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C O M P L E T Ji 



Concordance to shakspere 



BEING 



A VERBAL INDEX 



TO 



ALL THE PASSAGES IN THE DRAMATIC WORKS OF THE POET. 




BY 



MRS. COWDEN CLARK 



ORDER GATE EACH THING VIEW—Siiakspi-pk 




NEW YORK: 
WILEY AND PUTNAM. 



V 



M.DCCC.XTAI. 



U^^^ 






LONDON : 

Piintefl liy M. Mason, Ivy Lane, Paternoster Row. 




THIS WORK 



IS 



CONSECRATED TO THE MEMORY 



OF 



SHAKSPERE, 



AND 
TO THE USE OF THE BRITISH NATION, 

WHOSE BRIGHTEST ORNAMENT IS HIS GENIUS, 



BY 



MARY COWDEN CLARKE. 



TO 



DOUGLAS JERI-IOLD 



'lie first Y7it of tlie age 



tills 



Concordance to 
SIIAICESPERE , 
The first vrit of every age, 
is dodicated 

IIAEY COYfDElI CLARICE, 
Of a certain ac©, 
and 
Ho vjit at all: 






I 



HAU 




/ 



P R E F A C E. 



f A 
Shakspere, the most frequently quotedjbecause the most iiniversal-mincled Genius that ever lived, 

of all Authors best deserves a complete Concordance to his Works. To what subject may we not 
with felicity apply a motto from this greatest of Poets? The Divine, commending the efficacy 
and "twofold force of prayer — to be forestalled, ere we come to fall, or jDardoned, being down;" 
the Astronomer, supporting his theory by allusions to " the moist star, upon whose influence 
Neptune's empire stands;" the Naturalist, striving to elucidate a fact respecting the habits 
of "the singing masons," or " heavy-gaited toads;" the Botanist, lecturing on the various 
properties of the " small flower within whose infant rind poison hath residence, and medicine 
power," or on the growth of "summer grass, fa&test by night, unseen, yet crescive in his 
faculty;" the Philosopher, speculating upon "the respect that makes calamity of so long life," 
" the dread of something after death, the undiscovered country, from whose bourn no traveller 
returns;" the Lover, telling his "whispering- tale in a fair lady's ear," and vowing the 
"winnowed purity" and "persistive constancy" of his "heart's dear love;" the Lawyer, 
discussing some "nice sharp quillet of the law;" the Musician, descanting on the "touches of 
sweet harmony;" the Painter, describing his art, that "pretty mocking of the life;" the Novel- 
writer, seeking an illustrative heading to a fresh chapter, " the. baby figure of the giant mass to 
come at large;" the Orator, labouring an emphatic point in an appeal to the passions of assembled 
multitudes, "to stir men's blood;" the Soldier, endeavouring to vindicate his profession, by 
vaunting the " pomp and circumstance of glorious war ;" or the Humanist, advocating " the 
quality of mercy," urging that, "to revenge is no valour, but to bear;" and maintaining that 
" the earth is wronged by man^s oppression," — may all equally adorn their page or emblazon 
their speech with gems from Shakspere^s works. 

To furnish a faithful guide to this rich mine of intellectual treasure, superadding what 
was defective in my predecessors, Twiss and Ayscough, has been the ambition of a life; and it 
is hoped that the sixteen years' assiduous labour devoted to the work, during the twelve 
years^ writing,* and the four more bestowed on collating with recent editions and correcting 
the press, may be found to have accomplished that ambition, and at length produced the great 
desideratum— a complete Concordance to Shakspere. 

* I cannot refuse myself the pleasure of mentioning tliat the day which witnessed the conclusion of this task, was the 
birth-day of the best of mothers— Mary Sabilla Novello; she who forms the glory and happiness of her children; she wiio 
first inspired me with a love for all that is good and beautiful, and who therefore may well be said to have originated my 
devotion to Sliakspere. 



vi PEEFACE. 

The appearance of a Preface with, the concluding number of a periodically published work, 
though it possesses the advantage of affording an opportunity of commenting upon any thing 
that may have occurred in the course of printing ; yet on the other hand, it involves a degree 
of disadvantage to the author, more especially in the present case, where there was judgment 
to be exercised in the admission or omission of certain words, and the right of that judgment 
to be vindicated and explained. The apparent inconsistency of omitting particular words 
when used in one sense, while they were retained in other instances, could only be accounted 
for by that discretionary power, which the author must claim in the Preface; where good and 
suihcient reason could be advanced why that power was not merely exercised for the sake of 
condensation, but likewise for perspicuity, and the especial benefit of the quoter. For 
instance, it might at first excite surprise to find so few examples of the word let; but by 
omitting it as an auxiliary verb (where the simple fact of its being universally joined to another 
verb of more importance, renders it less likely to suggest itself as a means of reference, as — 
'^' let me remember thee what thou hast promised,") and retaining it merely in its more 
singular sense, the space gained is the enormous diiference between IT lines and 2184, or 
six printed pages of three columns each; while at the same time the few important instances 
in which the word occurs are thus rendered far more clearly apparent and easy of reference. 

This was felt to be so valuable an arrangement, that, even during the course of printing, 
several thousand lines of MS. were cancelled — thus: well, omitted as an adverb, saves about 
1550 lines, and leaves clearer the word as a noun, and where it indicates health; it is also 
retained where a pun is involved, as — "would not this ill do well?'' 

It must be borne in mind that these omitted references are so frequent, as well as of such 
insignificance, that their retention would but have encumbered, and (so to say) hidden the 
other references to the same word of more distinct and unquestionable importance: as an 
example of this, " my lord," as a mere title, occurs in the play of Hamlet alone, no fewer than 
192 times ! 

Come, look, marry, pray, truth, truly, and well, when used merely interjectionally, and 
still and well, as adverbs, are omitted. Like, as an adverb merely conveying a simile, as — 
" he receives comfort like cold porridge," from the multiplicity of examples, and because such 
passages invai'iably contain words more striking — is omitted. Toward and towards are only 
retained when used peculiarly. 

Titles: as master, mistress, lord, lady, king, count, don, signior, etc., when joined to proper 
names, are omitted; as are also lord and lady, when used merely as sir and madam. A few verbs 
and adverbs, as, to he, to have, to do; and heyond, some, never, etc., are omitted, on account of 
their insignificance, and frequent recurrence; also, oaths and exclamations of small importance, 
a few peculiar ones only, such as aroint, avaunt, etc., being retained. 

All nouns and verbs spelt alike are placed under one heading; and all plural nouns will 
be found under the same headings with their respective singulars. A few words, such as naught 
and nought, sallad and sallet, spelt indiscriminately in various editions, are placed under one 
heading. 



PREFACE. vii 

When a word recurs on the same subject, and with but little variation of context, in the 
course of a scene, or stands so closely repeated as inevitably to catch the eye in looking out the 
passage in the Play, as — "my poverty but not my will consents. I pay thy poverty, and not 
thy willj" the repetition is merely indicated by the word (rep.) in the Concordance. 

The size of the Work has been selected with a view to its ranging with Mr. Charles 
Knight's popular and beautiful Pictorial Edition of Shakspere ; but it will admit of being 
cut down so as to conform with the usual octavo volumes. 

In Mr. Payne Collier's edition of Shakspere, he divides the second act of the Midsummer 
Night's Dream, into two scenes only; but as in most editions it is divided into three, I have 
adopted the latter mode of reference, merely pointing out the variation here, to avoid any 
confusion. I avail myself of the present opportunity to offer my thanks publicly to the above- 
named gentleman, for the kind and handsome manner in which he entrusted me with the then 
unpublished MS. of his concluding volume, when I took the liberty of applying to him, though 
unknown, for the purpose of collating his edition with the others, in order to complete my 
Concordance. Such a mark of confidence was a worthy type of the fraternity of feeling 
inspired by a close study of our immortal Poet; and it is one of the not least agreeable con- 
comitants of my task, that it has been the means of my receiving generous testimonies of 
sympathy and encouragement from many of the cleverest men of our age, between whom and 
myself I could never have hoped for any assimilation, had it not been for the mutual existence 
of profound veneration and love for the genius of Shakspere. 

Let me not likewise omit to acknowledge (after the fashion of dramatic authors in the 
preface to their Plays, towards the actors who embody their conceptions) my obligations to my 
"co-mates and brothers in 'labour'" — the Printers; for though the public can judge of the 
typographical beauty and accuracy of the pages of the Concordance which they have produced, 
no one but myself can appreciate their care, minute correctness, and patient assiduity. 

Shakspere himself says: "Most poor matters point to rich ends,^' — I trust my humble 
labour may tend to the "rich end" of furthering a universal study and appreciation of his 
genius; — in this hope, it only remains for me to take leave of those for whom I have been 
working so many years (I cannot call them my readers), with an assurance that it has been a 
labour of love, and that it has been productive of many happy thoughts and aspirations to 

Their faithful and obedient servant, 

^...../^.^.. , 



/ 



ABL 



\HI,K-iiiovi<lo(l I be «' iililc as now ....Uamlel, v. a 
wliik' 1 nm ulilo to stiiml Itninro ami Juliet, i. 1 

I mil till' L'roiilrst. iilili' tii iln k'list — v. ;) 

MU.lOli lihlcT Ih.ni nuium'II' hilim (,\r.v,ic, iv. 11 

A 111 1 A I! n limiiiHl lisMh.MiJ nlmrU .. .. VraiyK's/, i. 2 
n'liuMub.T «U,.nitl...n IkiM Ml.oiu-a .... — i. 1 
.■;inu..t |KTisli,li;lviimMluvMliuur(l..r(C0O.(t/'''. i. 1 

l.iimic,Mi«in, iiw!i\,nli,..iicl — ii. 3 

piv-cnllv will u-uilliwrd Minhnnt nC l'eniee,\\. ti 

lis illu' luul Ih'cii iili.iiiiil.. V'.im/iivorrtf Sliiew, iii. 2 
(,'o. j-rt iilH«iri\; lo.vk (othy liiirk.. Hmfo-'s TaU; iii. 3 

volT iiuiv 1 wtiiliMunll — iii.3 

ho is mmt' iiiuuiiil ii now ship to juu'gc — iv. 3 

I'll liiiiii.' von wluMv hi' is iibimnl — iv. 3 

those hlUul ones, uIhuiviI him. . .. — iv. 3 

hissoii.iilionnl the I'l-ineo — v. 2 

we eiiiiie nlio;ir,l ; a lenu'iu' t'lMiii.. Cometlij of Knois,\. 1 
hilt till lioiowiu'i-ooinos iihoiira — iv. 1 

1 luno ooiive\e.l iilhwra; .iiid I — iv. 1 

tliiit we were siiCe iiiul s.uiml nhoiird — iv. t 

Iheivroiv iiwiiv, to Kot oiir stnll'iilioiml — iv. i 

the wiiul liiir.'iiiuIwewiU ahoiinl .. ..lUiin/ f. ii. 2 

wo will iilioiinl toniulit: why — ii. 2 

ill hiviiii; the lui/o iihonrd 2 Henri/ I'!, iv. 1 

ahoai-.l in\ willev, 1 invito vou iU1...4n(. ^-C/i'o. ii. (> 
eoine, sir.will v^ii alioauiy'I have. — ii.fi 

j,'o see niv lonl 'ahoanl; I'ovthis Ojmbehne, i. 2 

this iiif,'lit; I iiiiisl nboai'il to-morrow — i. 7 

thv (leitv iihoaiil our ihiiioiin,' liont Pericles, in. 1 

oonio, lei's luiveherahoiiolsiiiUlonly.. — iv. 1 
not oarrv her iihoanl; il' she remain .. — iv. 2 
pivornoi- who eravos ti> eome aboard .. — v. 1 
there is some ol' worth would eonio aboard— v. 1 
her I'ortuiu-s hroiiuht the maid ahraml us — v. 3 
that would liiiu lav kuil'e ahourd ..limn. A'- Jul. ii. 1 

l.aertos 1 aboard, nhoiiid, tor shiimo Uamlel, i. S 

teuiiit liiiii with soeeil aboard — iv. 3 

mvsoir will strai^lil abroad Olhello, v. 2 

AlSonK — whore is tin n\uvW!..Taminff of Shrew, iv. o 
where 1 he;ir, ho makes abode ... 7'(/'o G. q/' I'er. iv. 3 
voiir iritieueo for mv lom- abode.. Uo-.o/" I'eiiice, ii. 6 
eaii vield me here bvmv abode .. ..UivlmnI III. i. 3 

whoUv depends on vonr abode t,l^ .S Cleo. i. 2 

desire'mv man's abode, wherel CijmMine, i. 7 

shall our abode make with vou i.e.ir, i. I 

iiiilo~s his alioilo bo linjiorod hero by ..Ollielln, iv. 2 
V l!i II )i:i ) aboded the suiUleu breach.. He;i. (7//. i.l 

Ai!oni.;.Mi:N'i'- 

I'nsliman! nliodomonts 3 lleiinj VI.iv.7 

Al! >l>I.\i; -eried, aho.liuu hieldesa time — v. « 
VI'.' >.MIN' \i;i.K— ahouiiiiable monster!- renipp.'.V.ii. 2 
adoi.limi ofubominable terms. ... .l/e)!-;/ Ifiees, ii. 2 
I'roui their abominable and beastly tonehes,. 

Me.isinr for .VcisHir, iii. 2 
(which he would call ahominableV. ;.uee's I.. L. v. 1 
of either, are ahoniinable fellows... ts;/o» (,*eiV, iv. 1 
that villauonsahoininable misleudev.l Ufn.lV. ii. 1 
thoii nbjminable damned eheater..2 iU;u-ii ir. ii. 4 
iiliominahleUloster! jjuard thv llead.l llenn/n. i. 3 
abominable words, as no ebristilin ..2 lieu. I I. iv. 7 
» Milt tlieivot' makes tlioeabomiuablo..3HeK. /'/. i. 4 
dissonilifne' abominable varlet ..Troil. •5- Ores. v. 4 
N oil vile abominable tents thus — V. U 

si'olied. detestoil. and iibomimihle.. Tif. Ambon, ii. 3 
n'Mniiuablo deeds, eomidots of mischief — v. 1 

(1 abomiiialile! She makes rci-ie/e.!, iv. 6 

lib. nni liable villainl where is ho ? /-«i?-, i. 2 

vliii.M 1 N AlilA'— tlicy imitated hvmmnity so 

abomi niibly Uamlel, iii. 2 

AKi i.M I XAt" ION— Antony, most large in his 

nliominations hi'oiiii and Cleopatra, iii, 6 

VHOKTl V i:— this thv abortive iirido..2 Hen. I'l. iv.l 
should I jov ill an allortive birtti? . . Lore's L. L. i. 1 
prodii;ios. and simis, abortive iircsagcs.K. John, iii. 4 
aborl'ivo be it, prodiiiions, and untimelv..n. HI. i. 2 
thou eh ish-marked. abortive, rootinj; hog! — i. 3 
\.U.)l!\l>--l'or buinonrs do aiiound ..Ilennj V. iii. 2 
rliouuKitiedisoasosdoabound...W':/, .V.'.« »n-.m,ii. 2 

then abonud in tears WinlrrS Tah; ii. 1 

abound in thodivisioiiof oaehscvoral..V,ie(y,'.'A, iv. 3 
so eares and iovs abound, as seasons . .2 U. 11. ii. 4 
never tliev siiall ahoimd as t'ormerly.Heii. Illl. i. 1 
tboio'h perils did ahinind us tliiek as — iii. 2 
AHiit'N'DlNti. [(■.'""■'■. AhiV/i/]— mark then 

alHUindim,' valour in our En.ijli.sh.. Hc«™r.iv.3 
.^.11011 >i U'ST— like an usiu-cr, abouud'stin all. . 

Itomeo and Juliet, iii. 3 
.\.BR A1I.\M— consin Abraham Slender. . M. irires,i. i 

between master Abraham and — i.l 

from our hole Abraham was.. ,1/cm-Ai7»j of fenice, i. 3 
(> fallior Abraham! what lliose ehristians — i. S 
the bosom of L'ood old Abraham! ..Itichurd II. iv. 1 
of Kdward sleoiiin .Vbraham's bosom. . Itich. III. iv. 3 
r Kme-Af]— youus; Abraluuu Cupid, he that shot . . 

liniiii-oiiml Juliet, ii.\ 

VBRE AST-then flvabrcast; as, in this- llennj I', iv. ti 

all abreast, oluiri.'ed our main Imttlos, .:i l!e,i. I I. i. 1 

where one hut eoes alireast. . Trailus .S- CjcHi'ifu,' iii. 3 

MilillHiK-wiUabridizotlivrife-Tieof.'fn.o/Ter.iii. 1 

asleep, abridirc u>y dolofiil days .. ..2 lleuri/ If. ii. 4 

VHKllKi l-:i)-to be abrideed fiMin sueh-.V. of I'en.i. 1 

have alirid^nl his time of fearim.' death- J. 0.s-iir,iii.l 

\ P. Ii 1 IX i K M I" .N'T— 111 v abridi-'ouient comes. Ham. ii. 2 

w hat abrid^emont huvo vou tor-.li.i;. A'.'s Drfnni.v. I 

brook iibridnemont; ami yoiueyes. . Hen. V. v. (eho.) 

this tierce nbridi;cmcnt liath Ctjmbeline, v. 5 

.VBKOACU— wluit mischiefs lie might set abroach 

•1 Henri/ IV. iv. 2 
the seerot misehiofs that I setabroach-KiWi. III. i. 3 
tbisaiK'ieut iiuarrel new abroach? .. Koiiipo >"!■ Jiil.i. 1 

AUlvO.Ml— bow tea tnresai-e abroad TempesI, iii. 1 

and sabioets none abroad — v. 1 

wonders' of the world abroad ..Two Gent.ofVtr. i. 1 
what news abroad, friar?- .UcLwrf for Measure, iii. 2 
what HOWS abroad i' the world? ' — iii. 8 

there's viUunv abroa.i; this letter- tore's t. Lost, i. 1 
doth noise abroad, Navarre hath — ii. 1 

would be with my hopes abroad. ..jVerr'am/ q^ ('. i. 1 
ventures he hath', snuandered abroad — i. 3 

come abroad with luiu at his rcijuest — iii. 3 



i'^] 



ABU 



ABHOAD— no spirit dares stir abroad. . . . Hamlet, i. 1 
nm come abroad to see tlio world- I'am. of .'^hrew, i. 2 
for tile most |iart been aired a broad .. IVinter's T. iv. 1 
there are eo/euers abr.iiul; tliurofore — iv. 3 

whv should I enrrv lies abroad'r' .. — iv. 3 

foul wliisporiu;,'s are iibroad Macliolh,v.i 

eallinc homo our exiled friends abroad — v. 7 
there's to^sMbl■olld;lllloll I'll tell.. .. A-iiiff yo/m. i. 1 
heilr'st thou the news iibrond, wlio.. — iv. 2 

come; siriiseoin|irmlont,wliatuoWBnbrOad? — v. B 

robbers nniee iibioail iiuseou Hichard II. Wi.'i 

there's vilhnioiis news iibn.ad \ Henri/ IV. ii.4 

noise abroad that llarrv Monmouth . .2 11. t;'.(Iud.j 
I am pliiil to see your lordsliipabioad — i. 2 

your lordship u'oes ahioiid by advice. — _ i. 2 
rain within doors, and uoue' abroad .. — iv. 4 
tbciiruied hand dotli li;;lit abroad ....Henri/ V. i. 2 

venture trade abnind ; others — i. 2 

the 'ralbol so iiiueli seined abroad- 1 Heiiru I'l. ii. 3 

his hands .ibroad disphivod 2 Henri/ II. iii. 2 

whattiiro? wluil news abroad 3 Henri/ II. ii. 1 

unless abroad tliov Piivehase? .... — iii.3 

meet thee, if thou stir abroad — v. 1 

1 will buz/ abroad such pro|iheeies — v. fi 

what news ahroady no news so bad abroad- ii. Ill.i. 1 

lieary.m the news abroad y Yes — ii. 3 

rumour it abroad that .\mie my wife — iv. 2 

broii/iht with her one eare abroad.. Hen )-y nil. i. 4 

ishcrea.h tooomeMbiondi' — iii. 2 

what news iibioiid? The heaviest — iii. 2 

but to the s|iort abroad! . . . . Tivihisand Cressida, i. 1 

what miike wo abroad '/ Timon of Athens, iii. 5 

walk abroad, and reoroato yonrsolves.y. desar, iii. 2 
thy s|iirit walks abroad, and turns . . — v. 3 
hlive ropoit how 't is abroad .... Antoni/ ^ Cleo. i. 4 
yon shall know nu'an time of stirs abroad — i. 4 

there's none abroad son liolesome Ci/mlieline, i. 3 

yonr means abroad .MUi have nic, rich — iii. 4 

no companv's abroad — iv. 2 

what o.ouipanv diseoveryou abl•oad■^ . — iv. 2 
set abroad now business for yon all'i". . 7'i,'ks .-tnd. i.2 
like Sibvl's leaves, abroad, and whore's- iv. 1 

if you do stir abroad. f.'o armed Lear, i. 2 

you have hoard of the news abroad — ii. 1 

a troubled mind diavcuic to walk abroad.. 

lioineo and Juliet, i. 1 
theCapnletsabroml.and if we meet — iii. 1 
at home abroad, iKninht— time, work], alone, 

in eompanv — iii. 6 

that tllo^• so sh'riok abroail? The people — v. 3 

and it is'tbouv'ht abroad, thai •Iwr.amy.. Othello, i. 3 
as knaves be suoh abroad, who having.. — iv. 1 
AHKOllATK— toabro;;alvsrmrllit\'.(.(Hv'.« ),./..iv.2 
AlililHIK-ill ean thv iK-ble mind abrook 1' (/.;■;. ii. 4 
AHKri"l'— \ our abrupt iloparlui-o ..1 lleiui/ /7.ii.3 
AURLU'TIUN— what makes this prett.v nbrii|.tion.. 

rroihis.iii.l Cu'ssid,,, iii. 2 
ABRUPTLY— broken ftom coiiuiam abrunlly.. 

As i/.iii l.ik,' il, ii. 4 
ABSENCE— absence of thvfriond.. J'l.-ut/. if ler. i. 1 
1 will not be alienee at the grace.. il/m-y ll'iees, i. 1 
will he ab^oneo from his house .... — ii. 2 

to take an ill advantaio of his absence — iii.3 
ray lad,\' w ill han.^ thee for thy absence. Twelfth A. i. 6 

oiir aliseiieo to siippl.v Measure for Measure, i. 1 

lord Am-'olo dukes it well iu his absence — iii. 2 
in tboaiisoneeof tliednke.... — v. 1 

whieb death, or absence, soon shall.il/i'rf. K. Dr. iii. 2 

your absonee onlv Love's Labour Lost, v. 2 

but I dote on his'very absence ..Mer. of I'enice. i. 2 
in bearing thus the absence of your lord — iii. 4 
if vou would walk in absence of the — v. 1 
by reason of his absonee. there is. As you Like il, ii. 4 
or brood nimn our absoneo: that.. Winter's Tale, i. 2 
sliiieod in his abseneo, and his pond.. — i. 2 

uudorta'eu to do iu his absence — iii. 2 

my best ondoavonrs, in yonr absence — iv. 3 

Olil- absoneo makes lis untbrifty .. — v. 2 

from whom mvabsooee was not six.. OiM.o.rE,-. i.l 
whoso absouee'is no less material .. .. Machclh, iii. 1 

his absoneo. sir, la\s blame ii|ioil — iii. 1 

the advantage of bis absoneo took....K/«- Jolin, i. 1 

is but tbx absonee for a time Uiehurd II. i. 3 

and wocreato, in absenoeofourself.. — ii. 1 
this absonee of n our father's draws.. 1 HennjIF.w. 1 

ofhis absence make this use — iv.l 

with Owen (lleodow er's absence thence — iv. 4 
oiu- substitutes in ab~cnec well . ...■-' Henri/ IV. iv. 4 

the mouse, in ab-cncc of the cat Henri/ f. i. 2 

iealonsof vonr ab^cuec, seek through.. — iv. 1 
'my absenec doth nogleot no aroat. . liichard III. iii. 4 
and wo foigcUul in our Ion;: absence. Hoi. ;7//.ii. 3 
that wails bcr iibseuooy. . . . TimIiis ,nid Cressida, iv. 5 

and tin d.aoneo, absoneo Timon of .llhens, iv. 3 

that ab'sonco w heroin ho won honour. . Cocio/niiiis, i. 3 
all the varn she sinm iu lUyssos' absence — i. 3 
by calii'inoss. or b\- abseneo; all's in . . — iii. 2 

ever oool i' tile alisoneo of the — iv.l 

im|>atieut of mv absence; and Julius Cirsar, iv. 3 

cannot oiuluro mv absonee.. J/i'ohi/ and Cleopalra,i. 2 
whioh in thv abs'euce is no better — i iv. 13 

I pniv, his abseneo proceed hv ri/mteioie, iii. ;> 

afterl.ai- absence, siudi is vo'urs.... — iii. 6 

a fever with the ahsonce of her son. . — iv. 3 

his strange absoneo, grew shameless — v. 5 

should lie wrong my lihortiosinabsence../'eiic;es,_i. 2 

elioice i'tbo ubseuoo of \aair king — ii.4 

shall support hv bis do'ar absence Othello, i. 3 

strike otf this s.''oic of absence — iii. 4 

to the felt ab-c;;c, ii.w I fcolacnnse — iii. 4 

ABSEN'l'—for lie, 11 Ml louii absent. TteeyVA Night, i. b 
and much please llic absent duke.. Mea.forM. iii. 1 
would the duke, that is absent, have — iii. 2 

1 never heard the absent dnko inueli — iii. 2 

how eame it that the absent dnko — iv. 2 

bv a snored vow, and shall bo absent — iv. 3 

tl'iat Hero shall he absent; and thci'C..JtfHc'i.Wo,ii.2 
of our being absent hence . . Merchant of I'eiiice, v. 1 
vflien I am absent, then lie with — v. 1 

that I should yet absent me . . Taming of S. (Ind.) 2 



absent tiMi. . Maclic;h,\. 4 
oIIk r...ni/()ii Like it, ii.2 



AUSKNT-wb ' o 1 

ifhchoalii.iii 1 m- 

not seek an lo. n-i . 

of my tboii,i.-li,s,liaplv.iicoii absent then.. 4«'.s-)rW(.i.:f 

the coming spai'o, expecting absent friends — ii. 3 

herself most eliaslol v absent — iii. 7 

to be togollior, tbon'eh :ibsent .... II inter's Tale, i. 1 
thov have been absent; 'tis good.. — ii. 3 

the' room up of mv ab-ont ohild ....King John, iii. 4 

jov absent, grief is present Ilicliard II. i. 3 

'to'lako ail\anta-e of the absent time — ii. 3 

that the absent king iu deputation. 1 Henri/ IT. iv. 3 

what with the absentkiug — v. 1 

best siioces' when vmi are absent ..3 Henri/ I'l. ii. 2 

the 11110011 hoiug absent, 'tis Henri/ I 111. ii. 4 

bcr altondaiits'iibseut, swallowed 11 re.. ./:(■«■.<„ .-.iv. 3 
the porturlioil oonrt.formv being ahsont.rvm)). iii. 4 

absent thee from folioitv awhile Il.imlel, v. 2 

1 boing4ibseut, and mv'iihieo supplied. .0//i(*i, iii. 3 
and lovers' absent lion'rs, more todions — iii. 4 

ABSOI.UTIO— boiibsoliitefordoath.jl.'ca./orj»/eo. iii.l 

niv absolute |iowor, and phieo — i. 4 

as'iust, as absolute, as Aiieelo — v. 1 

he'nocds will be absolute .Milan TempesI. i. 3 

thou woublst makoaii absolutooourtior.Vc/v e IC.iii.3 
on whom I built au absolute trust .. ..Mm-belh, \. 4 

with an absolute, sir, not r — iii. li 

I speak not as ill absolute fear — iv. 3 

and pardon alisoluto I'or voiirself..l Henri/ II'. Iv. 3 
Huoh largo toiins, and so'absidute. .2 Henri/ II'. tv. 1 
it is a most absolute, and o\eollcnt horse. . II. I', iii. 7 
allowed with absolute |>ower ..Timnn i,f .Itheiis, v. 2 

mark vou bis absolute sluiliy Curlolnnns,\\\. 1 

there tlio people bad more alisoluto iiower — iii. 1 
vou mo too absolute; though therein — iii. 2 

thoroloro, most absolute sir, if thou .. — iv. 5 

almost most absolute AloNas.. Jo/oiii/ cS- Cleopatruji.i 
hilt bv sea be is an absolute master — ji. 2 

Cvpri'is, l.MliiMibsoliiteiiuoen.. — iii. 6 

tlio absolute soldiorsbip ^a.ll Inivc bv land — iii. 7 
1 have an absolute hope 'our landmen — iv. 3 

most absolute lord, mv mistress Cleopatra — iv. 12 
he eommands hisabsolnte eoinmlssion ..Cyinb. iii. 7 

lam alisoluto, 't was very Cloton — iv. 2 

not absolnlo uiadness coiild so fiu-have — iv. 2 

nav, how absolute olio's iii't, not Perieles, ii. 5 

contends in skill witli absolute -Marina — iv. ((iowcr) 

luaioslv, to him ourabsiduto power I.enr, v. 3 

how alisoluto the kua\o is! We must ..Hamlet, v. 1 
believomc, an absolute gontloman .... — v. 2 
mv soul lialh her content .so absolute .. 0//i<-//o, ii. 1 
not out ofabsol lite lust(,tliou!;li,poradventure — ii. 1 

A13.St»LU'l'iOI.V— 
this shall absolutely resolve you..il/ea./oi'ilfea. iv. 2 
hear, and alisolntel'v to determine ..2 Henry If. iv. 1 

AliSOl A" ICl )— absoi; od him with an axe.H. fill. iii. 2 
committed mav he absolved in LOnglish — iii. 1 
to make eonlossion, and to lie absoUod..fl. fi-J. iii. .'> 

ABSTAlA'S-whoabstains Irom moat, that.. 7f. //. ii. 1 

ABSTE.MIOl'S— bcmorcalistomious.. Tempest, iv. 1 

ABSTINENCE — a mau of stricture, and firm 

abstinence Measure for Measure^ i. 4 

he doth with holv abstinence subdue — iv. 2 
abstiuonoe laigonders maladies. . Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 
akiiidot'eio-iuiss to the next abstinence. Ham/c/, iii. 4 

ABSTKAC'l'-bc ba'Jian abstract for ..iv/er;!/ »'. iv. 2 
bv an abstract of success. 1 have ...ill's Hell, iv. 3 
tflis little ab.-lract doll, contain . . . . A'.ag .'o/,», ii. 1 
brief abstraet and record oftedions.tf/cA.in/ ///. iv. 4 
wdlo is the abstraet of all faults. . .iH/o.a// .S- Cleo. i. ■!• 
[KmgA/]— an abstraet 'tween his lust and him — iii. 6 
the abstract IKnighl — abstracts] aud brief ehronioles 
Hamlet, ii. 2 

ABSURD — nature, to reason most absurd. Ihimlet, i. 2 
let the candied tongue lick absurd pomp — iii. 2 
this protVor is absurd and reasonless.! Henri/ II. v. 4 
to eonii Iter their most alisnrb intents.. («/. <s' f/cii. v. 2 

ABSYKTliS— as wild .Media vonng Absvrtus did 

2 iie«ri/J7. v, 2 

ABUNDANCE— with this abimdaneo of superfluous 

• King John, ii. 1 

alnmdaneo, to feed m,v innocent people. 7'c»i/>c,\7, ii. 1 
in the same abuudanee as\onr irood.-Vc/. e/7V/j. i. 2 
lack it where there is sueli abundauco...i/r.<»V», i. 1 
one that hath abnudanecorcbarL-e too.l Hen. II. ii.i 
for ho hath the horn of abimdanco. .2 Henrij IT. i. 2 
that hine abimdauee, and en.jo.v it not — iv. 4 

to particulari.'.o their alumita'iiee Coriolanus, i. 1 

that yon two have not in abundance? — ii. 1 
tbc.v gave their creatures in abundance.. iVWc/es, i. 4 

ABUNDANT — to brcatlie the abundant dolour 

liichard IL i. 3 
and th,v abundant goodness shall excuse — v. 3 
is so abundant scarce, it will.. Troilns * Cj-es-su^i, ii. 3 

ABUNDANTLY— for tliough abundantly they lack 
Coriolanus i. 1 

ABTTSE— she docs abnse our ears All's H'ell, v. 3 

some enchanted tritle to abuse me Tempes', v. 1 

he shall not abuse Kobcrt Shallow.. M«-»-!/Hife,«,i. 1 
re.ioioosoniueh at thoabusoof yalstail' — v. 3 
so did I ahnso myself, my servant. . rice/W A', iii. 1 
use their abuses in coninion ....Mea.for Mea. ii. 1 
and see how he goes about to abuse me — iii. 2 

this is a strange abuse — v. 1 

to find out this abuse, whence 'tis — v. 1 

after his troasouablo abuses — v. 1 

that abuses our young iihints .4s you Like il, iii. 2 

bov, that atnisos evor\' one's eves — iv. 1 

if vmn- lass intorprotn'tion should abnse. irint. T. iv. 3 
wicked dreams abuse the cmtained ...Vneiielh. ii. 1 

hang him, he'll abuse us Timon nf ,lt^,ens. ii. 2 

for the i>oor abiisos oi the time 1 Henry 1 1', i. 2 

erics out upon abuses, seem — iv. 3 

turn their own jierfection to alnisc. .2 Henry If. ii. 3 
dji-i\e you then to confess the wilful abuse — ii. 4 
(rc/idi/ci/) no abuse, Hal. on mine honour, 

woiilil bo abuse the countenance of. . — iv. 2 
well digest the abuse of distance.. Hetiry V, ii. (cho.) 
it was onrsclf thou didst abnse . . — iv. 8 



ABU 



— V. 1 



AUl/SE— larilon rav obuse : 1 flli<l..l Henry Fl.ti. 3 

duu'ti^inent lor thin ttlniBC — iv. 1 

iminu; Rliall flight ubuse it? — I v. 6 

own inTWHi aiiswirr tliv nliuse 2 Hennj Fl. ii. 1 

how imraiv I Lun l>rook ul)ii~c !.... — v. 1 

or wlicrvfr/re (lost iil)UbC it, if tliou — .v. 1 

tilt- abuse- (lonu to my niece.' 3 Henry Fl. ni. 3 

tnlif no oflVncc at our abuse — >.\'- 1 

tlie abuse of Kruatness is, wlicn .... Julius Oi'iar, ii. 1 
the times abuBu, if these be motives — ii. 1 

Cleopatra do not abuse my master e.Anl. ff (An. y. 2 
mine ears must not in liaste al)use . . Cymljclmej i. 7 
(unless my sins abuse my divination) — ly. 2 
with foul incest to abuse your soul .... Pencles, i. I 
thev do abuse the kinf, that flatter .... — .1.2 
do not abuse me. Be comforted . . King Lear, iv. 3 

that thought abuses you.. — y- 1 

true birtli, stumbling on abuse . . Ilomen ^ Juliel,n. 3 
nor pravers, shall purchase o\it abuses — iii. I 

abuses me t») damn me: I'll have ...... Wa;nZ(;/,ii. 2 

or is it some abuse, and no such thmg ? — ly. 7 
after some time, to abuse Otiiello s ear . . OllwUo,i. 3 
abuse him to the Moiir, in tlie rank garb — ii. 1 
mv nature's plague to spy into abuses .. — in. 3 
remove yoiu-tlioughti it doth abuse your — iv. J 
opinion on my greatest abuse [CoHier. Kmght. 

IcastmisuseJ ..........•••. — '''"'' 

there lie women do abuse their husbands — 

as lionest, as you that thus abuse me — ... - 

AUUSED— mylied shall be abused. M'rry Wiw«,ii. 2 
there was never man thus abu.sed. Twelfth Sight,\v. 2 
never man so notoriously abused — iv. 2 

and by my friends I am abused. . — v. I 

he liath lieen most notoriously abused — v. 1 

lieard vour roval ear abused. . Mecmire/or Ment. v. 1 
princeandClaudiomightilyabused ..Miirli Ado,y. 2 
of another, therefore \>eah\iseti...Mid.N.l)rettm, n. 3 
hisbook-men; for here 'tis abused ..Love « L. L.ii. 1 
none could be so abuscdin sight. At ymLikcilin.b 

this lord, wlio liath abusBl me Ms IVeU, v. 3 

6ti-an"ers may be Ualedand abused. Ta/nin;? o/.S. v. I 
are ainised. and by some putter-on.. tfMer s T. u. 1 
hath abu.sed and dishonoured me.. Com. o/krrors, y. I 
noble duke hath been too much abused ..«. /;.ii.3 
upbraided, or abused in disdainful . . Hilary f • 'i>- ^ 

must be abused by silken, sly. ^'V'"™ '.''■ •■ ^ 

to hear the city abused Henry VIII. (epilo^nie) 

th'e people are abused; set on Conolauus, lu. 1 

he liath abused your powers...... .. — .y. 5 

tlmt he his high authority abused.. Ant. Sf Cleo.ui. 6 
vou are abused beyond the mark.. — .1.11.6 

toljeabusedbyonethatlookson.. — . ui. U 

you are a great deal aljused m too. . . . Cymhelme,]. ft 

vou have abused me : his meanest garment — 11. 3 
why ha-st thou abused so many miles — iij. 4 

but that ray master is abused — ii.i- i 

good king! to be so mightily abused!. ri/MS.-fjid. 11. 3 
as flatteries; when they are seen abused ... Lear, 1. 3 

to have her gentleman abused — ii- 2 

being apt to have his ear abused........ — .11.4 

mv follies! then Edgar was abused . . — in. 7 
the fwxl of thy abused father s wrath ! . . — 1 v. 1 
this great breath in his abused nature! — iv. , 

1 am mightily abused; I should even die — iv. 7 
thv face is miich abused with tears.flom. ^ Jul. ly. 1 
prowess of mv death rankl y abused ...... Ha',iM, 1. i 

of youth and raaidhood may be abused. . Othello, 1. 1 
abused her delicate .vouth with drugs.... — 1.2 

she is abused, stolen from me, and corrupted— 1. 3 
delicate tenderness will find itseli abused — .u. 1 
out of self-bounty, be abused; look tot.. — in. 3 
she's gone; I am abused; and my relief .. — ui.3 
I swear 'tis better to be much abused.... — m. 3 

the floor's abused by some most villanous — ly. 2 

ABUSER— anabuserof theworld, apractiser— 1. 2 

..VBUSING— the corruption of abusing time.. ... 

Richard III. ill. 7 
old abusinff of God's patience . . . .Merry Wires, i. 4 
abusing tetter men than they can be.. Hpm. *'///. 1. i 

AB1;T— ieafv shelter that abuts against. . I'endes, v. 1 

ABUTTIXG— high uprearedand abutting fronts. . 

Henry f. 1. (chorus) 

ABY— lest, to thy peril, thou aby it dear. . ... 

Midsummer Nights Dream, 111. 2 
show oflovetoher, thou shall aby it — iii. 2 

A.BY.SM— dark backward and abysm ot. . Tempest, 1. i 
dliot their fires with the abysm of bell.. ... 

Antony and Cleopalra, 111. 11 

ACADEME— our court shall be a little academe. .. 

Lore's Liibotir Lost, 1. 1 
the books, the academes from wlieuce — iv. 3 
the arts, the academes tliat show , — i*"- * 

ACCENT— with a swaggering accent sharply.. ... 

Tireiflh Sight, in. 4 
pra'-tised accxnt in their fears.. M/J. N.'s Dream, v. 1 
and so miss the accent; let me . . Lore's L. Lost, iv. 2 
action and accent, did thev teach — . .y.- ^ 

your accent is something finer. . .l» you Like i/, 111. 2 
prophesving, with accents terrible — .'Hucbeth, 11. 3 

the accent of his tongue affectcth King John, i. 1 

that any accent breaking from thy . . — v- 6 
the heaw accent of thy moving tongue . . B. //. y. 1 
short- winded accents of new broils..! Henry ly.]. 1 
became the accents of the valiant. .2 Henry If. 11. 3 

in second accent of his ordnance Henry V. n. 4 

cannot brook the accent of rejirofif . . .nirt. III. iv. 4 
and with an accent tuned 'in.. Troilus ^ Cressida,\. 3 
do not take his rougher accents for..Coiioia7iu»,iii. 3 
unborn, and accents yet unknown?.. y. C/rsar, 111. 1 
if but as well I other aci^nts borrow.. Kin,? Lear, 1. 4 
these new tuners of accents . . linmeo and Juliet, ii. 4 
with goo<l a^.cent and gfiod discretion . . Hamlet, i[. 2 
neither having the accent of christians — in. 2 
with like timorousaccent, and dire yell.. OWie((o, 1. 1 

ACCEPT— should refuse U)a<.'cept...Wer of yenwe.i. 2 
this ring I do accejit most thankfully — iv. 2 
your lonlahip to accei)t our . . Taming of S. (Inq.) 1 
acccptof him, oreUe youdorae — n. [ 

if vou accept them, then their worth — .11. 1 
if tliis be courtesy, sir, accci)t of it — iv. Z 



[_3i 

ACCEPT— pray oiicept his service. . Taming of S. ii. 1 

Iilcascyou toacceiitit.that Il'intert rale,ii. I 

uncle, that we will accept Ilichnrd II. 11. 3 

would accept of grace and love 1 Henry iy.iv.3 

pass our ac<;ept, and peremiitory Henry V.y. 2 

acceiit this scroll, most gracious ..) Henry VI. 111. 1 
my lords, accept this hearty kind — 111. 3 

there is my pledge, accept it, Somerset — iv. 1 
wilt thou acceiJt of ransom, yea or no? — v. 3 

cither accept the title thoii — y. 4 

and 1 accept the combat willingly..2 Henry VI. 1. 3 
of Buckingham, I a<ce|)t thy greeting — v. 1 
yes, laccejit her, tbr slie well deserves.. S/f.F/. in. 3 
whe'r you acce|it our suit or no ..lUcliard III. in. 7 

sweet prince, aci*pt their suit — in. 7 

therefore, m'cept such kindness as — iv. 4 

occciit distracted thanks . . Troilus and Cressala, y. 2 
ay, my good lord, and she accepts of it. '/'. of Ath. 1, 1 

beseech your lordship to accept — 1. 1 

accept, and wear it, kind ray lord — — 1. 2 

1 shall accept them fairly — .1.2 

to accejit my grief, and whilst this — iv. 3 

and cannot now accept, to grace Corwlanus, v. 3 

next, accept mv tliankfulnesB — y. 4 

people will accept whom he admits.. . . Tdus And. 1. 2 

more ripe, accept my rhymes Pericles, i. (cho.) 

wiiich welcome we'll accept — 1. 4 

accept this latC'stiavourCKn'V'''- Collier, the 

obsequies tliat I for] liomeo and Juliet, y. 3 

ACCEPTANCE— goixl acceptance of his.. Henny A'. 1. 1 
him to your ''ra^MOUS acceptance.. ikfer. 0/ Ven. iv. 1 
iMured It to her acceptance; you .. Winter s T. iv. 3 

fair winds let this acceptance Hen. V. v. 2 (cho.) 

tell him our noble acceptance of Coriolanus, li. 3 

thanks, but with acceptance bounteous. . Othel. in. 3 

ACCEPTE1>— not be accepted, on my llfe..lH./r.v. 1 

nought would be accepted but the. .itfer. of Ven.y. 1 

Ihavedone, inmost accepted pain.. Troil.SrCr. lu. 3 

ACCESS— no man hath access by day to her. . ... 

Two Gentlemen of Verona, 111. i 
shall you have access, where — iii- 2 

I have access my own love — ly. 2 

be not denied access Twelfth N>ght,i. 4 

desires access to you Measure for iieasure, 11. 2 

a sister desires access to you — ii. 4 

we may vet again have access to Taming of H. 1. 1 
none shall have access unto Bianca — i. 2 

keeps from all if ♦ <>i suit >r^ — i. 2 

set the youn^tr tit , — .1. 2 

and free access 1 i rcot — 11. 1 

from the access 0/ it —11.2 

deslresacce sto \i lu lji_U I i.-euce U inter sT.v.l 
tliat has the bciitti tot ai e s' — v. 2 

stop up the access and pa ~a^c to Macbeth, 1. 5 

we are dtuied a<ce unto 2 Fenry IV. iv. 1 

if you earn it bji hi at'e to H> r ry VIII. m. 2 
huthdcmcd mv aic s to tli^e Coiiolanus,v. 2 

may w e not ^et » t (. 1 1 hei Pi rides, 11. 5 

he may notha\e ni 1 (. s to Horn S, Jul i. i (cho.) 
and de-nied Ins aete s to me Hamlet, u. 1 

to virtuous Desdemona procure me some access. . 
Othello, iii. 1 
ACCESSARY— T am your accessary . . All's Well, ii. 1 
both their deaths shalt thou be accessary. . P.m. i. 2 
ACCESSIBLE— accessible is none but iliUbrd way 

Cymbeline, iii. 2 
ACCIDENCE— some questions in his accidence. . 

Merry WIces of Windsor, iv. 1 
ACCIDENT— bv accident most strange.. Tempest, i. 2 

of every these hapijened accidents — v. 1 

and the particular accidents gone by . . — v. 1 

yet doth this accident and Twelfth Night, iv. 3 

O 't is an accident that heaven . . Mea. for Mea. iy. 3 
this is an accident of hourly proof. . . . Much Ado, iL 1 
think no more of this night's accidents. . 

Midsummer Nifrht's Dream, iv. 1 
bv what strange accident I chanced . — .v- 1 
bV some accident, should pass . . Winter's Tale, iv. 3 
hilt as the unthought on accident is — iv. 3 

but forced by need, and accident. . — y. 1 

nothing pleaseth but rare accidents..! Wenry IV. \. 2 
dismay not princes, at thiBaccidenCUJe/iryl'L iii. 3 

signsof future accidents! — y. 3 

by some unlooked accident cut ofll-./ficAari HI;}- 3 
prizes ol' accident as oft as merit . . Troil.^ Cress, iii. 3 
till accident, or purpose, bring you to 't — iv. S- 
are all but accidents unpurposed.. /ln(. .^-Cteo.iv. 12 
which shackles accidents, and bolts up — v. 2 

should answer s'jlemn accidents Cym'oeline, iv. 2 

be not with mortal accidents opprest — v. 4 

the day was yours by accident — v. 5 

by accident I ha<l a feigned letter. . — v. .i 

had no notice of these accidents Ram. if Jul. v. 2 

friar .John, was staid by accident. . — y. 3 

that he, as 'twere by accident, may here-K'j?Ji'«(, iii. 1 

joy grieves, on slender accident — iii.2 

uncharge the practise, and call it, accident — iv. 7 
are tongues, are liands, are accidents.. — iv. 7 

this accident is not unlike my dream Othello, i. 1 

of moving accidents, by fl'jod, and field. . — i. 3 
the shot of accident, nor dart of cliance.. — iv. 1 
abode l>e lingered here by some accident — iv. 2 
these blwHly accidents must excu.c my nianner..v. 1 
ACCIDENTAL— give phice to accidental evils.. 

Julius Ctpsar, iv. 3 

thysin'snot accidental. butatrade-."'/t-'j./'>r.'V/. iii. 1 

accidental judgements, casual s hiughters- Haml. v . 2 

ACCIDENTALLY— accidentally ai-e met. Co/ iJ.v. ] 

thus accidentally to encounter Coriolanus, iv. 3 

which accidentally, or by the way. . Luce's L. L. ly. 2 
ACCITE-and wliat accites your most-2 Hen. IV. u. 2 
we will accite, as I before remembered — v. 2 
ACCITED—bv the senate is accitcd.-ri/. Andron. i. 1 
ACCLA.MATlfJN— in acclamations .. Coriolanus, 'i. 9 
ACCO.M.MODATE— 

safer sense will jie'er accommodate his.. J ear, iv. 6 
ACCO.NLMODATED- 
asoldjerisbetter accommodated, than. .2 //. /r.iii.2 
accommodated! it comesof accominiKlo — iii. 2 
accommodated by the place, more . . CymlieUne, v. 3 



ACC 



ACCOMMODATED— accommodatcil; that is, when 
aiiiaii is, tti;t!iev say accommodated. .2 H.IV. iii.2 

ACC< 1 ,M MO OATK/N— 

all the acconimoilations that tbou..A/ea.//>r M. Iii. 1 
with such a<;coiiiiiiodatioii, and licsort . . Othello, i. 3 

ACCOMMODO— 
accommodated! itcoinesofaccommodo. 2 H. if'.iii.2 

ACCO.MPANIED— 
hut a so liow thou art accompanied..! Hen. IV. 11. 4 
and how accomimnieil? I do not know. 2 //. IV.i\. 1 
and how a<-coinpauied ? ean'st thou tell tluit?— iv. 4 
you shall find me well accompanied.. /(/(-//. /;/. iii..') 
archbishop of Canterliury accompanied. //. VI If. i v. ! 
Iiow aix-oinpanied? with old Menenius . Coriol. iii. 3 
ae-corapanied witli a iiarbarous Moor.. Titus. And. ii. 3 

ACCOjfPANY— 
fresh daysof love, accomr)any../ifK/. N.'sDream, y. I 

unless you will accompany me Taming of S. i. 2 

accompany us to the place Winter's T. iv. 1 

that which should accompany old age. Mache'h,v. 3 
grafted tf),a{x;oinpany the gieatnesB..! Hen. IV.ii'i. 2 
and I will merrily accompany you home. Coriol. iv. 3 
accompany your noble emperor ..Titus Andron. i. 2 
and sliall, or him we will accompany — 1. 2 

ACCOAil'ANYING- 
notone aiTOinpanyinghis declining. TinumofA.i. 1 

ACCO.Ml'LICE— 
and iiappincss to his accomplices !..! Henry VI. V. 2 

ACCO.Nil'J-ISH- 
tlian toaceomplish twenty golden. .3 Henry VI. iii. 2 



jirojccts to ajxximplish, iny test. . Corinlanus, y. f> 
1 list rter force accomplish as .. Titus Andron. ii. 1 



.Vou must r«.-r force accomp. 

ACC(JMPiJSllED— 
wise, remorseful, well a/-compli?hed Two n. of V. iv. 3 
most excellent a<*omplisbed \iu\y Twelfth Night, Vii. I 
shall think wearcaccoiiiplished. ilerch. of l'ei>. iii. 4 

she accomplished Mi's WeU that Hods Well, iv. 3 

by tliem accomidished . . Taming 0/ Hhrew, (Ind.) 1 
even so looked he, accomjilished with. . Rich. II. ii. I 
sliall Ijc accomplished without contradiction— iii. 3 
thief, ora tliat wajaccfjmplished courtier. Cymlj. i. S 
contains none so accomplished a courtier — i. ;> 
at this instant is full accomplished — v. 

ACCOJIPLI.SIIING- 

the armourers, accomplishing .... Hen. V. iv. (cho.) 

ACCOMPLISHMENT- . 

turning thea«;coinp)ishment Henry V. 1. (cho.) 

ACCORD- my heart aiwords thereto. Two U. of Ver. i . 3 
father's remembrance be at accord. /1» you Likeit, i. 1 
you to his love must accord or ... . — v. 4 

the ground of all accord . . Taming of S. iii. I (gamut) 

on mine own accord, i'll off Winter's Tale, ii. 3 

■»-ill attend on their accords. . Comedy of Errors, ii. 1 

to accord to fiurnish him with Henry V.'u.2 

with full accord to all our just — v. 2 

and diristian-like accord in their sweet — v. 2 
inclination accords not with the . .3 Henry VI. iii. 2 
and Jove's accord, nothing so full. Troilus -j- Cres. i. 3 
gentle and unforced accord of Hamlet sits. Ham. i. 2 

ACCORDANT— 

and if he found her accordant, he..Muc>i Ado, 1. 2 

ACCOiiDETII— heart accordethwith.2 Hen. VI. M\ ' 



ACCORDING— according to my birlh.Ju.e/fl'/iA'. iy. 3 
jlesk 
according to hfs worth 



according to ray shalTow-'simpIe skill. TwoG. of V.]. 2 



countryman, according to our — 111.2 

accoribng to your ladyship's imjwse.. — iv. 3 

according to our meaning, Merry Wives, i. 1 

and sent according to«)mmand...Jieu./or Mea. iv. 3 
and squar'st thy life according . . — v. I 

I spoke it but according tfj the trick — v. 1 
or tf) her death; according to our la.y,'...Mid.N.Dr.). 1 
man by man, according to the scrip — ..;. 2 
and BO every one according to his cue — iii- 1 
and according to my description ..Merch. of Ven. i. 2 
for the young gentleman, (according to fates— 11. 2 

when it is paid according to the — iv. 1 

to forswear; according as marriage. j1» you Likeii, v. 4 

according Xi> the &xjl s Ixjlt, sir — v. 4 

our returned fortime, according to the — .v. 4 
and weU, ac<»rding to the fashion.. Taming of S. ly. 3 
my poor bat>e according to thine oath. Wint. T. ui. 3 
buy out his life, according to the . . Com. of Err.i. 2 
every one according to the gift which.. Macbeth, 111. 1 
remains to do, according to our order — v. G 
according to the fair play of the world. King John,v. 2 

liast thou, according to thy oath Richardll. 1. 1 

and formally according to our law . . — .1. 3 
shall we divide OUT right, according to — m. I 
we will, according tfj yourstrength. .iHenrylV. y. :> 
and merit, acc<jrdin" to the weight . . Henry V.n. 2 

is not according to the disciplines — in- 2 

according to their firm proiwsed natures — y. 2 
madam, according as your ladyship.. liJe/iry^/. 11. 3 
(repea/frf)theretobc used according to.. 2 H./'/..;!. I 
all things well, according as I gave — — in. 2 
he matched according toliis state ..SHenry VI. 11. 2 
not according to tiie prayer of the jieople. Corio. 11. 1 
and hiss him, according as he nleased.Ju/. C<Fsar,\. 2 
according to the which thou shalt discourse — 111. I 
acwrding to his virtue let him us use — .y. 5 

must receive him according to the honour. C'ym. n. A 
I love your majesty according to my.. King Lear, 1. 1 

consent and fair according voice- Rom. ^ Jul.\. i 

acc/)rding to the phrase, or the addition. H'/m/er, 11. 1 
my lord. I will use them accijrdin" to their — 11. 2 

ACCORDINGLY— uiKjn him accordingly.. Cymt.i. 7 
mav minister to theiu accordingly.^Ue'i./or J/ea. 11. 3 
and heard more, procceil accordingly. i'/acA Ado, 111. 2 
knowledge, and accordingly valiant.. /!«'» WeU. 11. 4 
which trust accordingly, kind citizens.. /C. John, 11. 1 
for, aicordingly, vou tread uiwn iny..l Henry IV. 1. i 
I do, inv lord; and nie-an accordinglj'..! Hen. VI. 11. i 
fortune'him accordingly ! Amen . . Antony * C<eo. 1. 2 
behold and so proceedaccordingly — 111. J 

ACCOST— accost. Sir Andrew, aixiifi.. Twelfth N. 1. i 

good mistress a'wost, I desire — 1. 3 

good mistress Mory accost — 1. 3 

aemsU is, front ber, b<iard her — )■ 3 

is that the meaning of accoot? — i. 3 



ACC 



[4] 



ACCOSTED— shOHid then have iiccosteil. Twel.N. iii. 2 
ACCOUNT— I nccomit of licr lieauty. Tin G. ofV. ii. 1 
Btaiul move for iiiimlx-r than nccimnt ..M.fnr M. ii. i 
to make an mHMiint of hor life tii. . . . Much Ado, ii. 1 
Claudio !-liiill rundi r ini.' a dear nccomit — iv. 1 
■vve niav il<' it t^tiU with. nit a.i'uunt. . Liive's L. L. v. 2 
vouvarri.iinl, lini;:htiii virtnis ..!<Iei: of I'en. iii. 2 
tlu'ivia d.i anvMiiit iii\>rlf will paid — iv. I 

lire niLit iiic not v"ur sirvant friiiln'sT. i. 2 

tliih- siKWl liatii liiH'ii lioymul ai^ooimt.. — ii. 3 

tiun iiiv ai'CciniU I well may give (song) iv. 2 

tiiicli 1 aiv.iiiiit tliy lore Macbelh, 1. 7 

V lull noiiu ean I'li'll our jiower to account — v. 1 
this wliiih licaecountssocloarly won..A'. J»/in,iii. 1 

(> wluii the last account 'twixt — iv. 2 

H|ioii renviiiider of a dear, account ..Richard II. i. 1 

call him to so strict account 1 Urnry IV. iii. 2 

liv which iieeonnt, our hiisiiicss v.ilncd — iii. 2 

niid in aeeouut nothing' so strong — v. 1 

and so, I hear, he doth aiwiint me too — v. 1 
nnd summed the neeoimt otehaiiee..2 n,',<nj IV. i. I 
cN'iilicrs t.i this ureat account . . lleiin/ /'. i (chorus) 
iv'ad.aiidcii^tace.nmt, 1 1 moiistrous!.2ncH)-</F/.iv. 2 
In this arrcimt, then, Marsiret.. . .SHmri/ T/.iii. 1 

to aeemiiit this world hut lull — iii. 2 

hi^'h aeiMuid ..f'vou.lni- Ihev account.. /e/c/i.///. iii. 2 

ouriiatlalia trel'iles that aecoiint — V. .1 

wlu.se captain 1 iici'iuiiit mvself .... — V. 3 

■(. is the account of all that world. .Hp//)-7/ I'lll. iii. 2 
takes no account how thin-s ;_... from.. Timon of A. ii. 2 
do it llicii, that we mav account tliee — ii. 2 
I hroiinht in mv accounts laid — ii. 2 



lit til. 



hie 



you account a vice m him Coriotanus, i. 1 

'y.ni should account mc the more virtuous — ii. 3 

\is a c.iudition thev account gentle — ii. 3 

when he shall couu- to his account — iv. 7 

\v hcnc'er we cune to our account — iv. 7 

I acc.niiit ol'them as jewels ptu'chascd.. Titus.in. iii. 1 
with loii!,' use, account no sin ..Pvridi's, i. (Gowcr) 

he that .ilhevwisc accounts of me I'l-ridas, ii. 5 

who vet is no dearer in my account.. Km^' icnr, i. 1 
O il.ar acciMiut I m\ life Is niv ..Romeo fy Jul. i. ii 
a hcL/uarly account of ein|it\' hoxcs — V. 1 

hut scut t.i niv ncc.iuiit with all mv . . . . Hnmta, i. Ii 
th.iudi thcviumpnot una just account.. 0(/ie((o, i. 3 

ACCOtlNTANT— accountant loras.'.n-cat — ii. 1 
as itao|>c:irsacco\intaiitt.>thclaw..1/c„.fM- -Vm.ii.4 

Al't'(lliNT101>— areac.M\intrdii,i..rciti;-eiis.CV,;/o. i.l 
was vet ofmauv ac. ■tainted hiMiitifid. 7'icc////, A' 



: well i 



ited 1 



'it'nl ..Me,> 



Mc. 



..uiiteilin..L<)cc'sL.;>.ie. 1 
.In- i,,,l, >,„n,-tinieaivi.iiMhildanwrons..;U.rc(i.iv. 2 
11. it liie h. he;,.v...iiite.l\\'avwiek..l Ui-iini /7. ii. 1 
a... I was a.','..iintc.l a -....d act.a- UamM, iii. 2 

Al'(.'IUIi\'l"ST— a.Tount'stitshame..7Vi»H.o/S/i. iv. 3 

Ai :COUTEUE15-arehothaceoutored../l/cr.q/- V. iii.4 
opou the w.nil, acoutcred as 1 was. .Jul. Ccvsar, i. 2 

ACrt)!' riilCMKNT— 
all theac.Mntie.neiit, comi.l.ancnt.-V,-,-;';/ W!ves,iv. 2 
ii.)int-dc-\ icL- in \.un'a.'.- MiiVi'i.K ii(s,.,i,v ;/o« f.. iii. 2 
chaiii:c iherc ].o.'r a.'.'oiitrci.iciits. . J'wji/hV o/'S. iii. 2 
c\(eii,.r tonii, oulward accoutivineut; . . K. John, i. 1 

Ai.'CiiUlC — camp and profits will accrue. Hen. F. ii. 1 

AC:iU'.MUJ>AT!0— 
uu horror's lieail horrors accum ulate.. .. OWieWo, iii. 3 

A(.'('UjMlll.A'n.:i)— 
hath hciic.aunulated tohisown..HeH>-y VIII. iii. 2 

ACI'l'Ml'LATION— 
iinick acciiiuulationof reno\vn..jin(o«i/<5-Cteo. iii. 1 

Acci'iis:;))— 

t.. make I'cllowsliips accursed .. Mens, for Meas. iii. 2 
how acciirse.l, in lieiuff so blessed. Winter's Tale, ii. 1 
a. 1.1 lll.l^t a.-cmsed am i, to he hv oatii — iii. 3 

M.r,; ■i.i; (la.h.v a hi. 11.1 a.', le-e.l Macbeth, iii. Ii 

si 11..!, a\e, a ■.■i|.>.'l m. I'l,- .-.len.lar .. — iv. 1 

s:;ia I,, a.v.jr-, it a.;. I .h...- 1 'las; 'heme. . — iv. 3 

a.'.aiiv,.-! he that Lamiieihat tcUs .... — V. 7 

shall think themselves accursed Ucnrtj V. iv. 3 

a.-cmsed town! ai-i'urscd fatal hand.l llennj VI. i. 4 

passions, fear is most acciirse.l — v. 2 

a.Tiiiscd he lie that seeks to make ..3 llennj VI. i. 1 

thel.rat..flliisa.,viirseddulie — i. 3 

ami till I r....t .ml their a.'imrscd line — i. 3 

wast the caii?c, ami most ai'curscd ertcct..J(. ///. i.2 
a.'ciu-.c.l ami uii.|Ui.a wran-liiiL' da^s — ii. 4 
nil, the hed ofdealh — iv. 1 
•cnrse.l, tiir makiii!,' — iv. 1 
iv. 4 



hetlmii. .inoth I, a 
stvaneliiiL' f ' 
the im.-t a- 
hless.-.l, I., I 



1 tl 



hie 



■ a.-t 



chat a.- 



It still ..Timon of .i. 

I — iv.2 

I... — iv. 3 

I i.m wherel ..Ci/mh. v. 5 

. I the....7V(Hs"-J;i(Mi.4 

■'..■ thee.. — iii. 1 

I fiend — iv. 2 



l.le 



etch, f.. 



I'ciuse.l deed — v. 3 
a. cnrse.l time! unt'.irtunatc "Id man../fom. 4 J. iv. ;> 
a. -curse. I, \udiap|iv, wretched, hateful day — iv. 5 
ACC LI ItST— 1 am accurst to roh in that.. rr/. IF. ii. 2 

tlioughts of men accurst! past 2 llcunj II'. i.3 

in second husband let mc be accurst . . Uamtet. iii. 2 

ACCUSATION— current for an accusation. 1 H./r. i.3 
willsovmu-a.-uii aliiai.oerwei',dl?..yi/C(/./o/-jVra.ii.4 
he willa...i.U Mira.-.llali.. 1, .:.... — iii. 1 

he yon e..iio;...l iu ii..' a '.-i.-ation Much Ado,\\. 2 

tluiu,;;h he th...e:!it his ai-cusation true iv. I 

then with public aei-iisati. Ill uncovered — iv. 1 
mine and my mastc.-'s false accusation — v. 1 
)iroduce more accusati.>n than your.. Winter's T. ii. 3 
wliicli coiit'-a.li.-ts mi- ac.-n--alion: and — iii. 2 
shall iiialu-f.l-.-a.-.-ii-:ili..ii l.lush .. — iii. 2 
the.-c aci-:.uli,.ii-, anil .h;' r erieVous..nu-;i. II. iv. 1 
lum r.iar th . a. , ii a; i- .ii, r..rth ..1 Henry VI. iii. 1 
an lionest uiau Tur a villain's accusation.. 2 Ii. r/.i.3 
to liis accusations, he pleaded stLll..i/f»fy /'///. ii. 1 
come not by the way of accusation — iii. 1 

1 need not be barren of accusations . . Coriolamis, \. 1 
the accusations which they have often — iii. 1 



ACCUSATION— prepared with accusations. Cor. iii 
nowrcceivedhisaccusations.....4;i(o/ii/.^ Cleo. iii 

ACCUSATIVE— 
wliat is your accusative case? Merry Wives, iv 

ACCUSATIVO— Accusativo, liinc. — ,iv 

aceusativo, liing, hang, hog — i.v 

ACCUSE — but these that accuse him — ii 

the head of Aupelo accuse him . . Mca.for Mca. i\- 

but to accuse limi BO, that is — iv, 

accuseshim of fornication, in self-same 
wliicli here you come to accuse. . 

to accuse tins worthy man 

tliey know that do accuse me Much Ado, iv. 

in the prince's name accuse these men — 

is to accuse yovu- mothers All's Well, i 

cannot praise us, as little accuse us.. Winter's T.i 
in this whieli you accuse her " 



•ords 1 
lie';; thy iiardon i 



who can 
by false r 
despair, 1 
the cvi.le 
to,iustie(. 
no'man r 
dare iii-.-i 
let them 
llim J a.-. 
ace 



win 



of which i . 
thcla.-k.>r. 
thoudi.lsti 
how dare y 
accuse s.am 
I accuse tlu 
■\vill quieki 



use my zeal.. Richard II. i 
use thee — v 
it lllenry VI. iii. 1 

(-.-use \ ..rk I'm- a traitor. 2 Hen. VI. i. 3 
l.ith aei-nse his master — ,i. 3 
e me'.^ wherein am I.. — iii. 1 

■d.ith level at — iii. 1 

il.l ac-ense m.vself Ridiard III.\.i 

hat doth accuse me? . . — i. 4 

t.i aeeuscit Henry VIII. ii. 4 

.-.-usevou — V. 2 

II liiililly, more than.. — _v. 2 
.- me hv invention . . Coriolujitts, iii. 2 

Ihe .-itv ports by — v. !i 

' I. Iters he had ..Antony ^ Cleo. iii. :i 
a.-.-iiseV Ca-sar.. — iii.fi 

iie.-nse m\ self so sorclv — i\-. ti 

ii-it,v, (to'm-cuso myself) . .Ci/mb. ii. '6 



•hi 
;:h.ists 



111 i;. 



ontiii 
: the thunilercr — 
rsw-ear ..TiiiisAiii 
; lit into.. iV 



cles, iv. 3 



, and accuse thee 
I (^cnitd accuse me of such things Hamlet, iii. 1 

ACCUSED— 
so vidgarly and personally accused. Men. for Mea. v. 1 
niidit have been accused in fornication — ii. 1 
niiist wr.iiiijfnlly accuse your substitute — v. 1 
what man is he' \-ou are I'lei-used of?. . Much Ado, iv. 1 
uiioii the instant that she was aeeused — iv. 1 
and wish he h d not so accused her . . — iv. 1 
Ilei-o was iu this manner accused.... — iv.2 
mv lailv Iler.i has been falsely accused — v. 2 

aiid Cla'udio who aecnsed her — v. 4 

for tin- life let i ustiee be accused.. Merc/i. of Ven. iv. 1 
w-hei-ef.ire hastth.m aei-iised him ....All's Well, v. 3 
lieeii puhlielv ai-euse.l.s.i shall she. fFmto-'s 7'«tejii.3 
thou art here a.-euseil (//irf'c'menO — iii. 2 

Polixeues t,with whom I am accused) I do — iii. 2 
the accuser and the accused, freely ..Richard II. i. 1 

here is a man accused of treason 2 Henry VI. i. 3 

I am falsely accused by the villain — i.3 

-n-ho being accused a crafty murderer — iii. I 

if she be accused on true report Richard III. i. 3 

than some, that have accused them — iii. 2 
all these accused him strongly .... llenr;/ VIII. ii. 1 
pcradventure thou wert accused by. Timon of A. ix. 3 

malicious, or be accused of folly Coriotanus, i. 1 

against tlie belly; thus accused it .. — i. 1 

ACCUSER— 
the wateh that are their accusers . . Much .-ido. iv. 2 
the accuser, and the accused, freely . . Richard II. i. 1 

my accuser is my 'prentice; and 2 Henry VI. i. 3 

slauilevs of her false accusers Richard 111. i. 3 

rii-her than mv base a.-i-users nriiry fill. ii. 1 

bi-im: toe'ethet- vmirself and vouraeeusers — v. 1 
rny aeel'isei-s he what they will .... — v. 2 

not rash like his accusers, and tlius . . Corifil'inas, i. 1 

what monster's l\er accuser? Cyml>i'li,ii; iii. ;; 

to seal the accuser's lips I.car, iv. (i 

ACCUSETH— but it accuscthhira ..Richard 111. i. 4 

ACCUSING— 

mv most royal liege, accusing it 2 Henry IV. iv. 4 

ai-'cnsinsr the lady Hero wrongfully.. il/wc/i Ado, iv. 2 

AC'ClISTtlMED— 

is an aeeustome.I acti.in witliher Macbeth, y. 1 

breath of her a.-eust.imed crossness ..Much Ado,i\. 3 
the aeenstoiued sight <if deatli . . As you Like it, iii. .") 
of your accustomed diligence to me. . 1 Hen. VI. v. 3 
soon recover his aeeustomed health. Richard III. i. 3 
I hold an old accustomed feast Romeo <§- Jul. i. 2 

ACE— but an ace for him: for he is but one. I.es9 

than an ace Midsummer Night's Dream, v. 1 

the most coldest tliat ever turned up ace.. Ci/mf). ii. 3 

ACHE— fill all thy bones with aclies Tempest, i. 2 

no further, sir; my old bones ache — HJ- 3 

ache, [lemu-e, and iniiiris.innicnt. Mca. for Men. iii. 1 

charm a.-be'\vit!i air, and a;;ouv Much Ado.x. 1 

let him kn.i.k till it ache. . . . Comedy «f Errors, iii. 1 

wdicn ■\-oin- hea.l ili.l hut aclie King John, iv. 1 

never ha.l tl..- a. -he iu his shovdders. .2 Hen. IV. v. 1 
close u]i, or I'll makeyour head ache.. Hen. VIII. v. 3 
and sueh an a-.-lii- iu iny bones. . Troilus ^- Cress, v. 3 
aches contract and starve yoiur supple. Timon ofA.'y. 1 

mv wounds ache at you — iii..') 

their aclies, losses, their pangs of love — v. 2 

and my soul aciies, to know Coriotanus, iii. 1 

fie, how m,v bones a. -he! -.s hat .. Romeo r!y Juliet, u. b 
lord, liowniv lu-.i't a.-h.'^! what a head — ■ ii. ."i 

mine ache t.'i tl.i.ik ...it Hamlet, v. 1 

for let our linu'er a. -he, anil it indues . . Olhello, iii. 4 
smell'st so sweet, that the sense aches at the — iv. 2 

ACHERON— 

and at the pit of Acheron meet me Macbelh, iii. 5 

fog, as black ns Acheron ..Mid. Night's Dream, iii. 2 
pull her out i.f ,V.-lieron by the heels. .TOn,* An.ix. 3 

ACHIE\'l-;— -.ime a.-hicve greatness.. ricc/Wi N. iii. 4 

some achieve er. atiiess, and — (letter) ii. 5 

some aeliie\e LO-eatness, and some . . — v. 1 

honesty, and achieves her goorlncss . . All's Well. i. 1 
if I achieve not this young modest. , , Taming of S. i. 1 
bend thoughts and wits to achie\'e her — i. 1 

a slave to achieve that maid whose.. — i. 1 



ACK 



ACHIE'VE— thisfeat, acliicvc the elder.. 7'«m.o/S.i. 2 
bid them achieve me, and then sell . . Henry V. iv. 3 
and to achieve the silver livery of. .2 Henry VI. y. 2 
and does achieve as soon as draw . . Coriotanus, iv. 7 
you cannot, as you would, achieve . . Titus And. ii. 1 
to acliicvc her whom I love. To achieve her! — ii. 1 

ACIIlEAn.:D— 
experieme is by industry achieved. 7'mio Gen. of V.i. 3 



that w-l 
all plea 
they si. 
heaps 1 
best ga 
in this 
which 1 



'f.irtii 
iallv t.ilil 
rtainlife 



i-aehi. 



ed her mistress. .A/cr. of Fen. iii. 2 
eved:teU me.... 7'aminffo/S. i. I 
ve.lliv others.. ..King Jolm,iv. 2 
-st..rsa.liicved ....Rich. II. W. 1 



— iv. I 



liel.l 
ael 



a\e 11.1 s..oner a.-hieved..l Henry IV. i. 2 
1 iige a.-hieved gold ... .2 Henry IF. iv. 4 

he achieved (clioi-us) Henry F. v. 2 

a.-lrie\-ed, and city Coriotanus, i. 9 

1 by the minute.. ,.4n(. ffCleo. iii. 



how acliieved yon these endowments ..Pericles, v. 1 
he hath achieved a maid that paragons. . Otiicllo, ii. 1 

ACHIEVEMENT— 
the soil of tlie achievement goes . .2 Henry IV. iv. 4 
fen- achievement, otfer us his ransom.. Henri/ T. iii. 5 
achievement iscommand; ungained. . Trail. SfCr. i. 2 
acliieveinents, plots, orders, preventions — i. 3 

how m.y achievements mock me 1 — iv.2 

takes fi-oni our achievements, though . . Hamlet, i. 4 

ACHIEVER— 
when the acliiever brings home full. . Much Ado, i. 1 

ACllILId-:S— like to Achilles' spear.. 2 Hen. FI. v. 1 
llidc thv hea.l .Vehilles; \Ki-ii. .Love'sLabourLosI, v. 2 
the gi-eiit Achilles, wh.nii opinion. . Trail. ^Cres. i. 3 
Achilles; abetter man than Troilus. 

Achilles? — i.2 

the large Achilles, on his pressed bed — i.3 

yet good Acliillcs still cries — i.3 

as prouil a place as broad Acliilles . . — i.3 

Achilles' horse makes many Thetis' sons — i.3 

stron.ger than Achilles' arm — i.3 

Achilles shall have word of this — i.3 

blown up in rank Achilles — i.3 

relates iu purpose only to Achilles. . — i.3 

but that Achilles, were his brain — i.3 

those honours oflf if not Achilles? .. — i.3 

'tis meet, Achilles meet not Hector — i.3 

that ever Hector and Achilles meet — i. 3 

what glory our Acliilles shares .... — i.3 

plucks down Acliilles' plumes — i.3 

andrailest every hour on Achilles,. — ii. 1 

this lord, Achilles, Ajax, who wears — ii. 1 

yes, good sooth; to, Achilles! to, A.iax! — ii. 1 
wdien Achilles' bracli bids me, shall I — ii. 1 

then there's Achilles, a rare engineer — ii. 3 

what, ho! my lord Achilles! — ii. 3 

Where's Achilles? What, art thou devout?— ii. 3 
then, tell me, Patrocles what's Achilles? — ii. 3 
eoinmands Achilles; Achilles is my lord — ii. 3 

Achilles is a fool ; Thersites is a — ii . 3 

to command Achilles; Achilles is afool — ii. 3 
vdiere is Achilles? Within his tent — ii. 3 

Achilles hath inveigled his fool . .. — ii. 3 

that has hisai'gument; Achilles . . — ii. 3 

no Achilles with him. The elephant — ii. 3 
Achilles bids ine say. he is much .. — ii. 3 

Achilles will nut t-i the field to morrow — ii. 3 
kiiigd.imed Achilles iu commotion rages — ii. 3 

when tliey go from Achilles — ii. 3 

titled as Adullcs is, by going to Achilles — ii. 3 
sa.v in thunder, Achilles goto him.. — ii. 3 

must prepare to figlit without Achilles — ii. 3 
he is not emulous, .as Achilles is.... — ii. 3 

tlie hart Achilles keeps thicket .... — ii'. 3 

let Achilles sleep; light boats — ii. 3 

Achilles stands i' the entrance — iii. 3 

what savs Achilles? would he aii.sht — iii. 3 

these fellows? know they not -Achilles? — iii. 3 
their smiles before them to j\.cliitlcs — iii. 3 

'tis known, Achilles, that vou are . . — iii. 3 

lietter would it fit Achilles much — iii. 3 

Hector's sister diil .Vi-liillcs win .... — iii. 3 

to tliiscH'eet, Aehilles. havelmovcdj-ou — iii. 3 
I come fr.iiu tlie w.irthv Acliilles .. — iii. 3 

though the meat hulk Achilles be . . — iv. 4 

Achilles bids vou welcome — iv. 5 

Achilles, sir, Avhat is TOur name? If not 

Achilles ui.tliiiiLT. "Therefore Achilles — iv. .5 
but for Achilles, mv .'wii searching eyes — iv. 5 
is this Achilles? lam Achilles .... — iv. .^i 

and you, Achilles, let Ihese threats alone — iv. .') 
art tliou.gbt to be Achilles' male \'ai-lct — V. 1 

prouder than the cur Acliilles — v. 4 

bear I'atroclus' body to Achilles — v. ."i 

great Aeliillcs is arming, weeping .. — v. .5 

what it is 1.1 meet Achilles angry .. — v. .'i 

Achilles hath the mighty Hector slain — v. 9 
Achilles:Aehilles!ltector'sslain!Achilles! — v. in 
to prav Achilles see us at our tent.. — v. 10 

ACHIN'G— medicine foriiiy aching bones! — v. 11 
not for mc, yet for your aching bones — v. 1 1 

the poultice for my acliing bones?.. iJom. f,- Jul. ii. 5 

ACITITOPl IE I.— a' whoreson Acliitophell.2H. IV.i.'i 

ACKN^)^VLED(;E- 

acknow ledge then the king King- John, ii. 1 

this thing of darkness I acknowledge .. reni/icsi, y. I 
if the encounter acknowlcd.ge itsclf..l/OT../"or M. iii. 1 
meant to acknowledge it this niglit ..Much .4do. i. 2 
■will acknowdedge .you and ,lessica...Vcr. of Ven. iii. 4 
spu-it, that wiU not acknowledge it . . All's Well, ii. 3 
due, time claims, he does acknowledge — ii. 4 
wdiich lionoiu- does ackuow K-ilge. . Winter's Tale, i. 2 
of fault, I must not at all acknowledge — iii. 2 
thon sham'st to ackiiowle.lge nie . . Com. of Err. v. 1 
kingdoms that acknowdede'c Christ . .1 H. IV. iii. 2 
of my gi'catness to acknowledge it.. 2 Henry IV. ii. 2 

if ever thou darest acknowdedge it Htni-y V. W. 1 

five best senses acknowledge tnee Timon of A. i. 2 

that do acknowledge Caisai- Antony S,- Cleo. iii. 1 1 

I have so often blushed to acknowdedge . . Lear , i. I 
nature is ashamed almost to acknowledge — i. ! 
by my soul, I'll ne'er acknowdedge . . Rom. ^- Jul. iii. 5 



ACK 



ACICNOWLRDfi ED— 

too base to lie uckiiowlcdgcd Winter's Tnle, iv. 1 

reserved, nor whnt acknowledged . . Ant. <5- CIco. v. 3 
ami the whnrescni must be ncknowledyed. . Lear, i. 2 
tobe upkiKiwK'dized, madam, is o'erpaid .. — iv.7 

AC K N () W 1 , E yx i !■: M ICNT— 
with this acknowledgement, that God.. Hen. V. iv. 8 

ACKNOWN— 
\_CoUier. KnightJ—hc not acknoNvn on't..Ortd(n, ill. 3 

A-COLD—( rcuea'ed) array; Tom's a-cold. . Lear, iii. 4 
Tom's a-eoldi I eaimot daub it further.. — iv.7 

ACONITU.M— as neonitum, or rash.. 2 Hen.lF.iv.i 

ACOl! N— wiierein the acorn cradled Tempi'st, i. 2 

creej) into acorn cups, and hide.. Jl/(d. A'. Dream, ij. 1 

yon bead, \'Oii acoi'u — iii. 2 

under a tr^e, like a .In.ppe.l ac..™....ls;/"" i-*", iii. 2 

ACQUAIXT-misorv ucinainis a man. . 7','my».»7, ii. 2 
acquaint licr witli tlic .la;iL'ci- i<f . . Mea.far Mea. i. 3 
I will ae,|uaint inv ila iiuliter witluil. . jVuc/i Ado, i. 2 
they did ent-.ent nie t < acniaint lier of it — iii. 1 
imri I came to aei{iuiiiU \ ou with .. As you Like it, i. 1 
leanie hitlier til ac luaiut vini witlial — i. 1 

speedily toae^uaint \-.ai witlial All's Well.i. 3 

tomv I'lnnsc, ar>iuaiiit niv moliier with — ii. 3 
niav'l hebnldtoacqiiain; lil>,-race .. — iii. G 
I'll presently aeiiuaiul tlie ^l\uvn... .Winter's T.ll. 2 
not acaiiaint niv fatlicr ol' this business — iv. 3 
acquaint the kiii" withal, I would do't — iv. 3 

acquaint you with the jiert'ect spy Macbeth, lii. 1 

broke out to acquaint ycni with King Joli'i,_v. 6 

I must acquaint you that I have . .2 Henry IV. iv. 1 
I will acquaint liis Majesty of tliose.2J/c/iar(/ lll.i. 3 

but I'll acquaint oiu- duteous — iii. 5 

acquaint the princess with the — — iv. 4 

■win we acquaint with all that v/e. Titus Andro. ii. 1 

find means, and aeqiiaint ytni witlial Lear, i. 2 

acquaint my daugliter no further — _ i. 5 

acquaint her here of my son Paris linm. %Jul. iii. 4 

consent we shall a quaint liim with it . . Hamlet, i. 1 

ACQUAINTANCE— 
your eldest acquaintance cannot be — Tempest, v. 1 
decrease it upon better acquaintance.. 'Vfej-ry Wives,'i. 1 
that altogetlicr's acquaintance with.. — i. 2 

I desire more acquaintance of you.. — ii. 2 

I am blest in .your acquaintance — ii. 2 

hold acquaintance with the waves Tweim N.i.2 

mistress Accost, I desire better acquaintance — _i. 3 

I will wash off gross acqnai ntance — ii. 5 

to face me out of his acquaintance — v. 1 

heracquaintancegrewwith this lewd. ilfuc/i Ado,_v, 1 
desire you of more acquaintance. i)/(rf. N. Dream, iii. 1 
shall desire you of more acqiuiintanee — iii. 1 
I desire you more acquaintance, good — iii. 1 

my best-esteemed acquaintance lilerch.ofl'.u. 2 

have acquaintance with mine own. . .4s i/ou Like, i. 3 
that on so little acquaintance you should — v. 2 

■ small acquaintance, my sudden wooing.. — v. 2 
a desu-e to hold my acquaintance — All's Well, ii. 3 
talk logic with acquaintance that. . Taming nfS. i. 1 
'scape the true acquaintance of mine ear. K. John, v. 6 

against acquaintance, kindred 1 Henry IF. i. 1 

what old acquaintance! coidd not all this — v. 4 
many of mine old acquaintance are dead.2 H. / F. iii . 2 

let our old acquaintance be renewed — iii. 2 

must, perforce, be their acquaintance. .Hen. Fin. i. 2 
grow from the king's acquaintance by; this — iii. 1 
time, acquaintance, custom, and. . Trail. Sr Cres. iii. 3 

I m'ged our old acquaintance Coriolanus, v. I 

how creeps acquaintance? Hisfather. . Cymbcline, i. 5 

faith, my acquaintance lies little Pericles, iv. 6 

not grieve lending me this acquaintance . . Lear, iv. 3 
what sorrow craves acquaintance.. Borneo (5" Jul. iii. 3 

our old acquaintance of this isle? Olliella, ii. 1 

[Collier. Knight.'] sudden respect and acquaintance 

ACQUAINTED- — iv. 2 

having been acquainted ■svith.. Two Gen.ofVer. iv. 4 

and be acquainted with you Merry Wives, ii. 2 

like one that I am not acquainted withal — ii. 1 
acquainted each other how they love me — ii. 2 
to make myself acquainted with you.. — ii. 2 
youwovdddesires to be acquainted withal — iii. 1 

I have acquainted you with the dear — iv. 6 

I would not have yon acquainted . . Mea. for Mea. ii. 1 
I pray you, be acquainted with this maid — iv. 1 

I am as well acquainted liere — iv. 3 

I have acquainted you withal .... Love's L. Lost, v. 3 
have acquainted me witli their .... Mer. of Fen. i. 2 

I acquainted liim with the cause —(letter) iv. 1 

are you acquainted with the difference — iv. 1 
have you not been acquainted . . As you Like it, iii. 2 
let me be better acquainted with thee — iv. 1 

art not acquainted with him ill's Well, iv. 1 

nothing acquainted with these businesses — iii. 7 
are well ac(iiiainted with yourself . . — v. 3 

you must kiss, and be ac([uainted.. Taming o/S. iv. 1 
made me acquainted with a weighty — iv. 4 

what nci-d she l)e acquainted?.. Comedy of Errors, iii. 2 
helike, his wife, acquainted with his — iv. 3 

face of right, acquainted me with interest.. /o/in, v. 2 
I am well acquainted witli your . .2 Henry IF. ii. 1 
■well, I will be acquainted with him.. — iii. 2 
as things acquainted and familiar to us — v. 2 
as one being best acquainted with her. ./?'c/i./// iv. 4 
Queen sliall be acquainted forthwith. . H. Fill. ii. 2 
to be acquainted ■with this stranger . . — v. 1 

we are too well acquainted ■with . . Troilns fy Cr. ii. 3 
doors that were ne er acquainted . . Timon of A. iii. 3 
my lord, make me acquainted witli. . Jul. Ctesar, ii. 1 
acquainted my grieved ear withal. . Ant. ^ Cleo. iii. 6 
I pray you, be better acquainted .... Cymbeline, i. !> 
my father shall be made acquainted. . — i. 7 

I will make them acquainted with Pericles, iv. 6 

think he had been acquainted with her.. 0(/ic///), iii. 3 

ACQUIRE— 'tissweetat first toacquirc.H. Fill. ii. 3 

by our deed acquire too hiijh Ant. ^ Cleo. iii. 1 

acquire uo honour deraurnng upon me — iv. 13 

must acquire and beget a temperance .. Wamto, iii. 2 

AOQUIHED— here acq uired for him . . All's Well, iv. 3 

60 Stale his palm, nobly acquired . . Trail. ^ Cres. ii. 3 

ACQUISITION— thine own acquisition. Tempest, iv. 1 



[_5J 

ACQUIT— T will acquit von .... Tuetflh Kiglit, iii. 4 
lam Boa«iuit of this tindor-bo.-c .. Mirryll'ires, i. 3 
some broken lim I., shall acquit him ...As i/on Like, i. 1 
caniint entreat \-oii to iici|H!t me. .2 Henry If. (eiiil.) 
(io.l ae,|nii thciii c.i'llicir |iractices ....Henn/F. ii. 'J 
he m;n- ar,|iiit him ..r suspicimi ..2 Henri/ VL iii. i> 
bv cinamislance, bnl, t.i acquit my.self. .-/(«•/..;//. i. 2 
Kiehniond, well hast thou acquit thee — v. 4 

ACQUITTANCE— the acquittance follows ..Ci/m.y. 4 
3\1U can produce acciuittauces, for. . Lore's L, L.u. 1 

enforcement shall acquittance me llich. III. iii. 7 

must your conscience my aoqiuttancc seal. //a/«. iv. 7 
of sudden respect and acquittance \_Collier. 

Knight — acquaintance] Othello, iv. 2 

ACQUITTED— this day acquitted. .A/er. of Fen. iv. i 
no more tlian I am well acquitted of — .v. 1 

acquitted by a true substantial form ..2 Hen. IF.'vf. 1 

ACRE — for an acre of barren ground .... Tempest, i. 1 

dost crown my bosky acres — iv. 1 

between the acres of the rye...^s you Like (sang), v. 3 

ere with spiu- we beat an acre Winter's Tale, i. 2 

over whose acres walked those blessed..! Hen. IF. i. 1 

search every acre in the high grown Lear, iv. 4 

let them tlirow millions of acres ou us. . Hamlet, v. 1 

ACROSS — has broke my head across . . Twelfth N. v. 1 

this last was broke across Much Ado, v. 1 

good faith, across: but, ray good All's Well, ii. 1 

her flight across thy father's ground. . Winter's T. iy. 3 
or I wiU break thy pate across. . Corn, of Errors, ii. 1 
sighing, with your arms across Julius Ccrsar, ii. 1 

ACT — destined "to perform an act Tempest, ii. 1 

too delicate to act her earthly and — i. 2 

was a fm-therer in the act — _y. 1 

I will consent to act any villanj'...Afe)T!/ Wives,ii. 1 

if I do not act it, hiss nie — iii. 3 

we do not act, that often jest — iv. 2 

become thee well to act my woes. . Tu-e'fth Night, i. 4 

fairly note this act of mine — iv. 3 

he finished, indeed, his mortal act — y. 1 

lives not to act another Measure for Measure, ii. 2 

guts the drowsy and neglected act freslily — i. 3 
ath picked out an act — i.'j 

condemned upon the act of fornication — v. 1 

his act did not o'ertake his — v. 1 

these woolly breeders in the act..ilfer. of Fenice,\.3 

to tlie last hour of act — iv. 1 

thyself slialt see the act — _ iv. 1 

his acts being seven ages As you Like it, ii . 7 

and wore us out of act. . All's Well tliat Ends U'ell,i. 2 
of heaven we count the act of inen — ij. 1 

from our acts we them derive _ — ii. 3 

my reputation now in any staining act — jji* ■^ 
lawful meaning in a lawful act — iii. 7 

be a great deal of his act — iv. 3 

for, in an act of this importance. . V/inter's Tale, ii. 1 

or in act, or will, that way — iii. 2 

that all your acts are queens — iv. 3 

the dignity of this act was worth — y. 2 

to the swelling act of tlie imperial Macbeth, i. 3 

in thine own act and valour — _i. 7 

as troubled with man's act — ii. 4 

guide his valom- to act in safety — iii. 1 

to crown my thoughts with acts — iy. 1 

scenes and acts of death : your royal . . King John, ii. 2 

the better act of purposes mistook — iii. 1 

my death were adjunct to my act — ii.V ^ 

this act, so evilly born — iii. 4 

tills act is an ancient — • iv. 2 

tliy rude hand to act the deed — iv. 2 

to this most cruel act, do but despair . . — iv. 3 
if I in act, consent, or sin of thought. . — iv. 3 

be great in act, as you have — v. 1 

future ages groan for this foul act. . Richard II. iv. I 
my acts, decrees, and statutes, I deny — iv. 1 
still unfold the acts commenced..2Hei(r!/Zr. (indue.) 
contention in a lingering act.... — _i. 1 

move to do brave acts — ii. 3 

rebellion, and such acts as yours — iv. 2 

and sets it in act and use — iv. 3 

princes to act, and monarchs . . Henry F. i. (chorus) 
teach the act of order to a peopled kingdom.. i. 2 

speak freely of our acts — i.2 

and the act, for which we have in head — ii. 2 

for his acts so much applauded 1 Henry FI. ii. 2 

thy acts in Ireland, in bringing ... .2 Henry FI.\. 1 

would unfold his father's acts — iii. 2 

the same to act controlling laws . . — v. 1 

him from any further act — v. 3 

before I would have gran ted to that act ..3 H. Fl.i. 1 

nntil that act of parliament be — _i. 1 

by new act of parliament — ii. 2 

of death hath Roscins now to act? — v. 6 

to make an act of tragic violence . . Richard III. ii. 2 
the tyrannous bloody act is done . . — iv. 3 

is cried up for om- best act Henry Fill. i. 2 

tlie part my father meant to act — _.i. 2 

does pay the act of it — iii. 2 

to sleep an act or two — (epil.) 

he acts thy greatness in Troilus and Cressida, i. 3 

and esteem no act but that of. . — i. 3 

being mutual act of all our . . — i. 3 

the justness of each act such . . — ii. 2 

and the act a slave to limit. ... — }!!• ^ 

of lions, and the act of hares . . — jj^' " 

an act that very chance — iii. 3 

is ever the duller for his act . . Timon of Alliens, "V. 1 

any wholesome act established Coriolanus, i. 1 

brought to bodily act ere Rome .... — i. 2 

hath overta'en mine act — i. 9 

when he might act the woman — ii. 2 

the book of liis good acts — v. 2 

their servants to an act of rage ..Julius Cn'sar, ii. 1 

and this our present act, you see — iii. 1 

commits some loving act upon lier ..Ant. ^- Cleo.i. 2 

never did urge me in his act — ii. 2 

our conditions so differing in their acts — ii. 2 

further this act of grace — ii. 2 

hath so lietrayed thine act — ii. 7 

mav make to'o great an act — iii. 1 

to this great fairy I commend thy acts — iv. S 



ACT 



— i.3 



r. 2 



— V. 2 



ACT— his honour in the acts it did ..Ant.f,- Cleo.v. 

riiuse himself to praise niv uolilc act — v. 

to see iic'-funiied the dreaded act .... — V. 

and apply alla^'\anents to their act ... Cymbeline, i. 

than that horrid act of the — ii. 

art thou a feodary for this act — iii. 

as record of fairact; nay — iii. 

in posture that acts my words — iii. 

thou, Pisauio, must act tiir me — (letter) iii. 

it is no actof of comniou [lassage — iii. 

in act as many, (for three pert'orniers.. — v. 

mak'st thou liie a dullard in thisact .. — v. 

actsof hlack nielli, ali.iminable deeds. TOm.! And.v. 

to view iiKai's acts, why cloud Pericles, i. 

few love to liear tlie siiis they love to act — i. 

can make his will his act — i. 

and smiling extremity out of act — v. 

of a queazy question, which I must act . . Lear, ii. 

this act persuades me, that this — ii. 

and did the act of darkness with her — iii. 

to quit this horrid act — iii. 

opposed against the act — iv. 

smile the heavens upon thisholy act.. Kom. <5- Jul. ii. 

thy wild acts denote the unreasonable — iii. 

my dismal scene I needs must act alone — iv. 

alinost to jelly with the act of fear Hamlet, i. 

in his particular IKnigtit — peculiar sect and 
force] act and [ilace 

any unproportioued thought his act. . . . 

howsoever thou pursu'st tliis act 

or time to act them in; what should . . 

when thou see'st that act a-foot 

or about some act that has no relish . . 

an act, that blurs the grace and blush. . 

thought-sick at the act. All me, what act 

to wdiat it would, acts little of his will . . 

it argues an act; and an act hath three . . 

it is to act, to do, and to perform 

hut mutes or audience to this act 

carnal, bloody, and unnatural acts 

the native act and figure of my heart — Othello, i 

by what you see them act — i 

blood is made dull with the act of sport .. — ii 

though I am bound to every act of duty . . — iii 

witli"alittleact upon theblood — iii 

to do the act that might the addition earn 

'tis a strange truth, Omonstrous act! 

I know, this act shows horrible and grim 

the act of shame a thousand times committed — v. 

thisheavy act with hea^vy heart relate .. — v. 
ACTiEOI^ — like sir Acta;on he Merry Wives, ii. 

for a wilful and secure Actaeon — iii. 

with horns, as was Aetason's. . Titus Andrnnicus, ii. 
ACTED— for by such was it acted. . Winter's Tide, v. 

I so lively acted with my tears. . Tn-o Gen . niTer. i v. 

which miist be acted, ere they may \K..M,n-hetti, iii. 

shall this our lofty scene be acted over../.rfc.mr, iii. 

world see his nobleness well acted.. . . Ant. ,%■ Clen. v. 

true love acted, simple modesty ....Bom. ^ Jut. iii. 

but it was never acted ; or, if it was Hamlet, ii. 

ACTING— acting this in an obedient.. TieeZ/i:/! A^. v. 

or that the resolute acting of j'oiu-.jVea./orJWea. ii. 

several crime, acting it many ways . . Macbeth, i v. 

but as a scene acting that 8r"unieut. .2 Hen. IF. i v. 

it is a part that I shall blush in acting . . Corinl. ii. 

laetween the acting of a dreadful thing.../. C.vsnr, i i . 

abate thy valour in the acting it . . Rom. •%■ Jul. i". 

important acting of your dread command. H.im.iii. 
ACTION— the rarer action is in ■virtue . . Tempest, v. 

what dangerous action stood . . Two Gen. ofFer. v. 

I can construe the action of her Merry ll'ives, i . 

counterfeiting the action of an — ly. 

thv limbs, actions, and spirit Twelfth NiglU, i. 

I'll have an action of battery — iv. 

he, upon some action, is now — v. 

more reasons for this action ..Measure for Meas. i. 

in hand, and hope of action — i. 

I'll have mine action of battery — ii. 

have your action of slander too — ii. 

in action all of precept, he did show — iv. 

his actions show much like to madness — ly. 

gentlemen have you lost in this action?. Much .Ida, '\. 

you went onward on this ended action — i. 

and we wiU do it in action . . Mid. N.'s Dream, iii. 

donotfret yourself too much in the action — iv. 

and long-during action, tires the . . Love's L. L. iv. 

action, and accent, did they teach . . ~ 7.- 

how many actions most ridiculous.. .4s you Like,\\. 

woman's thought runs before her actions — iv. 

and waspish action she did use — iv. 

in what pai-ticular action to ti-y him. J«'s Well, iii. 

in this action contrives against his own — iv. 

with honourable action Taming nfS. (indue.) 

gait and action of a gentlewoman - (indue.) 

I'll bring mine action on the proudest — iji. 

this action I now go on, is for my. Winter'sTale, ii. 

behold our human .actions, (as they do) — iii. 

your actions arc my dreams — iii. 

ner actions shall be holy, as you hear — y. 

when our actions do not, our fears Macbeth, iv. 

it is an accustomed action with her — — y. 

in this action of swift speed King Jolm, ii. 

of any kindred action like to this?.. — iji. 

strong reasons make strong actions — in. 

makesfearful action, with wrinkled — iv. 

the graceless action of a heavy hand — iv. 

and on our actions set the name of — v. 

to underprop this action? is't not I — v. 

and tlie generalcourseof the action. .1 Hen. IF.ii. 

skimmed milk, with so honourable an action ii. 

wert not ■with me in this action — ii. 

vilely since this last action? — iii. 

could restrain the rtitf-ln.riie action . .2 Hen. IF. i. 

rtiddivide the action ottiieir bodies.. — i. 

for vour quiet o'er-po^tiiiL' tliat action — i. 

there isnot adiiir_yroiis aciion can .. — i. 

indeed the instant action (a causeon foot) — _i. 
Master Fang, have you entered the action — ii. 
thv face, and draw tliy m-tioii ; come — ij. 

when the miui of action is called on — ii. 



ACT 



ACTION— arc inniuewciUo tlu8action.2flea./^. iv. 1 
to the kill!,', tuste of this action. ... — iv. 1 

the maiiiiur liow tliis action hath . . — iv. 4 

that aitiim. licnce borne out — iv. 4 

(uliich i;; l.iiir terras, or two actions) — v. 1 

ull out of wurlt, and cold for action . . lloinj V. i. 2 

8o niav a thousand actions — i. 2 

that this fair action nuiy on foot — i. 2 

imitate tlic action of the tiger — iii. 1 

I cannot give ducactinn to my words..2 IhniJ'I. v.l 
my soul and Ijodv on the action both — v. 2 
tliat in yonr (Uitwaid aelion shows ..Rich. III. i. 3 
which action's SLlf was tmi^ue to . . Ilennj I'lll. i. 1 
must not stint our iiccessavv actions — i. 2 

and bci'iiuiinf,' thx ac'tinT\ of L'ood women — ii. 3 
if my actions were tried by every tongue — iii. 1 
no other spealver ot'my li\ inn actions . . — iv. 2 

in the veins of actions higliest TroUus4' Ores, i.3 

sith every action tlrat hatli gone — i.3 

with ridiculous and awltward action — i.3 
oddly poised in tliis wild action — i.3 

smiles upon tlie foreliead of this action — ii. 2 
and whole carriage of this action rode — ii. 3 

bring action liitlier, this cannot — ii. 3 

an effeminate -man in time of action — iii. 3 

but he, In heat of action, is more .... — iv. b 

they are in action. Now Ajax — iv. 5 

he goes upon tliis present action Coriolanus, i. 1 

one voluptuously surfeit out of action — i.3 

tliat best can aid yom- action — i. li 

else your actions would grow wondrous — ii. I 

he hath in this action outdone — ii. 1 

in limnan action and ca\)acity — ii. 1 

and liis actions in their licarts, that for — ii. 2 
in such business action is eloquence. . — iii' 2 

by my body's action, teach — iii. 2 

tliat sliall set them iu present action.. — iv. 3 
you are darkened in tliis action, sir . , — iv. 7 
either had borne the action of yomrself — iv. 7 

my partner in this action, you — v. 3 

and laborur of our great action — v. .5 

the charges of the action — v. 5 

than thyself, or me, in personal action../. Ciesar, i. 3 
action, nor utterance, nor the power . . — iii. 2 

let not a leaner action rend us Antony Sf Cleo. ii. 2 

partake in the glory of the action . . — iii. 5 

but his whole action grows not — iii. 7 

I never saw an action of such shame — _ iii. 8 
think'sthis very action speaks iu — iii. 10 

the violence of action hath made .... Cymheline, i. 3 
tlian in my every action, to be .... — _i. 5 

if vou will make 't an action — ii. 3 

her pretty action did outsell her gift — ii. 4 

mine action, and thine own? — iii. 4 

though his actions were not visible _ — iii. 4 
tile common men arc now in action 'gainst — iii. 7 
to lock it from action and adventure — iv. 4 

the action of my life is like it — v. 4 

in thj' dumb action will I be as.. Titus Andron. iii. 2 
wanting a hand to give it action — v. 2 

blush not in actions blacker than Pericles, i. 1 

partakes her private actions to yonr — _i. 1 

nor never did my actions yet — ii. 5 

my actions are as noble as my thoughts __ — ii. 5 
action may conveniently the rest — iii. (Gower) 
and with continual action are even as — iv. 3 

what is done in action, more — v. (Gower) 

no unchaste action, or dishonoured step . . Lear,\. 1 
vice sometimes by action dignified., i^m. Sc Jul. ii. 3 
they are actions that a man might play. . Hamlet, i. 2 
look, mth what courteous action it waves — _i. 4 

in action, how like an angel — ii. 2 

and pious action, we dosugar o'er the devil — iii. 1 

and lose the name of action — iii. 1 

suit the aetiim to the word, the word to — iii. 2 

there the action lies in his true nature — iii. 3 

lest, with this jiiteous action, you convert — iii. 4 
the use of actions fair and good he likewise — iii. 4 

not tell him of his action of battery? — v. 1 

my outward action doth demonstrate — Othello, i. 1 
for if such actions may have passage free . . — i. 2 
though our proper son stood in your action — i.3 
used their dearest action iu the tented field — i.3 

some action that maj; offend the isle — ii. 3 

it were an honest action, to say so — ii. 3 

in action glorious I had lost these legs — ii. 3 

pleasure and action make the hours seem. . — ii. 3 

ACTION-TAKING— 
a lily-livered action-taking knave . . King Lear, ii. 2 

ACTltlM- the head of Actium beat. .^n(. ^ Cleo. iii. 7 

ACTIVK— and liis active practice Much AJo, v. 1 

the most active fellow in Europe . .iltenry IV. iv. 3 
the most active gentleman in France. He7ir!/ V. iii. 7 
liberal, ^■aliant, aeti \-e, wealthy . . . .'iHenry VI. iv. 7 
'tv.'ixt his mental and active parts.. Troil.fy Cres. ii.3 
my siieeuhiti\e and active instruments. {^Kni^hl 
i>fHi-ed instrument] Othello, i. 3 

.\CTIVKIA'— frost itself as actively doth.Hamt. iii. 4 

ACTIVE-VALIANT— 
more active-valiant, or more 1 Henry IV. v. 1 

ACTIVITY— doing is activity; and he . . Hen. V. iii. 7 
she call your activity in ([Uestion . . Trail, fy Cr. iii. 2 
that \ou'r activity m'ay defeat. . Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

ACTCll— these our actors, as I foretold.. Tempest, iv. 1 
the fault, but not the ac.tot ot'H,..Mea.for Mea. ii. 2 

and let go by the actor — ii. 2 

read the names of the actors Mid. AT. Dream, i. 2 

call forth yom- actors by the — — ._i. 2 

an actor, too, perhaps, if I see cause — iii. 1 

and most dear actors, eat no ... . — iv. 2 

the actors are at hand — v. 1 (t)ro.) 

the actors, sir, will show .... Lnve^s Lahoitr Lost, v. 2 
I'll prove a busy actor in their play. . .is you Lll:e,\\\. 1 
a heavenly effect in an earthly actor. . .ill's ll'ell, ii. 3 

after a well graced actor leaves liicharcl II. y. 2 

iu jest by counterfeiting actors 3 Henry VI. ii. 3 

author's pen, or actor's voice .... Trail, fy Ores, (pro.) 

like a dull actor, now, I have Coriolanus, v. 3 

bear it as our Roman actors do Julius Ccesar, ii. 1 

the actor may plead pai'don Antony Sr Cleo. ii. ."i 



[«] 



ACTOR- 
an actor in Rome — The actors are come . . Hamlet, i i . 2 
each actor on his ass — The best actors iu — _ii.2 
and was accounted a '^nod actor — iii. 2 

ACTUAL— other actual |.erfonnaiiecs ..Madieth.v. 1 
in discom-se of thmiebt, or actual deed. . Othello, iv. 2 

ACUTE— a most a.-iitc Juvenal . . Voce's L.Lost, iii. 1 
is good in those in w lioni it is acute — iv. 2 

ACUTELY-cauuot answer thee acutcly.yWs Well, i.I 

j\D AGE— like the poor cat i' the adage . . Macbeth, j. 7 
unless the lulage must be verified . .3 Henry VI. u i 

ADALLAS— Thracian king, Adallas...ln(. ^Cleo. iii. fi 

.iiDAM- Adam's sons are my brethren. .jl/uc/i .Ida, ii. 1 
clapped on the shoulder, and called Adam — i.I 

endowed with all that Adam bad left — ii. I 

a month old, when Adam was no. . Love's L. L. iv. 2 
had he been Adam, he had tempted — v. 2 

as I remember, ^Vdain, it ^\■as As you Like it, i. 1 

this is it, Adam, that grieves me. ... — i.I 

§0 aiiart, Adam, and thou shalt hear — i. 1 

ut the penalty of Adam, the seasons' — ii. 1 
why whither, 'Adam, wouldst thou have — ii. 3 
how now, Adam I no greater heart.. — ii.6 

checrly, good Adnm — ii. (i 

none tine, but Adam, Ralph. . Taming of Shreir, iv. 1 

old Adam new aiMiareled? Com. of Errors, iv. 3 

thou, old Adam's likeness, set to ..Richard It. iii. 4 
since the old days of good-man Adam..l Hen. 1 V. ii. 4 
in the state of innocency, Adam fell.. — iii. 3 

■whipjied the offending Adam out of . . Henry V. i. 1 

and Adam w as a gardener 2 Henrij VI. iv. 2 

young Adam, IKnig/U — Abraham] Cupid, he that 

shot Romeo ^- Juliet, ii. 1 

they hold up Adam's profession Hamlet, v. 1 

the scripture says, Adam digged — v. 1 

ADAMANT — as iron to adamant. . Trail. <5- Ores. iii. 2 
draw me, you hard-hearted adamant. MiVi. N. D. ii. 2 
spium in pieces posts of adamant — 1 Henry VI. i. 4 

ADD— they that add moreover Twelfth Sight, i. 3 

she adds, moreover, that you should — ii. 2 

and did thereto add my love — v. 1 

disguiscr; andyou may add to it. . Mea. for Mea. iv. 2 
she will not add to her damnation . . Mucti Ado, _iy. 1 

I will add the I'envoy Love's Labour Lost, iii. 1 

it a<ld3 a precious seeing to the — iv. 3 

to our perjury to add more terror. ... — v. 2 
if I coul d add a lie unto a fault . . Merch. of Yen. v. 1 

I'll add three thousand crowns All's Well, iii. 7 

concerneth us to add her .... Taming of Shrew, iii. 2 
and I will add unto their losses — v. 2 

will thereto add, ' tis pity, she's. . Winter's Tale, ii. 1 
which you say, adds to nature ... . — iv. 3 

add thereto a tiger's chaudron Macbeth, iv. 1 

or add a royal number to the King John, ii. 2 

of England add thus much more — iii. 1 

or add another line unto the._ — iy. 2 

good hap, add an immortal title Richard II. i. I 

add proof unto mine armour — _i.3 

it adds more sorrow to my want .... — iii. 4 

will add right worthy gains — v. 6 

must add unto your sickness 2 Henry IV. iii. 1 

with reasonable swiftness, add more . . Henry V. i. 2 

to this add — defiance: and tell — iii. 6 

to afld to your laments 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

wordd but add increase unto my . .2 Henry VI. iii. 2 
the words would add more anguish. .3 Henry VI. ii. 1 
to add more measure to your woes. . — ii. 1 

I can add colours to the cameleon . . — iii. 2 

eyes add water to the sea — v. 4 

I need not add more fuel to — v. 4 

support, out of his grace he adds . . Henry VIII. ii. 3 

yet will I add an honour — iii. 1 

and, to add greater honours to his age — iv. 2 

add to my clamours Troilus and Cressida, ii. 2 

and add, that, if he overholdhis.. — ii. 3 

and add more coals to Cancer — ii. 3 

may these add to the number. . Timon of Athens, iii. 1 
unpurgedair to add unto his sickness. .J«i/ws C. ii. 1 

add more, from thine invention Ant. Sf Cleo. iii. 10 

which I will add to you, the liver, heart. . Cymb. v. b 

unless I add, we are"honest — v. 5 

nor come we to add sorrow to Pericles, i. 4 

I'U rise, or else add ill to ill — ii. 1 

thereto add such reasons of your own .... Lear, 1 . 4 
doth add more grief to too much.. . . Romeo ^ Jul. i. \ 
nothing canst thou to damnation add. . Othello, iii. 3 

ADDED— to have it added to the . . Mea. for Mea. ii. 4 
Ba, pueritia, with a horn added ..Love's L. Last, v. 1 
CamiUo's flight, added to their . . Winter's Tale, ii. 1 

a gash is added to her wounds Macbeth, iv. 3 

and added years to his short Richard II. i. 4 

and new happiness added to that . .2 Henry IV. iv. 4 

twenty-six; added to these Henry V. iv. 8 

a thought of added honour . . Troilus and Ores. iv. 5 
you have added worth unto 't . . Timon of Athens, i. 2 
nave added slaughter to the sword . . Julius Ccesar, v. 1 

no; I rather added a lustre to it Cymbeline, i. 2 

but he added to your having — i.3 

what fool hath added water to Titus Andron. iii. 1 

who ever but his approbation added . . Pericles, iv. 4 

all love, and added to the gall Lear, i. 4 

which, added to the goose, proves. . Romeo Sf Jul. ii. 4 

ADDER — I am all wound with adders. . Tempest, ii. 2 
an adder do so much? an adder did it.. JV/iti.iV.D. iii, 2 

thou serpent, never adder stung — iii. 2 

or is the adder better than the eel.. Taming of .5. iv, 3 
she longed to eat adder's heads . . Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

tongue of dog, adder' s fork Macbeth, iv. 1 

I pray thee, with a Im-king adder . . Richard II. iii. 2 
art thou, like the adder, wiixen deaf?, .2 H. VI. iii. 2 
more poisons than the ailder's tooth. .3 Hen. VI. i. 4 
than 1 can \vish to adders, spiders . . Richard HI. i. 2 
more deaf than athlers to tlic Viiice . . Trail. ^- Cr. ii. 2 
the black toad, and adilei-lilue ....Timon o,' A. iv. 3 
bright day, that lr.'in,u-s lurtli tlic adder. J»(/i/s C. ii. 1 

were't toad or adder, spider, 'twould ti:tjmb. iv. 2 

even as an adder, when she . . Titus Andronicus, ii. 3 

as the stung are of the adder Lear, v. 1 

I will trust, as I will adders fanged Hamlet, iii. 4 

ADDICT— addict thcusclves to sock. .2. Hen. IV. iv. 3 



ADM 



being addicted to a melaneboiy. . Twelfth Night, ii. 5 

ADDICTION— since his addiction was ..Hen. V. i. I 
what sjiort and revels his addiclion lends . . Olh. ii. 2 

ADDING— adding a tongue which I. . Lore's L.L. ii. I 
stayed the odds by adding foiu- (;r/)e»/c</) — ^ iii. 1 

by addinj^ one more L — iv. 2 (epitaph) 

this world: adding thereto, moreover — v. 2 
to England; adding withal, how ..Rieliard II. iv. 1 
adding further, that, had the king. . Henry VIII. i. 2 
addinn; to clouds more clouds Kniiwo -S- Jul. i. 1 

ADDITION— are devils' additions. . Merry irires, ii. 2 
my troth, it is no addition toher wzt..:V/(r/( .Ida, ii. 3 

wiiere great additions swell, and All's ll'etl,U. 3 

and worth it wit. 1 addition! butfair.. — iv. 2 
without addition, or diminishing . . Com. nfEr. ii. 2 
in which addition, hail, most worthy ..Macbethji. 3 

particular addition, from the bile — iii. i 

this addition more, fidl thirt.y King John, ii. 2 

with this slu'ill addition I Henri/ 1 J', ii. 4 

and with this addition in French . . ... Henry V. v. 2 
beasts of their particular additions. . Trail. ^ Ores. i. 2 
his aildition yield to sinewy Ajax — 'li. i 

his addition shall be humble .... — iii. 2 

a great addition earned in thy. ... — iv. 5 

bear the addition nobly ever! Coriolanus, i. 9 

to undercrest your good addition .... — _ i. 9 

with what addition ! that by Julius Ctesar, iv. 3 

by addition of his envy! ..Antony and Cleopatra, v. 2 

and all the additions to a king Lear, i. 1 

deny'st the least syllable of thy addition — ii. 2 

the comfort with what addition I can — iii. 6 

(^Collier. Knight'] — more than in your addition v. 3 
such additionsvour honours have more. . — v. 3 
with swinish phrase, soil our addition . . Hamlet, i. 4 
or the addition, of man, and country. . ,. — ii. I 
and with no addition, we go to gain a little — iv. 4 
and think it no addition, nor my wish. . Othello, iii. 4 
you give me the addition, whose want. . — iv. I 
the act that might the addition earn — jv. 2 

ADDLE — beaten as addle as an egg. . Rom. ^-Jul. iii. I 
addle egg. If .you love an addle egg . . . Troil.'S- Cr. i. 2 

ADDRESS— address thy gait unto her. . Twelfth N. i. 4 
address me to my appointment . . Merry Wives, iii. 5 
my powers, address your love. . Mid. N.'s Dream, ii. 3 
so seriously he does addresshimself. ..-fW'.s- Well, iii. 6 
guests approach: address yourself.. Winter's T. iv. 3 
in chief address the substance of . .2 Henry IV. iv. 1 
di-eadfid lay! address thee instantly.. 2 Hen. VI. v. 2 
let us address to tend on Hector's.. Trail. •5- Cress, iv. 4 
that gods and men, addi-ess their dangers — v. II 
we first address towards you, who with . . Lear, i. I 
and did address itself to motion, like ....Hamlet, i. 2 

ADDRESSED— 
were all addressed to meet you . . Love's L. Lost, ii. I 
so have I addressed me: fortune ..Mer. of Ven. ii. 9 
to this forest, addressed a mighty.. .4* you Like it, v. i 

and addressed them again to sleep Macljeth, ii. 2 

our navy is addressed, om- power. .2 Henry IV. iv. 4 
he is addressed; pressnear, and.. /u(ms Crt".*";-, iii. 1 
as you are addressed, will very well Pericles, ii. 3 

ADDREST— the march we are addrest. . Henry V. iii. 3 

yoiu' grace, the prologue is addrest Mid. N. D. v. 1 

1 might behold adcb'est the king Love's L. L. v. 2 

ADHERE— do no more adliere Merry Wives, ii. 1 

every thing adlieres together Tn-elfth Night, iii. 4 

what to her adheres, which. . Winter's T. iv. (chorus) 

nor place, did then adliere, and yet Macbeth, i. 7 

not living, to whom he more adlieres . . Hamlet, ii. 2 

ADJACENT— 
the sense of the adjacent wharfs. . . . Anl. ^ Cleo. ii. 2 
demesnes that there adjacent lie Rom. ^-Jul. ii. 1 

AD.IOINED — are mortised and adjoined. . Ham. iii. 3 

AD.IOINING— adjoining to tlK city.. Ant. fr CI. iv. 10 

ADJOURN— we adjourn this court . . Hen. VIII. ii. 4 

ADJOURNED— thus adjourned the Graces. . Cymb.v. 4 

ADJUDGED— he adjudged yom- brdther.Af. /or il/. v. 1 
thou art adjudged to the death.. Coinerfi/ of Errors, i. 1 
by God's book are adjudged to death. .2 Hen. VI. ii. 3 
in thy nativity, adjudged an olive. .3 Hen. VI. iv. 6 
to be adjudged some du'cful . . Titus Andronicus, v. 3 

ADJUNCT— my death were adjunct to John, iii. 3 

learning is but an adjunct to ourself.toue's L.L. iv. 3 

ADMINISTER— 
keep the oath that we administer . . Richard II. i.3 

ADMINISTERED— 
medicine must be administered, or .. King John, v. 1 

ADMINISTRATION— 
and, in the administration of Ms law ..2H.IV.V.2 

ADMIRABLE— O, 'twill beadmirable.. Tu-el. N. ii. 3 

the knight's in admirable fooling — ii. 3 

of excellent breeding, admirable... A/errj/ Wives, ii. 2 
it is admirable pleasures, and fery — iv. 4 

but that my adnm-able dexterity of wit — iv. 5 
howsoever, strange, and admirable ..Mid. N. D. v. 1 
most admirable : I have seen those ..All's Well, ii . 1 
of an admu-able conceited fellow.. Winter'sTate, iv. 3 
O admirable youth! he ne'er saw. . Trail. ^ Cres. i. 2 
O admirable man! Paris? Paris is dirt — i. 2 

admirable: how this grace speaks.. 7'2mono/.4iA i. I 

with admirable rich words to it Cymbeline, ii. 3 

an admirable evasion of wdioremaster-iiian.. Learj i. 2 
moving^ how exjtress and admirable! . . Han.let, li. 2 
an admirable musician' O, she will . . Othello, iv. I 

ADMIRAL — thou artoui admiral ..IHcnry IV. iii. 3 
Jaqncs of Chatillon, admiral of France. . H. V. iv. 8 
lord Bom-bon, our high-admiral. . . .ZHcnry VI. iii. 3 
that Richmond is their admiral . . Richard III. iv. 4 
the Egyptian admiral, mth all Anl. fy Cleo. iii. 8 

ADMIRATKJN-the top of admiration. TempcsY, iii. 1 

bring in the admiration; that we All's Well, ii. 1 

were very notes of admiration .... Winter's Tate, v. 2 

that admiration did not whoop at Henry V. ii. 2 

it is the greatest admiration in the .. — iv. 1 
as great in admiration as herself . . Henry VIII. v. 4 

witliout the help of admiration Cymbeline, i. 5 

what makes your admh-atiou? — i. 7 

and not protract with admiration what is — iv. 2 

this admiration is much o' the favour Lear, i. 4 

season your admiration for a while .... Hamlet, i. 2 



ADM 



[7 ] 



ADMIRATION— , ,.,.,„ ... ., ' 

lit the hucls of this mother's ndirnration?. Ham. tii. .i 
struck her into amiizcmcnt and admiratiou — iii. 3 

■vbiMIif K-eiicoiiiiter do so much iiiliiiire. Tniipcst, v. 1 
nor admire not in . . Tirelflh Mfilil, ni. I (elnilleiif-'e) 
tl\at I tin- f.arts ndnure .... J.orc s l.iibniir l.nsl,i\. - 

while we' do admire this virtue launiiL: n/J.. i. i 

fee his weakness, and admire our Hevrtj ; . iii. b 

sln-nir, and, i' the end, admire. ._. . . . . . Co>'io/«>i».v, i. 9 

VDiMIF! ED— admired JSlivanda! mdeed. /■pm/<c.v/,ni. 1 

■ tiiat she miaht admired be. TvoG. of Ver. n.f cson<,') 
vainiv comes the admired princess , . Love s /,. /.. i. 1 
wherein Kosalind is so admired. ..fs ijmi l.ikr if, m. 2 
meetiii", witli most admired disorder . . M.n-I'dh, ui. 4 
afterthe admired heels of Bolinghroke.2Hc». 7/_._i. 3 
all the court admired him for. . . . ..'iUcnrij I /. ui. 1 

that doth make them most admired.. SJ/e/iiy J I.i.i 
settlest admired reverence m . . Tiinon ot Athens, y. 1 
in thee, fair and admiredl . . Antony f^- Cleopatra,!. 1 
bv the mother's side, admired Octavia — .u. 2 

celerity is never more admired — "i. 7 

served with glory and admired success . . Cmib. i. 1 
as coddess-like to her admired . . Pericles, V. (.^ower) 
all the admired beauties of Yerona.flom. ^-Jul. i. ^ 

ADMIRER— a fresh admirer of what.. HfH. yiH-l- ] 

.-U)MIRING-soI, admiring of his.. M'J. N.Drin. i. 1 
and admiring the nothing of it . . n inter s Tale, iv. 3 
and from thy admiring daughter took — . v- J 
shines seldom in admiring eyes .... 1 Henry I F.in. i 
and, all admiring, with an inward . . Henry J .i. 1 
with modesty admiring thy renown..! Hen; ;/;/. ii. 2 

ADMIRINGLY— of him, admiringly. ..J" s nell, i. 1 
of this lord? Admiringly, my liege... — v. 3 

IDJIIT- kind of traffic would I admit.. Tempest, n. 1 

■ he admits him not for his. . Merry (Frees ii. 1 Cletter) 
she will admit no kind of suit. . . . Twelfth Night, i. 2 

she never \vill admit me — \- * 

my haste mav not admit it ... . Measure for Mea.i. 1 
admit no other Avay to save his life — ".4 

that they will admit any good part . .Much Ado,y. 2 
your answer, whether you'U admit. . Mer.of ' . iv. 
to admit no traffic to our adverse.. Com. o/&rws,!. 1 
whose title they admit, Arthur's, OT..KingJohn, ii. 1 
party do the townsmen yet admit? ••„„—„,!!• f 
for the which the prince admits him. .2Hen./F._ii. 4 
well, by my will, we shall admit no parley — iv. 1 
too heavy to admit much talk ...•.• — . 7' \ 

which supply, admitme chorus to..He)iryr.i. (cho.) 
therefore wc must needs admit the — .J. 1 

although I did admit it as a motive — .".2 
the latest parte we will admit ... . — /"■ ^ 

to admit the excuse of time — v. (cho.) 

if sorrow can admit society Richard III. iv. 4 

admit him enti-ance, Griffith Henry VIII. iv. 2 

my love admits no qualifying . . Troilus Sr Cres. iv. 4 
of' this division admits no orifice „ — , .Y- ^ 

the people do admit you; and are . . Coriolanus, u. 3 

to strike at him admits a good — v. 5 

a yielding; this aximits no excuse.. — Y- 5 
people will accept whom he admits . . ntus And.i. 2 
adm'it no messengers, receive no tokens.. Hamlet, ii. 2 
should admit no discourse to vour beauty — in. 1 

.VDMITTANCE-of great admittance.A/e/ri/ Wtves,u.-2 
or any tire of Venetian admittance — iii. 3 
now wdiat admittance, lord? . . Love s Labour L.ii. 1 
to give admittance to a thought. . . .-IHenry IF. iv. 1 
do crave admittance to yoiu? majesty.. HeHry V. ii. 4 

most desirous of admittance Timon of Athens, i. 2 

let them have kind admittance .... ^ — ,^ , . J- ^ 
had I ailmittance, and opportunity. . Cymbetine,\. 5 

'tis gold which buys admittance — u. 3 

first admittance to the ambassadors Hamlet, ii. 2 

VDMITTED— might not be admitted. . Twelfth N. 1. 1 
well, let her be admitted ..Measure for Measure,_u. 2 
you slrall not be achnitted to his sight — iv. 3 
manners I might safely be admitted.. ..4i; s'rell, iv. 5 
uncertain, should not be admitted . . 2 Henry IV. 1.3 

excuses shall not 'oe admitted — ' .v. 1 

admitted to your liighness' council .■■^^?''- V,v"!- ' 
tliat we may be admitted where heis..I!ich. III. i. 3 
I pray, let them be admitted . . Timon of Athens, i. 2 
never admitted a private whisper . . Coriolanus, y. 3 

he fell upon me, ere adinitted Antony Sr Cleo. u. 2 

not ijetty tilings admitted — v.2 

to be adinitted to j'our presence . . Titus Andron. v. 1 

VDMITTIiSTG- never admitting council.. Cono/. v. 5 

vDMONISH— spirits that admonish me ..IH. VI. v. 3 
ADMONISHMENT- 
tliy grave admonishments prevail . . i Henry VI. ii. 5 
his ears a"aiust admonishment ..Troilus Sf Cres. v. 3 

.lDM()NISIUNG-admonishingthatwe..nen. V.iv. 1 

.VDIK iXli'ION— thy frozen adinonition . ..R. //. ii. 1 

doulile and treble a'draonition Mea. for Men. Ui. 2 

VDO— he makes me no more ado. . Two G. of Vcr. iv. 4 
what ado here is to bring. . Merry Wives of Wind. iv. 5 
I have much ado to know myself. . Merch. of Ven. i. 1 
to see the end of this ado . . Taming of tlie Shrew, v. 1 

you had mucli ado to make Winter s Tale,u 2 

here's ado to lock up honesty — ii. 2 

here's such ado to make no stain . . — .ii. 2 

no more ado; remember, stoned .. — iv. 3 

witli much ado, at length have Richard Il.v.i 

I made me no more ado 1 Henry 1 V. ii. 4 

now no more ado, brave Burgvmdy .1 Henry VI. iu.2 

av.-ay : let's have no more ado ZHenry VI.iv.5 

make me no more ado, but all .... Henry VIII.j. 2 

nor no more ado with that harsh Cymbeline, iij. 4 

not we be tired with tliis ado. . Titus Andronicus, ii. 1 
make no more ado, but give . . — iv. 3 

we'll keei) no CTcat ado Romeo and .Juliet, in. 4 

VDONIS-fetch thee straight, Adonis. Tam.of .S.(ind.) 2 
thv iiromises are like Adonis' gardens..! Hen. VI. i. 6 

\lji')L'T— with willing soul adopts thee..«io/i. 72. iv. ! 

may not a kin'4 adopt an heir -iHenry f'/.i.l 

for your liest ends you adopt yoiu- policv. Cor/o/. in. 2 
1 hail rather to adopt a childj than getit..O(/icHo,i. 3 

A Ui ) V£ Ii D— t. > be adopted heur to . . As ynu Like tt,i.i 
and an adopted name of privilege ..I Henry IV.v. 2 
this wa.. iiu wjs liis adopted he'u- . . . .3Henry VI. i. 4 
1 was ad. ".ltd heir I'V his consent — ii.2 



ADOl'TED— ., , , . . „ 

a Koman now adopted happily.. Titus Androntcus, i. 2 

ADOl'TEDLY- , . ^ „ ■ r 

ailoi)tcill\' as sctiool-maids change. .il/cn. /or Men. i. 5 

ADnrTIi'tN— and their ado)ition tried. . . . /f'onW.i.S 

lint stand luiilcr the adoption of.. .Merry n'lrrs.w.'i 

'tisoi'tcn seen adoption strives with. . All's Well,!. 3 

her sr>n into the adoption of the crown . . Cymb. v. 5 

ADOPTIOUS— . , ,„, ,„ „ . , 

pretty, fond, adoptions Christendoms ..Alls Well, i. ! 

ADOR'ATION— the soul of adoration?.. Hoir;/ V.iv. 1 

with adorations, with fertile tears. Twelfth Kiglil, i. b 

all adoration, duty, and observance.. /Is you Like, y. 2 

ADOliE— and 1 do 'adore thee Tempest, u. 2 

I did adore a twinkling star . . Two Gen. of Vcr.u. (> 

and adore false shapes 77. ,,. ■.^•^•? 

I do adore thee so, that danger. . . . Twelfth Night, ii. ! 
and one that adores me; what o' that? — ii. 3 
I may command where I adore (repeated)^ — ii. 5 
I do adore thy sweet grace's slipper. . Loves L.L.v. 2 

I adore the sun, that locks Alls Well,}, i 

how dearlv he adores Mark Antony !..^»!(. ^ Cl.m. 2 

make us a'dore our errors — ,".'.•.'' 

instructs you how to adore the heavens . . Cynib. ui. 3 
pretend to honour and adore . . Titus Androntcus,!. 1 
by the gods, that warlike Goths adore — if. 1 

now gods, that we adgre, whereot Lear,\.i 

ADORED— I was adored once ioo..Ti!^elflh Higlit,n. 3 

worshipped, kissed, loved, adored. . Two G.ofVer.iv.i 

make the hoar leprosy adored.. Timon of Alliens, ly. 3 

those eyes adored them, ere their fall. . Pericles, ii. d 

ADORE'k— Iprofessmyselfheradorer..C!/»if)e/)i!e, i. 5 

ADORETH— letthe soul forth that adoreth.ie.///. i. 2 

AJ>ORN— no less adorns om- gentry. Winter s Tale, i. 2 

adorn liis temples with IHenryVI.v.i 

fashions to adorn my body Ridiard III. i. 2 

■with trophies do adorn thy tomb.. . . TiUis Andron. i. 2 

funeral praises do adorn thv tomb!../io;n. ^ Jul. v. 3 

ADORNED— she came adornedhitherlike-fi. IL y. 1 

dames so jetted, and adorned Pericles,!. 4 

ADORNING— their bends adornings.^n'. •§■ Cleo. n. 2 
ADORN JIENT-the adornment of her bed..Cymb. u. 2 
•\vith the adornment of my qualities .. — m. 5 
ADOR'ST— thou ador'st, and hast. . Titus Andron. v. 1 
ADRAM.VDIO- j. , , , ^ . „ 

Of Dun Adramadio, Dun Adramadio. Love sLL. ly. i 
ADllIAN— which of them, he or Adrian, TeinpeU.a. 1 

your name, I think, is Adrian Coriolaniis, ly . 3 

ADRIAN A— I am not Adiiana, nor. . Com.of hrr.n. 2 

to Adriana, villain hie thee — iv. 1 

Adiiana! that is where we dmed . . — iv. l 

ADRIANO— . ^ , , , r • , 

heat of duty, DonAdriano deAxmado. Lowe sL.L. 1. 1 

of industry, Don Adi-iano de Arniado. . iv. 1 (letter) 

or called Don Adriano de Aimado .... — „ '^- ' 

ADRIATIC— the swelUngAcU-iatic seas. Tarn. o/S. i. 2 

ADSUM— Adsmu. Asmath, by the eternal.2H. K/. i. 4 

ADULATION— blown from adidation?..Hcn. V. iv. ! 

ADTJLTERATE-the adulterate Hastmgs.ii. ///. ly. 4 

possessed with an adulterate blot . . Com. of Err. n. 2 

she advdterates hom-ly with yom: uncle . .John, lu. 1 

that adulterate beast, with witchcraft . . h.amlet, i. 5 

ADULTERER— liars, and adulterers Lear, i. 2 

ADULTERIES— that thy adulteries rates.- Cymb. v. 4 
ADULTEROUS- .,,..„ ^ „, 

that Angelo is an adulterous thief. . Mea.for Mea. y. 1 
only the adulterous Antony .... Antony ff Cleo. in. B 

ADULTERY— thy cause? Adultery Lear, ly. 6 

fornication, adultery, and all..Aieas«rc/o>-Me«s.ii. 1 
adultery with Polixeues . . Winter's T. m. 2. (maiet.) 
now shall we have wilful adultery ....Henry F. ii . 1 
How I of adultery? wherefore write you ..Cymb.m.-2 
win this ring by hers and mine adultery — y. 5 
ADULTRESS— she's an adultress.. (f"K!(ers Tale,!!. 1 
I have said she's an adidtress; I have — ii. 1 
she, the adultress; for the harlot king — ii. 2 
they called me foul adultress. . Titus Androntcus, u. 3 
mother's tomb, sepulch'ring an adultress . . Lear, a. 4 

ADVANCE— whom to advance Tempest, i. 2 

the fringed era'tains of thine eye advance — _i.2 
I must advance the colom-s of ... . Merry » ives, in. 4 
that advance thek pride against . . ..Much Ado, iii. 1 
you do advance your cunning. . Mid. iV._ s Dream, in. 2 
advance your standards, and — Love s L. Lost, iv. 3 

will advance unto his several ~ ^ ,, '"^•? 

towards wlrich, advance the war Macbeth, y. 4 

we should advance ourselves to look. .2 Hen. IV.!. 3 
the signs of war advance ; no king . . . . Henry V . n. 2 
yom- eyes advance after j;our thoughts — y. (cho.) 
and never war advance his bleeding . . — X- i^ 
advance om- waving colours on the . . 1 Henry l /. i. 6 
and here advance it in the market-place — n. 2 
I seek not to advance or raise myself — in. 1 

■whose hopeful colours advance with our — ly. 1 
advance thy halberd higher than . . . Richard III. i. 2 
advance yoin: standards, draw your — v. 3 

advance om: standards, set upon — , „ . .Y- ^ 

he will advance thee; some httle ..Henry VIII. m. 2 
60 much, as to advance this jewel . . Timon ofAlh. i. 2 

advance, brave Titus: they do Conoiit»«s,i.4 

and advance the theme of our assembly — ii. 2 

to advance thy name, and Titus Andromcus, i. 2 

if Saturnine advance the queen of — .}. 2 

to your ■wishes' height advance you both — ii. 1 
your faitlifulness, we will advance you. . l'ericles,i. 1 
ere the sun advance his burning eye.. Kom. fyJul.n.3 
ADVANCED— advanced their eyelids... Tempest, ly. 1 

you are like to be much advanced Twelfth N.i. 4 

how he jets under his advanced plumes ^ — _u. 5 

more advanced by the king Alls Well, ly. 5 

that are advanced here before the eye ....John,)i.\ 

working I was first advanced i Henry I V. xv. 4 

hung thy advanced sword i' the air. Troit. S,- Cres. i v. 5 
filliii"the air with swords advanced ..Coriolanus,!. 6 
which, being advanced, declines; and then — li. 1 
of a sudden tlius advanced in Rome. 7V/us Andron. i. 2 
advanced above pale envy's threatening — ii. ! 

tobeadvancLd t..tliislieiL'hf:' — iv.2 

by this tli..irciiild shall be advanced.. — iv.2 

lielicanus late advanced iu . . Pericles, iv. 4 (Gower) 



ADV 

ADVANCED— 
one step 1 have advanced thee; if thou .... Lear,y. 3 
wcepyenow seeing she is advanced. .Rom.cf-.'K'.iv. 5 
death's pale flag is not advanced there — y. 3 
the poor advanced makes friends Hamlet, iii. 2 

ADVANCEMENT— 
sleep were this for your advancement !..7"e»?i!esf,ii. ! 
may turn back to my iid;-ancement.. Winter s T. iv. 3 
give you advanccnicnt; be it your ..2 Henry IV. Y. .5 
fear not your .advancement; I will bo — v..') 
endeavoured my advancement to the..! Hen. VI. li.b 
you envy my advancement, and my.. fli'cAarrf ///. i. 3 

the advaiirc'nicnt of your cliildren — iy. 4 

disonkvs deserved much less advancement. /.ear, ii. 4 
more Ibiin in your advancement [Collier. Knight 

addition] — . y . S 

what advancement may I hope from tliee..Hr™/.ii). 2 
Sir, I luck advancement. How can that be, — iii. 2 
ADA^ANTAGE— 

our own doth little advantage Tempest.!. 1 

the next advantage will we take thorouj-'ldy — iii. •'^ 
and fair advantage of his days.. TwoGen.nfl'er.'n. I 
your good word cannot advantage him — iii. 2 
her folly motion, and advantage ..Merry Wives,!!!. 2 
to take an ill advantage of his absence — iii. 3 
shall advantage thee more than ever. Twelfth N. iy. 2 
his advantage that I dearly love. . . Mea. fur Mea. ii. 4 
only refer yourself to this advantage — iii. 1 

for some atlvantage to vourseif — iv. 1 

I did liimat this advantage take.ilKrf. N. Dream, iii. 2 
lend, nor borrow, upon advantage . . Mer. of Ven.i. 3 

doit in hope of fair advantages — ii. 7 

finds no otlier advantage in tlte process.. /IH's Well,!. 1 

that's for advantage. So is running — i. 1 

she herself, without otlier advantage, may — i. 3 
where there is advantage to be given . . Macbeth, y. 4 
the advantage of his absence took the.. Kins' Jo/i7i,i. 1 

to cull the plots of best advantages — fj. 1 

for our advantage: therefore, hear us first — ii. 1 
speed then, to take advantage of the field — ii. 1 

till this advantage, this vile drawing — ii. 2 

and with advantage means to pay thy love — iii. 3 

so small advantage shall step forth — iii. 4 

the rich advantage of good exercise — iv. 2 

as I upon advantage did remove — y. 7 

their advantage, and yom- highness' loss ..Ric. II. i. 4 

to take advantage of the absent time — .ii. 3 

I'll use the advantage of my power — iii. 3 

for our advantage, on the bitter cross. . 1 Hen. IV. i. 1 

we'll read it at more advantage — ii. 4 

shall be paid back again with advantage — .ii. 4 
with like lulvantage on the other side — iii. 1 

let's awav; advantage feeds him fat.. — iii. 2 

you give liini then advantage — iv. 3 

from this swarm of fair advantages .. — v. 1 

nor lose the good advantage of his grace . . 2 H. JT. iv. 4 

turning past evils to advantages — iv. 4 

make road upon us with all advantages.. Hen. V. i. 2 
advantage is a better soldier than rashness — iii. 6 
death is to him advantage; or not dying — iv. 1 
whose hours the peasant best advantages — iv. 1 
reraeraber, with advantages, what feats — iy. 3 

how, with most advantage, they 1 Henry VI. i. 4 

my ill, the advantage of my good — ii. 5 

and, in advantage lingering, looks .... — iv. 4 
on that advantage, bought with such . . — iy. 6 
when I spy advantage, claim the crown. . .2 H. VI. i. 1 
and his advantage following your decease — iii. 1 
shapes with Profeus, for advantages.. 3 Hen. F/.iii.2 
the swift advantage of the hours ..Richard III. iv. 1 

■with best advantage will deceive — v. 3 

pleases, and for his own advantage . . Henry VIII. i. 1 
would not lose so rich advantage of. . Trod. Sf Cr.ii. 2 
the advantage of the time prompts — — iii. 3 
do not give advantage to stubborn critics — v. 2 
should have ta'en the advantage of. . Coriolanus, ii. 3 
and lose advantage, which doth ever cool — iv. 1 

advantage, more than do vis wrong Julius C. iii. 1 

from which advantage shall we cut him off- iv. 3 
who, hawng some actvantage on Octa%'ius — v. 3 
advantage servesfor a fair victory..-J«(on!/ Sr Cl._ iv. 7 

and hoUr our best advantage — iv.. lo 

with no more advantage than the Cymbeline, i. 5 

beyond him in the advantage of the time — iv. 1 
stand, stand! we have the advantage of the — v. 2 
■«'hich gave advantage to ancient soldier — v. 3 
that highly may advantage thee. . Titus Andron. v. ! 

taking advantage of our misery Pericles, i. 4 

the good advantage of the night Lear, ii. 1 

party to the advantages of Fi-ance — iii. 5 

with this di-eam of his advantage Hamlet, i. 2 

bring them after in the best advantage . . Othetlo,_i. 3 
can stamp ancl counterfeit advantages . . — ii. 1 
give me advantage of some brief discom-se — iii. 1 
to the advantage, I being here, took't up — iii. 3 
with the least advantage of hope — iv.2 

ADVANTAGEABLE— 
shall see advantageable for our digmty .Hen. V. v. 2 

ADVANTAGED— 
the poor Mariana advantaged, and.Mea./or M. m. 1 

ADVANTAGEOUS— 
here is every tiling advantageous to life. Tempest, u. 1 
advantageous care mthdi-ew me. . Trail. Sr Cres. v. 4 

ADVAN'rAGING— 
advantaging theu- loan^n-ith interest.. .Ric/i. III. iv. 4 

ADVEN 'r'Rt)US— and advent'rous spirit . 1 H. / ;^'. i. 3 

ADVENTURE— will not adventure my. Tempest, ii. 1 
bold Leander would adventiu-e. Two Gen. of Ver. iii. 1 
the fear of your adveutme ^^■olild...•ls you Like it,i. 1 
I have by hard adventure found mine — ii. 4 
I'll adventure to borrow of a week. . . Winter's T.i. 2 
■will you adventure to save this brat's — ii. 3 
and would'st adventure to mingle faith — iv. 3 
much less the adventiu-e of her person — v. 1 
in this mist at all adventures go. . Comedy ofEr. ii. 2 
to try the fair adventure of to- mon-ow . . .John, v. 5 
he in this a.hciitr.rc hath svriu-ised. .IHenry 7r. i. 1 
such ivas:.n,f.)itbis adventure, t!iat — i. 2 

then will tlu..,- lalvcnturenniai tbc exploit— i. 2 
iu the a-.U-Liiliuc lit' this perilous day — v. 2 



ADV 



ADVENTURE— 
IKi.ight.'] my life spakoatadTenture..2H(!nr!/ jr. i. 1 
at all adveiituies, so we were quit — Ih-iinj V. iv. 1 
xinliecat'ul.desijcrate.mldadvcnture.l lien. VJ.iv. 4 
adventure to lie banislied myself . .2 lleiirij VI. iii. 2 
liave found the adventure verv easy — iv. 2 

ad\enturc to lie sent to the Tower ..Richard 11 1. \.Z 
if vou f:;ll in tlie adventure, our crows . . Cymb. iii. 1 

not deatli on't, I would adventure — iii. 4 

to lock it from aetion and ad\'euturc — iv. -1 

or die in the adventure, be my helps Pericles, i. 1 

who looking' for aiUeutures in the world — ii. 3 

ad veutiu'e fir s^ueh merehandize Rom. ft Jul. ii. 2 

in the churehjard; vet I will adventure — v. 3 

ADVENTURED— I have adventured to try.Ci/m.i. 7 

ADVENTURING— by adveutturingboth.-l/.o/r. i. 1 

ADVENTUKOUS— by report, adventurous.i-'eri. i. 1 

spend vour adventurous worth, whom if . . — ii. 4 

tiieath'ini; the steel in my adveutm-ous. Titus An. v. 3 

til.' ad^■ent^Irou3 knight shall use liis foil.. Ha/n. ii. 2 

A 1) V E^ T I' K O ITSLY— 

diu-st steal anv thius adventm-ously..7J'enr!/F. iv. 4 
ADVEKSARl£S— 
into the leaguer of the adversaries ..AlVs Well, iii. 6 
as adversaries do in law, strive. Tamirisj- of Shrew, i. 3 
simtxest Ids soon-believing adversaries ..Rich. II. i.l 
eloudymLUUse to tlieir adversaries.. IHcn. W. iii. 2 
even In the bo.Jom i.f our adversaries — v. 5 
[C'o«i(;r]-embraee these souradversarie3..3f/. FI. iii. 1 

the soids of fearful adversaries Ricltard III. i. 1 

a weeder-out of his proud adversaries — i. 3 
oneient knot of dangerotis adversaries — iii. 1 
tliov have been still my adversaries — iii. 2 

the usurping helmets lifom' adversaries — v. 3 

111 the i.'.i;«lirftlieira.lversaries Coriolanus, iv. 3 

AI->VKJ;SAliY— a stiiuy adversary.. il/(?r. o/ l-Vn. iv. 1 

and 1 will be thy achersary Merrij IVives, ii. 3 

i' the adversary's entertainment .■ill's H'ell. iv. 1 

of battle with mine ad\'ersary Richard II. i. 3 

by reason of his adversaiy's odds 1 Henry FI. v. 5 

thy adversary's M-ife doth pray for. . Richard III. v. 3 

the adversary I am to cope mthal Lear, v. 3 

the servants of yoiu" adversary ..Romeo ^- Juliet, i. 1 

ADVE RSE— of tlus adverse town. . Twelfth A'/g/i/, v. 1 

against me on the adverse side . . Meas. for iieas. iy. 6 

this to what adverse issue it can .... Much Ado, ii. 2 

time seem so adverse, and means -Ill's F/ell, v. 1 

no trafiie to oin adverse towns. . Comedy of Errors, i. 1 
tlie ad^■erse winds, whose leisure I . . King John, ii. 1 
when adi erse foreigners affright my. . — iv. 2 
of thj- ad\erse periucious enemy .... Richard II. i.Z 

combat with adverse planets Mlenry FI. i. 1 

in v ina.-\ers on the adverse party . . Richard III. iv. 4 
wfiieh they upon the adverse faction want — v. 3 
ADA'EI-iSK'LY-toneh my palate adversely . CorioJ. ii. 1 
ADVEKSITIES— embrace these som- adversities 

ICollier — adversaries] Zllcnry FI. iii. 1 

all indign and base adversities make tlhello, i. 3 

ADVERSITY— 
I am, cross'dwith adversity . . Two Gen. of Fer. iv. 1 
sweet are the uses of adversity . . As you Like il, ii. 1 
soul, bruised with adversity . . Comedy of Errors, ii. 1 
to be patient; I am in adversity — iv. 4 

ringed about with hold adversity . . 1 Henry FI. iv. 4 
well said, adversity! and what need. Troll. ffCr. v. 1 
adversity'ssweet milk, philosophy.. /torn.* /u(. iii. 3 
ADVERTISE— 
can my part in liim advertise . . Measure for Meas. i. 1 
the king his lord advertise whether. . Hen. VIII. ii. 4 
ADVERTISED— 

Elease it yom- grace to he advertised.. 2 Hfn.r/.iv. 9 
y my scouts I was advertised, that. .SHc/i. FI. ii. 1 
I have advertised him by secret means — iv. b 
we are advertised by our losing friends — v. 3 

bylriends am well advertised Ricliardlll. iv. 4 

ailvertised, thci r great general . . Troilus ^ Cres. ii. 2 

ADVERTISE.MENT— 
griefs cry louder than advertisement. Much Ado, v. 1 
an advertisement to a proper maid ..Alt's Well, iv. 3 
this advertiseracut is five days old. .IHenry/F. iii. 2 
yet doth he give us bold advertisement — iv. 1 

ADVERTISING- 
as I was then advertising, and . . Meas. for Meas. v. 1 

ADVICE — ask my fatherior his advice. . Tempest, v. 1 
this pride of hers, upon ad\dce . . Two G. of Fer. iii. 1 
with more ad^^ce, that thus without advice — ii. 4 

aud thy ad\'ice tiiis nJL'lit — iii. 2 

the onset to thv giiml advice — iii. 2 

the lists of all advice my strength.. Afeas. /or M. i. 1 

whose advice hath often stilled — iv. 1 

he wants adWce — iv. 2 

and say by whose advice thou cam'st — v. 1 

yet did repent mc after more advice — v. 1 

upon more adricc, liath sent you . . Mer. of Fen. iv. 2 

understand what advice shall All's Well,i. 1 

f-hare the advice lictwixtj'ou — ii. 1 

you did never lack ad\ ice so much — iii. 4 

upon advice, it toucheth us both .. Taming of Sh.i. 1 
we need no more of your advice .. Winter's i'ale, ii. 1 
easier for adWce, or stronger for. . — iv. 3 

else have desired yoiU" good advice Macbeth, iii. 1 

if you will take a lioracly man's advice — iv. 2 
a Sliced with such advice disposed . . King John, iii. 4 

is banished upon good advice Richard II. i. 3 

3'our lordship goes abroad by advice . .iHen.IF. i. 2 
with good advice, and little medicine.. — iii. 1 
on his more advice, we pardon him . . Henry F. ii. 2 
and Hiune's advice, your grace's title. .2Hcn. Fl.i. 2 

but with advice, and silent secresy — ii. 2 

thus Mgh, by thy advice, and thy. . Richard III. iv. 1 
begin to relish thy ad\'ice . . Troilus and Cressida, i. 3 
as you shall gii'e the adv'ice.. Antony ^-Clcopaha, i. 3 
some comfort out of your best adv'icQ. .Cyinbelinc, i. 2 
if you will elect by my advice . . THus Atidronicus, i. 2 
the Greeks, upon advice did bury Ajax — i. 2 

by ray advice, all humbled on your.. — i. 2 

shaU file our engines with advice.... — ii. 1 

by good advice, mortal revenge — iv. 1 

will all subscribe to thy advice — iv. 2 

nor ask advice of any other thought Pericles, i. 1 



[8] 



ADVICE —we must have use of yom' advice. ie«r, ii. 1 
and, by my ad%ice, let us impart wliat . , llamtel, i. 1 

by my foriner lecture and advice — ii. 1 

she toiik the fruits uf ray advice; and he — ii. 2 
when this :id\ ice is free, I give Othello, ii. 3 

ADViSE-ad\ ise you what you say. Twelfth Night, iv. 2 
she thus advises thcc, that sighs.. — ii. 6 (letter) 
advise me where 1 may have. . Two Gent, of Fer. iii. 1 
I ad^'ise you. let mc not Hud you. . Mea. for Mea. ii. 1 
we shall advise this wronged maid — iii. 1 

upon her, father, ii'vou advise it .. — iv. 1 

and ailvisc him for a better iilace.. — iv. 2 

I am Clinic to advise you, I'ninfiirt you — iv. 3 

friar, ad-visc him; 1 lea\c him to.. — v. 1 

let the f.ia v ad\ise vi m Much Ado, iv. 1 

good m.v lord, advise him All's Well, i. 1 

to my cliamber, aud advise me — ii. 3 

I need not to ad\ ise ,>'ou further — iii. 5 

well dost thou advise: if Biondello. . Taming of S. i. 1 

I ad\'ise you use yoiu* manners — i. 1 

be gone, or talk not, I advise you .... — i. 2 
and this will I advise you; first tell me — iv. 2 
do your duty thoroughly, I adxdse you — iv. 4 
thou dost advise me, even so as . . Wijiler's Tale, i. 2 

I will advise you where to plant Macbeth, iii. 1 

and that well might advise hira to — iii. 6 

bid thy master well advise himself . . Henry V. iii. 6 

I advise you, (and take it from Henry Fill. i. 1 

that rock, that I advise your shunning — i.l 

can advise me like you — i.l 

I shall anon advise you further .... — i.'i 

of mankind, that he thus advise us. . Tim. of A. iv. 3 
what peace you'll make, advise me. . Coriolanus, v. 3 
shall advise me in all for Cleopatra. . .int. .^ CI. v. 2 
sir, I would advise you to shift a shirt . . Cymb. i. 3 

will,out of this advise you, follow iii. 2 (letter) 

advise the emperor for nis good . . Titus Andron. i. 2 
advise thee, Aaron, what is to be done — iv. 2 
with dead cheeks advise thee to desist.. Pericles^ i. 1 
but yet, I know you'll do as I advise . . — iv. 4 

brotlier, I advise you to the best Lear, i. 2 

advise yom' fellows so — i. 3 

advise yourself. I am sure on't — ii. 1 

advise the duke, where you are going — iii. 7 

I do advise you, take this note — iv. 5 

lay hand on heart, advise Romeo and Jidiet, iii. 5 

can you advise me? I am lost in it .... Hamlet, iv. 7 
you advise me well. I protest Otiiello, ii. 3 

ADVISED— well hast thou advised. . Two G. of V. i. 3 

be advised, sir, aud pass good Merry Wives, i. 1 

are you advised o' that? — i. 4 

art advised o' that? more on't . . Meas. for Meas. ii. 2 
and advised him for the entertainment — iii. 2 

yet I'm advised to do it — iv. G 

say you, Herraia, be advised, fair. Mid. N. Dream, i. 1 
but be first advised, in conflict. . Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 
if by me you'll be advised, let's . . — v. 2 

and were you well advised — v. 2 

with more advised watch, to find . . Mer. of Fen. i. 1 

therefore be advised — ii. 1 

therefore be well advisecl, how you do — v. 1 
biit art thou not advised, he took . . Taming of S.i. 1 
friendly, as thou hast advised me, . Winter' sTale, i. 2 
be advised. I am; and by my fancy — iv. 3 

I am advised what I say Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

be well advised; tell o'er thy t:ils..King John, iii. 1 
upon liumom- than advised respect — iv. 2 

nor never by ad\dsed purpose meet. .iJ/cArird II. i. 3 
good cousin, he advised; stir not ..Mlenry IV. 'ir. 3 

you were advised, his flesh was 2Henry IF. i. \ 

as I was then advised by my learned — i. 2 

the advised head defends itself at Henry V. i. 2 

and bids you he advised, there's naught — i. 2 
French, advised hy good intelligence — ii. (clio.) 
are you advised? the east side of . .iHenry FI. ii. 1 
and bid me be advised how I tread.. — ii. 4 

livery of advised age — v. 2 

and bade me be advised? Richard III. ii. 1 

be advised; heat not a furnace Henry VIII. i. 1 

be advised; I say again, there is not — i. 1 

by my friends in Spain advised .... — ii. 4 

I am advised to give her music o' . . Cymbeline, ii. 3 
whether since he is advised by aught .... Lear, v. 1 
general, be advised; he comes to bad Othello, i. 2 

ADVISEDLY— take it advisedly ....\Henry IF.y.I 
wiUnevermorebreakfaithadvisedly..il/er. ofF. v. 1 

ADVISING— 
fasten your ear on my advisings.. Mea. fer Mea. iii. 1 

ADVOCATE— 

an advocate for an impostor? Tempest, i. 2 

to be her advocate to the loudest . . Winter's Tale, ii. 2 
what advocate hast thou to him?.. — iv. 3 

advocate's the coiut-word for a pheasaut — iv. 3 
step forth mine advocate; at your — v. 1 

soul should sue as advocate for thee ..Com. ofEr. i . 1 

an earnest advocate to plead Richard III. i. 3 

I will be known your advocate Cymbeline, i. 2 

ADVOCATION— 
my advocation is not now in tune Othello, iii. 4 

iEACIDA — aio te, vEacida, romanos vincere 

posse 'illenry FI. i. 4 (iiaper) 

^ACIDES- 
fnr sure il'lacides was Ajax ..Taming of Siirew, iii. 1 

jEDILK — tlicicddes, ho! let himbe..Corio^a;(«*', iii. 1 

seize himj tcdiles. Down with liim — iii. 1 

asdiles, seize him. Yield, Marcius, yield — iii. 1 
our ffidiles smote? ourselves resisted?.. — iii. 1 

^GEON— hapless ^geon, whom the .. Com o/" iir. i. 1 
doth xEgeou wend, but to procrastinate — i. 1 
-ZEgeon, art thou not? or else his ghost? — v. 1 

speak, old iEgeon, if thou he'st — v. 1 

the same iEgeon, speak, and speak .... — v. 1 

iEGLE— make him -with fair JEsM . . Mid. N. Dr. ii. 2 

yEiSIILIA— ^vife once called JEinilia ..Com. of Err. v. 1 
the same iEmilia! If I dream not, thou — v. 1 

jEMILIUS — news with thee iEmilius. Titus And. iv. 4 
.lEmilius, do this message honourably — iv. 4 

iENEAS— he had said, mdower. Eneas ..Temnesl, ii. 1 
as did iEneas old Anchises bear. . . .2 Henry FI. v. 2 
but then J^neaij bare a living load. . — v. 2 



AFF 

iENEAS— 

j-Eneas, from the field to day? (rep.') Troil.% Cres. i 

that's yEneas, is not that a brave man? — i 

but peace, iEueas, peace, Trojan — i 

fair lord jEiieas, let me touch — i 

'tis the lord JEneas. Is the prince . . — iv 

lord ^neas. A valiant Greek, ^Eneas — iv 

Jove, let vEneas live, if to my — iv, 

who's there? mv lord -i3i]neas? — iv, 

and, my lord yEneas, we met by chance — iv, 

and bring iEneas, and the Grecian. . iv, 

as you and lord ^Eneas consent — iv, 

thus says ..ZEiieas; one that knows .. — iv, 

JEneas'is a-field; and I do stand .... — v, 

Ajax hath ta'en vEneas — v, 

as yEueas, our great ancestor Julius Ctesar, i, 

Dido and her Jbneas shall •want. Antony ^ Cleo. iv. 

like false ..Eneas, were in his time. . Cymbeline, iii. 

to bid -ZEneas tell the tale twice o'er. 7'/(i(.« And. iii, 

'twas Eneas' tale to Dido; and thereabout. Horn. ii. 
iEOLUS— yet iEolus would not be . .2 Hen. VI. iii. 
AER — we call mollis aer; and mollis aer ...Cymb. v. 
AERIAI; — the aerial blue, anindistinct. . Oiiiclln, ii. 
-lESC ULAPIUS— ililscidapius guide us ..Pericles., iii. 

what says my iEsculapius? Merry Wives, ii. 

iESON— that did renew old jEson . . . Mer. of Ven. v. 
^SOP— iEsop fable in a winter's night. . .3 H. FI. v. 
iETNA— let hot JEtna cool in SicUy.. 7V7ms And. iii. 

I will he thro'vvn into JEtaa. Merry Wives, iii. 

AFAR — made afar ott' by Su' Hugh . . — i. 

saw afar off in the (irciiard this Much Ado, iii. 

sijeakforher is afar offgmlty Winter's Tale, ii. 

be commenced in stronds afar remote. 1 Hen. IF. i. 
AFEAKD — aleard now oi" your foiu* legs. Tempest, ii. 

be not afeard, thy good friend — ii. 

I afeard of him? — ii. 

art thou afeard? iii. 

be not afeard; the isle is full — iii. 

but that I am afeard . . Merry Wives of Windsor, iii. 

not the ladies be afeard of the lion?.j¥<rf. jV. Dr. iii. 

aknavery of tliem, to make me afeard — iii. 

a conqueror, and afeard to speak !. . Love's L. L. v. 

yet to be afeard of my deser>'iug . . . Mer. of Ven. ii. 

I am half afeard, thou vrilt say anon — ii. 

I am afeard, the life of Helen All's Well, v. 

then never trust me if I be afeard . Taming of S. v. 

Horteusio is afeard of you. He that is — v. 

I was not much afeard; for once. Winter's Tale, iv. 

I am but sorry, not afeard — iv. 

nothing afeard of what thyself Macbeth, i. 

o,rt thou afeard to be the same? — i. 

a soldier and afeard? what need v. 

but, if you be afeard to hear Ki7ig John, iv. 

art thou not horribly afeard 1 Henry IF. ii. 

I am afeard there are few die well Henry F. iv. 

that shall make all France afeard..! HenryFI. iv. 

name I oft have been afeard 2 Henry FI. ii. 

a virtuous sin), makes me afeard . Trail, e,- Cres. iv. 

to be afeard to tell grey-beards Julius Ccesar, ii. 

he is afeard to come. I will not ..intony (f Cleo. ii. 

half afeard to come. Goto, goto — iii. 

art not afeard? Those that I reverence . . Cymb. iv. 

I am afeard, being in night Romeo fy Juliet, ii. 

I am afeard, you make a wanton of me.Hamte;, v. 
AFFABILITY— in smiles and affability. /«i/«s C. ii. 

affability as in discretion you ought . . HenfyF. iii. 

her affability and bashful modesty. TnmMio-o/S. ii. 
AFFABLE— Baptista Minola, an aft'able — i. 

soft, and affable, why does the world — ii. 

valiant as a lion, and wondrous affable. IH. IV. iii. 

since he was mild and aft'able 2 Henry FI. iii. 

afi'able wolves, meek beai's, you fools. TiHi ok of.i . iii . 
AFFAIR — to confer of home" affairs .Two G. ofV. ii. 

in these affau's to aid me — ii. 

break with thee of some affairs — iii. 

hope is a curtail dog in some affairs ...Merry W. ii. 

is right apt for this affair Twelfth Night, i. 

so hardy to come again in Ms affairs — ii. 

take, and give back, affairs — iv. 

give the mother notice of my affair ..Mea. for M. i. 

lord Angelo, having affairs to heaven — iii. 

my stay must be stolen out of other affairs — iii. 

save in the office and affairs of love ..Much Ado, ii. 

whiles I in tliis affair do thee employ. .";//(/. A', i*. iii. 

not I, but my affairs, have made. ..;Vw'. of Fen. ii. 

till I, and my afl'airs are answered .As you Like, ii 

liart of a minute in the affau's — ■ iv 

that and all your worthiest affairs . . AlVs Well, iii. 

such affairs, ICotlicr. KnigJU — a scarre] that iv. 

to wear yomr gentle limbs in my affairs — v. 

aft'airs do even drag me homeward. Winter's Tale, i. 

in your affairs^ my lord, if ever I.. .. — i. 

what liis happier affairs may be — iv. 

andfor the ordering your affairs, to sing — iv. 

grownincapableof reasonable affairs? — iv. 

yorur affairs there? what? with whom? — iv. 

I command thee to open thy aft'aii'? — iv. 

best half of our aft'air. 'Well Macbeth, iii. 

in riddles and aft'airs of death — iii. 

to treat of high affairs touching E-ing John. i. 

demand of thine attiiirs, as well as . . — v. 

furnish ns for our aft'airs in hand Richard IT. i. 

and, for these great att'au-s do ask some — ii. 

to order these affairs, thus tlu'ust — ii. 

big upon the maidenhead of our affairs. 1 H. IF.'w. 

hasty employment in the king's aft'airs .2 H. / r. ii. 

give even way unto my rough aft'airs .. — ii. 

like a brother toiled in my affairs — iii. 

with ringing in the king's affairs — iii. 

and prosper your affairs, and send us peace — iii. 

and brethi'en in these great affau-s — iv. 

putting all affairs else into oblivion — v. 

him debate of commonwealth aft'airs . . . Hen ry F. i. 

other aft'airs must now be 1 Henry Ft. iv. 

I come to talk of commonwealth affairs. .2 i7. Fl.i. 

my lord is cold in great affairs — ill. 

take order for mine own aft'airs — iii. 

the first of all yom- cliief aft'airs 3 HenryFI. 'iy. 

a packhorse in'his great aft'airs — Richard III. i. 

IKnight} so thi-ive liu my dangerous affaii-e - iv. 



.2 



. 1 



AFF 



[9] 



A.FFAIIIS— 

dure look into these aifairs Ucnry Till. ii. 2 

is this an hom' for temporal n.fl'airs':' ha? — ii. 2 

tlieir affairs as riulUeous; 1, lit all — iii. 1 

iiflairs that walk (;is, thov sav, s|iiriis .lul _ v. 1 
from yom- affairs 1 liindrr vuii to.. Ion- — v. 1 
what's vom- affair, 1 \n\\\ voii . . . TioUus fy Cies. i. 3 
tlie j.'rcat swav of his affairs with — ii. 2 

is s\ieh a wrest intlairattiiirs.... — iii. 3 

mv aifairs are servaiited to others ... Corio/HiiKs.T. 2 
the f irtunes and affairs of noble .Julius Cwsar, iii. 1 
there is a tiile in the affairs of men — iv. 3 

siuue the aifairs of men rest — v. 1 

his affairs eonie to me on the wind. v4n?. Sf Cleo. iii. 6 

to JewTV, on artairs.if Antony — iv. 6 

if one of mean aUiiirs may plod it ..Cymleline, iii. 2 

assaulted, for f iltowiii^' her aftiiirs Lear, ii. 2 

freely gone with this affair along Hamlet, i. 2 

bnt what is yoiu* affair in Elsiuore? — ■ i. 2 

and start not so wildly from my affair.. — iii. 2 

that else leans on the affair — iv. 3 

im.l inir affairs from England come too late — v. 2 
the state affairs, hath hither hronght . . . Othello, i. 3 

still the honse affairs would draw her — i. 3 

your graee, on to the state affairs — i. 3 

nesceeh you, proceed to the affiiirs of state. . — 1.3 
the aff'air cries haste^nd speed must answer — i. 3 

let's to our affairs. Forgive us our sins — ii. 3 

in their sleeps will mutter their aff'airs — iii. 3 

I have dealt most directly in thy affair — — iv. 2 

-A FFAIRE— la grande affaire Memj H'ires, i. 4 

AFFECT— thou att'eet her, Claudio? . . Much Ado. i. 
in JNIilan, here, whom I affect. 'jCwo Gen. nJTer. iii. 

sir John affects thy wife Merry Wives, ii. 

he my husband best of all affects.. — iv. 

IMariii once told me, she did affect me.. Twel. N. ii. 
to affect sijeech and discom-se. . MeisuieJ'or Mca. i. 
of safe discretion, that does affect it — i. 

everj- man with his affects is born . . Lore's L. L. i. 

I doatt'eet the very ground — i. 

I will something aft'ect the letter . . — iv. 

you affect a sorrow, than to have {rep.^. All's Well, i. 
study what you most affect. Taming of the Shrew, _\. 
if you aft'ect him, sister, here I swear — • ii. 

if X affect it more, than as i Henry fF. iv. 

yoivr grace aff'ect their motion? 1 Henry VI. v. 

since iie affects her most — v. 

how tliey affect the house and claim. .2 Hen. VI. iii. 

and affect in honour honesty Henry VIII i. 

infectiously itself affects, without. Troii. <^ Cres. ii. 2 

that I aft'ect the imtraded oath — iv. 5 

for he does neither affect company. Timon of Ath. i. 2 

praise, but what he does affect — 1.2 

to affect the malice and displeastnre .Cori'o^i?iMS, ii. 2 
charge him home, that he affects tyrannical — Hi. 3 
stratagem must do that yovi affect . . Titus .-ind. 11. 1 

doth affect a saucy roughness Lear, ii. 2 

young aff'ects, in my distinct and proper. Oi/iriio,!. 3 
not to affect many proposed matches .... — ■ iii. 3 

AFFECTATION— it is affectations .Merry Wives, i. 1 
siiruee aff'ectation ICollier — affection] figures 

pedantical Love's Labour Lost, V. 2 

ICollier'] indict the author of affectation.. Hum. ii. 3 

AFFECTED— stand you affected to. TuioGen. ofV. i. 3 

I stand att'eeted to her — 11. 1 

and as I fiud her, so am I affected. Merry Wives, ill. 4 
he, surely, affected herfor her wit. ..Loue's L. L. 1. 
which we lovers intitle affected .... — ii. 

that most are affected to these — Hi. 

too aft'ected, too odd, as it were — v. 

I am in all affected as yom-self . . . Taming of Sh. i. 
have I aff'eoted wealth or honour . .2 Henry VI. iv. 
how he doth stand aft'ected to our ..Ridiard III. iii. 
wluch ever yet affected eminence. . Henry VIII. ii. 3 
some imacre of the affected merit. . Trail. %■ Cres. ii. 2 
more affected than the performance — ii. 2 

nature but aft'ected ICollier. Knight — infected] — 

timon of Athens, iv. 3 
thou hast affected the fine strains . . Coriolanus, v. 3 
only affected greatness got by you .. Cymbeline, v. 5 
for aught thou know'st, affected be . . Titus And. ii. 1 

I thought, the king had more affected Lear, 1. 1 

no marvel then, thoueh he wei-e ill affected — ii. 1 

AFFECTETU— of his tongue alfecteth him .John i. 1 

AFFECTING— affecting one sole tluone . 6'«rio;. iv. 6 
such a di-awliug, art'ecting rogue ..Merry Wives, ii. 1 
antick.lisping, aff'ectingtantasticoes./?o7tt. %Jul.'\\. 4 

AFFECTION— affection not gone forth... rnnpes;, i. 3 

my affections are then most humble — 1.2 

fair encounter of two most rare affections — iii. I 

your affections would become tender — v. 1 

affection chains thy tender days .. Two Gen. of l'.\. 1 

80 your aft'ection would cease — ii. 1 

but can you aft'ection the 'oman? . . Merry Wives, i. 1 
to the vciiemcncy of your affection.. — ii. 2 

hath answered inv afrection (so far. . — iv. 6 

the flock of all a.ft'ectloiis else that. . . . Twelfth iV. i. 1 
or thy affection cannot hold the bent — ii. 4 
by vain though aiit affection ..Measure for Meas. i. b 
In the wiirkiiig of your own affections — • ii. 1 
or, hy the affection that now guides.. — 11.4 
neither heat, affection, limb, nor beauty — iii. 1 

yes. Has he aff'ectious in him — iii. 1 

the continuance of her first affection — iii. 1 

I heard him swear his affection Much .Jrfo, ii. 1 

into a nioimtaiu ofall'ection. the one — ii. 1 
whatsoever conies atlnrart liis affection — ii. 2 
loves him with an eiiraL'cd att'cclion . . — ii. 3 
iin-iiicil,le;i .-linstallassr.idtsofaffcction — ii. 3 
hatli :-lic |);:m!" I ii.t affection known to — ■ ii. 3 
sci'iii, hrrarr.-lioiis have their full lient — ii. :i 
ratli-n- die, tli;iii givcaiiysign ofaff'cetion— ii. 3 
to wish liim wrestle with atTection ...... — iii. 1 

no shape nor project of affection, she is — iii. 1 
containing her anection unto Henedick — v. 4 
that my prayers could such aft'ection. jUi'i/. A'. D. i. 1 

and tei'iiler ine, forsooth, affection — iii. 2 

that waraiiainst your own att'ections. tore'.! L. L. i. 1 
against tlie liuni'oiir of affection would — i. 2 
have at you tlicu aliection's men at arms — iv. 3 



AFFECTION— 
mtty without affection; audacious.. Lodc's L. L. v. 

most sweet pleasure and aft'ection — v. 

[Collier'] hyperboles, spruce aft'ection — ■ v. 

better part of my affections would ..Mer.of Ven. i. 
is there in your aft'ection towards . . — i. 

level at my affection — i. 

looked ou yet for my affection ... . — ii. 

and with affection wondrous sensible ^ ii. 

dimensions, senses, affections, passions — iii. 
affliction, mistress of passion, sways it — iv. 

and his aft'ections dark as Erebus — v. 

I will render thee again in affection. Js you Litie, i. 
come, come, wTcstle with thy aff'ectious — 1. 
my affection hath an unknown bottom — iv. 

as fast as you pour aff'cction in — Iv. 

disclose the state of your aft'ection Alt's Well, i. 

affection is not rated from the heart. Taming of S. i. 
not removeSj at least, aft'ection's edge . . — i. 

that loves with all affection — iii. 

of your entke affection to Bianca — iv. 

or both dissemble deeply their afi'ections — iv. 
betwixt them then stich an affection. Winter's T. i. 
affection! thy intention stabs the centre — i. 

this shows a sound affection — iv. 

I am heir to my aff'ection — Iv. 

with thought of such affections, step forth — v. 
the affection of nobleness, which nature.. — v. 
with all greediness of affection, are they.. — v. 
gay vestments his aff'ections bait?. Come(/!/o/£;)-. ii. 
strayed his aff'ection in unlawful love? — v. 
gi-eat affections, wrestling in thy bosom ..John, v. 
let me wonder^ Harry, at thy affections. 1 H. IV. iii. 
in affections ot delight, in military .2 Henry IV. ii. 
a better place In his aft'ection, than — iv. 

witli what wings shall his affections fly — iy. 
with the least affection of a welcome . . — Iv. 

In his tomb lie my affections — v. 

it shows my earnestness of affection . . — v. 
and though his aft'ections are higher ..Henri/ V. iv. 
nor your affections, and your appetites — v. 
this jewel, pledge of my affection ..I Henry VI. v. 
with all my full affections still met. Hen. VIII. iii. 
my king is tangled in affection to.. — iii. 
be corrupted through affection .. Troilus .§■ Cres. 11. 

temporize with my affijctlon — iv. 

I weigli ray friend's affection with . Timon of Ath. i. 
the a.ppetite and affection common .. Coriola?ius, 1. 
and your affections are a sick man's — 1. 

guided by vom' own true affections.. — ii. 3 
but, out, affection! all bond and privilege — v. 3 
not known whenlilsaffections swayed .j«(. C^s. 11. 1 

do stand but in a forced affection — iv. 3 

thou aft'ections? yes, gracious madam. ^lrt(. ^-Cleo. i. 5 
yet have I fierce affections, and think — i. .5 
Antony will use his affection where it is — ii. 6 

made weak by my affection — iii. 9 

the itch of his affection should not then — iii. 1 1 
pitying the pangs of barred aft'ection. .C'l/mdcZ/ru-, i. 2 
will continue fast to your affection . . — 1. 7 
love and your aft'ections on a stranger? .Pericles, ii. 5 

or vom- fore- vouched affection fall into Lear, 1. 1 

to feel my affection to your honom- — i. 2 

with that ceremonious affection as you — 1.4 

measuring his affections bv my own. iiom. ^ Jul. i. 1 

his own affection's counsellor — i. 1 

young affection gapes to be his heir. . — ^1.5 (clio.) 
she affections, and warm youthful blood — ii. 5 
affection makes him false, he speaks.... — iii. 1 
keep you in the rear ot'yonr affection . . Hamlet, i. 3 
Ms atfeetion to me. Affection? puh! .. — 1.3 
the author of affection [CoiKer— aft'ectation] ii. 2 
love ! his affections do not that way; tend — iii. 1 
dipping all his faults in then' affection . . — iv. 7 
goes hy_ letter, and affection, not by the old..O(A. 1. 1 
and poison this young maid's affections?... . — i. 3 
of his salt and most hidden loose affection? — ii. 1 
and doth affection breed It? I think. It doth — Iv. 3 
and have not we affections? desu-es for sport — iv. 3 

AFFECTIONATE— yoiu: wife, (so I would say) 
and your aft'ectionate servant . . Lear, iv. 6 (letter) 

AFFECTIONATEIvY— commends himself most 
affectionately to j'ou Troilus and Cressida, iii. 1 

AFFECTIONED— an affectionedass. . Twclftli N. 11. 3 

i\FFECT'ST— as thou atfeot'st .... Antony ■$■ Cleo. 1. 3 
that thus affect'st a sheep-hook . . Winter's Tale, i v. 3 

AFFEERED— thy title is affeered .... Macbeth, iv. 3 

AFFIANCE— the sweetness of affiance.. Hcnci//'. ii.2 
dangerous than this fond affiance . .2 Henry VI. iii. ' 
to know Ifyour affiance were deeply. . Cymbeline, i. 

AFFIANCED — was atfiancedtoher.jl/eas./or M. iii. 
I am affianced this man's wife — v. 

AFFIED— we be affied; and such .. Taming of S iv. 

AFFIN'D— seem all affin'd and kin . . Trail, i)- Or. i. 

in any_ just term am affin'd to love Othello, i. 

if partially aflin'd, or leagued in office — ii. 

AFFINITY — Cyprus, and great affinity — iii. 

AFFIRIVI- faithfully affirm, that the land. Hen. V. i. 

and I must not blush to affirm it — v. 

but I affirm it is the woman's part . . Cymbeline, ii. 
renege, affirm, and turn their halcyon Lear, ii. 

AFFIRMATION— of bloody afiirmatiou . . Ci/mb. i. 

AFFIRMATI'S^E- your two affirmatives.. Tu: N. v. 

AFFLICT — never afflict yourself to know . . Lear, i. 
where thou keep'st hourly affiict . . Meas. for .U. iii. 
that time conies, afliict me with . . .-Is you Like it, iii. 
but I could aftlict you i'lu'ther . . 
d doth afflict my soul 



leave to a: 
w hate 'or \ 
conscicii'f. 
thy greedi 
the leaniK 
friends, tli 
sour looks 



li.f 



ith . 



Tale 
.1 Henry VI. Ml. 
.2 Henry VI. ii. 
..3 Henry VI. i. 
;l. .Rich. III. V. 
rimonnf.llh.'iv. 



ii :ililii/t me 

iln.^t thou afflict 

Annl.UiiHictthee 

It iifHicts us 

afliict each other ..Ant. ^- Cleo. i 

t his gentle heart. . Titus .Initnai 

we will aftlict the cmiieror — i 

that does afliict our natures Ihtmlet, 

to us unknown, afflicts liim thus, that. . — 
AFFLICTED— he thus afflicted in.. Titus Andron. 
sliall be any fiu'thcr alfllcted Merry ll'icrs. i 



AFO 

AFFLICTED- ' 

I come to visit the aifficted spirits. . Meas. for M. ii. 3 

vile prison of afflicted breath A7n^' JoAn.iii. 4 

sure, he is nini'h alHicted. 'Wlio ..Henry VIII. ii.2 
dishoncstlv ulliirtcd, but vet honest.. Ci/nifa'dnf, iv. 2 
that we should he thus affiicted ..Uomeo ff Jul. ii. 4 

AFFLICTION- affliction alters {rep.) Wiuter'iT. iv. 3 
do not receive affliction at my. ... — iii. 2 

for this affliction has a taste as . . — v. 3 

a feeling of their afflictions Tempest, y. I 

the afliiction of my mind amends' — v. 1 

that money will h'eabitingaffliction ..MerryW.v.b 
aiflictinu liiav one dav smile wjain. Love's L. Lost, i. 1 
and sleep in the affliction of these .... Machelh, iii. 2 

fair affliction, peace King Jolin, iii. 1 

and Bom- affliction, be playfellows . .2 llonn/l'I. iii. 2 

must weigh out my aiflic'tions Hrnrif /'///.iii.l 

one of my greatest' affiictions .. Timonif'Allams,\i\. 2 

are made thy chief afflictions — iv. 2. 

please to stop affliction, let hira take — v. 2 

lie, that have afflictions on them Cymbeline, iii. IS 

happier much by his affliction made — v. 4 

man's nature cannot carry the affliction., Lear, Hi. 2 
shake patiently my great affliction off . . — iv. .5 

henceforth I'll bear aifiiction, till it — iv. i; 

affliction is enamoured of thy parts., iiom. f,- .Jul. Mi. 3 

if't be the affliction of his love Hamlet, iii.l 

in most great affliction of spirit iii. 2 

thought and affliction, passion, hell itself — iv. ."> 
pleased heaven to try me with atflictinn . . Othello, iv. 2 

AFFORD— we cannot aff'ord you ill's Well, iv. 1 

this commendation I can afford her , . Much Atln,i. i 
praiseweraay afford toany lady.. iowe'sL. Lost,'iv. 1 

we can aff'ord no more at such — v. 2 

and would aff'ord my speechless visor half — v. 2 
nothing that my house aff'ords. . TamingofS. (ind.) 1 
Padua aff'ords this kindness {rep.') — v. 2 

now Jove afford j'ou cause Winter's Tale, \\. 3 

that every churl affords Corned ij oi' Errors, iii.l 

purest treasure mortal times afford ..Richard II. i. 1 

afford no extraordinary gaze 1 Henry IV. Mi. 2 

see what physic the tavern affords. .1 Henry VI. iii. 1 

such as my wit affords 2 Henry Ff. i. 1 

as my rapier's point affords 3 Henry VI. i. 3 

other pleasure can the world afford? — iii, 2 

since this eaa-th affords no joy to me — iii. 2 

spacious world cannot again afford, .iiic/mrd ///, i. 2 
this dark monarchy afford false .... — i. 4 

the news that the Guildhall affords.. — iii. 5 

thon wouldst as soon afford a grave. . iv. 4 

comfort that the dark night can afford — v. 3 
as easy as a do\vn-bed would aff'ord it.. Hen. Ff//. 1. 4 
charitable men afford to beggars. . Timon of Ath. iii. 2 

this brief world affords to such as . . iv. 3 

Rome could aff'ord no tribune like . . Titus And. iii. 1 
Rome aff'ords no prey but me and mine — ill. 1 

ail hell aff'ord you such a devil? v. 2 

can aff'ord no better term than this..ifom. fy Jul. iii. 1 
these times of woe aff'ord no time.... — iii, 4 

and strength shall help afford — i v. 1 

the world affords no law to make thee — v. 1 

AFFORDETH— as soul to soul aff'ordeth . . Othello, i. 3 
AFFRAY— that voice doth us affray.. Tin m. <S- Jui.iii. 5 
AFFRIGHT— or rather did affright., il/id. N.'s Dr. v. 1 

adverse foreigners affright my towns John, iv. 2 

did aflu-ight the air at Agincourt . . Henrt/ V. i. (cho.) 

the scarecrow that aftxights our 1 Henry VI. 1. 4 

their touch affrights me 2 Henry VI. iM. 2 

doth death aft'rlght? Thy name affiights me — iv. 1 
even to affright thee with the view thereof — v. 1 
must not now affright us: by fair . .3 Henry VI. iv. 7 

dream affrights thee with a hell Ricliurd III. 1. 3 

dreams afl'right our souls — v. 3 

the one aft'rights you, the other Coriolanus, i. 1 

dragons here affright thee hard Pericles, i. 1 

these gone; let them affright thee.. Komeo 6r Jul. v. 3 

to affright an imperious lion: sue to Othello, ii. 3 

AFFRIGHTED— have been so affiighted. . Hamlet, ii. 1 
affrighted much, I did in time . . Winter's Tale, iii. 3 

who then, affrighted with their I Henry I V. i. 3 

marvel, lord, though it affrighted you ..Rich. III.L i 
people and senators ! be not affrigKted . . Julius C. iii. 1 
that the affrighted globe should yawn . . Othello, v. 2 
AFFRONT— picture affi-pnt his eye. Winter's Tale, v. 1 
yom- iireparatlon can af&ont no less..C!/m6e;i)ie,iv. 3 

that gave the affi-ont with them — v. 3 

may here aff'ront Ophelia: her fatlier . . Hamlet, iii. 1 

AFFilONTED— might be aff'ronted.. Trail. * (V. iii. 2 

AFFY— daring to ally a mighty lord..2Henr!/ I'l. iv. I 

jMarcus Andronicus, so I do afty . . Titus jlndron. 1. 1 

A-FIELD— who's a-fleld to-day'?.. Troilus ■f Cr. iii. 1 

Prince Troilus! wherefore not a-field — i. 1 

iEneas is a-field ; and I do stand eng.aged v. 3 

when thou didst keep my lambs a-field. IH. VI. v. 4 

AE'IRE — until oiur city be afire Coriolanus, v. 3 

AFLOAT — sea as we are now afloat ..Jul. Ciesar, iv. 3 

AFOOT— have walked ten mile afoot ..Much Ado, ii. 3 

of what strength they are afoot. All'sWell, Iv. 3 (note) 

1 saw the tyrant's power afoot Macbeth, iv. 3 

were I tied to run afoot, even to .... Richard II. i. 1 
before the game's afoot, thou still.... 1 Henri/ iF. 1.3 

by the squire afoot, I shall — ii.2 

threescore and ten miles afoot with me — ii. 2 
bear mine own fiesh so far afoot again — ii. 2 

is so forward, and afoot too — ii. 2 

we'll walk afoot awhile, and ease . . — ii. 2 
so far afoot, I shall he weary, love .. — ii.3 

but afoot, he will not budge — ii. 4 

till these rebels, now afoot, come ..illenry IV. 'vi. \ 

once afoot, end in one purpose Henry V. i. 2 

the game's afoot ; follow your — iii.l 

how now, my noble lord ? what, all afoot? 2 //. VI. v. 2 
went all afoot in siiinmer's scalding . .?,Ileii. VI. v. 7 
anon, he's there afoot, and there . . Troilus ,'y Cr. v, r, 

Itoiiic should know we were afoot Coriolanus, i. 2 

mischiei', thou art afoot, take tiiou.. Julius Ces. iii. 2 
were our witty emiiress well atbot.. . Titus .-ind. iv. 2 

to keep base life afoot King Lear, ii. 4 

'tis so; they are afoot. Well, sir .... — iv. 3 
wlicii tliou ice'bt that act afoot Hamlet, iii. i 



AFO 

AFOREHAND-knowing aforehand.. Lore's L. L. v. 2 

AFORESAID— witli the aforesaid swain— i. 1 (letter) 

or, as aforesaid, honest Launcclot..jVfr. of I en. ii. 2 

and, as aforesaid, Patroclus is afool.. Trail. Sf Cr. ii. 3 

AFRAID— of her society be not afraid.. Tempest, iv. 1 

we are less afraid to l)c drowned — i.l 

I ara afraid he will chastise me — v. 1 

you are afraid if vou see the Merry H'wes, i. 1 

1 am half afraid iie will liavc — iii. 3 

answer your master, l]e nut afraid.. — iv. 1 

be not afraid of grcatnc ss. . ruvlfih Aig-^i^ii.S (letter', 
be not afraid, good youth, I will not — lii. I 

be not afraid of greatness — iii, 4 

I ara afraid this great luhlier.. — iv. 1 

that my daughter is sometime .ifrnid...1/»(-/i Adn. ii. 3 
they shall hear I ara not afraid. .1/iV/. .WsDmnn, iii. I 
be not afraid : she shall not harm tliee — iii. 2 
I am much afraid, my ladv his...l/c;c/iaH/o/' r'eii. i. 2 
be not afraid, that I your hand should.. yKi's H'ell, ii. 3 

not that I ara afraid' to die — iv. 3 

I am afraid, sir, do what vciu. .Tmnfngnf Shrew, v. 2 
tliese witches are afraid o"f swords. . Com. of Err. iv. 4 

I ara afraid they have awaked Macbeth, ii. 2 

I am afraid to think what I have done — ii. D 

almost afraid to know itself — iv. 3 

I will not be afi-aid of death and bane — v. 3 

thou'lt be afraid to hear it — v. 7 

he is afraid of me, and I of him King John,iv. 1 

I am afraid ; and yet I'll venture it. . — iv. 3 

I am afraid, my daughter 1 Henry IF. iii. 1 

I am afraid of this gunpowder Percy — v. 4 

I am afraid he would prove the better.... — v. 4 

that, afraid of him, by magic 1 Henry VJ. i. 1 

or more afraid to fight, than IHenry VI. ii. 3 

and be not afraid. Be merry, Peter . . — ii. 3 
are you nil afraid? alas, Iblame you-.K/c/i. J//, i. 2 

I am afraid, methinks, tohear — i. 4 

what? art thou afraid? Not to kill — i. 4 

good my lord, be not afraid of shadows — v. 3 
I am afraid, his thinkings are below. Hen. r/Z/. iii. 2 
lo. C-Bsar, is afraid? Pardon me ..Julius Cipsar, ii. 2 
is all afraid to govern thee near. . Antony ^- Cleo. ii. 3 
I ara almost afraid to stand alone. . Romeo ff Jul. v. 3 

are afraid of goose quills, and dare Hamlet, ii. 2 

be not afraid, though you do see me Othello, v. 2 

AFRESH — stir afresh within me; a,ViA..Winler'sT.v. \ 
are even now to be afresh lamented . . — iv. I 
then have to't afresh; sweet Bianca! . Tam. ofSh. i. 1 
their congealedraouths, and bleed afresh.fl/e.///. i. 2 
AFKIC— 1 would they were in Afric, hot\\.Cymb. i. 2 
as when we put them on first in Afric . Tempest, ii. 1 
better parch in Afric sun ..Troilus and Cressida, i. 3 

not Afric owns a serpent Coriolanus, i. 8 

AFRICA— I speak of Africa, and golden.2Hera.ir. v. r> 

A FRIC AN— lose her to an African • Tempest, ii. 1 

.X- FRONT— these four came all a-front..l H. /F.ii. 4 
AFTER-DINNER— digestion sake, an af ter- 

. ^.S'""'^'''' breath Troilus * Cressida, ii. 3 

AFTER-ENQUIRY— 

or jump the after-enquiry on your own ..Cymb. v. 4 

At TER-EYE— erelefttoafter-eyehim .. — i. 4 

AFTER-HOUR- 

after-hours give leisure to repent. . . Richard III. iv. 4 

atter-hoiu-s with sorrow chide us not.iiom. ^-Jul. ii. 6 

.•Vl' TER-LOVE— to win thy after-love.. fi/c/t. II. v. 3 

scorn at first makes after-love . . TwoGen. ofVer. iii. 1 

AFTER- ."MEETING- 

A *^,™^'r>pointof thisour after-meeting. Corio!. ii. 2 
At i EiiA (_)( )N— ride you thisafternoon? . Macb. iii. 1 
custom with him i' the afternoon to . . Tempest, iii. 2 
the attemoon, Barnardine (note) Meas. for Mea. iv. 2 
IS to be executed in the afternoou? — iv. 2 

Barnardineraust die thisafternoon? — iv. 3 

O, this afternoon. Well, IwiU. . . . Love's L. L. iii. 1 

It must be done this afternoon iii. i 

in the afternoou we will with some — iv. 3 

the rude multitude call the afteruoon — v. 1 

and measurable for the afternoon — v. 1 

most vilely in the afternoon, when..Mer. of Fen. i. 2 
Ash- Wednesday was four year in the afternoon— ii. 5 
shametul hate sleeps out the afternoon. All's Well, v. 3 
we may contrive this arceruoon .. Taming of Shr. i. 2 
married man afternoon as she . . — iv. 4 

biit- till this afternoon, his passion. . Com of Err. v. 1 
this afternoon will post to consummate ..John, v. 7 
at two o'clock i' the afternoon ....1 Henry IF.m. 3 
tlrree of the clock in the afternoon. .2 Heriry IV. i. 2 
to eclipse thy life this afternoon. ... 1 Henry VJ. iv. .5 
even m the afteruoon of her best days. fli'cA. ///. iii. 7 
idle housewife with me this afternoon ...Coriol. i. 3 
have the drum struck up thisafternoon.. — iv 5 
come you this afternoon, to know ...Rom. * Jul. i 1 

to come to shrift this afternoon — ii 4 

this afternoon, sir? well, she shall .. — ii' 4 
AF?ER'sTrpp'''W° °''"'® afternoon ....Hamlet, i. 5 
A FTFR^TtX?''*^"^' '^^'^ ted-time?.Mid. N. Dream, v. 1 

A S2,""i''^<^'"'ttom of the after- tiraes.2 Henry IV. iv. 2 
AJiER WARD— afterward up higher;. Ci/mtrfme, i. G 
11 3'ou seek us afterwards in other terms.. — iii. 1 
and afterward determine our ..Two Gen. ofVer.iii. 2 
and afterwards picked my pocket. . Merry Wives, i. 1 
and we mil afterwards 'ork upon .... — i.l 
the devil guide his cudgel afterwards! ..— iv. 2 
executed, and sleep afterwards.. Mens, for Meas. iv. 3 
lack ot tempered judgement afterward . . — v. 1 
hang It first, and draw it afterwards. Muc/i Ado, iii. 2 
recount their particidar duties afterwards — iv. 1 

we U have dancing afterward — v 4 

never to speak to k,dy afterward . . Mer. of Ven. ii! 1 
the first assault, or ransom afterward ..All's Well, i. 3 
at terwards consort you till bed- time. Com. of Err. i. 2 
read it, afterwards seal it, and again ..Ma'cbeih, v. 1 
pardon, tirst; and afterward stand up.. Rich. II. v. 3 
tnat afterwards we may digest oxa. Richard III. iii. 1 
ana afterward by substitute betrothed — iii. 7 
spe:Uv as much a? thou afterward.. Troil. ^- Cres. ii. 1 
aiterward. 3s Iloptfir's leisiire and vour — iv. .'b 
AM:ua m death, and envy afiurward../u/. Ca;sar,i\. 1 



[10] 



AGA 



AFTERWARD— 
afterward, to order weU the state.. Titus Andrnn. v. 3 
they not say afterwards, if they should.. H«?nie(, ii. 2 

AG.MN— yet again Tempest, i. 1 

oft' to sea again j. 1 

we'll cry it o'er again — i, 2 

sighing back again, did us — i. 2 

they all have met again i. 2 

which Syeoi-ax could not again undo — i. 2 

weepingagain thekingmy father'swi-eck — i. 2 

no, it begins again — i.2 

thy nerves are in their infancy again . . — i. 2 

I ne'er again shall see her ii. i 

though some cast again ii. i 

the storm is come again — ii. 2 

and it shall be said so again — ii. 2 

open your chaps again — ii.2 

we'll fill him by and by arain — ii.2 

Lo, lo, again? bite him to death — iii. 2 

to hearken once again the suit I made thee — iii. 2 

■will make me sleep again — iii. 2 

I cried to dream anain iii. 2 

whom once again 1 tender to thy laand. . — iv. 1 

Mars' hot minion is returned again — iv. 1 

say ;igain, where didst thou — iv. 1 

since you have given me again — v. 1 

to call her back again Two Gen. ofVeronaA. 2 

and yet take this again — li. 1 

since unwillingly, take them again — ii. 1 

could not again reply ii.i 

here have 1 brought him back again — iv. 4 

and find my dog ajjain iv. 4 

or ne'er return again into my sight — iv. 1 

let me look on that again iv. 4 

once again I do receive thee honest v. 4 

if once again, Milan shall _ v. 4 

repeal thee home again v. 4 

If I were young again, the Merry Wives, i. 1 

mine own great chamber again else — i.l 

"whilst I live again i. 1 

I'll never to sea again ii. 1 

your husband is in his old luues again.. iv. 2 

shall I put him into the basket again? .. iv. 2 

to carry the basket again to meet him . . iv. 2 

take the basket again on your iv. 2 

pray heaven, it be not full of the knight again — iv. 2 

any way then to unfool me again? iv. 2 

why may not he be there again? iv. 2 

never trust me when I oiieii again — iv. 2 

in the way of waste, attempt us again — iv. 2 

let our wives yet once again — iv. 4 

I'll to him ag'ain in name of Brook iv. 4 

I will never take you for my love again.. — v. 5 

I will never mistrust my wife again .... v. 5 

that strain again Twelfth Night, i. 1 

thou raightst never draw sword again .. — i. 3 
I wmild I might never draw SH'ord again — ■ i, 3 

thcrefive, I say again, take her away — i. 5 

unless oercluiniT, ynu come to me again — i. 5 
to drown her rcmciiihrance again with more — ii. 1 

to come again in ills aifairs ii.2 

we'll have the bear again 11.5 

I bade you never speak again of him iii.l 

'tis titnc to smile again iii. 1 

yet come again; for thou iii. 1 

come again to-morrow (re/).) iii. 4 

I will return again into the house — iii. 4 

slid, I'll after him again iii. 4 

I'll be with you again i v. 2 (song) 

desire my dog again v. I 

till I come again v. 1 

to speak of, would offend again . . Meas. for Meas. i. 3 

he calls again; I pray you 1.5 

give you three-pence again ii. 1 

before me again upon any complaint ii. 1 

why dost thou ask again? ii. 2 

to him again; entreat him : ii.2 

may call it back again ii.2 

come again to-morrow ii.2 

to hear her speak again, and feast ii. 2 

ere long I'll visit you again iii.l 

you'll forswear this again iii. 2 

the duke, we talk of, were returned again — iii. 2 

my kisses bring again, bring again iv. 1 (song) 

mended again; the matter: proceed — v. 1 

call that same Isabel here once again .... v. 1 

return him here amin: go with lum — v. 1 

see a bachelor of threescore again? . . Mvch Ado, i. 1 

than I will get again OTth drinking 1.1 

I would have thee lience, and here again . . — ii. 3 

we'll hear that song again ii.3 

send her home again without a husband.. — iii. 3 

nothing, unless you render her again — iv. 1 

take her baek again ; give not tliis — iv. 1 

too few to wash"her clean again — iv. 1 

thatfairagain unsay; Demetrius. .i>/('d. N. Dream, i. 1 
to have his sightth'ithcr,and backagain.. — i.l 

let him roar again, let him roar again i.2 

and return again, as from a voyage — ii.2 

and be thou here again, ere the leviathan — ii.2 

that he lieard, and is to come again — iii. 1 

I pray thee, gentle mortal, sing again — iii.l 

lower! hark, again iii. 2 

Little again? nothing but low iii. 2 

Lysaiider.speak again: thou runaway — iii. 2 

the man shall have his mare again — iii. 2 

to Athens hack again repair — iv. 1 

being sensible, should curse again v. 1 

atfliction may one day smile again. . Love's L. L. \. I 

fair, I give you back again ii. 1 

and go well satisfied to France again. . — ii. 1 

to-morrow shall we visit you again ii. 1 

say the moral again iii. i 

first praise me, and again say, no? .... iv. 1 

to insert again my hand credo for iv. 2 

I will look again on the intellect .... iv. 2 

well proved again on my side! iv. 3 

immediately they will again be here.. v. 2 

and utters it again when God doth _ v. 2 

but take it, sir, again v. 2 



AGAIN— 

we are again forsworn; in will Love's L. L, v. 2 

will you have me, or your pearl again? — v. 2 

and the whole world again, cannot — v. 2 

let me borrow m.v arms again — v. 2 

lest you be forsworn again — v. 2 

latter hazard back a":aln Merchant of Venice, i. 1 

swore he would pay him again, wlien — i. 2 
call thee so again, to spit on thee again — i. ;! 

that doth untread again his tedious . . ii. f, 

survey the inscriptions back again .... ii. 7 

I shall never see my gold again — iii.l 

for wooing here, vmtil I sweat again .. iii. 2 

but, till I come apain no bed — iii. 2 

well, till we shallmeet again iii. 4 

when we meet again; I wish you well — iv. 1 

to come again to Carthage v. 1 

I dare be bound again, luy soul upon . . — v. 1 
ever he go alone again, I'll never../(s you Likeit, i. 1 

I will render thee again in affection — i.2 

may 'st in honour come otf again i.2 

to bring again these foolish runaways — ii. 2 

givingher them again, said with — ii. 4 

turning again toward childish — ii. 7 

shallow again : a more souuder — iii. 2 

wonderful, and yet again wonderfid . . — iii. 2 

when shalt thou see him again? — iii. 2 

I marvel, why I answered not again . . — iii. 5 
I will he with thee again. Ay, go ... . — iv. 1 

a promise to return again wit'liin — iv. 3 

if I sent him word again, it was not .. v. 4 

restored to thoin again that were — v. 4 

in blowing him down again, with All's Well,S. ! 

what, pale again? my fear hath i. 3 

to bear me back again. I cannot give — ii. 1 

to be young again, if we could — ii.2 

why, there t serves well again ii.2 

haste you again — ii.2 

we'll ne'er come there again — ii.3 

when I lose thee again, I care not .... — ii . 3 

if I could but meet him again — ii.3 

out of it 3'ou'll run again, rather — i i . .5 

thither we bend again ; ; — iii. 2 

then hast thou all again. Poor lord!.. — iii. 2 

a letter? read it again iii. 4 

will speed her foot again, led — iii . 4 

come, let's return again, and suffice .. — iii. 5 

of honour again into his native — iii. G 

and pay again, when I have found it .. — iii. 7 

hast thou to speak to us agai n ? — i v. 1 

when back again this ring shall — iv. 2 

or r_etm-n again into France? — iv. 3 

I wiU never trust a man again — iv. 3 

I pray you, sir, put it up again — iv. 3 

we must to horse again ; go, go v. 1 

the time is fair again v. 3 

would never receive the ring again .... — v. 3 

and bring again the count. lam — v. 3 

and give me mine again — v. 3 

I intend to hunt again . . Taming of Shrew, (ind.) 1 

and once again, a pot o' the smallest . . — (ind.) 2 

to fall into my dreams again ;. . . — (ind.) 2 

that we may yet again have access .... — i.l 

nay, come again, good Kate; I am .... — ii. 1 

cuff you, if you strike again — ii. 1 

in the hole, man, and tune again — iii.l 

as he stooped again to take it up — iii. 2 

the wench, when he arose again? — iii. 2 

cut out, and sewed up a,gain; and that — iv. 3 

and fetch our horses back again — iv. 5 

why, then let's home again; come .... — v. 1 

therefore I'll sleep again. Nay, that.. — v. 2 

will take again your queen Winter's Tale, i. 2 

time as long again would be filled up — i.2 

come, sir, now I am for you again — ii. 1 

call the queen again. £e certain — ii. 1 

my rest might come to me again — ii. 3 

lo, fool again! I'll speak of — iii. 2 

spirits of the dead may walk again — iii. 3 

never dance again after a tabor — iv. 3 

which will shame you to give him again — iv. 3 

and again does notliing, but what he. . — iv. 3 

pm-chase the sight again of dear — iv. 3 

then recovered again with aqua-vit£e. . — iv. 3 

fit to shore them again, and that — iv. 3 

would have him wed again — v. 1 

bless the bed of majesty again with — v. I 

break his grave, arid come again to me — v. 1 

make her sainted spirit again possess. . — v. 1 

when your first q_ueeu's again in breath — v. 1 

he dies to me again, when talked of . . — v. 1 

then again worries lie his daughter — v. 2 

until you see her die again...". — v. 3 

that's never to be found again — v. 3 

fairs, again, if any Syracusan born. . Com. of Err. i. 1 

pay your worship those again, perchance — i.2 

till he come home again, I would ii. 1 

go back again, thou slave, and fetch (jep.) -- ii. 1 

so jest with me again ii.2 

thence that drop again, without ii.2 

come again, when ycm may iii.l 

get you in again; comfort my iii. 2 

establish him in his true sense again. . — iv. 4 

they are loose again iv. 4 

help, to have them bound again — iv. 4 

brought him to his wits again v. 1 

tomakeof him afiinnal man again .. — v. 1 

yet once again prwlaim it jmblicly — v. 1 

we came again to bind them — v. 1 

when shall we tliree meet again Macbeth, \. 1 

and tlu-ice again, to make up nine — i. 3 

addi'essed them again to sleep ii.2 

look on't again, I dare not — ii.2 

but returns again to night iii. 2 

then comes my fit again iii. 4 

we'll hear, ourselves again iii. 4 

upon a thoughthe will again be well.. — iii. I 

but now, they rise again, with iii. 4 

or, be alive again, and dare me to — iii. 4 

being gone, I am a man again — iii. 1 



AG AIN— she'll soon be back ncain Macbelh iii. 5 

we may again give to oui' tables — iii. (i 

not lie 'long but ru be liere again — Iv. 2 

sluilt tlimi'si'e tliy wlnilesome daysagain? 

'] tell \oi[ vet aaiiii, l!;in(|\io's 

il(i applaud again 



profit 
eilg 



slionldluu-aivdr 



— V. 



1 she;itlu 



iheeik'd. 



' 1 tii-:vt Muain, nindam, Iwould..* 

bear liome that lusty 111. lod again 

part yiau- iniiigledt-oloursonce again., 
and she attain wants nothing, to name 

ami congeal ai;ai)i to what it was 

tell o'er'thv tale again 

then s|iealc ai-'ain; not all thy former.. 

would live again by death ot need 

as now again to snatch our 

is, to mistake again; though 

and will aL'ain eonnnit them to 

true, I shall .see mv bov again — "'• ■* 

and, rising so attain, when I — i". 4 

I did never ask' it you again — iv. 1 

once arain we sit, once again crowned — iv. 2 

but now I breatlie airain aloft — iv. 2 

from them to me again. Tlie spirit .. — iv. 2 

in sii'us again parlev with sin — iv. 2 

hrittht, sir; |>ut it npaL'ainI — iv. 3 

take a-ain from this my lumd — v. 1 

mv tongue shall hush a'gain this storra — v. 1 

return to me again, after they lieard . . — v. 1 

the precedent to these lords again — v. 2 

up onre ;Tgain; putspirit in the — v. 1 

welcome home again discarded — v. 4 

I sav aL'ain, if Lewis do win — v. 4 

bv liis persuasion are again fallen off. . — v. .■) 

instantlv return with me again — v. 7 

are come home again, come the three.. — v. 7 

bids, I should not hid again Bidiard II. i. 1 

return back to their chairs a^in — i. 3 

retnrn airaiii, and take an oath — i. 3 

that spe;iks thy words again, to do — ii. 1 

yet, airain, metb.inks, some unburn , — ii, 2 

'the other again is my kinsman — ii. 2 

here part, tliat ne'er shall meet again. . — ii, 2 

stand upon my kingdom once again .. — iii. 2 

till so much ii'lood thither come again — iii. 2 

deadly hate: again uncurse then- souls — iii. 2 

s|ienk again to alter this, for counsel is — iii. 2 

and lands restored again, be freely — iii. 3 

should take it otf again with words. ... — iii. 3 

restored again to all liis land 

say that again ■ tlie shadow 

and wash him fresh again with 

wilt know again, lieiug ne'er so little. . 

give me mine o^en again; 't were 

speak it again; twice saying pardon .. — v. 3 

and then again; it is as hard toeome.. — v. 5 

then am I kinged again; and, by and by — v. 5 
come yourself with siieect to us again.. lHe«. IV. i. 1 

when he please again to be himself — — i. 2 

Iiis nose, and took 't awaj' again — i. 3 

lu-ged the ransom once again of — i. 3 

good thoughts of the world again — i. 3 

nay, if you have not, to't agafn; we'll stay — _i. 3 

to lift me up again, being down? — ii. 2 

o>vn flesh so far afoot again — ii. 2 

I say imto you again, you are — ii. 3 

breathe awhile, and then to it again — ii. 4 

send him back again to my mother , ,_. . — ii. 4 

pick thee out tlrree sucli enemies again ~ ii. 4 

the money shall be paid back again. ... — ii. 4 

give me leave to tell you once again .. — iii. 1 

Ave money is paid back again.... — iii. 3 

some siu-ety for a safe retm-n again — iv. 3 

I must go write a^ain, to other friends r— iv. 4 

will you again unKnittllis churlish.... — v. 1 

move in that obedient orb again — v. 1 

never to hold it up again! — v. 4 

ha! again. Said he, young Harry . .•2Henry I V . \. \ 

since we are o'erset, ventm-e again — i. 1 

and send you back again to your master — i. 2 

call him back again — i. 2 

I woidd I might never spit wliite again — i, 2 

give us that liing again, and take — i. 3 

but I will have some of it out again.... — ii. 1 

whetlier I shall ever see thee again, or no — ii. 4 

I win see you agin ere I go — ii. 4 

in all the mns of court again — iii. 2 

till he roar again. Olord! good my .. — iii. 2 

again would a'go, and again woidd a' come — iii. 2 

within oiu' awf id banks again — iv. 1 

I never tliought to hear you speak again — iv. 4 

O, thou wilt he a wilderness again .... — iv. 4 

a fear to be again displaced — iv. 4 

and, again, sir, shall we sow the — v. 1 

adozenof cushions a"ain; you have .. — v. 4 

I tliee defy again: Ohoundof Henry F. ii. 1 

begin the "battery once again — iii. 3 

how shall I know thee again? Give.. — iv. 1 

once more come again for ransom — iv. 3 

once more back again; and he that .... — iv. 5 

tiu'ice up again, and fighting — iv. 6 

comest thou again for ransom? No — iv. 7 

till Harry's back-retm-n again to France — v. (cho.) 

in my cap till I see him once again — v. i 

do always reason themselves out again — T. 2 

if Henry were recalled to life agaiii.. IHcnry VI. \. 1 

my life, my joy, again returned — i. 4 

again, in pity of my bard distress — ii, 5 

once again we'll sleeo secure in Rouen — iii, 2 

before he'll buy again at such a rate . . — iii. 2 

I'll liave a bout with you again, or else — iii. 2 
to get the town again, or die 



like to have the overthrow again 

lost, and recovered in a day again! . . . ._ 
like a Frenchman; turn, and turn again! 
scouts returned again, that dogged .... 

flies so, will ne'er return again 

and turn again unto the warlike 



— iii. 2 

— iii. 2 



[ 11 ] 

AGAIN— 
go, and be free opain, as Suffolk's ..Illcnnj VI. v. 

and I again, in llenry 's royal — v. 

I must trouble yon again, no — v. 

hope to eoniiiier them at;ain •'Heiinj VI. i. 

deli\ered up aiiain with peaceful — i. 

I am pleased again. iMy lord — i. 

nevcrinouut to troubleyou again — i, 

restore this cripple to his legs again? .. — ii. 

toward London, back agiiin — ii. 

from lience to prison back again — ij. 

tlie world may laugh again — ii. 

come to me again, and given me — iii. 

he dotli revive again; madam — iii. 

drove bacli; again unto my native — iii. 

blusli and beautify the cheek again.... — iii. 

alive again ? then show me wliere — iii. 

in contempt, sliall hiss at thee again .. — iv. 

Lent shall be as long again as it is — iv. 

I'll read it over once again — iv. 

foi'ewell, for I must lience again — iv. 

and that will mal^e 'em red again .... — iv. 

now part tliem again, lest they — iv. 

are thy sovereign, Cliftord kneel again — v, 

go to bed, .and dream again, to keep — v. 

my father's blood open it again 3 Henry VI. i. 

with this we charged a^ain; (repea/ed) — ■ i. 

betliink thee once again — i. 

never henceforth shall I joy again . . — ii. 

milking another head to fight again . . — ii. 

again bestride our foaming steeds (rep.) — ii. 

I II never pause again, never stand . . — ii. 

take leave until we meet again — ii. 

that ho]ies to rise again — ii. 

and as the air lilows it to me again . . — iii. 

so would you be again to Hemy .... — iii. 

chief to bring him down again — iii. 

for I will hence again; I came to ... . — iv. 

and beat him back again — iv. 

and once again proclaim us king .... — iv. 

Warwick takes his gift again — v. 

will issue out a"ain, and bid us battle — v. 

might recover all our loss again! .... — v. 2 

farewell, to meet again in heaven .... — v. 2 

doth live again in tliee — v. 4 

take up the sword again, or take . . Richard III. i. 2 

speak it again, and even with — i. 2 

world cannot again afford — i.2 

what, if it come to thee again? — i. 4 

I shall be reconciled to him again.. — i. 4 

go back again, and I mil send you . — i. 4 

win our ancient right in France again — iii. 1 

until we meet a"aiii in heaven — iii. 3 

and tlien again uegin, and stop again — iii. 5 

was lu-ged to teU my tale again — iii. 7 

here Catesby comes again ; now Catesby — iii. 7 

call them again, sweet prince — iii. 1 

call them again, I am not made of stone — iii. 7 

let's to our Iroly work again — iii. 7 

ere I can repeat tliis curse again — iv. 1 

I say again, give out, that Anne — iv. 2 

tell o'er your woes again by viewing . . — iv. 4 

shall never speak to tliee again — iv. 4 

and never look upon thy face again . . — - iv. 4 

again shall you be mother to a king . . — iv. 4 

shall come again transformed to — iv. 4 

and made liis course again for Bretagne — iv. 4 

whip tliese stragglers o'er the seas again — v. 3 

would reduce tliese bloody days again — v. 4 

peace lives arain; tliat she may loiig. . — v. 4 
I say again, there is no English soxil.HenrijVIII. i. 1 

of his master he shall again relate .... — i. ^ 

understand a^ain like honest men . . — i. 3 

a measure to lead them once again . . — _i. 4 

when he was brougJit again to tile bar — ii. 1 

but he fell to liimself again — ii, 1 

never tbund again, butVhere they .. — ii. ' 

for it grows again freslier than — ii. 1 

poor lady! she's a stranger now again — ii. 3 

I swear again, I woidd not be a queen — \\- ^ 

therefore, I say again, I utterly abhot — ii. 4 

that again I do refuse you for my — ii. 4 

call her again. Katharine queen ... . — ii. 4 

again, there is siirung up a lieretic . . — iii. - 

then, stops again, strikes his breast . . — iii. 2 

'tis well said again: and 'tis a kind . . — iii, 2 

in spite of fortiinewiU bringme ott'again — iii. - 

like Lucifer, never to hope again — iii. 2 

or gild again the noble troops that . . — iii. 2 

you are well met once again — iv. 1 

then rose again, and bowed — iv. 1 

paced back again to York-place — iv. 1 

he gave liis lionoiirs to the world again — iv. 2 

this fellow let me ne'er see again — iv. 2 

souls with modesty again — v. 2 

being but a private man again — v. 2 

let me never hope to see a chine again — v. 3 
I'll unarm a^ain; why should I war. Troil.^Cres. i. 1 

and such again, as venerable Nestor — i. 3 

thus once again says Nestor &om. ... — ii. 2 

you sliall make it whole again — iii. 1 

what! are you gone again — iii, 2 

what, billing again? here's — iii, 2 

retort that heat again to the first — iii. 3 

reverberates the voice again — iii. 3 

what things again most dear — iii. 3 

and yet it may again, if thou — iii. 3 

fountain of your mind were clear again — iii. 3 

come you again into my cliamber. ... — iv. 2 

where be answers again, because .... — iv. 4 

wlien shall we see again? — iv. 4 

O heavens! be true, again? — iv. 4 

when Helen is a maid again — iv. 6 

warm 5'et, let us fight again — iv. 5 

stand again; think st thou to catch. . — iv. ."i 

take and take again such preposterous — V. 1 

give 't me again. Wlmse was 't? {repeufed) — v. 2 

thou never shalt mock Diomed again — v. 2 

anon, shalt hear of me again — v. 6 

age we void it up again Timon of Athens^ i. 2 



AGAIN— 
we'll forth again, my Alcibiades. . Timort ofAlh. ii. 

as it grows again toward earth — ii. 

and come again to fiupitcr to him .. .. — iii. 
go, bid all my IVieiids again, Lucius.. — iii. 

dares to he hall'so kindag;iin? — iv. 

the wajipened widow wed again — iv. 

and spices to the Aiiril day again — iv. 

for showing me again tlie eyes of man 

returns to thine own lijis again 

if I thrive well, I'll visit thee again., 
hadst thuu wealth again, rascals .... 
thou'dst courtier be again, wert thou 
what else to do, I'll see thee again . . — iv. 3 

see him a palm in Athens again — v. 1 

I like this well, he will retiurn again — v. 2 

come not to me again — v. 2 

go again; and after it again; and over and over 
he comes, and up again ; catched it again. C'on'oi. i. 3 

we sliall be charged again — i. 6 

if e'er again I meet him beard to beard 
rather liave my wounds to heal again 
an 't were to give again ; — but 'tis .... 
and knowing myself again, repair to 
and, now again, on liim, that did not 

to make road upon's again 

in our ages see their banners wave again — 
my speech, and I will speak't again — 

I say again, in soothing them — 

he cannot be reined again to temperance — 
the very lunir you take it off again? — 

a small thing would make it flame again — 
his crest up again, and the man in . . — 
we sliall liave a stirring world again . . — 
tlirusts forth his horns again into .... — 
may wish good Marcius home again . . — 
I fear they 11 roar him in again — 



— IV. 3 

— iv. 3 

— iv. 3 

— iv. 3 

— iv. 3 



— i. 10 

— ii. 2 

— ii. 3 



— ill. I 



iii. 1 



IV. 6 
iv. 6 
iv. 6 



V. 2 
— V. 3 



• they*! 
you know the wa_y home again . 
or capitulate again with Home's 
every noise be still: peace yet again. /uims Ccesar, i. 2 

sayst tliou tome now? speak once again — i. 2 

to him again; then he put it by again — i. 2 

when lie came to liimself again — i. 2 

I'll ne'er look you i' the face again . . — i. 2 

get you tobed"again,it isnot day.... — ii. 1 

had thee there, and liere again — ii. 4 

come to me again and bring me word — ii . 4 

he begins again to speak — iii. 2 

a hasty spark, and straight is cold again — iv. 3 

and thou shalt sleep again; I will not — iv. 3 

then shall I see tliee again? . — iv. 3 

sleepagain, Lucius: sirrah, Claudius! — iv. 3 

that the sword goes up again? — v. 1 

whether we shall meet again, I know not — v. 1 

if we do meet again, why (repealed) — v. 1 

to yonder troops and here again .... — v. 3 

I will be here again, even with .... — v. 3 

we wish it ours again Anlony Sf Cleopatra, i. 2 

paragon again my man of men — _i. 5 

words of Fompey, return it again .... — ii. 2 

but yet hie you again to Egyjit — ii. 3 

I say again, thy spirit is all afraid.... — ii. 3 

call the slave again; though I am .... — ii. 5 
if thou again say yes. He is married 
sure he cannot weep it baek again . . 
he will to his Egyptian dish again . . 

I will employ thee baek again 

to him again ; tell him, he wears 

being whipped, bring him again 

severed navy too have knit again 

since my lord is Antony again, I will 

in the blood siiall make it live again — iv. z 

Hie thee again : I have spoke already . . — v. 2 

I am again for Cydiius, to meet — v. 2 

never be beheld of eyes again so royal — v. 2 
in the world, that I may see again . . Cymbeline, i. 2 

" ' > . > > " ! - j 2 

i. 2 
ii. 2 

ii. 4 



ii 


.6 


11 


.6 


ill 


.3 


11. 


11 


11 . 


11 


ii. 


11 


111. 


11 



ill. 1 
iii. 1 
iii. 4 



— v. 4 



— T. ; 



the gods! when shall we see again., 
they were again together : you have . . — 
to the trunk again, and sliut the spring — 

and now 'tis up again : it must be — 

and take your ring again; 'tis not yet won — 

to resume we liave again — 

which lie, to seek of me again — 

1 thought you would not nack again — 
or, by Jupiter, I will not ask again . . — 
safe may st tlioii wander, safe return again — 
knock her back, foot her home again — 
gave them first, lias them again ...... — 

again; and bring me word how 'tis. . — 
I have resumed again the part I.. .. — 

nor bear again ; but end it by some . . — 
letting them thrive again on tlieir .. 

rock, and now throw me again 

pr'ythee, valiant youth, deny 't again 
I am down again ; but now my heavy 

should again unite his favour — y. 5 

I will not loose again, till Titus Andronicus,_ii. 4 

these mischiefs be returned again.... — iii. 1 
till Lucius come again, he leaves .... — iii. 1 

hut, say again, how many saw — iv. 2 

taken them down again — iv. 3 

be blithe again, and bury all thy fear — iv. 4 
this mil I do, and soon return again 
or else I'll call my brother back again 
tarry ivitli him, till I come again .... 

how to knit again this scattered 

broken limbs again into one body. . . . 

I were dead, so you did live again 

steeple, church, and parish, up again . . 

though calmed, they give 't again 

hut tortunc's mood varies again — 
kindle again the over-pressed spirits — 

to blow into life's flower again _. — 

my wedded lord I ne'er shall see again — 
walk, and be cheerful once again 
and brought them down again . . 

I tliink you'll turn a child again — iv. 4 

again thwarting the wayward — iv. 4 (Gower) 

leaves Thai-sus, and aga'in embarks — iv. 4 (Gower) 
take me home again, and prostitute. . — iv. & 



V. 2 
V. 2 
v. 2 



Pericles, ii. 1 

— ii, 1 

iii. (Gower) 



— iv. 3 



AG.VIN— 

father turn our thoughts agaui . . Pericles, v. (Oower) 

turn your eyes again iiiioii me — T. 1 

at Tliarsus, and found at sea again . . — v. 1 

nine years; and away he shall again Lear, j. 1 

notlungcancomeofnotlnng,sneak again — i. 1 

nor sliall ever see that face of hers again — i. 1 

old fools are balies again, and must . . — i- 3 

measure vom-lubher's length again.. — i. 4 

beweep this eause again, 1 11 pluck . . — ;• "1 

take it again perforce — .}• 5 

he dies, that strikes again — \\- ' 

better counsel, give me mine again . . — \)- i 

and speak it again, my lord; no more — n- * 

anil there, antl there, and there again — m. 4 

I'd say. I had eyes again — jv. 1 

I met him back again — .iv- 2 

speak yet again. But have I fallen . . — iv. 6 

tempt me again to die before vou please — iv. 6 
let but the herald cry and I'll appear again 
if ever I retm'n to you again, I'll bring — 
what, in iU thoughts agam" 



— V. 1 
V. 2 

» UilL, lil llA HiU«piifc.J u^»iii •• 

sound. Again. Again. Ask him his purposes — y- 3 
if ever you distxurb our streets again . . Horn. <5- Jul. i. 1 

• ' ■ ■" -^ -' ■- - 1.3 

i. 4 
i. 5 (cho.) 



ii. 2 
ii. 2 
ii. 2 
ii. 2 
ii. 2 
ii. 3 
iii. 1 
iii. 3 



ii. 2 
iii. 1 
iii. 1 
iii. 2 
iii. 4 
iii. 4 
iv. 2 



comeback again, I have remenibered me ■ 
swears a prayer or two, and sleeps again 
Romeo is beloved, and loves again — 

speak again, blight angel — 

1 wotdd it were to give again — 

frank, and give it thee again — 

stay but a little, I will come again . . — 
to lure this tassel-gentle back again . . — 
■with a silk tlii-ead plucks it back again — 

ere thou ask it me again — 

take the villain back again, that late — 

wilt speak again of banishment — 

and then down falls again — \\\- •> 

ere I again behold my Komeo — lu- 5 

think'st thou we shall ever meet again? — jji. 5 

that faith return again to earth — iii- 5 

God knows when we shall meet again — iv. 3 
I'll call them back again to comfort me — iv. 3 
dressed! and in your clothes! and down again — iv. 5 
that I ask again; for nothing can be ill — v. 1 
here it is again, nor get a messenger to — v. 2 

but I will %vrite again to Mantua — v. 2 

palace of dim night, depart again — v. 3 

has this thing appeared again to-night. . Hamlet, }. 1 

if again this apparition come — i- 1 

and let us once again assail your ears — i. 1 
break thee off; look where It comes again — j- 1 
behold ! lo, where it comes again ! — — j. 1 
and wishes bend again toward France — i- 2 
the heaven shall bruit again, re-sjieaking — i- " 
I shall not look upon his like again . . — i. 2 

perhaps 'twill walk again. I warrant — j. 2 
and marble jaws, to cast thee up again — i. 4 
dead corse, again, in complete steel, revisit' st — j- 4 
it waves me tortli again; I'll follow it — i. 4 
andlay your hands again upon my sword ' " 

I'U speak to liim again : what do you read 
bring him to his wonted way amin . . 
take these again; for to the noble mind 
make us again count o'er, ere love. . . . 
60 again, good night! I must be cruel 
tem'yt you again to bed; pinch wanton 
and, sponge, you shall be dry again . . 
come again? and will he not come again ? (song) iv. h 
he never will come again (song) .... — iv. ' 
reverted to my bow again, and not . . — iv. 

if praises may go back again — iv. 

fear I, this will give it start again — iv. 

to it again, come. Vfho builds stronger — v. 
'twill away again, from me to you , . — v, 
withdrew to mine oivn room a^ain . . — v, 

a very palpable liit. Well, again — v. 

nay, come again. Look to the aueen — v, 

lo, here I lie, never to rise again — y 

and let ourselves again but understand. . Othello, i 
tlierefore vouch again, that with some — i 

haste, despatch, she'd come again .... — i 
at nine i' the morning here we'll meet again — i 
and I re-tell thee again and again, I liate — 1 
which now again you are most apt to play ^ ii 
yet again yoiir fingers to your lips . . — ii 
and duck a"ain aslow as hell's from heaven — ii 
there should be, again to inflame it . , — ii 
shall come into no true taste again . . — ii 
will you hear it again? No; for I hold him — ii 
even as again they were, when you . . — ii 
sue to him again, and he's j'ours .... — ii 

I will ask him for my place again.... — ii 

the coiu'se to win the Moor again? — ii 

music tliat may not be heard, to 't again 
by the front, to bring you in again . . — m. i 
my lord and you again as friendly .. — iii. 3 
when I love thee not, chaos is come again — iii. 3 
'twill away again; let me but bind it hard — iii. 3 

give it me again ; poor lady, she'll — iii. 3 

T pray let Cassio be received again .. — iii. 4 
1 may again exist, and be amember. . — iii. 4 
can ransom me into his love again .. — iii. 4 

and is again to cope your wife — iv. 1 

body and beauty unprovide my mind again — iv. 1 
tm-n, and yet go on, and turn again. . — iv. 1 
what shall I do to win my lord again? — iv. 2 
Othello and Desderaona return again to Venice iv. 2 
I can again thj former light restore — v. 2 

I cannot give it vital growth again . . — v. 2 
I think she stu-s again: no. Wliat's the best? — v.2 
O lad V, speak again ! sweet Desdemona — v.2 
AGAJteilNON— five of Agamemnon .2Hen. JV.n. 4 
is as magnanimous as Agamemnon . . Henry V. iii. G 
and ne'er was Agamemnon's brother.3 Hen. VI. ii. 2 
Troilus, than Agamemnon and all.. Troi. ^ Cres. i. 2 
great Agamemnon, Nestor shall apply — i. 3 

Agamemnon, thou gi'eat commander — i. 3 
as .\gamemnon and the hand of Greece — i. 3 

great Agamemnon, this chaos — i.3 

Bometime, great Agamemnon, thy topless — i. 3 



AGAMEiMNON— 
excellent! 'tis Agamemnon just.. rroi/Hsilj-Cres 1.3 
is this great Agamemnon's tent, I pray? — i. 3 
call Agamemnon head and general . . — i.3 

wliich IS the high and mighty Agamemnon i. 3 

sii-, pardon; 'tis for Agamemnon's ears — i.3 
it is not Agamemnon s sleeping hour — i. 3 
we have, great Agamemnon, here in Troy^ i. 3 
a taste of it forthwith to Agamemnon — _i. 3 
Acamemncn — howif he had boils? .. — ii. 1 
come, what's Agamemnon? Thy commander ii. 3 
Agamemnon commands Achilles; Achilles ii. 3 
Agamemnon is a fool; Achilles is a fool — ii. 3 
Agamemnon is a fool to offer to command — ii . 3 
is a fool to be commanded of Agamemnon — ii. S 
O Agamemnon, let it not be so! .... — ii. 3 
and he replies, thanks, Agamemnon — iii. 3 
general of the Grecian army, Agamemnon— iii. 3 
conduct from Agamemnon. Agamemnon? iii. 3 
'tis Agamemnon's wish: and great.. — iv. 5 

treat Agamemnon comes to meet us — iv. 5 
thank thee, most imperious Agamemnon iv. 5 
after we part from Agamemnon's tent — iv. 5 
here's Agamemnon, an honest fellow — v. 1 

AGATE— an agate very vilely cut . . Much Ado, iii. 1 
like an agate, with your print . . Love's L. Losl. ii. 1 
never manned with an agate till now. .2 Hen. 11'. i. 2 

AGATE-RING- 
nott-pated, agate-ring puke-stocking. 1 Here. IF. ii. 4 

AGA'TE-STONE- 
no bigger than an agate-stone on the. Rom. <§- Jul. i. 4 

AGAZED — whole army stood agazed on. 1 Hen. Fi.i. 1 

AGE— who with age, and envy, was Tempest, i. 2 

to excel the golden age — ii. 1 

and as, with age, his body uglier grows — iv. 1 

let me embrace thine age — v. 1 

great impeachment to his age . . Two Gen, of Fer. i. 3 

to clothe mine age with — ii. 4 

much vexation to your age — iii. 1 

the remnant of mine age — iii. 1 

learn the humour of this age Merry Wives, i. 3 

well nigh worn to pieces with age.... — ii. 1 

and did deliver to our age — iv. 4 

like the old age Twelfth Night, ii. 4 

to see this age! A sentence — iii. 1 

all ages smaek of this vice .Measurcfor Measure, ii. 2 

thou hast nor youth, nor age — iii. 1 

that age, ach, pemn-y — iii. 1 

beyond the promise of his age Much Ado. 



iii. 1 



— ii. 3 



(verses) iii. 2 

— iii. 2 

— iv. I 

— iv.3 



ii. 3 



that he cannot endure in his age 

when the age is in, the wit 

trust not my age, my reverence . 
nor age so eat up my invention . 
give your age such cause of fear . 

as under privilege of age, to brag — v. 1 

do not erect in this age liis own — v. 2 

away this long age ot tluree hours. . Mid.N.'s Dr. v. 1 
such a ballad some three ages since.. LoiJe'sL. Lnsi,\. 2 

beauty doth varnish age, as if — iv. 3 

the hoy was the very staff of my age..Mer. of Fen. ii. 2 
and wrinkled brow, an age of poverty — iy . 1 
unregarded age in corners tlirown ..As you Like ii,i\.Z 
the sparrow, be comfort to my age! — ii. 3 

therefore my age is as a lusty winter — ii. 3 

two weak evils, age and hunger .. — ii. 7 

his acts being seven ages — ii." 

the sixth age shifts into the 

buckles in his sum of age 

too great for any mouth of this age's 

the foolish chroniclers of that age 

whose boughs were mossed with age 

a ripe age; is thy name William ? — v. 1 

on us both did haggish age steal on All's Well.i. 2 

to which title age cannot bring thee — ii. 3 
in what motion age will give me.... — 

I'll have no more pity of his age — 

heavy, and mine age is weak — iii.i 

whose age and honom: both suffer . . — v. 3 
any woman in this waning age. Taming of S. (Ind.) 2 
stand back ; 'tis age that nom-isheth — ii. 1 

in his waning age, set foot — ^ii. 1 

as well as reverend age, I may — iv. 5 

most ignorant by age, or thou Winter's Tale, ii. 1 

I would there were no age between .. — iii. 3 

well you fit our ages witn flowers — jv. 3 

they are given to men of middle age.. — iv.3 

is he not stupid with age — iv. 3 

indeed, than most of his age — iv. 3 

yourages, of what having, breeding.. — iv.3 

age, thou hast lost thy labour — iv.3 

now, in age, is she become the — y. 3 

hathhomelyage the alluring beauty . Com. of Er. ii. 1 
I see thy age and dangers make .... — v. 1 

that of an hour's age doth hiss Macbeth, iv. 3 

that which should accompany old age — y. 3 

sweet poison for the age's tooth King John,\. 1 

but in this iron age, would do it ! — — iy. 1 
a make-peace shall become my age ..Richard 11. i. 1 
shall be extinct with age, and endless — i.3 
to furrow me with age, but stop .... — i.3 

unkindness be like crooked age — ii. 1 

that age and sullens have — ii. 1 

sickliness and age in him; he loves you — ii. 1 

who, weak with age, cannot — ii.2 

and future ages groan for this foid . . — ■ rv. 1 

of woefid ages, long ago betid — v. 1 

not be many hours of age more — v. 1 

my fair son from mine age, and rob.. — y. 2 
wlien his infant fortune came to agc.lHen. IV.i. 3 

to the pupil age of this present — ii. 4 

his age some fifty, or, by 'r lady — .ii- 4 

of the age of two and twenty, or thereabouts iii. 3 

truth, in this fine age, were not — iv. I 

to grace this latter a^e with noble . , — y. 1 
hath yet some smack of age in you ..2HejtryIF.i.2 
as the malice of this age shapes them — i. 2 

old mth all the characters of age? — i. 2 

can no more separate age and covetousucss . i. 2 
(as, force perforce, the age will pour it in — iv. 4 
and weak age, of indigent faint Henry /'. i. 1 



AGE— and see old age, will yearly Henry V. iy. 3 

learn to know such slanders of the age — iii. 6 

old age, that ill layer-up of — v. 2 

hereafter ages may liehold 1 Henry Fl.i\.2 

keepers of my weak decaving age — ii. 5 

in an age of care, argue the end — ii. .■> 

reileem the passage of yom age ! — u. !> 

to taunt his valiant age — iii. 2 

fitter for sickness, and for crazy age.. — iii. 2 
when sapless age, and weak imable . . — iv. 5 

my age was never tainted — iv. .'i 

then leaden age, quickened — iv. B 

I shall die with mickle age — iv. B 

an age of discord and continual — — v. .5 
he beingof age to governof himself. .2Hefli-i/f'/. i. 1 

the comfort of my age ! — _i. 1 

this dishonour in thine age will bring — ii. 3 

solace, and mine age would ease — ii. 3 

O miserable age ! virtue is not — • iv. 2 

a bricldayer, when he came to age . . — iv. 2 
shame ttiine honourable age witn blood? — v. 1 

unto the grave with mickle age — v. 1 

livery of ad\ised age — v 2 

eternized in all age to come — 6-3 

slipped our claim until another age. .3ffe«r?/n. ii. 2 

O pity, God, this miserable age! — ii. 5 

none of you may live your natural ase.lUch. lll.i. 3 

with the grossness of this age — iii. 1 

succeeding ages have re-edified — iii. 1 

successively from age to age, he — iii. 1 

the truth should live from age to age. . — iii- 1 
that ever wretched age hath looked upon — iii. 4 

thy age confirmed, proud, subtle — iv. 4 

with grief and extreme age shall perish — iv. 4 

mine shall be a comfort to your age — iv. 4 

youth, to wail it in their age . , — iv. 4 

plants, to wail it with their age — iv. 4 

chilctren quit it in your age — v. 3 

he would not in mine age have . . . Henry VIII. iii. 2 
greater honours to his age than man — iy. 2 

prerogative of age, crowns Troil.^-Cres. i. 3 

the faint defects of age — i. 3 

to remember my father's age . . Timon of Athens, i. 2 

upon whose age we void it up — i. 2 

your reverend ages love security .... — iii. S 

but yomr age has forgot me — iii. 5 

pity not honoured age for — iv. 3 

his pupil age man-entered thus_ Coriolanus, ii. 2 

shall hardly in our ages see tlieir .... — iii. 1 

have been within my age — iv. 6 

and your misery increase with your age! — v. 2 

remains to the ensuing age — v. 3 

groaning underneath this age's yo^e.. Jul. Casar, i. 2 

age thou art shamed — i. 2 

when went there by an age — i. 2 

shoidd do your age some mischief — iii. 1 

how many ages hence, shall this — iii. 1 

the choice and master spu'its of this age — iii. 1 

in peace, lead on our daysio age — v. 1 

thovigh age from folly could not give. Ant. ^Cleo.i. 3 
age cannot wither her, nor custom . . — ii. 2 

thou heapest a year's age on me I Cymbeline, i. 2 

well corresponding with your stiff age — iii. 3 
skipped from sixteen years of age to sixty — iv. 2 
he it is, that hath assumed this age . . — y. 5 
wrong mine age with tliis indigiuty. . Titus And. i. 1 

the cordial of mine age to glad — i. 2 

his, that shakes for age and feebleness — i. 2 

a staff' of honour for mine age — i- 2 

for pity of mine age, whose youth . . .— iii. 1 
I bring consuming sorrow to thine age — iii- 1 

I am of age to keep mine own — iv. 2 

and bear the faidts of Titus' age .... — iv. 4 

nor age, nor honour, shall shape — iv. 4 

if my fi'osty signs and chaps of age — v- 3 

complexion, height, age, with warrant. Pericto, iv. 3 

to outlive the age I am — v. 1 

shake all cares and business from our age. . Lear, i. 1 

bahn of your age, most best — i. 1 

you see how full of changes his age is ... . — i. 1 

'tis the infirmity of his age — i. 1 

must we look to receive from his age — i. 1 

this policy, and reverence of a^e (letter) . . — i. 2 

that sons, at perfect age, and iathers — i. 2 

such men as may besort your age — i. 4 

I confess that I am old; age is unnecessary — ii. 4 

as full of grief as age — ii. 4 

life would not yield to age — iv. 1 

whose age has charms in it — v. 3 

a pretty age. Faith lean tell her age.Rom. fyJul. i. 3 
all clmstian souls! were of an age .. — i.3 
fall backwai-d, when thou com',st to age — i. 3 
that warns my old age to a sepulchi-e — v. 3 
fiuther woe conspires against mine age? — v. 3 

as proper to our age to cast Hamlet, ii. 1 

so his sickness, age, and impotence — _ii.2 

and the very age and body of the time — iii. 2 

for, at yom' age, the hey-day — iii. 4 

on mount of all the age for ner perfection — \v. 7 
than settled age his sables, andliis weeds — iv. 7 
but age with his stealing steps (song) — v. I 
the age is grown so piclted, that the. . — y. ^ 

I know, the di-ossy age dotes on — v.2 

it yet has felt no age, nor known Othello, iii. 4 

AGED — their sinews with aged cramps., remjocsf, iv. 1 
nought esteems my aged eloquence. TwoG. ofF. iii. 1 
tli.y blessed youth becomes as aged.. A?ca. for M. iii. 1 

to be aged in any kind of course — ij!- 2 

that aged ears play tijuant . . Love's Labour Lost, ii. I 
whose aged honour cites a virtuous . . All's Well, i. 3 
nothing so aged, as this seems .... Winler'sTale, v. 3 

how is t witn aged Gaunt? Richard II. ii. 1 

with signs of war about his aged neck — ii. 2 

Nestor like aged in an age of 1 Henry VI. ii. 5 

first lean tliine aged back — ii. .^ 

forgets aged contusions and all 2 Ucnry VI. v. 3' 

dimmed yom- infant morn to aged night. ./f. III. iv. 4 

an aged princess: many days Uennj Fill. v. 4 

and take our goodly aged men by-- Timon of A h. v. 2 
in pity of our aged, and oiu- youth. ... — v. 2 



AGE 



AGED- , ^ .. , . 

an UL'cd interpreter, though young. . Timon of A. v. 4 

asccrcu-itom, hut bv your voices Coriolatius, ii. 3 

UL'td sir. luunlsutf." ^leucc, rotten .. — m. 1 
au.l. LiL'iusau'oil, die of this fully! ....Cymbellne, i. 2 
filliin.' tlio iiiTwl wrinkles in my .. Titus Andron. jii. 1 
{.'iMitle a"crrni(ii! uiil>ind my sons .. — iii- 1 

rc„H,V/'— |nvi.:n\' tin' a,L'ed eyes] — iii. 1 

and fill tUi-;.-r.U':u- withgolden.... — iv. 4 
ashe ro-iivdsiiisaiiiHMather'slite.... — v. 2 

iHhallivitUa-idpatiL'nee Pcricles.n.i 

in the oiii iT^>i"n oi'ai^vd tjTanny. . Lear, i. 2 (letter) 

and :i -rari. Ills a:jr(l .nan — iv. 2 

and our aired fathi-i-sridit — iv. 4 

AGENOK— the daniihter of Agenor. . Taming ofS. i. 1 

ACiENT— the agent'of her heart. 'i'M-o Gen. ofVer.i. 3 

this ungenitured agent vi\\\... Measure for Mea. ni. 2 

and trust no agent; for beauty is Much Ado, ii. 1 

and well lieeome the agent: it ma,j..Wimler s T. i. 2 

beud up eaeh eorporal agent to this Macbeth, i. 7 

whiles niirht's black agents to their prey — in. 2 

Clod's wrathful agent, do correct K. John, ii. 1 

beim; the aL'ents.'or base second 1 Henry IF. i. 3 

(.the'agent of thv fouUnconstancy).2 Henry FI. iii. 2 

as tlie'ai.'ent of our cardinal Henry VIII. m. 2 

thus is tlie iioor agent despised! . Troihis ^-Cres. v. 11 
former agents, if tliey did eomplarn. . Coriolanus, i. 1 

tlie a^'cnt for his master Cymbeline, i. 6 

AGCiltAVATE— the more to aggravate.. i?!VA. II. i. 1 
I will aegravate his stile; thou ...Mcny Wives, ii. 2 
but I will affgravate my voice so . . Mid. M. Drm. i. 2 

aL'frravate your choler iHanry IF. ii. 4 

ACkiKIEF^D— find himself aggriefed.Hfn;;/ F. iv. 7 
AGILE— his agile arm heats down.. Rom. S,- Jul. ill. 1 
AGINCOURT— thefieldof Agiiicourt ...Hen. F.iv.7 

aftright the air at Agincom-t? O — i. (eho.) 

the name of Agincourt: yet, sit and see — iv. (eho.) 
AGITATION— m this slumbryarftation ..Mac6._v. 1 
so now I speak my agitation of ihe.Mer. of Fen. iii. 5 
AGLET-B^tBY 

to a puppet, or an aglet-baby Taming of S. 1.2 

AGNIZE— I do agnize a natural and prompt.. Of/i.i. 3 

AGO— for but a month ago I went ..TwelftliNiglit, i. 2 

he might have took his answer long ago — i. 5 

we m'ade eaeh other but so late ago — v. 1 

a great while ago the world — v. 1 (song) 

four days ago. Let's see the Love's Labour Lost,!. 1 

'tis but an hour ago, since it As you Like it, ii. 7 

past my gamut long a^ff). .Taming oftlte Shrew, in. 1 

twenty years ago, in Genoa — iv. 4 

departure two days ago Winter's Tale, i. 2 

we had the tune on 't a month ago , . — iv. 3 
tlu-ee nights ago on Goodwin Sands . . . K. Jolm, v. 3 

woeful ages, long ago betid Richard II. v. 1 

fom-teen nundrett years ago, were . . 1 Henry IF.i. 1 

he is my lord, an hour ago — ii- 3 

how long is it ago, Jack, since — ii- '4 

stolest a cup of sackxighteen years ago — ii. 4 
no longer ago tlian Wednesday last. 2 Henry IF.\\. 4 

that's fifty-five year ago — iii. 2 

ten days ago I di'ownecl Z Henry IV. ii. 1 

have braved the east an hour ago Rich .III.v.3 

his love too, long ago; I am old.. . . Henry VIII. iii. 1 
not long ago, one of his men ..Timon of Athens, iii. 2 

how long is this ago? Cymbeline, i. 1 

over-roasted rather; ready long ago.. — v. 4 
I read it in the grammar long ago'. Titus Andro. iy. 2 

is it two days ago, since I tripped up Lear, ii. 2 

his sou was but a ward two years agoRom. SfJul.i. 5 
I would have been a-bed an hour ago — iii. 4 

heavens! die two months ago Hamlet, iii. 2 

how long ago, and when he hath Othello, iv. 1 

AGONE— long agone I have forgot. Two Gen. ofF. iii. 1 
he's drunk, sir Toby, an hour agone . Twelfth N. v. 1 

AGON Y— ach with air, and agony with. Much Ado, v. 1 
mirth cannot move a soul in agony . Lore's L. L.v.2 

take that to end thy agony 3 Henry VI. y. 5 

awaked you not with this sore agony.. flic/i. III. i. 4 
God knows, in torment and in agony — iv. 4 
he was stirred with such an agony.. Henry VIII. ii. 1 

A-GOOD— I made her weep a-good. Two G. of Fer. iv. 4 

AGli E£— it agrees well, passant Merry Wives, i. 1 

agree with his demands to the point. Jl/i;a./ori>/. iii. 1 
but, gentles, agree: the civil war of.Love's L. L. ii. 1 
how dost tliou and thy master agree. Mer. of Fen. ii. 2 
though long, our jarring notes agree. Tarn, of S. v. 2 
should well agree with our external.. — v. 2 

1 very well agree with you in the . . Winter's T. i. 1 
how ill agrees it with your . . Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 
Jack, how agi-ees the devil and thou..l Henry IF. i. 2 
the gentlemen do not agree with.. .IHenry IV. (epi.) 

digestions, does not agree with it Henry V. v. 1 

how can tliese contrarieties agree?. . 1 Henry FI. ii. 3 
to France ; agi-ee to any covenants . . — v. 5 
style agrees not with the leanness . .2Henry FI. i. 1 

that they may agree like brothers — iv. 2 

queen and this young prince agi-ee ..3Hen. FI. iii. 3 
yes, I agree, and thank you for yom- — iii. 3 
and so agree, the play may pass. .Henry Fill, (pro.) 
ere we can agree upon the first .... Timon of A. iii. 6 
therein our letters do not well agree. ./. Ccpsar, iv. 3 
full well, Andronicus, agree these deeds. Tit. An. i. 2 
nay, come agree, whose hand shall go — iii. 1 

agi'ee between you; I win spare — iii. 1 

your choice agrees with mine Pericles, ii. 5 

an she agree, within her scope Romeo (f Jul. i. 2 

it best agrees with night — iii. 2 

AGREED— welcome ! now agreed?. Mea. /or Mea. iv. 1 

are you agreed? — iv. 2 

and there heard it agreed upon, that. .il/«cA .ido, i. 3 
lam agreed; and would Ihad given. .7"am.o/S. i. I 
unwilling, lagreed; alas, too soon. Comerfj/o/^r. i. 1 
conclude7and be agreed; our doctors say..i<. //. i. 1 
the traitors are agreed; the king. . HenryV. ii. (eho.) 
agreed; I'll to yon corner. And I this.. 1 Hen. F/. ii. 1 
it is agreed between the French . .2Hen FI. i. 1 (art.) 
agreed between them; that the dutchies — i. 1 

the peers agreed; and Henry — i. 1 

it stands agi'eed, I take it, bv Henry Fill. v. 2 

are you all agreed, lords? liVe are .. — v. 2 



[ 13] 



AGREED— 

my horse toyours. No. 'Tisdone. Agreed.Corw. i. 4 
thus we are agreed: 1 crave, our. . . . Ant. ^ Cleo. ii. 6 
have our two wagers recorded. Agreed . . Cymb. i. 5 

what,are you both agreed? Pericles, ii. 5 

AGREEING— most of all, agreeing with the 

F reclamation Measure for Measure,!. 2 
agreeing in earnestness to see him . . Coriol. ii. 1 
meet, and agreeing with thine infancy. Tit. And.v. 3 

di-iigs fit, and time agreeing Hamlet, iii. 2 

AGREEMENT— upon actreement . . Taming of S. i. 2 
upon some agreement, shall you find • — iv. 4 
wmtheitherpart'sagreemcnt stand?.. — iy. 4 
^^pon agreement, ot swift Severn's . ; I Henry / F. i. 3 
AGRIPPA — ^^vorthy Menenius Agrippa . . Cor/o(. i. 1 
Ido not know, iMeeienas; askAgrlppa.J^n^<§-C/eo.ii. 2 
speak, Agrippa. Thou hast a sister.. — ii. 2 
say not so, Agrippa; if Cleopatra heard you ii. 2 
let me hear Agrippa f m-ther speak . . — ii. 2 
power is in Agrippa, if I would say Agrippa ii. 2 
honourable friend, Agrippa! Good Enobaa-bus ii. 2 
adieu, noble Agrippa. Good fortune — iii. 2 
go forth, Agrippa, and begin the fight — iv. 6 

go, charge Agi-ippa plant those — iv. 6 

AGROUND — we run ourselves aground. rempes/,_i. 1 

AGUE — as I take it, an ague — ■ ii. 2 

I will help his agi» — ii. 2 

■ how does thine agvre? — ij. 2 

would blow me to an ague, when I. . Mer. of Fen. i. 1 

till famine, and the ague, eat Macbeth, y. 5 

and meagre as au ague's fit King John, iii. 4 

presuming on an ague's privilege Richardll. ii. 1 

how scapes he agues, in the devil's. .1 Henri// F. iii. I 

this praise doth nourish agues — iy. 1 

au uutimely ague stayed me Henry VIII. i. 1 

like an ague, subtly taints . . Troilus <S' Cressida, iii. 3 
to heavenly agues, the immortal . . Timon of A. iv. 3 
as that same ague which hath .... Julius Ccssar, ii. 2 
AGUE-CHEEK— 

who, sir Andrew Agueeheek? Twelfth Night, i. 3 

thj' sworn enemy, Andrew Agueeheek — iii. 4 (dial.) 

set upon Agueeheek a notable report — iii. 4 

AGUED — with flight and agued fear. . Coriolanus, i. 4 

AGUE-FACE— sir Andrew Agueface.. Tii-ei/iiA N. i. 3 

AGUE-FIT— 

this ague-fit of fear is overblown . . Richard II. iii. 2 
AGUE-PROOF— I am not ague-proof .... Lear, iv. 6 

A-HOLD— layher a-hold, a-hold Tempest, i. 1 

A-HUNGRY- I am not a-hungry . . Merry Wives, i. 1 
as to di-ink when a man's a-hungry. . Twelfth N. ii. 3 

AID — by whose aid, (weak masters Tempest, v. i 

I have her sovereign aid — v. 1 

to aid me with thy counsel Two Gen. of Fer. ii. 4 

that guides him sliould aid him. . Merry Wives, iii. 5 
and be my aid for such disguise, as . . Twelfth N. i. 2 

will move us for speedy aid All's Well, i. 2 

should tender your supposed aid .... — i. 3 

hy the good aid that I of you — iii. 7 

and aid me with that store of — v. 1 

by thy honest aid, thou kept'st — v. 3 

didst counsel and aid them. Winter'sT. iii. 2 (indie.) 

omit nothing, may give us aid ■ — iv. 3 

till, raising of more aid, we . . Comedy of Errors, v. 1 
their mould, but with the aid of use . . Macbeth, i. 3 

the holy king his aid to wake — iii. 6 

from his own determined aid King Jolin, ii. 2 

strongly sworn to give him aid Richard II. ii. 3 

to this we swore our aid \ Henry IF. v. 1 

and surmise of aids uncertain 2Henry IF. i. 3 

in aid whereof, we of the spirituality. . Henry F. i. 2 
such a worthy leader wanting aid . . 1 Henry FI. i. 1 
her aid she promised, and assured.... — i. 2 
renowned Talbot doth expect my aid — iv. 3 

the cause I cannot aid the man — iv. 3 

our o'er-matched forces forth for aid — iv. 4 
succours that should lend him aid . . — iv. 4 

York should have sent him aid — iv. 4 

six hours they will he at his aid — iv. 4 

appear, and aid me in this enterprize — v. 3 
craves aid of your honour from tlie. 2 Henri/ FI. iv. 5 

such aid as I can spare — iv. 5 

with aid of soldiers to tliis needful. .ZHenry FI. ii. 1 

I'll aid thee tear for tear — ii. 5 

are gone to France for aid — iii. 1 

craving aid for Henry — iii. 1 

to crave thy just and lawful aid — iii. 3 

be released from giving aid — iii. 3 

I firmly am resolved, you shall have aid — iii. 3 

how can we aid you with Ricliard III. ii. 2 

expecting but the aid of Buckingham — iv. 4 
fear of that withholds my present aid — iv. 5 

and aid thee in this doubtfid — v. 3 

ere I could lend thee aid — v. 3 

never seek for aid out of himself Henry Fill. i. 2 

alack of Timon's aid Crep.)....Timonof.-ltlipns,v. 2 

that best can aid your action Coriolanus, i. 6 

despatch those centuries to our aid . . — i. 7 

if you refuse your aid upbraid us — y. 1 

to lend me arms and aid Antony .§- Cleo. ii. 2 

will pray in aid for kindness — v. 2 

Lucina lent not me her aid — v. 4 

it is for justice, and for aid . . Titus Andnmicus, iv. 3 
to me and to my aid, the blest Pericles, iii. 2 

fo join with you some further aid Hamlet, iv. 1 
DANCE — for aidance 'gainst the. .2Henry FI. iii. 2 

AIDANT — be aidant, and remediate Lear, iv. 4 

AIDED— aided to expose the child. . . . Winter's T. v. 2 
AIDING— heaven aiding, and by the...-l(rs Well, iv. 4 
then deny her aiding hand therein.. Ricliard III. i. 3 
AIDLESS — aidless came off, andvfith. Coriolanus, ii. 2 
AIERY — ouraiery buildeth in the cedar's.. R. III. i. 3 
your aiery buildeth in our aiery's nest — i. 3 

an aiery of children, little eyases Hamlet, ii. 2 

AIGRE— 

I Knight} like aigre droppings into milk — i. 5 
AIL — what does she ail, that she's not..4//'s Well, ii. 4 
AIL'ST— what ail'stthou, man?.. Winter's Tale, iii. 3 
AIM — my jealous aim might err. . Two G. of Fer. iii. 1 

behold lier that gave aim to — v. 4 

all my neighbours shall cry aim., jl/crr!/ Wives, iii. 2 



AIR 

AIM — that now I aim at Merry W/ivs, iii. 4 

than the aims and ends of buming.jV/en'./or .Mea. i. 4 
and aim better at me by that I do . . Much Ado, iii. 2 
but if all aim but this be levelled false — iv. I 
a certain aim he took at a fair. . Mid. jV. Dream, ii. 2 

as I will watch the aim Merchant of Venice, i. 1 

from the hunters' aimhadta'en..^s you Like it, ii. 1 

against the levelof mine aim All's Well.ii. 1 

fly with false aim; move the — iii. 2 

and my sweet hope's aim .... Comedy of Errors, iii. 2 

sister, sweet, for I aim thee iii. 2 

safest way is, to avoid the aim Macbeth, ii. 3 

to cry aim to these ill-tuned repetitions . . Jolm, ii. 1 

not swifter toward their aim 2Henry IF. i. 1 

fleshed with conquest, aim to hit i. 1 

with a near aim, of the main iii. 1 

may with as great an aim level at .. — iii. 2 

as an auu or butt, obedience Henry F. i. 2 

unfortunate, I missed my aim 1 Henry FI. i. 4 

and aim weat the best ZHenry' FI. iii. 1 

your highness aims at, if I aim aright — iii. 2 
my thoughts aim at a further matter — iv. 1 

guess that he doth aim at it? Richard III. iii. 2 

I know the Bretagne Richmond aims at — iv. 3 
to be the aim of every dangerous shot — iv. 4 
wander from the good we aim at. . Henry Fill. iii. 1 

the chief aim of his honour — v. 2 

not answering the aim, and that.. rro;'«»s^-Crps. i. 3 

fame, at the which he aims Coriolmms, i. 1 

we shall be shortened in our aim — i. 2 

would work me to, I have some aim . . Julius C. i. 2 
even in the aim and very flash of it . . — i. 3 

though enemy, lost aim Antonyfy Cleo. iv. 12 

my lord, I aim a mile beyond . . Titus Andron. iv. 3 

give me aim awhile — v. 3 

they aim at it, and botch the words Hamlet, i v. 5 

where the aim reports, 'tis oft with Othello, i. 3 

as my thoughts aim {Knight— a,iraed'\ not at iii. 3 

AIMED— that never aimed so high Pericles, ii. 5 

my discovery be not aimed at.. Two Gen. of Fer. iii. 1 

well aimed of such a young one Taming ofS.n.l 

tliis bird you aimed at, though you . . — v. 2 
seen in him, aimed at your highness . . Richard Il.i. \ 
in faith, it is exceedingly wellaimed . . 1 Hen. IF.i.Z 
I aimed so near, when I supposed. . Romeo fy Jul. 1. 1 

and not where I had aimed them Hamlet, iv. 7 

{Knight— my thoughts aimed not] Othello, iii. 3 

AIMEST— thou aimest all awry 2 Henry FI. ii. 4 

let all the ends, thou aimest at. . . . Henry Fill. iii. 2 

AIMING— aiming at Silvia as a . . Two G. of Fer. ii. 6 
our soldiers, aiming at their safety.. 2 Henry IF. i. 1 
aiming, belike, at yourinterior hatred. .Ji/cA. Ill.i. 3 

AIR^-cooling of the air with sighs Tempest, i. 2 

rthe air, or the earth? — i. 2 

with its sweet air — i. 2 

the goddess on whom these airs attend — i. 2 

the air breathes upon us — ii. 1 

and sweet airs, that give delight — iii. 2 

where thou thyself dost air — iv. 1 

are melted into air, into thin air ... . — iv. 1 

that they smote the air — iv. 1 

Shalt have the air at freedom — i v. 1 

hast thou, which art but air — v. 1 

a solemn air, and the best — v. 1 

I drink the an- before me — v. 1 

love can feed on the air Two Gen. of Fer. ii. 1 

than live in your air — ii. 4 

the air hath starved — iv. 4 

she purged the air of pestilence . . Twelfth Night, i. 1 
the babbling gossip of the air cry out — i. 5 
between the elements of air and earth — i. 5 

more than light airs, and — ii. 4 

lest the device take air, and taint — iii. 4 

this is the air: that is the — iv. 3 

which the air beats for vain . . Measure for Meas. ii. 4 

and so stop the air by which he — ii. 4 

now divine air! now is his soul Much .ido, ii. 3 

she'd mock me into air — iii. I 

charm ach -with air, and agony .... — v. 1 
your tongue's sweet air more tuneable . Mid. N.D.i.\ 
washes aU the air, that rheumatic . . — ii. 2 
and in the spiced Indian air, by night — ii. 2 
physic of thy health-giving an-. iotTe'sL. L.i.l (let.) 

sweet air! GrO, tenderness of — iii. 1 

playing in the wanton air — (verses) iv. 3 

air quoth he, thy cheeks may blow (verses) iv. 3 
blow like sweet roses in this summer air — v. 2 
all the other passions fleet to au-s. . Mer. of Fen. iii. 2 
bring your music forth into the air . . — v. 1 
or any air of musie touch their ears. . — v. 1 

yet thou liest in the bleak air As you Like it, ii. 6 

move the stUl piercing air All's Well, iii. 2 

although the air of paradise did.fan.. — iii. 2 
with her breath she did perfume the air. Tam. ofS. i. 1 
climate's delicate: the air most sweet. Winter's T. iii. I 

i' the open air, before I have got — iii. 2 

with slu-ieks, she melted into air — iii- 3 

see'st thou not the air of the court — iv- 3 

liis very air, that I shoidd call you brother — v. 1 

pm-ge all infection from our air — v. 1 

there is an air comes from her — y. 3 

tlu'ough the fog and filthy air Macbeth, i. 1 

whither are they vanishe'd? Into the air — i. 3 

they made themselves air — i. 5 (letter) 

the air nimbly and sweetly recommends — i. 6 
I have observed, the air is'delicate . . — i. 6 
upon the sightless couriers of the air ....Macbeth,i. 7 

lamentings heard i' the air — ii. 3 

and general, as the casing air — iii. 4 

I am for the air; this night I'll — iii. 5 

I'll charm the air to give a sound — iv. 1 

infected be the air wdiereon — iv. 1 

and slirieks that rent the air — iv. 3 

howled out in the desert air — iv. 3 

as easy may'st thou the intrenchant air — v. " 
leave them as naked as the vulgar air. King John, ii. 2 

mocking the air with colours — v. 1 

being brought into the open air — y. 7 

cast forth in the common air Richard II. i. 3 

had wandered in the ou' — i. 3 



AIR 



[jjn 

AIR — light as air, are, to the jealous .... Otliello, iii. 3 
hath hlowB Ills ranks into the air . . — iii. 4 

bear him out o* tlie air — v. 1 

S|)c;ik as liberal as the air [Collier. Knl. — north] V. 2 

AIK-B1!AV1NG— 

vnur stiitolvandair-bravingtowcrs.lHfnjy I'T. iv. 2 

AIK-DKAWN— the air-drawn (higfrer .Macbe/lt, iii. 4 

AIRED— most part, been aired aV)riiad.»7/(/<c"s T. iv. 1 

sliurtly after this world had aired them. H. ;///. ii. 4 

AIKLESS — airless dunpeon, nor strong.. J«//u.s C. i. 3 

AIRY — that this airy cliarm is for Tempest, v. 1 

silence, you airy toys Memj IVires, v. 5 

that tlioushalt like an airy spiritgo.Mid. A'. D. iii. 1 

and gives to airy nothing a local — v. 1 

some airy devil'hovers in the K. John, iii. 2 

like an eagle o'er his airy towers .... — v. 2 
hover about me witli yoiu- airy wings. 7?2'c/t. III. iv. 4 
airy succeeders of intestate joys .... — iv. 4 
his ear full of his airy fame . . Troilus fy Cressida, i. 3 
[Knight — lion's mane, be shook to airy air] — iii. 3 

brawls bred of an airy word Hnmeo^ Juliet, i. I 

would through the airy region stream — ii. 2 
and make her airy tongue more hoarse — ii. 2 

of so airy and light a quality Hamlel, ii. 2 

AJAX — this love is as mad as Ajax.. Z.o»e's L. L. iv. 3 

will be given to Aj ax — v. 2 

for sine, .3iaeides was Ajax Taming of S. iii. 1 

and now, like Ajax Telamoniua ..2 Henry VJ. v. 1 

to Hector J they call him Ajax Troil. <5- Cres. i. 2 

Ajax is grown self-willed — i. 3 

let blockish .4.J ax draw the — i. 3 

brainless Ajax come safe off — i. 3 

Ajax, employed, jilucks down — i. 3 

why, how now, Ajax? wherefore — ii. 1 

whosoever you take him to be, he is Ajax — ii. 1 
this lord Achilles, Ajax, who wears.. — ii. 1 

1 say, this Ajax, — naj', good Ajax — ii. 1 

Ajax was here the voluntary — ii. I 

to Achilles! to Ajax! to! I shall cut — ii. 1 
shall the elephant Ajax carry it thus — ii. 3 

what moves Ajax thus to bay — ■ ii. 3 

then will Ajax lack matter — ii.3 

no, noble Aiax; you ai-e as strong .. — ii.3 

yom- mind's the clearer, Ajax — ii. 3 

let Ajax go to him, dear lord — ii.3 

the steps that Ajax makes when .... — ii.3 
what a vice were it in Ajax now .... — ii. 3 
his addition yield to sine\vy Ajax .. — ii.3 
were your days as green as Ajax ... . — ii. 3 
the eminence of him, but be as Ajax — ii. 3 

be rided by him, lord Ajax — ii.3 

their flower, Ajax shall cope the best — ii. 3 

Ajax is ready. This shall I — iii. 3 

good-morrow, Ajax. Good-morrow — iii. 3 
immediately the unknown Ajax ... . — iii. 3 
tlirow upon him, Ajax renowned .. — iii. 3 
clap the lubber Ajax on the shoulder — iii. 3 
all the Greeks begin to worship Ajax — iif. 3 

but our great Ajax bravely — iii. 3 

shall Ajax fight with Hector? — iii. 3 

I'll send the fool to Ajax — iii. 3 

Ajax goes up and down the field .... — iii. 3 

I said, good-morrow, Ajax — iii. 3 

you shall see the pageant of Ajax .. — iii. 3 

I humbly desire the valiant Ajax — iii. 3 

Jove bless great Ajax — iii. 3 

to Ti'oy, thou dreadful Ajax — iv. 5 

this Ajax is half made of — iv. 5 

stand by our Ajax: as you and lord. . — iv. 5 

now, Aj ax, hold tliine own I — i v. 5 

there, Ajax! You must no more — iv. 5 

let me embrace thee, Ajax — iv. 5 

the issue is embracement: Ajax, farewell — iv. 5 

Ajax commands the guard — v. 1 

Ajax, your guard, stays to conduct . . — v. 2 
Ajax, against that dog of as bad a kind, 

Achilles: and now IS tlie cur Ajax — v. 4 
bid the snail-paced Ajax arm for ... . — v. b 

Ajax hath lost a friend — v. 5 

Ajax hath ta'en jEiieas — v. 6 

the sevenfold shield of Ajax ..Antony ^ Cleo.iv. 12 
Thersites' body is as good as Ajax. . Cymbeline, iv. 2 
did bm'y Ajax tliat slew himself. . Titus .-indron. i. 2 
and cowards, but Ajax is their fool Lear, ii. 2 

AKIN — akin to foul redemption.. jVeas. /or il/wM. ii. 4 

AXiAB ASTER — monumental alabaster ..Othello, v. 2 
like his grandsire cut in alabaster?. .Mer. of fen. i. 1 
witliin their alabaster innocent avms.Rich. III. iv. 3 

AiACRITY— not that alacrity of sjnrit./dcA. ///. v. 3 
I have a kind of alacrity in sinking . . Merry W. iii. 5 
with a bridegroom'sti-esh alacrity... Trail. S,- Cres. iv. 4 
a natural and prompt alacrity, 1 find in. .Othello, i. 3 

A-LAND — why, as men do a-Iand Pericles, ii. 1 

(if e'er this colIin drive a-land) — iii. 2 (scroll) 

ALARBUS — Alarbus goes to rest Titus An. i. 2 

Alarbus' limbs are lopped, and entrails — i. 2 

AI/ARM — the grim alarm, excite the . . Macbeth, v. 2 
be ready to direct these home alarms. i?ic/tarrf //. i. 1 
when the angry trumpet sounds alarm ..2H. VI. v. 2 
arming to answer in a night a\arm .Troilus .§• Cr. i. 3 

in the alarm of fear caught up Hamtel, ii. 2 

as tlie sleeping soldier, in the alarm. . — iii. 4 
Bjieaks, is it not an alai'm to love? Othello, ii. 3 

ALARtTM-endure her loud alarums.. ra7ni7/^''o/ S. i. 1 
hark I what new alarum is this sanie?.H<-»iy r. iv. 6 

sound, sound alarum ; we will 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

whence cometh this alarum, and the noise? i. 4 
hearing alarums at our chamber .... — ii. 1 
such fierce alarums both of hope .... — v. 5 

sound trumpets, alarum to the 2 Henry VI. ii.3 

our stem alarumschanged to merry.. /iic/iart/ ///. i. 1 

strike alarum, drums! let not — iv. 4 

i'the sun, when the alai-um were struck.. Con'of. ii. 2 

ALARUM-BELL — ring the alarum-bell : murder! 

and treason I Macbeth, ii. 3 

ring the alarum-bell : blow, wind! .. — v. 5 

ALARUMED — alarumed by his sentinel — ii.) 
when he saw my best alarumed spirits Lenr, ii. 1 

ALBAN-by good saint Alban, who said.2Hen. VI. ii. 1 
I thank Goil, and saint Aiban — ii. 1 



A/^E 



AIR — hangs in our air, and thou art . . liichardll. i. 3 

brooks your grace the air — iii. 2 

ever dancing in the air — iv. 1 

as high i' tlie air as tliis 1 Henry IV. i. 3 

hang in the air a thousand — iii. 1 

{KnYghtl the quality and air of our attempt iv. 1 

what is that honoiii'? Air — v. 1 

eating the air on promise 2 Henry IV. i. 3 

give him air, he'll straiglit be well . . — iv. 4 

marry, good air; spread, Davy — v. 3 

affl-ight the air at Agincourt?. . Henry V. i. (chorus) 

the air, a chartered libertine — i. 1 

for now sits exiiectation in the air.. — ii. (chorus) 

up in the air, crowned with — ii. 4 

this your air of France hath — jii. 6 

he trots the air; the earth — jii. 7 

lie is pm'e air and fire — iii. 7 

Kien puis? Tail' et le feu — iv. 2 

and our air shakes them passing .... — iv. 2 
but stink, and putrefy the air .... 1 Henry VI. iv. 7 
smell the air shall be perfiuncd ... .2 Henry VI. i. 1 
shall not breathe infection in this air — iii. 2 
andcatch the air, blaspliemiugGod.. — iii. 2 

brcatlie iny soul into the air — iii. 2 

fiiui cuntMgious darkness in the air .. — iv. 1 

if mine arm be heaved in the air — iv. 10 

dead men's cries do fill the empty air — v. 2 

cherish weeds, but gentle air? 3 Henry VI. ii. 6 

the air hath got into my deadly — ii. 6 

and, as the air blows it to me again. . — iii. 1 

how to find the open au- — iii. 2 

well are you welcome to this open air. .K<t'/i. ///. i. 1 

those that breathe them in the air — i. 3 

tlie empty, vast, and wandering air .. — _i. 4 
his hope in air of your fair looks .... — iii. 4 
if yet your gentle souls fly in the air — iv. 4 
theair'[roWfr. A'n!>/i(— dew] israwandcold v.3 

tlie air will drink the sap Henry VIII. i. 2 

there's fresher air, my lord, in — i. 4 

should with a bond of air (strong . .Troilus i^ Cr. i. 3 
his person, and share the air witli us — ii. 3 

carpenter, the air is sweet — \\\-'^ 

as false as air, as water — j!j- 2 

from the lion's mane, be shook to air — iii. 3 

that the appalled air may — iv. 6 

tliy advanced sword i' the air — iv. 5 

through him drink the free air. . Timon of Athens, i. 1 

a decbcated beggar to the air — iv. 2 

all part into tills sea of air — jv. 2 

below thy sister's orb infect the air . . — iv. 3 

hang his poison in the sick air — iv. 3 

the bleak air, thy boisterous ........ — iv. 3 

promising is the very air o' the time — v. 1 

doth choke the air -ivith dust — v. 3 

filling the au' with swords Coriotanus, i. 6 

that do corrupt my air, I banish you — iii. 3 
you are they that made the air u'nwholesome iv. G 

the wide cheeks o' the air — v. 3 

splitting the air w'ith noise — v. 5 

my lips, and receiving the bad air ..Julius Caesar, i. 2 
the exhalations, whizzing in the air. . — ji. 1 

the rliemny and unpurged air — ii. 1 

the noise of battle hurtled in the air — ii. 2 
wliistling to the air, which, but ior..Ant. ^- Cleo. ii. 2 

music i' the air. Uuder the earth — iv. 3 

fight i' the tii'e, or in the air — iv. 10 

and mock our eyes with air — iv. 12 

I am fire, and air ; my other elements — v. 2 

as soft as air, as gentle — v. 2 

as we do air, fast as 'twas ministered.. Ci/m6i?(«!e,i. 1 

but riding forth to air yom'self — i. 2 

where air comes out, air comes in ... . — i. 3 
from the smallness of a gnat to aur . . — _i. 4 

after, a wonderful sweet air — ii.3 

I beg but leave to air this jewel — ii. 4 

nor know not what air's from home.. — iii. 3 
and the air on't revengingly enfeebles me v. 2 

embraced by a piece of tender air (i-cp.) — v. 4 
the piece of tender air, thy virtuous.. — v. 5 
clipped about mth this most tender air — y. 5 
lamenting doings in the airl.. Titus .4ndronicus,iii.2 

not trust the air with secrets — iy. 2 

to stop the air would hurt them Pericles, i. 1 

should open to the listening air — i. 2 

our woes into the air — i. 4 

earth, sea, and air, were all — i. 4 

as fire, air, water, earth, and heaven — iii. 1 

I pray you, give her air — iii. 2 

the air IS quick there, piercing — iv. 1 

bird that flies i' the purer air! — iv. 6 

you taking airs with lameness! Lear, ii. 4 

choose to wage against the enmity o'tlie air ii. 4 

that in the pendulous air hang — iii. 4 

here is better than the open air — iii. 6 

thou unsubstantial air, that I embrace — iv. 1 
would stretch thy spirits up into the air — iv. 2 

that wing the midway air — iv. 6 

feathers, air, so many fathom — iv. 6 

the first time that we smell the air . . — iy. 6 
spread his sweet leaves to the air . . Romeo ^ Jul. i. 1 
which is as thin of substance as the air — i. 4 

sails upon the bosom of the air — ii. 2 

idle in the wanton summer air — ii. 6 

with thy breath this neighbour air . . — ii. 6 
the air [Collier. Knight — earth] doth drizzle iii. 5 

no healthsome air breathes in — iv. 3 

for it is, as the air, invulnerable Hamlet, i. 1 

in earth, or air, the extravagant — i. 1 

the air bites slirewdly ; it is very cold — i. 4 

a nipping and an eager air — i. 4 

bring with thee airs from heaven — i. 4 

metliinks, I scent the morning air .. — _i. 5 
out of the air, my lord? (/■epert/erf)..,, — ii. 2 
this most excellent canopy, the air .. — ii. 2 

seemed i' the air to stick — ii. 2 

nor do not saw the air too much .... — iii. 2 

I eat the air, promise-crammed — iii. 2 

with the incorporal air do hold discourse — iii. 4 

and hit the woundless air — iv. 1 

go, vanish into air j away OlheUo, iii. i 



ALBAN— 
ray lords, saint Alban here hath done ..211. IV. ii. 1 

ALB AN Y— our no less loving son of Albany. Lear. i. 1 
moreaffectedthedukeof Albany, than — i. 1 
to thine and Albany's issue be this . . — i. 1 

Cornwall, and Albany, with my two — i. 1 

twixt the dukes of Cornwall and Albany?— ii. 1 
his party 'gainst the duke of Albany? — ii. 1 
cunning, 'twixt Albany and Cornwall — iii. 1 
of Albany's and Cornwall's iiowers you — iv. 3 

ALBEIT— albeit,! will confess thy. Merry Wires, iii. 4 

albeit the quality of the time Twelfth Night, iii. 3 

Shylock, albeit i neither lend ..Mei chant of Ven.'i.i 
for more certainty, albeit I'll swear.. — ii. i; 
albeit, I confess, your coming befc ire.. Is ,i/o» L. il,i. 1 
albeit you have deserved higli cumnKiidation i. 2 
ire, albeit my %\Tongs might . . Comedy nf Errors, v, 1 

noble Dauphin, albeit we swear King Joh « , v. 2 

ICollier'i albeit I make a liazard . . . .IHcnry IV. i. 3 
venture thee, albeit, considerations . . — v. 1 
albeit, I could tell to thee (as to one..2Henry lV.i\.2 

albeit against my conscience Ricliard III iii. 7 

albeit they were fleshed villains .... — iv. 3 
and shall, albeit sweet music . . Troilus fy Cres. iii. 2 
a worthy fellow, albeit he comes on ..Cymbeline, ii. 3 
albeit unused to the melting mood Othello, v. 2 

ALBIO N-thatnook-shotten isle of Albion. H. V.iW.h 
loosing ken of Albion's wished coast ..2 Hen. VI. iii. 2 
great Albion's queen in former golden. 3IJ'e»i. F/.iii. 3 
king of Albion, my lord and sovereign — iii. 3 
then shall the realm of Albion come .... Lenr, iii. 2 

ALCHEMIST-and plays the alchemist ..K. Jolin,id. 1 
you are an alchemist, make gold ..Timon of Ath. v. 1 

ALCHEMY— like richest alcliemv. . Ju</«.« Cr.esur,\.Z 

ALCIBIADES— 'tis Alcibiades, and ..Timon of A. i. 1 
captain Alcibiades, your heart's in . . . — i. 1 

Alcibiades, thou art a soldier, therefore — i. 2 

we'll forth again, my Alcibiades — ii. 2 

this is to lord Timon ; this to Alcibiades — ii. 2 
Alcibiades is banished : hear you of it? — iii. 6 

certain : Alcibiades reports it — v. 1 

drive back of Alcibiades the approaches wild v. 2 
if Alcibiades kill my countr3Tnen, let — v. 2 
be Alcibiades your plague, you his . . — v. 2 
to prevent wild Alcibiades' ■wrath .. — v. 2 
from Alcibiades to Timon's cave — v.3 

ALCIDES — so is Alcides beaten by ..Mer. of Ven. ii. 1 

■than young Alcides, when he did — iii. 2 

let it be more than Alcides' twelve.. Taming of S. i. 2 
as great Alcides' shoes upon an ass. . King John, ii. 1 
where is the great Alcides of the field. 1 Hen VI. iv. 7 
teaeh me, Alcides, thou mine . . Antony ^ Cleo. iy. 10 
nor great Alcides, nor the god oi'v/ar.Titus And.iv.2 

ALDER-LIEFEST— with you mine alder-licfest 

so^J'ereign 2Henry VI. i. 1 

ALDERMAN— 
crept into any alderman's thumb-iing.lHen./F. ii.4 
on the fore-finger of an alderman Horn. ^ Jul. i. 4 

ALDERMEN— mayor and aldermen. . Rich. III. iii. 7 

ALE — go to the ale with a christian. Two G. of Ver. ii. !> 

she brews good ale — iii. 1 

you brew good ale — iii. I 

no more cakes and ale Twelfth Night, ii. 3 

her withered dew-lap pour the ale ..Mid. N. Dr. ii. 1 
were he not warmed with ale . . Tarn, of S. 1 (indue.) 
for God's sake, a pot of small ale — 2 (indue.) 

on the score for sheer ale — 2 (indue.) 

once again, a pot o' the smallest ale — 2 (indue.) 
for a quart of ale is a dish . IVinter's Tale, iv. 2 (song) 

have him poisoned in a pot of ale 1 Henry I f. i. 3 

all iny fame for a pot of ale, and safety Hen. V. iii. 2 
in his ales and his angers, look you . , — iv. 7 

being in his ales and his cups — iv. 7 

do you look for ale and cakes here .. Henry VIII. v. 3 

jiLECTO— with fell Alccto's snake. . . .2 Hen. IV. v. 5 

ALE-HOUSE— to the ale-house with. Two G. cfV. ii. 5 
if thou wiltgo to the ale-honse, so .. — ii. 5 
make an ale-house of my lady 's house. Tu'ci. .V. ii.3 
call at all the ale-houses, and bid ..Much Ado, iii. 3 
triumph is become an ale-house guest?. JijcA. 11. v. 1 
would I were in an ale-house in London. .H. V. iii. 2 
my image but an ale-house sign ...2HenryVI. iii. 2 
underneath an ale-house' paltry sign — \. 2 

ye ale-iiouse painted signs Titus Andron. iv. 2 

to make fools laugh i' tlie ale-house Olliello, ii. 1 

.\LENCON— atthedukeAleiieoii's ..Love'sL. l.ii.l 
the heir of Aleneon, Rosaline her name — ii. 1 
and of Berry, Aleiieon, Brabant, Bar. HeniyV. iii. i 
when Aleneon and my self were down — iv. 7 
he is a friend to Alenson and an enemy — iv. 7 
he's a friend of the duke 01 Alen5on's — iv. 8 
is takeout of the helmet of xUenSou — iv. 8 

that this is the glove of Alenyon — iv. 8 

John dlike of Alenson; Antony duke of — iv. 8 

the duke of AJenSon flieth to 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

duke of Alencon, this was your — ii. 1 

but unto thee, AleuSon, and the rest — iii. 2 
Charles, Alenson, and that traitorous — iv. 1 
and Burgundy, AlenQon, Keignier .. — iv. 4 

beat down Alenson, Orleans — iv. 6 

Calaber, Bretagne, and Alenson 2 Henry VI. i. 1 

the duchess of Alenson, the French ..Hen. VIII. iii 2 

ALEPPO — her husband's to Aleppo gone . . Mncb. i. 3 
that in Aleppo once, where a malignant. Othello, v. 2 

ALE-WASHED- 
foaming bottles, and ale-washed wits. .Hen. V. iii. 6 

ALE-WlFE— 
the fat ale-wife of Wineot . . Taming ofS. 2 (indue.) 
two holes in the ale-wife's new petticoat. 2 H.IV. ii. 2 

ALEXANDER- 

the parish curate, Alexander Lovers L. Lost, v. 2 

is dismiiA'ed; iirocoeil, ltikhI Alexander — v. 2 
Alexander Iclt liis to the worthiest. . Vlnter's T. v. 1 
like so many .\K\-andri--, l-nc. ni ..Henry r. iii. 1 
Alexaniici- ihe i'lg \. as born? Alexander — iy. 7 
I think, Alexander the Great was born in — iv. 7 
if you mark Alexander's life well .. — iv. 7 
Alexander (God knows, and you know) — iv. 7 
as Alexander is kill his friend Clytus — iv. 7 
Alexander Idcii, an esquire of Kent .2 Hen. VI. iv. 10 



ALE 



15] 



ALL 



i. 2 



ii. 5 
ii. 5 
IT. 6 



AI.EXANDER— 
Alexander Wen, that's ray name ..2 Henry VI. v. 1 
godd-morrow, Alexander; liow do. JVni(. Sr Ores. i. 2 
as a thnv made tor Alexander .... Corhlanus, v. 4 
and .Vniniiin. lie :;avr to Alexander.. !»/. iS-Cteo.iii.6 
tliink Aiexaiuier innlied i>' this I'ashiuu. .Ha■m/e^ v. 1 
traiv the nolile lUisti'f Alexander .... — V. 1 
Alexander died, Ale.xander was bm-ied — v. 1 

ALEXANDR.IA- 
from Alexaiulria thisis the ntn^s.Anlony ff Cleo. i. 4 
when rioting in Alexandi'ia; you did — ii. 2 
in Aloxiindria,— here's tlie manner of it — .jii. 6 

Crosar sits down in Alexandria — iii. 1 ] 

tlu'ough Alexandi-ia make a jolly march — iv. 8 

ALEXANDRIAN— 
this is not yet an Alexandrian feast./ln(. ^- Cleo. ii. 7 
and present ovir Alexandrian revels.. — v. 2 

ALEXAS— Alexas, come, liis fortune _ — i. 2 
lord Alexas, sweet Alexas, most any thing 

Ale.xas, almost most absolute Alexas 

Where's Alexas? Here madam, at your _ 
weleorae, my good Alexas: did I, Charmiau 

fo to the fellow, gooil Alexas; bid him _ 
idyou Alexas bring rae word — 

Alexas did revolt; and went to Je-svTy — 

ALIAS— alias the Prince of Darkness . . All's Well, iv. 5 
testy magisti'ates (alias, fools) .... CoHolnnus, ii. 1 

ALICE— lend it to Alice Shortcake. .Aferrj/ Wives, i. 1 

thou liest! sir Alice Ford — ii. I 

Madam. Alice madam, or Joan (ind.) Tarn. ofS. 2 

Alice, tu as ete en Angleterre, et Henry V. iii. 4 

excusez moi, Alice; escoutez: de hand — iii. 4 

AI>1EN — he ijroved against an alien.Mer. ofVen. iv. 1 
and art alnrost an alien to the 1 Henry IF. iii. 2 

ALIEN A — no longer Celia.but Aliena...4s you Like, i. 3 

therefore, corn-age, good Aliena — ii. 4 

I'll tell thee, Aliena, I cannot be — iv. 1 

I love Aliena; say with her, that she — v. 2 

go you, and prepare Aliena — v. 2 

when your brother maiTies Aliena . . — v. 2 

.A.LIGH'T— bid her alight (song) Lear, iii. 4 

ALIGHTED-Madam: there is alighted.Mer. ofr. ii. 9 
e'en at hand, alighted by this . . Taming oJ'Shr. iv. 1 
nobles of the senate newly alighted.. Timon of A. i. 2 

ALIKE — 'twere all alikeas if we . . Men. for Mea. i. 1 
all men are not alike; alas, good. . . . Much Ado, iii. 5 

where all alike do dote Love's Labour Lost, iv, 3 

to see alike mine honour as their.. Winter's Tale^ i. 2 

but looks on alike: wilt please — iv. 3 

the odds for high and low's alike .... — v. 1 
male twins, both alike; those .... Comedy ofEr. i. 1 

had left to both of us alike — i. 1 

the bill that writes them all alike Macbeth, iii. 1 

both are alike ; and both alike we like John, ii. 2 

situations, look you, is both alike Hen ry V. iv. 7 

will you have my power alike \ Henry VI. \\.\ 

and good devil, were alike, and both. .3 Hen. VI. v. 6 

blamed for it alike with us Henry VIII. i. 2 

things, that are known alike — 1. 2 

ciu-ses and his blessings touch me alike — ii. 2 

both alike: he merits well to Troilus /^ Cres. iv. 1 

your diet shall be in all places alike Timon of A. iii. 6 

serving alike in sorrow — iv. 2 

at all times alike men ate not — v. 2 

each in my love alike, and none .... Coriolanus, i. 3 
fetch him off, or make remain alike.. — 1.4 

we hate alike; not Afric owns — i. 8 

all boats alike showed mastership .. — iv. 1 
our dungy earth alike feeds beast . . Ant. fyCleo. i. 1 

yoitr fortunes are alike — i. 2 

alike against my stomach, having alike — ii. 2 

to suffer all alike — iii. 11 

disdains thee and the devil alike .... Cymbeli 
pray not alike; though forfeiters .... — 
alike conversant in general services. . — 
in dignity, whose dust is both alike. . — 

creatures may be alike — 

your fortunes are alike in aU .... I'itus Andron 
every mother breeds not sons alike . . — ii. 3 
both alike in dignity .... Romeo ^ Juliet (prologue) 
bound as well as I, m penalty alike. . — i. 2 
alike bewitched by the charm of looks — i. ,5 (eho.) 
ALISANDER — that lam Alisander.. Lode's L. I,.v.2 

'tis right; you were so, Alisander — v. 2 

away the conqueror, take away Alisander — v. 2 
overthrown Alisander the conqueror! — v. 2 

run away for shame, Alisander — v. 2 

hut for Alisander, alas, you see, how 'tis — v. 2 

ALIT — quod me alit, me extin^uit Pericles, ii. 2 

ALIVE — he came alive to land Tempest, ii. 1 

his sou's alive ; 'tis as impossible — ii. 1 

deadoralive? — ii. 2 

that Julia is all ve Tin Gentlemen of Ver. ii. 6 

illumined, cherished, kept alive .... — • iii. 1 

I have one friend alive — v. 4 

you are the cruelest she alive Twelfth Night, i. 5 

there is scarce tmthenough alive. Mm. /or Mea. iii. 2 
that might come if he were known alive — iv. 3 

I have reserved alive — v. 1 

if I know more of any man alive Much Ado, iv. 1 

(God rest his soul!) alive or dead?. . Mer. of Ven. ii. 2 

there be fools alive, I wis — ii. 9 (scroll) 

and means, for every man alive All's Well, iv. 3 

your daughter-in-law had been alive — iv. .5 

of all the men alive, I never Taming of Shr. ii. 1 

what blessings I have here alive . Winter's Tale, iii. 2 

O that he were alive, and here beholding iii. 2 

not left a purse alive in the whole array iv. 3 

a son, who shall be flayed alive iv. 3 

remember, stoned and flayed alive . . — iv. 3 
or, be alive again, and dare me to .... Macbeth, iii. 4 
'twould have angered any heart alive — iii. 6 

Shalt thou hang alive, till famine — v. .^ 

young Arthur is alive; this King John, iv. 2 

they heard young Arthur was alive?.. — v. 1 

when I mount, alive may I Rieliard II. i. 1 

in you I see old Gaunt alive — ii. 3 

that man is not alive, might 1 Henry IV.iii. 1 

or more bold, is now alive — v. 1 

of my hundred, and fifty left alive .. — v. 3 



111. 2 
iv. 1 
iv. 2 

v. 5 



ALIVE— if Percy be alive, thou get'st..! Hen. IV. v. 3 

bears not alive, so stou^ a — v. 4 

art thou alive? or is it fantasy — v. 4 

if the man were alive, and would deny it — v. 4 

had been alive this hour — . v. .5 

which says the dead is not alive 2 Henry 1 V. i. 1 

and is Jane Niglitwork alive? Slie lives — iii. 2 
I am the most ofi'ending soul alive . . Henry V. iv. 3 

there's not a bov left alive — iv. 7 

fight withal, if ne be alive — iv. 7 

he would wear, if alive) I will — iv. 7 

be thou gracious to none alive 1 Henry VI. i. 4 

ah, York, no man alive so fain as I. .2 Hen. VI. iii. 1 
and all to have the noble duke alive — iii. 2 
alive again? then show rae where . . — iii. 3 

the bricks are alive at this day — iv. 2 

ah, were the duke of Suffolk now alive — iv. 4 

loved well, when they were alive — iv. 7 

ground gape, and swallow me alive..3 Henry VI. i. I 
and leave not one alive, I live in hell — i. 3 
wdiy, then he is alive. Nay, he is deaxl.Itich. III. i. 2 

not know tli:it Englishman alive — ii. 1 

if that our noble father be alive? — ii. 2 

for reverence to some alive — iii. 7 

what heir of York is there alive, but we? — iv. 4 
the greatest monarch now alive may. He;;. VIII. v. 2 
wouldst not entomb thyself alive. Troil. f; Cres. iii. 3 

no man alive can love, in siich — iv. 1 

and we alive, that lived? fiy . . Timon of Athens, iii. 1 

thecapofaU the fools alive — iv. 3 

kill me, that thou art alive — iv. 3 

Timon; who, alive, all living men .. (epita.) v. 5 
ay, if I be alive, and your mmd hold . . Julius C-_i-2 
well, to oiu- work alive, what do you — i v. 3 
shall ever take alive the noble Brutus — v. 4 
or alive, or dead, he will be found like — v. 4 
and see whe'r Brutus be alive or dead — v. 4 
our will is, Antony be tookalive. Antonyt^ Cleo. iv. 6 
Cymbeline dreams that they are alive . . Cymb. iii. 3 
as good as Ajax, when neither are alive — iv. 2 

he IS alive, my lord. He'U then — i v. 2 

the same deail thing alive — v. 5 

the poor remains, alive, and dead ,. rz/us Andron. i. 2 
whom you Goths beheld alive, and dead — i. 2 

where you left him all alive — ii. 4 

hither both thy sons alive; and that — iii. 1 
the villain is alive in Titus' house . . — v. 3 
to killen bad, keep good alive ..Pericles, ii. (Gower) 

she is alive; beholdlier eyelids — iii. 2 

put them i' the paste alive Lear, ii. 4 

alive or dead? ho, you sir? friend! .... — v. 6 

if both remain alive — v. 1 

my side, her husband being alive — v. I 

bodies be they alive or dead — v. 3 

alive! in triumphi and IVIercutio .Rom. ^ Jul. iii. 1 
thy Juliet is alive, for whose dear sake — iii. 3 
hear thee say, that Cassio's not alive . . Othello, iii. 3 
there's millions now alive that nightly lie — iv. 1 

ALLAY— allay them Tempest, i. 2 

to allay the gust he hath in Twelfth Night, i. 3 

take pain to allay with soms.. Merchant of Ven. ii. 2 

be moderate, allay thy ecstacy — iii. 2 

I might be some allay Winter's Tale, iv. 1 

than nothing can allay, nothing but.. Jf. Jolin, iii. 1 
it would allay the burning quality . . — v. 7 
and allay this thy abortive pride_ ... .2 Hen. VI. iv. 1 

and when the rage allays, the rain 3 Hen. VI. i. 4 

or but allay, the fire of passion Henry VIII. i. 1 

and allay those tongues that diu'st . . — ii. 1 

desire not to allay my rages Coriolanus, v. 3 

it does allay the good precedence . . . Ant. fy Cleo. ii. 5 
of your person it would scarcely allay .... Lear, i. 2 
ALLAYED— 

allayed their swelling griefs ZHenryVI. iv. 8 

jVLLAYING— allaying both their ivxxj ..Tempest,_i. 2 

not a drop of allaying Tiber in't Coriolanus, ii. 1 

ALLAYIVIENT— apply allayments to their . Ci/m. i. 6 

the like allaymeiit could I give . . Troil. <5; Cres. iv. 4 

ALL-BINDING-manacles of the all-binding [CoHi'er 

— all-building] law Measurefor Measure, ii. 4 

AI>L-CHEERING— all-cheering sun. Rom. 4- Jul. i. 1 

ALL-DREADED— the aU-dreaded . Cymb. iv. 2 (song) 

ALLEGATION— reprove my allegation.2 H. VI. iii. 1 

false allegations to o'erthrow Ms state? — iii. 1 

ALLEGE — reasons you allege Troil. 4' Cres. ii. 2 

ALLEGED— alleged many sharp .... Hen. VIII. ii. 1 

thorny points of my alleged reasons — ii. 4 

ALLECilANCE— and allegiance c\t3X.. Macbeth, ii. 1 

I charge thee on thy allegiance Much Ado, i. 1 

but on my allegiance, mark you this. . — i. 1 
if they should have any allegiance in them iii. 3 
on your allegiance, out of the chamber. Winter's T. ii. 3 
the faith and allegiance of a true — iii. 2 (indict.) 

from his allegiance to a heretick King John, iii. 1 

swearing allegiance, and the love of soul — v. 1 
which honour and allegiance cannot think, ii. 7/.ii. 1 
and sends allegiance and true faith of — iii. 3 
I did pluck allegiance from men's. . . 1 Hen. IV. iii. 2 
as if allegiance m their bosoms sat. . . . Henry V. ii. 2 
we charge you, on allegiance toom'sclf .1 if. VI. iii. 1 
then swear allegiance to his majesty.. — v. 4 

keep the Frenchmen in alleriance — v. 5 

agamst thy oath and true allegiance. .2 Hen. VI. v. 1 
hast thou not sworn allegiance to me? — v. 1 
subjects, sworn in all allegiance, wUl. .3 H. VI. iii. 1 

we owe allegiance unto Henry — iv. 7 

all of you, allegiance; this sorrow .. Richard III. i. 3 
cold hearts freeze allegiance in them. Hen. VIII. i. 2 

a heart with less allegiance in it — v. 2 

follow with allegiance a fallen lord. Ant. fy CI. iii. 11 

on thine allegiance hear rae! since thou ..Lear^ i. 1 

to hell, allegiance! vows, to the blackest. . Ham. iv. h 

ALLEGIANT— but allegiant thanks. He?!. VIII. iii. 2 

ALL-ENDING— general all-ending day..B.///. iii. 1 

ALLEY — in a thicli pleached alley Much Ado, i. 2 

as we do trace this alley up and down — iii. 1 

the natural gates and alleys of the hoAy. Hamlet, i. 5 

ALL-HAIL— by the aU-hail hereafter . . Macbeth, i. 5 

in either side give the aU-hail to thee. Cor('o/an«s, v. 3 

ALL-HAILED— who all-hailed me.Vac6rWi, i. 5 (let.) 



AI,LH ALLOWIWA.S— 

upon allhallowmaslast,afortniglit.i)/crn/ Wives, i. I 
ALL-HALLOWN— 

farewell, all-hallown summer! 1 Henry IV. i. 2 

ALL-IIOLLOND— Hallowmas, master Froth? 

All-lioUond eve Measurefor Measure, ii. 1 

ALL-HONOURED— 

what made the all-honoured, honest.^n*. ^ Cleo. ii. (! 

AIXIANCE— good lord,forallianceI..il/iic/i Adri,n. 1 

one day sliall crown the alliance on't. . Tirel. N. v. 1 

and in his parties, his alliance Winter's Tale, ii. 3 

in love and dear alliance, let tliat Henry V. v. 2 

and for alliance sake, declare the cause.. 1 H.VI. ii. .'i 
that in alliance, amity, and oaths . . — iv. I 
as his alliance will confirm our peace ■ — v. b 
abroad they purchase great alliances Hen. VI. iii. 3 
by tills alliance to make void my suit — iii. 3 

is this the alliance that he seeks — iii, 3 

joined with France in such alliance., — iv. 1 

by blood, and by alliance — iv. 1 

this fair alliance quickly shall Richard III. iv. 1 

infer fair England's peace by this alliance — iv. 4 
therefore let our alliance be combined. J. Ciesnr. iv. 1 
for this alliance may so hapnyprove./iom. f; Jul. ii. 3 
ALLIED— allied unto the duke .. 7'«'o G. offer, iv. 1 
she's nothing allied to your disorders. Twelfth A', ii. 3 
of a great kindred; itis well allied. .il/ra.s. /or M. iii. 2 
kingdoms known and allied to yours. Winter's T. i. 2 
neither allied to eminent assistants. . Hen. VIII. i. 1 
ALLIES — the queen and her allies . . Richard III. i. 3 

embracements to my wife's allies — ii. 1 

by the su»"estion of the queen's allies — iii. 2 

or his mfe s allies — v. 1 

your land, and love, and "reat allies. /4s you Like. v. 4 
the passages of allies, creeks, and.. . . Com. of Er. iv. 2 
acquaintance, kindred, and allies ... I Henry IV. i. 1 
ALLIGANT — in such alligant terms . . Merry W.yi.2 
ALLIGATOR— an alligator stuffed.. iiom,. 4' Jul. v. 1 
ALL-LICENSED-thisyourall-liceusedfool Lear.i. 4 
ALLONS— AUons! AUons! sowed.. Loot's L. L. iv. 3 

Aliens, we will employ thee — v. 1 

pour une fois; Aliens nous a disner. . Henry r. iii. 4 
ALLOT— stars allot thee for his lovely. Tam.'o/S. iv. 5 

five days we do allot thee for Lear, i. 1 

ALLOTTED— 

thou art allotted to be ta'en 1 Henry VI. v. 3 

ALLOTTERY— 

give me the poor allottery my father. .4s ?/ok Like, i. 1 
ALLOW — will allow me very worth . . TwelflhN. i. 2 

ere I \vill allow of thy wits — i v. 2 

you must allow vox — v. 1 

would allow it, sir. But the law will not 

allow it Measure for Measure, ii. 1 

the law allows it, and the eom-t . . Mer. of Ven. iv. 1 
the coiu'tesy of nations allows you. ..4s you Like, i. 1 
therefore allow me such exercises .... — i. 1 

pr'ythee allow the ivind All's Well, v. 2 

of this allow, if everyouh,ave . . Winter's T. iv (eho.) 
at this time he will allow no speech. . — iv. 3 

I would allow him odds Rieliard II. i. i 

and fearless, I to thee allow — i. 1 

honour I for ave allow — v. 2 

why, they will allow us ne'erajorden.lHen.LF. ii. 1 
I well allow the occasion of our arms — i. 3 
I do allow this wen to be as familiar. .tHen.IV. ii. 2 
I like them all, .and do allow them well — iv. 2 
competence of life, I will allow you. . — v. 5 

allow us as we prove Troilus andCressida, iii . 2 

this is all a liberal course allows .. Timon of A. iii. 3 
allow their officers, and are content. Cor/otenti.s, iii. 3 

if your sweet sway allow obedience Lear, ii. 4 

allow not nature more than nature needs — ii. 4 

if convenience will not allow — ii:. 6 

allows itself to any tiling — iii. 7 

the time wiU not allow the compliment — v. 3 
for grace, and love for love allow. . Romeo HJnl. ii. 3 

of these dilated articles allow Hamlet, i. 2 

ALLOWANCE— states' aUowance...Hen.r///. iii. 2 
give him allowance for the better. . T/oil. ^ Cres. i. 3 

we do allowance give before — ii. 3 

and syllables of no allowance, to your . . Coriol. iii. 2 

and put it on by your allowance Lear, i. 4 

under the allowance of your grand aspect — ii. 2 
of safety, and allowance, as therein — Hamlet, ii. 2 
must, in your allowance, o'erweigh a whole iii. 2 
be known to you, and your allowance . . Otiiello, i. 1 
of very expert and approved allowance — ii. 1 
ALLO WED— generally allowed .... Merry Wires, ii. 2 
there is no slander in an allowed fool. Twelfth N. i. Ii 
and allowed your approach, rather . . — i. ."> 
it shall not be allowed in Vienna ..Mea. for M. ii. I 
and the worser allowed by order of law — iii. 2 
she is allowed for the day- woman . . Love's L. L. i. 2 
go, you are allowed; die when you .. — v. 2 
my lord, are such allowed infirmities. Win'er's '/'. i. 2 
for once allowed the skilful pilot's. .^Henry VI. v. 4 

who, being allowed his way Henry VIII. i. 1 

is not ours, or not allowed — i. 2 

scholars, allowed freely to argue — ii. 2 

on all sides the authority allowed — ii. 4 

almost, no grave allowed me — iii. 1 

allowed with absolute power . . Timon of.ithens, v. 2 
by our permission is allowed to make. J. Ccvsar, iii. 2 
as since he hath been allowed the name . . Cymb. i. S 

and though it be allowed in meaner — ii. 3 

being done, but being so allowed — iii. 3 

yet here s!ie is allowed her virgin erants. . Ham. v. 1 
sudden death, not shriving-time allowed — v. 2 
a substitute of most allowed sufficiency. . Othello, i. 3 
ALLOWING— her allowing husband.. Winter'sT. i. 2 
your patience this alknving, I turn — iv. (chorus) 

allowing him allowing breath Richard II. iii. 2 

ALL-PRAISED— all-praised knight.. IHen./F. iii. 2 
ALL-SEER— 

that higli All-seer which I dallied. . Richard III. v. 1 
AIjL-SEEING— All-seeing heaven, what — ii. 1 
ALL-SHAKING— 

and thou, all-shaking thimder, strike. . . . Lear, iii. 2 
ALL-SHUNNED- 
his disease of all-shunned poverty. . Timon of A. iv. 2 



AJ.L 



AI.r,-S()lT|,S— thisis All-soulHduy, fellows, 
is it not? It is my lord. Why, then All- 

smils (lav IticharJ III. v. 1 

this, tliiH All-aouls (lav (t)!^' tViirl'iil — v. I 

A l,l,-Tl';i,l,li\(:— .ill-tclliiii,'V:niR'../,oiT's /,. L. ii. 1 

AI,l,-'rill\(i-.iiul.ill-tliin-iinlicf.miillL'.M.ic)). iii. 1 

Al.I,UH!:-alluroliim,hui-iihi.iiui}.7Vm(iHo//l. iv. 3 
aca^ii-mcnt toalliiri' false hearts .. .. (.■yHi^p//;ip, ii. •! 
v.-iuil<l all lire, and make a hatterv I'mdes, v. 1 

A 1 ,1 , 1 1 U Is I )— IK It so allured to feed .... Cymbelinc, i. 7 

Aia.UlilOiMKN'f— 
1. 1 take heel of the nlliirenipnt of.... /(«'.? »>«, iv. 3 

AI,l,UI{IN(i— lheiillurinj;lieaiity ..Cnm.nflir. ii. 1 

AI,I,|ISl()\_thealliisiouholda m.. Love's L. L. iv. 2 

AI,I.-\VA'l'fIIKI)_ 
Hie weai-vaiiil all-watelied night. Wcnri/r. iv. (cho.) 

Al.l.-Woln'IlV— (), my all-worthy lord. 

All- worthy, vi Main ! Cymbeline, in. 5 

A1,I,V — the iirinee's near ally.. . ./(omco * Juliet, iii. 1 

ALI.YCIKILLY— 
iiiethiiiks.vou'reallveholly ..Tim Gen.offer. iv. I 
too iii'ifh toallyeholly and musing, iVcrry ^f^irea-, i. 4 

AI..M.'. I \— not to overthrow your almain..OWid. ii. 3 

ALMANACK— 
the aliiuiiMiek; find out mocir\-!Hm^e. Mid. N. D. iii. 1 
here eouies the aliimnaek of mv true CVrtii. o/' F.r. i. 2 
what savs the ahnaiiack to that?. . . .2;/ch< y/;'. ii. 4 
tinipests than ainiiiiiiiiks eaii report .!«/. AMcn. i. 2 

AI.MKillTY — Almi;..htv dreadfid. . Lore's /.. L. iii. 1 
Mars, oriaoees then liili^rhtv, pave .. — v. 2 

..Hciiru !' 

iv. 1 

ay, (loil Alnii-htv lielj>iiie! 'iHenn/ T/. ii. 1 

in mass l,v tlie Alininhtv sun ..TroilusA- Cress, v. 2 

y\I..M(I.NI)^«ill nohlo ii'iore for an almond — v. 2 

Al,iM( ).-^T— and almost iiiaecessihle .... Tempest, ii. 1 
which is inileeil almost hevonderedit — ii. 1 
hath here almost iiersiiaiU'il the kiny — ii. 1 
thv e^■es are almost set in tliy head . . — iii, 2 

llial manv, nay, almost any — iii. 3 

of their plot is almost eonie — iv. 1 

I think, 'tis almost day . . Two Gen. of Verona, iv. 2 

almost as well as I do Know — iv. 4 

I am nhnost out at heels Merrij IVives, i. 3 

it makes me almost ready to wrangle — ii. 1 

he hath indeed, almost natural ..Twelflti Night, 1. 3 

when'lisalnaistan ai.j.le — i. .'i 

do show his days are almost done.... — ii. 3 

I am nhnost sick for one — iii. 1 

worn your eyes almost out in the..Mca.for Mca. i. 2 
for, as 1 take it, it is almostday .... — iv. 2 

it is iilmosl elear dawn — iv. 2 

as like almost tot'laudio.ashimself — v. 1 

1 have almost malier enough in me ..Much Ado, i. I 

'tis almost five o'eloek, ecnisin — iii. 4 

ymi are almost eome to part almost a fray — v. 1 
adaii-hter, almost the eo,.v of mv child — v. 1 
thev swore that \on were almost sirk forme — v. 4 
I swo.Mi almostwilh tViii- .. M„lsui„,„rri\. Dream, ii. 3 



[ 10 ] 



St fai 



forgot your love? Almost I had . . Love's L. L. iii. 1 
would almost danm those ears ..Mer. of Venice, i. 1 

his hmii- is almost past — ii. 6 

thou almost mak'st me waver in .. .. — iv. 1 
it is iihiinst morning', and vet, I am sure — v. 1 
and iilmo-t with tears I speak it .. .4s i/ou Life !/, 1. 1 
sheteh his lestliern coat almost to hnrstiug — ii. 1 
till now ;ilmost fourscore here lived 1 — ii. 3 

1 faint almost to death — ii. 4 

1 almost die for food, and let me — ii. 7 

and almost elude (iod for making .you — iv. 1 
the tioor world is almost six thousand — iv. 1 
wliose skill was almost as great as his.. All's Well. i. 1 

we liavo almost emhossed nira — iii. 

heehanged almost intoiinotherman — iv. 3 

dear (dmost n;: 111- hi'r: \', liich gratitude — iv. 4 

we are almost :■ Ml.i s , r .s Ilinlcr's Tate, i. 2 

mav this, aim., M ;i niii-.hic, lie(hme .. _ iv. 3 
theV seemed ahenst, with staring .... — v. 2 
mv' lord's almost so far transported .. — v. 3 
almost made me traitor to mvsell'. . Cum. of Er. iii. 2 
J have not breathed almost, since I .. — V. 1 

who, almost (lend fir lireath Min-hdli, i. '.> 

he has almost supped: why have you — i. 7 

J have almost slipiied the hour — ii. 3 

go ahout. Ahuostaniile — iii. 3 

almost at odds with morning — iii. 4 

nlas, poor eountry; almost afraid to.. — iv. 3 

1 have almost forgot the taste of — v. & 

theday almost itself professes — v. 7 

almost ashamed lo sav vhiit good. .Ki'nff /o/in, iii. 3 
ordo you almost think, although vou — iv. 3 
in the fl(dd, and idmost lords ofitf .. — V. .■) 

1 left him almost speechless _ v, (i 

and art almost an alien to the hearts. 1 Hen./ /'. iii. 2 
a geiitlenuin almost forspent with ..'illcnni IV.i. 1 

Imt he is almost Milt of mine — i. 2 

which is. al i, P. |l"'l- :i kingilom down i. 3 

and (lend nil 1.. lo think — iv. 4 

andall herah.i i i I okedoms .. J/rari/ K. i. 2 
thatalmo^t mi;lii' i Im u i-iiied . . . . — ii. 2 
and those few i have, almost no hotter — iii.fi 
Kcntinels almost r,'ceive the secret. . .. — iv. (cho.) 
miide me nhnost \ ield upon my .. ..li/eiirj/J'/. iii. 3 
the Fi-cic-h \.crr -.hiiost ten to one .. — iv. 1 

awn\ ! ' M n il'iinststopsmy — iv. 3 

theds-i II. I I oLiit 2H(!nn^ rf. iii. 1 

wereiiin,i,-i 111,, :■ vliarpriuilled .... — iii. 1 
uv, almost slain, lor he is taken. . . .3Hean/ /'/. iv. 4 
almost hurst to hcleh it in the sia,.. Richard III. i. 4 

frozen almost to death — ii. 1 

you cannot reason almost with a mau — ii. 3 

ni.th almost overta'en him in — ii. 4 

imagine, or almost lielie\'e — iii, .•> 

and almost shoiddeied in the swallowing — iii. 7 
qnoth Forrest, almost chnnged mv mind — iv. 3 
did almost sweat loheiir the urni'u. . Henri/ I'lIL i. 1 
almost apiiears in loud rehelllon. Not almost - i. 2 
« lien we, almost « ith ra\islicd listening — i. 2 
almost forgot my prayers to eouteut.. — iii. 1 



Al.,I\IOST— altnost, no grave allowed me.. //. nil. iii. 1 
all famous colleges almost in Christendom — iii. 2 

nuide almost each pang a death — v. 1 

will almost give us apriuee ..TroilusS Cjvs.v. iii. 3 
knows almost every grain of Plutus' — iii. 3 

and almost, like the gods, does — iii. 3 

the one almost as intlnite as nil — iv. 

the painting is almost the nat iiral.. '/■/mem 0//1W. i. I 

he has almost charmed me from — iv. 3 

it almost turns my dangerous nature wild — iv. 3 

luiy, these are almost thoroughlv Cariolanus, i. 1 

ere almo.st. Home should know 'we .. — i. 2 

come, come, thi'v arc almost here — ii. 2 

we will so: almost all repent in their election ii. 3 
and is almost nml me for the violent — iv. 3 

have, almost, stumped the leasing — v. 2 

almost at noint to enter — v. 4 

that it had almost choked Ciosar .. Julius Cirsar, i. 2 
crowd a feeble man almost to death.. — ii. 4 

now thev are niniost on bim _ v. 3 

hath almost eiidi'd his life's history.. — v. ."j 

almost most nhsoliite Ale\as Antony <S Clco. i. 2 

truth should be silent, 1 had almost forgot ii. 2 

the wild (lisLOiise liiitli nhnost antick'd — ii. 7 

he cried almost to ronring _ iii. 2 

overliii\snie;ilmiisttlic sum he pays. . CymMi'ne, i. 2 

art thou iiiiid? Alnii,,-|, >ir _ i. 2 

I had almost Inrjnt to rnlreat y(nir grace — i. 7 
almost midiii;dil, niiidniii. t have read — ii. 2 

it's nhnost morniiiL', is't not? _ ii. 3 

that it did almost stretch the sides .. — iii. 1 

and am almost a inniKilready — iii. 4 

lieing going, nimosi, spent with hunger — iii. 
well eiicoiinU'ird! 'tis nhnost night.. — iii. G 
agatheod lily nlinosl, « il liercd. . 7'//hs/Ih((7-oi!. iii. 1 
that were his biiirl nlino-l impregnahlo — iv. 4 
and alnio-t briii-.i, my henrt with .... — v. 1 
she RWonnded nhnost at mv iileasing — v. 1 

their sorrows aim, ist were 'forgot — v. 1 

aeea that almost burst the deck Pericles,\v. 1 

I have cried her almost to the uiimher — iv. 3 
her monnmeiit is almost linished.... — iv. 4 

now our sands 'ire nhnost run — V. 2 (Gower) 

isoshanieil nhnost to iick nowlcilge hers ..Lear, i. 1 
nothing almost sees miracles, hut misery — ii. 2 

'tishnrd; almost imimssihlc — ii. 4 

I a.m almost mad myself; Iliad a son — iii. 4 

almost hio smn.ll for sight — iv. f> 

for I iim almost renilv toilissolvc.... — V. 3 

'tis almost morning, I would have. .flom. fyJul. ii. 2 
that almost freezes up llie bent of life — iv. 3 
I am almost iil'j- id to sinnd alone. . .. — v. 3 

sick almost todoomsday with eclipse Hamlet, i. 1 

distilled almost to jelly with the net of fear — i. 2 
with almost all the holy vows of heaven — i. 3 
my hour is almost come when I to sulphurous i. 5 
that's almost in sha|ie of a camel? .. — iii. 2 

almost as bad. goml mother, as kill a king — iii. 4 
to whet thy almost hlimted piu-pose.. — iii. 4 

for use almost can ehauLi:e the stamp.. — iii. 4 

his mother lives almost by his looks.. — iv. 7 

and vet it is almost against nn- caiscienoe v. 2 

a fellow almost damned in a fair wife. . . . Olliello, i. 1 
whom love has turned almost the wrong side ii. 3 
my money is almost spent; I have heeii — ii. 3 
is not almost a fault to incur a private — iii. 3 
etmkl almost read the thoughts of people — iii. 4 
ruhhcd this young tiuut almost to the sense — v. 1 
lie'salmost slain, and Koilerigo deiul — v. 1 

that dost almost persiuule justice to. . _ v. 2 

ALMS-doth heg the aim s of pal sled . Mea.fnr Men. i i i . 1 
an' he should, it were an alms to hang. .1/i/(7i.t,/n, ii. 3 
upon entreaty, have a present alius. 'i'<iniin^<ii' s.\v. 3 
so give alms "; pray so ; and for . . Il'in/er's 'l'<ili; iv. 3 

wherein he puts alnts for Troitus i^- C're.s-.v/f/a, iii.3 

I have voiir alms ; adieu Coriolanus.ii. 3 

bend like his that hath rceeived an alms — iii. 2 

by his own alms emiMiisoned — v. .5 

one bred of alms, anil fostered with. . Cymbeline, ii. 3 
that have their alms cut of the . . Titus Andv^n. ii. 3 
who hath rceeived yoti t,t fortune's alms . . Lear,\. 1 

some other c(uirse, to forti;ue's alma Olliello, iii. 4 

ALMS-BASKET — lived long on the alms-basket 

of words Lire's Labour Lost, V. 1 

AliMfi-UKKD— murderisthvali,>B-decd..3//. ('/.v. ,'i 
AI.MS-DR [NIC— drink alms-drink. .,/»/. ,S'- Cleo. ii. 7 
A I ,M S- 1 1< UhSK-a hnndreil alms-houses ../;,•«. r. i, 1 
AIjMS-MAN— f.r nn alms-man's gown .«/cA.//. iii. 3 
ALtJli'T— herehainhev is aloft . . Two (Jnu ,,/l-er. iii. 1 

breathe again aloi't the tlood Kinf;- John, iv. 2 

raise aloft the milk-white rose 1 Henry FT. i. I 

that you be by her aloft, while 2 Henry VI. i. 4 

their master loves to he aloft — ii. 1 

I'll wear aloft my hurgonet — v. 1 

to west on wing soariim nloft Cymbeline, v. .5 

and sits aloft, secnre of (liuiider's. TOus Andron. ii. 1 

to mount aloft with tliv imperial — ii. 1 

till thou art here aloft,' or I below. ... — ii. 4 
and reared aloft the hloodv battle-axe — iii. 1 

ALUN M— let it alone, thou fool Tempest, iv. 1 

now we are alone, wouldst. . Two Gen. of I'crona, i. 2 

to walk alone, like one — ii. 1 

she is alone — ii. 4 

then let her alone — ii. 4 

the fools are mad, if left alone — iii. 1 

I wdll go to her alone — iii. 1 

1 may venture to depart alone — iv. 3 

here can I sit alone — v. 4 

CO tell thy master, I am alone.... jVlerri/ Wives, iW.i 

let the clothes alone — iv. 2 

that it alone is high fantastical . . Twelfth Niglit, i. 1 

it alone concerns your car — i. .'') 

give us the place alone — i. i 

that I may bear my evils alone — ii. 1 

let me alone with liim — ii. 3 

mistress of it, save I alone — iii. 1 

deal gentiv with him; let me alone .. — iii. 4 

let me alolie withhiin — iii. 4 

nay, let me alone f.r swearing — iii. 4 

nay, let lum alone, I'll go — iv. 1 



ALO 



AJiO.N'lO- 

some condemned for a fault ahmo ..Men.for M. ii. 1 
I'cilro and tho C(mnt Claudioalonc.JI/uc/i^do, ii.2 

and leave us alone , iii. 1 

let them alone till they are sober .... iii. 3 

yea, even I alone v. 1 

and she alone is heir to l)oth of us. . . . v. 1 

I am alone, whenalItheworld..;i//(L N. Dream, ii. 2 
stay, on thy peril; I alone will go.... — ii. 3 

that must needs he sport ahme iii. 2 

though I alone do feel the injury .... iii. 2 

let her alone; spenk not of iteleua . . — iii. 2 
let your epilogue alone. The iron timgue — v. 1 
as I, for praise alone, now seek ta.. Love's L. L. iv. 1 

lives not alone immured in the — iv. 3 

for myself alone, I would not .. Mer. of Venice, in. 2 

let him alone; I'lU'ollow him _ iii. 3 

if I be left alone, nmv by mine honour — v. 1 
if ever he go alone again, I'llnever..^sj/ouLiJie, i. I 

leave rac alone to woo him — i. 3 

then, being alone, left and obandoned — ii. 1 

we are not all alone inihappy — Ii. 7 

as lief have been myself alone — iii. 2 

poor men alone? no, no; the noblest.. — iii. 3 
and show what wc alone must think. ./Iff's Well, i. 1 
alone she was, and did eominunicate — i. 3 
than alone the recoviry of the king.. — ii. 3 
good alone is good, without n name .. — ii. 3 

let thy courtesies alone, they are — v. 3 

leave me and her alone .... TamingofS. 2. (indue.) 

when lam aliiiie, wliv, then — i. I 

in hope to sped ;i I, me — i. 2 

being alone, that she shall still be.... — ii. 1 
when men and women iirc alone .... — ii. 1 

your lo\'e, and then let me alone — iv. 2 

not he alone shall suffer what wit . . Winter's T. iv. 3 
let's alone. I am sorry, sir, I have. ... — v. 3 
would that alone, alone he would . . Com. of Er. ii. I 
about tjvening, come yourself, alone.. — iii. 1 

alone, it was the subject of — v. 1 

keep ourself till supper-time alone . . Macbeth, iii. I 
why do you keep alone, of sorriest .. — iii. 2 
main jjart, pertains to you alone .... — iv. 3 

and not alone in habit and device King John, i. 1 

catch your hide and yoti alone — ii. 1 

those woes alone, which I alone am,. — iii. 1 

we will alone upliold; without — iii. 1 

yet I alone, aloiic, do me oppose — iii. 1 

using conceit alone; without eyes .... — iii. 3 

let me alone with lum '. — iv. 1 

in spite of si)ite, alone upholds — v. l 

yourselves, and leave us here alone..i!i'c/inr(i/7. v. 3 

this let alone, will all the rest — v. 3 

leave the prince and me alone 1 Henry IV. i. 2 

that I cannot manage alone — i. 2 

as well have met the devil alone — i. 3 

why are you thus alone? — ii. 3 

BO often when thou sit'st alone? — ii. 3 

let tbcra alone awhile, and then — ii . 4 

pr'ythce let him alone; we shall — ii. 4 

pr'ythce let her alone, and list — iii. 3 

Iniight have letalone the insulting.. — v. 4 

let it alone; I'll make other 2 Henry IV. ii. 1 

let them alone; the marshal — ii. 3 

an' ymicould hiivelet me aUme; my old — iii. 2 
why (lid you leave me here alone, my lords? — iv. 4 
the chamber, leave as here alone .... — iv. 4 

then, would he were hero alone Henry V. iv. 1 

would you and I alone, without more — iv. 3 
but to thy arm alone, ascribe we all — iv. 8 

we'll e'en let them alone 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

well then, alone, since there's no .... — ii. 2 
not that alone, hut all tho whole .... — iii. 1 

toueheth none but us aUme — iv. 1 

when my angry guardant stood alone — iv. 7 
we are alone; here's none but thee ..2 Henry VI. i. 2 

I am not able to stand alone — ii. 1 

let me alone; dost thou use to — iv. 2 

and live alone as secret as I niiiy — iv. 4 

I have singled thee ahme 3 Henry VI. ii. 4 

I am with (hee here alone — ii. 4 

well content with thataloue — iv. 7 

lam myself alone: Clarence — v. 6 

were best to do it secretly, alone Riclmrd III. i. 1 

execnle thy wrath on me alone — ^ i. 4 

let me alone to entertain him — iii. 5 

he himself wandered away alone .... — iv. 4 

for my little cure, let me alone Henry VIII. i. 4 

na,y. Sir Nicholas, let it alone — ii. 1 

thou art alone, if thy rare qualities .. — ii. 4 
have not alime employed yon where.. — iii. 2 
let them alone, and draw'the em-tains — v. 2 
per se, and stnndsnlone. So (hi all., rroi'/.^- Ores. i. 2 
prideailone must (nrre the mastitf on — i. 3 

were! alone t,i pass the dilKcidtics .. — ii. 2 

letthese thriaisnlmie. till — iv. .'i 

I'll light witli bim nl, me: stand .... — v. 6 
were enough alone hi overcome him. . Tim. of.i. iii. .') 

walks, like contempt, alone — iv. 2 

I had rather be alone. Why, fare .... — iv. 3 

that thee alone oirey — v. 1 

all single and alone, .vet an arch villain — y. I 

let us alone to guard'CorioU Coriotanus, i. 2 

let her alone, lady; as she is now .... — i. 3 

be is himself alone, to answer — i. 4 

let bim alone, he didinform the.*.... — i. 6 

let him, alone, or so many, so minded — i. 6 

Omenlonel make you a swoi'd of me? — i. G 

alone I fought in y(ntr Corioli walls.. — i. 8 

I know you can do very little alone. . — ii. 1 
too infnnt-like, for doing much ahme — ii. 1 
know, Rome, that all alone Marcius , — ii. 1 
alone he entered the mortal gate .... — ii. 2 
thongli I go alone, like to a lonely . , — iv. 1 
your VoliJes in Corioli: alone I did it — v. 5 
uenr the palmalone. Another general., Jh/ius C. i. 2 
is he alone? No, sir, there are more.. — ii. 1 
let me depart alone, and, for my sake — iii. 2 
save 1 alone, till Antony Iuia'c spoke — iii. 2 
revenge yourselves alone on C'assiua — iv. 3 



ALO 



AIjONE — 'tis not meet they bo alone. . Julius C. iv. 3 
but thine inul all alone, to nisht.. ..Ant^^ Cluo. i. 1 
lor not alone the (leatli oi" Fulvia .. .. — i. 2 

did sit alone, Mhistlinu' to the uir .... — ii. 2 

let it alone; Ictus to hllli:inls _ ii. .■; 

the senators alone (if tliis i^reat world — ii. 6 

he alone dealt on lieutenautry — iii. i) 

ourselves alone; I'll write it — iii. 11 

it portends alone the fall of Antony. . — iii. 1 1 
I am alone the villain of the earth . . — iv. 6 
let him alone, for I rememher now .. — y. 1 

she is alone the Arabian bird Cymheline^ i. 7 

let me alone with him — iv. 2 

to hriui^' him here alone — iv.2 

not prohMhle t.M-nme alone — iv.2 

60 the revetiire alitne i^irsued me — iv.2 

sheaione kniHlliis; ;ind, but she spoke it — v. 5 
hot dreams, and she alone were eold — v. 5 

let his arms alone; they were not — v..") 

when wert thou wont to walk alone.. TOus And. i. 2 

and then let rae alone: I'll find — i. 2 

let it alone; and come, I will — iv. 1 

let me alone — iv. 3 

why do you keep alone? how ehanco . . Pericles, i v. 1 
care not for me; I can go home alone — iv. 1 

I am alone felicitate in your Lear, i. 1 

not alone the imperfections of — i. 1 

let me alone. Good, my lord, enter hero — 111.4 
who alone suffers, suffers most i' the — iii. 6 

away she started, to deal with grief alone — i v. 3 
scarce awake; let him alone awliilo . . — iv. 7 

we two alone will sing like birds — v. 3 

are busied when they are most alone. /fom. <?• /«(. i.l 

for then she coidd stand alone — i. 3 

lot him alone, he hears him like — i. 5 

call medlars, when they lan;:,di alone — ii. 1 
you shall not stay alone, till holy church — ii. 6 
at home, abroad, alone, in company.. — iii. 5 
too much minded by herself alone . . — iv. 1 
my lord, we must entreat the time alone — iv. 1 
to-morrow night look that thoii lie alone — iv. 1 
let me now he left alone, and let the — iv. 3 
I needs must act alone: come, phial.. — iv. 3 
now must I to the monimientalone.. — v, 2 
I am almost afraid to stand alcmo here — v. 3 
stay then, I'll go alone: fear comes . . — v. 3 
then all alone, at the prefixed hour of her — v. 3 
'tis not alone my inky cloak, good mother. Ua mJet,i.2 
does not grow alone in thews, and bidk — i. 3 
some imp.artment did desire to you alone — i. 4 
all alone shall live within the book.. — i. 5 

now I am alone. O, what a rogue ... . — ii. 2 

let his (lueen mother all alone entreat — iii. 1 
the cease of majesty dies not alone .. — iii. 3 

never ahme did the king sigh — iii. 3 

so I alone heeame their prisoner — iv. 6 (letter) 
in a postscript here, he saj'S, alone . . — iv. 7 
brief discourse with Desdeniona alone . . Othetto, iii. 1 
your napkin ie too little; let it alone — iii. 3 
now now! what do you here alone?.. — iii. 3 
leave procreauts alone, and shut the door — iv.2 

ALONG — along, and do the murder first. 7'cm;9i',s(,i v. 1 
had come along with me . . Two Gen. of Verona, ii. 4 

is gone with her along — ii. 4 

in what habit will you go along? .... — ii. 7 
regard thy danger, and along with rae — iii. 1 

consent to go along with you — iv. 3 

and as we walk along, I dare — v. 4 

I'll tell you as we pass along — v. 4 

boy, go along with this woman . . Merry Wives, ii. 2 

to go along with me — iv. 6 

lara in haste; goalong withme — v. 1 

and bring her along with you Twelfth Night, v. 1 

a servant comes with me along. .Meas. /or Mea, iv. 1 
nay, tarry, I'll go along with thee . . — iv. 3 
and Egeus, go along: I must employ. .jl/i'ii. N. D. i. 1 
buy them, along as you passed . . Lovers L. Lost, ii, 1 
came nothing else along with that?.. — v. 2 

and travellin" along this coast — v. 2 

with him is Gratiauo gone along . . Mer. of Fen. ii. 8 

to come with him along — iii. 2 

bring your true friend along — iii. 2 

with her father ranged along As you Like it, i. 3 

I'll go along thee — i. 3 

60 shall we pass along, and never — i. 3 

he'll go along o'er the wide world with — i. 3 

as he lay along imder an oak — ii. 1 

brook that brawls along this wood — ii. 1 

jimips along by him, and never stays to — ii. 1 
we'll go along together; and ere we. . — ii. 3 

there lay he, stretched along, like — iii. 2 

that he comes not along -with her. . . . All's Well, iii. 2 
entreat you written to hear along. ... — iii. 2 

he shall go along with me — iii. 6 

bring alon^ these rascal knaves . . Taming of S. iv. 1 
if along with us, we shall be joyful .. — iv. 5 
come, go along, and see the truth ... . — iv. 5 
you shall bear along impawned . . Winter's Tale, i. 2 
let's along. Now, had I not a dash . . — v. 2 
come, go along; my wife is coming. . Com. ofEr. iv. 4 

confederates; along with them — v. 1 

■with him along is come the mother-ciuecn.,/o/i»i, ii. 1 
bear not along the clogging burden . . Richard Il.i.3 

will you go along with us'r — ii. 2 

still doing, thus he passed along — . v. 2 

they will along with company 1 Henry /F. ii. 1 

the lean earth as he walks along — ii. 2 

under whose government come they along? — iv. 1 

in Worcester, as I rode along — iv. 1 

come you along with me — v. 4 

come, go along with me, good 2 Henry IV. ii. 1 

and, as I came along, I met — ii. 4 

wil't please your grace to go along with us? — iv. 4 
take all his company along with him — v. & 

if they march along unfought Henry V. iii. :> 

like a peacock sweep along his tail.. 1 Henry VI. iii. 3 

as he marched along, by yoiu' — iv. 3 

I should not thus be led along 2 Henry VI. ii. 4 

and sorrow, go along with you — iii. 2 

as he comes along, his arms ai'e — iv. 9 



[ 17 ] 



ALONE— the king in my behalf along. .3 Hen. VI. ii.l 

every borough as we pass along — ii. 1 

towns as they do march along — ii. 2 

vengeance comes along with them .. — ii. .I 

to go along with us; for — iii. 1 

widow, go you along; lords, iise — iii. 2 

what say'fit thou? wilt thou go along? — iv. 5 
where George of Clarence sweeps along — v. 1 

every county as we go along — v. 3 

and Berkley, go along with me .... Richard III. i . 2 
as we paced along upon the giddy .... — i . I 
my gracious lord, wil't please you pass along? iii. 1 
and see, he brings the mayor along . . — iii. a 
I'll go along by your prescription . . Henry VIII. i. I 

your lordship shall along; come — i. 3 

my comfort comes along — ii. 4 

as he passed along, how earnestly — v. 2 

strangeness as we pass along. . . . Troilus fy Cres. iii. 3 

along the field I will the Trojan — v. I) 

march patiently along: let one be — v. in 

take the bonds along with you. . Timon of Alliens, ii. 1 

and go along with him — iv. 2 

this present action. Let's along Coriulanus, i. 1 

Bolemnness out o' door, and go along with ua — i. 3 
will you along? We stay here for .... — ii. 3 
come, sir, along with us. I would they — iii. 1 

take this along; I writ it for — v. 2 

when he lies along, after your way . . — v. .5 
these men, that come along with yon?. .Mllns C. ii. 1 
Metellus, go along by him: he loves. , — ii. I 

stand, till Cajsar i-iass along — ii.l! 

speak to great Cassar as he comes along — ii. 4 
that now on Pompey's basis lies along — iii. 1 

stand, ho! speak the word along — iv.2 

marching along by them, by them . . — i^'. 3 
we'll along ourselves, and meet them — iv. 3 
before him: on, there; jiass along. . .4nt. ^ C'leo. iii. 1 

go you along: Where's bolabella — v. 1 

espoiised my bride along with me.. Titus Andron. i. 2 
along with me: I'll see what hole .... — ii. 4 
whose hand shall go along, for fear . . — iii. 1 
and whh'l along with thee about .... — v. 2 
take my ministers along with me .... — v. 2 
who shall cross?) along to go . . Pericles,ii\. (Gower) 
old Uelicanus goes along behind -^ iv. 4 (.Gower) 

sirrah, come on; go along with us Lear, iii. 1 

I pray youj go along with me — iv. 3 

go along witli rae; and Montague . . Rom. ^ Jul. i. 1 
soft; I will go along; and if you leave. . — i. 1 

I'll go along, no such sight to — i. 2 

lay thee all along, holding — v. 3 

therefore I have entreated him along . . Hamlet, i. I 
freely gone with this affair along .... — i. 2 
she to England shall along with you — iii. 3 

good guard, and go along with rae Othello^ i. 1 

amazed at it, but go along with me.. — iv. 2 

ALONSO— thee of thy son, Alonso Tempest, iii. 3 

most cruelly didst tliou Alonso — v. 1 

AL(JOF— stand you awdiile aloof . . Twelfth Night, i. 4 
one, aloof, stand sentinel. M/dsummer A'. Dream, ii. 3 

and the rest, stand all aloof Mer. of Ven. iii. 2 

the rest aloof are the Dardanian wives — iii. 2 

must keep aloof from strict 1 Henry IV. iv. 1 

the cowards stand aloof at bay .... 1 Henry VI. iv. 2 

keep off aloof with wortliless — iv. 4 

stand'st thou aloof upon — v. 4 

and trembling stands aloof 2 Henry VI. i. 1 

rest stand all aloof, and bark at him .3 Henry F/.ii. 1 
stand all aloof; but, uncle, Arem.. Titus Andron. v. 3 
and so stand aloof for more serious . . ..Pericles, iv. 6 

stand aloof from the entire point I^ear, i. 1 

hence, and stand aloof; yet put it owt.Rrim. 4' Jul. v. 3 
stand all aloof, and do not interrupt . . — v. 3 
and bid rae stand aloof, and so I did . . — v. 3 
keeps aloof when we would bring l\im.. Hamlet, iii. 1 
terms of honour, I stand aloof — v. 2 

ALOUD— reading aloud to him . . Twelfth Night, ii. a 

I'll tell the world aloud, what Mea. for Mea. ii. 4 

I say my prayers aloud Much Ado, ii. 1 

when all aloud the wind . . . Love's L. L. v. i (song) 

voices I desire aloud with mine Macbeth, v. 7 

and cried aloud, O that these hands King John, iii. 4 
and cries aloud, tarry, dear cousin. ... Henry V. iv. (i 
I mil tell thee aloud, — England is . . — v. 2 
even now he cries aloud for him. . . .2 Henry VI. iii. 2 

ring bells, aloud; burn, bonfires — v. I 

who cried aloud, what scourge for Richard III. i. 4 
and he shrieked out aloud, Clarence is — i. 4 

fairly, shall bo spoke aloud Tmilus if Cres. i. 3 

8peo.k aloud to have her back — ii. 2 

prompts me aloud to call — iii. 3 

and whine aloud [or mercy. Antony ^Cleopatra, iii. 11 

so far I read aloud : but even Cymbeline^ i. 7 

singing aloud; crowned with rank Lenr, iv. 4 

is hoarse, and may not speak aloud.. Rom. 4- Jul. ii. 2 
Komeo, he cries aloud, hold friends — iii. 1 

her father's house; I'll call alond Otiiello, i. 1 

the wind hath spoke aloud at land .. — ii.l 

ALPHABET— will wrest an alphabet. Tilas And. iii. 2 

ALPHABETICAL— what should that alpha- 
betical jiositicni Twelfth Nii^'ht, ii. .a 

ALPIION.SO-Uon Alphonso, with.. 7'iff) Gen. of V. i.3 

ALP.S— of the Alps and Apennines .. King Jotin,i. \ 

to the frozen ridges of the Alps Ricluird II. i. I 

the Alps doth spit and voidliis rheum. Wc/irj/ V. iii. 5 
on the Alps, it is reported . . Antony ff Cleopatra i. 4 

ALREADY— he is slii|ined already. '/"wo Gen. of V.'i. 1 

already hath pos>x'ssec( them iii. 1 

fed upon tills woe :i.l ready — iii. 1 

you are already love's firm votary . . — iii. 2 
'already have 1 been false to Valentine — iv. 2 
he is deatl already, if he be come . . Merry Wives, ii. 3 

'tis past eight already, sir — iii. a 

is he at master Ford's already, think'st — iv. 1 
and already you are no stranger. . Twelfth Night, i. 4 

he's out of his guard already — i. 5 

she's drowned, alreatly, sir, with .... — ii. I 
my niece is already iii the belief that — iii. 4 

has censured him already Meas. for Meas. i. .■) 

shortly of the sisterhood, if not already — ii. 2 



ALII 

ALREADY — from nature stolenaman iilready 

made Mvamire fm- Measure, i i . 4 

the image of it gives me content already — iii. 1 

already he hath carried notice — iv. 3 

told me too many of him already, sir — iv. 3 
I have already delivered him letters.. MucA Ado, i. 1 

I am here already, sir — ii. 3 

his cheek hath already stuffed tennis-balls — iii. 2 
it is proved already that you are .... — iv.2 
already to their wormy beds are .... Mid. N. D. iii. 2 

for, you see, it is already in snuff — v. 1 

she liath spied him already, with those — v. 1 
60 much, dear liege, I have already .Love's L. L. i. I 
well, she hath one o' my sonnets already — iv. 3 
the child brags in her belly already . . — v. 2 

suitors that are already come? Mer. of Ven. i. 2 

my people do already know my — iii. 4 

a quarrel, ho, alrea(ly? what's tlie .. — v. 1 
they say , he is already in the forest. .4s you I. lie, i. 1 

I have done aheaily : the blushes All's Welt, ii. 3 

I have know^l thee already — ii. 3 

great saint .Tacqiios bound, already at — iii. a 

to what is past already — iii. 7 

I have told your lordship already .... — iv. 3 
thou hast spoken all already, unless — v. 3 

gone already; inch-thick, knee-deep. 'r//i(«'.v 7'. i. ii 
tliey're here with me already :'whispcring — i. 2 

too much homely foolery already — iv. 3 

which I have given already, but not — iv. 3 

the gentleman is half flayed already. . — iv. 3 
and already appearing in the blossoms — v. 2 
but that, methinks, already — what was — v. 3 
he is already named: and gone to Scone. .Mact. ii. i 
expectation, already are i' tiie court. . — iii. 3 

withbloodof thine already — v. 7 

Arthur be not gone already, even . . King John, iii. 4 
breath already smokes about the .... — v. 4 

it is in a manner done already — v. 7 

that blood already, like the pelican Richard II. ii. 1 
the earl of Wiltsliire is already there — ii. 2 
depressed he is already; and deposed — iii. 4 

thou j udgest false already 1 Henry IV. i. 2 

men that we have already way-laid — i. 2 

and see already, how he doth begin .. — i.3 
tliey are up aheady, and call for eggs — ii.l 
some of them set forward already'? .. — ii. 3 
take it already upon their salvation — ii. 4 

so, two more already. Their points.. — ii. 4 
your honour had already been at ... . — iv. 2 

but my powers are there already — iv. 2 

thy theft hath already made thee butter — iv. 2 

Percy is already in the field — iv. 2 

she is in hell already, and burns 2 Henry IV. ii. 4 

the fiowcra that you already have sent — ill. 1 

we have sent forth already — iv. I 

our army is dispersed .already _ iv.2 

I have liim already tcm\iering between — iv. 3 
unless already he be killed with your — (epilogue) 

is footed in this land already Henry V. ii. 4 

wherewith already France is ovcr-ruu.l Hen, VI. i. 1 
your sliips already are in readiness . . — iii. 1 

tis known already that I am — v. 4 

he hath learnt so much fence already. 2 Hen. VI. ii. 3 
methinks, already, in this civil broil — iv. 8 
thy grave is digged already in the earth — iv. 10 
thou hast spoke too much already . .3 Henry VI. i. 1 

hownow! IS he dead already? — i.3 

each one already blazing by our .... — ii.l 
they are already, or quickly will he, landed iv. 1 
I have already. 'That was in thy rnge.id'c/i. ///. i. 2 
im.agine I have said farewell already — i. 2 
hatlT she forgot already that brave . . — i. 2 

my life is spanned already Henry VIII. i. 1 

it hath already publicly been read .. — ii, 4 
he has banished me his bed already.. — iii. 1 

with these you bear already — iii. 2 

the king already hath married the .. — iii. 2 

one already of the privy council — iv. 1 

they are come already from the — v. 3 

but he already is too insolent . . Troilus fy Cres. i. 3 
why, even already they clap the .... — iii. 3 

they are opposed already — iv. 5 

nay, I have done already — iv. 5 

I am so far already in your gifts . . Timon of .Uh. i. 2 
the fool hangs on your back already — ii. 2 
we cannot, sir, we are undone already . . Coriol. i. 1 
in whom ab-ea<ly he is well graced . . — i. 1 
of their powers are forth already .... — i. 2 
billeted, already in the entertainment — iv. 3 
and have already o'erborne their way — iv. 6 
which you deny already ; 3'et we ... . — v. 3 
have raoved already some certain . . Julius Casar, i. 3 

three parts of him 13 ours already — i.3 

sir, Octavius is already come to Koine — iii. 2 

I have slept, my lord, already — iv. 3 

touched with what is spoke already . Ant. ^ Cleo. ii. 2 
some o'their plants are ill-rooted already — ii. 7 
who, queasy with his insolence already — iii. 6 
'tis done already, and the messenger gone — iii. 6 
he is already traduced for levity .... — iii. 7 
six kings already show me the way . . — iii. H 
I have spoke already, and it is provided — v. 2 
the paper hath cut her throat already . . Cymb. iii. 4 

and am almost a man already — iii, 4 

I have alremly fit ('tis in my cloak-bag) — iii. 4 
Lucius hath wrote already to the ... . — J!!- ^ 

the powers that he alrea^ly hath in Gallia — iii. 5 
has sorrow made thee dote aircudy?. Tilus And. iii. 2 
beat us down, wliich are down already .. Peric/cs, i. 4 
who already, wise in our negligence .... Lear, iii. 1 

part of a imwcr already fcxited — iii. 3 

of esteem arc made already mothers. . Rom. ^ Jul. i. 3 
who is aU-eady sick and pale with grief — ii. 2 
Alas, poor llomeo, he is aheady dead! — ii. 4 

I already know thy grief — iy. 1 

the bridegroom he is come already . . — if . 3 

we have sworn, my lord, already Hamlet, i. 5 

they have already order this night to play — iii. 1 
those that are married already, all but one — iii. 1 
yes, 'tis already garrisoned — iv. 4 



ALR 



AIjKEADY — what to tliis was ECciucnt tliou 

know'st already llumlel, v. 2 

his purse is empty already : all his golden — v. 2 

I have already chose my ofliccr Oihdlo, i. 1 

bclic\'e of it oppresses nJe ah*eady — i. 1 

and rnet, are ut the duke's already. . — i, 2 

but thou hast already, with all toy heart — i. 3 
and the woman bath ibund him already — ii. 1 
that which he hath drunk to-night already — ii. 3 

tliey have given me a rouse already — ii. 3 

the Jloor already changes with my poison — iii. 3 

look, how he laughs already — iv. 1 

what already I have ibolishly suifered — iv. 2 

ALSO— tl\ere is also another de\'ice ..Merry Wives, i. 1 

you will also look that way — i!i. 1 

like a jaek-a-napes also — ■ iv. 4 

because I know also, life is a — v. 1 

you were also, Jupiter, a swan — v. 5 

who shortly also died Tirdflh Nt'glit, i. 2 

you shall also make no noise in the . Miicli Ado, iii. 3 
and also the watch heard them talk .. — v. 1 
was wont to laugh is also missin"../ls j/ou Like it, ii. 2 
not m words only, but in woes also..\ Henry IV. ii. 4 
■with Erebus and tortures vile also. .2Henry IF. ii. 4 

vile seize on his lungs alsol — v. 3 

the noble earl of Suilolk also lies .... Henry V. iv. 6 

there is also moreover a river — iv. 7 

and also being a little intoxicates in his — iv. 7 
po also Harry jMonmouth, being in . . — iv. 7 
I also wish it to you. I tliink . . Timon of Ath. iii. 6 

as in the duke himself also Lear, i. 4 

of that I shall have also cause to Hamlet, v. 2 

ALTAK— the altar of her beauty.. Two Gen. of V. iii. 4 

and hung over the altar Merry Wives, iv. 2 

whose ingrate and inauspicious altars . Twelfth A^. v. 1 
or on Diana's altar to protest . . Mid.N.^Dream, i. 1 
from thy altar do I fly . . All's Well that Ends WeU,u. 3 
the altar at St. Edmund's-bury ; even on 

tliat altar King John, v. 4 

the mailed Mai's shall on his altar sit..l Hen. IV. iv. 1 

let's to the altar; heralds 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

with modest paces came to the altar. Hen. yilL iv 1 
used to creep to holy altars. . Troilus fy Cressida, iii. 3 
think it an altar ; and thy brother .. — iv. 3 
to their nostrils from our blessed altars . . Cymb.v. 5 
and do upon mine altar sacrifice Pericles, v. 2 

ALTER-thoushouldst not alter the. .il/fny ll'iees, ii. 1 
she that would alter services . . Twelfth N. ii. 5 (let.) 
be tliat I am, and seek not to alter xns.MuchAdo, i. 3 

but doth not the appetite alter? — ii. 3 

we see the seasons alter; hoary Mid. N's. Dream, ii. 2 

thy love ne'er alter, tiU thy — ii. 3 

no power in Venice can alter a decree.. Mer. of V. iv. 1 
no power in the tongue of man to alter me — iv. 1 
cither malice, or matter to alter it . . Winter's T. i. 1 
and whose heart together, afilictiou alters — iv. 3 

to alter favour ever is to fear Macbeth, i. 5 

alter not the doom fore-thought .... King John,iii. 1 

speak again to alter this Richard II. iii. 2 

augment, or alter, as your Henry V. v. 2 

would please toaltertneking'scourse. Hen. VIII.'\. 1 
can alter tlie condition of aniau ....Coriolanus^v. 4 
alter thy course for Tyre Pericles.iu. 1 

ALTEKATIOK— he's full of alteration. ... tpa;-, v. 1 
I must be a party in this alteration. . Winter's T. i. 2 
and settled project may suffer alteration — iv. 3 
fill the cup of alteration with divers. .2//cn. ir. iii. 1 

pome alteration in good-will 1 Henry FI. iv. I 

what an alteration of honour has.. Timon of Ath. iv. 3 

here's a strange alteration! Coriotanus,iv. 5 

atfii'.'hted gliibe sliould yawn at alteration. .0(/i. v. 2 

AI/i'EKED— lite is altered now. . Tiro Gen. ofVer. ii. 4 

but you, sir, altered that Twelfth Night, ii. 1 

tlie numbers altered! — ii, 5 

brother Angelo will not be altered. jVea.'!../'o;- M. iii. 2 
finding myself thus altered with . . Winter's Tale, i. 2 

delayed, but not'mug altered — iv. 3 

is }-our merry humour altered?. . Comedy of Err. ii. 2 
our scene is altered, from a serious . . Richard II. v. 3 

I will not have it altered 1 Henry I V. iii. 1 

he altered much upon the hearing it .2 Henry I V. iv. 4 
strangeness of Ms altered countenance. 2 Hen. F/.iii. I 

ay, but the case is altered SHenry I'l. iv. 3 

hut 'tis so lately altered, that the.. He;iry VIII. iv. 1 
hi iw much her grace is altered on tlie sudden — i v. 2 
titles now are altered strangely with me — iv. 2 
hath altered that good picture? .... Cyinbeline, iv. 2 

thy speech had altered it Pericles, iv. 6 

metlunks, thy voice is altered Lear, iv. G 

were he i ti favour, as in humom", altered. Othello, iii. 4 

AI,TE KING— and altering rheum.-?. Winter's T. iv. 3 

Al/n I EA— rascally Althea's a\vn-iu..2llciiry I r. ii. 2 
Althea dreamed slie was delivered .. — ii. 2 

the fatal brand Althca bunied 'SHenry VI. i. 1 

AJ/nXUDE— the altitude of his virtue Corinl. i. 1 

at each make not the altitude Lear, iv. 6 

1>V the altitude of achopine Hamlet, ii. 2 

Al/roC ETHER— 

3'et I am not altogether an ass Merry Wives, i. 1 

that altogethcr's acquaintance with.. — i. 2 

my v.'ite, master doctor, is for you altogether iii. 2 
anil revels sometimes altogether. . Twelfth Night, i. 3 
and al together against my will ., ..As yoiiLike it, i. 1 

that 1 am altogether misprised — i. ] 

you are not altogether of liis council. ..^/^sfTe//, iv, 3 
not altogether so .great as the first in — iv. 3 
this your request is altogether just.. Winter'sT. iii. 2 
then altogether they fell upon me . . Com. of Br. v. 1 
of joy, being altogether wanting ..Richard II. iii. 4 
Tou are altogether governed by ....I Henry IV. iii. 1 
but thou art altogether given over . . — iii. 3 
is altogether directed by an Ii-ishman .. Hen. F. iii. 2 
forlam she, andaltogetherjoyless../Ji'cAarrf///. i. 3 
and altogether more tractable.. Troilus % Cress, ii. 3 
thou art not altogether a fool . . Timon of Athens, ii. 2 
JVC are not to stay altogether, but to. . Coriolanus, ii. 3 

my quarrel was not altogether slight Cymb. i. 6 

this is not altogether fool, my lord Lear, i. i 

not altogether, sir; Hooked not for — ii. 4 

it was not altogether your brother's evil — iii. 5 



[ ^8 ] 



AMB 



ALTOGETHER— 

O, reform it altogether: and let tliose . . Hamlet, iii. 2 

but altogether lacks the abilities that . . Othello, i. 3 

ALTON— lord Verdun of Alton, lord..lHcn. VI. iv. 7 

ALWAYS— they always use to laugh at Tempest, ii. 1 

yet always bending towards — iv. 1 

you always end ere you begin . . 3'ico Gen. of f'er. ii. 4 

I reckon this always — ii. 5 

you would have them always play . . — iv. 2 
I would always have one play but one thing — iv. 1 

I love [ii'n/g-A*— thank] you always Merry W. i. \ 

there they always use to discharge . . — iv. 2 
but I will always count you my deer — v. .5 
for that's it, that always makes.. Twei/tt Night, ii. 4 
always obedient to your grace's . . Mea.for Mea. i. 1 

thou art always figuring diseases — i. 2 

which sorrow is always toward ourselves ii. 3 

I am always bound to you iv. 1 

you always end with a jade's trick . . Much Ado, i. 1 

always excepted my dear Claudio — iii. i 

you have been always called a merciful — iii. 3 

but always hath been just and virtuous v. 1 

why, shall I always keep below stairs? — v. 2 
and justice always whirls in etjiial . . Love'sL. L. iv. 3 
by Jove, I always took three threes., — v, 2 
I was always plain with you. . Merchant of Ven, iii. 5 
for always the dulness of the fool ..As you Lilce, i. 2 
would always say, (metlunks, Iliear. .^H's Well, i. 2 

that always loved a great fire — iv. 5 

we have always triUy served you ... . Winter's 7". ii. 3 
before the always wind-obey ing deep Com.ofEr.i. 1 
thinks a man always going to bed . , — iv. 3 

always thought, that I require Macbeth, iii. 1 

ear of youth doth always listen Richard II. ii. I 

for he is just, and always loved us well — ii. 1 

the king wiU always think him 1 Henry IV. i. 3 

would always say, she could not abide..2H./F. iii. 2 

O, give me always a little, lean — iii. 2 

they do always reason themselves .... Henry V. v. 2 
stomachs always serve them well . . 1 Henry VI. ii. 3 
but always resolute in most extremes — iv. 1 

with favour have I always done 2 Henry VI. iv. 7 

and hajipyalwaj'swasit for thatson..3HeH. F/. ii. 2 
commanded always by the greater gust — iii. 1 

will always bear himself as King — iv. 3 

suspicion always haunts the guilty.. — v. 6 

such purple tears be always shed — v. 6 

the benefit thereof is always granted. .7?ic/i. ///. iii. 1 
your majesty has always loved .... Henry VIII. ii. 2 

you are always my good friend — y. 2 

my lord, we always nave confessed it Tim. of Ath. i. 2 

I do not always follow lover — ii. 2 

Ihavenoted thee always wise; here's — iii. 1 
I have observed thee always for a towardly — iii. 1 
always a villain's oflice, or a fool's . . — iv. 3 
one that hath always loved the people. . . . Coriol. i. 1 
those senators that always favom-ed him — iii. 3 
he was always good enough for him . . — iv. ^ 

always factionary on theparty of _ v. 2 

what I fear; for always I am Cassar Jul. Crvsar, i. 2 
(always reserved my holy duty) .... Cymbeline, i. 2 
sir, as I told you always, her beauty — i. 3 

it did always seem so to us Lear, i. 1 

he always loved our sister most — i. 1 

my custom always of the afternoon Hamlet, i. 5 

AMAIMON— Amaimon sounds well; Lucifer 

well Merry Wives, ii. 2 

that gave Amaimon the bastinado. .1 Henry IV. ii. 4 

AJMAXN— her peacocks fly amain Tempest, iv. 1 

and here she comes amain . . Love's Labour Lost, v. 2 
from far making amain to \\s .. Comedy of Errors, i. 1 

cried out amain, and rushed into 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

from Ireland am I come amain 2Henry VI. iii. 1 

bid him come amain, to say — v. 1 

to London will we march amain . .SHenry VI. ii. 1 

no longer, make we hence amain .... ii. 3 

towards Berwick post amain .... ii. 5 

at our backs ; and therefore hence amain — ii. 5 

doth march amain to London iv. 8 

warriors, march amain towards Coventry iv. 8 

and cry you all amain, Achilles . . Trail, fy Cres. v. U 
they Inther march amain, under. . TitusAndron. iv. 4 

AMAZE-eannot choose but amaze \-axa.Merry W. v. 3 
you do amaze her: hear the truth .. — v. 5 
amaze me : I would have thought . . Much ^t!o, ii . 3 
o\vu margent did quote such amazes. Love's L. L. ii. 1 
you amaze me, ladies; I would have. JsyoM Like, i. 2 
lest your retirement do amaze vour..lHenri//F. v. 4 

it would amaze the proudest .". 1 Henri/ VI. iv. 7 

amaze the welkin with your broken . . Rich. III. v. 3 
ye gods, it doth amaze me, a man of Jul. Cmsar, i. 2 

beacon fired, to amaze your eyes Pericles, i. 4 

and amaze, indeed, the very faculties . . Hamlet, ii. 2 

AMAZED— be not amazed! call all . . Merry W. iii. 3 

if he be not amazed, he will v. 3 

if he be amazed, he will every way . . v. 3 

stand not amazed: here is no v. 5 

youstand amazed; but be of comfort. TwelfthN. iii. 4 

be not amazed; right noble is _ v. 1 

yet you are amazed ; but this . . Measure for Mea. i v. 2 

my lord, I am more amazed at v. 1 

I am amazed at your passionate. . . Mid. N. Dr. iii. 2 

I am amazed, and know not what to say iii. 2 

amazed, my lord? why looks your ..Looe's L. L. v. 2 
you are all amazed: here is aletter.il/er. o/Ten. v. 1 
and constancy, hath amazed me more. ^H'sWeH, ii. 1 
there 1 stood amazed for a while. . Taming ofS. ii. I 

that, all amazed, the priest let fall . . iii. 2 

your strange encounter much amazed me — iv. 5 
that I, amazed, ran from \KT.Comedy of Errors, iii. 2 
■who can be v/ise, amazed, temperate ..Macbeth, ii. 3 

she has mated, and amazed my sight v. 1 

behold the French, amazed, vouchsafe . . John, ii. 1 
why stand these royal fronts amazed thus? — ii. 2 

for I was amazed under the tide iv. 2 

lam amazed, metlunks; and lose my — iv. 3 

and makes me more amazed than had — v. 2 

we are amazed; and thus long have, fli'e/iari //. iii. 3 
poor boy, thou art amazed; hence, villain— v. 2 
be not amazed, there's nothing hid. . 1 Henry VI. i. 2 



AMAZED— 
what, amazed at my misfortunes? . Henry VIII. iii. 2 
you are amazed, my liege, at her . . Troil.&^Cres. v. 3 

fled to his house amazed Julius Cccsar, iii. 1 

1 am amazed with matter Cymbeline, iv. 3 

stand you not so amazed King Lear, iii. 6 

stand not amazed: the prince will.. item. ^ Jul. iii. 1 
thou hast amazed me; by my holy order — iii. 3 

it would have much amazed you Hamlet, i. 2 

to make heaven weep, all earth amazed. 0(AeHo, iii. 3 

come, stand not amazed at it, but go — iv. 2 

AMAZEDLY- Macduffthus amazediv ..Macb. iv. 1 

I shall reply amazedly, half 'sleep. . Mid. N. D. iv. 1 

I speak amazedly; audit becomes... Winter's T. V. 1 

AMAZEDNESS— little amazedness... — v. 2 

two in great amazedness will fly ..Merry Wives, iv. 4 

AMAZEMENT— no more amazement . . Tempest, i. 2 

in every cabin, I flamed amazement. . — i. 2 

wonder, and amazement inhabits here — v. 1 

put not yourself into amazement. Mea. /or Mcrt. iv. 2 

all this amazement can I qualify Much Ado, v. 4 

or resolve you for more amazement. Winter's Tale, v. 3 

to the amazement of mine eyes Macbeth, ii. 4 

wild amazement hurries up and down Joh » , v. 1 

will stike amazement to their . . . Troilus <(• Cres. ii. 2 
destriiction, frenzy, and amazement, like — v. 3 

amazement shall drive courage from Pericles^ i. 2 

into amazement and admiration Ha»iie(, iii. 2 

but, look! amazementonthy mother sits — iii. 4 

AMAZING— fall like amazing thunder ..Rich. II. i. 3 

AMAZON — like Amazons, come tripping ..John, v. 2 

bouncing Amazon, your buskined.. . . Mid. N. D. ii. 2 

thou art an Amazon, andfightest IHen.VI. i. 2 

belike, she minds to play the Amazon.3 Hen. VI. iv. 1 
AMAZONIAN— his Amazonian clun.Corio(anws,ii. 2 

like an Amazonian tridl, upon 3 Henry VI. i. 4 

AMBER — their ej'es purging tliick amber. .Ham. ii. 2 
her amber hairs for foulliave amber. Love's L. L.iv. 3 
with amber bracelets, beads . . Taming of Shrew, iv. 3 
AMBER-COLORED— 

amber-colored raven was well notedioue'i L.L. iv. 3 

AMBIGUITIES— 

out of questions too, and ambiguities .. Henry V. v. ! 

till we can clear these ambiguities . . Rom. 4- Jul. v. 3 

AMBIGUOUS — such ambiguous gi\ing out. Ham. i. 5 

AMBITION— his ambition growuig Tempest, i. 2 

I have no ambition to see a goodlier man — i. 2 
even ambition cannot pierce a wink beyond — ii. 1 

that entertained ambition — v. 1 

this is the period of my a.mbiiior\.. Merry Wives, iii. 3 
of ambition, an envious emulator ./Is you Like it, i. 1 

who doth ambition shun — ii. 5 (song) 

the ambition in my love thus itla^ues.. All'slVell, i. 1 
his humble ambition, prouu nmnility — i. 1 

art not without ambition ; but Macbeth, i. 5 

vaulting ambition, wliich o'erleaps itself — i. 7 
thriftless ambition, that will ravin , . — ii. 4 

are capable of this ambition King John, ii. 2 

thoughts tending to ambition Richard II. v. 5 

ill-weaved ambition, how much ....\ Henry IV. v. 4 
now beshrew my father's ambition ! . . Henry V. v. 2 
and be choked ■with thy ambition ..1 Henry VI. ii. 4 
choked with ambition of the meaner — ii. 5 

before, ambition Ibllows him 2 Henry VI. i. 1 

Somerset's and Buckingham's ambition — i. I 

and thy ambition, Gloster — ii. 1 

at Somerset's ambition, at Buckingham — ii. 2 
virtue is choked mth foul ambition . . — iii. 1 

fie on ambition ! fie on myself — iv. 10 

tongue-tied ambition, not replying ZJi'diorrf ///. iii. 7 
ambition, thou scarlet sin, robbed . . Hen. VIII. iii. 2 
that, out of mere ambition, you have — iii- 2 
I charge thee, fling away ambition .. — iii. 2 
become a churchman better than ambition v. 2 

pour in; his ambition is dry.. Troilus {fCressida, ii. 3 
a beastly ambition; wliich the gods, rimono/ /I. iv. 3 

the inarlc of Ms ambition is — v. 4 

CEEsar's ambition shall be glanced at ./u!. Ccesar, i. 2 
lowlines is yoimg ambition's ladder.. — ii. 1 

standstill: ambition's debt is paid .. . — iii. I 

anddeath, for Ms ambition. Who is here — iii. 2 
ambition should be made of sterner stuff — iii. 2 
did thrice refuse: was this ambition — iii. 2 

and ambition, the soldier's ■virtue . . Ant. fy CIco. iii. 1 
ambitions, covetings, change of prides . . Cymb. ii. 5 
Caisar's ambition (wMch swelled so much — iii. 1 
no blowm ambition doth our arms incite. . Lear, iv. 4 
why, then your ambition makes it one . Hamlet, ii. 2 
which dreams, indeed, are ambition .. — ii. 2 
I hold ambition of so airy and light — ii. 2 

shows a most pitiful ambition in the fool — iii. 2 
my cro^wn, mme o'wn ambition, and my — iii. 3 
with divine ambition puifed, mal:es mouths iv. 4 
big wars, that make ambition virtue! . . Othello, iii. 3 
AMBITIOUS— his eye ambitious, Ms .Love's L.L. v. 1 
whose ambitious head spits in the ..Mer. of Ven. ii. 7 
I would not be ambitious in my wish ~- iii. 2 
I am ambitious for a motley coat..4s2/o!4 Like it, ii. 7 
nor the soldier's, which is ambitious — iv. 1 

ambitious love hath so in me. All's Well, iii. 4 (letter) 
how that ambitious Constance would not. . John, i. 1 
if love ambitious sought a match of . . — ii. 2 
sky-aspiring and ambitious thoughts . . . Rich. II. i. 3 

how now, ambitious Humphry? 1 Henry VI. i. 3 

Poole: farewell, ambitious Richard.. — ii. 4 
covetous, ambitious, or perverse .... — iii. 1 
the canker of ambitious thoughts . . 2 Henry VI. i. 2 
ambitious Warwick, let thy betters siieak — i. 3 
ambitious churchman, leave to alflict — ii. 1 

and, like ambitious Sylla, overgorgcd ^vith — iv. 1 
a bedlam and ambitious humour makes — v. 1 
ambitious York did level at thy 3 Henry VI. ii. 2 

firoud ambitions Edward duke of York — iii. 3 
ike a subject, proud ambitious York. . — v. :> 

free'd from Ms ambitious finger Henry VIII. i. 1 

you are ambitious for knaves' caps. . Coriolaiius, ii. 1 

as ever in ambitious strength I — iv. 5 

ambitious past all tMnking, self-lo^^ng — iv. fi 
and I have seen the ambitious ocean . . J. Ccesar, i. 3 
but as he was ambitious, I slew him. . — iii. 3 



AMB 



[ 19] 



AMBITIOUS— Ca;sarwasiambitiou3..J»(.C«'S(i)-, iii. 2 
Brutus savs, he was ambitious (.r,vic<((«/) — in. 2 
(Udtliisiu C;Bs:\rsceunamliitiuus?.... — in. 2 

tlitivlorc'tisi'urtMin, ho was not ambitious — in. -i 
olipose not Si_ ytliia In iinihili.uis Konic. Titus And. i. 2 
proud ami amiiitious tribune, canst thou — i. 2 
when he the ambitious Norway combated . Hum.]. 1 
for the very siilistanee of the ambitious — u. 2 
I am very proud, reveugctiil, ambitious — ui_. 1 

AMBITIOUSLY— ambitiously tor rule. TUusAiid.i. 1 
as others would ambitioiisly receive it. 2 Hen. f7. ii. 3 

4MBLE— you iig, you amble, and you lisp. Ham. m. 1 

" vour wit ambles well; it goes easily ..Much Ado,-v. 1 

who time ambles withal As you Like tt, lu. 2 

who ambles time witlial? — '!!• ^ 

these time ambles withal —,„».'.'.• i 

AMB1,ED— he amiilcd up and down . . 1 Hen. IT . iii. 2 

AMBLING— my ambling gelding .. JV/ercy mn'sii. 2 

a wanton ambling nymph Richard HI. i. 1 

I am not for tliis ambling Romeo A- Juliet, i. 4 

AMBUSCADOES — of breaches, ambusoadoes, 

Spanish blades „~ ,,!■■? 

AMBUSH— in the ambush of my name. Mecr.. /Id- M_. i. 4 
who would have suspected an ambusli. .Ill s IVell, ly. 3 
once did I lay an ambush for. ........ Richaid 11. i. 1 

in secret ambush on the forest side..;! llcui!/ 1 1, jv. (> 
I fear some ambush: I saw him not..Ciimhehne, iv. 2 
sec the ambush of our friends be strong. Tdiis .Snd.v. 3 

AMEN— eome,— anieul I will pom- Tempesl,u.'i 

I say amen, OJonzalo — v. 1 

Be'tso. jVnien! — ■''• j 

amcnl amen! Go on. Two Gejitlem/rnof Verona,v. \ 
better than your thoughts ! Amen. Merry Wn-es, in. 3 
marrv, amen. I will, sir, I will .. Twelfth Night, ly. 2 
not tfie kiii5 of Hungary's! Amen.il/?a./ori»/ea.i. 2 

amen: for I am that way going „ "T ^j " , 

amen, if you love her Much Ado,i. 1 

cry, amen. God match me (repra/ed) — u. 1 

ond all grace say amen to it •■;•, „— H- ' 

amen, amen, to that fair praj'er.il/id. N. Dream, a. 3 

amen, so you be none Love's Labour Lost, ii. 1 

amen, so I had mine: is not — iv. 3 

and sigh, and say, amen; use all ..Mer.ofl'en.n. 2 

let me say amen betimes, lest — . iii. 1 

eiveusjdy! Amen. Au\a.nma.y .Asyou Likeit,m.^ 
for my good amends! Amen. ram.o/^A)-. 2 Ciudyic.) 
amen, say we; we will be mtnesses . . — ii. 1 

God bless us, and amen, the other Macbeth, ii. 2 

I could not say amen, when they .... — n. 2 
pronounce, amen? I had most need. . — _u. i 

sir, amen. Stands Scotland — ly. 3 

amen, ameni Mount, chevaliers! toarms..7o/mjU. 1 
crv thou, amen, to my keen curses. .... — , i"}- ' 

inhope, I cry amen Richard II. i. 3 

will no man say, amen! am I botli priest 

and clerk? well then, amen — iv. 1 

to cry amen to that,- thus we appear. . . He7iry V. v. 2 
England and fair France. Amen I Now — v. 2 
God speak this Amen! Amen! Prepare — -y. 2 
■will scarcely say, amen; yet, Stanley ..Rich. III.]. 3 
amen, and make me die a good old . . — _ii. 2 

England's worthy king! Amen — m. 7 

I say amen to her. Stay, madam — iv. 4 

great God of heaven, say amen to all I — v. 4 
traitor hears me, and says not, amen? — v. 4 

long live here, God say, amen! — v. 4 

now I pray God, amen ! You bear .Henry VIII. u. 3 
mvamento't! AU men's. There's — 111.2 
mai-rv, amen! No, no; there be more — 111. 2 

methinks, I could cry the amen — v. 1 

into whose hand I give thy life. Amen — y. 4 
such scarcity of youth! Axnen...Troilus^ Cress.]. 3 
de^'il, envy, say, amen: what, ho! . . — ii. 3 

amen. Where's Acliilles? what — .11. 3 

sav, amen. Amen. Amen. Amen !. . — 111.2 
il'l should need 'em. Amen. Timon ofAth.i. 2 (grace) 

mankind, high, and low! Amen — iv. 1 

confound vou howsoever! Amen — iy. 3 

good friend to the people! Amen, amen. Conol. 11. 3 
amen, sir : to my poor unworthy notice — ii. 3 
not our streets with -war! Amen, amen. — iii. 3 

good Isis, I beseech thee! Amen Ant.SrCleo.i. 2 

and fortune him accordingly ! Amen. — _i. 2 

happily, amen! I did not think — 11.2 

you to the best! Amen; I thank thee . . Cymb. 111. 4 
the hands of Romans! So say I, Amen — iv. 4 

but your mother for to say amen Tiius And. ly. 2 

amen, amen! but come what sorrow.J?om.^-/u'._ii. 6 
or else hesiirew them both. Amen ! . . — iii. .5 
God forgive me (marry, and amen-), how — iy. 5 

and helpful to him ! Ay, amen ! Hamlet, ii. 2 

amen to that, sweet powers! I cannot . . Othello, ii. 1 
AM END— compensation makes amends. Tempest, iv. 1 

tlie attliction of my mind amends — v. 1 

kiss each several paper for amends. TwoCen. of Kj. 2 

that makes amends for her — iii. 1 

and make thy love amends — iv. 2 

tiuit is, lie -svill make thee amends. Merry IVh'c.i, ii. 3 
one wav or otlier make you amends .. — iii. 1 

ci^'litoVlock, to have amends — iii. 3 

she'll make yon amends, I warrant .. — iii. 5 

let th-a.t go to make amends — v. 5 

drink and good counsel will amend.. . Tu-elfhN. i. 5 
and sin that amends, is but patched.. — i. 5 

you must amend your drunkenness.. — ii. .'j 
do you amend it then: it Wea... .Mid. K. Dream, ii. 2 
are no worse, if ima»ination amends them — v. 1 
we will make amends, ere long — — (cpil.) 
and Robin shall restore amends — — (epil.l 
God amend us, God amend! we are. JCoue's L. L. iv. 3 
1 ic tlianked for my good amends .. Tnm. of Sh.i (ind.) 

tliou wilt amend'thy life? Winter's Tale, v. 2 

I'll jiial;e you amends next Com. of Errors, ii. 2 

liiit make ameuils now Macbeth, iii. i 

liis liaiid, they presently amend — iv. 3 

and for amends to his posterity A'lng- John, ii. 1 

learn, lord, to amend this fault 1 Henry IV. iii. 1 

thou amend thy face, and I'll amend — iii. 3 
amend the attention of your ears. 2 Henry iy.i.2 
fiu- iortuue maketh us amends 3 Henry VI. iv. 7 



AMEND— Edward, I will make amends. .3«. VI. v. 1 
way to make the wench amends .... Diehard Ill.i. 1 
our entreaties, to amend your fault! — iii. 7 

to make amends, I'll give it to yoirr — iv. 4 

I cannot make you what amends I would — iy. 4 
you make amends. He sits 'inongst..6'!/m6cii'ni',_i. 7 

to hoot, can never amend — ii. 3 

but vour being by me cannot amend mc — iv. 2 
all tfie abhoiTcd things 0' the earth amend — v. f> 

but it is not in virtue to amend it Othello^ i. 3 

make her amends, she weeps — iv. 1 

AMENDED— cannot be now amended . Rich. III. iv. 4 

my faults to have amended . . All's )r('H,lii. 4 (letter) 

I must excuse what cannot be amended.. Coj-io(. iv. 7 

troth, that ease may he amended . . Romeo ■%- Jul. iv. .5 

AMENDMENT— w'hat hope is there of lus majesty's 

amendi-nent All's ll'ell thai Ends irell,i. 1 

your amendment, are come to...7'am. o/S. 2 (indue.) 

1 see agoodamendmentof life in thee.. 1 Hen. IV. i. 2 

likelihood of his amendment, lords? . . Rich. III. i. 3 

AMERCE— araerce you with so strong. Ro7n.^ Jul. iii. 1 

AMERICA— Aiuerica, the Indies?. Comedy of Er. iii. 2 

AMES-ACE-tlii-ow ames-ace for my life. All's Well, ii. 3 

AMI— if he mil come to Ami. .-Is you Like it, ii. 5 (song) 

AMIABLE-tolay an amiable siege. .il/erj-y Wives,!!. 2 

the orchard tliis amiable encounter.. WmcA Ado,m. 3 

Bull Jove, sir, had an amiable low . . — v. 4 

■n'hile I thy amiable cheeks do coy. Mid. N.'s Dj-.iv. 1 

in no sense is meet or amiable. Taming of Slirew, v. 2 

amiable lovely death! King John, iii. 4 

'twould make her amiable, and subdue. Othello, iii. 4 

AMID— ay, and amid this hurly.. Taming of Shr. iv. 1 
AMIENS— ray lord of Amiens, and.Asyou Likeit, ii. 1 
AMINTAS — Polcmon and Amintas.Anl. .5- Cleo. iii. 6 

AMISS— it shall not be amiss Twelfth Night, iii. 2 

that shall not be much amiss , . Meas.for Meas. ii i. 1 

why_ 'tis not amiss, Pompey — iii. 2 

yet it had not been amiss, the rod . . Much Ado, ii. 1 
tor never any thing can be amiss. . Mid. N.'s Dr. v. 1 
that did never choose amiss. jVcr. of Ven. ii. 9 (scroll) 
'tia not amiss ; and I was about .... All's Well, iv. 5 
why nothing comes amiss, so money., ram. of Sh. i. 2 
impossible, I should speed amiss .... — ii. 1 
have talked amiss of her; it' she be .. — ii. 1 
drives our e3^es and ears amiss . . Comedy of Err. ii. 2 
what is amiss ! You are, and do not . . Macbeth, ii. 3 
swoi-n to do arruss, is not amiss .... King John, iii. 1 
and all, are all amiss employed .... Richard II. ii. 3 

it is not a hair amiss yet 2Henry IV.i. 2 

great lords if I have done amiss .... 1 Henry VI. iv. 1 

gold cannot come amiss 2Henry VI. i. 2 

which is not amiss to cool a man's. . — iv. 10 

'twere not amiss he were created 2IIenry VI. y. 1 

beseech you, take it not amiss .... Richard III. iii. 7 

something hath been amiss Timon of Athens, ii. 2 

what is amiss in them, j'ou gods — iii. 6 

therefore, 'tis not amiss, we tender .... — v. I 
what is amiss, plague and infection mend! — v. 2 
if he had done, or said, anj'thing amiss.Julius C. i. 2 
this dream is all amiss interpreted . . — ii. 2 

what is now amiss, that Caesar — iii. 1 

it is not amiss to tumble .... Antony <§■ Cleopatra, i. 4 
what's amiss, may it be gently heard — ii. 2 
have we done aught amiss? . . Tilus Andronicus, v. 3 
'twere not amiss to keep our door hatched. Peric. iv. 3 
seems prologue to some great amiss .... Hamlet,iY. 5 

but here shows much amiss — v. 2 

that's said or done amiss this night Othello, ii. 3 

that's not amiss ; but yel keep time.. . . — iv. 1 
AMITIES — dissolutions of ancient amities.. Lear, i. 2 
and stand a comma 'tween their amities. .Ham/e^ v. 2 
AMITY— thou and I are new in amity. M/(i. N. D. iv. 1 
as well be amity and life 'tween snow..il/e)-. of V. iii. 2 
a true conceit of godlike amity — , iii. 4 

1 will pm-sue the amity. These things. All's Well, ii. a 
the society, amity too, of your brave . Winter's T. v. 1 
let in that amity whichyou have made. . . . John, ii. 2 
is cold in amity and painted peace .... — iii. 1 
deep-sworn faith, peace, amity, true love — iii. 1 

dear amity and everlasting love — v. 4 

and the division of our amity f Henry I V. iii. 1 

of our restored love and amity . — iv. 2 

join yom- hearts in love and amity .1 Henry VI. iii. ! 

in alliance, amity, and oaths — iv. 1 

surer bind, this knot of amity — v. 1 

amity; andlastlytoconfirmthatamity..3H. f/. iii. 3 
in sign of league and amity with thee..ii/cA. III. i. 3 

might thi-ough their amity Henry Vlll.i. 1 

the amity that wisdom knits not. . Troilus &■ Cr. ii. 3 
to hold you in perpetual amity. .jln(o»y ^ Cleo. ii. 2 
the very strangler of their amity ... . — ii. 6 
that which is the strength of their anaty. Ant. ^- C ii. 6 
xmder two commands hold amity? Lear,i\. 4 

AMOROUS-encounterof my amorous. .MucA Ado.i. 1 
sm-e, my brother is amorous on Hero — ii. 1 
versing love to amorous Phillida. . Mid. N.'s Dr. ii. 2 
Lorenzo, and his amorous Jessica. . Mer. of Ven. ii. 8 

the amorous count solicits her All's Well, iii. 5 

send forth your amorous token for fair — v. 3 
aproper stripling, and an amorous!. rommg-o/S.i. 2 
our hue musician groweth amorous.. — iii. I 
tliequaint musician, amorous Lieio — iii, 2 
to eoiu't an amorous looking-glass. . Richard III. i. 1 
yom- neck unloose his amorous fold. Trail. ^- Cr. iii. 3 

amorous view on the fair Crcssid — iv. 5 

I have chastised the amorous Trojan — v. 6 
with IPhccbus' amorous pinches black. .4n/. Sf Cl.i. b 
this amorous surfeiter would have donned — ii. 1 
follow faster as amorous of their strokes — ii. 2 
dift'erence 'twixt amorous and villanous. .. Cj/m6. v. 5 
held, fettered in amorous chains.. Titus Andron. ii . 1 
our court liave made their amorous sojourn. Lear^i. 1 
can see to do their amorous rites, . Romeo <5- Jul. iii. 2 
tliat unsubstantial deutli is amorous — v. 3 

and slie did gratify liis amorous works ...Othello, v. 2 

AiMOKT — wliat. sweeting, all amort? . Tarn. o/.s'. iv. 3 
wliat all amort? Rouen hangs her . .1 Hen. VI. iii. 2 

AJIOUNT — donotamounttoaman ..Henry r.iii. 2 
aninunts to. It doth amounttoone .Love's L. L. i. 2 
we knowwbereuiitilit dotli amount.. — v 2 



ANC 

AMOUNT-whereuntil itdoth amount. lonf'sL.t. v. 2 
upon my life, amounts not to fifteen. ../i/rsHWi, iv. 3 
my land amounts not to so much . . Taming ofS. ii. 1 
amomit unto a liundred marks . . Comedy of Er. i. 1 
■wliichdoth amounttothrecodd ducats — iv. 1 
will hut amount tofive and twenty. .3 Henry VI. ii. 1 

ASIOUR — I'aniour de Dieu, mcpar'donnerl.H. F. iv. 4 

AMPIIliMACHUS— 
Am|ihimaf-hus, andThoas, deadly .rroi'?. <5-CrCT. v. 5 

AJMPHTIIILL—fromAmplithill, where.//. VIII. iv. 1 

AMPLE— behold her face at ample view Tirelflh N.\.\ 

such ample grace and honour Meas. far Meas.i. \ 

I know yom- hostess as ample as All's Well, iii. 5 

be encountered with a shame as ample — iv. 3 
give mc ample satisfaction i'or tiie^e.. Com. of Er. v. 1 
as to my ample hope was promised. . King John, v. 2 
in very ample virtue of his father.. 2i/e7ir?/ //'. iv. 1 

wdth ample and brim fulness of Henry V. i. 2 

in large and ample empery — i. 2 

and ample interchange of SAveet. . . Richard III. v. 3 
the ample proposition, that hope...rj-o!i. (f Cress, i. 3 

and had as ample power as I — ii. 2 

I do enjoy at ample point all — iii. 3 

my lord, now ample you are beloved Tim. of Ath. i. 2 

remain this ample third of our fair Lear^ i. 1 

now and then an ample tear trilled do\\Ti — iv. 3 

AMPLER— and ampler strength ... Winler'sTale.iv.Z 

AMPLEST — plead for amplest credence. /IH'srj'cH, i. 2 
hug with amplest entertainment ... TimonofAlh. i. 1 

AMPLIFIED— 
his fame unparalleled, haply, amplified.. Cor/o!. v. 2 

AMPLIFY— I did amplify m'y judgement ..Cymb. i. 6 
to amplify too much, would' make Lear, v. 3 

AMPLY — as amply, and unnecessarily .. 7'en7/)«s<, ii. 1 

than amply to imbare their Henry V. i. 2 

as amply titled as Achilles is . . Troilus <§- Cress, ii. 3 

AMURATH — not Amiu-ath an Amm-ath succeeds, 
but Harry HaiTy 2 Henry IV. v. 2 

ANATOMIZE-let them anatomize Regan. Lpor, iii. 6 
to anatomize in the vulgar . Lone's L. L. iv. 1 (letter; 

should I anatomize him to thee As you Likeit, i. 1 

anatomize among my household?. 2Hen. IV. (indue.) 

ANATOMIZED— 
the wise man's follyisanatomized ..Asyou Like, ii. 7 
have him see his company anatomized.. -I(r.'i/re;z,iv. 3 

ANATOMY — from sleep thatfell anatomy. JoAn, iii. 4 
I'll eat the rest of the anatomy ... Twelfth Night, iii. 2 

a mere anatomy, a mountebank Com. of Er. v. 1 

what vile part of thisanatomy doth. Rom. SrJul. iii. 3 

ANCESTOR-buried with her ancestors. MucAyido, v. 1 

and all his ancestors, that coiue Merry Wives, i. 1 

bequeathed down fi-om manyaneestors.^U's Well, iv. 2 
of six preceding ancestors, that gem . . — -v. 3 
that which his ancestors achieved w'lth. Ricli. II. ii. I 
from the flight of all thy ancestors . . 1 Henry IV. iii. 2 
willhavea wildtrickof hisaucestors — v. 2 
I am sleeping -n-ith my ancestors ...'i Henry IV. iv. 4 

bringintoany of your ancestors Henry V. i. 2 

most famed of famous ancestors, Edward — ii. 4 
the sceptered office your ancestors ..Richard III. iii. 7 
censor twice, was his great ancestor. . Coriolanus, ii. 3 
as iEneas, our great ancestor, did . . Jtdius Ccesar, i. 2 
like to their ancestors; but, -woe the while — i. 3 
my ancestors did from the streets of . . — ii . I 

give him a statue with liis ancestors .. — iii. 2 

thou mine ancestor, thy rage .. Antony ^ Cleo. iv. 10 
my liege, tlie kings your ancestors . . Cymbeline, iii. 1 
our ancestor was that Mulmutius ... . — iii. 1 
appears, he hath had good ancestors.. — iv. 2 
burial amongst their ancestors .... Titus Andron. i. 2 

OS erst our ancestor, when with — v. 3 

my derivation was from ancestors Vfho. Pericles, v. 1 
bones of all my buried ancestors lie.. Rom. ^-Jul. iv. 3 

ANCESTRY— nature, likeixis ancestry ..Cymb. v. 4 
by the honour of my ancestry.. Two Gen. ofVer. v. 4 
noble ancestry from the corruption ..Rich. III. iii. 7 
not propped by ancestry (whose gi-ace.. Hen. VIII. i. 1 

ANCHISES— old Anchises hear 2 Henry VI. v. 2 

now by Anchises life, welcome . . Trail. % Cres. iv. I 
upon his shoulder the old Anchises bear. /.C(Fsar,i, 2 

ANCHOR — the anchor is deep Merry Wives, i. 3 

not my tongue, anchors on Isabel . . Mea.for M. ii. 4 
much ado to make his anchor hold. Winter's Tale, i. 2 

60 certain, as your anchors; who — iv. 3 

whilst our pinnace anchors in the. .2 HenryVI. iv. 1 

the holding anchor lost, and half SHenryVI. v. 4 

say, 'Warwick was our anchor — v. 4 

Oxford here another goodly anchor?.. — v. 4 

great anchors, heaps of pearl Richard III. i. 4 

there would he anchor his aspect. /In/ony <?- Cleo. i. 5 
see, Posthumus anchors upon Imogen . . Cymb. v. 5 
all safe, the anchor's in the port. . Titus Andron. iv. 4 

suppose him now at anciior Pericles, v. (Gower) 

an anchor's cheer in prison be my scope. Hamlet, iii. 2 

ANCHORAGE— weighed her anchorage. Titus An. i. 2 

ANCHORED— 
ray nails were anchnrcd in thine eye^.Rich. III. iv. 4 

ANCHORING— yon tall anchoring bark . . Lear, iy. 6 
a pair of anchoring hooks.. 7'/('o Gen. of Verona, iii. I 

ANCHO"VIES— Item anchovies, and. . 1 Hen. IV. ii. 4 

ANCIENT— put tliis ancient morsel Tempest, ii. 1 

a very ancient and fish-like smell — .^^- ^ 

my ancient skill beguiles me Mea.for Mea. iv. 2 

you speak like an ancient and most..-iV!«'/i .4rfo, iii.3 
Ibeg the ancient privilege of Athens.M/d.A'.flr. i. 1 
and will you rent our ancient love asunder? — iii. 2 
feed fat tlie ancient grudge I bear . . Mer. of Ven.i. 3 

the ancient saying is no lieresy — ii. 9 

and one in whom the ancient Roman — iii. 2 

derived from the ancient Capulet All's Well, v. 3 

call home thy aucientthoughts.T'am. o/S. 2(induc.) 
your ancient, trusty, pleasant servant — i. 2 

an ancient angel coming down — iv. 2 

a sober ancient gentleman by your . . — y. 1 
the year growing ancient — not j^et. . Winter's T. iv. 3 

my life before this ancient sir ..- iv. 3 

is as an ancient tale new told King John, iy. 2 

if he appeal tlie duke on ancient malice. RicA.//. i. 1 
hath he fined for ancient quarrels. . . . — ii. 1 
rude ribs of that ancient castle — iii. 3 



ANC 



[ 20 ] 



i;^^^ 



luid I 



ANCIENT— as ancient writers do report.lH. /*'..ii. 4 
leads ancient lords and reverend .... — iii. 2 

consists ofancionts, corporals, lieutenants — iv. 2 

ra.'Lvd than an i>Ul faced ancient — iv. 2 

nev, lanientinu ancient oversiahts..2 Henry IT. ii. 3 
mine aucicntTilly-Cally, Sir John (rep.) — ii. 4 
', yo down, p>od ancient .... — ii. 4 

'0,k1 ancient; tliis will grow — ii. 4 

vledgc, in tlio ancient wars.. Henry y. iii. 2 
certainly, ancient, it is not a tiling .. — iii. 6 
wlieu tlie true and ancient prcrogatifes — iv. 1 
will von nmck at an ancient tradition? — v. 1 
and exempt I'rom ancient gentry? . . 1 Hcnryj I'l. ii. 4 

my ancient incantations arc too — v. 3 

in' the fam.nis ancient city, Toiu-s ..2 Henry I'l. i. 1 

,ir ancient Inckerings — i. 1 

cut proverb will he effected .. — iii. 1 
ivered vonr ancient freedom. . — iv. 8 
onr ancient ris-'ht in France, .fl/c/i. ///. iii. 1 

his ancient Itnot of dangerous — iii. 1 

pity, > on ancient stones, tliose tender — iv. 1 
if ancient sorrow he most reverent . . — iv. 4 
onr ancient word of courage, fair saint — v. 3 
a courier, one mine ancient friend. Timon ofAfJi. v. 3 

they, upon their ancient nialiee Coriolamis,yi. 1 

motlicr, where is your ancient courage? — iv. 1 
and they stand in their ancient strength — iv. 2 
to thee, "and to thy ancient malice . . — iv. !> 

a root of ancient envy — iv.b 

ga-ve ad» antage to an ancient soldier Cymb. v. 3 

distil from tl;e-e two ancient m-ng . . Titus And. iii. 1 
from a -lies niK'lent Gower is conie. Pericles, i. (Gower) 
I left hehlnd an ancient snhstitute — v. 3 (Gower) 

dissnlntions of ancient amities Lear,i. 2 

this ancient rutflan, sir, wliose life I. . — ii. 2 

yon stubborn ancient knave, you reverend — ii. 2 

ito Dover, do it for ancient love — iv. 1 

let us then determine with tlic ancient of war — v. 1 
from ancient grudge break to new. yi'o/H.c?- Jul. (prol.) 
made Verona s ancient citizens cast by — i. 1 

wlio set this ancient quarrel new aUroaeli? — i. 1 
this same ancient feast of Capulet's .. — _i. 2 
groans ring yet in mv ancient ears . . — ii. 3 
farewell, ancient lady; farewell, lady — ,ii. 4 
ancient damnation; Omost wickedhend — iii. .i 
be borne to tliat same ancient vault. . — iv. 1 
as In a vault, an ancient receptacle . . — iv. 3 
is no ancient gentlemen but gardeners. . HamJei, v. 1 

his IMoor-sMp's ancient Othello, i. 1 

ancient, what makes he here? — i. 2 

ancient, conduct tliem; you best know — _i. 3 
please your grace, ray ancient; a man.. — _i. 3 
'tis one lago, ancient to the general — — ii. 1 

good ancient, you are welcome — ii- 1 

lieutenant is to be saved before the ancient — ii. 3 
this is mv ancient; tliisismyriditliand — ii. 3 

this is Othello's ancient, as I take it — v. I 

ANCIENTEST— . 

ere ancientest order was Winter's Tnle, iv. (cho.) 

ANCIENTRY— wronging the ancientry — iii. 3 
a measure full of state and ancientry Much Ad:i, ii. 1 
ANCLE — and down-gyved to Iris ancle . . Ramh'l, ii. 1 
AN CXrS— whence came that AncusMarcius?Cor. ii. 3 
ANDIRON— her andirons (I liart forgot . . Cymh. ii. 4 
ANDREN—[ Co(. K»'.-valeof Aiidren?]. Hen. yill. i. 1 
ANDREW— Sir Andrew Ague-clieek?.^!!!^/^ A', i. 3 
for here comes Sir Andrew Ague-face — ;• 3 

sweet Sir Andi'ew — i.3 

accost Sir Andrew, accost — i.3 

au' thou let part so. Sir Andrew, would — _i. 3 
approach, Sir Andrew; not to be .... — ii. 3 

shall we not. Sir Audi-ew — ii. .5 

one Sir Andrew — ii. 5 

must needs yield your reason, Sir Andrew — iii. 2 
there is no way but this, Sir Andrew — iii. 2 

for Andrew, if he were opened — iii. 2 

sworn enemy, Andrew Ague-cheek — iii. 4 (dial.) 

go. Sir Andrew ; scout me for — ?!!• * 

come, Sir Andrew, there's no remedy — iii- 4 
wlio lias done this. Sir Andrew? .... — v. 1 
wealtliy Andrew docked in sand. . . . Mer. of Ven. i. 1 
ANDROMACHE— he chid Andromache, and 

struck his Troilus 4' Cress, i. 2 

Andromache, I am offended witlr you — v. 3 
how poor Andromache shrills her dolours — v. 3 
ANDKONICI— you sad Andronici. . . . Titus And. v. 3 
the poor remainder of Andronici will — v. 3 
till all the Andronici be made away.. — ii. 3 
ANDRONICUS— chosen Andronicus — i. 1 

returns the good Andronicus to Rome — i. 1 
Marcus Andronicus, so I do affy .... — i. 1 

the good Andronicus, patron ot virtue — 1. 2 
Cometh Andronicus, bound with laurel — i. 2 

Andronicus, stain not tliy tomb with — i. 2 
and let Andronicus make this his latest — i. 2 
Titus Andronicus, the people of Rome — i. 2 
Andronicus, would thou wert shipped to hell — i. 2 

Andronicus, I do not flatter thee — i. 2 

Andronicus! to gratify the §ood Andronicus — i.2 
Titus Andronicus, for thy favours done — i.2 
tell me, Andronicus, doth this motion — i.2 
full well, Andronicus, agree these . . — i.2 
come, Andronicus; take up this good — i. 2 
tliis day all quarrels die, Andronicus — i.2 
but fierce Andronicus would not relent — ii. 3 
the unhappy son of old Andronicus — ii. 4 

Andronicus himself did take it up .. — ii. 4 
Andronicus, I will entreat the king.. — ii. 4 
Titus Andronicus, my lord the emperor — iii. 1 
I go, Andronicus, and for tliy hand. . — iii. 1 
wortliy Andronicus, ill art thou repaid — iii. 1 
die, Andronicus; thou dost not slmnber — iii. 1 
farewell, Andronicus, my noble father — iii. 1 
revenge the heavens for old Andronicus — iv. 1 
I greet your honours from Andronicus — iv. 2 
she would appln.ud Andronicus' conceit — iv. 2 
and that it comes from old Andronicus — iv. 3 

wilful sons of old Andronicus — i v, 4 

of Lucius, son to old Andronicus ... . — - iv. 4 
I will enchant tlie old Andronicus . . — iv. 4 



ANDRONICUS— 
now will I to that old Andronicus .. Tilus And. iv. 4 
sprung from the great Andronicus .. — v. 1 
that robbed Andronicus of Ids good hand — v. 1 
I mil encounter with Andronicus . . — v. 2 
what wonldst tliou have us do, Andi-onicus? — v. 2 
but would it please tliee, good Andronicus — v. 2 
what says Andronicus to tliis device? — v. 2 

farewell, Andronicus; revenge now goes — v. 2 
wliy art thou tlius attired, Andronicus? — v. 3 
we are beholden to you, good Andronicus — v. 3 

it was, Andronicus. Your reason — v. 3 

ANEW— make him tell the tale anew . . Othello, i v. 1 
weep o'er my father's death anew .... AWs It'cit, i. 1 

but draw anew the model 2 Henry IV. i. 3 

were I to choose anew, clear up . . Titus Andron. i. 2 

ANGEL — and they to him are angels .... Tempesl,\. 2 

now, good angels, preserve the king. . — ii. 1 

say they have angels' faces. . . . Two Gen. of Ver. iii. 1 

slie hath legions of angels Merry Wives, i. 3 

humour nie the angels — i.3 

I had myself twenty angels given.... — ii. 2 

but I defy all angels (in any — ii. 2 

as make the angels weep . .Measure/or Measure, ii. 2 
let's write good angel on the devil's horn — ii. 4 
though angel on the outward side, . . . — iii. 2 

noble, or not t for an angel Much .4dn, ii. 3 

in angel whiteness bear away those . . — ■ iv. 1 
what angel wakes me from my. . Mid. N. Dream, iii. 1 , 
for that augel knowledge you can. Loi'e's L. Lost, I. ! ■ 

there is no evil angel but love — i.2 

an angel shalt thou see — v. 2 

an angel is not evil — v. 2 

are angels vailing clouds, or roses — v. 2 

tlie figure of an augel stamped . . Mer. of Venice, ii. 7 

but here an angel m a golden — ii. 7 

in his motion like au angel sings .... — v. 1 
and angels oifieed all; I will begoue..^/i's Well, iii. 2 
wliat angel shall bless this unworthy — iii. 4 
ancient angel [Cfii.-eugle. Kn(.-angle]. Tarn. ofS. iv. 2 
like an evil angel, and bid you. . Com. of Error's, iv. 3 
here are the angels that you sent for . . — iv. 3 

ajjpear to men like angels of light — . iv. 3 

will plead like angels, trumpet-tongued.il/ac6eW, i. 7 

some holy angel ny to the coiu't — iii. 

angels are bright still, though — iv. 3 

and let the angel, whom thou still . . — v. 7 
when his fair angels wordd salute my. King Jolm, ii. 2 
imprisoned angels set tirou at liberty — iii. 3 
if an angel shoidd have come to me . . — iv. 1 

methinks, an angel spake — v. 2 

a glorious angel; then, if angels fight.. B;'cA. //.iii. 2 
ICollier — fire, that's God's angel] . . 1 Henry IV. iii. 3 

1 must still lie good angel to thee — iii. 3 

as if an angel dropped do^vn — iv. 1 

this bottle makes an angel — iy. 2 

like his ill angel (repeated) 2Hetiry IV.i. 2 

there is a good angel about Mm — ii. 4 

consideration like an angel came .... Henry T. i. 1 
God, and his angels, guard your .... — i. 2 
an angel is like you, iCate (repeated'^ — v. 2 
wonderful, when angels are so angry . . Rich. 111. i. 2 

a shadow like an angel, with — i. 4 

issued from my other angel husband .— iv. 1 
to Richard, and good angels tend thee — iv. 1 

good angels guard thy battle 1 — v. 2 

good angels guard thee from the boar's — v. 3 
God, and good angels, fight on Richmond's — v. 3 

like good angels, to my end Henry VI II. ii . 1 

good angels keep it from us! — ii. 1 

that angels love good men with .... — ii. 2 

ye have angels' &ces, but heaven — iii. 1 

by that sin fell the angels, how can . . — ill. 2 

as I have a soul, she is an angel — iv. 1 

now good angels fly o'er thy royal head — v. 1 
few are angels ; out of wliich frailty.. — v. 2 
women are angels, wooing. . . . Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 2 

unarmed as beuding angels — i. 3 

Brutus, as you know, was CaBsar's angel .Jul. C. iii. 2 
some god, some angel, or some devil — iv. 3 
thy angel becomes a fear, as being... ^n<. ^ Cleo. ii. 3 

though this a heavenly angel Cymbeline, ii. 2 

by Jupiter, an angel! or, if not — iii. 6 

yet reverence (that angel of the world) — iv. 2 
the old man and Ms sons were angels — _ v. 3 
to betray, doth wear an angel's mee . . Pericles, iy. 4 

croak not, black angel Lear, iii. 6 

O, speak again, bright angel! Rom. ^ Jul. ii. 2 

her immortal part with angels lives. . — v. 1 
that with angels dost remain ICollier. Kniifht 

with tears distilled by moans] — v. 3 

angels and ministers of gi-ace defend as. .Hamlel, i. 4 

though to a radiant angel linked — i. 5 

in action how like an angel! — ii. 2 

help, angels, make assay ! bow — iii. 3 

habit's devil is angel yet in this — iii. 4 

a ministering angel shall my sister be — v. 1 
and flights of angels sing thee to tliy rest — v. 2 

O, the more angel she! and you the Othello, v. 2 

yea, curse his better angel from his side — v. 2 
ANCiELICA — good Angelica: spare .Rom. ^-Jul. iv. 4 
ANGELICAL— fiend angelical! dove-feathered- iii. 2 
ANGEL-LIKE— how angel-like he sings ..Cymb. iv. 2 
age with angel-like perfection.. Two Gen. of Ver. ii. 4 
ANGELO — come before us Angelo...il/ea. /or 7i/e«. i. 1 

it is lord Angelo — i. 1 

Angelo, there is a kind of character. .. — i. 1 

hold therefore, Angelo — i. 1 

from lord Angelo by special charge . . — i. 3 

I have delivered to lord Angelo — 1.4 

than in lord Angelo — i. 4 

I have on Angelo imposed the office . . — i. 4 
lord Angelo is precise — i.4 

foverns lord Angelo — 1.5 
y your fair prayer to soften Angelo . . — i. 5 

go to lord Angelo, and let Mm — i. 5 

lord Angelo is severe — ii. 1 

or what art thou Angelo? — ii. 2 

I'll tell him yet of Angelo'a request .. — ii. 4 
hopeofpardon from lord Angelo?.... — iii. 1 



ANG 



ANGELO— 
Angelo, having affairs to heaven. .il/cn./orJV/ea. iii. 1 

the princely Angelo? — iii. 1 

Angelo ha{l never the pm'pose to — iii. 1 

I am confessor to Angelo, audi know — iii. 1 

tile assault that Angelo liath made .. — iii,! 

I should wonder at ^Vngelo — iii. 1 

much istliegooddukedeceivedin Angelo — iii. I 

her should this Angelo have married — iii. 1 

this well-seeming Angelo — iii. 1 

can this be so? did Angelo so leave her? — iii. 1 

go you to Angelo; answer Ms requiring — iii. 1 

haste you speedily to Angelo — iii. 1 



— iii. 2 



— IV. 2 



iv. 2 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 



V. 1 
V. 1 
V. 1 



and dispatch with Angelo, that it may 

lord Angelo dukes it well in his absence 

they say, this Angelo was not made . . 

my brother Angelo will not be altered 

twice treble shame on Angelo 

with Angelo to-night shall lie 

lord Angelo hath to the public ear . . 
lord Angelo, belike, thinking me remiss 
now in the government of lord Augelo 

to the law than Angelo who hath — 

deliver his head in the view of Angelo? — 
Ms head borne to Angelo. Angelo nath — 
thisisa tiling, that Angelo knows not — 
the hour draws on prefixed by Angelo — 

send the head to /Uigelo. (repeatett) — 

we shall proceed with Angelo — 

his head is off, and sent to Angelo .... — 
injurious world! most damned Angelo — 

notice to Escalus .and Angelo — 

and to the head of Angelo accuse Mm . — 

here is lord Augelo sliall give you — 

Angelo's forsworn; is it not strange? Q-ep.) - 
that Angelo is an adulterous thiet. . . . — 
it is not truer he is Angelo, that this . . — 
as Angelo; even so may Angelo, in all — 
condemned by Angelo: I, in probation — 
try her gracious fortune witii lord Angelo — - 
complaint intended 'gainst lord Angelo — 
do you not smile at this, lord Angelo . — 
come, consinAngelo; in this I'llbe .. — .v. i 

this is no witness for lord Angelo — v. 1 

and that is Angelo, who thinks he knows — v. 1 
face, thou eruelAngelo, which, once thou — v. 1 
set these women on to slander lord Angelo — v. 1 
an Angelo for Clandio, death for death — v. 1 
then, Angelo, thy fault's thus manifested — v. 1 
for Angelo, Ms act did not o'ertake . . — v. 1 
and so wise as you, lord Augelo, have — v. 1 
by this, lord Angelo perceives he's safe — v. 1 
■well, Angelo, your evil quits you well — v. 1 
love her, Angelo; I have confessed her — v. 1 
forgive him, Angelo, that brought you — v. 1 
signior Angelo, you must excuse. . . Com.of Er. iii . 1 

one Angelo, a goldsniitli — iv. 4 

report here to the state, by signior Angelo. Othello, 1 , 3 

ANGER— with anger so disteinper'd .. Tempest, \v. 1 

but I fear'd lest I might anger thee . . — iv. 1 

would be fingering them, to anger. Tu'o Gen. ofV. i. 2 

urge not my father's anger — iv. 3 

an"er Mm, we'll have tlie bear again.. Twelfth N.ii. 5 
in the contempt and anger of his lip I — iii. 1 

with anger, with sickness, or with Mucli Ado, \. 1 

both pleaseth men, and angers them . . — ii. 1 

pale m her anger, washes all Mid. N. Dream, ii. 2 

which not to auger bent, is music . . . Love's L. Z. iv. 2 

with Ms eyes full of auger As you Like ii, i. 3 

fall in love mth my anger — iii. 5 

too far in anger, lest thou hasten All's Well, ii . 3 

planteth anger; and better 'twere .. Tarn. ofShr. iv. 1 

will tell the anger of my heart — iv. 3 

to my red-looked anger be the. . . . Winter's Tale, ii. 2 
not a party to the anger of the king . . — ii. 2 

let grief convert to anger Macbeth, iv. 3 

than out of anger can be uttered ....IHenrylV.i. 1 

tokeepMsanger still in motion — . i* 3 

sometimes he angers me, with — iii. i 

this is the deadly spite that angers me — iii. 1 
by the mass, I could anger her to the heart — iii. 2 

passion, or of mii-tli, or anger , Henri/ F, ii.2 

m his ales or Ms angers, look you — iv. 7 

not for fear, but auger, that tliy cheeks. 1 H. VI. ii. 4 

my heart for anger bums ZHenry VI. i. 1 

w^hose looks bewray her anger — i. 1 

anger is like a full-hot horse Henry VIII. i . 1 

out of anger he sent command — ii. 1 

to him derived your anger 

the queen is put in anger 

does whet his anger to Mm 

what sudden anger's this? how have I 

I fear, the story of his anger 

what was his cause of anger? Troilus ^ Cress, i. 2 

that were we talking of, and of his anger — i.2 

nay, but you part in anger — v. 2 

thou should'st, thoust anger ladies ... Timon of A. i. 1 
unnoted passion he did behave his anger — iii. 5 

tobe in anger, is impiety — iii. 5 

do you dare onr anger? 'tis in — iii. 5 

and answer the vantage of his anger Coriol. ii. 3 

that leads my use of anger, to better.. — iii. 2 

all's in anger. Only fair speech — iii. 2 

anger's my meat; I sup upon — iv. 2 

and lament as I do, in anger, Juno-like — i v. 2 
a lamb that carries anger, as the flint../. Ctesar, iv. 3 
never anger made good guard . . . Antony ^ Cleo. iv. 1 

and had no help of auger Cymbeline, i. 2 

thy tongue move anger to our face? Pericles, i. 2 

his rage and anger be forgot — i.2 

yes, sir; but anger has a privilege Lear, ii. 2 

touch me with noble anger ! — ii. 4 

and take tire chance of anger — iii. 7 

thou wilt anger him. This cannot anger him : 

'twould anger Borneo ^ Juliet, ii. 1 

I anger her sometimes, and tell her . . — ii. 1 

more in sorrow than in anger Hamlel, i. 2 

find some occasion to anger Cassio Othello, ii. I 

ANGERED-it angered him to the heart.2Hen./r. ii. 4 
't would have angered any heart Macbeth, iii. i! 



— 11. 4 



— 111. 2 



ANG 



■VNGERED— 
so angered with another letter... Tino Gen. of Fer. i. 2 
at whose burden the angered ocean Ant. &■ Cleo. ii. G 

frighted, and angered worse; go Cymbeline, ii. 3 

and, being angered, pxiffs away from. iio?«. e?- Jul. i. 4 

she that, oeing anu'cred, her revenge Ol/iello, ii. 1 

ANGERINCJ—iuicoi-iii!: itself and othei-s ..Lear,iv. 1 
ANGERLY— look aiiserly. Have I not ..Mncb. iii. 5 

nor look upon the iixiii angerly ^itig Jn'iti^ iv. 1 

ANGES— je suis scnibhv'.ile i les anges?. . . Hen. I', v. 2 

ANGIERS— before Angierswell met. . King John, ii. 1 

welcome before the gates of Augiers, duke — ii- 1 

till Angiei-s, and the right thou hast in — ii. 1 

to the walls these men of Anglers — ii. 1 

men of Anglers, and my loving subjects, 

You loving men of Anglers — ii. 1 

you men of Anglers, open wide j'our.. — ii. 2 
rejoice, you men of Anglers, ring .... — ii. 2 
lordofourpreseuce. Anglers, and of you — ii. 2 
these scroyles of Angiers flout you.... — ii. 2 
and lay this Angiers even with the groimd — ii. 2 
now, citizens of Angiers, ope your .... — ii. 2 
is not Augiers lost? Ai-tliiu-ta'en — — iii. 4 

ANGLE — in an odd angle of the isle Tempest, i. 2 

so angle we for Beatrice Much .4do, iii. 1 

and did angle for me, madding my Alls Well, v. 3 

i Knight — angle coming do\vn the hill].. Tam.ofS. iv. 2 
fear the angle that plucks Winter's Tale, iv. 1 

the hearts of all that he did angle for. ..\H.IF. iv. 3 
to angle for your thoughts . . Troilus 'f Cressida, iii. 2 

give me mine angle; we'll to Antony f,-Cleo. ii. .■) 

tlirown out his angle for my Hamlet, v. 2 

ANGLED— angled formine eyes.... ;rm/CT-'s Tale, v. 2 

ANGLER — angler in the lake of Darkness. Lear, iii. 6 

ANGLETERRE— 

jUice, tu as etc en Angleterre, et tu . . Henry V. iii. 4 

aussi droict que les natifs d' Angleterre — iii. 4 

et tr6s distingue seigneur d'AngleteiTe — iv. 4 

roy d' Angleterre, heretier de France — v. 2 

ANGLL5E — Angliffi, et hoeres Francise. . . Henry V. y. 2 

ANGLING — pleasautest angling is to. Much Ado, iii. 1 

I am angling now, though you. . . . Winter's Tale, i. 2 

when you wagered on your angling. /4h<. ^ Cleo. ii. 5 

A-NGLOIS — comment appellez-vous la main, 

en Angloia Henry V. iii. 4 

j'ay gagne deux mots d'Anglois vistement — iii. 4 
fort bon Anglois. Dites moi en Anglois — iii. 4 
raeilleur que TAngloislequelje parte — v. 2 

ANGRILY— how angrily 1 taught. Tico Gen. ofV. i. 2 
ANGRY— breasts of ever angry bears . . . Tempest, i. 2 
nay, good my lord, be not angry .... — ii. 1 

except an angry word Two Gen.of Verona, 11. 1 

what, angry, sir Thurio? — ii. 4 

her father will be angry Merry Wives, iii. 4 

good George, be not angry — v. 5 

like an angry ape, plays siich Mea.for Mea.ii. 2 

redeem your brother fi"om the augi'y law — iii. 1 
I pray you, be not angry with me . . Much Ado, iii. 1 

art thou sick, or angry? — v. 1 

I think he be angry indeed — v. 1 

the cliilding autumn, angry winter.A/jd. A^. Dr. ii. 2 
O, when she's angry, she is keen .... — iii. 2 

it bears an angry tenor As you Like it, iv. 3 

rage like an angry boar .... Taming of the Shrew, i. 2 

i'iSith, you are too angry — ii. 1 

bite the lip, as angry wenches will . . — ii. 1 
be not angry. I Mil be angry; what — iii. 2 
Apollo 's angry, and the heavens. Winter's Tale, iii. 2 

are angry, and frown upon U3 — iii. 3 

heavens, taking angry note, have left — v. 1 

to appease an angry (iod Macbeth, iv. 3 

bring the angry lords, mth all King John, iv. 2 

doth dogged war bristle his angry crest — iv. 3 
may never lift an angry arm against .Richard II. i. 2 
who, therewith angry, when it next..lHenr!/ IV. i. 3 

I should be angry Nvith you if the Henry V. iv. 1 

I was not angry since I came to France — iv. 7 
this pale and angry rose ; as cognizance.. IH. VI. ii. 4 

and digest your angry choler — iv. 1 

but when ray angry guardant — iv. 7 

nay, be not angry, I am pleased 2HenryVI. i. 2 

and shows an angry eye — iii. 1 

like an angry hive of bees — iii. 2 

but angry, wrathful, and inclined to blood — iv. 2 
I am so angry at these abject terms . . — v. 1 
do not fright us with an angry look. . — v. 1 
when the angry trumpet sounds .... — v. 2 

whom angry heaven do make — v.2 

•while he knit his angry brows ZHenry VI. ii. 2 

when angels ore so angry Richard III. i. 2 

stabbed in my angry mood at — 1.2 

be not angi-y with the child — ii. 4 

my uncle Clarence' angry ghost — iii. 1 

the king is angry, see ; he gnaws .... — iv. 2 
in the Lethe of tliy angry soul thou.. — iv. 4 

pray Grod, he be not angry Henry VIII. ii. 2 

who can be angi'y now? — ii. 2 

what, art thou angry, Pandaras? . . Troil.^Cres. i. 1 
makes me smile, make Hector angry? — i. 2 

was he angry? So he says here — i. 2 

what, is he angry too? Who, Troilus? — i. 2 

as angry with my fancy — iv. 4 

what it is to meet Achilles angry .... — v. 5 
that I had no angry wit to be a lord.. Timon of A.i.\ 

but yond' man's ever angry — i. 2 

I am angry at him, that might have. . — iii. 3 
but who is man, tliat is not angry. . . . — iii. 5 
will you not be angry? Well, well. . Coriolanus, ii. 1 

and be angry at your pleasures — ii. 1 

and, bein^ angry, does forget that ever — iii. 1 
60 would do, were he more angry at it — iv. 6 
leap in with me into this angry flood. /ui. Ca)sar,i. 2 
the angry spot doth glow on Ciesar's.. — i. 2 

with an angry wafture of your hand.. — ii. 1 

be angry when you will, it shall — iv. 3 

not tliink, you could have been so angry — iv. 3 

Fulvia, perchance, is angry Antony ^ Cleo. i. 1 

he makes me angi'y with him (repealed) — iii. 11 
be angry, and despatch: O could st thou — v. 2 
the hourly sliot ot angry eyes Cymbeline, i. 2 



[ ^1 ] 



ANGRY — be not angry, most mighty. . Cymbeline, i. 7 

he comes on angry purpose now — ii. 3 

tho' Rome be therefore angry — iii. 1 

wherein you made gi'eat Juiio angry — iii. 4 
I sec you are angi-y ; know, if you kill — iii. 

haply, be a little angry for my so — iv. 1 

farewell, you are angry. Still going? — v. 3 
in tempest of thy angry frown .Titus Andronicus, i. 2 

the angry northern wind will — iv.l 

shalt thou ease thy angry heart — v. 2 

an angry brow, dread lord Pericles, i. 2 

your ire, ye angry stars of heaven.... — ii. 1 

resolve yom- angry father if my — i i . 5 

why art thou angry? That such Lear, ii. 2 

wliich oft the angry Mab with Wistcis. Rom. ^ Jul. i. 4 
once, when, in an angry parte, he smote. Hamlet, i. 1 

is my lord angry? He went hence Othello, iii. 4 

he be angry? I 'have seen the cannon (rep.) — iii. 4 

matter in't indeed, if he be angi'v — iii. 4 

what, is he angry? May be the letter — iv.l 

almost to the sense, and he grows angry — v. 1 
ANGUISH— anguish of a tortiuring.iV/Vd. N.'s Dr. v. 1 
the words would add more anguish. .SHenry VI. ii. 1 
whose power will close the eye of anguish, Lear, i v. 4 

im_perfect by your eyes' anguish — iv. 6 

pam is lessened by another s angiiish. JJom. ^-Jul. i. 2 

more fell than anguish, hunger, or t'ne sea. Othello, v. 2 

ANGUS— Murray, Angus, and Menteith. 1 Hen. IV.i.l 

ANHEIRES-rCoQ- will you go,AnheiresMerri/ W. ii. 1 

AN-HUNGRY — they were an-hungry Coriol. i. 1 

ANIGHT for coming anight to 3a,n&.AsyouLike, ii. 4 
ANIMAL— 
those pampered animals that rage . . Much Ado, iv. 1 
he is only an animal, only sensible. . Love'sL.L. iv. 2 
that souls of animals infuse ..Merchant of Fen. iv. 1 
his animals on his dunghills are . . As you Like it, i. 1 
the wi'etched animal heaved forth such — ii. 1 
to fright the animals, and to kill them — ii. 1 
a poor, bare, forked animal as thou art . . Lear, iii. 4 
the paragon of animals! and yet to me.Hamlet, ii. 2 
ANIMIS-Tantajneanimise£elestibusiri)e..2ff. r/. ii. I 
ANJOU-Ireland, Poictiers,Anjou,Touraine../t)/in, i. 1 
and Ireland, Anjou, Toiu-aine, Maine — ii. 1 
for Anjou, and fair Touraine, Maine — ii. 2 

Poictiers, and Anjou, these Ave provinces — ii. 2 
Reignler, duke of Anjou, doth take . . 1 Hen. VI. i. I 
duke of Anjou and Maine, yet is he — v. 3 

command in Anjou wdiat your — v. 3 

the county Maine, and Anjou, free from — v. 3 

the duchy of Anjou and the . .2Henry VI. i, 1 (art.1 

the duchies of Anjou and Maine .... — i. 1 

Anjou and Maine 1 myself did win . . — i. 1 

Anjou and Maine, both given unto the — i. 1 

by thee, Anjou and Maine were sold. . — iv. 1 

ANNA— as Anna to the queen of. . Taming of Shr. i. 1 

ANNALS— have writ your annals true . . Coriol. v. 5 

ANNE— there is Anne Page, which. . Merry Wives, i. 1 

mistress Anne Page? ..._. — i. 1 

master Abrahaui, and mistress Anne Page — i. 1 

heaven 1 this is mistress Anne Page — i. 1 
the very point of it; to mistress Anue Page — i. 1 

here comes fair mistress Aime — i. 1 

for your sake, mistress Anne — i. 1 

1 will wait on him, fair mistress Anne — i. 1 
miistress Anne, yourself shall go first — i. 1 
acquaintance with mistress Anne Page ■ — i. 2 
master's desires to mistress Aime Page — i. 2 
heaven sendAnne Page no worse fortune — i. 4 

Anne is a good gu'l, and — 1.4 

a good word to mistress Anne Page. . — i. 4 
in love with mistress Anne Page .... — i . 4 

I know Anne's mind — i. 4 

dat I shall have Anne Page for myself — i. 4 

I vill myself have Anne Page — i . 4 

by gar, if I have not Anne Page .... — i. 4 

I know Anne's mind for that — i.4 

knows more of Anne's mind — i.'\ 

how does pretty mistress Anne? — i.4 

Anne loves him not: for I know Anne's — i. 4 

you are come to see my daughter Anne? — i. 1 

now does good mistress Anne? — ii. I 

for a jack-a-nape to Anne Page — ii. 3 

where mistress Anne Page is — ii. 3 

thy adversary towards Anne Page .. — ii. 3 

sweet Anne Page ! (irpm(ed) — iii. i 

to bring me vere IS Anne Page — iii. 1 

to dine with mistress Anne — iii. 2 

a match between Ann Page and .... — iii. 2 
first motive that I wooed thee, Anne — iii. 4 

1 had a father, mistress Anne — iii. 4 

tell mistress Anne the jest — iii. 4 

mistress Anne, my cousin — iii. 4 

now, good mistress Anne — iii. 4 

love him, daughter Anne — iii. 4 

I would my master had mistress Anne — iii. 4 
nothing but about mistress Anne Page — iv. b 

love I bear to fair Anne Page — iv. 6 

if Anne Page be.my daughter — v. 5 

to marry mistress Anne Page — v. 

if I did not think it had been Anne IPage — v. 5 
as Anne and I had appointed (rep.).. — v. 5 

it is not Anne Page? — v. 5 

who liath got the right Anne? — v. 5 

yes, by saint Anne; and ginger. . Twelfth Night, ii. 3 

Ses, by saint Anne, do I . . Taming of S. i. 1 (indue.) 
ad issue— Edmund, Anne, and 2Henry VI. ii. 2 

his eldest sister, Anne, my mother . . — ii. 2 

the lamentations of poor Anne Richard III. i. 2 

but, gentle lady Anne, to leave tliis. . — 1.2 
that Anne my wife is very grievous . . — iv. 2 

that Anne my queen is sick — iv. 2 

and Anne ray wife hatli bid the — iv. 3 

conveyance "witli her good aunt Anne — iv. 4 

that wretclied Anne thy wife — v. 3 

of the queen's, lady Anne BuUen . . Hen. VIII. iii. 2 
AnneBuIlenI No; I'll noAnne Bullens — iii. 2 
last, that the lady Anne, whom the king — iii. 2 

and behold the lady Anne pass — iv.l 

ANNEXED— had annexed unto't../in(. ffCleo. iv. 12 
ANNEXMENT— each small anne.xincnt..il.i»i. iii. 3 



ANO 

ANNOY— that might annoy my finger.. Hen. V. ii. 2 
tliorns tliat would annoy our foot. .iHenry VI. iii. 1 
iiirewell, sour annoy I for here, I hope. 3 //en. VI. v. 7 
guard tliee from the boar's annoy. . Richard III. v. 3 
stretch so far, as to annoy us all ..Julius Cirsar, ii. 1 

what can from Italy annoy us Cymbeline, iv. 3 

I fear, was root of tliine annoy . . Tiljis Anclron. iv. 1 

ANNO YANCE-meansof all annoyance. Afaei<e//i, v. 1 
any annoyance in that precious sense . . ..John, iv. 1 
to souse annoyance that comes near — v. 2 

doing annoyance to the treacherous. Richard II. iii. 2 
the herd hatli more annoyance l)y the 7'rOT'(. <5- Cres. i . 3 

ANNOYED— she shall not be annoyed .. Tarn, of S. i. 1 

ANNOYING — without annoying me .. /wJi'us Cn-s. i. 3 

ANNUAL — to give liim annual tribute. .Tempest, i. 2 
about their annual reckoning. . . . Love's L. Lost, v. 2 
thousand pound a year, annual support. H. Flll.ii. 3 
Neptune's annual feast to keep. .Per/c/es, v. (Gowcr) 
three thousand crowns in annual fee . . Hamlet, ii. 2 

ANOINT— anoint his eyes; but do it.. Mid. N. D. ii. 2 
for tlie purpose, I'll anoint my sword. . Hamlet, iv. 7 

ANOINTED— anointed sovereign of. Love's L. L. iii. I 
anointed, I implore so much expense — v. 2 

that had struck anointed kings Winter's Tale, i. 2 

l)roke ope the Lord's anointed temple. .il/acdeW, ii. 3 
hail, you anointed deputies of heaven! ../o/in,iii. 1 

Ills deputy anointed in his sight Richard II. i. 2 

commit'st thy anointed body to the cure — ii. 1 
because the anointed king is hence?.. — ii. 3 
wash the balm from an anointed king — iii. 2 
deputy elect, anointed, crowned, planted — iv. 1 
you stand against anointed majesty..! Hen. IV. iv. 3 
stooped his anointed head as low ..iHen.IV. (indue.) 
Henry'sfaithfulandanointed queen. IHertry VI. v. 5 
off, wherewith thou wast anointed. .3He7iry FI. iii. 1 
I was anointed king at nine months old — iii. 1 
anointed let me be with deadly venom. Rich . III. iv. 1 
rail on the Lard's anointed ; strike . . — iv. 4 
my anointed body by thee was punched — v. 3 
in his anointed flesh stick boarishfangs ..Lear, iii. 7 

ANON — thou wilt anon, I know it Tempest, ii. 2 

I will fm-nish it anon with — ii. 2 

home, John Rugby; I come anon. .3/errj/ Wives, iii. 2 

you shall see sport anon — iii. 3 

at street end ; he will be here anon . . — iv. 2 

I shall find you anon — iv. 2 

I'll be with you anon Twelfth Night, ui. 4 

and anon, sir — iv. 2 (song) 

I will awake it anon — v. 1 

but more of that anon — v. 1 

I will call upon you aXLoa.Measure for Measure, iv. 1 

more of him anon — iv. 2 

you shall anon over-read it at — iv. 2 

greet us here anon, my gentle Varrius — iv. 5 
the friar and you must have a word anon — v. 1 
and all her elves come here anon. . Mid. N.'s Dr. ii. 1 
anon, his Thisbe must be answered. . — iii. 3 
cover thou anon with drooping fog . . — iii. 3 
of this discourse we more will near anon — iv. 1 
anon comes Pyramus, sweet youth . . — v. 1 

and anon falleth like a crab Love's L. Lost, iv. 2 

and ever and anon they made a doubt — v. 2 
desire Gratiauo to come anon to my. Mer. of Ven. ii. 2 
thou wilt say anon he is some kin .... — ii. 9 

I will anon ; first let us go to — iii. 5 

anon, a careless herd, full oiths.. As you Like it, is. 1 

I'll talk with you more anon All's Well,i.Z 

I'll speak with you further anon .... — i. 3 

you shall hear one anon — iv.l 

hear of your lordship anon — iv. 3 

I shall weep anon ; good Tom Drum — y. 3 
anon I'll give thee more instructions. Tarn, of S. (ind ) 
the fury spent, anon did this break. Winter's T. iii. 3 
and anon swallowed with yest and froth — iii. 3 

we'll buy the other things anon — iv. 3 

we'll have this song out anon by ... . — iv. 3 

may think anon it moves — v. 3 

that he'll think anon it lives — v. 3 

anon, I am sure, the duke Comedy of Errors, v. I 

anon, I w-ot not by what strong — v. 1 

we'll look to that anon — v. 1 

Paddock calls : anon. Fair is foul .. ..Macbeth, i. I 
anon, anon ; I pray you remember . . — ii. 3 

I'll come to you anon — iii. 1 

be large in mirth; anon we'll drink .. — iii. 4 

well, more anon ; comes the — i v. 3 

toward Birnam, and anon methought — v. b 

anon I'll tell thee more King John,i. 1 

tumbled about, anon becomes — iii. 4 

still and anon cheered up the heavy — iv. 1 
which ever and anon he gave his nose.lHen. IF. i. 3 
what ostler! Anon, anon. I pr'ythee — ii. 1 

Anon, anon, sir! score a pint of — ii- 4 

tale to me may be nothing but — anon — ii. 4 
Anon, anon, sir I (repealed) Look down — ii. 4 
let him alone ■. we shall have more anon — ii. 4 
the prince, and master Poiiis anon. .2Henry IF. ii. 4 

this will grow to a brawl anon — ii . 4 

some sack, Francis. Anon, anon, sir — ii. 4 
that comes hither anon about soldiers? — iii. 2 
I'll give you a health for that anon . . — v. S 
I'll be with you anon ; most sweet sir — v. 3 
anon, desire thera all to my pavilion . Henry V. iv. 1 
anon, from thy insulting t\Tanny..l Hc»rt/ ;'/. iv. 7 

shall heat you thorouglily anon 2 Henry VI. ■^. 1 

through this laund anon the deer. .ZHrnry VI. iii. 1 

wine enough, my lord anon Richard lll.i. 4 

the duke of York, anon expect liim here — iii. 1 

I shall anon advise you furtlier Henry Fill. i. 2 

I told your grace they would talk anon — _ i. 4 
and, anon, he casts his eye against .. — iii. 2 

close ; we shall hear more anon — v. 2 

you'll leave your noise anon ye rascals — t. 3 
Troilus ; you shall see anon. . Troilus Sf Cressida, i. 2 
I'll shew you Troilus anon; if he.... — i. 2 

and, anon, behold the strong-ribbed. . — _ i. 3 

she shall come anon. Where — iv. 4 

anon he's tliere afoot, and there they — v. 5 

but thou anon shalt hear of me — v. 6 

you shall hear fi-om me anon . . Timon of Athens. i. 1 



ANO 



[22] 



ANON— I'll speak with you anou 

I'll tell you more anon 

you anon do meet the senate Coriolanus, u. 3 

to meet anon, upon your aiiprobation — u. 3 

I'll have you talked with anon — iv. 5 

forbear me till anon Antomj /}■ Cleopatra,}}. 7 

ask him one thing ; I'll remember't auon . Cymb. ui. 5 
a retire ; anon a rout, confusion thick — v. 3 
which thou shalt hear of me anon. TitusAndron. v. 1 

shall I hear from you anon? Lear, i. 2 

and then anon di-iuns in his ear — Itom. If Jul.}. 4 
anon, good nurse 1 sweet Montague.. — ii. 2 
I come anon: hut if thou mean'st — — ii. 2 
Peter! Anou? My fan, Peter (repealed) — n. 4 
anon comes one with light to ope the — v. 3 

anon he finds liim strikmg too Hamlet,}}. 2 

anon the dreadfid thunder doth — .<!■ 2 

you shall see anon (repealed) — m. 2 

anon, as patient as the female dove . . — .v. 1 
bade him anon return and here speak . . Othello, jv. 1 
get you away; I'll send for you anou — iv. 1 
pr'ythee, hie thee ; he'll come anon . . — iv. 3 
if vou stare, we shall hear more anon — v. 1 
ANOTHER— is another way so high. . . . Tempest,}}. 1 

and another storm brewing — . ;;• 2 

give me the lie another time — in. 2 

in such another trick — V"'- \ 

there's another gai-ment for't — iv. 1 

but I'll prove it by another. . . . Two Gen. of Ver. i. 1 
such another proof will make. ' ' 

so angered with another letter 

fold them one upon another — 

and yet another yet — 

I'll write yovu ladyship another — — 

as one heat another heat expels — 

drives out another — 

send her another; never — 

serve to scale another Hero's tower . . — 
I'll get me one of such another length — 

now of another thing she may — 

•what cur is that? says another — iv. 4 

there is also another device in Merry Wives, i. 1 

shall tell you another tale — J- 1 

to know one another — i. 1 

and here another to Pace's wife — i 3 

here's another letter to Tier — }.^ 

it is such another man — i-f 

Anne's mind, as well as another does — 

one with another. Ford 

but I have another messenger to — 

turn another into the register — 

built upon another man s ground — — 
and another gentleman from Frogmore — 
court of France show me such another — 
another hope, to betray lilin to another — 
I must of another errand to sir John — ;;;.■■ 

if I be served such another trick — ui. 5 

I have received from her another embassy — iii. 6 
to make another experiment of his .. — iv. 2 

how to know one another — v. 2 

and by that we know one another . . — v. 2 

and then another fault, in the — v. 5 

will be paid, one time or another . Ticelflh hight, ii. 4 

but sucli another jest 

but, would vou undertake another suit 
they will kill one another by the look 
I'll go another way to work with him 
she loves another 

fraut mc another reciuest 
woidd you eoidd make it another 



— i. 2 



iii. 1 
iii. 1 
iii. 1 



— ii. I 

ii. 2 

ii. 2 

ii. 2 

iii. 1 



iii. 3 



iii. 1 



^ V. 1 

to be a double-dealer; there's another — v. 1 

Escalus, another thing to fall Mea.for Mea. ii. 1 

lives not to act another — ii- 2 

more fit to do another such offence .. — _i!. 3 

rather rejoicing to see another merry — iii. 2 

thou believ'st there is another comfort — v. 1 

there is another friai- that set — V. 1 

I have bethought me of another fault — v. 1 

this is another prisoner that I saved — v. 1 

or else make another courtsey Much Ado, ii. 1 

I might liave another for working-days — ii. 1 

seeing how much another man is — — ii. 3 

another is wise; yet I am well; another — ii. 3 

one an opinion of another's dotage .. — ii. 3 

will not bite one auother, when they meet — iii. 2 

thou art another; I'll wear none but this — iii. 4 

vet Benedick was such another — iii. 4 

I pray you choose another subject ()■!?;) ) — v. 1 

that wlien I note another man like him — v. 1 

another Hero? Notliing certainer . . — v. 4 

here's another, \viit in my cousin's hand — v. 4 
four happy days bring in another. . Mid. xW'sDr. i. 1 

I will wed thee in another key — i. 1 

to choose love by another's eye — i. 1 

(as I can take it with auother herb) . . — ii. 2 
should, of auother, therefore be abused 
therefore, another prologue must tell 
then there is another thing; we must 
as one come not within another's way 
but we are spiri ts of another sort — 
as little patience as another man — Lo 
anotlier of these students at tliat time 

'twill be thine another day — iv. i 

an' I cannot, another can — iv. 1 

one drunkard loves another of tlie name — iv. 3 

another with his finger and his tliumb — v. 2 
tcU thee more of this another time. . Mcr. of yen. i. 1 

to shoot another arrow that self — J. J 

and sealed under for another — i. 2 

one wooer, another knocks at the door — i. 2 

to Tripolis, another to the Indies — — i. 3 

anotlier time you called me dog — ..i- 3 

there I have another bad match — in. 1 

here comes another of the tribe ■ — in. 1 

one by another: this making of christians — lu. 5 

the law hath yet another hold on you — iv. 1 

is there yet another dotes upon As you Like it, 1.2 

hadst tliou descended from another house — i- 2 

thou liadst told me of another father — i- 2 

let my father seek another heir — i. 3 



ANOTHER— 
one another do^vn his innocent, ...As youLike it, ii. 1 

I am shepherd to another man — ii. 4 

come, more, another stanza — ii. 5 

that is another simple sin in you .... — iii. 2 

they were all like one another — iii. 2 

to be married of him than of another — iii. 3 

an' you serve me such another trick . . — iv. 1 

but they asked one another the reason — v. 2 

happiness through another man's eyes — v. 2 

there is, sure, another flood toward . . — v. 4 

as creatures of another place All's Well,}. 2 

sense saves another way — ii. 1 

count's master is of auother style — ii. 3 

you are not worth another word .... — ii. 3 

thither they send one another — iii. 5 

that drum or another, or liic jacet — iii. 6 

not to know what we speak one to another — iv. 1 

and buy another of Bajazet's mule . . — iv. 1 

in the night, I'll put another ring.... — iv. 2 

he changed almost into another man — iv. 2 

light on such another herb — iv. 5 

another bear the ewer . . Taming of Shrew, 1 (indue.) 
another tell him of his hounds.. — 1 (indue.) 

I think, 'twas in auother sense), I am — i. 1 

to help me to another, a fine musician — _ i. 2 

one buckled, another laced; an old . . — iii. 2 
another way I have to man my haggard — 
the coverlet, another way the sheets. . — 
to take upon you another man's name — 
auother dowry to another daughter. . — 
no, I'll not rear another's issue 



ii. 3 
iii. 1 
iii. 1 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 
L. L. i. 2 
ii. 1 



iv. 1 
iv. 1 
V. 1 
V. 2 
ale, ii. 3 
iii. 3 
iv. 1 



iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 
V. 1 
v. 2 
V. 2 
V. 2 
V. 2 
V. 2 



iii. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 



sometimes on one side, some another 
which is another spui' to my departure 

this cheat bring out another 

a kiss to choose, who loves another best 

here's another ballad, of a fish 

lay it by too; another. This is a merry 

shake off one, to take another 

seven years, be born another such. . . . 
unless another, as like Hermione as is 
■with staring on one another, to tear., 
one joy crown another; so, and in such 
never lieard of such another encounter 

another elevated that the oracle 

one sign of dolour to another 

another ship had seized on us. .Comedy of Errors, i. 1 

in the ocean seeks another drop — i. 2 

and purchase me another dry basting — ii. 2 

the lost hair of another man — ii. 2 

have at you with another — iii. 1 

hand iu 'hand, not one before another — v. 1 

or memorize another Golgotha Macbeth, i. 2 

and I another. I myself have all the other — 
and I anotlier, so w'eary with disasters . . — 

here's another, more patent than — 

another yet? a seventh? I'll see — 

tinned another way, to our own .... King Joh. 

add another hue unto the rainbow . . — iv. 2 

whisper one another in the ear — iv. 2 

another lean unwashed artificer .... — iv. 2 

this object, form such another? — iv. 3 

sound but auother, and another shall — v. 2 
behold another day break in the east — v. 4 
stay yet another daj', thou trusty . . Richard II. ii. 4 

two buckets filling one another — iv. 1 

ne'er so little urged, another way to pluck — v. 1 

and fill another room ill hell — y. b 

cannot be true to one another I IHenry IK ii. 2 

become not a cart as well as anotlier man — ii. 4 
strangled with a halter, as another . . — ii. 4 
I have more flesh than another man — iii. 3 
another king I they grow like llydra's — v. 4 
I fear, thou art another counterfeit . . — v. 4 
meeting the check of such another day — v. 5 
a kingdom do^vll, and set another up. .iHen.IV. i. 3 
or it \vill seek me in another place . . — ii. 3 
cannot one bear with another's conflrmities — ii. 4 
for the prince himself is such another — ii. 4 
marry, there is another indictment upon — ii. 4 
as men take diseases, one of auother — v. 1 
and let another half stand laughing bjr. . Hen. V.i. 2 
endure cold as another man's sword will — ii. 1 

to cut one another's throats — ii. 1 

is like anotlier fall of man — ii. 2 

if I should take from another's pocket — iii. 2 
France himself, and sucli another neighbour - iii. 6 
here's my glove; give me another .... — iv. 1 
I have another leek in my pocket. ... — v. 1 
anotlier would fly sirift, but wanteth..lHe7i.F/. i. 1 
quarrel will driiik blood another day — ii. 4 

imperious ill another's throne? — iii. 1 

belt so fiist at one another's pate — iii. 1 

turn tliy edged sword auother way . . — iii. 3 
twinkling another counterfeited beam — v. 3 

unto another lady of esteem — v. 5 

flies from auot'ner coast 2Henry FJ. i. 2 

to purchase such another island .... — iii. 3 
let them kiss one another, for tliey . . — iv. 7 

or pick a sallet another while — iv._ 1 

making another head to fight again. ,3Hen. VI. ii. 1 
slippccf our claim until another age. — ii. 2 
one the better; then, another best .. — .?!• ^ 
and yielding to another when it blows — . iii. 1 
ay, but, I fear me, in anotlier sense. . — iii. 2 

another no more, for thou slialt — iii. 2 

like a Sinon, take another Troy — iii. 2 

here another anchor? Aud Somerset another - v. 4 

he might infect another ■ — v. 4 

resident in men like one another .... — v. 6 
I'll tlirow thy body in another room — v. 6 
Clarence hath not another day to \i\fi. Rich, III. i. 1 
as for another secret close intent .... — i. I 
and see another, as I see thee now. ... — i. 3 

O, but remember this another day — i. 3 

I would not spend another such a night -~ 1. 4 

factor for another's gain — iii. 7 

girdling one another within their alabaster — iv. 3 

give me another horse; — bind up — v. 3 

and place infecting one another.,,. Hcurj/ Vlil. i. I 



ANO 



ANOTHER-anothcr spread on his breast.H.fi//. i. 2 

has crept too near another lady — ii. 2 

one heave at him. I another — ii. 2 

the honour they do one another? — v. 2 

her ashes new create another heir — v. 4 

you shall tell me auother tale. . . . Troilus ff Cress, i. 2 

[Knigid— yon are such another woman] — i. 2 

past watcliing. You are such anotherl — i. 2 

he ofi'ers in another's enterprize — i. 2 

thou strikest as low as another — ii. 1 

what is he more than auother? — ii. 3 

we understand not one another — iii. 1 

will leave to be another's fool — iii. 2 

prove false to one another — ?!!• 2 

do one pluck down another — •!!• 3 

one man eats into another's iiride. ... — iii. 3 

let me bear another to his horse > — iii. 3 

with another knot, five-fingered-tied — v. 2 

one another meet, and all cry — Hector I — v. 3 

what one thing, what another, that I — v. 3 

the effect doth operate another way. . — v. 3 

liut edifies another with her deeds .. — v. 3 

they are clapper-clawing one another — v. 4 

I think, they have swallowed one another— v. 4 

one bear will not bite another — v. 8 

commanding one another's fortunes., ri'mcm of A.\.2 

near? why then another time I'll.... — i. 2 

his own blood that spills another — iii. 5 

that one need not lend to another — iii. 6 (grace) 

away; rob one another. There's more — iv. 3 

have sooner got another service — iv. 3 

which else would feed on one another. Corioianu.', i. 1 
you would be another Penelope 



ii. 1 
ii. 3 
iii. 1 

' — iv. 5 



_ ii. 4 



— iii. 1 



and one infect another against the wind — 
the state hath another; his wife another — 
so soon out as another man's will .... — 

one time will owe another — 

hate one another. Reason ; because they 

then less need one auother . 
another word, Menenius, I will not hear 

fears it not from another — y. 2 

another general shout! I do believe. J«/msC«sar, i. 2 
smiled at one auother, aud shook their heads - i. 2 
break up the senate till another time — ii. 2 
when comes such another? Never .. — iii. 2 

hacked one auother in the sides — v. 1 

or till another Ca3sar have added .... — v. 1 
choked with such another emphasis.. .4n«. SfCleo. i. 5 
I would you had her spirit in such auother — ii. 2 
or, if you borrow one another's love . . — ii. 2 

they pinch one another by the disposition — ii. 7 
to-morrow you'll serve another master — iv. 2 
such another sleep, that I might (rep.) — v. 2 
as she would catch another Antony. . — v. 2 

woo another wife, when Imogen {rep.)Cymheline, i. 2 
to exchange one misery with another — _i. 6 
and he's auother, whatsoever he be . . 
the cutter was as another natm-e .... 

love where there's another man 

it doth confirm another stain 

many Cassars ere such another Julius 

never find such another master — iv. .s 

one sand another not more resembles — v. 5 
that is another's lawful promised love. . Titus .-hid. i. 2 
bnt I'll deceive you in another sort., ""^^ iii. 1 
why, I have not another tear to shed — iii. 1 

I'll teach thee another course — , iv. 1 

another hue, iu that it scorns to bear another - w. 2 

lad framed of anotlier leer — iv. 2 

to find another that is like to thee . . — v. 2 

I know, another doth provoke Pericles, i. 1 

like one another's glass to trim — i. 4 

how's this? we must take another couise — iv. 6 

in pace another Juno — v. 1 

come ashore, I have another suit .... — v. 2 

beg another of thy daugliters Lear, i. 4 

IKnighl — I have another daughter, who, I auij - i. 4 
no more see oue auother; but yet — — 

and here's another, whose warped looks — 

oue side will mock another — 

another way the news is not so tart. . — 

here, friend, is auother purse — 

die with pity, to see another thus. . . . — 

but another, to amplify too much. ... — 

another's burning, one pain ia lessened by 

another's Romeo 4- Juli: 

grief Clues with another's languish . . — 
see how one anotlier lends content . . — 
then dreams he of auother benclioe . . 

to lay oue iu, another out to have 

I dare draw as soon as another man. . — 

I must another way, to fetch a ladder — 

yn.ii\ anotlier, for tying his new shoes — 

the label to another deed, or my true — 

tiun to anotlier, this shall stay them — 

heaj) not another sin upon my head. . — 

I di'camt my master and another fought — 

must not put auother scandal on Win . . Uai 

and you make yourselves another: you jig ■ 

true love know from another one? — iv. 

one woe doth tread upon another's heel — 

I'll puf another (luestion to thee .... — 

there's another; why may not that be — 

why he more than another ? Wliy, sir — 

possible to nnderstaiul iu another tongue — 

tliis is too heaw, let me see another.. — v. z 

come, anotlier hit ; what say you? . . — v. 2 

another of liis fatlioni they have not Othello, i. 1 

some one way, some anotlier; do you know — ;• 1 
this very night, at one another's heels — i. 2 

here comes another troop to seek for you — i. 2 
of reason to poise anotlier of sensuality — 
that not auother comfort like to this.. — 

one iniiierfectness shews mc another.. — 

'tis such anotlier fitchew, marxj a perfumed — 

yon must tell us another tale — v. i 

if heaven would make me such auother world - v. 2 
I have another weapon in Ihis chamber — v. 2 
and here another; the one of them imports—, v. 2 
now here's another discontented paper — v. 2 



ii. 4 



iv. 2 



— ii. 3 



iii. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
V.3 
v. 3 
let, ii. 1 
iii. 1 



V.I 

V. 1 
V. 2 



i. 3 
ii. 1 
ii. 3 
iv.l 



ANS 



[23 J 



ANS 



ANSELME — cOTinty iViiBClitie and hislicniitcoiis 

sisters Homer) fif Juliet^ \. 2 (note 

ANSWER — to nnswxT thy best pleasure. '/'cmpcsi, i. 
Willi never v'u'lds us kind answer .... — i. 

on tliisfjroen laiiil iinswcr your summons — iv. 
a silly answer, and fitting well.. Tiro Gan. of I'er. i. 
a tlumsttud times it answers, iiol .... — i. 

answer not; the tide Is now — ii. 

e'onie. answer not, hut — ii. 

I will answer it straight Merry H;vcs,\. 

it is a ver\' discretion answer — i. 

and tills day wc sliall have mu- answer — iii. 
answer your master, be not afraid.... — iv. 

I am not able to answer the — v. 

liandmaid do return this answer. . Twelfth Night, i. 

a good lenten answer — i. 5 

good my mouse of virtue answer me — i. 5 

I shall answer for lier — i. 5 

to answer by the method, in the first — i. 5 

he might have took his ans\i'er long ago — i. 5 

I wilTanswer you with gait — iii. 1 

stir on tlic youth to an answer — iii. 2 

I can no otlier answer make — iii. 3 

yes, nightingales answer daws — iii. 4 

witli as muelr safety you might ans^vcr — iii. 4 

and on the answer.'he pays you — iii. 4 

I shall answer it. AVhat will you do? — iii. 4 

I pray y<iu, answer him Mt^nmirefor Measure, i. 5 

from brakes of vice, and answer none — ii. 1 
answer to this, I, now the voice of .. — ii. 4 

and nothing of your answer — ii. 4 

answer me to-morrow, or, by the affection — ii. 4 
answer his requiring with a plausible — iii. 1 
and tlic place answer to convenience — iii. 1 

to make your answer before him — iii. 2 

if his owl) life answer the straitness of — iii. 2 

and yield nie a direct answer . — iv. 2 

as you will answer it at your peril . . — iv. 2 (note) 

j'oii'll answer this one day . — iv. 3 

and leisure answers leisure — v. 1 

mark, how short his answer is Much Ado, i. 1 

be the better prepared for an answer.. — i. 2 
in that kind, you know your answer — ii. 1 

and so dance out the answer — ii. 1 

when the danee is done ! Answer clerk — ii. 1 
thus answer I in the name of Benedick — ii. 1 
if their singing answer yoirr saying. . — ii. 1 
to have all things answer my mind .. . — ii. 1 

1 knew it would be your answer — iii. 3 

if they make you not then the better answer - iii. 3 
will never answer a calf wdien he bleats — iii. 3 
I will owe thee an answer for that . . — iii. 3 

I dare make his answer none — iv. 1 

bid her answer truly — iv. 1 

to make you answer truly to your name — iv. 1 
if you aje a maid answer to this .... — iv. 1 
how answepyou for yourselves? .... — iv. 2 
and let it answer every strain for strain — v. 1 
let him answer me: come, follow me — v. 1 

that dare as well answer a man _ v. 1 

that you are thus bound to yom* answer? — v. 1 
let me go no further to mine answer — v. 1 

your answer, sir, is enigmatical — v. 4 

I answer to that name; what is — v. 4 

answer, as I call you Mid. NighCs Dream, i. 2 

how answer you tliat? — iii. 1 

that vou answer to Pyrannus — iii. i 

and dares not answer, nay — iii. 1 (song) 

will you tear imjjatient answers from — iii. 2 
Hermia should give answer of her clioice? — iv. 1 
call rae, and I will answer; my next is — iv. 1 
I do say, thou art quick in answers. .Loue's L.L. i. 2 
so I may answer thee with one as old — iv. 1 
they vrill not answer to that epithet — v. 2 

attends thy answer there — v. 2 

shall I know yoiu: answer,. Merchant of Venice, i. 3 

your answer to that — i. 3 

your answer had not been inscroUed — ii. 7 (scroll) 
doth teach me answers for deliverance — iii. 2 

I shall answer that better to the — iii. 5 

thou art come to answer a stonv .... — iv. 
we all expect a gentle answer, Jew . . — iv. 

I'll not answer that: but say — iv. 

now for your answer: as there — iv. 

this is no answer, thou unfeeling — iv. 

not boirad to please thee \vith my answer — iv. 
you will answer, the slaves are ours (rep.') — iv. 
stand for judgement; answer; shall I have — iv. 
to know your answer, whether you'll — iv. 
we will answer all things faithfully. . — v. _ 
how shall I answer yoti? As wit.... AsyouLike it, i. 2 

answer me in one word — iii. 2 

is more than to answer in the — iii. 2 

you are full of pretty answers — iii. 2 

not so; but I answer you right — iii. 2 

as fast as she answers thee with — iii. 5 

never take her without her answer .. — iv, 1 
for I must bear answer back how .... — iv. 3 
good wits haA-e much to answer for .. — v. 

a good answer; art rich? — v. 

he would answer, I spake not true . . — v. 
while 'tis vendible; answer the time . . AlCs Well, i. 
I cannot answer thee aeutely; I will — i. 

he bath armed our answer, and Florenee — i. 
(repealed) an answer will serve all men. 

Marry, that's a bountiful answer . . ii. 2 

urge her to a present answer back .... — ii, 2 

must answer for yonr raising? — ii. 3 

of pity: speak; thine answer — ii. 3 

but to answer you as you would be .. ' — iv. 3 

bids you answer to what I shall ask.. — iv. 3 

shall I set down your answer so? .... — iv. 3 

let me answer to the particidar of the — iv. 3 
would peep forth, and answer, thanks — iv. 4 

I could not answer in that course of.. — v. 3 

I'll answer him by 1,-iw: I'll not. Tarn. o/S/i. 1 (ind.) 

make tlie welkin answer them — 2 (ind.) 

is that an answer? Ay, and a kind one — v. 2 
I know her answer. What? she .... — v. 2 



ANSWER— 
made you do, we'll answer; if you. Winter's Talc, i. 2 

I may not answer. A sickness caught — i. 2 

laid to thy answer; hut the last — iii. 2 

he makes the maid to answer, whoop — iv. 3 

and stand in hope of answer — v. 2 

ray life may last to answer — v. 3 

and answer to his part performed in — v. 3 
as I am a christian answer me.. Comedy nf Errors, i. 2 
madly thoti didst answer me? what answer — ii. 2 

may answer my good-will — iii. 

whe'r you'll answer me, or no — iv. 

answer you 1 what should I answer you? — iv. 

all the metal in your shop will answer — iv. 

any man to answer it, that breaks . . — iv. 

these rebukes, and answer not? — v. 

that clogs me with this answer Macbeth, iii. 

(howe'er you come to know it), answer me — i v. 

answer me to what I ask you. (rep.) — iv. 

would I eould answer this comfort with — iv. 
for controulment; so answer France.. A'ni^'' Ja/i7i, i. 

answer like an ABC-book; O, su' (ipp.) — i. 

ere answer knows what question would — i. 

stay for an answer to your embassy. ... — ii. 

to draw an answer from thy articles?.. — ii. 

let me make answer — thy usurping son — ii. 

make answer to us both — ii. 

why answer not the double majesties.. — ii. 

to charge me to an answer — iii. 

answers not to this. O be removed (rep.) — iii. 

answer not: but to my closet — iv. a 

as you answer, I do know the scope .... — v. 2 

how we shall answer him: for — v. 7 

or my divine soul answer it iu Richard II. i 

I'll answer thee iu any fair — i 

as your lives shall answer it — i 

my lord, my answer is — to Lancaster — ii 

and noble lords, what answer shall . , — iv 

to answer twenty thousand — iv, 

for your days of answer: little — iv 

must answer. Thy life answer! — v, 

his answer was, he would unto thestews — v. 3 

sent for him to answer this 1 Henry II'. i. 1 

to answer all the debt he owes — i. 3 

come, come, you paraqiuto, answer me — ii. 3 

answers, some fourteen an hour after — ii. 4 

are you not a coward? answer me to that — ii. 4 

shafl I give him his answer — ii. 4 

if thou love me practice an answer .. — ii. 4 

send him to answer thee, or any man — ii. 4 

in such a parley would I answer thee — iii. 1 

I'll answer the coinage — iv. 2 

shall I return this answer to the king? — iv. 3 

on their answer, we will set on them — v. 1 
he himself will answer. Here comes.2H<?n7-i/ ly. i. 1 

let him be brought into his answer . . — ii. 1 

but answer in the effect of your — ii. 1 

the answer is as ready as a borrower's — ii. 2 

answer, thou dead elm, answer — ii. 2 

pleaseth your grace, to answer them — iv. 2 

ne shall answer it; some pigeons .... — v. 1 
in answer of which claim, the prince . . Henry V.\. 2 

arrest them to the answer of the law.. — ii. 2 

to answer royally in our defences .... — ii. 4 

to so hot an answer for it, that caves — ii. 4 

to answer matters of this consequence — ii. 4 

the sum of all our answer is butt his — iii. 6 

fire answers fire, and thro' their paley — iv. (cho.) 

the king is not bound to answer the. . — iv. 1 

answer for it. I do not desire (rep.) — iv. I 

bear my former ansn'er back — iv. 3 

quite from the ans^ver of his degree . . — i v. 7 

let his neck answer for it — iv. 8 

no answer made. Well then, (rep.) — v. 2 

pass oiu' accept, and peremptory answer — v. 2 

give me your answer; i'faith, do .... — v. 2 

how answer you, la plus belle Katharine — v. 2 

come, your answer in broken music.. — v. 2 

of my mirth, if I answer you for that — v. 2 
and I will answer unpremeditated . . .1 Henry VI. i. 2 
answer you so the lord protector? The 

Ijord protect him, so we answer — i. 3 

Gloster, thou'lt answer this before the — i. 3 

1 will not answer thee with words . . — _i. 3 

dare no man answer in a case — ii. 4 

and answer was returned, that he will — ii. 5 

purpose to answer what thou — iii. 1 

let me know, and then I'll answer you — iv. 1 

have their answers every one — v. 1 

I would that you would answer me. . — v. 3 

to give thee answer of thy just demand — v. 3 

what answer makes your gi-ace — v. 3 

will answer our hope in issue — ■ v. 5 

shall m.akc answer to such questions.. .2ZJen. VI. i. 2 

trcmblest at, answer that I sh&'.l ask — i. 4 

in thine own person answer thy abuse — ii. 1 

these foul offenders to their answers.. — ii. 1 

an answer from the king, or we'll . . — iii. 2 

nay, answer, if you can: the Frenchmen — iv. 2 

what answer makes your grace — iv. 4 

canst thou answer to my majesty — iv. 7 

matters they were not able to answer — iv. 7 

whose greatness answers words — iv. lo 

given no answer all this while — v. 1 

whisper you, ray lords, and answer. .3Ht'7jji/r/. i. 1 

here I stand, to answer thee — ii. 2 

before you answer Warwick — !!!• ' 

but answer me one doubt — iii. 3 

war shall answer his demand ■ — iii. 3 

and tell what answer Lewis and the lady — iv. 3 

what answers Clarence to his sovereign s — iv. 6 

do but answer this, what is the body — v. 1 

thou would'sthave me answer to.. .. — v. .'j 

crooked my mind, to answer it — v. 6 

could all but answer for that peevish-./i/c/i. ///. i. 3 

his answer was, — the people were not . . — iii. 7 

still answer nay, and take it — iii. 7 

if, not to answer, you might haply ... . — iii. 7 

definitively thus 1 answer you — iii. 7 

to Kichmond you shall answer it iv. 2 



ANSWER— 
to make ye suddenly an answer . . Henry fill. iii. 1 

to make a seemly answer to such — iii. I 

lay upon my credit, I answer is most false — iii. 2 
for your stubborn answer, about the — iii. 2 

sorely tainted), to his answer, he fell — iv. 2 

whicn will require your answer — v. 1 

be godfather, and answer for her — v. 2 

this woman's answer sorts Troilns fif Creasida, i. 1 

his pretty answer. Wliat was his answer? — i. 2 

arming to answer in a night alarm . . ~ i. 3 

fire to answer for bis lo\'e — i. 3 

and wake him to tlie answer, think you? — i. 3 

farewell, who shall answer him? — ii. 1 

too well acquainted with these answers — ii. 3 

and bring his answer presently — ii. 3 

who, I? why, he'll answer nobody .. — iii. 3 
your answer, sir. Fare you well .... — iii. 3 
where he answers again, because .... — iv. 4 

hence, I'll answer to my lust — iv. 4 

no trumpet answers, "lis but early.. — iv. 5 

we'll, answer it; the issue is — iv. 5 

whom must we answer? The noble.. — iv. .^j 
great spirit flew : answer me, heavens! — iv. 5 

to answer such a question — i v. .^ 

that I might answer thee profitably. Timon of A. ii. 2 

answer not, I am gone — ii. 2 

that answer might have become — ii. 2 

answer in a joint and corporate voice — ii. 2 
withtheir faint reply this answer join ^ iii. 3 
ay, but this answer will not serve. ... — iii. 4 

now we shall know some answer — J!J' * 

we cannot take this for an answer, sir — iii. 4 

exposed, answer mere nature — iv. 3 

while you have throats to answer — v. 2 

no answer? what is this? Timon is dead — v. 4 

public laws at heaviest answer — v. 5 

well, sir, what answer made the belly. Coriolanus, i. 1 

your belly's answer: what the — i. 1 

what could the belly answer? I will — i. I 

a while, you'll hear the belly's answer — i. 1 
it was an answer; how apply you this? — i. 1 

but Rome was ready to answer us — i. 2 

alone, to answer all the city — i. 4 

both observe and answer the vantage — ii. 3 

and shall answer as traitors do — iii. 1 

and follow to thine answer — iii. 1 

where he shall answer, by a lawful . . — iii. 1 

arm yourself to answer mildly — iii. 2 

I will answer in mine honour — iii. 2 

answer to us. Say then; 'tis true — iii. 3 

Coriolanus he would not answer to . . — v. 1 
his answer to me was, he could not . . — v. 1 
trade art thou? answer me directly. /uJms Ccesar,i. 1 

and answer, such high things — i. 2 

then I know my answer must beraade — i. 3 
stay not to answer me, but get thee gone — ii. 4 
rose against Cassar, this is my answer — iii. 2 

with reasons answer you — iii. 2 

answer every man directly — iii. 3 

answer every'man directly, and briefly — iii. 3 
a fool, that brought my answer hack — iv. 3 

no, Ctesar, we ■will answer on their .. — v. 1 

stand not to answer: here, take — v. 3 

no more light answers: let our ..Antony S^Cleo. i. 2 
I shall entreat him to answer like — ii. 2 

possess it, I'll make answer: but I — ..."• i^ 

which we will answer as a law .... — iii. 10 

is this his answer? Ay, my lord — iii. 1 1 

and answer me declined, sword against — iii. 1 1 
the full Ca3sar will answer his emptiness — iii. U 
lives he? wilt thou not answer, man? — iv. 12 
Ave anstt^er other's merits in our name — v. 2 

only, thus far you shall answer Cymbeline, i. 5 

you shall answer me with your sword — i. .■) 
deliver with more openness your answers— i. 7 
tills is no answer. But that you shall — ii. 3 
the briefness of your answer made .. — ii. 4 
doublet; hat, hose, all that answer to them — iii- 4 
and there's no answer that will be given — iii. h 

ho! no answer? then I'll enter — iii. 6 

thus did he answer me: yet said .... — iv. 2 

and put us to our answer ■ — iv. 2 

should answer solemn accidents — iv. 2 

whose answer would be death drawn . — iv. 4 

great the answer be Britons — v. 3 

give answer to this boy, and do it freely — y. 5 
answer I must, and shall do with.. Titus Androyi.i. 2 
to answer their suspicion witii .... — _ii. 4 

though they cannot answer my — iii. 1 

draw him but to answer thee in awght.. Pericles, y. 1 
if this but answer to my just belief .. .. — y. 1 

answer my life my judgement Lear, i. 1 

I know no answer — i. 1 

the fault of it I'll answer — i. 3 

fit to answer from our home — ii- 1 

I'll answer that. Jly sister may receive — ii- 2 
and attend the Icisiu-c of their a.nswer . . — ii. 4 
fetch me a better answer. My dear lord — ii. 1 
than to answer with thy uncovered body — iii. 4 

let him first answer that — iii. 7 

his answer was, the worse — ;v. 2 

which tie him to .an answer — iv. 2 

craves a speedy answer; 'tis from — iv. 2 

I'll read, and answer — iv. 2 

I should answer from a full-flomng stomach— v. 3 
why you answer this present summons? — v. 3 
wast not boiuid to answer an unknown . . — y. 3 
her eye discourses, I will answer it.. Horn. <5- Jut. ij. 2 

Romeo will answer it — ii. 4 

answer a. letter. Nay, he will answer the — ii. 4 
good, or bad? answer to that; say either — ]]. i 
eyes shut, that make thee answer. ... — iii. 2 
do not answer me, my fingers itch .. — iii. 5 
to answer — I'll not wed, I cannot love — iii. 3 
to answer that, were to confess to you — iv. 1 

answer rue like men — iv. 5 

who's there? Nay, answer me: stand ... Hamlet, i. 1 

'tis gone, and will not answer — i. 1 

but answer made it none : yet once — ' • 2 



ans 



[24] 



ANT 



iNSWEK— 
answer rae: let mc not burst in ignorance. Ham. i. 4 
we'll read, answer, ami think upon this.. — ii. 2 
1 have nuthini; with this answer, Hamlet — iii. 2 

to make me a wholesome answer — iii. 2 

a wliolesorae answer; my wit's (rppeu(£t/) — iii. 2 
come, you answer with an idle tongue . . — iii. I 
and will answer well the death I gave hira — iii. i 
would vouchsafe the answer']" How (rep.) — v. 3 
or iiuit in answer of the third exchan"e. . — v. 2 
this tliou sUmU answer; I know thee, Koderigo. 

Sir, Iwill answer Olhello,i. 1 

direct session, call thee to anB\yer — i. 2 

cries — haste, and speed must answer it .. — i- 3 

niglit-ln-awlery give me answer to it — ii. 3 

such an answer would stop them all — ii. 2 

a di^LT. than answer my waked wrath — iii. 3 

make questions, and by thera answer — iii. 4 

T c:mnnt weep; nor answer have I none.. — iv. 2 

ANSW'EK.VBl.E— answerable sequestration. 0;/i. i. 3 

all tilings answerable to this portion . Tayn. ofS. ii. 1 

these men, he shall be answerable . . .1 Henry IV. ii. 4 

ANSWERED— thisshallbeansweredjVfrri/HO'i'es, i. 1 

all this; that is now answered — i. 1 

wlio, mutually hath answered my atfection — iv. 6 

I cannot be so answered Twelfth Ninht, ii . 4 

must she not then be answered? .. — ii. 4 

it would scarce be answered — iii. 3 

since been answered in repaying .. — iii. 3 

had answered for his deed .Measurefor Measure^ ii. 2 
would have dark deeds darkly answered — iii. 2 
no more words, tlieelerk is answered.MucA Ado, ii. 1 
leaf on it, would have answered her.. — ii. 1 
anon, Iris Thisbe must be answered. itftZ. N. Dr. iii. 2 

I am answered, sir Love's Labour Lost, i. 2 

answered, — do not so, slubber not ..Mer. ofl'en. ii. 8 

is it answered? what if my — iv. 1 

what, are you answered yet? some . . — iv. 1 
suit against him: are you answered? — iv. 1 
hue a bciigar should be answered .... — iv. 1 
aitairs arc answered. An' will (^rep.).AsyouLike, ii. 7 
1 nKir\ el, wliy I answered not again — iii. 5 
you h;U'c answered to his reputation. .4«'s fVell, iv. 3 
shonkl have answered heaven boldly . Winter'sT. i. 2 
I rautt be answered; dostthou hear.. — __i. 2 
thou hast answered him well. Corfterfj/ of Errors, iii. 1 
and blows have answered blows .... King Jolin, ii. 2 
this must be answered, either here . . — iv. 2 
mv impatience, answered neglectingly.l Hen. IV.\. 3 

I answered indirectly, as I said — i. 3 

rolil)ei/, lad, how is that answered?.. — iii. 3 
with peril I have answered; for all.2H'enry IV. iv. 4 
he answered thus; young Talbot ..\HenryVJ.iv. 7 
faults are easy, quicklj' answered ..2 Henry FI. iii. 1 

for measure must be answered ZHenry VI. ii. 6 

who a uswcred him, the}' came from . . Ricli. III. iv. 4 
lie answered, tush! it can do me no ..Hen. VIII. i. 2 
fairly answered; a loj-al and obedient — iii. 2 

to-mon-ow be answered in tliis challenge — iii. 3 
tlie belly answered,— well, sir, vhat. .Coriolanus, i. 1 
lite his accusers, and thus answered — i. 1 

which being answered, and a petition — _i. I 
I insisted, yet you answered not ..Julius Ccesar, ii. 1 
and grievously hath Cajsar answered it — iii. 2 
that matter is answered directly .... — iii. 3 

and open perils surest answered — iv. 1 

should I have answered Caius Cassius so? — iv. 3 
oivr hopes are answered; you said .... — v. 1 

BU-, this shoidd be answered Antony /y Cleo. iii. 6 

can her contempt be answered? Cymbeline, iii. 5 

whose rudetiess answered ray steps too loud — iv. 2 

if seconds had answered him — v. 3 

sojourn, and here are to be answered Lear, i. 1 

sh*, he answered me in the roundest — i. 4 

how shall this bloody deed be answered? .Ham. iv. 1 
but iealous souls will not be answered.. O/AeHo, iii. 4 
ANS'WERIN'G — answering us with our own. Cor. v. 5 
that answering one foul wrong. .i>/eas. /or Meas. ii. 2 
not answering the aim, and that.. Troilus SfCres. i. 3 
he professes not answering; speaking — iii. 3 
answering before we do demand of. . Jul. Crvsar, v. 1 
bear it as answering to the weight. . Ant. f,- Cleo. v. 2 
than answering a slave without a knock. Ci/jn!). iv. 2 
who, even now, answering the letter of _ — v. 5 
fame answering the most strong. /^er/c/es, iii (Gower) 
ANSWER'ST— if thou answerest me not . . Ham. v. 1 
and answerest not? Dromio. . Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 
thou answerest, she is fair. . . . Troilus <5- Cressida, i. 1 
ANT — of the moldwarp and the ant. . 1 Hen. IV. iii. 1 

we'll set thee to school to an ant Kin^ Lear, ii. 4 

ANTENOR— that's Antenor; he has. . Troil.^Cr. i. 2 

Hclenus, Antenor, and all the — iii. 1 

a Trojan prisoner, called Antenor. ... — iii. 3 

but this Antenor, I know, is such — iii. 3 

for the enfreed Antenor, the fair Cressid — iv. 1 

our Antenor delivered to us — iv. 2 

the devil take Antenor? — iv. 2 

A plague upon Antenor! (repeated).. — iv. 2 

thou art changed for Antenor — i v. 2 

which for Antenor we deliver you . . — iv. 4 

ANTENORIDES— Trojan.andAntcnorides, 

with massy Troilus * Cressida (prologue) 

ANTHEM — as ending antliem of ray endless 

dolour Two Gentlemen of Veronn, iii. 1 

hollaing and singing of anthems 2 Henry IV. i. 2 

ANTHROPOPHAGI— the Antliropoplia^i.. 0th. i. 3 
ANTHROPOPHAGINIAN— he'll speak' like an 

Anthropophaginian unto thee.. Merry Wines, \v. b 

ANTIATES— i'the vawardare the Antiates. Corio/.i.6 

set roe against Aufidius, and his Antiates — i. 6 

got on the initiates, was ne'er distributed — iii. 3 

]io less honour to the Antiates — v. 5 

ANTICIPATES— whose footing here anticipates _ 

oiir thoushts Otticllo, ii. 1 

ANTICIPATING— fresh and fair, anticipating^ 

time with starting Troilus ^- Cressida, iv. 5 

ANTICIPATION— so shall my anticipation 

prevent your discovery Hamlet, ii. 2 

ANTlCrPAT'ST— time, thou antieipatest my 

di'ead exploits Macbeth, iv. 1 



ANTICK — drawing of an antick. . . . Much Ado, iii. 1 
or pageant, or antick, or firework. .Lore'sL.LoA-/, v. 1 
we will have, if this fadge not, an antick — v. 1 

were he the veriest antick in Taming of Sh. (ind.) 

and there the antick sits, scoffing. .Richard II. iii. 2 

of old father antick the law? IHenry IV i. 2 

three such anticks do not amount. . . Henry V. iii. 2 
thou antick death, wliich laughest..! Henri/ VI. iv. 7 
witless anticks, one anotlier meet.. Trail. t^-Cres. v. 3 

covered witli an antick face Romeo Sr Juliet, i. 5 

the i)ox of such anticks, lisping, alfecting — ii. 4 

to put an antick disposition on Hamlet, i. 5 

ANTIGICED— disguise liath almost an ticked 

us all Antony ^Cleopatra, ii. 7 

ANTICKEY— go antickly, and show. . Much Ado, v. 1 
ANTIUOTE-some sweet oblivious antidote. Macb. v. 3 
his antidotes are poison, and he.. TimonofAth. iv. 3 
ANTIGONUS— 
Antigonus, I charged thee, that she . . Winter's r. ii. 3 
good Antigonus, since fate, against thy — iii. 3 
and said, his name was Antigonus .. — iii. 3 
as mv AntiL^inus to break Ills grave.. — v. 1 
tlic letters ui' Antigonus, found with it — v. 2 
liccamc of Antigonus, that carried hence — v. 2 
ANTIOCII— Anfioch the groat ..Pericles, i. (Gower) 
Antiocli, farewell! for wisdom sees . . — i. 1 

at Antioch, wliose arm seems far too — i. 2 

and went to Antioch, where, as thou — i. 2 

being at Antioch — What from Antioch? — i. 3 

as friends to Antioch, we may feast.. — i. 3 

the tliird, of Antiocli; and his device — ii. 2 
in Antioch, and his daugliter, you. . — v. 3 (Gower) 
ANTIOCHUS— I have, Antiochus .... — i. 1 
that would be son to great Autiochus — i. 1 
Antiochus, I thank thee, who hath taught — i. 1 
I wait the sharpest blow, Antiochus — i. 1 

nor tell the world, Antiochus doth sin — i. 1 
great Antiochus (gainst whom I am — i. 2 
Antiochus you fear, and justly too . . — i. 2 

royal Antiochus (on what cause I — i. 3 

lord Thaliard from Antiochus is welcome — i . 3 

Antiochus from incest lived not free . . — ii. 4 

Antiochus and his daughter's dead . . iii. (Gower) 

ANTI OP A— Ariadne, and Antiopa?..Mjd. N.Dr. ii. 2 

ANTIPATHY— hold more antipathy Lear, ii. 2 

ANTIPHOLUS-ay, ay, Antiiiholus.. Co<«.o/&. ii. 2 
come, come, Antipholus, we dine too late — ii. 2 
shall, Antiiiholus, hate, even in the. . — iii. 2 
master Antipholus? Ay, that's my name — iii. 2 

is crowing to me by Antipholus — iv. 1 

well met, well met, master Antipholus — iv. 3 
now out of doubt, Antipholus is mad — iv. 3 
signior Antipholus, I wonder much that — v. 1 
your grace, Antipholus, my husband — v. 1 
I see my son Antipholus, and Dromeo — v. 1 
your name, sir, called Antipholus? . . — v. 1 

nave I been patron to Antipholus — v. 1 

these two Antipholus', tliese two so like — v. 1 
Antipholus, thou earnest from Corinth — v. 1 
ANTIPOBES— nowtotheantijiodes ..MuchAdo,ii. 1 
noon-tide with the antipodes. . Mid. N. Dream, iii. 2 
should hold day with the antipodes . . Mer. of Ven. v. 1 
we were wandering with the antipodes.iJ<cA./I. iii. 2 

as the antipodes are unto us ZHenry VI. i. 4 

ANTIQUARY-the antiquary times. rrSi7..§-Cres. ii. 3 
ANTIQUE— and antique song we heard. 7'«W.Af. ii. 4 
never may believe these antique fables. Mid. N. D.y. 1 
an oak, whose antique root peeps out. .4.s you Like, ii. 1 
constant serWee of the antique world — ii. 3 
while you perform your antique round. i>/ac!<ctt, iv. 1 
in tliis, the antique and well-noted. . King John, iv. 2 
tile senators of the antique Rome . . Henry V. v. (cho.) 
the dust on antique time would lie. . Coriotanus, ii. 3 
his antique sword, rebellious to his arm. . Ham. ii. 2 

I am more an antique Roman than — v. 2 

an antique token my father gave Othello, v. 2 

ANTIQUIUS — et quo antiqmus. . Pericles, i. (Gower) 
ANTIUUITY— and of antiquity too. il/(?a./orM. iii. 2 
high top bald "witli dry antiquity. .(4s you Like it, iv. 3 
not the privilege of antiquity upon thee All's Well, ii. 3 
about you blasted with antiquity? . .2Henry IV. i. 2 
antiquity forgot, custom not known . . Hamlet, iv. 6 
ANTIUiW— he is retired to Antiinn. . Coriolanus, iii. 1 
at Antium lives he? At Antium I wish — iii. 3 

a goodly city is this An tiura — iv. 4 

is ne in Antium? He is, and feasts .. — iv. 4 
ANTONIAD— 

thcAntoniad, the Egyptian admiral. .4n(.,5-C;ra. iii. 8 
ANTONIO— thy uncle, called Antonio. . Tempest, i. 2 

did Antonio open the gates — i. 2 

what things are these, my lord Antonio — v. 1 

know you don Antonio Two Gen. of Verona, ii. 4 

you must know of me then, Antonio.. TwelfthN. ii. 1 
O, good Antonio, forgive me your trouble — ii. 1 

my kind Antonio, I can no other — iii. 3 

Antonio, I arrest thee at the suit of. . — iii. 4 

Where's Antonio then? — iv. 3 

this is that Antonio, that took the . . — v. 1 

Antonio never yet was thief — v. 1 

Antonio! O my dear Antonio ! — v. 1 

fear'st thou that Antonio? _. . — v. 1 

■well enough; you are si,giiior Antonio. Af«c/i.4(^o,ii. 1 
I know Antonio is sad to think . . Merch. of Ven. i. 1 
since you have found Antonio, we . . — i. 1 
you look not well, signior Antonio . . — i. 1 
I tell thee what, Antonio, I love .... — i. 1 

my Antonio, I do know of — i. 1 

'tis not unknown to you, Antonio, how — i. 1 
to you, Antonio, I owe themost — i. 1 

my Antonio, had I but tlie means — i. 1 
Antonio shall be bound. Antonio shall — i. 3 
Antonio bound. Your answer (rep.) . . — i. 3 

may I speak with Antonio? — i. 3 

this is signior Antonio — i. 3 

signior Antonio, many a time — i . 3 

■who's there? Signior Antonio? Fie, fie — ii. fi 
besides, Antonio certified the duke . . — ii. 8 
let good Antonio look he keep Ms day — ii. 8 

1 thought upon Antonio, when he told — ii. 8 
to tell Antonio what you hear — ii. 8 



ANTONIO— 
I saw Bassanio and Antonio part . . Mer. of Ven. 

that Antonio hath a ship of rich lading — i 

the good Antonio, the lionest Antonio — i 

whether Antonio have liad any loss at sea — i 

my master Antonio is at his house . . — i 

Antonio, as I heard in Genoa — i 

there came divers of Antonio's creditors — i 

but Antonio is certainly undone .... — i 

signior Antonio commends hini to you — iii. i 

tliat royal merchant, good Antcmio? — iii. 2 

rather have Antonio s flesh, than — iii. 2 

it will go hard with poor Antonio — iii. 2 

that this Antonio, being the bosom . . — iii. 4 

what, is Antonio here? — iv. 1 

loathing I bear Antonio, that I follow — iv. 1 

good cheer, Antonio! what man? .. — iv. 1 

between the .Jew and Antonio — iv. 1 (letter) 

Antonio and old Shyloek, both stand — iv. 1 

tell her tlic process of Antonio's end — iv. 1 

Antonio, I am married to a wife — iv. 1 

for half thy ■n'e.alth, it is Antonio's .. — iv. 1 

ay, for the'state, not for Ant.jnio — i«. 1 

what mercy can you render iiini, Antonio — iv. 1 

Antonio, gratify this gentleman .... — iv. 1 

if thou caii'st, unto Antonio's house.. — iv. 1 

toward Belmont: come Antonio .... — iv. 1 

this is Antonio, to whom I am — v. 1 

Antonio, you are welcome; and I have — ..Y* * 

that is Antonio, the duke's eldest All's Well, iii. 5 

Antonio, my fatlier, is deceased . . Taming ofSh. i. 2 

old Antonio's son: my father dead .. — _i. 2 

Petruchio is my name, Antonio's son — ii. 1 

ANTONIUS— directly in Antonius' way./. Ciesar, i. 2 

Antonius. Cf-csar, my lord (repeated) — i. 2 

he did bid Antonius send word yto on — i. 3 
is Ciesar witli Antonius prized so .. Ant.^Cleo.l. \ 

were I the wearer of Antonius' beard — ii. 2 

she is now the ■wife of iVIarcus Antonius — ii- G 

I could do more to do Antonius good — iii. 1 

ANTONY — brotherAntony — holdyou. .MmcA/Wo, v. 1 

but, brother Antony, — come _ — v. 1 

grace's officer, Antony Dull. . Love's L.L. i. 1 (letter) 

an't shall please you; I am Antony Dull — i. 1 
said, Mark Antony's was by Cajsar. . Macbeth, iii. 1 

as valiant as Marli Antony; and he. . Henry V. iii. G 

Antony duke of Brabant, the brother — iv. 8 
man of worship, Antony Woodrille..7?!c/iorrf///. i. 1 
that quick spirit that is in Antony. y^/ms Ccesar, i. 2 

he loves no plays, as thou dost, Antony — i. 2 

whoofferednim the crown? Why Antony — i. 2 

I saw Mark Antony oftijr him a crown — i. 2 

it is not meet, Mark Antony, so well — ii. 1 

let Antony and Caesar fall togetlier . . — ii. I 

for x^LUtony is but a limb of Ccesar — — ii. 1 

and for Mark Antony, think not of him — ii. I 

we'll send Mark Antony to the — ii. - 

Mark Antony shall say, I am not well — iii 

see! Antony, that revels long — ii. 2 

good-morrov/", Antony, so to most noble — ii. '2 

he di'aws Mark Antony out — 

Where's Antony? Fled to his liouse — 
of Antony's. Thus Brutus ()^»^;i'"i/«0 — 
tliat Antony may safely come to him — 
Mark Antony shall not love Cajsar dead — 

so says my master Antonv — 

here comes Antony . V.^elcome, (repeated) — 
U Antony! beg not your death of us — 

swords have leaden points, ?.Iark Antony- 
Mark Antony, pardon me, Caius Cassius — 
were you, Antony, tlie son of Cajsar. . — 
you shall, Mark Antony. Erutns .. — 
do not consent, tliat Antony sj)ea,k. . — ■ 

what Antony shall speak, 1 will — 

Mark Antony, here, take you Ca!sai''s body — 

do you not? I do, Mark Antony — 

his body, mourned by Mark Antony — iii. 2 

for ray sake, stay here wdth Antou^^ — iii. 2 

which Mark Antony, by our permission — iii. Ii 

till Antony have spoke. Stay, ho! (rep.) — iii. 2 

noble Antony go up. For Brutus' sake — iii. 2 

let us hear what Antony can say .... — ii'. ^ 

not a nobler man in Rome than Antony — iii. 2 

read it, Mark.Vntony. The will, the will — iii. '-' 

we will hear it, Antony; you shall .. — iii. 2 

room for Antony; most noble Antony — iii. - 

peace there: hear tlie noble Antony. . — iii. 2 

I Brutus, and Brutus Antony (re;wa(ed) — iii. 2 

hear Antony, most noble Antony — iii. 2 

prick liim down, Antony — iv. 1 

who is youi' sister's son, Mark Antony — iv. I 

come, Antony, and young Octavius — iv. 3 

young Octavius with JNIark Antony have — iv. 3 

and i\Iark Autonj^, come down upon us — iv. 3 

Octavius, Antony, and Lepidus, have — iv. 3 

now, Antony, our hopes arc answered — v. 1 
JIark Antony, shall we give sign of battle? — v. 1 

Antony, tlie posture of your blows .. — v. 1 
for yoii have stolen their buzzing, Antony — v. 1 

conie, Antony, away: defiance, traitors — v. 1 

wliilst we by Antoiiy are all enclosed.. — v. 3 

Mark Antony is in your tents — v. 3 

as Cassius' legions are by Antony . . — v. 3 

tell Antony, Brutus is ta'eii — v. 4 

safe, Antony; Brutus is safe enough. . — v. 4 

more tlian Octavius, and Mark Antony — v. 5 
nay, hear thcni, Antony. Fiihia.. . . .dnt.'^- Cleo. i. 1 

therefore, hear it, Antony: Where's .. ■ — i. 1 

thou blushest, Antony; and tliat blood — i. 1 

the fool I am not; Antony will be liimsclf — i. 1 

when he is not Antony ." — i. I 

still should go witli .Antony — i. 1 

hush! here comes Ant*Jny.' Not he.. — i . 2 

Antony, thou wouldst say, — O, my lordl — i. 2 

but here comes Antony. I am sick.. — i . 3 

quicklv ill, and ■well: so Antony loves — i. 3 

my oblivion is a very Antony, and I am — i. 3 

yet must Antony no way excuse his — i. 4 

Antony, leave tliv lasei^vious wassels — i. 4 

gap of time, my Antony is away .... — i. 4 



ANT 



ANTONY— the weight of Antony \....Aiil.^- Cleo. i. 5 
how much unlike art thou Mark Antnny! — i. 5 
how f-'oes it with my hrave Mark Antony! — i. 5 

when 1 tori:et to send to Antony — 1, 5 

nnotlicr emphasis! say, the hrave Antony — i. 5 

Marl; Aiitonv iu Enypt sits at dinner — ii. 1 

in lu'inr ti'-itlier, looking fur Antony — li. 1 

M:irk Auiom is every liour iu Home — ii. 1 

tile ii^''er l\l^t-\^ earieil Autouv _ ii. I 

C;esur ami Antony shall well greet.. — ii. 1 

I tliiuk, not moved by Antony — ii. 1 

let ^VnLiiny look over Caisar's liead .. — ii. 2 

here eomcs the noble Antony ^ li. 2 

great .Mark Antony is now a widower — ii. 2 

take Antony Oeta\'ia to his wife — ii. 2 

not till lie hears how Antony is touehed — ii. 2 

niilile A ntouy, not sickness should detain — ii. 2 

when she first met Mark Antony — ii. 2 

O, rare for Antony I I Icr gentlewomen — ii. 2 

All t.iny, euthroiied iu the market-place — ii. 2 

niion lier lauding. -Viitony sent to her — ii. 2 

our courteous Aitouy, whom ne'er the — ii. 2 

now, Antony must leave her utterly — ii . 2 

can settle the heaa-t of Antony, Octa\'ia — ii. 2 

tlieretbre, O Antony, stay not by — ii. 3 

sir. JIark Antony, mil e'en but Idss — ii. 4 

I'll think them every one an Aulony — ii. 5 

madam, madam,— Antony's dead • — ii. 5 

if Antony be ti-ee, and healthful — ii. 5 

yet if thou say, Autony lives, is well.. — ii. 5 

jiraisiug Antony, I have dispraised Caisar — ii. 5 

but Jlark Antony put me to some . . — ii. U 

no, Antony, take' the lot — ii. 6 

not so; wliich is iNIark Antony — ii. ti 

Antony will use his altl'etion where.. — ii. 6 

good Antony, your hand — ii. 7 

I Antony, you have my father's house — ii. 7 

so thy grand ca)itain Antony sliall .. — iii. 1 

Caisa'r and Antony have ever won .. — iii. 1 

thou wilt VTite to Antony? — iii. 1 

how deurlv he adores jMai'k Axitony!. — iii. 2 

wh.it's Autony? The God of Jupiter — iii.'-' 

n Antony! thou Arabian bird I .. — V.'.- - 

he loves Anton 3': ho! hearts, tongues — iii- 2 

^ing, number, ho, his love to Antony — JH- - 

luo'st noble Antony, let not the — iii. 2 

wjien Antony found Julius Cassar dead — iii. 2 

when Antony is gone through wdiom — iii. 3 

between her brother and JIark Antony — iii. S 

Where's Antony? He's walking in the — iii. 5 

bring nic to Antony. Come, sir ... . — iii. 5 

the wife of Antony should have an army — iii. G 

my lord, Mark Antony, hearing that you — iii. 

only the adulterous Antony — iii. 5 

yoiir presence needs must puzzle Antony — iii. 7 

ruin other magic, Antony, claps on — iii. 8 

vet follow the wounded chance of Antony — iii. 8 

let him appear that's come from Autony — iii. 10 

such as I am, I come from Antony .. — i;i. 10 

for Antony, I have no ears to Ms request — iii. 10 

from Antony win Cleopatra — Hi- '" 

observe how Antony becomes his flaw — iii. 10 

Antony, or we, in fault for this? Antony — iii. 1 1 

so, hap'ly, are they friends to .fVntony — iij. 11 

that vou embrace not Antony as you — iii. 1 1 

to be"sm-e of that, I will ask Antony — iii. 11 

vou had left Antony, and put yourself — iii- 1 1 

have you no ears? I am Autony yet — iji- H 

Mark Antony,— tug him away — iij. 1' 

portends alone the fall of Antony — iji- " 

since my lord is Antony again — iii. 11 

personal combat, Cajsar to Antony . . — iv. I 

those that served Mark Antony but late — iv. 1 

earned the w'aste : poor Antony — iv. 1 

clapped up together in an Antony . . — iv. 2 

Hercules, whom Antony loved — iv. 3 

single fight! Then Antony,— but now — iv. 4 

the gods make this a happy day to Antony — iv. 5 

our will is, Antony be took alive — iv. G 

Antony is come into the field — iv. C 

that Antony may seem to speed his . . — jv. 6 

to Jewry, on affairs of Antony — iv. 6 

and leave his master Antony — . iv. 6 

Enobarbus, Antony hath after thee sent — iv. fi 

O Antony, thou mine of bounty — iv. 6 

O Antony, nobler than my revolt — iv. 9 

O Antony! O Antony! Let's speak.. — iv. 9 

Antony is valiant, and deiected — iv. 10 

fortune and Antony part here — iv. 10 

say, that the last I spoke was Antony — iv. 1 1 

here I am, Antony; yet cannot — iv. 12 

no, Antony; my mistress loved thee — iv. 12 

Binike was, Antony! most noble Antony — iv. 12 

groan did break the name of Antony — iv. 12 

escape the sorrow of Antony's death — iv. 12 

Where's Antony? There, Diomcd, there — iv. 12 

iVntony, Antony, Antony! Charinian — iv. 13 
o'erthrown Antony, but Antony's hath — iv. 13 
none but Antony should conquer Autony — iv. 13 
but come, come, Antony! help me .. — iv. 13 
JIark Antony, I served, who best — v. 1 

1 say, O Cicsar, Antony is dead — v. 1 

the death of Antony is nota simple doom — v. 1 

O Antony! I have followed thee to this — v. 1 

Antonj' did tell me of you, bade .... — v. 2 

yet to imagine au Antony, were .... — v. 2 

uy taking Antony's course, you shall — v. 2 

Antony shall be brought drunken forth — v. 2 

for Cydnns, to meet Mark Autony . . — v. 2 

methluks, I hear Antony call — v. 2 

if she first meet the curled Antony . . — v. 2 

O Antony! Nay, I will take thee too — v. 2 

as she would catch another Antony . . — v. 2 

she shall be Inu-icd by her Antony „ — v. 2 
Antonv! aadl'otpan! Ay,boj..Jtomeo^ Juliet, i. a 

ANTKliS— of antres vast, anddestirts idle.O'Ac/te, i. 3 
ANVIL— his iron did on the anvil cool John, iv. 2 

here I clip the anvil of my aword . . Coriolanus, iv. 5 
APACE— the charm dissolves apace Tempest, v. 1 

ore pleasant, sir! and speak apace . .fl/ea. /or iV. Iii. 2 



[25] 



APACE— 
our nuptial hour draws on apace .Mid. N. Drm. i. 1 
stayed an houi-, and talked apace . Love's L. LosIjY. 2 
quickly, and speak apace: I would. -4s yoK Like, iii. 2 
come apace, good Audrey; I mil, . — iii, 3 

approaches apace; I would gladly AlCsiyell.iv. 3 

Sunday comes apace: we will have. Tcanina' o/S. ii. ) 

gentle heart! Kate, cat apace — iv. 3 

rounds apace: we shall present .. Winter's Tnle, ii. 1 
now spm's the lated traveller apace . . Madietli, iii. 3 

the holy legate comes apace Hint; John, v, 2 

the king colnes on apace 1 Henry IF. v. 2 

come apace to the king Henri/ V. iv. 8 

great weeds dogro\y apace liiclmrd III. ii. 4 

the future comes apace Timon of Alliens, ii. 2 

Brutus, come ai)ace, and see how .Julius Ccesar, y. 3 
creeps apace into the hearts of. . . . Antony <§■ Cleo. i. 3 

thou bleed'st apace. I had — iv. 7 

apace, Eros, apace. No more a soldier — iv. 12 
O, come; apace, despatcli: I partly .. — v. 2 
Regan, I bleed apace: untimely .... Kinf; Lear, iii. 7 
powers o' the kingdom approach apace — iy. 7 1 

iKnifflU anon? Before, and apace].iio;». ^-Jul. ii. 4 

gallop apace, you fiery footed steeds — iii. 2 | 

your rOof. A'nf.-unblest] fate hies apace. OMei/o, v. 1 | 
At ART — go apart, Adam, and thou. /is you Like it, i, 1 
why, thy godliead laid apart, warr'st — iv, 3 (letter) 
to put apart these your attendants ., Winter's T. ii, 2 
therefore I keep it lonely, apart; hut here — v. 3 
stay, stand apart; I know not . . Com. of Errors, v. 1 
resolve yourselves apart; I'll eome ..Macbeth, iii. 1 : 

all revetence set apart, to him Kijig John, iii. \ 

stand all apai't, and show fair duty. Richard II. iii. 3 

and la3' apart the borrowed glories Henry K. ii. 4 

to lay apart their particular functions — iii- 7 
in jirivate will I talk with thee apart ..\Hen. VI. i. 2 | 
and Henry put apart, the next for me.2Hen. VI. iii. 1 
sirs, stand apart; the king shall know — iii. 2 
all apart; cousin of Buckingham ...Richard III. iv. 2 
man apart, all single and alone . . Timon of Ath.y. 1 

get thee apart, and weep Julius Ccrsar, iii. 1 

to lay liis gav comparisons apart. . Anl, <§- Cleo, Iii. 11 

Cesar's will? Hear it apart — iii. 11 

I have kept apart for Livia — .v. 2 

away ; apart upon our knees Cymbeline, iv. 2 

drew myself apart, and almost broke. Titus And. v. 1 , 
to draw, apart the body he hath killed. .Hamic(, iv. 1 1 
go but apart, make choice of whom . . — iv. 5 i 

the wlille to draw the Moor apart Othello, ii. 3 | 

come, go with me apart ; I will withdraw — iii. 3 1 

stand you awhile apart; confine yourself — iv. 1 | 

APE — sometimes like apes, that moe ... Tempest, li. 2 | 

turn'd to barnacles, or to apes — ^X- ^ i 

like an angr,y ape, plays. , . Measure for Measure, ii, 2 ! 

and lead h'isapes iutoliell Much Ado, ii, 1 1 

so deliver I up my apes — ii. 1 | 

bo.ys, apes, braggarts, Jacks — v. 1 

a giant to an ape, but then is an ape — v. 1 

on meddling monkey, or on busy ape, Mi'd. iV,D,_ii. 2 
fox, the a_iie, and the humble-bee.. iojie's L. L. iii, 1 
the ape his keeper, the tired horse,. — iv, 2 
this is the ape of form, monsieur , . — v. 2 

more new-fangled than an ape ..As you Lilie it, iv. 1 
love to her, lead apes in hell ... Taming of Shrew, ii. I 

so perfectly he is her ape iVinler's Tale,y. 2 

no, I am an ape. If thou art... Comedy o/ii;;»-o)s,ii. 2 

out, you mad-headed aye 1 Henry / F. ii. 3 

have not transformed lum ape 2Hemy Ii'. ii. 2 

alas, poor ape, how thou sweat'st — .ii. 4 

from every region, apes of idleness .. — iv. 4 
because that lam little, like an ape..B!c7i. III. iii. 1 
from slaves that apes would beat? . . Coriolanus, i. 4 
yon showed your teeth like apes. ..Julius Ccesar, y. 1 
for apes and monkeys, 'twixt two .... Cymbeline, i. 7 
O sleep, thou ape of death, lie dull .. — ii. 2 
is jollity for apes, and grief for boys — iv. 2 
the ape is dead, and I must conjure. ..Rom. ^Jul. ii. 1 
like the famous ape, to try conclusions .Hamlet, iii. 4 

he keeps them, like an ape — iv. 2 

APE-BEAREK— since an ape-bearer. Winter's T. iv, 2 
AFEMANTUS— 
glass-faced flatterer to Apemantns. Timon ofAth. i, 1 
good-morrow to thee, gentle Apemantns — i, 1 

you know me, Apemantns — i. 1 

thou art proud, Apemautus — i. 1 

how likest thou this picture, Apemantus — i. 1 

wilt dine with me, Apemantns? — i. 1 

howdostthoulikethis jewel, Apemantns? — i. 1 
do then, Apemantns? Even as Apemantns — i. 1 
art not thou a merchant? Ay: Apemantns — i. 1 
what time 0' day is't, Apemantns? . . — i. 1 

why, Apemantns? should'st have kept — i. 1 

OApemantus! you are welcome — i. 2 

good dich thy good heart, Apemantns ! — i. 2 
now, Apemantns, if thou wert not svdlen — i. 2 
here comes the fool with Apemantus — ii. 2 

are we, Apemantns? Asses. Whj^? ., — ii, 2 

how dost thou, Apemantus? 'would,, — ii, 2 

Apemautus, read me the superscription — ii. 2 
answer might have become Apemantus — ii, 2 
where feed st thou o' days, Apemantus — iv, 3 
thou do with the world, Apemantus, , — - iv, 3 

rather be a beggar's dog, than Apemantus — iv, 3 
APENNINES— the Alps and x\.penniues,, ..Jo/i«, i. 1 

APEX — me pompaj provexit apex Pericles, ii. 2 

A- PIECE— and two-pence a-piece ..Merry iVifcs.i. 1 

a month's length a-j licce, by an -UCs Well. iv. 3 

bonds of forty iiouud a-|)iece, and ...illein y If', iii, 3 

forty, fifty, a him(b*ed ducats a-piece , , Ilamlel, ii. 2 

APISH— apish, shallow, inconstant ..As ynu Like, iii. 2 

this apish and unmannerly approach . Ki)ig John, v. 2 

still our tardy, apish nation Richard II. ii. 1 

French nods, and api^h com-tesy liichard III. i. 3 

their manners are so apish Lear.i. 4 (song) 

APOLLINEM— ad Apollinem, ad .7V/,k Andron. iv'.'i 
Al'OLLO— Apollo Hies, and Daphne.. jV/rf. A'.'s B.ii. 2 
as bright Apollo's lute, strung . . Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 
are hai-sh alter the songs of Apollo . . — v. 2 
hark! Apollo plays and twenty .. Tam.of S. 2 (ind.) 
sight shall sad Apollo weep — 2 (ind.) 



APP 

APOLLO-Delphos, toApolIo'stemple. Winler'sT. ii. 1 

the great Apollo suddenly will — ii. 3 

great Apollo, turn all to the best — iii . ! 

thus by Apollo's great divine scaled up — iii. 1 

the oracle ; Apollo be iny judge — iii. 2 

and in Apollo s name, his oracle .,,. — iii. 2 
deliveredof great Apollo's priest (rep.) — iii. 2 
Ajiollo's'angry, and the heavens (j-p/),) — iii 2 
and that Apollo would, this being indeed — iii. 3 
golden Apollo, a poor humble swain — iv. 3 

has not the divine Apollo said — v. 1 

tcl I me, Apollo, for thj' Daphne's love. Troil.^- Cr.i. 1 
though Apollo knows, 'tis dry enough — i. 3 
ivrinkles Apollo's, and makes pale .. - ii. 2 

unless the fiddler Apollo get his — iii. 3 

Apollo, Pallas, Jove, or Mercury.. rt;«s.<4ndron.iv. 1 
this to Apollo ; this to the god of war — iv, 4 
Apollo, perfect me i' the characters , , Pericles, iii, 2 

now, b.y Apollo (repeated) King Lear, i, 1 

APOI-LODOKUS-Apollodorus carried .Anl.^Cl. ii, 6 
APOLOGY — I will have an apology, , Love's L. L. v. 1 

ergo, I come with this apology — v. 2 

strengthened with what apology you..-4^/'s Well, ii. 4 

mj' lord, there needs no such apology. /i/c/i. III. iii. 7 

or shaU we on without apology? ..Romeo ^ Juliet, i. 4 

-^POPLEX— this apoplex will, certaui..2Hen.iF.iv. 4 

APOPLEXED — that sense is apoplexed . Homie^ iii. 4 

APOPLEXY — same whoreson apoi)lexy.2Hen. IF. i. 2 

this apoplexy is, as I take it — i. 2 

peace is a very apoplexy', lethargy . . Coriolanus, i v. 5 
APOSTLE — the prophets and apostles. 2Henr7/ FI. i. 3 

by the apostle Paul, shadows Richard III. v. 3 

APOSTROPHE-not the apostrophes. lore's i. i. iv. 2 

APOTHECARY— bid the apothecary.2Hen;!/Fi. iii. 3 

civet, good apothecary, to sweeten my . . , , Lear,iY. 6 

I do remember an apothecary , , Romeo ^ Juliet, v. 1 

what, ho! apothecarj'! Who calls so loud — v, 1 

true apothecary ! thy drugs are quick — v, 3 
APPAL — ^when every noise appals me , , Macbeth, ii. 2 

on that which might appal the devil — iii. 4 

Sagittary appals our ninnbers Troilus fy Cres. v. 5 

make mad the guilty, and appal the free. ;J'";iii",ii. 2 

APPALLED— your cheer appalled. . . , I Hury ri. i, 2 
that the appalled air may pierce, T>'oi7«s ^ C';t.ss. iv. 5 

-'Vl'PAREL — women in men's apparel, .ilje/-?-)//'', iii. 3 
fijr all he was in woman's ajix^arel. . . . — y. h 
every true man's apparel fits (rep.)..Mea.forM. iv, 2 
dress him in my apparel, and make , , Much Ado, ij. 1 

the infernal Ate iu good apparel — , ji, I 

yes, it is apparel jil- 3 

wears out more apparel than the man — iii. 3 
and thorns at their apparel snatch ,il/i'd. A". Dr.iii. 2 
get your apparel together; good strings — iv. 2 

1 beseech thee apparel thy head. . Lore's L.LosI, v. 1 
and snore, and rend apparel out., il/c^'c/i.^/Tt'/), ii, ."j 

to disgrace my man's apjiarel ^Is you Like It, ii. 4 

aud in man's apparel? Looks he as.. — iii. 2 
not out oiyom- aijparel, and j'et out of — iv. 1 

by wearing his apparel neatly All's Well, iv. 3 

what apparel he will wear.. romYHg-o/S/i. 1 (indue.) 
puts my apparel and my countenance on — _i. 1 
costly apparel, tents, and canopies . . — n. 1 
a very monster in apparel; and not like — iii. 2 

but formal in apparel, in gait — iv. 2 

money and apparel ta'en trom me. . Winter' sT. iv. 2 

that put me into tins apparel — iv. 2 

apparel vice lilce virtue's harbinger. Com. ofEr. iii. 2 
my gay apparel for an a\m's-JxiS\i's. Richardll. iii. 3 
enterecl into for gay apparel, 'gainst — T. 2 
but in vile apparel, and send youback.2Hen.ir._i. 2 
for his apparel is built upon his back — jii, 2 
trussed him, and all his apjiarel, into — iii. 2 
and Iwill apparel them all in one. .2fl'en7'y FI. iv. 2 
is my apparel sumptuous to behold. . — iv. 7 
dost thou with thy best apparel on. . Jul. Ca>sa7-,i. 1 
bring this apiiarel to my chamber . . Cymbeline, iii. 5 
for the apparel oft proclaims the man . . Hamlet, i. 3 

APPARELED— shall come appareled.il/iic/i-4do, iv. 1 
are appareled thus, like Muscovites. .Loue'si.L. v. 2 
oftentimes he goes but mean appareled. Tam.of S.iii. 2 
not so well appareled as I wish you. . — iii. 2 
of old Adam new appareled?. . Comedy of Errors, iv. 3 
on my side it is so well appai'eled . . 1 Henry VI. ii. 4 
sec, where she comes, appareled like Periclesj i. 1 

APPARENT — is it now apparent?. il/ea.,/'o;- Men. iv. 2 
without apparent hazard of his . . Two Gen. of V_ i. 3 
is thy strange apparent cruelty. . . .ilfer. of Ven. iv. 1 

he's apparent to my heart Winter's Tale, i. 2 

(for, to a vision so apparent, rumour.. — _i. 2 
it is apparent foul-play; and 'tis shame.. John, iy, 2 
some apparent danger seen in him . , Richard II. i, 1 
although apparent guilt be seen in , . — iv. 1 
apparent that thou art heir apparent. IHeH/yJf. i. 2 
from this open and apparent shame . . — ii. 4 
by some apparent sign, let ushave..lHe«;!/F/._ii. 1 
doth front thee with apparent spoU . . — iv. 2 
if death be so apparent, then both fly — iy. 5 
I'll draw it as apparent to the crovm.SHenry FI. ii. 2 
as harm apparent, in my opinion ..Ridiardlll. ii. 2 
to no apparent likelihood of breach .. — li. 2 

his apparent' open guilt omitted — iii. .5 

no less apparent to the vrUgar eye. , Coriolanus, iy. 7 

these apparent prodigies Julius Ca-sar, ii. 1 

if you can make't ap|)arcnt Cymbeline, ii. 4 

vou see, it is apparent: who found . . Titus And. ii, 4 

APPA R l) NTL Y— if he should scorn me so 

apparently Comedy of Errors, iv. 1 

APPARITION— fine apparition I Tempest, i. 2 

a thousand blushing apparitions Much Ado, iv. 1 

that shapes this monstrous apparition. J«J/'usC. iv. 3 

if again this apparition come Hamlet, 1. 1 

made true and good, the apparition comes — i. 2 

APPEACII— I will appeach the 3'illain. . Ricli.II. v. 2 
twenty times my son, I would aiipeach liim — v. 2 

A.PPEACIIED— to the full appeached. . All's Well, i. 3 

APPEAL— duke, aud appeal to him . . Mea.for M. i. 3 
thus to retort your manifest appeal . . — y . 1 
lappeal to your own conscience.. Winter'sTale, iii. 2 
make good the boisterous late appeal. /iic/iard//. i. 1 
if he appeal the duke on ancient .... — i. 1 



APP 

APPEAI>— to apiical each other of liigh. . Rich.ll. i. 1 

of Hereford that appeals me — . i- 3 

as true, in thisa|ipeal, aathou — iv. 1 

is guilty of niv true appeal — ■ iv. 1 

■n-henevervetwasyourappeal denied .2Iffn./r. iv. 1 
the will of God, to whom I do appeal. . Henry V. i. 2 
to which we all appeal. The mercy. . — ii. 2 
to heaven I do appeal, how 1 have . .2Henry VI. n. 1 

appeal unto the Pope, to bring Henry VIII. ii. 4 

to call back her appeal she intends . . — u. 4 
and your appeal to us there make .. — .v. 1 
upon his own appeal, seizes him ..Ant. Sf Cleo. m. 5 

or we appeal, and from thv justice fly Cymb. v. 4 

APPEAXED— as for the rest appealed. .Ri'c/iard/J. i. 1 
APPEAK— than he appears by speech ..Tempest, i. 2 

appear, and pertl V — no tongue — iv.l 

for it appears by "their Tiro Gen. of Verona, u. 4 

that my love may appear plain — v. 4 

though" she appear honest to me . . ilerry ll'wet,u. 2 

it appears so hy his weapons — iii. 1 

and appear fresh Twclflh i\ighl, ii. 5 (letter) 

let it appear in thy smiling. . — ii- 5 (letter) 
why appear you ^vith this ridicnloxis — lu. 4 
on "purpose tKat I may appear stubborn — iii. 4 
his dishonesty appears, iu leaving. ... — iii. 4 

must needs appear offence Measure for Meas. ii. 4 

thus wisdom wishes to appear more bright — ii. 4 
as it appears accountant to the law . . — _ii. 4 
he would appear a pond as deep as hell — iii. 1 

that appears not foul in the truth — iii. 1 

and he shall appear to the envious — m. 2 

to make the truth appear, where it .. — v. 1 
let her appear, and he shall marry her — T. 1 
and there ap^iears much joy in Mm . . il/Hc/i Ado, i. 1 

as a dream, till it appear itself — .i. 2 

graces will appear, and there's an end — ii. 1 
that no dishonesty shall appear in me — ii. 2 
there shall appear such seeming truth — _i;. 2 
as it appears lie hath, he is O'cpealein — iii. 2 
let that appear hereafter, and aim better — iii. 2 
let that appear when there is no need — iii- 3 

as it may appear unto you — iii. 5 

that which appears in proper nakedness — ir. 1 
now thy image doth appear in the rare — v. 1 

it appears not in this confession — v. 2 

as it appears in the true course — v. 4 

when hawthorn buds appear . . Mid. N.'s Dream,!. 1 

iu thine eye that shall appear — .?}• 3 

bv and by I will to thee appear — iii. 1 

I'll charm his eyes, against she do appear — iii. 2 
in their nativity all truth appears . . — iii. 2 

it appears, bv liis small light of — v. 1 

while these \'isions did appear — (epilogue) 

one more fool, ajipearl Love's Lahour Lost, iv. 3 

there is no certain princess that appears — iv. 3 
ridiculous appears, to check their ft)lly — v. 2 
well then, it now appears, you need. Mer. of Ven.\. 3 
in such eyes as ours appear not faults — ii. 2 
I shall appear by the time I linger here — ,ii. 9 
there doth appear among the buzzing — iii. 2 
besides, it should appear, that if he had — iii. 2 

honour more appears, than any — }H- 2 

wliich appears most strongly iu bearing — iii. 4 
it must appear that malice bears — — iv. 1 
it doth appear you are a worthy judge — iv. 1 
for it appears by manifest proceeding — iv. 1 
it must appear "in other ways than . . — y . 1 
well in thee appears the constant . . .is you Like, ii. 3 
if it appear not inconvenient to you.. — v. 2 
if it appear not plain, and prove untrue. AlVs Well.r. 3 
my wrong, the more my spite appears. Tnm.ofS. iv. 3 

ye't that dare less appear so fVinter'sTale, ii. 3 

%vill have the truth of this appear — ii. 3 

that the queen appear in person here — iii. 2 

I have strained to appear thus — ijj- 2 

the causes of her death appear, unto — iii. 2 
nor shall appear in Sicily— my lord.. — iv. 3 
(where we offenders now appear) .... — v. 1 
but it appears, she lives, though yet — v. 3 
so it doth appear by the wrongs. . Comedy of Er. iii. 1 
they appear to men, like angels of. . .. — iv. 3 
and yet the eighth appears, who bears, il/acdetfi, iv. I 
doc3"appcar, there is nor flying hence.. — v. 6 
king Kichard doth himself appear . . Richardll. iii. 3 

may appear at large diseoiused — v. 6 

it appears so by the story XHenry IV. iii. 3 

vou have, as it appears to me iHenry IV. }\. 1 

let them appear as I call — iii. 2 

for your part, it not appears tome .. — jv. 1 
and' wherein it shall appear that your — iv. 1 
sorrow so royally in you appears, that — v. 2 
till their conversations appear more wise — v. 5 
thus dotli it well ajjpear, the Salique. . Henry V. i. 2 

all appear to hold in right and title — i. 2 

swallowed, and digested, appear before us — ii. 2 
let housewifery appear; keep close .... — ii. 3 

60 appears this fleet majcstical — iii. (cho.) 

and water never appear in him — iii. 7 

and when it appears, it will bate — iii. 7 

though it appear a little out of fashion — iv. 1 
he appears but a man; and though .... — iv.l 

to cry amen to that, we thus appear — v. 2 

the better I shall appear: my — v. 2 

that he will appear in his true likeness — v. 2 

he must ajipcar naked, and blind — v. 2 

m. >tlier deigned to appear to me 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

shall this night appear how much — ii. 1 

the truth appears 60 naked on . .^ — ii. 4 

it doth appear: why look you stillso — iii. 1 
appear, and aid me" in this enterprize — v. 3 
as may appear, bv Edward's good..3Hcnry VI. iii. 3 

[Col. kni so it appears by that Yl.Richardlll. iii. 2 

jn that very shape he shall appear. . Henry VIII. i. 1 
almost appears in loud rebellion (rpp.) — i.2 

wlicrein he appears, as I could wish.. — ill* ^ 
and anpear in forms more horrid .... — 111- ^ 
how sleek and wanton ye appear .... — iii. 2 

see you do appear before them — y. 1 

that shall from mine eyes ai>pear .. Trail. ^, Cress, i. 2 
appear it to your minci, that — iii. 3 



[20 ] 



APPEAR— to appear this morning . . Troil.fr Crcs. v. 3 
sometime, it appears like alord... Timon of .itii. ii. 2 
how fairly tliis lord strives to appear foul — iii. 3 
and I must needs appear. In like . . — iii. 6 
can ever appear in y(mr impediment .Coriolanus, i. 1 
to Aufldius thus I "will appear, and fight — i. !> 
who's yonder, that does appear as he — i. 6 

never would he appear i' tne market-place — ii. 1 
call for C!oriolanu6. He doth appear — ii . 2 

Hob and Dick, that do appear, their .. — ii. 3 

AufidiuB will appear well in these wars — iv. 3 

but I appear not like a guest — iv. 5 

intends to appear before the people . . — y. 5 

when you saw his chariot but appear. /«/. Cuesar, i. 1 
which would appear ortence in us — — i. 3 
shall no wliit appear, but all he buried — ii. I 
though now we must appear bloody.. — iii. 1 
will appear such as he is, fidl of regard — i v. 2 
that you have wronged me, doth appear — iv. 3 
let it appear so; make yoirr vaunting — iv. 3 
though they do appear as huge as high — iy. 3 
him appear: these strong Egyptian. ..-Inf. SrCleo. i. 2 

and it appears, he is beloved of — i. 4 

thou would'st appear most ugly — _il. 5 

we shall appear before him — iu. 1 

when it appears to you where this. ... — 111' * 
long ere she did appear; the trees — — 111''' 
will appear there for a man: speak not — iii. 7 
how appears the fight? on our side . . — ..l"- 8 
let him appear that's come from Antony — iii. 10 
I will appear in blood: and my sword — iii. 11 

that dar St appear thus to us? — v. 1 

'twould appear by external swelling. . — y. 2 

I will leave to appear hereafter Cymbeline, i. 6 

(you not making it appear otherwise) — _ i. 5 
that, which to appear itself, must not — iii. 4 

must needs appear, niikingl ike — iii. 5 

this youth, howe'er distressed, appears — ly. 2 

with 't I may appear a gentleman Pericles, n. 1 

he appears to have practised more ....— li. 2 
the sea-tost prince appears to speak — iii. (Gower) 
diamonds of a most praised water appear — iii. 2 
Dionyza does appear mth Leonine — iv. (Gower) 

and am no other than I appear — v. 1 

reverend Cerimon there well appears — v. 3 (Gower) 

it appears not which of the dukes Lear,i. 1 

since thus thou wilt appear, freedom — — i. 1 

cast her off, appears too grossly — i. 1 

agreat abatement of kindness appears — i. 4 

and bitter fool will presently appear — _ i. 4 

upon the beach, appear like mice — iv. 6 

tattered clothes small vices do appear — iv. 6 

let but the herald cry and I'll appear again — v. 1 

to appear where you shall hold — v.3 

if none appear to prove upon thy —v.3 

let him appear at the third sound — v. 3 (herald) 

why he appears upon this call — y. 3 

appear thou in the likeness of. ..Romeo ^ Juliet, ii. 1 
in thy likeness thou appear to us — _ii. 1 

and cold, appear like death — iv.l 

tush I tush! 'twill not appear ,. Hamlet,}. I 

(as it doth well appear unto our state) . . — i. 1 
cap-a-pie, appears before them, and, with — _i. 2 
why, it appears no other thing to me .... — ii. 2 
should more appear like entertainment — ii. 2 
it well appears; but tell me, why you.. — iy. 7 
prizes the virtue that appears in Cassio..O//ie»o, ii. 3 

APPEARANCE-appearanceof fancy.. MucA Ado, iii. 2 
thi-ee times slain the appearance ot. .2 Henry IV. i. 1 
you see what a ragged appearance it is — iii. 2 

out of appearance.' X do confess my Henry F. ii.^ 

possess nim with any appearance of fear — iv. 1 
deny the appearance of a naked blind boy — v. 2 
and quick appearance argues proof.. 1 Henry VI. y. 3 
appearance make in any of their. . Henry VIII. li. 4 
for not appearance, and the king's late — iv. 1 
thou hast a grim appearance, and . . Coriolanus, iy. 5 
requires your haste post-haste appearance ..0th. i. 2 
with frank appearance their purposes — i. 3 

APPEARED— hath appeared m me . . . Twelfth ff.i.b 
lord Angelo, have still appeared . . Mea.for Mea.y. 1 
in her eye there hath appeared a fire. iV/ucA Ado, iv. 1 

is our whole dissembly appeared? — jy. 2 

thy mother appeared to me last... Winter'sTale, iii. 3 
than formerly he hath appeared. . — iv. 1 

appeared upon the coast, on Wednesday — iv. 3 

cf wonder appeared in them — y. 2 

strange motions have appeared 1 Henry IV. ii. 3 

damned commotion so appeared IHenrylV. iv. 1 

appeared to me but as a common man ..Hen. V.iv. 8 
well appeared in his lineaments ..Rithcird III. iii. 5 

at which appeared against him Henry VIII. ii. 1 

cited by them, but appeared not — iy. 1 

it seemed, appeared to Rome Coriolanus, i. 1 

your favour is well appeared by your — iv. 3 
the ghost of (ifflsar hath appeared. . Julius Cwsar, y. .5 
there she appeared indeed; or my ..Ant. Sf Cleo. ii. 2 
of the goddess Isis that day appeared — iii. 6 

like a pair of twins appeared — iii. 8 

she hath not appeared before the Cymbeline, iii. 5 

upon his eagle backed, appeared to me — y. .5 

what, has this thing appeared again Hamlet, i. 1 

image even but now appeared to us' — i. 1 

to hiin appeared to be a preparation — ji. 2 

it hath not appeared. I grant (rep.).... Othello, iv. 2 

AI'PE ARER — reverend appearer, no Pericles, v. 3 

APPEARETH— here appeareth due. Afer. ofVen. iv. 1 
as well appeareth by the cause you . . Ricnard II. i. 1 

APPEARING— not appearing what. Winter's T. iv 1 
already appearing in the blossomsof.. — v. 2 

we sec the appearing buds 2Henry IP', i. 3 

on the earth with yet appearing blood — iv. 1 
one appearing hair, that wiU not . Hen. V. iii. (cho.) 
so appearing to the common eyes ...Jul. Cwsar, ii. 1 

APPEASE — to appease an angry God . . Macbeth, iy. 3 
deep jirayere cannot appease thee . . Richard III. i. 4 
so children temporal lathers do appease... Ci/mt.y. 4 
to appease tlicir groaning shadows . . Titus .4nd. i. 2 
mutinvthere he hastes t' appease .Pen'cies, iii. (Gow.) 

APPE AiSEU- be appeased with slaughter . Cymb. v. 5 



APP 

APPEASED— 
the Eternarswrath'sttppeased..rK'o Gen. ofVer. v. 4 

rebels would be soon appeased iltenry VI. iv. 4 

Lewis and Warwick be appeased . . . .3Hcn. VI. iv. 1 
till we have appeaned the multitude.../, drsar, iii. 1 

APPELLANT— come I appellant to.. .Richard II. i. 1 
the summons of the appellant's trumpet — i. 3 
the appellant in all duty greets .... — i. 3 
lords appellants, your difterences .... — iv.l 

are the appellant and defendant 2HenryVI. ii. 3 

than is the appellant, the servant.... — ii. 3 

APPELLE— qu'ils sontappelle de fingres.Hen. V. iii. 4 
EscoutezI comment estes-vous appellej — iv. 4 

APPELLEE— elle est appellee, de hand — iii. 4 

APPELLEZ — comment appeUez-vous la main - iii. 4 
comment appellez-vousles ongles.. .. — iii. 4 

comment appellez-vous le col? — iii. 4 

comment appellez-voiLS les pieds et la — iii. 4 

APPELLONS-les onglesTles appellonsde nails - iii. 4 

APPENDIX — against you come with your 

appendix TamingofShrar, iv. 4 

APPERIL—C Co((ier. Knight let me stay at tliine 

apjieril, Timon] Timonof Athens, i. 2 

APl'E RTAIN— all rites that appertain unto 

her burial Much Ado, iv. 1 

know no secrets that appertain to you. .^. Ctvsar, ii. 1 
what most nearly appertains to us both . . Lear^ i. 1 

APl'ERTAIWING-businessappertaining. Temp. iii. 1 
a congruent epitheton, appertaining .Love'sL.L.i. 2 
appertaining rage to such a greeting. Rom. ^ Jul. iii. 1 

APPERTAINMENT— and we lay by our 

aiipertainments, visiting . . Troilus fy Cressida , ii. 3 

APPERTINENT— as an appertinent title to 

your old Love's Lahour Lost, i. 2 

other gifts appertinent to man .... 2 Henry IV. i. 2 
ail appertinents belonging to his Henry V. ii. 2 

APPETITE— the appetite of her eye. fl/erry H'ives, i. 3 
appetite may sicken, and so die . . Twelfth Night, i. I 
and taste with a distempered appetite — _i. 5 

their love may be called appetite — ii. 4 

or that his appetite is more to Mea.for Mea. i. 4 

fit thy consent to my sharp appetite — ii. 4 
both right and wrong to the appetite — ii. 4 

but doth not the appetite alter? Much Ado, ii. 3 

with that keen appetite that he Mer. of Ven. ii. 6 

his spirit, his appetite, his sleep.. Winter's Tale, ii. 3 
now, good digestion wait on appetite .Macbeth, iii. 4 
cloy the hungry edge of appetite .... Richard II. i. 3 
belike then, my appetite was not.. 2 Henry IV. ii. 2 
fl,nd your appetites, and yom- digestions. Hen.V. v. 1 
and bestial appetite in change ot hiat.Rich. III. iii. 5 
to breakfast, with what appetite you. Hen. VIII. iii. 2 
into will, will into appetite (rep)... Trail. '^ Cres. i. 3 
to curb those raging appetites that . . — ii. 2 
an appetite that I am sick withal.... — iii. 3 

dexterity so obeying appetite — v. 5 

unto the.appetite and affection common.. Coiioi. i. 1 
a sick man's appetite, who desires — — i. 1 

digest his words with better appetite. /iii.C(Esar,_i. 2 

with cloyless sauce his appetite Ant. 4 Cleo. ii. I 

cloy th' appetites they feed; but she — ii. 2 

nor i' the appetite ; slutterly Cymbeline, i. 7 

weak with toil, yet strong m appetite. . — iii. 6 
staunch theearth's diy appetite. . Titus ^ndron. iii. 1 

messes to gorge his appetite Lear, i. 1 

goes to't with a more riotous appetite — iv. 6 

in the taste eonfovmds the appetite. . Rom.^Jul. ii. 6 
as if increase of appetite had grown by. . Hamlet, i. 2 

to please the palate of my appetite Othello, i. 3 

and to give satiety afresh appetite .. — ii. 1 

even as her appetite shall play the god — .?!• 3 
creatirres ours, and not their appetites — iii. 3 

APPLAUD— applaud our loves. . Two Gen. of Ver. i. 3 

I do applaud thy spirit T — v. 4 

till thou applaud the deed Macbeth, iii. 2 

would applaud thee to the very echo (rep.) — y. 3 
and blows, and groans applaud our. .1 HenrylV. i. 3 

applaud the name of Henry SHenry IV. iv. 2 

Rome's best citizens applaud Titus Andron. i. 2 

dost thou applaud my choice? — . 1. 2 

she would applaud Andronicus' conceit — iy. 2 
bv the gods, 1 do applaud his courage. . Pericles, ii. 5 
and tongues, applaud it to the clouds. . Hamlet, iv. 5 

APPLAUDED— so much applauded..! Henry VI. ii. 2 

APPLAUDING— great triumphers in their 

applauding gates Timon of Athens, V. 2 

sounds togetlier, applauding our Ant. Sr Cleo. iv. 8 

APPLAUSE— with all the applause and.. . Coriol. i. 9 
not relish well their loudapplause. Mea. /or Mea.i. 1 
hearing applause, and universal ..Mer. of Ven. iii. 2 
true applause, and love ; yet such ...^is you Like, i. 2 
with what loud applause didst thou ..'iHen. IV. i. 3 
this general applause, and cheerful. .. fli'cA. ///.iii. 7 
the applause and approbation . . . Troilus ^ Cress, i. 3 

laughs out a loud applause — i. 3 

who broils in loud applause — ^i. 3 

his silence drinks up his applause • — .\\-^ 

formed in the applause where they — iii. 3 

tliat these applauses are for some. . . Julius Ccesar, i. 2 
voices and applause of every sort.. Titus Andron. i. 2 
with joy, revel, pleasure, and applause ..Othello, ii. 3 

APPLE— give it his son for an apple Tempest, ii. 1 

when 'tis almost an apple Twelfth I^'ight, i. 5 

an apple, cleft in two — ^ .y. 1 

sink in apple of his Gyel. Midsumjner Night's D. iii. 2 
laugh upon the apple of her eye? ... Love's L. L. v. 2 
a goodly apple rotten at the heart . . Mer. of Ven. i. 3 
there's small choice in rotten apjiles . Tarn. ofSh. i. 1 
as much as an apple doth an oyster . . — ly. 2 

heads crushed like rotten apples Henry V. iii. 7 

and fight for bitten apples Henry VIII. y. 3 

as like this as a crab is like an apple Lear, i. 5 

APPLE-JOHN— an old appIe-john.... IHen. IV. iii. 3 
apple-johns? thou know'st, sir (rcp.)..2Hen. IV. ii. 4 
once set a dish of apple-johns before him — ii. 4 
APPLETART— like an appletart.. raming- ofSh. iv. 3 
APPLIANCE— 
conseri'e a life in base appliances, il/ea./or .^ea. in. 1 
to tender it, and ray appliance, with...4H's Well, ii. I 
all appliances and meons to boot.. .2Hei!ry IV. iii. 1 



APP 

^VPPLIANCE— that's the apiiliance only. 11. VlU-j- 1 

by cood appliance was recovered Pericles, iii. 2 

bv aesnerate appliance are rclicvcil. . . . Hamlet, i v. 3 

Al'l'iaCAXION— several applications.. /IH'sM'cH, i. 2 

Al'PLIED — may come, shall be applied.... Leiii\\. 3 

it is applied to a deathful wound ..iUeuiij VI. lii. 2 

and balms applied to you, yet dare l..Coriolanus,i. 6 

ArPLIKS— now applies it to a fool ...Ttcelflh N. iv. 1 

APPI-Y— would it apply well to the.Merrij H'ivesA). 2 

craft against vice I must apply ..Mea.Jbr Men. iii. 2 

foest about to apply amoral Mucli Ado, i. 3 
'11 apply.to your eye, sen tie lover. il/iV. M. Dr. ill. 2 
the power thereof it dotli apply . . Love's L. Lost, y. 1 
never did apply hot and rebellious. As you Like it, ii. 3 
philosophy will I apply, thattreats. 'jCumini'o/'S.j. 1 

apply to her some remedies Winter's Tale, iii. 2 

let your remembrance apply to Banriuo..M«c6. iii. 2 
Nestor shall apply thy latest words. Troii. f Cress, i. 3 
how apply you tills? The senators ..Coriolaiius,i.\ 
these does she apply for warnings. . . Jul. Ctesar, ii. 2 
if you applj' yourself to owe intents. ^l/i(. ^Cleo. v. 2 
and apply allayments to their act .... Cymbeline,\. 6 
to ajnilv to his bleeding face Lear, iii. 7 

APPOINT — appoint him a meetlng.A?(?rry 'fires, ii. 1 

at de place I did appoint V — iii. 1 

for I'll appoint my men to carry — iv. 2 

appoint a meeting with this old — iy. ■! 

appoint her to look out of Much Ado, ii. 2 

desires this ring; appoints liim All's Well, iii. 7 

to appoint mvself in this vexation?. . Winter's T.i. 2 

he dues — he did appoint so Macbeth, ii. 3 

and appoint them a place of meeting.U/eHri//*'. i. 2 

to appoint some of your coxuicil Henry V. y. 2 

to aiipoint who should attend on him Hen. I'ill. i. 1 
I do a\ipoint Mm store of provender. .'(((.Ctpsar, iv. 1 
IjiH-ius, and appoint the meeting.. Titus Andron. iy. 4 

API'OIXTED— being then appointed Tempest, i. 2 

and I liave appointed mine host ISJerry Wives,!. •! 

lie liath appomted them contrary places — .ii- 1 

this is tlie pl.aee I appointed — iii- 1 

we have appointed to dine with — ?!!■ 2 

the hour sue appointed me — iii- 5 

liatb appointed that he shall likewise — iv. 6 

as you told me yoii had appointed? . . — v. 1 

as Anne and I had appointed — v. 5 

oath, and the nuptial appointed.. Afea. for ilea. iii. 1 
he was appointed, next morning at. . Much Ado, iii. 3 
place thou hast appointed me. . Mid. N. Dream, i. 1 

here is the place appointed for As you Like it, i. 2 

shall I be appointed hours; as. .Taming ofSlirew, i. 1 
my master hath appointed me to go.. — iv. 4 
I am appointed him to murder you . . Winter's T. i. 2 
to have you royally appointed, as if . . — i v. 3 
and s\!eh officers appointed to Aixcat. Richard II. i. 3 
as is appointed us, at Shrewsbiu-y . . 1 Henry IV. iii. 1 

if 1 be appointed tor the place iHenry VI. i- 3 

let these have a day appomted them — — i. 3 
this is the day appointed for the combat — ii. 3 
ten is the hour tliat was appointed me.. — ii. 4 
Sir John Stanley is appointed now to. . — ii. 4 
thou hast appointed justices of peace.. — iv. 7 
appointed this conduct to convey...ii!c/iar(i III. i. 1 
ray lords, youare appointedfor that- C'j/mtriine, iii. 5 
you maybe armed and appointed well Tj'w.f-^rarf.iv .2 
to some retention and appointed guard — Lear, v. 3 

ATPOINTjNIENT— own appointment.. il/erri/ W.ii. 2 
missing your meetings and appointments — iii. 1 
I will tlieu address me to my appointment — iii. 5 
therefore your best appointment. Mea. /or Mea. iii. I 

to stead up j^our appointment — iii. I 

and my appointments have in them.-.^^rs Well, ii. 5 

in best appointment, all our regiments John,\\. 1 

our fair appointments may be well. if/c/jarrf //. iii. 3 

follows my appointment Henry VIII. ii. 2 

here art thou in appointment. ..Tro/iwsi?- Cress, iv. 5 
where their appointment we \-i\a.j...Anl.^Cleo. iv. 10 
warlike appointment gave us chaseHn)ll^e^iv.6 (let.) 

APPKEIIEND— to apprehend thus. . Cymbeline, iii. 3 
in private brabble did we apprehend. Twe/fl/i A^. v. 1 

a man tliat apprehends death Mea.for Mea. iv. 2 

that appreliends no further than this world — v. 1 

you api)reliend passing shrewdly Much Ado, ii. 1 

apprehend more than cool Tea.son. Mid. N. Dream, v. 1 
that if it would but apprehend some joy — v. 1 
apprehend nothing but jollity. ..jr/jKer's Tale, iv. 3 

he apprehends a world of iigures 1 Henry IV. i. 3 

encounter any such, apprehend him. .Henry V. iv. 7 
in his majesty's name, apprehend him — iv. 8 
will apprehend you as his enemy.. 3 Henry VI. iii. 1 
t) let my lady a]>prohend no fear. Trial. ■^^ Cress, iii. 2 
I'll apprehend hinj: abominalilc villain 1 .. Lear, i. 2 
stri\'ing to ai)preheiid him. Is he pursued — ii. 1 

I will apitrehend him; stop Romeo^-Juliet, v. 3 

condemned villain, I do apprehend tliee — v. 3 
[CVj/. Knt^ apprehend thee for a felon — v. 3 
do you know where we may apprehend. . Othello, i. 1 
I tlierefore apprehend, and do attach thee — i. 2 

APP RE MENDED— let him be apprehended. Cor- iii. 1 
like to be apprehended for the v;\ic\\Merry Wives, iv..^ 
where being apprehended his fa,\se.TwelfthNight,v. 1 
which I apprehended with . . Lore's I,. L. i. I (letter) 
merchant is apprehended for arrival.. Com. o/£r. i. 2 

though strongly apprehended 'ZHenry IV. i. 1 

they shall be apprehended by and by. . Henry I', ii. 2 
whom we have apprehended in the fact 'illen. VI. ii. 1 
apprehended here immediately Troil. <§- Cress, ill. 3 

APPREHEND'ST— sothou apprehend'st r«»t.o//l. i. 1 

APPREHENSION— 
death is most in apprehension- . . . Mea.for Mea. iii. 1 

have you professed apprehension Mucli Ado, iii, 4 

tlie ear more (luick of apprehensionii/ii/. N. Dr. iii. 2 

objects, iilcas, apprehensions Lnve'sL.L. iv. 2 

O no I the apprehension of the good. . . Richard II. i. 3 
how sucli an apprehension may turn \ Hen. IV. iv. 1 
if the English had any apprehension. Henry V. iii. 7 
to scourge you for this apprehension. 1 Henry VI. Ii . 4 
to question of his apprehension.... 3 Henry VI. iii. 2 
cannot outfly our apprehensions. . Troil. ^^ Cress, ii. 3 
that's a lascivious apprehension r/mon of Athens, i. 1 
took fro>n you the apprehension. . . . Coriolanus, ii. .'? 



[27 ] 



APPREHENSION— 

had not apprehension of roaring terrors.. C(/m6. iv. 2 
he may be ready for our apprehension., . . Lear, in. b 

in apprelieiision, how like a godl Ham^e^, li. 2 

in this bruiaish apprehension, kills.... — iv. 1 
but some uncleanly appreliensions keep.OWicWo, iii. 3 

AI'l'KEHENSIVE— apprehensive senses^iM's Well, i.2 

makes it apprehensive, quick.; IHenry IV. iy. 3 

flesh and blood, and apprehensive. i/«i(us Ctesar, iii. 1 

AI'PRENDIIE- 
je ne doute point d'apprendre par la . . Henry V. iii. 4 

A'PPRENNE— il faut que j'apijrenue.. — iii. 4 

APPRENTICEHOOD— 
a long apprenticehood to foreign .... Richard II. 1. 3 

APPRIS— -que vous m'avez appris Henry V. iii. 4 

AJPPROACH — approach, my Ariel Tempest, i- 2 

do not approach till thou dost — iv. 1 

approach, rich Ceres, her to entertain — iv. 1 
by thy approach thou makest . . Two Gen. of Ver. y. 4 

let her approach Merry Wives of Windsor, ii. 2 

gives intelligence of Ford's approach — iii. 5 

let him approach ; call in Twelfih Night, i. 5 

and allowed your approach, rather . . — i. 5 

approach, sir Andrew; not to be — Ii. 3 

mark his first approach before my lady — ii. h 
beetles black, approach not near. Mid. A'. D. ii. 3 (song) 
at whose approach, ghosts, wandering — iii. 2 
by day's approach look to be visited. . — iii. 2 

let him approach — v. 1 

approach, ye furies fell! — v. 1 

no woman may approach his silent. . Love's L, L. ii. 1 
Navarre had notice of your fah- approach — ii. 1 

love doth approach disguised — v. 2 

let them not approach — v. 2 

holla! approach. This side is — v. 2 

I should be glad of his approach — Mer. of Ven. i. 2 
approach, here dwells my father, Jew — ii. 6 
my labour by his own approach , . As youLike it, ii. 7 
Orlando did approach the man ...... — iv. 3 

if they do approach the city, we shall, ^ii's WeU,'m. 5 

let liim approach, a stranger — v. 3 

my approach be shunned, nay, hated. Winter's T. i. 2 
she did approach my cabin where I lay — iii. 3 
your guests approacli; addi-ess yourself — iv. 3 

and let him approach singing , . — i v. 3 

his approach, so out of circumstance - . — v. 1 
be stone no more; approach; strike all — v. 3 

my wife with your approach Macbeth, i. 4 

approach the chamber, and destroy — ii. 3 

approach thou like the rugged liussian — iii. 4 
some danger does approach you nearly — iv. 2 
before thy here approach, old Siward.. — iv. 3 

let them approach; — om- abbeys King Jolm., i. 1 

but for our approach, those sleeping stones — ii. 1 
your king and England's doth approach — ii. 2 
shall hear of your approach, if that .. — iii. 4 
this apish and unmannerly approach — v. 2 
nothing but liis majesty's approach . . Richard II. i. 3 
and approach the ragged' st hour ....2 Henry IV. i. 1 

as I have been, approach me — v. 5 

to desire the approach of day HenryV.'iv. 1 

for our approach shall so much- diire. . — iv. 2 

by whose approach the regions 1 Henry VI. ii. 1 

and death approach not ere my — ii. .5 

death's approach is seen so terrible! .iHenryVI. iii. 3 

with thy approach, I know Henry VIII. ii. 4 

the approach of this wild river break — iii- 2 
and give him note of our approach.. Troil. fy Cr. iv. I 
they approach sadly, and go away. Timon ofAtti. ii. 2 
his expedition promises present approach — v. 3 
lascivious town om' terrible approacli — v. 5 

like a shepherd, approach the fold — v. 5 

than that which is to approach . . Antony cj- Cleo. i. 2 

of horse to tell of her approach — iii. 6 

approach, and speak. Such as I am.. — iii. 10 

approach, there : ay, you kite — iii. 1 1 

sounds together, applauding our approach — iv- 8 
approach, ho! all's not well: Cesar's — v. 2 
to approach the imperial seat. . Titus Andronicus, i. 1 
at the fii'st approach you must kneel — iv. 3 
now begin our sorrows to approach . . — iv. 4 
approach, thou beacon to this under globe.X.enr, ii. 2 
powers o'the kingdom approach apace. . . . — iv. 7 
lie that dares approach, on him, on you . . — v. 3 
close fighting ere I did approach . . Romeo <§- Jul. i. 1 
that thou hear'st something approach — v. 3 
warning, something doth approach . . — v. 3 

APPROACHED— Pedro is approached. Murt ^rfo,i. 1 
in tlireats, approached the opening. As you Like it, ly. 3 
approached too late; the capon burns- Com. of Er. i- 2 
expected then, but not approached .. Cymheline,\\. 4 

APPROACH ER-and all approac-hers. Timon nf A. iv. 3 

APPROACHES— Toby aiiproaches.7'«e////i lS'iglit,i\. b 
the vaporous night approaches . . Mea.for Mea. iv. 1 
her father never approaches her heart. .^IW's Well, i. I 
that approaches apace; I would gladly — iv. 3 

near approaches tlie subject of our Macbeth, iii. 3 

the time approaches, that will with due — v. 4 

for England his approaches makes Henry F. ii. 4 

of Alcil)iades the approaches wild . Timon of .Ith. v. 2 

my boy Marcius approaches Coriolanus, ii- 1 

he approaches, you shall hear him . . — v. 5 
at your service: my lord approaches .,4n(. ^- Cleo. i. 2 
makes his approaclies to the port of Rome — i. 3 
the queen tyjjiroaches; her head's declined — iii. 9 

APPROACIlETH—whcu he approacheth to 

your presence Tuc Genilnncn of Verona,v. 4 

period of thy tyranny approacheth.. 1 Henry VI. iv. 2 
approacheth boldly to our presence .ZHenry VI. iii. 3 
APPROACHING— the approaching tide. Tempest, v. 1 
new-married man aiiproaehing. . . . Mea.for Mea. v. 1 
signify the approaching of his lord . Mer. of Ven. ii. 9 
red hot, approaching near these eyes. &'njJoAn,iv. 1 

beat the approaching Cajsar Antony & Cleo. iii. 7 

APPROBATION— gives manliood more 

approbation than Tmelflh NiglU, iii. 4 

and there receive her approbation. . Mea.for Mea. i. 3 
credit, that's sealed in approbation?.. — v. 1 
naught for approbation, but onlv..>rjn^er'« Tale,'\'u \ 
drop their blood in approbation of Henry V. i. 2 



APT 

APPROIiATION— 
learned ajiprobation of the judges ..Henry VI 1 1, i.2 
apjjlaiise and approliation the which . . Troil. ^ Cr. i. 3 
them title, knee, and approbation. Timon of Alh. iv. 3 
and with most prosperous api)robation . . Coriol. ii. 1 
to meet anon, upon your approliation .... — ii. 3 
and revoke your suclden api^robation .... — ii. 3 

the api)ri.>balion of those that weep Cymbeline, i. 5 

on the approbation of what I have spoke — i. .'5 

whoever lint his approbation added .... Pericles, iv. 4 

APPROOF — coiideninatiou or approof.jWeii./briV. ii. 4 

so in approof lives not his epitaph ......Ill's Well, i. 2 

and of very valiant approof — ii. 5 

band shall pass on thv approof Ant, (y Cleo. iii. 2 

APPROPRIATION— a great appropriation 

to his own good parts Mercliant of Venice, i. 2 

APPROVE— no way approve his. . Twelfth Night, iv. 2 
on whose eyes I might approve this..Jl/irf. N. Dr. ii. 3 

and approves it with a text Mer. of Fen . i i i . 2 

which well approves you arc great . . All's Well, iii. 7 
does approve by his loved mansionry . , Macbeth, i. 6 
approve Henry of Hereford, Lancaster, ./(/c/i. II. i. 3 
task me to my word; approve me . . 1 Henry IV. iv. 1 
my growth would approve the truth.. 2 Henry IV.i.2 

to approve my youth further — i.2 

approves her fit for none 1 Henry VI. v. 5 

not fail to approve the fair conceit. .Henrj/Ti//. ii. 3 
approve then- trutlis by Troilus . . Troil. ^ Cress, iii. 2 
I muse, my mother does not approve . . Coriol. iii. 3 

that he approves the common liar Ant. <$- C7eo. i. 1 

I approve your wisdom in the deed. . — v. 2 
thou dost approve tlyself the very. . Cymbeline, iv. 2 

which must approve thee honest — v. 5 

ray sword upon thee shall approve . . Titus .ind. ii. 1 
that may men approve, or men detect. . Pericles, ii. I 

speeches may your deeds approve Lear, i. 1 

must approve the common saw ! — ii.2 

this approves her letter, that she would .. — ii. 4 
which approves him an intelligent party. . — iii. 5 
he maj' approve our eyes, and speak .... Hamlet, i. 1 
if you did, it would not much approve . . — v. 2 

I do approve in fearful sense Othello, i. 3 

warlike isle, that so approve the Moor ., — ii. 1 
consequence do but approve my dream . . — ii. 3 
my love doth so approve him, that even — iv. 3 

blame him, his scorn I approve — iv. 3 (song) 

APPROVED— and still approved., noo Gen. of V. v. i 
of approved valour, and confirmed . . Much Ado, ii. 1 
not knit my soul to an approved wanton — iv. 1 

is he not approved in the height — i v. 1 

his love and wisdom, approved so All'sWell, i. 2 

there is a remedy, approved, set down — i. 3 

servant, well approved in all . . Taming of Shrew, i. 1 
my best beloved and approved friend — i.2 

they have approved their virtues.. Winter's Tale, iv. 1 
till I have used the approved means.. Com. of Er. v. 1 
to more approved service and desert.. KicAard //. ii. 3 
that ever valiant and approved Scot..l Henry IV. i. 1 
he be approved in practice culpable ,2Henry VI. iii. 2 
approved warriors, and my faitliful. . Titus And. v. 1 
very noble and approved good masters . . Othello, i. 3 
of every expert and approved allowance — ii. 1 

and he that is approved in this offence — ii. 3 

I have well approved it, sir. I drunk I — ii. 3 

APPROVERS— known to their approvers. Cymt. ii. 4 

APPURTENANCE— the appurtenance of.. Ham. ii. 2 

APRICOCK— feed him with apricocks. Mii/. Af. U. iii. 1 

bind thou up yon dangling apricocks. . Rich. II. iii. 4 

APRIL— spongy April at thy nest Tempest, iv. 1 

glory of an April day. . Two Gentlemen of Verona, i. a 

he smells April and May Merry Wives, iii. 2 

a day in April never came so . . Merchant of Ken. ii. ^ 
men are April when they woo ..As you Like it, iv. 1 

the fourscore of April, forty Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

the first of April, died your noble . . King John, iv. 2 
an 'twere a man bom in April — Troilus ^ Cress, i. 2 
spices to the April day again. . . Timon of Alliens, iv. 3 

the April's in her eyes Antony 4' Cleopatra, iii. 2 

youthful April shall with all Titus Andron. iii. 1 

when well-appareled April on the ...Rom. SfJul. i. 1 
APRON — leather jerkins, and aprons.. 2Hen. IV. ii. 2 

two of our jerkins and aijrons — ii. 4 

I give thee my apron 2Henry VI. ii. 3 

think scorn to go in leather aprons . . — iv. 2 
holdup, you sluts, your aprons .. Timon of.ilh. iy. 3 
where is thy leather apron, andthy rule../.CfT'snr,i. 1 
mechanic slaves with greasy aprons- vlji/. 4- Cleo. y. 2 
he will line yoiu- apron with gold .... Pericles, iv. 6 

APRON-MEN— ancl your apron-men Coriol. iv. f> 

APT— is right apt for this affair. . . . Ticelflh Night, i. 4 

apt in good faith: very apt ! — \. b 

how apt the poor are to be proud! . . — iii. 1 
and I, most jocund, apt, and willingly — v. 1 

madam, I am most apt to embrace . . — y. 1 

by vain though apt affection .Meas.for Meas. i. 5 

I find an apt remission in myself — y. 1 

how apt it IS to learn any hard Much Ado,\. 1 

I am apt to do myself wrong — ii. 1 

there is not one word apt Mid. N. Dream, y. 1 

pretty and apt Love's Labour Lost, i. 2 

and my saying apt? or I apt — i- 2 

wherefore apt? And therefore apt.. — _i-2 

delivers in such apt and gracious words — ii. 1 

youth so apt to nluek a sweet — iv. 3 (verses) 

she's apt to learn, and thankful.. Taming of Shr. ii. 1 
villany, apt, liable to be employed ..King John, iv. 2 

you know, how apt our love was Henry V. ii. 2 

IS she not apt? Our tongue is — v. 2 

stubborn to justice, apt to accuse it. Henry VIII. ii. 4 
critics— apt, without a theme . . Troilus ^- Cress, y. 2 
she is young and apt: our. own.. Timon ofAlhenSji. I 

I have a heart as little apt as Coriolanus, lii 2 

a mock apt to be rendered Julius C'asar, ii. 2 

I shall not find myself so apt to die — iii. 1 
show to the apt thoughts of men . . — v. 3 

the fit and apt construction of thy name.. Ci/mft. v. 5 

being apt to have his ear abused Lear, ii. 4 

they are apt enough to dislocate — iv. 2 

an' I were so apt to quarrel as tho\i. Rom. 4- Jul. iii. 1 
you will find ine .ipt enough to that — iii. 1 



"~! 



APT 



ATT — heavy sorrow makes them apt. fiom. ^-Jut. iii. 3 
I find thee apt; and duller shoulu'st .... Hamlet, i. 5 
hands apt, drugs fit, and time agreeing.. — Mi' ^ 

YOU are most apt to play the sir* in Othello, ii. 1 

loves him 'tis apt, and of great credit .... — ii. 1 
so kind, so apt, so blessed a disposition .. — ii. 3 
■what he fomid himself was apt and true — v. 2 

APTER— apter to do, than to confess. As you Like, iii. 2 
is apter than thy tongue to tell iHenry IV. i. 1 

APTEST— every man the aptestway..2Hcnrj//F. i. 1 

APTLY— lus youth will aptly receive. Twelfth N. iii. 4 
that part was aptly fitted.... ramiiig-o/S/i. 1 (indue.) 
prettily and aptly taunts himself. . Jtichard III. iii. 1 
verse which aptly sings the good .. Timon of Ath. i. 1 
that you aptly will suppose .... Pericles, v. 2 (Gower) 
or liverv, tnat aptlv is put on Hamlet, iii. 4 

APTNEi)S-they are"ina ripe aptness. CoMo/niiws, iv. 3 
friended with aptness of tne season. . Ci/mbeline, ii. 3 

AQUA-VIT^E— my aqua- vita; hot tlc...U«r!/ If. ii. 2 
like aqua-vita; with a midwife . . Tu-elflh .\iglit,u. b 
recovered again ^vith aqtia-vita;.. Winter's Tale, iv. 3 
oil, the balsamum, and aqua-vita;. .Com. of Er. iv. 1 

give me some aqua-vita; Rom. (§- Jul. iii. 2 

"some anxia-vita;, hoi mvlord! my lady 1 — iv. 5 

AQUILCJN-cholic of puited Aquilon.r>oi7. <S-C»-. iv. 5 

AQIJlTAIN-surrenderupofAquitain. Lome's L. L.\. 1 
the plea of no less weight than Aquitain — ii. 1 
one part of Aquitain is bound to us — ii. 1 

we will give up our right in Aquitaiu — ii. 1 
to have his title live in Aquitain .... — ii. 1 

than Aquitain, BO gelded as it is — ii. 1 

or yield up Aquitain. We arrest your — ii. 1 
I'll give you Aquitain, and all that is — ii. 1 

ARABIA — in ^"Li'abia there is one tree. . Tempest, iii. 3 
and the vasty wilds of Ai-abia are ..Mer. of Ten. ii. 7 
all the perfumes of Arabia wiU not .... Macbelh,^ v. 1 

I would my son were in Arabia Cor'olanus, iv. 2 

king i\Ia!chus of AraMia... ..Antony ^-Cleopatra, iii. 6 

ARABIAN — she is alone the Arabian bu-d . Cymb. i. 7 

Antony 1 Othou Arabian birdl.. -Inf. <§- Cleo.Vd. 2 
as fast as the Arabian trees Othello, v. 2 

ARACHNE— Ai-achne's broken woof. Troil.^- Cres. v. 2 

ARAISE — powerful to araise king Pepin. .4;('s Well, ii. 1 

ARBITRATE— bloody issue arbitrate. Kin o-Jo/m, i. 1 

long process could not ai-bitrate Love's L. L. v. 2 

certain issue strokes must arbitrate Macbeth, v. 4 

can arbitrate this cause betwixt us.. .Richard II. i. 1 
your swords and lances arbitrate — i. I 

AitBITRATING- arbitrating that which the 

commission of Romeo «§- Juliet, iv. 1 

ARBITRATOR— old arbitrator, time. Trail. S,- Cr. iv. 5 
arbitrator of despairs, just death 1 Henry VI. ii. 5 

ARBITREMEN'T- arbitrement is like to. Lear, iv. 7 
even to a mortal arbitrament .... Twelfth Night, iii. 4 
keep aloof from strict arbitrement ..\HenryIV. iv. 1 
if it come to the arbitrement of swords. Henry V. iv. 1 
the arbitrement of bloody strokes. . . Richard III. v. 3 
be jiut to the arbitrement of swords . . Cymbeline, i. 5 

ARBOUR— hide me in the arbom- Much Ado, ii. 3 

where, in an arbour, we will eat . . . .iHenry IV. v. 3 
private arbours, and new-jilanted.. J«(. Casar, iii. 2 

ARC — champion, virtuous Joan of Arc ..\Hen. VI. ii. 2 
Joan of Arc hath been — v. 4 

AKCU — watery arch, and messenger ... Tempest, iv. 1 

the most arch deed of piteous Richard III. iv. 3 

a heretic, an arch one, Cranmer ..Henry VIII. iii. 2 

a most arch heretic, a pestilence — v. 1 

whicli, like an arch, reverberates.. j['ro?7. SrCrcs. iii. 3 
ne'er through an arch so hurried., . . Coriolanus, v. 4 
the wide arch of the ranged empire. .. ^n(. <f-Cteo. i. 1 
to see this vaulted arch, and the rich. Cymbeline, i. 7 
my worthy arch and patron, comes Lear, ii. 1 

ARCHBISHOP— 

archbishop late of Canterbm"y Richard II. ii. 1 

well-beloved, the archbishop 1 Henry IV. i. 3 

the archbishop's grace of York, Douglas — iii. 2 
against the archbishop and the earl.. illenry IV. i. 2 
Northumberland, and the archbishop — ii. 1 

and the archbishop are strong — ii. 3 

fain would I go to meet the archbishop — ii. 3 

j'ou, lord archbishop, whose see is — iv. 1 

good-day to you, gentle lord archbishop — iv. 2 
and you, lord archbishop, and you . . — iv. 2 
shall see him for it, an archbishop. Henri/ F/I/. ill. 2 
no great good lover of the archbishop's — iv. 1 
the archbishop is the king's hand .... — v. 1 

1 ha ve brought my lord the archbishop — V. 1 
my lord archbishop; and has done lialf — v. 2 
good lord archbishop, I am very sorry — v. 2 
thank you, good lord archbishop : what — T. 4 
O lord archbishop, thou hast made me — v. 4 

ARCHBISHOPRIC— 

the arehbishopric of Toledo Henry VIII. ii.l 

ARCHDEACON- the archdeacon hath divided 

it into 1 Henry IV. iii. 1 

ARCHED — gates of monarchs are arched.. Cymb. iii. 3 
thou hast the right arched bent of. Merry Wives, iii. 3 

to sit and draw his arched iDrows All's Well, i. 1 

ARCHELAUS— Archelaus, of Cappadocia; 

Philadelphos Antony •fy Cleopatra, iii. 6 

ARCII-ENEJIY— of that arch-enemy..3Hfn. VI. ii. 2 
ARCHER — is no longer an archer .... Much Ada, ii. 1 

pikes to set before his archers 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

archers thall be placed in the midst ...Rich. III. v. 3 

draw, archers, draw your aiTows — v. 3 

you are agood archer, Marcus . . Titus Andron. iv. 3 

shot from a well-experienced archer Pericles, i. 1 

ARCHERY— with Cupid's archery.. M/d. N. Dr. iii. 2 
now let me see your archery . . Titus Andronicus, iv. 3 
ARCHHERETIC-haudoft'hatarchlieretio/oAn.iii.l 
ARCHIBALD— and brave Ai-chibald.l Henri/ IV. i. 1 
ARCHITECT- architect and plotter. . Titus And. v. 3 
ARCH-MOCK— arch-mock to lip a wanton. Ort. iv. 1 
ARCH-VIELAIN-bean areh-viUain.Wea./e.r,W. v. 1 
an arch-villain keeps him company. Timon of A. v. 1 
AKClf- Mauri jaculis,neqne arcu. ... Titus .ind. iv. 2 

AKDE— the vale of Arde. rCol. Knt Andi-en]. 

'Twixt Guynes and Arde Henry VIII. i. 1 

ARDEN— iu the forest of Arden As you Like it, i. 1 

[Col. Knt — my uncle in the forest of Arden] — i. 3 



^28J 

ARDEN— 

this is the forest of Arden (rep.).. As you Like it, ii. 4 

ARDENT— under ardent zeal.. 7'/mon of .lihen.-; iii. 3 

ARDOUR-abates the ardour of my liver. Tem/iesl, iv. 1 
when the compulsive ardour gives llatnlct, iii. 4 

ARGAL— argal, she drowned herself — v. 1 

argal, he that is not guilty of his own . . — v. 1 
argal, the gallows may do well to thee . . — v. 1 

AR GENTINE-goddess argentine, I will.. PeriV;e,v, v. 2 

ARGIER — sir, in Argier Tempest, i. 2 

from Argier, thou know'st, was banished — i. 2 

ARGO — Ai'go, their thread of life is spun. 2 H.r/. iv. 2 

ARGOSIES— your argosies with portly.Mer. of V. i. 1 
three of your ai'gosies are richly come to — v. 1 
no less than three great argosies.. Taming o/Sh. ii. 1 

ARGOSY— he hath an argosy bound.Mer. of Ven. i. 3 

hath an argosy east away coming — iii. 1 

besides an argosy, that now is Taming of Sh. ii. 1 

have I choked you with an argosy? . . — ii. 1 
command an argosy to stem the ZHenry VI. ii. 6 

ARGUE — for it argues facility Love's L. Lost, iv. 2 

have bid me argue like a father Richard //. i. 3 

argues but the shame of your offence.2Hen./r. iv. 1 
argue the end of Edmund Mortimer.life7iri/F/. ii. 5 
and quick appearance argues proof. ... — v. 3 

this argues what her kind of life — v. 4 

a death argues a monstrous life 2 Henri/ VI. iii. 3 

her looks do argue her replete with.3Henry VI. iii. 2 
argues your msdom, and your love . . Rich. III. iii . 7 

my lord, this argues conscience in — iii. 7 

we are too open here to argue this. .Henri/ VIII. ii. 1 

al lowed freely to argue for her — ii. 2 

which argues a great sickness in. . Timon of Ath. v. 1 

it argues a distemjiered head Romeo Sr Juliet, ii. 3 

if I drown myself wittingly, it argues , . Hamlet, v. 1 
this argues fruitfulncss, and liberal. . . . Othello, iii. 4 

ARGUED— well have you argiied, sir . . Rich. II. iv. 1 
argued betwixt the duke of York ..IHenryVI.iv. 1 
which argued thee a most unloving. .SHen. VI. ii. 2 

ARGUING— I should be argriing still. Tam.of S. iii. 1 
greater themes for insurrection s arguing. CorioZ. i. 1 
if arguing makes us sweat Julius Ccesar, v. I 

ARGtjMENT— argument to commend. Merri/ W. ii. 2 
tang argimients or state . . Twefth Night, ii. 5 (letter) 
this was a great argument of love in her — iii. 2 
the rather oy these arguments of fear — iii. 3 

have given us bloody argument — iii. 3 • 

thy tongue tang witt arguments of state — iii. 4 
thou wilt prove a notable argument . . Much Ado, i. 1 
become the argument of his own scorn — ii. 3 
hold longer argument, do it in notes . . — ii. 3 
nor no great argument of her folly .... — ii. 3 

for bearing, argument, and valom* — iii. 1 

would not make me such an argument — iii. 2 
is a great argument of falsehood) .... Love's L.L.i.2 

how did this argument begin? — iii. 1 

thus came your argument in — iii. 1 

the world cannot hold argument — iv. 3 (verses) 
finer than the staple of his argument — v. 1 
therefore, I'll darkly end the argument — v. 2 

arnaed in arguments; you'll be — v. 2 

since love's argument was fii'st on foot — v. 2 
this fool to cut ofi' the argument? . . As you Like it, i. 2 

grounded upon no other argument — i. 2 

should not seek an absent argument . . — iii. 1 

'tis the rarest argument of wonder All's Well, ii. 3 

in argument of praise, or to the worth — iii. 5 
is the argument of Time . . Winter's Tale, iv. (chorus) 

claim this argument for ours Macbeth, ii. 3 

with very easy arguments of love King John, i. I 

break into this dangerous argument. . — iv. 2 
as I could sift him on that argument . . Rich. II. i. 1 

it woiddbe argument for a week IHenry IV. ii. 2 

content; and the argument shall be — ii. 4 

as a scene actingthat argument . . ..2Henry IV. iv. 4 
but our argument is all too heavy .... — . .Y* ^ 
for lack of argument; dishonour not.. Henry r. iii. 1 
he will maintain his argimient as well — iii. 2 
way of argument, look you, and friendly — iii. 2 
and my horse is argiuuent for them all — iii. 7 
when blood is their argmnent? now . . — iv. 1 
(good argument, I hope, we shall not fly) — iv. 3 
the argument you held, was wrong. .IHenri/FJ. ii. 4 
now, Somerset, where is youi' argument — ii. 4 

in argument ujpon a case — ii. 5 

in argument and proof of which contract — y. 1 
nothing but an argument, that he . .2Henry VI. i. 2 
and we yet have but trivial argument — iii. 1 
inferring arguments of mighty force.. SHen. F/.ii. 2 
inferring arguments of mighty strength — iii. 1 
well steeled with weighty arguments. .B/c/t./I/. i. 1 
their arguments, be now produced . . Hen. VIII. ii. 4 
like conditions as our argument. rroii.^Cres.(prol.) 
I cannot fight upon this argument .. — i. 1 

all the argument is, a cuckold — ii. 3 

lost Ms argument. No; you see (rep.) — ii. 3 
good argument for kissing once (rep.) — iv. t> 
parted thus you and your argument — iv. !t 
and try the argument of hearts . . Timon of Ath. ii. 2 
so it may prove an argument of laughter — iii. 3 
as if he had but proved an argmnent — iii. .0 
an argument that he is plucked.. y4n/..f- Cleo. iii. in 
much like an argument that fell out..Ci/m6e;mi', i. 6 

the argument of yom- praise, balm of Lear, i. 1 

they are yet but ear-kissing arguments. . — ii. 1 
to occupy the argument no longer ..Rom. 4' Jut. ii- 4 
no money bid for argument, unless .... Hamlet, ii . 2 
this show imports the argument of the play — iii. 2 
have you heard the argument? is there no — iii. 2 
not to stir without great argument — iv. 4 

AROUS — Argus were her eunuch. . . . Love's L. L. iii. 1 
watch me like Argus : if you do not. Mer. of Ven. v. 1 
purblind Argus, all eyes and no sight. Troil.^- Cr. i. 2 

ARIADNE-madam, 'twas jiriadne. TwoGen.of V. iv. 4 

with Ariadne, and Antiopa? . . Mid. N.'s Dream, ii. 2 

ARIEL — approach, my Ariel ; come .... Tempest, i. 2 

task Ariel, and all his quality — i. 2 

but are they, Ariel, safe? — i. 2 

Ariel, thy charge exactly is — i. 2 

my quaint Ariel, hai'k — i 2 



ARM 



ARIEL— delicate Ariel, I'll set thee free, rempes*, i. 

thou hast done well, fine Ariel! — i. 

hast tliou perform 'd, my Ariel — iii. 

Ariell my industrious servant Ariell.. — iv. 

dearly, my delicate Ariel — iv. 

well. Now come, my Ariel — iv, 

I thank you: Ariel, come — iv. 

go, release them, Ariel — v. 

Ariel, fetch me the hat and rapier — v. 

why, that's my dainty Ariel — v. 

mv Ariel; chick — that is — v. 

A l!lES--gave Aries such a knock.. Titus Andron. iv. 

ARIGH'T— thou speak'st aright . . Mid. N. Dream, ii. 

never going aright, being a watch ..Love's L. L. iii. 

thou hast harped my fear aright Macbeth, iv. 

highness aims at, if I aim aright IHenry VI. iii. 2 

would you represent our queen aright. TilusAnd. v. 2 

to understand my purposes aright Lear, i. 4 

when I am known aright, you shall not . . — iv. 3 

me and my cause arightto tire unsatisfied. Hamtet,v. 2 

ARION— Ai-ion on the dolphin's back. . Twelfth N. i. 2 

ARISE — now I arise: — sit still Tempest, i. 2 

arise, and say how thou — v. 1 

until the officer arise to let him in.Mea.for Mea.lv. 2 
to havemy love to bed, and to arise. Mid. N. Dr. iii. 1 

O Pyramus, arise ; speak, speak — v. I 

arise more great; arise, sir Richard ..King John, i. 1 

arise forth from the couch — iii. 4 

sudden mischief may arise of it Henry V.iv. 7 

factious emulations sliall arise I .... 1 Henry VI. iv. 1 

what infamy will there arise — iv. 1 

Suffolk arise; welcome, queen 2Hemy VI. i. 1 

Edward Plantagenet arise a knight. .iHenry VI. ii. 2 

see, see, what showers arise — ii. 2 

if he arise, be mocked and wondered at — v. 4 

arise, dissembler; though I wish Richard III. i. 2 

arise, and take place by us Henry VIII. i. 2 

shall mine innocence arise — iii. 2 

pray you, arise, my good and gracious — v. 1 
as I point my sword, the sun oxiBes. Julius C(Fsar,ii. 1 
most noble sir, aiise; the queen.. Anto7iy «§-_ Cleo. iii. 9 

and Pha;bus 'gins arise Cymbeline, ii. 3 (song) 

my lady sweet, arise; arise, arise — ii. 3 (song) 

are means the happier to arise — iv. 2 

arise, my knights o'the battle — - v. 5 

ere I arise, I will prefer my sons .... — v. b 
faint-hearted boy ,arise,andlookupon.r!7us.4n. iii. I 

come sir, arise, away; I'll teach you Lear,i. 4 

arise, fair sun, and kill the envious ..i?om. 4- Jul. ii. 2 
arise, one knocks; good Romeo (rep.) — iii. 3 
arise, arise, awake the snorting citizens. . Othello, i. 1 

a gi-andsire of you; arise, I say — i. 1 

arise, black vengeance, fiom thy hollow cell — iii. 3 

ARISETH— from whence ariseth this? . . — ii. 3 

ARISTOTLE— to Aristotle's checks. Taming ofS.i.l 

whom Aristotle thought unfit to hear . Trail. 8f Cr. ii. 2 

ARITHjMETIC— a tapster's arithmetic — i. 2 

that hath no arithmetic but her brain — iii. 3 

but now 'tis odds beyond arithmetic. Cori'o?rtnw5, iii. 1 

spare your arithmetic; never count. . Cymbeline, ii. 4 

tliatiightsby thebookof ai-ithmetic..iiom.<5-.'«(. iii. 1 

would dizzy tlie arithmetic of memory. . Hamlet, v. 2 

ARITHMETICIAN-a great arithmetician 0//ie»o, i. 1 

ARK — are coming to the ark ! As you Like it, v. 4 

ARM — his arms m this sad knot Tempest, i. 2 

his good arms in lusty stroke — ii.l 

and Ms fins like arms — ii. 2 

to wreath your arms like Two Gen. of Ver. ii. 1 

like a soldier, at arm's end — v. 4 

or else keep it in your arms Merry Wives, iii. 1 

pinch them, arms, legs, backs .... — v. 5 

and hug it mine arms Measure for Measure, iii. 1 

depose I had him in mine arms . . — y. 1 

orunder your arm, like Much Ado, ii. 1 

look you arm yourself to fit . . ..Mid. N. Dream, i. 1 
-tiud 1 will wind thee in my arms.. — iv. 1 

fitted ill the arts, glorious in arms. . Love's L. L.ii. 1 
with your arms crossed on your thin — iii. 1 
lord of folded arms, the anointed .... — iii. 1 

lay liis wreathed arms athwart — iv. 3 

allection's men at arms — iv. 3 

arm, wenches, arm I encounters — v. 2 

and lay my arms before the legs — v. 2 

here comes Hector in arms — v. 2 

let me borrow my arms again — v. 2 

hold death awhile at the arm's end. As you Like, ii. G 
mewling and puking in the nurse's arms — ii. 7 

supporthim by the arm — ii. 7 

and here upon his arm the lioness had — iv. 3 
will you take Mm by the arm? 
it is my arm. I thought 



— iv. 3 

— V. 2 

Well, i. 2 



lend mc an arm ; the rest have .il 

garter up thy arms 0' this fasliion? . . 

spending his manly marrow in her arms — ii. 3 

so may you lose your arms Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 

why tnen,no arms. A herald.. — ii.l 

and arms her ■with the boldness . . Winter's Tale, i. 2 
holds liis wife by the arm, and little — i. 3 

is quite beyond mine arm — ii. 3 

but quick, and in mine arms — iv. 3 

opening Ms free arms, and weeping .. — iv. 3 

joy to see her in your arms — v. 1 

though others have the arm, show. .Com. of Er. iii. 2 

the great wart on my left arm — iii. 2 

with furbished ai'ms, and new supplies . . Macbeth , i . 2 

point rebellious, arm 'gaiust arm — i. 2 

arm, arm, and out! ifthis — v. 5 

whose arms are hired to bear — 

my arms such eelskins stuffed King John, 

not tliink of home, but follow arms . . — i 

hath put Mmself in arms — i 

resign them, and lay down thy arms? — i 
and then our arms, Uke to a muzzled — i 

mount, chevaliers! to arms! — i 

lay down our just-borne arms (rep.) — _: 
in arms to spill mine enemies' blood (rep.) — i; 
arm, arm, you heavens, agiunst these — i] 
therefore, to arms ! be champion .... — 1: 

than arm thy const.ant and thy — 1 

father, to arms! Upon thy wedding-day— 1: 



ARM 

ARM— TO not to arms against mine nncle..^o/i», iii. 1 

tlierc \n arms they would be as — iii. 4 

arm von ai::iin?t yonr other — iv. "J 

unto'tJic L'i i>t of iiiurdev's ai-ms — iv. 3 

go, lieai- him in thine avins — ' iv. 3 

make tlie Fieneh lay down tlieir arms — v. 1 

and base truce, to arms invasive? — v. 1 

let us, ray liege, to arms — v. 1 

that Neiitunes arms, who clippeth .. — v. 2 

flatly says, he'll not lay down his arms — v. 2 

these pigmy arms, from ont — v, 2 

the gallant monarch is in his arms .. — v. 2 

my arm shall give thee help — '^- '^ 

better arm you to the sudden time — v. 6 

the three corners of the world in arms — v- 7 
make good against me, arm to arm ..Richard II. i. 1 

this arm shall do it, or this life — j- 1 

command our officers at arms — i. 1 

never lift an angry arm against .... — i. 2 

of his arrival here" in arms — i. 3 

thus knightly clad in arms — ;. 3 

grace of God, and this mine arm — i. 3 

ask yonder knight in arms — i.3 

■who ready here do stand in arms .... — i. 3 

and fold him in om- arms — i.3 

shock of wrathful iron arms — .i. 3 

and with uplifted arms is safe — ii. 2 

our native peace with self-born arms — ii. 3 

ostentation of despised arms? — ii. 3 

how quickly should this arm of mine — ii. 3 

in braving arms against thy sovereign — ii. 3 

plucked ftom my arms perforce — ii. 3 

I see the issue ot these arms — .!!■■' 

falter ixnder foul rebellion's arras ... . — Ui* '^ 

than tliis weak arm; discomfort .... — JU' ^ 

arm, arm, my name I a puny — iii. 2 

in stiif unwieldy arms against — ijj.^ 

gentlemen in arms upon his party . . — iii. 2 

to lay ray arms and jiower — jjl' "^ 

and uneiVil arms be rushed upon ! — H j • 3 

his glittering arms he will commend — iii. 3 

is not my arm of length — iv. 1 

we may arm us to encounter it — v. 3 

whose arms were moulded in lllenry IV. i. 1 

sees reason, I'U forswear arms — i. 2 

our fortunes in our own strong arms — _i. 3 

to meet me in arms by the ninth .... — ^ii. 3 

to bloody battles, and to bruising arms — iii. 2 

and great name in arms, holds — iU. 2 

all furnished, all in arms, all plumed — iv. 1 

men of estimation and command in arms — iv. 4 

confident against the world in arms. . — v. 1 

or an arm? No. Or take away — v. 1 

haughty arms this hateful name (rep.) — v. 2 

to gentle exercise and proof of arms. . — v. 2 

embrace liim mth a soldier's arm . . — v. 2 

the arms are fair, when the intent .... — v. 2 

never did such deeds in arms — v. 3 

and rebels' arms triumph in massacres ! — v. 4 

Stafford, and Blunt, are in my arms — v. 4 

thy name in arms were now — v. 4 

who, as we hear, are busily in arras . . — ■ v. 5 

like afire out of his keeper's arms -ZHcnry IV. i. 1 

the occasion of our arms {repeated) .. — i. 3 

what a maidenly man at arms — ii. 2 

what -wrongs our arras may do — iv. 1 

put us in these ill-beseemmg arms . . — iv. 1 

more perfect in the use of arms — iv. 1 

our powers to the arm of peace — iv. 1 

in the arm that was upreared — iv. 1 

shallowly did you these arms commence — iv. 2 

this little kingdom, man to arm — iv. 3 

strength into one giant arm — iv. 4 

and do arm myself, to welcome — v. 2 

and with your puissant arm renew .... Henry F. i. 2 

we must not only arm to invade — i. 2 

yokefellows in arms, let us — ii. 3 

most meet we arm us 'gainst — ii. 4 

look, you strongly ann to meet liim . . — ii. 4 

de arm, madame. Etlecoude — iii. 4 

denails, dearm.debilbow — iii. 4 

'tis midnight, I'll go arm myself — iii. 7 

now is it time to arm; come — iii. 7 

those legs, and arms, and heads — iv. 1 

God's arm strike with us! — iv. 3 

he threw his wounded, arm, and kissed — iv. 6 

expressly against the law of arms . . — iv. 7 

thy arm was here, and not to us (rep.) — iv. 8 

hisarms spread wider than 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

we'll offer up our arras; since arras.. — i. 1 

are the flower-de-luces in your arms — i. 1 

the devil was in arms — i. 1 

then- arms are set, Mke clocks — i. 2 

assembled here in arras this day — i.3 (procl.) 

with a baser man of arms by far — i. 4 

from my shoulders crack my arms .. — i. .'j 

despairing of his own arm's fortitude — ii. 1 

arm, armT the enemy doth make — ii. 1 

fiince first I followed arms — ii. 1 

when arm in arm they both came — ii. 2 

chain these legs and arms of thine — ii. 3 

sinews, arms, and strength, with which — ii. 3 

and pithless arms, like to a withered — ii. 5 

(before whose glory I was great in arms) — ii. 5 

direct mine arms, I may embrace. . . . — ii. .'> 

back against mine arm — ii. .■) 

take up arms like gentlemen — iii. 2 

will take thee in their anns — iii. 3 

this arm, that hath reclaimed — iii. 4 

the law of arms is such, that — iii. 4 

crave the benefit of law of arras — ' iv. 1 

servant in anns to Harry king — iv. 2 

and lay him in his father's arms — iv. 7 

lies inhersed in the arms of the most — iv. 7 

for his rare success in arms — iv. 7 

these arms of mine did conquer itSenry VI. i. 1 

standard bear the arms of York — i. 1 

whose overweening arm I have plucked — iii. 1 

Kemes of Ireland are in arms — iii. 1 

say, I moved him to those arms — iii. 1 



[29] 



i 


4 


iii 


4 


iv 


3 


IV. 


4 


IV 


4 


IV 


4 


iv 


4 


T 


^i 


V 


3 


V 


3 


V 


3 


V 


3 


V 


3 



ARM— my arms torn and defaced .... 2 Henry VI. iv. 1 

as hating thee, ni-e rising up in arms — iv. 1 

here in Kent are up in arms — iv. 1 

never have given out these arms .... — iv. 8 

his arms are onl.y to remove — iv. 9 

and now is York in arms — iv. 9 

what's the reason of these arms — iv. 9 

and if mine arm be heaved — iv. 1 

the reason of these arms in peace — — v. 1 

but if thy arras be to no other end — v. 1 

thus he marcheth with thee arm in arm?— v. 1 

Buckingham, and bid him arm himself — v. 1 

and so to arms, victorious father — v. 1 

is hoarse with calling thee to arms . . — v.? 
as thou lovest and honour'st arms . .ZHenry VI. i. I 

therefore, to arms ; and father do but — i. 2 

such mercy, as his ruthless arm — i. 4 

at mountains with outstretched arras — _i. 4 

slaughtered by the ireful arm — ii- 1 

devotion with revengeful arms? — ii. 1 

embrace thee in my weary arms — ii. 3 

suppose, this arm is for the duke .... — ii. 4 

these arms of mine shall be — ,?!• ^ 

to shrink mine arm up — iii. - 

■while life upholds this arm, this arm — iii. 3 

well, I will arm me, being thus — iv. 1 

but why come .you in arms? — iv. 7 

scrupulous wit! now arms must rule — iv. 7 

whose arms gave shelter — v. 2 

naked, foil a man at arras — v. 4 

for bearing arms, for stirring — ^v. 5 

our bruised arms hung up Richard III, i. 1 

his hell-governed arm hath butchered — i. 2 

the quarrel from his powerfid arm — i. 4 

with his victorious arm, and charged — i. 4 
and hugged me in his arms, and swore 

and from her jealous arms pluck 

mine arm is, like a blasted sapling . . 
within their alabaster innocent arms 

and when tills arm of mine hath 

my dangerous attempt of hostile arras 
are in arms. In Kent, ray liege, (rep.) 
ray liege, in Yorkshire are in arras .. 
fellows in arras, and ray most loving 

send out a pursuivant at arras 

to ray tent and help to arm me 

in this doubtful shock of arms 

arm, fight, and conquer, for fair .... 

why then 'tis time to arm, and give. . 

that he was never trained up in arms — v. 3 

arm, arm, my lord; the foe vaunts .. — v. 3 

our strong arms be oiu' conscience . . — v. 3 

God, and your arms, be _praised — v. 4 

challenged the noble spirits to arras. Henry VIII. i. 1 

in mine arms I bid him welcome .... — ii. 2 

lav kissing in your arras, lord cardinal — iii. 2 

all the Indies m his arms — iv. 1 

stronger than Achilles' arm 'fore. . Trail. Sr Ores. i. 3 

her worth in other arms than hers.... — i.3 

Greek did compass in his arms — i. 3 

call some knight to arms — ii. 1 

what, alas, can these my single arms? — ii. 2 

disciplined thy arms to fight — ii. 3 

and with hds arms outstretched — }}}■ ■^ 

he ■wears his tongue in liis arms — iii. 3 

tliou hast lusty arms — iv. .5 

worthy of arms ! as welcome — iv. 6 

I would, my arms could match thee — iv. 5 

I corae to lose ray arm, or win — v. 3 

I will not arm to-day; whereupon .. — v. 4 

bid the snail-paced Ajax arm — v. 5 

be happy, that my arms are out of use — v. 6 

execute your arms [Co Wer — aims] .. — v. 7 
(though his right arm might . . Timon of Athens, iii. 5 

to take his fortune by the arm — iv. 2 

whom fortune's tender arm ■with .... — iv. 3 

wandered with our traversed arms . . — v. 5 
shall know, we have strong arms too. Coriolanus, i. 1 

yoiu- knees to them, not arms, must help — i. 1 

counsellor heart, the arm our soldier ^- i. 1 

sir, the Voices are in arms (repealed) — i. 1 

O let me clip you in arms as sound . . — i. G 

i' the shoulder, and i' the left arm .... — ii. 1 

in's nervy arm doth lie — ii. I 

arm yourself to answer mildly — iii. 2 

from these old arms and legs — iv. 1 

mine arms about that body — iv. 5 

or lose mine arm for't — iv. 5 

what an arm he has! lie tm'iied — iv. 5 

Italy, and her confederate arms — ■v. 3 

your infants in your arms JuliusCcPsar, i. 1 

can do no more tlian Cajsar's arm — ii. 1 

and sighing, with yoiu- arms across . . — ii. 1 

in conquest stretched mine arm so far — ii. 2 

our arms, in strengtii of malice — iii. 1 

more strong than traitors arms ■ — iii. 2 

the arm and burgonet of men? . . Antony ^- Cteo.i. 6 

to lend me arms, and aid — ii. 2 

ere we put ourselves in arms — ii. 2 

my arm is sore, best -"^ay with — ii. 5 

thy raaster thus with pleached arms — iv. 12 

the arm of mine own body — v. 1 

his reared arm crested the world .... — v. 2 

the like is on lier arm — v. 2 

arm me, audacity, from head to foot. . Cymlieline, i. 7 

that too casually hath left mine arm . . — ii. 3 

last night 'twas on mine arm — ii. 3 

she stripped it from her arm — ii. 4 

by Jupiter, I had it from her arm — )]. i 

but, to owe such straight arms, none . . — iii. 1 

for their liberties, are now in arms — iii. 1 

have not I an arm as big as tliine? .... — iv. 2 

tlie dire occasion in his arras — iv. 2 

his arms thus leagued: I thought, he slept — iv. 2 

come, arm him; boy, he is preferred.... — iv. 2 

■whose rags shamed gilded arms — v. 5 

let his arms alone; they were not — v. 5 

the justice of my cause with arms. Titus Andron. i. 1 

a nation strong, trained up in arras . . — i. 1 

and chastised with arms our enemies' — i. 1 



ARM 



ARM — Titus, flourishing in arms .. TitusAndron. i. 1 

slain manfully in arms — i. 2 

then, Aaron, arm thy heart, and fit. . — ii. 1 
each wreathed in the other'sarms. . .. — 11.3 

tenfold grief with folded arms — iii. 2 

lifts she up her arms in sequence thus? — iv. 1 

and arm the minds of infants — i v. 1 

wrap and fumble in tliine arms — iv. 2 

dispose this treasure in mine arras .. — iv. 2 
arm, arm, ra.y lords ; Rome never .... — iv. 4 

he understands .you are in arms — v. 1 

if one arm's emliracement will — v. 2 

oped their arms to erabrare me — v. 3 

whose arm seems far too short Pericles, i. 2 

bring arras to princes — i. 2 

he'll fill this land with arras — i. 2 

the virtue I have borne in arms — ii.l 

jewel holds his biding on my arm — ii.l 

your worth in arms, were raore than ... . — ii. 3 
my education being in arts and arras . . — ii. 3 

since they love men in arras — ii. 3 

ta'Ke in your arms this piece of yom-. ... — iii. 1 
take her by the arm, walk with her .... — iv. 1 

sir, lend your arm. Come — v. 2 

tlirew her o'erboard with these very arms — v. 3 

a second time within these arms — ■ v. 3 

lanced mine arm: but when Lear, ii. 1 

weapons! arms! what's the matter here . . — ii. 2 

bare arms pins, wooden pricks — ii. 3 

stop her there! arms, arms, sword, fire .. — iii. 6 

I pr'y thee, take him in thy arms — iii . 6 

bind fast his corky arms — iii. 7 

this hurt: give me your arm — iii. 7 

five me thy arm ; poor Tom shall — i v. 1 
must change arms [iin^-names] at home — iv. 2 
no blown ambition doth our arms incite — iv. 4 

arm it in rags, a pigmy's straw — iv. 6 

let go his arm. Ch'ill not let go, zir . . . . — iv. 6 

thy arm may do thee justice — v. .1 

this sword, this arm, and my best spirits — v. 3 
the law of arms [Kn^-war], thou wast not — V. 3 

■\vith his strong arms he fastened — v. 3 

nor arm, nor face, nor any other part. i?o7rt. ^-Jul. ii. 2 

I was hurt under your arm — !'!■ ' 

his agile arm beats down their fatal. . — iii. 1 
underneath whose arm an en^iious . . — iii- 1 
Romeo leap to these arms, untalked of — iii. 2 
since arra from arm that voice dotli us — iii- 5 

arms, take your last embrace ! — ■v. 3 

my father's spirit in arms ! all is not veil, Hamlet, i. 2 
with arms encumbered thus, or this .... — .;. 5 

goes he to tlie length of all his arra — ii. 1 

a little shaking of mine arm — ii.l 

to give the assay of arras against your . . — ii. 2 

he, whose sable arras, black as his — ii. 2 

sword, rebellious to his arm, lies where. . — ii. 2 
or to take arms against a sea of troubles — iii. 1 
arm you, I pray you, to this speedy voyage — iii. 3 

thus wide I'll ope ray arms — iv. 5 

he was the first that ever bore arms .... — v. 1 

could he dig ■without arms — v. 1 

caught her once more in mine arms — v. I 

to quit him with this arra? — ■v. 2 

for since these arms of mine had seven . . Othello,]. 3 
love's quick pants in Desdemona's arms — ii. 1 
or do but lift this ai'iii, the best of you .. — _i|. 3 
frora his very arm puffed his own brother ^ iii. 3 
■nith this little arm, and this good sword — v. 2 

ARMADA-who sent whole armadas. .Co7n.o/£r. iii. 2 

AliMADO— that Armado hight. . . . Love'sL.Lost, i. I 
Arraado is a most illustrious wight .... — i. 1 
a letter from the magnificent Armado.. — i. 1 
heat of duty. Don Aoriano de Armado — i. 1 (letter) 
andDon Armado shall be yom' keeper.. — i. J 
industry, Don Adi'iano de Arraado — iv. 1 (letter'/ 
this Armado is a Spaniard, that keeps... — iv. 1 
or called, Don Adriano de Armado .... — v. 1 
to impart to Armado, a soldier, a man. . — v. 1 
that put Armado's page out of Ms part.. — v. 2 

Armado's page, Hercules — .v. 2 

a whole armado of convicted sail . . King John, iii. 4 

ARMAGNAC— the earl of Armagnac.l Henry VI. v. 1 
the emperor, and the earl of Armagnac? — v. 1 
and so the earl of Armagnac may do . . — v. .'j 

ARMATHO- Armatho o' the one side. Love's L. L. iv. 1 
and sent ine from Don Armatho — iv. 2 

ARMED— Cupid all armed .... Mid. N.'s Dream, ii. 2 

brought with armed men back to Much Ado, v. 4 

if you are armed to do, as sworn...I.otic'sI,. Lost, i. 1 
approach disguised, armed in arguments — v. 2 

and am armed to suffer, ■with Mer. of Venice, iv. I 

I am armed, and well prepared — iv. 1 

he comes armed in his fortune ....As you Like it, iv. 1 

he hath armed our answer All's llell,]. 2 

but she is armed for him and keeps — iii. 5 

am armed with his good-will . . Taming of Shrew, \. 1 
be thou armed for some unliappy words — n. 1 
though thy little finger be armed in . . — iv. 3 
her forehead; armed and reverted. . Com. ofEr. iii. 2 
with valour armed, compelled these — Macbeth,\. 2 
the armed rhinoceros, or the hyrcan — — iii. 4 
ere sunset, set armed discord 'twixt. . KingJohn, in. 1 
thinking his voice an armed Englishman — v. 2 

their thimbles into armed gauntlets — v. 2 

is llan-y Hereford armed? Yea Richard II. i. 3 

proved armed soldiers ere her _. . — ?!!• ^ 

so armed to bear the tidings of calamity — iii. 2 
white beards have armed tlieir thin — — ui . 2 

with the armed hoofs of hostile 1 Henry IV. J. 1 

against the lion's anned jaws — iii. 2 

gallantly armed, — rise from the ground — i^v. 1 
his armed heels against the panting..2Keiirt/ IV. i. 1 

the nobles, and the armed commons — _ii. 3 

their armed staves in charge — i^v. 1 

while that the armed hand doth fight. . Henry V. i. 2 

like soldiers, armed in their stings — _ i. 2 

yerk out their armed heels at their dead — iv. 7 

amongst the troops of armed men \Henry VI. ii. 2 

thrice is he armed, that hath his . . .2 Henry VI. iii. 2 
armed as we are, let's stay within ZHenry VI. i. 1 



ARM 



[ 30 ] 



ARMED-fiU the house with armed mcn.3//f;i. Vl. i. 1 

3-et am I armed utrainst the worst — iv. I 

what means this armed snard Diehard III. i. 1 

ten tliousand soldiers, iinneil ill pmof •■ — '^■'^ 

a prologue armed, but not Trnilus^- Cress, umd.) 

was lleetor, armed and gone — .i.2 

with my armed fist I'll nash him — ,ii. 3 

I would fain have armed to-day — iii- 1 

when I meet >ou armed, as black — iv. 1 

liere, sister; armed', and bloody — v. 3 

and he is armed, and at it, roaring — v. 5 

once suliducd in armed tail — v. 11 

and mv armed knees, who bowed . . Cnrinlnuiis, iii. 2 
but 1 am armed, and dan.L'ers are . . J<,l.,r:r.7„u; i. 3 
for I am armed SI) stiMiiLT in honest}'. . . . — ^X* ^ 
lioman Brutus, with tile armed l■e-t.-lH^'S Clco. u. 6 

chain mine ui-medneek — iv. 8 

that arnieil tlie queen of Troy Tiliis Androii. i. 2 

vou niav be armed and appointed well.. — iv. 2 

an armed kni','ht that's conquered Pericles, ii. 2 

po armed. Armed, brother! ..(rfpra/ed) iear, i. 2 
thmi art armed, Glo'stcr: let the trumpet — v. 3 
when I wasarmed,not sru-e,thoughhoping — v. 3 
I eon;c hither armed against m\self ..Iloin ..^- Jul. v. 3 

eomes armed thron^'ll our watch Hamlet, i. 1 

a fi'iire like vnur fatlier, armed at point — i. 2 
lunied sav voii? .\rme.l, mv lord — i. 2 

All.MKNIA— Armenia, he gave to. .Ant. fyCleo. iii. fi 
but tlien, in his Armenia, and other — iii. 6 

AKM-(;AUNT-[Co/. A'n/.-an arm-gaunt steed] - i. 5 

AK.MIES— retire of both your armies.. Kins' Jo/m, ii- '^ 
where these two christian armies might — v. 2 
on our behalf, armies of pestilence.. /I'ic/wrd. II. iii. 3 
in both om- armies, there is many ..\ Henry IV. v. 1 
betwixt our armies true intelligence — — v. 5 

that our armies join not iHenrylV. i. 2 

his grace just distance 'tween our armies? — iv. 1 
and here between the armies, let's didnk — iv. 2 
stickler-like, the armies separate ..Trail. f,- Ores. V. 9 

how far off lie these armies? Coriolnnus, i. i 

the eyes of both our armies here . . Julins Ccesar, iv. 2 
were we before otu- a,vm\es...AntoniiSf Cleopatra, ii. 2 

ARMKiERO— writes himself armigero..M«n-y(f. 1. 1 
qiuttance, or olilii^ation, armigero — i. 1 

AK.MING— full arniing of the verity. .^«'s Well, iv. 3 
arming to answer in a night alai-m.r>'0!7.<§- Cress, i. 3 

by this, is arming him in Troy — v. 2 

great Arehilles is arming, weeping — v. 5 

arming myself with patience Julius C<esar, v. 1 

AKMIPOTBNT— armipotent Mars. .Low's Uh. v. 2 
linguist, and the amripotent soldier.. /J/<'s Well, iv. 3 

ARMOUR— like unscoured armour.. Mco./oriVfea. i. 3 
ten mile afoot, to see a good armom-. . Much Ado, ii. 3 
give me my armour. 'Tis not needed. .jVrtc6e//i, v. 3 

come, put mine armour on — v. 3 

burden of our armour here we sweat. KingJohn, ii. 1 

their armour, that marched hence — ii. 2 

whose armour conscience buckled on. . . — ii. 2 
unto my armour with tliy prayers — Richard II. i. 3 
and bring away the armour that is there — li. 2 
our armour alias strong, our eause..2/iert7-y//''. iv. 1 

like a rich armoru' worn in heat — iv. 4 

tut! I have the best armour He7iryF.\ii. 7 

you have an excellent armour — iii. 7 

you talk of horse and armour — iii. 7 

the armour, that I saw in your tent — iii. 7 

heads had any intellectual armour .... — iii. 7 

the sun doth gild our armour — iv. 2 

with my armour on my back — v. 2 

and would have armour here \ Henry FI. i. 3 

a woman, clad in armour, chaseth — i. 5 

she carry armour, as she hath begun.. — ii. 1 
scouring my lord of York's armour, .ittenry VI. i. 3 
lands, goods, horse, armour, anything — v. 1 

injustice putsliis armour on SHenryVI. ii. 2 

I am ready to put armour on — iii. 3 

I am ready to put armour on — iv. 1 

have in our armours watched — v. 7 

complete armour that thou wear'st! /Jic/tarti///. iv. 4 
and all mv armotir laid into my tent? — v. 3 

and buekfe on tlteir armour — v. 3 

we have our armours buckled on.. Troil.^- Cress, v. 3 
I like thv armour well; I'll frush it.. — v. 6 
thy goodly armour thus hath cost — v. 9 

fut armour on thine ears Timon of Athens, iv. 3 
would put mine armour on Coriolanus, iii. 2 

Eros! mine armour, Eros! (rep.) Ant.&-Cleo. iy. 4 

I'll give thee, friend, an armour all of gold — iv. 8 

turned to a rusty armour {repeated) Pericles, ii. 1 

let his armour rust imtil this day — ii. 2 

in your armours, as you are addressed — ii. 3 
I'll give thee armour to keep off. Ilomeo^ Juliet, iii. 3 

such was the very armour he had on Hamlet, i. 1 

thv Cyclops' hammers fall on Mars' armom: — ii. 2 
all the strength and armour of the mind.. — iii. 3 

AR.MOUREK— thrive the armourers. Hen. F. ii. (cho.) 
armourers, accomplishing the knights — iv. (cho.) 

the armourer and his man 'IHenry VI. ii. 3 

the servant of tliis armourer, my lords . — ii. 3 
and sti'uck his armourer Trail. ^-Crcss. i. 2 

ARMOURY— out of the town armours'. Tum.ofH. iii. 2 

go mth me into mine armoury Titus .ind. iv. 1 

goodliest weapons of his annoury .... — iv. 2 

ARMY — a treacherous army levied Tempest, i. 2 

none such in the army of any sort. ... .Much. ido, i. 1 

witli a whole army shooting* at me — ii 1 

and the hn"e array of the world's . . Love's L. Lost, i. 1 

an army of good words Merc/iant of Venice, iii. 5 

sliall be whipjied through the army.. All' slVetl, iv. 3 

tire array breaking, mv husband — iv. 4 

a purse alive in tlie whole army.. Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

each army hath a hand King John, iii. 1 

tliat such an army could be drawn — i v. 2 

within a ken, oiu- army lies 2HenryIV. iv. 1 

and deliver to the army this news. . . . — iv. 2 
and let our army be discharged too. . , — iv. 2 

wherefore stands otu: army still? — iv. 2 

my lord, our army is dispersed — iv. 2 

the army is discharged all, and gone.. — iv. 3 
when he shall see our army Henry V. iii. 5 



ARMY — army, aweak and sickly guard.Hen. ('. iii. G 
the hiun of either army stilly sounds — iv. (cho.) 
how dread an army hath en'rounded — iv. (cho.) 

should dishearten liis army — iv. 1 

an army have 1 musteied 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

all the whole arm j^ stood agazed — i. 1 

the English army is grown weak — i. 1 

levied an army; weening to — ii. 5 

that dogged the mighty army of — iv, 3 

the English army, that divided — v. 2 

now dismiss your army when — v. 4 

assail them with the army of the king.2Hen. VI. iv. 2 

his army is a ragged multitude — iv. 4 

there's an army gathered together ... — iv. 6 
until this army bo dismissed from him — iv. 9 
"why I have brought this army hither — v. 1 

cheered up the drooping army ZHenryVI. i. 1 

om- army s ready; come — i. 1 

the army of the queen mean to — i- 2 

the army of the queen hath got — ^i.i 

the army of great Buckingham .... Richard III. iv. 4 

Buckingham's army is dispersed — iv. 4 

went tlirough the army, cheering up.. — v. 3 

frown and lour upon our array — v. 3 

an arm^ cannot rule them Henry VIII. v. 3 

emulation in the army crept.. Troi/w.s' ^Cressida, ii. 2 
general of the Grecian army, Agamemnon — iii. 3 

our army's in the field Coriolanus, i. 2 

for the remove bring up your army .. — i. 2 

the Voices have an army forth — i. 3 

he makes among your cloven army .. — i. 4 

before our army liear me — i. 9 

have you an army, read}', say you? . . — iv. 3 

a fearful array, led by Cains — iv. 6 

more than the instant army we can make — v. 1 

the array marvelled at it — v. 5 

comes his army on? Julius CiTsar, iv. 2 

under which otu: army lies — v. 1 

king's son's body before our army .. Ani.Sf Cleo. iii. 1 
should have an army for an usher .. — ii'.' •> 

distract your army which doth — iii. 7 

and feast the army ! we have store . . — iv. 1 

'tis a brave army, and full of — iv. 3 

oui" array shall, m solemn show — 'v. 2 

O, I am known of many in the army. Cymheline,'\\. i 
pray, sir, to the army: I and ray brother — iv. 4 
the army broken, and but the backs. . — v. 3 
the Goths, and raise an army there.. Kius And. iii. 1 

the army of France was landed Lear, iii. 7 

I told him of the army that was landed . . — iv. 2 

how near's the other army? — iv. 6 

her army is moved on. I thank you .... — iv. G 

within tlie lists of the army — v. 3 (herald) 

witness, this army, of such mass Hamlet, iv. 4 

AROINT— aroint thee, witch! il/ac6c(/i,i. 3 

aroint thee, witch, aroint thee! Lear, iii. 4 (song) 

AROSE— when he arose again? . . Taming ofShr. iii. 2 

thereupon these errors are arose Com. of Er. v. 1 

such a noise arose as Henry Vlll. iv. 1 

suddenly arose, and walked about . . Jul. Ccesar, ii. 1 

AROUSE— wolves arouse the jades . .2HenryVI. iv. 1 

A-ROW — beaten the maids a-row.. Com. of Errors, v. 1 

ARRAGON— Pedro of Arragon comes.. MucA Ado^ i. 1 

and then go I toward Arragon — iii. 2 

the prince of Arragon hath ta'en . . Mer. of Ven. ii. 9 

ARR^UGN— how you shall arraign. ..Men../'i)r M. ii. 3 
that we may arraign our most . . Winter's Tale, ii. 3 
it shall be done, I will arraign them .... Lear, iii. 6 

arraign her first; 'tis Goueril — iii. 6 

not thine: who shall arraign me for 't. . . . — v. 3 
our person to arraign in ear and ear . . Hamlet, iv. 5 

ARRAIGNED— here accused and arraigned of 

high Winter's Tale, iii. 2 (indictment) 

ARRAIGNING-aiTaigning hisunkindness.O(/i.iii. 4 

ARRANT— of as arrant knaves as imj. Much Ado, iii. 5 
I leave an arrant knave with your worship — v. 1 

Poins be not two arrant cowards 1 Henry IV. ii. 2 

that arrant malmsey-nose knave ...2Henry IV.ii. 1 

for they are arrant knaves — v. 1 

that Visor is an arrant knave — v. 1 

no, thou an-ant knave; I would I might — y. 4 
this is an arrant counterfeit rascal . ...Henry V. iii. G 

'tis as arrant a piece of knavei-v — iv. 7 

his reputation is as arrant a villain . . — iv. 7 

'sblud, an arr.ant traitor — iv. 8 

what an arrant, rascally, beggarly . . — iv. 8 

the moon's an arrant thief Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

fortune, that arrant whore, ne'er Lear, ii. 4 

all Denmark, but he's an arrant knave. . Hamlet,\. 5 
we are arrant knaves, all: believe none — iii. 1 

ARRAS — thou stand ivithin the arras . . ..John, iv. 1 
will ensconce ine behind the arras. Merj-y Wives, iii. 3 

I wliipt me behind the arras Mitch /Ido, i. 3 

in cypress chests my arras Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 

go Iiide thee behind the arras 1 Henry IV. ii. 4 

last asleep behind the arras — ii. 4 

I fell asleep here behind the arras.... — '.'!■ ^ 

the arras, figm*es, why, such Cymheline, ii. 2 

be you and I behind an arras then .... Hamlet, \\. 2 

behind the arras I'll convey myself — iii. 3 

behind the arras hearing something stir .— iv. 1 

ARRAY— eat, array myself, and Wse.Mea.for M. iii. 2 
me fresh array, and entertainment. /Is you Like, iy. 3 

put you in your best array — v. 2 

rings, and things, and fine array .Taming ofSh.il. 1 
poor furniture, and mean array.. — iv. 3 

m which array (brave soldier) Henry V. iv. 6 

thou wolf in sneep's array 1 Henry VI. i. 3 

liitherward in proud array 2HenryVI. iv. 9 

stand we in good array ^Henry VI. y. 1 

set not thy sweet heart on proud array . . Lear, iii. 4 
courts thee in her best array . . Romeo ^ Juliet, iii. 3 
in all her best array bear her to church — iv. 5 

.(UlRAYED— is he arrayed? Ay, madam ..Lear, iv. 7 
if impious war, arrayed in flames Henry V. iii. 3 

ARREARAGES — send the arrearages By ml. ii. 4 

ARREST— I arrest thee at the suit . . Tavtflh N. iii. 4 
speak so wisely under an arrest . . Mea.for Mea. i. 3 

he arrests him on it — i. .') 

I do arrest your words — ii. 4 



ART 



ARREST — we arrest your word Lore's L.Lost, ii. 1 

well, officer, arrest him at mv suit. . Com. of Er. iv. 1 
arrest me, foolish fellow, if thou (csp.) — iv. 1 

I do arrest you, sir; you hear — iv. 1 

suborned the goldsmUli to arrest me.. — iv. 4 

he did arrest me with an officer — v. 1 

of capital treason we arrest you here. . Rich. II. iv. 1 
under oiu' arrest, procureyour sureties — iv. 1 
we must aiTest sir John Falstaff. . . .2Henry IV. ii. 1 
sir John, I arrest you at the suit .... — ii. 1 

I do aiTest thee, traitor, of high — iv. 2 

arrest them to the answer HenryV.W.i 

I arrest thee of high treason (repraJeiO — ii. 2 
I do arrest thee ot high treason here. 2 Henri//'/, iii. 1 
change my countenance for this arrest — iii. 1 
I do arrest you in his highness' name — iii. 1 
I arrest thee, York, of capital treason — v. 1 
I arrest thee on capital treason {rep.) .... Lear, v. 3 

sends out arrests on Fortinbras Hamlet, ii. 2 

death, is strict in his arrest — • v. 2 

ARRESTED-his horses are arrested. Aferri/Wu'es, v. 5 

there's one yonder arrested Mea.for Mea. i. 2 

I saw him arrested — i. 2 

I am arrested in the street. . . . Comedy of Errors, iv. 1 
what, is he arrested? tell me {repeated) — iv. 2 

whose suit is he arrested at? — iv. 4 

and you, sir, for this chain arrested me? ^ v. 1 

and he is arrested at my suit 2Henry IV.ii. 1 

he is arrested, but wi 11 not obey 2 Henry VI. v. 1 

Northumberland arrested him Henry VIII. iv. 2 

ARRIVAL-my arrival, and m.y wife's. IV inter' sT. v. 1 
is apprehended for arrival here. Coroedy of Errors, i. 2 

the cause of his arrival here Richard II. i. 3 

still ending at the arrival of an hour..lHen. IV. v. 2 
hearing of your arrival in this realm. 1 Hen. VI. iii. 4 

ARRIVANCE-expectaney of more arrivance. Olh. ii. 1 

ARRIVE — ^nostril where I arrive . . Winter's Tale, i. 2 
so soon as you arrive, shall clear . . — iv. 3 

or arrive where I may have 1 Henry FI. v. 5 

many so arrive atsecond masters. .JVmono/' /((A. iv. 3 
but ere we could arrive the point ..JuliusCcesar, i. 2 

where he arrives, he moves all hearts Lear, iv. 5 

too svnSt airives as tardy as too slow./^om. ^ Jul. ii. 6 

ARRIVED— in this island we aiTived . . Tempest, i. 2 

when I arrived, and heard thee — i. 2 

1 have since arrived but hither . . Twelfth Night, ii. 2 
lam arrived for fruitful L,ombardy.2'a)n!ng'o/S. i. ' 
this gentleman is happily arrived .... — i. 

father is arrived in Padua — iv. 

happily I have arrived at last — v. 

being well arrived from Delphos .. Winter's Tale, ii. 
and safe, arrived where I was. . Comedy of Errors, i. 

■we miss, were safe arrived Macbeth, v. 

our messenger Chatillon is arrived . . King John, ii. 

that they are all arrived — iv. 

the news abroad, who are arrived? .. — iv. 
either past, or not an-i ved to pith. Henry V. iii. (cho.' 
where ne'er from France arrived more — iv. f 
being thus arrived from Ravenspurg .3 Hen. VI. iv. 

have arrived our coast — v.; 

cardinal Carapeius is arrived Henry VIII. ii. 

he is arrived: march gently on ...Julius Cmsar, iv. : 
is arrived here where his daughter. Pericles, v. (Giow. 

are here arrived; give order Hamtet, v. '■ 

give us truth who 'tis that is arrived Othello, ii. 

he is not yet arrived; nor know I aught — ii. 
iipon certain tidings now arrived — ii. 2 

ARRIVING— arriving at place of potency. Coriol. ii. 3 

ARROGANCE— arrogance to choose .. All'sWell, ii. 1 
O monstrous arrogance! thou liest . . Tarn. ofS. iv. 3 
not you for her proud arrogance .... Richard III. i. 3 
ye endure to hear this arrogance? . . Hen. Fill. iii. 2 
bastes his arrogance ■with his own. Trail. ^ Cress, ii. 3 
supple knees feed arrogance — iii. 3 

ARROGANCY-craramed with an-oganev- H. Fill. ii. 4 

ARROGANT-arrogant Winchester?. .l" Henri/ r/. i. 3 
nor cease to he an arrogant controller.2Hen. FI. iii. 2 
thy proud child, arrogant man. Timon of Athens, iv. 3 
aiTOgant piece of flesh threat us Cymheline, iv. 2 

ARROW — son has broke his arrows Tempest, iv. 1 

that your arrow hath glanced .... Merry Wives, y. 5 
little Cupid's crafty arrow made ....Much Ado, iii. 1 

some Cupid kills with arrows — iii. 1 

by his best arrow with the golden. . Mid. N. Drm.i. 1 
swifter than arrow from the Tartar's — iii. 2 
fleeter than arrows, bullets, wind . . . Love's L. L. v. 2 
to shoot another arrow that self . . Mer. ofFenice.i. \ 

that love's keen arrows make As yau Like it, iii. 5 

hath ta'en his how and arrows .. — iv. 3 

that arrows fled not swifter toward . .2Henry IV. i. 1 

swallow, an arrow, or a bullet? — iv. 3 

as many arrows, loosed several Henry F. i. 2 

draw your arrows to the head ! Richard III. y. 3 

and, as an aiTow, shot from Pericles, i_. 1 

she'll not be hit with Cupid's an'ow..i?om. ^- Jul. i. 1 
slings and arrows of outrageous fortune ..Ham. iii. 1 

so that my arrows, too slightly — iv. 7 

that I have shot my arrow o'er — v. 2 

ART— if by yoiu- art Tempest, i. 2 

lie there, my art — i- 2 

such provision in mine art — i. 2 

for the liberal arts, ■without — i. 2 

it was mine art, when I arrived — i. 2 

liis art is of such power — i-2 

through his art foresees the danger . . — ii. 1 

some vanity of mine art — iv. 1 

which by mine art I have — iv. 1 

by my so potent art — v. 1 

spirits to enforce, art to enchant — (ejiil.") 

use your art of wooing Merry Wives,^ ii. 2 

boys of art, I have deceived — ii'. 1 

O had I but followed the arts! . . Tu'clflh Night,i. 3 
as full of laboiu* as a wise man's art — • iii. 1 

as art and practice hath Measure for Measure, i. 1 

she hath prosperous art when — _i. 3 

all her double vigour, art, and nature — ii. 2 

with what art you sway : . Mid. N. Dream, i. 1 

natm-c here shows art, that through.. — ii. 3 
and contemplative in living art . . . Love's I. Los/, i. 1 
well fitted in the arta, glorious — ii. 1 



ART 



[31 ] 



ASK 



AK.T— that art would comprehend . . Lure's L. L. iv. 2 

other slow arts entirely kci'p — 'V. 3 

the hooks, the iivts, the aeademcs — iv. 3 

no wit bv nature nor art .Is ;/">' Like it, m. 2 

most ipr.'.rouod in Uisarl, andyet .... _— „ .Y- r 

that hdiouriii.u art can never Ill s It ell, ii. 1 

allmy ^)eril, thou uoart — !!• { 

my art IS not past power — ii- J 

nursery of arts, I am arrived . . Taming n/S/irew^i. 1 

begin with rudiments of art — >."• ' 

the art to love. And may you (reprateO — iv. 2 
there is an art, which in their . . H'iiilcr s Tale, iv. 3 
that art which, you say, adds (,reji.'l . . — iv- 3 
this is an art, which does mend nature — iv. J 

but the art itself is nature — iv. 3 

as we are mocked with art — v. 3 

let it be an art lawful — y. 3 

cling together, and choke their art Mm-bclh, _i. i 

there's no art, to find the mind's — ..;. 4 

show the i-'lory of our art — '."••' 

tell me, (if your art can tell — iv- ' 

the great assay of art — IJ.- ^ 

trace me in the tedious ways of art.l Henry II . iii. 1 

invest their sons with arts 'lUennj IV. vf. 4 

60 that the art and practick part Henry V. i. 1 

dear nurse of arts, plenties — ^ y- - 

untrained in any kind of art 1 Henry VI. i. '2 

contrived by art. and baleful — n- J 

natiu-al graces that extinguish art . . — v. 3 
in sweet music is such art . . Henry VIII. m. I (song) 

so excellent in art, and still so — iv. 2 

swelling o'er with arts and Trnil.ffCres. iv. 4 

thou art even natural in thine art . . Timon of A. v. 1 
on objects, arts, and imitations . . Julius Ccvsar, iv. 1 
I have as much of this in art as y on . . — ly. 3 

be it art or hap he hath spoken AnI. <§- Cleo. ii. 3 

the art o' the com-t, as hard to Cymbehne, in. 3 

ay, and singrdar in his art — "i. ^ 

those arts they have, as 1 could ptit . . — .v- 5 
temjier him, with all the art I have..ri(us And. iv. 4 

yet neither pleasure's art can Fcricles,i. 2 

art hatli thus decreed, to make — ;!• 3 

my education being in arts and arms .. — ..!>• 3 

through whicli secret art — m. 2 

even lier art sisters the natural. ... — v. (Oower) 

I want that glib and oily art kl^'^''.\}-] 

upon the warrant of my art [Co?. Knt — note]- in. 1 

uatm-e's above art in that resjDCct — iv. B 

by the art of known and feehng sorrows — iv. 6 
now art thou what thou art, by art . . Rom. .§- Ju(. u. 4 
the commission of thy years and art — iv. 1 

BO tutored by my art, a sleeping potion — v. 3 
less art. Madam, I swear, I use no art. . Hamlet, }}. 2 

farewell it, for I will use no art — n. 2 

I have not art to reckon my groans — ii. 2 (letter) 

beautied with plastering art — ni. 1 

for art and exercise in your defence .... — ly. 7 

a practiser of arts inhilnted and out Othello, i. 2 

AKTEMIDORUS-defendthee! thy lover, 

Arteraidorus Julius Censor, ii. 3 (paper) 

ARTERIES— spirits in the arteries .. Love's L. L. iv. 3 

ARTERY— each petty artery in this ho(W.Hamlet, i. 4 

ARTHUK— Arthm-l''lanta"enetlays..A'mg-./oAn,i. 1 

put the same into young Arthur's hand — \. } 

Arthur, that great forermmer of thy blood — ;i. 1 

in right of Artiiur do I claim of thee . . — u. 1 

Arthur of Bretagne, yield thee — ii. 1 

whose title they admit, Arthur's or Jolm's — ii. 1 

men of Anglers, Arthur's subjects — ii. 1 

and let young Arthur, duke of Bretagne — ii. 2 
proclaim Arthur of Bretagne, England's — ii. 2 
create yoimg Arthur duke of Bretagne — ii 2 

to stop Arthur's title in the whole — ii. 2 

Anglers lost? Arthur ta'en prisoner? . . — iii. 4 

behold my pretty Arthiu- more — iii. ^ 

my boy, my Arthur, my fair — J!!- ■* 

frjevea that Arthur is liis prisoner .... — !!!•'' 
ohn hath seized Arthur — ?![■"* 

then Arthur needs must fall — iii. 4 

gainby young Arthur's fall — iii. ■! 

that Arthiu' did. And lose it (repeated') — iii. 4 

■will not touch young jVrthru-'s life — HI* ^ 

if that young Arthur be not gone — iii. 4 

read here, young Arthur: how now.. .. — iv. 1 

the enfranchisement of Arthmr — iy. 2 

he tells us, Arthur is deceased — iv. 2 

to seek the grave of Arthur — iy. 2 

voung Arthiur's death is common — iv. 2 

nis tale, and talks of Arthur's death . . — iv. 2 
urgest thou so oft young Arthur's death — iv. 2 

broke with thee or Arthm-'s death — iv- 2 

young Arthur is alive ; this hand — iv. 2 

doth jVrthur live? O haste thee — iv. 2 

in seeking you. Arthiu- doth live — iv. 3 

after they heard young Arthur was alive — v. 1 

after yormg Arthur, claim this land — y. 2 

when Arthur first in coiu^ 2 Henry Zr. ii. 4 

I was then sir Dagonet in Ai-thirr's show — iii. 2 
in Arthur's bosom, if ever man (tep.) ..Henry r. ii. 3 

and widow to prince Arthur Henry VIII. iii. 2 

ARTICLE- to every article Tempest, i. 2 

or thrice in that last article Two Gen. of Ver. iii. 1 

not alter the article of thy gentry., il/erry tViveSyii, 1 
that does lend articles? Articles are — iv. 1 

swerve not from the smallest article. A/ea. /or M. iv. 2 
this article, my liege, yourself must., towe'j L. L. i. ! 
therefore, tliis article is matle in vain — i. 1 
to draw an answer from thy articles.. Kini? John,\\. 1 
shouldst thou find one heinous article.. IticU.II. iv. 1 

despatch; read o'er these articles — iv. 1 

shall sei^ve to show in articles 2IIenry IV. iv. 1 

each several article herein redressed . . — iv. 1 
how far forth you do like their articles? — iv. 2 

iyc o'er-glanced the articles Henry V. v. 2 

shen articles, too nicely urged — v. 2 

within the fore-rank of oui- articles .... — v. 2 

the king hath granted every article — v. 2 

let that one article rank with — v. 2 

here are the articles of contracted. . . .2 Henry VI. i. 1 
Suffolk concluded on the ajticles — i. 1 



ARTICLE— stay to hear these articles 3 Wcnry Vl.i. 1 

shall articles lie drawn touching — iii. 3 

the articles o' tlie conibi nation Henry VIII. i. I 

tlicartii'IesrollrctidlVo.o his life .... — iii. 2 
those articles, mv lui-il, arc ill (Ik! .... — iii. 2 
I vet rcincnilKr sonic nC tlu-se articles — iii. 2 
endures not article tying him to aiight . . Coriol. ii. 3 
you have broken the article.. /ln(o)ij/,5-CTeo/)(iira,ii. 2 
the article of mv oath— To lend me . . — ii. 2 

let us have articles betwixt us Cymbeline, i. 5 

that's an article witliiii our law Pericles, i. 1 

carriage of the article designed Hamlet, i. 1 

the scope of these dilated articles allow.. — i. 2 

take him to be a soul of great article — y. 2 

but the main article I do approve 0(/irf(o,i. 3 

I'll perform it to the last article — iii. 3 

for to deny each article with oath — v. 2 

ARTICUL'ATE— we may articulate . . Cor!olanus,i. 9 
ARTICULATED-youhavearticiilated.lHen./r.v. 1 

ARTIFICER— lean unwashed artilicer Jijhn,\v. 2 

ARTIFICIAL— two artificial gods.. Mid. N. Dr. iii. 2 

shall raise such artificial sijrites Macbeth, iii. 5 

■wet my checks mth artificial tears..3HeHri/ VI. iii. 2 
artificial strife lives in these touches.. Timon ofA.i. 1 
two stones more than his artificial one — ii. 2 
that thy prosperous artificial feat can . . Pericles, y. 1 
makes liimself an artificial night . . Itomeo <5- Jul. i. 1 
ARTILLERY— and heaven's artillery, ram. o/SA. i. 2 
the mouth of thy artillery. As we will .. Jo/i»i,ii. 2 

by discharge of their artillery \ Henry IV.i. 1 

to ■view the artillery and munition . . 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

to rive their dangerous artillery upon -< iv. 1 

ARTIST— relinquished of the artists.... .J/Cs Wellii. 3 

the artist and unread Troilus S,- Cressida, i. 3 

in framing artists, art hath Pericles, ii. 3 

ARTLESS— so full of artless jealousy . . Hamlet, iy. 5 

ARTOIS— the regions of Artois 1 Henry Vl.ii.l 

ARTS-MAN— arts-man pra3ambula..ioK<!'s i. i. y. 1 
ARTUS—gelidus timer occupatartus.2Henry VI. iv. 1 
ARXJJS'DEL— Richard, earl of jVrundel . . Rich. II. ii. 1 
ARVIRAGUS— Cadwal, (once Arviragusj.Ci/mt. iii. 3 

ray Cadwal, Arsiragus, your younger — v. 5 

ASCANIUS— witch me, as A6canius.2Hrari/ VI. iii. 2 

ASCAPART— fell upon Ascapart — ii. 3 

ASCAUNT— there is a willow grows ascaunt 

the [A'li/WiJ— aslant a] brook Hamlet,iv. 7 

ASCEND— 
her chamber-window will ascend. Tr™ Gen. o/F. iii. 1 

ascend my chambers, search Merry Wives, iii. 3 

bleed France, and peace ascend to heaven. JoAn,ii. 1 
ascend his throne, descending tuow.. Richard II. iy. 1 

I'll ascend the regal throne — iv. 1 

Bolingbroke ascends my throne — y. 1 

Bolingbroke ascends my throne 2Henry IV. iii. 1 

it ascends me into the brain — iv. 3 

would ascend the brightest heayen..Hen. V. i. (cho.) 
ascend, brave Talbot; we will follow..) Hen. VI. ii. 1 
they ascend the sky, and there awake.. Rich.III.i. 3 
base degrees by which he did ascend./u(. C<psar, ii. 1 

ascend, fair queen, Pantheon TitusAndronicus^ i. 2 

ascend her chamber, hence and ..Borneo SfJul. iii. 3 
ASCENDED— Brutus is ascended. . JuliusCwsar, iii. 2 

the dust shoidd liave ascended Ant. jr Cleo. iii. 6 

ASCENSION— hisascensionis more sweet. Ci/mfc. v. 4 

ASCENSION-DAY- 

ere the next Ascension-day at noon. King John, iv. 2 

on this Ascension-day, remember well . . — y. 1 

is this Ascension-day? Did not (rep.) .. — v. 1 

ASCENT— his ascent is not by such easy. .Coriol. ii. 2 

ASCRIBE— which we ascribe to heaven. All's Well, i. 1 

to thy arm alone, ascribe we all Henry F. iv . 8 

ascribes the glory of his eomiuest . . 1 Henry VI. iii. 4 

the reason why we ascribe it to him. 7'ro/(. ^ Cres. ii. 3 

ASH — where against my grained ash.. Coriolanus, iv. 5 

ASHAMED-art thou not ashamed. rzooGen.o/F. iv. 2 

be thou ashamed, that I have took .. — y. 4 

are you not ashamed Merry Wives, iii. 3 

are you not ashamed? (repeated) — iy. 2 

perchance, publicly, she'll be ashamed. il/ea../or A/, v. 1 
fie upon thee! art not ashamed? — Much Ado, iii. 4 

but are you not ashamed? Nay Love's L. L. iv. 3 

to be ashamed to be my father s child. Mer. of V. ii. 3 

for I am much ashamed — ii. 

invention is ashamed, against All's Well, i. 3 

ashamedof me? No, sir, (rep.) ..TamingofSh.v.i 
I am ashamed, that women are so simple — v. 2 
I am ashamed: does not the stone. Winter'sTalc, v. 3 
I am almost ashamed to say what good. ./oA?i, iii. 3 

art not ashamed? but, sirrah ! Henry IV. i. 3 

pocket up wrong; art thou not ashamed? — iii. 3 

if I be not ashamed of my soldiers — iv. 2 

are you not ashamed, to enforce 2HenrylV.\[. 1 

art thou not ashamed to be called — ii. 4 

I need not be ashamed of your majestj'. Hen. r. iv. 7 

are you not ashamed, with this 1 Henry VI. iv. 1 

I am ashamed ; O heaveus ! . . Troilus ^ Cressida, iii. 2 
before the gods, I am ashamed on't. Timon of A. iii. 2 
I am ashamed I did yield to them . . Jid. Ccesnr, ii. 2 
it is ashamed to bear m.e\.. Antony <5- Cleopatra, iii. 9 
I am ashamed to look upon the — Cymbeline, iv. 4 
a wretch whom nature is ashamed almost.. Lea;-, i. 1 

I am ashamed that thou hast power — i. 4 

art not ashamed to look upon this beard . . — ii. 4 
upon his brow shame is ashamed. .. /torn. <§-/u;. iii. 2 
be not you ashamed to show, he'll not.. Hamtet, iii. 2 
rA'niffAf]— you'll be ashamed for ever. . . . Olttello, ii. 3 
ASHER-IIOUSE— 
confine yourself to Asher-house . . Henry VIII. iii. 2 

ASHES— and thou shalt turn to ashes John, iii. 1 

and strewed reijentant ashes on his head — iv. 1 

and some will mourn in aslios Richard II. v. 1 

not in ashes, and sackcloth iiHennj IV. i. 2 

till in her ashes she lie bm-ied Henry V. iii. 3 

her ashes, in an urn 1 Henry VI. i. 6 

under feigned ashes of forged love . . — iii. 1 

but from their ashes shall be — iv. 7 

in Smitlifleld shall be burned to ashes. 2Hen. VI. ii. 3 

my ashes, as the phoenix, may 3Henry VI. i. 4 

pale ashes of the house of Lancaster !.. KicA. III. i. 2 
modesty, now in his ashes honour.. Henry VIII. iv. 2 



ASHES— her ashesnew create anothcr.Hcn.r///. v. 4 
from the sacred ashes of her honour .. — v. 4 
through the ashes of my chance .. Antony ffCteo. v. 2 
from ashes ancieiitGfiwer is coine.i'er/fies, i. (Gower) 
jialc, [lalc as ashes, all licdanbed. . . .yiom.^-./ii/. iii. 2 
lips and checks shall lade to paly ashes — iv. 1 
ASHFORD— John Cade of Ashford . .2Henry VI. iii. 1 
Where's Dick, the butcher of Ashford? — iy. 3 

ASHORE— how came we ashore Tempest, i. 2 

here shall I die ashore — ii. 2 (song) 

since I was cast ashore — ii. 2 

swam ashore, man, like a duck — ii. 2 

ashore at Windsor? Merry Wives, ii. 1 

thou wert come ashore, W'e could. . . Taming ofSh. i. 1 

since I came a^sbore, I killed a Inan — i. \ 

to the leviathan to come ashore Henry V. iii. 3 

to welcome them ashore Richard III. iv. 4 

bear him ashore: I'll pledge it AnI.SrCleo. ii. 7 

threw him ashore, to give him ..Pericles, ii. (Gower) 

and when you come ashore, I have — y. 2 

I must fetch his necessaries ashore .... Othello, ii. 1 
ASH- WEDNESDAY— 

on Ash- Wednesday was four year. Mer. of Ven. ii. .5 

ASHY — of ashy semblance, meagre. .2//«>iryr/. iii. 2 

ASIA — from the farthest inch ot Asia..il/«rt/l(/o, ii. 1 

clean through the bounds of Asia . . . Corn, of Er. i . 1 

and hollow pampered jades of Asia. .2JlCTir!// r. ii. 4 

extended Asia from Euphrates .. Antony S,- Cleo. i. 2 

ASIDE— whose enmity he flung aside . . Tempest, ii. 1 

stand aside! the company parts. 7'«'oGc'n.o/;'t7-. iv. 2 

the attraction of my good parts asXAcMerryW. ii. 2 

take him aside Tirelfth Night, v. 1 

will't please you walk as\de'i. .Measure for Meu. iv. 1 
old signior, walk aside with me .... Much .ido, iii. 2 

well, stand aside: 'fore God, they — iv. 2 

stand aside: the noise they make. Mid. N.'s Dr. iii. 2 
our purposed hunting shall be set aside — iy. 1 
stand aside, good bearer . . Love's Labour's Lost, iv. 1 

walk aside the true folk — iv. 3 

stand aside, good Pompey — y . 2 

go, draw aside the curtains Merchant of Ven. ii. 7 

my sister, reading; stand aside ..AsijouLike it, iii. 2 
he threw his eye aside, and mark .... — iv. 3 

therefore stand aside : this ring All's Welt, y. 3 

Eianca, stand aside: poor girll . . Taming ofSh. ii. 1 

setting all this chat aside, thus — ii. 1 

Kate, let's stand aside, and see — y. 1 

casting their savageuess aside Winter sTale, ii. 3 

and lay aside the thoughts of Sicilia.. — iv. 1 

not cast aside so soon Macbeth, i. 7 

to lay aside the sword which sways . . King John, i. 1 
setting aside his high blood's royalty. Ilicliardl I. i. 1 
and lay aside my high blood's royalty — \. 1 
to lay aside life-harming hea^viness .. — ii. 2 

step aside, and I'll show thee 1 Henry IV.ii.i 

stand aside, nobility — ii. 4 

thy knighthood aside, thou art (rf/j.) — iii. 3 
daff'ed the world aside, and bid it pass — iv. 1 
knighthood and my soldiership aside. .2Hen. IV. i. 2 
Hay aside that wliich grows to me !. . — ..i. 2 
peace, fellow, peace; stand aside; know — iii. 2 
go to; stand aside. And good master — iii. 2 
set this unaccustomed fight aside . . 1 Henry VI. iii. 1 

pity, must be laid aside ZHenry VI. \\. 2 

to stand aside, while I use — J!!- 3 

all dissembling set aside, tell me ... . — in. 3 
my mourning weeds are laid aside .. — ill. 3 
your scorns, and your mislike aside — iy 1 
thv brothers beat aside the point . . Richard III. i. 2 
or "hedge aside from the direct ._. Troilus /!f Cres. iii. 3 
aside, aside; here comes lord llmon.. Tim. of A. Si. 2 

setting his fate aside, of comely — iii. •'' 

come lay aside your stitchcry Coriolanus, i. 3 

throwing it aside and stemming it.. JntiusCa;sar,_i. 2 
boy, stand aside: CaiusLigarius! how? — ii. 1 
turn aside, and weep for her.Antony ^Cleopatra, i. 3 
so please you, step aside; I'll know.iio/nco SrJul.i. 1 
with one hand beats cold death aside — iii. 1 

hath rushed aside the law — iii. 3 

but soft! aside; here comes the king ..Hamlet, v. 1 

ASK— when I could not ask my father . . Tempest, v. 1 

that I must ask my child forgiveness . . — y. 1 

and you ask me, if she did nod.. I'u'o Gen.of Ver. i. 1 

and ask remission for — J. 2 

ask my dog — n- S 

tliatlshall askofyou — y. 4 

and ask of Doctor Caius' house Merry Wives, i. 2 

that it pleases your good worship to ask — i. 4 
ask me no reason why I love you — ii. 1 {letter! 

you may ask your fatlier — . in. 4 

I pray you, ask him some — iv. • 

and ask liim, why, that hour — iv. 4 

to ask for my kinsman Toby Twelfth Night, u. .') 

and ask no other dowry mth her .... — .ii. J> 

what shall you ask of me — ni- 4 

makes me to ask you for my purse . . — in. 4 
and for his cowardship, ask Fabian . . — ui. 4 
her unhapijy brotlier? let me osk..W(;ij./o/-il/ca. i. 5 

ask him what tills man did — ;;■ j 

I beseech your honour, ask me — ]}■ } 

why dost thou ask again? — n. 2 

and ask your heart, what — .?!• 2 

let me ask my sister pardon — in-' 

he doth oftener ask forgiveness — ly. 2 

what is he that you ask for, niece? ..Much Ado,i. 1 

thou should'st rather ask, if it — !>!• ■* 

ask my lady Beatrice else .- -- m- ■• 

first, 1 ask thee what they liave done (rep.) — y. 1 

that will ask some tears in Mid. N. Dream, i. 2 

I then did ask of her her changelmg — iv. 1 
but ask mo not what ; for, if 1 tell .... _ — ly . .i 
was it then to ask the question . . Love s L. Lost, ii. I 

the hoiu: tliat fools should ask — ii. 

Rosaline tliey call her: ask for her . . — in. ] 

it is not so; ask them, how many — v. ^ 

I know the reason, lady, why you ask — v. ^ 

why ask you? He speaks not — .y. 2 

nay, but ask my opinion too . . Mcreh.of Venice, in. 5 

you II ask me, why I rather — iv. 1 

thy life before thou ask it — iv. 1 



ASK— I'll ask him what he would . . As you Like it. i. 2 
didheask for me? whereremahishey — ij;- 2 

you should ask me, what time — in. 2 

think not I love hira, though I ask . . — in. b 

and ask me what you will — iv. 1 

I might ask you for your commission — iv. 1 

let me ask vou a question AU'sireU,_i 1 

kneeled, mV lord, to ask me mercy . . — ii- ] 

free for me to ask, thee to bestow — iJ- 1 

ask me if I am a corn-tier — 11.2 

rather muse, than ask, why I entreat — .Ji. 5 

and sine; ask questions, and sing — lu- ^ 

to what~I shall ask you out of a note — iv. 3 

Ineednot ask you, ifgold win — iv. 3 

what does lie ask liim of me? — iv. 3 

let liim not ask our pardon — v. 3 

eood my lord, ask him upon his — . v. 3 

Esk hun wliat apparel he will. . Tarn, of S. 1 (indue.) 

ne'er ask mc wliat raiment — 2 (indue.) 

ask JIariau Ilacket, the fat — 2 (mduc.) 

if thou ask me why, sutficetli — i- ' 

let me be so bold as to ask you — .J. 2 

wlien I shall ask the banns — .ii- 1 

should ask, if Katliarine sliould be . . — 111.2 

and seemed to ask him sons — in- 2 

his welcomes forth, asks tliee .... Winter's Tate, iv. 3 

then asks Bohemia forgiveness — v. 2 

if anv ask you for your master .. Comedy of Err. u. 2 

some" devils ask but tlie paring — iv. 3 

answer rae to what I ask you Macbeth, 1 v. 1 

nay, ask me if I can refrain King John, 11. 2 

anil I did never ask it you again — — iv. 1 
meantime, but ask what you would.. — iv. 2 
that you have bid us ask his liberty. . — jv. 2 

we do no further ask, than — iv. 2 

I do not ask you much ; I beg — v. 7 

in arms: ask hira his name Richard II. i. 3 

marshal, ask yonder knight — .1-3 

great affairs do ask some charge — .11. 1 

yet ask. And shall I have? — iv. 1 

shall ask me for one penny cost MIenrylV.i. 3 

directly to this question that I ask . . — 11. 3 
ask me when thou ivilt, and thou — — .11. 4 
may I ask, how my lady his wife doth?.2ri./r. 111. 2 

bade me ask for it to day Uennj V. \\. 2 

ask me this slave in Frcucli — iv. 4 

neighbours tell, Kate? I'll ask them'. — v. 2 

ask me wliat question thou canst 1 llenrxj VI. \. 2 

go ask liira, wliitlier he goes — 11. 3 

answer that I shall ask 'llienryVI. \. 4 

ask what thou wilt: that I had — _ 1. 4 

I ask but this; can he, that speaks . . — iv. 2 

and ask liim, what's the reason — iv. 9 

first, let me ask of these — v. 1 

Clifford, ask mercy, and obtain Zllenry VI. 11. 6 

and ask the lacly Bona for thy — .11.6 

canst do what I mean to ask — 111.2 

why ask I that? my mangled — _ v. 2 

that your lordship please to ask . . liichardlll. iii. 2 

to ask those on the banks — iv. 4 

ask God for temperance; that's Henry VIII. i. 1 

ere you ask, is given — _i. 2 

miglit ask by law, scholars — _ii. 2 

that seal, you ask with such a violence — iii. 2 

may I lie bold to ask what that — iv. 1 

av; I ask, that I mi^ht waken . . Troitus <?- Crcs. i. 3 

Itector bade ask. Wliich way — iv. 5 

ask me not what I woidd be — v. 1 

ask nothing, give it him, it foals. . Timon ofAlh. h. 1 

that you ask me what you are — .ii. 2 

what do you ask of me, my friend — — iii. 4 
wliy dost ask that? I have forgot all.. — iv. 3 
tell me one thing that I shall ask you . . Coriol. ii. 1 

the price is, sir, to ask it kindly — ii. 3 

on him, that did not ask, but mock — ii. 3 

who shall ask it? the tribunes — iv. 6 

or, if you'd ask, remember this ■ — v. 3 

for we have notliing else to ask — v. 3 

vet we will ask; that, if you fail — v. 3 

I should not then ask Casca what. .JutiusCcesar, i. 2 
whv ask you? Hear you auglit of her. ... — iv. 3 
not'know Mecffinas; askAgrippa ..Ant. .^-Cleo. ii. 2 

do so far ask pardon, as befits — .!!• ^ 

I have one thing more to ask him yet — iii. 3 
to be sure of that, I wlU ask Antony — iJ!- " 

he did ask favour — iij. U 

two hours, I ask no more — iv. 2 

can we, with manners, ask what .... Cymbeline, i. 5 

my conscience bids me ask — 1.6 

or, by Jupiter, I wiU not ask again . . — iii. 5 

I forgot to ask him one tiling — iii. 5 

andask, what news, of mel — v. 3 

to ask of whence you are — v. 5 

and ask of Cymbeline what boon .... — v. 5 
think more and more what's best to ask — v. 5 
religiously they ask a sacrifice .... Titus .-Indron. i, 2 

slialt obtain aiid ask tlie empery — i. 2 

I ask your voices, and your siiftVaaes — i. 2 
you shall ask pardon of his m.ajcsty.. — i. 2 
but what says Jupiter, I ask thee? . . — iv. 3 

nor ask advice of any other thought Pericles, i. 1 

it fits thee not to ask the reason why . . — i. 1 

for faith, not ask thine oath — i. 2 

lieing bid to ask what he would — i. 3 

he asks of you, that never used to beg. . — ii. 1 
my tongue that iieat, to ask your help — ii. 1 

let rae ask one thing — ii. .'i 

ask her forgiveness? do you but I.err.i]. i 

in, and ask thy daughters' blessing — iii. 2 

if he ask for me, I am ill — ■ jij. 3 

let me ask you one word in private — iii. 4 

ask me blessing, I'll kneel down, and a?k — v. 3 

ask him his purposes, why he — v. 3 

in wisdom, I sliould ask thy name — v. 3 

ask me not what I know — v. 3 

why, may one ask? I dreamt .... Romeo fy Juliet, i. 4 
go, ask lu3 name; if he be married .. — i. 5 

ere thou ask it mc again — ii. 3 

ask for me to-morrow, andyou shall find — iii. 1 
that I ask again; for nothing can — v. 1 



ASK— when they ask vou, what it means.Hamfcf, iv. .■) 
without a heart? wliy ask you this? . . — iv. 7 

wherefore ask you this? Zounds, sir Olhctln,i. 1 

I will ask him for my place again — .i). 3 

I wonder in my soul, what you could ask — 111. 3 
why dost thou ask? But for a satisfaction — iii. 3 

send for the man, and ask him — v. 2 

Cassio did tup her; ask thy husband else — v. 2 

I do believe it, and I ask your pardon . . — v. 2 

ASKANCE-canst not lookaskance. Taming of Sh. u. 1 

ASKED-gentlenianthatyou asked. rM'ofi«i.o/r.iv.2 

when your husband asked who . . Merry Wives, iii. 3 

who asked them once or twice — iii. .'j 

you in doubt, sir, that you asked lier?..M!(cA^rfo. i. 1 
he asked rae, of what parentage . . As you Lilie it, iii. 4 
no boast, i)eing asked, to say, we are — iv. 3 I 
but they asked one another the reason — v. 2 
asked thee mercy for't . . AWs Well that Ends Well, ii. 1 
he asked me for a thousand marks. Comedy o/£/-._ii. 1 

I thought to have asked you — iii. 1 

hath he asked for me? Macbeth, 1. 7 

is there scarce asked, for who? — ly. 3 

blacklierries? a question not to be asked. 1 Hen./ F.ii. 4 
and take purses? a question to be asked — ii. 4 

had been asked twice on the banns — iv. 2 

he asked the way to Chester iUenrylV.i. 1 

my consent ne'er asked herein before. 2Hen;-i/ Vl.ii. 4 

and never asked for restitution — iii. 1 

asked the mayor, what meant this. Richard III. in. 7 

was granted ere it was asked Henry Vlll.i. 1 

he last asked the question Timon of Athens,i\. 2 

have pardons, being asked, as free . . Coriolanus,ii\. 2 

no question asked him by any — i v. S 

and when I asked you what the . . Julius Cwsnr, ii. 1 
as much as to have asked him pardon. ^n(. .5- CI. ii. 2 
that whoso asked her for his wifo.Perictes.i. (Gower) 

this was well asked, 'twas so well — ii. 3 

I asked Iiis blessing, and from first to \ast..Lear, v. 3 
I should have asked you that before.-Bom. ff Jul. i. 2 
mv young lady asked for, the nurse . . — i. 3 

called for, asked for, and sought for . . — i. 5 
when you are asked this question next. , Hamlet, v. 1 
ASKER — ere now, denied tlic asker?. . Coriolanus, ii. 3 
ASKETH— my business askethliaste.. ram. of Sk. ii. 1 

the business asketh silent iHenry I'l.i. 2 

ASKING— may upon asking ^ivc"!.. Twelfth NiglU, iii. 4 
without asking mj good-will.. Taming of Slireir, v. 1 

asking every one lor Sir .Tohn 2 Henry 1 1', ii. 'I 

his right, asking a wife for Edward.3He)!>!/r/. iii. 1 

at his asking, the archbishopric Henry VIII. ii. 1 

it values not your asking — ii. 3 

down the field, asking for himsAf.Troil. <5 Cres. iii. 3 
yet dare I never deny your asking . . Coriolanus.i. tJ 

in asking their good loves — iii. 2 

now I'll tell you without asking. .ifomeo ^ Juliet, i. 2 

not be ray offer, not thy asking Hamlet, i. 2 

first asking your pardon thereunto — iv. 7 (letter) 
ASK'ST— for prisoners ask'st tliou? ..1 Henry VI. iv. 7 

thou ask'st me such a question Cymbeline, i. 6 

ASIjA'NT-lKnt a wiUow grows aslant]. Hiimtef, iv. 7 

ASLtOEP— I have left asleep -. . . Tempest,!. 2 

will j'ou laugh rae asleep — ii. 1 

what, all so soon asleep? — ii. 1 

to be asleep with eyes wide open — ii. 1 

and yet so fast asleep — ii. 1 

I'll yield him thee asleep — iii. 2 

within this lialf hour will he be asleep — iii. 2 
the mariners asleep under the hatches — _ v. 1 
they have judged me fast asleep. Two Gen. of V. iii. 1 

I was fast asleep — 'v. 2 

I told him you were asleep TwelflhNight, i. 5 

how if the nurse be asleep, and mll.ii/ucA .ido, iii. 3 
I'll watch "Titania when she is asleep. iW<i. A". D. ii. 2 

sing me now asleep? then to yom- — ii. 3 

dead? or asleep? I see no blood — ii. 3 

this is my daughter here asleep — iv. 1 

stolen hence, and left me asleep — i v. 1 

asleep, my love? what dead, my dove — v. 1 
though credit be asleep, and not . . . Winter's Tale, v. 2 

when Duncan is asleep, (whereto Macbeth, i. 7 

and upon my life, fast asleep ■ — y. 1 

find him when he lies asleep \Henry IV.\. 3 

Falstafi'l fast asleep behind — ii. 4 

the other night I fell asleep here — — iii. 3 
now their pride and mettle is asleep. . — iy. 3 

then deatli rock rae asleep 2HcnryIV. ii. 4 

subjects are at this hour asleep? — iii. 1 

maj' well be charmed .sleep — iv. 2 

found some months asleep, and leaped — iv. 4 

when others be asleep, to pry IllenryVI.i. 1 

there sits the duke asleep Richard III. 1. 4 

fall asleep, or hearing, die . . Henry VIII. 111. 1 (song) 
she is asleep: good wench, let's sit. . . . — iv. 2 
the virgin voice that babies lulls asleep.. Cor/o/. iii. 2 

I think our fellows are asleep — i v. .'j 

fast asleep? it is no matter Julius Ccpsnr, 11. 1 

thou hast been all this while asleep . . — v. .0 

that sucks the nurse asleep? Ant.^Cleo. v. 2 

to bring her babe asleep Titus Andron. 11. 3 

I espied the panther fast asleep — ".4 

sung thee asleep, his loving breast . . — v. 3 

fot tween asleep and wake! Lear, 1. 2 
think, the world's asleep: how now — 1. 4 

in bed, asleep, while they do dream. . Rom. SrJul. 1. 4 
athwart raen's noses as they lie asleep — 1. 4 
tickling a parson's nose as a' lies asleep — _ i. 4 

that hath lain asleep in the sun — iii. 1 

how sound is she asleep ! I needs must — ly. 5 
when he is drunk, asleep, or in his rage. . Ham. iii. 3 

'faith, half asleep. Good madam Othello, i v. 2 

ASMATH— Asmath, by the eternal. ..2Hcnry VI. 1. 4 

ASPECT— nuncio of raorc grave aspect. Twelfth N. i. 4 

ravish doters with a false aspect .Lore's L. Lost, iv. 3 

other of such vinegar aspect, that ..Mer.ofVen.u 1 

this aspect of mine hath feared _ — ii. 1 

they work in mild aspect..4s you Like i', iv. 3 (letter) 
with an aspect more favourable . . Winter's Tale, li. 1 
know my aspect, and fashion your. . Com. of Er. ii. 2 

mistress liath thy sweet aspects — ii.. 2 

declining their rich aspect to the — m.Z 



ASPECT— save in aspect, have all offence ..John,\\. 1 

that close aspect of his does shov/ — iv. 2 . 

taking note of thy abhorred aspect — iv. 2 

do hate the dire aspect of civil Richard II. j. 3 

thy sad aspect hath from the — i. 3 

malevolent to you in all aspects — I Henry IV. 1. 1 

rendered sucli aspect as cloudy — i". 2 

lend the eye a terrible aspect Henry V. m. 1 

with an aspect of iron, that — v. 2 

for his grim aspect, and large \ Henry VI. 11. 3 

and unnatural aspect may fright Ricliardlll. i. 2 

sliamed their aspects with store — ..;• 2 

that sweet aspect of princes Henry VIII. in. 2 

'tis his aspect of terror: all's not well — v. 1 

corrects the ill aspects of planets .. Troilus S,- Cres.). 3 
put on a most importunate aspect.. Timon ofAth. u. 1 
my young boy liath an aspect of .... Coriolanus, y. 3 
there woidd he anchor his aspect — Ant. ^- Cleo.i. 5 
under the allowance of j'our grand aspect. Lenr, 11. 2 
distraction in's aspect, a broken voice. . . Hamlet, ii. 2 

ASPEN— an 'twere an aspen leaf 2HenryIV. ii. 4 

ASPERSION— no sweet aspersion shall.. Tempest, iy. 1 

ASPICIOUS— two aspicious persons. . Much Ado, iii. & 

ASPICK— have I the aspickinmy ,..Ant. ^Cleo. v. 2 

this is an aspick's trail: and these (rep.') — y. 2 

thy fraught, for 'tis of aspicks' tongues . Othello,ui. 3 

ASPIKxVTION-aspiration Wftshim. Trail. 4- Cres. iv. b 

ASPIRE— wilt thou aspire to guide. Two Gen. ofV. iii. 1 

whose flames aspire, as thoughts . . Merry Wives, y. ;> 

to aspire unto the crown RHenryVLi. 1 

that smile we would aspire to Henrii VIII. 111. 2 

digs hills because they do aspire Pericles, 1. 4 

ASPIRED— hath aspired to Solon's Titus And.!. 3 

gallant spirit hath aspired Romeo ^Juliet, lu. 1 

ASPIRING— show boldness, and aspiring .. Jo/m, v. I 
his aspiring rider seemed to know . . Ricliard II. v. 2 

dame Eleanor's aspiring humour 2Henry VI. 1. 2 

will the aspiring blood ofLancaster..3He;!j-yr/. v. 6 

the aspiring flame of golden Richard III. iv. 4 

A-SQtriNT— you so, looked but a-squint . . . Lear, v. 3 
ASS— wiiat a tViee double ass was I — Tempest, y. 1 

away ass; you will lose Two Gen. of Ver. ii. 3 

what an ass art thou! — ij. 5 

why, thou whoreson ass! — n. 5 

that such an ass should owe them. Two Gen. ofV.v.2 

vet I am not altogether an ass Merry Wives, \. 1 

Page is an ass, a secure ass — n. 2 

that I am made an ass — y. •'' 

I am not such an ass, but I TwelflhNight,}. 3 

welcome, ass. Now let's have — 11. 3 

an attectioned ass, that cons — 1;. 3 

would make him an ass. Ass, I doubt — .ii. 3 
'slight! will you make an ass 0' me? — lii. 2 
an ass of me; now my foes tell me irep.) — .v. 1 
for, like an ass, whose back with .Mea.for Men. 111. I 

all of luxury, an ass, a madman — .v. 1 

away! you are an ass, you are an ass,. Much Ado, iv. 2 
an ass! but masters, remember that (rep.) — iv. 2 

yet forget not that I am an ass — iv. 2 

O that I had been writ down, an ass... — iv. 2 

place shall serve, that I am an ass — v. 1 

the oflfender, did call me an ass — ..v. 1 

you see an ass' head of your own . . Mid. N. Dr. in. 1 

this is to make an ass of me — in. 1 

an ass's nowl I fixed on his — !!!• ^ 

and straightway loved an ass — in. 2 

and I am such a tender iiss — 1"^ • J 

methought, I was enamoured of an ass — iv. 1 

manisbut an ass,ifhego — iv. J 

yet recover, and prove an ass — ..y. ' 

an ass! Ha, ha! what say'st tliou-.X-oue s L. L. ni. 1 
you must send the ass upon the horse — m. ' 

as he is, an ass, let him go — "f. 2 

for the ass to the Jude .— ■^. f 

that any man turn ass Asyou Like it,n.b (Jiang,) 

but if thou be'st not an ass Alls Welt,n. 3 

ever.y braggart shall be found an ass.. — ly. 3 

tMs woodcock! what an ass it is! . . Tarn. o/S/i. 1. 2 
preposterous ass! that never read — — jn i 

my ox, my ass, my any thing — >n. ^ 

away, away, mad ass! his name — » ' 

anass. 'Tistruo; she ridesme (rep.).. Com. 0/&..11. 2 

1 think thou art an ass — ni- j 

my heels, and beware of an ass — ^n. 1 

or thy name for an ass — ■!'.'.; 

I am an ass, I am a woman's — ni. i 

and so is an ass. I am an ass indeed. . — i.y. 4 

upon an ass: but, ass, I'll take King .Mm,!!. I 

yet I bear a burden like an ass Ricliard II. r. h 

a woman should be made an ass 2HenryIV. 11. 1 

come, you virtuous ass, you — .n- ~ 

by Cheshu, he is an ass, as in the 'orld. Hen. V. 111. ~ 
thou scm-vy valiant ass! ... .Troilus fr Cresstda,u. 1 

that I might water an ass at it! — m. -3 

to an ass were nothing; he is both ass — v. 1 

lie is both ox and ass — '''■1 

that that same vouug Trojan ass — — y. 4 
like a dog, the heels of the ass . . Timnn of Athens,!. 1 
and th' ass, more captain than the lion — 111. 5 

by the ass : if thou wcrt the a ss — P'- 3 

]iow has the ass broke the wall . — i.y- 3 

when I find the ass in compound . . . Coriolanus, 11. 1 
or to be entombed in an ass's packsaddle — .11. 1 

what an ass it is! then thou — V- ^ 

bear them as the ass bears gold — JuhusCasar, iv. 1 

like to the empty ass, to shake — iv. 1 

and I, an ass, am onion-eyed . . Antony Sr Cleo. iv. J 
might hear thee call great Csesar, ass — v. 2 
unless it had been the fall of an ass . . Cymbeline,!. 3 

should yield the world tliis ass — - .". 1 

now what a thing it is to be an ass ... Tdus And. ly. 2 

thou borest thine ass on thy back Lear, 1. 4 

may not an ass know when • -- .]■ * 

then came each actor on his ass Hamlet, n. i 

why, what an ass am I? — "• '^ 

for your dull ass will not mend his ... . — v. 1 

which this ass now o'er-reaches........ -- y. J 

much like his master's ass, for naught . . Othello,!. 1 
for making hira egregiously anass _. -"'!•' 

.■VSSAIL— board her, woo her, assail her.. Twel. N. 1. .i 



ASS 



[33 ] 



ASSAIL— he aspuils: and our \-ir^iiiity...J//'s "'<•«, i. 1 
nssivil thcui with the army of the ...'Jllfiinj I' I. iv. 2 

let usussuil thefaniilv of Vork ?.<h'in yfLx. 1 

what huly would you (■h,..>L> to a.-ailr. . , . ( ymb. i. :, 

let usoneeapuuasxiil y,u),- r;.rM ;■,;;-/,/. i. 1 

it be a shi, when \ it,f r.vr a; .;iiU o, ... w ■.-/", |;. :i 

ASSAll.AUl.K-they aiva, K.ihiMc i', .■','/., lo. ~ 

ASSAILA.\T— thv as>aiUiut is qnirk. 7VW//A ,v. lu. 1 
pass iih.n!.', and I'leNer stir assailaiits.-lsy^.i' /,,/,■,', ;. :i 

ASSAll.Kl)— oiirniotlicrisas,,aiRd /„/,», in. 1 

iind be assailed by rohbcr.-, and die .../J,,,;;/;', iv. 1 

inv ruin and assailed of none 1 llftiiy I I. w. 7 

I Inivc assailed her with naisie t;iu,t,Hi!U', n. 3 

altboULdi assailed witli fortune. iV/-V/«, v. r, ((.ow.1 
ASSA!T;i"ni-feli I'oison wiiieh as.aileih.../..AH, v. 7 
ASSAII.IXti— to beat assailiu'j death..; II,M. Ti. ly. 4 
bide tlieeneonnter of assailiiii; e\es..i(..,./. \ Jul. i. I 
ASS.VS.SINATHIX— if tlie as^as• ji'ati.ni..l.',i.;/e'/i, i. 7 
A.-iSAUL'L'— it assaults nierev itself . . I'cmpi'sl, (e|.\l.) 
the assault, that Anu'elo hatlnnade.. !/<•./ f,rM. iii. 1 

iuvineii'ie auaiust all assaults Much AJu, ii. 3 

in the first assault, or ransom ill's n til, i. 3 

against your \ aiu assaidt — iv. 2 

of raen.beitan afresh assault Macbelh,i. 2 

say, where v, 111 \ ou assaidtV King John, ii. 2 

what means death in this rude assault. Bu'/i. //. v. 5 

■with shot, or with assault \Henryyi. i. 4 

tlic eiiemv doth make assault! — ii. 1 

in whi<-h "assault we lost twelve — ly. 1 

will make a compliraental assault. Troil. ^- Crcs. ni. 1 

ay, for an assault too Cariolanus, iv. b 

no sooner nmreh to assault- thy country — v. 3 

and the assault you have made Cijmbeliiie,i. 5 

ehull be made aciiuaintedof thy assavUt — _,i. 7 

sauh assaults as would talce in — iii. 2 

unreclaimed bloud, of general assault. .. Hamie(, ii. 1 

or, naked as I am, I will assault thee. . . . Othello, v. 2 

ASSAti 1>TKD— assaulted, for following her. Let!)-, ii. 2 

ASS.VY— in this manner assay ma'i..Mernjll'ives, ii. 1 

bid herself assay him Measure for Measure, j. 3 

assay the power you have — ..'.•* 

only he hath made an assay of her .. — iii. 1 

let us assav otir plot AlVs Well, iii. 7 

convinces the great assay of art Macbeth, iv. 3 

I will assay thee; so defend thyself..! Henry IV. v. 4 

I would assay, proud queen ZHenry VI. 1. 4 

let us make the assaj' upon him. . . Timon ofAlh. iv. 3 

windlaees, and with assays of bias Hamlet, ii. 1 

to yive tb.e assav of arms against — ii. 2 

did M.;i as a\ liiui to any pastime? — iii. 1 

hcUi". au_'(.ls, nial;e assay! bow,stubborn — iii. 3 

this can not be, iiy no assay of reason Othello,]. 3 

come on , assay ; "there's one gone to — ii. 1 

assay s to lead" the way — !;• 3 

ASSAYED— if we assayed to steal. . . As you Like it^ i. 3 

have assayed to win tlie Tower iHenry VI. iv. a 

perlbrmance, 'twere better not assayed.. H.iMiZe/, iv. 7 

ASSAYING— labour in assaying it ...Com. nf Er. v. 1 

ASSEJIBLANCE— aEsemblanceofaman.2H./r. iii. 2 

ASSEMBLE— let kings assemble .... Khig John, iii. 1 

to the English court assemble now ..2Ueii. IV. iv. 4 

let them assemble ; and on a safer. . . Cariolanus, ii. 3 

assemble presently the people hither — iii. 3 

assemble all the poor men ofyom-sort./wi.Orysar, i. 1 

assemble we immediate council . .Antony SfCleo. i. 4 

ASSEJIBLED— all that are assembled. Com. o/ iV. v. 1 

yoiu- tlock, assembled by the bell ..2Henry IV. iv. 2 

we have in head assenAled them? Henry V. ii. 2 

should be maintained, assembled .... — ii. 4 
our former favour, you are assembled — v. 2 
with their chief assembled strength. .lHe«ri/ VI. i. 1 
all manner of men, assembled here — i. 3 (procl.) 
assembled such troops of citizens. .. JJicAurd I/i. iii. 7 
are assembled to plead yom- cause .Henry VIII. ii. 4 
hath assembled Eocchus, the king.. Jn'. ^C/eo. iii. 6 
ASSEMBLIES— to haunt assemblies ..Mea.for M. i. 4 
in private. And in assemblies too . . Com. ofEr. v. 1 
ASSE JIBLY— the whole assembly . . Mueh Ado, iv. 2 
good-morrow to this fail- assembly . . — ^y. 4 

no assembly but horn-beasts As you like it, iii. 3 

these tidings to this fair assembly — _v. 4 

honourable? Is yom- assembly sol.. 2 Henry IV. iv. 2 
never seen before in such an assembly — (epil.) 
whom this great assembly is contrived. Hfjirj/F. y. 2 

60 noble and so fair assembly Henry VIII. i. 4 

you hold a fair assembly; you do well — i. 4 
let no assembly of tw euty . . Timon of A. iii. 6 (grace) 
you, the great toe of this assembly?. . Cariolanus, i. 1 
and advance the theme of our assembly — ii. 2 
if there be any in this assembly ..JuliusCa'sar,ii.i. 2 
my oath betine this honouralile assembly. Lea7",iii. 6 
a fair assenddy ; \yliither shoidu they./fom. t^-Jul. i. 2 
A.SSEM— without the kind's assent.. Hen. VIII. iii. 2 

b.y the main assent of all these — iv. 1 

ASSES— send ministers to me, asses . . Twelfth N. iv. 2 
one lion may, when many asses do. . Mid. N. Dr. v. 1 
which, like your asses, your dogs. . . Mer of Ven. iv. 1 
asses are made to bear, and so are . . Taming of S. ii. 1 

there's none, but asses, will be Comedy of Er. ii. 1 

here come more. Asses, fools Troilus <5- Cress, i. 2 

what are we, Apemantus? Asses. . Timon of Ath. ii. 2 

thy asses are gone about 'em JLcar, i. 5 

. be" led by the nose, as asses are Othello^ i. 3 

i ASSEZ — c'est asscz pour une fois Henry V. iii. 4 

I ASS-HEAD-will you help an ass-head. Twelfth N. v. 1 

I ASSIGN — to assign our trial-day liichard II. i. 1 

till we assign you to your days — iv. 1 

with their assigns, as girdle, hangers Hamlet, v. 2 

their assigns, and three liberal-conceited — v. 2 

to his conveyance I assign my wife Olhelto, i. 3 

ASSIGNED— assigned and native. . As you Like il,ii. 1 

and east, is to my part assigned 1 Henry IV. iii. 1 

assigned amito be the English scourge. IHe/i. VI. i. 2 

to Ptolemy he assigned Syria Ant. <ij- Cleo. iii. 6 

ASSINEGO— an assmego may tutor.. JVoiV. ^ Or. ii. 1 

ASSIST— you do assist the storm Tempest, i. 1 

let us assist them — i. 1 

gentle girl, assist me Tu-o Gen. of Verona,n. 7 

assist me, kniglit ! I am undone . . Merry Wives, i v. 5 
assist me in my xnirpose — iv. 6 



ASSIST— the hot-blooded cods assist . . l\'eri y W. v. .'j 
will take it on you to assist \\\:n . . Men. fur Mtn, iv. 2 
\,m aiv iMtb siire, and will assist mc.Miich .■ldo,i. 3 

;„ ,1,,; hi ;iv-i.,i inu- nr au — v. 3 (song) 

,., , , '",■ I '. , ■ ;; ■ i t nie!...,/.(.i'e'sL. Lo.«/, i. 2 

. ,, :. ■,, oivd U'od — i.2 

^M, , ■ I !■ ,;,, ■■ I ,1 i .1 inenuich.7ViM.n/S/i. 1 (ind.) 

a i,l OK- 'I'KMiM,-, lor 1 know — i. 1 

as-isl OR- ill n, sweet Warwick SHoiri/JV. i. 1 

■(i-e'll :ill ;i-i-l v-'u; be, that Hies — i. 1 

tin M' I I -it you! and keep Coriolanus,i. 2 

[,]>:. I! 1 1 i: l.k' nienioi-}'. Assist.. — v. 5 

^l,:i,i 1 ■ : ' . K cds of justest men..4nf. 1?- Cieo. ii. 1 

af i ., -jn ,, ,i irnds. Ocjuick.orl — iv. 13 

do not assist the storm: here's all Pericles, iii. 1 

your voice, to assist my simpleness Olhello. i. 3 

AisSISTANCE— such assistance as I . . Much Ado, ii. 1 
to the end to crave your assistance. . Love's L. L. v. 1 

to be rendered by our asssistance — ,v. 1 

that I to yom- as.sistance do make love. Macbeth, iii. 1 
without tVie assistance of a mortal hand.. John, iii. 1 

by your assistance win the day — v. 4 

towards our assistance, we do seize . . Richard //. ii. 1 
swore him assistance, and performed. lHe;ir;//r. iv. 3 
we had his assistance by the hand . .2Henry IV. i. 3 
my gain of it by their assistances — _ iv. 4 

whicli, by the heavens' assistance — ZHenry VI. v. 4 
by thy advice, and thy assistance. .iii'c/mr</ ///. iy. 2 
y'om- present assistance therein. Timon of Alliens, iii. 1 
one solo throne without assistance . . Corlolanun, iv. 6 
ASSISTANT-assistaut, or go-between . . Merry W.ii. 2 

if they were liis assistants Diehard III. iv. 4 

neither allied to eminent assistants .He// ry VlU.i. 1 
in one respect I'll thy assistant be . . Bom. f,- Jul. ii. 3 
and convoy is assistant, do not sleep — Hamlel,i. 3 

let me be no assistant for a state — ii. 2 

ASSISTED— yourself assisted with. W'Hi(er's Tale,v. 1 

I am assisted by wicked powers — -v. 3 

-with terrible numbers, assisted by Macbeth, i. 2 

ASSISTING— assisting you in all . . Tamingof ,S7.. i. 2 

ASSOCIATE— friends should associate. Til us And. v. 3 

to associate me, here in this city.. Romeo f,- Juliet, v. 2 

the associates tend, and every thing Hamlet, iv. 3 

ASSOCIATED— associated with Auiidius. Co;-!oi. iv. 6 
ASSUAGE— good gods assuage thy WTath — v. 2 
AS.SUBJUGATE-mywilI,assubiugate.rro(7.^-C. ii. 3 
ASSUME— if spirits can assume both . . Twelfth N. v. 1 

I will assume thy part in some Much Ado,i. 1 

my very -visor began to assume life — ii. 1 

I will assume desert; give me a hej.Mer. of Ven. ii. 9 
but assumes some mark of virtue — — iii. 2 

these assume but valour's excrement — iii. 2 

himself, assume the port of Mars.Henry V. i. (chqr.) 

this sliape of sense assmues Troilus ij- Cressula,i. 3 

and loss assume all reason without .... — v. 2 

do not assiune my likeness Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

I assume the lists, nor ask advice Pericles, i. 1 

to assume a semblance that very dogs Lear, v. 3 

if it assume my noble father's person Hamlet, i. 2 

there assume some other horrible form. . — i. 4 
hath power .to assume a pleasing shape. . — ii. 2 

assume a virtue, if you have it not — iii. 4 

ASSUMED— hath assvimed this age . . Cymheline, v. 5 
ASSUMING — assuming man's innrmities. Per. i. (Gr.) 
ASSURANCE — than an assurance that..7-empes<, i. 2 

for more assurance that a living — v. 1 

and my assurance bids me search.il/erri/ Wives, iii. 2 
give me modest assurance, if you.. Twelfth Night, i. 5 
a desperate assurance she will none. . — ii. 2 

plight me the full assurance of — iv. 3 

jealousy sha,ll be called assurance Mucli Ado, ii. 2 

for the more better assurance tell.. Mid. N. Drm. iii. 1 
your father make her the assurance. Tarn. ofSh. ii. 1 

if you make this assurance — ii . 1 

and make assurance here in Padua . . — iii. 2 
and give assm-ance to Baptista Minola — iv. 2 
to pass assurance of a dower in marriage — jv. 2 

and such assiurance ta'en, as shall — iv. 4 

counterfeit assurance: take you assurance — iv. 4 
and therefore, for assurance, let's each — v. 2 
yet I'll make assurance double sure.. . . Macbeth, iv. 1 
thy now uasured assurance to the erow-n . . John , ii. 2 
procure Mm better assurance than ..illenry IV. i. 2 

give me assurance with some ZHenry VI. iv. 1 

else his head's assurance is but frail ..Rich. IH-i'v. 4 

nor no more assurance of equal Henry VIII. ii. 4 

assurance bless your thoughts! . Timon of Alliens, ii. 2 
the way which promises assm-anee .Ant. ^-Cleo. iii. 7 

by an auricular assurance have youi- Lear, i. 2 

from some knowledge and assurance — iii. 1 

to give the world assurance of a luau ..Hamlet, iii. 4 

which seek out assvirance in that — v. 1 

ASSURE— I assure you, Carthage Tempest, ii. 1 

out o' the raoon, I do assure thee — ii. 2 

assure thyself, my love Two Gen. ofVer. iv. 2 

not I, I assm-e thee Merry Wires, ii. 2 

assure yoiu-self, after om- ship .... Twdfth Night, i. 2 

and assure thyself, there is no — iii. 2 

you'll find it otherwise, I assure you — iii. 2 
I do assure you, 'tia against my will ■ — iii. 4 
as Hector, I assure you: and in the . . Much Ado, ii. 3 
a marvellous witty fellow, I assure you — iv. 2 

piece of work, I assure you Mid. N. Dream, i. 2 

no, I assure you; the wall is down — v. 1 

but, sir, I assure ye, it was Lovers L. Lost, iv. 2 

I do assure you, sir, I do assure — v. 1 

I do assure you, very good friend — v. 1 

you cannot licg us, sir, I can assure . . — v. 2 
I assure thee, and almost with tears.. /Is yow Like, i. 1 

counterfeit, I assure you — iv. 3 

I do assin-e you, my lord, he is All's Well, ii. 5 

I know not how I shall assure you . . — iii. 7 
nay, I assure you, a peace concluded — iv. 3 

I'll assure her of her widowhood. . Tamingof Sh.ii . 1 
that can assm-c my daughter greatest — ii. 1 
Grumio, w'bat can you assure her?.... — ii. 1 

these I will assure her, and twice — ii. 1 

1 dare assure you, sir, 'tis almost two — iv. 3 

I do assure thee, father, so it is — iy. 5 

the man, I do assure you \ Henry IV. ii. 4 



ATH 

ASSURE-carl ordukc, lean assure you.l lien. IV. v. 4 
almostout of mine, I can assure ium.'JIIcni y I V. i. 2 
stick to thee, J r:iu n.surelbir that .. — V. 3 
I a-siii-r N.ii,!li' I ;- -.'111 >;i-ellent ..Henry F. iii. 6 
I'll :i i.'. ' III :• ;. ' ■ - prave .. — iii. G 

ni> l,> ,. , !' ,ii;'earl..2He»r!/ F/. ii. 2 

tlii- I ,].. ;i III ■ or. ■ -.1. lii.liard — ii. 2 

in, or ;iO-, I, -lire yourselves will.. — iv. 9 

(hi, -liiill :i ,ui-i' niv constant loyalty .3Hen. »';. iii. 3 
oi llu, ki.R.l.im. I'll assure you .. ..Henry VIIl. i. 3 
I clu ■.osiire ynii the king cried ha! .. — iii- 2 

nor, I'll assiire you, better taken, sir — iv. 1 

that I assure you ; Troilus Troilus •§■ Cress, iv. 1 

I dare assure thee, that no enemy ...Jul. C'esar, v. 4 

but, I assure yoTi, a prize Jio less — v. 4 

why, assure thee. IaicIus, 'twill 7'i7ws And. v. 1 

never plucked vet, I can assure you ..Pericles, iv. 6 

nor, I assure ll'iee, Regan Lear, ii. 1 

thy earliuess doth me assure Romeo ■^-Juliet, ii. 3 

assure vnii.niv food lieire. T bold Hamlel, ii. 2 

assure thee, if' I do vow Ti frieiid--l!ip Olhello, iii. 3 

assure vo.urself, I yvill seek satisfaction — iv. 2 
ASSU RED— wdiat he's most assured. i)/e«./or Mea. ii. 2 
be assured, my purse, rny person — Mer. of Ven. i. 1 
be assiu-ed, you may. I will (re_peo(e(i) — _ i. 3 
be assured, thou shalt have justice .. — iv. 1 

as 'twere, a man assured of All's Well, ii. 3 

(stand you so assured) as firmly as ..Tarn. ofSh. i. 2 

swore, I was assiu-ed to her Com. of Errors, iii. 2 

■well assured, that I did so, when fre;).) . . John,'u. 2 

assured loss, before the match — iii. 1 

as well assiu-ed, Richard their king. . Richard If. ii. 4 

be assm-ed, will easily be granted \ Henry !V. i. 3 

therefore be assured, my good lord.. iHcHrj/ /r.iv. 1 

wilt have me die assured of it — iv. 4 

though no man be assured what grace — v. 2 
I bid you be assured, I'll be your father — v. 2 
assured I love you not. I am assured — v. 2 

be assured, you'll find a difference Henry F. ii. 4 

before thy most assured overthrow . . — iv. 3 
she promised, and assured success — IHenryVI.i. 2 

but this I am assured — _y- b 

well assured you put sharp weapons. .2If('n.F/. iii. 1 
or, be well assured, adventure to be . . — iii. 2 

be well assured, her faction will ZHenry VI. v. 3 

be you, good lord, assured, I hate.. .Richard III. i. 3 
be assui-ed, we go to use our hands .. — ,i. 3 
and most assured that he is a friend. . — ii. 1 
(wdiich, well I am assured, I have not — v. 3 

ventures and assm-ed destruction — v 3 

yet remain assured, that he's . ..Timon of Athens, v. 1 

resting well assured they ne'er Cariolanus, iii. 1 

but, being assm-ed, none but myself. . . — v. 2 
that I may rest assured, whether, ./u'i'us Ctrsar, v. 3 
no,l3e assured, you shall not find me..Cymbeline, i. 2 
be assured madam, with hisnext vantage — i. 4 

shall be assured to taste of too — i. 6 

languish for assm-ed bondage? — i. 7 

perfect goodness her assurett credit — i. 7 

were I well assured she came of gentle.. Peric/es,y. 1 

to defend him, stand in assured loss Liar, iii. n 

would I were assured of my condition .... — iy. 7 
be assured, he closes with you in this . . Hamlet, ii. 1 
be thou assured, if words be made of . . — iii. 4 
[A'n'>/ii.]— be assured of this, that the . . Otliello,i. 2 
be thou assm-ed, good Cassio, I will do.. — iii. -1 
and be you well assured, he shall .... — iii. 3 
but be you well assured, no more than — iv. 1 
ASSUREDLY— assuredly the thing.. Jsi/ou Like, ii. 4 

the siege assuredly I'll raise 1 Henry VI. i. i 

yet to wear; I shall, assuredly Henry VII I. iv. 2 

assuredly, you know me Antony ^-Cleopatra, v. 2 

ASSYRIAN— O base Assyrian kniglit.2He)i ry/T.y. 3 

enforced from the old Assyrian slings.. Henri/ V. iv 7 

ASTERN— [Kni.Jwe are strongin astern. PenV/cs, iii. 1 

ASTONISH— can so astonish a mother.. Hnm(r(, iii. 2 

whose beauty did astonish the survey . All's Well, v. 3 

they may astonish these fell lurking. .2 /fen. VI. v. 1 

dreadful heralds to astonish us Julius Ccrsar, i. 3 

ASTONISHED— have astonished him ..Henry V. v. 1 

thou liast astonished me with \Henry VI. i. 2 

beauteous Margaret hath astonished me — v. 5 

ASTRiEA— bright Astraaa's daughter . .1 Hcji. VI. i. S 

terras Astraaa relicLuit: be you . . TitusAndrnn. iv. 3 

ASTRAY— in that you're astray.. r«'o Gen ofVer.i. 1 

lead these testy rivals so astray. . . Mid. N. Drm. iii. 2 

ASTRONOMER— were that astronomer.. Cymt. ni. 2 

ho pei-fbrms, astronomers foretel it... Troil. Sr Cres. v. 1 

ASTRONOMICAL-a sectary astronomical.. ierir,i. 2 

ASUNDER — keep_ them asimder . . Merry Wives, iii. 1 

you rent our ancient love asunder. ..iV//ti. N. D. iii. 2 

they wliirl asunder, and dismember mcJolin, iii. 1 

narrow ocean parts asunder Henry V. i. (cho.) 

shoulders crack my arms asunder \HenryVI.i. i) 

could not live asunder day or night. . — .ii. 2 

hack their bones asunder — iv. 7 

clapped up close, and kept asunder. .2Henry VI. i. 4 

to rend his limbs asunder ZHenry VI. i. 3 

ah, cut my lace asunder Richard III. iv. 1 

my chaff and corn shall fly asunder. Henry VI 1 1, v. 1 
curbs of more strong link asunder . . Cariolanus, t. 1 
that we two are asunder, let that . . Cymbcline, iii. 2 

and he are many miles asunder Rom. ,% Jul. iii. 5 

pluck them asunder. Hamlet, Hamlet! .. Uaui. v. 1 
ATALANTA— of Atalanta's heels. . .is you Like, m. 2 

Atalanta's better part — iii- 2 (verses) 

ATE— shall find her the infernal Ate. . Much Ado, ii. 1 
more Ates, rrtore Ates; stir them . . . ioj-e's L. L. y. 2 

an Ate, stirring him to blood King John, ii. t 

Ate by his side, come hot from iicl].. Jul. Ciesar, iii. 1 
ATHENIAN— the Athenian youth, /Wd. N. Drm. i. 1 

the sharp Athenian law cannot — i. 1 

a sweet Athenian lady is in love — ii. 2 

by the Athenian garments lie hath on — ii. 2 

b"ut Athenian found I none — ii. 3 

desi.ii.sed the Athenian maid — ii. 3 

that work for bread u|;ou Athenian stalls— iii. 2 
yet latched t'nc Atbenitin's eyes with — iii. 2 
and the Athenian woman by his side — iii. 2 

this is the same Athenian — iii. 2 

D 



ATH 



ArilENIAN— 
bv the Athenian garments lie had on..1/irf.A'.D. iii. 2 
that I have 'nointcd an Athenian's eyes — iil. 2 
oil' the head of this Athenian swain .. — iv. 1 
without the peril of the Atlienian law — iv. 1 

1 tell you, I am no true Athenian — iv. 2 

to lie sung bv an Athenian eunuch . . — v. 1 

the Athenian bay put forth Tioil.^Cres. (prol.) 

are they not Athenians? Yes Timon oJAtii. i. 1 

to knock out an honest Athenian's .. — i. 1 
thou art an Athenian; therefore welcome — , 1. 2 

sow all the Athenian bosoms — iv. 1 

the Athenians both within and out . . , — iv. 1 

is this the Athenian minion — iv. 3 

aiKl pn'niiic to Ihe Athenians, to speak — v. 2 
the Athciuans liv two of their most .. — v. 2 

sinu-e thv Atli.-nian eradle — V. 5 

I Mint', L'-iiid AtlK'nian. Ko words Lrnr,in. i 

ATI HON S-aiKicut privilege of Athens . 3//ti. A. Z)/-. i. 1 
or cl^e the law of Athens yields you. . — i. 1 
fnim Alliens is her house remote .... — i. 1 

eeeined .Atlieus us a paradise to me . . — i. 1 

through Athens' gates have we devised — j. 1 
and tlience, from Athens turn away — i. 1 

through Athens I am thought as fair — i. 1 

through all Athens, to play in om- .. — i. 2 

weecls'of Athens he doth wear — ii- 3 

and lielp from Athens calls — iii. 2 

and Helena of Athens look thou find — iii. 2 
to Atliens will I hear my folly hack — iii. 2 

haek to Athens shall the lovers wend — iii. 2 
that I may hack to Athens, hy daylight — iii. 2 
j:iav all to Athens hack againrepaii-.. — iv. 1 
tn he HI 'ue from Athens, where we .. — iv. 1 

a«a\-, with un to Athens — iv. 1 

Vein liavc not a man in all Athens — iv. 2 

wit ciiaiiv iiaiiilieraft man in Athens — iv. 2 

men, tiiat work in Athens here — v. 1 

have to the port of Athens sent..Tioil.^Ci-es. (prol.) 
tlie senators of Athens: happy nienl.. Tiinon of A. i. 1 

of Athens here, my lord. Goto — ii. 2 

free-hearted gentleman of Athens . . — iii. 1 
I would not tor the wealth of Athens — iii. 2 

Athens contain thee, attend our — iii. 5 

that I may strike at Athens — iii. 6 

the senators of Athens, together.. — iii. G (grace) 
sink, Athens! henceforth liated be .. — iii. B 
in the earth, and fence not AtheusI .. — iv. 1 
heap on Athens, ripe for stroke ! .... — iv. 1 
how cursed Athens, mindless of thy. . — iv. 3 
Iiroud Athens on a heap,— warr'st {rep.) — iv. 3 
strike up the di'ura towards Athens.. — iv. 3 
that the whole lili; of Athens were in this — iv. 3 
what wonldst thou have to Athens?. . — iv. 3 
the commonwealth of Athens is become — iv. 3 

to Athens, go, break open shops — iv. 3 

let us first see peace in Athens — iv. 3 

shall see him a palm in Athens again — v. 1 
best in all Athens: thou art, indeed.. — v. 1 
tlie senators of Athens greet thee .... — v. 2 

entreat thee hack to Athens — v. 2 

and of our Athens (thine, and ours) . . — T. 2 
sworil against the walls of Athens .. — v. 2 

hut if he sack fair Athens — v. 2 

l)efore the reverend'st tlu-oat in Athens — v. 2 
tell Athens, in the secxucnce of degree — v. 2 
l:mt say to Athens, Timon hatlr made — v. 2 
before proud Athens he's set down .. — v. 4 
he puryo-X'th to Atliens: whither ..Ant.^Cleo. iii. 1 
my Inril, iu Athens. No, my most .. — ..i"- 6 

a jirivatc niau in Athens — iii. 10 

ATIIOL— earl of Athol of Miu-ray ...A Henry IF. i. 1 

ATIIVERSARY— you, the athversary..H<?H. K iii 2 

nia-rv, th' athversary was have possession — iii. 6 

the perdition of theathversary hiith.. — iii. 6 

.ATHWART— athwart goes all deconmi.M. /or M.i. 4 

whatsoever comes athwart his Mucli.4ilOjn. 2 

laj; his wreathed arms athwart hia. Love's L. L, iv. 3 
quite traverse, athwart the heart. . As you Like, iii. 4 

when, all athwart, there came IHenry IV. i. 1 

winged thoughts, athwart the sea. Henri/ F. v. (cho.) 

athwart the lane, he, with two Cymbeline, v. 3 

athwart ICotUer — over] men's noses. .Rom. /jr Jul. i. 4 

ATLAS — von are no Atlas for so great. SHciiri/ VL v. 1 

.\T0MIES— easy to count atomies .^s you LiVce ((, iii. 2 

shut their coward gates on atomies — iii. i 

drawn with a team oflittle atomies.. Rom. ^ Jul.i. 4 

ATOMY— thou atomy, tlioul 'iHcnrylV.v. 4 

ATOXl'J — even atone together.y^syowLftv?, v. 4 (verse) 

since we cannot atone you liichard 11. i. 1 

to atone your fears with ray. . . . Timon of Athens, v. 5 
he and Aufidius can no more oXonG.CoriotanuSy iv. 6 
the present need speaks to atone you. /l)i(.^C(c'Q. ii. 2 
I was glad I did atone my countryman . . Cymb. i. .'> 

I would do much to atone them Olhello,iv. 1 

VTONEMENT— 
to make atonements and compromises, il/crry >F._ i. i 

now make our atonement well t Henry I f. iv. 1 

ile?ires to make atonement hetween . . Rich. III. i. 3 
.'iTIlOPOS— come, Atropos, I sayl ..iHenry IV. ii. 4 
ATTACH— attach the hand of his ..Love's L. L. iv. 3 

desires yon to attach his son Winter's Tale, v. 1 

or I'll attach you by this officer. Com. of Errors, iv. 1 
£ would attach you all, and make yon. Rich. II. ii. 3 

treason I :ittaeh you both 2Henry IV. iv. 2 

to attacli lord Jloutacute; and the.. Henri/ /'///. i. 1 
myself attach thee as a traitorous. . CorioUtnus, iii. 1 
do attach [Col. Kn/. -apprehend] the£.J?om.<5-/«(. v. 3 
some of you; whoe'er you find, attach — v. 3 
therefore apprehend and do attach thee ..Othello, i. 2 
ATTACHED- who am myself attached. Tempest, iii. 3 
I should be attached in Ephesus . . Com. of Err. iv. 4 

din-st not have attached one 2Henry IV. ii. 2 

my father was attached, not attainted.! Hen. VI. ii. 4 
hath attached our merchants' goods. Henry A'///, i. I 
he is attached; call him to present trial — i. 2 
be half attached with that which ... Troil.^-Cres. v. 2 
ATTACHMENT— attachment to thy senses — iv. 2 

ATTAIN — suit cannot attain it Merry Wives, iii. 4 

one un worthier may attain .... Merch. of Venice, ii. 1 



[ 34 ] 



ATT 



ATTA IN-attain to tlici r abhorred ends. All's Well, iv. 

far surmounts our labour to attain it. ..Rich. II. ii. 

ere he attain his easeful western . . . .^Henry VI. v. 

the gods irrant tine to attain to! . . Timon of Ath. iv. 

when he unce attains tlic iitnio,t. ..//((lus Ccesar, ii. 

by this vile ciinqucst sliaU athiin unto — v. 

have but lalmured to attain this hour — v. 

to attain iu sLiit tlie place Cymheline, v. 

ATTAINDEH— stands iu attainder . . Love'sL.L. i. 

with the attaiuderof his sland'rous./J/'c/inrif II. iv. 

from all attainder of suspect Itirh :rrl HI. iii. 

first, Kil.lare'sattainder,theu(le|int\-.;ir;,, ;■///. ii. 
ATTAINED- attained the crt'ect. . .i/--.r /..,■ Me,,, ii. 

ere his youth attained a beard . . .1/'.^ .V.'s Djm.u. 

whieii once attained, your hiL'liness. .-J. lien. It', iv. 

these oracles are hardily attained . .'lUeury VI. i. 

nor more attained, tluin \)\ a place . . Coriotunns, i. 
ATTAINT-you are attaint v.itli faul ts. lore's L. L. v. 

simple thiet brags of his own attaint? Com. o/A'r. iii. 

overbears attaint, with cheerful. . Henry V. iv. (cho 

was never yet attaint with any \ Henry VI. v. 

nor any man an attaint, but he . . Troilus ij-Cres. i. 
ATTAINTED— not thou attainted... IHennyT/. ii. 

my father was attached, not attainted — ii. 

I must offend, before I be attainted. .2Henri/ VI. ii. 
ATTAINTURE— and her attainture . . — i. 

ATTASKED — more attasked for want Lear, i. 

ATT EiMl-'T— attempt us again .... Merry Wives, iv. 

reileem it by some laudable attempt.. Tu-eJ/MA'. iii. 

by fearing to attempt Measure for Measure, 1. 

and make fit for Ms attempt — iii. 

can with ease attempt you — iv. 

either not attempt to choose at alL.Mer. of Ven. ii. 

by direct, or indirect attempts, he seek — iv. 

I must attempt you further — iv. 

and give over this attempt As you Like it, i. 

stagger iu this attempt; for here .... — iii. 

impossible be strange attempts All's Well, i. 

?ra;y God's blessing into thy attempt . . — i. 
will grace the attempt for a worthy.. — iii. 

but the attempt I vow — iii. 

the attempt, and not the deed Macbeth, ii. 

prepares for some attempt of war — iii. 

till my attempt so much be glorified John, v. 

such mean attempts, such barren . . 1 Henry I V. iii. 

and hair of om- attempt brooks — iv. 

that your attempts may overlive. . . .IHenry IV. iv. 

supplies to second our attempt — iv. 

in this haughty great attempt \Henry VI. ii. 

will follow me to this attempt ZHenry VI. iv. 

false traitors from the like attempts.. /?('c/(. ///. iii. 

attempt [Kn^'/if — aftliirs] of hostile arms — iv. 

the ransom olF my bold attempt shall — v. 

the gain of my attempt the least of you — v. 

never attempt anything on him . . Henry VIII. iii. 

this man of thine attempts her love. J'imono/ yli/i. i. 

but with his last attempt he wiped it out. Coriol. v. 

one incorporate to our arms Julius Ca-sar, i. 

bid thee do, thou should'st attempt it — v. 

I durst attempt it against any lady . . Cymbeline, i. 

you're worthy of, by your attempt . . ' — i. 

though your attempt, as you call it . . — i. 

tliis attempt I'm soldier to, and will abide — iii. 

for which attempt, the judges. . . . Titus Andron. iii. 

having wooed a villain to attempt it.... Perjcie.i, v. 

can do, that dares love attempt Romeo 4- Jul. ii. 

neglecting an attempt of ease, and gain. . Othello, i. 

therefore I will attempt the doing it ... . — iii. 

I will be near to secmid your attempt . . — iv. 

if thou attempt it, it will cost thee dear — v. 
ATTEMPTED— is falsely attempted. . Love'sL.L. i. 

prosnerously I have attempted Coriolanns, v. 

ATTEMPTIBLE— and less attemptible ...Cym6. i. 
ATTEMPTlNG-by attcmptiut; it ..'ZHenryVI. ii. 

for him attempting who was self-subdued. Lear, ii. 
ATTEND— dost thou attend me? Tempest, i. 

the goddess on whom tlie.^e airs attend .. — i. 

I chiu-ge thee tliat thou attend me — _ i. 

shall step by step attend you — iii. 

do now attend the queen'? — iv. 

attends the emperor in his . . Two Gen. of Verona, i. 

we'll lioth attend upon your ladyship — ii. 

then I'll presently attend you — ,ii. 

I but attend on death — iii. 

one tluit attends your ladyship's command — iv. 

the dinner attends you, sir Merry Wives, i. 

the deanery, where a priest attends . . — iv. 

attend your office, and your — T. 

slifi will attend it better in thy . . . . Twelfth Night, i. 

si>rne lour, or five, attend liim — _i. 

he attends your ladyship's pleasure.. — iii. 

attends thee at the orchard end — iii- 

shall I attend your lordship? Mea.for Mea. ii. 

but I will attend yon awhile — iii. 

I shall attend your leism-e — iv. 

we here attend you; are you yet Much .diio, v. 

give thee fairies to attend on thee..il/<rf. N.'s D. iii. 

fairy king, attend, and mark — iv. 

we attend, like humble- visagcd. . Love's L.Lost, ii. 

we attentl. We will have — v. 

what humble suit attends thy — v. 

our leisures to attend on yours. . . . Merch. of Ven. i. 

and happy hours, attend on 3'ou! — iii. 

I attend them, with all respect.. ..As you Like it,_\. 

he attends here in the forest on the . . — iii. 

I must attend the duke at dinner — iv. 

trip, Audrey; I attend, I attend — v. 

I must attend his majesty's cnimnand./1/r.s Well, i. 

the best that shall attend his love .... — j. 

which but attends thy naming — ii. 

shall more attend iqion the coming space — ii. 

you presently attend his further — ii- 

let one attend him withasilver.ram.o/S. 1 (indue. 

how thy servants do attend on thee.. — 2 (indue. 

I pray you do; I will attend her here — ii. 

when the priest attends to speak the — iii. 

obey the bride, you that attend on her — iii. 

i' the garden; sliall's attend j'ou .. Winter'sTale, i. 

and brought up to attend my sons. Comedy of Er. i. 

let your will attend on their accords. . — ii. 



ATTEND— I will attend my husband. Com.o/£r. v. 1 
witluiut the illness, should attend it ..Macbeltt.i. !t 

attend tho.-e men our pleasure? — iii- 1 

sav to thekine', 1 wnnklattenilhis leisure — iii- 2 
aiid better health attend his nmiesty!-. — iii. 4 
let niir just eensiire^ attend the true event — V. 4 
attend on you with all true duty . . Khig John, iii. 3 
as thcv say, attcud tlie steps of wrong) — iv. 2 
nor attend the foot, that leaves the print — iv. 3 
we will attend to neither, strike uj) . . — v. 2 
is made my gaoler to attend on me . . Richard II. i- 3 
iu the base" court he doth attend to speak — iii- 3 
the furm of w hat he shoidd attend . .\HenryIV. i. 3 
^^■hen you arc better tempered to attend — i. 3 
straiLdit they shall be here: sit, and attend — iii. 1 
lord liardolph doth attend him hcre..2Hei!ri//r. i. I 

and conquest to attend on us Henry V. ii. 2 

tliat fear attends her not — ii. 4 

shall I attend your grace? No — iv. 1 

upon a wooden coffin we attend 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

Ins place and function to atteitd — _i. 1 

will attend on her; will not your .... — ii. 2 
I will attend upon your lordship's leisure — v. 1 
honourable peace attend thy throne. 2 Henry VI. ii. 3 

that thou henceforth attend on us — v. 1 

attend me, lords. The proud ZHenry VI. ii. 1 

to White-friars; there attend my Richardlll. i. 2 

and all their ministers attend on him — i. 3 
attend \_Col. Kn(.-wait] upon your grace — i- 3 

attend the sequel of your imposition — iii. 7 
to-morrow then we will attend your grace — iii- 7 
thy life, and doth thy death attend . . — iv. 4 
ajipointwho should attend on him.. Henry VIII. i. 1 

attend; this holy fox, or wolf — i- 1 

some attend him. You have now a broken — _ i. 4 

you, he bade attend him here — iii. 2 

he attends your highness' pleasure — v. 1 

it is my duty to attend your hishness' — v. 1 
fulfilled, and I attend with patience.. — v. 2 
all the virtues that attend the good . . — v. 4 
attend me where I wheel: strike not.Troil.f,Cr. v. 7 
thy power hath conjured to attend. Timon of Ath. i. 1 
attends he here, or no?— Luciliusf .. — i. 1 
ladies, there is an idle banquet attends you — i. 2 
we attend his lordship; 'pray, signify — iii- 4 

attend our weightier judgment — iii. .'i 

thither where more attends you Corialanus, i. 1 

attend upon Cominins to these wars. . — i. 1 
I know, oiu- greatest friends attend us — i. I 
where great patricians shall attend .- — i- '.1 
the market-place, I know, they do attend — ii- 2 

we'll attend you there: where — iii- I 

away , the tribunes do attend you ; arm — iii- 2 
let a guard attend us tlirough'the city — iii- 3 
with graceful eyes, attend those w,ars.yfn(.i5-C(eo. ii. 2 
there I \vill attend what further conies — iii- 8 

I must attend mine office — iv. G 

good queen, I must attend on Caesar — v. 2 
ju solemn show, attend this funeral — v. 2 

I'll attend yom- lordship Cymheline, i. 3 

I will attend the queen — .i- 4 

I'll attend yoiu' lordship — ij- 1 

attend youhere the door of our stern — ii- 3 
to your mistress, attend the queen .. — ii. 3 
Wiiich attends in place of greater state — iii- 3 
that did attend themselves, and had — iii. G 
willingly attend your ladyship . . Titus Andron. iv. 1 
Marcus,' attend liini in his ecstacy .. — iv. 1 
and night to attend him carefully . . — iv. 3 
cannot induce you to attend my words — v. 3 

move you to attend me most — v. 3 

high, who attends us there? Pericles, i. 1 

attend me then: I v,'cut to Antioeh 
their general, we attend him here. . 
O, attend, my daughter; princes .. 

imniort:ility attends the former — ni- - 

a niece of mine shall there attend you — iii. 4 
attend the lords of France and Burgundy.. Lea?-, i. 1 
messengers from hence attend despatch ... — ii- 1 

\'igilance, does not attend my taking — ii- 3 

and attend the leisiu'e of their answer — — ii- 4 

Le:u-, and leave you to attend him — iv. 3 

I shall attend you presently at yinir tent — v. 1 
if you with patient ears attend.. Borneo <$.'«'■ (P;'.'";l-) 

this body, and attend oiu' will — iii- 1 

use that word in hell; bowlings attend it — 111. 3 
my betossed soul did not attend him _ — v- 3 
co'iiscqnence, attends the boisterous ruin .Ham. 111. 3 

attend: where are my Switzers — iv. 5 

that you attend him in the hall — v- 2 

let tliy wife attend on her; and bring . . Othello, i. 3 
the gentlewoman that attends the general's — iii. 1 
by you invited, do attend your presence — iii- 3 

I do attend here on the general — iii- 4 

bring you, for I attend here : but I'll -. — iii- 4 

ATTISNDANCE— on your attendance. r«'e//(/i A', i. 4 
what no attendance? no regard?.. jTam/iisrjrS. iv. I 

I danced attendance on his will ■•Henry VI. \. 3 

I dance attendance here; I think. . Riclmrdlll. iii. 7 
danceattendanceon their lordshi|is'.Hcnryr///. v. 2 
wait attendance till you hear . . 7'imon of.Uhcns, i. 1 

ATTENDANT— have I few attendants. Te/npes/, v. 1 
because that she, as her attendant . . Mid. N. Dr. ii. 1 
her attendants of her chamber, Baw..4s youLike, ii. 2 
means, and attendants, and my loving. ^H'sW'eH, i. 3 
and brave attendants near him. Tarn, of S. 1 (indue.) 
to put apart these your attendants. . Winter's T. ii. 2 
that his attendant, (for his case . . Comedy of Err. i. 1 
with his mad attendant and himself. . — .v. I 

the fury of my three attendants 1 Henry VI. iv. 2 

attendant on the duke of Norfolk.. iiic/iorrf///. ii. 1 
her attendants absent, swallowed fire. Jut. Cesar, iy. 3 

her attendants are all sworn Cymbetine,u. 4 

reason, he m-iist have some attendants — iv. 2 
dismiss yom- attendant there; look Othello, iv. 3 

ATTENDED— I am attended . . Two Gen. of Ver. v. 1 
a fair young man, and well attended. . Twelfth K.i. 5 
only attended by Nerissa here. . Merch. of Ven. iii. 4 
as the lark whenneither is attended .. — v. 1 
proud day, attended with the plea8iu:e3.../o'in, m- 3 



— i. 4 

— ii.3 




ATTENDKIJ— to he nttendcrl l),v slaves . . John, iv. 2 
nttcndert him on briil^cs; stood in. ..1 Henr;/ir. iv. 3 

but lit tended bv a simide guard 'AUenryVI. iv. 2 

but nfteiidrd With weak guard — iv. 5 

who attended him in secret ambush.. — iv. <> 
attencled to their sngarcd words ..Richard HI. i\i. 1 
I am attended at the cypress grove.. Cori'o/(um.s, i. 10 

that liine tfo Ions attended thee Cymbetine, i. 7 

a nueon, attended by a Moor Titus Andron. v. 2 

attended on li,\- many a lord . . Pericles, iv. i (Gower) 

he is attended with a desperate train Lear, ii. 4 

I am most dreadfullv attended Ihimlel, ii. 2 

ATTENDETII— he attendeth hare. Mm: nf Ven. iv. 1 

i\ XT ENDING— an atteudint; star., i-oi-c's L. L. iv. 3 

bv this, I know, is here attending ill's IVell, v. 3 

w'ith a free desi re, attendi ng Hicluud //. i. 3 

nil fears atten.'.inv' .'n so dire. . . . TmHiis A- Cress, ii. 2 
than attendin;; for a elierk ; rlelier. . Ci/iiibeline, iii. 3 
nttcndim; you here at iMilforil Haven — iv. 2 

he staved, attending nature's law — v. 4 

to love-siek Dido's sad attending car.Tidw.'Irirf. v. 3 
patience evermore attending. . Pericles, v. 3 (Gower) 
like softest music to attending ears!. J?om. ^Jtd. ii. 2 
tlieir hearts attending on themselves .... Olhello, i. 1 

ATTEND'ST— thou attend'st not Tempest, i. 2 

A'L'TENT— be attent, and time..Pe>-('ci(;s, iii. (Gower) 
for a while with an attent ear Hamlet, i. 2 

iSTTENTION— letter with attention. Lore's L. L. i. 1 
enforce attention, like deep harmony. . Kich. II. ii. 1 

amend the attention of your ears iHenrii IV. i. 2 

bold with time, and your attention... Hen. VIII. ii. 4 
mv heart, and lend my best attention Cymh. v. 5 

ATTENTrV^E— obey, and be attentive .. rem/jw/, i. 2 
reason is, your spirits areatteutive.il/er. of Ven. v. 1 

be you silent and attentive too SHenryVI.i. 1 

sense on the attentive bent. . . . Troilus ^-Cressida, i. 2 
vex not his prescience; be attentive. ^ln(. S/- Cleo. i. 2 

AXTENTIVENESS— how attcntiveness 

wounded his daughter W/nfer\s Tale, v. 2 

ATTEST— crooked figure may attest. Hera. V. i. (cho.') 

now attest, that those, whom — iii. 1 

but I attest the gods, your full. . Troilus fyCress. ii. 2 
invert the attest of eyes and ears — v. 2 

ATTESTED— attested by the holy. . . . Tvelfth N. v. 1 

ATTIRE — my masculine usm-ped attire — v. 1 

I'll show thee some attires _. . , . . Much Ado, iii. 1 

in poor and mean attire, and with . . Asyou Like, i. 3 
some meaning in his mad attire. . Taming ofS. iii. 2 
and so ^vild in their attire; that look . . Macbeth, i. 3 
stern looks, ditfused attire, and every.. Henri/ V. v. 2 
thy wife's attire, have cost a.in.ass. ...2HenryVI. i. 3 

to attire you for our journey — ii. 4 

shaw itself, attire me how you can — ii. 4 

do you now put on vour best nitire?.. Jul. Ccesar, i. 1 
leap thou, attire and all, through . . Ant. ^ Cleo. iv. 8 

go fetch my best attires — v. 2 

you ^^^ll say_, they are Persian attire iear, iii. 6 

ay, those attires are best Romen ^ Juliet, iv. 3 

ATTIRED-attired in a robe of white. Merry Wives, iv. 4 
for my part, I am so attired in wonder. Much .4do, iv. 

blush to see you so attired Winter's Tale, iv. 

were they but attired in grave weeds. Titus And. iii. 
why art thou thus attired, Audronicua — v. 

ATTORNEY— die by attorney ....As you Like it, iv. 
ten groats for the hand of an attorney. /M;'sfreZ/,ii. 2 
v.ill nave no attorney but myself ..Comedy o/jB?-. v. ' 
to be mine own attorney in this case.l Henry VI. v. 
be the attorney of my love to her . . Richard III. iv. 
I, bv attorney, bless thee from thy .... — v. 
the king's attorney, on the contrary. Henri/ n//. ii. 

ATTORNEYED-am still attorneyed . Mea. for M. v. 
have been royally attorneyed Winter's Tale, i. 

ATTORNEYSHIP— by atlorneyship.l Henry FJ. v. 

ATTORNIES — attornies are denied vae..Rich. II. ii. 
windy attorni«s to their client woes. Ke'cSard If/, iv. 

ATTORNIES-GENERAL-that he hath by 

his attornies-general to sue Richard II. ii, 

ATTRACT— attracts my soul .... Twelfth Night, ii. 
more goodly, and attract more eyes . . 1 Henry IV. i. 
with death, attracts the same 2Henry VI. iii. 

ATTRACTION— setting the attraction, il/errt/ W. ii. 
and with his great attraction robs. Timon of Ath. iv. 
harmonv and other choice attractions . . Pericles, v. 

ATTRxVCTIVE— and attractive eyes.Mid. N. Dr. ii. 
here's metal more attractive. Oho! ..Ham/e(, iii. 

ATTRIBUTE— the attrilmte to awe. Mer. of Ven. iv. 

it is an attribute to God himself — iv. 

swear b.y Jove's great attributes, I loved — iv. 
much attribute he hath; and much. Troilus^Cr. ii. 
you not And out that by her attributes? — iii. 

and for an honest attribute cry out Pericles, iv. 

t'.ie nith and marrow of our attribute Hamlet, i. 

ATTRIBUTED— seldom attributed to.^H's Well, iii. 

ATTRIBITTION— such attribution . . 1 Henry I V. iv. 

ATTRIBUTIVE— that is attributive iCol. Knt.~ 
inclinable] to what infectiously.. Troil. ^ Cr. ii. 

AI'BREY— the lord Aubrey Vere Zllenry VI. iii. 

At.rBURN— her hair is auburn.. Two Gen. of Per. iv. 
some black, some aubiu-n, some bald .Coivofanus, ii. 

AUDACIOUS — audacious eloquence. .il/Zi;. N. Dr. v. 

audacious without impudeney Loue's L. Lost, v. 

away with that audacious lady . . Wiyiler's Tale, ii. 
his duteous land audacious cruelty..! Henry IV. iv. 
such is thy audacious wickedness . . 1 Henry VI. iii. 

perish ye, with your audacious prate.. iv. 

obey, audacious traitor; kneel 2Henry VI. v. 

AUDACK )USLY-speak audaciously . Lowe's L. L. v. 

AUDACITY — courage and audacity . .1 Henry. VI. i. 
arm me audacit}', from head to foot . . Cymbeline, i. 

AUDIBLE— cries out most audible. Mea. for Mea. y. 
waking, audible, and full of vent . . Corioian«s,iv, 

AUDIENC E— thou have audience.. Twelfth Night, i. 
let the audience look to their eyes . . Mid. N. Dr. i. 
dismiss this audience, and I shall . . Love's L. L. iv. 

shall I have audience; he shall v. 

60, if any of the audience hiss _ v. 

vouchsafe me an audience for one word — v. 2 

five me audience, good madam ..Asyou Like it,i\\. 2 
et me have audience for a word — v. 4 

was worth the audience of kings. . Winter's Tale, v. 2 



[ ->5 ] 

AUDIENCE— gawds, to give me audience. /o/m, iii. 
and can give audience to any tongue .... — iv. 
let mc have audience: I am sent — v. 

five me nudinu-c li ir a. while 1 Henry IV. i. 
v no suit i:;;!!!! our ;ti idle nee 2Hcnry IV.iv. 

that he will tjiw yuu audience — iv. 

Tipon that ill;- taut, craved audience .... Henry V.u 

we'll give them present audience — ii. 

no audience, but the Tribulation . . Henry VIll. v. 

tlu'ee-pence to a second day of audience. .Conol.n. 

list to .your tribunes; andicuee: peace — iii. 

give me audience, friends Julius Ccesar, iii. 

and I will give you audience — iv. 

hardly gave audience, or vouchsafed.. /4n<. SfCleo. i. 

did gibe my missive out of audience — ii. 

oft before gave audience, as 'tis reported — iii. 

the queen, of audience, nor desire, shall — iii. 

of your audience been most free Hamlet, i. 

some more audience, than a mother — iii. 

sir, in this audience, let my disclaiming.. — v. 

but mutes or audience to tliis act — v. 

and call the noblest to the audience — v. 

AUDIS — tain lentus andis scelera?. TiVMs.^n'/ron. iv. 
AUDIT — to make their audit at your . . Macbeth, i. 

to keep your earthly audit siu-e.... Henry VIlI. iii. 

yet I can make my audit up Coriolanus, i. 

if you will take tliis aiidit Cymbeline, v. 

and, how his audit stands, who knows. Ham/e(, iii. 
AUDITOR— I'll be an auditor Mid. N. Dr. iii. 

a kind of auditor; one that hath iHenrylV. ii. 

call me before the exaetest auditors. /"I'mono/" .4. ii. 
AUDITORY— noble auditory, be it . . Titus And. v. 
AUDREY-Audrey; I will fetch (rep.). ^Isi/oii Li7cc,iii. 

come, sweet Audi-ey ; we must be ... . — iii. 

we shall find a time, Audrey (^repeated) — v. 

sir Oliver, Audrey, a most vile (jep.). — v. 

good even, Audrey. God ye good even — v. 

trip, Audrey, trip, Audrey — v. 

to-morrow IS the joyful day, Audrey — v. 

mend your voices! Come Audrey — v. 

bear your body more seeming, Audrey — v. 
AUFIDIUS— leader, TuUus Aufidius .Coriolanus, i. 

so, your opinion is, Aufidius, that — i. 

noble Aufidius, take your commission — i. 

see him pluck Aufidius down by the — i. 

my lord from fell Aufidius? (»epea(erf) — i. 

Tullus Aufidius, is he within you. ... ,— - i. 

there is Aufidius; list, what work.... — i. 

the man of my soul's hate, Aufidius — i. 

to Aufidius thus I will appear — i. 

o'er them Aufidius, their very heart. . — i. 

set me against Aufidius, and his .... — i. 

bear against the great Aufidius a shield — i. 

but then Aufidius was within my view — i. 

has he disciplined Aufidius soundly? — ii. 

fought together, but Aufidius got off — ii. 

TuUus Aufidius then had made new — Iii. 

saw you Aufidius? On safe-guard he — iii. 

your noble Tullus Aufidius will appear 

wheregreat Aufidiuslies: is he in.... — iv. 

'tis Aufidius, who, heariiig of our .... — iv. 

Marcius, joined with Aufidius, leads — iv. 

he and Aufidius can no more atone . . — iv. 

associated with Aufidius, rages — iv. 

Tidlus Aufidius, the second name . . — iv. 

and is Aufidius with him? — iv. 

this man, Aufidius, was my beloved — v. 

Aufidius, and you 'Voices, mark — v. 

Aufidius, though I cannot make (^rep.) — v. 

less? or gi-anted less, Aufidius? — v. 

stand, Aufidius, and trouble not the - v. 

his ovra impatience takes from Aufidius — y. 
AUFIDIUSES — six Anfldiuses or more — v. 
AUGHT— if thou remember'st a\ight Tempest, i. 

by aught that I can speak., rwo Gen. of Verona, iii. 

respect not aught yoiu- servant doth. . — v. 

if it be aught to the old tune Twelfth Night, v. 

can laboxu- aught in sad invention . . Much Ado, v. 

ah me ! for aught that ever I Mid. N. Dream, i. 

nor is he dead for aught that I can . . — iii. 

none at all in aught proves Love's L. Lost, iv. 

you will do aught, this shall you — v. 

and yet, for aught I see, they are Mer. of Ven. i. 

would'st thou aught with me? — ii. 

nor hazard, aught for lead — ii. 

threatenest, than dost promise aught — iii. 

would take au^lit but the two rings.. — v. 

or hers, for aught I know All's Well, v. 

(for audit I see) two and thirty.... Taming of Sh. i. 

if you know aught which does . . . Winters Talc, i. 

if aught possess thee from me Comedy ofEr. ii. 

if thou art changed to aught, 'tis — ii. 

or are .you aught that man may Macbeth, i. 

if he see aught in you, that makes .. King John, ii. 

he did, for anght he knew — v. 

before I make rcidy to aughtyou say.RichardH. ii. 

if aught but beasts, I had been still . . — v. 

for aught I know, my lord, they do . . — v. 

art thou aught else but place, degree ..Henry V. iv. 

for aught I see, this city must be 1 Henry VI. i. 

or aught that we could do — i. 

that you have aught but Talbot's — ii. 

or aught intcud'st to l.ay unto — iii. 

wdien have I aught exacted atyour.2//enry /'/. iv. 

never dreamt on aught but butcheries .Rich. III. i. 

have aught committed that is — ii. 

he will not be won to aught against him — iii. 

in aught pertains to the state Henry VIII. i. 

heard him at any time speak augHt? — i, 

a"ainst mine honour aught — ii. 

what is aught, but as 'tis valued?. . Troil. ^Crcs. ii. 

would he aught with us? (rep.) — iii. 

know them for aught till he — iii. 

indeed, in aught he merit not Coriolanus, i. 

article tying liim to aught — ii. 

and never of me aught but what is . . — iv. 

it be aught towarrl the general good ..Jul. Ccesar, i. 

hear you aught of her in yours? — iv. 

no pleasure in aught an eunuch has. Ant. ffCleo. i. 

my lord that I Icisa ivii£ht but he Cymbeline, ii. 



. 3 



AUGIIT-m.y poor boy done aught but well. C.vmi). v. 4 
for aught tliou know'st, afi'cctcd be. . Titus And. ii. t 

have we done aught amiss? — v. 3 

aught escupen but liimself .... Pericles, ii. (Gower) 
(who, for an.^lit Iknow totbe coutiary — ii. ."i 
if that thy iiinster would gain augb.t by — iv. fi 
in aught you would, resolve you .... — y. I 

but to answer thee in aught — v. 1 

if aught within that little, seeming ..King Lear, i. 1 
liad'st thou been aught but gossamer — iv. 6 
do you hear aujjht sir. of a battle .... — iv. 6 
advised by aught to change the course — v. 1 
nor aught so good, but strained twm.Rom. ^ Jul.W. 3 
if aught in this miscarried by my fault — v. 3 

against thy mother aught Hamlet, i. 5 

that you know aught of me — i. 5 

whether aught, to us unknown, allliets . . — ii. 2 

no, not I, I never gave .'S'ou aught — iii. 1 

if he steal aught, tlie whilst this play is. . — iii. 2 

in neitlier aught, nor in extremity — iii. 2 

if m.y love thou liold'st at aught — iv. 3 

if that his majesty would aught with us. . — iv. 4 

since no man, of aught he leaves — v. 9 

if aught of woe, or wonder, cease your — v. 2 

neither my place, nor aught I heard of . . Oltiello, i. 3 

nor know I aught but that he's well — ii. I 

nor know 1 aught, by me that's said — ii. 3 

diseern'fit thou aught in that? is he not. . — iii. 3 

my lord, for aught I know — iii. 3 

nor set down aught in malice — v. 2 

AUGMENT — in seeking to augment it.. Macbeth, ii. 1 
to ratify, augment, or alter, as your . . Henry V. v. 2 
store oi' treasons to augment my guilt .2 Hen. F/. iii. 1 
in seeming to augment it, wastes it?. Henry nil. i. ' 

AUGMENTATION— 
with the augmentation of the Indies. Tw-ef/'/A A', iii. 

AUGMENTED— will lie augmented..3He;;f;/ I'l. v. 
what he is, augmented, would run. JuliusCffsar, ii. 
every stage with an augmented AnLfx Cleo. iii. 

AUGMENTING— 
swift brook, augmenting it with. . Asyou Like it, ii. 
with tears augmenting tlie fresh .Romeo ^- Juliet, i. 

AITGRE — into an augre's bore Coriolanus, iv. 

AUGRE-HOLE — an augre-hole may r\\A\.Macb. ii. 

AUGURS— and trees to speak; augurs .. — iii. 

AUGURER— the augurer tells me . . Coriolanus, ii. 
the persuasion of his augurers iaQ.j.JuliusCaisar,ii. 
what say the augm'ers? they would not — ii. 2 
the augurers [Co^-auguries] say they. /tni.^CZ. iv. 10 
O, sir, you are too sure an augurer .. — v. 2 

AUGURIES— [Co«. ]-tlie augm-ies say they— iv. 10 

AUGURING-myauguringhopesays.. — ii. 1 

AUGURY — if my augiu-y deceive . Two Gen. of V. iv. 4 
not a whit, we clefy augury Hamlet, v. 2 

AUGUST — of August weary, come .... Tempest, iv. 1 
the tenth of August last 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

AUGUSTUS— heard of great Augustus . . Cymb. ii. 4 
now say, what would Augustus Caisar — iii. 1 

■that I am to pronouuee Augustus Csesar — iii. I 
will pursue her even to Augustus' throne — iii. 5 
Augustus lives to think on t — v. 5 

AULD — tliine auld cloak about thee..O;/i. ii. 3 (song) 

AUMERLE— lord Aumerle, is liarrj. Richard II. i. 3 
my noble cousin, lord Aumerle: not sick — i. 3 

cousin Aumerle, how far brought — i. 4 

you have a son, Aumerle, my noble.. — ii. 3 
are my lord Aumerle, lord Salisbury — iii. 3 
Aumerle, thou weep'st ; ray tender-hearted — iii. 3 
before my face the lord Aumerle.. .. — iv. I 
there is my gage, Aumerle, in gage . . — iv. I 

Aumerle, thou liest; his honour — iv. 1 

to the like, forsworn Aimierle — iv. 1 

the very time Aumerle and you did. . — iv. 1 
Aumerle is guilty of my true appeal — iv. 1 

that thou, Aumerle, didst send two . . — iv 1 
against Aumerle we will enforce .... — iv. 1 
here comes my son Aumerle. Aumerle — v. 2 

strike him, Aumerle : poor boy — v. 2 

after, Aumerle; mount thee upon — v. 2 

AUNT — maid's aim t, the fat woman. Merry Wives, iv. 2 
it is my maid's aunt of Brentford .... — iv. 2 
I have a widow aunt, a dowager . . Mid. N. Drm. i. 1 
tlie wisest aunt, telling the saddest . . — ii. 1 
songs for me and my aunts. . Winter's T. iv. 2 (song) 

and thine aunt, great king; 'tis I Ric/iard II. v. 3 

rise up, good aunt. Not yet, I thee . . — v. 3 
good aunt, stand up. Nay, do not . . — v. 3 
that she, and my aunt Percy, shall. IHenry/r. iii. 1 
sweet aunt, be quiet; 'twas against ..2HenryVI. i. 3 
from your kind aunt, duchess of. . . .SHenry VI. ii. 1 

ah, amit, you wept not for our Richard III. ii. 2 

the hand of her kind aunt of Gloster? — iv, 1 

t'leir aunt am I in law, in love — i\'. 1 

to sec the queen Ilia aunt HenryVlII. j. 1 

and for an old aunt, whom the Trail. ^ Vres. ii. 2 

the Grecians koep our aunt — ii. 2 

thy mother, my sacred aunt — iv. 5 

make my aunt merry with some fi'us .Ind. iii. 2 

do not fear thine aunt — iv. 1 

ray noble aunt loves me as dear — iv. 1 

AUNT-MOTHER— 
but m.y uncle-father, and aunt-mother ..Ham. ii. 2 

AURICULAR— by an auricular assurance. Lenr, i. 2 

AURORA-shines Aurora's harbinger. .W/d. A'. D. iii. 2 
shady curtains from Aurora's bed . . Rom. S( Jul. i. 1 

AUSPICIOUS— a most auspicious star . . Tempest, i. 2 

calm seas, auspicious gales — .v. 1 

helm, as thy auspicious mistress! All's Well, iii. 2 

lady fortune, stand you auspicious!. Winter's T. iv. 3 

to stand his auspicious mistress Lear, ii. 1 

with one auspicious, and one dropping.... Ham/e<,!. 2 

AUSSI — ct vous auEsi; votre serviteur. Twelfh N. iii. I 

AUSTERE— with an austere regard .. — ii. 5 

if this austere insoeiablc life Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

with most austere sanctimony All's IVell, ly. 3 

as of grave and austere quality.. 7'?mon of Athens, i. 1 

AUSTERELY— if I have too austerely. 7'empcs», iv. 1 
mii-dit'st thou nercei\T3 austerely. Com. o/'Jjrrors.iv. 2 

AUSTERENESS— niistereness oi my.. Mea. for.M. ii. 4 

AUSTERITY— sainc austerity and garb.. Co/voi. iv. J 



AUS 



[30] 



AXE 



AUSTERITY-austerity and single Mte.Mid.N.D. i. 1 
with sucli ansteritv as 'longetli . . Taming o/SA. iv. 4 

AUSTRIA— from oiir cousin Austria ..AU'slVell, i. 2 
before Ansiers, well met, brave Austria ..Joint, ii. 1 
from nortl'i tn soutli; Austria and France — ii. 2 

Austria! tliou dost shame that bloody — in. 1 
AustriuMieiuUie tliere — i;;- ^ 

AUTJUOiNTlL'— autlientic in yoar. .MerrylVives,u. 2 
all tile learned and autlientic fellows./l«'s ffell, n. 3 
liy dfgiee, stand in autlientic place, rro/i. <5- Cres.i. 3 
as truth's authentic autlior to be cited — iii. 3 

AUTHOR— will read politic autliors . Tiiwlfth N. n. 5 
know tlie grounds and authors of it . . — v. 1 

and don Joliu is the author of all Much .ido,-v. 2 

where is any atithor in tlie world . . Love's L.L. iv. 3 

the authors of these women — iv- 3 

the earthlv author of my blood nicliard II. i. 3 

our humble author will continue .2Hcn»!/ IF. (epil.) 

vet their own authors faithfully Henry V. i. 2 

the author of the servant's damnation.. — iv. 1 
our bendimi author hath pursued.. — v. 2 (cho.) 
the author, thou the instrument ....SHenrijFI. i_v. 6 
their heads, tliat were the authors. . Henry Fill. u. 1 
of author's pen, or actor's voice.. T'roiY. Sf-Cres. (prol.) 

as truth's authentic author — » m- 2 

but at the author's drift — "'• 3 

as if a man were author of liimself ..CoHoinnus, v. 3 
shall prove t.he immediate. author ..Am. S,- Cleo. u. 6 

1 should be author to dishonour yow'.. T!lus.4nd. i. 2 
toll \ou alii.t mine authors fay. .Ferides, i. iGower, 

uiii'ht indite the auilior ofalfeetion Hamlel,u. 2 

vicMent aiith.a- of his own just remove .. — iv. 5 

AllTHOKri'li;s_his rewards his authorities — iv. 2 

and re-deliver our authorities Mea..for Mea.iv. 4 

must tall "Ut to him, or our authorities. .Cor/oi.u. 1 

v.lu'u two autUnritiesare up — jij- 1 

bv turning; o'er autluirities, I have. ... Pericles, Ui. 2 

stili would umua:;e those aiithorides Lear,i. 3 

At'TIlOKlTY— u'se your autliority .... Tempest, i. 1 
thv speech serves fur aut'aoritv . . . Tirelfth Nlghl, i. 2 
thus can the demi-pod, authority... Vai./or Mea. i. 3 

with full liTie of his authority — 1.5 

drest in a little brief authority — ii. 2 

lx..-aase authoritv, though it err like — u. 2 

for their robherv have authority .... — ".2 
when it i^ lioriie in high authority .. — iv. 2 
tor niv authoritv bears a credent bulk — iv. 4 
Owhat authority ami show of truth.. './«c/i Ado, iv. 1 
save base autlior'ity from others'. . Love's L. Lost, i. 1 
more authority, dear boy, name more — _ i. 2 
O, some autlioVitv how to proceed — — jv. 3 
if law, authoritv, and power deny . .Ver. of Fen. iii. 2 
wrest once the law to your autliority — iv. 1 

there is no fettering ot authority All's IFell,_n. 3 

bv his authority he remains here — — ^ iy. 5 
it is in mine authority to command.. Winter's T. i. 2 
by his great authority, wliich often hath — ii. 1 
great authority; close with him (rep.) — ly. 3 

m any breast of strong autliority King John, ii. 1 

Alack, thou dost usurp authority — ,n. 1 

to him, and his usurped authority . . — iii. I 

on tlie winking of authority — iv. 2 

youi' sovereign greatness and authority — ^v. 1 
wrested his meaning, and avithority.2Hejir.i//f. iv, 2 
I gave bold way to my authority — — v- 2 

under the king in some authority — T. 3 

a man of great authority in France .1 Henry FI. v. 1 

neither in birth, or for a'uthority — v. 1 

in suljstanee, and autlioritv, retain .. — v. 4 
of such sreat authority in France .... — .v. 5 
whv, our authoritv is his consent ..2HenrijFI. in. 1 

that hath authoritv over iiim SW nnjFI.i. 2 

on all sides the authority allowed. . Henrij I III-.\[- 4 
cannot carry authority so weighty .. — iii. 2 
the strong course of niv authority — — v. 2 
bifold authoritv'!' where reason can. Tro/l.^- Cre.?. y. 2 
'gainst the authority ( pf manners . . Timon of Aih. ii. 2 
tny good name live with authority.... — y. 2 

what authority surfeits on Coriolanns, i. 1 

fjr they do prank them in authority — iii. 1 

or let lis stand to our authority — iii. 1 

ratlier discredit my autliority Ant.Sf Cleo. li. 2 

if our eyes had authority, here — .!!•'' 

that he his higli authority abused — — .?."• 6 

authoritv melts from me — in. U 

mv authority shall not see thee Pericles, iv. 6 

if bur father'carry authority with such Lear, i. 1 

faiu call master. ^A^lat'8 that? Authority — _i. 4 

by his authority I will proclaim it . . — ii. 1 

niightst behold the great image of authority — iy. 6 

power and corrigible authority of this . . Othello, i. 3 

one, that in tlie authority of her merit — — ii. 1 

AUTHORIZED— winter'sfire, authorizcd.il/nc6. in. 4 

A UTOLYC US-named me, Autolycus. Winter's T. iv. 2 

in rogue; some call him Autolycus . . — iv. 2 

AUTUMN— the childing autumn. MW. AT. Dream, li. 2 

in the end of autumn turned to Mer. of Fen. i. 3 

wlieu the clouds in autumn crack. Taming of Sh. i. 2 

foemen,like to autumn's corn ZIIennjFI. y. 7 

an 'twere a cloud in autiuun TroilusffCres. i. 2 

autimin 'twas, that grew the more..^7i(. fyCleo.y. 2 

av, and for laving autumn's dust Lear, iv. 6 

AllVERUNE— countess of Auvergne.lHenri/F/. ii. 2 
AVAIL— of this can she avail?. . . . Mea. for Mea. iii. 1 

shall work i n nie for thine avail All's Well,_ i. 3 

for your avails they fell: to-morrow — iii. 1 

concerns more tl lan avails Winter's Tale, m. 2 

since arms avail not, now that IHenry FI.i. 1 

will it best avail vour majesty — lu. 1 

\\''A!IICE— this avarice sticks deeper.. Mactett, iv. 3 
•WATlICIOUS-avaricious, false .... — iv- 3 
.\V AUNT— Rogues, hence, avaunt..il/crr?/ Wives, i. 3 

avaunt, perplexity! what shall Love's L. L. v. 2 

avauut, tlion witch! come, Dromio. Com. of Er. iy. 3 

avaunt! and quit my sight! Macbeth, iii. 4 

avaunt, thou liateful rillain John, iy. 3 

you liunt-counter, hence, avaunt 2Uenrii IV.'i.i 

iCol. A:;i(.]-dogs! avaunt, you cullious. //'"■'■. iii. 2 
pleasant, avaunti you have suborned..! Uen. I'l. v. 4 
avaunt, thou dreadful minister of hell.fl'cA, ///. i. - 



AVAUNT— to give her the avanntl.. Henry Fill. ii. 3 
ah, thou spell! avaunt.. ...4h((j«i/ •^■Cleopatra, iv. 10 

traitors, avaunt ! wliere is Titus .Indron. i. 2 

avunnt.thou (himnrd il 'orl^ceper! Pericles, iy. C 

avaunt, you cur ! lie tliy mouth Lear, iii. 6 

avauut! be ginu;! tli-.u liast set me on. .Othello, iii. 3 
hence, aiaunl! L';i.-sio shall have my place — iv. 1 
AVE— :<,',. \:iu<v, an.l avcs \-ehemcnt ..Mea. far il. i. 1 
AVE- :>1.V,; It:.-— ninnher Ave-Maries.. a HcHci/r/. i. 3 
our Avc--Marica with our beads? .. ..iHennjVl. ii. 1 
AVENGE— remember to avenge me ..\ Henry FI. i. 4 
AVENUED— not live to be avenged. ..ZHenry FI. i. 3 

but thou wilt be avenged on my Richard III. i. 4 

if God will be avenged for the deed — i. 4 

twenty wounds be well avenged . . Julius Ceesar, v. 1 
and be aveni2:ed on cursed Tamora. Tilus.-indron. v. 1 
AVERDUPOLS-hctwecn their averdupois.2H./F. ii. 4 
AVERRING— averring notes of chamber.. Cymi). v. 5 
AVERT-avert your liking a more worthier. Lecirj i. 1 
AVOID — well (lone; avoid; no more . . Tempest, ly. 1 

tliat you might avoid him Merry yVivcs,i\. 2 

though what I am I caunot avoid — iii. 5 

he cannot by the duello, avoid it.. TwefthNight, iii. 4 

he will avoid yoiu- accusation Mea. .for Mea. iii. 1 

fasliion of the world is to avoid cost ..Much Ado,i. 1 

for either he avoids them with — ii. 3 

another man like him, I may avoid him — v. 1 
red, that would avoid dispraise. . Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 
no wise remedy how to avoid it ..As you Like it,i. 1 

been all this day to avoid him — ii. 5 

may avoid, but the lie direct (rep.) .. — y. 4 
'tis safer to avoid what's grown . . Winter's Tale, i. 2 

let us avoid. It is in mine — .1-2 

Satan, avoid! I ehai-m thee. . Comedy of Errors, iv. 3 

avoid then, fiend! what tell'st — iy. 3 

safest way is, to avoid the aim Macbeth, ii. 3 

j'Ct, to avoid deceit, I mean to learn. . King John, i. 1 

slander sought I to avoid Richard II. i- 3 

no shelter to avoid the storm — h. 1 

which to avoid, I cut them off 2Henry IF. iy. 4 

will you yield, and this avoid? Henry F. iii. 3 

false fiend, avoid! Lay hands upon . .IHenry FI. i. 4 
because he would avoid such bitter. .3 Hcnr;/ CA ii. 6 
avoid the ceusm-es of the carping . . Richard III. iii. 5 

to speak, and to avoid the first — iii. 7 

avoid the gallery. Ha! I have said-.HenryFlII. y. 1 
how may I avoid, although my will.rro/;. ^Cr.ii. 2 

pray you, avoid the hovise Coriolanus, iv. 5 

no place for you: pray you, avoid . . — iy. b 

the man I should avoid so soon Julius Ceesar, i. 2 

avoid, and leave him Antony ^ Cleopatra, v. 2 

thou basest thing, avoid! hence Cymbeline, i. 2 

and did avoid a puttock — i. 2 

hence, and avoid my sight! Lear, i. 1 

happily, foreknowing may avoid Hamlet, i . 1 

out-Herod's Herod: pray you avoid it .. — iii. 2 

what's past; avoid what is to come — iii. 4 

AVOIDED— men else I have avoided thee.Macft. v. 7 

since not to be avoided it falls \ Henry IF. v. 5 

by the destinies to be avoided 3 Henry FI ii. 2 

what cannot be avoided, 'twere childish — v. 4 
true, when avoided grace makes . . Richardlll. iv. 4 
it cannot be avoided, but by tliis (rep.) — iy. 4 
what can be avoided, whose end is. JuliusCwsar, ii. 2 
AVOIDING— avoiding, fortune's malice.SH. FI. iv. 6 
AVOUCH- 1 speak, and I avouch. . Merry Wives, ii. 1 
if the duke .avouch the justice of.. Mea. forMea. iv. 2 

I'll avouch it to his head Mid. N.'s Dream, i. 1 

and in the stocks avouch it. . Winter's T. iv. 2 (song) 

bid my will avouch it ; yet Macbeth, iii. 1 

and dare not avouch iu your deeds Henry F. v. 1 

avouch the thoughts of your heart — y. 2 

I wdl avouch in presence of the kiug« . Rich.lII.i. 3 
if you'll avouch, 'twas wisdom .. TrnilusSf Cres. ii. 2 

I dare avouch it, sir; what Lear, ii. 4 

without the sensible and true avouch of.. HamZrf, i. 1 

AVOUCHED— prove what is avouched Lear, v. 1 

AVOUCHES— this, wliieh he avouches .Macbeth, v. 5 
this avouches the shepherd's son.. Winter's Tale, v. 2 
AVOUCHJXENT— testimony, and witness, 

and avouchments Henry F. iv. 8 

AVOW — I dare avow (and now I . . Henry Fill. iv. 2 

and dare avow her beauty and her.. Trail. ^- Cres. 1. 3 

A'lVAIT— await for wretched years . . 1 llenrij FI.i. 1 

what fate awaits the duke (rep.).2Heu. FI. i. 4 (paper) 

AWi\ ICE— a\vake, dear heart, awake Tempest, i. 2 

tliou ha>t slept well, awake! — i. 2 

and heware: awake! awake! — ii. 1 (song) 

why, hiw now, ho! awake? — ii. 1 

wliicli did avi'ake me — ii. 1 

if he awake, from toe to crown — iv. 1 

beiUL' awake, enforce them — v. 1 

if I did think, sir, I were well awake . . — y. 1 

iTiaster Ford, awake; awake Merry Wives, i'u. 5 

to awake your dormouse valour Twelfth N. iii. 2 

it ijiay awake my bounty further .... — v. 1 

I will .awake it anon — v. 1 

now, 'tis awake ; takes note Mea. for Mea. ii. 2 

tell liim, he must awake — iv. 3 

pray, mastei' IBarnadine, awake till.. — i. V* 3 
now will he lie ten nights awake .... Much Ado, ii. 3 
awake the pert and niinble spirit. M/(/.A^.I>7-ertm, i. 1 

60 awake, when I am gone — ii. 3 

if you live, good sir, awake — ii. 3 

being awake, and hast thou killed him — iii. 2 

will cause Demetrius to awake — iii. 2 

[Cu///er]-are you sure that we are awake? — iv. 1 
why then, we are awake: let's follow — iv. 1 
awake, sir; if you love the maid . . Taming of S/i. i. 1 
with the clamour keeii her still awake — iy. 1 
but what yoiu" iealousies awake. . Winter'sTale, iii. 2 
being now awake, I'll queen it no. . . . — iv. 3 
it is required, you do awake your faith — v. 3 
music, awake her; strike; 'tis time.. — v. 3 
awake! awake! ringthe alarnm-beU..Macfce(A, ii. 3 

JMalcolm! awake! shake off this — ii. 3 

we must awake endeavour for ilefencc John, ii. 1 

he will awake my mercy, which lies dead — iv. 1 

awakes my conscience to confess — v. 4 

am I not ting? awake, thou sluggard. /ii'c/i. //. iii. 2 



A'WAKE-death itself awakes 2H.nry IF.iii. I 

but, being awake, I do despise my dream — y. 5 
how you awake the sleeping sword .... Henry F. i.2 

awake remembrance of these valiant — i.2 

awake, awake. English nuinWty'.,. . ..MIenryFI. i, 1 
there awake God's L'c.itle-sle lung. . . liichardi 1 1. i. 3 
awake! and think,. ,ur w)-ongs (;rp.) .. — v. 3 
guiltily awakr; an.l in a bluodv battle — v. 3 
quiet untronlilnl -...nl, awake, awake! .. — y. 3 
a trumfiet 1. 1 a\'.n!;e his ear . . Troilus <5" Cressida, i. 3 

know, Trojan, he is awake — i. 3 

Hector, thou sleep'st; awake thee! .. — iy. 5 
if none, n.wake your dangerous lenity. . . Coriot. iii, I 
will awake liini, and be sure of liim../u!.Crt'sar, i. 3 

awake, I say; what Lucius! — ii. 1 

awake, and see thyself; shall Rome.. — ii. 1 

np this hour; awa'ke, all night — Ji. 1 

and awake your senses, that you may — iii. 2 
sirs, a^^■ake! Claudius! The strings — iv 3 

Lucius, awake. IMylord! Didst thou — iv. 3 
sirrah, Claudius! fellow^thou! awake — iv. 3 

awake, awake, sir; speak to us — iv. 9 

and if thou canst awake by four Cynilieline,ii. 2 

and cry myself awake? that's false .. — iii. 4 

and so I am awake — v. 4 

I have been broad awake two hours.. TOms And. ii. 2 

he'll so awake, as she in fury — iv. 4 

they may awake their helps Pericles, i. 4 

and will awake him from his melancholy — ii. 3 
nature awakes; a warmth breathes .. .. — iii. 2 
thunder shall not so awake the beds of eels — iv. 3 

a w.ake, and tell thy dream — v. 2 

when we do awake him; I doubt not .... Lear, iv. 7 

he's scarce awake ; let him alone — iv. 7 

awake, as from a pleasant sleep . . Romeo -I- Jul. iv. 1 

against thou shalt awake — iv. 1 

tliroat aw'ake the god of day Hamlet, i. 1 

rouglily awake, I here proclaim — v. 2 

awake'the snorting citizens with the bell. 0//.ei/o, i. 1 

AWAKED— awaked an evil nature Tempest, i. 2 

we were awaked — v. 1 

we have very o.ten awaked him. . Men. for Mea. iv. 2 
shall find, awaked in such a kind . . Mitch Ado, iv. 1 
Iwonder, if Titauia be awaked.. il/irf.A'.Dre'/jn, iii. 2 

and would not be awaked Mer. of Fen. v. 1 

from miserable slumber I awaked. . .u you Like. iv. 3 

his equal had awaked them All'siVcll,]. 2 

I am afraid they have awaked Macbe'h, ii. 2 

om* knocking has awaked him — ii. 3 

awaked the sleeping rheum Richard II. i. i 

from which awaked, the truth — y. ! 

awaked yon not with this sore Richard III.^ i. 4 

timorous dreams was still awaked . . — iy. 1 
master is awaked by great occasion.. TlmonofAlh. i'u 2 

read the garboils sfie awaked Antony <§- Cleo. i. 3 

AWAKEN— awakens me with tliis.Mea.forMea, iv. 2 
I offered to awaken his regard for . . Coriolanus, v. 1 
AWAKENED— that awakened vou.TamingofS. v. 2 
AWAKENING— of her awakening ..Rom.^Jul. v. 3 
AWAKING— that he awaking ...Mid. N. Dream, iv. 1 
nourish the cause of his aw-aking. Wiitler's Tale, ii. 3 
AWARD— the court awards it {rep.). Mer. of Fen.iv. 1 

and award either of you to be Richard III. ii. 1 

AWE — will awe him with my cudgel. A/ern/ Wives, ii. 2 

wrench awe from fools Measure for Measure, ii. 4 

awe a man from the career of Ills Much Ado, ii. 3 

the attribute to awe and maj esty. Mer. of Fenice, iv. 1 

by my sceptre's awe I make Richard II. i. 1 

that cloth with awe and terror 2Henry IF. iv. 4 

we'll bend it to our awe Henry F..i. 2 

creatiu" awe and fear iu other men — iv. 1 

she holdeth thee in awe IHenryFl.i. 1 

Frenchmen might be kept in awe? . .2 Henry FI. i. I 

to keep the strong in awe Richard lll.y. 3 

domestic awe, nlglit-rest, and . . Timon of Athens, iy. 1 
keep you in awe which else would feed . . Coriol. i. 1 
live to be in awe of such a, thing. .. .J uliusCtesar, i. 2 

wdiose bend doth awe the world — _i. 2 

shall Rome stand under one man's awe? — ii. I 
to keep her still, and men in awe. Pericles, i. (Gower) 

thy free awe ijays homage to us Hamlet, iv. 3 

that earth which kept the world in awe. . — v. 1 

AWEARY — lam awearyofthismoon.it/irf. N. D.y. 1 

mj' little body is aweary of this great.. 1/er.o/ Fere. i. 2 

do that for nie, which I am aweary of. . All's Well, i. 3 

I begin to be aweary of thee — iv. 5 

I 'gin to be aweary of the sun Macbeth, v. 5 

not an eye but is aweary 1 Henry IF. iii. 2 

are you aweary of me? O Cressida!. Tro/V. ^-Cie*. iv. 2 

Cassius is aweary of the world Julius Cietar, iy. 3 

I am aweary, give me leave awhile.. /?om. i^ Jut. ii. 5 

AWED— created to be awed by man ..Richard 1 1. v. 5 

AWFUL— company of awfid men. Ttno Gen. of F. iv. I 

awful rule, and right supremacy. . Taming ofSh. v. 2 

to pay their awful duty to our Richard //. iii. 3 

come within our awful banks again. .2Hen. IF. iv. i 

justice from youi' a^vful bench — v. 2 

not to grace an awful princely scei)tre."2 Hen. FI. y. I 
and wring the awi'ul sceptre from ..3Henry J- 1, ii. 1 

awful both in deed and word Pericles, ii. (Gower) 

AWKWARD— nor no awkward claini../7enr;/J'. ii. 4 

by awkwai-d wind from England ...2 Henry FI. iii. 2 

ridiculous and awkward action . . Troit. rS- Cres. i. 3 

to the world and awkward casualities. . Perk'tes, v. I 

AWL— the awl; I meddle with no ..Julius Ca-sar, i 1 

but with awl iCollier. Knight~a\l2. . — i. 1 

AWLESS— the awless lion could King John,]. I 

upon the innocent and awless throne. . Rich. III. li. 4 
A- WORK— for that sets it a- work ..2Henry IF. iy. 3 

set a- work bj' a reproveable badness Lear, iii. 5 

AWRY— you pluck my foot awry. 7'amin4'o/.S/i. iy. 1 

eyed aivi-y, distinguish form Richard II. ij. 2 

looking awry upon your lord's — ii. 2 

thon aimest'all awry: I must 2Henry FI. ii. 4 

merely awry: when he did love Coriolanus, in. 1 

your crown's awry; I'll mend it .int. ^- Cteo.y. 2 

their currents turn awry [Knt away] . H«»!/e(, iii. 1 

AXE— your block and your axe Mea. for Mea. iv. 2 

is the'axe upon the block — iv. 3 

not the hangman's a.xe, bear half. . Mer. of Fen. iv. I 



AXE 



iXE— fulls not the nxe upon IhcAsijou I.ikeil, iii. 
iTHinkTV hliiiidv ii\e: Ah. liauntl ..lUclmitl II. i. 2 
till the iixe of (lentil hiiiii; over then. .i Henry VI. ii. 4 

fnst liv u hiilehcr Willi nil axe — iii- 2 

thiuifrli with ii little iixe, liew down.. 'illenry VI. li. 1 

wc set the iixe to thy iisuiiiing rixit — .ii. 2 

or hew mv wny out with a blooily axe — iii. 2 

rields the" oediir to the axe's edge — v. 2 

even ns the axe fulls Ileiny J' HI. u. I 

nliMilveil him with an axe — m- 2 

ere niv tree Iiatli felt the axe ..Timon of Aihcns, v. 2 
then I'll ;;o fetrli an t\\\: {irp.^.Titu>..lndrnnk-us,v\ .1 

I have unniiut the axe iiiysell I'erietfs.i. 2 

cnt'st mvheiulott'withagolilenaxe.«om. /iJid. in. 3 

let the preat axe fall Hamlel, iv. 5 

not to stay the ffvinclinir of the axe — v- 2 

AXI,K-TK'Ei;— irate on the axle-tree..! Uen.lV. iii. I 
strona as the axle-tree on whieli .. Trail. SrCres. i. S 

AYE— the perpetual wink for aye might. 7'emprs^ ii. 1 

for ave thv foot-lieker — >v. 1 

for aye to \)e in shady eloister Mid. N. Dream, i. 1 

to protest, for aye, austerity and single — ..i. I 

and must for aye eonsort with — iii.-' 

stand aye accursed in the calendar! . . Mnclieih. iv. 1 

and hoiionr I for aye allow Richard 11. v. 2 

to feed for ave her lamp Troilus ^ Cressida, iii. 2 

that will a s'eieeeh-owl aye be called — v. U 

and live ave with thv namel — v. 11 

saint- f r :iye lie rnm-ned Timon of Athens, v. 1 

to m:i'M' \:i-t N\'i tune weep for aye — v. .'j 

that Ir !i 11. i! rliaritv ave wears. /'enWc!, v. 3(Gowcr) 
hid mv l.in_' :', nil iiiaster aye good-night ..Lear, v. 3 
this V, 111. 1 is ii.it for aye Hamlel. iu. 2 

A'\'R-Ki;.M.\IXlXU— nve-remaining .. Pericles, i[\. 1 

.V/rUlC— the azure vault set roaring . . TempesI, v. 1 
white ami azure, laeed with blue Cymbeline, ii. 2 

.VZ UKED— uor the azured hare-bell — iv. 2 

B. 

i5.\. — proof will make me cry ha. . Two Gen. of Ver. i . 1 

ba, piieritia. with horn atlded. Ba...Z.oi'Cs',« L.L. v. 1 

HABBLE— this bubble .shall not . Two Gen. of Ver. i. 2 

and leave thy vain bibble babble. Twelfth Niffhi, iv. 2 

f.ir the wateli to babble and to talk . . Much Ado, iii. 3 

liABUEED— 'a babbled of green fields.. JfeHri/ F. ii. 3 

BABBLING— make the babbling gossip. Twel. N. i. .5 

lying, vainness, babbling, drunkenness — iii. 4 

for seliool, fool, a babbling rhyme . . . Much Ado, v. 2 

let luit our babbling dreams affright. /^^cAorrf ///. y. 3 

whilst the babblins; echo mocks Titus .ind. ii. 3 

a long-tongued babbling gossip — iv. 2 

;{.\BE— a testy babe, will scratch. r«'o Gen. of Ver. 1. 2 
and when he was a babe, a child . . Lore's L. L. v. 2 
Lialies liath judgement shown (rep.) . . All's IVi-ll, ii . 1 
am rough, and woo not like ababe.^om/«g■(l/.^'. ii. 1 

[ am no child, no babe — iv. 3 

and a goodly babe, lusty, and like. Winler'sTale, ii. 2 
dares trust ine with her little babe . . — ii. 2 
ift please the queen to send the babe — ii. 2 

his babe's, betrays to slander — ii. 3 

look to yoiu- babe, ray lord — ii. 3 

come on, poor babe: some — ii- 3 

his innocent babe truly begotten .. — iii. 2 (oracle) 

come, poor babe: I have heard — iii. 3 

the thrower-out of my poor babe .... — iii. 3 

and for the babe is counted lost — iii. 3 

niteons plainings of the pretty babes. Com. of Er. i. 1 

like a naked new-bom babe Macbeth, i. 7 

to love the babe that milks me — i. 7 

linger of a birtli-strangled babe — iv. 1 

his wife, his babes, and all — iv. 1 

to leave his babes, his mansion — iv. 2 

wife anrl babes, savagely slaughtered — iv. 3 

madly think, a balie of "clouts King John, iii. 4 

mothers' moist eyes babes shall &ic\i.\Henry V I . ii. 1 
his name the mothers still their babes — ii. 3 
in the mouth of every sucking babe.. — iii. 1 
as looks the mother on her lowly babe — iii. 3 

no more will I their babes 2Henry VJ. v. 2 

tears, then, for babes ZHenry VI. i. 1 

upon the lips of this sweet babe — v. 7 

to slay that babe, and the most Richard 111. i . 3 

these babes for CUrence weep — ii. 2 

those tender babes, whom envy — i\'. 1 

lay the gentle babes, thus, thus — iv. 3 

all, my tender babes! inv unblown.. — iv. 4 

only mocked with two fair babes — iv. 4 

think that thy babes were fairer .... ^- iv. 4 
my babes were destined to a fairer . . — iv. 4 
like abalic sprung uii (repealed) .. Timon of Alh. i. 2 

spare not the babe whose dimpled — iv. 3 

nur yells of mothers, maids, nor babes — iv. 3 

worth many babes and beggars! Anl. fi- Cleo. v. 2 

the king, he takes the babe to his Cymbeline. i. 1 

doinj; iiothin" for a babe ICot. Knt bribe] — iii. 3 

I stiile these babes; thinking to bar. . — iii. 3 

to bring lierbabe asleep Titus .Indron. ii. 3 

here is the babe, as loathsome — i\'. 2 

the crying babe controlled with this — v. 1 

even thus he rates the balie — v. 1 

knows thou urt the empress' baljc — v. 1 

mothers who, t-i nousle up their bal)es../'er/c/'\s', i. 4 
loss of maidenhead a babe is moulded — iii. (Gow.) 
a more 111 n.st'rous birth had never babe .. — iii. I 

lay the balie upon the pillow — iii. 1 

for the balie cannot hold out to Tyrus .. — iii. 1 
my halK- .Marina (whom for she was born — iii. 3 

old fitols are babes again hear, i. 3 

never spring a babe to hcmoxir her — i. 4 

thou wast the prettiest iinlie that ....Ilom./iJnt. i. 3 
softiiji sinews of the new-ixirn hahe. ...Ilnmtei, iii. 3 

those, that do teach v.ning babes Othello, iv. 2 

BAUII-;S_babi(:s,an.l old wnliieii..;/--,/f./ T. iii. (.-l.o.) 

prini-es, use mv babies well! Iti.hard III. iv. 1 

virgin voice tli'at liabic- lulls a<\cv]<.Cnriol.,,„i.i.u). ■> 
BABIIOX— likeagemiiivoflialKX>iis.iUi-rrvllVr,-». n.-> 

rool it with a lialKH.ii'sliloixl .Macbeth, iv. I 

hang him, bahiwin! his wit 'illcnrylV.W. 4 

bred out into baboon and monkey.- 7'iHion o//)/A. i. 1 
a baboon, could he but sivak....". Pericles, iv, 6 



Lji^j 

R.VBOON— mvliu'manity witli a baboon .. 0/Ae«o, i. 3 

BABY— the bahv beats the nurse ...Mea.for Men. i. 4 

no rhyme t.i ladv hiit baby Much Ado, y. 2 

a toy.'.i "tnek. a l.iil.v'^ cap TaminvofShr. iv. 3 

as ii' I wen a babv :.'lill Ifiiiii-r's Tale, ii. 1 

ca^tiim fnrlli to ei-ows tliy baby daughter — iii. 2 

iirotest me tlic habv of a girl Macbeth, Iii. 4 

wears iipnu his lial'iy l>n>w — iv. 1 

eomuieud tliesc waters to those baby eyes.. Jo/in, v. 2 

and ilaudle trice 111..' a baby iHeuryVl.i.3 

the bahv ti-iii-e of I lie giant mass.. 7'roiV. fy Cress, i. 3 
slianic's'a baby: liiMV she is now .... — iii. 2 
into a rapture lets liiT baby cry . . . . Coriolanus, ii. 1 

dost thou not see my baby at Ant. ^ Cleo. v. 2 

I am no baby, I, that, with base ..Titus Andron. v. 3 

think yourself a baby Hamlet, i. 3 

tliat great babv you see there — ii. 2 

BABYLON— dwelt a man in Babylon. ThvV//i N. ii. 3 
and talked of the whore of Babylon . . Henry K. ii. 3 

BACC-VK lO— Baccnre ! vou are .... Taming of Sh. ii. 1 

B.'VCCIIANAL-tbc tipsy Bacchanals .Mid. N. D. v. 1 
dance now the Iv'vi.ti'in Bacchanals. .4h(. .fi-Cteo.u. 7 

BACCJU'S— daiutv I>K'cbus gross ..Love's L. i. iv. 3 
plmnpv Da'Hliiiswitli Ant. <§• (-'(m.ii. 7 (songll 

B.\CllELnR— dismiss'd bachelor loves. TempesI, iv. 1 

he was a bachelor then Tiivlf'h Night, i. 2 

if the man be a baclielor, sir Mea.for Mca. iv. 2 

never see a bachelor of threescore .... Much Ado, i. 1 

I will live a bachelor — i. 1 

he shows me where the bachelors sit — ii. 1 
when I saidj I v/oulddie abachelor.. — ii. 3 

becomes a virtuous bachelor Mid N. Dream, ii. 3 

wlien I was a bachelor: I would. . Mrr. of Ven. iii. 1 
than the bare limw of n bachelor.. Is i/o" /''■" '', iii. 3 

yniitlirul parcel of noble bachelors -lirsin-ll, ii. 3 

me out .•outrai'tf.l bachelors Ml.unjlV. iy. 2 

ever since his fatberwas a bachelor ..'illenry IV. i. 2 

the ^vord of a king and a bachelor Henry V. v. 2 

I, being but a baeiielor, ha\-e other.. 3 Henry I'l. iii. 2 

many with a king, a bachelor Richard ///. i. 3 

or a I'lachclor? yVnswer every man ..Jut.Ccesar, iii. 3 
am T a married man. or a bachelor .. — iii. 3 

■wisely, I say, I am a bachelor — iii. 3 

would not part a bachelor Titus Andron. i. 2 

marry, bachelor, her mother is Rom. ^- Jul. i. 5 

BACHELORSHIP— 
the tirst fruit of my bachelorship. ... 1 Henry VI. v. 4 

BACK — sighing back again Tempest, i. 2 

and ride upon their backs — ii. 1 

measure us back to Naples? — ii. 1 

break mv back, than — iii. 1 

and do lly him when he comes back — v. 1 

on the bat's back I do fly — v. 1 (song) 

to call her bacit again TwoGen. of Verona, i. 2 

my penance is, to call Lucetta back.. — i. 2 
here have I brought him back again — iv. 4 

Thurio give back, or else — v. 4 

when gods have hot backs Merry IVivcs, v. 5 

arms, legs, backs, shouldei's, sides .... — v. 5 

the flame will back descend — v. 5 

like Arion on tlie dolpliin's back.. Twelfih Night, i. 2 

I think 1 have the back trick — i. 3 

I coukl Iiardlv entreat him back .... — iii. 4 

back you shall not to the house — iii. 4 

take, and give back, affairs — iv. 3 

and bring you back in happiness!..)/™. /or Mea. i. 1 

may call it back again — ii. 2 

gentle my lord, tiu'n back (rep.) — ii. 2 

whose back with ingots bows — iii. 1 

or clothe a back, from such — iii. 2 

lives behind the liae!-; i.if such Much Ado, iii. 1 

and what liaN'C I to give >■■ lu back. . .. — iv. 1 
there, Lconato, take her back auain.. — iv. 1 

brouL'ht with armcil nicu iiac'c t.i — v. 4 

to have his si'^lit tliitucr and back ..Mid. N. Dr. i. 1 
on a d.ilphin's liack. uttering such.... — ii. 2 

keciiliuck tlieclam.ir..usow'l — ii. 3 

U[ion me when I turn my back . — iii. 2 

to Athens will I bear my folly back. . — iii. 2 

nay, go not back — iii. 2 

anil back to Athens sliall the lovers. . — iii. 2 
that I may back to Athens, by daylight — iii. 2 
may all to Atlicns hack u'::aiii repair — iv. 1 

betore Thisbecmncs liack au.l finds .. — v. 1 
carried the town-gates on his back . . Lore's L. L.i.i 

fair, 1 give you back again — ii. 1 

I'll reiiay it back, or yield up Ayuitain — ii. 1 
that ever turned their backs to mortal — v. 2 
and stand between her back, sir, and — v. 2 

latter ba/ar.l back again Merchant of Venice, i. 1 

survey tlic inscriptions back again .. — ii. 7 

to wish it back on you — iii. 4 

of late so huihlled on his back — iv. 1 

'tis well yon olfer it behind her back — iv. 1 

do not draw back your liand — iv. 1 

he calls us back: my oride fell ....4s you Like it, i. -2 
how now! backfriends. — Sheiihcnl.. — iii. 2 

lav sleeping on his back — iv. 3 

tw'ii'c did he turn hisiiaek — iv. 3 

I must bear answer back howyou — iv. 3 

to bear me back again All's Ifell, ii. 1 

urge her to a present answer back.... — ii. 2 

wlien back again this ring — iv. 2 

no more doublets than baeks, Taming ofSh. 2 (indue.) 

skipper, stand back: 'tis age — ii. 1 

Bwayeil ill tlic back, and shoulder — iii. 2 

comes with him on his back _. — iii. 2 

ami fetch our horses back again — iv. .'» 

o' your back, and then come back .. — v. 1 
str'aiuiuL' ..11. f.a- plucking back.. IVinler's Talr, iv. 3 
or pin. k back lliv business tlicro .... — iv. 3 
will lircak the baVk ..f man, the heart — iv. 3 
may turn back to mv advancement.. — iv. 3 

go iiack a'.-aiu. thou slave (re;;.) Com.of Er. ii. 1 

F.ack.sbnc. .a- 1 will break — ii. 1 

tlielcurs come back! — iv. 2 

a' turns back for very fear — iv. 2 

to turn back ail hour ill a day? — iv. 2 

my liege, they are not yet come back .. Macbeth, i. 4 
I ducunuucnd yuu to tneir bucks — iii. 1 



BAG 



BACK — those that we bnry, back, our. . Macbeth, iii. 4 

make haste, she'll soon be back again .. — iii. s 

turll^ me his back, and hums — iii. 8 

we'll .lie with liarncss on our backs — v. .'j 

but get thcc back, my soul — v. 7 

whose foot sinirnp back the ocean's. . King John, ii. 1 

birthrights proudly on their backs .. — ii. I 

lies as sightly on the back of him — ii. 1 

cry, havock, kings! back to the stained — ii. 2 

shall not drive me back, when — iii. 3 

let him come back, that — iv. 1 

stand back, lord Salisbury, stand back — iv. 3 

shall pardon me I will not back .... — v. 2 

must I hack because that John — v. 2 

the lords are all come back — v. 6 

may break his fonmingeourser's back. /fi'f/inrrf/7. i. 2 

and both return back to their cliairs — i. 3 

save back to England, all the world's — i. 3 

beats back the envious siege — ii. 1 

a keeper back of death, who gently .. — ii. 2 

thrives to beat back Bolingbroke* — ii. 2 

bein" plucked from off their backs .. — iii. 2 

O call back yesterday, bid time — iii. 2 

shall we call back Northumberland — iii. 3 

Kortbumberland comes back from .. — iii. 3 

sent back like Ilallowiuass, or shortest — v. 1 

on the back of such as have before .. — v. .'i 

that Kolingbmke ■\vas on his back! .. — v. .'> 

pr.aid man, that did ii«iir.. bis back.. — v..', 

■ver (.ill."; i 1 \He7iry IV.i. ■> 



ami I 



twill Ik 



came at my back, and let drive at me — ii. 
and send him back again to mj- motlier — ii. 
the money shall be paid back again.. — ii. 
bootless home, and weather-beaten back — iii. 

a dozen of shirts to yoiur back — iii. 

paid back again. I do not like [rep.) — iii. 

drag back our expedition — iv. 

bring your luggage nobly on your hack — v. 
turned me back with joyful tidings . .'IHenry IV. i. 

of those that turned their backs — i. 

and send you back again to your master — i. 

call him back again — i. 

he lea ves his back unarmed — i . 

comes the king back from Wales 

thousand reasons hold me back 

if her feathers tm'n back in 

you knew I was at your back 

his apparel is built upon his back .... 

break some gallows' back 

and ebb back t.) tlie sea ; where 

look back untn y..iir miglUy 

and bring you back, eha iniing 

he might return to vasty 'J'artar back — 

full intent back to our brother — 

from the French comes back — iii 

turn thee liaek. ami tell thy king — 



— 11. 1 



— ii. (ehn.) 



■ (cl.V 



misti-ess slue 


\\i\\\ -In.jk vour back . 


— iii 


bear mv ir. 


era.i->ierlrack 




once m. jr.- !■ 


■'-. a /an,: and he that . 


— iv 


straight fa ek 


a-L'iii t.. France 


— V. (ch. 


with mv ani 


'lur on my back 


— V 


a straight ba 


■k will st.iop 


y 


dazzled ami 


iMve back his enemies. 


.\n.nryVI.'\ 


with a spear 


nto the back 


. - i 



wdien he sees me go back one foot 

stand back you lords, and give us leave 
stand back.'thon manifest conspirator 
not slay thee, but I'll drive thee back 

drives iiack our troops 

lean thi ne aged back ag:iinst 

kecii not iiaek your p.iweis .. 
Cliic liaek. f.i.l: llii- i- .ii ■ -li 



■..in hi 
iHi |.: 



C ....•2U.-„ryVI.-\ 
icr back — i 

look . — ii 



.■k 



I. keil back, by false.... — iii. 

dn.^.e ba.^k a;'ain unto mvuativo — iii.; 

the tempest beat us back, I stood .,., — iii.: 

let them break your backs ■with bm'deus — Iv. i 

but now is Cade driven back — iv. i 

run liaek and liite. liecause he was .. — v. I 
turn back, and fly, like ships before . .SllenryVI. i. ' 

your mess of sons to back ■N'on now?.. — i. ■ 

never once again turn back, and fly . , — ii. I 

that sets his foot upon her back ...... — ii. '. 

in their ireful hands, are at our backs — ii. .' 

an envious mountain on my back .... — iii. : 

to keep them back that come — iv. ; 

and beat him back again — iv. f 

foes may set uiion our baeks — v. 1 

for blond til. lU ne'er put'st back — v..' 

s.iine weieiit. or break mv back — v. i 

my lord, staiul back, and let Richard III. i. i 

no friends to back mv suit withal .. .. — i. i 

I'll back to the duke" of Gloster — i. .1 

go back again, and I will send you .. — \. t 

look back, am! pry on every siife — iii.' 

look back, defend thcc, here are enemies — iii. .' 

will bui'kle fortune on mv back — iii. i 

look back with me. unto 'the Tower .. — iv. 1 

unresolved to beat them back — iv. I 

jiower then, to beat him back — iv. t 

many have broke their baeks with . . Henry VIII. i. 1 

the hack is sacrifice to the find — i. V 

ccrcinony of bringing back the prisoner — ii. 1 

if your liack cannot \'ouchsafe — ii. ' 

I know your back will liear a duchess — ii. ; 

madam."you are called back — \\. '. 

to call back her appeal — ii. ■; 

about the L'iviug ba.dithegrcatseal.. — iii. 1 

the same full ^tatc paced back again — iv. ! 

comeback; what mean yon? (repealed) — v. I 

when the.i' pass back, from — T. : 

upon mvback, to defend mv belly .Troi^ ^- Cress, i.*. 

we turn' not back the silks" _ ii. i 

to have her back returned — i"i, ; 




BAGK-and renders back his figure.. rroi/.^-Cj-es. iii. 3 

a wallet lit his back — iii. 3 

puts back leave-taking, justles — iv. 4 

kiads o' grnvel i' the back, lethargies — v. 1 

comCj Hector, come, go back — v. 3 

is nniinoii-^; therefore, come back ... . — v. 3 
witli the >leeve, liack to the dissembling — v. 4 
mi.i-t not liirak niv liac-k, to heal. . 7Vmo;i of Alh. ii. 1 
the tool hani;s on vourbark already.. — ii. i 
when my iiuli-^po-'iti'in jiiit you back — ii. 2 

I have kept l.ii.'k tlicii- toes — iii. 5 

let me linik bark uron thee — iv. 1 

raltier than vender I. urk — iv. 1 

as we ilo turn our liaeks from — iv. 2 

thy baek, I iirythee. I^ivc and love.. — iv. 3 
and would sencl them back the plague — v. 2 

entreat thee baek to Athens — v. 2 

soon we shall drive back of Alcibiades — y. 2 

do Ixick receive the (lower of all Coriola7ius, i. 1 

all hurt behind; backs red, «nd faces — i.4 
Titus Lartius, must to Conoli back .. — i. 9 

he delivered baek on good eouditiou — h^ 10 

the city, thus 1 tiu-n my back — iii. 3 

stand, and go hack. Yi>u guard like — v. 2 

therefore, go back (repealed) — v. 2 

therefore, back to l?ome, and prepare — v. 2 
buck, that's the utmost of your (r(?p.) — v. 2 
for keeping your greatness back? .... — v. 2 

unjust, and spurn nie back — v. 3 

I'll not to Rome, I'll back with you — v. 3 

a better witness back than words — v. 3 

nut it by with the back of his hand . . Jul. Cresar, i. 2 
he then imto the ladder turns his back — ii. 1' 

ne'er looked but on mv back — ii. 2 

never shall turn back for I mil slay — iii. 1 
thou shalt not baek, till I haveborne — iii. 1 

pause till it come back to me — {!!■ ^ 

stand back I room! bear back 1 — iii. 2 

a fool that brought my answer back . . — iv. 3 
him there, these people at our back . . — iv. 3 
ensign here of mine was turning back — V. 3 

he came not back : he is or ta'cn — v. 5 

the hand could pluck herback AnlonnSyCleo. i. 2 

goes to, and baCK, lackenug — i.4 

carry back to Sicily much tall youth — ii. 6 

andbear back otu- targe undinted .. — ii. 6 
Bure he cannot weep it back again ... . — ii. 

I will eniplov thee back again — iii. 3 

looking back on what I have left .... — in. 9 
sent our seboolmaster, is become back? — .?."• ^ 

ret thee back to Caasar, tell him — iii. 1 1 

let us score their backs, and snatch .. — iv. 7 
and o'er green Neptune's baek with.. — iv. 12 
they showed his hack above the element — v. 2 

■what have I kept back? — v. 2 

goest thou back? thou shalt go back — v. 2 

that I might prick the goer back Cymbcline, i. 2 

make her go back, even to — _i. 5 

back mv ruig; render to me some — ii. 4 

I thonglit yoli woidd not back again — jii. 4 

it' you'll back to the court — iii. 4 

with that suit upon my back — iii. 5 

I'll knock her back, foot her home . . — iii. 5 

and but the backs of Britons seen — v. 3 

but to look back in frown — v. 3 

and I'll soon bring her back Tilus Aiidron. i. 2 

not be denied: sweet heart, lookback — i. 2 

thy sous to back thy (inarrels — ii. 3 

do'not draw back, for we will — .]]• ^ 

in scorn to thee sent back — iii. 1 

■whilst she playeth on her back — iv. 1 

to the very back : yet wrung with (rep.) — iv. 3 

when I did push tliee back Pericles, v. 1 

return those back as are right fit Lear, i. 1 

to turn thy hated back upon — i. 1 

I have vca'rs on my back, forty-eight — i.4 

call tiie'elotpoll baek — i.4 

whv came not the slave back to me — i.4 

thou borest thine ass on thy baek over . . — _i. 4 

and not send back nn- messenger — ii. 4 

who hath had three siuts to his back — iii. 4 

the foul fiend bites my baek — iii. 6 

back, Edmund, to my brother — i v. 2 

I met hint back again — iv. 2 

so suddenly gone back know you the — iv. 3 

strip tbine'own back — iv. 6 

hack do I toss these treasons — v. 3 

I will back thee. How? (rep.) .... Ilnmeo <<1- Jul. i. 1 

nurse, comeback again — i. 3 

when maids lie on their backs — i- 4 

turn back, didl earth, and find — ii. 1 

that fall back to ;-'aze on him — ii. 2 

to lure this tassel-gentle back again — ii. 2 

forgot why 1 did call thee back — ii. 2 

thread plucks it back again — ii. 2 

driving baek shadows over lowering hills— ii. 5 
my back o' t'other side, — O my baek ! (rep.) — ii. .'; 

the furious 'Tybalt back again — iii. 1 

take the villain back again — iii. 1 

sends it baek to Tybalt — iii. I 

hut by and by comes back to Romeo — iii. 1 

than new snow on a raven's baek ■ — iii. 2 

back, foolish tears, back to your native — iii. 2 
pack of blessings lights upon thy baek — iii. 3 
and call thee back with twenty hundred — iii. 3 

that he dares ne'er come back — iii. 

price, being spoke behind your hack.. — iv. 1 
i'U call them hack again to comfort me — iv. 3 
uuon tbv back hangs ragged misery — v. 1 

is erajity on the back of iNIontague . . — v. 3 
vesternight returned mv letter back.. — v. 3 
in going'back to school in Wittenberg . . Hamlet, i. 2 

if praises may go back .again — iv. 7 

Hamlet comes back; -what would you.... — iv. 7 

should have a back, or second — iv. 7 

he hath borne me on his back a thousand — v. 1 

right welcome back to Denmark — v. 2 

who briniTs back to him, tliat you attend — ■». 2 
now wiaking the beast with two backs . . Othello, i. 1 
■when I came back, (tor tlris was brieO.... — ii. 3 



[38 ] 

BACK— I pr'ythcc, call him back (rep.). .Othello, iii. 3 

I do beseech your lordship, call her back — iv. 1 

instrument of this 3'our calling back .... — iv. 1 

do you go hack dismavcd? 'tis a lost fear — v. 2 

BAClC-BITE-knavcs, and will baek-bite..2H./r. v. 1 

BACK-BITTEN— they are back-bitten — v. 1 

BACK-DI10R— at your back-door.i'V/erryfniic,!, iii. 3 

baviuL' found the "back-door open. . . . Cymbcline, v. 3 

BACKED— witha^vincyardbaoked.JI/ea./oril/ea. iv. 1 

he means, l>a<'ked by the power of . .ZHenry VI. i. 1 

when 'tis backed with France — iv. 1 

let us be backed with (iod — iv. 1 

and Buckingham, backed with Richard III. iv. 3 

great Jupiter upon his eagle backed.. Ci/m6e/i'ne, v. ^ 

it is backed like a weasel Hamlet, iii. 2 

BACK-l'KllCNU-a back-friend. .Comcc/yo/Er. iv. 2 
BACKING-call you that backing (rep.).)Hen.IV. ii. 4 

backing of the iUikeof York ZHenry F/. ii. 2 

BACK-liETU RN— till Harry's back-retui-n 

again to France Henry V. v. (chorus') 

BACKSIDE— went the backside the iuwn. .Cymb. i. 3 
BACKSWORD-a good backsword raan.2Hcn./F. iii. 2 

B ACK WARD— the dark backward Tempest, 1. 2 

his baekwiird voice is to utter — ii. 2 

but she woidd spell him backward. . Much Ado, iii. 1 
what is a, b, spelt backward with . . Lovers L. L. v. 1 
that Dobbin's tail grows backward.il/fr. of V'en. ii. 2 

you go so much backward All's Well, i. 1 

doth back'n-ard pull our slow designs. . — i. 1 
demonstrate them now but goers backward — i. 2 

and beat them backward home Macbeth, v. 5 

when the Englisli measiu-ed backward John, v. 6 

whose mind is backward now ! Henry V.iv.Z 

by a pace goes backward Troilus ^ Cress, i. 3 

an' you draw backw'ard, we'll put. . . . — iii. 2 
that will fly with his face backward — iv. 1 

souls that fly backw^ards Cymheline, v. 3 

and he holp by backward turning iiom.ffJul.i.i 

thou wilt fall backward, when thou (rep.) — i. 3 

if, like a crab, you could go backward. . Hamlet, ii. 2 

do thev re-stem their baCKward course. . Othello, i. 3 

BACK^rt^ARDLY- does he think so backwardly . . 

BACK- WOUNDING— Timon of Athens, iii. 3 

back-wounding calumny .... Measure for Mea. iii. 2 

BACON— hang hog is Latin for hacon.. Merry W. iv. 1 

I have a gammon of bacon, and Uvo.lHenrylV. ii. 1 

on, bacons, on! what, ye knaves? .... — ii. 2 

B.ACON-FED— bacon-fed knaves — ii. 2 

BAD — good wombs have borne bad sona.. Tempest, i. 2 
exchange the bad for the better.. Two Gen. o/Fo-. ii. 6 

to call Her bad, whose — ii. 6 

so much of bad already — iii. 1 

harsh, untunable, and bad — ill. 1 

prevents a bad marriage Twelfth Night, i. 5 

it were a bad recompense for — ii. 1 

your bad entertainment — ii. 1 

one that serves a bad woman . . Measurefor Mea, ii. 1 
to make bad, good, and good provoke — iv. 1 

for being a little bad; so may — v. 1 

did o'ertake his bad intent — v. 1 

and, with his bad legs, falls into .... Much Ado, ii. 1 
tax not so bad a voice to slander .... — ii. 3 

his had voice bode no mischief — ii. 3 

which is as had as die with tickling. . — iii. 1 

an' bad thinking do not wrest — iii. 4 

not my bad life reft me so much .... — iv. 1 
for which of my bad parts didst thou — v. 2 
else your memory is bad, going o'er.toDc'sL.l. iv. 1 
a better bad habit of frowning. . . . Merch. of Fen. i. 2 
there I have another bad match .... — iii. 1 

the cuckoo, by the bad voice — v. 1 

the tree yields bad fruit As you Like it, iii. 2 

the only jprologues to a bad voice? .... — v. 3 
among nine bad if one be gooA. .AlVsyi'ell, i. 3 (song) 

to produce so bad an instrument — v. 3 

even as bad as those that vulgars . , Winter's T. ii. 1 

of "ood and bad ; that make — iv. (chorus) 

had not our hap been bad Comedy of Errors, i. 1 

did I tell him it was vile and bad — v. 1 

those that would make good of bad. . . . Macbeth, ii. 4 

things bad begun, make strong — iii. 2 

bad world the while! this must .... King John, iv. 2 

and too bad to live ; since Richard //. i. 1 

uiion his bad life, to make all — i. 1 

but by bad courses may be understood — ii. 1 
doubly divorced — Bad men, ye violate — v. 1 
overflow of good converts to bad .... — v. 3 

rebellion had bad rA'/i( ill] luck ..2HenryIV. i. 1 

is as bad as to smell a fox — 1.2 

and good from bad find no partition. . — iv. 1 

the king bath run bad humours HenryV.i\. 1 

yonr honour wins bad humours — Hi. 2 

but his few bad words are matched .... — iii. 2 

for oivr bad neighbour makes us — iv. 1 

scourge the bad revolting stars 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

letters, full of bad mischance — i. 1 

not half so bad as thine to England's.2Hcnri/r/. i. 4 
so good a quan'el, and so bad a peer. . — ii. 1 

that's bad enough, for I am but — ii. 4 

so bad a death argiies a monstrous . . — iii. 3 

ill-got had ever bad success? ZHenry VI. ii. 2 

counting myself but bad, till I — v. 6 

no news so oad abroad, as this Richardlll. i. 1 

by saint Paul, this news is bad indeed — i. 1 

w^hich renders good for bad, blessings — i. 2 

the world Is grown so bad — i. 3 

bad Is the world; and all wdll — iii. 6 

when such had \_Col. Knt.-WY] dealing — iii. 6 
good news or bad, that thou (repca^erf) — iv. 3 

no, to their lives bad friends were — iv. 4 

so bad, but well may be rcjiorted (rep.') — i^v. 4 

slept upon this bold l>ad man HenryVIII. ii. 2 

now good, or bad, 'tis but the . . Troil.^ Cress, (prol.) 

sans check, to good and bad — i. 3 

of good or bad unto the general — i. 3 

nor fear of bad success in a bad cause — ii. 2 
that dog of as bad a kind, Achilles .. — v. 4 

thou art too bad to curse Timon of.ithens, iv. 3 

canst not paint a man so bad as is — ■v'. 1 

brave death outweighs bad life Coriolanus, i. 6 



BAD— good, or bad? Not according to. Con'otoni/s, ii. 1 
is as bad as that w hich he dislikes . . — ij. 2 
is, indeed, sir, a mender of bad soles. ./«!. Crrsar, i. 1 
andre.-eivin- the lad air. But, soft.. — .i. 2 
unto bad can-cs swear such creatures — \\. I 
that one of two bad ways you must.. — iii. 1 
for his bad \erses, tear him for his bad — iii. 3 
better than bad strokes, Octavius (rep.) — ^v. 1 

the nature of bad news infects Antony SrCleo.]. 2 

the good and bad together — ii. 5 

never good to livioL' bad news — ii. 3 

for so bada pravia^ as liis was — iv. 9 

a thing too bad lov bad report Cymbcline, i. 1 

the fear's as bad as tailing — iii. 3 

to lose so bad employment — iii. 4 

from one bad tiling to worse — iv. 2 

let tlie time run on, to good, or bad . . — v. r> 
in a bad quan'el slain a virtuous son.. Tilus .ind. i. 2 
for these bad bondmen to the yoke . . — iv. 1 

bad father! to entice his own Pericles, i. (Gower) 

you were not so had, as with foul .... — hi 

to killcn bad, keep good alive — ii. (Gowcv) 

fortune, tired with doing had — ii. (Cower) 

I never spake bad word, nor did — iv. 1 

are yet so bad as thou art — iv. i; 

it is too bad, too bad. Yes, madam !<;«)■, ii. 1 

bad is the trade must play the fool — iy. 1 

is thy news good or bad? (rep.) Romeo * Jut. ii. .'') 

it was bad enough, before their spite — iv. 1 
I will not entertain so bad a thought — iv. 3 
either good or bad, but thinking makes. Hamfe^, ii. 2 

were it not that I have had dreams — ii. 2 

you were better have a bad epitaph — ii. 2 

almost as bad, good mother, as kill a king — iii. 4 

thus b.id begins, and worse remains — iii. 4 

look through our bad performance — iv. 7 

be advised; be comes to bad intent Othello, \. 2 

if my bad blame light on the man — i. 3 

not to pick bad from bad ; but, by bad . . — iv. 3 

BAD-CAUSER— the bad-causer worse.ificft.///. iv. 4 

BADE— the tempest that 1 bade thee? . . Tempest, i. 2 

wdio b.ade yon call her? Two Gen. of Verona, ii. 1 

love bade me swear -^ ii. 6 

carried mistress Silvia the dog you bade — iv. 4 
and she bade me tell your worship. /l/crn/ Wives, ii. 2 
the lady hade take away the fool . . Twelfth Night, i. 5 

sir, I bade them take you — i. !> 

my lady bade me tell you — ii. 3 

I bade you never speak again of him — iii. 1 

bade me come smiling — v. 1 

he bade me store up as a triple All's Well, ii. 1 

when I gave it Helen, I bade her — v. 3 

I bade the rascal knock upon .... Taming of Sh. i. 2 

he loves (he bade me say so) Winter's Tale, v. 1 

nor bade farewell to him Macbeth, i. 2 

he bade me, from him, call — __i. 3 

and bade them speak to him — iii. 1 

your highness bade me ask Henry V. ii. 2 

temi-)cred thee, bade thee stand up — ii. 2 

BO a' bade me lay more clothes — il. 3 

you bade me ban, and will you . . . .2Henry VI. iii. 2 

and bade me be advised ! Richard III. ii . I 

bade me rely on him, as on — ii. 2 

I bade them, that did love their — iii. 7 

you, he bade attend him here .... Henry VIII. iv. 2 

bade me enjoy it, with the place — iii. 2 

he bade me take a trumpet .. Troilus Sr Cressida, i- 3 

I b.ade the vile owl go learn — ii. 1 

Hector bade ask. Which way .... — iv. i 

but bade me not commend her — iv. .'i 

spite of ctmnin^, bade him ■win all — v. f> 

plunged in, and bade him follow . . Julius Ccesar, i. 2 

that bade the Romans mark him — i. 2 

bestow these papers as you bade me — i. 3 

being prostrate, thus he bade me say .. — iii. 1 
to do this wdren I bade thee? . . Antony Sr Cleo. iv. 12 
tell me of you, bade me trust you. . — v. 2 

for so he bade me say TitusAndronicus, iv. 2 

done his sacrifice, as Dian bade. Pf ri'c/cs, v. 2 (Gower) 
at twelve year old, I hade her come. Komco ^ Jul. i. 3 

my yovmg lady bade me (repeated) — ii. 4 

bade hlm'bethink how nice — iii. 1 

that Romeo bade thee fetch — iii. 2 

a madman's mercy bade thee run away — v. 3 
my lord, his majesty bade me signify . . Hamlet, v. 2 

very moment that he ))ade me tell it Othello, i . 3 

bade me, if I had a friend that loved her — i . 3 
revenge being nigh, bade her wrong stay — ii. 1 
bade him anon return, and here speak . . — iv. 1 

and bade me to dismiss you — iv. 3 

I have laid those sheets j'ou bade me — — iv. 3 

BADGrE — but the badges of these men . . Tempest, v. 1 

mthout a badge of hitteraess Much Ado, i. 1 

bearing the h.adge of faith to prove . Mid. N. Dr. iii. 2 

black is the bad"e of hell Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 

and by these badges understand — v. 2 

sutferance is the badge of all Mer. ofVen. i. 3 

the badges of his grief and patience.. i?iWiard //. v. 2 
which is the badge of pusillanimity.. 2/7eH7-j//r.iv. 3 

took exceptions lit this badze 1 Henry VI. iv. 1 

that he wears the badge of Somerset — iv. 1 

me with murder's crimson badge ..iHenry VI. iii. 2 

thy household badge (rc/jea/ed) — v. 1 

mercy is nobility's true badge Titus Andron.h. 2 

have yet worn Vulcan's badge — ii. 1 

BADGED— all badgcd with blood Macbeth, ii. 3 

BADLY— badly, I fear; how fares .... King John, v. 3 

BADNESS— more name for badness.il/ea./or j)/«7. v. 1 

set a- work bv a reproveablc badness Lear, iii. 5 

mistress, as hadness ■would desire — iv. 6 

BADEST— and, as thou badest me Tempest, i. 2 

and badest me bury love Romeo ^ Juliet, 11. 3 

BAES — hear her lamb, ■^vllen it bacs . . Much .4do, iii. 3 
a lamb, indeed, that bacs like a hew. Coriolanus, ii. 1 

BAFFLE— I w ill baffle sir Toby . . Twelfth Night, ii. 5 
call me villain, and baffle me I Henry IV. i. 2 

BAFFLED— have they baffled thee?. Twelfth Night, v. 1 

impeached, and baflled here Richard II. i. 1 

and shall crood news be baffled? . . . .IHenry IV. v. 3 

BAG— I haii-e a bag of money here . . Merry Wives, ii. 2 



BAG 



[ 39 ] 



;A(i — or Biiins in sealed bags Merry If'ivcs, in. ■! 

ft h' xlgo pudding? a l)ag uT flax? — v. 5 

a scjileil bag, two sealed bags Mer. of I'm. ii. 8 

tUoii-h not with bagnnd bagt,'UL'c..Js iiimLike ii, iii. 2 
and that hisbiiys shall in-on'. .>,im;',m„r SInifir, i. :.' 
l\w ciH-nu- u-ilh Im4- nnd bui;-aw. . /r,„',v's r.,lc; i. :! 

deny tlie bugol'^'old .Cnmrd;/ of lun.rs.iv. 1 

«fc thou shake the bags of hoarding.. ... .Ju/m. iii. 3 

the clergy's bags are lank and lean ..2H,iinj n. i. 3 

here is tlie bag of gold Tilus Aiidioiucus, ii. l 

tie my treasure nji in silken bags Pericles, iii. 2 

on treasured with bags of spices full I .... — iii. 2 

bf.l tathers, that bea'r bags Lear, ii. 4 

your dauglder. and your bags Othello, i . 1 

l!un put u]) your pipes in your bag — iii. 1 

BAGUAUIC — yciurag, yon bnggagcil/erri/ Wi'i'cs, iv. 2 
thnndi not with bag and baggage. .-■Isi/OK Like, iii. 2 

y'are a baggage: the Slies aiv Tam.ofSh. V (.iud.) 

tlie enemy, with bag and baggage.. IVinler's Tale, i. 2 

thou baggage, let me in ^Comeihj of Errors, iii. 1 

that lay witli the little baggage Pericles, iv. 3 

tlie peevish baggage would but give way — iv. 6 
out, you baggage! you tallow f'aee!.A'o;K.<5-,/Mi. iii. 5 
hang thee, young baggage ! disobedient — iii. 5 
BAGCJT— ourself, and Bushy, Bagot hcre./i(c/i.//. i. 4 
by Bushy, Bagot, and their complices.. — ii. 3 

where is Bagot? what is become — iii. 2 

call forth Bagot: now, Bagot, freely.... — iv. 1 

B:igot, forbear, thou shalt not — iv. I 

BAGrl'IPE — bagpipe singsi' the nose.. Hir.of Ten. iv. 1 
why he, a swoln bagpipe: but of force — iv. 1 
tlie bagpipe could not move you. . Winter^ sTale, iv. 3 
orthedroucofaLiucolnshire bagpipe. .IHeji./F. i. 2 
Ii VdPIPER— parrots, at a baguiper. . . Mer of Ven. i. 1 
BAIL — I cry bail: here's ageutlemaa.il/ea./ojiV/. iii. 2 
yoiu' good worship will be my bail . . — iii. 2 

you win not bail rne then, sir? — iii. 2 

lot me bail tliese gentle three — v. 1 

I'll put in bail, m"y liege AWs Well, v. 3 

fcteli my bail; stay, royal sir — v. 3 

till I give thee bait: bu"t, sirrah.. Com. of Errors, iv. 1 

and tliat shall bail me: hie thee — iv. 1 

to i)e your bail, by Droniio — v. I 

o:i 1 1 in my sons to be my bail 2 Henry I'l. v. 1 

shall be tireir father's bail — v. 1 

here comes Cliltbril, to deny their bail — v. 1 

yet let rae be their bail Titus Andron. ii. 4 

thou shall not bail them — ii. 4 

BAILIFF — a process-server, a bailiff.. Winter sT. iv. 2 
B AILLEZ— baiilez me some iiapcr. . Merry Wives, i. 4 
B.A.ISANT — eu baisant ia main d'une . . Henry T. v. 2 
B.\ISn;ES— poiu' estre baisties devant leur — v. 2 

B ALSER — what is iiaiser eu English — v. 2 

BAIT-mth saints dost bait thyliook.il/cn./ui-A/. ii. 2 

bait the hook well: this fish will Mucli Ado, ii. 3 

devour the treacherous bait — iii. 1 

the false sweet bait tliat we lav — iii. 1 

to bait me with this foul '.Mid.N.'s Bream, iii. 2 

witii this melancholy bait Mercli.of I'enice, i. 1 

to bait fish withal: if it will — iii. 1 

boat her husband, anrl now^ baits me. Winter'' sT. ii. 3 
gay vestments his affections bait?. . Cmn. of Err. ii. I 
my wretc'iedness iloth liait myself. . Kirhard II. iv. 1 
young dace be a bait for the old pike.'-'He/i./F. iii. 2 

we'll bait thy bears to death •iUeiny VI. v. 1 

wth cautelous baits and practise . . Oiriohnius, iv. 1 
{Col. KnI.'] Brutus bait not me ..Julius C^rsar, iv. 3 

but worn, a bait for ladies Cyinbeline, iii. 4 

more dangerous, than baits to fish . . filusAnd. iv. 4 
the one is wounded with the bait .... — iv. 4 
love's sweet bait from fearful.. Kom. ^-Jul. i. 5 (cho.) 

your bait of falsehood takes his Hamlet, ii. 1 

BAITED— and baited it with all. . TwelfliiNiglii, iii. 1 

how hath he been baited! Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

to be baited with the rabble's curse Mnehetli, v. 7 

to be so baited, scorned, and stormed . . Riclt.III. i. 3 
whv stay we to be baited with one. .Coriolantis, iv. 1 
BAITING— and here ye lie baiting.. H^Hn/ /'///. v. 3 
BAITING-PLACE— to thebaiting-plaee.'2fr. VI. v. 1 
BA.TAZET— another of Eajazet's mule. All's Well, iv. 1 
BAKE — I wash, wring, brew, bake. . Merry Wires, i. 4 

in the cauldron boil and bake Macbeili, iv. I 

and bakes the elf-locks in foul . . Romeo ff Juliet, i. 4 
B.-VlvED- when it is baked with frost . . Tempest, i. 2 

had bakeil thy blood, and made King Jolni, iii. 3 

tlicu to be baked with no date Troit.4- Cres. i. 2 

paste let their \n\c heads be baked . . Titus .4nd. v. 2 

are both, baked in that pie — v. 3 

look to tlie baked meats Romeo SfJulift, iv. 4 

the funeral Ijakcd meats did coldly Hamlel, i. 2 

rKiiigliO—a most instant tetter baked about^ i. 5 
baked and inip;isted with the p;u'ching.. — ii. 2 

BAKER— away to bakers' wives IHennj IV. iii. 3 

tlu; owl was a baker's daughter Hamlet, iv. 5 

BAKING— the oven and the baking. r»-o/(..t Cres. i. 1 
B.V L.VNCE — reasons in her balance . . . Much Ado, v. 1 

a mote ^v^ll turn the balance Mid. N. Dream, v. I 

are there balance here, to weigh ..Mer. or Ven. iv. 1 

hung so tottering in the balance All's Welt, i. 3 

thy estate, a balance more replete — ii. 3 

in the balance of great Bolingbroke.KiV/iarrf//. iii. 4 
have in c'lnal b;dance justly weighed.2HeH./F. iv. 1 
still bear the balance and tne sword .. — v. 2 

a sword, or sceptre, balance it 2Henry VI. v. 1 

my cause in lialauce to be weighed .. Titus And. i. 1 
if the balance of our lives had not one ..Othello, i. 3 

BALD — and prove a bald ierkiu Tempest, iv. 1 

and high top bald witli dry As you Like it, iv. 3 

that grows liald by nature . ... Comedy of Error.^, ii. 2 
Time hioi Hi- i;m-1, aiiil therefore .. — ii. 2 

baldfolliM' ' • ■, >, 'twould be a bald — ii. 2 

thatbai'l is it King .Mm, i\i. 1 

this bald unl ■■ ■; ^' . :;:,t I Henry IV. i. 3 

forapitifnlbald orowu -_ ii. 4 

lean, old, chapped, bald shot iHenry IV. iii. 2 

a curled p.ate will grow bald Henry V. v. 2 

make cvirl'd-pate ruifians bald . . Timon of .ilk. iv. 3 

some aul)urn, some bald Coriolanus, ii. 3 

people do with these bald tribunes .. — iii. 1 
but they stand bald Ijefore liini — iv. 5 



I BALD— little wit in thy bald 
BALDPATE— gDiKlnian baldpate...fl/w./OT'Mca.'v. 1 
as tlie plain baldpatc of father T'lma.Com.of Er. ii. 2 
BALDPA'l'iOD- you l)aldp;de<I, lviiig.,Ura. 'for M. v. 1 
BALDliICK— iuan invisihlr bal('lri._'k..il/«c'/. .J</o, i. 1 
iiAl>E— the one side must bavo h.ile ..(:orioUiniis,i. 1 
BALE b'UL-art, and bakl'id M»ev\y .\ Henry VI. ii. 1 
by sight of these our balefiU enemies — v. 4 

thou baleful messenger IHenry VI. iii. 2 

recount ourbalefid news SHenryVI. ii. I 

with moss, and baleful misletoe Titus And. ii. 3 

the story of that baleful burning night — v. 3 

with baleful weeds, and precious. AV)m('0fv.7i//(W,ii. 3 

BALK— rA.»/>A/]— balk logic with... 3\imi/;- o/S/i. i. 1 

BALKED— balked in tlieir own bloud.\ Heniy I V. i. 1 

BALL — mtli two pitch balls stuck. . Lore's L. L. iii. 1 

riding on the balls of mine Mer. of Ven. iii. 2 

why, these balls bound Alt's Well, ii. 3 

that two-fold balls and treble sceptres, il/acde^/i, iv. 1 

from under this terrestrial ball Richard II. iii. 2 

or a ball of wild fire \ Henry IV. iii. 3 

commenced on this ball of earth . .'illenry IV. (ind.) 
matched our rackets to these balls .... Henry V. i. 2 

turned bis balls to gun-stones — i. 2 

I did present him with those Paris balls — ii. 4 
the sceptre, and the ball, the sword .. — iv. 1 

the fatal balls of murdering — v. 2 

spurn tbiueeyes like balls Before me. ^n(. ffCleo.ii. 5 

hath made the ball for them Pericles, ii. 1 

as swift in motion as a l)all Romeo ^-Juliel, ii. 5 

BALLAD— a ballad of this di'eam . . . Mid. N. Dr. iv. 1 

is there not a ballad, boy Love's L. Lost, i. 2 

was guilty of such a ballad some three — i. 2 

with a woeful ballad made As you Like it, ii. 7 

for I the ballad will repeat .... All's iVell, i. 3 (song J 

traduced by odious ballads — ii. 1 

as he had eaten ballads Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

I love a ballad but even too well .... — iv. 3 
bere; ballads? Pray now, buy (rf;).) — iv. 3 
more ballads; we'll buy the ()c;)ea(«;) — iv. 3 
and sung this ballad against the hard — iv. 3 
the ballad is very pitiful, and as true — iv. 3 

this is a merry ballad — iv. 3 

table-book, ballad, knife, tape, glove — iv. 3 

an' I have not ballads made 1 Henry IV. ii. 2 

I will have it in a particular hallad.2neHri//;''. iv. 3 

a rhyme is but a ballad Henry V. v. 2 

rliymers bal lad ns out o' tune Ant. ^ Cleo. v. 2 

BALLAD- JIAKER-breed ballad- makers. Cooo;. iv. 5 
my ej'es with a ballad-maker's pen . . Much Ado, i. 1 
that ballad-makers cannot be able. Winter's Tale, v. 2 
BALLAST— to be ballast at her nose. Com. o/ Ej-. iii. 2 
BALLASTING— more euual ballasting. . Cymb. iii. 6 
BALLOW— 

[Col. Knt.l — your costard or my ballow . . Lear, iv. 6 
BALM — juice of balm, and every . . Merry Wives, v. ."j 

balm his foul head with Taming ofSh. 1 (indue.) 

labour's bath, balm of hurt ininds Macbeth, ii. 2 

thejj which no balm can cure Richard II. i. 1 

caa^wash the balm from an auoi uted — iii. 2 
own'''tear3 I wash away inv balm .... — . iv. 1 

be drops of balm, to sanctify iHenry IV. iv. 4 

'tis not the balm, the sccx>tre Henry V. iv. \ 

thy balm washed off 'ill. nry VI. iii. 1 

pity hath been balm to heal — iv. 8 

I pour the lielpless balm Richard III. i. 2 

instead of oil and balm Troilus (J- Cress, i. ! 

to give thy rages balm, to wipe Timon ofAlh. v. 5 

and balms applied to you Coriolan ms, i. 6 

as sweet as balm, as soft as air . . Antony <?- Cleo. v. 2 

your praise, balm of your age Lear^ i. 1 

BALMED — balmed and entreasured. . ..Pericles, iii. 2 

this rest might yet have balmed thy Lear, iii. 6 

BALMY— to have their balmy slumbers ..Olliello, ii. 3 

O balmy breath, that dost almost — v. 2 

BALSAM— is this the lialsam, l\\at.Timon of/tth. iii. h 

BALSAMUM— theoil,tlicbalsaninm.Com.'ofBr. iv. 1 

BALTHAZAR-come, Balthazar, we'll. i1/!ic/i.lrfo,ii. 3 

dost thou hear, Balthazar? I pray thee — ii. 3 

now, Balthazar, as I have ever . . Mer. of Ven. iii. 4 

his name is Balthazar — iv. ! (letterl 

yon are sad, sijjnior Balthazar ..Comedy of Er. iii. 1 
O signior Balthazar, either at flesh .. — . iii. I 
where Balthazar and I did dine together — v. 1 

liow now, Balthazar? dost thou Rom. <§- Jul. v. 1 

BAN — asked tw^ice on the bans \ Henry IV. iv. 2 

and ban thine enemies, both mine ..2 Henry VI. ii. 4 

should seem to curse and ban — iii. 2 

you b.T,de me ban, and will you — iii. 2 

sometime with lunatic bans Lear, ii. 3 

I, her husb.and, contradict your bans — v. S 

with Hecate's ban thrice b!a-stcd Handel, iii. 2 

BANBUKY— you Banbury cheese ..Merry ll'ires, i. 1 
BAND — release me from my bands .. Tempest, (ct)il.) 

bind our loves up in a holy baud ;l/«c/i yhlo, iii. ! 

let them he in b.and — iv. 2 

captain of our fairy baud Mid. N. Dream, iii. •> 

chosen out of the gross 1 tand As you Like it, iv. 1 

tojoin in Hymen's btuiils — v. 4 

think us snihe band of strangers All'sWell,\v. 1 

charge yim in tlie baud of truth — iv. 2 

to turn him out o' the liand — iv. 3 

on a band? Not on a band Comedy rfEr. iv. -2 

of the band; he that brings (»v7).) — iv. 3 

according to thy oath and band Rich-inl II. i. 1 

gentlywould dissolve the bawls of lil'o — ii. 2 
the end of life cancels all bauds ....Mlean/ IV. iii. :; 

captain of Ibis rniiio<l liaiul Henry r.'iv. (,clui.) 

behold .von poor .and starved baud ' — iv. 2 

we happy few, we band of bnithcrs .. — iv. 3 

iu infant bands crowned king — v. 2 (cho. ) 

Iiorsemen with bis biinds of foot \Henry VI. iv. I 

will you lead a band of nica 'IHenry VI. iii. 1 

nourish a miiihtv l>and — iii. 1 

anddiein hands lor iliis unmanly ..3HenryVI. i. 1 
■with a band ol'ihiity thou.saud men — ii. 2 

some few bauds of chosen soldiers .... — iii. 3 

forthwith in holy wedlock bands! — iii. 3 

revolt in my penurious baud Timon ofAih. iv. 3 

hie you to yoiu- bauds Coriolanus, i. 2 



BAN 

BAND— their bands i' the vaward ate. .Coriolanus, i. 6 

the band that seems to tie Ant.^ CVeo. ii. G 

and as my furthest band shall pass .. — iii. 2 

bring him through the bands — iji. lO 

not mustered among the liauds Cymbaline, iv. 4 

merited than a band of C'loteus v. .'i 

all Ids threatening band of Tvjihon's. Titus And. iv. 2 
towards Koine a band of warlike Goths — v. 2 

with all bands of law, to our Hamlet, i. 2 

unite commutual in most sacred bands .. iii. 2 

BANDIED— well bandied both . . Love's L. Lost, v. 2 
BANDING— and banding themselves..! Heii.r/. iii. 1 
BANDITTO-and handitto slave. . ..2ifc«»wK/. iv. 1 
BANDOG— crv, and hanilogs howl .... — i. 4 
BANDY— I will bandy with thee. . As yon Like it, v. 1 

to bandy word for word Taming or Slirea\ v. 2 

I will not bandy with thee word ".llcnri) I'l. i. 4 

one tit to bandy -nith thy lawless sons. Titus And. i. 2 
do you bandy looks with rae, you rascal?. . Lear, i. t 

to bandy hasty words, to scant — ii. 4 

would bandy lier to my s^veet \ove..Roni.^Jul. ii. 5 
BANDYING-this factious band.yiug.lHci» I, r/. iv. 1 
BANE— ravin down their proper bane. il/cw./.icM. i. 3 

not be afraid of death and bane Macbeth, v. 3 

and bane to those that for my surety .2Ht-iir;/ VI. v. 1 
'twill be his bane; he cannot .. Troilus ^-Cress. iv. 2 
the Britons, was the Romans' bane. . Cymbeline, v. 3 
lest Rome herself be bane unto herself. Titus And. v. 3 

BANED— to have it baned? Mercli. of Venice, iv. 1 

BANG-you'll bear me a bang for tha.t. Jul. Ceesar, iii. 3 
BANGED— have banged the youth . . Tu-elfth N. iii. i 

tempest hath so banged the Turks dihello, ii. 1 

BANISH— will banish Valentine.. 7'?™ 6e». of C ii. B 

that banish what they sue for Mea.for ilea. ii. 4 

nor do not banish reason for inequality — v. 1 
and banish hence these abject. Taming' of Sh. 2 (ind.) 
therefore, we banish you our ten'itories.fli'c/i. //. i. 3 

therein we banish with yourselves — i. 3 

six years we banish him — i. 3 

think not, the king did banish thee — i. 3 

as 'twere, to banish their effects — i. 4 

banish us both, and send the king — v. 1 

liim keeii with, the rest banish I Henry IV. ii. 4 

banish Peto, b.anish Bardolpb (rep. ). . — ii. 4 
perforce compelled to banish him . .iHenry IV. iv. 1 

till then I banish thee v. 5 

henceforth we banish thee 1 Henry VI. iv. 1 

good uncle, banish all offence — v. 5 

banish the canker of ambitious iHenry VI. i. 2 

I banish her, my bed, and company . . — ii. 1 

we banish thee forever {rep.') i'imon of Ath. iii. 5 

this instant, banish him our city . . Coriolanus, iii. 3 

corrupt my air, I banish you — iii. 3 

still to banish your defenders — iii. 3 

to banish him 'that struck — iv. 2 

when I said, banish him, I said 'twas — iv. 6 

thou didst unjustly banish me Cymbeline, iii. 3 

Leonatus' jewel; whom thou didst banish — v. 5 

banish me my lord, but kill me not . . Othello, v. 2 
BANISHED-tbou know'st was banished. Tempest, i. 2 

is banished from your eye — ii. 1 

were .you banished thence? — iv. 1 

is to be banished from myself. . TuoGea.uf Ver. iii. 1 
banished from her, is self from self .. — iii. 1 

that thou art banished — iii. 1 

doth Silvia know that I am banished — iii. 1 
Valentine is banished from her sight — iii. 2 
but were you banished for so small . . — iv. 1 
my self was from Verona banished ... . — iv. 1 
because .you are a banished man .... — iv. 1 

1 bear unto the banished Valentine.. — iv. 3 
a man disgi-aced, banished Valentine — . v. 4 

these banished men, that I — v. 4 

my remembrance clearly banished . . Twelfth A', v. 1 
the old duke is banished by bis . . As you Like it, i. 1 
duke's daughter, be banished with her — i. 1 
teach me to forget a banished father.. — i. 2 
thy banished father, had banished thy — i. 2 

is daughter to the banished duke — i. 2 

when your highness banished him .. — i. 3 

fiassed" upon her; she is banished .... — i. 3 
lath banished me his daughter? — i. 3 

y oitr brother that batb bam shed you.. — ii. 1 

two of the banished duke's pages — v. 3 

bequeathing to his banished brother — v. 4 

whose banished sense thou hast All's Well.i't. 3 

have banished rae from Scotland Macbeth, iv. 3 

fair return of banished majesty ..King John, iii. I 
our royal sword your banished hands . . Rich. II. i. 3 

in the air, banished this frail — j. 3 

and I from heaven banished — i.3 

from the number of his banished years .. — i.3 

thy son is banished upon good — i.3 

though banished yet a true bom — _i. 3 

royalties and rights of banished Hereford — ii. 1 

by the robbing of the banished duke — ii. 1 

the banished Bolingliroke repeals — ii. 2 

yoiu" love pursues a banished traitor — ii. 3 

why have those banished and forbidden. . — ii. 3 
thou art a banished man, and here art .. — ii. 3 

as I was banishod, I was banished ■ — ii. 3 

besides, I heard the baiiislied Norfolk say — iv. 1 
many a time Iiath banished Norfolk fought— iv. 1 
your banished honours, ami restore. .IHenrylV.i. 3 
a banished woman from mv Hany's.. — ii. 3 

but all arc banished, till their illeary IV. y. [, 

hath banished moody discontented.] Zir?)/j/ i'l. iii. I 
his ladv banished, andalinih lopiio<l.;;H«i;!/rj. ii. 3 
or bani'shcd fair England's territories — iii. 2 
by the ground that 1 am banislied from — iii. 2 
to be banishod myself: and banished — iii. 2 
thus is poor Suffolk ton times banished — iii. 2 
if it be banished from the frosty he.ad — v. 1 

a king, become a banished man ZHenry VI. iii. 3 

wcrt thou not banished, on pain Ricliardlll. i. 3 

alas! he has banished me his bed. .Henry VIII. iii. 1 
and my poor name b:mished the kingdom — iv. 2 

1 hate not to be banished Timon of Ath. jii. 5 

Alcibiades in banished: hear you (rep.) — iii. 6 
he's banished, and so it shall be ... . Coriolanus, iii. 3 



BAN 



[40] 



BAR 



B ANISIIED— but he is h.inisliert .... Coriolanus, iii 
our ciion'i>''s lianislu.il! liu is gone — iii 



Imt that tl-.ou :in tU 
i' the wrun:.'. wlicn 
so lultcfl, niid a. bui 



f l.aiiishL-.lhim — 

A\K-d: blithe has — 
go, y.m that biiiiished liiui, a mile . . — 
when we lianisUed him, we respeeted not — 
unshout the noi^^e that lianisheil Mareius — 
being banished t'or't, lie eamc unto . . — 
she's wedded; )ier liu<liand bani'shert.O/mdc/i') 



alaek^ good i 
his niistres-. i 
lady, that lia' 
Lciinatus! a 1 
to enjo\' thy 1 
he is aYianlsh 
indeed, a haul 
Belarius wlw. 
from these de 
stands my other so 



;id thercl'ore banished — 
im lie now is banished — 

h' 1-1 land banished — 

a r;i-x'al — 

itil 



n ; I liuow not — i'. .0 

onietime banished — v. .'> 
to be banished. T-iVi/s.-lnri. iii. 1 
, a banished man — iii. 1 
thy other banished son, with this dear — iii. 1 
myself unkindly banished, the gates — v. 3 

thy banished trimk he found in our Lcrir, i. 1 

Kent hanished thus! and France in — i. a 

the noble and ti la-hearted Kent banished — i. 2 
now, bani^-lud Kent, if thou eanst serve .. — i. 1 
Mdiv, thi~ fellow has haiii.-hed twoof his .. — i. 1 
poo'r banished man! thou sav'st, the king — iii. 4 

thev say, Kdgar his haiiishcil son — iv. 7 

Kent, sir, the banished Kent — y. 3 

and Komeo banished (ii'/i.) Hnmeo/^- Jnlicl, in. :! 

banished, that one word— banished .. — iii.-' 
banished— to Sjieak that word, is father — iii. 2 
banished,— there is no end, no limit.. — iii. 2 
henec from "\''erona art thou banished — iii. 3 
banished is banished from the world — jij- 3 
but Romeo may not, he is banished.. — \\\- ^^ 
but I am lianished: and sav'st thou.. — }}!■ ^ 
Init banished— to kill me; banished? — ?'.!•'' 
tho^l^dl thou art banished. Yet 'nanished — iii. 3 
dotiiiu' like me, and like mc banished — iii. 3 
■where that same banished runagate — iii. 5 

Romeo is banished: and all the world — iii. 5 
tliis is that banished haughty JNIontaguc — v. 3 
banished the ite^v-made bridegroom — V. 3 

BANISIIEU— those my banishers . . Cnrhlnmis, iv. 5 
BANISILMENT-deadlv banishment. 7'hv.G.o//-. iii. 1 
to liberty, and not to banishment. ..Is you JJkeit, i. 3 
thoUL'htsfrom banishment ..Tmniuf^nf s:,. ■> uiid.) 
the straUL'er iiaths of banishment .. ..fli'c.'i<mi //. i. 3 
andL'ildinv bjiiishineiit. Norfolk.. — i. 3 

eaeh other otli.T's love in banishment — i. 3 

with weleoine leane from banishment — i. 3 

adiled years to bis short banishment — i. 4 

shall call him home from banishment — i. 4 

nor Hereford's banishment, nor (Jaunt's — ii. 1 
eating the bitter bread of banishment — iii. 1 
my banishment repealed, and lauds.. — iii. 3 
the sentence of dread brtni.shnient on — iii. 3 
left me in reimtclc-s lianishment ..XHcnry TV. iii. 2 
in banishment, with sir.Iohn irep.')..tllenry fl.i}.. 3 

thus feirward in his banishment — iii. 2 

find more jiain in. lianishment Richard III. i. 3 

my woful banishment, could all but . . — ._i- 3 
ha! banishment':' it comes not ill.. Timon of A. iii. b 
for fine, or banishment, then let. . . . Coriolanus, iii. 3 
so to lyjart the banishment of that . . — iv. 3 
hearing of our iMarcius' banishment — iv. fi 

willingly consented to his banishment — iv. G 

and theii his banishment Cymbetine, i. f> 

so, followed my banishment — iii. 3 

these children niion my banishment — v. 6 
my everlasiiiii; doom of' banishment. TOiis ylnd. iii. 1 
Lilians' b:uiisl[ii>eiii v,as wrongfully — iv. 4 

lives luai'-caiid bani-Iiiiient isliere Lear,i. 1 

from liim, a-- this 1.;' Kent's banishment .. — i. 1 

dillideiicr<. banishment of friends — i. 2 

are dry. for Ibaneo's b.anisbment . . Rom. Sf Jul. iii. 2 
but b"d\'Oja;iislimcnt. Ha! Crc/i.).. — iii. 3 
than death: do not say— banishment — iii. 3 
banishment is death mis-termed («'p.) — iii. 3 
that blaek word death to banishment — iii. 3 
mau:;le me with that word — banishment — iii. 3 

thou wilt sneak again of banishment — iii. 3 
BANISTER— his servant ]!;ini-ter..i/cnn/ Vlll. ii. 1 
BANK— sitting on a bank, we.aiinL' Tempeit^ i. 2 

thy banks with iiconied and liliecl — iv. 1 

breathes upon a bank ot \iolets . . Tu-elJ1h Night, i. 1 

1 know a bank whereon the ....Mid. N. Dream, ii. 2 

for I upon this hank will — ii. 3 

moonlight sleeps upon this bank . . Mer. of Ten, v. 1 

no, like a bank, for love to lie Winler'sTulc, iv. 3 

upon this bank and shoal of time Macbf'/i, i. 7 

do ^iorify the lia;iks that bound King John, ii. 2 

I'll set a haul, of rue Richard II. iii. 4 

on tlie ::enilr >, .rMii' ^edgv bank . .1 Henry 1 1: i. 3 
l;i the lioli.i-v i ;o:k liliiMil-stained .... — i. 3 

that ebi.le-l!i'' ba'ik-i of England.... — iii. 1 

thrice from Ibe I'aiik.- ..f Wye — iii. 1 

come within .lur awful banks asain.'l Henry IF. iv. 1 

-oiled iu a flowering bank 2Henry T/. iii. 1 

from England's bank drove back .... — iii. 2 

to ask those on the banks Richard III. iv. 4 

as barren as banks of Lybia . . Troilus <§• Cressida.i. 3 

upon the Stygian banks' staying — iii. 2 

trembled underneath her banks ..Julius Ccesar, i. 1 

draw them to Tiber banks — .i. 1 

Cydnus swelled above the banks Cymbeline, ii. 4 

your never-withering banks of flowers — v. 4 
at len''th they overfow their oanks Pericles, ii. 4 

BANKED— as I have banked their towns! ..John, v. 2 

BANKKOUT— 
bankrout ICol. bankrupt] quite the.. Love's L. L.i. I 
[Knt.'] poor bankrout. break at once. Horn. ^Jul. iii. 2 

BANKRUPT— your wit bankrupt. Tu'o Gen. of I', ii. 4 
for debt that bankrupt sleep doth.. :!//</. A'. Dr. iii. 2 
[Cf/i.] the ribs, but bankrupt quite . . Lore's L. L.i. 1 
iiljon that poor and broken bankrupt. -Is ijou Like, ii. I 



BANKRIIRT-a bankrupt, aprodigal.Mcr.o/rcH. iii. 

cut the forfeiture from that bankrupt — iv. 

time is a verj- bankritpt, and owes. . Com. of Er. iv. 

the next that must be bankrupt sol .Richard II. ii. 

the kiuii's grown bankrni)t, like .... — ii. 

since it is bankrupt of his nuaiesty .. — iv. 

big JNlars seems bankrupt in their .... Henry V. iv. 

bankrupts, hold fast: rather than. . Timon of.i. iv. 

bankrupt [A'»/. bankrout] break ...Rom. ^Jul. iii. 
BANN— -when I shall ask the banns . . Tarn ofSh.u. 

invite, yes, and proclaim the banns .. — iii. 

with mnltiiilving banns! Timon of Athens, iv. 

BANNER— the Norwcyan banners flout.il/af(/e;/i,i. 

hang out our banncrs'on the outward 



i'l 



the danc 
vill the baun. 
d nobles hear 

rcitv witli 111 



his banners salile, trinnned 

at point to show their otien 

France spreails his banner> 

the royal biumer: and all ij 

BANNERET— rneoannerei, 

BANNIN'.i-fell, bnoiin- li 

BANQUET— let OS to t^o i.s 

words are a ^a■! \- i'.iola iiiM 

the mind shall iiaiiiineU lb 

the duke; his banquet is pr 

a most delicious b:ii hi net.. . 

his countr 

[Uet 



if the French.. Jo/in, ii. 
nijiet take. Henrf/T. iv. 
there lie.. — iv. 
liread..7'i'mon of Ath. y. 
- \\i\,ve.. Coriolanus, iii. 
k .... Antony ^ Cleo. i. 
-11-paid.. — iii. 
witli..;'c;/f;M, V. (Gow 

banner Lear, iii. 

in our — iv. 

uility OIUclln,ii\. 

ai.outthee..Ws»l'(?.7,ii. 

iL'! \ Henry VI. V. 

o met ;>/)(c/i Ado, ii. 



et.. 



L.Losl,i. 
let isprep;Tred..l,w/();( Lihei'.ii. 

ipiet r^imhik' iifS. 1 (indue. 

1 lianquet them . . — i. 

se our stomachs up — y. 

a banquet to mc Macbeth^ i. 

our feasts and banquets bloody knives — iii. 

filled up ^vith riots, banquets, siiorts . . Ilenrit /'. i. 

and feast and banquet in the open , . 1 Henry J'l. i. 

and let us iKuiquct royal ly, after this. . — i. 

shouldfind a running banquet ere.. //(.'"r?/r///. i. 

you have now a broken banquet — i. 

IS the banquet ready i' the pnvy chamber — _ i. 

a blessed troop invite me to a banquet — iv. 

besides the running banquet of two .. — y. 

there is an idle banquet attends ...Timon of Ath, i. 

bring in the banquet quickly Anl. ^-Cleo. i. 

whilst I at a banquet hold him sure. . Titus And. V. 

and this the banquet she shall sm-feit on — v. 

oHicious to make this banquet — v. 

we have a trifling foolish banquet . . Romeo^-Jul. i. 
BANQUETED-caroused and banqueted ..1 H. 11. ii. 
BANQUETING- banqueting must . Trail.^- Cres. v. 

I profess myself in banqueting to aM,Jut, Ctnsar, i. 
BANQUO— iMaebeth and Bancmo? Macbeth, i. 

hail jNIacbetb, and Banquo ! Banquo — i. 

noble Banquo, that hast no less deserved — i. 

true, worthy Banquo; he is full — i. 

Banquo, and Doualbain 1 Malcolm!.. — ii. 

Malcohn! Banquo! as from your ... . — ii. 

Banquo! Banquo! our royal master's — ii. 

our fears in Banquo stick deep — iii. 

for Banquo's issue have I tiled — iii. 

kings, the seed of B;vnquo kings I ... . — iii. 

say, thus did Banquo — iii- 

know, Banquo was yoiu- enemy — iii . 

it is concluded: Banquo, thy — iii. 

is Banquo gone from court? — iii. 

let yoiur remembrance apply to Banquo — iii. 
that Banquo, and his Fleance, lives — iii. 

'tis Banquo's, then. 'Tis better — iii. 

but Banquo's safe? Ay, my good — iii. 

the graced person of our Banqrto present — iii. 

and to our dear friend Banquo — ■ iii. 

and the right viiliant Banquo walked — iii. 

shall Banquo's issue ever reign — iv. 

thou art too like the spirit of Banqvio — iv. 
for the blood-boltered Banquo smiles — iv. 

1 tell vou yet again, Banquo's buried — v. 
BAPTIST A— signior Baptista will you. Tarn. ofS. i. 

signior Baptista, for this fiend of hell — i. 

helping Baptista's eldest daughter . . — i. 
indeed had Baptista's youn''est daughter — i. 

her father is Baptista jlinola — i. 2 

for in Baptista's keep, my treasure is — i. 2 

this order hath Baptista ta'en — i. 2 

to old Baptista as a schoolmaster .... — i. 2 
and beside signior Baptista's liberality — i. 2 

to Baptista Minola, I promised ^ — i. 2 

the house of signior Baptista JMinola? — i. 2 

Baptista is a noble gentleman — i. 2 

yet ever see Baptista's daughter? .... — i. 2 

good-morrow, neighbour Baiitista.. .. — ii. 1 
signior Baptista, my business asketh . — }!■ ' 
but now, Bajitista, to yom' younger .. — ii. 1 

good Katharine, and Baptista — iii. S 

give assurance to Baptista JVlinola . . — iv. 2 
and one Bajitista's daughter here .... — iv. 2 
signior Baptista may remember me .. — \v. i 

done thy errand to Baptista? — iv. ^ 

Baptista; set your countenance irep.") — iv. 'I 
signior Baptista of whom I hear so .. — iv. ■! 
signior Baptista, shall I lead the way — iv. 4 

Baptista is safe, talking witli — iv. -1 

help, son! help, signior Baptista! .... — v. 1 
father Baptista, I cliarge you, see ... . — T. 1 
take heed, signior Baptista, lest you — v. 1 

fear not, Baptista; we will ct^ntent .. — ^v. 1 
his wife, Baptista: you shall see anon. . Hamlet, iii. S 
BAPTISJI— as pure as sin with baptism. Henry F. i. i 
young maid that yet wants baptism .Hen. Vlll. v. ; 

Moor were't to renounce his baptism Othello, ii. i 

BAPTISED- I'll be new baptised . . Rom. t,- JuL ii. i 

BAR— other bars he lays before me. Merry IVives, iii. '. 

we will bring the device to the bar ..Twelfth N. iii. '. 

any bar, any cross, any impediment. . Much Ado, ii. ! 

the lottery of my destiny bars me ..A/er.o/f'cn. ii. 1 

nay, but I bar to-night — ii. ; 

is no bar to stop the foreign — ii. I 

put pars between the owners — iii. ; 

60 sweet a bar shoidd sunder such — iii.: 



B AR-wi th his hinds, bars me the jilace. .4s- you Like, i. 1 

iieace, ho ! I bar confusion — V. 4 

which bars a thousand harms ..7'am. of S. 2 (indue.) 

since this bar in law makes us — i. 1 

we'll liar tliee from succession. . . . Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

that bars the titU ;i t'r.y sen King John, ii. I 

that law biu' iw wrong — iii. 1 

Twill bar no honest man illenry IV.ii.i 

should, or should not, bar us in our . . Henry V. i. 2 

there is no bar, to make against — i. 2 

of this law !i ml female bar — J. 2 

to bar vonrhi-hiies claiming — i. 2 

Brabant, Bar, and Bm-L'undy — iii. ■'J 

Bar liarry England, that sweeps — id. 5 

and Edward duke of Bar — iv. 8 

unto this bar and roval interview — y. "^ 

a secret ?ate of iron '1i:irs in \Ilenn/VI. i. 4 

I couM nil! ' — - of steel — i. 4 

set bar I '■ ■■ ■ I- ; .oLoie — ii. S 

audi'" ,,:itiiie Richard III. i.i 

tohai-oi' cs ' ■" lieirsintrne — iii. 2 

who sliali iiar me fr.im them? — iv. 1 

and fortune, bar me happy hours! — iv. 4 

throng to the bar, crying all, guilty! ■ — v. 3 

the great d\d<e came to the bar Henry Fill. ii. 1 

brought again to the bar, to hear .... — ii. i 

if you cannot bar his access to — iii. 3 

being waaiM- of these worldly bars.. /k//'i« rn-»nr,i. 3 

and to bar voor ollence herein too Cymbeline. i. .') 

thinkiiiL' (o bar thee of succession.... — iii. 3 

nogiuii-il to bar la-nen's shaft Perirlrs, ii, 4 

alli'iorts I'll bar; the rillaia shall not ....Lc.r.ii. 1 

inimiction be to bar in\' doors — iii. 4 

bar the door uron vour own liberty. . . . Ilnmlfi, iii. 2 

BARBAR.'V— hiul amai.l called l;arbar:l.O//i<'»«, iv. 3 
at one side, and f.'mx it like iioor Ikirbara — i v. 3 

BARBARlAN-like a barbarian slave. Troil. <§■ CV. ii. 1 

I ^vould thev were barbarians Coriolanus, iii. 1 

betwixt an erring barbarian and Othello, i. 3 

B ARBAKISiM— for barbarism spoke. . Love's L. L.i. 1 
barbarism, making me the precedent. Winter'sT. ii. 1 

barbarism itself have pitied him Uichard II. v. 2 

begin to proclaim barbarism Troilus ^ Cres. v. 4 

BARBAROUS— the barbarous caves .. Ticetflh N. iv. 1 

most barbarous intimation! Love's L. Lost, iv. 2 

we will be singled from the barbarous — y. 1 

with the barbarous multitudes Mer.ofVen. ii. 9 

choke liis days with b.arharous ignorance .John, iy. 2 

give ourself to barbarous licence Henry /'. i 2 

our \'ineyards to a barbarous people — iii. -'i 

O barbarous and bloody spectacle! ..2Henry I'l. iv. 1 
ah, b.Tibarous villains! hath this lovely — iv. 4 
receive us for barbarous and uunatiu-al.. Cymb. iy. 4 
wars against the barbarous Goths.. Titus Andron. i. I 
was ever Scythia half so barbarous? — i. 2 

thou art a Roman, be not barbanins . — 1.2 

accompanied with a barbarous jMoor — • ii. 3 
nay, barbarous Tamora! for no name — ii. 3 

tiarbarous, beastly villains! . — v. I 

take you in this b;irbarous Moor . . — v, 3 

piratesfnot enough barbarons)had not.Pericles, iv. 3 
the barbarous Scythian, or he that makes.. iefir.i. 1 

most barbarous, most degenerate! — iv. 2 

put by this barbiu-ous brawl Othello, ii . 3 

BARBARY— Barbary and India . . Mer. of Fen. iii. 2 

than a Barbary cocli-pigeon As you Like it, iv. 1 

Bolingbroke rode on roan Barbary . . Richard II. v. .5 
rode he on roan Barb.ary? Tell me . . — v. 5 
in Barbary, sir, it cannot come ....XHcnry IF. ii. 4 
not swagger vith a Barbary ben . . . .2 Henry IF. ii. 4 
wagered With him six Barhary horses . . Hamlet, v. 2 
six Barbary horses against six French . . — v. 2 
covered with a Barbary horse Olhettn. i. 1 

BARBASON— I am not Barbason Henry F. ii. 1 

Lucifer, well; Barbason, well Mem/ Wirfs, ii. 2 

BARBED— barbed steeds to stables ..Richard II. iii. 3 
insteadof mounting barbed steeds.. A'i'f/"Tni' III. 1. I 

BARBER— forfeits in a barber's shop .Men. for .M. v. 1 
seen him at the barber's? (^repeated).. Much Ado. iii. 2 

1 must to the barber's, monsieur . . Mid. N. Dr. i y. 1 

it is like a barber's chair All's IVelt, 11.2 

like to a censer in a barber's shop. 7'fi7n/'ng-'-'/.s'/i. i\-. 3 

for a barber shall never earn 2Henry 1 l.i.:: 

it shall to the barber's, with voiu* beard. Hrim//'/, ii. 2 

BARBERED—barbered ten times o'er. .In/. S-Or'.. ii. 2 
BARBERMONUEK— bai'bcrmonger, .haw .Z.r,„-. ii. 2 

BARD— a bard of Ireland told Hich;nl III. iv. 2 

figures, scribes, bards, iioets Anton </ ^- Clri> iii. 2 

BARDOLPH-B:irdoliih,Nym, and Pistol.. Ucir;/ ". i. 1 

I will entertain Bardoiph — i. ;'. 

Bardolph, follow him — i. 3 

Bardoliih, I say — i i i . .J 

Bardoliih, Pcto, and Gadshill 1 Henry IF. i. :; 

plague upon you both! Bardolph! Peto! — ii. 2 

so did you, BardoU)h; you are lions — ii. 1 

banish Bardolph, banish Poins — ii. 1 

Bardolph, am I not fallen away ^-ilely — iii. 3 

you lie, hostess; Bardolph was sha\'ed.. — iii.:'. 
did I, Bardolph? Indeed, sir .lohn, \ on — iii. 3 
Bardolph— my lord. Go, bear this letter — iii. 3 
Bardolph, get thee before to Coventry.. — iv. 2 

that the lord Bardolph doth '.2Ilenry IF. i. I 

what news, lord Bardolph? — i. 1 

better assurance than Bardolph — i. 2 

Where's Bardoliih? He's gone into — i. 2 

for striking him about Bardolph — i. 2 

'tis very true, bird Bardolph — 1.3 

not so much, lord Bardolph — i. 3 

arrant malmsey-nose knave, Bardolph — ■ ii. 1 

draw,. Bardol(ili, cut mo oJf — ii. 1 

keep them ott, Bardolph — ii. 1 

by the mass, here comes Bardolph — ii. 2 

and yom-s, most noble Bardolph 1 — i i . 2 

how doth thy master, Bardolph? — ii. 2 

sirrah, you boy, and Bardolph; no word — ii. 2 

Bardolph hath brought word — ii. 4 

I tell thee what, corporal Barflolph .... — ii. 4 

quoit him down, Bardolph, like — ii. 4 

honest Hanlolph, whose 'cal burns .... — ii. 4 
pricked down Bardolph irrecoverable . . — ii. 4 



BAR 



[41 ] 



BAS 



BAEDOLPn-mastcv coriiorate Barclolph.2H./r. iii. 2 
iicaliver into Wurt's hand, Bnrdolph .. — iii. 2 

Bardolph, give tlie siildicrs coats — iii. 2 

on, Bardolpli, lead tlie men awaj; — iii. 2 

howivnv Bardoliili? ,Tlie army is — iv. 3 

the lord Bardolpn.w'ith a great — Iv. 4 

pive me voiu' harai, master Bardoljili .. — v. 1 
kind master Bardoiph; and welcome .. — v. 1 

Bard<il|)h, look to onr horses — v. 1 

"ive master Bardolph some wine — v. 3 

he merry, master Bardolph — v. 3 

honest Bardolph, welcome — v. 3 

I'll drink to master Bardolph, and to all — v. 3 
will yon not, master Bardolph? Yes, sir — v. 3 

away, Bardolph ; saddle my horse — v. 3 

come, Bardolph; I shall be sent for — v. •■) 

good-morrow, lientcnant Bardoliih ..Henri/ J', ii. 1 
good nontenant Bardolph, t'ood corporal — ii. 1 
good Bardolph, i>iit thv nose lietwcen .. — ii. 1 
Bardoljih. Ik- blithe; ^^vm, ronse thy . . — ii. 3 
saw a flea stick npoii Bardolph's nose .. — ii. 3 

for Bar.Iol|,h~ho is white-livered — iii 2 

Bardolpli stole a lute-case — iii- 2 

Nym and Bardolph are sworn brothers — iii. 2 
Banlolph, a soldier tirm and sound .... — iii. 6 
Fortune is Rardolph's foe, a.nd frowns — iii. 6 

let o.it llard.iliili's \ntal tliread be cut .. — iii. G 
Bardoli^i, it'vii\n- oiaiost\- know the man — iii. 6 
Bavdwlph and Xvni, had' ten times .... — iv. 4 
BAKlC-dwrll in this liare isUmd.. 7Vm;)M' (ei>ilogne) 
ao|:ea;-s hv their bur.' liveries ..Tu-a Gcii. offer, li. 4 

thev live bvvnorl.Mre words — ii. 4 

whicli is imuli in a liare christian.. — iii. 1 

hv tlie have scalp — iv. 1 

from the seedness the bare fallow . . Men.firr Men. i. 5 
tlieu sliunld cover, that stand bare?..W«-. of Veil. v. 9 

therefore, lav bare vour bosom — iv. 1 

than the bare brow of a \)ac\\c\or...4si/nriLII;e il, iii. 3 

but his riuht cheek is worn bare -Ill's iVrll. iv. 5 

that bare eyes to see alike Whiter' i I'ule, i. 2 

I bare home upon my shoulders . . Cmneilii nf Er. ii. 1 

meeting were hare without it Mucbelli, iii. 4 

bv liare imagination of a feast liieh :rd 11. i. 3 

stand hare a1id naked, trembling — iii. 2 

bare [CoL KnI base] and rotten Mlcnry Il'.i. 3 

sncli poor, such bare, such lewd — iii. 2 

exceeding poor and bare; too beggarly — iv. 2 

call three fingers on the ribs, bare — iv. 2 

drop ujion our bare, unarmed iHenry IV. ii. 4 

(k'or /I' rare, :ind Francis rickbone.... — iii. 2 

strril. :inil l!!ov land, manured — i v. 3 

fr'>m this iiai-e withered trunk — \y. 4 

Caesar and !iis fortune bare at once . . 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

whom with my bare fists — i. 4 

the curse of her tliat bare thee 'iUeiiri/ VI. iv. 10 

but then iEneas bare a living load — ■ v. 2 

onr head shall go bare, till . 7Troilus^ Cressidn, iii. 2 
and ])lainncss 1 do wear mine bare — iv. 4 

especially upon hare friendship .. Timonof Ath. iii. 1 

wdiose bare imhoused trunks — iv. 3 

bare for every storm that blows .... — iv, 3 

show bare heads in conOTCgations . . Coriolanus, iii. 2 

it was a bare petition of a state ■ — v. 1 

dawning may hare the raven's eye ..Cymlieline,\\. 2 

and left me l')are to weather — iii. 3 

thou hast stuck to tlie bare fortune .... — ^\' ^ 

and made thy body bare Tittts Androuleut;^ ii. b 

their numbed and inortified bare arms. . . . Lra?-,_ii. 3 

but such a poor, bare, forked animal — iii. 4 

with such a storm as his bare head — !!!■'' 

that bare A^owel I shall poison . . Romeo ^Juliet, iii. 2 
art thon so bare and full of wretchedness — v. 1 
who hare my letter then to Romeo — v. 2 

his quietus make with a bare bodkin . . Himlet, iii. 1 

rather use, than their bare hands Othello, i. 3 

sores, and shames, on my bare head — iv. 2 

wear thv good rapier bare, and put it — v. 1 

B .VRE-B'ONE— here comes bare-bone.l Henry IV. ii. 4 

BAREn— to be so bared before h\s.Men.for Men., iv. 2 

have bared niv bosom to the thunder.. /"i.C^s/vr, i. 3 

B.VRE-FACEf)— -n-ill play bare-faced. W/i/. K.Dr. i. 2 

and though I could with bare-faced... il/nc')p'A, iii. 1 

bore him bare-faced on the bier. f/(7?«/f/, iv. .'j (song) 

B AliE-FOOT— in my bare-foot way . . Trmpe.it, ii. 2 

that bare-foot plod I the eold.,4«'s IVett, iii. 4 ( letter) 

I must dance bare-foot on her Taming of Sh, ii. 1 

'condition I had gone bare-foot to. rro/(iis .5- Cre.i. i. 2 
going to find a bare-foot brother out. Rom. fr Jul. v. 2 
run bare-foot up and down, threatening. Hamlet, ii. 2 
would have walked bare-foot to Palestine .0(/i. iv. 3 
B.VRE-GN" AWN— tooth bare-gnawn and. . Lenr, v. 3 
BARE-HEADED- Alack! bare-headed.. — iii. 2 
turning, iiare-headed, lower than his. R/chnrdll. v. 2 

a dozen captains, bare-headed iHenry IV. ii. 4 

hare-headed plodded by rav foot-cloth. 2;7eii. r/.iv. 1 
BARELY— shall I not have barely..Mer. ofVen. iv. 1 

you barely leave our thorns All's Well, iv. 2 

barely in title, not in revenue Iticlmrd II. ii. 1 

I barelv gratify your love Ci/mt>ethic, ii. 4 

BAREN'ESS— us mth our bareness ... .Itt'snell, iv. 2 

and for their bareness, — I am siu'e . . 1 Hcnn/I l\ iv. 2 

B.\RE-PICKED— now, for the bare-picked. 7o/i«,iv. 3 

BARE-RIBBED— bare-ribbed death, wh.we — v. 2 

BARFITJ>— vet a barful strife! Tnetrth AVg/i/, i. 4 

BARGAIN— seal the bargain with. T^-o Cien. of V. ii. 2 
hath sold him a barrrain, a goose. Lotc's L. Lost, iii. 1 
to sell a bargain well, is as cunning. . — iii. 1 
make a world- without-eud bargain.. — v, 2 
me, my bargains, and my well- won. il/er. of Ven. i. 3 
thwarted my bargains, cooled my friends — iii. 1 
to solemnize the bargain of yom-faitli — iii. 2 

so is the bargain As you Like it.^ v. 4 

take lunuls, a bargain Winter'sTrde, iv. 3 

upon what bargain do you give it me. Com. of Iir.'\\.2 
no bargains break, that are not thi^.IO'vffJohn, iii. 1 
to clap this ro^'ai bargain up of peace — iii. 1 

the devil shall have his bargain I Henry IV. i. 2 

but in tlie way of bargain, mark ye.. — iii. 1 
I, by bargain, should wear it myself. .ilcnri/ V. iv. 7 
and BO clai) hands, and a bargain .... — v. 2 



BARGAIN- bargain for their wives. . 1 Henry VI. v. 5 

go to, a bargain made Troilus c§- Cressidn, iii. 2 

there's a bargain made Julius Ccesnr, i. 3 

lest the bargain shoidd catch cold .. . . Cymbeline, i. .'J 
a dateless bargain to engrossing .... Horn. SfJul. v. 3 

too fond of her mostfiltliv bargain Ottiello, v. 2 

BARGAINED— 'tis bargained Uwixt.r«m.o/.SA. ii. 1 

lands are bargained for, and sold illenryVI. i. 1 

if r have bargained for the joint Pericles, iv. 3 

BARGl^— barge stays: your lordsbiiLiiotri/ VIII. i. 3 
they have left their barge;, and landed — i. 4 

see the barge be ready ; and fit it — ii. 1 

barge she sat in, like a bttrnisbed . . Ant. 4-Cleo. ii. 2 

from the barge a strange invisible — ii. 2 

to him in his barge with fervour.. Pericles, v. (Gow.) 

sir, tliere's a barge put off from Mitylene — v. 1 

BARGULUS— Bargulus the strong . .iHcnryVI. iv. 1 

BARING— or the baring of my beard.. /i/Cs Well, iv. 1 

BARK — they hm-ried us aboard a bark.. Tempest, i. 2 

the watch-dogs bark — i. 2 (song) 

which I made of the bark of a tree — ii. 2 

why do yotn' dogs bark so? Merry Wires, i. 1 

woiddbark your honour from ...Men. for Men. iii. 1 

rather hear my dog bark at a crow Much Ado, i. 1 

and neigh, and bark, and grvmt. Mid. N. Uicam, iii. 1 

as sure as bark on tree Lore's L. Lost, y. 2 

op.e my lips, let no dog bark ! Mer.ofVen.i. 1 

the scarfed bark puts from her — .".•*' 

and in their barks my thoughts As you Like, iii. 2 

writing love-songs in their barks .. — iii. 2 

carvingRosalind on their barks .. — iii. 2 

look to thy bark; I'll not be long. IVinler'sTale, iii. 3 

conceive a bark of baser kind — iv. 3 

what became <jf his bark, and bin ... . — y. 2 
had not their bark been very slow .Comedy of Er._\. 1 

if any bai'k put forth — iii. 2 

master, there is a bark of Epidamnum — iv. 1 
you sent me to the bay, sir, for a bark — iv. 1 
that the bark Expedition put forth . . — iv. 3 

though his bark cannot be lost Macbeth, i. 3 

do wound the bark, the skin Richardll. iii 4 

the fox barks not, when he 2Henry VI. iii. 1 

even asa splitted bark.so — iii. 2 

stand all aloof, and bark at him ZHenryVI. ii. 1 

the enemies to our poor bark — y. 4 

that dogs bark at me, as I halt Richard III. i. 1 

being a bark to brook no mighty sea — iii. 7 

like a poor bark, of sails and tackling — iv. 4 
loss, bark, and part o' the timber . . Henry VIII. i. 2 

bark when their fellows do — ii. 4 

deep-drawing barks do there . . Trail. Sj Cres. (prol.) 

hoj>e, our convoy, and om- bark — i. 1 

the strong-ribbed bark through — i. 3 

leaked is our bark Timon of Athens, iv. 2 

'tis thou that rig»'st the bark — v. 1 

swell, billow, aud swim bark ! .... Julius Cfesnr, y. 1 

the barks of trees thou browsedst Ant. ^- Cleo. i. 4 

lo, as the bark, that hath discharged.. Titus And. i. 2 
on their skins, as on the bark of frees — v. 1 

Pericles think tliis the bark I', rides, v. (Gower.) 

and sweetheart, see, they bark at me Lear, iii. 6 

and yon tall anchoring bark, diminished — iv. 6 

dog bark at a beggar? — iv. (j 

thou oounterfeit'st a bark Romeo Sr Juliet, iii. 5 

the bark thy body is, sailing in — iii. .5 

rocks thy sea-sick weary bark — v. 3 

the bark is ready, and the wind at help. Hamlet, iv. 3 

his bark is stoutly timbered Othello, ii. 1 

let the labom-ing'bark climb hills of seas — ii. 1 

BAllKED— and this ijiue is \>a,r'k(iA..Ant.erCleo. iv. 10 

instant tetter barked [Knight. hetkeiX- .. Hamlet j i. b 

BARKING— the envious barking oi.lHenry VI. iii. 4 

as often beat for barking Coriolanus, ii. 3 

BARKLOXJGHLY-Barkloughly castle. «/gA. //. iii. 2 
B ARK'ST— thou bark'st at him ... Troil. ^ Cres. ii. 1 
BARKY— the barky fingers of the elm.Mid.N. D. iv. 1 
BARLEY— leas of wheat, rye, barley . . Tempest, iv. 1 

their barlev broth, decoct their Henry V. iii. 5 

BARM— the drink to bear no barm . . Mid. N. Dr. ii. 1 
BARN — barns and garners never. Tempcrf, iv. 1 (song) 

see he shall lack no barns Much Ado, iii. 4 

my field, my barn, my horse. Taming of Shrew, iii. 2 

he loves his own barn better 1 Henry IV. ii. 3 

set fii*e on barns and haystacks . . Titus Andron. v. 1 
BARNACLE — be turn'd to barnacles .. Tempest, iv. 1 
BARNARDINE— 
to die Claudio aud Bamardine .. . Men. for Men. iv. 2 
call hither Barnardine and Claudio. . — iv. 2 
Where's Barnardiue. As fast locked up _ — iv. 2 
and in the afternoon, Barnardine.. — iv. 2 (note) 
what is that Barnardine, who is to . . — iv. 2 
let this Barnardine be this morning. . — iv. 2 

and off wi th Barnardine's head — iv. 2 

'sirrah, bring Barnardiue hither '.rep.') — iv. 3 
master Barnardine! what, ho, Barnardine — iv. 3 

Eray, master Barnardine, awake till — iv. 3 

ut Barnardine must die this afternoon — iv. 3 

both Barnardine and Claudio — iv. 3 

what's he? His name is Barnardine — v. 

which is that Barnardine? This, my lord — v. 
BARNE— mercy on's! a barne l.rep.).Winler'sT. iii. 
B ARNET— away towards Barnet .... 3 Henry VI. v. 

tlie best at Barnet field — v. 

BARON-the young baron of Eu!:land..Vcr.n/FTO.i. 

the lords anil barons of the realm . . 1 Henry IV. iv. 

great princes, barons, lords, anil Henry V. iii. 

of other lords and barons, knights .... — iv. 

twelve barfms, and twenty reverend. .2^7c»r7/ 7'"/. i. 

are four barons of the Ci nque-ports. Henri/ VIII. iv. 

BARONY— I'll live mv baronv •IHenrylV. i. 

BARRAB.VS— tiic stock of Bai'ralia-.,V,r.n/ )>n. iv. 
BARRED— which was before barred. . Much. Mo, iv. 

things hid and barred, yon mean. . Love'aL. Lost, i. 

ins])ired merit so by breath is barred. . .4//'s WW/, ii. 

from his presence I am baiTed . . Winter's Tale, iii. 

sweet recreation barred, what doth. . Com. of Er. v. 

in a ten times barred up chest Richard II. i. 

purpose so barred, it I'ullows Cnriolnnns, iii. 

the pangs or barred iiinTtl..n ( iruhelnir, i. 

be barred his entrance here Tilus .Indrunicus, i. 



BARRED — nor have we herein barred . . Hamlet, i. 2 
BAR B EL-place barrels of pitch upon.l Henry VI. v. 4 
BARREN— an acre of barren ground.... Tempest, j. 1 

bai-rcn place, and fertile — i. 2 

but barren hate, and sour-eyed disdain — iv. 1 
I let go your liaiid, I am barren ..Twelfth Night, i. 3 
takes delight in such a barren rascal — i. 5 

why laugh you at such a baiTCn rascal — y. 1 

to live a barren sister all Mid. N.'s Dream, i. 1 

shallowest thick-skin of that barren — iii. 2 
O, these are barren tasks, too hard. . Lore's L. L. i. 1 
and such barren plants are set before us — iv. 2 
and therefore findiug barren practisers — iv. 3 
a breed for barren metal of his. . . . Merch. of Ven. i. 3 
fasting, upon a barren mountain . . Winter's T. iii. 2 
of that kind our rustic garden's barren — iv. 3 

dull? barren my wit? Comedy of Errors, ii. 1 

aud put a barren sceptre in my grine. . Macbeth, iii. 1 
unfeeling, baiTcn ignorance is made. . Richardll. i. 3 

small model of the barren earth — iii. 2 

and we are barren, and bereft of friends — iii. 3 

no, on the baiTcn mountains let 1 Henry IV. i. 3 

wished him on the barren mountains — _ i. 3 
such barren pleasures, rude society .. — iii. 2 
barren, barren, barren; beggars all'.. — v. 3 

evennore succeeds barren winter ^Henry VI. ii. 4 

I am not barien to bring forth .... Richard III. ii. 2 

old barren plants lo wail it with — iv. 4 

were his brain as barren as banks. . Troil. ffCres. i. 3 
I need not be barren of accusations . . Coriolanus. i. 1 
the barren, touched in this holy cliase../"/. CV^'j-ar, i. 2 
that long time have been barren . . Anlnny"; Cleo. ii. 5 
for beauty that made barren the .... Cymbeline, v. .*> 
a barren detested vale, you see . . Titus Andron. \i. 3 

some quantity of barren spectators Hamlet, iii. 2 

BARRENNESS— by the barrenness. . Com.of Er. iii. 2 
BARREN-SPIRITED— 

a barren-spirited fellow Julius Ctrsar, iv. I 

BARRICADO— we barricado it against. .4«'.5 Well, i. 1 
no barricade for a belly; know it. . Winter' sTale, i. 2 
EARRICADOES— 

transparent as barrieadoes TvelfthNlghl, iv. 2 

BARROW— a barrow of butcher'sofral.il7ci;?/)/\ iii. 5 
BARR'ST-thou barr'st us our prayers. Corio/«?j".sy. 3 
barr'st me ray wav in Rome . . Titus Andronieus, i. 2 
BARSON— goodma'n Pufl:" of Barson ..2 Henry IV. v. 3 
BARTERED -would have bartered me.l Hen. VI. i. 4 
BARTHOLOMEW— 
go you to Bartholomew my page. Tam.o/SA. 1 (ind.l 

little tidv Bartholomew boar-pig iHenrylF. ii. 4 

BARTHOLOMEW-TIDE— are like flies at 

Bartholomew-tide, blind Henry V. v. 2 

BASAN— upon the hill of Basan . . Ant. ^ Cleo. Hi. 1 1 

BASE — with yoiu' unruly base . . Two Gen. ofVer, i. 2 

indeed I bid the base for Proteus .... — _i. 2 

lest the base earth should — ii. 4 

base men, that use them to so base effect — ii. 7 

go, base intruder — iii. 1 

or base treachery — iv. 1 

such vile base practices — iv. 1 

the more degenerate and base art thou — v. 4 

base Gongarian rKnl.-Ihmga.rian'].. Merry W. i. 3 

1 will run no base humour — i. 3 

base Phrygian Turk ! — i. 3 

on base and ground enough Tu-elflh Night, v. 1 

conserve a life in base appliances. .A/eo. /or Wm. iii. 1 
it is the base, the bitter disposition . . Much Ado, ii. 1 
things base and vile, holding no ..Mid. N.'sDr.i. 1 
base authority from other's books . . Love's L. L. i. 1 

that base minnow of thy mirth — i. 1 (letter) 

which the base vulgar do call three . . — i. 2 
as it is base for a soldier to love {rep.') — j. 2 
do affect the very groimd, which is oase — _i. 2 
not uttered by base sale of chapmen's — ii. 1 
to the wide fields too base to be mine — ii. 1 

(O base and obscure vulgar) — iv. 1 (letter) 

kisses the base ground with — iy. 3 

to tMnk so base athought ..Merchant of Venice, ii. 7 

gold, silver, and base lead — ii. 9 

or with a base and boisterous sword./is you l.ike,ii. 3 
in my nobler thoughts most base .... All's Well, ii. 3 

highest compulsion of base fear — V:\'^ 

the base. The base is right (_rep.). .Taming of S. iii. 1 
most of them means and bases . . Winter sTale, iv. 2 
thou art too base to be acknowledged — iy. 3 
to a most base, and vile concluded . . King John, ii. 2 

parley, and base truce, to arms — y. 1 

or sound so base a parle Richard II. i. I 

limps after, inbase imitation — ii. 1 

base men by his endowments — ii. 3 

fall to the iJase earth from the — .jj. 4 

my lord in the base court he — ill- •* 

in the base court? Base comt (rep.).. — !!!• ^ 

to make the base earth proud — iii. 3 

shall I make to this base man? — iv. 1 

though being all too base to stain .... — iv. 1 
make glory base, and sovereignty .... — iv. 1 
fawn on ra»e with base humility .... — y. 1 
permit the base contagious clouds ..\HenryIV. i. 2 
ICol. Kn^ J never did base and rotten policy — j. 3 

or base second means, the cords — .i. 3 

sounded the verv base string of — ii. 4 

tired thyself in base comparisons — .''.'.■' 

pick-thanks and base newsmongers.. — '.'.!■- 
through vassal fear, base inclination — .'!!'^ 
you ])oor, base, rascally, cheating . .277^?*/ ?/77". ii. 4 
I'll ne'er bear a base mind; an't be .. — iii. 2 

in base and abject routs, led on — iv. 1 

form of base and bloody insurrection — iv. 1 

most recreant coward base — v. 3 

for the wnrld. and worldings base — v. 3 

O base .\ss\rian knight, what is — v. 3 

is in base dura lice, and contagious .. — v. 5 

base tike, call'st thou me host Henry V. ii. 1 

base is the slave tliat pays — ii. 1 

and jutty his confounded base — iii. 1 

none of j'ou so mean and base — iii. I 

or art thou base, common, and popular . — iv. 1 

like abase pander, hold tlie — iv. 5 

dost thou thirst, base Trojau — v. 1 



BASE— a base Walloon, to win tlic. ...\ Ihury ri. i. 1 

to leave my base vocation — i. 2 

of base insinuating flattery — ii. ■! 

perish, base prince, ifjnoble duke — iii. 1 

so will this base and en\iou0 discord — iii. 1 

base muleteers of Franco ! — iii. 2 

I vowed, base knight, when I — iv. 1 

contaminated, base, and misbegotten — iv. 6 

of all base passions, fear is most — v. 2 

than is a slave in base servility — v. 3 

dccrc^jit raiser I base, ignoble — v. 1 

so abject, base, and poor, to choose . . — v. r> 

bears this base and humhle mind illemyVIA. 2 

base dunghill villain, and mechanical — i. 3 

'tis but a base ignoble mind — ii. 1 

ne'er yet did base dishonour bhu: .... — iv. 1 

base slave! thy words are blunt — i\'. 1 

small things make base men proud . . — i\'. 1 
and will vou credit this base drudge's — i\'. 2 
mill you, "base peasants, do ye believe — iv. 8 
only my followers' base and ignomiuious — iv. 8 
base, fearfulj and despairing Henry..3Ht'7irT/ VI. i. 1 
base declension and loathed bigamy. iiic/i. ///. iii. 7 

a base foiil stone, made precious — v. 3 

and base lacquey peasants y. 3 

richer than my "base accusers Henry VIII, ii. 1 

c;ivy and base' opinion set against .. — iii. 1 
tliev are too thin and base to hide.. .. — v. 2 

theft most base; that we . . TroUusfCressida, ii. 2 

on terms of base comp\ilsiou — ii. 2 

but the strong base and bxiilding of . , — iv. 2 
have here her base and pillar by us . . — iv. b 
tlie base o' the mount is ranked . . Timon of Ath. i. 1 
been touched, and found base metal — iii. 3 

if 'twill not, 'tis not so base as you .. — iii. 4 

1 should prove so base, to sue — iii. .^j 

wrong, right; base, noble — iv. 3 

these base slaves, ere yet the fight.. . . Coriolamis, i. 5 

it makes the consuls base — iii. 1 

must I witli my base tongue — iii. 2 

their base throats tear, with giving .. — v. 5 
i'or the base matter to ilhnninate. ./«Z/iis Ccesar, i. 3 
scorning the base degrees by whioli .. — ii. 1 
who is here so base, that would be .. — iii. 2 

even at the base ufPomiiey's — iii. 2 

our lingers with base bribes? — iv. 3 

villain, dog! O rax^Xy \yxse.. Antony fy Cleopatra, Y. 2 

tliis jiroves me base; if she first — v. 2 

base and unlustrous as the smoky . . Cymbeline, i. 7 
eiul thou seek'st; as base, as strange — 1.7 

yon pretend with that base wretch .. — ii. 3 

note of it with ah.ase slave — ii. 3 

th.in wert too base to be his groom . . — ii. 3 

and i)ase things sire base — iv. 2 

tliou villain Viase, kuo^^'st me not.... — iv. 2 

more like to run the countrj' base — v. 3 

is bl:ick so base a hue TitusAndronicus, iv. 2 

here's the base fruit of his burning — v. 1 

with base prayers, I should repent.... — v. 3 

improvided of a pair of bases Pericles, ii. 1 

never relished ot a base descent — ii. 5 

wherefore base? when my dimensions Lear, i. 2 

why brand they us witli base? (reyiOT^frO.. — i. 2 
Eilmund the base shall top the legitimate — i. 2 

vou base foot-ball player — i. 4 

nase, proud, shallow, beggarly, three-suited — ii. 2 

to keep base life afoot '. — ii. 4 

the dram of base [Cot. Knt. — ill] doth . . Hamlet, i. 4 
that beetles o'er his base into the sea?.... — i. 4 

with flaming top stoops to his base — ii. 2 

are base respects of thrift, but none — iii. 2 

among a mmeral of metals base, shows . . — iv. 1 

to whatbase uses we may return — v. 1 

and all indign and base adversities Othello, i. 3 

as (they say) base men, being in love .... — ii. 1 
jirerogatived are they less than the base.. — iii. 3 

some oase noti.>rious "knave, some — iv. 2 

whose hand, like the base Judean. threw — v. 2 

BASE-BOKN-base-born callat as s\\e.2Henry VI. i. 3 
ten thousand base-born Cades miscai'ry — iv. 8 
thy tongue detect thv base-born heart.3rfc!i. VI. ii. 2 

BA.SELESS— like the "baseless fabric ...Tempest, iv. 1 

BASELY— but basely led by flatterers . . Uiclt. II. ii. 1 
but basely ^nelded upon comjiromise — ii. 1 

to spend that shortness basely 1 Henry IV. v. 2 

that basely fled, when noble 1 Henry VI. iv. .5 

and do now not basely die Antony^ Cleo.iv. 13 

none basely slain in brawls Titus Aiidron. i. 2 

and basely put it up without revenge? — i. 2 

so great a lord basely insinuate — iv. 2 

and basely cozened of that true Imnd — v. 3 

BASENESS — some kinds of baseness . . Tempest, iii. 1 
such baseness had ne'er like executor. . — iii. 1 
why, thou uncoufinable baseness ..MerrylVires, ii. 2 
alas, it is tlie baseness of thy fear . TwelJ'tliNiglil, v. 1 

are nursed by baseness Men. for Men. iii. 1 

by that forced baseness which he . lyinier's Tale, ii. 3 

reflect I not on thy baseness — iv. 3 

[Col. Knt.'] — there isno primer baseness..//. VIII. i. 2 
ny damned baseness, to him that.. Timon of A. iii. 1 
teach my mind araostinherent baseness. CojiVi/. iii. 2 

the gods detest my baseness Antony ^-Cleo. iv. 12 

branded his baseness that ensued ., — iv. 12 
made my throne a seat for baseness... Ci/mteKnc, i. 2 
so many weights of baseness cannot — iii..') 

with baseness? bastardy? liase, base Lear, i. 2 

a baseness to write fair Hamlet, v. 2 

the blood and baseness of our natiu'es . . . Otiiello, i. 3 
and made of no such baseness as jealous — iii. 4 

B.^-SER— gross world's baser slaves . . Loire's L. L. i. 1 

wiiere her shoe, which is baser — i. 2 

civet is of a baser birth than tax. .As you Like it, iii. 2 

whose baser stars do shut us up All's IVi-ll, i. 1 

make conceive a bark of li.nser kind. IVinler's T. iv. 3 
neighboured by fruit of Iran r ^ualitv. . n<'iin/ V. i. 1 

but with a baser man of ;'rins ;.i limn/ VI. i. 4 

worshipped in a baser temple . . Timon nf Ail'i.-ns, v. 1 
other elements I give to baser life . . Ant.^Cteo. v. 2 

lumiixed with baser matter Hamlet, i. .'j 

when the baser nature comes between.... — v. 2 



B.VSEST- her foot, which is basest Lore's!. L. i. 2 

or what is he of basest function.. ..AsyouLiUeit, ii. 7 

the basest liorn of his hoof is HenryV. iii. 7 

bring nolilrst niiml^ to basest enCia ..Tim. of Atli. iv. 3 

one o' th',' !<i\vcst. I i!i -est, poorest Coriolanus, i. 1 

when their bnsc-t niolul be wotmoYcd. Jul. Ctesnr,i. 1 

thou basest thing, avoid! lience Cymbeline, i. 1 

prostitute me to the basest groom Pericles, iv. 6 

as basest and contemned'st wi-etchcs Lear, ii. 2 

to take the basest and most poorest — ii. 3 

our basest beggars are in the poorest — ii. 4 

BA8E-VIOL— went like a base-viol. Com. of Br. iv. 3 

BASHFUL— hence bashful cunning . . Tempest, iii. 1 

shewed bashful sinceritv, and comply. Muc/t.'tclo,iv. 1 

her affability, and l)ashiul modesty.. Tnm. nf Sh. ii. 1 

you bashful fool, must you •IHmrv IV. ii. Z 

and b.ashfnl Ilenrv deposed -iUenni VI. i. 1 

make bold her bashful years with . liirhnrd III. iv. 4 
BAS]lFULNESS-toueh"oniashfuln(s-..V/,;..Y.».iii.2 
BASILICO-LIKE— Basiliw-liko; what! ...Jnhn,'i. I 
BASILISK-not sighted like the liasilisk. Ifinler'sT. i. 2 

of basilisks, of cannon, eulvortn \ Henry IV. ii. 3 

the fatal balls of nnn-doiing liasilisks . . Henri/ V. v. 2 

basilisk, and kill the innocent 'IHenry VI. iii. 2 

chiefest prospect, mm-deringbiisilisks — iii. 2 
slay more gazers than the basilisk .SHenry VI. iii. 2 
would they were basilisks, to stnke-.Itichard III. i. 2 

it is a basilisk unto mine eye Cymbeline, ii. 4 

BASIMECXJ — monsieiu- Basimecu ...2He7tryVJ.iv. 7 
B.\SINGSTOKE— at Basingstoke. . ..illenrylV. ii. 1 
BASIS — o'er his wave- woni basis bow'd. Tempest, ii. 1 

fortunes upon the basis of valom- Tirelftti N. iii. 2 

lay thou thy basis siure Mncbetii, iv. 3 

upon this mountain's basis Henry V. iv. 3 

Troy, yet upon his basis Troil. ^- Cres. i. 3 

and now on Pompey's basis lies . . Julius Cresur, iii. 1 
BASKED— him down, and basked. . As you Like it, ii. 7 
BASKET — take this basket on yom'.iUerry Wii'es,i'n. 3 

look, here is a basket — iii. 3 

husband asked who was in the basket — iii. 3 
have I lived to be carried in a basket — iii. 5 
being thus crammed in the basket .. — iii. .5 

what they had in their basket — iii. 5 

searched for him, in a basket — iv. 2 

shall I put him in the basket again . . — iv, 2 

I'll come no more i' the basket — iv. 2 

and talks of the basket too — i v. 2 

to carry the basket ag;\in to meet .... — iv. 2 
what they shall do with the basket . . — iv. 2 
take the basket again on yoiu- shoulders — iv. 2 

set down the basket, villain — iv. 2 

you, youth in a basket, come — iv. 2 

empty the basket, I say — iv. 2 

out of my house yesterday in this basket — iv. 2 

this washis basket Antony^-Cleo v. 2 

impeg the basket on the house's top . . Hamlet, iii. 4 

In the basket creep, and break your — iii. 4 

BASKET-HILT—basket-hilt stale ..IHenrylV. ii. 4 

BASON — him \vith a silver bason . . Tarn. of S/i. 1 (ind.) 

basons and ewers, to lave her dainty — ii. 1 

I dj'eamt of a silver bason and ewer. '/'/mo)jo//(. iii. 1 

the bason, that receives yo\irguiltv. . Tilus And. v. 2 

BASS— it did bass mv tresnassr. ' Tempest, iii. 3 

BASSANIO— here ciimes Bassanio . . Mer. of Ven. i. 1 
my lord Bassanio, since you have. ... — i. 1 

good Bassanio, let me know — i. 1 

yes, yes; it was Bassanio; as I think — i. 2 

mark yo\i this, Bassanio, the devil .. — i. 3 
to one master liassanio, who, indeed — ii. 2 

signior Bassanio, — Gratiano! — ii. 2 

signior Bassanio, hear me; if I do not — ii. 2 
ditference of old Shy lock and Bassanio — ii. 6 
we are staid for at Bassanio's feast .. — ii. 6 
Bassanio presently will go aboard .. — ii. 6 

I saw Bassanio under sail — ii. 8 

went with him to search Bass nio's ship — ii. 8 
were not with Bassanio in his sliip . . — ii. 8 
I saw Bassanio and Antonio part (rep.') — ii. 8 

business for ray sake, Bassanio — ii. 8 

he wrung Bassanio's hand, and so they — ii. 8 
Bassanio, lord love, if tliy will it be.. — ii. i) 

upon the rack, Bassanio? — iii. 2 

yoix see me, lord Bassanio — iii. 2 

then be bold to say, Bassanio's dead — iii. 2 

my lord Bassanio," and my gentle lady — iii. 2 
steal the colour from Bassanio's cheek — iii. 2 

with leave, Bassanio; I am half — iii. 2 

lose a hair through Bassanio's faidt.. — iii. 2 
sweet Bassanio, my ships have all — iii. 2 (let. ) 
pray God, Bassanio come to see me . . — iii. 3 
in place of lord Bassanio and myself — iii. 4 

like the lord Bass.anio's wife? — iii..') 

the lord Bassanio live an upright ... . — iii. 5 
cannot better be employed, Bassanio — iv. 1 

give me your liand, Bassanio — iv. 1 

whether Bassanio had Tiot once a love — ■ iv. 1 
my lord Bass.auio, let him have the ring — iv. 1 
my lord Bassanio, upon more atlviee ~ iv. 2 

and never be Bassanio so for mc — v. 1 

m.y lord Bassanio gave lus ring awny — v. 1 
here, lord Bassiinio. swear to keeii this — v. 1 
pardon me, Bassanio; for bv this ring — v. I 
BASSIANUS— Bassianus, C.xsar's son.Titus .Ind. i. 1 
so Bassianus, 3'ou Ikivc played yoiU'.. — i. 2 

prince Bassi.auus, leave to lilead — i. 2 

for yon, iirinrc B:\-siainis, 1 have passed — i. 2 

or Bassianiis so ilrL'em'rate — ii 1 

though Ba^-iiiiiiislir (lie emperor's .. — ii. 1 
than this J, aviira, !;as-iainis' love .. — ii. 1 
thisistlic.lavor.liMv.i lorBassianus — ii. 3 
wash tlieii-liaii'ls in llassianus's hloi.d — ii. 3 
more, great eni)]ress; iJassianus comes — ii. 3 
poor r was slain, when Bassianus died — ii. 3 
lord Kassian us lies cinlirewed here . . — ii. 4 
tliis dcei) pit, poor Kassianus' ffrave.. — ii. 4 
t.i find tin- la-other Bassiauus (lead .. — ii. 4 
wliereis thy linithcr Bassianus? — ii. 4 

Soor Bassianns here lies murdered .. — ii. 4 
lassianus 'tis, we mean, do thou . . — ii. I (letter") 
where wo decreed to biu-y Bassianus — ii. 4 (letter) 



B,\S.SI,\NirS-havemurdered Bassianus. Til. And. ii. 4 

two sons, that min-dered Bassianus .. — v. 1 

whore the dead corse of Bassianus.... — v. 1 

B ASTA— Basta. content thee .... Taming of Shrew, i. 1 

BAST.VKD— for he's a bastard one Tempest, v. 1 

much as to say, t)astaTd virtues.- Two Gen. of V. iii. 1 
drirdt brown and white bastard, . Mea. for Mea. iii. 2 
for the getting a hundred bastards . . — iii. 2 

lives in John the bastard, whose Much Ado, i v. 1 

your brother, the bastard, is fled from — v. 1 

that thou wert but my bastard Love's L. Lost, v. 1 

but a kind of bastard hope neither. A/er. of Ven. iii. a 

that "were a kind of bastard hope — iii. 5 

same wicked bastard of Vetma . . As you Like it, iv. 1 
eiire, they are bastards to the English. /(/i'sire/i, ii. 3 
give her the bastard; thou, dotard. . Winter's T. ii. 3 
take up the bastard; take't up, I say — ii. 3 

the bastard brains with these my — ii. 3 

to see this bastard kneel and call me — ii. 3 
this bastard's life; for 'tis a bastard — ii. 3 

carry this female bastard hence — ii. 3 

a bastard by Polixeues — iii. 2 

which some call, nature's bastards .. — iv. 3 
gilliftowers, and do not call them bastards — iv. 3 

shame hath a bastard fame Com. of Errors, iii. 2 

for he is but a bastard to the time King John, i. 1 

them a bastard of tlie king deceased — ii. 1 

thy bastard shall be king — ii. 1 

bastards, and else. To verify — ii. 1 

the bastard Faulconbridge is now — iii. 4 

that lie is a bastard, not t!iy eon Uichard II. v. 3 

score a pint of bastard in the I Henry IV. ii. 4 

your brown bastard is your only — ii. 4 

hal a bastard son of the king's? illenry IV.'Vi. 4 

and'a bastard, and a knave, and Henry V. iii. 2 

but bastard Normans, Norman bastards — iii..') 
new-store France with bastard warriors — iii. 5 

the bastard of Orleans with him 1 Henry VI. i . 1 

bastard of Orleans thrice welcome . . — i. 2 

thou bastard of my grandfather — iii. I 

now Where's the bastard's br.aves .... — iii. 2 

Orleans the bastard, Charles — iv. 4 

to make a bastard and a slave of me . . — i v. .') 

the ireful bastard, Orleans — iv. 6 

shed some of his bastard blood — iv. G 

purposing the bastard to destroy .... — iv. 6 

we will have no bastards live — v. 4 

Brutus' bastard hand stabbed JxdinB..2H«H. VI. iv. 1 

if that the bastard boys of York — v. I 

I wish the bastards dead Richard III. iv. 2 

Tyrrel, I mean those bastards — iv. 2 

and not these bastard Bretagnes — v. 3 

bastard Margarelon hath Doreus .. Troil. ^- Cres. y. 5 

a bastard son of Priam's (rep.) — v. 8 

bastard instructed, bastard in mind ((rep.) — v. 8 
and wherefore should one bastard? .. — v. 8 
fiirewell, bastard. The deWl take.... — v. 8 
I laugh to think that babe a bastard. TiHiori of A. i. 2 

go, thou wast born a bastard — ii. 2 

think it a bastard, whom the oracle. . — iv. 3 
though but bastards, and syllables.. Corio/awKs, iii. 2 

bastards and all ; good man — iv. 2 

a getter of more bastard children — iv. 6 

what bastard doth not? Jidiits Crrsnr, v. 4 

we are bastards all; and that most . . Cymbeline, ii. i 

have me prove myself a bastard Titus And. ii. 3 

not the bringing up of poor bastards . . Pericles, iv. 3 

why bastard? wherefore base? Lear,i. 2 

love is to the bastard Edmund ^- i.2 

now, gofls, stand up for bastards — i.2 

degener.ate bastard! I'll not trouble thee — i. 4 

thou unpossessing bastard! — ii. 1 

Gloster's bastard son was kinder — iv. 6 

as 'tis said, the bastard son of G-loster — iv. 7 

that's calm, proclaims me bastard Hamlet, iv. 5 

B ASTARDTZlNCi— on mv bastardizing. . . . Lcnr. i. 2 

BASTARDLY— thou hastiirdlv ro-ue.2H('„!-v //'. ii. 1 

BASTARDY- slandered me with bastardy.. JoAu.i. 1 

thou thyself was born in bastardy ..2i/e;irvr/.iii. 2 

the bastardy of Edward's children Rich. 1 1 1, iii. .5 

touclied ,\'on the bastardy of Edward's — iii. 7 

his own iSastardv, as being got — iii. 7 

is guilts- of a several bastardv . . ..Julius Co'sar, ii. 1 

by his side his tVuit of bastardy Titus And. v. 1 

Willi baseness? bristardv? base, base? Lear. i. 2 

BASTE— that liastes Km'arroetincc. .Troil.&Cres. ii. 3 
BASTED— are but sligliflvlwsted on ..MtichAdo, i. 1 
BASTINADO— or in liastluado .... As you Like it. v. 1 
he gives the liastinado with his tongue ...John, ii. 2 
that gave Amaimou the bastinado ..\HenrylV. ii. t 
BASTING— what's that? Basting . . Com. of Err. ii. 2 

purchase me another dry basting — ii. 2 

BAT— toads, beetles, bats, light on you ..Tempest, i. 2 

on the bat's back I do fly — v. 1 (song) 

ere the bat hath flown his Macbeth, i'u. 2 

wool of bat, and tongue of dog — iv. 1 

where go you with bats and clubs. . . . Coriolanus, i. I 

ready your stitt' bats and clubs — i. 1 

costard or my hat [Col. Knt hallow] be . I.enr, iv. 6 

a hat, a gib, such dear conccrnings Hamlet, iii. 4 

B.\TC1I— thou crusty b.atch Troil. ■^Vres. v. 1 

BATE — didst promise to bate me Tempest, i. 2 

bate I beseech yon, widow Diilo — ii. 1 

rather tlian she will hate one breath. il/wc/i Ado, ii. z 
which shall bate his scythe's keen ."'. Lore's L. /.. i. 1 

bid the main Hood bate his Mcr. of Venire, iv. 1 

I will not bate thee a scruple '.-Ill'sUill, ii. 3 

that bate, and brat, and will .... T,imln^' ofsh. iv. 1 
do I not bate? ilo 1 not dwimllc? . .\ Henri/ IV. iii. 3 

and breeds no bate witii telling iHenry I V. ii. 4 

bate me some, and I will pay — (epil .) 

good bawcock, bate tliy rage Henry V. iii. 2 

when it apiiears it will" bate — iii. 7 

you bate too much of your own Timon of.-lth. i. 2 

who bates mine honour — iii. 3 

neither will they bate one jot .. .'. ..Coriolanus, ii. 2 

O let me hate, but not like me Cymbeline, iii. 2 

B.\TED— hast thou nothing bated Tempest, iii. 3 

Demetrius being bated, tlie rest .... Mid. N. Dr. i. \ 
with bated breath, and whispering ..Mer.ofVen. i. 3 



BAT 



13ATKI>— losses have so hated me. . . Mer. of I'm. iii. 3 

those Iratcd, tluit inherit hut AII'slI'M, ii. 1 

like ii hnted luid retired flood Kinn Jnlut, v 1 

hated like enj-'les havinc lately Mlniii/ If. iv. 1 

I eunuot he hated one doit IVi irln, iv. 3 

no leisure hated, no, not to stay Ha:itlrl, v. 2 

BATIOS— hrother John Bates, is not .... Ilnn!/ r. iv. 1 
BAT-FOWLINCi— ™ a, hat-fowliiip. . . . 7V/»;-«/, ii. 1 
BATH— in the height of this hath. . Mcrru Ifu-rs. iii. ."i 

sore lahour's hath, halm of Imrt M.u-hclh. ii. •> 

gud feith, and captains hath Heiinj I', iii. '2 

season the'slaves for tnhs andhalhs. rimo,, of A. iv. 3 

von were condneted to a -.'entle \Kith. Cnnnlnnus, i. 6 

BATHK— to hathe in tierv tloods . . M,;i.Jur Mea. iii. 1 

they meant to hathe in rcekinLj %vound3.il/ccfirf/i,i. 2 

and dill hathe their hands in it Julius Cceso^, ii. 2 

let ns liathe onr hands in Ca'sar'shlood.. — iii. 1 

or liatlie mvdvins honour in AntonijfiiCleo. iv. 2 

luid r this eheek tVi l)atlie my lips .... Cijinhclhu; i. 7 

BATH ICD— had most kindly'hathcd... J«!/"" -'.''•'■, iv- 3 

like ea-les lunim; lately hathcd .. . .1 ;fc»/;//r. iv. 1 

or hathed thy growim? \yith onr . . . .ZHenytj VI. ii. 2 

lav hathed lii maiden bloixl Tilus Andron. ii. 4 

B.VTI 1 1 NO— chaste Dian, hatliing Cyuibeline, ii. 4 

15.VTINIJ— blood hating inmycheeks Rom.^-Jul.iu. 2 
BATLET— and I rememher the kissing of her 

hatletrCo/. A'ii(.— hatler] Asxjou Likert,\\. i 

B ATT AILES— Dieu de battailes! Hemij V. iii. 5 

B.VTT.VLIA— our battalia trebles ..Richard III. v. 3 

BATTALION— but in battalions Hnmlcl, iv. 6 

BATTEJST- and batten on cold bits. . Corinlanns, iv. 5 

to fee(l, and batten on this moor? llamlrt, iii. 4 

BATTER— with a log batter his sknll.. TemprsI, iii. 2 
the ram that hatters down the wall. r)0!7.c5-C>cs. i. 3 

and hatters down himself — ii. 3 

to hatter the fortress of it.. Anloiuj tf Cleopatra, iii. 2 

batters all rebelling coasts Cijnibeliue, v. 4 

BATTERED-has not battered at their. .W«r/<c//i, iv. 3 

have battered me like roaring 1 Henri/ VI. iii. 3 

marks upon his battered shield. . Tilus .indron. iv. 1 

BATTERING-wouldleave battering. Com. 0/ Br. ii. 2 

England mount their battering cannon . . John, ii. 2 

BATTERY- an action of battery Tu-elflh N. iv. 1 

mine action of battery on thee Mea. for Mea. ii. 1 

shall do more than battery can Mncbelh, ii. 2 

if I begin the battery once again Henri/ V. iii. 3 

best idace to make oiu* battery next..l HennjVI. i. 4 
will make a battery in his breast . .ZHenry VI. iii. 1 

and his hum is a battery Coriolanus, y. 4 

make battery to our ears .inlomj S,- Cleo. ii. 7 

cannot keep" the battery from my heart — iv._ 12 
else an easy battery might lay flat . . Cijmbeliiie,'\. 5 
make raging battery. . Pericles, iv. 4 (^Gow. inscrip.) 
and make a'battery through Ms deafened — v. 1 
will not tell him ot'hisaction of battery. Hamlet, v, 1 
BATTLE-the battle with the Centaurs. iV/Vf. A'. t>._ v. 1 

give battle to the lioness As you Like it, iv. 3 

perchance, he's hurt i' the battle AlVslVell, iii. 5 

have 1 not in a pitched battle heard.. Tom. ofSh. i. 2 

when the battle s lost and won Macbeth, i. 1 

lead our first battle: worthy Macduff .. — v. 6 

'twixt two dreadful battles set l^ing .John, iv. 2 

and will in battle prove, or here Richard II. i. 1 

this feast of oattle with mine — i. 3 

to bloody battles, and to bruising . . 1 Henry IF. iii. 2 
what may the king's whole battle reach — iv. 1 

be seen to-morrow in the battle — iv. 3 

Hal. if thou see me dovm. in the battle — v. 1 
the king will bid you battle presently — v. 2 
that in the battle thus thou Grossest. . — v. 3 

haunt thee in the battle thus — v. 3 

as many holes in an enemy's battle. 2Hen7'j//r. iii. 2 

om- battle is more full of names — iv. 1 

in sight of botii our battles — iv. 1 

a fearful battle rendered you in music. Henry r. i. 1 
when Cressy bottle fatally was struck . . — ii. 4 

would not seek a battle as we are — iii. 6 

each battle sees the other's — iv. (chorus) 

our scene must to the battle fly . . — iv. (chorus) 

chopped off in a battle, shall join — iv. 1 

die well, that die in battle — iv. 1 

God of battles I steel my soldiers' — Iv. 1 

swarm about our squares of battle — iv. 2 

the life of such a battle in life — iv. 2 

himself is rode to view their battle — iv. 3 

are bravely in their battles set — iv. 3 

might fight this battle out — iv. 3 

that ran from the battle, have — iv. 7 

and even play of battle, was ever — iv. 8 

the battles ot the Lord of hosts 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

rushed into the bowels of the battle. . — i. 1 
in thirteen battles Salisbury o'ercame — i. 4 

at the battle of Patay, when — iv. 1 

leave the battle, boy, and fly — iv. 6 

the clustering battle of the French . . — iv. 7 
means to give you battle presently . . — v. 2 

which fly before the battle ends 2Hniry VI. iv. 2 

to die in ruffian battle — v. 2 

St. Alhan's battle, won by famous — v. 3 

charged our main battle's front ZHenry VI. i. 1 

encountered as the battle's .ioined. ... — i. 1 

and bid them battle straight — i. 2 

many a battle have I won in France — _i. 2 

1 saw him in the battle range about. . — ii. 1 
our battles joined, and both sides. ... — ii. 1 

darraign your battle, for they are — ii. 2 

this battle fares like to the morning's — ii. 5 

have chid me from the battle — ii. 5 

and battle for their dens — ii. 5 

and, now the battle's? ended, if friend — ii. 6 

andbidfal.se Edward battle — iii. 3 

pitched battle against Warwick? — iv. 4 

again, and hid us battle — v. 1 

enough to bid his brother battle — v. 1 

and Gid thee battle, Edward — v. 1 

here pitch oirr battle, hence — v. 4 

in Jlargaret's battle at St. Albans. . Richard III. i. 3 
in the clay of battle, tire thee more . . — iv. 4 

a royal battle might he won — i v. 1 

the form and model of our battle — — v. 3 



[ 43 ] 



BATTLE— prepare thy battle early. .«/c/mrii /i/. v.3 
to-morrow in the battle think on (,rp.) — v. » 

good auL'els guard thy battle — v. 3 

and in a bloody l)att]e cud thy days — V..3 

in the battle tl'duk on Buekinu'baiu.. — v. 3 
and thus my battle shall be ordered.. — v. 3 
we oursclf will follow in the main battle — V. 3 
after the battle let George Stanley die — v. 3 
that find such cruel battle here .. Troilusfy Cress, i. 1 

the vale, to see the battle — 1.2 

coped Hector in the battle — i. 2 

as doth a battle, when they charge . . — iii. 2 

a maiileu battle then? — iv. 5 

my great pm-|)Ose in to-morrow's battle — v. 1 
men'expose themselves to battle.. TimonofAlh. iii. 5 
and her rats are at the point of battle. Cono/anus, i. I 
to Lartius and to Marcius battle .... — i.6 

how lies their battle? know you — i. B 

I do beseech yon, by all the battles . . — i.6 

the brunt of seventeen battles since. . — ii. 2 

and to the battle came he — ii. 2 

battles thrice six I have seen — _ii. 3 

in puny battle slay me — iv. 4 

noise of battle hurtled in the b.\x ..Julius Civsar, ii. 2 

their battles are at hand — v. 1 

their bloody sign of battle is hung out — v. I 
Octa^^us, lead yoitr battle softly on . . — v. 1 

shall we give sign of battle? — v. 1 

upon one battle all our liberties — v. 1 

if we do lose this battle, then — v. 1 

if we lose this battle, you are contented — v. 1 

and Flavins, set our battles on — v. 3 

do win the battle still of mine .. Antony ^- Cleo. n. 3 

to wage this battle at Pharsalia — iii. 7 

provoke not battle, till we have done — iii. 8 

in eve of Cicsar's battle — iii. 8 

the last of many battles we mean — i v. 1 

by the battle, ditched, and walled . . CymbeUne, v. 3 

arise, my knights o' the battle — v. 5 

and j-our thi'ee motives to the battle. . — v. 5 
the stroke of this yet scarce-cold battle — y. .5 
successful in the battles that he . . Titus Andron. \. 2 

joined your high-engendered battles i; ar, iii. 2 

aught, sir, of abattle toward? — W.f, 

as this day's battle's fought — iv. 7 

I had rather lose the battle, than — v. 1 

before you fight the battle, ope this — v. 1 

we'll use his countenance for the battle. . — v. 1 

the battle done, and they within — y. 1 

nor the di\dsion of a battle knows Othello, i. 1 

than pertains to feats of broil and battle — ;• 3 

the battles, sieges, fortunes, that I have. . — i. 3 

BATTLE- AXE-the bloody battle-axe. Ti7«,</(n. iii. 1 

BATTLEMENT— upon our battlements ..Mach. i. 2 

entrance of Duncan under my battlements — _i. 5 

securely on their battlements King John,'u. 2 

the castle's tottered battlements Richard II. iii. 3 

tip to walls and battlements JuliusCrvsar.i. 1 

oft'the battlements of yonder tower.. /loni. KJnl. iv. 1 

all tlio battlements their ordnance fire . . Hamlet, y. 2 

fuller blast ne'er shook our battlement. . O'hrlln, ii. 1 

BATTY— leaden legs and batty ^yings.;V/V. A'. D. iii. 2 

BAUBLE— give his -wife my bauble -ill's "'ell, iv. 5 

a custard-coffin, a bauble Taming- of S/i . iv. 3 

off with that bauhle, tlu-ow it — y. 2 

how many shallow bauble boats . . Troilus Sr Cres./i. 3 
his shipping (poor ignorant hawhles. .Cymbeline, iii.l 

senseless bauble, art thou a feodary — iii. 2 

an idiot holds his bauhle for a god Titus And. y. 1 

to hide his bauble in a hole Rom. f,- Jul.-Vi. 4 

a,nd thither comes the bauble Othello, iv. 1 

BAULKED— and this was baulked . . TirelfihN. iii. 2 
BAVIN— and rash bavin mts soon ..MIenrylV. iii. 2 
BAWBLING— a bawbling vessel.. .Twelfth Niffhl, v. 1 
BAWCOCK — why, how now, my bawcock — iii. 4 
I' fecks? why, that's my bawcock . U'infer'sTale.i. 2 

good bawcock, bate t'ny rage ! Hen ry V. iii. 2 

the king's a bawcock, and a heart of gold — iv. 1 
BA'WD— if it be not a bawd's house.. il/ea./or.l/ea. ii. 1 

you are partly a bawd, Pompey — ii. 1 

by being a bawd? ■ — ii. 1 

you need not to fear the bawds — ii. 1 

would prove itself a bawd — iii 1 

fie, sirrah; a bawd, a wicked bawd .. — iii. 2 

and your powdered bawd — iii. 2 

for being a bawd, for being a bawd .. — iii. 2 
the due of a bawd, why, 'tis his (rep.) — iii. 2 
a bawd of eleven years continuance . . — iii. 2 

been a notorious bawd (repeated) — iv. 2 

he hath been a bawd. A bawd, sir? . . — iv. 2 
more penitent trade than your bawd — iv. 2 

come on, bawd; I ■n-ill instruct — j.'^' ^ 

to be a bawd to a bell-wether ....As you Like it, iii. 2 

a most intelligencing bawd Winter\Tnle, ii. 3 

this bawd, this broker KingJohn, Si. 2 

the bawd to theirs; France is a bawd — iii.l 

myvirtue bo his vice's bawd Richard ll.y.3 

and clocks the tongues of bawds MIenry IV.\. 2 

I remember him now, a bawd Henry V. iii. (i 

well, bawd will I turn, and something — y. 1 

same token, — you are a bawd Trail. ^- Cress, i. 2 

O traitors and bawds, how earnestly — X% '^ 
rogues, and usurers' men ! bawds . . Timon ofAth. ii. 2 
bom a bastard, and thon'lt die a bawd — _ii. 2 
only that is honest, hcrself's a bawd.. — iv. 3 

and to make whores, a bawd — iv. 3 

that dignities the reno^m of a bawd. . . . Pericles, iv. 6 
her gain she gives the cursed bawd — v. (Gow.) 
one that would'st be a bawd, in way of ... . Lear.n. 2 
and bawds and whores do churches build — iii. 2 

a bawd, a bawd, a bawdl soho! Rom. ^- Jul. ii. 4 

from what it is to a bawd Hamlet, iii. 1 

yet she's a simple bawd that cannot Othrlto, iv. 2 

BAWD-BORN— t.io; hawd-born. . Men. fnr Mea. iii. 2 

BAWDRY— we must live in bawdry. ,1s iinti Li!<e. iii. 3 

■without bawdry, which is strange . . IViat,-r's T. iv. 3 

he's for a iig, or a tale of bawdry lIumlit.M. 2 

BAWDY— if bawdy talk offend jon.Mea.for Mea. iv. 3 
itis abawdy planet, that will strike.. Il'inl< r'sT. j. 2 
come, sing me a bawdy song 1 Henry I V. iii. 3 



BEA 



B AAVDY— a merry, bawdy play. . Henry VIII. (prol. ) 
iiilse droji in her bawdy veins .... Troll. ^- Cress, iv. 1 
f<ir the bawdy hand of the dial .... Romeo .^ Jul. ii. 4 
bloody, bawdy villain I remorseless .... Handel, ii. 2 
the bawdy wind, that kisses all it meets. f»/,c//r., iv. 2 
BAWnV-lK H'Si:— to a bawdy-bouse.l/;f;/y//'. iii.3 

this house is turned hawdy-h'ouse — iii. 3 

memorandums of hawdy-liouscs .... — iii. 3 
a poor wliore's ruff in a bawdy-house — ii. 4 

we keep a bawdy-house straight Henry V. ii. 1 

come, I am for no more baW(ly-ho\iscs../Vr/r//'s,iv. 5 
BAAVL— those that bawl out the runis.-.'/^'iivi//; . ii. 2 
BAWLING— you bawlincr, I.ia-plu luous . 7>/«/,^.</,i. 1 
BAY— why, it hath bay windo\\s. . Tn-rlf/l, AV-/,/, iv. 2 

after three-pence a bay Measure fur. "^leasiite, ii. 1 ' 

puts from her native bay Merchant of Venire, ii. G 

like the bay of Portucral As you Like it, iv. 1 

I'd give bay Curtal, and his Alfs IVelt, ii. .1 

your deer does hoklyou at a bay. . Taming of .Sh. v. 2 
come to the bay of Ephesus . ... Comedy oj' £rrors,\. 1 

you sent me to the bay sir — iv. 1 

who put unluckily into this bay — v. 1 

a bay in Br;t;inny, received Richard II. ii. 1 

and chase them to the bay — ii. 3 

the cowards stand aloof at bay .... I Henry VI. iv. 2 
in such a desperate bay of death . . Richard III. iv. 4 
from the Athenian bay put forth.. Trail. S) Cr. (prol.) 
what moves Ajax thus to bay at him — ii. 3 

the other day a bay courser Timon of.-Uhens, i. 2 

a dog, and bay the moon Julius Ccesar, i v. 3 

Brutus, bay fJv7?t57i/ — bait] me not.. .. — iv. 3 
set the dogs o' the street to bay me.. . . CymbeUne, v. .5 

with precious lading to the bay Titus And. i. 2 

let us make a bay, and wake — ii. 2 

at such a bay, by turn to serve — iv. 2 

of chastity withrosemary and bays .... Pericles, iv. 6 

to ride on a bay trotting horse Lear, iii. 4 

bless this bay with his tall ship Othello, ii. 1 

go to the bay, and disembark my coffers . . — ii. 1 

BAYED— they bayed the hear with. M/rf. N.'s Dr. iv. 1 

here wast thou baj'ed, brave hart. ..lulius Casar, iii. 1 

and bayed about with many enemies — iv. 1 

BAYING— haying him at the heels . .2Henry IV. i. 3 

BAYNARD-liiing them to Baynard's.. iJ/cA. ///. iii. 5 

within this hour, at Bavnard's castle — iii. 5 

BAYONNE— the bishop of Bayonne.He«ri/rJ//. ii. 4 

BAY-TREE— bay-trees in our country. . Rich. II. ii. I 

BEACH— go stand upon the beach ..Mer.nfVen. iv. 1 

behold the English beach pales in. HeniyV. v. (cho.) 

let the pebbles on the hungry heach.Coriolanus, v. 3 

stones upon the numbered beach CymbeUne^ i. 7 

fishermen, that walk upon the beach Lear, iv. 6 

BEACHED— on the beached margent.M/d. N. Ur.ii.2 
upon the beached verge of the salt . . Timon of A. v. 2 

BEACHY— see the heachy girdle IHenry IV. iii. 1 

BEACON — which, as a beacon, gives.. — iv. 2 
beacon of our friend, the burning. .1 Henry VI. iii. 2 
modest doubt is called the beacon. Troll. f,-Cres. ii. 2 

be, like a beacon fired, to amaze Pericles, i. 4 

approach, thou beacon to this under globe. Lear, ii. 2 
BEAD— [Co/(/er]— Where's Bead?. . . . Merry Wives, v. 5 

you bead, you acorn Mid. N. Dream, iii. 2 

with amber bracelets, beads Taming of Sh. iv. 3 

for mj' beads ! I cross me Comedy of Er. ii. 2 

with these crystal beads heaven KingJohn, ii. 1 

give my jewels for a set of beads Richard II. iii. 3 

that beads of sweat have stood MIenrylV. ii. 3 

company, or at my beads iHenry VI. i. 1 

number ave-raaries on his beads — i. 3 

our ave-maries with our beads? ZHenry VI. ii. 1 

religious men are at their beads Ricliardlll. iii. 7 

seeing those heads of sorrow stand. ../«/. Ccesar, iii. 1 

BEADLE — beadle to a humorous Love's L. L. iii. 1 

the beadle to her sin King John, ii. 1 

war is his beadle, war is his vengeance.. Zienrj/F. jv.l 
have you not beadles in the toivn. . . .2Henry VI. ii. 1 
go fetch the beadle hither straight .... — ii. 1 

sirrah beadle, whip him till — ii. 1 

the running banquet of two beadles. Henry VIII. v. 3 

no better office, than to be beadle Pericles, ii. 1 

thou rascal beadle, hold thy bloody Lear, iv. 6 

BEAD'S-MAN-thy bead's-man .. Tu-oGen. of Ver. i. 1 
BEAD'S-MEN— thy very bead's-men...ii'c/i.//. iii. 2 

BEAGLE— she's abeagle, true-bred Tu-elfthN. ii. 3 

and take thy beagles with thee Timon ofAth. iv. 3 

BEAK — now on the beak Tempest, i. 2 

kite soar with unbloodied beak iHenry VI. iii. 2 

wing, and cloys his beak, as when . . CymbeUne, v. 4 

and turn their halcyon beaks with Lear, ii. 2 

BEAM— which end o' the beam she'd . . Tempest, ii. 1 
sometimes the beam of her Mi-rry Wires, i. 3 

1 fear not Goliath ivith a weaver's beam — y. 1 

quenched in the chaste beams .Un/. N.'s Dr.i\. 2 

on Neptune with fair blessed beams . . — iii. 2 

I thank thee for thy sunny beams — v. 1 

but I a beam do find in Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 

that little candle throws his beams. . Mer. of Pen. v. 1 

shall weigh thee to the beam All's Well, ii. 3 

but to the brightest beams distracted . . — v. 3 

when he hides' his beams Comedy ofEr.ii. 2 

for gazing on your beams, fair sun .... — iii. 2 

a rush will he' a beam to hang John, iv. 3 

and those his golden beams, to you . . Richard II. i. 3 

did blind men with his beams 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

twinkling another counterfeited beam — v. 3 

reflex his beams upon — v. 4 

whose beam stands sure, whose . . 2 Henry VI. ii. 1 

melts with the sun's hot beams — iii.l 

the glorious sun's transparent beams — iii. 1 

o'erSiades his beams of life ZHenry VI. ii. 6 

thy very beams will dry those — v. 3 

whose bright out shining beams ....Richard III. i. 3 

cast thousand beams upon me Henry Pill. iv. 3 

^^■a^•iu!: bis beam, upon the pashed ..Troll. <S'Oes. v. 5 

Sim, hide thy beams Timon of .Athens, v. 2 

down stieteh below the beam Coriolanus, i'li. 2 

the benefit ol' his blessed beams CymbeUne, iv. 4 

and ill the beams o' the sun so vanished — v. 5 

gilt the ocean with his beams Tilus And. ii. 1 

that by thy comfortable beams I may Lear, ii. 2 



BEA 

BEAM— raoonsliiue's watery beams.. . . Rom. fyJid. i. 4 

faster glide tluui the sun's beams — ii. 5 

till our seale turn the beam Unmh'l, \x. 5 

BEAN— pens anil beans are as (lauk . A Ilmr:/! f. ii. I 
BEAN-FED— a fat and lKan-teilhorsu.,U,W. .V. /). ii. 1 

BKAR— to bear up against what ^huiikl . . Trmi'rsl, i. 2 

the breasts of ever-angry bears — i. 2 

and sweet sprites, tlic burden bear . . — i. 2 (song) 

how I mav bear me here — i."2 

to bear off any weather at all — ii. 2 

mid bears celestial liquor — ii. 2 

I'll bear him no more sticks — ii. 2 

here ; bear m.v bottle — ii. 2 

I'll bear your logs the while — iii. 1 

earth, bear witness to this sound.... — iii. 1 

therefore bear up, and board 'em — iii. 2 

bear with my weakness — iv. 1 

help to bear this awa.v — ir. 1 

1 must be fain to bear with you.. Two Gen. o/ J'er. i. 1 

how do you hear with me? — i. 1 

that some whirlwind bear unto — i. 2 

to bear my lady's train — ii. -1 

bears n.i iin.i\'~i:in of the tiling — ii. 4 

to lieiu- :i luiril 'iiiiuon — ii. 7 

to bear iii> letters to _ iii. 1 

that you may bear it — iii. 1 

I bear unto the banished Valentine .. — iv. 3 

to bear me company — iv. 3 

he bears an honourable mind — v. 3 

bear witness, heaven — v. -I 

be there bears i' the town? Mernjll'ives,i. 1 

if you see the hear loose " — i. 1 

she bears the purse too — i. 3 

go hear tliou this letter — i. 3 

hold sirrah, bear you tliese letters .... — i. 3 

j'oirU not bear a letter for me — ii. 2 

if you will help me to bear it — ii. 2 

I pra.v j'ou, bear vitness — ii. 3 

whither bear you this? — iii. 3 

have you to do whither they bear it . . — iii. 3 

ay, ay; I must bear it — iii. 3 

I'had as lief bear so much lead — iv. 2 

disposition is able to bear — iv. ."i 

the dear love I bear to fair Ann Page — iv. 

the expressure that it bears — v. 5 

let summer bear it out Tirelflli Nighi, i. 5 

that I may bear my evils alone — ii. 1 

that love a woman can bear me ...... — ii. 4 

to anger him, Ave'Uhave the bear again — ii. 5 

will eitlier of you bear me a challenge — iii. 2 

the youth, bears in his visage — iii. 2 

same 'liaviour that your passion bears — iii. 4 

might bear my soul to hell — iii. 4 

as if a bear were at his heels — iii. 4 

he will bear you easily — iii. 4 

think you he will bear Measure for Measure, 1. 1 

bear me to prison, where I am — i. 3 

in person bear me like a true — i. 4 

I do; and bear the shame most — ii. 3 

heaven, let me bear it — ii. 4 

that bear in them one and — ii. 4 

what's yet in this, that bears — iii. 1 

from that trunk j'ou bear, and leave.. — iii. 1 

who the sword ot heaven will bear ... . — iii. 2 

the [jrovost, he shall bear them — iv. 3 

for my authority bears a credent — iv. 4 

let him Ijear it tor a difference Much .-Jtio, i. 1 

the savage bull doth bear the yoke — i. 1 

if ever the sensible Benedict bear it — i. 1 

wliieh shall bear no less likel'diood — ii. 2 

they say, I will bear myself proudly.. — ii. 3 

'tis a truth, I can bear them witness .. — ii. 3 

this is thy office, bear thee well in it. . — iii. 1 

and tlien the two bears willnot bite . . — iii. 2 

bear it coldly but till midnight — iii. 2 

therefore bear you the lantern — iii. 3 

in angel whiteness bear {^Col. beat] away — iv. 1 

what! bear lier in hand until — iv. 1 

(who, I myself will bear witness — v. 2 

make the "drink to bear no barm . . Mid. N. Dream, ii. 1 

(be it on lion, bear, or wolf — ii. 2 

or cat, or bear, pard, or boar — ii. 3 

no, no, I am as ugly as a bear — ii. 3 

a headless bear, sometime a fire — iii. 1 

hog, bear, fire, at every turn — iii. 1 

the hate I bear thee made me — iii. 2 

to Athens will I bear my follj' back.. — iii. 2 

to bear him to my bower in fair^'land — iv. 1 

they bayed the bear with hounds — iv. 1 

how easy is a bush supposed a bear — v. 1 

bear this signiticant to the Love's L. Lost, iii. 1 

why, she that bears the bow — iv. 1 

before a lady, and to bear her fan ... . — iv. 1 

thy eye Jove's lightning bears, thy voice — iv. 2 

folly m fools bears not so strong — v. 2 

and thus thy body bear — v. 2 

bear with me, I am sick — v. 2 

a heavy heart bears not — v. 2 

but that it bear this trial — v. 2 

and Tom bears logs into the — v. 2 (song) 

the ancient grudge I bear him Mer. of yen. i. 3 

cubs from the she bear — ii. 1 

who this inscription bears — ii. 7 

that bears the ngure of an angel — ii. 7 

once more what title thou dost bear . . — ii. 9 

patiently to bear my wrath — ii. 9 

that did bear the shape of man — iii. 2 

whose souls do hear an equal yoke — iii. 4 

a certain loathin", I bear Antonio — iv. 1 

not the hangmairs axe, bear half .... — iv. 1 

that malice bears down truth — iv. 1 

beai- him away: what is thy As you Like it, i. 2 

the knowledge of m.v fault bear with me — i. 3 

and what to bear with us — i. 3 

to bear your griefs yourself — i . 3 

is comely envenoms him that bears it — ii. 3 

I pray yon, bear with me ii. 4 

bear with you, than bear you (rep.) .. — ii. 4 

come, I will bear thee to some shelter — ii. 6 

the city-woman bears the cost — ii. 7 



[44] 



J3EA 



BEAR— world bears Rosalind ..Asyou L/4c, iii. 2 (ver.) 
would bear. That's no matter (iv/;.! — iii. 2 

ilil not bear themselves witliont — iii. 2 



I be 



— 111. .') 

— iii. h 

— iii. fi 

— iv. 3 

— iv. 3 

— iv. 3 

— V. 2 

— V. 4 

— (epil.) 
(epil.) 



•ih not, Ihut 1 hear thee love 

and tlu.u ^hult bear it 

it liears an angry tenor 

bear this, Inar all: she saj's, I am 

for I must bear answer back 

tliat j'oii should hear a good opinio 
bear your body more seeming .... 

for the love you bear to men 

the love you bear to women 

to grow there, and to bear All's IVell, i. 2 

to bear me back again — ii. 1 

more I'll entreat you Avritten to bear — iii. 2 

we'll strive to bear it for your — iii. 3 

how 'tis be>-t to boar it — iii. 7 

another bear tlie ewer Taming' ofSh. I (indue.) 

he bear himself witli honourable — 1 (indue.) 

and make licr l)ear the penance — i. 1 

for the love I bear my sweet — i. I 

for who slial 1 bear ycuir part — i. 1 

and bear his cliaii-'e 111' wooing — i. 2 

to bear, and so are .yon (j-fp<?H/pd) — ii. 1 

I will not bear these braves of tliine .. — iii. 1 

she bears me fair in hand — iv. 2 

mistress Kate, I'll bear you company — iv. 3 

my father's bears more toward — v. 1 

while he did bear my countenance — v. 1 

no hal ves; I'll bear it all myself — v. 2 

nor iiarehment, bears not one Winter's Tule, i. 2 

if not, how best to bear it — i. 2 

which 3^ou shall hear along impawned — i. 2 

though he does bear some signs — ii. 1 

bear the boy henee, he shall not — ii. 1 

is not big enoiigli to bear a schoolboy's — ii. 1 

it is but weakness, to bear the matter — ii. 3 

and that thou bear it to some remote . . — i i. 3 

wolves, and bears, they say, casting . . — ii. 3 

the common praise it bear's — iii. 1 

so long as nature will bear up — iii. 2 

to see how the bear tore out — iii. 3 

and the bear mocked him — iii. 3 

nor the bear half dined on — iii. 3 

I'll go see if the bear begone — iii. 3 

and bear the sow-skin budget — iv. 2 (song) 

■where they should tear their faces — iv."3 

if thou'lt bear a part — iv. 3 

I can bear my part — iv. 3 

you shiill bear witness to't — iv. 3 

so lies, that I must bear a part — iv. 3 

authority be a stubborn bear — iv. 3 

good my lords, bear witness to liis oath — v. 1 

and those that bear them — v. 1 

will bear no credit, were not — v. 1 

he was torn to pieces with a bear — v. 2 

those veins did verily bear blood? — v. 3 

punishment that women bear Comedy of Er. i. 1 

mi^ht bear him company in — i . 1 

to bear the extremity of "dire mishap . . — i. 1 

go bear it to the Centaur — i2 

you will not bear them patiently — i . 2 

vou would bear some sway — ii. 1 

bear a fair presence, though — iii. 2 

then she bears some breadth — iii. 2 

as from a bear a man would run — iii. 2 

no, bear't with you, lest I come — iv. 1 

and then sir, bears awa.y — iv. 1 

there's the money, bear'it straight — iv. 2 

nay, I bear it on my shoulders — iv. 4 

my bones bear witness, that since — iv. 4 

and the rope-maker, bear me witness — iv. 4 

bear me forthwitli unto his — iv. 4 

go bear him henee — iv. 4 

his word might bear my — v. 1 

and bear them to my h"ouse — v. 1 

and bear liim home for his recovery . . — V. 1 

why bear you these rebukes ". ... — v. 1 

that we may bear him henee — v. i 

and every one did bear thy praises Macbeth, i. 3 

under heavy judgment bears that life — i. 3 

bear welcome in your eye — . i. 5 

not bear the knife myself — i. 7 

who shall bear the guilt of our — i. 7 

like the rugged Itus.^ian bear — iii. 4 

was never called to bear my part .... — iii. 5 

and bear his hopes 'bove wisdom — iii. 5 

who bears a glass, which shows — iv. 1 

and the heart I bear, shall n ever — v. 3 

a bough, and bear't before him — v. 4 

hired to bear their staves — v. 7 

I tear a charmed life — v. 7 

bear mine to him, and so depart King John, i. 1 

did after wedlock bear him — i . 1 

from henceforth bear his name — i. 1 

some sins do bear their privilege — i. 1 

like to a muzzled bear, save in — ii. 1 

we will bear home that lust.y — ii. 1 

'gainst whom these arms we bear — ii. 2 

and bear possession of our person here — ii. 2 

well could I bear that England — iii. 4 

I hope, your warrant will bear out . . — iv. 1 

think you, I bear the shears — iv. 2 

bear with me, cousin — iv. 2 

go, bear him ill thy arms — iv. 3 

bear awa.y that child, and follow me . . — iv. 3 

wotild bear thee from the knowledge .. — v. 2 

I pray you, bear me henee from .! — v. 4 

give thee help to bear thee hence — v. 4 

to bear above our power! — v. 6 

go bear this lance to Thomas : . . Richnnl //. i. 3 

far to go, bear not along the — i. 3 

and my nurse, that bears me yet — i. 3 

to bear the tidings of cahimit.v — iii. 2 

the.y might have lived to bear — iii. 4 

■well, bear you well in this new — v. 2 

by man, wast born to bear? — v. ,'i 

kin.g to the living king I'll hear — v. .^j 

as a gib cat, or a lugged bear Mh-nryir. i. 2 



BE.'VR — true: who bears hard his . 

for, bear ourselves as even as 

to bear our fortunes in our own . 
'sblood, I'll not bear mine own . 
ill resiieet of the love I bear your , 



I do 



lit he 






lUcnn/ir. i 3 

— i. 3 

— i. 3 

— ii. 2 

— ii. 3 (letter) 

— iii. 1 



mark, how he bears his course 

go bear this letter to John of — i i i . 3 

his letters bear his mind, not I — iv. I 

m.y liorse, who is to bear me — iv. 1 

ay, by mv faith, that bears a frnstv . . — iv. 1 

good sir Michael; bear this sealed .... — iv. 4 

Westinorelanil, that was engageil, did bear— v. 2 

this earth that bears thee dead, bears — v. 4 

that should reward valoirr, bear the sin — v. 4 

bear Worcester to the death — v. 5 

and bears down !ill before him 'i Henry IF. i. 1 

to bear a gentleman in hand — i. 2 

you are too impatient to bear crosses.. — i. 2 

go bear this letter to my lord — i. 2 

for a poor lone woman to bear — ii. 1 

a beast, to bear every knave's wrong. . — ii. I 

or to bear the inventory of thy . — ii. 2 

bear with another's eonfirmitles (rf/).) ^ ii. 4 

and bear your years A'cry well — ii i . 2 

I'll ne'er bear a base mind — iii . 2 

peace, that bears such grace — iv. 1 

that all their eyes nia3' bear those — iv. 2 

you shall bear, to comfort him — iv. 3 

take me up, and bear me hence — iv. 4 

but, bear me to thatobamber — iv. 4 

in a quarter bear out a kna^'e — v. 1 

do bear themselves like foolish .justices — v. 1 

let me but bear j'onr love, I'll iiear . . — v. 2 

therefore still hear the balanee — v. 2 

sword that you have used to bear — v. 2 

but you must bear; the heart's all — v. 3 

we bear our civil swords — v. 6 

they do bear themselves Henry V. ii. 2 

that the powers we be.ar with us — ii. 2 

did'st bear the key of all my — ii. 2 

dear offences; bear them hence — ii. 2 

shall you bear our full intent — ii, 4 

your mistress bears •well — iii. 7 

for you bear a many superfluon sl.y .... — i i i . 7 

even as your horse beai's your praises — iii. 7 

into the mouth of a Russian bear — iii. 7 

the.y bear them on their shoulders — i\". 1 

on the king; we must bear all — iv. 1 

I pray thee, bear my former answer — . iv. 3 

now we bear the king toward Calais .. — v. (eho.) 

and bear me witness all, that here — v. 2 

nobles should such stomachs bear 1 Henry 11. i. 3 

bear henee his body, I will belli — i. 4 

your honours bear me company — ii. 2 

wdiich bears the better temiier (repealed) — ii. 4 

he bears him on the place's privilege. . — ii. 4 

to bear with their perverse — iv. 1 

great York might bear the name — \\. i 

to England shall he liear his life — i v . 4 

horse, that bears me, fall and die — i \-. 6 

can no longer bear these harms — iv. 7 

that I bear them henee — iv. 7 

bear her this .jewel, pledge — v 1 

did bear him like a noble gentleman. .2 //tnc;/ '7. i. 1 

bear that proportion to my flesh — i. 1 

in m,y standard bear the arras — i. 1 

while Gloster bears this base — i. 2 

she bears a duke's revenues nil — i. 3 

bears his thoiiL'lits above his falcon's.. — ii. I 

that bears so shrewd a maim — ii. 3 

can I bear this suamefiil yoke? — i j. 4 

wth what a majesty he liears himself — iii. 1 

what a rancorous mind he bears — iii. 1 

care, I bear unto m.y lord — ii i. 1 

legs be firm to bear his body — iii. 1 

and bear the name and port — iv. 1 

more can I bear, than yon dare — iv. 1 

his body will I bear unto the king — i\-. I 

monument of the victory will I bear. . — iv. 3 

and bear me where you ■will — iv. 7 

which I will bear in triumph — iv. 10 

to the stake my two brave bears — v. 1 

are these thy bears? we'll bait thy bears — v. 1 

suffered wit1i the bear's fell paw — v. 1 

I am resolved to bear a greater storm — v. 1 

the rampant hear chained to the ragged — v. 1 

from thy bunronet I'll rend thv beiif — a-. 1 

the bearward that protects the bear . . — v. 1 

dost not hide thee from the bear — \. -Z 

old Auehises bear, so bear I thee — v. 2 

I, m.y lord, will bear him company . .3 Henry I' I. i. 3 

thy father bears the ty lie of — i . 4 

be seen to bear a woman's face — i. 4 

or, as a bear, encomimssed round — ii. I 

henceforward will I bear upon — ii. 1 

n ay, bear three daughters — i i . 1 

Richard, I bear thy name — ii. I 

'tis love, I bear thy glories, makes — ii. 1 

the forest bear doth lick? — ii. 2 

whose father bears the title of a king — ii. 2 

I'll bear thee hence (r^^eii/ti/) — ii. .5 

or an unlieked bear-wheli) — iii. 2 

misshaped trunk that boars til's — iii. 2 

will always bear himself as king — iv. 3 

madam, bear it as vou may — iv. 4 

and liear with iniirhiessmy — iv. 4 

y, bear him .. — iv. 8 



than I 
the de 
live, to be 



st'blooil'. 



■tin 



il, to strike . . . 
a- bodies bear 
c. anil renew 



■•p.) .. 



go, be: 
bear he 
I charge ye, bear her hence 

the two brave bears, Warwick 

sta3' you, that bear the corse llichi 

bear with her weakness, which 

that a winged jMercury did bear 

that bear this mutual heavy 

every horse bears his commanding. . . . 



— ■\'. i 



BE A 



BEAR — I'll bear you company Kirhurd HI. ii. 3 

and thither bear your treasure — ii 

liriw to Ileal- witli liiin {rep.') — iii 

that yiiu should licar me on yoiu- .... — iii 

the tender love I liiiir your grace .... — iii 

as loath to liearuie to the slauirliter .. — ii! 

me to the l)loek; hear liim mvliead .. — iii 

Yielded to hear the -ohlen v.ilie — iii. 7 

tohearher hnrden.M-he'r I will — iii. 7 

I'll hear thv hiame, and take thy ... . — iv. 1 

to liear this tidings to the bloody king — iv. 3 

bearwiThnie; I am hungry — iv. 4 

jiroud neek hears half my — iv. 4 

hear her my true love's kiss — iv. 4 

von shall liear my standard — v. 3 

"Blunt, bear my irood-nigbt to him ^ V. 3 

that bear a weighty and a serious. HcHryf 7//. (prol.) 

did almost sweat to bear — i. 1 

nay, he must bear you company — i. 1 

and, to hear them, the bark is — i. 2 

that ehurehman bears a bounteous.... — i. 3 

great respect thev bear to beauty — i. 4 

how didhe bear liimself? — ii. 1 

yet, heaven bear witness — ii. 1 

tlie law I bear no malice for my — ii. I 

my lord, you'll bear us company — ii. 3 

have you lirabs to bear that load of title — ii. 3 

vou bear a gentle mind — ii. 3 

1 know yoiu' back will bear a duchess — ii. 3 

with these you bear already — iii. 2 

and bear the inventory of your best. . — iii. 2 

business, which I bear i' the state.... — iii. 2 

to the little good you bear me — iii. 2 

and bears Ms blushing honoiu's — iii. 2 

bear witness, all that nave not — iii. 2 

who's that, that bears the sceptre .... — iv. 1 

they, that bear the clotli of honour . . — iv. 1 

tlieir jiractices must bear the same . . — v. I 
eliurlish as the bear, slow as.. Troilus fy Cressida, i. 2 

my heart's content firm love doth bear — i. 2 

aiid bears his head in such a rein — i. 3 

sliould not our father bear the great — ii. 2 

he should not bear it so ._ — ii. 3 

though the sight I bear in things .... — iii. 3 

let Diomed bear him, and bring — iii. 3 

a binden which I am iproud to bear.. — iii. 3 

shalt bear a letter to him straight (t-ep.) — iii. 3 

his bane; he cannot bear it — iv. 2 

thou shouldst not bear from me — iv. 5 

and bear hence a great addition — iv. 5 

that he'll bear on liis helm — v. 2 

upon the love you bear me, get you in — v. 3 

go, bear Patroelus' body to Achilles. . — v. 5 

one bear will not bite another — v. 8 

it must not bear my daughter. . Timon of Athens, i. 1 

we will bear, with your lordship .... — i. 1 

my lord, whiclr bears that office — i. 2 

who dies, that bears not one spurn . . — i. 2 

to revenge is no valour, but to bear . . — iii. 5 

full of valour did he bear himself ... . — iii. 5 

meek bears, you fools of fortune .... — iii. 6 

nothing I'll 'bear from thee — iv. 1 

can bear great fortune but by — iv. 3 

the senator shall bear contempt — iv. 3 

dragons, wolves, and bears — iv. 3 

I, to bear this, that never knew — iv. 3 

wert thou a bear, thou wouldst be killed — i v. 3 

true; for he bears it not about him . . — iV. 3 

the oaks bear mast, the briers — iv. 3 

and there's .all tire love they bear \i.s..Corwlanus, i. ) 

as children from a bear — i. 3 

that bear the shapes of men — i.4 

able to bear against the great — i.6 

the rest shall Dear the business — . i. 6 

bear the addition nobly ever — i. 9 

that baes like a bear.'He's a bear, indeed — ii. 1 

though I must lie content to bear with — ii. 1 

your voices, bear of wounds two dozen — . ii. 3 

charters tliat you bear i' the body — ii. 3 

after tire inveterate hate he bears you — ii. 3 

bear him to the rock Tarpeian — iii. 1 

and bear him to the rock. No; I'll die — iii. 1 

o'er-bear wlrat thev are used to bear — iii. 1 

armour on, wdiieh I can scarcely bear — iii. 2 

a lie that it must hear? — iii. 2 

mil bear the knave by the voliune .. - iii. 3 

tlie wounds his body bears, which show — iii. 3 
common chances common men could bear — iv. 1 

the v.-oimds that he does bear for Rome — iv. 2 

aud thy face liears a command in't . . — iv. .'5 

displeasm-e which thou shouldst bear me — iv. .5 

he bears himself more prondlier — iv. 7 

that he bears all things fairly — iv. 7 

and hear the palm, for having bravely — v. 3 

you shall bear a better witness — v. 3 

that must bear my beating to — v. .5 

bear from hence his body, and mourn — v. 5 
bear too stuhlioni and too strsmg/i. .JuliusCasar, i. 2 

upon his shoulder the old Anchises bear — i. 2 

and bear the palm alone — i. 2 

Cixjsar dotli liear me hard — i. 2 

that I do bear, I can shake off — i. 3 

in his own hand bears the power .... — i. 3 

since the quarrel will bear no colour — ii. 

every noble Roman bears of you .... — ii. 

bear fire enough to kindle cowards . . — ii. 

that every Roman bears, and nobly bears — ii. 

the ingrafted love he bears to Csesar — ii. 

and bears with glasses, elephants .... — ii. 

Caius Liijarius doth bear CEEsar hard — ii. 

but hear it as our Roman actors do . . — ii. 

can I bear that with patience — ii. 

to bear my greetin" to tlie senators . . — ii. 2 

if you bear me hard, now — iii. 1 

bear with me; my heart is in the.. .. . — iii. 2 

stand back! room! bear back! — iii. 2 

you'll bear me a bang for that, I fear — iii. 3 

lint bear tliem as tlie ass bears gold . . — iv. 1 

offence should bear his comment — iv. 3 

should bear Ills friend's iniii'mities.. — iv. 3 



__J^J 

BKAR — anger, as the flint bears fire ..Jul.Cwsar, iv.3 
vou not love enough to bear with me — iv. 3 
bear ■with him, Brutus; 'tis his fashion — iv. 3 
no man bears sorrow better: Portia is — iv.3 

then like a Roman bear the truth — iv.3 

but yet my nature could uot bear it so — iv. 3 
hear with me, good boy {repeated) .... — iv. 3 

he bears too great a mmd — v. 1 

thee to know, this bears .... Antony <$• Cleupaira, i. 2 

to know the purposes I bear — i. 3 

to bear such idleness so near — i. 3 

when we do bear so great weight .... — i.4 

to bear the weight of Antony ! — i. 5 

and bear back our targe undinted .. — ii. 6 
bear him ashore: I'll pledge it for . . — ii. 7 
he bears the third part o' the world.. — ii. 7 
the holding every man shall bear. ... — ii. 7 

bear the king's son's body before — iii. 1 

the mares would bear a soldier — iii. 7 

a charge we bear i' the war — iii. 7 

it is ashamed to bear me — ..iii- 9 

shall bear iis an errand to him — iii. U 

shall bear the olive freely — iv. 6 

bear otu- hacked targets like the — iv. 8 

O, bear me witness, night — iv. 9 

shall upon record hear hateful — iv. 9 

let us bear him to the court of guard — iv. 9 

like a bear, or lion, a towered — iv. 12 

bear me, good friends, where Cleopatra — iv. 12 
pimisli it seeming to bear it lightly . . — iv. 12 

and you bear it as answering — v. 2 

and bear her women from the monument — y. 2 

you bear a graver purpose Cymbeline, i. 5 

and the primrosea, bear to my closet — i.6 

the love I bear him made him — i. 7 

a woman, that bears all do-wn — ii. 1 

that will not bear your enemies' boats — iii. 1 
neither here I'll keep, nor bear again — v. 3 
justly may bear his betrothed from. Tilus.indron.i. 2 

to bear ine down with braves — ii. 1 

should let life bear his name — iii. 1 

in this baud the other will I bear. ... — iii. 1 

bear thou my hand, sweet wench — iii- 1 

scorns to bear anotlier hue — iv. 2 

the privilege your beauty bears — iv. 2 

I'll bear you lienoe ; for it is — jv. 2 

more than our backs can bear — iv.3 

and bear the faults of Titus' age " — iv. 4 

what hate they bear their emperor . . — v. 1 
for I must bear thee to a trusty Goth — v. 1 
and bear it from me to the empress . . — v. 1 
more than any living man could bear — v. 3 

with patience bear such griefs ._ Pericles, j. 2 

whose -wdsdom's strength can bear it . . — i 2 
the device he bears upon his shield .... — ii. 2 
he hears upon his shield is an armed . . — ii. 2 

aged patience bear your yoke — .ii. 4 

to the next chamber bear her _ — iii. 2 

bear you it in mind, old Helicanus — iv. 4 (Gow.) 
he bears a tempest, which his mortal — i v. 4 (Gow.) 
and bear his courses to be ordered — iv. 4 (Gow.) 

omit that bears recovery's name — y. 1 

nature nor our place can bear Lear, i. 1 

with such dispositions as he bears — i. 1 

to the great love I hear you — i.4 

dogs, and bears, by the neck — ii. 4 

but fathers, that liear bags, shall see — ii. 4 

fool me not so much to bear it tamely — ii. 4 

wherein the cub-drawn bear would couch. . — iii. 1 

tho'a'dst shun a bear; but if thy — iii. 4 

thou'dst meet the bear i' the mouth — iii. 4 

come, help to bear thy master — iii. 6 

I'll repair the misery thoii dost bear i| . — iv. 1 

whose reverence the head- lugged bear woiild — iv. 2 

if I could bear i t longer, and not fall — iv. 6 

henceforth I'll bear affliction — iv. 6 

bear free and patient thoughts — iv. 6 

you must bear with me: pray now — iv. 7 

thy great emplojTnent will not bear question — v. 3 

bear him hence awhile — v. 3 

bear them from hence ; our present — v. 3 

a disgrace to them, if they bear it. . Romeo i5' ■'«'• }■ 1 

nay, I do bear a brain — i. 3 

being but heavy, I mil bear the light — i. 4 

and learns them first to bear — i. 4 

he bears him like a portly gentleman — i. 5 

I bear no hatred, blessed man — ii. 3 

but you shall bear the burden soon . . — ii. 5 
bear hence this body, and attend our will — iii. 1 
eoidd find out but a man to bear a poison — iii. 5 

chain me witli roaring bears — iv. 1 

shall Romeo bear thee hence — iv. 1 

best array, bear her to church .... — iv. 5 

bear this work of heaven with patience — v. 3 

befitted to bear our hearts in grief Hamlet, i. 2 

that which dearest father bears his son.. — i. 2 

bear it that the opposer may beware — i. 3 

nature in thee, hear it not — i. 5 

but bear me stiffly up — i. 5 

how strange or odd soe'er I bear myself — i. 5 
for who would bear the whips aud scorns — iii. 1 
who would fardels bear, to grunt and sweat — iii. 1 
makes us rather bear those ills we have — iii. 1 

have been too broad to bear with — iii. 4 

tliey bear the mandate ; they must — iii . 4 

aucl bear it to the chapel — iv. 2 

to bear all smooth and even, this sudden — iv. 3 
great love the general gender bear him . . — iv. 7 

whose grief bears such an emphasis? — v. 1 

you, the judges, bear a wary eye — v. 2 

let four captains bear Hamlet — v. 2 

ICotlier'] to bear me to him Othello, i. 2 

with more facile question bear it — i. 3 

he bears the sentence well, that (rep.) .. — i. 3 
but he bears both the sentence and the.. — _i. 3 
cast water on thcburning bear, and quench -^ ii. 1 

it is impossible they bear it out — ii. 1 

does bear [A'/ir. -tire the ingcner] all — ii. 1 

the love and duty that I bear you — V}.'^ 

that the probation bear no hinge — iii. 3 



BE A 



BEAR — would bear your misfortunes . . Othello, iv. 1 
I prythcc, bear some charity to my wit — iv. 1 
she will sing the savagenessout of abear — iv. 1 

for the love 1 bear to Cassio — iv. I 

yet could I bear that too; well, very well — iv. 2 

either I must live, or bear no life — iv. 2 

as true hearts cannot bear — iv. 2 

for a chair, to bear him easily hence. . — v. ' 
some good man bear hira carefully hence — v. 1 

bear him out o' the air — v. 1 

think on thv sins. They are loves I bear — v. 2 

BEAR-BAI'riNG— 
ill fencing, dancing, and bear-haitin". Twelfth N. i. 3 
with my lady, about a bear-baiting here — ii. 5 
wakes, fairs, and bear-baitings . . Winter^ s Tale, iv. 2 

BE ARD— tears run down his beard Tempest, v. 1 

ay, by my beard, will we .. Two Gen. of Verona, iv. 1 

a great round beard Merry Wives, i. 4 

yellow beard, a Cain-coloured beard . . — i. 4 

by the colour of his beard Tivelfth Niffht,]]. 3 

send thee a beard — iii- 1 

like an icicle on a Dutchman's beard — iii. 2 
put on this gown, and this beard .... — iv. 2 

without thy beard and go^vn — iv. 2 

shave the head, and tie the hesiTi..Mea.for.Vea. iv. 2 

his beard, and head, just of his — iv.3 

not endure a husband with a beard . . Much Ado, ii. 1 
upon a husband, that hath no beard — ii. 1 
hath a beard, is less than a youth (rep.) — ii. 1 

a hair of the great Cham's beard — ii. \ 

than he did, by the loss of a beard .. — iii. 2 
will smile, and stroke his beard — v. 1 

1 have a beard coming Mid. N.'s Dream, i . 2 

what beard were I best to play it in. . — i. 2 
beard, your orange-ta-miy beard (rep.) — i. 2 
Fi-ench-crown-colonr beard, your perieet — i. 2 

ere his youth attaiued a bearil — ii. 2 

good strings to your beards, new — iv. 2 

God's blessing on your beard Love's L.Lost, ii. 1 

a wife ! — A beard, fair health, and — y. 2 

void your rheum upon my beard. . Merch. ofVen.i. 3 

what a beard hast thou got — i i • 2 

upon their chins the beards of Hereides — iii. 2 
by your beards that I am (rep.) . . As you Lilte it, i . 2 

a beard of formal cut, full of — i i • 7 

a beard? nay, he hath but little beard — iii. 2 

stay the growth of his beard — i)!- ^ 

a beard neglected; which yon have not — iii. 2 
your having in beard, is a younger . . — iii. 2 
courtier's beard; he sent me word ^rep.) — v. 4 

say, his beard was not well cut — v, 4 

as had beards that pleased me — — (epilogue) 
as have good beards, or good faces. . — (eiiilogue) 

and ^mt as little beard AWs Well, ii. 3 

or the baring of my beard — i v. 1 

by my old beard, and every hair — . v. 3 

but that his beard grew thm Taming ofSh. iii. 2 

so sure as this beard's grey Winter's Tale, ii. 3 

by my white beard, you offer hira . . — i v. 3 

will make him scratch his beard — iv. 3 

whose beard they have singed oS..Comedyof Er. y. 1 

aud vet your beards forbid me Macbeth, i. 3 

dareful, beard to beard, and beat them.. — v. 5 

plucks dead lions by the beard King John,h. 1 

white beards have armed their thin.niWmrrf//. iii. 2 
thy tathei-'s beard is turned white . . 1 HenrylV. ii. 1 
upon the ground, but I will beard him — iv. 1 
I will sooner have a beard grow in ..iHenrylV. i. 2 

a white beard? a decreasing leg — . i. 2 

whose beard the silver hand or peace — iv. 1 
merry in hall, when beards wag all — v. 3 (song) 

fathers taken by the silver beards Henry V. iii. 3 

and what a beard of the general's cut . ■ — iii. 6 

takes him by the beard — iv. 6 

a black beard will turn white — v. 2 

and take the Turk by the beard — v. 2 

I beard thee to thy face \ Henry FL].3 

priest, beware voiu- beard — i. 3 

his well-proportioned beard made. .2Henry F/. in. 2 
to beard thee too: look on me well. . — iv. 10 
hem, and stroke thy beard, as he. . Trail. ^ Ores. i. 3 

I'll hide my stiver beard in — i. 3 

by this white beard, I'd fight with . . — iv. .5 
honoured age for his white beard. Timon of Ath. iv. 3 
take our goodly aged men by the beards — y. 2 
if e'er again I meet him beard to beai-d. . Coriol. i._ 10 

the wagging of yovir beards (rep.) — .ii. 1 

you had more beard, when I last — i.y. 3 

were I the wearer of Antonius' beard. Ant.S- Cleo. ii . 2 
breeding, as his white beard came to. Cymbeline, y. 3 

at suit of his grey beard Lear, ii. 2 

spare my grey beard, you wagtail — ii- 2 

art not ashamed to look upon this beard . . — i[. 4 

to pluck me by the beard — i;i. 7 

if you did wear a beard on your chin —111.7 

ha! Goneril! \vith a white beard — iv. 6 

told me, I liad white hairs in my beard — — iv.fi 

his beard was grizzled? no? It was Hamlet, \. 2 

that old men have grey beards — 11.2 

comest thou to beard me in Denmark . . — !;■ '^ 
it shall to the barber's, with yoru: beard — 11. 2 
plucks off my beard, and blows it in — — u. 2 
his beard was as wliite as snow — — iv. 5 (song) 
can let our beard be shook with danger — iv. 7 
defeat thy favour with an usurped beard. OrtcWo,.i. 3 
did I to day. see Cassio mpe his beard . . — lu. 3 

BEARDED— bearded like the piu-d . . .Is you Lilce, 11. 7 

such bearded liermit's staves -Z Henry I v. y. 1 

am I dared, and bearded to my face? .1 Henry VI. i. 3 
every bearded fellow, that's but yoked . . Othello, 1 v. 1 

BEAftDLESS— shall a beardless boy. . King Jnhn, v. 1 
the push of every bearded vain IHenrylV. in. 2 

BEARER— stand aside, good bearer.. Loire's L. L. iv. 1 
when thou dost pinch thy bearer ..'iHenry I V. iv. 4 

hast eat thy bearer up — i.y. 4 

do divorce it from the bearer Henry I'lII.u. 3 

the bearer knows uot Troilus 4- Cressida, iii. 3 

marrow, in the bearer strong . . Timon of Athens, y. Ci 
bearers of tliis greeting to old Norway . . Hamlet, i. 2 
shoidd the bearere put to sudden death . . — v. 2 



BE A 



BEARETII— for the love he benrcth.VWm. nf Sh. iv. 4 
BEAR-IIERD — sixpence in earnest of the bear- 
herd \Ci)l. Kill liciir-waril] :l/u.7i Ailo, ii. 1 

by transmutation a liear-henl. Wim. o/SA. 2 linihic.) 

true valour is turned hear-hcrfl ■lllcinifl'. i. 2 

BEARING— for bearing the letter. rm,<;,;,. mrvr. i. 1 

the bearing of letter did V-irl/lh .\i\'IU, iv. 2 

a smooth, uiscreet, and stable bearing — Iv. 3 

I know him liv his hearing MucUAdo,u. 1 

for shajie, for beariuL', argument — iii. ! 

bearing the liadge oi'l.iith ....Mid. ^.'sDrcim, iii. 2 
goiid re|)ute, ea[ri:me. \i^armg.LoVf'sL.L. i. I [letter) 
well, we sliall see .y.iiir hearing ..McrcU. of Ven. ii. 2 

in beiu-ing thus tlie absence — iii. 1 

rcgia, bearing my port, cclsasenis. rajnmif o/S/i. iii. 1 
the manner of your bearing towai'tls. iVinter^s T. iv. 3 

though bearing misery, I desire — v. 1 

in their houses, bearing thence rings. Com. nf Er. v. 1 
bearing their birthrights proudly . . King John, ii. 1 

that bearing boughs may live Richard II. iii. 4 

bearing their own misfortunes — v. 5 

when the intent of bearing them .... 1 Henry IV. v. 2 
either wise bearing, or ignorant ....'ZHcnrylV.v. 1 

by his blunt bearing-, he will keep Henry V. iv. 7 

and nobles bearing banners — iv. 8 

bearing it to the bluod\' slaughter-house .2H. VI. iii. 1 
with tliv brave bearing should I be in love — v. 2 
bearing' the Iving in my belnilf along.SifcHryF/. ii. 1 

in bearing weight of govermneut — iv. 6 

for bearing arms, for stu'ring up — v. 5 

beai-ing a state of mighty moment . . . Henry VIII. ii. 4 
bearing the king's mil from Ms mouth — iii. 2 
8ueh valour in tire bearing .... Timon of Athens, iii. 5 

at liome, if bearing cqrry it — iii. 5 

never bearin" like laboiu: Coriotanus, i. I 

their provaud only for bearing bm'dens — ii. I 
scaling his present bearing with his past — ii. 3 
bearing his valiant sous in coflins.. Tilus Andron. i. 1 

we our betters see bearing our woes Lear, iii. 6 

hath mates, and bearing fellowship _ iii. 6 

bearing a Tartar's painted bow . . Romeo ^Juli-i, i. 4 
Tmkislx fleet, and bearing up to Cyprus . Oihello, i. 3 
bearing with frank appearance their pnr|inses — i. 3 
BEARING-CLOTH— look thee, a be.aring-cloth 

for a squire's child yVinler'^s Tale, iii. 3 

as a child's bearing-cloth, I'll use \ Henry VI. i. 3 

BEAR-LIKE— bear-like, I must fight . . Mucbeth, v. 7 
BEARN— thev sav, beai'ns are blessings. .-(H's JFeii, i. 3 

BEAR'ST— tliattlioubear'st Meas. for Meas. iu. 1 

thon bear'st thy heavy riches _ iii. 1 

youth, thou bear'st thy father's face . . AWs Well, i. 2 
if thou bear'st my life off hence .. Winter's Tale, i. 2 

bear his name whose form thou bear'st Tohn, i. 1 

thon bear'st the lantern in the pooi>.\ Henry IV. iii. 3 

thou bear'st thee like a king _ v. 4 

see'st thou tliis, and bear'st so long..2HeHrj/r/. ii. 1 

bear'st thou her face in mind Ant.^jrCleo. iii. 3 

thou bear'st a woman's face Titus And. ii. 3 

milk-livered man ! that bear'st a elieek . . Lear, iv. 2 
BEAR-WARD— [Co(. Knf.]— even take sixpence 

in earnest of the bear- ward Muck Ado, ii. 1 

manacle the bear- ward in their chains .2Hen. VI. v. 1 
the bear- ward that protects the bear .... — v. 1 
BEAR-AVHELPS— these bear-whelps. ra«s^nd. iv. 1 
BEAST— beasts shall tremble at thy <iia.. Tempest, i. 2 
heavens keep him from these beasts! .... — ii. 1 
any strange beast there makes a man . . — ii. 2 

conspiracy of the beast Caliban — iv. 1 

been a breakfast to the beast ... Tivo Gen.ofVer. v. 4 

it is a familiar beast to man Merry IVines, i. 1 

what a beast am I to slack it! — iii. 4 

makes a beast a raau, in some {rep.} — v. .') 

done lirst in the form of a beast — v. 5 

O you beast! O faithless coward !...iWra. /or jl/<?a. iii. 1 
buy and sell men and women like beasts — iii. 2 

ere this rude beast wUl profit — iii. 2 

is better than a beast of yoiu-s Much Ado, i. 1 

he would play the noble oeast iu love . . — v. 4 
thee to the mercy of wild beasts. .lU/d. N. Dream, ii. 2 

for beasts that meet me, run _ ii. 3 

this grisly beast, which by name . . — v. 1 

here come two noble beasts — v. 1 

a very gentle beast, and of a good . . — v. 1 

best at a beast, my lord, that e'er . . — v. 1 

when beasts most graze, birds. Loue'sL.Losf, i. 1 (let.) 

not so, gentle beast; my lips are — ii. 1 

he is little better than a beast . . Merch. of Venice, i. 2 

he be transformed into a beast As you Lilie it, ii. 7 

meaning me a beast — iv. 3 

the royal disposition of that beast.. — iv. 3 

a pair of very strange beasts — v. 4 

O monstrous beast! how like. . Tarn, of Sh. 1 (indue.) 
winter tames man, woman, and beast — iv. 1 

tiiree-iuch foul! I am no beast — iv. 1 

taken the shapes of beasts upon them. Winter'sT. iv. 3 
the beasts, the lishes, and the winged. Com o/£r. ii. 1 

a blessing he bestows on beasts — ii. 2 

as a beast: not tlnit, I being a beast .... — iii. 2 

w-onid mad or manor beast — v. 1 

what beast was it then, that made Macbetkji. 7 

as doth a raven on a sick-fallen beast /o/i«, iv 3 

a king of beasts? A king of beasts . . Riclmrd II. v. 1 

a beast to say otherwise (rep.) \ Henry IV. iii.. 3 

a IjCiist, to bear ever3' knave's wrong.2//rrtr// IV. ii. 1 

it is a beast for Perseus Henry V. iii. 7 

all other jades you may call beasts — iii. 7 

tlie lion's skin, while the beast lived .. — iv. 3 

even of the bonny beast he loved 2Henry VI. v. 2 

not to the beast that would usurp . .3Henry VI. ii. 2 

no beast so tierce, but (repeated) Itictiardlll. i. 2 

robbed many beasts of their . . Troilus <§- Cressida, i. 2 

wilt tliou not, beast, abide? — v. G 

what a wicked beast was I . . . . Timon of Athens, iii. 2 

the more beast, I say; I was — iii. 2 

of man, and beast, the infinite malady — iii. 6 
the nnldndest beast more kinder ., — iv. 1 

a beast, as thou art; the canker.. .. — iv. 3 

give it the beasts, to lie rid of the men — iv. 3 
and remain a beast with the beasts? — iv. :i 

what beast couldst thou be (repealed) — iv. 3 



[ ^^> ] 



B EAST— become a forest of beasts . 7'i«ion or Aili. i v. 3 
Isbail 111 (. .l^t.HK, bi thee. Beast! — iv. 3 

that 111 1 I 1 I i\ till \,.ild .... — iv. 3 

asbci t 1 1 ii hLs(»pp.) — iv. 3 

some Ik ' M ^ dues not — v. 4 

nitniit I I I I I n lu . . ..Coriolrnnts,u. \ 
the be 1st w itli niaii\ Iu .ids Imtts ... — iv. 1 

li'ivc beasts, and cowardly nobles .... — iv. 6 
whv buds, and beasts, fiom ^i^Ahty .. Jul. Ciesar, i. 3 

not find a heait Mithm the beast — ii. 2 

C e-.,xi shinild be a beast without a heart — ii. 2 

thou art fled to brutish beasts — iii. 2 

alike feeds beast as man ....Antony fyCteopat7-a,i. 1 
puddle wdiich beasts would cough at — i. 4 

like beasts, which you shun Cymbeline, y. 3 

knew the beast, that I might xiiil.. Titus Andron. ii. .■> 

but tlirow her forth to beasts — v. 3 

of man, brought near to beast Lear, ii. 3 

man's life is cheap as beast's — ii. 4 

the be.ast no hide, the sheep no wool — iii. 4 

what ho! you men, you beasts . . Romeo Sf Juliet, i. 1 
what a beast was I to chide at him! — iii. 2 

the unreasonable fury of a beast.... — iii. 3 

or ill-besoemiug beast, in seeming both — iii. 3 

lieaven! a l.ieast, that wants discourse.. Ha/«^(.'/, i. 2 
that adulterate beast, with witchcraft ... . — i. 5 

like the llyrcanian beast — ii. 2 

sleep, and teed? a beast, no more — iv. 4 

we are pictures, or mere beasts — iv. 5 

demi-naturcd with the brave beast — iv. 7 

let a beast be lord of beasts — v. 2 

now making the beast with two backs . . Otiiello, i. 1 

transform ourselves into beasts — ii. 3 

by and by a fool, and presently a beast . . — ii. 3 
abeast. There's many a beast then .... — iv. 1 

BEA.STLIEST— the beastliest sense. Mea.f or Mea. ii. 1 

BEAST-LIKE— her life was beast-like, 

[/v»/. -beastly] and devoid of pity .. . Tilus And. v. 3 

BEASTLINESS— 
that bolting-hutch of beastliness. . ..\HenrylV. ii. 4 

BEASTLY— O Jove, a beastlv fault.Merri/ iVives, v. 5 

abominable and beastly touelies Mea.forMea. iii. 2 

see, how beastly she doth com-t him. Tarn. ofSh. iv. 2 
being a very beastly creature .. Com. of Errors, iii. 2 
such beastly, shameless transformation.! Hch./F. i. 1 

thou, beastly feeder; art so full iHenry IV. i. 3 

and that most beastly; in good faith.. — ii. 1 

not to relent, is beastly, savage Richard III. i. 4 

in beastly sort, dragged through. Troil. ff Cress, v. 1 1 
in that beastly fury he has been.. Kmoiio/ylfA. iii. 6 
a beastly ambition, which the gods grant — iv. 3 
contumelious, beastly, mad-brained war — y. 2 
herdsmen of the beastly plebeians... Coriolanus, ii. I 
spoke was beastly dumbed by him . . Ant. ^ Cleo. i. 5 
to expound his beastly mind to us . . Cymbeline, i. 7 
we are beastly, subtle as the fox .... — iii. 3 
like beasts, wTiich you shun beastly — y. 3 

ah beastly creatru'e I the blot TilusAndron. ii. 3 

beastly villains, like thyself — v. 1 

[_Knt.'] her life was beastly, and devoid — v. 3 
you beastly knave, know you no Lear, ii. 2 

BEAT — I saw him beat the siu'ges Tempest, ii. 1 

1 could find in my heart to beat him . . — ii. 2 

beat him enough: after — iii. 2 

I'll beat him too — iii. 2 

I am sorry I beat thee — iii. 2 

beat the ground for kissing — iv. 1 

then I beat my tabor, at wdiich — iv. 1 

or e'er your pulse twice beat — v. I 

thy pulse beats, as of flesh — v. 1 

and nath threatened to beat her . . Merry Wives, iv. 2 

trust me, he beat him most — iv. 2 

he beat him most unpitifully — iv. 2 

he beat me grievously — v. 1 

I'd beat him like a dog Twelfth Night, ii. 3 

'slight, I could so beat the rogue .... — ii. 5 
I'll after him, a»ain, and beat him . . — iii. 4 
the baby beats the nurse . . Measure for Measure, i. 4 

I shall beat you to your tent — ii. I 

which the air beats for vain — ii. 4 

or they shall beat out my brains .... — iv. 3 
they laugh at him, and beat him .... Much Ado, ii. 1 

ancIyou'Ubeat the post — ii. 1 

sobs, beats her heart, tears her — ii. 3 

ICol.'] whiteness, beat away those blushes — iv. 1 
the more you beat me, I will ta,\\'n..MiiL N. Dr. ii. 2 
beat not the bones of the buried . . Lo ve's L. Lost, v. 2 

I'll beat him, by my life (rep.) AWs Well, ii . 3 

two hours younger, I'd beat thee — ii. 3 

and every man should beat thee — ii. 3 

how he beat me because her. . Taming ofShreic, iv. 1 

bate, and beat, and will not be — iv. i 

and beat me to death with a bottom of — iv. 3 

knocks as he would beat down — v. 1 

tliat oiler to beat ray servant? — v. 1 

he's beat from his best ward Winter's Tale, i. 2 

who late hath beat her husband — ii. 3 

he did beat me there Comedy of Errors, ii. 1 

jealousy! fie, beat it hence — ii. 1 

or I will beat this metliod in — ii. 2 

that I beat him, and charged Mm . . — iii. 1 

that you beat me at the mart — iii. 1 

if I beat the door down — iii. 1 

enough to beat the honest men Macbeth, iv. 2 

and beat them Kackward home — v. 5 

that beat his peace to heaven King John, ii. 1 

blood doth in the>c temples beat — ii. 1 

it is tobeat usurpini; down — ii. 1 

rocky shore licats tmck tlie envious.. /?(c/ia?-rf//. ii. 1 

thrives to heat liaek Bolingbroke — ii. 2 

scope to beat since f ics have scope to beat — iii. 3 
beat our ^\'atch, and rob our passengers — v. 3 
Tom, beat Cut's saddle, put a few . . 1 Henry IV. ii. 1 
if I do not beat thee out of thy kingdom -^ ii. 4 

whose swift -wrath beat down the iHenry IV.i.l 

didst thou beat heaven with blessing — i. 3 
your pulsidge beats as extraordinarily — ii. 4 

let's beat him before his whore — ii. 4 

he beat ills own name — iii. 2 

that you and Pistol beat among you — v. 4 



BEA 



BE AT— crowns to one they will beat . . Henry V. iv.l 

that beats upon the high ^horo — iv. I 

now lieat tlr,-in lience, \k\w do \HenryVl. i. 3 

toI)eata-siMlimMl.j,-il!i IVniu — iv. 4 

beat d"wn Alrnrnn, ( M-h-aus — iv. fi 

and thoughts lieat un a cr.iwn 2Henry VI. ii. 1 

quickly lound to beat a dog — iii. 1 

and beats it when it strays — ■ j.'j- 1 

from tlie shore the tempest beat us back — iii. 2 

beat away the busy meddling fiend — iii. 3 

may beat down Edward's guard — iv. 2 

levy men, and beat liiiii liaik again .. — iv. S 
or shall we beat tlie stones about — y. 1 

..brothers beat aside the point Ricltnrd 111. i. 2 

weep so oft? and beat your breast — ii. 2 

pent heart may have some scope to beat — iv. 1 
and unresolved to beat tlieni back. ... — iv. 4 

power then, to beat him back — iv. 4 

yet to beat down tliese rebels — i v. 4 

to beat this from his braius? Henry VIII. iii. 2 

1 will beat thee into handsomeness.. 7'ro//. i^Cr. ii. 1 

if thou use to beat me — ii. 1 

therefore I beat thee. Lo, lo — ii. 1 

more than he has beat my bones .... — ii. 1 

courage may beat down our foes — ii. 2 

he beats me, and I rail at him — ii. 3 

that I conld beat him, whilst — .!.'■•' 

my heart beats thicker tlian — iii. 2 

great Aj ax bravely beat down him .. — iii. 3 

will you beat down the door? — iv. 2 

Polydamus hath beat down Wenon . . — v. 5 
and now he haslieat it out oi'my. Timonof Alh. iii. 6 

with it beat out his brains — iv. 1 

I pr'ythee, beat thy ch-uin — iv. 3 

I'll beat thee, but I should infect .... — iv. 3 

may beat thy gravestone daily — iy. 3 

he'll beat Aufidins' head below Coriolanus, i. 3 

from slaves that apes would beat?.... — i. 4 

we'll beat them to their wives — i. 4 

they had beat you to your trenches? — . ' 6 

so often hast thou beat me — i. 10 

are as often beat for barking — ii- 3 

I could beat forty of them — iii . I 

thou hast beat me out twelve — iv. b 

and beat the messenger who bids beware — iv. 6 
om' enemies have beat us to the pit. ./iii. Co'sar, v. .'i 
the water which they beat, to follow..^n«. ^-Cleo. ii. 2 

he beats thee 'gainst the odds — ii. 3 

his quails ever beat mine, inhooped. . — ii. 3 
of Aetium beat the approaching Csesar — iii. 7 
as he had power to beat me out of Egypt — iv. 1 

we'll beat em into bench-holes — iv. 7 

we have beat him to his camp — iv. 8 

we have beat them to their beds — iv. 8 

if you beat us out of it, it is yours . . Cymbeline, iii. 1 
the rain and wind beat dark" December — iii. 3 
some fool; I am loath to beat thee .. — iv. 2 
beats in this hollow prison . . Titus Andronicus, iii. 2 

when thy poor heart beats -with — iii. 2 

or grass beat down with storms — iv. 4 

on the ragged stones beat forth — -v. 3 

their powei-, to beat us down Pericles, i. 4 

beat at this gate, that let thy folly Lear, i. 4 

one whom I will beat into clamorous — ii. 2 

and beat t'nee, before the king — ii. 2 

or at their chamber door I'll beat the drum — ii. 4 

all feeling else, save what beats there — iii. 4 

strike! beat them do^vn Romeo Sr Juliet, i. ) 

and you beat love down — 1.4 

it beats as it would fall in twenty.... — ii. 5 
with one hand beats cold death aside — iii. 1 
his agile arm beats do\vn their fatal. . — iii. 1 

whose notes do beat the vanity — iii. 5 

but surcease to beat: no warmth .... — iv. 1 

and hems, and beats her heart — iv. .'> 

I'll beat the knave into a twiggen (rep.). Othello, ii. 3 
as one would beat his olfenceless dog — ii. 3 
a tiirbaned Turk beat a Venetian .... — -v. 2 

BEATEN— you have beaten mj^ meTi. Merry Wives, i. 1 
for I have been cozened, and beaten too — iv. a 

is beaten black and blue — iv. 5 

I was beaten myself into all the .... — iv. 5 
I knew not what it was to be beaten.. — v. 1 
and would fain have it beaten away . . Much .4do, v. 1 
if a man will be beaten witli brains . . — v. 4 

I did think to have beaten thee — v. 4 

so is Alcides beaten by his page. . . . Mer. of Ven. ii. 1 
boimd in thy scarf, and beaten, thou..^l(rs Well, ii. 3 
you were beaten in Italy for picking . . — ii. 3 

once heard, and thrice beaten — ii. & 

beaten hence by your strange.. Taming of S. 2 (ind.) 

ye were beaten out of door — 2 (ind.) 

was ever man so beaten? — iv.l 

I am robbed, sir, and beaten .... Winter's Tate, iy. 2 

and be new beaten home? Comedy of Errors, ii. 1 

why am I beaten? (rp;)(?a/ed) — ii. 2 

any man thus beaten out of reason .. — ii. 2 
broke loose, beaten the maids a-row.. — v. 1 

let us be beaten, if we cannot fight Macbeth, v. G 

are we not beaten? is not Anglers lost?. . John, iii. 4 

being beaten, will cry out (rcpea(ed) — v. 2 

eldest son to beaten Douglas ] Henry IV. i. 1 

hath beaten down young Hotspur .2H:'nryiy. (ind.) 

shepherd beaten from thy side iHenryVI. iii. 1 

like the beaten flint — iii. 2 

have in their own land beaten Richard 111. v. 3 

beaten a long time out of play Henry VIII. i. 3 

shake like a field of beaten com — v. 4 

no man is beaten voluntary Troil. Sf Cres. ii. i 

here, sir; I'd have beaten him like. . Coriolanus, iv. 5 

nor walls of beaten brass Julius Ciesar, i. 3 

when thou once wast beaten from. Antony Sf Cleo. i. 4 

the poop was beaten gold — ii. 2 

that ne'er yet beaten liorse of Parthia — iii. 1 
they are beaten, sir; and our advantage — iv. 7 

ott'our coast, twice beaten Cymbeline, iii. 1 

beaten for loyalty e-xeited me to — v. 5 

I'd have thee beaten for being old Lear, i. .'i 

I hear the beaten drum — iv. 6 

in the beaten way of friendsMp IJamic^ ii. 2 



li aATKN— Cassic) luith beaten thee Oilielh, ii. 3 

BEATING — 'tis beiiting in my mini.... J'empesI, i. 2 
to still my beatin? mind — iv. 1 

witli beating on the strangeness — v. I 

can abide the lieating of so strong. Twelflh Nighl, ii. 1 
the highway: Ijtating, and hanging, (fmfer's T. iv. 2 

a million oi' locating niaj' come — iv. 2 

bless tliat cross with otlier beating. Comedy o/^;-. ii. 1 
with beatin;;; wlirn 1 am warm Xrep.) — iv. 4 

speak, heating y.'iir ofliccrs Coriolanus, iii. 3 

must bear ni\ iieatiiii; to his grave — v..') 

heart lieats u'itli i)utni4.'cous beating. TiVh.! .-l.-iri. iii. 2 

the bell then beating one UamM. i. 

whereon his brains still lieating.. — iii. 

will not mend bis pace with beating — v. 

BE ATRICE— to heaven, Beatrice Muck Ado, ii. 

that my lady Beatrice should know me — ii. 

the bitter disposition of Beatrice — ii. 

the lady Beatrice Imth a quai-rel to you — ii. 

ladv Beatrice. I will get you one — ii. 

and the ladv Beatrice into a mountain.. — ii. 

he shall fall in love with Beatrice — ii. 

that your niece Beatrice was in love . . — ii. 3 

she found IBouedick and Beatrice — ii. 3 

here comes Beatrice; by this day — ii. 3 

fair Beatrice, I thank you for your — ii. 3 

find mv cousin Beatrice proposing .... — iii. 

when Beatrice doth come — iii. 

is sick in love with Beatrice.. . ._. — iij. 

now begin, for look where Beatrice .... — iii. 
80 angle we for Beatrice; who even now — iii. 
that Benedick loves Beatrice so entirely — iii. 

never to let Beatrice know of it — iii. 

as ever Beatrice shall couch upon? .... — iii. 
of prouder stutt' than that of Beatrice . . — iii. 

from all fashions, as Beatrice is — ii i. 

to break with hira about Beatrice — i ii. 

played their parts with Beatrice — iii. 

wake rav cousin Beatrice, and desire . . — iii. 
ask my lady Beatrice else, here she comes — iii. 

lady Beatrice, have you wept all — iv. 

by my sword, Beatrice, thou lovest me — iv. 

what offence, sweet Beatrice? — iv. 

tarry, sweet Beatrice — iv. 

Beatrice, — in faith, I will go — iv. 

hear me, Beatrice — iv. 

nay but, Beatrice — iv. 

tarry, good Beatrice: by this hand .... — iv. 
tell "thee how Beatrice praised thy wit.. — v. 
I warrant you, for the love of Beatrice — v. 
helping me to the speech of Beatrice .. — v. 2 

and so, I pray thee, call Beatrice — v. 2 

well, I \vill call Beatrice to you — v. 2 

sweet Beatrice, wouldst thou come .... — v. 2 
an old instance, Beatrice, that lived. ... — v. 2 

which is Beatrice? I answer to _. — v. 4 

his own pure brain, fashioned to Beatrice — v. 4 
thou wouldst have denied Beatrice .... — v. 4 

BEAU — here comes Monsieur le Beau. .4s you Like, i. 2 

bon jour. Monsieur le Beau — i.2 

call him hither, good Monsieur le Beau — i. 2 

BEAT7FORT— Beaufort, that legca-ds. A Henrtj VI. i. 3 
fie, uncle Beaufort! I have heard ... . — iii. 1 
mine uncle Beaufort, and myself . . ..2Ileniy f'l. i. I 

Beaufort, the imperious churchman — i. 3 

at Beaufort's pride, at Somerset's ambition — ii. 2 

impious Beaufort, that false priest — ii. 4 

Beaufort's red sparkling eyes blah — iii. I 

Suifolk and the cardinal Beauifort's means — iii. 2 
myself, and Beaufort, had him in protection — iii. 2 

is BeauCort termed a kite? — iii. 2 

cardinal Beaufort is at point of death. . . . — iii. 2 

speak, Beaufort, to thj' sovereign — iii 3 

Beaufort, it is thy sovereign speaks to thee — iii. 3 

BEAUMOND-lordsof Rose, Beaumond.iJ/c/i. II. ii. 2 

B E AUMONT— Vaurtemont, Beaumont. Henrxj V. iii. h 
Foix, Beaumont, and Marie — iv. 8 

BEAUTEOUS— beauteous mankind is. . Tempest, r. I 
pearls in beauteous ladies' eyes. Two Gen. of Vvr. v. 2 
nature with a beauteous wall doth. r;cf>W/i i\iglil, 1. 2 
I am beloved of beauteous Hermia. . Mid. N. Dr. i. 1 
this beauteous lady Thisby is, certain — v. 1 
lord Perigort, and the beauteous heir.Lore'sL.L. ii. 1 

true, that thou art beauteous — iv. 1 (letter) 

beautifid than beauteous, truer.. .. — iv. 1 (letter) 

hand of tlie most beauteous lady — iv. 2 

eyes of beauteous [Coi. Knl beauty's] — iv. 3 

beauteous as ink ; a good conclusion — v. 2 

beauteous scarf veiling an Indian. .iVfer. of Ven. iii. 2 
eniiugh, andj'oung, and beauteous. 2'a/mV(»o/S/i. i. 2 
as is the other for beauteous modesty — i. 2 
not their beauteous looks, shall win.. — iv. 2 

beauteous and swift, the minions Machetlt, ii. 4 

to seek the beauteous eye of heaven .King John, iv. 2 
embounded in this beauteous clay . , — iv. 3 
most beauteous inn, why should ....Rirhard II. v. 1 
beauteous Margaret hath astonished. 1 Henry VI. v. 5 

given me, in tins beauteous face 2Henry VI. i. 1 

calls your beauteous daughter, wife../iic/i. ///. iv. 4 
thy beauteous princely daughter .... — iv. 4 
and blessed with beauteous wives .... — v. 3 
courtiers of beauteous freedom . . .intoyiy (§- Cleo. ii. 6 
you are a beauteous blossom, suie. TilusAndrnn. iv. 2 

and his beauteous sisters Romeo fy Juliet, i. 2 (note) 

may prove a beauteous flower — ii. 2 

the beauteous inaiesty of Denmark? . . Uamlel, iv. 5 

BEAUTEOUS-EVIL-but the beauteous-evil 

are empty trunks Twelflli Niglit, iii. 4 

BEAUTIED— beantied with plastering.. //amte(, iii. 1 

BEAUTIES— good beauties, let me.Twelftli Nigid, i. 5 
one that composed your beauties . Miti. N. Drcatti, i. 1 
richest beauties on the earth {rep.). . Love's L. L. v. 2 
virtues, beauties, livings, friends . . Mer. of Ven, iii. 2 

examine other beauties Romeo i§- Juliet, i. 1 

all the admired beauties of Verona. ... — i. 2 
their amorous ri tes by their own beauties — iii. 2 
your good beauties be the happy cause . /Mm^tV, iii. 1 
in years, manners, and beauties Othello, ii. 1 

BEAUTIFIEU-you ate beautified. r«'o f;.()/7V;-. iv. 1 
tlie most beautified Ophelia Hamlet, ii. 2 (letter) 



BEAllTIFlED-beautiliid is a vile phrase. Hnm. ii. 2 

BEAUTU'lI li— 1 see her beautit'id. TuoGen. of V. it. 1 
gentle^\'onian, mild, and beautiful. . .. — iv. 4 
yet ofmnnv aironntcd hvuul\fu\. .TuelflliNiglit, ii. 1 

looks boautil'iil in the uniiteinpt — iii. 1 

art as wise as thou art beautiful. . ..MW. A'. /)v.iii. 1 
fair, beautiful tliau beauteous, Loiic's L.L.iv. 1 (let.) 
most beautiful pngan, meist sweet. . Mer. of Ven. ii. 3 
.- a lady far more lieautiful thaii..7',;»ii)ig-o/S. 2 (ind.) 
his youngest daugiiter, beautiful Bianca — i. 2 

because his featjiers are more Ijcautil'ul — iv. 3 

, she's beautiful ; and therefore 1 Henry VI. v. 3 

which was not half so beautiful . . Timon of .Uii. i. 2 
not in fault, for she was beautiful . . Cymbeline, v. 5 
beautiful tyrant ! fiend angelical . . Rom. ^- Jut. iii. 2 

BEAUTIFY— to blush and beautify.2ffenr!/ F/.iii. 2 
to beautify thy triumphs, and return.. Titus And. i. 2 
grace thy marriage-day, I'll beautify. . Pericles, v. 3 
to beautify him, only lacks acover ..iJom. <5-./k(. i. 3 

BEAUTY— grief, that's beauty's canker . Tempest, i. 2 

is the beauty of his daughter — iii. 2 

shows all the beauty of the sun..r«ioGcn. ofVer.i. 3 

that her beauty is exquisite — ii. 1 

no man counts of her beauty — ii. 1 

I account of her beauty — ii. 1 

let her beauty be her wedding-dower — iii. 1 

upon the altar of her beauty — iii. 2 

wlien to her beauty I commend — iv. 2 

for beauty lives with kindness — iv. 2 (song) 

in the holiday time of my heaniY-.Merryn'ives, ii. 1 
[Xnf.] thou hast the right archecl beauty — iii. 3 
60 beauty's a flower Twelftli Night, i. 5 

. exquisite, and unmatchable beauty . . — i. 5 

- 'tis beauty truly blent, whose red.... — i. 5 
give out divers schedules of my beauty — i. 5 

crowned the nonpareil of beauty — i. 5 

virtue is beauty: but — iii. 

beauty ten times louder (rep.) Mea.for Mea. ii. 

affection, limb, nor beauty, to make.. — iii. 
that is cheap in beauty, makes beauty — iii. 

- exceeds her as much in beauty Much Ado, i. 

heretick in the despite of beauty .... — i. 
for beauty is a witch, against w'hose — ii. 

to turn all beauty into thoughts of . . — iv. 

a sonnet in praise of my beauty — v. 

none, but your beauty; would.. iV//d. N. Dream, i. 
sees Helen's beauty in a brow of. . — y. 

my beauty, though but mean. . . . Lovers L. Lost, ii. 
beauty is bought by judgement of. ... — ii. 

I thank my beauty, I am fair — iv. 

see, see, my beauty wall be saved . , — iv. 

ay, my continent of beauty — iv. 

hold, if not to beauty vowed — iv. 2 

beauty doth varnish age, as if — iv. 3 

I may swear, beauty doth beauty lack — iv. 3 
and beauty's crest becomes the heavens — iv. 3 
without the beauty of a woman's face — iv. 3 
teaches such beauty as a woman's 63^6 — iv. 3 

[Co/, ^.'rt^] eyes of beauty's tutors — iv. 3 

a light condition in a beauty dark . . — V. 2 

your beauty, ladies, hath much — v. 2 

look on beauty, and you shall see..M^cr. of Ven. iii. 2 

veiling an Indian beauty — iii. 3 

beauty provoketh thieves sooner . . As you Like it, i. 3 

for honesty coupled to beauty — iii. 2 

what though you have more' beauty — iii. 5 

youth, beauty, wisdom, courage AlVs V/ell, ii. 

his wanton siege before her beauty — iii. 

whose beauty aid astonish the survey .... — v. 

I saw sweet beauty in her face .... taming ofSh.i. 

~ hearing of her beauty, and her wit .. — ii. 
virtues spoke of, and thy beauty .... — ii. 
whereby I see thy beauty («p.) .... — ii. 
spangle heaven with such beauty .... — iv. 5 
embrace her for her beauty's sake.... — iv. 6 
thy beauty as frosts bite the meads . , — v. 2 
ill-seeming, thick, bereft of beauty'.. — v. 2 
never for a piece of beauty rarer. Winter's Tale, iv. 3 
take the winds of March with beauty — iv. 3 

I'U have thy beauty scratched — iv. 3 

flowed with her beauty once — v. 1 

not so rich in worth as beauty — v. 1 

'» the alluring beauty took from my . . Co7n. of Er. ii.*f 
best enamelled, will lose his beauty.. — ii. 1 
since that my beauty cannot please . . — ii. 1 

fli'st, he did praise my beauty — iv. 2 

love should go in quest of beauty King John, ii. 2 

such as she is, in beauty, virtue — ii. 2 

can in this book of beauty read — ii. 2 

as she in beauty, education — ii. 2 

chase the native beauty from his .... — iii. 4 
proud with pm'e and princely beauty — iv. 3 

or when he doomed this beaiity — i v. 3 

and stained the beauty of a fair .... Richardll. iii. 1 

thieves of the day's beauty I Henry IV. i. 2 

smother up his beauty from the world — i. 2 
a stain upon the beauty of all parts . . — iii. 1 

losing both beauty and utility Henry V. v. 2 

that ni layer-up of beauty — v. 2 

that beauty am I blest with 1 Henry VI. i, 2 

. her beauty, and the value of her .... — v. 1 

' O fairest beauty, do not fear — v. 3 

- so seems this gorgeous beauty — v. 3 

*- ay; beauty's princely majesty is .... — v. 3 

near your beauty with my nails ....2Henry VI. i. 3 
that for the beauty thinks it excellent — iii. 1 
and beautj', that the tyrant oft reclaims — v. 2 

'tis beauty, that doth oft make SHenry VI. i. 4 

hath placed thy beauty's ima^c — iii. 3 

fruit maintained with beauty s sun . . — iii. 3 
your beauty was the cause (rep.) . . Richard III. i. 2 
that beauty from my cheeks (rep.) . . — i.2 

I. thy beauty hath, and made them blind — i. 2 
but now tny beauty is proposed my fee — i.2 

- but 'twas tliy beauty that provoked. . — i. 2 
which, in their summer beauty kissed — iv. 3 
her manners, stain her beauty — iv. 4 

- will be the beauty of this kingdom . . Henry VIII. i. 3 

_ where this heaven of beauty sliall — i. 4 

great respect they bear to beauty .... — i. 4 



BEAUTY- () beauty, till now I never. l/eH.Fi/;. i. 4 

« beauty and honour in her arc so .... — ii. 3 

opposing freely the beauty of her ... . — iv. 1 

and true beiuity of tlic soul — iv. 2 

his bc'.iiitv. 'T« ould not become. . Troil. <5- CVes. i. 2 

isnotbirUi,b..;nity,f;i.oil shape — i.2 

my maiik, to defend my tieiinty — i.2 

arid dare avow her beauty and her .. — i. 3 
Cerberus is at Proserpina's beauty .. — ii. 1 

^ pleasures such a beauty brings — ii. 2 

the heart-blood of beauty — iii. 1 

gives us more palm in beauty than . , — iii. 1 

-- outliving beauty's outward — iii. 2 

~ the beauty that is borne here — iii. 3 

beauty! where's thy faith? — v. 2 

if beauty have a soul, this is not .... — v. 2 
commend my service to her beauty . . — v. 5 
by my once commended beauty. . . . Jut.Crrsar, ii. ) 
let witchcraft join with beauty .... Ant. ^ Cleo. ii. 1 
whose beauty claims no worse a husband — ii. 2 

- if beauty, wisdom, modesty, can settle — ii. 2 

her beauty and her brain go not Cymbeline, i. 3 

or let her beauty look tlirough — ii. 4 

no honour, where there is beauty , . . . — ii. 4 
for beauty that made barren — v. 5 

-_ the pri\'ilege your beautj' bears. . Titus Andron. iv. 2 
the beauty of this sinful dame ..Pericles, i. (Gower) 
the purchase of a glorious beaxity .... — i.2 

sits liere, like beauty's child — ii. 2 

which shows that beauty hath — ii. 2 

as my giving out her beauty stir up. . — iv. 3 

with grace, health, beauty, honour Lear, i. 1 

infect lier beauty, you fen-sucked fogs.... — ii. 4 

or dedicate his beauty to the sun Rom. ^ Jul. i. 1 

rich in beauty; only poor, that (icp.) — i. 1 

beauty, starved with her severity (»-ep.) — i. 1 
what doth her beauty serve — i. 1 

.. delight writ there with beauty's pen — i. 3 
her beauty [Co/, it seems she] hangs.. — i. 5 

' beauty too rich for use — i. fy 

^ I ne'er saw true beauty till this night — i. 5 
thy beauty hath made me effeminate — iii. 1 
and her beauty makes this vault .... — t. 3 

poweryet upon thy beauty (?ep.) — v. 3 

if she unmask her beauty to the moon. . Hamlet, i. 3 

the beauty of the world — ii. 2 

no discourse to your beauty (rep.) — iii. 1 

— for the power of beauty will sooner — iii. I 

can translate beauty into his likeness. . . . — iii. 1 

tying her duty, beauty, wdt Othello, i. 2 

if virtue no delighted beauty lack — i. 3 

as having sense of beauty , do omit — ii. 1 

lest her body and beauty unprovide — i v. 1 

he hath a daily beauty m his life — v. 1 

BEAUTY-WANING-beautv-waning.fiic/i. ///. iii. 7 
BEAVER— Harry, withhis beaver on..l Hen. IV. iv. 1 

in charge, their beavers down 2Henry IV. iv. 1 

faintly thro' a rusty beaver peeps Henry V. iv. 2 

1 cleft his beaver, with a downright. .3Henr!/ ;'/. i. 1 
is my beaver easier than it was? . . Richard III. v. 3 
my silver beard in a gold beaver . . . Troil. ^ Cres. i. 3 
O yes, my lord: he wore his beaver up . . Hamlet, i. 2 

BECAME — whiteness so become.. Tieo Gen. ofV. iii. 1 
the Fi-enchman became his surety . . Afer. of Ven. i. Z 

of her nature became as a prey AlVs Well, iv. 3 

her eyes became two spouts Winter's Tale, iii. 3 

Jupiter became a bull, and bellowed — iv. 3 
what pray you, became of Antigonus — v. 2 
became o'f his bark, and his followers — v. 2 
but she became a joyful mother. . Com. of Errors, i. 1 
at eighteen years became inquisitive — i. 1 

what then became of them — v. 1 

nothing in his life became him Macbeth, i. 4 

our will became the servant to defect — ii. 1 
which became him like a prince .... 1 Henry IV. v. 2 
became the accents of the valiant . .2Henry IV. ii. 3 

became a bricklayer, when iHenryVI. iv. 3 

since every Jack became a gentleman.. Ri'cA.///. i. 3 
each folloNving day became the next. Henry VIII. i. 1 
be better, he became her guest .... Ant. ^- Cleo. ii. 2 

in his spring became a harvest Cymbeline, i, 1 

became the life o' the need — v. 3 

what became of liim, I further know not — v. 5 

became his guide, led him, begged Lear, v. 3 

so I alone became their prisoner.. Ham/e.', iv. 6 (let.) 
BECHANCE— happiness bechance. Two Gen. ofV.i. 1 
BECHANCED— a thing bechanced . . Mer. of Ven. i. I 

what hath bechanced them SHenry VI. i. 4 

BECK— more offences at my beck than. . Hamlet, iii. 1 
in his office ready at liis beck. . Taming ofSh. ? (ind.) 

wdien gold and silver becks me King John. iii. 3 

troops of soldiers at their beck? SHnry VI. i. 1 

serving of becks and jutting out .. Timon of .4lh. i. 2 

and that thy beck might from .... Ant. ^- Cleo. iii. 9 

BECKED— whose eye becked forth . . — iv. 10 

BECKON— he beckons with his hand. . 1 Henry VI. i. 4 

it beckons you to go away with it Hamlet^ i. 4 

lago beckons me : now he begins Othello, iv. 1 

BE(JKON£D— one man beckoned . . Timon of.4lh. i. 1 
BECKONING— of Mars beckoning. Troil. i^ Cres. v. 3 
BECOJIE — it would become me as well. Tempest, iii. 1 

she will become thy bed — iii. 2 

your afi'ections would become tender — v. 1 
should become kings of Naples? .... — v. 1 

to become her tutor Two Gen. of Verona, ii. 1 

my master is become a notable lover — ii. 5 
my master is become a hot lover .... — ii. S 
to be fantastic may become a youth. . — ii. 7 

will well become such sweet — iii. 2 

your falsehood shall become you .... — iv. 2 
and now she is become as black as I. . — iv. 4 

do become an old coat well Merry Wives, i. 1 

as it shall become one that woidd. . . . — i. 1 
shall I sir Pandarus of Troy become — i. 3 

that becomes the ship-tire — iii. 3 

mv brows become nothing else — iii. 3 

will become it well — v. 2 

become the forest better than — v. 5 

become the form of my intent .... Twelflh Night, i. 2 
but it becomes me well enough — i. 3 



EEC 



BECOME— shall become thee well. . Twelfih Ni^'lil, i. 4 

what will become of this — ii. 2 

thy smiles becDinc thcc well — ii. 5 

and iKcomo th>' bi>iul-shi\'e — ii- 'j 

hit enoiiLth to lici-oiiio the I'unctiou .. — iv. 'J 

tliut shall hecf.mf him — v. 1 

whii t shall become of tllosc Me,i./ur Mifa. i. ^ 

what shall Ijecome of ine! — i- 2 

in time tlic rod bee<-)mes more mocked — _i. 4 
become them witli one half so good .. — ii- 2 
thy lilcssed youth becomes as aged ... ^ iii. 1 
warm motion to become a kneaded . . — ??.'•' 

tliat it becomes a virtue — iii. 1 

and for the most, become much more — v. 1 
and t»-> be merry best liec<»mes you ,.Mucfi AilOy ii. 1 

become tiie ari^umeut of liis own — ii. 3 

doth not my wit become me rarely .. — iii. 4 

and now is he become a man — iii. 4 

what shall become of tliis? — iy. 1 

well be said, becomesa virtuous. ..il/i(;..V.'s Dr. ii.3 

reason becomes the marshal — ii. 3 

nothing becomes him ill Love's L. Lost, ii. 1 

it would ill become me to be vaiu.... — iv. 2 
beaut>''s crest becomes the heavens . . — iv. 3 

Antonio sliall become bound Merch.ofVen.i. 3 

to Itccomc the follower of so poor .. .. — ii. 2 

parts that bewme thee hapijily — ii. 2 

entl this strife, become a cliristain .. — ii.3 

as shall eon\enieutly become you — ii. 8 

it becomes tiic throned monarch — iv. 1 

he iircscntlv become a christian .... — iv. 1 
and tile niglit, become the touches .. — v. 1 

I will become as liltcral as you — y. 1 

siK'li exercises as may become As you Like it, i. 1 

no more ott'end you than becomes me ■ — i. 1 

it well becomes'the ground — iii. 2 

that tears do not become a man — ?';■■* 

and \et his pride becomes him — iii. 5 

to be'g will not Ijeeome me — (egil.) 

to become the wife of a detesting All's Well, iii. 5 

what further becomes his greatness .. — iii. 6 
it shall become, to serve all holies. .Tumiiiff of Sli. i. 1 

as Iteconies, while I make way — i. 1 

as iiest beromes a gentlewoman — i. 2 

did ever i)i an so become a grove .... — ii. 1 

to clothe you as becomes 3'ou — iv. 2 

tllosc t«o' eyes become that heavenly — iv. 5 
that caji of yours becomes you not .. — v. 2 

and well become the agent iVtnter's Tale, i. 2 

never spoke what did l5eeome you less — i. 2 
brows, they say, become some women — ii. 1 
the oltiee lieeomes a woman best .... — ii. 2 

as might become a lady like me — iii. 2 

your extremes, it not becomes me — iv. 3 

that might become yoiu' time of day — iv. 3 

it becomes thy oath" fidl well — iv. 3 (song) 

best becomes the table — iv. 3 

as siiall become yom* highness — iv. 3 

as it becomes the partner of your — iv. 3 

it becomes none but tradesmen — iv. 3 

and it becomes my marvel — v. 1 

were now become a loss — v. 2 

now, in age, is she become tlie suitor — v. 3 

speak fair, become disloyalty Coinedy n/Er. iii. 2 

60 well thy words become thee Macbeth, i. 2 

I dare do all that may become a man .... — i. 7 

I must become a borrower — iii. 1 

would well become a woman's story .... — iii. 4 
well did he become that lion's robe. . King John, ii. 1 

of your son, becomes a sun — ii.2 

what becomes of me? felloWj begone — iii. 1 
nor thou become thy great birth .... — iii. 1 

anon becomes a mimntain — iii. 4 

when he intendeth to become the field — v. 1 

sliall l^ecome my age Ridmrd II. i. 1 

and both become the grave — ii. 1 

wliat o' God's name, doth become of this — ii. 1 

what is become of Bushy — iii. 2 

shall ill become the flower — iii. 3 

when triiunph is become an alehouse — v. 1 

and so become a rare hangman 1 Henrj/ IT. i. 2 

if I do become yom- physician 'IHeniij Il'.'i.i 

are now become enamoured on — i. 3 

doth this become your place — ii. 1 

if they become me not, he was a fool — ii. 1 
maidenly man at arms are you become — ii. 2 

such things become the hatch — iii. 1 

William is become a good scholar . . - iii. 2 
now is this Vice's dagger become .... — iii. 2 
is the birth, becomes excellent wit . . — iv. 3 

that he is become very hot — iv. 3 

when gold becomes her object — iv. 4 

truth, it very well becomes you .... — v. 2 

how ill wliite hairs become a fool — v. 5 

throne, and make you long become it.. //e/'/-7/.f'. 1. 2 
there's nothing so liecome.^ a man .... — iii. 1 

ill iiiy thfuights, becomes inc best — iii. 3 

tliis becomes the great; sorry am I .. — iii. 5 
ill-favourcrUy become the morning .. — iv. 2 

that shuidd I iccome oiu- country — v. 2 

becomes it thee to taunt liis \llennj 11. iii. 2 

and is become 3'our foe — iv. 1 

wounds become hard- favored death — iv. 7 

in golden palaces, as it becomes — v. 3 

such commendations as become a maid — v. 3 

you shall become true liegeman — v. 4 

what shall of him become ..2 Henry VI. i. 4 (pajier) 
no more than well becomes so good. . — li. 1 

how insolent of late he is become — iii. 1 

thine doth not become a crown — v. 1 

our right valiant father is become . .Z Henry I' I. ii. 1 
my soul's palace is become a prison.. — ii. 1 

becomes it thee to be thus bold — ii.2 

a king, become a banished man .... — iii. 3 

should not become my wife — iv. 1 

that king I^ewis becomes your enemy — iv. 1 

where is 'Warvviek then become .'. — iv. 4 

is to become her husband Rictuird III. i. 1 

to see you are become so peuitent — i. 2 

and to myself become an enemy — ii. 2 



VJ^ 

BKCOiVlE-beeome the scat of majesty. .7f<'c/i.i//. iii. 7 
tlicir bodies as becomes hci:' birth .. — v. 4 
is become as black as if besmeared ..Henryl'III. i. 2 
what shall become of the great didie — ii. 1 

what will Income of me now — iii. 1 

what's heroine of Katharine — iv. 1 

bccoiiK' a churchman better tlian .. .. — v. 2 
think his place becomes thee not .... — v. 2 
'twould not beeomehim, his ovrw's. . Troil. ^- Cres. i. 2 
his smiling becomes him better than — __i. 2 

am become as new into the world — iii. 3 

what's become of the wenching rogues — . v. 4 

does not become a man Timon of Athens, i. 2 

that answer might have become — ii.2 

Athens is become a forest of beasts .. — iv. 3 

tl lese words become your lips — v. 2 

ere we become rakes Coriolanus, i. 1 

how honour would become such — i. 3 

away . you fool ! it more becomes a man — i. 3 

what is become of Marcius — i. 4 

our very priests must become mockers — ii. 1 
the wounds become him on's brows.. — ii. 1 
this ])altering becomes not Rome .. .. — iii. 1 
that integrity which should become it — iii. 1 

such as become a soldier — iii. 3 

and this man is now become a ^od. Julius Ctvsar, i. 2 
it doth become the mouth as well .... — i. 2 
it would become me better, than to close — iii. 1 

in the pulpit as becomes a friend — iii. 1 

and is become the bellows Aiit.^-Cleo.i. I 

whom every thing becomes, to chide — i. 1 

does become the opposite of itself .... — i. 2 
this herculean Roman does become . . — i. 3 

say, this becomes him — i. 4 

the violence of either thee becomes . ■ — i. 5 

and shall become yon well — ii. 2 

vilest things become themselves in her — ii.2 

thy angel becomes a Fear — ii.3 

wliich viiW become you both — ii. 4 

it nothing ill becomes thee — ii. 6 

his captain can, becomes his captain's — iii. 1 
observe how Antony becomes Ms flaw — iii. 10 

dame, whate'er becomes of me — iv. 4 

impatience does become a dog — iv. 13 

more tenderness than doth become . . Cymbeline, i. 2 
satisfy me home, what is become of her — iii. 5 

thoug'h valour becomes thee well — iv. 2 

to become the geek and scorn — v. 4 

a physician would this report become — v. 5 
[Coi.l— would well have become this pla e — v. 5 

give him burial, as becomes Titus .4:idrou. i. 2 

is Laviuia then become so loose — ii. 1 

her continual tears become a deluge — iii. 1 
innocent, becomes not Titus' brother — iii. 2 
thus it shall become high-witted .... — iv. 4 
how well this honest mirth becomes . . Pericles, ii. 1 

for mirth becomes a feast — ii. 3 

will very well become a soldier's — ii.3 

no visor does become black villauy — iv. 4 (Gow.) 

mark how this becomes the house Lear, ii. 4 

most beloved, if all could so become it. . . . — iv. 3 

to be tender-minded does not become — v. 3 

death, becomes thy friend Rom.fyJul. iii. 3 

how the wheel becomes it ! Hamlet, iv. 5 

for youth no less becomes the light — iv. 7 

such a sight as this becomes the field — v. 2 

whatever shall become of Blichael Cassio. Othello, i ii . 3 

BECOMED— might have well beeomed..4n(..$-C/. iii. 7 
would have well becomed[Co(.-become]. . Cymb. v. 5 
gave him what beeomed love I might, itoiii. SfJiU.iv.2 

BECOMEST— thou becomest king . .ZHemyVI. iii. 3 
how bravely thou becomest thy bed. . Cymbeline, ii. 2 

BECOMIN(i-limit of becoming mirth. Loi-e'.si-.L. ii. 1 

so filled, and so becoming tVialer's Tale, iii. 3 

becoming the action of good women. Henry VIII. ii. 3 

since my becomings kill me .intouy Sf Cleo. i. 3 

nothing becoming you, nor satisfying. Cymbeline, iv. 4 
with dignities becoming your estates.. — v. 6 
it had been a kindness becoming well .. Pericles, iv. 4 

BED— can lay to bed for ever Tempest, ii. 1 

she will become thy bed — iii. 2 

bestrew the union of your bed — i v. 1 

iffthat oozy bed, where — v. 1 

my bosom, as a bed Two Gentlemen of Veronn, i. 2 

1 was in love with my bed — ii. 1 

you hie you home to bed — i v. 2 

her graudsire, upon his death's hei.Meriy Wives, i. 1 

make the beds, and do all myself — i. 4 

go to bed when she list — ii.2 

my bed shall be abused — ii.2 

before me to sweet beds of flowers.. Taelfih Xig-hi. i. 1 
togo to bed then, is early (reprnted).. — ii.3 

is to go to bed betimes — • ii.3 

wit enough to lie straight in my bed — ii.3 

for this night, to bed, and dream .... — ii.3 

let's to bed, knight — ii.3 

'tis too late to go to bed now — ii.3 

big enough for the bed of Ware — iii. 2 

wilt thou go to bed, INlalvolio? To bed? — iii. 4 

get him to bed, and let his — v. 1 

But when I came unto my bed — v. 1 Csong) 

I got possession of Julietta's bed.. Mcas. for Mcas. i. 3 

as to a bed that longing I have — ii. 4 

if for this night he entreat you to his bed — iii. 1 

his paved bed would break — v. 1 

as fortunate a bed, as ever Much .,ldo, iii. 1 

bid those that are drunk get them to bed — iii. 3 

till two, and then all to bed . . _. — iii. 3 

she knows the heat of a luxuiious bed — iv. 1 
forsworn his bed and company ..Mid. N. Dream, ii. 2 
to give their bed joy and prosperi ty . . . — ii. 2 

find you out a bed — ii.3 

one heart, one bed, two bosoms . — ii. 3 

here is my bed: sleep give thee — ii.3 

wakes me from my flowery lied — iii. 1 

to have my love to bed, and to arise. . — iii. 1 
already to their wormy tieds arc ^one — iii. 2 
measm-e out my length on this cold lied — iii. 2 
sit thee down upon this tlowciy lied.. — iv. I 
yom' royal walks, yuiu board, ^^nir bed — v. 1 



RED 



BED— sweet friends, to bed Mid. A'.'s Dream, v. 1 

lo^■ers, to bed ; 'tis almost fairy time.. — v. I 
seek the weaiv beds of people sick. . Love's L. L. v. 2 
in a golden bed lies all within ....Mer.of Ven.ii. 7 
take what wile yoii « ill to bed .... — ii. 9 (scroll) 

no bed shall e'er he !'iiilt\- — iii. 2 

let their beds iir made a -'soil, _ iv. 1 

I will ne'er cume in Nnur hed, until.. — v. 1 

nor my husbaiiMs 111 d — v. 1 

or go to bed now, beiiiL' t\\ o — \.\ 

they found the bed uiitreasured .. As you Lil<eil, ii. 2 
without candle may go dark to bed . . — iii. 5 
wit going to vonr neigliliour's bed.. . . — '\\.\ 

blessed boiid of 1 ., .aid and bed ! . . . . _ v. 4 ( song) 

toaloiiL'and well-deserveil bed — v. 4 

on his bed ofdeath many receiiits ....All's ll'ell, ii. 1 

in your hed fold faiier I'l.itiine — ii. .3 

raised iiic from my sickly bed? — ii. 3 

1 have sN\'orn, I Avill not bed her — ii. 3 

the Tuscan wars, and never bed her.. — ij. 3 

conquered my 3'et maiden bed — iv. 2 

gave it to yourself in bed — v. 3 

that I husbanded her bed — v. 3 

that I knew of their going to bed — v. 3 

my bed he hath defiled — \. 3 

to thy cold bed, and warm thee.. 7'njn. ofSli. I find.) 

this were a bed but cold to sleep — 1 (ind.) 

if he were conveyed to bed, wrapped — I (ind.) 

banquet by his bed, anil hrave — 1 (ind.) 

gently, and to hell with him — 1 (ind.) 

the lustful bed on imri.nse trimmed.. — 2 (iiid.V 
all this time ahanile.ned IVoiii your bed — 2 (ind.) 

and come now to hed — 2 (ind.) 

should j"et absent me from your bed. . — 2 (ind.) 

wed her, and bed her, and rid — i. 1 

sweet Katharine, in thy bed — ii. I 

about the making of the lied — iv. 1 

come, Kate, we'll to bed — v. 2 

a fellow of the royal bed Winter's Tale, iii. 2 

that goes to bed with the sun — iw 3 

when you are going to bed — iv. 3 

was brought to bed of twenty — iv. 3 

to die upon the bed my father — iv, 3 

as it becomes the partner of your bed — iv. 3 

to bless the bed of majesty again — v. 1 

but troubles of the marriafje lied.. Comcrf?/ ofEr. ii. 1 

keep fair quarter with Ms hed — ii. 1 

and truce with thy true bed — ii.2 

to truant with your bed — iii. 2 

nor to her bed lio homage — iii. 2 

and as a bed I'll take thee — iii. 2 

always going to bed, and says — iv. 3 

in bed, he slept not, for nvy — v. 1 

didst make him master of thy bed — v. 1 

his pendant bed, and proereant Macbe'li, i. o 

get thee to bed; is this a dagger — ii. 1 

ere you w'cnt to bed, that j^on did lie — ii.3 

rise from her bed, throw her — v. 1 

and again return to bed — v. 1 

who have died holily in their beds — v. 1 

to bed, to bed. Will she go now to bed . . — v. I 
room for him in my husband's bed . . A'liig Jolm, i. 1 
my bed was ever to thy son as true . . — i i . 1 
from their fixed beds of lime had been — ii. 1 

to die in beds that here come — ii- 2 

shall gUd her bridal bed — ii- 2 

lies in lus bed, walks up and down . . — iii. 4 

that bed, that womb, that mettle Ridmrd //. i . 2 

convey me to my bed, then to — ii. 1 

broke the possession of a royal bed . . — Iii. 1 
(Send the hearers weeping to theii' beds ■ — v. 1 

(liave been disloyal to thy bed — y, 2 

'time enough to go bed with a candle. 1 HenrylV. ii. 1 
,a banished woman from my Harry's bed — ii- 2 
gravity out of his bed at midnight. ... — ii. 4 

to the Welsh lady's bed — iii. 1 

tell me, doth he keep his bed? — iv. 1 

it grows late, we'll to bed 2Henry IV. ii. 4 

with the vUe in loathsome beds — \}.\- ^ 

please it your grace, to go to bed .... — iii. 1 
treason's true bed, and yielder up .. — iv. 2 

sit thou by my bed; and hear — iv. 4 

come, cousin hilence ; and then to bed — v. 3 

carry master Silence to bed — v. 3 

very sick, and would to bed Henry V. ii. 1 

I put my hand into the bed — ii.3 

as every sick man in his bed ^ iv. 1 

laid in bed majestical — iv. 1 

oft the bed of blessed raarriaOT — v. 2 

if I did but stir out of my bed \ Henry VI. \. 4 

sleep upon their quiet beds — ii. I 

and leave our beds, hearing alarums — i i . 1 
on the sudden from their tb-owsy beds — ii. 2 

in sleeping on your beds — v. 3 

companion of his mil. tial bed — v. .5 

I banish her, my bed, and company. 2He«ryr-(. ii. 1 

have you laid fair the bed ". .. — iii- 2 

dead in his hed, my lord — iii. 2 

took into her blameful bed some — iii. 2 

died he not in his hed? — iii. 3 

you were best to go to bed, and di'cam — v. 1 

table, Hcju'y, and thy bed ZHenry VI. i. 1 

took a beggar to his bed, and gi*aced.. — ii. 2 
his body couched in a curious bed .. — ii. ."i 

what, will he not to bed? — iv. 3 

attain his easeful western bed — v. 3 

go home to lied, and, like the owl — v. 4 

what, is he in his bed? Richard III. i. 1 

made her widow to a woful bed — i. 2 

in his unlawful bed — iii. 7 

accursed womb, the bed of death .... — i\'. J 

let sorrow haunt thy bed — iv. 1 

never yet one hour in hi shed — iv. 1 

myself, as false to Edward's bed — iv. 4 

thy daughter to a conqueror's hed. ... — iy. 4 
has banished me his tied already ..Henry VIII. iii. 1 

so went to bed ; where eagerly — iv. 2 

I must to bed; call in more — iv. 2 

to him too, before ha go to bed — v. 1 

pr'ythoc, to bed; and in thy prayers — v. I 



BED 



BED-her bed is India; there slie lies.T^vit./jrCrei. j. 1 

upon alazy l«d,tl\elive-lom;day — i. 8 

ou Ills pressed I iwllolUuK — _i. 3 

in tlie lily bed? propofea — iii. 2 

a chamlier oiid a hial, wliich. bed — iii- " 

byd, cliaruber, Paudnj; to — iii- 2 

troulilo him not: to bed, to bed — iv- 2 

iirvlhue now, tubed — iv- 2 

ninv lies thinkia-iu his lied ofthce .. — v- 2 

tliis diiintv bit, llius s;oes to bed — v. 9 

ni;iid,to tliv nnislcr's bed .... Timon of Alliens, iv. 1 

iu (lilterentJiedsi.flust — iv. 3 

detiler of Hymen's pm'est bed — iv. 3 

in tlie embraeenieuts of his bed Coriolamis, i- 3 

wlxose hours, wliose bed, whose raeal — iv. 4 
when I went to bed- Get you to bed./u(. Ctpsar, ii. 1 

every man hence to his idle bed — ii. 1 

iiTii-'ently, Bnitus, stole from ray bed — ii. 1 

t;ood Portia, go to bed — ii. 1 

steal out of his wholesome bed — ii- 1 

ciinifort your bed, and talk to you .. — ii. 1 

shall be,— ilrunk to bed Anl. ^ Cleo. i. 2 

to tumble on the bed of Ptolemy — — 1.4 
gi'eat Ca3sar lay his sword to bed .... — ii. 2 

I drunk him to his bed — ii- 5 

for the best tiuru i' tlie bed — ii. 5 

the beds i' tlie east are soft — ii. 6 

we have beat tliem to their beds — _ iv. 8 

run into 't as to a lover's bed — iv. 12 

take up her bed; and bear — v. 2 

tlian tiiat runagate to yoiu- bed CymheUne,_i. 7 

to bed: take not away the taper .... — ii. 2 
liow bravely thou beeomest thy bed. . — ii. 2 

f >ich tlie adornment of her bed — ii. 2 

tliat vou have tasted her in bed — ii. 4 

played the strumpet in my bed — iii. 4 (let.) 

hil-e to Ms bed! what is it — iii- 4 

th;it'sfalse tahisbed,isit — iii- 4 

(lo't, and to bed then — iii- 4 

have made the ground my bed — iii- 6 

he'll make Ms grave a bed — iv- 2 

to make his bed with the defunet — iv- 2 

ray c^ueen upon a desperate bed — iv- 3 

that IS my bed too, lads — iv. 4 

in tVcshcups, soft beds, sweet words.. — v. 3 

a hangman to iielp Mm to bed — v. 4 

in suit the plaee of his bed — v. .5 

over ehance, in honour's bed Titus Andron.K. 2 

died in honour's lofty bed — iii- 1 

left the eamp to sin m Luereee's bed — iv. 1 

I mean she's brought to bed — iv. 2 

but yesternight was brought to bed . . — iv. 2 

by the detiline of her parent's bed Pericles, i. 1 

to keephis bedof blaekness — _i. 2 

love men in arras, as well as beds — ii. 3 

what haste vou ean, get you to bed — iL 5 

Hymen hath brought the bride to bed — iii. (Gow.) 
he" went to bed to her very deseription . . — iv. 3 

not so awake the beds of eels — iv- 3 

ere she had a husband for her bed Lear, i- 1 

within a dull, stale, tired bed — i. 2 

vouehsafe me raiment, bed, and food . - . . — ii. 4 
ask for me, I am ill, and gone to bed ... . — iii. 3 

go to thy eold bed, and warm thee — iii. 4 

and I'll go to bed at noon — iii. 6 

my fool usurps my bed [Col. Knt. body]. . — iv. 2 
shady eurtains from Aurora's bed. . Romeo <5- Jul. i. 1 
in bed, asleep, wMle they do dream. . — i. 4 

come on, then let's to bed — i. 5 

hath stolen Mm home to bed — ii. 1 

soon to bid good-morrow to thy bed. . — ii- 3 
Romeo hath not been in bed to night — ii. 3 
made you for a highway to my bed . . — iii. 2 
bid her hasten all the house to bed . . — iii. 3 
go you to her ere j'ou go to bed (^rep.) — iii. 4 

ma"ke the bridal bed in that dim — iii. 5 

tMs phial, be'mg then in bed — iv. 1 

comes to rouse thee from thy bed .... — iv. 1 

I'll not to bed to night — iv. 2 

get thee to bed, and" rest — iv. 3 

get you to bed; faith — iv- 4 

let the eounty take you in your bed. . — iv. 5 
with ilowers I strew thy bridal bed . . — v. 3 
why I descend into this bed of death — v. 3 

get thee to bed, Franeiseo Ilamlel, i. 1 

will sate itself in a celestial bed — i. 5 

let not the royal bed of Denmark — _ i. 5 

when second "husband kisses me in bed .. — iii 2 

in her closet, ere you go to bed — iii. 2 

I'll call upon you ere you go to bed — iii. 3 

or in the incestuous pleasiu'es of Ms bed.. — iii. 3 
in the rank sweat of an enseamedbed .. — iii. 4 

but ^o not to my uncle's bed — iii. 4 

the bloat king, tempt you again to bed . . — iii. 4 

go to their gi-aves like beds — iv. 4 

an' thou liadst not come to my bed . . — iv. b (song) 
business, hath raised me from my bed . . Olheilo, i. 3 

my tiirice-di-ivenbedof down — i. 3 

why, go to bed, and sleep — i. 3 

housewifery, and housewives in your Ijcds — ii. 1 
you rise to play, and go to bed to work . . — ii. 1 
bride and groom devesting them for bed.. — ii. 3 

come away to bed, sir, for your hurts — ii. 3 

his bed shall seem a school — iii- 3 

nightlv lie in those unproper beds — iv. 1 

strangle her in her bed, even the bed .... — iv. 1 

lay on my bed my wedding-sheets — iv. 2 

get you to bed on the instant — iv. 3 

he hath commanded me to go to bed — iv. 3 

laid those sheets you bade me on the bed — iv. 3 
thy bed, lust-stained, shall with lust's . . — v. 1 
will you come to bed to-night, Desdemona — v. 2 
my mistress here lies murdered in her bed — v. 2 

look on the tragic loading of this bed — v. 2 

BEDABBLED-bedabbled with the dew.i»/'/d.7V.r).iii.2 
BEDASJIED-trecs bedashed with rain..7iVcA. ///. i. 2 
BEDAUBED— all bedaubed in blood. Kom. fy.lul. iii. 2 
BEDAZZLED-bedazzled with the sun. Tmn. of S. iv. 5 
BEDCHAMBER— your bedchamber.. «ic/mr'///;. i. 2 
own hand, iu his bcdehamber Henry VIII. iiu 2 



[49] 



BEDCHAMBER— of his bedchamber.. Ci/ml/rim.-, i. 1 
I will keep them in my bedchamber — i. 7 

first, her l)ed(!hamber, (where, I confess — ii. 4 
their mother's bcdehamber should .- Tilvs And. iv. 1 
BED-CL(i'l'HES— to his bcd-clothcs ..All's IIVI. iv. 3 
.BEDDED — my son i'the ooze is bcd<lod. Tfripe^t, iii. 3 
wedded her, not bedded her . . All's H'cll, iii. 2 (letter) 

bedded hair, like life in excrements Hamlet, iii. 4 

BEDE— Where's Bedef [CoZder— Bead Knight— 

Peile] Merni Wives of Windsor, v. b 

BEDEOK-should bedeck thy sliupe.Kom. ^- Jnl. iii. 3 
BEDECIvINIi— with such bedeekiuL'. J.../'i'',< L.L. ii. 1 
BEDEW- bedew her pasture's grass'.. A'-cAu/t^ //. iii. 3 

all the tears that should bedew illennj IV. iv. 1 

you now bedew king Henry's 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

BEDFELLOW-with strange bedfellows. Tempest, ii. 2 
were you her bedfellow last night? . . JMudi .4do, iv. 1 
this twelvemonth been her bedfellow — iv. 1 
have that doctor for my bedfellow. . Mer. of Ven. v. 1 
sweet doctor, vou shall be my bedfellow — v. 1 
allot thee for fiis lovely bedfellow. ram/jig-o/S/i. iv. 5 
how doth my cousin, your bedfeUow?.2HeH.iF. iii. 2 
being so troublesome a bedfellow?.... — iv. 4 

the man that was Ms bedfellow , Henry V.ii. 2 

two tender bedfellows for dust Richard HI. iv. 4 

to leave so sweet a bedfellow? Henry Vlll. ii. 2 

tie him not to be their bedfellow .... Coriolanus, ii. 2 

go, you wild bedfellow .intony ^ Cleopatra, i. 2 

but soft! no bedfellow: gods Ci/mMmc, iv. 2 

to seek her as a bedfellow Pericles, i. (Gower) 

BEDFORD— morrow, brother Bedford . Hchi ;/ V. iv. 1 
my noble lord of Bedford, my dear lord — iv. 3 
Harry the king, Bedford, and Exeter — iv. 3 

Bedford, if thou be slack 1 Henry FI. i. 1 

the duke of Bedford had a prisoner . . — i. 4 

the valiant duke of Bedford — iii. 2 

courageous Bedford, let us now — !!!• ^ 

heavens keep old Bedford safe! — H'' ^ 

the noble diike of Bedford, late deceased — iii. 2 

and did my brother Bedford toil 'AHenry VI. i. 1 

Henry's conquest, Bedford's vigilance — i. 1 
BEDIM JIED—bedimmed the noon-tide. Tempe-rf, v. 1 
BED-HANGINGS-thesebed-hangings.2i;<;n./r. ii. 1 

BEDLAM— Bedlam, have done. 1 have John, ii. 1 

ha! art thou Bedlam? Dost thou Henry V. v. 1 

the bedlam brainsick duchess '2 Henry VI. iii. 1 

to Bedlam with him (repealed) — v. 1 

with a sigh like Tom o' Bedlam Lear, i. 2 

proof and precedent of Bedlam beggars — ii. 3 

get the Bedlam to lead Mm — iii. 7 

BE D-MATE-should rob my bed-mate. Troil.^Cr. iv. 1 
BED-PKESSER— this bed-presser . . 1 Henry IV. ii. 4 
BEDRENCH— bedi-ench the fresh . . Richard II. iii. 3 
BED-RID— sick, and bed-rid father. . Love's L. L. i. 1 

lies he not bed-rid? fVinter'sTale iv. 3 

impotent, and bed-rid, scarcely hears . . Hamlet, i. 2 
BED- RITE— no bed-rite shall be paid- Tempest, iv. 1 
BED-ROOM— no bed-room me denv.Mid. N. Dr. ii. 3 
BED-SWER'V^ER-she's a bed-swerver. Winter's T. ii. i 
BED-TIME-after-supperandbed-time.Mirf.A'.jD. v. 1 
afterwards consort you till bed- time.. Com. of Er. i. 2 

I would it were bed- time, Hal 1 Henry IV.y.X 

BEDWARD— tapers burned to bedward . . Coriol. i. 6 
BED- WORK— call this— bed- work ..Troil.^Cres. j. 3 

BEE — than bees that made them Tempest, i. 2 

where the bee sueks there suck I — v. 1 (song) 

and kill the bees, that Two Gen. of Verona^ i. 2 

'tis seldom, when the bee doth leave. 2 Henry/ F. iv. 4 

when, like the bee, tolling from — iv. 4 

and, like the bees, are murdered — iv. 4 

for so work the honey bees Henry V. i. 2 

so bees with smoke 1 Henry VI. i. ,5 

like an angry hive of bees 2 Henry VI. iii. 2 

the bee stings, but I say, 'tis the bee's — iv. 2 
they rob the Hybla bees, and lea.ve. JuliusCiesar, v. 1 
yon bees, that make these looks .... Cymbeline, iii. 2 

like stinging bees in hottest Titus .indron. v. 1 

that rob the bee of her honev Pericles, ii. 1 

BEEF— I am a great eater of "beef . . Tu-efth Night, i. 3 
she hath eaten up all her beef . . Micas, for Meas. iii. 2 

of muttons, beefs, or goats Merchant of Venice, i. 3 

give me conserves of beef. Taming of Shrew, 2 (indue.) 

a piece of beef, and mustard — iv. 3 

why then the beef, and let the — iv. 3 

else you get no beef of Grumio .... — iv. 3 

then the mustard without the beef — iv. 3 

O my sweet beef, I must still 1 Henry I V. iii. 3 

five them great meals of beef Henry V. iii. 7 
Inglish are shrewdly out of beef .... — iii. 7 

in chines of beef, ere thou sleep 2Henrv f^. iv. 10 

BEEF-WITTED— beef-witted lord!. Troil.'^-Cres. ii. 1 

BEEHIVES— but rob beehives 2Henry VJ. iv. 1 

BEER — vilely in me, to desire small beer.-JHcn./f. ii. 2 
the poor creature, small beer . . — ii. 2 

a pot of good double beer, neiglibour.2 Henri/ VI. ii. 3 
felony, to drink small beer — iv. 2 

to suckle fools, and chronicle sraalllieer. OfAeHo, ii. 1 
BEER-BARREL— stop a beer-liarrel .... Hamlet, v. 1 
BEETLE— toads, beetles, bats, light o\\..Tempest, i. 2 
poor beetle, that we tread upon. . . Mea.for Mea. iii. 1 
beetles black, approach not. . Mid. N. Dr. ii. 3 (song) 

the shard-home beetle, with his Macbeth, iiL 2 

fillip me with a tluee-man beetle 2Henry IV. i. 2 

his shards, — and he their beetle Anl. (§- Cleo. iii. 2 

find the sharded beetle in a safer Cymbeline, iii. 3 

show scarce so gross as beetles Lear, iv. 6 

that beetles o'er his base into the sea Hamlet, i. 4 

BEETLE-BROWS— the beetle-brows. «om. (§- Jul. i.4 
BEETLEHEADED— whoreson, beetleheaded, 

flapeared knave Taming of Shrew, iv. 1 

BEE'VES- has he land and beeves ...2HenryIV. iii. 2 
BEFAX— might befal your travel .... Twelfth N. iii. 3 

than what befals myself — iii. 4 

what doth befal you here Mea.forMea. i. I 

the worst that may befal me in . . Mid. N. Dreamy i. 1 
best please me, that befal preposterously — iii. 2 

it doth befal, that I, one Snout — v. 1 

now fair befal your mask Lovers L. Lost, ii. 1 

well, befal what will befal — v. 2 

fiiir be£il thee, good Petruchio. . . . Taming ofSh. v. 2 



BEG 



BEFAIv— so befal my soid, as this . . Com. of Err. v. 1 

happy days befal my gracious Itichardll. i. 1 

whom fair befal in heaven 'mongst .. — ii. 1 

hap did ne'er befal our state 1 Henry VI. i. 6 

110 war, befal thy parting soul — ii. .5 

befal the duke of Somorret ..'illenryVI. i. 4 (paper) 

let me stay, befal what may befal — iii. 2 
more sueh days as these to us befal . . — v. 3 

or what sorrow can befal thee ZHenry VI. iv. 1 

what may befal him, to his harm .... — iv. B 
now fair befal thee, and thy noble ..Richard IIL i. "i 

now fair befal you! he deserved — iii. a 

with the worst that may befal Julius Crrsar, y. 1 

by what did here befal me Antony <5 Cleo. ii. 2 

all joy befal yom* grace, and you . . Cymbeline, iii. 5 

befal wliat may befal, I'll speak Titus And. v. 1 

and ours with thine, befal what fortune' — v. 3 

BEFALLEN— what hath befallen ...Com. of Err. i. 1 
what hath then befallen, or what ...2He:ny II'. i. 1 
tell you things since then befallen ..SHenryVL ii. 1 
misfortune is befallen king Edward.. — iv. 4 
and Lancaster that had befallen us.. Richard III. i. 4 

how now? what hath befallen? Hnmlet, iv. 3 

heartily wish this had not befallen Othello, ii. 3 

you shall understand what hath befallen — v. 2 

BEFEL— how heavily tMsbefel ..Mea.for Mea. iii. 1 

lo, what befell he threw Ms eye.. As you Like it, iv. 3 

what befel me on a day ZHenry VI. iii. 1 

BEFIT— business that we say befits Tempest, ii. 1 

as best befits her wounded reputation. il/nr/i Ado. iv. 1 
how that name befits my composition. ../J(c/i. //. ii. I 

it well befits you should be 2Henry IV. iii. 2 

it ill befits thy state ZHenry VI. iii. 3 

such as befit the pleasures — v. 7 

as befits mine honour to stoop Anl.fr Cleo. ii. 2 

as doth befit our honour Pericles, i. 1 

alas, my father, it befits not me — ii. 3 

his love, and best befits the dark Rom. ^ Jul. ii- 1 

BEFITTED- that it us befitted to bear- - Hamlet, i. 2 
BEFITTING— nor befitting this first . . Tempest, v. 1 
BEFOREHAND— hath been beforehand . . John, v. 7 
BEFORE-TIME— I have before-time. Cor/o/nnws, i. 6 
BEFORTUNE-all good befortune. TvoGen. nfV. iv. 3 
BEFRIEND— thou niayst befriend me . . ..John, v. 6 
and God befriend us, as our cause . . 1 Henry IV. v. 1 
and negligence befriend thee now. . Trail, (f Cres. v. G 

food Servilius, will you befnend.. Timon ofAlh. iii. 2 
shall beseech Mm to befriend . . Julius Crrsar, ii. 4 

1 will liefriend thee more with rain.. Tilus And. iii. 1 
BEFRIBNDED-have us befriended.. 7roi(.<5- Cr. v. 10 

[Knt.} befriended with aptness Cymbeline, ii. 3 

happy man ! they have befriended. . Titus And. iii. 1 
BEG— boon than this I cannot beg. Two Gen. of V. v. 4 
that I do beg his life, if it be sin . . Mea.for Mea. ii. 4 
and doth beg the alms of palsied eld — iii. 1 

and sequent death is all the grace I beg — v. I 
I beg the ancient privilege of Athens.. ATi'd.iV' D.'i. 1 

I do but beg a little changeling — ii. 2 

place can I beg in your love — ii. 2 

if she be by , beg of her for remedy . . — i i i . 2 

and beg her Indian boy — iii. 2 

if I beg the law, the law, upon — iv. I 

make himfawn, and beg, and seek . . Love's L. L. v. 2 

vain petitioner! beg a greater matter — v. 2 

thou bid' St me beg — v. 2 

you cannot beg us, sir, I can — v. 2 

beg mercy of the duke. Beg, that.. Mer. of Ven. iv. 1 

you taught me first to beg — iv. I 

what wilt thou do? beg when As you Like it, i. 1 

wouldst thou have me go and beg — — ii. 3 

but first begs pardon — iiL 5 

therefore, to beg will not — (epil.) 

1 do beg your good- will in this All's Well, i. 3 

you beg a single jaenny more — v. 2 

you beg more than one word then — — v. 2 

but first I lieg pardon — v.3 

and on our knees we beg Winter sTale,'\i. 3 

but that I may beg — _. — iv, 2 

I'd beg your precious mistress — v. 1 

beg thou, or borrow, to make Com. of Errors, i. I 

I shall beg with it from door — iy. 4 

who neither beg, nor fear Macbeth, i. 3 

find him fortune ! and more I beg not — — . \- 7 

upon my knee I beg, go not King John, iii. 1 

iDcg cold comfort — .v. 7 

and to beg enfranchisement Richard II. iii. 3 

I'll beg one boon, and then be gone . . — iv. 1 

I have no need to beg — iv. 1 

and beg thy pardon ere he do — v. 2 

a beggar begs, that never begged — v. 3 

such extenuation let me beg 1 Henry IV. iii. 2 

his livery, and beg Ms peace — iv. 3 

did you beg any? God forbid! — v. 2 

the town's end, to beg during life .... — v. S 
young knave and beg! [Col. begging].2Henr!,' IV.i.S 

it is worse shame to beg than — i. 2 

that I will beg a ragged and forestalled — v. 2 

my speech, to beg your pardon — (epil. ) 

I beg the leading of the vaward Henry V. iv. 3 

on my knee, I beg mortality 1 Henry VI. iv. 5 

for I beg no favour 2Henry VI. i\. i 

make thee beg pardon for thy passed — iii. 2 

aj', but she's come to beg ZHenryVI.iii. I 

I think he means to beg a child — !!!• '^ 

that love, which vu-tue begs, and — — iii. 2 

and at Ms hands beg mercy — y. 1 

and humbly beg the death upon . . Ridiard III. \. 2 
but beg one favour at thy gi'.acious . . — i.'i 
asyou would ber;, were you in my .. — i.4 

this do I beg of heaven, wlien I — iii 

[Coi.] none of you would once beg .. — ii. i 
she now begs, that little thought. . Henry VIII. iii. 1 
purpose, thus to beg a kiss .. Troilus ^Cressida, iii. 2 
may I, sweet lady, beg a kiss of you.. — iv. 4 

why, beg tlien. Why then — iv. ,'r 

I beg of you to know me Timon of Athens, iy. 3 

am bound to beg of my lord general.. Cor/o/anus, i. a 
the people, beg their stinking breaths — ii. I 
to beg of Hob and Dick, that do.. .. — ii. 3 
to beg of thee, it is my more disjinnoiir — iii, 2 



BEG 



[50 J 



BEG-beg enfranchisement for Pul)lius.J«i.C««ar,iii. 1 
() Antony, be^ not your death of ua — iii. 1 

to beg the vo'u'L' mill utterance — iii. I 

yea, beg a ]Kiii- r.r liiiii for meraorv .. — iii. U 

lici; ot'ten oinuwu li:iniis Anlony >\- Cleo. ii. 1 

liif't bosiiK' till 'ivilr.^ty canbeg ' — ii. .I 

tVir he |i:ir;l\ '.-■ - - ( ■ i i;f desu'Cil — iii. 11 

no less li. ; iii. ;■ ■: ' !i::dom — V. 2 

I bci! 'M;i I .^ ,1 ; : ii this jewel C<jmbeUne,ii. 4 

I donot Ijbl tlie'.' bujmy life — v. 5 

and beg for grace iu vain Titus Andron.i. 2 

'tis present dcatli I beg — ii. 3 

•upon my feeble knee I beg this boon — ii. 4 

and his emiircss beg at the gates — iii. 1 

for shame you could not beg for grace — v, 2 
to beg relief among Rome's enenncs — V. 3 

be glad of bread, and beg for it Pericles, i. 4 

ncvci UM'd to beg. No, friend (rcyj.) — ii. 1 

you sail \\'U could not beg — ii. 1 

t' 111'-' of vou, kind friends — ii. 1 

lie-' another of thy daughters Le,ir, i. 4 

else will take the thuig she begs — i. 4 

ou my knees I beg, that you'll — ii. 4 

pension beg to keep base life afoot — ii. 4 

some reason, else he could not beg — iv. 1 

beg pardon of the prince Komeo ^-Juliet, iii. 3 

hang, beg, starve, die i' the streets .. — iii. 5 
fall prostrate here, .and beg your pardon — iv. 2 

what wouldst thou beg, Laertes Hamlel, i. 2 

we beg yoxu- hearing patiently.... — iii, 2 (prol.) 
virtue itself of vice must pai'tlon beg .... — iii. 4 

I'll blessing bei; of you — iii. 4 

to-morrow shall I beg leave to see — iv. 7 (lot.) 

but wish and beg yoirr sudden coming . . — iv. 7 

h.orse, when he meant to beg it — v. 1 

I therefore beg it not, to please Ofbelln, i. 3 

BEGAN— yet you began rudely Twelfih Kighl, i. :> 

my very visor began to assume life . . lilur!iAdn, ii. 1 
my lungs began to crow like ....As you Like il, ii. 7 
this carol they began that hour ... . — v. 3 (song) 

his good melancholy oft began AU'sfMlji. 2 

how her sister began to scold Taming of Sh. i. 1 

wh') began to be much sea-sick . . fP'inler's Tale. v. 2 

that ended wlien I but began — v. 3 

of men, began a fresh assault Macbeth., i. 2 

the wood began to move — v. 5 

began to give me ground 1 Henry ly. ii. 4 

and began to loathe the taste — iii. 2 

and bepau thus: wonder of natru-e ..Henry V. iii. 7 
wl\en the fight began, roused ou .... I Henry VI. ii. 2 

i>Ii5nmoutli first began to reign — ii. 5 

rest where it began at first — iv. 1 

began her devilish practices 'iHcnry VI. iii. 1 

when the dusky sky began to rob — iii. 2 

your qu.arrel? how'began it first? . .ZHenry VI. i. 2 

then began the tempest Richard III. i. 4 

fij'st, I began in private with you.. Henry VIII. W. 4 
how yoimgly he began to serve his. . Coriolanus, ii. 3 
continued to liis country, as he began — iv. 2 

stand in thine, began to water 'uliusCasar, iii. 1 

then began a stop i' the chaser Cymbeline,Y. 3 

he be^an his mistress' picture — v. 5 

■w ho did end, the minute I began Pericles, v. 1 

the strings of life began to crack Lear, v. 3 

were you by, when it began? Romeo Sf Jul. i. 1 

Benvolio, who began this bloody fray? — iii. 1 

speak, who began this? on thy love Othello, ii. 3 

how this foul rout began, who set it on . . — ii. 3 
'tis monstrous. lago, who began it? — ii. 3 

BEtiAN'ST— thou began'st to twist. . . . Much Ado, i. 1 
BilGET— did beget ot him a falsehood . . Tempest, i. 2 

to beget more love in you TwoGen.of Ver. iii. 1 

his eye begets occasion for his mirth. Lnve'sL. L. ii. 1 

as time in Padua shall beget Taming ofSh. i. 1 

if (lid sir Robert did beget us both King John, i. 1 

and not love, begets Ms penitence . . Richard II. v. 3 

and these tv,'0 beget a generation — v. 5 

like the father that begets them IHenry IV. ii. 4 

you called fathers, did beget you Henry V. iii. 1 

and doth beget new courage 1 Henry VI. iii. 3 

1 did beget her, all the parish — v. 4 

is likely to beget more conquerors . . — v. 5 

quarrel daily dothlieget! ZHenry VI. ii. 5 

beget yom- hajipiness, be happy Riciiard III. iv. 3 

I will beget mine issue of your — iv. 4 

live, and beget a happy race of kings — v. 3 

tliis one christening will beget Henry I'lII. v. 3 

begets hot thoughts, and hot 0'ep.).Troil.i>, Ores. iii. 1 

and beget young gibbets Cymbeline, v. 4 

ivill beget a very excellent iiiece.. Titus Andron. ii. 3 
till time beget some careful remedy.. — iv. 3 

they never do beget a coal-black calf v. 1 

pity begets you a"L'nodoninion Pericles, iv. 3 

that beget'st him tliat did thee beget. . — v. 1 
would beget opinion of my more fierce .. Lear, ii. 1 
could not beget such dilferenfissues .... — iv. 3 
must acquire and beget a temperance. . Hamlet, iii. 2 

BEGET'ST— thou that beget'st him .... Pericles, v. 1 

BEGETTING— begetting wonder.. IVinler's Tale, v. 1 

O heavy times, begetting such events .ZHen. VI. ii. 5 

my liege, and blood of your begetting.CwmJcd'nc, v. 5 

BEGGAR- to relieve a blind beggar . . . Temvest, ii. ■> 

like a beggar at Hallowmas Two Gen.nffer. ii. 1 

lies by a beggar, if a beggar dwell. . . TtL-tlflh N. iii. 1 

a beggar; Ciressida was a beggar — iii. 1 

yes, your beggar of fifty . . .". Mca. far Mea. iii. 2 

he would mouth with a beggar — iii. 2 

wdiich now peaches him a beggar — iv. 3 

marriage honourable in abeggar? Much Ado, iii. 4 

took up a beggar's issue — iv. 1 

of the king and the beggar Love'sL. Lost, i. 2 

indubitate beggar Zenelophon .. — iv. 1 (letter) 
the begg-ar, what sawhe (rep.) .. — iv. 1 (letter) 

on whose side? the beggar's — iv. 1 (letter) 

thou the beggar, for so witnesseth — iv. 1 (letter) 

a beggar, that used to come Mrr. of Vcn. iii. 1 

you teach me how a beggar sliould be — iv. 1 

under a bush like a beggar? As you Like il, iii. 3 

I , am not furnished like a bcsgar .. — (epil.i 
•*alt thou needs be a beggar?" All's Well, i. 3 



BEGGAR— the king's a beggar All's IVell (epil.) 

not the beggar then forget. . Tamingof .S7i. 1 (indue.) 
than a poor and loathsome beggar.. — 1 (indue.) 
beggars that come nnto my father's.. — iv. 3 
betwixt the prince and beggar .. IVintcr's Tale, ii. 1 

as a beggar wont her brat Com. of Errors, iv. 4 

of kings, of beggars, old men King John, ii. 2 

lilie a poor beggar, raileth — ii. 2 

or witli pale beggar fear impeach Richard II. i. I 

a beggar begs that never begged before — v. 3 
changed to the beggai- and the king.. — v. 3 

like silly bef;gars, who, sitting in — v. 5 

makes me wish myself a beggar v. 5 

nor moody beggars starring 1 Henry IV. v. 1 

beggars all, beggars all, sir John ■illenryiv. v. 3 

thoncommand'st the beggar's knee . . Henry V. iv. 1 

tliat beggars, mounted, run iHenry VI. i. 4 

took a beggar to bis bed, and graced .. _ ii. 2 

spurn upon thee, beggar, fur thy Richard III. i. 2 

it beggars any man that keeps it — i. 4 

prince whtit fieggar pities not? i. 4 

a bcf'gar, brother? _ iii. l 

you'ir say abeggar, nay — iii. l 

these famished beggars, weary — v. 3 

made it a fool, and beggar Henri^ VIII. i. 1 

a beggar's book outwonhs a noble's .. — i. 1 
beggar the estimation wliich you..7'roi7. f/Cres. ii. 2 

as misers do by beggars — iii. 3 

speaking is for beggars; he wears — iii. 3 

forth the beggars of t!ie world Timon ofAth . i. 1 

show him ivhat a beggar his heai-t is — i. 2 
steal but a beggar's dog, and give it. . — ii. 1 

charitable men afford to beggars .... iii. 2 

I was so unfortunate a beggai — iii. 6 

a dedicated beggar to the air — iv. 2 

raise me tliis beggar, and denude — iv. 3 

the beggar native honour — iv. 3 

be again, wert thou not beggar — iv. 3 

to some she beggar, and compounded — iv. 3 

I had rather be a beggar's dog — iv. 3 

ere thou relieve the beggar — iv. 3 

which they have given lo beggars. . Coriolanus, iii. I 

a beggar's tongue make motion — iii. 2 

when beggars die, there are no fulius Ca-sar, ii. 2 

send to Antony shall die a hssgar. Antojiy .§■ Cleo. i. 5 

the beggar's nurse and Caesar s v. 2 

wouldliave a queen his beggax v. 2 

worth many babes and beggars" — v. 2 

thou took'st a beggar Cymbeline, i. 2 

takingabeggar without more quality — i. 5 
bare tortime of that beggar Posthumus — iii. 5 
two beggars told me I could not ,.. . — iii. 6 

is worse in kings, than beggars — iii. 6 

why, are all your beggars whipped Pericles, ii. 1 

if all your beggars were whipped — ii. 1 

a knave, beggar, coward, pander Lear, il. 2 

of Bedlam 'oeggai-s, wdio, with roaring — ii. 3 

our basest beggars are in the poorest .... — ii. 4 

so beggars marry many — iii. l (song) 

madman and beggar too iv. 1 

a poor unfortunate beggar _ iv. 6 

a farmer's dog bark at a beggar — iv. 6 

they are but beggars that can count.. /?om. <§-/«;. ii. 6 

the beggar's shop is shut — v. 1 

then are our beggars, bodies Hamlet, ii. 2 

outstretched heroes, the beggars' shadows — ii. 2 

beggar that I am, I am even poor — ii. 2 

your fat king, and your lean beggar — iv. 3 

a progress through the guts of a Deggar .. — iv. 3 
a beggar, in his drink, could not have. . Othello, iv. 2 

BEGCr •i.RED— and beggared by the.. Mer. of Ven. ii. 6 

and beggared yours for ever? Macbeth, iii. 1 

seems bankrupt intheir beggared host.Henryr. iv. 2 

it beggared all description Antony S, Cleo. ii. 2 

wherein necessity, of matter beggared.. Horalei, iv. 5 

BEGGARLY— the beggarly thanks. v4syoui.;'/(et(,ii. 5 
rest were ragged, old, and beggarly.. Tam.o/A'/i. iv. 1 

poor and bare ; too beggarly \HenryIV.iv.2 

rascally, beggarly, lousy knave Henry V. iv. 8 

the rascally, scald, beggarly, lousy. ... — v. 1 
my dukedom to a beggarly denier ..Richard III. i. 2 

am yet a courtier beggarly Henri/ VIII. ii. 3 

proud, shallow, beggarly, tliree-suited Lear, ii. 2 

a beggarly accoimt of empty boxes. . Rom. ^Jul. v. 1 
shake me off to beggarh' divorcement. . Othello, iv. 2 

BEGGA'R-MAID- 
Cophetua loved the beggar-maid . . Rom. * Jul. ii. 1 

BEGGAR- JIAN— is it a beggar-man? .... Lear, iv. 1 

BEGG AR- WOMAN— 
wa» by a beggar-woman stolen 2IIcnry VI. iv. 2 

BEGGARY— usurp the lieggary ...Mea.Jor Men. iii. 2 
learning, late deceased iii1)eggary..iV)</. A'. Ur. v. 1 

there is no vice, but beggary T. King John, ii. 2 

countenanced by I)oys, aii(l'beggary.2;7e;iry/;'. iv. 1 
to conclude, reproach, and beggary. .2Hen/ //;'/. iv. 1 

for beggary is valiant .'". — iv. 2 

impotent and snail-paced beggary. fl/e/iarrf ///. iv. 3 
there's begg.Txy in the love that can.. /fni.<5-aeo. i. 1 
pronounce the beggary of his change . Ci/mtcime, i. 7 

dependency but brats and beggary — ii. 3 

naught but beggary and poor looks .. — v. 5 
[Col. A'?iZ.]_contcmpt and beggary. . Rom. ti- Jul. v. 1 

BEGCiED- sir, 'tis well begged ..Twvlfth Night, iii. 1 
more oft than begged or borrowed . . — iii. 4 
in mild terms, begged my patience .Mid.N. Dr. iv. 1 

that begged it as a fee Mer. of Venice, v. 1 

unto the judge that begged it — v. 1 

he begged mine; and neither man .. — v. 1 
and begged the ring, the which I did — v. 1 
I think yon wouldliave begged the ring — v. I 
love I begged for you, he begged . . Com. of Er. iv. 2 
exactly begged your grace's pardon. . Richard I J. i. 1 

begs that never besged before — v. 3 

I should have begged I niiglit bave..l Henry VI. iv. I 

in earnest what I liegged in jest Richard III. v. 1 

O ^vpll becged! Mere be tlie 'biitelier..Coiio/unii», i. 9 

in all t«-;. -a-fa-lhv vices bee'-'ed _ ii. 3 

^^heuhehrL-LVdniii-VMiees;.: - ii. 3 

and on lui- knee hnth br^i'i d JnliusOrsar, ii. 2 

whereon, 1 begged bin jiardun ■i}it.fy Cleo. iii. G 



BEG 

BEGGED— and begged he pardon?..4n?. ^Cleo. iii. 11 
thought to liave begged, or bought. . Cymbeline, iii. 6 
I begged the empire at thy hands.. TiluiAndron. i. 2 
not life that I have begged so long? .. — ii. 3 

led him, begged for him, saved hrni Lear, v. 3 

he begged of me to steal it Olhello, v. 2 

BEGGING— begging but a beggar Twelfth N. iii. 1 

this begging is not strange Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

[Co/.]— a young knave, and begging .i Henry IV. i. 2 

a begging prince what beggar Riciiard III. i. 4 

betwixt thy begging and my — iv. 2 

I have been begging sixteen years. . Henry VIII. ii. 3 
to trouble the poor with begging. . . . Coriolanus, ii. 3 
as begging hermits in their holy. Titus Andron. iii. 3 

fets more mth begging, th m we Pericles, ii. 1 
GG'ST— what begg'st thou thcn.ri7u» Andron. ii. 3 

BEGIN — no, it begins again Tempest, i. 2 

first begins to crow — ii. 1 

I do begin to have bloody thoughts .. — iv. 1 

begin to chase the ignorant fumes — v. 1 

their understanding begins to swell.. — v. 1 

when I to love begin Tuo Gen. of Ver. i. I 

you always end ere you begin — ii. 4 

without advice begin to love her .... — ii. 4 

the sun begins to gild the — v. 1 

falls off, ere it begins — v. 4 

I do begin to perceive, that I Merry iVives, v. 5 

begin, fool; it begins, hold Twelfth Night, ii. 3 

I shall never begin, if I hold — ii. 3 

good, i' faith I Come, begin — ii. 3 

why, that begins my name — ii. 5 

learn to begin thy health .'ilea, for Mea. i. 2 

the vile conclusion I now begin with — v. 1 

now begin ; for look where Much Ado, iii. I 

for the letter that begins them all . . — iii. 4 

Pyramus, you begin ; when Mid.N. Dream, iii. 1 

made senseless things begin to do..., — iii. 2 
her dotage now I do begin to pity . . — iv. 1 
begin these wood-birds but to couple — iv. 1 

come, thy I'envoy ; begin Love'sL. Lost, 'v.i. 1 

now vnW I begin your moral — iii. 1 

how did this argument begin? — iii. 1 

peace, the peal begins — v. 1 

to begin, wench,— so God help me . . — v. 2 

begin, sir; you are my elder — v. 2 

the scene begins to cloud — v. 2 

by the cuckoo: — Ver, begin — v. 2 

begin it,— ding, dong, bell. . Mcr. of Ven. iii. 2 (song) 

there begins ray sadness As you Like it, i. i 

within me, begins to mutiny — i. 1 

is it even so? begin you to grow — i. 1 

and there begins new matter — iv. i 

you must begin, — will you, Orlando — iv. 1 

we will begin these rites — v. 4 

and I'll begin with the women — (epil.) 

and ere I do begin All's iVcll, ii. 5 

and I begin to love, as an old man . . — iii. 2 

they begin to smoke me — iv. 1 

as it begins, shall so persevere — iv. 2 

I begin to love him for this — iv. 3 

you might begin an impudent — iv. 3 

go thy ways, I begin to be aweary — iv. 5 

to begin his wooing, that would .. Taming of Sh. i. 1 

an' he begin once, he'U rail in his — i. 2 

I must begin with rudiments of art . . — iii. 1 

now it begins to work — iii. 2 

now I begin: imprimis, we came — iv. 1 

who shall begin? That will I — v. 2 

first begin with her {repeated') — v. 2 

my favour here begins to warp tv inter's Tale,i.'i 

gasping to begin some speech — iii. 3 

the storm begins; poor wretch — iii. 3 

thought to begin from such a cottage — iv. 1 

when daffodils begin to peer — iv. 2 (song) 

soul vexed, begin, and why to me ! . . — v 1 
would she begin a sect, might quench — v. 1 

you first begin to brawl Comedy of Errors, iv. 3 

why, here begins his morning story . . — v. \ 

things of day begin to droop and Macbeth, iii. 2 

begin to doubt the equivocation — v..") 

leaning on mine elbow, I begin King John, i. 1 

throw down your gage; do you h&givi.liichaid II. i. I 
order the trial, marshal, and begin . . — i. 3 

attending but the signal to begin — i. 3 

thine ej-e begins to speak — v. 3 

how he doth begin to make us 1 Henry IV. i. H 

team begins his progi'ess — iii. 1 

how bloodily the sun begins to peer . . — v. 1 

begin to patch up thine old body 'iHenrylV, ii. 4 

doth begin to melt and drop — ii. 4 

the obstructions, which begin to stop — iv. 1 

then with Scotland first begin Henry V.i. 2 

if I begin the battery once again — iii. 3 

I have heard a sonnet begin so — iii. 7 

yet my blood begins to flatter — v. 2 

the day begins to break, and night . . 1 Henry VI. ii. 2 

the ruin, there begins confusion — iv, 1 

glass, that now begins to run — iv. 2 

we shall begin our ancient bickerings. 2Henry VI. i. 1 
sweet York, begin; and if thy claim — ii. 2 

this knave's tongue begins to double — ii. 3 

wdiose flood begins to flow within — iii. 1 

the rage allays, the rain begins 3 Henry VI. L 4 

ay, now begins a second storm to rise — iii. 3 

so young a thorn begin to prick — v..*) 

I hope, begins our lasting joy — v. 7 

for my name begins with G Richard Ill.i. 1 

and first begin to brawl — i. 3 

tyranny begins to jut upon the — ii. 4 

lie did iny gracious lord, begin that place — iii. 1 
and then' again begin, and stop again — iii. 5 
so, now prosperity begins to mellow — iv. 4 

he begins a new hell in himself Henry VIII. i. 1 

Ulysses, now I begin to relish I'roil.^- Cres. i. 3 

I will begin at thy heel — ii. 1 

beijin to lose their gloss — ii. 3 

airtheGreeks begin bi 'AIT. lii;i Aja:c — iii. 3 

I'll begin So much for Ac. In- — iv. .■■) 

strife before their strokes be rin — iv. ."i 

the Grecians begin to proclaim — v. 4 



BEG 



BEGIN— how the sun bepins to set.. Tioil. ^Cies. v. 9 
nay, ail' you begin to rail on society. . Tini.of Alli, i. 2 

now b<.'j;i'ni> to mend, and nothing — v. 2 

the ;^i>ds begin to nuiek ine C'oriuhiuus^i, \i 

eiirsc begin at every root of liis licart — ii. I 
from >vhere he shoidd begin, and end — ii. I 

to end, where lie was to begin — • v. 5 

begin it with weak straws Julius Cri-sar, i. 3 

any tliinetliat iitliev men begin — ii. 1 

he'bcginsUL'ain tosiiealv — iii. 2 

staled by other nun, begin his fashion — iv. 1 
wlien love begins to sieken and deeay — iv. 2 
where I did be'-'in, thvre ^-ball lend. . — v. 3 
begin to throw I'ompev the e;reat.-l«/.i;iy,SCVeo. i. 2 
let us draw lots, who shall begin .... — ii. 6 
when it apiicurs to nm where this begins — iii. 3 
mine honestv, and i, begin to snuare — iii. U 
w lieu one io -iTat be-iiis to rage .... — iv. 1 

tobi> oriiote, be;jius iietinies — iv. 4 

inul begin tlie ligbt; our will is _ iv. B 

n\y de.-ulatiou does begin to make .. — v. 2 

Mary-buds begin to ope CijinbeUne, ii. 3 (song) 

our song the wdiilst: brother, begin .. — iv. 2 

iind remove him. So; begin — iv. 2 

I will begin the fashion, less without — v. 1 
daughter s ebastity— there it begins — v. 5 

well, ray pcaee we will begin — v. 5 

read, when mine beirins to dazzle . . Titus And. iii. 2 

av, now begin our sorrows — iv. 4 

h"e shall, and then I will begin — v. 1 

their mouths, it' lliey begin tiiery — v. 2 

what they did begin, was, wiih ..Periclcs.i. (Gower) 
now the winds bei;in to blow .... — ii. (Gower.) 

ready to bei-'in the ti-iumph — ii. 2 

beirih to part their IViH-e-o' bright .. — iii. 2 

be^'in to Iind an idle and fond Lear, i. 2 (let.) 

will paek, when it begins to rain — ii. 4 

my wits begin to turn — iii. 2 

he lieirins at enrfew, and walks till . . — iii. 4 

his wits begin to unsettle — iii. 4 

my tears bugin to take Ms part — iii. fi 

thy slayer liegins threats: -whilst thou — iv. 2 
let them begin. I will frown. . ..liameo fy Juliet, i. 1 

in the furthest east begin to draw — i. 1 

shall bitterly begin his fearful date .. — i. 4 
and Konieo 'begin both -with a letter — ii. 4 

I know it beg'ins \nt\\ some other. ... — ii. 4 
this but begiiis the woe, others must end — iii. 1 

if it live in your memory, begin at Hamlet, ii. 2 

'tis not SO; it begins with Pyrrhns — ii. 2 

begin, murderer: leave tliy (/■£■;?.) — iii. 2 

ill pause where I shall first begin — iii. 3 

thus bad begins, and worse remains behind — iii. 4 

ne'er begin [Co/. Knt were ne'er begun] — iv. 3 

as the world were now but to begin — iv. 5 

come, liegin; and you, the judges bear .. — v. 2 

begin to heave the gorge, disrelish Othello, ii. 1 

my blood begins my safer guides to rule — ii. 3 
lago beckons me; now he begins tlie story — iv. 1 

and begin to find myself fobbed in it — iv. 2 

BEGINNER— in the first beginners . . Cijmbeline,_v. 3 

where are the vile beginners of this.iiom. ^Jul. iii. 1 

BEGINNING— forgets the beginning . . Tempest, ii. 1 

no great love in the beginning Merry Wives, i. 1 

there are pretty orders beginning. /Vea. /or il/ca. ii. 1 
when she is beginning to write to hua-MudiAdo, ii. 3 
the true beginningof ourend.Afirf. N.Dr. v. 1 (prol.) 

I will tell you the beginning As you Like it, i. 2 

well, the beginning that is dead — i. 2 

I could match this beginning with. . . . — i. 2 
a strange beginning; borrowed majesty ..John,i. \ 
end of a fray, and the beginning ot..li/i!nri//r. iv. 2 
weak beginnings, lie intreasured ..2Henryiy.\\\. 1 
to liinder our beginnings, we doubt . . Henry V. ii- 2 
we see yonder the beginning of the day — iv. 1 
end of it unknoAvn to the beginning. Coriolanus, iii. 1 
was an ill beginning of the night .Julius Ccesar, iv. 3 

I will never fail beginning Cymbeline, iii. 4 

our heavy haps had their beginning.. Tilus And. v. 3 

I cannot speak anv beginning to this . . Othello, ii. 3 

BEGNAW— conscience still licanaw..i;/o/i<7rrf///. i. 3 

BEGNAWN— begnawn with tlie bots.. Tarn. ofg. iii. 2 

BEGOT— me this; who begotthee. 7Vo Gen. fi/T. iii. 1 

was begot between two stock-fishes. Mea.ybr A/, iii. 1 

there's one wlioui lie begot with child — v. 1 

these are begot in the ventricle . . Love's L. Lost, iv. 2 

whose influence is begot of that loose — v. 2 

how be^ot, how nourished ..Mer. of Ven. iii. 2 (song) 

such a father begot villains As you. Like ilj i. 1 

that was begot of thought — iv. 1 

were well I'K'gnn, and well begot .... — v. 4 
but wbe'r I be as true begot, or no . . King Jolin, i. 1 
that I am as well begot, my liege .... — i. 1 
and I am I, howe'er I was begot .... — i. 1 

when liiehard me begot, if thou — i. 1 

father never wa^- so true begot — ii. 1 

what caniKjiK'er begot tbis lusty .... — ii. 2 
for nothing hath begnt my sometbliig — ii. 2 

the issue ■was not his begi it ;'. iiiinrdfll. iii. 5 

I am a lyastard begot, bastard. . . . Troihis <S- Ovs. v. 8 

excuse be born or e'er Itegot CyntUline, iii. 2 

grandsire, and begot a father to rue . . — v. 4 
first, know thou, I begot liira .... 7 Whs Andron. v. 1 

vou have begot me, bred nie, loved me Lear, i. 1 

twas this flesh begot those pelican — iii. 4 

begot of nothing but vain fantasy . . Itoni. ^- Jul. i. 4 

'tis a monster begot upon itself Othello, iii. 4 

BEGOTTEN— true bc.gotten father. .A/fr. of Vev. ii. 2 

show me a child begotten of AWs Well, iii. 2 (let.) 

innocent babe truly lie.gotteru Winter's T. iii. 2 (oracle) 

no heir ticgotteu of his body 1 Henry VI. ii. 5 

not me begotten of a shepherd — v. 4 

BEGRIiMED— now begrimed and black. 0</iriJo, iii. 3 

BEGUILE — high and low beguile .. Merry Wives, i. 3 

whiles you bcginle the time .... Twelfth Nig/u, iii. 3 

who does liegiiile you — v. 1 

my ancient skill beguiles me .... Men. for Mea. iv. 2 
n tiat and'oean-ted horse hagwyc. Mid. N, Dream, ii. I 
how shall we beguile the lazy time .. — v. 1 
doth light of lisht beguile Lore's L. Lost, i. 1 



ijn 

BEGUILE— to beguile two hours in ..AWsWell,iv. 1 

to beguile the supposition of that — iv. 3 

is there no exoirist, bee iiiles the truer — v. 3 

to beguile I be ol.l I'nU ramingof Sh. i. 2 

that we uiiglit b.gnile Ibe i.ld panlabnui _ iii. 1 
would beguileiuilure oi' ber enstoni.. )r!/i/cr',(7'. iv. 2 

to beguile Ibe time, look like the Marbelh. i. :, 

in prosperity, tbou dost beguile me!./i'i"i7i.,;(; U. iv. 1 
pick aqiuinel to beguile me of it ..I HenrylV. iii. 3 
is't thou that tbink'st to beguile me?.l UenryJ'L i. 2 
and Glostcr's show beguiles him ..'IHenry II. iii. 1 
rudely beguiles our liiis of all . . Troilus f,- Crcs. iv. 4 
the fox would beguile the .... Timnn of Alliens, iv. 3 
and so beguile thy sorrow, till thee. . Tilus/lnd. iv. 1 

Hiiserv could beguile the tyrant's rage Lenr, iv. 8 

pious bonds the better to beguile Ilamlcl, i. 3 

and fain I would beguile the teflious day — iii. 2 

and often did beguile her of her tears Olhello, i. 3 

so let the Turk of Cyjirus ns beguile — i. 3 

but I do beguile the thing I am — ii. 1 

to beguile many, and be beguiled bv one — iv. I 

BEGUILED— beguiled my hopes. Two Gen. offer. v. 4 

tliat beguiled hira of a eliain Merry Wires, iv. 5 

that beguiled master Slender — iv. 5 

how am I beguiled ! Twelfth Night, v. 1 

in choice he is so oft beguiled . ..Mid. N. Dream, i. 1 

hath well beguiled the"lieavy gait — v. 1 

and how she was beguiled Taming of Sh. 2 (ind.) 

you have beguiled me with a counterieit..J'o/i«, iii. 1 
very much beguiled the tedioiisness. iiic/iar»7 II. ii. 3 
in such distraction as beguiled aU ..int. Sr Cleo. iii. 7 
beguiled me to the very heart of loss — iv. 10 

airs not well : Caisar's beguiled — v. 2 

he tliat beguiled you, in a plain accent . . Lear, ii. 2 
not vanquished, but cozened and beguiled — v. 3 
poor ropes, you are beguiled, both..J(om, (§- Jul. iii. 2 
beguiled, divorced, wi'onged (rtp.) .. — iv. 5 
thus begidled your daughter of herself . . Olhello, i. 3 
to besnile many, and be beguiled by one ■ — iv. 1 

BEGUILING— beguiling virgins with.. Henry r. iv. 1 
beguiling them of commendation ..lHeijri//K. iii. 1 

BECiUN-^yon hsive often begun to tell . . Tempest, i. 2 
while ago the world begun . 7'«.-rf/(/( Night, v. 1 (song) 
I have begun; and now I give .... Mea. for Mea. ii. 4 
were well begun, and well begot ..As you Like it, v. 4 
my lord, 'tis but begun . . Tami7tg of Sh. i. 1 (indue.) 

well begun, Tranio — i. 2 

thus have I politicly begun — iv. 1 

since you have begun, liave at you — v. 2 

I have begun to plant thee Macbeth , i. 4 

things, bad begun, make strong — iii. 2 

so is my name begun; Philip King John, i. 1 

all things begun come to ill end — iii. 1 

let this en'! where it begun Richard II. i. 1 

my leave before I have begun — i. 2 

begun upon an honom-able respect .... Henry V. v. 1 
carry armour, as she hath begmi .... 1 Henry I' I. ii. 1 

warrant, begun tlirough malice — iii. 1 

since we liave begmi to strike ZHenry VI. ii. 2 

all designs bcgim on earth below . . Troil. ^ Cres. i. 3 
when such time they have begun . . Coriolanus, iii. 3 

the ides of March begun Julius Ccesar, v. 1 

an end of what I have begun ..Antony S^ Cleo. iv. 12 

since first the world begun Romeo fy Juliet, i. 2 

but, orderly to end where I begun Hamlet,\\i. 2 

\Col. Knl.} my joys were ne'er begun .... — iv. 3 

love is begun by time — iv. 7 

they had begun the play — v. 2 

BEHALF — thy voice in my behalf. . . Merry Wives^ i. 4 
whet yora' gentle thoughts on his behalf — iii. 1 
shall on her behalf change slander . . Much Ado, iv. 1 

too officious ill her behalf Mid. N.'s Dream, iii. 2 

and in that liehalf, bold of your .. lope's L. Lost, ii. 1 
his wise mother wrought in his behalf. A/er.o/ Fen. i. 3 
in the behalf of agooclplay?..../lsj/ouL!7u;i(, (epil.) 
very honest in the belialf of the raa.i<l.All'sWeU, iv. 3 

in behalf of the coimt Rousillon? — iv. 3 

suffer something in my behalf — iv. 4 

to speak in the behalf'of my daughter — iv. 5 

whisper him in your behalts Winler'sTale, iv. 3 

in the liehalf of liis friend — v. 2 

right and true belialf of thy deceased. .&'?!4',/o/in, i. 1 
spread his colours, boj', in thy behalf — ii. 1 
that behalf which we have ciiallenged — ii. 1 

on om' behalf, armies liichnrd II. iii. 3 

in your majesty's behalf I Henry IV. i. 3 

[KnighQ in liis'belialf, I'll empty all. . — i. 3 

both in an unjust behalf — i. 3 

I have much to say in the behalf — • ii. 4 

engross up glorious deeds on my behalf — iii. 2 

even in thy belialf, I'll thank — v. 4 

coming in'behalf of IVance Henry V. v. (chorus) 

my behalf won Id pluck a flower (rep. ). 1 Henry VI. IL 1 
every word you speak in his behan..2Heiiri/rj. iii. 2 
hand of mine hath writ in thy behalf — iv. 1 

the king in my behalf along ZHenry VI. ii. 1 

in our king's behalf, I am commanded — iii. 3 

the broker in mine own behalf — iv. 1 

you in our behalf go levy men — iv. 1 

in the duke's behalf I'll give my Aoico. Jtich.III. iii. 4 

from me to my son in your behalf — iv. 1 

be elociucnt iii my behalf to her — iv. 4 

princes fight in thy behalf — v. 3 

live to coiiie in my behalf . . Troilus ff Cressida, iii. 3 

to rob in tlie behiilf of charity — v. 3 

modesty speak in your own behalf. Timan of -^'A-..!. 2 

in my lord's behalf, I come — iii. 1 

we see, have sided in his behalf Coriolanus, iv. 2 

told as many lies in bis belialf — v. 2 

sands that run i'the clocK s behalf . . Cymbeline, iii. 2 
if you dare venture in your own behalf . . Lear, iv. 2 
got his mortal hurt in iny behalf. . Romeo fr Jul. iii. I 
will do all my abilities in thy behalf ..Olhello, iii. 3 
I have moved my lord in his behalf — iii. 4 

BEHAVE- he did behave his anger. Timon ofAth. iii. 5 

BEHAVED— as he is behaved, if't be . . Ihnnlei, iii. 1 
how have I been behaved, that he Oihelln, iv. 2 

BEIIAVEDST— thou behavedst tliysclf.g lien. VI. iv. 3 

BEIIAVKJUR-and thy behaviour. Two Oen. of V. iv. 4 
tlie hardest voice of her behaviour. . Merry Wives, i. 3 



EEH 



BEIIAVIOUll— unweighed behaviour.. JI/crryJF. ii. 1 

teach the eliiMicn tbeir bchavioiU'S .. — iv. 4 
there i:- e i: ir br .i , . ,!,■ ii, than. .. .Twelfth Night, \. 2 
jiraci' 111 : I. bi^ own shadow — ii. .') 

the I 1 : lie gentleman — iii. 4 

hciii!!- II. [ii I . , .If lo love ..MuehAdo,\\.'.; 
hatb I.I I !l i.e: , 1 .| I ,1 ■ -1 ,11, ■, --vcnied — ii. 3 
all iii ; 1 ;. 1 i. I I 11. i .1-1 ii- ..Lore's L. L. ii. 1 

hisgi I, i.ii I,, :,,. , ; ;..;;.. ; i.-aious — v. i 

bebai iour, \, li;u .leii Ijnm, iili iiiis man — v. 2 
and his behaviour everywhere . . Mereh. of Venice, i. 2 

lest, through thy wild behavioiu- — ii. 2 

as the bciiaviourof the country is..flsyo«LiV.(!i7, iii. 2 

60 grossly shown in thy behaviours All's Well. i. 3 

over-eyeing of his odd behaviour. Tarn, of Sh. 1 (ind.) 
maid's mild behaviour and sobrietj' .. — i. 1 
for learning, and behaviour, fit for her — i. 2 

qualities, and mild behaviour — ii. 1 

hiding his bitter jests in blunt behaviour — iii. 2 

in my behaviour to the majesty Kim; John, i. 1 

borrow their beliaviours from the great — v. 1 

this loose behaviour I tlirow off 1 IlenrylV. i. 2 

cause hath my behaviour given Henry VIII. ii. i 

to use so rude behavioiu'; go to, kneel — iv. 2 

mark his behaviour; we ai'e not Coriolanus, ii. 3 

soil, perhaps, to my behaviours Julius Ctesar, i. 2 

when I have envied thy behavioiu'. . Ant. ^- Cleo. ii. (J 

often the surfeit of our own behaviour Lear, i. 1 

a very gross kind of behavioui' iilom. ^-Jul. ii. 4 

to make enquiry of Ms behaviour Hamlet, ii. 1 

your behaviour hath struck her — iii. 2 

smiles, gestures, and light behaviour . . Olhello, iv. 1 

BEHEAI)- take him away, and be]iead.27/eH. I'l. iv. 7 

BEHEADED-Claiidiowasbeheaded.jUca./oj.i/fa, v. ! 
beheaded publicly for his oft'ence .Com. rf Errors, v. 1 

noble eai'l, and was beheaded MIcnry VI. ii. 5 

well, he shall be beheaded for it ■lIU'iun VI. W. 7 

the lords you talk of are beheaded. ///c'l-i/ J III. iii. 2 
fell faults our brothers were beheaded. Titns .ind. v. 3 

BEHELD— beheld the king my father . . Tempest, i. 2 

that if you now beheld them — v. 1 

freshly beheld oiu' royal, good — v. 1 

her picture I have yet beheld . . Two Gen. of Ver. ii. 4 
any madness, I ever yet beheld . . Merry Wires, iv. 2 

you saw the mistress, I beheld Mer. of Vev. iii. 2 

I never yet belield that special . . Taming ofSh.ii. 1 

that have beheld me give away — iii. 2 

hast thou beheld a fresher gentlewoman — iv. 6 
she the fairest I have yet behold. . Winler'sTale, v. 1 
there might you have beheld one joy — v. 2 

till now infixed I beheld myself KingJohn, ii. 2 

have you beheld, or have you read .. — iv. 3 

pageant have we here beheld Richard II. iv. 1 

when I beheld in London streets — v. 5 

slie hath beheld the man whose 1 Jfeiiji/ VI. ii. 2 

of you have mine eyes beheld l<:i-hurd HI. ii. 4 

beheld them, when they lighted He'iry VIII. i. 1 

on his own part beheld 7 Vo/7. i*; Cres. ii. 3 

hadst thou beheld— Pray now Coriolanus, i. B 

•those that have beheld the doing — i. 9 

Bonie among you have beheld me — iii. 1 

thou hast oft beheld heart-hardening — iv. 1 
[A'n(.— beheld dissensions numbers! .. — iv. B 

thatlbeheld: mine eyes int. )^- Cleo. Mi. ^ 

beheld this man; commend unto — iv. 8 

never be beheld of eyes again — v. 2 

out-lustres many I have beheld Cymbeline, 1. 5 

whom you Goths beheld alive .... Titus Andron. i. 2 

beheld his tears, and laughed — v. l 

strangers ne'er beheld, but wondered . . Pericles, i. i 
nonethat beheld him, but like lesser — ii. 3 

BEHEST— wlioUy to my behests . . Love's L. Lost, v. 2 
with care perform Ms great behest . . Cymbelin/i, v. 4 

BEHIND-HAND— 

of my behind-li,aud slaekuess Winter's Tale, v. 1 

BEHOLD— once a day behold this maid-. Tempest, i. 2 

behold, sir king, the \^Tonged duke — v. 1 

behold her that gave aim to Two Gen. of Ver. v. 4 

Milan [Coi. Verona] shall not behold [Coi. hold] - v. 4 
will you go with us to behold it . . Merry H'ires, ii. ! 

behold what honest clothes you — iv. 2 

shall not behold her face at ample. Twelfth Night, i. i 
behold, behold, where madam .... Mea. .for Mea. i. 2 

and to behold his sway — i. 4 

behold, how like a maid she \i\\\B\\cs.Much.ido, iv. J 
behold the ni"ht of our solemnities. . Mid. N. Dr. i. S 
power to say, behold! the jaws.. — i. l 

when Phcebe doth behold her sil vev — J. 1 

do but behold the tears . . Lore's L. Lost, iv. 3 (verse.) 

I might behold addrest the king — v. 2 

not to behold— once to behold {rep. ) . . — v. 2 

look on me, behold the window — \.t 

but my outside to behold ... /l/cr. of Ven. ii. 7 (ecit;1!1 

behold, there stand the caskets — ii. 9 

if they behold a cat ; and tethers — iv. 1 

O, liehold this ring, whose high All's Well, v. 3 

and now behold tlie meaning — v. 3 

behold, my lords, although tlic i>riiit. '/'■|?i(e.'''s7". ii. 3 
if powers (livine behold om-lraman .. — iii. 2 

for, behold me, a fello^^ — iii. 2 

behold tlie sternness of )iis iivcseiice .. — iv *,t 
any thing that \ou beluibl the while — iv. 3 

erethey can behold briebt Plia bus .. — iv. S 
wdiere he is to behold him, with flics — iv. 3 
behold; and sav, 'tis well; Hike your — v. 3 

if youcanliehdldit, I'ilmake — _t. 3 

would behold in me this slianieful..Com. o/iTr. iv. i 

we will beliold his death — v. ! 

mighty duke, behold a man — v. i 

pry thee, see there! behold! look! .llacbelh,iii. i 

can behold such sights, and keep — iii. -1 

I am sick at heart when I behold — v. 3 

behold, where stands the usnriier's — v. 7 

behold, the French, amazed King John, ii. I 

from off our towers we might behold — ii. 2 

must I behold my pretty Arthur — iii. 4 

those eyes of yours behold another day — v. 4 
tiiere to behold our cousin HereforcL.ifti'c/iard/J. i. 2 

like a king; behold his eye — jii.3 

yet look up; behold; that you — v. 1 



BEH 



BEHOLD— to behold the face of that.-lHfHr!//;'. i. 3 

If thou didst, then behold that — ii. 4 

do you behold these exhalations .... — ii. 4 

behold yourself 60 by a son 2IJenr\j IV. v. 2 

mnnarchs to liehold the swelling. . Henry V. i. (cho.) 

to behold his lion's whelp — i 2 

it ia most lamentable to behold — ii. I 

and in them behold, upon the hempen — iii. (cho.) 
behold the thrcaden sails, borne .... — iii. (cho.) 
and behold a city on the inconstant — iii. (eho.l 
behold the ordnance on their — iii. (cho.) 

now, who will behold the royal . . — iv. (cho.) 
mean and gentle all, behold, as may — iv. (cho) 
we then behold their natural tears?.. — iv. 2 
do but behold your poor and starved — iv. 2 

behold the English beach — v. feho.) 

but now behold, in the quick forge — v. (cho.) 

are we to behold your face — v. 2 

are now glad to behold yoiff eyes — v. 2 

behold my sighs aud tears \HcnryVl. iii. 1 

behold, niy lord of Winchester — iii. 1 

behold, this is the happy wedding .. — iii. 2 
behold the wounds, the most unnatural — iii. 3 

you mav bcliold confusion ■ — iv. 1 

must I behold thy timeless cruel .... — v. 4 
behold and hear our exorcisms? . . ..iHenry VI. i. 4 

your highnes.^ to behold the light — _ii. 3 

unworthy to behold the same — iv. 4 

apparel sumptuous to behold — iv. 7 

true, father, behold his blood ZUenry VJ. i. 1 

make king Lewit behold thy sly — iii. 3 

behold this pattern of thy butcheries.. iJi'c/i./n.i. 2 
to da V shalt thou behold a subject die — iij. 3 
liebofd, mine arm is like a blasted .. — iii. 4 
[ /i;i;.]— never more behold thy face . . — iv. 4 
through the clouds behold this present — v. 1 
let's stand close, and behold him . . Henry VIII. ii. 1 

and behold the lady Anne pass — iv. 1 

and be'aold that chair stand empty . . — v. 2 
now living can behold that goodness — y. 4 
cheeks abashed behold our vforks-.TroiLSr Cress, i. 3 
aud anon, behold the strong-ribbed. . — i. 3 
when Helenus beholds a Grecian ... . — ii. 2 
behold itself, not going from itself .. — iii. 2 

till he behold them formed — iii. 2 

and to behold his visage, even to ... . — iii. 3 
behold thy till. Nay, I have done . . — i^'. 5 

behold, I pray you! Now — v. 2 

upon that sleeve; behold it well .... — v. 2 

behold, destruction, frenzy — X- 3 

a better feast never behold. . . . Timon of Athens^ iii. 6 

behold, the earth hath roots — iv. 3 

let me behold thy face — .iy. 3 

behold! these are the tribunes .... Coriolanus, iii. 1 

and therein behold themselves — iii. 1 

behold \^Knt. beheld] dissentious nmuhcrs — iv. 6 

behold now presently, and swoon — v. 2 

nay, behold us; this boy, that caimot — v. 3 

behold, the heavens do ope — v. 3 

behold our patroness, the life of Rome — v. 4 
whiles they behold a greater than. . JuliusCcesar, i. 2 

when they behold their infants — iii. 1 

when vou but behold our Ca3sar's.... — iii. 2 

come down, behold no more — y. 3 

a stnmipet's fool: behold and see. Antony ^-Cleo. i. 1 
to behold a foul knave uncuckolded — i. 2 

didst thou behold Oetavia — iii. 3 

the number of the ships behold — }!!• 8 

1 can behold no longer — iii. 8 

behold it stained with his most noble — v. 1 
see, Caasar! O, behold, how pomp.... — v. 2 
where is the queen? Behold, sir .... — a;. 2 

behold the sun with as tirra eyes Cymleline,_\. 5 

once more let me behold it — ii. 4 

behold divineness no elder than a boy — iii. 6 

behold their quartered fires — iy. 4 

behold the poor remains, alive Titus Andron. i. 2 

behold, I choose thee, Tamora — i. 2 

never man's eye may behold my body — ii. 3 

once to behold the thing ■ — ii. 4 

now I behold thy lively body so? — iii. 1 

to behold oiu: cheeks how thej are . . — iii. 1 
can the son's eye behold his father . . — v. 3 
behold tliis child, of this was Tamora — v. .s 
the place where you behold us now . . — v. 3 

Tlialiard, behold, here's poison Pericles, i. 1 

she is alive, behold her eyelids — iii. 2 

beiiold him, sir; this was a goodly . . — v. 1 

not to behold this shameful lodging Lear, ii. 2 

there thou mightst behold the great — iv. 6 

behold, it is the privilege of mine honour — v. 3 

one of them we behold — v. 3 

to liehold this night earth-treading.. i2o7H.«§-./i/^ i. 2 

this night you shall behold him — i. 3 

ere I again behold my Romeo — iii. 5 

till I beliold liim — dead — is my poor. . — iii. o 

or, behold, 'twi.xt my extremes — iv. 1 

that ever, ever, I did yet behold — iv. 6 

partly, to behold ray lady's face — v. 3 

but soft, behold! lo, where it comes .... Hamlet, i. 1 
and now behold, O Gertrude, Gertrude — iv. 5 

O liehold, the riches of the ship Otliello, ii. 1 

and behold what innovation it makes — ii. 3 
grossly gape on? behold her tupped. ... — iii. 3 

behold her well, I pray you, look — v. 1 

behold! I have a weapon — v. 2 

BEHOLDEN— she is beholden to. Ta-oGen. of V. iv. 4 
be beholden to his friend for umiui.Merry^Vives, i. 1 
little beholden ICol. beholding] io.Mea.forMea. iv. 3 
we be beholden [Col. beholding] to. . Mer. of Ven. i. 3 

you are fain to be beholden to As youLiUe it, iv. 1 

generally beholden ICol. beholding]. 7'am/ng-o/S. i. 2 
been more kindly beholden \^Col. beholding] — ii. 1 

to whom am I beholden for these KingJohn, i. 1 

little are we beholden to your love . Richard II. iv. 1 
vou are more beholden to the night. 1 Henri/ /F. ii. 1 

nave been beholden to him Richard ///. ii. 1 

then is he more beholden to you — iii. 1 

my lord Sands, I am beholden to . . Henry VIII. i. 4 
have been beholden [Coi. beholding] — iv. 1 



r 52 1 



BElIOLDEN-beholden to a subject.. n™i;/r///. v. 2 
good brethren, I am much beholden . . — v. 4 
Brutus' sake, I ara beholden to... Julius Ctrsur, iii. 2 
hefindBhimsclf beholden to us all .. — iii. 2 
is she not then beholden to the man . . Tilus.Uid. i. 2 
are beholden to you, good Andronicus — v. 3 

I am beholden to you for your Pericles, ii. t> 

BEHOLDER— the beholders take. . As yon Lilie it. i. 2 
but the wisest beholder, that knew.. Winter's T. v. 2 

did make beholders wink RtcAon/ //. iv. 1 

to hurl at the beholders of my shame.lHfn??/;'/. i. 4 
and the beholders of this tragic play. Rich. ill. iv. 4 

to tell you, fair beholders Troilus 6-Cres. (prol.) 

BEHOLt)EST— yet thou beholdest . . Coriolamis. v. 2 
here thou viewest, beholdest . . Love's L. L. i. 1 (let.) 
sraallest orb, ■which thou beholdest. Wer. of Ven. v. 1 
Eros, thou vet beholdest me? . . Antony frCleo. iv. 12 
BEHOLDIlSfG—C Co/.] little beholding. A/ea./orjl/. iv. 3 
iCol.'] shall we be beholding to you .Mer. of Ven. i. 3 

iCol.'] rest generally beholding Taming of Sh. i. 2 

[Co(.] more kindly beholding to you.. — ii. 1 

would, by beholding him, have ^HenrylV. rv, 4 

pale before, beholding him Henry V. iv. (cho.) 

playing on the lute, beholding 1 Henry VI. i. 4 

I cloy me with beholding it Richard III. iv. 4 

[Coi.J should have been beholding,. Zfenn/ VIII. iv. 1 
such rich beholding as they have. Trail. ^ Cres. iii. 3 

an hour from her beholding Coriolanus, i. 3 

I am wild in my beholding Pericles, v. 1 

father, are not fit for your Tbeholding .... Lear, iii. 7 

BEHOOF— kings for your behoof. . ..iHenry VI. iv. 7 

BEHOVE— behove my knowledge .. Winter'sTale, i. 2 

therefore it behoves men to be wary — iv. 3 

preferment, behoves it us to labour . .2Henry VI. i. 1 

perforce, behoves me keep at Cymbeline, iii. I 

as it behoves my daughter Hamlet, i. 3 

ah, my behove, O, methought — v. 1 (song) 

BEHOVEFUL-behovefulforoiu:state.7?om.,S-jMi.iv. 3 
BEHOWL-the wolf behowds the moon..M!rf.JV.D. v. 2 

BEING— gave me my being Taming of SItrew, i. 1 

and influence to their whole being. Timon ofAth. v. 1 
took such sorrow, that he quit heing.. Cymbeline, i. 1 

to shift his being, is to exchange — i. 6 

whence we had our being, and our birth. Pericles, i. 2 
shatter all his bulk, and end his being. . Hamlet, ii. 1 

I fetch my life and being from men Othello, i. 2 

BEL— sometune like god Bel's priests. AfwcA.4do, iii. 3 

BELARITJS- myself, Belarius ■, . Cymbeline, iii. 3 

a subject, who was called Belarius — v. 5 

am that Belarius, whom you — v. 5 

by Belarius stolen, for many years — v. 5 

BELCH — sea hath caused to belch up . . Tempest, iii. 3 
Belch! How now, sir Toby Belch? . . Twelfth N. i. 3 
almost burst to belch it in the sea . . Richard III. i. 4 

tb.e bitterness of it I now belch Cymbeline, iii. 5 

when they are full, they belch us Othello, iii. 4 

BELCHED— as hath been belched on . . Pericles, iv. (i 
BELCHES— that it belches upon us ... . — iii. 2 
BELCHING— the belching whale.. Troii. <g- Cres. v. 5 

lamps, the belching whale Pericles, iii. 1 

BELDAM — have I not reason, beldams. Afac6e/A, iii. 5 
old men. and beldams, in the streets. iiT!)!^ John, iv. 2 

shakes the old beldam earth 1 Henryl V. iii. 1 

beldam, I think, we watched you iHenry VI. i. 4 

BE-LEE D— must be be-lee'd and calmed. OrtpHo, i. 1 
BELFRY— been that day in the belfry . . Pericles, ii. I 
BELGIA — where stood BeXgia... Comedy of Errors, Iii. 2 
Edward from Belgia, with hasty . . . .SHenryVI. iv. 8 
BELIE— yet belie thy happy years. . Tu-elfihNight. i. 4 

to belie him, I will not, and more All's Well, iv. 3 

thou art not holy to belie me so King John, iii. 4 

I should belie my thousshts Richard II. ii. 2 

dost belie him, Bercy, thou dost belie. .1 Hen. IV. i. 3 

that doth belie the dead iHenry IV. i. 1 

doth belie all corners of the world . . Cymbeline, iii. 4 
we say, lie on her, when they belie her..O(/ie/to, iv. 1 
thou dost belie her, and thou art a devil — v. 2 

BELIED— my cousin is belied Much Ado, iv. 1 

my soul doth tell me. Hero is belied. . — v. 1 

thou hast belied mine innocent — v. 1 

and lastly , they have belied a lady . . — r. 1 
I have belied a lady, the princess .... Cymbeline, v. 2 

BELIEF— into a received belief Meri-y Wires, v. 5 

my niece is already in the belief. Twelfth Night, iii. 4 
draw a belief from you, to do ....As you Like it, v. 2 

within the prospect of belief Macbeth, i. 3 

which was to my belief witnessed — iv. 3 

and let belisf and life encounter King John, iii. 1 

liolds belief that, being brought — v. 7 

she's in a wrong belief, I go \HenryVI.ii.3 

of Caisar's carries beyond Delief.v4n(o7;i/ ^ Cleo. iii. 7 
wounding his belief in her renown . . Cymbeline, v. 5 
how belief may suffer by to\il.. Pericles, iv. 4 (Gower) 

but answer to my just belief — v. I 

mil not let belief take hold of liim Hamlet, i. 1 

belief of it oppresses me already Othello, i. 1 

BELIEST— thou beliest thyself MtichAdo,v.l 

BELIEVE— did believe he was the duke. Tempest, i. 2 
believe me, sir, it carries a brave form .... — i. 2 

I do well believe yoiu: liighness — ii. 1 

I Arill believe that there are unicorns .... — iii. 3 

I'll believe both; and what does — iii. 3 

would they believe me? — iii. 3 

believe that there were mountaineers .... — iii. 3 

I do believe it, against an oracle — iv. 1 

will not let you believe things certain — v. 1 

no, believe me Tua Uenllcmenof Verona, ii. 1 

so I believe ; but Thurio — iii. 1 

he hath : believe me Merry Wives of Windsor, i. I 

nay, I'll ne'er believe that — ii. 1 

believe it. Page; he speaks sense — ii. I 



I will not believe such a Catalan 
for, believe me, I hear the parson 

I do believe the swearer 

believe it, for you know it 

believe me, there's no such thing 



ii. I 

ii. 1 

ii. 2 

ii. 2 

iii. 3 



yet of thee I will believe Twelfth Night, 

and, I believe, that does harm — i . :i 

no, believe me — i. 4 

dear lord, believe it — i. 4 



BEL 



BELIEVE— over-far believe that. . TwelfthNight, ii. I 

can ever believe such imiiossible .. — iii. 2 

that he believes himself, so do not I — iii. 4 

will you make me believe, that T . . — iv. ! 

make him believe thou art sir Topas — iv.2 

believe me, I am not — iv.2 

nay, I'll ne'er believe a madman . . — iv. 2 
I believe thee ; for, I think, thou ..Mea.forMea.i.i 

believe me, this may be — 12 

believe not that the dribbling dart — i. 4 

do not believe it — i. 5 

wdiom I believe to be most strait .. — ii. 1 

believe this, no ceremony — ii . 3 

sir, believe this, I had ra'ther give . . — ii. 4 

believe me on mine honour — ii. 4 

who ■will believe thee, Isabel? — ii. 4 

who would believe me? O perilous — ii. 4 

I do make myself believe, that you — iii. 1 

canst thou believe thy living is a life — iii. 2 

and I believe, I know the cause — iii. 2 

I can hardly believe that, since you — iii. 2 

let me excuse me, and believe me . . — iv. 1 

I do constantly believe you — iv. 1 

I believe, there comes no countermand — iv. 2 

believe it, royal prince, if he be less — v. 1 

if she be mad (as I believe no other) — v. 1 

we did believe no less — v. 1 

my lord, most villanously, believe it — v. 1 

not I, believe me Much Ado about Nothing, ii. 1 

they will scarcely believe this — ii. 2 

I believe it better than renortingly . , — iii. I 

surely, I do believe your fair cousin . . — iv. 1 

but believe me not; and yet Hie not — iv. 1 

that I believe, said she, for he swore — v. ) 

who, I believe, was packed in all this — v. 1 
do not believe but I shall do thee . . Mid. N. Dr. ii. 2 

I believe, we must leave the killing. . — iii. 1 

I'll believe as soon, this whole — iii. 2 

believe me, kin " of shadows — iii. 2 

I never may believe these antique . . — v. 1 

I believe, although I am so loa.th. Love's L. Lost, i. 1 
believe me sir, had I such venture. . Mer. of Ven. i. 1 

believe me, no: I thank my fortune.. — i- 1 

believe me, you are marvellously ... . — i. 1 

made her neighbours believe she wept — iii. 1 

Nerissa teaches me what to believe . . — v. 1 

and she believes, wherever they. . As you Like it, ii. 2 

believe I love. Me believe it? (_rep.) — iii. 2 



believe then if you please 
dost thou believe, Orlando 



— V. 2 
, ., V. 4 

I sometimes do believCj and sometimes — v. 4 
I do not all believe: 'tis my slowness.. ,i4H's Well,\. 3 
I could neither believe, nor misdoubt — i. 3 

dost thou believe't? Ay, madam — i. 3 

believe not thy disdain, but presently — ii. 3 
and believe this of me, there can be . . — ii. 5 
and believe't the duke will lay upon — iii. 2 

I believe with him, in argument . . — iii..') 
believe it, my lord, in mine own .... — iii. 6 

1 should believe you; for you have .. — iii. 7 
would you believe my oaths, when I — iv. 2 

as, I believe you are, you must — iv. 3 

nor believe he can have every thing — iv. 3 

could win me to believe, more than. . — v. 3 

do not believe him — v. 3 

believe me, lord, I think Taming ofSh. 1 (ind.) 

believe me, sister, of all the men — ii. 1 

'tis incredible to believe how much . . — ii . 1 

I may believe, yet I mistrust — iii. 1 

I must believe my master — iii. 1 

not I, believe me; thus I'll visit — iii. 2 

his mother says, if I may believe her — v. 1 

I believe, 'a means to cozen — v. 1 

believe me, sir, they butt together . . — v. 2 

believe me, I speak as my Winter'sTale,]. 1 

but I cannot believe this crack to be — i. 2 

I must believe you, sir — i. 2 

I do believe thee : I saw his heart .... — i. 2 

you would believe my saying — ii. 1 

I do believe it. Do not you fear — ii. 2 

I do believe, Hermione hath suifered — iii. 3 

his own report, and I believe it — iv. 3 

believe me, thou talkest of an admirable — iv. 3 
1 do well believe, excels whatever . . — v. 3 

make us but believe, being Comedy of Er. iii. 2 

you are now bound to believe him .... — v. 1 

I believe, drink gave thee the lie Macbeth, ii. 3 

what I believe, ru wail (rep.) — iv. 3 

believe me, I do not believe thee King John, iii. 1 

as true, as, I believe, you think — iii. 1 

teach me to believe this sorrow — iii. ! 

and I do fearfully believe, 'tis done . . — iv. 2 
yet, believe me, prince, I am not .... — v. 2 
we do believe thee, and beshrew my . . — v. 4 

well believe thou ai't my friend — v. 6 

into my hands, never believe me ! . . Richard //. ii. 2 
believe me, noble lord, I am a stranger — ii. 3 

king, believe not this hard hearted — v. 3 
for I well believe thou wilt not . . . .1 Henry I V. ii. 3 

but he would make you believe it — ii. 4 

make me believe, tluu thou artonly — iii. 2 

wilt thou believe me, Hal':' — iii. 3 

force you to belie^-e that which I 'iHciirylV. i. I 

who shall believe, but you misuse.. — iv.2 

believe me, I am passing light in — iv.2 

believe not the word of the noble .... — iv. 3 
princes all, believe me, I beseech you — v. 2 

hear, note, and believe in heart Henry V. i. 2 

but, I believe, as cold anight as 'tis.. — iv. 1 

1 do believe, your majesty takes no . . — iv. 7 
believe vaj words, for they are certain. 1 Henry VI. i. 2 
believe me, lords, my tender yeai-s .. — iii. 1 
believe me, lords, for flying at the . .iHenryVI. ii. ; 
believe me, cousin Gloster, had not . . — ii. 1 
believe me, lords, were none more.... — iii. 1 

I do believe that \iolent hands — iii. 2 

base peasants, do ye believe him? — iv. 8 

well guessed, believe me SHenry VI. iv. .'i 

either not bclie\''-:' the euvious Hicfiard III. i. 3 

I'll not believe fCol. Knt. think] but — i. 3 



BEL 



[53] 



B ELIEVE— now they believe it Richardlll. i. 3 

ciiuld not believe but that I was in hell — i. 4 

thy mind, nnd beliuvo him not — 1.4 

llii'li^NX'. will iK'\'orstancl uiiri^ht .. — iii. 2 
or :ilmcist believe, (wcrc't not, tlmt .. — iii. f) 

out lit' hope they nia,\' believe Henry I'lII. (prol.) 

1 believe, not aW; we must not — i. 2 

tliey are breiith I not believe in — ii. 2 

lielieve nie, thcre'san ill opinion .... — ii. 2 
l'elie\c nic, she has had )uuch wrong — iii. 1 

I'elieve it, tliis is true — iii. 2 

lins the king this? Believe it — iii. 2 

slwi'tly. I lielieve, his second marriage — iii. 2 

a niyal traiiij lielicve me — iv. 1 

believe me, sir, slie is the goodliest .. — iv. 1 
I do believe it: fir they passed ., Troil.fr Cress, iii. 3 

1 mnst not believe you — Iv. 5 

to tell me so, I'd not believe thee .... — iv. 5 
I'roud Dionied, believe I eome to .... — v. 3 
I ilo lielieve thee;— live (repeated) .... — V. 4 
lielieve't, dear lord you mend . . Timon of.ithens, i. 1 

tye, no, do not believe it (rep.) — iii. 2 

believe't, my lord and I have made . . — iii. 4 
what then? believe't, that we'll do . . — iv. 3 

of flesh, and not believes himself — iv. 3 

I'll believe him as an enemy — iv. 3 

and believe it, my most honom-ed lord — iv. 3 
believe me. sirs, we shall be charged .Corzoianus, i. 6 

thou'lt not believe thy deeds — i. 9 

and believe't not lightly — iv. 1 

I'd not believe them more thiin thee. . — Iv. 5 
believe it, O believe it, most dangerously — v. 3 
I do believe, that these applauses.. Judiis Ccpsar, i. 2 

for, I believe, they are portentous — i. 3 

believe me for mine honour (repealed) — iii. 2 
believe not so. I but believe it partly — v. 1 

believe it, till I weep too .intonyfy Cleo. iii. 2 

believe not all, or if you must believe — iii. 4 
and believe, Caesar's no merchant. ... — v. 2 

but he that will believe all that — v. 2 

I do well believe you Cymbeline, i. 1 

believe it sir: I have seen him — i. 5 

I could not but believe she excelled. . — i. 5 
I do believe, (statist tho' I am none — ii. 4 

must iirst induce you to believe — ii. 4 

noor fools believe false teachers — iii. 4 

he believes it is a thing most precious — iii. b 
would not believe her lips in opening it — v. 5 
believe me, queen, your swarth . . Titus Andron. ii. 3 

how canst thou believe an oath — v. 1 

believe't I will: now, by yoiu* Pericles, ii. 1 

I believe you; your honour and your — iii. 3 

believe me, la, I never killed a mouse . . — iv. 1 
Tericles believe his daughter's dead — iv. 4 (Gow.) 
I'll believe thee, and make my senses .... — v. 1 

you said you would believe me — v. 1 

you'll scarce believe me (repeated) — v. 1 

which to believe of her, must be a faith Lear, i. 1 

he will not believe a fool — i. 4 

thoul't not believe, of how depraved — ii. 4 

not I, believe me: you have dancing. Bom. 4- Jul. i. 4 

my idolatiy, and ru believe thee — ii. 2 

believe me, love, it was the nightingale — iii. 5 

shall I believe that unsubstantial — v. 3 

I might not this believe, without Hamlet, i. 1 

heard, and do in part believe it — i. 1 

fits your wisdom so far to believe it — i. 3 

do you believe his tenders, as you call . . — i. 3 
for lord Hamlet, helieve so m^ich in him — i. 3 

Ophelia, do not believe his vows - i. 3 

I believe, it is a fetch of warrant — ii. 1 

most best, believe it. Adieu — ii. 2 (let.) 

powerfidlj' and potently belie%'e — ii. 2 

indeed, my lord, you made me believe so — iii. 1 
arrant knaves, all; believe none of us.... — iii. 1 
but yet I do believe, the origin — iii. 1 

1 do believe you think what now you . . — iii. 2 

I pray you. Believe me, I cannot — iii. 2 

do not believe it. Believe what? — iv. 2 

no, believe me, 'tis very cold — v. 2 

believe me, an absolute gentleman — v. 2 

never believe it; I am more — v. 2 

do not believe, that from the sense of all. Othello, i. 1 

and prays you to believe him — i. 3 

I cannot believe that in her _ ii. 1 

that Cassio, loves her, I do well believe it — ii. 1 

surely, Cassio, I believe, received — ii. 3 

I do believe, 'twas he. How now — iii. 3 

heaven mocks itself! I'll not believe it — iii. 3 

believe me, I had rather have lost — iii. 4 

Greater reason to believe now than ever . . — iv. 2 
I do believe it, and I ask your pardon — v. 2 

BELIEVED— to be much believed.Mea./or Mea. ii. 4 
not lieing believed, or wring redress . . — v. 1 

scarce make that be believe'd All's Welt, iv. 1 

I have too much believed mine. . Winter's Tale, iii. 2 
I have heard (but not believed) the . . — iii . 3 
thesejuggliug fiends no more believed.. MacicW, v. 7 
I would not have believed no tongue. K(H;g-./o/m,iv. 1 

wliat he bears may be believed \Hem-y ly.i. 2 

ifl in;iy be lielievcd, so; if not — v. 4 

tliou wbiildst snear to be believed .Richard III. iv. 4 

that Bevis was lielieved Henry VIlI.l. 1 

which, being believed, it was much . . — i. 2 
let it not be believed for womanhood. Trail, t; Cr. v. 2 

not strong enough to be believedj Cymbeline, ii. 4 

let pity not be believed ! irar, i v. 3 

you shoidd not have believed me Ilmnli-t, iii. 1 

my lord, tliis would not be believed uiheltn, iv. 1 

BELIEVING— no believing you.Tu'o Gen. nffcr. ii. 1 
to be saved by believing riglitly..r!/T/Y2/i Xigh!,m. 2 

there is no believing old signs Much Ado, iii. 2 

from belie\'ing thee a vessel of too .ill's Welt, ii. 3 

that to l)elieving souls gives light . .2Heiiry VI. ii. 1 v 

BELIEVEST- as thou believest . . Mea. for Mea. v. 1 
swear by? Tliou believest no God . . Titus And. v. 1 

BELIKE—belike it hath some. . Two Gen. of Ver. i. 2 
belike, boy, then you are in love .... — ii. 1 

belike, that now she hath — ii. 4 

belike, she tliinks tlmt Troteus — iv. 4 



BELIKE— she's dead, belike . . Two Gen. of Ver. iv. 4 

who belike, having received Merry Wives, iii. 1 

belike, you slew great number ..TwelfihKighl, iii. 3 

belike, this is a man of that quirk — iii. 4 

lord Angelo, belike, thinking me. il/m./or Mea. iv. 2 

a ghostly father, belike — v. 1 

this a good friar, belike! v. 1 

belike, for want of rain Mid. N. Dream, i. 1 

some merry mocking lord, belike . Love'sL. Lost, ii. 1 

then, belike your hand is in — iv. 1 

of honour, so belike, is that All's Well, iv. 5 

that sounds: belike, some TamingofSh. 1 (ind.) 

as though belike, I knew not what .. — i. 1 
O then, belike, you fancy riches more — ii. 1 
more commendable : belike, you mean — iv. 3 
came to me; belike, you thought .Comedi/o/i?)-.iv. 1 

belike, his wife, acquainted with — iv. 3 

belike, it is the bishop of Carlisle . . Richard II. iii. 3 

belike then, ray appetite was illenryJ V. ii. 2 

O then, belike, she was old and gentle. Henri; V. iii. 7 
belike, your lordship takes us .... 1 Henry VI. iii. 2 

then you, belike, suspect these IHenry VI. iii. 2 

belike, he means (backed by SHenry VI. i. 1 

'twas odds, belike, when valiant — ii. 1 

so brave? belike, he thinks me Henry — iv. 1 
belike, she minds to play the Amazon — iv. 1 

belike, the elder; Clarence will — iv. 1 

to-morrow, then, belike, shall lie — iv. 3 

that l)e? belike, unlooked-for friends — v. 1 

O belike, his majesty hath some Richardlll. i. 1 

aiming, belike, at your interior — i. 3 

belike, they had some notice Julius Cmsar, iii. 2 

then, belike, my children shall Ant. <5- Cleo. i. 2 

belike, 'tis but a ruinour — iv. 3 

belike, somethiufj, I know not what Lear, iv. 5 

belike, this show imports the argument. Hamlet, iii. 2 

why then, belike, he likes it not — iii. 2 

but that, belike, lago in the interim .... Othello, v. 2 

BELL— ding dong bell Tempest, i. 2 (song) 

in a cowslip's bell I lie — v. 1 (song) 

the Windsor bell hath struck Merry Wives, y. 5 

or the beUs of saint Bennet TwelflhNighl,v. 1 

hath a heart as sound as a bell Much Ado, iii. 2 

than the bell rings, and — v. 2 

but matched in mouth like bells . . . Mid. A'. D r. iv. 1 
dong, bell. Ding, dong, bell.^icr. ofVen.ni. 2 (song) 
been where bells have knolled . . As you Like it, ii. 7 
have with holy bell been knolled .... — ii. 7 

the falcon Iier bells, so man — iii. 3 

twelve upon the beU, my mistress . . Com. of Err. i. 2 

no, no, the bell: 'tis time — iv. 2 

she strike upon the bell Macbeth, ii. 1 

the bell invites me ii. 1 

IKnt.'] countenance this horror! ring the bell - ii. 3 

ring your bells : kin» John King John, ii. 2 

bell. Book, and candle, shall not — iii. 3 

if the midnight bell did — iii. 3 

strike upon my heart, which is the hell.Rich. II. v. 5 
as a sullen bell remembered knolling.2HeH»-y;r. i. 1 

or a common 'larum bell? — iii. 1 

assembled by the bell, encircled — iv. 2 

and bid the merry bells ring — iv. 4 

why ring not out the bells 1 Henry VI. i. 6 

a warning bell, sings heavy — iv. 2 

ashehis bells. Fiill often 2HenryVI.in. I 

ring, bells, aloud; burn, bonfires — v. 1 

if Warwick shake his bells ZHenry VI. i. 1 

shall be thy funeral bell — ii. 5 

worse than the scarin" bell Henry VIII. iii. 2 

let's mock the midnight bell Ant. ^ Cleo. iii. 1 1 

no mournful bell shall ring TitusAndron. v. 3 

church, steeple, bells, and all Pericles, ii. 1 

kept such a janglmg of the bells — ii. 1 

till he cast bells, steeple, ehui-eh — ii. 1 

the curfew bell hath rung Rom. fy Jul. iv. 4 

our instruments, to melancholy bells — iv. 5 

this sight of death is as a bell — v. 3 

the bell then beating one Hamlet^ i. 1 

like sweet bells jangled out of tune — iii. 1 

the bringing home of bell and burial — v. 1 

the snorting citizens with the bell Othello, i. 1 

out of doors, bells in your parlours — ii. 1 

till the bell hath told eleven — ii. 2 

silence that dreadful bell, it frights — ii. 3 

BELLARIO— hand, doctor Bellario..')/<;r.o/ Ven. iii. 4 
unless Bellario, a learned doctor .... — iv. 1 
from Bellario? From both ('rep.) .. .. — iv. 1 
this letter from Bellario doth commend — iv. 1 
the court shall bear Bellario's letter. . — iv. 1 
you hear the learned Bellai'io, what he — iv. 1 

came you from old Bellario? — iv. 1 

it comes from Padua, from Bellario.. — iv. 1 

BELLE— la plus belle Katharine HenryV. v. 2 

BELLIES— hearts in their bellies.. ..IHenry/r. iv. 2 
so they come by great bellies ..Timon of Athens, i. 1 

BELLMAN— the fatal bellman Macbelli, ii. 2 

BELLONA— till that Bellona's bridegroom — i. 2 

BELLOW — raven doth bellow for revenge. Ha;n. iii. 2 

BELLOWED— a bull, and bellowed.. Winter's T. iv. 3 

and bellowed out as he'd biu'st. . . Love's L. Lost, v. 3 

have so strutted, and bellowed Hamlet, iii. 2 

BELLOWING— burst of bellowing ....Tempest, ii. 1 

fetching mad bounds, belloNving.iV/er. of Venice, v. 1 

BELLOWS— is become the bellows ....Anl.^Ceo. i. 1 

flattery is the bellows blows up sin Pericles, i. 2 

BELLOWS-MENDER— 
Francis Flute, the bellows-mender. M/rf. N.'sDr. i. 2 
the bellows-mender! Snout the tinker ! — iv. 1 
BELL-WETHER— 
with a jealous rotten bell-wether. Jl/erry Wives, iii. 5 

to be bawd to a bell-wether As you Like it, iii. 2 

BELLY — sometimes my portly helly. Merry Wives, i. 3 

so many tuns of oil in his belly — ii. 1 

my belly's as cold as if I had — iii. 5 

I have my belly full of ford — iii..') 

dare not for my hejid till my belly. Mea.forMea. iv. 3 
the child bra^s in her belly already. Love's L. L.v.2 
blood in's belly than will sup a flea . . — v. 2 
the getting up of the negro's belly. Mer. of Ven. iii. .5 
in fair round belly Asyou Like it, ii. 7 



BEL 

BELLY— put a man into your bellv./ls you Like, iii. 2 
my heart in my belly, ere I . . Taming of Shrew, iv. 1 
no barricado for a belly; know it. . Winier'sTnle, i. 2 

with the pudding in his belly lllenrylV. ii. 4 

I would my face were in yom- belly.. iii. 3 

I am tlie fellow with the great hel\Y..2HenryIV. i. 2 
a decreasing leg? an increasing belly? — i, 2 

with something a round belly — i. 2 

subi5tanee into that fat belly of his .. — ii. I 
he made a shrewd thrust at your belly — ii. 4 

of tongues in this belly of mine — iv. 3 

an' I had but a belly of any inditferency — iv. 3 
underneath the bellv of their stceds.3H?7/ri/ VI. ii. 3 
upon my back, to defend my belly. Trail. 4- Cm: i. 2 

wears his wit in his belly — ii. i 

members rebelled against the belly.. Coriolanus, i. I 

the belly answered, — Well, sir (rfp.).. i. 1 

I may make the belly smile, as well . . — i. 1 

your belly's answer: what! — i. 1 

by the cormorant belly be restrained . . — i. 1 

what could the belly answer? — i. 1 

you'll hear the belly's answer — i. 1 

yoiir most grave belly was deliberate . . — i. 1 

(this says the belly), mark me — i. 1 

the senators of Rome are this good belly — i. 1 

hath his belly full of fighting Cymbeline, ii. 1 

and when I had been in his Delly Pericles, ii. 1 

Hopdance cries in Tom's belly Lear, iii. 6 

BELLY'D— and being great hAly'd.Mea.forMea. ii. 1 
with full consent belly'd his sails.. Troil.&Cres. ii. 2 
BELLY-DOUBLET- 

crossed on your thin belly-doublet.. Loi-c'si.L. iii. 1 
BFLLY-FULL— rumble thy bellv-full . . Lear, iii. 2 
BELLY-PINCHED-the belly-pinched wolf - iii. 1 
BELMAN—Belman is as goocl.. ram. o/'S/i. 1 (indue.) 
BELMONT— in Belmont is a lady ..Mer. of Ven. i. 1 

which makes her seat of Belmont — i. 1 

to furnish thee to Belmont, to fair .. — i. 1 

I must go with you to Belmont — ii. 2 

will we both fly toward Belmont — iv. 1 

run from Venice, as far as Belmont.. — v. 1 
before the break of day be here at Belmont — v. 1 
BELOCKED— fast belocked in thine.. Mea.forMea.Y. 1 
BELONG— what belongs to a frippery.. TeTiipesf, iv. 1 
belong you to the lady Olivia. . . . Twelfth Night, v. 1 
we know what belongs to a watch . . Much Ado, iii. 3 
of sale a seller's praise belongs ..Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 

what doth to you belong, it were — v. 2 

to our rose of youth rightly belong All's Well, i. 3 

here it is, and all that belongs to't — ii. 2 

(yet not so deeply as to thee belongs). Tam.of S. ii. 1 
and all things' that belong to house .. — ii. 1 
and what shame else belongs to't. Winter'sTale, iv. 3 

not thy embassage belong to me Richard II. iii. 4 

this honourable bounty shall belong.l Henry IV. v. 5 
if there were, it not belongs to you..2HenryIV. iv. 1 
particular belong unto the lodging . . — iv. 4 
know the office that belongs to such.. 1 Hen. VI. iii. 1 

that doth belong unto the house — iii. 1 

duty that to us belongs iHenry VI. iii. 1 

judgement only doth belong to thee — iii. 2 

as I belong to worship, and aflect . . Henry Fill. i. 1 
no great ottence belongs to't, give your — v. 1 

I belong to the larder, belong to — v. 3 

you not chiefly belong to my heart. Timon ofAth.i.2 

no blame belongs to thee — ii. 2 

one tliat knows what belongs to reason — iii. 1 

which to a mother's part belongs Coriolanus, v. 3 

the tears belong to Egypt Antony',^- Cleupaira, i. 3 

all that belongs to this Cymbeline, v. 5 

here is more belongs to her . . TitnsAndronicus, ii. 3 

your tributary drops belong to woe. Rom. fyjul. iii. 2 

BELONGED-neeessity belonged to't.. Tim. of A. iii. 2 

indeed, belonged to such a trifie Othello, v. 2 

BELONGING-and thy belongings.. Tl/en. /or Mea. i. 1 
belonging to whom? Tomvtortunes.Loi'e'.!l.L. ii. 1 
appertinents belonging to his honour.. Henri/ F. ii. 2 
give him with all his trim belonging. Corio/anu.s, i. 9 
any other part belonging to a man. Womeo ffJul. ii. 2 
BELOVED- how well beloved . . Two Gen. of Ver. i. 3 

where they're beloved — v. 4 

cannot love where he's beloved — v. 4 

of the creature that is beloved . . Twelfth Night, ii. 4 

to the unknown beloved — ii, 5 

I am beloved of beauteous Hermia.. .ilHrf. A'. Z)r. i. 1 
fairly spoke by a beloved prince . . Mer. of Ven. iii. 2 
and no less beloved of her uncle . . As you Like it, i. 1 

of all sorts enchantingly beloved — i. 1 

being before his beloved mistress — iv. I 

my best beloved and approved fi-iend.. Tam.of Sh. i. 2 

so beloved of me. Beloved of me — i. 2 

your sou was beloved in Padua — v. 1 

one of us too much beloved Winter's Tale, iii. 2 

break my oath to this my fair beloved — iv. 3 
highly beloved, second to none. . Com. of Errors, v. 1 
the Protector's wife, beloved of hini..2Henryr/. i. 2 

no less beloved, than when thou — ii. 3 

am I then a man to be beloved . . . .ZHenry VI. iii. 2 

Oxford, wondi-ous well beloved — iv. S 

and ten times more beloved, than — v. 1 

ever beloved, and loving, may Henry VIII. ii. 1 

that she beloved knows naught. . Troilus ^ Cress, i. 2 

she was beloved, she loved — iv. 5 

how ample you are beloved .... Timon of Athens, i. 2 

make the meat be beloved — iii. 6 (grace) 

that was beloved after his means .... — iv. 3 

didst thou ever know beloved — iv. 3 

lest parties (as he is beloved) Coriolanus, iii. 1 

and come home beloved of all the trades — iii. 2 
was my beloved in Rome: yet thou.... — v. 2 

Mark Antony, so well beloved Julius Ccpsar, ii. 1 

a bourn how far to be beloved Antony ^ Cleo. i. 1 

you shall be more beloving, than beloved — i. 2 

lie is beloved of those that only — i. 4 

but, be sure, no less beloved Cymbeline, iv. 2 

my beloved brother, graeious triumplier. TilusAnd.\.2 
for our beloved mother in her pains.. ,. — iv. 2 
from the loss of a beloved daughter .... Pericles, v. 1 
live the beloved of your brother ..Lear,i.i Jetter) 
beloved Itegau, tliy sister's naught — ji. i 



BEL 



[54] 



B'.OLOVED-wo'.ildbeararity most beloved. Lear, iv. :! 

VL't Edniuml WHS beloved; tlie one — v. 3 

non- Itomeo is beloved . . . .Romeo ^- Julicl, i. 5 (cho.) 
fair voild bL'hi'id, honoured, beloved.. Ham/e/, iii. 2 

t'.K miLtiiitifu IS much beloved OlhcUo. i. 2 

E!:LOVlNa-in(>rebclovav,'tiismlii.'loved.-l"^-V(V.i.2 

BEI/r— cause witliiu tlio Ix-lt ui' rule Ma-i.c'h. v. 2 

lie that buckles him in uu- licit ■lll^nrijIV. i. 2 

BELZEBUB— BcUebub at the stave's. J>i;(A/i A', v. 1 
who's there, i'the name ot'Belzcbub? ..Macbeth, ii. 3 
as Lucifer, and Belzebub himself — Henry V. iv. 7 
BEJIAD13ING— and bemadding sorrow ..Lear, iii. 1 
BEMETE— I shall so bemete theu.Tamingof Sit. iv. 3 
Br^MOANED— so bemoaned his fon..3Henryf'!. ii. 5 
BEMOCK—bemock the modest moon..Co7Manvs, i. 1 
BEMOCKED— with bemocked at stabs. Tempest, iii. 3 
BEiMOILED— howshewasbemoiled.Tnm.o/SA. iv. 1 
BLO.MONSTER— bcmousternot thv feature. Lrar, iv. 2 
BEN"CH-be the supporter of a lieuch. Tiiel/th Night, i. 5 

justice from vour inrt'al beiu'li •iHennj W. v. 2 

wrinkled sen'ate from the bench. . Timon of.it/i. iv. 1 

with senators uf the bench — iv. 3 

a'.:ainst a trraver bcncli than ever ..Coriolanus, m. 1 
oiiedience'tails to the Rrcater bench .. — iii. 1 

of emntv, bench bj' his side Lear, iii. 6 

cannot sit at ease on the old beneh.Romco ffJul. ii. 4 
BE N'CHED-nieaner form have benched. Winter's T. i. 2 
BEN'CHER— than auecessary bencher ..Coriol. ii. 1 
BEN^CUMS— sleeping upon benches ..\HenryIV. i. 2 

pluck do-.vu benches Julius Ca-sar, iii. 2 

BlONiJH-HOLES— into beueh-holcg./(/i^ S^Cleo. iv. 7 

BEND— and bend the dukedom Tempest, i. 2 

but I do bend my speech to Measure for Men. i. 1 

yet bend not all the harm Much .-Ido, v. 1 

I would bend under an^' heavy weight — v. 1 

■we bend to that the working Love's L. Lost, iv. 1 

or shall I bend low, and in . . Merchant of^ Venice,]. 3 

thither we bend again All's Well, iii. 2 

if vou love the maid, bend thoughts. Taminjo/ S. i. 1 
wlio for Bohemia bend, to signify. Winter's Tale, v. 1 
homeward did they bend their course. Com.o/ Br. i. 1 
I am settled and bend up each corporal. MacfceiA, i. 7 
and both conjointly bend your sharpest . . JoAn, ii. 2 

tend their best studies — iv. 2 

why do you bend such solemn — iv. 2 

or bend one wrinkle on my Uichard II. ii. 1 

learn to hend their bows of — iii . - 

flatter, bow, and bend my knee — iv. 1 

prayers, I bend ray knee — v. 3 

why dost thou beud thine eyes — 1 Henry IV. ii. 3 

towards York shall bend you — v. 5 

we'll bend it to our awe Henry r.\.% 

and hend up every spirit to his — lii- 1 

thee stoop, and hend thy knee 1 Henry VI. Y. 1 

witch doth bend her brows — v. 3 

in duty bend thy knee to me 2Henry VI. v. 1 

I do beud my knee with tliiue SHenry VI. ii. 3 

towards Coventry bend we om- course — iv. 8 

and humbly bend thy knee — v. 1 

to bend the fatal instrument — v. 1 

once didst bend against her breast. . Richard III. i. 2 
towards London do they bend their course — iv. 5 
that prouder than blue Iris bends. . Trail. .5- Cres.i. 3 

tliev were used to bend — iii. 3 

to our own selves bend we our needful — iy. 4 
bend like his that hath received. . . . Coriolanus, ill. 2 
am! must bend liisbody,ifCa!sar../!tiiusC(Bsar, i. 2 

whose bend doth awe the world — i. 2 

now bend, now turn the oSice.. ..Antony ^Cleo.L I 

and made their bends adornings — ii.2 

except she bend her humour Cymbeline.i. 6 

whose boughs did bend with fruit — iii. 3 

now to Marina bend your minil.. Pericles, iv. (Gow.) 

to mv sense bend no licentious ear — v. 3 

did all their thunders beud Lear, ii. 1 

v.'hen that, wliich makes rae bend, makes — iii. 6 
and wishes bsnd again toward France. . Hamlel, i. 2 

bend you to remain here in tlie clieer — _ i. 2 

that you do bend your eye on vacancy . . — iii. 4 
BEN'D'ED-neitlier bended knees. 7'«ioGo;i.o/Ffr. iii. 1 

b ith, my true joints bended be Itichardll. v. 3 

helnict,"aud his bended sword. . Henry V. v. (chorus) 

now upon mv bended knee HHenry VI. i. 1 

the uobles bended, as to Jove's statue. . . Coriol. ii. 1 

my bended hook shall pierce Antony ffCleo. ii. ij 

to' the la^t, bended their light on me Hamlet, ii. 1 

BENDING— bending towards their Tempest, iv. 1 

fair kniahthood's bending knee . . M^rry Wives, v. 5 
but mv beuiling down reiirieve . . Mea.forMea. lii. 1 

to watch the fearful bending of Richard II. iii. 3 

some supportance to the bending twigs — iii. 4 

and bending forw,ard, struck his 2HenryIV._ i. 1 

this prostrate and exterior bending . . — iv. 4 
give phiee to flexm-e and low bending. Henri/ f. iv. 1 
our bending author hath pursued . . — v. 2 (cho.) 

no bending knee will call tliee SHenryVI. iii. 1 

where be tlie bending peers that . . Richard UI. iy. 4 
unarmed as bending angels . . Troilus 4- Cressida, i. 3 
bending their expedition toward ..JuUusCtesar, iv. 3 
bending down his corrigible ucck..//n/.'5-CTeo. iv. 12 

whij^e lii'h and bending Ijead looks Lear, iv. 1 

benrthii.' his sword to his great nia-t3r,... — iy. 2 
humbly tlieicfore bending to yoiu- state.. OWe«o, i. 3 

BENE— but omne bene, say I Love's L. Lost, iv. 2 

bone?— bone, for bene; Priseian — y. 1 

core bene trovato, may I say {^rep.).. Tarn. ofSh. 1. 2 

BENEDICITE-with you ! Benedicite ! Mca.forM. ij. 3 

Benedicite! wliat eai-lv tongue. . Romeo .$■ Juliet, ii. 3 

BENEDICK— Benedietc of I'adua Much Ado, i. 1 

vou tax signior I!eii.;ilick ton much.. — i. 1 

Ijctv.-ixt si L'nior Benedick and lier — i. 1 

ifhc have caught the Benedick, it will — i. 1 

ei'.'nio'- Bcnc'lick, no for tlicn («'/).).. — i. 1 

still be talking signior Benedick — i. 1 

meet food to feed 'It, as signior Benedick — i. 1 

signior Claudio, and signior Benedick — i. 1 

Benedick, didst thou note tlie daugiuer — i. 1 

butif ever the sensible Beucdick bear it — i. 1 

vou may see Benedick the married man — i. 1 

ID the mean time, good signior Benedick — i. 1 



BENEDICK— loving friend, Benedick.. Much Ado, 
the mid-wav between him and Benedick — 
then half signior Benedick's toii:;uc — 

inelanehiilv in signior Beneilick's I'are — 
this was signior Beiiediek that said so — 

are not you signior Benedick'/ — 

thus answer I in the name of Benedick — 
have lost the lieart of signior Benedick — 
she were an excellent wife for Benedick — 
to bring signior Benedick, and the lady — 
and Benedick is not the unhopefuUest — 
with Benedick; and I, with your (rc/i.) — 
see you where Benedick hath liid Iiiraself — ii- 3 

was in love with signior Benedick — ij. 3 

she should so dote on signior Benedick — ii- 3 

especially against Benedick — ■ Ii. 3 

her att'eetion known to Benedick — li. 3 

she found Benedick and Beatrice between — ii. 3 

sweet Benedick! God give me patience — ii. 3 
it were good that Benedick knew of it — ii. 3 
in every thing, but in loving Benedick — ii. 3 

1 pray you, tell Benedick of it — ii. 3 

shall we go si^k Benedick, and tell him — ii. 3 
I love Benedick well, and I could wish — ii. 3 
must only be of Benedick: when Ido — iii. 1 
how Benedick is sick in love with . . — iii. 1 
that Benedick loves Beatrice so entirely — iii. 1 
if thev loved Benedick, to wish him — iii. 1 
therefore let Benedick, like covered fire — iii. 1 
I will go to Benedick, and counsel him — iii. 1 
80 rare a gentleman as signior Benedick — iii. 1 
signior Benedick, for shape, for bearing — iii. I 
and Benedick, love on, I will requite — iii. 1 
be bold with Benedick for his company — iii. 2 

yet Benedick was such another — iii. 4 

signior Benedick, don John, and all the — iii. 4 

uncle 1 signov Benedick 1 friar — iv. 1 

on the sensible Benedick's head — v. 1 

here dwells Benedick the married man — v. 1 
good-morrow. Benedick ; why, what's the — v. 4 
containing her affection unto Benedick — v. 4 
how dost thou, Benedick the married man — v. 4 

BENEDICTION— 
brought a benediction to the buyer.. Winter'sT. iv. 3 

he leaves the healing benediction Macbeth, iv. 3 

the benediction of these covering — Cymbeline, y. 5 
thou out of heaven's benediction comest..Lc«>-, ii. 2 

that strippeddier from his benediction — iv. 3 

hold your hands in benediction o'er me . . — iv. 7 
BENEDICTTJS- 
of tills distUled Carduus Benedictns.. iUwcA^rfo, 111. 4 
BenedictusI why Benedictus? (rep.) — iii. 4 
BENEFACTOI^-two notorious benefactors. 

Benefactors? 'Well; what (:rep.).Mea.forMea. ii, 

you great benefactors. . Timon of Athens, iii. 6 (gi-ace 

BENEFICE— of another benefice . . Romeo Sf Jul.i.' 

BENEFICIAL— by beneficial help .Comedy of Er. 1. ' 

the rays of the beneficial sun Henry VIII. 1. 

for, besides these beneficial news, it is . . Othello, ii. 
BENEFIT— sweet benefit of time.. TwoGen. of V.h. 
the Wiiter will do him a benefit . . Merry Wives, iii. 
have I the benefit of my senses.Twelflh N. v. 1 (let.. 

is likewise your own benefit Mea.forMea. iii. 

do a poor wronged ladyamerited benefit — iii. 
the doubleuess of the benefit defends — iii. 
for the benefit of silence, would thou — v. 
her benefits are mightily misplaced.. .4s yoxiLike, i. 

bite so nigh as benefits forgot — ii. 7 (sons 

disable all the benefits of your own . . — iv. 

nothing benefit your knowledge Winter's T. iv. 

have done the time more benefit — v. 

that has the benefit of access — v. 

by the benefit of his wished lipit.. Comedy ofEr. 1. 
of whom I hope to make much benefit — i. 

receive at once the benefit of sleep Macbeth, y. 

the present benefit which I possess, ./(ic/mrc/ //. ii. 
I crave the benefit of law of arms ..IHenryVl. iv. 

in earnest of a further benefit — v. 

bodies for theh' country's benefit — v. 

of benefit proceeding from our — v. 

make but little for his benefit 2Henry VI. 1. 

the benefit thereof is always granted. i?('cA. III. 111. 

this proffered beneilt of dignity — 111. 

give mine the benefit of seniory — iv. 

but benefit no furtlier than vainly. . Henry VIII. 1. 

so noble benefits shall prove not — i. i 

give me now a little benefit. . TroilusfyCressid'i, iii. 3 

we arc born to do benefits Timon of Alliens, i. 2 

for any benefit that points to me — iv. 3 

no public benefit, which you receive. Corw/anm, i. 1 

may prove as benefits to thee — iv. 5 

the benefit wdiich thou shalt thereby reap — v. 3 
give away the benefit of our levies . . — v. 

and then is death a benefit Julius Caisar, ih. 1 

shall receive the benefit of his dying — iii. 2 
you shall find a benefit inthisehange.^ln(.^-a<?o. v.2 
\vith the next benefit 0' the wind . . CymbeUne, iv. 2 
tohave the benefit of his blessed beams — iy. 4 

pains, and benefits, to laughter and Lear, i. i 

wretchedness deprived that benefit — iv. 6 

as tlie winds give benefit, and convoy . . Hamlet, i. 3 

distinguish alienefit from an injury Othello, i. 3 

but to' know so must be my benefit — iii. 4 

BENEFITED— by him so lieuefited I Lear, iv. 2 

BENETTED— thus benetted round .... Hamlet, v. 2 
BENE'VOLENCE-to do my benevolence. il/i'rri/ ir.i. 1 
as— blanks, benevolences, and I wot. .Richardll. ii. 1 
BENIGN— prince, and benign lord. Feric/cs, ii. (Gow.) 
BENISON— God's benison go with you.iliac6e(/i, ii. 4 

to whom I give ray benison Pericles, ii. (Gower) 

without om- grace, our love, our benison . . Lear^ i. 1 

the bounty, and the benison of heaven — — iv. 6 

BENNET— the bells of saint Bennet. . Tu-elflhN. v. 1 

of Brocas, and sir Bennet Seely Richard II. v. 6 

BENT-bent[A'n<.-beauty]of thebrow./l/errylf. iii. 3 
or thy att'eetion cannot hold the hcnt. Twelfth N. ij. 4 
her affections have their full bent . . Much Ado, ii. 3 

have the very bent of honour — iy. 1 

to a silver bow new bent in heaven . . Mid. N. Dr. i. 1 
I see you all are bent to set against me — iii. 2 



BER 

BENT— which not to anger bent . . Love'sL.Loet, iv. 2 
though my revenges were high bent . . All's Well, y. 3 

to your own bents dispose you Winter's Tale, i. 2 

and, madly bent on us, chased . . Comedy of Err. y. 1 

for now I am bent to know Macbeth, iii. 4 

our cannon shall be bent against. . , . King John, ii. 1 

with favour, we are bent to hear — ii.2 

are bent to dim his glory liichardll. iii. 3 

are idly bent ou him that enters — v.2 

such as is bent ou sim-likc majesty. 1 HenrylV.iu. 2 

with his pike bent bravclv ■> Henry IV. ii. 4 

that met tlieni in their bent Henry V. v. 2 

fierce bent against their faces \ Henry VI. i. 1 

all his mind is bent to holiness iHenry VI. i. 3 

naughty persons, lewdly bent, under — ii. 1 

when "Warwick bent his jjrow ZHenryVI. y. 2 

divinely bent to meditation Richard III. iii. 7 

set his sense on the attentive bent. . Troil.^ Cres.i. 3 
why such unplausive eyes are bent .. — iii. 3 
all gaze and licut of amorous view .. — iv. .^ 
this preparation whither 'tis hent.Coriol. i. 2 (letter) 
I can give liis humour the true bunt. Jut. Cirsar, ii. 1 

and it is bent against Cajsar — ii. 3 (paper) 

bliss in our brows' bent; none . . Antony f{ Cleo. i. 3 
their faees to the bent of the king's . . Cymbeline^ i. 1 

men, bent to the spoil Titus Andronicus, iv. 4 

Thaliard came full bent with sin. Pericles, ii. (Gow.) 
but bent all offices to honour her .... — ii. 5 
and my best spirits are bent to prove .... Lear, v. 3 
that thv bent of love be honourable..iiom.<S-./w;. ii. 2 

in the full bent, to lay our service Hamlet, ii. 2 

they fool me to the top of mv bent — iii. 2 

and everv tiling is bent for England — iv. 3 

BENTII-Chitopher,Vauniond, Bentii . . All's Wetl,iv. 3 
BENTIVOLIl— conieoftheBentivolii.rnm.o/S.i. 1 
BENUMBED— their benumbed wills. Troil. 4- Cr. ii. 2 
BEN VENUTO— 

undertake your ben venuto Love's L. Lost, iv. 2 

BENVOLld—tiurn thee Ben volio ....Rom. f; Jul. i. 1 

come between us, good Benvolio — ii. 4 

help me into some house, Benvolio . . — iii. 1 
Benvolio, who began this bloody fray? — iii. 1 
this is the truth, or let Benvolio die — iii. 1 

BEPAINT— maiden blush bepaint my cheek - ii. 2 
BEQUEATH-mv horns I betiueath. A/frry Wives, v. 5 
Helena to me bequeath, whom I Ao.Mid. N. D. iii. 2 
your former honour I bequeath ...As you Like it, v. 4 
come away; bequeath to death . . Winter' sTale, v. 3 
forsake thy fortune, bequeath thy land ..John, i. 1 

I do bequeath my faithful services — .7.-'^ 

for what can we bequeath, save Richard II. iii. 2 

at that time, bequeath you my. . Troil. ^r Cress, v. 1 1 

a sister I bequeath you, whom Ant. S,- Cleo. ii. 2 

so I bequeath a happy peace to you Pericles, i. \ 

my dead father did bequeath to me — ii. 1 

BEQUEATHED—liywill bequeathed John.i. 1 

upon this fashion bequeathed me. ./Is you Like it, i. 1 

and bequeathed tomy overbxiking All's Well, i. 1 

her father bequeathed her to me — — i. 3 
'longing to our house, bequeathed down — iv. 2 
BEQUEATHING— 

his crown bequeathing As you Likeit, v. 4 

bequeathing it, as a rich legacy . . Julius Ctesar, iii. 2 

BERATTLE— berattle the common stages .Heui!. ii. 2 

BEREAVE— bereave him of his wits. . 1 Henry VI. v. 3 

she'll bereave you of the deeds .. Troil. ffCres. jii. 2 

bereaves the state of that integrity.. Cor/o/ani/s, iii. 1 

you shall bereave yourself of AnI.ff Cleo. v. 2 

I'll not bereave you of yom servant .. Pericles, iv. 1 
BEVEA'VED— of life bereaved h.im. .ZHenry Vl.ii. 6 

in the restoring his bereaved sense Lear, iv. 4 

BERFET— Alonso, they have bereft ...Tempest, jii. 3 
madam, you have bereft me of. . . . Mcr of Ven. iii. 2 
ill-seeming, thick, bereft of beauty.. Tarn, of .S/i. y. 2 

live to see like right bereft Comedy of En: ii. 1 

to pity him, bereft and gelded Richard II. ii. 1 

are barren, and bereft ot friends — iii. 3 

territories is utterly bereft you — 2Henry VI. ii\. 1 

tune bereft my vital powers — iij. 2 

they say, is shamefully bereft of life — iii. 2 
hath bereft thee of thy life too latcSi^Icnr?/ VI. ij. 5 
I tliink, his understanding is bereft. . — ii. 6 
he that bereft thee, lady, of thy ... . Richard III. i. 2 
you have bereft me of all words . . Troil. .§■ Cres. iii . 2 
of m-etched soul bereft.. T™(iJio//lMe;is, v. .5 (ejiil.) 

here bereft my brother of his life Titus .-hid. ii. 4 

have bereft a prince of all his fortunes.. Fcri'i'^es, ii. 1 

has been bereft of ships and men — ii.3 

for which I love him, are bereft me Othello, i. 3 

BERGAMO-a sail-iuaker in Bergamo. Tarn. ofS. v. 1 
BERGOMASK— a Bergomask danee.ikTid. N. Dr. v. 1 

but come, your Bergonmsk — v. 1 

BE-RHYM"E— love tobe-rhymeher. . Rom. SJul. ii. i 
BE-RH'yMED— never so be-rhymed./lsi/oui.*c, iii. 2 

BERKLEY— at Berkley castle Richard II. ii. 2 

far is it, my lord, from Berkley now? — ii. S 
sent me o'er by Berkley, to discover — ii. 3 
the lords of York, Berkley and Seymour — ii. ? 
it is my lord of Berkley, as I guess . . — ij. 3 
at Berkley castle. You say true .... 1 HenrylV. i. 3 
Tressel and Berklev, go along with rae. Rich, III. i. 2 
BERMOOTHES-still vex'd Bermoothes. Tempest, i. 2 
BERNARDO— live the king! Bernardo. . Hamlel, i. 1 

Bernardo hath my place (rep.) — i. 1 

let us hear Bernardo speak of this — i. 1 

these gentlemen, Marcellus and Bernardo — i. 2 
BERRIES — give me water with berries. . Tempest, _i. 2 

I'll pluck tliee berries — ii. 2 

two lovely berries moulded on one. Mid. N.'s D. iii. 2 
wholesome berries thrive, and ripen ..Henry V. i. 1 
cannot live on grass, on berries . . Timon of .ith. iv. 3 

feed on berries, and on roots Tilus .ind. iv. 2 

BERRY— the dukes of Berry, and Henry T.ij. 4 

Orleans, Bourbon, and of Berry — — iii. 5 
roughest berry on the rudest hedge ..Ant, fy Cleo. i. 4 
of bud, bird, branch, or berry . . Pericles, v. (Gower) 
BERTRAM— be thou blest, Bertram! ..All's Well,i. 1 
farewell, Bertr.am. The best wishes.. — i. 1 
carries no favour in it, but Bertram's — i. 1 
no living, none, if Bertram be away . . — i. 1 



BER 



[ 55] 

BESEKCU— 1 besoecli yom- graces . . Richard 111. i, 
I bcfecch your grace to pardon nie . . — i, 

reasoDH, I beseech yoii, grant me — • i. 

I do bcseccii you, citlicr not believe.. — i. 

that small, God, 1 beseeeb thee — i. 

I do beseech yoiu- liigimcss to take .. — ii. 
I do beseech you, send lor some of them — iii. 
I rather do beseech vou pardon me . . — iii. 
1 do beseech you, talce it uot amiss . . — iii. 
take heed; yes, heartily beseech you. H(?«/y /'///. i 
I do beseech your grace, for charity.. — ii. 
beseeeii your lordship, vouchsafe to speak — ii. 
beseech you, sir, to spare me till I.... — ii. 
I do beseeeii you, gracious madam . . — ii. 
but, I beseeen you, what's become of — iv. 

I do beseech your lordship, that — v. 

command; ungained, beseech. '/'i-o/Jm.! <5- Cn'ssida, i. 
my lord, I do beseeeii you, pardon me — iii. 
I do beseech you, as in way of taste.. — iii. 
I beseech you on my knees, I beseech — iv. 
which, I beseech you call a virtuous sin — iv. 
I beseech you next to least with me.. — iv. 
tell me, I beseech you, in what place — iv. 

right deadly; I beseech you go — v. 

which I do beseech your lordship. . . Timon ofAth. i. 

I beseech your honour, vouchsafe — i. 

I beseech you, pardon me, my lord . . — i. 
I do beseech you, good my lords .... — ii. 
if I might beseeeii you, gentlemen . . — iii. 
my lords, I do beseech ycu, know me — iii. 
beseech your honour, to make it ... . ^ v. 
but, I beseech you, what says the ....CorinlaiJus,i. 

beseech you, give me leave to — i. 

I do beseech yon, by all the battles . . — i. 

therefore, I beseech yon — i. 

I do beseech you, let me o'er- leap .. — ii. 
tlierefore, I beseech you, I may be .. — ii. 

no more words, we beseech you — iii. 

therefore, beseech you, you that will — iii. 
beseech you, tribunes, hear me but . . — iii. 

yourself: be gone, beseech you — iii. 

calmly, I do beseech you — iii. 

which is his house, beseech you? .... — iv. 

not the face to say, beseech you — iv. 

sir, I beseeeii you, think you — iv. 

I beseech you, peace : or, if you . 

nay, I beseech you, sir, be not Julius Cicsar. 

I shall beseech Iiim to befriend — ii. 

I do beseech ye, if you bear me hard — iii. 
sweet Isis, I beseech thee! , Ant. fyCleo. i. 

food Isis, I beseech thee ! Amen .... — i. 
shall beseech yon, sir, to let me ... . — i. 

I earnestly beseech,) touch you — ii. 

forsake thy seat, I do beseech thee . . — ii. 

I beseech you, sir, harm not yowseli',. Cymlieline, i. 

beseechyouripatience: peace, dear ., — i. 

I beseeeii you all, be better known . . — i. 

but I beseech your grace — i. 

beseech you, sir, desire my man's — i. 

his health, beseech you — i. 

yes, I beseech ; or I shall short my word — i. 

therefore, I shall beseech you — i. 

guard me, beseech ye — ii. 

beseech your majesty, forbear sharp — iii. 

beseech your highness, hold me your — iv. 

take that life, beseech you, which I.. — v. 

cause it to sound, beseech you Pericles, iii. 

I do beseech you to learn of me — iv. 

I beseech your honom-, give me — iv. 

I beseech you, do — iv. 

I beseech your honour, one piece . . . 

let us beseeeii you fm-ther, that 

recount, I do beseech thee — v. 

beseech you, first go with me to my . . — v. 

therefore beseech you to avert youi- liking., iear, i. 

I yet beseech your majesty — i. 

I beseech youl^ sir, pardon me — i. 

I beseech you, pardon me, my lord — i. 

I do beseech you to understand — i. 

let me understand your grace not — ii. 

I do beseech your grace — O cry you mercy — iii. 

I beseech you, follow straight Rom. <§- Jul. i. 

I do beseech thee, — madam — ii. 

what are they, I beseech your ladyship? — iii. 

good father, 1 beseech you on my knees — iii. 

pardon, I beseech you! henceforward — iv. 

nCti.t.'] — I do beseech you, sir, have . . — v. 

I beseech thee, youth, heap not another — v. 

I do beseech you, give him leave to go . . Hamlet, i. 

we beseech you, bend you to remain .... — i. 

I beseech you instantly to visit — ii. 

I do beseech you, both away — ii. 

I do besecli you. I know no touch of it — iii. 

ay, beseech .you. Being thus beuetted — v. 

I beseech you, remember, — nay — v. 

but I beseech you, ift be your pleasure. . Olhello, i. 

I do beseech you send for the lady 

I humbl.y beseeeii you, proceed 

lords; beseech you, let her will 

will I beseech the virtuous Desderaona .. 

yet, I beseech you, — if you think fit 

whereon, I do "beseech thee 

I do beseech you,— though I perehauoe . . 

I humbl.y do beseech you of your pardon 

hold her free, I do beseech your honour . . 

I do beseech you, that by your virtuous. . — iii. 

I do beseech your lordship, call her back — iv. 

I do beseech you, sir, trouble yourself no — iv. 

I do beseech you I may speak with you . . — v. 
BESEECHED-the town is beseechcd . . Henry r. iii. 

beseeched me to entreat your majesties. //nmie^, iii. 
BESEECHING-rejoice, beseecliing God. Hennj V. ii. 

beseeching thee, if witli tliy will iUcnry VI. ii. 

beseeching him to give her virtuous. ilcHry VIII. iv. 

beseeching ymi to i,'ive her priiurlv . . I', rides, iii. 
BESE1-:K-1 I:c ;vk '.Ml, ii-iv.MiL'L'rn\:lto. ■-';/,■». /r.ii. 
BESlOKM-a.. i.ii'y i:> -vin w.. /„-., i .;■,:. n/rer. ii. 

6(> inii'liCh 'I ;is iiKiy l;iv.'.'rni ir mii, ■_;,,/ Sli. iv. 

beseem tlic lord Northumberland ..UicUardll. iii. 



BES 



BERTRAM-good loi'd, young Bertram. ./l/i'sH'eH, i. 2 
why then, young Bertram, take her.. — ii. 3 
know'st thou not Bertram, what she — ii. 3 

BERWICK— at Beiwiek in thcmrtix.-iHcnry VI. ii. 1 

till they come to Berwick, whence — ii. 1 

towards Berwick iiost anuiin ZHenry F/. ii. h 

BESCREENED— bcscrceuedin night.iio)H..S-./«(. ii. 2 

BESEECII — beeseeeli you, father! Tempest, i. 2 

becseech you, sir, be merjy — ii. 1 

Bate, I beseech you, widow Dido .... — ii. 1 

I do beseech you, chiefly, that I — iii. 1 

I do beseech thy greatness — iii. 2 

I do beseech you that are of — iii. 3 

beseech you confirm his welcome. 7'«-o Gcu. of F.W. 4 

I now beseech vou, for your — v. 4 

I beseeeii you be ruled by Merry Wives, i. 1 

I beseech you, be nut so flegmatic. ... — i. 4 

I beseech you, heartily — iii. 2 

I beseeeii you, follow — iv. 2 

give me leave I beseech you Twelfth Night, iii. 1 

and, I beseech you, come again — iii. 4 

I beseech you, do me tills — iii. 4 

I beseech you, what manner of — iii. 4 

and I beseech, look into . . Measure forMeasure, ii. 1 

I beseech you, sir, ask him — ii. 1 

I beseech your honoui", ask me — ii. I 

I beseech you, sir, look in this — ii. 1 

nay, I beseech you, mark it well — ii. 1 

I do beseech you, let it be — ii. 2 

when, I beseech you? that in his .... — ii. 4 
therefore, I beseech you, look forward — iv. 3 
well, I beseech you; let it be proclaimed — iv. 4 
I beseech your highness, do not marry me — v. 1 
but, I beseech yom- grace, pardon me. jVucA .ido, ii. 1 

adieu, be vigilant, I beseech you — iii. 3 

I beseech you, let it be remembered.'. — v. 1 

which I beseech your worship — v. 1 

but I beseech your grace, that I . . . . Mid. N. Dr. i. 1 

I beseech your worship's name — iii. 1 

your name, I beseech you, sir — iii. 1 

other men's secrets, I beseech you . . Love's L. L. i. 1 
I beseeeii you, a word; what is she .. — ii. 1 

I beseeeii you, read it — iv. 2 

I beseech your society — iv. 2 

I beseeeii your grace, let this letter . . — iv. 3 
I do beseech thee, remember {rep.) .. — v. 1 

I beseech you, follow — v. 1 

madam, not so: I do beseech you, stay — v. 2 
old man, ergo, I beseech you .... Mer. of I'enice, ii. 2 
I beseech you, sir, go; my young .... — ji. 5 
I do beseech you, even at that time.. — ■ iii. 2 
therefore, I do beseech you, make . . — iv. 1 

I beseech you, let his lack of years — iv. 1 (let.) 
I beseeeii you, wrest once the law. . . . — ' iv. 1 
most heartily I do beseech tlie court — iv. 1 

I beseech you punish me not As you Like it, i. 2 

ves, I beseech yom- grace — i. 2 

I do beseech your grace, let me . — i. 3 

I shall beseee"h your highness All's Well, ii. 3 

I most unfeignedly beseech — ii. 3 

do the palmers lodge, I do beseech you — iii. 5 

I beseech you, let me answer — iv. 3 

I shall beseeen your lordship — iv. .i 

I do beseech you, wliither is he gone — v. 1 
I do beseech you, sir, since you are .. — v. 1 
I beseech yom- honour, to hear me . . — v. 2 
tell me, I beseech you, which is .. Taming of Sh. i. 2 

for what reason, I beseeeii you? — i. 2 

knock at your ear, and beseech listening — iv. 1 
indeed, — beseech you, — Verily .... Winter' sTale,i. 1 

press lue not, beseech you so — i. 2 

but, beseech yom- grace, be plainer . . — i. 2 
I beseech you, if you know aught.... — , i-2 
beseech you ail, my lords, with thoughts — ii. 1 
beseech 3'our highness, my women .. — ii. 1 
beseech your highness, call the queen — ii. 1 
I beseech you, hear me, wlio profess — ii. 3 

beseech your highness, give us better — ii. 3 
teseeeh you, tenderly, apply to her . . — iii. 2 

at my petition, I beseech you — iii. 2 

I beseech you, sir: I have a kinsman — iv. 2 

soft, swain, awhile, beseech you — iv. 3 

beseech you, of your o-wn state take. . — iv. 3 
beseech you, sir, remember since .... — v. 1 
beseech you, sir, were you present . . — v. 2 
I himibly beseech you, sir, to pardon — v. 2 

have patience, I beseech Corned ij of Errors, iv. 2 

whom I beseeeii to give me ample — v. 1 

I sliall beseech you— that is question .A'/no-Zo/m, i. 1 
I do beseeeii you, madam, be content — iii. 1 
beseech voiir majesty, impute his . . Richard II. ii . 1 
I beseeen your grace, look on my ... . — ii. 3 
I do beseech youi- grace to pardon me — v. 2 
I do beseech your majesty, to have . . — v. 3 

uot yet, I thee beseech, for ever — v. 3 

1 beseech you, let not his report iHenrylF. i. 3 

I do beseech your majesty — iii. 2 

I do beseech your majesty, make up — v. 4 

I beseech your grace, I may — v. 5 

I most humbly beseeeii your lordship ..illen.IV. i.2 

I beseech you, stand to me I — ii. 1 

1 beseech you, I may have redress . . — ii. 1 
I beseech you, which is justice Shallow — iii. 2 

let me see them, I beseech you — iii. 2 

I beseech your grace, let it be — iv. 3 

my lord, I beseech you, give me leave — iv. 3 

I beseech you, su-, to countenance — v. 1 

believe inc, I beseech you, my father — v. 2 
which I beseech ■\'c>u to let me have . . — v. 5 

one word niore.l" beseech you — (epil.) 

I beseerh your highness to fc«-give HcnryV. ii. 2 

not so, X do beseech your niaie.'ty . . . . — iii. 5 

I thee beseech to do me tavouis — iii. c 

I pray you, and beseech you — iv. 1 

I beseech you, take it for your ov.-n .. — iv. 8 
I li...-iT>-li vi.m- IiimUucs";, uur'liiu me.. — iv. 8 
I .lo i„ -rr.;, yarn- rr,..! ,,uii-4v ... .-21101 ry VI. i. 3 
) lic,r>vli VM,,r ,„;,;r..|-v, -l.iiM.tcast.. — i.3 

I liL--i-rli VMur nitij.jrlv, i!ivc me leave — ii. 3 
I beseech God on my knees, thou may'st — iv. 10 



— V. 3 
1 



— V. 1 

— V. 1 



— i.3 

— i.3 



— ii.3 

— iii. 1 

— iii. 3 



— U1.3 



BESEEM— it ill beseems this presence. A7;i^./o/in, ii. 1 

more than well beseems a man 1 Henry VI. iii. I 

as beseems their worth iv. 7 

as may beseem ;i, nio.iaich like ZHenry VI. iii. 3 

hou-evil itbescnn.^ tlicL- — iv. 7 

BESElOiMETU— ill beseemcth mc. Love's L. Lost, ii. 1 
BESEEMING-hesecming sucha wife. TwoU.nf V. iii. 1 

yet best beseeming me to siicak Kicliard II. iv. 1 

ill beseeming any common man I Henry VI. iv. 1 

these thiee in poor beseeming Cymbeline, v. 5 

their grave beseeming ornaments. yfomeo ^-Juliet, i. 1 

BESET— you are hard beset Two Gen. of Ver. ii. 4 

the thicket is ix'set v. 3 

to defend him, when he was beset. Twelfth Night, v. I 

how am I beset! what kind Mueti Ado, iv. 1 

1 was beset with shame and courtesy, il/o-. of Ven. v. 1 

we're beset with thieves faming of i'/i. iii. 2 

BESHREW- beshrew me, but . . Two Gen. of Ver. i. 1 

beshrew me, sir, but if he — ii. 4 

beshrew me, the knight's in Twelfth Night, ii. 3 

beslirew his soul for me — iv. 1 

marry, beshrew my hand, if it should.il/uc/i/lcio, v. 1 
now much beshi-ew my manners.jUid. N. Dream, ii. 3 

beshrew my heart, but I pity — v. 1 

and beshrew all shrews ! . . Love's Labour's Lost, v. 2 
beshrew me, but I love her heartily. Afer. of Ven. ii. 6 

beshrew your eyes, they have iii. 2 

lunes o'the IdngI beshrew them! . Winter's Tale, ii. 2 
upon mine ear; beshrew his hand . . Com. af Er. ii. 1 

beslirew my soid, but I do love King' John, v. 1 

beshrew thy very heart! I did not .. — v 5 
beslu-ew thee, cousin, which didst . . Richard II. iii. 2 
beshrew your heart, fair daughter ..2Henry IV. ii. 3 
and will not call, beshrew thy heart — v. 3 

now beshrew my father's ambition HenryV.-r.2 

beshrew the winners, for they 2Henry VI. iii. 1 

beslu-ew me, but his passions . . 3 Henry VI. i. i 

beshrew me, I would, and venture. . Henry VIII. ii. 3 
beshrew the witch! with venomous. Troil. <$- Or. iv. 2 
come, come , beshrew your heart ! . . . . — iv. 2 
beshrew your heart, for sending me.. Rom. ^Jul. ii. 5 

beshrew my very heart, I think — iii. 5 

or else beslirew them both. Amen .. — iii. 5 
she will beshrew me much, that Romeo — v. 2 
but, beshrew my jealousy! it seems .... Hamlet, ii. 1 

beshrew me much, Emilia, I was Olhello, iii. 4 

beslu-ew him for it! how eomes this ti-ick — iv. 2 

beslu-ew me, if I would do such a wrong — iv. 3 

BESIEGE— that doth my life besiege ..All's Well, ii. 1 

JSTeptime seemed to besiege Tempest, i. 2 

that comes here to besiege his cowct.Love's L. L. ii. 1 

faintly besiege us one hour 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

intend here to besiege you ZHenry VI. i. 2 

of the queen mean to besiege us — i. 2 

to court, the women so besiege us . . Henry VIII. v. 3 

BESIEGED— so it is besieged.. Loue'sL.Los^, i. 1 (let.) 

except this city now by us besieged . . King John, ii. 2 

for Orleans is besieged; the English. .IHe/iri/F/. i. 1 

thou know'st how Orleans is besieged — i. 4 

Paris was besieged, famished, and lost..2H<?)!. Vl.i.Z 

BESLTJBBER-beslubber our garments. . 1 Hen. IV. ii. 4 

BESMEAR — so much besmear it.Merch.of Venice, v. 1 

and besmear our swords Julius Cirsur, iii. 1 

BESMEARED— besmeared as black . . Twelfth N. v. 1 

they were besmeared and overstained John, iii. 1 

as black as if besmeared in heU. Henry VIII. i. 2 

BESMIRCH— doth besmirch the virtue . . Hamlet, i. 3 
BESMIRCHED— are all besmirched .. Henry V. iv. 3 
BESOM— I am the besom that must .2Henry VI. iv. 7 
BESORT— men as may besort yom- age .... Lear, i. 4 
and besort, as levels with her breeding ..Olhello, i. 3 
BESOTTED— like one besotted.. rro((Ks .5- Cress, ii. 2 
BESPAKE-but I bespake you fair. Tw.lfth Night, v. 1 

steed's neck, bespake them thus Richard II. v. 2 

BESPE AK-I will bespeak our diet. Twelfth Night, iii . 3 
see me an officer, bespeak him . . Merch. of Ven. iii. 1 
the cap youi- worship did bespeak. Taming ofS. iv. 3 

or bespeak a long spoon Comedy of Errors, iv. 3 

he did bespeak a chain for me — iv. 4 

my young mistress thus did I bespeak. .Hamlet, ii. 2 
BESPICE— might'st bespice a cup. .Winter's Tale. i. 2 
BESPOKE— sir! I bespoke it not ..Com.of Err. iu. 2 

then fairly I bespoke the officer — v. 1 

I have bespoke supper to-morrow .... 1 Henry IV. i. 2 

in disgrace, bespoke him thus I Henry VI. iv. 6 

your love to me, my lady is bespoke Lear, v. 3 

BESS— come hither, Bess, and let me. .ZHenry VI. v. 7 
BESSY-o'er the bom-n, Bessy, to me. Lear, iii. ti (song) 

BEST — to answer thy best pleasure Tempest, i. 2 

thou best know'st what — i. 2 

and be quick, thou wert best — i. 2 

I am the best of them that — i. 2 

howlthebest? — i. 2 

best stand upon our guard — ii. 1 

my best way is to creep — ii. 2 

I'll show thee the best springs — ii. 2 

have I eyed with best regard — iii. 1 

are created of every creature's best — iii. I 

invert what best is boded me — iii . 1 

since I feel the best is past — iii. 3 

and the best comforter — v. I 

the best news is, that we — v. I 

you were best stick her .... Two Gen. of Verona, i. 1 

twere best pound you — i. 1 

of many good I think him best — i. 2 

I think, best loves ye — i. 2 

best sing it to the tune of — i. 2 

but she woidd be best pleased — i. 2 

best to take them up — i. 2 

■whither were I best to send him — i. 3 

that fashion thou best liliest.. — ii. 7 

what best contents her — iii. 1 

how shall I best convey — iii. 1 

the best is, she bath no _ iii. 1 

the best way is, to slander — iii. 2 

thy first best love — v. 4 

the best way were to entertain. . . . Merry Wives, ii, 1 

the best courtier of them all — ii. 2 

and in such wine and sugar of the best — ii. 2 
I'll speak it before the best lord — iii. 3 



BES 



TSGJ 

BEST — l)y our best eyes cannot be censureil../o/i;i, ii. 2 

your breecbcs best may carry them . . — iii. 1 

(tlie liest 1 luul, a princess wrousht it me — iv. 1 

I :un lirst jikascd to befrom such.... — iv. 1 

beiiil tlK'ir brst studies — iv. 2 

good words, I tbink, were best — iv. 3 

have I not liere tbc best cards — v. 2 

the best part of ray power — v. 7 

otlier princes tliat may best be spared — v. 7 
even in the best blood chambered. . . . Bkhard II. i. I 

the best way is, to 'venge my — i. 2 

I would he were the best in "all — iv. 1 

yet best beseeming me to speak — iv. 1 

confoimd the best part of an hour .Allenry IV. i. 3 

from the best of all mv land — iii. 1 

'twere best, he did. Then are we all — v. 2 

to stain with the best blood that I . . — v. 2 

from the best tempered courage 2 Henry IV. i. 1 

seem best; things present, worst .... — i. 3 

and fame with the very best — ii. 4 

the best of them all at commandment — iii. 2 

have you served with the best — iii. 2 

as strong, our cause the best — iv. 1 

therefore, thou, best of gold, art — iv. 4 

rank with the best governed nation . . — v. 2 
and ripen best, neiglibom-ed by fruit . . Henry V. i. \ 

if each man do his best — ii. 2 

the full fraught man, and best indued — ii. 2 

'tis best to weigh the enemy — ii. 4 

that men of few words are the best men — iii. 2 

therefore to our l)cst mercy give — ,iii. 3 

in ray thoughts, becomes me best.... — iii. 3 

tut! Ihave tlie best armoiu: — iii. 7 

it is the best liorse of Europe — iii. 7 

whoae horn's the peasant best advantages — iv. 1 

share from me, for the best hope I have — iv. 3 

and all his brethren in best sort — v. (cho.) 

on both parts best can witness — v. 2 

in this best garden of the world — v. 2 

as your wisdoms best shall see — v. 2 

the best king, thou shalt find the best — v. 2 

God, the best maker of all marriages — v. 2 

by wliich the world's best garden. . — v. 2 (cho.) 

his safety there I'll best devise 1 Henry VI. I. I 

where is best place to make — i. 4 

as fitting best to quittance — ii. 1 

horses, which dotli bear him best — ii. 4 

now will it best avail your majesty.. — iii. 1 

where is the best and safest passage. . — iii. 2 

I were best to leave him — v. 3 

may live to be the best of all 2Henry VI. i. 3 

that time best fits the work — i. 4 

thyself be faultless, thou wert best .. — ii. I 

where it best fits to be — ii. 3 

and, with your best endeavour — iii. 1 

to your wisdoms seemeth best — iii. I 

there's Best's son, the tanner — iv. 2 

ay, by the best blood that ever — iv. 1 

she hath lost her best man — iv. 10 

you were best to go to bed — v. 1 

Richard hath best deserved of ZHenry VI. i. 1 

would thy best friends did know — ii. 2 

the queen hath best success when.... — ii. 2 

the better; then another, best — ii. 5 

they prosper best of all when I am .. — ii. 5 

and undo, as him pleaseth best — ii. 6 

and aim we at the best — iii. 1 

I hope, all's for the best — iii. 3 

having now the best at Barnet — v. 3 

but bad, till I be best — v. 6 

were best to do it secretly, alone Richard Ill.i. 1 

where it seems best unto your royal — iii. 1 

for your best health and recreation . . — iii. 1 

best fitteth ray degi'ee, or your — iii. 7 

even in the at'teruoon of her best days — iii. 7 

as one being best acquainted with. ... — iv. 4 

an honest tale speeds best — iv. 4 

that is the best news; that the earl . . — iv. 4 

with best advantage will deceive .... — v. 3 

were now best, now worst Henry VIII. i. 1 

therefore, best not wake him from .. — i. 1 

and the best heart of it, thanks you.. ' — i. 2 

what we oft do best, by sick — i. 2 

is cried up for our best act — i. 2 

let's dream who's best in favour — i. 4 

and of the best breed in the north — ii. 2 (letter) 

the best, she sliall have; and my (_rep.) — ii. 2 

our content is om' best having — ii. 3 

well worthy the best heir o' the world — ii. 4 

the inventory of your best graces .... — iii. 2 

all thy best parts" bound togetlxer .... — iii. 2 

the best persuasions to the contrary.. — v. 1 

you, that best should teach us, have — v. 2 

nourishment, dare bite the best — v. 2 

all the best men are oixrs; for 'tis .... — (epil.) 
or do his best to do it, he hath . . Troilus ^ Cress, i. 3 

in taint of our best man — _i. 3 

Aj ax shall cope the best — ii. 3 

merits fair Ilelen best [Knt ^most] . . — iv. 1 

likes not you, pleases me best — v. 2 

in qualities of the best Timon of Athens, i. 1 

the best, for the innocence — i.l 

I could wish my best friend at such.. — i. 2 

the five best senses acknowledge .... — i. 2 

my lord, you take us even at the best — i. 2 

the best of happiness, honoiu* — i.2 

even to the state's best health — ii. 2 

the best half shoidd have returned . . — iii. 2 

this was my lord's best hope — iii. 3 

ever at the best, hearing well — iii. 6 

serve his mind with mv best will .... — iv. 2 

best state, contentless, natli - iv.3 

the best, and truest; for here it sleeps — iv.3 

good as the best; promising — v. 1 

make them best seen — v.l 

best in all Athens: thou art (rep.) .. — v.l 

for thy best use and wearing — v. 2 

see, our best elders. Marcitis Coriolanus, i. 1 

the Antiates, of their best trust — i. 6 

that best can aid your action — i. 6 



BES 



BEST — you were best meddle with.Aft'jTi/ iVines, iii. 3 

there's a hole made in your best coat — iii. 5 

he my husband best of all affects .... — i v. 4 

I'll make the best in Gloucestershire — v. 5 
all if you will; {or I myself am hesi.. Twelfth N. i. 4 

I'll do my best, to woo your lady — i. 4 

make yom- excuse wisely, you were best — i. h 

excellent ! why this is the best fooling — ii. 3 

the best persuaded of himself — ii. 3 

to-morrow, sir; best, fi^^t. ij" see .... — iii. 3 

at the Elephant, is l>r-^l t.> lnil_'L- — iii. 3 

your ladyship wcrL' liL-t Ii;ul- uuard.. — iii. 4 

the vantage best have toijk Mea.for.Vea. ii. 2 

thy Lest of rest is sleep — ]ii. 1 

therefore your best appointment make — iii. 1 

'tis best that thou diest quickly — iii. 1 

the best and wholsomest spirits — iv. 2 

but the best is, he lives not in them . . — iv. 3 

as seems you best, in any chastisement — v. 1 

they say, best men are moulded — v.l 

and to be merry best becomes you Much Ado, ii. 1 

the best I can, "mv lord — ii. 3 

thy counsel whicli is tlie best to furnish — iii. 1 

as best befits her wounded reputation — iv. 1 
by his best arrow with the golden . . Miit. N. Dr. i. 1 

yon were best to call them — i.2 

what beard where I best to play it in — i. 2 

do thv best to pluck this crawling .. — ii. 3 

and those things do best please me .. — iii. 2 

he hath simply the best wit — iv. 2 

yea; and tlio ijiest person too — iv. 2 

the best in this kind are but — v.l 

the very best at a beast, my lord — — v. 1 

to the l)est liride-bed will we — v. l' 

birds best peck, and men sit. . Love's L.L. i. 1 (letter) 

but the best that ever I heard (rep.) .. — i. 1 

and the best of them too — 1-2 

for the best ward of mine honour is. . — iii. 1 

you were best call it daughter-beamed — v. 2 

I am best pleased with that — v. 2 

with eyes best seeing heaven's — v. 2 

that sport best pleases, that — v. 2 

Pompey proves the best worthy — v. 2 

no; he "is best indued in the small .... ^ v. 2 

honest plain words best pierce — v. 2 

when he is best, he is little worse . . Mer. of Vcn. i. 2 

was the best deserving of a fair lady — i. 2 

my best endeavoius shall be done — ii. 2 

you were best to tell Antonio — ii. s 

the best conditioned and unwearied. . — iii . 2 

I think the best grace of wit will — iii. 5 

why, I were best to cut my — v. 1 

and thou were best look to't As you Like il,\. 1 

of my own people, who best know him — i.l 

for the best is yet to do — i.2 

not chance for your best virtue — iii- 2 

the best thing in him is his — iii. 5 

put you in your best array — v. 2 

tis the best brine a maiden can All's Well, i. 1 

he cannot want the best that — i.l 

the best wishes, that can be forged . . — i. 1 

honours best tlurive, when rather .... — ii. 3 

thou wert best set thy lower part — — ii. 3 

lay om- best love and credence, upon — iii. 3 

how 'tis best to bear it — iii. 7 

drimkenness is his best virtue — iv. 3 

reputed one of the best that is — iv. 3 

in you it best lies — v. 3 (petition) 

'tis best put finger in the eye . . Taming of Shrew, i. 1 

the best horse in Padua, to begin — i.l 

my best beloved, and approved friend — i. 2 

arid thrive, as best I may — i.2 

brought up, as best becomes — i.2 

tell whom thou lo vest best — ii. I 

waspish, best beware my sting — ii. 1 

your offer is the best; and, let — ii. I 

old fashions please me best — iii. 1 

revel it as bravely as the best — iv. 3 

cannot, best stop your ears — iv. 3 

hence, make your best of it — i v. 3 

where then do you know best — iv. 4 

yon were best knock louder — v. 1 

then thou wert best say, that I — v. 1 

feast with the best, and welcome to . . — v. 2 

he's beat from his best ward Winter's Tale, i. 2 

how is't with you, best brother? — i.2 

if not, how best to bear it — i. 2 

O then, mv best blood turn to — i.2 

his, that did betray the best — _i. 2 

become some women best; so that .. — ii. 1 

a sad tale's best for winter — ii. 1 

and do your best to fright me — ii. 1 

as your charities shall oest instruct.. — ii. 1 

the office becomes a woman best .... — ii. 2 

commend my best obedience to — ii. 2 

turn all to the best! these proclamations — iii. 1 

you, my lord, best know, who least . . — iii. 2 

make your best haste; and go not too — iii. 3 

scared away two of my best sheep .. — iii. 3 

mv best Camillol "We must — iv. 1 

a tiss to clioose who loves another best — iv. 3 

thnt best l)ecomes the talile^ — iv.3 

(with my best endeavours, in your .. — iv.3 

who do their best ofiice, if they — iv. 3 

wliose purse was best in pictui-e — iv.3 

80 his successor was like to be the best — v. 1 

my best train I have from your — v. 1 

fou were best say these robes are not — v. 2 
see, the jewel, best enamelled. . Comedy of Err. ii. I 

in debating which was best, we shall — iii. 1 
my deed, 'twere best not know myself.Wtic6i?(/i, ii. 2 

we have lost best half of our affair .... — iii. 3 

but, in best time, we will require — iii. 4 

thou art the best o' the cut- throats .... — iii. 4 

to feed, were best at home — ii-. 4 

and show the best of our delights — iv. 1 

judicious, and best knows the fits — iv. 2 

solicits heaven, himself best knows — iv.3 

at your best command; at your King John, i. 1 

in best appointment, all our regiments — ii. 1 



BEST — which men are best inclined ..Coriolanus, i. 

send us to RotYie the l)est — i. 9 

when you speak jjcst unto tlie purpose — ii. 1 

some of the liest of them were — ii. I 

he proved liest man i'the Held — ii. 2 

that our best wiiter liroiiglit — ii. 3 

a brace iif the lte>t of tlieni — . iii. 1 

for your liest cH'ls, yon adopt your policy — iii. 2 

as best thou art experienced — iv. 5 

for his best friends, if tlicy sliould say — iv. 6 

that we did, we did for tlie best — iv. 6 

best of my llesli, furgive my tyranny — v. 3 

my best lind frcsliest men — v. h 

let's make the best of it — v. 5 

what dost thou with thy best apparel. /uJ.Ctsior, i. 1 
do you now put on yoiu best attire . . — i. 1 

many of the best respect in Rome — i.2 

that your best friends shall wish .... — ii. 2 

at your best leisure — iii. 1 

with the most boldest and best hearts — iii. I 

as I slew mv best lover — iii. 2 

't were best "lie speak no harm — iii. 2 

ay, and truly, you were best — iii. 3 

our best friends made, and our best. . — iv. 1 
covert matters may be best disclosed — iv. I 

to see my best friend ta'en — v. 3 

the gods best know, — O never Antony S,- Cleo. i. 3 

at the last, best; see, wlieu — i. 3 

but this is not the best — i. 3 

no worse a husband than the best of men — ii. 2 

ray arm is sore, best play with — ii. .'i 

for the best turn i'the bed — ii. .'> 

when the best hint was given him .. — iii. 1 
let 3'our best love draw to that (rep.) — iii. 4 
best of comfort; and ever welcome . . — i i i . il 

well beeomed' the best of men — i i i . 7 

are not, in their best fortunes, strong — iii. li) 

let our best heads know — iv. 1 

best that you safed the bringer — i v. 6 

the foulest best (its my latter — iv. 6 

their appointment we may best discover — iv. 10 

for his best force is forth to man — iv. 10 

to liold our best advantage — iv. 10 

who best was worthy best to be served — v. i 
so, Dolabella, it shall content me best — v. 2 

make your best use of this — v. 2 

go fetcti my best attires — v. 3 

some comfort out of your best advice . Cymbeline, i. 2 
best express liow slow his soul sailed on — i. 4 
your lord, (the best feather of our wing) — _i. 7 
equal discourtesy to your best kindness — ii. 3 

and, therewitlial, the best — ii. 4 

madam, you're best consider — iii. 2 

this life IS best, if quiet life behest .. — ?'.'• ^ 

first, with the best of note — iii- 3 

may the gods direct you to the bestl — iii. 4 
from every one the best she hath ... . — jjj- '^ 

I were best not call — !!!■ 6 

best draw my sword; and if mine.... — }!!••» 

you Polydore, have proved best — iii. 6 

do your best wills, and make me .... — v. 1 
that best could deem his dignity?.... — v. 4 
whom best I love, I cross; to make . . — v. 4 
a man should have the best use of eyes — v. 4 
thinlc more and more what's best .... — v. 5 

and lend my best attention — v. 5 

and was the best of all amongst — v. ,^ 

boast of him that best could speak . . — v. 5 
Rome's best cliampion, successful. TiVus Andron. \. z 

Rome's best citizens applaud — i.2 

I have done as best I may ■ — .^•- 

prosecute tlie meanest, of the best . . — iv. 4 

what pledge will please him best — iv. 4 

my cause wlio I>est can justify . . Pericles, i. (Gower) 
I'll do mv lie.st, sir. This Tliarsus .. — i. 4 

in Thars'us was not best longer — ii. (Gower) 

all liave done well, but you the best. . — ii. 3 

all for speeding do their best — ij. 3 

that best kno\v'st how to rule — j'j. 4 

tlirow their Ijest eyes upon it — iii. I 

no care to j^our best courses — V'- ^ 

here to-ino"rrow with his best ruff on — iv.3 
sweetest, and liest lies here. . — iv. 4 (Gow. inscrip.) 

'twere best I did give o'er — v. 1 

your best object, the argument (rep.) Lear, i. 1 

the best and soundest of his time — i- 1 

the world bitter to the best of our times — i. 2 (let.) 

we have seen the best of our time — i.2 

I advise you to tlie best — i.2 

and the best of me is diligence — i. 4 

sirrah, you were best take my coxcomb .... — i. 4 

the better? Best! this weaves itself — ii- 1 

when he saw my best alarumed spirits — ii. 1 

which I best thought it fit to answer — ii. 1 

'tis best to give liim way — .!!• * 

feet in some of our best ports — iii. 1 

lamentable change is from the best — iv. 1 

I'll bring him the best 'parel that I — iv. 1 

who, witn best meaning, have incurred .... _ v. 3 

and the best quarrels, in the heat — v. 3 

by me investedj he compeers the best ■ — v. 3 

and my best spirits are bent to prove — v. :? 

mine eyes are none o'the best — v. 3 

begone; the sport is at tlie best Rom. Sr Jul. \. l> 

is his love, and best befits the dark . . — ii. 1 

I thought all for the best — in. 1 

it best agrees with night — iii. 2 

Tybalt, Tybalt, the libst friend I had — iii. 2 

courts thee in her best array — ]]]■ ^ 

I think it best you married" with — iii. .'> 

in tliy best robes uncovered on the bier — iv. 1 

ay, those attires are best — iv. 3 

but she's best married, that dies .... — iv. 5 

in all her best array bear her — iv. 5 

time lie thine, and'thv best graces Hamlet, i. 2 

Ishall ill ail mv hest'obey vou — i.2 

best safety lies ill fear ". — i. 3 

in Franee', of tlie liest rank and station .. — i. 3 

murder most foul, as in the best it is — 1. .^ 

that I love thee best, most best — ii. 2 



BES 



[57 ] 

BESTRAUGIIT— 

wl\at, I iim not bcstm\\g\it..Taming or Sli. 2 (iucluc.) 

BKST-i;E(i.\KI)El)— 
IIk- iK'st-iVL'anU'd virfiiiis MmhanI of Venice, ii. 1 

BlOSTKliW— ln'stivw tlio union of yiiur.7Vmpt's?,iv. 1 
we will hustrcw the fixowml.. Tnmiiii; of Sh. 2 (inrtuc.) 

BESTREAVED— liisticwo.l with (lowers — 1 (indue.) 

BESTKID— whon 1 bostiid tlioc ...Comcihi or F.r.\. 1 

that thou so otten host l.estiid Nwluml II. v. .'< 

tliree times I bestrid liini Illcnnj V'i. v. U 

lie bestrid an o'er-prcssed Roman . . Coriolanus, ii. 2 

his legs bestrid the ocean Antony ^- Cleo. V. 2 

never bestrid a liorse, save one Cymbcline, iv. 4 

BESTRIDE— bestride our down fallen.. Mocdsi/., iv. 3 

bestride me, so ; 'tis a point IHenry IF. v. I 

he doth bestride a bleeding land ....iHenry IV.i. 1 

when I bestride him, I soar Henry V. iii. 7 

and once again bestride our foaming. SHt'jiri/K/. ii. 1 
bestride the rocic, the tide will wash . . — v. 4 

saw bestride my tliresliold Coriolanus, iv. 5 

he doth bestride the narrow world. Jj/Z/ms Ccesar, i. 2 
he bestrides tire lazy-pacing clouds. .i?om. fy Jul. ii. 2 
a lover may bestride the gossamers.... — ii. 6 

BET — the French bet against the Danish. Hamlet, v. 2 

BETAKE— betake thee to't TwelflhNight, iii. 4 

betake you to your guard — iii. 4 

betake thee to thy faith AlVs Well, iv. 1 

therefore betake thee to nothing.. Wm/er's Tale, iii. 2 
makes me betake me to my heels ..2Henry VI. iv. 8 

each one betake him to his rest Pericles, ii. 3 

but every man betake him to Romeo ^ Juliet, i. 4 

BETEEJ'I— I could well beteem thera. Mid. N. Dr.i. 1 
that he might not beteem the winds .... Hamlet, i. 2 

BETHINK— betliink you of some. .Merry Wives, iii. 3 
and now I do bethink me Twelftli Night, v. 1 

food, good my lord, bethink you . . Mea.forMea. ii. 2 
will oethink me : come again — ii. 2 

'twas bravely done, if you bethink . . Much Ado, v. 1 
now I do bethink me, so itis . . Mid. N. Dream, iv. 1 
and not bethink me straight. .MercAa»!io/ Venice, i. 1 

I will bethink me: may I speak — i. 3 

O, noble lord, bethink thee . . Taming afSh. 2 (ind.) 
bethink you, father; for the difference ..Jolin, iii. 1 

but I bethink me, what a weary Ric/iard II. ii. 3 

bethink thee on her virtues 1 Heiiry VI. v. 3 

hut bethink thee once again IHenry VI. i. 4 

as 1 bethink me, you should not be king — i. 4 
while we bethink a means to break it off — iii. 3 

madam, bethink you, like Richard III. ii. 2 

I shall otherwise "bethink me JuliusCa^sar, iv. 3 

bethink yourself wherein you may Lear, i. 2 

bade him betliink how nice Romeo^ Juliet, iii. 1 

trust to't, bethink you, I'll not — iii. 5 

if vou bethink yourself of any crime . . Othello, v. 2 

BEl'HOUGHT-better bethought him. Tu-elfth N. iii. 4 

bethought me of another fault .... Mea.for Mea. v. 1 

bethought me what was past Pericles, i. 2 

'tis well bethought; she, (luestionless .... — v. 1 

am bethought to take the basest Lear, ii. 3 

marry, well bethought: 'tis told me Hamlet, i. 3 

BETriUMPED— never so bethumped. A'i'ng- John, ii. 2 

BETID — betid to any creature Tempest, i. 2 

of woeful ages, long ago betid Richard II. v. 1 

know I what is betid to Cloten Cymbeline, iv. 2 

BETIDE — happiness betide my liege. Richard II. iii. 2 
betide the duke of Somerset?. .2 Henry VI. i. 4 (paper) 

for any sore that may betide SHenry VI. iv. 6 

hap betide that hated wretch Richard Ill.i.'i 

ill rest betide the chamber where .... — i. 2 

dead, what would betide of me — i. 3 

so betide to me, as well I tender yon.. — ii. 4 

or woe betide thee evermore .... Titus Andron. iv. 2 

BETIDETH— else betideth here.. Two Gen. of Ver. i. 1 

recking as little what betideth me — i v. 3 

BETIME— is to be up betimes .... Twelfth Night, ii. 3 

is to go to bed betimes — ii. 3 

hanged betimes in the morning . . Mea.for Mea. iv. 3 
betimes i' the morn, I'll call you .... — iv. 4 

but the next morn betimes — v. 1 

let me say amen betimes Merch. of Venice, iii. 1 

this diseased opinion, and betime.. Winter's Tale^i. 2 

I will to-morrow (betimes I will Macbeth, iii. 4 

good God, betimes remove the means — iv. 3 

put up thy sword betimes King John, iv. 3 

lie tires betimes, tliat spurs too (rep.) ..Rich. II. ii. 1 

be with me betimes 1 Henry IV. ii. 4 

and stop the rage betime 2Henry VI. iii. 1 

would have lost my life betimes .... — iii. 1 
away betimes, before his forces join.3Henr!/r/. iv. 8 

have leave to go away betimes — v. 4 

come, let us sup betimes Richard III. iii. 1 

let us pay betimes a moiety Troilus (f Cress, ii. 2 

break off betimes, and every man../M((ws Cmsar, ii. 1 

set on his powers betimes "before — iv. 3 

we rise betime, and go to it Ant. (^ Cleo. iv. 4 

to be of note, begins betimes — iv. 4 

or betimes let's re-enforce, or fly Cijmbeline, v. 2 

all this morning betime, and . . Hamlet, iv. 5 (song) 
knows, what is t to leave betimes? .... — v. 2 

I will be with thee betimes Othello, i. 3 

betiraesin the morning will I beseech.. .. — ii. 3 
BETOKEN— this doth betoken, the corse. Hamlet, v. 1 
BETOOK-betook my self to walk, toiie's t. L. i. 1 (let.) 
BETOSSED— when my hetossed soul. Rom. * Jul. v. 3 
BETRAY— do not betray me, sir . . Merry Wives, iii. 3 
betray him to another punishment .. — iii. 3 

we'll betray him finely — v. 3 

tlioso that betray them, do no — v. 3 

letter that 1 dropped to betray him.. Twelfth N. iii. 2 
may more betray our sense than. . Mea.for Mea. ii. 2 
I do betray myself with blushing .Lowe's L.Lost,i. 2 

these betray nice wenches — iii. 1 

to betray a she lamb of As you Like it, iii. 2 

and betray themselves to every . . — iv. 1 

offer to betray you, and deliver all . . Alt's Well, iii. 6 

he will betray us all unto — iv. 1 

undertake to betray the Florentine. . . — iv 3 

natme will betray its folly Winter's Tale, i. 2 

with his, that did betray the best — i. 2 

his babe's, betrays to slander — ii. 3 



BET 



BEST— the best actors iu the world Ham!et,\\. 2 

where vour wisilom best shall think — iii. 1 

do the 'king best service in the end — iv. 2 

I prjH' von, pass with \"our best violence — v. 2 
y(ni we're best go in. 'N'ot T ; 1 must .... Othello, i. 2 
conduct them, 'you best know tlie place .. — '}. 3 
take ui) this mingled matter at the best.. — i. 3 

of the place is best known to 3'ou — i. 3 

thou pruisest the worst best — ii. 1 

having mv best judgement collied — ii. 3 

the best of you shall sink in my rebuke.. — ii. 3 
the best sometimes forget; though Cassio — ii. 3 
in rage strike those that wish them best.. — ii. 3 

make examples out of their best — iii. 3 

their best conscience is— not to leave — iii. 3 

as I have spoken for you all my best .... — iii. 4 

what's the best? if she come in — v. 2 

peace, you were best. Thou hast not — v. 2 

well, thou dost best — v. 2 

BESTAINED— his thin bestained cloak ..John, iv. 3 

BESTED— a fellow worse bested illenry VI. ii. 3 

BEST-ESTEEMED— 

my best-esteemed acquaintance.il/er. of Venice, ii. 2 
BESTIAL— bestial appetite in change .Rich. III. iii. 5 

whether it be bestial oblivion Hamlet, iv. 4 

and what remains is bestial Othello, ii. 3 

BESTILLED— [Kn(.] bestilled almost to .Hamlet, i. 2 

BESTIR— aground: bestir, bestir Tempest, i. 1 

BESTIR'D— hath so bestir'd thee .... 1 Henry IV. ii. 3 

vou have so bestir'd your valour Lear, ii. 2 

BEST-MOVING— best-moving fair.. Lore's L.L. ii. 1 
BESTCW — bestow upon the eyes of tliis. Tempest, iv. 1 

and bestow vour luggage — v. 1 

the praises tliat I now bestow.. TwoGen. of Ver. ii. 4 

to bestow her on Thurio — iii. 1 

I may bestow myself — iii. 1 

bestow thy fawning smiles — iii. 1 

how should I bestow him? Merry Wives, iv. 2 

for what is yours to bestow TwelfthNiglit, i. 5 

shall I feast him? what bestow on him? — iii. 4 
to bestow it all of yonx worship .... Much Ado, iii. 5 

wliich they did bestow Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

sweet royalty, bestow on me — v. 2 

that I would bestow upon Mer. of Venice, ii. 2 

silence bestows that virtue — v.l 

bestows himself like a ripe As you Like it, iv. 3 

you will bestow her on ()rlando . . — v. 4 

to bestow them, as notes Alt's Well, i. 3 

for me to ask, thee to bestow — ii. 1 

I will bestow some precepts on this . . — iii. 5 

not to bestow my youngest Taming of S!i. i. 1 

I here bestow a simple instrument — ii. 1 

a blessing he bestows on beasts . . Com. of Errors, ii. 2 

that chain will I bestow — iii. 1 

that will I bestow among — iv. 1 

can you tell where he bestows himself? il/oc6e(/i, iii. 6 

how you would bestow yourself King Joim, iii. 1 

might we see Falstaff bestow hiinself.2 Henry IV. ii. 2 

I will bestow a breakfast Henry V. ii. 1 

my sovereign lord, bestow yourself . . — iv. 3 
we will bestow you in some better ..IHenry VI. iii. 2 
and to bestow your pity on me .... Henry VIII. ii. 4 

bestow your counsels on me — iii. 1 

to bestow my bounties upon you .... — iii. 2 
swear you would bestow on me?.. .. Troil.^Cres.v.2 
what you bestow, in him I'll . . Timon of Athens, i. 1 

if you'll bestow a small Coriolanus, i. 1 

bestow your sned-for tongues? — ii. 3 

and so bestow these papers as you. . Julius Ccesar, i. 3 
wilt thou bestow thy time with me . . — v. 5 

bestow it at your pleasure Ant. ^ Cleo. v. 2 

will 3'ou bestow them friendly .... TitusAndron. i. 2 

must needs bestow her funeral — iy. 2 

bestow your love and your affections . . Pericles, ii. 5 

and bestow your needful counsel Lear, ii. 1 

I'U bestow you with a friend — iv. 6 

shall bestow on him [CoZ. Knt give him such 

an unaccustomed dram] so sure . . Rom. <^-Jul. iii. 6 
will so bestow otu-selves, that, seeing . . Hamlet, iii. 1 

■n-e ivill bestow ourselves: read on — iii. 1 

I will bestow him, and mil answer well — iii. 4 

bestow this place on us a little while — iv. 1 

as of her tongue she oft bestows on me. . Othello, ii. 1 
but what praise couldst thou bestow on — ii. 1 
I will bestow you where you shall have — iii. 1 
she may, I tliink, bestow t on any man . . — iv. 1 
BESTO'WED- have bestowed on. Two Gen. of Ver. iii. 1 

'tis labour well bestowed Merry Wives, ii. 1 

I protest to you, bestowed much on her — ii. 2 

so they shall be both bestowed! — iv. 5 

woulcl I had bestowed that time . . Twelfth Nig/it, i. 3 
that fortune hath bestowed upon her — ii. 4 

than ever she bestowed upon mo — iii. 2 

bestowed heron her own Mea.for Mea. iii. 1 

Don Pedro hath bestowed much Much Ado, i. 1 

the rod lie might have bestowed on you — ii. 1 
X would she had bestowed this dotage — ii. 3 
suit ill spent, and labour ill bestowed — iii. 2 
being bought, and orderly bestowed. Mer. of Ven. ii. 2 

little is the cost I have bestowed — iii. 4 

henceforth be bestowed equally . . As you Like it, i. 2 
consent to have her so bestowed.. Taming of Sh. iv. 4 

safe place you have bestowed Comedy of Er. i. 2 

our bloody cousins are bestowed Macbeth, iii. 1 

jiains I have bestowed, to breed thi3.2He»r!//F. iv. 2 
I would have bestowed the thousand . . — v. 5 

have bestowed more contrite tears Henry V. iv. 1 

have I licstowed on learned clerks. .'iHcnry VI. iv. 7 
would not b;ivc bestowed the heir . .ZHcnry VI. iv. 1 
whose HIV Were ill bestowed ..Troilus ^■(■ressii'n, ii.2 
hestowedhis lips on that unworthy..-/Hf..>;C(eo. iii. 11 
on the heavens bestowed. . Pericles, iv. 4 (Gow. insc.) 

his people cannot be well bestowed Lear, ii. 4 

will you see the players well bestowed.. Ham;e^ ii. 2 

where the dead bodv is bestowed — iv, 3 

BESTO'WING— stand at my bestowing./l(('j Well, ii. 3 

err in bestowing it iii. 7 

bestowing on him at his asking . . . Henry VIII. ii. 1 
yet, in bestowing, madam, he was.... — iv. 2 
my powers do their bestowing lose. TroiL ^ Cres. iii. 2 



BETRAY — tlid betray me to my ovra.Com. ofEr. v. 1 

to betray us in deepest consequence Macbeth, i.3 

would not betray the devil to his — iv. 3 

doth betray to loss the ccniqucst 1 Henry VI. i v. 3 

hushes to betray thy wings 2Henry VI. ii. 4 

ah, villain, thou wilt betray me — iv. 10 

why then should I betray thee? — i v. 10 

knave: wouldst thou betray me? ..Richard HI. i. 1 
to betray you any way to sorrow . . Henry VIII. iii. 1 
to betray me. My lords, I thank you — iii. 1 
wear them, betray with them.. Timon of Athens, iv. 3 
will betray tawny-finned fishes .... Ant. <S Cleo. ii. 5 

should not betray mine interest Cymbeline, i. 4 

wilt thou betray thy noble mistress . Titus And. iv. 2 

that will betray with blushing — iv. 2 

live to betray tnis guilt of ours? — iv. 2 

to betray doth wear an angel's Pericles, iv. 4 

of silksj betray thy poor heart to women. Lear, iii. 4 

must die, else she'll betray more men ..Oiliello, v. 2 

BETRAYED— would be betrayed. Lojie's L. Lost, iii. 1 

are we betrayed thus (;ep.) — iv. 3 

I am betrayed, by keeping company — iv. 3 

Camillo has betrayed me Winter' sTale, v. 1 

hath wilfully betrayed the lives of. . . 1 Henry IV. i. 3 

he hath betrayed his followers Henry V. iii. 6 

his dastard foe-men is betrayed \ Henry VI. i. 1 

as sure as in this late betrayed town — iii. 2 

but dies, betrayed to fortune — iv. 4 

for fear you be betrayed IHenry VI. iv. 4 

either betrayed by falsehood 3Henry VI. iv. 4 

by thy guile betrayed to death .... Richard HI. v. 3 

was by that wretch betrayed Henry VIII. ii . 1 

he has betrayed your business Coriolanus, v. 5 

unicorns may be betrayed with tiees.Jul.Ca:sar, ii. I 

queen so mightily betrayed Ant. <5- Cteo. i. 3 

thy tongue hath so betrayed thine art — ii. 7 
this foul Egyptian hath betrayed me — iv. 1 

betrayed I am ; O this false soul — i v. 1 

she hath betrayed me, and shall die. . — iv . 12 

in this relieved, but not betrayed — v. 2 

her painting, hath betrayed liim Cymbeline, iii. 4 

those that are betrayed do feel — iii. 4 

alas ! he is betrayed, and I undone Othello, v. 2 

BETRAYEDST— 

that thou betrayedst Polixenes . . Winter'sTale, iii. 2 
BETRAYING— and betraying me . . Timon of A. iv. 3 

BETRIM— at thy hest betrims Tempest, iv. 1 

BETROTH— that betroths liimself .... Much Ada, i. 3 
BETROTHED— we are betrothed.. Two G.o/Fer. ii. 4 
thyself art witness, I am betrothed . . — iv. 2 
you are betrothed both to a maid. Twelfth Night, v. 1 
lie his old betrothed, butdespised./l/ea./orMea. iii. 2 
my lord, was I betrothed ere I saw. Mid.N.'sDr. iv. 1 
fathers, and betrothed lovers, that .... Henry V. ii. 4 
your highness is betrothed nnto .... 1 Henry VI. v. 5 
by substitute betrothed to Bona ..Ricliardlll. iii. 7 
may bear his betrothed from all . . Tiius Andron. i. 2 
my true betrothed love, and now my wife — i. 2 
betrothed, and would have married. iJom. f Jul. v. 3 
BETTED— and betted much money..2HeKrs//F. iii. 2 

BETTE R— that I am more better Tempest, i. 2 

my father's of abetter nature, sir — i. 2 

no better than the earth he lies upon . . — ii. 1 

has done little better than play'd — iv. 1 

send some better messenger Two Gen. of Ver.i. 1 

was there ever heard abetter? — ii. 1 

for truth hath better deeds — ii.2 

exchange the bad for the better — ii. 

better forbear, till Proteus — ii. 7 

therefore, is she better than a jade .. — iii. 1 

he hath staid for a better man — iii. 1 

the better to confer with thee — iii. 2 

would better fit his chamber — iv. 4 

but better, indeed, when you — v. 2 

I better brook than flonrishing_ — v. 4 

better have none than plural faith . . — y. 4 

I wish'd your venison better Merry Wives, i. 1 

'twere better for you, if it — j- 1 

upon better acquaintance — j. 1 

ay, for fault of abetter — i. 4 

the better, that it pleases your — i 4 

would you desire better sympathy — ii. 1 (letter) 
I like it never the better for that .... — ii- 1 

leads a better life than she does — ii.2 

in better plight for a lender than .... — ii.2 

better three noiu-s too soon — .!!• - 

I know not which pleases me better. . — S\]-^ 

heaven make you better than — !!!• ^ 

how things go, better than I can .... — ii; 4 

I seek you a better husband — iii. 4 

he is alietter scholar, than I — iv. 1 

better shame than murder — iv. 2 

there is no better way than that — iv. 4 

the better to denote her to the doctor.. — iv. 

better a little chiding, than — v. 3 

become the forest better than the to^vn — y. .^ 

I desire better acquaintance Twelfth Night, i. 3 

iinder the desree of my betters — J. 3 

she will attend it better iu tliy youth — i. 4 

doth ever make the better fool — ;• ^ 

for the better encreasing your folly . . — i- 5 

no better than the fool's zanies — .i. ? 

she were better love a dream — '!• 2 

he does it with a better grace — .<!• 3 

my legs do better understand me — — in. 1 
how much the better to fall before . . — in- 1 
would it be better, madam, than I .. — iii. 1 

but given unsought is better — lu- 1 

yon shall find better dealing — m. 3 

lint my hope is better, and so — iii. 4 (ebiil.) 

he hath better bethought him — in. 4 

if vou he no better in your wits — iv. 2 

triily sir, the better for my foes — v. 1 

the better for thy friends — v. 1 

and the better for my foes — y . I 

none better knows than you . . Measure for Mea.i. 4 

it shall be the better for you — ii. 1 

and fortune shall better determine .. — ii. 1 

would much better please me — i i . 4 

graciously to know I am no better . . — ii. 4 



BET 



EETTER-better it were, a brother... Vtv/./or Mm.u. 1 

i^ivc him a better proflamatioii — iii. 2 

love talks witli lictter love — Mi. 2 

he .-hall know vou better, sir — iii. 2 

for my better fiuisfartioii — iv. 2 (note) 

anil advise him tor a better place .... — iv. 2 

O, the better sir; for he that — iv. 3 

the better, given nic by so holy — iv. 3 

he's a better woodman than thou .... — iv. 3 

it can be no better — v. 1 

not better than he, bv her — . v. 1 

that life is better life, past fearing. ... — v. 1 

to buy you a better iiusband — v. 1 

I craveno other, nor no better man .. — v. 1 

become much more tlie better -for being — V. 1 

to provide for better times to come .. — v. 1 
indeed, better bettered expectation ..Much Ado, i. 1 

how much better is it to weep at joy.. — i. 1 

is better than a beast of youi-s — i. I 

that she may be the better prepared — i. 2 

and it lietter fits my blood to be — i- 3 

I love you the better; the hearers — — _ii. 1 

it were a better death than die — iii. 1 

I believe it better than reportingly .. — iii. 1 

and aim better at me bv that I now.. — iii. 2 

but it woidd better fit vour honour . . — iii. 2 

if thcv make vou tlien the better answer — in. 3 

] tliink, vour'otherrabato were bettor — iii. t 

will fashion the event in better shape — iv. 1 

vou are little belter than tbUe knaves — iv. 2 

and for the more lietter ason-ance...W<V/. N. Dr. iii. I 

this falls out better than I could devise — iii. 2 

desire lime .and hair to speak better.. — . v. 1 
which Pvramus, which Thisbe, is the better — y. 1 
vet a belter love than ray master. .Loae'sL.Los;,;. 2 

were much better ufed on Navarre .. — _ii. 1 

better than remmieration {repeated) — iii. 1 

dill vol! ever hear better? — iv. 1 

oo.r co|)pcr buvs no better treasure .. — iv. 3 

a lietter speech was never spoke before — v. 2 

well, better '.vits havcworn plain — v. 2 

coii-trne niv ^;.eeches jjctter (i-c/jea/ed) — T. 2 

and ■.-h'.wcii the l-ettcr face — V. 2 

the better part of my alfections .... Mer. of fen. i. 1 

leave vou no«- v.iih fcrter comi)any — i. 1 

thcv v.-ouid be 1 effer. if v.-cU followed — i. 2 

better than the Ncapoiilaii'.-; abetter — i. 2 

he is little better than a beast — i. 2 

thou may'st with better face exact .. — _i. 3 

v.'hieh is'the better man, the greater — if. 1 

and better, in my mind, not undertook — ii. 4 

niv prize? are my deserts no better .. — ii. 

biit I will better the instruction — iii. 1 

to wish myself much better; yet — ^ iii. 2 

ansiver that better to the commonwealth — iii. 5 

that stand in belter place — iii. 5 

vmi cam'.ot better be emploved — iv. 1 

\\ho>e trial slutll better publish his — iv. 1 (letter) 

becomes the throned monarch better — iv. 1 

would be thought no better a musician — v. 1 

■we hope, the better for our words — v. 1 

bid him Iceep it better than the other — v. 1 

and I have better news in store for you — v. 1 

his horses are bred better As you Like it, i. I 

marry, sir, be better employed — i. 1 

av. better than he I am before — i. 1 

allows you my better, in that you.... — j. 1 

all the 'better, we shall be the more . . — i. 2 

which may be better supplied when I — i. 2 

thou shoutdst have better pleased me — i. 2 

my better parts are all thrown down — i. 2 

hereafter, in a better world than this — i. 2 

take the jmrt of a better wrestler than — i. 3 

were it not better, because that I — _i. 3 

fortune cannot recompense me better — ii. 3 

at home, I was in a better place — ii. 4 

who calls? Your betters, sir — ii. "l 

that you weed your better judgments — ii. 7 

have looked on better days — ii. 7 

that we have seen better diiys — ii. 7 

were I not the better part made — iii. 1 

a better instance, I say; come — iii. 2 

Atalanta's better part; sad Lucretia's — iii. 2 (ver.) 

desire we may be better strangers.. .. — iii. 2 

defence is better than no skill — iii. 3 

luit I were better to be married — iii. 3 

shepherdess, look on him better — iii. 5 

let me be better acquainted — iv. i 

I do love it better than laughing — iv. 1 

a better jointure. I thinl:. than .' — iv. 1 

of a better leer than yon — iv. 1 

nay, you were better speak first — iv. 1 

or, to thy better understanding, diest — v. 1 

good plays prove the better by the (epilogue) 

mher they are the better for their All's Wett, i. 1 

j-our date is better in your pye — i. 1 

it was foi-merly better; marry — i. 1 

I'll like a maid the better — ii. 3 

)io better, if you please — ii. 3 

1 have spoken better of you — ii. 5 

when better fall, for yom- avails — iii. 1 

lady, have a better cneer — iii. 2 

better 'twere, I met the ravin lion .. — iii. 2 

better 'twere, that all the miseries . . — iii. 2 

none better than to let him fetch .... — jlj- ^ 

and dares better be damned than .... — iii. 6 

sir, been better known to you — v. I 

which better than the first — v. 3 

I take him for the better dog. Taming of Sli. 1 (indue. ) 
esteemed him no better than a poor — 1 (indue.) 

the better for him: would, I were so too — i. 1 

Pedascide, I'll watch you better j-et .. — iii- 1 

were it better I should rush in thus — j'l- " 

for Kate, and better for myself — iii. 2 

to put on better ere he go — iii. 2 

and lietter 'twere, that both of us did — iv. 1 

lie that knows better iiow to tame — iv. 1 

voiu" betters have endured me say — iv. 3 

1 never saw a better fashioned gown — iv. 3 

or is the adder better than the eel ... . — iv. 3 



[58] 



BETTER— better once than never. rnmi»^ of Sh. v. 1 

i Collier'] for a better jest or two — v. 2 

hoiie, better. Sirrah, Biondello, go — v. 2 

win my wager lietter yet — v. 2 

never spokest to better puriiose H'iiilcr'xTnle, i. 2 

who have sped the better by my — i. 2 

I love you better. And why so — ii. 1 

is for my better grace .•. — ii. 1 

Jove send her a better guiding spirit — ii. 3 

give us better credit: we have always — ii. 3 

better bm-n it now, than ciu'se — ii. 3 

for their better safety, to fly — iii. 2 (indict.) 

much better than to be pitied — iii. 2 

since fate, against thy better disjiosition ^ iii. 3 

better not to have had thee than .... — iv. 1 

sweet sir, much better than 1 was — iv. 2 

a way to make us better friends — iv. 3 

yet natiu'e is made lietter by no mean — iv. 3 

what you do, still betters wliat is done — iv. 3 

he could never come better: he shall — iv. 3 

no, nor mean better: by the pattern . . — iv. 3 

my senses, better pleased with madness — iv. 3 

the swifter speed, the better — iv, 3 

and graced your kindness better — v. 1 

one worse, and better used, would make — v. 1 

doth boasi; itself above a better — v. 1 

to say, you have seen a better — v. 1 

and himself, little better, extremity.. — v. 2 
better than thy dear self'sbetter part. Coin. n//ir.ii. 2 

better cheer may you have (re/j.) .... — iii. 1 

mine own self's better part — iii. 2 

but I think him better than I say — iv. 2 

gonot my horse the better, I must.... i)/ac()c/7i iii. I 

better be with the dead — iii. 2 

'tis better thee without, than he — iii. 4 

food night, and better health attend . . — iii. 1 

etter Idaebeth, than such — iv. 3 

an older, and a better soldier, none .... — iv. 3 

the gashes do better upon them — v. 7 

cowed my better part of man I — v. 7 

manners give our betters way King John, i. 1 

afoot of honour better than I w.as.... — i. 1 

I would not wish a better father — i. 1 

but butt'ets better than afist of France — ii. 2 

the better act of pru'poses mistook — iii. 1 

and better conquest never canst thou — iii. 1 

upon which better p.art our praj'ers . . — iii. 1 

fit it with some better time — iii. 3 

I could give better comfort than .... ^ iii. 4 

what better matter breeds — iii. 4 

any longed-for change, or better state — iv. 2 

strive to do better than well — iv. 2 

make haste; the better foot 'oefore .. ■ — iv. 2 

thou wert better gall the devil — ir. 3 

that you might the better arm — v. 6 

each day stil'l better other's happiness.Bj'c/iorrf//. i. 1 

'tis better hope, he is; for his designs — ii. 2 

please me better, wouldst thou weep — iii. 4 

tlion little better tluug than earth . . — iii. 4 

better far oft', than near be ne'er — v. 1 

1 see some sparkles of a better hope . . — v. 3 
tlie better sort, as thoughts of things — v. 5 
persuades me I was better when a king — v. 5 
little better than one of the wicked. .IHenry/r. i. 2 
by how much better than my word . . — i. 2 

when you are better tempered — i. 3 

could be better bitthan 1 have been.. — ii. 1 

he loves his own barn better than.. .. — ii. 3 

I never dealt better since I — ii. 4 

I shall think the better of myself .... — ii. 4 

there is no man speaks better Welsh — iii. 1 

his health was never better worth — iv. I 

they'll fill a pit, as well as better — iv. 2 

the better part of om's are full — iv. 3 

oxen at a stall, the better cherished . . ^ v. 2 

making you ever better than his — v. 2 

friends, better consider what you .... ■ — v. 2 

I better brook the loss of brittle life . . — v. 4 

I coidd have better spared a better man — v. 4 

the better part of valour is discretion (rep.) — v. 4 

he would prove the better counterfeit — y. 4 
being better horsed, out-rode me — iUenrylV. i. 1 

you should procure him better assurance — i. 2 

thou wort better be hanged — i. 2 

a candle, the better part burnt out . . — i. 2 

a better comimnion ! Heaven send (rep.) — i. 2 

I were better to be eaten to death — — i. 2 

but gladly would be better satisfied . . — i. 3 

there is not a better wench in England — ii. 1 

I have had better news — ii. 1 

the tennis-com't keeper knows better — ii. 2 

for fartlt of a better, to call ray friend — ii. 2 

keeps the road way better than — ii. 2 

better than I was; hem — ii. 4 

not seen a hulk better stuifed.. — ii. 4 

and teu times better than the nine . . — ii. 4 

I love thee better than I lo\'e e'er — ii. 4 

abetter than thou: lam a gentleman — ii. 4 

a soldier is better accommodated — — iii. 2 

my lord of York, it better showed .... — i v. 2 

I am, my lord, but as my betters are — iv. 3 

shall better speak of you than : — iv. 3 

'twere better than your dukedom — iv. 3 

thou hast a better place in his — iv. 4 

better quiet, better opinion, better. ... — iv. 4 

is lietter than a penny in purse — v. 1 

that no man could better comm.and.. — v. 1 

tliou hadst better thou hadst struck.. — v. 4 

tills poor show doth better this — v. .'i 

and to promise you abetter — (ejiil.) 

we lose the better half of our liennj /'. i. 1 

never was monarch better feared — ii. 2 

leave them, and -eek sime' hetter service — iii. 2 

if there is not better (bivi'lious — iii. 2 

when there is more better — iii. 2 

advantage is a hetter soldier — iii. B 

almost no better tli.an so many French — iii. 6 

by one that knows him better than you — iii. 7 

you are the better at proverbs — iii. 7 

were better than a chtirlish tifff .... — iv. 1 



— 11. 4 



BET 



BETTER-likes me better, since I may. UenryV. iv. 1 

then you are a better than tlie king. . — iv. 1 

which likes me better, than to wish.. — iv. 3 

with better heed to rc-survey them . . y. 2 

the princess is the better Englishwoman — v. 2 

canst speak no better English — v. 2 

the better I shall appear v. 2 

if thou wear me, better and better — v. 2 

not all together; better far, I guess..I//c;iri/;v. ii. 1 

did look no better to that iveiglity — ii. 1 

blades, wdiicli bears the hotter temper 
I'll proi'c on better men titan Somerset 

his burial better than his life ii. s 

will bestow you in some better place — iii. 2 

persuade you take a better course — iv. 1 

yoiu- discretions better can persuade. . — iv. 1 

her father is no better than an c#irl . . — v. 5 

but prosper better than _ v. .^i 

was betterworth than all thy father's.2Hc?irj; VI. i. 3 
let thy betters speak. The cardinal's (rep.) — i. 3 

to this gear; the sooner the better .... — i. 4 

I saw not better sport these seven. ... — ii. I 

thou corddst have better told — ii. 1 

farewell, and better than I fare — ii. 4 

which fear if better reasons can supplant — iii. 1 

there is no better sign of a brave mind — iv. 2 

better, ten thousand base-born Cades — iv. S 

and learn to govern better — iv, 9 

I am far better bom than is the king — v. 1 

thy betters in their birth — v. 1 

my title's good, and better far than.. 3 1/cnrv VI. i. 1 

no, I can better play the orator — i. 2 

you love the breeder better than — ii. 1 

your legs did better service than — ii. 2 

now, one the better; then another best — ii. 

to be no better than a homely swain — ii. 5 

'tis better said than done, my gracious — iii. 2 

as are of better person than myself .. — iii. 2 

and better 'twere, you troubled — iii. 3 

'tis hetter using France, than trusting — iv. 1 

she better would have fitted me — iv. 1 

I like it better than a dangerous .... — iv. 3 

better do so, than tarry — iv. ,5 

I am your better, traitors as ye are .. — v. b 

good was little better — v. 6 

my breast can better brook thy — v. 6 

a. better husband. His better (rep.). .Richard III. i. 2 

the self-same name, but oue of better — i. 2 

whom God preserve better than you.. — i. 3 

ay, and ranch better blood than his . . — i. 3 

O, sir, 'tis better to be brief, than .... — i. 4 

will reward you better for my life — i. 1 

seldom comes the better: I fear — ii . 3 

better it were, they all came — ii. 3 

might better wear their heads — iii, !! 

the better, that your lordship {rep.).. — iii. 2 

and I in better state than ere I was . . — iii. 2 

I never looked for better at his hands — iii. 5 

that, till thou bring better news — iv, 4 

and said, the better for our purpose . . — v. 3 
abusingbetterraenthan theycan be.Henij/r///. i. 3 

I think, would better please them — i. 4 

'tis better to be lowly born — ii. 3 

who shall report he lias a better wife — ii. 4 

for your honour better, and your cause — iii. 1 

Surrey durst better have burnt that — iii. 2 

yom- meditations how to live better. . — iii. 2 

nor, I'll assure you, better taken, sir — iv. 1 

does deser\'e our better wishes — v. 1 

ween you of better luck 

and a soul none better in my kingdi 

for better trial of you — v. a 

become a churchman better — v. 2 

he had better starve than but once . . — v. 2 
if she be fair, 'tis the better for ^xey-.TroiLS/Cres. i. 1 

better at home, if 'would I might — i. 1 

Troilus is the better man of the two — i. 2 

no. Hector is not a better man — i. 2 

'twould not become him, his own's better — i. 2 

loves him better than Paris — i. 2 

becomes him better than any man . . — i. 2 

Achilles; abetter man than Troilus — i. 2 
the lustre of the betterTA-ji<.— yet to show 

shall show the better] shall exceed — i. 3 

we were better parch in Afric sun — i. 3 

for the better rit«(.-as the worthier] man — i. 3 

still, that we have better men — i. 3 

all the better; their fraction is — ii. 3 

thinks himself a better man — ii. 3 

better; I am the lord Pandarus irep.) — iii. 1 

nothing, my lord. The better — iii. 3 

and better would it fit Acliilles much — iii. 3 

'twere better she were kissed — iv. ,=1 

the kiss you take is better — iv. S 

your fool no more. Thy better must — v. 2 

loved me better than you ■will 

which better fits a lion 

few things loves better Timon of Ath, 

some better than his value — i, 1 

he wrought better, that made — i. I 

if oiu' betters play at that game — i. 2 

whit better or pro]:erer can we call .. — i. 2 

and come with better music — i. 2 

twenty more better than he — ii. i 

not cumber your better remembrance — iii. 6 

ma V you a better feast never behold. . — iii. 6 

wdiave seen better days — iv. 2 

who seeks for better (ifthee — iv. 3 

I love thee better now than e'er I did — iv. 3 

that never knew but better — iv. 3 

thou shouldst have loved thyself better — iv. 3 

men may see't the better — v. i 

cannot better be held, nor more Coriolanus, i. 1 

it was no better than picture-like — i. 3 

she will but disease our better mirth — i. 3 

of no better report than a horse-drench — ii. 1 

I wish no better, than have him bold — ii. 1 

they hate upon no better a protmd ,. — ii. 2 

and to make us no better thought of — ii. 3 

better it is to die, better to starve — ii. 3 



— V. 1 

— V. 1 



— V. 3 

1 



BET 

BETTER— tliis mutiny were better . . Coriolanm, ii. 3 
not unlike, eaeli way, tn better yom's — iii. 1 

tn a better hour, let wliivt is meet — iii, 1 

my use of aui;er, tn better vantiige .. — iii. 2 
have defier\'e(l no bettiT entertainment — iv. 6 

miglit iiave lieen much better — ■ iv. H 

nature, tliat sliaiies man lietter . — iv. (i 

you sliall bear a better witness liaelc — v. 3 

tligest His words witli better appetite. ../«/.C(ei-ar, i. 2 

yea, get the better of them — ii. 1 

wife sliall meet with better dreams ,. — ii. '.' 

it would become me better — iii. 1 

that you may the lietter iud^'e — iii. 2 

Cajsa'r's better parts sliali now be ... . — iii. 2 

you say, you are a better soldier — iv. 3 

hot a better: did I say, better? — iv. 3 

thou lovedst Ixim better than ever . . — iv. 3 

110 man bears sorrow better — iv. 3 

'tis better, that the enemy seek us . . — iv. 3 

offeree, give plaee to better - iv. 3 

words better, as you do (repeo/c^^ — v. 1 

will liope of bettor deeds to-morrow., l;l^ cS- Clco. i. 1 

I love long life better than figs — 1.2 

Iwtter than she. Well, if you (ic/;.).. — i. 2 

whose better issue in the war — i. 2 

you can do better yet ; but this is — i. 3 

given less matter a better ear — ii. 1 

sliould be better, he beeame her guest — ii. 2 

my better cunning faints under — ii. 3 

better leave undone, than ^ iii. 1 

for better might we have loved — iii. 2 

in Egypt cannot make better note .. — iii. 3 
better I were not yom-s, than yours . . — iii. 4 
I ha'v'^ sixty sails, Csesar none better — iii. 7 
'tis better playing with a lion's whelp — iii. 11 
being twenty times of better fortune — iv. 2 

have paid my better service — iv. 6 

but better 'twere thou fell'st — iv. 10 

in thy absence is no better than a sty — iv. 13 

does begin to make a better life — v. 2 

be better known to this gentleman . . Cymbellne, i. a 
I pray you, be better acciuainted .... — i. ."i 
I ■will consider vour mnsie the better — ii. 3 

devils cannot plague them better — ii. 5 

our crows shall fare the better for you — iii. 1 

mayst be valiant in a better cause — iii. 4 

all the better; your valiant Sritons (}■cp.^ — iii. 5 

as 'tis no better reckoned — iii. 6 

j'ou shall have better cheer — iii. 6 

or if not, nothing to be were better . . — Iv. 2 

than be so, better to cease to be — iv. 4 

I'll take the better care — iv. 4 

murder wives much better than — v. I 

yet am I lietter than one that's sick — v. 4 

I cannot do it better than in gyves . , — v. 4 

this man is better than the ralm — v. 5 

lii'c, and deal with others better — v. 5 

a Iretter head her glorious body fits . . Titus And. ). 2 
till you know better how to handle it — ii. 1 

better than he have yet worn — ii. 1 

the worse to her, the better loved — ii. 3 

my lords: the better foot before — ii. 4 

have better sewed than Pliiloniel .... — \\. b 

they're better than the tribunes — iii. 1 

my" youth can better spare my blood — iii. 1 

deeper read, and better skilled — iv. 1 

coal-black is better than another hue — iv. 2 
a better prince, and benign lord. . Pericles, ii. (Gow.) 

I would wish no better otfioe — ii. 1 

if that ever my low fortunes better .. — ii. 1 

he had need mean better than — ii . 2 

he could not please me better — ii. 3 

were never better fed with such — ii. .'i 

ay, and better too; we oft'eud worse .. — iv. 3 
the better for you that yoiu" rcsorters — ii'. 6 
einee they do better thee in their .... — iv. fi 

any of these ways are better yet — iv. 6 

I'tl wish no better choice — v. 1 

but her better stars brought her to . . — v. 3 

now I know you better — v. 3 

and sue to know you better Lear, i . 1 

see better, Ijcar; and let me — i. 1 

better thou hadst not been born (rf p.) — i. I 

a better where to find — i. 1 

I would prefer him to a better place — i. 1 

derive from him better testimony — i. 2 

I am better tlmn thou art now — i. 4 

make servants of their betters — i.4 

sti'iving to better, oft we mar what's well. . — i. 4 

here to-night? the betterl Best! — ii. 1 

I have seen better faces in my time — ii. 3 

when a wise man gives thee better counsel — ii. 4 

fetch me a better answer — ii. 4 

your state better than yon yourself — ii. 4 

thou better know'st the offices of nature .. — ii. 4 

be better at thy leisure ii. 4 

holy water in a dry house is better than . . — iii. 2 

why, thou wert better in thy grave iii. 4 

hath yom- grace no better company iii. 4 

here is better than the open air — iii. 6 

when we our betters see bearing — iii. 6 

but better service have I never iii. 7 

better thus, and known to be contemned . . — iv. 1 

smiles and tears were like a better day .... iv. 3 

who, sometime, in his better time — iv. 3 

and thou speak'st in better phrase iv. 6 

raethinks, j-oii are better spoken iv. 6 

better I were distract: so should iv. G 

be better suited; these weeds are memories — iv. 7 
no better. 'Well, sir. Say— better ..Ko;n. ,5- /u;. i. 1 

yes, better, sir. You lie i. 1 

my life ivere better ended by their hate ii. 2 

a better love to berhyme her ii. 4 

is not this better now than groaning — ii. 4 

though his face be better than ii. 5 

thy disposition better tempered — iii. 3 

and all the better is it for the maid . . — iv. 

I love thee better than myself v. 3 

barred your better wisdoms Hamlet, i. 2 

pious bonds, the better to beguile — i. 3 



[ 59 



BETTER— that with better heed Hamlet, ii. 1 

but, better looked into, he truly found it — ii. 2 
a better proposer conld I'liargc you withal 

in reputiiliiiu ami |ini(it, was better 

if their menus a,v 11.. icllrr 



ii. 2 



you wei'o 
od'sboilik 
have Lie'ttL 
that it I 



ett. 



I hette 



■ th; 



li epitaph . 

Letter 

ith li. 



.jthi 



■ had 1 
lu mistuki 



sly 



still belt 

I took thee for thy butter . .' . 

'twere better not assa\e(l; tlna-ffore .... — iv. 

drink to Hamlet's better breath — v. 

'tis better as it is. Nay, but he prated . . Ol/iello, i. 

I could never better stead thee than now — i. 

the better shall my puriuise work on him — i. 

it had been better you had not kissed — ii. 

for the better compassing of his salt — ii. 

recoiling to her better judgment — iii. 

I swear, 'tis better to be much abused.... — iii. 

hadst been better have been born a dog. . — iii. 

your case is better: O, 'tis spite of heU .. — iv. 

do build on thee a better opinion — iv, 

that my coat is better than thou think'st — v. 

yea, curse his better an{^el from his side.. — v. 

a better never did sustain itself upon — v. 

BETTERED— bettered expectation . . Much Ado, i. 

bettered with his own learning., il/er. of F. iv. 1 (let. 

have bettered rather than decreased. jTom. of Sh. ii. 

he's bettered, we have therefore odds . . Hamlet, v. 
BETTERING-the bettering of my mmd. TewpesI, i. 

bettering thy loss makes liicknra III. iv. 

BETTING— I won of you at betting . . Henry F. ii. 

BETTRE— entendre bettre que nioy — v. 

BBVERAGE-have wholesome beverage frjn^er'sT.i. 
BEVIS-as Bevis of Southampton fell..2HeH)7/K/. ii. 

that Bevis was believed Henry Fill. i. 

BEVY— he hopes, in all this noble bevy — i. 
BEWAIL-tlieir own disgrace bewail. M/rf. K.Dr. iv. 

myself bewails good Gioster's cv.se. .'ZHenry FI. iii. 

which to this hour bewail the injury. Cw-/ota7i«s, v. 
BE WAILING- this bewailing land. 'H<;»n/r//J. iii. 
BE WARE— off slumber, and beware . . Tempest, ii. 

a dog, beware my fangs Merclianl of Feniee, iii. 

therefore beware my censure ....As you Like it, iv. 

beware of being captives, before you. . All's Well, ii. 

beware of them, Diana; their promises — iii. 

waspish, best beware my sting. . . . Taming ofSh. ii. 

and beware of an ass Comedy of Errors, iii. 

like tlie parrot, beware the rope's end " — iv. 4 

Macbeth! beware Jlacduff: beware .. Macbeth, iv. 1 

my liege, beware; look to thyself . . Richard II. v. 3 

but beware instinct; the lion 1 Henry I F. ii. 4 

priest, beware your beard ; Henry FI. i. 3 

Clarence beware; thou keep'st ZHenry VI. v. 6 

bewareCC'oZ./fnt.-takeheedlof yonderdog./i.///. i. 3 

beware of him; sin, death, and hell — i. 3 

beware, you lose it not; for us Henry Fill. iii. 1 

then bew-ire; those wounds .. Troilusfy Cres. iii. 3 
beat the messenger who bids beware. Coriolanus, iv. 

beware the ides of March (rep.) Julius Crrsar, i. 2 

Caisar, beware of Brutus — ii. 3 (paiier) 

young lords, beware! an' should the.. raws.ijid. ii. 1 
hurt these bear-whelps, then beware . . — iv. 1 

beware my follower; peace, Smolkin Lear, iii. 4 

pray, innocent, and beware the foul fiend — iii. 6 

beware of entrance to a quarrel Hamlet, i. 3 

th.at the opposer may beware of thee — 1.3 

O, lieware, my lord, of ie.alousy Othello, iii. 3 

BEWEEP-beweep to many simple galls.Itich. II. i. 3 
and I'll beweep these comforts.. Timon of Athens, v. 2 
old fond eyes, beweep this cause again Lear, i. 4 

BEWEPT-he bewept my fortune. . ..Ricliard III. i. 4 

1 have bewept a worthy husband's — ii. 2 

which bewept to the grave did go. Hamlet , iv. 5 (song) 

BEWET-withhis true tears airbe',vet.'JViH.\-.Ji;rf. iii. 1 

BE WHO RED— hath so bewhored her . . Othello, iv. 2 

BEWITCH— words bewitch your bearts.SHcn. FI. i. 1 

Warwick's words bewitch liim not..3ken)-v FI. iii. 3 

BE WITCHED— he be not bewitched. Twelfth N. iii. 4 

hath bewitched the bosom of my. Mjrf. N. Dreani,i. 1 

yet I am bewitched with the rogue'6.1Ke)!r;//f'. ii. 2 

hath bewitched me with her words. 1 IlenryFI. iii. 3 

look how I am liewitched liicharil III. iii. 4 

wdiat Sinon hath bewitched oiu' ears.. TilnsAnd. v. 3 

thou hast bewitched my daughter Pericles, ii. 5 

bewitched by the charm of looks Rnm. <5- ,Iul. i. b 

BEWITCHJlENT-the bewitchment oi..Coriol. ii. 3 
BEWRAY— looks liewray her auger.. 3/f(?;i);/ VI. i. 1 

not bewray thy treason with — iii. 3 

bewray what life we have led Corinlnn us, v. 3 

bewray thy meaning so Titus Amlron. ii. b 

did not thy hue bewray whose brat . . — v. 1 

lie did bewray his practise Lear, ii. 1 

thyself bewi-ay, when false opinion — iii. 6 

BEWRAYED— this flower bewraj'ed.l Henry FI. iv. 1 
BEZONIAN— king, Bezoni.an, speak..2;fcn./r. v. 3 

men oft die bv vile bezoniana 'iHenr:/ FI. iv. 1 

BI.-VNCA- Bianca, get you in (rep.}. Taming- ofSh. i. 1 

good-will effects Biauca's grief — i. 1 

go in, Bianca; and for I know — i. 1 

more to commune with Bianca — i. 1 

the love I bear my sweet Bianca .... — i. 1 

hapiiy rivals in Bianea's love — i. 1 

sweet Bianca! happy man be his .... — i. 1 
beautiful Bianca, and her witiiliolds — i. 2 
none shall have access unto Bianca . . — i. 2 

seen in music, to instruct Bianca — i. '2 

a sclxoolmaster for fair Bianca — i. 2 

to fair Bianca, so beloved of me — i. 2 

one more may fair J'iaiica have — i. 2 

tliis insolence? Bianca, stand aside .. — ii. 1 

in my sight? Bianca, get thee in — ii. 1 

unto Bianca., fair, ar d virtiuuis — ii, 1 

that love Bianca more than words . . — ii. 1 
gi-eatest dower, shall have Bianea's lovo — ii. 1 

shall Bianca be bride to you — ii. 1 

B mi Bianca, take him for thy lord' — iii. 1 (gamut) 
if thy thoughts, Bianca, be so humble — iii. 1 
marry sweet Bianca, with cousent . . — iii. 2 



BID 

BIANCA — cloth watch Bianea's steps. 2'nm.o/S. iii. 

let Bianca take her sister's room (7-c;).) — iii. 

that Bianca doth fancy any other — iv. 

3'our mistress Bianca I'oved none — iv. 

your entire affection to Bianca — iv. 

fors^\'car Bianca and her love for ever — iv. 

niistress Bianca, bless you V ith — iv. 

give me Bianca fur my jiatriioiioy .. — iv, 

bid Bianca make her rcnilv straight.. — iv. 

I)ut, bid Bianca farewell for ever" — iv. 

Bianea's love made me exchange .... — v. 

look not iiale, Bianca, thy father — v. 

fair Bianca, bid my father v. 

be your half, Bi an'ca comes — v. 

ofyour duty, fair Bianca, hath cost.. — v. 

is it with you, my most fair Bianca? . . Ot/tctlo, iii. 

pardon me, Bianca; I have this while .. — iii. 

sweet Bianca, take me tins work out .... — iii. 

no, in good troth, Bianca iii. 

now will I question Cassio of Bianca .... iv. 

now, if this suit lay in Bianea's power . . -,- iv. 

how now, my sweet Bianca? iv. 

BIAS— nature to her bias ch-ew TwelflhNigiU, v. 

study his bias leaves, and makes . . Love's L. L. iv. 

not unluckily against the bias . . Taming of Sh. iv. 

commodity, the bias of the world King John, ii. 

this vile drawing bias, this sway — ii. 

this same bias, this commodity ii. 

fortune runs against the bias Richard II. iii. 

trial did draw bias and thwart TroiL^Cres. i. 

till thy sjihered bias cheek — iv. 

kini; falls from his bias of nature Lear, i. 

with assays of bias, by indirections Hamlet, ii. 

BIAS-DRAWING- 

from all hollow bias-drawing .... Trail. /r Cres. iv. 
BIBBLE— tliv vain bibble babble.. TwelfiliNight, iv. 
BICKERINCiS— our ancient bickerings.2Hcn. ;-■/. i. 
BID— the very minute bids thee Tempest, i. 

unless he bid them — ii. 

drink servant-monster, when I bid thee — iii. 

bids thee leave these iv. 

I bid a hearty welcome v. 

I liid the base for Proteus . . Two Gen. of Ferona, i. 

and love bids mc forswear — ii. 

law of friendship bids me to conceal . . — iii. 

bid him make haste — iii. 

she bids me think — iv. 

did not I bid thee still — iv. 

wife, bid these gentlemen welcome. .Jl/crct/ Wives, i. 

my assurance bids me search — iii. 

or bid farewell to yonr good — iii. 

•and bid her think, what — iii. 

if he bid you set it down — iv. 

take her by the hand, and bid her go — iv. 

bid the disnonest man mend TwefthXigld, i. 

bid him turn you out of doors ' — ii. 

she is willing to bid you farewell — ii. 

bid hun go? what an if J'OU do (np.) — ii. 

bid you come speak Mith her — iv. 

bid come before us Angelo Meus.for Meas. i. 

bidherself assay him — i. 

what I bid them do: for we bid this .. — i. 

bid them bring the trumpets — iv. 

3'ou bid me seek redemption — v. 

you were not bid to siieak — v. 

until my husband bid me — v. 

my husband bids me; now I will — v. 

let me bid you welcome, my lord .... Much Ado, i. 

I am sent to bid yon come in — ii. 

sent to bid yon come in to dinner — ii. 

bid her steal into the pleached bower — iii. 

did they bid vou tell her of it .... — iii. 

you are to bicl any ina.ii stand — iii. 

bid those that are drunk get — iii. 

call to the nurse, and bid her still it. . — iii. 

bids rne a thousand times goodnight — iii. 

and bid her come hither — iii. 

bid him bring his jieu and inkhoni .. — iii. 

bid her answer truly — iv. 

come, bid me do any thing for thee . . — iv. 

bid liini speak of patience — v. 

I will bid thee draw, as we do — v. 

he hath bid me to a calf's head — v. 

I cannot bid you bid my daughter live — v. 

depart when you bid me — v. 

as I did bid thee do Mid. N.'s Dream, iii. 

go, bid the huntsmen wake them .... — iv. 

(luke was here; and bid us follow him — iv. 

he did bid us follow to the — iv. 

and bid them so be gone Lore's L. Lost, v. 

the princess bids yon tell — v. 

in iirivale, and I'll bid adieu — v. 

go, bid them prepare — v. 

if 1 could bid the fii'th welcome. . Mer. of Venice, i. 

as I can bid the othci' foiu* — i. 

courageous fiend bid.- me ]iack — ii. 

to bid my old master the Jew — ii. 

who bids thee call? I do not bid thee — ii. 

I am bid forth to supper, Jessica .... — ii. 

I am not bid for love -~ ii. 

do as I bid you. shntdoors after — ii. 

have power to bid j-oii welciane (rep.) — iii. 

cheer yon stranger; bid her welcome — iii. 

bid your friends wclci line, show .... — iii. 

go in, sirrah, Itid them iirepare — iii. 

then bid them iirepare dinner — iii. 

bid them cover the talile — iii. 

bid the main flood bate his — iv. 

bid me tear the bond — iv. 

bid her be judge, whether — iv. 

bid him keep it better than — v. 

but I was bid to come for you As you Like i7, i. 

fentle Phcebc bid mc give vou — iv. 
will bid the duke to .... : — v. 

your best array, bid your friends .... — v. 

good my lord, bid him welcome — v. 

make court'sy, bid me farewell — (epil. 

when exception bid him speak .ill's Well, i. 

that he bid Helen come to vou — i. 

flics where you bid it, I fiud — ii. 



1 I 



BID 



[JOJ 

BID— to bid his brother battle 3Hennj f'l. v. 1 

and bid thee battle, Edward — v. 1 

for Warwick liids you all farewell — v. 2 

then bid me kill myself, and I viWX.. Richard III. i. i! 

bid me farewell. 'Tis more — i. 2 

that (!od bids ns do good for evil .... — i. 3 

bid GIoBter think on this — i. 4 

bid my friend, for joy of this good news — iii. 1 

bid him not fear the separated — iii. 2 

go, bid thy master rise and come .... — iii. 2 

when he cloth bid good-morrow .... — !!!•'* 

my good lord mayor, we bid farewell — iii. 5 

bid tliera both meet me, within — iii. 5 

so foolish sorrow bids yonr stones — iv. 1 

hath bid the world goo<l-night — iv. 3 

bid her wipe her weeping eyes — iv. 4 

for whom you bid like soiTow — iv. 4 

bid him levy straight the greatest.... — iv. 4 

bid Irim briu" his power before — v. 3 

bid my guard watch ; leave me — v. 3 

for so the season bids us be — v. 3 

Harry the Sixth bids thee despair .. .— v. 3 

thy nephews' souls bid thee — v. 3 

imliappy sons do bid thee flourish. . . . — v. 3 

bid hira bring his power; I will lead — y. 3 

bid him recount the fore-reeited Henry VIII. i. 2 

bid him strive to gain the love — _i. 2 

in mine arms I bid him welcome .... — ii. 2 

bid the music leave ; they are harsh — i v. 2 

and do as I have bid you — v. 1 

did my commission bid ye so far .... — v. 2 

speak, sir, for heaven now bids me .. — y. 4 

when their ladies bid them clap — (epil.) 

and bid the cheek be ready ■with. . Troitus ^ Cres.i. 3 

when Achilles' brach bids me — ii. 1 

Achilles bids me say— he is much.... — ii. 3 

sweet, bid me hold my tongue — iii. 2 

bid them have patience — iv. 4 

Achilles bids you welcome — iv. 5 

bids thee, witn most diWne — iv. 5 

Ibid good-night: Ajax commands .. — v. 1 

ho! bid my trumpet sound I — v. 3 

you bid them rise and live — v. 3 

and bid the snail-paced Ajax arm — y. 5 

enfranchised, bid nim come to me.. Timon ofAth. i. 1 

to bid me farewell twice — i. I 

mightst kill 'em, and bid me to 'em . . — i. 2 

you have bid me return so much .... — ii. 2 

as I can bid thee speak — ii. 2 

bid 'em send o' the instant — ii. 2 

greet him from me ; bid him suppose — ii. 2 

go, bid all my friends again — iii. 4 

like tapsters, that bid welcome — iv. 3 

bid them flatter thee — iv. 3 

we are fit to bid her welcome Corlolanm, i, 3 

bid them wash their faces — ii. 3 

bid me farewell and smile — iv. 1 

bid them all home; he's gone — iv. 2 

bid them home; say, their great enemy — iv. 2 

the messenger who bids beware — iv. 6 

do not bid me dismiss my soldiers .... — v. 3 

what he bids be done, is finished — v. 4 

bid them repair to the market-place — v. 5 

bid every noise be still Julius Ccesar, i. 2 

a soothsayer bids you beware the ides — i. 2 

for he did bid Antonius send — i. 3 

now, bid me run, and I will — ii. 1 

go bid the priests do present — ii. 2 

proceeding bids me tell you this .... — ii. 2 

bid them prej^are within — ii. 2 

my master bid me kneel (rep.) — iii. 1 

bid me say to you by word — iii. 1 

bid them speak for me — iii. 2 

bid go forth: a barren-spirited — iv. 1 

bid them move away ; then — iv. 2 

Pindarus, bid our commanders — iv. 2 

bid the commanders prepare to lodge — iv. 3 

bid him set on his powers — iv. 3 

whatsoever I did bid thee do — v. 3 

bid me give 't thee? didst thou not . . — v. 3 

thy Brutus bid me give it tliee — y. 3 

but bid farewell, and go; when ..Ajitony^-Cleo.i.Z 

then bid adieu to me, and say — _i. 3 

bid him report the feature ot Octavia — ii- 5 

bid you Alexas brin" me word — ii. 5 

do as I bid you. Wliere's this cup . . — ii. 7 

let Neptune hear, we bid a loud — ii. 7 

the land bids me tread no more — iii. 9 

bid them all fly; for when (rep.) .... — iv. 10 

and fortunes bid thy followers.fly — iv. 12 

bid that welcome which comes — iv. 12 

Dolabella, bid him yield — v. 1 

bid her have good heart — v. 1 

bids thee study on what fair — v. 2 

those things I bid you do, get Cymheline, i. 4 

my conscience bids me ask — i. 6 

as I have words to bid you — i. 7 

go, bid my woman search for a jewel — ii. 3 

is majesty bids you welcome — iii. 1 

fo, bid my woman feign a sickness . . — iii. 2 

o as I bid thee: there's no move .... — iii. 2 

what villany soe'er I bid thee do — iii. .5 

boys, bid him welcome. Were you — iii- G 

in'honesty, I bid for you, as I'd buy — iii. B 

bid the captains look to't — iv. 2 

I do not bid thee beg ray life — y. 5 

I am not bid to wait upon this TitusAndron. i. 2 

hole where Aaron bid us hide him . . — ii. 3 

bid him bury it; more hath it — iii. 1 

to bid .3Sneas tell the tale twice — iii. 2 

bids thee cliristen it with — iv. 2 

Marcus, loose when I bid — iv. 3 

bid him demand what pledge — iv. 4 

and bid the o\vners (lueiich them .... — v. 1 

and bid him come and banquet .... — v. 2 

and bid that strumpet — v. 2 

the feast that I have bid her to — v. 2 

bid hira farewell; commit him — v. 3 

the reason why, because we bid it Pericles, i. 1 

being bid to ask what he would — i. 3 



BIG 



BID— his taken labours bid ]iim...WslVcll, iii. 4 (let.) 

and sorrow bids me speak — iii. 4 

and I'll be bid by thee — jv. 2 

our general bids you answer — iv. 3 

he swears oaths, bid him drop gold — iv. 3 (let.) 

bid them come near I'aming ofSh. 1 find. ) 

bid him shed tears, as being — 1 (ind.) 

now knock when I bid you — i. 2 

he bid rae knock him and rap him.... — i. 2 

bid them use them well — ii. 1 

do bid me pack, I'll give her (rep.) . . — ii. 1 

the feast, fother, and bid the guests. . — ii. 1 

when I should bid good-raorrow — iii. 2 

did I not bid thee meet me — iv. 1 

bid my cousin Ferdinand — iv. 1 

you bid me make it orderly — iv. 3 

I did not bid you mar it — iv. 3 

I bid thy master cut out (.rep.) — iv. 3 

bid Bianca make her ready — iv. 4 

but, bid Bianca farewell — jv. 4 

to bid the priest be ready — iv. 4 

bid my father welcome — v. 2 

go, Biondello, bid your mistress — v. 2 

not come; she bids you come to her .. — v. 2 

{)ray you, bid these unknown Winter^sTale, iv. 3 

)id us welcome to your sheep-shearing — jv. 3 

with madness, do bid it welcome .... — iv. 3 

bids the other grow, faster than — iv. 3 

let's before, as he bids us — iv. 3 

I'd bid you mark her eye — v. 1 

of who she but bid follow — v. 1 

we bid be quiet, when we hear . . Comedy ofEr. ii. 1 

Dromio, go bid the servants spread . . — _ii. 2 

go bid them let us in — iii. 1 

id them welcome hither — iii. 1 

bid my wife disbm'se the sum — iv. 1 

bid you forsake your liberty — iv. 3 

to what end did I bid thee hie — iv. 4 

bid the lady abbess come to me — y. 1 

gone before to bid us welcome Macbeth, i. 4 

you shaU bid God yield us — .;. 6 

go, bid thy mistress, when — ii. 1 

do not bid me speak — ii. 3 

and bid my mil avouch it — iii. 1 

but who did bid thee join with us.... — iii. 3 

impress the forest, bid the tree — iv. 1 

o'erfraught heart, and bids it break.. — iy. 3 
speedy messenger bid her repair .... King John,n. 2 

my throne, bid kings come bow — iii. 1 

that what you bid me undertake .... — iii. 3 

do as I bid you do — iv. 1 

that you have bid us ask his — iv. 2 

OS bid me tell my tale in — iv. 2 

bloody toil, we bid good-night — v. 5 

none of you will bid the \vinter come — y. 7 

bid his ears a little wliile Richard II. i. 1 

bids, I should not bid again (rep.) .. — i. 1 

bid liim, O what? with all good — i, 2 

you would have bid me argue like . . — i. 3 

uncle, bid him so — i. 3 

a brace of draymen bid, God speed . . — i. 4 

bid him repair to us to Ely-house — ii. 1 

bid her send me presently — ii. 2 

and duty bids defend; the other — ii. 2 

and bids me speak of nothing — iii. 2 

yesterday, bid time return — iii. 2 

that bids me be of comfort — iii. 2 

ere thou bid ^ood-night — v. 1 

■until thou bid me joy, by pardoning — v. 3 

no little reason bids us speed 1 Henry W. i. 3 

bid the ostler bring my gelding — ii. 1 

bid Butler lead him fortn — ii. 3 

and bid you play it off — .M- ^ 

she bids you upon the wanton — iii. 1 

the world aside, and bid it pass — iv. 1 

bid my lieutenant Peto meet me .... — iv. 2 

if well-respected honoiu' bid me on . . — iv. 3 

he bids you name your griefs — iv. 3 

the king will bid you battle — v. 2 

subjects, and time bids be gone 2HenryIF. i. 3 

and bid me fetch thee thu-ty — ii. 1 

do not bid me remember mine end . . — ii. 4 

bid mistress Tearsheet come — ii. 4 

ere they come, bid them o'er-read . , — iii. 1 

and bid the merry bells — iv. 4 

cook, bid him come hither — v. 1 

by heaven, I bid you be assured — v. 2 

I will bid you good-night — (epil.) 

bids you be advised, there's naught. . . . Henry V. i. 2 

to comfort him, bid him, 'a should not — ii. 3 

be bids you then resign your — ii. 4 

and bids you, in the bowels of the lord — ii. 4 

they bid us — to the English — iii. 5 

bid him, therefore, consider of his — iii. 6 

go, bid thy master well advise — iii. 6 

on to-morrow bid them march — iii. 6 

bids them good-raorrow — iv. (cho.) 

bid thy ceremony give thee cure .... — iv. 1 

bid them a'hieve me, and then — iv. 3 

bid him prepare, for I will — iv. 4 

if they will fight with us, bid them . . — iv. 7 

and bid nie eat my leek — v. 1 

to bid his young son welcome 1 Henry VI. iv. 3 

bid me be advised how I tread iHenry VI. ii. 4 

and bid rae not farewell? — ii. 4 

bid them blow towards England's .. — J!!- 2 

will you bid me leave? — jjj* 2 

bid the apothecary bring — iii. 3 

gOj bid her hide him quickly — v. 1 

Clifford ; bid him come amain — v. 1 

bid Salisbury and Warwick, come .. — v. 1 

and bid him arm himself — v. 1 

speak blasphemy ere bid you fly ... . — y. 2 

and bid them battle straight 3Henry VI. i. 2 

to bid the fatlier \vipe his eyes . — i. 4 

retire, if Warwick bid him stay — ii. I 

good fortune bids us pause — ii. 6 

hid false Edward battle — iii. 3 

I seal my truth, and bid adieu — iv. 8 

out again, aud bid us battle — v. 1 



BID— for if a king bid a man be a YiWam. Pericles, i. 3 
howl do as I bid you, or you'll move .. — ii. 3 

though loath to bid farewell — ii. 5 

Lychorida, bid Nestor bring me spices — iii. 1 
bid Nicander bring me the satin — iii. 1 

princes, bids you all adieu Liar, i. 1 

bid them farewell, Cordelia — i. 1 

bid farewell to your sisters — i. 1 

80 your face bids me — i. 4 

bid them come forth and hear me — ii. 4 

1 do not bid the thunder-bearer shoot.... — ii. 4 

his ear abused, wisdom bids fear — ii. 4 

bids the wind blow the earth into — iii. 1 

and bids what will take all — iii 1 

than now to bid you hold — iii. 7 

do as I bid thee, or rather do thy — iv. 1 

bid me farewell ; and let me hear — iv. 6 

I am come to bid my king and master . . — v. 3 

bid a sick man in sadness Romeo Sf Juliet, i. 1 

I trow, to bid me trudge — i. 3 

so soon to bid good-minTow to thj' bed — ii. 3 
bid her devise some means to come . . — ii. 4 
bid iiim come to take his last farewell — iii. 2 
bid her hasten all the house to bed . . — jj!- -^ 
bid my sweet prepare to chide (rep).. — - iii. 3 
bid her, mark you me, on Wednesday — iii. 4 

bid me leap, rather than marry — iv. 1 

or bid me lurk where serpents are .... — iv. 1 
or bid me go into a new-made grave — iv. 1 

fond nature bids us all lament — iv. 5 

and do the thing I bid thee do — v. 1 

do as I bid thee, go. I am almost — v. 3 

with mid looks, bid me devise — v. 3 

he early bid me give his father — v. 3 

and bid me stand aloof, and so I did. . — v. 3 

of my watch, bid them make haste Hnmlct,S. 1 

and bid me hold my peace — i.2 

no money bid for argument — .!.'• ^ 

bid the players make haste — iii. 2 

by no means, that I bid 3'ou do — iii. 4 

go, bid the soldiers shoot — v. 2 

not serve God, if the devil bid you Othello, i. 1 

so was I bid report here to the state — i. 3 

brief; and bid — good-morrow, general . . — iii . 1 

which so often you did bid me steal — iii. 3 

seek him, bid him come hither — iii. 4 

1 have sent to bid Cassio come speak .... — iii. 4 
and bid me, when my fate would have . . — iii. 4 
bid her come liither, go: she says enough — iv. 2 

BIDDEN— stand when he is bidden. . Mitch Ado, iii. 3 

BIDDING— to thy strong bidding Tempest .^ i. 2 

what you mean 'by bidding me taste . Twelfth N. iii. 1 

bidding the law make court'sy Mea.forMea. ii. 4 

could do nothing mthout bidding..i1fer. o/ Fen.ii.5 

health, at yom- bidding, serve aWs Well, ii. 1 

at my bidding, you could so stand up — ii. 1 

I shall not break your bidding — ii. 5 

go, do our bidding : hence Winter's Tale, ii. 1 

thou wilt perform my bidding — ii. 3 

and think upon my bidding — ii. 3 

his person at our great bidding Macbeth, iii. 4 

bidding me depend upon thy stars.. Kraj' John, iii. 1 
save bidding farewell to so sweet .... Ricliard II. ii. 2 

his neigh is like the bidding of Henry V. iii. 7 

I -will do nothing at thy bidding ... Timon ofAth. i. 1 

is finished with nis bidding Coriolanns, v. 4 

and I will do his biddding Julius Ciesnr, v. 3 

thy biddings have been done Antony 4' Cleo.i. 4 

might from the bidding of the — iii. 9 

but pertbrras the bidding of the fullest — iii. 11 

do thou thy master's bidding Cymbeline, iii . 4 

do his bidding; strike — iii. 4 

too slow to do thy master's bidding . . — iii. 4 
your bidding shall I do effectually. . Titus And. iv. 4 
perform my bidding, or thou liv'st in . . Pericles, v. 2 
thunder would not peace at my bidding. . Lear, iv. 6 

dismiss me ! it was his bidding Othello, iv. 3 

BIDDY— ay, Biddy, come with me . . Twelfth N. iii. 4 

BIDE— I'll bide your proof — _i. 5 

can give no place, bide no den ay — ii. 4 

that would not let him bide . . Mid. N.'s Dream, iii. 2 
and bide the penance of each three. Lone'sL.Losi, i. I 
bide upon 't; thou art not honest.. Winter's Tale, i. 2 
and though gold bides still . . Comedy of Errors, ii. 1 

safe in a ditcli he bides Macbeth, iii. 4 

men must bide the touch 1 Henry IV. iv. 4 

no spark of honour bides 3Henry VI. i. 1 

or bide the mortal fortmie — ii- 2 

where Cleopatra bides; 'tis the last.Anl.'tjrCleo.iv. 12 
where bide? how live? or in TDjlife. Cymbeline, iii. 4 
then, not in Britain must you bide .. — iii. 4 

there let them bide, until Titus Andronicus, ii. 4 

where you may bide, until your date..i'e7'('c;es, iii. 4 

bide the pelting of this pitiless storm Lear, iii. 4 

nor bide the encounter of assailing.. Bom. ^ Jul. i. 1 
BIDING— tlireats of biding there. Tuo Gen. of I'er. iii. 1 

holds bis biding on my arm Pericles, ii. 1 

I'll lead vou to some tiding Lear, iv. 6 

BID'ST— tliou bid'st me beg Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

shall not marry, till thou bid'st- . Winter's Tnle. v. 1 
if thon, that bid'st me be content . - King John, iii. 1 

bid'st thou me rage? why, now Zllennj VLi. 4 

thou bid'st me to my loss Cymheline, iii. 5 

BIER— weeping after this untimely hm.liich.II. v. 6 

the bier at door, and a demand Cymlieline, iv. 2 

Borneo, press one heavy bier Roi,reo S,- Juliet, iii. 2 

in thy best robes uncovered on the bier _ — iv. I 

bore iiim bai'C-faecd on tlie bier . Hamlet, iv. 5 (song ) 

BI-FOLD— itself! bi-fold authority !. Tro;;. * Crcs. v. 2 

BIG — a dog as bigas tenofyom-s. IVoGew. nfVer. iv. 4 

he's too big to go in there Merry Wives, iii. 3 

no woman s gown big enough for liim — iv. 2 

she's as big as he is — iv. 2 

no woman s heart so big, to hold . Twefth Night, ii. 4 
although the sheet were big enough.. — iii. 2 
big enough; if it be too big for . . Mea.for Mea. iv. 2 
he is not so big as the end of .... Love's L. Lost, v. 1 

Pompey surnamcd the big — v. 3 

his leg ^is too big for Hector — v. 2 

his eye being big ivith tears Mer. of Venice, ii. 8 



BIG 

BIG-tlie bigTOimd tears coursed one. /Is you Like it, ii. 1 
and liis big manlv voice, tiu-ning .... — ii. 7 

the black i;uwn oV a biu lieart AWs Well, i. 3 

ln..k lint l.r.', lKU■st;llnp,n.ll■^tl\re.7■am.•n°■o/AV^. ill. 2 
niv mind hMthbirii n'^ lii-' !i> one.... — v. 2 
sport Irerself with that she's big with. (rm/er'sT. ii. 1 

the centre is not big enongli — ii. 1 

if yo>i had but looked liig, and spit . . — iv. 2 
slie is too big, I liope, for mu.. Comedy of Errors, iv. 1 

strive to speak big, and clap Richard 11. iii. 2 

and misclumce look big upon 1 Henry W. iv. 1 

■whilst tlie bi^ year, swolu 2Henry IV. (indue.) 

vitli forehead bold and big enougli .. — i. 3 
bulk, and big asserablanee of a man — iii. 2 

big Mors seems bankrupt Henry V. iv. 2 

shall lessen this big look Henry t' III. i. 1 

of oath, and big compare. . . . Troilus fj Cressida, iii. 2 
how big imagination moves .... Tinion of Athens, i. 1 
a carbuncle entire, as big as thou. . . . Coriolaims. i. -l 
mock at deatlx with as big heart .... — iii. 2 
tliv heart is big; get thee apart ..Julius Cccsar, iii. 1 

lady, big of this gentleman Cymbeline, i. 1 

another stain, as big as hell can hold — ii. 4 
an arm as big as thnie? a heart as big? — iv. 2 

■whilst I was big in clamour Lear, v. 3 

a bump as big as a young Romeo fy Juliet, i. 3 

not half so big as a round — i.4 

big wars, that make ambition virtue . . Othello, iii. 3 

BIGAMY— and loathed bigamv Richard III. iii. 7 

BIG-BELLIEB— growbig-beflied....;ira.A'.Dc. ii. 2 
BIG- BO NED— no bis-boned meu. Titus Andron. iv. 2 
BIGGER— how to name the bigger light. Tempest, i. 2 

the bigger bulk it sho^ws — iii. 1 

tlie husband's the bigger Twelfth Night, iii. 1 

his opening with this bigger kej.Mea. for Mea. iv. 1 

a bigger. I'll have no bigger Tamingof Sh. iv. 3 

compass is no bigger than Richard II. ii. 1 

hearts in their bellies no bigger .... 1 Henry I V. iv. 2 
the spoons will be the bigger, sir . . Henry fill. v. 3 

I'll run away till I am bigger Coriolanus,j. 3 

a court no bigger than his cave : . . . Cymbeline, iii. 6 

thy words, I grant, are bigger — iv. 2 

he seems no bigger than liis head Lear, iv. 6 

no less? nay, bigger; women gxov ..Rom. ^ Jul. i. 3 

in shape no' bigger than — i.4 

BIGGEST— and biggest tears . . Pericles, iv. 4 (Gower) 
BIGGIN-witli homely biggin bound. 2Henry IV. iv. 4 
BIGNESS— legs are both of a bigness.. — ii. 4 
BIGOT— I met lord Bigot, and lord . . King John, iv. 2 

lord Bigot, I am none — iv. 3 

BIG-SWOLN-of my big-swoln heart.3Hen)-!/;'/. ii. 2 
the welkin ■with his big-swoln face?. Titus And. iii. 1 
BILBERRY— as blue as bilberry . . Merry Wives, v. 5 
BLLBO — challenge of this latteri bilbo — i. 1 
to be compassed, like a good bilbo.... — iii. .'j 
BILBOES— the mutines m the bilboes . . Hamlet, v. 2 

BILBOW— de arm, de bilbow Henry V. iii. 4 

BILL — in any bill, warrant Merry Wives, i. 1 

exhibit a bill in the parliament — ii. 1 

he set np his bills here in Messina Much Ado, i. 1 

have a care that yom- bills be not stolen — iii. 3 
being taken up of these men's bills . . — iii. 3 
I will draw a bill of properties. . Mid N.^s Dream, i. 2 

•ndth orange-tawny bill — iii. 1 (song) 

with bills on their necks As you Like it, i. 2 

and as pigeons bill, so wedlock — iii. 3 

for I have bUls for money Taming of Shrew, iv. 2 

error i' the bill, sir; error i' the bill . . — iv. 3 

take thou the bill, give me — iv. 3 

the neb, the bill to nim? Wi7iter's Tale, i. 2 

from the bill that writes them Macbeth, iii. 1 

manage rusty bills agaiust Richard II. iii. 2 

that self bill is urged Henry F. i. 1 

thus runs the bill — i. 1 

this bill urged by the commons? — i. 1 

take up commotiities upon our bills. 2HcKrj/ VI. iv. 7 
had been cleft with a brown bill .... — iv. 10 

not your sums and bills Timon of Athens, iii. 4 

my lord, here is my bill. Here's mine — iii. 4 

all our bills. Knock me down — iii. 4 

proscription, and bills of outlawry. ./uZ.Crt^sar, iv. 3 

give these bills unto the legions — v. 2 

with charitable bill (O bill Cymbeline, iv. 2 

fear no more tavern bills — v. 4 

bring up the brown bills Lear, iv. 6 

clubs, bills, and partizans! strike l..i?omeo ^Jul. i. 1 
BILLET— my brains with billets . . Mea. for Mea. iv. 3 
BILLETED— distinctly billeted .... Coriolanus, iv. 3 

go where thou art billeted; away Othello, ii. 3 

BILLIARDS— let us to billiards.. ^n/ony<5-C/m. ii. 5 
BILLING— what, billing asain?.. Troilus S, Ores. iii. 2 
BILLO W-methoiight the billows spoke. Tempest, iii. 3 
take the ruffian billows by the top.. 2 Hen ry/F. iii. 1 
on the inconstant billows dancing. Henry r. iii. (cho.) 
tlie tumbling billows of the main . . Richard III. i. 4 
even the billows of the sea. . Henry VIII. iii. 1 (song) 
swell, billow; and swim, bai'k! . .Julius Ccpsar, v. \ 
shakes on Neptune's billow. . . . Pi'ricles, iii. (Gower) 
the brine and cloudy billow kiss the moon — iii. 1 

I never saw so huge a billow, sir — iii. 2 

the chiding billow seems to pelt Othello, ii. 1 

EIND-to bind him to remember. Two Gen. of Ver. iv. 4 
provident in peril, bind himself .. TwelfthNight, i. 2 
or to bind him up a rod, as being .... Much Ado, ii. 1 

to bind our loves up in a holy — iii. 1 

come, bind them iv. 2 

to do what, signior? To bind me — v. 4 

fast bind, fast find; a proverb. . Mcrch. of Venice, ii. ,5 

must sheaf and bind As you Like it, iii. 2 (verses) 

according as marriage binds — v. 4 

we will bind and hood-wink him so. . All's Well, iii. 6 

bind him, bind him, let him not.. Com. of Er. iv. 4 

bind Dromio too, and bear them v. I 

that we may bind him fast v. 1 

we came again to bind thcra v. 1 

and bind Us fiu-ther to you Macbeth, i. 4 

bind np those tresses: 0, what love. . KingJolm, iii. 4 

bind up your liairs — iii. 4 

and bind the boy, which you shall find — iv. 1 

1 say, and bind him here — iv. 1 



[61 ] 



BIND— go bind thou up ,von dangling. . Rich. II. iii. 4 

now bind my brows witli iron ^Z Henry IV. i. 1 

■with a double surety binds his followers — i. 1 
a hoop of gttld, to liind thy brothers in — iv. 4 

and surer binci, this knot 1 Henry VI. v. 1 

and binds the wretch, and beats it. .2Henry VI. iii. 1 
you bind me to yoiu' highness' services Hen.. VI. iii. 2 
another horse,— bind up my wounds ..Rich. III. v. 3 
your lordship ever binds him . . Timon of Athens, i. 1 

I bind on pain of punishment Antony fy Cleo. i. 1 

and bind up the petty difference — ii. 1 

bind the oflender, and take him .... Cymbeline, v. 5 
would bind me liere unto the body.. Titus And. ii. 3 
into limits could I biud my woes .... — iii. 1 
therefore bind them, gentle Publius — v. 2 

therefore bind them sure; and stop .. — v. 2 

look, that you bind them fast — v. 2 

command, bind them in brass Pericles, iii. 1 

bind fast his corky arms Lear, iii. 7 

bind him, I say. Hard, hard — iii. 7 

to tills chair bind him — iii. 7 

let me but bind it hard Othello, iii. 3 

gentlemen ; I'll bind it with my sliirt . . — v. 1 
BINDETH- -these reasons bindeth us.l Henry VI. v. 5 
BIONDEI-LU-if Biondello, thou wert.Tam. ofSh. i. 1 
when Biondello comes, he waits on thee — i. 1 
even he. Bioudellol Hark you, sir . . — i. 2 
no chiders, sir; Biondello, let's away — i. 2 

what is he, Biondello? — iv. 2 

sirrah, Biondello, now do your duty — iv. 4 

what say'st thou, Biondello? — iv. 4 

Biondello, what of that? 'Faith, nothing — iv. 4 
hear'st thou, Biondello? I cannot tarry — iv. 4 
I fly, Biondello: but they may chance — v. 1 
go,"Biondello, bid your mistress come — v. 2 
sirrah, Biondello, go, and entreat my — v. 2 
BIRCH— threatening t^wigs o'Lh\rc\\.. Mea. for Mea. i, 4 

BIRD — this was well done, my bird Tempest, iv. 1 

melodious birds sing {rep.) . .Merry W. iii. 1 (song) 

might haply inhabit a bird Twelfth Night, iv. 2 

to tear tlie birds of prey Mea. for Mea. ii. 1 

a bird of my tongue, is better Much Ado, i. 1 

overjoyed with iinding a bird's nest . . — ii. 1 

have stolen his bird's nest — ii. 1 

a bird? who would give a bird..^V/rf. N. Dream, iii. 1 

hop .as light as bird from brier — v. 2 

the birds have any cause to sing . . Love's L. Lost, i. 1 

most grazCj birds best peek — i. 1 (letter) 

and birds sit brooding m — v. 2 (song) 

knew the bird was fledged. . . . Merch, of Venice, iii. 1 
unto the sweet birds tlii-oat...4si/ou Like, ii. S (song) 

wliat the bird hath done — iv. 1 

when birds do sine, hey ding — v. 3 (song) 

am I your bird? I mean Taming of Shrew, v. 2 

this bird you aimed at — v. 2 

with hey ! the si\'eet birds. Winter's Tale, iv. 2 (song) 

but this bird hath made his Macbeth, i. 6 

the obscure bu-d clamoured the livelong — ii. 3 

the most diminutive of birds — iv. 2 

as birds do, mother — iv. 2 

poor bird I thou'dst never fear — iv. 2 

poor birds they are not set for — iv. 2 

against a bird, do I with Mowbray . . Richard II. i. 3 

the singing birds, musicians — i. 3 

the cuckoo's bird, useth the I Henry IV. v. 1 

thou art a summer bird iHenrylV. iv. 4 

I heard a bird so sing — v. 5 

as bird doth sing on bough Henry F. iii. 2 

a quire of such enticing birds iHenry VI. i. 3 

yea, men and birds, are fain — ii. 1 

no higher than a bird can soar — ii. 1 

may imagine how the bird was dead — iii. 2 

a bird that will revenge upon ZHenry VI. i. 4 

if thou be that princely eagle's bird.. — ii. 1 

many more proud birds — ii. 1 

for both of you are birds of self-same — iii. 3 
such a pleasure as incaged birds .... — iv. 6 

the bird, that hath been limed — v. 6 

the hapless male to one sweet bird . . — v. 6 

the rod, and bird of peace Henry VIII. iv. 1 

the bird of wonder dies, the maiden. . — v. 4 
and birds, and fishes (repeated) .. TimonofAlh. iv. 3 

the bird of night did sit Julius Ccesar, i . 3 

why birds, and beasts, from quality. . — i. 3 

Antony I O thou Arabian bird \..Ant.^ Cleo. iii. 2 

she alone is the Arabian bird Cymbeline, i. 7 

the bird is dead, that we have made.. — iv. 2 

1 saw Jove's bird, the Roman eagle . . — iv. 2 
his royal bird prunes the immortal . . — v. 4 
the birds ehaunt melody on e.\erj. Titus Andron. ii. 3 
and sweet melodious birds, be unto ■us — ii. 3 

whilst their o\vn birds famish — ii. 3 

like a sweet melodious bird — iii. 1 

suftiirs little birds to sing — iv. 4 

forth to beasts, and birds of prey .... — v. 3 

the meanest bird that flies i' the Pericles, iv. 6 

of bud, bird, branch, or berry — v. (Gower) 

O, well flown, bird! i' the clout Lear, iv. 6 

will sing like birds i' the cage — v. 3 

that birds would sing Romeo tf Juliet, ii. 2 

no further than a wanton's bird — ii. 2 

I would, I were thy bird — ii. 2 

must climb a bird's nest soon — ii. a 

this bird of da^wning singeth all night . . Hamlet, i. I 

hillo, ho, ho, boy! come, bird, come! — i. .^ 

let the birds fly; and, like the famous ape — iii. 4 

BIRD-BOLT— things for bird-bolts. TwelfthNight, i. .■•) 

eliallenged him at the bird-bol t Much Ado. i. 1 

thumped him with thy bird-bolt . . Love's L. L. iv. 3 

BIRDING— we'U abirding together, ^/er)^^ Wives, iii. 3 
her husband goes this morning a birding — iii. 5 

is tliis morning gone a birding — iii. h 

he's a birding, sweet sir John — iv. 2 

BIRDING-PIECE- 
to discharge their birding-pieces — iv.2 

BIRDLIME— as birdlime does Otiiello, ii. 1 

BIRNAM — until gi"eat Bimam wood ..Macbeth, iv. 1 

till the wood of Bimam rise — iv. 1 

near Birnam wood shall we well .... — v. 2 
make we our marcli toward Biruam.. — v. 2 



BIR 

BIRNAM— ~~ 

till Bii-nara wood remove to Dunsinane.il/artett.v. 3 
till Bu-nam forest come to Dunsinane — v. 3 
Tiie wood of Birnam. Let every.... — v. 4 
I loolced toward Bii-nam, and anon . . — v. 6 
fear not, till Birnam wood do come . . — v. 5 

though Birnam wood be come v. 7 

BIRON— you three, Biron.Dumain.Lojje's /.,. Lost, i. I 
swore to that, Biron, and to the rest — i. l 

Birou is like an envious sneai)ing frost — i. 1 

go home, — Biron; adieu! — i. I 

my lord Biron see hun delivered o'er — i. 1 

a truth, Biron they call him ii. 1 

that last is Biron, the merry ii. i 

monsieur Biron, to one lady Rosaline — iv. 1 
from my lord Biron, a good master . . — iv. 1 
from one monsieur Biron, one of the — iv.2 

Biron. Sir Nathaniel, this Biron — iv.2 

would the king, Biron, and Longaville — iv. 3 
what ■will Biron say, when that lie . . — iv. 3 

Biron, read it over. "Where hadst . , iv. 3 

it is Biron's ^vriting, and here is .... — iv. 3 

are then no eyes, nor I Biron — iv. 3 

and good Biron, now prove our — iv. 3 

nay, I have verses too, I thank Biron — v. 2 

that same Biron I'll torture — v. 2 

BO shall Biron take me for Rosaline . . — v. 2 

this pert Biron was out of v. 2 

Biron did swear himself out of all. . . . — v. 2 

quick Biron hath plighted faith — v. 2 

and lord Biron, I thauk him, is my . . — v. 2 

Biron, they will shame us — v. 2 

my lord Biron, before I saw you .... — v. 2 

BIRTH— a birth, indeed, wliieh throes.. Tempest, ii. 1 

and nobleness of bu-th..r8oo Gentlemen of Verona, i. 3 

did govern Proteus' birth — li. 7 

what says she to my birth — v. 2 

doth object, I am too great of birth. Merry Wives, iii. 4 
thou wast o'erlooked even in thy birth — v. !> 

keep according to my birth TwelfthNight, iv. 3 

when Viola from her birth had . . — v. 1 

she is no equal for his birth Much Ado, ii. 1 

on this travail look for greater birth . . — iv. 1 
should I joy in an abortive birth. . Love's L. Lost, i. 1 

a month old at Caius' birth — iv. 2 

labom-ing perish in their Ijirth — v. 2 

I do in birth deserve her . ...Merchant of Venice, ii. 7 

a gentleman of my birth AsyouLikeit,i. 1 

civet is of baser birth than — iii. 2 

than the heraldry of your birth All's Well, ii . 3 

by birth a pedlar, bv education. Taming of S. 2 (ind.) 

bethink thee of tljy birth — 2 (ind.) 

wealthy, and of worthy birth — iv.5 

nor on the birth of trembling Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

of her breeding, as i' the rear of birth — iv. 3 
not full a month between their births — v. 1 

tills tyrant holds the due of birth Macbeth, iii. 6 

sought a match of birth, whose v&ias. King John,ii. 2 

virtue, birth, is the young — ii. 2 

great birth, nor deserve a crown (rep.) — iii. 1 

for, since the birth of Cain — iii. 4 

famous by their birth, renowned Richard II. ii. 1 

by fortune of my birth — iii. 1 

and at my birth, the frame 1 Henri//r. iii. 1 

at your birth, our grandara earth — iii. 1 

(yet likely of fair birth), shoiUd he...2HenryIV. i. 3 
is the birth, becomes excellent wit . . — iv. 3 

and loathly births of nature — iv. 4 

in the derivation of my birth Henry V. iii. 2 

Plenties, and joyful births, should not — v. 2 
am by birth a shepherd's 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

stands upon the honour of his birth . . — ii. 4 
I was the next by birth and parentage — ii. 5 
for your royal birth, inferior to none — iii. 1 

doubting thy birth and la^wf ul — iii. 3 

of the garter were of noble birth .... — iv. 1 
neither in birth, or for authority .... — v. 1 

to obscure my noble birth — v. 4 

joined with her bu-th, approves — v.^ 

cunning man did calculate my birth. 2 Henry VI. iv. 1 
byherhe had twoeliildren at one birth — iv.2 
ignorant of his birth and parentage . . — iv. 2 

thy betters in their birth — v. 1 

thy state, and birth, that ZHenry VI. iii. 3 

the ©■wl shrieked at thy birth — v. 6 

yovir due of birth, the lineal glory .Richard III. iii. 7 
your right of birth, your empery .... — iii. 7 

ripe revenue and due of birth — iii. 7 

burden was thy birth to me — iv. 4 

^vrong not her birth, she is of royal . . — i v. 4 

in her birth. And only in (rep.) — iv. 4 

their bodies as becomes their births . . — ■v. 4 

is not birth, beauty, good shape Troil. ^-Cres. i. 2 

and due of birth, prerogative of age . . — i. 3 
not name desert, before his birth .... — iii. 2 
high birth, vigour of bone, desert .... — iii. 3 

even in the birth of our own — iv. 4 

residence, and birth, scarce is. . Timon of Athens, iv. 3 
with all the alihorred births below . . — iv. 3 
never comest unto a happv birth ..Julius Cresar, v. 3 

what's his name, and birth? Cymbeline, i. 1 

above him in birth, alike conversant in — iv. 1 
not seeming so worthy as thy birth . . — iv. 2 
our Jovial star reigned at his bu'th . . — v. 4 

a mother to the birth of tliree — v. 5 

whence we had our being and our birth . . Pericles, i . 2 
inhonour of whose birth these triumphs — ii. 2 
a more blnst'rous birth had never bade . . — iii. 1 
at her birth, Thetis, being proud — iv. 4 (Gow. insc.) 

a tempest, a birth, and death — v. 3 

if not by birth, have lands by wit Lear, i . 2 

prodigious birth of love it is to me . . Rom, ^Jul.i.f) 

revolts from true birth stumbling — i i . 3 

thy birth, the heaven, and earth (rep) — iii. 3 
wherein our Saviour's birth is celebrated. Hamlet, i. 1 

he himself is subject to his liirth — i. 3 

as in their birth, (wherein they are not — i.4 
of violent birth, but poor validity .... — iii. 2 
bring this monstrous birth to the world's. Othello, i. 3 
both at a birth, shall lose — ii. 3 



BIRTU-CHILD— 

Tlictis' birth-child on tlic. rerides, (Gow. inscrip.) 

BIHTI IDA Y— this is mv l.iilluhiy ../(((/KsCwsar, v. 1 

is my liirthiUiy: I luiiltliMi!^ht..-i«(oH!/fr 6'teo. iii. 11 

ainlto-iiuuiov, islicr butluhp- Pericles, ii. 1 

BIUTIIDO.M— •Idwu-talkn liiiilulora ..iVac6e(A, iv. 3 

BIllTll-I'l>ACi:— iHith-iihi.v h:itel ....Cariol.iv. 4 

EiUTll-KlCUT— with Ihy h;rth-right..-lH'.(Jr,^«, i. I 

bciuiiii; tliiir liirth-iiglits pr.iudly ..Khig John, ii. 1 

honour of his biith-ri-ht to tlif ....iHenry VI. u. 2 

deserved to lose liis Ijirth-ri^'ht thus? .ZHenrij VI. i. 1 

should lose his l)irth-riiht by his father's — ii. 2 

BIRTH-STKAJvGLEU- 

tinger of birth-strangled babe ilacbelh, iv. 1 

BIS— simplicity, bis eoctus Love's L.Losl, iv. 2 

BISCUIT— the remainder biscuit ..AsyoitLike i/,n.7 

as a sailor breaks a biscuit Troil.fyCres. ii. 1 

BIS11(-)P— bishoii, is Norfolk ilcaA! ..KicJianI II. iv. 1 
ancient lords, and reverend bishops.! Henry/F.iii. 2 

the bishop turns insurrection illeiiry IV. i. 1 

say, tire bishop and Northu>nberland — iii. 1 
wi'tii you, lord bisliop, it is even so .. — iv. 2 
ay, see the liisliop be not o\e.borne.lHf«)y VI. iii. 1 
through malice of the bishop's men . . — iii. 1 
bishop and the duke of (iloster's men — iii. 1 

ti\e bishop hatli a kindly gird — iii. 1 

lord bishop, set the crown upon — iv. 1 

the bishop will be overborne — v. 1 

barons, aud twenty reverend bishops.. 2 Hen. TJ. i. 1 
I'll send some holy bishop to cutreat — iv. 4 

is prisoner to the bishop here ZHenry VI. iv. 5 

to steal the bisliop's deer — iv. 5 

bishop, farewell; shield thee from .. — iv. .5 
and from the bishop's huntsmen .... — Iv. 6 

Ilcnry at the bishop's palace — v. 1 

fathers, and well-learned bishops. . Richard III. iii. 5 
he (I mean the bishop) did require.. Henry rii/.ii. 4 
maimed the jm-isdiction of all bishops — iii. 2 

wliat two reverend bishops Avere — iv. 1 

that whicii the bishop spake — v. 1 

BISSON — j-our bisson consi)eetuities .Coriolaiius, ii. ', 

threatening the flames with bissou .... Hamlet, ii. 2 

BIT— the needful bits and curbs ...Mea.for Mea.'i. 4 

dainty bits make rich tlie ribs Love's L. Lost, i. 1 

I wilt not touch a bit As youLike it, ii. 7 

with a half-checked bit Taming of Shrew, iii. 2 

coidd be better bit than I have been. . 1 Henry IV. ii. 1 

the gimnial bit lies foul with HenryV.iv.2 

their mouths with stubborn bits . . Henry VIII. v. 2 

the bits, and greasy reliques Trail, tj- Cres. v. 2 

pleased with this dainty bit, thus — v. 9 

many prodigal bits have Slaves. Timon of Athens, Ii. 2 

^o : and batten on cold bits Coriolanus, iv. 5 

it had its head bit off by its yonni; Lear, i. 4 

mine enemy's dog, though he had liit nie. . — iv. 7 

as is the bud bit by an envious Rom. ^-Jul. i. 1 

BITCH— a bitch's blind puppies . . Merry Wives, iii. ."i 

and the son and heir of a mongrel bitch . . Lear, ii. 2 

BITCU- WOLF— bitch-wolf s son. . Trail. <S- Cres. ii. 1 

BITE— and after, bite me Tempest, ii. 2 

bite him to death, I pr'ythee — iii- 2 

now 'gins to bite the spirits — iii. 3 

whereof the ewe not bites — v. 1 

she hath no teeth to bite Tu'o Gen. of Ver. iii. 1 

it shall bite upon my necessity. . . . Merry Wives, ii. 1 

can make him bite the law Meas.forMeas. iii. 1 

if I had my moutli, I would bite Much Ado, i. 3 

this fish w'lll l)ite — ii. 3 

the two bears will not bite one another — iii. 2 
that bites the first-born iui'auts ..Love's L. Lost, i. 1 
i'o bites and blows upon my body. ..^6- you Like it, ii. 1 

that dost not l)ite so niL'h '— ii. 7 (song) 

nor l)ite tlie lip, as angry Tamingof Shrew, ii. 1 

th}- beauty, as frosts bite the meads . . — v. 2 

lest it should bite its master Winter's Tale, i. 2 

hath less power to bite Richard II. i. 3 

than when it bites, but lanceth not — i. 3 

that frosts will bite them IHenrylV. i. 3 

must I bite? Yes certainly Henry V. v. 1 

and fret, and bite his tongue iHenry VI. i. 1 

run back and bite, because he was — v. 1 

and bite thy tongue, tliat slanders . .ZHenry VI. i. 4 

tiiou earnest to btte the world — V. 6 

snarl, and liite, and play tlie dog — v. (5 

fawns, he bites; and when he bites. . Richard III. i. 3 

but he would bite none Henry VIII. i. i 

he Ijites his lip, and starts — iii. 2 

noiu-is'nnient, dare bite tlie best — v. 2 

thoiigli yi.tu bite so shar^) at Trail. r^- Cress, ii. 2 

bites his lii)\\"ith a politic — iii. 3 

my sword should bite it — v. 2 

one bear will not bite another — v. 8 

yet to bite his lip, and limn at Coriolanus, v. 

inad. I will not iiite liim Antony ^Cleopatra, ii. 

or shall we bite our tongues .... Titus/lndrun. iii. 

oft liite the holy cords in twain Lenr, ii. 

the foul fiend bites my back — iii. 

tuotTi that poisons if it bite — iii. 

I will liite my thumb at them Rnm. ^- Jul. i. 

do you bite your thumb at us (ip/i.).. — i. 

not; Iiite my thumb at yon sir (r^v;.). . — i, 

bite thee by the ear for that jest I/- v'O — ii' 

the air bites slrrewdly ; it is very cul'! Hamlet, i. 

EITINU— will be a biting affliction..l/«'-y Wires, v. 
statutes, and most liitiug laws . . Mcas.for Meas. i. 

here under some biting'error Much Ado, iv. 

v/herc biting cold would never let..27i(!/irj/ VI. iii. 
tlieu we are lUce to have biting statutes — iv. 

cold biting mnter mars our — iv. 

tJiis would have been a biting jest. . Ricliard III. ii. 

for his biting is immortal Ant. tf Cleo. v. 2 

how she died of the biting of it — v. 2 

with my good biting faulehion Lear, v. 3 

BITTEN— tight for bitten apples. . . . HmryVIlI. v. 3 
BITTER— me with bitter fasts. .Tu-oUen. of Ver. ii. 4 

you gave me bitter piUs — ii. 4 

many bitter tlu'eats of — iii. 1 

it is a bitter deputy Measure for Measure, iv. 2 

that's l:>itter to sweet end — iv. fj 

tlie base, the bitter disposition of ..« J/kc/i .Idn, ii. 1 



BITTER— liitter on your bitter foe. . Mid. A. Dr. iii. 2 

do not be so bitter with me — iii. 2 

stir Demetrius up with bitter WTong — iii. 2 

too liittcr is thy jest l.ore'sL.Losi, iv. 3 

gall? bitter? Therefore meet — v. 2 

tieeze tliou bitter sky .... As you Like it, ii. 7 (soug) 

I'll sauce lier with bitter words — iii. 5 

I "will be iiitter with liim — iii. 3 

the food of sweet and bitter fancy .... — iv. 3 

but, O how bitter a tiling it is — v. 2 

in the most bitter toucli of sorrow -Ill's Well, i . 3 

'tis bitter. Find you that there? .... — iii. 2 
tlie hitter past, more welcome is .... — v. 3 
slir ci(\,s thcc witli a l>ittcr \vord..Taming of Sh. ii. 1 

liidiuL' his liittcr ic^ts in blunt — iii. 2 

at >-oii lor;i l.ittcr[r,,MietterJjest.... — v. 2 

in that lie made more bitter Winter's Tale^ i. 2 

make heavy, and wngcance bitter . . — iv. 3 

it is as bitter upon thy tongue — v. 1 

and bitter shame hath spoiled the . . KingJohn, iii. 4 
bitter clamour of two eager tongues.. A'/c/inrd //. i. 1 
eating the bitter bread of banishment — iii. 1 
our advantage, on the bitter cross ..\Heniy IV.i. 1 
captain, these are very bitter words.. 2Hc;iri/ir. ii. 4 
consecrate commotion's bitter edge . . — iv. 1 

this bitter taste yield his — iv. 4 

sweeten the bitter mock you sent Henry V. ii. 4 

given me most bitter terms — iv. 8 

bitter injuries, which Somerset .... 1 Henry VI. ii. f> 

avoid such bitter taunts ZHenry VI. ii. 6 

upliraidings, and your bitter scoffs. . Rieliardlll. i. 3 

called me all tlrese bitter names — i. 3 

the bitter sentence of poor — i. 4 

yet his punishment was bitter death — ii. 1 

bitter consequence, that Edward . . — iv. 2 
will prove as bitter, black, and tragical — iv. 4 

in the breath of bitter words let's — iv. 4 

to leave is only bitter to him HenryVIII. ii. 1 

to leave is a thousand-fold more bitter — ii. 3 

is it bitter? forty pence, no — ii. 3 

the bitter disposition of the time . . Trail. fy Cres. iv. 1 
too bitter to your countrywoman (rep.) — iv. 1 

1 see a tiling bitter to me as death . . Cymbeline, v. 5 

bitter torture shall winnow — v. .'j 

for these bitter tears, which now.. Titus Andron. iii. 1 
a brine-pit with our bitter tears .... — iii; 1 
stomachs with their bitter tongues . . — iii. 1 
revenge these bitter woes of oiu-s .... — iii. 2 

leave these bitter deep laments — iii. 2 

torment you with my bitter tongue.. — v. 1 
nor can I utter all oiir bitter grief . . — v. 3 

makes the world bitter to Lear, i. 2 (letter) 

a bitter fool! Dost thou know (lepea/ei/) . . — i. 4 

sweet and bitter fool Aiill presently — i. 4 

and felt it bitter, pretty fool! ....liomeo ^Juliet, i. 3 

sweet, convert to bitter gall — _i. 5 

thy wit is a very bitter sweeting — ii. 4 

Come, bitter conduct, come unsavoury — v. 3 
'tis bitter cold, and I am sick at heart. . Hamlet, i. ! 
and lack gall to make oppression bitter.. — ii. 2 
as the bitter day would quake to look on — iii. 2 

pov.'cr to make this bitter to thee Othello, i. 1 

you shall yourself read in the bitter letter ■ — i. 3 
be to liim shortly as bitter as coloquintida — i. 3 

BITTEREST— to talk their bitterest. I'.intcr'sT. iii. 2 

break out to bitterest enmity CLriolnnus, iv. 4 

all the bitterest terms that ever . . Titus .indron. ii. 3 

BITTERLY— wept bitterly. . . . Two Gen. of Ven. iv. 4 
and she will speak most bitterly. . Mea. for Mea. v. 1 

whicli then blew bitterly against Riclmrd //. i. 3 

bitterly to speak in your reproof . . Riciiard III. iii. 7 

more bitterly could I expostulate — iii. 7 

you speak too bitterly. Hear me.... — iv. 4 
vent reproaches most bitterly on you. Hen. VIII. i. 2 
and it cried bitterly: yea, quoth. .i(o;neo<5- Juliet, i. 3 
shall bitterly begin his fearful date .. — ■ i. 4 

BITTERNESS— a badge of bitterness.. jV«c/« Ado,i. 1 

but say not so in bitterness As you Like it, iii. .^j 

contempt nor bitterness were in All's Jl'ell.i. 2 

naught, but shame and bitterness ..King John, iii. 4 

the bitterness of your galls i Henry I V. i, 2 

from liitterness of soul denounced . . Rieliardlll. i. 3 

the bitterness of it I now belch Cymbeline, iii. 5 

his frenzy, and his bitterness Titus Andron. iv. 4 

despised time is naught but bitterness . . Ot/iello, i. 1 

BITTER-SEARCHING-I would invent 

as bitter-searching terms iHenry VI. iii. 2 

BITUJIED— caulked and bitumed ....Pericles, iii. 1 
how close 'tis caulked and bitumed — iii . 2 

BLii:B— when my tongue blabs Twelfth Mght.i. 2 

eyes blab his heart's malice 'iHenry VI. iii. 1 

cannot choose Ijut they must blab Otiiello, iv. 1 

BLABBED— wliy liave I blabbed?. Trail. ^-Cres. iii. 2 
blabbed tliem witli such pleasing. TiYiis^lwcZ/od. iii. 1 

BLABBING-blaljbing, andremorseful.2HcH. VI. iv. 1 

BLACK— yond' same black cloud Tempest, ii. 2 

though ne'er so black .... Ta'o Gen. of Verona, iii. \ 
how black? why, as black as ink . . — iii. 1 

now she is become as black as I — iv. 4 

my face is black — v. 2 

black men arc pear's — v. 2 

is beaten ulaclc air! iiluc Merry Wives, iv. h 

tell'st tliou nic oililack and blue?.. — iv. 5 

my doe with tlic black scut? ...... — v. 5 

fairies black, grey, green, and white — v. u 

on iny blaclc cofiin ict Twelfth Night, ii. 4 (song) 

and wc will fool him black and blue — ii. 5 

not black in my mind — iii. 4 

besmeared as black as A'uican — v. 1 

as these liiack masivs proclaim ..Mea. for Mea. ii. 4 

if black, wdiy, nature, drawing Much jido, iii. 1 

is not under white and black — v. 1 

beetles black, approacli not . . Mid. N. Dr. ii. 3 (song) 
the ousel-cock, so block of hue .... — iii. 1 (song) 
drooping fog, as black as Acheron. . — iii. 2 

O night with hue so black! — v. 1 

thv love is black as ebony Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 

that is not full so black — iv. 3 

() paradox! black is the badge of hell — iv. 3 
if IB black, my lady's brows be — i\.S 



BLACK— bom to make black fair . . Love's L. L. '\y. .'i 
paints itself black, to imitate her .. — iv. 3 

are chiiuncv-swec|iers black — iv. 3 

I'll change'niy black go«-u — v. 2 

are but black to Rosalind .Is you Like iV, iii. 2 

your black silk hair, your bugle .. — iii. ."i 

my eyes were black, and my hair black — iii..") 

over the black gown of a big heart All's Well, i. 3 

vipon your grace's part; black and fearful — iii. 1 
the Black Prince, sir, alias, the prince.. — iv. 5 
were they false as o'er-dyed blacks. Winter'sTale, i. 2 
yet black brows, they say, become — ii. 1 

cypress, black as e'er was crow .... — iv. 3 (song) 
or pinch us black and blue . . Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

see my black and deep desires Macbeth j i. 4 

ere, to black Hecate's summons — iii. 2 

whiles night's black agents — iii. 2 

black spirits, and white — i v. 1 (song ) 

how now, you secret, black, and midnight — iv. 1 

opened, black Macbeth will seem — iv. 3 

wiped the black scruples — iv. 3 

the devil damn thee black — v. 3 

die under their black weight King Jolin, iii. 1 

as black, — nay nothing is so black . . — iv. 3 

whose black contagious breath — v. 1 

in the black brow of night — v. Ii 

fitting to the night, black, fearful .... — v. 6 

rescued the Black Prince Richard II. ii. 3 

that tell block tidings — iii. 4 

against black pagans, Turks — iv. 1 

BO heinous, black, obscene a deed! .. — iv. i 
put on sullen black incontinent .... — v. 6 

borne mth black vapom- 2Henry IF. ii. 4 

alas, a black ousel, cousin Shallow .. — iii. 2 

black Grcorge Bare, and Francis — iii. 2 

Edward the black prince Henry V.i.2 

as CTOss as black from white — ii. 2 

said it was a black soul burnin" .... — ii. 3 
that black name, Edward black prince — ii. 4 

it will be a black matter — iv. 1 

a black beard will turn white — v. 2 

hung be the heavens with black .... 1 Henry VI. i. 1 
we mourn in black ; why mourn we not — i. 1 
whereas I was black and swart before — _ i. 2 

terror, and black Nemesis — iv. 7 

black, forsooth; coal-black as jet ..'iHenry VI. ii. 1 
Edward the black prince (repea(ed) . . — ii. 2 

in England some black storm — iii. 1 

but, see, his face is black, and full .. _ — \\\-^ 
from his bosom purge this black despair . — iii. 3 
wrap our bodies in black mourning..3i7en;!/f/. ii. 1 
covered with the night's black mantle — iv. 2 
are dimmed with death's blaclc veil.. — v. 2 
I spy a black, suspicious, threatening — v. 3 

what black magician conjures Richard III- i. 2 

bl ack night o'ersliade thy day — i.2 

I'll join with black despair — ii. 2 

but if black scandal, or foul-faced — iii. 7 

as bitter, black, and tragical — iv. 4 

hell's black intelligencer — iv. 4 

a black day will it be to somebody . . — v. 3 

makes my whitest part black Henry VIII. i . 1 

as black as if besmeared iu hell — i.2 

he had a black mouth, that said — i. 3 

no black envy shall make my grave — ii. 1 

armed, as black defiance .... Troilus 8/- Cressida, iv. 1 
will make black, white; foiil, fair. Timon of Ath. iv. 3 
engenders the black toad, and adder — iv. 3 
some black, some auburn, some bald. Corio^anws, ii. 3 
our black sentence and proscription. Jn/.Crrmr, iy. 1 
with Phcebus' amorous pinches black. ^n/. i^ C/eo. i. 5 
they are black vesper's pageants .... — iv. 12 
O damned paper! black as the ink. . Cymbeline, iii. 2 
will have his soul black like his iaa^.TilusAnd. iii. 1 

'twas a black ill-favoured fly — iii. 2 

a joyless, dismal, black, and sorrowful — iv. 2 

is black so base a hue — iv. 2 

iie\'er turn a swan's black legs — iv. 2 

look, how the black slave smiles — iv. 2 

acts of black night, abominable deeds — v. 1 
ay, like a black dog, as the saying is — v. I 

proper palfreys, black as jet — v. 2 

in thine ear), as black as incest Pericles, i. 2 

is a black ^Ethiop, reaching at the Sim.. — ii. 2 
no visor does become black villany — iv. 4 (Gow.) 

looked black upon me Lear, ii. 4 

croak not, blaclc angel ; I have no — iii. 6 

be thy mouth or black or white — iii. 6 

ere the black ones were there — iv. 6 

black and portentous must Romeo fy Juliet, i. 1 

being black, ijut us iu mind — i. 1 

stablied with a white wench's blaclc eye — ii. 4 
this day's black fate on more days .. — iii. 1 

fought in this black strife — iii. 1 

sober-suited matron, all in black .. .. — iii. 2 
with thy blaclc mantle, till strange . . — iii. 2 
and ttu'ued that black -word dcatii .. — iii. 3 
never was seen so black a da\' as this — iv. 5 
turn from their oftice to blaclc funeral — iv. f> 

nor customary suits of solemn black Hamlet, i. 2 

salile arms, black as his luirpose — ii. 2 

this cb'cad and black complexion smeared — ii. 2 

nay, then let the deril wear black — iii. 2 

thoughts black, hands aiit, drugs fit — iii. 2 

O bosom, black as death! O limed soul — iii. 3 
his soul may lie as diimned, and black .. — iii. 3 
there I see such black and grained spots — iii. 4 

on old black ram is tupping Othello, i. 1 

your son-in-law is far more fair than black — i. 3 
now if she be black and witty? Wep.).... — ii. 1 

to the health of the black Otliello — ii. 3 

haply, for I am black ; and have not those — iii. 3 
is _nov,' begrimed, and black as mine .. .. — iii. 3 
arise, black vengeance, from thy hollow cell — iii. 3 

BLACK AMOOIl-were a blackamoor. . Trail. /^Cr. i. 1 

BLACKBERRIES-plenty as blackberries.) ll.JV. ii. 4 
a micber, and eat blackberries? — ii. 4 

rSLACKBERRY-worth a blackben-y. rroti. iiCr. v. 4 

BLACK-BROWED— 
consort with black-browed night . . Mid. A'. Dr. iii. 2 



ELA 



[ r.3 ] 



BLACK-BROWEU— 

come, lovinc!, bliick-browed maht. Romeo ^ Jul. iii. 2 

BLACK-COftNKI!ED_ 
before black-cornered niiilit. , . . Timon of Alliens, v. 1 

BLACKEK-blackcr in their ilteet./ls>/oM l.iUeU, iv. 3 
because your brows ;ire blaekcr . . }I'inler\i7'atc, ii. 1 
piety docs my deeds make the l:>lackcr — iii. 2 

in ue.tious blacker than the night Pericles, i. 1 

and you the lilaeker de v il Olhello. v. -' 

BLACKEST-the blackest wws.TwoGen. nfVcr. iii. 1 
vows; to the blackest devill conscience. Wcn«te(,iv. 5 
devils will their blackest sins put on , . Othello, ii. 3 

BLACK-FACED— 
when black -faced Clifford shook . . Richard III. i. 2 

BLACK-FP.IAKS— is Blnek-tVinrs..//c(i;v I'lll. ii. 2 

BLACKlIEATII-\ipon I'laeklieath.. nen'.y. v. (eho.) 

}!LACKMErvE-Strani;eotl:laekmcre.lile».>'/. iv. 7 

BLACK-JIONDAY- 
a bleedinaon blaek-THondavlast..il/<?r.orren.. ii. 5 

BLACKNfiSS-ravcn ehiiles Ii'lackncss. Troil.'^- Cr. i]. 3 
more fiery by night's lilaekness . . Antony ^ Cleo. i. 4 

liis bed of blackness imlaid ojic Pericles, i. 2 

a white that shall her blackness fit Othello, ii. 1 

BLACK-OPPKESSING— 
the black-oppressing humour.. 7,oi'."'s /.. L. i. 1 (let.') 

BI^\DDER-a man up like a bladder..! U.-nnj! r. ii. 4 

boys that swim on Itladdeis llniiti 1' I il.Wi. -i 

bladders full of imposthmne.. •/'(o-Yks .•^-Vn-ssidn, v. 1 
green earthen pots, bladders llumen tS- Juliet, v. 1 

BLADE— as brasgarts do tlieir blades.. jVia'A.Ji/o, v. 1 
with blade, -nitli bloody (rep.) .. Mid. N. Dream, v. 1 

come blade, my breast iniln-ne — v. 1 

[Col.'] done i' the blade of youth All's Well, v. 3 

and on thy blade, and dudgeon Macbeth, ii. 1 

let fall tlry blade on vulnerable crests . . — v. 7 

between two blades, which bears 1 Hem-y VI. ii. 4 

cleaving to my blade, shall rust SKeiiry VI. i. 3 

and, with thy treacheroTis blade ..Richard III. i. 4 
flourishes his blade in sjiite of me . . Romeo fifJul. i. I 
Spanish blades, of healths five fathom — i. 4 
a very good blade! a very tall man! — ii. 4 

BLADED— the bladed grass .... Mid. N.'s Dream, i. 1 
though bladed com be lodged Macbeth, iv. 1 

BLjiJN — itches. Wains, sow aU..Timono/' Athens, iv. 1 

BLAJIE-old lord, I cannot blame tliee. Tempest, iii. 3 

or who can blame me to piss Merry Wives, v. 5 

blame not this haste of mine Twelfth Sight, iv. 3 

so far blame proves my enterprize..A/V(/. N.Dr. iii. 2 

or be to blame, by this Love's Labour s Lost, i. 2 

truly, the more to blame he Mer. of Venice, iii. 5 

you v.'ere to blame, I must be — v. 1 

blame you me to love you (rep.').. As you Litre it, v. 2 

than Idare blame my weakness All's iVell, ii. 1 

he has much worthy blame laid — iv. 3 

shall render yon no blame : — v. 1 

my high-repented blames — v. 3 

whether I have been to blame, or no — v. 3 
I cannot blame thee now to weep. Taming of Sh. iii. 2 

fie! you are to blame: come — iv. 3 

credit, the other mickle blame. . Comedy of Err. iii. 1 
and I, to blame, have held him here — iv. 1 

lays blame upon his promise Macbeth, iii. 4 

the taints and blames I laid upon — iv. 3 

who then shall blame his pestered. ... — v. 2 

I cannot blame liim ; was he I Henry I V. i. 3 

I cannot blame his cousin king — i. 3 

I cannot blame him; at my nativity — iii. 1 

I feel me much to blame 2 Henry IF. ii. 4 

I blarae you not; for, hearing this Hen'ry V. iv. 6 

can you blame her then — v. 2 

or will you blame and lay the fault. 1 Henry VI. ii. 1 

his fancy, blame him not — iv. 1 

my youth be guilty of such blame? .. — iv. 5 

I cannot blame them all 2 Henry VI. i. 1 

lord Warwick, blame me not ZHennj VI. ii. 1 

I blame not her, she coidd say little less — iv. 1 

let me blame your grace — iv. 6 

nor were not worthy blame, if this . . — v. .5 

alas, I blame you not Richard III. i. 2 

Icannot blame her, by God's holy .. — i. 3 
the king my uncle is to blame for this — ii. 2 
I'll bear thy blame, and take thy office — iv. 1 
but wrong, and blame the due ot blame — v. 1 

I cannot blame his conscience Henry VIII. iv. 1 

you are to blame, knowing, she will not — iv. 2 

ifthe king blarae me for't'. — v. 3 

'tis much to blame; they say . . Timon of Athens, i. 2 

no blame belongs to thee — ii. 2 

you lilame Mai-cius for being xtrond.Coriotanus, ii. 1 
who is't can blame him? your enemies — iv. 6 

the blame may hang upon your — v. 3 

from Aufidius a great part of blame. . — v. 5 
I am to blame to be thus waited for..A«(. Ccesar, ii. 2 
I lila.me -,,m not for praising Ca3sar ..- — iii. 1 
not in yiior fiuieral speech blame us.. — iii. 1 

)Ku)r knave, I blarae thee not — iv. 3 

by which I did blame Cato — v. 1 

some men are n.uch to blarae Cymbelinc, i. 7 

made me to blame in memory — iii. 5 

of what we blame him for iv. 2 

no blame be to you, sir: for all was . . — v. 3 
I blame ye not; you had a motive for't — v. 5 

blarae both my lord and me Pericles, iv. 1 

in part I understand them, are to blame . . Lear, i. 2 

the duke's to blame in this _ ii, 2 

a:i clears her from all blame — ii. 4 

'tis his own blame; he hath put ii. 4 

canst thou blame him? Ills daughter — iii. 4 

which men may blame, but not control . . — iii. 7 

and, manners, blame us not ^.. — iv. 6 

to lay the blarae upon her own despair .. — v. 3 

you are to blame, my lord Ilnmco f,-Jalij;t, iii. 5 

we are oft to blame m this Hamlet, iii. 1 

by cock, they ore to l)lame — iv. 5 (song) 

death no wind of blarae shall breathe. . — iv. 7 

the king, the king's to blarae — v. 2 

if my bad blame light on the man ! Otheltn, i. 3 

whom let us not therefore blarae — ii.3 

but I am much to blame .-. — iii. 3 

lam to blame. Why is your speech — iii. 3 



BLAME — in sootli, you are to blame ....Ottiello, iii. 4 

calling back, lay not your blame on me — iv. 2 

lot nobodv Iilarne liim. Ids scorn .. _ iv. 3 (sons 
BLAMi:i)— need none In lie blamed ..Mitt.S.Dr. v. 

that was not, to lie lilanird in -IH's/rv/(, iii. 

be blamed for 't liow you niiuht .. Wiiiin'sTale,i\. 

you that :ire Ijlur.uid for it alike .... Henry VIII. i. 

■which 1 ha\c rather lilanned as mine own.. Lrar, i. 
BLAiMKFUL— bloody lihiinefid blade. ;V»;. A'. D. v. 

took into her bliuneful be<l some . .-llienryVI. iii. 

as blameful as the c.xecutionery llirhurd III. i. ; 

BLAMELESS— is chaste, Poli.\ei;es blameless 

Winter'^ Ttdr, iii. 2 (Oracle' 
BLANC— from Port le Blanc, a Iwv . . Richard II. ii. 
BLANCH— the lady Bbmch of S|:aiu . AVni'^o/iii, ii. 

the lady Blanch is ne:ir to England. . — ii. 

find it fairer than in Blanch — ii. 

lie find it pnicr than in Blanch .... — ii. 

richer lilo.d tlniii ladv Blanch — ii. 

shall Le« is have Blanch? and Blanch — iii. 

Lewis mavrv lilaneh! t) boy, then .. — iii. 

in the rieht of ladv Blanch your — iii. 

Tray, Biancli,an(i Swcctlicart Lear, i'li. 

BLAiVCllED— are blanched with tear. .Macbeth, 'iii. 
BLANK— wiuh a blank space for . .Merry ll'ires, ii. 

a blank, my lord; she never toId..I'w(?(/'//iA7^/i/, ii. 

wonldtbey wcr.' blanks, rather.. — iii. 

in the e\en ro;i(l of a Ijlank verse ....Much Ado, v. 

an' you talk in blaiilc verse As you Like it, iv. 

out of the bliuik and level of my. Winter's Tale, ii. 

at home shall have blank charters ..Ricliard II. i. 

as — blanks, benevolences — ii. 

a commission to a blank of danger. Troil.SrCres. iii. 

the other blank as nothing — iv. 

it is lots to blanks, ray name hath . . Coriolanus, v. 

the true blank of thine eyes Lear, i. 

or the blank verse shall halt for 't Handel, ii. 

that blanks the face of joy — iii. 

as level as the cannon to liis blank 



within the blank of his displeasure .... Othello, iii. 

BLANKEI?- peep through the blanket. .Maciief/i, i. 
will toss the rogue in a blanket ....iHeurylV. ii. 
the Sim from us with a blanket .... Cymbetine, iii. 

with filth; blanket my loins Lear, ii. 3 

naj', he reserved a blanket, else — iii. 4 

a blanket, in the alarm tif fear Handel, ii. 2 

BLASPHEME-blaspheme the good.j1/ea./br Mea. 1. 5 

and does blaspheme his breed? Macbeth, iv. 3 

brother of England, you blaspheme in . . John, iii. 1 

ELASPHEIVIING- blaspheming Jew..jVac6W//,iv. 1 
blaspheming God, and cm-sing nien.'2Henry VI. iii. 2 

BLASPUEiMOtIS— 
blaspheinons, incharitable dog Tempest, i. 1 

BLASPHEMY — blasphemy, that swear'st — v. 1 
in the soldier is flat blasphemy . . Mea. for Mea. ii. 2 
I would speak blasphemy ere 'nid IHenryVI. v. 2 

BLAST— there he blasts the tree . . Merry Wives, iv. 4 
blasts of January would blow. . . . Winter's Tale, iv. 3 
bolted by the northern blasts twice . . — iv. 3 
striding the blast, or heaven's cherubim. -1/ac(/i?^/i, i. 7 

but when the blast of war blows Henry V. iii. 1 

general trumpet blow his blast 2Henry VI. v. 2 

or tears I blast or drown ZHenry VI. iv. 4 

I'll blast his harvest — v. 7 

have many blasts to shake them Richard III. i. 3 

come, blow thy blast. I'ullus Coriolanus, i. 4 

with brazen din blast you .■int.^- Cleo. iv. 8 

[Vol.'] — to which that blast gives heat . . Pericles, i. 2 

trora fell destruction's blast — \.'i (Gower) 

blasts and fogs upon thee! the uutented . . Lear, i. 4 

and blast [A'«^. blister] her pride — ii. 4 

which the impetuous blasts, with eyeless — iii. 1 
one blast of thy minikin mouth .. — iii. 6 (song) 

owes nothing to thy blasts — iv. 1 

I'll cross it, though it blast me Hamlet, i. 1 

airs from heaven, or blasts from hell .... — i. 4 

if this should blast in proof — iv. 7 

fuller blast ne'er shook our battlements. 0//tc/^o, ii. 1 

BLASTED— why upon this blasted heath. . Macb. i. 3 
about you blasted with antitiruty . .2 Henry //'. i. 2 

thus are my blossoms blasted in t Henry VI. iii. 1 

mine arm is like a blasted sailing.. Ricliard 1 1 1, iii. 4 

be men like blasted woods Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

to see 't, mine eyes are blasted Ant. ^ Cleo. iii. 8 

you were half blasted ere I knew you — iii . 11 

thus blasted, he will repent Pericles, i v. ) 

of blown youth, blasted with eestacy . . Haml'jt, iii. 1 
with Hecate's ban thrice blasted — iii. 2 

BLASTING-blasting in the bud . Tuo Gen. of Ver. i. 1 

a blasting and a scandalous Mea. for Mea. v. 1 

mildewed ear, blasting his wholesome.. Hamlet, iii. 4 

BLASTMENT— contagious blastments . . — i. 3 

BLAZE— the blaze ICol. blade] of youth, .-l/r,! Well, v. 3 

his rash fierce blaze of riot Richard II. ii. 1 

ye blaze to burn them out ZHenry VI. v. 4 

for Hector in his blaze of wrath . . Trail. f/Cres. iv. 5 
and their blaze shall darken hira . . Coriolanus, ii. 1 

the main blaze of it is past — iv. 3 

blaze forth the death of jirinces ..Julius Ctrsar, ii. 2 
find a time to blaze your marriage. iioHi. ^- Jul. iii. 3 
these blazes, daughter, giving more light. Hamlet, i. 3 
a speech of fire, tliat fain would blaze.. — iv. 7 

BLAIZED— ever as it blazed Com. of Errors, v. 1 

room hath blazed with lights. . Timon of Athens, ii. 2 

BLAZING— but every blazing star .... All's Welt,]. 3 
each one blazing by our meeds 3 Henry VI. ii. 1 

BLAZON— with loyal blazon Merry » ires, x. :, 

do give thee fivefold blazon Tn-elnhNigiii,':. 

I tliink your Ijlazon to be true Mncli Aii(i,'u. I 

thy skill be more to blazou it . . Rc.men , ;- Jnliit, ii. b 
but this eternal blazon ranst not iic .... llamtri, i. 5 

BLAZONING-blazoningourinjustice. rdnsAud. i\-. ( 
excels the quirks of blazoning pens tl'lifHo, ii. 1 

BLAZON'S'!'— thyself thou Mazon'st. Cyml,rlinc, iv. 2 

BLEACH-and maidens bleach. i-ort-'s L.L. y. 2 (song) 

BLEACHINU— forth to h]eaclung. Merry Wives, iv. 2 
sheet bleaching ou tlie hedge. Winter's T. i v. 2 (song) 

BLEAK-thou liest in the bleak ^Y.Asyou Likeit, ii. 6 

look bleak in the cold wind All's Welt, i. 1 

to make his bleak wimls kiss King John, v. 7 



RLE 

BLEAK— think'st that the bleak air. Tim. ofAth. iv. 3 

standing bleak upon the sea Pericles, iii. 2 

bleak [Knt. high] winds do sorely nifHe . . Lear, ii. 4 

BLEAKED—wlth bleared visages , . iter, nf Ven. iii. 2 

supposes bleared thine eyne Tmning of SI,, v. 1 

the bleared sights are spectacled Cnriotanus, ii. 1 

BLEAT— a calf when he bleats Much Ado, iii. 3 

like to .you, for you have just his bleat — v. 4 

bleat softly then, the bnteher Love'sL. Lost, v. 2 

made the ewe bleat for the lamb . . Mer. of Ven. iv. 1 
and bleat the one at the other Winter's Tale, i. 1 

BLEATED— Neptune a ram, and bleated — iv. 3 

BLED— all this while had bled .... As youLiUe it, iv. 3 
have not washed my nose that bled. ! Coriolanus, i. 9 
the drops that we have bled together. . — v. I 

BLEED— O ray heart bleeds to tliink .... Tempest, i. 2 
ifyoii piick us, do we not bleed?. A/ec. of Venice, iii. 1 

lest he do bleed to death — iv. 1 

one shall swear she bleeds Taming of Sh. 2 (ind.) 

weep I cannot, but my heart bleeds. Winter's T. iii. 3 

I would fain say bleed tears — v. 2 

if he do bleed, I'll gild the Macbeth, ii. 2 

bleed, bleed, poor country ! — iv. 3 

it weeps, it bleeds; and each — iv. 3 

sword impress, as make me bleed — y. 7 

bleed France, and peace ascend .... King John, ii, 1 

which bleeds away, even as a form — v. 4 

this is no time to bleed Richard II. i. 1 

spear-gi-ass, to make them bleed \ Henry IV. ii. 4 

unless I did bleed too — v. 4 

my heart bleeds inwardly 2 Henry IV. ii. 2 

fever, and we must bleed for it — iv. 1 

and made his England bleed Henry V. v. 2 (cho.) 

for ray opinion bleed 1 Henry VI. ii. 4 

congealed raouths, and bleed afresh.. W/c/mrd III. i. 2 
let Paris bleed; 'tis but a sx:a,r..TroiiusfyCressida^\. 1 

and bleed to death upon — li. 3 

thy wounds do bleed at many vents — v. 3 

I bleed inwardly for my lord . . Timon of Athens, i. 2 

alas, Coesar must bleed for it! Julius Ccesar, ii. 1 

how many times shall Cffisar bleed . . — iii. 1 

did not great Julius bleed for justice' sake — iv. 3 

I do not see them bleed Antony ^- Cleopatra, V. 2 

son's eye behold his father bleed. . Titus Andron. v. 3 

before thee, thou thyself shalt bleed Pericles, i. 1 

look, sir, I bleed. Where is the villain . . Lear, ii. I 

Regan, I bleed apace: untimely — iii. 7 

bless thy sweet eyes, they bleetl — iv. 1 

at this time, we sweat and bleed — v. 3 

wife! look how our daughter bleeds. iJom. ^ Jul. v. 3 

they bleed on both sides : how is it Hamlet, v. 2 

she swoons to see them bleed — v. 2 

I bleed still, I am hurt to the death Olhello, ii. 3 

nobody come? then shall I bleed to death — v. 1 
I bleed, sir; but not killed — v. 2 

BLEEDETH— bleedeth at our doors .2Henryl V. iv. 4 

BLEEDING— nose fell a bleeding . . Mer. of Ven. ii. .5 
to the bleeding, and the grim alarm . . Macbeth, v. 2 
lie scattered on the bleeding ground .KingJohn, ii. 2 
spit it Weeding, in his high disgrace ..Richardll. i. 1 

testament of bleeding war — iii. 3 

and bleeding, will we offer them \HenryIV. iv. 1 

breathless and bleeding upon the ground — v. 4 

he doth bestride a bleeding land 2HenryIV. i. 1 

advance his bleeding sword,'twixt Henry V. v. 2 

lest, bleeding, you do paint 1 Henry VI. ii. 4 

to wear my bleeding roses — ii. 4 

the heifer dead, and bleeding fresh . . — iii. 2 

of thy mother's bleeding heart iHenryVl. iv. 1 

the bleeding witness of ner hatred . . Richard III. i. 2 
live unscarred of Weeding slaughter.. — iv. 4 
pairof bleeding hearts; thereon engrave — iv. 4 
priests in holy vestments bleeding. . Timon of A. iv. 3 

dismiss the controversy bleeding Coriolanus, ii. 1 

the bleeding business they ha\c.. Julius Ca'sar,Vn. 1 
pardon me, thou bleeding piece of earth — iii. 1 
whereof lie bleeding in me..C'/;»i(;f/(ju',iii. 4 (letter) 

than thy master in bleeding — iv. 2 

he hath returned bleeding to Korae . . Titus And. i. 1 

to apply to his bleeding face Lear, iii. 7 

met I my father with his bleeding rings , . — v. 3 

rude brawls doth lie a bleeding Rom. <$- Jul. iii. 1 

and Juliet Weeding; warm, and newly — v. 3 
than Pvrrhus bleeding sword now iia.Ms.Hamlet, ii. 2 

BLEEDiNG-NEW— 
they were bleeding-new, my lord .. Timonof Aih.i. 2 

BLEED'ST— thou Bleed'st too much.iH™;-.v 1^- v. 4 

worthy sir, thou bleed'st Coriolumis,_ i. 5 

thou Weed'st apace. I had a wound. Jji^^^- Cleo. iv. 7 
bleed'st not; speak'st; art sound Lear, iv. G 

BLEJIISH— garments not a blemish Tempest, i. 2 

in nature there's no bleraisir Twelfth Night, iii. 4 

integrity stands "\nthout blemis'n.^/e'^f. /or i)/e«. v. 1 
I'll give no blemish to her honour. Winler'sTale, i. 2 

which nature made his blemish illeurylV. ii. 3 

shoiUd not blemish it, if 1 stood by . Ricliard III. i. 2 
whom these things cannot blemish ..Ant.^-Cleo. i. 4 
and blemish Cajsar's triumph — iv. 1 

BLEMISHED— 
sire blemished his gracious dam... Winter's Tale, iii. 2 
pawn the blemished crown, wipe oS.Riclwrd II. ii. 1 
corruption of a blemished stock . . Richard III. iii. 7 
thy garter, blemished, pawned his .. — iv. 4 

BLliMISHES-forget my blemi-shes. Winter's Tale,y. I 

not my bleraishes in tlie world's Ant.^Cleo. ii. 3 

as constrained bleraishes, not as deserved — iii. U 

BLENCH— you do blench from this.Mea. forMea. iv. 5 

could man so blench? I must Winter's Tale, i. 2 

doth lesser blench at sufferance ..Trail. ^ Cres. i. 1 

to blench from this, and to stand — ii. 2 

if he do bleneh, I know my course Hamlel, ii. 2 

BLENDED-seek this blended knight.. Trod.ff Cr. iv. 5 
both vour voices blended Corintnnvs,\'\\. I 

BIjENT— 'tis beauty truly blent . . Twetfh Mghi, i, 5 
something, being blent togetlier.jl/cr. of Venire, iii. 2 

BLESS — woul<l not bless our Em-ope .. Tempest, ii. 1 

go with rae to bless this twain — iv. 1 

not been there (liiess theniark.. Tu'oGcn. of Ver. iv. 4 
heaven bless them, and make .... Merry Wives, ii. 2 
bless you sir. Ana you, sir — ii. 2 



BLE 

BLESS— bless tliee, biJly doctor..... Voti/ »Vfc?, ii. 3 

bless you, sirl — iii- •"> 

bless you, fair shrew Ticclfih Sight, i. 3 

God bless thee, lady — . i- ■'> 

Jove bless thee, master pai'son — iv. i 

bless you, good father friar Meas./or JiJens. iii. 2 

adieu, trusty Pompey. Bless you, friar — iii. 2 

I bless myself every way Much Ado,i.3 

God bless" me from a challenge! — ,v. I 

bless thee. Bottom! bless thee!.. jVW.JV.Drcam.iii. 1 

and l)less it to all fair posterity — iv. 1 

a paniniour is, God bless us! — iv. 2 

[Tn/.]— for a woman, God bless us — v. 1 

will we siny, and bless this place — v. 2 

nud eauli a'vcral chamber bless — v. 2 

(i.alWess niv ladies! are they all. lofc's i. Losl,n. 1 

(.;od bless the lung!.... — iv. 3 

tbuy did not bless us with one — v. 2 

wlu) (God bless the mark!) is Mer. of J'enice, ii. 2 

God bless your worship ! — .?!• ^ 

some sober brow will bless it — iii. 2 

heaven bless bim! farewell, Beitiam. . All'syi'etl, i. 1 

bless our poor virginity from — ^i. 1 

bless you my fortunate lady — _ ii. 4 

bless nini at home in peace — iii. 4 (_let.) 

wliat ;uif.'el shall bless this — iii. 4 

(Jii.l bless vou, captain ParoUes — iv. 3 

better tliai'i the first, O dear heaven, bless — v. 3 
mistress Bianca, bless you with.. Taming of Sh. iv. 2 
bless thyself; thou met'st with. . Winter's Tale, iii. 3 

I hless the time, when mygood — iv. 3 

bless me from marrying a usurer .... — iv. 3 
to bless the bed of majesty again .... — v. 1 
he will bless that cross with. . Comedy of Errors, ii. 1 

one cried, God bless us ! Macbeth, ii. 2 

when they did say, God bless us .... — ii. 2 

bless you, fair dame ! — iv. 2 

Jesu bless \is ! strike; down \lJenry IV. ii. 2 

and God bless yoiu: expedition IHenrylV. i. 2 

you would bless you to hear what .. — ii. 4 

iiow the Lord bless that sweet — ii. 4 

sir John, heaven bless you — iii. 2 

God bless thy lungs, good knight! .. — v. 5 

the lord in heaven bless thee Henry r. iv. 1 

and bless us ^Yitb. her former qualities — v. 2 

thou shalt no sooner bless mine — v. 2 

St. Dennis bless this happy stratagem.! Hen. VI. iii. 2 

he's a tjood man I Jesu bless him 2Henry TV. i. 3 

O Lord Ijless me, Ipray God! — ii. 3 

to bless a regal tlu-one ZHenry VI. iv. 6 

O Jesus bless us, he is born — v. 6 

God bless thee; and put meekness. ./{/cAairf ///. ii. 2 

God bless your grace with health — iii. 1 

[Co/.]— God bless the prince from all — iii. 3 

jf not to bless us and the land — iii. 7 

Goil bless yoiu- grace! we see it — iii. 7 

I, by attorney, bless thee from thy . . — v. 3 
fortune falls, will bless the king . . Henry VIII. ii. 2 

to bless your eye withal — iii. 2 

ever God bless your highness — iii. 2 

with the king, God bless him — iii. 2 

heaven bless thee! thou hast the .... — iv. 1 

both now and ever bless her! — v. 1 

bless me, what a fry of fornication .. — v. 3 
her own shall bless her; her foes .... — v. 4 

shall see this, and bless heaven — y. 4 

heaven bless thee from a tutor. Troibis Sf Cressida,\\. 3 

Jove bless gieat Ajax — iii. 3 

so the gods bless me, when all. . Tiinon of Athens, ii. 2 

assm-ance bless j'our thoughts __— ii. 2 

so in nothing bless them — iii. 6 (gi'ace) 

break reliL'ions; bless the accursed .. — iv. 3 

heavens bless ray lord from fell Coriolanus, i. 3 

you hless me, gods! Therefore — iv. 5 

the gods bless you for your tidings . . — v. 4 

the holy priests bless her Anl.f,- Cleo. ii. 2 

bless my lord and husband! (/-ep.) — iii. 4 

make her thanks bless thee — iv. 8 

and bless the good remainders Cymbeline, i. 2 

if you will bless me, sir, and give .... — iv. 4 
O bless me here with my victorious . . Titus And._ i. 2 
now, the gods to bless your honoiur! . . Pericles, iv. 6 

heavens bless my girl! but hark .... — v. 1 
pure Diana, I bless thee for thv vision — v. 3 
bless thy five mtsi Tom's a cold {rep.) . Lear, iii. 4 

bless thy five wits! Opity! — iii. 6 

bless thee, master ! Is that the naked {rep.') — iv. 1 

bless thy sweet eyes, they bleed — iv. 1 

bless the good man from the foul fiend ! . . — iv. 1 

if Edgar Kve, O bless him ! — i v. G 

now, God in heaven bless thee . . Romeo <§- JiUiet, ii . 4 
God in heaven bless her! you are .... — iii. .5 
(iod bless you, sir! My lord, the queen. Hamlet, iii. 2 
God bless you, sir. Let him bless thee . . — iv. 6 

((iod bless the mark)! his Moorship's Othello, i. 1 

that he may bless this bay with his.... — ii. 1 

heaven bless the isle of CyiJrus — ii. 2 

is it out of the way? Heaven bless us! — iii. 4 

BLESSED— or blessed was't, we did Tempest, i. 2 

to estate on the blessed lovers — iv. 1 

on this couple drop a blessed crown — v. 1 

a blessed soul doth in Elysiiun. Tao Gen. of Ver. ii. 7 
witli such grace hath blessed them .. — iii. I 

O, this blessed hour — 'ii- -^ 

my charity, and my blessed order.. i^/ea./or.Vea. ii. ? 

fur all thy blessed youth becomes — iii. 1 

then, oh, you blessed ministers above — v. 1 

1 iksscd be' your royal grace — v. 1 

liatli blessed vou with a good name...'1/Kc'; Ado, iii. 3 
thrice blessed they, that master. . Mid. N. Dream, i. 1 
for she hath blessed, and attractive . . — ii. 3 
on Neptime with fair blessed beams.. — iii. 3 
hath sucli force and blessed power . . — iv. 1 

which by us shall blessed be — v. 2 

blessed are clouds, to do as such. . Love's L. Lost, v. 2 
it is twice blessed; it blesseth .Merch. of Venice, iv. 1 

for, by these blessed candles — v. 1 

he blessed for yom* good comfort. . As youLil<e it, ii. 7 
is the single man therefore blessed?. . — iii. 3 
O blessed bond of board and bed . — v. 4 (song) 



[64 j 



BLESSED— in thee some blessed s\nr:\t. AlVsWell, ii. 1 
as 'longeth to a lover's lilessed case!. Tam.ofSh. iv. 2 
it is the blessed sun. Then God (7("p.) — iv. .'i 
how blessed am I in my just censm'C. }Vinler''sT. ii. 1 

now blessed be the great A|)ollo! — iii. 2 

how blessed are we, that are not simple — iv. 3 

we arc blessed in this man (ivji.) — iv. .t 

never, Paulina; so be bkssid uiy spirit — v. 1 
the blessed gods purge all infei'tion .. — v. I 
and your father's blessed (as he from — v. 1 
some blessed power deliver us . . Comedy of Err. iv. 3 

I had lived a blessed time Machfth, ii. 3 

now blessed be the hour, by niaht . . King John, i. 1 
and with a blessed and imvexed retire — ii. 1 - 

the half part of a blessed man — ii. 2 

and this blessed day, ever in France — iii. 1 

and blessed shall lie be, that doth.. .. — iii. 1 
and then we shall be blessed to do .. — iii. 1 

this blessed plot, this earth Richard II. ii. 1 

world's ransom, blessed JNIary's son . . — ii. 1 

walked those blessed feet, which IHemylV.i. 1 

and the blessed sun himself a fair. .. . — i. 2 

shall the blessed sun of heaven — ii. 4 

thou art a blessed fellow to think ..2HenryIV. ii. 2 
the dove and very blessed spirit of peace — iv. 1 

and blessed, and graced indeed — iv. 1 

we are blessed in the change Henry V.\. 1 

the bed of blessed marriage — v. 2 

he was a king blessed of the King of..lHenryVI. 1. 1 

thatbeauty am I blessed with — i. 2 

more blessed hap did ne'er befal .... — i. 6 

reverenced like a blessed saint — iii. 3 

blessed are the peace-makers (rep.) . .iHenry VI. ii. 1 
blow towards England's blessed shore — iii. 2 

blessed with a goodly son ZHenry VI. ii. 2 

the people of this blessed land — iv. 6 

the heavens have blessed you Richard III. i. 3 

York blessed his tlvree sons — _i. 4 

to make the blessed period of this peace — ii. 1 
a blessed labour, my most sovereign — ii. 1 
tlie holy priNilege of blessed sanctuary — iii. 1 
if grace had blessed thee mth a fairer — iv. 4 

and blessed with beauteous mves — v. 3 

thou fall'st a blessed martyr Henry VIII. iii. 2 

his blessed part to heaven_, and slept — iv. 2 

even now, a blessed troop invite • — iv. 2 

tell him, in death I blessed him — iv. 2 

thy person under their blessed win»s — v. 1 
would discredit the blessed sods. . Troil. fyCres. iv. 5 
my dearest lord, blessed, to be most. Tim.of Ath. iv. 2 
O blessed breeding sun, draw from . . — i v. 3 

then was a blessed time — iv. 3 

whilst thou'rt blessed and free — iv. 3 

the rather we shall be blessed to do. . Coriolanus, ii. 2 
O blessed heavens ! More noble blows — iv. 2 

O stand up blessed! whilst — v. 3 

be blessed for making up this peace . . — v. 3 
we are blessed, that Rome is rid of.. Jul. Cresar, iii. 2 
not to have been blessed withal, .^rifoni/ ^- Cleo. i. 2 
Oetavi a is a blessed lottery to him .. — ii. 2 

O, thou blessed moon, when men — iv. 9 

O blessed, that I might not! Cymbeline, i. 2 

blessed be those, how mean soe'er — i- 7 

blessedlive you long! a lady to the.. — i. 7 
far it is to this same blessed Milford — iii. 2 
thou blessed thing! Jove knows what — iv. 2 

the benefit of his blessed beams — iv. 4 

and make me blessed to obey — v. 1 

more sweet than our blessed fields. ... — v. 4 
blessed may j'ou be, that, after this . . — v. 6 
to their nostrils from our blessed altars — y. b 

make me blessed in your care Pericles, iii . 3 

blessed, and mine own ! Hail, madam — v. 3 
all blessed secrets, all you unpublished . . Lear, iv. 4 
[Col. Kn(.] blessed my rude hand ..Rom.^'Jul.i. b 
lady, by yonder blessed moon I swear — ii. 2 

blessed blessed night! I am afeard — ',!}• '-^ 

doth she not count her blessed — Iii. b 

wife, we scarce thought us blessed .. — 111* "^ 
and blessed are those whose blood .... Hamlet, iii. 2 
and when you are desirous to be blessed — iii. 4 
and little blessed with the set phrase. . . . Othello, i. 3 
most blessed condition. Blessed fig's end — ii. 1 
blessed, she would never have loved (_rep.) — ii. 1 
so apt, so blessed a disposition — ii. 3 

BLESSEDLY— but blessedly holp hither. Tempest, i. 2 

the time was blessedly lost Henry V. iv. 1 

BLESSEDNESS-in single blessedness. W/d.A'.'s D. i. 1 
found the blessedness of being little. Henry VIII. iv. 2 

leave her blessedness to one — v. 4 

BLESSES — every good tongue blesses — iii. 1 

BLESSETH-it blesseth him that gives. Mer.ofV. iv. 1 

BLESSING— marriage blessing.. J'empcsf, iv. 1 (song) 

Juno sings her blessings on you .. — iv. 1 (song) 

Ceres' blessing so is on' you ^ iv. 1 (song) 

now all the blessings of a glad father .. — v. 1 

father, your blessing Two Gen. of Verona, ii. 3 

blessing of your heart — iii. I 

blessing on your heart for'tl Merry Wives, ii. 2 

blessinj; of Iris heart! — iv. 1 

lieard it, what blessing bringeth it?. .Much .4do, i. 3 
for the which blessing, I am at him . . — ii. 1 
God's blessing on your heard! .... Love'sL.Lost, ii. 1 
and thrift is blessing, if men ste&X.Mer.of Venice, i. 3 

give me your blessing — ii. 2 

but give me your blessing; I am .... — ii. 2 

1 feel too much thy blessing — iii. 2 

for, having such a blessing m his lady — iii. .') 
charged my brother on his blessing. .^s you Like, i. 1 

the blessing of God, till 1 have All's t¥eU,i. 3 

tiiey say, beams are blessings — i. 3 

and pray God's blessing into thy attcmiit — i. 3 

blessing upon your vows! — ii. 3 

commends it to your blessing Winter's Tali', ii. 3 

and blessing, against tills cruelty — ii. 3 

tell me wbiit blessings I have here alive — iii. 2 

and pray yi'iii- iiintlier'B blessing — v. 3 

a blessing lu' I.Lstows on beasts . . Com.of Errors, ii. 2 

I had must need of blessing Macbeth, ii. 2 

that a swift blessing may Boon return . . — iii. S 



BLI 

BLESSING-eousin, blessing upon you,. Macbeth, iv. 2 

and snn'lrv bicssinirs bong about — iv. 3 

my 111.' .iii- ■',, wiH\ tbrei King . Mm, iii. 3 

wi'tb (li\' b[.~:.in^, >lri-l 1. IV lance's.. H<Wia»'d //. i, 3 
yet, blr--iii-iiii lli^ lu-iirt tliatgives .. — v. 5 
heaven with blessing iioliugbroke . .2Henry IV. i. 3 

blessing o' j'our good heart — ii. 4 

upon my blessing I command thee go.l Henry VI. iv. b 
and take my blessing, good my girl . . — v. 4 
a world of earthly blessings to niy ..'illenry VI. i. I 
good for bad, blessings for cursings.i£/c/ia?-(i III. i. 2 

on my knee I crave your blessing — ii. 2 

the butt end of a mother's blessing . . — ii. 2 
shall cry for blessings on him .... Henry VIII. ii. 1 
his eiu'ses and his blessings touch me — ii. 2 
which, to say sooth, are blessings .... — ii. 3 

and heavenly blessings follow — ii. 3 

■Hill fall some blessing to this land .. — Hi- ^ 
runs his course, and feieeps in blessings — iii. 2 

fall thick in blessings on her! — iv. 2 

■with this kiss take my blessing — v. 4 

this land a thousand 'thousand blessings — v. 4 
that I account them blessings.. Kraono/ /(Mens, ii. 2 
flow, flow, you heavenly blessings.. C>/m6ri/ne, iii. 5 
your blessing, sir. Though you did love — v. b 

now, blessing on thee rise Pericles, v. 1 

did the thircl a blessing against his will . . Lear, i. 4 

and ask thy daughter's blessing — iii. 2 

when thou dost ask me blessing, I'll kneel — v. 3 
I asked his blessing, and from first to last — y. Z 

immortal blessing from her lip Rojn. Sf Jul. iii. 3 

a pack of blessings lights upon thy back — iii. 3 

a double blessing is a double grace Hamlet, i. 3 

there, my blessing with you — i. 3 

my blessing season this m thee — i. 3 

conception is a Itlessing; but as yom" .. — ii. 2 

blessed, I'll blessing beg of you — iii. 4 

BLEST— let me be blest to make. Two Gen. of Ver. v. 4 
I am blest in your aeifoaintance. .M«ry Wives, ii. 2 

blazon, evermore be blest! — v. .'> 

now with hymn or carol blest. . Mid. N.'sDream, ii. 2 

aud the owner of it blest — v. 2 

he was blest; and thrift is blessing. . Mer. of Ven.i. 3 
to make me blest, or curscd'st among — ii. 1 
be thou blest, Bertram! and succeed.. ^H's^J'eH, i. 1 

welcome, and undoubted blest — ii. 1 

how accursed, in being so blest . . Winter's Tale, ii. 1 

now be you blest for it ! I'll to — ii. 2 

how blest this land would be Richard II. iii. 4 

the father of so blest a son I Henry IV. i. 1 

as likely to be blest in peace ZHenry VI. iv. 6 

been blest with many children .... Henry VIII. ii. 4 

God's blest mother 1 I swear — v. 1 

that the blest gods— as angry . . Troilus.fr Cress, iv. 4 

blest be, you bees, that make Cymbeline, iii. 2 

away! arid to be blest, let us with care — v. 4 

the blest infusions that dwell Pericles, iii. 2 

to have blest mine eyes — iii. 3 

O the blest gods! so will you wish on me.. Lear, ii. 4 

BLEW— that blew this tempest up King John, y. 1 

which then blew bitterly against. . , . Richard II. i. i 
what wind blew you hither. Pistol ..2HenryIV. v. 3 
ye blew the fire that burns ye .... Henry VIII. v. 2 

BLIND— her, and her blind boy's Tempest, iv. 1 

that the bliud mole may not ' — iv. 1 

because love is blind Tu-oGen.of I'erona, ii. 1 

wept herself blind at my parting — ii. 3 

he should be blind; and being blind — ii. 4 

but I shall be blind — ii. 4 

three or four of his blind brothers. ... — iv. 4 
drowned a bitch's blind puppies. . Merry Wives, iii. 5 

whom the blind waves Twelfth Night, v. 1 

for the sign of blind Cupid Much Ado, i. 1 

you strike like the blind man — ii. 1 

is winged Cupid painted bliud . . Mid. N. Dream, i. 1 
doth falsely blind the eyesight . . Love's L. Lost, i. 1 

and, strucken blind, kisses the — iv. 3 

will gaze an eagle blind — iv. 3 

like a blind harper's song — v 2 

so may I, blind fortune leading, .itfcr. o/Fenj'ce, ii. 1 
but love is blind, and lovers cannot. . — ii. 6 
as the blind man knows the cuckoo. . — ■v. 1 

as the bountiful blind woman As you Like it.i.'i 

thatblindrascally boy, that abuses.. — iv. 1 
and all eyes blind with the pin . . Winter's Tale^ i. 2 

these blind ones, aboard him — iv. 3 

for my rage was blind King John, iv. 2 

yet salt-water blinds them not .... Richard II. iv. 1 

makes blind itself with foolish \HenryIV. iii. 2 

strike the daujihin blind to look Henry V.i. 2 

the blind and bloody soldier — iii. 3 

that goddess blind, that stands — iii. 6 

he must appear naked and blind — v. 2 

of a naked blind boy in her — v. 2 

as love is blind, and enforces — v. 2 

blind, though they have their eyes .. — v. 2 

and she must be blind too — v. 2 

sword did blind men with his \HenryVI.\. 1 

glimmer thro' a blind man's eye — ii. 4 

a blind man at Saint Alban's ZHenry VI. ii. I 

blind, and now restored? Bom bliud — ii. 1 

how long hast thou been blind — ii- 1 

if thou hadst been bom blind — ii. 1 

I would be blind with weeping — iii. 2 

and called them blind and dusky — iii. 2 

be blind with tears, and break ZHenry VI. ii. .■■) 

and made tluni blind with weeping.Jiic/m;^i( III. i. 2 

yet to thy own soul so blind — i. 4 

dead life, blind sight, poor mortal — iv. 4 

into the blind cave of eternal night . . — v. 3 
that blind jjriest, liketlie eldest son..lIen.vni. ii. 2 
blind fear, that seeing reason (rep.'). Troil. ,'iCr. iii. 2 
and blind oblivion swallowed cities up — iJ!' 2 

and the blind to hear him sjieak Coriolanus, ii. I 

be put in mind of liis blind fortune .. — v. b 
I'll wake mine eyeballs blind first .. Ci/mMme, iii. 4 
are sometimes like our judgments, blind — iv. 2 
make tb.y father blind irep.) .... Titus Andron. ii. b 
make them blind with tributary tears — iii. 1 
for whom my tears have made me blind — v. 3 



BhlND— do make their chiUlron bltnd .... Lear, ii. 4 

led by their eyep, l)iit hliiiil men — .11.4 

when nmdmeii Uniil the liliud — jv. 1 

eliiiuee to lie:ir iil'tlKit liliud traitor — iv. !) 

do tliv worst, blind Oupid — iv. G 

he tl^it i-; stnicUu liliiid Koiiwo fyJuUet, i. 1 

blind i< Ids 1 ive, iuid best befits (n'/J.) — ii. 1 
eleftwith the blinil bowbov's butt-shaft — ij. 4 

iflove lie blind, it iKstaifvees — „ i'!- 2 

hein? not defleient, blind, or bime Olltcllo, i. 3 

drown ents, and blind I'Uiiiies — .1.3 

Bl-IN DKD-not a blinded t:.Hi. . Two (len. ofVer. iv. 4 

himli'dit tluit WHS it blinded by. .Lowe's L. Los(, i. 1 

that is not blinded bv iu r majesty? .. — iy. 3 

no eves, the dnst h;illi blindedthem.'i/fciin/r/. iii. 3 

BLIN'DFOLD-iindblindrold .leaili ..lUdmnlll. i. 3 

BLINDING— .Lda/.cd with blindini; tears - 11.2 

dart yonr hliiulin.; (lames into her Lear, n. 4 

BLINl)I-Y— the brother blindly shed . . Uidi.l II. V. 4 
BLINDNESS— 
hell) liini of his blindness. TK'ofit'n. ofF.ir. 2 (song) 
loie with sonie sho%v of blinduess. . Com. of Er. iii. 2 

thank love for my blindness llenrij V. v. 2 

BLIN1)-\V(I1;M- .. , 

blind-worms, do no \VTong ..Mid. N. Dr. n. 3 (sOTg) 

adder's fork, and blind-worm's Am<i..ilaebetU, iv. 1 

BLIXK-to blink throm:h with ..Mid. N.Drenm, v. 1 

BLINKI>;(;— of a blinkim; idiot.. /-/«•. of Venice, ii. 9 

that blinkin- Cunid u'ossiiis Alf^llell.i. 1 

BLISS— l)liss and I'oiulness on vmx.. '.tea. for ilea. ill. 2 
of I aire wlute, this seal o! liiiss..W(/. N.'.'i Dream, in. 3 

tbronyhwbomlseenobliss .. - V. 1 

have but a shadow's l>liss . . Mer. of Ven. ii. 9 (scrolD 
hold vour fortune for v.nn- bliss — iii. 2 (scroll) 
tl-.e w'i, bed haven of niv bli-. . Tamh,«- of Skreir, v. 1 
bear,; me seve-ed from' mv bibs . . Voi,u'r,y nf Er. i. 1 
the eontrary briuLletli forth bliss .... 1 lleiinj I'L V. 5 
if tb in thin'k'stou heaven's bliss ..'illenryVI. iii. 3 
all that poets feii;n of bliss and joy . .ZHenry VI. i. 2 

the hope I have of heavenly bliss — i". 3 

will prove our country's bliss — iv- ^ 

bliss in our brows' bent Inlony A'- Cleopatra, i. 3 

from help as limbo is from bliss. . Titus Andron. in. 1 

I shall never come to bliss — in. 1 

thou art a soul in bliss Lear, iv. 7 

to merit bliss by making me despair.Hom. ^./ii(. i. 1 

bliss bo upon you! tell me — .v. 3 

that cuckold lives in bliss, who Othello, lu. 3 

so come my sovJ to bliss, as I speak — v. 2 

BLISXJiK— and blister you all o'er .... Tempest, i. 2 

a blister on his sweet tongue Love'sL.Losl,Y.i 

let my tongue blister; and never. . ll'inter'sTale,}i. 2 
whose sole name blisters our tongue . . Macbeili, iv. 3 
for each true word, a blister . . TImon of Alliens, v. 2 
[A'n(.]— powerful sun, to fall and blister . . Lear, n. 4 
the angry Mab with blisters plagues.. ifom. .fJvl.i.i 
innocent love, and sets a blister there.. Ham/e', iii. 4 
BLISTEKED— blistered her report. il/ra..ftrMea. ii. 3 
short blistered breeches, and those.. HeHrj/r///..i. 3 

blistered be thy tongue, for such Eom.^ Jul. in. 2 

BLITHE— blithe and bonny ...Much Ado, ii. 3 (song) 

Bardolph, be blithe Henry I', ii. 3 

sweet emperor, be blithe again Titus Andron. iv. 4 

so buxom, bhthe, and full of face..P(;/-ic/es,i. (Gow.) 
BLITHER— blither for their drouth. — iii. (Gow.) 
BLITHILD— descended of Blithild .... Henry V. i. 2 
BLOAT— let the bloat king temijt you. . Hamlet, iii. 4 
BLOCK— what a block art thou. Two Gen. of Ver. ii. 5 
down on twenty bloody blocks ..Mea.for Mea. li. 4 
sirrah, provide .your block and your axe — iv. 2 

is the axe upon' the block, sirrah? — iv. 3 

him, fellows; bring him to the block — iv. 3 
condemn thee to the very block, where — y. 1 
it ever changes with the next block . . MiichAdo,\. 1 

past the endurance of a block — .ii. 1 

why, a block moved with none — iii. 1 

a riuintain, a mere lifeless block . . As you Like it, i. 2 
iuraore than the common blocks.. Winter's Tale, i. 2 
these traitors to the block of death. .iHenryl V. iv. 2 
stoop to the block, than these knees. .iHen. VL iv. 1 

come, lead me to the block Richard III. iii. 4 

wdrat tongueless blocks were they — iii. 7 

convey nie to the block of shame — v. 1 

like a block, hath denied my access. Coriolanns, y. 2 
you blocks, you stones, you worse .Julius Ccesar,]. 1 

how thou stirrest, thou block Pericles, iii. 2 

this a good block ! it were a delicate Lear, i v. 6 

BLOCKilEAD-wedged up in abloekhead. Con'o(. il, 3 
BLOCKISH— let blockish Ajax draw. ryoaX 4-Cr. i. 3 

BLOIS— Maine, Blois, Boictiers 1 Henry VI. iv. 3 

BLOMER— sir William Blomer .... Henry Fill. i. 2 
BLOOD— straw to tlic fire i' the blood . . Tempest iv. 1 

flesh and blood, you brother — v. 1 

beats, as of flesli'and blood — v. 1 

mind to feed on your blood Two Gen. of Ver. ii. 4 

as tliou art a gentleman of blood — iii. 1 

makes the milch-kine yield XAooi.Merry Wives, iv. 4 

am I not of her blood? Twelfch Nigid ii. 3 

let thy blood and spirit — ii. 5 (.let.) 

you find so much blood in his liver. . — iii. 2 
make some obstruction in the blood — iii. 4 

inhabits our frail blood — iii. 4 

of this malapert blood from you — iv. 1 

and let your flesh and blood obey it. . — v. 1 
had it been the brotlier of my blood. . — v. 1 

right noble is his blood — v 1 

confesses that his blood flows Mea.for Mea. i. 4 

whose blood is very snow-broth — i. .5 

resolute acting of your blood could .. — ii. 1 

blood, thou still ai-t blood — ii. 4 

why does my blood thus muster — — ii. 4 

falfen by prompture of tlie blood — ii. 4 

ne'er issued from Ills blood — iii. 1 

both in tlie heat of blood, and lack . . — v. 1 
I thank God, and my cold blood — Much Ado,i. 1 
prove that ever I lose more blood .... — i. 1 

it better fits ray blood to be — i. 3 

whose charms "faith melteth into blood — ii. 1 

wisdom and blood combating iu — ii. 3 

that blood hath the victory — ii. 3 



[ <>5 ] 



BLOOD-no true drop of blood in him. A/jic/iJi/o, iii. 2 

turns about all the hot bloods, between — iii. 3 

comesnot that lilood, a^ modest — .i' 

more intemperate in yonrblond than — ii 

the story that is piinti'd in her blouil? — i' 

not yet so dried tliis blood of mine .. — i' 

I will be flesh and l.looa — 

this speech like iron through your blood — ' 

exanniie well your blood i^Iid. N. Dream, 

tliat master so their blood, to undergo — 
but, either it was dillerent in blood . . — 

I see no blood, no wovmd — ii. 3 

being o'er shoes in blood — iii. 2 

I am not guil ty of Ly Sander's blood — iii. 2 

that cost uie fresh blood dear — iii. 2 

wdiat, stained with blood! — v. 1 

his own person in flesh and blood.. L/'ve's L. Lost i. 1 

thou heatcst my blood — i • 2 

Alack, let it blood — ii. 1 

the poor deer's blood, that my heart. . — iv. 1 

in sanguis — blood; ripe as — iv. '2 

she reigns in ray blood, and will — iv. 3 

a fever in your blood! why, then — iv. 3 

as flesh and blood can be — iv. 3 

young blood will not obey an old .... — iv. 3 

ibr native blood is coimted painting. . — iv. 3 

the blood of youth burns not with — v. 2 

no more man's blood in's belly than — v. 2 

sweet bloods, I both may and will ... . — v. 2 

your oft'er made in heat of blood — v. 2 

when blood is nipped, and ways be — v. 2 (song) 
whose blood is warm within .... Mer. of Venice, i. 1 

may devise laws for the blood — .5.2 

to prove whose blood is reddest — ii. 1 

thou art mine own flesh and blood .. — ii. 2 

tiiougli I am a daughter to his blood — .ii. 3 

my own flesh and blood to rebel ! — iii. 1 

my daughter is my flesh and blood . . — iii. 1 

more between your bloods, than there — iii- 1 

only my blood speaks to you in my . . — iii. 2 

blood, bones, and all, ere thoii (cpp.). . — iv. 1 

doth give thee here no jot of blood .. — iv. 1 

one drop of christian lilood, thy lands — iv. 1 

shed thou no blood; nor cut thou — iv. 1 

which is the hot condition of their blood — y. 1 

in the gentle condition of blood . . As you Like it, i. 1 

takes not away my blood, were there — i. 1 

of a diverted blood, and bloody brother — ii. 3 

hot and rebellious liquors in nry blood — ii. 3 

this napkin, dyed in this blood — iv. 3 

will swoon when they do look on blood — iv. 3 

as marriage binds, and blood breaks — v. 4 

thy blood and virtue contend All's Well, i. 1 

as .you, and all flesh and blood are . . — i. 3 

the cherisher of my flesh and blood . . — i. 3 

our blood to us, this to our blood is born — i. 3 

does it curd thy blood, to say — i. 3 

from forth the royal blood of France — ii. 1 

make yourself a son out of ray blood — ii. 3 

that our bloods, of colour, weight . . — ii. 3 

treat decision hath much blood let forth — iii. 1 

do wash his name out of my blood — iii. 2 

Ms important blood will nought .... — iii. 7 

workmanly the blood and tears . Tarn, of Sh. 2 (ind.) 

in despite of the flesli and the blood — 2 (ind.; 

much sadness hath congeale(i your blood — 2 (ind.) 
higher reared with stronger blood.. Winter' sTale, i. 2 

friendship far, is mingling bloods — 1.2 

thoughts that would tliick my blood — i. 2 

give scandal to the blood o' the prince — i. 2 

then, my best blood turn to — i. 2 

you have too much blood in him .... — ii. 1 

I'll pawn the little blood which I have — ii. 3 
the red blood reigns in the winter's — iv. 2 (song) 

and the true blood which fairly peexJg — iv. 3 

that makes her blood look out — iv. 3 

not hold thee of our blood, no, not . . — iv. 3 

and none of .your flesh and blood .... — iv. 3 

then your blood had been the dearer — iv. 3 

1 am sure, my heart wept blood — v. 2 

those veins did yeril.y bear blood? — v. 3 

rigorous statutes with their bloods ..Com.of Err. i. 1 

my blood is mingled with the crime — ii. 2 

a drop of blood, a pin, a nut — iv. 3 

even for the blood that then Host .. — v.) 

all the conduits of my blood froze up — y. 1 

make thick my blood, stopnp Macbeth,!. 5 

marked with blood those sleepy two .... — i. 7 

gouts of blood, wliich was not so before — ii. 1 

smear the sleepy grooms with blood. ... — ii. 2 

wash this blood clean from my hand .. — ii. 2 

the fountain of your blood is stopped . . — ii. 3 

and faces were all badged with blood . . — ii. 3 

skin laced with his golden blood — ii. 3 

the near in blood, tlie nearer — ii. 3 

there's blood upon thy face — iii. 4 

blood hath been shed ere now — iii. 4 

thy blood is cold; thou hast no — iii. 4 

blood; they say blood will have blood. . — iii. 4 

brought forth the secretest man of blood — iii. 4 

1 am in blood slept in so far — iii. 4 

cool it with a baboon's blood . 
pour in sow's blood, that hath. 



to have had so much jjlood iu him? .... 

here's the smell of the blood still 

harbingers of blood and death 

too much charged with blood of thine. . 

for war, and blood for blood Kin 

great forerunner of thy blood, Richard 
the market-place in Frenchmen's blood 

you stain your swords with blood 

repent each drop of blood, that 

stirring him to blood and strife 

when Oving blood doth iu these 

will bear home that lusty blood again 
and stalk in blood to our possession . . 
and as well-born bloods as those .... 
blood hath bought blood, and blows 
hast thou yet more blood to cast away? 
thou hast not saved one drop of bl'jod 



iv. 1 
iv. 1 
V. 1 
V. 1 



BLO 

BLO(_)lJ-when the rich blood .>f kings. A-i»ig-./oAn, ii. 

till then, blows, blood, and death! .. — ii. 

whose veins bound rii'lier bio.nl than — ii. 

cannoneer beL'ot this Im-tv blood? — ji. 

beauty, I'llnoalion, bb.od.'Irhls — ii. 

false (>l I to t.il r hlooil join.-il! .... — iii. 

so hitelv pnrL'L'd of !ili>o(l, so new Iv .. — iii. 

againstlhe hlo.jil that thou '.... — iii, 

tile sun's o'ercast with blood — iii. 

but blood, the blood, and ((cp.) — iii. 

ere our blood shall queueh — iii. 

had baked thy blood, and made it — iii. 

is all as youtiful as your blood — iii. 

steeps bis safety in true blood — iii. 

that blooil, wh'ifli owed the lireailth. . — iv. 

nosur. fonn.lalionset on l.iooil — iv. 

where is that blood, dial I Inu-e — iv, 

thiseonfioe olblooil and breath — iv, 

witli the erlmson spots of blood — i\', 

foul imaginary eyes of blood iji'eseuted — iv. 

tliat leaves the iirint of blood where'er — iv. 

to stranger blood, to foreign ro.yalty. . — v. 

the blood of malice in a vein of — v. 

full warm of blood, of mirth — v. 

hy all the blood that ever fury — v, 

the life of all his blood is touched — v. 

on unrciirievable condemned blood .. — v. 

the blood is hot, that must be Iliclmnl II. i. 

aside his high blood's ro.yalty (rep.).. — i. 

through streams of blood, which blood — i. 

told this slander of his blood — i. 

nearness to our sacred blood should.. — i. 

in the best blood chambered — i . 

this choler without letting blood — i. 

I had in Gloster's blood doth more . . — i. 

in thj' old blood no living fire — i. 

phials of his sacred blood, or seven .. — i. 

ah! Gaunt! his blood was thine — i. 

farewell, my blood; which if to-day — i 

the earthly tndhor of my blood — i. 

rouse up thy youthful Ijlood — i. 

with that dear blood which — i. 

even in our kindred's blood — i. 

chasing the royal blood, mth fury .. — ii. 

tliat blood alread,y, like the pelican . . — ii. 

respect'st not spilling Edward's blood — ii. 

were guilty of no kindred's biood — ii. 

of noble blood in this declining land — ii. 

to wash yonr blood from off my hands — iii. 

gentlem.an in blood and lineaments — iii. 

near to the king iu blood — iii. 

opinions, and m.y living blood — iii. 

but now, the blood of twenty thousand — iii. 

and, till so much blood thither come — iii. 

mock not flesh and blood with — iii. 

showers of blood, rained from — iii. 

no hand of blood and bone can gripe — iii. 

grass with faithftd English blood — iii. 

the royalties of both your bloods — iii. 

over-proud with sap and blood — iii. 

the blood of English shall manure . . — ii'. 

with the king's blood stained — v. 

of valour, as of royal blood — v. 

that blood should sprinkle rae — v. 

this blood otf from ray guilty hand . . — v. 
lips with her o^VIl children's blood . . 1 Henry If. \ . 

balked in their own blood — i. 

camest not of the blood royal — i. 

my blood hath been too cold — i, 

shed my dear blood drop by drop .... — i. 

that dead is, the next of blood? ....... — i, 

the blood more stirs, to rouse a lion.. — i. 

lost the fresh blood in th.y cheeks .... — ii. 

swear it was the blood of true men .. — ii 

doth not thy biood thrill at it? — .ij, 

show greatness, courage, blood — iii, 

charming your blood with pleasing.. — iii. 

of my blood he'll breed revengement — iii. 

accompany the greatness of t'nj' blood — ii;, 

all the court and princes of my blood — iii. 

I will wear a garment all of blood .. — iii. 

his altar sit, up to his ears in blood . . — iv. 

while his blood was poor, upon — iv. 

to save the blood on either side — v. 

excuse of youth, and heat of blood .. — v. 

can lift your blood up with persuasion — v. 

with the best blood that I can — v. 

till then, in blood by noble Percy lie — v, 

even with the rebels' blood 'illenrylV. (indiit 

with the blood of fair king Richard.. — i. 

a kind of sleeping in the blood — .j. 

not have attached one of so high blood — i;. 

there is some ofthe king's blood sjjilt — ii. 

humours of blood, he was the mark.. — ij- 

and it perfumes the blood ere one.... — ii. 

by this light flesh and corrupt blood — .i i . 

your ink to blood, your pens to lances — iv. 

on the e.arth with yet appearing blood .- iv. 

by the honour of my blood, my father's — iv. 

doth so over-cool their blood — jV- 

the warming of the blood — Jv. 

for the cold blood he did naturally . . — ly- 

when vou perceive his blood inclined — iv. 

the united vessel of their blood — iv. 

the blood weeps from my heart — iv. 

when rage and hot blood are his — — iv. 

and heavy sorrows of the blood — i v. 

from thy place and blood derives — p-. 

which never quafi'ed but blood, would — n'. 

infect my blood with joy — iv. 

the tide of blood in rae bath proudly — v. 
shall drop their blood in approbation.. Hon-;/ V. i. 

contend, without much fall of blood — i. 

forage in blood of French nobility . . — i. 

the blond and courage, that renowned — i. 

asdid the former lions of yonr blood. — i. 

with Wood, and sword, and fire, to win — .i. 

chased your blood out of apiiearaiiee? — ii. 

in spirit, not swerving with the blood — ii. 

to suck, the very bloud tosuek! — ii. 



BLO 



BLOOD— the dead men's blood Iletirtj f. ii. i 

summon lip tlie blood, difgiiisc fair .. — Jii. 1 

wliuse blood is let fiom fatliers — m.- 1 

copv now to lUL-n of Liiosser blood — in. 1 

doiioct tlicir cold blood to such (irp.) — n;- S 

jiemions painted in the blood of Ilarfleur — }]}■ 5 

for tlie effusion of oui- blood — iji- U 

groimd with your red blood discolour — in. 6 

wlien blood is their argument? — iv. 1 

issued forced drops of blood — iv- j 

up toward heaven, to pardon blood . . — iv. 1 

their hot blood may spin in English — ;v. 2 

have them weep our horses' blood! .. — iv. 2 

scarce blood enough in all their — iv. 2 

to-day that shedshis blood with me — }v. 3 

as I suck blood, I >vill some — iv. 4 

helmet to the spur, all blood he was. . — iv. 6 

with blood be sealed a testament — }^'- 6 

and soaked in mercenary blood — y.7 

peasant limbs in blood of princes — .'V. 7 

and trentlemen of blood and quality.. — iv. 8 

notlung do but meditate on blood — v. 2 

yet my blood begins to flatter me ... . — "C. 2 

and from lier lilond raise up issue — Y- ' 

wliy mom-n wc not in blood \Hejiry VI. i. 1 

blood will I draw on thee — .!••'• 

bnt.lords, in all our blood massacre — in 2 

vet lives guiltv in thy blood — ij- ■! 

quarrel will drink blood another day — n-^ 

to be restored to my blood — .};• ^ 

at peace, except ye thirst for blood . . — ;;!• 1 

to his blood. Let Richard be (rep.) — ni. 1 

one drop of blood, drawn from — H!' ^ 

blow should broach thy dearest blood — !"■ '1 

presume to boast of gentle blood — i v- 1 

trifle, thatwas bought with blood.... — iv. 1 

Knglish deer, be then in blood — jv. 2 

he is not Talbot's blood, that basely. . — P'- '■• 

drew blood from thee, my boy — P'- G 

shed some of his bastai-d blood — }v- 6 

base, aud misbegotten blood I spill . . — P'- 6 

for that pure blood of mine — }^- 6 

in that sea of blood my boy did — i"*'- 7 

his pimy sword in Frenchmen's blood — iv. 7 

to stop effusion of our Christian blood — v. 1 

I was wont to feed you with my blood — v. 3 

descended of a gentler blood — v.4 

the guiltless blood of innocents — t. 4 

whose maiden blood, thus rigorously — y. 4 

my sword should shed hot blood 2Hen}ijl I.i. 1 

he" is the next of blood — }• J 

proportion to my flesh and blood — J- 1 

a duke, and next of blood — .'■ 2 

red, master; red as blood — .'?• ' 

chaps he stained with crimson blood — in- 1 

clavwitli tla' blood of Eudlislimen .. — in-' 

si'lJi.hv tiir hi, wd is settled in — in- 2 

hi- face is lilnck, and full of blood.... — ni- 2 

wliilelshe-! thvblotxl, iffroui — in- -i 

or with their blood stain this — iv. 1 

king Henry's blood (rc;wa/cd) — }'*'• 1 

drones suck not eagles' blood ■ — ^^'\ 

wrathful, and inclined to lilood — _iv. 2 

ne'er shall this Ijlood be wiped — iv. 10 

thine honourable age with blood .... — v. 1 

his blood. And, brother (re;;.) 3Hemy VI. 1. 1 

di-ops of blood were in my father s . . — ;• 1 

write up his title in usurping blood . . — J. 1 

in whose cold blood no spark of honour — ;. 1 

as I did, with my blood — V' 

the lukewarm blood of Henry's heart — J- 2 

my father's blood hath stopped — }• 3 

let my father's blood open it amin . .■ — i. 3 

son's blood, cleaving to my blade (rep.) — }■ 3 

in blood of those that had encountered — }■ 4 

■vrith the blood that valiant Cliflibrd. . — V 4 

would not have stained with blood . . — }• 4 

in blood of my sweet boy (rep.) — }• 4 

my blood upon your heads! — .}• 4 

to'his captives— blood and death — Ji- J 

their blood upon thy head — in 2 

growing with our heated bloods — ii- 2 

thy brother's blood the thirsty — in 3 

their fetlocks in liis smoking blood . . — in 3 

be drunken with our blood — u. 3 

his puri>le blood right well resembles — in 5 

an.l niiLhelluse of blood doth — in 

nod Mith the issuing blood stifle — m 6 

bv M.i.id. and by alliance — iv. \ 

the lUiit this sentence with thy blood — v. 1 

till- fli;irist l>lood your bodies bear .. — v. 1 

who ;avc liis blood to lune — "«'• 1 

niv bluod, my want of strength — v. 2 

now filled with blood, were likened . . — v. 2 

my glory smeared in dust and blood — v. 2 

would wash this congealed blood — v. 2 

shed no blood at all — v. 5 

petitioners for blood thou ne'er — v. 5 

will the asjjiring blood of Lancaster. . — v. 6 

repiuchased with the blood of enemies — v. 7 

remnant of that royal blood! Riclmrdlll. 1. 2 

cursetheblood,thatlet this blood .. — 1.2 

this blood from cold and empty (rep.) — }• 2 

this blood madest, revenge liis irep.).. — 1. 2 

swallow up this good king's blood — 1.2 

faulchion smoking in his blood — }■ 2 

his blood, I spilt mine own (rep.) — — 1. 3 

the faultless blood of pretty Rutland — ;. 3 

as it was won with blood, lost be it so — >• 3 

garments are not spotted with our blood — j. 3 

briglit hair dabbled in blood " !• * 

by Christ's dear blood shed for — .1.4 

in bloody thoughts, and not in blood — 11. 1 

destruction, blood, and massacre!.... — ii. 4 

bl.iod to blood, self 'gainst self — .ii- i 

are let blood at Pomfret castle — »!■ 1 

oiu- guiltless blood to drink — !!!■•' 

true bloods, which, as thou know'st.. — JH- •* 

blood to blood, your right of birth. . . . — iii- 7 

wlieii scarce the blood was weU — iv. 1 



[G6 ] 



BLO 



BLOOD— I am in so far in blood Uichard III. iv. 2 

made drunk with innocent blood! .. — iv. 4 

and lap their wntlc blood _ iv. 4 

Ihnvenonion— li^nlth,' n.valblood — iv. 4 

of roval blood [' "/. /,,,;. a royal prinojss]— iv. 4 

steeped ill Kntkui, IV 1.1. Hid — iv. 4 

mine issue of your hlood uiion — iv. 4 

your mettle, of your very blood — iv. 4 

swills your warm blood like wash — v. 2 

one raised in blood, and one (rep.) .. — v. 3 

Eroud horses hard, and ride in blood — v. 3 

lindly shed the brother's blood — v. 4 

poor jLn!.'land weep in streams of blood — v. 4 

outwortii's a noble's blood Henry VIII. i. 1 

tlien my guiltless blood must cry — ii. 1 

aud with that blood will make them — ii. 1 

tied by blood aud favour to her — ii. 2 

if tbis'salnte ray blooda jot — ii. 3 

their greatness, not by blood — v. 4 

their high blood chafed Troilus^Cressida (prol.) 

when w'ith your blood you daily paint — i. 1 

a lord of Troj an blood, nephew — j. 2 

with my three di-ops of blood — _i.3 

or is yoiu- blood so madly hot — ii. 2 

hot passion of distempered blood — ii. 2 

adrop of Trojan blood spent — ii. 2 

let thy blood be thy direction — ii. 3 

holds in Ms blood such swoln i — li. 3 

I will let his humours blood — ii. 3 

hot blood, and hot blood begets hot . . — iii. I 

hot blood, hot thoughts, and hot deeds — iii. 1 

renew swifter than blood decays .... — iii. 2 

give us a prince of blood — iii . 3 

our bloods are now in calm — iv. 1 

no blood, no soul so near me — iv. 2 

aud let thy eyes spout blood — iv. 5 

Ajax is half made of Hector's blood. . — iv. 5 

the obligation of oui- blood forbids .. — iv. .'i 

my mother's blood runs on — iv. 5 

will cost a di-op of Grecian blood — — iv. 5 

I'll heat his blood with Greekish wine — v. 1 

with too much blood, and too little . . — v. 1 

and too little blood, they do, I'll be . . — v. 1 

art thou of blood, and honour — v. 4 

have roused his drowsy blood — v. .'> 

thouhast thy fill of blood and deatli! — v. S 
dip their meat in one man's blood. Timon of Ath.i. 2 

their blood is caked, 'tis cold — ii. 2 

tell out my blood. Five thousand . . — iii. 4 

who, in hot blood, hath stejiped — iii. 5 

condemn rashness in cold blood .... — !?!• ^ 

he forfeits his own blood — iii. .5 

strange, unusual blood, when — iv. 2 

■with man's blood paint the ground . . — i v. 3 

go suck the subtle blood (rep.) — iv. 3 

diseases lick up then false bloods! . . — iv. 3 
through the rivers of your blood — Corioianus, i. 1 

that art worst in bloocl, to run — i. 1 

hisbloody brow! O Jupiter, no blood — i. 3 

when it spit forth blood at Grecian . . — i. 3 

the blood I drop is rather physical .. — i. 5 

come not in tlie blood of others — i. 6 

by the blood we have shed together . . — 1.6 

'tis not my blood wherein thou see'st — i. 8 

a charter to extol her blood — i. 9 

the blood upon your visage dries — i. 9 

he was a thing of lilood, whose — ii. 2 

for my countrv I have shed my blood — iii. 1 

the blood he hath lost, (which, I dare — iii. 1 

and the hazard of much blood — iii. 2 

and the drops of blood shed for — iv. 5 

draw tuns of blood out of thy — iv. 5 

and the man iu blood, they will — iv. 5 

our blood is cold, and then wc pout . . — v. 1 

and these conveyances of our blood . . — v. 1 

lest I let forth your half-pint of blood — v. 2 

her hand the grandchild to her blood — v. 3 

shed thy wife and children's blood .. — v. 3 

he sold the blood aud labour of — v. 5 

in triumph over Pompey's blood ..Julius Ctesar, 1. 1 

lost the breed of noble bloods — .1.2 

when every drop of blood — ij. 1 

in the spirit of men there is no blood — ii. 1 

which drizzled blood upon the Capitol — ii. 2 

a hundred spouts, did run pure blood — ii. 2 

yom- statue spouting blood in — ii. 2 

great Rome shall sviek reviving blood — 11. 2 

might fire the blood of ordinary men — iu. 1 

that Cajsar bears such rebel blood — iii. 1 

men are fiesli and blood, and — iii. 1 

in Cffisar's blood up to the elbows — iii. 1 

who else must be let blood — iii. 1 

the most noble blood of all this world — iii. I 

as fast as they stream forth thy blood — iii. 1 

the hand that shed this costly blood — iii. 1 

blood and destruction shall be so in use — iii. 1 

their napkins in liis sacred blood — — id. 2 

mark how the blood of Caesar — iii. 2 

wdiich all the while ran blood — in. 2 

of speech, to stir men's blood — m. 2 

and drop my blood for drachmas — — iv. 3 

when grief, and blood ill-tempered . . — iv. 3 

young bloods look for a time of rest.. — iv. 3 

that makest my blood cold — iv. 3 

so in his red blood Cassius' day is set — y. 3 
blood of thine is Caesar's homager . . Ant. <§- Cleo. i. 1 

higher than both in blood and life . . — i. 2 

you'll heat my blood ; no more — 1. 3 

lack blood to think on't — j. 4 

cold in blood, to say, as I said then. . — 1. f> 

with Parthian blooil thy sword is warm — iii. 1 

I will appear in blood: I, aud my .. ~ iii. 11 

in the blood shall make it — iv. 2 

we'll spill the blood that has — iv. 8 

stained with his most noble blood — — v. 1 

as sovereign as the blood of hearts . . — v. 1 

there is a vent of blood, and something — v. 2 
our bloods no more obey the heavens.Cymbeline, i. 1 

thou art poison to my blood — i . 2 

let her languish a drop of blood a day — 1. 2 



BLOOD— her blood? if it be so to i\n..Cymbdine, iii. 2 
the jirincely blood flows in his cheek — iii. 3 
I'd let a parish of sncli Clotcn's blood — iv. 2 

as rmi^li, tli.'ii' r..\ iil I.I I eiichalL-d — iv. 2 

to niv rah' click Mill. (I.,- blood — iv. 2 

scarce c\cr l...ikc.l on 111.. I'.il .. iv. 4 

their blooil tliinks scorn, till it fly out — iv. 4 
the blood was cool, have threatened.. — v. a 

and spare no blood beside — v. 5 

for wdiom my heart drops blood — v. b 

and blood of your begetting — v. 5 

stain not thy tomb with blood Tilus Andron. i. 2 

blood and revenge are hammering .. — ii. 3 
wash their hands in Eassianus' blood — ii. 3 
leaves are <b(>ps of new-shed blood .. — ii. 4 

afearfiil sJL'l.t ..f lilood and death — ii. 4 

by night h.y l.atlicil in maiden blood — ii. 4 

river of warm lilood, like to — ii. 5 

notwithstanding all this loss of blood — ii. .5 
all my blood in Rome's great quarrel — iii. 1 
my son's sweet blood will make it shame — iii. I 

refuse to drink my dear son's blood — iii. 1 

can better spare my blood than .you — iii. 1 

see their blood or die with this reproach — iv. 1 
execution on mv flesh and blood .... — iv. 2 

the boy, he is of royal blood — v. 1 

tliat receives your guilty blood — v. 2 

with your blood and it, I'll make a paste — v. 2 
receive the blood: and, when that .... — v. 2 
preserved her welfare in my blood.... — v. 3 

wortliv princes' bloods were shed Pedicles, i. 2 

blood from my cheeks — i. 2 

we'll mingle bloods together — i. 2 

wishing it BO much blood unto your life.. — ii. 3 

may be as great in blood as I — ii. 5 

my life my" blood that fosters it — ii. 5 

not consume your blood with sorrowing — iv. 1 

walk softly, do not heat your blood — iv. 1 

much less in blood than virtue — iv. 4 

for flesh and blood, su', white and red. ... — iv. 6 

but are you flesh and blood — v. 1 

propinquity and property of blood Lear, i. 1 

blood drawn on me would beget — ii. 1 

my breath and blood ! — ii. 4 

my flesh, my blood, my daughter — ii. 4 

carbuncle, in my corrupted blood — ii. 4 

I am a gentleman of blood and breeding .. — iii. 1 

our flesh and blood, my lord, is grown — iii. 4 

a son now outlawed from my blood — iii. 4 

I smell the blood of a British, man.. — iii. 4 (song) 
conflict be sore between that and my blood — iii. .5 

to let these hands obey my blood — iv. 2 

I am no less in blooil than thou art — v. 3 

ci\il blood makes civil hands Rom. t^-Jid. (prol.) 

atfections, and warm youthful blood — ii. .'i 
now comes the wanton blood up — — li. 5 

hot days is the mad blood stirring — iii. 1 

all me, the blood is spilled of my dear — iii. 1 
blood of ours, shed blood of Montague — iii. 1 
the price of his dear blood doth owe? — iii. 1 
my blood for your rude brawls doth — iii. 1 

hood my unmanned blood bating in — iii. 2 
bedaubed in blood, all in gore blood — iii. 2 
Komeo's hand shed Tybalt's blood?. . — iii. 2 
with blood removed but little from . -. — iii. 3 

dry sorrow drinks our blood — iii. 5 

her blood is settled, and her joints. ... — iv. ,'j 

Alack, alack, wliat blood is this — v. 3 

Paris too, and steeped in blood — v. 3 

with trains of fire, and dews of blood.... HamW,i. 1 

a fashion, and a toy in blood — i. 3 

when the blood burns, how prodigal - i. 3 

freeze thy young blood; make thy two .. — i. 5 

must not be to ears of flesh and blood — i. 5 

holds such an enmity with blood of man — i. 5 

the thin and wholesome blood — i. 5 

a savaireness in unreclaimed blood — ii. 1 

horridly tricked with blood of fathers — ii. 2 

blessed are those wdiose blood — iii. 2 

now could I drink hot blood, and do — — iii. 2 
thicker than itself with brother's blood? — iii. 3 

the hey-day in the blood is tame — iii. 4 

tears, perchance, for blood — iii. 4 

like the hectic iu my blood he rages — iv. 3 

and my blood, and let all sleep ? — iv. 4 

that drop of blood, that's calm — iv. 6 

pelican, repast them with my blood — iv. b 

a knife in it, where it draws blood — iv. 7 

treason of the blood! Othello, i. 1 

some mixtures powerful o'er the blood . . — i. 3 

1 do confess the vices of ray blood — i.3 

the blood and baseness of our natm-es — i. 3 

it is merely a lust of the blood — i.3 

when the blood is made dull with the act — ii. 1 

by heaven, my blood begins my safer — ii. 3 

with a little act upon the blood — iii. 3 

O blood, lago, blood! Patience, I say .. — iii. 3 
or did the letters work upon liis blood. . . . — iv. 1 

shall with lust's blood be spotted — v. 1 

yet I'll not shed her blood — v. 2 

BLOOn-BESPOTTLD— 
O bl'icd-bespotted Neapolitan 2Henryri. v. 1 

BLOOU-B( >LTEKED— 
the blood-boltered Banquo smiles .... Macbeth, iv. 1 

BLOOD-CONSUMING— 
blooii-consuming sighs reeal his life..2Hen. VI. iii. 2 

BLOOD-DRINKING— 
cognizance of my blood-drinking . .\ Henry VI. ii. 4 

with blood-drinking sighs iHenry VI. iii. 2 

detested, dark, blood-drinking pit . . Titus And. ii. 4 

BHWD- lIOUND-starved blood-hound.2 Hen. IV.y.i 

BLOODIED— to breathe his bloodied horse — i. 1 
look you, how liis sword is bloodied. 7'roiY.<5-C)e.s. i. 2 

BLOODIER— thou bloodier villain ....Macbeth, v. 7 

BLOODIEST— this is the bloodiest shavas.Jnhn, iv. 3 

BLOODILY— how bloodily the sun ..lllenrylV. v. 1 

that bloodily did yawn upon Ins Henry V. iv. 6 

at Pomfret bloodily were butchered.. Kic/i.i//. iii. 4 
at a shot, so bloodily hast struck? Hamlet, v. 2 

BLOODLESS— with bloodless stroke.. T«'f''''/iA'. ii. 5 



BLO 



[ 07 ] 



lU-OOOI.ESS— pnU', !iii(\ bloodless ..iUriin/ VI. iii. 2 
thou lilooilluss iviiimmt ot'tlmt myaX.JIIeli. III. i. 2 
of pale mill tiloodlffs oiniilation . . Troil. <§• Cres.L 3 
vtriH'U piilc niiil lilooilk'ss Titv.s Andronicus, iii, 1 

BLOOO-SACIUFICK— 
mv lioilv, nor bloo.l-s;icrifioe, CTitreat.\ Ilcnry VI. v. 3 

EliOOD.'^II ED~:i ikiidlv bloodslied. . King John, iv. 3 
to (Hiarrel, luid t.i bloodshed 2Henry IV. iv. 4 

I3L001)-8UEDDK\U— 
lire free from :jiul tless blood-shedding.S J7en. FI. iv. 7 

BIAKin-STAI"NEl)-blood-staiued with. 1 Hen. if'.i. 3 
unhallowed and blood-stiuiied hole.. TOus/lnd. ii. 4 
rh'ops fi-oin thv blood-stained face — v. 3 

BI,O0D-yiICK'l<:H— 

blood-sueker of slecpini men iHenryVI. m. 2 

knot -.'ou are of dainnecl blood-suclters.iiJ/f.///. iii. 3 

EliOOD-SlttKlNc;— 
the rising of blood-suckiug siglis ..ZUenry FJ. iv. 4 

liLOOU-TIlTRSTY 
to mo, blood-thirstv lord; and 1 Henry FI. n. 3 

Bl-OOlJY-niark so bloody on the business. Tempest, i. 3 

I do begin to have bloody tliouglits — iv. 1 

lust is hut abloodv fire Merry Wives, v. 5 (song) 

not of such a bloody natiu-e ....Twelftli. Night, iii. 3 

have given us bloody argument — iii. 3 

full of despite, bloody as the hunter — iii. 4 
the most skilful, bloody, and fatal .. — iii. 4 

ill terms so bloody, and so dear — v. 1 

Lriven sir Toby a bloody coxcomb too — v. 1 

if a bloodv coxcomb be ahui-t — v. 1 

vou set nothing by a bloody coxcomb — v. 1 
down on twenty bloody blocks ..Mea..for Mca. ii. 4 
w ith bloody moutli did stain . . Mid. N. Dream, v. 1 
with bloody blameful blade (rep.) .. — v. 1 
to-morrow to my bloody creditor.. Mcr. of Fen. iii. 3 
wolfish, bloody, stai-vedaud ravenous — iv. 1 
diverted blood', and bloody brother .As you Like, ii. 3 
that lives and dies by bloody drops .. — iii. .5 

he scuds this bloody napkin — iv. 3 

but for the bloody napkin? — iv. 3 

understood without bloody succeeding. jd/i's H'ell, ii. 3 

from the bloody course ot wai- — iii. 4 (let.) 

so horrible, so bloody, must lead.. Winler'sTale, ii. 3 
to bloody thoughts, and to revenge .. — iii. 2 

what bloody man is that? Macbeth, i. 2 

Avhich smofied with bloody execution — 12 

that we but teach bloody instructions.... — _i. 7 

it is the bloody business — ii. 1 

this most bloody piece of work — ii. 3 

the near in blood, the nearer bloody — ii. 3 

who did this more than bloody deed? — — ii. 4 

we hear, cm' bloody cousins are — iii. 1 

and in such bloody distance — iii. 1 

with thy bloody and invisible hand — iii. 2 

feasts and banquets bloody knives — iii. 6 

be bloody, bold, and resolute — iv. 1 

I grant iiim bloody, luxurious — iv. 3 

control of tierce and bloody war .... King John, i. 1 
with fearful, bloody issue arbitrate .. — i. 1 

all preparation for a bloody siege — ii. 1 

for bloody power to rush upon — ji. 1 

and bloody point to point — ii. 2 

thou dost shame that bloody spoil. . . . — iii. 1 
to march a bloody host, and make . . — iii. 1 
Ijloody England into England gone. . — iii. 4 

shall "find but bloody safety — iii. 4 

out of the bloody fingers' ends — iii. 4 

tl>e fierce looks of these bloody men.. — iv. 1 
the man should do the bloody deed . . — iv. 2 

to break within the bloody house — iv. 2 

finding thee fit for bloody villany .. — iv. 2 
it is a damned and a bloody work. . . . — iv. 3 

you bloody Neroes, ripping up — v. 2 

to fierce and bloody inclination — v. 2 

after such bloody toil, we bid good-niglit — v. 5 

hand, and murder's bloody axe Bichard II. i. 2 

but bloody with the enemies — ii. 1 

bloody with spurring, fiery-red — ii. 3 

looks bloody on the earth — ii. 4 

and in outrage, bloody here — iii. 2 

ten thousand bloody crowns — iii. 3 

the bloody office of his timeless — iv. 1 

did spend a sad and bloody hour .... 1 Henry IV. l. I 
alfi'ighted with their bloody looks — — i. 3 

even with tlie bloody payment — i. 3 

we must have bloody noses, and cracked — ii. 3 
to bloody battles, arid to bruising arms — iii. 2 

my favours in a bloody mask — iii. 2 

many dearer, in this bloody fray — v. 4 

in a bloody field by Shrewsbury.2H<?nr!/7r. (indue, 
saw liim in bloody state, rendering . . — 
tliat furious Scot, the bloody Douglas — 
each heart being set on bloody courses — 

led on by bloody youth, guarded — 

of base and bloody insvu-rection — 

seal this lawless bloody book — 

he would make tills a bloody day .... — v. 4 

unwind your bloody flag Henry F. i. 2 

bred out of that bloody strain — ii. 4 

blood)' constraint ! for if you hide — ii. 4 

and sword and shield, in bloody field — iii. 2 

in liberty of bloody hand — iii. 3 

the blini and bloo'dy soldier with foul — iii. 3 

and by his bloody side — iv. 6 

may wander o'er this bloody field . . — iv. 7 

whose bloody deeds sliall make 1 Henry FI. i. 1 

dj'C your white rose in a bloody red.. — ii. 4 

notliiu;» less than bloody tyrrany — ii. 5 

I'll withdi'aw me and my bloody power — iv. 2 

terror, and their bloody scourge — iv. 2 

withered, bloody, pale, and dead .. .. — iv. 2 

turn ou the bloody hounds — iv. 2 

drops bloody sweat from — iv. 4 

his bloody sword he brandished .... — iv. 7 

have found a bloody day of this — iv. 7 

the most bloody nurser of his harms — iv. 7 

now bloody T.-ilbot's slain — iv. 7 

such immaiiity, and bloody strife.... — v. 1 

surprised by b"loody hands — v. 3 

with child, ye bloody homicides .... — v. 4 



V. 7 



BLdODY— 
unless it were a bloody murderer . .iHenry VI. in. 

murder, indeed, that bloody sin — iii. 

beariii" it to the bloody slaughter-house — in. 

sh.ikiiig the Moody dei'ls — iii. 

s.H.nerdiiiiee liiioii a bloody pole .... — iv. 
O barbarous and bluudy spect.ude. . . . — iv. 
rather than bloody war shall cut ... . — iv. 

England's bloody scourge — v. 

the bloody parliament shall this — Sllciiry VI. i. 

look, whe're bloody Cliftbrd comes — i. 

bloody Clittbrd, rough Northumberland — i. 
after the bloody fray at Wakefield . . — ii. 

let our bloody colours wave — ii. 

wipe away these bloody marks — u. 

O bloody times! whilst lions war — — ii. 

and bloody steel grasped in their — ii. 

hewmy way out with a bloody axe.. — ui. 
butchers aiul villains, bloody cannibals — v. 
to make a bloody supper in the Tower — v. 

provoked by thy bloody mind Richard III. i. 

hath plagued tl'iy bloody deed — i. 

was stabbed with bloody daggers — — i. 
who made thee then a bloody minister — i. 

a bloody deed, and desperately — .i. 

nearer m bloody thoughts — n. 

Pomfret! O thou bloody prison — in. 

O bloody Richard! miserable England — iii. 
the tyrannous and bloody act is done — iv. 

fleshed villains, bloody dogs — iv. 

this tidings to the bloody king — iv. 

proud, subtle, slv, and bloody — iv. 

bloody thou art," and bloody will be.. — iv. 

dangerous success of bloody wars — iv. 

bought love with sucli a bloody spoil — iv. 
in the sty of this most bloody boar . . — iv, 
the wretched, bloody; and usurping boar — v. 
bv this one bloody trial of sharp war — v. 
tliat bloody [Cof.-this guilty] homicide — v. 
to the arbitrement of bloody strokes — v. 

bloody and guilty, guiltily awake (lep.) — v. 
dream on, of bloody deeds and death — v. 

a bloody tyrant, and a homicide — v. 

the bloody dog is dead — v. 

the dead temi5les of this bloody wretch — v, 
would reduce these bloody days again — v, 

a cruel nature, and a bloody Henry VIII. v, 

armed, and bloody in intent.. Troilvn ^ Cressida, v, 
for I have dreamt of bloody turbulence — 
when I have the bloody Hector found — 
the fault's bloody; 'tis necessary. Timon of .4th. iii, 

his bloody brow with his mailed Coriolanus, i 

his bloody brow! O Jupiter — i 

set up the bloody flag against all — — ii 
the other course will prove too bloody — iii 
and with bloody passage, led your wars — v, 
most bloody, fiery, and most terrible. Jm^. Casar,_i. 

our course will seem too 'oloody — ^ii 

now we must appear bloody and cruel — iii 
let each man render me his bloody hand — iii 
shaking the bloody fingers of thy foes — iii 
the cruel issue of these bloody men . . — iii 
whilst bloody treason flourished — iii 

most bloody sight — iii 

should endure the bloody spur — iv 

their bloody sign of battle is hung out — y 

1 will give thee bloody teeth AnionyS,- Cleo. i 

before I strike this bloody stroke .... — iv. 

if my shirt were bloody Cymbeline, i, 

upon warrant of bloody affirmation . . 
and send him some bloody sign of it 

this bloody man, the care oii't 

is this, thou makest thy bloody pillow? 

yea, bloody cloth, I'll keep thee 

ere bloody hands were washed — y 

quit the bloody wi-ongs upon her foes. Tilus And.i 
upon his bloody finger he doth wear — ii 
thj' whelps, fell evirs of bloody kind. . — ii 
reared aloft the bloody battle-a.xe.... — iii 

this heinous, bloody deed — iv 

I leave you both, luce bloody villains — iv, 

that blo'odv mind, I think — v, 

in bloody lines I have set down — v 

where bloody murder, or detested rape — v, 
more stern and bloody than the Centaurs' — v, 

■vvith bloody views, expecting Pericles, i 

hide thee, thou bloody hand Lear, iii 

light of ear, bloody ot hand — iii 

hold thy bloody hand — iv. 

the arbitrement is like to be a bloody . 

the bloody proclamation to escape 

what means that bloody knife — 

from those bloodv hands throw Horn. SfJu 

who began this bloody fray — 

corse, a bloody piteous corse — 

this bloody knife shall play the umpire — 

where bloody Tybalt, yet but green. . — 

Host thou there m thy bloody sheet . . 

the ground is bloody; search about . . 

bloody, bawdy villain! remorseless Hamlet, ii. 

rash and bloody deed is this! A bloody — iii. 

how shall this bloody deed be answered — iv. 

my thoughts be bloody, or be nothing.. — iv. 

so jump upon this bloody question .... — v. 

of carnal, bloody, and unnatural acts . . — v. 

the bloody book of law you shall Othello, \. 

one at otlier's breast, in opposition blocxly — ii. 

even so my bloody thoughts, with violent — iii. 

remorse, what bloody work soever — iii. 

but (dost thou hear!) most bloody — iv. 

where be these bloody thieves? — v. 

these bloody accidents must excuse — v. 

some bloody iiassion shakes your very frame — v. 

O bloody period! All, that's spoke — v. 

BLOODY-FACED-bloody-faced as thXs.illen.IF. i. 
BLOODY-HUNTING— 

Herod's bloodv-lnmting slaughtermen. Hen. F. iii. 
BEOODY-MIN DED— 

let not this make thee bloody-minded. Sf/cn. f'/.iv. 

pursue the bloody-mindcdqueen ..SHenryVI. ii. 



— in. 4 



— V. 1 



— V. 3 
3 
1 



. 3 

_ V. 3 



BLO 



BLOOD Y-SCKPTKED— 
an untitled tyrant bloody-sceptred ..Macbeth, iv. 3 

BLOOM— and lilnom of Instihood Mndi Ado, v. 1 

the bloom that promiscth n, mighty. . KiugJntin, ii. 2 

BLOOJMIOD— thiitoiiedavlilonmed .Mlr„rii ri. i. fi 

BLOSSI )jM -under llie lihi^Mmi ..Tcmpcsl.v. 1 {-mn) 
spied a blosx.m passing f;iir. . Lorr'sL.L. iv. 3 (ver. 1 
not tlic gaudy blossoms of your love. . — v. 2 
cannot so much as a blossom yield. . As ynuLike, ii. 3 

blossom, speed thee well! Winler'sTate, iii. 3 

in the blossoms of their fortune — v. 2 

that this good Mussom could 2 HenrylV. ii. 2 

this pale and mnideu blossom here . . 1 //^wry VI. ii. 4 
by tills nuiideii li!(is.-om in my hand — ii. ■t 

my Icanis, my blossom, in his pride — iv. 7 

thus are my blossoms blasted •lllenryVI. iii, 1 

to-morrow blossoms, and liears Ucnryl' ! IL iii. 2 

you are a beauteous blossom .... TitmAmlron. i e. 2 
cut off even in the blossoms of my sin . . Hnwlct, i. :, 
yet fruits that blossom first Olhclln, ii . .'! 

BLOSSOMING-as blossoming time.ilfpn.y;>r Mea. i. ft 
their sweets on blossoming Csc?ar... -int. ^-Cteo, iv. 10 

BLOT— it is the lesser blot . . TmoGen. of Verona, v. 4 

of an antick, made afoul blot MuchAdo, iii. 1 

who can lilot that name — iv. 1 

Heroitself can blot out Hero's virtue — iv. I 
and the blots of nature's hand ....Mid. N.'s Dr. v. 2 
then praise too short doth blot. . Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 
it blots thy beauty, as frosts . . Taming of Shreti\ v. 2 
possessed with an advdterate blot . . Com. oflirr. ii. 2 
to look into the blots and stains of right.. /o/m, ii. 1 
that blots thy father. There's a good (,rep.) — ii. 1 
full of unpleasing blots, and sightless .... — iii.) 

with inky blots, and rotten Richard II. ii. 1 

time hatd set a blot upon my pride . . — iii. 2 

marked with a blot, damned — iv. 1 

the realm of this pernicious blot — iv. 1 

this deadly blot in thy digressing son — v. 3 
wear the detested blot of mm-d'rous..l Henry IV. i. 3 

hath left a kind of blot HenryF.n.2 

this blot, that they object against . . 1 Henry FI. ii. 4 
our sword we wiped away the blot. .2Henry VI. iv. 1 

to blot out me, and put his ZHennjVL ii. 2 

all the impure blots and stains Richard III. iii. 7 

as shall to thee blot out Timon of .Athens, v. 2 

blot and enemy to oiu- general name. Ti'vs.-Uid. ii. 3 

BLOTTED— ever-blotted paper. . . . Mer. of Ven. iii. 2 
my name be blotted from the book . . Ridwrd //. i. 3 
those charms, thine eyes, are blotted . . Otiiello, v. 1 

BLOTTING— blotting your names ..-Zllenry VI. i. 1 

BLOW— blow till thou burst thy wind . . Tempest, i. 1 

a south west blow on ye — i. 2 

what a blow was tliere given — ii. 1 

suifer the flesh-fly blow my mouth — iii. 1 

give him blows — iii. 2 

by the canker ere it blow. . . . TwoGen. of Verona, i 1 

blow not a word aw ly — i- 2 

as thoughts do blow them. .Merry Wires, v. fi (song) 

how imagination blows him Twelfth Nigld, ii. 5 

take you a blow o' the lips then — ii. 5 

that keeps you from the blow of the law — iii. 4 
should meet the blow of justice . . Mea. for Mea. ii. 2 

whereon the wild thyme blows Mid.N.'sDr. ii. 2 

thy cheeks may blow Love's L. lost, iv. 3 (verses) 

though they are lame with blows — v. 2 

and, when they repair, blow like sweet — v. 2 
how blow? how blow? speak to be .. — v. 2 
Dick the shepherd blows his nail . . — , v. 2 (song) 

all aloud the wind doth blow — v. 2 (song) 

would blow me to an ague Merch. of Venice, i. 1 

the four winds blow in from — i. 1 

it bites and blows upon my body., vis you Like it, ii. I 

to blow on whom I please — ii. 7 

blow, blow, thou winter wind — ii. 7 (song) 

will undermine you, and blow you up. All's Well, i. 1 
but we may blow our nails together. Tam. of Sli. i. I 
what happy gale blows yon to Padua — i. 2 

halfso great a blow to the ear — _i. 2 

will blow out fire and all — ii. 1 

shake not, though they blow perpetually — ii, 1 

may blow no sneaping winds Winter's Tale, i. 2 

a feather for each wind that blows .. — ii. 3 
of January woidd blow you through — i v. 3 

from the dead blow of it — iv, 3 

of every wind that blows — iv. 3 

sixteen winters cannot blow away .. — v. 3 

1 could too well feel his blows. Comedy of Errors, ii. 1 

an' you use these blows long — ii. 2 

and, in his blows, denied my house . . — ii. 2 

and the blows you gave were ink — iii. 1 

and the blows I bear; I should kick — iii. 1 

well struck; there was blow for blow — iii. 1 
and if the wind blow any way .from. . — iii. 2 

the merry wind blows fair — iv. 1 

feel your blows. Thou art sensible (rep.) — iv. 4 

for my service, but blows — iv. 4 

and the very ports they blow Macbeth, 1 . 3 

that but this blow might be — ;• 7 

shall blow the horrid deed — ..!• 7 

whom the vile blows and buffets — lu. 1 

blow, wind! come, wrack! — y. ,'> 

take pains to blow a horn King John,^. 1 

and blows have answered blows — n. 2 

tiU then, blows, blood, and death — _ii. 2 

shall blow each dust, each straw — — ni. 4 
and let thy blows, doubly redoubled. J?/V/mr<i //._i. 3 
which his ancestors achieved with blows — _ii. 1 

to change blows with thee — in. 2 

so many blows upon this face — iv. 1 

what wards, what blows 1 Henry IF.i.2 

till fields, and blows, and gi-oans — — _i. 3 

grief! it blows a man up — u. 4 

to blow away this praise 2Henry IV. i. 1 

that in the dole of blows your son — _ i. 1 

kingdom, sick ■with civil blows — iv. 4 

wind which blows no man to good . . — y. 3 

when the blast of war blows in Henri/ F. iii. 1 

let us but blow on them — iv. 2 

answer thee with words, but blows ..IHenryFI.i. 3 
or else this blow should broach — iii. 4 



BLO 



[^>«] 



BLOW — and, interchaii.niiig blows . . 1 Henry VI. iv. B 
1 shall never be able to figlit a hVnv , .•illenry VI.X. 3 
leave vonr (Irinlcin?. and i'lill to blows — ii. 3 
have at thee with a dnwm iirht blow — ii. 3 

shall blow ton thoiisanils.ml-; — iii. 1 

anil bid them blow towards Enirland's — iii. 2 
stniek'st thou one blow in the lield — iv. 7 

{ general trumpet blow his blast — v. 2 
lis l)eaver with a doMmright blow ..Zlleiinj I' I. i. 1 
by words, or blows, here let us win . . — i. 1 

but Inu-klc with thee blows — i. f 

fiM- racing \vind blows up incessant .. — i. 4 

bh.ws. and revenge, for me — ii. I 

and manv blows repaid — ii. 3 

ill 1.1 iws 'the wind, that protits — \\.:^ 

liiaKht it with a hundred blows — ii. .'> 

n^ f lildw this ti^ather from mv face (rep.) — iii. i 
whi'n t do blow, and yielding (irp.) — iii. 1 

or t;ind faith, vou'U catch a blow .... — iii. 2 

chop this hand off at a blow — v. 1 

and blow it to the source — v. 3 

to cure that blow of tliine Richard 111. iv. 4 

like a moitar-piecc, to blow us Henri/ Fill. v. 3 

fur trllinv how I took the blow . . Troilus <§• Cres. i. 2 

trumi'd, blow loud, send thy — i. 3 

whii'h cvid Ii(is blow to their deities.. — iv. 4 

bli)W, villain, till thy sphered — iv. 

his l)i'ws are well disposed — iv. .'5 

let the truuippts blow — iv. 5 

tiKfC 'luiek blows of fortune.... 7"tmono//l(Ae«s,i. 1 

thai'lt observe, blow oft' thy cap — iv. 3 

for cverv storm that blows — iv. 3 

cnnie, blow thy blast Coriolanus, i. 4 

and snro i>l'tws lor sinking nnder them — ii. 1 
yet ott, when blows have made me .. ■ — ii. 2 

that won you without blows — iii. 3 

fortune's blows, when most struck .. — iv. 1 

struck more blows for Rome — iv. 2 

more noble blows than ever — ■ iv. 2 

can you think to blow out the intended — v. 2 

words before blows: is it so Julius Cresar^ v. 1 

the posture of your blows are yet .... — v. 1 
why nnw', blow, wind; swell, billow .. — v. 1 
the blow thou hadst shall make. . Antony ^- Cleo. ii. f> 
and your brothers were at blows .... — ii. 6 
sighs of Octavia shall blow the fire . . — ii. 6 
wind i' the world will blow them down — ii. 7 

wlien most she offers blows — iii. 9 

this blows my heart — iv. 6 

and let the water-flies blow me — v. 2 

hark, how her sighs do blow Titus Amlron. iii. 1 

will blow these sands — ^X* ^ 

I wait the sharpest blow, Antiochns Pericles^ i. 1 

blows dust in others' eyes — i. 1 

flattery is the bellows blows up sin — i. 2 

do you but strike the blow — i. 2 

must feel war's blow, who spares not .. — i. 2 

that were to blow at Are, in hope _ — i. 4 

now the wind begins to blow — ii. (Gowcr) 

wilt thou? blow and split thyself — iii- 1 

see, how she 'gins to blow into life's.... _ — iii. 2 
instniment ot wrath prest for this blow — iv. (Gow.) 
but a blow, which never shall be kuoivn — iv. 1 

is this wind westerly that blows — iv. 1 

a strong wind will blow it to pieces — iv. 3 

bids the wind blow the earth Lear, iii. 1 

blow, wind, and crack your cheeks! (7rp.) — iii. 2 

hawthorn blows the cold wind (rep.) — iii. 4 

which the rude wind blows in your face.. — iv. 2 

that bear'st a cheek for blows — iv. 2 

made tame by fortune's blows — iv. 6 

remember thy swashing blow . .Romeo ^- Juliet, i, 1 
■were interchanging tlu'usts and blows — i. 1 

this wind you talk of blows lis from.. — i. 4 

make it a word and a blow — iii. 1 

what storm is tliis, that blows so contrary — iii. ? 
and our vain blows malicious mockery. . Hamlet, i. 1 
seeming to feel this blow, with flaming — ii. 2 

my heard, and blows it in my face — ii. 2 

and blow them at the moon — iii. 4 

and do but blow them to their trial — y. 2 

may the winds blow till they have Otliello, ii. 1 

close together at blow and thrust — ii. 3 

my fond love do I thus blow to heaven — iii. 3 

blow me about iu winds! roast me — v. 2 

SLOWED— have blowed up the towm.. Henri/ V. iii. 2 

[/v»/.] cxsufflicate and blowed surmises. O^/ifHn, iii. 3 

BljO\VER-underrainers, and blowers up. .-)'('.iU>H,i. 1 

BLO WING-sweating, and blowing. A/erri/ Wires, iii. 3 

marry, in blowing him down again AlVsH'etl.i. 1 

but X, with blowing the fire . . tamim; ofStireu; iv. 1 

trumoct blowing them together 2Henri/lV. iv. 1 

the shepherd, blowing of his nails ..3 Henry FI. ii. 5 
as zephyrs, blowing below the violet . Cymbeline, iv. 2 

that ([uicken even with blowing Otliello, iv. 2 

BLO WA'-blown with restless violence. iWco./orM. iii. 1 

a vane blown with all winds Much Ado, iii. 1 

the hud ere it be blown — iv. 1 

angels veiling clouds, or roses blown. Love's L.L. v. 2 
blown me full of maggot ostentation — v. 2 
being blown down, man will (rep.) ..AlVsWell,i. 1 

with flies blown to death Winter^ Tale, iv. 3 

our cliimneys were blown down Macbeth, ii. 3 

and trees blown down; though castles .. — iv. 1 

hath lilowu his spirit out King John, iv. 1 

this shower blown no bv tempest — v. 2 

tnohuge t I be Ijlcwu'oiit with that .. — v. 2 
how ui)W, blown .lack? how now . .1 Henry IF.iv. 2 
rumour is a pipe blown by surmises. 2 Hpnrj//r.(ind.) 

hath blowm that vice in "me Henry 1'. iii. 6 

with titles blown from adulation .... — iv. 1 

so lightly blown to and fro — iv. 8 

blown with the windy tempest SHenry VI. ii. h 

mast be now blown overboard — v. 4 

it is .vou have blown this coal Henry VIII. ii. 4 

that I have blown tliis coal — ii. 4 

to this maturity blown up Troilus <5" Cressida^ i. 3 

or mj' heart will be blown up — iv. 4 

I have been blown out of your gates. CoWo/anws, v. 2 
so hurried the blown tide — v. 4 



BLOWN— against the blown rose../l»(. ^ Cleo. iii. 11 
'tis well lilown, lads. This morning — iv. 4 
something blown: the like is on her arm — v. 2 
toward Ejihcsus turn our bhtwn sails ..Pericles, v. 2 
that thou hast blown unto the worst ....Lear,\v. 1 
no blown ambition doth our arms incite — iv. 4 

form and Itatinc of blown vouth Hamlet, iii. 1 

with all his crimes broad blown — iii. 3 

anil blown [K,i/.-hlowcd] surmises ... .OtfitHo, iii. 3 

when it luith blown his ranks into the air — iii. 4 

BLt)WSE— sweet blowse, you am. .Titus Am'ron. iv. 2 

BLO W'ST— thou blow'st for Hector. Troil.S,- Cres. iv. 5 

EIJIBBERED— 

[Cnllil■r^ she comes blubbered 2Henry IV. ii. 4 

BLlTBliK r, 1 X ( ;_blnbburiug and weeping, 

wecpiii- -Mill iihil.liering Romeo /;- Juliet, in. 3 

BLI7E_end ol'lliv blue bow dost crown. T<-m))M(, iv. 1 

is beaten black and blue Merry Wires, iv. 5 

tell'st tiiou nie of black and blue? — iv. 5 

the maids as blue as bilberry — v. 5 

flowers purple, blue, and Avhite — v. 5 

we will fool him black and blue.. Tu-elftli Night, ii. 5 
violets blue, and lady-smocks. Looe'sL.L. v. 2 (song) 

a blue eye, and sunken .is you Like it, iii. 2 

gartered with a red and blue Msi.Taming of Sti. iii. 2 

their blue coats brushed — iy. 1 

your e.vebrows? Blue, my lord .. Winter^ s Tale, ii. 1 

nose tfiat has been blue — ii. 1 

or pinch us black and blue . . Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

blue coats to taivny coats 1 Henry VI. i. 3 

the lights biu-n bine, it is now .... Ridmrd III. v. 3 
that prouder than blue Iris bends.. 7'ro/(. S, Cres. i. 3 
the black toad, and adder blue . . Timon of.-Wi. iy. 3 

when the cross blue lightning Julius Ccesar, i. 3 

or blue promontory with trees . . Antony f Cleo. iy._ 1 2 

laced with blue of heaven's own Cymbeline, ii. 2 

the yellows, blues, the purple violets. . Pericles, iv. 1 

or the skyish head of blue OljTnpus Hamlet, y. 1 

the main, and the aerial blue Olhello, ii. 1 

BLUE-BOTTLE— blue-bottle rogue!.2He»?,»T//r. v. 4 
BLUE-CAPS— a thousand blue-caps. 1 Hchcj/ /F. ii. 4 
BLUEST— my bluest veins to kiss../4n(. <?• Cleo. ii. 5 

BLUE-EYED— this blue-eyed hag Tempest, i. 2 

BLUEISH— with a blueish tinsel .... Much Ado, iii. 4 
BLUNT— blunt Thurio's dull . . Two Gen. of Vcr. ii. 6 

and blunt his natural edge Mea.for Mea.i. 5 

and his wits are not so blunt. ....... Much Ado, iii. 5 

yours as blunt as the fencer's foils . . — y. 2 

matched with too blunt a will Love's L. Lost, ii. 1 

with warning all as blunt Merck, of Venice, ii. 7 

you are too blunt, go to it Taming of Shrew, i\. 1 

hiding his bitter jests in blunt behaviour — iii. 2 

though he be blunt, I know him — iii. 2 

unkinduess blunts it, more than..Comedi/0/Err. ii. 1 
foolish, blunt, unkind; stigmatical .. — iv. 2 
convert to anger; blunt not the heart .Macbeth, iv. 3 
a good blunt tellow; why, being younger. .Jo/m, i. 1 

Spencer, Blunt, and Kent Ridmrd II. v. Ii 

sir Walter Blunt, new 'lighted 1 Henry IV. i. 1 

— iii. 2 



liow now, good Blunt? 'f by looks . . 

welcome, sir Walter Blunt — }"■<> 

Westmoreland, and warlike Blunt ., — iv. 4 
his name was Blunt; semblably .... — v. 3 

sir Walter Blunt; there's honour — v. 3 

the spirits of Shirley, Statford, Blunt — v. 4 
that the blunt monster with. . ..2HenryIV. (indue.) 

and both the Blunts killed — . i- ' 

Blunt, lead him hence: and see — iv. 3 

omit him not: blunt not his love .... — iv. 4 

and blunt the sword that guards — v. 2 

by his blunt bearing, he will Hejiry V. iv. 7 

thy words are blunt, and so art thou. 2 Henry VI. iv. 1 

Germans, and blunt Hollanders 3 Henry VI. i v. 8 

so harsh, so blunt, unnatural — v. 1 

long borne your blunt upbraidings..iSi(;Aajd ///. i. 3 
murderous 'knife was dull and blunt — iv. 4 
sir James Blunt, and Rice ap Thomas — iv. 5 

good captain Blunt, bear — v. 3 

sweet Blunt, make some good means — v. 3 

good night, good captain Blunt — y. 3 

this 'tis: blunt wedges rive hard.. Troilus^- Cres. i. 3 
what a blunt fellow is this grovm..JuliusCa;sar,i. 2 

a plain blunt man, that love — iii- 2 

I am too blunt, and saucy Cymbeline, v. .5 

B LUNTED-blunted with community.. lHe«./r. iii. 2 

to whet thy almost blunted purpose . . Hamlet, iii. 4 

BI/UNTES'T- is the bluntest wooer..3H<'n>7/r/. iii. 2 

BLUNTLY— plain and bluntly \ Henry VI. iv. 1 

that thou comest in so bluntly ? . . Richard III. iy. 3 

deliver a plain message bluntly Lear, i. 4 

BLUNTNESS— been praised for bluntness — ii. 2 
BLUNT- WITTED-blunt-witted lord.2Hen. VI. iii. 2 
B LUR— ne'er yet did base dishonour blur — iy. 1 
blurs the grace and blush of modesty.. Ha/n/i'/, iii. 4 
BLURRED— hath nothing blurred ..Cymbeline, iv. 2 

BLURTED— ours was blurted at Pericls, iv. 4 

BLUSH— habit make thee blush. r;«o Gen. of r 



her blush is guiltiness, not modesty.. Muc/i Ado, iv. 
but I should blush, I know Love'i L. Loit, iv. 



V. 3 



IV. 3 



i:, i. 1 



come, sir, you blush; as is your 

and fBr you both did blush — 

Cupid himself would blush to secMer. of Vi 

I must blush and weep isyou Lik 

than with safety of a pure blush — i. z 

in the which hope, I blush, and hide. . — i.i. 7 
we blush that thou shoiddst choose ..AlVsWell, ii. S 

I blush to say it, he won me — v. 3 (petition) 

make false accusation blush Winter'sTale, iii. i 

I should blush to see you so attired.. — iv. 3 
I'll blush you thanks. J\ly prettiest — iv. 3 

you will but make it blush King John, iv. 1 

England, blush for shame — v. 2 

made the western welkin blush — v. ij 

wherefore blush you now 2HenryIV. ii. 2 

hope to make the sender blush at it . . Henry V. i. 'i 

and I must not blush to affirm it — v. 2 

thy cheeks blush for pure sliame . . 1 Henry VI. ii. 4 

and blush not at my shame 2Henry VI. \i 4 

yet thou shalt not see me blu.sh — iii. 1 

to blush and beautify the cheek again — iii. 2 



BOA 

BLUSH- to make thee blush illenry VI. i. 4 

not bewray thy treason with a blush — iii. 3 
blush, blush, tliou lump of foul ....Richard J Jl.i. 2 
if vou can blush, and cry guilty ..Henry VIII. iii. 2 
ifl blush, it is, to sec anoldeman.... — iii. 2 
the clieek be ready with a blush . . Troil.fy Cres.i. 3 

she does so blush, and fetches her — iii. 2 

come, come, what need you blush .... — iii. 2 

who.se blush doth thaw Timon of Alliens, iy. 3 

you sliall perceive whether I blush. . Coriolanus, i. i) 
it is a part that I shall blush in acting — ii. 2 
here do we make his friends blush . . — iv. 6 
followed that I blush to look uyion..Ant.^Cleo. iii. 9 

nay, blush not, Cleopatra — y. 2 

blood will make it shame and blush-.TilusAnd. iii. 1 
I blush to think upon this ignomy .. — iv. 2 

say all this, and never blush — y. 1 

those men blush not in actions Pericles, i. 1 

ina.y make Irim blush in being — i. 2 

the beetle-brows, shall blush for me..Rom.4-Jul._i. 4 
else would a maiden blush bepaint . . — ii. 2 
still blush, as thinking their own .... — iii. 3 
the grace and blush oi modesty Hamlet, iii. 4 

shame ! where is th}' blush — iii. 4 

BLUSJ lED— I blushed to hear 1 Henry IV. ii. 4 

ever since thou hast blushed extempore — ii. 4 
and Helen so blushed, and Paris . . Troll. Sr Cres. i. 2 
that pages blushed at him Coriolanus, v. 5 

1 have so often blushed to acknowledge . . Lear, i. 1 
that her motion blushed at herself Olhello, i. 3 

BLUSHES— iu bini, he blushes.. 3 •«DGe». nfVer. v. 4 
iirolixious blushes, that banish . . Mea.forMea. ii. 4 
how like a maid she blushes here . . Much Ado, iv. 1 
angel wliiteness bear away those blushes — iy. 1 
the blushes in my cheeks thuswhisper./l/i'.'iWeK, ii. 3 
cool, blusliesl and, Parolles, live safest — iv. 3 
he blushes, and 'tis it; of six preceding — v. 3 

come, quench your blushes Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

he is bold, and blushes not at death John., iv. 3 

Eut off your maiden blushes Henry V. v. 2 
lushes of hers must be quenched Pericles, iv. 3 

BLUSHEST— thou blushest, Antony. /In/. <?■ Cleo. i. 1 

BLUSHING — blushing apparitions ..Much .Ido, iv. 1 

blushing cheeks by faults are bred ..Lore's L.L. i. 2 

I do betray myself with blushing — __;. 2 

will sit blushing in his face Richard XL iii. 2 

as doth the blushing discontented — iii. 3 

made a blushing cital of himself 1 Henry 1 V. y . 2 

must you be blushing 2Henry I r.ii. 2 

my master's blushing cheeks IHenryVI. iv. 1 

arid, if thou canst for bluslung ZHenry VI. i. 4 

turn my blushing cheeks; pardon me — v. 1 
'tis a blushing shame-faced spirit . . Richard Ill.i. 4 

for more than blushing comes Henry VllL ii. 3 

as from a blushing hanclmaid — .W-^ 

bears bis blushing honours thick ujjon — iii. 2 
what, blushing still? have you not. 7 Vo/Li?- Cres. iii. 2 
blushing to be encountered .. Titus Andronicus, ii. 5 

that will betray with blushing — iv. 2 

mv li|is, two blushing pilgrims ..Romeo fy Juliet^ i. 5 

BLUSTEIi-threaten present blusters. (r;)7/er's7'. iii. 3 

in the blusters of thy wrath . . Timon of Athens, v. 5 

BLUSTERING— in your blustering land. . Jo/m, v- 1 

a tempest, and a blustering day - . ..XHenryl V. v. 1 

early, one blustering morn Pericles, v. 3 

BLU6T'ROUS-for a more blust'rous birth — iii. 1 

BOAR— or boar with bristling htiir. . Mid. A^. Dr. ii. 3 

rage like an angry boar, chafed .. Taming ofSh. i. 2 

doth the old boar feed iHenryl /'..ii. 2 

to night the boar had rased otf Richard 111. iii. 2 

to fly the boar before the boar (rep.) — jij- - 

the boar will use us kindly — J!!- '- 

fear you the boar, and go so unprovided — \\\- '^ 

the boar did rase his helm — iii . 4 

in the sty of this most bloody boar . . — iv. 5 
bloody, and usurping boar, that spoiled — v. 2 
guard thee from the boar's annoy .... — v. 3 

who, like a boar too savage Timon of Athens, y. 2 

eight wild boars roasted whole . . Antony Sf Cleo. ii. 2 

the boar of Thessaly was never — iy-_ 1 1 

like a full-acorned boar Cymbeline, n. .') 

the chafed boar, the mountain . . Titus .-Indron. i\. 2 

BOARD — bear up, and board 'em Tempest, iii. 2 

front her, board her, woo her Tu-efth Night, i. 3 

that did the Tiger board — v. 1 

your royal walks, your board. .Mid. N.'sDream,v. 1 

to grapple, as he was to board Lure's L. Lost, ii. 1 

but ships are but boards Merehnnl nf Venice, i. 3 

bond ot board and bed As you Like it, v. 4 (song) 

I will board her, though she chide. V'araing-o/A'/i.j. 2 
read it iu thy looks at board.. Comedj/ of Errors, iii. 2 

at board, he "fed not for my — v. 1 

cannot lodge and board a dozen Henry V. ii. 1 

kneeled down at the board 2Henry VI. iv. 1 

the honourable board of council Henry Vlll.i. 1 

1 would have left it on the board . . Cymbeline, ill. 6 
I'll board [Kii<.-boord] him presently . . H«m/e/, ii. 2 

his board a shrift; I'll intermingle Othello, iii. 3 

BOARDED— I boarded the king's ship. . Tempest,}. 2 

have boarded me in this fury Merry Wires, ii. 1 

I would he had boarded me Much Ado, ii. 1 

and boarded her i' the wanton All's Well, v. 3 

calmed, and boarded with a pirate. .tllenryVI. iv. 9 

in the grapple I boarded them . . Hamlet, iv. 6 (let.) 

he to-night hath boarded a land carack..O//ic«o, i. 2 

BOARDING— boarding, call you it.Merry Wives, ii. 1 

BOARISH— stick boarish fangs Lear, iii. 7 

BOAR-PIG— Bartholomew boar-pig..2Hen»tf //'. ii. 4 

BOARSPEAR-boarspear in my hand./f-vyoti Like,i. 3 

come on, where is your boarspear. . Richard III. iii. 2 

BOAST— that I boast her off Tempest, iv. I 

my duty, will I boast of Two Gen. of Verona, 'li. 4 

and ma'ke no boast of it Much Ado, iii. 3 

is more than all these boasts Mid. N. Dream, i. 1 

why should proud summer boast., i-oue'i- L. Losi, i. 1 

and make no boast of them AsyouLilce it,\\. 5 

it is no boast, being asked — iv. 3 

boasts liimself to have a worthy. . Winter' sTale, iv. 3 
every present time doth boast itself . . — v. 1 
thou may'st with lilies boast King John, iii. 1 



BOA 



n59j 

BODIIjY — received some bodily wound . . Olhello, ii. 3 

BOOING— and hodin? sm-itch-ov.'\s ..'2 Hen ri/y I. iii. 2 

nnd fnircst bodin;: di'cams llichm'il IJl. v. 3 

n'lM- the intVetcd limisc, bmlinp! to all . , OlliHIn, iv. \ 

BODKIN— the hend nf:i hodkiu ., Lore's L. Lnst, v. 2 
{■Mnudt thnist a. bculkin's point... Ilinicrs Tali; iii. 3 
rrr;/.] (Joil'slKulkin, man, muclil)etter.. liajji^ei, ii. 3 
Ids iniiutus make with a bare bodkin .. — Iii. 1 

B()I)\— Ids bcidy uglier grows Tempest, Iv. 1 

I cndnaoe Uiy body — v. 1 

that 1, unworthy body as I am. . Twoticn. offer, i. 2 

tliat will endanger his body — v. 4 

ami tind any body in the liouse .. .. Merry IVives^ i. 4 

to come under one body's hand — i. 4 

of thy old body than I have done .... — ii. 2 

good body, I thank thee — ii. 2 

whether that the body public .... Mens, for Meets, i. 3 

give up your body to sueh — ii. 4 

ratlier give my body than my — ii. 4 

lay down the treasures of j'our body — ii. 4 
ere I'd yield my body up to shame ... — ii. 4 
by yielcling up thy body to my will. . — ii. 4 

shoidd herbody stoop to such — ii. 4 

the damued'st body to invest — iii. 1 

keep the body of it ever fair -.- iii. 1 

hath any body inquired for me — iv. 1 

and by an eminent body — iv. 4 

but by gift of my chaste body — v. 1 

that lie ne'er knew my body — v. I 

this is the body that took away — v. 1 

the body of your discourse is Much.-ldo, i. 1 

combating in so teiider a body — ii. 3 

should suffer salvation body and sold . . — ' iii. 3 
as your soul should with your body . . . . — iv. 1 

I'll prove it on his body — v. 1 

though the body pine Love's L. Lost, i. 1 

and body's fosteriii" patron — i. 1 fetter) 

and thus thy body bear — v. 2 

my little body is aweary of this. . . Mer. of Venice, i. 2 
what part of your body pleaseth me . . — i . 3 
the paper as fhe body of my friend .. . — iii. 2 
so young a body, with so old a head — iv. 1 (letter) 
no, not my bod5', nor my husband's ... — v. 1 

I once did lend my body for his — y. 1 

bites and blows upon my body. . ..As yon Like it, ii. 1 

he piercetli through the body of — ii. 1 

cleanse the foul body of the infected. . — ii. 7 

that one body should be filled — iii. 2 (verses) 

ah, sir, a body would think this — iv. 3 

bear your body more seerain" — v. 4 

that wishing well had not a body in't. . All's Well, i. 1 

till I have issue of my body — i. 3 

my poor body, madam, requires it — i. 3 

our parting is a tortured body — ii. 1 

a child begotten of thy body — iii. 2 (letter) 

of as able Dody as when he — iv. 5 

to deck thy body with his ruiBing . . Tarn. ofSh. iv. 3 
'tis the mind that makes the body rich — iv. 3 

a hasty- ivitted body would say — v. 2 

commits his body to painful labour — v. 2 

continue the standing of his body.. IFintei-'sTale, i. 2 
soul's peril, and thy body's torture... — ii. 3 

and first fruits of my body — iii. 2 

or hoop his body more with thy — iv. 3 

witches that deform the body Com. of Errors, i. i 

and that this body, consecrate to thee .. — ii. 2 

a very reverent body, ay, such — iii. 2 

in what part of her body stands — iii. 2 

took measure of my boay — iv. 3 

where is Duncan's body? Macbeth, ii. 4 

for the dignity of the whole body — v. 1 

before my body I throw my — v. 7 

was levied in me body of aland King John, iv. 2 

nay, in the body of this fleshly — iv. 2 

and part this body and my soul — v. 4 

sings his soul and body to their — v. 7 

at Worcester must his body be interred — v. 7 

my body shall make good Richard II, i. 1 

heaven's grace, and my body's valour — i. 3 
commit'st thy anointed body to the . . — ii. 1 

learn to make a body of a limb — iii. 2 

gave his body to that pleasant — iv. 1 

to undeck the pompous body of .... — iv. 1 

yielded up his body to the grave — v. 6 

squires of the night's body, be called. lHen»-y IV. i. 1 

wiieu that this body did contain — v. 4 

well-known body to anatomize .2 Heyirj/Zr. (indue.) 

all put forth; body and goods — i. 1 

followed both with body and with mind — i. 1 

we are a body strong enough — i. 3 

to patch up thine old body for heaven — ii. 4 
shew aweak mind and an able body.. — ii. 4 
the body of our kingdom how foul .. . ■ — iii. 1 
it is but as a body, yet, distempered.. — iii. 1 

hath fed upon the body of my — iv. 4 

your workings in a second body — v. 2 

that the great body of oiu' state — v. 2 

make less thy body, hence, and more.. — v. 5 
I commit my body to your mercies.... — (epil.) 

no sooner left his father's body HcmyV. i. 1 

leaving liis bodv as a paradise — i. 1 

like little linily 'with a mighty — ii. (eho.) 

altlinugli my 'l)ody pay the price — li. 2 

but not my body, pardon, sovereign — ii. 2 

never any body saw it but his lacquey.. — iii. 7 
with a liiidy filled, and vacant mind.... — iv. 1 
I Ricliard'.. body liaA'C interred new. ... — iv. 1 

bear hence his liody, I will help 1 Uenry VI. i. 4 

bring forth llic bi>il\' ofijld Salisbury. — ii. 2 

outward i-;)ni|icisiti'''u of his body — ii. 3 

leaving.' im licir licL'otten of his body.. — ii. Tj 

my bod\' shaii |.a\' rc.imipcnsc — v. 3 

cannot m-.' h..il\-, m.m- IjIimhI sacrifice. — v. 3 
mvliodv.sniil.'aiMl all, before that.... — v. 3 

be firm t. I^ear his hnflv ■nlenry K/. iii. 1 

my bodv round eiC4irt\cith miserv... — iii. 1 
rear up his h.»lv; wriii- him bv ..'.... — iii. 2 
thy liody mi-ht my heart ". — iii. 2 

fracious M)vcreiL.'n. view 'Ins \)\Ay — iii. 2 
should hreathc it so into thy body.. — iii. 2 



BOD 



BOAST — of such tame patience boast. . Richard 11. i. 1 
my freedom, boast of nothing else .... — i. 3 

wander, boast of this I can — i. 3 

coiKiuost for a prince to lioast of ....1 Uenry IV. i. 1 
1 could make as true a boast as i\\i\t..nenryV. iii. 7 
to boast of this, or take that iirnise.... — iv. 8 

that she mav boast, she hath \ Henry VI. ii. 2 

that nation boast it so with us — iii. 3 

jiresniiie to boast of Identic blood — . i\'. 1 

tlu' French can little boast — iv. .') 

thena|)kin,undgoboast of this . . ..3rrc;:r;/;7. i. 4 
cannot make boast to have.. Trail iis <S Cressiita, iii. 3 
boast thee, death! in tliy possession. ..l/i/.<Sr'c(). y. 2 
dear as yours, can justly boast of. . . . t'ymhetine, ii. 3 
ratlier you felt, than niake't my boast — ii. 3 

further to boast were neither true — v. .'i 

tliat made barren the swelled boast . . — v. 5 
every thing doth ma.ke a gleeful boast. Titus And. ii. 3 

which I'lllieep from lioast Pericles, iv. 6 

whore they boast to have well-armed .... Lear, iii. 7 
bid, O va'm boast ! who can control .... Othello, v. 2 

BO.-VfiTEU— oft have boasted to retain i.ear,iii. 6 

BOASTFiri..—and boastful neighs. Henry r.iv. (cho.) 

BOASTING— no boasting like a fool Macbeth iv. 1 

and set upon oiu- boasting enemy ...1 Henry r/. iii. 2 

sir, to such as boasting show Troil.fUres. iv. 5 

topping all others in boasting Coriolanus, ii. 1 

1 know that boasting is an honour .... Olhello, i. 2 
BOAT— carcass of a boat ICol.Knt. hxiW].. Tempest, i. 2 

drive the boat with my sighs.. Tieo Gen. of Ver. ii. 3 

liuu" on our driving boat TirelflhNight, i. 2 

souglit for safety by our boat . . Comedy nf Errors^ i. 1 

all our lives in one small boat 1 Henry VI. iv. 6 

tvMit out a boat unto the shore Richard III. iv. 4 

many shallow bauble boats dai'e . . Troit.^Cres. i. 3 

Where's then the saucy boat — i. 3 

li.dit boats sail swift — ii. 3 

all Ijoats alike showed Coriolanus, iv. 1 

come, down into the boat .. Antony /i/- Cleopatra, ii. 7 

the press of boats, or pride Cymbeline, ii. 4 

will not bear your eueniies' boats .. — iii. 1 
brings in some boats that are not .... — iy. 3 

aboard our dancinj' boat Pericles, iii. 1 

her boat hath a leak Lear, iii. 6 (song) 

my boat sails freelj', botli with Olhello, ii. 3 

BO.\.TSWi\.IN — boatswain have care.... Tempest, i. 1 

where is the master, boatswain? — i. 1 

tlie swabber, the boatswain, and I. . . . — ii. 2 (song) 

the master, and the boatswain — v. 1 

the boatswainwhistles, the master calls. Peri'c/es.iv. 1 

B( )B— against lier lips I bob Mid. N.'s Dream, ii. 1 

not to seem senseless of the bob . . As you Like it, ii. 7 
you shall not bob us out of.. Troilus Sr Cressida, iii. 1 

B<3BBED— beaten, bobbed, and thumped.Bic.///. y. 3 

I have bobbed his brain Triolus ^- Cressida, ii. 1 

gold and jewels that I bobbed from him. Othello, v. 1 

BOBTAIL— or bobtail-tike, or trundle-tail. Lear, iii. 6 

BOCCHUS— hath assembled Bacchus. .-l/i^.^-a™. iii. G 

BODE— bad voice bode no mischief 1 . . Much Ado, ii. 3 

what should that bode? — iii. 2 

what it bodes, marry, peace it bodes. rojn.o/S/j. v. 2 

what it doth bode, God knows %Ilenry VI. i. 2 

whate'er it bodes, henceforward 3 Henry VI. ii. 1 

I would bode, I would bode . . Troilus .^^ Cressida, v. 2 
mysiglitisvery dull,whate'eritbodes. r/dfs/lHrf. ii. 4 

much misfortmie bodes Romeo <§- Juliet, i. 4 

this bodes some strange eruption Hamlet^ i. 1 

eyes do itch; doth tiiat bode weeping?. . Othello, iv. 3 
w'hat did thy song bode, lady ^ v. 2 

BODED — invert what best is boded me. Tempest, iii. 1 
what boded this 'IHenry VI. iii. 2 

BODEMENT— sweet bodements! good! Macbeth, iv. 1 
makes all these bodements . . Troilus «§- Cressida, v. 3 

BODGED— alas! we bodged again ZHenryVI. i. 4 

BODIES — and you a curer of bodies .Merry IVives, ii. 3 

nor I too : dere is no bodies — iii. 3 

souls and bodies hath he divoTced-.Twelflh Night, iii. 4 

hale souls out of men's bodies? Much Ado, ii. 3 

with two seeming bodies Mid. N. Dream, iii. 2 

as imagination bodies forth — v. 1 

why are om- bodies soft, and weak . . Tarn, of Sh. v. 2 
to the dead bodies of my queen .. IVinter'sTale, iii. 2 
save our deposed bodies to the ground .Rich. II. iii. 2 
as the soldiers bore dead bodies by ... I Henry IV. i. 3 
the gibbets, and pressed the dead bodies — iv. 2 

of tlieir bodies from their souls iHenrylV. i. 1 

ha^■e left tlieir bodies here in England. .Henry V. i. 2 

( Hct their bodies follow, my dear — i. 2 

tbeirbudies to the lust of English j'oiitli — iii. 5 
their poor bodies must lie anii fester .... — iv. 3 
many of our bodies shall, no doubt .... — iv. 3 

and dispose of their dead bodies — iv. 7 

and have our bodies slaughtered.. ..IHcnryVI. iii. 1 

give me their bodies — iv. 7 

go take their bodies hence — iv. 7 

sold their bodies for their country's. . . — v. 4 
the bodies shall be dragged at my ..iHenry VI. iv. 3 
wrap our bodies in black munrnmg..3Henr!//7. ii. 1 
unlooked-for issue of their bodies .... — iii. 2 

the dearest blood yoin- liodies bear — v. 1 

whose b 'io. !:irh:i. ; inurdercd ....Richard III. v. 3 

intLi- til -ir ! ■'■ 'ic'-onies — V. 4 

tile boilii . ;i, '■- confessor ...Henri/F/f/. i. 1 

bad your ! <lie p.. : in-; among you Cori'oi. ii. 3 

state of bodies woi, — v. 3 

do lance diseases i : ' I ■ 'u:i Antony^- Clro. v. \ 

produce their boi 1 M ,. .: .• ,i live or dead. Lev r, v. 3 
villanous shame to tlie ile.id bodies ..Rom.fyJul. v. 3 

then are our beggars, bodies Humlct, ii. 2 

to keep those many many bodies safe.... — iii. 3 

in weakest l)odies strongest works — iii. 1 

these bodies high on a stage — v. 2 

ta'KC up the bodies [Co/, knt body] .. — v. 2 

our bodies are our gardens Otiwtio, i. 3 

BODIKIN- 
od's bodikin \_rol. God's bodkin], man..HnniW, ii. 2 

BdDILKSS-tlusbodiles.s creation — Iii. 4 

Bi tl)lLY-in lioLlilv health, sir, marrv.2/;enri//r. ii. 2 
he hr.niglit to bodily a.'t ere Kiane ..Corlnl.nnts, i. 2 
enjoyed the dearest bodily [.art CyiidieUnc, i. h 



BODY-his head and lifeless body lie .'IHenry VI. iv, 

his body will I bear unto the ting — iv, 

wdiere's the body that I should embrace? — iv 

as I thrust thy body in with my — iv. 

my sold and body on the action both! — v 

his will in his old feeble body — v 

that this my body might ZHenryVI. ii 

fen' al I my body's moisture scarce .... — i i 

this body nnist be prey — ii 

his body couched in a curious bed — i i 

more than my body's parting — ii 

and deck my 'body in gay ornaments. — iii 

sits deformity to mock my body — iii. 

to Henry's body, and supply — iv 

means to make the body follow — i\', 

wdiat is the body, when the head .... — v. 
my mangled bodv shows, my blood .. — v. 

that T must yield my body to the — v. 

nothingleftme, but my body's length! — v. 

have shaped my body so — v. 

I'll throw thy body m another — v. 

hadst but power over his mortal body ..i!/c/i.J//. i. 

fashions to adorn my body — i. 

I'll go hide the body in some hole.... — i. 
prevailed upon my body with their .. — iii. 
to engross his idle body, but praying. — iii. 
preys on the issue of his mother's body — iv. 

from her sweet brother's body — iv. 

AU-Soid's day is my body's doom's-day — v. 
my anointed body, by thee was pnnel led — v. 

who set the body and the limbs IlenryVIII. i. 

panging as soul and body's severing.. — ii. 

of his o\im body he was ill — iv. 

body o' me, where is it? there — v. 

I would my heart were in her bodj'. Trail. % Cres. i. 

do to this body what extremes — iv. 

every joint and motive of lier body ... — iv. 

in which part of his body shall I — iv. 

bear Patroclus' body to Achilles — v. 

come, tie his body to my horse's tail.. — v. 

which now the public body Timnn of Athens, v. 

when all the body'smembers rebelled. Cor'ad-mus, i. 

i' the midst o' the bodj', idle — i. 

aft'ection common of the v.'hole body.. — i. 

and the shop of the whole body — i . 

seven hurts i' the body, one in — ii. 

motion towards the common body.... — ii. 

you bear i' the body of the v.'eal — i i . 

to jump a body with a dangerous — iii. 

and by my bocly's action, teach — iii. 

think on the wounds his body bears. . — iii. 
twine mine arms about that body.... — iv. 

bury his reasons with his body — v. 

bear from hence his body — v. 

and must bend his body, if Ccesar. .Julius Cfesar, i. 

that I may produce his body — iii. 

here, take you Cajsar's body — iii. 

prepare the body then, and "follow us.. — iii. 

here comes his body, mourned by — iii. 

stand from the body — iii. 

his body in the holy place (repeated) — iii. 

what villain touched his body — iv. 

where, Messala, doth his body lie? ... — v. 

and to Thassos send his body — v. 

this common body, like to .. Antony fj- Cleopatra, i. 

bear tlie king's son's body before — iii. 

she shows a body rather than a life . . — iii. 

the soul and body rive not more — iv. 

thy captain is even such a body — iv. 

the arm of mine own body — v. 

his body's a passable carcass Cymbeline, i. 

some natural notes about her body . . — ii. 
that ever hath but clipped his body . . — Ji. 

my body's marked with Roman — iii. 

insultment ended on his dead body . . — iii. 

the lines of my body are as well — iv. 

if we do fear this body hatha tail .. .. — iv. 

his body's hostage for" his return — iv. 

Thersites' body IS asgood as Ajax ... — iv. 
he'll then instruct us of this body — — iy. 
a better hcatl her glorious body fits . . . Titus And. i. 
make yoiu honour of his body's hue.. — ii. 

as any mortal body, hearing It — ii. 

unto tlie body of a dismal yew — ii. 

never man's eye may behold my body — ii. 

some bring the murdered body — ii. 

and made thy body bare of her two .. — ii. 

behold thy living body so? — iii. 

broken limbs again into one body .... — v. 
the steel in my adventurous body — — v. 

to preimre this bodv like to them Pericles, i. 

makes both my hotly pine — _i. 

I'll bring the body presently — iii- 

the common body by you relieved — iii. 

from her derogate body never spring Leur, ]. 

he charges home my linprovided body ... — ii. 

the mind to sutti^r with the bodv — ;;. 

wdien the mind's free, the body ''s delicate — iii. 
with thy uncovered body this extremity . — iii. 

all the rest of his body cold :.- — jji. 

six shirts to his boilv, horse to ride — iii. 

rCo(. Kn«.]— mv f.iol iisnrnsmybody .... — iv. 

if ever thou wilt thrive linrvmv body — iv. 

for a hand, am! a foot, and a bodv . . Rom. 'f Jul. ii. 

bear hence tills liod\. and nrt'-'i 1 — iii. 

not body's death, Imt bodv".^ ha-ii limcnt — iii. 
upon his bodv th:it liitb -l:!o-li^ •■■.1.. — ni. 

in one little!,:-!'.- vb-.i --; iV o'-t.. — in. 

the liark tb.x I' :'', i . -■• 'i'. "' 'b' ■•. — i". 



her body sleep in . 
followed m.^- i'o.h i'- 
tlie vciice and \ i.loi 


r: .«!' Iliat'boiiy... 


each petty ari.r- o 

natural -at - :i:,«l a 
loatbsooie .;,,.:. ,11 
the vei-v i'.'-.r ;o' ' 1,.' 


■'.■• .laWiiodv!' 

,1, -nvioth h>dy 
1 . ..i 111 ■ time 


asf.'on, ibi r 

todl-aw apart the Ih 


dy he hath kiUei 



BODY— bring the bixly into the chapel. . Handel, iv. I 

done, nij- lord, with the dead body? — iv. 2 

you nn\st tell lis where the body IS — iv. 2 

the body is with the king, but tlie (;rp.).. — iv. 2 

sent to seek hiin, mid to tiiid tlie body — iv. 3 

deeayer of your wlinreson dead Iwdy". — v. 1 

\_Col. A'/i/.]-take mi the body: suoh"'a sight — v. 2 

when she is sated with his body Ulliello,!. 3 

rcjicals him for lier body's lust — ii. 3 

had tasted her sweet body, so I had — iii. 3 

lest lier liody and beauty unprovide — iv. 1 

coimli, and cry — hem, if any body come.. — iv. 2 

hath thus ensnared niv soul and Uody — v. 2 

EODY-CUREK— and body-cm-cr. .il/crry mvcs, iii. 1 
BODYKINS—bndykins, master Page — ii. 3 

BOG — sucks up fi'om bo^s, feus, flats Tempest, ii. 2 

through bog, through bush Mid. N. Dmm, iii. 1 

I found it out by tlie bogs. . , . Comedy of Errors, iii. 2 

fall into i'oul bogs Henry V. iii. 7 

and whirlpool, over bog and quagmire . . Lear, iii. 1 

BOGGLE— you boggle shrewdly ill's H'ell. v. 3 

BOGGLER— have been a boL'gler ...J<i/. ^ Clco. iii. 11 

BOIIEillA— to visit Bohemia irinler'sTale, i. 1 

betwixt our Bohemia and youi" Sicilia — i. 1 

to pay Bohemia the visitation — i. 1 

show himself over-kind to Bohemia — i. 1 

yon are sure, all in Bohemia's well .. — i. 2 

when at Bohemia you take my lord — 1.2 

understand Bohemia stays here — 1.2 

sky is nothing: Bohemia is nothing.. — 1.2 

haiigiu" about his neck, Bohemia — 1. 2 

and will fetch oft' Bohemia for't — 1.2 

w itli Bohemia, and with yom- queen — 1. 2 

licie comes Bohemia. Tliis is strange — 1. 2 

rolixencs, king of Bohemia — iii. 2 (indict.) 

touelied upon tiie deserts of Bohemia — iii. 3 
places remote enough are in Boliemia — iii. 3 

in fair Bohemia; and remember — iv. (chorus) 

cowardly rogue iu all Boliemia — Iv. 2 

more than all the lawyers in Bohemia — iv. 3 

not for Bohemia, nor the pomp — Iv. 3 

we are not furnished likeBohemia's sou — iv. 3 
wlio for Bohemia bend, to signify .... — v. 1 

great sir, Bohemia greets you — v. 1 

Where's Bohemia? speak. Here .... — v. 1 
as they sjieak: Bohemia stops Ills ears — v. 1 

then asks Bohemia forgiveness — v. 2 

true fellow as any is in Bohemia — V. 2 

BOHEMIAN — here's a Bohemian.. Merry Wives, Iv. 5 
Boliemian born; but here nursed. j)/ea./07- Mea. iv. 2 

BOHUN— poor Edward Bohun Henryrill. ii. 1 

BOIL — I have seen corruption boil . . Mea. for Mea. v. 1 

boil thou. first i'the cliarmed pot Macbeth, jv. 1 

in the caiildron boil and hake — iv. 1 

like n hcll-liroth boil and liubble — iv. 1 

anil I'loth hiiil, as 'twere from, . TrolhisffCressida, i. 3 
boils? fnii, all over, genenally'i" (rep.) — ii. 1 

boils and ))laines plaster you o'er Coriolanus, i. 4 

thou art a boil, a jilaL'UC-'-ore Lear, ii. 4 

BOILEn-l.iiled ^^ ithiu thv skull Tempest, v. 1 

let ine lie Imil.'il toderith with .. Tnelpli Night, ii. 5 

anv lint tin .1 'imm,.,, i,r,;i.is U',, iter's Tnte, iii. 3 

snrlilin' 1 II ;iii_lLt Ciiiiiln'line, i. 7 

BOiLl:, I I _ Mih, 1- breast. .l.'»(.,V. Dr. V. 1 

flavin-- ' ,ii_,ii 1 K, i,rijils?.ii;(i/(7-'.«7u/i', iii. 2 

fill- biiiliip. I b.ilei Uhil^es IHenry (7. V. 4 

BOIS—siiii ot ,ir Jbiwlaiid do Bois. .^Iswou Lilce il, i. 1 

sir KoH land de Bois. I w.mld — i. 2 

BOI.^TElHK'S-liasB and boisterous sword ■ — 11. 3 

what need you be so boisterous King John, iv. 1 

what small thiiu's are boisterous — Iv. 1 

make gmid the Imisterous late appeal ..Rich. II. 1. 1 

rnuseii n|) with lini-^terous untuned — 1. 3 

the harsh, and boi-tenms tongue ..IHenryll'. iv. 1 
hiinour snateiied with biii-terous hand — iv. 4 

CiiiSird, buii-teri.u^ Ciill'ord ZHenryVI. ii. 1 

swell before a boisterous storm Itidiard III. 11. 3 

air, thy boisterous ehamberlaiu .. Timon of Ath. iv. 3 
too rough, too rude, too boisterous . . Horn. €f .lid. 1. 4 

consequence attends tlie boisterous Hamlet, iii. 3 

stubborn and boisterous expedition Othello, 1. 3 

BUISTEROUSLY-must be asboisterouslv..;f>/iH, iii. 4 

BOITIER— un boitier verd Merii/ inres, i. 4 

BOLD— make his buld waves tremble . . Tempest, i. 2 
liis bold head 'bcve the contentious waves — ii. 1 

may I be bold to think these spirits? — iv. 1 

bold Leander would adventure.. Tmjo Gen. of J', iii. 1 
I'll be so bold to break — 111. 1 

1 dare be bold with our discourse . . — v. 4 

I make bold, to press upon Merry Wives, ii. 2 

I will first make bold — 11.2 

I'll be so bold as to stay, sh' — iv. 5 

may I be so bold to say so, sir? — iv. 5 

who more liold? — iv. .5 

and tlv.it you may be bold to say .. TvelfthNight, i. 5 

let me be bold Measure for Measure, ii. 4 

virtue is bold, and goodness — iii. 1 

I will only be bold with Benedick ..Miich Ado, iii. 2 
by what power I am made bold..il/irf.A'./)rca)n, 1. 1 

I shall make bold with you — iii. I 

bold of yom' worthiness Love's L. Lost, ii. 1 

making the bold wag — v. 2 

too rude, and bold ot voice . . Merchant of Venice, ii. 2 

had you becu as wise as bold — ii. 7 (scroll) 

then be bold to say, Bassanio's .... — iii. 2 

spirits are too bold for your years. . As yov Lifte it, i. 2 

may I be bold to acquaint All's Well, iii. 6 

of that I have made ahold charter .. — Iv. 5 

be bold, you do so grow — v. 1 

durst make too bold a herald — v. 3 

let me be thus bold with you. . Taming of Shrew, 1. 2 

if I may be bold, teli me — 1.2 

let me be so bold as to ask you — i. 2 

am bold to show- myself a forward — ii. 1 

may I be so bold to know — ii. 1 

give bold [Co/. A';i/.-bold'st] titles. WiMer'sTale, ii. 1 
bold oxiips, and the crown-imperial — iv. 3 

drunk, hath made me bold Macheth, ii. 2 

I'll make so bold to call — ii. 3 

ay, and a bold one, that dare look — iii. 4 



[70] 

BOLD— he bloody, bold, and resolute . . Macbeth, Iv. 1 
he is liolil, and blushes not at death ..KingJohn,'\v. 3 

Henry I leiel'niil, thy bold son Ricliard ll.i. 1 

a bold spirit ill :i loyal breast — 1.1 

sprightrully and bold, stays — 1.3 

no person be so hold, or daring 1.3 

therefore, be bold. Then thus ii. 1 

heinous, strong, and bold conspiracy! — v. 3 
ten thousand bold Scots i Henry IV. 1. 1 

Eresence is too bold and peremptory — 1. 3 

e bold to tell you, tliat I — Iii. 2 

yet doth he give us bold advertisement — iv. 1 

such bold hostility, teaching — iv. 3 

or mnre bold, is now alive — v. 1 

the flame of bold rebellion 'IHenrylV. (Indue.) 

my greedy ear with their bold deeds — i. 1 

or wliat hatlr this hold enterprize .... — 1. 1 

to look with forehead bold and big .. — 1.3 
all these bold fears, tliou see'st — iv. 4 

1 gave bold way to my authority .... — v. 2 
that have a man so bold, that dares. . — v. 2 
the like bold, just, and impartial .... — v. 2 

his grace is bold, to trust these Henry V.'xi.i 

I will be so bold as to tell you — iii. 2 

I'll be so bold to take 1 Henry FI. ii. 1 

madam, I have been bold — 11.3 

must your bold verdict enter — Hi. 1 

set a gloss upon his bold intent — iv. 1 

ringed about with bold adversity — Iv. 4 

for X am bold to coimsel you iu Hiis. .2 Henry FI. i. 3 

dare you be so bold? — Hi. 2 

and therefore am I bold and resolute — iv. 4 
dare any be so bold to soimd retreat — iv. 8 

as famous and as bold in war SHcnryFI. 11. 1 

to be tlius bold In terms — Ii. 2 

and what makes robbers bold — ii. 6 

in peace, yet bold in war — Iv. 8 

a parlous boy; bold, quick Richard III. iii. 1 

yet who so bold, but says — iii. 6 

I am thus hold to put your grace .... — Iv. 2 

daring, bold, and venturous — Iv. 4 

make bold her bashful years — iv. 4 

the ransom of my bold attempt — v. 3 

Joeky of Norfolk be not too bold — v. 3 (scroll) 

fight, bold [K?i(. boldly] yeomen! .. — v. 3 

this makes bold mouths Henry Flll.i. 2 

with bold spirit relate — i. 2 

dare be bold to weep for Buckingham — ii. 1 

slept upon this bold bad man — Ii. 2 

you are too bold ; go to — 11.2 

I will be bold with time — ii. 4 

you made bold to carry into Flanders — iii. 2 

may I be bold to ask what that — Iv. 1 

a bold, brave gentleman — iv. 1 

bold language. Do: remember your bold — v. 2 
for then^the bold and coward.. Troiltts^-Cressida,i. 3 

state of war, bold as an oracle — 1.3 

an eagle flight, bold, and forth Timon of Ath. 1. 1 

I have been bold, (for that I knew . . — 11. 2 

and make bold power look pale Coriolanus, 1. 1 

bold gentleman, prosperity be thy page — 1. 5 

I will be bold to take my leave — 11. 1 

like a bold flood o'er-beat — Iv. 5 

of any bold or noble enterprize .... Julius Ccesar, 1. 2 

we are too bold upon your rest — ii. 1 

Caesar was mighty, bold, royal — iii. 1 

abused In too holil a persuasion Cymbeline, i. 5 

I will make bold to send them — 1.7 

as I am bold, her honour will — ii. 4 

under the conduct of bold lachlmo . . — iv. 2 

with the loss of many a bold one — v. 5 

I'll make bold, your highness cannot — v. 5 
I should be so bold to press heaven. . Titus And. iv. 3 

he bold in us; we'll follow — v. 1 

like a bold champion, I assmne Pericles, i. I 

unto a stranjrcr knight to be so bold — il. 3 

so debauched, and bold Lear, i. 4 

bold in the quarrel's right — ii. 1 

show too bold a malice against — ii. 2 

wherefore, bold peasant, darest thou — iv. 6 

invades our land, not holds the king — v. 1 

he is bold in his defence — v. 3 (herald) 

I am too bold, 'tis not to me Romeo Sr Juliet, ii. 2 

that I mean to make bold withal — iii. 1 

piercing steel at bold Merc utio's breast — iii. 1 

till strange love, gro^vn bold — iii. 2 

the bold winds speeeliless, and the orb. . Hamlet, ii. 2 

O my lord, if my duty be too bold — iii. 2 

making so bold, my tears forgetting .... — v. 2 
have done you bold and sauc.y wrongs . . Othello, 1. 1 

a maiden never bold; of spirit so 1. 3 

surfeited to death, stand in bold cure .... — Ii. 1 
left iu the conduct of the bold lago — ii. 1 

fives me this bold show of courtesy — ii. I 
have made bold, lago, to send in — iii. 1 

to be bold with you,— not to att'ect — iii. 3 

be Ijold, and take thy sword — v. 1 

BOLD-BEATING— 
your bold-beating oaths Merry Wives, ii. 2 

BOLDENED— thou thus boldencd. /(.i- you Likeil,\\. 7 
am boldencd under your promised. . Henri/ I'lIL 1. 2 

BIJLDE 11— bolder to chide you. . . Tiro Gen. 'nfVer. ii. 1 
buld wag by their praises bolder.. /.otu-'s L. Lost, v. 2 
of these bolder vices wanted less.. Winter'sTatc, iii. 2 

makes me the bolder to salute '■I Henry FI. i. 1 

no man might be bolder Richard ill. iii. 4 

bolder, but not so subtle Corinlamis, 1. 10 

BOLDEST— vour boldest suit .... Mcr. of Fenice, ii. 2 
the most bo"ldest and best hearts. .y«//?/.s- Ctcsar, ill. 1 

BOLD-FACED— bold-faced victory. .lHe«n/;V. iv. 6 

BOLDLY— I will boldly publish her. . Twelfth N. ii. 1 
boldly, at least: but O, poor souls.. .l/ea./oril/ea. v. 1 
have answered heaven boldly .... Winter's Tale, 1. 2 

in myself I boldly will defend Richard II. i. \ 

out with it boldly, man — 11.1 

b.y lieavcn thus boldly for his king . — Iv. 1 

w'e may boldly spend upon the hope. I Henry IF. iv. 1 
and boldly did outdare tire dangers . . — v. 1 
but boUUy stand, and front him . . . .2Henry VI. v. 1 
what's he, approacheth boldly to . .ZHenry VI. iii. 3 



BOLDLY— boldly, and cheerfully . . Richard III. v. 3 

[A-'niff/iO— fight boldly, yeomen! — v. 3 

I am wife in, out with it boldly . . Henry VIII. Iii. 1 
know many dare accuse you boldly .. — v. 1 

let's kill him boldly JuliusCirsar, ii'. 1 

none but friends; say boldly ..Antony ^-Cleo. iii. 11 

BOLDNESS— boldnes's before my lady. TwelfthN. iii. 4 

what foolish boldness brought thee .. — v. 1 

In the boldness of my cunnfng . . Mea. for Mea. iv. 2 

a strumpet's boldness, a divulged All's Well, ii. 1 

'tis but the boldness of his hand — Iii. 2 

the boldness Is mine own .... Tanking of Shrew, ii. 1 
arras her with the boldness of a wife. Winter's T. i. 2 
as boldness from my bosom, let it.. .. — ii. 2 

1' the boldness of your speech — iii. 2 

show boldness, and aspiring confidence ..John, v. 1 
call honom'able boldness, impudent. 2Hch?-;/ IV. 11. 1 
upon thee, beggar, for thy boldness.. J((c/iarc; ///. 1. 2 
■will make my boldness manners. .. frou;/ I'lll. v. 1 
boldness comes to me now . . Troilus <5- Cressida, iii. 2 

boldness be my friend! arm me Cymbeline, i. 7 

BOLD'ST— [Co(. A')!/.]— bold'st titles. »'(n/ei'sr.ii. 1 

BOLINS— slack the hollns there Pericles, iii. 1 

BOLINi iBROKE— Bolingbroke, as low . , Rich. II. i. 1 
no, Bolingbroke: If ever I were traitor — 1. 3 
nor the jjrevention of poor Bolingbroke — ii. I 
the banished Bolingbroke repeals himself— ii. 2 
servants fled with him to Bolingbroke — ii. 2 
Bolingbroke my son'ow's dismal heir — ii. 2 
thrives to beat back Bolingbroke .... — ii. 2 

than Bolingbroke to England — iii. 1 

whilst Bolingbroke, through our .... — iii. 2 
this traitor, Bolingbroke, who .all tills — iii. 2 
man that Bolingbi-oke hath pressed.. — iii. 2 
are gone to Bolingljroke, dispersed .. — iii. 2 
strives Bolingbroke to be as great as we — iii. 2 

swells the rage of Bolingbroke — iii. 2 

have made peace witii Bolingbroke . . — iii. 2 
our lives, and all are Bolingbroke's .. — iii. 2 

proud Bolingbroke, I come" to — iii. 2 

York hath joined with Bolingbroke — iii. 2 

night, to Bolingbroke's fair day — iii. 2 

Harry Bolingbroke on both his knees — iii. 3 
far off from the mind of Bolingbroke ' — iii. 3 
tell Bolingbroke, (for yond', methinks — iii. 3 
thrice-noble cousin, Harry Bolingbroke — iii. 3 

comes back from Bolingbroke — iii. 3 

what says king Bolingbroke? — iii. 3 

root and all b.y Bolingbroke — iii. 4 

Bolingbroke hath seized the wasteful — iii. 4 
in the mighty hold of Bolinglu'oke .. — iii. 4 
the balance of great Bolingbroke .... — iii. 4 

the triinnph of great Bolingbroke — iii. 4 

than Bolingbroke's return to England — iv. I 

and crown to Henry Bolindiriike — iv. 1 

standing before the Sim of Bolingbroke — Iv. 1 

at last out-faced by Bolingbroke"/ — iv. 1 

aprisoner by proud Bolingbroke — v. 1 

Bolingbroke deposed thine intellect.. — v. 1 
the mind of Bolingbroke is changed.. — v. 1 
mounting Bolingbroke ascends my . . — v. 1 
the duke, great Bolingbroke, mounted — v. 2 

God save thee, Bolingbroke — v. 2 

preserve thee! welcome Bolingbroke — v. 2 

to Bolingbroke are we sworn subjects — v. 2 
till Bolingbroke have pardoned thee.. — v. 2 

I am unkinged by Bolingbroke — v. '> 

posting on in Bolingbroke's proud joy — v. h 
Bolingbroke rode on roan Barbary . . — v. .^ 
that Bolingbroke was on his back .... — v. .'» 
and tired by jauncing Bolingbroke .. — v. 5 
ingi'ate and cankered Bolingliroke . . 1 Henry IF. i. 3 
tins thoi'n, this canker, Bolingliroke.. — i. 3 

to gall and pinch tliis Bolingbroke . . — 1.3 

vile politician, Bolingbroke, in Richard's — i. 3 

this king of smiles, this Bolingbroke — 1. 3 

liath Henry Bolingbroke made head — iii. i 

■where? which is Bolingbroke — iii. 2 

for life under great Bolingbroke 2HenryIF. 1. 1 

beat heaven with blessing'Bolingbroke — i. 3 

the admired heels of Bolingbroke — _ 1. 3 

my cousin Bolingbroke ascends my.. — iii. 1 
when Harry Bolingbroke, and he.... — iv. 1 

from the breast of Bolingbroke — iv. 1 

since miscarried under Bolingbroke.. — iv. 1 
succeeding his father Bolingbroke ..\HcnryVI. ii. 5 

Roger Bolingbroke, the conjurer 'IHennj FI. 1. 2 

Henry Bolingbroke, duke of Lancaster — " ii. 2 
in the reign of Bolingbroke — 11.2 

BOLSTER— pillow, there the bolster. Tarn. ofSh. iv. 1 
ever mortal eyes do see them bolster . . Othello, iii. 3 

BOLT— with his o^vn bolt Tempest, v. 1 

I'll make a shaft or a bolt on't Merry Wives, iii. 4 

bolts and shackles ! Tuelfth Night, 11. 5 

thy sharp and sulphurous bolt. . . . Mea.forMea. 11. 2 

lay bolts enough upon him — v. 1 

yet marked I wdicre the bolt ... . Mid. N. Dream, il. 2 

according to the fool's bolt, sir Asyc^i Like it, v. 4 

a fool's bolt is soon shot Henry V. iii. 7 

corresponslve and fulfilling bolts. Tj-o/i^Cres. (prol.) 

charge thy sulphui; vdth a bolt Coriolanus, v. 3 

accidents, and bolts up change Ant. fyCleo. v. 2 

'twas but a bolt of nothing Cymbeline, iv. 2 

to pick that bolt, then, free for ever .. — v. 4 
the thunderer, whose bolt you know — v. 4 

no bolts for the dead — v. 4 

to oppose the bolt against Lear, ii. 4 

BOLTED— bolted by the northern. Winter'sTale, iv. 3 

so finely bolted, didst thon seem Henry V. 11. 2 

ill-schooled in liolted language Coriolanus, iii. 1 

BOLTER— nurde bolters of them \HenryIF. iii. 3 

BOLTING— the bolting. Havel (rep.). 7'ro//..S-C)-. i 1 

BOLTING-HUTCH— 
that bolting-hutch of beastliness 1 Henry I F. ii. 4 

BOiMBAST— bombast, and as lining . Love's L. L. v. 2 
now, my sweet creature of bombast. .IHc^r?///'. ii. 4 
them, with a bombast circrunstance Othetio, i. 1 

BON-^French lord. Monsieur le Bou?.^/e7■. of Fen.i. 2 
que je suls ie bon escolier Henry F. iii. 4 

II est fort bon Anglois — iii. 1 



BON 



[71 ] 

BON DAGE— ail iitle and foul bondage Lmr,i. 1 

bondage is hoarse, and may not Horn. ^- Jul. ii. 2 

doting on liisown oljscciuious bondage ..Olhclln, i. 1 

BONDAiAID— to malse abondmaid.. Tam.nrsh. ii. 1 

BONDMAN— in a bondman's key.jWcr. <>f I'l'iiin; i. 3 
witli liini liis l)ondman, all as mad.. Coj«. of Krr. v. 1 

yonv bondman, Uromio? (rfp.) — v- 1 

so every bondman in liis own \\tmiX..Jul. Ctesar, i. 3 
spealt this before a willing bondman — i. 3 
so base, tliat would be a bondman.... — iii. 2 
checked like a bondman; all his faidts — iv. 3 

with rindarus his bondman — ..7-^ 

my cnfrancliised bondman .... Antony ^- Cleo. iii. ! 1 

BONDiMEN— liave been as bondinen . .iHninj I'l. i. 3 
and make yom- bondmen tremble../"//".'.' Cifsar, iv. 3 
and l)owed like bondmen, kissing Cxsar's — v. 1 
for these base bondmen to tlie joke. .Tiius ,4iid. iv. 1 

BOND-SLAVE— tliy bond-slave. . TwdjVi Night, ii. 5 

of law is bond-slave to tlie law Ricliard II. ii. 1 

bond-slaves, and pagans, shall our Ottteilo, 1. 2 

BONE— fill all tliy bones with aches Tempest, i. 2 

of )iis bones are coral made — i. 2 (song) 

no further, sir; my old bones ache — iii. 3 

■will never out of my bones — v. ] 

■weave tlieh- thread ■with bones . . Twelfth Night, ii. 4 
where my bones shall be thrown . . — n. \ (song) 

tliy bones are lioUow MeasureforMeamre^ i. 2 

in the traveller's bones: he will not. . — iv. 2 

and sing it to her bones Much Ado, v. I 

now, unto thy bones good night — v. 3 

let us have the ton"s and the bones. M(d. N. Dr. iv. 1 
laus deo, l)one intelligo. Bone? (re2)).Love'sL.L. v. 1 

as white as whales bone — v. 2 

the carved bone face on a flask — v.2 

beat not the bones of tlie biu'ied — v.2 

deatli's head "witli a bone in his . , Mer. of Venice^ i. 2 

my flesh, blood, bones, and all — iv. 1 

when virtue's steely bones look All's Well,i. 1 

the tomb of honoured bones indeed .. — ii. 3 

to lay my bones tliere IVinter's Tale, iv. 1 

to lie close by his honest bones — iv. 3 

my bones bear witness, that since.... — iv. •! 

tlve guardian of tlieir bones Macbeth,\i. 4 

tliy uones are marrowless — iii. 4 

till from my bones my flesh — v. 3 

fair fall tlie bones that took King John,_i. 1 

lay before this town our royal bones — ii. 1 

kiss thy detestable bones — iii. 4 

my soul, and England keep my bones — iv. 3 
for the bare-picked bone of majesty. . — iv. 3 
womb inherits naught but bones. . . . Ricliard II. ii. 1 

as paste and cover to our bones — }!!• 2 

no nand of blood and bone can gripe — V-X'^ 
upon thy royal grandsire's bones .... — iii. 3 

tlielr bones with industry 2Henry IV. iv. 4 

goodman death ! goodman bones — 'v. 4 

or lay these bones in an unworthy — Henry V._ i. 2 
desperate of their bones, ill-favouredly — iv. 2 

acliieve me, and then sell my bones — iv. 3 

leave their valiant bones in France .... — iv. 3 
fined tliese bones of mine for ransom .. — iy. 7 

till bones, and flesh, and sinews 1 Henry VI. iii. 1 

to pieces, hack their bones asunder . . — iv. 7 

by these ten bones, my lords iHenry VI. i. 3 

marrow, bones, and all SHenry VI. iii. 2 

that Warwick's bones may keep — v. 2 

mocked the dead bones that lay — Richard III. i. 4 

then would I liide my bones — iv. 4 

tliat his bones, when he has ran . . Henry VIII. in. 2 
to lay his weary bones among ye ... . — iv. 2 
nerve and bone of Greece .... Troilus frCressida, i. 3 
tarre the mastifis on, as 'twere their bone — _i. 3 
more than he has beat my bones .... — ii. 1 

■vigour of bone, desert in service — iii. 3 

and such an aclie in my bones — v. 3 

thy heart, thy sinews, and th3; bone — v. 9 
a goodly medicine for my aching bones — v. 1 1 
not for me, yet for your aching bones — v. 1 1 
that you may live only in bone. . Timon ofAth. iii. 5 

I feel't upon my bones — iii. ti 

consumptions sow in hollow bones of man — iv. 3 

flesh slide from tlie bone — i.'v. 3 

or I shall sliake tliy bones out Coriolanus, iii. 1 

is oft interred with tlieir bones ..Julius Ccesar, iii. 2 

my bones would rest, that have — v. .5 

within my tent his bones to-night .... — ■y. 5 

and the dryness of his bones Antony % Cleo. i. 4 

this earthly prison of their bones., raus^jirfron. i. 2 

till Mutius' bones be buried — i. 2 

there Ue thy bones, sweet Mutius. ... — i. 2 

I will grind your bones to dust — v. 2 

go grind their bones to powder small — v. 2 

tor "a monument upon thy bones Pericles, iii. 1 

strike her young bones, yon taking Lear, ii. 4 

and tear thy flesh and bones — ii;. 2 

her whip, of cricket's bone Romeo ^-Juliet.i. 4 

my bones ache! what a jaunt (rc'p.) — ii. 5 
is this the poultice for my acliing bones — ii. ■> 

with dead men's rattling bones — iv. I 

the bones of all iny buned ancestors — iv. 3 
with some great kinsman's bone .... — iv. 3 
misery had worn him to the bones . . — v. I 
thy canonized bones, hearsed in death. . Hamlet, i. 4 

canst mutine in a matron's bones — iii. i 

nor hatchment, o'er his bones — iv. 5 

did these bones cost no more the breeding — v. 1 
and hell gnaw his bones I Othello, iv. 2 

BONE-ACHE-rather, the bone-ache!. Troi/. <5-Cr. ii. 3 
incurable bone-ache, and the rivalled — v. 1 

BONELESS — from his boneless gums . . Macbeth, i. 7 

BONFIRE- nothing but bonfires... Winter's 7'u/c,v. 1 

way to the everlasting bonfire Macbeth, ii. 3 

an everlasting bunflre light \ Henry IV. iii. 3 

bonfires in France forthwith I am . . 1 Henry VI. i. 1 
command tlie citizens make bonfires .. — i. 6 

burn, bonfires, clear and bright illcnnjVl.y. 1 

some to make bonfires, each man oiliritu, ii. 2 

BON JOUU-bon jour, monsieur le Beau.. fsv"'-''-'',.!- 2 

we'll give your grace bon jom* Tftu^Aii<tr<iii.\. 2 

signior Komcu, bon jour! Romeo <5" Juliet, ii. 4 



BOO 



BON— bon Dieu! Ics langiies dcs hommes. //t'li. V. v. 2 
( > their bons, their boiisV Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 4 

BON A— but tills: 'tis bona terra ....2HenryVl. iv. 7 
iisk tlie liulv liona tnr thy (|ueen ....'iHenryVI. ii. 6 

tluit vii'tuiins Uuly Bi.u:i — iii. 3 

and I:idv l>"n;\, hear nic spLiik — iii. 3 

hi.-' love'iinto inn- sister Bona — iii. 3 

iiuk'.'is tlio lailv Bona quit his pain .. — iii. 3 

that iMinn shall be wife to — iii. 3 

I will revenge his wrong to lady Bona — iii. 3 

how sh:ill Bona be revenged — iii. 3 

and mine, fair lady Bona, joins — iii. 3 

about the marriage of the lady Bona — iv. 1 
what said hid.y Bona to my marriage — iv. 1 

and the huly Bona, send to him — iv. 3 

betrothed (ii Buna, sister to the king.. TS/rt. //7. iii. 7 

BOi\A-l{0BA— the bona-robas \veie.2HenryIV. iii. 2 
slie was then a bona-roba — iii. 2 

BOND— his words are bonds .... Tiro Gen. of Ver. ii. 7 

since bonds dis^'rai'cd them TwelfthNight, iii. 1 

a contract of eternal bond of love — v. 1 

yon make mv bunds still greater.. Jl/ra./'orMra. v. 1 
for everlasting bond of fellowship . . Mid. N. Dr.i. 1 

I Avould, I had your bond (;'cp.) — iii. 2 

I think, I may take Ids bond. ..Merch.of yenicc,i. 3 
Avell then, your bond; and let me see — i. 3 

sc:xl me there your single bond — i. 3 

I'll seal to such a boiid, and say — i. 3 

a month before this bond expires — i. 3 

thrt'C times tlie v.alue of this bond — — i. 3 
ycL', Sliyloek, I will seal unto tliis bond — i. 3 

direction for this merry bond — _i. 3 

to seal love's bonds new made — ii. (i 

tor the Jew's bond, which he hath . . — ii. 8 
to his bond: he was wont to call (rep.) — iii. 1 
forfeiture, of justice, and his bond .. — iii. 2 
si-K thousand, and deface the bond . . — iii. 2 

my bond to the Jew is forfeit — iii. 2 (_let.) 

inv bond: speak not against my bond — iii. 3 

that I will have my bond — iii. 3 

my bond; I will not hear thee (_rep.) — iii. 3 
no spe:iking; I willhave my bond .. — 
!ia\'c the due and forfeit of my bond — 
not draw them, I would have my bond — 

the seal from off my bond — 

do you confess the bond? I do — 

penalty and forfeit of my bond — 

let melook upon the bond — 

win-, t!n^ bond is forfeit — 

bid me tear the bond — 

I ^ta.\" here on my bond — 

here a|ii:earetli due npuii the bond.. .. — 

so s'ays the bond; doth it not — 

is i t su nnm inated in the bond? — 

cannot find it; 'tis not so in the bond — 
this bond doth give thee here no jot.. — 
take then thy bond, take thou . . . . : — 

pay the bond thrice, and let — 

have merely justice, and his bond .. — 

than the natural bond of sisters As you Like it, i. 2 

I ilessed bond of board and bed . . — v. 4 (song) 
my love hath in't a bond All's Well, i. 3 

frospcrity's the very bond of love. Winter'sTale, iv. 3 
will discharge my bond Comedy of Errors, iv. 1 

1 am here entered m bond for you.... — iv. 4 
with my teeth my bonds in sunder .. — v. 1 

I will loose his bonds, and gain — v. 1 

that great bond which keeps me ^dls.. Macbeth, iii. 2 

and take a bond of fate — iv. 1 

I tore them from their bonds KingJoim, iii. 4 

commit them to their bonds — iii. 4 

and rotten parclunent bonds Richard II. ii. 1 

there is my bond of faith, to tie — iv. 1 

'tis nothing but some bond, that he .. — v. 2 

■with a bond that he is bound to — v. 2 

three or foiu' bonds of forty pounds .\HenryIV. iii. 3 
would not take Ins bond and yom-s ..2HenryIV. i. 2 

coupled in bonds of perpetuity I Henry VI. iv. 7 

cancel his bond of life Richard III. iv. 4 

aught, my bond to wedlock Henry VIII. ii. 4 

notmthstanding that your bond of duty — iii. 2 

should with a bond of air Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 3 

tied with the bonds of heaven — v. 2 

the bonds of heaven are slipped — v.2 

fi tr 'tis a bond in men Timon of Athens, i. 1 

to trust iTi,an on his oath or bond.. — i. 2 (gi-ace) 

take the bunds along with you — ji- 1 

denianrts of ilate-broke bonds — ii. 2 

all bond and [irivilege of nature break . . Corlol. v. 3 
grace in e:iiiti\'e bnn'ils his chariot.. /w/ms Caesar, i. 1 
what otiier bund, than secret Romans — ii. 1 

within tile build of marriage — ii. 1 

I knew it for m.y bond Antony ^ Cleopatra, i. 4 

from a next with bonds of death Cymbeline_,i. 2 

lovers, and men in dangerous bonds — iii. 2 

no bond, but to do just ones — v. 1 

and cancel these cold bonds — v. 4 

think lier bond of chastity ciiute cracked — v. b 
save these in bonds; let them be .... — v. 5 
I love your majesty according to my bond.Lrar, i. 1 

the boinl cracked between son — i. 2 

how manifold and strong a bond — ii. 1 

of nature, bond of childhood — ii. 4 

like sanctified and pious bonds Hamlet ^ i. 3 

BONDAGE-hath into bondage brought. Tempest, iii. 1 

as bondage e'er of freedom — iii. I 

to increase your bondage. . Measure forMeasure, iii. 2 

thy liberty into bondage As you Like it, v. 1 

to be proiid of thy bondage All's Well, ii. 3 

'tis a liard bondage, to become — iii. .5 

will also be the bondage of certain.. ''7jii'<7r'.s' T. iv. 3 

east off his chains of bundacc nirhard I [. i. 3 

bimilnge liapiiy, to be i 1l' i -r,,.) . . i ;;,.,;,-,/ Vl. v. 3 

Cassias from llondaire will iU:h\^:r...n,!.,j!:i':rs„r, i. 3 

free from the bomUiL'e yuo are in — v. r> 

languish for asssured b(>nda'j:c? Cymbeline, i. 7 

TOWS of women of no more bondage be — ii. 4 

and sing our bondage freely — iii. 3 

most welcome, bondage ! — ' v. 4 

not born for bondage — v. 



BONNE— le gcntilhomme de bonne Henry V. iv. 4 

je suisgentilbonime de bonne rnaison — iv. 4 
BONNET— his bonnet in Germany. . Mrr. nf Ven. i. 2 

your bonnet nnlianded As imu l.lkr //, iii. 2 

olf gnes his liunnet to an oysterweiieli. /'''>■/""■'/ //. i. -1 

1 will wear it in my bonnet lli'iiniV. iv. 1 

with this bonnet in" thy hand Carivliuuis, iii. 2 

your bonnet to his right use //./"'/ f, v. 2 

BONNETED-to tlie iieoi)Ie, bonnet'.d ...Coriol. ii. 2 

BONNY— be blithe and bonny. .iU/.cA ,((/rj,ii. :S(sung) 

bonny Kate, and sometimes Kate..7'am('"e'o/.S. ii. 1 

but for my bonny Kate — iii. 2 

the bonny beast he loved so well .... 2 Henry VI. v. 2 

a cherry lip, a bonn.y eye Richm d lll.i. 1 

bonny sweet Robin is allm3' joy. //«/»'/•/, iv. .'j (song) 

BONO'S— bonos dies, sir Toby TirelfihM^ld, iv. 2 

BONVLLLE— ofthelordBonville ..ZlienryVl.iv. 1 
BONY — the bony priser of the .... As you Like it, ii. 3 

BOOK — knowing I loved my books Tempest, i. 2 

here, kiss the book — ii. 2 

swear to that; kiss the book — ii. 2 

I'll to my book ; for yet — iii. I 

having first seized his books — iii. 2 

remember first to possess his books . . — iii. 2 

biu'n but his books — iii. 2 

I'll drown my book — 'v. 1 

upon some book I love Tn-o Gen. of Verona, i. 1 

I n.ad my book of songs Merry Withes, i. 1 

yon have not the book of riddles .... — i. 1 

book of riddles ! why, did — i. 1 

I'll be sworn on a book, she — . !• '* 

and a giiod student from his book — iii. 1 

nothing in the world at his book — iv. 1 

word for word, without book TwelfthNight, i. 3 

I have unclasped to thee the book even — i. 4 

that cons state without book — ii. 3 

I'll be supposed upon a book Mea.for Mea. ii. 1 

the gentleman is not in your books . . Much Ado, i. 1 
tu-e the hearer with a book of words — _i. 1 
in my chamber window lies a book . . — ii. 3 
dothwan-ant the tenor of my book . . — iv. 1 
a whole book full of these quondam — v. 2 

wi'itten in love's richest book . . Mid. N. Dream, ii. 3 

painfully to pore upon a book Love's L. Lost, i. 1 

base antliority from others' books. ... — i. 1 

dainties that are bred in a book — iv. 2 

and makes his book thine eyes — iv. 2 

where is a book? that I may — iv. 3 

each of .yon hath forsworn his book .. — iv. 3 
the ground, the books, the academes — iv. 3 

we nave forsworn our books — iv. 3 

they are the books, the arts — iv. 3 

doth otter to swear upon a book. . Merch. of Ven. ii. 2 
we tinned o'er many books together — iv. 1 (let.) 
trees, books in the running brooks.^.': you Like it^ ii. 1 

these trees shall be m.y books — iii. 2 

by the book ; as you have books for . . — 'v. 4 
my books, and instruments, shall be. Tarn. ofSh. i. 1 
and ply his book ; welcome his friends — i. I 

all books of love, see that at any — i. 2 

poetr3% and other books, good ones .. — i. 2 
packet of Greek and Latin books .... — ii. 1 
and you tlie set of books — ii. 1 

put me in thy books — ii. 1 

father prays yon leave yoiu' books .. — iii. 1 

the priest let'fall the book — !!!■ ^ 

priest and book, and book and priest — iii. 2 
name put in the book of virtue . . Winter's Tale, iv. 2 

is as a book, where men may read Macbeth, \_. 5 

can in this book of beauty read King John, ii. 2 

bell, book and candle shall not — iii. 3 

be blotted from the book of life Richard II. i. 3 

damned in the book of heaven — iv. 1 

see the very book indeed where — iv. 1 

1 will unclasp a secret book MIenrylV.i. 3 

I'll be sworn upon all the books in .. — ji. 4 
by that time will our book, I think . . — iii- 1 

as far in the devil's book, as thou iHeniylV. [i. 2 

copy and book, that fashioned — ii. 3 

that one might read the book of fate — iii • 1 

shut the book, and sit him down .... — iii. 1 

turning your books to graves — j^' ^ 

seal this lawless bloody book — iv. 1 

how deep you were within the books — iy. 2 

for in the book of Numbers Henry V. i. 2 

book our dead, and then to bury them — iy. 7 

my study and my books be false 1 Henry VI. ii. 4 

I'll note you in my book of memory — ii. -l 

is my study, and my books — ^v. 1 

yom' names from books of memory. .2Henry VI. \. 1 
such ashy God's book are adjudged.. — .ii. 3 

h' as a book in his pocket — iv. 2 

because my book preferred me — iv. 7 

what, at your book so hard? SHfiin/ ''' .>'• 6 

made him my book, wherein Ricliard III. iii. H 

and, see, a book of prayer in his — iii. 7 

a book of prayers on their pillow lay — iv. 3 
for, by the book, he should have braved — ^v. 3 
a beggar's book oiitworth's a noble's. //£'7i7'i/r7//._i. 1 
thou learn a prayer without book. . Troil.'^- Ores. ii. 1 

O like a book of "sport thou'lt — iv- 5 

when comes your book forth Timon of Athens, i. 1 

his land's put to their books — ..j- 2 

is enrolled in Jove's own book Coriolanus, m. 1 

the book of his good acts — v.2 

write his speeches in their books ..Julius Ctesar^ i. 2 

here's the book I sought for so — I'v. 3 

in nature's infinite book of secresy...-l»i(. S,- Cleo.\. 2 

yet keep his book uncrossed Cymbeline, iii. 3 

a book ? O rare one! — v. 4 

neck, sir, is pen, book, and counters . . — y.i 
down to throw my books and fly . TilusAndron. iv. 1 
some book there is that she desires .. — iv. 1 
[Col. A'»i/.]— what book? why lifts she up — iv. 1 
Lucius, what book is that she tosseth — iv. 1 

her face, the book of praises Pericles, i. 1 

who has a book of all that monarchs do . . — i. 1 

thy pen from lender's books Lear, iii. 4 

you have leai-nt it without book. . Romeo «§- Juliet, i. 2 
tills precious book of love — i. .1 



BOO 



[72] 



BOOK-that book in man3''s eyes dotli. . ilom..?-. 

you kiss In' the book. Madam — 

!is sc'IiooUh'ivs t'niLU their books — 

tluit li.'liU In' ihc book of arithmetic — 



luntainins srieh vile — iii. 2 

wrilwiMi 111-- ill sour misfortune's book — v. 3 

all -;i\\s ..ri.nok:, :ill r.M-nis Hamlet, i. S 

wiHiin th" bilk ;nhl \Mlinne of my brain — i. 5 

rrail oil this linnk: iluit slunvof sucli — iii. 1 

the bloodv book of la'.v vo\i sliall yourself. 0(/ie«o, i. 3 
this mo.-tgoodlv book, "iiuide to write .... — iv. 2 

EOOKE])-lct it be booked witli iHeim/II'.w. 3 

BOOICISII— t am not bookish. . . . mnler's Tale, iii. 3 

■ft-hose bookisli rule hath yulled -IHenryVl. i. 1 

unless tlie liookish theoriek, wherein Othello, i. 1 

EOOK-IIATE— and his book-mates.. Lore's L.L. iv 1 
BOOK- MEN— Navarre and his book-men — _ii. 1 
vou two are book-men: can you tell .. — iv. 2 
BOOK-OATH-now to thy l)ook-oath.2 Henri/ IV. ii. 1 
BOON— a smaller boon than tliis. Two Gen. ofVer. v. 4 

to grant one boon that I — v. 4 

I'll beg one boon, and then be gone.R/r/inrd II. iv. 1 

take exceptions to my boon ZHeiiry f'l. iii. 2 

I beseech yon, grant me this boon.. ii/c/iarii If/, i. 2 
a boon, my sovereign, for my service. . — ii. 1 
ask of Cymbeline wliat bouii thou ..Ct/mbeline, v. 5 

my boon is, that this sentieman — v, A 

I beg this boon, witli tears TiiusAmlron. ii. 4 

this, as mv last lio.'n, -i\e \w .I'erides, v. 2 (Gower) 
isbyyon/fancy's til im'.iuI bnon — v. 2 (Gower) 

mv boon I make it, tUnl miu l;now Lenr, iv. 7 

^vf^v, this is not a boon! tis as I should.O;/:cHo, lii. 3 
B>)0'|{— wouldst thou have, boor?...l/ci);/ Wires, iv. f> 

let lioors ami franklins say it n'rnier's Tnle, v. 2 

BOOKD— [h'«/.]-I'U boordhira presently. Hamie', ii. 2 
BDOlUSll— whieliin the Ixiorisn U.Ast/oii Likeit,v. 1 
BOOT— are over hoots in love .. . . Two Gen. of fer. i. 1 

over the boots? — i. 1 

nav, give me not the boots — i. 1 

I'll not, for it boots thee not — i. 1 

I'll wear a boot to make it — v. 2 

liiiuor fishermen's boots with Merry Wives, iv. a 

and so be these boots too TirelflhNigld, i. 3 

could I, with boot, change for — Hea.forUea. ii. 4 
to run into't, boots and spurs and a.\l. AW slVell,\\. 5 
he will look upon his boot and sing.. — iii. 2 
a pair of boots that have been . . . Taming of Sh. iii. 2 

wliiles your boots are gi-een — iii- 2 

off witli my boots, you rogues — iv. 1 

j'onr stomachs, for it is no boot — v. 2 

grace to boot! of this make no H'inter'sTale.i. 2 

it slial I scarce boot me to say — iii- 2 

yet hold tiiee, there's some boot — iv. 3 

without boot? what a boot is here — — iv. 3 

and the rich East to boot Maclelh, iv. 3 

we bid ; there is no boot Richard II. \. 1 

it boots thee not to be compassionate — ..i. 3 

it boots not to complain — iii. 4 

give me my boots, I say; saddle — v. 2 

bring me my hoots, I will unto — v. 2 

their boots. What (repealed) 1 Hennjir.n. 1 

home without bouts, and in foul — iii. I 

and my soul to boot, he hath more . . — iii. 2 
and wears his boot vei-y smooth — iHenry IV- ]\- 4 

appliances and means to boot — iii- 1 

come, off witli your boots — v. 1 

get on thy boots; we'll ride all night — v. 3 
Boot, boot, master Shallow, I know . . — y. 3 

make boot upon the summer's Henry V. i. 2 

talk no more of flight, it is no boot..l Henry fl. iv. ti 

his mate, make boot of this 2Henry VI. iv. 1 

nor it boots thee not, proud queen . .ZHenry F/. i. 4 

it boots not to resist both wind — iv. 3 

young York he is but boot Richard III iv. 4 

this, and Saint George to boot — v. 3 

to change would give'au eye to boot . Troll. <§- Cr. i. 2 

I'll give you boot, I'll give — iv. 5 

and I will boot thee with what Ant.Sr Cteo.n. b 

but now make boot of his distraction — iv. 1 

to boot, my son, who shall take Cymbelinc,_i. 6 

voice of unpaved eunuch to boot .... — ii. 3 
and mine to boot, be darted on thee . . — Iv. 2 
what boots it thee, to call thysM.. TilusAndron. v. 3 

nor hoots it me to say, I honour him Pericles, i. 2 

pull off my boots; harder, harder Lear, iv. G 

the benison of heaven to boot, and boot .... — iv. B 

with boot, and such additions — v. 3 

BOOT-HOSE— a kersey boot-hose.. Tammg-o/S. iii. 2 
EOOTIES-drops booties inmy mouth. >rn?./er'sr. iv. 3 

BOOTLESS— to a bootless inquisition T.^mpest, i. 2 

and bootless make the breathless . . Uld. N. Dr. ii. 1 
to catch the tiger: bootless speed — — ii. 2 
his prodigal wits in bootless rhymes. Lom'sL.L. v. 2 
no more with bootless prayers. .. */er. of Venice, ia. 3 

and bootless 'tis to tell you 1 Henry IV. \. 1 

have 1 sent liini, bootless home — iii. 1 

we may as bootless spend our vain . . Henry V. iii. 3 
witli bootless labour swim against ..Zllenry VI. i. 4 

bootless is flight, they follow us — ii. 3 

bootless are ijlaints, and cureless .. — ii. 6 

Clitford, reiient in bootless penitence — _ii. (> 
des|iat".h; 'tis bootless to cxoXaim. . liirhardlll. iii. 4 

it shall be therefore bootless Henry VIII. ii. 4 

dotli not Brutus bootless kneel JuliusCresar, iii. 1 

all bootless to them, they'd not pity. Titus .ind. iii. 1 
in bootless prayer have they been held — iii. 1 

but bootless is your sight Pericles, v. 1 

very bootless. Edmund is dead tmr, v. 3 

rob's himself, that spends a bootless grief. Olhelln, i. 3 

BOOTY— when tiiey have the booty . . 1 Henry IV. i. 2 

thieves upon their conquered booty . .3Wcnry ''/. i. 4 

a i.aroel of oiu- hopeful l)ooty Titus A.-idron. ii. 3 

BO-FEEP— king should plav bo-peep. Lmci. 4 (song) 

BORACIIIO— what news, Borachio? . . Much.Ulo, i. 3 

term me Bor.achio \_Col. lint. Claudio] — ii. 2 

Borachio. Pray write down, Bora,ehio — iv. 2 

my brotlier's men bound! Borachio.. — v. 1 

BOftDER— the border of this horizon. 3 Henry F7. iv. 7 

the borders maritime lack . . Antony Sr Cleopalra, i. 4 

BOKDEKED— cannot be bordered Lear, iv. 2 



BORDERER— the pilfering borderers .. Henry V. i. 2 
BOK E— the love my people bore me .... Tempest, i. 2 

bore us some leagues to sea — i. 2 

O, that j'ou bore the mind tliat I do .. — ii. 1 
loveleverhoremy daughter.. '/"woGen. 1/ Ter. iii. 1 

she bore a mind that envy Twelfih N'-^hi, ii. 1 

bore many gentlemen, myself .... Men. for Mea. i. 5 

the clown" bore it, the fool Lore's L. L™/, iv. 3 

and thy father bore it As you Like ii, iv. 2 (song) 

the love I bore your queen IVinier'sTalc, iii. 2 

bound me, bore me thence .... Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

that bore thee at a burden — v. 1 

the queen, that bore thee Mache'h, i v. 3 

with a little pin bores through Richard II. iii. 2 

as the soldiers bore dead 1 Henry I V.i. 3 

and thus I bore my point — ii. 4 

a lute-case ; bore it twelve Henry V. in. 2 

he bore him in the thickest ZHenry VI. ii. 1 

some tardy erijiple bore Richard III. ii. 1 

he bores me witli some trick Henry VIII. i. 1 

obedience he still bore your grace.... — iii. 1 
tlu-ough the window-bars hoTe.Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

contiiied into an augre's bore Coriolanus, iy. 6 

mortal a jnirpose, as then each bore. . Cymbeline, i. 5 

or she, that bore you, was no — J. 7 

Bhoulii All the bores of hearing — iii. 2 

whom she bore in hand to love — v. 5 

whose towers bore heads so high Pericles, i. 4 

bore the commission of my place Lear, v. 3 

the love I bore my cousin Tybalt.. A'owi. ,5- Jul. iii. h 

but he, which bore my letter — v. 3 

they bore him barefaced Hamlet, iv. 5 (song) 

too'light for the bore of the matter — iv. 6 (letter) 

a while tliejr bore her up — iv. 7 

he was the first that ever bore arms — v. 1 

BOREAS— let the ruflian Boreas . . Troil. B,- Cress, i. 3 

BORED— earth may be bored Mid.N.Dream, ii\. 2 

BOREST-thou borest thine ass on thy back. Lear, i. 4 
BORING— the ship boring the moon.X'i/i^er'sr. iii. 3 

BORN— if he be not born to be Tempest, i. 1 

where was she born — _ i. 2 

a devil, a born devil — iv. 1 

a gentleman born, master parson . . Merry Wives, i. 1 
yet I live like a poor gentlem.an bom — _i. 1 

the first hour I was born — ii. 2 

for I was bred and born TwelflhNight, i. 2 

were we not born under Taurus — i. 3 

can tell thee where that saying was born — i. h 

both born in an horn' — ii. 1 

some are born great — ii. 5 (letter) 

some are born great — iii. 4 

why some are born great — y. 1 

where were you born, friend? . . Meas.for Meas. ii. 1 
in progress to be h.atched and born . . — ii. 2 
than ray son should be unla\vfully born — iii. 1 
usurp the beggary he was never born to — iii. 2 
a Bohemian born; but here nm-sed . . — iv. 2 
say'st thou art), born under Satiu-n . . Much Ado, i. 3 

I was born to speak all mirth — ii. 1 

you were born in a merry horn- — ii. 1 

a star danced, and under that I was born — ii. 1 
no, I was not horn under a rhyming — v. 2 
was I to tills keen mockery born . . Mid. N. Dr.ii. 3 
and vows so born, in their nativity . . — iii. 2 
every man with his affects is born. Loue's L. Lost, i. 1 

you were born to do me shame — iv. 3 

the cause why we were born — iv. 3 

therefore is shg born to make — iv. 3 

was for my service born — v. 2 

whereof it is born, I am to learn. . Mer. of Venice, i. 1 
the fairest creature northward born. . — ii. 1 
of spleen, and born of madness . . As youLike it, iv. 1 
it was a crest ere thou wast born . . ^ iv. 2 (song) 

wast horn i' the forest here f — y. 1 

that we, the poorer born . . ._. All's Well, i. 1 

you were born under a charitable — i. 1 

must needs be born under Mars — i. 1 

a good woman born but every blazing — i. 3 

this to our blood is born; it is — _i. 3 

challenges itself honour's born — ii. 3 

is, as 'twere born so. Take her — ij. 3 

I was well born, nothing acquainted — iij. 7 
born in Verona, old Antonio's son. Taming of S.i. 2 
his name is Licio, born in JMantua .. — ii. 1 

I am he am born to tame you — ii. 1 

ere he was bom, desire yet their life.. Winter''s T. i. 1 

have since then been born to us — i. 2 

than question how 'tis born — _i. 2 

by age, or thou wert born a fool — ii. 1 

d, that ever I was born — iv. 2 

these seven years, he horn another such — iv. 3 

some new grace will be born — v. 2 

because I was no gentleman born (rep.) — v. 2 
if any, born at EiJliesus, be seen. . Comedy of Err. i. 1 
if any Syraeusan born, come to the bay — i. 1 
in Syracusa was I born ; and wed. ... — i. 1 
for none of woman born shaU Macbeth, iv. 1 



was he not born of woman? — v. 3 

no man, that's born of woman — v. 3 

what's he, that was not born of woman? — v. 7 
thou wast bom of woman; but swords — v. 7 
must not yield to one of woman born. . — v. 7 

being of no woman bom, yet I — v. 7 

a gentleman, born in Northamptonshire. ../o/m, i. 1 

being younger born, doth he lay claim — i. I 

was thy elder brother born — ii. 1 

natura'lly born to fears — iii. 1 

not such a gracious creature bom — iii. 4 

this act, so evilly born, shall cool — iii. 4 

were born to see so sad an hour — v. 2 

for you are born to set a form — v. 7 

we were not born to sue Richard II. i. I 

wherefore was I born? if tliat -~ ii. 3 

what, was I born to this — iii. 4 

by man, wast born to bear — v. 5 

been born. I say, tlie earth (iep.)..\ Henry IV. iii. 1 

I was not born a yieUler — v. 3 

my lord, I was bom about three 'illenry IV.i.-Z 

to'brother born, a household cruelty — iv. 1 

this Ily di-a sou of war is born — iv. 2 



Bon 

BO RN-success of mischief shall be born .2Hen.lV,iv.2 
where Alexander the pig was born . . Henry V. iv. 7 
Alexander the Great was horn in Macedon — iv. 7 
Henry, born at Monmouth (rep.) . , 1 Henry VI. iii. 1 
born to eclipse thy life this afternoon — iv. 5 

young Talbot was not born to be — ■ iv. 7 

born blind, an't please your grace ..IHenryVl. ii. 1 

where wert thou born — ii. I 

O, horn so; master — ii. 1 

if thou hadst been born blind — ii. 1 

for you are more nobly born — ii. 3 

there was he born, uncler a hedge ... . — iv. 2 
this word sallet was born to do me . . — iv. 10 
I am far better horn than is the king — v. 1 

but 'twas ere I was bom ZHenry VI. i. 3 

like men bom to renown — i. 4 

and less than I was bom to — iii. 1 

ay, thou wast born to be a plague.... — v. 5 
the hour that ever tliou wast horn . . — v. 6 
when thou wast born, to signify .... — v. (> 

bless us, he is born with teeth — y. 6 

but I was bom so high Richard III. i. 3 

than the infant that is born to night. . — ii. 1 

she was dead ere thou wast bom — ii. 4 

'tis better to be lowly born Henry VIII. ii. 3 

a stranger, born out of your dominions — ii. 4 
she is noble born; and, like her true. . — ii. 4 

an 'twere a man born in April Troil. <5- Ci-es._i. 2 

and, being bom, his addition shall . . — iii. 2 

would thou hadst ne'er been bom — iy. 2 

we are born to do benefits Timon of.l/hens, i. 2 

made away ere it can be born — .;. 2 

thou wast born a bastard — ii. 2 

sects and factions were newly born . . — iii. !) 

thou wast born to conquer my — iv. 3 

if thou hadst not been born — iv. 3 

surely, this man was bom of woman — iy. 3 

though you were born in Rome Coriolanus, i. 3 

I was born free as Cassar JuliusCcesar, i. 2 

I was not born to die on Brutus' — v. 1 

as this very day was Cassius bom. ... — y. 1 
who's born that day when I forget. . Ant. ^Cleo.i. !> 
for the matter that is then bom in it — ii. 2 

deceased as he was bom Cymbeline, i. 1 

let it die as it was born — i. ii 

timely knowing, the remedy then bom — __i- 7 
why should excuse he born or e'er begot — .'.'.'• ^ 
not born, where't grows; but worn .. — iii. 4 
fly out, and show them princes born — iv. 4 
went hence so soon as they were born 
in Cambria are we born, and gentlemen ■ 

my boy, a Briton born 

who, being born your vassal 

they were not born for bondage 

if you, bora in these latter times. .Peri'cto 
for she was born at sea. I have named — 
may be mannered as she is born — — 
ah me! poor maid, born in a tempest — 
when I was born, the wind was north — 

it was when I was born — 

if you were born to honour, show it now — 

she's born to undo us — ■ 

bom? and wherefore called Marina (rep.) 
died the very minute I was born . 

thou that wast born at sea — y. 1 

better thou hadst not been born Lear, i. 1 

tliat thou wast born with — j. 4 

dowerless took our youngest born — ii. 4 

when we are bom, we cry — iy. ti 

he was not bom to shame Romeo ^- Juliet, iii. 2 

well, we were bom to die — iii. 4 

well-a-day, that ever I was born! — iy. o 

and to the manner born, it is a_ custom.. Hmn'ei, i. 4 

that ever I was bom to set it right — i. 5 

very day that young Hamlet was born — y. 1 

been better have been born a do" Othello, iii. 3 

where he was born, drew all sucJi — ill- "^ 

begot upon itself, born on itself — iii. 4 

would thou hadst ne'er been born .... — iy. 2 

BORNE — have borne bad sons Tempest,!. 2 

have home the humoured letter . . Merry Wives, ii. I 

'tis well borne up Measure for Measure, i v. 1 

when it is borne in high authority — iv. 2 

hath he borne himself penitently . . — iv. 2 

and Ills head borne to Angelo — iy. 2 

he hatli borne himself bej'ond Much Ado, i. I 

the conference was sadly borne — ii- 3 

over-boldly we have borne ourselves. Loiie'i-L.L.y. 2 

still have I borne it with Merchant of Venice, i. 3 

[Co/(i'er] on the now borne brief All's Well, ii. 3 

never tender lady hath borne greiiter . Winter's T. ii. 2 
i'the love that I have borne your father — iv. 3 
which being violently borne upon. Com. of Errors, i. 1 

and borne hence for lielp — v. 1 

that he is borne about invisible — y. 1 

hath borne his faculties so meek Macbeth^ i. 7 

how you were borne in hand — iii. 1 

things have been strangely borne — • iii. G 

he has borne all things well — iii. li 

the tidings, which I have heavily borne — iv. 3 

this must not be thus borne King John, iv. 2 

what penny hath Rome borne — y. 2 

perceives it is but faintlj^ borne Richard II. i. 3 

such wrongs are borne. In him — ii. 1 

himself had borne the crown — iii. 4 

sufferances that you had borne IHenry IV. v. 1 

truly home bet\vixt our armies — v. .5 

I have borne, and borne, and borne .iUenry IV. ii. 1 

like the south borne with black — ii. 4 

ne'er had borne it out of Coventry .. — iv. I 
how this action hath been borne .... — i\'. 4 
that action, hence borne out 



V. 4 
V. .') 

V. 5 
V. 5 
V. 5 

.(Gow.) 



iv. B 



— v. 1 



be all well borne without defeat . 
her sceptre so fantastically borne . 

threaden sails, l>oi"ne with 

thek. -. '• ■ bi-.rbonie 

tll.'V b'. , , • \<-. 



to ill" . 

hitllrrloir 

lo, where yo 



...Henri/ V. i. 2 
— ii. 4 
— iii. (chorus) 



— iv. 1 
— V. (chorus) 



o.i.isiil ii.'lmct. 
10 1 c io tin m against 
son is borne ! 1 Henry VI. iv. 7 



BOR 



[ 73 ] 

BOSOM-throiigh flinty Tartar's liosom. .(((',< f^fH, iv. d 
declining head into liis bosom.. 7'am/H;,'»/'Wi. I (ind.) 

from bounty, fertile Irosom IVinler'sTale, i. 2 

entertainment my Ixisom likes not .. — i. 2 

a iiasti me to harder bosoms — i. 2 

tliou liast cleansed my bosom , ._. — _i. 2 

as boldness from my Ijosom, let it ... . — ii. 2 
you have yom- father's bosom there . . — iv. 3 

shall deceive our bosom interest Macbeth, i. 2 

still keey my bosom frauehised — ii. 1 

that busmess in yoiu- bosoms, whose .... — iii. 1 

■weei) oiu- sad bosoms empty — iv. 3 

not nave such a heart in my bosom — v. 1 

cleanse tlie stuffed bosom of that — v. 3 

into this city's bosom King John, ii. 2 

lives in this" bosom, dearly cherished. — iii. 3 

I would into thy bosom pour my — iii. 3 

upon the bosom of tlie ground — iv. 1 

do take possession of my bosom — iv. 1 

within this bosom never entered — iv. 2 

upon her gentle bosom, and fill up . . — v. 2 

wrestling m thy bosom, do make — v. 2 

so hot a summer in my bosom — v. 7 

through ray binned bosom — v. 7 

best blood chambered in his bosom . . Dkhard II. i. 1 

sins so heavy in his bosom — i. 2 

many miles upon her peaceful bosom — ii. 3 

and m my loyal bosom lies — .ii. 3 

from thy bosom pluck — iii. 2 

write sorrow on the bosom of the earth — iii. 2 
to the bosom of good old Abraham! . . — iv. 1 
to whose flint bosom my condemned — v. 1 

that hangs without thy bosom? — v. 2 

from the traitor's bosom, king — v. 3 

into the bosom creep of that same . AllenrylV.y. 3 
nor honesty, in this bosom of thine . . — iii. 3 
against the bosom of the Prince of Wales — iv. 1 
even in the bosom of our adversaries — y. 5 

reign in all bosoms, that 2HenryIV. i. 1 

whose bosom burns with an incensed — i. 3 

thj' glutton bosom of the royal — i. 3 

there is a thing within my bosom — iv. 1 

a nest of hollow bosoms HennjV. ii. (cho.) 

as if allegiance in their bosoms sat .. — ii. 2 

turn into your bosoms, as dogs — ii. 2 

in Arthur's bosom, if ever man (rep.) — ii. 3 

I and my bosom must debate — iv. 1 

gored the gentle bosom of peace — iv. 1 

accord in their sweet bosoms — v. 2 

and in his bosom spend my 1 Henry Fl. ii. 6 

drawn from thy country's bosom .... — iii. 3 
feeds in the bosom of such great .... — iv. 3 
from his bosom purge this black . .2Henry VI. iii. 3 
is crept into the bosom of the sea .... — iv. 1 

no other bosoms but the score — iv. 7 

throw in the frozen bosoms of our part — y. 2 
issue from the bosom of the boy . . . .'illenry VI. \. i 

I stabbed your fathers' bosoms — if. B 

in the deep bosom of the ocean .... Richard III. i. 1 
live one hour in your sweet bosom . . — i. 2 

that mutinies in a man's bosom — _ i. 4 

of Edward sleep in Abraham's bosom — iv. 3 
all to pieces on thy rocky bosom .... — iv. 4 
ovra points on then- masters' bosoms — v. 1 

in yom' emboweled bosoms — v. 2 

our wrongs in Richard's bosom will — v. 3 

let us be lead within thy bosom — v. 3 

hearts are great within my bosom . . — y. 3 

bosom up my counsel Henry VIII. i. 1 

shook the bosom of my conscience .. — .U' '* 
lie i' the bosom of oru- hard-ruled king — iii. i 

lift their bosoms higher than Trail. <$-Cres.i. 3 

set footing in your generous bosoms — .ii. 2 
passion doth embrace my bosom .... — iii- 2 
that labour on the bosom of this . . Timon of Alh. i. 1 
to gratulate thy plenteous bosom .... — . i. 2 

sow all the Athenian bosoms — iv. 1 

from forth thy plenteous bosom one — iv. 3 

feed him, keep in your bosom — y.\ 

how shall tliis bosom multiplied . . Coriolanus, iii. 1 
no allowance, to your bosom'^ truth — iii. 2 
whose double bosoms seem to wear . . — iv. 3 
my bosom to the thunder-stone ..Julius Ccesar,i. 3 
by and by thy bosom shall partake.. — ii. 1 

tut, I am in tlieir bosoms — v. 1 

search this bosom: stand not to answer — y. 3 
but in my bosom shall she never. , ..Ant. Sj-Cleo. ii. 6 
whose bosom was my crownet .... — iv. 10 

my bosom takes oif my manhood . . Cymbeline, v. 2 

I found this label on my bosom — v. 5 

sheathed my rapier in his bosom. . TilusAndroii.\\. 1 
do hug hini in their melting bosoms — iii. 1 

my dagger in their bosoms — iv. 1 

from her bosom took the enemy's point — v. 3 

inflame love in thy bosom Pericles, iv. 1 

leajis to be gone iiito my mother's bosom — v. 3 
shall to my bosom be as well neighboured. Lcnr,!. 1 
to your' professed bosoms I commit him. . . . — i. 1 

lay comforts to your bosom — ii. 1 

I know you are of her bosom — iv. .'• 

to pluck the common bosom on his side — v. 3 

the frozen bosom of the north Romeo ^Juliet, i. 4 

and sails upon the bosom of the air. . — ii. 3 
sucking on her natural bosom lind . . — ii. 3 

and the third in your bosom — .ii. 4 

thou and my bosom heneefortii shall — iii. 5 
my bosora's'lord sits lightlj' in his . . — v. 1 
thy husband in thy bosom there lies — v. 3 
it mis-sheathed in my daughter's bosom — y. 3 
those thorns that in her bosom lodge .... Hamlet, i . 5 

in lier excellent white bosom — ii. 2 (let.) 

soul of Nero enter this firm bosom — di.2 

O bosom I black as death! — iii. 3 

to tire sooty bosom of such a thing as.. ..Oflu'lio. i. 2 

time to speak yom- bosom freely — iii. I 

swell, bosom, witli thy fraught — iii. 3 

your thought; it doth abuse your bosom — iv. 2 

her hand on her bosom — iv. 3 (song) 

BOSOMED— conjunct and bosomed with ..Lcnr, v. 1 
BOSOX— [Kk?.]— is the master, bosony .. Temins', i. I 



BOT 



BORNE— and all is borne away iUeitryVl.\. 1 

remorselcs.-i, have they borne him henoo — iii. 1 

the raavi.v'ssw.inl Imnie before us — iv. 3 

witll tlK'.-vliurnrbrr..reus — iv. 7 

colours, oltcM liorur ir> Franec 'illenryl'l. i. 1 

never bonir tluv ^ou — i. 1 

I Imvc too Ion- borne voiir !.Unit . .Richanllll. i. 3 

tluit isliardlv horncb.vany - ii. 1 

av, or snrlv borne? Or stran-e .... Trail.fyCrcs. ii. 3 

that is boriie here in the face — iii. 3 

ratlier Troy were borne to Greece ()cp.) — iv. 1 

O, if he had borne the business Coriolanus. i. 1 

either had borne the action — iv. 7 

how iilainlv I have borne this business — y. 3 

till I liave borne this corse Julius Ctesar, iii. 1 

was borne so like a soldier .. Antonys-Cleopatra, i. 4 
by the way, should have borne men — iii. 6 

you have licen nobly borne — iv. 12 

the fool had borne my head Cymbelijic, iv. 2 

and lionours, borne as I wear mine . . — v. 2 
borne her cleanly bv tlie keeper's. TOus Jndron. i\. 1 
miseries are more than may 'oe borne — iii. 1 

may this be borne? as if liis — iv. 4 

I'll' show the virtue I have borne Pericles,n. 1 

whicli botli of them have borne against. . Lear, iii. 1 

the oldest hath borne most — v. 3 

ICol. A"h(.] be borne to burial ..Romeo •^■Juliet, W. I 
borne to that same ancient vault — — iy. 1 

was falsely borne in hand Hamlet, ii. 2 

better, my mother had not borne me — — iii. 1 
he hath borne me on his back a thousand — v. 1 

BOROUGH— met him in boroughs .... 1 Henry IV. iv. 3 
in every borough as we pass along. . .'ilienry VI. ii. 1 

BOKUO\V— sir Thurio borrows.. Tmio Gen.ofVer. ii. I 

anil spends what he borrows — ii. 4 

we'll borrow place of liim Mea. for Mea. v. 1 

and borrows money in God's name. . iVuch .Ido, v. 1 

let me borrow my arms again Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

I neither lend nor borrow by taking.Mer. of Ven. i. 3 

you neither lend nor borrow — i. 3 

you must borrow me Garagantua'3..4s?/oi( Like, iii. 2 

that I of you shall borrow .-ill's W^ll, iii. 7 

why, shecomestoborrownotliing.7'rt?.';'V?s'n/.'>/i. iy. 1 

to borrow of a week, when Winter's Tale, i. 2 

borrow, to make up the suni.. Comedy of Errors^i. 1 

go liorrow me a crow — iii. 1 

that borrow their behaviours from . . KingJolm,v. 1 
and never borrow any tear of thee . . Ricfmrd II. iii. 4 

coming in to boi-row a mess of illenry IV. ii. 1 

you borrow not that face of seeming. . . — v. 2 

the sun borrows of the moon Troil. f,- Crcs. v. 1 

when men come to borrow of your. Timon of ■■ilh.Si. 2 

to borrow so many talents; nay — vS-^^ 

when he sent to borrow of me — iii. 6 

were yom- godheads to borrow . . — iii. 6 (gr.ai;e.) 
I will lend thee money, borrow none — iii. 6 

there were no suns to borrow of — iy. 3 

or, if you borrow one another'slove../ln(.'5-Pteo. ii. 2 
what imitation you can borrow .... Cymbeline, iii. 4 

as well, I other accents borrow Lear, i. 4 

borrow Cupid's wings and soar....i?omer) Sr Juliet, i. 4 
pay grief, must of poor patience borrow. . Otiiello, i. 3 

BOSROWED-pluck the borrowed. Merry Wives, iii. 2 
articles are borrowed of the pronoun.. — iv. 1 
more oft than begged, or borrowed . . Twelflh N. iii. 4 
for he borrowed a box of the ear. . Mer. of Venice, i. 2 

to waste his borrowed pmrse — ii. .5 

in these my borrowed flaunts behold. Winter'sT. iy. 3 
whj' do you dress me in borrowed robes?iV((t'?je//i, i. 3 
the borrowed majesty of England here(rep. ). Jolui, i. 1 
paid money that I borrowed three.. lHei»-i/ /;'. iii. 3 

a borrowed title hast thou bought — v. 3 

the thousand pound I borrowed 2Henry IV. v. i 

and lay apart the borrowed glories Henry V. ii. 4 

his feathers are but borrowed 2Henry VI. iii. 1 

woidd he have borrowed of you? . . Timon ofAth. iii. 6 

as if I borrowed mine oaths of him Cymbeline, ii. 1 

this borrowed passion stands. . Pericles, iv. 4 (Gower) 
in this borrowed likeness of shrunk, fiom. <§- Jul. iv. 1 
to take her from her borrowed grave. . — v. 3 
thirty dozen moons, with bon-owed. . . . Hamlet, iii. 2 

BOKROWER-must become a borrower. il/ac()e(/i, iii. 1 

as ready as a borrower's cap 2 Henri/ IV. ii. 2 

neither a borrower, nor a lender be Hamlet, i. 3 

BORROWING-our borrowing prayers./lH'sJfeH, iii. 1 
borrowing only lingers and lingers. . .2 ffcnry/r. i. 2 
argument of hearts by borrowing.. T'/irton of Ath. ii. 2 
borrowing didls the edge of husbandry.. Hom^e/, i. 3 

BORROW'ST-dropthouborrow'st.rroi(. SfCres. iv. :> 

BOSK.Y — dost crown my bosky acres .. . Tempest, iv. 1 

BOSOJI — not this deity in my bosom ... — ii. 1 

my bosom, as a bed Two Gen. of Verona, i. 2 

in thy pure bosom rest them — iii. 1 

the milk-white bosom of thy love. ... — iii. 1 

hand is perjured to the bosom? — v. 4 

in Orsino's bosom Twelflh Night, i. 5 

in his bosom? In what chapter (rc/j. J — i. 'i 

my bosom is full of kindness — ii. 1 

a Cyprus, not a bosom, hides my — iii. I 

I have one heart, one bosom — iii. 1 

can pierce a complete bosom. iV/eo^wre/or Measure, i. 4 

go to your bosom, knock there — ii. 2 

you shall have your bosom on this . . — iv. 3 

m the wards of covert bosom — v. 1 

and in her bosom I'll unclasp Much .ido, i. I 

this liath bewitched the h>stnuo{ my. Mid. N. Dr. i. \ 

emptying our bosoms of their — i. 1 

one l)ed, two bosoms, and one troth . . — ii. 3 
two bosoms interchained with {rep.').. — ii. 3 
that througii thy bosom make me. ... — ii. 3 
the transparent bosom . . Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 (ver:^es) 

athwart lus loving bosom to keep — iv. 3 

being the bosom lover of m.ylnrd..l/er.o/ Venice, iii. 4 
from brassy bosoms, and ront;h hearts — iv. 1 
must prepare your bosom for his knife — iv. 1 

therefore, lay hare yoiu- bosom — iv. 1 

heart within her bosom.... .45 i/ou Like it, v. 4 (vcr.--c) 
stall this in your bosom, and I thnnk... ill's Well, i. 3 
shut his bosom against our borrowing . . — iii. 1 
seventeen poniards are at thy bosom .... — iv. 1 



BO.S.^ED— cushions Ijossed with pearl. Tnm.o/ .S/i. ii. 1 
B(WWORTlI— in Bosworth tMd.. .. Richard III. v. 3 

BOTCIl-do botch and bungle iip I lean, V. ii. 2 

and botch the words iin lit to tlii.ar.Avn. ;)./,../,•/, iv. .^ 

BOTClIEJ>— rufhan hatli holrlu-d. rnrifh .\,-i<i. iv. 1 

mended so, it is but hotchcil . . 'I'nmm ni' .til,ri:s, iv. 3 

BOTCHICH— let the liotulier maid. . Twelflh i\,ti/it, i. 5 

he was a hotelier's prentice AU'slVelt, iv. 3 

as to stiift'a botcher's cushion Coriolanus, ii. 1 

BOTCH KS— leave no rubs, nor botches.. iV/acdefA, iii. 1 
BOTCHY— not that a botchy core?. Tro;/. ^Crcs. ii. 1 

BOTH— both, both, my girl Tempest, i. 2 

iiaving both the key — i. 2 

must by us both be spent — i. 2 

drop on .you both — i. 2 

alIaying"both their fmry, and my — i. 2 

they are both in either s powers — i. 2 

then let us both be sudden — ii. 1 

that you shall hate it both — iv. 1 

both in word and deed — v. 1 

they were living both in Naples — v. 1 

may be both at once delivered., '/"wo Gen. of Ver. i. 1 

we'll both attend yom- ladyship — ii. 4 

they are both as whole as a fish — ii. .5 

friar Laurence met them both — v. 2 

I will be cheater to them both Merry Wives, i. 3 

and I will trade to them both — i. 3 

with both the humours — i. 3 

he wooes both high and low — ii. 1 

both rich and poor, both young and old — ii. 1 
may come and go between you both — ii. 2 

commend me to them both — ii. 2 

do you stridy them both — iii. 1 

I have deceived you both — iii. 1 

did he send you both these letters .... — iv. 4 
and so they shall be both bestowed . . — iv. 5 

without the show of both — iv. 6 

both, my good host — iv. 6 

both the i)roofs are extant — v. 5 

courage and hope, both teaching. . Tmelflh Night, i. 2 

if both break, your gaskins fall — i. 5 

both born in an hour — ii. 1 

that can sing both high and low. ... — ii. 3 (song) 

this will so fright them both — iii. 4 

bot'n day and night did we — v. I 

assmne both form and suit — v. 1 

to make us happy both — v. 1 

you are betrothed both to — v. 1 

thou shalt be both the plaintiff — v. 1 

that have on both sides past — v. 1 

the glory of a creditor, both thanks. Mea../ur.Uca. i. 1 

Tisit both prince and peoide — i. 4 

making both it unable for itself — ii. 4 

hooking both right and wrong — ii. 4 

sleep, di-eaming on both — iii. 1 

with both, her combinate husband . . — iii. 1 
correction and instruction must both — iii. 2 

you are to do me both a present — iv. 2 

Angelo hath seen them both — iv. 2 

I know them both — iv. 2 

in secret holds, both Barnardine — iv. 3 

and hearty thankings to you both.. . — v. 1 

both in the heat of blood — v. 1 

you are both sure, and mil assist xas..MuchAdo, i. 3 
for he both pleaseth men, and angers — ii. 1 

intend a kind of zeal both — ii. 2 

both which, master constable — iii. 3 

both strength of limb — iv. 1 

'fore God, they are both in a tale — iv. 2 

good day to both of you — v. 1 

fentlemen both, we will not wake . . — v. 1 
came to seek you both — t. 1 

but I pray you both, possess — v. 1 

and she alone is heir to both of us . . — y. 1 
some private schooling for you both. .!/»/. A'. Dr. i. i 

unfolds both heaven and earth — i. 1 

shall serve as pillow for us both .... — ii. 3 

and both as light as tales — iii. 2 

you both are rivals, and love {rep.').. — iii. 2 
created both one flower, both on one — iii. 2 
both warbling of one song, both in .. — iii.".- 

two of both kinds makes up four — iii. 2 

both quake and tremble here — v. 1 

moderately, or to forbear both Lore's L. Lost, i. 1 

I confess both, they are both — i. 2 

both in one, or one in both — iv. 1 (letter i 

and raar'iced you both, and for you both — iv. ;-: 

writ on both sides the leaf — v. 2 

well bandied both ; a set of wit — v. 2 

I remit both twain, — I see — v. 2 

I both may and will — v. -J 

to those that make us both — y. - 

food signiors botii, when shall we . . .Ver. of I'cn. i. I 
y adventuring both, I oft found both — i. 1 

or to find both, or bring your — i. 1 

one speak for both;— what would you — ii- - 

desires to speak with vou both — iii- I 

the power to steal both his — iij. 2 

when we are both accoutered — ?,.'- ^ 

I fear you are damned both by father — iii. 5 

well, you are goue both ways — iii. 5 

from both, my lord; Bellai-io greets.. — iv. I 

and old Shylock, both stand forth — iv. 1 

will we both fly toward Belmont — iv. 1 

in both my e.yes he doubly sees himself — y. 1 

stand you both forth now As you Like it, i. 2 

and yom- heart, both in an instant . . — iii. 2 

they" are both the conlirmers — iii. 4 

and my grief were both extermined.. — iii..') 
Orlando doth commend him to you both — iv. 3 
consent with both, that we may enjoy — v. 2 

i'faith ; and both in a tune — v3 

her and death were both one thing . . — v. 1 
was converted both from his enterprize — v. 4 

but on us both did haggish All's Well, i. 2 

their heads are both one — i. 3 

or where you both om- mothers — i. 3 

that vour Dian was both herself — i. 3 

if bot"lr gain all, the gift doth stretch — ii. 1 

and is enough for both . . . .- — ii. I 



EOT 



[74] 



BOTH— hnth of Galen and Parai'clsus. ./IH'sffeH, ii. 3 

o'er whom both sovereign power .... — ii. 3 

which lintli thv dut\- owes — ii. 3 

bi>tli ni\ levenV'e and hate — ii. 3 

whicli i')f tliem lioth is dearest to me — iii. 1 

the duke shall both speak of it — iii. (i 

where liotli not sin, and yet a sinful — iii. 7 

to tlui uk botli lieaven and me — iv. 2 

daiiniahle, botli sides rogue — iv. 3 

in the minority of tliem both — iv. 5 

at onee both the office of God — v. 2 

both sutfer UHiler tliis complaint (rep.) — v. 3 

either both, or none — V. 3 

both, both; O pardon! — v. 3 

either of you both love Katharina. Taming ofSh. i. 1 

oiu- cake's dough on both sides — i. 1 

it touchetli us both : that we may — i. 1 

for my hand, both our inventions.... — i. 1 

or both? pray, what's tlie news — i. 1 

my reasons are both good and weighty — i. 1 

arid tell them both these are their tutors — ii. 1 

and he, of both, that can assure my. . — ii. 1 

take my leave, and thank you both. . — ii. 1 

thus pleasant with you botn — iii. 1 

sweet masters, both, I must be gone — iii. 1 

both on one horse? — iv. 1 

and better 'twere, that both of us — iv. 1 

then both, or one, or any thing thou wilt — iv. 3 

or both dissemble deeply their — iv. 4 

for both oiu- sakes, I would that word — v. 2 

painful labour, both by sea and land — v, 2 
to save both, farewell, our brother. Winter' sTalc, i. 2 

sec good and evil, inclining to them both — i. 2 

or both yourself and me cry, lost — i. 2 

are both landed, hasting to the court — ii. 3 

in me both disobedience — iii. 2 

ha\e been both at Delphos — iii. 2 

one grave shall be for both — iii. 2 

if fortune please, both breed thee .... — iii. 3 

mocked him, both roai-ing louder — iii. 3 

try all : hotii j oy and terror — i v. (chorus) 

she was both iiantlcr, butler, cook; both — iv. 3 

and remembrance, he to you both.... — iv. 3 

we can both sing it; if thou'lt — iv. 3 

I'll buv for you Doth; Pedler — iv. 3 

ti 1 1 he had both tune and words — iv. 3 

having both their eonntiy quitted.. .. — v. 1 

ray brother; both your pardons — v. 3 

decreed; both by the Syracusans . Com.of Errors, i. 1 

male twins, both alike — i. 1 

had left to both of us alike — i. 1 

a thousand marks between you both — i. 2 

nay, master, both in mind — ii. 2 

give me the chain; both wind and tide — iv. 1 

both one, and other, he denies me now — iv. 3 

mistress, both man and master — iv. 4 

speak'st false in both — iv. 4 

and his man are both broke loose — v. 1 

they are both forsworn — v. 1 

and my man, both bound together . . — v. 1 

you both of .you remember me — v. I 

and ray children both — v. 1 

they smack of honour both; go, get Macbeth, i. 2 

or that with both he laboured — i. 3 

the proportion both of thanks — i.4 

greater than both, by the all-hail — i. 5 

strong both against "the deed — i. 7 

and yet you would make both — i. 7 

that "could swear in both the scales .... — ii. 3 

good morrow, both ! Is the king — ii. 3 

shall keep us both the safer — ii. 3 

hath been both grave and prosperous . . — iii. 1 

both of you know, Banquo was — iii. 1 

that are both his and mine — iii. 1 

disjoint, hoth the worlds suifer — iii. 2 

{jresent him eminence, both with eye. . — iii. 2 

)oth sides are even — iii. 4 

on appetite, and health on both — iii. 4 

to be given, both more and less ^ v. 4 

the tyrant's people on both sides — v. 7 

if old sir Robert did beget us both King John, i. 1 

make answer to us both — ii. 1 

the worthiest, hold the right from both — ii. 1 

and retire of both your armies — ii. 2 

both are alike; and both alike we like — ii. 2 

and both conjointly bend your — ii. 2 

80 strong in both, imyoke this — iii. 1 

I ara with both: each army — iii. 1 

with hot irons burn out both mine . . — iv. 1 

I will both hear and grant you — iv. 2 

their hearts), both for mvself and them — iv. 2 

which both our tongues held vile — iv. 2 

written doMOi, both they, and we — v. 2 

high-stomached are they both Richard //. i. 1 

we thank you both: yet one — i. 1 

is my life; both prow in one — i. 1 

shoiild violate!) both to defend — i. 3 

ask yonder knight in arms, both who — i. 3 

and recreant, botli to defend himself — i. 3 

and both retm-n back to their chairs — i. 3 

for both hast thou, and hoth become — ii. 1 

richly in both, if justice had — ii. 1 

both "are my kinsmen — ii. 2 

both young and old rebel — iii. 2 

on both his knees, doth kiss — iii. 3 

by the royalties of both your bloods.. — iii. 3 

scope to lieat both tliee and me — iii. 3 

am I lioth |)ricst andclerk — iv. 1 

is my llicliai-d both in shape — v. 1 

and bate t\i™s one, or both, to worthy — v. 1 

banish US both, and send the king — v. 1 j 

yet, through both I see some — v. 3 

against them both my true joints .... — v. 3 

as' of royal blood; both have I spilt . . — v. b 
'gage them both in an un'ust {rep.)..lHcnrijIV. i 3 

a plague upon you both — ii. 2 

O, we are undo"ne, both we and ours — ii. 2 

so majestically, both in word and matter — ii. 4 

both which I have had — ii. 4 

and Gleuduwer being both away — iv. 1 



BOTH— in both our armies, there is.Allenry IV. v. 1 

both he, and they, and you, yea, every — v. 1 

hut we rose botli' at an instant — v. 4 

and both tlie Clinits killed ■ilTevri/iy. i. 1 

he's followed both with body — ' i. 1 

and so both the degrees ];rcvent my.. — i. 2 

yoiu" uses both in i.mrse and jjcrson . . — ii. 1 

to pawn both my plate, and the tapestry — ii. 1 

you are botli, in good troth — ij. 4 

because their legs are both of a bigness — ii. 4 

fare you well, gentlemen both — iii. 2 

concurring both in name and quality — iv. 1 

mounted, and both roused in their seats — iv. 1 

members of our cause, hoth here and.. — iv. 1 

in sight of both our battles we — iv. 1 

and,"both against the peace of heaven — iv. 2 

then both parties nobly are subdued — iv. 2 

of capital treason I attach you both. . — iv. 2 

both which, we doubt not but your . . — iv. 4 

never come with both Imnds full — iv. 4 

that war, or peace, or both at once . . — v. 2 

for women are shrews, both short — v. 3 (song) 

I charge you hoth go witli me — v. 4 

gentlemen both, you will mistake.... Henri/ V. iii. 2 

you are as well provided of both .... — iii. 7 

which is both healthful, and good.... — iv. 1 

brothers both, commend me to — iv. 1 

as in kindness; princely in both — iv. 3 

and they are both hanged ; — iv. 4 

situations, look you, is both aUIie .... — iv. 7 

and there is salmons in hoth — iv. 7 

the numbers dead on both our parts. . — iv. 7 

my duty to you both, on equal love . . — v. 2 

mightiness on both parts best can — v. 2 

losing both beauty and utility — y. 2 

in duty I am bound to both IHenryyi.u. 1 

they both came swiftly running — ii. 2 

and sconi both him and thee — ii. 4 

wrong whereof you both complain. .. — iv. 1 

good cousins both, of York — iv. 1 

both are my kinsmen, and I love (,rep.) — iv. 1 

where both tlieir lives are done — iv. 3 

if we both stay, we both are sure to die — i v. 5 

death be so apparent, then both fly . . . — iv. 5 

it was both impious and unnatwal. . . — v. 1 

purpose is both good and reasonable. . — v. 1 

and may ye both be suddenly — v. 3 

alai'mns both of hope and fear — v. a 

I fear me, both at first and last — v. 5 

but I ^vUl rule both her, the king — — v. 5 

myself did win them both 2HenryFI.i. 1 

.Ahjou and Maine both given imto .. — i. 1 

both together heaved it up, we'll both — i. 2 

to call them both, a pair of — .;. 2 

kneel we both together; and in this. . — ii. 2 

thine enemies, both mine and thine.. — ii. 4 

but both of you were vowed duke — iii. 2 

cut both the villains' throats — iv. 1 

and bring them both upon two poles. . — iv. 7 

of one or both of ns the time is come. . — t. 2 

soul and body on the action both — v. 2 

and you both have vowed revenge SHenry VI. i. 1 

he is both king and duke of Lancaster — i. 1 

injured both thyself and us? — i. 1 

both from thy table, Henry — i. 1 

be hated both of God and man — i. 3 

do make me -wipe off both — i.3 

my uncles both are slain — i. ■* 

of both the Sicils, and Jerusalem — _i. 4 

and both sides fiercely fought — ii. • 

to frustrate both his oath — ii. 1 

both bound to revenge — ii • ^ 

hoth tugging to be victors — ii. 5 

swearing both they prosper — ii, 5 

ere night yield both my life — ii. s 

sinew both these lands together — ii. 6 

tlie hill, so both may shoot — iii. 1 

here stand we both and aim — iii. 1 

wrongs both them and me — iii. 2 

I can tell you both, her suit is — J!J- ^ 

and our peers are both misled — iii. 3 

that moves both wind and tide — iii. 3 

my talk and tears, both full of truth — iii, 3 

for both of you are birds of — iii. 3 

what, if both Lewis and Warwick — iv. 1 

Clarence and .Somerset both gone ... . — iv. 1 

so tlien hoth depart to him — iv. 1 

to resist both wind and tide — iv. 3 

f*ve me both your hands — iv. ti 

make you both protectors of this land — iv, fi 

soon persuade both him, and all his. . — iv. 7 

we'll meet both thee and Warwick . . — iv. 7 

thou and thy brother both shall buy .. — v. 1 

two of thy name, both dukes of Somerset — v. 1 

and both preposterous; therefore, not — v. 6 

frincely nephew, brothers both — v. 7 

beseech yom- graces both liichard III. i. 1 

fair creature; thou art both — i. 2 

to both their deaths Shalt thou — i. 2 

I fear me, both are false — i. 2 

wear both of them, for both of them. . — i. 2 

when we both lay in the field — ii . 1 

you mistake me both ; I do lament ... — ii. 2 

'alas! for both, both mine, Edward ... — ii. 2 

hoth by his father and mother — ii. 3 

my brother mocks both you and me.. — iii 1 

my good lords both, with all the heed — iii. 1 

there shall you find us both — iii. 1 

and we will both together to the Tower — iii. ^ 

the princes both make high account. . — iii. 2 

and both are ready in their offices. ... — Wl- ■' 

your good graces hoth have well — iii. 5 

right noble princes both, but I'll .... — iii. .5 

hid them both meet me, irithin — iii.!) 

both in yoru- form and nobleness .... — iii. 7 

these both put by, a poor petitioner . . — iii. 7 

God give vour graces both a happy ... — iv. 1 

hence both are gone with (repeated).. — iv. 3 

because both tliev match not — iv. 4 

both the princes had been breathing.. — iv. 4 



EOT 

.BOTH — we must both give and take. .fl/cAnrrf/// v. 3 
and being present both, 'twas said.. Henry VIII. i. 1 

or both, (for he is equal ravenous .. .. — i. 1 

both fell by our servants — ii. 1 

Good-day "to both yoiu* graces — ii. 2 

both of his truth and him — iii. 1 

I thank von botli for vour cnod wills — iii. 1 

'twill be niiicli both t'oi- v.ju:- houoiu-.. — iii. 1 

ye tell me what yc wi,--li lor both .... — . iii. I 

ever doul)le, both in his words and . . — iv. 2 

have followed both my fortunes — iv. 2 

the God of heaven, both now and ever — v. 1 

the progress hoth of my life and office — v. 2 

both in his private conscience — v. 2 

I sh.all both find j'our lordship — v. 2 

fools, on both sides! Helen . . I'roilus fyCressida, i. 1 

I give to both your speeches — i.3 

yet let it please both — i.3 

for both our honour and oiU' shame . . — i.3 

Paris and Troilus, you have both said — ii. 2 

both alike; he merits well — iv. 1 

both merits poised — iv. 1 

both take and give — ir. .'i 

heart and hand both open, and both. . — iv. .'j 

expectance here from both the sides.. — iv. 5 

both taxing me, and gaging me — v. 1 

both an ass and ox; to an ox (rep.) .. — v. 1 

both to those that go, or tarry — v. 1 

come both, you cogging Greeks (rep.) — v. 6 

I know them both Timon of Athens^ i. 1 

my deserts to his, and join them both — iii. .5 

with all my heart, gentlemen both .. — iii. 6 

the Athenians both within and out .... — iv. 1 

but the extremity of both ends — i\'. 3 

not thieves. Both too; and women's sons — iv. 3 

my ladies both, good-day to you Cnriolanus, i. 3 

how do you both? you are manifest. . — i. 3 

that both our powers, with smiling.. — i. G 

calling both the pai-ties knaves — ii. 1 

we meet here, both to thank — ii. 2 

till we called both field and city ours — ii. 2 

both observe and answer — i i . 3 

when, both your voices blended — i i i . I 

may enter 'twixt the gap of both ... . — iii. 1 

sworn by, both divine and hiunan . . — iii. 1 

on both sides more respect — iii. 1 

since that to both it stands in like . . -^ iii. 2 

in thy lying tongue both numbers .. — iii. 3 

hail to you both! Your Coriol anus.. — iv. G 

the gods preserve you botli — iv. G 

are bound to pray for you both — iv. H 

a noble grace to both parts — v. 3 

peace, both, and hear me speak — v. .'j 

I will look on both inditfcrently ..Julius Caesar, i. 2 

we hoth have fed as well (rp/;.) — i. 2 

find a time both meet to hear — i. 2 

do so: farewell, both ,. — i. 2 

that you are both deceived — ii. 1 

before the eyes of both our armies here — iv. 2 

Csesar's, I would say? Both? Antony 4- Cleo. i. I 

as both truth and malice have power — i. 2 

higher than both in blood and life . . — i. 2 

with his joy : but between both -^ i. 5 

Lepidus flatters both, of both is flattered — ii. I 

join with beauty, lust with both — ii. 1 

the which you both denied — ii. 2 

her love to both, woiild (7-ep.) — ii. 2 

which will become you both ; farewell — ii. 4 

plied them both with excellent praises — iii. 2 

both he loves. They are his shards.. — iii. 2 

if on both parts this be not cherished — iii. 2 

between, praying for both parts — iii. 3 

both how yoii were wrong led — iii. G 

appeared both as the same — iii. 8 

so to them both. Fortune pursue thee — iii. 10 

for both, my lord. I would, they'd fight — iv. 10 

thev were in Afric both together Cymbeline, i. 2 

makes him hoth without and within — i. 5 

one the other, or have fallen both — i. .') 

the winning both of first and last .... — i. .'j 

will be both noisome and infectious. . — i. (i 

that tub both filled and running — i. 7 

what both you spur and stop — i. 7 

that both mine ears must not — i. 7 

no more be mad; that cures us both.. — ii. 3 

proceeded but by both your wiils — ii- I 

or masterless leaves both to ^\'h^ — ii. t 

hath done you both this cursed ill jury — iii. 1 

in dignity, whose dust is both alike.. — i\ . 2 

and patience, rooted in him both — iv. 2 

have both their eyes and oars so cloyed — iv. •! 

and brain not; either both, or notliiiig — v. 1 

purse and brain lioth eniity — \. \ 

in justice, (both 011 her, and hers — v, .'i 

offend youthen tliat both slioulil siiecd. Til us And. u . 1 

this wasp outlive, ns both to sting .. — ii. :'. 

he and his lady both are at the lodge — ii. 1 

hither both thy sons alive — iii. I 

none of both but are of high desert — iii. 1 
redeem my hrothers both from death — iii. I 

I'll deceive them both; lend ine — iii. 1 

that I intend to send them both — iv. 1 

gods, confound you both — iv. 2 

that you are both deciiihered — iv. 2 

and so I leave you both, like bloody — iv. 2 

and tell them both the circumstance — iv. 2 

that down fell both the rain's horns. . — iv. 3 

vet should lioth ear and heart ohcv . . — iv. 4 

the bull and cow are bnth milk-white — v. 1 

that both mine eves v.-eve rainy — v. 1 

both her sweet hands, her baigue .... — v. 2 

why, there thev arc both, baked in .. — v. 3 

yoii're both a father and a son Pcrieles, i. 1 

and both like serpents are — i. I 

makes both my body pine — i. 2 

break one, will sure crack both — i. 2 

that time of both this truth — i. 2 

prove aw'ul hoth in deed and word — ii. (Go\yer) 

a man whom both the waters — ii. 1 

1 thank both him and you — ii. 3 



BOT 



[ 75 ] 



BOTH— \tluitl nreyou Imth |)lcasccl?..../Vr/c;M, ii. 5 
urc ynu huth ai;rcc(l? Yes, please your — it. f) 

makes her liotii the hoiirt — iv. (Gower) 

blame liiitU my Innliiiulmc — iv. 1 

we shiiuUl lune holli lord and lown — iv. G 

iil.nth were ju^tlv weijihed — v. 1 

OL^iml mine it' both were opeued — v. 1 

will divest us, botli of rule Lmr, i. 1 

so farewell to you both — i. 1 

what most nearly appertains to us both. ... — i. 1 

and ^avest awuy both jiarts — i. 4 

[lared thy wit o both Bides — i. 4 

It is liotl! he and she, your son and daugliter ;— ii. 4 

^i>i>d-morrow to vou totli — ii. 4 

situ that botI> eharue and danwr — ii. 4 

L-riel'iis aL:e; wretelied in liuth — ii. 4 

1 willhave sneh loveneesou vo\iboth .... — ii. 4 
wliieh lu.th ot'them ha\ e borne nyainst .... — iii. 1 
brim; ,\'ou u here both lire and food is ready — iii. 4 

meet both weleome and [n-oteetion — iii. 6 

Ijoth style and ^'ate, horseway, and footpath — iv. 1 

bo(h, both, my lord: this letter — iv. 2 

to botli tliese sisters have X sworn — V. 1 

b:'th? one? or neither? neither can (rep.) . . . — v. 1 

I was eoutraeted to thera both — v. 3 

households, botli alike indignity. fiom. ■$-Jul. (.pro!.) 
both by myself, and many other friends — i. I 
of honbui'ablereclvoningareyou both — i. 2 
the more I have, for both arc infinite — ii. 2 
both are remedies within thy help .. — ii. 3 

good-morrow to you both — ii. 4 

begin both with a letter Irep.) — ii. 4 

shiill thank thee, dangliter, for ns both — ii. fi 
liappiness that both receive in either — ii. 6 
a plague o' both the houses! (/f/).).... — iii. 1 

or I, or both, must go with him — iii. 1 

father, or tli,\' mother, nay, or both .. — iii. :i 

y.Mi are beguiled, both you and I — iii. 2 

ill-lie-eenuTig beast, in seemingboth — iii. 3 
nus-shapeii in the ewdnct of themboth — iii. 3 

or else l)eshrew them both — iii. T) 

to another, this shall slay them both — iv. 1 

that we both were in a house — v. 2 

both to impeach and purge nryself .. — v. 3 
as they had delivered, both in time .... Hamlet, i. 2 

oft loses both itself and friend — i. 3 

extinct in both, even in their promise.... — i. 3 

I entreat you both, that being of so — ii. 2 

biith your majesties might — ii. 2 

but we both oliey; and liere give up — ii. 2 

both to my God, and to my gracious king — ii. 2 

away, I do beseech you, both away — ii. 2 

good lads, how do ye both? — ii. 2 

both in reputation and profit (repeateiO . . — ii. 2 

much to_ do on both sides — ii. 2 

M'ay again, to both your honours — iii. 1 

whose end, both at the first, aud now — iii. 2 

we will both om- judgments join — iii. 2 

both here, and hence, ijm-sue me lastini; — iii. 2 
where I shall first begin, and both neglect — iii. 3 
when both contend wlrich is the mightier — iv. 1 
and skill, both countenauce and excuse.. — iv, 1 

friends both, go join you v/ith some — iv. 1 

let them know both what we mean to do — iv. I 
that both the worlds X give to negligence — iv. 5 

you will ch-aw both friend and foe — iv. 5 

eoiiyenience both of time and means — iv. 7 

I do not fear it; I have seen you both — v. 2 

they bleed on both sides — v. 2 

both you of my inclining, and the rest . . Otlwllo, i. 2 

both do learn me how to respect you — i. 3 

but he bears b^ith the sentence — i. 3 

being strong on Ijoth sides — i. 3 

freely, both with wind aud stream — ii. 3 

had twinned with me, both at a birth .. — ii. 3 
have tlieir palates both for sweet and sour — iv. 3 

B(.)T.S_begiiawn with the hots.. .. rajH/n,!,'o/S/!. iii. 2 

way to give poor jades the hots \I!e>iri/ir. ii. 1 

lia! bots on't, 'tis come at last I'H' ides, ii. 1 

EOTl'LE— he shall taste of my bottle .. rempcrt, ii. 2 

if all the wine in my bottle will — ii. 2 

swear by this bottle — ii. 2 

oyer-ljoai-d, by this bottle — ii. 2 

I'll swear upon that bottle — ii. 2 

here; bear my bottle — ii. 2 

and take his bottle from hira — iii. 2 

a pox o' your bottle — iii. 2 

ay; but to lose our bottles in the pool — iv. 1 

X will fetch otf my bottle — iv. 1 

•with my aqua- vita; bottle Merry fVivcs,\i. 2 

for tilling a bottle with Mea./or Mea. iii. 2 

hang mein abottle like acat Much Aiio,i. 1 

a great desire toabottleof hay...W(i. N. Dram, iv. 1 
out of a uarrow-mouthed bottle.. /Is you Like It, iii. 2 

fill me abottle of sack \ Henry IV. iv. 2 

this bottle makes an angel — iv. 2 

brandish any thing hut my bottle iHenrytV. i. 2 

will do among foaming bottles Henry V. iii. 6 

out of his leathern bottle SJIenry f'l. ii. b 

beat the knave into a twiggen bottle . . Oiliello, ii. 3 

BOTTI.E-ALE— no bottle-ale houses. Ta-elf(l<. N. ii. 3 
away, you bottle-ale raseaU 'illenryll'. ii. 4 

BOTTLED— on that bottled spider.. ftic/iarrf ///. i. 3 
to help me ciu'se that bottled spider iv. 4 

BOTTtJ.M— do so near the bottom run . . Tempest, ii. 1 

provide to bottom it on me Tieu Gen. ofVer. iii. 2 

if tiie bottom were as deep as hell. /l/i-rry/f'/Kes, iii. 5 

most noble bottom of our fleet rwelfth Night, v. 1 

look into the bottom of my place. . Mea. for Mea. i. 1 

Nick Bottom, the weaver Mid. K. Dream, i. 2 

you, Nick Bottom, are set down .... — i. 2 
what say'st thou bully Bottom? .... — iii.) 
not I'yramus, but Bottom, the weaver — Iii. 1 

■what say you. Bottom? — iii. 1 

O Bottom, thou art changedl — iii. 1 

bless thee. Bottom! bless thee! — iii. 1 

called Bottom's dream, because (,rep.) — iv. 1 

have you sent to Bottom's house? — iv. 2 

O sweet bnlly Bottom! _ iv. 2 

Bottom I U most cooiagcous day!.... — iv. 2 



BGTTOM— let us bear, sweet Bottom. /Wif.A'.Dr. iv. 2 

are not in one hottoni trusted Mer. of I'enice, i. 1 

hath an ludiuowii bottom As yuu Like it, w. 1 

down in the iieiLrhbour bottom — iv. 3 

wdieu yojir hinl^hip ^ees the bottom.. /(H's Well, iii. 6 
now 1 see tile bottom of your purpose — iii. 7 
with a bottom of hn.wii thread ..Taming of Sh.\v.^ 

but there's no bottom, none Machelh, iv. 3 

now the KoLli^h hottmns have waft.Kivg John, ii. I 

dive into the bottom of the deep iHenrylV. i. 3 

rob me of so rich a bottom here — iii. 1 

the very bottom and the soul of hope — iv. I 
see the bottom of Justice Shallow .,2HenryIV. iii. 2 
to sound the bottom of the after-times — iv. 2 
I'll pledge ,vou a mile to the bottom — v. 3 (song) 

the ooze and bottom of the sea Henry f. i. .: 

knew'st the very bottom of my soul.. — ii. 2 

draw the huge bottoms through — iii. (cho.) 

we then should see the bottom of all.i Henry I'l. v. 2 
scattered in the bottom of the sea . . IlichanI lll.'i. 4 
wooed the slimy bottom of the deep .. — i. 4 
searches to the bottom of the worst.. Trail, fy Cr. ii. 2 
finds bottom in the uncomprehensive — iii. 3 

I myself see not the bottom of it — iii. 3 

but 'the bottom of the news is Coriolanus, iv. 5 

drops i' the bottom of a cowslip Cymbeline, ii. 2 

wound, nor tent to bottom that — iii. 4 

who ever yet could sound thy bottom? — iv. 2 
now to the bottom dost thou search., raws And. ii. 4 
my sorrow deep, having no bottom . . — iii. 1 

to the bottom of your story Perieles, v. I 

one dead in the bottom of a tomb.. Worn. ^Jul. iii. .'j 

that sees into the bottom of my grief ? — iii. 5 

BOTTOMLESS-rather, bottomless. ^Is yon Likeil, iv. 1 

mv passions bottomless with them. . '/'//«.? And. iii. 1 

E(.>(rciQUALT-Lestrale, Boueiiiualt../;!'»/y /•. iii. 5 

duke of Bourbon, and lord Boneiqnalt . . — iv. 8 

BOUGlI-thathaugsou the bough. 7'('m/y..»(, v. 1 (song) 

the shade of melancholy boughs . .As y>n Likeil, ii. 7 

but upon the fairest boughs — iii. 2 (verses) 

an oak, whose boughs were mossed — iv. 3 

wing me to some withered bough . IVinter^sTale, v. 3 

hew' him down a bough, and bear't Maelielh, v. 4 

that bearing boughs may live Riclmrd IL iii. 4 

as bird doth sing on bough li'-iny r. iii. 2 

fell from their boughs, ai'id left. TImon n/J //, jis. 'i\. 3 
whose boughs did bend with fruit.. t'i///'',.,''/ic, iil. S 

boimd with laurel boughs Titus Amhonicus, i. 2 

there on the pendant boughs Hnndfl. iv. 7 

BOUGIlT-where scorn is bought. 7'«oGe».o/;Vr.i. 1 

but a folly bought with wit — i. 1 

not only bought many presents ..Mcny Wines, ii. 2 
for youth is bought more oft .... T/felflh Nig/U, iii. 4 
beauty is bought by judgment . . Love's L. Lost, ii. 1 

the goose that you bought — iii. 1 

then cannot we be bought — v. 2 

I think, he bought his doublet . . Mer, of Venice, i. 2 
these tilings being bought, and orderly — ii. 2 

since you are dear bought — iii. 2 

slavish parts, because .you bought them — iv. 1 

is dearl3' bought, is mine — iv. 1 

he hath bought a pair of cast lips . . As you Like, iii. 4 

and he hath bought the cottage — iii. 5 

till honour be bought up AWs Well, ii. 1 

he might have bought me — v. 3 

at market-price have bought — v. 3 

I bought, and brought up to attend. .Com. ofEr. i. 1 

to be so bought aud sold — iii. 1 

I have bought the oil, the balsamum — iv. 1 

silks that he had bought for me — iv. 3 

I have bought golden opinions Macbeth, i. 7 

so great a day as this is clieaply bought — v. 7 

blood hath bought blood i^ing John, ii. 2 

English, you are bought and sold . — v. 4 

good names were to be bought 1 Henry I V. i. 2 

would have bought rae lights as good — iii. 3 

I bought you a dozen of shirts — iii. 3 

they have bought out their services. . — iv. 2 
to-day hath bought thy likeness .... — v. 3 
a borrowed title bast thou bought. ... — v. 3 

I bought him in Paul's 2Henry IV. i.'i 

a trifle, that was bought with blood. IHejoi/ VI. iv. 1 

from bought and sold lord Talbot — iv. 4 

advantage, bought with such a shame — iv. 6 
and bought Ills climbing very dear.. 2 Henri//''/, ii. 1 

poison that I bought of Iiim — iii. 3 

I have bought it with a hundred ^Henrij VI. ii. 5 

till I have bought a glass liichurit III. i. 2 

having boughtlove with such — iv. 4 

Dickon thy master is bought and sold — v. 3 (scroll) 
have bought her dignities so dear.. Hfnry fill. iii. I 
and thou art bought and sold . . Trudus ^ Cress, ii. 1 
she hath bought the name of v:\xovii. .Cyndjelinc, ii. t 

to have begged, or bought — iii. G 

because X bought miue'oNvn. . Titus Andrcnilcns, iii. 1 

the end of all is bought thus dear I'l'ncles, i. 1 

my master and mistress have bought you — iv. i; 
have bought the mansion of a lovc/iVmi iS-Jnl. iii. 2 
X bought an unction of a mountepaidc.ii'0"/i'7, i\'. 7 

medieiues bought of mountebanks Oihelio, i. 3 

BOULT-Boult, sir. Search the market. i-o/iVts-, iv. 3 
it's no calling: but here comes Boult — iv. 3 

Boult, has she any qualities — iv. 3 

what's her price, Boult? — iv. 3 

Boult. take ymi the marks of her .... — iv. 3 

Boult B returned. Now, sir, hast — iv. 3 

Boult, spend thou that in the town... — iv. 3 

Boult, take her away ; use her — iv. 6 

BOUNCE-lire, and smoke, and bounce. A'//)^'-/o/i7i, ii. 2 

bounce would a'sav: and away ■ilienry IV. iii. 2 

BOUNCED— how he bounced and 1', rieles, ii. 1 

BOUNCING— the bouncing Amazon. il/it/ A'. IJr. ii. 2 

BOUND— a confidence sans bound Tempest, i. 2 

bound sadly home for Naples — i. 2 

si)irit8, as in a dream, are all boundup — i. 2 

bound of laud, tilth, vineyard — ii. 1 

bm-n above the hounds of reason. 7'«'o6'en. o/Tcr. ii. 7 
shall ] be evermore bound to thee. .Merit/ Wires, iv. 6 

and leap all civil boucids Twelfth A'igitt, i. 4 

I am bound to the count Orsino'e com-t — ii. 1 



BOU 

BOUND— whither yon are bound. . Twelfth Mght, ii. 1 

I am bomid to your niece .— iii. 1 

have him in a dark rotjm and bound.. — iii. 4 
I shall he irinch liomid to you for't... — iii. 4 

bound up the threatening twigs Mea.forMea. i. 4 

hounil by my eliaiily, and my blessed — ii. 3 

I am bound to call upon you — iii. 2 

I am always bound to vou — iv. 1 

X am bomid toenter iinblicly _ iv. 3 

let these men he bound and brought.Jl/uc/i Ado, iv. 2 

two of my brother's men bound — V. I 

that you are thus bound to your answer — v. 1 
past the bounds of maiden's patience. AfiV/.iV.D. iii. 'i 

I am more hound to yon Lome's Labour's Lost, i. 2 

one iiart of .\(iuitain is bound to us .. — Ii. 1 
that and other sieeialities are bound — ii. I 

restrained, nil, tivated, boimd — iii. 1 

lam houmUo serve — iv. 1 

shall be hound. Antonioshall yrep.).Mer.or Ven.i. 3 
and Antonio hound. Your answer .. — i. 3 

he hath an arg<.sy hoini.l to Tripolis — i. 3 

I am not bound to iilease thee with .. — iv. 1 
X will be bound to i)ay it ten times .. — iv. 1 
in my mind, you are much bound .. — iv. 1 
fetehin.^ mad bounds, bellowing .... — v. I 
infinitely bound. You shoidd m (rep.) — v. 1 
X dare be bound again, my sold iqjou — v. 1 

are as much bound to him as I As yon, Like it, i. 1 

his flocks, and bounds of feed, are now — ii. 4 

the cottage, and the bounds iii. .I 

I recovered him ; bound up his woimd — iv. S 

with all bound humbleness AWs Well, ii. 1 

if you were but bound to't — ii. 2 

if ever thou bc'st bound in thy scarf — ii. 3 
shoitld sustain the bound andhigh curvet — ii. 3 
wdiy, these bales bound; there's noise — ii. 3 

whither are ycm bouird? — iii. 5 

to great Saint Jaques bound — iii. 5 

I'll have them ^'ery fairly bound . . Taming of Sh. i. 2 

and bound I am to Padua; there to visit iv. 5 

when they are bound to serve, love . . — v. 2 
one jot beyond the bound of honour. Winter\T. iii. 1 

so noble, vilely bound up — iv. 3 

I am bound to you: there is some sap — iv. 3 

anil whither they are bound — iv. 3 

ruslies? whither are you bound? .... — iv. 3 
one oi' the other twins was bomid. Com. of Errors, i. 1 

clean through the bounds of Asia i. 1 

but hath his bound, in earth, in sea. . — ii. 1 

but that X am bound to I^ersia — iv. 1 

for he is bound to sea, and stays — iv. 1 

they must be bound, and laid in some — iv. 4 

will you be bound for nothing — iv. 4 

more help, to have them bound again — iv. I 

once did I get him bound — v. 1 

and bound the doctor, whose beard . . — v. 1 

they fell upon me, bound me — v. 1 

and my man, both bound together . . — v. 1 

for lately we were bound — v. 1 

you are now bound to believe him . . — v. 1 
who hath bound him here? (rep.) .... — v. 1 

confined, bound in to saucy Macbeth, iii. 4 

thou other gold-bound brow, is like — iv. 1 

a soldier, and now^ boiuid to France.. AV7(^,/o/m, i. I 

whose veins bound richer blood — ii. 2 

glorify the banks that bound them .. — ii. 2 

that slie is bound in honour still — ii. 2 

proud river peering o'er his bounds . . — iii. 1 
which I alone, am bound to underbear — iii. 1 

let me not be hound ! — iv. 1 

within those hounds we have o'erlooked — v. 4 

England, bound in with the Richard II. ii. 1 

is now bound in with shame — ii. 1 

to whose high will we bound our .... — v. 2 
hound to hiinself? what doth he (rep.) — v. 2 

beyond the bounds of iiatienee 1 Henry IV. i. 3 

the thieves have bound the true men — ii. 2 
and bound them. No, no (repealed)., — ii. 4 
you bound tliem, and were masters . . — ii. 4 
within that bound, to Owen Glendower — iii. 1 

utmost bound of all our fortunes — iv. 1 

a kingdom tor it ^vas too small a boiuid — v. 4 
I am bound to thee, reverend Feeble. 2Hen. IV. iii. 2 

brow, with homely biggin bound — iv. 4 

no less for bounty bound to us Henry .'•'. i i . 2 

ca, ha! he boiuuU from the earth — iii. 7 

the king is not hound to answer — \\.\ 

or bound my horse for her favours .. — v. '- 
like captives hound to a triura|iliant..lHeni;//7. i. 1 
the Englisii forth the bounds of France — i. J 

in duty I am hound to both — ii. 1 

X am hound to you, that you on — ii. 4 

a heart it was hound in with <liamonds — iii. - 
can he bound by anj' solemn vow ..'iHenryVl. v. 1 
but tliat he wtis bouud by a solemn oath — v. 1 

botli bound to revenge SHenry VI. ii. 4 

no\v are our brows bound with llichard III. i. 1 

hath be set bounds between tiieir love — i*'. I 
I am bouud by oath, and therefore .. — iv. 1 

hound witli triumphant garlands — iv. 4 

to nature none more bound Henry VIII. i. 2 

for where I am robbed and bound .. — ii. 4 

if you are bound to us, or no — iii. 2 

all thy best p.orts boimd together .... — iii. 2 

but that I am bound in charity — iii. 2 

how much are we bound to heaven . . — y. 2 

arc you bound thither? Troilus ij- Cressida, i. I 

this sinister bounds in my fathers.... — i\. .'> 

be bound to you so much — iv. 5 

are bound iCol. given] to Dioraed — v. 2 

flies each bomid it chafes Timon of Athens, i. 1 

I am bound to your free heai't — i. 2 

we are so virtuouslj' bound — i. 2 

bound servants, steal! — iv. I 

1'ustice in your city's bounds — v. 5 
lis linovs)! luuil \,ith oak Coriolanus,\. 3 

am bomiil to iieu of uiy lord general — i. 9 

if you will pass to where you are bound — iii. 1 

are bound to pray tor yon both — iv. (i 

what he woidd not, btjuud with an oath — v. 1 



BOU 



l^ 

BOTFNTY— has 0|>cncd l}oniity .... Hciir;/ 11 II. Ml. 2 
till judgmeiil guide his bounty . . 'I'roil. tj- Cm. iv. 5 

see, magic of bounty ! Timon of Athens, i. 1 

and taste lord Tinion 's bounty — i. 1 

'tis iiit.v, bounty had not eyes'beliind — i. 2 
O, be is the very soul of bounty ! .... — i. '2 

the bounty of this lord! — ii. 2 

ni) villanons bounty hath yet passed — ii. 2 

tluvt thought is bounty's foe — ii. 2 

for bounty, that makes gods — iv. 2 

of your open bounty tasted — v. 1 

with his DOiuity overplus ..A71 tony ^Cleopatra, iv. 6 
O Antony, thou mine of bounty .. — iv. 6 

do not abuse my master's boimty.. — v. 2 

for liis IniunU, there was no Avinter in't — y. 2 
>'L't iieaAen's bounty towards him .. Cymbeline, i. 7 

fitting my linunty, anil my state — v. 5 

who pour tlieir bounty on her. . Pii/clca, v. (Gower) 
consists ill liounty, cx'|iect uvcii hvro.. — v. 1 
that we our hu-yei-t Imuuty may uxleiid ..Lear.i. 1 

the bounty and tlie b^'uizun of iiea\'eu — iv. (J 

ray bomity is as boundless Romero ^- Juliet, ii. 2 

the more merit is in yoiu' liouuty Hamlet, ii. 2 

BOXJRBIER — la trnic'lavee an bo"urbier.Hf7i.F. iii. 7 

BOURBON— dukes of Orleans, Bourbon — iii. 5 
he that will not follow Bourbon now.. — iv. 5 

John duke of Bourbon — iv. S 

lord Bourbon, our hi^'h udiuiral ..Zllevry VI. iii. 3 

BOTJRDEAXIX— Hieluird cifBourdcaux./i/c/i.//. y. 6 

venture of Bourdon iix stuif •lllrnry IV. ii. \ 

go to the gates of Bouideaux MlcniyVI. iv. 2 

marched to Bourdeanx \vith his power — iv. 3 
and made their march ibr Bourdeaux — iv. 3 
Boru-deaux, warlike duke ! toBomxleaux — iv. 3 
merchant's goods at Bourdeanx Henry VIII. i. 1 

BOURN — contract, succession, bourn . . Tempest, ii. 1 

no boiu-n 'twixt his and mine Winter's Tale, i. 2 

like a bourn, a pale, a shore. . Troilus ifCressiJa, ii. 3 
set a bourn how far to be beloved. Auto ny^-Cleo. i. 1 
from bourn to bourn, region. . Pericles, iv. 4 (tiower) 
come o'er the bourn, Bessy, to me. Lear, iii. 6 (soug) 
the dread summit of this chalky bourn — iv. 6 
from whose bourn no tra\eller returns. Hamtei, iii. 1 

BOUT— have one bout witli you. . TwelfiliNigld, iii. 1 

I'll have a bout with thee 1 Henry VI. i. 5 

damsel, I'll have a bout with you . . — iii. 2 

will have a bout with yon Romeo ^ Juliet^ I. b 

as make yoiU' bouts more violent Hamlet, iv. 7 

I'll play this bout first, set it by — v. 2 

BOW-at which end o'the beam slic'd bow. Tempest, ii. 1 

each end of thy blue bow dost crown — iv. 1 

tell me heavenly bow, if Venus — iv. 1 

it woidd l)ow to me, for every Tti-elfih Niglu, ii. 5 

whose back with ingots bows ..Mea./or Mea. iii. 1 

like to a silver bow new bent Mid. N. Dream, i. 1 

by Cupid's strongest bow — i. 1 

his love-shaft smartly from his bow — ii. 2 
than arrow from the Tartar's bow . . — iii. 2 
but come, the bow; now mercy .. Love^sL. Lost, iv. 1 

why, she that bears the bow — iv. 1 

wide o' tlic bow hand — iv. 1 

East bows not his vassal head — iv. 3 

when true sidjjccts bow Merclianl of Venice, iii. 2 

as the ox hath Ms bow, sir As you Lil<e it, iii. 3 

he hath ta'en his bow and arrows — iv. 3 

wliich bow the head, and nod AWs Well, iv. 5 

pursue me as you draw^our bow. Taming of .">'/i. y. 2 

bid kings come bow to it King Joltn , iii. 1 

bow my knee before his majesty Ricliard II. i. 3 

learn to bend their bows — iii. "2 

flatter, bow, and bend my knee — iv. 1 

he di-ew a good bow 'iHcnry IV. iii. 2 

wrest, or bow your reading Henry V.i. 2 

Ms pettiness would 1)0W under — iii. 6 

but, if I bow, they'll say 1 Henry VI. Iv. 5 

than these knees bow to any 2Henry Vl.iv. 1 

brook I bow a knee to man — v. 1 

hath tliy knee forgot to bow ? — V. 1 

bows unto tlie grave with mickle age — v. 1 

and, lords, bow low to Mm ZH.nry VI. i. 4 

and he shall bow his knee — ii- 2 

you bow like subjects Richard III. i. 3 

bow themselves, when ]\<i.. Henry V III. iii. 1 (song) 
like loaden branches, liow to the eartlr — iy. 2 

swords and bows directive Troilns 4-Cressida, I. 3 

for, oh, love's bow shoots — iii. 1 (.song) 

and, when it bows, stands up Coriolanus, i. -1 

my mother bows; as if 01.vmpus — v. 3 

the gods that Romans bo\v he^t^re. .JuliusCcesar, ii. 1 
my knee shall bow ray prayers. . Antony 4'Cleo. ii. 3 
flame o'the taper liows toward her . . Cymbeline,u. 2 
bows yon to morni ng's holy ofiiee .... — iii. 3 

i'the cave, wherein they bow — iii. 3 

bow your knees; arise, my knights .. — v. 5 
bow this feeble ruin to the earth. . TilusAndron. iii. 1 

and be happy, by my sih'er bow Pericles, y . 2 

makes me beud, makes the king Ijow Lear, iii. 6 

fellow handles Ms bow like a erow-keeper — iy. G 
from love's weak childish bow . . Romeo (,■ Juliet, i. 1 

a 'Tartar's iJainted bow of lath — I. i 

constrains a man to bow in the hams — ii. -4 
and bow them to yom- gracious leave . . Hamlet, i. 2 
would have reverted to my bow again . . — iv. 7 

BOW-BOY— the blind bow-boy's. . . . Itom. .5- JuL ii. i 

B(JW-CASE— you bow-case, you vile.lHc/iryi/'. ii. 4 

BOWED— his wave- worn basis bowed . . Tempest,\l. 1 
to tliee lilce osiers bowed . . Love's Labour's Lost, iy. 2 

and bowed liis eminent top -Ul's Il'ctl, i. 2 

and bowed her hand to teach her.'I'umiiiL; if Sli.ll. 1 

thrice bowed before me itintrr's i'aU\ iii. 3 

hath bowed you to the grave )hi<-l,eih, iii. 1 

where I first bowed iny knee IMeniy JV. i. 3 

necessit.v so Imwed the state 'iUenrylV. iii. 1 

three-peiiLe Imwed would hire me.. Henry VIII. II. 3 

and bowed her to the people — .'.X- ' 

wdio bowed iuit in my stirruo Coriolanus, iii. 2 

he tjowed hi^ uatuve, never known — v. .^ 

and bowed like bouilmeu lulius Crsar. v. 1 

must be bowed as I would have you . . Pericles, iy. 3 
knees humbly bowed, uuuld uot . . liom. SfJul. iii. 1 



BOY 



BOUND— more bound to his mother. . Coriolanus, v. 3 
we are bound; togetlier witli thy {rep.) — v. 3 
their life are bound in shallows . . Julius Ccvsar, iv. 3 
that ever Brutus will go bound to Rome — v. 1 
had bound me up from mine own...'ln(. <5- Cleo. ii. 2 

he's bound unto Octa%na — ii- 5 

if r were bound to divine of this unity — ii. (1 
often bound for no less tlian my life. . Cymheliue, i. ."j 
am bound to load tliy merit rielily . . — i. 

wliiles I am bound to wonder vep.) — .;■ 7 

you are most bound to the king — ii. 3 

which daily she was bound to prott'er — iii. 5 
whither bound? To Milford llttven .. — iii. 6 
a kinsman, who is bound for Italy . . — iii. li 

well, or ill ; I am bound to you — iv. 2 

I dare be bound he's true — iv. 2 

Andronieus, bound with laurel . . Titus .Andron. I. 2 
faster bound to .Varon's charming .. — ii. 1 

like Nilns, it disdaineth bounds — iii. 1 

and hers, are highly bound to thee . . — iv. '2 
is he sure bound? look that you («'p.) — v. 2 
is bound l>y the indenture of his oath . . Pericles,^ i. 3 

whom I am bound to (re;j.) — iv. 6 

casualties bound me in servitude — v. 1 

whereto being bound, the interim — v. 2 (Gower) 

of all these bounds, even from this Lear, i. 1 

to t\\\ law my ser\ices are bound — i. 2 

the child was"bound to the father — ii. 1 

•whereto our health is bound — ii. 4 

the rexenges we are hoimd to take — iii- 7 

we are bound to the like — iii- 7 

but I am bound upon a wheel of fire — iv. 7 

thou wast not bound to answer — v. 3 

^tontague is bound as well Romeo iy Juliet, i. 2 

but bound more than a madman is - - — i. 2 

soar with them ixbove a common bound — i. 4 

and so bound, I cannot bound a pitch — i. 4 

such vile matter, so fairly bound? . — iii- 2 

no limit, measure, bound — iii. 2 

not stcri]iing o'er the bounds of modesty — iv. 2 
our whole cit.y is much bound to him — iv. 2 
the survivor bound in filial obligation ..Hamlet, i. 2 

s;ieak, I am bound to hear — l.b 

the single and peculiar life is bound — iii. 3 

like a man to double business bound ... . — iii. 3 
embassador that was bormd for England — iv. B 

revenge should have no bounds — iv. 7 

.f she in chains of magic were not bound. Otliello, i - 2 
to you I am bound for life, and education — i. 3 
bosom freely. I am much bound to you.. — iii. 1 

bound to every act of duty (rep.) — ii i- 3 

as I am bound, receive it i'rom me — iii. 3 

1 am bound to thee for ever — iii. 3 

think yourself bound to put it on him .. — iv. 2 
I am bound to speak ; my mistress here - . — v. 2 

BOUNDED— and bounded in a pale.- 1 Henry VI. iv. 2 
the bounded waters should lift . . Troilus ff Cress, i. 3 
I could be bounded in a nutshell Hamlet, ii. 2 

BOUNDEN-much bounden to you./4.v you Like it,\. 2 
I am much bounden to your maiestv loltn, iii. 3 

BOUNDETH-boundeth where it faUs.fl/c/iard/J. i. 2 

BOUNDING— to thy boundin-' steed. 1 Hen r;//^. ii. 3 
a bounding [Coi. Knt. abounding] valour. H. F. iv. 3 
bounding between the two moist. . Trail. S,- Cres. i. 3 

BOUNDLESS— of boundless tongue.. (fin/er'sT. ii. 3 
boundlesss intemperance in nature . . Macbeth, iv. 3 

the infinite and boundless reach King Joint, iv. 3 

that the desire is boundless.. 7')-o//us<5-C;es.«ria, iii. 2 
for there is boundless theft. . . . Timon of Athens, iv. 3 
compass such a boundless hapjiiness! ..Pericles, I. 1 
my bonntv is as boimdless as the sea.flom.<5-/Mi. ii. 2 

BOUNTl^iU.'^- most boimteous lady ..Tetnpest, iv. 1 

how does my bounteous sister? — iv. 1 

most bounteous sir, look . . Measure for Measure, v. 1 

the gift which bounteous nature Macbeth, iii. 1 

a bounteous hand was kindly lent.. n;c/if(r>(///. ii. 2 

bears a bounteous mind indeed Henry VIII. i. 3 

call Mm, bounteous Buckingham .. — ii. 1 
we'll share a bounteous time . . Timon of Athens i. 1 

many a bounteous year — iii- 3 

with more raouey, bounteous Timon — iv. 3 
the bounteous housewife, natm'e .. — iv 3 

be bounteous at om- meal Antony <5- Cleo. iv. 2 

ships, and bounteous winds. . Pericles, iv. 4 (Gower) 

been most free and bounteous Hamlet, i. 3 

to be free and bounteous to her mind Otliello, 1. 3 

bounteous madam, whatever shall — iii. 3 

but with aece]>tauce bounteous — iii. 3 

BOUNTEOUSLY- 
and I'll pay thee bounteously Twelfth Night, i. 2 

BOUNTIES— bestow ray bounties. . Heiiry VIII. iii. 2 
Hector's leisure, and j-om- bounties. Trail. ^- Cr. iv. 5 
all that of his bounties taste . . Timon of Alliens, i. 2 
nor came any of his bounties over me — iii. 2 
I'll pay your bounties; till then. rest..Pmcfo, ii. 1 

BOUNTIFUL— bountiful fortune Tempest, i. 2 

the bouutifid blind woman doth ..As you Like it, i. 2 

marry, that's a bountiful an.swer lU's Well, ii. 2 

as bountifid as mines of India .... 1 Henry IV. iii. 1 
thy very bountiful good lord. . Timon of Athens, iii. 1 
thy lord's a bountiful gentleman — iii. 1 

BOtTNTIFULLY-eommendme bountifully — iii. 2 
give it bountifully to the desii'ers . . Coriolanus, ii. 3 

B()UNTY— testify yom: bounty.. r«'o Gen. ofVer. i. 1 

full of virtue, bounty, worth — iii- 1 

all gold and bounty Merry Wives, i. 3 

it may awake ray bounty further.. 2'«ie///iA'i>A(, v. 1 

lullaby to your boimty — v. I 

let your bounty take a nap — v. 1 

than customary bounty can Mer. of Venice, iii. 4 

who had even tuned his bounty All's Well, iv. 3 

from bounty, fertile bosom Winter's Tale, i. 2 

j'our lack of love, or bounty — iv. 3 

stableness, boimty, perseverance Macbeth, iv. 3 

stands for ray bounty Richard II. ii. 3 

king, for thy great bounty — iv. 1 

this honorable bounty shall belong.. IHeriri/ZF. v. 5 

no less for bounty bound to us Henry V. ii. 2 

live to merit such a bonntv '2 Henri/ VI. v. 1 

yom- twuuty, virtue, fair liusmlity.HicliardJII. iii. 7 



BOWELS — for thine own bowels ..Mea.forMea. iii. 1 
Iiave theii- bowels full of wrath . . . .King John, ii. I 

wdiose bowels suildenly burst out — v. 6 

that all oiv buwels crumble — v. 7 

out of the Ij.iwelt. of the harmless \HenryIV. i- 3 

no mine Hei.i^lit than mine own bowels — v. 3 

I do retort the solus in thy bowels Hc/iry V. ii. 1 

in the bowels of the Lord — ii. 4 

into the bowels of the battle IHenryVI.i. 1 

that gnaws the bowels of the — iii. 1 

so, rushing ill the bowels of the French — iv. 7 

unri)i'(l4 the bowels of thy Richard III. i. i 

into the iatal bnw els of the deep .... — iii. 4 
thus far into the bowels of the land.. — v. 2 
thou tiling of no bowels, thou ! . . Troilus ^- Cres. ii. 1 

no lady ot more softer bowels — ii. 2 

into tlie bowels of ungrateful Rome. Coj7'o/rtjm.v, iv. b 

tearing his country's Dowels out — v. 3 

that ran through Cccsar's bowels ..Julius I'lesar, \. 3 
in his brinish bowels swallow .. Ttius .iudruti. iii. 1 

my bowels cannot hide her woes — iii. 1 

this sword shall plough thv bowels .. — iv. 2 

BOWER— canopied with bowers . . Twelfth Night, i. ! 

bid her steal into the pleached bower. i)i«c7(.-l£/o, iii. 1 

lead him to my bower Mid. N. Dream, iii. 1 

near to her close and consecrated bower — iii. 2 
to beai- hull to my boxver in fairyland — iv. 1 
a fair queen in a sum.raer's bower- - 1 Henry IV. iii. 1 

than flatter hira in a bower Coriolanus, iii. 2 

when thou didst bower the spirit. . Romeo i^-Jut. iii. 2 

BOWING — goodly biu'den bowing. Tenjp. iv. 1 (siiug) 

bowing his head' against thesteepy.5'«mono//)//i. i. 1 

BOWL— lurk I in a gossip's bowl .... Mid. N. Dr. ii. 1 

challenge her to bowl Lnve's Labour' sLost, iv. 1 

roasted crabs hiss in the bowd — v. 2 (song) 

thus the bowl should run .... Taming nf Shrew, iv. 5 

madam, we'll play at Imwls }<i h.uid 11. iii. 4 

fill me a bowl of wine { rrp.) jui-l„nil 111. v- 3 

let me have such a bowl may hold../7i'/w(' VI II. i. 4 

like to a bowl upon a subtle Cariotnnus, v. 2 

Lucius, a bowl of wine Julius C^'sar, iv. 3 

give me a bowl of wine: in this I bury — ..'^- 3 
fill om' bowls; once inore..--lvi/o7/i/ ^■t.:leo]iitra, iii. 11 

broke his pate with your hQwl CymLelinc, ii. 1 

what I ha^'e lost to day at bowls — ii. 1 

yoiu- gravity o'er a gossip's bowl Rom. iyJul. iii- 5 

and bowl the round nave down the lull.Humlet, ii. 2 
BOWLED— and bowled to death . . Merry Wires, iii. 4 

BO WLE R — a very good bowler Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

BOWLING— little but bowling . . Winter'sTule, iv. 3 

BOWSPRIT- the yards and bowsprit . . Tempest, i. 2 

BOW-STRING— Cupid's bow-string. iWwcA/lr/o, iii. 2 

enough: hold, or cut bow-strings . - Mid.N. Drni. I. 2 

BOX — a box, a green-abox irep.) Merry Hives, i. 4 

if he took you a box 0' the ear.... Mea. for Mea. 11. 1 

borrowed a box of the ear Mer. of Venice, I. 2 

he wears his honour in a box unseen . . .-lirs Well, ii. 3 
that box? Sir, there lies irep.) . . Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

for the box 0' the ear that t Henry IV. i. 2 

I will take thee a box on the ear Henry V. iv. 1 

sworn to take him a box o' the ear . . — iv. 7 

purchase him a box o' the ear — iv. 7 

give him a box o' the ear 2 Henry VI. iv. 7 

the surgeon's box, or the patient's. Trail. 4- Cres. v . 1 

why, thou damnable box of envy — v. 1 

notning but an empty box Timon of Athens, iii. 1 

here is a box; I had it from Cymbetine, iii. 4 

if tliat box I gave you was not thought — v. 5 

of his lands will hardly lie in this box. . Hamlet, v. 1 

BOXES— all the boxes in my closet .... Pericles, iii. 2 

a beggarly account of empty boxes. . Rom. .§■ Jul. v. I 

BOX-TREE- into the box-tree . . Twelfth Mglit, ii. 5 

BOY— to sea boys, and let her Tempest, ii. 2 (song) 

when we "were bojs, who would — iii. 3 

and her blind boy's seandal'd company — iv. 1 

and be a boy right out — iv. 1 

not so fair boy, as well-favoured.. Two Gen. of V. ii. 1 
belike, boy, then you are in love .... — ii. 1 
no boy, but as well as I can do thera — ii. 1 

ay boy it's foi love — ii. 4 

ail' if thou see'st my boy — iii. 1 

rejoice ill the boy's coi-rection — iii. 1 

tlie hangman's boys in the market-place — iv. 4 
look to the boy. Why boy! wdiy wag! — v. 4 

where is that ring, boy? — v. 4 

I think the boy hath grace — v. 4 

more grace than boy — v. 4 

I keep but tlu'ce men and a boy . . Merry Wives, i. I 

and, to her boj', say I — i. 3 

here, boy s, here, here ! shall we wag. . — ii. 1 

and the boy never need — ii. 2 

bo.y, go along with this woman — ii. 2 

Hector of Greece, my boy — ii. 3 

hoys of art, I have deceived — iii. 1 

O you are a flattering boy : — iii. 2 

wiiy, this boy will carry a letter — iii. 2 

to ni,y wife, and Falstoff's boy — iii- 2 

and iTalstatr's boy with her — iii- 2 

thou'rt agoodboy: this secresy — iii. 3 

help to cover your master, boy — iii. 3 

O boy, thou hadst a father , — iii. 4 

let the boys leave to play — iv. 1 

get you home, boy — iv. 1 

and she's a great lubberly boy — v. 5 

and 'tis a postmaster's boy — v- -5 

when I took a boy for a girl — v. 5 

not Anne, but a postmaster's boy .... — v. .o 

cannot you see but marr.y boys? — v. 5 

a boy; un paisan, by gar, a boy — v. S 

ay, by gar, and 'tis a bo.y v. 6 

nor young enough for a boy Tuclflh Night, i. ,■) 

betw'een Itoy ami man — i. 5 

come hither, boy; if ever — ii. 4 

hath it not, bo.y? — ii- 4 

for, bov. however we do praise — ii- 4 

but died iliv sisttr other love, my boy — ii- 4 
did she -ri' iIr'c the while, old boy .. — iii. 2 

a very ui.-h,iiif-i liallry boy — iii. 4 

that iuutl iii.i^ratjiul boy there — v- 1 

come, boy , w itli me — v. 1 



— iv'. 1 



i. 2 



iii. 1 
iii. 1 



iii. 1 



iv. 1 
iv. 3 
V. 1 



BOY 



BOY— boy, thou liast said to me .. Twvlflh NiX'ht, v. 1 

tlmt I was imd a little tiny boy — v. 1 (song ) 

'twas tliy boy that stole your meat . . Much Ado^ ii. 1 
bov, — siciiioi-. In my eliamber-window — ii. 3 

ifthou kill'st me, boy — v. 1 

boy; eoino boy, fbllow mc: sir boy .. — V. 1 

lioy^, iipo?;, braiiL^arts, Jacks — V. 1 

i'ilsluon-mnnLieriii!? boys, that lie .... — V. 1 

fare vou well, bn^■; vou know — v. 1 

boys'in game thomselves [lepcalcil) ...Mid. N. D. i. 1 

Lath a lovely boy, stolen from — ii. 1 

withholds tlie loved boy, crowns him — ii. 1 

I do but beg alittle ebangeling boy.. — ii. 2 
if that boy did die; and for her (rrp.) — ii. 2 

give me that boy, and I will go 

and beg her In(lian boy 

and now I have the boy, I will undo 

boy, what sign is it, when Love's L, Lost, i. 2 

comfort me, boy: what great ' ' 

more authority, dear boy, name more 

is there not a ballad, boy, of the 

boy, I do love that eoimtry girl 

siiig, boy; my spirit grows heavy 

bis ili.~grace is to be called boy 

by heart, and in heart, boy 

the boy hath sold him a bargain .... 

then the boy's fat I'envoy 

domineering pedant o'er the boy 

whining, pm'blind, wayward boy 

king Pepin of France was a little boy 

play at push-pin with the boys 

yes', yes; he teaches boys the hornbook 
he hath been iive thousand years a boy 

the boy replied, an angel is not — v. 2 

tlie heilge-priest, the fool, and the boy — v. 2 
the hoy was the very statfof my age.jVer. o/ Ven.i\. 2 
is my boy (God rest liis soul), alive . . — ii. 2 

you are not Launcelot, my hoy — ii. 2 

your boy that was, your son — ii. 2 

a poor boy,— not a poor boy, sir — ii. 2 

to see me thus transformed to a boy — ii. 6 

in the lovely garnish of a bo^ — ii. 6 

wliy, all tlie boys in Venice follow him — ii. 8 

the tirst boy, for a thousand ducats . . — iii. 2 

between the change of man and boy — iii.'' 

kind of boy, a little scrubbed boy. ... — v. 

a prating noy, that begsred it — v. 

and tlien the boy, his clerk — v. 

for that same scrubbed boy — v. 

wlnit, boy? C!orae, come, eider As you Like it, i. 

but that I kindle the bo.v thither .... — i. 

as boys and women are for — iii. 2 

'tis but a peevish boy — iii. 3 

that blintl rascally boy, that abuses. . — iv. 1 

the boy is fair, of female favour — iv. 3 

that tlie boy can do all this — v. 4 

in this shepherd boy some lively .... — v. 4 

this boy is forest- born — v. 4 

stand to it, boy, steal away AWs Well, ii. 1 

no more were broken than these boys' — ii. 3 

these boys are boys of ice — ii. 3 

proud scornful boy, unworthy this .. — ii. 3 

to the wars, my boy, to the warsi .... — ii. 3 

rasli and unbridled boy, to fly — iii. 2 

twenty such rude boys might tend .. ' — iii. 2 

a foolish idle boy, but, for all — iv. 3 

to be a dangerous and lascivious boy — iv. 3 
to mell with, boys are not to kiss — iv. 3 (letter) 

that lascivious yoimg boy the count — iv. 3 

I'll not budge an inch, boy.. Tamins ofSh. 1 (indue.) 

saw'st thou not, boy, how Silver — 1 (indue.) 

and if the boy have not a woman's — 1 (indue.) 
I know, the boy will well usurp. ... — 1 (indue.) 
so would I, faith, boy, to have the next — i. 1 
tush! tush! fear boys with bugs .... — . i. 2 

fox is not so kind, my boy — ii. 1 

why. Jack boy! ho boy! — iv. 1 

but, sir, here comes your boy — iv. 4 

my boy shall fetch the scrivener .... — iv. 4 
and yours, when you were boys . . Winter's Tale, i. 2 

as to-day, and to be boy eternal — i. 2 

art thou my boy? Ay, my good — i. 2 

to say, this boy were like me — i. 2 

the lines of my boy's face — i. 2 

go, play, boy, play: thy mother — i. 2 

how now, boy? I am like you — i. 2 

take the boy to you; he so troubles.. — ii. 1 

give me the boy; I am glad — ii. 1 

*>ear the boy hence, he shall not — ii. 1 

a boy? A daughter; and a goodly babe — ii. 2 
how does the boy? He took good .... — ii. 3 

fancies too weak for boj'S — iii . 2 

a boy, or a child, I wonder? — iii. 3 

why, boy, how is it. I would — iii. 3 

■when was this, boy? Now, now — iii. 3 

but look thee here, boy — iii. 3 

take up. boy; open't — iii. 3 

this is fairy gold, boy, and 'twill — iii. 3 

we are lucky, boy; and to be so — iii. 3 

come, good boy, the next wa3' home — iii. 3 

'trs a lucky day, boy; and we'll do . . — iii. 3 

for thee, fond boy, if I may ever .... — iv. 3 
come, boy; I am past more children — v. 2 
and so have I, boy. So you have .... — v. 2 
not meanly proud of two such boys . . Com. of Er. i. 1 
my youngest boy, and yet my eldest care — i. 1 

is troubled with unruly boys — iii. i 

in Syraeusa, boy, thou know'st — v. 1 

how goes the night, boy ? Macbeth, ii. 1 

what B the boy Malcolm? — v. 3 

thy fear, thou lily-livered boy? v. 3 

thou unreverendboy, sir Robert's son. KingJolin, i. 1 



[ 77 ] 



to spread his colours, boy 

a noble boy ! who would not do 

till then, fair boy, will I not 

make it subject to this boy 

hath made me guardian to this boy. . 
and this boy lilier in feature to his . . 

my boy a bastard! by my soul 

of France can win: submit thee, boy 



— 11. 



BOY — shames him so, poor boy King John, ii. 1 

and riglits, of this oppressed boy .... — ii. 1 

that yon green boy shall have no ... . — ii. 2 

what say^t thou, boy? — ii. 2 

boy, tlien wliere art thou — iii. 1 

and at thy birth, dear boy! nature .. — iii. 1 

Huliert, keep this boy: Vliilip — iii. 2 

tlii'ow thine eye on yon young boy . . — iii. 3 

1 shall see my boy again — iii. 4 

lord I my boy, my iVi'thur — iii. 4 

and bind the boy, which you shall . . — iv. 1 

young boy, I must — iv. 1 

come, boj', prepare yourself — iv. 1 

1 can heat it, boy — iv. 1 

and I did purpose, boy, with this .... — iv. 1 

shall a beardless boy, a cockered .... — v, 1 

forgot the duke of tlereford, boy Richard II. ii. 3 

why, foolish boy, the king is left — _ii. 3 

boys, with women's voices — iii. 2 

dishonourable boy! that lie — iv. 1 

boy let me see the writing — v. 2 

poor boy, thou art amazed — v. 2 

wanton, and eft'eminate boy — v. 3 

pardoning Rutland, my transgressing boy — v. 3 

the boy shall lead our horses \ Henry IV. ii. 2 

of mettle, a good boy,— by the — ii. 4 

gallants, lads, boys, hearts of gold .. — ii. 4 

swear 'st thou, ungracious boy? — ii. 4 

to laugh at gibing boys, and stand . . — iii. 2 

man by man, boy by boy, servant by — iii. 3 

thisDoy lends mettle to us all ... . — v. 4 

1 have two hoys seek Percy and thyself — v. 4 

shall iind no boy's play bere — v. 4 

boy, tell him, I am deaf iHenrylV. i. 2 

boy! Sir? What money is in iTiy — i. 2 

and the hoy that I gave Falstaii .... — ii. 2 

hath not the boy profited — ii. 2 

instruct us, boy: what dream, boy?.. — ii. 2 

good interpretation: there it is, boy.. — ii. 2 

sirrah, you boy, and Bardolph — ii. 2 

give me my rapier, boy — ii. 4 

rides the wild mare ^vith the boys ... . — ii. 4 

e'er a scurvy young boy of them all — ii. 4 

none, Ned, none; no, boys, none — ii. 4 

or is the hoy of the wicked? — ii. 4 

for the hoy, there is a good angel ... . — ii. 4 

now sir John, ahoy; and page — \\V^ 

our watch- word was hem, boys — iii. 2 

and countenanced by boys, and beggary — iv. 1 

this same sober-blooded boy — iv. 3 

any of these demure boys come to — iv. 3 

cherish it, my boy; and noble offices — iv. 4 

hoy, hristle thy courage up Henry V. ii. 3 

like horse-leeches, my boys — ii. 3 

I am boy to them all tlii'ee — iii. 2 

come hither, boy; ask me this — iv. 4 

expound unto me, boy — iv. 4 

for there is none to guard it but boys — iv. 4 

'tis certain, there's not a boy left — iv. 7 

with wives, and boys, whose shouts — v. (chorus) 

compound a boy, half French — v. 2 

yoiu: French pai-t of such a boy — v. 2 

now, boy, do thou watch 1 Henry VI. i. 4 

thee and thy fashion, peevish boy. ... — ii. 4 

therefore, dear boy, mount on my .... — iv. 5 

drew blood from thee, my boy — iv. 6 

from Talbot, my brave boy — iv. 6 

leave the battle, boy, and fly — iv. 6 

to the peasant boys of France — iv. 6 

my hoy did drench his over mounting — iv. 7 

poor boy! he smiles, methinks — iv. 7 

we took him setting of boy's copies. 2 Henry VI. iv. 2 

in whose time boys went to span-counter — iv. 2 

if that the bastard boy s of York — v. 1 

my surety will refuse the boys — v. 1 

mine, boy? not till king Henry ZHenry VI. i. 2 

in vain, tliou speak'st, poor boy . — i. 3 

Dicky your boy, that, with his i. 4 

issue from the bosom of the boy — i. 4 

that this goodly boy should lose — ii. 2 

thy minions, proud insulting boy — ii. 2 

ah, boy, if any life be left — ii. 5 

O boy, thy father gave thee life — ii. 5 

my heart, sweet boy, shall be thy ... . — ii. 5 

peace wilful boy, or I will charm — v. .'j 

speak to thy mother, boy — v. 5 

my poor boy, Icarus — v. 6 

seared the wmgs of my sweet boy .... — v. C 

and let me kiss my boy — v. 7 

no, boy? Why do you weep so oft. . Richard III. ii. 2 

did dissemble, granddam? Ay, boy .. — ii. 2 

a parlous boy: go to, you are too .... — ii. 4 

come, come, my boy, we will — ii. 4 

O 'tis a parlous boy; bold, quick — iii. 1 

fools, and unrespective boys — iv. 2 

boy, — My lord. Know'st thou not any — iv. 2 

go, call liim hither, boy — iv. 2 

the boy is foolish, and I fear not him — iv. 2 

Kichmond was a little peevish boy . . — iv. 2 

should to thy ears not name my boys — iv. 4 

'tis too weak ever to get a boy Henry VIII. ii. 3 

wanton boys that swim on bladders. . — iii. 2 

it's one o'clock, boy, is't not?. — v. 1 

and of a boy. Ay, ay, my liege (rep.) — v. 1 

'tis a girl, promises boys hereafter. ... — v. 1 

among boys, grooms, and lacqueys . . — v. 2 

a file of boys behind them — v. 3 

good boy, tell him I come .... Troilus ■^ Cressida, i. 2 

virgins and boys, mid-age and wrinkled — ii. 2 

if my lord get a boy of you — iii. 2 

pr'ythee, be silent, boy: I profit not.. — v. 1 

and doubt thou not, brave boy — v. 3 

food boy, wink at me, and say. Timon of Athens, iii. 1 
'11 swear, 'tis a very pretty boy .... Coriolanus.i. 3 

my boy Marcius approaches — ^ii. 1 

with spits, and boys with stones — iv. 4 

than boys pursuing summer — iv. 6 

and my young boy hatli an aspect . . — v. 3 

tliat's ray brave boy — v. 3 

that brought you forth this boy — v. 3 



— IV. 13 



— IV. 4 

— V. 1 



BOY 



BOY— speak thou, boy ; perhaps Coriolanus, V. 3 

this boy, that cannot tell — v. 3 

name not tlic god, thou boy cf tears.. — v. .5 

boy! Osluve! pardon me, lords — v. .'i 

boy! fiilM.' liMiind! ifyouhave — v. .■) 

alone I dill it. i;oy! — v. .0 

is not to-inurrow, boy. the Ides ..Julius Crcsar, ii. 1 

boy! Lucius! Fast asleep? — ii. I 

boy, stand aside: Caius Ligarius — ii. I 

I pr'ythee, boy, run to the senate-house — ii. 4 

yes, bring me word, boy — ii. 1 

nark, boy! what noise is that? — ii. 4 

sure, the boy heard me — ii. 4 

bear with me, good boy — iv. 3 

it does, my boy; I trouble thee — iv. 3 

thy leaden mace upon my boy — i v. 3 

and, good boyhood night; let me see — iv. 3 
boy! Xiucius! Varro! CJlaudius! .... — iy. 3 
how many boys and wenches .... Antony^- Cleo i. 2 

'tis to be chid as we rate boys — i. 4 

stood pretty dimpled boys, like smiling — ii. 2 
then the boy shall sing; the holding — ii. 7 

to the boy Caesar send this grizzled.. — iii. 1 1 

like boys unto a muss — iii. 11 

till, like a boy, you see him — iii. 11 

he calls me boy; and chides, as he had — iv. I 
to the Roman boy she hath sold me. . — iv. 10 
young boys and girls are le\el now .. 
when boys, or women, tell their dreams — 
some squeaking Cleopatra boy my . . — 
stoop, boys; this gate instructs ....Cymhtii 
O boys, tliis story the world may .... — 
these boys know little, they are sons — 

divineness no elder than a boy — 

boys, bid him welcome — 

hark, boys. Great men, that had .... — 

boys, we 11 go dress our hunt — 

the boy Fidele's sickness did make . . — 
blazori'st in these two princely boys. . — 

jollity for apes, and grief for boys — 

a most rare boy, of melancholy — 

he was a queen's son, boys — 

let's see the boy's face — 

the boy hath taught us manly duties — 

hoy, he is preferred by thee to us — 

have with you, boys 

away, boy, from the troops — v. 

an old man, and two boys — v. 

two boys, an old man twice a boy — v. 

hath my poor boy done augiit but \^■ell — v. 

my boy, a Briton born — v. 

boy, thou hast looked thyself — v. 

nor wherefore, to say, live, boy — v. 

the boy disdains me, he leaves me .. — v. 

on the truth of boys and girls — v. 

what wouldst thou, boy? I love thee — v. 
is not this boy revived from death? .. — v. 

give answer to this boy — v. 

my boys, there was our error — v. 

what, villain boy ! barr'st me. . THus Andronicus, i. 

why, boy, although om- mother — ii. 

ay, boy, grow ye so brave — ii. 

there speak, and strike, brave boys . . — ii. 

you shall know, my boys — ii. 

remember, boys, I poured forth tears — ii. 

faint-hearted boy, arise, and look — iii. 

as for thee, boy, go, get thee — iii. 

alas, the tender l3oy, in passion — iii. 

come, boy, and go with me — iii. 

she loves thee, boy, too well — iv. 

ah, hoy, Cornelia never with — iv. 

open tiiem, boy; but thou art deeper — iv. 

and kneel sweet boy, the Roman — iv. 

lesson, then? boy, what say you? .... — iv. 

ay, that's my boy ! thy father — i v. 

my boy shall carry from me — iv. 

no, boy, not so ; 1 11 teach thee — iv. 

so brightly when this boy was got . . — iv. 
ye sanguine, shallow-hearted boys . . — iv. 

sir boy. now let me see your — iv. 

here, boy, to Pallas: here, to Merciu-y — iv. 

against the wind: to it, boy — iv. 

good boy in Virgo's lap — iv. 

touch not the boy, he is — v. 

to save my boy, to nomish — v. 

come hither, boy, come, come — v. 

ICol.-Knt.} why ray boy? Why? Lear, i. 

why, my boy? If I gave them — i. 

why no, boy; nothing can be made — i. 

the ditt(2rence, my boy, between — ;. 

dost thou call me fool, boy? — i 

ind.anger of kibes? Ay, boy — i. 

why, what canst thou tell, my boy — .J. 

loyal and natural boy, I'll work — n. 

with you, goodman boy, if you please — .u. 

come on, my boy: how dost, my boy? — iii. 

true, my good boy: come, bring — iii. 

but I'll go in: in, boy; go first — ill 

dolphin my boy, my boy, sessa — }]]■ 

a boy's love, or a whore s oath — iii. 

as flies to wanton boys, are we to the gods. . — iv. 1 
ay, boy; ready. You are looked for. .Hom.^-Jul. i. 5 

cheerly, boys; be brisk awhile — i. 5 

fetch me my rapier, boy — .......... — i. .0 

what, goodman boy! I say, he shall — i. b 

you are a saucy boy; is't so, indeed. . — _ i. .'> 
boy, this shall not excuse the injuries — in. 1 
thou, wretclied boy, that didst consort — iii.! 

give me thy torch, boy; hence. _. — v. 3 

the boy gives warning, something . . — v. 3 
provoke me? then have at thee, boy. . — v. 3 
lead, boy; which way; Yea, noise? .. — v. 3 
hillo, ho, ho, boy ! come, bird, come — Handel, i . 5 

do the boys carry it away? — ii. 2 

here, man and boy, thirty years — y. 1 

some wine, boys Othello, ii. 3 

BO YET— lord Boyet, my beauty. . Love's L. Lost, ii. 1 
good Boyet, you are not ignorant .... — ii. 1 

here comes Boyet. Now what — n. 1 

Boyet, you can produce acquittances — ii. 1 



BOY 



[78 ] 



BOYET— Boyct is disposed Love's L. Losl,u. 1 

Boyct, you can carve — i v. 1 

vou still wrangle witli her, Boyet.... — iv. 1 

licre comes Boyct, and mirth — v. 2 

thy news, Boyet? — v. 3 

know their minds, Boyet — v. 2 

the dne of honey-tongned Boyet — v. 2 

Boyct. prepare; I will away to-night — v. 2 

EOYLSIl— saueiness, and boyish tn^nis Mm, v. 2 

I ran it tlu-ough, even from my boyisli. . Olhello, 1. 3 

BOY-QUKI'LKR- 
come, con;e, thou boy-qneUer . . TroiUts A- Cress, v. 5 

BRABANT— in Brabant oneeV {ref,) .Lov,'sI.. L. ii. 1 

of Brabant, and of Orleans Uenrij V. ii. 4 

Alen<;on, Brabant, Bar, and Burgundy — iii. 5 
Antony dnke of Brabant — iv. 8 

BRABANTIO-signiorBrabantio irep.'). , Othello, \. 1 
most grave Brabiintio, in simple and pure — i. 1 

it is Brabantio; general, be advised — i. 2 

here conies Brabautio, and the valiant .. — i. 3 
Brnbnntio, take np this minified — i 3 

BR ABBLE— in private bvnlible . . Tii-eiilh Night, v. 1 
this pettv brabble will nniln us . . Tilus Andron. ii. 1 

BR ABBLtR—with such a bralililcr . . KtngJahn, v. 2 
like Brabbler the bound Troilus ^-Cressida, v. 1 

BRACE — but you, my brace of lords. . . . Tempest, v. 1 

as will utter a brace of words Love'sL. Lost, v. 2 

the utterance of a brace of tongues. . KingJohn, iv. 1 
n brace of dravnien bid God speed . . Richard II. i. 4 

like a brace of greyhounds SHf-nri/FI. ii. R 

^\ itb u hriicc i^l'conrtezans Richard III. iii. 7 

yo\i brace of w arlike brothers . . Troilus ^- Cress, iv. 5 

two brace of greyhounds Timon of.'lthens^ 1. 2 

held with a Ijrace of harlots — iv. 3 

discover a brace of unmeriting Coriolanus, ii. 1 

so. here comes a brace — ii. 3 

1 e^inld myself take up a brace — iii. 1 

your brace of unprizcable estimations. Cj/mbpZ/np,!. 5 

(and pointed to this brace) Pericles, ii. 1 

have lost a brace of kinsmen . . Romeo t^- Juliet, v. 3 

it stands not ill such warlike brace Olhello, i. 3 

without are a brace of Cyprus gallants .. — ii. 3 

BR ACKD—a drum is veaAy braced . . King John, v. 2 

B R AC IC LET— bracelets of thy hair..i\/»/.A-.'sD)-. i. ] 

with amber liracelets Taming of Shrew, iv. 3 

bra<'elct, necklace-amber Wiiiter'st. iv. 3 (song) 

sb'ic-tyc, bracelet, horn-ring — iv. 3 

this her bracelet, (O cunning Cymbeline, v. 5 

the bracelet of the truest princess — v. 5 

BK ACII— brach Jierriman .. Taming of Sh. 1 (indue.) 

■vritli the deep-mouthed brach — 1 (indue.) 

bad rather hear Lady, my brach ..MUnry II'. iii. 1 
when Achilles' brach bids me. Troilus^ Cressida,ii. 1 

when Eady, the liraeli, may stand Lear, i. 4 

hoinid or spaniel, brach, or lym — iii. 6 

BRACY— here was sir John Bracy ..1 Henry IT. ii. 4 

BR.\G-thou Shalt not live to brag. TwoGen.nf Vcr. iv. 1 

have heard him brag to you Tirelflh Kighi, iii. 4 

to brag what I have done Much Ado, v. 1 

the child brags in her belly Liu-e's L. Lost, v. 2 

C:rsar's thrasonical brag is i/mi Like it, v. 2 

thief brags of his own attaint?. . Com. nf Errors, iii. 2 

is left this vault to braer of Maehelh, ii. 3 

to brag, and stamp, and swear . . King John, iii. 1 

forgive me, God, that I do brag thus.. Henry V. iii. 6 
were some of your brags dismounted — iii. 7 

pardon me this brag Troilus * Cressida, iv. 5 

to brag unto them, thus I did Corinlnnus, ii. 2 

but made not here his brag Cymbeline, iii. 1 

bo hrairs bis service — v. 3 

cither our 1 -rags were cracked — V. 5 

with that iiroud brag of thine Tilm Andron. i. 2 

if fiirtune lirag of two she loved Lear, v. 3 

Verona brags of him Romeo Sf Juliet, i. 5 

in words, brags of Ms substance — ii. 6 

BRAGGARDISM-whatbraggardlsm.'AroG.o/ F.ii. 4 

EKAGCi ART— apes, braggarts. Jacks. Wuc/i Ado, v. 1 

as braggarts do their blades — v. 1 

the braggart, the hedge-priest Love'sL. Lost, v. 2 

see how' much I was a braggart ..Mer. of Ven. iii. 2 
a braggart, let him fear this (rep.) . . AlVs Well, iv. 3 
and Iwaggart \vith my tongue Macbeth, iv. 3 

braggart vile Henry V. ii. 1 

let the unscarred braggarts Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

by this unholy bragL-art Coriolanus, v. 5 

you reverend hragL'art, we'll teach you . . Lear, ii. 2 
a braggart, a rogue, a villain , . Romeo <5- Juliet, iii. 1 

BRAGGED— the knave bragged . . Merry Ifives, iii. 3 
the whip of your bragged progeny . . Coriolanus, i. 8 

BR AGGING— art thou bragging . . Mid. N. Dr. iii. 2 
like a tine bra^ginj^ youth . . Merch. of f'enice, iii. 4 
raw tricks of these bragging Jacks .. — iii. 4 
the brow of bragging horror King John, v. 1 

1 rascal, bragging slave iUenryW. ii. 4 

like the bragging Spaniard — v. 3 

under the correction of bragging Henry V. v. 2 

bragging, and telling her fantastical lies. 0(/u'/;o, ii. 1 

BR.'i.GLESS- yet bragless let it h^.TroiLfyCres. v. 10 
BRAID— Frenchmen are so braid .... AWs Well, iv. 2 

'BRAID — 'twould 'braid yourself Pericles, i. 1 

BRAIN — there thou may st brain \nm.Tempest, iii. 2 

my old brain is troubled — iv. 1 

cure thy brains, now useless — v. 1 

has Paite any brains? Merry Wives, iii. 2 

I'll have my brains ta'en out — iii. 5 

nor nowhere else, but in your brain — iv. 2 

out of your husband's brains — iv. 2 

ba\'c T laid mv brain in the sun .... — v. 5 

when liver, brain, heart TwelflhNight,i. 1 

till his brains turn out o'the toe .... — i. 3 

I wear not miitley in my brain — i. .'> 

that has no more brain Ihan a stone — i. .5 

whose scull Jove cram with brains .. — i. 5 

till I see his brains — iv. 2 

lieat out my brains with billets. .j»/ca./f/r Mea. iv. 3 

these paper bullets of the brain Much Ado, ii. 3 

soiniet of his own pure brain — v. 4 

if a man will be beaten with brains.. — v. 4 

have such seething brains Mid. N.'s Dream, v. 1 

a mint of plirases in his brain Love's L. Lost, i. 1 



BRAIN-arts cntircl.v keep the hraXn.. Love'sL.L. iv. 3 
lives not alime immiu'ed in the brain — iv. 3 
wormwood from your fruitful brain — v. 2 

the brain may devise laws Merch. of Venice, i. 2 

in his brain — wliich is as dry .. ..As you Like it, ii. 7 
Troilus had his brains dashed out .. — iv. i 
with pure love, and troubled brain .. — iv. 3 
woman's gentle brain could not drop — iv. 3 
brains of iny Cupid's knocked out . . AlVs Well, iii. 2 
his brains are forfeit to the next .... — iv. 3 

to the infection of my brains Winter's Tale, i. 2 

the blank and level of my brain — ii. 3 

the bastard brains with these — ii. 3 

would any but these boiled brains .. — iii. 3 
here is more matter for allot brain .. — iv. 3 

my dull brain was wrought Macbeth, i. 3 

and dashed the brains out — i. 7 

the warder of the brain, shall be — i. 7 

p oeeeding from the heat opjjressed brain — ii. 1 

that, when the brains were out — iii. 4 

the written troubles of the braiu — v. 3 

and his pure brain (which some .... King John, v. 7 

my brain I'll proN'e the female Richard II. v. 5 

I could brain him with his lady's . . 1 Henry IV. ii. 2 
the brain of this foolish compounded. 2He?iry/F. i. 2 

and perturbation of the brain — _i. 2 

rock his brains in cradle — iii. 1 

it ascends me into the brain — iv. 3 

fails, and my brain is giddy; O mel — iv. 4 
their brainswith care, their bones .. — iv. 4 

but in gross brain little wots Henry V. iv. 1 

a quagmire of yom' mingled brains ..\HenryVI. i. 4 

their giddy brains knocked out — iii. 1 

these conjurations in her brain 'illenry VI. i. 2 

my brain, more busy than — iii. 1 

steel, to sear me to tlie brain Richard III. iv. 1 

beside forfeiting our own hi&ins.HenryVIIl. (prol.) 

commotion is in his brain — ?j!* *^ 

yom- brain, and every function — iii. 2 

to beat this from his brains? — iii. 2 

a young conception in my brain . . Troil.fy Cress, i. 3 

were his brain as barren — J. 3 

no more brain than I have — ij- 1 

I have bobbed his brain — ii. 1 

if he knock out either of your brains — ii. 1 

and your brain so tempered — .ii. 3 

no arithmetic but her brain to set — iii. 3 

Hector has knocked out his brains . . — iii. 3 
little brain; these two may (rep.) .. — v. 1 
he has not so much brain as ear-wax — y. 1 

an honest Athenian's brains Timon of Athens, i. 1 

with it beat out his brains — iv. 1 

scorn 'dst our brain's flow — v. a 

to the seat o' the brain Coriolanus, i. 1 

your conversation would infect my brain — \\. 1 
but yet a brain, that leads my use . . — iii. 2 
care draws in the brains of men . . Julius Cresar, h. 1 

keep his brain fuming Antony i^- Cleopatra, ii. 1 

when I wash my brain, and it grows — ii. 7 
take from his brain, from his time . . — .hi. 7 
diminution in our captain's brain .. — in. 11 
yet have we a brain that nourishes . . — iv. 8 

lier beauty and her brain go not Cymbeline, _\. 3 

that bears all down with her brain .. — .ii. 1 
could have knocked out his brains .. — • iv. 2 
which the brain makes of fumes .... — iv. 2 

his nobler heart and brain — v. 4 

as madmen tougue, and brain not. ... — v. 4 
purse and brain both empty: the brain — v. 4 
the liver, heart, and brain Of Britain — v. f> 

mine Italia.i brain 'gan in your — v. 6 

beat forth our brains, and make. . Titus Andron. y. 3 

a heart and brain to breed it in? Lear, i. 2 

if a man's brains were in his heels — . i. 5 

lest my braiu turn, and the deficient — iv. 6 

have a surgeon, I am cut to the brains .... — ;■ iy. 6 

nay, I do liear a brain Romeo fy Juliet, i. 3 

tlu-ough lovers' brains, and then .... — i. 1 
which are the children of an idle brain — .i. 4 

youth with unstulfed brain — .ii- 3 

dash out my desperate brains? — iv. 3 

into every Crain, that looks so many Hamlet, i. i 

the book and voliune of my brain — .i. 5 

or else this brain of mine hunts not — ij- 2 

been much throwing about of brains.... — ii. 2 
about my brain ! humph! I have heard — .ii. 2 

wdiereon his brains still beating — iii- 1 

sleep rock thy brain ; and never come .. — iii. 2 
this is the very coinage of your brain. ... — iii- 4 

O heat, ch-y up my brains — iv. 5 

cudgel thy brains no more about it — v. 1 

couFd make a prologue to my brains — v. 2 

it plucks out brains and all Olhello, ii. 1 

and unhappy brains for drinking — ii. 3 

in their mouths, to steal away their brains — ii. 3 
hadst shut up in th.y brain some horrible — iii. 3 
is he not light of brain? He is that he is — iv. 1 
knockinL' oiit his brains — iv. 2 

BRAINED-if the other two be brained. Tcmpcs/, iii. 2 
that brained my purpose Meas.for lUeus. v. 1 

BRAINISH-this brainish apprehension. Ham/e/, iv. 1 

BRAINLESS— dull brainless Ajax. . Troil.^Cres. i. 3 

BRAIN-PAN— 
my brain-jian had been cleft 2Henry VI. iv. 10 

BRAIN-SICK— in brain-sick men.. IHejir?/ VI. iv. 1 

the bedlam hrain-^ick dncliess 2Henry VI. iii. 1 

mad raisleailer of thy brain-sick son.. — v. 1 
her brain-sick raptures cannot . . Trail, fy Cres. ii. 2 
to feed his brain-siclctits TilusAndronicus,v. 2 

BRAINSICK LY— think so brainsickly.. A/acieW, ii. 2 

BRAKE— from brakes [C'oi.-breaks] of vice 

{^Col.-Knt. ice] MeasureforMeasure,ii. \ 

hide me in the brakes, and leave ..Mid. N. Dr. ii. 2 
this hawthorn brake our tyring-house — iii. 1 
enter into that brake; and so every.. — iii. 1 

through brake, through brier .. ... — iii. 1 

and entered in a brake: when I did. . — iii. 2 
Iris passion ne'er brake intoextremity, Com. o/Bc. v. 1 

tidings of this broil brake off our liHcnri/Zr. i. 1 

under this thick-grown brake ....ZHcnry VI. iii. 1 



BRA 



BRAKE— and even here brake oK.. Richard III. iii. 7 
iuid the rough brake that virtue Henry VIII. i. 2 

BKAKENBIJRY— 
please your worship, Br.akenbury . . Richard III. i. 
we know thy charge, Brakenbury . . — i. 1 

Brakenbury, I have done these things — i. 4 
sir Robert Brakenbury — v. 4 

BRAMBLE— elegies on brambles.. Js j/om I.i;.T7'(,iii. 2 

BK AN— sup with water and hr&n. .Mea. for Mea. iv. 3 
fast a week with bran and water. . Love's L. Lost, i, 1 
cbaft' and bran, chaff and bran! . . Troilus^ Cres. i. 2 

and leave me Ijut the bran Coriolanus, i. \ 

meal and bran together ho thi'ows .. — iii. 1 
nature hath meal and bran Cymbeline, iv. 2 

BR.VNCH— e\cry lineament, branch ..iWuc/i^rto, v. 1 
that violates the sinalle.-t branch. Loj'e's L. Lostj i. 1 
his head, for a hraneli of victory.. .4s i/ou Likeit, iv. 2 
with any branch or image of thy state. .I/('s»V7;, ii. 1 
which cannot choose but branch .. Winler'sTalc, i. 1 
a branch and parcel of mine oath ..Com. of Iii r. v. 1 
one flourishing branch of his most ..Richard II. i. 2 

peace, or any branch of it illenjylV. iv. 1 

in every branch truly demonstrative.. Henri/ F.ii. 4 
as a branch and meiuber of this royalty — v. 2 
lopped the branch in hewing Rutlaud.3He«. VI. ii. G 

uo.hoi)cful branch ma.y spring — iii. 2 

adjudged an olive branch — iv. 6 

who.se top branch overjieered Jove's.. — v. 2 
but bis present is a withered branch ..Pericles, ii. 2 
of buil, bird, branch, or berry — v. (Gower) 

BRANCHED-my branched velvet. TwelflhMglit, ii. b 

BRANCHES— branches of learning.;1/cr. o/Ten. ii. 2 
wear upon youi" virgin branqhes . Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

or seven fair branches, springing Richard II. i. 2 

some of those branches by the destinies — i. 2 
all superfluous branches we lop away — iii. 4 

droops his sapless branches IHenryVI. ii. & 

why grow the br.anches, when Richard III. ii. 2 

m.y legs, like loaden branches, bow. Henry VIII. iv. 2 
reach his branches to all the plains .. — v. 4 
be lopped branches (rep.) . . Cymbeline, y. 4 (scroll) 
hath to it circumstantial branches .. — v. .^ 

and thy lopped bianehes point — v. 5 

bare ol her two br.anches? Titus Andronicus, ii. 5 

and an act hath three branches Hamlet, v. 1 

BRANCHLESS-yoursso brauchlcss.yln/. ^C/t'o. iii. 4 

BRAND— wasted brands do glow.i1//f/. A'. Dream, v. 2 
these petty brands, that caliuiiny . U'inler'sTale, ii. 1 
singed off with brands of fire. . Comedy of Errors, v. 1 
the senseless brands will s.^'mpathize .'.Rich. II. v. 1 

as did tlie fatal brand Altliea — . .'IHenry VI. i. 1 

a brand to the end o' the world Coriolanus, iii. I 

putting to my house the brand — iv. 6 

with the brands fire the traitovs'.. J uliusCwsar, iii. 2 

come, brands, ho, fire-brands — iii. 3 

nicely depending on their brands . . Cymbeline, ii. 4 

why brand they us with base? Lear, i. 2 

shall bring a brand from heaven — v. 3 

brands the harlot even here Hamlet, iv. 5 

BRANDED— should be branded ..Richard III. iv. 4 
never yet branded with suspicion. Wejirt/F///. iii. 1 
branded his baseness that ensued. .^Inf.i^-Ueci. iv. 12 

BRANDISH— never brandish mote.. Richard II. iv. 1 

brandish anything but my bottle 'iHenry 1 V. i. 2 

brandish vour crystal tresses 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

BRANDISHED-his brandished steel ..Macbeth, i. 2 
brandished b.v man that's of a woman.. — y. 7 
his brandished sword did blind men .1 Henry VI. i. I 
his bloody sword he brandished over me — iv. 7 

BRANDON— sir William Brandon.. Hic/iard J//, y. 3 
you, sir William Brandon, and you — v. 3 

Brakenbury, and sir Willi.am Brandon — v. 4 

BRAS— en Anglais, le bras. De ai-m. . Henry V. iii. 4 
d'esehapper la force de ton bras — iv. 4 

BRASS — with characters of brass ..Mea. for Mea. v. ) 
can any face of brass hold longer. Love's L. Lost, v. 2 
pewter and brass, and all tilings.. Taming of Sh. ii. 1 

since nor brass, nor stone Winter's Tale. i. 2 

were brass impregnable Richard II. iii. 2 

like the brass cannon; let the hvow.. Henry V. iii. 1 
shall witness live in brass of this .... — iv. 3 

brass, cur! thou damned (?'ep.) — iv. 4 

men's evil manners live in brass . . Henry VIII. iv. 2 
shoidd hold up hi!;h in brass. . Troitusfj Cressida, i. 3 

scud thy brass voice through — i. 3 

nor walls of beaten brass Julius Crpsar, i. 3 

1 will go get a leaf of brass Tilus Jmlron. iv. 1 

bind them in brass, having called Pi rides, iii. 1 

BRASSY — from brassy bosoms ..Mer. of Venice, iv. 1 

BRAT— that brat is none of mine.. Winter'sTale, ii. 3 

adventure to save this brat's life .... — ii. 3 

for as thy brat has been east — iii. 2 

as a beggar wont her brat Comedy of Errors, iv. 4 

condemn thy brat, and thee 1 Henry VI. y. 4 

as for the brat of this accursed ZHemy VI. i. 3 

by heaven, brat, I'll plague — v. 5 

answer for that peevish brat? Richardlll. i. 3 

ti> draw the brats of Clarence out .. .. — iii. 5 

follow him, against us brats Coriolanus, iv. 6 

no more dependency but brats Cymbeline, ii. 3 

bewray whose brat thou art Titus Andron. v. 1 

BR AVE— a brave vessel Tempest, i. 2 

mj' brave spirit! — i. 2 

it carries a brave form — i. 2 

the duke of Milan, and his brave son .. — i. 2 

you are gentlemen of brave mettle — ii. 1 

that's a brave god, and bears — ii. 2 

O brave monster ! lead the way ! — ii . 2 

he were a brave monster, indeed — iii. 2 

he has brave utensils — iii. 2 

is it so brave a lass? — iii. 2 

and bring tliee forth brave brood! — iii. 2 

this will pro\e a brave kingdom to me! — iii. 2 

O brave new world, that has — v. 1 

these be brave spirits, indeed! — v. 1 

and brave master Shoe-tie. Measure for Measure, iv. 3 
I'll devise thee brave imnishments ..Much Adc,v. 4 
O brave touch! could not a worm, . Mid. i\.Dr iii. 2 

therefore br.ave conquerors! Love's L. Lost, i. 1 

full merrily hath this brave manage — y. 2 



BRA 



BRAVE— brave Iloi-tor; wc arc irmch.Loiv',</-./.,v. •-' 

rouse up a brave miiKl Merchmit of renifi\ ii. 2 

O sweet t)liver, O brave (llivcr . . As you Like it, iii. 3 
a brave mau! he writes lirave (rep.) — iii. 4 
but all's brave, that youth mounts .. — iii. 4 

'tis brave wars! most admirable. . . . AlVs fVflL ii. 1 
brave atteuilants near Wnn-.Ta/nin-; of Sli. 1 (in<l\ie.) 

1 will unt liLiir tliese braves of thine — iii. 1 
bravoil iiKinv nu'u: lirave not me.... — iv. .1 

this is a luavc Icliow m>Uer's Tale, iv. 3 

amity too, of yoin* brave father — v. 1 

hail, brave friend! say to tlie king Macbelh,i. 2 

for bruve Maebeth (Well lie deserves — i. 2 

well met, brave Austria King John, ii. 1 

this bruve duke eanu'earlv — ii. 1 

darest tllou In-axe :i iinbleiimu? — iv. 3 

silken wautnu brave our fields — v. 1 

conipldsidu, and a ln-a\-e resi^ert! . . .. — ■ V. 2 
thereend thy brave, and turn thy face — v. 2 
brave soldier, jiardon me, that any . . — _y. 6 
as when brave Gannt, thy father. . . . Pirhardll. ii. 3 
Ifnny Percy, and brave Archibald ..Mlemyiy. i. 1 

by the lord, I'll be a brave jndge — i. 2 

rarewo'-ds! brave world! — iii. 3 

I have thrown a br.avc defiance — v. 2 

if die, biave death, when princes .... — v. 2 

forwornis, brave Percy — v. 4 

move to do brave arts' 2Henri/ /F. ii. 3 

a rascal, to brave me! — ii. 4 

his brave Heet witli silken HenryT. iii. (chorus) 

O brave siiirit! Via! les eaux — iv. 2 

take it, lira xe Vork : m iw, soldiers . . — iv. 3 

ilive me crowns, brave crowns — iv. 4 

le plus Iivave, valiant, ettrSs — iv. 4 

the most brave, valorous — iv. 4 

in which array (brave soldier) — iv. 6 

the bra\"e sir tiuisehard Dauphin — iv. 8 

called the brave lord Puntou IHenryFI. i. 4 

aseen<l, brave Talbot — ii. 1 

no more ado, brave Bur<:undy — iii. 2 

now Where's the Bastard's braves.... — iii. 2 
bi'ave Burgundy, undoubted hope .. — iii. 3 

welcome, lirave duke I — iii. 3 

brave captain, and victorious — iii. 4 

take mercy on brave Talbot's soul . . — iv. 3 

if he be dead, brave Talbot — iv. 4 

force from Talbot, my brave boy .... — iv. 6 

brave death by sjieaking — iv. 7 

welcome, brax-e earl, into our territories . — v. 3 

brave peers oi' I^lnLdaiid, pillars :2 Henry VI. i. 1 

bra\-e York, Salisbury — i. 1 

no better sii^n of a brave mind — iv. 2 

be brave then; for your captain is brave — iv. 2 

O brave! But is not this braver? — iv. 7 

and Clifford, are ye so brave? — iv. 8 

wilt brave me with these saucy (rep.) — iv. 10 
to the stake, my two brave bears .... — v. 1 

with thy brave bearing — v. 2 

brave warriors, Clifford and ZHemyVI. i. 4 

the sons of brave Plantagenet — ii. 1 

where your brave father Dreathed..., — ii. 1 

that thou, brave earl of March — ii. 1 

wdiy, then it sorts, brave warriors. ... — ii. 1 
welcome, my lord, to this brave town — ii. 2 

welcome, brave Warwick! — iii. 3 

is Lewis so brave? belike, he thinks — iv. 1 

thanks, brave Montgomery — iv. 7 

come on, brave soldiers — iv. 7 

and thou, brave Oxford — iv. 8 

brave warriors, march amain — iv. 8 

brave young prince! thy famous.. — v. 4 

brave followers, yonder stands — v. 4 

with them, the two brave bears — v. 7 

forgot already that brave prince Richard III. i. 2 

gallant-sprinrfng, brave Plautagenet — i. 4 

when traitors brave the iield ^ iv. 3 

a bold brave gentleman Henry VIII. iv. 1 

do pitch their brave pa\'ilions. . Troil. ^Cres. (prol.) 
iEneas: ia not that a brave man?.... — i. 2 

a brave man, niece; O brave Hector! — i. 2 
is't not a brave man? O, a brave man! — i. 2 

why this is brave now — i. 2 

brave Troilus I the prince of chivalry! — i. 2 

1 presume, brave Hector would not lose — ii . 2 
foot were on brave Hector's breast .. — iii. 3 

this brave shall oft make thee — iv. 4 

welcome, brave Hector; welcome ,... — v. 1 

and doubt thou not, brave boy — v. 3 

a brave fellowl he keeps his Timon of Athens, i. 2 

little gold of late, brave Timou — iv. 3 

advance, brave Titus: they do Corinlanus, i. 4 

if any think, brave death outweighs.. — i. 6 
a brave fellow, but he's vengeance proud — ii. 2 

j'on have done a brave deed — iv. 2 

are you so brave? I'll have you talked — iv. .'i 
his child, and this brave fellow too .. — v. 1 

that's my brave boy v. 3 

have you chose out, brave Cains... /K(ms Cresar, ii. 1 

soul of Rome! brave son, derived — ii. 1 

here wast thou bayed, brave hart — iii. 1 

didst thou send me forth, brave Cassius — v. 3 
brave Titinius! look, wher' he have not — v. 3 
how goes it with my brave Mark , , Ant. ^ Cleo. i. 5 
O that brave Cajsar! Be choked (rep.) — i. 6 

ha, ray brave emperor ! shall we — ii. 7 

no practise had in the brave squares of war — iii. 9 
together with my brave Egyptians all — iii. 11 

that's my brave lord ! I will be — iii. 1 1 

]tis a brave army, and full of — iv. 3 

it is because we "brave her: come .... — iv. 4 
O my brave emperor, this is fought . . — iv. 7 

have, bv their brave instruction — iv. 1 2 

wliat's brave, what's noble — iv. 13 

O brave sir! I would they were Cymbeline, i. 2 

in this to liearme down with htaves. .Tit-usAnd. ii. 1 

ay, boy, grow ye so bi-ave — ii. 1 

there speak, and strike, brave boys .. — ii. 1 
painted hope braves your mightiness — ii. 3 

I'll go brave it at the court — iv. 1 

to brave the tribune in lus brother's. . — iv. 2 



[79] 



BRE 



BR AVE— why, so, brave lords (rtp.) . Titus And. iv. 2 

brave slip, sprung from the — v. 1 

tills is a brave night to cool a courtezan. . Lenr, iii. 2 
Romeo, brave IMercntio's dead. . Knmeo ^-Juliet, iii. 
slew thy kinsman, brave Mercutio .. — iii. 

this brave o'erhanging flrmanicnt Hamlet, ii. 

this is most brave! that I, the son — ii. 

and demi-natured with the brave beast — iv. 
adieu, brave Moor! useDesdemona ....Othello,]. 
to throw out our eyes for brave Othello .. — ii. 
O brave lago, honest, and just, that hast — v. 
that be m;ule him brave me upon the watch — T. 

BllAVED-bravod in mine own liouse. '/"um.o/SA. iv. 

hast bra\-ed many men (rcppa/cc/) . — iv. 

that faced and braved me in this matter — v. 

and my state is braved l<iiiff.Joln>. iv. 2 

how I am braved, and must perforce. I /Icnj;/ r/. ii. 4 
have braved the east an hour ago . . Uichiini ill. v. n 
one he loves; braved by his brother.. .^w/.Cff.inr, iv. 3 

BRAVELY— liravcly the figure of this. Tempcs/, iii. 3 

and bravely rigij'd , as when — v. 

bravely, my diligence — v. 

'tw'as liravely done, if you bethink . . Muck Ado, v. 
he bravely broached his boiling.. Mi'rf. N. Dream, v. 
oaths, and breaks them bravely . . As youLike il, iii. 

steal away bravely. I shall stay All's Well, ii. 

and leave hci' bravely, go; the king . . — ii. 3 
and for our flight. Bravely, coragio! — ii. 5 
whatsoe'er he is, he's bravijly taken — iii. :> 

revel at as bravely as the best Tamini; ofSh. iv. 3 

she came to it, (bravely confessed.. iVinter'sTale, v. 2 
the noble thanes do bravely Maeheth, v. 7 

bravely came we otf King Joh n,v. 5 

come brother John, full bravely I Henry IV. v. 4 

for to serve bravely, is to come '{rep.^.lHenrylV. ii. 4 
who came off bravely, who was shot. . Henry V. ill. 6 

the French :ire bravely in their — iv. 3 

takes upon her bravely at first dash..l Hejiry VI. i. 2 
Piicelle bath bravely played her part — iii. 3 
been dry, and bravely marching ..2HenryVI. iv. 10 
loin bravely, let us to't pell-mell . . Richard I II. v. 3 

here we may see most bravely Troilus ^- Crcs.\. 2 

great Ajax bravely beat dowii Mm . . — iii. 3 

for having bravely shed thy wife Coriolanus, v. 3 

thou diest as bravely as Titiaius.. Julius Ca-sar, v. 4 
do bravely, hor.se! for wot'st thou . . Ant. .5' Cleo. i. .5 
Cytherea! how bravely thou becomest. Cymbeline, ii. 2 

a i>iece of work so bravely done — ii. 4 

fell bravely, and were slain — v. 4 

sir; see you do it bravely Titus Andronicus, iv. 3 

1 will die bravely, like a bridegroom Lear, iv. 6 

BRAVER^his more braver daughter . . Tempest, i. 2 

my dagger with the braver grace . . Mer. of Ven. iii. 4 
in brief, a braver choice of dauntless. King John, ii. 1 
a braver place in my heart's love ..\Henry IV. iv. 1 
I do not think, a braver gentleman . . — v. 1 
a braver soldier never couched lance. 1 Hen. VI. iii. 2 

two braver men ne'er spurred S Henry VI. v. 7 

a braver warrior, lives not this day . . Titus And. i. 1 

BRAVERY— and witless bravery . . Mea. for Mea. i. 4 
his bravery is not on my cost ....As you Like it, ii. 7 
double change of bravery .... Taming of Shrew, iv. 3 
come down with fearful bravery . . Julius Ca-sar, v. 1 

the natural bravery of your isle Cymbeline, iii. 1 

the bravery of his grief did put me Hamlet, v. 2 

upon malicious bravery [Kni. -knavery].. O/AeHo, i. 1 

BRAVEST— discipled of the bravest.... ^«'s;re«, i. 2 

the bravest questant shi'inks — ii. 1 

bravest at the last: she levelled ..^n/n»i!/<5-Cteo. v. 2 
from this most bravest vessel Cymbeline, iv. 2 

BRAVING— continue a braving war . . All's Well, 1. 2 
braving arms against tliy sovereign.. Bic/iorrf //. ii. 3 
in braving arms, be bis own carver ,. — ii. 3 

BRAWL— adevil in private hmwhTwelfthNight, iii. 4 

nor no brawl to come — v. 1 

but with thy brawls thou hast..M;'rf. N.'sDream, ii. 2 
win your love with a French brawl.Loue'sL. L. iii. 1 
the brook that brawls alon^ this, . .-is you Like it, ii. 1 
I'll rail and brawl, and with.. Taming of Shrew, iv. 1 
like a shrew, you first begin to brawl. Com.of Er. iv. 1 
his sports were liindered by thy brawls — v. 1 

as the times do brawl 2HenryIV. i. 3 

this win grow to a brawl anon — ii. 4 

in brawl ridiculous, the name of. Henry V. iv. (cho.) 
this brawl to-day gi'own to this faction.! Hen. VI. ii. 4 

first begin to brawl; the secret Richard III. i. 3 

none basely slain in brawls Tilus.indronicus^ i. 2 

a matter of brawl betwixt my uncle.. — iv. 3 
three civil brawls [K;i(.-broils] ..Romeo <§- Juliet, i. 1 
meet, we shall not 'scape a brawl .... — iii. 1 
the unlucky manage of this fatal brawl — iii. 1 
fur your rude brawls doth lie a bleeding — iii. 1 

put by this barbarous brawl Othello, ii. 3 

those whom this vile brawl distracted.. — ii. 3 

BRAWLED— brawled down the flinty ribs. JoAn, ii. 2 

BRAWLING-brawling discontent. itfea. /or il/ej . iv. 1 

brawling in French Love's L. Lost, iii. 1 

she is an irksome brawling scold . . Taming ofSh. i. 2 
kept waking, and with brawling fed. . — iv. 3 

what a brawling dost thou keep 1 HenrylV. ii. 2 

sir John? what,"areyoubrawlinghere.2Hi?77./F. ii. 1 
O brawling love ! O loving hate.. /Borneo c^J«;/e/, i. 1 

BRAWN — and that damned brawn.. 1 Henry IV. ii. 4 

and Harry Monmouth's brawn 2HenryIV. i. 1 

put this withered bra^vn Troilus <§• Cressida, i. 3 

hew thy target from thy brawn .... Coriolanus, iv. 5 
the brawns of Hercules; but his .... Cymbeline, iv. 2 

BRAWN- BUTTOCK— 
quatch-buttock, the brawn-buttock ..All's Well. ii. 2 

BRAY — trumpets' dreadful bray Richard II. i. 3 

thus bray out the triumph Hamlet, i. 4 

BRAYED— brayed with minstrelsy. 7'('mon ofAth. ii. 2 

BRAYING— shall braying tmmn&ts.King John, iii. 1 

BRAZED — that now I am brazed to it .... Leor, i. 1 
damned custom have not brazed it so.. Hamlet, iii. 4 

BRAZEN — upon our brazen tombs . . Love's L. L. i. 1 
with his iron tongue and brazen mouth.. JoAn, iii. 3 

through brazen trumpet send Richard II. iii. 3 

rather hear a brazen canstick \ Henry IV. iii. 1 

are brazen images of canonized -i Henry VI. i. 3 



BRAZEN— from their brazen caves..2;7c;i»;/ VI. iii. 2 
yet that thy brazen gates of heaven. .3H('»ii/ VI. ii. 3 
wert thou environed with a brazen wall — ii. 4 
and split tliv lira^cn pipe.. .. Troilus ^ Cressida, iv. 5 
tniin|iclcrs, u itli brazen Am. ...Antony fy Cleo. iv. 8 
why shell (lailv cast of brazen cannon ..HamW.i, 1 

brazi;.\-iaCi;— 

well said, brazeu-fucc; hold \towt.MerryWives, iv. 2 

BHAZEN-FACED-a brazcH-faced varlet.Le«r, ii. 2 

BKAZIER— he should be a brazier .. Henrj/ Ff//. v. 3 

BREACH— from the breach of the satL..TmelfthN. ii. 1 

as honour, withoiit breach of honour.Loue'si./,. ii. 1 

with the breach yourselves made All's Well^ i. I 

to excuse your breach of promise. Comedy nfEr. iv. 1 

like a breach in nature Macbeth, ii. 3 

set upon a little breach, discredit KfngJohn, iv. 2 

to come off the bre:Lch with his pike.2 Henri/ /F. ii. 4 

like the tide into a breach Henry V.\.2 

once more unto the breach, dear friends — iii. 1 
on, on! to the breach, to the breach.. — iii. 2 
the trumpet calls us to the breach .. — iii. 2 
at such a breach, at such a convoy .. — iii. 6 
for before breach of the king's laws . . — iv. 1 

guarded where the breach was 1 Henry VI. ii. 1 

which our policy must make a breach — iii. 2 

danger for the breach of law iHenry VI. ii. 4 

a breach, that craves a quick — iii. 1 

and where this breach, now in our . . — v. 2 
no apparent likelihood of breach . . Richard III. ii. 2 

aboded the sudden breach on't Henry VIII. i. 1 

oiu' breach of duty, this way — ii. 2 

however, yet there's no great breach — iv. 1 
the very breach, whereout Hector's. Troil. ^Cr.iv. 5 
tainted with the breach of hers.Cy/n&e/me, iii. 4 (let.) 
the breach of custom is breach of all. . — iv. 2 
this great breach in his abused nature.. Lear, iv. 7 

more honoured in the breach than Hamlet, i. 4 

scapes i' the imminent deadly breach. . . . Othello^ i. 3 
between him and my lord an imkind breach — iv. 1 

BRE ACHES— nuptial breaches ._. Lenr, i. 2 

of breaches, ambuscadoes, Spanish. . Rom. & Jul. i. 4 

BREAD — maid as ever broke hx&oA.. Merry Wives,\. 4 

the humour of bread and cheese .... — ii. 1 

is more to bread than stone Mea. for Mea. i. 4 

she smelt brown bread and garlick . . — iii. 2 
my troth he is, as ever broke bread. .il/!<c/i Ado, iii. 5 
that work for bread upon Athenian. M/t(. A', flr. iii. 2 

as the touch of holy bread As youLike it, iii. 4 

the bitter bread of banishment .... Richard //. iii. 1 

I live with bread like you — iii. 2 

that jade hath eat bread — v. 5 

item, bread, a halfpenny (rep.) IHenry/F. ii. 4 

he wouldhavechipped bread well.. 2He7irv/''. ii. 4 

crammed with (iistressful bread Henry V. iv. 1 

want ye com for bread? 1 Henry VI. iii. 2 

parts bread with him Timon of Athens, i. 2 

I speak this in hunger for bread .... Coriolanus, i. 1 

be glad of bread, and beg for it Pericles, i. 4 

corn, to make your needy bread — i. 4 

on thy heart, ere I taste bread Lear, v. 3 

God's bread! it makes me mad Ro7n. ^- Jul. iii. .'i 

took my father grossly, full of bread. . llamlel, iii. 3 

buys herself bread and clothes Othello, i\. 1 

BRilAD-CniFPEE— 

call me pantler, and bread-chipper.. 2Henry7F.ii. 4 
BREADTH— to a hair's breadth ..Mtrry Wives, iv. 2 

his woe the length and breadtli Much Ado, v. ! 

if there be breadth enough ..All's Well, iii. ■.; (letter) 
then she bears some hKMlth'/.ComeJij nf Ermrs, iii. 2 

owed the breadth of all this isle King John, iv. 2 

and yet the spacious breadth. . Troilusf,- Cressida, t. 2 

it is as broad as it hath brea<lth Ant. * Cleo. ii. 7 

he will repent the breadth of his great. /"crtcies, iv, 1 
than the length and breadth of a pair . . Hamlet, v. 1 

BREAK— break my back Tempest, \\i. 1 

if thou dost break her virgin knot — iv. 1 

my charms I'll break — v. 1 

I'll break my staff — y. 1 

now will we "break with him . . Tiro Gen. of Ver.\. 3 

now can I break m3' fast — ii. 4 

I am to break with thee — iii. 1 

be so bold to break the seal — iii. 1 

which he will break, as easily — iv. 4 

for lovers break not hours — v. 1 

they will break their hearts but..ilfern/W'iues,_ii. 2 

and I would not break with her — iii. 2 

break their talk, mistress Quickly . . — iii. 4 
if one break, the other will hold (rep.).Tu-elfthA.i. 5 
and then to break promise with him — ii. 3 
or we break the sinews of our iilot .. — ii- 5 
[_Col.2 some run from breaks of ice. il/ea./oril/en. ii. 1 
and those eyes, the break of day — — iv. 1 (song) 

break off thy song, and haste — iv. I 

his ]iaved bed would break — v. 1 

did he break out into tears Much Ado, i. 1 

will break with her, and with her father — 1. I 

after, to her father will I break — j. 1 

and instantly break with you of it .. — i.'- 

he'U but break a comparison — n. ' 

to break with liiiii about it — jj. 1 

if he break the peace, ho ought — .ii. 3 

for my life, to break with him about it — 111.2 

you break jests as brai,'garts do — v. I 

break the locks of prison gates . . Mid. N. Dream, 1. 2 

with fair iEgle break his faith — .ii. 2 

he will seem to break loose — iii. 2 

here will I rest me, till the break of day — 111. 2 
have a care the honev-bag break not — iv. 1 

now until the break of day — v. 2 

meet me all by break of day — v. 2 

break it, and not break my troth .. Lc/ce « L.Lost,i.\ 
article, my liege, yourself must break — i. 1 

if I lireak 'faith, tfiis word shall — i. 1 

and he, that breaks them in the least — 1. 1 

why, will shall break it — ii. 1 

and sin to break it — Ji. 1 

break up this capon - iv. 1 

break the neck of the wax — 1 v. 1 

you wouM for paradise break faith.. — iv. 3 
to break the vow I am eugaged in — iv. 3 



BRE 



[ 80 ] 



BREAK— maids; break off, break off.Love's L. L. v. 2 

of your eye must break my oath .... — v. 2 

Bevcr breaks men's troth — v. 2 

■\vbeii I break this oath of mine — v. 2 

I'll break a custom Merchant of Venice, i. 3 

who if he break, thou may'st — ;• 3 

if he should break his day — i- 3 

an' it shall please you to break \\\> this — _ii. 4 

swear he eannot choose but break — jit. 1 

those dulcet somids in break of day. . — iii. 2 

will before break of day be here — v. 1 

I never more will break an oath — v. 1 

will never more break faith advisedly — T. 1 

as lief thou didst lirenk his neck ..As you Like it, i. 1 

and when I bi\-ak that oath, let me. . — i. 2 

'gainst the lady will suddenly break — _i. 2 

tin I break my shins against it — _ii. 4 

brave oaths, aiid breaks them bravely — iii. 4 

on one side, breaks his staff — iii. 4 

break an hour's promise in love — iv. 1 

and break but a part — iv. 1 

if you break one jot of yomr promise — iv. I 

asmarriagc binds, and ulood breaks — v. 4 

if I break time, or flinch All's fFell, ii. 1 

I shall not break your bidding — ii. .^ 

you break into some merry .. Taming of Sh. 1 (ind.) 

if you break the ice, and do this — _i. 2 

canst not break her to the lute? — ii. 1 

my heart, concealing it, will break . . — iv. 3 

as' the sun breaks through — iv. 3 

to break a jest upon the company — _— iy. 5 

vou hove not dared to break Winter' s'l\de, iii. 2 

break up the seals, and read — iij- 2 

my heart, cracking it, break too! — — iii. 2 

anon did this break from her — iii. 3 

and break a foul gap into the matter — iv. 3 

will I break my oath to this — iv. 3 

will break the back of man — iv. 3 

Antigonus to break his grave — v. I 

do not break off so, for we may . . Comedy of Err. i. 1 

or I shall break that merry sconce .. — _i. 2 

or I will break thy pate across — ii. 1 

breaks the pale, and feeds from home — ii. 1 

break it with a deep-divorcing vow ? — ii. 2 

none enter, lest I break your pate.... — ii. 2 

I'll break ope the gate {repealed) .... — iii. 1 

well, I'll break in; go borrow — iii. 1 

Tou offer to break in now — iii- 1 

to answer it, that breaks his band — iv. 3 

I will not break away — iv. 4 

storms and direful thunders break Macbeth, i. 2 

that made you break this enterprize . , — _ i. 7 

the o'er-fraught heart, and bids it break — iv. 3 

and break it to our hope — v. 7 

and fools break off your conference.. A'ln^- John, ii. 1 

that still breaks the" pate of faith .... — ii. 2 

since kings break faith — ii. 2 

no bargains break, that are not — iii. 1 

to break into this dangerous — iv. 2 

needs must break. And, when it breaks — iv. 2 

this will break out to all our — iv. 2 

to break within the bloody house .... — iv. 2 

made me break off, and those thy — iv. 2 

and do not break my limbs — iv. 3 

.another day break in the east — v. 4 

that they may break his foaming. . ..Richard II. i. 2 

but it must break with silence — ii. 1 

see joj', that breaks that oath — ii- 3 

for I am loath to break om: — ii. 3 

they bre.ak their faith to God — iii. 2 

head, shall break into corruption .... — v. 1 

weeping made you break the story ., — v. 2 

the door, or I will break it open — v. 3 

and break the neck of tliat proud man — v. 5 

to break into this woman's mood 1 Henry IV. i. 3 

to break the pate of thee — ji. 1 

farther afoot, I shall break my wind — ii. 2 

in faith, I'll break thy little — .ii- ^ 

oftentimes breaks forth in strange.... — iii- 1 

and, withal, break with your wives .. ■ — fjj- ^ 

ere break the smallest parcel — iii. 2 

I pray God, my girdle Dreak — iii. 3 

of^ office did I break in Richard's time — v. 1 
breaks like a fire out of hi> 'keeper's ..iHenrylV. i. 1 

shall break into corruption — iii. 1 

1 saw hitn break Skog.an's head — iii. 2 

not to break peace, or any branch of it — iv. 1 

Trill you thus break your faith — iv. 2 

or other break some gallows' back — iv. 3 

life looks through, and will break out — iv. 4 

my officers, break my decrees — iv. 4 

I break, and you, my gentle creditors — (epil.) 

or break it all to pieces Henry V.i. 2 

a' breaks words, and keeps whole ... . — iii. 2 

their howls confused do break the clouds — iii. 3 

break up their drowsy grave — iv. 1 

the morning which breaks yonder. ... — iv. 1 

break out into a second course — iv. 3 

nor never break for urging — v. 2 

Katharine, break thy mind to me — v. 2 

break up the gates, I'll be yoiu- 1 Henry VI. i. 3 

contumeliously should break the peace — i. 3 

and break our minds at large — i. 3 

should they first break in — ii. 1 

the day begins to break, and night is fled — ii. 2 

will at last break out into a flame — iii. 1 

food greybeard? break a lance — iii. 2 

break my warlike word — iv. 3 

to break yom: necks, or hang {rep.) .. — v. 4 

although you break it when your .... — v. 4 

that breaSs a stick of Gloster's grove. 2Henry VI. i. 2 

and ghosts break up their graves — i. 4 

my lord, break we oft"; we know your — ii. 2 

and 60 break off; the day is almost .. — iii- 1 

from the king, or we'll all break in . . — iii. 2 

my burdened heart would break .... — iii. 2 

arid do good, break open the gaols — iv. 3 

then break into his son-in-law's house — iv. 7 

let them break your backs with burdens — iv. 8 

to break into my garden — iv. 10 



BRKAK— hath made her break out - .3lleury VI. i. 1 

I'd break a thousand oaths — _i. 2 

ah, would she break from hence — ii. 1 

break off the parley; for scarce I .... — ii. 2 

and lireak o'ercharged with grief — ii. 5 

upM-r sw'^:u-. and break an oath — iii. 1 

!• ' I I I "\;i k your oaths — iii. 1 

li. ii! . .^uis to break it off — iii. 3 

;-. IK \. I - 111, "1- l)reak my back — v. 7 

suir-Av l(i\:ik^ reasons, and reposing. /;/c/t((7fi III. i. 4 

their heads that iM-cak his law — i. 4 

ofGod, diilstl.icak tliatvow — i. 4 

wound of malice should break otit .. — ii. 2 
you break nut sanctuary in seizing him — iii. 1 
you break no privilege nor charter . . — jli* ^ 
and so break off the talk, and give us — iii. 1 

till heartstrings break — iv. 4 

feared to break an oath by him (»■<?;;.) — iv. 4 

darkness breaks within the east — v. 3 

like a glass did break i' the vmsmg,.. Henry VIll. i. 1 

and break the foresaid peace — i. 1 

such which breaks the sides of loyalty — i. 2 
break up the court; I say, set on .... — ii. 4 
the approach of this wild river break — iii. 2 

go, break among tire press — v. 3 

livelong day breaks seurril jests. . TroilmS,-Cress.i. 3 

as a sailor breaks a biscuit — ii. 1 

o'er the ice that you should break . . — iii. 3 
for if Hector break not his neck (reyj.) — iii- 3 

with sobs, and break my heart — iv. 2 

I will not break: faU, Greeks — v. 1 

will you go? you wiU break out — v. 2 

I must not break m.v faith — v. 3 

but a plague break thy neck — y. 4 

but must not break rny back . . Timon of Athens, yi. 1 

will knit and break religions — iv. 3 

within this mile break forth — iv. 3 

to Athens, go, break open shops — iv. 3 

insolence shall break his wind — y. 5 

to break the heart of generosity Coriolanus, i. 1 

we'll break our walls, rather than — _ i. 4 

which will in time break ope the locks — iii. 1 

(as he is beloved), break out — iii- 1 

which looks with us to break his neck — iii. 3 

break out to bitterest enmity — iv. 4 

the Voices dare break with us — iv. 6 

that, which shall break his neck — iv. 7 

bond and privilege of nature, break . . — v. 3 

he i-eturning to break our necks — v. 4 

doth not the day break here JuliusCresar, ii. 1 

be motives weak, break off betimes .. — ii. 1 
if he do break the smallest particle . . — ii- 1 

let us not break with him — ii- 1 

break up the senate till another — ii- 2 

fret, till your proud heart break — iv. 3 

Egyptian fetters I miist break Antony <?■ Cleo. i. 2 

from this enchanting queen break oft' — i. 2 
I shall break the cause of our expedience — i- 2 
which break themselves in sweariug — _ i. 3 

if swift thought break it not — iv- G 

(b-ied with grief, will break to powder — iv- 9 

did break the name of Antony — iv. 12 

false housewife Fortune break her wheel — iv. 13 
O break! O break! As sweet as balm — v. 2 

wherefore breaks that sigh CymbMne, iii. 4 

to break it with a fearful dream — iii. 4 

might break out, and swear he'd fetch — iv. 2 

thy noble heart to break Titus Andronicus, iji. 1 

and do not break into these deep .... — iii- 1 

cattle break their necks — v. 1 

and nephew, break the parle — v. 3 

and break my very utterance — v. 3 

who shims not to break one Pericles,]. 2 

by break of day, if the wind cease — lii- 1 

sought to make us break oiu- vow Lear, i- 1 

tears, which break from me perforce — i- 4 

lest it break thy neck with following it — — ii- 4 

but tliis heart sliall break — ii- 4 

wilt break my heart? I'd rather break mine — iii- 4 

it is, and my "heart breaks at it — iv- 6 

lance of justice hurtless breaks — iv- (i 

break, heart; I pr'ythee, break — v- 3 

grudge break to new nmthij .. Romeo fy Juliet (prol.) 
light through yonder window breaks? — ii. 2 
Obreak, my heart! poor bankrupt (i-ep.) — iii. 2 
the break of day disguised from hence — iii. 3 

but break it, and take this — v- 1 

peace, break thee off; look, where it — Hamlet, i. 1 
break we our watch up; and, by my advice — i. 1 

but, break, my heart; for I must hold — _i. 2 

break all the spokes and fellies — ii. 2 

calls me villain? breaks my pate across.. — ii. 2 
what we do determine, oft we break .... — '.ij- 2 

if she should break it now — jj!- ^ 

and break yom' own neck down — iii. 4 

that inward breaks, and shows no cause — iv. 4 

break not your sleeps for that — iv. 7 

breaks out to savage madness Othello, iv. 1 

or else break out in peevish jealousies. . — iv. 3 

persuade justice to break her sword . - - . — v- 2 

BREAKER— a breaker of proverbs ..\Henry IV. i. 2 

I'll be no breaker of the law I Henry VI. i. 3 

BREAKFAST— relation for a breakfast. Tempest, y. 1 
be mended with a breakfast . . Two Gen.of Ver. iii. 1 
would have been a breakfast to the beast — y. 4 

to my house to breakfast Merry Wives, iii. 3 

or seven dozen of Scots atabreakfast.lHenjy/F.ii. 4 
go, make ready breakfast; love thy.. — iii. 3 

I will bestow a breakfast, to make Henry F. ii. 1 

eat his breakfast on the lip of a lion — iii. 7 

a sorry breakfast for mj' lord iHenry VI. i. 4 

called your grace to breakfivst once . . Rich. III. iv. 4 
to brea"kfast, with what appetite . . Henry VIII. iii. 2 

be at a breakfast of enemies Timon of Athens^ i. 2 

livedst but as a breakfast to the wolf — ly. 3 
boars roasted whole at a breakfast.. ^n(. <5- Cleo.u. 2 

which is not worth a breakfast Pericles, iv. 6 

BREAKING— in breaking faith. Two Gen. of Ver. iv. 2 
sudden breaking out of mirth. . . . Love's L. Lost, v. 1 
so much I hate a breaking cause — v. 2 



BRE 



BKEAKING-heard, breaking of ribs., ^s you. Like, i. 2 
or the breaking of my Spanish svorA. All'sWeU, iv. 1 
in brcakii,!; Ihci.i, 111" is stivinj.'er than — iv. 3 
theaianv In-.i^KiiiL-, mv luisl, and hies — iv. 4 

not'.-iiiiail.Mc niinvakinu It.iUcstv.KVn/o-'sT'ate, i. 2 
of water in Ike lavakiiiu guliih. . Comcrfy n/i'rr. ii. 2 
break an^' lireaking here, and I'll break — iii- 1 

it seems, thou wantest Ijrenlcing — iii- 1 

any accent, breaking from thy tongue ....John. v. 6 
late tossing on the breaking seas . . Richard II. iii. 2 

by breaking through the foul \ Henry IV. '\. 2 

grow stronger for the breaking . . ..2Henry I V. iv. 1 
the horsemen off from breaking in . . 1 Henry VI. i. 1 
and, breaking in, were by the swords.3//e7irj/ VI. i. 1 
why sigh'st thou without breaking? 'A-oiY. <§• Cr. iv. 4 
then this breaking of his has been.'A'mono//l(/i._v. 1 
mature for the violent l)rcaking out. Corto/ont«, iv. 3 

breaking his oath and resolution — v. .5 

did withhold our breaking forth. /4n(o7i(/<5-C'i()o. iii. 6 

the lireaking of so great a thing — v- 1 

breaking forth in rank and not to be Lear, i. 4 

oft breaking down the pales and forts . . Hamlet, i. 4 
BREAK-NECK— to meabreak-neck..Wm;<?r'5r. i. 2 
BREAK-PROMISE— 

most pathetical break-promise ..As you Like it, iv. 1 
BREAK'ST-break'st thy instrument. Jui.C<csar, iv. 8 

BREAK-VOW— that daily break-vow lohn, ii. 2 

BREAST— and penetrate the breasts of . . Tempest, i. 2 
wliose heads stood in their breasts .... — iii. 3 
that dost inhabit in my breast.. 2'wo Gen. of Ver. v. 4 
the fool has an excellent breast . . Twelfh Night, ii. S 
this crawling serpent from my breast. ii/id.JV. D. ii. 3 
broached his boiling bloody breast . . — v. 1 

come, blade, my breast imbrue — v. 1 

some reason, in my breast Love'sL.Lost,u. 1 

all about the breast: a candle, ho! .. — iv. 3 

a brow, a breast, a waist, a leg — iv. 3 

the base ground with obedient breast — iv. 3 

then my heart is in thy breast — v. 2 

ay, his breast; so says the bond.. Mer.of Venice, iv. 1 
you must cut this flesh from off his breast — iv. 1 
whoever charges on his forward breast. .(4/r.s Well, iii. 2 
is from my breast the innocent . . Winter's Tale, iii. 2 
if my breast had not been made. .Comedy of Br. iii. 2 

come to my woman's breasts Alacbeth, i. .5 

O, my breast, thy hope ends — iv. 3 

due to some single breast — iv. 3 

in any breast of strong authority. . . . King John, ii. 1 
that hand upon that breast of thine.. — iii. 1 
the mood of a much troubled breast.. — iy. 2 

a bold spirit in a loyal breast Richard II. i. 1 

cold cowardice in noble breasts — i. 2 

may enter Butcher Mowbray's breast — i. 2 

truth liath a quiet breast — i . 3 

keep thy sorrow in my breast — iii. 4 

a thousand spirits in one breast — iv. 1 

liis mouth, ours from our breast — v. 3 

conjure from the breast of civil 1 Henry IV. iv. 3 

from the breast of Bolingbroke 2Henry IV. iv. 1 

reigns solely in the breast of . . Henry V. ii. (chorus) 

iny breast I'll bm'st with 1 Henry VI. i. Ci 

lock his counsel in my breast — ii. a 

engenders thunder in his breast — iii. 1 

undaunted spirit in a dying breast . . — iii. 2 
thyself hast given her woetui breast. . — iii. 3 
beget new courage in our breasts .... — iii. 3 

when thou suck'dst her breast — v. 4 

sharp dissension in my breast — v. 6 

cherished in your breasts 'iHenry VI. iii. 1 

comfort from a hollow breast — iii. 2 

his head lie on my tlirobbing breast — iv. 4 

this breast from harbouring foul — iv. 7 

that Are all my breast ZHenryVI.W. 1 

plant courage m their quailing breasts — ii. 3 
tugging to be victors, breast to breast — ii- b 
my sighing breast shall be thy funeral — ii. h 
your tathe"rs' bosoms, split ray breast — ii. 6 

will make a battery in his breast — iii- 1 

infuse his breast with magnanimity- . — v. 4 

my In-east can better brook thy — v. P 

thy halberd higher than my breast. . Richardlll. i. 2 

once didst bend against her breast — i. 2 

please to hide in this true breast — i- 2 

even so thy breast encloseth — i. 2 

weep so oft? and beat your breast — ii - 2 

put meekness in thy breast — ii- 2 

another spread on his breast Henry VIII. i. 2 

to tremble the region of my breast.. . . — ii. 4 

strikes his breast hard: and anon — iii. 2 

he has a loyal breast, for you have seen — iii. 2 
dare sail upon her patient breast . . Trail. SrCres. i. 3 
foot were on brave Hector's breast .. — iii. 3 
unmeasurable, and infinite breast. Timon ofAth. iv. 3 
in whose breast doubt and suspect. . . . — iv. 3 

the breasts of Hecuba, when she Coriolanus, i. 3 

to ease his breast with panting — ii. 2 

what his breast forges, that his tongue — iii. 1 

blood out of thy country's breast — iv. 5 

my remission lies in Volcian breasts — v. 2 

this breast of mine hath buried Julius Cwsar, i. 2 

seemed to open the breast of heaven . . — i. 3 

and here my naked breast — iv. 3 

burst the buckles on his breast ..Antony cj- Cl^o. i. 1 
dost thou not see my baby at my breast - v. 2 

here, on her breast, there is — v. 2 

on her left breast a mole Cymbeline, ii. 2 

under her breast (worthy the pressing) — ii. 4 

this tablet lay upon his breast — v. 4 

whose naked breast stepped before . . — v. s 
is left to tyrannize upon my breast. . Titus And. iii. 2 

his loving breast thy pillow — v. 3 

inflamed'desire in my breast Pericles, i. 1 

all comfort m your sacred breast — i. 2 

by the o'er-fed breast of this most — iii- (Gower) 

lie heavy in my breast Borneo ^Juliet, i. 1 

closed in my breast, by some vile — _i. 4 

as that witliiu my breast ^ ii. 2 

thine eyes, peace in thy breast — ii. 2 

piercing steel at bold Mercutio's breast — iii. 1 
here on his manly breast: a piteous corse — iii. 3 



BRE 



BRU AST-needs be treason in my breast. Jlam/p/, iii. 2 

ftnil tilting one iit other's breast otliello, it. 3 

has a breast so pure, but some uneleanly — iii. 3 
man but a rush against Othello's breast — v. 2 
1! I'.IO AST-DlCiiV-breast-ileep in earth. Tilns.lmlr. v. 3 
r.ltlOAS'l'ED— and breasted the snrf;e ..Tempest, ii. 1 
JiUiOASTINO-breastinc the \M\v .Urnryi: iii. (eho.) 
iiino .VS-ri^J-ATE-stniiVscr broastphae.2;;,'». ('/. iii. 2 

BKK AT II— shall pen thy breath up Tumpest, i. 2 

their words are natural breath — y. 1 

gentle breath of yours — (cjiil.) 

here's my mother's breatli .... Two Gen. of 'Vr. li. 3 

in respect of her breath — iii. I 

that makes amends for her sour breath — iii. 1 

and so sweet a breath to sing Tiaelfth Night, ii. 3 

a contagious breath — ii. 3 

fly away, fly away, breath — ii. 4 (song) 

our very pastime, tired out of breath — iii. 4 
a breath thou art, (servile to all . . Mea./orMea. iii. 1 
and a scandalous-breath to fall ou him — v. 1 
and words from bresth, as there is sense — v. 1 
if her breath were as terrible as her . . MuchAdo, ii. 1 
one breath of her accustomed crossness — ii. 3 
that \vith thy breath hast killed — — v. 1 
foul breath, and foul breath is noisome — v. 2 
such dulcet and harmonious breath. 3/id. N.Dr. ii. 2 
O, I am out of breath, in this fond .. — ii. 3 
so doth thy breath, my dearest Thisby — iii. 1 

lay breath so bitter on your — iii. 2 

mockers waste more idle breath — iii. 2 

for wc are to utter sweet breath — iv. 2 

the endeavour of this present breath.. Lowe'sL.L. i. 1 
vows are but breath, and breath . . — iv. 3 (ver.) 
wished himself the heaven's breath — iv. 3 (ver.) 
that charge their breath against us . . — v. 2 
with your sweet breaths puil'ed out . . — v. 2 

of thy royal sweet breath as will — v. 2 

own part, I breathe free breath — v. 2 

in the converse of breath — v. 2 

with 'bated breath, and whispering. iv/^r. of Ven. i. 3 
besides commends, and courteous breath — ii. 9 

lips, parted \vith sugar breath — iii. 2 

than any that draws breath in Italy — iii. 2 
although thy breath be rude..4si/oii Like, ii. 7 (song) 

and breaths that I defied not — (epil.) 

or sweet breaths, will, for my — (epil.) 

insijired merit so by breath is barred. .^ii's Well,u. 1 

made a groan of her last breath — iv. 3 

wanton with her breath Taming ofSh. 2 (indue.) 

and with her breath she did perfume — i. 1 
heat outwardly, or breath within. tVinler'sTate, iii. 2 
Juno's eyes, or Cytherea's breath .... — iv. 3 
your first queen's again in breath .... — v. 1 
and could put breath into liia work . . — v. 2 

could ever yet cut breath? — v. 3 

they'll suck oiu- breath, or pinch . . Com. of Err. ii. 2 
when the sweet breath of flattery .... — iii. 2 

but I felt it, hot in her breath — iii. 2 

to the hot breath of Spain — iii. 2 

run this humour out of breath — iv. 1 

how hast thou lost thy breath — iv. 2 

melted as breath into the wind Macbeth, i. 3 

who, almost dead for breath — i. 5 

that the heaven's breath smells — i. B 

of deeds too cold breath gives — ii. 1 

pay Iris breath to time — iv. 1 

mouth-honour, breath — v. 3 

give them all breath, those clamorous.. — v. 6 
abundance of superfluous breath .... King John, ii. 1 
by the windy breath of soft petitions — ii. 2 
is but the vain breath of a common . . — iii. 1 
can task the free breath of a sacred . . — iii. 1 

the latest breath, that gave the — iii. 1 

the vile prison of afflicted breath — iii. 4 

and stop this gap of breath — iii. 4 

I will not, having breath to cry — iii. 4 

for even tlie breath of what — iii. 4 

nay, one quiet breath of rest — iii. 4 

the breath of heaven hath blown .... — iv. 1 

but with my breath I can revive — iv. 1 

this confine of blood and breath — iv. 2 

that sweet breath which was embounded — iv. 3 

it was my breath that blew this — v. 1 

the name of right, with holy breath.. — v. 2 

your breath first kindled the dead — v. 2 

whose black contagious breath already — v. 4 
young, and cheerly drawing bTeath.. Richard II. i. 3 

the sweet infant breath of gentle — i. 3 

my tongue from breathing native breath — i. 3 

such is the breath of kings — i.3 

thy kingdom cannot buy my breath — i. 3 

nor strive not with yoiu' breath — ii. 1 

'tis breath thou laek'st, and that breath — ii. 1 
sighed my English breath in foreign — iii. 1 
the breath of worldly men cannot — — iii. 2 
allowing him a breath, a little scene — iii 2 

pays death servile breath — iii. 2 

send the breath of parte into his .... — iii. 3 

by subject and inferior breath — iv. I 

with mine own breath release all — iv. 1 

recover breath ; tell us how near is . . — v. 3 
giving him breath, the traitor lives . . — v. 3 
restram their breath on some \ Henry IF. ii. 3 

for breath to utter what is like ... — ii. 4 

hark how hard he fetches breath — ii. 4 

might draw short breath to day — v. 2 

1 was doNvn, and out of breath — v. 4 

he sure means brevity in breath . . . .•illenry IV. ii. 2 

true bed, and yielder up of breath .... — iv. 2 

by his gates of breath there lies ....... — iv. 4 

and found no course of breath within — iv. 4 
the breatli no sooner left his father 's . . Henry V.\.\ 

anight is but small breath — ii. 4 

hold hard the breath, and bend up .. — iii. 1 
subjected to the breath of every fool — iv. 1 

my fading breatli permit 1 Henry VI. ii. ^ 

vexation almost stops my breath .... iv. 3 

pause, and take thy breath — iv. 6 

thy fiithcr ere thon yield thy breath. . — iv. 7 
by breath of her renown — v. 5 



[_81J 

BKEATlI-60 long as breath did Iast..2W«nr!/ VI. i. 1 
for his breath stiivks with eating .... — iv . 7 
miu-der thy breath in middle of a word. Rich.III.Mi.t) 
give me some breath, some little pause — iv. 2 
stops he now for breath? well, be it so — iv. 2 
a breath, a bubble; a ciueeu in jest .. — iv. 4 

and in the breath of bitter words — iv. 4 

despairing, yield thy breath — y. 3 

kiss you twenty with a breath Henry VIII. i. 4 

they are breath I not believe in — ii. 2 

that breath fame blows; that pTB,\se.Troil.ii- Cres.i. 3 

your breath with full consent — ii. 2 

digestion sake, an after-dinner's breath — ii. 3 
she fetches her breath as short as — — iji. 2 

than breath, or pen, can give — iii. 3 

not given so many good words breath — iv. 1 

of our own labouring breath — iv. 4 

with distinct breath and consigned . . -= iv. 4 

to the uttermost, or else a breath — iv. 5 

an impair thought with breath — iv. .'j 

seen thee pause, and take thy breath — iv. i 

but keep yourselves in breath — v. 7 

I'll take good breath; rest, sword .... — y. 9 
and pledges the breath of him . . Timon of Athens,]. 2 
give me breath: I do beseech you .... — ij. 2 

to give it in a breath — !'• 2 

the breath is gone whereof this praise — _;;. 2 
they have e'en put my breath from me — iu. 4 
breathinfeet breath; that their society — iv. 1 
he whose pious breath seeks to convert — iv. 3 

and let his very breath, whom — iv. 3 

not by his breath, that is more miserable — iy. 3 

poor suitors have strong breaths Coriolanus,i. 1 

spend my malice in my breath — ii. 1 

the people, beg their stinking breaths — u. 1 

for the hire of their breath only — .if. 2 

lamout of breath; confusion's near — Jii. 1 
whose breath I hate as the reek o' the — iii- 3 

never man sighed truer breath — iv. 5 

and the breatn of garlic-eaters! — iv. 6 

with such weak breath as this — y- 2 

uttered such adeal of stinking breath. ./iji.Ctcsar, i. 2 
and having lost her breath. . Antony * Cleopatra, li. 2 
our fortune on the sea is out of breath — .."■• 8 
from his all-obejang breath I hear . . — iii. 1 1 

give him no breath, but now — iv. 1 

intheir thick breaths, rank of gross diet — v. 2 

motion and breath left out Cymbeline,ii. 4 

whose breath rides on tlie posting .... — lu. 4 

out-sweetened not tliy breath — iv. 2 

is, every breath, a death — ■"■• ' 

on citlier side I come to spend my breath — v. 3 
his celestial breath was sulphurous . . — y. 4 
and going mth thy honey breath. Titus Andron. ii. 5 

who tells us, life's but a breath I'ericles, i. 1 

the breath is gone, and the sore eyes — — i. 1 
enough ; let your breath cool yourself . . -« i. 1 
breath [Co/.-blast— Xni.-spark] gives heat — i. 2 

fetch breath that may proclaim — i.4 

and wanting breath to speak — .i- 4 

and left me breath nothing to think on — _n. 1 

[CoM a warm breath out of her — ni. 2 

a love that makes, breath poor Lear, i. 1 

like the breath of an unfee'd lawyer — .i. 4 

I am scarce in breath, my lord — n- 2 

my breath and blood! fiery? thefleryduke? — _ii. 4 

■ take my breath from me — iv.H 

if that her breath will mist or stain — v. 3 

have life, and thou no breath at all — y- 3 

their breatlis with sweetmeats . . Romeo Sf Juliet,}. 4 

by summer's ripening breath — ii- 2 

breath? How art thou out of breath? — u. 5 
breath to say to me— that thou (rep.") — ii. 5 

then sweeten with thy breath — .11.6 

with gentle breath, calm look, knees — in- 1 
unless the breath of heart-sick groans — in. 3 
no warmth, no breath, shall testify . . — iv. 1 
the trunk may be discharged of breath — v. 1 
hath sucked the honey of thy breath — v. 3 

O, you the doors of breath, seal — v. 3 

hath stopijed her breath — v. 3 

my short date of breath is not so long — y . 3 

windy suspiration of forced breath Hamlet, i, 2 

words of so sweet breath composed — iii. 1 

give it breath with your mouth — \]]-^ 

words be made of breath, and breath of life — iii. 4 
the gentleman in our more rawer breath? — v. 2 
shall drink to Hamlet's better breath — — v. 2 

he's fat, and scant of breath — v. 2 

draw tliy breath in pain, to tell my story — y. 2 

with thine own powerful breath Othello, ii. 1 

that their breaths embraced together — — ii. 1 
thy words before thou givest them breath — iii. 3 
each syllable, that breath made up — iv. 2 

balmy breath, that dost almost persuade — v. 2 
whose breath, indeed, these hands have. . — v. 2 

BREATHE— the air breathes upon us. . Tempest, ii. 1 
while Stephano breathes at nostrils.... — ii. 2 
come, and go, and breathe twice — jy. 1 

Eray thee, breathe it in mine.. Two Gen. of Ver. iii. 1 
ut to breathe upon my love — y. i 

speak, breathe, discuss ; brief .... Merry Wives, iy. 5 
breathes upon a bank of violets . . TweJ'th NigM,_i. i 

sighs shall poor Olivia breathe? — ii. 2 

mercy then will breathe within. . Mea.for Mea. ii. 2 

1 breathe free breath Love's L. Lost, y. 2 

able to breathe life into a stone All's Well, ii. 1 

created for men to breathe themselves — ii. 3 
doth he breathe? He breathes. Taming ofSh. l-(ind.) 
here let us breathe, and happily — . i- 1 

hear me breathe my life Winter's Tale, i y. 3 

our mother, breathe her em'se King John, iii. 1 

while Philip breathes — iii- 2 

but now I breathe again — iv. 2 

you breathe these dead news — y. 7 

never to return breathe I against thee..iiicA. II. 1. 3 

to breathe the abundant dolour — .i.3 

that I may breathe my last — ii. 1 

for they breathe truth, that breathe .. — 11. • 

1 am in health, I breathe, and see — — ii- 1 



BRE 



BREATIIE— to breathe this news ..liidiard II. iii. 4 

or drink, or breathe, or live — iv. I 

and breathe short-winded accents . .\HenrylV. i. 1 
when j'ou breathe in your watering.. — ii. 4 
breatlie a while, and then to it again — ii. 4 
no man so potent breathes upon .... — iv. 1 
give me leave to breathe a wliile .... — v. 3 
we breathe too long; come, cousin .. — v. 4 

stay, and breathe a while — v. 4 

to breathe his bloodied horse IHenrylV.i. 1 

latest counsel that ever I shall breathe — iv. 4 

suft'er you to breathe in fruitful 1 Henry VI. y. 4 

shall not breathe infection 2Henry VI. iii. 2 

here could I breathe ray soul — iii. 2 

I should breathe it so into thy body — iii. 2 
from their misty jaws breathe foul .. — iv. 1 
house of Lancaster leave to breathe.. 3Henry VI. i. 2 
their lives, breatlie out invectives — — i.4 
and, whilst we breathe, take time . . — i.4 
lay me down a little while to breathe — ii. 3 
now breathe we, lords ; good fortune — .ii. 6 

do I not breathe a man? — iii. i 

the traitor breatlie out so proud words? — iv. 1 

if she have time to breathe — v. 3 

Clarence still breatlies Richard III. i. 1 

his better doth not breathe — i- 2 

those that breathe them in the air . . — _ i. 2 
wherefore breathe I in a christian land — iii. 7 
the worst that man can breathe. . Timon ofAlh. iii. 5 

you breathe iu vain. In vain? — iii..') 

breathe you, my friends: well fought. Coriolanus. i. 6 
breathless, power breathe forth. .Jn/oni/ i5-C'/t'o. ii. 2 

to let him breathe between — iii. 10 

breathe not where princes are Cymbeline,y. 5 

to breathe the welkin dim . . Titus Andronicm, iii. 1 
no more interest but to breathe ! — iii. 1 

awarmth breathes rCai.-warm breath]. Per/cics, iii. 2 

but thou dost breatlie : hast hea^T Lear, iv. O 

some say of breeding breathes — v. 3 

to breathe such vows ..Romeo & Juliet, i. h. (chorus) 
mouth no healthsome air breathes in — iy. 3 
but breathes his faults so quaintly .... Hamlet, ii. 1 

the youth you breathe of, guilty — .ii. 1 

and hell itself breathes out contagion .. — iii. 2 
I have no life to breathe what thou hast — iii. 4 

no wind of blame shall breathe — i v. 7 

I may not breathe my censure Othelln, \v. 1 

BREATHED— hath breathed out.. Tirelfth Night, v. 1 
a man so breathed, that certain. . Love's L. Lost, v. 2 
when he breathed, he was a man — — y. 2 
heaven, breathed a secret vow . . Mer. of Venire, iii. 4 

I am not yet well breathed As you Lil:e it, i. 2 

as s\vift as breathed stags ..TamingofSh. 'i (indue.) 
would you not deem, it breathed?. Winter's Tale, v. 3 
I have not breathed almost, since. . Com. of Err. v. 1 

we breathed our coimsel King John, iv. 2 

that ever fury breathed — v. 2 

which breathed this poison Richard II. i. 1 

tliree times they breathed 1 Hen ry I V. i. 3 

to be revived, and breathed in meL.iHenryl V. iy. 1 

a thousand sighs are breathed 2HenryVI. iii. 2 

your brave father breathed his latest.3He;iri/(7. ii. 1 
Montague hath breathed his last — — y. 2 
thus have you breathed your curse .Richard III-\. 3 

that breathed upon the earth — iij- ft 

breathed, as it were, to an untu-able. Tim. of Ath. i. 1 
and breathed our siitterauce vainly.. — v. 5 

this day I breathed first Julius Caisar, v. 3 

breathed, and fight maliciously ..Ant. SfCleo. iii.. II 
hath breathed iu my dishonom-. . Titus Andron. ii. I 
he breathed defiance to my ears. . Romeo ij^ Juliet, i. 1 
and breathed such life mth kisses . . — v. 1 

BRE ATHER-confounds the breather. Mea. forM. 1 y.4 
will chide no breather in thsv.'orld.AsyouLil<c,yn. 2 
a statue, than a breather . . Antony ^- Cteupalra. iii. 3 

BREATHING-breathing in their faces. 7Vi"r<'s', iv. 1 
shake the head at so longabreathing..jl/ui-/i.l'io, ii. 1 
this mortal breathing sa.mt..Mercha7it of Venice,]}. 7 

no sighs, but 0' my. breathing — iii. 1 

I scant this breathing courtesy — y. 1 

are sick for breathing and exploit — All's Well,}. 2 
rescue those breathing lives to die . . King John, ii. 2 
breathing to his breathless excellence — iv. 3 

your breathing shall expire — v. 4 

from breathing native breath? Richard //. 1. 3 

the extremest point of mortal breathing — iv. 1 

a breathing valiant man 1 Henry VI. iv. 2 

be my last breathing in this mortal. .iHenryVI. ]. 2 

into this breathing world Richard HI. 1. I 

cannot be quiet scarce a breathiug wliile — .1. 3 

ICol. Knt.'] or breathing stones — iii. 7 

poor breathing orators of miseries! .. — iv. 4 
the princes had been breathing here — iv. 4 
comes breatliing at his heels. . Troilus^-Cressida, y. !) 
to give breathing to my purpose. ..In/o/ii/ SrCleo. 1. 3 
tyrannous breathings of the north ..Cymbcline,}. 4 
'tis her breathing that perfumes — — 11.2 

a lady that wants breathing too Penclrs, 11.3 

breathing like sanctified and pious — Hamlet, 1. 3 
it is the breathing time of day with me. . — y. 2 

BREATHLESS— breathless housewife. Mid. N.D.u. 1 
breathing to his breathless excellence . . John, iv. 3 
all breathless lies the mightiest .... Richard 11. v. H 
toil, breathless and faint, leaning . . 1 Henry IV. 1.3 

here breathless lies the king — v. 3 

I saw him dead, breathless and bleeding — y. 4 

view his breathless corse iHcnry VI. lu. 2 

breathless [Cot. Ji'n^.-breathing] stones. Ric. I U. 111. 7 
now breathless wrong shall sit — TimonofAth. y. 5 

why are you breathless? Julius Casur, 1. 3 

breathless, power breathe forth. . Antony ^ Cteu. 11. 2 
half breathless, panting forth from Goneril. Lear, ii. 4 

BREATH'ST— livest, and breath'st. . Richard II. i. 2 

BRECKNOCK— gone to Brecknock. KicAard///. iv. 2 

BRED— for I was bred and born . . Twelfih Night, i. 2 
would not a pair of tlicse have bred. . — iii. 1 
but here nursed up and bred . . Meas. for Meas. iv. 2 

against that power that bred it Much Ado, iii. 1 

ray hounds are bred out of ... . Mid. N. Dream, iv. 1 
blushing cheeks by faults are bred. Lore'st.Loj/.i. 2 



BEE 



[_82J 

BREEDER-tlie fairest breeders of. Tihis Amhon. iv. 2 
hath lieen hreeiler of these dire events — v. 3 
wouldst tliou be a l)roeder of sinners?.. . Hamlet^ iii. 1 

BREEDING— of cxi'cllent breeding. iVfrryWVces,!;. 2 
of good ea(i;u:ity imd breeding .. TirrlJ'thNight^ iii. 4 
beneath your soft and tender breeding — v. 1 
when green geese are a breedina; . . Love's L. Lost, i. 1 
graees, and in qnalitics of breeolng.jUw. o/ ;'e«. ii.7 
may complain of good bveedlng .. As youLike it, iii. 2 

being a man of yoiu" breeding — iii. 3 

put you to the iieight of your breeding.^K's Well, ii. 2 
she liad her breeding at ray father's . . — ii. 3 

to consider wliat is breediufj Winter's Tofc, i. 2 

forward of lier breeding, as i' the rear of — iv. 3 
of what having, breeding, and anything — iv. 3 
which nature sliows aliove her breeding — v. 2 
generation of .still breeding thoughts. K/c/wrd //. v. 5 

wits of no iiigher breeding than 'IHenrtj IV. ii. 2 

gentleman, I know not yom' breeding — v. 3 
that you are worth your breeding — Henry V. iii. 1 
him to give lier virtuous breeding . Henry VIII. iv. 2 
blessed Dreeding sun, draw form . Timon oJ'Ath. iv. 3 
mucli is breeding, whicli, like the ..Ant.Sf Cleo. i. 2 
in my exile the waut of breeding . . Cymbeline, iv. 4 

deserved so long a breeding — v. 3 

my breeding, was, sir, as your liighness — v. 5 
his breeding, sir, hath been at my charge . . Lear^ i. 1 
I am a gentleman of blood and breeding . . — iii. I 

some say of breeding breathes — v.3 

these bones cost no more the breeding . . Hamlet, v. 1 

besort, as levels with her breeding Othello, i. 3 

'tis my breeding that gives me this bold. , — ii. 1 

BREFF— that is the breff and the Xong.HenryV. iii. 2 

BRENTFORD-woman of Brentford itfcrry Wives, iv. 2 
cannot abide the old woman of Brentford — iv. 2 
dress him like the witch of Brentford.. — iv. 2 

it is my maid's aunt of Brentford — iv. 2 

was't not the wise woman of Brentford — iv. S 
apnrehended for the witch of Brentford — iv. 5 

BRETAGNE— Artlrm- of Bretagne ..King John, ii. 1 

young Arthvir, duke of Bretagne — ii. 2 

Arthur of Bretagne, England s king — ii. 2 
create young Arthur duke of Bretagne — ii. 2 
furnished by the duke of Bretagne. .iJic/mrrf //. ii. 1 

dukes of Berry, and of Bretagne Henry V. ii. 4 

Orleans, Calaber, Bretagne 2Henry VI. i. 1 

I know the Bretagne Richmond aaas.Rich.IIl. iv. 3 

the Bretagne navy is dispersed — iv. 4 

and made his course again for Bretagne — iv. 4 

a scum of Bretagnes, and base — v. 3 

long kept in Bretagne at our mother's — v. 3 
and not these bastard Bretagnes — v. 3 

BRETHREN— are my brethren Much Ado, ii. 1 

ray friends, and brethren in these . .2 Henry IV. iv. 1 
his gi-eatness and thy other brethren — iv. 4 
and'all his brethren, in best sort. . Henry V. v. (cho.) 
had I thy bretliren here, their lives. .SHenry VI. i. 3 
the mayor then, and his brethren.. iJj'c/iar'i///. iii. 7 

amongst my brethren mortal Henry VIII. iii. 2 

good lord mayor, and your good brethren — v. 4 
ray spritely iJrethren, 1 propend . . Troil.Sf Cres. ii. 2 
brethi-en,andsister.s, of the hold-door — v. U 
some certain of your bretliren roared — Coriol. ii. 3 

to lay them by their brethi-en Titus Andron. i. 2 

stay, Roman brethren; gracious — — i. 2 
these are their brethren, whom you Goths— i. 2 
for their brethren slain, religiously they — i. 2 
naught, but to inter our bretliren — — i. 2 
for my brethren's obsequies — i. 2 

five Mutius bm-ial with o\a brethren — i. 2 
e must be buried with his brethren — i. 2 
I trained thy bretliren to that guileful — v. 1 
BREVIS— that ira fm-or brevis est. . Timnn of Ath. i. 2 
BREVITY— Roman in brevity {rep.).'2HenrylV. ii. 2 

the rude brevity and discharge Troil.^-Cres. iv. 4 

since brevity is the soul of wit Hamlet, ii. 2 

BREW— she brews good ale. Two Gen. of Verona, iii. 1 

you brew good ale — iii. 1 

I wash, wring, brew, bake, scour .. Merry Wives,_\. 4 
go brew me a pottle of sack finely — — iii. 5 
or brew it to a weak and colder . . Troil. fy Cres. iv. 4 

BREWAGE— in my brewage Merry Wives, iii. 5 

BREWED-our tears are not yet brewed. Macie/A, ii. 3 
sunshine brewed a shower for \am...ZHenry VI. ii. 2 
hut tears, brewed with her sorrows. . Titus And. iii. 2 

BRE WER^a brewer's horse 1 Henry IV. iii. 3 

that gibbets on the brewer's bucket.2HeKr!//F. iii. 2 

when brewers mar their malt Lear, iii. 2 

BREWHOUSE— in the hrev/liouse. Merry Wives, iii. 3 

BREWING— another storm brewing . . Tempest, ii. 2 

some ill a brewing towards. . Merchant of Venice, ii. 5 

BRIAREUS— he is a gouty Briareus. Troil.^Cres. 1. 2 

BRIBE— I'll bribe you (.rep.) Mea.for Mea. ii. 2 

that you took bribes from France ..2Henry VI. in. 1 
never had one penny bribe from France — iii. 1 

frail nature with some bribe ZHenry VI. iii. 2 

to take a bribe, to pay my sword Coriolanus, i. 9 

taking bribes here of the Sardians. ./ai/wsCtssar, iv. 3 

contaminate our fingers with base bribes — j_v. 3 

[ Col.- Knt.] doing nothing for a bribe. Cymbeline, iii. 3 

BRIBE-BUCK— like abribe-buck. . Merry Wives, v. 5 

BRIBED— shall be bribed to do him . . King John, ii. 1 

if I should be bribed too Timon of Athens, i. 2 

BRIBER— a sufficient briber for his life — iii. 6 

BRICK— circuraraured with brick. A/ea./or Mea. iv. 1 

he be set against a brick wall.. . . Winter's Tate, iv. 3 

and the bricks are alive at this day.2HcKri/f'/._iv. 2 

on a brick wall have I climbed — iv. 10 

BRICKLAYER— and a good bricklayer — iv. 2 

became a bricklayer, when he came. . — iv. 2 

BRIDAL— to the bridal dinner. . . . Taming ofSh. iii. 2 

I will bring thee to thy bridal chamber — iv. 1 

shall gild her bridal bed; and make. A'ing- John, ii. 2 

thy poor sire with liis bridal day SHenry VI. ii. 2 

make the bridal bed in that dim. . Romeo ^- Jul. iii. 5 
our bridal flowers serve for a buried corse — iv. 5 

with flowers I strew thy bridal bed — v. 3 

for such observances as fit the bridal . . Othello, iii. 4 

BRIDE— darkness as a bride Meas.forMeas. iii. 1 

you brides and bridegrooms all . . As you Like it, v. 4 



mil 



BRED— the dainties that are bred. Lore's L. Lost, iv. 2 
a neighbom-, and near bred..iVcrcAn;i/ of Venice, ii. 1 

tell me, where is fancy bred — iii. 2 (song) 

the scull that bred them — iii- 2 

she is not bred so dull — _ iij. 3 

his horses are bred better AsyouLikeit, i. 1 

from their cradles bred together .... — .i. 1 
yet am 1 inland Vired, and know .... — ii.7 

e'er man lirt'd his hopes out of Winler'sTale,v. 1 

the raging fire "f 1e\cr bred . . Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

this call', bred from his cow King John, i. 1 

one nature <if nne sitlistancc bred 1 Henry IV. i. 1 

and ho is h.cd out of that bloody Henry F. ii. 4 

phiinlv sav, our mettle is bred out . . — iii. 5 

all Olivers" and Rowlands bred \HenryVI. 1. 2 

the wound, that bred this meeting ..ZHenryVI. ii. 2 
thy summer bred us no increase .... — ii. 2 

deceit, bred by necessity — iii. 3 

hatli bred a kind of remorse in me . . Richard III. i. 4 
I have bred her at my dearest . . Timon of Athens, i. 

the strain of man's bred out — _ i. 

but bred a doL: — iv. 

true bred! "Your company Coriolanus, i. 

he has been bred i' the wars — iii- 

and being bred in broils, hast not .... — iii. 
yonrserp"ent of Egypt is bred now.. .4n(. SfCleo. ii. 

you bred him as my iilayfellow Cymbeline,i. 

"one, bred oi' alms, and fostered with cold — ii. 
the flesh that she herself hath bred. Titus Andron. v. 

where were you bred? (rep.) Pericles, v. 

you have begot me, bred me Lear, i. 

a servant that he bred, tlu-illed with — iy- 

three civil brawls bred of Romeo S; Juliet, i. 

BREECII— stolen the breech from ..ZHenry VI. v. 

BREECHED— breeched with gore Macbeth, ii. 

BREECHES— make your breeches. rvfoGen. of F.ii. 
pair of old breeches, thrice tru-ned..ram. of Sh. iii. 
your breeches best may carry them .KingJohn, iii. 

most master wear no breeches iHenry VI. i. 

short blistered breeches, and those. . Henry VIII. i. 

and put'st down tliine own breeches Lear, i. 

his breeches cost him but a crown. Othello, ii. 3 (song 

BREECHING— breeching scholar. 7'amm^ o/ SA. iii. 

BREED— that which breeds between . . Tempest, iii. 

use doth breed a habit in Two Gen. of Ver._v. 4 

will breed no terror in the youth. Twelfth Night, iii. 4 

that my sense breeds with it Mea.for Mea. ii. 2 

in the occasion that breeds it MuchAdo, i. 3 

are these the breed of wits Love's L. Lost , v. 2 

1 make it breed as fast Merchant of Venice, i. 3 

take a breed for barren metal — i. 3 

to breed rae well : and there begins. As you Like it, i. 1 

for she mil breed it like a fool — iv. 1 

virginity breeds mites, much like . . . .All's Well, i. 1 

and choice breeds a native slip — _i. 3 

and these breed honour — ii. 3 

or breed upon our absence Winter' sTale, i. 2 

please, both breed thee, pretty — iii. 3 

only therefore desire to breed by me.. — iv. 3 

where they most breed and haunt Macbeth, i. 6 

that in time will venom breed — iii. 4 

does blaspheme his breed? — iv. 3 

unnatural deeds do breed unnatural — v. 1 

thousand hearts of England's breed. . King John, ii. 1 
what better matter breeds for you.... — iii. 4 

this happy breed of men Richard II. ii. 1 

feared by their breed, and famous — ii. 1 

watching breeds leanness — ii. 1 

your chamber-lie breeds fleas 1 Henry IV. ii. 1 

he'll breed revengement and a scourge — iii. 2 
breed a kind of question in our cause — iv. 1 

and breeds no bate with telling iHenrylV.ii. 4 

to breed this present peace — iv. 2 

lest example oreed, by his sutFerance.. Henri/ V. ii. 2 
that island of England breeds very . . — iii. 7 

shall breed a plague in France — iv. 3 

where I could not breed no contentions — v. 1 

base and envious discord breed IHenryVI. iii. 1 

sudden foil shall never breed distrust — iii. 3 

when envy breeds unkind — iv. 1 

do breed love's settled passions ■ — v. 5 

in York this breeds suspicion 2Henry VI. i. 3 

shall breed selves of themselves. . . . Ricliard III. iv. 4 

breed him some prejudice Henry VIII. i. 1 

the best breed in the north — ii. 2 (letter) 

my integrity should breed — iii. 1 

breed a nursery of like evil Troil. <§■ Cress, i. 3 

and that breeds hot blood — iii. I 

pleased to breed out your inheritors. . — iv. 1 
but breeds the giver a return . . Timon of Athens, i. 1 
that feeds and breeds by a composture — iv. 3 

make war breed peace — v. 5 

tailors, and breed ballad-makers ..Coriolanus, iv. 6 
hast lost the breed of noble bloods. . JuliusCcesar, i. 2 
tiiat ever Rome should breed thy fellow — v. 3 
powers breed scrupulous faction . .Antony t,- Cleo. i. 3 
calls him Posthumous, breeds him ..Cymbeline, i. 1 
plenty, ar.d peace, breeds cowards . . — iii. 6 
worthiness of nature, breed of greatness — iv. 2 

the imperious seas breed monsters — iv. 2 

here nothing breeds unless. ... Titus Andron. ii. 3 

yet every mother breeds not sons alike — ii. 3 

flesh, wliich did me breed Pericles, i. 1 (riddle) 

yet they poison breed — i. 1 

can breed me quiet! — i. 2 

a heart and Ijrain to breed it in? Lear, i. 2 

I would breed from hence occasions — i. 3 

see what breeds about her heart — iii. 6 

if the sun breed maggots in a dead dog .Hamlet, ii. 2 
this courtesy is not of the right breed. ... — iii. 2 

and many more of the same breed — v. 2 

or breed itself so out of circumstance . . Othello, iii. 3 
no friend, since, love breeds such otfence — iii. 3 
worms were hallowed, that did breed. ... — iii. 4 
doth affection breed it? — iv. 3 

BREED-BATE— nor no breed-bate. Aferry Wives, i. 4 

BREEDER -breeder of all good . . TwoGen. of V. iii. 1 

thesewoolly breeders in the act. il/crc/i. of Venice,i. 3 

you love the breeder better than ZHenry VI. ii. 1 

wherecomes the breeder of my sorrow — iii. 3 



BRIDE— take possession of the bride ..All's Well, ii. h 
shall Bianca lie bride to you. . Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 

where is my lovely bride — iii. 2 

see not your bride in these unrevereut — iii. 2 

bid good-moiTow to my bride — iii. 2 

and IS the bride and bridegroom coming — iii. 2 
he took the bride about the neck .... — !!'• - 

obey the bride you that attend — iii. 2 

though bride and bridegroom wants — iii. 2 
sweet Bianca practise how to bride it — iii. 2 
mistress bride, hath that awakened you — v. 2 
in likeness of a new untrimmed bride . . John, iii, 1 

to be the princely bride of such 1 Henry VI. v. 3 

with his new bri'de, and England's . .2 Henry VI. i. 1 

not his new-made bride shall Sllenry VI. iii. 3 

with him and his new bride (rep., iv. 1) — iii. 3 

and his well-chosen bride — iv. 1 

the brother of your loving bride — iv. 1 

in yom: bride you bury brotherhood — iv. 1 

o' the youngest for a bride Timon of Athens, i. 1 

I choose thee, Tamora, for my bride. . Titus And. i. 2 
I lead my espoused bride along — i. 2 

?our noble emperor, and his lovely bride — i. 2 
am not bid to wait upon tlris bride — i. 2 

joy, sir, of your gallant bride — i. 2 

if the emperor's court can feast two brides — _j. 2 
wake the emperor and his lovely bride — ii. 2 

clothed like a bride, for the Pericles, i. 1 

Hymen hath brought the bride to bed — iii. (Gow.) 
for your bride goes to that with shame — iv. 3 
may think her ripe to be a bride. /Borneo <§■ Juliet, i. 2 
happily make thee there a joyful bride — iii. -i 
shall not make mo there 0. joyful bride — iii. 5 

sweetheart! why bride! what — iv. 5 

come, is the bride ready to go to church — iv. 5 

hath death lain with thy bride — iv. 5 

in terms like bride and groom devesting. Othello, ii. 3 

BRIDE-BED— the best bride-bed. ilft'd. A'. Dream, v. 2 
I thought, thy bride-bed to have decked. Hamte(, v. 1 

BRIDEGROOlVI— bridegroom's ear.. ATer. of Fen. iii. 2 
you brides and bridegrooms all ..As you Like it, v. 4 
to want the bridegroom, when .. Taming of Sh. iii. 2 
bridegroom coming home? {repeated} — iii. 2 
the mad-brained bridegroom took him — iii. 2 
though bride and bridegroom wants — iii. 2 
you shall supply the bridegroom's place — iii. 2 
till that Bellona's bridegroom, lapt in . . Macbeth, i. 2 
fresh as a bridegroom ; and his cliin..! Henry /F.i. 3 
with a bridegroom's fresh alacrity. . Troil. ^Cr. iv. 4 
Iwill be a bridegroom inroydeath.^n(.^CTeo. iv. 12 

I will die bravely, like a bridegroom Lear, iv. 6 

a gentleman to be her bridegroom?. i?om.<§-Jui. iii. 6 
when the bridegroom in the morning — iv. 1 
the bridegroom ne is come already . . — iv. 4 
the new-made bridegroom from this city — v. 3 

BRIDGE— the bridge much broader MuchAdo, i. I 

attended him on bridges 1 Henry I V. iv. 3 

Fluellen, came you from the bridge?. .Henry f. iii. 6 

caraest thou from the bridge? — iii. 6 

march to the bridge; it now draws .. — iii. 6 

at the bulwark of the bridge 1 Hetiry VI. i. 4 

Cade hath gotten London oridge... SHenry VI. iv. 4 

for they have won the bridge — iv. 5 

account his head upon the bridge.. U/cAard III. iii. 2 
take the bridge qrute away of him. Timon of Ath. iv. 3 
trotting horse over four-inched bridges . . Lear, iii. 4 

BRIDGBT—mistr«ss Bridget lost..JV;erry Wives, ii. 2 
does Bridget paint still, Pompey?. Men. /or Afea. iii. 2 
Maud, Bridget. Marian, Cicely .Com. o/ Errors, iii. 1 

BRIDGNORTH- is Bridgnorth .... 1 Henry IV. iii. 2 
our general forces at Bridgnorth shall — iii. 2 

BRIDLE— her bridle was burst . . Taming of S?i. iv. 1 
he is the bridle of your will .. Comedy of Errors.ii. 1 

to bridle and suppress the pride iHenry Vl.i. 1 

but I'll bridle it; he shall die — iv. 7 

makes me bridle passion ZHenryVI. iv. 4 

BRIDLED— asses, will be bridled so. Com. oZ&t. ii. 1 
mine was not bridled Henry V. iii. 7 

BRIEF- open the matter in brief. Two Gen. of Ver. i. 1 
be brief, my good she Mercm-y .... Merry Wives, ii. 2 

I will be brief with you — ii. i 

we must he brief — iii- 3 

brief, short, quick, snap — iv. 5 

if you have reason, be brief Twelfth Night, i. h 

be curst and brief: it is no — iii. 2 

very brief, and exceeding good senseless ^ iii. 4 
drest in a little brief authority. . Meas.for Meas. ii. 2 

makes beauty brief in goodness — iii. 1 

my most stay can be hut brief — iv. 1 

be brief: here is lord Angelo shall — — v. ' 
in brief, to set the needless process by — v. 1 

a time too brief too, to have all Much .-ido, ii. 1 

brief, I pray you; for you see — iii. 5 

come, friar In-ancis, be brief — iv. 1 

in brief, since I do purpose to marry — v. 4 

brief as the lightning in the Mid.N. Dream, i. 1 

there is a briet'i how many sports .... — v. 1 

a tedious brief scene of young — v. 1 

tedious and brief? that is hot ice ... . — v. 1 
which is as brief as I have known .... — v. 1 

I hope, she will be brief — v. I 

to be brief, the very truth is ... . Merch. of Venice, ii. 2 

in very brief, the suit is — ii- 2 

with all brief and plain conveniency — iv- 1 
how brief the life oivaax^.Asynu Like i7,iii. 2 (verses') 
in brief, he led me to the gentle duke — iv. 3 

briefj I recovered him — iv. 3 

that IS the brief and the tedious of it. . All's Well. ii. 3 

expedient on the now-bom brief — ii. 3 

in a sweet verbal brief, it did concern — v. 3 
in brief, sir, study what you most.. Taming of Sh. i. 1 
in brief, sir, sith it your pleasure is . . — _ i. 1 

well, sir, in brief, the gown is not — iv. 3 

say in brief the cause why thou. Comedy of Errors, i. 1 

oiit, out, brief candle! life's but Macbeth, y. 5 

in brief, a braver choice of dauntless. King- John, ii. 1 

shall draw this brief into as huge — ii. 1 

in brief, we are the king of — ii. 1 

I must be brief, lest resolution — iv. 1 

a thousand businesses -ire brief in h.and.. — iv. 3 



BRl 



[ 83 ] 



BRIEF— brief then: and vvlint's tho ucv/s7..J(ihii, v. 6 
ouly to be biief. left I his title .... liichaid //. iii. 3 
so brief witli him, l\o wmiUl (;fp.). . . , — iii. 3 

in wooing sorrow let's be l>ricf — V. 1 

benrtliia seiiletl brief IHniii/II'. iv. 4 

tlverofore, in brief, tell me 'iittnry I' I. iv. I 

wliat, so brief? O, sir, 'tis (_rep.) ....Hichardlll. i. 4 

if die, be brief; that our — ii. 3 

speak sudiJ-inly, be brief — iv. 2 

we must be brief, when trai tors brave — i v. 3 
brief abstraet and record of tedious . . — iv. 4 

and brief, good mother — iv. 4 

be brief, lest that the process of — iv, 4 

in brief, for so the season bids us. ... — y. 3 
from spiritual leisiu'c a brief span .Henry fill. iii. 2 

nigl\t hath been too brief Trail. 4' Cress, iv. 2 

thou art too brief — iv. 5 

let your lii-iei' plapues be mercv — v. 11 

that this liiief win-Ill attbrds ..Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

and to make it liricf war Corioliinus, i. 3 

a brief fMreivell: the beast with — iv. 1 

this is the brief of mouey ..Antony fy Cleopatra, v. 2 

be brief I pray you C\jmbeUne,i. 2 

postures beyond brief nature — v. S 

to be brief, my practise so — v. 5 

lu brief, sorrow woidd be a rarity most . . Lear, iv. 3 

list a brief tale; and when 'tis told — v. 3 

quickly send; be brief in it — v. 3 

tlxus tlieii in brief: the valiant ..Romeo /^- Juliet,]. 3 
brief yi-iiinds determine of my weal .. — iii. 2 
it were a grief, so brief to part wi til thee — iii. 3 
then I'll be brief; O happy dagger! . . — v. 3 
I will be brief; for my short date .... — v. 3 

brieflet me be: sleepmgmthin Hamlet, i.b 

whicli he, in brief, obeys; receives rebuke — ii. 2 
and outward floiu'ishes, — I \vill be brief . . — ii. 2 
abstract, and brief chronicles, of the time — ii. 2 
'tis brief, my lord. As woman's love .... — iii. 2 

(for this was brief,) I foimd them Olliello,ii. 3 

aoraetliing tliat's brief; and bid — iii. 1 

advantage of some brief discourse with . . — iii. 1 
well, do Lt, and be brief — v. 2 

BRIKFER— gamut in a briefer sort.. Tam. ofSh. iii. 1 

BRIEFEST— and the briefest end... 'ln<. 4-Cleo. iv. 13 

BRIEFLY— briefly, I do mean Merry Wives, i. 3 

briefly, I have pursued her — ii. 2 

sliow me briefly how Much Ado, ii. 2 

and briefly, I desire nothing but — y. 1 

instance, oriefly; come, instance. ^s you Like it, iii. 2 

let's briefly put on manly Macbeth, ii. 3 

say briefly, gentle lord, we coldly pause .. John, ii. 1 
question stands; briefly to this end.. 2HCTiri//F. iv. 1 

you have, enscheduled briefly Henry V. v. 2 

briefly we heard tlreir drums Coriolanus, i. 6 

speak briefly then ; for we are peremptory — iii. 1 
every man directly . Ay, and briefly. ./u/.C'fcsar, iii. 3 
directly, and briefly, wisely, and truly — iii. 3 
for yoiu- dwelling, — briefly. Briefly . . — iii. 3 
put on thy defences. Briefly, sir . . Ant. ^ Cleo. iv. 4 

briefly die their joys, that place Cymbeline, v. 5 

and time that is so briefly spent. Pericles, iii. (Gow.) 

therefore briefly yield her — iii. 1 

briefly thyself remember Lear, iv. 6 

siieak briefly, can you like Romeo Sr Juliet, i. 3 

BRIEFNESS-briefness of your answer. Cymbeline, ii.4 

breafness sails are filled Pericles, v. 2 (Gower) 

briefness, and fortune, workl brother .... Lear, ii. 1 

BRIER^-through tooth'd briers Tempest, iv. 1 

through brier, over park Mid. N. D ream, ii. 1 

like tlie red rose on triumphant brier — iii. I 

thi'ough brake, through brier — iii. 1 

for briers and thorns at their apparel — iii. 2 
with the dew, and torn with briers . . — iii- 2 

hop as light as bird from brier , — v. 2 

how full of briers is this As you Like !(, i . 3 

when briers shall have leaves All's Well, iv. 4 

thy beauty scratched with briers. Winter's Tale, iv. 3 
usurping lyy, brier, or idle moss.. Comedy of Er. ii. 2 

from off this brier pluck 1 Henry VI. ii, 4 

the briers scarlet hips Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

scratches with briers, scars to Coriolanus, iii. 3 

covered with rude-growing hriGXS.TitusAndroji. ii. 4 

BRIGHT— she is too bright Merry Wives, ii. 2 

wishes to appear most bright .... Mea. for Mea. ii. 4 
so quick bright things come to . . ^^td. N. Dream, i. 1 

how came her eyes so bright — ii. 3 

look as bright, as clear, as yonder..., — iii. 2 

for shining now so bright — v. 1 

one half BO bright through. Loi;e's L. Lost, iv. 3 (ver.) 

are colliers counted bright — iv. 3 

as bright Apollo's lute, strung with. . — iv. 3 
vouchsafe, bright moon, and these thy — v. 2 
the moon shines bright: in such.j)/er. of Venice, v. 1 
inlaid with patines of bright gold .... — v. 1 

thou wilt show more bright As you Like it, i. 3 

the scorn of your bright eyne ... . — iv. 3 (letter) 
should love a bright particular star . . All's Well, i, 1 
in his bright radiance and collateral . . — i. 1 
bright and goodly shines the moon.. Tam. o/S/i. iy. 5 
so bright. I know, it is the sun {rep.') — iv. 5 
ere they can behold bright Phoebus. Winter's T. iv. 3 

that e'er the sun shone bright ou — v. 1 

be bright and jovial 'mong your guests. ^/ac!ie(A, ilL 2 

angels are bright still, though — iv. 3 

your sword is bright, sir; put it up. . King John, iv. 3 
witli hard bright steel, and hearts. . Rictiard II. iii. 2 

the track of his bright passage — iii. 3 

as bright as is the eagle's — iii. 3 

and, like bright metal on a sullen ..\HenryIV. i. 2 

to pluck bright honour from — i. 3 

it shines briglit, and never changes . . Henry V. v. 2 

than Julius Cccsar, or bright I Henry VI. i. 1 

bright star of Venus, fallen do\vn.... — i. 2 

creature, bright Astrsea's daughter .. — i. 6 

life, and slay bright fame — iv. 6 

bum, bonfires, clear and bright ....2HenryVI. v. 1 
whose bri!5ht outshining beams .... Ricliard III. i. 3 

with bright hair dabbled in blood — L4 

by the bright track of his fiery ear . . — v. 3 
shall iiiU Eke a bright exlialatiou. Hcn-ry VIII. ilL 2 



BRIGHT— whose bright faces cast.. /;<■»), vT/Ji. iv. 2 
wherever the bright sun of Iieaven .. — ■ v. 4 
dearniy lord, keeps lioiioiirbriglit.V'ro/i.iJ'''''^'- V'- * 
tear my liright luiir, uiul serateli .... — iv. 2 

more bright in ze;il tliaii — iv. 4 

(on whose hi iylit ciest Fame with .. — iv. 
thou bright defiler of Hymen's . . Timon of Alh. iv. 3 
it is the briglit day, that brings . . Julius Casar, ii. 1 
the bright day is done, and we tae..Anl. ^Clea. v. 2 
town with rejoicing fires bright .... Cymbeline, iii. 1 
and tapers burn so bright, and every.. 7V(i/ji.l7i(i. i. 2 
I will bo bright, and shine in pearl . . — ii. 1 
the morn is bright and grey, the fields — ii. 2 
to part their fringes of bright gold .... Pericles, iii. 2 
by bright Diana, whom we honour all — iii. 3 

feather of lead, bright smoke Romeo if Juliet, i. 1 

doth teach the torches to biurn bright — i. 5 

by Rosaline's bright eyes — ii. 1 

through the aii-y region stream so bright — ii. 2 

O speak again, bright angel — ii. 2 

keep up your liright .swords, for the dew. Othello, i. 2 
BRIGHT-BURNING— 
a fkggot to bright-buniing Troy. . Titus Andron. iii. 1 

BRItHlTEN— glory brighten it iHenrylV. ii. 3 

BRIGHTEST— to the brightest beams. All's Well, v. 3 

though the brightest fell Macbeth, iv. 3 

ascend the brightest heaven Henry V. i. (chorus) 

hath the brightest day a cloud 2Henry VI. ii. 4 

BRIGHTLY— brightly as a king..Af<?r. of Venice, v. 1 

that shone so brightly when this boy. Titus And. iv. 2 

BRIGHTNESS— ray and brightness. Troi;. fyCres. i. 3 

the brightness of her cheek would., iiom. S^ Jul. ii. 2 

BRIGH'T-SHINING- 

midst of this bright-shining day ZHenry VI. v. 3 

BRIM — with peonied and lihed brims.. Tcm/jesi, iv. 1 

and pleasure di'own the brim All's Well, ii. 4 

with arajile and brim fulness of his .... Henry V. i. 2 
to the brim with principalities.. ^/i/o7iy ^-Cleo. iii. U 

a cup that's stored unto the brim Pericles, ii. 3 

brin" me but to the very brim of it Lear, iv. 1 

BRIAlFUL- brimful of sorrow Tempest, v. 1 

with liis eye brimful of tears 2Henry IV. iii. 1 

our legions are brimful Julius Carsar, iv. 3 

the people's hearts brimful of fear Ottiello, ii. 3 

BRIMSTONE— fire and brimstone. r«)e(/l!AA'!>/i(, ii. 5 

and brimstone ill your liver — iii. 2 

fire and brimstone! My lord? Oiliello,iv. 1 

BRINDED— thrice the brinded cat Macbeth, iv. 1 

BRINE — plunged in the foaming brine.. Tempest, i. 2 

brine pits, barren place — i. 2 

he shall drink nought but brine — iii. 2 

with eye-offeuding brine Twelfth Night, i. 1 

'tis the best brine a maiden can All's Well, i. 1 

with wire and stewed in brine. . ..Antony^ Cleo. ii. 5 

an' the brine and cloudy billow Pericles, iii. 1 

what a deal of brine hath waslied ..Rom. 'Sr Jul, ii. 3 
BRINE-PIT— made a brine-pit ..Titus Andron. iii. 1 

BRING— bring her to try Tempest, i. 1 

and then I'll bring thee — i. 2 

bring forth more islands — ii. 1 

than we bring men to comfort tliem .... 
when you should bring the plaister .... 

but nature should bring forth 

I'll bring my wood home faster 

let me bring thee where crabs grow 

I'll bring thee to clustering filberds .... 

canst thou bring itie to the party ? 

and bring thee forth brave brood 

will bring ns good warrant 

§0, bring the rabble, o'er whom 
ring a corollary, rather than want .... 

go, biing it hither for state to catch 

for the prize I'll bring thee 

at least, bring forth a wonder 

I'll bring you to your ship 

thither will I bring thee Two Gen. of J 

we'll bring thee to our crews 

I'll bring you where 

to her let us garlands bring , 

to bring me where 

Ursula, bring my picture there. 

we must bring you — v. 3 

come, bring her away — v. 3 

I must bring you to our — v. 3 

and I will bring the doctor Merry Wives, ii. 3 

I will bring thee where niistresB — ii. 3 

he promise to bring me vere — iii. 1 

I have suffered to bring this woman — iii. 5 

I'll but bring my young man — iv. 1 

I'll bring linen tor him straight — iv. 2 

devise to bring him thither — iv. 4 

what ado here is to bring you together — iv. 5 

bring you the maid — iv. 6 

we'll bring you to Windsor — v. 5 

I pray you bring your hand Twelfth Night, i. 3 

~ ... j^ 

iii. 1 
iii. 2 
iii. 4 



ii. 2 
ii. 2 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 
iii. 3 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
V. 1 
T. 1 



iv. 2 (song) 

— iv. 4 

— iv. 4 



I bring no overture of war 
to bring a Cressida to this Troilus . . 
come,. bring us, bring us where he is 
we will bring the device to the bar . . 

and bring me word 

and bring her along with you 

I'll brin" you to a captain — v. i 

that did brin» me fiirst on shore — v. 1 

bring him hither — v. 1 

that we may bring you sometliing.Mea./or Mea. i. 1 
and bring you back in hajipiness .... — i. 1 
as bring me to the sight of Isabella . . — i.b 
the bare fMlow brings to teeming. ... — i. .'> 

bring him his confessor — ii. i 

come, bring them away — ii. 1 

I know no law; bring them away .. — ii. 1 

and do brinfj in here before 

look you, bring me in the names ... 

bring them to sireaJc 

he would never bring them to light. 
my kisses bring again, bring again.. 

to bring you thus together 

sirrah, bring Barnardine hither 

after him, fellows; bring him 

he BhaU bring you belure the duke . 



— v. 1 



ii. 1 
ii. 1 
iii. 1 
iii. 2 
(song) 



iv. 3 



BRI 



BRING-bid them bring the trumpets. A/ca./orjUt'u.iv. 5 

so, bring us toour iialuee — v. 1 

when the achiever lirings home i'uW.. Much Ado, i. 1 

brin" you the lengtli nf I'rester .lohn's — ii. ■ 

whicli is, to bring sigiiior lieiicdiek.. — ii. 1 

and bring them to sue tills — ii. 2 

bring it hither to me in tlie or(;liard.. — ii. 3 

I'll bring you thither, iny lord — iii. 2 

you'll be made brin" Deformed forth — iii. 3 

examination yourself and bring it me — iii. 5 

bid him bring his pen and iukhorn . . — iii. 5 

bring him away — iv. 2 

bring me a fatl'ier, that so loved — v. 1 

bring him yet to me — v. 1 

come, bring away the plaiutiifs — v. I 

bring you these fellows on — v. 1 

four liappy days bring in another . . Mid. N. Dr. 1. ! 

deepest loathin" to the stomach brings — ii. 3 

to bring in, God shield us! a lion — iii. 1 

thiit is to bring the moonlight — iii. 1 

you never can bring in a wall — iii. 1 

and bring him silently — iii. 1 

see thou bring her here — iii. 2 

good monsieur, bring me the honey-bag — iv. 1 

go, bring them in; and take — v. 1 

bring her to trial Love's L. Lost, i. 1 (letter) 

bring him festinately hither — iii. 1 

and that brings me out — v. 2 

for the news I bring, is heavy — v. 2 

we will bring you on your way — v. 2 

or bring your latter hazard Merch. of Venice, i. 1 

who brings word, the prince — i. 2 

and brings down the rate of usance — i. 3 

not in his power to bring to pass . . — i. 3 

bring me the fairest creature — ii. 1 

come, bring me unto my chance .. — ii. 1 

that this same paper brmgs you .. — iii. 2 

when it is paid, bring your true — iii. 2 

bring them, I pray tiiee — iii. 4 

bring us the letters; call — iv. 1 

to bring thee to the gallows — iv. 1 

and bring him, if thou canst — iv. 1 

and I bring word, my mistress — v. 1 

bring your music forth into the air — v. 1 

I'll bring you to him straight Asyou Like it, ii. I 

if he be absent, bring his brother — ii. 2 

to bring again these foolish runaways — ii. 2 

bring us where we may rest ourselves — ii. 4 

or bring it for food to thee — ii. 6 

if I briug thee not something to eat. . — ii. (i 

bring him dead or living — iii. 1 

to bring the ewes and the rams — iii. 2 

you bring me out: soft! — iii. 2 

bring us unto this sight, and you .... — iii. 4 

besides, he brings his destiny — iv. I 

he that brings this love to thee — iv. 3 (let.) 

on your right hand, brings you to tliis — iv. 3 

if I bring in your Rosalind — v. 4 

will have her, when I bring her? — v. 4 

that bring these tidings to this fair .. — v. 4 

nature brings to join like likes All's Well, i. 1 

nor honey, can bring home — i. 2 

good Lateu, bring in the admiration — ii. 1 

the sun shall bring their fiery torches — ii. 1 

to bring me down must answer — ii. 3 

title age cannot bring thee — ii.3 

I will bring you where you shall — iii. 5 

when we bring him to om' tents — iii. 6 

can bring this instrument of honour — iii. 6 

wisdom brings in the champion — iv. 2 

come, bring forth this counteri'eit — iv. 3 

bring him forth: he has sat in — iv. 3 

the time will bring on summer — iv. 4 

to bring me in some grace (rep.) .... — v. 2 

one brings thee in grace {rep.) — v. 2 

to bring forth this discovery (rep.) .. — v. 3 

suffer under tliis complaint we bring — v. 3 

find him, and bring him hither — v. 3 

bring our lady hither Taming of Sh. 2 (indue.) 

brill'' you from a wild cat to — ii. 1 

'twill bring you gain, or perish ou .. — ii. 1 

which, to bring to pass, as I before . . — iii. 2 

I'll bring mine action on thee — iii. 2 

bring along these rascal knaves — iv. I 

how diu'st you, villains, bring it from — iv. 1 

I wiU bring thee to thy bridal. — iv. I 

dress thy meat myself, and bring it thee — iv. 3 

and bring our horses unto long lane end — iv. 3 

if a man Tiring him a hundred pound — v. I 

and Ijriug them hither straight — v. 2 

and brings your froward wives as — v. 2 

to bring false generations Winter's Tale, ii. I 

now, from the oracle they will bring all — ii. 1 

I shall bring Emilia forth — ii. 2 

I come to bring him sleep — ii.3 

within this hour bring me word *tis done — ii. 3 

bring forth, and in Apollo's name .. — iii. 2 

if you can bring tincture, or lustre .. — iii. 2 

pr ythee briug me to the dead bodies — iii. 2 

sliall I bring thee on the way? — iv. 2 

if I make not this clreat bring out — iv. 2 

slie shall bring hiin tliat which he .. — iv. 3 

pr'ythee, bring liim in — iv. 8 

come, bring away thy pack after me.. — iv. 3 

and bring him up to liking — iv. 3 

I'll bring you where he is aboard .... — iv. 3 

in pawn, till I bring it you — iv. S 

I will bring tliese two moles — iv. 3 

bring them to our embracement — v. 1 

will Diing me to consider that — v. 1 

to-morrow you will bring it home. Com. of Err. iii. I 

bring it, I pray you, to the Porcujiino — iii. 1 

tlieu you will bring the chain — iv. 1 

and bring thy master home — iv. 2 

that brings any man to answer it ... . — iv. 3 

I think, he brings the money — iv. t 

come, gaoler, brmg me where the — iv. 4 

let your servants bring my — v. 1 

promising to bring it to the Porcupine . — v. I 

Droniio my nitm did bring Uiem — v. i 



BRI 



[84] 



BRING— he brings preat news Macbelli, i. 5 

bring forth men-children only! — \-7 

•why did you bring tliese daggers — ij- 2 

I'll bring you to hira — .'!■ S 

bring them before us — ii'- 1 

that hviiig you word, Macduft" is — \v. I 

cotne, liriug ino wlicre tliev arc — iv. 1 

front to trout, liring thou this fiend . . — iv. 3 

bring me no more reports — v. 3 

bring it after me; I will not be — v. 3 

what brings you here to court so Khig JoIih,\. 1 

may from "England bring that right.. — ij. 1 

I bring you witnesses, twice fifteen .. — _ii. 1 

that brings this day about — iii. 1 

will bring tliis labour to a happy — iii. 2 

loves again : bring them before me . . — iv. 2 

but to my closet bring the angry lords — iv. 2 

and l)rings from him such offers — v. 7 

and bring tlieir times about Richard II. i. 3 

I'll bring thee on thy way — .i. 3 

and Ijring away the armour that is . . — _Ji. 2 

bring fortli these men — iii. 1 

bring me my boots; I will unto — v. 2 

elder days may happily bring forth. . — v. 3 

that brings me food, to make — ,^.' ^ 

spent with crying — bring in IHenrijIJ'. i. 2 

to bring a slovenly imhandsome .... — i. 3 

occasion that shall bring it on — i. 3 

bid the ostler bring my gelding out — _ii. 1 

and bring him out, that is but woman's — iii. 1 

to raise him, brin" him hither — iii. I 

mine imcle bring him our purposes .. — iv. 3 

and bring me word what he will do . . — v. 1 

Douglas and Hotspur bring together — v. 1 

cannot choose but bring him quickly — v. 2 

come, bring your luggage nobly — . v. 4 

man of them brings other news.2HemrjII'. (indue.) 

they bring smooth comforts false — (indue.) 

noljle earl, I bring you certain news . . — i. 1 

that time and spite dare bring — .i. 1 

good people, bring a rescue or two . . — ii. 1 

to see Ills father bring up his powers — ii. 3 

shall bring this prize in very easily. . — iii. 1 

witli honey, we bring it to the hive . . — iv. 4 

tidings do I bring, and lucky joys . . — v. 3 

what ! I do bring good news? — v. 3 

come, bring me to a justice — v. 4 

to bring forth so great an object. . Henry V. i. (cho.) 

at one time bring in to any of — i. 2 

with merry march bring home — . i. 2 

and bring you back, charming the . . — ii. (cho.) 

didst bring in wonder, to wait on — ii. 2 

let me bring thee to Staines — ii.3 

present audience, go and bring them — ii. 4 

to whom expressly I bring greeting.. — ii. 4 

into Rouen bring him our prisoner . . — iii. 5 

quickly bring us word of England's fall — iii. 5 

bringme just notice of the numbers.. — iv. 7 

andnring him tomy tent — iv. 7 

there must we bring him — v. (cho.) 

to bring your most imperial majesties — v. 2 

sad tidings bring I to you out of 1 Henry VIA. 1 

or bring him in obedience to — i. 1 

a holy maid Mther with me I bring. . — i. 2 

spv'st anv, run and bring me word . . — i. 4 

bring forth the body of old — ii. 2 

done so, bring the keys to me .... — ii- 3 

John of Gaunt doth bring his pedigree — ii- 5 

to bring this matter to tlie wished.... — iii. 3 

should bring thy father to his drooping — iv. 5 

bring forth that sorceress — v. 4 

witli her that brings no vantages . . ..2Henry VI. 1. 1 

gives gold, to bring the witch — i.2 

bring him near the kin" — ii. I 

will bring thy head with sorrow to .. — ii. 3 

which time will bring to light — iii. 1 

than bring a bxu'den of dishonour .. — iii. 1 

bring me unto my trial when — iii. 3 

bid the apotliecary bring the strong poison — iii. 3 

tlicrefore, briii" forth the soldiers — iv. 1 

bring them both upon two jioles .... — iv. 7 

that crings his head unto tlie king . . — iv. 8 

or dare to bring thy forces so near — v. I 

intend these forces thou dost brin^?. . — v. 1 

darest briu" them to the baiting-place — v. 1 

may bring forth a bird that will ....ZHcnry VI. i. 4 

brings a thousand-fold more care — ii. 2 

how many hours bring about the day — ii. 5 

would bring white hairs unto — ii. 5 

bring fortli that fatal scriteh-owl — ii. 6 

what brings thee to France? — iii. 3 

I'll be chief to bring him down — iii. 3 

will bring you many friends — iv. 7 

bring forth" the gallant — v. ij 

not barren to bring forth laments. . Richard III.u. 1 

come, bring forth the prisoners — iii. 3 

see, he brings the mayor along — ij'- * 

if you thrive well bring them to — iii. 5 

we'll bring it to a happy issue — iii. 7 

I'll bring thee to their sights — iv. 1 

till thou bring better news — iv. 4 

him that brings the traitor in? — iv. 4 

comfort bring! to your highness .... — iv. 4 

bring his power beibre sun-rising — v. 3 

every tongue brings in a several — v. 3 

Lord Stanley, bid liim bring his power — v. 3 

they bring you to unrest — v. 3 

will lie bring his power? — v. 3 

and the opinion that we bring . . Henry J'lll. (prol.) 

may bring his plain-song, and have.. — i. 3 

to bring inj' whole cause 'fore his .... — ii. 4 

that you bring a wretched lady? .... — iii. 1 

bring me a constant woman to — jlj* ^ 

he brings his physic after his — iii. 2 

in sijite of fortune will bring me off. . — iii- 2 

every thing may bring my ruin! — iii. 2 

bring him to us — v. 1 

some pains to bring together yourself — v, 1 

the tidings that I bring will make .. — v. 1 

wliich time shall bring to ripeness . . — V. 4 



BRING— soon bring his particulars.. Troii. SfCres. i. 2 

to bring, uncle,— iiy, a token from . . — i.2 

himselt bring the praise forth — i. 3 

I bring a trumpet to awake his ear . . — i. 3 

be you my time to bring it to — i. 3 

from Hector bring those honours off — _i. 3 

such a beauty brings with it — ii- 2 

brin" action nither, this cannot — ii.3 

and bring his answer presently — ii.3 

I'll bring her straight — iij- 2 

comes to me now, and brings me heart — iii- 2 

such pains to bring you together .... — ?!!■ ^ 

and bring us Cressid hither — ?!!• ^ 

withal, bring word — if Hector — iii. 3 

'twas to bring this Greek to Calchas' — iv. 1 

you bring me to do, and then — iv. 2 

I'll bring her to the Grecian — iv- 3 

and bring .^neas, and the Grecian . . — iv- 4 

I'll bring you to your father — iv- .'i 

or purpose, bring you to 't — iv- 5 

Agamemnon's tent, to bring me thither — iv. 5 

I'll bring you to the gates - — v. 2 

taken too, or bring him otf — y. fi 

little casket briu^ me hither ...Timonof Athens,}. 2 

they laboured to oring nianslaugliter — iii. 5 

to bring it into danger — }]]■ ^ 

come, bring in all together — iii-0 

\vretchedness that glory brings us ... . — iv. 2 

bring down rose-cheeked youth — iv. 3 

let it no more brin^ out ingrateful . . — iv. 3 

who can brin g noblest minds to — i v. 3 

bring us to his cave — v. 2 

bring us to him, and chance it as ... . — v. 2 

and nothing brings me all things — v. 2 

much hazard, if they bring not Timon — v. 3 

dear countryman, bring in thy ranks — v. 5 

bring me into your city — v. 5 

for the remove bring up your Coriolamis, i. 2 

and bring thy news so late? — _i. 6 

bring me word thither how — i._ 1 

brings 'a victory in his pocket? — ii. 1 

sliomd bring ourselves to be monstrous — ii. 3 

I cannot bring my tongue to such . . — ii. 3 

bring in the crows to peck the eagles — iii. 1 

to bring the roof to the foundation . . — iii. 1 

undertake to bring him where he ... . — iii- 1 

if you bring not JMarcius (rep.) — iii. 1 

bring me but out at gate — iv. 1 

mercy his mother shall bring from hira — v. 4 

if the Roman ladies bring not comfort — v. 4 

what conquest brings he home Julius Ccpsar, i. 1 

that brings forth the adder — ii. 1 

look in the calendar, and bring me word — ii. 1 

I wiU bring him to the Capitol — ii. 1 

bring me their opinions of success .. — ii. 2 

yes, bring me word, boy — ii. 4 

the wind brings it from the Capitol . . — ij. 4 

and bring me word what he doth ... . — ij. 4 

bring him with triimiph home — jjj- 2 

we'llbring him to his house with — ijj. 2 

bring me to Octavius — iii. 2 

bring Messala with you immediately — iv. 3 

bring us word unto Octavius' tent . . — v. 4 
bring in the banquet quickly — Antony fy Cleo. i. 2 

seek him, and bring him hither — i. 2 

then, we bring forth weeds — i.2 

your old smock brings forth a new . . — i. 2 

Caisar, I bring thee word — _i. 4 

bring it to that, the gold I give thee. . — ii. 5 

as a gaoler to bring forth some — ii. 5 

I, that do bring the news, made not — ij. 5 

never good to bring bad news — ii. .5 

of her hair: bringme word quickly.. — ii. 5 

bid you Alexas bring me word — ij. 5 

these the showers to bring it on — iii. 2 

thou shalt bring him to me where I. . — iii. 3 

let it be; bringme to Antony — iii. 5 

bring him through the bands — iii. 10 

being whipped, bring him again — iii. 1 1 

follow me close; I'll bring you to 't . . — iv. 4 

I'll bring thee word straight — i v. 1 

and bring me how he takes my death — iv. 1 1 

with your speediest, bring us what . . — v. 1 

bring our cro^Tn and all — v. 2 

he brings you figs. Let him come in — v. 2 

a noble deed ! he brings me liberty . . — v. 2 

to bring him to the haven Cymbeline, i. 2 

1 will bring from thence that honour — i. 5 
if I bring you no suifieent testimony — i. 5 
when thou shalt bring me word — — i. 6 

bring this apparel to my chamber — iii. 5 

to bring him here alone — iv. 2 

and bring him to dinner presently . . — iv. 2 

or what his death will bring ns — iv. 2 

brings the dire occasion in his arms. . — iv. 2 

without a monument!) bring thee all — iv. 2 

and bring me word, how 'tis — iv. 3 

fortune brings in some boats — iv. 3 

of note ; bring him to the king — v. 3 

bring your prisoner to the king — v, 4 

that I bring unto their latest. , Titus Andmnicus, i. 2 

and I'll soon bring her hack — i.2 

lullabj', to bring her babe asleep — ii.3 

bring thou her husband — ii.3 

straight will I bring you to — ii- 4 

then all too late I bring this fatal — jj. 4 

some bring the murdered body — .!!• ^ 

I bring consuming sorrow to thine age — iii- 1 

and bring you up to be a warrior — iv- 2 

to nourish, and bring hira up — v- 1 

briug down the devil: for he — v. 1 

so, now bring them in, for I will — v- 2 

and briug our emperor gently in thy — - v- 3 

may to your wishes pleasure bring. Pericles, i- (Gow.) 

bring in our daughter, clothed like — i. 1 

bring arms to princes, and to siibifcts.. — i. 1! 
soiTow never comes, but liiiugs ;in heir — i- 4 

thej' bring us peace, and '.Dino to us — i- I 

but bring they ^^■hat they «iU — i- 4 

his child, I WIS, to incest bring — ii. (Gower) 



BRI 

BRING— come, and bring away the nets. Pericles, ii. 1 
and I'll bring thee to the court myself — ii. 1 

I'll bring you in subjection — ii. 5 

bid Nestor bring me spices, ink and paper — iii. 1 
bid Nicander bring me the satin coffer — iii. 1 

I'll bring the body presently — iii. 1 

we'll bring your grace even to — iii. 3 

I'll bring home some to-night — iv. 3 

come, bring me to some private place. . — iv- 6 
infirm and choleric years bring with them. Lear, i. 1 

I will fitly bring you to hear my — j. 2 

bring oil to fire, snow to tlieir colder — ii. 2 

come, bring away the stocks — ii. 2 

I entreat you to bring but five and twenty — jj. 4 

come, bring us to this hovel — iii. 2 

and bring you where both fixe and food. ... — iii. 4 

bring in the evidence : thou robed — iii. 6 

like a thief, bring him before us — iii. 7 

bring some covering for this naked soul . . — iv. 1 

I'll briug him the best 'parel — iv. 1 

bring me but to tlie very brim of it — iv. 1 

I'll bring you to our master Lear — iv- 3 

and bring him to our eye — jv. 4 

bring up the brown bills — iv. 6 

bring his constant pleasure — v. 1 

I'll bring yon comfort. Grace go — v. 2 

shall bring a brand from heaven — v. 3 

the time will bring it out — v. 3 

and bring thee cords made like- . Romeo ^-JtUiet, ii. 4 
and bring in cloudy night immediately — iij- 2 
and she brings news; and every tongue — iji. 2 

I win bring you till ther — iii. 2 

I bring thee tidings of the prince's doom — iii- 3 
could to no issue of true honour bring — iv. 1 
for shame, bring Juliet forth : her lord — iv. 5 
dost thou not bring me letters from . . — v. 1 
nor get a messenger to bring it thee.. — v. 2 
bringit straight unto my cell (rep.).. — V. 2 
bring forth the parties of suspicion . . — v. 3 

Eeace this morning with it brings.... — v. 3 
ring with thee airs from heaven Hamlet, i. 4 

bring these gentlemen where Hamlet is — ii. 2 
do grace to them, and bring them in ... . — ii . 2 
we would bring him to some confession . . — iii. 1 
will bring him to his wonted way again — iii. 1 
bring me to the test, and I the matter . . — iii. 4 

and bring the body into the chajiel — iv. 1 

of nothing: bring me to him: hide fox .. — jv. 2 

bring him before ns (repeated) — iv. 3 

these good fellows will bring thee.. — iv. 6 (let.) 
bring you, in fine, together, and wager .. — iv. 7 
young Osrick, who brings back to him . . — y. 2 
state, to bring [Co(. -bear] me to him .... Othello, i. 2 
bring him away: mine's not an idle .... — j. 2 
he snail our commission bring to you.... — i. 3 
bring them after in the best advantage . . — i. 3 
hell and night must bring tliis monstrous — \. 3 

and bring all Cyprus comfort — ii. 1 

bring thou the master to the citadel .... — ii. 1 

if I can bring it to any opportunity — ii. 1 

and bring him j ump when he may — ii . 3 

by the front, to bring you in again — iii. 1 

so much to do to bring him in ! trust me — iii. 3 

to bring them to that prospect — iii- 3 

I pray you, bring me on the way a little — iii- 4 

can bring you, for I attend here — iii. 4 

that viper? bring the villain forth — v. 2 

come, bring away- Soft you; a word or two — v. 2 

BRINGER— some bringer of that joy. Mid. N.Dr. v. 1 
the first bringer of unwelcome news..2Wfnr!/jr. i. 1 
safed the bringer out of the host. /fri/oni/ (5- C/eo. iv. G 

BRINGETH-what blessing bringeth it. Much Ado,i. 3 
from whom he bringeth sensible. iVer. of Venire, ii. 9 
the contrary bringeth forth bliss ....\ Henry VI. v. 4 

BRINGING— bringing wood in slowly.. rcmp«!(,ii. 2 
witness good bringing up . . Two Gen. of Verona, iv. 4 
in his own bringingsforth.il/easwre/oritfeaswre, iii. 2 
own children in good bringing up. Taming of Sh. I. 1 
chid you for not bringing it . . Comedy of Errors, iv. 1 

a plague on my bringing up \ Henry IV. ii. 4 

bringing rebellion broached on his. Henry V. v. (cho.) 
in bringing tliem to civil discipline. .2 Henry VI. i. 1 

of bringing back the prisoner Henry VIII. ii. 1 

hark, our drums are bringing forth. . Coriolanus^ i. 4 
TOUT care in bringing up my child .... Pericles, iii. 3 
tis not the bringing up of poor bastards — iv. 3 

bringing tlie murderous coward to the Lear, ii. I 

pardon me for bringing these ill neves. Rom.S,- Jul. v. 1 
the bringing home of bell and burial ..Hamlet, v- 1 

BRING'ST— thou bring'st me out.. Asyou Like, iii. 2 

thoubriug'st me happiness tHenry IV.'w. 4 

unless thou bring'st them with t\iee.Jul. Casar, v. 1 

thou bring'st good news Cymbeline, v. 4 

tliy sorrows which thou bring'st Pericles, i. 4 

BRINISH— her brinish tears 3 Henry VI. iii. 1 

will in his brinish bowels swallow. . Titus And. iii. 1 

BRINK— to the very brink ot tears.Timonof Ath. v. 2 
strength to pluck thee to the brink. . Titus And. ii. 4 

BRISK— most brisk and giddy-paced.. rireZ/V/i N. ii. 4 

to see him shine so brisk i Henry IV. i. 3 

of wine, that's brisk and fine.2Henr;/ IV. v. 3 (song) 
cheerly, boys; be brisk awhile ..Romeo ^Juliet, i. 5 

BRISKY — most brisky juvenal Mid. N.'sDr. iii. 1 

BRISTLE— as a bristle nia.y enter. . Twelfth Mght, i. 5 
doth dogged war bristle his angry crest. .John, iv- 3 
and bristle up tlie crest of youth -.-.lH(';?r!//r. i. 1 
boy, bristle thy courage up Henry V. ii. 3 

BRISTLED— the bristled lips before him.Corw/. ii. 2 

BRISTLING— with bristliug hail-.. ..Mi'rf.iV.Dr- ii. S 

BRISTOL— straight to Bristol castle.«ic/iarrf //. ji. •! 

to go with us to Bristol castle — ii.3 

all of them at Bristol lost their heads — iii. 2 

his brother's death at Bristol \ Henry IV. \. 3 

at Bristol I expect my soldiers . . . .ZHenry VI. iii- 1 

BRITAIN— Guinever of Britain was. Z-odc's/.. I. iv. 1 

they made Britain, India Henry VIII. i. 1 

I have seen him in Britain Cymbeline, i. 5 

my lord, I fear, has forgot Britain . . — i. 7 

sooner landed in our not-fearing Britain — ii. 4 
was Cains Lucius in the Britain court — ii. 4 



BRI 



[85] 

BR()KE-I liavc broke with her fatlicr . Mufh Ado, ii. 1 
my troth he is as over broke bread . . — iii. D 

tins last was Iiroko ucniss — y. 1 

vows that ever nu-ii \\i\vv iiroke...il//'rf. N. Dream, \, 1 
dumbly have broke oft, not ijaying .. — _ v. 1 
the tlu'Cshold, and broke my s\\m.Love\'!L.Losf,ii\. 1 
vows, for tliee broke, deserve not — iv. 3 (verses) 

if by me broke, what fool is — iv. 3 (verses) 

your oath once broke, you force not.. — v. 2 

and broke three of his ribs As you Like it, i. 2 

thou hast not broke from company ^.. — i'. 4 

I broke my sword upon a stone — ii. 4 

so I had broke tliy pate, and asked . . AWs Well, ii. 1 

and brokos with all that can in — iii. 5 

for she hath broke the lute to me. TamingofSh. ii. 1 

havin" broke your fast Comedij of Errors, i. 2 

he broke from those that had .... — r. 1 

and his man are both broke loose — v. 1 

murder hath broke ope the lord's Macbeth, ii. 3 

turned wild in nature, broke their stalls — ii. 4 

the mirth, broke the good meeting — iii. 4 

at no time broke my faith — iv. 3 

and ne'er broke his fast King Jolm^ i. 1 

I faintly broke with thee — iv. 2 

and broKe out to aquaiut you with . . — v. 6 

that late broke from the duke Richard II. ii. 1 

of Worcester hath broke his staff — i i . 2 

broke the possession of a royal bed .. — iii. 1 

all oaths, tliat are broke to me ! — iv. 1 

wlien time is broke, and no proportion — v. 5 
check time broke in a disordered .... — v. .5 

broke oath on oath I Henry IV. iv. 3 

madly hath broke loose, and bears . .iHenrylV. i. 1 

is not yom- voice broltef — .;. 2 

wlien the prince broke thy head .... — ii. 1 

that you broke your word — ii. 3 

or, like a school broke up — iv. 2 

have broke their sleep wth thoughts — iv. 1 
what was the impediment that broke . . Henry V.i. 1 
for a' never broke any man's head . . — iii. 2 

why, all our ranks are broke — iv. 5 

then broke I from the officers \ Henry fl-i. 4 

oiu- windows are broke down — iii. 1 

hath with Talbot broke his word .... — iv. 6 

therefore may be broke without — y. 5 

was broke in twain iHenryVI. i. 2 

broke be my sword, my arms torn — iv. 1 

hath my sword therefore broke through — i v. 8 

and broke his solemn oath? ZHenry VI. i. 4 

since when his oath is broke — ii. 2 

a thousand men have broke their fasts — ii. 2 

our ranks are broke, and ruin — ii . 3 

have you not broke your oaths? — iii. 1 

the cable broke, the holding — v. 4 

when thou hast broke it in Biclmrd III. i. 4 

many have broke their backs witli..Hcnry VIII. i. 1 

broke into a general prophecy — i. 1 

13ride at length broke under me .... — iii. 2 

vou have broke it, cousin Troilus ^ Cressida, iii. 1 

I would they had broke 's neck ! — iv. 2 

such a house broke! Timon of Athens, iv. 2 

how has the ass broke the wall — iv. 3 

in excess hath broke their hearts .... — v. 5 

hunger broke stone walls Corialanusj i. 1 

whose plots have broke their sleep .. — iv. 4 

a hundred times hath broke — iv. 5 

I would have broke mine eye-strings. Cymbeline, i. 4 
you have broke his pate with your . . — ii. 1 
wit had been like him that broke it . . — ii. 1 

almost broke my heart with Titus Andron. v. 1 

broke them in the sweet face of heaven . . Lear, iii. 4 
day before, she broke her brow . . Romeo t>f Juliet, i. 3 
the day is broke; be wary, look about — iii. 5 

the doors are broke Hamlet, iv. .5 

air envious sliver broke — iv. 7 

the day had broke before we parted Othello, iii. 1 

BROKEN"— are they broken? . . Two Gen. of Ver. ii. 5 

may heedfully be broken — ii. 6 

remnants of wit broken on me Much Ado, ii. 3 

here's a Costard broken in a shin. Lojje's L.Lost, iii. 1 
that a Costard was broken in a shin — iii. 1 

how was there a Costard broken iu . . — iii. 1 
if broken then, it is no fault .... — iv. 3 (verses) 
me without some broken limb . . As you. Like it, i. 1 
longs to see this broken music in his — i. 2 
that poor and broken bankrupt tlicre — ii. 1 

to glean the broken ears after — iii. i 

might excuse his broken promise — iv. 3 

no more were broken than these AWs Well, ii. 3 

broken hilt, and ehapeless (re^.).. Taming ofSh. iii. 2 
you have broken from his liking.. Winter's Tale, v. 1 

I make a broken delivery of the . . — v. 2 

of wonder is broken out within tiiis hour — v. 2 
our sides it never shall be broken . . King John, v. 2 
grown bankrupt, like a broken vnsai..Rich. II. ii. 1 
oiur drooping country's broken wing — ii. 1 
forsook the court, broken Ms staff. ... — ii. 3 

their points being broken 1 HenrylV. ii. 4 

woiddst thou have thy head broken? — iii. 1 

like a broken limb united 'ZHenrylP'. iv. 1 

■with the broken seals of perjury HenryV. iv. 1 

your answer in broken music — v. 2 

and thy English broken; therefore .. — v. 2 
in broken English, wilt thou liave me — y. 2 

the pieces of the broken wand 2Hcnry VI. i. 2 

why hast thou broken faith witli me — y. 1 
for hitlier we have broken in by ioxccZHeytry VI. i . 1 

any oath may be broken — i. 2 

him that hath once broken faith .... — iv. 4 
methought that I had broken frova.Rlchard III. i. 4 
tlie liroken rancour of your high-swollen — ii. 2 
not been broken, nor my brother slain — iv. 4 
thy broken faith hath made a prey ibr — iv. 4 
amaze tlie welkin with your broken staves — y. 3 
you have now a broken banquet . . Henry VIII. i. 4 
an old man, broken with the storms.. — iv. 2 
moved, have broken with llic king .. — y. 1 
here is good broken music .. Troilus SrCressida, iii. I 

with tlie salt of broken tears '. — iv. 4 

as is Araclinc's broken woof — v. 2 



BRO 



BRITAIN-which wasminein Britain. Cv/mdri/nr.ii. 4 
was in this Britain, and oonquered it — iii. 1 

Britain is a world by itself — iii, 1 

who was the first of Britain — iii. 1 

the heir of Cynilieline and Biitaiu .. — iii. 3 
tliLMi not iu Britain must you bide .. — iii. 4 
hufh lUitaiu all the sun that shines (rpp.) — iii. 4 
wlicnco In- nuives his war for Britain — iii. .'i 
eiioiii,'h, that, Britain, I have killed thy — v. 1 
il'tliat thy gentry, Britain, go before — v. 2 

our Britain's harts die flying — v. 3 

in Britain where was he that could.. — v. 4 
Britain be fortunate (rep. V. .■)) .. — V. 4 (scroll) 
tlie liver, heart, and brain of Britain — v. 5 

and not o' the court of Britain — v. 5 

away to Britain post I in this design — v. 5 
'gan in your duller Britain operate . . — \. !> 
iiromises Britain peace and plenty .. — v. 5 

BKITANY— a bay of Britany Richard II. ii. 1 

tlien to Britany I'll cross the sea. ...SHeiiryVI. ii. 6 

we'll send him hence to Britany — iv. 6 

he shall to Britany. Come therefore — iv. 6 
too good, for any lady in Britany. . . . Cymbeline, i. 5 

BlUTISH— placing of the British crown — iii. 5 
let a Roman and a British ensign.... — v. 5 
smell the blood of a British man..I.ra;-, iii. 4 (song) 

madam, news; the British powers are — iv. 4 

upon the British [A'n(. -English] part.y .... — iv.fi 

BRITON — here comes the Briton Cymbeline, i. 5 

he is called the Briton reveller — 1.7 

whiles the jolly Briton (your lord .. — i. 7 

aud Britons strut ^\^tll courage — iii. 1 

would show the Britons cold — iii. I 

your valiant Britons have their .... — iii. .5 
wars against the fallen-off Britons .. — iii. 7 
my master, a very valiant Briton. ... — iv. 2 

must or for Britons slay us — iv. 4 

suit myself as docs a Briton peasant — iv. 4 

but the backs of Britons seen — v. 3 

preserved the Britons, was the Roman's — v. 3 
ICol. A'h(.] now a favourer to the Briton — v. 3 
no more a Briton, I have resumed . . — v. 3 
great the answer be Britons must take — v. 3 
tribute; that the Britons have razed out — v. 5 

my boy, a Briton born, let him — v. 5 

he hath done no Briton harm — v. 5 

BRITTLE— a brittle glory {rep.) ..Richard II. iv. 1 
better brook the loss of brittle life ..\Henry IV. v. 4 
my kingdom stands on brittle glass. Richardlll. iv. 2 

BRiZE — annoyance by the brize. . Troilus c§- Cress, i. 3 
ti-.e brize upon her, like a cow. . Antony <§- Cleo. iii. 8 

BROACH— this blow should broach.. 1 Henry T/. iii. 4 

ever I did broach this business Henry VIII. ii. 4 

if I would broach the vessels . . Timon of Alliens, ii. 2 
I'll broach the tadpole Titus Andronicns, iv. 2 

BK-OACHED- broached his boiling. . Mid N. Dr. v. 1 

that I broached in jest Taming of Slirew, i. 2 

a portent of broached mischief 1 Henry IV. v. 1 

rebellion broached on his sword. Henry F. v. (chorus) 
best blood that ever was broached.. 2 Henri/ FI. iv. 10 
what hath broached this tumult . . ..SHenry FI. ii. 2 

broached with the steely point — ii. 3 

the business she Iiath hroRChei.. Antony ^ Cleo. i. 2 

the business you have broached — i. 2 

such quarrels mav be broached. Titus Andronicus, ii . 1 

BROAD— that leads to the broad gute.All's Well, iv. 5 
against those honours deep and oroad.. Macbeth, i. 6 

as broad, and general — iii. 4 

for from broad words, and 'cause — iii. 6 

till, by broad spreading, it disperse . . 1 Henry FI. i. 2 

in thy broad cardinal's hat — i.3 

with a broad and powerful fan . . Troilus <§- Cress, i. 3 
as proud a place as broad Achilles — i.3 

it is as broad as it hath breadtli ..Antony ^ Cleo, i i . 7 
I have been broad awake two hours.. Titus And. i].2 
an ell broad! I stretch it out {rep,)., Rom, ffJul, ii. 4 
far and wide a broad [Co(. -abroad] goose — ii. 4 

for the world is broad and wide — iii. 3 

with all his crimes broad blown Hamlet, iii. 3 

his pranks have been too broad — iii. 4 

BROADER — the bridge much broader. il/«rA Ado, i. ) 
who can speak broader than he. Timon of Athens, iii. 4 

BROAD-FRONTED— 
In-oad-fronted Caisar, when ii\n\\..intony ff Cleo. i. .5 

BROADSIDE- fearwebroadsides?..2Henr!/7F. ii. 4 

B ROAD-SPREADING— 
his broad-spreading leaves did ....Richard II. iii. 1 

BROCAS— the heads of Brocas — v. e 

BROCK— marrv, hang thee, brock ! TwcZ/Mi ,V/V,«, ii. 5 

BROGUES— put my clouted brogues. Cymheline, iv. 2 

BROIL—the knowledge of the broil M.n-heil,, i. 2 

of new broils to be commenced \HenryIF. i. 1 

it seems tlien the tidings of this broil. . — i. 1 

keep it from civil broils! 1 Henry VI. i . 1 

leave tliis peevish broil, and set iii. 1 

churchmen take delight iu broils — iii. 1 

more furious raging broils iv. 1 

these outrageous broils v. 4 

in this eivilbroil, I see them 2He»ri/ FI. iv. 8 

here a period of tumultuous broils . .ZHenry FI, v. f> 
domestic broils, clean over-blown .. ftie/i';ri( ///. ii. 4 

and firstlings of those broils Trail. fyCres. (prol.) 

who broils in loud applause i.3 

stop, or all will fall in broil Coriolanus,\\\. 1 

and lieing bred in broils, hast not — iii. 2 

domestic and particular broils are not Lenr, v. 1 

[A'ni.] three civil broils bred Romeo ■'\- Juliet, i. 1 

pertains to feats of broil and battle Othello, i. 3 

BROILED-fat tripe.finely hrnWeil.Taming of lih.n. 3 
might have broiled and eaten him. . Coriotanns, iv. b 

BROILING- liave you been broiling?. Hen. VIII, iv. 1 

BlvOKE— I have broke your 'best Tempest, iii. 1 

son has broke his arrows iv. 1 

and broke open my lodge Merry Wives, i . 1 

.'^lender, I broke your head — i. 1 

as honest a maid as ever broke bread. . — i. 4 

lie has broke my head across Twelfth Night, v. 1 

vou broke my head for nothing — v. 1 

wliich are as easy broke as tlicy . . Men. for Mea. ii. 4 
which was broke off, partly, fo'r that. . — v. I 



BROKEN— all I)roken implements. 'Amon of.Mh, iv. 2 
you have broken the article of j'onr..4n(. f,-Cleo, ii. 2 
the army broken, and l)ut theb:icks..C!/n!W':nc, v. 3 
whoof their broken debtors take .... — v. 4 
these broken limbs again into one. Titus Andmn, v. 3 

broken a staff, or so; so let it pass Pcricln, ii. 3 

an eater of broken meats Ltar,u,'i 

might yet have balmed thy broken senses — iii. 6 

for your broken shin Romeo 4' Juliet, i . 2 

a broken voice, and liis whole function. H'rin/e/, ii. 2 
men do their broken weapons rather usc.O//ie(;o, i. 3 
this broken joint, between vou and her. . — ii. 3 

BROKENLY— confess it brokenly Henry V. v. 2 

BROKER— a goodly broker. . Two Oen. of Verona, i. 2 

tliat liroker, tliat still breaks King Jo/m, i i . 2 

this broker, this all changing word . . — ii . 2 
no broker; yet am I Suffolk (rep.) ..2Henry FI. i. 2 

to play the broker in mine 3 Henry VI. i v. 1 

[Col. Knt.1 hence, broker, lackey. Trail. (?• Cres. v. 1 1 

for they are brokers not of that clie Hamlet, i. 3 

BKOKERS-BETWEEN— 

and all brokers-between Bandars., rroi/.i?- Cres. iii. 2 
BROKING — redeem from broking pavfn,Rich,Il, ii. 1 
BROOCH— in a brooch (rep.) .... Lore's L, Lost, v. 2 

just like the brooch and toothpick All's Well^ i. 1 

pomander, broocii, table book Winler'sTale, iv. 3 

is a strange brooch in this all-hating . . Rich. II, v. .'i 

he is the brooch, indeed, and gem Hamlet, i v. 7 

BROOCHED-be brooclied vnth mc. Ant, Sr Cleo. iv. 13 

BROOCHES— your brooches, pearls .,2HenryIF, ii. 4 

BROOD— bring thee forth brave brood. Tempest, iii. 2 

become thehatchandbroodof time.2Henry/F. iii. 1 

why, what a brood of traitors 2 Henry FI. v. 1 

in safeguard of tlieir brood ZHenry VI. ii. 2 

fond of no second brood Coriolanus, v. 3 

threatening band of Typhon's brood.. Titus And. iv. 2 
which his melancholy sits on brood . . Hamlet, iii. 1 
BROODED— of brooded watchful day ... . John, iii. 3 
BROODING— 

sit brooding in the snow . . Love's L. Lost, v. 2 (song) 
BROOK — be the fresh-brook muscles . . Tempoet, i. 2 

Naiads, of the wandering brooks — iv. 1 

ye elves of liills, brooks, standing lakes — v. I 
now to brook this patiently. . . . Two Gen. of Ver, v. 3 

I better brook than flourishing — v. 4 

and tell him, my name is Brook . . Merry Wives, ii. 1 

and thy name shall be Brook — ii . 1 

there is one master Brook below — ii. 2 

Brook, is Ills name — ii. 2 

such Brooks are welcome to me — ii . 2 

my name is Brook. Good master Brook — ii. 2 

speak, good master Brook — ii. 2 

master Brook, I will first make — ii. 2 

master Brook, I say you shall — ii. 2 

want no mistress Ford, master Brook — ii. 2 

master Brook, thou shalt know — ii. 2 

thou, master IJrook, shalt know him — ii. 2 
I marvel, I hear not of master Brook — iii. 5 
now master Brook ; you come to .... — iii. 5 
master Brook, I will not lie to you . . — iii. 5 
very ill-favouredly, master Brook .. — iii. 5 
No, master Brook, but the peaking (rep.) — iii. 5 
tli.at, master Brook, there was the.... — iii..') 
na.y, you shall hear, master Brook .. — iii. 5 
but mark the sequel, master Brook. . — iii. .'> 
hissing hot, think of that, master Brook — iii. 5 
master Brook, I will be thrown into — iii. .5 
eight and nine is the hour, master Brook — iii. 5 
you shall have her, master Brook.... — iii. 5 
I'll to him again in name of Brook . . — iv. 4 
how now, master Brook? Master Brook — v. 1 
I went to her, master Brook, as you see — v. 1 

I came from her, master Brook — v. 1 

devil of jealousy in him, master Brook — v. 1 
in the shape of man, master Brook . . — v. 1 

I'll tell you allj master Brook — v. 1 

strange things in hand, master Brook — v. 1 
master Brook, Falstatf 's a knave .... — v. 5 
his horns, master Brook (repeated) .. — v.b 
paid to master Brook ; his horses (rep.) — v. 5 

to Windsor, to one master Brook — v. 5 

to master Brook you yet shall hold . . — v. 5 

or by rushy brook, or on the Mid. N. Dream, ii. 2 

many can brook the weather Lore's L. Lost, iv. 2 

as o'er a brook, to see fair Portia . . Mer. of Ven. ii. 7 

as doth an inland brook into the — v. I 

or brook such disgrace well as he ...-isyou Like it, i. 1 
books in the running lirooks, sermons — ii. 1 

upon the brook that brawls along — ii. 1 

tlieextreinestvergeof the swift brook.. — ii. 1 

he is drowned in the brook — iii. 2 

painted by a running brook . . Tam. o/.SA. 2 (iniliic.) 
my busiuess cannot brook this.. Com. o/JJrrors, iv. L 

I cannot brook thy sight King John, i'l'i. 1 

how brooks your grace the air .... Richard II, iii. 2 
of oiu- attempt brooks no division . . 1 HenrylV. iv. 1 

one England brook a double reipi — v. 1 

lean no louijer brook thy vanities.... — v. 4 
I lietter brook the loss of brittle life . . — v. 4 

then brook abridgement Henry V. v. (chorus) 

our late sovereign ne'er could brook.l Henry VI. i. 3 

how ill we brook his treason — iv. I 

business will not brook delay 2Heury Fl.i. 1 

for flying at the brook, I saw not .... — ii. 1 
the water where the brook is deep .. — iii. 1 
fierce, and cannot brook hard language — iv. u 
knowing how hardly I can brook abuse — v. 1 

if tliey can brook to bow a knee — v. 1 

could never brook retreat, cheered . .ZHennj FI. i. 1 
for aiiger bm-us, I cannot brook it . . — i. 1 

lord, I cannot brook delay — iii. 2 

that makes email brooks to flow .... w. iv. 8 
can l)etter brook thy diiggcr's point.. — v. 6 
in that you brook it ill, it Taakcs.... Richard 1 1 1, i. 3 

n bark to brook no mighty sea — iii. 7 

tliat cannot brook the accent of reproof — iv. 4 
should brook as little wrongs .Timon of Athens, iii. ,') 
will the cold brook, candieu with ice — iv. 3 
insolence can brook to be cymmanded . . Coriol. i. I 
caimot brouk competitors in love. Tilus Andron. ii. 1 



BKO 

BKOOK — gi-ows ascaunt the brook Hamlet, iv. 7 

and herself, fell In the weeping brook.. — iv. 7 

BKUOKED— never brooked parle . . Tamingof Sh. i. 1 

vour lordship lirooked imprisonment. . Rich. III. i. I 

have brooked the eternal devil .... Julius Ctpsar, i. 2 

BROOINI— and thy broom groves Tempest, iv. 1 

I am sent, with"broom, before ..Mid. N. Dream, v. 2 
BROOJISTAFF— 

came to tlic broomstafFwith me — Henry fill. v. 3 

BKOTII— cooling my broth . . Merchant of I'enice, i. 1 

their barley broth, decoct their cold. . Henry V. iii. 5 

sanced oxa broths, as Juno had Cijmheline, iv. 2 

BKOTHEL— is o' the brothel! . . Timon of Athens, iv. 1 
Jlarina thus the brothel scapes.. i-'ez-icto, v. (Gower) 

like a tavern, or a brothel Lear, i. 1 

keei> thv foot out of brothels, thy hand — iii. 4 

(videliolt, a brothel), or so-forth Hamlet, ii. 1 

BH0T1JKL-U0U8E— 

up at the door of a brothel-house MucJi Ado, 1. 1 

BHUTHER— fai-ewell brother! Tempest, i. 1 

my brotlier, and thy uncle — ;• 2 

tliat a brother should be — i. 2 

the government I cast upon my brother . . — i. 2 

in my false brother — i-2 

if tills might be a brother — i. 2 

hearkens my brother's suit — i. 2 

on my brotlier — !• 2 

my brother's daughter 's queen of Tunis — ii. 1 
you did supplant your brother Prospero.. — ii. 1 

my brother's servants were then — ii. 1 

here lies your brother, no better — ii.l 

brother, my lord the duke, stand too — — iii. 3 

the king, his brother, and yours — v. 1 

thy brother was a furtherer — v. 1 

jou brother mine, that entertained — v. 1 

wlioni to call brother would even — v. 1 

and Ferdinand her brother found — v. 1 

wherewitli my brother held you. TwoGen. ofVcr. 1. 3 

blind brotlicrs and sisters went — iv. 4 

here's the twin brother of thy letter. Merry Wives, ii. 1 
tlirce of master Ford's brothers watch — iv. 2 

to season a brother's dead love Tteelfth Night, i. 1 

this debt of love but to a brother — i. 1 

my brother he is in Elysium — i. 2 

O, my poor brother! — ' i. 2 

I saw your brother most provident . . — i. 2 

her brother, who shortly also died — i. 2 

to take the death of her brother thus? — i. 3 

good fool, for my brother's death — i. 5 

to mourn for yoiur brother's soul — i. 5 

and all the brothers too — ii. 4 

that I, dear brother, be now ta'en — iii. 4 

I my brother know yet living In — iii. 4 

and so, in favour wa^ my brother .... — iii. 4 
had it been the brother of my blood. . — v. 1 

1 never had a brother — v. 1 

such a Sebastian was my brother too — v. 1 

as 'twere a brother of your Mea.for Mea. i. 4 

iinliappy brother Claudio (ccp.) — i. 5 

vour brother kindly greets you — i. 5 

brother and his lover have eoibraccd — 1. h 
vour brother's life falls into foriijit .. — i. 5 

^twixt you and your poor brother — i. 5 

commend me to my brother — i. 5 

I have a brother is condemned to die — ii. 2 

his fault, and not my brother — ii. 2 

I had a brother then — ii. 2 

your brother is the forfeit of the law — ii. 2 

e(tndemns your brother (;-ep.) — ii. 2 

Your brother dies to-morrow — ii. 2 

cannot weigh our brother with ourself — ii. 2 

that's like my brother's fault — ii. 2 

against my brother's life — ii. 2 

O let her brother live — ii. 2 

your brotlier cannot live — ii, 4 

now took your brother's life — ii. 4 

a sentence ou your brother's life — ii . 4 

to sa^"e this brother's life? — ii. 4 

your brother is to die — ii. 4 

t'etch your brother from the manacles — ii. 4 
as iiiucli for my poor brother as myself — ii. 4 

then must your brother die — ii. 4 

better it were, a brother died at once — ii. 4 
sliding of your brother a merriment., — ii. 4 

else let my brother die — ii. 4 

my brother did love Juliet — ii. 4 

a present pardon for my brother .... — ii. 4 
n'dceni thy brother by yieldiu" up . . — ii.4 
I'll to my brother; though he hath .. — ii.4 
brother die: more than our brother. . — ii. 4 

yes, brother, yon may live — iii. 

tliere spake my brother — iii. 

wliat says my brother? , — iii. 

wluit sin you do to save a brother's life - ■ iii. 
this substitute and to save your brother — iii. 
1 had rather ray brother die by the law - iii. 
redeem your brother from the angry ^ iii. 
her lirotlier Frederick was wrecked.. — iii. 
she lost a noble and renowned brotlier .^ iii. 
not onlj' saves your brother but keeps — iii. 

by this, is your brother saved — iii. 

aiid you, good brother father — iii. 2 

provost, ray brother Augelo will not — iii. 2 
if my brother wrought by my jiity . . — iii. 2 

I am a brotlier of gracious order — iii. 2 

I come about my brother — iv. 1 

remember now my brother — iv. 1 

though he were my brother — i v. 2 

if yet her brother's pardon be come .. — iv. 3 

sent my brother's pardon — iv. 3 

my truth, Isabel, I loved thy brotlier — iv. 3 

suitor to me for he^ lirother — v. 1 

was sent to by my brother — v. 1 

for her poor brother's iiardon — V. 1 

release my brother — v. 1 

for my poor brother's head — v. 1 

have weighed thy brother by himself — v. 1 

your brother's death, 1 know — V. 1 

so happy is your brotlier — v. 1 

but as lie adjudged yom- brother — y.\ 



[86] 



BRO 



BROTIlElt— for your brother's liti;./)/ca.yL))il/ni. v. 1 

her brother's ghost his paved bed — v. 1 

as if my brother lived — v. 1 

ray brother hn<l but justice — v. 1 

if he be like your brother for his sake — v. 1 

he is my brother too — v. 1 

every montli a new sworn brother .... Much Ada, i. 1 

reconciled to the prince your brother — i. 1 

how now, brother? where is my — i. 2 

but, brother, I can tell you strange . . — i. 2 

late stood out against your brother . . — i. 3 

the prince, your brother, is royally . . — i. 3 

it is your brother's right hand — i. 3 

are entering; brother, make good room — ii.l 

my brother is amorous on Hero — ii. 1 

are very near my brother in his love — ii. 1 

hath your grace ne'er a brother like you? — ii. 1 

goyou to the prince your brother .... — ii. 2 

in love of your brother's honour .... — ii. 2 

lord and brother, God save {rep.) .... — iii. 2 

for my brother, I think he holds you — iii. 2 

but as a brother to his sister — iv. 1 

is this the prince's brother? — iv. 1 

myself, my brother, and this grieved — iv. 1 

the princess brother, was a villain .... — iv. 2 

to call a prince's brother, villain .... — iv. 2 

for brother, men can counsel — v. 1 

brother,— content yourself — v. 1 

brother Antony, — Hold you content — v. 1 

but, brother Antony — v. 1 

brother, away; I will be heard — v. 1 

Leonato and his brother — v. 1 

your brother, the bastard, is fled .... — v. 1 

did he not say, my brother was fled? — v. 1 

two of my brother's men bound! .... — v. 1 

Don John your brother incensed me — v. 1 

but did my brother set thee ou to tliis? — v. 1 

my brother hath a daughter — v. 1 

hired to it by your brotlier — v. I 

office, brother; you must be (rep.) .. — v. 4 

to marry with my brother's daughter? — v. 4 

call her forth, brother, here's the friar — v. 4 

my lord, your brother John is ta'en in — v. 4 
displease her brother's noon-tide. .*/id. A'. Dr. iii. 2 
would call their brothers, fools . . Mer. of Venice, i. 1 
chargedmy brother ou his blessing. ^s you Litie it, i. 1 

my brother Jaques he keeps at — i. 1 

but I, his brother, gain nothing — ■ i. 1 

bars me the place of a brother — i. 1 

yonder comes my master, your brother — i. 1 

a poor unworthy brotlier of yours .... — i . 1 

I know you are my eldest brother . . — i. 1 

were there twenty In'Others betwixt.. — i. 1 

come, come, elder brother, you are . . — i. 1 

wert thou not my brother, I woidd . . — i. 1 

his j'ounger brother, the new duke . . — i. 1 

your younger brother, Orlando — i. 1 

your 'brother is but young and tender — i. 1 

notice of my brother's purpose herein — i. 1 

against me his natural brother — i. 1 

tyrant duke, unto a tyrant brother . . — i. 2 

iny co-mates, and brothers in exile . . — ii. 1 

your brother that hath banished — ii. 1 

to his brother; fetch that (»ep.) — ii. 2 

your brother, (no, not brother — ii. 3 

a diverted blood, and bloody brother — ii. 3 

find out thy brother, wheresoe'er he is — iii. 1 

quit thee by thy brother's mouth — iii. 1 

I never loved niy brother in my life — iii. 1 

Ganymede, my new mistress's brother — iii. 2 

in beard is a younger brother's revenue — iii. 2 

and browner than her brother — iv. 3 

his brother, his elder brother (rep.') .. — iv. 3 

are you his brother? Was it you — iv. 3 

committing me unto my brother's love -— iv. 3 

tell your Ijrother how well — iv. 3 

how you excuse m.v brother, Rosalind — iv. 3 

God save you, brother — v. 2 

did your brother tell you how — v. 2 

for your brother and my sister — v. 2 

I shall tliink my brother happy — v. 2 

when your brother marries AJiena . . — v. 2 

roethought he was a brother — v. 4 

they shook hands, and swore brothers — v. 4 

purposely to take his brother here . . — v. 4 

bequeathinf! to his banished brother — v. 4 

offer'st fairly to thy brother's wedding — v. 4 
count Rousillon cannot be my brother.^li/'s^rri/, i. 3 

he must not be my 'brother — i.3 

your son, were not my brother — i.3 

he must be my brother? — ]. 3 

he slew the duke's brother — j'!- ■'' 

your brother, he shall go along — iii. 6 

the count Kousillon and my brother — iv. 1 

what's his brother, the other captain — iv. 3 

brother for a coward, yet his brother — iv. 3 
brother Fetruchio, sister Katharina.. Tom. o/SA.y. 2 
filled up, my brother, with our. . . . Winter's Tale, i. 2 

we are tougher, brother, than you .. — i. 2 

to save both, farewell, our brother . . — i. 2 

how is 't with you, best brother? .... — i. 2 

my brother, are you so fond of — i. 2 

show in our brot'her's welcome — .i. 2 

and reconciled king, my brother — iv. 1 

ay, good brother, or go about to think — iv. 3 

his sworn brother, a very simple — iv. 3 

that I should call you brother — v. 1 

can send his brother, and, but infirmity — v. 1 

her brother, having hotli their country — v. I 

called me brother; and then (rfpea(ei/) — v. 2 

with your cro\vned brother — v. 3 

dear my brother, let him, that was . . — v. 3 

look upon my brother — v. 3 

became inquisitive after his brother.Com.o/Err. i. 1 

reft of his brother, but retained — i. 1 

and a brother, in quest of them — _i. 2 

fie, brother! how the world — ii. 2 

then, gentle brother, get you in again — iii. 2 

I would not spare my brother — iv. 1 

did caU me brother; what I told .... — v. 1 



BROTIIEH-embraee thy brother there.Com.o/£r.v. 1 

my glass, and not my brother — v. 1 

into tlie world, like brother and brother — v. 1 

if J)<nialbain be with his brotlier Macbeth, v. 2 

of tliy deceased brother Gefl'rey's son.. KingJohti, i. 1 

that is my brother's plea — i. ) 

to claim your brother's land? — i. 1 

your brother did employ my father. . — i. 1 

your brother is legitimate (rep.) .... — i. 1 

like thy brother, to enjoy thy land.. — i. 1 

madam, an' m3' brother had my shape — i. 1 

brother, take you my land — i. 1 

brother by the mother's side — i. 1 

where is that slave, thy brother? — i. 1 

hast tliou conspired •with thy brother — i. 1 

look here upon thy brother Geffrey's — ii. 1 

was thy elder brother born — ii. 1 

6011 to the elder brother of this man.. — ii. 1 

first called my brother's father, dad — ii. 2 

brother of England, how may we.... — ii. 2 

brother of England, you blaspheme.. — iii. 1 



:dom'8 (rep.).RichardII. 



1. 2 



ii. 1 
ii. 1 
ii. 1 



ii. 4 
iii. 2 
iii. 3 
iv. 2 



my brother,nay, my kii.guu.,, o ,_, u^.,. 
thou seest thy wretched brother die., 

thus thy brother to be slaughtered . . — 

thy sometimes brother's wife — 

commend me to my brother, Edmund .— 
wert thou not brother to great Edward's — 

my brother Edward's son — 

my brother Gloster, plain — 

his brother, archbishop late of — 

cut off my head with my brother's .. — 

sent from my brother Worcester .... — 

I am sworn brother, sweet — 

brother, the king hath made I Henry I V. 

once again of my wife's brother — 

then proclaim my brother Edmund. . — 

his brother's death at Bristol — 

farewell, good brother; we shall — 

I fear my brother Mortimer doth stir — 

sworn brother to a leash of di'awers. . — 
by thy younger brother is supplied . . 
John of Lancaster, my brother John 
younger sons to younger brothers. . . . 

myself, my brother, and his son — v. i 

unless a brother should a brother dare — v. 2 

come, brother, let's to the highest — v. 4 

how doth my son and brother? 2HenryIV. i. 1 

your brother thus; so fought — i. 1 

ending with — brother, son, and all .. — i. 1 

that I am a second brother — ii. 2 

John, with my brothers and sisters — ii. 2 (letter) 

and art thou Poins, his brother? .... — ii. 4 

like a brother toiled in my aft'airs . . — iii. 1 

as if he had been sworn brother — iii. 2 

my brother general (repeated) — iv. 1 

where is the prince your brother? .... — iv. 4 

is not his brother, Thomas of Clarence? — iv. 4 

art not with the prince thy brother? — iv. 4 

in his aft'ection, than all thy brothers — iv. 4 

of gold, to bind thy brothers in — i v. 4 

I am here, brother, full of heaviness — iv. 4 

we left the prince my brother here . . — iv. 4 

brothers, you mix your sadness — v. 2 

yet be sad, good brothers — v. 2 

no more of it, good brothers, than. . . . — v. 2 

I'll be your fatlier and your brother too — v. 2 
your brother kings and monarchs .... Henry V.i.2 

all tliree sworn brothers to France . . — ii. 1 

from our brother England? — ii. 4 

back to our brother of England — ii.4 

are sworn brothers in filcliing — iii. 2 

were my brother, I would desh'e 



— 111. 6 

— iii. fi 
— iv. (clio.) 

— iv. 1 



V. 2 
V. 2 
V. 2 



we are in God's hand, brother 

calls them brothers, friends 

brothers both, commend me 

fo with my brothers to my lords .... 
rother John Bates, is not that 

brothers; for he, to-day that sheds (rep.) 
the brother to the duke of Burgundy 

unto our brother France 

most worthy brother England 

happy be the issue, brotlier England 
brother, we shall; go, uncle (rep.) .. 

our gracious brother, I will go 

this I have not, brother, BO denied .. — .. ^ 
to sla.y thy brother Abel if thou wilt.l Hetiry VI. i. 3 

what! did my brother Henry 2HenryVI.\, 1 

and did my brother Bedford toil — i. 1 

brother York, thy acts in Ireland — i. 1 

that the.y may agree like brothers.... — iv. 2 
8tatford'and his orother are hard by — iv. 2 

Stafford and his brother's death — iv. 4 

brother, here's the earl of Wiltshire's.3Hcn;-i/ T/. i. 1 

good brother, as thou lov'st — i. 1 

brother, though I be j'oungest — i. 2 

now, sons, and brother, at a strife? .. — i. 2 
brother, thou shalt to London presently — i. 2 
my brother Montague shall post ... ' ' 

brother, I goj I'll win them 

how fares my brother? 

I think it cites us, brother to the . . . 



lord George, your brother, Norfolk 
and for j'our lirother, he was lately . . 
therefore comes my brother Montague 
didst kill our tender brother Rutland 
was Agamemnon's brother wronged 
thy brother's blood the thirsty earth 
revenge! brother, revenge my death! 

brother, give me thy hand 

that slew thy brother Rutland 

that slew thy sire and brother 

your brother Richard marked 

brother of Gloster, at St. Atoau's 

brothers, you muse what chat 

well, jest on brothers. I can tell .... 

go we, brothers, to the man 

my elder brother, the lord Aubrey . . 
sent from your brother, marquis .... 
dear brother, how shall Bona be .... 
our brother made a worthy choice? .. 



i. 2 
ii. 1 
ii. 1 
ii. 1 
ii. 1 
ii.l 



iii. 3 
iii. S 

iv, ; 



BRO 

BROTHER-tlic brother of your()ep.).3Hen'!('''. iv. I 

leave your brothel's to CO speed — iv. 1 

not be tied imio his brother's will — iv. 1 

now, brother kiiiL;, f';uvweli, and sit .. — iv. 1 

Edward's brother, were but a feigned — iv. 2 

brother bciujj; eiu-elessly eneaniped .. — iv. a 

how to use yoiu- brothers brotherly . . — iv. 3 

be conveyed nnto my brother — iv. 11 

fell SVarwiek's brotlier, and by that. . — iv. l 

our king, my brother, is prisoner — iv. ;> 

brotlier. the time and ease retiuireth — iv. 5 

is esciiped from your brother — iv. 6 

m\- brother \\as too earcless of his — iv. 6 

brollier. Ilikenot this — iv. 7 

both liim, and all his brotliers — iv. 7 

brother, this is sir John Montcoracry — iv. 7 

whv, brother, wherefore stand you .. — iv. 7 

brother, we will proclaim .you — iv. 7 

flatter Henry, and forsake thy brother — iv. 7 

how far otf is our brother Montague? — v. 1 

gave the kinRdom to thy brother — v. 1 

and thv brother both shall buy this . . — v. 1 

to bid Ills brother battle — v. 1 

the nature of a brother's love — v. 1 

against his brother, and his lawful king — v. 1 

to deserve well at my brother's hands — v. 1 

to my brother tiu'u my blushing eheekg — v. 1 

sweet brother, take my hand — v. 2 

for, brother, if thou didst — v. 2 

commend me to my valiant brother. . — v. 2 

no hoped-for mercy with the brothers — v. 4 

excuse me to the king my brother .... — v. 5 

thy brother Edward; and thyself — v. 6 

I have no brother, I am like no brother — v. 6 

princely nephew, brothers both — v. 7 

noble Clarence, worthy brother, thanks — v. 7 

my country's peace, and brothers' loves — v. 7 

to set my brotlier Clarence Richardlll. i. 1 

brother.good day: what means — i. 1 

Antony Woodville, her brother there — i. 1 

since that our brother dubbed them.. — i. 1 

degree soever, with his brother — i. 1 

brother, farewell: I will unto the king — i. 1 

but that thy brothers beat aside — i. 2 

the duke of Gloster and your brothers — i. 3 

my children, brothers, and myself. ... — i. 3 

our Ijrother is imprisoned by your .. — 1.3 

king against the duke my brother — i. 3 

for my brother for his sake — i.4 

my brother's love, the devil {rep.). ... — i. 4 

my brother, hate not me (r«p.) — i. 4 

he knew that I had saved his brother — i. 4 

brotlier [Co(.A'n/.-Gloster], we have done — ii. I 

a tongue to doom my brother's death — ji. 1 

my brother killed no man — ii. 1 

dear brother, live, and be a king? . ... — ii. I 

but for ray brother, not a man — ii. 1 

and brothers, haiight and proud .... — ii. 3 

I did grow more than my brother. . . . — ii. 4 

brother to brother, blood to blood — — ii. 4 

unto his princely brother presently.. — iii. 1 

if our brother come, where shall we — iii. 1 

how fiires our loving brother? — iii. 1 

ay, brother; to our grief — iii. 1 

the prince my brother hath outgrown — iii. 1 

a beggar, brother? Of my kind uncle — iii. 1 

my orother mpeks both you and me — iii. 1 

the king my brother was possessed . . — iii. 1 

that Edward is your brother's son .. — iii. 7 

depose the child your brother's son . . — iii. 7 

your brother's son shall never reign — iii. 7 

be married to my brother's daughter — iv. 2 

murder her brotners, and then marry — iv- 2 

Elizabeth, my brother's daughter.... — iv. 3 

where be thy brothers? — iv. 4 

death of my poor sons and brothers? — iv. 4 

in that safety died her brothers — iv. 4 

didst thou love her brothers — iv. 4 

by the man that slew her brothers . . — iv. 4 

sap from her sweet brother's body . . — iv, 4 

shall call thy Dorset, — brother — iv. 4 

her father's brother would be her lord? — iv. 4 

he that slew her brothers, and her . . — iv. 4 

thy brother [Co(. A'h*. -my husband] made — iv. 4 

brother slain [Col. Knt. brothers died] — iv. 4 

his elder brother, with many more . . — iv, 4 

thy brother tender George be executed — v. 3 

brother blindly shed the brother's blood — v. 4 
marriage with his brother's %vife . . Henry Fill. ii. 2 

learn this, brother, we live not to — ii. 2 

dowager, sometimes our brother's wife — ii. 4 

the heads of all thy brother cardinals — iii. 2 

you a brother of us, it fits we thus . . — v. 1 

their dear brothers are able to endure — v. 3 

as much as his brother Hector Trriil.fyCres.\. 2 

tie, lie, my brother 1 weigh you — ii. 2 

for dreams and slumbers, brother priest — ii. 2 

brotlier. slic is not worth what — ii. 2 

our firebrand brother, Paris — ii. 2 

you'll renieiuber your brother's excused? — iii. 1 

brother Troilus! Good brother — iv. 4 

confirm my princely brothers {repeated) — iv. 5 

his brother, the bull, the primitive . . — v. 1 

han,^ing at his brother's leg — v. 1 

for the Ilea vens, sweet brother — v. 3 

brother, you have a vice of mercy in — v. 3 

my brother with your true sword .... — v. 3 

well fought, my youngest brother.... — v. 6 

how now, my brother? — v. 6 

hence, brother rCof.A'n'.-broker] lacquey — v. 11 

follow lover, elder brother ....Timonof Athens, ii. 2 

welcome, L'ood brother. Wliat do you — iii. 4 

friend, or brother, he forfeits — iii. .5 

twinned brothers of one womb — iv. 3 

the brother's [Co(.-rother's] sides.... — iv. 3 

here come our brothers — v. 3 

at home, upon ray brother's guard. . Coriolanut, i. 10 

liatter my sworn brother the people . . — ii. 3 
youi- brother Cassius at the door.. ./ufiHs Cirsnr, ii. ! 

thy brother by decree is banished.... — iii. 1 



[87] 



BROTHER— my banished brother./K/jus Ctcsar, iii. 1 
and our hearts, of brothers' temper .. — iii. I 

your brother too must die — iv. 1 

most nolile brother, you have done .. — iv. 2 

how should I wrong a brother? — iv. 2 

braved by his brother; cheeked — iv. 3 

hear me, good brother — iv. 3 

O my dear brotlier! this was au ill .. — iv. 3 

good-night, good brother — iv. 3 

on business to my brother Cassius.... — iv. 3 
go, and commend me to my brother.. — iv. 3 

against my brother Lucius Antony fy Cleo. i. 2 

his brother warred upon him — ii. 1 

yom' wife, and brother, made wars . . — ii. 2 

my brother never did lu'ge me — ii. 2 

to make you brothers, and to knit. ... — ii. 2 

the heart of brotliers govern — ii. 3 

no brother did ever love so dearly. ... — ii. 2 
and your brothers were at blows .... — ii. 6 
good brother, let me request you off. . — ii. 7 

what, are the brothers parted? — iii. 2 

my noble brother! The April's .... — iii. 2 
between her brother and Mark Antony — iii. 3 
brother! husband win, win brother.. — iii. 4 
of a war shall stain your brother ... . — iii. 4 
brother, good-night : to-morrow is the day — iv. 3 
thou, my brother, my competitor .... — v. 1 

thief-stolen, as my two brothers Cijmleline, i. 7 

the younger brother, Cadwal — iii. 3 

I'll love iiim as my brother — iii. 6 

if brothers? 'would it had been so — iii. 6 

brother, stay here; are we not brothers? — iv. 2 
I yoke me in my good brother's faidt — iv. 2 
brother, farewell. I msh ye sport . . — iv. 2 

you and my brother search — iv. 2 

I 'wish my brother make good time . . — iv. 2 
but see, tliy brother. This Cloten . . — iv. 2 
howsoe'er, my brother hath done well — iv. 2 
■Where's my brother? I have sent.... — iv. 2 

my brother wears thee not — iv. 2 

oiir song the whilst : brother, begin . . — iv. 2 
of bold laehimo. Sienna's brother. ... — iv. 2 
I and my brother are not known .... — iv, 4 
created a mother, and two brothers . . — v. 4 
O my gentle brothers, have we thus met? — v. 5 

you called me brother (rep.) — v. 5 

now parted with your brothers? — v. .5 

on him, her brothers, me, her master — v. 5 
thou art my brother: so we'll hold .. — v. 5 

mean indeed to be our brother — v. ,5 

lord Titus, my beloved brother Titus Andron. i. 2 

brothers, help to convey her henee . . — i. 2 
unworthy brother, and unworthy sons — i. 2 

brother, for in that name doth nature — i. 2 
for thy sake, and thy brother's here — i. 2 
Laviriia is thine elder brot'ner's hope — ii. 1 
Bassiauus is the emperor's brother . . — ii. 1 
to save your brother from the sacriiiee — ii. 3 
speak, brother, hast thou hiirt (rep.) — Ii. 4 
ttiey, that made away his brother.... — ii. 4 

brother, help me with thy fainting — ii. 4 
my brother dead ! I know, thou dost — U. 4 

here bereft my brother of his life — ii. 4 

Lucius, for thy brothers let me plead — iii. 1 

to rescue my two brothers — iii. 1 

my brother, weeping at my woes — iii. 1 

when I did name her brothers — iii. I 

Marcus! brother, well I wot — iii. 1 

that to her brother which I said to thee — iii. 1 
mine shall save my brothers' lives . . — iii. 1 
redeem my brothers both from death — iii. 1 
let me show a brother's love to thee. . — iii. 1 
O, brother! speak with possibilities. . — iii. 1 
and thy brother, I, even like a stony — iii. 1 

come, brother, take a head — iii. 1 

fie, brother, tie ! teach her not — iii. 2 

becomes not Titus' brother — iii. 2 

see, brother, see; note, how she quotes — iv. 1 

brother, sit down by me — iv. 1 

the tribune in his brother's hearing. . — iv. 2 

will you kill your brother! — iv. 2 

he is your brother, lords — iv. 2 

he's your brother by the surer side . . — iv. 2 

for murder of our brother — iv. 4 

two of her brothers were condemned — v. 2 
that murdered om- emperor's brother — v. 3 
fell faults our brothers were beheaded — v. 3 

moonshines lag of a brother? Leavy i. 2 

it is a letter from my brother — i. 2 

1 hope, for my brother's justification — i. 2 

the beloved of your brother, Edgar .... — i. 2 (let.) 

the character to be your brother s? — i. 2 

your indignation against my brother — i. 2 

friendship falls off, brothers divide — i. 2 

I am thinking, brother, of a prediction — i. 2 

armed, brother? Brother, I advise you .. — i. 2 
a credulous father, and a brother noble.... — i. 2 

set guard to take my brother — ii. 1 

brother, a word; descend: brother, I say .. — ii. 1 

fly, brother; torches! torches! — ii. 1 

'twas her brother, that, in pure kindness . . — ii. 4 

your brother's evil disposition — iii. .'j 

back, Edmund, to my urother; hasten .... — iv. 2 
could my good brother suffer you to do it . . — iv. 2 

and the exchange, my brother I — iv. 6 

never found my brother's way — v. 1 

subject of this war, not as a brother — v. 3 

and call itself your brother — v. 3 

false to thy gods, thy brother — v. 3 

O my brotlier's child! unliappy.iJ6meoi5-,/«to(, iii. 1 
for the sunset of my brother s son ... . — iii . 5 
holy franciscan friar ! brother, lio I .. — v. 2 

to And a barefoot brother out — v. 2 

brother, I'll go and bring't thee .... — v. 2 
brother Moiitajiie. c'ive me thy hand — v. 3 
of Hamlet our (k-ir brother's death ....Hamlet, i. 2 
thiukiuL', by our Kill' dear brother's death — i. 2 

to our inosl viiliiiut brother — i. 2 

my father's brother; Init no more like .. — i. - 
sleeping, by a brother's hand, of litii — i. 6 



BRO 

BROTHER— a brother's murder Hamlet, iii. 3 

thicker than itself witl) brother's blood? — iii, 3 

the queen, your husband's brother's wife iii. 4 

kill a king and many witli his brother — iii. 4 
counterfeit presentment of two brothers — iii. 4 

blasting his wholesome brother — iii. 4 

my brother shall know of it — iv. .'; 

her brother is in secret come from France iv. 5 

forty thousand brothers could not — v. 1 

o'er the house, and hm't my brother .... v. 2 

will this brother's wager frankly play .. — v. 2 
call up my brother : O that you had .... Othello, i. 1 

or any of my brothers of the state — i. 2 

from ms very armputt'ed his owu brother — iii. 4 

how is it, brothe — v. 1 

BROTHERHOOD-brotherhood in thee.K;c/i.//. i. 2 

shall combine, and brotherhood Henry r. ii. 1 

in your bride you bury brotherhood.3Hrari/;7. iv. 1 
this deep disgrace in brotherhood . . Richard III. i. 1 

who spoke of brotherhood? ii. 1 

schools, and brotherhoods in cities.. Trail, fy Ores. i. 3 
by my brotherhood, the letter was ..Horn. * Jul. v. 2 
BBOTHER-IN-LAW— 
the king's brother-in-law [rep.').. Winler'sTale, iv. 3 
but for our trusty brother-in-law . , . liichard II. v. 3 
brother-in-law, the foolish Mortimer.lHcnrw/F. i. 3 
BROTHER-LIKE- 

Clareuce, this is brother-like ZHenry VI. v. 1 

BROTHEK-LOVE- 

true heart, and brother-love I do ii.HenryVIII. v. 2 
BROTHERLY— 
I speak but brotherly of him ....As you Like it, i. 1 
to use your brothers brotherly . . . .3Henry 11. iv. 3 

Polydore, I love thee brotherly CymbtUne, iv. 2 

BROUGHT— brought to this shore Tempest, i. 2 

was hither brought with child i.2 

into bondage brought my too diligent .. — iii. 1 

and brought us thus together? — v. 1 

which brought us hither — v. 1 

and were brought moping hither — v. 1 

to me that brought your mind. . Two Gen. of Ver. i. I 

have brought me to my love — ii. 7 

one that I have brought up of — iv. 4 

here liave I brought aim back again — iv. 4 
JiUiaherself hath brought it hither.. — v. 4 
you have brought her into such . . Merry Wives, ii. 2 
could never have brought her to .... — ii. 2 
what's brought to pass under the .... — iv. 2 
when you have brought him thither — iv. 1 
marriage would have brought upon her — v. ."i 

you brought in one night here Twelfth Night, i. 3 

you know, he brought me out of favour — ii. 5 
what foolish boldness brought thee to — v. 1 
has brought you to this sliame . . Meas.for Meas. ii. 3 
that brought you home the head .... — v. 2 
that she brought me up, I likewise . . Much Ado, i. 1 

I have brought count Claudio — ii. 1 

be bound, and brought to Leonato's.. — iv. 2 
shallow fools have brought to light . . — v. 1 
how you were brought into the orchard — v. 1 
face to face be brought to Margaret . . — v. 1 

brought with armed men back to — v. 4 

I thank it, brought me to Mid. N. Dream, iii. 2 

liave brought about their annual .Love's L. Lost, v. 2 
I have brought him a present .... Mer.of Venice, ii. 2 
from heaven brought her (rep.). As youLike, v. 4(ver.) 

that has brought his pardon All's '4'etl, ii. 1 

brought you this letter, gentlemen?. . — iii. 2 

hath brought me up to be your — iv. 4 

she brought stone jugs. . Taming of Shrew, 2 (indue.) 

Ms son, brought rip in Florence — i. 1 

beauteous; brought up, as best — i.2 

who brought it? I. Tis burnt — iv. 1 

his daughter is to be brought by you — iv. 4 
we are undone and brought to nothing — v. 1 

I have brought him up ever since — v. 1 

till I be brought to such a silly pass. . — v. 2 
brought you forth a daughter. . . . Winter's Tale, ii. 3 

from thence have brought this — iii. 2 

times that brought them in — iv. (clio.) 

be known when 'tis brought forth . . — iv. (elio.) 

was brought to bed of twenty — iv. 3 

and brought a benediction to the buyer — iv. 3 

till it be brought you — iv. 3 

I brought the old man and his son . . — v. 2 
why, sii', I brought you word . . Coin, of Errors, iv. 3 
till I have brought him to his wits . . — v. 1 

let him be brought forth — v. 1 

they brought one Pineli; a hungry .. — v. 1 
brought to this town by that most.... — v. 1 

but 1 tliink he brought it not — v. 1 

rooks, brought forth the seeretest Macleth,iii. 4 

and brought oil' the field; 3'our cause .. — v. 7 
liave brought a countercheek before. .^ing-Jo/m, ii. 1 
zeal and charity brought to the field — ii. 2 
prophet, that I brought with me .... — iv. 2 

who brought that letter from — iv. 3 

brought in matter that should feed . . — v. 2 
this news was brought to Richard . . — v. 3 
and brought prince Henry in their . . — v. 6 

being brought into the open air — v. 7 

let liini be brought into tlie orchard.. — v. 7 

brought hither Henry Hereford Hichurd II. i. 1 

how far brought you high (rep.) — i. 4 

now hath my soul brought forth .... — ii. 2 

by me hither brought, Exton — v. G 

for he that brought them I Henry IV. i, 1 

and he hath Ijrought us .smooth — i, ) 

hath brought three hundred marks . . — ii. 1 
hath Butler brought those hor.ses .. — ii. 3 

journey-bated, and brpuglit low — iv. 3 

that brought you home, and boldly . . — v. 1 

rescue thou hast brought to me — v. 4 

enterprize brought forth, more than..2Henrj/ IV.i. 1 
let him be brought into his answer .. — ii. 1 
what the devil hast thou brought there? — ii. 4 

Bardolph hath brought word — ii. 4 

have brought ourselves into a burning — iv. I 
fondly brought here, and foolishly sent — iv. 2 
are brought to the correction of your — iv. 4 



BRO 

BKOUGHT—may on foot be brought . . Henr)/ F. i. 2 
BO graciously hath brought to light . . — ii. 2 

that erst brouglit sweetly forth — v. 2 

had him brought into ray power .... 1 Henry FI. i. i 
York and Somerset brought rescue in — iv. 7 

and safely brought to Dover — v. 1 

we have brought duke Humphrey in.2Henri/r/.i. 3 
be brought against me at my trial-day — iii. 1 
and fuel be brought to feed it with . . — iii. 1 

I liave been so well brought up — iv. 2 

why I have brought tliis army hither — y. 1 

were brought me of your loss SHenry FJ. ii. 1 

brought your prisoner to your palace — iii. 2 
when nature brought him to the — — iii- 3 
and brought from thence the Thracian — iv. 2 
brought desired help from Burgundy — iv. 7 
the queen hath brought a puissant .. — v. 2 

and j'et brought forth less than — v. 6 

and untimely brought to light nichnrd Ill.i. 2 

who brought me in mv master's hate — iii. 2 
Buckingham be brought to Salisbury — iv. 4 

he was Brought to tills by a vain Henry Fill. ;. 2 

has brought with her one care abroad — .i. i 
to him brought, viva voce, to his face — u. 1 
when he was brought again to the bar — _ii. 1 
your grace coiild but be brought to know — in. 1 
you brought tlie king to be your servant — in. 2 
having brought the qiieen to a prepared — iv. 1 
and brought'him forward (as a man. . — iv. 2 
and brought me garlands, Griffith . . — iv. 2 
I have brought my lord the archbishop — v. 1 
he brought a Grecian queen . . Troilus ^- Cressida, u. 2 

he brought home noble prize — .n. 2 

what have I brought you to do — iv. 2 

at many times I brought in Timon ofAthens,xi. 2 

poor honest lord, brought low by his — iv. 2 

■which with wax I brought away — "v-fi 

that could be brought to bodily act. . Coriolanus, i. 2 
half an hour since brought my report — .i. 6 
tell us what hath brought you to't . . — ii. 3 
cm- best water brought by conduits . . — _ii- 3 

hath brought me to thy hearth — iv. 5 

have brought a tremblmg upon Rome — iv. 6 

say not, we brought-it. How! — iv. 6 

thatbrought thee to this world (rep.) — v. 3 
cm- spoils we have brought home — — v. 5 

brought you Caesar home? Julius Cwsar,}. 3 

he hath brought many captives home — iii. 2 
and having brought our treasure where — iv. 1 
he was but a fool, that brought my . . — iv. 3 
tillhehavebrought thee up to yonder — v. 3 
tliough daintily hroTiihtup..Anton{iiir Cleopatra, i. 4 
which thou hast brought from Rome — ii. 5 
his guard have brought him thither. . — iv. 13 
Antony shall be brought drunken forth — v. 2 
simple countryman, that brought her figs — v. 2 
which brought them to be lamented. . — v. 2 

have you brought those drugs Cymheline, i. 6 

had I not brought the knowledge — u. 4 

I am brought tnither among the — — v. 1 
and brought to yoke, the enemies. Titus Andron. i. 2 

that we are brought to Rome — i. 2 

that brought her for this high good tmn^ — i. 2 
brought hither in a most unlucky hoiur -— ii. 4 
or brought a faggot to bright-burning — iii. 1 

we are not brought so low — iii. 2 

I mean she's brought to bed — iv. 2 

hut yesternight was brought to bed . . — iv. 2 
I have brought you a letter, and a couple — iv. 4 
I have brought up a neck to a fair end — iv. 4 
and brought him hither, to use as you — v. 1 
till he be'brought imto the empress' face — v. 3 
or who hath brought tlie fatal engine in — v. 3 
contrary are brought your eyes . . Pericles, ii. (Gow.) 

hath brought the bride to bed — iii. (Gow.) 

king Simonides are letters brought — iii. (Gow.) 

brought hither to Pentapolis — iii. (Gow.) 

had pleased you had brought her hither — in. 3 

brought up some eleven,— Ay (rep.) — iv. 3 

he brought his disease hither — iv. 3 

have brought this king to Tharsus — iv. 4 (Gow.) 

yet I was mortally brought forth — v- 1 

rescued me, brought me to Mitylene — — v. 1 
but brought forth a maid-child called — — v. 3 
her better stars brought her to Mitylene — v. 3 
her fortvines brought the maid aboard — — v. 3 
they shall be brought you to my house . . — v. 3 
who brought it? It was not brought me ..hear,\. 1 

of man, brought near to beast — ii. 3 

as well be brought to knee his throne — ii. 4 

have his daughters brought him to this pass — iii. 4 

wliich twain liave brought her to — iv. 

the trumpet sound for him that brought it — v. 1 
I brought my master news of Juliet's.j(iom.(5-.//;i. v. 3 

60 young days brought up with him Hamlet, ii. 2 

to him from whom you brought them. . — iv. 6 

fropi Hamlet? who brought them — iv. 7 

received them of him that brought them — iv. 7 
to such wondrous doing brought his horse — iv. 7 
let the foils be brought, the gentleman — v. 2 

the state affairs, hath hither brought Othello, i. 3 

I have brought you from Venice — ii. 1 

these legs, that brought me to a part of it — ii. 3 

BROW— my brow to frown TwoGen.of Fer.K. 2 

the right arched bent of the hrovi. Merry Wives, iii. 3 

my brows become nothing else — iii. 3 

my father had a mole upon his brow. Twelfth A', y. 1 
there is written in your brow .... Mea.forMea. iv. 2 
but speak you this with a sad brow . . Much Ado, i. 1 
honest, as the skin between his brows — iii. 5 
their brows death-counterfeiting . . Mid. N. Dr. ni. 2 
sees Helen's beauty in a brow of Egypt — v. 1 

these lily brows [Co(. Kn(. lips] — .v. 1 

■wanton with a velvet brow Love's L. Lost, in. 1 

praise cannot mend the brow — iv. 1 

and she strikes at the brow — iv. 1 

a state, a brow, a breast, a waist — iv. 3 

the heaven of her brow, that is not . . — iv. 3 
in black my lady's brows be decked. . — iv. 3 
to imitate her brow — iv. 3 



[ «8] 



BRU 



BRO'W— help, hold his brows! .... Lore's L. Lost, v. 2 
the mourning brow of progeny forbid — ^v. 2 
some sober brow will bless it. . Merch.of Fenice, iii. 2 

hollow eye, and wrinkled brow — iv. 1 

speak sad brow, and true maid . . As you Like it, iii. 2 

than the bare brow of a bachelor — iii. 3 

'tis not ycirr iuky brows, your black — iii. 5 
by the stem brow, and waspish action — iv. 3 

sit and draw his arched brows Alt's Well, i. 1 

unknit thftt threatening unkind brow. Tam.ofSh. y. 2 
my bosom likes not, nor my brows. Winter's Tale, i. 2 

and hardening of my brows — i.2 

as if you held a brow of much — i.2 

your brows are blacker; yet black brows — ii. I 

and pluck it o'er your brows — iv. 3 

skin off my harlot's brow .... Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 
weors upon his baby brow the round. .jVocfce//i, iv. 1 

would wear the brows of grace — iv. 3 

ne'er pull your hat upon your brows . . — iv. 3 
against the brows of this resisting . . King John, ii. 1 
these eyes, these brows, were moulded — ii. 1 
in the fro^wniug wrinkle of her brow — ii. 2 

a riot on the gentle brow of true — iii. 1 

and put ray eyeballs in thy vaulty brows — iii. 4 
my handkerchief about your brows . . — iv. 1 
■why do you bend such solemn brows on — iv. 2 

with ^vrmkled brows, with nods — iv. 2 

and outface the brow of bragging horror — v. 1 
lift up thy brow, renowned Salisbury — v. 2 
in the black brow of night, to find — — ■v. 6 

and frowning brow to brow Bichard II. i. 1 

your brows are full of discontent .... — iy. 1 
stain the brow of my young Harry ..\HenryIF. i. 1 

moody frontier of a servant brow — _i. 3 

beads of sweat have stood upon thy brow — _ii. 3 

this seeming brow of justice — iv. 3 

this man's brow like to a title-leaf ..iHenrylF. i. 1 

now bind my brows with iron — _i. 1 

it is not a confident brow, nor — ii. 1 

■whose brow, with homely biggin bound — iv. 4 

and a jest with a sad brow — v. 1 

let the brow o'erwhelm it, as fearfidly.Henri/;'. iii. 1 
as by his smoothed brow, it doth . . 1 Henry FI. iii. 1 

witch doth bend her brows — v. 3 

great duke Humphrey knit his brows.2Henr!/ Fl.i. 2 

he knits his brows, and shows — iii. 1 

and Suffolk's cloudy brow his stormy hate— iii. 1 
must round engirt these brows of mine — v. 1 
likeagallant in the brow of youth .. — y. 3 

while he knit his angry brows ZHenry Fl.ii. 2 

she knits her brows — iii- 2 

the wrinkles in my brows — v. 2 

when Warwick bent liis brow — y. 2 

now are our brows bound with Richard III. i. 1 

crown his wrinkled brows with paper — i. 3 
metal, that must round my brow .... — iv. 1 

to grace thy brows withal — v. 4 

a weighty and a serious brow Henry Fill, (prol.) 

returned, his brows bound with oak.. Corio/anus, i. 3 
his bloody brow with his mailed hand — i. 3 

liisbloody brow! O Jupiter — _i. 3 

en's brows, Menenius: he comes — _ii. 1 

prepare thy brow to frown : know'st — iv. 5 
angry spot doth glow on Caesar's brow./u(. Ccesar, i. 2 
to show thy dangerous brow by night — ii. 1 
all thecharactery of mysadbrows .. — ii. 1 
put on my brows this wreath of ■victory — v. 3 

take this garland on thy brow — v. 3 

bliss in our brows' bent Antony f,- Cleopatra, i. 3 

and make his eyes grow in my brow — _ i. 6 

did put his brows within Cymbeane, ni. 1 

an angry brow, dread lord Pericles, i. 2 

my queen's square brows — y- 1 

stamp -wrinkles in her brow of youth Lear^ i. 4 

hast not in thy brows an eye discerning . . — iv. 2 

that kiss fair ladies' brows llomeo .?- Juliet, i. 1 

day before, she broke her brow — j. 3 

it had upon its brow a bimip _ — ..'.3 

upon his brow shame is ashamed to sit — in. 2 
but the pale reflex of Cynthia's brow — iii. 5 
■«'ith overwlielming brows, culling of — y. 1 

contracted in one brow of woe Hamlet, i. 2 

with his other hand thus o'er his brow. . — .ii. 1 
what a grace was seated on this brow .. — in. 4 
between the chaste unsmirched brow — — iv. 5 

take my napkin, rub thy brows — v- 2 

brow o' the sea stand ranks of people . . Othello, in. 1 

didst contract and pm-se thy brow together — in. 3 

BROW-BOUND— was brow-bound. . Coriolanus,ii. 2 

BROW N— brown furze, any thing Tempest, i. 1 

she has brown hair Merry Wives, i . 1 

world drink bro\\'n and white Mea.for Mea. ill. 2 

she smelt brown bread and garlic — iii. 2 

a commodity of brown paper and old — ly. 3 

too brown for a fair praise Much Ado, i. 1 

brown in hue as hazel-nuts Taming of SA.ii. 1 

■with a bottom of bro^vn tlii-ead — iv. 3 

your brown bastard is your only . . 1 Henry IF. u. 4 

been cleft with a brown bill 2 Henry FI. iy._ 10 

when the brown ■wench lay kissing. Hi^nri/ J'///, lu. 2 
a brown favour, (for so 'tis (rep.).. Trail. ^Cres. 1. 2 

but bro^wn. Faith, to say (rep.) — .i. 2 

not that our heads are some brown.. Corio(o7!Ms,_ii. 3 

her hair, what colom-? Bro^v^l Ant. Sf Cleo. iii. 3 

for the white reprove the brown — iii. 9 

do something mingle with our brown — iv. 8 

bring up the brown bills Lear, iv. 6 

BROWNER— a thought browner. . ..Much Ado, in. 4 

sometliing browner than Judas's..^s youLike it,iii, 4 

the woman low, and browner than her — iv. 3 

BROWNIST— as hef be a Bro\vni6t . . TwelfthN. iii. 2 

BROWSE— we'll browse on that Cymbeline, iii. 6 

BROWSED'ST— thoubrowsed'st../ln(o!i;/.S-aeo. i. 4 
BROWSING— browsing on i^vy .. Winter's Tale, iii. 3 
BRUISE— and bruise to death .... Mea.forMea. ii. 1 

and briuse of many days Much Ado, v. 1 

bruise me with scorn, confound me.. ioDe'si.t. y. 2 

nor bruise her flowrets with the 1 Henry I F.i. 1 

spermaceti, for an inward bruise — i. 3 

teel the bruises of the days heioie . .iUenry I F. iv. 1 



BRUISE — not good to bruise an iujiuy. Henry F. iii . 6 

the law shall briuse him Timon of Alliens, iii. .'■) 

yet glance by, and scarcely bruise Leur, v. 3 

BRUISED- Ihruised my shin Merry Wives, i. 1 

soul, bruised in adversity Comedijnf Errors, S\, 1 

he was so bruised, that the \ Henry IF. v. 5 

to have borne his bruised helmet.. Hc/iri/ F. v (cho.) 

our bruised arms hung up for Richard III. i. 1 

bruised underneath the yoke of tyranny — v. 2 
Palamedes sore hm't and briused .. Troll. ^- Cress, y. 5 

bruised pieces go, you have Antonyfy Cleo. iv. 12 

that the bruised heart was pierced Othello, i. 3 

BRUISING— against the bruising. r«'o Gen. of F. i. 2 

battles, and to bruising arms \ Henry IF. iii. 2 

thy bruising irons of wrath Richard III. v. 3 

shall not be bruising to you Coriolanus, ii. 3 

BRUIT— the bruit thereof will bring.3Henryr/. iv. 7 
the bruit is— Hector's slain .. Troilus^- Cressida, v. 10 
as common bruit doth put it . . Timon of Athens, v. 2 
the heaven shall bruit again Hamlet, i. 2 

BRUITED— greatest note seems bruited. Wac6c//i,v. 7 

being bruited once, took fire 2Henry IF.i. 1 

no less than fame hath bruited .... 1 Henry FI. ii. 3 

BRUNDUSIUM— 
from Tarentura, and Brundusium..^n«. ^-Cleo. iii. 7 

BRUNT — in the brunt of seventeen.. Coriofanus, ii. 2 

BRUSH— and all brush of time 2Henry FI. v. 3 

with one winter's brush fell fiom..Tim.of.4th. iv. 3 

BRUSHED— my mother brushed Tempest, i. 2 

their blue coats brushed Taming of ,'ihrcu-, iv. I 

BRUSHES— he brushes liis hat Much Ado, iii. 2 

not yet the brushes of the ■war ....Troil.^Cres. v. 3 

BRUTE— et tu Brute? then fall . . Julius Cassar, iii. 1 
it ■K'asa brute part of him to kill so Hamlet, i\\. 2 

BRUTISH — like a thing more brutish.. . Tempest, i. 2 

sensual as the hrutish sting As you Lilie it, ii . 7 

my remembrance brutish wrath ..Richard III. ii. \ 

thou art fled to brutish beasts Julius Ctesar, iii. 2 

brutish villain! worse than hrutish! Leur, i. 2 

BRUTUS— daughter, Brutus' Portia.. :l/er. of Fen. i. 1 
the outside of the Roman Brutus .... Il.'nry F. ii. 1 

Brutus' bastard hand stabbed 2Henry FI. i v. 1 

one's Junius Brutus, Sicinius Coriolanus, i. 1 

Siciiiiiis, Brutus, Coriolanus, citizens — iii. 1 

Brutus, I do observe you now lulius Ccesar, i. 2 

than that poor Brutus, with himself — i.2 
then, Brutus, I have much mistook. . — i.2 

tell me, good Brutus, can you see — i.2 

it is very much lamented, Brutus . . — i. 2 

speaking of Brutus, and groaning — i.2 

wished that noble Brutus had his eyes — i.2 
therefore, good Brutus, be prepared.. — i.2 
be not jealous of me, gentle Brutus .. — i.2 

that virtue to be in you, Brutus .... — i. 2 
the fault, dear Brutus, is not in our — i. 2 

Brutus, and Cajsar; what should be — i.2 
Brutus will start a spirit as soon as . . — i.2 

there was a Brutus once — i.2 

Brutus had rather be a villager — i.2 

thus much show of fire from Brutus — i.2 

well, Brutus, thou art noble — i. 2 

he loves Brutus; if I were Brutus now — i. 2 

the noble Brutus to our party — i. 3 

where Brutus may but find it — i . 3 

upon old Brutus' statue — 1.3 

is Decius Brutus, and Trebonius — i. 3 

see Brutus at his house — i. 3 

Brutus, thou sleepest, awake (j-cp.) .. — ii. 1 
full petition at the hand of Brutus .. — ii. i 

Brutus, do we trouble you? — ii. 1 

tliis Decius Brutus. He is welcome — ii. 1 

we'll leave you, Brutus — ii. 1 

ungently, Brutus, stole from — ii. 1 

I should not know you Brutus — ii. 1 

Brutus is wise, and, ■n'ere he not .... — ii. 1 
is Brutus sick? and is it physical .... — ii. 1 
what, is Brutus sick, and will he ... . — ii. i 
no, my Brutus, you have some sick.. — ii. 1 
if you were gentle Brutus (repea/ed) — ii. 1 
Portia is Brutus' harlot, not his ■«'ife — ii. 1 
a woman that lord Brutus took to wife — ii. 1 

if Brutus have in hand any — ii. 1 

it sufiiceth, that Brutus leads me on — ii. 1 
here's Decius Brutus, he shall tell .. — ii. 2 
what, Brutus, are you stirred so early — ii. 2 
the heart of Brutus yearns to think upon — ii. 2 

Cajsor, beware of Brutus — ii.3 (paper) 

Decius Brutus loves thee not — ii. 3 (paper) 

Brutus! the heavens speed thee .. — li. 4 

Brutus hath a suit, that Cffisor — ii. 4 

Brutus, what shall be done? — iii. 1 

Brutus; he draws Mark Antony .... — iii. 1 

what, Brutus! pardon Cajsar — iii. 1 

doth not Brutus bootless kneel — iii. 1 

S) to the pulpit, Brutus — iii. 1 
rutus shall lead; and we will grace — iii. 1 
thus, Brutus, did my master bid me — iii. 1 

say, I love Brutus, and I honour him — iii. 1 
if Brutus will vouclisafe, that Antony — iii. 1 

so well as Brutus living {rep.) — iii. I 

first, JNIarcus Brutus, will 1 shake . . — iii. 1 
now, Decius Brutus, yours; now yours — iii. 1 
Brutus, a word ■with you — iii. 1 

1 will hear Brutus speak. I will hear — iii. 2 

the noble Brutus is ascended — iii. 2 

Brutus' love to Ca:sar was no less — iii. 2 

why Brutus rose against Cajsar — iii. 2 

noiie, Brutus, none. Then none have I — iii. 2 
to Caesar, than you should do to Brutus — iii. 2 
live, Brutus, live! live! Bring him.. — iii. 2 
shall now be crowned in Brutus .... — iii. 2 

peace; silence! Brutus speaks — iii. 2 

for Brutus' sake, I am beholden irep.) — iii. 2 
'twere best he speak no harm of Brutus — iii. 2 
the noble Brutus hath told you, Ca;sar — iii. 2 
under leave of Brutus, and the rest {rep.) — iii. 2 
Bi-utus says, he was ambitious (rep.) — iii. 2 
not to disprove what Brutus spoke .. — iii. 2 
I should do Brutus wrong, and Cassius — iii. 2 
the weU-beloved Brutus stabbed — — iii. 2 



BRU 



[89] 



BRIfTUS— ior Brutus, as you ^riov..Jul.C<esar, iii. 2 

I luu iio oriitoi, as Brutus is — 

but were I Brutus, anil Brutus Antony — 

we'll hum the house of lirutus — 

I heard him say, Brutus anil Cassius — 

to Brutus, to Cassius; burn all — 

Brutus and Cassius, are levying powers — 

Brutus, this sober form of yours — 

that you are Brutus that speak — 

Brutus, bay not mc; I'll not endure it — 

you wrong me, Brutus; I said, an elder — 

when Jlarcus Brutus grows so covetous — 

Brutus hath rived my neart — 

but Brutus makes mine (rreator than — 

but mirth and lauphter to his Brutua — 

Brutus! What's the matter? — 

are over-earnest with your Brutus . . — 

bear with him, Brutus; 'tis his fashion — 

1 cannot drink too much of Brutus' love — 
let it not. Brutus. Every thing is well — 
good night, lord Brutus. Farewell . . — 
thy e's'irspirit, Brutus. Why eomest — 
in'your bad strokes, Brutus, you give — 

now, Brutus, thank yourself — 

I was not born to die on Brutus' sword — 

now, most noble Brutus, the gods. ... — 

that ever Brutua will go bound to ... . — 

for ever, and for ever, farewell, Brutua — 

Brutus gave the word too early — 

is overthrown by noble Brutus' power — 

as welcome to the ears of Brutus — 

thy Brutus bid me give it thee (rep.) — 

and I am Brutus, Marcus Brutus (rep.) — 



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IV. 3 
V. 1 
V. 1 
V. 1 
V. 1 
V. 1 
V. 1 

V. 3 
V. 3 
V. 3 
V. 3 



kill Brutus, and be honoured in his.. — v. 4 
Brutus is ta'en. I'll tell the news f/cp.) — v. 4 
Brutus is safe enough ; I dare (rep/) .. — v. 4 
he will be found like IJrutus (rep.) .. — v. 4 
and see whe'r Brutus be alive or dead — v. 4 

what lU request did Brutus make — v. 5 

for Brutus' tongue hath almost ended — v. 5 
for Brutus only overcame liimself. ... — v. 5 

so Brutus should be found (j-f/).) — v. 5 

all that served Brutus, 1 will entertain — v. 5 
at Philimii the good Brutus ghonted. Anl. 4 Cleo. ii. 6 
Roman Brutus, with the armed rest — ii. 6 
when at l-*hilippi he found Brutus slain — iii. 2 
'twas I, that the mad Brutus ended — iii. 9 
lord Jimius Brutus sware for. . . . Titus Audron. iv. 1 
i' the Capitol ; Brutus killed me Uamlei,m.i 

EUBBLE-corruptiou boil and bubble. -Vea./oriV. v. 1 

seeking the bubble reputation As you Like it, ii. 7 

on ray life, my lord, a bubble All's Well, iii. 6 

earth hath bubbles, as the water baa . . Macbeth, i. 3 
fire burn ; and cauldron bubble (rep.) .... — iv. 1 
like bubbles upon a late distm'bed . . 1 Henry 11^. ii. 3 

of dignity, a breath, a bubble Riclmrd III. i v. 4 

them to their trial, the bubbles are out.. Hamlet, v. 2 

BUBBLING— to a bubbling fountain.. ri7«!i/l7i(i. ii. 5 

BUBUKLES— his face is all bubukles.. Henri/ r. iii. 6 

BUCK-buck? Iwouldlcould (rep.).MerryWives,\u.3 
Inick, buck, buck? Ay, buck (rep.) .. — iii. a 
it was a buck of the iirst head . . Love's L. Lost. iv. 2 
make a man mad as a buck. . Comedy of Errors, iii. 1 
she waslies bucks here at home . . ..2Hcnri/ VI. iv. 2 
bow shoots buck and doe . . Troit.^Cres. iii. 1 (song) 

BUCK-BASKET-the buck-basket. Merri/'yjBes, iii. 3 
they conveyed me into a buck-basket — iii. a 
buck-basket! By the lord, a buck-basket — iii. 5 
this 'tis to liave linen, and buck-baskets — iii. 5 
nothing of Ford's but his buck-basket — v. 5 

BUCKET— dive like buckets, in concealed.J'o/m, v. 2 

two buckets filling one another Richard II. iv. 1 

that bucket down, and full of tears . . — iv. 1 

gibbets on the brewer's bucket 2 Henry IT. iii. 2 

a new link to the bucket must needs — v. 1 

BUCKING — were going to buc\niLg. Merry Wives, i'li, 3 

BUCKINGHAil— 

York and Buckingham, Somerset ..iHenryVI. i. 1 
Somerset, Buckingham, lirave York — i. 1 

cousin of Buckingliam though — i. 1 

Somerset's and Buckingham's ambition — i. 1 

Somerset, Buckingham, and grumbling — i. 3 

show some reason, Buckingham, why — i. 3 

lord Buckingham, methinks, you — i. 4 

with our cousin Buckingham — ii. 1 

at Buckingham, and all the crew — ii. 2 

ot Suffolk, Buckingham, and York .. — iii. 1 
sliarp Buckingham unburdens with — iii. 1 

wliat, Buckingham, and Clifford — iv. 8 

Buckiugham, is the traitor Cade — iv. 9 

Buckingham, go and meet hiiu — iv. 9 

Buckingham, to disturb me v. 1 

Ilumplirey of Buckingham, I accept — v. 1 
O Buckingham, I pr'ythee, pardon me — v. 1 
Buckingham, I do dismiss my powere — v. I 
Buckinu'liam, doth York intend no .. — v. 1 
see Buckingham! Somerset comes .. — v. 1 

call, Buckingham, and bid him (rep.) v. 1 

duke of Buckingham, is either SHenry I'l. i. I 

in Buckingham, Northampton, and.. — iv. 8 
lords of Buckingham and Stanley. . Richard III. i. 3 

the duke of Buckiudiam and I — i. 3 

O princely Buckingham, I kiss i. 3 

Buckingham, beware of yonder dog i. 3 

she say, my lord of Buckingham?. ... i, 3 

Stanley, Hastings, Buckingham .... i. 3 

sou Dorset; Buckingham, nor you .. — ii. 1 

now, princely Buckingham, seal thou ii. 1 

whenever Buckingham doth tm'n .. ii. 1 

cordial, princely Buckingham ii. 1 

my noble cousin Buckingham ii. 1 

train, my lord of Buckingham? — ii. 2 

1 say, with noble Buckingham — ii. 2 

dukes, Glostel: and Buckingham .... — ii. 4 
mv lord of Buckingham, if my weak — iii. 1 
tell you what, my cousin Buckingham — iii. 1 
and my good cousin Buckingham . . — iii. 1 
princely Richard, and to Buckingham — iii. 2 

then cursed she Buckingham iii. 3 

cousin of Buckingham, a word with you — iii. 4 



BUCKING IIAM-cousiu Buckingham. Ktc/i///. iii. 6 
cousin of Buckingham, and sage, grave — iii. 7 
cousin of Huckingliam, — my gracious — iv. 2 

ah, Buckinglmiu, now do I'play — iv. 2 

why, Biickiiighaiii, I sav, I would .. — iv. 2 
hig1i-rcachiiig Bui'kiiigtuim grows .. — iv. 2 
deep-revolving witty BiicUiiigluiin .. — iv. 2 
and Buckingham, hackcil with tl>c .. — iv. 3 
than Buckingluim anil his rasli-levicd — iv. 3 

rebel, dull-brained Buckingham — iv. 4 

expecting but the aid of Buckingham — iv. 4 
stirred up by Dorset, Buckingham . . — ' iv. 4 

the army of great Buckingham — iv. 4 

Buckingham's army is dispersed .... — iv. 4 
they came from Buckingham upou . . — iv. 4 
the duke of Buckingham is taken . . — iv. 4 
Buckingham be brouglit to Salisbury — iv. 4 
in tlie battle think on Buckiugham. . — v. 3 
duke of Buckingham's surveyor. . . . Henry VIII. i. 1 
Buckingham sliall lessen tills big look — i. 1 

my lord the duke of Buckingham .. — i. 1 
I am the shadow of poor Buckingham — i. 1 
that gentleman of Buckingham's .... — i. 2 
that the duke of Buckingham is run — i. 2 

out of the duke of Buckingham — i. 2 

of the great duke of Buckingham.... — ii. 1 
call him bounteous Buckingham ... . — ii. 1 
be bold to weep for Buckingham ... . — ii. 1 
and, if he speak of Buckingham .... — ii. I 
constable, and duke of Buckingham — ii. I 

Henry of Buckingham, who first — ii. 1 

bewailing land of noble Buckingham — iii. 2 
the duke of Buckingham came from — iv. 1 
BUCKLE— 
a span buckles in his sum. ./I.? you Like it, iii. 2 (ver.) 
cannot buckle his distempered cause . . Macbeth, v. 2 

hinges, buckle under life iHenrylV. i. I 

he that buckles himself in my belt . . — i. 2 
combat thou shalt buckle with me..lHenry VI. i. 2 
too strong for me to buckle with .... v. 3 

but buckle with tliee blows 3 Henry VI. i. 4 

since you will buckle fortune .... Richard III. iii. 7 

and buckle on their armour ■ — v. 3 

and buckle in a waist most Troilus tf Cress, ii. 2 

his stubborn buckles, with these — iii. I 

hath burst the buckles on his breast. ^ln(. fr Cteo. i. I 

BUCKLED— buckled below fair. . . . Merry JVives, v. 5 

one buckled, another laced . . Taming of Shrew, iii. 2 

armour conscience budded on King John, ii. 2 

the very town be buckled with 1 Henry VI. i v. 4 

we have our armours buckled .... Tjoil. If Cres. v. 3 

is not this buckled well? Antony^ Cleo. iv. 4 

BUCKLER— thee the bucklers Crep.) .Much Ado, v. 2 
I'll buckler thee against a million . Tarn, of Sh. iii. 2 
buckler cut through and through . . 1 Henry IV. ii. 4 
the guilt of murder bucklers tiiee..2Henry VI. iii. 2 

now buckler falsehood with 3Henry VI. iii. 3 

BUCKLERSBURY— 
and smelt like Bucklersbury .... Merry Wives, iii. 3 

BUCKRAM— cases of buckram 1 Henry IV. i. 2 

two rogues in buckram suits — ii. 4 

four rogues in buckram let drive at . . — ii. 4 
in buckram. Ay, in buckram suits . . — ii. 4 
these nine in buckram, that I told .. — ii. 4 
eleven buckram men grown out of two! — ii. 4 

nay, tliou buckram lord 2 Henry VI. iv. 7 

BUCK- WASHING— 
best meddle with bucii-washing.. Merry Wives, iii. 3 

BUD— in the sweetest bud Two Gen. of Ver. i. I 

the most forward bud is eaten — i. 1 

blasting in the bud — i. 1 

these lisping hawtliorn buds Merry Wives, iii. 3 

lilce a worm i' the bud TwelfthNight, ii. 4 

as chaste as is the bud ere it Mv^h Ado, iv. 1 

wlien hawthorn buds appear . , Mid. N. Dream, i. 1 
chaplet of sweet slimmer buds is ... . — ii. 2 
kill cankers in the musk-rose buds .. — ii. 3 
which sometime on the buds was wont — iv. 1 

Diana's bud o'er Cupid's flower — iv. 1 

masked are roses in their bud Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

as whirlwinds shake fair buds . . Taming nfSh. v. 2 

by bud of nobler race Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

will canker sorrow eat my bud .... King John, iii. 4 

we seethe appearing buds iHenrylV. i. 3 

boot upon tlie summer's velvet buds . . Henry V. i. 2 

blossoms blasted in the bud 2Henry VI. iii. I 

that kneeled unto the buds AiUony^Cleo. iii. 1 1 

stiakes all our buds from growing Cymbeline, i. 4 

of bud, bird, branch, or berry . . Pericles, v. (Gower) 

as is the bud bit by an envious Rom. «§• Jul. i. 1 

among fresh female buds shall you . . — i. 2 

this bud of love, by summer's ripening — ii. 2 

BU DD ED— which is budded out .... Henry VIII. i. 1 

BIJ DOING- young budding virgin. . Tarn. of^h. iv. 5 

and all the budding honom-s \HenryIV. v. 4 

BUDGE— they cannot budge Tempest, v. 1 

Launcelot, budge not; budge. . Merck, of Venice, ii. 2 
I'll not budge an inch. . Taming of Slirew, 1 (indue.) 
but afoot he will not budge a foot . . 1 Henry I V. ii. 4 

I will not budge a foot \HcnryVI.i.3 

hence we will not budge 3HenryVI. v. 4 

as they did budge from rascals Coriotunus^ i. 6 

must I budge? must I observe ..Julius Ctesur, iv. 3 
not budge for no man's pleasure ..liomeo^-Jul. iii. 1 

you shall not budge; you go not Hamlet, iii. 4 

BUDGER— let the first budger die. . . . Coriolanus, i. 8 

BUDGET — she cries budget Merry Wives, v. 2 

either your mum, or her budget .... — v. 2 

and she cried budget, as Anne — v. 5 

bear the sow-skin Inidget.. Winler'sTatc, iv. 2 (song) 

BUFF— a fellow all in bull' Comedy of Errors, i\\2 

but he's in a suit of butt". — iv. 2 

and is not a buff jerkin a most 2HenryIV. i. 2 

wliat a plague have I to do with a buff — i. 2 

BUFFET— and so buffets himself.. iV/cn-y Wives, iv. 2 

that be did buffet ttice Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

blows and biittets r>f the world Mact)eth, iii. I 

but buffets better tlian a Hst King John, ii. 2 

divide myself, and go to Initfets IHenry IV. ii. 3 

if I might bufi'et for my love Henry V. v. 2 



BUL 



BUFFET— we did buffet it with .... JuliuaCcrsnr, i. 2 
and stand the bufi'et with knaves. .-Ih^ohj/ ^- Cteo. i. 2 

that fortunes buft'ets and rewards Humlct, iii. 2 

BUFFETING— this civil buffeting ..XUennjlV. ii. 4 

BUG— tush! fear boys with bugs .. Taiiiiiign/Sh. i. 2 

the bug, which you would fright . . Winter's T. iii. 2 

Warwick was a bug, that feared SHenry VI. v. 2 

grown the mortal Ijugs o' the field ..Cymbeline, v. 3 

such bugs and goblins in my life Hamlet, v. 2 

BUGBEAli— a bugbear take liiml .rroi7. (fCres. iv. 2 

BUGLE— or hang my bugle m Much Ado, i. 1 

your bugle eyeballs As you Like it, iii. 5 

imgle bracelet, necklace-amber. (rini:i?)'s7'.iv.3(soiig) 
BUILD— to build upon afoolisli ..Merry Wives, iii. 5 

then, build me thy fortunes Twelfth Niglit, iii. 2 

sparrows must not build in his ..Mea.for Mea. iii. 2 

any model to build mischief on? Much Ado, i. 3 

like the martlet, builds in. . Merchant of Venice, ii. y 

the which I can build up All's Well, ii. 3 

foundations which I build upon.. Winter's Tale, ii. 1 
when the kite builds, look to lesser . . — iv. 2 

when we mean to bmld, we first 2HenryIV. i. 3 

at least, desist to build at all? — i. 3 

beyond his power to build it — i. 3 

any ground to build a grief on — iv. 1 

plot, well chosen tobuUd upon! 2 Henry VI. i. 4 

on thy shoulder do I build ray seat..3//enri/;7. ii. (i 
did Julius Ca3sar build that place ./i/c/iacrf ///. iii. 1 

who builds his hope in air — iii. 4 

nor build their evils on the graves.. Henry VI II . ii. 1 
build there, carpenter; the air . . Trail. ^Crrs. iii. 2 
to build his fortune, I will strain. . Timon of Alh. i. 1 

thou shalt build from men — iv. 3 

the cuckoo builds not for himself. .'fntonj/.^'C'''')- ii. 6 
O why should nature build so foul. . TitusAnd. iv. 1 
[^Col. Knight.'] build his statue. . P«7We.!, ii. (Gower) 
dare build so far to make your speed .... Lear, iii. 1 

bawds and whores do churches build — iii. 2 

he must build churches then Hamlet, iii. 2 

what is he that builds stronger (rep.) .... — v. I 

nor build yourself a trouble Othello, iii. 3 

do build on thee a better opinion — iv. 2 

BUILDED— to keep it biulded . . Antony Sf Cleo. iii. 2 

BUILDETH— buildeth on the vulgar. .2Hen. IV. i. 3 
ouraiery buildetIiinthecedar'stop..iiicAariZ//i. i. 3 
your aiery buildeth in our aiery's nest — i. 3 

BUILDING— the building fall.. Two Gen. of Ver. v. 4 
gaze upon tlie buildings, and then. . Com. of Err. i. 2 

love, in building, grow so ruinate — iii. 2 

stole thence the life o' the building . . Macbeth, ii. 3 

the singing masons building roofs Henry V.\.2 

thy sumptuous buildings 2Henryl'I. i. 3 

base and building of my love . . Troilus^ Cress, iv. 2 
may rail against great Buildings. rimono/.4(/i. iii. 4 

and the buildings of ray fancy Coriolanus, ii. 1 

it was a worthy building Cymbeline, iv. 2 

mine eye upon the wasted building.. Titus And. v. I 
goodly buildings left without a roof . . Pericles, ii. 4 
.may all the building in my fancy Lear, iv. 2 

BUILT— and built so shelving.. TuoGen. of Ver. iii. 1 
a fair house, built upon anotlier . . Merry Wives, ii. 2 

on whom I built an absolute Macbeth, i. 4 

his apparel is built upon his back. .2Henry IV. iii. 2 

and I have built two chantries Henry V. iv. I 

thou hast built a paper-mill 2Henry VI. iv. 7 

from age to age he built it? Richard III. iii. 1 

as fairly built as Hector. . . . Troilus ^ Cressida, iv. b 
you deserve to have a temple built. . . Corioln n us, v. 3 
swallows have built 'in.... Antony ^ Cleopatra, iv. 1 

who cannot be new built Cymbeline, i. B 

built up for his chiefest seat .... Pericles, i. (Gower) 

hath built lord Cerimon such — iii. 2 

the gallows is built stronger than Hamlet, v. 1 

BULK — the bigger bulk it show s Tempest, iii. 1 

draught, andlmlk, unprizable ..Twelfth Night, v. 1 
authority bears a credent bulk . . Mea. for Mea. iv. 4 
sjiread of late into a goodly bulk. . If'inter'sTale, ii. 1 

by our feeding to so great a bulk 1 Henry I v. v. 1 

statiue, bulk, and big assemblance.2//c)i;y /*'. iii. 2 

withinmy panting bulk Uichardlll. i. 4 

cau with Ills very bulk take Henry VIII. i. 1 

way with those of nobler bulk. Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 3 

though the great bulk Aeliilles — iv. 4 

monstrous bulk of this ingratitude . Timon of A. v. 1 

stalls, bulks, windows, are Coriolanus, ii. 1 

with half the bulk o' the world.. /l«/ony <$- Cleo. iii. 9 

not grow alone in thews, and bulk Hamlet, i, 3 

did seem to shatter all his bulk — ii. 1 

here, stand behind this bulk Otii ello, v. 1 

BULL— burst of bellowing like bulls Tempest, ii. 1 

dew-lapp'd like bulls — iii. 3 

thou wast a bull for thy Europa . . Merry Jl'ices, v. 5 
the savage bull doth bear (repeated).. . Much.ldo. i. 1 

pluck oft the bull's horns — i. 1 

when shall we set the savage bull's . . — v. 1 

he thinks upon tlie savage bull — v. 4 

Bull Jove, sir, had an amiable {rep.) .. — v. 4 
bear, or wolf, or bidl, on meddling . . Mid.N. Dr. ii. 2 

dew-lapped like Thessaliau bulls — iv. I 

Jupiter became a bull, and Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

dried neat's tongue, bull's pizzle .... 1 Henry I V. ii. 4 
youthful goats, wild as young bulls.. — iv. i 

lieifers are to the town bull 2HenryIV, ii. 2 

from a god to a bull? — ii. 2 

Warwick rages like a cliafed bidl ..3Henry VI. ii. .'i 

his brother, the bull Troilus <$■ Cressida, v. 1 

now bull! now dog! 'loo.PariSj'loo! — v. 8 

the bull has the game — v. 8 

the bull being galled, gave Aries. Titus Andron. iv. 3 
but where the bull and cow are — v. 1 

BULL-BEARING— 
bull-bearing Milo his addition. Troil.fy Cressida, ii. 3 

BULL- BEEVES-their fat bull-beeves?.ineH. VLi. 2 

BULL-CALF— I heard bull-calf .... 1 Henry IV.ii.i 
Peter Bull-calf of the grecinrcp.)..2/;™)j( IV. iii. 2 
prick me Bull-calf tillhe roar again — iii. 2 

to free Mouldy and Bull-calf — iii. 2 

Mouldy, Bull-calf, Feeble (rpp.) .... — iii. 2 

for your part. Bull-calf, grow till you — iii. 2 

BULLEN- Thomas Bullen's daujihter. Hen.yill. i. 4 



BUL 



BlTLLEN-AnneBuUenl No ^rcp.).Hen.rilI.u\. 2 

the queen's, lady Anne Bullcn — iii. 2 

Bullen! no, we'll no BuUens — iii. 2 

BULLET— naper bullets of the brain. . MtichAdo, ii. 3 

and the bullet, that's he Love's L.Lost, iii. 1 

Heeter than arrows, bullets, wind — v. 2 

instead of bullets wi-apped in fire King John, ii. 1 

their ilril't of biUlets on tliis town — ii. 2 

sir John, with two bullets IllenrylV. ii. 4 

no proofs, nor no bullets — ii. 4 

a swallow, an arrow, or a bullet? .... — iv. 'i 

like to tlic bullet's grazing Henry V. iv. 3 

e\-eballs into bullets turned 1 Henry VI. iv. 7 

BULLOCK— so they sell bullocks MuchAdo,\\. 1 

yoke of bullocks a"t Stamford fair?. .iHenrylV. iii. 2 

BULLY— discard, bully Ilercides Iilernj Wives, i. 3 

said I well, bully Hector? — i. 3 

my hand, bully: thou shalt have — ii. 1 

bless thee, bully doctor — ii. 3 

ha, bully 1 wha't say s ray — ii. 3 

ha! is he dead, bully Stale? — ii. 3 

our English tongue, is valour, bulljy — ii. 3 
will clapper-claw thee tightly, bully — ii. 3 
and, moreover, bullj', — biit first .... — ii. 3 

bully knight! Bully sir John — iv. 5 

let her descend, bully, lether descend — iv. h 
what say'st thou, bully Bottom ?.. .Wd. N. Br. iii. 1 

sweet bully Bottom! — iv. 2 

1 love the lovely bully Henry V. iv. 1 

BULLY-MONS'^ER- bully-monster . . Temped, v. 1 
BULLY-ROOK— my bully-rook?.. .Me/;;/ "a'es,;. 3 

how now buUy-rooK? — ii. 1 

tell him bully-rook — ii. 1 

what say'st thou, bully-rook ? — ii.l 

BULWARK— water- walled bulwark. A'ijig- John, ii. 1 

making the wars their bulwark Henry V. iv. 1 

at the bulwark of the bridge \UenryVl.'\. 4 

to scale their flinty bulwarks — ii. 1 

shake thy bulwarks to the ground . . — iii. 2 

like higli-reared bulwarks, stand. . . Richard Til. y. 3 

be proof and bulwark against sense . . Hamlet, iii. 4 

BUM— bxim, sir. Tmih a.nHrep.'j . . Mea.forMea. ii. 1 

then slip I from her bum Mid. N .Dream, ii. 1 

becks, and jutting out oi\)Vtias\.Timonof Athens,!. 2 
BUiM-BAILIFF- 
bum-bailiff [Co;.- &!«. bum-bailie].. Twei/rtiV. iii. 4 

BU.MBARD— like a foul bumbard Tempest, ii. 2 

that hucre bumb.ard of sack I Henry IV. ii. 4 

here ye lie baiting of bumbards Henry VIII. y. 3 

BUMP— upon its brow a bump as big . Horn. <S- Jul. i. 3 
BUNCH— in the bunch of grapes .. ilea, for Mea. ii. 1 

lam abunch of radish IHenrylV. Ii. 4 

BUNCHES— bunches growing . . Tempest, iv. 1 (song) 

bunches of keys at their girdles 'IHenrylV. i. 2 

BUNG— you filthy bimg, away ! — ii. 4 

BUNG-llOLE— stopping a bung-hole?. . Hamlet, v. 1 

BUNGLE— bungle up damnation Henry V. ii. 2 

BUNTING— this lark for a bunting ..AWsWell, ii. 5 
B UOY — a buoy almost too small for sight. . Lear, iv. 6 

BUOYED— would have buoyed up — iii. 7 

BURDEN — under my burden groau'd .. Tempest, i. 2 
and, sweet sprites, the burden bear — i. 2 (song) 

with goodly burden bowing — iy. 1 (song) 

let us not burden oiff remembrances — y. 1 

belike it hath some burden then. Two Gen. ofj'er.i. 2 

that goes without a burden Much Ado, iii. 4 

why sweat they tinder burdens. .il/er. of Venice, iv. 1 
set uown your venerable burden., ^ts you Like it, ii. 7 
I would sing my song without a burden — iii. 2 
the one lacking the burden of lean . . — iii. 2 

knowing no burden of heavy — iii. 2 

a vessel of too great a bm'deii All's Well, ii. 3 

as wealth is burden of my wooing. Taming ofSh. i. 2 
I will not burden thee: for, knowing — ii.l 
toy heart will be a bm-den to me. . Winter'sTale, ii. 3 
with such delicate burdens of dildo's — iv. 3 
of twenty money-bags at a, burden . . — iv. 3 
of such a burden, male tvfinB..Comedy of Errors, i. I 

false, he burdens me withal ._ — y. 1 

bore thee at a burden two fair sons . . — y. 1 
heavy burdens are delivered [Coi.-burden 

undelivered] — y. 1 

yrith burden of our armour here .... King Jolm, ii. 1 
I'll take that burden from j'our back — ii. 1 
that their burdens may not fall this day — iii. 1 
the clogging burden ot a guilty souL.Ji/c/iai'd //. i. 3 

j'et I bear a burden like an ass — v. 5 

than a joint bm-den laid upon iHenrylV. v. 2 

their heavy burdens at his narrow gate. Henn/ V. i. 2 
than bring a burden of dishonoiu' ..2Henry VI. iii. 1 
let them Ijrealc your bacl:s with burdens — iv. 8 
unload my heait's great burden . . . .ZHenry VI. ii. 1 
to bear her burden, whe'r I will . . Richard 111. iii. 7 
and leave the burden of it all on thee — iv. 4 
a grievous burden was thy birth to me — iy. 4 

cannot vouchsafe this burden Henry VIII. ii. 3 

the burden of my sorrows fall upon ye — iii. 1 
O 'tis a bm-den, Cromwell, 'tis a burden — iii. 2 
willing to leave their burden: reach — iv. 2 
God safely quit her of her burden. . . . — -v. 1 
of importless burden, divide . . Troilus SrCressida, i. 3 
'tis a burden which I am proud to bear — iii. 3 

with burdens of the dead Timon of Alliens, iv. 3 

knew but better, is some burden - iv. 3 

only for bearing burdens, and sore. . Coriolanus, ii. 1 
at whose burden the angered ocean. .4^/. Sf Cleo. ii. 6 

tliy burden at the sea, and called Pericles, v. 3 

biu-den do I sink. And, to sink (rep.)Rom. ^Jul. i. 4 

but you shall bear the bm-den soon . . — ii. 5 

most painted word: O heavy btirden!.. HamJef, iii. 1 

BURDENED-as burdened with lesser.Com. ofEr. i. 1 

but were we burdened with like weight — ii. 1 

my burdened heart would break . .'IHenry VI. iii. 2 

neck bears half my bm-dened yoke. Kichardlll. iv. 4 

BURDENING— with burdening grief.. 1 Hen. VI. ii. 5 

BURDENOUS-liis bindenous taxations.«/c/i.//. ii. 1 

BURGHER-that a wise burgher put. Mea. for Mea. i. 2 

and rich bm-ghers of the flood. . Merch. of Venice, i. 1 

native burghers of this desert c\iy. As you Like it, ii. I 

BURGLARY — flat burglary, as ever..j)/ucA^do, iy. ii 



[90] 



BURGOMASTER— burgomasters, and.l Hen./ K.ii. 1 

BURGONET-write upon thy bnrgonet.2Hen. VI. v. 1 

I'll wear aloft my burgonet — v. 1 

and from thy burgonet I'll rend thy bear — -y. 1 
tlie arm and burgonet of men .4nlony ^- Cleo. i. 5 

BURGUNDY— Bar, and Burgundy . . Henry V. iii. 5 
the brother to the duke of Burgundy — iv. 8 
we do salute you, duke of Burgundy — v. 2 
duke of Burgundy, you would the peace — y. 2 
my lord of Burgundy, we'll lake your — v. 2 
lord regent, and redoubted Burgimdy.l Hen. VI. ii. 1 

the duke of Burgundy will fast — iii. 2 

vow, Biu-gundy, Dy honour of thy house — iii. 2 

no more ado, brave Burgundy — iii. 2 

this is a double honour, Bm-gundy . . — iii. 2 
Burgundy enshrines thee in his heart — iii. 2 
wills lord Talbot, plcaseth Burgundy — iii. 2 
entice the duke of Burgundy to leave — iii. 3 
Burgundy. "Who craves a parley (.rep.) — iii. 3 
brave Burgundy, undoubted hope of — iii. 3 
in spite of Burgundy, and all his friends — iii. 3 
of Burgundy. Shame to the duke (rep.) — iv. 1 
from om- uncle duke of Burgundy . . — iv. 1 
what! doth my uncle Burgundy revolt? — iv. 1 

Charles, and Burgundy, Alenson — iv. 4 

Alengon, Orleans, Burgundy, and from — iv. 6 
George from Burgundy to Jini;la.nd..3 Henry VI. ii. 1 
duchess of Biu-gnndy, with aid of soldiers — ii. 1 

as he hears since to Burgundy — iv. 6 

doubtless. Burgundy will yield liim — iv. 6 

brought desired help from Bm-gundy — iv. 7 

embarked to cross to Burgundy Richard III. i. 4 

attend the lords of France and Burgundy., icar, i. 1 

the princes, France and Burgundy — i. 1 

and milk of Burgundy, strive to be — i. 1 

here's France and Burgundy (rei)ea(ed) — i. 1 

right noble Burgundy, when she was dear — i. 1 

my lord of Burgundy, what say you — i. 1 

peace be with Bm-gundy 1 since that — i. 1 

not all the dukes of waterish Burgundy — — i. 1 
come, noble Bui-gundy. Bid farewell — i, 1 

BURIAL— appertain imto her burial.. Mue/t Ado, iv. 1 
crossways and floods, have burial. . Mid.N.'sDr. iii. 2 

to kiss her burial Merchant of Venice, i. 1 

nor would we deign him burial of his . . Macbeth, i. 2 
the rest, and give them burial here . . liicliard II. y. 5 
■will see liis burial better than his . . 1 Henry VI. ii. 5 

give them burial as beseems — iv. 7 

the duke give order for his burial . . Richard III. i. 4 
carrion men, greening for burial. .Jm/jms Ccesar, iii. 1 
with all respect and rites of burial — — y. 5 
with bm-ial amongst their ancestors. . Titus And. i. 2 
burial, as becomes: give Mutius bm-ial — i. 2 
give him burial in his father's grave — y. 3 
no mournful bell shall rin" her burial — v. 3 

strength left to give them burial Pericles, i. 4 

ICol. Knt.] borne to burial in thy.JJomeo ^-Jul. iv. 1 
wedding cheer, to a sad biu-ial feast . . — iv. 5 
in christian burial, that wilfuUy seeks.Hamlet, v. 1 

and finds it christian burial — v. 1 

been buried out of eliristian biirial — v. 1 

and the bringing home of bell and bm-ial — v. 1 

BURIED— buried her grandam.. rwoGe/i. ofVer. ii. 1 

I am sure, she is not buried — iv. 2 

assure thyself, my love is buried . . — iv. 2 

and must be buried but as. , Measure for Measure^ v. 1 
she shall be buried with her face . . Much Ado, iii. 2 

she lies buried with her ancestors — v. 1 

and be buried in thy eyes — y. 2 

beat not the bones of the buried . . Love's L. Lost, y. 2 
bui-ied, as they say, if my gossip ..Mcr. of Ven. iii. 1 

that is dead and buried As you Lilie it, i. 2 

and shoxdd be buried in highways All's Well,i. 1 

lie with him when I am buried — iv. 2 

with his nearest; buried a wife — iv. 3 

not to be bm-ied, but quick Winter'sTale, iv. 3 

buried some dear friend? Comedy of Errors, y. 1 

Banquo's buried; he cannot come out.. il/fic6e(/i, v. i 

that words seemed bm-ied in Richard 11. i. 3 

and by the buried hand of warlike . . — iii. 3 

or I'll be bm-ied in the king's — iii. 3 

and bm-ied once; why not upon — iii. 3 

I present thy bm-ied fear — v. 6 

till in her ashes she lie bm-ied Henry V. iii. 3 

though bm-ied in your dunghills — — iv. 3 
Cosui- de-lion's heart was buried . . 1 Henry VI. iii. 2 

Edward's title buried ZHcnry VI. iii. 2 

in the deep bosom of the ocean bm-ied.. /{ic/i. //J. i. 1 

too lag to see him buried — ii. 1 

and buried, gentle Tyrrel? (rep.) — iv. 1 

buried this si^h in wrinkle of asmile. Tro;(.<5-Cr. i. 3 

lately buried his father Timon of.itl\ens, ii. 2 

familiars to his buried fortunes — iv. 2 

hath buried thoughts of great value. ./uJmsC<Esar,i. 2 
half their faces buried in their cloaks — ii. 1 

but all be buried in his gravity — ii. 1 

have buried them for prey ! Antony ^- Cleo. iii. 11 

thy name so buried with her — iv. 12 

she shall be bm-ied by her Antony . . — v. 2 
buried one aud twenty valiant sons. . Titus And. i. 2 
he must be buried with his brethren — i. 2 

till Mutius' bones be buried — i. 2 

shall all be buried by my death — y. 1 

a man, pray see me buried Pericles, ii.l 

this cannot be; my daughter's bm-ied.. ■ — v. 1 

born at sea, buried at Tharsus — v. 1 

O come, be buried a second time — v. 3 

bones of all my bm-ied ii,r\CQitws.UonieoSf Juliet, iv. 3 
with my cliild, my joys are buried . . — iv. a 

flowers serve for a buried corse — ■ iv. .'i 

hath lain these two days buried — y. S 

the majesty of buried Denmark Hamlet, i. \ 

is she to be buried in christian burial .... — v. 1 
gentlewoman, sheshouldliave been buried — y. 1 
who is to be buried in 't? One, that was — v. 1 

Alexander was buried — v. 1 

be bm-ied quick with her, and so AviU I . . — y. 1 

BURIER— be the burier of the dead!..2Henry IV. i. 1 

BURLY- SONED- 
cut out the burly-boned clown 2 Henry VI. iv. 10 



BUR 



BURN — and burn in many places Tempest, i. 2 

that bum by day and night — i. 2 

when this burns, 'twiU weep — iii. 1 

burn but his books — iii. 2 

burns most of all Two Oen. of Verona, i. 2 

though he burn himself in love — ii. s 

lest it should burn above — ii. 7 

the more it Inirns — ii. 7 

with thy daring folly burn the world? — iii. 1 

we burn daylight Merry Wives, ii. 1 

and bm-u him with their tapers — iv. 4 

to burn the knight with my taber.... — iv. 4 

pinch him, and Durn him — v. 6 (song) 

I'll go bm-n some sack Twelfth NiglU, ii. 3 

an' he were, I would burn my study.. iUuc/i.ido, i. 1 

to burn the errors that these — iv. 1 

and roar, aud burn, like horse.. jV/d.A^. Dream, iii. 1 

the blood of youth burns not Love's L. Losl, v. 2 

he means to burn the lodging As you Like it, ii. 3 

and fire to burn : that good pasture . . — iii. 2 

o'erbears it, and burns on All's Well, v. 3 

and burn sweet wood . . Taming of S/irew, 1 (indue.) 
Tranio, I bm-n, I pine, I perish. ... — i. 1 

burns worse than tears drown Winter s Tale, ii. 1 

the fire, not she, which bm-ns in't — ii. 3 

better bum it now, than curse — ii. 3 

nor my lusts burn hotter than — iv. 3 

the capon bums, the pig falls ... . Comedy of Err. i. 2 

your meat doth ijurn, quoth I — ii. 1 

will bmn a Poland winter {repealed) — iii. 2 
will burn; ergo, light wenches will burn — jv. 3 

fii-eburn; and cauldron (»-ep.) Macbeth, iv. 1 

revenges burn in them — y. 2 

thy rage shall burn thee up King John, iii. 1 

with hot irons burn out both mine eyes — iv. 1 

ii'ous must I burn them out — iv. 1 

very iron to bm-n them out — iv. 1 

they burn in indignation — iy. 2 

this tyrant fever burns me up — y. S 

violent fires soon bm-n out Ricliardll. ii. 1 

hand shall burn in never-quenching — y. 5 

whose bosom bums with 2Henry IV. i. 3 

whose zeal burns in his nose — ii. 4 

ah-eady, and burns, poor soul! — ii. 4 

impatiently I burn with thy desire . . 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

beholding the towns bum — i. 4 

burns under feigned ashes — iii. 1 

that sorceress, condemned to burn . . — v. 4 

burn her, burn her — v. 4 

burns with revenging fii-e 2HenryVI.iv. 1 

away, burn all the records — iv. 7 

bm-u, bonfires, clear and bright — v. 1 

lest by your heat you burn yom-selves — v. 1 

my heart for anger bums 3Henry VI. i. 1 

and bm-n me up with flames — ii.' 1 

here burns my candle out — ii. c 

ye blaze to burn them out — v. 4 

hell bm-ns, fiends roar liicltard III. iy. 4 

the lights burn blue — v. 3 

this candle burns not clear Henry Vlll. iii. 2 

ye blew the fire that bums ye — v. 2 

you may chance to bm-n yom- lips.. Trail. % Cres. i. 1 

Paris burns us all (lep.) — ii. 2 

when he burns with entertaining — ii. 3 

burn, house; sink, AtheusI ..Timon of Athens, \\\. C 

allure him, burn him up — iv. 3 

thou sun, that comfortest, burn! .... — y. 2 
let them hang. Ay, and burn too.. Coriolanus, iii. 2 
if he could bm-n us all into one coal.. — iv. (j 
his eye red as 'twould bum Rome. . . . — v. 1 

burn like twenty torches joined JuliusCtcsar, i. y 

seek, burn, fire, kill, slay — iii. 2 

we 'U bm-u the house of Brutus — iii. 2 

we'll bum his body in the holy place — iii. 2 

to Cassius' ; bum all, some to — iii. 3 

how ill this taper bm-ns — iy. 3 

overplus of slupping will we huxa.. Ant. fyCleo. iii. 7 

to burn this night with torches — iv. 2 

and tapers bum so bright Titus Andron. i, 2 

the corn, then after burn the straw . . — ii. 3 

doth burn the heart to cinders — ii. 6 

to live and burn in everlasting fire — v. 1 

and his they in his palace buia. Pericles, y. 3 (Gow.) 

but thine do comfort, and not bm-n ituv, ii. 4 

of natm-e, should burn itself out — iv. u 

one fire burns out another'!: huxmng. . Rom. ^- Jul. i. 2 

come, we burn daylight — i. 4 

teach the torches to bm-n bright! .... — i. 5 

there, where, the torch doth bm-n — y. 3 

where now it burns, Mai-cellns Hamlet, i. 1 

when the blood bm-ns, how prodigal .... — i. 3 

frost itself as activelj' doth burn — iii. 4 

burn out the sense and virtue of mine . . — iv. 5 

bm-n like the mines of sulphur Otiiello, iii. 3 

would to cinders bum up modesty — iv. 2 

BURNED— by thatfii-e which buiued-.Wd. A". D. i. 1 
maideu's heart hath bm-iied?..Js!/t)i( Like,iv. 3 (let.) 

I'll have thee biu-ued Winier's Tale, ii. 3 

the pig, quoth I, is burned . . Comedy of Errors, ii. 1 

1 burned indesii-eto question.. Ma c6e//i, i. b (letter) 
scorched viens of one new burned ..A7;i^./o/i<i, iii. 1 
I am burned up with inflaming wrath. . — iii. 1 

through my burned bosom — v. 7 

of my heart is cracked and burned . . — v. 7 
soon kindled, and soon bm-ned .... 1 Henry IV. iii. 2 

half his Troy was burned iHenrylV. i. 1 

besides, they have burned and cai-ried.He»ij/ ;•'. iv. 7 

the fatal brand Altlica burned iHenry VI. i. 1 

in Sinithfield shall be bm-ned to ashes — ii. 3 

and tapers burned to bedward Coriolanus^ i. 6 

yom* temples burned in their cement — iv. 6 

thi-one, burned on the water Antony^Cleo. ii. 2 

•no heretics burned, but wenches Lour, iii. 2 

BURNET — cowslip, burnet, and green .Henry V. v. 2 

BURNETH— the taper bm-ncth .... JaliusCcesar, ii. 1 

it burneth in the Capel's monument. iiom. ^-Jul. v. 3 

B U RN ING-for fear of bm-ning. . . Two Gen. of Ver. i. 3 

with liver burning hot Merry Wives, ii.l 

aims and cuds of burning youth ..Mea. for Mia. i. 4 
honoured for liis burning throne .... — y. 1 



BUR 



BtniNING— is Imrningin my \mU.. I\ler.qf Ten . v. 1 
13 no nmlite in tliis biirning eoiil . . Kiun; John, iv. 1 

quite o'er witli Imrning meteors — v. 2 

smoke:' about tlie burning crest of .... — v. 4 
it would allay tbe burning qimlity .. — v. 7 
burning cress'ets; and at my birth.. li/CHry/K. iii. \ 

the knight of the burning lam]! — iii. 3 

he is in nis robes, burning, burning.. — iii. S 
the land is burning; Percy stands on — iii. 3 

om-sclveti into a burning fever 'iHenrylV. iv. 1 

Bliakcd of a burning (juotidian Ilenri/V. ii. 1 

a black soul burning m hcll-ftre — il. 3 

burning fatal to the Talbotites .... 1 Hennj VI. iii. 2 
the burning torch in yonder tniTct .. — iii. 2 
to darkness, and the bin-ning lake .,2Iicni-yVI. i. 4 

conmienccd in burning Ti'oy? — iii. 2 

thv biu'ning car never had scorched. SHcn;-?/ J'l. ii. 6 
a burning devil take them . . Troilus ^- Cressida, v. 2 
spoil of Plia^bus' burning kisses .... Coriolanus, ii. 1 
a uarae i' the fire of burning Rome .. — v. 1 

the taper; leave it biuning Ci/mbeline, ii. 2 

by the burning tapers of the sky. Titus Aiidron. iv. 2 

111 dive into the burning lake — iv. 3 

the base fruit of his burning lust .... — v. 1 
story of that baleful burning night . . — v. 3 
a burning torch, that's turned upside . . Pcricleny ii. 2 

with eyne of biu-ning coal — iii. (Gower) 

a thousand \\'ith re4 burning spits Lear, iii. 6 

that burning shame detains him from .... — iv. 3 
burning, scolding, stench, consumption.... — iv. 6 
fire burns out another's burning . Romeo ^ Juliet^ i. 2 
ere the sun advance his burning; eye . . — li. 3 
made milch the burning eyes oiheavcn.Hnin/f«, ii. 2 
singeing his pate against the burning zone ■ — v. I 

to cast water on the burning bear Othello, ii. 1 

she's like a liar, gone to burning hell .... — v. 2 

BlIP.NING-GLASS-biuming-glass.jl/errj/ Wives, i. 3 

litrKNISHED— the burnished s\in. . Mer. of I'en. ii. 1 
like a burnished tlu-one .... Antony (§- Cleopatra, ii. 2 

BURNT — the lightning had bumtup.. Tempest, iii. 1 

pottle of bmnit sack to give Merry Wives, ii. 1 

and let bui'ut sack be the issue — iii. 1 

'tis burnt; and so is all the meat. Taming ofSh. iv. 1 

'twas burnt, and dried away — iv. 1 

taper will be burnt and done Richard IJ. i. 3 

the better part bm-nt out 2 Henry IV. i. 2 

being burnt i' the hand for stealing. 2 Henri/ VI. iv. 2 
better have burnt that tongue .... Henry VIII. iii. 2 

we must be burnt for you Coriolanus, v. 1 

you see, we have burnt our cheeks.. /l»i(. SfCleo. ii. 7 
how Trov was burnt, and he made . Titus And. iii. 2 

heretics, "be bmrntfor liars Romeo if Juliet, i. 2 

night's candles are burnt out — iii. 5 

are burnt and pureed away Hamlet, i. 5 

BURR — 1 am a kind of bm-r Mea.for Men. iv. 3 

thou cat, thou biurr: vile thing.3/i'd. N. Dream,iu. 2 

they are but burrs, cousin As youLike it, i. 3 

these biu'rs are in my heart — i. 3 

rough tliistles, kecksies, burrs Henry V. v. 2 

they are burrs, I can tell you Trail, f Ores. iii. 2 

BURROW — out of their burrows Coriolanus, iv. 5 

BURST— blow till thou burst thy -mad.. Tempest, i. 1 

heard a hollow burst of bellowing — ii. 1 

were great, 'twould burst at this All's Well, iv. 3 

the glasses you have burst.. Taming of Sh. 1 (indue.) 

hath been often bui'st, and now — iii. 2 

how her bridle was biu'st — iv. 1 

the burst and the ear-deafening.. Winter's Tale, iii. 1 

whose bowels suddenly burst out King Jolm, v. 6 

if m.y heart be not ready to burst.... 2Hen»i//r. ii. 4 

and then he burst liis head — iii. 2 

will make him brust his lead 1 Henry VI, i. 1 

or we'll burst them open — i. 3 

my breast I'll burst with — i.5 

passions of thy heart burst out — iv. 1 

will burst, an' if I sneak (rep.) ZHenry VI. v. 5 

almost blu-st to belch it in Richard III. i. 4 

would thou wouldst biirst Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

then biu-st his mighty heart JuliusCresar, iii. 2 

hath biu-st the buckles on his \>Kast.. Ant. SfCleo. i. 1 
in lus voice, and biu-st of speaking. . Cymbeline, iv. 2 

a sea that almost bm-st the deck Pericles, iv. 1 

such bursts of horrid thunder Lmr, iii. 2 

that my heart would burst — v. 3 

joy and gi-ief, burst smilingly — v. 3 

bellowed out as he'd bm-st heaven — v. 3 

let me not burst in ignorance Hamlet, i. 4 

in death, have burst their cerements — i. 4 

tlie instant burst of clamour that — ii. 2 

yom- heart is bm-st, you have lost Othello, i. 1 

Bl'KSTING— almost to bursting. . As you Like it, ii. 1 

BUKT(JN— nortli from Burton here..iHen»-» IV. iii.l 

BURTON-HEATH— 
old Sly's son of Burton-heath, roint'ng- of SA. 2 (ind.) 

BUR Y— bury it certaiu fathoms Tempest, v. 1 

will I biu-y mine Tu'o Gentlemen of Verona, iii. 1 

and lion are left to bury the dead. Mid. N. Dream, v. 1 

from me, I biu-y a second husband All's Well, i. 1 

■we do bury the incensing relics of it .. — v. 3 
we need no grave to bury honesty. Win(er's7'a;e, ii. 1 

any of him left, I'll bury it — iii. 3 

those that we bury, back, our Macbeth, iii. 4 

away toward Bm-y, to the Dauplun.Kin^'Jo/in, iv. 3 
to bui-y mine intents, but to etfect. . Richard II. iv. 1 

om: dead, and then tobiu^ them Henry V. iv. 7 

his body, I will help to bury it 1 Henry VI. i. 4 

at Bury the first of this next month.2He;ic7/;'/. ii. 4 

Warwick, with the men of Bury — iii. 2 

until the tjucen his mistress bury it. . — iv. 1 
in your bride you bury brotherhood. 3ffe7!r!/r/.iv. 1 
your- daughter's womb I bury theni..«icA./n. iv. 4 

but yet I '11 bury thee Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

that hangmen would bury with .... Coriolanus, i. 5 

and bury all, which yet distinctly — iii.l 

shall bury his reasons with his body — v. 5 

1 come to bury Caisar, not to praHe.Jul.Ccesar, iii. 2 
in this I bury all imkindncss, Cassiug — iv. 3 
we'll bury him; and then, what's. ..!l»i(.,5-C(co. iv. 13 
let us bury him, and not protract . . Cymbeline, iv. 2 
yet bury him as a prince -- jv. 2 



[91 ] 



BURY— bury him where you can . . TitusAndron, 1. 2 
would you hiiry him in my tlespite? — i. 2 

to panlou iMutins, and to bury hira. . — i. 2 

upon advice, did bury Ajax — i. 2 

well, bury liini, and bury me the next — i. 2 
to bury so much gold under a tree .. — ii. 3 

we decreed to bury Bassianus — ii. 4 (letter) 

bid him bury it; more hath it merited — iii. 1 
and bury all thy fear in my devices. . — iv. 4 

thrive, bury my body Lear, iv. 6 

bury their parents' strife . . ..Romeo fy Juliet, (prol.) 

and badest me bury love — ii. 3 

I'll bury thee in a triumphant grave — v. 3 

BURYING— give her huryrag.. Pericles, iii. 2 (scroll) 
what is her burying grave Romeo & Juliet, ii. 3 

BURYING-PLACE- 
henceforth a burying-place to all..2He?»-!/f/. iv. 10 

BUSH— here's neither bush nor slirub . . Tempest, ii. 2 

thy dog, and bush — ii. 2 

I have a fine hawk for the bush . . Merry Wives, iii. 3 
thorough bush, thorough brier. . Mid. N. Dream, ii. 1 
must come in with a bush of thorns.. — iii.l 

through bush, tlirough brake — iii. 1 

in some bush? where dost thou — iii. 2 

how easy is a bush supposed a bear . . — v. 1 
dog, and bush of thorn, presenteth . . — v. 1 
where is the bush that we must. . Love's L. Lost, iv. 1 

closely shrouded in this bush — iv. 3 

be married under a bush As you Lilte a, iii. 3 

into a bush: xmder which bush's shade — iv. 3 

that good -n-ine needs no bush — (epil.) 

myself have limed a bush for her 2HenryVl.i. 3 

gives not the hawthorn bush ZHenry VI, ii. 5 

doth fear each bush an officer — -v. 6 

in a bush: with trembling wings — v. 6 

on each bush lays her full mess . . Timon of Ath. iv. 3 
by yon bush? pray, how far tliither. Cymte/me, iv. 2 
chaunt melody on every bush. . . . Titus Andron. ii. 3 
many miles about there's scarce a bush . . Lear, ii. 4 

BUSHELS— in two bushels of chatf . . Mer. of Ven. i. 1 

BUSHES-telling the bushes that thou.Mid. N. Dr. iii. 2 

they do use good bushes Asyou Like it, (epil.) 

limed bushes to betray thy wings ..2HenryVI. ii. 4 

BUSHY— om-self and fiushy, Eagot ..Richard IL 1. 4 
Bushy, wdrat news? Old John of Gaunt — i. 4 
go. Bushy ^0 the earl of Wiltshire . . — ii. 1 
IS held by Bushy, Bagot, and their . . — ii. 3 
bring forth these men ; Bushy and Green — iii. 1 
what is become of Bushy? where is.. — iii. 2 
Bushy, Green, and the earl of Wiltshire — iii. 2 
the earl of Wiltsliire; Bushy, Green. . — iii. 4 

BUSIED— they are busied about .. Taming- o/SA. iv. 4 
who, busied m his majesty, sm-veys.... Henry F. i. 2 

that England were busied -ivith — ii. 4 

as with a man busied about decrees. . Coriolanus, i. 6 
that most are busied when they are.. iiom. 6rJul. i. 1 

BUSILY — we hear, are busily in arms. .1 Hen. 2 V. v. 5 
see how busily she tm-ns the leaves. . Titus And. iv. 1 

BUSINESS— to the present business Tempest, i. 2 

a mark so bloody on the business — i. 2 

to do me business in the veins — i. 2 

there's other business for thee — i. 2 

to answer other business — i.2 

tills is no mortal business — i. 2 

but tills swift business I must imeasy . . — i.2 
widows in them of this business' making — ii. 1 
they'll tell the clock to any business .. — ii. 1 
Ijerform much business appertaining . . — iii. 1 

for that's my business to you — iii. 3 

there is in this business more than — v. 1 

on the strangeness of this business .... — v. 1 
some discretion do my business. Two Gen. of Ver. iv. 4 
indeed, sir John, is my business ,. . Merry Wives, iii. 6 
their business might be every thing.. Twelfth N. ii. 4 

and know his business of him Mea.for Mea. i. 5 

and that's my pith of business 'twixt — i. 
my business is a word or two with . . — iii. 1 

to have hearing of this business — iii.l 

and the business he hath helmed .... — iii. 2 
in special business from his holiness — iii. 2 
when you have a business for yourself — v. 1 
my business.iu this state made me .. — v. 1 
and holy to your business, not changing — v. 1 

and tend on no man's business Much Ado, i. 3 

about your own business, count — ii. 1 

employ you in some business Mid. N. Dream, i. 1 

we may effect this business yet ere day — iii. 2 
on serious business, craving quick . . Love'sL.L. ii. 1 
your own business calls on you..il/er. of Venice, i. 1 
fare you well, I have some business. . — il. 2 
slubber not business for my sake .... — II. 8 
despatch all business, and ue gone .. — iii. 2 
in all your business and necessities. ^Isj/o« Like, il. 3 
dearest friend prejudlcates the business. ^//'.s-/rei^, i. 2 
the business Is for Helen to come hither — i. 3 
and know her business? that done, laugh — il. 1 

does your business follow us — ii . 1 

I know my business is but to the court — ii. 2 
an end, sii-, to yom- business; give Helen — li. 2 
In such a business, give me leave to. . — 11. 3 
a very serious business calls on him. . — li. 4 
prepared I was not for such a business — il. .5 
would. In so just a business, shut Ills — iii.l 
at some great and trusty business.. .. — iii. 6 
seems to undertake this business .... — ill. 6 
if the business be of any difficulty .. — iv. 3 
the business is not ended, as, fearing — iv. 3 
to whose trust your business was more — iv. 4 
I am for other business. I beseech .. — v. 2 

her business looks in her ^dtli an — v. 3 

my business asketh haste Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 

watch our vantage in tills business . . — iii. 2 
if you knew my business, you would — iii. 2 

till you have done your business — iv. 2 

pass the business privately and well — iv. 4 
lest you be eoney-catched in this business — v. 1 
made liis business more material. . Winter'sTale, i. 2 
are to tills business purblind (rep.) .. — i.2 

I will whisper to the business — i.2 

you smell tlils business with a sense — U. 1 



BUS 

BUSlNESS-tliis business will raise us.Winler'sT.ii. 1 

will clear, or end, the business — iii.l 

what is the business? O sir, I shall .. — iii. 2 

howe'er the business goes, you have.. — iii. 3 

to be so rid o' the business. Come, noor — iii. 3 

for this ungentle business, ^mt on tliee — iii. 3 

J iresent partner in this business — iv. 1 

lold some counsel in such a business — iv. 3 

I uot acquaint my father of this business — iv. 3 

so fraught with curious business .... — iv. 3 

I understand the business, I hear it.. — iv. 3 

or toze from thee thy business — iv. 3 

to undertake the business for us — iv. 3 

are you a party in this business — iv. 3 

when the business is performed — iv. 3 

a broken delivery of the business .... — v. 2 

unlawfid business I am about — v. 3 

present business calls me from you. .Com.o/.Err.i. 2 

their business still lies out o' door. ... — ii. 1 

besides, I have some business in the. . — iv. 1 

my business cannot brook this — iv. 1 

great business Into my despatch Macbeth, I. 5 

and single business, to contend against — i. 6 

■will proceed no further in this business — i. 7 

in some words upon that business — ii. 1 

it is the bloody business, wliich informs — il. I 

what's the business, that such — ii. 3 

put that business in your bosoms — iii. 1 

masking the business from the common — ill. 1 

great business must be wrought ere noon — iii. 5 
sweat in this business, and maintain. Kiwg-./o/in, v. 2 

to consummate this business happily — v. 7 
to see this business; to-morrow next.Richardll. 11. 1 

full of careful busmesB are his looks.. — ii. 2 

our business for the holy land iHcnrylV.i. 1 

say I; every man to his business — ii. 2 

some hea-vy business hath my lord .. — ii. 3 

in faith, I'll know yoiu- business, Harry — il. 3 

a business that this night may execute — iii. 1 

so hath the business that I come .... — iii. 2 

by which account, our business valued — iii. 2 

our hands are full of business — iii. 2 

and since this business so fair Is done — v. 5 
your place, your time, and business. 2H«nry IV. li. 1 

my worldly business makes — iv. 4 

about thy business, Davy — v. 1 

run before our business; therefore .... Henry V. i. 2 

you may call the business of the master — iv. 1 
the business asketh silent secrecy . . ..2Henry VI. i. 2 

look into this business thorouglily . . . . — ii. 1 
about your business straight; go. ...Richardlll. i. 3 

your censures in this weighty business — ii. 2 

go, effect this business soundly — ill. 1 

hath sounded Hastmgs In our business — iii. 4 

let us consult upon to-morrow's business — v. 3 

no element in such a business Henry VIII. i. I 

why, all this business our reverend . . — i. 1 

to look on the business present — i. 1 

no primer business [Co/. Knl baseness] — i.2 

as all think, for tliis business — ii. 1 

how holily he works In all his business — ii. 2 

■with some other business, put the king — ii. 2 

this way, is business of estate — ii. 2 

make you know your times of business — ii. 2 

unpartial judging of this business.... — il. 2 

shaU meet about this weighty business — ii. 2 

it was a gentle business, and becoming — II. 3 

did debate this business, who deemed — ii. 4 

nor ever more, upon this business — li. 4 

broach this business to your hlglmess — li. 4 

wished the sleeping of tills business.. — ii. 4 

i' the progress of this business — II. 4 

what can be their business with me.. — ill. 1 

if your business seek me out — iii. 1 

for such men, or such business — ill. 1 

to trust us In your business — ill. 1 

much pain in the king's business .... — ill. 2 

to thiiik upon the part of business . . — iii. 2 

the Lord increase this business — iii. 2 

all the business I writ to his holiness — Hi. 2 

'tis all my business; at our last — iv. 1 

how goes her business ! That I can . . — iv. 1 

some touch of your late business — v. 1 

than the business that seeks despatch — v. 1 

speak to the business, master secretary — v. 2 

we have business of more moment. ... — v. 2 

think he has business at his house — v. 4 

my business seeths. Sodden business. Trail. ^ Cr. HI. 1 

I have business to my lord — 111. 1 

nothing but heavenly business should — iv. 1 

what business, lord, so early ,. — iv. 1 

I have important business — y. 1 

is't not your business too? It is .. Timon of Ath. ii. 2 

is miagreeable to this business — ii. 2 

one business does command us all .. • — iii. 4 

In debt to my Importunate business. . — ill. 6 

our business is not unknown to Coriolanus, i. 1 

ere stay behind this business — i. ( 

O, if he had borne the business — i. 1 

but had he died In the business, madam — i. 3 

bear the business in some other fight — i. (i 

you are like to do such business .... — iii. 1 

in such business, action is eloqueuce — iii. 2 

you have merrily ended my business — iv. 3 

how plainly I liave borne this business — v. 3 

he has betrayed yoiu- business — v. ."i 

the bleeding business they have done./ui.Cfesar, iii. 1 

to groan and sweat under the business — iv. 1 

on business to my brother Claudius.. — iv. 3 

the end of tins day's business — v. 1 

the business she liath broached .. Antony ^-Cleo. i. 2 

and the business you have broached . . — i.2 

it is my business too: farewell — i.4 

you do mistake your business — ii. 2 

despatch we the business we have — li. 2 

our graver business frowns at this levity — ii. 7 

I liiul thee most fit for business — iii. 3 

thy business? Tlie news is true — iii. 7 

tile business that we love, we rise — iv. 4 

the business of this man looks out .. — v. 1 



BUS 



T^J 

BUTCHERED-bloodUy were biitchered.Bic.///. iii. 

whose children tliou hast butcliered — iv. 

the wronged souls of butchered princes — v. 

means been butchered wi'ongfully.. THus And. iv. 
BUTClIElilES— ofthy butclieries . . fliWiani ///. i. 

never dreamt on aught but butcheries — i. 
BlITCHEKLY— fell, how butcherly..3Hcnryr/. ii. 
BUTCHERY— is but a butchery... -Is yow Like il, ii. 

furious close of civil butchery I Henry 1 1', i. 

to do this piece of ruthless butchery . . liicli. Ill, iv. 
BUTLER — my drunken butler? Tempesl, v. 

both pantler, butler, cook ff'inler's Tate, i\'. 

hath Butler brought those 1 Henry I r. ii. 

bid Butler lead him forth — ii. 

BUTT— [CoZ. Knl.'i carcase of a butt Tempest, i. 

I escaped upon a butt of sack — ii. 

the whole butt, man — ii. 

tell not me; when the butt is out — iii. 

look how you butt yom'self in . . Love's L. Lost, v. 

they butt together well C»ep.) .... Taming of Hh. v. 

as an aim or butt, obedience Henry V. i. 

I am your butt, and I abide your. . . .SHenry fL 1. 

'tis Butts, the king's physician .... Henry VHL v. 

what's that Butts? I think — v. 

by holy Mary, Butts, there's knavery — v. 

why, no, thou ruinous butt Troil.fyCres. v. 

beast with many heads butts me . . Coriolanus, iv. 

here is my butt, and very sea-mark of. . Ol/wllo, v. 
BUTT-END— butt-end ofamother'8..yi/c/i. H[. ii. 
BUTTER-Eleming with my butter. jl/ej-r// H'iiies,n. 

am as subject to heat, as butter — iii. 

to be prologue to an egg and butter. . 1 Henry IF. i. 

and call for eggs and butter — ii. 

never see Titirn kiss a dish of butter? — ii. 

as fat as butter. The man — ii. 

such toasts and butter, with hearts . . — iv. 

theft hath already made thee butter — iv. 
BUTTERED— ta'en out, and buttered. A/erri/ IV. iii. 

kindness to his horse, buttered his hay . . Lear, ii. 
BUTTERFLIES- 

the wings from painted butterflies. Mid. N. Dr. iii. 

for men, like butterflies, show not. Trail. Sr Cress, iii. 

boys pursuing summer butterflies. . Coriolanus, iv. 

and laugh at gilded butterflies Lear, v. 

BUTTEKELY— after a gilded butterfly . . Coriol. i. 

and a butterfly; yet your butterfly was — v. 
BUTTERING— of fortune's buttering.. /l«'siyri(, v. 
BUTTER- WOMAN— right butter-woman's ICol. 

butter-women's] rate to market. .^sj/ou Lilieif, iii. 

put you into abuttei'-woman's mouth.^H's IFell, iv. 
BUTl'ERY— them to the buttery. Tam. of ah. 1 (ind. 
BUTTERY-BAR— the buttery bar. TwelflhNigU, i. 
BUTTOCK— the pin buttock {rep.).. . . All's Well, ii. 

marry, sir, in her buttocks . . Comedy of Errors, iii. 

more with the buttock of the mghX.. Coriolanus, ii. 
BUTTON — 'tis in his buttons .... Merry iVives, iii. 

pray you undo this button Lear, v. 

very butcher of a silk button . . Romeo ^- Juliet, ii. 

before their buttons be disclosed Hamlet, i. 

fortune's cap we are not the very button — ii. 
BUTTONED— heart is buttoned up. Com. of Err. iv. 
BUTTON-llOLE-button-hole lower.Loue's L. L.v. 
BUTTRESS— no jutty, frieze, buttress.. Maci)e//i, i. 
BUTT-SHAFT— Cupid's butt-shaft.. LoKc's L.L. i. 

the blind bow-boy's butt-shaft.. /iomeo<5- Juliet, ii. 
BUXOM — of heart, of buxom valour. ...Henri/F. iii. 

so buxom, blithe, and full otiace.Pericles, i. (Gow. 
BUY — will money buy them? Tempest, \. 

I'll go buy them vizards Merry Wives, iv. 

that silk will I go buy — iv. 

money buys lands, and wives — v. 

you will needs buy and sell n;en..jV(?a./or3/(?a. iii. 

tobuyyouabetter husband — v. 

would you buy her, that you {rep.) . . Much Ado, i. 

the fairyland buys not the child.Mid.A.Drcam, ii. 

thou shalt buy [c'oi 'by] this dear.. — iii. 

breath may buy that honour Lave' sL. Lost, i. 

for some prince to buy — ii. 

did point you to buy them — ii. 

I will never buy and sell out of this.. — iii. 

may a man buy for a remuneration.. — iii. 

if so our copper buj's no better — iv. 

Bhouldst have it to buy gingerbread — v. 

what buys your company? — v. 

that do buy it with much care . . Merch. of Venice, i. 

I will buy with you, sell with — i. 

to buy his favour, I extend — i. 

I will go buy my fortunes As you Like it, i. 

in this desert place buy entertainment — ii. 

what is he that shall buy liis flock . . — ii. 

if it stand with honesty, buy thou.... — ii. 

and buy it with yom' gold right — ii. 

and let me buy yoiu' friendly help . . AlFs Well, iii. 

to buy his will, it would not seem . . — iii. 

and buy another of Bajazet's mule .. — iv. 

I will buy me a son-in-law — v. 

you buy it? or who gave it <,rep.) .... — v. 

to buy apparel 'gainst the wedding . Tarn. ofSh. ii. 

what am 1 to buy for our Winter's Tale, iv. 

fo buy spices for our sheep-shearing — iv. 
'd have you buy and sell so _— iv. 

buy of me, come; come buy {?rp.) .. — iv. 3 (song 
pray now, buy some; I love a ballad — iv. 
we'll buy the other things anon .... — iv. 

wenches, I'll buy for you both — iv. 

will you buy any tape — iv. 3 (song 

they throng who shall buy first — iv. 

being able to buy out his life .... Com. of Errors, i. 

fo thou, and buy a rope's end — iv. 
buy a thousand pound a year! I buy — iv. 

you shall buy this sport as dear — iv. 

otter me commodities to buy — iv. 

why, 1 can buy me twenty Macbeth, iv. 

the curse that money may buy out . King John, iii. 
thy kingdom cannot buy my \ix^&i\\.liicltard 11. i. 

shall we buy treason? \ Henry I r. i. 

you may buy laud now as cheap .... — ii. 
shall buy maidculieads as tliey buy — ii. 



BYZ 



— iii. 7 



BUSINESS— partners in the business. .Cyrnddi' 

received command to do tliis business — 

'tip not sleepy business ; but must .... — 

do incite the gentry to this business 

there's business in these faces — v. 

set abroad new business for you all. TilusAndron. i. 

all cares and business from our nge Lear, i. 

Bounded you in this business? Never — i. 

frame the business after your own wisdom — i. 

convey the business as I shall And means. . — i. 

I do serve you in this business — i. 

I see the business: let me, if not by birth . . — i. 

this weaves itself perforce into my business — ii. 

counsel to our business [Kn(. -businesses] .. — ii. 

you have mighty business in hand — iii. 

it is thy business that I go about — iv. 

charged my duty in this business — iv. 

thy death and business lean tell — iv. 

for this business, it toucheth us as France. . — v. 

your business of the world hath so an end. . — v. 

onr present business is general woe — v. 

having some business, doentreat.i?omeo<§-JuZic;, ii. 

good Mercutio, my business was great — ii. 

hands full all, in this so sudden business — iv. 

thus much the business is: we have .... Hamlet, i. 

personal power to business with the king — i. 

business and desire, shall point you {rep.) — _i. 

and think upon this business: meantime — ii. 

this business is well ended: my liege .... — " 

my return, shall be the end oi my business — 

and do such business as the bitter day . . — 

like a man to double business bound . . . 

has this fellow no feeling of his business — 

what is the issue of the business there.... — v. 

they have not to lead their business Othello, i. 

it is a business of some heat....: — i. 

upon some present business of the state. . 

the business? The Turkish preparation.. 

my place, nor aught I heard of business 

disports corrupt and taint my business . . 

gentlemen, let's look to our business .... 

converse and business may be more free 

when I shall turn the business of my soul 

[Km>/iO what bloody business ever — lu. 

the business of the state does him offence — iv. 
BUSINESSES— so full of businesses . . All's Well, i. 

nothing acquainted with these businesses — iii. 

despatched sixteen businesses — iv. 

thou, having made me businesses. Winter' sTale, iv. 

a thousand businesses are brief King John, iv. 

iKnt.'] needful counsel to our businesses .. Lear, ii. 
BUSKINED-your buskined mistress. Mid. N. Dr. ii. 
BUSKY — peer above yon busky hiU....\ Henry I V. v. 
BUSS— and buss thee as thy wife .... King John, iii. 

whose wanton tops do buss Troil.^- Cress, iv. 

BUSSES— give me flattering busses . . 2 Henry IV. M. 
BUSSING— knee bussing the stones .Coriolanus, iii. 
BUSTLE— world for me to bustle ia..RichardIlI. i. 

come, bustle, bustle ; caparison — v. 

BUSTLING— a bustling rumour ..Julius Cresar, ii. 
BUSY — he is very busy about it Much Ado, i. 

have a care tliis busy time — i. 

you see, 'tis a busy time with me .... — iii. 

\_Col.'] most busy, least when I Tempest, iii. 

meddling monkey, or on busy ape .Mid. N.'s D. ii. 

prove a busy actor in their play.. /is yow Like it, iii. 

they're busy within, you were Tamingof Sh. v. 

that she is busy (rep.) — v. 

to busy giddy minds with foreign ..2HenryIV. iv. 

I was busy tor the commonwealth — v. 

busy hammers closing rivets Henry V. iv. (clio. 

while we be busy below 2HenrijVI. i. 

more busy than the labouring spider — iii. 

beat away the busy meddling fiend. . — iii. 

Gloster, in those busy days Richard III. i. 

for lords, to-morrow is a busy day.... — v. 

we are busy; go. This priest Henry VIII. ii. 

but that the busy day, waked . . Trail, fy Cres. iv. 

busy care draws in the brains JuliusCtPsar, ii. 

do you busy yourself with that? iear, i. 

what, are you busy? do you need ..liom.^Jul. iv. 

to be too busy, is some danger Hamlet, iii. 

let me be tliought too busy in my fears. Othello, iii. 

did not call; he's busy in the paper — iv. 

some busy and insinuating rogue — iv. 

BUSY-LESS-busv-lessrCo/.-busy, least].. Temp. iii. 
BUTCHER—of butcher's offal .... Merry Wives, iii. 

the butcher hears you cry Love's L. Lost, v. 

tyrants, butchers, murderers As you Lilie it, iii. 

this dead butcher, and his fiend-like . . Macbeth, v. 

than to be butcher of an innocent . . King John, iv. 

against the butchers of his life Richard II. i. 

stern murder how to butcher thee — i. 

that it may enter butcher iMowbray's — i. 

food wife Keech, the butclier's wife. 2Henry IV. ii. 
could lay on like a butcher Henry V. v. 

as the butcher takes away 'IHenry VI. iii. 

and sees fast by a butcher — iii. 

are you the butcher, Suffolk? — iii. 

and Dick the butcher,— then is sin . . — iv. 
Where's Dick, the butcher of Ashford? — iv. 

for example, tliat am a butcher — iv. 

are you there, butcher? ZHenry VI. ii. 

butchersand villains, bloody cannibals! — v. 

you have no children, butchers ! — v. 

where is that devil's butcher, — v. 

next his tliroat unto the butcher's knife — v. 
compelled, been butcher to the sire ..Rich. III. y. 
butcher's cur is venom-mouthed . . Henry VIII. i. 

were be the butcher of my son Coriolanus,i. 

or butchers killing flies — iv. 

but not butchers, Oaius Julius Ccesar, ii. 

meek and gentle with these butchers! — iii. 

the lamb entreats the butcher Cymbeline, iii. 

the very butcher of a silk button . . Ham. SrJul. ii. 

BUTCHERED— his people butchered..! Hen. IV. i. 

hell-governed arm hath butchered.. /iic/mrdi//. i. 

by you my hopes are butchered — i. 



. 2 

.2 

— iii. 3 

1 



— i. 3 

— i. 3 



— ii. 3 

— iii. 1 



BU Y- to buy your worship 2HenryIV. i. 2 

(saving your manhoods), to buy .... — ii. 1 
sell tlie pasture now to buy the . . He7iry V. ii. (cho.) 
to buy a slobbery and a dirty farm . . — iii. 5 
and buy nothing of me but cudgels.. — v.! 
.you must buy that peace with lull .. — v. 2 
had sold ray farm to buy my crown — v. 2 

before he'll buy again at 1 Henry VI. iii. 2 

who would not buy thee dear? 2 Henry VI. v. 1 

would buy two hours' life ZHenr'y VI. ii. 6 

shall buy this treason even with .... — v. 1 

to buj' a world of happy days Richard III. i. i 

their factor, to buy souls — iv. 4 

which buys a place next to the kiwg.HenryVIIl. i. 1 

does buy and sell his honour as — i. 1 

I will buy nine sparrows for Trail. ^ Cres. ii. 1 

and he shall buy my daughter — iii. 3 

dispraise the thing j'ou desire to buy — iv. 1 
did buy each other, must poorly .... — iv. 4 

as I would buy thee, view thee — iv. 5 

buy twenty more better than he. . Timon of Alh. ii. I 
means are gone, that buy this j^raise — ii. 2 
in him, which buys out his fault .... — iii. 5 

is mine. I'll buy him of you Coriolanus^ i. 4 

to buy and sell with groats — iii. 2 

I would not buy their mercy at — iii. 3 

my wealth would buy this tor a lie I . . — iv. 6 
and buy men's voices to commend.. Jm(. Casar, ii. 1 

he does buy my injuries Cymbeline, i, 2 

if you buy ladies' flesh at — i. 5 

to buy a present for the emperor ... . — i. 7 
'tis gold which buys admittance .... — ii. 3 

I bid for you, as Id buy — iii. G 

in the end to buy him a wooden oaal.. Pericles, iv. 6 

shall buy this unprized precious Lear, i. 1 

if my cap would buy a halter — i. 4 

any man should buy the fee-simple. i{o»n.4^.?u(. iii. I 

buy food, and get thyself in flesh — v. 1 

that he did buy a poison of a poor .... .— v. 3 
costly thy habit as thy purse can hVLj... .Hamlet, i. 3 

Srize itself buys out tne law — iii. 3 
esires, buys herself bread and clothes.. Othello, iv. 1 
BUYER— benediction to the buyer. Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

ill's time a great buyer of land Hamlet, v. 1 

BU YIN G — for buying any thing ..As you Like it, ii. 4 

BUZ— should be? should buz Taming ofSh. ii. 1 

and buz these conjurations 'i Henry I'l. i. 2 

yet look to have them buz ZHenry VI. ii. U 

for I will buz abroad such — v. 6 

more wasps that buz about Henry VIII. iii. 2 

and buz lamenting doings in ... . Titus Andron. iii. 2 

buz in the people's ears — iv. 4 

each buz, each fancy, each complaint .... Lear, i. 4 

BUZZARD— and like a buzzard . . Taming ofSh. ii. 1 

abuzzard take thee? Ay, for (rep.) .. — ii. 1 

while kites and buzzards prey Richard III. i. 1 

BUZZED — buzzed into his ears? ....Richard II. ii. 1 

BUZZER — not buzzers to infect liis ear.. Ham(e/, iv. 6 

BUZZING— among the buzzing.. i»/er.o/ Venice, iii. 2 

hushed witli buzzing night-flies. ...2Henrj//r. iii. 1 

hear a buzzing, of a separation Henry VIII. ii. 1 

for you have stolen their buzzing . . Julius Ctesar, v. I 

with his pretty buzzing rmloAy.. Titus Andron. iii. 2 

'BY— CCo/.] thou Shalt 'by this Atax..Mid.N.Dr. iii. 2 

BY AND BY— by and by it will strike. Tempest, ii. 1 

we'll fill him by and by again — ii. 2 

that shall be by and by: 1 remember.. — iii. 2 
and by and by a cloud takes all. Two Gen. of Ver. i. 3 
and by and by intend to chide myself — iv. 2 

I'll be with her by and by Merry Wives, iv. I 

and will by and by depart Twelfth Night, iii. 4 

come by and by to my chamber — iv. 2 

I would by and by have some.. Meas. /or il/eos. iii. 1 
by and by : I hope it is some pardon — iv. 2 
and by and by I will to thee appear. Mid. iV. Dr. iii. 1 
for in the temple, by and by with us — iv. 1 
that by and by, disguised they will. Loue's L. L.v. 2 
by and by: when from the first ..AsyouLike it, iv. 3 

I'll hear you by and by Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

but, by aud by, rude fishermen . . Comedy of Er. v. 1 

and, by and by, think that I am Richard II.v. £> 

aud, by and by, in as high a flow as..lHe)ir!/ir. i. 2 
emboweled will I see thee by and by — v. 4 

shall be apprehended by and by Henry V. ii. 2 

will come this way by and by iHenry VI. i. 3 

now fetch me a stool hither by and by — ii. 1 
I'll be with you, niece, by and by. . Trail. fyCres. i. 2 
when by and by the din of war 'gun.Coriolanus, ii. 2 
ay, by and by ; but we will diink .... — y. 3 
by and by thy bosom shall i)U.vtiike.JuliusCa!sai;i\. 1 
shall raise you by and by on business — iv. 3 

I'll see you by and by Antony 4' Cleopatra, iii. S» 

look by and by to have thy sons.. Titus Andron. iii. I 
I will embrace thee in it by and by.. — v. 2 
by aud by I come: to cease thy suit.Rom. ^Jul. ii. 2 
but by and by comes back to Romeo — iii 1 
by and by: God's will! what wilfulness — iii. 3 
that we may call it early by and by.. — iii. 4 
and, by anu by, my master drew on him — v. 3 

I come to m3' motuer by and by Hamlet, ill. 2 

I will come by and by. I will say (rep.) — iii. 2 
1 dare not drink yet, madam ; by aud by — v. 2 

meet me by and by at the citadel Othello, ii. 1 

now a sensible man, by and by a fool . . — ii. 3 
by and by, breaks out to savage madness — iv. 1 

yes; 'tis Emilia: — by and by — v. 2 

by and by;— let me the curtains jirtiw .. — v. 2 
BY-DEFlilNDANCIES— 

and all the other by-dependancies . . Cymheline, v. 5 
BY-DRINKlNG-and by-drinkings.lHe»ri/ /;'. iii. 3 
BY-GONE — by-gone day proclaimed.. '^i'n/er'i T. i. 2 

for all thy by-gone fooleries were — iii. 2 

BY-1'ATHS— by what by-paths iHenrylV. iv. 4 

BV-FEEPINU— 

[ A'h^] theu, Ijy-pecping in an eye Cymbeline, i. 7 

BY-RUO-M— stand in some by-room. . 1 Hi.nryl I', ii. 4 
BY-\VoRDS-by-words to our eucmies.3 Ho/ ri/r/. i. 1 
B YZxVNTIUii— and Byzautium. . Timon of .ith. iii. 5 



CAB 



[93] 



C^S 



CABBAGE — worts! good cabbage ..Merry Wives, '\. \ 

CABIN— keep your cabins Tciiiiiest,i. I 

to cabin — i. 1 

make yourself ready in your eal)in — i. 1 

in every cabin I flamed amazement — i. 2 

make me a willow cabin at your gate. TwelflU A', i. 5 

she did approach my cabin Wititer^s Tnte. iii. 3 

who from mv cabin tempted me. . . . Itichnrd III. i. 4 

no, to my eabin: these drums AntonyffCteo.ii. 7 

and cabin in a cave TitusAndrouicus. iv. 2 

up from my cabin, my sea-gown Umnkl, v. 2 

CABINED— I am cabined, cribbed ....Mncbelh, iii. I 

CABLE— rope of his destiny oiu- cable . . Trmpesl, i. 1 

the cable broke, the holding anchor.. 3//e??rf/ f'l. v. 4 

let me cut the cable Antony f,-ClmiMlrn. ii. 7 

to enforce it on), will give him cable OUieUo, i. 2 

with cables of iierdiu'able toughness .... — i.3 
CACKLING-every goose is cackling. A/er. of fen. v. 1 
I'd drive yc cackling home to Camelot . . Leai; ii. 2 
C.\COD>EMON— thou cacodoemon! . . Ficlmrd III. i. 3 
CADDLSSES— inkles, caddisses.... Winter's Tale, iv. 3 
CADDIS-GARTER- 

puke-stocking, caddis-garter IHenrylV. ii. 4 

CADE-Jolm Cade of Asliford 2Heuryri.i\l. 1 

have I seen this stubborn Cade oppose — iii. 1 
I tell thee. Jack Cade the clothier.... — iv. 2 
John Cade, so termed of our supposed — iv. 2 

of stealing a cade of herrings — iv. 2 

Jack Cade, the duke of York hath .. — iv. 2 
them traitors that are up with Cade. . — iv. 2 
will parley with Jack Cade their .... — iv. 4 

lord Say, Jack Cade hath sworn — iv. 4 

Jack Cade proclaims himself — iv. 4 

Jack Cade hath gotten London-bridge — iv. 4 

how now! is Jack Cade slain? — iv. 5 

Jack Cade ! Jack Cade ! Knock — i v. 6 

he'll never call you Jack Cade more — iv. fi 

know. Cade, we come ambassadors . . — iv. 8 
follow Cade, we'll follow Cade! Is Cade — iv. 8 
ten thousand base-born Cades miscarry — iv. 8 

is the traitor Cade surprised? — iv. 9 

'twixt Cade and York distressed .... — iv. 9 

but now is Cade driven back — iv. 9 

of Cade is fled. Is't Cade that I — iv. 10 

that monstrous rebel. Cade, who .... — v. 1 

of Cade, whom I in combat slew irep.) — v. 1 

CADENCE-golden cadence of poesy. Lore's L. L. iv. 2 

CADENT — with cadent tears fret cnaunels.. Lear, i. 4 

CADMUS-Hercules and Cadmus.. il/id. N. Drm. iv. 1 

Ci\J)UCEUS-craft of thy Caduceus. r»-o;7. ^-Cres. ii. 3 

CAJDWj\X-younger brother, Cadwal.Cj/mftrimc, iii. 3 

Cadwal, and I, will play the cook .. — iii. 6 

but what occasion hath Cadwal now — iv. 2 

and grief for boys. Is Cadwal mad?.. — iv. 2 

Cadwal, I cannot sing; I'll weep .... — iv. 2 

nay, Cadwal, we must lay his head .. — iv. 2 

this gentleman, my Cadwal, Arviragus — v. 5 

C ADWALLADER-not for Cadwallader. Henry V. v. 1 

CyESAR-an emperor, Cjesar, Keisiu:. Merry Wives, i. 3 

and prove a shrewd CiBsar to jou..Mea.forMea. ii. 1 

what, at the heels of Ca3sar? — iii. 2 

the pummel of Caesar's faidehion. Lovers L. Lost, v. 2 
and Cresar's thrasonical brag of . . As you Like it, v. 2 
that Cffisar himself eoidd not have ..AlVsWell, iii. 6 

Slark Antony's was by Coesar Macbeth, iii. 1 

to Julius Coesar's ill-erected tower . . Richard II. v. 1 

the times, since Caesar's fortunes IHenrylV. i. 1 

compare with Caasars, and with Cannibals — ii. 4 
fetch their conq^uering Csesar in. . Henry V. v. (cho.) 

than Julius Ctesar, or bright 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

which Caesar and his fortune bare at once — i. 2 
bastard hand stabbed Julius C£csar.2 Henjy VI. iv. 1 

in the commentaries CiEsar writ — iv. 7 

no bending knee will call thee Csesar.SILen. VI. iii. 1 
they, that stabbed Caisar, shed no blood — v. 5 
did Julius Ctesar build that ^\axiQ..IiichardIII. iii. 1 
that Julius CiEsar was a famous man — iii. 1 
she shall be sole victress, Cesar's Caisar — iv. 4 
to see Cresar, and to rejoice in his. . JuliusCcesar, i. 1 
no images be hung witn Ca;sar's trophies — i. 1 
feathers plucked from CfiEsar's wing.. — i. 1 
peace, ho! Ca;sar speaks. Calphurnia — i. 2 
Ca3sar, my lord. Forget not, in your — i. 2 
when Ca;sar says, do this, it is performed — i. 2 

Cxsar. Ha! who calls? — 1.2 

Caesar: speak; CiEsar is tiuned to hear — i. 2 
come from the tlirong: look upon Ca;sar — i. 2 
(except immortal Ccesar), speaking*.of. . — i. 2 
the people choose Cajsar for their king — i. 2 

I was born free as Coasar — i. 2 

Cxsar said to me, darest thou, Cassius — i. 2 
C^sar cried, help me, Cassius, or I . . — i. 2 
the waves of 'fiber did I the tired Caesar — i. 2 
if Caisar carelessly but nod on him . . — i. 2 
new honours that are heaped on Cajsar — i. 2 
C:csar: what should be in that Cffisar? — i. 2 
will start a sjjirit as soon as Cajsar . . — i. 2 

what meat doth this our Ciesar feed. . — i. 2 

are done, and Cajsar is returning — i. 2 

angry spot doth glow on CjEsar's brow — i. 2 
Antonius. Cfesar. Let me have men — i. 2 
fear him not, Caesar, he's not dangerous — i. 2 

fear; for always I am Cajsar — i. 2 

to-day, that Ca!5(ir looks so sail — i. 2 

because Co3sar refused the crown (rep.) — i. 2 
what? did Cxsar swoon? He fell down — i. 2 

no, Cajsar hath it not; but you — i. 2 

but, I am sure, Cassar fell down — i. 2 

if CiEsar had stabbed their mothers . . — i. 2 
for pulling scarfs oiFCajsar's images.. — i. 2 

Cffisar dotli bear me hard — i. 2 

Ca:sar's ambition shall be glanced at (rep.) — i. 2 

brought you CsEsar home? — i.3 

comes Ciesar to the Capitol to-morrow? — i. 3 
*tis Cxsar that you mean: is it not .. — i.3 

mean to establish Caisar as a king.... — i.3 
why should Coesar be a tyrant then? — i.3 



C^E.'^AU- so vile a thing as CiieBaT7..JuliuiCwiar,i. 3 

and to speii.k truth of Ca'isar — 

so C.Tsar niav, tlicn lest lie may — 

first dill wlict nieau'uinst (':csar — 

be t(UiiMiv.I but onlv Caesar? — 

of Ca'sar, siioiild outlive C:esar — 

let Antony, and Cii-siir, fall together — 

Antony is liut a limb of Cajsar — 

stand op against tlie spirit of Casar. . — 
by Cicsar's spirit, and not dismember (rep.) — 

harm than Caesar's arm, when Caesar's — 

love Cajsar, all that he can do (rep.) — 

whe'r Cicsar will come forth to-day . . — 

doth bear Cassar hard, who rated him — 

help, ho! they miu'der Cassar — 

what mean you, Cajsar? think you.. — ii. '^ 

CiCsar shall forth: the things — ;;. 2 

face of Cffisar, they are vanished. Caesar — ii. 2 

O Ciesar! these things are beyond .. — ii. 2 

Caisar shall go forth: for these (rep.) — ii. 2 

no, CiCsar shall not: danger (rep.) .. — ii. 2 

terrilile, and Cffisar shall go forth — ii. 2 

Caisar, all hail! Good-morrow (ri'p.) — ii. 2 

shall CaDsar send a lie? — jj. 2 

Caesar will not come (repealed) — ii. 2 

this day, a crowm to mighty Ca;sar . . — ii. 2 

when Cajsar's wife shall meet (rep.) .. — ii. 2 

lo, Cajsar is afraid? Pardon me, Coasar — ii- '^ 

good-morrow, CiEsar. Welcome.... — jj. 2 

Cffisar, 'tis strucken eight — }\-f 

so to most noble Caesar — ij. 2 

Cassar, I will: and so near will I be. . — ii- 2 

O Caasar I the heart of Brutus — ii. 2 

Caasar, beware of Brutus — ii. 3 (paper) 

and it is bent against Caesar — ii. 3 (paper) 

stand till Cffisar pass along — li. 3 

read this, O Ciesar, thou mayst live — ii- 3 

take good note, what Ccesar doth — ii. 4 

is C«sar yet gone to the Capitol?. . . . — i]- ^ 

thou hast some suit to Caasar — ii. 4 

please Cassar to be so good to Ca;sar.. — ii. 4 

throng that follows Caesar at the heels — ii. 4 

speak to gi'eat Caisar as he comes .... — ii. * 

that Caisar will not grant — _ii. 4 

ay , Cajsar ; but not gone (rep.) — iii. 1 

C,T3sar, read mine first (rep.) — in. 1 

delay not, Cajsar; read it instantly .. — iii. 1 

look, how he makes to Caesar — iii. ' 

Cassius or Ciesar never shall turn . . — iii. 1 

he smiles, and CiEsar doth not change — iii. 1 

presently prefer liis suit to CsEsar — iii. 1 

Caesar, and his senate, must redress? — iii. 1 

most mighty, and most puissant Caasar — iii. 1 

to think that Cscsar bears such rebel — iii- ' 

know, Caasar doth not wrong — iii. ' 

sound more sweetly in great Caesar's — ui. 1 

but not in flattery, Caasar — iii. ' 

pardon, Caasar; Caasar, pardon — ii>. 1 

OCaesar,— Hence! wilt thou (rep.) .. — iii. 1 

et tu. Brute? then fall Caasar — in. 1 

some friend of Cassar's shoidd chance — iij. 1 

so are we Caasar's friends — iii. 1 

bathe our hands in Caesar's blood — iii. 1 

how many times shall Caesar bleed . . — in. 1 

Caesar was mighty, bold, royal — iii- 1 

1 feared Cassar, honoured him — iji. 1 

how Caesar hath deserved (rep.) — — iii. 1 

mighty Caesar! dost thou lie so low — i;;. 1 

so fit as CfEsar's death's hour — iii. I 

as here by Caisar, and by you cut off — iii. 1 

hath done this deed on Ca;sar — iii. ' 

that did love Caesar when I struck lum — iii- 1 

that I did love thee, Caesar — iii. 1 

the enemies of Cffisar shall say this . . — iii. 1 

1 blame you not for praising Caesar.. — iii. 1 

by looking down on Caasar — iii. 1 

and wherein, Caesar was dangerous . . — iii. 1 

you, Antony, the son of Cffisar — iii. I 

show the reason of our Cajsar's death — iii. 1 

CiEsar shall have all true rites — iii. 1 

Ca;sar's body. You shall not (rep.) — iii. 1 

and Caesar's spirit, ranging for reveng — iii- 1 

you serve Octavius Cassar (rep.) .... — iii. 1 

OCa-.sarl Thy heart is big — iii. I 

shall be rendered of Ca;sar s death . . — iii. 2 

any dear friend of Cajsar's — iii. 2 

Brutus' love to C:Esar was no less — iii. 2 

why Brutus rose against CiEsar — iii. 2 

not that I loved Cresar less — iii. 2 

had you rather Ca;sar were living .. — iii. 2 

C^sar were dead, to live all (rep. ) — iii. 2 

done no more to Cassar, than you — — iii. 2 

let him be C^sar. Cffisar's better.... — iii. 2 

grace to Cassar's corse (repeo^erf) .... — iii. 2 

this Cresar was a tyrant — iii. 2 

I come to bury Cscsar, not to praise. . — iii. 2 

with Caesar. The noble Brutus (rep.) — iii. 2 

grievously hath CiBsar answered it . . — iii. 2 

come X to speak in Caesar's funeral . . — iii. 2 

in Cajsar seem ambitious? (rep.) .... — iii. 2 

in the cotiin there with Caesar — iii. 2 

Caesar has had great wrong — iii. 2 

yesterday the word of Cajsar might . . — iii. 2 

with the seal of Caesar, I formd it — iii. 2 

would go and kiss dead Caesar's wounds — iii. 2 

meet you know how Ca!sar loved you — !!!• 2 

hearing the wUl of Ca:sar, it will .... — iii. 2 

you shall read us the will ; Caesar's.. — iii. 2 

whose daggers have stabbed Cicsar . . — iii. 2 

a ring about the corse of Caesar — iii. 2 

the first time ever Ca;sar put it on . . — iii. 2 

how the blood of Ca;sar followed it . . — iii. 2 

was Cajsar's angel: judge, O ye (ren.) — iii. 2 

when the noble Cassar saw him stab — iii. 2 

the while ran blood, great Caisar fell — iii. 2 

behold our C.'esar's vesture wounded — iii. 2 

Onoble Cnisarl O woful day! — iii. 2 

show you sweet Caesar's wounds .... — iii. 2 

a tongue in every wound of CsEsar .. — iii. 2 

wherein hath Ca;sar thus deserved . . — iii. 2 



CilCSAR — and under Cfsar's seal. .JutiusCasar, iii 

most noble Cajsar! we'll (rep.) — iii 

here was a Cajsar: when comes — iii 

he and Lcpidus are at Cajsar's house — iii 

to-night, that I did feast witli Cicsar — iii 

I am goin,!' to Ciesar's funeral — iii 

go you to Cicsar's house — iv 

when Cassar lived, he durst not thus — iv 

strike, as tlrou didst at Cxsar — iv 

Cassar, we will answer on their — v 

in CiEsar's heart, crying (7'en.) — v 

one another in the sides of Ca'sar .... — v 

like bondmen, kissing C.Tsar's feet . . — v 

behind, struck Ca;sar on the neck .... — v 

Caesar's three and twenty wounds (rep.) — v, 

Cassar thou canst not die by traitors'.. — v, 

that ran through Caesar's bowels .... — v, 

Caesar, thou art revenged — v, 

the ghost of Ciesar hath appeared .... — v, 

Cassar, now be still — v, 

that they did in envy of great Cassar — v, 

scarce- bearded Cajsar have not Antony/y Clco. i, 

from Cxsar; therefore, hear (rep.) .. — i, 

blood of thine is Cassar's homager.... — i, 

is Ciesar with Antonius prized so.... — i, 

■to marry me with Octavius Ca?sar.... — j 

joining their force 'gainst Cassar .... — i, 

Iiath given the dare to Cassar — i, 

it is not Caesar's natural voice — i, 

every hour, most noble CKsar — j. 

that only have feared Cassar! — j, 

Cassar, I bring thee word — i. 

to-morrow, Cxsar, I shall be furnished — i. 

broad-fronted Cxsar, when thou wast — i, 

love Cxsar so? O that brave Cxsar .. — i, 

the valiant Cxsar! By Isis (rep.) .... — i. 

Cxsar gets money, where he loses.... — ii. 

Cxsar and Lepidus are in the field .. — ii, 

cannot hope, Cxsar and Antony shall — ji. 

dead, did trespasses to Cxsar — ji. 

if Cxsar move him, let Antony (rep.) — ji. 

Antony. And yonder, Cxsar — ii. 

my being in Egypt, Cxsar, what .... — ii. 

her garboils, Cxsar, made out of ... . — ii. 

soft, Cxsar. No, Lepidus, let him . . — ii. 

but on, Cxsar; the article of my — ii. 

give me leave, Cxsar — ji. 

I am not married, Cxsar — ii. 

will Cxsar speak? Not till he hears — ii. 

the power of Cxsar, and his power .. — ii. 

halt^the heart of Cxsar, worthy — ii. 

he made great Cxsar lay his sword . . — ii. 

higher, Cxsar's or mine? Cxsar's .. — ji. 

unmatchable, where Cxsar's is not . . — ii. 

or friends with Cxsar, or not captive — ii. 

and friends with Cxsar (rep.) — ii. 

he 's friends with Cxsar — ii. 

Antony, I have dispraised Cxsar ... . — ii. 

since J'ulius Cxsar, who at Philippi — ii. 

when Cxsar and your brothers were — ii. 

that Julius Cxsar grew fat mth .... — ji. 

certain queen to Cxsar in a mattress — ii. 

Cxsar's sister is called Octavia — ii. 

then is Cxsar, and he, for ever knit. . — ii. 

Octavia blow the fire up in Cxsar .. — ii. 

the vessels, ho! here is to Cxsar .... — ii. 

Cxsar, and Au tony, have ever won.. — iii. 

Cxsar is sad; and Lepidus — iii. 

how he loves Cxsar! — iii. 

Cxsar? why he's the very Jupiter of — iii. 

spake you of Cxsar? how? — iii. 

would you praise Cxsar, say — Cxsar — iii. 

but he loves Cxsar best — iii. 

but as for Cxsar, kneel down — iii. 

will Cxsar weep? he has a cloud .... — iii. 

Antony found Julius Cxsar dead — iii. 

Cxsar, and Lepidus have made wars — iii. 

Cxsar bavin" made use of liim — iii. 

navy's rigged. For Italy, and Cxsar — iii. 

whom does he accuse? Cxsar — iii. 

hail, Cxsar, and my lord! (rep.) .... — iii. 

you come not like Cxsar's sister .... — iii. 
where Cxsar fought with Pompey .. 

in Caesar's fleet are those 

1 have sixty sails, Cxsar none better 
Actiruu beat the approaching Cxsar — iii. 

Cxsar has taken Toryne — iii. 

this speed of Cxsar's carries beyond — iii. 

the hill, in the eye of Cxsar's battle — iii. 

to Cxsar wiU I render my legions .. — iii. 

fly, and make your peace with Cxsar — iii. 

Cxsar, 'tis his schoobuaster — iii. I 

Cxsar, I go. Observe how Antony . . — iii. 1 

power that moves. Cxsar, I shall .. — iii. 1 

to the boy Cxsar send this grizzled . . — iii. 1 

as i' the command of Cxsar — iii. 1 

high-battled Cxsar will unstate his.. — iii. 1 

the full Cxsar will answer his (rep.) — iii. I 

a messenger from Cxsar — iii. 1 

Cxsar's ivill? Hear it apart — iii. 1 

as Cxsar has; or needs not us (rep.) — iii. 1 

we are; and that's Cxsar's — iii. 1 

Cxsar entreats not to consider (rep.) — iii. I 

shall I say to Cxsar what you require — iii. 1 

6a.v to great Cxsar this — iii. 1 

your Cxsar's father oft — iii. 1 

tributaries that do acknowledge Cxsar — iii. 1 

this Jack of Cxsar's shall bear us — iii. 1 

cold upon dead Cxsar's trencher — iii. 1 

be thou sorry to follow Cxsar in — iii. 1 

get thee back to Cxsar, tell him — — iii. 1 
to flatter Cxsar, would you mingle . . 

Cxsar sits down in Alexandria — iii. l 

personal combat, Cxsar to Antony . . 

Cxsar must tliink, when one 

that he and Cxsar might determine 

or from Cxsar's camp say 

sir, he is with Cxsar 

Cxsar, I shall. The time 

to incline himself to Cxsar 



. 7 



CiESAR— Cajsar Imth hanged him ..Anl.-^-Ctvo. iv. G 
Ctcsar himself has work, and our .... — iv. 7 
things he speaks may concern Cajsar — Iv. 9 
their sweets on blossoming Ctesar. ... — iv. 10 

anrl blemish Caesar's triumph — i v. 1 

has packed cards with C;esar — iv. 12 

our Cxsar tells, I am conquunir .... — iv. 12 
not me, 'tis Cfesar thou defuat'st .... — iv. 12 
the wheeled seat of fortunate Ca'sar ■ — iv. 12 

this sword but shown to Ca;sar — iv. 12 

she had disposed with Ca!sar — iv. 12 

not Caesar's valour hath o'erthrown — iv. 13 
of the full-fortuned Ca;sar ever shall — iv. 13 

of Ca'snr seek your honour — iv. 13 

none about Ci«sar trust, but (rep.) .. — iv. 13 
the pauses that he makes, Ciesar — — v. 1 
as I was to him, I'll be to CaJsar — — v. 1 

I say, O Cassar, Antony is dead — v. 1 

he is dead, Caisar, not by a public . . — v. 1 

C;Bsar is touched, when such — v. 1 

for C.Tsar cannot live to be ungentle — v. 1 

you find of her. Caisar, I shall — v. 1 

'tis paltry to be Cajsar — v. 2 

the beggar's nurse, and Ca;sar's — v. 2 

C;csar"sends greeting to tlie queen . . — v. 2 

guard lier tilt Caisar come — v. 2 

I'll ruin, do Cffisar what he can — v. 2 

than vou shall find cause in Ca;sar . . — v. 2 
hast done thy master Ca?.sar knows . . — v. 2 

to Cais.ar I will speak what — v. 2 

wliat Cicsar means to do with me? . . — v. 2 

make way there,— Cresar — v. 2 

see, Cresar! O behold, how pomp — v. 2 

Ca;sar, what a wounding — v. 2 

say, good Cajsar, that I some lady . . — v. 2 
and believe, Cajsar's no merchant . . — v. 2 
Ca;sar through Syria intends his — — v. 2 

1 hear him mock the luck of Cassar . . — v. 2 

hear thee call great Cassar ass — v. 2 

Caisar hath sent,— Too slow — v. 2 

Ca:sar'8 beguiled. There's (rep.) — v. 2 

C.Tsar, thy thoughts touch their etteets — v. 2 
away there, way for Ca;sar I — v. 2 

Ciesar, tliis Cnarmian lived — v. 2 

than when Julius Ca5sar smiled Cymbetine, ii. 4 

Augustus Csesar with \is (_rep,) — iii. I 

famous in Cajsar's praises — iii. 1 

there be many Caesars, ere such .... — iii. 1 
akind of conijuest CiEsarraadehere — iii. 1 
to master Cajsar's sword, made Lud's — iii. 1 

there is no more such Caesars — iii. 1 

if Cajsar can hide the sun from — iii. 1 

Cassar's ambition (which swelled .... — iii. 1 

we do say then to Ca!sar — iii. 1 

whose use tlie sword of Cfesar hath.. — iii. 1 
Augustus Caasar, (Caisar, that hath. . — iii. 1 

in Caesar's name pronounce I — iii. 1 

thy Coasar knighted me — iii. 1 

so Ca:;sar shall not find them — iii. 1 

commission: long live Cffisar! — iii. 7 

we siibmit to Cjesar, and to the Roman — v. 5 
the imperial Caesar, should again unite — v. 5 
if ever Bassianus, Caesar's son, were.. Tttus And. i. 1 

1 (lid enact Julius Caesar Hamlet, iii. 2 

imperious Cffisar, dead, and turned .... — v. 1 
fit to stand by Ctesar and give Othello, ii. 3 

C^ESARION— sat Cajsarion, v/fiom. . Ant.^Cleo. iii. 6 
the nest Csesarion smite! — iii. 11 

CAGE — not to sing in my cage Much Ado, i. 3 

in which cage of rushes, I am siu:e./-ls- youLike it, iii. 2 
had never a house but the cage .... 2 Henry VI. iv. 2 

oiu- cage we make a quire Cymbetine, iii. 3 

from forth that pretty hollow cage..T*Vw5 And. iii. 1 

will sing like birds i' the cage Lear, v. 3 

I must up-fill this osier cage Romeo <§■ Juliet, ii. 3 

C AGED-twenty caged uightmgales. Tam.of Sh.i (ind.) 

CAIN — a month old at Cain's birth. £o!'e'sL.I.os<,iv. 2 

since tlie birth of Cain King John, iii. 4 

with Cain go wander through Richard II. v. 6 

one spirit of the first-born Cain . . ..2Hemy IV. i. \ 

be thou cursed Cain 1 Henry VI. i. 3 

as if it were Cain's jawbone Hamlet, y. 1 

CAIN-COLOURED— a cain-coloured [Kn(.-cane- 
colnured] beard Merry Wives, i. i 

CAITIFF — O thou caitiff! . . Measure for Measure, ii. 1 
I should do with this wicked caitiff? — ii. 1 
the wickedest caitiff on the ground . . — v. 1 
I went to this pernicious caftiif deputy — v. I 

I am tlie caitiff, that do hold —All's Well, iii. 2 

a caitilf recreant to my cousin Richardll. i. 2 

a very caitiff crowned with care . . Richard III. iv. 4 

but say, thou art a caitiff Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

consume you wicked caitiffs left.. — v. 5 (epitai^h) 

caitiff, to pieces shake, that under Lear, iii. 2 

here lives a caitiff wretch would sell. Rom. i^Jh/. v. 1 
alas, poor caitiff! look how he laughs.. 0(/teZ/o, iv. 1 
O the pernicious caitiff! how came you.. — v. 2 

CAIUS — ask of doctor Cains' housQ. .MerryWives, i. 2 

my master, master doctor Cains — i. 4 

and Caius, the French doctor — ii. 1 

dwell v,'ith master doctor Caius — ii, 2 

save you, good master doctor Caius . . — ii. 3 

master doctor Caius, I am come — ii. 3 

have you looked for master Caius.... — iii. 1 
master doctor Caius, the renowned .. — iii. 1 

here comes doctor Caius — iii. 1 

and firm for doctor Caius — iv. 6 

slie is, by this, doctor Caius' wife ..'.. — v. 5 
first, you know, Caius Marcius is.... Coriolamis, i. 1 
esnccially against Caius Marcius? . . — i. 1 

Where's Caius Marcius? Here — J. 1 

no, Caius Marcius; I'll lean upon .. — i. 1 

if we and Caius Marcius chance to meet — i. 2 
that Caius Marcius wears this war's — i. 9 

Caius Marcius CoriolanuB (ren.) — i. 9 

with fame, a name to Caius Marcius — ii. 1 
worthy Caius, and by deed-achieving — ii. 1 
performed by Caius Alareius Coriolanus — ii. 2 

m3' name is Caius Marcius — iv. .'j 

to thwack our general, Caius Marcius — iv. b 



CAItlS-Caius Marcius was a worthy. Conotanus, iv. 
a fearful army, led by Caius Marcius — iv. 

when, Caius, Rome is thine — iv. 

ay, Marcius, Caius Marcius; dost thou — v. 
seem too bloody, Caius Cassuis . .Julius Ctrsar, ii. 
sacrificers, but not biitolitrs, Caius .. — ii. 
Caius Lii-'arius dolli Itcur C';i_sar liard — ii. 
Caius Ligarius, tiiatMetcllus («'p.) — ii. 

time have you chose out, Caius . — ii. 

what it is, my Caius, I shall unfold .. — ii. 
Caius Ligarius, Cicsar was ne'er .... — ii. 
thou hast wronged Caius Ligarius. . — ii. 3 (pajjer^ 

next Caius Cassius, do I take — iii.' 

pardon me, Caius Cassius — iii. 

should I have answered Caius Cassius so? — iv. 3 
and see liow I regai-ded Caius Cassius — v. 3 
she was the wife of Caius Marcellus..4n(. (5-C/fo. ii. 6 

the one is Caius Lucius Cymbetine, ii. 3 

Caius Lucius will do his commission — ii. 4 
was Gains Lucius in the Britain court — ii. 4 

thou art welcome, Caius — iii. 1 

thou comest not, Caius, now for tribute — v. 5 
Caius Lucius, although tlie victor .. — v. b 
to Saturn, Caius, not to Saturnine .. Titus And, iv. 3 
come liither, Caius, and Valentine! — v. 2 
Caius, and Valentine, lay hands .... — v. 2 
where is your servant Caius? Lear, v. 3 

CAKE— no more cakes and ale .... TwelfthKight, ii. 3 
our cake's dough on botli uAca.... Taming oJ'Sh. i. " 

my calie is dough: but I'll in — v. 

your cake here is warm within. . Com. of Errors, iii. 
stewed primes, and dried cakes — 2Henry IV. ii. 
do you look for ale and cakes here.. Henri/ VIII. v. 
he that will have a cake out of . . Troilus fy Cres. i. 
tlie making of the cake, the heating. . — i. 
packtliread, and old cakes of roses.. iJom. S^ Jul. v. 

CAKED— their blood is caked . . Timon of Athens, ii. 

CALABER— Orleans, Calaber 'i Henry VI. i. 

CALAIS— on toward Calais, hoi King John, iii. 

of that receipt I had for Calais Richard II. i. 

as far as Calais, to my uncle's head . . — iv. 
to execute the noble diUce at Calais . . — iv. 
and in Calais they stole a fireshoveL.Henri/F. iij. 2 

■we'll retire to Calais; to-night — iii. 3 

to march on to Calais without — iii. B 

we'll then to Calais; and to England — iv. 8 
now we bear the king toward Calais — v. (cho.) 

as I rode from Calais, to haste 1 Henri/ VI. i v. 1 

some respite, will return to Calais — — iv. 1 
is chancellor, and the lord of Calais. .ZHenryVI. i. 1 

CiiXAliIITIES- in his calamities.. Timon ofAth. iv. 3 

CALAMITY— cuckold but calamity ..Tu-etfthN. i. 6 
different plague of each calamity . . King John, iii. 4 

sticking together in calamity — iii. 4 

to bear the tidings of calamity Richardll. iii. 2 

free my country from calamity IHenry VI. i. 2 

should calamity be full of words ?..i?(c/iard ///. iv. 4 
you are transported by calamity — Coriolanus, i. 1 
we must find an evident calamity . . — v. 3 
and thou art wedded to calamity . . Rom. 4r Jul. iii. 3 
that makes calamity of so long life — Hamlet, iii. 1 

CALCHAS— Calehas shall have .... Troil.^Cres. iii. 3 
to bring this Greek to Calehas' house — iv. 1 
Diomed, with Calehas' daughter? .... — iv. 5 

ofthe field doth Calehas keep? — iv. .i 

he goes to Calehas' tent; I'll keep.... — v. 1 
and uses the traitor Calehas' tent — — v. 1 
Calehas, I think. Where's your daughter?— v. 2 

CALCULATE-did calculate my birth.2Heri. VI. iv. 1 
old men fools, and children calculate.. /ui.Cissar, i. 3 

CALEN— [K)i(.] Calen o Custure me . . Henri/ V. iv. 4 

CALENDAR-a calendar, a calendar. Mirf. N. D. iii. 1 
he found in the calendar of my past . . All's Well, i. 3 
you the calendars of their nativity.. Com. of Err. v. 1 
stand aye accursed in the calendar! ..Macbeth, iv. 1 

the high tides, in the calendar? Kirtg John, iii. 1 

give me a calendar; who saw the sun.. JJicA. ///. v. 3 
look in the calendar, and bring . . Julius Ca'sar, ii. 1 

scratch it out of tlie calendar Pericles, ii. I 

he is the card and calendar of gentry . . Hamlet, v. 2 

CALF— %vill never answer a calf. Much.-ldo, iii. 3 

he hath bid me to a calf's head — v. 1 

and got a calf in tliat same — v. 4 

he elepeth a calf, cauf: half, hauf.Loue's L.Lost, v. 1 
is not veal a calf? A calf (repeated) .. — v. 2 

then die a calf, before your horns — v. 2 

more calf, certain — v. 2 

and the calf, are all called, neat . . Winter' sTale, i, 2 
you wanton calf? art thou my calf? . . — i. 2 
might have kept this calf, bred i]:om.. King John, i. 1 
as the butcher takes away the ealf..2HeHr!/ VI. iii. 1 

iniquity's tluoat cut like a calf — iv. 2 

as wolf to heifer's calf, pard to . . TroilusSr Cres. iii . 2 
never do beget a eoal-black calf . . Titus Andron.y. 1 
to kill so capital a calf t'nere Hamlet, iii. 2 

CALF-LIKE— that calf- like, tliey my..rem;;es;, iv. 1 

CALF'S-SKIN-goes in tlie calf 's-skin. Com.of Er.\\'. 3 
and liang a calf 's-skiii on those (rep.). . . . John, iii. 1 

CALIBAN— j'es, Caliban her son Tempest, i. 2 

that Caliban, whom now I keep — i. 2 

we'll visit Caliban, my slave — J. 2 

what ho! slave, Caliban! — i. 2 

I had peopled else this isle with Calibans — i. 2 

having seen but him and Caliban -~ i. 2 

to the most of men this is a Caliban — i. 2 

'Ban, 'ban, Co— Caliban — ii. 2 (song) 

ofthe beast Caliban, and his confederates — iv. 1 
we must prepare to meet with Caliban.. — iv. 1 

and I, thy Caliban, for aye — iv. 1 

set Caliban and his companions free — v. 1 

CALIPOLIS— my fair Calipolis .... IHenry IV. ii. 4 

CALIVER — the report of a caliver . . 1 Henri/ / /'. iy. 2 
put me a caliver into Wart's hand..2Henr!//F. iii. 2 
come, manage me your caliver — iii. 2 

CALL-might'st call him a goodly person. Tempest, i. 2 

I might call him a thing divine — .j. 2 

doth thy other mouth call me? — ii. 2 

that I may call men — iii. 1 

for so he calls them — iii. 2 

he himself calls her a nonpareil — iii. 2 



CALL — till thou dost hear me call Tempest, iv. 1 

whom to call brother would — v. I 

than you may cull to couifort you — v. 1 

and I would call it fair play — v. 1 

circumstance, you call me fool. . TwoGen. of Ver. i. 1 

it were a shame, to call her back ajjain — i. 2 

my penance is, to call Lucetta back. . — i. 2 

your father calls for you — i. 3 

who bade you call her? — ii. 1 

I was sent to call thee — ii. 3 

sir, call me what thou darest — ii. 3 

call her divine — ii. 4 

to call her bad, whose — ii. 6 

when I call to mind your — iii. 1 

which some call tears — iii. 1 

and call herj thence — iv. 2 

entreated me to call — iv. 3 

who calls? — iv. 3 

convey, the wise it call Merry Wives, i. 3 

I may call him my master — i. 4 

call him in: such Brooks — ii. 2 

yet I ^vl•ong him to call him poor .... — ii. 2 

that calls himself doctor of pfiysic .. — iii. 1 

what do you call your knight's name — iii. 2 

and when I suddenly call you — iii. 3 

call all your senses to you — iii. 3 

call your men, mistress Ford — iii. 3 

she calls you, coz — iii. 4 

call her in — iii. 5 

somebody, call my wife — iv. 2 

ay sir; I'll call them to you — iv. 3 

go, knock and call — iv. 5 

the knight may be robbed, I'll call . . — iv. b 

it is thine host, thine Ephesian, calls — iv. b 
call in question the continuance .. ra'cZ/Wi Night, i. 4 

to call his fortunes thine — i.4 

call in my gentlewoman (rep.) — i. 5 

that envy could not but call fair .... — ii. 1 

constrained in't to call thee knave . . — ii. 3 

constrained one to call me knave — ii. 3 

thou hast her not i' tlie end, call me cut — ii. 3 

for many do call me fool — ii. .5 

we'll call thee at tlie cubiculo — iii. 2 

go call him hither — iii. 4 

why I do call thee so — iii. 4 (challenge) 

I'll call sir Toby the whilst — iv. 2 

who calls there? — iv. 2 

I call thee by the most modest — iv. 2 

■who calls, ha? — iv. 2 

call forth the holy father — v. 1 

call hither, I say, bid come before. .A/ea./or Mea. i. 1 

call it so — i. 3 

-who's that which calls? — i. .''> 

he calls again; I pr.ay you _ — i. b 

peace and prosperity ! who is't that calls? — i. 5 

may call it back again — ii. 2 

nay, call us ten times frail — ii. 4 

wliich do call thee sire — iii. 1 

at that place call upon mo — iii. 1 

I am bound to call upon you — iii. 2 

may be, I will call upon you anon . ; — iv. 1 

I made my promise to call on him . . — iv. 1 

do you call, sir? — iv. 2 

do you call, sir, your occupation — — iv. 2 

call hither Barn'ardine and Claudio.. — iv. 2 

the ■unfolding star calls up the shepherd — iv. 2 

call your executioner, and off' with .. — iv. 2 

I'll call you at your house — iv. 4 

go, call at Flavins' house — iv. 5 

call that same Isabel here once — v. 1 

to Mm, till we call upon you — v. 1 

to call liim villain? — v. I 

hear me call Margaret, Hero Much Ado, ii. 2 

let us send her to call him in to — ii. 3 

and presently call the rest of the ■watch — iii. 3 

well, you are to call at all — ?!!• ^ 

you must call to the nurse — ?H* -^ 

matter of weight chances, call up me — iii. 3 

call up the right master constalile .... — iii. 3 

what kind of catechising call you this? — iv. 1 

call me a fool; trust not my reading. . — iv. I 

you must call forth the watch — iv. 2 

to call a prince's brother, villain .... — iv. 2 

the offender, did caU me ass — v. 1 

and so, I pray thee, call Beatrice .... — v. 2 

well, I will call Beatrice to you, who — V. 2 

to call young Claudio to — v. 4 

call her forth, brother — v. 4 

call you me fair? Mid. N.'sDream, i. 1 

you were best to call them generally — i. 2 

now, good Peter Quince, call forth . . — i. 2 

answer, as I call you — J. 2 

those that hobgoblin call you — ii. I 

and maidens call it, love-in-idleness — ii. 2 

and help from Athens calls.... — jj!-^ 

to call me goddess, nvmpli, di\'ine .. — iii. 2 

when I come where lie culls, then .. — iii. 2 

Titania, music call ; ami strike — iv. 1 

when my cue comes, call mo — iv. 1 

a tortunng hour? (iall I'liilostrate . . — y. 1 

else the Puck a liar call — (epil.) 

which the base vulgar do call .... Love's L. Lost,i. 2 

Biron, they call him — ii- 1 

and Rosaline thev call her — iii. 1 

donoteall it sin Inme — iv. 3 (verses) 

too peregrinate, as I may call it — v. 1 

(which he would call abominable) .... — v. 1 

which the rude multitude call — v. 1 

you were best call it, daughter-beamed — v. 2 

the ladies call him, sweet — v. 2 

I dare not call them fools — v. 2 

call them forth quickly — ■y- 2 

youi* own business calls on you. . Mer. of Venice, i. 1 

would call their brothers, fool — i. 1 

you call me misbeliever, cut-throat. . — i. 3 

I am as like to call thee so again .... — i. 3 

whobids thee call? (rep.) — ii. S 

call vou? what is your will? — ii. 5 

Goodwins, I think they call the place — iii. 1 

lie was wont to call me usurer — iii. 4 



CALL — to church, and call me ■wite.Mer. of reH.ili. 2 

go one, and call the Jew — iv. 1 

call tlie messenger — iv. 1 

who culls? Sola! did you see — v. 1 

fur call you that keeping for Asyou KiUcil, i. 1 

calls \ our worship? — i. 1 

call h'iui in; 'twill be a good — i. 1 

call him hither, good monsieur — i. 2 

tlK- princesses call for you — i. 2 

lie calls US back — i. 2 

did you call, sir? sir, you have — i. 2 

what shall I call thee — i. .3 

look you call me Ganymede — 1.3 

I will not call him sou ircp.} — ii. 3 

who calls? Your betters, sir — ii. 4 

call you them stanzas? — ii. .'j 

but tliat they call comnlimcnt — ii. 6 

to call fools into a circle — ii. a 

call me not fool, till heaven hath .... — ii. 7 
all things that thou dost call thine .. — iii. 1 
if you would but call me Kosaliud .. — iii. 2 

nay, you must call me Rosalind — iii. 2 

good even, s;ood master what ye call' t — iii. 3 

It pleases him to call you so — iv. 1 

luiworthy of her you call Rosalind. . . — i v. 1 

she calls me proud — iv. 3 

call you this railing? — iv. 3 

cal I you this chiding? — iv. 3 

to that youth, he calls his Rosalind.. — iv. 3 

that he in sjiort doth call his — iv. 3 

neither cull the gidiliuess of it — v. 2 

my lord calls for you All's Well, i. 1 

aiid prime can happy call — ii. 1 

what do you call there? — ii. 3 

call before me aU the lords in — ii. 3 

else I'd call you knave — ii. 3 

a very serious business calls on him. . — ii. 4 

father to, then call me husband — iii. 2 (let.) 

tend upon, and call her hourly — iii. 2 (let.) 

ho calls for the tortures — iv. 3 

well, call liim hither — v. 3 

and call him, madam, do him. ramin^ o/SA, 1 (ind.) 
C'hristophero Sly; call not me .... — 2 (ind.) 
call home thy ancient thoughts . . — 2 (ind.) 
you would call out for Cicely Uacket — 2 (ind.) 
not call nic, husband? my men (rep.) — 2 (ind.) 

■what must I call her? — 2 (ind.) 

so lords call ladies — 2 (ind.) 

cull him lialf a score knaves — i. 2 

V iiat may I call yoiu- name — ii. 1 

frets call you these? quoth she — ii. 1 

while she did call me, rascal fiddler.. — ii. 1 
t'ueycallme— Katharine, that do.... — ii. 1 

call you me daughter? now — ii. 1 

call "you this garaiut? tut! — iii. 1 

he calls for wme — iii. 2 

my haste doth call me hence — iii. 2 

who is that calls so coldly? — iv. 1 

call forth Nathaniel, Joseph, Nicholas — iv. 1 

they are. Call them forth — iv. 1 

1 call them forth to credit her — iv. 1 

come, and know her keeper's call .... — iv. 1 
go, call my men, and let us straight — iv. 3 

please it you, that I call? — iv. 4 

please to call it a rush candle — iv. 5 

call forth an officer — v. 1 

what a foolish duty call you this?.... — v. 2 
which I'll not call a creature of . . Winter's Tale, ii. I 
beseech your highness, call the queen — ii. 1 
our prerogative calls not yoiu- counsels — ii. 1 
the keeper of the prison, call to liim — ii. 2 

I pray you now, call her — ii. 2 

you'd call your children yours — ii. 3 

I'll not call you tyrant ii. 3 

she durst not call me so — ii. 3 

kneel and call.me father? _ ii. 3 

not be long before I call upon iii. 3 

Perdita, I pr'ythee, cairt _ iii. 3 

some call him Autolycus iv. 2 

which some call nature's bastards .. iv. 3 

and do not call them bastards iv. 3 

they call him Doricles — iv. 3 

they call themselves saltiers — iv. 3 

call this, yom- lack of love — iv. 3 

whom son I dare not call — iv. 3 

desperate, sir. So call it — iv. 3 

that I may call thee something — iv. 3 

he would not call me son iv. 3 

let him call me, rogue, for being .... iv. 3 

that I should call you brother — v. 1 

business calls me trom you now.. Comedy of Err. i. 2 

sconce call vou it? _ ii. 2 

thyself I call it, being strange to me — ii! 2 

hcjw can she thus then call us by — ii. 2 

cheer her, call her wife _ iii. 2 

why call you me love? call my — iii' 2 

call tliyself, sister, sweet iii. 2 

she that doth call me husband iii. 2 

every one doth call me by — iv! 3 

let's call more help _ jy. 4 

go call the abbess hither v! I 

yet did she call me so _ v 1 

her sister here, did call me — v" 1 

Paddock calls: anon; fair is foul Machelh i] 1 

from him, call thee thane of i. 3 

lest occasion call us, and shew ti9 — ii' 2 

make so bold to call, for 'tis — ii. 3 

a hideous trumpet calls to parley — ii. 3 

our time does call upon us _ iii. 1 

and stay there till we call _ iii. 1 

I'll call upon you straight _ iii 1 

our masters? Call them, let me — iv. 1 

when none can call our power _ v. 1 

do call it valiant fury v. 2 

what needful else that calls upon us — v! 7 

I am thy grandam, Richard; call me so ..John, i. 1 

be George, I'll call him Peter — i. 1 

call for our chiefest men _ ii! 1 

who is it, thou dost call usurper _ ii! 1 

coll not me slanderer _ ii 1 



CAliL— call the lady Constance King John, ii. 2 

and call them mctcorSj prodigies .... — iii. 4 

they wuuld he as a call to train — iii. 4 

crul'ly love, und call it cunning — iv. 1 

tlie)i call tlieiu to our presence Richard II. i. 1 

i spit at him; call him _ i. 1 

call it not puticnec, Gaimt — i. 2 

cull it a travel that thou takest — i. 3 

hi^'h Hereford, it you call liim so .... — i. 4 

wiicii time shall call him home — i. 4 

rights, call in the letters patents — ii. 1 

Tinless you call it good, to pity him . . — ii. 1 

Barklotighly castle call you this — iii. 2 

O,' call hack yesterday, bid — iii. 2 

and nothing can we call oiu* own — iii. 2 

shall we call back Northtmiberland — iii. 3 

to come at traitors' calls, and do .... — iii. 3 

call forth Bagot: now Bagot — iv. 1 

Hereford here, whom you call king.. — iv. 1 

what name to call myself! — iv. I 

you must call him Rutland now .... — v. 2 

did I ever call for thee to pay I Henry IF. i. 2 

an' I do not, call me ^dllam — i. 2 

wliat do you call the place? — i. 3 

we'll calf up the gentlemen — ii. 1 

. and call for eggs and butter — ii. 1 

can call them all by their christian . . — ii. 4 

by the Lord, so they call me — ii. 4 

they call chunking deep, dying — ii. 4 

dost thou not hear them call? — ii. 4 

I pr'ythee call in Falstaff. — ii. 1 

call in ribs; call in tallow — ii. 4 

an' ye call me coward, I'll stab (rep.) — ii. i 

call you that, backing of yoiu- friends? — ii. 4 

all? I know not what ye call, all — ii. 4 

spit in my face, call me horse — ii. 4 

what a plague, call you him? — ii. 4 

never call a true piece of gold — ii. 4 

call in the slieriff ; now — ii. 4 

go, call him forth. Falstaff! — ii. 4 

which calls me pupil, or hath — iii. 1 

I can call spirits fi-om — iii. 1 

come, when you do call for them? . . — iii. 1 

and I will call him to so strict — iii. 2 

what call you rich? — iii. 3 

thou art a knave to call me so — iii. 3 

unless you call three fingers — iv. 2 

with him that calls not on me? — v. 1 

he calls us rebels, traitors — v. 2 

wliat, to York? call him back again. 2ife>ir!/ IF. i. 2 

and wiU you yet call yourself young? — i. 2 

and call me gossip Qiuckly ? — ii. 1 

ere Ion" they should call me madam? — ii. 1 

you call honourable boldness — ii. 1 

for fault of a better, to call my friend — ii. 2 

and therefore I call him her dream.. — ii. 2 

call him up, drawer. Cheater, call.. — ii. 4 

call me pantler and bread-chipper .. — ii. 4 

call the earls of Surrey and of Warwick — iii. I 

phrase, call you it? by this good day — iii. 2 

let them appear as I call — iii. 2 

of difference call the swords — iv. 1 

call in the powers, good cousin — iv. 3 

that may do me good, and call it — iv. 3 

call for the music in the other — iv. 4 

doth the king call? _ iv. 4 

now call we our high court — v. 2 

and wilt not call, beshrew thy — t. 3 

shall we call in the embassador Henry V.i.2 

call in the messengers sent — i. 2 

he'll call you to so hot an answer.... — ii. 4 

they will steal anything, and call it — iii. 2 

the tnunpet calls us to the breach .. — iii. 2 

we may call them, in their native .. — iii. 5 

what do you call him — iii. 6 

all otlier jades you may call beasts . . — iii. 7 

and calls them'brothers, friends — iv. (cho.) 

you may call the business — iv. 1 

call you me? [Coi.-Callino. JfH(.-Calen O] — iv. 4 

what call you the town's name — iv. 7 

they call it Agincourt. Then call . . — iv. 7 

call yonder fellow liither — iv. 7 

call him hither to me, soldier — iv. 7 

and I call you, my queen — v. 2 

would call'forth her flowing tides .... 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

speak, shall I call her in? — i. 2 

go, call her in; but, iirst — i. 2 

open the gates; it is Gloster that calls — i. 3 

1 11 call for clubs, if you _ i. 3 

of this princely train call ye the — ii. 2 

call we to mind, and mark but this. . — iii. 3 

'Talbot, captains, calls you forth .... — iv. 2 

call ray sovereign yours — iv. 2 

could but call these dead to life — iv. 7 

yet, call the embassadors — v. 1 

I'll call for pen and ink — v. 3 

to call them both— a pair of crafty . .2Henry VI. i. 2 

heard a voice to call him so — ii. 1 

and call these foul offenders to — ii. 1 

if it he fond, call it a woman's — iii. 1 

fo, call oiir uncle to oiu' presence ... . — iii. 2 

'11 call him presently, my noble .... — iii. 2 

and call them blind and dusky sky.. — iii. 2 

sometime, he calls the king — iii. 2 

disdain to call us lord; and Picardy.. — iv. I 

and calls your gi'ace u-iu-per, openly — iv. 4 

they call, false caterpillars — iv. 4 

for any that calls me other than — iv. B 

he'll never call you Jack — iv. 6 

to call poor men before them — i v. 7 

king did I call thee? — v. 1 

sirrahj call in my sons to be ray — v. 1 

call hither Clifford; bid hira — v. 1 

look in a glass, and call thy image so — v. 1 

call hither to the stake my two — v. 1 

call Buckingham, and hid him Irip.) — v. 1 

of Cumberland, 'tis Warmck callsl.. — v. 2 

to call a present parliament — v. 3 

and call them pillars, that will ZHcnryVI. ii. 3 ' 

can neither call it perfect day — ii. 5 I 



CALL— no bending knee will call thee.3/fc7i. VI. iii. 1 

should call you, lather. No more (rep.) — iii. 2 

and call Edward king. Call him my — iii. 3 

call Edward king, and at his hands. . — v. 1 

call Warwick patron, and be penitent — v. 1 

thou v/ilt, if Warwick calls — v. 1 

love, which gi'eyhcaids call divine . . — v. 6 

were it, to call king Edward's Richard III. i. 1 

ha? I call thee not — 1. 3 

' his majesty doth call for you — i.3 

and call us, orphans, wretches — ii. 2 

dread lord, so must I call you now .. — iii. 1 

thank you as you call me — iii. 1 

whom our manners call — the prince — iii. 7 

call them again, sweet prince — iii. 7 

well, call them again; lam not — iii. 7 

go, call him hither, boy — iv. 2 

quickly shall call home to high — iv. 4 

that calls your beauteous daughter (rep.) — iv. 4 

dear mother, (I must call you so) — iv. 4 

call for some men of sound — v. 3 

call up lord Stanley, bid him — v. 3 

attaclied; call him to present trial.. Henij/r///. i. 2 

sir, it calls, I fear, too many — ii. 1 

cardinal, pr'ythee, call Gardiner to me — ii. 2 

sir, call to mmd that I have been .... — ii. 4 

she's going away. Call her again — ii. 4 

to call back her appeal she intends .. — ii. 4 

I dare now call mine own — iii. 2 

you must no more call it York-place — iv. 1 

it is not you I call for ; saw ye — iv. 2 

I must to bed; call in more women . . — iv. 2 

(when heaven shall call her from .... — v. 4 
call here my varlet, I'll unarm . . Troilus * Cress, i. 1 

they call him, Ajax ' — i. 2 

[ Co/.] and call them shames — 1.3 

(which, slanderer, he imitation calls) — i. 3 

our policy, and call it cowardice — i.3 

when fitness calls them on — i. 3 

they call this,— bed- work, mappery . . — i.3 

with once voice call Agamemnon .... — i. 3 

of Troy, call you yourself iEneas? . . — i. 3 

to-morrow with his trumpet call .... — i. 3 

call some knight to arms — ii. 1 

you may call it melancholy — ii.3 

this noble state, tocall upon liim .... — ii. 3 

shall I call you father? — ii. 3 

to call together all his state — ii.3 

if the king call for him at supper .... — iii. 1 

if she call your activity in question. . — iii. 2 

call them all— Pandars — iii.2 

aloud to caU for recompense — iii. 3 

go call Thersites hither, sweet — iii. 3 

(or, rather, call my thought — iv. 1 

I'll call mine uncle down — iv. 1 

which, I beseech you, call a virtuous — iv. 4 

in this I do not call your faith — iv. 4 

they call him Troilus; and on — iv. 5 

.lEneas, call my brother Troilus to me — iv. 5 

who calls? Dionied. Calchas, I think — v. 2 

shipmeu do the hurricano call — v. 2 

Cassandra, call my father to — v. 3 

call the man before thee Timon of Athens, i. 1 

I call the gods to witness — i. 1 

why dost thou call them — i. 1 

and call him to long peace — i. 2 

properer can we call our own — i.2 

I'll call on you. None so welcome . . — i. 2 

to call upon lus own — ii. 2 

or falsehood, call me before the — ii- 2 

who can call him his friend — iii. 2 

away in a cloud: call him, call him.. — iii. 4 

call me to your remembrances — iii. 5 

vicious strain, and call it excellent . . — iv. 3 

call the creatures, whose naked — iv. 3 

and call him noble, that was now Coriolanus, i. 1 

I see him stamp thus, and call thus. . — i.3 

call thither all the officers of — i. 5 

where is he? call him hither — i. 6 

call him, with all the applause — 1.9 

(I cannot call you Lycurguses) — ii. 1 

Coriolanus must I call thee? — ii. 1 

we call a nettle, but a nettle — ii. I 

call for Coriolanus. He doth — ii.2 

he himself stuck not to caU us — ii. 3 

custom calls me to't; what custom .. — ii.3 

call 't not a plot; the people cry .... — iii. 1 

the rabble call our cares, fears — iii. 1 

go, call the people; in whose name .. — iii. 1 

who was wont to call them woollen.. — iii.2 

call me their traitor ! thou — iii. 3 

ray master calls for him. CotusI .... — iv. 5 

pr'ythee call my master to him — iv. 5 

yet one time he did call me by my . . — t. 1 

call all your tribes together — v. 4 

to call me to your senate — y. 5 

who calls! Bid every noise (rep.) ..Julius Ciesar, i. 2 

when it is lighted, come ana call me here — ii. 1 

call it my fear, that keeps you — ii.2 

and call in question our necessities . . — iv. 3 

call Claudius, and some other — iv. 3 

calls my lord? I pray you, sirs — iv. 3 

so, call the field to rest : and let's — v. 5 

both? call in the messengers Antony ff Cleo. i. 1 

we cannot call her winds and waters — i.2 

your honour calls you hence — i.3 

call on him for't; but, to confound . . — i. 4 

for so he calls me; now I feed myself — i. o 

say thou, shall call her mistress — i. b 

time calls upon us: of us must — ii.2 

call the slave again; though I am (rep.) — ii. 5 

whom tliey call my father's son — iii. 6 

will their good thoughts call from hira — iii. B 

that ever I shoiUd call thee, cast-away! — iii. 6 

the emperor calls for Canidius — iii. 7 

call to me all my sad captains — iii. \ 1 

call all his noble captains to my lord — iii. 11 

he calls me boy; and chides. — iv. 1 

call forth mv household servants .... — iv. 2 

call for Enobarbus, he sliall not — iv. :i 



CAL 



CALL-call my guard (rep.) Anlony ^iCleo.iv. 12 

methiiiks, I hear Antony call — v. 2 

that I might hear thee call great Caasar — v. 2 
DolabeUa sent from Cicsar; call him — v. 2 
protection; calls him I'osthmnus ....Cymfjeliiie,i. 1 

call my women: think on — i. G 

foiu- o' the clock, I pr'thce, call me .. — ii. 2 
do you call me fool/ As 1 am mad .. — ii. 3 
make 't an action, call witness to 't.. — ii. S 

■which I did call my father — ii.'S 

or robbery, call it what you will .... — iii. 3 

call her before us; for we have — iii. 5 

I were best not call ; I dare not call . . — iii. G 
young gentlemen, that call mo fatlicr — v. 5 
this gentleman, whom I call I'olydore — v. 5 

call forth your soothsayer — V. & 

which we caU mollis aer; and mollis — v. 5 
rape, call you it, my lord, to seize. Titus Anclron. i. 2 
go home, call for sweet water (rep.) .. — ii. 5 

and fair men call for grace — iii. 1 

to that I call: what, wilt thou — iii. 1 

my brother I 'tis sad Titus calls — v. 2 

or else I'll call my brother back again — v. 2 

and calls herself, "Revenge — v. 2 

boots it thee, to call thyself a sun? . . — v. 3 

doth your highness call? Thaliard Pcrictes,i. 1 

for mine, if 1 may call't ott'ence — i. 2 

the good king Simonides, do you call him? — ii. 1 

call It by what you will, the day — ii. 3 

that calls me traitor, I retiurn the lie . . — ii. 5 
doth my lord call? Get fire and meat . . — iii. 2 
hundreds call themselves your creatures — iii. 2 
the master calls, and trebles their confusion — iv. 1 
and though you call my course unnatiural — rv. 4 

well ; call forth, call forth — iv. 6 

call up some gentlemen (rep.) — v. 1 

startle me, to call thyself Marina — v. 1 

calls my gracious lord? — v. 1 

call and give them repetition — v. 2 

call Fraaee; who stirs? call Burgundy Lear, i. 1 

let pride, which she calls plainness — i. 1 

most loath to call yom- faults — i. 1 

•which I would fain call master — i. 4 

call the clnt|ioll back — i. 4 

go you, call hither my fool — i. 4 

dos't thou call me fool, boy? — i. 4 

necessity will call discreet proceeding — i. 4 

call my train together — i. 4 

I whicli I can call but now) I have heard . . — ii. 1 

why dost thou call him kuave? — ii. 2 

call not your stocks for me — ii. 2 

which I must needs call mine — ii. 4 

come when it will, I do not call it — ii. 4 

from those that she calls servants — ii. 4 

he calls to horse — ii. 4 

but yet I call you servile ministers — iii. 2 

Frateretto calls me; and tells me — iii. 6 

bosomed with her, as far as we call hers . . — v. 1 

and call itself your brother — v. 3 

call by thy trumpet — v. 3 

upon this call o' the trumpet — v. 3 

my master calls, and I must not say — v. 3 

wfiy caU you for a sword? Romeo ^-Juliet,!. 1 

call her forth to me — i. 3 

how now, who calls? Your mother . . — i. 3 

call good Mercutio — ii. i 

as maids call medlars, when they . . — ii. 1 
that which we call arose, by any.... — ii. 2 

call me but love, and I'll be new — ii. 2 

it is my soul, that calls upon — ii. 2 

forget why I did call thee back — ii. :; 

enough I may but call her mine .... — ii. G 
in that sense, may call him — man . . — iii. 1 

thy fault our law calls death — iii. 3 

then starts up, and Tybalt calls — iii. 3 

call thee back with twenty himdred — iii. 3 

but that ajoy past joy calls out — iii. 3 

that we may call it early by and by — iii. 4 

all men call thee fickle — iii. S 

■n-ho is't that calls? is it my ladj' mother?— iii. 5 
thy eyes, which I may call the sea . . — iii. 5 
do" thou but call my resolution wise — iv. 1 

I'll call them back again to — iv. 3 

they call for dates and quinces in ... . — iv. 4 
call Peter, he will show thee where . . — iv. 4 

help! help!— call help! — iv. 5 

who calls so loud? come hither, man — v. I 

I will go call the watch — v. 3 

call a Ughtning before death (rep.) .. — v. 3 

that calls our person from our — v. 3 

ran awa^ to call the watch — v. 3 

believe his tenders, as you call them? . . Hamlet, i. 3 

av, fashion you may call it — i, 3 

I'll call thee, Ilaralet, king, father — i. 4 

so I call it, since not the exterior — ii. 2 

the common stages, (so they call them) . . — ii. 2 

if you call me Jephtha, my lord — ii. 2 

wliio calls me villain? breaks my pate — ii. 2 

what do you call the play? — iii. 2 

call me what instrument you will — iii. 2 

I'll call upon you ere you go to bed — iii.,3 

calls virtue, hypocrite; takes oft' — iii. 4 

you cannot call it love — iii. 4 

call you, his mouse ; and let Mm — iii. 4 

we'll call up our wisest friends — iv. 1 

who calls on Hamlet? O, here they ccjme — iv. 2 

the rabble call him lord — iv. 5 

down a-down, and you call Mm a-down — iv. 5 
we may call it herb of grace o' Sundays. . — iv. 5 

and all that we call ours, to you in — iv. .'i 

that I must call't in question — i v. 5 

the practice, and caU it, accident — iv. 7 

and that he calls for drmk — iv. 7 

maids do dead men's fingers call them .. — iv. 7 

what call you the carriages? — v. 2 

why is tills impawned, as you call it? — v. 2 

and call the noblest to the audience .... — v. 2 

call up her father, rouse him Othello, i, 1 

I'll call aloud — i. I 

call up all my people — J. 1 



n)6j 

CALL — call up my brother,— O that Otliello, i. 1 

atevery house I'll call: I may command — j. 1 

session, call thee to answer — i. 2 

this, thatyou call— love, to be a sect — i. 3 

here at the door; I pray you, call them — ii. 3 

known by, let us call thee — devil! — *ii. 3 

I pr'ythee, call him back (rcpeuled) — iii. 3 

that we can call these delicate creatures — iii. 3 
I do beseech your lordshii). call her back — iv. 1 
our full senate call all in all sufficient? . . — iv. 1 
remember; and call thy husband hither — iv. 2 

wli}' should he call her whore? — iv. 2 

he calls me to a restitution large — v. I 

and makest me call, what I intend to do. . — v. 2 
CALLAT—callat of boundless tongue. H'm^pr'sT'. ii.3 

base-born callat as she is tHenry yi. 1. 3 

to make this shameless callat know.3Hcnrj/ I'l. ii. 2 
have laid such terms upon his callat . . Otliello, iv. 2 

CALL'DST— thou call'dst me up at Tempest, i. 2 

thou call'dst me dog, before . . 'Mercti. of Venice, iii. 3 

thou call'dst me king? SHennj VI. iv. 3 

CALLED— thy uncle called Antonio Tempest, i. 2 

from their confines called to enact — iv. 1 

you nymphs, called Naiads — iv. 1 

called forth the mutinous winds — _ v. 1 

and come when you are called. . . . Merry Wives, iii. 3 
were called forth by their mistress . . -,- iii. 5 

which I called Koclerigo TwelfthNight, ii. 1 

if my lady liave not called up her — — ii.3 
their love may be called appetite — — ii. 4 
lowly feigning was called compliment — iii. 1 

none can oe called deformed — iii- 4 

and since you called me master — y. I 

let him be called before us.Measurefor Measure, iii. 2 

who called here of late? — iv. 2 

he is called up — iv. 2 

a young Florentine, called Claudio...iViMcA Ado, i. 1 

on the shoulder, and called Adam — i. 1 

that jealousy shall be called assurance — _ii. 2 
been always called a merciful man — — iii. 3 
would'st thou come when I called thee? — v. 1 
Bijrite, called Robin Good-fellow . . Mid- N. Dr. u. 1 

it shall be called Bottom's dream — iv. 1 

■which is called supper Love's L. Lost, i. 1 (letter) 

(so is the weaker vessel called — — i. 1 (letter) 

his disgrace is to be called boy — ..i- 2 

then called you for the I'envoy — ni- 1 

of France, that he called Rosaline . . — iv. 1 
I have called the deer the princess killed — iv. 2 
nominated, or called, Don Adriano . . — v. 1 
and trow you what he called me? — — ■v. 2 
as I think, so was he called. . Merchant of Venice, i. 2 

another time you called me dog — i. 3 

but what will you be called? As you Like tt,i. 3 

it may well be called Jove's tree — in- 2 

wliich in all tongues are called fools — v. 4 
is called the retort courteous (rep.) .. — ■y. 4 

how called you the man you Alls Well,!. 1 

give thee less to be called grateful — .u. 1 

at a place there, called Mile-end — iv. 3 

humbly called mistress — ^-3 

she called the saints to surety — y. 3 

a daughter called Katharine (rep.). TamingofSh. ii. 1 

for you are called plain Kate — n- 1 

get a father called— supposed Vincentio — _ii. 1 
Ajax— called so from Ms grandfather — in. 1 
therefore 'tis called a sensible tale. ... — iv. 1 
know, sir, that I am called llorteusio — iv. 2 

my name is called, Vincentio ^ — ly- & 

and the calf, are all called, neat . . Winter s Tale, i. 2 

this news, wMch is called true — v. 2 

and called me brother; and then (rep.) — .y. 2 
if thy name be called Luce . . Comedy of Errors , in. 1 
laidclaim to me; calledme Dromio — iii- 2 
evennowa tailor called me in Ms.... — iv. 3 
is not your name, sir, called Antipholus? — v. 1 

how far is't called to Fores? Macbeth, i. 3 

was never called to bear my part — lu. 5 

'tis called the evil ; a most mii-aculous . . — i v. 3 

it caunot be called our mother — iv. 3 

that thou art called a king KingJolm, u. 1 

our trumpet called you to this — };• ' 

since I first called my brother's father — _u- 2 
meritorious sliall that hand be called - - — in- 1 
to-day, as I came by, I called there.. Bichard II. n. 2 
and this land be called the field of . . — iy. 1 

and called mine, Percy, Ms 1 Henry IV. i. I 

be called thieves of the day's beauty _ — i. 2 
well, thou hast called her to a reckomng — i. 2 
he called them — untaught knaves.... — .1.3 
I was never called so in mine ovm . . — |n. 3 
nay, my lord, he called you Jack — — iii. 3 

he called me even now, my lord 'IHenrylV. u. 2 

thou not ashamed to be called captain? — ii. 4 
when the man of action is called on.. — ii. 4 
you were called lusty Shallow (rep.) — iji. 2 
nereis two more called than yom-.... — iji. 2 
and the whores called Mm mandrake — iii. 2 

■what is tMs forest called? — iv. 1 

'tis called Jerusalem, my noble — iv. 4 

I would, Ms majesty had called me . . — v. 2 
the king hath called Ms jparliament.. — y. 5 
this day in Germany called Meisen . . Henry V.i. 2 
those whom you called fathers, cUd . . — iii. 1 

he is called, Ancient Pistol — iii. G 

my name is Pistol called. It sorts.... — iv. 1 
this day's called; the feast of Crist)ian — iv. 3 
Ms father was called, Pliilii) of Macedon — iv. 7 

it is called Wye, at Monmouth — iv. 7 

what is this castle called, that stands — iv. 7 
3'ou called me yesterday, mountain-squire — ■v. 1 

a prisoner called— the brave lord \ Henry VI. i. 4 

they called us, for our fierceness — i. 5 

called for the truce of Winchester. ... — ii. -1 
and called unto a cardinal's degree ! . . — v. 1 

and Suifolk, am I called — v. 3 

as to be called but ■viceroy of — v. 4 

being called a hundred times •iHemyVI. ii. I 

and tMngs called whips? — ii. 1 

how art tliou called? and what is thy — v. 1 



CAL 



CALLED— shall this be called ZUenry VI. i. 1 

(as if a channel should be called a sea) — ii. 2 

my crown is called content — iii. 1 

thou hudst called me all thcie Richard III. i. 3 

arc you called l^f_'o/. Kii/ dj-awn] forth — i. 4 

wordly things, tis called ungrateful — ii. 2 

the castle, andcalled it, Rou^emout. . — iv. 2 
I called tliee then, vain flourish (rf'yj.) — iv. 4 
that called your grace to breakfast once — iv. 4 
you have a daughter called Elizabeth — iv. 4 

nor called upon for high feats Henry VIII. i. 1 

let be called before us that gentleman — i- 2 
you are called back. What need (rep.) — ii. 4 
Katharine no more shall be called queen — iii. 2 
now the king's, and called — WMtehall — iv. I 

must wait, till you be called for — v. 2 

it be called the wild and wandering. 2'roii.<5-C)-fs. i. 1 

a prince called Hector — i. 3 

modest doubt is called the beacon — ii. 2 

be called to the world's end after — iii. 2 

have a Trojan prisoner, called jUiteuor — iii. 3 

hark! you are called: some say — iv. 4 

unworthy to be called her servant. ... — iv. 4 
that proof is called impossibility .... — v. 5 
that will a screech-owl aye be called — v. 1 1 

I called thee by thy name Timon of Athens, i. 1 

these debts may well be called — iii. 4 

till we called both field and city .... Coriolnnus, ii. 2 

right noble : let him be called tor — ii. 2 

we have been called so of many — ii.3 

as cause had called you up — ii.3 

60 he might be called your vanquisher — iii. 1 
called them tuTie-plcasers, flatterers.. — iii. 1 

and manhood is called foolery — iii. 1 

he called me, father: but what o' that? — v. 1 

called you, my lord? Get me Julius Ccesar, ii. 1 

when he was called a king — ii. 1 

shall be called purgers, not murderers — ii. 1 
the knot of us be called the men .... — iii. 1 
Cleopatra, as she's called in Rome ..Ant.^r Cleo. i. 2 

that called me, timelier than — ii. 6 

Ca3sar's sister is called Octavia — ii. G 

to be called into a huge sphere — ii. 7 

Where's this cup I called for? — ii. 7 

you have not called me so, nor — iii. 

my Avars, and called them home .... — iv. 10 
I am called Dercetas, Mark Antony.. — v. 1 

Ms father was called Sicilius Cymbeline, i. 1 

he is called the Briton reveller — i. 7 

that ever country called Ms! — i. 7 

crown, and called himself a king .... — iii. 1 
the king his father called Guiderins.. — iii. 3 

Belarius, that am Morgan called — iii. 3 

before I entered here, I called — iii. 6 

who called me traitor, mountaineer. . — iv. 2 
you shall be called to no more payments — v, 4 

I am called to be made free — v. 4 

every villain be called, Posthumus . , — v. 5 
a subject who ■was called Belarius. ... — v. 5 
you called me brother, when I was but — v. b 
and then they called me, foul. Titus Andronicus, ii. 3 
not henceforth called my children . . — ii. 3 

Tamora, be called a gentle — ii.3 

if that be called deceit ' — iii. 1 

a thing witMn thee, called conscience — v. 1 
what are they called? Rapine (rep.) .. — v. 3 
this is called Pentapolis, and om* king. . Pericles, ii. 1 

deserves so to be called, for his — ii. 1 

having called them from the deep ! .... — iii. 1 
Marina was she called . . — iv. 4 (Gow. inscrip.) 
a Mug's daughter? and called Marina? — v. 1 
wlierefore called Marina? called Marina — v. 1 

a maid-child called Marina — v. 3 

thy burden at the sea, and called Marina — v- 3 
can you remember what I called the man? — v- 3 

back to me, when I called iiim? Lear, i- 4 

never gave you kingdom, called you — iii. 2 

Modo he's called, and JMahu — iii. 4 

informed Mm, then he called me sot — iv. 2 

you called, my j'oimg lady asked for.ifom. ^Jul. i. 3 
and called for, and asked for, and sought — i. 5 
were he not Romeo called, retain .... — ii. 2 

still am I called ; unhand me Hamlet, i. 4 

but called it, an honest method — ii. 2 

you have been hotly called for Othello, i. 2 

with that he called the traitor— lown — ii. 3 (song) 
Ipray you, called wind instruments? .... — iii. 1 

till Cassio be called to him — iii. 4 

he called her whore; a beggar, in his .... — iv. 2 
and her friends to be called — whore? ;. . . . — iv. 2 
my mother had a maid called Barbara . . — iv. 3 

1 called my love, false love — iv. 3 (song) 

a young Venetian, called Roderigo — v. 2 

CALLING— calling my officers . . TwelfthNigtd, ii. 5 

the very debt of your calling Mea. for Mea. iii. 2 

my reverence, calling, nor divinity.. A/ucA Ado, iv. 1 
and would not change that calling. /Is yoM Like it, i. 2 
shall flout me out ot my calling .... — iii. 3 

as calling home oui' exiled friends Macbeth, v. 7 

do thou never leave calling— Francis. IHeiiri/ZF.ii. 4 

still, and hear'st such a calling — ii. 4 

but keep my wonted calling? 1 Henry VI. iii. 1 

favour him, calling him 2Henry VI. i. 1 

Warwick is hoarse with calling thee. . — v. 2 

you sign your place and calling Henry VIII. ii. 4 

reverence to your calling makes — v. 2 

calling both the parties knaves .... Coriolanus, ii. 1 
it's no calling: but here comes Boult. . Pericles, iv. 3 

mistermed: calliug death Romeo ^-Julie', in. 3 

instrument of this your calling back.. 0^/i(.'//o, iv. 2 
CALLING- [Co;.] Callino, castoremelHtm-w .''. iv. 4 
CALL'ST—call'st thou my love ....Lnvc'iL.L. iii. 1 

that call'st for company to Taming Ot Sh. iv. 1 

what, o' devil's name, tailor, call'st thou — iv. 3 
with what thou else call'st th ne . Winer' Tale, ii. 3 
that, penitent, as thou call'st him .... — iv. 1 
that thou call'st for such store . . Comedy ofEr. iii. 1 
though thou call'st thyselt a hotter . . Macbeth, v. 7 

base tike, call'st thou me host ? Henry r. ii. 1 

call'st thou Mm a cliild? ZHenry VI. ii. 2 



CAL 

CALL'ST-cnll'st tlioii that harm?. Timnn ofAth. iv. 3 

villain 1 call'st thou that trimming .. TilasAnd. v. " 

thou call'st on liim that liates thee Lear, iii. 

CALM— and promise you ealm seas .... Tempest, v. 

be calm, ffood wind, hlow not . . TwoGen. ofl'er. i. 

imdergo tor one calm look? — v. 

the seas waxed calm, and .... Comedy of Errors, i. 

they shoot but calm words King John, ii. 

we bound our ealm contents Richard II. v. 

tlic cankers of a calm world 1 Henrii I V. iv. 

sick ot'a calm: ven, l;i>.»1 south •lllenrxj II'. ii. 

do calm tl>e fury of tlii:: nui.l-liro(l.-JHf»ri/ /'/. iii. 

he dares not calm liiscoiiti.iurlii.us.. — iii. 

that led calm lleury, tlioiigh he. ..3Ilevnj VI. ii. 

with imticncc ealm the storm — iii. 

a soul as even as a calm Henry VIII. iii. 

and married calm of states Trail, fr Cres. i. 

our bloods arc now in calm — iv. 

be calm, be ealm Coriolanus, iii. 

let's be calm. The people are abused — iii. 

when the sea was calm, all boats .... — iv. 

how calm and gentle I proceeded. .^n/ony f,-Cleo. v. 

(therein he was as calm as virtue) . . Cymbetine, y. 

trilimic speaks to calm my thoughts.. Tiius And.i. 

a charm to calm these fits — ii. 

O calm thee, gentle lord! — ■ iv. 

to calm this tempest whirling — iv. 

calm thee, and bear tiic faults — iv. 

calm, dishonourable, %'ile .... Romeo fy Juliet, iii. 

with gentle breath, calm look — iii. 

without a sudden calm, will overset — iii. 

that drop of blood, that's ealm Hamlet, \v. 

how much I had to do to calm his rage ! — iy. 
if after every tempest come such calms., O/AeWo, ii. 

CALMED — inyself have calmed iHenry VI. iii. 

is straightway calmed, and hoarded. . — iv. 
nor, being provoked, soon calmed. Troil. <§- Cres. i v. 

though calmed, they give't again Fericles, ii. 

must be be-lee'd anil calmcdliy debitor.. Of/irito, i. 

CALMEST— the calmest and most . .•iHenry IV. iii. 

CALMLY — calmly run on in obedience John, v. '1 

calmly, I do beseech you Coriolanus, iii. 3 

calmly, good Laertes llnnlel, iv. h 

CALMfJESS— yomsclf by calmness.. r/oi/o/on/.v, iii. 2 

CALPHURNIA— Calphurnia (rep.). J alius Cresar, i. 2 

Antonius, to touch Calphurnia — i. 2 

tlirice hath Calphurnia in her sleep — ■ ii. 2 

Calphurnia here, my wife, stays me — ii. 'i 
this by Calphurnia's di-eam is signified — ii. 2 
do your fears seem no>v, Calphurniai" — ii. 2 

CALUMNIATE-only to calumniate. Troil. * Cr. v. 2 

CALUMNIATING— 
to envious and calinnniating time . . — iii. 3 

CALUMNIOUS— calumnious knave? ..All's Well, i. 3 
under more calttminous tongues . . Henry VIII. v. 1 
scapes not calumnious strokes Hamlet, i. 3 

CALUMNY-and smell of calumny.Mea./orA/ea. ii. 4 
calumny the whitest virtue strikes . . — iii. 2 

that calumny doth use (rep.) Winter's Tale, ii. 1 

snow, thou snalt not escape calumny. . Hamlet, iii. 1 

CALVED — though calved i' the porch . . Coriol. iii. 1 

CALVES — they are sheep and calves Hamlet, v. 1 

CALVES-SKINS— and of calves-sldns too — v. 1 

CALYDON— heart of Calydon 2 Henry VI. i. I 

C AJIBIO — his name is Cambio, . . . Taming of Sh. ii. 1 

welcome, good Cambio — ii. 1 

it likes me well; Cambio, hie you.... — iv. 4 

Cambio. What say'st thou — iv. 4 

hard, if Cambio go without her — iv. 4 

Cambio comes not all this while — v. 1 

this my Cambio? Cambio is changed — v. 1 

CAMBRIA— I am in Cambria.. CymteJinc, iii. 2 Get.) 
in Cambria are we bom — v. 5 

CAMBRIC— cambrics, lawns Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

your cambrics were sensible as Coriolanus, i. 3 

sharp neeld wound the cambric. . Pericles, iv. (Gow.) 

CAMBRIDGE— earl of Cambridge. Hency T. ii. (cho.) 
my lord of Cambridge, and my kind — ii. 2 

though Cambridge, Scroop, and Grey — ii. 2 

then Richard, earl of Cambridge — ii. 2 

my lord of Cambridge here, you know — ii. 2 
bounty bound to us, than Cambridge is — ii. 2 
name of Richard earl of Cambridge . . — ii. 2 

Richard, earl of Cambridge, for 1 Henry Vl.ii. i 

earl of Cambridge, lost his head — ii. 5 

earl of Cambridge, then derived from — ii. 5 
married Richard, earl of Cambridge. 27/f?ir!/ VI. ii. 2 

CAMBYSES— in king Cambyses' vtia.MIenrylV. ii. 4 

CAME—before we came unto this Tempest, i. 2 

that we came from thence? — i. 2 

how came we ashore? — i. 2 

which now came from him i.2 

how came that widow in? — ii. 1 

the rarest that e'er came there — ii. 1 

he came alive to land ii. 1 

Bay, how came you hitlier? _ v. 1 

since I came to tills isle v. 1 

a friend that came from him . . Two Gen. of Ver. i. 3 

it came hardly off ii. 1 

from whence you came? — ii. 4 

whence came you? iv. 1 

and I came no sooner into iv. 4 

unhappy were 3-0U, madam, ere I came — v. 4 

he came of an errand to me Merry Wives, i. 4 

even .as you came in to me ii. 2 

your worship would kill liim if he came — ii. 3 

slip away ere he came iv. 2 

for so soon as I came beyond .Eton .. iv. 5 

but I came from her, master Brook . . v. 1 

1 came yonder at Eton to marry — v. 5 

O, it came o'er my ear like the . . Twelfth Night, i. 1 

whence came you, sir? i. 5 

when came he to tills town? v. 1 

but when I came to man's estate . . — v. 1 (song) 

when I came, alas! to wive — v. i (song) 

but when I came imto my bed .... — v. 1 (song) 

this we came not to, only for Mea./or Mta. i. 3 

air, she came in great with child — ii. 1 

how eame it that the absent duke — iv. 2 

came not to an undoubtful proof — iv. 2 



[97] 



CAME— I came to her from C\a,\i<i\o.Mea.forMea. v. 1 

came I hither, to speak, as from his . . — v. I 

proportions come short of composition — v. 1 

with slower foot came on — v. 1 

provost, how came it, Claudio — v. 1 

never came trouble to my house Much Ado, i. I 

I came yonder from a great supper . . — i. 3 

how came you to this? — i. 3 

of passion came so near the life — ii. 3 

I came hither to tell you — iii. 2 

I came to seek you both — v. 1 

let me go with tliat I came for — v. 2 

how came her eyes so bright?. .Jl/(rf. A'. 's Dream, ii. 3 

that next came in her eye — iii. 2 

(so it eainc to pass) Titania waked — iii. 2 

how came these tilings to pass? .... — iv. 1 

tell me how it came tills night — iv. 1 

hearing our intent, came here — iv. 1 

I cannot truly say h(jw I came here — iv. 1 

I came with itiermia liither — iv. 1 

I from Thebes came last a conqueror — v. 1 

iCol. iv?i(.]-and then came Pyramus — \. 1 

gentle lady, before I came Love's L. Lost, ii. 1 

until the goose came out of door . . — iii. I 

thus came your argument in — iii. 1 

he came, saw, and overcame : he came — i v. 1 (let.) 

who came? the king? why did he.. — iv. 1 (let.) 

to whom came he? to the beggar.... — iv. 1 (let.) 

when he came to fivescore — i v. 2 

madam, came notliing else along . . — v. 2 

said, I came o'er Ms heart — v. 2 

found it, or came by it Merchant of Venice, i. 1 

that came hither in company of -^ i.2 

he eame too late, the ship was — ii. 8 

with one fool's head I came to woo . . — ii. 9 

a day in April never came so sweet . . — ii. 9 

I often came where I did hear of her — iii. 1 

there came divers of Antonio's creditors — iii. 1 

came you from Padua — iv. 1 

that your messenger came, in loving — iv. 1 (let.) 

came you from old Bellario? — iv. 1 

and I came to accLuaiut you with../lsi/cu Liheil, i. 1 

I eame hither to acquaint you withal — i. 1 

I am heartily glad 1 came liither to you — i. 1 

out of the wonder, before you came . . — iii. 2 

his fellow fault came to match it — iii. 2 

she came to seek you there — iv. 1 

how I came into that desert place.... — iv. 3 

brag of,— I came, saw, and overcame — v. 2 

skirts of this ivild wood he came — v. 4 

for tlience we eame, and, after so'aie..AlVs Well, iii. 2 

you came, I tliink, from France? .... — iii. 5 

thej' will say, came you off with — iv. 1 

thence it came, that she, whom — v. 3 

we came in with Richard .. Taming of Sh. 1 (indue.) 

a quarrel, siuce I came ashore — i. 1 

why came I liither, but with that — i. 2 

though Paris came, in hope to — i. 2 

that only, came in well; sir, list .... — ii. 1 

Petruclilo came? Ay, that Petruohio came — iii. 2 

came you from the cliurch? (rep.) .... — iii. 2 

seeing this, eame thence for — iii, 2 

imprimis, we came down a foul hill. . — iv. 1 

that ever came into my note Winter's Tale, i. 1 

cast out it stiU eame home — i. 2 

how came 't, Camillo, that he did stay? — i. 2 

how came the posterns so easily open? — ii. 1 

fortune it came to us, I do — ii. 3 

before Polixenes eame to your court.. — iii. 2 

good my lord, she came from Lybia. . — v. 1 

I now came from him — v. 1 

with the manner how she came to it. . — v. 2 

but we came to see the statue of — v. 3 

which my daughter came to look upon — v. 3 

alas, too soon, we came aboard . . Com. of Errors, i. 1 

but ere they came; O let me say — i. 1 

coasting homeward, eame to Ephesug — i. 1 

from whence he came, lest he — iii. 1 

nor goldsmith, eame to me — iv. 1 

together; and therefore came not — iv. 1 

he that came behind you, sir — iv. 3 

who came in haste for it — iv, 4 

he came to me, and I delivered it ... . — i v. 4 

to-day came to my house — iv. 4 

and thereof came it, that the man — — v. 1 

we came again to bind them ^ v. 1 

I never came ^vi thin these — v. 1 

I came from Syracuse — v. 1 

we came into the world, like — v 1 

thick as tale came \_Knt can] post Macbeth, i. 3 

came missives from the king — L S (letter) 

camethey not by you? — iv. 1 

who was't came by? Two or thi'ee — iv. 1 

when I came hither to transport — iv. 3 

how came she by that light? — y. 1 

you came not ot one mother King John, i. 1 

.... .,,...„ _ J J 



he came into the world full fourteen 

by this brave duke came early to 

which here we came to spout against 

in her right we came 

whose conduct eame those powers. . . . 
O bravely eame we oti', when with . . 

half an hour since came from the — y. 

your son was gone before I came. . . . Richard II. ii 
to-day as I came by, I called there . . — ii 
an hour before I came, the duchess .. — ii, 

letters came last night to — iii 

she came adorned hither like — v 

lately came from the king . . 

there came a post from Wales 1 Henry IV. i. i 

unwelcome news came from the ... 
upon my sword came there a certain 
wnen it next came there, took it in . 
when you and he eame back from . 
when his infant fortune came to age 

close, came in foot and hand 

in Kendal green, came at my back . 
how came Falstalf s sword so hacked 
your uncle Worcester's horse came . 
the more and less came in with cap . 



ii. 1 
ii. 2 
iv. 2 
T. 5 

7 



V. 5 



CAM 



CAME— came but to be duke of 1 Henry I V. iv. 3 

tut, I came not to hear this iv. 3 

so fairly one, came not, till now iUenrylV. i. 1 

the field? eame you from Shrewsbury? — i. 1 

after liim, eame spurring hard i. 1 

he came sighing on after the — i. 3 

so came I a widow; and never — ii, 3 

and, as I came along, I met — ii. 4 

before I eame to Clement's-inn iii. 2 

he came ever in the rearward of — iii. 2 

if that rebellion came like itself iv. 1 

I came, saw, and overcame — iv. 3 

he came not through the chamber . . — iv. 4 

when I here came m, and found 110 .. iv. 4 

how I came by the crown, O God — iv. 4 

consideration like an angel came Henry V,\. \ 

never came reformation in — i . 1 

on his unfurnished kingdom came .. i.2 

asever you came of wuimn — ii. 1 

Fluellen, came you from tile bridge.. iii. a 

who came off bravely, who was shot — iii. 6 

upon these words I came, and cheered — iv. B 
all my mother came into mine eyes. . — iv. o 
since! came to France, until this instant — iv 7 

never eame any from mine — iv. s 

your majesty came not like yourself — iv. s 

they both came swiftly running 1 Henry VI. ii. 2 

we came sir, but to tell you — iii. 2 

in Ilia litter, sick, came to the field .. — iii. 2 

as we hither eame in peace — iv. 1 

to destroy, came in strong rescue .... iv. (i 

your highness came to England iHenry VI. i. 3 

to Berwick, whence they came — ii. 1 

from whence she came, and him to . . ii. 2 

came he right now to sing iii. 2 

in England, since gentlemen came up — iv. 2 
a bricklayer, when he came to age . . ~ 'w.'i 

the sea, from wlieiiee I came ZHenry VI. i. 1 

and full as oft eame Edward — i. 4 

like to lightning eame and went — ii. 1 

when came George from Burgmidy . , — ii. 1 

Warwick came to seek you out — ii. 1 

came on the part of York ii. 5 

therefore I came untoyour majesty.. — iii. 2 

my father came untimely iii. 3 

I came from Edward, as embassador — iii. 3 
I came to serve a king, and not a duke — iv. 7 

the post came from (repeated) v, 1 

the source from whence it came — v. 3 

I came into the world with my legs. . v. li 

never came poison from so sweet Richard III. i. 2 

before I came, ready to catch each . . — i. 3 

and I came hither on my legs i. 4 

murderers as yourselves came to you i. 4 

that came too lag to see him buried.. ii. 1 

they all came by his father ii. 3 

you talk of, came into my mind .... iii. 2 

your lordship came to see his end ... . iii. .5 

out since you came too late — iii. 5 

here brake off, and came away _ iii. 7 

came to me, as I followed Henry's corse — iv. 1 

and came I not at last to comfort you? iv. 4 

they came from Buckingham upon. . iv. 4 

all that I had murdered came to my tent — v. 3 
came to my tent, and cried, on! victory! — v. 3 

but he came to whisper Wolsey Henry VIII. i. 1 

the great duke came to the bar ii. i 

when I came hither, I was lord high — ii. 1 

thus it came; give heed to't — ii. 4 

how came his practices to light? .... iii. 2 

and came to the eye 0' the king — iii. 2 

duke of Buckingham came from his trial iv. i 

with modest paces came to the altar — iv. 1 

with easy roads, he came to Leicester — iv. 2 

came you from the king, my lord? .. v. 1 

I am glad, I came this way so happily — v. 2 

at length they came to the broomstaff v. 3 

when I came? Was Hector (rey.) ..Trail. ,Sf Cres.i. 2 

she came to him the other dav i.2 

she eame, and puts me her wliite .... — i. 2 

how eame it cloven? i.2 

who said he came hurt home i.2 

for my own part, I came in late — iv. 2 

I came to kill thee, cousin, and bear — iv. i 
nor came any of his bounties .Timonof .-iltiens, iii. 2 

and came into tlie world when sects — iii. 5 

how came tlie noble Timon to — . iv. 3 

but therefore came not my friend — v. 1 

which ne'er came from the lungs Coriolanus, i. 1 

there came news from him last night — i. 3 

driven, and then I came away — i. 6 

aidless came oflj and with a sudden . • — ii. 2 

and to the battle came he ■ — ii. 2 

whence came that Ancus Marcius .. — ii. 3 

on safe-guard he came to me — iii. 1 

he came unto my hearth — v. .^ 

when he came unto himself? Julius Ccesar, i. 2 

when he came to liimself again — i.2 

after that, he came, thus sad, away? — i.2 

as if they came from several citizens — i. 2 

many lusty Romans came smiling .. — ii. 2 

with her death that tidings came .... — iv. 3 

but, my lord, he came not back — v. 5 

Fulvia thy wife first came into Ant. &■ Clco. i. 2 

know then, I came before you — ii. G 

your mother came to Sicily — ii. li 

we came hither to fight with you .... — ii. i; 

the messenger came ou my guard — iv. 

why came you from your master? . . Cymbe!i/:e, i. 2 

it came in too suddenly — 1.5 

and so, I hope he came by 't — ii. 4 

brag of, came, and saw, and overcame — iii. 1 

thou told'st me, when we came from — iii. 4 

he came our enemy, remember — iv. 2 

in thissad ^^Teck? howcameit? .... — iv. 2 

as his white beo rd came to v. 3 

resumed again the part I came in -^ v. 3 

came crying 'mongst his foes — v. 4 

from stiller seats we came — v. 4 

he came in thunder — v. i 

H 



CAM 



[ y« ] 



CAME— say, how came it yoxirs? Cymbeline, v. 5 

came to me with his sword drawn . . — v. 5 
when came you to serye our Roman. . — .^f- ^ 
camo here to make us merry .... Tiiun Andron. iii. 2 

I never came there — iv. 3 

the earth from whence they came Pericles, i. 1 

stop this tempest, ere it came — i- 2 

nii;^t retiu-u from whence it came — i. 3 

how Thaliard came fall bent — ii. (Gower) 

a fire from heaven came — ii- * 

I came unto your court, for honour's cause — ii. S 

know, but you, how she came dead — JT. 4 

but there never came her like in — iv. 6 

where, since I came, diseases have — iv. 6 

that I came Avith no ill intent — iv. 6 

well assured slie came of gentle kind .... — v. 1 

how came you in these parts? — v. 1 

acrewof pirates came and rescued me .. — v. 1 

how slie came placed here within — v. 3 

knave came somewhat saucily Lear, i. 1 

when came this to you? who brought it? — i. 2 

why came not the slave back again — i. 4 

since I came hither, (whidi I can call ... . — ii. 1 

why we came to visit you — ii. 1 

came there a reeking post — ii. 4 

how came my man r the stocks? — ii. 4 

Kowland to the dai'k tower came. ... — iii. 4 (song) 

which came from one that's of — iii. 7 

my son came then into my mind — iv. 1 

when the rain came to wet me once — i v. 6 

we came crying hither: thou know'st .. — iv. 6 
came there a man, who having seen .... — v. 3 

it came eveu from the heart ot — v. 3 

in the instant came the fiery liomeo Sr Juliet, i. 1 

came more and more, and fought («p.) — i. 1 

the very them.e I came to talk of — _i. 3 

came he not home to-night? — ii. 4 

why the devil came you between us? — iii. 1 
I dreamt my lady came and found me — v. 1 

and therefore came I hither — v. 3 

hoiu'of her waking came I to take .. — t. 3 
but, when I came, (some minute ere — v. 3 

in post he came from Mantua — v. 3 

he came with flowers to strew his — — v. 3 
and therewithal came to this vault . . — v. 3 
though willingly I came to Denmark . . Hamlet, i. 2 

I came to see your father's funeral — _i. 2 

came thisfrom Hamlet to her? — ii. 2 

then came each actor on his ass — ii. 2 

it came to pass, as most like it was — ii. 2 

how came he dead? I'll not be juggled .. — iv. 5 

I came to 't that day that om- — v. 1 

how came he mad? "Very strangely — v. 1 

how these things came about — v. 2 

or came it by request, and such fair Othello, i. 3 

[C'^/.A'n/.] how came it, Michael — ii. 3 

when I came back, (for this was brief) . . — ii. 3 

how came you thus recovered? — ii. 3 

Michael Cassio, that came a wooing .... — iii. 3 

Cassio, whence came this? — iii. 4 

Cassio came hither; I shifted him away — iv. 1 

came in and satisfied him — v. 2 

came you, Cassio, by that handkerchief — v. 2 
whereon it came that I was cast — v. 2 

CAMEL— as for a camel to thread Diehard //. v. 5 

a drayman, a porter, a very camel. T/o;;. ^ Cres. i. 2 

do, rudeness ; do camel, do, do — ii. 1 

the world, than camels in their war.Con'o(a7i!«, ii. 1 
of a camel? By the mass (rep.) Hamlcl, iii. 2 

CAMELEON-the eameleon love. Two Gen. ofVer. ii. 1 
he is a kind of cameleon — ii. 4 

1 can add colours to the cameleon. .3H(?n;-?/ VI. iii. 2 
excellent, i'faith; ofthecameleon's dish. //a/7i/e^ iii. 2 

CAMELOT— cackling home to Camelot . . Lear, ii. 2 

CAMILLO— shall chance, Camillo.. Winler'sTale, i. 1 

wiiat! Camillo there? Ay, my good lord — i. 2 

Camillo, this gi-eat man will yet — i. 2 

how came't, Camillo, that he did stay? — i. 2 
I have trusted thee, Camillo, with all — i. 2 

have not you seen, Camillo — i. 2 

I say, thou liest, Camillo, and I hate — i. 2 

good-day, Camillo. Hail, most — i. 2 

Camillo, your changed complexions — i. 2 

Camillo, as you are certainly — i. 2 

dost thou hear, Camillo, I conjm'e .. — i. 2 
good Camillo. I am appointed (rep.) — i. 2 

come, Camillo; I will respect — i.2 

his train? Camillo with him? ^ — ii. 1 

Camillo was his help in this — ii. 1 

and Camillo is a federary with her . . — ii. 1 

Camillo's flight, added to their — ii. 1 

Camillo and Polixenes laugh at me. . — ii. 3 
and conspiring with Camillo to — iii. 2 (indict.) 
is, that Camillo was an honest man . . — iii. 2 
blameless, Camillo a true subject .— iii. 2 (oracle) 
recal the good Camillo; whom I . . . . — iii. 2 

I chose Camillo for the minister — iii. 2 

the good mind of Camillo tardied my — iii. 2 

poisoned good Camillo's honom- — iii. 2 

I pray thee, good Camillo, be no more — iv. 1 
as thou lovest me, Camillo, wipe not — iv. I 
I have considered so much, Camillo. . — iv. 1 
ray best Camillo! we must disguise . . — iv. 1 
I think, Camillo. Even he, my lord — iv. 3 
Camillo, not for Bohemia, nor the . . — iv. 3 
now, good Camillo, I am 60 fraught.. — iv. 3 

how, Camillo, may this, almost — iv. 3 

worthy Camillo, what colour for .... — iv. 3 
my good Camillo, she is as forward . . — iv. 3 
Camillo, preserver of my father, now of — iv. 3 
thus we set on, Camillo, to the seaside — iv. 3 
Camillo has betrayed me; whose honour — v. 1 
who? Camillo? Camillo, sir; I spake — v. 1 
in the king, and Camillo, were very . . — v. 2 
come, Camillo, and take her by the hand — v. 3 

CAMLET— you i' the camlet. . .' Henry VIII. v. 3 

CAMOMILE- though the camomile..! //p«j-.v/F. ii. 4 
CAMP — all the secrets of our camp .... All's Well, iv. 1 

captain Dumain be i' the camp — iv. 3 (note) 

in the duke of Florence's camp? .... — iv. 3 



CAMP — common caraester to the camp.. -iii'j ;>'<?/;, v. 3 
to a commoner o the camp, if I be one — v. 3 
catching hither, even to our camp. .IHenry IV. iv. 

the dullest peasant in his camp 2 Henry IF. i. 

for I shall sutler be unto the camp. . . . Henry V. ii. 

and a horrid suit of the camp — iii. 

from camp to camp, tlu:ough tlie foul — iv (chorus 

to the princes iu our camp — 

nor pibble pabble in Pompey's ca.m\i — 
seek through yomr camp to find you — 

with the luggage of our camp — 

the vengeance on the whole camp! Troil. (§- Cres. ii. 3 
not a whittle in the imruly camp. Timon of Aih. y. 2 

to the Roman camp conduct us CorioLanus, i. 7 

my noble steed, known to the camp . . — i. 9 
his funerals shall not be in om- CQ\n\).Jxd.Ctssar, v. 5 
or from Caesar's camp say. . Antony 6f Cleopatra, iv. 3 

we have beat him to nis camp — iv. 8 

the capacity to camp this host — iv. 8 

left the camp to sin m Lucrece' bed?. Titus And. iv. 1 
a warrior, and command a camp .... — iv. 2 
if the general camp, pioneers and all . . Othello, iii. 3 
CAMPEIUS— cardinal Camneius is.. Henry VIII. ii. 1 
and learned priest, cardinal Campeius — ii. 2 
cardinal Campeius is stolen away to — iii. 2 
CAMPING— with camping foes. . Alt's Welt, iii. 4 (let.) 

CAMEST— ere thou earnest here Tempest, i. 2 

how thou earnest here — i.2 

when thou earnest first — _i. 2 

how camest thou to be the siege — ii. 2 

how earnest thou hither? — ii. 2 

by tliis bottle, how thou camest hither — ii. 2 

and say how thou camest here — v. 1 

how camest thou in this pickle? — t. 1 

how camest thou by this ring?. . Two Gen. ofVer^ v. 4 
then camest in smiling, and in . . TwelfthNight, v. 1 
thou earnest here to complain .... Mea.for Mea. v. 1 

from whence thou camest All's IVeil, ii. 1 

what cause thou earnest to Ephesus.. Cojn. ofEr, i. 1 

thou camest from Corinth first — v. 1 

whence earnest thou, worthy thane? . . Macbeth, i. 2 
camest thou by these ill tidings? ..Richard II. iii. 4 
nor thou camest not of the blood .... 1 Henry IV. i. 2 
how now, Fluellen, camest thou .... Henry I', iii. 6 

camest thou here by chance iHenry VI. ii. 1 

how camest thou so? A fall off of a tree — ii. 1 

to tell thee whence thou camest ZHenry VI. i. 4 

camest to bite the world: and if (rep.) — v. 6 

and how earnest thou hither? Richardlll. i. 4 

thou camest on earth to make the .... — iv. 4 

yet earnest thou to a morsel Coriolanus, i. 9 

camest thou from where they made. . Cymbeline, v. 3 
before thou camest, and now, like . . Titus And. iii. 1 

thou camest from good descending? Pericles, v. 1 

how earnest thou hither, tell me? . . Ro7n. <5- Jul. ii. 2 
why camest thou now to murder .... — iv. 3 
CAN— hate it as an unfilled can . . Twelfth Night, ii, 3 
CANAIvIN-the canakin clink (_rep.)..Oth. ii. 3 (song) 
CANARIES— into such a canaries.. /Uerry Wives, ii. 2 
you have drunk too much canaries ..iHenrylV. ii. 4 
CANARY — her to such a canary . . Merry nives, ii. 2 

and drink canary with him — iii. 2 

thou lack'st a cup of canary Twefth Night, i. 3 

unless you see canary put me down . . — _ i. 3 

canary to it with your feet Love's L. Lost, iii. 1 

and make you dance canary All's Well, ii. 1 

CANCEL— cancel all grudge Two Gen. of Ver, j. 4 

invisible hand, cancel, and tear to Macbeth, iii. 2 

the end of life cancels all bands \HenrylV. iii. 2 

cancel his bond of life, dear God . . Richard III. iv. 4 
the power to cancel his captivity. . Julius Cajsar, i. 3 

and cancel these cold bonds Cymbeline, v. 4 

proceed to cancel of yom- days Pericles, i. 1 

CANCELLED— statutes cancelled ..3 Henry VI. v. 4 

concealed lady to our cancelled lov&.Rom.^Jul. iii. 3 

CANCELLING— cancelUngyour fame..2Hen. VI. i. 1 

CANCER— more coals to Cancer. . Troilus ^ Cres. ii. 3 

CANDIDATUS— be candidatus ti\e\i.. Titus And. i. 2 

CANDIED— candied be they and me\t..Tempest, ii. 1 

the cold brook, candied with ice. . Timon ofAth. iv. 3 

let the candied tongue lick absurd .... Hamlet, iii. 2 

CANDLE— till candles, and starlight . . Merry W.y. 5 

help me to a candle, and pen Twelfth Night, iv. 2 

not come there for the candle . . Mid. N. Dream, v. 1 

dark needs no candles now Love's L.Lost, iv. 3 

what, must I hold a candle to . . Mer. of Venice, ii. 6 
thus hath the candle singed the moth — ii. 9 
how far that little candle throws his — v. 1 

we did not see the candle — v. 1 

by these blessed candles of the night — v. 1 
seek him with candle; bring Mm...isyou Like it, iii. 1 
than without caudle may go dark . . — iii. 5 
please to call it a rush cauule. Taming of Shrew, iv. 5 

their candles are all out Macbeth, ii . 1 

out, out, brief candle! life's but — v. 5 

bell, book, and candle, shall not drive — John, iii. 3 
enough to go to bed with a candle ..\ Henry IV. ii. 1 
a caudle, the better part burnt (rep.)..'2HenryIV. i. 2 
drinks off candles' ends for flapdragons — ii. 4 

here burns my candle out ZHenry VI. ii. 6 

this candle burns not clear Henry Vlll. ill- 2 

so, out went the candle, and we were Lear, i. 4 

night's candles are burnt out . . Romeo ^-Juliet, iii. 5 
CANDLECASE-have been candlecases. Tam.ofS. iii. 2 
CANDLEHOLDER— a candlcholder.iJom. <§-/«;. i. 4 
CANDLE-MINE-candle-mine, you..2 Henry IV. ii. 4 
CANDLESTICK- 
[K)i(.] a brazen candlestick tumedi-lHerary/r. iii. 1 

sit like fixed candlesticks, with Henry K iv. 2 

CANDLE-WASTERS— 

drunk with candle- wasters Much Ado, v. 1 

CANDY— her fraught from Candy.. TwelfthNight, v. 1 

what a candy deal of courtesy 1 Henri/ IV. i. 3 

CANE-COLCiURED— [A'nt.] a little yellow 

beard; a cane-colourcd beard Merry Wives, i. 4 

CANIDIUS-is't not strange, Canidius.yln/.tSCVeo. iii .7 
Canidins, we will fight with hini by sea — iii. 7 
CanidiuB, our nineteen legions thou — iii. 7 

the emperor calls for Canidins — 111.7 

Canidins, and the rest that fell away — iv. G 



CAP 



CANKER— grief, that's beauty's canker.. rcmpe»(, i. 2 

so his mind cankers — iv. I 

the eating canker dwells. . . . Two Gen. of Verona, i. 1 

is eaten by the canker — i. 1 

I had ratlier be a canker in a hedge . . Much Ada, i. 3 

Borne to kill cankers in the Mid. N. Dream, ii. 3 

but now will canker sorrow eat King John , iii. 4 

the inveterate canker of one wound . . — v. 2 
this thorn, this canker, Bolingbroke.lHenry Jf. i. 3 

the cankers of a calm world — iv. 2 

could be kept from cankers! 2Henry I V.ii. 2 

hatli not thy rose a canker I Henry VI. ii. 4 

consuming canker eats his falsehood.. — ii. 4 

banish the canker of ambitious 2Henry VI. i. 2 

the canker gnaw thy heart Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

full soon the canker death eats. .iiomeo ^Juliet, ii. 3 

the canker galls the infants of Hamlet, i. 3 

to let this canker of our nature come... — v. 2 

CANKER-BIT— and canker-bit Lear, v. 3 

CANKER-BLOSSOM— 
juggler! you canker-blossomI.il/jd. N. Dream, iii. 2 

CANKERED — a cankered grandam's vriU..John, ii. 1 
ingrate and cankered Bolmgbroke ..I Henry IV. i. 3 
cankered heaps of strange iiiAi\evtd.2 Henry I V. iv. 4 
fight against my cankered conntry. .Coriolaiius, iv. & 
cankered with peace, to part hep!).. Rom. ff Jul. i. 1 

CANNIBAL— and with (Jannibals ..IHenrylV. ii. 4 

the hungry cannibals would not ZHenry VI. i. 4 

bloody cannibals! how sweet a plant — v. 5 
and of the cannibals that each other eat .Othello^ i. 3 

CANNIBALLY— been cannibally given. .Coiio/. iv. 5 

CANNON— as a cannon will shaot.Merry Wives, iii. 2 

he reputes me a cannon Love'sL.Lost, iii. 1 

.even in the cannon's mouth Asyou Like it, ii. 7 

they were as cannons overcharged Macbeth, i. 2 

the thunder of my cannon shall be . . King John, i. 1 
our cannon shalt be bent against .... — ii. I 
the cannons have their bowels full .. — ii. 1 

our cannons' malice vainly shall — ii. 1 

their battering cannon, charged to the — ii. 2 
he speaks plain cannon, fire, and smoke — ii. 2 

of basilisks, of cannon, culverin 1 Henry IV. ii. 3 

now the devilish cannon touches. Henry ^. iii. (cho.) 

like the brass cannon — iii. 1 

sounded like a cannon in a vault 3Henry VI. v, 2 

from the door with cannons Henry VIII. v. 3 

from the fatal cannon's womb . .Romeo ^ Juliet, v. 1 
why such daily cast of brazen cannon . . Hamlet, i. 1 

but the great cannon to the clouds — i. 2 

as level as the cannon to his blank — iv. 1 

if we could carry a cannon by our sides.. — v. 2 

the cannons to the heavens — v. 2 

I have seen the cannon, when it hath. . Othello, iii. 4 

CANNON-BULLETS— 
that you deem cannon-bullets.. ..Tirelfth Night, i. 5 

CANNONEER— what cannoneer begot .... John, ii. 2 
the trumpet to the cannoneer without. . Hamlet, v. 2 

CANNON-SHOT-roaring cannon-shot. 1 Hen. VI. iii.3 

CANON— and continent canon .Love's L.L. i. 1 (let.) 

the most inliibited sin in the canon All's Welt,i. 1 

the canon of the law is laid on him.. King John, ii. 1 
religious canons, civil laws are. Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

against the hospitable canon Coriolanus, i. 10 

'twas from the canon — iii. 1 

fixed his canon 'gainst self-slaughter 1 . . Hamlet, i. 2 

CANONIZE— to come, canonize us.Troil. ^- Cres. ii. 2 

CANONIZJiD-canonized, and worshipped. yoAn, iii. 1 
thou shalt be canonized, cardinal.. .. — iii. 4 
brazen images of canonized saints ..2Henry VI. i. 3 
why thy canonized bones, hearsed Hamlet, i. 4 

CANOPIED— when canopied with. r«>e(/Mi\'(j'A« _i. 1 
now canopied under these windows. .t'i/m6e(inc, ii. 2 

CANOPIES — tents, and canopies .. TamingofSli. ii. 1 
imder the canopies of costly state.. 2 Henrj/ IV. iii. 1 

CANOPY — embroidered canopy to . ..iHenryVI. ii. 5 
under the canopy. Under the canopy?. . Coriol. iv. 5 
shadows seem a canopy most faXal..JuliusCcesar, v. 1 

\_Col. A'n(. J— thy canopy is dust Rom. Sr Jul. v. 3 

this most excellent canopy, the air .... Hamlet, ii. 2 

CANSTICK— 
brazen canstick [/&«.- candlestick].lHenri//F. iii. 1 

CANTERBUR Y-archbishopof Canterbury. ./o/m, iii. 1 

archbishop, late of Canterbury Richard II. ii. 1 

pilgrims going to Canterbury with ..\ Henry IV. i. 2 

IS my gracious lord of Canterbury? Hem-y V. i. 2 

moved you, my lord of Canterbury. Hen? yF///. ii. 4 
installed lord archbishop of Canterbury — iii. 2 

the archbishop of Canterbury — iv . 1 

by the archbisnop of Canterbury — iv. 1 

Canterbury? Ay, my good lord — v.) 

good and gracious lord of Canterbury — v. 1 

stand up, good Canterbury — v. 1 

promotion of his grace of Canterbm-y — t. 2 
my lord of Canterbury, I have a suit — v. 2 
do my lord of Canterbm-y a shrewd . . — v. 2 

CANTLE — a monstrous eantle out ..\HenryIV. iii. 1 
the greater eantle of the world.. v4n(oni/^ Cleo. iii. 8 

CANTONS— write loyal cantons . . Twelfth Night, i. 5 

CANUS— that three-headed canus. Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

CANVAS— white canvas doublet .... 1 Henry IV.'ii.i 
I'll canvas thee between a pair of ..2Henry IV. ii. 4 

I'll canvas thee in thy broad 1 Henry VI. i. 3 

washed off a canvas climber Pericles, iv. 1 

CANZONET-supervise the canzonet.ioiJe'sL.l.iv. 2 

CAP — will wear his cap viith suspicion ?.yi/uc/i.4do, i. 1 

you shoidd wear it in your cap — iii. 4 

what's her name in the cap? Love's L. Lost, ii. 1 

ay, and worn in the cap of — v. 2 

wears her cap out of fashion All's }Vell,i. 1 

wear themselves in the cap of the time — ii. 1 
put offs cap, kiss his hand (rep.) .... — ii. 2 
coats, andcaps, and golden rings. . Taming ofSh.iv. 3 

here is the cap your worship — iv. 3 

a trick, a baby^ cap — iv. 3 

gentlewomen wear such caps as these — iv. 3 
It is a paltry cap, a custard-coffin.... — iv. 3 

I like the cap; and it I will have — iv. 3 

like to have neither cap nor gown .. — iv. 3 
that cap of yours becomes you not .. — v. 2 
before the flowers in their caps, dying. Macbeth, w . 3 



CAP 



[ 9^> ] 

CAPITOL— coinpaiiy to the Capitol. ..Corlolanus, i. 1 

nor fane, nor Cnpitol, the prayers — i. 10 

than a neeessary bencher m the Capitol — ii. 1 
on, to the Capitol. All tongues speak — ii. 1 

you are sent I'or to the Capitol — ii. 1 

let's to the Capitol; and carry with lis — ii. 1 
your number, repair to the Capitol . , — ii. 3 
to the Capitol: come; we'U be there — ii. 3 

though calved i' the porch o' the Capitol — iii. 1 

as far as doth the Capitol exceed — iv. 2 

shall us to the Capitol? O ay — iv. 6 

let's to the Capitol: 'woidd, naif my — iv. S 

see you yond' coign o' the Capitol — v. 4 

down that way towards the Capitol. Ju/i«sCffisor, i. 1 
as we have seen him in the Capitol . . — i. 2 

against the Capitol I met a lion — i. 3 

comes Caisar to the Capitol to-morrow? — i. 3 

as doth the lion in the Capitol — i. 3 

stands, as the Capitol, directly here. . — ii. 1 
hold Inm from the Capitol to-day . . — ii. 1 
and I will bring him' to the Capitol . . — ii. 1 
which drizzled Blood upon the Capitol — ii. 2 
run to the Capitol, and nothing else? — ii. 4 
and the wind brings it from the Capitol — ii. 4 

yet gone to the Capitol? — ii. 4 

to see him pass on to the Capitol .... — ii. 4 

come to the Capitol. I wisli — iii. 1 

of his death is enrolled in the Capitol — iii. 2 

briefly, I dwell by the Capitol — iii. 3 

or here, or at the Capitol — iv. 1 

to drench the Capitol; but that.. Antony SfCleo. ii. 6 

the stairs that mount the Capitol Cymheline, i. 7 

this passage to the Capitol .... Tiliis.indiomcus, i. 1 
and m the Capitol and senate's right.. — i. 1 

thou great detender of this Capitol — i. 2 

I was killed i' the Capitol Hamlet, iii. 2 

CAPITUIiATE-capitulate against us.l Hen. IK iii. 2 

or capitulate again with Rome's Coriolanus, v. 3 

CAPOCCHIA— a poor capoccliial ..Trail. ^Cres. iv. 2 

CAPON— steals her capon's leg. Two Gen. of Ver. iv. 4 

bid me to a calf's head and a capon . . Much Ado, v. 1 

break up this capon Love's L. Lost, iv. 1 

with good capon lined, with eyes..^s you Like it, ii. 7 
the capon burns, the pig falls from. . Com. of Er. i. 2 
malt-horse, capon, coxcomb, idiot — — iii. 1 

of sack, and minutes capons IHenrylF. i. 2 

and a cold capon's leg? _ — _i. 2 

but to carve a capon and eat it? — ii. 4 

item, a capon, 2s. 2d Item — ii. 4 

you are cock and capon too Cymheline, ii. 1 

you cannot feed capons so Hamlet, iii. 2 

CAPPADOCIA— of Cappadocia..^»i(o7iy ^ Cleo. iii. 6 
CAPPED— oft capped TKni. -off-capped] ..Olliello, i. 1 
CAPRICIO— this caiDricio hold inthee.^H's Well, ii. 3 
CAPRICIOUS— capricious poet . . A.v you Like it, iii. 3 
CAPTAIN— captain of us all . . Two Gen. of yer. iv. 1 
we must bring you to our captain . . — v. 3 

there is our captain — v 3 

hring you to our captain's cave — v. 3 

a fair behaviour in thee, captain . . Tu! elf Ih Night, i. 2 
a bawbling vessel was he captain of . . — v. 1 
I'll bring you to a captain in this .... — v. 1 
the captain, that did bring me first . . — v. 1 

not told us of the captain yet — v. 1 

to command the captain and all . . Mea.forMea. i. 2 
tliat in the captain's but a cholerick . . — ii. 2 

captain of our fairy band Mid. N. Dream, iii. 2 

a phoenix, captain, and an enemy .... All's Well, i. 1 
farewell, captain. Sweet monsieur.. — ii. 1 

we shall, noble captain — ii. 1 

God save you, captain ^ ii. f> 

good captain, let me be the interpreter — iv. 1 

captain, I wiU. He will betray — iv. 1 

is tliis captain in the duke of («p.) . . — iv. 3 
captain, we must be neat irep.) .. Winter' sTale, i. 2 

dismayed not this our captains Macbetli, i. 2 

piu-e soul unto his captain Christ. . . Ricliard II. iv. 1 

his captain, steward, deputy elect — iv. 1 

will you give me money, captain? .. — iv. 2 
good captain Pistol; not here (reji.).'2Henry IV. ii. 4 
captain? if captains were of my (rep.) — ii. 4 
by my troth, captain, these are. very — ii. 4 
o my word, captain, there's none such — ii. 4 
a dozen captains, bareheaded, sweating — ii. 4 
a dozen captains stay at door for you — ii. 4 
my captain, sir, commends him {rep.) — iii. 2 

lord! good my lord captain — iii. 2 

and good master corporal captain .... — iii. 2 
go, captain, and deliver to the army — iv. 2 

all to their captain, the heart — iv. 3 

Scots captain, captain Jamy (j-ep.) . . Henry V. iii. 2 

gud feith, end captains bath — iii. 2 

captain, I thee beseech to do me — iii. 6 

speak, captain, for his life — iii. 6 

the royal captain of this ruined band — iv (chorus) 
under what captain serve you? — iv. 1 

1 tell you captain, if you look in — iv. 2 

Gower is a goot captain — iv. 7 

hispleasiue, captain, I peseech you.. — iv. 8 
and, captain, you must needs be friends — iv. 8 
captain, but with this acknowledgment — iv. 8 
enough, captain; you have astonished — y.\ 
being captain of the watch to-mg\\t.\ Henry VI. ii. 1 
come hitlicr, captain : you perceive . . — ii. 2 
away, captains: let's get us from .... — iii. 2 
welcome, brave captain, and victorious — iii. 4 
a knight, a captain, and a leader .... — iv. 1 

Talbot, captains, calls you fortli — iv. 2 

wMles the honourable captaixr there — iv. i 
hear ye, captain? are you not at leisure? — v. 3 
then call our captains, and om- colours — v. 3 

BO many captains, gentlemen — v. 4 

captain, shall I stau the forlorn 2Henry I'l. iv. 1 

this villain here, being captain — iv. I 

fur your captain is brave, and vows.. — ^X''^ 
Where's captain Margaret, to itiQce..3Henry VI. ii. fi 
a wise stout captain, and persuaded.. — iv. 7 

one thing more, good captain Richard III. v. 3 

O thou! whose captain I account myself — v. 3 
captain general of the Grecian.. Troilus i^- Cress, iii. 3 



CAR 



C.\P — came in with cap and knee. . . . 1 Henry IV. iv. 3 

fitter to be worn in my cap 2HenryIV. i. 2 

answer is as ready as a borrower's cap — ii. 2 

thou shalt have a cap to-morrow — ii. 4 

I will cap that proverb Henry V. iii. 7 

weal' your dagger in your cap that . . — iv. 1 

this will I also wear in my cap — iv. i 

with his cap in hand, like — iv. & 

wearing leeks in their Monmouth caps — iv. 7 
whv wear'st thou that glove in thy cap? — iv. 7 

if I can see my glove in liis cap — iv. 7 

and stick it ill thy cap — iv. 7 

I met this man with my glove in his cap — iv. 8 

wear it for an honour in tliy cap — iv. 8 

60 pold as to wear it in my cap till . . — v. 1 

he 11 make his cap co-equal \ Henry VI. y. 1 

fling up his cap, and say — God . . . .IHenry VI. iv. 8 

throws not us his cap for joy "iHenryVI. ii. 1 

hurled up their caps, and some ten . . — iii. 7 

dare us with his cap, like larks Henry VIII. iii. 2 

the cap plays in the right hand . . Timon of Alh. ii. 1 
may throw their caps at their money — iii. 4 

time's flies, cap an'.l knee slaves — J!V *> 

did you see my cap? (rep.) — iii. 6 

observe, blow ott' thy cap — iv. 3 

thou art the cap of all — iv. 3 

they tlu-ew their caps as they Coriolanus, i. 1 

ambitious for poor knaves' caps and legs — ii. 1 
take my cap, Jupiter, and I thank thee — ii. 1 

with their caps, and shouts — ii. 1 

greasy caps, in hooting at Coriolanus' — iv. 6 
coxcombs, as you tlii'ew caps up ... . — iv. 6 

I have ever held my cap off to Ant.^ Cleo. ii. 7 

ho, says a'! There 's my cap — ii. 7 

thev cast their caps up, and carouse — iv. 10 

siicn gain the cap of him Cymheline, iii. 3 

if my cap would buy a halter Lear, i. 4 

wore gloves in my cap, served the lust — iii. 4 

fortune's cap we are not the very button. Hamlet.ii. 2 
caps, hands, and long ues, applaud it .... — iv. ."i 

a very ribband in the cap of youth — iv. 7 

nor caps, nor any petty exhibition Othello, iv. 3 

CAPABILITY— capability and sodlike. Hamlet, iv. 4 

CAPABLE— being capable of all illl Tempest^ i. 2 

if their daughters be capable. . . . Love's L. Lost. i_v. 2 
cicatrice and capable impressure.-^si/ou Lilte if, iii. 5 

heart, too capable of every line All's Well, i. 1 

so thou wilt oe capable oi a courtier's — i. 1 
if thou be'st capable of things serious. Winler'sT.iv. 3 

are capable of this ambition King John, ii. 2 

for I am sick, and capable of fears .. — iii. 1 

his flesh was capable of wounds ^HenrylV. i. 1 

ingenious, forward, capable Richard III. iii, 1 

and capable of our flesh, few are .... Henry VI 11. v. 2 
that's the more capable creature. Troilus^ Cres. iii. 3 

the means to make thee capable Lear, ii. 1 

the most part are capable of nothing . . Hamlet, iii. 2 

to stones, would make them capable . . — iii. 4 

till that a capable and wide revenge . . Othello, iii. 3 

CAPACITIES— the capacities of us . .IHenn, IV. i. 2 

CAPACITY— you be capacity of it.. il/«r!/ n'ives,i. 1 

notwithstanding thy capacity Twelfth Night, i. 1 

this is evident to any formal capacity — ii. 5 

of good capacity and breeding — iii. 4 

speak most, to my capacity .... Mid. N. Dream, v. 1 

God comfort thy capacity ! Love's L. Lost,iv.2 

your capacity is of that nature — v. 2 

"the capacity of your soft eheveril. . Henry VIII. ii. 3 
the capacity of my ruder powers.. Trail. arCres. iii. 2 

in human action and capacity Coriolanus, ii. 1 

the capacity to camp this host . . .-intonij ^- Cleo. iv. 8 
CAP-A-PE— I am courtier, cap-i-jpe. Winler'sT. iv. 3 

armed at point, exactly, cap-a-pe Hamle', i. 2 

CAPARISON- this caparison .... Winter's Tale, iv. 2 

caparison my horse ; call up Richard III. v. 3 

here is the steed, we the caparison . . Coriolanus, i. 9 

CAPARISONED-I am caparisoned. ^s you Like, iii. 2 

for all the world caparisoned like. . Tarn. ofSh. iii. 2 

CAPE— with a small compassed cape — iv. 3 (note) 

or lace for your cape Winter's Tale, iv. 3 (song) 

win this cape of land 1 Henry IV. iii. ] 

what from the cape can you discern .... Othello, ii. 1 

CAPEL — in Capel's monument ..Romeo i^ Juliet, v. 1 

it burneth in the Capel's monument.. — v. 3 

C.A.PER— he capers, he dances .... Merry Wives, iii. 2 

'faith, I can cut a caper Twelfth Night, i. 3 

let me see thee caper: ha! — i. 3 

is there here one master Caper . . Mea.for Mea. iv. 3 

run into strange capers As you Like it, ii. 4 

and he that wUl caper with me iHenrylV.i. 2 

I have seen him caper upright . . . .i Henry VI. iii. 1 

he capers nimbly in a lady s Richard 111. i. 1 

he ottered to cut a caper at Pericles, iv. 3 

C.\PKIIED— the third he capered.. Loue',« L.Lost, v. 2 

CAPERING — capering to eye her Tempest, v. 1 

he falls straight a capering. , Merchant of Venice, i. 2 

ca|)ering [Co/. Kn(.-carping] fools. .IHenry/T. iii. 2 

CAPET- Iliigh Capet also, that usurped.. He«r;^f. i. 2 

sole heir to the usurper Capet — i. 2 

and Hugh Capet's clahn. Icing Lewis. . — i. 2 
CAPIIlS-CaphL-i, ho! Caphis, I &ay\. Timon of Alh. ii. 1 
CAPILET— my horse, prey CapUet . . Twelfth N. iii. 4 
CAPIT^VINE— le grand capitame .... Henry V. iv. 4 
CAPITAL— offences being so c&pitaX'iWinler'sT. iv. 3 

but treasons, capital, confessed Macbeth, i. 3 

of capital treason we arrest you harcltichardll. iv. 1 
and military title capital, tlirough..! Henry/*', iii. 2 
of capital treason I attach you both.2Henri//>'. iv. 2 

when capital crimes, chewed Henry V. ii. 2 

she is our capital demand, comprised — v. 2 
of capital treason 'gainst the king . .'iHenry VI. v. 1 
and in such capital kind, deserves.. Cori'otenus, iii. 3 

tliine enmity's most capital — v. 3 

due to this heinous capital offence .... Pericles, ii. 4 
Edmund, I arrest thee on caiiital treason. Z,enr, v. 3 

to kill so capital a calf there Hamlet, iii. 2 

so crimef 111 and so capital in nature.... — iv. 7 
C.VPITE— shall hold of me in capite.aHenrj/ VI. iv. 7 

CAPITOL— here? to the Capitol Coriolanus, i. 1 

to know wliat's done i' the Capitol .. — i. 1 



CAPTAIN— the captain of us aXl. .Trail. e,-Cm. iv. 5 

why, how now, captain? Timon of.ithens, ii. i 

now, captain? I am a humble — iii. 5 

pardon me, if I speak like a captain — iJ!' '^ 

th' ass, more captain than the lion . . — iii. 5 
senate pom-s into captains' wounds? — iii. h 
our captain hath in every figure skill — v. 4 
if thy captain knew I were here .... Coriolanus, v. 2 
come, my captain knows you not .... — v. 2 
his captain's heart, which ir\..Anlony>j Cleopalra.i. 1 
entreat yom* captain to soft and gentle — ii. 2 
I do beseech thee, captain, and hear — ii. 7 

hoi noble captain! Come — ii. 7 

so thy grand captain Antony shall set — iii. 1 
than his captain can, becomes (rep.) — iii. I 

call to me all my sad captains — iii. 11 

call all his noble captains to my lord — !!!•'' 
a diminution in our captain's brain — iii. 11 
now thy captain is even such a body — iv. 12 

my dear master, my captain — iv. 12 

bid the captains look to 't Cymheline, i v. 2 

here is a captain, let him teW.. Titus Andronicus, v. 3 
come hither, captain; hark, take thou.. ..Lear, v. 3 

give it the captain. Haste thee — v. 3 

courageous captain of compliments. ilom. ^ Jul. ii. 4 

go, captain, from me greet Hamlet, iv. 4 

let four captains bear Hamlet — v. 2 

come, captain, will you go? Othello, i. I 

our great captain's captain, left in — ii. 1 

I meet the captains at the citadel — iii. 3 

CAPTAINSHIP— the captainship.. Timon of Alh. v. 2 

have nicked his captainship Antony^- Cleo. iii. 11 

CAPTIOUS— captious and intenible . . All's Well, i. 3 
CAPTIVATE— husbands captivate.. IHenry;-'/. ii. 3 

have been captivate ere now — v. 3 

their woes, whom fortune captivates?. 3Henry VI. i. 4 

CAPTIVATED— captivated, bound, iowe's L. L. iii. 1 

CAPTIVE— the captive is enriched — iv. I (letter) 

beware of being captives, before j'Ou..JH's Well, ii. 1 

whoso words took all ears captive — v. 3 

never did captive with a freer heart. . Richard //. i. 3 
and in a captive chariot, into Rouen. .Henri/F. iii. a 
like captives bound to a triumphant. .1 Henry VI. i. 1 

who thunders to his captives ZHenryVl. ii. 1 

and turned my captive state to — iv. 6 

take away this captive scold — v. 5 

grossly grew captive to his honey . . Richard 1 1 1, iv. 1 
whom the Greeks held captive . . Troilus ^ Cres. ii. 2 
when many times the captive Grecians — v. 3 
as most abated captives, to some . . Coriolanus, iii. 3 
in captive bonds his chariotwheels?..Ju(.('<esar,i. 1 
brought many captives home to Rome — iii. 2 
withCajsar, or not captive to liiva.. intony^Cleo. ii. !> 

slaughter of you their captives Cymheline, v. 

came you to serve our Roman captive? — v. 5 

and return, captive to thee TitusAndron. i. 2 

more than so, captives, to be advanced — iv. 2 

you have the captives who were Lear, v. 3 

CAPTIVED— all our princes captived. . Henry V. ii. 4 

CAPTIVITY— 'gainst my captivity .... Macbeth, i. 2 

death, smeared with captivity! ....IHcrirj/;'/. iv. 7 

who kept him in capti\aty, till ....2 Henry VI. ii. 2 

to set him free from his captivity . . ZHenry VI. iv. 5 

■ to cancel his captivity JuliusCcesar, i. 3 

fiven to captivity me and my utmost. . Olliello, iv. 2 
PTUM— te captum quam queas. Taming of Sh. i. 1 
CAPUCIUS— your name Capucius./Jenri/ Vlll. iv. 2 
CAPULET— Diana Capulet . . All's hell, v. 3 (pet.) 

derived from the ancient Capulet — v. 3 

down with the Capulets! down with. /?om. <5- Jul. i. 1 
thou villain, Capulet: hold me not . . — i. 1 
by thee, old Capulet, and Montague — i. 1 
you, Capulet, shall go along with me — i. 1 

mine uncle Capulet, his wife — i. 2 (note) 

my master is the great rich Capulet.. — i. 2 
at this same ancient feast of Capulet's — i. 2 

nay, sit, good cousin Capulet — i. a 

is she a Capulet? O dear account ! . . — i. 5 

and I'll no longer be a Capulet — ii. 2 

on the fair daughter of rich Capulet — ii. 3 

the kinsman of old Capulet — ii. 4 

the day is hot, the Capulets abroad — iii. 1 

by my head, here come the Capulets — iii. 1 
good Capulet— which name I tender — iii. 1 
my father Capulet will have it so. . . . — iv. 1 
all the kindred ol the Capulets lie . . — iv. 1 
run to Capulet's, raise up the Montagues — v. 3 
these enemies? Capulet! Montague! — v. 3 
CAR-to guide the heavenly car.. TwoGen. of Ver. iii. 1 

be diawn from us wdth cars Twelfth Srjhl, ii. j 

Pliibbus' car shall shine from liur Mid. A . Dr. i. 2 

boimd to a triumphant car 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

Phieton hath tumbled from his car .. ZHenry V I. i. 4 

thy burning car never had — ii. 6 

shall raise his car above — iv. 7 

bright track of his fiery car Richard III. v. 3 

[Cot. A'n/.] confessor JohndelaCar..HeHry>'/iJ. i. 1 
[Col. A'n;.] to permit John de la Car — i. 2 
ICol. A'n(.] and Jolm Car, confessor to — ii. 1 

like hob' Phcebus' car .Intony^ Ckopatra, iv. 8 

liad it been all the worth of his car . .' Cymheline, v. 5 
when thy car isloadeu Vi-ith .. Titus Andronicus, v. 2 

CARAT- less fine in carat iHenry IV. iv. 4 

CARAWAY — with a dish of caraways — v. 3 

CARBONADO- make a carbonado. . 1 Henry IV. v. 3 

notched him like a carbonado — Coriolanus, iy. 6 

or I'll so carbonado your shanks Lear, ii. 2 

CARBONADOED— carbonadoed face. yl«'s»'e«, iv. 5 

heads, and toads carbonadoed Winler'sTale, iv. 3 

CAKBUNCLE— rubies, carbuncles.Com.o/iVr. iii. 2 
acarbuncle entire, as big .as thou ....Coriolanus, i. 4 

a carbuncle of PhcEbus' wheel Cymheline, v. 5 

a plague-sore, an embossed carbuncle .... Z-ear, ii. 4 

with eyes like carbuncles, the hellish . . Hamlet, ii. 2 

CARBUNCLED-were it carbuncled.Jn(.($-Cieo.iv.8 

CARCASE-carcase of a boat [An(.-butt]. 7'empes(, i. 3 

give his carcase to my hounds Mid. N. Dr. iii. 2 

where the carcases of many ..Merch.of Venice, iii. 1 
shakes the rotten cai-case of old 6.&&t\\. King John, iL 2 
as the dead carcases of unburied Coriolanus, iii. 3 



CAR 



[ 100 ] 



CARCASE-a carcase fit for hounds. /«(/«« Ccfs 

his body's a passable carcase CytnbeL 

honours to have saved tlieir carcases" 



— V. 3 



Taming of Sh. ii. 1 

Macbeth, \. 3 

KhigJoftn, V. 2 

..AllennjVI. v. 3 
AnI. Sf Cleo. iv. 12 



iii. 1 
iii. 1 
iii. 1 
iii. 4 
iii. 4 



V. 7 






ii. 1 



iii. 1 



iii. 3 



CARD— faced it witli a cai-d of 

Icnow i' the sliipmau's card . . 

the best cards for the game . . 

there lies a cooling card 

has packed cards with Ctesar 

as sure a card as ever won .... Tilus A/tdmnnus, v . i 

■we must speak by the card Hamlet, v. 1 

he is the card and calendar of gentry — — v. '2 

CARDER— the spinsters, carders Hcnnj VIII. i. 2 

CARDINAL— of fair Milan cm&iuaX.mngJohn, iii. 1 

thou canst noi, cardinal, devise — iii. 1 

food father cardinal, cry thou, amen 
in" Philip, listen to the cardinal 

to the cardinal? What should (rep.) 

thou shalt be canonized, cardinal 

father cardinal, I have heard you say 
brought that letter from the cardinal? 
the cardinal cannot make your peace 

to the disposing of the cardinal 

thee in thy broad cardinal's hat 1 Henry VI. i. 3 

my feet I'll stamp thy cardinal's hat — i. " 
cardinal, I'll be no breaker of the law — i 
this cardinal is more haughty than . , — i 
and called unto a cardinal's degree! — v 

once he come to be a cardinal — v, 

let us watch the haughty cardinal ..iUenry VI. i 
duke Humphrey, or the cardinal .... — i 
oft htive I seen the haughty cardinal — i 
and the cardinal, with Somerset's . , — i 

as I think, it washy the cardinal 

from the rich cardinal, and from .... 

Suflblk and the cardinal's broker 

my lord cardinal's man, for keeping 
college of the cardinals would choose 
fancy not the cardinal, yet must we 
cardinal's not my better in the field 
lord cardinal, I will follow Eleanor.. 

ay, mj' lord cardinal 

cardinal, is your priestliood gro^vn .. 

cardinal, I am witli you 

to my lord cardinal to keei), until . . 

lord cardinal, he is your prisoner 

but my lord cardinal, and you 

lord cardinal, if thou think'st on ... . 

lord cardinal, will your grace Richard III. iii. 1 

our reverend cardinal carried Henry VIII. i. 1 

dift'erence betwixt jou and the cardinal — i. 1 
the cardinal's malice and liis potency — i. 1 

this cunning cardinal the articles — i. 1 

he privily deals with our cardinal .. — i. 1 
thus the cardinal does buy and sell . . — i. 1 
the o'er-great cardinal hath showed — i. 1 

my good lord cardinal, they vent — i. 2 

my lord cardinal, you that are blamed — i. 2 
menaced revenge upon the cardinal — i. 2 

my learned lord cardinal, deliver — i. 2 

tlie cardinal's and sir Thomas Lovell's — i. 2 
to the cardinal's; yoiu' lordsliip is. . . . — i. 3 

had the cardinal but half my — i. 4 

you have found him, cardinal — i. 4 

I'll tell you, cardinal, I should judge - i. 4 
good my lord cardinal, I have half . . — _i. 4 
tlie cardinal is at the end of this .... — ii. 1 

the cardinal instantly will find — ii. 1 

cither the cardinal, or some about him — ii. 1 
'tis the cardinal; and merely to revenge — ii. 1 

the cardinal will have his will — ii. 1 

a man of my lord cardinal's — ii. 2 (letter) 

this is the cardinal's doing — ii. 2 

my good lord cardinal? O, my AVolsey — ii. 2 
cardinal, pr'y thee, call Gardiner tome "* " 

even of yoiu-self, lord cardinal 

lord cardinal,— to you I speak — 

my lord cardinal, I do excuse you . . — 
speak my good lord cardinal to this point — 
perceive, these cardinals trifle with me — 
two great cardinals wait in the presence — 

lord cardinal, the willing'st sin — 

two reverend cardinal virtues (rep.) — 
the cardinal cannot stand under them — 
cardinal's letter to the pope miscarried — 
how that the cardinal did entreat. ... — 
digest this letter of the cardinal's? .. — 

as the agent of our cardinal — 

'tis so. The cardinal — observe — 

my lords; saw you the cardinal? .... — 
hear the king's pleasure, cardinal .. — 
the heads of all thy brother cardinals — 

into your own hands, cardinal — 

kissing in your arms, lord cardinal. . — 

blush, and cry guiltj, cardinal — 

lord cardinal, the king's further .... — 
well, my little good lord cardinal. ... — 

for, since the cardinal fell, that — 

this cardinal, though from a humble — i.. 

CARDINALLY— cardinally given. .Vea. /or Mea. ii. 

CARD-MAKLER-a card-maker. Taming of Sh. 2 (ind, 

C ARDUUS— Carduus Benedictus Much Ado, iii. 

CARE — good boatswain, have care Tempest, i. 

what care these roarers for the name of .— i- 

notliing but in care of thee — i. 

witli human care; and lodged thee . . 

if of life you keep a care 

let no man take care for himself . . . 

and yet I care not Two Gen 

I care not though he — n. 

I thank thee for thine honest care — iii. 

what need a man care for — iii. 

I care not for that neither — iii. 

tliat cares not for your love — iv. 

I care not for her — _v, 

for he cares not what he puts .... Merry Wives, ii. 

I cai-e not for that — iii. 

have a care of your entertainments . . — iv. 
I am sure, care's an enemy to lii'ii. TwelfthNight, i. 3 

an' he will, I care not — i. 5 

ay, ay; I care not for good life — ii. 3 



— ii. 2 



ii. 4 

ii. 4 

iii. 1 

iii. 1 

iii. 1 



iii. 2 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 



III. 2 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 
iv. 1 



— ii. 1 (song 
. 0/ Verona, ii. 



CARE— I do care for something . . Twelfth Nighl, iii. 1 
do not care for you: if that be to care — iii. I 
some of my people have a special care — iii. 4 

?rays you to have a care ofliini — iii. 4 
care not who knows so much — iii. 4 

thauks, provost, for thy care Mea. for Mea. v. 1 

have a care tliis busy time Muc/i Ado, i. 2 

it keeps on the windy side of care — ii. 1 

only have a care that your bills be not — iii. 3 
care killed a cat, thou hast mettle (rep.) — v. 1 
I thank tliec for thy care and honest — v. 1 
dost thou tliink, I care for a satire . . — v. 4 

effect it with some care Mid. N.'s D ream, ii. S 

have a care the honey-bag break not — iv. I 
I would not care a pin if the .... Love's L. Lost, iv. i 

you care not for me — v. 5 

past cure is still past care — v. S 

we will take some care — y. S 

do buy it with much care .... Merchant ctf Venice, i. 1 
but my chief care is, to come ... . — _ i. I 

pay his debt, and then I care not — iii. £ 

I care not for my spirits As you Like it, ii. 4 

that little cares for buying any tiling — ii. ■! 

nay, I care not for their names — }},• ' 

but what care I for words? — iii. £ 

I care not, if I have: it is my study. . — v. i 
madam, the care I have had to even . . Alt's Well, i. i 
and I thank you for your honest care — i. ^ 
I express to you a mother's care .... — i. I; 
I care no more for, than I do for .... — i. ; 
throw thee from my care for ever ... . — ii. ; 

lose thee again, X care not — ii. ' 

and forfeited to cares for ever ! — ii. ; 

her care should be to comb your . . Taming ofSh. i. 1 

he took some care to get her — _i. 1 

'tis with cares. I care not — ii. 1 

all is done in reverend care of her .. — iv. 1 
I care not what, so it be wholesome. . — iv. ; 

in a good father's care, to have — iv. -5 

one that cares for thee, and for — v. 2 

I care not; it is a heretic Winter's Tale, ii. i 

and with some care ; so far — iv. 1 

and I coi-e not to get slips of them — iv. ; 

if you make a care of happy — iv. ; 

of your own state take care — iv. ; 

not little of his care, to have — iv. ! 

it shall be so my care to have — iv. ; 

care not for issue; the crown — v. 1 

great care of goods at random left. ComeJyo/£r. i. 1 

on whom our care was fixed — i. 1 

and yet my eldest care, at eighteen . . — i. 1 
I am dull with care and melancholy — i. i 
he hath great care to please liis wife . . — ii. 1 

in care to seek me out — ii. ! 

my feeble key of untuned cares? .... — v. 1 

whose care is gone before to bid Macbeth, i. ■ 

knits up tlie ravelled sleave of care — ii. : 

why, what care I? if thou can'st nod . . — iii. < 

and take no care who chafes — iv. I 

I care not if thou dost for me — v. i 

I would not care, I then would be . . King John, iii. : 
where is my mother's care that such — iv. : 
good quarter, and good care to-night — v. i 

lives, but crosses, care, and grief Ricliard II. ii. 1 

are now with me past care — ii. : 

take special care my greetings — iii. ' 

my care; and what loss is it (lep.) .. — iii.; 
drive away the heavy thought of care? — iii.' 

part of your cares you give me — iv. 

your cares set up, do not pluck (rep.) — iv. : 

know not, nor I greatly care not — v. ; 

so wan' with care, find we \ Henry IV. i. 1 

I care not. Sir John, I pr'ythee — ,i. : 

I care not for thee, Kate — ]}.'■ 

you care not who sees yoiu' back .... — ii. ■ 

I do not care: I'll give thrice so — iii. 

have a reverend care of yom- health.. 2H(?»)i/7r. i. : 

and I care not, if I do become — i. : 

in good faith, a' cares not what — ii. 

I care not for his tlirust — ii. 

again, or no, there is nobody cares — — ii. ' 
well, sweet Jack, have a care of thyself — ii. ' 
for mine own part, sir, I do not care . . — iii. : 

by my troth, 1 care not; a man — iii.: 

care I for the limb, the tliewes — iii. : 

perform with a most christian care . . — iv. i 
shall observe him with all care and love — iv. ■ 

the incessant care and labour — iv. ■ 

perturbation ! golden care ! that keep'st — iv. ' 
their brains with care, tlieir bones. ... — iv. ' 
ray care could not withhold thy (rep.) — iv. ■ 

the care on thee depending — iv. ■ 

his cares are now all ended — v. ! 

bear your love, I'll bear your cares . . — y. I 
for my part, I care not, 1 say little. . . . Henry V. ii. : 
alas, your too much love and care . . — ii. : 
their dear care and tender preservation — ii. '■ 
and the cares of it, and the forms of it — iv. 
there is much care and valour in tliia — iv. 

nor care I who doth feed upon — iv. ; 

I care not who know it — iv. ; 

take you no care; I'Unever IHenry Vl.i. ' 

aged, in an age of care, argue — ii. i 

be wary in thy studious care — ii. i 

care is no cure, but rather — iii.: 

speak, thy father's care — iv. i 

perplexea with a thousand cares ..... — v. ; 

noble lords, I care not which iHenry Vl.i. I 

so cares and joys abound, as seasons. . — ii. ■ 

I care not whither, for I beg no — ii. ' 

the reverent care I bear unto — iii. 

the care you liave of us, to mow down — iii. 
that care to keep your royal person.. — • iii. I 
and care not wiio they sting in his . . — iii. : 
in care of your most royal person ... . — iii.: 

for their tender loving care — iii. : 

'tis not the land I care for — iii.: 

or Walter, which it is, I care not .... — iv. 

I care not with what envy — iv. li 

a thousand-fold more care to keep. .iHenry VI. ii. : 



CAR 

CARE — care, mistrust, and treason ..'iHenry VI. ii. 3 
much overgrown with care, here .... — ii. 

while heart is drowned in cares — iii. 3 

you seem to have so tender care? .... — iy. 6 
often feel a world of restless cares . . Richard III. i. 4 
those cares [Col. Knt.-ihis care] on me? — iii. 7 
will you enforce me to a world of cares? — iii. 7 
full of wise care is this your counsel — iv. i 

a very caititt' crowned with care — iy. 4 

thaiits you for this great care Henry VIII. i. H 

and with a care, exempt themselves. . — i. 2 

look to't; I put it to your care — i. '.! 

brought with her one care abroad. . . . — i. 4 

with all the care I had, I saw — li. 2 (letter) 

have great care I be not foimd — ii. 2 

that's christian care enough — ii. 2 

killing care, and grief of heart — iii. 1 (song) 

I care not, (so much I am happy — iii. 1 

(of his great grace and princely care — v. I 
but what care I? I care not . . Troilus Sf Cressida, i. 1 
I do not care whether you do or no . . — i. 1 

swords? any thing, he cares not — 1.2 

nay, I care not for such words — iii. 1 

lie cares not, he'll obey conditions . . — iv. 5 
I would not care; but to be Menelaiis — v. 1 
but advantageous care withdrew me — v. 4 

careless force, and forceless care — y. 5 

no care, no stop! so senseless .. Timon of Athens, ii. 2 

nor resumes no care of what — ii. 2 

be't not in thy care; go, I charge thee — iii. 4 

habit? and these looks of care? — iv. 3 

if he care not for't, he will — iv. 3 

care of your food and living — iv. 3 

of Timon, that— Timon cares not — v. 2 

I care not, and let him taUe't (rep.).. — v. 2 

most charitable care have the Coriolanus, i. 1 

who care for you like fathers — i. I 

care for us! 'True, indeed! — i. 1 

their counsels, and their cares . — i. 1 

fe.ar not our care, sir — i. 7 

neither to care whether they love .... — ii. 2 
if he did not care whether he had .... — ii. 2 

the rabble call our cares, fears — iii. 1 

my general cares not for you — v. 2 

I neither care for the world — v. 2 

he cares not for your weeping — y. 3 

what watcliful cares do interpose. ./MimsCa;sar, ii. 1 
which busy care draws in the brains — ii. 1 

if you did, I care not — iv. 3 

nor neither cares for him ..Antony fy Cleopatra, ii. 1 
in thy vats our cares be drowned. . — ii. 7 (song) 

hast thou no care of me? — iv. 13 

I do not greatly care to be deceived.. — v. 2 

our care and pity is so much — v. 2 

take tiiou no care; it shall be heeded — v. 2 
he hath a court he little cares for .... Cymbeline, i. 7 
very truth of it, I care not for you . . — ii. 3 
care no more to clothe, and eat . . — iv. 2 (song) 

this bloody man the care on't — iv. 2 

me leave, I'll take the better care. . . . — iv. 4 
reserve my cracked one to more care — iv. 4 

no care of yours it is ; you know — v. 4 

let us with care perform his — v. 4 

and so much for my peculiar care.. .. — v 5 
I care not, I, knew she and all . . Titus Andron. ii. 1 

father's sake, and mother's care — iii. 1 

never with more care read to her sons — iv._l 

for this care of I'amora, herself — iv. 2 

made by grief and care: witness — v. 2 

good sooth, I care not for you Pericles, i. 1 

have after nourishment and life by care — i. 2 
and cares it be not done; and so witli me — i. 2 

which care of them, not pity — i.2 

but let your cares o'crlook what — i.2 

the care I had and have of subjects' — i.2 

billow kiss the moon, I care not — iii. 1 

and leave her the infant of your care . . — iii. 3 

make me blessed in your care — ii i • 3 

no care to your best courses — iv. I 

care not for me ; I can go home alone . . — i v. 1 

what! I must have a care of you — iv. 1 

and care in us at Avhose expance — iv. 4 

to shake all cares and business Lear, i. 1 

of territory, cares of state — ;• 1 

half iny care, and duty — i. 1 

I disclaim all my paternal care — i. 1 

no need to care for her frowning — i. 4 

why, then I care not for thee — ii. 2 

pinfold, I would make thee care for me — ii. 2 

1 have ta'en too little care of this! — iii. 4 

I'll never care what wickedness — iii. 7 

what care I, what curious eye ..Romeo ^Juliet, i. \ 
where care lodges, sleep will (rep.) .. — ii. 3 

by my heel, I care not — iii. 1 

I have more care to stay, than will . . — iii. 5 
my care hath been to have her matched — iii. 5 

nor dotli the general care take hold Othello, i. 3 

look with care about the town — ii. 3 

the general does not greatly care — iii. 1 

I care not for thy sword; I'll make thee — v. 2 

CARE-CRAZED— care-crazed mother. i?ic7i./f/. iii. 7 

CARED-none of us cared for Kate. rempes(,il. 2 (song) 

and said, she cared not Much .ido, y. 1 

he cared not who knew it Henry V. iii. 7 

they ne'er cared for us yet Coriolanus, i. 1 

CAREER — awe a man from the career. Much Ado, ii. 3 
I shall meet your wit in the career . . — v. 1 

this brave manage, this career Love'sL.Lost. y. 2 

stopping the career of laughter Winter'sTale, i. 2 

miss the first career, be Mowbray's . . Richard II. i. 2 
he passes some humours and careers . . Henry V. ii. 1 
down the hill he holds his fierce career? — iii. 3 

CAREFUL— and tutors not so careful . . Tempest., i. 2 

as to say, a careful man Twelfth Night, iv. 2 

hanging, yields a careful man work. Winter sT. iv. 3 
more careful for the latter-born . . Comedy of Er. i. 1 

and careful hours, with Time's — v. I 

O full of careful business Richard II. ii. 2 

the part of a careful friend iHenry IV. ii. 4 

our careful wives, our children Henry V. iv, 1 



CAR 



f 101 ] 



CA RKFUli— to this civreful height . . IlicJiard HI. i. 3 
like aciivcfiil mother — ii. 2 

iisi' cMrerul wictfh, choose (rusty — v. 3 

most liko.ie.ii-eful suhiLTt Ilennj III I. i. 2 

soliliers, have e:>ivl'nl waloh tnlniit/ <^- Clco. iy. 3 

iind |iniv he e;i refill all, niul have ..Tiliii .liul. iv. 3 
till time he-et some e.irelul remeilv.. — iv. 3 
iind is not nirelul wliiit tliev mean .. — iv. 4 
1 Imve seen thee earelul to ..hserve .. — \-l 
whielv the earel'ul Titiis hiith onlained — v. 3 
UMiler tlie eoveriiiy of a careful niylit ..Policies, i. 2 

ot revioles the careful search hy — iii. (Uower) 

there I'll leave it at caretul nursing .... — iii. 1 
toward, Eilmuud; pray you, he careful. . Lear, iii. 3 
well, thou hast a careful father.. Wom('0(S-./i((;cr, iii. 5 
C.\HEFU1-LY— to enquire carefully.. 7'am. ofSti.\. 2 
that I so carefullv have dressed ! . . . . Kiehanl II. v. 5 

more than carefully it us concerns Henry I', ii. 4 

tend the eniiieror's'person carefully. . TUusAnd. ii. 2 

do it carefully: and the uohle and Lrar, i. 2 

come most ea'rcfuUy upon your hour . . Hamlet, i. 1 
man hear him carefully from hence .... Olhello, v. 1 

CAKEIKE.S— passed the carcires Merry ll'ircs, i. 1 

CAHELESS— as sound as careless infancy — v- 5 
careless, reckless, and fearless ....Mea.for Mea. iv. 2 
acareless herd, full of the pasture. ylsj/ouLi'Ae//, ii. 1 
demonstrating a careless desolation . . — iii. 2 

and the careless lapse of youth All's Well, ii. 3 

to I'adua, careless of your life. . . . Taming of Sh. iv. 2 

as 'twere a careless trifle Macbelh, i. 4 

too careless patient as thou art Richard II. ii. 1 

by seeming cold, or careless of his..2Henry ly. iv. 4 

niy careless father fondly gave 3 Henry VI. ii . 2 

my brother was too careless of his charge — iv. G 

with such a careless force Trail. ^ Cress, v. 5 

unkind, and careless of thine own. Titus Androii. i. 2 

careless heirs may the two latter Pericles, iii. 2 

the light and careless livery that Hamlet, iv. 7 

CARELESSLY— the tiraecarelessly.-Jsi/oH UkeU,i. 1 
brother being carelessly encamped, ,3Hc'nry 'V. iv, 2 

like his raiment, carercssly Timon of Ath. iii. 5 

if Ciesar carelessly but nod on hXm. JuliusCcesar, i. 2 

be thought we held him carelessly. ./(om. if Jul. iii, 4 

CAKELfiSSNESS-noble carelessness. Corio/a?mSj ii. 2 

CAREST— and carestfor nothing.. 7'«'c//i'AA'ig-/i/, iii. 1 

CARET— focative is, caret Merry Wives, iv. 1 

golden cadence of poesy, caret ..Love\ L.Losl, iv. 2 
CARE-TUNED-my care-tuned tongue.fli'cA.//. iii. 2 
CAJRKANET— her carkanet. . Comedy of Errors, iii. 1 
CARL— or could this carl, a very drudge . . Cymb. v, 2 
CARLISLE- it is the bishop of Carlisle.BiWi.//. iii. 3 

but here is Carlisle living, to abide — v. 6 

Carlisle, this is your doom — v. 6 

C ARLOT— the old carlot once was./ls ynuLike it, iii. 5 
CARINLV-N — let carman whip his . . Mea.forMea. ii. 1 
CARMEN— the carmen wliistle . . ..iHenry IV. iii„2 
CARNAL — this carnal cm- preys on. /iicAa>-d i/2. iv. 4 
of carnal, bloody, and unnatural acts ..Hamlet, v. 2 

our carnal stings, our unbitted lusts Othello, i. 3 

CARNALl/Y— carnally, she says ..Mea.forMea. v. 1 
CARNARVONSHIRi;— 

I mvsclf would for Carnarvonshire. Henryr///. ii. 3 

CAl'JrATION—carnation ribbon. Lore's L. Lost, iii. 1 

carnations, andstreaked gillyflowers. Winter' sT. iy. 3 

a' could never abide carnation Henry V. ii. 3 

CAROL— with hymn or carol hlsst.. Mid.N.'sDr. ii. 2 

this carol they began AsyouLike it, v. 3 (song) 

C AROU SE— and q.uafl' carouse ..Taming of Sh reu;i.'2 
carouse full measure to her .... — iii. 2 

drink carouses to the next day's. Antony ^- Cleo. iv. 8 
and carouse together like Mends — iv. 10 

the queen carouses to thy fortune Hamlet, v. 2 

CAROUSED — drunkenly caroused ..Bichardll. ii. 1 

all day caroused and banqueted \ Henry VI. ii. } 

hath to-night caroused potations Oilwllo, ii. 3 

CAROUSING-aboard, carousing.. ranmis-o/SA. iii. 2 

faith, sir, we were carousing till Macbeth, ii. 3 

CAJIP— use the carp as you may All's Well, v. 2 

do hourly carp and quarrel Lear, i. 4 

falsehood takes his carp of truth Hamlet, ii. 1 

CARPED— he mocked or carped at . . Henry VIII. i. 2 
CARPENTER— a rare carpenter? ....Much Ado, i. 1 

of wood; it is some carpenter 1 Hen. VI. v. 3 

build there, carpenter Troilusff Cressida, iii. 2 

why sir, a carpenter Julius Ccesar, i. 1 

the shipwright, or the carpenter? ()T;j.)../f«?n;e/, v. 1 

CARPER— cunning of a carper. Timov of Athens, iv. 3 

CARPET— on carpet consideration . . Tu-elfih N. iii. 4 

the carpets laid, and every thing. Tn/nin^'- n/ Sh. iv. 1 

upon the grassy carpet of this Richard II. iii. 3 

\Col. K/i/, j as a carpet hang upon thy.. i'<;ridcs,iv. 1 
CARPET-MONGER— 

full of these quondam cai'i)et-mongerg,3/uc/;^rfo,v, 2 

CARPING— carping is not conunendable — iii. 1 

ICol. Knt.'] royalty, with carping fools. 1 Hen. IV. iii. 2 

with envious carping f ,»ngue 1 Henry VI. iv. 1 

the censures of tlie carping vioriA.. Richard III. iii. 5 

CARRACK—annadas of Carracks.. Com. o/£/. iii. 2 

to-night hath hoarded a land carrack . . Othello, i. 2 

C ARR AT-to tlie utmost carrat. Comedy of Errors, iv. 1 

CARRIAGE-uprightwith his carriage .. Tempest, v. 1 

for eaijing me of the carriage Merry Wives, ii. 2 

reverend caiTiage, a slow tongue. Twelfi'liKight, iii, 4 

than to fashion a carriage to rob Much Ado, i. 3 

of good repute, carriage,bearing.Z,o»e'sL,L.i. 1 (let.) 
and carriage. Sampson, master irep.) — i. 2 
and their rough carriage so ridiculous — v. 2 
the violent carriage of it will .. Winter's Tate, iii. 1 
teach sin the carriage of a holy . . Comedy of Er. iii. 2 
many carriages he hath despatched. . Kirtg John, v. 7 

and a most noble carriage \ Henry IV. ii. 4 

or ignorant caiTiage, is caught 2HenryIV. v. 1 

tlie ordnance on their carriages.. Henry f. iii. (clio ) 
tills carriage, the hearts of princes. Henry A'/ii. iii. 1 
for honesty, and decent carriage .... — i v, 2 
■whole carriage of this action Todc, Trail. ^' Cress, ii. 3 
and honourable carriage, had .Timon of Athens, iii. 2 
become the carriage of his chafe . . Ant. ^ Clin. i. 3 

of yoiu: carriage from the court CymUeline, iii. t 

vronicu of good carriage Romeo iy Juliet, i. 4 



CARRIA(!E— and carriage of the article. Ham(e(, i. I 
three of tlie carriages, in faith, are very — v. 2 
carriages, and of very liberal conceit (rep.) — v. 2 

the carriages, sir, are the hangers — v. 2 

and threeliheral-eoneeited carriages . . — v. 2 

CARRlED-carried mistress Silvia. Two Gen.nfV. iv. 4 

they carried me to the tavern Merry WiveSj i. 1 

have I lived to to be carried in a basket — iii. .') 

and swears, he was carried out — i v. 2 

arrested, and carried to prison . . Meas.forMeas. i. 2 

saw him carried away — i. 2 

yonder man is carried to prison — i, 2 

already he hath carried notice — iv. 3 

this well carried, shall on her Much Ado. iv. 1 

for he carried the town-gates .... Love' s I.. Lost, i, 2 

but that he is carried into All's Well, iii. 6 

u remorseful pardon slowly carried . . — v. 3 

that carried hence the child Winter's Tale, v. 2 

were carried towards Corinth .... Comedy of Er.i. 1 
was carried with more speed before .. — i. 1 

carried to Colmes-kill Macbeth, ii. 4 

Falstatf, you carried your guts .... 1 Henry IV. ii. 4 
tliou art violently carried away .... — ii. 4 

and carried you a forehand shaft — iii. 2 

they have bm'ned and carried away . . Henry V. iv. 7 

our reverend cardinal carried Henry VIII. i. I 

she has carried herself toward me . . — ii. 4 
that kiss I carried from thee dear . . Coriolanus, v. 3 

when he had carried Rome — v. 5 

Apollodorus carried Antony <§- Cleopatra, ii . 6 

he was carried from oif our coast . . Cymbeline, iii. 1 

CARRIER — one of Cupid's carriers, itferri/ Wives, ii, 2 

good-morrow, carriers 1 Henry IV. ii. 1 

sirrah, carrier, what time do you .... — ii. 1 
art not thou the carrier? Titus Andronicus, iv. 3 

CARRIES — it carries a brave form Tempest, i. 2 

and the fox carries the goose Mid. N . Dream, v. 1 

for the goose carries not the fox — __v. 1 

why, it carries it: Remuneration! . Love's L. L. iii. 1 
which this promise carries . . Merchant of Venice, ii. 7 
he carries his house on his head..^s you Like it, iv. 1 
an unclean mind carries virtuous .... All's Well, i. 1 
my imagination carries no favour . . — 1. 1 

a very plausive invention that carries it — iv. 1 
before the judgement, carries poor. Com. of Err. iv. 4 

what is it carries you away? 1 Henry IV. ii. 3 

that carries no impression 3 Hen cy /'/. iii. 2 

she that carries up the train Henry VI II. i\. 1 

the truth of the question carries — v. 1 

but he carries some stain of It Troil.^ Crcs. i. 2 

but carries on the stream — ii. 3 

the noblest mind he carries .... Timonof Athens, i. 1 

before him he carries noise Coriolanus, ii. 1 

the greater part carries it — ii. 3 

with a larab that carries anger . . Julius Ctesar, iv. 3 
speed of Caasar's carries beyond. ..4?iton!/<5-c;eo. iii. 7 
a la stoccata carries it away. . . . Romeo ^ Juliet, iii. 1 
carries them through and tlirough .... Hamlet, v. 2 

CARRION— that foolish carrion . . Merry Wives, iii. 3 
do, as the carrion does, not as ...Meas.forMeas. ii. 2 
a carrion death, within whose.. AfereA. of Venice, ii. 7 

out upon it, old carrion I — iii. 1 

a weight of carrion flesh — iv. 1 

and be a earrion monster like King John, iii. 4 

leave her comb in the dead earrion. .'iHen. IV. iv. 4 

you island carrions, desperate of Henry V. iv. 2 

made a prey for carrion kites 2Henry VI. v. 2 

her contaminated carrion weight.. Trail. <§• Cres. iv. 1 

old feeble carrions, and such lulius Ctesar, ii. 1 

with carrion men, groaning for burial — iii. 1 
more courtship lives in caiTion flies. Ram. <§• Jul. iii. 3 
out, you green sickness earrion I .... — iii, 5 
a dead dog, beingagod, kissing carrion, Ham/e(, ii. 2 

CARRY— he will carry this island Tempest, ii. 1 

I'll carry it to the pile — iii. 1 

go to, carry this — iv. 1 
eneeforth carry your letters . . Two Gen. ofVer. i. 1 

she can fetch and carry — iii. 1 

cannot fetch, but only carry — iii. 1 

he must carry for a present — iv. 2 

to carry that which I — iv. 4 

nay, daughter, carry the wine in ..Merry Wives, i. 1 

can you carry your good will — i. 1 

if you can carry her your — i. 1 

why, this boy will carry a letter .... — iii. 2 
he will carry 't, he will carry 't (,rep.) — iii. 2 
and carry it among the whitsters ... . — iii. 3 

carry them to the laundress in — iii. 3 

I must carry her word quickly — iii. 5 

to carry me in the name of — iii, 5 

to carry the basket again to — iv. 2 

carry his water to the wise woman.. Twelfth N. iii. 4 

we may carry it thus, for our — iii. 4 

fair one, of the sin you carry? . . Meas.for Meas. ii. 3 

if you think well to carry this — iii. 1 

as if to carry him to execution — iv. 2 

here is the head: I'll carry it myself — iv. 3 
daughter and her gentlewoman carry. Much Ado, ii. 3 
liis valour cannot carry his discretion. il//(/. A'. I>, v. 1 

I am sure, cannot carry his valour — v. 1 

he must carry me a letter Love's L. Lost, iii. 1 

but as a coach doth carry thee . . — iv. 3 (verses) 
no lawful means can carry me out.Mer. ofVen. iv. 1 

resolves to carry her; let her All'sWell, iii. 7 

carry himself? I have told (rep.) .... — iv. 3 
carry him gently to my fairest. . Tarn. ofSh. 1 (ind.) 
an olficer: carry this mad knave to .. — v. 1 

carry me to the gaol — v. 1 

that thou carry this female bastard. Winter's 7". ii. 3 
why shoidd I carry lies abroad? .... — iv. 3 
go, carry them, and smear the sleepy. . Mncbelh, ii. 2 
twofold balls and treble sceptres carry — iv. 1 
your breeches best may carry thora../v7ng-./o/in, iii, 1 

carr.y master Silence to bed iHenrylV. v. S 

go, carry sir John Falstaff to — v. & 

carry them here and there Henry V. i. (chorus) 

we carry not a heart with us from . . — ii. 2 

the men would carry coals — iii. 2 

to carry thee out of this place 1 Henri/ VI. i . 3 

eUe carry ai-moui-, as she hath begun — ii. I 



CAS 

CARRY-forbidden late to carry any.l He;/r(/ VI. Iii, 1 
and carry him to Rome, and set tlie, .2Henr!/ /'/. i. 3 

as fast as horse can carry them — i. 4 

he'd carry it so to make the sceptre. H??nr!/ VIII, I. 2 
words cannot carry authority so weighty — iii. 2 
to can-y into Flanders the great seal — iii. 2 
still in thy right hand carry gentle .. — iii. 2 
the elephant Ajax carry it thus? . . Trnil. .§■ Cres. ii. 3 
shall pride carry it? An 'twoukl (rep.) — ii. 3 
glorious heaven, he shall not carry him — v. li 
stay at home, if bearing carry it. . Timon o/Ath.iii. :, 

this will I carry to Rome Coriolanus, i. ft 

Miss it, rather than carry it — ii. 1 

and carry with us ears and eyes — ii. I 

every one, Coriolanus will carry it .. — ii. 2 

think you, he'll carry Rome? — iv, 7 

but he could not carry his honours even — iv. 7 

a mighty strength they carry Antony fy Clco. ii. 1 

and carry back to Sicily much tall .. — ii.fi 
carry me now, good friends, and have — iv, 12 
shall she carry this unto her grave?.. TitusAnd. ii. 3 
shall carry from me to the empress' , . — iv. I 

only I carry winged time Pericles, iv. (Gower) 

not carry her aboard — iv. 2 

shall carry half my love with him Lear, i. I 

if our father carry authority with — i. 1 

may carry through itself to that full — i, 4 

man's nature cannot carry the affliction .. — iii. 2 

hardly shall I carry out my side — v. 1 

and carry it so, as I have set it down — v. 3 

o' my word, we'll not carry coals. /ininco .§- Jui/e(, i. 1 

I will carry no crotchets — iv. 5 

do the hoys carry it away? Hamlet, ii. 2 

that can-y but half sense — iv.i 

if we could carry a cannon by our sides — v. 2 
thick-lips owe, if he can earry't thus ! . , Othello, i. 1 

CARRYING-earrying your letter.. TwoGen. of V. i. 1 

for carrjdng a letter to your lover — i. 1 

as thou didst me in carrying gates.Lovc'sL.Lost, i. 2 

for carrying my head to'hun 'ZHenry VI. iv. 10 

carrying, I say, the stamp of one defect. .Hain?e/, i. 4 

CAR&Y-T ALE— some carry-tale.. Lowe's L. Lost, v. 2 

CART— to cart with Rosalind, ,,4s you Like, iii. 2 (ver.) 
to cart her rather ; she's too rough. Taming ofSh. i, 1 

provide some carts, and bring Richard //. ii, 2 

if I become not a cartas well as ....\HenryIV.ii. 4 

when the cart draws the horse? Lear, i. 4 

I cannot draw a cart, nor eat — v. 3 

thirty times hath PhcEbus' cart gone . . Hamlet, iii. 2 

CARTER— there is three carters. . Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

when your carters, or your Richard III. ii. 1 

but keep a farm, and carters Hamlet, ii . 2 

CARTHAGE— she was of Carthage Tempest, ii. 1 

this Tunis, sir, was Carthage — ii. 1 

Carthage? I assure you, Carthage .... — ii. 1 
which Burned the Carthage queen ..Mid. N. Dr. i. 1 
to come again to Carthage . . Merchant of Venice, v. 1 
as Anna to the queen of Carthage.. jTunjjng-o/S/i. i. 1 

CARVE — she carves, she gives the . . Merry Wives, i. 3 

if I do not carve most curiously Much Ado, v. 1 

Boyet, you can carve Love's L. Last, iv. 1 

he can carve too, and lisp — v. 2 

Orlando ; carve on every tree ....As you Like !(, iii . 2 

but to carve a capon and eat it? 1 Henry IV.ii. i 

to carve out dials quaintly ZHenry VI. ii. 5 

let's carve him as a dish lit for . . . .JuliusCwsar.ii. 1 
unvalued persons do, carve for himself.. Hamie^ i. 3 
stirs next to carve for his own rage Othello, ii. 3 

CARVED— the carved bone face . . Love's L. Losl,v.2 

and carved upon these trees? Asyou Like it, iii. a 

carved like an appletart? ... .Taming of Shrew, iv. 3 

touched, or carved to thee Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

like valour's minion, carved out his Marljelh, i. 2 

for a pair of carved saints Richard II. iii, 3 

a head fantastically carved upon it.2HenryIV. iii. 2 
my knife carved in Roman letters . . Titus And. v. 1 

CARVER-more our carver's excellence. Winter's T.y.H 
be his own can'er, and cut out Richard II. ii. 3 

CARVING— carving the fashion of ..Much Ado, ii. 3 
plants \vith cai-ving Rosalind..,. ,,<ls yon Like it, iii, 2 

CASA — alia nostra casa bene venuto. Taming ofSh. i. 2 

CASC A — pluck Casca by the sleeve . . Julius Ccesar, i. 2 
Casca will tell us what the matter is — i. 2 
ay, Casca; tell us what hath chanced — i. 2 
I should not then ask Casca what . . — J. 2 
tell us the manner of it, gentle Casca — i. 2. 

but you, and I, and honest Casca — i. 2 

will you sup with me to-night, Casca? — >. 2 

Casca; brought you Cassar home? — i. a 

good-night tlien, Casca: this disturbed — i. 3 

a Roman. Casca by j'our voice — i. 3 

thus imbraced, Casca, as you see ... . — i- 3 
you are dull, Casca; and those sparks — i. 3 

now could I, Casca, name to thee — ;. 3 

you speak to Casca; and to such a man — i. 3 

no, it is Casca; one incorporate to — i. 3 

come, Casca, you and I ^vill, yet, ere day — i, 3 
this, Casca, this, Cinna, and this, Metelius — ii, 1 
good-morrow, Casca: Caius Ligarius — ii, -' 
come not near Casca; have an eye — ii. 3 (papci ) 
Casca, be sudden, for we feai- prevention — iii. 1 

Casca, you are the first that rears — iii- ' 

and, my valiant Casca, yours — iii , 1 

what a rent the envious Casca made — iii. ^ 
and some to Casca's; some to Ligarius' — iii. 3 
whilst damned Casca, like a ciur .... — v. 1 

CASE— our case is miserable Tempest, \. 1 

for our case is as theirs — i. \ 

thy case, dear friend, shall be — ^ii- 1 

I am in cose to justle a constable — iii, 2 

and in any case, have a nay- word. ilferry Wives, ii. 2 
well, what is your accusative case? .. — iv, I 
what is your locative case, William? — iv, ) 
your genitive case, plural, William? (rep.) — iv, I 

vengeance of Jenny's easel — iv, I 

no understandings for thy cases — iv, I 

sowed a grizzle on thy case? Ttielflh Might, v, I 

as well as a man in his case may do . . — v. ! 
with thy case, thy liabit .. Measure for Measure ii. 4 
I may make my case as Claudio'e .... — T. 



CAS 

CASE— yea, and a case to put it into . . . Much Mo, i. 1 

the lute should be like tlie case — ii. 1 

let my counsel sway you in this case — iv. 1 
immediately providea in that case ..Mid.X.Dr. i. I 
the worst tliat may befal me in this case — i. 1 
in any case, let Thisbv liave clean . . — iv. 2 

as his your case is sucli Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 

O they were all in lamentable cases! — v. 2 

that supeiiluous case, that hid — v. 2 

■what a case am I in then As you LIkeil, (epil.) 

in this case. In what case? (rep.) AU's Well, i. 3 

with the foXj ere we case him — '.4'' 

my life, sir, m any case — iw 3 

if this be not a lawful case for me.Tamins ofSh, i. 2 
as 'lonaeth to a lover's blessed case!.. — iv. 2 

and hold your own, in any case — iv. 4 

what case stand I in? ._.._. Winter's Tate,i. 2 

for, as the case now standsj it is — ii. 3 

but though my case be a pitiful one . . — iv. 3 

that's tlie case of the shepherd's son — iv. 3 

to tear the cases of their eyes — ■ v. 2 

(for liis case was like, reft of . . Comedy of Errors,}. 1 

you must case mc in leather — ^ii. 1 

■would not spare my brother in this case — iv. I 
obser\'ation madest thou in this case — iv. 2 

he is arrested on the case — iv. 2 

plain case : he that went like (rep.) .. — iv. 3 

but, in these cases, we still have Macbeth, i. 7 

■n'ould not be sir Nob in any case. . . . A'/ng^ John, i. 1 
my sworn duty in that case Richard II. i. 1 

1 liave cases of buckram for . . _. 1 Henry 1 V.i. 2 

case ye, case ye ; on with your visors . . — ii. 2 

in any case the offer of the king — v. 2 

■nhat, is it in the case? Ay, Hal — ■v. 3 

it was young Hotspur's case 2Henry IF. i. 3 

and n;y case so openly known — ii. I 

she hath been in good case — ii. 1 

it was Jove's case: from a prince .... — ii. 2 

the ease of a treble hautboy was — iii. 2 

a rotten case al)ides no handling — iv. 1 

make the case yours — v. 2 

in cases of defence, 'tis best Henry J'.ii. 4 

I have not a case of lives — iii. 2 

no further of the case, how 1 Henry VI. ii. 1 

no man answer in a case of truth? — ii. 4 

the truth and plainness of the case . . — ii. 4 

in argument upon a case — ii. 5 

mine own attorney in this case — v. 3 

pity my case! the spite of man 2Henry VI. i. 3 

bewails good Gloster's case — iii. 1 

in any case, be not too roiigh — iv. 9 

ay, but the case is altered SHenry VI. iv. 3 

thus stands the case — iv. 5 

the time and case requireth haste .... — iv. 5 

in case some one of you would — v. 4 

the extreme peril of the ease Richard III. iii. 5 

your just proceedings in tills case — iii. 5 

m this case of justice, ra.y accusers. . Henry VIII. y. I 
and case thy reputation in thy.. Troilus Sf Ores. iii. 3 

ay, ay; 'tis too plain a case — iv. 4 

sweet instruments hung \ip in cases. Ti'mon o/Ath. i. 2 

■what a strange case wa's tliat? — iii. 2 

no, in such a case the gods will not.. Coriolanus, v. 4 

to write in such a case Julius desar, i'v. 3 

and the case to be lamented Antony 8r Cleo. i. 2 

to stoop in such a. case — ii. 2 

to consider in what case thou standest — iii. 11 

crack thy frail case! — iv. 12 

this case of that hu^e spirit — iv. 13 

the case stands with her Cijmbeline, i. 6 

idiots in this case of favour — i. 7 

I yet not xmderstand the case myself — ii. 3 

stands in ■worse case of woe — iii. 4 

an 'twere my case [Kn'. -cause] .. Titus Andron. ii. 5 

is not this a heavy case — iv. 3 

her eyelids, cases to those heavenly.. Pericles, iii. 2 

and leave his horns without a ease Lear, i. 5 

■n'hen every case in law is right — iii. 2 

what, with the case of e.ycs? . — iv. 6 

your eyes are in a heavy case — iv. 6 

our further pleasm-e iir this case. . Romeo'^ Juliet, i. 1 

give me a case to put my — i.4 

a case as mine a man may strain — ii. 4 

such a case as yours constrains — ii. 4 

even in my mistress' case just in her case — iii. 3 

since the case so stands — iii. 5 

a pitiful case, ay, by my troth (rep) .. — iv. 5 
his eases, his tenures, and his tricks? . . Hamlet, v. 1 
whose motive, in this case, should stir me — v. 2 
as in these cases, ■where the aim reports.. Of/ie//o, i. 3 
as if the case [An !. -cause] were his .... — iii. 3 
in such cases men's natures wrangle. ... — iii. 4 
your case is better: O 'tis the spite — iv. 1 

CASED— a cased [A'n(.-chased] lion ..KingJnlm, iii. 1 

a cunning instrument cased up Richard II. i. 3 

for preservation cased, or shame Cymbelinc, v. 3 

jewel-like, and cased as richly Pericles, v. 1 

CASEjSIENT— go to the casement.. Merry fVives, i. 4 

.you may leave a casement Mid, K. Dream, iii. 1 

the moon may shine in at the casement — iii. 1 

\\p to the casements then Merch. of Venice, ii. 5 

my house's ears, I mean, my casements — ii. b 
and it will out at the casement . . As youLike it, iy. 1 

thy casement I need not open All's Well, ii. 3 

■was it from a casement thro\VTi me . . — v. 3 
you threw it him out of a casement .. ' — v. 3 
through casements darted their .... Richard II. ■v. 2 
look through a casement to allure . . Cymbeline, ii. 4 

in at the easement of my closet Lear,i. 2 

CASH — in cash most justly paid Henry V, ii. 1 

CASHIER-buUy Hercules; cashier.. Merri; Wives, i. 3 

CASHIERED— was, as they say, cashiered — i. 1 

does his cashiered worship mutter?. Ti'inon of A. iii. 4 

and, ■when he's old, cashiered. Othello, i. 1 

by that small hurt, hast cashiered Cassio — ii. 3 

CASING— gener.il, as the casing air il/ac6e(A,iii. 4 

'CASTON-go, zir, without vurtlTer 'casion.. Lear, iv. 6 

CASK— into the wofullest cask .. ..iUenryVl. iii. 2 

C/VSKET— choose the right casket, ilfer. of Venice, i. 2 

wine on the contrary casket — i. 2 



[ IDS'] 



CASKET-depending on the caskets.. iVer.o/ Ven. i. 2 

lead me to tne caskets, to try — ii. 1 

here, catch this casket — ii. 6 

the several caskets to this noble prince — ii. 7 

what says this leaden casket? — ii. 7 

this casket threatens: men, that — ii. 7 

there stand the caskets, noble prince — ii. 9 

vhicli casket 'twas I chose (rep.) .... — ii. 9 

let me to my fortune and the caskets — iii. 2 

fortune stood upon the caskets there — iii. 2 
an empty casket, where the jewel . . King John, v. 1 
the little casket bring me hither .. Timon of Ath. i. 2 

■were not this glorious casket stored Pericles, i. 1 

my casket and my jewels — iii. 1 

CASKETED— casketed my treasure ..All's Well, ii. 5 

CAStiUE — on the casque of thy adverse. .i?/cA. //. i. 3 
the very casques that did affright . Henry V. i. (cho.) 
were it a casque composed b.y. Troilus ^ Cressida,v. 2 
not moving from the casque to Coriolanus, iv. 7 

CASS.ALIS— Gregory de Cassalis ..Henry VIII. iii. 2 

CASS ANDR A— Cassandra's wit . . Trail. Sr Cres. i. 1 

and Cassandra laughed — i.2 

it is Cassandra. Cry, Trojans, cry! .. — ii. 2 

our minds, because Cassandra's mad? — ii. 2 

Cassandra, call my father to persuade — v. 3 

visions Cassandra doth foresee — v. 3 

CASSIBELAN— with Cassibelan Cymbeline, i. 

Cassibelan, thine uncle — iii. 

the famed Cassibelan, who was once — iii. 

can gripe as hard as Cassibelan — iii. 

CASSIO— Michael Cassio, a Florentine . . Othello, i. 

Cassio's a proper man — i. 

Michael Cassio, lieutenant to — ii. 

but this same Cassio, — though he speak . . — ii. 

I thank you, valiant Cassia — ii. 

how say you, Cassio? is he not a most .. — ii. 

ensnare as great a fly as Cassio — ii. 

degree of this fortune, as Cassio does? .. ■ — ii. 

Cassio knows you not — ii. 

anger Cassio, either by speaking too loud — ii. 

but by the displanting of Cassio — ii. 

that Cassio loves her,I do well believe it — ii. 

I'll have our Michael Cassio on the hip.. — ii. 

I fear Cassio with my nightcap too — ii. 

to pxit our Cassio in some action that — ii. 3 

the virtue that appears in Cassio — ii. 3 

I do love Cassio well — ii. 3 

than it should do off'ence to Michael Cassio — ii. 3 

Cassio following liim with determined .. — ii. 3 

this gentleman steijs in to Cassio — ii. 3 

of swords, and Cassio high in oath — ii. 3 

though Cassio did some little wrong — ii. 3 

yet, surely, Cassio, I believe, received . . — ii. 3 

light to Cassio; Cassio, I love thee — ii. 3 

to counsel Cassio to this parallel coiurse . . — ii. 3 

Cassio hath beaten thee {repeated) — ii. 3 

my wife must move for Cassio to her — ii. 3 

he may Cassio iind soliciting his wife — ii. 3 

one Cassio entreats her a little favour . . — iii. 1 

good Cassio, I ■B'ill do all my abilities.... — iii. 3 

do not doubt, Cassio, but I will have — iii. 3 

whatever shall become of Michael Cassio — iii. 3 

with Cassio's suit: therefore (rep.) — iii. 3 

Cassio parted from ray wife? {rep.) — iii. 3 

^'ly. your lieutenant Cassio — iii. 3 

what ! Michael Cassio, that came — ii i . 3 

did Michael Cassio, ■n-hen you wooed — iii. 3 

not that, ■B'hen Cassio left my wife — iii. 3 

for Michael Cassio,— I dare be sworn — iii. 3 

I think that Cassio is an honest man — iii. 3 

observe her well with Cassio — iii. 3 

Cassio's my worthy friend — iii. 3 

it be fit that Cassio have his place — iii. 3 

will in Cassio's lodging lose tliis napkin — iii. 3 

I found not Cassio's kisses on her lips ,. ■ — iii. 3 

I lay with Cassio lately — iii. 3 

one of tills kind is Cassio_ — iii. 3 

to day, see Cassio wipe his beard with .. — iii. 3 

hear thee say, that Cassio lives not — iii. 3 

sirrah, where lieutenant Cassio lies? .... — iii. 4 

till Cassio be called to him — iii. 4 

I have sent to bid Cassio come speak .... — iii. 4 

I pray, let Cassio be received again .... — iii. 4 

I pray, talk me of Cassio — iii. 4 

look you! Cassio, and my husband — iii. 4 

how noWj good Cassio? what's the news — iii. 4 

alas! thrice gentle Cassio, my advocation — iii. 4 

go seek him : Cassio, walk hereabout — iii. 4 

save you, friend Cassio ! — iii. 4 

I was going to your lodguig Cassio — iii. 4 

Cassio, whence came this? — iii. 4 

how now, Cassio? What is the matter?.. — iv. I 

such a man), Cassio came hither — iv. 1 

now will I question Cassio of Bianca .... — iv. 1 

it is a creature, that dotes on Cassio — iv. 1 

poor Cassio's smiles, gestures, and light — iv. 1 

do you hear, Cassio? Now he importunes — iv. 1 

crying, O dear Cassio 1 as it were — iv. 1 

and for Cassio, I'll be his undertaker — iv, 1 

1 thank you, how does lieutenant Cassio? — iv. 1 
division twixt thy lord and Cassio? .... — iv. 1 

for the love I bear to Cassio — iv. 1 

deputing Cassio in liis government — iv. 1 

Cassio sliall have my place — iv. 1 

you have seen Cassio and she together . . — iv. 2 

to depute Cassio in Othello's place — iv. 2 

as the removing of Cassio — iv. 2 

he kill (bassio, or Cassio him — v. 1 

if Cassio do remain, he hath — v. 1 

the voice of Cassio: lago keeps his word — v. 1 

here's Cassio hurt by ■villains. Cassio? . . — v. 1 

O my dear Cassio! my sweet Cassio! {rep.) — v. 1 

Cassio, may you suspect who they — v. 1 

alas, he faints, O Cassio! {rep.) — v. 1 

patience a while, good Cassio — v. 1 

how do you, Cassio? O, a chair, a chair! — v. 1 

he that lies slain here, Cassio was my . . — v. 1 

Cassio hath here been set on in the dark — v. 1 

alas, good gentleman ! alas, good Cassio! — \.\ 

go know of Cassio where he supped — v. 1 



CAS 

CASSIO— let's go see poor Cassio dressed. Otiiello, v. 1 

gave thee, thou gavest to Cassio — v. 2 

never loved Cassio, but with such v. 2 

like she comes to speak of Cassio's death — v. 2 

Cassio, ray lord, has killed a young — v. 2 

Cassio killed? No, Cassio is not {rep.) — v. 2 

heavenly true ! Cassio did tup her — v. 2 

false to ■«-edIock? Ay, with Cassio — v. 2 

Cassio! did you say, with Cassio? (rep.) — v. 2 

that she with Cassio hath the act of. — v. 2 

Cassio confessed it: and she did gratify. . — v. 2 

she give it Cassio ! no, alas — v. 2 

did you and he consent in Cassio's death? — v. 2 
the death of Cassio to be undertook .... — v. 2 
came you, Cassio, by that handkerchief. . — v. 2 
is taken off', and Cassio rules in Cyprus . . — v. 2 

CASSIUS — let me not hinder, Cassms.. Jul. Caisar, i. 2 

Cassius, be not deceived — i.2 

among which number, Cassius, be . . — i.2 
no, Cassius; for the eye sees not .... — i.2 
dangers would you lead rae, Cassius — i.2 
I would not, Cassius ; yet I love Mm — i.2 

darest thou, Cassius, now leap in — i.2 

help me, Cassius, or I sink — i.2 

and Cassius is a wretched creature .. — i.2 

but, look you, Cassius, the angry — i.2 

Cassius has a lean and hungry look — i. 2 

so soon as that spare Cassius — i.2 

and he were Cassius, he should not . . — i.2 
your ear is good: Cassius, what night — i. 3 
that you mean: is it not, Cassius? .. — i. 3 
Cassius from bondage will (rep.) .... — i. 3 

Cassius, if you could but wm — i. 3 

since Cassius first did whet me against — ii. 1 
'tis your brother Cassius at the door — ii. 1 
will seem too bloody, Caius Cassius — ii. 1 

alas, good Cassius, do not think of him — ii. 1 

take heed of Cassius — ii. 3 (paper) 

Cassius or Cfesar never shall (rep.) .. — iii. 1 
as low as to th.y foot doth Cassius fall — iii. I 
and Cassius too. Where's Publius? — iii. I 

Caius Cassius, do I take your — iii. 1 

pardon me, Caius Cassius — iii. 1 

Cassius, go you into the other street — iii. 2 

those that will follow Cassius, go .... — iii. 2 

1 will hear Cassius, and compare — iii. 2 

do Brutus ■wrong, and Cassius wrong — iii. 2 

ran Cassius' dagger through — iii. 2 

Brutus and Cassius are rid like madmen — iii. 2 
to Brutus'; to Cassius'; burn all .... — iii. 2 
Brutus and Cassius, are levying powers — iv. 1 

is Cassius near? He is at hand — iv. 2 

in general, are come with Cassius. ... — i.v. 2 
Cassius, be content; speak your griefs — iv. 2 

in my tent, Cassius, enlarge your — iv. 2 

let me tell you, Cassius — iv. 3 

the name of Cassius honours this .... — iv. 3 

go to; you're not Cassius — iv. 3 

IS no terror, Cassius, in your threats — iv. 3 
like Cassius? should I have {rep.) .. — iv. 3 

alone, on Cassius, for Cassius is — iv. 3 

than ever thou lovedst Cassius — iv. 3 

O Cassius, you are yoked with a lamb — iv. 3 
hath Cassius lived to be but mirth . . — iv. 3 

Ses, Cassius; and, henceforth, when — iv. 3 
Cassius, I ara sick of many griefs. . — iv. 3 
in this I bury all unkindness, Cassius — iv. 3 

noble, noble Cassius, good-night — iv. 3 

on business to my brother Cassius . . — iv. 3 
commend rae to my brother Cassius — iv. 3 

if Cassius might have ruled — v. 1 

old Cassius still! — v. 1 

this very day was Cassius born — v. 1 

no, Cassius, no; think not, thou .... — v. 1 

and for ever, farewell, Cassius! — v. 1 

O Cassius, Brutus gave the word .... — v. 3 
noble Cassius, fly far off — v. 3 

Cassius! far from this country .... — v. 3 

as Cassius' legions are by (rep.) — v. 3 

but Cassius is no more , — • v. 3 

so in his red blood Cassius' day is set — v. 3 
thou send me forth brave Cassius? .. — v. 3 

see how I regarded Caius Cassius — v. 3 

come, Cassius' sword, and find" Titinius' — v. 3 
he have not crowned dead Cassius! .. — v. 3 

1 shall find time, Cassius, I shall .... — v. 3 

moved pale Cassius to conspire? Ant. ^ Cleo. ii. 6 

struck tlie lean and wrinkled Cassius — iu. 9 

CASSOCK— from off theu- cassocks .... All's Welt, iv. 3 

CAS'T — the government I cast upon Tempest, i. 2 

though some cast again — ii. 1 

since I was cast ashore — ii. 2 

have me cast my love on him?.. TuoGen. of Ver. i. 2 
thought your love not cast away .... — i. 2 

cast up with a pail' — iii. 1 

will you cast away your cliild .... Merry Wives, ill. 4 

to cast away my speech Tvetfth Night, i. 5 

my fortunes having cast me — ii.5 

cast thy humble slough — ii. 5 (letter) 

cast thy hmnble slough, says she .... — iii. 4 

to non-regardance cast my faith — v. 1 

his filth witliin being cast Mea. forMea. iii. 1 

the poor wench is cast away Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

hath an argosy cast aivay . . Merc/iant of Venice, iii. 1 
too precious to be east away npon..^s you Like it, i. 3 

I will not cast away ray physio — iii. 2 

and to cast away honesty upon — }!!■'' 

bought a pair ol cast lips . — iii. 4 

'tis but one cast away, and so — iv. 1 

to cast thy wandering eyes on ... . Taming of Sh. iii. 1 
therefore, fire, fire ; cast on no water — iv. 1 
when you cast out, it still came . . Winter' sTale, i. 2 

thy brat hath been cast out — iii. 2 

cast your good counsels upon his passion — iv. 3 
(his dignity and duty both cast off) . . — v. 1 

not cast aside so soon Macbeth, i. 7 

yet I made a shift to cast him — ii. 3 

doctor, cast the water of my land — v. 3 

hast thou yet more blood to cast away? ..John, ii. 2 
dead, and cast into the streets — v, 1 



CAS 



[ 10-3 J 

CASTLE— the castle in St. Albans. . . .iUenry VI. v. 2 
my gracious lord; I'll to my castle. .SHenri/fJ, i. 1 
here to hesiese you in your castle .... — 1.2 
Oxford ti) Ilunmics' castle straiglit .. — v. 5 
arc let lilood at romf'ret castle .... liicliard III. iil. 1 

brinj^ thoni to liaj'nard's castle — iii. 5 

withm tliis hoiir, at Baynard's castle — iii. 
iu courtesy showed me the castle .... — iv. 2 
and wear a castle on thy head! .. Troilus^ Cres. v. 2 
destruction on the enemy's castle?.. TilusAnd. iii. I 
quickly send, be brief iu it, to the castle. . Lear, v. 3 
come, let's to the castle: news, friends. . Ot/icUn, ii. i 
CASTLE-DITCM— i' the castle-ditch, itferry >r. v. 2 
CASTURE-[Coi.] Callino,castore me!. Henry F. iv. i 

CASUAIi— and tlie other casual Cymbeline, i. .'i 

accidental judgments, casual slaughters. Hnmlel, v. 2 
CASUALLY— too casually hath left.. Cymbeline, ii. 3 

CASUALTIES— awkward casualties Pcridi's, v. 1 

turned Iier to foreign casualties Leur, iv. 3 

CASUALTY— road of casualty ..Mer. of Venice, ii. 9 
CAT-take suggestion as a cat laps milk. Tempest, ii. 1 

will give language to you, cat — ii. 2 

our cat wringing her hands. Tiiio Gen. of Verona, ii. 3 

hang me in a bottle like a cat Mucli Ado, i. 1 

what though care killed a cat — v. 1 

or a part to tear a cat iu Mid. N. Dream, i. 2 

be it ounce, or cat, or bear — ii, 3 

lian" off, thou cat, thou burr — iii. 2 

by (fay more than the wild cat ..Mer. of Venice, ii. 5 

are mad, if they behold a cat — iv. 1 

why he, a harmless necessary cat .... — iv. 1 
tlie very uncleanly rtux of a cat.. As you Like it,iii. 2 

if the cat will after kind — iii. 2 (verses) 

but a cat, and now he's a cat to me. . All's Well, iv. 3 

he is more and more a cat — iv. 3 

pox on him! he's a cat still — iv. 3 

or of fortune's cat, (but not a musk cat — v. 2 
eyes to see ivithal than a cat . . Taming of Shrew, i. 2 

but will you woo tliis \vild cat? — i. 2 

from a ^v^ld cat [Co^-Kate] to — ii. 1 

like the poor cat i' the adajje? Macbeth^ i. 7 

thrice the brinded cat hath mewed . . — iv. 1 

as melancholy as a gib cat 1 Henry IV. i. 2 

if your mother's cat had kittened .... — iii. I 
and a ramping cat, and such a deal . . — iii. 1 

as vigilant, as a cat to steal cream — iv. 2 

in absence of the cat, to spoil Henry V. i. 2 

the cat must stav at homfe — i. 2 

a mule, a cat, a fitchew, a toad . . Troilus Sf Cres. v. 1 
the mouse-ne'er shunned the cat .... Coriolanus. i. 6 

cats, that can judge as fitly — iv. 2 

she'll prove on cats, and dogs Cymbeline, i. 6 

creatures vile, as cats and dogs — v. 5 

cat, mth eyne of burning coal.. Pe)/c(es, iii. (Gower) 
the sheep no wool, the cat no perftune . . Lear, iii. 4 

pur I the cat is grey — iii. 6 

more than prince of cats Romeo Sf Juliet, ii. 4 

good king of cats, notliing — iii. 1 

a mouse, a cat, to scratch a man .... — iii. 1 
every cat, and dog, and little mouse.. — iii. 3 
the cat will mew, and dog will have .... Hamlet, v. 1 
drown thyself? drown cats, and blind ..Othello, i. 3 

wild cats in your kitchens — ii. 1 

CATAIAN — such a Cataian Merry Wives, ii. 1 

my ladv's a Cataian Twelfth Night, ii. 3 

CATALOGUE— the catalogue oi\hosa.. AlVsWell, i. 3 

ay, in the catalogue ye go for men Macbeth, iii. 1 

have you a catalogue ot all Coriolanus, iii. 3 

the catalogue of his endowments .... Cymbeline, i. 5 
C ATAPL ASM_no cataplasm so rare . . . Hamlet, i v. 7 

CATARACT — you cataracts, and Lear, iii. 2 

CATARRHS— ruptures, catarrhs ..Troil.&Cres.v. I 
CATASTROPHE-on the catastrophe.. .4/i's Well, i. 2 

the catastrophe is a nuptial Love's L, Lost, iv. 1 

I'll tickle yovu- catastrophe 'iHenrylV. ii. 1 

like the catastrophe of the old comedy I ear, i. 2 

CATCH— will you troll the catch Tempest, iii. 2 

this is the time of our catch — iii. 2 

for stale to catch these thieves — iv. 1 

that shall catch your royal — v. 1 

so quickly may one catch the plague. Twelfth N. i. 5 

now let's nave a catch — ii. 3 

shall we rouse the night-owl in a catch — ii. 3 

I am dog at a catch ii. 3 

and some dogs will catch well — ii. 3 

let our catch l]e, thou knave — ii. 3 

to catch a saint, with saints Men. for Mea. ii. 2 

your's would I catch, fair Hermia . . Mid. N. Dr. i. 1 
should catch your voice, my eye {rep.) — i. 1 

makes speed to catch the tiger ii. 2 

from yielders all things catch — iii. 2 

every object tliat the one doth catcli.iore',!L.L. ii. 1 

if I can catch him once upon Mer. of Venice, i. 3 

here catch tliis casket; it is — ii. G 

catcli the strong fellow by the leg.. As youLikc it, i. 2 

our very petticoats will catch them — i. 3 

such a swain as you to catch. . Taming of Shrew, ii. I 

but he hath got a quiet catch — ii. 1 

lest lie catch cold on's feet . . Comedy of Errors, iii. 1 

to catch the nearest way Macbeth, i. f, 

and catch, with his surcease, success .... — i. 7 

I'll catch it ere it come to ground — iii. 5 

however men do catch; near or King John, i. 1 

an a' may catch your hide and you — ii. 1 

your skin-coat, an' I catch you right — ii. 1 

in the night to catch my horse 1 Henry I V. iii. 3 

catch of you, Doll, we catch ofyou..iHenry IV. ii. 4 

traps to catch the petty thieves Henry F. i. 2 

and so I shall catch the fly, your cousin — v. 2 

and stare, and catch the air 'IHenry VI. iii. 2 

set to catch my winged soull — iii. 3 

or good faith, you'll catch a blow . .SHemyVI. iii. 2 

to catch the itiiiglish crown — iii. 2 

ready to catch each other by Richard 1 1 1, i. 3 

souls may catch the king's — ii. 2 

to catch this good occasion most. . . . Henry VIII. v. 1 
Hector shall have a great catch. . Trail. ^ Cress, ii. 1 
sooner catch the age, than what .... — iii. 3 

you will catch cold, and curse me — iv. 2 

with great truth, catch mere simplicity — iv 4 



CAU 



CAST — cast away, and sunk, on Goodwin, i/o/m, v. fi 
dead, forsook, cast oil"; and none of you .. — v. 7 

or fortune cast my lot Ricliard II. i. 3 

with a freer heart cast ott' his — i. 3 

as to be cast forth in the — i. 3 

our states all nt one oast? \HenryI V. iv. 1 

vou oust tlic event of war IHenry IV. '\. 1 

proviikost thvM-llto I'nst liim up .... — i. 3 

of time, cast iillliis fnllowers — iv. 4 

let it l)c cast and p;ii(l: sir John — v. 1 

theroforo 1 must civst it up Henri/ V. iii. 2 

be cast from possiiiility of all \ Henry VI. v. 4 

do not cast away an honest man '2Henry VI. i. 3 

write and read, and cast account ..'iHenryVI. iv. 2 
to whom do lions caat their gentle. .3 Hejirv VI. ii. 2 

ICol. Knl.] have cast in darkness . . Ricliard III. i. 3 
have set my life upon a cast — v. 4 

your colt's tooth is not cast yet .... Henry VIII. i. 3 

ever casts such doubts — iii. 1 

and anon, lie casts his eye against.... — iii. 2 
and, sivint-like, cast her fair eyes .. .. — iv. 1 
whose bright faces cast thousand ... . — iv. 2 

how earnestly he oast his eyes — v. 2 

modesty again, cast none away — v. 2 

let us cast away nothing .... Troilus ^- Cressida, iv. 4 

are we undone? cast olf? Timon of Athens, iv. 2 

would cast the gorge at — iv. 3 

thou hast cast away thyself — iv. 3 

our Rome will oast upon thee Coriolanus, ii. 1 

you must oast your election on him.. — ii. 3 
from thonoe into (lestructiou cast him — iii. 1 

wlien you oast your stinking — iv. G 

and cast yom'self in wonder, to see.Jidius Ctesar, i. 3 

to cast into my teeth — iv. 3 

ii were pity to cast them away . . Antony Sr Cleo. i. 2 

the city cast her people out — ii. 2 

cast on my noble fatlier — ii. 6 

harsh fortune casts upon my face ... . — ii. 6 

think, speak, cast, write, slug — iii. 2 

they cast their caps up — iv. 10 

though forfeiters you cast in prison. Cymde/me, iii. 2 
and cast from her his dearest one .... — v. 4 

throw stones, cast mire upon me — _v .5 

the ocean, and cast your nets Titus Andron. iv. 3 

all headlong cast us down — v. 3 

the blind mole casts copped hills Pericles, i. 1 

one mountain, to cast up a higher ■ — i. 4 

the sea hath cast me on the rocks — ii. 1 

poor men that were cast away before us — ii. 1 

till he cast bells, steeple, church — ii. 1 

hath cast upon your coast (rep.) — ii. 1 

and men, and cast upon this shore — ii. 3 

must cast thee, scarcely coffined — iii. 1 

did tlie sea cast it up? — iii. 2 

which even women have cast off — iv. ) 

but cast their gazes on Marina's face .. — iv. 4 

I take up wliat's cast away Lear, i. 1 

poor j udgment he hath now cast her off. ... — i. 1 

and cast you, with the waters — i. 4 

think I have cast off for ever — i. 4 

to cast one's eyes so low! — iv. 6 

for thee, oppressed king, am I cast down . . — v. 3 
cast by their grave beseeming . . Romeo <§• Juliet, i. 1 
cast it off; it is my lady: O, it is my love — ii. 2 
sweet my mother, cast me not away! — iii. 5 
why such daily cast of brazen cannon . . Hamlet, i. I 
good Hamlet, cast thy nirfited colour off — i. 2 
and marble jaws, to cast tliee up again ! . . — i. 4 
to cast beyond ourselves in our opinions — ii. 1 
sicklied o'er with the pale cast of thouglit — iii. 1 

and we cast away moan — iv. 5 (song) 

cannot with safety cast him Othello, i.^ 1 

seems to cast water on the burning — ii." 1 

our general cast us thus early, for the love — ii. 3 

you are but now cast in his mood — ii. 3 

whereon it came that I was cast — v. 2 

CASTAWAY— wretches, castaways. R/c/mri/ ///. ii. 2 
ever I should call thee, castawayl...4n(. ^-Cleo. iii. 6 
like a forlorn and desperate castaway. TilusAnd. v. 3 

CASTED— with casted slough HenryV.'iv. 1 

CASTIGATE— castigate thy ]ir'\Ae.TimonofAth. iv. 3 
C.VSTIGATION- much castigation .... Othello, iii. 4 
CASTILIAJST- art a Castiliau king.MerryWives, ii. 3 
C ASTILIANO— Castiliano vulgo. . Twelfth Night, i. 3 
CASTING — casting their savageness..^rin/er's7'. ii. 3 

the casting forth to crows thy — iii. 2 

tliere was casting up of eyes — v. 2 

C.VSTLE— wealth of Windsor castle.jlferri/J^'/iies.ii. 3 
liis house, his castle, his standinj'-bed — iv. 5 
searcli Windsor castle, elves, witliin.. — v. 5 

t!iis castle hath a pleasant seat Macbeth, i. 6 

though castles topple on their — iv. 1 

the castle of Macduff I will surprise .. — iv. 1 
your castle is surprised; your wife .... — iv. 3 

our castle's strength will laugh — v. .5 

the castle 's gently rendered — v. 7 

enter, sir, the oastle. Why should I play — v. 7 

but Dover castle: London hath King John, v. 1 

meut UK pre-entlv at Berkley castle. TJ/c/iard //. ii. 2 
I'll for refuge straight to Bristol castle — ii. 2 
there stands the castle, by yon tuft .. — ii. 3 
Ijlease to enter in the castle, and there — ii. 3 

to go with us to Bristol castle — ii. 3 

Barkloughly castle coll you this — iii. 2 

bores through his castle wall — iii. 2 

and all your northern castles yielded iii. 2 

gOj to I'lint castle; there I'll pine — iii. 2 

this castle yield? The castle is royally — iii. 3 

rude ribs of that ancient ca-stle — iii. 3 

from the castle's tottered — iii. 3 

ofllylila, my old lad of the castle ..IHenry IV. i. 2 

at Berkley castle. You say true — i. 3 

we steal as in a castle; cock-sure .... — ii. I 
girdiii;; with grievous siege, castles ....Henry V. i.2 
from their sons, mock castles down . . — i.2 

what is this castle called iv. 7 

to visit her poor castle where 1 Henry VI. ii. 2 

an outlaw in a castle keeps — iii. I 

at your father's castle walls — v. 3 

let him shun castles (rep.) ■illenry VI. i. 4 



Catch -catch my nfe so pleasantly. Troil.f,- Cr. iv. .■• 
a noble nature may catch a wrench. Tim. ofAlh. ii. 2 

consuniption catch tliee! — iy. 3 

I will fear to catch it, and give way.. iv. 3 

could I but catch it for them — v. 2 

the very way to catch them Coriolanus, iii. 1 

you may be pleased to catch at . .Antony ^- Cleo. H. 2 

but I'll catch thine eyes, though.... v. 2 

saucy lictors will catch at us v. 2 

as she would catch another Antony. — v. 2 
lest the bargain should catch cold . . Cymbeline, i. 5 
[Co(.] may cu tell her in the sea . . Titus Andron. iv. 3 

canst thou catoli any fishes then? Pericles, ii. 1 

thou'lt catch cold shortly Lear, i. 4 

catch in their fury, and make nothing of. . — iii. 1 
to catch my death with jaunting liomeo ^Juliet, ii. ft 

ay, springes to catch woodcocks Hamlet, i. 3 

I U catch the conscience of the king ii. 2 

perdition catch my soul, but I do \ove,. Othello, iii. 3 

CATCIIED-when tnoy are catched,.I,oBe'.!/,. to,«(,v. 2 
my fear hath catched your fondness . . All's Well, i. 3 

catched it a"ain ; or whether his Coriolanus, i . 3 

cruel death hath catched it Uomeo fy Juliet, iv. h 

CATCHES— coziers' catches without ..TwelflhN. ii. 3 
we did keep time, sir, in our catches .. — ii. 3 
as the greyhound's mouth it catches.. A/uc/i/lrfo, v. 2 
and catches for his master Taming nfShrev), v. 2 

CATCHING— for catching cold. . Two Gen. of Ver. i. 2 

there's goodly catching of cold Much 'Ado, iii. 4 

sickness is catching; O were favour . . Mid. N. Dr. i. I 

'tis catching hither, even to our IHenry IV. iv. 1 

their diseases are grown so catching. Henri/ K///. i. 3 

Ills infection being of catching Coriolanus, iii. 1 

passion, I see, iscatching; for mine. /«i('«sCffisar, iii. I 
Cleopatra, catching but the least.. vin/ony ^-Cleo. i. 2 

CATE— for dainties are all cates . . Taming of SA. ii. 1 
but thoudiraycates be mean. Comedy of Errors, iii. 1 

than feed on cates, and have 1 HenrylV. iii. 1 

wine, and see what cates you have.. \HenryVI. ii. 3 
these cates resist me, she not Pericles, ii. 3 

CATECHISE— I must catechise you . . TiretfihN. 1. 5 

and catechise my picked man King John, i. 1 

r will catechise the world for him Othello, iii. 4' 

CATECHISING-what kind of catechising 

call you this? Mvch Ada, iv. 1 

CATECHISM— in a catechism ....As you Lil<e it, iii. 2 
so ends my catechism 1 Henry I V. v. 1 

CATER— caters for the sparrow . . As you Like it, ii. 3 

CATER-COUSIN-scarce cater-cousin.. Afer.o/F. ii. 2 

CATERPILLAR— the caterpillars of.Richard II. ii. 3 
herbs swarming with caterpillars? .. — iii. 4 

all, whoreson caterpillars! 1 Henry IV. ii. 2 

caterpillars eat my leaves away 2Henry VI. iii. 1 

false caterpillars, and intend their . . — iv. 4 
for every graft would send a caterpillar. Peric(es, v. 1 

CATESB Y— Catesby, I come Richard III. i. 3 

come hither, gentle Catesby — iii. 1 

go, gentle Catesby, and, asit were . . — iii. 1 
tell liim, Catesby, liis ancient knot . . — iii. 1 

good Catesby, go effect this — iii. 1 

shall we hear from you, Catesby .... — iii. I 

is my good friend Catesby — iii. 2 

good-morrow, Catesliy — iii. 2 

well, Catesby, ere a fortnight make — iii. 2 

and good-morrow Catesby — iii. 2 

Catesby hath sounded Hastings — iii. 4 

Level and Catesby [_Col. iCni.-Ratcliif] — iii. 4 

but, what, is Catesby gone? — iii. .5 

Catesby, o'erlook the walls — iii. 5 

yesternight by Catesby was it sent . . — iii. 6 
now, Catesby, what says yom- lord . . — iii. 7 
return, good Catesby, to the gracious — iii. 7 
here Catesby comes again (rep.) .... — iii. 7 

come hither, Catesby — iv. 2 

thyself, or Catesby; where is he? .... — iv. 4 
Catesby, fly to the duke — iv. 4 

true, good Catesby, bid him — iv. 4 

CATHEDRAL— cathedual church of. .2Henry VI. i. 2 
CAT-LIKE— with cat-like watch..yls you Like it, iv. 3 
CATLING— to make catlings on . . Trait. fyCres. iii. 3 

what say you, Simon Catling?.. Borneo fy Juliet, iv. f) 
CAT-LOG— the cat- log of her ..TwoGen. of Ver. iii. 1 
CATO—imder- valued to Cato's ..Merch. of Venice, i. 1 

a soldier even to Cato's wish Coriolanus, i. 4 

well-reputed; Cato's daughter.. ..Jk;i'«s Ctesar, ii. 1 

by which I did blame Cato for — v. 1 

and come, 3^oung Cato — v. 3 

1 am the sou of Marcus Cato (rep.) . . — v. 4 

and noble Cato, art thou down? — v. 4 

niav'st be honoured as being Cato's son — v. 4 

CAT-O'MOUNTAIN-orcat-o'mountain.T'emp. iv. 1 
your cat-o'moimtain looks Merry Wives, ii. 2 

CATS-GUTS— rCo(. A'nJ.-calves] eats-guts. Cym6. ii. 3 

CATTERWAULING— 
what a catterwauling do you keep. Twef/h Night, ii. 3 
what a ca.tterwauling dost thoukeeii?. f.tusAnd. iv. 2 

CATTLE— and takes the cattle. . . . Merry Wives, iv. 4 
living by the copulation of cattle. /Is yon Li'Aeii, iii. 2 

for the most part cattle of this — iii. 2 

men's cattle break their necks .. Tilus Andron. v. 1 

CAUCASUS— on the frosty Cauca6Us?.i?(c/mrrf //. i. 3 
Prometheus tied to Caucasus TitusAndron. ii. 1 

CAUULE-the breast: aoaudle,ho!.ioi!e'sI..LM(, iv. 3 

ye shall have a liomiiou cauille •iHenri/Vl. iv. 7 

caudle thy morninL; taste . ...Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

CAUGIlT-have I ouu-ht tliee.... i>/.-rry Wires, iii. 3 
must becaiiglit witli tiokliiig.... r«T(/W N'ght, ii. 
sooner caught than the pestilence.... jUuc/i .4do, i. 1 

if he have caught the Benedick — i. 1 

we have caught her, madam — iii. i 

none are so surely caught Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

and caught it of 3'our eyes — v. 2 

liow I caught it, found it Merchant of Venice, i. 1 

licence of tree foot hast caught ..Asyou Likeit, ii. 7 
look my twigs; he shaE be caught ..All'sH'cU, iii. 6 

we have caught tlie woodcock — iv. 1 

for I have caught extreme cold ..Taming of Sh. iv. 1 
and it is caught of you (repealed) . . Winter's Tale, i. 2 

a sickness caught of me i.2 

for most it caught me, the celestial . . — iii. i 



CAU 

CAUGHT— mine eyes (caiight the.. irin/er'sTnle, v. 

which 1 cauglit witli linjjiug '2Hennj 1 /'. iii. 

is caught, as men talse diseases — v. 

young was limed, and caught S Wch nj VI. v. 

that tliey have caught tlie King Henry VII I. ii. 

he lias caught me in his eye . . Timon nf Alliens, iv. 
and when he caught It, he let it .... CorioLanusj i. 

or be caught with cautelous — iv. 

say, ah, ha ! you're caught Anlonij fy Cleo. ii. 

when you caught hurt in parting .... Pericles, iv. 

a Ibx, when one has caught her Liar, i. 

have X caught tliee? he, that parts us — v. 

in the ahrriu of four cauglit up Hamlet, ii. 

[KntJ] hath uiuight me in liis clutch — v. 1 (sonj 
I have cau-ilit her once more in my anus — v. 
thus creduTi>us fools are caught Oihellu, iv. 

CAULDRON— about the caulih'on go..Macbelh,\v. 
fire, bmTi; aud cauldron, bubble (rep.) — iv. 

in tile cauldron boil and bake — iv. 

for the ingredients of oiu' cauldron.... — iv. 

and now about the cauldron sing — iv. 

why sinks that cauldron? .— iv. 

CATJXKED — caulked and bitumed . . Pericles, iii. 
how close 'tis caulked and bitumedl — iii. 

CAUSE— you have cause (so have we . . Tempest, ii. 
who hath cause to wet the grief on't .. — ii. 

I have cursed them without cause — v. 

aiid that's lier cause of sorrow. Two Gen. of Ver. iv. 
afterwards 'ork upon the cause .... Merry fVives, i. 

(IS 1 am from giving him cause — ii. 

there is reasons, and causes for it ... , — iii. 
to give liim such cause of suspicion I — iii. 3 
what cause of suspicion? what cause — iii. 3 

if I suspect without cause — iii. 3 

I suspect without cause, mistress .... — iv. 2 

our frailty is the cause TwelfthNight, ii. 2 

find notable cause to work — ii.3 

thou therefore hast no cause — iii. 1 

di'ew your sword upon me without cause — v. 1 
and tile judge of thine own cause .... — y. 1 
he hath cause to complain of? .... Mea.for Mea. ii. I 
hearing of the cause; hoping {rep.').. — ii. 1 

lie's hearing of a cause — ii. 2 

the cause of his withdi-a wing (rep.).. — iii. 2 

give your cause to heaven — iv. 3 

her cause, and yours, I'll perfect .... — iv. 3 

as cause doth minister — iv. 5 

beyou judge of your o\TO cause — v. 1 

I would he had some cause to prattle — v. 1 

then is your cause gone too — v. 1 

I must be sad wlien I have cause Much Ado, i.Z 

as I have just cause, being her uncle — ii. 3 

give your age such cause of fear — v . I 

actor, too, perhaps, if I see cause. . Mid. N.'sDr. iii. 1 

hast given me cause to curse — iii.l 

will cause Demetrius to awake — iii. 2 

the birds have any cause to sing. . Love's L.Lost, i. 1 

as the style shall give us cause — i. 1 

the first aud second cause will not . . — i. 2 
we cannot cross the cause why we . . — iv. 3 

I hate a breaking cause to be — v. 2 

form all causes to the purpose — v. 2 

(as there is no sucli cause) you will .. — v. 2 
doth cause me as my father .... Mer. of Venice, ii. 2 

before thou had'st a cause — iii. 3 

I acquainted liim with the cause in — iv. 1 (let.) 
I am informed thoroughly of the cause — iv. 1 

too unkind a cause of grief — v. 1 

I have more cause As you Like it, i. 3 

and that a great cause of the night . . — iii. 2 
not cause to weep? as good cause. ... — iii. 4 

I have more cause to hate him — iii. 5 

upon the seventh cause (.rep.) — v. 4 

seventh cause; how did you (j-ep.) .. — v. 4 
was this fair face the cause . . . All's Well, i. 3 (song) 
with that raalimaut cause wherein.. — ii. 1 
I am the cause liis death was so ... . — iii. 2 
know the cause of your coming?.. /"amm^o/S/i. ii. 1 

to know the cause why music — iii. 1 

no cause to stay. But I have cause . . — iii. 1 

know you not the cause? — iv. 2 

a weighty cause of love between .... — iv. 4 

let me never have a 3ause to sigh — v. 2 

that has most cause to grieve Winter'sTale, ii. 1 

there is no cause, when you shall.... — ii. 1 
the cause were not in being Crep.).. .. — ii. 3 
nourish the cause of his awaking .... — ii. 3 

shall the causes of their death — iii. 2 

to get the cause of my son's resort .. — iv. 1 

now Jo ve aftbrd you cause ! — iv. 3 

such power, she had just cause — v. 1 

let him, that was tlie cause of this.... — v. 3 
cause why thou departed'st (rep) . . Comedy of Er. i. 1 

nieelv, that have no otlier cause — ii. I 

on her part some cause to you — iii. 1 

upon what cause? — _y. 1 

we shall have cause of state Macbeth, iii. 1 

all causes shall give way — iii. 4 

the general cause? or is it a fee-grief . . — iv. 3 

for their dear causes would — v. 2 

buckle his distempered cause within . . — v. 2 

your cause of sorrow must not be — v. 7 

give you cause to prove my saying .Kins' John, iii. 1 
you shall have no cause to curse .... — iii. 1 

thou hast no cause to say so yet — iii. 3 

order in so fierce a cause doth — iii. 4 

will pluck away his natural cause . . — iii. 4 
I had mighty cause to wish him .... — iv. 2 

the spot of this enforced cause — v. 2 

put his cause and quarrel to — v. 7 

appeareth by the cause you come .... Richard II. i. 1 
can arbitrate this cause betwixt .... — i. 1 

the cause of his arrival here in — i. 3 

in the justice of his cause — i. 3 

as they cause it right, so be thy — i. 3 

heaven in thy good cause make — i. 3 

liad I thy youth, and cause, I would — i. 3 

60 the causes of our wreck — ii. 1 

yet I know no cause why — ii. 2 

I wi!l unfold some causes of your — iii. 1 



104 ] 



CAU 



CAUSE— well, tliat thou hast c:m»<d. Riclmrd II. iii. 

wert cause of noble Gloster's death . . — iv. 

cause to wail, but teachest (.rep,) — iv. 

thou hast no cause to fear — v. 

and for this cause, awhile we 1 Henry IV. i. 

a kind of question in our cause — iv. 

water-colours, to impaint his cause.. — v. 

God befriend us, as our cause is just! — v. 

his quarrel, and his cause illenrylVt i. 

but the cause that wit is in other men — i. 2 

1 have read the cause of his effects . . — i. 2 

thus have you heard our cause — i. 3 

action (a cause on foot) — i.3 

wrencliing the true cause — ii. 

as stron", our cause the best — iv. 

all memliers of our cause, both here. . — iv. 

every slight and false derived cause — iv. 

hath no just cause to hate me — v. 

nor peer shall have just cause to say — v. 

turn him to any cause of policy Henry V. i. 

in regard of causes now in hand .... — i. 

yoiu- grace hath cause, and means . . — i. 

that shall have cause to curse — i. 

hand in a well-hallowed cause — i. 

we therefore have great cause of ... . — ii. 

and now to our French causes — ii. 

so grossly in a natm'al cause — ii. 

when you yourselves are cause — iii. 

no great cause to desire the approach — iv. 

his cause being just, and his quarrel — iv. 

if his cause be ^vrong, our obedience — iv. 

but, if the cause be not good, the king — iv. 

be his cause never so spotless — iv. 

much more, and much more cause. . — v. (cho. 

there is occasions and causes why..,. — v. 
these news would cause him once . . 1 Kenr y VI. i. 

to know the cause of your abrupt — ii.3 

and for that cause I trained thee .... — ii. 3 

declare the cause my father — ii. 5 

that cause, fair nephew — ii. 5 

more at large wliat cause that was .. — ii. 5 

I have, upon especial cause — iv. 1 (letter) 

for so slight and irivolous a cause . . — iv. 1 

to forget this quarrel, and the cause — iv. 1 

but cm-se the cause I cannot aid .... — iv. 3 

give me hearing in a cause — v. 3 

for he hath greatest cause 2Henry VI. i. 1 

confederates in tliis weighty cause . . — i. 2 

OS I was cause your higliness came . . — i.3 

that threat'st where is no cause , — i. 4 

the cause injustice' equal scales (rep.) — ' ii. 1 

give you in this weighty cause? .... — iii. 1 

thou shalt have cause to fear — iv. 1 

to determine poor men's causes — iv. 7 

the cause why I have brought — v. 1 

thou hast no cause. No cause! ZHenry VI. i.Z 

for a thousand causes, I would prolong — i. 4 

with justice of our cause — ii. 1 

I'll cut the causes off, flattering .... — iii. 2 

from such a cause as fills mine eyes — iii. 3 

this is the cause, that I poor Margaret — iii. 3 

they take offence without a cause .... — iv. 1 

as he favours Edward's cause 1 — iv. 1 

upon what cause? , Richard III. i. 1 

the cause of my imprisonment — i. 1 

thou wast the cause (rep.) — i.2 

hath more cause to be a moui'uer — i.2 

not the cause ICol. Kni.-mean] of my lord — i.3 

pardon them that are the cause tliereof! — i.3 

what cause have I, (thine being . . — ii. 2 

all of us have cause to wail — ii. 2 

go with you. You have no cause .... — ii. 4 

indeed, had no cause to mistrust .... — iii. 2 

the cause why we are met is, — — iii. 4 

ICol. /i?!(.] in this just cause come I — iii. 7 

who hath any cause to niouru — iv. 4 

though far more cause, yet much .... — iv. 4 

you have no cause to hold my — iv. 4 

God, aud our good cause, fight upon — v. 3 
the cause he may a little grieve at. .Henry VIII. ii. 1 

what's the cause? It seems — ii. 2 

what cause hath my behaviour given — ii. 4 

to plead your cause; it shall be — ii. 4 

to bring my whole cause 'fore his — ii. 4 

the fullcause of our coining — iii.l 

makes my cause more strange — iii. 1 

and comlorts to yom' cause — iii.l 

and counsel, for my cause — iii. 1 

put your main cause into the — iii. 1 

for your honour better, and your cause — iii. 1 

put my sick cause into his hands .... — iii. 1 

upon what cause, wrong you? — iii. 1 

has left the cause o' the king unhandled — iii. 2 

not wholesome to our cause — iii. 2 

as I will lend you cause — iii. 2 

good Griffith cause the musicians.... — iv. 2 

the chief cause concerns his — v. 2 

1 take my cause out of the — v. 2 

the cause betwixt her and this — v. 2 

what was his cause of anger?.. Troilus <§- Cressida, 
he is melancholy without cause .... 

I know the cause too; he'll lay 

bad success in a bad cause 

and on the cause and question now. . 

for 'tis a cause hath no mean 

let him show us a cause 

since you refused the Grecians' cause 
that cause sets up with and against. . 
a cause worthy my spleen .... Ti 

ay, Timon, and have cause 

i' the cause against your city — v. 3 

or we had cause of fear, we sent — v. 5 

fight, as cause will be obeyed Coriolanus, i. 6 

in hearing a cause between — ii. I 

all the peace you make in their cause — ii. 1 

he has more cause to be proud — ii. 1 

with the least cause, these his new . , — ii. 1 

you know the cause, sir — ii.3 

as cause had called you up — ii. 3 

I wish I had a cause to seek him .... — iii. 1 



— 1. 2 



ii. 2 
ii.3 

iv. 5 
V. 2 
of Alliens, iii. 5 



CAUSE— cause iraborn, could never.. C'orioiajiws, iii. 1 
one part does disdain witli cause .... — iii.l 

leave us to cure this cause — iii.l 

and power i' the trutli o' the cause . . — iii. 3 

a cause for thy repeal — \v. \ 

and, by my troth, you have cause — iv. 2 

I have the most cause to be glad of . . — iv. 3 

what cause, do you think, I liave — v. 2 

stand to me in this cause — v. 'J 

great cause to give great thanks — v. 4 

if you would consider the true cmsc. JuliusCiesar, i. 3 
I know no personal cause to spurn .. — ii. I 
but our own cause, to prick us to redress ^ ii. 1 
unto bad causes swear such creatures — ii. I 
that, or our cause, or our pertbrrnance — ii. 1 
acquainted with your cause of gi'ief. . — ii. I 
some cause, lest I be laughed at (rep.) — ii. 2 
nor without cause will he be satisfied — iii. I 
we will deliver you the cause, why . . — iii.l 

hear me for my cause — iii. 2 

not without cause; what cause — iii. 2 

some worthy cause to wish things done — iv. 2 

our cause is ripe: the enemy — iv. } 

come, come, the cause; if arguing.... — v. 1 
between them and a great cause ..An u,ny ^ Cleo. i. 2 
shall break the cause of our expedience — i.2 
they have entertained cause enough — ii. 1 

having alike your cause? — ii. 2 

your partner in the cause 'gainst which — ii. 2 
we have cause to be glad, that matters — ii. 2 
the least cause for what you seem. ... — iii. 2 
not called me so, nor have you cause — iii. 6 

would obey it on all cause — iii. 9 

for I have savage cause — iii. 11 

never find more cause to change .... — iv. 5 

not as you served the cause — iv. 8 

proportioned to our cause, must be .. — iv. 13 
than you sliall find cause in Caesar . . — v. 2 

project mine own cause so well — v. 2 

lest I give cause to be suspected Cymbeline, i. 2 

your cause doth strike my heart .... — i. 7 
thou niay'st be valiant in a better cause — iii. I 

that we have given him cause — iii. .'> 

of judgment is oft the cause of fear .. — iv. 2 

striking m our country's cause — v. 1 

the justice of my cause witli arms. Titus Andron. i. 1 

undertook, this cause of Rome — i . 1 

commit ray cause in balance to — i. 1 

myself, my person, and the cause .... — i. 1 
valiant doings iii their country's cause? — i. 2 
died in honour and Eavinia's cause ... . — i.2 
in fame that died in virtue's cause .... — i.2 

the cause were known to them — ii. 1 

[Knt.'] aii't were my cause, I should., — ii. 5 

Rome never had more cause ! — i v. 4 

thou hast cause to rue — v. 1 

'cause they take vengeance of such . . — v. 2 
a thousand times more cause tlian lie — v. 3 

what cause had Titus to revenge — \.Z 

my cause who best can j ustify . . Pericles, i. (Gowcr) 
Antiochus (on what cause I know not — i.3 

gives cause to moui'n his funeral — ii. 4 

try honour's cause, forbear your — ii. 4 

unto your court, for honour's cause — ii. .'i 

that is the cause we trouble you so early — iii. 2 

cause it to sound, 'lieseecli you — iii. 2 

the cause of your king's sorrow — v. 1 

to know the cause [K'n^-more of it] Lear, i. 4 

beweep this cause again, I'll pluck — i. 4 

are old, make it your cause — ii. 4 

I have full cause of weeping — ii. 4 

the king hath cause to plain — iii. 1 

what is the cause of thunder? — iii. 4 

is there any cause in natm-e .— iii. fi 

some dear cause will in concealment — iv. 3 

what was thy cause? Adultery — iv. S 

that the queen on special cause is here .... — iv. 5 
cause, they have not. No cause, no cause.. — iv. 7 

most just and heavy causes make — v. 1 

the cause remove. My noble (.rep.).. Rom. ^Jul. i. 1 

of the first and second cause — ri. 4 

what unaccustomed cause procures her — iii. 5 
all niglit for lesser cause and ne'er been — iv. 4 
the very cause of Hamlet's lunacy .... Hamlet, ii. 2 
the cause of this effect ; or, rather say (rep.) — ii. 2 

defective, comes by cause; thus — ii. 2 

John-a-dreams, unpregnant of my cause — ii. 2 
what cause he will by no means siieak . . — iii. 1 
the happy cause of Hamlet's wildness . . — iii. 1 
my lord, what is your cause of distemper? — iii. 2 
his form and cause conjoined, preaching — iii. 4 

no cause without why tlie man dies — iv. 4 

sitli I have cause, and will, and strength — iv. 4 

the numbers oannot try the cause — iv. 4 

what Is the cause, Laertes, that thy — iv. 5 

for by the image of my cause, I see — v. 2 

report me and my cause aright — v. 2 

by cunning, and forced cause — v. 2 

I shall have also cause to speak — v. 2 

mine's not an idle cause Othello, i. 2 

little shall I grace my cause, in speaking — i. 3 

my cause is hearted; thine hath no — i. 3 

you have little cause to say so — ii. 1 

will I cause these of Cyprus to mutiny . . — ii. 1 

[A')i(.] as if the cause were his — iii. 3 

rather die, than give thy cause away .... — iii. 3 
(as worthy cause I have, to fear— I am) — iii. 3 
sith I am entered in tliis cause so far .... — iii. 3 
alas the day, I never gave him cause ... . — iii. 4 

not ever jealous for the cause — iii. 4 

to the felt absence now I feel a cause .... — iii. 4 

it is the cause, it is the cause (rep.) — v. 2 

dear general, I never gave you cause — v. 2 

CAUSED-sea hath caused to belch up.. Tempest, iii. 3 

hath caused his death Richard II. i. 2 

hath caused every soldier to cut Henry V. iv. 7 

thou hast caused printing to be used. 2 Herery VI. iv. 7 

have caused him, by new aet ZHenry VI. ii. 2 

who caused your father's death. . . . Richard III. ii. 2 
you have caused y om- holy hat . . Henry VIII. iii. 2 



CAUSKD-that letter, lonueed yuu.llrnnji'lll. iv. 2 

uiusetl uiir swiftest eoinposition CorioUmus^ iii. I 

is iiiticd of him that caused it inloiiyij-C/eo. v. 2 

tliat caiiseil a lesser villnin Cytnbeline, v. 5 

CAUSEl.lCSS-eauselcss, iierhaps, but.TOjis And. iv. 1 

eiipernatiiral and causeless -i/Z's /!>//, ii. 3 

with the rest, causeless have laid ..•iUenrnt'l. iii. 1 

CAUSEK-the causer of your vow. Lore's /.. Lost, iv. Ii 

the causer of the timeUvs deaths .... IlichanUll. i. 2 

CAUSES'!"— cnuscst to be done. . . . Men. lor Mea. iii. 2 

(.'Ai:SKTlI-tluit whieh eanseth it.7"j-o,(. dj- Cms. iv. 4 

CAl'TlCl-— no .-oil, uor caulel Hamlel. i. 3 

CAUTELOi;S-witli eautelous haits.Coriolunm, iv. 1 

cowards, and men cuutelous Julius Ca'sar^ ii. I 

CATTTXON— with caution, tluit AU'slfell,]. 1 

advise liini to a caution, to hold Macbeth^ iii. G 

for tliv i-Mod caution, tlianks — iv. 1 

and pressed in with this <'autinn . . llenryVin. ii. 4 
yet my caution was more pertinent. .C'orm/m/K.s, ii. 2 

Vitl\ such cautious, that, it they come Leur, ii. 1 

that in wav of caution (1 must tell yow ..Hamlet, i. 3 
CAl TJtIZiXG— 

and each false be as a caut'rizing..ri«ion of Ath. v. 2 
CA^'ALEUO-eke cavalero Slender .Merry IV i-oes, ii. 3 
to help cavalero Cobweb to scratch.. il/iV/. N.Dr. iv. 1 
CAVAl.EltUES— 

to all the eavaleroes about London ..2Henryll'. v. 3 
CAVALEHO-JUSTICE— 

cavalero-justice, I say Merry Wives, ii. I 

tell him cavalero-iustice; teUhun.. — ii. 1 
CAVALIER- 
and choice-drawn cavaliers . , Henry V. iii. (chorus) 
she'll disi'urnisli us of all our cavaliers. Pcr/c/cs, iv. 6 

CAVE— to our captain's cave Tu-o Gen.ofl'er. v. 3 

mountains, and the barbarous caves. Twelftli .Y. iv. 1 
like an o'enrrown lion iu & caxvq . . . . Mea.for Mea. i. 4 

ffu to m V cave and tell me As you Like it, ii. 7 

led me instantly imto his cave — iv. 3 

to know at your abandoned cave .... — v. 4 

that ca\"cs and womby vaultages Henry V. ii. 4 

loosed them from their brazen caves. 2HeHrj/ VI. iii. 2 

Envy in licr loathsome cave — iii. 2 

into the blind cave of eternal Richard III. v. 3 

bring us to his cave: it is our part.. TimonofAtlt. v. 2 
here is his cave: peace and content . . — v. 2 
from Aleibiades to Timon's cave .... — v. 3 
aspick leaves upon the caves oil^\\Q..Ant.^'Cleo. v. 2 

in this onr pinching cave Cymbeline, iii. 3 

trained up tlius meanly i' the cave . . — iii. 3 

there is cold meat i' the cave — iii. 6 

a coiu't no bigger than tills cave .... — iii. 6 

remain here m the cave — iv. 2 

that such as we cave here — iv. 2 

with a council-keeping cave . . Titus .■indronims, ii. 3 
which waj^ shall I find revenge's cave — iii. 1 

and cabin in a cave — iv. 2 

there's not a hollow cave — v. 2 

murderers in their guilty caves — v. 2 

and make them keep their caves Lear, iii. 2 

else would I tear the cave where. Rmneo 4- Juliet, ii. 2 

did ever diagon keep so fair a cave? — iii. 2 

CAVE-KEEl^ER— I was a cave-keeper . . Cymb. iv. 2 

CAVERN — from the tongueless caverns. ./?/c/i. //. i. 1 

find a cavern dark enough Julius Crcsar, ii. 1 

CAVETU— caveto be thy counsellor . . Henry F. ii. 3 
CAVIARE — 'twas caviare to the general. Hamic^ ii. 2 
CAVIL — 'tis love you cavil a.t..TwoGen. of k'erona, i. 1 

that's but a cavil; he is old Taming of Sh. ii. 1 

I'll cavil on the ninth part } Henry IT. iii. 1 

to cavil in the course of 1 Henry VI. v. 4 

you cavil, widow; I did mean ZHenn/ VI. iii. 2 

CAVILLING— not stand cavilling . . . .SHenry VI. i. 1 

CAWDOR— the thane of Cawdor Macbeth, i. 2 

no more that thane of Cawdor shall.... — i. 2 

hail to thee, thane of Cawdor! — i. 3 

of Cawdor? the thane of Cawdor lives .. — i. 3 

no more than to be Cawdor — i. 3 

and thane of Cawdor too — i. 3 

call thee thane of Cawdor — i. 3 

and tliane of Cawdor : the greatest is ... . — i. 3 

is execution done on Cawdor? — i. 4 

my worthy Cawdor! the prince of — i. 4 

thane of Cawdor, by whicn title . . — 1. 5. (letter) 

Glamis thou art, and Cawdor — i. 5 

great Glamis! worthy Cawdor! — i. 5 

Where's the thane of "Cawdor? — i. 6 

therefore Cawdor shall sleep no more . . — ii. 2 

king, Cawdor, (Jlamis, all — iii. I 

CAWING — rising and cawing ..Mid. N. Dream, iii. 2 

CEASE — here cease more questions Tempest, i. 2 

you said our work should cease — v. 1 

cease to persuade Two Gentlemen of Verona, i. 1 

60 your affection would cease — ii. 1 

cease to lament for that , — iii. 1 

I pray thee, cease thy coimsel Much Ado, v. 1 

O nature, cease! [Kii(.-cesse!] AlVs Welt, v. 3 

both shall cease without your — v. 3 

cease; no more: you smell Winter's Tale, ii. 1 

things at the worst will cease Macbeth, iv. 2 

Constance would not cease, till she . . King John, i. 1 

may cease their hatred Henry V. v. 2 

cease, cease these jars, and rest your.. 1 Henri/ r/. i. 1 

retreat, and cease our hot pursuit — ii. 2 

shall not cease to rage, until iHenry VI. iii. 



nor cease to be an arrogant controller 



iii. 2 



cease, gentle queen, these execrations — iii. 2 

let me entreat thee, cease — iii. 2 

cease to weep, but who can cease to . . — iv. 4 

and petty sounds to cease I — v. 2 

to cease this civil war iHenry VI. i. 1 

the lamb will never cease to — i v. 8 

nor cease liis flow of riot Timon of Athens, ii. 2 

your importunaey cease, till — ii. 2 

why cease you till you are so? Coriotanus, i. 6 

let them not cease, out with — iii. 3 

to say, beseech you, cease: you have.... — iv. 6 
which are, or cease, as you shall give./ln(.<5C(po. i. 3 

than be so, better to cease to be Cymbelinc, iv. 4 

would cease the present power of life ... . — v. 5 
never was a war did cease, ere — v. 5 



CEASE-swcet father, cease your tears. TitusAnd. iii. 1 

yet cease your ire, ye angry stars Pericles, V\. 1 

by bi'cak of day, if the wind cease — iii. 1 

patience, good sir, or here I'll cease .... — v. 1 

we do exist, and cease to be Lear, i. 1 

or cease your quest of love? — i. 1 

that thin'gs might change, or cease — iii. 1 

and nnichination ceases: fortune love you! — v. 1 

fall, and cease! this feather stirs — y. 3 

which doth cease to be Romeo i^ Juliet, ii. 2 

to cease thy suit, and leave me — ii. 2 

the time the potion's force should cease — v. 3 
the cease of majesty dies not alone .... Hamlel, iii. 3 
woe, or wonder, cease yoiu' search — v. 2 

CEASED— ceased, in heavy satistaclion.. All's Well, v. 3 

for miracles are ceased Henry V. i. 1 

be not ceased with slight denial Tmion of Athens, ii. 1 

CEASETH— never ceaseth to enlarge . . 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

C!EDAR— pluck'd up the pine andcedar. Tempesl,v. 1 

as upright as the cedar Love's L.Lost, iv. 3 

as on a mountain top the cedar .... 2 Henry VI. v. 1 
thus yields the cedar to the axe's . .3 Henry VI. v. 2 

aiery buildeth in the cedar's top Richard III. i. 3 

and, like a moimtain cedar Henry VIII. v. 4 

strike tlie proud cedars 'gainst. . ; . . . Coriotanus, v. 3 
a stately cedar shall (jep. v. b)Cymbeline, v. 4 (scroll) 

the lofty cedar, royal Cymbeline — v. 5 

to the majestic cedar joined — v. .5 

but shrubs, no cedars we Titus Andronicns, iv. 3 

CEDIUS— Epistrophus and Cedius.. rro>7..5-Cres. v. 5 

CELEBRATE— true love to celebrate. . Tempest, iv. 1 

and lielp to celebrate a contract — iv. 1 

now witchcraft celebrates pale Macbeth, il. 1 

doth celebrate this feast ot battle Richard II. i. 3 

to celebrate the joy that God 1 Henry VI. i. 6 

Bacchanals, and celebrate ourdrink?./4n«.i5-C;eo. ii. 7 
my queen, we'll celebrate their nupt\a\s. Pericles, v. 3 

CELEBRATED— contract celebrated. Winter's T. v. 1 
our Saviour's birth is celebrated Hamlet, i. 1 

CELEBRATION— day's celebration ..Tempest, iv. 1 
we will our celebration keep — Twelfth Mght, iv. 3 
day of celebration of that nuptial. Winter's Tale,iv. 3 
are ever forward in celebration , . Henry VIII. iv. 1 
it is the celebration of his nuptials Othello, ii. 2 

CELERITY— his quick celerity ..A/ea. /or Mea. iv. 2 
it was the swift celerity of his death. . — v. 1 

celerity than that of thought Henry F. iii. (clio.) 

ay, with celerity, find Hector's. . Troilus Sf Cress, i. 3 
she hath such a celerity in dying. /ln(o)iy f; Cleo. i. 2 
celerity is never more admired — iii. 7 

CELESTIAL — bears celestial liquor . . Tempest, ii. 2 
now I worship a celestial sun. . Two Gen. of Ver. ii. G 
celestial Silvia's chamber-window — ii. 6 

give me thy hand, celestial, so Merry Wives, iii. 1 

and rare, precious, celestial? ..Mid. N. Dream, iii. 2 
celestial, as thou art, oil pardon.. Lome's L.Lost, iv. 2 

until the twelve celestial signs — v. 2 

the celestial habits, (methinks .. Winter's Tale, iii. 1 
envelope and contain celestial spirits.. Hcnii/ V. i. 1 
by inspiration of celestial grace .... 1 Henry VI. v. 4 

a pattern of celestial peace — v. 5 

that celestial harmony I go to .... Henry VIII. iv. 2 
his celestial breath was sulphurous. . Cymbelinc, v. 4 

taste the fruit of yon celestial tree Pericles, i. 1 

celestial Dian, gocldess argentine — v. 2 

will sate itself m a celestial bed Hamlet, i. .'j 

to the celestial, and my soul's idol. . — ii. 2 (let.) 

CELIA— dear Celia, I show more ..Asyou Likeit, i. 2 
ay, Celia; we stayed her for your .... — i. 3 

no longer, Celia, but Aliena — i. 3 

CELL— a full poor cell Tempest, i. 2 

... — i. 2 



: weighty. /{ic/inrei ///. ii. 2 

' "Ug — iii. Hi 

..Henry VIII. i. 1 



— V. I 



before we came unto this cell 

lodged thee in mine o\vn cell 

retire into my cell 

mantled pool beyond yom- cell 

we are now near his cell 

this is the mouth o' the cell 

which weather- fends your cell 

fetch me the hat and rapier in my cell. 

this cell's my court 

go sirrah, to my cell 

and 3'onr train to my poor cell 

at friar Patrick's cell Two Gen. of Verona, iv. 3 

at Patrick's cell, should meet me — v. 1 

at Patrick's cell this even — v. 2 

it is a cell of ignorance Cymbelinc, iii. 3 

sweet cell of virtue and nobility .. Tims Andron. i. 2 

to my ghostly father's cell Romeo (.y Juliel, ii. 2 

at friar Laurence' cell be shrived.... — ii. 4 
hie you hence to friar Laurence' cell — ii. 5 

to dinner; hie you to the cell — ii. .5 

he is hid at Laurence' cell — iii. 2 

to Laurence' cell, to make confession — iii. 5 
here comes the lady towards my cell — iv. 1 
the youthful lord at Laurence' cell . . — iv. 2 

bring it straight unto my cell — v. ? 

and keep her at my cell till Romeo . . 

in my cell there would she kill herself 

to keep her closely at my cell, till I.. — v. 3 

feast is toward in thine eternal cell Hamlet, v. 2 

thy [K)i(. the] hollow cell rA'K(.-hell]!..0«rfto, iii. 3 

CELLAR— my cellar is in d rock Tempest, ii. 2 

CJSLLARACjE- fellow in the cellarage . . Hamlel^ i. 
CELSA — sterat Priami regia cclsa. Taming of ah. iii. 1 

celsa senis, that we might beguile — iii. 1 

presume not; celsa senis, despair not — iii. 1 
CEMENT — burned in their cement. . Coriotanus, iv. 6 

may cement their divisions .intuny fy Cleo. ii. 1 

as the cement of our love — iii. 2 

CENSER— a censer in a barber's shop. Tam. of SA. iv. 3 

thou thin man in a censer! illenrylV. v. 4 

CENSOR — being censor twice Coriotanus, ii. 3 

CENSORINUS— and Censorinus — ii. 3 

CENSURE-shoidd censure thus.. TwoGen. of Ver. i. 2 
which now you censure him .... Meas.for Mcas. ii. 1 
when I, that censure him, do so ... . — ii. 1 

in mortality can censure 'scape — iii. 2 

themselves to every modern censure. /<.5you/.i7i<',iv. 1 
therefore beware my censure, and keep . — iv. 1 
blessed am I in my just censure?.. Winter'sTale, ii. 1 



— V. 3 



CENSURE — let our j ust censures attend . Macbeth, v. 4 

to give their censure of these 1 Henry VI. ii. 3 

if you do censure me by what — v. ."i 

to give his censure: these are no 2HenryVI. i. 3 

and censure well the deed — iii. 1 

give your censures in 

to avoid the censure, 

durst wag his tongue 

your lateceusure i"'l 

and giddy censure will then cry o\it.. Coriotanus, i. 1 

to suffiir lawful ci'iisiire for Buen .... — iii. 3 

or endure your lieaviest censure .... — v. i 

censure me iu >'our wisilom Julius Ctcsar, iii. 2 

must court'sy at the censure Cymbelinc, iii. 3 

fear not slander, censure rash .... — iv. 2 (song) 

the strongest in our censure Pericles, ii. 4 

the fault would not 'scape censure Lear, i. 4 

first be known that are to censure them . . — v. 3 
take each man's censure, but reserve .... Hamlet, i. 3 

shall in the general censure take — _i. 4 

the censure of which one, must, in your — iii. 2 

join in censiu'e of his seeming — iii. 2 

m mouths of wisest censure ; what's Othello, ii. 3 

I may not breathe my censure — iv. 1 

remains the censure of this hellish villain — v. 2 
CENSURED— has censured lum . . Mea. for Mea. i. 5 

I hear how I am censured Much Ado, ii. 3 

by our best eyes cannot be cfaiUxQd.. King John, ii. 2 
you two know how you are censured. Cono/unus, ii. 1 
why, how are we censured? Because — Ii. 1 

I may be censured, that nature thus Lear, iii. .'> 

CENSURER— malicious censurers ..Henry VI II. i. 2 
CENSURING— of censuring B.ome'!. Ant. ij- Cleo. v. 2 

CENT — donneray deux cents escus Henry V. iv. 4 

CENTAUR— with the Centam-s. .^V/W. N. Dream, v. 1 

fo bear it to the Centaur, where. . Comedy of Err. i. 2 
'11 to the Centaur, to go seek this . . — i. 2 
safe at the Centaur; and the heedful — ii. 2 
you know no Centaur? you received — ii. 2 
home to the Centaur, with the gold.. — ii. 2 
come to the Centaur : fetch our stuff — i v. 4 
that lay at host, sir, in the Centaur. . — v. i 
and bloody than the Centaurs' feast. . TitusAnd. v. 2 
down from the waist they are Centaiu's. . Lear, iv. 6 
CENTRE-through the centre creep. Mirf. N.'s D. iii. 2 

thy intention stabs the centre! Winter'sTale, i. 2 

the centre is not big enough to bear. . — ii. 1 
many lines close in the dial's centre ..Henry V. i. 2 
the middle centre of this cursed .. ..1 Henry /'/. ii. 2 

even in the centre of this isle Ricliard III. v. 2 

the planets, and this centre . . Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 3 
as earth to the centre, yet, after all . . — iii. 2 

is as the very centre of'the earth — Iv. 2 

the inmost centre of the eartli . . Titus Andron. iv. 3 
dull earth, and find thy centre out. . Rom. ^ Jul. ii. 1 

it were hid indeed within the centre Hamlet, ii. 2 

CENTURIES— centuries to our aid . . Coriotanus, i. 7 
CENTURION— the centurions, and.. — iv. 3 
CENTURY-said a century of prayers. Cymbeline, iv. 2 
a century send forth; search every acre . . Lear, iv. 4 
CERBER'US-club killed Cerberus.. iow's L. i. v. 2 

damn them with king Cerberus 2HenryIV. ii. 4 

Cerberus is at Proserpina's beauty. . Troil.^-Cres.Vi. 1 
as Cerberus at the 'Thracian poet s .. TitusAnd. ii. .'> 
CERECLOTH-to rib her cerecloth. . Mer. of Ven. ii. 7 
CEREMENT— burst their cerements! . . Hamlet, i. 4 
CEREMONIAL-cereinouial rites. Taming ofSh. iii. 2 
CEREMONIES- 
all sanctimonious ceremonies may. . . . Tempest, iv. 1 
but after many ceremonies done. Taming- o/SA. iii. 2 
shall find the ceremonies of the wars. . Henry V. iv. 1 
his ceremonies laid by, in his nakedness — iv. 1 
find tliem decked mtii ceremonies. Juims Ciesar, i. 1 
fantasy, of dreams, and ceremonies.. — ii. 1 
Ctesar, I never stood on ceremonies.. — ii. 2 
all true rites, and lawful ceremonies — iii. 1 
twenty popish tricks and ceremonies. Tj/us/Inrf. v. 1 
CEREMCJNIOUS- how ceremonious. Winler'sT. iii. 1 

let us take a ceremonious leave Ricliardll. i. 3 

form, and ceremonious duty, for you — iii. 2 
too ceremonious, and traditional . . Richardlll. iii. I 
cuts oft' the ceremonious vows of love — v. 3 
of Troy are ceremonious courtiers. Trail. Sf Cresi. i. 3 

with that ceremonious aft'ection Lear, i. 4 

CEREMONIOUSI-Y— 

ceremoniously let us prepare.. ..Mer. of Venice, v. 1 

CEREMONY— and ceremony of it..Verry Wives, iv. 2 

to give oivr hearts united ceremony . . — iv. 6 

and all the ceremony of this Twelf/h Kighl, v. 1 

no ceremony that to great ones . . Mea. for Mea. ii. 2 
sorting with a nuptial ceremony . . Mid. N. Dr. v. 1 
urge the thing held as a ccremony?.jVer."/ Ven. v. 1 

use a more spacious ceremony All'sWell, ij. 1 

whose ceremony shall seem expedient — ii. 3 

that I leave out ceremony Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

the sauce to meat is ceremony Macbeth, iii. 4 

save ceremony, save general irep.) . . Henry V. iv. 1 
O ceremony, show me but thy worth! — iv. 1 
and bid thy ceremony give thee cure! — iv. 1 
thrice gorgeous ceremony, not all these — ■ iv. 1 
and, but for ceremony, such a wretch — iv. 1 
but the ceremony of bringing back.Hcnry/'///. ii. 1 

you saw the ceremony? — iv. 1 

my lords, ceremony was but deWsed. Tim. of Ath.i. 2 

bate one jot of ceremony Coriotanus, ii. 2 

set on; and leave no ceremony out .JuliitsC<vsarj i. 2 

it useth an enforced ceremony — iv. 2 

what, no more ceremony? Antony^- Cleo. iii. II 

of welcome is fashion aiid ceremony. . . . Hamlet, ii. 2 

what ceremony else? that is (rep.) — v. 1 

CERES— Ceres, most bounteous lady ..Tempest, iv. 1 
approach rich Ceres, her to entertain . . — iv. 1 

Ceres' blessing so is on you — iv. 1 (song) 

Juno and Ceres whisper seriously — iv. 1 

when I presented Ceres — iv. 1 

tlic licai! at Ceres' plenteous load? ..'ZHenryVI. i. 2 
CERI.MON— hath built lord Cerimon ..Pericles, iii. 2 

lord Ceriinon, my lord; this man — v. 3 

lord Cerimon hath letters of good credit — v. 3 
lord Ceriinon, we do our longing btay.... — v. 3 



CERIMON— Cerimon there well.PfWcipj, v. 3 (Gow.) 
CERN-rCoi. Knt.'] what 'cerns it you. Tom. o/Sh.v. 1 

CERTAIN— that's most certain rempesl,m. 2 

bury it certain fathoms in the earth . . — v. 1 
will not let you believe things certain — v. I 
know for certain, that I am Prospero — v. 1 
without you? nay that's certain. TwoGen.of Ver. ii. 1 

some certain shot be paid — .??• 5 

'tis most certain your husband's.. jVi'ny(Ki»ej,ui. 3 

most certain, if you are she Tu-elflh NtglU,i. 5 

most certain: let our catch be — .;■-' 

nay, that's certain ; they that — in. J 

for meddle you must, that's certain — iii. •» 

I would send for certain of my Mea.for Mea. i. 3 

I'll send him certain word — ..J. 5 

thou art not certain; for thy complexion — in- ' 

but it is certain, that when he — i". '-J 

to die tills day, that's certain — iv. 3 

for certain words he spake against . . — y. 1 

but it is certain I am loved of all Much Ado,i. 1 

'tis certain so; the prince wooes — i}- 1 

rich she shall be, that's certain — .ii- 3 

nay, that's certain; %ve have — iv- 2 

certain, said she, a wise gentleman .. — v. 1 
thy crazed title to my certain right. .Vid. iV. Dr. i. 1 
and certain stars shot madly from .. — li- 2 

a certain aim he took at a fair — .fV ^ 

becertain, nothing truer; 'tis no jest lu. 2 

and as a certain father saith Loue's L. Lost, iv 2 

at the father's of a certain pupil — — ;v. 2 

ther^ is no certain princess that — iv. 3 

Bome certain treason — iv. 3 

some certain special honours it pleaseth — v. 1 

more calf, certain — "^- 2 

that certain he would fight, yea — — v. 2 
peeled me certain wands, and . . Merch.of Venice, \. 3 
Lorenzo, certain; and my love, indeed — n. 6 
that's certain; I, for ray part, knew — in. 1 

that's certain, if the devil may be — i "■ 1 

a lodged hate, and a certain loathing — iv. 1 

for here I read for certain — y- 1 

of a certain knight, that swore . . As you Like it, i. 2 
the cut of a certain courtier's beard. . — .v. 4 

certain it is, that he will steal Alls Well, in. 6 

butof this I am not certain — iv. 3 

she has; certain it is, I liked her — — y. 3 

is certain to me a break-neck Winter's Tale,}. 2 

be certain what you do, sir — .;;■ 1 

and to the certain hazard of all — m. 2 

the bondage of certain ribbands — iv. 3 

most certain, to miseries enough — iv. 3 

nothing so certain, as your anchors . . — ly. 3 
to certain merchants, of whom. . . Comedy of Err. i. 2 
in a thing falsing. Certain ones then — u. 2 

home for certain ducats — y. • 

(a thing most strange and certain) Macbeth, n. 4 

for certain friends that are both — m. I 

for, certain, sir, he is not — v. 2 

but for certain, he cannot buckle — — v. 2 
but certain issue strokes must arbitrate — y. 4 

most certain of one mother King John, i. 1 

for the certain knowledge of that truth — _i. 1 

by some certain king purged — u. 2 

no certain life achieved by others' death — ly. 2 

came there a certain lord, neat 1 Henry IF. i. 3 

why, that's certain; 'tis dangerous .. — ii. 3 
followed certain men into this house — ii. 4 

he is certain, ours is doubtful — iv. 3 

certain horse of my cousin Vernon's — i v. 3 

to reform some certain edicts — iv. 3 

no, that's certain ; I am not — y . 4 

I bring you certain news from iHenryll ■ i. 

too true, your fears too certain — j. 

I hear for certain, and do speak — i. 

I have no certain notice — ..!■ 

I have received a certain instance .. — ui. 
certain, 'tis very certain {repeated) . . — iii. 

but be old; certain, she's old — lu. 

this apoplex, will certain be his end. . — iv. 
it is certain, that either wise bearing — v. 

it is most certain — y. 

titles to some certain dukedoms Henry V. i. 

behind and settled certain French . . — i . 
did claim some certain dukedoms . . — _i. 
long as I may, that's the certain of it — ii. 
it is certain, corporal, that he is .... — .ii. 
falorousaentlemaii,thot is certain .. — iii. 
'tis certain, he hath passed the river — iii. 
'tis certain, every man that dies ill . . — iv. 

'tis certain, there's not aboy left — iy. 

for they are certain and infallible . . 1 Henry Fl. i. 
about a certain question in the law.. — iy. 
some certain dregs of conscience. . . . Richard UI. i. 
the verity of certain words spoke . . Henry Flll.i. 
from a dying man receive as certain — ii. 
and held for certain, the king will . . — ii. 

certain, the daughter of a king — ii. 4 

on certain speeches uttered by — li. 4 

for certain, tliis is of purpose laid — v. 2 

'tis now too certain — v. 2 

certain and possessed conveniences. Troil.Sf Cres.ul. 3 
'tis certain, greatness, once fallen . . — iii. 3 
call my thought a certain knowledge — iy. 1 
there are certain ladies most . . Timon of Athens, 1. 2 
my lord, there are certain nobles . . — _i. 2 
my lord, here is a note of certain dues — li. 2 

with certain half-caps — .ii. 2 

for certain money here, sir (.rep.) — iii. 4 

BofuUofgold? Certain — y. 1 

acertain number, though thanks to. CorwtenMS,;. 6 
yes, certain, there's a letter for you . . — ii. 1 
when some certain of your brethren — .ii. 3 
to keep him here om- certain death . . — iii. 1 
but this certain, that, if thou conquer — v. 3 

certain, tliis is true? (rap.) — v. 4 

given up, for certain drops of salt .... — y. 5 
some certain of the noblest minded. JuliusCcesar,!. 3 

nay, that's certain — iii. 2 

therefore, 'tis certain, he was not — iii. 2 

send to you for certain sums of gold — iv. 3 



[ 1C6] 

CERTAIN-for certain, she is deiui. Julius Cwnar, iy. 3 
tills is most certain that I shall ..Anlonyi^-Cleo.u. 1 
you could not lack, I am certain on't — ii. 2 

a certain queen to Ca3sar — ii. (j 

by certain scales i' the p.yramid — ii. 7 

is this certain? or I have no — iii. 3 

most certain; sister, welcome — iii. 6 

most certain. Go, Eros, send his — iv. 5 

nay, 'tis most certain — v. 2 

nay, that is certain — v. 2 

at certain hours, such thoughts .... Cymbelinc, i. 4 
■whose top to climb is certain falling — iii. 3 
»» certain as I expect my revenge — iii. 4 (let.) 

to make me certain it is done — iii. 4 (let.) 

'tis certain, she is fled — iii. 5 

did compound for her a certain stuff — v. 5 
some certain snatch or so would. . TitusAndron. ii. 1 

then were it certain, vou were not Pericles, i. 1 

thee aia certain condolements, certain. . — ii. 1 

this letter, and some certain jewels — iii. 4 

for certain in our story — iv. (Gower) 

'tis most certain — v. 3 

that's most certain, and with you Lear, i. 1 

you shall run a certain course — i. 2 

if the matter of tliis paper be certain — iii. 5 

cannot be bordered certain in itself — i v. 2 

most certain, sir — iv. 7 

shall be. That's a certain te.xt. iJomeo fy Juliet, iv. 1 

doomed for a certain term to walk Hamlei, i. 5 

that certain players we o'er-i\aught on .. — iii. 1 
a certain convocation of politic worms .. — iv. 3 

that is most certain — v. 2 

'tis certain then for Cyprus Othello, i. 3 

without more certain [Jf n(.-wider] — i. 3 

upon certain tidings now arrived — ii. 2 

certain, men should be what they seem. . — iii. 3 
certain of his fate, loves not his ^vronger — iii. 3 

thou art wise; 'tis certain — iv. 1 

on the sea-bank with certain "Venetians — iv. 1 
nay, that's certain; but yet the pity of it — iv. 1 

CEETAINER— nothiu" eertainer Much Ado, v. 4 

CERTAINLY— certainly, sir, I can Tempest, i. 2 

but, certainly a maid — .1.2 

no certainly ;— speak louder Merry Wives, iv. 2 

for certainly, while she is here Much Ado, ii. 1 

therefore, certainly, it were not good — iii. 1 
certainly, my conscience will serve. itfer. of Fen. ii. 2 
certainly, the Jew is the very devU .. — ii. 2 

but Antonio is certainly undone — iii. 1 

certai uly , there is no truth in him. As youLike it, iii. 4 
certainly, a woman's thought runs . . — iv. 1 
as you are certainly a gentleman. . Winter's Tale^ i. 2 

but he was certainly whipped — iv. 2 

if you had won it, certainly, you had . . ..John, iii. 4 

the king is certainly possessed 1 Henry IF. iv. 1 

and certainly, she did you wrong Henry F. ii. 1 

certainly, ancient, it is not a thing . . — iii. 6 
for, certainly, thou art so near the gulf — iv. 3 

yes, certainly ; and out of doubt — v. 1 

are we certainly resolved 1 Henry FI. v. 1 

certainly, the cardinal is the end ..HenryFIII. ii. 1 
we'll hear you sing, certainly . . Troitus ^ Cress, iii. 1 
certainly, he flouted ns downright . . Coriolanus, ii. S 
nay, certainly, I have hsaxd. Antony Sf Cleopatra,i\. 7 

nay, certainly to-night ; for look Pericles, iii. 2 

our sister's man is certainly miscarried . . Lear, y. 1 

and, certainly, in strange uniiuietness. . Othello, iii. 4 

CERTAINTIES-with.no certainties ..2HenrylF. i. i 

1 speak from certainties Coriolanus, i. 2 

certainties either are past remedies . . Cymbeline, i. 7 

CERTAINTY— but a certainty.. il/ea.s-. /or Meas. iv. 2 

tell me, for more certainty Merch. of Fenice, ii. 6 

we here receive it a certainty, vouched. All's Well, i. 2 
upon thy certainty and confidence . . — ii. 1 

encourage myself in my certainty — iii. 6 

with all certainty, to be the king's. Winter's Tale ^v. 2 

the certainty of this hard life Cymbeline, iv. 4 

certainty of your dear father's death . . Hamlet, iv. 5 

CERTES— for, certes, these are people.. Tempest, iii. 3 

and certes, the text most infallibly. Love's L. L. iv. 2 

certes she did: the kitchen-vestal.. Com. o/£)r. iy. 4 

one, certes, that promises no Henry Fill. i. ! 

for certes, says he, I have already Othello, i. 1 

CERTIFICATE— this is a certificate.2irenr!//r. ii. 2 
CERTIFIED— certified the d\ik&..Mer. of Fenice, ii. 8 

foreign princes shall be certified 1 Henry Fl. iv. 1 

CERTIFIES— [Co(. Knt.'] then certifies.flw/i./i/. iii. 2 

CERTIFY— I go to certify her IHenryFI. li. 3 

CESARIO— towards you, Cesario . . Twelfth Night, i. 4 

who saw Cesario, hoi — i. 4 

Cesario, thou know'st no less but all — i. i 

now, good Cesario, but that piece — ii. 4 

mark it, Cesario 1 it Isold — ii. 4 

once more, Cesario, get tnee to yon .. — ii. 4 

Cesario is your servant's name — iii. 1 

Cesario, by the roses of the spring .. — iii. 1 
nor your name is not master Cesario — iv. 1 

be not offended, dear Cesario — iv. 1 

Cesario, you do not keep promise .... — v. 1 

what do you say, Cesario? — v. 1 

where goes Cesario? — v. 1 

Cesario, husband, stay — v. 1 

fear not, Cesario, take thy — v. 1 

the count's gentleman, one Cesario .. — v. 1 

my gentleman, Cesario? — v. 1 

Cesario, come; for so you shall be — v. 1 

CESS— in the withers out of all cess ..IHenrylF. ii. ! 
CESSE— [X»i(.]-in me, (J nature, cesse! ..Alt's Well, v. 3 
CHAFE— will chafe at the doctor's. . Merry Wives, y. 3 

I chafe you, if I tarry Taming ofStirew, ii. 1 

see how it chafes, how it rages . . Winter's Tale, m.Z 

who chafes, who frets, or where Macbeth, iv. 1 

fain would I go to chafe his paly ..'IHenryFI. iii. 2 
do not chafe thee, cousin .... Troilus ^- Cressida, iv. 5 

flies each bound it chafes Timon of Athens, i. 1 

does become the carriage of Ills chafe. /ln^i5-C'teo. i. 3 
on the \innumbered idle pebbles chafes . . Lear, iv. 6 
CHAi'ED- chafed him so ..Two Gen. ofFerona, iii. 1 
an angry boar, cliafed ^\ith sweat?. Taming of .SVi. i. 2 
Warwick rages like a chafed bull ..ZHenry FI. ii. 5 



CHAFED— what, are you chafed?. . . . Henry Fill. i. I 
60 looks the chafed lion upon tiie daring — iii. 2 

their high blood chafed Triolus ^Crrssida (prol.) 

so blushed, and Paris so chafed i.2 

being once cliafed, he cannot be Coriolanus, iii. 3 

the cnafed boar, the mountain lioness. Titus And. iv. 2 

CHAFF— in two bushels of chaff . . . Mer. of Fenice, i. 1 

picked from the chaff and ruin of — ii. 9 

scared my choughs from the chaS.. Winter's T. iv. 3 

corn shall seem as light as cliaff iHenry IF. iv. 1 

where my chaff and corn shall fly . . Henry Fill. v. 1 
chaff' and bran, chaff and bran ! . . Troilus ^ Cress, i. 2 

a pile of noisome, musty chaff Coriolanus, v. 1 

vou are the musty ehatf; and j'ou — v. 1 

CHAFFLESS— unlike all others, chaffless. . Cymb. i. 7 

CHAFING— troubled Tiber chvt&ag..JuliusCtesar, i. 2 

CHAIN— howling, gingling chains Tempest, v. 1 

afl'ection chains tliy tender days. Tu-o Gen.ofFer. i. 1 
and have taken him by the cliain . . Merry Wives, i. 1 

and shakes a chain in a most — iv. 4 

beguiled him of a chain, had the chain — iv. 5 
beguiled master Slender of his chain — iv. 5 

I'll provide you a chain — v. 1 

go, sir, rub your chain with crumbs. . TieelflhN. ii. 3 
your neck, like a usurer's chain ?....JV/uc/i Ado, ii. 1 
his speech was like a tangled chain. Af/rf. A'. Dr. v. 1 
the cliain were longer, and the letter. Lore's L. L. v. 2 
and a chain, that you once wore .Asyou Like it, iii. 2 
filed keys off, that hung in chains. Winter's Tale, iv. 3 
he promised me a chain; would ..Comedy of lir. ii. 1 
get you home, and fetch the chain . . — iii. 1 

thai chain I wiU bestow (be it for — iii. I 

here is the chain; I thought to irep.) — iii. 2 
he had of me a chain; at five (rep.) .. — iv. ) 
a chain, a chain; do you not hear (rep.) — iv. 2 
is that the chain, you promised me . . — iv. 3 
for my diamond, the chain yon promised — iv. 3 
more covetous would have a chain . . — iv. 3 

the devil will shake her chain — iv. 3 

for a chain, your husband had (rep.) — iv. 4 

did I meet him with a chain — iv. 4 

protest, he had the chain of me — v. 1 

and that self chain about his neck.... — v. 1 
so to deny this chain, which now .... — v. 1 

tlus chain you had of me — v. 1 

to go fetch a chain, promising — v. I 

of him received the chain, wliich .... — v. 1 

these peo^ile saw tlie chain about — v. 1 

you, sir, for this chain arrested' — v. 1 

cast off' his chains of bondage Richard II. i. 3 

marry, our chains, and our jewels ..iHenry IF. ii. 4 
I will chain these legs and arms ..IHenry FI. ii. 3 

the very shaking of their chains 2Henry FI. v. 1 

..he bearward in their chains — v. 1 

their rotten coffins up in chains ZHenry FI. i. 3 , 

do chain my soul to thine — ii. 3 

tliat in tlieir chains fettered — v. 7 

a thrifty shoeing-horn in a chain.. Trail, fy Cres. V. 1 

to chain up and restrain the poor Coriolanus, i. 1 

chain mine armed neck Antony 4- Cleopatra, iv. 8 

and hang me up in chains! — v. 2 

fettered in amorous chains.... TiiusAndronicu-s, ii. I 

chain me with roaring bears Romeo /^Juliet, iv. 1 

ill cliaius of magic were not bound Othello, i. 2 

CHAINED— night kept chained below. Tempest, iv. 1 
too long, if it were chained together. Com. ofEr. iv. 1 
bear chained to the ragged staff . . . .i Henry FI. v. 1 

CHAIR— the several chairs of oxd&r. Merry Wives, v. 5 
as I say, in a lower chair, sir ... . Meas. for Meas. ii. 1 

it is like a barber's chair All's Well, ii. 2 

fast to the chair; be heedful: hence ..King-JoA;!, iv. 1 
return back to their chairs again .... Richard if. i. 3 

this chair shall be my state 1 Henry IF. ii. 4 

so hunger for my eniiity chair ZHenry IF. iv. 4 

run a tilt at death within a chair?.. IHewyK/. iii. 2 

thy father to his drooping chair — iv. 5 

in that chair where kings and queens.2 Henry Fl.i. 2 

even in the chair of state! ZHenry FI. i. 1 

and, o'er the chaii' of state, where.... — i. 1 
is he that took king Henry's chair . . — i. 4 
his dukedom and his chair with me. . — ii. 1 

for chair and dukedom, throne — ii. i 

hadst kept thy chair in peace — ii.6 

resign thy chair, and, where I stand — v. 5 

is tile chair empty? Richard III. iv. 4 

by the foil of England' s chair — v. 3 

in a rich chair of state Henry Fill. iv. 1 

reach a chair;— so, — now methinks . . — iv. 2 
and benold that chair stand empty .. — v. 2 
pant in youi- great chairs of ease..Timon of Ach. v. .5 
and the chairs of justice supplied .. Coriolanus, iii. 3 

a tomb so evident as a chair — iv. 7 

lay it in the prastor's chair, vrYieie. .JuliusCcssar^ 1. 3 
let him go up into the public chair . . — iii. 2 
andliimself in chairs of gold..... Antony ^Cleo. iii. 6 

to this chair bind him Lear, iii. 7 

fellows, hold the chair: upon these eyes.. — iii. 7 

for a chair, to bear him easily hence. . Otlwllo, v. 1 
a chair, a chair! Roderigo! (rep.) — v. 1 

CHAIR-DAYS— and thy chair-days..2Henr!/r/. v. 2 

CHALICE— take away these chalices. .iVerr;/ '♦'. iii. 5 

the ingredients of our poisoned chalice. .A/ac6e//ij 1. 7 

preferred him a chalice for the nonce . . Hamlet, iv. 7 

CHALICED— chaliued fLowcxs. Cymbeline, ii. 3 (song) 

CHALK — grace cluilks successors Henry Fill. i. I 

CHALKED— clialked forth the way Tempest, v. 1 

CHALKY— for tlie chalky cliffs. . Comedy of Err. iii. 2 

as I could ken thy chalky cliff's iHenryFl. iii. 2 

di-ead siunrait of this chalky bourn Lear, iv. 6 

CHALLENGE-I combat challenge. Merry WVues, i. 1 

by gar, it is a challenge — i. 4 

to challenge him to the field Twelfth Night, ii. 3 

I'll write thee a challenge — ii. 3 

challenge me the count's youth to .. — iii. 2 

beai- me a challenge to hiih? — iii. 2 

here's the challenge, read it — iii. 4 

not the matter I challeiifre thee for — iii. 4 (dial. ) 

1 will deliver his challenge by word — iii. 4 
some horrid message for a challenge — iii. 4 
uncle's fool, reading the challenge. . ..MuchAdo, i. k 



CHA 



[ 107 ] 

CHAMBER— show you a clianiber. 7Voi(. ^Cres. iii.2 

bed, cluiniber. Paniliir to i)i'ovi<l.j — iii. 2 

coniu , villi a^'uiii into jtiy chamber .. — iv. 2 
keen bis cliiunlicr, many (?-i»;>.) . . Timon ofAlh. iii. \ 
lead me tn my chamber.. ..Antony ^CU-npnlra^ ii. it 

come, I'll to my eiianiber CiftnbeUiu\ i. 3 

that perfumes the chamber th VIS — ii. 2 

my <iesi;;n? to note tlie chamber — ii. 2 

ay, to itccp lier chamber — ii.3 

the cliimncy is south the chamber .. — ii. 4 
the roof o' the chamiier witli "oldcn — ii. 4 
description of wliat is in lier chamber — ii. 4 

sir, iier chambers are ail locl<ed — iii. .^ 

brinj; tliis aiiparel to my chamber .. — iii. f) 

in Ill's own cliamber, I mean — iv. 1 

Tbaliard, you're of our ctiamljer Pericles, i. 1 

strictly tied to her eliaraber, that it.. .. — ii. .■> 

to the next chamber bear her — iii.2 

or at their chamber door I'll beat Lear, ii. 4 

private in his chamber pens himsQlt.. Rom. if Jul. i. 1 
and sought for, in the great chamber — i. i 
hie to your chamber: I'll find Borneo — iii.2 
ascend her chamber, hence and comfort — iii. 3 

light to my chamber, liol — iii. 4 

lady mother's coming to your eb.amber — iii. 5 
thy nurse lie with thee in thy chamber — iv. 1 
ICol. Knt.l was sewing in my chamber. Ham;e/,ii. 1 

keep close within your chamber — iv. 7 

now get you to my lady's chamber. ... — v. I 
if she be in her chamber, or your house.. OtAd/o, i. 1 

I found it in my chamber — iii- 4 

how she plucked him to my chamber .. — iv. 1 
that you should find it in your chamber — iv. 1 
I have another weapon in this chamber — v. 2 

I found it in my chamber — v. 2 

CHAMBER-COtJNCIL— 

as well as my chamber-councils .. Winter'sTale,i. 2 
CHAMBER-t)O0R— 
hold the chamber-door, whilst by .... Henry V. iv. 5 

alarums at our chamber-doors \HenryVI. ii. 1 

a lousj' footboy at chamber-door?. . Henri/ Fill. v. 2 

and dupped the chamber-door. . Hamlet, iv. !i (song) 

CHAMBERED-best blood cbambered.iJicAard//. i. I 

CHAMBERER— that chamberers have. . Olhello,m. 3 

CHAMBER-HANGING— averring notes of 

chamber-hanging, pictures CymbeUne,v. 5 

CHAMBERLAIN-his two chamberlains. Macbeth, i.7 
what ho! Chamberlain. At band.. 1 Henry IV. ii. 1 
got my lord chamberlain his liberty. /i/c/iarrf ///. i. 1 
as much, unto my good lord chamberlain — i. 1 
between them and my lord chamberlain — i. 3 

with a priest, lord ehamberlainy — iii. 2 

good lord chamberlain, to, give Henry VIII. i. 4 

say, lord chamberlain, they have done — i. 4 
my lord chamberlain, pr'ythee, come — _i. 4 
well met, ray good lord chamberlain — ii. 2 
thanks, my good lord chamberlain . . — ii. 2 

thv boisterous chamberlain Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

CHAMBER-LIE-voiu: chamber-lie ..\Henry IV. ii. 1 
CHAMBER-MAID— 

my niece's chamber-maid Twelfth Nigld, i. 3 

since possesses chamber-maids and Lear, iv. 1 

worms that are thy chamber-maids. .Rom. if- Jm;. v. 3 

CHAMBERPOT— for a chamberpot. .ConoianMs, ii. 1 

CHAMBER-WINDOW— climb celestial Silvia's^ 

chamber-window . . TwoGentlemen of Verona, ii. 6 

he her chamber-window will ascend . . — iii. 1 

your lady's chamber-window — iii.2 

out of her lady's chamber-ivindow . - Much Ado, ii. 2 
than to see me at her chamber-window — ii. 2 
in my chamber-window lies a book.... — ii.3 
the lady Hero's chamber-window .... — ii. 3 

see her chamber- window entered — iii. 2 

out at her mistress' chamber-window .. — iii. 3 
with a ruffian at her chamber-window — iv. 1 
the great chamber-window, where. Mid. N. Dr. iii. 1 

knock at my chamber-window All's Well, iv. i 

CHAMP— Richard du Champ Cymbeline, iv. 2 

CHAMPAIGN-[Co(.] daylight and champaign 

discovers not more Twelfth Night, ii. 5 

CHAMPAIGNE-Guienne,CharapaigneHen»-yr/. i. 1 

CHAMPAIN— with champains riched Lear, i. 1 

CHAMPIAN— dayliglit and champian Wol 

champaign] discovers not more . Twelfth Night, ii. 5 

CHAMPION— brings in the champion. .4«'s Well, iv. 2 

and champion me to the utterance! ..Macbeth, iii. 1 

thou fortune's champion King John, iii. 1 

to arms! be champion of oiu' church! — iii. 1 
the widow's champion and defence . . Richard II. i. 2 
why then, the champions are prepai-ed — i. 3 
demand of yonder champion tlie cause — i. 3 

his new-come champion 1 Henry VI. li. 2 

a stouter champion never handled — iii. 4 

his champions are— the prophets ''Henry VI. i. 3 

the most complete champion that ever — iv. 10 
now will I be Edward's champion.. SHenryf/. iv. 7 

hardy and undoubted champions — v. 7 

Rome's best ebampion, successful.. TitusAndron. i. 2 

Rome's readiest champions — i.2 

like a bold champion, I assume Pericles, i. 1 

I can produce a champion, that will Lear, v. 1 

CHANCE—cbance to steal . . Two Gen. of Verona, ii. 4 
either in nativity, chance, or death.Mcrri^ Wives, v. 1 

how chance you went not with — v. 5 

to comfort you with chance Twelfth Night, i. 2 

if it be thy chance to kill me — iii. 4 (chal.) 

but it chances, the ite»,\ti\.. Measure fur Measure, i. 3 

though mv chance is now to use — iii. 2 

wherein if bechance to fail — iii.2 

but, by chance, nothing of what — iv. 2 

I may chance have some odd quirks.. Miic/i^lrfo,ii. 3 

any matter of wei,L-'ht clitiuoes — iii. 3 

make a pisli ot cli:ince and sufferance. — v. 1 
how chance tlic roses tlicrc do iiide. ... Mid.N .Dr. i. 1 

how chance moonshine is gone — v. I 

come here by chance, we'll not . . Love's L. Lost, v. 2 
I here am come by chance; and lay.. — v. 2 
you must take your chance .Merchant of Venice, ii. 1 
come, bring rae imto my chance — ii. 1 

by the view, chance as fair — iii. 3 (scroll.) 



CHA 



CHALLENGE— I will challenge hira-jUHc/i--l:/n, iv. 1 
do challenge thee to trial of a man . . — v. 1 

God bless nie from a challenge! — v. 1 

Claudio vmdergoes my challenge — — v. '2 

challenge her to bowl Love's L. Lost, iv. 1 

when she shull ohallt-ngc this — v. 2 

HcolorwiHi-li!illcn;;eliim — v. 2 

bv tlu' north polo. I ilm-liallenne thee — v. 2 
Ponipcv liatli nuule tlie challenirc- - - . — v. 2 
come challenge, ciiallenge me by these — v. 2 

cliallenges itself as honour's born All's Well, ii. 3 

wlio may I rather eballenge for Macbeth, iii. 4 

I am a subject, and challenge law . . Hichard //.ii.3 

in mv life did hear a challenge \ Henry IV. v. 2 

live to sec it, 1 will challenge it Henry I', iv. 1 

anil ever dare to challenge this glove — iv. 7 

if any man challenge this, he is — iv. 7 

I know this; and thus I challenge it — iv. 8 

in thy cap, till I do challenge it — iv. 8 

not of any ciiallenge of desert I Henry VI. v. 4 

perfections challenge sovereignty ..SHenryVI. iii. 2 
subjects inny challenge nothing of their — iv. 6 
whv, and I'll challenge nothing but — iv. 7 

by this I ehnlleiige him to single fight — iv. 7 
these graces eballenge grace: and.. — iv. 8 

and make my challenge Henry VIII. ii. 4 

t!ian liers, to'him this challenge .. Trail. ,$-Cres. i. 3 
tliis ciiallenge that the gallant Hector — _i. 3 

I have a roisting challenge sent — ii. 2 

to-morrow be answered in this challenge — iii. 3 
his spirit, that dares not challenge it — v. 2 
meantime, laugh at his challenge. . Ant. f,Clen. iv. 1 
where merit doth most challenge it iCol. Knl.'] 

—nature doth with merit challenge Lear, i. 1 

read tliou this challenge; mark but — iy. 6 

a challenge on my life Ilomeo <5- Jidiel, ii. 4 

dares ne'er come back to challenge you — iii. 5 
so much I challenge that I may profess.. 0//ic/(o, i. 3 
his worthiness does challenge much respect — ii. 1 

CHALLENGED— ihallenged him ..Twelfth N. iii. 4 
and clialleii.ucd Cupid at the flight ..Much .ido, i. 1 
and challenged him at the bird-bolt. . — i. 1 

and hath challenged thee? — v. 1 

challenged Charles the wrestler . . As you Like it,\. 2 
behalf which we have challenged ..King .lohn, ii. 1 

challenged you to single fight 1 Henry I V. v. 2 

their heralds challenged the noble. . Henry VIII. i. I 
thv horn, it should be challenged .. Trail, i/ Cres. v. 2 
thus, and challenged of wrongs? ..TitusAndron. i. 2 
these white flakes had challenged pity . . Lear, iv. 7 

CHALLENGER— the challenger's. /Is yoM Like it, i. 2 

monsieur the challenger — i.2 

he is the general challenger — _ i- 2 

a style fit for challengers — iv. 3 

unhorse the lustiest challenger Bichard 11. v. 3 

stood challenger- on mount of all Hamlet, iv. 7 

CH AM— hau- of the great Cham's beard.Much Ado, ii- 1 

CHAMBER-me to my chamber. Two Gen. of Ver.n. 4 

go with me to my chamiier — ii. 7 

her chamber is aloft, far from — iii. 1 

that is hanging in your chamber .... — iv. 2 

but all the chamber smelt him — iv. 4 

but whips me out of the chamber — iv. 4 

that's her chamber — iv. 4 

hie home unto my chamber — jv. 4 

would better tit his chamber, than . . — iv. 4 

mine own great chamber again Merry IVives,i. 1 

ascend my chambers, search, seek .. — jJ!' * 

and in the chambers, and in the — iii. 3 

step into the chamber, sir John — i v. 2 

my husband will come into the chamber — iv. 2 

there's his chamber, his house — iv. 5 

gone up into his chamber — iv. 5 

my chambers are honourable — iv. .5 

speak %sith you in your chamber — — iv. 5 

come up into my chamber — iy. .5 

once a day her chamber round . . Twelfth Nighty i. 1 

come by-and-by to my chamber — iv. 2 

withdraw into a chamber Much Ado, v. 4 

to bring moonlight into a chamber .Mid. N. Dr. iii. 1 
must have a wall in the great chamber — iii. 1 

and each several chamber bless — v. 2 

her attendants of her chamber ..Asyuu Likeit, ii. 2 

go with me to my cliamber All's Well, ii. 3 

gently to my fairest chamber . Tarn. ofSh.\ (indue.) 

to tlie drunkard's cliamber — 1 (indue.) 

lay here in this Modly chamber — 2 (indue.) 

this cliamber with her — ii. 1 

to dress your sister's chamber up — ii. 1 

go to my chamber, put on clothes . . — iii. 2 
will hriiig thee to thy bridal chamber — iv. 1 
in her chamber, making a sermon . . — iv. 1 

out of the chamber with her Winter's Tale, ii. 3 

perfume for a lady's chamber — iv. 3 (song) 

commanded out of the chamber — y. 2 

why have you left the chamber? Macbeth, i. 7 

those sleepy two of his own cliamber .. — _i. 7 

who lies i the second chamber? — ii. 2 

retire we to our chamber — ii. 2 

approach the chamber, and destroy .... — ii. 3 

those of his chamber, as it seemed — ii.3 

at hand, that chambers will be safe — v. 4 

ill your ehaml>ers gave you King John, v. 2 

sitting in my Doliiliin chamber iHenrylV. ii. 1 

venture upon the charged chambers — ii. 4 

than in the perfumed chambers — iii. 1 

bear me hence into some other chamber — iv. 4 
he came not through the chamber where — iv. 4 
depart the chamber, and leave us — — iv. 4 

but, bear me to that chamber — iv. 4 

unto the Temple, to his chamber . . 1 Henry VI. ii. .i 

enter his chamber, view his 'iHenryVl. iii. 2 

capers nimbly in a ladj^'s chamber.. /i/c/iar(/ ///. i. 1 
rest betide tlie chamber where thou. . — i. 2 
prince, to London, to yourehamber.. — iii. 1 

a iirisoner in my cliamber Henry VIII. i. 1 

time I was my chamber's prisoner .. — i. 1 

ready i' the privy chamber? — i. 4 

air, my lord, in the next chamber .. — i. 4 
withdraw into your private chamber — iii. 1 



CHANCE— if he chance to speak.. Tam. ofSh. 1 (ind.) 
a heavy chance 'twi.xt him and you — i. 2 

a gcntu'inaii whom by chance I met — i. 2 

and if she chance to nod, I'll rail.... — iv. 1 

but they may chance to need thee .. — v. 1 

if you sliall chance, Cainillo, to visit. Winter's T. i. 1 

by my fears, of what may chance — i- 2 

w'liere chance may nurse, or end it-.. — ii.3 

to be the slaves of chance — iv. 3 

lionest, I am so sometimes by chance — iy. 3 
how diancc thou art returned so soon?. Com. o/i?r. i. 2 
if chance will have me king, why ^rep). Macbeth, i. 3 

died an hour before this chance — ii.3 

set my life on any chance, to mend.. .. — iii. 1 

the eliance, of goodness, be like — iv. 3 

I'll take my chance; your face hath. .Kins' Jolm, i. 1 

madam, by chance; but not by — i. 1 

where but by chance a silver — iii. 4 

and so, by chance, did grace Richard Il.i. 4 

but by tlie chance of war I Henry IV. i. 3 

untbought of Harry, chance to meet. . — iii. 2 
and summed the account of chance ..IHenry IV. i. 1 
it may chance cost some of us our. ... — ii. 1 
in the chance, throw me in the chance? — ii. 1 
how chances mock, and changes fill .. — iii. 1 

of the main chance of things — iii. 1 

against ill chances, men are ever — iv. 2 

how chance, thou art not witli — iv. 4 

what chance is tliis, that suddenly . . 1 Henry VI. i. 4 

if it chance the one of us do fail — ii. 1 

and, now it is my chance to find — v. 4 

caniest thou here bj' chance illenryVI. ii. 1 

for these woeful chances, misthink..3//enrj//-'/. ii. 5 

unless she chance to fiill — iii.2 

if you ever chance to have a child. ... — v. .^ 

of gold, that by chance I found Richard III. i. 4 

how chance, the prophet could not.... — iv. 2 

if I chance to talk a little wild Henry VIII. i. 4 

if they should chance, in charging you — v. 1 
'tis but the chance of war.. Trodus'fyCressida O'rol.) 
or you may chance to burn your lips — i. 1 
in the reproof of chance lies the true — i. 3 

how chance my brother Troilus — iii. ) 

an act that very chance doth — iii. 3 

we met by chance — iv. 2 

where injury of chance puts back — iv. 4 

(as seld 1 have the chance) — iv. 5 

and chance it as it may Timon of Athens, v. 2 

and Caius Marcius chance to meet ..Coriolanus, i. 2 

if you chance to be pinched — ii. 1 

of what we chance to sentence — iii. 3 

that common chances common men — iv. 1 

to each elianee that starts i' the — iv. 1 

by some chance, some trick not — iv. 4 

lest you shall chance to whip — iv. 6 

the disposing of those chances which — iv. 7 

and his child like him by chance — v. 3 

some friend of Caesar's should chance. Jid. Ccesar, iii. 1 

faints under his chance Antony <f- Cleopatra, ii. 3 

if tills division chance, ne'er stood .. — iii. 4 
giie up yourself merely to chance .. — iii. 7 
I'll yet follow tlie wounded chance.. — iii. 8 

no cliance may shake it — ill. 1 1 

as things but done by chance — v. 2 

through the ashes of^my chance — v. 2 

tliink what a chance thou ehangest. . Cymbeline, i. 6 
seem to those which chance to find us — iv. 2 

wilt take thy chance with me? — iv. 2 

but we grieve at chances here — iv. 3 

your country wars you chance to die — iv. 4 

this was strange chance — v. 3 

so am I, that have this golden chance — v. 4 

consider, sir, the chance of war — v. 5 

by-dependancies, from chance to chance — v. 5 
secure from worldly chances . . Titus .indronicus, i. 2 
triumphs over chance, in honour's bed — i. 2 
though chance of war hath wrought — i.2 
woe to her chance, and damned — — iv. 2 
how chance my daughter is not with . . Pericles, iv. 1 
and chances into an honest house — v. (Gower) 

thromi to my chance, is queen of us Lear, i. 1 

how chance the king comes with so small — ii. 4 

take the chance of anger — iii. 7 

if you do chance to hear of that — iv. 5 

it is a chance that does redeem — v. 3 

this trick may chance to scath you../fom. fj-Jul. i. 5 

food hap to 3'ou, tliat chances here . . — iii. 3 
e may chance to do some good — iv. 2 

guilty of this lamentable chance! — — v. 3 

oft it chances in particular men Handel, i. 4 

how chances it, they travel? — ii. 2 

if he by chance escape your venomed — iv. 7 

that look pale and tremble at this chance — v. 2 
r Knl."] tlii'ow such chances of vexation . . Othello, i. 1 

I spake of most disastrous chances — _ i. 3 

well, I may chance to see you .. ; — iv. 1 

shot of accident, nor dart of chance — iv. 1 

CHANCED— chanced on this letter. Mcr. of Ven. v. 1 

think upon what hath chanced Macbeth, i. 3 

that what he feared is chanced 2 Henry IV. i. 1 

the occurrences, whatever chanced. //('!<• '/'■.v(cho.) 
tell us what hath chanced to dav.. Julius Cresar, i. 2 
not then ask Casca what hath chanced — _i. 2 
and tell him what hafhchaueed?.. . . — iii. 1 

how every thing is chanced — v. 4 

chanced in the times of old.. Titus Andronicus, iii. 2 
this chanced to-night. Jlost likely . . Pericles, iii. 2 
if then thcv chanced to slack you Lear. ii. 4 

CHANCELLOR— is chancellor, and..3//c«r!/ VI.\. 1 

one Gilbert Peck, his chancellor Hairy VIII. i. I 

sir Gilbert Peck, his chancellor — ii. 1 

is clioscn lord cliuiiccUor iu vour place — iii. 2 

CHA.N'DLlCli-tln-ikurost chandler s.l//cnr?//;'. iii. 3 

CHANG v. -siilfir a sea change . . Tempest, i. 2 ( song) 

do you change culour? TicoGen.of Verona, ii. 4 

revolt and cUange your mind — iii. 2 

what fine change is in the music ... . — iv. 2 

ay, that change is the spite — iv. 2 

can no way change you to — v. 4 

women to change their shapes — v. 4 



CHANGE— change her determ nation?. Merry W. iii. 5 

why, here's a change, inilceil Mens, far Meas. i. 2 

change your place, you need not change — i. 2 

if power change jiurpose — j- 

as school-maids change theirnames — _i. 
with boot, change for an idle plume — Ji. 

you must, sir, change persons with me — v. 
it ever changes with the next block . . Much Ado, i. 
if my passion change not shortly ... . — .i. 
fit your honoiu' to change your mind — in. 
maintained the change of words with — iv. 

on her behalf change slander to — iv. 

by this light he changes more and more — v. 
angry winter, change their wonted.. Mid. N. Dr. ii. 2 
win not change a raven for a dove?,. — ii. 3 

what change IS this, sweet love? — lii. 2 

this moon: would, he would changel — v. 1 

and change you favours too Love^sL. Lost, v. 2 

do but vouchsafe one change — v. 2 

thus change I like the moon — v. 2 

with rae to change a word? — v. 2 

therefore, change favours; and — v. 2 

the ladies did change favours — v. 2 

these foul- will change habits — v. 2 

insoci able life change not your oflfcr — v. 2 

I'll change my black gown for — v. 2 

I would not change this hue . . Merch. of Venice, li. 1 
between the change of man and boy — iii. 4 
Bome power to change this currish Jew — iv. 1 
for the time doth change his nature . . — v. 1 

would not change that calling As you Like it, i. 2 

wilt thou change fathers? — ;• 3 

not seek to take your change upon you — _i. 3 

I would not change it — "• 1 

about his neck : change you colour? . . — iii. 2 

I vnW not change for your best — in- 2 

but the sky changes when they are . . — iy. 1 

but as we change our courtesies AlFs Well, in. 2 

change it, change it; be not so — JX- 2 

change true rules for odd inventions. Tarn, o/ Sh. lu. 1 
I can change these poor accoutrements — iii. 2 

and double change of bravery — iv. 3 

and the moon changes ev en as your. . — iv. 5 
nine changes of the watery star ..Winter s Tale, i. 2 

that changes thus his manners — .1.2 

that you do change tliis purpose — U. 3 

that you must change this purpose . . — iv. 3 

niend nature; change it rather — iv. 3 

robe of mine does change my disposition — iv. 3 
if you will not change your purpose. . — iv. 3 
change garments "with this gentleman — iv. 3 
no jot hath she, to change our loves . . — v. 1 
but the changes I perceived in the king — v. 2 
sorcerers, that change the mind. . . Comedy of Err. i. 2 

to hollow falsehood change! King John, iii. 1 

the lips of unacquainted change — iii. 4 

with any longed-for change — iv. 2 

thimbles into armed gauntlets change — y. 2 

yea, but not change their spots ._ Richard II. i. 1 

can change their moons, and bring .. — .i. 3 
pronliets whisper fearful change .... — _ii 4 
to change blows with thee for our day — iii. 2 

change the complexion of her — '.!!•■' 

for every one doth so against a change — iii. 4 

our visors we will chance \HenryIV. i. 2 

changes fill the cup of alteration ..2Henryiy. iii. 1 
the seasons change their manners.... — iv. 4 
his eye is hollow, and he changes. . . . — Iv. 4 

the noble change that I have — iv. 4 

and now my death changes the mode — iv. 4 

we are blessed in the change Henry I'.i. 1 

look ye, how they change ! — ii. 2 

I will not change my horse with .... — iii. 7 

that I gave it to in change — iv. 8 

I warrant you, or I will change it.... — iv. 8 
shall change all griefs, and quarrels — v. 2 
and never changes, but keeps his .... — v. 2 
imparting change of times and states. 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

lords I'll change for one of ours — i. 1 

she would change my shape — v. 3 

to change two dukedoms for 2Henry Vl.i. 1 

nor change my countenance ■ — iii. 1 

and change misdoubt to resolution . . — iii. 1 
is able with the change to kill and cure — v. 1 

change shapes, with Proteus SHenrijVI. Ui. 2 

makes you in this sudden change? . . — iv. 4 
Warwick now can change no more . . — v. 1 
holy humour of mine will change. .Richard III. i. 4 

before the days of change — ii. 3 

canst thou quake, and change — }}'• ^ 

bestial appetite in change of lust — iii. 5 

change, would give an eye to boot. . Trail. ^Cres. i. 2 

frights, changes, horrors, divert — i. 3 

a son of Priam, in change of him .... — iii. 3 

there will come some chiiuge — v. 1 

there turn and change together — v. 3 

fortune in her shift aud cliange. Timon of Athens, i. 1 
came the noble Timon to this change? — iv. 3 

sprung from change of fortune — iv. 3 

every minute you do change a mind.Cariolanus, i. 1 
but with them chan"e of honours .... — ii. 1 
may I then change tliese garments?.. — ii. 3 
what makes this change ! The matter? — iii. 1 
more than you doubt the change of 't — iii. 1 
all these tlungs change, from tueir. .JuliusCcvsar, i. 3 
will change to virtue, and to worthiness — _i. 3 
how that might change his nature .. — ii. 1 
not come, their minds may change . . — ii. 2 
he smiles, and Caesar doth not change — iii. 1 
in his own change, or by ill officers .... — iv. 2 

now I change my mind, and partly — v. 1 

must change [Coi.-charge] his horns.Anl. SfCleo. i. 2 
would purge by any desperate change — i. 3 

what he cannot change, than — i. 4 

there is a change upon you — ii. 6 

and did deserve his change — iii. 6 

more cause to change a master — iv. 6 

the miserable change now at my end — iv. 13 

accidents, and bolts up change — v. 2 

you shall find a benefit in this change — v. 2 



L 108 ] 

CHANGE— change you, madam? Cymheline, i. 7 

Eronounce the beggary of liis change — i. 7 
lit abide the change of time — ii. 4 

covetings, change of prides, disdain.. — ii. .1 
change command into obedience .... — iii. 4 
I'd change my sex to be companion.. — iii. B 
he would chan£;e places with his olficer — v. 4 

hath wrought this change of cheer Tilus And. i. 2 

[Cat.'] should this change of thoughts?.. Per/des, i. 2 

by this our change, these months — i. 4 

they did change me to the meanest — iv. 6 

would not in reputation change — iv. 6 

you see how full of changes his age is .... Lear^ i. 1 

that things might change, or cease — iii. 1 

the lamentable change is from the best .... — iv. 1 

I must cha,iige arms at home — iv. 2 

hark in tliine ear: change places — iv. 6 

advised by aught to change the course — v. 1 

the change of fourteen years Romeo ^Juliet, i. 2 

monthly changes in her circled orb . . — ii. 2 
saint Francis 1 what a change is here! — ii. 3 
the lai'k and loathed toad change eyes — iii. 5 

hymns to sullen dirges change — iv. 5 

all things change them to the contrary — iv. 5 

I'll change that name with you Hamlet, i. 2 

our loves should with our fortunes change — iii. 2 

can change the stamp of nature — iii. 4 

this would changes, and hath abatements — iy. 7 
such changes [iCn^-chances] of vexation. O^AeZ/o, i. 1 

how say you by this change? — i. 3 

I would change my humanity with — i. 3 

she must change for youth ; when she is — i. 3 

she must have change,, she must — i. 3 

to change the cod's head for the salmon's — ii. 1 
to follow still the changes of the moon . . — iii. 3 
the Moor already changes with my poison — iii. 3 

yom' mind, perhaps, may change — iii. 3 

here is a change, indeed! 'tis meet — iv. 2 

when they change us for others? — iv. 3 

CHANGEABLE-of changeable taffeta. TwelflhN.n. 4 
be effeminate, changeable, longing. .4s j/om Like, iii. 2 

report is changeable : 'tis time to look Lear, iv. 7 

these Moors are changeable in their wills. 0/At/fc,i. 3 

CHANGED-changed or else new-formed. Tempest, i. z 

they have changed eyes — i. 2 

fashion of the time is changed. Tico Gen. of Ver. iii. 1 
the story shall be changed .... Mid. N.'sDreatn, ii. 2 

Bottom, thou art changed 1 — iii. 1 

but now she's changed .- Love's L. Los!, v. 2 

you are marvellously changed . . Mer. of Venice, i. 1 

lord, how art thou changed! — ii. 2 

he changed almost into another ma,n.All'sWell, iv. 3 
Tranio is changed into Lncentio.. Ta/nm^o/SA. i. 1 
Cambio is changed into Lucentio .... — v. 1 
she is changed, as she had never been — v. 1 
what we changed, was innocence.. Winter' sTale, i. 2 
your changed complexions are {rep.') — i. 2 

most marble there, changed coloiur . . — v. 2 
how the world is changed with . . Comedy ofEr. ii. 2 

if thou art changed to aught — ii. 2 

thou wouldst have changed thy face — iii. 1 

oh, grief hath changed me — v. 1 

she IS corrupted, changed; and yfon..KingJohn, iii. 1 
the mind of^Bolingbroke is changed. Bi'cAarrf II. v. I 
now changed to the beggar and the king — v. 3 
that he hath changed his style? — \Henry VI. iv. 1 

changed to a worser shape thou — v. 3 

oiu- stern alarums changed to Richard III. i. 1 

quoth Forrest, almost changed my mind — iv. 3 

my mind is changed; Stanley — iv. 4 

thou art changeafor Anteuor . . Trailus ^ Cres. iv. 2 
delivers us thus changed, makes you. Coriolamis,_ v. 3 
lord! how your favour's changed with. Per/des, iv. 1 

they shall not be changed yet — . iv. 3 

Persian attire; but let them be changed. . Lear, iii. 6 

but never man so changed — iv. 2 

thou changed and self-covered th'mg — iv. 2 

in nothing am I changed, but in — iv. 6 

art thou clianged? pronounce this ..Rom. S^Jul. ii. 3 

1 would they had changed voices too — iii. 5 

to visit my too much changed son Hamlet, ii. 2 

I am changed. I'll sell all my land Othello.^ i. 3 

he is much changed. Are his wits safe? . . — iv. 1 

CHANGEFXJL-changeful potency. Tro/;. :^-Cres. iv. 4 
CHANGELING— sweet a changeling. ilfid.iV. Dr. ii. 1 
I do but beg a little changeling boy. . — ii. 2 
did ask of her her changeling child . . — iv. 1 
this is some changeling: open't. . Winter's Tale, iii. 3 
but to tell the king she's a changeling — iv. 3 
please the eye of fickle changelings. .IHfnri/ IV. v. 1 
his nature in that's no changeling. . Coriolanus, iv. 7 
safely, the changeling never knowm .... Hamlet, v. 2 

CIIANGEST— thou changest on Cymheline, i. 6 

CHANGING— weeks without changing, rempcs/, ii. 1 
changing thoughts forget . . Two Gen. of Verona, iv. 4 
not changing heart with habit .... Mea.forMea. v. 1 

but, in this changing, what is Love' sL. Lost, v. 2 

be quit with thee by changing .. Taming of Sh. iii. 1 
this all changing word, clapped on. . King John, ii. 2 

I see, changing his property Richard II. iii. 2 

an hour in changing, hardiinent \ Henry IV. i. 3 

ICot. Knt.'] of ne er changing night.Richard III. ii. 2 

and shallow, changing— woman ! — iv. 4 

but are changing still one vice Cymheline, ii. 5 

go, give that changing piece . . TilusAn'Ironicus^ i. 2 

CHANNEL — your crisp channels Tempest, iv. 1 

shall leave his native channel King John, ii. 2 

trenching war channel her fields 1 HenrylV.i. 1 

in a new channel, fair aud evenly . . — iii. 1 
waft me safely 'cross the Channel. .IHenry VI. iv. 1 
if a channel should be called a sea . .3Henry VI. ii. 2 

and make your channel his? Coriolanus, iii. 1 

weep your tears into the channel ..Julius Cresar, i. 1 

fret channels in her cheeks Lear, i. 4 

CHANSON— of the pious chanson will . . Hamlet, ii. 2 

CHANT— do use to chant it Twelfth Nigh', ii. 4 

that tirra-lirra chants Winter' sTale,'vf. 2 (song) 

he so chants to the sleeve-hand — iv. 3 

who chants a doleful hymn to his . . King John, v. 7 
the birds chant melody oncvery bush. Titus And. ii. 3 



CHANTED-chanted snatches of old .. Hamlet, iv. 7 
CHANTICLERE- 
the strain of strutting chanticlere. Tempest, i. 2 (song) 

began to crow like clianticlere As you Like it, ii. 7 

CHANTING— chanting faint hvmns.Mid. N.Dr. i. 1 
CHANTRIES— built two chantries. . . . Henry V. iv. 1 
CHANTEY— into the chantry bj-. Tireliih Mght,iv. 3 

CHAOS— like to a chaos 3Hcnry VI. iii. 2 

this chaos, when degree is Tmilus 6- Cressiila, i. 3 

mis-shapen chaos of well-seeminjj ..Row.fr Jul. i. 1 

I love thee not, chaos is come again Othelln, iii. 3 

CHAP— open your chaps again Tempest, ii. 2 

line his dead chaps with steel King John, ii. 2 

my knife in your mouldy chaps , . . ."iHenry IV. ii. 4 

before his chaps be stained iHenry VI. iii. l 

world, thou hast a pair of chaps. /ln(o?;y S,Cleo. iii. ."> 
my frostv signs and chaps of age .... Tilus And. v. 3 
CHAPE— in the chape of his dagger . . All's Well, iv. 3 
CH.'VPEL-to the chapel let us presently. Much Ado, v. 4 
do, chapels had been churches . . Mer. of Venice, i. 2 
go with you to your chapel? ....As you Like it, iii. 3 
visit the chapel where they lie . . Winter's Tale, iii. 2 
quit presently the chapel; or resolve — v. 3 

for at saint Mark's chapel King John, ii. 2 

as his queen, gom^ to chapel Henry VIII. iii. 2 

thus in a chapel lying! Cymheline, ii. 2 

and bring the body into the chapel .... Hamlet, iv. 1 

bear it to the chapel. Do not believe it.. — iv. 2 

CHAPELESS— hilt and chapeless. Taming of Sh. iii. 2 

CHAP-FALLEN— quite chap-fallen? . . Hamlet, v. 1 

CHAPLAIN— chaplain, away! SHenry VI. i. 3 

the chaplain of the Tower hath . . Richard III. iv. 3 

John de la Court, my chaplain Henry VIII. i. 2 

my chaplain to no creatm'e liviu" — i. 2 

by vour teaching, and your chaplains — v. 2 

CHA'PIyESS— yellow chapless skulls. Rom. fyJul. iv. 1 

lady Worm's; chapless, and knocked . . Hamlet, v. 1 

CHA'PLET-chaplet of sweet summer.Mid. N. Dr. ii. 2 

shall as a chaplet [Cof. Kn(. -carpet] ..Pericles, iv. 1 

CHAPiMEN — of chapmen's tongues. . Love's L. L. ii. 1 

you do as chapmen do, dispraise. . Trail. fyCres. iv. \ 

CHAPPED— lean, old, chapped 2 Henry I v. iii. 2 

CHAPTER- what chapter of his bosom, rwc^///! A', i. & 
CHARACT — his dressings, characts.il/ra. /or il/cn. v. 1 
CHARACTER-and outward character. Twelfth N.i.i 

I confess, much like the character — v. 1 

a kind of character in thy life Mea.for Mea. i. 1 

with character too gross, is writ on . . — i. 3 
you know the character. I doubt not — iv. 2 
characters of brass a forted residence — v. 1 

my thoughts I'll character Asyon Like it, iii. 2 

and there thy character Winter's Tale, iii. 3 

whichthey know to be his character.. — v. 2 
old with all the characters of age? . .iHenry IV. i. 2 
razing the characters of your reuown.2H«ir!/r7. i. 1 

I say, without characters, fame Richnrdlll. iii. 1 

grossness little characters sum up.. Tro(7. SfCres. i. 3 
m characters as red as Mars his heart — v. 2 
the character I'll take with wax . . Timon ofAlh. v. i 

fleam out of this character, if I "... . Coriolanu s, ii. 1 
paint him in the character — v. 4 

knew the stars, as I his characters.. Cymleime, iii. 2 

he cut our roots in characters — iv. 2 

Apollo, perfect me i' the characters . . Pericles, iii. 2 
know you the character? It is my lord's — iii. 4 
in glittering golden characters express — iv. 4 
know the character to be your brother's?. . Lear, i. 2 

didst produce my very character — ii. 1 

in thy memory look thou character .... Hamlet, i. 3 
'tis Hamlet's character. Naked — iv. 7 

CHARACTERED— 
charactered and engraved . . Two Gen. of Verona, ii. 7 
one scar charactered on thy skin ..2HenryVI. iii. 1 

CHARACTERLESS— 
characterless are grated to dusty.. Trail. ^ Cres. iii. 2 

CHARACTERY— for their characterj'.il/CT-ry W. v. & 
all the characteryof my sad hro^Vf^. JuliusC^sar, ii. I 

CHARBON-young Charljonthe puritan. /l/Cs^J'-eH, i. 3 

CHARE— does the meanest chares . . Ant.SrCleo. iv. 13 
when thou hast done this chare — v. 2 

CHARGE— charge exactly is performed . Tempest, i. 2 
I charge thee tliat thou attend me .... — i. 2 

go, charge my goblins that they — iv. 1 

the same fashion as you gave in charge — v. 1 

that is thy charge — v. 1 

'tis a great charge, to come Merry Wives, i. 4 

you shall find it a great charge — i. 4 

not to charge you ; for I must — ii. 2 

give your meii the charge — iii. 3 

it charges me in manners Twelfth Night, ii. 1 

on thy life, I charge thee, hold — iv. 1 

father, I charge thee, by thy — v. I 

from lord Angelo by special c\iaTse.Mca../'orMea. i. 3 

and by me tins furtlier charge — iv. '-' 

and charges him, my lord, with — v. 1 

charges she more than mc? — v. 1 

embrace your charge too ^villingly . . Much Ado, i . 1 

I charge thee on thy allegianre — i. 1 

give them their charge, neighbour .. — !!!•■' 
IS your charge; you simll comprehend — iii. ri 

thisistheendoi tlK'ch;irge — iii. 3 

well masters, we liear (iiir diarge — iii. 3 

we charge you in tlic prince's name. . — iii. 3 
never speak; we charge yon, let us .. — iii. 3 

I charge you, on 3'onr souls — iv. 1 

I charge thee do so, as thou art — ii. 1 

masters I charge you, in the prince's — iv. 2 

an you charge it against me — v. 1 

what you lay to their charge — v. 1 

I charge thee, hence, and do not. . Mid. N. Drm. ii. 3 

that charge their breath Love's L. L:s',y. 2 

I cliarge vou by the law Merch. of Venice, iv. 1 

on your cliarge, to stop the wounds . . — iv. 1 
must be hanged at the state's charge — iv. 1 
and charge us there upon intergatories — v. 1 
I charge thee, be not tbou more . . As you Like it, i. 3 

he laid to the charge of women? — iii. 2 

I charge her to love thee — iv. ;>. 

I charge you, O women — (epil.) 

and so I charge you, O men — (epil .) 



CHA 

CHARGE— I charge thee, as heaven.... ^H'sJWI, i. 3 

liad her breeding iit my father's eharge — ii. 2 

whoever charges on his forward breast — iii. 3 

Fir, it is a charw too heavy for — iii. 3 

the charge, and thanking, sliall be .. — iii. 5 

to eliarge in with our liorse upon .... — iii. fi 

tlie crafts, tliat yon do churgo men witli — jv. 2 

now will 1 cliarge yon in tile baud .. — iv. 2 

do thev eliargc me further':' — v. 3 

tell me true, I cluimc you — v. 3 

I clia i-ge thee, tender Taming ofSh. 1 (indnc.) 

wiiit on him, I charge you, as becomes — i. 1 

niui licar bis charge "of woomg — i. 2 

liere I charge tUei', tell whom thou lovest — ii. 1 

I ebart'e you, ill tile duke'.-! name .... — v. 1 

father 'Ha'iitista, I ehar^'cy. Ill, see .... — v. 1 

Katharine, I cluirge thee, tell these . . — y. 2 

to you a charge and trouble IVinler^s Tnle^ i. 2 

you, sir, charge him too coldly — i. 2 

lay the old proverb to your charge .. — ii. 3 

I do in justice charge thee — ii. 3 

have alHiut me niaiTy parcels of chai'ge — iv. 3 

to execute the charge my father — v. 1 

lay't 60, to his charge — v. 1 

so great a charge from thine o«ti. . Comedy ofEr, i. 2 

the gold I gave in charge to thee — i. 2 

thy charge. My charge was but to fetch — i. 2 

and charge you, in the duke's name — iv. 1 

Satan, avoid! I charge thee tempt .. — iv. 3 

I charge thee, Satan, housed — iv. 4 

besides the charge, the shame — v. 1 

speak, I charge you. The earth Macbeth, i. 3 

do mock their charge with snores — ii. 3 

may recoil, in an imperial charge — iv. 3 

shall pay this expedition's charge King John, i. 1 

lay not my transgression to my charge — _ i. 1 

to charge me to an answer, as the pope — iii. 1 

so feared he had a charge to do — iv. 2 

is't not 1, that undergo this charge?,. — v. 2 

great att'airsdo ask some eliarge Kichard II. \\. 1 

he it your charge to keep him safely .. — iv. I 

limits of the charge set down \Hennjll'. i. 1 

at our o^\^l charge, shall ransom — i. 3 

companj', for they have great charge — ii. 1 

abuudauce of charge too, God knows — ii. 1 

rogue a charge of toot — ii. 4 

yea, but a little charge will trench . . — iii. 1 

thou Shalt have charge, and sovereign — iii. 2 

charge an honest woman with pickiug — iii. 3 

procured thee. Jack, a charge of foot — iii. 3 

my whole charge consists ot ancients — iv. 2 

but, to mv charge; the king hath scut — iv. 3 

every leader to fiis charge — v. 1 

going with some charge to lord John.2Hejir!/ IV, 1.2 

nere. Pistol, I charge you with a cup — ii. 4 

I will charge you. Charge me? .... — ii. 4 

he shall charge you, and discharge you — iii. 2 

their armed staves in charge — iv. 1 

the leaders, having charge from you — iv. 2 

come, I charge you both go with me — v. 4 

be it yoiu- charge, my lord, to see ... . — v. 5 
or nicely charge your understanding . . Henry V. i. 2 

we charge you in the name of God . . — i.'2 

to render wliat we have in charge .... — i. 2 

and upon this charge, cry — iii. 1 

and we give express charge, that — iii. 6 

I'll to my charge: if we no more meet — iv. 3 

■with all expedience charge on us ... . — iv. 3 

I charge you in his majesty's name . . — . i v. 8 
we charge and command you. I Henry F/. i. 3 (proc.) 

no better to that weighty charge .... — ii. 1 

remember what I gave in charge .... — ii. 3 

intend'st to lay unto my charge — iii. 1 

we charge you, on allegiance to ourself — iii. 1 

henceforth, I charge you, as yon love — iv. 1 

thy father's charge shall clear thee .. — iv. 5 

e.xpences and sufficient charge — v. 5 

I had in charge at my depart 2Henry VI. i. 1 

own proper cost and charges — i. I (articles) 

costs and charges in transporting her! — i. 1 

60 am I given m charge — ii. 4 

crimes are laid unto your charge .... — iii. I 

a charge, lord York, that I will see.. — iii. 1 

and charge, that no man should .... — iii. 2 

I charge you, waft me safely cross . . — iv. 1 

I charge and command, that — iv. 6 

and we charge and command — iv. 7 

cried, charge! and give no foot of ZHcniy VI. i. 4 

cry, charge upon our foes! — iu 1 

we charge you, in God's name — iii. 1 

of marriage was the charpe he gave.. — iii. 3 

<^oing what you gave in charge — iv. 1 

brother was too careless of his charge — iv. 6 

the skilful pilot's charge — v. 4 

I charge ye, bear her hence — v, 5 

bath straightly given in charge Richard III. i. 1 

we know thy charge, Brackcnbury .. — i. 1 

I'll be at charges for a looking-glass — i. 2 

I lay unto the grievous charge of others — i. 3 

I have resignecTto you my charge — i. 4 

I charge you, as you hope for any . . — i. 4 

to take on you the charjic and kingly — iii. 7 

the thing you gave in cliar^e beget .. — iv. 3 

each leader to his several charge .... — v. 3 

hie thee to thy charge — v. 3 

every man unto his charge — v. 3 

whom as great a charge as little Henry VIII. i. 1 

you charge not in your spleen — i.2 

TU take the charge of this — i. 4 

give my charge up to sir Nicholas .. — ii. 1 

you charge me that I have blown ... . — ii. 4 

protection: this is my charge — iii. 2 

Cromwell, I charge t'lice, llmg away — iii. 2 

in those charges which will require.. — v. 1 

I charge you. embrace, and love — v. 2 

■when they charge on heaps Trail, fy Cress, iii. 2 

a hell of pain, and world of charge .. — iv. 1 

I charge thee, use her well (rep.) .... — iv. 4 

I'll nothing do on charge — iv. 4 

how no^v, my charge? — v. 2 



[ 109 ] 



CHARGE— weary of thiscliarge ..TimonofAth. iii. 4 
go, I charge thee; invito them all.... — iii. 4 

mend, and cliarge home Coriolanus, i. 4 

heard the charges of our friends .... — i. 6 

obev, I charge thee, and follow — iii. 1 

in tills point eliarge him home — iii. 3 

we charge you, tliut N oil have — iii. 3 

need ni>l piit new mutter tobischarge — iii. 3 

the ceiitiiiioiis, mid tlicir eliurges — iv, 3 

and yet to cliarge thy sulphur with. . — v. 3 
answering us with our own charge .. — ■v. 5 

the charges of the action — v. 5 

unluckily charge my fantasy JidiusCtesar, iii. 3 

how to cut off some charge in legacies — iv. 1 

lead theircharges off alittle — iv. 3 

we will answer on theii" charge — v. 1 

[Col.'] charge his horns with jiarlaiids. Ant. Sr Cleo. i. 2 

have tongue to charge me with — ii. 2 

a charge we bear i' the war — iii. 7 

that knows a warlike charge — iv. 4 

detain no jot, I charge thee — iv. 5 

go, charge Agrippa plant those that — iv. 6 
if sleep cliarge nature, to break it ..Cymbeline, iii. 4 
let it be your charge, as it is ours. ...Titus And. ii. 2 

here's money for thy charges — iv. 3 

this charge [^Co(.-change] of thoughts . . Pericles^ i. 2 

with this strict charge, (even as he — _ii. I 

patience, good sir, even for this charge . . — iii. 1 

here I charge your charity withal — iii. 3 

breeding, sir, hath been at my charge .... Lear, i. 1 
goatish disposition to the charge of a star — i.2 
he charges nome my unprovided body . . -^ ii. 1 

si th that both charge and danger — ii. 4 

I charge thee in the prince's uamcKom. <$- Jul. iii. 1 

not nice, but full of charge — v. 2 

upon thy life I charge thee — v. 3 

by heaven, I charge thee, speak (rep.t . . Hamlel, i. 1 
look to't I charge you: come your ways — i. 3 

as you may season it iu the charge — ii. 1 

a better proposer could charge you withal — ii. 2 
compulsive ardour gives the charge .... — iii. 4 
this army, of such mass, and charge .... — iv. 3 
man3' such like as's of great charge — v. 2 

fo to answer this your charge? Othello, i. 2 
egan this? on tliy love, I flmrge thee .. — ii. 3 

you charge me most unjustly — iv. 2 

I charge you, go with me — v. 1 

I charge vou, get you home — v. 2 

CHARGED-my master charged.. Two Gen. of Ver. v. 4 
she was charged with nothing but .... Much Ado, v. 1 
and, as thou say'st, charged my ..As you Like iL, i. 1 

my father charged you in liis will _ i. l 

therefore heaven nature charged — iii. 2 (ver.) 

physicians have expressly charged. Tam.ofSh. 2 (ind.) 
your father charged me at our parting — i. 1 

since I am charged in honour Winler'sTale, i. 2 

Antigonus, I charged thee, that she. . — ii. 3 
charged, him with a thonsund. Comedy of Errors, iii. 1 

cannon, charged to the mouths KingJolm, ii. 2 

anything he sliall be ch,arged withal. 1 Htnry/f'. ii. 4 

of "many I am charged withal... V — -(111.2 

venture upon the charged charabers.2H?nr!/ IV. ii. 4 

shall stand sore charged for Henry V. i. 2 

charged our main battle's front ZHenry VI. i. 1 

with this, we charged again — i. 4 

charged us from his soul to love .... Richard III. i. 4 

the liing hath strictly charged — iv. 1 

we shall be charged again Coriolanus, i. 6 

shall I be charged no further than.... — iii. 3 

they charged hi m even as those — iv. 6 

but beiu" charged, we will be ..Antony fyCleo. iv. 10 
though the king hath charged you.. ..Cymbeline, i. 2 
or have charged him at the sixth hour — i. 4 
charged me, on pain of their perpetual ..Lear, iii. 3 

wast thou not charged at thy peril — iii. 7 

my lady charged my duty in tliis business — iv. 5 

what you have charged me ivith — v. 3 

I have charged thee, not to haunt about. Othello, i. 1 
(for such proceeding I am charged withal) .^ — i. 3 
CHARGEFUL-chargeful fashion. Comedy o/Brr.iv. 1 
CHARGE-HOUSE— educate the youth at 

the charge-house on Lome's L Lost, v. 1 

CHARGETH-justly chargeth them..Co)n. o/ Err. v. 1 
CHARGING— in charging you with. He7ir?/F///. v. 1 
CHARIEST-the chariest maid is prodigal. Hamiet, i. 3 
CHARINESS-not sully the chariness. Merrw>fi»cs,ii.l 
CHARING-CROSS-to be delivered as far 

as charing-cross 1 HenrylV. ii. 1 

CHARIOT — and in a captive chariot . .Henry V. iii. 5 
did follow thy proud chariot wheels.2 Henry F/. ii. 4 
in captive bonds Iris chariot wheels? JuliusCcesar, i . 1 
when you saw his chariot but appear — i. 1 

set thee on triumphant chariots Ant. <5- Cleo. iii. 1 

follow his chariot, like the greatest .. — iv. 10 
our chariots and our horsemen be in. Cymltetine, iii. .5 
my sword, my chariot, and .... Tiltts Andronicus, i. 2 

horse and chariots let us have — ii. 2 

or tear them on thy chariot wheels.. — v. 2 

in a chariot of inestimable value Pericles, ii, 4 

her chariot is an empty hazel-nut . . Romeo ■^■Jul. i. i 

CHARITABLE— all charitable . . Mea.for Mea. iii. 2 

why had I not with charitable hand, jl/uc/i Ado, iv. 1 

born under a charitable star All's Well, i. 1 

ha' done me a charitable office ... lVinter\iTate, iv. 2 
a charitable duty of ray order.. Comedy of Errors, v. 1 
iu such a just and charitable war. . . . King John, ii. 1 
I come to thee for charitable licence . . Henry F. iv. 7 
to stop devoted charitable deeds? ..Richard III. i. 2 
why have you that charitable title. Timon ofAth. i. 2 
what chantable men afford to beggars — iii. 2 

most charitable care have the Coriolanus, i. 1 

ruddock would, with charitable bill. Cymde/ine, iv. 2 

do this, and be a charitable murderer. Titus And. ii. 3 

for thou hast done a charitable deed .. — iii. 2 

a charitable wish, and full of love .... — iv. 2 

be thy intents wicked, or charitable ....Hamlet, i. 1 

for charitable prayers, shards. Hints .... — v. 1 

CHAKITAIiL-y- can thev cluiritalily. .Henn/F. if. 1 

CIIARITIES-asyour charities shalU'lVn(er'.«7'u/e,ii. 1 

CHARITY — out of Mb choi-ity Tempest, i. 2 



CHA 

CHARITY-charity in thee .... Tu-u Gen. of Ver. ii. 5 
of charity what km are you to me? . . TwelfihN. v. I 
bound hy my charity, and my . . Mea.for Mea. ii. 3 
might there not be a charity in sin.. — ii. 4 

no siu at all, but charity — ii. -i 

were equal poise of sill and charity.. — ii. 4 

induced by my charity, and licarmg iv. 3 

thy love is far from cHarity Love's L.Lost, iv. 3 

for charity itself fulfilB the law (re/).) — iv. 3 
he hath a neighbourly charity . . Mcr. of Venice, i. 2 
'twere good, you do so much 'for charity — iv. 1 
let him speak ; 'tis charity to show . . Turn, of Sh. iv. I 
elsewhere they meet with charity . . — iv. 3 
your charity would have lacked.. IVinler'sTale, iii. 3 
whom zeal and charity brought .... King John, ii. 2 

the ehm-ch, offending charity — iii. .i 

for 'twere no charity; yet, to v.'ash.. Richard II. iii, 1 
open as day for melting charity. . . .'ZHenry IV. iv. 4 

the dead with charity enclosed Henry V. iv. 8 

charity chased hence by rancour's.. 2He7iryF/. iii. 1 

fie I charity, for shame ! speak not , . v. 1 

sin before, but now 'tis charity SHenryVI.v. b 

sweet saint, for charity, be not so Richardlll. i. 2 

lady, ^ou know no rules of charity . . — i.2 
if uot for charity, urge neither charity — i. 3 

m.y charity is outrage, life i. 3 

we have done deeds or charity — ii. \ 

love, charity, obedience, and true duty ! — ii. 2 

deliver all with charity Henry VIII. i. 2 

I do beseech your grace, for charity . . — ii. I 

ever yet have stood to charity — ii. 4 

I have more charity: hut say — iii. 1 

I am bound in charity against it! iii. 2 

a little earth for charity ! so went.... — iv. 2 
to speak him, and yet with charity . . — iv. 2 
love, friendship, charity, are . . Troilus ^-Cress. iii. 3 
and rob in the Behalf of charity . . — v. 3 

it comes in charity to thee Timon of Athens, i. 2 

show charity to none; but let ... . -^ iv. 3 

empoisoned, and with his charity slain . . Coriol. v. A 

so near the lack of charity Cymbeline, ii. 3 

and praise myself for charity iv. 2 

tlie charity of a penny cord ! — v. 4 

this was but a deed of charity TitusAndron.v. 1 

1 thought it princely charity to grieve .. Pericles, i. 2 
through Ephesus poured forth your cliarity — iii. 2 

the gods requite his charity I — iii. 2 (scroll) 

here I charge your charity withal — iii. 3 

that learned charity aye wears — v. 3 (Gower) 

with prayers, enforce their charity Lear, ii. 3 

that ray cliarity be not of him perceived.. — iii. 3 
do poor Tom some charity, whom the foul — iii. 4 

let's exchange charity v. 3 

by Gis, and Ijy saint'Charity , . Hamlet, iv. f> (song.) 
bear some charity to my wit Otliello, iv. 1 

CHARLEMAIN— great Charlemain..^«'s Well, ii. 1 
daughter to Charlemain, who was .... Henry V. i. 2 

CHARLES — officers of Charles Love's L. Losl,ii. 1 

not Charles, the duke's wrestler ..As you Lilie it, i. 1 
monsieur Charles, what's the new news — i. I 
Charles, I thank thee for thy love to me — i. 1 
tell thee, Charles, it is the stubbornest — i. 1 
farewell good Charles. Now will I stir — i. 1 
with Charles, the duke's wrestler (rep .) — i.2 
have you challenged Charles the wrestler? — i.2 

how dost thou, Charles? — i.2 

or Charles, or soraetliing weaker — i.2 

but lately foil the sinewy Charles. ... — ii. 2 

Charles' wain is over the new 1 HenrylV. ii. 1 

where Charles the Great, having Hent y V. i. 2 

of Charles the duke of Lorain (rep.) — i. 2 

and Lewis the son of Charles the Great — i. 2 
daughter to Charles the foresaid duke — 1.2 
line of Charles the Great was re-united — i.2 
Charles De la bret, high constable of — iii. .5 
Charles, duke of Orleans, nephew to — i\'. ,s 
Charles De-la-bret high constable of — iv. 8 

the dauphiu Charles is crowned 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

here coraeth Charles; I marvel — ii. 1 

wherefore is Charles impatient — ii. 1 

that Charles the dauphin may — iii. 2 

see, noble Charles ! the beacon — iii. 2 

the bastard's braves, and Charles .... — iii. 2 
the princely Charles of France <,rep.) — iii. 3 

Ch:irles, and the rest, will take — iii. 3 

joined witli Charles, the rightful.. — iv. 1 (letter) 
with Charles. Alenijon, and that .... — iv. 1 
the bastard, Charles, and Burgundy., — iv. 4 
near knit to Charles, a man of great — v. 1 

to Paris, royal Charles of France .... — v. 2 

command the conquest, Charles — v. i 

Charles the dauphin is a proper man — v. 3 

light on Charles, and thee 1 — v. 3 

since Charles must father it — v. 4 

't was neither Charles, nor yet — v. I 

Charles, and the rest, it is enacted — v. 1 

and, Charles, upon condition — v. I 

insulting Charles! hast thou — v. 4 

how saj' st thou, Charles? — v. t 

he is near kinsman unto Charies — v. .^> 

and the Fi-ench king Charles •iHeiiryVI.\. 1 

Charles, and William de la Poole.. — i. I (articles) 
Charles the emperor, under pretence. Hem y^'V//. i. I 
Cliarles, I ^^^ll play no more to-night — v. I 

but little, Charles, nor shall not — v. 1 

'tis midnight, Charles, nr'ythee, to bed — v. 1 

Charles, good-night Well, sir — v. 1 

CHARM — with a charm joined to Tempest, i. 2 

all the charms of Sycorax — i.2 

my high charms work, and these — iii. 3 

some wanton charm upon this man and — iv. 1 

my charms crack not — v. 1 

your charm so strongly works them .... — v. 1 

my charms I'll break — v. I 

this airy charm is for — v. \ 

the charm dissolves apace — v.l 

now ray charms are all o'ertlirown — (epil.) 

I think yon have charms MerryWives, ii. 2 

I have no other charms — ii. 2 

she works by charms, by spells — iv. 2 



CHA 

CHARM— oft hatli such a charm. . Men. for Men. iv. 1 
against whose charms faith melted .. Much Ada, \i. 1 
yet is this no charm for the tootli-ach — iii. 2 

charm ach witli air, and agony — v. 1 

ere I take this charm oft" from Uid.N. Dream, ii. i 

nor spell nor charm, come our — ii. 3 (.song) 

all the power this charm doth owe .. — .ii. 3 

I'll charm his eyes, against — "i. 2 

but I will charm him first to keep. Taming of Sh.i. 1 
and charm her chattering tongue — — iv. 2 

peace, the charm's wound up Macbeth, i. 3 

the mistress of your charms, the close. . — iii. 5 
provide, yom' cliarms, and every thing — iii. 5 

for a charm of powerful trouble — iv. 1 

then the charm is firm and good — iv. 1 

I'U charm the air to give a sound — iv. I 

despair thy charm; and let tiie angel . . — v. 7 
spirits now with spelling charms — 1 Henry Vl.y. 3 
therefore shall it charm thy riotous .iHenryVI. iv. 1 

or T will cliai-m your tongue 3 Henry VI. v. 5 

have done thy cliarm, thou hateful ..liichard HI.]. 3 
my body with their hellish charms? — iii. 4 

and her" great charms misguide Coriolanns,!. 5 

I charm you, by my once Julius Ciesar, ii. 1 

but all cliarms "of love, salt Antony S, Cleo. ii. 1 

I !im revenged upon my charm .... — iv. 10 

this grave cTiarm, whose eye — iv. 10 

tongue, charms this report out Cymbeline, i. 7 

nor no witohci-aft charm thee! — iv. 2 (song) 

that mil charm Kome's Saturnine ..Titus And. ii. 1 

a charm to calm these fits — ii. 1 

mumbling of wicked charms, conjm-ing . . Lear, ii. 1 

whose age has charms in it — v. 3 

bewitched by the charm of looks.flom..^' Jul. i.,") (cho.) 

nor witch hath power to charm Hamlet, i. 1 

are there not charms, by which Othello, i. 1 

hast practised on her with foul charms . . — 1. 2 
what drugs, what charms, what conjuration — i. 3 
forth of rayheart,thosecharm3,thineeyes — v. 1 
charm your tongue. I will not charm .. — v. 2 
CHARMED— so I charmed their ears . . Tempest, iv. 1 
my outside have not charmed her! Twelf th Night, ii. 2 
I will her charmed eye release . . Mid. A'.'s Ur. iii. 2 

boil thou first i' the charmed pot ! Macbeth, iv. 1 

I bear a charmed life, which must — _v. 7 

may well be charmed asleep 2HenryIV. iv. 2 

has almost charmed me from . . Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

I, in mine own woe charmed Cymbeline, v. 3 

CHARr^IER— she was a charmer Othello, iii. 4 

CHARMETH— such as charmeth.Afid. N.Dream,iv. 1 

CHARMIAN-dearCharmian, I shall.^nJ. 4rCleo. i. 3 

cut my laee, Charmian, come; but let ■ — i. 3 

look, pr'ythee, Charmian, now this .. — i. 3 

Charmiaii,— Madam. Ha, ha! give me — i. 5 

Charmian, where think'st thou he Is — i. o 
note him, good Charmian, 'tis the man — i- 5 

ink and paper, Charmian — i. i 

did I ever, Charmian, love Cfesar so? — _i. 5 
come, Charmian. My arm is sore.... — ii. S 

1 am pale, Charmian. Madam — ii. 5 

I faint; O Iras, Charmian — ii. -i 

Charmian, though he be painted — ii. 5 

pity me, Charmian, but do not speak — ii. 5 
I think so, Charmian; dull of tongue 

widow? Charmian, hark 

more to ask him yet, good Charmian 
O Charmian, I will never go from hence 

Charmian, help! help, Iras! help 

how now, Charmian? my noble girls ! 

but hark thee, Cliarmian. Finish 

now, Charmian? show me, my women 
now, noble Charmian, we'll despatch — v. 2 
kind Charmian; Iras, long farewell.. — v. 2 
Charmian, is this well done? — v. 2 

Caesar, this Chajrmian lived but now — v. 2 
CHARMINGr-charming your blood.. IHejij-i/ZF. iii. 1 

you back, charming the narrow. . Henry V. ii. (cho.) 
ye charming spells and periajJts .... 1 Henry VI. y. 3 

set betwixt two charming words Cymbeline, i. 4 

more charming with their own nobleness — y. 3 
bound to Aaron's charming gyq^.. Titus Andron. ii. 

CHARMINGLY— 

and harmonious charmingly Tempest, iv. 

CHARi>fECO— a cup of charueco iHenryVl.iX. 

CHARNEL-HOUSE— if charnel-houses.. il/ac6. iii. 
shut me nijjhtly in a charnel-house. Rom. ^Jul. iv. 

CH AROLOrS-Bouciqualt, and Charolois.Hen. V. iii. 

CHARON — be thou my Charon . . Trail. ^ Cres. iii. 

CHARTER- light upon your charter. Afer.o/ Ken. iv. 
as large a charter as the wind. ...As you Like ii, ii. 

1 have made a bold charter All's Well, iv. 

at home shall have blank charters . . Eichard II. i. 
liis charters, and his customary rights — ii. 

no privilege nor charter there Richard III. iii. 

mother, mio has a charter to extol . . Coriolanus, i. 
and the charters that you bear i' tlie . . — ii. 
and let me find a charter in yom' voice. . Othello, i. 

CHARTERED— a chartered libertine . . Henry v. i. 
CHARTREUX— o' the Chartreux . . Henry VIII. i. 

sir, a Chartreux friar, his confessor — i. 

CHAR YBDIS— fall into Charybdis.il/er. of Ven. 111. 
CHASE — do chase the ebbing Neptune. . Tempest, v. 

begin to chase the ignorant fumes — v. 

unhappy passenger in cliase .... Two Gen.ofVer. v. 

a ring in cliase of you Twelfth Niglit, iii. 

and Daphne holds the chase . . Mid. N.'s Dream, ii. 

out of breath, in this fond chase! — ii. 

this kind of chase, I should hate. . As you Like it,i. 

down his innocent nose in piteous chase — ii. 

is't I that chase thee from thy All's Well, iii. 

this is tire cliase ; I am gone Winter's Tale, iii. 

in the chase it seems of this fair — v. 

should chase us, with my father — v. 

that holds in chase mine honour King John, i. 

and chase the native beauty — iii. 

and chase them to the bay Richard II. ii. 

to chase these pagans, in those \ Henry IV. i. 

France will be disturbed with chases . . Henry V. i. 

you see, tliis chase is hotly followed . . — ii. 

thee I'll chase hence, thou wolf 1 Henry VI. i. 



[ no ] 



— iii. 3 

— iii. 3 

— iii. 3 
iv. 13 
iv. 13 
iv. 13 

V. 2 



CHASE- can chase away the first- ..'IHenryVI. iii. 2 

seek thee out some other chase — v. 2 

single out some other chase 3Henry VI. ii. 4 

where he did mean no chase Hicliard III. iii. 2 

to chase us to our graves — iv. 4 

spies of the Voices iield me in chase. .Coriolanus, i. 6 
barren, touched in this holy chasi^.. J uliusCersar, i. 2 

oiir valour is, to chase what flies Cymbeline, iii. 3 

tile proudest panther in the cliase . . Titus And. ii. 2 
the nortli side of this pleasant chase.. — ii. 4 
if thy wits nui the wild-goose cha^e.Hom. ^-Jul. ii. 4 

appointment gave us chase Hamlet, iv. 6 (letter) 

I do follow here in the chase, not like . . Othello, ii. 3 

CHASED— hath chased sleep .... TwoGen. ofVer. ii. 4 

all sorts of deer are chased Merry Wives, v. 5 

more spirit chased than enjoyed .Mer. of Venice, ii. G 
bent on us, chased us away . . Comedy of Errors, y. 1 
IKni.] achased lion by the mortal paw.. ./oA/i, iji. 1 
so cowarded and chased your blood . . Henry K. ii. 2 
hath from France too long been chased — y. 2 

when I have chased all thy foes \ Henry VI. i. 2 

charity chased hence by rancour's. .iHoiry VI. iii. 1 
which chased you from the field . . . .ZHenry VI. i. 1 
ten, chased by one, are now each .... Cymbeline, v. 3 

CHASER — then began a stop i' the chaser — v. 3 

CHASETH-in armour, cliaseth ti\eva.l Henry VI. i. 5 

CHASING— cheek; chasing the jcoj&i. Richard II. ii. 1 

CHASTE — cold nymphs chaste crowns. Tempest, iv. 1 

ere one chaste man Merry Wines, ii. 1 

if he be chaste, the flame will — v. 5 

Isabel, live chaste, and brother die. >/ea. /or jUeo. ii. 4 

but by gift of my chaste body — v. 1 

as chaste as is the bud, ere it Much Ado, iv. 1 

quenched in the chaste beams. il/uL A'.'s Dream, ii. 2 
■will you give horns, chaste lady?. Lome's L. Lost, y. 2 
I will die as chaste as Diana . . Merch. of Venice, i. 2 

survey with thy chaste eye As you Like i7 , iii. 2 

the fair, the chaste, the unexpressive — iii. 2 
in Florence, of a most chaste renovin.All'sWell, iv. 3 
then let Kate be chaste, and Dian. Taming ofSh. ii. 1 
as continent, as chaste, as true .. Winter'sTale. iii. 2 
Hermione is chaste, Polixenea . . — iii. 2 (oracle) 

nor in a way so chaste: since — iv. 3 

by our noble and chaste mistress ....I Henry IV. i. 2 

chaste and immaculate in very 1 Henry VI. v. 4 

of virtuous chaste intents — v. b 

the model of our chaste loves Henry VIII. iv. 2 

I was a chaste wife to my grave — iv. 2 

as chaste as may be in the world . . Troil.^Cres. i. 3 
chaste as the icicle, that's curded . . Coriolanus, v. 3 

virtuous, wise, chaste, constant Cymbeline, _i. b 

the chimney-piece, chaste Dian, bathing — ii. 4 
thouglit her as chaste as unsunned snow — ii. 5 
I was taught of your chaste daughter. . — v. 5 
Lucrecewas not more chaste iiinn.TilusAndron. ii. \ 

of that chaste dishonoured dame — iv. 1 

good report to a number to be chaste . . Pericles, iv. 6 
sworn, that she will live chaste?. /iomeo tj- Juliet, i. 1 

or your chaste treasure open to his Hamlet^ i. 3 

be thou as chaste as ice, as pure as snow — iii. 1 
between the chaste unsmirched brow .. — iv. 5 
and many worthy and chaste dames . . Otiiello, iv. 1 
secure couch, and to suppose her chaste! — iv. 1 
if she be not honest, chaste, and true . . — iv. 2 
not name it to you, you chaste stars! .. — v. 2 
Moor, she was chaste; she loved thee .. — v. 2 

CHASTELY— wish chastely, and love... 4«i's Well,i. 3 

herself most chastely absent — iii. 7 

virtuous to lie, as to live chastely . . Coriolanus, v. 2 

CHASTISE— he will chastise me Tempest, v. 1 

and chastise with the valour of my Macbeth, i. 5 

by whose help, I mean to chastise it.King John, ii. 1 
the palsy, chastise thee, and minister. iJic/iard //. ii. 3 
I will chastise this high-minded 1 Henry VI. i. b 

CHASTISED— this chastised kingdom John, v. 2 

this arm of mine hath chastised Richard Ill.iv.i 

have chastised the amorous Troj an. Troi'/. 4 Cres. v. 5 
nor once be chastised with the sohev. Ant.^-Cleo. v. 2 
and chastised with arms our enemies.. Titus And. i. 1 

CHASTlSEMENT-any chastisement.ilfea./o; M. v. 1 
in your chambers gave you chastisement?./oAn, v. 2 
for justice, and rough chastisement.. iJic/iard //. i. 1 

terms to give him cnastisement? ■ — iv. 1 

very instruments of chastisement ..2HenryIV.iv. 1 

him chastisement for this abuse 1 Henry VI. iv. 1 

thy ministers of chastisement Richard Ill.y. 3 

chastisement doth therefore {rep.l.JuliusCa;sar,'iv. 3 

CHASTITY— pure chastity .... TwoGen. ofVer. iv. 3 
than our brother is our chastity. jWeas. /or Meas. ii. 4 
in double violation of sacred chastity — v. 1 
is not chastity enough in language . . Much Ado, iv. 1 
lamenting some enforced chastity.. A/id. N. Dr. iii. 1 
the very ice of chastity is in t'aem. As youLike it,\i\. 4 
my chastity's the jewel of our house. All's Well, iv. 2 
Roman Lucrece for her chastity. . Taming of Sit. ii. 1 
to force a spotless vu-gin's chastity ..iHenryVl. y. 1 
there's a palm presages chastity . . AnionyS,- Cleo. i. 2 
assault you have made to her chastity. Cymbeline, i. 5 
ere he wakened the chastity lie wounded — ii. 2 
your daughter's chastity— there it begins — v. b 
not but think her bond of chastity quite — y. 5 
thy sons make pillage of her chastity. Titus And. ii. 3 
this minion stood upon her chastity. . — ii. 3 
her spotless chastity, inhuman traitors — v. 2 
if your peevish chastity, which is not,.. Pericles, iv. 6 

my dish of chastity with rosemary — iv. 6 

strong proof of chastity well-armed. Borneo ^/wi. i. 1 
cold, my girl? even like thy chastity . . Othello, v. 2 

CHAT— a t-liough of as deep chat Tempest, ii. 1 

then leave tliis chat; and, good. . Looe's L. Lost, iv. 3 

let's hold more chat — v. 2 

long to have some chat with hst\.Taming ofSh. ii. 1 

setting all this chat aside — .ii. 1 

what a fool am I, to chat with you .. — iii. 2 

for now we sit to chat, as well — v. 2 

for my fool, and chat with you. . Comedy of Err. ii. 2 

this bald unjointed chat of his 1 Henry IV. i. 3 

no more of tliis unprofitable chat .... — iii. 1 

what chat we two have had ZHenry VI. iii. 2 

her baby cry, while she chats him . . Coriolanus, ii. 1 



CHE 

CHAT — go and chat with Paris . . Romeo Sf Juliet, iv. 4 

CHATILLON— now, say, Chatillou . . A7ng- /o/ik, i. 1 

farewell ChatiUon. What now, my son? — i. 1 

my lord of Chatillon may from England — ii. 1 

our messenger Chatillon is arrived . . — ii. 1 

pause for thee; Chatillon, speak — ii. 1 

Jaques Chatillon, Kainbures Henry V. iii. 5 

Jaques of Chatillon, admiral of France — iv. 8 

CHATHAM— the clerk of Chatham. .2//enr!/r/. iv. 2 

CHATTEL-niy goods, my chattels. Taming ofS. iii. 2 

lojk to my chattels, and my mo\eables. Henry V. ii. 3 

goods, lands, tenements, chattels. . Hemy VJII. iii. 2 

CHATTER- moe and chatter at me Tempest, ii. 2 

would chatter tliis way Cymbeline, i. " 

the wind to make me chatter Lear, iv. t 

CHATTERING— chattering tongue. Tam. of tih. iv. 2 
chattering pies in dismal discords . .ZHenry VI. v. 6 

CHAUD- il felt fortchaud Merry Wives, i. 4 

CH AUDRON— a tiger's chaudron .... Macbeth, iv. I 
CHEAP — that is cheap in beauty.. A/ea. /or A/ra. iii. 1 

is dear in Sicily, he cheap in Winter's Tale, i. 2 

I hold yom- dainties cheap . . Comedy of Errors, iii. 1 
buy laud now as cheap as stinking.. lf/e«r!/ /f'. ii. 4 
so stale and cheap to vulgar company — iii. 2 

bought me lights as good cheap — iii. 3 

when flesh is cheapandfemalesdear.2/fenr!//r. v. 3 

and hold their manhoods cheap Henry V. iv. 3 

may make cheap pennyworths 2 Henry VI. i. \ 

who, in a cheap estimation Coriolanus, ii. 1 

I hope to see Romans as cheap as ... . — iv. 5 

for Rome, to make coals cheap — v. 1 

which are as cheap as lies — v. 5 

maidenhead were no cheap thing .... Pericles, iv. 3 

man's life is clieap as beast's Lear, ii. 4 

CHEAPEN — I'll never cheapen her ..MuchAdo, ii. 3 

if he should cheapen a kiss of her Pericles, iv. 6 

CHEAPER— the cheaper way . . Meas. for Meas. ii. 4 
CHEAPEST-the cheapest of us is tea.Ric/iard II. v. b 

breakfast in tlie cheapest countrv Pericles, iv. 6 

CHEAPLY— as this is cheaply bought. . Macbeth, v. 7 
CHEAPSIDE— in Cheapside shall ..2//enry VL iv. 2 

when shall we go to Cheapside — iv. 7 

CHEAT — how to cheat the devil. . Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 

m.y revenue is the silly cheat Winter's Tale, iv. 2 

if I make not this cheat bring out.... — iv. 2 
you do not mean to cheat me so. .Comedy ofEr. iv. 3 

cheats the poor maid of tliat King John, ii. 2 

CHEATED — cheated of om* lives Tempest, i. 1 

hath cheated me of this island — iii. 2 

cheated of featm'e by dissembling, .iiic/iarrf ///. i. 1 
CHEATER— I will be cheater to. . . . Merry Wives, i. 3 

disguised cheaters, prating Comedy of Errors, i. 2 

a tame cheater, he; you may 2Heiiry I V.i'i. 4 

cheater, call you him? (j-ep.) — ii. 4 

thou abominable damned cheater — ii. 4 

I played the cheater for thy father's.. Titus And. v. 1 
CHEATING-base, rascally, cheating.2He7ir!//F. ii. 4 
CHECK— check this erring love . Two Gen. ofVer. ii. 4 

against, all checks, rebukes Merry Wives, iii. 4 

the staunj'el checks at it! Twelfth JSiglit, ii. 5 

the haggard, chuck at every feather. . — iii. 1 

cheek tlieir folly, passion's solemn . . Love'sL.L. v. 2 

• you might keep that check for it. AsyouLike it, iv. 1 

check thy contempt ; obey our will . . All's Welt, ii. 3 

so devote to Aristotle's checks Taming ofSh. i. i 

for goodness dares not check thee! Macbeth, iv. 3 

a queen, and check the world ! King John, ii. 1 

to check his reign, but they will .... — iii. 4 
idly spread, and find no check? .... — v. 1 
to check time broke in a disordered — v.b 

the check of such another day 1 Henry IV. v. 5 

rebuke and check was the reward ..2HenryIV. iv. 3 

hardly can I check my eyes ZHenry VI. i. 4 

Phaeton should check thy fiery steeds — ii. 6 
to check, to o'erbear such as are .... — iii. 2 

man cannot swear but it checks Richard III. i. 4 

check? and disasters grow in Troit.jr Cress, i. Z 

sans check, to good and bad — i. 3 

seldom, nor no slight checks . . Timon of Athens, ii. 2 

nor check my courage for Coriolamis, iii. 3 

worthy shameful check it were. .^n(ony ^ Cleo. iv. 4 
nobler, than attending for a check. . Cymbeline, iii. 3 

check tliis hideous rashness Lear, i. 1 

must be used with checks, as flatteries — i. 3 

his master will check him tbr't '.. — ii. 2 

may gall him with some check Otlielta, i. 1 

my fortunes, if the.y check me here — ii. 3 

to incur a private check — iii. 3 

his stubbornness, liis checks, and frowns — iv. 3 
CHECKED— be checked for silence .... Alt's Well, i. 1 

I have checked him for it 2HenryIV. i. 2 

checked and rated by Northumberland — iii. 1 
unto myself, and not be checked . . ..2 Henry VI. i. 2 
other side, I checked my fiiends.. R/c/isrrf I II. iii. 7 

checked like a bondman Julius Ccesar, iv. 3 

CHECKERED— checkered slough.. 2Henr!/ VI. iii. 1 

make a checkered shadow on Titus Andron. ii. 3 

CHECKERING— checkering the .Romeo & Juliet, ii. 3 
CHECKING-checking at r Co/.-lilung not]. Ham. iv. 7 

CHEEK- to the welkin's cheek Tempest, i. 2 

the setting of thine eye, and cheek — ii. 1 

starved the roses in her cheek. Two Gen. of Ver. iv. 4 

feed on her damask cheek Twelfth Night, ii. 4 

my tears let fall upon your cheek — v. 1 

the old ornament of his cheek hath... VucA.-(rfo, iii. 2 

why is your clieek so pale? Mid.N.'s Dream, i. 1 

I'U go with thee, cheek by jole . . — iii. 2 

while I thy amiable cheeks do coy — iv. 1 

these yellow cowslip cheeks, are gone — v. 1 

for blusliing cheeks by faults Love's L. Lost, i. 2 

for still her cheeks possess the .... — i. 2 

that on my cheeks down flows — iv. 3 (vers.) 

thy cheeks may blow; air, would — iv. 3 (vers.) 

as at a fair, in her fair cheek — iv. 3 

that smiles his cheek in years — v. 2 

saint George's half cheek in a brooch — v. 2 
a villain with a smiling cheek .iVcrcft. of Venice, i. 3 
steal the coloiu' from Bassanio's cheek — iii. 2 
Helen's cheek, but not her heart.. Jsi/ou Likeit,iii. 2 
alean ciieck; whidi youhave not .. — iii. 2 



1 



CHE 



L HI ] 

CIIEEIl — their cheer is the greater .... Much Ado, i. 3 

si> 1 iniiy iuive good clieer — v. 1 

what olicer, niv Iovl'? Demetrius. it/iiZ, A'. Urcain, i. 1 
anil ii;',li' oI'cIk'Ct with sit,'hs of love.. — iii. 2 
tliat liked, that looliwl, with clieer .. — v. 1 
Is'eris.sa, ehecr yvn strau^er. MerchaiU of rcnicc, iii. 2 

show a merry cheer — iii. 2 

therefore, he of good clieer — iii. 5 

good clieer, Antoniol wliatman? — iv. 1 

clieer tliyself a little As you Like it, ii. 6 

be of good clieer, youth: you a inaiiy — iv. 3 

lady, have a better cheer All's IVult, iii. 2 

for here is clieer enough .. Tamiiij; of Shrew, 2 (iiid.) 

groat stine of wedding cheer Tuiuuigo/Sli. iii. 2 

mistress, what eheeri' faith, as cold .. — iv. 3 

Olio mcbS is like to he your eheer — iv. 1 

likoliliood, some cheer is toward — v. J 

after our great good cheer: pray you — v. 2 

what cheer? how is't with you ft^inler's Tnte, i. 2 

pray God^ou^ cheer maj' answer Comedy of Err. iii. 1 

email cheer, and great welcome — iii. 1 

better cheer may you have — iii. 1 

here is neitiier cheer, sir, nor — iii. 1 

comfort my sister; cheer her — iii. 2 

much thanks for my good cheer.... — v. 1 

you do not give the cheer Macbeth, iii. 4 

come, sisters, cheer we up his sprites .. — iv. I 

receive what cheer you may — iv. 3 

will cheer me ever, or disseat me now . . — v. 3 
cheer [Coi.-hear] there for welcome ..Rkhardll. i. 2 

my 60^■ereign lord, cheer up •ZHenrylF. iv. 4 

and make good cheer, and praise .... — v. 3 (song) 

wliatman! be of good elieer HenryV. ii. 3 

are sad, your cheer appalled 1 Henry Vl.S.'i 

Salisbury, cheer thy spirit with — i. 4 

go, go, eheer up thy hunger-starved . . — i. 5 

may elieer our droopin" spirits — v. 2 

was wont to cheer his dad ZHenry yi. i. 4 

doth not the object cheer your heart (j-ep.) — ii. 2 

my lord, cheer up thy spirits — ii. 2 

my royal father, cheer these noble — ii. 2 

cheers these hands that slew — ii. 4 

this cheers my heart, to see — v. 4 

cheer his grace with quick and Richard ///.;. 3 

now cheer each other, in each other's.. — ii. 2 
be of good cheer: mother, how fai'es .. — iv. 1 

of spirit, nor eheer of mind — v. 3 

cheer thy heart, and be thou not — v. 3 

eheer your neignbours; ladies Henry VIII. i. 4 

be of good eheer; they shall no more. . — v. 1 

go in, and cheer the town, we'll . . Trail. <5- Cress, v. 3 
e cheers them up Timon of .-likens, i. 2 

I'll cheer up my discontented troops — iii. 5 
ah,my good friend! what cheer?.... — iii. 6 

royal eheer, I waiTant you — iii. 6 

Publius, good cheer ; there is .... Julius Ca'sar, iii. 1 
cheer your heart ; be you not . . Anlmiy S,- Cleo. iii. 6 
what, what? good eheer! why .... — iv. 13 
be of good cheer; you have fallen .. -^ v. 2 

what cheer madam? false to his hs&lCymbeline, iii. 4 
go in, and eheer the king: he rages . . — iii. 5 
you shall have better clieer ere you.. — iii. 6 

hath wrought this change of cheer Titus And. i. 2 

and cheer the heart tliat dies in — i. 2 

ne'er let my heart know merry cheer .. — ii. 3 

then eheer thy spirit: for know — iv. 4 

although the eheer be poor — v. 3 

the day to cheer, and night's dank.. Tiom. /^Jul. ii. 3 

with that part elieers each part — ii. 3 

wedding cheer, to a sad burial feast . . — iv. 5 
here in the cheer and comfort of our age. Hamlet, i. 2 
60 far from cheer, and from yom' former . . — iii. 2 
an anclior's cheer in prison be my scope? — iii. 2 
CHEERED— nor cheered with horn.. il/irf.iV. Dr. iv. 1 
still and anon cheered up the heavy King John, iv. 1 

I came, and cheered hini up Henry J', iv. (i 

cheered up the drooping army iHenry I'l. i. 1 

I cheered them up with justice — ii. 1 

all the world is cheered by the sun . . Richard III. i. 2 

therefore be cheered; make not Ant.fr Cleo. v. 2 

CHEERER-merry eheerer of the heart .Henri/ F. v. 2 

CHEERFUL— be cheerful, sir Tempest, iv. 1 

till when, be cheerful, and tliink — v. 1 

yet be elieerful, knight Merry Wives, v. 5 

?r'ythee, be cheerful: know'st . . . . As you Like it, i. 3 
hope, with cheerful eyes King John, iv. 2 

to entertain a cheerful disposition. . . Richard II. ii. 2 
of a cheerful look, and pleasing eye .1 Henry Il\ ii. 4 
this had been cheerful after victory.2H(;n>i//K. iv. 2 
with cheerful semblance .... Henry V. iv. (chorus) 
with one elieerful voice welcome iHenry VI. i. 1 

cheerful colours! see, where SHenryVI.v. 1 

applause, and cheerful shout Richard III. iii. 7 

be cheerful, Richmond — v. 3 

showers to bring it on: be cheerful. ./Inf. 4- Cieo. iii. 2 

be cheerful ; wipe thine eyes Cymbeline, iv. 2 

lies rolled in the cheerful sun Titus Andron.iX. 3 

walk ; and be cheerful once again .... Pericles, iv. 1 
the ground with cheerful thoughts . . Rom. ^ Jul. v. I 

CHEERFULLY- look ehcerfuUy.. Taming ofSh. iv. 3 
olil heart! thou speak'st cheerfully . . Henry V. iv. 1 
said so, to make us fight cheerfully — iv. 1 

fo cheerfully together, and digest.. 1 Henri/ VI. iv. 1 
is grace speaks cheerfully Richard Ill.i. 3 

his grace looks cheerfully and smooth — iii. 4 

how cheerfully my mother looks Hamlet, iii. 2 

how cheerfully on the false trail they cry! — iv. 5 

CHEERING— cheering a rout of . . . .iHenry IV. iv. 2 

the army, cheering up the soldiers.. ii/c/ia/-ti///. v. 3 

CHEERLESS— all's cheerless, dark Lear, v. 3 

ClIEERLY— eheerly, clieerly, my hearts. '/'cvjipesV, i. 1 

chcerly, good hearts — i. 1 

well said, thou look'st eheerly As you Like it, ii. 6 

eheerly, good Adam! — ii.G 

young, and eheerly drawing breath .Richard II. i. 3 

eheerly, my lord: how fares your \ Henry IV. y. 4 

eheerly to sea; the signs of war Henry V. ii. 2 

but eheerly seek how to redress SHenry VI. v. 4 

in Ood's name, eheerly on Rtcltard III. v. 2 

1 pr'ythee, man, look eheerly. . Timon of Alliens, ii. 2 



cm 



CHEEK— meet in some fresli cheek. /Lii/ou /.i*i;, iii. .5 
nor your cheek of crenni, that can .. — iii. 5 

tlKiii tliut mixed in his oliook — iii. 5 

takos all liNoliliiiuil from hor cheek ..All's Weil, i. 1 
anil \ our jiiiriiik'o than in ymir cheek — i. 1 

for, I'o.ik tliv ohooksooufessit — i. 3 

hoioo.i his'sinistorohook — ii. 1 

bluslios in my oliooks thus whisper me — ii. 3 

(ieath >it on fliv olieok for ever — ii. 3 

loll oliook is ;i ohoek of two pile (rep.) — iv. 5 
white and rod « itliin her cheeks?. . 7'am. ()/ S/i. iv. 5 

is loanin- oliook to oheck? Winter's Tale, i. 2 

of his ohin.aiidehoek - ii. 3 

adlietion may subdue the cheek — iv. 3 

made it one upon my cheek . . Comedy of Errors, i. 2 
beauty took from my poor cheek? — ii. I 

the natural ruby of your cheeks Macbeth, iii. 4 

those linen cheeks of thine are — v. 3 

upon thy cheek lay I tliis King John, ii. 1 

your city's threatened cheeks — ii. 1 

and strain their cheeks to idle — iii. 3 

the native beauty from his cheek — iii. 4 

seen inhabit in those cheeks? — iv. 2 

doth pro:,'ress on thv cheeks — v. 2 

make paTe our cheeK Richard II. ii. I 

made nie sour my patient cheek — — ii. 1 
tlie beauty of a fair queen's cheeks .. — iii. 1 
upon the cloudy cheeks of heaven .. — iii. 3 

then his cheek looked pale 1 Henry IV. i. 3 

lost the fresh blood in thy cheeks — ii. 3 

his oheek looks pale — iii. 1 

lot them coin hischeeks — iii. 3 

the whiteness in thj' cheek is apter ..ilienrylV. i. 1 
than he shall get one on his cheek . . — i. 2 

a yellow cheek? a white beard? — i. 2 

with kindly tears his gentle cheeks . . — iv. 4 

their cheeks are paper Henry V. ii. 2 

investing lank-lean cheeks — iv. (elio.) 

parohiiig heat displayed my cheeks . . 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

hero by the cheeks tii drag — i. 3 

and tliy cheek's side struck off: — _i. 4 

niojtntrme, your cheeks do counterfeit — ii. 4 
that thy cheeks blush for pure shame — ii. 4 
when ray lips do toueli his cheeks . . — ii. 5 

my master's blushing cheeks — iv. 1 

blush and beautify the elieek again. aHenry VI. iii 2 

these cheeks are pale for — iv. 7 

give thee this to dry thy cheeks iHenry VI. i. 4 

gave him, to dry his cheeks — ii. 1 

his pale cheeks, methinks, present . . — ii. 5 
and wet my cheeks with artificial . . — iii. 2 
to my brother turn my blushing cheeks — v. 1 
rendthat beauty from my cheeks . . Richard III. 1. 2 

had wet their cheeks, like trees — i. 2 

red colour hath forsook his cheeks .. . — _i. 4 

and kindly kissed my cheek — ii. 2 

in their fair cheeks, my lord Henry VIII. i. 4 

her hair, her cheek, her gait. . Troitus S^Cressida, i. 1 
set the jaundice on your cheeks? — — i. 3 
do you with cheeks abashed behold. . — i. 3 

and bid the cheek be ready with — i. 3 

and scratch ray praised cheeks — iv. 2 

heaven in your cheek, pleads — iv. 4 

till thy sphered bias cheek out-swell — iv. 5 

her cheek, her lip, nay, her — iv. 5 

mother's blood runs on the dexter cheek — iv. f> 

she strokes his cheek! — v. 2 

let not the virgin's cheek make. Timon of Alliens, iy. 3 

in their nicely-gawded cheeks Coriolanus, 'li. 1 

knaves tent in my cheeks — iii. 2 

the wide cheeks o' the air — y. 3 

Calphurnia's cheek is pale JuliusCcesar, i. 2 

else so thy cheek paj's shame Antony ^- Cleo. i. 1 

that thy cheek so much as tanked not — i. 4 
to glow the delicate cheeks which .. — ii. 2 
which pitifully disaster the cheeks .. — ii. 7 
you see, we have burnt oui' cheeks . . — ii. 7 

put colour in thy cheek — iv. 12 

had I this cheek to bathe my lips Cymbeline, i. 7 

princely blood flows in his cheek .... — iii. 3 
tliat rarest treasure of your cheek . . — iii. 4 
his right cheek reposing on a cushion — iv. 2 
give colour to my pale cheek with .. — iv. 2 
who, with wet cheeks, were present.. — v. 5 
uimn the dead man's earthy cheeks.. 7'(7i/j./nd. ii. 4 
vet do thy cheeks look red as Titan's — ii. 5 
ailing the aged wrinkles in ray clieeks — iii. 1 
then fresh tears stood on her cheeks . . — iii. 1 
to behold our cheeks how they are .. — iii. 1 

I will wipe thy cheeks — iii. 1 

no service on her sorrowful cheeks . . — iii. 1 
her sorrows, meshed upon her cheeks — iii. 2 

and with dead cheeks advise thee Pericles, i. 1 

blood from my cheeks, rausmgs — i. 2 

our cheeks and hollow eyes do witness — i. 4 

something glows upon my cheek — v. 1 

tears fret channels in her cheeks Lear, i. 4 

water-drops, stain my man's cheeks! — — ii. 4 

crack your cheeks! rage! blowl — iii. 2 

bear'st a cheek for blows — iv. 2 

tear trilled down lior delicate cheek .... — iv. 3 
hangs upon the cheek of night . . Romeo fy Juliet, i. 5 
brightness of her ohoek would shame — ii. 2 
how she leans her cheek upon her hand ! — ii. 2 

that I might touch that cheek! — ii. 2 

a maidenTilush bepaint my cheek . . — ii. 2 
washed my sallow cheeks for Rosaline! — ii. 3 

here uixm thy cheek the stain — ii. 3 

the wanton blood up in your cheeks — ii. b 

blood hating in my cheeks — iii. 2 

roses in thy lips and cheeks shall fade — iv. 1 

famine is in thy cheeks — — v. 1 

in thy lips, and in thy cheeks — v. 3 

the harlot's cheek, beautified with .... Hamlet, iii. 1 

pinch wanton on yoiu" cheek — iii. 4 

should make very forges of my cheeks.. 0//ieHo, iv. 2 
CIIEEK-ROSES-those cheek-roses.. iUea./Dr Mea. i. 5 

CHEEK— what cheer? Tempesl^i. 1 

I have good cheer at home Merry Wives, iii. 2 

besides your cJieer you shall have sport — iii. 2 



— V. 5 
. 1 



CHEERLY— eheerly, boys; be brisk ..Rom. /j-Jul. i. 

whati eheerly my liearts — i. 

CHEKK'.ST— how cheer'st thou ..Mer. of Venice, iii. 
Cil F.IOSE — yon Banbury cheese! .... Merry Wives, i. 

there's pi|jpins and cheese to come .... — i. 

not the huniour of bread and cheese .. — ii. 

Hugh, the Welshman, with my cheese. — ii. 

lest he transform me to a piece of cheese 

with a piece of toasted cheese 

breeds mites, much like a cheese All's Well, 

I had rather live with cheese 1 Henry I V. iii. 

it will toast cheese; and it will endiue.Hcnr;/ V. ii. 

stinks witii eating toasted cheese ..2 Henry VI. iv. 

why, my cheese, my digestion. Troitus ^ Cressida, ii. 

old mouse-eaten dry ohoose, Nestor — v. 

this piece of tons tod ohoose will do't Lear, iv. 

CHEESE-FAKl XG— clioese-paring..2He7ir!//F. iii. 
CHEQUIN-or four thousand chequins../'(.T''c/ejf, iv. 
CHER — notre triis cher iilz Henry roy. . Henry V. V. 
CHERE-mon tr^s chereet divine deesse? — v. 
CHERISH-liow you the purpose cherish. Tempest, ii. 

cherish thy forlorn swain ! . . 7'wo Gen. of Verona, v. 

if thou dost love fair Hero, cherish ii.Muck Ado, i. 

they cherish it, to make it stay . . Winter's Tale, iv. 

witchcraft with revenue cherish .... KingJolin, iii. 

his reign, but they will cherish it — iii. 

in tills kind, cherish rebellion Richard II. ii. 

to thy servants, cherish thy guests. .IHenrylV. iii. 

taugnt us how to cherish such high . . — v. 

thy brothers: cherish it, my boy IHenrylV. iv. 

cherisii duke Humphrey's deeds ....'IHenry VI. i. 

for what doth cherish weeds ZHenry VI. ii. 

sworn to cherish and defend Richard III. i. 

with all duteous love doth cherish you — ii. 

cherish those hearts that hate thee. Henry VIII. iii. 

outrages, and cherish factions.. Timon of .itlicns, iii. 

thou hast vowed to cherish Romeo ^ Juliet, iii. 

CHERISHED-have been cherished 7'woGen.o/F. iii. 

illumined, cherished, kept alive.... — iii. 

if they were not cherished by our All's Well, i v. 

dearly cherished; give me thy hand.A'im,' John, iii. 

so tame, so cherished, and locked up. 1 Henri// F. v. 

the better cherished, still the nearer . . — y. 

who, cherished in your breasts iHenry VI. iii. 

be preserved, cherished, and kept . . Richard III. ii. 

botii parts this be not cherished.. .4n/on»/i^C/eo. iii. 
CHERISHER— eherisher of my flesh ..All's Well, i. 
CHERISHES— that cherishes my flesh — i. 
CHERISHING— than cherishing the ..HetiryV. i. 

kill thee with much cherishing.. /fomeo ^-Juliet, ii. 
CHERRIES-those kissing cherries.. il/id. A'. 'sOr. iii. 
CHERRY— like to a double cherry.. — iii. 

my cherry lips have often kissed . . — v. 

this cherry nose, these yellow — v. 

give it a plum, a cherry, and a fig. . . . KingJohn, ii. 

hath a pretty foot, a cherry lip Richard Ill.i. 

as like you as cherry is to cherry . . Henry VIII. v. 

silk, twin with the rubied cherry. PenWes, v. (Gow. 
CHERRY-PIT— play at cherry-pit . . Twelfth N. iii. 
CHERRY-STONE— a cherry-stone. . Com.ofErr. iv. 
CHERTSEY— toward Chertsey vith. Richard III. i. 

at Chertsey monastery this noble.. .. — i. 

towards Chertsey, noble lord? — i. 

CHERUB— I see a cherub Hamlet, iv. 

CHERUBIM — 1 a cherubim thou wast. Tempest, i. 

young-eyed elierubims[/Cn(.-cherubins].l/er.o/ V.v. 

or heaven's cherubim, horsed upon Macbeth, i. 

pages were as cherubiras, all gilt Henry VIII. i. 

fears make devils of cherubims . . Trail. <5- Cres. iii. 

for all her cherubun look Timon of.Hhens, iv. 

with golden cherubims is fretted .... Cymbeline, ii. 

thou young and rose-lipped cherubim ..Othello, iv. 
.CHERUBINS— [Co<. Knt^ quiring to the young- 
eyed cherubins Merchant of Venice, \. 

CHESHU— by Cheshu, I think, a' wiW.Henry V . iii. 

by Cheshu, he is an ass, as in the 'orld — iii. 

by Cheshu, he will maintain his — iii. 

in the name of Cheshu Christ, speak.. — iv. 

by (ihesliu, I am yom- majesty's — iv. 

CHESNUT-yom- enesnut was ever. As youLike it 4ii. 

as will a chesnut in a farmer's fire. Taming of Sh. i. 

a sailor's wife had chesnuts in her lap . . Macbeth, i. 
CHEST — neither press, coffer, chest. Werri/ Wives, iy. 

these three chests of gold, silver. .Verc/i.o/ren/ee, i. 

what says the golden chest? ha! ... . — ii. 

iu cypress chests my arras .... Taming of Shrew, ii. 

locked up in chests and trunks KingJoh n, v. 

jewel in a ten times barred up chest .Richard II. i. 

are my chests filled up mth iHenryVI. iv. 

from Ills deep chest laughs out Trail, fy Cres. i. 

come, stretch thy chest, and let — iy. 

for all the chests in Corioli Coriolanus, ii. 

sir. Ills chests and treasure he Antony^- Cleo. iy. 

their alms out of the empress' ehest.. TilusAnd. ii. 

we have a chest beneath the hatches . . Pericles, iii. 

toss upon our shore this chest — iii. 

CHESTEK-asked the way to Chester.2Henr!/ IV. i. 
CIIETAS— Ilias, Chetas, Trojan.. Trail. ACres. (prol. 
CHEVAL— le eheval volant Henry V. iii. 

montez a clieval ; my horse! valet! .. — iv. 
CHEVALIER— mountehevaliersl toarmslJo^n, ii. 

entre les mains d'mi chevalier Henry V. iv. 

CHEVEKIL— a cheveril glove .. Twelfth Night, iii. 

of your soft cheveril conscience .... Henry VIII. ii. 

O, here 's a wit of cheveril Romeo 4- Juliet, ii. 

CHEW— as if I did but only chew.. il/ea./or A/ca. ii. 

my noble friend, chew upon this ..Julius Caesar, i. 
CHlOWED—e\cr chewed with a tooth.. Henry /F. ii. 

oa|iitai crimes, chewed, swallowed Henry V. ii. 

lies fi ml with chewed grass — iv. 

CHJCWIOT— peace, chowot, peace 1 HenrylV. v. 

ClllOWING— ohewing the food As you Like it, iv. 

CMICK— my Ariel; ohick— that is Tempest, v. 

ClllCKI'.X-ull in\ pretty chickens Macbeth, iv. 

to guuril the oliiokon from a hvmgTy .iHenry VI. iii. 

the poor oluckeii .should be sure of death — iii. 

you wouhleat chickens i'.tho shell.. 3'ro//.<5- Cres. i. 

to scald such chickens as you arc. . Timon ofAth. ii. 

forthwith, they fly like chickens Cymbeline, v. 

CHID-faull for which I chid her. TwoUcn. of Ver. i. 



CHI 



[ 112 ] 



CHI 



CHIi»— I chid I^ucetta hence .... Two Gen. of Ver. i. 

when you chid at sir Proteus — _ii- 

chid I for that at fruial nature's Much Ado, iv. 

when we have chid the Imsty-footed.itft'rf. A". J)r. iii. 

but he hath chid me hence — iii. 

whiles you chid me, I did . . As you Like it, iv. 3 (^let. 
I should have chid you for not. . Cojnedij of En: iv. 

he chid the sisters, when first Macbeth, iii. 

I then have chid away my friend . . King Jolm, iv. 
■wilt be horribly chid to-morrow.. .AHcnry IF, ii. 

and cliid his truant youth — y. 

thus uiibraided, chid, and rated at ..iHenryVI. iii. 

have chid me from the battle ZHenryVI. ii. 

he chid Andromache, and struck.. Troil.ff Cress, i. 
will you be chidy We will bear. T/mon of .mens, i. 

'tis to be chid as we rate boys Antony ^- Ctec. i. 

he might have chid me so Ot/tello, iv. 

CHIDi:>EN— chidden for being. . Two Gen. of rer. ii. 

and fly like chidden Mercury Trcilus ^ Cress, ii. 

the rest look like a chidden train ..JuliusCcesar,\. 
[Cot. Kilt.'] the cliidden billow seems Otiiello, ii. 

CHIDD'ST— tliou chidd'st me oft.Romen 4- Juliet, ii. 

CHIDE — will make me chide thee Tempest, i. 

the bolder to chide you for yom-s. TwoGen. of I'er. ii. 

if she do chide, 'tis not — iii. 

intend to chide myself — iv. 2 

I will no further chide you Twelfth Night, iii. 3 

we shall chide downright Mid. N.'s Dream, ii. "2 

now I but chide, but I should use — iii. 2 

as well as I, may chide you for it — iii. 2 

you cliide at him, offending twice. Lojie'sL.Los^iv. 3 

at tables, chides the dice — .X- ^ 

I will chide no breather As youLike it, iii. 2 

chide a year together {repeated'). ... — iii. 5 

what had he to do to chide at me? — iii. 5 

almost chide God for making you. . — iv. 1 

to chide liim from our eaves All's Well, iii. 7 

it is no time to chide you now . Taming of Shrew, i. 1 
though she chide as loud as thunder — i. 2 
not her that chides, sir, at any .... — _ i. 2 

to chide at your extremes Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

the one he chides to hell, and bids . . — iv. 3 
her natural posture! chide me, dear.. — v. 3 
that chides the banks of England ..XUenry IV. iii. 1 

chide him for faults, and do it iHenry IV. iv. 4 

my lord of Wcarwick ; chide him hither — i v. 4 

we'll chide this dauphin at his Henry V. i. 2 

shall chide your trespass, and return — ii. 4 
and ciiide the cripple tardy-gaited — iv. (chorus) 

then must I chide outright 2Heiiry VI. i. 2 

and chides the sea that sunders . . ..ZHenry VI. iii. 2 

and so I chide the means — iii. 2 

as good to chide the waves — v. 4 

to chide my fortune, and torraent ..Richard III. ii. 2 
tlie raven chides blackness . . Troilus c§- Cressida, ii. 3 

if he flinch, chide me for it — iii. 2 

good Troilus? cbide me for it — v. 3 

to the market-place; chide me no more . Cmol. Iii. i 
and lifter seem to chide them ....Julius Ccesar, ii. 1 

he'll tiiink your mother chides — iv. 3 

to cliide, to laugh, to weep . . Antony 4- Cleopatra, i. 1 
and cliides as lie had power to beat — iv. 1 

with Juno chide, that thy adulteries. CT/mteirac, v. 4 

but I'll not chide thee ; let shame Lear, ii. 4 

I pray thee, chide not Romeo Sr Juliet, ii. 3 

after-hours with sorrow cliide us not! — ii. 6 
what a beast was I to chide at him ! . . — iii. 2 

bid my sweet prepare to chide — iii. 3 

like death to chide away tills shame — iv. I 

do you not come your tardy son to chide. Hamlet, iii. 4 
in her heart, and chides with thinking. . Othello, ii. 1 
do not you cliide; I have a tiling for you — iii. 3 
and he "does cliide with you — iv. 2 

CIIIDER— I love no chiders, sir. . . . Taming ofSh. i. 2 

CHIDING— better a little chiding.. Memjr Wives, v. 3 
did I hear such gallant chiding . . Mid.N.'sDr. iv. 1 
churlish chiding of the winter's ..As youLikeit, ii. 1 
mischievous foul sin, in chiding sin -^ ii. 7 

call you this chiding? — iv. 3 

in thy not chiding: for she w^as .. Winter's Tale, v. 3 
a rock against the chiding flood . . Henry VIII. iii. 2 

returns to chiding fortune Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 3 

thou hast as cliidmg a nativity Pericles, iii. 1 

strike my gentleman for chiding of his.. . . Lear, i. 3 
the chiding ICol. A'7?^ -chidden] billow. . Othello, ii. 1 
in good faith, I am a. child to chiding. . — iv. 2 

CHIDEST— thou chidest me well . . Richard 11. iii. 2 

CHIEF — for her chief virtue TwoGen. of Ver. iii. 1 

in chief, for tliat her reputation . . Mea.for Mea. v. I 

yet 1113' chief humour is for Mid. N. Dream^ i. 2 

are not you tlie chief woman? . . Love's L. Lnst,iv. I 
but my chief care is, to come . . Merck, of Venire, i. i 
father''s gift stands chief in power .... All's Well, ii. 1 

cliief nourisher in life's feast Macbeth, ii. 2 

here's our chief guest — iii. 1 

but, chief of all, your safety King John, iv. 2 

from all soldiers chief majority ..lllenry IV. iii. 2 
your grace do I in chief address ....'2HenryIV. iv. 1 

now now, my lord chief justice? — v. 2 

and woe to my lord chief justice! — v. 3 

my lord chief justice, speak to that .. — v. 5 

their chief assembled strength 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

chief master-gunner ami of this town — _ i. 4 

prove a chief ofi'ender in — iii. 1 

king Henry's peers, and chief nobility — iv. 1 
the chief perfections of that lovely .. — v. 5 

I was the chief that raised (rep.) SHcnryVI. iii. 3 

that his chief followers lodge — iv. 3 

the first of all your chief an'airs — iv. 6 

the chief cause concerns his grace . . Henry VIII. v. 2 
the church the cliief aim of his honour — v. 2 
are made thj chief atilictions. . Timonof Alliens, iv. 2 

Cains Marcius is chief enemy Coriolanus, i. I 

my friends (of whom he's chief) — v. 2 

chief factors I'or the gods . . Antony ^ Cleopatra, ii. 6 
ray chief end, like a right gipsy — iv. 1 

farewell, great chief — iv. 12 

chief architect and plotter of .... Titus Andron. v. 3 
were 1 chief lord of all this spacious . . Pericles, iv. 4 
and the chief head of this post haste .... Hamlet, i. 1 



CHIEF— and generous, cliief in that HamlH^ i. 3 

what is a man, if his chief good — iv. 4 

CIIIEFEST— your chiefest thoughts. iVer. nfVen. ii. 8 
security is mortals' chiefest enemy . . Macbeth, iii. 5 
for our chiefest men of discipline .. King John, ii. 1 

sit at chiefest stern of public I Henry VI. i. 1 

within their chiefest temple I'll .... — ii. 2 
their chiefest prospect, murdering. .2Hcnry VI . iii. 2 
Hastings, theking's chiefest friend. .3Hfn/y VI. iv. 3 
into this chiefest thicket of the park — iv. 5 
well winged with ourcliiefest hoise. Richard III. v. 3 
that's one of the chiefest of them.. Troil. 4- Cress, i. 2 
that valour is the chiefest virtue.... Coriotonus.ii. 2 
help, three 0' the chiefest soldiers . . — v. 5 
the chiefest princes of the Goths . . Titus Andron. v. 2 

built up for his cliiefest seat Pericles, i. (Gower) 

chiefest courtier, cousin, and our son . . Hamlet, i. 2 

CHIEFLY- chiefly that I might set it. Tempest, iii. 1 

but chiefly him you termed — v. 1 

but, chiefly, for thy face . . Two Gen. of Verona, iv. 4 

but chiefly by my villany Much Ado, iii. 3 

receipts he gave me ; cliiefly one ....All's Well, ii. 1 
but chiefly, a villanous trick of . . . . i Henry IV. ii. 4 
and chiefly therefore I thank God.. SHenry VI. iv. 6 
did you not chiefly belong to . . Timon of Athens, i. 2 
and with j'ou chiefly i' the world ..Ant. ^-Cleo. ii. 2 
and then myself, I chiefly, that set . . Cymbeline. i. 6 

but, chiefly, to take thence Romeo <§- Juliet, v. 3 

one speech in it I chiefly loved Hamlet, ii. 2 

CHIEN — le chien est retourne Henry V. iii. 7 

CHILD — was hither brought with child . Tempest, i. 2 
seek to violate the honour of my cliild — i. 2 

him and his innocent child — iii. 3 

that I must ask my child forgiveness I — v. 1 

that she is my child Two Gen. of Verona, iii. 1 

for love is like a child — iii. 1 

come not to my cliild Merry Wives, iii. 4 

will you cast awajy your cliild on. . . . — iii. 4 

have your rememDrance. child — iv. 1 

never name her, child, if she — iv. 1 

you do ill to teach the child such .../ — iv. 1 
now is Cupid a child of conscience . . — v. 6 

madam Julietta with child Mea.for Mea. i. 2 

is there a maid with child by him? . . — i. 2 

with child, perhaps? — i. 3 

he hath got his friend with child .... — i. 5 

some one with child by him? — i. 6 

sir, she came m great with child .... — ii. 1 

being as I say, with child — ii. 1 

respected with man, woman, or child — ii. 1 
she is with child; and he that got it — ii. 3 
Kate Keepdown was with child by . . — iii. 2 
his child is a year and a quarter old — iii. 2 

for getting a wench with child — iv. 3 

there's one whom he begot with child — v. 1 

no, for then were you a child Much Ado, i. 1 

no child but Hero, she's his only heiri — i. 1 

as to show a child his new coat — iii. 2 

if you hear a cliild cry in the night. . — iii. 3 
and let the child wake her with crying — iii. 3 

do so, as thou art my child — iv. 1 

that so loved his child, whose joy — v. 1 

so wronged mine innocent child — v. 1 

thou hast belied mme innocent child — v. 1 

thou hast killed my child — v. 1 

breath hast kiUed mine innocent child? — v. 1 

the copy of my child that's dead — v. 1 

my child, my daughter Hermia.Mzd. N. Dream, i. 1 
bewitched the bosom of my child .... — i. 1 

love-tokens with my child — i. 1 

and she hath no child — i. 1 

therefore is love said to be a child — _i. 1 

would have the child knight of liis train — ii. 1 

laud buys not the child of me — ii. 2 

come, thou child; I'll whip thee — iii. 2 

ask of her her changeling child — i v. 1 

like a child on a recorder — v. 1 

this child of fancy, that Armado ..Love'sL.Lost,i. 1 
with a child of our grandmother Eve — i. 1 (let.) 

and sweet my child, let them be — i. 2 

sweet invocation of a child — i.2 

warble, child, make passionate my . . — iii. 1 

of tlie foresaid child or pupil — iv. 2 

her shoulder is with child Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 

offered by a child to an old man .... — v. 1 
when he was a babe, a child, a shrimp — v. 2 
the child brags in her belly already. . — v. 2 

all wanton as a child, skipping — v. 2 

that knows his own child Merch. of Venice, ii. 2 

son that is, your child that shall be. . — ii. 2 
ashamed to be my father's child!.... — ii. 3 

the Moor is with child by you — iii. 5 

my father hath no child but I ....As you Like it, i. 2 
my child's father [A'n(.— father's child] — i. 3 

seconded ■with the forward child .... — iii. 3 
let her never nurse her child herself — iv. 1 

his sole child, my lord AU'sWell, i. 1 

a child begotten of thy body . . — iii. 2 (letter) 
and thou art all my child: towards .. — iii. 2 
for getting the sheriff''s fool with child — iv. 3 

he got his wife with child — v. 3 

a child shall get a sire Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 

I am no cliild, no babe — iv. 3 

happy the parents of so fair a child . . — iv. 5 

it is a gallant child ; one that Winter's Tale, i. 1 

soften at the sight 0' the child '. — ii. 2 

the child was prisoner to the womb. . — ii. 2 

my child? away with 't! — ii. 3 

getting wenches with child — iii. 3 

a boy, or a child, I wonder? — iii. 3 

a bearing-cloth for a squire's child .. — iii. 3 

till his lost child be found? — v. 1 

say, he found the child — v. 2 

that carried hence the child? — v. 2 

aided to expose the child, were even — v. 2 

left you wite, and child Macbeth, iv. 3 

this noble passion, child of integrity.. — iv. 3 
dispossess that child which is not his? King John, i. 1 
to tny grandam, child. Do child .... — ii. 1 
thy sins are visited iu this poor child — ii. 1 



CHILD— relief of this oppressed child.A'ini'Jo/m, ii. 1 

let wives with child pray iii. i 

give my child his kingdom here — iii. 1 

because my poor child is — iii. 4 

Cain, the first male child — iii. 4 

your child. Grief fills the room (ri'p.) — iii. 4 
pretty child, sleep doubtless, and secure — iv. 1 
corruption of a sweet child's death .. — iv. 2 

before the child himself felt he — iv. 2 

the inheritance of this poor child .... — iv. 2 
to be butcher of an innocent child . . — iv. 2 

if thou didst kill this child — iv. 3 

bear away that child, and follow me — iv. 3 

not my child, to smooth his fault Richard II. i. 3 

a long parted mother with her child — iii. 2 
lest child, child's children, cry against — iv. 1 
same child of honour and renown .. 1 Henry IV. iii. 2 

is thought with child by 'illenrylV. (indue.) 

neither woman, man, nor child — ii. 1 

an the child I now go with — v. 4 

an it had been any christom child Henry K. ii. 3 

horrid night, the child of hell — iv. 1 

robes, as a child's bearing-cloth 1 Henry VI. i. 3 

alas! tills is a child, a silly dwarf. ... — ii. 3 

shall a cliild instruct you what — iii. 1 

happy for so sweet a cliild — v. 3 

1 am with child, ye bloody — v. 4 

the holy maid with child? — v. 4 

ray child is none of his — v. 4 

to be protected like a child iHenry VI. ii. 3 

doth sting a cliild, that, for — iii. 1 

murder not this innocent child . . ..ZHenry VI. i. 3 

drain the life-blood of the child i. 4 

hereafter say unto his child — ii. 2 

call'st thou him a child? — ii. 2 

means to beg a child of her — iii . 2 

a child; and men ne'er spend (rep) .. — v. .5 

ever chance to have a child — v. 5 

if ever he have child, abortive Richard III. i. 2 

like a child, told the sad story — i.2 

love me dearly as liis child — ii. 2 

I, as a child, will go by thy direction^ — ii. 2 
that land, that's governed 'by a child! — . ii. 3 

food madam, be not angry with thechild — ii. 4 
is master's child, as he worshipfully — iii. 4 
went with child of that insatiate ... . — iii. 5 
loath to depose the child, your brother's — iii. 7 
canst thou demise to any. cliild of mine — iv. 4 

withal endow a child of thine — iv. 4 

the tender temples of m}' child — iv. 4 

if it conceived a male child by me. . Henry VIII. ii. 4 

that the great cliild of honour — iv. 2 

never, before this happy cliild — v. 4 

to see what this child does — v. .•■) 

whereof thy proud child Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

indeed, la, tis a noble child Coriolanus, i. 3 

his mother, wife, his child, and this . . — v. 1 

wife, mother, child, I know not — v. 2 

between the child and parent — v. 3 

mother, wife, and child, to see the son — v. 3 
requires nor child nor woman's face. . — v. 3 

ana his child like him by chance — v. 3 

hateful error, melancholy's child. . JuliusCresar, v. 3 
let me have a child at fifty. . Antony Sf Cleopatra, i. 2 

be a child o' the time — ii. 7 

prevail under the service of a chUd — iii. 1 1 

a child that guided dotards Cymbeline, i. 1 

sole cliild to the king? His only child — i. I 

how now, my flesh, my child? — v. 5 

for ne'er till now was I a child . . Titus Andron. ii. 4 

save thou the child, so we — iv. 2 

how many women saw this child of his? — iv. 2 
how many saw the child? Cornelia. . — iv. 2 

his child IS like to her, fair as — iv. 2 

by this their child shall be advanced — iv. 2 

I heard a cliild cry underneath — v. 1 

first, hang the child, that he may.... — v. I 
Lucius, save the child; and bear it .. — v. 1 
thy child shall live, and I will see. . . . — v. 1 
my child shall live. TeU on thy (rep.) — v. 1 
benold this child, of this was Tamora — v. 3 

like a loving child, shed yet — v. 3 

I mother, wife, and yet Ms child. Pericles, i. 1 (riddle) 
untimely claspings ■with your child.... — 1.1 
his child, I wis, to incest bring. ... — ii. (Gower) 
like beauty's child, whom nature gat .. — ii. 2 
Ms queen with child, makes her.. — iii. (Gower) 

that e'er was prince's child — iii. 1 

must in your child be thought on — iii. 3 

iu bringing up my child — iii. 3 

I think, you'll turn a child a^ain — iv. •! 

Pericles shall demand his child — iv. 4 

she did disdain my child, and stood — iv. 4 

you not your child well loving — iv. 4 

thou art my child; give me fresh — v. 1 

as much as child e'er loved Lear,i. 1 

there's father against child — i.2 

between the child and the parent — i.2 

iu a child, than the sea-monster! — i.4 

create her cliild of spleen — i.4 

tooth it is to have a thankless cliild! — i.4 

the child was bound to the father — ii. 1 

I will not trouble thee, my child — ii. 4 

child Rowland to the dark tower. . — iii. 4 (song) 

served you ever since I was a child — iii. 7 

I think tills lady to be my child Cordelia. . — iv. 7 

my child is ye* a stranger in Romeo (<(• Juliet, i. 2 

took up the child: yea, quoth he — i. 3 

Only brother's child! unhappy sight! — iii. 1 
before some festival to an impatient child — iii. 2 
a desperate tender of my child's love — iii. 4 

thou nast a careful father, child — iii. 5 

marry, my child, early next Thursday — iii. ;i 
God had sent us but this only child. . — iii. 5 

my child! my only life, revive — iv. 5 

one poor and loving child, but one thing — iv. 5 

O child! O child! my soul (rep.) — iv. h 

my child is dead; and, with my child — iv. 5 

you love your child so ill — iv. 5 

an old man is twice a child Hatnlet, ii. 2 



CHI 



[ 113] 



CHO 



CHILD— speak like a good child HamM, iv. 6 

1 hud rather to adopt a child Othello, i. 1) 

L'lad at soul I have no other ehihl — .1.3 

luiroodfaitli, I iiMiaehild toehiding.. . — jv. 'i 

ClULU-UKD-ehiUl-lxd piivile-c.lFiHfcr'srate, nj. 2 

aten-ibloeliiia-lnd luist thnii had . .../'enW«, in. 1 

at -^ea in eliil.i-lieil died shf, lint hromrht — v. 3 

ClUl,n-L'llANiii:i)-cliiia-clui\i.wd f.illierf,™r, iv. 7 

CIlIl.nKU-Ue.h.hUd.a. ll':itherfd! .... — ill. 6 

CllIl.LnvHlCl<.-wh:cluh.i>i>>ede'hilderiek(fen;-!/»..;.2 

Cllll.iniOOD-cliiKllu.od iiinoeeneey }li<I.N.Dr. 111. 2 

whiL'li in niv cliiltlliood 1 didilote upon — IV. 1 

1 nive tills i'luMho..,! pniof Mv. ili.nfl'cnice, i. 1 

tr lined t. .-ether ill their '.■hiUlhonds. I, „/«•',< 7Vi/e,i. 1 
'ti< the eve .it eliihlliocd, thut fears .... jW«ci.W/i, it. 2 
of nature, bond ..f eluldli.M.d, elVects of ..Lrar. ii. 1 
now I hive stained the ehi idliood. . Kom. ^- Jul. in. .'5 
ClUi.DlNU-theeUildin:.; aiiininii..Miy. A'. Ih: ii. 2 
CHlLDlSU-toward ehildish tvehle..l«.v.M(/./A-,7 u. 7 
hut what he did liein,' ehihiish?. . I(V„/,t'.« V,,/-', iv. 3 

the see|>tie in his ehiUlisli list ■'Ih'nn/II.l. 1 

'tuere childish weakness to lament. .3H?(ir!//'/. v. 4 

with store of eluldish drops lliclmrd III. i. 2 

our easiness and childish pity .... Ileiirij I'Lll. y. 2 
such eliildish friendliness to yield . . Coriolaiius, ii. 3 
from love's weak childish how ..Romeo ■^^ Julicl, i. 1 
cm L1)I,<11-1'< lOLISIi— I am too childish- 
foolish for this world liichard III. i. 3 

CIULDlSlINliSS-secondchildishuess.-li: !/ouL/f.e, ii. 7 

perhaps, thy childishness will move.fono(rt»».?, v. 3 

freedom, it does from childishness. .^nfony^CVco. i. 3 

ClIIl..D-KILLER-cnielchUd-killer..3H<?Hi !//'/. ii. 2 

ClllLD-LIKE-child-like duty..7'K'o Gen.o/yer. in. 1 

shown your father a cliild-like oflice .... Lear. ii. 1 

CIIILDNESS-his varymg childness IVinler sTale, i. 2 

CHILDREN— my wife and children .... Tempest, i. 1 

not good that children should know . . Merry W. ii. 2 

the children must he practised well. . . . — iv. 4 

teach the children their hehaviom-s — iv. 1 

to stick it in their children's s\^[\t..iIen..forMea. i. 4 
rnen from children nothing differ. . . . Much Ado, v. 1 

shall npou their children be Mid. N. Dream, v. 2 

are to he laid upon the cluldren.. Mcr.o/ I'eiia-e, ni. 6 
his kisses are Judas's own children.. 4s youXifci;, iii. 1 
the world full of ill-favoured children — in. a 
thoii-h it he the getting of children., .-firs »reH, in. 2 
ownehildren in good bringing up.TamingofSh.u 1 
commonlv, do get their cluldren .... — u. 1 
good hearing, when children are toward — v. 2 
you'd call your childxen yours.. . . M'inter'sTale, ii. 3 

iii. 2 
iv. 1 
V. 1 

V. 2 

■s, i. 1 

V. 1 

V. 1 



her children not her husband's 

nor of your children — 

most precious queen and cliildren. . — 
(jewel of children) seen this hour . . — 

I am past more children; but — 

the children thus disposed — Comedy of Br 
these are the parents to these childi-en — 
my husband, and my children both — 

vour children shall be kings Macbeth, i. 3 

do you not hope your children shall — — i. 3 
throne and state, children and servants — i. 4 

and all my cluldren? well too — iv. 3 

my children too? wife, children — iv. 3 

he has no children: all my pretty ones? — iv. 3 
my wife and children's ghosts will — — v. 7 

doubt, as all men's children may King John, i. 1 

and leave your children, wives — ii. 1 

such unconstant childreu of ourselves — iii. 1 

the sons and children of this isle — v. 2 

I mean, my children's looks Richard II. li. 1 

our lives, our children, and our heirs.. — ii. 1 

your children yet unborn — iii. 3 

which Uke unruly children — lii. 4 

lest child, child's children, cry against — iv. 1 
the children yet unborn shall feel tliis — iv. 1 
lips with her own children's blood . . 1 Henry 11^. 1. 1 
in cradle-clothes our children where — i. 1 
that men would tell their children.. — ni. 2 

the children are not in fault ■lUenrylV. li. 2 

were all thy children kind Henry f. 2 (cho.) 

some upon "their children rawly left — iv. 1 
our childi-en, and our sins, lay on ... . — iv. 1 
and ourselves, and children, have lost — v. 2 

that atii-ights our childien so 1 Henry VI. i. 4 

our wives, and children, all will fight . . — iii. 1 
when sceptres are in chikU-en's hands .. — iv. 1 
he liad two children atone birth! ..iHenryVI. iv. 2 
in their wives' and children's sight.. — iv. 2 

how many children hast thou 3 Henry T/. iii. 2 

madam, do you love your children?. . — iii. 2 
thou wrong St thy children raiglitily — iii. 2 

and thou hast some cluldren — iii. 2 

you have no eliildren, butchers! — y. .^ 

apainst mv children, brothers Ilidmrd III. i. 3 

live to wall thy children's loss — i. 3 

guiltless wife, and my poor children! — i. 4 

peace, children, pe;icc! the king — ii. 2 

comfort of thy children left thee — — ii. 2 
sanctuary children, ne'er till now .. — iii. 1 
the bastardy of Edward's chl Idren .. — iii. .'i 
the bastardy of Edward'sciiildreii? .. — iii. 7 

name is ominous to children — iv. 1 

wept like two children, in their death's — iv. 3 
villain-slave, where are ray children? — iv. 4 
the little souls of Edwards children — iv. 4 

the advancement of your cliildren . . — iv. 4 
they are as children, one step below — iv. 4 

your children were vexation to your — iv. 4 
tlie chiiilren live, whose parents thou — iv. 4 

but thou didst kill my childien — iv. 4 

Hastings, and Edward's children — v. 1 

when I was found false to liis cliildren — v. 1 
your children from the sword (^rcp. I.. — v. 3 
blest with many cluldren by you . . Henry VIII. ii. 4 
our children's children shall see this — v. 4 
were like unbridled children. '''ro/i«j<!(.Crps»irfa, iii. 2 

obedience fail in children! Titnon of Athens, iv. 1 

as children from a bear, the Voices.. C'orioianu»,i. 3 

have 1 had children's voices? — iii. 1 

towards her deserved children is .... — iii. 1 



ClinvUHlCN-morc bastard children.. C'or/ofanus, iv. 5 
ourselves, our wives, and children .. — iv. li 

thy wife and children's blood — v. 3 

fools, wdioso children he hath slain .. — v..) 
men fools, and children calculate. ../k(iu« t'rpsnr, i. 3 

into the law of ch Idren — \\>- ' 

men, wives, and children, stare — m. ' 

belike, my chUdieii shall liiive no ...Int. ^ Cleo. i. 2 
put vour i'hlldieii to that destruction — v2 
you with your childien will he send — v. Ii 

that a king's children should be so ..Cymbe,ine,i. I 
60 children temporal fathers do appease — v. 4 
these children upon my banishinent — v. .'J 
I lost my children; if these be they.. — v. •'> 
not henceforth called my children ..Titus And. n. 3 
that ravens foster folorn children.. — i;. 3 

our wdves, our children, or ourselves ..Pericles, i. 4 

rags, do make their children blind Lear, ii. 4 

bear bags, see their children kind — _ii. 4 

calledyouchildren, youowe me no .... — 111.2 

vengeance overtake such children — m- 7 

but their children's end Komen * Juliet, (prol. ) 

which are tlie children of an Idle brain — ]. 4 
fromher womb children of divers kind — 11.3 
as the indifferent cluldren of the earth.. Ilamlel, 11.2 

an aiery of childreu, little eyases — ii. 2 

what? are they children? — .11.2 

CHILL— will he too chill and tender. . .-Ul s 'Veil, it. 5 

my veins are chill, and have no more . . yeneles. 11. I 

CHILLING-a chilling sweat .. ..Titus AnJion.u. 4 

CHIME— have heard the chimes . . ..'IHenryl ; . 111. i 

'tis like a chime a-mending Troil.ti, Cress. 1. 3 

only danceth at so harsh a chime Fencles, 1. I 

CHIMNEY— up into the chimney.. Me/ry JKiticj, iv. 2 
to Windsor chimneys shalt thou leap — v. h 
the smoke out at the chimney . . As you Lit<e it, ly. 1 

our chimneys were blown down Macbeth, ii. 3 

wain is over the new chimney 1 Henry IV. ii. 1 

and then we leak in your chimney. . — u. I 

he made a chimney in my father's..2Henr?/F/. iv. 2 

rooked her on the clumney's top . . . .iHenry VI. y . li 

yea, to chimney tops, your infants. Jit/ms Cresar,\. 1 

the chimney is south the chamber. . Cymbeline, 11. 4 

CHIMNEY-PIECE— the chimney-piece — ii.4 

CHIMNEY-S'WEErER— 

are chimney-sweepers black — Love s L. Lost, iv. 3 

chimney-sweepers, come to dust.. Cymb. iv. 2 (song) 

CHIN— till new-born chins be rough . . Tempest, _u. 1 

dancing up to the chins — iy. ' 

one chin, and so forth Twelfth Niglit,). 5 

would not have it grow on my chin — 111. 1 

on old Hy em's chin, and icy.. ..il//d.^.Dr?a>?i, 11. 2 
more hair on thy chin, t\\an. Merchant of Venice^}}. 2 

wear yet upon their chins — iii. 2 

stroke your cliius, and swear by . . As you Like it,i. 2 

or his chin worth a beard? — in. 2 

the knowledge of his cliiu — in. 2 

the pretty dimples of Ms chin Winter'sTale, 11. 3 

it stood in her chin, by the salt.ComedyofEir. iii. 2 

and his chin, new reaped 1 Henry IV. 1.3 

whose chin is not yet Hedged i Henry 1 V. 1. 2 

your chin double? your wit single? .. — 1.2 

the first white hair on my chin — 1.2 

whose chin is but enriched Henry V. 111. (cho.) 

et le menton? De chin — iii. J 

tliree or four hairs on his chin . . TroilusSi Cress, 1. 2 
her white hand to his cloven chin . . — i. 2 
to think how she tickled his chin — — 1.2 

on his chin. Alas, poor chin! — 1.2 

that Helen spied on Troilus' chin — — 1.2 

fifty hairs on your chin, and one — .1.2 

with his Amazonian chin he drove.. Corioianu.sii. 2 

which thou dost ravish from my chin Lear, iii. 7 

if vou did wear a beard upon your chin — iii. 7 
CHIN A— they are not china dishes. Mea.forMea.ii. 1 

CHINE— to raose in the chine Taming of Sh. iii. 2 

clown in chines of beef ere thou ...iHenryVI. iv. 10 

never hope to see a chine again Henry VIII. v. 3 

CHINK-through the chink of a wiiil.Mid. K.Dr. 111. 1 
and through wall's chink, poor soids — v. 1 

in it a crannied hole, or chink — v. I 

show me thy chink, to blink through — v. \ 

now will I to the cliink, to spy — y. 1 

shall have the chinks Romeo ^ Juliet, i. 

CHIPPED— have chipped bread well .2 Henry IV. 11. 4 

hacked and chipped, come to him. TroH. Sr Cress, v. 6 

CHIRON— Chiron, thy ears want wit. Tiius And. u. 1 

Chiron, we hunt not. we, with horse — .ii. 2 

Stuprum— Chiron— Demetrius — iv. 1 

I take them, Chiron, and Demetrius — v. 2 

villains, Chiron and Demetrius! .. — v. 2 

'twas Cliiron, and Demetrius — v. 3 

that cursed Chiron and IJemetrius were — ..v. 3 

CHIRPING— chirping of a wren. . . .2 Henry VI. ui. 2 
CHIKRA— cliirra! Quarc cliirra .. Lore's L.Lost,y. i 
CHIRURGEONLY-must chlrurKeonly..7'cmp..ii. 1 
CHITOPHER— Chitopher, Y immund. AW sfVetl, iv. 3 
GH I'V ALROUS— chivalrous design . . liichard II. 1. 1 
CHIVALRY— the victor's chivalry.... — .1. j 
(for Cliristian service and true chivalrj') — u. 1 

1 have a truant been to chivalry — 1 HennjIV. v. 1 
all the chivalry of England move ..iHenrylV. 11. 3 

when all her chivalry liath been Henry T. 1. 2 

kept together in our chivalry! — iv. 6 

art sealed the son of chivalry 1 Henry VI. ly. b 

the rtower of Europe for his chivalry.SHc «>(/ )'/. 11. 1 
Troilus! the prince of chivalry!. Troi'iusiS-C'res.'i. 1. 2 
on his fair worth and single chivalry — iv. 4 

to-day i' the vein of chivalry — .y. 3 

his device, a wreath of chivalry Pericles, 11, 2 

CUtZZEL- what flue chizzel could., (fjwfer'*'/. v. 3 
CHOICE-this is my father's choice. A/eiTj/ICiecs 11.1. 4 

a leavened and prepared choice Mea.fnrMea. 1. I 

choice offriends, to quit me Much .■Ulo,\v. 1 

yield not to your father's choice — Mid. N. l)r. 1. 1 
or else it stood upon choice of friends — 1. j 
if there were a sympathy of choice .. — 1..' 
because in choice he is so ot't hyguilcd — . 1. | 
should give answer of her choice? .. — »v. 
make choice of which j our highness — v. 1 



CHOTCE-siiiguIar and choice epithet. Loi'c s L. L. v. 1 
in terms of choice I am not ... Merch. of Ve nice, 11. 1 

now make vour choice — !■• ^ 

fail in fortune of my choice — "i. 9 

well, but to my choice — .!!. » 

while he doth make his choice — 111.2 

and choice breeds a native slip to us. . All s nell.i. 3 
80 make the choice of thy own time. . — 11. ) 

make choice, and sec, who shuns — 11. 3 

I had rather be in this choice — .;]■ 3 

this ring he holds in most rich choice — m. 7 

I stuck my choice upon her — ' , V- f 

small choice in rotten apples .... rammg of i/i. i. 1 
she's the choice love of signior Gremio — .1. 2 
for that which resteth in my choice -~ 111. I 

pedler, let's have the first choice. IVinler s Tule, iv. 3 
to grieve at knowing of th^' choice .. — iv. 3 
your choice is not so rich m worth .. . — y.- ] 
a braver choice of dauntless spirits . . lung John, 11. 1 
and twmtv thousand nun of choice ..iHenrylV.i. 3 



IS 1 



I'th 



cho 



i. 3 



.,„ I Henry V J. v. 1 

1, that admonish — v. 3 

lM>lr.c myself — v. 3 

■li-hts — .V. .^ 

I v/orthy choice?. 3He>ir!/K/. iv. 1 

.i,,.i/.p _ — iv. 1 

...Henry VIII. i. 2 



i. 9 



content 

and ye 'n 'ie' -,1 

no 1 10, 1' 

with rh . . I ■. 
our liiii! M >■ 01 .' 

how like you 011. — ■ v; ■ 

a choice hour to hear from him . 

here I'll make my royal choice...... — .1.' 

(audof your choice) these reverend.. — 11.4 
he should take his choice .... Troilus .§■ Cressida, 1. 2 

issues from our choice: and choice — i. 3 

of their own choice; one's Junius. . . . Conolanus, 1. 1 

take your choice of those that best can 
distribution, at yom- only choice .... 

the wisdom of their choice IS rather .. — .;;..; 
at thy choice then ; to beg of thee .... — 111. 2 

choice and master spirits of this age./u!.C^.rar,iii. 1 

rather makes clioice of loss Antony fy Cleo. ui. I 

fight for freedom in your choice .. . Titus Andron. 1. 1 
pleased with this my sudden choice . . — 1. .^ 

dost thou applaud my choice .' — .1.^ 

to make some meaner choice — .". j 

take choice of all ray library — .iv.i 

and damned her loathed choice! .... — ly. ' 

to forbear choice i' the absence ......... Pericles, 11. 4 

'tis well your choice agrees with mine . . — \\. i> 

well, I commend her choice — "• J 

harmony and other choice attractions . . — v. 1 
no better choice, and think me rarely wed — y. 1 

can make choice of cither's moiety Lear, 1. I 

most choice, forsaken ; and most loved .... — i. 1 

men of choice and rarest parts — .1.4 

at vour choice, sir. I pr'ythee, daughter 77 /!• * 
within her scope of choice hes . . . . Romeo Sf Juliet,}. ^ 
well, you have made a simple choice — '!• J 

for on his choice depends the safety . .... Hamlet, 1. 3 
therefore must his choice he circumscribed — .1. 3 
my dear soul was mistress of her choice . . — in. 2 

and written in very choice Italian — 111.- 

reserved some quantity ol choice ••....... — i"- ? 

make choice of whom your wisest tricnds — iv. s 

she will find the error ot her choice Othello,}- i 

and compel her to some second choice . . — u. 1 
CHOICE-DRA'WN— „ „.-.,, n 

and choice-drawn cavaliers . . Henry V. 111. (chorus) 
CHOICELY-collccted choicely, {rom.iHenr;/! 1. 111. 
CHOICEST— all the choicest music. .Henry) ///. iv. 1 
CHOIR— to a prepared place in the choir — iv. 1 

which performed, the choir, with .... — iv. 
CHOKE-choke yoiu: good to come .Mea.for Mea. y. 1 

andchokeadawwitlial Mudi Ado u. 3 

that's the way to choke a gibmg. . Love s L.Los, y. 2 
do choke their ser^ce up even . .As you Like 1 , 1 . J 
cling together, and choke their art . .... Macbeth, i. i 
and tocfioke Ids days with barbarous. &nir./°'in. i.\. - 

food doth choke the feeder Ricliard //..i . I 

earthly parts to choke your chrae . ... Henry K i.y. 3 

to choke thee with thine own 1 Henry VI. 111. 2 

boilinsr choler chokes vy-k-„ ~r„ :;; f 

and clioke the herbs for want of. . iHenryVl.m. I 
'twould choke me, for I should.. Timon of Athens, 1. 2 

doth choke the air with dust . — .;• ^ 

to choke it in the utterance . . . .... Coriotanus, iv. 7 

prove untrue, I'll choke '}}y^^^^ ■■ ■i.--^''f,^fZ'i' 3 
my tears will choke me, if I ope. . Titus ^^fron. v. 3 
ncfr choke, the strong conception. . ...... Olliclto, v. 2 

CHOKED— 'tis time 1 were choked.. il/i?rr.v / ires, 1 . ^ 

what, have I choked you. Tammg o] *^'-^"'. »• ' 

her fairest flowers choked up ...... lUchaid II. ui. 4 

gain proposed choked the respect . . . . ("''"'y'} -. • ' 

and be choked with thy ambition ! . . 1 Henry VL v. 4 
of Mortimer, choked with ambition . . - u. •> 
virtue is choked with fou ambil;ion.2Henry >'/. u . } 
cive thanks to you that choked it . . Henry VIII. 1. 2 
that it had almost choked Caesar ..JuliusCa'sar.i. 2 
all pity choked with custom ......;. — „, "V ^ 

be choked with such another emphasis ! Ant. f; Cleo.y. 5 
that what's else rare, is choked . .... C}l'"belineM o 

CHOKlNG-lbUows the chokmg.. 1." tej t'"s. . 3 

a choking gall, and a preserving. . Romeo &Juliet,i. 1 

CHOLER-cold water on thy choler.iVerry »..-«». 1. 3 

howfuUofcholcrsIara J ■/„„'. Tf ««/ iii 

l'?it"Slint^ ci^"e?' .•.■.v.--7;;„^' ;i^^!'iy: 1 

what, drunk with choler?. Wlenry IV. x. 3 

choler, my lord, if rightly taken . . . . — i . •* 

I beseek you now. aggravate yom- choler - u. 1 
aud his oholcrs, and his mootts ...... Henry V. v. 7 

Cched with choler, hot a. g»mx>wder - v. 7 

vour angry choler on your 1 Henry VI. n . 1 

for boiling choler chokes — „, X- ' 

my choler being over-blo«-n 2He«r!, T/. i. 3 

speak, mv eholer is so great... —„,,,\ ! 

reason with your choler question ..Henry VIII. i. 
and something spoke in clioler ...... - "• ' 

choler docs kill me, that thou art. Ttmon of Alh. ly. 3 

what biscliolcr? Choler! Coriolanus,m. \ 

put him to choler straight — "'-3 



CHO 

CIIOLER— to your rash eholer? JuliusCwsar, iv. S 

and France in eholer parted ! Lear, i . 2 

Imeanan' we be in eholer we'll draw. Kom. /jrJul. i. 1 
perforce with wilful eholer meeting . . — i- S 
no, my lord, mth eholer. Your wisdom. Hamlet, Vn. 2 
perhaps, plunge him into more eholer — — iii. 2 
he is rash, and very sudden in eholer . . Othello, ii. 1 

CHOLERIC— but a choleric word. . Mea.for Mea.\\. 1 

ourselves are choleric Taming of Shew, i v. 1 

I fear, it is too choleric a meat ... . — iv. 3 

I fear„'tis choleric; what say you . . — iv. 3 

lest it make you choleric. Comedy of Errors, n. 2 

before you were so choleric — ii.2 

are you so choleric with Eleanor 2Henry VI. i. 2 

go, show j^our slaves how choleric. Ju/m* Ccesar, iv. 3 
to the choleric fisting of each rogue — Pericles, iv. 6 
that infirm and choleric years Lear, i. 1 

CHOLIC— with a kind of cholic . . . .\ Henry I r. in. 1 
out-swell the cholie of pufted .. TroilusSf Cress, iv. 5 
to be pinched with the cholic Coriolanus, ii. 1 

CnOOSE-I know thou canst not choose., renipesf,!. 2 

cloud cannot choose but fall — ii.2 

I cannot choose but pity her. rwoGen.o/f'erona, iv. 4 

you shall not choose, sir _. . . Merry Wives, i. 1 

that cannot choose but amaze him.. — v. 3 
thou canst not choosebut know.. Twelfth Night,\\. 5 

thou shalt not choose but go — i v. 1 

they are glad to choose me Meas.for Meas. ii. I 

I pray you choose another subject Much.ido, v. 1 

choose your revenge yoiurself — v. 1 

to choose love by another's eye\..Mid.N.Drea7n. i. 1 

if we choose by "the horns Love'sl.Lost,\v. 1 

to choose me a hus\)0.nd{repeated),Mer, of Venice, i. 2 

that I cannot choose one, nor — ;. 2 

who chooses his meaning, chooses you — i. 2 
an you \viU not have me, choose ... . — i. 2 
offer to choose, and choose the right.. — i. 2 

I know he will choose it — _i. 2 

to choose at all, or swear (rep.) — ii. 1 

know if I choose the right? — ii. 7 

if you choose that, then I am yours.. — ii. 7 
here do I choose, and thrive I as I . , — ii. 7 
all of his complexion choose'me so .. — ii. 7 

if you choose that wherein I am — ii. 9 

that choose by show, not learning .. — ii. 9 
I will not choose what many men . . __ — ii. 9 

tliat did never choose amiss — ii. 9 (scroll) 

when they do choose, they have .... — ii. 9 
swear he cannot choose but break .. — iii. I 
how to choose right, but then I am .. — iii. 2 
let me choose; for, as I am, I live . . — iii. 2 
choose I; joy be the consequence! .. _— iii. 2 
you that choose not by the (rep.) — iii. 2 (scroll) 

why I rather choose to have — iv. 1 

you cannot choose but lose by 't All's Well, i. 1 

that cannot choose but lend and give. . — i. 3 
to choose from forth the royal blood . . — ii. 1 
thou hast power to choose, and they . . — ii. 3 
we blush that thou shouldst choose . . — ii. 3 

if thou shouldst strive to choose — ii. 3 

flower, choose thou thy husband — v. 3 

I think he cannot choose Taming ofSh. 1 (md.) 

I choose her for myself; if she — ii. 1 

vou shall not choose but drink .... — v. 1 

i hope, I may choose, sir — v. 1 

which cannot choose but branch . . Winter's Tale, i. 1 

not half a kiss to choose who loves — iv. 3 

my son should choose himself a wife . . — iv. 3 

the office to choose you a queen — v. 1 

this course I fittest choose Comedy of Errors, i v. 3 

whose way himself will clioose Richard II. ii. 1 

let's choose executors, and talk of ... . — iii- 2 

choose out some secret place — v. 6 

why, it cannot choose but be \HenryIV. i. 3 

I cannot choose ; sometimes — iii. 1 

which cannot choose but bring him .... — v. 2 
do you choose for me, maiTy then ..ilienrylV. iii. 2 

how to choose a man? care I for — iii. 2 

and let us choose such limbs of noble.. — v. 2 
master Robert Shallow, choose what.. — v. 3 

and rather choose to Mde them in Henry V. i. 2 

to choose for wealth, and not for .... 1 Henry F/. v. 5 
would choose him pope, and carry . .IHenry VI. i. 3 
I choose Clarence only for protector.3 Henry F/. i v. 6 
she cannot choose but have thee . . Richard I j /. iv. 4 
careful watch, choose trusty sentinels — v. 3 

I cannot choose but laugh Trail, fy Cress, i. 2 

I will choose mine heir from forth. Timon of Ath. i. 1 

I cannot choose but tell him — v. 2 

Hydra here to choose an officer Coriolanus, iii. 1 

they choose their magistrate — iii. 1 

he cannot choose: I am most — iv. 3 

let liim choose out of my files — v. 5 

the people choose Caesar for their king./uZ.Ctrrar i. 2 

I rather choose to wrong the dead — iii. 2 

where would you choose Xfi... Antony fy Cleopatra, i. 2 
cannot change, tlian what he chooses — _i. 4 

choose your own company — iii. 4 

what lady would you choose to assail? Cymbeline, i. 5 
what she cannot choose but must be. . — i. 7 
he cannot choose but take this service — ii. 3 
that I would choose, were I to choose. 7'i(!/s/lnrf. i. 2 

behold, I choose tlice, Tamora — i. 2 

he should not choose but give them . . — iv. 3 

to fight when I cannot choose _. Lcar,\. 4 

and choose to wage against the enraitj^ — — ij. 4 
yet I cannot choose but laugh . . Romeo ^ Juliet, \. 3 
you know not how to choose a man . . — ii. 5 
I cannot choose but ever weep the friend — iii. 5 
since nature cannot choose lus origin . . Hamlet, i. 4 

I cannot choose but weep, to think — iv. 5 

choose we; Laertes shall be king — iv. 5 

he shall not choose but fall — iv. 7 

you may choose a sword unbated — iv. 7 

cannot choose but they must blab Othelln, iv. 1 

CHOOSER— might be her chooser. . Merry Wives, iv. 6 

CHOOSETH— who chooseth me..Mer. of Venice, ii. 7 
who chooseth me, shall get as much . . — ii. 7 
who chooseth me, must give and hazard — ii. 7 

CHOOSIN'G— voluntary choosing .Mer. of Venice, ii. 1 



[ 114 ] 



CHOOSING— in choosing wrong.. Afer.o/ Veni.ce,in. 2 
in choosing for yourself, you showed. 3 tlenry Vi. i v. 1 
for choosing me, when Clarence is. . . . — iv. 6 

CHOP — from the nave to the chops Macbeth, i. 2 

you will, chops? Hal, wilt 1 Henry IV. i. 2 

come on, you whoreson chops iHenry IV. ii. 4 

and chop away that factions pate . .2 Henry VI. v. 1 

this hand should chop it off 3Henry VI. ii. 6 

I had rather chop tliis hand off — v. 1 

chop off his head, man Richard III. iii. I 

I'll chop off my hands too. . . . Titus Andronicus, iii. 1 
any one of you, chop off your hand . . — iii. 1 

wilt thou help to chop it off? — iii. 1 

I will chop her into messes Othello, iv. 1 

CHOPINE— by the altitude of a ch-iinne. Ilamlei, ii. 2 
CHOP- LOGIC-how now, chop-logic] J?om..S-Ju(. iii. a 
CHOPPED-head's to be chopped off. Afeo./oc Mea. i. 2 

her pretty chopped hands had As you Like it, ii. 4 

and heads, chopped off in a battle Henry V. iv. 1 

and clapped then* chopped hands . . Julius Cfesar, i. 2 
CHOPPING— the chopping French... if/c/mrri //. v. 3 
CHOPPY — at once her choppy finger. . . . Macbeth, i. 3 

CHORUS — admit me chorus Henry V. i. (cliorus) 

you are as good as a chorus, my lord . . Hamlet, iii. 2 
CHOSE — I chose her, when I could not.. Tempest, v. 1 
I rather chose to cross .... Two Gen. of Verona, iii. 1 
whom right and wrong have chose. Love'sL. Lost, i. 1 
the word is well culled, chose; sweet.. — v. 1 
no further, but chose hex&l.. Merchant of Venice, ii. 7 
which casket 'twas I chose: next .... — ii. 9 
I chose Camillo for the minister. . Winter's Tale, iii. 2 
for what dull part in't you chose her.. — v. 1 

a deal of old iron I chose forth 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

elected, the wife I chose? Troilus t?- Cressida, ii. 2 

have you chose tliis man? Coriolanus, ii. 3 

they have chose a consul, that will . . — ii. 3 
say, you chose him more after our — ii. 3 

what a time have you chose ont. .JuliusCresar, ii. 1 

1 chose an eagle, ancl did avoid Cymebline, i. 2 

I have already chose my officer Otiullo, i. 1 

for she had eyes, and chose me — iii. 3 

CHOSEN — as they are chosen Mea.for Mea. ii. 1 

being chosen the prince's watch .... Much Ado, iii. 3 
never be chosen by any rightly . . Mer. of Venice, i. 2 
may be chosen out of the gross . . As you Like it, iv. 1 
the chosen of signior Hortensio .. Tamingof Sh. i, 2 

Stephen Langton, chosen archbishop John, iii. 1 

a guard of chosen shot I had IHenryVl.'i. i 

and holy; chosen from above — v. 4 

plot, well chosen to build upon! 2Henry VI. i. 4 

him that were not law^'ul chosen ..2Henry F/. iii. 3 
some few bands of chosen soldiers .. — iii. 3 
to rank our chosen truth with . . Henry VIII. (nrul 

I saw well choseuj ridden — ii. 2 (letter' 

sir Thomas More is chosen lord — iii. 

the servants of this chosen infant.. .. — v. 
when we were chosen tribunes for . . Coriolanus, i. 
then were they chosen; in a better . . — iii. 
chosen Andronicus, siu'named Pius . . TilusAnd. i. 
be chosen with proclamations to-day.. — i. 

CHOUGH — a chough of as deep chat . . Tempest, ii. 
or russet-pated choughs, many.... Mid. A'. Dr. iii. 2 
chough's language, gabble enough . . All's Well, iv. 1 
seared my choughs from the chaff. Winter' sTale,'w. 3 
and choughs, androolis, brought forth.Maci)c//i, iii. 4 

the crows, and choughs, that wing Lear, iv. 6 

'tis a chough; but as I say, spacious . . Hamlet, v. 2 

CHRISH— by Chrish la, tish ill done . . Henry V. iii. 2 
up the town, so Chrish save me, la . . — iii. 2 
no time to discovu'se, so Chrish save me — iii. 2 

and, by Chrish, do nothing — iii. 2 

nothing done, so Chrish sa' me, la . . — iii. 2 
so Chrish save me, I will cut off — iii. 2 

CHRIST— fought for Jcsu Christ .... Richard II. iv. 
his pure soul unto his captain Christ — iv. 

so Judas did to Christ : but he — iv. 

as to the sepulchre of Christ 1 Henry I V.i. 

the kingdoms that acknowledge Clirist? — iii. 
in the name of Chesliu Christ, speak. . Henry V. iv. 

Christ's mother helps me, else 1 Henry VI. i. 

shall sup with Jesu Clu'ist to-night. .2He«??/ VI. y. 
by Christ's dear blood shed for Rictiard III. i. 

CHRI&TEN— bids thee cluisten it . . Titus And. iv. 

CHRISTENDOM— 

fond, adoptions Christendoms All's Well, i. 

lyingest knave in Christendom.. Ta?n. afSh. 2 (iud.' 
the prettiest Kate in Christendom .... — ii. 

none that Cluristendora gives out Macbeth, iv. 

to do offence and scath in Christendom . . John, ii. 
all the kings of Christendom are led so .. — iii. 

by my Christendom, so I were out of — iv. 

never a king's son in Cliristendom . . 1 Henry I V. i. 
there is ne'er a king in Christendom — ii. 
in any summer-house in Cliristendom — iii. 
any plot of ground in Christendom . . 1 Henry VI. ii. 
the states of Christendom, moved .... — v. 
the lyingest knave in Christendom. 2 ffem-i/ VI. ii. 
the bluntest wooer in Christendom. 3Henrj/F/. iii. 
there's ne'er a man in Christendom. iJ/cAard ///. iii. 4 
they have worn out Cliristendom . . Henry Vill. i. 3 
your scruple to the voice of Christendom — ii. 2 
all famous colleges almost in Christendom — iii. 2 
Christendom shall ever speak liis vu'tue — iv. 2 

CHRISTENED— was christened. ..4s yoK Likeit, iii. 2 

be new cliristened in tlie Tower Richanllll. i. 1 

rKnt.'i on other grounds christened Olliello, i. 1 

CHRISTENING— 
in cliristening thou shalt have.. Mer. of Venice, iv. 1 
you must be seeing christenings? . . Henry VIII. v. 3 
one christening will beget a tliousand — v. 3 
■when they pass back from the christening — v. 3 
are come already from the christening — v. 3 

CHRISTIAN—of a christian . . Two Gen. of V. r. ii. a 

to go to the ale with a christian — ii, 

which is much in a bare cliristian . . — iii 

as a cliristians ought to speak Merry Wives^ i, 

as I am a christiane soul, now — iii 

as foolish christian creatures, as I — iv. 

no more wit than a christian Twefth Nigltt, i. 3 

for tliere is no christian, that means — iii. 2 



CflU 

CHRISTIAN-good christians ought. A/ea..ft»il/t'a.ij. 1 
I hate liim for he is a christian. A/crc/t. of Venice, i. 3 
father Abraham, what these christians — i. 3 

this Hebrew will turn christian — i. 3 

if a christian do not play the knave . . — ii. 3 
become a clu'istian, and thy loving wife — ii. 3 
with my new master the christian .. — ii. 4 
to feed upon the prodigal christian .. — ii. 5 
to gaze on chi-istian fools with varnished— ii. ."i 

there will come a christian by — ii. .'J 

fled with a christian? O ray christian — ii. 8 
to lend money for a christian courtesy — iii. 1 

and summer, as a christian is? — iii. 1 

a cliristian, what is his humility? (ren.) — iii. I 
his sufferance be by christian example? — iii. 1 
and yield to eliristian intercessors .. — iii. 3 

he hatli made me a christian — iii. 5 

we were christians enough before ... . — }]]• ^ 
this making of christians will raise.. — iii. 6 
in converting Jews to cliristians .... — iii. 5 

these be the christian husbands — iv. 1 

her husband, rather than a cliristian ! — iv. 1 
dost shed one drop of christian blood — iv. 1 

and let the christian go — iv. 1 

he presently become a Christian .... — iv. 1 
defies me, like Turk to Cliristian../)s!/o!(i,(7tciV, iv. 3 
the greatest in the chi-istian world ..All's Well, iv. 4 
not like a christian footboy . . Taming of Slirew, iii. 2 
as I am a christian, answer me . . Comedy of Err. i. 2 

these two christian armies might King John, v. 2 

for christian service, and true Richard II. ii. 1 

some honest christian trust me with — iv. 1 
glorious christian field, streaming (rep.) — iv. 1 
that in a christian climate, souls .... — iv. 1 
them all by their cliristian names ..IHenry IV. ii. i 
if, like a christian, thou hadst truly. . — v. 5 
he had him from me christian . . . .'..2HenrylV. ii. 2 
perform with a most chi'istian care . . — iv. 2 

no tyrant, but a chi-istian king Henry V.i. 2 

the mirror of all cliristian kings — ii. (cliorus) 

upon no christian soul but I Henry VI. iv. 2 

stop effusion of our christian blood.... — v.i 

the christian prince, king Henry — v. 3 

no christian ear can endure to heit.x.2 H7nry VI. iv. 2 

as I am a christian faithful man Rieliard III. i. 4 

upon the earth a christian ; made him — iii. 5 

of virtue for a christian prince — iii. 7 

thy devotion, and ri^lit christian zeal — iii. 7 

breathe I in a christian land? — iii. 7 

and many a chi'istian soul, death — iv. 4 

I could wish more christians Henry VIII. ii. 1 

the learned ones, in christian kingdoms — ii.2 

that's christian care enough — ii. 2 

is this your christian counsel? ....... — iii. 1 

you have cliristian warrant for them — iii. 2 

as jou wish cliristian peace — iv. 2 

this young one made a christian .... — v. 2 
on my christian conscience, tliis one — v. 3 

God rest all christian souls ! Romeo ff Jidietj i. 3 

accent of christians, nor the gait (rep.). Hamlet, iii. 2 
and of all christian souls, I pray God . . — iv. 5 
is she to be. buried in christian burial . . — v. 1 

and finds it christian burial — v.i 

have been buried out of christian burial — v.i 

more than their even christian — v. 1 

christian [A'«(. -christened] and heathen. O'AeHo, i. 1 
for christian shame, put by this bailianms — ii. 3 
no, as I am a chi-istian: if to preserve this — iv. 2 

CHRISTIAN-LIKE— 

with a most christiau-like fear Much Ado, ii. 3 

neighbourhood and chrlstian-like .... Henry V. v. 2 

yet he, most christian-like 2Henry VI. iii. 2 

and a christian-like conclusion Rieliard III. i. 3 

CHRISTMAS— at Christmas I no . . love' sL. Lost, i. 1 

dash it like a Cliristmas comedy — v. 2 

a Christmas gambol Taming ofShre-w, 2 (ind.) 

CHRISTOM— any cliristom child Henry V. ii. 3 

CHRISTOPHER-Christopher Siy. Tam.ofSh.2 (ind.) 
sir Christopher, tell Richmond . . Richard III. iv. 5 

CHRISTOPHERO— 
I am Christophero Sly . . Taming of Shrew, 2 (ind.) 
not a tinker, nor Christophero Sly — 2 (ind.) 

CHRONICLE— for 'tis a chronicle .... Tempest, v. 1 
look in the chronicles .... Tamingof Slirew, ! (md.) 

or fill up chronicles in time 1 Henry IV. i. 3 

spoke j'our deservings like a chi'onicle — v. 2 

time's doting clironicles, say illenrylV. iv. 4 

your clironicle [A'n(. -chronicles] as rich. .Hen. V. i. 2 

as I have read in the chronicles — iv. 7 

will be the chronicles of my doing ..Henry VIII. i. 2 
his own trumpet, his own chronicle. Trail. ^-Cr. ii. 3 
good old chronicle, that hast so long — iv. 5 

whose chronicle thus writ Coriolanus, v. 3 

my sword will earn our chronicle .Ant. ^- Cleo. iii. 1 1 

abstract, and brief chronicles Hamlet, ii, 2 

suckle fools, and clii-oiiicle small beer. . Othello, ii. 1 

CHRONICLED— chronicled for.. Two Gen. of Ver. i. 1 
well carried, shall be chronicled . . Mid. .V. Dr. iii. 2 
this deed is clironicled in hell Richard II. x. 6 

CHRONICLER-foolish chroniclers.. /Is youLike.iv. 1 
an honest chronicler as Griffith . . Henry VIII. iv. 2 

CHRYSOLITE— and perfect chrysolite ..UtheUo, v. 2 

CHUCK— how dost thou chuck?.. 7'w'c;///iAVg'/i(, iii. 4 

the princess, sweet chuck Love's L. Lost, v. 1 

sweet chucks, beat not the bones .... — v. 2 

of the knowledge, dearest chuck Macbeth, iii. 2 

use lenity, sweet chuck ! Henry V. iii. 2 

no my chuck: Eros, come Antony CyCl-eo. iv. 4 

your promise. What promise, chuck? .. Othello, iii. 4 
pray, chuck, come hitlier — iv. 2 

CHUFF— no, ye fat chufls 1 Henry I V ii. 2 

CHURCH— I am of the church Merry Wives, i. 1 

to stay for me at church — iv. 6 

if it Jiad not been i' the church — v. 5 

why dost thou not go to clim-ch . . TwelfthNight, i. 3 

no sir, I live by the church ' — iii. i 

I do live by the church — iii. 1 

my house doth stand by tlie cluu-ch — iii. i 

the cliurch stands by tliy tabor (re;;.) — iii. 1 
that keeps a scliool i' the ehurcli .... — iii. 2 



CIIU 



[ 115 ] 



C'llURC'M-sce ft church by day li(,'Ut.. il/ucA Ado, ii. 1 
v!ien mean vou to f;u to churchy .... — ii. 1 
in thcoklch'urcli whulow — i:i. 3 

urc conic to tl'tih vou to church .... — iii. ■! 
shoulil 1 no to chiirch, mid sec . . .W«c/i. of Venice,]. 1 
Ko with nic to church, nuil cull me .. — iii. - 
us iiluiii as wnN to i>arish .■hurcli...l.<!/ou hike 11, ii. 7 
where hells lui'vckuolicl to clu.rch.. - ii. 7 
with holv hell heen knollel to church — _i). 7 
get vou tochuieh. Mild have agooil.. — in. 3 

(is time wc were at church Taming nfSU. iii. 2 

lietter ere he go to church — \]\-'^ 

ciinie you from the ciuirch? — lii. 2 

lit the"iiartiug nil the church did echo — iii. 2 

lit saint Luke'schurch is at your — iv. 4 

to the church ; take the priest — iv. 4 

I'll see the church o' your back — v. 1 

1 have seen them in tlie church — v. 1 

fhop, church, session, hani^ing .. Winler'sTnle, iv. 3 
agamsttheehurch.onr holy mother. /i:in4'./o/i», ill. 1 
he champion of our cluu-ch! (»cp.) .. — in. 1 

ransackins the church — in. 4 

stood out against the holy church .. — .v. 2 
the inside of a church is made of . A Henri/ 1 r. iii. 3 

111V lords of the old church iHemij J )'.n. 2 

aiid thou foUow'dst him like a church — ii. 4 

testament have given to the church Henry I', i. 1 

and a true lover of the holy church .. — _ i. 1 
to lie executed for rohbing a church. . — lii.- Ii 
the clu.rch's iirnvcrs made him {rep.).lHennjt'l.}. 1 
tiuouLrhout the .vcar to church thou — i. 1 

or dignities of cl'iurch. here by the .. — ..)• 3 
am not I a prelate of the church? — — iii. 1 

soldier, tlian a man o' the church lUennjI'I. i. 1 

in the cathedral church of 'Westminster — i. 2 
makes the church the chief aim ..Henry VIII. v. 2 
swallowed the whole parisli churcli . . Pericles, ii. 1 

bells, steeple, cluu'ch, and parish — ii. 1 

hie vou to church Rameo Sf Juliet, ii. 5 

till holy church incorporate two .. — .?.'•'' 

nor so wide as a eliurch door — iii- 1 

at saint Peter's church, shall happily — in, 5 
bv saint Peter's church, and Peter too — iii. .5 
go w ith Paris to saint Peter's church — iii. 5 

get thee to church o' Thursday — iii- 5 

we' II to church to-morrow — iv. 2 

is the bride ready to go to chmch? — iv- a 

best array bear her to church — iv. .^ 

to cut his tliroat i' the chru-ch Hamlel, iv. 7 

gallows is built stronger tlian the church — v. 1 

CnirKCH-BENCH— 
go sit here upon the church-bench.. Jl/urt Ado, iii. 3 

CiU'RCHES— had been churclies ..Mer. of Venire, i. 2 
let tliem fight against the churches . . Macbeth, iv. 1 
market-crosses, read in churclies ..IHennj IV. y. 1 

liawds and whores do churches build h' "r, iii- 2 

be must build churches then Hmnk't, iii. 2 

ClIUKCH-LIKE-church-likehumours.aHfn-r/- i. 1 

CilUKCHMAN— patient churchman ..A/ei»i/ IV. ii. 3 

art thou a cbui-chmau? Twelfth Night, iii. 1 

Bc-aufort, the imperious churcbman..2HCTi)i/r/. i. 3 
ambitious churchman, leave to afflict — ii. 1 
that churchman bears a bounteous.. Henr;/ VIII. i. 3 
vou are a churchman, or I'll tell you — i. 4 
\ieeoine a churchman better — v. 2 

CIUJKCHJMEN— and churchmen.. A/errv Wives, ii. 3 

liad not churchmen prayed \Henry VI. i. 1 

or religious churchmen, may — __i. 1 

i;' holv churchmen take delijrht in .. — iii. 1 

cburcnmen so hot? good uncle iBenry VI. ii. 1 

and stand between two chiuchmenTfic/iarrf ///. iii. 7 
any thing but churclimen's habits. Hcii;jf Vlll. iii. 1 

CTIIVRCH-W AY— church- way paths.iWd.A". Or. v. 2 

CllUKCH-YARD— tocliurch-yards-. — iii. 2 
dwelt by a church-yard; 1 will tcU Winter's Tale.Vi. 1 

if this same were achurch-yard King.lohn, iii. 3 

in St. Katharine's church-yard I Henry 1 7. i. 2 

like graves i' the holy church-yard- Cor/o/nm/s, iii. 3 
no foot upon the churcli-yard tread- Worn. S,-Jid. v. 3 
to stand alone here in the church-yard — v. 3 
and strew this hungry church-yard .. — v. 3 

sear-r, about the church-yard — v. 3 

we fiiiind hira in the church-yard — v. 3 

coming from this ehmch-yard side .. — _y. 3 
when churchyards yawn Hamlet, iii- 2 

CJIl'RI./— churl, upon tliy eyes ..Mid.N:s Dream, ii. 3 
thou churl, for this time, tliough - Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

that every churl aftbrds Comedy of Errors, iii. 1 

some stern untutored churl •2Henry VI. iii. 2 

fie. thou art a churl; you have. . Timon of Athens, i. 2 
think us no churls; nor measure . . Cymbetine, iii. 6 
tliough vou left me like 3.c\\ur\.Tilus.indroaicus, i. 2 

chiirr! drink all and leave. . .. /iomco ,^,/u)/c/, v. 3 
CJniil.ISII— elinrli>h i\et.. Two Gen. of Verona,\\\. 1 

iiu:- in thi? cb'.iiilsli messenger ..Tieelfth Nigtit, ii. 2 
cbiirlish chilling f>l the winter's. ../is !/o«Li7i<";(, ii. 1 
my master is of churlish disposition .. — ii. 4 

this is called the reply chiurlish — v. 4 

the third, reply churlish — r. 4 

interruption of their churlish drums„King'/o/in, ii. I 
though churlish thoughts themselves — ii. 2 
trumpets and loud churlish drums .. — iii. I 

again unknit the eluirlish knot \HenryIV.v. 1 

waste for churlish viinter's t.vranny-.2Henr;//F. i- 3 
better than a churlish turf of France.. Hen r;/>'. iv. 1 
or doth this churlish superscription.! iifnrf/r/. iy. 1 
churlish as tiic bear, slow *iB . . Troiluji <§- Cressida, i. 2 

1 tell thee, churlish priest Hamlel, v. 1 

CIlURLlSHJLY-how churlishly. 'Ara Oen. ofVer. i. 2 
CIHIRN-brcathless housewife chiuni..A//y. A'. Dr. ii. 1 
CI HIS— to Chushi«countryinen..i>/cr. of Venice, iii. 2 
CICATRICE— the cicatrice and ..Asyou LiUeil, iii. 5 

with his cicatrice, an emblem of war.. /!»'.! iVell. ii. 1 
tliere will be large cicatrices to show.Cor/o/.nm, ii. 1 

Kince vet thv cicutriee looks raw Hamlet, iv. 3 

HKl.V-r:. I r, nil ; I! '< i ■ely ]Iacketram.<)/»i. 2 (ind.) 

.M:triaii,< : -'' I ']'., Jen' I. Comedy of Errors iii. 1 

CRKi;<i ' vithsuch ..JiilimCtesar,\.2 

did Cieert. -LI-. ;i.i, 'I i"g? — i- 2 

O Cicero, I have teen tempests — i. 3 



CICERO— farewell, Cicero Jutius Ctesar, i. 3 

but what of Cicero? shall we sound .. — U. 1 
Cicero being one. Cicero .me? (rrp.) .. — iv. 3 

CICESTER^our town of Cucster .. ..K/r/iar'/ 11. v. 6 

CIE1./-Ciell cousin (hle.ni.i IJcryV. iv. 2 

ClI-ICIA— Cilieia, and ri.<inicia,.4.i/r);///,^f7,r,. in- ti 

CliMliKK-who's that?.MetellusCimbcr?7«(.CcTOi;M. 3 

and this, Metciliisl'iniher — ii. 1 

mark well Metellns i 'iiiilier — ii. 3 (paper) 

where is JMetellusOi'uliery — iii. 1 

Metellus Ciniher throws before (,<-/).) — in. I 

that PubliusCindier may liavc — in- 1 

enfranchisement for I'lihliiis Ciniber.. — in. 1 
Cimber should be iK'.nisbed — iii. I 

CIMMERIAN— swarth Cimmerian. ■/■/.■»s.l/»/ro«,ii- 3 

CINCTURE— cloak aiul cincture-. ,. K//i,g .'o/i», iv. 3 

CINDER— cinders of the clement - - ..'illenryl V. iv. 3 

show the cinders of my spirits AntoHy(,-Clro. y. 2 

doth burn the heart to cinders. TilusAndronicus, ii. i 
that would to cinders burn up modesty. 0^/ic//o, iv. 2 

CINN A-'tis Ciiina, I do ki^ow (i-ep.) .JuliusCasar, i, 3 
am I not staid for, Ciuna? (re/),) ,.,. — i. 3 

good Cinna, take tliispai.er — i. 3 

this, C'iiina; and this, jMctellus Cimber — n. 1 

now, Ciiuia: now, i\Ietellus _— ii. 2 

liave an eye to Cinna — li. 3 (pajer) 

yours, Cinna; and, my valiant Casca — m. 1 

my name is Cinna (rcpca'eiO — )!!•'' 

not Cinna the conspirator (rfppo/fci) — iii. 3 

CINQUE-PACE— and a cinque-pace.. itfwcA Ado, h. 1 
falls into the cinque-pace faster — ii. 1 

CINQUE-PORTS-of theCinque-ports. Hen. VIII. iv. 1 

CINCiUE-SPOTTED- 
left breast a mole cinque-spotted Cymbelme, ii, 2 

CIRCE— havcdi-ankofCirce'scup.Comed!/ ')/■£>/■. v, 1 
as if, with Circe, she would change - - 1 Henry VI. v. 3 

CIRCLE— to call fools into a circlets i/ou Likeit, ii. b 
obscured in the circle of this forest .. — v. 4 
into your hand the circle of my glory. Ki«4'./oAn, v. 1 
from out the circle of his territories . . — v. 2 

you must make a circle; if conjure Henry V. v. 2 

glory is like a circle in the water 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

with Henry's death, the English circle ends — _i. 2 
craves the circle of the Ptolemies. ./lri'.<§-C/eo. iii. 10 
heavy people, circle me about . . Titvs Andron. iii. 1 

the wheel is come full circle Lear, y. 3 

a spirit in his mistress circle liomeoSr Juliet, ii. 1 

CIRCLED— circled witli the same 'iHenry VI. i. 2 

Dhan, circled with her nymphs SHcnry VI. iy. 8 

monthly changes in her circled orb../iomeo SfJul. ii, i 

CIRCLING— circling now thy hcad.fi/c/ia/d III. iy. 4 
whose circling shadows kings have. . Titus And. ii. h 

CIRCUIT— until the golden circuit. .2He»i!/ VI. iii. 1 

within whose circuit is Elysium ?,Henry VI. i. 2 

circuit dostrCof. ivn/.-cauopy is dust].JJom.<5-./«(. v. 3 

CIRCUM CIRCA- 
about your infamy circum circa . . Love sL.Lost, v. 1 

CIRCUMCISED— the cu-cumcised dog . . Othello, v. 2 

CIRCUMFERENCE- 

in the circumference of a peck Merry Wtves, iii. 5 

invisible within the circumference .Mid.N.'sDr. y. 1 
harboured in their rude circimrference John, ii. 1 

CIRCUMMURED- 
a garden circummured with hrick.Mea.forMea. iv. 1 

CIRCUMSCRIBED-he circumscribed . Titus And. i. 2 
must his choice he circumscribed Hamlet, i. 3 

CIRCUMSCRIPTION— 
free condition put into circumscription . . Othello, i. 2 

CIRCUMSPECT-wise, and circumspect .2 //en. r/. i. 1 
Buckingham grows circumspect . . Richard III. iv. 2 

CIRCUMSTANCE - 
by your circumstance, you call.. Two Gen of Ver. i, 1 

60 by your circumstance, I fear — i. 1 

that I can deny by a circumstance — _,i, 1 

must, with circumstance, be spoken — '}}}•- 

or unsafe circumstance Twelfth Kight, iii, 4 

but nothing of the circumstance more — iii. 4 
till each circumstance of place, time — v. 1 
matter, or other circumstance ..Mea.for Mea. iv. 2 

and, circumstances shortened Much Ado, iii. 2 

about my love with circumstance. Mer. of Venice.i. 1 
sixth, the lie wi th circumstance . . As you Like it, v. 4 

in all these circumstances Taming ofSlircie, iv. 2 

to leave frivolous circumstances . , — v, 1 

all other circumstances made up,, Winter'sTale,\\. 1 

bv circumstances partly laid — iii. 2 (indict.) 

so out of circumstance, and sudden — v. 1 

truth were pregnant by circumstance — v. 2 

with circumstance, and oaths Comedy of Err. y. 1 

cuts off more circumstance King John, u. 1 

the circumstance considered 1 Henry / /' . i . 3 

the circumstance I'll tell you 1 Henry VI. \. 1 

if your grace mark every cirenmstnnce — iii. 1 
peroration witli such circumstance?.. 2//enji//'/. i. 1 

tell us here the circumstance — ii. 1 

not essentiall.v, but by circnmstauce — y. 2 
give me leave, by circumstance (rep.)..Eich. Ill, i. 2 
all circumstances well considered — — iii. 7 
indui'cd by potent circumstances . . Henry I' III. ii. 4 
in hiscircumstance, expressly-. Troj7"s*ri^.w. iii. 3 

my circumstances, being so near Cymhctine, ii- 4 

tell tlicm both tlie circumstance- - Titux.lndron. iy- 2 
and I'll stay the circumstance . . Ilomeo ^Juliet, ii. A 
we cannot without circunir-tancc descry — y. 3 

in such perilous circuniftouce Hamlel, i. 3 

without more circumstance nt all, I hold — \. :> 

if circumstances lead mc, I will find — ii. 2 

[ftn(.] by no drift of circumstance — iii. I 

comes near the circumstance — iii. 2 

in our circumstance and course — iii- 3 

remember all the circumstance? — v. 2 

with a bombast circumstance Othello, \. 1 

or breed itself so out of circumstance — iii. 3 

jiomp and eircionstanco of glorious war. . — iii. 3 
imputation, and strong circumstances .. — iii. 3 

CIRCUMSTANCEJ)— he circumstanced — iii. 4 

CIRCUMSTANTIAL— 

so to the lie circumstantial As you Like it, v. 4 

no further than the lie circumstantial — v. 4 

liath to it circumstantial branches. . Cymbeline, v. i 



CIT 



CIRCUMVENT-would circumvent GoA. Hamlet, v. 1 

CIRCUMVENTION-circumvcntion.rraV. ^Cr. ii. 3 

act ere Rome Inwl circumvention? . . Coriolanvs, i. 2 

CISTERN— not fill up the cistern of . . Maebelli, iy. 3 

made a cistern for scaled ^mikits.. Antony ff Cleo. ii. .'> 

or keep it as a ciiiterii for foul toads. . . . Othello, iv. 2 

CITADEL— window of the citiwlcl ....AWsWeU,'\v. 1 

a towered citiulcl, a jiendant xoe\..Ant.fyCleo. iv. 12 

they give tlieir greeting to the citadel ..Othello, ii. 1 

bring thou the master to the citadel .... — ii. 1 

meet mc by-anil-hy at the citadel — ii. 1 

I meet the captains at the citadel — ill. 3 

Emelia, nin you to the citadel, and tell — v. 1 

CITAl^— matle a blu.shing cital 1 Henry IV. v. 2 

CITE— I need not cite him to it.TwoGen. ofVer.'n. 4 

for we cite our faults — iv. 1 

the devil can cite sciiptiu-e . . Merchant of Venice, i. 3 
whose aged honour cites a virtuous . . All's Well, i. 3 

I think, it cites us, brother ZHenry VI. i\. 1 

CITICD— which you have cited Henry V. v. 2 

bafl I not been cited so by them . .2Henry VI. iii. 2 
aiicl eiteil up a thousand lieavy .... Hichard Ill.i. 4 

she oft was cited by them Henry VIII. iy. 1 

author to be cited, as true .. Troitus ^-Cressida, iii. 2 
CITIES— in boroughs, cities, villages.) Henry/r. iv. 3 

the cities turned into a maid Henry V. v. 2 

so tlie maiden citie^ you talk of — v. 2 

razed your cities, anil subverts IHenryVI.ii. 3 

see the cities and the towns defaced — iii. 3 

twelve cities, and seven walled — iii. 4 

and are the cities that I got with ....illenryVI. i. 1 
towns and cities for a dangerous. . . . Richard III. i- 4 

and brotherhoods in cities Trail, fy Cress, j. 3 

oblivion swallowed cities up — iii. 2 

let courts and cities be made all Coriolanus, i H 

with sbiiis made cities Antony ^Cleopatra, iv. 12 

O let those cities, lliat of Plenty's cup .. Pericles, \. 4 

in cities, mutinies; in rountries Lear, i. 'i 

the fire is spied in jiopulous cities Othello, i. 1 

CITING— citing iiiv worthless praise.. ri/«.svlH(/. v. 3 

CITIZEN— gravest citizens Iiave. . Mea.for Mea. iv. i; 

he seek the life of any citizen . . Mer. of Venice, iy. 1 

you fat and greasy citizens As you Like It, ii- 1 

renowned for grave citizens . . Taming ofShreir,_ i. I 
Pisa, renowned for grave citizens.. .. — iv. 2 
doing displeasure to the citizens.. Coinfrft/o/^ri-.y. 1 

kind citizens, and let us in Ki7ig John, ii. 1 

speak, citizens, for England — ii. 2 

now, citizens of Anglers, ope your gates — ii- 2 
velvet guards, and Kiinday citizens.! /.'t';in//r. iii. 1 

the civil citizens kneading up the Henry V. I. J 

London doth pour cut her citizens ! . . — v. (cho.) 

Gloster too, a foe to citizens \ Henry VI. i. 3 

command the citizens make bonfires — i. U 
slain our citizens, and sent oui- sons .. — ii. 3 
the citizens fly and forsake their ..2HenryVI. iv. 4 

with the loving citizens ZHenryVI. iv. H 

the same xinto the citizens Richard III. iii, ,5 

acquaint our duteous citizens — iii. -"i 

how Edward put to deith a citizen. , — iii- U 
lire citizens? Now by the holy (rep.) — iii- 7 
thanks, gentle citizens, and fiiends.. — iii. 7 
such troops of citizens to come to Mm — iii - 7 

consorted with the citizens — iii 7 

your citizens entreat you — iii- 7 

come, citizens, we will entreat no more — iii 7 

the citizens, I am sure Henry VIII. iy. I 

good citizens. We are (rep.) Coriolanuti,i. 1 

the citizens of Corioli have issued .. — _ i. B 
help, ye citizens. On both sides .... — ijl* * 
tribunes, partricians, citizens (rep) ., — iii-! 

lo, citizens, he says, he is content — iii. 3 

when he speaks not like a citizen .. — iii. .1 

they came from several citizens Julius Ca-sar, i. 2 

to every Roman citizen lie gives — iii- 2 

and citizens to their dens ..Antony ^Cleopatra, v. I 

but not so citizen a wanton Cymbeline, iv. 2 

Rome's best citizens applaud Titus Andron. i. 2 

ay, but the citizens favour Lucius .. — iv. i 
made Verona's ancient citizens . . Romeo Sf Juliet, i. 1 
the citizens ai-e up, and Tybalt slain — iii. 1 

awake the snorting citzens with Othello, i. 1 

CITTERN— a cittern head Lore's L. Lost, v- 2 

CITY— through the city gate . . Two Gen. of Ver. iii. 1 

let us into the city presently — iii- 2 

that do renown this city Twelfth Night, iii. 3 

most of our city did — iii. 3 

our city's institutions Measurefor Measure, i. 1 

what shall become of those in the c.ty? — i. 2 

all the youth in tire city? — .ii. 1 

a league below the city — iv. 3 

provost, round about the city — _ v. I 

as of any man in the city Much Ada, ii i. .'i 

for if we meet in the city Mid. N.'s Dream,i. 2 

to leave the city, and commit yourself — ij- 2 
and profit of the city consisteth .Mer. (^Venice, iii. 3 
your charter, and yoiu: city's freedom — iy. 1 

burghers of this deseit cit.v Asyou Like it, ii. 1 

of the country, city, coiu-t, yea — ii- 1 

what woman in the city do I name. . — ii. 7 
yourselves made, .yon lose .your city ..All's IVell, i. ! 

if thc.v do approach the city — '!!••'' 

bein"'a stranger in this city here - Taming of Sh. ii. I 
my bouse within the city is rich!/ .. — .ii. 1 
have done your business in the city — iv. 2 

to cozen somebody in this city under _— y. 1 
postern, clear them o' the city .... Winter's Tale, i. ;; 
here in your city; I now came from. . — y. ! 
up and down, to view the cMy.Cnmedy of Errors, i. 2 

to none that lives here in the city — v. 1 

and all that know me in the city — — v. 1 

coniront your city's eyes KingJolm, ii. ! 

pave unscratcked yoiu- city's threatened — ii. I 
harbourage within your city walls .. — ii. 1 

shall your city call us lord — ii. 1 

rilisof this contemptuous city — ii- 2 

pcnd destruction into this city's bosom — ii- 2 

win you this city without stroke — ii.2 

so peremptfiry, as wc to keep this city — ii- 2 
to siicak unto this city — ii.2 



CIT 

CITY— this city now by us besieged ..King John, ii. 2 

tliere's that will sack a city \Uenry II'. v. 3 

a city on the inconstant Henry V. iii. (chorus) 

before him, through the city — v. (chorus) 

many would the peaceful city qiiit — v. (chorus) 
cannot see many a fair French city — y. 2 

tower, to overpeer the city 1 Henry F/. i. 4 

this city must be famished — ..;• 4 

pity the city of London, pity usi — i;i- 1 

these are tViie city gates, the gates of . . — iii. 2 
saclts shall be a mean to sack the city — lu. 2 

open your city gates, be humble — iv. 2 

in the famous ancient city. Tours . .iHenry VI. i. 1 
wiien in the city Tours thou ran'st.... — .1.3 
and therefore in this city mil I stay.. — iv. 4 
to spoil the city, and 3'our royal coiu-t — iv. 4 

to defend the city from the rebels — iv. 5 

now is Mortimer lord of this city — iv. 6 

that of the city's cost — iv. 6 

defer the spoil of the city imtil night.. — iv. 7 

the city favours them ZHenry VI. i. 1 

marched through the city to — i. 1 

Warwick, wilt thou ope the city gates — v. 1 
the city being but of small defence .... — v. 1 
his enforcement of the city 'wives ..Richard III. iii. 7 
seems disgi-acious in the city's eye . . — iii. 7 
to hear the city abused extremely. Henry F///.(epil.) 
Priam's six-gated city, Dardan. TroitusffCres. (prol.) 
I wouder now how yonder city stands — iv. 5 
make not a city feast of it .... Timon of.4thens, iii. 6 

some high-Weed city hang his — iv. 3 

that thou art out of the city? — iv. 3 

i' the cause against your city — v. 3 

Timon to our city's love — v. 5 

into our city with thy banners — v. 5 

regular justice in your cit3''s bounds.. — v. 5 

bring me into your city — v. b 

the other side o' the city is risen Cnriolanus, i. 1 

several places of the city you cry — i. 1 

they say, the city is well stored — i. 1 

should have first unroofed the city .... — i. 1 

but issue forth their city — i. 4 

alone, to answer all the city — i. 4 

numbers to make good the city — i. 5 

and city, we render you the tenth .... — 1.9 

go you to the city; learn, how — 1. 10 

'tis south the city mills — i. 10 

how you are censured here In the city — ii. 1 

the mortal gate o' the city — ii. 2 

called both field and city ours — ii. 2 

to unbuild the city (rf;jra(e(i) — iii. 1 

the people are the city — iii. 1 

that IS the way to lay the city flat — iii. 1 

tlie viper that would depopulate the city — iii. 1 

our good city cleave in the midst — iii. 2 

this instant, banish him our city — iii. 3 

the city, thus I turu my back — iii. 3 

let a guard attend us through the city — iii. 3 

a goodly city is this xVntium: city — iv. 4 

i' the city of kites and crows. I" the city — iv. 5 

to melt the city leads upon your — iv. 6 

who did hoot him out o the city — iv. 6 

the intended lire your city is — v. 2 

I am hushed until our city be afire .... — v. 3 

that shall our poor city find — v. 4 

senators, patricians, a city full — v. 1 

thej' are ne.ar the city? — v. 4 

go tell the lords of the city, I am — v. 5 

the citv ports by this hath entered — v. 5 

your city Rome (I say, your city) — v. 5 

though in this city he hath widowed.. — v. .5 
the city cast her people out. .Antoiiy^Cleopalra, ii. 2 

enter the city, clip your wives — iv. 8 

din blast yoii the city's ear — iv. 8 

the hills adjoining to the city — iv. 10 

did you but know the city's Msunes.Cymheline, iii. 3 
this day within the city walls .. TilusAndrantcus, i. 1 

is not your city strong? — iv. 4 

this city tlien, An tioch the great . Pericles, i. (Gower) 
a city, on whom plenty held full hand — i. 4 

but this populous city will yield — iv.6 

the city strived gnd Neptune's — 5 (Gower) 

to rage the city turn — v. 3 

westward rooteth from the city's side. Rojii.^- Jul. i. 1 
all our whole city is much bound .... — iv. 2 
here in this citv visiting the sick .... — v. 2 
the new-made 'bride^roora from this city — v. 3 
delight in, the tragedians of the city ... . Hamlet, ii. 2 
estimation they did when I was in the city — ii. 2 
three great ones of the city, in personal. . Olhelln i. 1 
many a beast then in a populous city — iv. 1 

CITY-WARD— the city-ward [Kn(.-pittie-ward], 
the park- ward Merry Wii^es. iii. 1 

CITY- WOMAN— the city- woman. .4s i/om Likeil, ii. 7 

CrVET— he rubs himself with civet . .'MmhAdo, iii. 2 
hands are perfumed with civet ..Asyou Like it, iii. 2 

civet is of a baser birth — iii. 2 

give me an ounce of civet Lear, iv. 6 

CIVIL— they are reformed, civil. Two Gen. of Ver. v. 4 

in honest, civil, godly company Merry Wives, i. 1 

she's as fartuous a civil modest wife . . — ii. 2 

and leap all civil bounds Twelfth Night, i. 4 

he is sad and civil, and suits — iii. 4 

but ciiil, count; civil as an orange . . Much Ado, ii. 1 

grew civil at her song Mid. Night's Dream, ii. 2 

if you were civil, and knew courtesy — iii. 2 
civil war of wits were much better. Love'sL. Lost, ii. 1 
a civil doctor, which did refuse . . Mer. of Venice, v. 1 
that shall civil sayings sixovf. Asyou Like, iii. 2 (ver.) 

like a civil war, set'st oath King John, iii. 1 

hostility and civil tumult reigns — iv. 2 

of civil wounds ploughed up Richard //. i. 3 

should so with civil and uncivil — iii. 3 

furious close of civil butchery iHenrylV. i. 1 

from the breast of civil peace — i v. 3 

receive those that are civil 2Henry IV, ii. 4 

this honest, virtuouSj civil gentlewoman — ii. 4 

whose see is by a civil peace — iv. 1 

poor kingdom, sick with civil blows . . — iv. 4 
we bear our civil swords — v. .'i 



[ 116] 



CIVIL — the civil citizens kneading up. . Henry V. i. 2 

he was thinking of civil wars — v. 2 

keep it from civil broils! IHenryVI.i. 1 

civil dissension is a viperous worm — iii. 1 

bringing them to civil discipline ''Henry VI. i. 1 

abeady in this civil broil — iv. 8 

to cease this civil war ZHenryVl. i. 1 

and eyes, like civil war, be blind .... — ii. 5 

storms be past of civil enmity — iv. 6 

now civil wounds are stopped Richard HI. v. 4 

civil laws are cruel Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

either there is a civil strife in huaven.Jul.Ccesar, i. 3 
domestic fury, and fierce civil stritfe.. — iii. 1 
sliines o'er with civil svioxAs.Anlony ^-Cleopatra, i. 3 

have shook lions into civil streets — v. 1 

if anything that's civil, speak Cymbeline, iii. 6 

oiu' Troy, our Rome, the civil wound . Tilus.-lnd. v. 3 
civil blood makes civil hands. .liomeoSr Juliet, (prol.) 
\_Cot. A'n/.]-I will be civil with the maids — i. 1 
three civil brawls bred of an airy word — i. 1 
come, civil night, thou sober-suited . . — iii. 2 

the mere form of civil and humane Othello, ii. 1 

worthy Montano, you were wont be civil — ii. 3 

and many a civil monster — iv. 1 

CIVILESt— the civilest place of all .2Hetiry VI. iv. 7 

CIVILITY — civility, and patience. Merry Wives, iv. 2 

all the observance of civility . . Merch. of Venice, ii. 2 

in civility thou seem'st so empty? As you Like it, ii. 7 

the show of smooth civility — ii. 7 

to proclaim it civility, were like . . Ant. ^ Cleo. iii. 1 1 

civility not seen from other Cymbeline, iv. 2 

from tlie sense of all civility Othello, i. 1 

CLACK-DISH— in her clack-dish .Mea.for Mea. iii. 2 

CLAD— dimension grossly clad TwelilhNight, v. 1 

thus knightly clad in arms Richard II. i. 3 

a woman, clad in armour 1 Henry VI. i. .5 

the morn, in russet mantle clad Hamlet^ i. 5 

CLAIM — I claim the promise . . Tico Gen. of Ver. iv. 4 
I claim her not, and therefore .... — v. 4 

claim her with a loving kiss . Mer. of Ven . iii. 2 (scroll) 

the Jew may claim a povmd — iv. 1 

in the forest lays claim to you ....As you Like it, v. 1 
thy duty owes, and our power claims.. .4H's IVell, ii. 3 
as your due, time claims, he does .... — ii. 4 
honour that good convenience claims — iii. 2 
heaven, and my heaven's claim. . Comedy ofEr. iii. 2 
one that claims me, one that haunts.. — iii. 2 
what claim lays she to thee? (rep.) .. — iii. 2 

laid claim to me; called me — iii. 2 

did claim me for her husband — iv. 1 

mad flesh that claims marriage — iv. 4 

that most raa.y claim this argument . . Macbeth, ii. 3 
lays most lawful claim to this fair . . King John, i. ^ 
doth he lay claim to thine inheritance? — i. 
move you to claim your brother's land? — i. 
my brother might not claim him .... — i. 
in right of Arthur do I claim of thee — ii. 
inhlsface, to contradict his claim.... — ii. 
make all the claim that Arthur did.. — iii. 4 
after young Ai'thur, claim this land.. — v. 2 
and such as to my claim are liable . . — v. 2 

personally I lay my claim Richard II. ii. 3 

nor claim no further than your 1 Henry IV. v. 1 

or should not, bar us in our claim Henry F. i. 2 

against your lii^hness' claim to France — i. 2 
make claim and title to the crown . . — i. 2 

and Hugh Capet's claim — 

and conscience, make this claim .... — 
grandsire's tomb, from whom you claim — i. 2 

did claim some certain dukedorns — i. 2 

that you claim, hear no more of you — i. 2 

nor rio awkward claim, picked from — ii. 4 
this is his claim, his threatening .... — ii. 4 

you claim no interest in any 1 Henry VI. v. 4 

when York shall claim his own . . . .'iHenry VI. i. 1 

advantage, claim the crown — i. I 

and if thy claim be good, the Nevils 
(from whose line I claim the crown) 

as I have read, laid claim unto 

claim the crown from John (rep.) . . . 
affect the house and claim of York . 

comes York, to claim his right 

claim the English crown ZHenry VI. i. 1 

Plantagenet, for all the claim 

if I claim by open war 

had slipped our claim until 

and only claim our dukedom 

stronger, then we'll make our claim. . 

the wit to claim the place Richard III. 

when I am king, claim thou of me . . — 

I'll claim that promise at your grace's — iii. 1 

my lord, I claim the gift, my due .... — iv. 2 

here to claim the crovra — iv. 4 

that claim their offices this day . . Henry VIII. iv. 1 

and claims to be high-steward — iv. 1 

and by those claim their greatness. ... — v. 4 
I am your debtor, claim it when . Troil. fr Cress, iv. 5 

did claim no less than what Coriolanus, ii. 3 

were fit for thee to use, as they to claim — iii. 2 
whose beauty claims no worse . . Antony Sr Cleo. ii. 2 

for your claim, fair sister Lear, v. 3 

[_Cnl. A'rt/.]-claims the conveyance Hamlet, iv.i 

now to claim my vantage doth invite me — v. 2 

CLAIMED — your father claimed this son ..John, i. 1 

this prince hath neither claimed it. Richard III. iii. 1 

CLAIMING — your liighness claiming . .Henry V. i. 2 

CLAMBER — clamber not you up .Mer. of Veiiice, ii. 5 

CLAMBERING-clambering the walls. Coriolanus^ ii. 1 

her coronet weeds clambering to hang.. Hamlet, iv. 7 

CLAMOROUS— be clamorous, and leap. TwelfthN. i. 4 

keep back, the clamorous owl ....Mid. N.'s Dr. ii. 3 

more clamorous than a pan-ot . . As you Like it, iv. 1 

with such a clamorous smack .. Taming of Sh. iii. 2 

those clamorous harbingers of blood . . Macbeth, v. G 

are clamorous groans, that strike Ricliard. II. v. .5 

the herds were strangely clamorous.! Henry IV. iii. 1 
this immodest clamorous outrage . . 1 Henry VI. iv. 1 
with the clamorous report of war ..Richard III. iv. 4 
clamorous demands of date-broke . Timon ofAlh. ii. 2 
whom I beat into clamorous whining Lear, ii. 2 



i. 2 



— 11. 2 



— V. 1 



ii. 2 
iv. 7 

iv. 7 
iii. 1 
iii. 1 



CLA 

CLAMOUR— an hoiu: in clamour Much Ado, v. 2 

deafcd with the clamours of their.. Loiie'sL.tos/, v. 2 
with the clamour keep her still . . Taming of Sh. iv. 1 

contempt and clamour will be Winter's Tale, i. 2 

a savage clamour? well may I get — iii. 3 

clamour your tongues, and not a word — iv. 3 
the venom clamours of a jealous. Comedi/ rf Err. v. 1 

make our griefs and clamour roar Macbeth, i. 7 

soul-fearing clamours have bra.v,'ied.. KingJotm, ii. 2 
loud clamours of hell, be measures . . — iii. 1 

with the clamour of thy drum — v. 2 

bitter clamour of two eager tongues. . Richard II. i. I 

with deafening clamours iHenry IV. ii. 4 

why what tumultuous clamour iHenry VI. iii. 2 

peace, you ungmcious clamours! . . Troil. fy Cress, i. 1 
canst but cry, add to my clamom-s . . — ii. 2 

shall dizzy with more clamour _ v. 2 

the applause and clamour of the host. Cor;o(anus, i. 9 

with shouts and clamours Julius Ccesar, iii. 2 

can vent clamour from my throat Lear, i. 1 

aud clamour moistened: then away iv. 3 

whilst I was big in clamour v. 3 

burst of clamom- that slie made Hamlet, Ii! 2 

lest, by his clamour (as it so fell out) . . Otiiello, ii. 3 
Jove's dread clamours counterfeit — iii. 3 

CLAMOURED-clamoiu-ed the livelong. 7l/ac6eWi, ii. 3 

CLANG— and trumpet's clang? Taming of Sh. i. 2 

CLANGOUR-dismal clangour heard.3Henri/r/. ii. 3 

CLAP— clap on more sails; pursue. . Merry Wives, ii. 2 

to clap into your prayers Mea. for Mea. iv. 3 

clap us into, light o' love Much Ado, iii. 4 

shall we clap into 't roundly As you Like it, v. 3 

and clap upon you two or three All's Well, iii. 6 

and clap thyself my love Winter'sTale, i. 2 

to clap this royal bargain up King John, iii. 1 

and clap their female joints in .... Richard II. iii. 2 

hostess, clap to the doors IHenrylV. ii. 4 

whose shouts and . laps out-voiccHenri/^. v. (cho.) 

and so clap hands, aud a bargain v. 2 

on yoiu- heads clap round fines Henry VIII. v. 3 

when their ladies bid them clap — (epil.) 

they clap the lubber Ajax . . Troilus % Cressida, iii. 3 
if the tag-rag people did not clap him.Jul.Cassar, i. 2 
Antony, claps on his sea- wing.. Wn(ani/,^C/eo. iii. 8 
every one with claps 'gan sound. Pericles, iii. (Gow.) 

what ! fifty of my followers at a clap ! Lear, i. 4 

claps me his sword upon the table.. Rom. 4- Jul. iii. 1 

CLAPPED— clapped under hatches Tempest, v. 1 

let him be clapped on the shoulder Much Ado, i. 1 

and clapped him on the shoulder. Lome's L. Lost, v. 2 
Cupid hath clapped him 0' the ..Asyou Like it, iv. I 
ever match clapped up so suddenly? Tam. ofSh. ii. 1 
word, clapped on the outward eye . . King John, ii. 2 

of sugar, clapped even now 1 Henry IV.ii. i 

he would have clapped i' the clout..2 Henry ;/-'. iii. 2 

let them be clapped up close i Henry VI. i. 4 

hath clapped his tail between his legs — v. 1 
that's clapped ujion the court-gate.. Henry F///. i. 3 

company clapped wings to me — 1.4 

for you all clapped yom- hands.. Troilus ^Cress. ii. 2 
the sudden, clapped to their gates . . Coriolanus, i. 4 
and clapped their chopped hands .. Julius Ctusar. i. 2 
all of you clapped up together . . Antony ^ Cleo. iv. 2 
and; '^ ^-- ' - 

CLAP 

CLAP 

CLAPPER-CLAWING— 
are chipper-clawing one another.. rro((. A Cress, v. 4 

CLAPPER-DE-CLAW— 

clapper-de-claw ! vat is dat? Merry Wires, ii. 3 

he shall clapper-de-claw me — ii. 3 

CLAPPING— with clapping him . . ..Richard II. v. 5 
clapping their hands, and crying iHenry VI. i. I 

CLARE— votarists of saint Clare .. A/eas./orjl/eas. i. h 

CLARENCE— Thomas of Clarence. .2He)!ii//F. iv. 4 
but well to thee, Thomas of Clarence — iv. 4 

who saw the duke of Clarence? iv. 4 

Warwick! Gloster! Clarence! iv. 4 

and brother Clarence, and you v. 2 

was Lionel duke of Clarence 1 Heiuy VI. ii. 4 

duke of Clarence, the third son to king — ii. 5 
Lionel, duke of Clarence, next to . . 2 Henry VI. ii. 2 

duke of Clarence (from whose line .. ii. 3 

daughter unto Lionel, duke of Clarence ii. 2 

married the duke of Clarence' daughter — iv. 2 

from the duke of Clarence' house iv. 4 

and George, of Clarence; Warwick.. 3Herari/fi. ii.6 

let me be duke of Clarence ii.6 

why, Clarence, to myself iii. 2 

is Clarence, Henry, and his son — ill. 2 

and as for Clarence, as my letters iii. 3 

now tell me, brother Clarence iv. I 

now. brother of Clarence, how like you iv. 1 

better would have fitted me, or Clarence — iv. 1 
alas, poor Clarence! is it for a wife . . — iv. 1 

Clarence will have the younger! .... iv. I 

Clarence aud Somerset lioth gone .... iv. 1 

where Somerset and Clarence come.. iv. 2 

then, gentle Clarence, welcome unto — iv. 2 

1 think, that Clarence, Edward's brother iv. 2 

but, welcome, Clarence; my daughter iv. 2 

yea, brother Clarence, art t'hou here too? iv. 3 

choosing rac, when Clarence is in place — iv. 6 

Clarence only for protector {rep.) iv. 8 

answers Clarence to his sovereign's will? — iv. 6 
and, Clarence, now then it is more than — iv. 6 

and therein Clarence shall not want iv.6 

ah, forward Clarence! how evil it iv. 7 

and, tliou, son Clarence, shalt stir.... iv, 8 

■well-minded Clarence, be thou fortunate — iv. 8 

guess, how nigh is Clarence now? v. 1 

then Clarence is at hand, I hear liis. . v. 1 

and lo, where George of Clarence sweeps — v. 1 

come, Clarence, come; thou wilt — v. 1 

that Clarence is so harsh, so blunt — v. 1 

good Clarence; this is brother-like .. v. 1 

what Clarence, but a quicksand .... — v . 4 

Clarence, excuse me to the king — v. .'i 

then, Clarence, do it thou — v. 5 

good Clarence, do; sweet Clarence .. — v. 5 



CLA 



[ 117 ] 



CT,ARENCE— Clarence, beware ZUenryVl. v. 6 

Cliucnee, thv turn is next — V. 6 

Cliirciu'O, iui"il C; lostci-, Uive niv lovely — v. 7 

tluuiks, nohk-t'liiiviuv; wortfiv .... — v. 7 
tosct niv l.r.itluT rltiivllfL-, im;i....«iWi.irf(///. i. 1 

tliis liny' shouid CliirLiuv i-li.sely be.. — i. 1 

down t'l in\' soul ! lu-ix' Chireiiee comes — i. 1 

wl\at's thenuitti-r, Chiivucc? — i. I 

his witV, I'InrciicT. 'tis slu-, tliat tempers — i. 1 

we are not siil'e. (.'hireiice, we lire not sale — i. 1 

simple. I'lniii ClMrinec! Idolovothee — i. 1 

HiidsoslKiU Cliuvucetoo — i. 1 

to iirw liis li.itred more to Clarence.. — i. 1 

(.'huvnee b:itli not another day to live — i. 1 

C'lureneestilMintithes: Kdward .... — i. 1 

his maiostN' apiinst tlie duke of Clarence — i. 3 

poor Chirunee did lorsukc bis father — i. i 

n\urrv, as for Clarcnco, be is well repaid — i. 3 

Clarence, whom [, iud.vd. liave laid in — i. 3 

for Clarence is wLll-s|ioken — i. 3 

monarchy atford false Clarencel .... — i. \ 

Ciareneeis come; false, fleeting (rep.) — 1,4 

1 would speak with Clarence — i. 4 

the noble duke of Clarence to j'our .. — i. 4 

bitter sentence of poor Clarence' death? — i. 4 

to take our brother Clarence — ii. 1 

13 Clarence dead? the order was reversed — ii. 1 

worse than wretched Clarence did . . — ii. 1 

to my closet: O poor Clarence! — ii. 1 

wlien they did hear of Clarence' death? — ii. 1 

Clarence, ray unhappy sou! — ii. 2 

my feeble hands, Clarence and Edward — ii. 2 

dear lord Clarence! Alas, for both (re/j.) — ii. 2 

had we, but Clarence? and he's gone — ii. 2 

1 tor a Clarence weep, so doth not (rep.') — ii. 2 
marry, my uncle Clarence' angry ^"luist — iii. 1 
to draw tlie brats of Clarence out ot sight — iii. 5 
marry straight to Clarence' daughter — iv. 2 
the son of Clarence have I penned .. — iv. 3 

thou hadst a Clarence too — iv. 4 

tliy Clarence he is dead, that stabbed — iv. 4 

wlicre is thy brother Clarence? — iv. 4 

thou madest away her uncle Clarence — iv. 4 

poor Clarence, by thy guile — v. 3 

CI. AKET— nothing but clai-et wine ..iHenryVI. iv. 6 
CJ-ARIBEI>— fair daughter Claribel. . . . Tempest, ii. I 

the next heir of Naples? Claribel — ii. 1 

how shall that Claiibel measure ns — ii. 1 

did Claribel her husband find at Tunis — v. 1 
Cl/.ASP— I am glad to clasp thee.. Troil. SrCiess. iy. 5 

you clasp young Cupid s tables Cymbelhte, iii. 2 

and we'll elasu nands Pericles, ii. 4 

in gold clasps locks inf.tie golden. /?o;neo ^JuUcl,\. 3 

the gross clasps of a lascivious Moor — Othello, i. 1 

Cr,.VSPED-favoiu- neverolasped. rimon of Alliens, iv. 3 

CLASPIJS^G — untimely claspin^s with ..Pericles^'i. 1 

clasping to the mast, endured a sea .. — iv. 1 

CLATTER— by tliis great clatter Macuelh, v. 7 

CLAUDIO— that's Claudio {rep.)...Mea.for Meu. i. 2 

here comes signior Claudio — i. 2 

why, how now, Claudio? — i. 3 

what's thy offence, Claudio? — i. 3 

to her unhappy brother Claudio — i.f> 

see that Claudio be executed — ii. I 

it grieves me for the death of Claudio — ii. 1 

but yet, poor Claudio! there's no — ii. 1 

is it'your will Claudio shall die — ii. 2 

business is a word or two with Claudio — iii. 1 

O, I do fear thee, Claudio — iii. 1 

dost thou thinkj Claudio, if I would — iii. 1 

be readv, Claudio, for your death. ... — iii. 1 

if Claudio die to-morrow, or uo? — iii. 2 

marry, this Claudio is condemned .. — iii. 2 

Claudio must die to-moiTOw — iii. 2 

know how you find Claudio prepared — iii. 2 

are to die Claudio and Barnardine . . — iv. 2 

call hither Barnaivline and Claudio — iv. 2 

the warrant, Claudio, for thy death. . — iv. 2 

for the most gentle Claudio — iv. 2 

W'hat comfort is for CI audio — i v. 2 

have you no countermand for Claudio — iv. 2 

and here comes Claudio's pardon .... — iv. 2 
let Claudio be executed by foiu* — iv. 2 (note) 
let me have Claudio's heiid sent me — iv. 2 (note) 

Claudio, whom here you have. — iv. 2 

I may make my ease a.s Claudio's ,. — iv. 2 

a man of Claudio's years — iv. 3 

more like to Claudio — iv. 3 

and how shall we continue Claudio.. — iv. 3 

both Barnardine and Claudio — iv. 3 

unhappy Claudio! wretched Isabel! — iv. 3 

1 am the sister of one Claudio — v. 1 

I came to her from Claudio — v. 1 

Angelo for Claudio, death for death. . — v. 1 

where Claudio stooped to death — v. 1 

he dies for Claudio s death — v. 1 

how came it, Claudio was beheaded.. — v. 1 

thou had'st done so by Claudio — v. 1 

■when Claudio lost his heiul (rep.) .... — v. 1 

she, Claudio, that you wronged — v. 1 

the head of Hagozine for Claudio's .. — v. 1 

young Florentine, called Claudio Mnrh.Uln,\. i 

tlie eomp.any of the right noble Claudio — i. 1 

God help the noble Claudio! — i. I 

f ignior Claudio, and signior Benedick — i. 1 

hear, count Claudio — i. 1 

dost thou affect her, Claudio? — i. 1 

and tell fair Hero 1 am Claudio .... — i. 1 

the prince and count Claudio — i. 2 

the prince discovered to Claudio — i. 2 

■who? the most exquisite Claudio? .. — i. 3 

comes me the prince and Claudio. ... — i. 3 

give her to count Claudio — i. 3 

and that is Claudio — ii. 1 

ill news with the cars of Claudio .... — ii. 1 

count Claudio? Yea, the same — ii. I 

I have brouijht count Claudio — ii. 1 

here, Claudio, I have wooed in — ii. 1 

count Claudio, when mean you to go — ii. I 

I warrant thcc, Claudio, the time — ii. I 



CEAUDIO-count Claudio shall inarry.M«cA/((io,ii. 3 
in niarrviiig the renowned Claudio .. — ii. 2 
to vex Claudio, to undo llci-o, and kill — ii. 2 

don IVilro and the count Claudio — ii. 2 

both to the prince and Claudio — ii. 2 

[Co/. AiW.]-,\laigarct term me Claudio — ii. 2 

and such a nuui is Claudio — ii. 3 

proposing with the I'rince and Claudio — iii.] 
always excepted my dear Claudio .. — iii. 1 

yet count Chuiilio may liear — iii. 2 

the prince, Clauilio, and niv master.. — iii. 3 
the prince and Claudio; hut the devil — iii. 3 

away went Claudio enrngod — iii. 3 

the two princes lie? aud Claudio lie? — iv. 1 

so will it fare with Claudio — iv. I 

unto the [iriuce and Claudio — iv. I 

kill Claudio — iv. I 

is Clan:lio thine enemy? — iv. 1 

count Claudio liath wronged Hero? ■ — iv. 1 

by this hand Claudio shall render . . — iv. 1 
and that count Claudio did mean.. .. — iv. 2 

that shall Claudio know — v. 1 

here comes the prince and Claudio . . — v. 1 

know, Claudio, to thy head — \.\ 

thine, Claudio, thine, I say — v. 1 

dispose for henceforth of poor Claudio — v. 1 

passed between you and Claudio — v. 2 

Claudio undergoes my challenge — v. 2 

the prince and Claudio mightily abused — v. 2 

so are the prince and Claudio — v. 4 

call young Claudio to a reckoning . . — v. 4 

the prince and Claudio promised — v. 4 

and give her to young Claudio — v. 4 

from me, from Claudio, and the prince — v. 4 
here comes the prince, and Claudio.. — v. 4 
good-morrow, Claudio; we here .... — v. 4 
the priuee, and Claudio, have been . . — v. 4 
for thy part, Claudio, I did think. . . . — v. 4 

they were given me by Claudio Hamlet, iv. 7 

CLAtlDIUS— Claudius, and some.. /i(Z/«sC'ffisa)-,iv. 3 
Varro, and Claudius! Calls my lord? — iv. 3 
Claudius! sirs, awake! Claudius! .. — iv. 3 

sirrali, Claudius! fellow thou! — iv. 3 

CLAUSE-reasonsfrom this clause. r«'e/ft/i Nighl,u\. 1 
CLAW — claw no man in liis humour. . Much Ado^ i. 3 
shall hangout for the lion's claws..M/d.A'.Z)?-. iv. 2 
if a talent be aclaw,look (rep.)... Love'sL. Losl,iv. 2 
wounded with the claws of a lion.. .4s yuu Like it, v. 2 
CLAWED— clawed like a jiarrot . . ..2HenryIV. ii. 4 
clawed [Kn/. -caught] me in Ms . . Hamlet, v. 1 (song) 

CLAY — in tliis beauteous clay King John, iv. 3 

was now a king, and now is clay I.... — v. 7 
but gilded loam, or painted clay .... Richard It. i. 1 
this foolish compounded clay, man ..iHenrylV. i. 2 

with charity enclosed in clay Henry V. iv. 8 

to support this lump of clay 1 Henry VI. ii. 5 

and temper clay with the blood . . . .2Henry VI. iii. 1 
kingdoms are clay ; our dungy . . Antony §- Cleo. i. 1 
but clay and clay differs in dignity . Cymbeline, iv. 2 

waters that you lose, to temper clay Lear, i. 4 

a pit of clay for to be made (^ep.) . Hamlet, v. 1 (song) 
dead, and turned to clay, might stop . . — v. 1 
CLAY-BRAINED-clay-brainedguts.lHenry/K. ii. 4 
CLEAN-raaid with clean hands. Jl'ioo Gen. of Ver. iii. 1 
too few to wash her clean again .... Much Ado, iv. 1 
let Thisby have clean linen .... Mid, N. Dream, i v. 2 

to wash your liver as clean As you Like it, iii. 2 

for keeping his sword clean All's Well, iv. 3 

clean through the bounds oi Asia.Comedyof Err. i. 1 

nothing like so clean kept — iii. 2 

wash this blood clean from my hand?. .il/ac6e(A,ii. 2 
what, will these hands ne'er be clean? — v. 1 
unhappied and disfigm-ed clean — Richard II. iii. 1 

though not clean past your youth 2 Henry IV. i. 2 

will he wipe his tables clean — iv. 1 

sweep the court clean of such iHenry VI. iv. 7 

domestic broils clean over-blown . . Richard III. ii. 4 

renouncing clean the faith Henry VIII. i. 3 

'would thou wert clean enough .. Timon oj .Uh. iv. 3 

and keep their teeth clean Coriolanus, ii. 3 

this is clean kam. Merely awry — iii. 1 

clean from the purpose Julius Cirsar, \ . 3 

ere clean it o'ertlii'ow nature Cymbeline, iii. (j 

limbs, till they be clean consumed. Titus.indron. i. 2 

it is clean out of the way O'lutu, i. 3 

CLEANLIEST— the clcalllie^t shift..ls i/ou Like. iv. 1 
CLEANLY— not neat, but cleanly.. Winlcr'sTale, \. 2 

wherein neat and cleanly \ Henry IV. ii. 4 

and live cleanly, as a nobleman should — y. 4 

and borne her cleanly b^v .... Titus Andronicus, ii. 1 

CLEANSE — cleanse the foul body... 4s you Like it, ii. 7 

cleanse the stuffed bosom of that Macbeth, v. 3 

CLEANSED— cleansed my bosom. . Winter's Tale, i. 2 
CLEANSI NG— in cleansing them . . Richard III. v. 5 
CLEAN-TIMBERED- 
Hectorwas not so clean-timbered.. Lotie'si.Losi, v. 2 

CLEAR— and a clear life ensuing Tempest, iii. 3 

if you know yourself clear Merry Wives, iii. 3 

and clear from any image Twelfth Night, iii. 4 

let me be clear of thee — iv. 1 

and the clear stones towards — iv. 2 

given me such clear lights of favour — v. 1 

it is almost clear dawn Meas.for Meas. iv. 2 

in time may come to clear himself — v. 1 

will make up full clear — v. 1 

by fountain clear, or spangled.. A/id. JV. Dream, ii. 1 

as clear, as yonder Venus — iii. 2 

how to get clear of all the debts. .Mer. ofVen.ice,\. 1 
that clear honour were purchased.. — ii. 9 

this wrestler shall clear all As you Like iV, i. 1 

she looks as clear as morning .... Taming of Sh. ii. 1 

with a countenance as clear Winter'sTale, i. 2 

posterns, clear them o' the city — i. 2 

if they please, can clear me in 't — ii. 3 

will clear, or end, the business — iii. 1 

shall clear that doubt — iv. 3 

and that will clear your sight. . Comedy of Err. iii. 2 

mine eye's clear eye — iii. 2 

only look up clear; to alter favour .... Macbeth, i. h 
so clear ill his great otiice — i. 7 



CLE 

CI..EAR-franehised, and allegiance elcar..Wac6cWi,ii. 1 
a little water clears us of this deed .... — ii. 2 
were 1 from Dunsinane away and clear — v. 3 

so foul a sky clears not without Kiiig John, iv. 2 

all offences with as clear excuse IHennjIV. iii. 2 

and I, in the clear sky of fame iHenry IV. iv. 3 

as clear as is the summer's sun Henry V. i. 2 

go, clear thy crystals — ii. 3 

with those clear rays wnich she IHenry VI. i. 2 

so clear, so shining, and so evident .. — ii. 4 

charge shall clear thee from — iv. 5 

yes, master, clear as day iHenryVI. ii. 1 

as I am clear from treason — iii. 1 

that you will dear yinirself from all — iii. I 

burn, bonfires, clear and bri'dit — v. I 

that I am clear fnmi this misdeed. .Sf/pHci/r/. iii. 3 

proofs as clear as (iiunts in July Henry VIII, i. I 

by darkening my clear sun — i. 1 

IHiint, and tlius far clear him — ii. 4 

this candle burns not clear — iii. 2 

tliat I shall clear myself — v. 2 

'tis clear, they '11 say, 'tis naught — (enil.) 

fountain of your mind were clear. Troil. ^ Cress, iii. 3 

crack my clear voice with sobs — iv. 2 

understand more clear, what's past .. — iv. ;> 
villaiiiesof manwill sethiinclear.2'(mono/..l(/i. iii. 3 
and make a clear way to the gods.. .. — iii. 4 
you cannot make gross sins look clear — iii. ."j 

roots, you clear liea\'ens! — iv. 3 

drop our clear judgments. /^ji/ohi/ Sf Cleopatra, iii. 11 
cause so well to make it clear .... — v. 2 

clear up, fair queen, that cloudy. . Titus Andron. i. 2 

see clear to stop the air would hurt Pericles, i. I 

lest my life be cropped to keep you clear — i. I 

Eersevere still in that clear way — iv. B 
y her own most clear remembrance .... — v. 3 

as clears her from all blame Lenr, ii. 4 

not yet thy sighs from heaven clears. /fom.,5-/u(. ii. 3 
till we can clear these ambiguities .. — v. 3 

they got clear of our ship Hamlet, iv. 6 (letter) 

hath puddled his clear spirit Othello, iii. 4 

CLEiVRED— ail debts are cleared. . .Mer. of Ven. iii. 2 
the imposition cleared, hereditary. IfinteV's'/We, i. 2 
let us be cleared of being tyrannous — iii. 2 

see the coast cleared, aud then IHenry Vl.i.S 

I cleared him with five talents. Timon of Athens, ii. 2 

b^ time let them be cleared Cymlieline, iv. 3 

till the ship be cleared of the dead Tcricles, iii. I 

CLEARER-mantle their clearer reason. Tempest, v. 1 
shall come to clearer knowledge. . Winter's Tale, ii. 1 
your mind's the clearer, Ajax . . Troilus <V Cress, ii. 3 

CLEAREST— think that the clearest gods.Z,rar,iv. 6 

CLEARLY— clearly banished Twelfth Night, v. I 

can make me know this clearly All's Well, v. 3 

which he accounts so clearly won . . King John, iii. 4 
wound our tattered colours clearly up — v. s 
do not understand yourself so clearly . . Hamlet, i. 3 

CLEARNESS— make foul the clearness. .4H's Well, i. A 

that I require a clearness Macbeth, iii. 1 

taste be taken from that clearness . . Titus And. iii. I 

CLEAR-SHINING-clear-shining sky .3Heii. VI. ii. 1 

CLEAVE— thy thoughts I cleave to Tempest, iv. 1 

to cleave a heart in twain Meas.for i^leas. iii. 1 

garments; cleave not to their mould ..Macbeth, i. 3 

if you shall cleave to my consent — ii. 1 

my tongue cleave to my roof Richard II. v. 3 

cleave me to the girdle 7"i'wion of Athens, iii. 1 

our good city cleave in the midst . . Coriolanus, iii. 2 
if the world should c\i.:aY(i .. A niony ^- Cleopatra, iii. 4 

cleave, mj' sides! heart, once — iv. 12 
cleave to no revenge but lAicius. . Titus jtndion. v. 2 
cleave the general ear with horrid Hamlei. ii. 2 

CLEAVING— by cleaving the \>\n. Love'sL, Lost. iv. 1 
blood, cleaving to my blade SHenry Ii. i. 3 

CJ/EFT-perjury cleft to the root. Two Gen. of Ver. v. 4 

an apple, cleft in two Twelfth Night, v. 1 

ha\ e cleft liis club to make Aluch Ado, ii. I 

cleft the heart that could Winter's Tale, iii. 2 

my brain-pan Iiad been cleft 'iHenry VI. iv. 10 

cleft his beaver with a downright ..iHenry VI. i. 1 
the very pin of his heart cleft with.. Rom. ^- Jul. ii. 4 
thou hast cleft my heart in twain! .... Hamlet, iii. 4 

CLEMENCY— to your clemency .. — iii. 2 (iirol.) 

Ci.EMENT-against Clement Perkes .iHenrylV. iv. 4 
more clement than vile men Cymbeline, v. 4 

CLEMENT'S-INN— of Clement's-inn.2Hen./r.iii. 2 

before I came to Clement's-inn — iii. 2 

when I lay at Clement's-inn — iii. 2 

1 do remember hira at Clement's-inn — iii. 2 
CLEOJIENES— Cleomenes and Dion. Winter's T. ii. 1 

Clcoir.enes and Dion, being well .... — ii. 3 
that you, Cleoincnes and Dion — iii. 2 

fo, Cleomenes; yourself, assisted with — v. 1 
EON— there wil 1 I visit Cleon Pericles, iii. 1 

most honoured Cleon, I must needs be — iii. 3 
by Cleou trained in music, letters. ... — iv. (Gow.) 

hath our Cleon one daughter — iv. (Gow.) 

that Cleon's wife, with envy rare — iv. (Gow. ) 

till cruel Cleon, with his wicked Mife.... — v. I 
she should have been, by savage Cleon . . — v. 1 

to strike the inhospitable Cleon — v. 2 

she at Tharsus was nursed with Cleon . . — v. 3 

for wicked Cleon and his wife — iv. 3 (Gow.) 

CI-EOPATRA- 

Clcopatra's majesty As you L^fceiV, iii. 2 (verses) 

but stirred by Cleopatra Antony ^ Cleopatra, i. I 

Cleopatra's health to di-ink — i. 2 

name Cleopatra as slie's called in Rome — i. 2 
Cleopatra, catchiu" but the least noise — i. 2 

especially that of Cleopatra's — i. 2 

Cleopatra,— why should I think .... — i. 3 
so near the heart as Cleopatra this . . — i. 3 

not more manlike than Cleo])Htra .. — i. 4 

salt Cleopatra, soften thy waned lip! — ii. 1 
if Clcoi>atni beard you. your reproof — ii. 2 

gone toga/.c on Cleopiitra too — ii. i 

pray you, is he marned to Cleopatraf — ii. B 
Cleopatra and hinl^^el^ ill chairs of gold — iii. 6 
Cleopatra hath nodded liini to her .. — iii. 6 
Cleopatra docs confess thy greatness — iii. 10 



z 


T. 




— 


V. 




— 


V. 




— 


V. 




ofHli. 


iv. 


4 


rd 11 


iv. 


1 



CLtOPATRA— -w-in Cleopatra... ^nioni/ ^Clea. iii. 10 
her name since shewas Cleopatra? .. — iii. 11 
Antony a"ain, I win be Cleoiatra .. _ iiii 11 
built in Cleopatra's sails their nests.. — iv. 10 

I will o'ertake thee, Cleopatra _ iv. 12 

sine;; Cleopatra died, I have lived _ iv. 12 

my mistress Cleopatra sent me to thee — iv. 12 
i;uo(l friends where Cleopatra bides . . — iv. 12 
<.) Cleopatra! tliou art taken, qneen! — v. 2 

Cleopatra, do not abuse my master's v. 2 

Cleopatra,— tliink you, there was — v. 2 

Cleopatra, know, we will extenuate.. — v. 2 
shall advise me in all for Cleopatra . . — v. 2 

nay, blush not, Cleopatra _ v. 2 

Cleopatra, not wdiat you have reserved v. 2 

some squeaking Cleopatra boy — v. 2 

the story proud Cleopatra OimUlhu; ii. 4 

Dido, a dowdy; Cleopatra, a gipsy.. Horn./)- J u,'. ii. 4 

CLEPE— they clepe us drunkards lUunlci. i. 4 

CLEPED— are cleped all by the name...Wucte.7;, iii. 1 
CLEPETII— he clepeth a calf .... Low's L. LosI, v. 1 
CLERGY— at one time the clergy yet . . lleniv > . i. 1 

as never did the clergy i. 2 

the clergy's bags arelank and lean..2Weiin/ VI. i. 3 

ga\e the cler^ an ill example Henry I' I II. iv. 2 

CLERGYiMAN— a clergyman of....II!cha:;l II. iii. 3 
CLERGYMEN— among the clergymen . . .l„h » , i v. 2 

you holy clergymen, is there no Riehnnl II. iv. 1 

grace stands 'tween twoclergymenl.fi/c/ia;</i//. iii. 7 

CLERK— answer, clerk (^repealed) Much Ado, ii. 1 

great elerks have purposed Mid. N.'sDimm, v. 1 

clerk, draw a deed of gift Merhant of l-'eiiice, iv. 1 

I give it to the judge's clerk v. 1 

thejudge's clerk! but well (n p.) _ v. 1 

the judge's clerk ; a prating boy — v. 1 

then the boy, his clerk, that took some — v. 1 

I'll mar the young elerk'a pen f i 

the doctor's clerk, in lieu of this 

Nerissa there, her clerk 

the clerk, that is to make me (rep.) . . 
my clerk hath some good comlbrts . . 
I were couching with the doctor's cleric 
take the priest, clerk, and some. . Taming 

am I both priest and clerk V Ilich'. 

meet not with saint Nicholas' clerks. 1 Hennjir. ii. 1 

the clerk of Chatham 'IHenryVIiv. 2 

have I bestowed on learned clerkg . . — iv! 7 
all the clerks, I mean, the learned.. Henry F;/J. ii. 2 

r^T f.*^fi^'^T^?/i^ dumbs Pericles, v. (Gower) 

>;f'J?(J^K-LIKE— thereto, clerk-like. W^Ufr's Ta/c, i. 2 

CLERKLY-very clerkly done. TwoGen.ofyemna, ii. 1 

thou art clerkly, thou art clerkly. Af«rV Wires, iv. 5 

t'wugh clerkly couched, as if she ..iHemyri.vd. 1 

CLIENT-counsellors lack no clients.A/pir.^o)- jVca. i. 2 

attornies to their client woes Richard III. iv. 4 

she should do her clients her fitment. . Pericles, iv. 6 

CLIFF— one cliff, two notes. Tarn. ofSh. iii. 1 (gamut) 

I looked for the chalky clift's. Comedy nf Errors, iii. 2 

as I could ken thy chalky cliffs 'iilenry VI. iii. 2 

if he can take her cliff Troilus ^ Cressida, v. 2 

there is a cliff, whose high and bendin" . Lear, iv 1 

■upon the crown o' the cliff _ iv. H 

the dreadful summit of the cliff Hamlet, i. 4 

CLIFFORD— and Cliflbrd, are ye illent-iiVl. iv. 8 

a CUftbrd! a Clifford? We'll follow (r-u.) — iv 8 
• call hither Clifford; bid him come .. — v. 1 

and here comes Clifford, to deny v 1 

I thank thee, Clifford _ v! 1 

we are thy sovereign, Clifford — v. 1 

ay, Clifford, a bedlam and ambitious — v. 1 
Clifford of Cumberland, 'tis Warwick — v. 2 

Clifford, I say, come forth (rep.) _ v. 2 

deadly-handed Clifford slew my steed — v. 2 

I intend Clifford, to thi-ive to-day — v. 2 

new ruin of old Clifford's house — v. 2 

lord Clifford, and lord Stafford dllcnryVI. i. 1 

and thine, lord Clifford i. 1 

the hope thereof makes Clifford mourn — i. 1 
true, Clifford; and that's Richard.... — i. 1 

poor Clifford ! how I scorn his — i. 1 

lord Clifford vows to fight in — i.i 

Clifford, how thy words revive .... — i. 1 
look, where bloody Clifford comes! . . — i! 3 
all, Clifford murder not this innocent — i 3 

ah, gentle Clifford, kill me with — i. 3 

sweet Clift'ord, hear rae speak j. 3 

and, Clifford, cope with him — t ■i 

1 pray ; sweet Clifford, pity me I — 

blotxly CUftbrd, rough Northumberland — 

(J Clifford, but bethink thee once.. .. 

hold, valiant Clifford! for _ 

hold, Clifi'.jrd, do not honour 

w arriors, Clifford and Northumberland — 

valiant Clifford, with his rapier's — 

'gainst thee, fell Clifford, and thee . . — 

Imrd-hearted Clifford, take me — 

Clifford's and Northumberland's. . . 

how he singled Clifford forth 

ireful arm of unrelenting Cliff'ord. ... 

Rutland, by rough Clifford slain 

O Clittbrd, boisterous Clifford 

the stem lord Clifford done to death 
than common fear of Clifford's rigour 

with CUftbrd, and the haught 

Clifford, were thy heart as hard 

full well hath Cliftord i)layed 

but, Clirtbrd, tell me, didst thou .... — ii. 2 

'twas nut your valour, Clifford, di'ove ii. 2 

■upon that Clift^ord, that cruel _ li. 2 

that Clifford's manhood lies — ii. 2 

the steely point of Clifford's lance — ii. .■; 

now, Clifford, I have singled thee ii 4 

my queen, and CUftbrd too have chid — ii. 5 

that Clifford fled with them? _ ii. 6 

for 'tis Clifford who not contented .. ii 6 

heart, which CUftbrd placed there — ii. 6 

6)'C;i 1:, Clillord, dost thou know ii. G 

C'liU'orJ, repent in bootless (rep.) — ii. 6 

they iiiMi-k tliee, Clifford! swear as .. _ iiK 



..^Heiuy VI. ii. \ 



ii I 
ii. I 
ii. 1 



when Clifford cannot spare Ids 



CI-Il i ORD-two Cliffords, as the father.3 He,,. VI. v. 7 

when black-faced Clifford shook his. Itic/iurd III. i. 2 

CLIFTON— and so liath Clifton (rep.).117e»rw;r. v. 4 

make lip to Clifton v. 4 

CLIMATE— the quality o' the cUmate.. Te,npesl, ii'. 1 

and favour of the climate H'in:tr's Ijle, ii. 3 

the climate's delicate; the air iii.) 

our air, whilst you do climate here ! . . — v! 1 

the earth this cUmate overlooks King .Ivhn, ii. 2 

that, in a christian climate ........ llichard 1 1, iv. 1 

is not their cUmate foggy, raw Hennj f. iii. 5 

unto the climate that they point ..Julias i:ns;ir, i. 3 

though he in a fertile climate dwell Oihrlln, i. \ 

CLIMATURES- unto om- climatm-es ..lla„,lel,i. 1 
CLIJIB— climb her window .. Two Cen.of Verima, ii. 4 

to climb celestial Silvia's — ii. 6 

one cannot climb it ■without — iii. 1 

climb o'er the house to unlock Love's L.Lost, i. 1 

give us cause to cUmb iu the merriness — i. 1 
■which they will climb incontinent ..As you Like, v. 2 

or else climb upward to what they Marhelh, iv. 2 

what, and wouldst climb a tree? 2iJe>irj/rj. ii. 1 

and made me climb with danger — ii. 1 

fearless minds climb soonest unto ..ZHeriry VI. i\. 7 
to climb steep hills, requires slow ..HctyVlII. i. 1 

with a purpose it hath to climb Trail. i^- Cress, i. 3 

the steepy mount to climb Tiinon o/A:he>is, i. 1 

whose top to climb is certain famng.C!/mije///ie, iii. 3 

let our crooked smokes climb — v. 5 

or climb my palace, tiU from forth. TitusAndron. i. 2 
and climb the highest promontory top — ii. 2 
nor I no strength to climb without . . — ii. 4 

the fairest breeders of our climb — iv. 2 

you do elinib up it now : look Lear, i v. 6 

are high, and hard to cUrab Romeo fyJnliel, ii. 2 

your love must elinib a bird's nest soon — ii. 5 

let the labouring bark climb hUls of seas. Othello, ii. 1 

CLIBIBED— have I climbed into. . ..iHer.ry VI. iv. 10 

that cUmbed unto their nest S Henry VI. ii. 2 

have you climbed up to walls Julius Ccesar, i. 1 

CLIJIBEU-washed off a canvas climber, i^er/c/es, iv. 1 
CLIMBER-UPWARD— whereto the climber- 
upward turns his face J uliusCtpsar, ii. 1 

CLIMBETII— now climbeth Tamora..7V(iM.4H((. ii. 1 

CLIMBING- still climbing trees.. ione's L.Lost, iv. 3 

hempen tackle, ship bo.ys climbing.Hen?-!//'. 3(clio.) 

quartering steel, and climbing fli-e ..IHemy VI. iv. 2 

birds, are fain of climbing high %Uenr,jVl. ii. 1 

and bought his climbing very dear — ii. ) 

climbing my walls in spite of me .... — iv. 10 

down, thou climbing sorrow Lear, ii. 4 

CLIME— virgins of our clime . . Merch. of Venice, ii. 1 

thou art fljang to a fresher clime liichurd II. i. 3 

cold and sickness pines the cUme .... — v. 1 

to choke your clime, the smell Henry V. iv. 3 

back again unto my native clime? ..2 f/cm (//'/. iii. 2 

in each several olime Pericles, iv. 4 (Gower) 

matches, of her own clime, complexion. 0(/ie«o, iii. 3 

CLLNG — that do cling together Macbeth, 1. 2 

hang alive, till famine cling thee — v. 5 

CLINK— canakin clink (rep.) Othello, li. 3 (song) 

I heard the clink and fall of swords.. — ii. 3 

CLINKING— cUnking of pewter \HenryIV.ii. 4 

CLINQUANT— all clinquant Henry VIII. i. 1 

CLIP — wings cUp dead men's graves .,'iHenry VI. iv. 1 
O ! let me clip you in arras as sound . Coriolanus, 1. 6 
enter the city, clip your wives . . Antony (j Cleo. iv. 8 
the earth shall clip m it a pair so famous — v. 2 
will I, my loved Marina, clip to form . . Pericles, v. 3 

Zou elements that cUp us round about! Olhello, iii. 3 
IPPED— clipped in with the sea . . 1 Henry I V. iii. 1 
that ever hath but clipped Us body. . Cymbeline, ii. 3 
clipped about with this most tender air — v. b 

nor more, nor clipped, but so Lear, iv. 7 

CLIPPER— hmiself will be a clipper . . Henry V. iv. 1 
CLIPPETH-who clippeth thee a.\)imt.KingJotm, v. 2 

CLIPPING— with clipping her Winter a Tale, v. 2 

CLIPT— Judas Maccabaius dipt . . Love's l„ LosI, v. 2 
CLIP-WINGED— a clip-winged .... 1 Henry I V. iii. 1 
CLITUS— sit thee down, Clitus (rep.) Jul. Casar, v. 5 

Clitus ! what ill request (rep.) — v. 5 

CLOAK — bear it under a cloak . Two Gen. of Ver. iii. 1 

a cloak as long as thine — iii. 1 

then let me see thy cloak — iii. 1 

any cloak will serve the turn — iii. 1 

fasliion me to wear a cloak? — Iii. 1 

let me feel thy cloak upon me — iii. 1 

an old cloak makes a new jerkin ., Merry Wives, i. 3 

or a hat, or a cloak, is notliing MuchAdo, iii. 3 

take my coloured hat and cloak . . Taming of Sh. i. 1 
a scarlet cloak! and a copatain hat! .. — v. 1 

not line his tliin bestained cloak King John, iv. 3 

whose cloak and cincture can hold . . — iv. 3 
the cloak of night being plucked ..Richard It. iii. 2 
satin for my short cloak and slops? . .iHenrylV. i. 2 

give rne my sword and cloak — ii. 4 

Tike a wet cloak ill laid up — v. 1 

lend me thy cloak, sir Thomas Henri/ V. iv. 1 

what colour is this cloak of? 2Henry VI. ii. 1 

hut cloaks and gowus before this — ii. 1 

to let thy horse wear a cloak — iv. 7 

wise men put on their cloaks Richard III. ii. 3 

hats, cloaks (doublets, I think) . . Henry VIII. iv. 1 
get on your cloak, and haste jo\\..Timonof Alh. ii. 1 
what hast thou there under thy cloak — iii. 1 

you pulled me by the cloak Julius Casar, i. 2 

half their faces buried in their cloaks — ii. 1 

1 liave night's cloak to hide me..J(oineo <5- Juliet, ii. 2 

'tis not alone my inky cloak Hanilei, i. 2 

then take thine auld cloak Othello, ii. 3 (song) 

CLOAK-BAG— stufi'ed cloak-bag illenrylV. ii 4 

('tis in my cloak-bag,) doublet, hat. . Cymbeline, iii. 4 

».,LOCK— they'll tell the clock to any . . Tenipest, ii. 1 

vat is de clock. Jack ? Merry Wives, ii. 3 

the clock gives me my cue iii. 2 

the clock upbraids me with Twelfth Night, iu! 1 

by four of the clock Mea.for Mea. iv. 2 (note) 

like a German clock, still a repairing. Lotie'sL.Z,. ui. 1 

larks are plouglunen's clocks — v. 2 (song) 

at the farthest by five of the clock . . Mer.of Veu. ii. 2 



CLOCK-ever run before the clock. .Wer. of Venice, ii. (1 

there's no clock in the forest As you Like it, iii. 2 

of time, as well as a clock _ Hi. 2 

and his honour, clock to itself All's Well 1. 2 

thee not ajar o' the clock hnKmA... Winter's Tale, i. 2 

wishing clocks more swift? j. 2 

the clock hath strucken tv/elve.Comedy of Errors, i. 2 
should be your clock, and strike you . — 12 

and now the clock strikes one — iv. 2 

I have not heard the clock Macbeth, ii. I 

by the clock, 'tis day _ ii.4 

time made me his numbering duukiilichard II. v. .'^1 

his Jack o' the clock, this music v..') 

and clocks the tongues of bawds 1 Henry I V. i. 2 

fought a long hour by Shrewsbury clock — v. 4 

about three of the clock illenrylV i 2 

the clocks do toll, and the third. . Henry V. iv. (cho. ) 

like clocks, still to strike on 1 Henri/ ;'/. i. 2 

tell the clock there; give me Richardlll.v '■', 

count the clock. The clock hath../!;i/Ms Ca-sar, ii. i 
canst awake by four 0' the clock .... Cymbeline, ii. 2 
the sands that run i' the clock's behalf — iii. 2 

to weep 'twixt clock and clock? _ iii. 4 

upon a time unhappy was the clock .. — v. 5 
r^i,, r, - '''' strack nine, when .... Romeo * Juliet, ii.i, 
^ir^ik^"'^-^'-'-"^^^'— *'^<^ clock-setter ..A'lng-yoAi,, iii. 1 
CLUD— to become a kneaded elod..i¥ea./ori)/c'3. iii. 1 

to a clod of ■way ward marl? Much .-Ida, il . 1 

riT^, r,!Jl-sx,'^'°'^' '^"'^ module King John, v. 7 

>;J:')J^JJ,X— the meagre cloddy earth ..King John, iii. 1 
><T 1<^ POLE— from a clod-pole ..TwelflhNight, iii. 4 
CLOG— as will clog the foot of a flea .. — iii. 2 

and enfranchised with a clog Much Ado, i. 3 

here comes my clog. I have, sir All's Well, ii. o 

•with his clog at his heels Winter'sTule, iv. 3 

the time that clogs me with Macbeth, iii. (i 

with clog of conscience, and sour Richard II. v.ti 

to hang clogs on them Othello, i. 3 

r.r'^il^?-'.'?^??}?'^'^'''^'^ ^'"^'og the guiltless keel — ii. I 

}<T><To'^,?iP~"^^<=^°?gi"gl"irden....ifwAard/;. i. 3 

CLOISTER— in the cloister?. . . . Two Gen. of Ver. i. 3 

my sister should the cloister enter.. zl/ea./orJl/ea. i. 3 

to be in shady cloister mewed . . Mid. N. Dream, i. 1 

steal, sir, an egg out of a cloister All's Well, iv. 3 

^■?''A"i.?i?i?I?'' ^■^'^^ ^'°- ^""^^ religious.. Richard I J. \. 1 
CLOISTERED-his cloistered flight ..Macbeth, iii. 2 

J^T !^ ?r ^''^^'^''^ ^ cloistress Twelfth Aighi, i. 1 

CLOSE— close by, my master Tempesi i. 2 

to close prison he commanded. . TwoGen.of Ver. iii. 1 

close at the heels of her virtues — iii. 1 

to make this happy close v. 4 

close by the Thames' side Merry Wives, iii! 3 

doth oft close in pollution TwetfthNi<'ht, i. 2 

close, in the name of jesting! — ° ii 5 

by the holy close of lips _ v! 1 

follows close the rigom- of Meas.for Meas. l! 5 

hark! how the viUain would close now _ v 1 

runs close by the gi-ound MuchAdo, iii. 1 

stand thee close then under this .... _ ii j 3 
some treason masters; yet stand close — iii! 3 
her close and consecrated bower.. Jl/iiZ.A'.'sDr. iii. 2 

stand close; this is the same — iii. 2 

I thought to close mine eyes Love'sL. Lust, v! 2 

of death close up mine eye! .... _ v 2 

for the close niglit doth .... Merchant of Venice, u! 6 
doth grossly close it in, we canuot — v 1 

but to close her eyes myself All's Well, v. 3 

a napkin being close conveyed. . Tarn. ofSh. 1 (ind.) 

IS to close our stomachs up — y 2 

keep it close; home, home Winter' sTale iii' 3 

to Ue close by his honest bones — 'iv 3 

or the close eai-th wombs _ iv 3 

ofgreat authority; close ■with liini'!! — iv' 3 
killed It; she'll close, and be herself.. J»fac6eWi, iii. 2 

the close contriver of all harms _ iii r, 

observe her; stand close v! 1 

young princes, close your hands . . '.'.King John, ii! 2 

that close aspect of his does show — iv. 2 

music at the close, as the last taste. . Richard II. ii. 1 
and furious close of civil butchery ..IHenrylV. i. 1 

stand close. Poins! _ ji. -2 

tliine ear close to the ground .!'!!!!! ii" ■> 

here, hard by; stand close — ii' 3 

but I followed me close, came in — ii' * 

else, keep close; we'll read it — ii' 4 

wait close, I will not see him iHenrylV i 2 

if I can close with him, I care not . — ii' i 

gentlewoman to close with us? — ii' 4 

cougruing in a full and natural close. . Henri/ V. i! 2 
as many lines close in the dial's centre — i 2 

keep close; I thee command _ ii' 3 

or close the wall up with our EngUsh — iii' 1 

m the suburbs close intrenched XHenryVJ. i 4 

when death doth close his tender .... — iii' 3 
let's stand close; my lord Protector..2Henr!/r/. i! 3 
let them be clapped up close, and keijt .— i 4 

m this close walk, to satisfy myself. . ii 2 

this is close dealing: well, I will ii' 4 

cry out for thee to close up mine eyes — iii' 2 
close up his eyes; and draw (rep.).... _ 1113 

these eyes shall never close SHenryVI i 1 

that makes him close his eyes? — i' 3 

or else hold close thy lips _ ii' o 

stand you thus close, to steal — iv's 

as for another secret close intent ..Richard III. i 1 

no sleep close up that deadly — is 

tempt unto a close exploit of death? — iv' 2 
I will take order for her keeping close — iv 2 
of Clarence have I penned up close . . _ iv 3 
let s stand close, and behold him . . Henry VIII ii' 1 

stand close, the queen is coming — iv i 

draw the curtain close; we shafl _ y' •> 

keep the door close, sirrah — y' 3 

standcloseup, orru make — v 3 

an 'twere dark , you'd close sooner. Trail. * Cres. iii" 2 

to close the day up. Hector's life — v'u 

to hold yom- hand more close . . Titnon of Athens, ii! 2 

let your close fire predominate _ iy 3 

that sokler'st close impossibilities — iv' 3 

which grtws here in my close _ y 2 



CLO 



CLOSE-staud close u\\ hilo, lor hrre. .JuliiisCnsarf i. 3 
ihan to close in tt'niiM <>l iViinilsliip.. — lii. I 
now sit we close nbi.ut this tnicr liere — iv. 3 
follow me eliise: I'll hriiii,' you to't. AiU.iCleo. iv. l 

8tii)iiU-l..sc, iiiul li^t t.iliiin — iv.9 

clownv »iiHlo\v> (.■Ki.>f; aiul golden .. — v. a 

alli'i-tion, n'M clnsu, us sure Ci/mli('linc,\. 7 

prnvoJ nie to excuse her keeping close " — lii i> 

close vill'.iin, I'll h:ive this secret — iii. 5 

close by the battle, ilitelied.und walled — v. 3 

the murble pavement closes — v. 4 

the close cniu'ts and counsels .... TiluiAndion. iv. 2 

stop close their mouths — v.i 

how close 'tis caulked and bituniedl..i'<'jf<'/r.t, iii. a 

close pent-up ^'uilts, rive your I.ciir^ iii. 2 

whose power will close the eye of anguish — iv. 4 
close tiirhtinL.' ere I did approach. Woineo i^- Juliet, i. 1 

to himself so secret and so close — i. 1 

IKiif.] to my L'liostly friar's close cell — ii. 2 
do tliou but eTose our hands with holy — ii. (J 

fi.>lIow me close, for I will speak — iii. 1 

sorjad thy close curtain — iii. 2 

tnine ear close to the hollow ground — v. 3 
he closes with you in this conseiiucncc. Hiim/c', ii. 1 

closes in the couscnuence (rejj.) — ii. 1 

beius kept close might move more grief — ii. 1 
foilowher close; give her good watch .. — iv. 5 

keep close witliin your chamber — iv. 7 

I fjund them close together Olhtllo, ii. 3 

tliey are close denotements, workin" .... — iii. 3 
seel her father's eyes up, close as oak.... — iii. 3 
vou shall close prisoner rest — v. 2 

CLOSED— closed in earnest .... Two Gm. nf Ver. ii. 5 

iiatm'e hath in him closed Muchelh, iii. 1 

mi"ht in the groimd be closed up . .ZHeiiry t'l. ii. 1 

hath closed these eyes of mine — ii. 3 

shall forthwith be closed in our . . TitusAndron, v. 3 
of adespiscd life, closed in my breast.Bo»i. 4^Jul. i. 4 
living corse, closed in a dead man's tomb! — v. 'J 
a cup, closed in mv true love's hand? — v. 3 

CLOSELY-been closely shrouded. . Lore's L. L. iv. 3 
therefore has he closely mewedher up. Tam.of Sh. i. 1 
goclosely in with me; much danger. KingJnhn, iv. 1 
tollow Fluellen closely at the heels ..Hennj V. iv. 7 

Chu:ence closely "oe mewed up Rlrhard III. i. 1 

as closely to conceal what we impart — iii. 1 
to keep her closely at my cell . . liomeo ^- Juliet, v. 3 
we have closely sent for "Hamlet Hamlet, iii. 1 

CLOSE NE.S.S— all dedicate to closeness. Tempest, i. 2 

CLOSEK— for secrecy, no lady closer. 1 Henry /A', ii. 3 
fight closer, or good faith, you'll . .ilJeunj VI. iii. 2 

CLOSEST— that is closest kept.. Two Gen. of Ver. i. 2 

CLOSE-STOOL— on a close-stool . . Love's L. Lost, v. 2 
a jiaper from fortune's close-stool .-iU's ll'eU, v. 2 

CLOSET— go into this closet Menij Ifives, i. 4 

vetch me in my closet nn boitier verd — i. 4 
dere is some simples in my closet .... — i. 4 

vat is in my closet'? — i. 4 

do in mv closet? dere is no honest (rep.) — i. 4 

luilock her closet, take forth paper Macbdh, v. 1 

but to my closet bring the angry ..Ki ig John, iv. 2 

when you come into your closet Henri/ V. v. 2 

and, in thy closet pent up, rue 'iHenri/ I'L ii. 4 

Hastings, help me to my closet RiclmrJ IIL ii. 1 

bed-work, mappery, closet war. . . . Trail. 4' Cress, i. 3 
the taper burnetii m j'our closet ..JuhusLa-sur, ii. 1 
I found it in his clcset, 'tis his will.. — iii. 2 

the primroses, tear to my closet Ct/mbeline, i. 6 

I'll to thy eloset; and go read with. . TnusAnd. iii. 2 

hither alt the boxes in my closet Pericles, iii. 2 

at the casement of my closet Lear, i. ■> 

I liave locked the letter in my closet — iii. 3 

go with me into ray eloset, to help — i v. 2 

m my closet [Co7. "A'n/.-chamberJ. Hamlet, ii. 1 

desh-es to speak with you in her closet.. — iii. 2 
my lord, he's going to his mother's closet — iii. 3 
and from his mother's closet hath he . . — iv. 1 
a closet lock and key of villauous Othello, iv. 2 

CLOSlNG-kill the stdl closing waters. 7'c)n;j«(, iii. 3 

in the closing of some glorious \ Henry IV. iii. 2 

busy hammers closing nvets up..Henryr. iv. (cho.) 
closing up of our most wretchea eyes! titus.ind. iii. 1 
this closing with him fits his lunacy.. — v. 2 

CLOSURE-guilty closiu-e of thy wal1s.i?)c;i.///. iii. 3 
make a mutual closure of our house.. TUtts .ind. v. 3 

CLOTEN— Cloten, whose love-suit . . Cymbelinc, iii. 4 

'tis Cloten, the son o' the queen — iv. 2 

Cloten, thou villain. Cloten thou double — iv. 2 
I am absolute, 'twas very Cloten .... — jv. 2 
this Cloten was a fool ; an empty .... — iv. 2 

cut offone Cloteu'shead, son to — iv. 2 

he's the queen's sou, Cloten : that's all — iv. 2 
I'd let a parish of such Clotens blood — iv. 2 
what Cloten 'slicing here to us portends — iv. 2 
I have sent Cloten's clotpole down . . — iv. 2 

for Cloten is quite forgot — iv. 2 

Cloten, hast here cut off my lord — iv. 2 

'tis he, and Cloten: malice and lucre — iv. 2 
this is Pisanio's deed, and Cloten's .. — iv. 2 
forCloten.there wants no diligence.. — iv. 3 
neither know I what is betid to Cloten — iv. 3 

newness of Cloten's death iv. 4 

though Cloten then but young iv. 4 

lord Cloten, upon my lady's missing — v. 5 
a band of Clotens ever had scar for . . v. .') 

CLOTH— clotli of gold, and cuts Much.idn, iii. 4 

out of the painted cloth for this. . Love's L. Los', v. 2 
I answer you right painted cloth. A- you Like it, iii. 2 

as Lazarus in tlie painted cloth i Henry IV. iv. 2 

with scanting a little cloth Henry V. ii. 4 

this clotli thou dipiied'st in blood. ...SZ/cnri/)/. i. 4 
tliey that bear the cloth of honour.Wfiirv/'///. iv. I 
set this in your painted cloths.. 7'roi7ui*Cic.»s. v. 11 
patclied with cloth of any colour ..Conolauus, iii. I 
her pavilion (cloth of gold, and ..Anlony^cko. ii. 2 

a squire's cloth, a pantler Cymbeline, ii. 3 

yea, bioody cloth, I'll keep thee .... — v. I 

shrouded in cloth of state Pericles, iii. 2 

the fire and the cloths — iii. 2 

CLOTUAlK-daiightcr to king Clothair.//rn,!/ V. i. 2 



fiiy ] 



CI.OTIIAUIUS— orClothariua Henry Vlll. i. 3 

CLOfllli— to clothe mine age ..Tu-o Gen. qf Ver. ii. 4 

go, take up these dollies here Merry Hires, iii. 3 

111 the name of fold clothes — iii..') 

and awav went I for fuul clothes .... — iii. f) 
with stinking clothes that fretted .. — iii. .'> 
hcliold wlmt lionest clothes you send — iv. 2 

let the clothes alone — iv. 2 

will y .u lake your wife's clothes?. ... — iv. 2 

these clothes are good enough Twelfth Kiglit, i. 3 

or clothe a iiaek, troni such Mea./or Mc^j. iii. 2 

honest in nothing but in his clothes.. — v. 1 
the soul of this man is his clothes .... All's Welt, ii. 5 

to drown my clothes, and say — iv. 1 

held familiarity with fresher clothes — v. 2 
wrappe<l in sweet clothes . . Taming ofSh. i. (indue.) 
follow Tranio stolen yoiu' clothes? . .. — i. 1 

put on clothes of mine — iii. 2 

she's married, not unto my clothes . . — iii. 2 

to clothe you as becomes you — iv. 2 

see you these clothes? say Winter's Tale, v. 2 

Hotspur Mars in swathing clothes..! HpHit/ i/'. iii. 2 

lay more clothes on lus feet Henry V. ii. 3 

thus I clothe my naked villany .... Richard llLi.S 
their clothes are after such a liasan. Henry VIIL i. 3 

a tool in good clothes Timon nf Alliens, ii. 2 

his clothes miuie a false report .... Coriolanus, iv. 5 
i' the swathing clothes the other .... Cymbeline, i. 1 
I will execute in the clothes that she — iii. .i 

know'st me not by my clothes? — iv. 2 

he made those clothes, which — iv. 2 

care no more to clothe and eat ... . — iv. 2(song) 

and has excellent good clothes Pericles, iv. 3 

through tattered clothes small vices Lear, iv. 

dressed! aud in your clothes! ..liomeo <i- Juliet, iv. a 
good spirits, to feed, and clothe thee?. . Hamlet, iii. 2 
up he rose, and donned his clothes.. — iv. 5 (song) 

her clothes spread wide — iv. 7 

so shall I clotlie me in a forced content. 0(Adto, iii. 4 

desires, buvs lierself bread aud clothes .. — iv. 1 

CLOTH ICD-daiighter, clothed like a bride. Per/dss, i. 1 

furtherance, I am clothed in steel — ii. 1 

CLOTHIEK— Jack Cade the clothier.2Henrj/r/. iv. 2 
clothiers all, not able to maintain . . Henry VIII. i. 2 

draw me a clothier's yard Leur, iv. 6 

CLOTHING— for clothing me in 1 Henm VI. v. 1 

CLOTPOLE— like clotpotes, ere I. . Troil. fy Crrss. ii. 1 
I have sent Cloten's clotpole down.. . Cymbeline, iv. 2 

call the clotpole back Leur, i. 4 

CLO UD— to ride on the curl'd clouds Tempest, i. 2 

youd' same black cloud. .. .■ — ii. 2 

yond' same cloud cannot choose — ii. 2 

the clouds, niethought, would open — iii. 2 

cutting the clouds towards Paplios — iv. 1 

a cloud takes all away! Two Gen.ofVerona, i. 3 

swift dragons cut the clouds full . . Mid. N. Dr. iii. 2 
f ar-otf mountains turned into clouds — iv. 1 
blessed are clouds, to do as (rep.).. Lore'sL. Lost, v. 2 
to shine (those clouds removed) upon — v. 'i 

are angels vailiug clouds, or roses — v. 2 

the scene begins to cloud — v. 2 

let not the cloud of sorrow justle it . . — v. 2 

beams distracted clouds give way All's Well, v. 3 

when the clouds in autumn crack. Taming of Sh. 1. 2 

like a summer's cloud, without Macbeth, iii. 4 

sits in a foggy cloud, and stays for — iii. a 

the invulnerable clouds of heaven . . KingJohn, ii. 1 

the uglier seem the clouds that Richard II. i. 1 

my Euglish breath in foreign clouds — iii. 1 
the envious clouds are bent to dim . . — iii. 3 

is mustering in his clouds — iii. 3 

base contagious clouds to smother . . 1 Henry IV. i. 2 

dropped down from the clouds — iv. 1 

subject to the weeping clouds 2HenryIV. i. 3 

spirits of the wise sit in the clouds . . — ii. 2 

clamours in the slippery clouds — iii. 1 

for my cloud of dignity is held — iv. 4 

filthy and contagious clouds of Henry V. iii. 3 

do break the clouds, as did the wives iii. 3 

np so suddenly into the clouds iii. 5 

he'd be above the clouds -illenry VI. ii. 1 

hath the brightest day a cloud — ii. 4 

with the southern clouds contend — iii. 2 

separated with the racking clouds ..'iHemy VI. ii. 1 
when dying clouds contend with .... — ii. .s 

do cloud my poys with danger — iv. 1 

black, suspicions, tlireatening cloud., — v. 3 
gale will soon disperse that cloud .... — v. 3 

for every cloud engenders not — v. 3 

the clouds, that lowered uixm Richardlll. i. 1 

the clouds, and enter heaven (rep.) .. — i. 3 

when clouds are seen, wise men — ii. 3 

do through the clouds behold tliis — v. 1 

even tills instant cloud puts on Henry VIII. i. 1 

call her from this cloud of darkness . . — v. 4 
an 'twere a cloud in autumn.. 7'roiii« 4-Cressida, i. 2 
wanton tops do buss the clouds . . — iv. 5 

one cloud of winter showers . . Timon of Athens, ii. 2 

he goes away in a cloud — iii, 4 

by yon clouds, let me deserve so ill . Coriolanus, iii. 1 
it Jupiter should from yon cloud speak — iv. 5 
exalted with the tlu-eatening clouds. J«/i«sC'a;sar. i. 3 
looks in the clouds, sconiing the base — ii. 1 
that fret the clouds, are messengers.. — ii. i 

warriors fight upon the clouds — ii. 2 

clouds, dews, and dangers, come — v. 3 

he has a cloud in's face Antony 4- Cleopatra, iii. 2 

sometimes we see a cloud that's — iv. 12 

dissolve, thick cloud, and rain . . — v. 2 

to be encountered witha cloud. raus/f/i^/rom'cus.ii.S 
sometime clouds, when they do hug — iii. 1 

why cloud they not their sights Pericles, i. 1 

they kissed the clouds, and strangers .. — i. 4 

a hand environed with clouds — ii. 2 

adding to clouds more clouds .... Itonico ^Juliet, i. 1 
he bestrides the lazy-pacing clouds . . — ii. 2 
checkering the eastern clouds with .. — ii. 3 
gallant spirit hath aspired the clouds — iii. 1 
lace the severing clouds in yonder east — iii. 5 
is there no pity sitting in the clouds — iii. 5 



CO A 

CLOUO— above the clouds, ashi^lias.A'om.iS-7K(. iv. 5 

that the clouds still hang on you? Hawlet, 1. 2 

cannon to the clouds shall tell — j. 2 

do you .sec yonder cloud, that'; almost .. — iii. 2 
keepshiniself in clouds, and wants not .. — iv. S 
and tongues, applaud it to the clouds .... — iv. .0 

billow seems to pelt the clouds Othello, ii. 1 

CLOUD-CAPP'lj-cIoud-capp'd tov;eiv. 'Tempest, iv. I 

CLOUDED— moon, and clouded too..JLoj'e'» L. L. v. 2 

my sovereign mistress clouded so. . Winter'sTale, i. 2 

hath clouded all thy happv days ..Richard II. iii. 2 

and Edward's sun is clouded illenryVI. ii. 3 

CliOUDlNESS-storm, and cloudiness'?. A/ucA/)rfo, v. 4 

CLOUDY— when you are cloudy Tempest, ii. I 

the cloudy incssenger turns me Mncbelh, iii. 6 

at inectiiig tears the cloudy eheeks./dc/wrrf //. ill. 3 

sucli aspect as cloudy men \ Henry IV. iii. 2 

and Sulfolk's cloudy brow 'iHenry VI. iii. 1 

dark cloudy death o'ershades Zllem-y VI. ii. 6 

thy cloudy wrath hath in eternal . . Ricliurd lll.i.3 
cloudy princes, and heart-sorrowing — ii. 2 
queen, that cloudy countenance . . 7'ittu.indron. i. 2 
my silence, and my cloudy melancholy? — ii. 3 

the brine and cloudy billow kiss Pericles, iii. 1 

briu" in cloudy night immediately. Rom. <$■ Jul. iii. 2 
CLOUT— he'll ne'er hit the clout.. Love's L. Lost, iv. 1 

a babe of clouts were he Khig John, iii. 4 

would have clapped i' the cloutat...2;JeHr!//A'. iii. 2 

gavest the duke a clout, steeped Ricliard III. i. 3 

Rome with clouts about theirheads./ln(. <§• Cieo. iv. 7 

i' the clout, i' the clout: hewgh! Lear, iv. (1 

looks as pale as any clout Romeo * Juliet, ii. 4 

a clout upon that head, where late Hamlet, ii. 2 

CLOUTED— as HO in clouted shoon..2Henri/>'/. iv. 2 

put my clouted brogues from otf Cymbeline, iv. 2 

CLOVES— stuck with cloves Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

CLOVEN— into a cloven pine Tempest, i. 2 

whoj with cloven tongues ii.2 

stuck with cloves. No, cloven . . Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

to his cloven chin (rep.) Troilus ^- Cressida, i. 2 

makes amongst your cloven army . . Coriolanus, i. 4 

CLOVER— burnet, and green clover Henry V. v. 2 

CLO^^EST— when thou clovest thy crown.. Lear, i. 4 
CLOWDEK— couple Cloivder.. TamingofSh. I (ind.) 
CLOWN— a most simple clov/u ! . . Love's L. Lost, iv. 1 

the clowu bore it, the fool sent it ... . iv. 3 

sweet clown, sweeter fool, sweetest .. — iv. 3 
the roynish clown, at whom so ot'l. As you Like it, ii. 2 

holla; you clown! ii. 4 

meat and diink to me to see a clown v. 1 

therefore, you clown, abandon v. 1 

or, clowu, thou perishest v. 1 

my clown (who wants but Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

the burly-boned clown •IHenry VI. iv. 10 

the clown shall make those laugh Hamlet, ii. 2 

let those, that play your clowns — iii. 2 

CLOWNISH— the clownish fool As you Like it, i. 3 

CLOY— or cloy the hungry edge Richard Il.i.i 

now I cloy me with beholding Richard III. iv. 4 

other women cloy th' appetites... J?itoHj/ fCleo. ii. 2 

wing, and cloys his beak Cymbeline, v. 4 

CLO'iED— not too much cloj'ed ..'iHenrylV. (epil.) 

whom he hath cloyed aud graced Hejiry V. ii. 2 

when they are cloyed with long \ Henry VI. ii. 5 

the cloyed will (that satiate yet Cymbeline, i. 7 

and ears so cloyed importantly — iv. 4 

mine eyes are cloyed with view. . TitusAndron. iii. 2 

CLO YLESS— with eloyless sauce Anl.ff Cleo. ii. 1 

CLOYMENT— surfeit, cloymeut . . TKelfth Night, ii. 4 
CLUB— have cleft his club to make ..Much Ado, ii. 1 

seems as massy as liis club - - iii. 3 

is too hard for Hercules' club Love's L. Lost, i. 2 

not so big as the end of his club .... v. 1 

whose club killed Cerberus — v. 2 

dashed out with a Grecian club ..As you Like it, iv. 1 

clubs cannot part them v. 2 

I'll call for clubs, if you 1 Uenni VI. i. 3 

woman, who cried out, clubs! Henry VIII. v. 3 

where go you with bats and clubs? . . Coriolanus, i. 1 
make you ready your stiff b.ats and clubs — i. 1 
that gi-asped the heaviest club..An!ony fyCleo. iv. 10 
clubs! clubs! these lovers will not .. Ti/uj .-inrf. ii. ) 
clubs, bills, and partizans! strike! .Romeo /^ Jul. i. 1 
great kinsman's bone, as with a club — iv. 3 

CLUCKED— has clucked thee to Coriolanus, v. 3 

CLUE— you have wound a goodly clue.4H's Well, i. 3 
CLUNG— how they clung in their ..HenryVIII. i. 1 
CLUSTER-gave way to your clusters. Conoiania, iv. 6 

here come the clusters iv. 

CLUSTERING— to clustering fllberds .. Tempest, ii. i 

vines, with clustering bundles — iv. 1 (song) 

into the clustering battle 1 Henry VI. iv. 7 

CLUTCH— come, let me dutch tliee Macbeth, ii. 1 

the power to clutch my hand King John, ii. 2 

hath clawed me in his clutch Hamlet, v. 1 (sons) 

CLUTCHED— it clutched? Mea./or Mea. iii."2 

clutched as many millions Coriolanus, iii. 3 

CLYSTER-PIPES— were clyster-pipes .. 0/Ae«o, ii. 1 

CLYTUS— kill his nest friend, Cl.\ tus. . Henry V. iV. 7 

Alexander is kill his friend Cly'tus .. — iv. 7 

CNEIUS — of CneiusPompey's .'.Antony^ Cleo. iii. II 

COACH — coach after coach Merry Wires, ii.2 

but as a coach doth carry.Lore'sI.i.o>/, iv. 3 (verses) 

when I am in my coach .Merch. 0/ Venice, iii. 4 

the zodiac in his glistering coad. Tittu And. ii. 1 

come, my coach! good-night, ladies ..Hamlet, iv. i 
COACHES— with their coaches .... .Merry Wives, ii. 2 

your eyes do make no coaches Love'sL. Lost, iv. 3 

COACH-IELIA)W-youreoadi-lellow..il/n-ri;(»'. ii. 2 
CO AC H- M A ICE KJ3— 

the fairies' coach-makers Romeo^ Juliet, i. 4 

CO- ACT— how these two did co-act. TroiL ^Crcs. v. 2 
CO- ACTIVE— thou co-active art .. Winter'sTale, i. i 

COAGULATE— with coagulate gore Hamlet, ii. 2 

COAI.. — a rasher on tlie coals . . Merch. 0/ Venice, iii. 5 

and all eyes else, deiwl coals! Winter's Tale, v. i 

no malice in this burning coal King John, iv'. I 

kindled the dead coal of wars v. 2 

the men would carry coals Henry V. iii. 2 

and it is like a coal of lire _ iii. e 



CO AL— hot conls of vengeance ! 2Hennj yi.v.2 

Bpeak withal, is Itindliiig coaU iHenn/ VI. ii. 1 

you have blown this coalbetwixt. . Henry Vlll. ii. 4 
tlmt I have blo\vn tliis coal: I clodeny — ii. 4 

aild more coals to Cancer Troilus^Crcssida^ ii. 3 

tlian is the coal of lire upon Corinlanus^ i. 1 

could burn us all into one coal — iv, G 

for Rome, to make coals cheai) — v. 1 

■with cy ne of burning coal Pn-icUs, iii. (Gower) 

rav word, we'll not carry coals . . Itomeo <S- Jul/'et, i. 1 
COAL-BLACK— some coal-black .... UU-hard II. v. 1 
black, forsooth; coal-black as jet ..iHennj ri.'n. 1 
■n-ound about thy coal-lilack hair . .'iHtnnj VI. v. 1 
in likeness of a coal-black ^loor.Titus Audron. iii. 2 
coal-black is better than another hue — iv. 2 
they never do beget a coal-black calf — v. I 
CO^UiSE— of what coarse metal. . . . Henry nil. iii. 2 

COARSELY-reports but densely ill's irell. iii. 5 

COAST— travelling along tliis I'uast. lore's L. l.vsi, v. 2 
fromevery coast renowned suitors, j/fc. of!'enice,'i. 1 

that appeared upon the coast IVmter's Tale, iv. 3 

private fricuds, upon this coast — Ilicliard 11. iii. 3 

see the coast cleared, and then I Henry VI. i. 3 

flies from another coast 'IHennj VI. i. 2 

kenof Albion's wished coast — iii. 2 

England, for it is yoiu' native coast . , — iv. 8 

to land them on our coast ZHenrij VI. iii. 3 

have arrived our coast — v. 3 

on the western coast rideth Richard III. iv. 4 

he was carried from oiTour coast . . Cymbeline., iii. 1 

to show what coast thy sluggish — iv. 2 

are landed on yoru* coa^t — iv. 3 

batters all rebelling coasts? — v. 4 

from coast to coast is tost Pericles, ii. (Gower) 

the sea hath cast upon your coast — ii. 1 

mariner, say what coast this is? .... — iii. I 
and on this coast suppose him now . . — v. (Gower) 

upon this coast, I warrant you — v. 3 

COASTING— coastiug homeward. . Comedij of Err. i. 1 
give acoastiugwelcomeere it comes. r?(;/(.<5-C;M.iv..'j 

COAT— white luces in theu- coat Merry Wines, \. 1 

it is an old coat — i. 1 

do become an old coat well — J. 1 

the salt tish is an old coat — i. 1 

If he has a quarter of your coat — i. I 

there's a hole made in j'our best coat — iii. 5 
instalment, coat, and several crest . . — v, 5 
I would not be in some of your coats.. rjre/^/uY.iv. 1 
that neither my coat, integrity ..Mea.for ."ilea. iv. 2 

as to show a child hip new coat Much .4ilo, iii. 2 

in their gold coats spots you see. . . . Mid N. Dr. ii. 1 

to make my small elves coats — ii. 3 

like coats in heraldry, due but — iii. 2 

I could shake them o'ff my coat . . As you Like it, i. 3 
did stretch his leathern coat almost . . — ii. 1 

am ambitious for a motley coat — ii. 7 

their blue coats brushed Taming of Shrew, iv. 1 

IsTathanicl's coat, sir, was not — iv. 1 

with silken coats, and caps — iv. 3 

in my green velvet coat lVinler''s Tale, i. 2 

ifthis be ahorsaman'scoat — iv. 2 

may enter Mowbray's waxen coat . . Richard II. i. 3 

shall make coats to deck our — i. 4 

torn my household coat, raned out . . — iii. 1 

f [littering in golden coats, like 1 Henry IV. iv. 1 
ike a herald s coat without sleeves . . — iv. 2 
in his coats. Now, by my sword (icp.) — _ y. 3 
Bardolph, give the soldiers coats . .2HenryIV. iii. 2 
covering discretion with acoat of fOUy. Henry V.ii. i 

spoil his coat, with scanting — ii. 4 

if I find a hole in his coat, I will — iii. 6 

lank-lean cheeks, and war-worn coats — iv. (cho.) 
gay new coats o'er the French soldiers' — iv. 3 
of England's coat one half is cut 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

five me my steeled coat — i. 1 
lue coats to tawny coats — i. 3 

out, tawny coats! out scarlet — i. 3 

the lions out of England's coat — i. 5 

down with the tawny coats! — iii. 1 

for his coat is of proof 2Henry VI. iv. 2 

wear it as a herald's coat — iv. 10 

tlu'ow away our coats of steel 3 Henry VI. ii. 1 

in a long motley coat, guarded. . Henry VIII. (prol.) 
yoiu- long coat, priest, protects you.. — iii. 2 

tliis coat of worth, for it was Pericles, ii. 1 

v.-hen they have lined their coats Othello, i. I 

but that iny coat is better than thou — v. 1 

COBBLE— «Miy sir, cobble you hdlus Crcsar, i. 1 

COBBLED-below their cohbled shoes. Cori'o/n;ii/s, i. 1 

COBBLER-you would say, a cobbler. J»/i'usCff'sar, i. 1 

thou art a cobbler, art thou? Truly, sir — i. 1 

COBIIAM— ReignoldlordCobham-../?/c/wrri//. ii. 1 

dame Eleanor Cobham, Gloster's . .2HcnryVI. ii. 3 

Edward, shall rmto my lord Cobham. 3 fJsniy F/. i. 2 

let noble Warwick, Cobham, and the rest — i. 2 

COBLOAF-CobloafI he would pun.. r™j7. fyCres.'\\. 1 

COBWEB— Peas-blossom! Cohvah\. Mid. N.Dr. iii. 1 

Cobweb. I shall desire you (rep.) — iii. 1 

Where's monsieur Cobweb? Ready (rep.) — iv. 1 
but to help cavalero Cobweb to scratch — iv. 1 
fa^ster than gnats in cobwebs . . Mer. of Venice, iii. 2 
rushes strewed, cobwebs swept . . Taming of Sh. iv. 1 

COCK— cock-a-doodle-doo TempeU, i. 2 (song) 

the old cock. The cockrel — ii. 1 

to crow like a cock Two Gen. of Verona, ii. 1 

by cock and pye, you shall Merry Wives, i. 1 

ere the first cock crow Mid. N.''s Dream, ii. 2 

of what kind should this cock QQva^.AsyouLike, ii. 7 
a combless cock, so Kate {rep.) . . Taming of Sh. ii. 1 

cock's passion, silence! I hear — iv. 1 

if tile springe hold, the cock's mine. Winter^s T. iv. 2 
I h.ave no pheasant, cock, nor hen .. — iv. 3 

carousing 'till the second cock Macbeth, ii. 3 

I iiave been since t'ne first cock . , . . i H'-nry I V. ii. 1 
bvcock and pye, sir, you shall not..2//tvij.i//''. v, ! 
and Pistol's cock is up, and flashing . . Henry V. ii. 1 

and country cocks do crow — iv. (chorus) 

tlie early village cock hath Richard III. v. 3 

retired me to a wasteful cock . . Timon of Athens, ii. 2 
his cocks do win the battle Antony fy Cleo. ii. 3 



COCIC-a cock that nobody can match. .Cymbeline, ii. 1 
cock and capon, too; and you crow, cock — ii. 1 
drenchril oursteeplcs, drowned the cocks!Lear,iii.2 

and walks (ill tlie lirst cock — iii. 4 

dimilli^lK■d til lie;- cock; her cock, a buoy — iv. 6 
the scCMud c'ck hnth crowed ..Romeo ^-Juliet, iv. 4 
about to speak wlicn tlic cnck crew .... Hamlet, i. 1 
I have heard, the cock, that is the trumpet — i. 1 

it faded on the cro\ving oi' the cock -^ i. 1 

the morning cock crew loud — i. 2 

bv cock, thcv are to blame — iv. .5 (song) 

COl'K-.V-III )0P— set cock-a-hoop! . ./(ompo ^Jul. i. i 
COCKATRICE— like cockatrices.. TirelflliNiglit. iii. 4 

a cockatrice hast tliou hatched Riclmrd III. iv. 1 

the death-darting eye of cockatrice. i?om.<5-./«;. iii. 2 

COCKERED— a cockered silken wanton ..Jolm,v. 1 

COCKLE— sewed cockle reaped no. . Love's L. L. iv. 3 

'tis a cockle, or a walnut-shell .. Taming of Sh. iv. 3 

the cockle of rebellion, insolence ..Coriolanus, iii. 1 

sail seas in cockles, have Pericles, iv. 4 (Gower) 

by Iris cockle hat and staff Hamlet, iv. 5 (song) 

COCKLED— horns of cockled snails.. Lout's L.L. iv. 3 
COCKNEY-will prove a cat:i<.ney..TwelfthNight, iv. 1 

as the cocknev did to the eels Lear, ii. 4 

COCK-PIG EON- 

tlian a B;irbary cock-pigeon As you Like it, iv. 1 

COCKPIT— can this cockpit hold . . Henry V. i. (cho.) 
COCKREL— the old cock. The cockrel.. Tempest, ii. 1 
as big as a young cockrel's stone . . Romeo ^Jul. i. 3 
COCK-SHU'r-about cock-shut time. K/c/iard III. v. 3 
COCK-SURE— in a castle, cock-sure..! Hrar!/;/'. ii. 1 
COCTUS— simplicity, bis coetU3!..I.ot>c's L.Lost,iv. 2 
COCYTUS-as Cocytus' misty mouth.. T/(«s And. ii. 4 

COD— your ka!S, and your cods Merry Wives, iv. 1 

from whom I took two cods As you Like it, ii. 4 

change the cod's head for the salmon's.. O/Ac/to, ii. 1 
CODDING— that codding spirit . . Titus .indron. v. 1 
CODLING— or a codling when 'tis.. Twelfth Night, i. .5 
COD-PIECE— with a cod-piece.. Tioo Gen. o/Tct-. ii. 7 

a cod-piece to stick pins on — ii . 7 

for the rebellion of a cod-pieee.il/eas. /»r Meas. iii. 2 
where his cod-piece seems as massy. il/w;/i Ado, iii. 3 
king of cod-pieces, sole imperator.Lose'sL.Lo.rf.iii. 1 
nothing to geld a cod-piece of a purse Winter's T. iv. 3 

the cod-piece that will house Lear, iii. 2 (song) 

marrv, here's grace, and a cod-piece — iii. 2 

C(ELESTIBUS-animisco3lestibusirffi?2HeH.r/. ii. 1 

CCELIUS— and Ccelius, are for sea ..Ant. ^Cleo. iii. 7 

CCELO— the ear of cffilo,— the sky.Loue's L. Lost, iv. 2 

CO-EQUAL— his can co-equal with..lHe?ir!/ VI. v. 1 

Ca2UR-DE-LION—of'Cceur-de-lion..Xmg' ^o/m, i. 1 

he hath a trick of Cceur-de-lion's face — i. 1 

or the reputed son of Cmur-de-lion .. — i. 1 

Richard Cceur-de-lion was thy father — i. 1 

God forgive you CcDur-de-lion's death — ii. 1 

Cceur-de-lion'e heart was buried . . 1 Henry VI. iii. 2 

COFFER— euckoldy rogue's coffer. . Merry Wives, ii. 2 

my coft'ers ransacked, my reputation — ii. 2 

in the chambers, and in the coifers . . — iii. 3 

neither press, coffer, chest, trunk — — iv. 2 

hold, there is half my coffer Twelfth Night, iii. 4 

remaining in the coiier of her . . Mens, for Meas. i. 3 
comes to the privy coffer of the..il/er.o/renice, iv. 1 
in ivorj' coffers I have stuffed .... Taming of Sh. ii. 1 

for our coifers, — with too great Riclmrd II, i. 4 

the lining of his coffers shall make . . — i. 4 

shall our coffers then be emptied IHenry IV.i.S 

and his coffers sound with hollow 2HenryIV. i. 3 

and to the coft'ers of the king Henry V.i. 1 

from his coffers received the golden.. — ii. 2 

than the rich-jewelled coffer 1 Henry VI. i. 6 

and all out of an empty coffer . . Timon of Athens, i. 2 
ransoms did the general coffers fill. /u/'usCfPsar, iii. 2 

which your own coft'ers yield! Cymbeline.^ i. 7 

bring me the satin coffer \_Ii.nt.-coSm\. Pericles, lij. i 

lay with you in your coffer — iii. 4 

to"the bay, and disembark my coffers . . Othello, ii. 1 

COFFIN-on my black cofiin let. TwelfthN. ii. 4 (song) 

and the ducats in her coffin!. .Jl/eccA. of Venice, iii. 1 

within this coffin I present thy Richard II. v. 6 

upon a wooden coffin we attend 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

hune their rotten coffins up SHenryVI. i. 3 

stand back, and let the coffin pass. . Richard III. i. 2 

my heart is in the cotRn there Jidius Ctesar, iii. 2 

sons in coffins from tlie field Titus Andron. i. I 

of the paste a coffin I will rear — v. 2 

[ A'n(.] bring me tire satin cotBn Pericles, iii. 2 

tis like a coffin, sir — iii. 2 

(if e'er tMs coffin drive a-land) — iii. 2 (scroll) 

I oped the coffin, .and found there rich. . — v. 3 
COFFINED— had I come coffined home . . Coriol.'ii. I 

scarcely coffined, in the ooze Pericles, iii. 1 

COCi — I cannot cog, I cannot prate. .jVerrj/ Wives, iii. 3 

come, I cannot cog, and say — iii. 3 

that lie, and cog, and (1 mt, deprave. . Much Ado, v. 1 

since you can cog, I'll play no Lncf't, L.lost, v. 2 

deceive, and cog, duck with French. ii/cAa7d ///. i. 3 
and you hear bun cog, see him. Timon of Athens, v. 1 

cog their hearts from them Coriolanus, iii. 2 

COGGING— cogging companion ..Merry Wives, iii. 1 
come both, you cogging Greeks. . Troilus^Crcss.v. 6 

some cogging cozening slave Othello, iv. 2 

COGITATION— cogitation resides.. IVinter'sTale, i. 2 

great value, worthy cogitations Julius Crvsar, i. 2 

COGNITION— nor have cognition.. r?'o/;.!5-Cress. v. 2 

COGNIZANCE— as cognizance of 1 Henry VI. ii. 4 

stains, relics, and cognizance JuliusCeesar, ii. 2 

cognizance of her incontinencv Cymbeline, ii. 4 

COCtSCOMB— knave's cogscomD ..Merry Wives, iii. 1 

CO-HEIR— they are co-heirs Winter's Tale. ii. I 

COHERE— do cohere, and jump ..Twelfth Night, v. 1 

COHERED — had time cohered Meas. for Meas. ii. 1 

COHERENCE— coherence of his men's.iHen.IV. v. 1 
COHERENT-may prove coherent ..All'sWell, iii. 7 

(jOIIOfiTS— dissipation of cohorts Lear, i. 2 

COIGNE— nor coigue of vantage Macbeth, i. 6 

see you yond' coigne o' the Capitol. . Coriolanus, v. 4 

by the four opposin" coignes Pericles, iii. (Gow.) 

COUj — this coil would not infect Tempest, i. 2 

here is a coil with protestation.. TwoGen. qf Ver. i. 2 



COIL— there is a great coil to-night.. Afuci AdM, iii. 3 

yondcr's old coil at home — v. 2 

all this coil is 'long of you . . Mid, N.'s Dream, iii. 3 
commanded here, and kept a coil .. ..All'sWell, ii. 1 

what a coil is there I Comedy of Errors, iii. 1 

I am not worth this coil King John, ii. 1 

what a coil's here! Timon of Aihrns, i. 2 

a reason for this coil? TiiusAnilronlnis.'n). 1 

here's such a coil! Homco rS Juliet, ii. Tj 

have shuffled off this mortal coil Humlel, i'li. 1 

COIN — do coin heaven's image . . Meas. Jor Meas. ii. 4 
the face of an old Roman coin . . Love's L. Lost, v. 2 
they have in England a coin .... Mer. of Venice, ii. 7 
pay them for it with stamped coin. Winter'sTate, iv. 3 
thousand marks of English coin .... King John, ii. 3 
plate, coin, revenues, and moveables. i^/e/mrd //. ii. I 

so far as my coin would stretch i Henry IV. i. 2 

for all the coin in thy father's — ii. 2 

let them coin his nose, let them coin — iii. 3 

his valour, coin, and people 2Henryl'I.i. 1 

such doubts, as false coin Henry VIII. iii. 1 

to be stamped oil the king's coin — iii. 3 

a slave, whose gall coins slanders . . Trail. SrCress. i. i 

why, the dog coins gold Timon of Athens, ii. 1 

let molten coin be thy damnation . . — iii. I 
mine honour, shall not know my coin — iii. 3 
let out their coin upon large interest — iii. 5 

so shall my lungs coin words Coriolanus, iii. 1 

I had rather coin my heart Julius Cn-sar^ iv. 3 

his coin, ships, legions, may ..Antony S^Cleo. iii. 11 

tliis gold must coin a stratagem . . TilusAndron. ii. 3 

COINAGE— I'll answer the cohjage. .\ Henry IV. iv. 2 

this is the very coinage of ^our brain . . Hamlet, iii. 4 

COINED — have coined me into gold Henry V. ii. 2 

vet, 'tis a life; you coined it Cymbeline, v. 4 

COINER — some 'coiner with his tools. . — ii. 5 
COINING— mother hourly coining plots — ii. 1 

no, they cannot touch me for coining Lear, iv. 6 

CO-JOIN— thou mayest co-join with.. Winter's T. i. 2 

COL— appellez-vous le col? Henry V. iii. 4 

COLBRAND— Colbrand the giant .... King John, i. 1 

nor sir Guj', nor Colbrand Henry VIII. v. 3 

COLCHOS— Belmont, Colchos' strand.iVer.o/' ( en.i. 1 

COLD— must our mouths be cold? Tempest, i. 1 

he receives comfort like cold porridge.. — ii. 1 
white cold virgin snow upon my heart — iv. 1 
to make cold nymphs chaste crowns . . — iv. 1 
shall not lie for catching cold ..TwoGen. of Ver. i. 2 

my zeal to Valentine is cold — ii. 4 

hope my master's suit will be but cold — i\. ( 

throw cold water on thy choler Men y Wives, ii. 3 

for my belly's as cold as — iii. i 

rather will suspect the sun with cold — iv. 4 
old, cold, withered, and of intolerable — v. 5 

he is now at a cold scent Twelfth Night, ii. t 

you are too cold {rep.) Measure for Measure, ii. 2 

to lie in cold obstruction — iii. 1 

from thence, by cold gradation . . — iv. 3 

I thank God, and my cold blood Much Ado, i. 1 

there's goodly catching of cold — iii. 4 

hymns to the cold fruitless nioon.Mi'ti. N. Dream, i. 1 
flying between the cold moon and — ii. 2 

rrieasure out my length on tills cold bed — iii. 2 

leaps over a cold decree Merchant of Venice, i. 2 

with some cold drops of modesty.. — ii. 2 

your suit is cold. Cold indeed.. — ii. 7 (scroll) 

even till I shrink with cold As you Like it, ii. 1 

in the cold wind; withal, full oft {rep.). Alt's Well, i. 1 

'tis too cold a companion — i. 1 

the list of too cold an adieu — ii. 1 

barefoot plod I the cold ground . . — iii. 4 (letter) 

and found her wondi-ous cold — iii. 6 

for you are cold and stern — iv. 2 

go to thy cold bed, and warm thee, Tam.ofSh. 1 (ind.) 

a bed to'o cold to sleep so soundly — 1 (ind.) 

a tallernmn than I will take cold.... — iv. 1 

to thy cold comfort, for being — iv. 1 

a cold world, Curtis, in every — iv. 1 

for I have caught extreme cold — iv. 1 

faith, as cold as can be — iv. 3 

the day in cold, while thouliest.. Taming of Sh. y. 2 
with a" sense as cold as is a dead . . Winter'sTate, ii. 1 
the men are not yet cold under water — iii. 3 
was turned into a cold fish, for she .. — iv. 3 

is cold; t!ie meat is cold Comedy of Error Sji. 2 

lest he catch cold oil's feet — iii. 1 

you stand liere in the cold — iii. 1 

when I am cold, he heats me — iv. 4 

and fan our people cold Macbeth, i. 2 

of deeds too cold breath gives — ii . 1 

this place is too cold for hell — ii. 3 

tiiy blood is cold; thou hast no — iii. 4 

[(>/. Kill.} toad, that under cold stone.. — iv. 1 

and yet seem cold, the time you — iv. 3 

is cold in amity and painted peace ..King John, iii. 1 

your majesty doth seem so cold — iii. 1 

the instrument is cold, and would not — iv. 1 
with cold; I do not ask you (rep.) .. — v. 7 

let not my cold words here Richard II. i. 1 

patience, is pale cold cowardice . — i. 2 

the commons cold, and will, I fear — ii. 2 

where shivering cold and sickness pines — v. 1 
Madeira, and a cold capon's leg? . . . .1 Henry I V. i. 2 

my blood hath been too cold and — i. 3 

with my wounds being cold — _i. 3 

'tis dangerous to take a cold — ii. 3 

sincerity of fear and cold heart — ii. 3 

hot livers, and cold purses — ii. 4 

out of fear, and cold heart — iv. 3 

the eartliv and cold hand of death .... — V. 4 
voung Harry Percy's spur was cold ..2Henry IV. i. 1 

terc^'^s spur was cold? (7-epea/erf) — _i. I 

he's like to be a cold soldier ..._ — iii. 2 

a whoreson cold, sir; a cou"h, sir — HI- 2 

we will have away thy cold — iii. 2 

their cold intent, tenour and substance — iv. 1 

which before cold and settled left — iv. 3 

for the cold blood he did naturally — — iv. 3 

by seeming cold, or careless of — iv. i 

how cold it struck my Lesrt! — iv. 4 



COL 



COIiD— after this cold considerancc ..illenrylV. v. 2 

nut of work, iiTifi toUI tor action! Henry V. i. 2 

and it will imkUuv wM us uiiotlier man's — ii. 1 
nil. 1 thov were as o^'lil ns.iny stone .... — .;)■•'' 

dccoi't their 0"ia bl.iiHl to so.-ii - in. .', 

to every one thawing eold tear - iv. (v\m.) 

as eold'a ni^lit as 'tis, he conlil wish — — iv. 1 
watch in darkness, rain, and cold . . 1 Henry ft. ii. 1 

in winter's cold, and Biininier's iUenry Vl. i. 1 

cold news for me ; for I had — . ;• 1 

with his \VTathful nipping cold — .ii. 1 

cold news, lord Somerset (rep) — I'l. 1 

cold snow melts with the sun's {rep.).. — \\\. 1 
biting cold would never let ^rass grow — ui. 2 

in wiiose cold bUxxl no spark Sllenry ''/. i. 1 

from the earth's cold face — !!• 3 

his cold thin drink out of his — .i}. 5 

a cold premeditation for my purpose! — iii. 2 
himself keepeth in the cola field'? .... — iv. 3 

cold biting winter mars our — iv. 8 

from coldand empty veins Uicharillll. i. 2 

that is too cold in thinking of it now.. — _i. 3 

wlien I am cold in love, to you — _ii. 1 

icv, cold, unwilling, lie thou so too.. .. — iii. I 

co'ld friends tome; what do they — iv. 4 

the air is raw and cold — v. 3 

cold fearful drops stand on — V. 3 

this cold corse on the earth's cold face — v. 3 

felt so much cold as over shoes — v. 3 

and cold hearts freeze alleeianee — Henry VI J J. i. 2 
placed together makes cold weather .. — i. 4 

and sleep in dull cold marble — iii. 2 

and of an earthy cold'r' — iv. 2 

tlie morn is colcl Troilus 4- Cressiila, iv. 2 

vou will catch cold, and curse me — iv. 2 

tlie devotion which cold lips blow — iv. 4 

k-thareics, cold luilsics, raw eyes — v. 1 

cold statues of tlic vmith — v. 11 

their bUHi.l is ealceil, 'tis cold ..Timon of.V/ie7:s.u. 2 
cannot coudemn rashness in cold blood'? — iii. 5 

thou cold sciatica, cripple our — iv I 

will the cold brook, candied with ice.. — iv. 3 

and drink cold water? no — .v. 1 

sir, those cold ways, that seem like .Coriolanus, iii. 1 

and batten on cold bits — iv. 5 

our blood is cold, and then wc pout .. — y. 1 
can both endiu'e the winter's cold. .JuliusCtrsarji. 2 

in a friend, it is cold modesty — iii. 1 

and straight is cold again — iv. 3 

or some devil, that miikest my blood cold — iv. 3 

for I perceive cold demeanour — v. 2 

between the extremes of hot and coldAnt.^-Cleo. i. .5 
cold in blood, to say, as I said then! . . — i. !> 
Oetavia is of a holy, cold, and still — — ii. 6 

cold and sickly he vented them — iii. 4 

cold upon dead Ciesar's trencher — iii. 11 

from my cold heart let heaven — iii. 1 1 

of that huge spirit now is cold — iv. 13 

lest the bargam slioidd catch cold . . Cymbeline, i. 5 
like Diana's priest, betwixt cold sheets — _i. 7 
it would make any man cold to lose . . .— ii. 3 

and fostered with cold dishes — ii. 3 

would show the Britons cold — iii. 1 

there is cold meat i' the cave — iii. H 

on them cold dew 0' the night — iv. 2 

and cancel these cold bonds — v. 4 

and she alone were cold . . ; — v. 5 

like a stony image, cold and numb.. Tilus.ind. iii. 1 

warm kiss on thy pale cold lips — v. 3 

a man slirunk up with cold Pericles, ii. 1 

let not conscience, which is but cold — iv. 1 

she sent him awaj' as cold as a snowball ■ — iv. 6 

tlion'lt catch cold shortly Lear,\. 4 

gave rae cold looks — ii. 4 

art cold? I am cold myself — iii. 2 

the cold wind: humph! go to thy cold bed — iii. 4 

this cold night will turn us all to fools — iii. 4 

through the hawthorn blows the cold wind — iii. 4 

all the rest of his body cold — iii. 4 

bright smoke, cold fire, sick health.. Romeo ^Jul. i. 1 
this field bed is too cold for me to sleep — ii. 1 
with one hand heats cold death aside.. — iii. 1 
shall run a cold and drowsy hiimour — iv. 1 
stark, and cold ajipear likedeath .... — iv. 1 

a faint cold fear thrills through — iv. 3 

out, alas! she's cold — iv. 5 

the air bites shrewdly: it is very cold . . Hamlet^ i. 4 
they should lay himi tlie cold ground. . — iv. 5 

but our cold maids do dead — iv. 7 

very cold; the wind is northerly {rep.) .. — v. 2 

colcl, cold, mv girl? even like Olhello, v. 2 

COLD-BLOObED— cold-blooded slave ..John, iii. 1 

COLDER— colder than that theme..'»'i;i/<!r'sTa;e,T. 1 

in colder news, but yet they must ./ficAarci ///. iv. 4 

to a weak and colder palate.. Tro/Yiis ^- Cre^sida,iv. 4 

M-ith your colder reasons Coriolanus, v. 3 

let his knights have colder looks Lear, i. 3 

snow to their colder moods — ii. 2 

COLDEST— where hope is coldest All's Well, ii. 1 

in the coldest fault? Taming of Shrew, 1 (indue.) 

under coldest [Co(. Kn(. -cold] stone .. Macbeth, iv. 1 

you stand in coldest ex|iectation iHenrylV. v. 2 

the most coldest that ever turned Cymbeline, ii. 3 

from their coldest neglect my love Lear, i. 1 

COLD- n E ARTED- 

eold-hearted toward met .. Antony t^ Clenpairn, iii. 11 
COLDLY— but yet so coldly. . . . Two Gen. of I'er. iv. 4 

bear it coldly but till midnight AfiichAdo, iii. 2 

who is that, calls so coldly? Taming ofSh. iv. 1 

charge him tiw coldly fVinler'sTale, i. 2 

(warm life, as now it coldly stands) .. — v. 3 
he would not plead so coldly.. Comedy of Errors, v. I 

we coldly pause for thee King John, ii. 1 

coldlv embracing the discoloured earth — ii. 2 
the ftench fight coldly, and retire .. — v. 3 
she coldly eyes the youthful .... Troilus ff Cress, i. 3 

but it lies as coldly m him as — iii. 3 

reason coldly of your grievances.. Womeo •^■jMi. iii. 1 
did coldly furnish forth the marriage . . Hnmle/, i. 2 
mayest not coldly set our sovereign — iv. 3 



[ 1'21 ] 

COLD-MOVING-eold-moving nods. Timon ofAlh. ii. 2 

COLDNESS—coldncss of the king . .3Henry I'l. ii. 1 

(loll not device bv ci.Idmss and delay ..Olhello, ii. 3 

OoLlCliliOOK— and Colelimok Merry Wires, iv. .') 

COLION'II.IO-Colevileot the ilale {rep.).'inen.ll\ iv. 3 
sIuUl you still he Colcvilc of the dale — iv. 3 
taken" sir.lohn Colevile of the dale .. — iv. 3 

topof it, Colevile kissing my foot — iv. 3 

name Colevile? It is my lord (rep.) .. — iv. 3 

send Colevile, and with Ids confederates — iv. 3 

C(ILL.\H— yoiu- neck out of the collar. /(om.i5' Jul.'i. 1 

tl\e collars', of the iiiooushine's watery — i. 4 

C01,L.\Ti;lf..VL-collateral ligllt AlVslVell^i. 1 

if by direct or liy collateral hand Hamlet, iv. i 

COLLE.VGlIED—colleagued with this — i. 2 

COLIyECT— in time collect myself. Winler'sTale, iii. 3 

good old knight, collect them all Henry V. iv. I 

made me collect these dangers iHenry I'L 111. I 

COLLECTED— be collected Tempest, i. 2 

had collected for general sovereignty . . All's Well, i. 3 

the sums I have collected shall King John, iv. 2 

OUT power collected, our substitutes.2He;ir!//r. iv. 4 

for these wars be soon collected Hetiry I'.i. 2 

assembled, and collected, as were a war — ii. 4 
host, collected for this expedition . . 1 Henry VL iv. 4 
a band of men, collected choicely . . 2 Henry VL iii. 1 

collected out of the duke of Henri/ Vlll. i. 2 

the articles collected from his life — — iii . 2 
have you collected them by tribes?. Corio(onus, iii. 3 
rank, of midnight weeds collected — Hamlet, iii. 2 

collected from all simples that have — iv. 7 

COLLECTION— make no collection.. Ci/mSe/me, v. 5 

doth move the hearers to collection — Hamlet, iv. 5 

a kind of yesty collection, which carries — v. 2 

COLLEGE— college of wit-craekers ..Much Ado, v. 4 

congregated college have concluded . . All's Well, ii. 1 

the college of the cardinals iHenry VL i 3 

colleges almost in Christendom . . Henry VIIL iii. 2 
COIyLIED— in the coUied night . . Mid. N. Dream, i. 1 

having mv best judgement collied Olhello, ii. 3 

COLLIER-haug him, foul co\\\\ir\..TwelphNighl, iii. 4 

are colliers counted bright Love'sL.Losl, iv. 3 

no, for then vre should be colliers. /(omeo ^Juliet, i. 1 
COLLOP-most dearest! my coUopl. W/n/er's Tale, i. 2 

thou art a collop of my flesh 1 Henry VL v. 4 

COLIiUSION— the collusion holds, tone's L. Losl,iv. 2 

COLMES— at saint Colmes' inch Macbeth, i. 2 

COLMES-KILL— carried to Colmes-kill.. — ii. 4 
COLOQUINTIDA-bitter as coloquintida. OWeHo, i. 3 
COLOSSUS— bnt a colossus can do. ... 1 Henry IV. v. 1 
the narrow world, like a Colossus.. ./«(i«sC(esar, i. 2 
COLOSSUS- ■WISE— 

and stands colossus- wise .... Troilus fy Cressida, v. 5 
COLOUR— with colours fairer painted .. Tempest, i. 2 

do you change colour? Two Gen.of Ver. ii. 4 

under colour of commending him . . — iv. 2 
advance the colom's of my love . . Merry Wives, iii. 4 
show no colour for my extremity . . — iv. 2 

into all the colours of the rainbow — iv. 5 

needs to fear no colours Twelfth Nighi, i. 5 

I fear no colours — i. .5 

by the colour of his beard — ii. 3 

a horse of that colour — ii. 3 

and 'tis a colour she abhors — ii. 5 

in this fashion, colour, ornament — iii. 4 

howsoever you colour it in being. . Mea.for Mea. ii. 1 

and head, just of his colour — iv. 3 

her hair shall be of what colour Much .4dn, ii. 3 

.of colour like the red rose on .Mid. N.'s Dream, iii. 1 
the eolo\U' of lovers; but to {rep.).. Love's L. Lost,i. 2 

are masked under such colours — i. 2 

wear his coloiu-s like a tumbler's hoop — iii. 1 

I do fear colourable colours — iv. 2 

for fear their colom's should be — iv. 3 

steal the colour from Bassanio's.il/er. of Venice, iii. 2 

of what colour? what colour As you Like it, i. 2 

about his neck : change you colour? . . — iii. 2 

most part cattle of tins colotu* — iii. 2 

hair is of the dissembling colour .... — iii. 4 
good coloiur, an excellent colour {rep.) — iii. 4 

of colour, weight, and heat All's Well, ii. 3 

which holds not colour with the time — ii. 5 

youth of a nation in his colour — iv. 5 

scorned a fair colour, or expressed .. — v. 3 
no link to colour Peter's hat. . Taming of Shrew, iv. 1 
what colour are your eyebrows?. . Winter'sTale, ii. 1 
'mongst all colours no yellow in't . . — ii. 3 

to colour the warden pies — iv. 2 

ribbands of all the colours i' the rainbow — iv, 3 

what colour for my visitation — iv. 3 

most marble there, changed colour . . — v. 2 
newly fixed, the colour's not dry .... — v. 3 

my hands are of your colour Macbeth, ii. 2 

steeped in the colours of their trade .... — ii. 3 

to spread his colours, boy King John, ii. 1 

our colours do return in those — ii. 2 

part your mingled colours once — ii. 2 

the colour of the king doth come .... — iv. 2 

the air OTth colours idly spread — v. 1 

follow unae(^uainted colours here? .. — v. 2 
tliy threatening colours now wind up — v. 2 

wound our tattered colom's clearly up v. b 

nnder whose colours he had fought. . Uichard 1 1, iv. I 
and rotten policy colour her working. 1 Henry IV. i. 3 

no colour like to right, he doth — iii. 2 

with some fine colour that — v. 1 

that wear those colours on them y. 4 

I have the wars for my colour 2Henry IV. i. 2 

in his true colours, and not oiu'selves ii. 2 

and your colour, I waiTant you, is as red Ii. 4 

hut a coloiu-. A colour, I fear (rep.) — v. 5 

suits not in native colours with Henry V. i. 2 

with patches, colours, and with forms — ii. 2 

'twas a colour he never liked — ii. 3 

he'sof the colour of the nutmeg — iii. 7 

dedicate one jot of colour unto iv (chorus) 

a<lvance our waving colours on 1 Henry VI. i. 6 

I love no colours: and, without {rep.) — ii. 4 

by these colours, for thy foes — ii. t 

the Talbot, with his coloiu:6 spread .. iii. 3 



COM 



COLOUK-disgracing of these colours.l Henri/ VL iii. 4 

the sanguine colour of the leaves — iv. 1 

jirosper our colours in this daugeroua — ' liv. 2 

our captains, and our colours — v. 3 

what colour is this cloak of? ilienryVI. ii. 1 

wliat colour is my Bown of? — ii. 1 

several colours we do wear (re;3.) — ii. 1 

but yet we want a colour for lus death — iii. 1 
whose hopeful colours lulvance with — iv. 1 

and with colours siiread marched SHenry VI. i. 1 

and their colours, often borne in I'ranee — i. 1 

that have forsworn thy colours — i. 1 

let our bloody coloiu-s wave! — ii. 2 

fatal colours of our striving houses .. — ii. 5 
I can add colours to the cameleon .. — iii. 2 
under the colour of his usual game . . — iv. S 

O cheerful colours 1 see, where — v. 1 

but his red colour hath forsook Richard III. Si. 1 

thou quake, and change thy colour? — iii. 5 
unless I have raista'en his colours much — v. 3 

for 'twas indeed his colour Henry VIIL i. 1 

why, Paris hath colour enougli Troil.Sf Cress, i. 2 

he having colour enough and the other — _ i. 2 
be patched with cloth of any colour. C'o?-io/anu«, iii. I 

lips did from their colour lly JuliusCa^sar,i. 2 

bear no colour for the thing he is .. .. — ii. 1 
seek no colour for yom- going .... Antony SfCleo.i. 3 
not leave out the colour of her hair ., — ii. 5 
what colour is it of? of its own colour — ii. 7 
her hair, what colour? Brown, madam — iii. 3 

put colour in thy cheek — iv. 12 

under her colours, are wonderfully ..Cymbeline, 1. 5 

against all colour, here did put __ iii. 1 

to gain his colour, I'd let a parish of — iv, 2 

give colour to my pale cheek — iv. 2 

the colour of her hair, complexion .... Pericles, iv. 3 

a fellow of the self-same colour Lear, ii. 2 

cast thy nighted colour off Hamlet, i. 2 

have not ciaft enough to colour — ii. 2 

turned his colour, and has tears in's eyes — ii. 2 

such an exercise may colour your — iii. ' 

what I have to do will want true colour — iii. 
as it may lose some colour Othello, i. 

COLOURABLE-colourable coloins. i.o»e's L. L. iv. 

COLOURED— coloured periwig.. Tuio Gen.of Ver.'w. 
take my coloiued hat and cloak.. Taming of Sh. '\. 
our wits are so diversely coloured ..Coriolanus, ii. 
thou shouldst be coloured thus Cymbeline, v. 

COLOURING-as passes colouring. Winter'sTale, ii. 

COLT— like unback'd colts Tempest, iv. 

like a rough colt; he knows not ..Mid. K.'s Dr. v. 

the hobby-horse is but a colt Love's L. Lost, ii. 

ay, that's a colt, indeed Merchant of Venice, i. 

youthful and unhandled colts — y. 

for young hot colts, being raged Pichard 1 1, ii. 

a plague mean ye, to colt me thus?. . 1 Henry IV. ii. 
your colt's tootn is not cast yet Henry VIIL i. 

COLTED— thou art not colted 1 Henry IV. ii. 



COLUMBINE— that columbine . . Loue's L. Lost, v. 
there's fennel for you, and columbines. Hamlet, iv. 

COMAGENE— king of Comagene./fntoiii/ ^-Cleo. iii. 

CO-jMART-same co-mart [ A'/i/.-cov'naut]. Hamlet, i. 

CO-MATES — now, my co-inates . . As you Like it, ii. 

COilB — to comb your noddle with..7'am/«^o/ Sh. i. 
when the bee doth leave her comb. .2Henry/^'. iv. 

comb do\vn his hair; lookl iHenry VI. in. 

you crow, cock, with your comb on. . Cymbeline, ii. 

COMBAT— I combat challenge .... Merry Wives, i. 
Pompey is imcasing for the combat?Loiie's L.L. v. 

I will not combat in my shirt — v. 

would by combat make her good . Winter'sTale, ii. 
but, O the noble combat, that, 'twixt — v. 

a noble combat hast thou fought King John, v. 

combat with adverse planets 1 Henry VI. i. 

my courage try by combat — i. 

in single combat thou Shalt buckle .. — i. 

grant me the combat — iv. 

and wherefore crave you combat? — iv. 1 

else, ruin combat witli their palaces! — v. 2 
single combat, in convenient place ..2Henry VL i. 3 
and I accept the combat willingly .. — i. 3 
the day of combat shall be the last . . — i. 3 

the day appointed for the combat — ii. 3 

to combat a poor famished man — iv. in 

whom I in combat slew — v. 1 

to combat with the wind 3Henry VL ii. 5 

though 't be a sportful combat. . Troilus <5- Cress, i. 3 
invite the Trojan lords after the combat — iii. 3 

break not his neck i' the combat — iii . 3 

dares me to personal combat Antony ^Cleo. iv. I 

emulate pride, dared to the combat Hamlet, i. I 

COMBAT .VNT— forward, combatauts.i?<cAa;d //. i. 3 

with these valiant combatants XHenrylV. i. 3 

you that would be combatants 1 Henry'VI. iv. 1 

alarum to the combatants iHenry VL ii. 3 

the head of the great combatant.. 7'ro//.<5-t'ress. iv. !> 
the combatants being kin — iv. 6 

COMBATED- Norway combated HamUt, i. 1 

COMBATING- and blood combating. MucA Ado, ii. 3 
his face still combating with tears ..Uichard II. v. 2 
wisdom and fortune combating. ^n/oni/^C/eo. iii. 11 

COMBED— be sleekly combed .... Taming of Sh. iv. I 

COMBINATE-eomb"inate husband. A/e.i. fyrMea. iii. 1 

COiMBlNATION-solemn combination . Twelfih A', v. 1 

the articles 0' the combination Henry VIIL i. I 

a combination, and a form, indeed .... Hamlet, iii. 4 

COMBINE— to thee doth combiue .As you Like it, v. 4 
two clxristian ai'inies might combine. A'i»^ Joh7i, v. 2 

and friendship shall combine Henry V. ii. 1 

combine your hearts in one — v. 2 

that they combine not there Coriolanus, iii. 2 

combine together 'gainst the enemy Lear, v. 1 

save what thou must eonibine iu . . Rojn. ^Jul. ii. 3 

COMBINED— I aiu cmhiued by.. .l/e.i.;br .V/ea. iv. 3 
whether lie v. a.-c.iuihineil with Norwav.A/ucteW, i.3 

letonr alliance he eoiubiiied Julius Ctpsar, iv. 1 

that which e.Miibiued us was most../ln(. ^Cleo. ii. 2 
and all couibiued, save what ..Romeo ^ Juliet, ii. 3 
thy knotted and conibineii locks to part. H.im/e/, i. 5 

COAlBLEoS— H comblees cock Tami ,g of Sh. ii. 1 



COM 




[ 122 ] 




COM 




COMBUSTION— of dire combustion . . Mm-I^e 
CO ME— tlie liour's now come 7V/;iy- 


/i, ii. 3 
«(, i. 2 
i. 2 
i. 2 
i. 2 
i. S 
i. 2 

(song) 
i. 2 

ii! 1 
ii. 1 
ii. 1 
ii. 1 

ii. 2 
ii.2 

iii. 2 

iii. 2 

iii. 3 

iv. 1 

iv. 1 

iv. 1 

iv. 1 

(song) 

iv. 1 

iv. 1 

iv. 1 

V. 1 

V. 1 

0, ii. 1 

ii.2 

ii.3 

ii. 4 

ii. 4 

ii. 4 

ii. 4 

ii. 4 

ii. 5 

ii. 7 

li. 7 

iii. 1 

iii. 1 

iii. 1 

iii. 1 

iv. 2 

iv. 3 

iv. 3 

v. 1 

v. 1 

V. 2 

V. 4 

V. 4 

■as, i. I 

i. 1 

i. 1 

i. 1 

i. 1 

i. 1 

i. 1 

i. 2 

i. 4 

i. 4 

i. 4 

i!4 
i. 4 
i. 4 
ii. 1 
ii. 1 
ii. 1 
ii. 1 
ii. 1 
ii. 1 
ii. 1 
ii. 1 

ii. 2 
ii.2 

ii. 2 

ii. 2 
ii. 2 
ii.3 
ii.3 
ii.3 
ii.3 
ii.3 
ii. 3 
iii. I 
iii. 1 
iii. 1 
iii. 2 
iii. 3 
iii. 3 
iii. 3 
iii. 3 
ii. 3 
iii. 3 
iii. 3 
iii. 4 
iii. 4 
iii. 4 
iii. 4 
iii. 4 
iii. b 
iii. b 
iii. 5 
iii. 3 
iii. b 
iii. 5 
iii. 5 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 


COJIE-I'U come no more i' the basket. /Vi 


rn,ir.iv.2 

— IV. 2 

— iv. 2 

— iv. 2 

— iv. 2 

— iv. 2 

— iv. 2 

— iv. 2 

— iv. 2 

— iv. 3 

— iv. 4 

— iv. 4 

— iv. 4 

— iv. 4 

— iv. 4 

— iv. 4 

— iv. b 

— iv. a 

— iv. 5 

— iv. 5 

— iv. 5 

— iv. b 

— V. 2 

— V. 5 

— V. 5 

— v. 5 
UXight,i. 3 

— i.3 

— i.3 

— i. 4 

— i. 5 

— i.b 

— i. 5 

— i. 5 

— i. 5 
_ i. 5 

— i. 5 

Z ii! 1 

_ ii.2 

— ii.3 
ii. 3 (song) 
ii. 3 (song) 

— ii. 3 
_ ii. 4 
ii. 4 (song) 

— ii.5 

— !!■? 

— ii'? 

— ii! 5 

— ii. 5 

— ii. 5 

— iii. 1 

— iii. 1 

— iii. 1 

— iii. 1 

— iii. 1 

— iii. 2 

— iii. 2 

— iii. 4 

— iii. 4 
_ iii. 4 

— iii. 4 

— iii. 4 

— iii. 4 

— iii. 4 

— iii. 4 

— iii. 4 

— iii. 4 

— iii. 4 

— iii. 4 
_ iii. 4 

— iii. 4 

— iii. 4 
i'.i. 4 

— iv. 1 

— iv. 1 

— iv. 1 
_ iv. 2 

— iv. 2 

— iv. 3 

— iv. 3 

— V. 1 

— V. 1 

— V. 1 

— V. 1 

— V. 1 

— V. 1 

— V. 1 

— V. 1 
;■ Meas. i. 1 

— i. 1 

— i- 1 

— i!.3 
_ ii. 1 

— ii. 1 

— ii. 1 

— ii. 1 

— ii. 1 

— ii. 1 

— ii. 1 

— ii. i 

— ii. 1 

— ii. 1 

— ii. 1 

— ii. 1 

— ii.2 

— ;!•'■* 

— ii! 3 

— ii.3 


COME— come all to help him Mens, fa 

I am come to know your pleasure 


;■ Mcas. ii. 4 

— ii. 4 

— iii. 1 

— iii. I 

— iii. 1 

— iii. 2 

— iii- 2 

_ iii. 2 

— iii. 2 

— iii. 2 
_ iv. 1 
_ iv. 1 

— iv. 1 

— iv. 1 

— iv. 1 

— iv. 1 

— iv. 2 

— iv. 2 
iv. 2 

— iv. 2 

— i\ . 2 

— iv. 2 

— iv. 2 

— iv. 3 

— iv. 3 

— iv. 3 

— iv. 3 

— iv. 3 

— iv. 3 

— iv. 3 

— iv. 4 

— iv!6 

— V. 1 

— v. 1 

— V. 1 

_ v. 1 

H v! 1 

— V. 1 

— V. 1 

— V. 1 

— V. 1 

— V. 1 

— V. 1 

— V. I 

— V. 1 

— T. 1 

'uchAdo, i. 1 

— i. 1 

— i. 1 

— i. 1 

— i.3 

— i. 3 

— ii. 1 

— ii. 1 

— ii. 1 

— ii.2 

— ii.3 

— ii. 3 

— ii.3 

— ii. .' 

— ii.3 

— ii. 3 

— ii.3 

— ii.3 

— .ii- 3 

— iii! 1 

— iii. 3 

— iii. 3 

— iii. 4 

— iii. 4 

— iii. 4 

— iii. b 

— iv! 1 

— iv. 1 

— iv. 1 

— iv. 1 

— iv. I 

— iv. 2 

— iv. 2 

— iv. 2 

— V. 1 

— V. 1 

— V. 1 

— V. 1 
_ V. 1 

— V. 2 

— V. 2 

— V. 2 

— V. 2 

— V. 2 

— V. 2 

— V. 4 

— T. 4 

— y-* 
s Dream, i. 1 

— i. 1 

— i. 1 

— ii. 1 

— ii. 1 

— ii. 1 

— ii. 2 

— ii.2 

— ii-2 

— ii!2 
ii. 3 (sons) 
ii.3(son;0 
ii. 3 (son;,') 

— iii!'l 

— iii. 1 

— iii. ) 

— iii. 1 


we'll come dress you straight 

youth in a basket, come out here I 

what wife I say! come, come forth . . 
take up your wife's clothes? Come away 
come you, and the old woman (rep.) 

she comes of errands, does she? 

come down, you witch 

shoidd that be, comes so secretly? .. 

they must come off 

fie, fie, he'll never come 

terrors in liini, that he should not come 
how you'll use him when he comes . . 
let it not be doubted but he'll come . . 


I come to answer tliy best pleasure .... — 

and hitlier come in't — 

shake it ott': come on — 


who'stheie? come in: the wish 

that now you are come, you will 

come your way, sir -. , . . 

if he be a whoremonger, and comes . . 
his neck will come to your waist 


come unto these yellow sauds — i. 2 

come from thy ward — 




it works; come on — 

comes to the entertainer — 

dolour comes to him, indeed — 

what to come, in yoiu^ and mj' discharge — 
as tliou got'st Milan, I'll come by Naples — 


a year and a quarter old, come Philip 

late come from the see, in special 

here comes a man of comfort 


I liave a servant comes with me 

I come about my brother 

what, ho! within! come forth! 

she comes to do you good 

come hitlier, sirrah: can you cut 

come on, bawd; I will instruct 

now are they come. This is a gentle 
I believe there comes no countermand 

and here comes Claudio's pardon 

fearless of what's past, present, or to com« 
come away, it is ahnost clear dawn . . 

for, look 5'ou, the warrant's come 

here comes your ghostly father 

I am come to advise you 

any thing to say to me, come to my. . 
from the danger that might come — 
she's come to know, if yet her (rep.). . 

the duke cfimes home to-morrow 

ui the times to come, have ta'en .... 


tlie storm is come again — 


twenty thousand worthier come to crave 

I come to speak with sir John 

till she come dowm; I come to speak 
there is a friend of mine come to town 

dat de court is know to come 

if it should come to the eai- of the court 


if thou bcest Trinculo, come forth — 

come on then; down, and swear — 

come on, Trinculo, let us sing — 

wilt come? I'll follow, Stephano — 

come to me, and I'll be sworn 'tis true — 

before you can say, come and go — 

■well. Now come, my Ariel — 


come up into my cliamber 

I come to her in wliite 

mistress Page is come with me 

I pray you come ; hold up the jest . . 

here comes master Fenton 

you must come in earlier o'nights. Tw-f // 
for here comes sir Andrew Ague-face 
and come home in a coranto? 


great .Tuno comes ; I know her — 

spring come to you at the farthest — iv. 1 




come with a thought: I thank you O'^P-) — 

do fly liim, when he comes back — 

come hither, spirit — 

peace, here she comes Two Gen. of I'eroi 


here comes my lady 

for here he comes, one of thy kin 

how have j'ou come so early by 

and theretore comes to speak with — 

of that too, and therefore comes 

come to what is important in't 

unless perchance, you come to me . . 
if tliat the youth will come tliis 


the friar is come. Come, I hai-e foimd 
well, he in time may come to clear . . 
being come to knowledge that there. . 

now 1 come to't, my lord 

noble prince, as there comes light 


now come I to my father (rep.) — 

here comes my fatlier — 

far beliind his worth come all the praises — 
this gentleman is come to me — 




come on mistress; here's a gentlewoman 

here comes the rascal I spoke of 

poor souls, come you to seek 

which here you come to accuse 

come hither, goodman baldpate 

come hither, Mariana: say, wast 

come hither, Isabel: your friar is now 

and choke your good to come 

and all my life to come I'll lend you 




so hardy to come again in Ills affairs 

here comes the fool, i'faith 

•what's to come is still unsure — 

come kiss me sweet and twenty — 

that they come from my niece 

come hither, boy; if ever thou 

come away, come away, death — 

come thy ways, signior Fabian (rep.) 
come by some notable shame? 


like your journey, when you come . . — 


and this way comes he — 

every tiring that he can come hy . . . — 
could their master come and go — 






no grief aid ever come so near — 


don Pedro of Arragon comes this night. M 


for here comes the trout that 

and I have heard herself come thus . . 

having come from a day-bed 

and then I comes behind 

here comes my noble gull-catcher . . 

he will come to her in yellow 

construe to them whence you come . . 
every feather that comes before his eye 

madam, I come to whet your 

when -wit and youth is come to harvest 




is it come to this, i'faith? 




in their rooms come thronging soft . . 
who comes here? what news, Boracliio? 

comes me the prince and Claudio 

and then comes repentance 


who's this comes here? — 

come not within the measiure — 

his ancestors, that come after him.. iVeny IVi 
iiere comes sir John — 


if a maid could come by them 

and whatsoever comes athwart his . . 
till all graces come in one woman (rep.) 


come, we have a hot venison pasty (rep.) — 

here comes fair mistress Anne — 

■will't please your worship to come in — 

tliey will not sit, till you come — 

tlicre's pippins and cheese to come ,, — 
as ever servant shall come in house . . — 

here comes my master — 

come, take-a your rapier, a'ad come after — 

dat shall come in my close c — 

to come under one body's hand .,..., — 

Rugby, come to the court vit me — 

come near the house, I pray you — 


the youngest wren of nine comes 

come, bring us, bring us where he is .. 


come what plague could have come . . 
come hither, Leonato: what was it .. 
if I perceive the love come from her 
here comes Beatrice : hy this day .... 
I am sent to bid you come in to dinner 
been painful, I would not have come 

sent to bid you come in to dinner 

I'll make her come, I warrant you .. 
when Beatrice doth come, as wc do.. 

come hither, neighbour Sea-coal 

but to write and read comes by natiu:e 

and bid her come hither 

my lady Beatrice else, here she comes 

are come to fetch you to church 

indeed, neighbour, he comes too short 
you come hither, my lord, to marry . . 
come to mai-ry her. Lady, you come 

comes not that blood, as modest 

come, let us go; these things come .. 

come appareled in more precious 

until they come to take hands 

come before master Constable (rep.).. 

come you hither, sirrah 

let the watch come forth 

here comes the prince and Claudio . . 
here comes the man we went to seek 
almost come to part almost a fray. . . . 
here comes master signior Leonato . . 
to-morrow morning come you to my 
that no man living shall come over it 
to have no man come over me? 


best have guard about you, if he come 

it did come to his hands 

and I'll come to thee 


oh ho! do you come near me now? . . 
can come between me and the 


if he come under my hatches . — 


for it comes to pass oft, that 

he will find it comes from 

here he comes with your niece 




you'll come to dinner, George? — 


well, come again to-morrow 


you are come to see my daughter — 

ranting host of the Garter comes — 

come a little nearer this ways — 




this comes with seeking you 

to bid yon come speak with her 

come on, sir; liold 

you are well fleshed; come on 


yoii may come and see the picture . , — 

she ho|)es there will come a time — 

Ik- may come and go between you both — 
now, eoidd I come to her with any . . — 

come you to me at night — 

come to me soon at night — 

and cuckold, come to me soon at night — 
dat he is no come; he has pray (rep.) — 

he is dead already if he be come — 

one, two, tree, four, come for? — 

tree hours for him, and he is no come — 

I am come to fetch you home — 

come at my heels. Jack Rugljy — 

there comes my master ....". — 

we are come to you, to do a good office — 


come by and by to my chamber 


willing it shall come to note 


here comes the man, sir, tliat 


here comes sir Toby halting 

you come to fright iis 

so comes it, lady, jou have been 

bade me come smiling 


wouldst thou come when I called thee? 
for here comes one in haste (rep.) — 

will you come presently? 

when I send for you, come hither — 
here comes the prince and Claudio . . 


bid come before us Angelo Meas. f 


go home, John Rugby; I come anon — 
when I suddenly calf you, come forth — 
and come when you are called — 


I come to know your pleasure 

come not to composition with 

where madam Mitigation comes! 

under her roof, as come to 

here comes signior Claudio 

whence comes this restraint? 

and nothing come in partial 


full of vexation come I Mr/J.N.' 

quick bright things come toconiusiou 


is come in at your back door — 

that come like women in men's apparel — 


all her elves come here anon 

the queen come not within his sight 
but room, faery, here comes Oberon . . 

wliy art thou here, come from 

and you come to give their bed joy . . 
progeny of e\'ils comes from our debate 

my gentle Puck, come hither 

biit who comes here? I am invisible 
coine not near oiu- fairy queen! . . — 
cliarm, come our lovely lady nigh — 
weaving s'.iiders, come not here . . — 
never nfav'st thou come Lysandar . . 
if you think I come liither as a lion. . 

or else one must come in with 

he comes to disfigure, or present .... 
that he heard, and is to come again. . 




heaven so speed me in ray tune to come! — 

I come to him: this is my — 

ay, that I will, come cut and — 

may ask your father; here he comes — 

come not to my child — 

I come to your worship from — 

once more to come to her between . . — 
I like his money well: O here he comes — 
you come to know what hath passed — 
comes me in tlie instant of our — 






but you shall come to it 

now, sir, come on: what was 

the time is yet to come 

what's come upon thee 

come hither to me, master Froth 

I never come into any room 

if you live to see this come to pass . . 
come hither to me master Elbow; come 
he will come straight 


come to me at your convenient leisure — 

desires you to come suddenly - 

look where his master comes — 

come hither William ; hold up your {rep.) ~ 


well, come to roe to-mon-ow 

I come to visit the afflicted spirits 







COM 



[ 1-23 ] 



COME— forth my mimic comes ..Mid, K.Drnam, iji. 2 

poorn anil ilorision never come in tears — jJ!' ^ 

Link, wluTC thv love comes — iii. 2 

vou woiiUl follow, but yet come not.. — 111.2 

whiit, Imve \ou coine by uight — iii. 2 

let me omie to lit-r — ni. 3 

!is one 10010 not \ritliin aiiotlier's way — m. 2 

li.'ie. ■onus one — iii- '-i 

w lien 1 eome wlieie he calls — m. '- 

eonieliitlier, lanihere — iii- * 

vet bill tlireeV eoine one more — ■!!• - 

here she eonies, curst, and suil — i.ii- 2 

come, sit thee down upon this tlowery — iv. I 

un exposition of sleep come U[iou mo — iv. 1 

but, as in health, come to my — iv. 1 

when my cue comes, call me — iv. 1 

is he come home yet? — !*'■ - 

if he come not, then the plaj^ — 1^ • - 

here come tlie lovers, full ot joy — v. 1 

come now; what masks, what dances — v. 1 

where I have come, great clerks have — v- ' 

we come not to otlend, but with .. — v. 1 (pro . 

we come but in despite (rep.) — v. 1 i,prol.) 

anon comes Pyramus, sweet youth . . — v. 1 

yonder she comes. O wall, full often — v- 1 

■"tide death, I come without delay — v. I 

here eome two noble beasts in — v. 1 

as lion eonie in strife into this place. . — v. 1 

he dares not come there for the caudle — v. I 

but silence, here comes Thisbe — v. 1 

so comes (Col. Jv7i(.-then came] Pyranuis — v. 1 

before Thisbe come back and tinds . . — v. 1 

here she comes; and her passion — v. 1 

sisters three, eome, come to me — ^ — v. 1 
come on then, I will swear to .... Love's L. Lost, i. 1 
that no woman shall come within — — 1 . 1 
here comes ill embassy the French . . — i. 1 
or vainly comes the admired princess — 1. I 
none spare that come within his power — ii. 1 

here comes Boyet — ii- t 

like one that comes here to besiege . . — li. 1 

here comes Navarre — ji- 1 

the packet is not come — u- ' 

you may not come, fair princess .... — 11. 1 

because your heart cannot come by her — iii. 1 

1 will come to your worship to-morrow — iii. 1 

the princess comes to hunt here — iii- 1 

comes a member of the commonwealth — iv. 1 

why did he come? to see? — iv. 1 (letter) 

by the horns, yourself, come near — — iv. 1 

shall I come upon thee mth — iv. 1 

when it comes so smoothly off — iv. 1 

here comes one with a paper — iv. 3 

who is becomes here? — jv. 3 

why, he comes in like a perjure — iv. 3 

your mistresses dare never come in . . — iv. 3 

if fairings come thus plentifully in . . — v. 2 

here comes Boyet, and mirth is in his — v. 2 

we will do't, come what will come — v. 2 

but what, but what, come they to — v. 2 

come on then , wear the favours — v. 2 

the rest will ne'er come in — v. 2 

be masked, the maskers come — v. 2 

if to come liitber you have measured — v. 2 

how eome you thus estranged? — v. 2 

and come here by chance — v. 2 

see where he comesi — v. 2 

never eome in visor to my friend .... — v. 2 

whether the three worthies shaU come — v. 2 

I say, they shall not come — v. 2 

and here she comes again — v. 2 

1 here am come by chance — v. 2 

ergo, I come with this apology — v. 2 

here comes Hector in arms (rep.") .... — v. 2 

of the year, come challenge — v. 2 

come when the king doth to (rep.) .. — v. 2 

and milk comes frozen home in — v. 2 (song) 

here comes Bassanio, yom- inost .Merch.ofJ'cnke,i. 1 

let old wrinkles come — i. 1 

to come fairly olf from — i. 1 

many .Tasons come in quest of her .. — i. 1 

Buiiei-fluity comes sooner by white hairs — i. 2 

princely suitors that are already come? — i. 2 

and you will eome into the court — i. 2 

a fore-runner come from a fifth — i. 2 

who is he comes here? — i. 3 

you come to me, and you say, Shylock — i. 3 

come on; in this there can be {rep.) .. — i. 3 

truth will come to light — ii. 2 

father, I am glad you are come — ii. 2 

U rare fortune 1 here comes the man.. — ii. 2 

to come anon to my lodging — ii. 2 

e'er the Jew her father eome to heaven — ii. I 

say, I will come — ii- .') 

there will come a christian b|y — ii. .') 

lierc comes Ijorenzo: more ot this — ii. 6 

but come at once; tor the close — ii. B 

what, art thou come? on, gentlemen — ii. 6 

the wind is come about, Bassanio.... — ii. 6 

four comers of the earth they come.. — ii. 7 

for princes to eome view fair Portia — ii. 7 

but they come, as o'er a brook — ii. 7 

and comes to his election presently .. — ii. 9 

comes to hazard for my worthless . . — ii. 9 

one that comes before to signify .... — ii. 9 

as this fore-spurrer comes before his — ii. 9 

that comes so mannerly — ii. 9 

for here be comes in the likeness .... — iii. 1 

that U8e<l to come so smug upon .... — iii. 1 

here comes another of the tribe — iii.! 

with bleared visages, come forth to .. — iii. 2 

what demigod hath eome so near — ■!!• - 

I eome by note, to give — iii. 2 

but who comes here? Lorenzo . — iii. li 

to come with liim along — iii. 2 

ilo not persuade you to come .... — iii. 2 (letter) 

biit.till 1 ciiinc nL-ain, nobed — iii. 2 

Ml liinil to ''(Mnr iihrcMUl with liiin.... — iii. 3 

pray (Jod, Bassanio come to see mc.. — iii. 3 

this comes too near the praising of . . — iii. 4 



CDME— come on, Nerissa; I have.iI/er.o/ Ti 
what you say ; here he comes .... 

and we will eome in to dinner — 

he should never come to heaven .... — 
thou art eome to answer a stony .... - 

at the door; he conies, my lord 

to determine this, come here to-day 

new come tVom Padua - 

comes with him, at my importunity 
here, I take it, is the tfoctor come .... 

a Daniel come to judgment! 

other half comes to the privy cofters 
otlier half comes to the general state 

to eome again to Carthage 

did nobody come; but, hark, I liear. . 

who comes so fast in silence 

who comes with her? None, but 

there's a post come from my master. . 
but there is come a messenger before 

I will ne'er come in your bed 

that doctor e'er come near my house 
it comes from Padua, from Bellario. . 
are richly come to harbour suddenly 

my ships are safely come to road 

but were the day come, I should wish 

yonder comes my master .-Is youl. 

that I should come to sucli penury . . — 
hath a disposition to eome in disguised — 
for my own honour, if he come in ... . — 
if he come to-morrow, I'll give him — 

may'st in honour come off again — 

mistress, you must come away — 

but I was bid to come for j'ou — 

here comes monsieur le Beau — 

there comes an old man, and his three sons ■ 
come on ; since the youth will not . . — 
I come but in, as others do, to try . . — 

but come your ways — 

look, here comes tfie duke — 

did come to languish; and, indeed .. — 
your praise is come too swiftly home — 

unhappy youth, come not within . . — 
no matter wliither, so you eome not here — 
but come thy ways, we'll go along . . — 

look you, who comes here — 

comeliither, coinehither, comehither — ii 

if it do come to pass — ii 

an' if he will come to Ami — ii 

who can come in, and say 

but who comes here ? 

kind should this cock come of? . . 

or comes of a very dull kindred. . 

here comes young master Ganymede — 

peace! here comes my sister, readin" — 

as wine comes out of a narrow-mouthed — 

he comes to kill my heart! — 

soft! comes he not here? — 

and come every day to my cote — 

come apace, good Audrey; I will — 

sluttishnesg may come hereafter .... — 

here comes sir Oliver — 

would come this morning, and comes not? - 
who comes here? mistress, and master — 
come not thou near me (^repeated) , . — 
never come in my sight more (rep.) . . — 
so tardy, come no more in my sight . . — 

for though he comes slowly — 

but he comes armed in his fortune . . — 
and so, come death. Two o' clock . . — 

or come one minute behind — 

a shadow, and sigh till he come — 

to sleep: look, who comes here — 

for here comes more company — 

here comes the man you mean — 

look you, here comes my Rosalind . . — 

here comes a lover of mine — 

here come two of the banished duke's — 

here comes a pair of strange 

who comes here? one that goes with . . AW 
Florence is denied before he comes . . 
what's he comes here? It is the count 

for the knaves come to do that 

your marriage comes by destiny — 

that he bid Helen eome to you 

is for Helen to eome hither 

see, that you come not to woo iionour 

farewell ; come hither to me 

nay, come your ways ^repeated) .... 

1 come to tender it, and my appliance 
come on, sir; I shall now put you . . 

here comes the king 

we'll ne'er come there again 

here he comes; I pray you, make us 
where I will never come, whilst .... 
day by day, come here for physic — 
save that he comes not along with her 

and when he means to come 

know it, before the report come — iii 

here they come, will tell you more . . - 

which never shall come off — iii 

no, come thou home, Rousillon 

come, night; end, day! 

nay, come: for if they do approacli. . 

look, here comes a pilgrim 

they come this way; if you will — 

now they eome: that is Antonio 

cannot be removed : here he comes . . 
every night he comes with musics . . 

he can come no other way 

ho! here he comes; to beguile two .. 
come on, tliou art granted space — 

when niidiiiglit eonies, knock 

not medille with liim till he eome .. 

not lie lier ulii.e to suy, is come 

Hoiiiliii: inns! I'o'rto tartarossa . . 

for it will come to pa,s8, that everj* . . 

his bi'ilmcss comes post 

to come into his presence 

1 will come after you, with what .... 
look, here he <!ome8 himself 



— ill. b 
iii. b 
iii. b 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. I 
iv. ! 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 



V. 1 
v. 1 
V. 1 

V. I 
V. 1 
V. 1 
V. 1 
V. 1 
V. 1 
V. 1 
V. 1 
V. 1 

keil, i. 1 
i. 1 
i. 1 



ii. 1 
ii. 3 
ii.3 



b (song) 
.'•. (song) 
5 (song) 

— ii. 7 

— ii. 7 

— ii. 7 



— ill. 2 



ill. b 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 



V. 1 

V. 2 
V. 2 
v. 3 
V. 4 
n-'ell, i. 1 
i. 2 
i. 2 
i. 3 
3 (song) 



(letter) 
iii. 2 

(letter) 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 
iii..') 
iii. b 



COM 

COME— but love, tliat comes too late . . All's IVell, v. 3 

come on, my son, in whom — v. .3 

that she may quickly come — V. 3 

(where you nave never come) — v. 3 

fears to eome into me — v. 3 

for four or Ave removes, come short.. — v. 3 

come hither, count — t. 3 

your reputation comes too short .... — v. 3 

let him eome and kindly Taming 0/ ah. 1 (ind.) 

bid them come near — 1 (ind.) 

you are come to me in happy time .. — 1 (ind.) 

hence coincs it tliat your kindred — 2 (ind.) 

undress you, and come now to bed .. — 2 (ind.) 

are come to play a pleasant — 2 (ind.) 

Vincentio, come of the Bentivolii — i. 1 

and am to Padua come — i. 1 

if Biondcllo, thou wert come ashore — i. 1 

rid the house of her: come on — i. 1 

when Biondcllo comes, he waits .... — i. 1 

here comes the rogue : sirrah — i. 1 

sirrah, come hither, 'tis no time — i. 1 

comes there any more of it? — i. 1 (ind.) 

after who comes b J' the worst — i. 2 

signior Hortensio, come you to part. . — i. 2 

then had not Grumio come — i. 2 

and come you now with— knocking. . — i. 2 

come abroad to see the world (rep?) — i. 2 

I come to wive it wealthily — i. 2 

nothing comes amiss, so money comes — i. 2 

grieved as I? butwho comes here? .. — ii. 1 

every day I cannot come to woo .... — ii. 1 

with" some spirit when slie comes .... — ii. I 

but here she comes: and now — ii. 1 

nay, come again, good Kate — ii. 1 

here comes your lather — ii. 1 

Sunday comes apace — ii. 1 

that Lucentio that comes a wooing. . — iii. 1 

if it would please him come and marry — iii. 2 

is he come? Why, no, sir — iii. 2 

who comes with him. O sir, his lacquey — iii. 2 

come, howsoe'er he comes (rep.) — iii. 2 

and yet I come not well — iii. 2 

not come ; now sadder that you come so — !!!■ ^ 

I am eome to keep my word — iii. 2 

away to-day, before night come .... — iii. 2 

ere 1 should come by a fire to warm — iv. 1 

shall find, when he comes home — iv. 1 

why, she comes to borrow nothing .. — iv. 1 

dagger was not come from sheathing — iv. 1 

here are they come to meet you — iv. 1 

bid my cousin Ferdinand come hither — iv. 1 

to matte her come, and know her — iv. I 

and come to Padua, careless of — iv. 2 

but that you're but newly eome — iv. 2 

beggars, that come unto my father's — iv. 3 

we inay come there by dinner time.. — iv. 3 

supper time, ere you eome there .... — iv. 3 

but, sir, here comes your boy ... . — iv. 4 

here comes Baptista — iv. 4 

having come to Padua to gather — — iv. 4 

to come against you come with yom- — iv. 4 

come on, o' God's name — jv. 5 

since we have come so far — iv. 5 

and then come back to my master as — v. 1 

Cambio conies not all this while .... — v. 1 

that his father is come from Pisa — v. 1 

comehither, crack-hemp (repen(ed).. — v. 1 

to come at first when he doth send . . — v. 2 

mistress come tome, I go, son (rep.) — v. 2 

and she cannot come. How! (rep.) .. — v. 2 

my wife to come to me forthwith .... — v. 2 

nay, then she needs must come — v. 2 

not come, she bids you come (rep.) . . — v. 2 

her come to me. I know her (.rep.) .. — v. 2 

by my holidame, here comes Katharina! — v. 2 

thcre^s a wench ! come on, and kiss me — y. 2 
reign now! here comes Boliemia. . Winter's Tale,u 2 

the boy hence, he shall not come about — ii. 1 

said she's goodly, come, between .... — ii. 1 

when you shall eome to clearer — ii. 1 

abound in tears as I come out — ii. 1 

credulity will not come up to the truth — ii. 1 

please you, eome something nearer . . — ii. 2 

might come to me again; who's there? — ii. 3 

commanded none should come at hiin — ii. 3 

I come to bring him sleep — ii.3 

I do come with words as med'cinal . . — 11. 3 

I say, I come from your good queen — ii. 3 

services, past, and to come) that you — ii.3 

you, sir, come you hither — ij. 3 

to the oracle, are come an hour — 11. 3 

but what comes from myself — ni- 2 

'fore who please to come and hear .. — 111.2 

which comes tome in name of fault.. — iii. 2 

when I shall come to know them — — 111.2 

to me comes a creature sometimes .. — in. 3 

yet I'll tarrv till my son come — 111. 3 

when thou art dead and rotten, come — m. 3 

wliv, then comes in the sweet o' the — iv. 2 (song) 

for'thelife tocnme. I sleepout — ;v. 2 

of beating mav come to a great — iv. "- 

which we two have sworn shall eome — _iv. 3 

daffodils, that come before tlie swallow — iv. 3 

never come better; lie shall come in — iv. 3 

though thev come to him by the gross _— iv. 3 

come buy (if mc, come; come (rep.) — iv. 3 (song) 

come to thcpedler; money's a mcdler — iv. 3 (song) 

let them eome in ; but quickly now . . — 1 v. 3 

but, come on; contract us — iv. 3 

I told yon what would come ot this. . — iv. 3 

come not before him — iv. 3 

tug for the time to come — iv. 3 

theold man comein withahnbliub — iv. 3 

let mv prophecy come home til you! — iv. 3 

if I iriav come to tlic siieech of him . . — iv. 3 

shall all come'under the hangman .. — iv. 3 

to Inive his daiigliter dime into grace! — iv. 3 

his grave, ami 1 'nie npain to me .... — v. 1 

he comes not like to bis tiithers .... — v. 1 

they are come: your mother was moat — ». 1 



COM 



[ 124] 



COJIE— will come on very slowly. . Il'inler's Tale, v 

here comes a. 2ontk'm:iii, that, happily ' — v 

here comes the lady Fiiuliua's — v 

here come those 1 have (liino gOLid — v 

comes it not something near? — v 

there is an air comes from her — v 

nay, come away; heqiieath to — v 

Syracusan born, come to the bay. Com. nf Errors, i 

for what she saw must come — i 

Droraio, till I come to thee — i 

here comes the almanack of my true — i 

come not home; you come not norae — i 

I from my mistress come to you .... — i 

come on, sir knave, have done — i 

till you come home to dinner — i 

they'll go, or come — ii 

till he come home again — ii 

here conies your man, now is — ii 



ii. 2 
iii. 1 
iii. 1 
iii. 1 
iii. 1 
iii. 2 



— i. 7 



iii. 1 

iii. 1 

.iii. 3 

iii. 4 



I desire him to come home 

will you come home? quoth I — 

see, liere he comes, how now, sir? — 

how comes it now, my husband {rep.) — 

come again, when you may — 

faith no; he comes too late — 

wife? you might have come before .. — 
about evening, come yourself aloue . . — 

put forth, come to the mart — 

lest I come not time enough — 

stays but till her owner comes aboard — iv. I 

to prison till it come — iv. 1 

the hours come back ! — iv. 2 

that time comes stealing on — iv. 2 

she comes in the habit of (rep.) — iv. 3 

will burn; come not near her — iv. 3 

here comes my man — iv. 4 

let him not come near me — iv. 4 

and come with naked swords — iv. 4 

come to the Centaur — iv. 4 

let us come in, that we — v. 1 

and tliereof comes it, tliat his — v. 1 

won his grace to come in — v. 1 

in person conies this way — v. 1 

see, where they come — v. 1 

and bid the lady abbess come — v. 1 

I come Graymalkin! Paddock calls.. ..JV/ac6e(/i, i. 1 

whence comfort seemed to come — i. 2 

who comes here? — i. 2 

he did come. A drum, a drum (rep.)... — i. 3 

new honours come upon him — i. 3 

come what come may; time — i. 3 

they are not yet come back — i. 4 

the king comes here to-night — i. 5 

come to my woman's breasts — i. 5 

Duncan comes here to-night — i. 5 

all our nights and days to come give 

we'd j ump the life to come 

come in time; have napkins 

come iu, equivocator 

here's an English tailor come hither 

has awaked him; here he cornes , 

here comes the good Macdutf 

if there come truth from them 

I'll come to you anon 

let it come down. O treachery ! 

then comes my tit again 

will come to know his destiny 

catch it ere it come to ground 

his message ere he come — iii. 6 

something wicked this way comes .... — iv. 1 

(howe'er you come to know it) — iv. 1 

Dunsinane hill shall come against .... — iv. 1 

come like shadows, so depart — iv. 1 

come in, without there! — iv. 1 

can come a devil more damned — iv. 3 

comes the king forth — iv. 3 

see, who comes here? — iv. 3 

loyou, here she comes! — v. 1 

1 will set down what comes from her . . — v. I 

he cannot come out of his grave — v. 1 

till Burnam forest come to Dunsinane. . — v. 3 

the cry is still, they come — v. 5 

do come to Dunsinane (^repealed) — v. o 

thougli Birnam wood be come — v. 7 

here conies newer comfort — v. 7 

controversy, come from tlie country. . King John, i. 1 

good fortune come to thee ! — i. 1 

and then comes answer like — i. 1 

but who comes in such haste — i. 1 

at our importance hither is he come — ii. 1 

along is come the mother queen — ii. 1 

how comes it Wren, that tliou art — ii. 1 

come to thy grandam, child — 

troop of huntsmen, come our lusty .. — 

that here come sacrifices for the — 

bid kings come bow to it — 

all thinas begun come to ill end — — 
here comes the holy legate of the pope — 

better part our praj'ers come in — 

and silver, becks me to come on — 

come hither, little kinsman irep.) .. — 

yet it sliall come, for me to do — 

look, who comes here! a grave — 

young lad, come forth — 

an angel should have come to me — 

come iortli. Do as I bid you do — 

lei iilm come back, that his ■ — 

of tile king doth come and go — 

the tidings come, that they are — 

this murder had not come into — 

shall think thedevil is come from hell — 
grapple with him, ere lie come so nigli — 
where the holy legate comes apace . . — 

his spirit is come m — 

and come you now to tell me — 

I come, to learn how you have dealt. . — 
annoyance that comes near his nest. . — 

as to tliink 1 come one way of — 

the lords are all come baclc — 

ht- will be dead, or ere I come — 

\idll bid the winter come to thrust. ... — 



ii 


1 


n 


2 


11. 


1 


Ill 


1 


111 


1 


HI. 


1 


111. 


1 


111. 


3 


111. 


3 


111. 


3 


lii. 


4 


IV. 


1 


IV. 


1 


!^- 


1 


iv. 


2 


IV. 


2 



11 


1 


ii 


1 


11 


1 


11 


1 


11 


2 


11 


2 


1] 


2 


11 


2 


11 


:> 


11 


3 


11 


a 


11 


3 


11 


3 


11 


3 


ii 


3 


11 


3 


11 


3 


11 


4 


111 


2 


111 


2 


111 


2 


111 


2 


111 


2 


iii 


3 


111. 


3 


111. 


3 


111. 


3 


Ill 


3 


111. 


3 


111. 


3 


Ill 




IV. 




P'- 




iv. 




IV. 




v. 




V. 


2 


V. 


2 


V. 


2 


V. 


3 


V. 


3 



COME— O ceusin, thou art come to set. King John, v. 7 

are come home again, come tiie three — v. 7 

appeareth bv the cause you come EichardlJ. i. 1 

come I appellant to this princely .... — i. I 

let him not come there, to seek — i. 2 

who hither come engaged by — i. 3 

plaining comes too late — i. 3 

whether our kinsmau come to see.. .. — i. 4 

if tliat come short, our substitutes . . — i. 4 

make haste, and come too late! — i. 4 

will the king come? that I may 

all in vain comes coimsel to his 

the king is come ; deal mildly 

come on, our queen 

here comes the duke of York 

wlii 1st otlrers come to make him 

now comes the sick hour that 

what a tide of woes comes rushing . . 

but wlio comes here? It is ray son 

here come the lords of Ross 

till ray infant fortune comes to 

and I am come to seek that name .... 
I come (what lord j'ou will) from .. 

here comes liis grace in person 

and here art come before the expiration - 
but as I come, I come for Lancaster 
but in this kind to come, in braviug 

witnessing storms to come 

BO much blood thither come again . . 
but who comes here? more health .. 
humoured thus, comes at the last .... 

no worse can come, to fight 

Bolingbroke, I come to change 

but who comes here? Well, Harry .. 

hither come even at his feet 

he is come to ope the purple 

Northmnberland comes back from . . 
to come down. Down, down, I come 

fet he is come. Stand all apart.... 
come but for mine own 

but stay, here come the gardeners .... 

duke of Lancaster, I come to thee 

tills paper, while the glass doth come 
torment'st me ere I come to hell .... 

the woe*s to come; the children 

your eyes of tears; come home with.. 

this way the king will come 

here coraes my son Aumerle 

be cropped before you come to prime 

never more come in mv sight 

but who comes here? Where is the king? - 
she's come to pray for your foul sin. , 

his words come from his mouth 

it is as hard to come, as for 

where no man never comes 

but come yourself with speed 1 Hen 

indeed, you come near me now, Hal 

well, come what will, I'll tarry 

they seldom come, they wished-for come - 
let not his report come current for . . 

and if the devil come and roar for - 

here comes your uncle - 

fill up chronicles in time to come - 

come away, and he hanged, come away - 

w^hat time do you mean to come .... — 

Ned, pr'ythee, come out of that fat . . - 

drive away the time till FalstafiF come — 

come liither, Francis — 

sir, it cannot come to so much — 

the rest, and then come in the other — 

of good fellowship come to J'ou! .... — 

he says he comes from your fafher . . — 

here comes lean Jack, here comes.,.. — 

'tis like, if there come a hot June .... — 

now Harry, whence come you? — 

they are come to search the house . . — 

but will they come, when you do — 

in my conduct shall your ladies come — 

see, how this river comes me — 

here come our wives, and let us .... — 

and so come in when ye will — 

for the time will come, that I shall . . — 

the business that I come to speak of — 

letters come from your father {rep.). . — 

imder whose government come they — 

the hope of what is to come in — 

let them come ; they come like sacrifices — 

O that Glendower were come! — 

lately come from swine-keeping .... — 

whose fellows are these, that come after — 
my cousin Vernon's are not yet come up — 

cousin, stay till all come iu. I come — 

coraes not in, o'erruled by prophecies — 

have not sought it? how comes it then? — 

durst not come near your sight — 

here coraes your cousin — 

but who conies here? Why staud'st.. — 

if he do corae in my way (re;;.) — 

if not, honour comes unlooked for . . — 

for the hour is come to end the one . . — v. 4 

the posts corae tiring on 2Henry IV. (indue.) 

here comes the earl. What news.... — i. 1 

here comes my servant Travers — i. 1 

what good tidings corae with you? . . — i. 1 

look, here coraes more news ■ — i. 1 

didst thou come from Shrewsbury? . . — i. 1 

here comes the nobleman that — i. 2 

you would not come when I sent — i. 2 

your life, to come speak with me .... — i. 2 

of this land-service, I did not come . . — i. 2 

and come against us in full puissance — i. 3 

past and to corae, seem best — i. 3 

an a' come but within my vice — ii. 1 

he comes continually to Pye-comei — ii. 1 

yonder he coraes; and that arrant .. — ii. 1 

so rough a course to come by her own? — ii. 1 

the butcher's wife, come in then — ii. 1 

the throng of words that come with . . — ii. 1 

come hither, hostess — ii. 1 

is it come to that? I had thought .... — ii. 2 



■y/r. i. 1 
i. 2 
i. 2 
i. 2 
i. 3 



ii 




11 




11 




11 




11 




11 




11 




ii 




III 




??.' 




iii 




iii 




IU 




IV. 




IV. 




IV. 




IV. 




IV. 




IV 


2 


IV. 


2 


iv. 


3 


IV. 


3 


IV. 


4 


V. 


1 


y. 


1 


V. 


2 


V. 


3 


V. 


3 


V. 


3 



COM 

COME— mass, here comes Bardolph. .2Henri/ IV. ii. 2 

how comes that? says he, that takes — ii. 2 

that I am yet come to town — ii. 2 

they'll corae in straight — ii. 4 

to corae halting oft', you know; to come — ii. 4 

rascal! let hiin not come hither — ii. 4 

tliere comes no swaggerers here — ii. 4 

come we to full points here — ii. 4 

the music is come, sir. Let them play — ii. 4 

very true, sir; and I come to draw you — ii. 4 

OJesu, are you come from Wales? .. — ii. 4 

wearied posts, come from the north. . — ii. 4 

twenty-nine years, come peascod time — ii. 4 

bid mistress "rearsheet come to my . . — ii. 4 

I Col.'] come, she comes blubbered (rep.) — ii. 4 

but, ere they come, bid them — iii. i 

the time shall come, thus did he .... — iii. 1 

of things not yet come to life — iii. 1 

corae on, come on, come on ; give me — iii, 2 

that comes hither anon about soldiers — iii. 2 

here come two of sir John Falstaffs men — iii . 2 

accommodated ! it comes of accommodo ^ iii 2 

look, here comes good .sir John — iii 2 

grow till you come unto it — iii 2 

come oft', and on, swifter than he ... . — iii 2 

and come you in, and come you in . . — iii 2 

in goodly form comes on the enemy — iv. 1 

here come I from our princely general — iv. 1 

this offer comes from mercy — iv. 1 

we come within our awful banks — iv. 1 

andgreet his grace: my lord, we come — iv. 1 

some good thing coraes to-morrow .. — iv. 2 

here comes our general. The heat. ... — iv. 3 

every tiling is ended, then you come — iv. 3 

and, when'you come to court — iv. 3 

demure boys come to anjy proof — iv. 3 

and this valour conies of sherris — iv. 3 

hereof comes it, that prince Harry . . — iv. 3 

now afoot, come underneath — iv. 4 

your highness knows, comes to no further — iv. 4 

those that I am come to tell you of I — iv. 4 

will fortune never come with both .. — iv. 4 

Ome! come near me, now — iv. 4 

lo, where he coraes; come hither to me — iv. 4 

for now a time is come to mock — iv. 4 

look, here comes ray John of Lancaster — iv. 4 

William cook, bid nim come hither.. — v. 1 

here come the heavy issue of dead . . — v. 2 

here coraes the prince. Good-morrow — v. 2 

now comes in the sweet of the night — v. 3 

fill the cup, and let it come — v. 3 (song) 

come from the court with news irep.) — v."3 

if sir, you come from the court — v. 3 

the Lord, that sir John were come 1 — v. 4 

well ; of siraerance comes ease — v. 4 

ere they come from the coronation . . — v. 5 

will leer upon him, as a' comes by .. — v. 5 

not to come near our person by ten . . — v. 5 

it come unluckily home — (cpil.) 

is come, to give him hearing Henry V. i. 1 

the weasel Scot coraes sneaking — i . 2 

how he comes o'er us with our wilder — i. 2 
till the king come forth, and not till — ii. (cho.) 

here comes ancient Pistol and his wife — ii. 1 

you must come to my master — ii. 1 

good husband, come home presently — ii. 1 

of women, come in quickly to sir John — ii. 1 

sweet men, come to him — ii. 1 

thus come the English with full — ii. 4 

lest that our king come here liimself — ii. 4 

embassador fiom the French comes . . — iii. (cho.) 

knocks go and come; God's vassals.. — iii. 2 

captain Fluellen, you must come.. .. — iii. 2 

not so good to come to the mines .... — iii. 2 

here a' comes, and the Scots captain — iii. 2 

the Leviatlum to come ashore — iii. 3 

here comes the man. Captain — iii. 6 

tell liim we will come on _ iii. e 

1 hope they will not come upon us now — iii. 6 

if it come to the arbitrement of — iv. I 

if ever thou come to me and say — i v. 1 

my penitence comes after all — iv. 1 

and comes safe home, will stand .... — iv. 3 

once more I come to know of thee .. — iv. 3 

come thou no more for ransom — iv. 3 

a ton of moysl come hither, boy .... — iv. 4 

all haggled over, comes to him — iv. 6 

life is come after it indifferent — iv. 7 

here comes his majesty — iv. 7 

bid them come down, or void the field — i\ . 7 

here comes the herald of the French — iv. 7 

I come to thee for charitable licence — iv. 7 

soldier, you must come to the kuig . . — iv. 7 

I peseech you now, come apace — iv. « 

treason come to light, look j'oii — iv. 8 

my liege, corae from the heart — iv. 8 

he is come to me, and prings me — v. 1 

■why here he coraes, swelling like .... — v. t 

at night when you come into your . . — v. 2 

when I come to woo ladies — v. 2 

here comes your father — v. 2 

and what's to come, she can descry ..\ Henry VI. i . 2 

come, come from behind — i. 2 

then come o' God's name, T fear no . . — i. 2 

I am corae to survej' the Tower — i. 3 

open, if that you corae not quickly .. — i. 3 

none durst come near, for fear — i. 4 

is come with a great power — i. 4 

here, here she comes — i. 5 

thy hour is not yet come — i. 5 

coine in, and let us banquet royally. . — i. 6 

come hither, captain — ii. 2 

message craved, so is lord Talbot come — ii . 3 

well, well, come on; who else? — ii. 4 

will my nephew come? (repealed) .... — ii. 5 

come to gather money for their — iii. 2 

market-tolks, that come to sell — iii. 2 

dare you come forth and meet us ... . — iii. 2 

like sohliers, corae and fight it out?.. — iii. 2 

in the rearward, comes the duke .... — iii. 3 



COM 



COME-come hither, you tliiit would.l /icHii/ /';. iv. I 

thiTC comes the niiii, tliLi-e begins .. — iv. 1 

too lute comes rescue — j^'* '* 

tliou art come to a Iciist ofdeatl; .... — iv. 5 

1 come to liuow wliat prisoners tliou — i\'. 7 

ifoneehe come to hctt cimiiiial — v. 1 

now the time is come, tliat France .. — v. 3 

all your strict jnx'ciseness come to tliis? — v. 4 

we come to l)e uitbrmed l>y — v. t 

to come to cross the seas to Englantl.. — v. 5 
come, let us ill; ami with all speed ..2Ilr„njri. i. 1 

a diiy will c.niic, wlien York. — i. 1 

eome, Nell. Ihou wilt ride — i. 2 

gold oanuot eomc amiss — i. - 

my lord protector will come this way — i. 3 

here a' comes, uietliinks, and the tiueen — i. 3 

come back, t'ool; this is the duke — i. 3 

could 1 eome near yoiu' beauty with.. — i. 3 

como Somerset, well see thee — i. 3 

come, my masters; the duchess — i. 4 

holy uncle, would 'twere come to that! — ii. 1 

uome with thy two-haud sword — ii. 1 

come to the king, and tell hmi what — ii. 1 

liere come the townsmen on procession — ii. 1 

Sijnpcox come; come, otter at my slu-ine — ii. 1 

come on, sirrab : off with your doublet — ii. 1 

till they come to Berwick — ii. 1 

let it come i' tiiitb, and I'll pledge .. — ii. 3 

masters, I am come liitlier, as it were — ii. 3 

but, sot't! 1 think she comes — ii. 4 

come you, my lord, to see my open .. — ii. 4 

my lord of Uloster is not come — iii. 1 

he sliould come about your highness — iii. 1 

that thou art come too soon — iii. 1 

is the hour to eome, that e'er I proved — iii. I 

from Ireland am 1 come amain — iii. 1 

epring-time showers, eomes thought — iii. I 

and undiscovered come to me again . . — iii. 1 

irom li-e!aud come I with my strength — iii. I 

here comes my lord — iii. 2 

come, basilisk, and kill the innocent — iii. 2 

come hither, gracious sovereign — iii. 2 

come, Warwick, eome good Warwick — iii. 2 

come, Suffolk, 1 must waft thee — iv. 1 

come, soldiers, show what cruelty. ... — iv. 1 

therefore come you with us — iv. 1 

come, aud get thee a sword — iv. 2 

come, eonic, let's fall in with them .. — iv. 2 

coine hitiicr, sirrah, 1 must examine — h'. 2 

o'er wlioin, in time to eome, 1 hope . . — iv. 2 

till I do come to l^ondon — iv. 3 

come then, let's go fight with — iv. 6 

England may come out of your mouth — iv. 7 

coward! what, to come behind folks? — iv. 7 

we come ambassadors from the king — iv. 8 

York is newly come from Ireland. ... — iv. 9 

proelaimeth, as he comes along — iv. 9 

the lord of the soil come to seize me.. — iv. 10 

to come to rob my grounds — iv. 10 

fret, come thou and thy iive men ■ — iv, 10 

et ten thousand devils come against me — iv. 10 

from Ireland thus comes York — v. 1 

a messenger, or come of pleasm-e? — v. 1 

Somerset comes with the queen — v. 1 

Clifford; bid him come amain — v. 1 

they come; I'U warrant, they (re/).).. — v. 1 

and Warwick, come to me — v. 1 

Clifford, I say, come forth and fight. . — v. 2 

one or both of us the time is come .... — v. 2 

come thou new ruin of old Clifford's — v. 2 

noble as he is, look where he comes . . — v. 3 

eternized in all age to eome — v. 3 

when the king comes, offer ZHenry yi. i. 1 

for shame, come down — i. 1 

come, cousin, let us tell the queen .... — i. 1 

here comes the queen, whose looks .. — i. 1 

come son, let's away (rff.) — i. 1 

you are come to Sandal m — i. 2 

look, where bloody Clifford comes! .. — i. 3 

and so he comes, to rend his limbs.... — i. 3 

Plantagenet! I eome, Plautageuetl .. — i. 3 

come, bloody Clifford, rough — i. 4 

why come you not; vvhat! — i. 4 

come make him stand upon — i. 4 

such comfort come to thee — i. 4 

I come to tell you things since theu.. — ii. 1 

are come to join with you — ii. 1 

therefore eomes my brother Montague — ii. 1 

I come to pierce it or to give — ii. 1 

thirty thousand men, comes Warwick — ii. 2 

away! for vengeance comes along .. — ii. 5 

or else come after — ii. 5 

come York, and Richard, AVarwick.. — ii. 6 

anon the deer will come — iii. 1 

here comes a man^ let's stay — iii. 1 

not a man comes for redress of thee. . — iii. 1 

ay, but she's come to beg — iii. 1 

and eome some otiier time, to know.. — iii. 2 

am come to crave thy just — iii. 3 

I come in kindness, and unfeigned love — iii. 3 

forbear this talk ; here comes the king — iv. 1 

where Somerset and Clarence eome .. — iv. 2 

come on, ray masters, each man — iv, 3 

and eome now to create you — iv. 3 

that he comes towards London — iv. 4 

come therefore, let us fly — iv. 4 

eomes hunting this way — iv. 5 

come theu, away; let's have — iv.b 

come hither, England's hope — iv. ti 

come therefore, let's about it speedily — iv. 6 

but, why come you in arras? — iv. 7 

back that come to succour you — iv. 7 

the lords aud gentlemen to come with — iv. 8 

in London, till we eome to him — iv. 8 

is sportful Edward corae? — v. I 

come, Warwick, take the time — V. 1 

see, wher" Oxford comes! — v. I 

who is nigh? come to me, friend — v. 2 

come quickly Montague, or 1 am dead — v. 2 

aud lo, wher« youthful Edward comes — v. .*> 



[ 1'^^ ] 



COiME — ere you come there, be sure ..iHminjI'l. v. .0 

so come to you, aud yours — v. 5 

if a tliin-: (■'"Mies ill li'is iu-ivd — v..') 

but wliiMvlMic ilnst till. II (Mine? — v. i; 

eome liiUur.lii'SK, and lot me kiss.... — v. 7 

to my soul! here Clarence nimes . . Hii-lwrJ III. i. I 

but who come.* liere? tlie new-delivered — i. 1 

in heaven, wliere thou .^luiJt never come — i. 2 

here come tlic lords of l:;iiekiii;.'haui.. — i. 3 

are come from visitiiiL; his majesty .. — i. 3 

the day will come, thiittliou slialt .. — i. 3 

Catesliy, I eome: lords, will you go.. — i. 3 

soft, here come my exccutiuiiers .... — i. 3 

and come to have the warrant — i..^ 

Clarence is come, false, fleeting — i. 4 

what, if it come to tliee again'? — i. 4 

wherefore do yon come? To, to, to .. — i. 4 

a liatterer, come thou on my side — i. 4 

in gootl time, here comes tlie noble duke — ii. 1 

seldom comes the better: I fear — ii. 3 

here comes a messenger: what news? — ii. 4 

the mayor of London comes to greet you — iii. I 

that he comes not to tell us (rep.). ... — iii. 1 

here comes the sweating lord (i-ep) . . — iii. 1 

would fain have come with me to meet — iii. 1 

if om- brother come, where shall we.. — iii. I 

here comes the duke of York — iii. 1 

let them rest; come hither; Catesby — iii. 1 

master rise and come to me — iii. 2 

come on, come on, where is your — iii. 2 

come the next Sabbath — iii. 2 

in happy time, here eomes the duke — iii. 4 

had you not come upon your cue .... — V.\- ^ 

thus far come near ui}' person — jjl' -^ 

and all will come to naught — iii. ti 

the mayor theu, and lus brethren, come? — iii. 7 

are come to have some conference . . — iii. 7 

here Catesby conies again: now Catesby — iii. 7 

troops of cituens to come to him .... — iii. 7 

we come to him in perfect love — iii. 7 

and that you come to reprehend my — iii. 7 

in this just suit eome I to move — iii. 7 

here the lieutenant comes: master .. — iv. 1 

come hither, Catesby; riunoiu: it abroad — iv. 2 

open means to come to them — iv. 2 

comehither,Tyrrel; go, by this token — iv. 2 

and here he comes: all health — iv. 3 

come to me, Tyrrel, soon at ai'ter supper — iv. 3 

wretched Margaret! who comes here? — iv. 4 

the time would come, that bottled . . — iv. 4 

shall come agalTi transformed — iv. 4 

with triumphant garlands will I come — iv. 4 

by the time to come. That thou — iv. 4 

swear not by time to come — iv.4 

Katelitt', come hither — iv. 4 

comes to be yoiu* liege, you cannot {.rep.) — iv. 4 

mid of night, come to my tent — v. 3 

means to come by what he hath . — v. 3 

my lord, he doth deny to come — v. 3 

enrich the time to come with — v. 4 

I come no more to make you .... Henry VIII. (prol.) 

those, that come to see only a show . . — (prol.) 

only they, that come to hear — (prul.) 

lo, where comes that rock — i. 1 

grief comes through commissions.... — i. 2 

and it's come to pass, that tractable.. — i. 2 

this revokement and pardon comes. . — i. 2 

made suit to eome in his presence.... — ;• 2 

pr'ythee, corae hither: what fair — i. 4 

thus far have come to pity me — ii. I 

of my long weary life is come upon me — ii. 1 

we come to a now your royal pleasure — ii- 2 

acquainted forthwith, for what you come — ii. 2 

come hither, Gardiner. My lord of York — ii. 2 

fiir more than blushing comes to — ii. 3 

who comes here? Good-morrow, ladies — ii- 3 

nor could come pat betwixt too early — ii. 3 

king of England, come into the court — ii. 4 

queen of England, come into court (rep.) — ii. 4 

to wear our mortal state to come .... — ii. 4 

1 know, my comfort comes aloug ... . — ii. 4 

pray their graces to come near — iii. 1 

we come not by the way of accusation — iii. 1 

not to come off; in his displeasure .. — iii. 2 

is he ready to come abroad? — iii. 2 

where high profits might come home — iii. 2 

my endeavours have ever come too short — iii. 2 

the third day, comes a frost, a killing — iii. 2 

you come to take 3'our stand here. ... — iv. 1 

when it comes, Cranmer will find .. — iv. 1 

is come to lay liis weary bones — iv. 2 

that comfort coraes too late — iv. 2 

I am happily corae hither — v. 1 

corae, corae, give rae your hand — v. 1 

you shall this morning come before us — v. 1 

else no witness would come against you — v. 1 
come back? what mean you? I'll not come — v. 1 

let liim come in. Your grace — v. 2 

in judgement eomes to hear — V. 2 

but know, I come not to hear — v. 2 

come lords, we trifle time away — v. 2 

with the great tool corae to court .... — v. 3 

banquet of two beadles, that is to come — v. 3 

are come already from the christening — v. 3 

some come to take their ease — (epil.) 

to 'renedos they come Troilus ^ Cressidu^ (^rol.) 

Cressid comes into my thoughts irep.) — i. 1 

1 cannot come to Cressid but by I'andar — i. 1 

'rroilua will not come far behind him — i. 2 

not come to't: you shall tell me (rep.) — i. 2 

when comes Troilus? I'll show you.. — i. 2 

an the devil come to him, it's all one — i. 2 

yonder comes Paris, yonder comes Paris — i 2 

what sneaking fellow comes yonder? — i. 2 

here come more. Asses, fools — i. 2 

tell him 1 come; I doubt, he be hurt — i. 2 

that we come short of our suppose ., — i. 3 

comes from Troy. Nor 1 from Troy come — i. 3 

if any come. Hector shall honour — i. 3 

of things to come at large — i. 3 



COM 



COME— Ajax eome safe off,. . . Troilus ^ Cressida., i. 3 

tlien would come some matter from.. — ii. I 

ere I come iinv iiiuk; to your tents .. — ii. I 

that mass of inouii to conic — ii. 2 

in time to eome, euiionize us — ii. a 

good 'rhersites, conic in and rail .... — ii. n 

and discipline come not near thee! . . — ii. 3 

art thou come? why, my cheese — ii. 3 

look you, who comes here? — ii. 3 

come in with me, Thersitcs — ii. 3 

may easily untie: here comes Patroclus — ii. 3 

we come to speak with him (/Y//J.).. .. — ii. 3 

fresh kings are coine to Troy — ii. 3 

come knights from east to west — ii. 3 

I come to speak with Pads from ,,.. — iii. J 

they are come from field — iii. 1 

here he comes: how now, how now? — iii. 2 

she'll come straight: you must — iii. 2 

come your ways, come your ways.-.. — iii. 2 

come draw this curtain — iii. 2 

come in, come in; I'll go get — iii. 2 

boldness comes to me now — iii. 2 

shall, in the world to come — iii. 2 

live to eome in my behalf — iii. 3 

1 will corae last; tis like — iii. 3 

what, comes the general to speak ... . — iii. 3 

to come as humbly — iii. 3 

Hector to come unarmed to my tent — iii. 3 

I come from the worthy Achilles — iii. 3 

my lord, corae you again into — iv. 2 

pray you, come in; 1 woidd not — iv. 2 

to this valiant Greek comes fast upon — iv. 3 

here, here he coraes: ah sweet ducks I — iv.4 

have patience; she shall come anon — iv. 4 

good brother, come you hither — iv. 4 

a coasting welcome ere it comes — iv. 5 

yonder conies the troop — iv. 5 

half Hector comes to seek this — i v. 5 

great Agamemnon comes to meet — iv. 5 

what's past, and what's to come — iv. 5 

here comes Thersites. How now .... — v. 1 

here comes himself to guide you .... — v. 1 

there will come some cliange — v. I 

she comes to you. Stand wliere — v. 2 

Cressid come forth to him — v. 2 

corae hither once again — v. 2 

shall I come? the hour? ay, come .. — v- 2 

day is ominous; therefore, come back — v. 3 

believe I come to lose my arm — V. 3 

soft! here come Sleeve, and t' other.. — v. 4 

hacked aud cliipiied, come to him — v. 5 

come both, you cogging Greeks — v. 6 

come here about me, you my myrmidons — v. 7 

how ugly night comes breathing — v. 9 

when coraes your book forth? .. Timoji of Athens, i. 1 

60 'tis: this comes off well — i. 1 

bid him corae to me — i. 1 

look, who coraes here — i. 1 

so they come by gi'eat bellies — i. 1 

I come to have thee thi-ust rae out . . — i. 2 

I come to observe; 1 give tjiee — j. 2 

that I might come nearer to you — i. 2 

there comes with them a foreriraner — i- 2 

and come freely to gi'atulate — i- 2 

they only now come liut to feast — i. 2 

what a sweep of vanity comes tliis way! — i. 2 

what will this come to? — i. 2 

it comes in charity to thee — i. 2 

and come with better music — i. 2 

what, you come for money ? — ii. 2 

here eomes the lord — ii. 2 

stay, stay, liere eomes the fool — ii. 2 

no, 'tis to thyself; corae away — ii. 2 

here comes m3' mistress' page — ii. 2 

when men come to borrow — ii. 2 

aside; here comes lord Tiinon (j-e;^.) — ii. 2 

the future comes apace — ii. 2 

1 come to entreat 3^our honour — iii. I 

and eome again to supper to him. ... — iii. 1 

is my lord ready to come forth? - — iii. 4 

ha! banishment? it comes not ill.. .. — iii. 5 

he sent to rae, sir — here he comes .... — iii. 6 

yonder coraes a poet, and a painter .. — iv. 3 

come nearer; then I love thee — iv. 3 

suspect still coraes where an estate .. — iv, 3 

may profit meet, and corae too late .. — v. 1 

we are hither come to offer yon — v. 1 

by some eoiuse, aud come to rae — v. 1 

corae not near him, if thou wouldst not — v. 1 

come hither, ere my tree hath lei t .. — v. 2 

come not to me again — v. 2 

tliither come, and let my gravestone — v. 2 

here come our brothers — y. 3 

corae, come. Soit; who comes here?. Corio/rt/iwi, i. I 

but it proceeds, or comes, from — i. 1 

the lady Valeria is come to visit you — i- 3 

come on, you coward?; you were got — i. 3 

over and over he comes, and up again — j 3 

yonder conies uews: a wa-'cr — i. 4 

corae on, my fellows; he tliat retires — i. 4 

come on; if you'll stand fast — i. 4 

we are come off" like Komaus — i. ti 

come I too late? The shepherd — i. U 

come I too late? Ay if you eomc not — i. ti 

he was wont to come home wounded — ii. 1 

he comes the third time home — ii. I 

had 1 come cottiiietl lioiiie — ii- 1 

to Coriolanus eome all joy uiid honour! — ii. 2 

he comes, and in the gown of humility — ii. 3 

to eome by him where he stands — ii. 3 

here comes a brace: you know — ii. 3 

here come more voices— your voices-. — ii. 3 

come aw ay. This man has marred . . — iii. 1 

sir, how coraes 't tliat you liave lioij) to — iii. 1 

he must come, or what is worst — iii. 1 

come all to ruin; let thy mother .... — iii. 2 

and come home beloved of all — iii. 2 

what, will he eome? Jle's coming . . — iii. 3 

well, here he comes. taUuly, Ido.. — iii. 3 

here comes his niotlier — iv. 2 



COME— hoi)e to come upon them .... Coriottmus, iv. 3 

but come lu : let me commend — i'^'* '^ 

some news 18 come [K;if.-coming] ,. — iv. 6 

here come the clusters — iv. 6 

vhen he shall come to his account .. — jv. 7 

whene'er we come to our account — — iv. 7 

and come to speak with Coriolanus . . — v. 2 

swoon for what's to come upon thee — v. '2 

mv wife comes foremost — v. 3 

all li\ing women are we come hither — v. ■! 

but, let it come: Aufidius — v. 3 

say no more; here come the lords — — y. 5 
comes in triumph over Pompey's ..Julius Cnsar, i. 1 

fellow, come from the throng — i. 2 

come on my right hand, for tliis ear — i. - 

or, if j-ou will, come home to me — i- 2 

things themselves comes CsEsar — i. 3 

for here comes one in haste — j- 3 

when it is lighted, come and call me — ii. 1 

these men, that come along with you? — ii- 1 

tliat we then could come by Cajsar's — ii. 1 

whe'r Cffisar will come forth to-day — ii- I 

the morning comes upon us — ii. 1 

embrace the means to come by it ... , — ii- 1 

end, will come when it wiU come . . — ii. 2 

1 come to fetch you to (^repeated) .... — ii- 2 

I will not come to-day — ii. 2 

tell them, Cfesar will not come — ii- 2 

my will, I will not come — ii - 2 

you will not come, tlieir minds — ii. 2 

look where Publius is come to fetch me — ii. 2 

come not near Cosca — ii. 3 (paper) 

come hither, fellow: which way .... — li. 4 

to great Cajsar as he comes along .... — ii- 4 

say, I am merry; come to me again.. — ii. 4 

the ides of March are come — iii- 1 

in the street? come to the Capitol .. — iii. 1 

softi who comes here? a friend — iii. 1 

that Antony may safely come to him — iii. 1 

so please him come unto this place . . — iii. 1 

but here comes .Ajitony — iii. 1 

Ate by his side, come hot from hell.. — iii. 1 

write for him, to come from Rome .. — iii- 1 

I come to bury Cassar, not to praise him — iii. 2 

come I to 6i)eak in Cajsar's funeral . . — iii. 2 

I must pause till it come back to me — iii- 2 

there will a worse come in his place — iii. 2 

O, what would come of it 1 — iii. 2 

will you give me leave? Come down — iii- 2 

I come not. friends, to steal away. ... — iii. 2 

a Cassar: when oomes such another? — iii. 2 

Octavius is already come to Rome .. — iii- 2 

to visit liim; he comes upon a wish.. — iii. 2 

comes his army on? They mean.... — iv. 2 

in general, are come with Cassius .. — iv- 2 

and let no man come to our tent .... — iv- 2 

you shall not come to them — iv. 3 

come yourselves, and bring Messala — iv. 3 

come In, Titinius: welcome, good .. — iv. 3 

Mark Antony, come down upon us . . — iv. 3 

come on refreshed, new-added — iv. 3 

never come such division 'tween .... — iv. 3 

ha! who comes here? I think, it is . . — iv. 3 

it comes upon me; art thou anything — iv- 3 

the enemy would not come do'svn — v- 1 

and come down with fearful bravery — v. 1 

the enemy comes on with gallant — v. 1 

if you dare tight to-day, come to the field — v. 1 

end of this day's business, ere it come? — v. 1 

let them all come down — v- 2 

time is come round, and, where I.... — v. 3 

come down, behold no more — ■ v. 3 

come liither, sirrah: in Parthia did I — v. 3 

come now, keep tliine oath! — v. 3 

clouds, dews, and dangers come — v. 3 

Brutus, come apace, and see how I . . — v. 3 

here comes the general: Brutus is ta' en — v. 4 

come hither, good Volumnius — v. 5 

I know, my hour is come ^ v. 5 

look, where they come ! Aniony fy Clenpalra, i. ! 

your dismission is come from Csesar — i- 1 

lie comes too short of that great — i- 1 

hush! here comes Antony — i. 2 

but here comes Antony- I am sick.. — i- 3 

never given you leave to come! — i. 3 

comes deared, by being lacked — i. 4 

says it will come to the full — ii. 1 

not if the small come first — ii. 2 

here comes the noble Antony — ii. 2 

but that to come shall all be done . . — ii. 3 

would I had never come from thence — ii- 3 

though it come too short, the actor ,. — ii. 5 

thou shouldst come like a fury — ii. 5 

that first we come to words — ii. 6 

in my bosom shall she never come .. — ii. 6 

and shortly comes to harvest — ii. 7 

to come. 6old, go to; come hither, sir — iii. 3 

might command it: come thou near — iii. 3 

there's strange news come, sir — iii. 5 

you come not like Cesar's sister .... — iii. 6 

you are come, a market-maid to Rome — iii. 6 

to come thus was I not constrained . . — iii. 6 

and his atfairs come to me on the wind — iii. 6 

here comes the emperor, is't not strange — iii- 7 

there I will attend what further comes — iii. 8 

friends, come hither: I am so lated - . — iii. 9 

sent our sclioolmastcr, is he come back? — iii. 9 

him appear that's come from Antony — iii- 10 

such as I am, I corne from Antony.- — iii. 10 

O, is it come to this? — iii. 1 1 

well said; come on: call — iv. 2 

Antony is come into the field........ — iv. 6 

come tnee on- I'll halt after — iv 7 

come on then ; he may recover yet . . — i v. 9 

all come to tills? the hearts — iv. 10 

when the exigent should come (rep.) — iv. 12 

do't ; the time is come — iv. 12 

come tlien; for with a wound — iv. 12 

draw, and come. Turn from me then — iv. 12 

fear of what hath come to pasa — iv. 12 



COME-I am come, I dread, too \ate.Anl. ^ Clco. iv. 12 
tlmt welcome which comes to punish us — iv. 12 
come a little : wishers were ever fools — iv. 13 

ere death dare come to US? — iv. 13 

come hither, Proculeius: go, and say — v. 1 

guard her till Cicsar come — v. 2 

your death will never let come forth — v. 2 
death? come hither, come! come, come — v. 2 

let him come in; how poor — v. 2 

husband, I come: now to that name — v- 2 
come tlien, and take the last warmth — v. 2 

here comes the gentleman Cymbdine, i. 1 

if the king come, I shall incur — i. 2 

where air conies out, air comes in — i- 3 

I would they had not come between us — i. 3 
charming words, comes in my father — i. 4 
but how conies it, he is to sojourn. . - . — i. 5 

here comes the Briton — i. -') 

if I come oft', and leave her in such . , — i. 5 

here comes a flattering rascal — i-G 

every day that comes, comes to decay — i- (i 
conies from my lord with letters .... — i. 7 

that's come to coiirt to-night? — ii. 1 

there's an Italian come — ii- I 

come off, come off'; as slippery — ii. 2 

I would this music would come — ii- 3 

here comes the king — ii. 3 

a worthy fellow, albeithe comes on . . — ii. 3 
than come to be but named of thee . . — ii. 3 
wish that warmer days would come.. — ii- 4 

the stone's too hard to come by — ii. 4 

lo, here she comes: I am ignorant .. — iii- 2 
the Roman, comes to Miltord Haven — iii- 4 

none dare come about him — iii- i 

where is she, sir? come nearer — iii- .5 

I would these garments were come . . — iii. -') 

stay, come not in — ijl- "^ 

fair youth, come in — iii. 6 

a woman's fitness comes by fits — iv. 1 

we'll come to you after hunting — iv. 2 

not probable to come alone — iv. 2 

ordinance come as the gods foresay it — iv. 2 
look, here he conies, and brings the dire — iv. 2 

and worms will not come to tnee — iv. 2 

come on then, and remove him — iv. 2 

as chimney-sweepers, come to dust.. — iv. 2 (song) 
all follow this, and come to dust — — iv. 2 (song) 
consign tothee, and come to dust.... — iv. 2 (song) 

nothing ill come near thee I — iv. 2 (song) 

and they come under the conduct of. . — iv. 2 

come more, for more you're ready — iv. 3 

against the part I come with — v. 1 

though you, it seems, come from .... — v. 3 

I come to spend my breath — v. 3 

you come in faint for want of meat . . — v. 4 

of what's post, is, and to come — v. 4 

let it come: sufficeth, a Roman — v. S 

I stand on fire: eome to the matter . . — v. .'5 

past, in being, to come! — v. 6 

how come these staggers on me ? — v. 5 

where you can, he comes not here-. TilusAndron. i. 2 
how comes it, that the subtle queen. . — _i. 2 
come on then, horse and chariots .... — ii. 2 
here comes a parcel of our hopeful . . — ii. 3 

great empress, Bassianus comes — ii. 3 

not by wondrous fortune come — ii. 3 

canst not eome to me, I come to thee — ii- 4 
who comes with our brother Marcus — iii. 1 
make uswondered at in time to come — iii. 1 

come agree, whose hand shall go — iii- 1 

die before tlieir pardon come — iii- 1 

come hither, Aaron — iii- 1 

I shall never come to bliss — iii. 1 

till Lucius come again, he leaves .... — iii. 1 
come hither purposely to poison me. . — iii. 2 
comes in likeness of a coal-black ... . — iii. 2 

see, how swift she comes! — ■ iv. 1 

who comes here? Good-morrow .... — iv. 2 
when you come to Pluto's region — — iv. 3 
and that it comes from old Aiidronicus — iv. 3 

Marcus, the post is come — iv-3 

not come from heaven? — iv. 3 

and when you come to him — iv. 3 

but who comes here, led by a lusty . . — v. 1 

few come within the compass of — v. 1 

let him come near — v. 1 

uncle Marcus, and we will come .... — v. 1 

revenge is come to join with me — v. 2 

Titus, I am come to talk with thee — v- 2 

come down, and welcome me (rep-) .. ■ — v. 2 
then I'll come, and be thy waggoner — v. 2 

my ministers, and come with me — v. 2 

revenge, now do I corae to thee — v. 2 

see, here he comes, and I must ply . . — v. 2 
bid him come and banquet at thy house — v. 2 

till I come [Co(- Kn ^-tm■n] again — v. 2 

Publius, come hither, Caius — v. 2 

ready 'gainst their mother comes .... — v. 2 

come hither, boy, come, come — v. 3 

from ashes ancient Gower is come .Pericles, i. (Gow.) 
see, where she comes, appareled like — — i- 1 

hush, here come the loiiis of Tyre — i- 3 

from Mm I come with message — i.3 

one sorrow never comes — i. 4 

and come to us as favourers — i- 4 

for what he comes, and whence he comes — i. 4 
nor come we to add sorrow to your tears — i. 4 
here he comes; what shall be next . . — ii. (Gqw.) 

come away, or I'll fetch thee — ii. 1 

they ne'er come but I look to be washed — ii. 1 
princes and knights come from all pai'ts — ii. 1 

'twill hardly come out (rep.) — ii. 1 

for he comes to an honoured triumph ... . — ii- 2 

to every one that comes to honour — ii- 3 

soft, here he comes: I must dissemble — ii. 5 

here comes my daughter, she can witness _ — ii. 5 

if king Pericles come not — iii. (Gower) 

weeping she comes for her old nurse's - — iv. 1 

when he shall come, and find — iv. 1 

eome you between, and save poor me .... — iv. 1 



COME— O our credit comes not in like.. Periclet, iv. 3 

but here comes Boult. Come your ways — iv. 3 

pray yon, come hither awhile — iv. 3 

come your ways; follow me — iv. 3 

worth of her, slie had ne'er come here. ... — iv. 6 

here comes the lord I.ysimachus — iv- Q 

here comes that which grows to the stalk — iv. 6 

such resort; and will come into it? — iv. 6 

come your ways (repea/erf) — iv. 6 

she had never eome witliin my dooi-s ! — i v. 6 

every coystiil that hither comes inquiring — iv- 6 

who craves to come aboard — v. I 

there is some of worth would come aboard — v. 1 

be suff'ered to corae near him — v- 1 

falseness cannot conic from thee — v-1 

O come hither, thou that beget'st him.--. — v. I 

melancholy state, did come to see you — v. 1 

that he can hither come so soon. ... — v. 2 (Gower) 

only she comes too short iecir, i- 1 

notning can come of nothing — i. I 

Kent! come not between the dragon .... — i. 1 

to come betwixt our sentence — i. 1 

come to me, that of this I may speak — i. 2 (letter) 

this villain of mine comes under — i.2 

and pat becomes, like the catastrophe .. — i.2 

if you come slack of former services — i- 3 

I'd have it come to question — i.3 

(so may it come!) thy master — i. 4 

you sir, come you hither — i.4 

come place him here by me — i- 4 

here comes one o' the parings — i- 4 

sir, are you come? Is it your will? .... — i.4 
godSj that- we adore, whereof comes tliis? — i.4 

lia! IS it come to this? let it be so — i- 4 

than comes from her demand — i. -"J 

how comes that? Nay, I know not — ii- 1 

yield; come before my father — ii- 1 

arch and patron, comes to-night — ii- 1 

1 know not why he comes — ii. 1 

all vengeance comes too short — ii. 1 

if they come to sojourn at my house — ii. 1 

you come with letters against the king .. — ii. 2 

draw, you rascal ; come your ways — ii - 2 

the king comes with so small — ii- 4 

bid them come forth and hear me — ii- 4 

would soon be here: is your lady come? — ii. 4 

who comes here? O heavens — ii. 4 

half your train, come then to me — ii. 1 

let shame come when it will — ii. 4 

if you will come to me — ii- 4 

what, must I come to you — ii- 4 

alack, the night comes on — i i - 4 

come out o' the storm — ii- 4 

from France there comes a power — iii. 1 

denied me to corae in — iii- 2 

nor cutpurses come not to throngs — iii- 2 

of Albion come to great confusion — iii. 2 

corae not in here, nuncle, here's a spirit — iii- 4 

grumble there i' the straw? come forth.. — iii. 4 

and art thou come to this? — iii- 4 

look, here comes a walking fire — iii- 4 

yet have I ventured to come seek you out — iii- 4 

burning spits come hizzing in upon them_ — iii. 6 
come o er the bourn, Bessy, to me . . — iii. 6 (song) 
why she dares not come over to thee — ill. 6 (song) 

come hither, mistress; is your name — — \]]' ^ 

come hither, friend: where is the king .. — iii-.*i 

nay, then come on, and take the chance — iii. 7 

untimely comes tills hurt — !!!■ ^ 

if this man come to good — iii. 7 

but who comes here? my father — iv. 1 

'parel that I have, come on't what will.. — iv. 1 

madam, here comes my lord — iv. 2 

wither and come to deadly use — iv. 2 

'twill, eome, humanity must perforce .. — iv. 2 

come with my lady liither — iv. 2 

remembers what we are come about — — iv..3 

when shall we come to the top — iv. 6 

come on, sir; here's the place; stand still — iv. 6 

but who comes here? The safer sense .. — iv. 6 

that we are come to this great stage — — iv. 6 

nay, come not near the old man — iv. 6 

the king is corae to his daughter - — v. I 

as the adversary I corae to cope withal . . — v. 3 

the wheel is come full circle _ — ■?. 3 

here comes Kent, sir. O! it is he — v. 3 

I am come to bid my king and master . . — v. 3 

to this gi'eat decay may come — v. 3 

O thou wilt come no more; never, never — y. 3 
here comes two of the house .... Hojneo ^-Juliet, i. 1 

here comes one of ray master's kinsmen — i. 1 

old Montague is come, and flourishes — i. 1 

Montague, come you this afternoon. . — i. 1 

see, where he comes; so please you .. — i. 1 

whither should they come? — i.2 

come and crush a cup of wine — i.2 

at twelve year old, I bade her come.. — i.3 

nurse, coiiie back again — i.3 

come Lammas-eve at night — i.3 

to see now, how a jest shall come about! — i. 3 

madam, the guests are come — i. S 

she comes in shape no bigger than . . — i. 4 

sometimes comes she with a tithe-pig's — i. 4 

8upperisdone,andweshallcometoolate — ■ i.4 

ana I come near you now? — i. .^ 

this unlooked-for sport comes well .. — i. 5 

come Pentecost as quickly as it wiU — i. !> 

dares the slave come hither — i- 5 

come luther, nurse; what is you — i. 5 

and rest come to thy heart — ii. 3 

stay but a little, I will come again . . — ii. 2 

one that I'll procure to come to thee — ii. 2 

madam. I corae anon (rep.) — if- 2 

here comes Roraeo, here comes Romeo — ii- 4 

come between us, good Bcnvolio .... — ii- 4 

for I was come to the whole depth . . — ii- 4 

Romeo, will you come to your father's? — ii. 4 

some means to come to shrift — ii. 4 

yet she is not come: had she affections — ii- 5 

shecomesl O honey nurse — ii- 5 



COM 



[ l'^7 ] 



COME— now comus the wanton blood. W<>wi. ^Jul, ii. 5 

nmcn, Imt oonic wliiit sorrow can.. .. — ii. 6 

liiTC eonies thr liuly; O, so liglit a loot — ii. 6 

conic, ciinif with ine, and we will .. — ii. G 

hy my hctiil, here come the Capulets — iii. 

here cnmcs my man — iii. 

here Climes tl\'e furious Tyhult — iii. 

li-\- Miul by Climes back to'iiomeo — iii. 

licrc comes my nurse, and slie brings — iii. 

shame come to Koineo! — iii. 2 

and bid lum come to take his last .. — iii. 2 

Konieo, come forth; conre tbrtli .... — iii. 3 

whence come you? what's vour (rp;() — iii. 3 

1 come from lady Juliet. Welcome. — iii. 3 

I'll tell ray lady yon will come — iii. 3 

she '11 not come down to-night — iii. 4 

sweet discourses in our time to come — iii. .'i 

licar him named, and cunuot come.. — iii. 5 

and joy comes well in such — iii. 5 

that should be husband, comes to woo — iii. 5 

here comes your fatlier; tell him so.. — iii. 5 

that he dares ne'er come back — iii. 5 

here comes the lady towards ray cell — iv. 1 

come vou to make 'confession — iv. 1 

shall t come to you at evening mass — iv. I 

come weep witli me; past hope — iv. 1 

in the morning comes to rouse — iv. 1 

and hither shall he come — iv. 1 

see, where she comes from shrift .... — iv. 2 

Komeo come to redeem rael — iv. 3 

die strangled ere my Koraeo conies? — iv. 3 

Romeo, Icorae! \_CdI. Knf. -Romeo!] — iv. 3 

the bridegroom he is come already .. — iv. 4 

bring Juliet forth; her lord is come .. — iv. 5 

at ray cell till Romeo come — v. 2 

is come to do some ^■illanous — v. 3 

for I come hither armed against .... — v. 3 

fear comes upon me: O much I fear — v. 3 

lady come from that nest of death . . — v. 3 

hold him in safety, till the prince come — v. 3 

know how this foul murder comes . . — v. 3 

then conies she to me; and with wild — v. 3 

he sliould hither come as this dire w'vAxt — v. 3 

and I entreated her come forth — v. 3 

anon, comes one with light to ope — v. 3 

you come most carefully upon Hamlel, i. 1 

if again this apparition come — i. 1 

look, where it comes again! — i. 1 

nortentnus figure comes armed through — i. 1 

Deholdl lo, where it comes again! — i. 1 

'gainst that season comes wherein — i. 1 

that it should come to this! — i. 2 

it is not, nor it cannot come to, good — — i. 2 

the ammrition comes; I knew your father — i. 2 

would the night were come 1 — i. 2 

but, here my father comes — i. 3 

look to 't, I charge you; come your ways — i. 3 

look, my lord, it comes! — i. 4 

to what issue \vill this come? — i. 4 

my hour is almost come — i. 5 

come from the grave, to tell us this ^ i. b 

come hither, gentlemen, and lay — i. 5 

come you more nearer than your — ii. 1 

of horrors, he comes before me — ii. 1 

defective, comes by cause — ii. 2 

sadly the poor wretch comes reading — ii. 2 

their inhibition comes by the means — ii. 2 

how comes it? do they gi-ow rusty? — ii. 2 

and dare scarce come thither — ii. 2 

haply, he 's the second time come to them — ii. 2 

he comes to tell me of the players — ii. 2 

the actors are come hither, ray lord — ii. 2 

for look, my abridgement conies — ii. 2 

say on: come to Hecuba — ii. 2 

sleep of death what dreams may come . . — iii. 1 

now this, overdone, or come tardy otf .. — iii. 2 

one scene of it comes near — iii. 2 

come hither, my dear Hamlet, sit by me — iii. 2 

never come mischance between us twain! — iii. 2 

tlien will I come to my raotlier {rep.) . . — iii. 2 

forestalled, ere we come to fall — iii. 3 

he will come straight; look, you lay — iii. 4 

do you not come your tardy son to chide — iii. 4 

avoid what is to come; and do not spread — iii. 4 

O Gertrude, come away! — iv. 1 

O come away! my soul is full of discord — iv. 1 

on Hamlet? O here they come — iv. 2 

he will stay till you come — iv. 3 

let her come in : to my sick soul — iv. 5 

young men will do't, if they come .. — iv. 5 (song) 

sorrows come, they come not single spies — iv. o 

is in secret come from France — iv. 5 

no, let's come in. I pray you, give me .. — iv. 5 

lo negligencCj let come what comes — iv. 5 

let her come m. How now! what noise — iv. 5 
and will he not come a^ain? [Tep.").. — iv. 5 (song) 

he never will come again — i v. 5 fsong) 

let them come in : 1 do not know — iv.O 

it comes from tlic embassador that — iv. B 

but my revenge will come — iv. 7 

are all the rest come back? — iv. 7 

but let him come; it warms — iv. 7 

and tricks come short of what he did .... — iv.7 

quick o' the ulcer; Hamlet comes back . . — iv. 7 

snail know you are come home — iv.7 

r An(.] with fantastic garlands did she come — iv. 7 

but if the water come to him, and drowu — v. 1 

the toe of tlie peasant comes so near — v. 1 

to this favour she must come — v. 1 

here comes the king, the queen — v. 1 

dost thou come here to whine — v. 1 

when the baser nature comes between — v. 2 

of our nature come in further evil? — v. 2 

peace: who comes here? Your lordship.. — v. 2 

sir, here is newly come to court — v. 2 

and it would come to immediate trial .... — v. 2 

tocoine; ifit be not to come (rppca'^i/) .. — v. 2 

the foils: come on. Come, one for me .. — v. 2 

come on, sir. Come, my lord — v. 2 

cay you so? come on. Nothing — v. 2 



COME— come agnin. iMiik to the queen. H«m(<(, v. 2 

mine and my father's death come not.... — V. 2 

with coiuinest come fniiii Poland — v. 2 

why does the ilnim come hitlier? — V. 2 

our alhiirs IVom 1;iil;I:uii1 eome too lute .. — v. 2 

dost tlion eiiiiie lo start my quiet Othello, i. 1 

in simiile ;uiii pure soul I come to you .. — i. 1 

because we eoiiie to do you service — i. 1 

I am one, sir, that comes to tell you — i. 1 

and what's to come of my despised time — i. 1 | 

but, look! what lights come yonder? .... — i. 2 

here comes another troop to seek for you — i. 2 

be adviserl: he comes to Dad intent — i. 2 

herecomesBrnlraiitio, and the valiant .. — i. 3 

and, till -lu' r.inie, as triih- us to lieaven.. — i. 3 

with iKlstr .Irsli.ltrh, she'll Cnm' .IL-aill.... — i. 3 

here comes tlie laily, let lier witness it .. — i. 3 
wai'like Aiotir, Ot!ielli>, is come on sliore — ii. 1 
as well to see tlie vessel that's come in .. — ii. 1 
the riches of tile siiij) is come on shore .. — ii. 1 
come on, come on: you are pictures out.. — ii. 1 
nothing, if not critical. Come on, assay — ii. 1 

my invention comes from my pate — ii. 1 

and receive him. Lo, where he comes!,. — ii. I 
if after every tempest come such calms .. — ii. 1 
hard at hand comes the master and main — ii. 1 

whose qualification shall come into — ii. 1 

profit's yet to come 'twixt me and you .. — ii. 3 
but Iiere they come ; if consetiuence .... — ii. 3 
how comes [ Co/. A')i<.-cameJ it, Michael — ii. 3 
all's well now, sweeting; come away to bed — ii. 3 
pray you, come in; I will bestow you. ... — iii. 1 

ma(lam, liere comes my lord — iii. 3 

when shall he come? tell me, Othello .... — iii. 3 

let him come when he will — iii. 3 

will come to thee straight. Emilia, come — iii. 3 
when I love thee not, cliaos is come again — iii. 3 

what is spoke comes from my love — ]]]-'^ 

Desdemona comes: if she be false — iii. 3 

look, where he comes! not poppy — iii. 3 

my waked wrath. Is it come to this? .. — iii. 3 

seek him, bid him come hither — iii. 4 

look where he comes, I will not leave.... — iii. 4 
I have sent to bid Cassio come speak .... — iii. 4 
a cause: is it come to this? well, well .... — iii. 4 
O, it comes o'er my memory as doth .... — iv. 1 

here he comes — as he shall smile — iv. 1 

and thither comes the bauble — iv. 1 

before me! look, where she comes — iv. 1 

an' you'll come to supper to-night ircp.) — iv. 1 
touchnot you, it comes near nobody .... — iv. 1 

'tis Lodovico, come from the duke — iv. 1 

bid her come hither; go: she says enough — iv. 2 

pray, chuck, come hitner — iv. 2 

or cry — hem. if anybody come — iv. 2 

how comes tnis trick upon him? — iv. 2 

there is especial commission come from . . — iv. 2 

pr'ythee, hie thee; he'll come anon — iv. 3 

straight will he come: wear thy good .... — v. 1 
to come in to the cry, without more (rep.) — v. 1 
here's one comes in his shirt, with light. . — v. 1 

come in, and give some help — v. 1 

will you come to bed, my lord? — v. 2 

she co.Ties to speak of Cassio's death .... — v. 2 

shall she come in? were't good? — v. 2 

if she come in, she'll sure speak to — v. 2 

O come in Emilia ; soft, — by-and-by .... — v. 2 
she comes more near the earth than she.. — v. 2 
O, are you come, lago? you have done .. — v. 2 
so come my so\d to bliss, as I speak true. . — v. 2 
uncle, I must come forth — v. 2 

COMEDIAN — are you a comedian?. Tnelfili Nighl, i. b 
quick comedians extemporally . . Aiiinmi .s i 'leo. v, 2 

COMEDY-proIogue of our comedy. .jVe;)// iC/i-fs, iii. 5 
the most lamentable comedy. jVii/. NiglU s Drcain, i. 2 
there are things in this comedy of.. • — iii. 1 

hear them say, it is a sweet comedy — iv. :: 

to dash it like a Cliristmascomedy.Loue'jfL.Los(,v. 2 

have made our sport a comedy — v. 2 

come to play a pleasant comedy. Tarn. ofSh. 2 (ind.) 

like the catastrophe of the old comedy Lear, i. 2 

either for tragedy, comedy, history .... Hamlel, ii. 2 
for if the king like not the comedy — iii. ^ 

COMELINESS — comeliness plucked. . Coriolanus, i. 3 

COMELY — sincerity, and comely love.MuviiAdo,iv. 1 
in most comely truth, thou deservest — v. 2 
what is comely envenoms him . . As you L.'ke it, ii. 3 
his fate aside, of comely virtues.. Timon nj .ith. iii. .■> 
a happier and more comely time . . Coriolanus, iv. 6 

COMLK — as any comer I have. . Merch. of f'enice, ii. 1 
the hand; grasps in the comer. . Troilus S,- Cress, iii. 3 

COMEST— comest to the \ady. TwelftliN. iii. 4 (chall.) 
coward, why comest thou not? ..Mld.N.'s Dr. iii. 2 

thou comest to use thy tongue Macbflh, v. b 

thou comest thus knightly cladi,rep.)Ridtard II. 1. 3 
and wherefore comest thou hither .. — i. 3' 
thou goest, not whence thou comest.. — i. 3 
comest thou because the anointed king — ii. 3 
and how comest thou hither, where no — v. 5 

when thou comest to thy father 1 IlenrylV. ii. 4 

comest thou again for ransom? Henry V. iv. 7 

comest thou with deep 1 Henry yi. iii. 1 

when thou comest to the stake — v. 3 

when thou comest to kneel at — v. 3 

why comest thou in such haste? ....'IHenryVL iv. 4 

why comest thou in such jiost? aUeiuyf'l. i. 2 

that tliou comest in so bluntly ....UicfmrU ill. iv. 3 
when thou comest thither,— dull .... — iv. 4 
although thou comest to me .. Timon of Athens, iii. 1 
wheuce comest thou? what wouldst.Cor/<vi«Hi«,iv. 5 
why comest thou? To tell thee ..JidiusCietar, iv. 3 
thou never comest unto a happy birth — v. 3 
comest thou smiling from.. .4 «/oni/ fy CI*'opatra, iv. 8 

thou comest not. Cams, now for Cymbe'.ine, v 5 

comest not to be made a scorn .... Tiltu Audron. i. 2 
out of heaven's benediction comest to .... Lear, ii. 2 

when thou comest to age Ilomea ^- Juliet, i. 3 

thou comest in such a questionable Hamlel, i. 4 

comest thou to beard me in Denmark? . . — ii. 2 

COMET— some comet, or unusal.. V'ammg-o/S/i. iii. 2 



COM 

I COMET-like a comet, I was wondered. 1 Hen.;/', iii. 2 

comets, importing change 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

now sliine it like a comet of revenge — iii. 2 

beggars die, there are no comets ..JuliusCrrsar, ii. 2 

CO.METH— why ho Cometh hither.... Kidmrd II. i. 3 

whence cometli this alarum \Hejiry VI. i. 4 

here oomcth Charles; I mar\'el — ii. 1 

Cometh Andronicus, Imund with .. TitusAndron. i. 2 

COMET-LlKE-gazed on comet-like ..I'ericles.v. 1 

t OMFITMAKEU-comfltmaker's wife. 1 Hen. />'. iii. 1 

COMFORT— comfort from this fellow ..Tempesl, i. 1 

wipe thou thine eyes; have comfort. ... — i. 2 

bcofcomfort — i. 2 

weigh our sorrow with our comfort — ii. I 

he receives comfort like cold porridge.. — ii. 1 
than we bring men to comfort them .. — ii. I 

well, here's niy comfort — ii. 2 

but here's my comfort — ii. 2 

than you may call to comfort you .... — v. 1 
thy great comfort in this mystery .Merry IVivet, ii. I 

f'veliimashowofcomfortinhis.... — ii. 1 
thank you for that good comfort .. — iii. 4 
and to comfort you with chance. . Twelfth Night, i. 2 

God comfort thee! — iii. 4 

you stand amazed; hut be of comfort — iii. 4 
whose very comfort is still Mens, for Meat. ii. 3 



iii. 1 
iii. 1 
iii. 1 



— iv. 2 



what's the comfort? why, as all comforts - 
dried not one of them with his comfort 

I thank you for this comfort 

I spy comfort; I cry, bail 

here comes a man of comfort 

heaven give your spirits comfort! . 

what comfort is for Claudio? — iv. 2 

to advise you, comfort you, and pray — iv. 3 
make her heavenly comforts of despair — iv. 3 
thou believest there is another comfort — v. 1 
make it your comfort, so happy is.... — v. 1 
being gone, comfort should remain ..Much .Ido, i. 1 

have comfort, lady — iv. 1 

go, comfort your cousin — iv. 1 

and speak comfort to that grief — v. 1 

take comfort; he no more shall see. .Mid. A'. Dr. i. 1 

tarry for the comfort of the day — ii. 3 

shine, comforts, from the east — iii. 2 

comfort me, boy: what great men. .Love'sL.Lostj i. 2 

God comfort thy capacity! — iv. 2 

I could put thee in comfort; not by two — iv. 3 
some good comforts too for you. . Mtr. of Venire, v. 1 
he not be acomfort to our travel?. ./Is you Like it, i. 3 

becomfort to my age! — ii. 3 

but I must comfort the weaker vessel — ii. 4 
live a little, comfort a little, cheer.... — ii. 6 
and be blessed for your good comfort! — ii. 7 

he that comforts my wile, is .ill's IVell, i. 3 

some comfort in the news, some comfort — iii. 2 
we make us comforts of our losses ! . . — i v. 3 

distress in my smiles of comfort — ■? . 2 

the rest will comfort, for thy . . Taming of Shrew ^i. 1 
shall soon feel, to thy cold comfort . . — iv. 1 
you have an unspeakable comfort. IVinler'sTale, i. 1 
nay, there's comfort in't, whiles .... — i. 2 
why, that's some comfort: what! .... — i. 2 

and comfort the gracious queen — i . 2 

the queen receives much comfort in't — ii. 2 
the crown and comfort of ray life ... . — ii i . 2 

my third comfort, starred most — iii. 2 

to greet him, and give him comforts — iv. 3 
comfort, good comfort; we must to .. — iv. 3 
for present comfort, and for future pood — v. I 
the great comfort that I have had of thee — v. 3 
so much to my good comfort, as it is — v. 3 

as sweet as any cordial comfort — v. 3 

my comfort; when your words .. Comedy of Err. i. 1 

comfort my sister, cneer her — iii. 2 

my comfort, and my injury — iv. 2 

whence comfort seemed to come Macbeth, i. 2 

there's comfort yet, they are assailable — iii. 2 

be it then' comfort, we are coming — iv. 3 

would I could answer this comfort with — iv. 3 
here comes newer comfort. Hail, king! — y. 7 

[Co/.j comfort your city's eyes King John, ii. I 

courage and comfort! all shall yet .. — iii. 4 

food lady! comfort, gentle Constance! — iii. 4 
could give better comfort than — iii. 4 

my widow comfort, and my sorrov.'s — iii. 4 
being create for comfort, to be used. . — iv. 1 

be of good comfort, for the great — v. 3 

be of good comfort, prince — v. 7 

and comfort me \vitli cold (,rep.) .... — v. 7 

this must my comfort be Ridiird II. i. 3 

what comfort, man? how is't with .. — ii. 1 

near the tidings of our comfort is — ii. 1 

my thoughts: comfort's in heaven .. 

my comfort is, that heaven will 

nor with thy sweets comfort his 

comfort, my liege, why looks your (ri-p.) 

of comfort no man speak 

that bids me be of comfort any more 

acomfort of retirement lives in this. . — iv. i 

bring smooth comforts false ilhnrylV. (indue.) 

is that all the comfort you give me? — ii. 4 

to comfort you the more, I have — iii. 1 

you shall bear, to comfort him — iv. 3 

1 am much ill. Comfort, your majesty! — iv. ■ 

now I, to comfort him, bid him Henry V. ii. 3 

plucks comfort from liis looks — iv. ^ehorus) 

my comfort is, that old age — v. 2 

cheer thy spirit with this comfort . . 1 Henry VI. i. 4 
as witting I no other comfort have .. — ii. b 
God comfort him in this necessitj'l . . — iv. 3 
the comfort of my age! thy deeds ..iHenry VI. i. 1 
in darkness, comfort in despair! .... — ii. 1 
great is his comfort, in this earthly . . — ii. I 

all comfort go with theel — ii. 4 

Comfort, my sovereign I (rep.) — iii. 2 

by crying comfort from a hollow hieast — iii. 2 
is all thy comfort shut in Gloster's tomb — iii. 2 

such comfort come to thee iHenryVI. \. 4 

comfort, my lord ; and so I take my — i v. H 
entertain good comfort, and cheer. . Richard III. i. 3 



iii. 1 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 
iii. •> 
iii. 2 



COM 

COMFORT— to comfort Edward wHh.Rich. III. ii. I 
and I for comfort liave but oiie false .. — ii- 2 
and hast tlie comfort of tliy cliildren .. — ii. '.i 
comfort, dear motlier: God is mucli.. — ii- 2 

in him your comfort lives — ii- 2 

sister, have comfort; all of us have -. — }'■'! 
by their uncle cozened of comfort — — iv.i 
but mine slmll be a comfort to your age — iv. 1 

but tills good comfort bring I — iv- 4 

lines of tair comfort and encouragement — v. 2 

all comfort that the dark night — v. 3 

Henry's issue, Richmond, comforts thee — v- 3 

doth comfort thee in thy sleep — v. ;) 

my comfort comes along Hcnrrj Vlll.ii. -1 

aiid comforts to your cause — - i||- 1 

as all my other comforts, far hence.. — iii- I 
is this your comfort? the cordial .... — iii. 1 

you'd feel more comfort — iii. 1 

pray, pray. Heaven comfort her .... — iv. 2 
take good comfort. O my good lord {rep.') — iv. 2 
I am past all comforts here, but prayers — iv. 2 
keep comfort to you: and this morning — v. I 
all comfort, joy, in this most gracious — v. 4 
this oracle of comfort has so pleased — v. 4 
with comfort go: hope of revenge — — v- 11 
failing to him, periods his comtort. T;mo« ofAth. i. 1 
O, what a precious comfort 'tis, to have — i. 2 
and I'll bcweep tliese comforts, worthy — v. 2 
in that there's comfort. Doubt not.. Cono/anws, ii- 1 
hearts dance with comforts, constrains — v. 3 
whicli is a comfort that all but we enjoy — v. 3 
thy person, our comfort in the country — v- 3 
Roman ladies bring not comfort home — y. 4 

at meals, comfort your bed Julius Casar, ii. 1 

these tidings will well comfort Cassius — v. 3 
thy spirits all of comfort ! . . Antony Sr Cleopatra, iii. 2 
best of comfort; and ever welcome to us — iii- 6 

gentle madam, to him: comfort him — iii- 9 
ut your comfort makes the rescue . . — iii. 9 

I spake to you for your comfort — iv- 2 

once for thy spritely comfort — .iv- 7 

but comforts we despise — iv. 13 

give her what comforts the quality -. — v. 1 
have comfort; for, I know, your plight — v. 2 
make yourself some comfort out of . . Cymbeline, i. 2 
honest wills, wliich seasons comfort — _ i. 7 

to our comfort, shall we find — iii. 3 

or in my life what comfort, when I. . — iii- 4 
thou art all the comfort the gods .... — iii- 4 
I'll make't my comfort, he is a man — iii. 6 
society is no comfort to one not sociable — iv. 2 
Imogen, the great part of my comfort — iv. 3 
it strikes me, past the hope of comfort — iv. 3 
his comforts thrive, his trials well are — v. 4 
but the comfort is, j'ou shall be called — v. 4 

for they shall taste our comfort — v. 5 

he comforts you, can make you . . Titus Androii.i. 2 
dawning day new comfort hath inspired — ii- 2 
why dost not comfort me, and help me — ii- 4 
and rather comfort his distressed plight — iv. 4 
was once our terror, now our comfort — v- 1 

the other's distance comfort me Pericles, i. 1 

joy and all comfort in your sacred — i- 2 

finding little Comfort to relieve them — i- 2 

awake their helps to comfort them — i- 4 

for comfort is too far for us to expect - . . . — _ i- 4 
sake of it. be manly, and take comfort .. — iii. I 

then men must comfort you — iy- 3 

lay comforts to your bosom Lear, ii. 1 

but thine do comfort, and not burn — ii. 4 

I will piece out the comfort with what . . — iii. 6 
thy comforts can do me no good at all . . — iv. 1 
'twas yet some comfort, when misery .... — iv- 6 

to you again, I'll bring you comfort — v- 2 

what coinfort to this gi-eat decay may.... — v. 3 
Bucli comfort, as do lusty young men.i?oj». gfJul. i-2 
all tills is comfort; wherefore weep . . — iii. 2 

I'll find Romeo to comfort you — iii. 2 

comfort thee, though thou art banished — iii. 3 
her chamber, hence and comfort her — iii. 3 
how well my comfort Is revived .... — '!!• ^ 

comfort me, counsel me — iii. 6 

word of joy? some comfort, nurse — iii- 5 

I'll call them back again to comfort me — iv. 3 
some merry dump, to comfort me .... — iv. -'i 

in the cheer and comfort of our eye Hamlet, i. 2 

but the free comfort which from thence-. O^Ae/io, i. 3 
though he speak of comfort, touching . . — ii. 1 
Bpirits, and bring all Cyprus comfort! .. — ii. 1 
that not another comfort like to this .... — ii- 1 
our loves and comforts should increase .. — ii. 1 

and I dote in mine own comforts — ii. 1 

love him dearly, comfort forswear me ! . . — iv. 2 
I expectations and comtbrts of sudden .... — iv. 2 
' COilFORTABLE— 

acomfortable doctrine TwelflhNight,\. 5 

for my sake, be comfortable As you Like it, ii- 6 

be comfortaole to my mother AlVs Well, \. \ 

sake, speak comfortable words Richard II. ii. 2 

what comfortable hour canst thou . Richard ///. iv- 4 
comfortable temper has forsook . . Timon ofAih. iii- 4 
true, 60 just, and now, so comfortable? — iv. 3 
yourself in a more comfortable sort. . Coriolanus, i. 3 
return to us, peaceful and comfortable. . Pericles, i. 2 

1 am sure, is kind and comfortable Lear, i. 4 

by thy comfortable beams I may peruse . . — ii. 2 
() comfortable friar ! where is Romeo <§- Juliet, v. 3 

COMFORTED— must I be comforted . . All's iVell, i. 1 
be comforted ; let's make us medicines- Macbeth, iv. 3 
be comforted, dear m&i&m.Antonyfy Cleopatra, iv. 13 

not comforted to live Cymbeline, i. 2 

be comforted, good madam Lear, iv. 7 

thou hast comforted me marvellous. iJom.ilJ-./u(. iii. 5 

COMFORTER— it is a comforter Tempest, ii. 1 

comforter to an unsettled fancy — v. 1 

let no comforter delight mine ear. . . . Much Ado, v. 1 
to be your comforter, when Richard III. i. 3 

COMFORTING-comfbrting your evils Winter'sT. ii. 3 

nature with comforting repose Henry VIII. T. 1 

comforting therein, that when old ..Ant, ^Cleo. i. 2 



[ 128 



COMFORTING-if I find him comforting.. Lear, iii. Ij 
CO.MFOllTLESS-conifortless despair. Com. of Er. v. 1 

fearful, comfvu'tless, and horrible King John, y, *i 

the queen is comfortless, and we .. Henry V III. ii. 3 

all dark and comfortless Lear, iii. 7 

CthMFORT'ST— that comfort'st. Timon of Athens,\. 2 
COAIIC— untoa peaceful comic sport..!//™!!/'''- ii- 2 

triiuuphs, mirthful comic shows ZllenrijI'I. v. 7 

CO.MU.'AL— pastoral-comical {rep.) Hamlet, ii- 2 

CO -M 1 i\' Ii —fir coining thence Tempest, ii- 1 

at till' riiail expects mycoming-- Two Gen.of fer.y. I 

my i'athor sluys my coming — .U* '^ 

sir Valentine is coining — iii. 1 

this cvcuivig coming — iv- 3 

but, by my coming, I have — y- 4 

master, doctor Caius, coming Merry yyives,i. 4 

I was coming to you — ii. I 

yonder he is coming, this way — ill- * 

yimr husband's coming hither — !!!■ ^ 

your husband's coming with half- ... — iii. 3 

she's coming; to her coz — iii. 4 

but is my husband coming? — iv. 2 

tarries the coming down of — iv. .') 

your true love's coraiug . . Twelfth Night, ii- 3 (song) 
Walvolio's coming dov/n this walk -. — ii- -5 

he's coming, madam — iii. 4 

vent to her that thou art coming? — iv. 1 

he'scoming; I perceive 't Mcas.forMeas.iX. 2 

he is coming, sir, he is coming — iv. 3 

of your intent, and coming hither? .. — v. 1 

then I will expect your coming ilfucA Ado, y . 1 

I have a beard coming Mid. N.'s' Dream, i. 2 

the duke is coming from the temple - . — i v. 2 

Thisby, coming fir.st by uight — V- 1 

we sluiU out-sleep the coming morn — v. 1 

to read the purpose ot my coming. Love's L. Lost, ii. 1 

I think, coming from Muscovy — v- 2 

but there are worthies a coming will — v. 2 
excuse me so, coming so short of thanks — y. 2 
cast away, coming from Tripolis.il/er. of Venice, iii- 1 
for your coming in to dinner, sir ... . — iii .^ 

and there exjiect their coining — v 1 

messenger before, to signify their coming — y. 1 
your coming before me is nearer . . As you Like it, i, 1 

they are coming to perform it — i-2 

yonder, sure, they are coming — _i- 2 

for coming anight to Jane Smile - . . . — ii. 4 
these couples are coming to the ark! — v. 4 
more attend upon the coming space ..All's IVell, ii. 3 
to make tlie coming hours o'ernow .. — .^^- ^ 

in coming on he has the cramp — iv. 3 

the king's coming — v. 2 

insult coming with her modern grace — y. 3 
know the cause of your coming?. . Taming o/SA._ii. 1 

coming? Is she come? (re/j.) — !j^' ^ 

Petruchio is coming, in a new hat . . — iii. 2 
bride and bridegroom coming home? — iii- 2 

I know, the rout is coming — iii- 2 

they are coming after to warn them.. — iv. 1 
is my master and his wife coming-... — iv. 1 
away, away! for he is coming hither.. — iv. 1 

an ancient angel coming down — iv. 2 

what company is coming here? — iy. 5 

I think, this coming summer Winler'sTale,!. 1 

he is not guilty of her coming hither — ii. 3 

your guests are coming — iy- 3 

I pr'ythee, is he coming home? . . Comedy of Err. ii. 1 

my wife is coming yonder — iv. 4 

and he not coming thither, I went — y. 1 

our thane is coming Macbeth, i. b 

he that's coming, must be provided for. . — _ i. 5 
their comfort, we are coming thither — — iv. 3 

that way are they coming _. — v. 2 

this three mile may you see it coming, . . — . .y- * 
ere our coming, see tliou shake .... King John, iii. 3 

is coming towards me Ricliard //. ii. 2 

his coming is but for his own ■ — .?!• ^ 

his coming hither hath no further .. — iii. 3 
our two cousins coniing into London — y. 2 
money of the king's coming down ..\HenryIV. ii. 2 

I stand close, I hear them coming — ij. 2 

and since yoiw coming hither — iii. 

coming in' to borrow a mess of 2HenryIV. ii. 

he heard of your grace's coming to town — .ii. 
what doth concern 3'our coming? ... . — iv. 

he is coming hither — iv. 

coming to look on you — ly- 

tell you the Dauphin, I am coming on.. Henry V.i. 

in fierce tempest is he coming — .ii. 

the winter coming on, and sickness . . — iii. 
the king is coming; and I must speak — iii- 

from Ireland coming, bringing — v. (cho. 

the emperor's coming in behalf of — v- (cho-^ 

I willexpect thy coming 1 Henry VI. y. ' 

watch the coming of my punished ..iHetiry VI. ii. 
the king, thou knowest, is coming . . — iii- 
duly waited for my coming forth? .. — i.y. 
she was coming with a full intent . .SHenry VI. ii 
the queen is coming with a puissant — .ii- 

before thy coming, Lewis was Henry's — iii- 
we were forewarned of your coming.- — iy. 

there attend my coming Richard III. i- 

the duke is coming; see, the barge. i/enri/ /'///. ii- 

I do not like their coming — iii- 

the full cause of our coming — iij- 

such a truant since ray. coining — iii- 

Btand close, the queen is comiug — iv- 

from all parts they are coming — y- 

they arc coniing from the field . . Troitus Sr Cress, i. 

he is coming down to you Timon of Athens, iii. 

take no warning by my coming . . — iii. 

an intent that's coniing toward him — y. 
ha! Marcius coming home? (rep.) . . Coriolanus, ii. 

make way, they are coming — ii. 2 

he's coniing. How accompanied? — iii. 3 

[A'n(-] some news is coming that turns — iv- 6 
now he 's coming; and not a hair- - - . — }y.' ^ 
receive his letters, and is coming. Ju^/mx Ccvsar, iii- 1 
is thy master coming? He lies to-night — iii- 1 
coming from Sardis on our former . . — v. 1 



COM 

COMING — yet, coming from him.. Jn(o?i!/ (J- Cteo. i. h 
thyself art coming to see performed — y. 2 

forestall him of the coming day! . . Cymbeline, iii. 5 
coming and going with thy honey . . Titus And. ii. 5 
is not thy comiug for my other hand? — v. 2 

and stay your coming to present Pericles, ii. 2 

but sta.Y, the knights are coming * — ."• ^ 

you have ibrtunes coming upon you .... — iy. 3 

the king is coming. Attend Lear, i. 1 

he's coming, madam ; I hear him — .;. 3 

he's coming hither, now, i' the night .... — ii. 1 
I hear my father coming; pardon me. ... — ii. 1 

this usage, coming from us — ii. 4 

to oppose the bolt against my coming in — ii. 4 

I told him j'ou were coming — iv. a 

which since his coming fortli is thought — iv. 3 

foing hence, even as then' coining hither — y. 2 
lomeo is coming Romeo ^Juliet, iii. 3 

lady mother 's coming to your chamber — iii. 5 
not to question, for the watch is coming — v. 3 
as he was coming from this churchyard — y. 3 
and prologue to the omen coming on ..Hamlet, i. 1 
hither are they coming, to ofter you .... — ii. 2 
I hear him coming; let 's withdraw .... — iii- 1 

they are coming to the play — iii. '■i 

witndraw, I hear him coming — iii. 4 

wish and beg .vour sudden coming o'er . . — iv. 7 
the king, and queen, and all arc coming — y. 2 

so guilty-like, seeing you coming Olliello, iii. 3 

sweet love, I was coming to yom- house. . — iii. 4 

but, so, I hear him coming — v. 1 

COMING-IN-coming-in for one maii-il/er- of Ven. ii. 2 
CO-MINGLED—SO well co-mingled . . Hamlet, iii. 2 
COMING-ON — a more coming-on. ^syouL^/(e /V, iv. 1 

to the comiiig-on of time Macbeth, i. 6 (letter) 

in robustious and rough coming-on . . Henry V. iii. 7 
COMINGS-IN— what are thy comings-in? — iy. 1 
COMINIUS — attend upon Cominius,. Coriolanus, i. 1 
follow, Cominius; we must follow you — i. 1 
to be commanded under Cominius .. — i. 1 
Cominius. Come ; half all Cominius' — i. 1 
Cominius, Marcius your old enemy — i. 2 (letter) 

Cominius the general is gone — i. 3 

will haste to help Cominius — i. 5 

speak, good Cominius: leave nothing — ii. 2 
please you to hear Cominius speak? — ii. 2 

worthy Cominius, speak — ii. 2 

proceed, Cominius. I shall lack voice — ii. 2 
and the commons? Cominius, no -... — iii. 1 

here is Cominius. I have been — iii. 2 

Cominius, droop not, adieu — iv. 1 

take good Cominius with thee awhile — iv. 1 
if he coyed to hear Cominius speak . . — v. 1 
return me, as Cominius is returned.. — v. 1 

and hum at good Cominius — y. 1 

COMMA— one comma in the course . Timon ofAth. i. 1 

stand a comma 'tween theu' amities Hamlet, v. 2 

COMBIAND — command these elements . Tempest, i. 1 
her earthly and abhorred commands .... — i. 2 
I will be correspondent to command .... — i. 2 
or dost unwillingly what I command-... — i. 2 
exactly do all points of my command .... — i. 2 
nor hath not one spirit to command .... — iii. 2 

Juno does command — iv. 1 

graves at my command, have waked .... — v. 1 

and deal in her command — v. 1 

write, please you command . . Two Gen. of Ver. ii. 1 

command me while I live — iii. 1 

by his master's command — iv. 2 

that attends your ladyship's command — iv. 3 

vour pleasme to command me — iv. 3 

let us command to kuow that Merry Wives, i. 1 

my house a week at command — iy.- ^ 

I may command where I adore.. Twelfth Kight, ii. 5 

command where I adore (rep.) — .ji- ^ 

and commands shall be executed — iii. 4 

command her followers — iv. 3 

'twas a commandment to command- il/ea./or il/ca. i. 2 
that it may know he can command-- — ^i.^ 
thisother doth command a little door — iv. 1 
an express command, under penalty — iv- 2 
and sent according to command .... — iv. 3 

command these fretting waters — iy. 3 

will your grace command me Much Ado, ii. 1 

shall I command thy love?. Lore's L.Lost, iv. 1 (let.) 
the king's command, and this most — v. 1 

please it your majest.v, command me — v. 2 
be commanded, that command? .Mer. of Venice, ii. 9 
I shall obey you in all fair commands — iii. 4 
take upon command what help . - As you Like it, ii. 7 

I have left you commands — y. 2 

must attend his majesty's command. . All's IVell, i. 1 
as I command you? that man (rep.) — .i. 3 
husband in thy power I will command — ii. 1 

what more commands he? — .ii- 4 

there was an excellent command! ., — V-V^ 

to be blamed in the command — iii- 6 

if he had been there to command .--. — iii. 6 

and at your majesty's command — . '^'' ^ 

yom- honour will command?-. ram/n^o/S/i. 1 (ind.) 
will command wherein your lady .. — 1 (ind.) 
what you will command me, will I do — ii. 1 
and whom thou keep'st command .. — .ii. 1 
go forward, Kate, at thy command . . — iii. 2 
this gallant will command the sun . . ~- iv. 3 

at your command at all hours — iv. 4 

I shall command your welcome .... — v. 1 
say, I command her come to me .... — v. 2 

to command the keys of all Winter' sTale,i. 2 

prevailed than so, on your command — .ii- 1 

tardied my swift command — iii- 2 

I willingly obey yom- command .... — iv. 1 
I command ihee to open thy aft'air . . — iv. 3 
by his command have I here touched — v. 1 
with thy command, let him be. . Comedy of Err. v. 1 
I, sir, am Dromio; command liim .. — v. 1 

he did command me to call timely Macbclh,\\. 3 

let your highness command upon me. . . . — iii. 1 

perform what you command us — iii- 1 

my poor country's, to command — iv. 3 



COM 



COMMAND— 'Usher command Macbelh,v. 1 

he ciiinimiml!', luovc only in command .. — y. 2 

ut \our hcslctiniimiiul King John, i. 1 

ollivihili ixiMiiMiiiiil the rest to stand — ii. 1 
coniiMHiul tliv sun and daughter to join — ii. 2 

my life thou'shult eummand IticluiiU 11. i. 1 

Mere ni't lioni to s)ie, b>it to comnumd — i. 1 

Miush:il,eonnnuud our officers at arms — _ i. 1 

lei it eomnuiiid a mirror liither — iv. 1 

the kiu'-', eniuniaiuls the contrary.... — v. 5 
I r^h.ai eomriuiiul iill tlie good hids ..Mlennjir. ii. 4 

to eoMiMmiid the devil — iii. 1 

of estiniutiuM iiiul command in arms — iv. 1 
a word of exceeding good command. 2/fenri//r. iii. 2 
no man could l>etter command ids.... — v. 1 
will yon eommund me to use my legs — (e|)il.) 

keep close, I thee counnand Henry C ii. 3 

our vain command upon the enraged — !!!• ■* 
yet my soldiers are in my eonimaud — iii- 3 

nndcr'his master's command — iv. 1 

begirar's liUee, command the health of it? — iv. 1 

he'had, deserving to command 1 Ueuitj VI. i. 1 

and look'st to command the prince. . — i- 1 
dost thou command me to be sliut out? — i- 3 

we charge and command you — (procl.) 

Dauphin, command the citizens — i. G 

this place commands my patience .. — iii. 1 
on the king commands me stoop .... — iii. 1 
yonr liighness shall command a peace — iv. 1 
upon mv blessing I command thee go — iv. ,') 
with such a proud command spirit .. — iv. 7 

command the conquest, Charles — v. 2 

command in Anjou what your honour — v. 3 
to be at your command; command .. — v. 5 

worldly pleasure at command 2Henryri. i. 2 

the Nevils are thy subjects to command — ii. 2 
used to command, untaught to plead — iv. 1 
kings and princes, — command silence — iv. 2 

can spare, you slrall command — iv. 1 

I charge and command — iv. 6 

and do as I command ye — iv. 7 

and we charge and cormnand — iv. 7 

parley, when I command them kill? — iv. 8 
comniaud no more content than 1? . . — iv. 9 

Henry, command my eldest son — y. 1 

Faulconbridge conunands thenarrow.3Henryri._i. 1 
command an ar"osy to stem the waves — .ii. 6 

command, and I'll obey — iii. 1 

wliat you command, that rests in me — iii. 2 
1 will do wliat your grace commands — iii. 2 
Vmt to command, to clieck, to o'crbear — iii. 2 

to serve, where kings command — iii. 3 

but why commands the king — iv. 3 

entreat, (for I command no more — iv. C 

stand thou when I command Richard III. i. 2 

we will do, we do upon command.... — 1.4 

he may command me, as my sovereign — iii. 1 
the king, tliat may command, entreats — iv. 4 
sent command to the lord mayor . . Henry VIII. ii. 1 

if I command liim, follows — ii. 2 

who commands you to render up ... . — iii. 2 
I can command: as I walk (rep.).... — iv. 1 
whose height commands as subject. Trnil.<Sr Cress, i. 2 

acluevement is command — i. 2 

Agamemnon commands Achilles .... — ii. 3 

to oiler to command AeliiUes — ii. 3 

the holy strength of their command.. — ii. 3 

and command liim wholly — iv. 4 

tt) him that Wctory commands? — iv. 5 

you shall command me, sir — iv. 5 

Ajax commands the guard to tend . . — v. 1 

he commands us to provide Timon of Athens, i. 2 

one business does command us all . . — iii. 4 

or that which can command it — iv. 2 

drugs of it freely command — iv. 3 

quickly draw out my command .... Coriolanus, i. 6 

tliy face bears a command in't — iv. 5 

under your great command — v. 5 

commands the empire of the sca...Anlony.^Cleo.i. 2 
necessity of time commands our services — i. 3 
through whom I might command .... .— iii. 3 

command what cost yom' heart — HV •* 

for indeed, I have lost command .... — iii. 9 
the bidding of tlie gods command me — ..V'- ^ 
soon us i' tlic command of Caesar .... — HI* * ^ 
worthiest to have command obeyed.. — iii. II 

and suti'ered my command — iv. 2 

on my command, thou tlienwouldst — iv. 12 
service tliat I shall command you.... — iv. 12 
as thereto sworn by your command . . — V. 2 
if, after this command, thou fraught.. Cunii/e/me, i. 2 
you Imve done not after our command — i. 2 
of what commands I should be subject — _i. 2 
save when command to your dismission — .!*• *^ 
command shall give t'leo opportunity — iii. 2 
since I received command to do this — iii. 4 

cliange command into obedience — iii. 4 

lie commands his absolute commission — iii. 7 

command, our present numbers — iv. 2 

good servant does not all commands — .v- 1 

a warrior, and command a camp. Titus Andrnn. iv. 2 
that hast upon the winds command ..Pericles, iii. 1 

which are now at your command — iii. 4 

get this done as I command you — iv. 3 

better thee in their command — iv. 6 

to perforin thy just command — v. 3 

speak, commands her service Lear, ii. 4 

commands the mind to suti'er with — ii, 4 

many (icople, under two commands. ..... — ii. 4 

so many have a command to tend you? . . — ii. 4 
in all your daughters' hard commands .. — iii. 4 

own behalf, a mistress's command — iv. 2 

ill our eyes wliich do command them — v. 3 

liiglier rate, than a eomiuaiid to parley.. HamW, i. 3 
but, 'IS you did command, ids access to me — ii. 1 
more into command than t<i entreaty .. ., — ii. 2 
where it falls, repugnant to command . . — ii. 2 

as I can make, you sliali command — iii. 2 

these cannot I command to any utterance — iii. 2 
like Mars, to tlueatcu and command — Iii. 4 



[ 129 ] 



COM 



COiMMAND-wlio commands tliem, sir?. /tonic/, iv. 4 

great command o'ersways the order — v. 1 

an exact comuuiud, laiilcd with many .. — v. 2 

I may cohiukuhI ;U ni.isl Othello, \. I 

you sluii I MuMc coioniiuid with years — i. 2 

and the iiuuicoimiKuids like a fiill soldier — ii. 1 
for the oiunmnd, I'll lay't upon you .... — ii. 1 
let him cnmnuuid, and toohcv sliall be .. — lii. 3 
cmiieror's side, ami command hiiu tasks — iv. i 
as 1 think, they do eonimaud himhomc — iv. 1 
power and vou'r conniuind is taken oft' .. — v. 2 

C< I M M A.N iVlO— cnmniundc de vous Henry V. iv. 4 

CO.\l.MAXl)i;i)— coiuinaiideil her. Two Cen.o/V. iii. 1 
her father hath commanded her. . Merry Wives, iv. 6 

it was commanded so Mettsure for Measure, v. 1 

how many be commanded Merch. of Venice, ii. 9 

I am conimanded here, and kept All's IVell, ii. 1 

as I was conimanded from you — ii. S 

a shower of commanded tears. r«mm»'o/ .SA. 1 (iiid.) 
I commanded the sleeves should be cut — iv. 3 
commanded none should come at.yVinter'sTale,\\. 3 
uo otlicr, as yourself conimanded .... — iii. 2 
were all commanded out of the chamber — v. 2 

lie will not be commanded Macbeth, iv. 1 

me where thou are commanded 2Henry VI. ii. 4 

despatched the duke, as lie'commanded — iii. 2 
commanded always by the greater. .'iHenry Vi. iii. I 

the king shall be commanded — iii- 1 

I am commanded, with your leave . . — iii. 3 
I am in this commanded to deliver.. TJicAard ///. i. 4 
and lie, that hath commanded is our — i. 4 
in the table of his law commanded .. — _i. 4 

they have not been commanded — iv. 4 

but to be commanded for ever .... Henry VIII. ii. 2 

let silence be commanded — ii. 4 

who had commanded nature — ii. 4 

hath commanded, to-morrow morning — v. I 

what you commanded me — v. 1 

the archbisliop, as you commanded me — y. 1 
to be commanded of Agamemnon.. Troil. <5- Ores. ii. 3 
to be conimanded under Cominius . . Coriolanus, i. 1 
commanded by such poor passion.. /tii/. Si-Cleo. iv. 13 
wherefore you have commanded .... Cymbeline, i. 6 
I am ignorant in what I am commanded — Hi. 2 
for 'tis conimanded I should do so . . — iii. 4 
second thing tliat I have commanded — iii. i 

do what we are conimanded Til as Andron. y. 2 

commanded lue to follow, and attend, Lear, ii. 4 

at your feet, to be commanded Hamlet, ii. 2 

I am commanded home Othello, iv. 1 

he hath commanded me to go to bed. . . . — iv. 3 

COMMANDER— ay, my commander. . . Tempest, iv. I 
love thee as our commander . . Two Gen. ofVer. iv. 1 

I was the world's commander Loi'e'sL. Lost, v. 2 

has taken their greatest commander.. -•IH'sWV//, iii. 5 
tliecommanders very poor rogues.... — iy. 3 
approaeli, commander of this hot .... KingJohn, ii. 2 
IJerfect in great commanders' names.. HcnryV. iii. 6 
a good old commander, and a most . . — iv. 1 
bosom of such great commanders . . 1 Henry VI. iv. 3 
royal commanders, be in readiness ..ZHenry VI. ii. 2 
Agamemnon, thou great commander. Troil. <j-Cr._i. 3 

thy commander, Achilles — ii. 3 

bid our commanders lead JuliusCa'snr, iv. 2 

commander of our commonweal. ..TilusAndron. i. 2 

commander of my thoughts — i v. 4 

than to deceive so good a commander . . Othello, ii. 3 

CO JIMANDINO— commanding love.. Ki/ii'Jo/m, i. 1 
the gieat commanding Warwick ..ZHenryVI. iii. 1 

bears liis commanding rein Richard III. ii. 2 

commanding all, obeyed of none .... — iv. 4 
(the court of Rome commanding) . . Henry VIII. ii. 2 
obeying in commanding, and tliy parts — ii. 4 
commanding one another's fortunes. Tim. of Alh. i. 2 
but commanding peace even with . . Coriolanus, iv. 7 

COMMANDMENT— 
to sea with the ten commandments. Wea./or Mea. i. 2 
'twas a commandment to command . . — i. 2 
heels are at your commandment.il/er, of Venice, ii. 2 
'gainst your wife's commandment. . . . — iy. I 

of stern commandment As you Like it, ji. 7 

I have express commandmeut Winter'' s Tale, ii. 2 

eomniandment on the pulse of life?. King John, iv. 2 
best of them ali at commandment.. xHtiiri/Zr. iii. 2 
England are at my commandment . . — y. 3 

I have express commandment 1 Henry VI. i. 3 

se t ray ten commandments in your face — i. 3 
like tlie commandment of a king.. Troil.fy Cress, i. 3 

more after our commandment Coriolanus, ii. 3 

thy commandment all alone shall live . . Hamlet, i. 5 
I will do your mother's commandment. . — iii. 2 
tell him, liis commandment is fulfilled . . — v. 2 
never gave commandment for tlieir death — v. 2 

COMAI AND'ST— thou command'st. . . . Henry V. iv. 1 
to hear what thou command'st . . ..3Henry VI. iv. 8 

COiMMENCE— wooer doth commence. ii/ucA Ado, ii. 3 

did you these arms commence IHenryl V. iv. 2 

till sack eommeiices it, and sets it .. — iv. 3 
did conimeuoe nmgli deeds of rage . . 1 Henry VI. iv. 7 
commence [CW. An', conduce] anght. Trail. SfCr.v. 2 
did commence in suiTerance . . Timon of A/hens, iy . 3 
my actions vet commence a deed Pericles, ii. 5 

COMMENCIiD-to be commenced.... liic/i>!//r. i. 1 
commenced on this ball of earth.. 2 Hen rj/ //'. (ind.) 
commenced in Inirning Troy? illenry VI. iii. 2 

COMMENCEMENT-commencement of. HamW, iii. 1 
it was a violent comnicuceiiieiit Othello, i. 3 

COMiMENCING-conimenciug in a truth ?..iWuo(<. i. 3 

COJIMEND- 
commend thy grievance to . . Two Gen. of Verona, i. 1 

I'll commend you to my master — i. 1 

to commend their service to liis will — i. 3 

commend, extol tlieir graces — i. 3 

to her beauty I conimcnd my vows .. _ — iv. 2 
that all our swains commend her? . . — iv. 2 (song) 
seest her before mo, commend me.. Merry Wives, i. 4 

womim, commend me to her — ii. 2 

commend me to them both — ii. 2 

argument to cummciid themselves .. — ii. 2 
did coiiiiiieud my yellow stockings .. TwelflhN. ii. i 



COMMEND- commend me tomy.^/cas./or Wcnu. i. 5 

commend me to the prison — iii. 2 

commend me to liim Much Ado, i. 1 

play yiiu, cinniciid me to mistress. A//(/, N. Dr. iii. 1 
Arme — Ai-nic— cunimeiids you. . .. /.ouf'jt L. /.o«/, i. i 
I did commend the blaek-oppres.sing.. — i, 1 (let.) 
lady, I will commend you to my own — ii. 1 

doeommend this sea!ed-up counsel.. — iii. 1 

that well can thee commend -♦ iv. 2 

besides commends, and courteous. . Mer. of Ven. ii. 9 
signior Antonio comnicnd- liim to you — iii. 2 
commend a young and learned doctor — iv. 1 
whereof 1 cannot eiion.^h coniineiid — i\,l(lct.) 
commend mc to your honourable wife .»- iy. I 
commend the parts and graces ..As you Like it, ii. 2 
Orlando doth commend him to you . . — iv. 3 
I pray you, commend iny counterfeiting — iy. 3 
commend mo to my kinsmen, and. ...Mi's Well, ii. 2 
were more than they can commend . . — iv. 3 
eomiiKiid tile i»aper to his gracious hand — v. I 
then I'll cuiinncnd her volubility .Vamint'o/S/i.ii. I 

commend mu to tl iv nia.-ter — iv. 3 

Emilia, coiniiiLnd iny \:cft Winler'sTale, ii. 2 

commends it til \uiir i)kssing — ii. 3 

that thou curniviend it stiangely .... — Ji. 3 
eommend them, and conilemii them — iv. 3 

I eommend you to your own content. Com. o/ii'rr. i.2 

justice cominends the ingredients Macbethj i. 7 

Ido commend you to their backs .... — iii. 1 
Dwell done! 1 commend your pains. . — iv. 1 
commend these waters to those baby.K/?j^Jo/iH,v. 2 

eommend nie to one Hubert — v. 4 

commend me to my brother Richard 1 1, i.2 

therefore commend me — i.2 

Gaunt commends liim to your majesty — ii. 1 
I send to her my kind commeuds.... — iii. I 
will commend to rust his barbed steeds — iii. 3 
to his gentle hearing kind commends — iii. 3 
lord ot York commends the plot .... 1 Henry IV. ii. 3 

commend me to my cousin illenry IV. i. 2 

I commend me to thee, I commend thee — ii. 2 
my captain, sir, commends him to you — iii. 2 

I eommend you well — iii. 2 

both, commend me to the princes .... Henry F. iv. 1 
tiie duke of York cominends him to. . — iv. u 
my lord, commend my service to my — iv. li 

1 commend tliis kind submission illenry VI. v. 1 

commend me to my valiant brother.3nenr!/ VI. v. 2 
commeud me to lord William .... lUclmrd III. iii. 1 
commends him to j'our noble lordship — iii. 2 
to thy lord; eommend me to him .... — iv. 5 
to thee I do commend my watchful . . — v.? 

commend me to his grace Henry Vlll. ii. 1 

the king's majesty commends Ids good — ii. 3 
and durst couiaicnd a secret to your ear — y. 1 
the repining enemy commends . . Troilus ^Cress. i. 3 
commends liimselt most atlectionately — iii. 1 

commend me to your niece — iii. I 

but commends itself to others' eyes.. — iii. 3 
we'll not commeud what we intend.. — iv. I 

bade iiie not commend her to you — iv. tj 

fellow, commend my service to her.. — v. 5 
commend me to liim: I will send. . Timon of.Uh. i. 1 

commend me to j'our master — ii. 1 

commend me to their loves; and, I am — ii. 2 

commend me to thy honom-able — iii. 2 

commend me bountifully to his good — iii. 2 
commend me to my loving conntrymcu — v. 2 
commend me to them; and tell them — y. 2 

commend to yoiu* remembrances Coriolanus, ii. 3 

commend me to my wife — iii. 2 

let me commend thee first to those .. — iv. ,'> 
buy men's voices to commend . . ..Julius Cwsar, ii. 1 

and commend me to thy lord — ii. 4 

commend me to my brotiier Cassius — iv. 3 

to tlus great fairy I commend . . Antony fy Cleo. iv. 8 
commend unto Ms lips tliy favouring — iy. S 
whom I commend to you, as a noble . Cymbeline, i. 

conunend me to the court — i. 5 

protection I commend me, gods I . . . . — ii. 2 
any way speak in liis just eommend . . Pericles, ii. 2 
every worth in sliow commends itself .. — ii. 3 

well, I commend her choice — ii. 5 

it is your grace's pleasure to commend ._. — ii. a 

I do commend to your content — iv. (Gower) 

doth this instant so much commend itself. J-t'iir, ii. I 
I did commend your higliness' letters .. — ii. 4 

commend a dear thing to you — iii. 1 

commend me to thy lady (rep.) .. Romeo ^ Juliet^W. 4 
commend me to thy lady and bid her — iii. 3 

commend me to your daughter — iii. 4 

let your haste cormncnd your duty .... Hamlet, i. 2 
with all my love I do commend me to you — i. .'> 
commend my duty to your lordship (rep.) — v. 2 
commend mo to my kind lord Oihelli, v. 2 

COMMENDAELE-notcommendable..1/ucA .4do,iii. 1 
cannot be commendable: but who dare — iii. 1 
commendable in a neat's tongue ..^ler. of Venice, i. 1 
discourse grow commendable in none — iii. .1 

nor more commendable Taming of Shrew, iv. 3 

and everwere, very commendable. .2//eiirj//('. iii. 2 
and, commendable proved, let's dic.llIenryVI. iv. G 

unto itself most commendable Coriolanus, iv. 7 

sweet and commendable in your nature, iiuwiii;/, i. 2 

COMMENDATION— 
a word or two of commendation. Two Gen. of Ver.i. 3 
commendation from great potentates — ii. 4 
her hearty commendations to you..l/err!/»»'irM, ii. 2 
prevail in man's commendation. Twelfth Kighl, iii. 2 
this commeudation I can aliord her . . .Uuc/i Ado, i. I 
the commendation is not ill his wit .. _ — ii. I 
prai' you, do my coiiiiiiendati(>iis./.oP6''< L.Lost, ii. 1 
publisli his commendation. .U/T. of Venice,iv. 1 (let.) 
liigh commeudation, true aj)i)lause./l»v"«'-*t'", i.2 
there commendations go with pity . . .Ws Well, i. I 
your commendations, madam, get tears — _i. I 

not much commeudution to them — ii. 2 

letters of commendation to the king — iy. 3 

in his commendations I am fed Macbeth, i, 4 

bcgiiUiug tliem of commendation .. U/rjuy IV. iii. I 
Jv 



COM 

COJIMENDATION— 
comniendatioTis to my king? (rep.)..} Henry I'l. v. 3 
you lus |.riIu■.■l^• '■■Tii'niondations.. Henry I'lII. iv. 2 
evergooil : r ... m. ,, .Minmenclations — v. 2 

a mere ':.!.! , .r m;ndation8.. rimouo/'.'ltfi. i. 1 

I have V ill , ..,,..■. lul^ition Cymheline, i. 5 

turn all iuin mv r.nniinnulatious — iv. 1 

to cx-|)ress lu',- i'i>iiiineiuliitions great .. Pericles, W. i 

CO iMMlOX I )1.: l)-niuel»eomnienrIed. rwoG-'n. o/r. ii. 4 

prie~t o»the town coinnieiided \uva..MerryWires,\\. 1 

T, 11,1 f. mirn, inled thy yellow. Tu-elfili Mght, ii. 5 (let.) 

^^ii'"'' u'li.U'd tlvy yellow stoclcings — iii. 4 

Jii .1 ili r.;ii!ii..iuleil, no richer ., H'liUer'sTate, in. 2 
111',.,' r iLiiuL.nik.cl to his goodness.. HfjjryFff/. iv. 2 

had commended Troilus Trail us ^Cresslda, i. 2 

by my once commended beauty ..JuliusCipsar, ii. 1 

smce commended to our master Pericles, 1. 3 

his maies tv commended him to you Hamlet, v, 3 

COMMJKNDlNG-commendinghim. TieoGen.o/f^. iv.2 

CO^IJMENT — to comment on your malady — ii. 1 

a vulgar comment will be made.Comcdi/ of Err. iii. 1 

forgive the comment that my passiou John, iv. 2 

by the idle comments that it makes — v. 7 

comment then upon his sudden 2Henry VI. iii. 2 

offence should bear his comment.. /u(ii«C<BSfflr, iv. 2 

with the very comment of thy soul Hamlet, iii. 2 

COMJIEiSITARIES— 

in the commentaries of Ctesar viTit.2Hen»-!/ VI. iv. 7 

COIMMENTING-oommentingupon.Vlsi/oij LiUe,ii. 1 

thnt fearful commenting is leaden. fi/cAaj-rf III. iv. 3 

C(1?.T.MER.CE— in some commerce. 7'«ri/V/i,Vi>/i(, iii. 4 

pcaeeail commerce from dividable. Trail. ^-Cress i. 3 

all the commerce that von have had — iii. 3 

better commerce than with honesty? . . Hamlet, iii. 1 

COMMINGS-[A'n(.] wageronyom'c'ommings — iv. 7 

COMMISERATION— 

commiseration on thy heroical. Lave'sL.L. iv. 1 (let.) 

pluck commiseration of his state . . Mer. or f'en.iv. 1 

lending your kind commiseration. 37/»s,4nrf70)!. v. 3 

[Col. A';i(.]-defy thy commiseration. fiomeo ^Jul. v. 3 

COMMISSION— my commission . . Twelfth Night, i. 5 

any commission from your lord — i. .'i 

there is our commission . . Measure for Measure, i. 1 

take thy commission — i. 1 

I leave you of your commissions .. — i. 1 

give out a commission for more heads — ii. 1 

ask yoxi for your commission .-Is you Like it, iv. 1 

vou commission [Col. Kn I. -heialdry'}. Mi's Well, ii. 3 

I'll give him my commission fVinter'sTale, i. 2 

and that beyond commission — i.2 

are not those in commission yet Macbeth, i. 4 

tliis great commission, France King .John, ii. 1 

tise our commission in his utmost force — iii- 3 

silence, in commission witli me 2Henryir. iii. 2 

hath the prince John a full commission — iv. 1 
with letters of commission IHennj VI. v. 4 

• the king's commission (rep.) iHenryVI.W. i 

let him see our commission Richard III. i. 4 

there have been commissions sent. . Henry VIII. i. 2 
through commissions, which compel — i.2 

haveyouaprecedentofthiscommission? — i.2 
denied the force of this commission.. — i.2 
by commission, and main power, took — ii. 2 (let.) 
highness' hand I tender my commission — ii. 2 

> OWT commission from Rome is read .. — ii. 4 
by a commission from the consistory — ii. 4 
stay, Where's your commission, lords? — iii. 2 
large commission to Gregory de Cassalis — iii. 2 
did my commission bid ye so far forget — v. 2 
seals a commission to a blank . . Troii. ■'^Crfss. iii. 3 
take your commission ; hie you to . . Coriolanus, i. 2 

the one half of ray cdhimission — iv. .5 

had not joined in commission with him — iv. 7 
your commission's ready: follow me. /In'. ■SCTeo.ii. 3 
will do Ills commission thoroughly. . Cymbeline, ii. 4 
he commands-his absolute commission — iii. 7 
the words of your commission will tie — iii. 7 

his sealed commission, left in trust Pericles, i. 3 

my commission is not to reason........ — iv. 1 

you are of the commission, sit you too . . Lear, iii. 6 
the commission of my place and person . . — v. 3 
he hath commission from thy wife and me — v. 3 
which the commission of thy years. Boot. ^Jul. iv. 1 

• his commission, to employ tfiose soldlevsHam/e/, ii. 2 
your commission will forthwith despatch — iii. 3 
to unseal their grand commission — v. 2 

• here's the commission; read it at more — v. 2 
deWsed a new commission; -wTote it fair — v. 2 
he shall our commission bring to vou , . Othello, i. 3 

and is in full commission here for" Cj'prus ii. 1 

especial commission come iVnm Venice .. — iv. '2 

COMMISSIONER-late commissioner??. Hf;.™ '. ii.2 
COMMIT— as e'er I did coimnit. Tu-o Gen. of Ver. v. \ 

to time. I will commit ru-elfih '.\ighi, i. 2 

and so I commit you Muck .4da, i. 1 

commit yourself into the hands . . Mitl.N.'s Dr. ii. 2 
follies that themselves commit. . Mer. of Venice, ii. 6 

her gentle spirit commits itself — iii. 2 

Lorenzo, I commit into your hands — iii, 4 

you lack not folly to commit them ..All's Well, i. 3 
commit it count. I am your accessary — ii. 1 
commits his body to painful labour.. 7'om.q/'.5/i. v. 2 

is for me less easy to commit IVinter'sTale, i. 2 

commit me for committing honour .. — ii. 3 
with the dam, commit them to the fire — ii. 3 

and will again commit them Jvino'j'o/in,iii. 4 

I do commit his youth — iv. 2 

and commit the oldest sins iHenry IV. iv. 4 

to my authority, and did commit you — v. 2 
you did commit me; for which (repj) — v. 2 
here I commit my body to your mercies — (epil.) 
where, inshipped," commit tnem .... 1 Henry VI. v. 1 
never traitor m the land commit . . . .2Henry VI. i.^ 
here commit you to my lord cardinal — iii. 1 

we will commit thee thither — iv. 9 

for that, commit your godfathers ..Richard III. i. 1 
moved his highness to commit me now — i. 1 
to commit you, the best persuasions. Henry VIII. v. 1 
well, uncle, what folly I commit. Trail. <^ Cress, iii . 2 
been known to commit outrages. . Timon ofAth. iii. 5 



[ 130 ] 



COMJIIT— our veiled dames commit.Cor/oitmiM, ii. 1 
tluis to commit yourwcak coudition./«;.C«?.rar, ii. 1 
which commits some loving act ..Antony ^Cleo. i. 1 
we do commit murder in healing .... — ii.2 

commit oifence to my inferiors Cymbeline, ii. 1 

than to commit such slaughter — v. 3 

commit my cause in balance to be. TitusAndran. i. 1 

of my country commit myself — i. 1 

commit him to the grave — v. 3 

fearfully, which you commit willingly. Pericles, iv. 3 

we commit no crime to use — iv. 4 (Gower) 

commit a thing so monstrous Lear, i. 1 

to your professed bosoms I commit him — i. 1 

commit not with man's sworn spouse — iii. 4 

COMMIT'ST-orelse eommit'st i\\y..Mid.N.Dr. iii. 2 
commit'st thy anointed body Itielmrd Il.i\. 1 

COMMITTED-committed here. Two Gen. of Vci. v. 4 
have committed disparagements ..il/ec;/ ll'ices,i. 1 
oft'ence is holy, that she hath committed — v. 5 
to prison, where I am committed. Meas. for Meas. i. 3 

there's many have committed it — ii.2 

offenceful act was mutually committed? — ii. 3 
flat burglary, as ever was committed. i>/uc/i/lrfo,iv. 2 
sir, they have committed false report — v. 1 
they are committed; and to conclude — v. 1 
I have committed to yoru- worship. IVinter's Tale, v. 2 
there his fury had committed. . . . Comedy afErr. v. 1 

who committed treason enough Macbeth, ii. 3 

crimes committed by your person . . Richard II. iv. 1 
intended, or committed, was this fault? — v. 3 
oath on oath, committed wrong on..l Henry IV. iv. 3 
the nobleman that committed the ..iHenrylV. i. 2 
wilftil adultery and murder committed. Henji/ ;'. ii.l 
enlarge the man committed yesterday — ii. 2 
very excellent service committed at — iii. 6 

committed to the bishop of York . .ZHenry VI. iv. 4 

have aught committed that is Richard III. ii. 1 

who hath committed them? the mighty — ii. 4 

the nobles were committed, is all — ii. 4 

for hateful deeds committed by myself — v. 3 

I for this had been committed Henry VIII. i. 2 

that I committed the dariug'st counsel — ii. 4 
the wilUng'st sin I ever yet committed — iii. 1 
hence you be committed to the Tower — v. 2 
throats that have committed them. . Titus And. iii. 1 
what ignorant sin have I committed?. . Othello, iv. 2 
what committed! committed! (rep.').. — iv.2 
act of shame a thousand times committed — v. 2 

COMMITTING— committing me.. ^.s you Like it, iv. 3 
commit me, for committing honour. IVinter's T. ii. 3 
in committing adultery with .. — iii. 2 (indict.) 
in conunitting freely your scruple. . Hen;;/ F///. ii. 2 

COMMIX — to commix with winds . . Cymbeline, iv. 2 

COMMIXTION— thy commixtion,7'roi7.,5-C)es.!.iv. 5 

COMMIXTURE-commixture ehovm.Love'sL.L. v. 2 
tliy toiigh commixtures melt 3 Henry VI. ii. 6 

COMMODIOUS-a commodious drab. Troil.^- Cres. v. 2 

COMJMODITIES-oommoditiestobuy. Com.ofEr. iv. 3 
take up commodities upon our bills. 2Henr?/r/. iv. 7 
our mere defects prove our commodities . . Lear, iv. 1 

COMMODITY-commodityofhair.r2t'eZ/(/iA7g7,;,iii. 1 
for a commodity of brown paper .. Mea. for Mea. iv. 3 
like to prove a goodly commodity . . Much Ado, iii. 3 
a commodity in question, I warrant you — iii. 3 
nor commodity to raise a present. Afer.o/renice, i. 1 
for the commodity that strangers have — iii. 3 
'tis a commodity will lose the gloss . . All's Well, i. 1 
a commodity lay fretting by you. Taming n/.s'A. ii. 1 
to me can life be no commodity. . Winter s Tale, iii. 2 
tickling commodity,- commodity ..King John, ii. 2 
this commodity, makes it take head. . — ii. 2 
this commodity, this bawd, this broker — ii. 2 

and wdiy rail Ion this commodity — ii. 2 

since kings break faith upon commodity — ii.2 
were a commodity ol'good names.. ..\HenryIV. i. 2 
such a commodity of warm slaves.. .. — iv.2 
I will turn diseases to commodity . .'iHenry IV. i. 2 
the commodity; nor the commodity . . Pericles, iv. 3 

COMMON — our hint of woe is common. Tempest, ii. 1 
all things in common nature shoxild .. . — ii.l 

rejoice beyond a common joy — v. 1 

thou common friend, that's. . . . Two Gen. of Ver. v. 4 
i' the common stocks for a witch.. ilferri/ Wives, iv. 5 
make him a common recreation. . Twelfih Night, ii. 3 
and the terms for common justice.. /l/ea./ocMett. i. 1 

1 have strewed it in the common ear — i. 4 
use their abuses in common houses .. . — ii. 1 
do me the common right to let me . . — ii. 3 
is in OUT prison a common executioner — iv. 2 

you kuow the coui-se is common — iv. 2 

my dear friend to a common stale . . Much Ado, iv. 1 
I am a spirit of no common rate ..Mid, N. Dr. iii. 1 
strike more dead than common sleep — iv. 1 
you mean, from common sense? . . Love's L. Last, i. 1 
when mistresses from common sense — i. 1 

my lips are no common — ii.l 

not jump with common spirits. . Mer. of Venice, ii. 9 
thou pale and common drudge 'tween — iii. 2 
to the common ferry, which trades to — iii. 4 

I am more than common tall As yau Like it, i. 3 

thievish living on the common road? — ii. 3 
the common executioner whose heart — iii. 5 
which in the common, is — woman . . — v. 1 

would slay in common sense All's Well, ii. 1 

and common speech gives him a worthy — ii. a 
and as in the common course of all . . — iv. 3 
was a common gamester to the camp — v. 3 

bought me at a common price — v. 3 

I think you now some common customer — v. 3 
rhetoric in your common talk.. Taming of Shrew, i. 1 

more than the common blocks Winter' sTale, i. 2 

surpassing the common praise it bears — iii. 1 
a common of my serious hours. Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 
is common; that every churl (rep.') .. — iii. 1 
supposed by the common rout against — iii. 1 
given to the common enemy of man ..Macbeth, iii. 1 

the business from the common eye — iii. 1 

the vain breath of a common man . . King John, iii. i 
no common wind, no customed event — iii. 4 
death is common in their mouths ... . — iv.2 



COM 

COM]\ION— forth in the common air . . Ulchardll. i. 3 
his courtsiiip to the common people. . — i. 4 
the commons hath he pilled with .... — ii. 1 
the commons cold, and will, I fear .. — ii.2 
and that's the wavering commons . . — ii.2 
the hateful commons will perform .. — ii.2 

some way of common trade — iii. 3 

the commons' suit? {rep.) — iv. 1 

the commons will not then be satisfied — iv. 1 
homo is a common name to all men. .1 Henry//', ii. 1 

not in the roll of common men — iii. 1 

so common hackneyed in the ej'es .. — iii. 2 
a companion to the common streets.. — iii. 2 
but is a weary of thy common sight — iii. 2 

to make it too common iHenrylV. i. 2 

so, thou common dog, didst thou .... — i. 3 
I warrant you, as common as the way — ii. 2 
the nobles, and the armed commons — ii. 3 

or a common 'larum-bell? — iii. 1 

doth, in common sense, crowd us — iv. 2 

with more tlian with a common pain — iv 4 
of this bill urged by the commons? .... Henry V. i. 1 
as 'tis ever coimnon, that men are.... — i.2 
or art thou base, common, and popular? — iv. 1 
sort our nobles from our common men — iv. 7 
appeared to me but as a common man — iv. 8 

hundred, besides common men — iv. 8 

ill beseeming any common man.. ..I Henry VI. iv. 1 

common grief of^all the land illeni-y VI. i. 1 

what though the common people favour — i. I 
the greatest favour of the commons.. — i. 1 
and common profit of his country! .. — i. 1 
enclosing the commons of Melford — i. 3 (petit.) 

the commons hast thou racked — i. 3 

hath he won the commons' hearts ... . — iii. 1 
would not tax the needy commons .. — iii. 1 
the commons haply rise to save liis life — iii. 1 
I shall perceive the commons' mind — iii- 1 

the commons, like an angry hive — iii. 2 

the commons send you word by me . . — iii. 2 
the commons, rude unpolished hinds — iii. 2 

tlie commons here in Kent are — iv. 1 

all the realm shall be in common — iv. 2 

and you, that love the commons, follow — iv. 2 

all things shall be in common — iv. 7 

from the king unto the commons .... — iv. 8 
the swords of common soldiers slain. .3Hen?"T/f'I. i. 1 
more than common fear of Clifford's — ii.l 

grief more than common grief ! — ii- 3 

the common people swarm like — ii. G 

the lightness of you common men — iii. 1 

the common people by nmnber swarm — iv . 2 

discharge the common sort — v. "i 

in common worldly things Richard III. ii.2 

grieved commons hardly conceive . . Henry VIII. i. i 
all the commons hate lum perniciously — ..'.'•' 
as you respect the common good .... — iii. 2 
the common voice, I see, is verified . . — v. 2 
in a scale of common ounces?. Troilus Sf Cressida, u. 2 

the common curse of mankind — ii. 3 

and that old common arbitrator, time — iv. 5 
'tis common: a thousand moral. Kj.iono//H/i(?ns,i. 1 

he speaks the common tongue — i. 1 

with more than common thanks I will — i. 2 

which I hear from common rumours — iii. 2 
and be denied such common grace . . — iii. 5 
witli the common lag of people . . — iii. 6 (grace ) 
thou common whore of mankiad — — iv. 3 
common mother, thou, whose womb _ — iv. 3 
in the common wreck as common bruit — v. 2 
deserve the common stroke of war . . — y. 5 
affection common of the whole body..Cor/o/artws, i. 1 
touching the weal o' the common — — i. I 
but for our gentlemen, the commo.'. file — i. 6 
forth, before the common distrilnttiou — i. 9 

stand upon my common part with . . — i. 9 

and the commons made a shower .... — ii. 1 
proud, and loves not the common people — ii. 2 
loving motion toward the common body — ii. 2 
they were the common muck o' the . . — ii. 2 
I have not been common in ny love — .!!■ ^ 
the tongues o' the common month . . — iii. 1 
passed the nobles [Col. A'«t. -noble] and 

the commons? [Col. Xr!<. -common] — iii. 1 
are learned, be not as common fools — iii. 1 

right and strength o' the commons . . — iii. 3 
my masters, and my common friends — iii. 3 

you common cry of curs! . — iii. 3 

common chances common men could — iv. 1 
your son will, or exceed the common — iv. 1 

show than that of common sons — v. 3 

in theirs and in the commons' ears . . — y. 5 

were I a common laugher JuliusCcesar, i. 2 

when he perceived the common herd — i. 2 
a common slave (j-ou know him well — i. 3 

but 'tis a common proof, that lowliness — ii. 1 

so appearing to the common eyes — ii. 1 

of praetors, common suitors — .i^* ** 

some to the common pulpits, and cry — iii. 1 
the commons hear this testament. . . . — iji. 2 
common pleasures to walk abroad . . — iii. 2 
shake his ears, and graze in commons — i v. 1 
and common good to all, made one . . — v. 6 
he approves the common liar .... Antony Sf Cleo. i. 1 

this common body, like to — i. 4 

i' the common show-place — iii. 6 

■with lips as common as the stairs Cymbeline, i. 7 

it is no act of common passage ^- iii. 4 

the common men are now in action . . — iii. 7 

by common voice, in electiou TilusAndron. i. ) 

the common people love so much — — iv. 4 
the common voice do cry, it shall be so — v. 3 

the common body, by you relieved Pericles, iii. 3 

tile common hangman shall execute it . . — iv. 6 

common sewers, of filth (rep.) — iv. 6 

pilferings and most common trespasses . . Lear, ii. 2 
that must approve the common saw I — — ii.2 
to pluck the common bosom on his side — y. 3 
our common judgement-place . . Romeo ^ Juliet, i. 1 
soar with them above a common bound — i. 4 



COM 



— Hi. 3 



COMMON— thou know'et 'tis common . . Hamlet, i 
ny, madam, U is oommim — i. 

18 as common as any the most vulijar .... — i 

whosccoMimiiu lliL'uK' is death of fathers — _i 

common for thi? \oungcrsort to lack .... — ii, 

and so bernttle the eoiiimon stages — ii 

(irow themselves to eoranion phiyers .... — ii 

L K/i/.!l I must common with your fp-ief . . — iv 

a knave of eoramon hire, a gondohcr .... Othello, \ 

in our common reason, (save tliat. . . """ 

a thing for me? It is a coumiou thin;,.... 
COMMONALTY of the connnoualty.Hciiryf///. 

he's a very dog to the conunonalty . . Corialanus, i. 
COJIMONEll-a commoner o' the ciunp..-(«'sH'fH,v. 

and then tlie vital commoners 'iHenrylV. ly. 

doubt not. the commoners Coriolanus,'\\. 

O tliou public commoner ! Othello, iv. 

Cti.MMONEST-the commonest creature.fiicA. //. v. 
COMMON-KISSINCJ— 

touch of oommon-kissiug Titan Cymbeline, iii. 

COMMONLY— fathers, commonly. 2'nmmg'o/A7i. ii. 

as our sex commonly are IVimn's 'I'lle, ii. 

in women commonly is seen 1 Henry VI. v. 

devil here, tliat commonly rebels Othello, iii . 

COAlMON'TY-is not a commonty. ram. o/SA. 2 (iud 
COMJNION-WEiVL-a common-weal.il/ea./oriVfu. ii. 

kind a fatlier of the coramon-weal..l Henry VI. iii. 

unlike the ruler of a common-weal. . 2 HeHri/ VI. i. 

the king and common- weal are deeply — i. 

it so with king and common-weal! . . — ii. 

Ihave loved my king, and common- weal — ii. 

to tight for king and common- weal. . Tiius .ind. i. 

ripen justice in this common-weal.... — i. 

and commander of om' common- weal — i. 

his shipwreck, and his common-weal's — ii. 
COMMONWEALTH— 

i' the com nu 111 wealth I would Tempest, ii. 

the latter end of Ids commonwealth.... — ii. 

indeed, in the commonwealth I .. Meas.forMcas.\. 

was known in the commonwealth ..Much Ado, iii. 

member of the commonwealth. .tore'sX-.Lusf, iv. 
a good memlwr of the commonwealth — iy. 
member of tlie commonwealth . . Mer. of Venice, iii. 
that better to the commonwealth.... — iii. 

in the commonwealth of nature AlVs Vf'ell,\. 

caterpillars of the commonwealth ..Richard II. ii. 
look too lofty in our commonwealth — iii. 

tlve commonwealth their boots 1 \ Henry IV. ii. 

lie too heavy on the commonwealth.. — iv. 
tlie commonwealth is sick of then: ..2HenryIl'. i. 
my brother general, the commonwealth — iv. 

1 was busy for the commonwealth . . — v. 
him debate of commonwealth affairs . . Henry V. i. 
tlie bowels of the commonwealth ..IHenryl'l. iii. 
the commonwealth hath daily rim ..2HeiirylI. i. 
come to talk of commonwealth affairs — i. 
means to dress the commonwealth . . — iv. 
lord Say hath gelded the commonwealth — iv. 
this our commonwealth 'gainst . . . .SHenry VI. iv. 
the commonwealth of Athens., r/njo/i of Athens, iv. 

the commonwealth doth stand Coriolanus, iy. 

a place in the commonwealth Julius Ceesar, iii. 

to ruffle in the commonwealth. . . . Titus Andron. i. 

COMJIOTION-tempest of commotion.2Hfnjj(i V. ii. 

if damned commotion so appeared .. — iv. 

consecrate commotion's bitter edge . . — iv. 

when lie please to make commotion. 2H(;nrj/ VI. iii. 

to make commotion, as full well he can — iii. 

some strange commotion is in iiis brain — iii. 

what follows then? commotions Henry VIII. 

commotion in the winds? .... Troilus <5* Cressida, i 

Achilles in commotion ra^es, and batters — ii. 
COMMUNE— commune with jou..Mea.forMea. iv. 

more to commune with Bianca . . Taming of S/i. i. 

what need we commune with you. IVinter's i<ite, ii. 

commune [iin(. -common] with your . . Hnmlei, iv. 
COMMUNICATE-did communicate to. .-l^'s iVM, i. 

thy strengtii to communicate. Co»!et(i/o/£Viors,ii. 

till he communicate his parts . , Troil. 6f Cress, iii. 
COMMUNICATEST— 

communicatest with dreams Winter's Tale, i. 

COMMUNICATION — minister communication 

of a most poor issue? Henn/ VI II. i. 

COMMUNITIES-could communities. Troil. <5-C>. i. 
COMMUNITY— with community ..MlenrylV. iii. 
COMMUTUAL — unite eommutual in . . Hamlet, iii. 
COMPACT— this compact sealed. . Twelfth Nig/U, v. 

woman, compact witli her that's. . Mea.fnrMea. v. 

are of imagination all compact. iWi'rf. N.'sUream, v. 

if he, compact of jars, grow m.ViSica,\.Asyoul.ilie, ii. 

whiles our compact is urged — v. 

and drift of your compact? . . Comedy of Errors, ii. 

being compact of credit, that you.... — iii. 

take this compact of a truce \HenryVI. v. 

and the compact is firm, and true.. JdcAan/ ///. ii. 

but what compact mean you .... Julius Co'sar, iii. 

my heart is not compact of flint.. TiVus Andron. v. 

mv dimensions as well compact L ar,i. 

of'your own, as may compact it more — i. 

[^Col. A'nf.j when he, compact, and flattering — ii. 

who, by a sealed compact, well ratified.. Hmate/, i. 
COMI'ANIKS-in all companies. Tmo Gen. ofVer.iv. 

stranger companies [CoJ. -strange companions] 

Mid. N:s Dream, \. 

discreetly in all kind of companies. Tamini,' nfsh. i. 

tlirust thyself into their companies. .KinA'/o/in, iv. 

gentlemen of companies, slaves ...AHe'nrylv. iv. 

his comnanies unlettered, rude lleiuy V. i. 

these villains from your companies. Tim. of Ath. v. 

to lodge their companies to night. ^iili'ust'iriar, iv. 

search what companies are near Cymbeline, iv. 

«o by your companies to draw him on. . Hamlet, ii. 
COMPANION— any companion in. ...Tempest, iii. 

set Caliban and his comjianions free .. — v. 

take with you your companions — v. 

companion, youthful Valentine. 'i'u'oCffn.n/rer. i. 

scall, scurvy, eosging companion. ^l/crri/H'/ecj, iii. 

nt his heels a raTible of his companions — iii. 

this your comjianion by the hand. Mea.forMea. Iv. 

with the other confederate companiou — v. 



,'. 2 



[ 131 ] 

COMPANION— who is his companion. MucA Ado, i. 
but, I pray you, who is his comiiiinion? — i. 
pale companion is not for our pomp.il/irf.A'.'.sDr. i. 
iCal.} friends and strange companions — i. 
with a companion of the king b ..Love's L.Lost, v. 

and point-de-vicc companions — v. 

the king and his Companions — v. 

in companions that do converse. Mcr. ofVeniee, iii. 

'tis too cold a companion All's Well, i. 

you comiiauion to the count Rousillon? — ii. 

by a gentleman his companion .. — iii. 

what an equivocal companion is this? — v. 
now, my spruce companions.. 7'««ii«i' of S/i;yi/', iv. 
the sweetest companion, that e'er. IVinter's Tale, v. 
this companion with the saffcon.Comedijof Err. \\. 

fancies your companions making? Macbeth, iii. 

with her companion grief must end.. Jiic/m;(iyi. i. : 

liege, and ray companiou peers — i. : 

with unrestrained loose companions.. — v.; 
a tun of man is thy companion ..,,\HenryIF.\\. 
grew a companion to the common .. — iii.: 
a better companion! Heaven (rep.')..iHeurylV. i. : 
says he, no swaggering companions.. — ii. - 

I scorn you, scurvy companion — ii. ■ 

studies his companions, like a strange — iv. ■ 
to be made companion with a king. . 1 Henry VI. v. ; 
must be companion of his nuptial .... — v. : 
why, rude companion whatsoe'er.. 2 Henry F/. iv. li 
have you therein my companion. . Henry VIII. iii. : 
our backs from our companions . . Timon of.tlh. iv. ; 
gives entrance to such companions?. C'o;i'o/auus,iv. ; 
now, you companion, I'll say an errand — v. i 
such j iggiug fools? companiou . . Julius Cipsar,i\'. I 
companion me with my mistress .Anlony ^Cleo, i. ; 
friend and companion m the front . . — v. 
there is a Frenchman his companion. Ci/m6t'/i'ne,i. ; 
undertake every companiou that you — ii. ; 

to be companion with them — iii . ( 

I create you companions to our person — v. ! 
the sweetest companions in tlie world — v. ; 

never be her mild companion Pericles, i. 1 

sad companion, dull-eyed melanclioly . . — i. : 
none tint I and my companion be suffered — v. 1 
well, my companion friends, if this but .. — v. 1 
was he not companion with the riotous . . Lear, ii. 1 

as are companions noted and most Hamlet, ii. 1 

that such companions thou'dst unlbld .Othello, iv. : 

COMPANION SHIP— 
twenty horse, all of companionship. Ti'morao/.^M.i. 1 
shall hold companionship in peace. Cor/o^a«»x, iii. S 

COMPANY'-allour company else hem^.Tempest, ii. ', 

her blind boy's scandal'd company — iv. 1 

to thee, and thy company, I bid — \'. I 

safiily foimd our king, and company .... — v. I 
there are yet missing of your company .. — v.] 
would entreat thy company . . Two Gen. of Ver. i. 1 

good company; with them shall — i. .' 

kindly in your company — ii. 'J 

to forbid sir Valentine ner company — iii. 1 

forsworn my company — ii i. S 

thrust from the company of awful men — iv. 1 

the company parts — iv. i 

I do desire thy worthy company .... — iv. ; 

to bear me company — iv. S 

into the company of three or foiu'.... — iv. J 
and Eglamour is in her company .... — v. i 

in honest, civil, godly company Merry ll'ives, i. 1 

father desires your worship's company — i. 1 
never laugh but in that maid's company — i. 4 
he hath not been thrice in my compauj'I — ii. 1 
she was in his company at Page's house — ii. 1 

forbear, here's company — ii. 3 

for want of company — iii. 2 

he kept company with the wild Prince — iii. S 

and requests your company — iii. 3 

I shall make two in the company .. — iii. 3 

and the rest of their companj' — iv. 2 

she hath abjured the company . . TieelfthA'ight, i. ii 
lie's drunk nightly in your company — i. 3 
not undertake her in this company.. — i. 3 
am best, when least in company .... — i. 4 
day and night did we keep company — v. 1 

grace and good company ! Meas, for Meas. iii. 1 

no loss shall touch her by my company — iii. 1 
his company at Mariana's house .... — iv. 3 
your company is fairer than honest. . — iv. 3 
IS most in the company of the right ..Much Ado, i. 1 

with me in your company? — ii. 1 

none but to desire your good company — ii. 1 
be bold with Benedick for liis company — iii. 2 

and steal out of your company — iii. 3 

I must discontinue your company . . — v. 1 

is all our company here? Mid. N.'s Dream, i. 2 

we shall be dogged with company . . — i. 2 
I have forsworn his bed and company — ii. 2 
this wood lack worlds of company .. — ii. 2 
keep little company together now-a-days — iii. 1 
nor longer stay in your curst company — iii. 2 
these tliat my poor company detest . . — iii 2 

a while from my ovra company — iii. 2 

dance, between two of our company? — v. 1 
forbear till this company be past . . Love's L. Lost, i. 2 

shall I send this; company! stay — iv. 3 

keeping company with moon-like men — iv. 3 

what buys your company? — v. 2 

worse than the king's and his company — v. 2 
leave yon now with better companj-.il/cr. of Ven. i. 1 
well, keep me company but two years — i. 1 

came hither in company — i. 2 

enough to keep his name company! — iii. 1 

creditors in my company to Venice .. — iii. 1 
in choosing wrong, I lose your company — iii. 2 
doth entreat your company to dinner — iv. 2 

to keei) his daughter company As you Like it, i. 2 

I cannot live out of her company .... — i. 3 

doth part the flux of company — ii. 1 

tliat youth is surely in their company — ii. 2 
if thou hast not broke from company — ii. A 
he is too disimtable for my company — ii. .■; 
friends must woo your company?.... — ii. 7 



COM 



"1 



COMPANY- for your company ..Asi/ou Like it, iii. 
for your last company; I am very glad — iii. 
thy company, which erst was so irksome — iii. 

for here comes more company — iv. 

which in the boorish is, company — v. 

not then have his company to-iiight?.-fU'»HV», i\'. 
have him see his company anatomized — i\\ 

mine own company, Chitopher — iv. 

good will, and thy good company. ';'ami'nffo/.Wi. i. 

what company is this? Master — i. 

and instruments, shall be my company — i. 
else you like not of m.y comiiany .. .. — ii. 
she shall still be curst in company . . — ii. 
wherefore gaze this goodly company — iii. 
and, honest company, I thank you all — iii. 
call'st for company to countenance her — iv. 

we'll fast for company; come — iv. 

mistress Kate, I'll bear j'ou company — i v. 

what company is coming here? — iv. 

shall be joyful of thy company — i . . 

jest upon the comjiany you overtake? — iv. 
in whose company I shall review. IV inter' sTale,\\-. 
with our company piece the rejoicing? — v. 
bear him company m the quest . . Comedy nf Err. i. 
his company must do his minions grace — ii. 
more company; the liciid is strong .. — iv. 

in company,! often glanced it — v. 

and in his company, that gentleman — v. 
keep ns company, and we shall make — v. 

that keeps him company Macbeth, iii. 

grace us with your royal company ? — iii. 

brought prince Henry in their company.. /oA/i, \. 
Willoughby, wanting your company . /i(f/ia/<i II.W. 

your noble company (rf/)ca(erf) — ii. 

they will along witli company IHenrylV. ii. 

heard him tell it to one ot his company — ii. 
accurst to rob in that thief's company — ii. 

forsworn his company hourly — i i . 

bewitched with the rogue's company — ii. 
so doth the company tliou keep st .. — i'. 

often noted in thy company — ii. 

Harry's companv, banish not (rep.) — ii. 

and cheap to vufgar company — iii. 

company, villanous company, hath been — iii. 
a shirt and a half in all my company — iv. 

and keeping such vile company 'iHenry IV. ii. 

what company? Ephesians, my lord — ii. 
till time and vantage crave my company — ii. 
discharge yourself of our company .. — ii. 
let men take heed of their company — v. 

those that kept me company — v. 

take all liis comimnj' along with him — v. 
and then I would no otlier company.. Hc;»-yr. iv. 
I am a gentleman of a comiiany? .... — iv. 

as in the king's company — iv. 

take thee in the king's company — iv. 

would not die in that man's company — iv. 
shall thine keep company to heaven — i'.'. 
traitors have never other company..! Hc-iirj/ VI. ii. 

your honours bear me company? — ii. 

such a valiant company are fled — iii. 

and so conduct me where from company — v. 
in courtly company, or at ifly beads. .2Ht';i(y VI. i. 
I banish lier my bed, and company .. — ii. 
be playfellows to keep you company! — iii. 
80 SiiffoUc had thy heavenly company — iii. 

my lord; will bear him company iHenry VI. i. 

and craves your company for speedy — ii. 

bones may keep thine company — v. 

in my company, my brother Gloster. il/cAard III. i. 
to comfort Edward with our comiiany? — ii. 
by ranch company might be urged .." — ii. 
so was I; I'll bear you company .... — ii. 
that ever graced me in thy company? — iv. 

forth of my company: if I be so — iv. 

naj', he must bear j-ou company Henry VIII. i. 

as first-good company, good wine.... — i. 
thought of this fair company clapped — i. 
my lord, you'll bear us companj'?.... — ii. 
wliicli company will not be friendly to — v. 
and to all this fair company!.. . Troilus ^ Cress, iii. 

sir, mine own company — iii. 

should rob my bed-mate of my company — iv. 

let's have your company — iv. 

keep Hector company an lioiu* or two — v. 
I'll keep your coinpauy. Sweet tir .. — v. 

I'll keep you ci n.ii.any Timon of Athens, i. 

for he does neithLT alicct company .. — i. 
entreats your coiu|aiiy to-morrow .. — i. 
what do you in this wise company?. . — ii. 
first mend my company, take away.. — iv. 
the plague of company bght uiion tjieel — ii'. 
and you tliis, but two in company . . — y. 
an arch-villain keeps liim company — v. 

yom- company to tlic Capitol Coriolan us, i. 

I'll keep you company — ii. 

let me desire your compan J' — iii. 

and most glad of your company — i v . 

to wildness, and much company ..JuliusCtPsar, ii. 
Lcpidus, not lack yom- company.. .■l/i/ony^M'o. '■• 

choose your own company, and — iii. 

desires your liighncss company .... Cymbeline, i. 
your company, o'erpays all I can do — ii. 

no company's abroad. None — iv. 

what company discover you abroad? — iv. 
sir, the soldier that did company these — v. 
thou art not for my compan.v. Titus Anlronicus, iii. 
might have j'our company in hell .... — v. 
but in lier company there is a Moor. . — v. 
our king, and all liis comimuy . . Tericles, v. 3 (Gow. 

take you some company, and away Lear, i. 

what, hath your grace no better company? — iii. 

noble pliilosophcr, your company — iii. 

Edmund, keep you our sister company .. — iii. 

how I love thy company Itomeo ^-Juliet, ii. 

for thine to keep liim company — iii. 

my dear son with such soiu- company — iii. 
but for your company, I would have — iii. 
he shall soon keep Tybalt company.. — iii. 
alone, in company, waking or sleeping — iii. 



K 



COM 



COMPANY-compiiny, at what expence. .Ham(e/, 11. 1 

peiTeivf in all this noble company Othello, 1. 3 

U, hilt I tear — how lost you company? . . — ii. 1 
iny \vifo i- fair, feeds well, loves company — iii. 3 

wt'li, 1 must leave Iicr company — iv. 1 

mIi'i kcejts her coini)anvV wluit place? .. — iv. 2 

CO.Mi'AKATIVl':— most comparative.! HenryZr.i. 2 
e\'ery heardless vain comparative.. ., — iii. 2 
made comparati\'e for your virtues. . Cymbetine, ii. 3 

COiMPAKK— I will not compare . . rwelflhNiglU, i. 3 
make no compare between that love.. — ii. 4 
made me compare with ilermia's..l/('(i. N.Dreamjii. 3 
my love, shall I eompaie thine eyiic? — iii. 2 
she hath made cumpaie between our — iii. 2 
our weakness past eoinpare . . Taming of Shreio, v. 2 

compare our faces, and be judge KingJohn, i. 1 

he never would compare between Richaidll. ii. 1 

etudj'ing how 1 may compare this prison — v. a 
miles a day, compare with Caesars . .^UearyJV. ii. 4 
compare dead happiness witli living. ./f/c-A. IIIAv. 4 
of oath, and big compare, want. Troilus Sf Cress, iii. 2 
nearest compare to thy flatterers?. Tiinon ofA'h. iv. 3 
and compare their reasons, wh^n.-JuliusCa-sar, iii. 2 
failing in him tliat should compare. . Cymheline, 1. 1 

I can compare om- rich misers to I'ericlcs, ii. 1 

i' the .justice of compare! — iv. 4 

luuittaiiited eye, compare her face. . Romeo ^Jut. i. 2 

^^et tliey are iKist compare — ii. 5 

pl■ai^ed him with above compare so .. — iii, 5 
eoiopuie with him in excellence Hamlet, v. 2 

Com l-'.V KKD — I am compared to. . Lovers L. Lost, v. 2 
us a laiiili. Iii'hig compared with my ..Macbeth, iv. 3 
comj>arL-d witli this truncheon ....iHenryVI. iv. 10 

COMI'^LIUNU— comparing to his .Timon of Ath. iii. 2 

COMPARISOiSr — break a comparison.. AfucA Adu, il. 1 

comparisons are odorous — iii. 5 

for so stands the comparison. Lot'e'sL. I.os(,lv. 1 (let.) 
full of comparisons, and wounding flouts — v. 2 
that the comparison may stand.. itfer. ofl'eiucr, iii. 2 
tired thyself in base comparisons ..IHenry IT. ii. 4 
in tlic cumparisous between Macedon.Hertryr. iv. 7 
but in the tigures and comparisons of it — iv. 7 
stand'st thou aloof upon comparison?.! Henry VI, v. 4 

uo more comparison between Trod. ^- Cress, i. 1 

in whose comparison all wliites are ink — i. 1 

Jupiter! there's no comparison. . .. — i. 2 
to match us in comparisons with dirt — i. 3 

after all comparisons of truth — iii. 2 

laj' his gay comparisons apart. ..-Ira/D/ij/ ^-Cleo. iii. 1! 
(ix kind of hand-in-haud comparison). Cymbe/ine, i. 5 

COMPASS— father compass tliee about!. Tempest, v. 1 
to compass her I'll use my. Two Geyi. of Verona, ii. 4 
M'hat compass will you wear .... — ii. 7 

that I may compass yours — iv. 2 

of that he could not compass Merry Wives, iii. 3 

like to the Garter's compass — v. 5 

that were hard to compass Twelfth Night, i. 2 

we the globe can compass soon.M/Vi.A'.'sDream, iv. ! 
within the compass of suspect . . . Comedy of Err. iii. I 
too big, I hope, for me to compass.... — iv. 1 
whose compass is no bigger than . . Richard II. ii. I 

in the ccrmpass of a pale — iii. 4 

in good compass; and now (?cp.) . . 1 Henry IV. iii. 3 

Reignier, compass liim 4^bout 1 Henry VI. iv. 4 

to comimss wonders, but by — v. 4 

or compass of thy thonglit? 2Henry VI. i. 2 

exceeds the compass of her wheel . .Sllenry VI. iv. 3 
within the compass of my curse.. ..Richard III. i. 3 

beyonil thought's compass Henry VIII. i. 1 

fail into the compass of a priemunire — iii. 2 
compass [CoL-couple] in his arms..7'r<»'i. SfCress, i. 3 

to ail points o' the compass Coriolanus, ii. 3 

my life is run his compass Julius desar, v. 3 

within the compass of my curse . . TilusAndron. v. 1 
to compass such a boundless happiness LPez-ic^i?*, i. 2 

past the compass of my wits Romeo Sf Juliet, iv. 1 

lowest note to the top of my compass.. Hamte/, iii. 2 
this is witliin the compass of man's wit. Ot/iello, iii. 4 
is it within reason, and compass? — iv. 2 

COMPASSED-shall this be compassed?. Tempest, iii. 2 
be compassed like a good bilbo .. Merry Wives, iii. n 
with a small compassed cape. Tarn. ofSh. iv. 3 (note) 

then he compassed a motion Winler's Tale, iv. 2 

see thee compassed with thy kingdom's. ;>/ac!ie//i, v. ^ 
into the compassed window... Tro/'/as fyCressida^ i. 2 

CO.MP ASSES— two hmidred compasses .. OtteHo, iii. 4 

COivIPASSlNG-corapassing the crown!. Henry F.iv. 1 
to be hanged in compassing thy joy .... Othello, i. 3 
compassing of his salt and most hidden. . — ii. 1 

COMPASSIUN— virtue of compassion ..Tempest, i. 2 
that his compassion may give life . . King John, iv. 1 
in compassion, weep the tire out .... Uicliard 11. v. 1 
compassion on the king commands. 1 Henr;/ VI. iii. 1 

moved with compassion of my — iv. 1 (letter) 

of mere compassion, and of lenity.... — v. 4 
tenderness and mild compassion . . Uicliard II. iv. 3 
and compassion to the senate!. Timon of Alliens, iii. 5 
make mine eyes to sweat compassion. Co/vo^u/u^s, v. 3 
not relent, or not compassion him?.. Titus And. iv. 1 

CUMPA&SIONATE— 
it boots thee not to be compassionate. ifi'cAorrf //. i. 3 
conipassioiiate heart will not permit.. TitusAnd. ii. 4 

COMPEER— he compeers the best Lear, v. 3 

COMPEL— it may compel him io..Mea.for Mea. iii. 1 

1 can compel. 'Thou cau'st compel. ATirf. N. Dr. iii. 2 

I'd compel it of you All's Well, iv. 3 

forced us to compel this offer 2Henry IV.iv. 1 

if requii'ing fail, ho will compel Henry V. ii. 4 

whicn compel from each the sixth. . Henry VIII. i. 2 
compel me then to read the viill'i. .JuliusCcesar, iii. 2 
must compel us to lament . .Antony ^Cleopatra, v. ! 
compel her to some second choice Othello, ii. ! 

COMPELLED-our compelled Bins.. Mea.for Mea. ii. 4 
puts it oft' by a compelled restraint . . All's Well, ii, 4 

I was comi>eUed to ner — iv. 2 

curse he canuot be compelled to't.. Winter'sTale,n. 3 
with valour armed, compelled these . . Macbeth, i. a 
like a dog that is compelled to tight. Km^JoAn, iv. 1 
greatness were compelled to kiss ..2HenryIV. Hi. 1 
perforce, compelled to banish him .. — iv. 1 



[ l'^2 ] 



Ct)MPELLED-our ofl:'eris compelled.2//e«/j/7r-. iv. 1 
notliing com^jelled from the viilac:Ks.. Henry V. iii. G 
fear, compelled to shut our shops." . 1 Henri/ VI. iii. 1 
tlie son, compelled, been butcher ..Richard III. v. 4 
compelled by hunger and lack of . . Henry VIII. \. 2 
(fye, fye upon this compelled fortune!) — ii. 3 
am I comiJcUed to set upon one . . Julius Ciesar, v. 1 

being thereto not compelled Pericles, iii. 2 

ourselves compelled, even to the teeth. Hamie/, iii. 3 

we put on a compelled valour — iv. 6 (letter) 

COMPELLING-compelling occasion. /In/. ^ Clco. i. 2 
COMPENSATION-your compensation. 7'cmpes;, iv. 1 
COMPETENCE-for competence of life.2H<'n./r. v. 5 
COAIPETENCY— competency lives.. Mpr. ofVen. i. 2 

receive that natural competency Coriolanus, i. 1 

COMPETENT-competent injury. 7'n'c/(A Aighl, iii. 4 

a moictv competent was gaged "by Hamlet, i. 1 

COMPETlTOH-his competitor. J'«'o Gen. of Ver. ii. 6 

the competitors enter TwetJIh Night, iv. 2 

he, and his competitors in oath . . Love's L. Los', ii. ! 
more competitors flock to the rebels. . Rich. III. iv. 4 
to hate one great competitor.yln(ony ^-Cleopatra, i. 4 
tliese competitors, are in thy vessel .. — ii. 7 

my competitor in toi) of all design — v. ! 

Tribunes! and me a poor competitor. '/"/(ks And. i. 1 

cannot brook competitors in love? — ii. ! 

COMPILE— for her sake compile.. Lonc's L.Lost, iv. 3 
COMPILED— vilely compiled, profound — v. 2 

two learned men nave compiled — v. 2 

COMPLAIN-you'U complain oi xae. Merry Wives, i. 1 
that he hath cause to complain.. JI/eos./ori)/cas. ii. ! 

to whom should I complain? — ii. 4 

thou earnest here to complain — v. 1 

let us complain to them what fools . Loue's L.L. v. 2 
may complain of good breeding.. .4s you Like it, iii. 2 
shall I complain on thee to our. . Taming ofSh. iv. 1 
we should ourselves complain ..Comedy of Err. ii. I 

complain unto the duke of this — v. 1 

alas, may I complain myself? Richard II. i. 2 

what I want, it boots not to complain — iii. 4 

whereof you did complain 2HenryIV. iv. 2 

wrong whereof you both complain?.! HenjT/f/. iv. 1 

they, that complain unto the king.. Bic/iard III. i. 3 

if they did complain, what could .... Coriolanus, i . 1 

supposed he must complain. .Borneo 4- Jul. i. 5 (cho.) 

COMPLAINED-complained of love./lsi/o« Lite, iii. 4 

COMPLAINER-speechles complainer. TitusAnd. iii. 2 

COMPLAINEST— complainest ti\ou..TwelfthN. iv. 2 

COMPLAINING— 

to his complaining names . . Two Gen. of Verona, i. 2 

such sweet complaining grievance .. — iii. 2 

the nightingale's complaining notes — v. 4 

humbly complaining to her deity . . Richard III. i. ! 

adieu, I pity thy complaining — iv. 1 

they vented their complainings .... Coriolanus^ i. 1 

uo less with thy complaining Cymbetine, iv. 2 

COMPLAINT-upon any complaint.. Mea. /or M. ii. 1 
to have a dispatch of complaints .... — iv. 4 
have heard me in my true complaint — v. I 
that there was complaint intended . . — v. 1 
hath set the women on to this complaint — v. 1 
with complaint against my child . . Mid. ff.'s Dr. i. 1 
the comijlaints, I have heard of you ..All's Well, i. 3 

both suffer untler this complaint — v. 3 

what impediment this comijlaint. Winter's Tale, iv. 3 
that the complaint they have to the king — iv. 3 

the complaints I hear of thee IHenry IV. ii. 4 

there are many complaints, Davy . .iHenrylV. v. 1 
a woe, a sore complaint, 'gainst him . . Henry V. i. 2 
the pitiful complaints of such. IHenry n. iv. ! (let.) 
this late complaint will make but ..'iHenry VI. i. 3 
trouble him with lewd complaints.. Jiic/iardil/. i. 3 
[Co/. /iCn(.] to bring forth complaints — ii. 2 

on the complaint o' the tenants. . . . Henry VIII. i. 2 
"will now unite in your complaints . , — iii. 2 

given ear to our complaint — v. 1 

my lord, grievous complaints of you — v. 1 
ill favouring the first complaint .... Coriolanus, ii. 1 
each complaint, dislike, he may enguard. . Lear, i. 4 

shall out-tongue his complaints Othello, i. 2 

COMPLEMENT— 
complement, and ceremony o( it .. Merry Wives, iv. 2 

a man of complements Love's L. Lost, i. I 

these are complements, these are humours — iii. 1 
and decked in modest complement . . Henry V. ii. 2 
{_Knt.'] my heart in complement extern. . Othello, i. 1 
COMPLETE-he is complete. Tu>o Gen. of Vemna, ii. 4 
can pierce a complete bosom .... Meas.for Mcas. i. 4 
of grace, and complete majesty . . Love's L. Lost, i. 1 
bofii the varnish of a complete man.. — i. 2 
no, my complete master: but to jig.. — iii. 1 
every way complete; if not complete. K»"ng-/o/in,ii. 2 

in complete glory she revealed ! Henry VI. i. 2 

the most complete champion that. .'iHenry VI. iv. 1 

make the hour full complete ZUenry VI. ii. 5 

than all tlie complete armour that.iZ/c/mrd ///. iv. 4 
this man so complete, who was .... Henry VIII. i. 2 
and complete in mind aud feature . . — iii. 2 
thou great and complete man . . Troilus t§- Cress, iii. 3 
a thousand complete courses of the sun! — iv. 1 
honourable, complete, free-hearted. 'i"im. o//i(/i. iii. 1 

filling still, never complete — iv. 3 

again, in complete steel, revisit'st thus. . Hamlet, i. 4 

a pestilent complete knave Othello, ii. 1 

COMPLEXION— complexion is perfect. Tempest, i. 1 

of what complexion soever Merry Wives, iv. 2 

drew to the complexion of a goose I . . — v. 5 
eye, forehead, and complexion . . TwelfthNight, ii. 3 

of your complexion — ii. 4 

it should be one of my complexion .. — ii. 5 
are as soft as our complexions . . Meas.for Meai. ii. 4 
for thy complexion shifts to strange — iii. 1 
being the st)ul of your complexion . . — iii. 1 
know love's grief'^by his complexion !.Afuc/i Ado, i. 1 
something of that jealous complexion — ii. 1 
what complexion? of the (,rep.) .. Love's L. Lost^ i. 2 
of all complexions the culled sovereignty — iv. 3 
and Ethiops of their sweet complexion — iv. 3 
and the coinplexion of a devil ..Merch. of Venice, i. 2 
mislike me not for my complexion . . — ii. 1 



COM 

COMPLEXION -of his complexion.. ^Ifer. 0/ Ven. ii. I 
then it is the comjilexion of them all — iii. 1 
good my complexion! dost thoii../(si/oi« Likeit,iii. 2 
between the imie complexion of true love — iii. 4 
best thing in him is his complexion .. — iii. .^ 
too great testimony in your complexion — iv. 3 
changed comple.'iions are to me.... Winter'sTale, i. 2 
whose fresh complexion and whose heart — iv. 3 
what complexion is she of ?. . Comedy of Errors, iii. 2 
judge by the complexion of the sky. liichardll. iii. 2 
change the complexion of her maid -pale — iii. 3 

the complexion of my greatness 2HenryIV. ii. 2 

that you lose so much complexion? . . Henry V. ii. 2 
with his smirched complexion, all fell — iii. 3 
praised his comijlexion above Parle. TroH. % Cres. i. 2 

Ills comjilexion is hijjher than his — i. 2 

too flamiii" apraise for a good complexion — i. 2 
horsed with variable complexions . . Coriolanus, ii. 1 
and the complexion of tlie Qievaent.JuliusCasar, i. 3 
reserve that excellent complexion .... Pericles, iv. 1 
the colour of her hair, complexion .... — iv. 3 
have the difference of all complexions . , — iv. 3 
by the o'cr-growth of some complexion.. Hamie/, i. 4 
this dread and black complexion smeared — ii. 2 
very sultry and hot; or my complexion .. — v. 2 

of her own clime, complexion Othello, iii. 3 

turn thy complexion there ! patience . . — iv. 2 

COMPLICE— and their complices. . . . Richard II. ii. 3 

fight with Glendower aud his complices — iii. I 

lives of all j'our loving complices ....IHenrylV. i. 1 

the rebels, and their complices 'iHenry VI. v. 1 

thyself, and all thy complices ZHenry VI. iv. 3 

COMPLIMENT— called compliment. rwe////i N. iii. 1 
valour into compliment, and men . . Much Ado, iv. 1 
in all compliments of devoted .Love's L.L. i. 1 (let.) 
stay not thy compliment; I forgive thy — iv. 2 
but that they call compliment. . . . As you Like it, ii, 5 

with customaiT compliment Winter's Tale, i. 2 

(saving in dialogue of compliment ..King John, i. 1 

come, come; sans compliment — v. 6 

more mechanical compliment. .y)n(ony^ Cleo. iv. 4 

further compliment of leave-taking jLear, i. 1 

time will not allow the compliment — v. 3 

but farewell compliment ! Romeo 4r Juliet, ii. 2 

the courageous captain of compliments — ii. 4 
compliment [A'n<. -complement] extern.. 0/AeHo,i. 1 
COMPLIMENTAL— 
make a complimental assault. . Troilus % Cress, iii. 1 

COMPLOT— or complot any ill Richard IL i. 3 

their complot is to have my life 'iHenry VI. iii. 1 

■will not yield to our complots? . . Richard III. iii. 1 
may digest our complots m some form — iii. 1 
the complot of this timeless tragedy. Titus And. ii. 4 
abominable deeds, complots of mischief — v. 1 
to lay a complot to betray thy foes . . — v. 2 
COMPLOTTED-complotted and contrived. /i/c.//. i. 1 
COMPLY — let me comply mth you .... Hamlet, ii. 2 

he did comply with liis dug, before — v. 2 

nor to comply with heat, the young .... Othello, i. 3 

COMPOSE— mettle should compose Macbeth, i. 7 

if we compose well here . ... Antony ^Cleopatra, ii. 2 
with her neeld composes nature's. Pericfes, v. (Gow.) 
COMPOSED — composed of harshness . . Tempest, iii. I 
whose composed rhymes should. Two Gen. of Ver. iii. 2 
composed and framed of treachery ..Much Ado, v. 1 
one that composed your beauties . . Mid. ft. Dr. i. 1 
hath well composed thee: thy {oLthet's.All'sWell, i. 2 
songs composed to her unworthiness — iii. 7 

imitate that which I composed Henry V. iii. 7 

well composed, with gifts of nature. Troil. ^ Cr. iv. 4 

were it a casque composed — v. 2 

words of so sweet breath composed Hamlet, iii. 1 

COMPOSITION-not to composition.Mea. /or A/ea. i. 2 

came short of composition — v. 1 

the composition, that your valour ....All's Well, i. 1 
made in the unchaste composition . . — iv. 3 
Norway's king craves composition .... Macbeth, i. 2 
in the large composition of this ma.u?King John, i. I 

mad kings! mad comijosition! — ii. 2 

that name beSts my composition!.. flicterd //. ii. 1 

to rememl)er so weak a composition. 2Henri/ IV. ii. 2 

outward composition of his body ..IHenry VI. ii. 3 

caused our swifter composition .... Coriolanus, iii. 1 

our composition may be written ..Ant. ^- Cleo. ii. 6 

take more composition and fierce quality. . Lear., i. 2 

nothing but the comj)osition of a knave.. — ii. 2 

there is no composition in these news . . Othello, i. 3 

COMPOST— do not spread the compost . Hamlet, iii. 4 

COM POSTURE— by a composture. Timon of Ath. iv. 3 

COMPOSURE— a strong composure. Troil. ^ Cress, ii. 3 

thou art of sweet composure — ii. 3 

as his composuremust be va,i'e,Antony^Cleopalra,_i. 4 

COMPOUND— rankest compound. Jl/erry Wives, iii. 5 

compound with him by the year..A/ea./orj>/eo. iv. 2 

we will compound this quarrel .. Tamingofah. i. 2 

I'll compound this strife _. — ii. 1 

compound whose right is worthiest . . King John, ii. 1 

then behold that compound 1 Henry IV. ii. 4 

whoreson mad compound of majesty. 2Henry/r. ii. 4 
only compound me with forgotten . . — iv. 4 

as manhood shall compound Henry r. ii. 1 

ransom thou wilt now compound — iv. 3 

I must perforce compound with mistful — iv. 6 

compound a boy, half French — v. 2 

let me compound this strife "iHenryVI. ii. 1 

and all what state compounds. Ti;no7io/.4//iens,iv. 2 
when I find the a«s in compound . . Coriolanus, ii. 1 

these most poisonous compounds Cymbetine, i. ti 

forces of these thy compounds on such — i. 6 
did compound for her a certain stuff — v. & 
than tliese poor compounds that. /?omeo ^Juliet, v. 1 
this solidity and compound mass .... Hamlet, iii. 4 
COMPOUNDED-compoundedof./Isyou Like it, iv. 1 
this foolish compounded clay, man. .2Henri//K. i. 2 
all strifes were well compounded. . Richard III. ii. 1 
weighed such a compounded one?. . Henry VIII. i. ] 
compounded thee poor rogue.. Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

what we have compounded on Coriolanus, v. 5 

she, of all compounded, outsells Cymbetine, iii. 5 

my father compounded with my mother. . Lear, i. 2 



COMPOUNDED— conipouiKleil it with.-HamW, iv. 2 

COMVKKllKiNl)-.,luill<Mm|iiTlifiiilnll..Uin-/iy<<io,iii.3 
than c.)L)l iLiiMin cwr (■..in]ii\'lunils. .V/i/. N. Di: V. 1 
it i-nnipivlHiiils some brin^or uf tluit joy — v. 1 
tliiit art wniil.l I'oii.iiiclicud . . . . Lnct'i i,. Losl,iv. 2 

CDMl'lilCUlCNDi::)- 
iriik'ctl, foniiirclu'iiilotl two aspicious.iWucA^rfo, iii. 5 

CD.MI'HISICU-fnnii'riscil witllin tlie . . Heiirij /'. V. 2 

C()Ml>l<ISlN(i-L-.iin|irisin;;iill thiit./dV/mn/ II. iii. 3 

COMl'IKl.MISlO— uiul .■c.iiip.Mmisos...l/,',M//r,rfs, i. 1 

make i-i>iii|)n>iniso, ili>iiHi:ilioii Kiiiif John, v. 1 

Imselv vifl.k'il ui.uii cniiipioinise ..Uuhanl 11. ii. I 
the iiiattui- L'lcm s tci LH.nii.n.niise .... 1 llinrijll. v. 4 

C().Ml»KOMii;EI)-wi.iv uuiu|irui.iisud.jUci-.o/T<;;i. i. 3 

COMl'T-awuy from the -real compt. ../«'»• 'C,;;, y. 3 
tlicirs, ill eoinpt, to make their audit .. Mac'uelti, i. 6 
and I'.ave tlic dales in eoiu|)t . . Tiinon of Athens, ii. 1 
■when wu sliall meet at eoinpt, tliis look .Oihello, v. 2 

COAU'TIBLE— am \erv oomptibie. 7'icc/Wi Night, i. 5 

COJIPULSATOKY— and teiing compulsatory 

[Cvl. Knt. — compulsative] Hamlet, i, 1 

COMrULSION— what comimlsion.jVer. of Vcn. ly. I 
the higliest compulsion of base fear...4/rs Well, iii. ti 
lL»y tlie compulsion of tlieir ordnance. A7n^ yo/tn, ii. 1 
between compulsion, and a brave respect! — v. 2 
what, upon compulsion? No ^rep.)..lHennjlJ'. ii. 4 
on terms of base compulsion? . . Tioilus fy Cress, ii. 2 
fools, by heavenly compulsion Learj i. 2 

COMPULSIVE— the compulsive ardom'.//am(t<, iii. 4 
and compulsive course ne'er feels Othello, iii. 3 

COMPUNCTIOUS-no compunctious ..3/oc()<?(A, i. 5 

CO.MPUTATION-by computation. Comedy of Er. ii. 2 
byjuet computation of the time . . Richard III. iii. 5 

COSffi ADE— and his comrades 1 Henry IV. Iv. 1 

to be a comrade with the wolf and owl ..Lear, ii. 4 
new-batched, unfledged comrade Hamlet, i. 3 

CON— taken great pains to con it. . Twelfth Night, i. 5 

that cons state without book — ii. 3 

to con them by to-morrow uiglit . . Mid. N. Dr. i. 2 

but I con hira no thanks for't All's Welt, iv. 3 

et dc con. De foot, et de con? Henry V. iii. 4 

and this the/ con perfectly — iii. 6 

tliy horse will sooner con an oration. Trail. ^Cr. ii. 1 
yet thanks I must you con . . Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

CONCAVE— concave as a covered. As you Like it, iii. 4 
made in her concave shores? Julius Ccesar, i. 1 

CONCAVITIES- the concavities oVit-HenryV. iii. 2 

CONCEAL— bids me to conceal . Two Gen. of Ver. iii. 1 
not conceal them, sir. Conceal . . Merry Wives, iv. 5 

conceal me what I am Twelfth Nighty i. 2 

he shall conceal it, wliiles — iv. 3 

you may conceal her (as best befits. . MuchAdo, iv. 1 
lovers' flights doth still conceal.. jWd. A'. Kreom, i. 1 
the more knavery to conceal it .. Winter' sTale, iv. 3 

conceal this dark conspiracy? Richard II. v. 2 

to utter them, or to conceal them . .iHenrylV. v. 3 
'tis wisdom to conceal our mcauing.3 Henry r/. iv. 7 

to conceal what we impart Richard III. iii. 1 

a strong faith to conceal it Henry Fill. ii. 1 

that which tonneuts me to conceal.. Cym6e/me, v. 5 

or can conceal his hunger, till Pericles, i. 4 

he, that conceals liim, death Lear, ii. 1 

CONCE ALED-I may be concealed. i)/ea./ori)/ea. iii. 1 
might'st pour this concealed man, .4s yuu Like it, iii. 2 

let it be concealed a wliile All's Well, ii. 3 

like buckets, in concealed wells .... King John, v. 2 
sorrow concealed, like an oven stopped. TitusAnd. ii. 5 
what says my concealed lady . . Romeo ^Juliet, iii. 3 
if you have hitherto concealed this sight. Hamlet, i. 2 

CONCEALING-by concealing it. TwoGen.of Ver. iii. 1 
heart, concealing it, will break ..Taming of Sh. iv. 3 
rive your concealing continents Lear, iii. 2 

CONCEALMENT— let concealment.. Twelfth N. ii. 4 

not in ignorant concealment Winter's Tate, i. 2 

profited in strange concealments . . 1 Henry I y. iii. 1 
a concealment worse than a theft. . . . Coriolanus, i. 9 
will in concealment wrap me up awhile.. Lear, iv. 3 

CONCEIT— the good conceit . . Two Gen. of Ver. iii. 2 

if he be so, his conceit is false Much Ado, ii. 1 

gawds, conceits, knacks, trifles . .Mid. N. Dream, i. 1 
fair tongue (conceit's expositor).. Looe's L. Lost, ii. 1 

good lustre of conceit in a tui-f — iv. 1 

their ix)nceit3 have wings, fleeter than — v. 2 

with thy keen conceit — v. 2 

gravity, profound conceit. . . . Merc/iant of Venice, i. 1 
noble and a true conceit of god-like.. — iii, 4 
as humours and conceits sliall govern — iii. 5 

thy conceit is nearer to death As you Like it, ii. 6 

you are a gentleman of good conceit — v. 2 
your conceit in that't (,rep.) .. Taming of Shrew, iv. 3 

for thy conceit is soaking Winler'sTale, i. 2 

mere conceit and fear of the queen's — iii. 2 
to ray earthy gross conceit . . Comedy of Errors, iii. 2 
pressed down with conceit; conceit .. — iv. 2 

without a tongue, using conceit alone John, iii. 3 

but conceit, my gracious lady {rep.). .Richard II. ii. 2 

eelfand vain conceit iii. 2 

no more conceit in him, than is iHenrylV. ii. 4 

with forged quaint conceit IHenryVI.iv. 1 

to ravish any dull conceit v. 5 

some conceit or otlier likes him ..Richard III. iii. 4 
aiiprovc the fair conceit, the king . . Henry VIII. ii. 3 
whose conceit lies in his hamstring. Trail. Sf Cress, i. 3 
griefs were but a mere conceit . . Timon of Athens, v. 5 

yet rich conceit taught thee — v. a 

bad ways you must conceit me ..Julius Cicsar, iii. 1 
would applaud Andronicus' conceit. Titus And. iv. 2 
wlio if it had conceit, would die ai....l'ericles, iii. 1 

I know not how conceit may rob Lear, iv. 6 

conceit, more rich in matter than. Aoineo ^Juliet, ii. 6 
the horrible conceit of death and uiglit — iv. 3 
force liis soul so to his own conceit .... Hamlet, ii. 2 

suiting with forms to his conceit'? — ii. 2 

conceit in weakest bodies strongest works — iii. 4 
ut your table I Conceit upon her father . . — iv. 5 

carriages, and of very liberal conceit .... v. 2 

in thy brain some horrible conceit Othello, iii. 3 

[Cg/. A'«/.J that so imiKifectly conceits .. — iii. 3 
dangerous conceits are, in their natures — iii. 3 

CONCEITED— humour conceited?.. Werry Wives, i. 3 



CONCEITED-Iiorrlbly conceited. Twelfth Niglit, Hi. 4 
an admirable conceited follow .. Winter'sTale, iv. 3 

well conceited, Uavy; about 'iHmrylV. v. 1 

you have riglit well conceited JuliusVirsar.i. 3 

CONCEITLESS— so conceitless. . TwoGen.ofVer. iv. 2 

CONCKIVK-well, I conceive Tempest,iv. 1 

nay, <:oneeive me, conceive me .... Merry Wives, i. 1 

plainly eoiieei ve, I love you Meas.for Meus. ii. 4 

laughed to see the sails conceive ..Mid. N.'s Dr. ii. 2 
his tongue to conceive, nor hie heart — iv. 1 

is foul, as I conceive Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

would conceive for wliat I gave . . Mcr.of Venice, v. 1 

more suits you to conceii'c As you Lilw it, i. 2 

and well you do conceive Taming of Shrew, i. 2 

I conceive by hira. Conceives by me I — v. 2 

thus she conceives her tale — v. 2 

he does conceive he is dishonoured, (fmfer's Tate, i. 2 
tliat could conceive, a gross and foolish — iii. 2 
make conceive a bark of baser kind.. — iv. 3 

cannot conceive, nor name thee ! Macliclh, ii. 3 

tliat takes upon liini not to conceive. '.i//e/;r;/ /''. ii. 2 

rank, conceives by idleness Ilc/ii i/ 1', v. 2 

pleasure as iucaged birds conceive. Sllcnri/ i'l. iv. u 

commons liardly conceive of me HmnjVIlL i. 2 

will conceive tlie fairest of lae.Timojiof Athens, iii. 2 

and so — I do conceive — iii. 6 

as I conceive the journey . . Antony fy Cleopatra, ii. 4 

and will conceive, I hope Cymbcline, ii. 3 

brazed to it. I cannot conceive you Lear, i. 1 

conceive, and fare thee well — iv. 2 

but as your daughter may conceive .... Hamlet, ii. 2 

what does this gentleman conceive? . . . . Otiiello, iv. 2 

CONCEIVED— conceived against.. rKJe/y^/i Night, v. 1 

that a woman conceived me MuchAdo, i. 1 

of thought, conceived of spleen ..AsyouLikeit,iv. 1 
he hath conceived against your sou. . All's Well, iv. 5 
to serve all hopes conceived. . . . Tanung of Shrew, i. 1 
if it conceived a male child by me. Henry, Vlll. ii. 4 

'tis conceived to scope Timon of Athens, i. 1 

error soon conceived, thou never . . Julius Ccesar, v. 3 
CONCEIVING- then conceiving.. il/cr. of Venice, i. 3 

conceiving the dishonour Winter's Tale, ii. 3 

your royal father off, conceiving you v. 1 

mucli more his own conceiving .... Cymbeline, iii. 3 

CONCENT— keep in one concent Henry V. i. 2 

having full reference to one concent — i. 2 

CONCEPTION— ray conception. . Meas.for Meas. ii. 4 

dangerous conception in this point. . Henry VIII. i. 2 

I have a young conception in Troilus |- Cress, i. 3 

joy had the like conception in . Timon of .llhens, i. 2 
conceptions only proper to myseli ..JuliusCeesar,!. 2 

at whose conception (till Lucina Pericles, i. 1 

have tlieir first conception by niisdread.. i. 2 

remember'st me of mine own conception . . Lear, i. 4 
conception is a blessing; but as your . . Hamlet, ii. 2 
and no conception, nor no jealous toy. . Othello, iii. 4 

nor choke, the strong conception v. 2 

CONCEPTlOUS-conceptiouswomb . Tim. ofAth. iv. 3 

CONCERN— that it concerns Two Gen.of Ver. i. 2 

it will not lie where it concerns i. 2 

all that may concern thy love-affairs — iii. 1 

it alone concerns your ear Twelfth Night, i. 5 

it concerns me to look into Meas.for Meas. i. 1 

whom it concerns to hear this matter v. 1 

what I woidd speak of concerns him.Muc/i^do, iii. 2 
how it may concern my modesty .. jl/(d. N.'s Dr. 1. 1 

sometMug nearly that concern i, i 

it may concern much Love'sL. Lost, iv. 2 

it concerns you something to know it.. All's Well, i. 3 
it did concern your highness with. ... — v. 3 
what concerns [Co;. A'n(.-cerus] it you. ram. o/S. v. 1 

concerns more than avails, Winter's Tale, iii. 2 

nor concern me the reporting iv. 3 

the king concerns him nothing iv. 3 

what coucern they? the general Macbeth, iv. 3 

what doth concern your coining? ..2HenrylV. iv. 1 
more than carefully it us concerns .... Henry V. ii. 4 

me they concern ; regent I am of 1 Heriry VI, i. 1 

why, what concerns his freedom — v. 3 

about that which concerns your grace. 3Hf«ry ?'I, i. 2 
concerns his grace of Canterbury . . Henry VIII. v. 2 

it does coucern you near Timon of Alliens, i. 2 

when it concerns the fool Antony ij- Cleopatra, i. 2 

or, being, concern j'ou not ii. 2 

things he speaks may concern Cicsar — iv. 9 

of me, or wliat concerns me Cymbeline, i. 7 

for it concerns your lord i. 7 

known to them it most concerns. . Titus Andron. ii. 1 
it higlily us concerns, by day and night — iv. 3 
more concerns the Turk tlian Khodcs . . Othello, i. a 

latest, wliieh concerns him first i. 3 

CONCEKNAMC Y— the concernancy . . . . Hamlet, v. 2 
CONCEKNED-not concerned mclii/onv (fjCleo. ii. 2 
CONCEKNETII— love conccnicth us. Tam.ofSh. iii. 2 
CONCEIiNINU-concerniiig me. TiroUen.of Ver. i. 2 

is concerning your marriage Mi-ri y il'ives, i. 1 

Pythagoras, concerning wiid-fowl?..7'u'e//WiA'. iv. 2 
as time and our concernings shall. .jl/ea.^orJl/eo.i. 1 
'greed, concerning your observance? — iv. 1 

as concerning -Jaquenctta Love's L. Lost, i. 1 

as concerning some entertainment. . .. — v. 1 
thoughts, concerning us and 1' ranee . . Henry V. i. 2 
concerning the I'reneh journey .... Henry VIII. i, 2 
purposed, concerning liis imprisonment — v. 2 

a gib, such dear concenungs hide? Hamlet, iii. 4 

nor no jealous toy concerning you OtIicUo, iii. 4 

concerning this, sir.-O well-painted .. iv. 1 

CONCERT— 
Bwect concert [Co/.-consort] . . Two Cen. of Ver. iii. 2 
scritch-owls make the concert hM...2HenryVI. iii. 2 
CONCLAVE— the lioly conclave for. Henry K///. ii. 2 
CONCLUDE— you conclude that. ri™Oen. of Ver. i. 1 
conclude, conclude, he is in love. . . . Much .ido, iii. 2 
to conclude, they are lying knaves. ... — v. 1 
to conclude, what you lay to their charge — v. 1 
quail, cruah, conclude, and quelll . . Mid.N.Dr. v. 1 

most infallibly concludes t Love'sL. Lost, iv. 2 

the other two concludes it v. 1 

and to conclude,— we have 'greed. Taming of Sh. ii. 1 
thou didst conclude hairy men . . Comedy ofEr. ii. 2 



CONCLUDE-to conclude, this drudge. Com.oriir. iii. 3 

to conclude, the victory fell on us Maibrih i 2 

this concludes; iny mother's sou did. Ain;- ,/„/,„, i 1 

conclude, and be agreed kidi.inlll.i 1 

to conclude, this evening mu.st I ...I llenri/l V. ii. 3 

toconcUide, 1 am Bogcjod _ jj. 4 

and concludes in huaity prayers ..Ulenry IV. iv! 1 

till you conclude, that be \ Henry VI. ii. 4 

and BO her death concludes — v 4 

sliall we at last conclude eti'cminate.. — \. \ 

if we conclude a peace, it shall — v. J 

and here conclude with me — v..', 

or else conclude my words effectual.2Heii) y^-V. iii. I 
will not eoneUide their plotted tragedy — iii. i 
and, to conclude, reproach, and beggary — iv 1 

but, to conclude with truth .Zi'l nry VI. ii. I 

and to conclude, the sliepherd's homely — ii. h 

you conclude that he is dead Riclmrd 111. ii. 2 

the cost that did conclude it Henry VI 11 i I 

to conclude, without the king's will — iii' -i 

Othcn conclude, minils, swayed by. rro/7.*fiv.<. v'. 2 
cannot conclude, but by the yea... . CoWo(,;vin.«, iii. I 

I wiU conclude to Imte her, nay Cymbcline, iii. .'1 

his fault concludes but, what ..liomco ff Juliet, iii. 1 
CONCLUDED-concludcd with a lAah.MurhAitu, v. I 

have concluded that labcnu-ing Alt's Well ii I 

nay, I assure you, a peace cmicluded — 'iv.' 3 

be It concluded, no barricado Winter'sTuh- i. 2 

abide within; it is concluded .'ilacbeil, iii 1 

most base and vile concluded pcai:e .Kuig John ii 2 

have a godly peace concluded 1 Henry II. v. 1 

months concluded by consent i Henry VI i i 

Suffolk concluded on the articles — iii 

is it concluded, he shall be (.rep.) ..Richard III. i. 3 
my presence uiiglit have been concluded — iii. 4 
IS It 50 concluded? By Priam. Troilus t,- Vressida, iv. 2 
the senate have concluded to give.Vi<(/!/sCV(jar ii 2 

concluded most cruel to herself Cymbeline, v. 5 

and wits at once had not concluded all ..Lear, iv. 7 
r,/-.,)!?Ji t"/S°'- 'tis so concluded on .... Hamlet, iii. \ 
CONCLUULhT— thou concludcst..jVea./or Mea. i. 2 

>;>^S/,rKA-'/i1?— concluding, stay Tempest, i. 2 

COiNCLUblON- in conclunion .. TwoGen.ofVer. ii. 1 

the conclusion is then, that it will — ii. a 

so conclusions passed tlie careires.. A/erry Wives, i. 1 
and the conclusion sliall be crowned — iii. 6 
a false conclusion ; I hate it as . . Twelfth Night, ii. 3 

so that, conclusions to be as kisses — v. 1 

but in conclusion, put strange v. 1 

the \i\e conclusion I now begin to..i/c'o./or ilea. v. 1 
the conclusion is, she shall be thine. ..WucA Ado, i. 1 
and this is my conclusion: for thy part — v. 4 
m conclusion, dumbly have broke ..Mid.N.Dr. v. 1 
the conclusion is victory ..Lore's L. Lost, iv. ) (let ) 
beauteous as ink; a good conclusion,. — v 2 
try conclusions [Co/.-confusions].il/cr. of Venice, ii. 2 
must make conclusion of these ..As you Like it v 4 
in conclusion, she shall watch all. Turning o/.sA. iv'. 1 

of this make no conclusion Winter'sTale, i. 2 

m conclusion, lie did beat me ..Comedy of Err. ii. 1 
I knew, t would be a bald conclusion — ii. 2 
an conclusion, equivocates him in .... Macbeth, ii. 3 
draws towards supper in conclusion. . KmgJohn, i. 1 
and in conclusion, drove us to seek.l He/iry /;-'. iv. 3 

there must be conclusions Henry /'. ii 1 

and tell him, for conclusion, he hath — iii'. 6 
and, in conclusion, wins the king.. SHenry VI. iii. 1 

and a ehiistian-like conclusion Riclmrd HI. i. 3 

rnodest eyes, and still conclusion . . Ant. 4- Cteo. iv. u 
she hath pursued conclusious infinite — v. 2 
my judgment in otlier conclusions?. . Cymbeline, i. 6 
read the conclusion then; which Kad ..Pericles, i. 1 

and, m conclusion, to oppose the bolt Lear, ii. 4 

like the famous ape, to try conclusions.Ham/e(,iii. 4 
m conclusion, nonsuits iny mediators . . Oihello, i. 1 
conduct us to most |n-eposterous conclusions — i. 3 
O most lame and impotent conclusion I .. — ii. 1 
main exercise, the incorporate conclusion — ii. 1 
rsJ^iJrV,"jl?i^'^""''^'''^'"i''^Koiiecouclusiou .. —iii. 3 
CONCOLINEL— 

Concolinel— sweet airl . . Love's L. Lost, iii. 1 (song) 
CONCORD— mar the concord . . Two Gen. of Ver. i 2 
this gentle concord in the world.. jV/d N.'sDr.iv. I 
we find the concord of this discord? . . — v. 1 
not moved with concord of sweet. Mer. of Venice, v. 1 
his jarring concord, and his discord . . .ill's Well, i. 1 
the sweet milk of concord into hell ..Macbeth, iv. 3 

but, for the concord of my state Richard II. v. 4 

S9ii!^H?J^^"'" ^ y°^'^ eoncubiiie.3H<;iiry^7. iii. -i 
CONCUPISCIBLE 
coneupiscible and intemperate. . Meas.for Meas. v. 1 

CONCUP Y— for his concupy Troilus ^-Cress. v. 2 

CONCUR— this concurs directly. . Twelfth N'ght, iii. 4 

bounties shall concur together.. Troilus 4 Cress, iv. 5 

CONCURRINU-concurring both \n.2HenryIV. iv. 1 

CONDEMN— at home condemn ti\em..Tempest, iii. 3 

coudemu it as an improbable ..Twelfth Night, iii. 4 

condemn the fault, but not Meas.for Meas. ii, 2 

the law, not X, condemns your brother — ii. 2 
we do condemn thee to the very block — v. I 
cannot greatly condemn our success./(«'s Well, iii. 6 
and condemn them, to lier service. Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

within him does comlemn itself Macbeth, v. 2 

twice all this, condemns you to lUcliard II. iii. 1 

thy words condemn thy brat 1 Henry VI. v. 4 

justify whom the law condemns.... 2Heiiry;'/. ii. 8 

not want false witness to condemn me iii. 1 

that faultless may condemn a nobleman I — iii. 2 
every tale condemns me for a villain.. «ic/i. ///. v. 3 
who cannot condemn rashness. Timon of.lthens, iii. o 
you might condemn us, as poisonous. CorioianiM, v. 3 
but must condemn it now. . Antony 4 Cleopatra, ii. 7 

condemn myself, to lack the courage iv. 12 

away I I do condemn mine ears Cymbeline, i. 7 

though I condemn it uot, yet Lear i 4 

CONDEMNATION- " ' 

of condemnation or approof Meas.for Meas. ii. 4 

whose condemnatioii is pronounced.. Hej/ryT iii 6 
^A^'JlVr.l'i'ife'^""''"" *"^ t''y ''eath.Cynii<ciiHt,iii'.5 
CONDEMNED— some caodei]iue<l..iV«a./ar.tf».ii. 1 



CONDEMNED-the man condemned. Mea./urMea. u.i 
I have a brother is condemnod to die — ii. 2 

whv, every fiuilt's o.mdemncd — ii- 2 

Claudio is e.iiHlriuiKil for untrussiug — iii. 2 

condemned npuii t'.ie net (rep.) — v- 1 

on tills mail eundeiaued as if my brother — v. 1 
thou 'rtcoudeniiied; Imt, ti)r those .. — v. 1 

condemned fir ivride aiiu scorn Much Ado, ui. 1 

\('ilt be condemned into everUistini;. . — iv. 2 
than one condemned by tiie king's. IVmler sTale,i. 2 

poor thing, condemned to loss! — ii. 3 

if I shall be condemned upon surmises — iii. 2 
by law thou art condemned to die. Come'lij of Err. i. 1 
on nnre|irie\ a'.ile eondemned blood. . KingJohn, v. 7 
king stand- LMi.raHv condemned . . Ilichard II. ii. 2 
I sli'all ^laiici '■.•r.;lc:iincda wandering — ii. 3 
my coiidemiiid K r.l is doomed a prisnncr — v. 1 
the poor eond.ii.ned iOn-Ush ..Henry V. 1 (chorus) 

condemned to ilie for tre'ason 1 Henrij Fi. ii. 4 

that soreeie:s, eoiideiiined to burn .. — v. 4 
tell you V, li. lu M'u liave condemned — v. 4 
he be coudeinned hv course of law. .2Heiir!/r/. iii. 1 
thus two friends condemned embrace — iii. 2 
truly is he, au 1 eondemned upon it. Henri/ r///.ii. 1 
I stand condeiiiued for tliis.. Troitus <§■ Cressida, iii. 3 

in yom- condemned secoinls Coriolanus, i. 8 

I had as lief be a condemned man . . — iv, 5 
you are condemned, our general — — _v. 2 
you have condemned and noted. . Julius Ccesar, iv. 3 
you yourself are much condemned . . — iv. 3 

the condemned Pompey Antomj fy Cleopatra, i. 3 

own tongue thou art condemned Cymbeline, v. 5 

be pitiful to ray condemned sons. TilusAndron. iii. 1 
thy brothers are condemned, and dead — iii. 1 
her brothers were condemned to death — v. 2 

■where thou dost stand condemned Lear, i. 4 

condemned villain, I do apprehend. Bom. i,- Jul. v. 3 
myself condemned, and myself excused — v. 3 

COiSTDEMNING — condemning some ..Coriolanus, i. 6 
condemning shadows quite Anton;/ fyCleo. v. 2 

CONDESCEND— you do condescend..! Henri/ F/. v. 3 
if thou wilt condescend to be — v. 3 

CONDIGN— in thy condign praise .. l-fu-e sL.Lost,\. 2 
never gave them condign pimishment.2Hen.. VI. iii. 1 

CONDITION— mark his condition Tempest, i. 2 

now the condition — ..i- 2 

I am, in my condition, a prince — m. 1 

the cat-log of her conditions. . Two Gen. offer, iii. 1 
leave her on such slight conditions .. — v. 4 
taint the condition of this ^Kan-aX.TwelflhNight, v. 1 

yes, and his ill conditions Mucli Ado, iii. 2 

a light condition in a beauty Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

if he have the condition of a saint.-Uer. of Venice, i. 2 
as are expressed in the condition .... — i. 3 

the hot condition of tlieir blood — v. 1 

in the gentle condition of blood . . As you Like it, i. 1 
forget the condition of my estate . . — i. 2 

such is now the duke's condition . . — _ i. 2 

are words, and poor conditions All's Well, iv. 2 

demand of him my conditions — i v. 3 

but they know his conditions and lay — iv. 3 
take her dowry with this condi tion. Taming ofSh. i. 1 
our soft conditions, and our hearts . . — v. 2 

the condition of that fardel Winter's Tale, iy. 3 

whose heat hath this condition King John, iii. 1 

what condition stands it (rep.) .... Richard II. ii. 3 

my condition, which hath been IHcnry IV.\. 3 

this same time's condition 2 Henry IP', iii. 1 

suffer the condition of these times . . — iv. 1 
what conditions we shaU stand upon? — iv. 1 
no conditions of our peace can stand — iv. 1 
as our conditions shall consist upon — iv. 1 

of what condition are you? — iv. 3 

I, in my condition, shaU better — iv. 3 

to welcome the condition of the time — v. 2 

despatched, with fair conditions Henry F. ii. 4 

his senses have but human conditions — iv. 1 

hard condition ! twin-born with.. — iv. 1 
this day shall gentle his condition .. — iv. 3 
teach you a good English condition — v. 1 
and my condition is not smooth .... — v. 2 

a hard condition for amaid — v.2 

to draw conditions of a friendly peace.l Henr j/ VI. v. 1 
upon condition I may quietly enjoy — v. 3 

the conditions of that league — v. 4 

upon condition thou wilt swear .... — v. 4 

shall our condition stand? — v. 4 

of so mean condition, may pass iHennjVI.Y. 1 

a great queen, with this condition . . Richard III. i. 3 
my degree, or your condition — iii. 7 

1 have a touch of your condition — iv. 4 

and tliose of true condition Henry VIII. i. 2 

either (for so run the conditions) — i. 3 

like conditions as our argument. Troil.fyCres. (prol.) 
condition, I had gone barefoot to India — _ i. 2 
custom, and condition, made tame .. — iii. 3 
lie cares not, he'll obey conditions . . — iv. 5 

you see how all conditions Timon of Athens, i. 1 

well expressed in oui' condition — _ i. 1 

I'll trust to your conditions — iv. 3 

back on good condition. Condition?. Corio;amis,i. 10 
condition! what good condition — — i., lu 
'tis a condition they account gentle. . — ii. 3 

to yield to his conditions — v. 1 

once more offered the fli'st conditions — v. 3 

on like conditions, will have — v. 3 

can alter the condition of a man? — y. 4 

under tliese hard conditions Julius C<esar,\. 2 

thus to commit your weak condition — ii. 1 
much prevailed on your condition .. — ii. 1 
upon condition Publius shall not live — ly. 1 
our conditions so diifering../4n(07ii/ ei-Cleopatra,i\. 2 

I embrace these conditions Cymbeline, i. ;> 

for condition, a shop of all the qualities — y. 5 

quiet and gentle thy conditions! Pericles, iii. 1 

makes not up on such conditions _. ._ Lear, i. 1 

imperfections of long-engrafted condition — ^ i. 1 
stars above us, govern oiir conditions .... — iv. 3 
would I were assured of my condition .. — i^* 7 
not my unhoused free condition put .... Othello, i. 2 



;. 6 



L 134 ] 

CONDITION— of most blessed condition. OthMo, Ii. 

and the condition of this country stands — ii. 

and then, of so gentle a condition! — Iv. 

CONDITIONALLY— conditionaUy..3 Henrv VI. v. 
CONDITIONED— best conditioned. itfer. of Fen. iii. 

but tiius conditioned Timon of A'hens, iv. 

CONDOLE— I will condole in some.A/irf. A'.'.s- Ur. i. 

let us condole the knight Henry I', ii. 

CONDOLEMENT-certain condolemeuts/'rr/c/cs, ii. 

nersevcr in obstinate condolement Hamlet, i. 

CONDOLING— is more condoling. /Wi/. N. Dream, i. 
CONDUCE— conduce to the hot ..Troil.^ Cress, ii. 

[Coi. Kiii.] conduce a fight of this strange — v. 
CONDUCT— nature was ever conduct . . Tempest, v. 

desire some conduct of the lady ..TwelfihNighl, iii. 

welcome then, conduct me thither... Lotie's L. L. ii. 

let us conduct them tliither — iv. 

give Mm courteous conduct . . ..Mer. of Venice, iv. 

and I shall conduct you, if you.. .4s </o«ii7(e it, iii. 

in Ills own conduct, purposely to — v. 

I will conduct you where you All's Well, iii. 

that done, conduct him to. . . . Taming of Sh. 1 (ind. 

pray you then, conduct me to Winter's Tale, ii. 

give me your hand: conduct me to .... Macheth, 1. 

an honourable conduct let him have.. A'ing- John, i, 

under whose conduct came those .... — 

conduct me to the king — 

sweet peace conduct his soul to .... Ilichard II. i v. 

I will be his conduct — iv. 

and in my conduct shall your 1 Henry IV. iii. 

shall follow in your conduct speedily — iii. 

the conduct of young Lancaster IHenrylV. i. 

by the impartial conduct of my soul — v. 

convey them with safe conduct Henry F. i. 

conduct me to the Daupliin's 1 Henry VI. iv. 

conduct me where from company — y. 

hast been conduct of my shame 2Henry VI. ii. 

will he conduct you tlirongh the heart — iv. 

this conduct to convey me to Richard III. [■ 

I'll conduct you to the sanctuary — ii. 

good lords, conduct him to his regiment — v. 

tinder your fair conduct, crave Henry VIII. 1. 

■water side I must conduct yom- grace — ii. 

in the conduct of my will Troilus^ Cress, ii. 

for you to conduct him thither — iii. 

to procure safe conduct for his person — iii. 

safe conduct from Agamemnon — iii. 

stays to conduct you home — v. 

to the Roman camp conduct us Coriolanus, i. 

desire of you a conduct over land . . Cymbeline, iii. 

imder the conduct of bold lacliimo . . — iv. 

under conduct of Lucius, son to. . Titus AriJron. iv. 

Erovision give thee quick conduct Lear, iii. 
is musters, and conduct his powers — — iy. 

fury be my conduct now! Komeo ^Juliet, iii. 

mis-shapen in the conduct of them both — iii. 

bitter conduct, come, unsavory guide ! — v. 

ancient, conduct them; j'ou best know ..Othello, i. 

conduct us to most preposterous — i. 

left in the conduct of the bold lago — — ii. 
CONDUCTED— shall be conducted.Jl/«o./or Mea. ii. 

I could ■wish you were conducted Coriolanus, i. 

if foul desire had not conducted you?. Titus And. ii. 
CONDUCTOR— conductor of his people?.. Lear, iv. 
CONDUIT-weather-beaten conduit. Winter' sTale, v. 

the conduits of my Wood froze . . Comedy of Err. y. 

water brought by conduits hither . . Coriolanus, ii. 

fi'om a conduit with three issiuug. TilusAndron. ii. 

how now, a conduit, girl? Borneo ^ Juliet, iii. 

CONEY— as the coney, that you see..4syou Like,ii\. 

so doth the coney struggle in ZHenry VI. i. 

CONEY-CATCH— I must coney-catch. Merri/ZF. i. 
CONEY-CATCHED— 

lest vou be coney-catched in. . Taming of Shrew, V. 
CONEY-CATCHING— 

3'our cone.y-catcMng rascals Merry Wives, i. 

you are so full of coney-catching. Taming of Sh. iv. 
CONi'ECTION— for my confections?. . Cymbeline, i. 

tliat confection which I gave him for — v. 
CONFECTIONARY— 

world as my confectionary Timon of Athens, iv. 

CONFEDERACY- this confederacy. Mirf. A'. Dr. iii. 

he hath heard of our confederacy ..IHenrylV. iy. 

and confederacy of lady Eleanor 2 Henry VI. ii. 

level of a full-charged confederacy. . Henry VIII. i. 

and wdiat confederacy have you with Lear, iii. 

CONFEDERATE— confederates, sodi-y. Tempest, i. 

the beast Caliban, and his confederates.. — iv. 

the other confederate companion. .jUea. /or Mea. v. 

ray wife and her confederates.. .Coinerfi/o/Jirr. iv. 

art confederate with a damned pack — iv. 

a rabble more of vile confederates. ... — v. 

heart is not confederate with my Richard II. v. 

send Colevile with his confederates.2Henj^i/ IV. iv. 

nor any of his false confederates . .1 Henry !'I. ii. 

with thy confederates in this weighty. aHenri/ VI. i. 

with many more confederates .... Ilichard 111. iv. 

Italy, and her confederate arms .... Coriolan us, v. 

was confederate with the Romans. . Cymbeline, iii. 

confederates all thus to dishonour me. Titus And. i. 

nor these confederates in the deed that — i. 

more than one confederate in the fact — iv. 

confederate with the queen, and her — v. 

confederate season, else no creature. . . . Hamlet, iii. 
CONFER— and confer fair jMilan Tempest, i. 

to confer of home atfairs Two Gen.ofVerona, ii. 

some secrets to confer about .... — iii. 

confer at large of all that — iii. 

tlie better to confer with thee .... — iii. 

may confer at large — iii. 

and confer with you of sometliiug ..Mid. N. Dr. i. 

a parley, to confer witli him 1 Henry VI. v. 

to confer about some matter — v. 

to ourselves : we must confer 3 Henry VI. v. 

did you confer with him? Richard III. i. 

on whom I may confer what I. . Timon of Athens, i. 

for a man and his glass to confer. . . . Cymbeline, iv. 

confer with me of murder and of Titus And. v. 

where you shall hear ns confer of this .... Lear, i. 
CONFERENCE— in sad conference . . Much Ado, i. 



CONFERENCE— words' conference ..Muc/i Ado, ii. 

the conference was sadly borne — ii. 

to hear our conference — iii. 

I will overhear their conference . . Mid. N.'s Dr. ii'. 
takes the meaning, in love's conference — ii. 
importunes personal conference ..Love'sL.Lost, ii. 
BO sensible seemeth their conference . . — v. 

yet she urged conference As you Like it, i. 

with gentle conference, soft, and.. Taming ofSh. ii. 
I must be present at your conference — ii. 
conference, about some gossips . . Winter'sTale, ii. 
it was the copy of our conference. .Comet/j/o/iJr. v. 

food to you in our last conference. . . . Macbeth, iii. 
reak off your conference King John, ii. 

conference with yovir grace alone. . . . Ricliard II. v. 

and I, must have some conference. .lHeriri//F. iii. 

the mutual conference that my 2Henry VI. i. 

not willing any longer conference ..SHcnryVI. ii. 

use further conference with Warwick — iii. 

no man shall have private conference. . Rich. III. i. 

forbear your conference with the noljle — i. 

have some conference with his grace . . — iii. 

private conference. We are busy.. Henry F///. ii. 

to know the secret of your conference? — ii. 

being crossed in conference by . . ..JuliusCaisar^ i. 

such free and friendly conference.... — iv. 

till we have done our conference .... — iv. 

the time with conference harsh . . Antony &- Cleo. i. 

opportunity of a second conference . . Cymbeline, i. 

not a man m private conference Pericles, ii. 

drift of conference [_iv7i^-circmnstance]. Hamlet, iii. 

in the ear of all their conference — iii. 

CONFERRED— that gem conferred . . All's Well, v. 

hast thou as yet conferred with i Henry VI. 'i. 

\_Col. Knt.'] than that conferred on Goneril. iear, i. 
CONFERRING— they sit conferring. Tarn, of Sh. v. 

conferring them on yoimger strengths Lear, i. 

CONl'ESS- as I confess .... Two Gen. of Verona, li. 

you'U not confess, you'll not confess . . Merry W. i. 

he doth'in some sort confess it — i. 

albeit, I will confess, thy father's.... — iii. 

though, I confess, on base and. . . . Twelfih Night, v. 

though, I confess, much like the — v. 

most freely I confess, myself — v. 

if it confess a natural guiltiness . . Mea. for Mea. ii. 

I do confess it, and repent it, father. . — ii. 

confess the truth, and say by whose.. — v. 

till she herself confess it — v. 

I do confess I ne'er was married (rep.) — v. 

I must confess, I know this woman.. — v. 

she would sooner confess; perchance — v. 

confess not that you know Much Ado, iii. 

I confess nothing, nor I deny nothing — iv. 

I must confess, that I have heard . . Mid. N. Dr. i, 

perforce I must confess, I thought . . — ii. 

I must confess, made mine eyes water — v. 

sir, I confess the wench Love's L. Lost, i. 

I do confess much of the hearing it . . — i. 

I confess both; they are both — i. 

I will hereupon confess, I am in love — _i. 

in so unseeming to comess receipt of — ii 

my lord, guilty; I confess, I confess — iv. 

let us confess, and turn it to a jest . . — v. 

confess what treason there is . . Mer. of Venice, iii. 

and I'll confess the truth {rep.) — iii. 

do you confess the bond? — iv. 

I confess, your coining before As you Like it,i. 

wherein 1 confess me much guilty . . — i. 

than to confess she does — iii. 

I do so, I confess it; all, sir, a body . . — iv. 

thy cheeks confess it, one to the other. Alt's Well, i. 

then, I confess, here on my knee .... — i. 

my heart will not confess he owes . . — ii. 

I will confess what I know without — iv. 

may be done, so you confess freely . . — iv. 

with yourself, confess 'twas hers — v. 

I do confess the ring was hers — v. 

in plainness do confess to thee .... Taming of Sh. i. 

struck in years, I must confess — ii. 

I must confess, yom* offer is the — ii. 

I confess the cape. With a trunk (rep.) — iv. 

confess, confess; hath he not (rep.) .. — v. 

if thou wilt confess, (or else be Winter's Ttde^ i. 

I do confess, I loved him, as in — iii. 

I must confess to you, sir, I am no . . — iv. 

but I confess, sii-, that we ■were. . Comedy of Err. iv. 

heard you confess, you had — v. 

(to conf(2ss!) could heget me? King John, i. 

and though thou now confess, thou didst — iii. 

my conscience to confess all this .... — v. 

the sacrament, I did confess it Richard II. i. 

confess thy treasons, ere thou fly .... — i. 

I must needs confess, because — ii. 

you confess then, you picked 1 Henry IV. iii. 

I must confess, are wags too 'illenrylV. i. 

two things, I confess, I cannot help . . — ii. 

I shall drive you then to confess .... — ii. 

I do confess my fault;' and do Henry V. ii. 

no wisdom to confess so much — iii. 

I will confess it to all the 'orld — iv. 

glad to hear you confess it brokenly — v. 

will not confess thy eixor 1 Henry VI. ii. 

I confiass, I confess treason 2Henry VI. ii. 

I will confess; alive again? — iii. 

I must confess, great Albion's SHenryVI. iii. 

yet I confess, that ofteu ere this day — iii. 

and you must all confess that I was. . 

these news, I must confess, are full . . 

confess who set thee up, and plucked 

timorously confess the manner . . Richard III. iii. 

I will confess she was not Edward's.. — iv. 

they all confess, there is indeed Henry VIII. i. 

must now confess, if they have any. . — ii, 

if you may confess it, say withal .... — iii. 

my sovereign, I confess, your royal . . — iii. 

for so 'tis, 1 must confess .... Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 

white hand, I must needs confess.... — i. 

if you'll confess, he.brought — ii. 

if I confess much, you wUl — iii. 

I must needs confess, I have. . Timon of Athens, iii. 



— IV. 4 



CON 



[ 135 ] 

CONFIDENT— I am confident ....UenryVlJl. ii. I 

thiin we are confiJent, wIkii. , Troilus ^Cri'tsiila. i. 3 
ctmfldcnt I am, lust ni;;li( 'twa-i .... CymbcUne, ii. 3 
tliese three, thivu thousimil c(inrnk'iit — v. 3 
ml leaser of lior liDiiuvir miillduiit than — v..') 
CONFIDENTLY— bo (■(infidently .... All's trelt, iii. 6 
thttt so confidently seems to unaertake — iii. 6 

CONFINE— she did confine thee Tempest, i. 2 

I have from their conJinca call'd — iv. I 

but yon must confiTic yoursell' Twelfth Night, i. 3 

confine? I'll confine mysclCno finer — i. 3 
in their own coufiiu's, with forked. .Is )/ow Littcit, ii. 1 
tliis confine of blood and breath .... King John, iv. '2 
from our quiet confines fright fair ..lUdiard II. i. 3 
measure our confines with such.... — iii. 2 

the mure, that should confine it . . , .'iHenrylV. iv. i 
now, ueighbour confines, imrge yon .. — iv. 4 
here in these confines slily luive I.Jticfinru 111. iv. 4 
to confine yourself to Asher-house IlvnnjI'lU. iii. '2 
shore, contiues thy spacious.. Troilus (f Cicssiiln, ii. 3 
confine yoiu'sclf most unreasonably.. Con'f)/.7n»,«, i. 3 
in these confines, with a monarch's. ../uf.Crpji//', iii. i 

till death enlarge his confine Antony '^■Clro. iii. 5 

his full fortune doth contine Cymbetine, v. i 

on the very verge of her confine Lear, ii. 4 

enters the confines of a tavern. . Romeo Sr Juliet, iii. \ 

erring spirit liies to his confine Hamttl, i. 1 

ill which there are many confines — ii. 2 

or confine him where yom- wisdom best — iii. I 

and confine for the sea's worth Otlwllo. i. 2 

confine yourself but in a iiationt list .... — iv. 1 
CONFINED— deservedly confined into. . Tempest, i. 2 

confined together in the same — v. 1 

cannot be measured, or confined — v. 1 

I must be here confined by you — (cpil.) 

free person she shouldbe confined. H'inter'sTale, ii. 1 
cabined, cribbed, confined, bound In.. Mac6rf/i, iii. 4 
as a fiend, confined to tyrannise .... King John, v. 7 

keep the wild flood confined! iHemylV.'i. 1 

[Co<.] to our purposes confined — iv. 1 

confined two mighty monarelues..H(?7i7-y f. i. (cho.) 
you and I cannot be confined within — v. 2 
and the execution confined . . Troilus % Cressidn, iii. 2 
whereon you stood, confined into . . Coriolanus, iv. 6 
mistress, confined in all she ha3...4)i(onv fyCleo. v. 1 

confined to exliibition I all this done Lear, i. I 

looks fearfully in the confined deep — iv. 1 

confined to fast in fires, till the foul .... Hamlet, i. 6 

CONFINELESS-my eonfineless ha.rms.Macbeth, iv. 3 

CONFINE R-stirred up theconfiner3.C'!/M6e//»f, iv. 2 

CONFINING— thy confining shores. .A'ln^Jo/iH, ii. 2 

in little room confining mighty.. Henry/', v. 2 (cho.) 

CONFIRM— confirm his welcome. Two Gen. of V. ii. 4 

these likelihoods confirm her flight . . — v. 2 

and my niece confirms no less ..Twelfth Night, iii. 4 

which to confirm, I'll bring you to . . — v. 1 

which did confirm any slander fb&t.Mach Ado, iii. 3 

and to confirm it plain, you gave. Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

his incivility connrms no less. . . Comedy of Err. iv. 4 

no witness to confirm my speech Macbeth , v. 1 

one part confirm the other's peace ..King John, ii. 2 
our souls religiously confirm thy words — iv. 3 
confirm to more approved service ..Hicliard II. ii. S 

what she says, I'll confirm 1 Henry yi. i. 2 

confirm it so, mine honourable (rep.) — iv. 1 

alliance will confirm our peace — v. S 

what we do establish, he confirms, .illenry t'l. iii. 1 

confirm the crown to me ^ Henry I' I. i. 1 

to confirm that amity with — iii. 3 

thou dost confirm his happiness Richard III. i. 2 

tliis, to confij-m my welcome ....: llemyf'lll.i. A 
to confirm tliis too, cardinal Campeius — ii. 1 
to confirm his goodness, tried it by . . — iii. 2 
confirm my princely brother's . . . Trail. ■§- Cress, iv. .i 
belialf, and thus far I confirm. . Timon of Athens, i. 2 

but to confirm my curses! Coriolanus, iv. 2 

whose strength I will confirm with. . Cymbelinc, ii. 4 
ay, and it doth confirm another stain — ii. 4 

and that will well coufii'm it! — iii. 4 

that confirms it home — iv. 2 

which to confirm, this coronet part Lear, i. 1 

they all confirm a Turkish fleet Othello, i. 3 

CONFIRMATION— the confirmatiou-.^ii's^VH, ii. 3 

and the particular confirmations — iv. 3 

yet, for a greater confirmation .... rVinter's Tale, ii. 1 
better opinion, better confirmation. 2Hen!-y IV. iv. 4 
how dear I hold this confirmation. . Henry VIII. v. 2 

honoured with confirmation your Cymbeline, i. 7 

confirmation! embrace him dear 'Thaisa. Pericles, v. 3 
for confirmation that I am much more . . Lear, iii. 1 
jealous, confirmations strong as proofs. .0(Af//o, iii. 3 
CONFIK.MED-confirmcd love .. Two Gen. of I'cr. iv. 4 
confirmed by mutual joinder .... Twelfth Niylit, v. 1 

valom-, and confirnied honesty Mucit .Ido, ii. 1 

confirmed, confirmed! O, that is stronger — iv. 1 
I will do with confirmed countenance — v. 4 
until confirmed, signed, ratified. . Mer.ofVenice, iii. 2 

faithfully confirmed by the rector All's Well, iv. 3 

all is confirmed, my lord Macbeth, v. 3 

no sooner had his prov/ess confirmed in.. ~ v. 7 
indeed! confirmed conspiracy.... /fcnri/f'. U (cho.) 
tliy age confirmed, proud, subtle.. ii/cAarrf III. iv. 4 
has such a confirmed countenance . . Coriolanus, i. 3 
he's not confirmed, we may deny him — ii. 3 
truth can never be confirmed enough . . Pericles, v. 1 
confirmed rCo(. Kn/.-conlerrcd] on Uoneril. /.car, i. 1 
CONFIRMER— the confirmers of. As you Lilce it, iii. 4 
sad signs eonfiimers of thy words?. .A'iHa- John, iii. 1 
CONFIKMITIES— 

bear with another'6Confirraitiea....2H(?nrj//r. ii. 4 
CONFISCATE— confiscate unto..Afer. of Venice, iv. 1 
dicst, and all thy goods are confiscate — iv. 1 
liis goods confiscate to the duke's.. Coincdy of Er. i. 1 
your goods too soon be confiscate .... — i. 2 
all his lands and goods be confiscate. 3 ffifHri/F/. iv. 6 

let it lie confiscate all, so soon Cymbelinc, v. 5 

COXFISC.VTION— bv conliscation.iV/ra./(,rjUett. v. 1 
t:i ) .'M H .\ E D— fur ever bu coiifi.xed here — v. 1 

Ci).\l''l.ICT— in our last cunfiiet Much /Wo, i. 1 

in confiict that you get the sun . . Love's L. Lett, iv. 3 



CON 



— iv. 1 

— iv. 1 

— iv. I 

— iv. I 



CONFESS— they confess, toward. Timon ofAlhcns,v. 

either yon nnist confess yourselves . . Coriolanus, i. 

biloMt.'and not coTilcss so much — ii. 

which, thou do.-il confess, were fit.... — ill. 

you slniU confess, that you are. . . . JuliusCmsar, ii. 

ilo you confess so much? give me .... — iv. 

does confess thy greatness. /lii/oni/ ifj- CTeopaIra, iii. 

but do confess, I have been laden .... — v. 

where, I confess, I slept not Cymbeline, ii, 

she did confess was us a scorpion to . . — v. 

she did confess, she liod for you a mortal — v. 

liere confess myself the king of Tyre . . Pericles, v, 

I confess that 1 am old Lear, ii. 

more strange, I must confess.... Wo»ico<5yii(ii"/, ii 

to answer that, were to confess to you — iv. 

1 will confess to you, that I love him — iv. 

I must confess, that duty done Hamlet, i. 

does confess, he feels himself distracted.. — iii. 

confess yourself to heaven — iii. 

me not to the puriwse, confess thyself . . — v. 

I dare not confess that, lest I should .... — v. 

a touch, a touch, I do confess — v. 

that will confess— iierfection so could err, Olhello, i 

truly as to heaven I do confess the vices — 1. 

if she confess, that she was half — i. 

should I do? I confess, it is my shame . . — i. 

and I confess me knit to tliy deserving . . — i. 

confess yom-self freely to her — ii. 

1 confess, it is my nature's plague to spy — iii. 

to confess, and be hanged for his labour., 

and then to confess: I tremble at it 

is it possible? confess! llandkerchiefl .. 

did he confess it? Good sir, be a man .... 

tiicrefore confess thee freely of thy sin ., — v. 

hither, and let him confess a truth — v. 

CONFESSED— if it be confessed Merry IVives, i. 

they have confessed yon did Meas.for Meas. v. 

I have confessed her, and I know .... — v. 

confessed the vile encounters Much .-ido, iv. 

he hath confessed himself to Morgan .All's H'ell,iY. 

what think you he hath confessed? ■ . — iv. 

(bravely confessed, and lamented. Winter's Tale, v. 

hut treasons capital, confessed Macbeth, i. 

very frankly he confessed his treasons .. — i. 

he natli confessed; away with him .2HenryVI. iv. 

always have confessed it (rep.) . . Timon of Athens,!. 

what she confessed, I will report Cymbeline, v. 

first, she confessed she never loved you — v. 

iine thing which the queen confessed — v. 

he hath confessed. What, my lord. ..... Olhello, v. 

Cassio confessed it; and sliedid gratify.. — v. 

wretch hath part confessed his villany . . — v. 

and he himself confessed, but even now — y. 
CONFESSES— scarce confesses that. Mea. for Mea. i. 

gentlewoman, confesses, that she .AsyouLike it, ii. 

bv her is poisoned: she confesses it Lear, v. 

COXi^ESSETH-which he confesseth.lHen;;/ IV. iv. 

CONFESSING-confessingtothisman.jVuc-'i Ado, v. 

not confessing their cruel parricide . . Macbeth, iii. 

bv confessing them, the souls of Richard II. i v. 

CONl'ESSION-holy confession, r^ro Gen.ofVer. iv. 
she did intend confession at Patrick's — v. 
I will, out of thine own confession. .V/ea./ojjWea. i. 
let my trial be mine own confession " — v. 
it appears not in this confession .... Much Ado, v. 

tile fairest is confession Love's L. Lost, v. 

the very sum of my confession.. 3/er.o/Fenicc, iii. 
his confession is taken, and it shall . . All's Well, iv. 

a strange confession in thine eye 2HenryIV.\. 

I'll hear him his confessions justify. Henry VIII. i. 
■under the confession's seal he solemnly — i. 

confessions of divers^witnesses — ii. 

mistress more than his confession. Troil. ^- Cress, i. 
so roundly to a large confession .... — iii. 

riddling confession finds but Romeo fy Juliet, ii. 

to make confession, and to be absolved — iii. 
to iriake confession to this father? . . — iv. 

a kind of confession in your looks Hamlet, ii. 

to some confession of his true state — iii. 

he made confession of you: and gave you — iv. 

handkerchief,— confessions Othello, iv. 

CONFESSOR— him his confessor.. jVras./uriV/cas. ii. 
I am confessor to Angelo, and I know — iii. 
and his confessor, gives me this instance — iv. 
the bodies of the duke's confessor . . Henry VIII. i. 
sir. a Chartrcux friar, his confessor . . — i. 
confessor to one or two of these! .... — i. 
and John Court, confessor to him ... . — ii. 
Edward Confessor's crown, the rod . . — iv. 
good even to my ghostly confessor.. /?om. .5- Jul. ii. 
a ehostlv confessor, a sin-absolver .. — iii. 
CONFIDENCE— confidence sansbound.. rempes^, i. 
next time we have confidence .... Merry Wives, i. 
I would have some confidence with.7l/i/c/i Ado, iii. 
upon thy certainty and confidence . . All's Well, ii. 

with all confidence he swcsirs Winter'sTale, i. 

boldness, and aspiring confidence. . . . King John, v. 
reposcth all his confidence in thee ..Richard 11. ii. 

I renounce all confidence I Henry VI. i. 

with a demure confidence this Henry VIII. i. 

in confidence of author's pen.. .Troil. ij-Cress. (prol. 
your master's confidence was.. Timon of Athens, iii. 
with no less confidence, than toys. . Coriolanus, iv. 
wisdom is consumed in vonfiK^ence.JutiusCirsar, ii. 
wager rather against your coi\fii\encc. Cymljeline.i. 
I do desire some confidence wil h . . Rom. fyJul. li. 

in all confidence, he's not for Rhodes Olhello, i. 

CONFIDENT— be too confident. . . Merry Wives, ii. 
yet confident I'll keep what I have.i«t>e'« L.Lost, i. 

art thou so confident? All's Well, ii. 

but the confident tyrant keeps Macbeth, v. 

secure and confident from foreign KingJohn,ii. 

liis forces strong, his soldiers confident ii. 

lions more conlident, mountains .... — ii. 

as confident, as is the falcon's Richard II. i. 

be coniident to speak, Northumberland ii. i 

are confident against the world \ Henry IV. v. 

it is not a confident brow 2 Henry IV. ii. 

all too confident to give admittance.. — iv. 
confident and over-lusty trench. Henry V. iv. (cho. 



CONFLICT— 'gan a dismal conflict Macbelh,i. 2 

in tile conflict that it holds with ..2llenryVI. iii. 2 
wlimn in tlii., ronllict I unawares ..SHenryVI, ii. h 
in tiie-ic coofliet.-- what may hcfal him — iv. 6 
bear liiinscll 111 the last uoiiflict.. JVmci »/• /!(/,, iii. 5 
after conflict, siic'li as was supposed. . TitiisAnd. ii. 8 

thon''li the conflict be sore between Lear, iii. 5 

(alack, too weak the conflict to support!) v. 3 

CONFLICTING-connietingelements. Tim.ofAth.iv. 3 
the to and fro conflicting wind and rain.. Lear, iii. 1 
CONFLUENCE— this confluence .. Timon of Ath. i. I 
CONFLUX— conflux of meeting sop. Troil.fy Cress. 1. 3 
CONI''ol;M-t..,,, luimbleseatconform.SHen.f';. iii.3 
COMI i':i| ■ !■ IMuite conformable. 7'am.o/ S/i. ii. 1 

to,' '. I iormalile Henry VIII. u. i 

COiM > ' I - . I f-_ ( 1 1 1 confounds me. Two Gen. of V. v. 4 

but it coiiiouiias the breather Mea.for Mea. iv. 4 

come, tears, confound ; out, sword . . Mid. N. Dr. v. I 

confound me with a flout Love's L. Loit, v. 2 

and greedy to confound a man...Vd'r. of Venice, iii. 2 

would quite confound distinction .til's Well, ii. 3 

confounds thy fame, as whirlwin<la.7'a;n.of S/i. v. 2 
inquisitive, confounds hia^etf . . Comedy of Err. i. 2 

and not the deed, coiitbumls us Macbeth, ii. 2 

though the ycsty waves confound _ iv. 1 

universal peace, confound :ill unity _ iv. 3 

they do confound their skill King John, iv. 2 

to that last hold, confound thcni:;elves v. 7 

too much riclics it confound itsell..RichardII. iii. 4 

and kind with kind confound — iv. 1 

let alone, will all the rest confound. . — v. 3 

he did confound the best part I Henry IV. i. 3 

confound themselves with working, 2H«?nri//r. iv. 4 

and jutty his confound base Henry V. iii. 1 

confounds the tongue, and makes ..\ Henry VI. v. 3 
confound your hidden falsehood ..Richard III. ii. 1 

not so hasty to confound my meaning iv. 4 

myselfmysclfeonfound! heaven _ iv. 4 

war, and lechery, confound aXW. Troilus &Cress. ii. 3 
shaft confounds, not that it woimds — iii. 1 (song) 
confound thee, if the gods (rep.). Timon of.Uhtni, i. 1 
the gods confound (hear me, you good — iv. I 
if thou dost perform, confound thee.. — iv. 3 

the gods confoimd them all iv. 3 

pride and wrath would confound thee — iv. 3 
and gold confound you howsoever! . . — iv. 3 

confound them by some course — v. 1 

in a mile confound an hour Coriolanus, i. 6 

let's not confound the time Antony fyCko. i. 1 

to confound such time, that drums.. — i. 4 

the gods confound thee I ii. 5 

what willingly he did confound — iii. 2 

the Roman gods, confound you both. Titus And. iv. 2 
interim, prtiy you, all confound. Pericles, v. 2 (Gow.) 
in the taste confounds the appetite. 7<om. ^Jul. ii. 6 
appal the free, confound the ignorant.. Hamte^, ii. 2 

confound the rest! such lore must needs — iii. 2 
CONFOUNDED— form confounded.. Lore's L. L. v. 2 

and module of confounded royalty ..King John, v 7 

all is confounded, all ! reproach Henry V. iv. b 

confounded be your strife ! 1 Henry VI. iv. 1 

thy fury spent, confounded be.Timon nf Athens, iv. 3 

confounded with this mutiny /,i . ' 1 ,, , , ;ii. 1 

have confounded one the otlier , , i. 3 

CONFOUNDING-coufoundingootli, . ,.iii.2 

to your confounding contraries .. 77 , , ,■ . - .; ,. i^-. ; 
set them into confounding odds '_ iv. 3 

CONFRONT-confront [C'o;.-comfort]your.JoAii,ii. 1 
dungliill curs confront the Helicons?.27/c/i ry/f. v. 3 
but to confront the visage of offence?. . Hamlet, iii. 3 

CONFRONTED-confronted were . . Love's L. L. v. 2 

lapt in proof, confronted him Macbeth, i. 2 

and power confronted power King John, ii. 2 

troubled, confronted thus . . Titus Androniais, iv. 4 

CONFUSED— a passion so confused.il/er. o//'p!!. ii. 8 
du-e combustion, and confused events...Vac!/e/A, ii. 3 

injustice and confused wrong KingJohn, v. 2 

order give to sounds confused ..Henry V. iii (cho.) 

with their howls confused do break.. iii. 3 

but with a din confused enforce ..Coriolanus, iii. 3 
such fearful and coiifued cries ..Titus Andron. ii. 3 
't is here, but vet confused Olhello, ii. I 

CONFUSEDLY— ground confusedly..! Heiuy/V. i. 1 

CONI'USION— come to confusion. ;Vi(/. N. Dieam, i. 1 

mark the musical confusion of h ounds iv. 1 

iCol.} will try confusions with ]um. Mer. of Ven. ii. 2 
there is such confusion in my powers — iii. 2 

1 bar confusion; 'tisi must make./JsyoK L/AeiV, v. 4 

and live on thy confusion Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

confusion now hath made liis Macbeth, ii . 3 

draw him on to his confusion iii. 5 

let confusion of one part confirm KingJohn, ii. 2 

and vast confusion waits (as doth a raven — iv. 3 

show nothing but co-'ifusion Richard II. ii. 2 

of iiell niell havock and confusion ..\HenrylV.v. I 

behold confusion of your foes 1 Henry VI. iv. I 

the ruin, there begins confusion — iv. 1 

heaping confusion on their own illenryVI. ii. 1 

shainc and confusion ! all is on the rout — v. 2 
contraries, and yet confusion live!. TimonofAth. iv. I 
make large confusion; and, thy fury -. iv. 1 

fall in the confusion of men — iv. 3 

not as oiXr confusion, all th.v powers — v. 5 
how soon confusion may enter .... Coriolanus, iii. 1 
I am out of breath; confusion's near — iii. 1 
ran about the streets, crying, confusion — iv. 6 
while we strut to our confusion. Jii^oiiy ■'(• Cleo. iii. 11 

nay, to th.v mere confusion Cymbeline, iv. 2 

anon, a rout, confusion thick — v. 3 

confusion fall— Nay, then I'll stop.. Titus And. ii. 3 
and work confusion on his enemies.. — v. 2 

calls, and trebles their confusion Pericles, iv. 1 

plaguel death! confusion! fier^y? Lrar,ii. 4 

of Albion come to great confusion (rep.). . — iii. 2 
confusion's cure lives not in (rep.). .Rom. ^Jul. iv. 5 
why he puts on this confusion Hamlet, iii. 2 

CONFin'.VTION— in confutation ..\ Henry VI. iv. 1 
COXl' i;TE-confutes mine hemour.il/eo. /or .Wfa. v. 1 
CO-">JGEAL— cool and congeal again.. King John, ii. 2 
CONGEALED— is congealed ieu.Meas.far Meat. iii. 2 



CON 

CONGEALED-pure congealed white..WiJ.JV.D)-. ili. 2 
hath congealed your liluod . . Taming of Sli. 2 (ind.) 

as flaws congealed in the spring 2IIinryjr. iv. 4 

till thy blood, congealed with tliis . .SHcnry VI. i. 3 

would wash tills congealed blood — v. 2 

open their congealed mouths Hichard III. i. 2 

CONGEALME&T— 
wash the congealment from your ..AnI.ffCleo. iv. 8 

CO>fGE'D— I have conge'd witli All's n'etl, iv. 3 

CONGEli— you muddy conger, )\iing.2 Henry ir. ii. 4 
and eats conger and fennel; and diiuks — ii. 4 

CONGRATULATE— 
to congratulate tlie princess Love'sL.Lost, v. 1 

CONGKEETED— you have congreeted. Henry F. v. 2 

C'ONGl^ EG ATE-most do congregate. Mer. ofVen.i.i 

CONGREGATED— 
and the congregated college have .... AWs Welly ii. ! 

guttered rocKs, and congregated sands. . Othello, ii. 1 
NGREGATlON-thc conjjregatiou.il/ucA^rfo, iii. 2 

before the whole congregation — iii. 3 

show bare heads in congregations . . Corinlanus, iii. 2 
a foul and pestilent congregation Hamlet, ii, 2 

CONGRUENT-a congruent epitheton. Loiie'sL.i. i. 2 
is liable, congruent, and measurable . . — v, 1 

CONGRUING— 
congruing [Col. Xn/.-congreeing] iu . . Henry V.i.i 

CONIES— tlieir burrows, like conies .Con'o/^iKKs, iv. 5 

CONJECTS-conjeets [Co/. /ui(. -conceits]. O(;i<(;o,iii. 3 

CONJECTURAL— conjectural fears. .^IH's Well, v. 3 
and give out conjectural marriages. . Coriolanus, i. 1 

CONJECTURE— simple coujectm-es.Jl/err;/ Wives, i. 1 
on my eyelids shall conjecture hang.iVKcA.-lt/o, iv. 1 
gross as ever touched conjecture.. Winter s Tale^ ii. 1 
surmises, jealousies, conjectures ..^HenrylV. (ind.) 
conjecture, expectation, and surmise — i. 3 
entertain conjecture of a time . . Henry V. iv. (cho.) 
by all conjectures; iirst, Kildare's..He?irj/r///. ii. 1 
to prenominatc in nice conjecture. 7'roi7.^Cres.iv. 5 
conjectures iu ill-breeding minds Hamlet, iv. 5 

CON.JOIN— conjoins with my disease. 2He»r!/ iK iv. 4 
fair ordinance conjoin together! ..Ilic/iard III. v. 4 

CONJOINED-shouldnot be conjoined. jl/ucA^iio, iv. 1 
this day to be conjoined in the state. . — v. 4 
I perceive they have conjoined. . Mid. N. Dream, iii. 2 
two parts, is now conjoined in one. .\ Henry VI. y. 2 
form and cause conjoined, preaching. . Hamlet, iii. 4 

CONJOINTLY— both conjointly bend. Xing' Jo/m, ii. 2 

5rodi"ies do so conjointly meet Julius Ccesar, 1. 3 
NJTJNCT- you have been conjunct Lear, v. 1 

when he, eonjunet \Cnl. Kn'.-compact] and — ii. 2 

CONJUNCTION-echoincoujuuction.Mid.A'.Dr.iv. 1 

son, list to this conjunction King Jolin, ii. 2 

the conjunction of our inward souls — iii. 1 

with our small conjunction 1 HemylV. iv. 1 

and Venus this year in conjunction!. 2H(;7i)i//r.ii. 4 

are so married in conjunction — v. 1 

and this dear conjunction plant Henry V. v. 2 

smile heaven upon thisfair conjunction. /?/c/i.///. v. 4 
all mvioy trace the conjunction!.. Henri/rii/. iii. 2 

CONJtrJiCTIVE-conjuuetiveto my life. Hamk'<, iv. 7 
let us be conjunctive iu our revenge .... Othello, 1. 3 

CONJURATION— 
mock not my senseless conjuration. /?('cAarti II. iii. 2 
under this conjuration, speak, my lord. Henry V. i. 2 
buz these conjiu-ations in her brain. .2Henry VI. i. 2 
defy thy conjurations {^Col. Kn^-commzserat^on] 

Romeo <§- Juliet, v. 3 
an earnest conjuration from the king ..Hamlet, v. 2 
what colli iirati on, and what mighty .... Othello, i. 3 

CON J URE— I do coni ure thee . . Two Gen. of Ver. ii. 7 
I'll conjure you, I'll fortune-tell.. jl/crrj/ Wives, iv. 2 
I conjure thee, as thou believest..Mi?a./or Mea. v. 1 

some scholar would conjure her Much Ado, ii. 1 

to conjure tears up in a poor .. Mid. N.'s Dream, ill. 2 

my way is, to conj ure you As you Like ?V, (epil.) 

I conjure thee, by all the parts . . Winter's Tale^ i. 2 
dost thou eonjui'e for wenches. Comedy of Errors, iii. 1 
I conjure thee to leave me, and be gone — iv. 3 

I conjure thee by all the saints — iv. 4 

I conjure you, by tliat which? Macbeth, iv. 1 

I conjure thee but slowly; run .... King John, iv. 2 

whereupon you conjure from 1 Henry IV. iv. 3 

Barbason; you cannot conjure me .. .HenryV.ii. 1 
I cannot so conjure up the spirit .... — v. 2 
conjure in her yoxi must make (rep.) — v. 2 
or devil's dam, I'll conjure thee .... 1 Henry VI. i. 5 
any thou canst coiijuie up to-day . .iHenry VI. v. 1 
what black magician conjures up . . Richard III. i. 2 
learn to conj ure and raise devils . . Troil. ^ Cress, ii, 3 

I cannot conjiu-e, Troilus — v. 2 

and conjure thee to pardon Rome . . Coriolanus, v. 2 
conjure with them, Brutus will .... JidiusCwsar, i. 2 

she conjures : away with her Pericles, iv. 6 

nay, I'll conjure too: Romeo! . . Romeo if Juliet, ii. 1 
I must conjure him: I conjure thee.. — ii. 1 
I conjure only but to raise up him . . — ii. 1 
but let me conjure you, by the rights . . Hamlet, ii. 2 
phrase of son-ow conjures the wandering — v. 1 

CONJURED— conjured the devil. . Mer. of Venice, i. 3 
eWls conjured to remembrance . . Winter's Tale, v. 3 
thy power hath conjui'ed to attend. Timon ofAlh. i. 1 
he hath conjured me beyond them . . — iii. 6 
like au exorcist, hast conjured up.JuliusCa^sar, ii. 1 

laid it, and conjured it down Romeo ■Sr Juliet, ii. I 

with some dram conjm-ed to this etfect. . Otiiello, i. 3 
he conjured her, she should ever keep it. . — iii. 3 

Cl-)NJURER— you are a conjurer.Cometiyo/£7-r. iv. 4 

they will kill the conjurer — v. 1 

forsooth, took on him as a conjurer. . — v. 1 
French conjurers, and sorcerers .... 1 Henry VI. i. 1 
Roger Bolingbroke, the conjurer? . .2Henry VI. i. 2 
with witches, and with conjurers.... — ii. 1 

nay, then lie is a conjurer — iv. 2 

CO^^JURING— conjuring the moon tear, ii. 1 

by letters conjuring to that effect Hamlet, iv. 3 

CONNED— conned with cruel pain. . Mid. N. Dr. v. 1 
that well by heart hath conned. . Love's L. Lost, v. 2 
and conned them out of rings? ..Asyou Like it, iii. 2 

the heart that conned tliem Coriolanus, iv. 1 

learned, and conned by rote JulmsCcesar, iv. 3 



[ 13« ] 



CONNIVE-godsdo this year connive. Winter's T. iv. 3 

CONQUER-of flattery conquers strife. Com.of Er. iii. 2 
that was wont to conquer others. . . . Richard II. ii. I 

Kate, to conquer the kingdom Henry V. v. 2 

and conquers as she lists \ Henry VI. i. 5 

the regent conquers, and the Frenchmen — v. 3 
conquer France, his true inheritance?.2 Wenr?/ VI, i. 1 
were tliere hope to conquer them again — i. 1 

these arms of mine did conquer — i. 1 

that I may conquer fortune s spite. .ZHenry VI. iv. 6 
in Richard's bosom will conquer ..Richard III. v. 3 
arm, tight, and conquer, for fair .... — v. 3 
if we be conquered, let men conquer us — v. 3 
wast born to conquer my country. Timon ofAlh. iv. 3 
he hath been used ever to conquer. . Coriolanus, iii. 2 

if thou conquer Rome, the benefit — v. 3 

we have used to conquer Antony ^ Cleo. iii. 7 

conquer him that did his master conquer — iii. 1 1 
none but Antony should conquer Antony — iv. 13 
to conquer their most absurd intents — v. 2 

CONQUERED— you have conquered.. .^I/Cs Well, iv. 2 
ne'er lift up his hand, but couquered.l Henri/ A7. i- I 
great progenitors had conquered? .... — v. 4 
monuments of conquered France ....2HenryVI. i. 1 
thieves upon their conquered booty.. 3Henry VI. i. 4 
neither conqueror, nor conquered .. — ii. 5 
by his prowess conquered all France — iii. 3 

it we be conquered, let men Richard III. v. 3 

when thou hast conquered! . . Timon of Alliens, iv. 3 
for what I have conquered, I grant. Ant. ^ Cleo. iii. 6 
and other of his conquered kingdoms — iii. 6 
not yielded, but conquered merely .. — iii. U 
in tills Britain, and conquered it . . Cymbelinc, iii. 1 
wisdom hath her fortune conquered.. Titus And. i. 2 

knight, tliat's conquered by a lady Pericles, ii. 2 

thou art not conquered Rotneo ^Juliet, v. 3 

CONQUERING— conquering might.totie's L. L. v. 2 

theii' conquering Caesar in Henry V. v. (cho.) 

in whose conquering name, let us ..I Henry VI. ii. 1 
to Paris, in this conquering vein .... — iv. 7 

from hence a conquering part Troilus <§■ Cress, i. 3 

his conquering banner snook .... Antony^ Cleo. i. 2 
till that the conquering wine hath — ii. 7 

disputation I kiss Ms conquering hand — iii. il 

CONQUEROR— last a conqueror. . . . Mid. N. Dr. v. 1 
brave conquerors ! for so you are.. Lome's X.. Lost,i. 1 

the conqueror is dismayed — v. 2 

take away the conqueror, take away — v. 2 
overtlii'own Alisander the conqueror I — v. 2 
a conqueror, and at'eard to speak I.... — _v. 2 

like a Roman conqueror As youLike it, iv. 2 

came iu with Richard Conqueror. Tam. ofSh.l (ind.) 
to enter conquerors, and to proclaim. it! ng-Jo/m, ii. 2 

at the proud foot of a conqueror — v. 7 

as his father here was conqueror ...I Henry VI. iii. 2 
conquest of our scarce-cold conqueror — iv. 3 
a conqueror, is likely to beget {rep.) . . — v. 5 
neither conqueror, nor conquered . .ZHenry VI. ii. 5 

seized on by the conqueror — iii. 2 

the conquerors, make war upon . . Richard III. ii. 4 
makes no conquest of this conqueror — iii. 1 
from this war thou turn a conqueror — iv. 4 
lead thy daughter to a conqueror's bed — iv. 4 
virtuous and holy, be thou conqueror — v. 3 
shall welcome home the conquerors. . — v. 3 
the conqueroi-s can but make a fire ..Jul. Cwsar, v. 5 
much you were my conqueror . . Antony t/f Cleo. iii. 9 
Ccesar tells, I am conqueror of myself — iv. 12 
and you shall find a conqueror — v. 2 

tracious conqueror, victorious. . TilusAndronicus, i. 2 
one, if he return the conqueror ..Lear, iv. 6 (let.) 
stood seized of, to the conqueror Hamlet, i. 1 

CONQUEST — better conquest never.. King John,n\. 1 
out-look conquest, and to win renown — v. 2 
hath made a shameful conquest .... Richard II, ii. 1 

faith, it is a conquest for a prince 1 Henry IV. i. 1 

fleshed with conquest, aim to hit 2HenrylV.\. 1 

of tlie nature of a conquest — iv. 2 

success and conquest to attend ou us . . Henry V. ii. 2 

here had the conquest fully been 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

ascribes the glory of liis conquest got — iii. 4 

think upon tlie conquest of my — iv. 1 

the conquest of our scaree-cold. — iv. 3 

command the conquest, Charles — v. 2 

shall Henry's conquest, Bedford's ..2HenryVI. i. 1 

by conquest got the crown ZHenry VI. i. 1 

presageth happy gain, and conquest — v. 1 
by my fall, the conquest to my foe . . — v. 2 
no conquest of this conqueror ....Richard III. iii. 1 
to whom will I retain my conquest . . — iv. 4 
confound them all i' thy conquest. Timon ofAth. iv. 3 

the conquest of thy fury — iv. 3 

what conquest brings he home? . . . . JuliusCcBsar,i. 1 

in conquest stretched mine arm — ii. 2 

all tliy conquests, glories, triumphs — iii. 1 

by this vile conquest shall attain unto — v. 5 
and your signs ofconque3t..^n;on!/<5-C/eo;)a(ra, v. 2 
put we i' the roll of conquest .... — v. 2 

kind of conquest Cfesar made here.. Cymijed'ne, iii. 1 
and make a conquest of unhappy me . . Pericles, i. 4 
witli conquest come from Poland Hamlet, v. 2 

CONRADE— what! Conrade (rep.) ..Much Ado, iii. 3 
my name is Conrade. Write down (rep.) — iv. 2 

CONSANGUINEOUS— 
am not I consanguineous? Twelfth Night, ii. 3 

CONSANGUINITY— 
no touch of consanguinity Troilus^- Cress, iv. 2 

CONSCIENCE- thy conscience is so ... . Tempest, i. 2 

but, for your conscience — ii. 1 

twenty consciences, that stand — ii. I 

you suffer for a pad conscience . . Merry Wives, iii. 3 
and the witness of a good conscience — iv. 2 
now is Cupid a child of conscience .. — v. 5 

in my conscience, sir, I do not TwelfthlVight, iii. 1 

my worthj as is my conscience, firm — iii. 3 

shall arraign your conscience . . . Meas.for Meat. ii. 3 

examine your conscience Much Ado, i. 1 

his conscience, find no impedimeut .. — v. 2 
beast, and of a good conscience. iWiy.^V.'.s Dream, v. I 
the testimony of a gjod conscience. Loue's L. L. iv. 2 



CON 

CONSCIENCE-consciences, that will. Love'sL.L. v. 2 
conscience will serve me to r\va..Mer. of Venice, ii. 2 

my conscience says, no — ii. 2 

well, my conscience hanging about .. — ii. 2 
well, my conscience says, Launcelot — ii. 2 
saj's my conscience: conscience, say I — ii. 2 
to be ruled by my conscience, I should — ii. 2 
in my conscience, my con.^cieiice (rep.) — ii. 2 

five the lie to their consciences. ..f.vi/on Like it, iii. 2 
appeal to your own conscience.. Winter'sTale, iii. 2 
in ny conscience, the heavens with. . — iii. 3 

but I cannot witii conscience take it iv. 3 

so much my conscience whispers in . . King John, i. 1 
whose armour conscience buckled on — ii. 2 

his purpose and his conscience, like.. iv. 2 

made it no conscience to destroy .... iv. 2 

between my conscience, and my cousin's — iv. 8 

awakes my conscience to confess all this v. 4 

whom conscience and my kindred ..Richard II. ii. 2 

with clog of conscience, and sour v. 6 

the guilt of conscience take thou for — v. 6 

a true face, and good conscience 1 Henry IV. ii. 4 

now for our conscience, the arms .... — v. 2 

but a good conscience will make — (epil.) 

is in your conscience washed as jmre . . Henry V. i. 2 

keep quiet iu his conscience i. 2 

may I with right and conscience .... i. 2 

with conscience wide as hell — iii. 3 

I think, in my very conscience, he is — iii. G 

they are our outward conscicncea .... iv. 1 

inyour own conscience now? iv. 1 

I mil speak my conscience of the king — iv. 1 
wash every mote out of his conscience — i v. 1 

in your conscience now, is it not? .... iv. 7 

please your majesty, in my conscience — iv. 7 
ground and his earth, in my conscience — iv. 7 
give me, in your conscience now .... — iv. .« 
yes, my conscience, he did us great goot — iv. 8 
but shall I speak my conscience? ..'ZHenryVI. iii. 1 
my o\vn conscience tells me, you are — iii, 1 
whose conscience with injustice is ., — iii. 2 

and in ray conscience do repute .... v. 1 

conscience tells me, he is lawful king.SHenry KZ. i. 1 
even upon thy conscience, is Edward — iii. 3 
with God, her conscience, and these..i?icAarrf ///. i. 2 
the worm of conscience still begnaw — i. 3 
some certain dregs of conscience are.. — i. 4 

Where's thy conscience now? — i. 4 

our reward, thy conscience flies out . . — i. 4 

my lord, tliis argues conscience — iii. 7 

against my conscience and my soul . . — iii. 7 
are gone with conscience and remorse — iv. 3 
every man's conscience is a thousand — v. 2 
O coward conscience, how dost thou — v. 3 

my conscience hath a thousand several — v. 3 
conscience is but a word that cowards — v. 3 
our strong arms be our conscience.... — v. 3 

my conscience, wish him Henry VIII. ii. 1 

if I have a conscience, let it sink me. . — ii. 1 
near his conscience. No, his conscience — ii. 2 

wringing of the conscience, fears — ii. 2 

the quiet of my wounded conscience — ii. 2 
but conscience, conscience — O'tis.... — ii. 2 
soft cheveril conscience would receive — ii. 3 
my conscience first received a tenderness — ii. 4 
shook the bosom of my conscience . . — ii. 4 
tlie wild sea of my conscience — ii. 4 

1 meant to rectify my conscience — ii. 4 

o' my conscience, deserves a corner . . — iii. 1 
on my conscience, put unwittingly?. . — iii. 2 

I leave to your own conscience — iii. 2 

a still and quiet conscience — iii. 2 

for truth's sake and his conscience .. — iii. 2 

I cannot blame his conscience — iv. 1 

yet my conscience says she's a good . . — v. 1 
both in his private conscience, and .. — v.-2 
as you do conscience in doing daily .. — v. 2 
on my christian conscience, this one — v. 3 
o' my conscience, twenty of thedog-days — v. 3 
thee like a wicked conscience . . Troilus % Oress. v. 1 1 
canst thou the conscience lack.. Timon of Athens, ii. 2 

for policy sits above coiiseienoe — iii. 2 

in my conscience, I was the first man — iii. 3 
fourth would return for conscience. . Coriolanus, ii. 3 
I may use with a safe conscience ..JuliusCcesar, i. I 

my conscience bids me ask Cymbeline, i. 6 

my mutest conscience, to my tongue — i. 7 ■ 
strongly as the conscience does within — ii. 2 
heaven, and my conscience, knows . . — iii. 3 

I false? Thy conscience \vituess .... — iii. 4 
the virtue which their own conscience — iii. (i 
my conscience! thou art fettered more — v. 4 
yet, on my conscience, there are verier — v. 1 
my heavy conscience sinks my knee — v. 5 
a thing within thee, called conscience. Titus And. v. 1 

let not conscieuce, which is cold Pericles, iv. 1 

if there be not a conscience to be used.... — iv. 3 
they're too unwholesome o' conscience .. — iv. 3 

I'll catch the conscience of the king Hamlet, ii. 2 

that speech doth give my conscience !... . — iii. 1 
conscience does make cowards of us all.. — iii. 1 
conscieuce, and grace to the profoundest — iv. 5 
now must your conscience my acquittance — iv. 7 

they are not near my conscience — v. 2 

is't not perfect conscience, to quit him . . — v. 2 

yet it is almost against my conscience — v. 2 

I hold it very stuff o' the conscience Othello, i. 2 

best conscience is— not to leave undone . . — iii. 3 
dost thou in conscience think, tell me . . — iv. 3 
CONSCIONABLE— fm-ther conscionable.O'/ieWo, ii. 1 
CONSECRATE-fleld-dewconsecrate.M/t/.A-./>r. V. 2 
this body, consecrate to thee. . Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 
consecrate commotion's liitter edse?2HefirylV. iv. 1 
we'll consecrate the steps that Ajax. Troil. i^- Cres. ii. 3 

seat, to virtue consecrate Titus Aiidronicus, i. I 

do I consecrate my sword, my chariot — i. 2 

to villany and vengeance consecrate — ii. 1 

did I mv so"ul and fortune consecrate Otiiello, i. 3 

CONSECRATED— 
underneath that consecrated roof. Twelfth Night, iv. 3 



CON 



[ 137 ] 



CON 



.lath tlKlw 

CONSKX r 



— iii. 2 



— iv. 3 



i. 1 



CONSKCRATED— 

mtrt mo iit tlie coii^ecnitoil Cumt.fV, ■-,./.»■ ;V.ti. Iv, 
1. ,■,.!■ hi liiT I'l.isc niul omisfcratiil ..Mnl. .\.l>r. Ill, 
n' .■.msc.-rntnl siiiiw.. 7V;;,.i,i ./■ |,7i. iv 

II, ;i.il.vi'.ins(.Mlt r.-miu'sl, ii 

111 tlnii- consents . . Tira Uci. of I'l-r. i 
it to L'li along with you.. — iv 

nuv, I'll consont to net any Mei-ry (rires, ij 

win lur to LMiisL-nt to you — .ji 

not iiv inv consent, I promise you .. 

wiiils'on inv consent, and my consent 

now in the lionse, by your consent .. — i". 3 

the nmitl hath triven consent to go .. — iv. 6 

thv eiinsent to my sinirii apiietite.jVra./or .Vea.ii. 4 

it IS not my eon^eiit, hot mv intreaty — iv. 1 

I will not consent to die this day .... 

hath my consent to marry her. . Mid. X. 1) 

l)et'ore your grace consent to marry.. 

mv soiil consents not to give sovereif^uty 

l)v vour settina on, by your consent? — in. " 

aiiil me, of my consent; of my consent — iv. 1 

here was a consciit, t^knowing. . . . Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

ore of consent and sutl'erance \rx..A^]iou Like ((, ii. 2 

and like enoULth to consent — iv. 1 

for all vour writers do consent — v. 1 

consent with b.ith, that we may — v. 2 

yon have mv consent: let your wedding — y_. 2 

to mv eiiilciuours L'ive consent ill's Well, n. 1 

let her, in line, consent, as we'll direct — iii. 7 

the main consents are had — v. Ii 

that villi express consent; which we — (ejnl.) 
man-V sweet Bianca with consent. . Tarn. ofSh. in. 2 

witli'one consent to have her so — iv. 4 

shall ha\'e my daughter with consent — iv. 4 
a husband take by my consent . . irinter'sTale,_v. 3 
either consent to pay this sum. .Comedijof En: iv. 1 
consent to lav thee thtit I never hadi — iv. 1 

if \on shall cleave to my consent Macbeth, ii. 1 

if thou did.^t but consent to this KittgJohn, iv. 3 

if 1 in act, consent, or sin of thought — iv. 3 
the other part reserved I by consent.. fii'Wmrd //. i. 1 

thou dost consent in some large — .1-2 

given here mv soul's consent — i^- ' 

consent upon'a sure foundation •IllenrylV. i. 3 

flix:k together in consent, like so — v. 1 

grows not in a fair consent with ours.. Hcmi/K. n. 2 
to consent to winking. I will wink (n-p.) — v. 2 
by my consent, we'll e'eu let them. . 1 llenry yi.i.'i 
consent, (and for thy honour (rep.) .. — 

king Ilcnry givesconsent — 

give consent, that Margaret maybe (rep.} — 

months concluded by consent .... 

and my consent ne'er asked herein 

say you consent, and censure well . . — \W- ' 

our authoritj' is his consent ~ ,,, ^"' ! 

he swore consent to.your succesaion.SHf/iryF/. ii. \ 



V. 3 



v. 5 
r<j VI.\. 1 



— 11. 6 

— ii. 6 
_ iv. 6 

— iv. 6 
rd III. iii. 4 



CONSEQUENCE-and conseiincncc. Hcnrj/ Vtll. 11. \ 
■ by the conseiiiicnco o' the crown . . . . Cumbetine, ii. 3 

some 

he cl 



yield consent to disinherit him. 

adopted heir by his consent 

hadst thou never given consent 

council and consent is wanting 

I yield thee mv free consent 

he consents, if ^Varwick yield consent 
give consent, his master's child . . liict 

sav, have I thy consent, that — •.■•*■ 

by particular consent proceeded . . Henry VI II. n. 4 

and our consent, for better trial — v. 2 

do not consent, that ever Hector. Trnilus fi- Cress. \. 3 
with full consent belly'd his sails .... — ii. '2 

your full consent gave wings — .ii. 2 

that all, with one consent, praise — ii'- ^ 

consent upon the order of their fight — iv. 5 
by your consent and voice, which you — v. 3 
marriage my consent be missing. . . Timon of Ath. i, 1 
the senators, with one consent of love — v. 2 

cannot make mv heart consent Coriolanus, i. 9 

and their consent of one direct way.. — _ii. 3 
bv the consent of all, we were established — in. 1 
with the consent of supreme Jove.... — ..Y- ^ 

do not consent, that Antony JuliusCcesar, in. 1 

consent you, Lepidus? I do consent.. — iv. 1 
not having my consent, bestow your . . Pericles, \i. 5 
there's no going but by their consent . . — iv. 6 

my will to her consent is but liomeo fy Juliet, i. 2 

lie's my consent and fair according voice — i. 2 
than your consent gives strength to — .;■ 3 

that thou consent to marry us this day — .u. 3 

give consent to m.arry Pans — iv. 1 

my poverty, but not ray will consents — v. 1 

do you consent we shall actiuaint Hamlel, i. 1 

upon his will I sealed my hard consent. . — i. 2 

consent to swear. Propose the oath — 1.5 

give them seals, never, ray soul, consent! — lu. 2 

pleasure, and most wise consent Othello, i. 1 

1 did consent; and often did beguile her — i. 3 
did von and he consent in Cassio's death? — v. 2 
Co.VSENTED-she hath consented. Merry mves, iv. 6 
'tis well consentetl; presently away..Jl/«c/i Ado, iv. 1 
your father hath consented that. . TamingofSh. u. 1 
have consented to all terms of reason.. //enrj/ V. v. 2 
have con-dented nnto Henry's death 1. 1 Henrys/, i. 1 

von all consented unto Salisbury's — i. •') 

the (ineen hulh heartilv eonsented.Hic/iard ///. iv. 5 

con-cnte I to his hani.-,liment Coriolanus, iv. 6 

CUN.-ii;.\TIXG— consentin,;! to' t. Mens. far Mens. iii. 1 
consenting to the safeguard of your .. — v. 1 

nor her sudden consenting As you Like >',v. 2 

his heart was not consenting All's H'vll, iii. 2 

CONSEQUENCE- 
an nnshunned consequence .... Mens, for Meat. in. 2 
choose I, joy be the consequence 1 . .Wtr. nfl'enice, iii. 2 
not in matter of heavy consequence.. /1W'» TeU, ii. b 

the consequence is then Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

to betray us in deepest consequence Macbeth, i. 3 

could trammel up the consequence .... — i. 7 
iCnl. Knl.1 know all mortal consc(iucncc8 — v. 3 
it is a matter of fiiiiall conse<iuencc. . Richard II. v. 2 
to answer matters of this consequence.. Henry ;'.ii. 4 
bitter consequence, that Edward..«ic/iard ;//. iv. 2 
hoping the consequence will prove as — iv. 4 
honourable dangerous consequence. ./uli'i«C(»«ar, i. 3 



,, ,-,,-,-- o fi- Juliet, i. 4 

i'th yiui'liL this coMsec[iieiice..Hiim(e<, ii. 1 
atdoKcs in thcconsciucncc. Av, marry - Ji. 1 
i)etty coiisci|iiciice, attends the hoistermis — in. 3 

ifeo'nscqucMcc clo hut approve (tlhello, ii. 3 

CONSHUlll'-'^'r— k'low all mortal consequents 

iCnt. /w,/.-cons(V|Uences] V„rh-lh, V. 3 

CONSiajU IONriA'-conse<inently. TiccUV, ,V/V/l^ iii. 4 

consciioeullv, thy rude hand to Kini;Jnl,n, iv. 2 

coiisciiuciitlv, like a traitor coward. .A'/c/..i)i( //. i. 1 

CUNSEltVi:— to conserve a life.. A/c<is./"i. l/cn. iii. 1 

honour taste of these conserves?. 7'nm. ofSh. 2 (.ind.) 

any conserves, give me conserves of beef — 2 (ind.) 

CON'SERVED— conserved of maidens'.. O/Acf/o, iii. 4 

CONSIDER— most deeplj; to consider. .Tempest, Hi. 2 

considers she my possessions?. . I'um Gen. of f^er.v. 2 

let her consider his frailty Merry ll'ives, iii. 5 

consider, he's an enemy to mankind. 7'ucW/i iV. iii. 4 
masters, you ought to consider . . Mid. N. s Dr. iii. 1 
consider, then, we came but in ... . — v. I (prol.) 
consider who the king your father. I.oiie'sI,.Los(,ii. 1 
consider, what you first did swear unto — iv. 3 
be thy plea, consider this .... Merch. of Venice, iv. 1 
when I consider, wliat great creation. ./li('s>reH, ii. 3 

to consider what is breeding Winter' sTaie, i. 2 

consider little what dangers — v. 1 

will bring me to consider that which.. — v. 1 
consider, now it stands upon my. Comedy of Ur. iv. 1 

consider it not so deeply Macbeth, u. 2 

better consider what you have 1 Henry IV. v. 2 

you that are old, consider not the 2HenryIV.i. 2 

and well consider of them — ^jf* * 

we consider, it was excess of wine .... llenry V. ii. 2 

we will consider of tliis further — .n. "1 

bid him, therefore, consider of his. ... — lu. 6 
consider lords, he is the next of blood.2Hf;!r!/f/.i. 1 

we will consider of your suit ZHenryVl. ui. 2 

ah, sirs, consider, he that set you . . Richard III. i. 4 
to consider further, that what his . . Henry yill.\. 1 
consider what vou do: how you may — ni. 1 
must consider, that a prodigal. 7"imono/.-lrtens, ui. 4 
consider you what services lie has . . Coriolanus, i. 1 

'tis for you; consider of it — i. 2 (letter) 

consider this; he has been bred i' the — lii. 1 
warlike service he has done, consider — lu. 3 
consider fiurther, that when he speaks — ni. 3 
what, you have said, I will consider. Julius Civsar, i. 2 
but if you would consider the true cause — i. 3 
if thou consider rightly of the matter — _ iii. 2 
not to consider in what case . . Antony f; Cleo. ui. 1 1 

and then let her consider Cymbeline, li. 3 

I will consider your music — .ii. 3 

madam, you're best consider — \\\- i 

consider, when you above perceive . . — m- 3 

but I consider, by medicine life — v. 5 

consider, sir, the chance of war — . v. 5 

consider him well: thouow'st Lear, in. 4 

my friends, consider you are my guests. . — in. 7 
'twere to consider too curiously (rep.) . . Hamlet, v. 1 
we consider the iraportanoy of Cyprus . . Ot/icllo,}. 3 
I hope, you wUl consider, what is spoke — lu. 3 
NSIDERANCE— cold considerance.aHeii./r.v. 2 



CONSOLATE— to consolato thine ear .All's lyelt, iii. 2 

CONSOLATION— 

Kate of my consolation TamingofShmr,]]. 1 

grief is crowned with consolation Int. <^clfii. i. 2 

CON.SON.\NCY-no consonancy iu.Tweflh Niuiii, ii. ■') 
bv the eonsonaney of our youth Hiunlet, ii. 2 

CON.SONANT-qiiis, thou consonant?. Louf'jt.L. v. 1 

CONS( )KT- [CVj(. J sweet consort. . Twoden afVer. iii. 2 

wilt thou be of our consort? — iv. 1 

for live consort with hhick-browcd.Wid. A^. Dr. iii. 2 
fair (Icsiies consort .\oiir ^'r!u;el ..Lovc'sL.l.nsl.W. 1 
and at'tcrwurils consort vou WW.Comedy of Krnirs,\, i 

let's not cou.sort with them Marlu-ll,,\i. 3 

consort with me in hnid and dear .Y'niiV. .^ tVcs.f. v. 3 
[C'oi. A'7i(.2 madam, he was of that consort. /.c^r.ii. 1 
consort! what, dost thou make ./fomco <j-/«(ic/, iii. 1 

zounds, consort! We talk here — iii. 1 

boy, that didst consort him here — iii. 1 

who is it that consorts, BO late — v. 3 

CONSORTED— and consorted.. totJc's L.L. i. 1 (let.) 
all the rest of that consorted crew . . Richard II. v. ^ 
two of the dangerous conaortcd traitors — v. 6 
witch, consorted with that harlot. ./iic/iaivf ///. iii. 4 
for this, consorted with the citizens. . — iii. 7 
who to Philippi here consorted ub.. JuliusCiesar, v. 1 
to be consorted with the humorous. Romeo^ Jul. ii. 1 



CONSORT'ST— consort'st with Romeo 

CONSPECTtriTIES— 
can your bissonconspectuities glean .Coriolanvi 

CONSPIRACY— that foul conspiracy. . Tempesi. 
open-eyed conspiracy his time doth.. — ii. 1 ( 
a pack, a conspiracy ' ' *' 



ill. I 



Mg) 



CONSID . . , 

CONSIDERATE— considerate eyes.Ricliard III. iv. 2 

go to then: your considerate stone. ..4h(. ^-Cleo. ii. 2 

CONSIDERxVTION-thy best consideration. Lear, i. 1 

on carpet consideration Twelfth Kight, iii. 4 

startles and frights consideration . . King John, iv. 2 

considerations infinite do make 1 Henry IV. v. 1 

thrust me from a level eonsideration.2He7iry/K. u. 1 
these humble considerations make me — ij. 2 

consideration like an angel came Henry V. i. 1 

would give it quick consideration . . Henry VI II. i. 2 

from it all consideration s\ips\. Timon of .Ithens, iv. 3 

come, and drown consideration... -("(oiiy /irCleo. iv. 2 

CONSIDERED-considered well.. Two Gen. of Vcr. i. 3 

you will be considered Measure for Measure, i. 2 

if I have not enough considered . . Winter's Tale, iv. 1 
I have considered so much, Camillo. . — iv. 1 
being something gently considered . . — ly. 3 
have you considered of my speeches?.. Mnclett, iii. I 

the clroumstanee considered \HenryIV.i.'i 

have been considered and debated on.l Henry VI. v. 1 
my lord, I have considered with ..i Henry VI. y. 1 
all circumstances well considered.. /iic/ia/vi ///. iii. 7 

I have considered in my mind — ■ iv. 2 

being considered, have moved us . . Henry VI 11. y. 1 
if thou hast considered, let us know. Ant. ■^Cleo. i_i. 6 
which I have considered of a course. Cymbelme, in. 4 

there's more to be considered — iii. * 

if thine considered prove the Prrtcles, y. 1 

and, at our more considered time Hamlet, ii. 2 

the play be tlien to be considered — in. 2 

CONSIDERING— considering the. Taming of Sli. ly. 2 

many mazed considerings did Henry Vlll.ii. 4 

not worth his serious considering — ni. 2 

considering how honour would Cirriolanus,i. 3 

considering who thou art Romen l^ Juliet, u. 2 

CONSIGN— and we'U consign thereto... Heiir!/ V. v. 2 

condition for a maid to consign to — v. 2 

consign to thee, and come to. .Cymbeline, iv. 2 (song) 
CONSIGNED— and to our purposes, consigned 

[Co(.-conttned] •iHenrylV. iv. 1 

and consigned kisses to them ..Troitus ^- Cress, iv. 4 
CONSIGNING— God consigning to ..illenrylV. v. 2 
CONSIST— do not our lives consist. Ti/v/VV/i NiglU, ii. 3 
it rather consists of eating and drinking — . ii. 3 
purgation did consist in words .... /Is you Like r/, i. 3 
whole charge consists of ancients . . 1 Henry I V. iv. 2 
as our conditions shall consist uj)on.2i/c)iry/r. iv. 1 

in her consists my happiness Richard ///. ly. 4 

most consist of war-marked Antony Sf Cleo. ni. 7 

welcome is peace, if he on peace consist.. /'enc(ej, i. 4 

all goodness that consists in bounty — .v. 1 

C( )NS1STETII— city consisteth ot.Mer.of Vemce,\u. 3 

CONSISTING— consisting equally.. ftirtarJ lll._y- 3 

of him there be much consisting. VVoiV. S^ Cress, in. 3 

CONSISTORY— counsel's consistory .Kic/inn//;/. n. 2 

cousistory , yea, the whole consistory, llenry VI Il.u.i 



u, lJtw:iv, a \;oiiBi,'iitiv-j' ,vpainst mC. . /Ii''. , ., ..-,... - 

now, for conspiracy, I know not . Winter's Tale, ni. 2 

conceal this dark conspiracy? Riclmrd 11. v. 2 

strong, and bold conspiracy I O loyal — v. 3 
confirmed conspiracy with fearful. //enry/'. ii. (cho.) 

conspiracy I shamest thou. Julius Ctvsar, ii. I 

seek none, conspiracy; hide it . — ii. 1 

security gives way to conspiracy — — ii. 3 (paper) 
conspiracyl sleep till I waked him Lear, i. 2 

CONSPIRANT— conspirant 'gainst this high — v. 3 
CONSPIRATOR— grand conspirator. /eiWmr!( //. y. 6 

back, thou manifest conspirator 1 Henry VI. \. 3 

come, seek, the conspirators Julius Casar, iii. 2 

tear him to piees, he 's a conspirator — jii. 3 

1 am not Cinua the conspirator — iii. 3 

I draw a sword against conspirators — v. 1 

all the conspirators, save only he — v. 5 

the proudest conspirator that lives.. Titus Arul. iv. 4 

CONSPIRE— and conspire against. Two Gen. of V.). 2 

the times conspire with you King John, iii. 4 

or what conspire you, lords? SHenryVl.i. I 

that do conspire my death Richard 111. iii. i 

I would conspire against destiny. 7'roii. Sf Cress, y. 1 
moved pale Cassius to conspire?.. /in'o"!/ <5-C'(eo. ii. 6 
what further woe conspires against, ./(om..^ Jul. y. 3 
thou dost conspire against thy friend .. O'/ieWo, iii. 3 

CONSPIRED— have you conspired.. WW. N.Vr. in. 2 

they have conspired together Mer. of Venice, li. 5 

hast thou conspired with thy brothcr.A'iHff John,i. 1 

lightly conspired, and sworn Henry V. ii. 2 

yon have couspired against our royal — ii. 2 
conspired with that irregulous devil.Cymbeline, iv. 2 

CONSPIRER— where conspirers are . . Macbeth, iv. 1 

CONSPIRING- 



•ing with Camillo. Winter's Tale, iii. 2 (indict.) 



CONSTABTLE- to justle a constable . . Tempest, ii 
the knave constable had set me . . .Merry IVives, iy. 5 
I am the poor duke's consinhle. Meas. for Meas. ii. 1 
how dost thou know that, constable? — ii. 1 
do the constable's wife any harm? .. — u. 1 

constable, what sa}' you to it? — ii. 1 

master constable. How long (rep.) . . — u. 1 
most desartless man to be constable?. JV/uc/i .Uto, iii. 3 

both which, master constable — iii. 3 

fit man for the constable of the watch — in. 3 

you, constable, are to present — iii. 3 

call up the right master constable . . — in. 3 

come before master constable — iv. 2 

master constable, you go not the way 

master constable,— pray thee, fellow 

master constable, let these men be . . 

this learned constable is too cunning 

nay, a night-watch constable . . Love s L. Lost, in 

to heneatli vour constable, it will All's Well, n. 2 

the constables have delivered her over.2Heiiry / T. y. 4 
ray lord high constable, but though .. Henry V.\\. 4 

iiigh constable of France — '" ' 

therefore, lord constable, haste on . . — 
forth, lord constable, and princes all — 

my lord high constable, you talk — 

I tell thee, constable, my mistress .. — 

my lord constable, the armour — 

my lord high constable, the English lie — 

now! my lord constable I Hark — ;■• - 

in mercy, the constable desires thee. . — iv. 3 
tell the constable, we are but warriors — iv. 3 
De-la-brct, high constable of France — iv. 9 

I was lord high constable Henry VIII. n. 1 

the constable 8 own wonl Romeo /y Juliel , i. 4 

CONSTANCE— ambitious Constance. . A' 
is not the ladv Constance in this troop? 
call the lolly Constance; some siieedy 
lady Constance, peace. War! war!., 
the lady Constance speaks not from.. 

comfort, gentle Constancel 

my name is Constance 



iv. 2 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 
V. 1 



— iii. .■> 



iii. 7 
iii. 7 
iii. 7 



','John,\. 1 



. All's Well, i. 2 



the lady Constance in a frenzy died. 

CONSTANCIES— constancies expire . . All's Well, i. 

CONSTANCY— my true constancy. V'wo«fn.<i/T. n.-.i 
men of such constancy put to sea.Tirelflh\ighl,u. 4 
Provost, honesty, and constancy.. A/pii..rnr<l/ca. iv. 2 
to something of great constancy.. Vid. S.prram,y. 1 
wisdom, and constancy, hath amazed. Alt siVell, n. 1 
constancy hath left you unattended . . Maebelh, ii. 2 
ftUow of plain and uncoined constancy. Henry V.y. 2 
and force them with a constancy. . Henry Vlll. in. 2 
find pcrsistive constancy in men?.'rroi<i«(5-Cre«f. i.3 

to keep her constancy in plight — nj- 2 

spirits, and formal constancy ....Julius Ca-sar,u. l 



CON 



CONSTANCY— of ray constancy ..Julius Civsnr, ii. 1 

constancy, be strong upon my side! — ii. ■* 
whom in constancj', vou tliink Cymbeline, i. fl 

CONSTANT— was so firm, so constant. . Tempest,]. 2 

ray stomach is not constant — ;;• 2 

prove constant to my.self ..Two GciLOfferona, ii. 6 

■were n\an Imt constant — v. 4 

fresh in Julia's witli a constant eye? — v. 4 
tlie constant iiiia;-,'e of the creature. TwelflhNighl^n. 4 
trial of it in auj' constant question . . — iv. 2 

still so constant, lord — v. 1 

as it is virtuous to be constant ..Meas.for Meas. iii. 2 
friendship is constant in all other . . Mudi Ado, ii. 1 
be yovi constant in the accusation. . . . — ii. 2 

to one thing constant never — ii. 3 (song) 

be placed in my constant soul ..Mer. of Venice, ii. 6 
the constitution of any constant man — iii. 2 
the constant service of the antique. .-l*- youLike i', ii. 3 
betwixt the constant red, and mingled — iii. 5 

to this I am most constant Winter's Tale,iv. 3 

therein am I constant to ray profession — i y. 3 
arm thy constant and thy nobler . . King John, iii. 1 

our friends true and constant 1 UenTijl V. ii. 3 

constant you arc, hvA yet a woman . . — ii. 3 
kiss thee with a most constant lieart.2Hcnri,'/r. ii. 4 

with faith, and constant loyalty Henri/ V. ii. 2 

constant in spirit, not swer^^n" — ii. 2 

how terrible in constant resolution . . — ii. 4 
shall assiu-e my constant loyalty . .SHenry VI. iii. 3 
long as Edward is thy constant friend — iv. 1 

bring me a constant woman Henry VIII. iii. 1 

they are constant, beiu"_;von . . Troilus 4- Cress, iii. 2 
let all const;uit men be Troiluses — iii. 2 

sir it is, and I am constant Coriolanus, i. 1 

ignorance, and perish constant fools. . — iv. 6 

you keep a constant temper — _ v. 2 

Cassius, be constant JuliusCcesar, iii. 1 

1 am constant to the northern star . . — iii. 1 
constant Cimber should be banished (re;).) — iii. 1 

wise, chaste, constant ciualified Cymbeline, i. 5 

a sly and constant knave — i. 6 

they are not constant, but are changing — ii. 5 
I dndne, is this most constant wife . . — v. 5 
with rich and constant pen vail. . Pericles, iv. (Gow.) 
a constant will to publish oiu' daiigliters' . . Lpur, i. 1 

bring his constant pleasure — v. 1 

I am constant to my purposes Hamlet, v. 2 

is of a constant, loving, noble natmre.. . . Othello, ii. 1 

CONST ANTINE— great Constantine..l Henry/'/, i. 2 

CONSTANTINOPLE— 
that shall go to Constantinople Henry K v. 2 

CONSTANTLY— constantly but.. Twelfth Night, ii. 3 

I do constantly believe you Meas.for Mens. iv. 1 

I constantly do think, (or, rather. Troil.Sf Cress, iv. 1 
to meet all perils very constantIy..J«<!'iisCn"sar, y. 1 
since patiently and constantly iaoVi. Cymbeline, iii. 5 
his eves upon you? most constantly — Hamlet, i. 2 

CONSTELLATION— constellation is.. Twelfth N. i. 4 

CONSTITUTION- excellent constitution — i. 3 
turn so much the constitution .Merck, of Venice, iii. 2 

CONSTRAIN— constrain me to tell Much Ado, i. 1 

constrains them weep, and shake Coriolan us, v. 3 

and constrains the garb, quite from Lear, ii. 2 

case as yours constrains a man . . Borneo «§- Juliet, ii. 4 

CONSTRAINED— be constrained in't. Twelfth N. ii. 3 
I have constrained one to call me. ... — ii. 3 

with him but constrained things Macbeth, v. 3 

fight with queasiness, constrained a,s.2HenryIV. i. 1 
constrained to watch in darkness . . 1 Henry VI. ii. 1 

thus was I not constrained Antony Sf Cleo. iii. 6 

as constrained blemishes, not as ... . — iii. 11 

constrained by her infirmity Cymbeline, iii. 6 

desired, more than constrained — v. 4 

I am glad to be constrained to utter . . — v. 5 
traitors, you constrained and forced. . Titus And. v. 2 

CONSTRAINETII-constrainethme.iWrf.iV. Dr. iii. 2 

CONSTRAINT— constraint of hunger.^W's IVell, iii. 2 

by love's own sweet constraint — iv. 2 

confess what I know without constraint — iv. 3 
the constraint of hospitable zeal .... King John, ii. 1 

it should be on constraint — y. 1 

bloody constraint ! for if vour hide Henry F. ii. 4 

it is a good constraint of fortime Pericles , iii. 2 

CONSTHINGED— constringed ia..Troil..^-Cress. v. 2 

CONSTRUCTION-construction made. Merry fr. ii. 2 

observe his construction of it Twelfth Night, ii. 3 

raider your hard construction must I — iii. 1 

illegitimate construction! Much Ado, iii. 4 

the mmd's construction in the face Macbeth, i. 4 

the merciful construction of good. Henry F///. (epil.) 
at him admits a good construction.. Coriolanus, v. 5 

show his skill in the construction Cymbeline, v. 5 

the fit and apt construction of thy name — v. .5 

CONSTRUE— protferer construe. Two Gen. ofVer. i. 2 

1 can construe the action of her ... Merry Wircs^ i. 3 
I will construe to them whence. . Twelfth Night, iii. 1 

construe my speeches better Lore's L. Lost, v. 2 

construe them. Hac ibat, as.. Taming of Shrew, iii. 1 
now let me see if I can construe it . . — iii. 1 

Blowbray, construe the times to illcnrylV. iv. 1 

construe'[t'n(.-castore: Knf.-custurCj me.iien. V. iv. 4 
construe any furtlier my neglect ..JuliusCcesar, i. 2 
men may construe things after their.. — i. 3 
mv engagements I will construe to thee — ii. 1 
jealousy must construe poor Cassio's . . Othello, iv. 1 

CONSUlj — I warrant him consul .... Coriolanus, ii. I 

were he to stand for consul — ii. 1 

thouglit, that Marcius shall be consul — ii. 1 
to desire the present consul, and last — ii. 2 
and i' the consul's view slew thi'ee . . — ii. 2 
well pleased to make tliee consiU .... — ii. 2 

to our noble consul wish we all — ii. 2 

that I may be consul, I have here .. — ii. 3 

beseech you, I may be consul — ij. 3 

indeed, I would be consul — ii. 3 

therefore let him be consul — ii. 3 

God save thee, noble consul I — ii. 3 

I would be consul, says he — ii. 3 

the,y have chose a consul, that will , . — i 
ngainst tiie grain to voice him consul — i 



[ 138 ] 



CONSUL-they are worn, lord consul. Cori"o(an«s, iii. J 

why then should I be consul? — iii." 

or never be so noble as a consul — iii. 

it makes the consuls base — iii. 

this a consul? no. The ajdiles, ho!. . — iii. 
whom late you have named for consul — iii. 
as I do know the consul's worthiness — iii. 
consul! what consul? The consul (re;;.) — iii. 
I'll return consxil; or never trust .... — iii. 
being passed for consul with full .... — iii. 3 
I have been consul, and can show .. — iii. 3 

if he had gone forth consul — i v. 6 

of consuls, senators, patricians — v. 4 

when he did stand for consul — v. 5 

subscribed by the consuls and partricians — v. 5 
Hirtius and Pansa, consuls, at thy . . Ant.fi-Cleo. i. 4 

sent by a cons<il to me Cymbeline, iv. 2 

wherein the toged consuls can propose. ..0(/(ei/o, i. 1 
and many of the consuls, raised, and met — ■ i. 2 

CONSULSHIP— stand for consulships? . . Coriol. ii. 2 
I pray, j'our price o' the consulship? — ii. 3 

CONSULT— let's consult together.. Merry Wives, ii. 1 

lest they consult about the 'ZHenry VI. iv. 7 

let us consult upon to-morrow's . . Richard III. v. 3 
sit we down, and let us all consult . . Titus And. iv. 2 

CONSULTING— and, not considting. Henry r//7.i. 1 

CONSUME — consume away in sighs. MucA Ado, iii. 1 
like a cheese; consumes itself to the .. All's Well,i. 1 
do consume the thing that feeds . Taming ofSh. ii. 1 
after that, consume away in rust .... King John, iv. 1 

and consume to ashes, thou foul 1 Henry VI. v. 4 

consume you wicked caitiff's. Timon ofAth. v. .5(epit.) 
the brand that should consume it . . Coriolanus, iv. 6 
will it consume me? let me see . . Titus Andron. iii. 1 

do not consume your blood with Pericles, iv. 1 

which, as tliey kiss, consume . . Pomeo ^Juliet, ii. 6 

CONSUMED— of the consumed time. . . All's Well, y. 3 
see it constantly consumed with fire. Winter's jT. ii. 3 
have consumed with fire our town. . Richard II. v. 6 

consumed his royal person Richard III. i. 1 

what else dear that is consumed... Troil.S^ Cress, ii. 2 

their way, consumed with fii-e Coriolanus, iy . 6 

wisdom IS consumed in confidence. J«^'?(s C(esar,ii. 2 
limbs, till they be clean consumed.... Titus And. i. 2 

CONSUMING— consuming means ..Richard II. ii. 1 
wlriles thy consuming canker eats ..I Henry VI, ii. 4 
consuming it with speaking! . . Timon ofAthens^ v. 2 
consuming sorrow to thine age . . Titus Andron. iii. 1 

CONSUMMATE— 
which consummate, return him . . Mea.for Mea. v. 1 
till your marriage be consummate ..Much Ado, iii. 2 
post to consummate this business. . . . King John, v. 7 
consummate our spousal rites.. Titus Andronicus,i. 2 

CONSUMMATION— 
quiet consummation have. . . . Cymbeline, iv. 2 (song) 
'tis a consummation devoutly to be . . Hamlet, iii. 1 

CONSUMPTION— in a consumption .Much Ado, v. 4 

this consumption of the purse 2HenryIV. i. 2 

consumptions sow in hollow bones. Timon of Ath. iv. 3 
consumptioncatch thee! This is in thee — iv. 3 
burning, scalding, stench, consumption. . Lear, iv. 6 

CONTAGION-duIcet in contagion. Twelfth Night, ii. 3 
strumpeted by thy contagion .... Comedy of Err. ij. 2 
all the contagion of the south light . . Coriolanus, i. 4 
the vile contagion of the night? . . Julius Caesar, ii. 1 
death, eontagfon, and unnatural.iJomeo Sr Juliet, v. 3 

hell itself breathes out contagion Hamlet, iii. 2 

I'll touch mv point with this contagion — iv. 7 

CONTAGIOtfS— 

a contagious breath (rep.) Twelfth Night, ii. 3 

up from the sea contagious fogs.M/rf. A'. Dream, ii. 2 

whose black contagious breath King John, v. 4 

permit the base contagious clouds ..\HenryIV. i. 2 
base durance, and contagious prison.2Henry/r. v. 5 

the filthy and contagious clouds Henry V. iii. 3 

a most contagious treason come to . . — iv. 8 
breathe foul contarious darkness . .iHenry VI. iv. 1 
this contagious sickness, farewell . . Henry VIII. y. 2 
contagious blastments are most Hamlet, i. 3 

CON'TAIN — that show, contain ..Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 
one of them contains my picture. Mer. of Venice, ii. 
contains her heavenly picture (rep.) — ii. 

cannot contain their urine — iv. 

your own honour to contain the ring — v. 
we can contain ourselves . . Taming of Sh. 1 (indue 
this little abstract doth contain .... King John,ii. 

why, it contains no king? (rep.) liidiard II. iii. 

this body did contain a spirit 1 Henry I v. v. 

this contains of general grievances. .IHenrylV. iv. 

please ic you, contains at large — iy. 

to envelope and contain celestial Henry V. i. 

were not sufficient to contain it .... 1 Henry VI. ii. 

worst, this letter doth contain? — iv. 

ever did contain a t'ning of worth. .2HeJ!ry VI. iii. 
bold to ask what that contains .... Henry VIII. iv. 
contain yourself; your passion . . Trail. ^ Cress, v. 2 

contain thyself, good friend Timon of Athens, ii. 2 

two days' shine, Athens contain thee — iii. 5 

too great for what contains it Coriolanus, y. 5 

your Italy contains none so Cymbeline, i. 5 

and take what it contains Lear, iii. 1 

dost contain ^Col. Knt.~is dust] ..Romeo Sr Juliet, v. 3 

CONTAINED— I am contained. . Mer. of Venicf, ii. 9 
a paper, which contained the name . . All's Well, v. 3 
what is here contained relish of love. Cymbeline, iii. 2 

CONTAINING-containing her aff"ectionil/uc/i/lrfo,v.4 
but for containing fire to harm mine. King John, iv. 1 
article, containing the deposing of.. Richard II. iv. 1 
whose containing is so from sense . . Cymbeline, v. 5 

containing such vile matter Romeo ^ Juliet, iii. 2 

OS much containing in as all these .... Hamlet, iv. 5 

CONTAMINATE— 
ruffian lust should be contaminate?.Com. o/£rr. ii. 2 
his fairest daughter is contaminate .. Henry V. iv. 5 
we now contaminate our 1insQT3..JuliusCtEsar, iv. 3 

CONTAMNIATED— 
to a contarainoted stale, such a one. . Much Ado, ii. 2 
contaminated, base, and misbegotten. 1 Hen. VI. iv. 6 
scruple of her contaminated carrion. Troil.^Cr.iv. 1 
even the bed she hath contaminated . . Othello, iv. 1 



CON 

CONTEMN— as if he did contemn . . Coriolanus, ii. 2 
and contemn with mowes the other. . Cymbeline, i. 7 
which contemns its origin, cannot be ... . Lear, iv. 2 

CONTEMNED-of contemned love.TwclfthNight, i. 5 

a plaster by contemned revolt KingJolm, v. 2 

to be contemned, than still contemned . . Lear, iv. 1 

CONTEMNED'ST-contemned'st wretches — ii. 2 

CONTEMNING— 
penance for contemnini; love. . Two Gen. ofVer. ii. 4 
contemning Rome, he has done. Antony fyCleo. iii. 6 

CONTEMPLATE-must I coutemplate.'SHcn. VI. ii. 5 

CONTEMPLATION— 

contemplation makes a rare TwelfthNight, ii. b 

leaden contemplation, have found. .Lo?)e'sL.L. iv. 3 
live in ^u'aycr and contemplation. Mer.o/reni'ce,iii. 4 
leave him in this contemplation?, /Is you Like it, ii. 1 
the sundry contemplations of my travels — iv. 1 
with contemplation and devout desires ..John, v. 4 

his contemplation under the veil Henry V. i. 1 

so sweet is zealous contemplation .Richard III. iii. 7 
tliink his contemplation were above. Hen. VIII. iii. 2 
slipped out of my contemplation.. T'roji.c^- Cress, ii. 3 
doth molest my contemplation? . . Titus Andron. v. 2 
what serious contemplation are .you in? . . Lear, i. 2 
given up liimself to tne contemplation.. Othello, ii. 3 

CONTEMPLATIVE— 
a contemplative idiot of him .... Tieelfth Night, ii. 5 
and contemplative in living art ..Love's L.Lost, i. 1 

CONTEMPT-eontempt of love. Two Gen. of Ver. ii. 4 

will grow more contempt Merry Wives, i. 1 

be placed in contempt ! Twelfth Night, i. 5 

at any thing more than contempt.... — ii. 3 

it is in contempt of question — ii. 5 

but turn him into a notable contempt — ii. 5 
in the contempt and anger of his Up! — iii. 1 
contempt farewell ! and maiden .. ..MuchAdo, iii. 1 
contempts thereof are as touching. Loire's L. Lost, i. I 
why, that contempt will kill the .... — v. 2 
a courtier, contempt, nor bitterness . . All's Well, i. 2 
you put off that with such contempt? — ii. 2 
check thy contempt: obey our will. . — ii. 3 
too virtuous for the contempt of empire — iii. 2 
mine eye infixing, contempt his scornful — v. 3 

contempt and clamoiir will be IVinler'sTale, i. 2 

a lip of much contempt, speeds from . . — i. 2 
that wrong with a more contempt. . Corn, of Err. ii. 2 
proud contempt that beat his Tpea.ce.. King John, ii. 1 

or with much more contempt Richard II. v. 2 

the jeering, and disdained contempt. .1 Henry IV. i. 3 
his tasking? seemed it in coutempi? . . — v. 2 
subjects to oppression and contempt. . Henry V. ii. 2 
slight regard, contempt, and any thing — ii. 4 
once, in contempt, they would have..l Henry F/. i. 4 
who, in contempt, shall hiss at t]iee.2He7iryVI, iv. 1 

irader foot with all contempt — v. 1 

lady, not for such contempt Richard III. i. 2 

and the nobility held in contempt — i. 3 

my deep service with such contempt? — iv. 2 
let the foulest contempt shut door.. Henry F7/L ii. 4 
walks, like contempt, alone . . Timon of.ithens, iv. 2 

Eoint to misery and contempt? — iv. 2 
ut by contempt of nature — lv.3 

the senator shall bear contempt — iy. 3 

he did solicit you in free contempt. . Coriolanus, ii. 3 
that his contempt shall not be bruising — ii. 3 
forget not with what contempt he wore — ii. 3 
what our contempts do often hurl . . Ant. .5- Cleo.i. 2 
into contemjit the suits of princely. .Cym&e/me, iii. 4 

can her contempt be answered? — iii. 5 

will then be a torment to her contempt — iii. 5 
meal, and bran; contempt, and grace — iv. 2 
justice, used in such contempt?.. Titus Andron. iv. 4 

or the best, for these contempts — iv. 4 

Rome requites with foul contempt . . — v. 1 
to laughter and contempt; that she may. . Lear, i. 4 
in contempt of man, brouglit near to beast — ii. 3 
\_Col. Knt.j contempt and beggary. . lionieo 4- Jul. v. 1 

CONTEMPTIBLE— 
know all, hath a contemptible spirit. .iv/wc/i^rfo, ii. 3 
to shine on my contemptible estate . . 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

CONTEMPTUOUS— 

ribs of this contemptuous cit.y King John, ii. 2 

contemptuous base-born callat as slie.2Henry VI. i. 3 

CONTEMPTUOUSLY— 
trampling contemptuouslj^ on. . TwoGen. of Ver. i. 2 

CONTEND— kiss, embrace, contend. ... — i. 2 

virtue, contend for empire in thee All's Well, i. I 

his wonders and his praises do contend. jliac6e//i, i. 3 

to contend against those honours — i. G 

do contend about them, whether — ii. 2 

two such kingdoms did contend Henry V. i. 2 

southern clouds contend in tears . .2Hanry VI. iii. 2 
■when dying clouds contend with, . ..SHenry VI. ii. 5 

if you contend, a thousand lives — ii. 5 

they contend with thee in courtesy. 7Voa'i. ^ Cr. iv. .'i 
I did contend against thy valour . . Coriolanus, iv. 5 
if we contend, out of our question.. ^n(. ^ Cleo. ii. 2 
for I will contend even with his .... — iii. 11 

whom I am too little to contend Pericles, i. 2 

contend not, sir; for we are gentlemen — ii. 3 
this Pliiloten contends in skill .... — iv. (Gower) 
when both contend which is the Hamlet, iy. 1 

CONTENDED— 
contended especially to know . . Meas.for Mens. iii. 2 

CONTENDING-of two contending.A/er. ofVcn. iii. 2 
hut a foul contending rebel . . Taming of Shrew, v. 2 

out, contending 'gainst obedience iladieth, ii. 4 

the contending kingdoms of France . . Ile^' ry ' . v. 2 
blood at Grecian swords' contending. Cor/oZanHS, i. 3 
contending with the fretful element Lear, iii. I 

CONTENT — how does your content. . . . Tempest, ij. 1 
furnish it anon with new contents .... — ii. 2 

and rest m.yself content — v. 1 

bring forth a wonder, to content ye,... — y. I 

that the contents will show Two Gen, of Ver. i. 1 

what best contents her — iii. 1 

are you content to be our general? — iy. i 

good master, be content Merry Wives, i. 4 

verefore shall I be content-a? — i. 4 

I have been content, sir, you — U.2 



CON 



CONTENT-I worrnnt.to your content. Mtvrj/ If. iv. 5 

of such con ten teas you will — iv. 6 

pr'ythcc, be content Twe(nii Kighi, y. 1 

DC Vou content, fair maid. . Meature/or Mrusure, ii. "2 
brother dies to-morrott'j be content.. — ii. !! 
how would you do to content thiM.... — iii. I 
the imaEC of It gives me content already — iii. 1 
yet I will be content to be a lawful .. — iv. 2 

the contents of this is the return — iv. 2 

whose contents shall witness to hira.. — iv. 3 

content yoiuTself : God knows Much 4<>o, v. I 

then be content. Content with . . Mid.N.'t Dr. ii. 3 
as minding to content you, our true — v. 1 (prol.) 

they are content to whisper — v. 1 

what are the contents? Lorc'sL.LosI, iv. 2 

strives to content, and the contents die — v. 2 
content in faith: I'll seal to ..Mercli.of /enicc,i. 3 

lie content, and seek no new — iii. 2 (scroll) 

vour ladyship all heart's content — — iii. ■! 
I am content, so he will let me have — iv 1 
I am content. Clerk, draw a deed . . — iv. 1 
now go we in content to liberty . . As yon Like it, i. 3 
light upon some settled low content — ii. 3 

but travellers nnist be content — ii. 4 

means, and content, is without three — iii- - 
men's good, content with my harm .. — iii. 2 
doth my simple feature content you? — iii. 3 

I know not tlie contents — iv. 3 

know not the contents — iv. 3 

I will content you, if what (rep.) — — v. 2 

if truth holds true contents — v.i 

I have had to even your content All's fVcll.u .S 

and for the contents' sake, we are sorry — iii- 2 
the general is content to spare thee yei; — iv. 1 
with verj' much content, my lord.... — iv. 5 
content you in my discontent — Taming nfSh. i. 1 
gentlemen, content ye: I am resolved — i. 1 
this contents; the rest will comfort .. — i. 1 

Basta, content thee: for I have it — — i. 1 
I am content to he Lucentio, because — i- 1 
content you, gentlemen, I'll compound — ii. 1 
I am content. Are you content (rep.) — iii. 2 

Kate, content thee — iii. 2 

his painted skin contents the eye? .. — iv. 3 

1 am content in a good father's care. . — iv. 4 

we will content you, go to — v. 1 

content; what is the wager — v, 2 

a hundred then. Content. A match — v. 2 
would they else be content to die?. iVinter'sTale.i. 1 
more it would content me to have her — ii. I 
ehall the contents discover, something — iii. 1 
not without much content in many — v. 3 

I am content to look on frep.') — v. 3 

to your own content (reo.) Comedy of Errors, i. 2 

anil shut up in measureless content ..Maclelh,\\. 1 

our desire 13 got without content — iii. 2 

may we content this widow lady? . . King John, ii. 2 
be content. If thou, that bid'st (rep.) — iii. 1 
not care, I then would be content. ... — iii. 1 

pardoned, am content withal Richard II. ii. 1 

will we bound our calm contents — — v. 2 

pood mother, be content — v. 2 

thoughts tending to content, flatter.. — v. .i 
content to do the profession some. . . 1 Henry IT. ii. 1 

will this content you, Kate? — ii. 3 

content; and the argument shall be .. — ii. ■» 
shall I? content: this chair shall.... — ii. 1 

content. To-night, say I — iv. 3 

I could be well content to entertain — v. 1 

I am content, that he shall take .... — v. I 

il est content de vous donner Henry V. iv. 4 

den it shall also content me — v. 2 

I am content; so the maiden cities .. — v. 2 

content; I'll to the surgeon's 1 Henry VI. iii. 1 

are you not content? Content — iv. 1 

I shall be well content with any .... — v. 1 
60 content? An if ray father (rep.) .. — v. 3 
I could be well content to be mine . . — v. 3 

she is content to lie at your — y. -i 

the fulness of ray heart's content . . . .2Henry VI. i. I 

work your grace's full content — i. 3 

I am content: provide me soldiers .. — iii. 1 
Margaret; these words content me much — iii. 2 

I am content he shall reign — iv. 2 

could command no more content than I? — iv. 9 

shall be so; content thyself Sllenry VI. i. 1 

I am content: Richard Plantagenet — i. 1 

my crown is cal led content — iij. 1 

with content, your crown content — ijl- i 

cry, content to that which grieves.... — iii. 2 

yet must I he content — iv. G 

well content with that alone — n;. 7 

it to yonr honour's good content!. ./^I'c/iard ///. iii. 2 
next sablmth, and Iwill content you — iii. 2 

with double riches of content — iv. 4 

dedicates to fair content, and you. . Henry VIII. i. 4 
range with humble livers in content — ii. 3 

our coutent is our best having — ii. 3 

forgot my prayers to content nim? .. — iii. 1 

these are the whole contents — iv. 2 

though my heart's content firm.. 7"ioiYu« (fCrcss. i. 2 

pray you, "content you — iii. 2 

worse, than the worst, content. rimono/zH/iens, iv. 3 

peace and content be here I — v. 2 

and could he content to give Coriolanus, i. 1 

eoft-eonscicnccd men can he content to — i. 1 
though I must be content to bear. ... — ii. I 

and IS content to speiul the time — ii. 2 

content, content. O sir, you arc not — ii. 3 
pray, be content; mother, I am going — iii. 2 
are content to suffer lawful ccusure. . — iii. 3 

I am content. I.,o, citizens (rep.) — iii. 3 

be you content: good Cinna JuUusCirsar, i. 3 

Caasius, he content, speak your griels — iv. 2 
could be content to visit other places — v. 1 
which drives o'er your content.. /Iii/oni/i?- CVeo. iii.G 
how 't will give otl". Content: 'tis strange — iv. 3 
Dolabella, it shall content me best . . — v. 2 

O content thee. Here comes Cj/mMi'iio, i. 6 

and the contents o" the story — ii. 2 



'[ 139] 

CONTENT— of his content,— yet not. Ci/inde/me, ill. 2 

of his content, all but in tiiatl — iii. 2 

becontnit: >tinr I'lw-liiitl son oiu".. .. — v. 4 
content tlu-t'. princi': I will restore. 7'i(«j/lurfrtfn. i. 2 
arm's cnibrai'.omont will ecmtent thee — v. 2 
that I repair to Home, I am content .. — y. 3 

all too little to content and please Pericles, i. 4 

more content in course of true delight .. — iii. 2 
I do commend to your content .... — iv. (Oow.) 
seemed so content to punish them — v. 3 (Gow.) 
let your study bo, to content your lord .... Lfur, i. 1 
the contents, iis in part I understand .... — i. 2 

his heart is not ill the contents — i. 2 

pray you, content: what, Oswald, hoi .. — i. 4 

on whoso contents, they summoned — li 4 

must be content to think you old ;.. — ■'■ ' 

must make content with his fortunes — iii. 2 (son^) 
see how one another leads content . . Rom. fif-Jul. i. 3 
content thee, gentle coz, let him alone — i. .') 
I am content, so thou wilt have it so — iii. 5 
it doth much content me to hear him . . Hamlet, ii. 2 

if not, be you content to lend your — iv. .5 

your soul to give it due content — iv. 5 

on the view and knowing of these contents — v. 2 

sir, content vou; I follow him Othello, i. 1 

you must therefore be content to slubber — |. 3 
wonder great as my content, to see you .. — ii. 1 
my soulliath her content so absolute .... — ii . 1 

1 cannot speak enough of this content .. — ii. 1 
nothing can or shall content my soul .... — ii. 1 

first be ripe: content thyself awhile — ii. 3 

play here, I will content your pains — — iii. i 

poor, and content, is rich, and rich enough — iii. 3 

farewell content! farewell the plumed .. — iii. 3 

pray, be content. O blood, lago, blood I — iii. 3 

so shall I clothe me in a forced content . . — iii. 4 

I pray you, be content: 'tis but his — i v. 2 

CONTteNTA— snerato me contenta ..illenn/IV. ii. 4 
CONTENTED-Ford, be contented. ;i/erry»7rm-, iii. 3 

art thou contented, Jew? Merch. of Venice, iv. 1 

and all his contented followers.. . . As you Like il, v. 2 
men could be contented to be what — All'sU'ell^ i. 3 
well, if you were so contented . . Taming ofSh. i v. 1 
if you be so contented, forswear — — iv. 2 

and will, if she be so contented — iv. 4 

well contented. What will you do? . . Mnrbelh, ii. 3 

the king shall be contented Richard II. iii. 3 

arc you contented to resign the crown? — iv. 1 
this world, for no thought is contented — v. .'> 
none contented; sometimes am I king — v. 5 
I could be well conteuted tobe.lHenry IV. ii. 3 (let.) 

be you contented, wearing now 2Heiiru 1 1', v. 2 

not die anywhere so contented HennjV. iv. 1 

who not contented that he lopped . .3 Henry VI. ii. 
must be contented to go along with us — iii. 1 
nor how to be contented with one wife? — iv. 3 
from that contented hap which I . . Richard III. i. 3 
are contented to wear our mortal . . Henry VIII. ii. 4 
be well contented to make your house — v. 1 

we are contented, Cresar shall Julius Cresar, iii. 1 

you are contented to be led in triumph — v. 1 

pr'vthee, nnncle, be contented Lear, iii. 4 

CONTEJSrTETU— contenteth me ..iHmnjVI.iv. 10 

CONTENTION— of their contention ..1 HcnrylV. i. 1 

contention, like a horse full of high.. 2HcHr;//F. i. 1 

to feed contention in a lingering act.. — i. 1 

breed no contentions with him H-iiry V. v. 1 

no quarrel, but a sliaiht contention ..'iHcnrij VI. i. 2 
when contention and occasion .. Trail. '^,- Cress, iv. I 
my arms could match thee in contention — iv. 5 

'twas a contention in public Cymbeline, i. 5 

great contention of the sea and skies O'hello, ii. 1 

CONTENTIOUS— contentious waves ..7'empc.!/.ii. 1 

that this contentious storm invades ns . . Lear, iii. 4 

CONTENTLESS-state, contentless. Timon ofAih. iv. 3 

CONTEST— do contest as hotl v Coriolanus, i v. b 

CONTEST .\TION— contestation was..4ii/.<S- Cleo. ii. 2 

CONTIN"ENCE— to justice, contiiK'noe. r,'»s,l,K/. i. 1 

CONTINENCY— withcontineii-y.l/,'.,./ ,-.Ve,.iii. 2 

making a sermon of continence .. l'<un:n- ni s'l. iv. 1 

CONTINENT— that orbed c.niiiiiLnt.. 7// ,•////, A', v. 1 

have overborne their continents. i)/'tf. A'. /> ream, ii. 2 

edict and continent canon ..Love\L.Losi, i. 1 (jet.) 

ay, my continent of beauty — iv. 1 

the continent and summary of. . Mer. of Venice, iii. 2 
liave been as continent, as chaste. JVinler'sTale, iii. 2 
my desire all continent impediments. .3A(c)je//i, iv. 3 

the opposed continent as much 1 Henry IV. iii. 1 

thou globe of sinful continents iHenrylV. ii. 4 

the continent (weary of solid firmness) — iii. 1 
be stronger than thy continent. ./lii/ony -5- C/eo. iv._ 12 
I pray you, have acontinent forbearance ../.ear, i. 2 
rive your concealing continents, and cr3' — iii. 2 

and continent, to hide the slain? Hamlet, iv. 4 

the continent of what [lurt a v'cntlcman. . — v. 2 
CONTINUAL— continual 'huuni..iUerr.v»7Des, iii. .'j 
a man of continual dissolution and thaw — iii. 5 
small have continual plodders.,.. /-owe',! L. to.!/, i. 1 
tongues continual slanders ride . .2lIenryIV. (ind.) 
Poins, and other his continual followers — iv. 1 
keep prince Ilairy in continual laughter — y. 1 

endeavour in continual umtion Henry V. i. 2 

of discord and cimliiuial strilii? \HenryVI. v. 5 

repentance, continual mo'litations.Heiirf/ /'///. iv. 2 
her continual tears become a deluge . Titus And. iii. 1 
with continual action are even as good.rerlcl''s, Iv, 8 

I have been in continual practice Hamlet, v. 2 

CONTINUALLY— by her continually .ji/.icdef/i, y. 1 
for they pray eoutiunally to their . . 1 Henry t V, ii. 1 
he corrics continually to Pyc-corner..2He/iry/r.ii, 1 
pravs continnallv for Richmond's.. /i/e/iart/ ///. v. 3 
CON'riNUANCl'- contlmlance.7'empes^ iv. 1 (song) 
call in question the continuance.. Ticclfth j\if,'ht^ \. 4 
in her the continuance of her first. Afea./or.Wcn. ill. 1 
a bawd of eleven years continuance.. — iii. 2 
means would graiit continuance.. iWer. of Venice. i. I 

extremes, in their continuance Kin:; John, \. 7 

too indirect for long continuance ..IHcnnjI V. iy. 3 
with long continuance in ascttled ..iHenry VI. ii. ■'i 
continuance of their parents' rage. /iom. it ./«'• (prol.) 



CON 



CONTINTJATE— 

and continuatc goodness Timon of Athentj i. I 

I shall, in a more continuatc time .... Othello, iii, 4 

CONTINUE— so you may continue Tempest, ii. 1 

if she would continue in it five weeks.. — ii. 1 
not long continue love to him.T'wo Gen. ofVcr. iii. 2 
if the duke continue these favours. ru'eZ/V/i Kighi^i. \ 
let him continue in his courses .. . ilea. for Mea. ji. 1 
to continue now, thou varlet (rep.) .. — ii. 1 

how shall wc continue Claudio _ — iv. 3 

your idle scorns, continue then.... Lote'-i /../."«', y. 1! 

and continue a braving war 411's Hell, i. 2 

for the which, I shall continue thankful — y. 1 

thus continue your resolve Taming of Shrew, i. I 

I will continue that I broached in jest — i. 2 
the heavens continue their lovesl.. IVInter'sTale, i. 1 
you did continue fault, and that you — i. 2 
will continue the standing of his body - i. 2 

shall continue our graces towards Macbeth, i. 6 

I have known her continue in this — y. 1 

your pleasure, and continue friends. King John, iii. 1 

author will continue the story iHenrylV. (iiyn\.) 

still continue peace and love 1 Henry VI. iv. 1 

continue still in this so good a mind. 2 Henri/ f/. iv. 9 
peers, continue this united league ..Richard III. ii. 1 

but this cannot continue Henry VIII. ii. 2 

did I continue in my liking? — ii. 4 

may he continue long in his highness' — iii. 2 
no care of what is to continue.. Timon of Athens, ii. 2 
your emperor continues still a.lovc...47i/.i^Wfo. iy. 6 

nor continue where he is Cymbeline, i. 6 

continues well my lord? his health .. — i. 7 
will continue fast to your affection .. — _i. 7 
that we must not eoiitinue friends.... — ii. 4 
Desdemona should long continue her love. Othello, i. 3 
go after, and mark how he continues — iv. 1 

C(5NTINUED-lind continued in it.Mea.for Mea. ii 1 

three hours the fight continued I Henry VI. I. 1 

how lone coutinueil: and what Coriolanus, ii.3 

I would he had continued to his country — iv. 2 
continued so, until we thought he ..Cymbeline, v. r> 

CONTINTTER— so good a continuer . . Much Ado, i. 1 

CONTINUING— weather continuing. tVinter'sT. v. 2 

CONTRACT— no contracts, successions, rempes^ii. 1 

to make this contract grow — iv. 1 

a contract of true love to celebrate — iv. 1 

help to celebrate a contract of true love.. — iv. 1 
a contract of eternal bond of love. Twelfth Xigh t, y. 1 
a true contract, I got possession. .Meas.fur Meas.i. 3 
between which time of the contract.. — iii. 1 
which, with a vowed contract, was fast — y. 1 

the contract of her marriage As you Like it, iii. 2 

the kinsr, smile upon this contract All's IVetl, ii. 3 

come on, contract us 'fore these. . IVinter'sTnle, iv. 3 
he must not; mark our contract .... — iv. 3 
will not have our contract celebrated — _y. 1 
joyful am I made by this contract!.! HeH/i/r/. iii. 1 
and proof of which contract, bear her — v. I 

in the course of this contract — v. 4 

dispense with that contract 

his contract with lady Lucy -^ , 

first he was contract to lady Lucy 

contract and starve your stipple . Timon ofA'h.i. 1 

the contract you pretend with that. . Cymbeline, u. 3 

it is no contract, none — JI- 3 

have no joy of this contract to-night.Rom. .5- /i/(.ii. 2 

it was verv sweet, to contract Hamlel, v. 1 (song) 

didst contract and purse thv brow Othello, 111. .1 

CONTRACTED— since contracted.. i)/er>-.v Wives, v. b 
you would have been contracted to. . Twelfth ,V. v. 1 
wast thou e'er contracted to this . . Mea. for Mea. v. 1 
extended or contracted all nroportions..-(«/'j iv.ll, v. 3 
and these your contracted heirs . . Winler'sT.ile,y. 3 
enquire me out contracted bachelors.l Henry IV. ly. 2 

the articles of contracted peace 2HenryVI, 1. 1 

I was contracted to them both Lear, v. 3 

to be contracted in one brow of woe Hamlet, 1. 2 

CONTRACTING— 
and perform an old contracting. Mcas. /or Meas. in. 2 
I CONTRACTION— body of contraction.. Haniief, ill. 4 

CONTRADICT— which contradicts. Winter's T. iii. 2 
I pr'ythee, contradict thyself, and say..Wiielie(/i, ;i.3 
thought to contradict your liking. .iHenry VI. 111. 2 

her husband, contradict your banns Lear, v. 3 

power than we can contradict . . Romeo f^ Juliet, v. 3 

CONTRADICTED- .. , 

I ever contradicted vour desire .... Henry VIII. 11. 4 

CONTRADICTION- 
accomplished without contradiction, nicftirrf/i. in. 3 

have his wortli of contradiction Coriolanus, in. 3 

without contra.lictinn, I have heard. /l7i'. ■^■Cteo. 11. 7 

without contradi.'tion, suffer the Cymbeline, 1. 5 

of this contradiction you shall now be quit — v. i 

CONTK A It r i:S— tiv contraries execute. Tempest, 11. 1 
to sootlic liioi ill these contr:iries?Comerf!/ o/" isr. iv. 4 
to your conroniuling contraries .. Timon qr.Hh. iv. 1 
no contraries liol.l more antipathy Lear, u. 2 

CONTRARIETIES- . „, •• , 

how can these contrarieties agree?..! Henry VI. u.s 

CONTRARIETY- . , . ^ 

than violcnlr>t contrariety Corio(oiii«, iv. r> 

CONTRAKIOKS- „ .. „ ■ 

and nio-t cor.tiarious guests Meas.for Mens. iv. 

thecontrarioM- winds, that held \ Henry IV. v. 

CONTRAKIolSLY-work contrariously. Hen. ;'. 1. 

CONTRARY— in its contrary as great . . Tempest, i. 
what instance of the contrary?. 'Aco Gen.ofVer.u. 
'tis pitv love should be so contrary . . — ly. 
I have" to show to the contrary. . . . Merry »fiiic», ij. 

I eould show vou to the contrary — 11. 

lie hath appofntcd them contrary places — 11. 

just the contrarv: the better TwelfthNighl,y. 

public ear professed the contrary.iWen./or ;»/ei>. iv. 
you may hear to the contrary .... — iv. 2 (note 

though I had sworn the contrary jlf iicA Ado, I. 

find no imiiediment to the contrary .. — v. 
contrarv to thy established., tore'i L.Loil,!. 1 (let 
he speaks the mere contrary, eros.se9. . — 1. 
woo contrary, deceived by these removes — y. 2 
wine ou the contrary casket Mcr. of Venice, \. 2 



CON 



[ 140] 

CONVENIENCy- 
brief and plain conveniencj^ . . Merch. of ren/ce, iv. 1 
kecp'st from me all conveniency Othello, iv. 2 

CONVENIENT-convenicntleisure.Merri/Wities.iii.S 
and 'tis not convenient you should be — iv. 5 
convenient is it: make a swift. . Mean. forMi-as. iv. 3 

a marvellous convenient place Mid.N.'sDr. iii. 1 

I go with all convenient speed.. Mcr.o//V'H/('c, iii. I 

the most convenient messenger AWs trell, iii. 4 

we have most convenient convoy .... — iv. 4 

if the time were convenient HenryV.'iv. I 

the garden here is more convenient..! Hennjn. ii. 4 

comluit, in convenient place 'iHenry FI. i. 3 

but it shall he convenient, master Hume — i. 4 
my lord, with all convenient haste. Richard III. iv. 4 
the most convenient place that I . . Henry VIII. li. 2 
take convenient numbers to make . . Cariolanus, i. 5 
true wars, I'll frame convenient peace — v. 3 
it were convenient you had such. . TitusAndron. v. 2 
xmder covert and convenient seeming .... Lear, iii. 2 
and more convenient is he for my hand . . — iv. 5 
'tis most convenient; pray you, go with us — v. 1 
we sliall And him most convenient Hamlet, i, 1 

CONVENIENTLY— 
may be conveniently delivered.. Tirelflh Night, iv. 2 
shall conveniently become you . . Mer. of Venice, ii. 8 

conveniently the rest convey Pericles, iii. (Gow.) 

I conveniently could send to Romeo. Horn, ^-Jul. v. 3 

CONVENT— golden time convents. 7'm!c/iia Nighl,_Y. 1 
one of our convent, and his . . ..Mens, for Meas. iv. 3 
abbot, with all his convent Henry VIII. iv. 2 

CONVENTED— he's eonvented ..Meas.forMeas. v I 
the council board he be eonvented.. Henry F/I/. v. 1 
eonvented upon a pleasing treaty . . Coriolanus, ii. 2 

CONVENTICLE— yom- conventicles.2 Henry VI. iii. 1 

CON VERS ANT-nor conversant -witti.KingJohn, iv. 3 
alike conversant in general services.. C!/m6c(i'n«,iv. I 
should be so conversant with pain Pericles, iii. 2 

CONVERSATION- 

out of my conversation Merry Wives, ii. t 

from the conversation of my thoughts. ^H's Well, i. 3 

till their conversations appear 2HenryIV. v. 5 

his conversation with Shore's wife. Richard III, iii. 5 
more of your conversation would . . Coriolanus, ii. i 
holy, cold, and still conversation. ^ntony^CTeo. ii. fi 

five times so much conversation Cymbeline, i. 5 

the good in conversation Pericles, li. (Gower) 

as e'er my conversation coped withaL.HaTnW, iii. 2 
those soft parts of conversation that . . Othello, iii. 3 

CONVERSE— converse with.. Tu'o Gen. of Vemna, i. 3 
I did converse this quondam day. Love's L.Lost, v. 1 
borne ourselves in the converse of . . . . — v. 2 
still converse with groaning wretches — v. 2 
alasl who can converse with . ...Mer. of Venice, \.1 
that do converse and waste the time — iii. 4 
did you converse, sir, with this. . Comedy of Err. ii. 2 
why dost thou converse with that . . 1 Henry IV. ii. 
practice and converse with spirits . . 1 Henry VI. \ 
converse with iron-witted fools . . Richard llj^v. 2 

one that converses more with Coriolad--., . 

to converse with him that is wise A Lear, i. 4 

your party in converse, him you would. Ham/ei, ii. 1 
that your converse and business may . . Othello, iii. 1 

CONVERSED— have conversed.. TiooGcn.o/rer. ii. 4 
any man with me conversedat \xouvs.MuchAdo, iv. 1 

conversed with a magician As you Like it, v. 2 

conversed with such as, like to p\tch.2 Henry VI. ii. 1 
hath he conversed with the enemy . . — iii. 1 

CONVERSING— by conversing with .iHenrylV. v. 1 
yeoman,by conversing with him... .IHenryF/. ii. 4 

CONVERSION— my conversion . . As you Like it, iv.a 
too sociable for your conversion King John,X\ 

CONVERT— must convert to disdain. . Much Ad/, i. 1 

let giief convert to anger Macbeth, iv. 3 

wicked friends converts to fear Richard II. v. 1 

thy overflow of good converts to bad — v. 3 

that shall convert those tears 2Henry IV. v. 2 

filths convert o' the instant Timon of Athens, iv. 1 

pious breath seeks to convert you — iv. 3 

sweet, convert to bitter gall Romeo ^-Juliet, i. 5 

you convert my stern eifects Hamlet, iii. 4 

convert his gyves to graces — iv. 7 

CONVERTED— I be so converted .... Much Ado, ii. 3 

and how you may be converted — Iii. 4 

and yorn-s, is now converted. . Merch. of Venice, iii. 2 
was converted, both from Ms ....As you Like it, v. 4 
that loam„-whereto he was converted ..Hamlet, v. 1 

CONVERTING-converting all. ATmc/j Adt>, ii. 3 (song) 
in converting Jews to Cliristians . . Mer. of Ven. iii. 5 
sure, there's no converting of them.. Henry VIII. i. 3 

CONVERTITE— tliese oouvertites.^s ym Like it, v. 4 
since you are a gentle convertite .... King John, v. 1 

CONVEBTLY— but so convertly that.MucA Ado, ii. 2 

CONVEY-convey the loAAer.TwoGen.of Verona, iii. 1 

I'll convey thee through — iii. 1 

convey, the wise it call Merry Wives, i . 3 

a friend here, convey, convey him out — iii. 3 
convey what I will set down .... Twelfth Night, iv. 2 
seriously I may convey my thoughts .All's Well, ii. 1 
convey unto our fearful minds . . Comedy of Err. i. 1 

you may convey j'our pleasures Macbeth, iv. 3 

convey me to my bed, then to Richard II. ii. 1 

convey him to the 'Tower, (rep.) — iv. 1 

lords convey my tristful queen ....IHenrylV. ii. 4 

convey them with safe conduct Henry V. i. 2 

to France shall we convey you safe — ii. (chorus) 
convey me Salisbury into his tent ..\HenryVl. i. 4 

keepers, convey him hence — ■ ii. .5 

only convey me where thou art 2HenryVl. ii. 4 

convey luni hence, and on our.loug-boat's — iv. 1 

away, convey him hence — iv. 1 

to convey me to the Tower Richard 111. i. 1 

convey me \_Col. X/ii.-lead me officers] — v. 1 
weight we must convey with M'n.Antony^Cleo. iii. 1 

how I convey my shame out of — ii i . 9 

help to convey her hence away . . Titus Andron. i. 2 
wliither wouklst thou convey this . . — v. 1 
help our uncle to convey him in ... . — v. 3 
some loving friends convey the emperor — v. 3 
conveniently the rest convey. . . . Pericles,'n\. (Gow.) 



COO 



CONTRAKY— to the contrary ?..il/CTcA. of Venice,\. 3 
to pull at a smack o' the contrary — All's Well,ii. 3 

they have gone a contrary way — in. •'J 

wafting his eyes to the contrary .. Winter's Tale, \. 2 

to the contrary I have express — n. 2 

thou, Hermione, contrary to.... — iii. 2 (mdict.) 

should to the heavens be contrary — _v. 1 

I have a king's oath to the contrary. King John, in. 1 

thrust upon contrary feet — iv. 2 

the king, commands the contrary . . Richard II. v. 5 

thou turn our offers contrary? I Henry I V. v. 5 

in thy house, contrary to the law . .2HenrylV. ii. 4 
banding themselves in contrary parts.lHeji. VI. iii. 1 

whereas the contrary bringeth — v. 5 

did he not, contrary to form of law .iHenryVI. iii. 1 
and, contrary to the king, his crown — iv. 7 
I'll prove the contrary, if you'll hear.SHcnri/;'/. i. 2 
the contrary doth make thee wondered at — i. 4 
hath strictly charged the contrary.if/c/iari( ///. iv. 1 

bad friends were contrary — iv. 4 

on the contrary, urged on the Henry Fill. ii. 1 

his contrary proceedings are all .... — iii. 2 

as i' the contrary the foulness is — iii. 2 

the best persuasions to the contrary fail — v. 1 

six months, be quite contrary Timon ofAth. iv. 3 

but art despised for the contrary — iv. 3 

but tidings to the contrary are . . Pericles, il. (Gower) 

for aught I know to the contraiy — ii. 5 

you must contrary rae! marry . . Romeo ^Juliet,!. 5 
storm is this, that blows so contrary? — iii. 2 
all things change them to the contrary — iv. 5 

and fates, do so contrary run Hamlet, iii. 2 

what in the contrary ? Every day Othello, Iv. 2 

CONTRIBUTION— 
a trembling contribution! why .... Henry Vlll. i. 2 
they have grudged us contribution../ii(.C(Esar, iv. 3 
CONTRIBIJTORS- 

we would be contributors Taming ofShrew, i. 2 

CONTRITE— more contrite tears. . . ; . . Hejiry V. iv. 1 
CONTRIVE— he doth eontrive..i»/er. of Venice, iv. I 
did so oft contrive to kill him? . . As youLike it, iv. 3 
in this action contrives against his . . All's Well, iv. 3 
we may contrive this afternoon . . Taming of Sh. i. 2 
to plot, contrive, or complot any ill.. Richard II. i. 3 
that do contrive how many hands Trail. <$- Cress. 1. 3 
the fates with traitors do contrive. /u'ms Ccesar, ii. 3 

nor let thy soul contrive against Hamlet, i. 5 

suddenly contrive the means of meeting — ii. 2 
CONTRIVED— contrived to bait. . Mid. N.'s Dr. iii. 2 
hast contrived against the very . Mer. of Venice, iv. 1 
complotted and contrived in this land. .7!i'c/i. II. i. 1 
premeditated and contrived murder. . Henry V. iv. 1 
by whom this great assembly is contrived — v. 2 
magic verses have contrived his end?. 1 Henry r/. i. 1 
that hath contrived this woful tragedy 1 — i. 4 
contrived by art, and baleful sorcery — ii. 1 

that you have contrived to take Coriolanus, iii. 3 

conscience, to do no contrived murder . . Othello, 1. 2 
CONTRIVEDST— 

thou that contrivedst to murder .... 1 Henry VJ.i.3 
CONTRIVER-villanous contriver.. ^s you Like it, i. 1 

the close contriver of all harms Macbeth, iii. 5 

find of him a shrewd contriver. . . . Julius Ctvsar, ii. 1 
the damned contriver of this deed . . Titus And. iv. 1 
CONTRIVING-our contriving friends.^n/.^Cteo.i. 2 
one that slept in the contriving of lust . . Lear, iii. 4 
generous, and free from all contriving . . Hamlet, iv. 7 
CONTROUL- would controul my dam s . Tempest, i. 2 
could controul thee, if now 'twere fit ... . — i. 2 

could controul the «noon — v. 1 

with an austere regard of controul. Twelfth Night, ii. 5 
subject, and at their controuls . . Comedy of Err. ii. 1 
the proud controul of fierce and .... King John, i. 1 

to be a secondary at controul — v. 2 

without controul, listed to m&he., Richard III. iii. a 
for the ill which doth controul it . . Coriolanus, iii. 1 
a sceptre to controul the world. . . . TitusAndron. i. 2 
no more will I controul thy griefs . . — iii. 1 
to slack you, we could controul them .... Lear, ii. 4 

men may blame but not controul — iii. 7 

vain boast! who can controul his fate? .Othello, v. 2 

CONTROULED-controuled the war. Conotenus, iv. 7 

controuled in that he frankly gave . . Titus And. i. 2 

the crying babe controuled with this — v. 1 

CONTROULING'-eontrouUng \)Ormds.KingJohn,u. 2 

lightens forth controuling majesty. .Richard II. iii. 3 

the same to act controuling laws. . . .2 Henry VI. v. 1 

CONTROULIiER-an arrogant controuller — iii. 2 

this night to be controullers Henry VIII. i. 3 

controuller of oiu: private steps\..Titus Andron. ii. 3 
CONTROULMENT— 
you may do it without controulment.*fuc/i Ado, i. 3 
for blood, controulment for controulment.. Jo/m, i. 1 
controulment, justice, or revenge?. TitusAndron. ii. 1 
CONTROVERSY— all controversy. Mea. /or Mca. i. 2 
the cause in controversy . Mer. of Venice, \v. 1 (letter) 
see the end of this controversy . . Taming of Sh. v. 1 
for staying on our controversy.. Comerfy of Err. v. 1 

here is the strangest controversy King Jolm, i. 1 

shall be swallowed in this controversy . Henry K. ii. 4 

the controversy of three-pence Coriolanus, ii. 1 

dismiss the controversy bleeding — ii. i 

it with hearts of controversy Julius Ctesar, i. 2 

to tarre them on to controversy Hamlet, ii. 2 

CONTUMELIOUS— 
and scorns, and contumelious taunts. 1 Henry F/. i. 4 
not calm his contumelious spirit ..2 Henry VI. iii. 2 
to the stain of contumelious.... Timon o/.-l//iens, v. 2 
CONTUMELIOUSLY— 

thus eontumeliously should break ..I Henry FJ. i. 3 

CONTUMELY-proud man's contumely. Ham;e(, iii. 1 

CONTUSION-forgets aged coutusion3.2 Henry F/. v. 3 

CONVENIENCE— 

the place answer to convenience. . Mea.forMea. iii. 1 

can meet him with any convenience . . All's Well, ii . 3 

honour that good convenience claims — iii. 2 

certain and possessed conveniences. Trail. l/Cres. iii. 3 

which, if convenience will not allow Lear, iii. 6 

weigh, what convenience, both of time. Hnm/e(, iv. 7 
for want of these required conveniences. Othello, ii. 1 



CONVEY-convey thy deity aboard . . Pericles, iii. I 
never could I so convey, unless .... — iv. (Gow.) 

convey the business as I shall find Lear, i. 2 

into !ier womb convey sterility I — i. 4 

she is not well; convey her to my tent .. — v. 3 
that may convey my greetings../(nmeo<^ Juliet, iii. .'> 

behind tlie arras I'll convey myself Hnmtel, iii. 3 

CONVEYANCE— of some conveyance.A/erryjr. iii. 3 

I fear tliere is conveyance I Henry VI. i . 3 

thy sly conveyance, and thy lord's.SHcjiry Vl. iii. 3 
madest quick conveyance with. . . . Rictiard III. i v. 4 

these con veyances of our blood Coriolanus, v. I 

Eortinliras craves the conveyance .... Hamlet, iv. 4 

the very conveyance of his lands — v. 1 

to liis conveyance I assign my wife Othello, i. 3 

CONVE YED'-be conveyed away. TwoGen.ofVer. iii. 1 
convej'cd me into a buck-basket. . Merry Wires, iii. fi 

tliere was one conveyed out — iv. 2 

conveyed to my understanding. .Mea. for Mea. iii. I 
if lie were conveyed to hed.Taming of Slirew, 1 (ind.) 

being close conveyed, shall — 1 (ind.) 

sir, 1 have conveyed aboard. . Comedy of Errors, i v. 1 

see him safe conveyed home — iv. 4 

conveyed himself as heir Henry V.i. 2 

be conveyed unto the Tower ZHenry VI. iii. 2 

be conveyed unto my brother — i v. 3 

he was conveyed by Richard — iv. 6 

suddenly conveyed from hence ..Richard III. iv. 4 

forthwith you be conveyed Henry Vlll. v. 2 

king's children should be so conveyed! Cymbefmc, i. 1 
lord of Gloster hath conveyed him hence. Lear, iii. 7 
CONVEYERS— conveyers are you all. /i/cAarrf//. iv. 1 
CONVEYING— and conveying gusts.. Cor.ofnnus, i. 6 
CONVICT— convict by course of law.;?(c7iard ///. i. 4 
CON^^CTED— armado of convicted sail., yo/m, iii. 4 
CONVINCE— it would convince ..Love's L.Lost, v. 2 

wine and wassel so convince Macbeth^ i. 7 

their malady convinces the great — iv. 3 

the world convince of levity.. Troitus ^- Cressida, ii. 2 

persuasion could but thus convince me — iii. 2 

convince the honour of my mistress. .Cymfje/i'ne, i. 5 

of both this truth shall ne'er convince.. Pen'rii'S, i. 2 

CONVINCED— convinced or supplied . . Othello, iv. 1 

CONVIVE— in the full convive. . TroilusSr Cress, iv. 5 

CONVOCATION-spiritual convocation.. He jjry V. i. 1 

a certain convocation of politic worms.. Ham/e^ iv. 3 

CONVOY— entertained my convoy .... AW sWell, iv. 3 

we have most convenient convoy .... — iv. 4 

at such a breach, at such a convoy . . Henry V. iii. 6 

and crowns for convoy put into — iv. 3 

hope, our convoy, and our bark.. Troilus^ Cress, i. 1 
my convoy in the secret night. . Romeo Sf Juliet, ii. 4 

and convoy is assistant, do not sleep Hamlet, i. 3 

CONVULSIONS- with dry convulsions . Tempest, iv. < 
COOK— or his cook, or his laundry ..Merry Wives, i. 2 

<^vould the cook were of my mind! Much Ado, i. 3 

Where's the cook? is supper.. Taming of Siirew, iv. 1 

where is the rascal cook? — iv. 1 

was both pantler, butler, cook . . Winter's Talc. iv. 3 
the cook help to make the gluttony. 2Henry7F. ii. 4 
yea, marry, William cook, bid him.. — v. 1 
tiny kickshaws, tell William cook . . — v. 1 

let thine age be thy cook Henry V. v. 2 

my cook and I'll provide Timon of Athens, iii. 4 

epicurean cooks, snarpen with . .Antony ^Clea.W. 1 
will play the cook, and servant .... Cymbeline, iii. 6 

you and Fidele play the cooks — iv. 2 

and cook to honest creatures — iv. 2 

for I will play the cook Titus Andronicus, v. 2 

hire me twenty cunning cooIilb.. Romeo fy Juliet, \v. 2 

thiiiga for the cook, sir — iv. 4 

COOICED— what we have killed be cooked. Cyrai). iii. 6 

yoube ready for that, you are well cooked — v. 4 

COOKER Y-fine Egyptian eookery.^ln/ony .^-CTeo. ii. 6 

but his neat cookery ! lie cut Cymbeline, iv. 2 

COOL— my humour shall not cool . . Merry Wives, i. 3 

for pills to cool the reins — iii. .'> 

I would not have things cool — iv. 2 

send me a cool rut-time, Jove — v. 5 

let it cool the while. I love Much Ado, ii. 3 

more than cool reason ever. . . . Mid. N.'s Dream, v. 1 
under the cool shade of a sycamore. Love'sL.Lost,Y.i 
my heart cool with mortifying . . Mer. of Venice, i. 1 

rust, sword ! cool, blushes 1 All's Well, iv. 3 

your lordship cool your hands?. Taming ofSh. 1 (ind.) 
warm, he cools me ^vith beating. Comedy of Err. iv 4 

cool it with a baboon's blood Macbeth, iv. I 

I'll do, before this purpose cool — iv. 1 

remorse, cool and congeal again King John, ii. 2 

as fire cools fire, within the scorched — iii. 1 
shall cool the hearts of all his people — iii. 4 

iron did on the anvil cool — iv. 2 

the cool and temperate wind Henry V. iii. 3 

'twill make them cool in zeal ....2Henrv VI. iii. 1 
which with the heart there cools .... — iii. 2 
to cool a man's stomach this hot ... . — iv. 10 

strike now, or else the iron cools Sllmryl'I. v. 1 

which with my scimitar I'll cool. Tmit. -S- Cnss. v. 1 
to let the meat cool ere we can . . Timon nf .ilh. iii. c 
which doth ever cool i' the absence. Cor/o/an«s, iv. 1 

to cool a gipsy's lust Antony .5- Cleopatra, i. 1 

delicate cheeks which they did cool — ii. 2 

when the blood was cool Cymbeline, v. 5 

the stream to cool this heat . . Titus Andronicus, ii. 1 
now let hot iEtna cool in Sicily . . — iii. 1 

lest your breath cool yourself Pericles, i. 1 

love cools, friendship falls off Lear, i. 2 

a brave night to cool a courtezan — iii. 2 

of thy distemper sprinkle cool patience. Herm/e^, iii. 4 
to cool our raging motions, our carnal . . Otlwllo, i. 3 
COOLED— and cooled, glowing hot. Merry ffiiie.s, iii. 5 
my bargains, cooled my friends.Mer. of Venice, iii. 1 
warmed and cooled by the same winter — iii. 1 
my senses would liave cooled to hear. . Macbeth, v. 5 

that must be cooled for this RIchnrd //. i. 1 

Nortliumberlandwill soon be cooled. 2Hen/i///'. iii. 1 

COOLING-whom I left cooling of the ah. Tempest, i. 2 

my wind, cooling my broth. . . . Merch. of J'enice, i. 1 

there lies a cooling card 1 Henry VI. v. 3 

you must stay the cooling too . . Troitus ^ Cress, i. 1 



coo 



[ 141 j 



COOLING— a hot friend cooliiiB ..Jtiliut Cijiar, iv. 2 

aiiiver with tlie ciinliiiK wind. ... 7'i7i/» AmlroH. ii. 3 
OPS— ftiid coond tV.ini Dthir lunils..K.(i^ Jnhii, ii. 1 
COOPED— alas, I am nnt e.>,.i«d i.p. .Ml,;!,!/!''- v. 1 
COPATAIN-and a i'i>|)iituiii Init!. r.iml:i^' nfSli. v. 1 
COPK-fiirlvi-iipi- voiircMiiti'.. 11,-. .'/,-,. /./■/■.■mc.'.iv. 1 
li.vf t.i coiH' liirn i'li thuM' Millon. . .I,< i/"" '•*'■ H. ii- 1 
I'll n>|.i' witli tlu'c, luid do fMn(.-....-illr,in/n. iii. ■.' 

nuil.Clillunl. coin' wilh l\iiii ■.Ulenn/ri. i. :> 

whiini you iire to i-ope witliul IliclmrJ III. v. 3 

to I'oiif niiilii'imjs ccnsiircrs Henry I'll!, i. 2 

Ajax sliiill copctlio l.L'st ....Troiliu/^Cressida, ii. 3 
tlie clieiipi'st foimtry under the cnjie .. I'ericlcs, iv. 
as the ndversarv 1 1'onie to cope withal . . Lvtir^ v. 3 
ho hath, aud ia'again to coih; vonr wifo.rWiWM, iv. 1 
COPED— should have copod KtOni.\. .-2 lli-ur,/ 11'. iv. 2 
Bav, he vcsterdav coped llei'tor . . Tifiil. <SOc».s-. i. 2 
as"e'er liiv eoMvJrsuti.in coped witlml . . /;<im/,-(, iii. 2 
C01"IIl';Tr'.V-kinL:lo|.hetmi../."rc's/..;,. iv. 1 (let.) 
let kins Cophetvia know the truth . .illriiiiiir. v. 3 
kin- Cophctua hnvd the liui,",'arniaiil. Ilnm. /iJul. ii. 1 

COI'IIOD— let tliis be copied out Ki„i:.l„lin, v. 2 

youth and ohservation co|'ie<l there .... l/.o/.M, i. 5 
(M have il-copied; take it, mid do't ..(i/h,'llo, iii. -1 

COl'lKS—setting of liuvs' copies 'lllciiyijl'l. iv. 2 

takes virtuous conies to be wicked. Tim. of .llh. iii. 3 
COPIOUS— be copious in exclaims. ./ii'c/mri/ ///. iv. \ 

CO I'PKD— casts copped hills towards Pericla, i. 1 

C( )PPEK — copper buys no better. . Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 

that tliat ring was copper \lIeniylV. iii. 3 

my ring was copper. I say, 'tis copper — iii. 3 
Troilus for a copper nose .... Troilus SrCressida^ i. 2 
with cunninp gild their copper crowns — iv. 4 
COPPEK-SPUft— 

and master Copper-spur Meas.for Meas. iv. 3 

COPPICE— edge of yonder coppice. . Lore's L. L. iv. 1 

COP'ST— fool thou con'st with. . . . Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

that con'st with dcatii himself. . Romeo Sr Juliet, iv. 1 

COPULATION— the copulation of .As you Like, iii. 2 

coiiulation thrive, for Gloster's hastartt ..Lear, iv. B 

COPULATIVE— country copulatives.^sj/oMii'Ae.v. 4 

COPY— leave the world no copy. . . . Twelfth Night, i. ^ 

almost the copy of my child that's . . Sluch Ado, v. 1 

might be a copy to these younger All's Well, i. 2 

will you give me a copy of the sonnet — iv. 3 
tliey say, it's a copy out of mine .. Winter' sTale, i. 2 
the whole matter and copy of the father — ii. 3 
it "Was the cttp^^ of our coni(;rence.Come(Vj/o/.Brr. v. 1 
in them nature's copy's not eterne .... Macbeth, iii. 2 
the copy of your speed is learned. . . . King John, iv. 2 
be copy now to men of grosser blood. . Henry V. iii. 1 
COPY-BOOK- B in a copy-book.. Z-ouc's L. Lost,v.2 
COR AGIO-eoragio, bully-monster (rep.t. Tempest,v. 1 

for our flight. Bravely, coragio 1 AU'sWen,n.i 

CORAIi— bones are coral made ..Tempest, i. 2 (song) 
I saw her coral lips to move .. Taming of Slireiv, i. 1 

CORAM— of peace, and coram MerryWires, i. I 

CORAMBUS— Coramhus so many All's WeU, iv. 3 

COR ANTO— home in a coranto?. . . . TwelflhNight, i. 3 

why, he's able to lead her a coranto.. --(U's Well, ii. 3 

lavoltas high, and swift corantos .... Henry V. iii. 6 

CORD-the ladder made of cords. Two Gen. of Ver. ii. 4 

quaintly made of cords — iii. 1 

to your waist, a cord, sir Meas.for Meas. iii. 2 

hast not left the value of a cord.. iV/er.o/f'f nice, iv. 1 

gnawed in two my cords Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

if thou want'st a cord, the smallest.. K.ing John, iv. 3 

the cords, the ladder, or \HenrylV.\.Z 

with edge of penny cord Henry V. iii. 6 

the charity of a penny cord! Cymbeline, v. 4 

give me cord, or knife, or poison — y. 5 

to help thee knit the cord .... Titus Andronicus, ii. 5 

oft bite the holy cords in twain Lear, ii. 2 

cords made like a tackled Romeo A Juliet, ii. 4 

cords, that Romeo bade thee fetch? ^rep.) — iii. 2 

take up those cords; poor ropes — iii. 2 

come, cords, come, nurse — iii. 2 

if there be cords, or knives, poison .... Othello, iii. 3 

CORDED— with a corded ladder.. TwoGen. of Ver. ii. 6 
and with a corded ladder fetch — iii. 1 

CORDELIA— what shall Cordelia do? Lear, i. 1 

then poor Cordelia! and yet not so — i. 1 

how now, Cordelia? mend your speech . . — i. 1 
and here I take Cordelia by the hand .... — i. 1 

fairest Cordelia, that art most rich — i. 1 

bid them farewell, Cordelia, though .... — i. 1 
with washed e.ves Cordelia leaves you.... — i. 1 
come, my fair Cordelia. Sister, it is not — i. 1 
how ugly didst thou in Cordelia show! . . — i. 4 

1 know, 'tis from Cordelia — ii. 2 

if you shall see Cordelia (as fear not .... — iii. 1 

ehame detains him from Cordelia — iv. 3 

tills lady to be my child Cordelia — iv. 7 

which he intends to Lear and to Cordelia — v. 1 

uix)n such sacrifices, my Cordelia — v. 3 

the question of Cordelia, and her father.. — v. 3 
Where's the king? and Where's Cordelia? — v. 3 

on the life pf I.*r,r, and on Cordelia — v. 3 

t/) hang Cordelia in the prison — v. 3 

Cordelia, Cordelia, stay a little: ha! — v. 3 

CORDI.Vr.,— to me were cordial Winter's Tale, i. 2 

as j*weet as any cordial comfort — v. 3 

a pleasing cordial, princely Richard III. ii. \ 

cordial that you bring a wretched.. Henry fill. iii. 1 
I do not know what is more cordial.. CymiWmc.i. 

was precious and cordial to me — iv. 2 

confection which I gave hira for cordial — v. 5 
the cordial of mine age to glad. . . . Titus Andron. i. 2 
come, cordial, and not poison . . Romeo ^ Juliet, v. 1 

CORDIS— have tremor cordis on me. Win er'sTale, i. 2 

CORE— cor. tuttoil core bene trovato. 7>im. ofsh. i. 1 
were not that a botchy core? .. Troilus ff Cress, ii. 1 

how now, thou core of envy? — v. 1 

most putrefied core, so fair without . . — v. 9 
I will wear him in my heart's core.. ..Humlel, iii. 2 

CORIN-in the shape of Corin satall.MiJ. \. Dr. ii. 2 
O Corin, that thou knew'st how .. As you Likeil, ii. 4 
no, Corin, being old, thou ean'st not.. — ii. 4 

CORINTH-carried towards Corinth. Com. of Err.'i. 1 
of Corinth that, of Epidaurua this .. — i. 1 



CORINTH— by Hshermen of Corinth. Com. o/£rr. i. 1 
rude fisherinen of (Jt^rinth by force .. — v. 1 

thou earnest from Coriiitli liVst — v. 1 

1 came from Corinth, iiiv most — v. 1 

would we could see you at (.'urinth.rimon o/.lrt. ii. 2 
f'OKINriHAN- but a Corinthian ..IHenrulf. ii. 4 
COHIOLANU.S— 

jMarcius Coriolanus: bear (rep.) Coriolanus, i. 9 

Coriolanus: welcome to Rome (rep.) — ii. 1 
newly named, what is it? Coriolanus — ii. 1 
every oue, Coriolanus will carry it . . — ii. 2 
therefore, for Coriolanus neither to care — ii. 2 
l>erformed by Cains Marcius Coriolanus — ii. 2 
sit, Coriolanus; never shame to hear — ii. 2 
the deeds of Coriolanus should not .. — ii. 2 
call for Coriolanus. He doth (rep.) .. — ii. 2 
to Coriolanus come all jov and honoiirl — ii. 2 

there, Coriolanus. May I then — ii. 3 

nor has Coriolanus deserved this .... — iii. 1 
Sicinius, Brutus, Coriolanus, citizens! — iii. 1 
Coriolanus, patience: speak, good .. — iii. 1 
the consul Coriolanus. He a consul! — iii. 1 
banishmenE of that worthy Coriolanus — iv. 3 
Coriolanus banished? Banished, sir.. — iv. 3 
Ills great opposer Coriolanus being .. — iv. 3 
entertainment, in being Coriolanus. . — iv. 5 
witness may my surname Coriolanus — iv. 5 
your Coriolanus, sir, is not much .... — iv. 
we wished Coriolanus had loved you — iv. G 

in hooting at Coriolanus' exile — iv. 6 

Coriolanus he would not answer to . . — v. I 

come to speak with Coriolanus — v. 2 

before you'll speak with Coriolanus.. — v. 2 
office me from iny son Coriolanus. ... — v. 2 
to his surname Coriolanus 'longs .... — v. 3 
stolen name Coriolanus in Corioli? .. — v. S 
as much as ever Coriolanus did . . TitusAndron. iv. 4 

CORIOLI— alone to guard Corioli Coriolanus, i. 2 

are set down before their city Corioli — i. 3 
the citizens of Corioli have issued. . . . — i. 6 
holdin" Corioli in the name of Rome — i. 6 
alone I fought in your Corioli walls — i. 8 
for what he did before Corioli, call hira — i. 9 
Titua Lartius, must to Corioli back.. — i. 9 

here in Corioli, at a poor man's house — i. 9 
for all the chests in (3orioli, and .... — ii. 1 
Marcius did fight witliin Corioli's gates — ii. 1 
such eyes the widows in Corioli wear — ii. 1 

before and in Corioli, let me say — ii. 2 

a sudden re-enforcement struck Corioli — ii. 2 

before Corioli, he scotched him — iv. 5 

his wife is in Corioli, and his child . . — v. 3 

stolen name Coriolanus in Corioli? ., — v. 5 

I fluttered your Voices in Corioli .... — v. 5 

CO-RIVALED-co-rivaled greatness?.. Tro^f. (j-Cr. i. 3 

CORK — take the cork out AsyouLikeit,y\\. 2 

as you'd thrust a cork into Winter's Tale, iii. 3 

CORK Y— bind fast his corky arms Lear, iii. 7 

CORMORANT— spite of cormorant. Louc's L.Lost, i. 1 

insatiate cormorant, consuming .... Richard I L ii. 1 

digestion of tliis cormorant war.. Trail. .^ Cress, ii. 2 

by the cormorant belly be restrained. Coriolanus, i. 1 

CORN— no use of metal, corn; or wine. . Tempest, ii. 1 

our corn's to reap, for yet Meas.for Meas. iv. 1 

playing on pipes of corn Mid. N.'s Dream, ii. 2 

and the green corn hath rotted . . — ii. 2 

he weeds the corn, and still lets . . Love'sL.Lost, i. 1 

sowed cockle reaped no corn — iv. 3 

though bladed corn be lodged Macbeth, iv. 1 

shall lodge the summer corn Richard It. iii. 3 

that even our corn shall seem 'iHenrylV. iv. 1 

to gather money for their corn .... 1 Henry VL iii. 2 

that come to sell their corn — iii. 2 

want ye corn for bread? — iii. 2 

curse the harvest of that corn — iii. 2 

like over-ripened corn, hanging -'Henry VI. i. 2 

like to the summer's corn by tempest — iii. 2 
like to autumn's corn, have we ... ."iHenry VI. v. 7 
where my chaff and corn shall .... Henry I'll I. v. 1 

shake like a field of beaten corn — v. 4 

we'll have corn at our own price .... Coriolanus, i. 1 

for corn at their own rates — i. 1 

sent not corn for the rich men only , . — i. 1 

the Voices have much corn — i. 1 

when we stood up about the corn ... . — ii. 3 
when corn was given them gratis. ... — iii. 1 
tell me of corn! this was my speech — iii. 1 

to give forth the corn o' the — iii. 1 

know, the corn was not our recompense — iii. 1 

did not deserve corn gratis — iii. 1 

first, thrash the corn, then after. . Titus Andron. ii. 3 
scattered corn into one mutual sheaf — v. 3 

are stored with corn, to make Pericles j i . 4 

fed my country with your com — iii. 3 

shall of a corn cry woe Lear, iii. 2 (song) 

thy sheep be in the corn — iii. 6 (song) 

that grow in our sustaining com — iv. 4 

unphi'mcd with corns, willhave.. Komco .5- 7«iie(,i. '.> 

she. Ill swear, hath corns — i. 5 

CORNELIA-Cornelia never with. ri(u« Andron. iv. I 

Cornelia the midwife, and myself — iv. 2 

CORNELIUS-what's this, Cornelius?. CymJicdVie, v. 5 

good Cornelius, and you, Voltiinand Hamlet,i. 2 

CORNER— all the corners else Tempest, i. 2 

at the corner of the orchard .... Twelfth Night, iii. 4 
fantastical duke of dark corners.. il/c«.. /or Men. iv.3 

I may sit in a corner, and cry Much Ado, Vi. \ 

sits tne wind in that corner? — ii. 3 

from the west corner of thy. Love's L. Lost, i. 1 (letter) 
from the four corners of the earth. . Mer. of Ven, ii. 7 
if you thus get my wife into corners — iii. 5 
unregarded age in corners thrown. /Is you Like it,\\. 3 
no other way but by this hedge' com(tr. All's Well, iv. 1 
hedge' corner in the coldest. rnminjyo/SA.l (indue.) 
skullting in corners? wishing .... Winter's Tale, i. 2 

upon the corner of the moOn there Macbeth, iii. 5 

even till that utmost corner of KingJohn, ii. 1 

come the three corners of the world . . — v. 7 

agreed; I'll to yon corner 1 Henry VI. ii. 1 

at every corner, have them kiss 'illenry VI. iv. 7 



COR 

CORNER— saint Magnus' corner! ..iHenryVI. iv. 8 
stands rea<ly at the park corner.. ..3 H<nrv VI. iv. 5 
o' my conscience, deserves a comcr.Wenr|/;'/;/.iii. 1 
winds of all the comers kissed yowv. Cymlieline, ii. 4 
doth belie all corners of the world .. — iii. 1 
like an ape, in the corner of his jaw . . Hamlet, iv. 2 
than keep a corner in the thing I love .Othello, iii. 3 
COItNI';R-CAI'-conier-caj)ofsocietv.;,o7.c'./,./.. iv.3 
COR.N'ER-STONIO— yond' eorner-6lone?..CoWo;. v. 4 

CORNET— doth stop my comets I Henry VI. iv. 3 

CORN-IIEL]>- 

tlie green corn-licld did pass./fiyou Like, v. 3 (song) 

CORNI.SII_art tliou of Cornish crewj.. Hcury V. iv. I 

CORN UTO— the leaking eorauto..A/fni/ Wives, iii. 5 

CORN WALI.,— of Albany, than Cornwall . . L,ar, i. 1 

our son of Cornwall, and you, our no less — i. I 

our dearest Regan, wife to Cornwall? .... — i. 1 

Cornwall, and Albany, with my two .... — i. 1 

duke of Cornwall, and Regan liis duchess — ii. 1 

twixt the dukes of Cornwall and Albany? — ii. 1 

spoken 'gainst the duke of Cornwall? — ii. 1 

rd speak with the duke of Cornwall — ii. 4 

the king would speak with Cornwall — ii. 4 

cunning, 'twixt Albany and Cornwall .. — iii. 1 

the duke of Cornwall's dead iv. 2 

Albany's and Cornwall's powers you .... iv.3 

that the duke of Cornwall was so slain .. iv. 7 

COROLLARY— bring a corollary Tempest, iv. 1 

CORONATION— double coronation.. King- /o/„i, iv. 2 
solemnly set down our coronation.. /(iWmrrf //. iv. 1 
in London streets, that coronation dav — v. 5 

affairs, upon his coronation day 'iHenry IV. iii. 2 

our coronation done, we will accite . . — v. 2 
ere they come from the coronation . . — . v. f> 
in our coronation take your place . . 1 Henry VI. iii. 4 

to haste unto your coronation, a letter iv. 1 

to see her coronation be performed ..iHenry VI. i. 1 

first, will I see the coronation iHenry VI. ii. 6 

sojourn till our coronation? Richard ///. iii. I 

to sit about the coronation — iii. 1 

is, to determine of the coronation ... . — iii. 4 

for his purpose in the coronation .... iii. 4 

order given for her coronation Henry VIII. iii. 2 

published, and her coronation — iii. 2 

voice is now only about her coronation — iii. 2 
lady Anne pass from her coronation — iv. 1 
this day, by custom of the coronation — iv. 1 

to show my duty in your coronation Hamlet, i. 2 

CORONER— and seek the coroner.. Tutrfyy/i Nighi. i. 5 

CORONET— his coronet to his crown . . Tempest, i. a 

coronet of fresh and fragrant flowers. ,W/(/. N.Dr. iv. 1 

imperial, crowns, and coronets . . Henry V. ii. (cho.) 

doth deserve a coronet of gold 1 Henry VI. iii. 2 

adorn his temples with a coronet .... — v. 4 

their coronets say so; these ore Henry VIII. iv. I 

'twas one of these coronets Julius Ciesar, i . 2 

this coronet part between you Lear, i. 1 

her coronet weeds clambering to liang..Hui;i(f/, iv. 7 
CORPORAL— sir corporal Nyra. . . . Merry Wives, ii. 1 

my name is corporal Nym — ii. 1 

in corporal sufferance finds a pavii.Mea.forMea. iii. 1 

I to be corporal of his field Love's L. Lost, iii. 1 

by earth, she is but corporal — iv.3 

I had that corporal soundness now. . . . All's Well, i. 2 

and what seemed corporal, melted Macbeth, i. 3 

bend up each corporal agent to this — i. 7 

of ancients, corporals, lieutenants ..\ Henry IV. iv. 2 
and good master corporal captain. .2Henry IV. iii. 2 

faint souls, past corporal toil Henry V. i. 1 

certain, corporal, that he is married., — ii. 1 

good corporal, be patient here — ii. 1 

good corporal, offer nothing here .... — ii. 1 

£ ray thee, corporal, stay — iii. 2 
is corporal motion governed by. . JuliusCirsar, iv. 1 
render me some corporal sign aho\it..Cymbetine. ii. 4 

CORPORATE— corporate Bardolph..2He;iry/K. iii. 2 
joint and corporate voice Timon of Athens, ii. 2 

CORPULENT— and a corpulent \HenrylV. ii. 4 

CORRECT— that which he corrects. ,Vca./or.»/ca. iv.2 
to correct yourself, for the example . . MuehAdo, v. 1 

do correct their proud contempt KingJohn, ii. I 

tlie fault that we oanuot correct Richord II. i. 2 

like magistrates, correct at home Henry V. i. 2 

when I did correct him for his fault..a;/(vi);//7. i. 3 

let them, not vou, correct him Ih'nnj I' 1 1 1, iii. 2 

eye corrects tfie ill aspects Troilus j-'Cressidu, i. 3 

what wouldst thou? I would correct him — v. 6 
his sorrow, would correct himself Pericles, i. 3 

CORRECTED-to your corrected son?.Cono/a7ii<s, v. 3 

CORRECTING— correcting thy stout — iii. 2 

CORRECTION-hts correction.. Two Gen. of Ver. ii. 4 

rejoice in the boy's correction — iii. 1 

under your good correction Meas.for Meas. ii. 2 

correction and instruction must both — iii. 2 
it shall follow in my correction ..Love's L.Lost, i. 1 
not so, sir; under correction, sir .... — v. 2 

under con-ection, sir, we know — v. 2 

since correction lieth in those hands .Richard II. i. 2 
ond minister correction to thy fault! — ii. 3 

to tie thee to my strong correction — iv. 1 

pupil-like, take thy correction mildly? — v. 1 
and dread correction wait on us .... I Henry ' v. v. I 
hangs resolved correction in the a\-m.2HenryIV. iv. 1 
brought to the correction of your law — iv. 4 
after the taste of much correction .... Henry K ii. 2 
under your correction, there is not .. — iii. 2 
let a Welch correction teach you .... — v. 1 
under the correction of bragging lie . . — v. 2 
my office, ere that correction . Troilus (tf Cressida, v. fi 
your iiurposed low correction is such .... Lear, ii. 2 

CORRECTIONER— 
you fllthv famished correctionerI....2Hen™/f'. v. 4 

CORRESPONDENT— 

I will he correspondent to command .. Tempest, i. 2 

CORRKSI'D.VDl.Xi;- 
corrc^ponuini,' witli your stiff age ..Cymbeline, iii. 3 

CORKHSri)N.SlVE— 
corrcBiionsive aud fulfilling liolts . 7")-oi7. ^ Cr. (pro!.) 

CORRIGIBLE— corrigible nwV. Antony ffVleo. iv. 12 
tlic power and corrigible authority Othello, i. 3 



c:;oR 



[ 142 ] 



CORRIVAL-'Bntlioiit corrivnl, all her..l Hcnnjir. i. 3 
an«l many more corrivals, and clear men — i^^ 4 
COKUOBORATE— ami corroborate.. ..Hem;/'' ii- 1 
CORROSIVE— but ratber corrosivc..lHc»?!/r/. iii. 3 
a fretful eorro.«ive [/Cji^-eorsive], M.illeniyl'l. ill. 2 
CORKXTI'T-corniiit, corrupt, and. . Menij Wives, v. !> 

oorrniit witb virtuous season Meas.for Meas. ii. 2 

had never the inirposo to corrupt her — iii. 1 

and the ecuTiuit deputy scaled — iii. I 

so tainted and corrupt, but .... Mer. of Vem'ce, iii. 2 

you corruiit tlie song, sirrah Mi's IVcll,\. 3 

or corrupt oiu' hope, to prostitute .... — ii. 1 

disdain ratber corrupt me ever! — _ii. 3 

my son corrupts a well-derived nature — iii. 2 

in" such a suit corrupt the tender — iii 5 

to corrupt liini to a revolt — iv. 3 (note) 

if sold will corrniit luni to a revolt .. — iv. 3 
art, iudecil. alilc to corrupt a saint . .1 Henry II'. i. 2 
tliis ii-'ht llcsh and corrupt blood.. . .2 Hcnr'/"'. ii. 4 

con'ui)t ;ind t-.iintcd witll \Heiiir/rr. v. 1 

she did corrupt IVail nature ZHi-nri/FI. iii. 2 

and I'll corrupt her manners Richard III. iv. 1 

know to be corrupt and treasonous. . Henri/ VIII. j. 1 
once corrupt, they turn to vicious forms — i. 2 

that no kinj can corrupt — iii. 1 

corrupt luinds procure Icnaves as corrupt — v. 1 
I will corrupt tlie Grecian ...Trottus^-Cresmla, iv. i 

that do corrupt my air Coriolamis, iii. 3 

fittest time to corrupt a man's wife . . — iv. 3 
disports connipt and taint my business . . Othello, i. 3 
COKRUI'TED-to be corrupted. Tim Gen. ofVer. iv. 2 
it is the flesh of a corrupted iKHSt.. Merry fVives, v. .'j 
she is corrupted, changed, and von. Kin ff John, iii. 1 
purchase corrupted pardon of a man — iii. 1 

and tliree corrupted men Henry V. ii. (chorus) 

attainted, corrupted, and exempt . . 1 Henry Vl.iX. 4 

witll injustice is corrupted ilienryl'I. iii. 2 

most traitorously corrupted the youth — iv. 7 
imderliand corrupted foul injustice. i?i'c/inr^ III. v. 1 
if this law of nature be corrupted. 'Ao/f.i^-CrMs. ii. 2 
fortunes have corrupted honest men.^n^S- C/eo. iv. 5 
one of her women, being corrupted.. Cymdrfijic, ii. 4 
are not corrupted as 'tis thoufjht! Tilus.lmlrnn. iii. I 

brought hither a corrupted mind Pericles, iv. B 

carbuncle, in my corrupted blood Lenr, ii. 4 

in the corrupted currents of this world. //i;mW, iii. 3 

and corrupted by spells and medicines . . Othello, i. 3 

would half have corrupted a votarist — — iv. 2 

CORRUl'TER— corrupter of words. . Twelflh A", iii. 1 

away, coiTupters of my faith! Cymheline, iii. 4 

and more corrupter ends, tlmn twenty Lenr, ii. 2 

CORRUPTIBLE— corruptible, grosse.. Henri/ r. iii. 4 
CORRUPTIBIA''— is touched corruptibly... /o/in, v. 7 
CORRUPTING— on heaps corrupting.. Hen;-!/ f. v. 2 
whom corruptinggold would tempt.TSic/iard Ill.iv. 2 
CORRUPTION— corruption inhabits. TwelflhN. iii. 4 

what corruption in this life Meas. for Meas. iii. 1 

I have seen corruption boil and bubble — v. 1 
but falsehood and corruption .. Comedy nf Err. ii. 1 

the fold corruption of a sweet King John, iv. 2 

shall break into corruption Richard II. v. 1 

his corruption being ta'en from ug..lHenr!//F. v. 2 

shall break into corruption ilienry IV. iii. 1 

to the corruption of a blemished .. iJ/cAarrf ///. iii. 7 
from the corruption of abusing time — iii. 7 

corruption wins not more than Henry VIII. iii. 2 

to keep mine honour from corruption — iv. 2 
of Cassiiis honours tliis corruption./ni/i/sCn'sar, iv. 3 

sword, fire! corruption in the place! Lenr, iii. 6 

corruption from that particular fault . . Humlel, i. 4 

Btewed in eori-uption; honeying — iii. 4 

rank corruption, mining all w thin — iii. 4 

CORRUPTLY— derived corruptly !..il/er. of Fen. ii. 9 
CORSE— greet my poor corse. Twelfth Nig-hl, ii. 4 (song) 

likeacorse? No like a (.rep.) (F;n(er's7'a(c, iv. 3 

spirit a^ain possess her corse — v. I 

upon wdiose dead eorse IHenry /F. i. 1 

a slovenly and unhandsome corse — — i. 3 
ne'er part, till one drop down a corse — iv. 1 
had only but the corse, but shadows.. 2Heni!/.'r. i. 1 

man, before dead Henry's corse? 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

wherein his corse shall be interred . . — ii. 2 

view his breathless corse 2 Henry VI. iii. 2 

bear the eorse, and set it down Richard III. i. 2 

the corse; or, by St. Paul, I'll make a corse — i. 2 

take up the corse, airs — i. 2 

injury, to scorn his corse — ii. 1 

as I followed Henry's corse — iv. 1 

this cold corse on the earth's — v. 3 

a fair corse, I'll be sworn Troilus ^ Cressida, ii. 3 

upon the paslied corses of the kings — v. 5 

here lies a wretched corse. Tiinon of Alh. v. 5 (epitaph) 

regarded as the most noble corse Corinlanas, v. h 

in the presence of thy corse? JuUusCa-sar, iii. 1 

till I have borne this corse into — iii. 1 

do grace to Caesar's corse — i ii. 2 

a ring about the corse of Caesar — iii. 2 

to winter-groimd thy corse Cijmhetine, iv. 2 

the dead corse of Bassianus lay .. Tilus .Indron. v. 1 

water must o'erwhelm thy corse Pericles, iii. 1 

what's here? a corse! most strange! .... — iii. 2 
piteons corse, a bloody piteous corse.Rom..5-J«(. iii. 2 
weeping and wailing over Tybalt's corse — iii. 2 
stick your rosemary on this, fair corse — iv. & 

flowers serve for a buried corse — iv. 5 

follow this fair corse unto her grave — iv. b 
poor living corse, closed in a dead. . . . — v. 2 

from the first corse, till he that died Hamlet, i. 'i 

that thou, dead eorse, again, in complete — i. 4 
we liave many pocky corses now-a-days — v. 1 
the corse, they follow, did with desperate — v. I 
CORSIVE-CAnf.] a fretful corsive..2Henr?/ VI. iii. 2 
CORSLET— able to pierce a corslet . . Coriolanus, v. 4 
C(.)SMO— Guiltian, Cosmo, Lodowick..^/r.wre«, iv. 3 
COST— that cost me two Bhillings . . Merry Wires, i. 1 

and at my proper cost Twelflh Nighl, v. 1 

where youth, and cost, and witless. iV/er/./bril/ea. i. 1 

it will cost him a thousand pound Much Ado, i. 1 

of the world is to avoid cost — i. 1 

though it costme ten nights' watchings — ii. 1 



COST— cost the fresh blood dear. . Mid.N. Dream, iii. 2 
cost me two thousand ducats. .Jl/cre/i. of Venice, iii. 1 

how little is the cost I have — iii. 4 

the cost of princes on unworthy. . As you Like it, ii. 7 
not on my cost (thinking I mean him) — ii. 7 

and coat me the dearest groans All's Well, i v. .5 

hath cost me a hundred crowns. . Taming of Sft. v. 2 
this jest shall cost mo some. . Comedy of Errors, iii. I 

one penny cost to ransom 1 Henry IV. i. 3 

we rate the cost of the erection 2HenryIV. i. 3 

and leaves his |)art-created cost — i. 3 

it may chance cost some of us — ii. 1 

indeed, sir; to my cost — iii. 2 

who doth feed upon my cost Henry V. i v. 3 

lingering wars with little cost 1 Henry I' I. i . 1 

to thy dear cost, be sure — i. 3 

I'll liicct thee to thy cost — iii. 4 

own proper cost :ind ehav^es. . .ilTenry VI. i. 1 (art.) 
for costs ;iud cliaiv'rs in transiiorting her — i. 1 

have cost a mass utpulilic treasury.. — i. 3 

command, that, of the city's cost — iv. (5 

will cost my crown ZHenry VI. i. 1 

these words will cost ten thousand .. — ii. 2 
maintain it with some little cost. . .. Richard III. i. 2 
kept in Brctagne at our mother's cost? — v. 3 

the cost that did conclude it Henry VIII. i. 1 

worth what she doth cost .... Troilus «f Cressida, ii. 2 
will cost a drop of Grecian blood .. — iv. 5 

armour thus hath cost thy life — V. 9 

bred her at my dearest cost Tinion of Athens, i. 1 

which will not cost a man a doit — j. 1 

command what cost your heart. ^n/onj/ Sf Cleo. iii. 4 

what pain it cost, what danger! Cymheline, iii. (1 

wortli all our mundane cost...Per(V/e.s iii. 2 (scroll) 

where thee he got, cost him his eyes Lear, v. 3 

Angelica: spare not for cost Romeo i^- Juliet, iv. 4 

it would cost you a groaning, to take. . Hamlet, iii. 2 

did these bones cost no more — v. 1 

his breeches cost him but a crown. Othello, ii. ? (song) 
if tliou attempt it, it will cost thee dear. . — v. 2 

COSTARD— his knave's costard . . Merry Wins, iii. 1 
Costard the swain, and heshall h&.Love' sL, Lnsl ,i. 1 

not a word of Costard yet — i. 1 

which as I remember, hight Costard — i. I (let.) 
with the rational hind Costard .... — i. 2 

that you keep Costard safe — i. 2 

here 's a Costard broken in a shin .. — iii. 1 
that a Costard was broken in a shin — iii. 1 
how was there a Costard broken in — iii. 1 

I, Costard, runninj^ out — iii. 1 

sirrah Costard, I will enfranchise thee — iii. 1 
signior Costard, adieu — i i i . 1 

my good knave Costard ! — iii. 1 

it was given me by Costard, and sent — iv. 2 

good Costard, go with me — iv. 2 

of Costard. Where hadst thou it . . — iv. 3 

your servant, and Costard — v. 2 

take him over the costard with Richard III. i. 4 

whether your costard or my bat Lear, iv. 6 

COSTER-MONGER- 

regard in these costermonger times ..2HenryIV. i. 2 

COSTLIER— no costlier than would.. Ci/m(<e//ne, iii. 2 

COSTLY— too costly to wear every day. Much Ado, ii. 1 

to show how costly summer was.il/er. of Venice, ii. 9 

be ready with a costly suit TamingofSh. 1 (ind.) 

counterpoints, costly apparel — ii. 1 

under the canopies of costly state ..2HenryIV. iii. 1 

1 ijook a costly lewel from my neck.2H?nr!/ I'l. iii. 2 

to this last costly treaty Henry VIII. i. 1 

with such a costly loss of wealth. .r/oiV. <5-C?c,v.s. iv. 1 
hand that shed this costly \)\oo<\\.JuliusCa-sar, iii. 1 
costly thy habit as thy purse can buy . . Hamlei, i. 3 

COT-QUfiAN— go, you cot-quean.. ftomeo *./«/. iv. 4 

COTE— besides, his cote, his flocks . . As yon Like il, ii.i 

come every day to my cote, and woo me — iii. 2 

COTED— foul have amber coted . . Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 

we coted them on the way Hamlet, ii. 2 

COTSALE— was out-run on Cotsale.Merr// Wires, i. 1 

COTSWOLD— Ravenspurg to Cotswold.ye/c/i. //. ii. 3 

and Will Squele a Cotswold man ..■illenrylV. iii. 2 

COTTAGE— poor men's cottages . . Mer. of Venice, i. 2 

buy thou the cottage, pasture ....AsyouLikeit, ii. 4 

and he hath bought the cottage — iii. 5 

to begin from such a cottage .... Winter's Tale, i v. 1 

from our cottage, but looks on — iv. 3 

home to your cottages, forsake 2Henry VI. iv. 2 

COTUS— Where's Cotus? (repeated).. Coriola.nus, iv. h 

COUCH— there I couch when Tempest, v. 1 (song) 

and his soft couch defile Merry Wives, i. 3 

we'll couch i' the castle ditch — v. 2 

I'll wink and couch — v. ."> 

as ever Beatrice shall couch upon?. .Much Ado, iii. 1 

but couch, ho! here he comes All's Well, iv. 1 

we'll have thee to a couch TamingofSh. 2 (ind.) 

forth from the couch of lasting King John, iii. 4 

and leavost the kingly couch 2Henry IV. iii. 1 

England shall coucli down in Henry V. iv. 2 

where souls do couch on flowers ..Ant.^- Clen. iv. 12 

can couch for fear, but I Titus Andronicus, v. 2 

wherein the cub-drawn bear would couch. /.cr/r, iii. 1 
with unstuffed brain doth couch.Homco ^Juliet, ii. 3 
a conch for luxury and damned incest.. Ham/c^ i. 5 

couch we awhile, and mark — v. 1 

the flinty and steel couch of war Olhelloj i. 3 

to lip a wanton in a secure couch — iv. 1 

no women, you'll couch with no men — iv. 3 (song) 

COUCHED-all couched in a pit. . . . Merry Wires, v. 3 

now is couched in the woodbine .... Much Ado, iii. I 

with valour couched in thine eye Richard II. i. 3 

braver soldier never couched lanee.l Henry VI. iii. 2 
though clerkly couched, as if she ...2HenryVI. iii. 1 
his body couched in a curious bed . . .3He/!r;/ VI. ii. 5 
is couched in seeming gladness. . . . Trail, g- Cress, i. 1 

these fUes are couched Tiinon of Athens, ii. 2 

when he lay couched in the ominous . . Hamlei, ii. 2 
COUCHES— now couches 'fore.. /Vr/c/e.?, iii. (Gower) 
COUCHING-that I were couching.. Wer. ofVen. v. 1 

lay couching, head on ground AsyouLike il, iv. 3 

a couching lion, and arampin" cat. I Henry 1 1', iii. 1 
these coucnings, and these iowiy. .JuliusCcesar, iii. 1 



cou 



COITDE- et le coude. De elbow Henry V. iii. 4 

COUGH— and falls into a cough.. Jlf/rf. A", Dream, ii. 1 

acough,sir; which I caught •lltcuiil i'. iii. 2 

to cough, and siiit, and with 'I'rnih'r. \ t ; - v. i. 3 

puddle which beasts would cough at. .1 <//. V < /•". i. 4 
cough, or cry hem, if anybody come . . Olhilln, iv. 2 

COUGIIING-coughing drowns. /.ore's L. L.v. 2 (song) 
man for coughing in the street, .fidmeo &-Juliel, iii. I 

COirLTER- that the coulter rusts Henry V. v. 2 

COUNCIL— the council shall hear it.MerryWives, i. I 
it is not meet the council hear a riot. . — i. I 

the council, look you, shall — i. 1 

the council shall know this — i. 1 

emptying our bosoms of their council. A/irf. N.Dr. i. 1 
their several councils thej; untiosom. Love's L. L. v. 2 

and, in our maiden council, rated — v. 2 

of a council frames by self-unable. . . . All's Well. iii. 1 
you are not altogether of his council — iv. 3 
in this day's council; but we'll take ..Macbeth, iii. 1 
wliat with our council we have done..Kic!iar(( II. i. 3 
yesternight our council did decree . . 1 Henry IV.i.i 
our council we mil hold at Windsor — i. I 
an old lord of the council rated me .. — i. 2 
thy place in council thou hast rudely — iii. 2 
appoint some of your council presently.Hen>T/r. v. 2 

the tongues of the French council — v. 2 

with all the learned council of the ..2UenryVI. i. 1 
other of your highness' privy council — ii. 1 
admitted to your highness' council .. — iii. 1 

nay more, the king's council — iv. 2 

we shall be of her council SHenryVI \. 1 

wherein thy couneil and consent is . . — ii. i; 
what council, lords? Edward from .. — iv. H 
in his nonage, council under him ..Richard III. ii. 3 

to-morrow hold divided councils — iii. 1 

there are two councils held — iii. 2 

bid him not fear tlie separated couiKjils — iii. 2 

not like these several councils — iii. 2 

my council is my shield — iv. 3 

tlie lionourable board of council out. .Henry VIII. i. 1 
a wise council to them of every realm — ii. 4 
either king or council, when you went — iii. 2 

one, already, of the privy couneil — iv. 1 

incensed the lords the council — v. 1 

have moved us and our council — v. 1 

was sent to me from the couneil — v. 2 

why are we met in council? — v. 2 

ami wisdom, of mv council — v. 2 

go we to council: let Achilles .. Troilus^ Cress, ii. 3 
instruments, are then in council . .JnliusCwsar, ii. 1 

let us presently go sit in council — iv. 1 

assemble we immediate council . . Antony fy Cleo. i. i 

private conference, or council Pericles, ii. 4 

duke's in council; and your noble self . . Othello, i. 2 
in council! in this time of the night! .... — i. 2 

COUNCIL-BOARD- 
iny uncle from the council-board ..IHenrylV. iv. 3 
the council-board he be convented..He«r!/r///. v. 1 

COUNCIL-HOUSE- 

sat in the council-house, early 2HenryVl. V, 1 

plotted, in the council-house Richard III. iii. ii 

COUNCIL-KEEPING— 
with a council-keeping cave .... Tilus Andron. ii. 3 

COUNSEL— time to counsel fhe&.TwoGen.ofFer. i. 1 

war with good counsel — i. I 

thou then counsel me to fall in love. . — i. 2 

1 like thy counsel; well hast thou .. — i."^ 

to aid me with thy counsel — ii. 4 

in counsel, his competitor — ii. 6 

counsel Lucetta; gentle girl — ii. 7 

if it were known in counsel Merry Wives, i. 1 

give me some counsel! — ii. 1 

follow your friend's counsel — iii. 3 

at the least, keep yom- counsel — iv. 6 

drink and good counsel will amend .. Twelfth N._ i. 5 
his counsel now might do me — iv. 3 

you give me ill counsel — vl 

worship for your good counsel ...Meas. forMeas. ii. 1 

wear it out w'ith good counsel Much Ado, ii. 3 

and counsel him to tight against his — iii. I 

have thy counsel, which is the best.. — iii. 1 
keep your fellows' counsels and your — iii. 3 

and counsels of thy heart! — iv. 1 

and let my counsel sway you in — iv. I 

1 pray thee, cease thy counsel — v. 1 

give not me counsel, nor let no — v. 1 

men can counsel and speak comfort. . — v. 1 

their counsel turns to passion — v. 1 

therefore give me no counsel — v. 1 

the ill counsel of a desert \'>\:\eo.Mid.i^.'sDream, ii. 2 
all the counsel that we two have .... — iij. 2 

did ever keei) your ciiiinsels, ui>\-cr .. . — }]']•'* 
commend this sealed up c<uinscl. . Lrwe'sL.Lost, iij. I 
meshes of good counsel the cripple. .i!/e?'.o/Ken._i. 2 
counsel well, fiend, say I, you counsel — ii. 2 
to offer to counsel me to stay with . . — ii. 2 
gives the more friendly counsel.. .... — ii. 2 

liate counsels not in such a quality.. ' — iii. 2 
would counsel you to a more equal. /f5yoK/.!V(e//, i.2 

I do in friendsliip eouusel you — i.2 

I would give him some good counsel — iii. 2 

I profess curing it by counsel — iii. 2 

with me, and let me counsel thee . . — iij. 3 

capable of a courtier's counsel All's Well.i. 1 

to your sworn eouusel I have spoken — iii. 7 

I'll in to counsel them Taming of Shrew, 1 (ind.) 

counsel me, Tranio, for I know — i. I 

will comfort, for thy counsel's sound — i. I 

thank me but a little for my counsel — i. 2 

therefore, mark my counsel Winter's Tale, i. 2 

orcounsel shake the fabric of his folly — \. 2 
prerogative calls not your counsels .. — ii. 1 

whose spiritual counsel had — ii. I 

didst counsel and aid them — iii. 2 (indirt.) 

hold some counsel in such a business — ■ iv. 3 

cast your good counsels upon his — iv. 3 

'tis your counsel, my lord should .... — v. I 

had squared mc to thy counsel ! — _ v. 1 

all counsel, all redress, but {rep.)... .King John, iii. 4 
we breathed our counsel — iv. 2 



cou 

COtf NSEI.— in vain conies counsel . . Itichard II. ij. 1 
my life'H couiisi'l would not hoor .... — ii. 1 
too late conii's loiiiiscl to be heard . . — ii. 1 

for counsel ii but v.iin — iii. 2 

your use and icninsel, wc shall 8cnd..lWriir|//r. i. 3 

voudo not con.i^il will — iv. 11 

1 hold ns littkioiiii-il with weak.... — iv. 3 

nud counsel eviry uiiiu the optest •illenryiy. i. 1 

hv mv li'iirniil counsil iu the laws ,. — i. 2 

Iwill take your. ounsil — iii. I 

the very latest eouiistl thut ever I .. — iv. 1 
such limbs of noble cumimI. that the — y. 2 
by your own counsel is suppressed ....llenrijl'. \i. 2 

h€nr the key of nil uiy eouuscla — ii. 2 

lock his counsel in my breast 1 Henry yi. ii. .') 

friendly counsel cuts oil' many foes . . — iii. 1 

and oil" our counsel, die? tllcnry '''• j- 1 

for I am hold to counsel you in this.. — i. 3 
whot counsel give you in this weighty — iii. 1 
y(Uir company for speedy counsel ..Sllennjl'l. ii. 1 
"what counsel give you? whither shall — ij. 3 

good counsel, marry; learn it Itichard III. i. .'i 

scorn me ft»r mj' gentle counsel? .... — i. 3 

to counsel me to make my peace .... — i. I 
my counsel's consistory, my Oracle . . — ii.2 

with politic prave counsel — ii. ?. 

if I may counsel you some day — iii. 1 

care is this your counsel, maclam — — i v. 1 
shall be the neighbour to my counsels — iv. 2 
bosom \iii my counsel, you'll And ..llenrii I'lll. i. I 
arc liliorul ui your loves, and counsels — ii. 1 

he counsels 11 divorce — ii- - 

heaven keeii me from such counsel ! . . — ii. 2 

whose counsel I will implore — ii. I 

the daring'st counsel which I had — ii. t 

his service, and his counsel — iii. 1 

and counsel, for my cause — iii. J 

any Englishman dare give me counsel? — iii. 1 

your griefs, and take my counsel — iii. 1 

IS this your christian counsel? — iii. 1 

reverend fathers, bestow your counsels — iii. 1 
and heavenly thoughts still counsel her — y. 4 
undertakings, as your counsels ...Trail, fy Cress. i\. 2 

my very soul of counsel — iii. 2 

and very courtly counsel — iv. 5 

to counsel deaf,"l)ut not to flattery 1. Timon of Ath.'i. 2 
yet he would embrace no counsel .... — iii. 1 
thou givest me, not all thy counsel . . — jv. 3 

more counsel, with more money — iv. 3 

e.xamine their counsels and their Coriolamis, i. 1 

of Konie are entered in our counsels — ...'• 2 
■whoever gave tlmt counsel, to give .. — iii. 1 
never admitting counsel o' the war .. — y. 5 
tell me your counsels, I \n\\. not ..Julius Ciesar, ii. 1 

for women to keep counsel ! — ii- ■! 

yourself shall give us counsel.... /In/ony fyCleo. v. 2 
things set down by lawful counsel. . . . Cymbeline,!. 5 
that make these locks of counsel 1 ... . — iii. 2 

now for the counsel of my son — iv. 3 

counsel, lad, smells of no cowardice . . Titus And. ii. 1 
close enacts and counsels of the heart! — iv. 2 
two may keep counsel, when the third's — iv. 2 

1 can keep honest counsel, ride hear, i. 4 

this man liath had good counsel — _i. 4 

bestow your needful counsel to our — ii. 1 

when a'wise man gives the better counsel — ii. 4 

my Regan counsels well : come out — ii . 4 

unless good counsel may the cause. ./?omeo ^Jul. i. 1 

thou shalt hear our counsel — i. 3 

in night so stumblest on my counsel? — ii.2 
he lent me counsel, and I lent him eyes — ii. 2 
two may keep counsel, putting one . . — ii. 4 
to hear "good counsel: O, what learning — iii. 3 
comfort me. counsel me: alack, alack — iii. 5 

give me some iiresent counsel? — iv. 1 

the players cannot keep counsel Hamlet, iii. 2 

that I can keep your counsel, and not .. — iv. 2 
BO I thank you for your good counsel .... — iv. .') 
we lacked your counsel and your help . . Otliclhi,u 3 
to counsel Cassio to this parallel course.. — ii. 3 
he was of my counsel in my whole course — iii. 3 
turn the key, and keep our counsel — iv. 2 

COUNSELED— I shall be counseled Macbeth,yi. 1 

pray, Ix; counseled; I have a heart.. Coriolamis, iii. 2 
that lord that counseled thee to give Lear, i. 4 

COUNSEL-KEEPElt- 
his note-b(X)k, his counsel-keeper . .'HienrylV. ii. 4 

COUNSELLOR — you are a counsellor . . Tempest, i. 1 
to be an emperor's counsellor. . Tico Gen. of Ver. ii. 4 

not for his counsellor Merry iVives, ii. 1 (letter) 

good counsellors lack no clients.. Mt'tw./ar Mm.i. i. 2 
counsellors that feelingly persuade./l» you Like it, ii. 1 
a counsellor, a traitress, and a dear ..All^s ll'ell,\. 1 
your most obedient counsellor. . . . Winter stale, ii. 3 
cheeks of thine are counsellors to fear . MaelietU,y . 3 
and hot blood are his counsellors ..iHenrylV. iv. 4 
all your sage counsellors, hence? .... — iy. 4 
therefore, ca veto be thy counsellor ..Henry I', ii. 3 
well Bupnlied with noble counsellors — ii. 4 

be a goo<l counsellor, or no? 2llenry f'l. iy. 2 

noses had been coun.sellor8 to Pepin. Henry yill. i. 3 

a fellow counsellor, among lioys — v. 2 

you are a counsellor, and, by tliat virtue — v. 2 
as he was a counsellor to try him ... . — v. 2 

the counsellor heart, the arm our Coriolanut, i. 1 

love's counsellor should till the \mteti.Cymbeline, iii. 2 
fit counsellor, and servant for a prince ..I'crielvs, i. 2 
thou art a grave and noble counsellor.. — v. 1 
his own aflections' counsellor . . Uomeo fy Juliet, i. 1 
go counsellor; thou and my bosom .. — iii. .'< 
indeed, this counsellor is now most still. ffamW, iii. 4 
a most profane and lilieral counsellor?.. OMcHi, ii. 1 

COUNT— other out of all count . TwoOen. of Ver. ii. I 

and how out of count? — ii. 1 

that no man counts of her beauty .. — ii. 1 

but count the world a stranger — v. 4 

I will always count you my deer. . Merry Wivei,v. !> 
the daughter of a count that died. Twelfth i\iglil, i. 2 
the count himself, here, hard by — — j. 3 
she'll none o' the count — <• 3 



[ 143 ] 



COU 



COUNT— here comes the count Twelfth Night, i. 4 

if it lie a suit from the eoinit — 

the voculi of the count's was to-day.. — ii. 3 
loon- favours to till' oonnt'sserving-man — i 
cliuilcMtJi' roo till- couut's youth to .. — iii. 2 

'gainst tlic <viinit Ills galleys — iii. 3 

the count's geiitleuiau, one Cesario . . — v. 1 

to serve this noble count — y. 1 

about your own business, count .. ..Much Ado, \\. 1 

why, how noWj count? wherefore — ii. 1 

thc'count is neither sad, nor sick {rep.) — ii. 1 

count, take of me my daughter — ii. 1 

speak, count, 'tis your cue — ii. 1 

these gloves the coimt sent me — iii. 4 

the prince, the count, signior Benedick — iii. 4 

to be married to this count? — iv. 1 

know you any, count? — iv. 1 

and this grieved count, did see her .. — iv. 1 

and let this coimt kill me — v. 1 

i t is as easy to count atomies ....Aiyou Like i(, iii . 2 

1 count it but time lost to hear — y. 3 

how long is't count, since AWs tVell, i. 2 

welcome, count, my son's no dearer — i. 2 

commit it, count. I am your — ii. 1 

the help of heaven we count the act.. — ii. I 
count; to all counts! to what (rep.).. — ii. .■? 
the l''rench count has done most .... — ')!• -"^ 
a gentleman that serves the count .. — '":!• '^^ 
of the great count himself, she is ... . — iii. .0 

the amorous count solicits her — iii. .'i 

the count, he is my husband — iii. 7 

tlie count, he wooes your daughter .. — iii. 7 
hath the count all this intelligence? — iv. 3 

the count's a fool, and full of gold. . . . — iv. 3 (let.) 
for I knew the young count to be — — iv. 3 
for count of this, the covmt's a fool . . — iv. 3 (let.) 
that lascivious young boy the count.. — iv. 3 

and bring again the count — v. 3 

come hither, count; do you know.... — v. 3 

which he counts but a trifle Winter'sTale, v. 1 

and count his friends my foes King John, iii. 1 

there is a soul, counts thee her — iii. 3 

on you depending, counts it your weal — iv. 2 
I count myself ii? nothing else so ..Richard II. ii. 3 

go, count thy way with sighs — v. 1 

this grate, I can count every one .... 1 Henry VI. i. 4 
or count them happy, th.at enjoy ....illeuryl'l. ii. 4 

then must I count mj' gains Hichard III. \. 1 

I would not be a young count in . . Henry Vlll. ii. 3 
count wisdom as no member of.. Troilus ff Cress, i. 3 
do not count it holy to hurt by — v. 3 

iCol. Knt.} much count to violent thefts — v. 3 
count it one of my greatest.. Timon of Athens, iii. 2 
?eace, count the clock lulitis Cmsar, ii. 1 
know not wiiat counts harsh . . Antony -'v C!co. ii. 6 

as we count not worth the Cymbeline, i. U 

which I count his, beyond all talents — i. 7 

never count the turns — ii. 4 

by my count, I was your mother. /(ompo <5 Juliet, i. 3 
but beggars that can count their wortli — ii. G 
by tliis count I shall be much in yours — iii. .'i 

doth she not count her blessed — iii..') 

her father counts it dangerous — iy. I 

count myself a king of infinite space . . Hamlet, ii.2 

make us again count o'er, ere love — iii. 2 

why to a public count I might not go — iv. 7 

I'll count his favours: but, sure — v. 2 

COUNT-CARDINAL— 
our count-cardinal has done this ...HeniyJ'III. i. I 

COUN T-CONFECT- 
a "oodly count-confect; a sweet .1/i/c/i .ido.iv. 1 

COUNTfeD— willing to be counted. Lotc'sL. Los/, ii. 1 
for native blood is counted painting.. — iv. 3 

are colliers counted bright — iy. 3 

thou must be counted a servant . . Winter' sTale, i. 2 
mine integrity, being counted falsehood — iii. 2 
for the babe is counted lost for ever. . — iii. 3 
nor En gland's counted queen .... Richard lll.iv. 1 

COUNTENANCE-my countenauce.A/«M/»''''"M,ii.2 
here \vi'apt up in countenance .... Mea.for Mea. v. 1 
will do with confirmed countenance. .iV«c/i--i:/o, v. 4 

Biron was out of countenance Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

I will not be put out of countenance . , — v. 2 
imt thee in countenance {repeated).... — v. 2 
liis countenance seems to take. ...As ynu Like H,\. 1 
the foiuitunaiicc of stern commandment — ii. 7 
111 akin '.' you that countenance you are — iv. 1 
tlicir t-!lc-''t than in their countenance — iv. 3 
my appirel mid my countenance.. ra/m'n4'r)/S/i._ i. 1 

to couiitcnnnce my mistress — iv. 1 

call'st for company to countenance her — iv. 1 
in gait and countenance surely like. . — iv. 2 
in countenance somewhat doth resemble — iv. 2 

set j'our countenance, sir — iv. 4 

in this city under my countenance . . — v. I 
did bear my countenance in the town — y 1 

with a countenance as dear as Winter'sTale, i. 2 

on him such a countenance as he ... . — i. 2 

lift up your countenance — iv. 3 

with countenance of such distraction — v. 2 
sprights to countenance this horror! . . Macbeth, ii. 3 
under whose coimtenance we steal .AHenry II'. i. 2 
abuses of the time want countenance — ^i. 2 

how ho holds his countenance] — ij. 4 

and gave his countenance, against his — iii. 2 
dangerous countenance, and violation — v. 1 
abuse the countenonce of the king..2Henrr///''. iv. 2 
the coimtenance and grace of heaven — iv. 2 
countenance William Visor of \yoncot — v. 1 
have some countenance at his friend's — v. 1 
dobut mark the countenance that he — v.,') 

his countenance enforces homoge Henry I', iii. 7 

grisly countenance made others fly . . I Henry I' I. i. 4 
tlie countenance and confederacy . .2Henryy I. ii. 1 
strangenessof his altered countenance? — iii.) 
change my countenance for this arrest — iii. 1 
yea, subject to your countenance ..HenryVIII.ii. 4 

a heed was in his countenance — iii. 2 

there's a countenance: is't not . . Troilut ijrCrets. i. 2 
thy countenance, still locked in steel — iv. S 



COUNTEN ANCE-conflrmcd countenance. Coni)(. 1.3 
is come, that turns their cmiutenances — Iv. 6 
he wogeil me with his countenance .. — v. & 
turn the trouble of my countenance.. ^uJ. Casar, i. 2 
his coimtenance, like richest alchemy — i. 3 
did sleep day out of countenance. /ln/oni/<5-C/M. ii. 2 
from nil- tln-n tluit noble countenance — iv. la 
but kci'p that countenance still .. ..Cymbeline, iii. 4 
fair i|UucH. thiit cloudy countenance.. '/'/<?« And. i. 2 

in liiin, by w<jr(l, or countenance? Leur,\.2 

but you have that in your countenance.. — i. 4 

his countenaiu'e likes me not — ii.2 

we'll use liis countenance for the battle. — v. 1 
a countenance more in sorrow than .... Hamlet, 1.2 I 



sir, that soaks up the king's countenance — iv. 2 
sboidd have countenance in this world.. — v. 1 

COUNTENANCED— 
but faults so countenanced, that ..Mens, fur Mens. v. 1 

rage, and counteiumced by boys 'iHenryiy. iv. I 

your worship, let him be countenanced — v. 1 

COUNTER— what, for a counter . . As youLihe it, ii. 7 
I cannot do't without coimters .. II'inter'sTale, iv. 2 
a hound that runscounter . .Comedy of Errors, iv. 2 
will you with counters sum .. Troilus Sf Cresm'da, ii. 2 

such rascal countei-s from his Julius Ciesar, iv. 3 

neck, sir, is pen, book, and counters .Cymbeline, v. 4 
O this is counter, vou false Danish dogs. //am^(,iv. 5 

COUNTEi;-CASTlOR 
debittH- inrl - Ii lit'ii-, this counter-caster. 0//ie/(o,i. 1 

COUN'l'IOiirilAXiJI-:— 
coimtii.liiiML'i- i-: :c vcrally in all Cymbeline, v. a 

COUNTERCHECK- 
this is called the countercheck ..../)« ;/o« Likeil, v. 4 
the fifth, the countercheck quarrelsome — v. 4 
a countercheck before your gates .... King John, ii. 1 

COUNTEKl'EIT-sodocounterfeits7'7/-o6'c/i.o/r. ii.4 
thou counterfeit to thy true friend! .. — v. 4 

the kmivc counterfeits well Tuelfth Night,\v . 2 

or do you but couuterf'eit? — iv. 2 

to tell you true, I counterfeit him. . . . MnchAdo, ii. I 
may be, she doth but counterfeit .... — ii. 3 

God! counterfeit! there never (.rep.) — ii. 3 
do, persevere, counterfeit sad looks. >/i'd. N. Dr. iii. 2 
you countertcit, you jmppet, you 1 .. — iii. 2 

fair Portia's counterfeit? Merch. of Venice, iii. 2 

now counterfeit to swoon .^.As you Like it, iii. h 

this was not counterfeit : there is too — iv. 3 
counterfeit, I assure you (r(>/)«i(cd) .. — iv. 3 
what metal this counterfeit lump of..AlVsiyell, iii. 6 
so curiously he had set this countei feit — iv. 3 
bring forth this counterfeit module . . — iv. 3 
busied about a counterfeit assm-ancc. Tam.ofSh. iv. 4 
while counterfeit supposes bleared . . — v. 1 

not a counterfeit stone, not Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

to counterfeit thus grossly with ..Comedy of Err. ii. 2 
sleep, death's counterfeit, and look on .Macbeth, ii. 3 

beguiled me with a counterfeit . . KingJohn, iii. 1 

counterfeit oppression of such grief . . Richard II. i. 4 
a true piece of gold a counterfeit \ Henry IV. ii. 4 

1 fear thoti art another counterfeit . . — v. 4 

this is an arrant counterfeit rascal Henry V. iii. 6 

you are a counterfeit cowardly knave — y. 1 
your cheeks do counterfeit our rG^QS.lHenryVI. ii. 4 
mu-e shame, to counterfeit our roses.. — ii. 4 
'tis but his policy to counterfeit ....ZHenryVl. ii. 6 
I can counterfeit the dceii tragedian. fiiWiord ///. iii. 5 
'tis no counterfeit. 'Tis the right ring. Henry VI II. v. 2 
remembered a gilt counterfeit . . Troilus Sf Cress, ii. 3 
strike me the counterfeit matron Lri'monq/V!//!. iv. 3 
tliou draw'st a counterfeit best in all — v. 1 
I will counterfeit the bewitchment . . Coriolnnus, ii. 3 
with his tools made me a counterfeit. r.vmaWine, ii. 5 
the counterfeit fairly last night (rep.).Hom.«r Jul. ii. 4 
counterfeit presentment of two brothers. Hamlet, iii. 4 

an eye can stamp and counterfeit Othello, ii. 1 

Jove's di-ead clamours counterfeit — iii. 3 

these may be eoimterfeitsi let's think't . . — v. 1 

COUNTERFEITED— 
well counterfeited: Ipray (rep.)...AsyouLiketl,iv.3 
how I counterfeited to swoon, when he — v. 2 
under the coiiiiterfoited zeal of God.2Hpn»!//r. iv. 2 
anolhcr couuti-rfiited beam \ Henry VI. v. 3 

COUNTE K F !■; 1 T I NO- 
my counterfeiting th.e action of .. MiTry Wires, iv. 5 
commend ni.v couiitcrfeitingtohim..4.« you Like, iv. 3 

in jest by co'unterteiting actors? SHenry yi.ii. 3 

they'll mar ray counterfeiting Lear, iii. 6 

COUNTERFEITLY— most countcrfeitly .Corio/. ii. 3 

COUNTERFEIT'ST— 
counterfeit'st the person of a king? . .\ Hermj I V. v. 4 
thou counterfeit'st most lively . 7'/mori ofAtlient, v. I 
thou Ciiuuterfcit'st a hark, a sca.ftnmco ^Juliet.iii.i 

COUN'J'EK-(;,VTE— the counter-gate.. iVerrj/Jf. iii. 3 

COUNTEH.MAND- 

no countrrnuinil for Clandio Mens. for Meas. iv. 2 

there ooniLS no countermand — iv. 2 

tiiat connturninnds the passages. Comc(/i/ of Err. iv.2 
crijiplf bore tin- countermand Itichard III. ii. I 

COUN'I'EH Ml XKS-the countermines. J/cwryC. iii. 2 

COUXTElll'olNTS— 
mv arras, counterpoints, costly .. rnmin^n/'.'JA. ii. 1 

COUNTEIU'OISE-may counterpoise. .WhcA Ado, iy. 1 
to whom I promise a counteriKiise . . All's Well, ii. 3 
counterpoise ofso great an opimsition.l Henry I V. ii. 3 
I'll counteriioise, and make him. Timon nf Athens,!. I 
do more than counterpoise, a full . . Coriolanut, v. 5 

COUNTERPOISED- 
cannot he coniitirpoised with snch..2;fciir(/ VI. iv. 1 
her dowry "Ir.ill l^i- .ountcrpoised ..3;f.iiry ;'/. iii. 3 
in the w rill !"■ in 'Iv counterpoised. C'orio/aniM.ii. 2 

couNTKi;-si:ALi.r>- 

conditions, will liuve counter-sealed — v. 3 

COUNTERVAIL— might countervail. .Arrif/M, ii. 3 

cannot countervail the exchange. Woini-o /^Juliet, ii. G 
COUNTIOSS— comes the countess. . TterlphMght, v. 1 
COUNTESSES— rest are countesses. //cnryry//. iv. 1 
COUNTIES — princes and counties! . . .Much Ado, iv. I 

our discontented counties do revolt. . KingJohn, v. I 



cou 



COUNTIES— soldiers up in counties.2//c»r!/ ir.W. 1 
powers unto their several counties . . — iv- 2 

and those two counties 1 Hem-y VI. v. 3 

these counties were the keys 2 Henri/ VI. i. 1 

COUNT ING-counting myself but bad.3 Wcnri/ VI.v. 6 

COUNTLESS— countless and infinite.. JVVus^jid. v. 3 
enticeth thee to view a countless g\ovy.. Pericles, i. 1 
that give heaven countless eyes to view. . — i. 1 

COUNTllIES— two countries at onae.MuchAdo, iii. 2 
I could find out countries in her. Comedy of Er. iii. 2 
catecliise my picked man of countries.Kmg-yo/m, i. I 
the rest of thy low countries have . .2HenryIV. ii. 2 
dismiss you to voiu- several countries. 2Henr!/ VI. iy. 9 
in countries, discord; in palaces, treason. . Lear, i. 2 
the seas, and countries ditferent Hamlet, iii. 1 

COUNTRY— one in country footing ..Tempesl,iv. I 

while I am king of this country — iv. 1 

guide us out of this fearful country I — v. 1 

he's a justice of peace in his coimtry. Merry IVives,i. 1 
laugh this sport o'er by a coimtry lire — v. 5 

what country, friends, is this? Twelfth Night, i. 2 

know'st thou tliis country? — i. 2 

not of this country though Meas. for Mens. iii. 2 

and tlie country proverb known. . il/i'rf .A'.'s Dr. iij. 2 
boy, I do love that country girl . . Love's L.Lost, i. 2 
to the country maid J aquenetta .... — iii. 1 
a vessel of our country, riclily . . Mer. of Venice, ii. 8 

the body of tlie country, city As you Like it, ii. 1 

country, as the behaviour of the country — iii. 2 

tlie earliest fi-uit in the country — iii. 2 

all tlie lieneflts of your own comitry — iv. 1 
these pretty country folks would lie — v. 3 (song) 
the rest of the country copulatives . . — v. 4 
our Isbels o' the country are nothing..-l(rs(f'eH,iii. 2 

that chase thee from thy country — Iii. 2 

in that country, he had the honour . . — iv. 3 

if you could find out a country — iv. 3 

follow him to his country for justice — v. 3 (petit.) 

since I saw my country yVinter'sTale, iv. 1 

of that fatal country Silicia — iv. 1 

ha%ang both their country quitted . . — v. 1 
he laboured in his coimtry's wreck .... Macbeth, i. 3 
had we now our country's honour roofed — iii. 4 

to this our suffering country — iii. 6 

bleed, bleed, poor country! — iv. 3 

our country sinks beneath the yoke .... — Iv. 3 

yet my poor country shall have — iv. 3 

and my poor country's, to command .... — iv. 3 

alas, poor country; almost afraid — iv. 3 

in our country's pm-ge, each drop — v. 2 

skirr the country round; hang those — y. 3 

come from the country to be judged. . KingJohn, i. 
our country manners give our betters — i. 
wliich iu our country's cradle draws. Bic/iacd //. i. 

turn me from my country's light — i. 

our drooping country's broken wing — ii. 
loath to break our country's laws..., — ii. 
the bay-trees in omr country are all — ii. 

to that pleasant country's earth — iv. 

to weep over his country's wrongs. .\ Henry IV. iv. 

for all the country, in a general i Henry IV. iv. 

in our marches through tlie country.. i/enryK. iii. 

the country cocks do crow — iv. (choriu 

amember of the country's peace .... — iv. 

enough to do our country loss — i v. 

that sliould become our country .... — v. 

weak list of a country's fasliion — v. 

the nice fashion of your country — v. 

and free my country from calamity. . 1 Henry VI. I. 
■wasted our country, slain our citizens — ii. 3 
look on thy country, look on fertile.. — iii. 3 
drawn from thy country's bosom .... — iii. 3 
wash away thy country's stained spots — iii. 3 
country, and sweet eoimtrymeu!.... — iii. 3 
compassion of my country's wi'eck.. — iv. 1 (let.) 
and my country s weal. What I .... — v. 1 
or sack this country with a mutiny., — v. 1 
sought every eountrv far and near . . — v. 4 
upon the country where you make . . — v. 4 
bodies for their country's benefit .... — v. 4 
to ease your country of distressful .. — v. 4 

common profit of his country! 2 Henry VI. i. 1 

in duty love my king and country I.. — _i. 3 

live in your country here — ii. 3 

your kin,^, your country, and your lives — iv^ 4 

sweet is the country, because full — i v. 7 

weU you love your prince and country — iv. 9 

death, to do my country good — iv. 9 

for all the country is layed for me . . — iv. 10 
how will the country, for these . . . .^Henry VI. ii. 5 
here in this country, where we now — iii. 1 

strength and safety of our country .. — iii. 3 
lad will prove our country's bliss.... — iv. 6 
my country's peace, and brothers' . . — v. 7 
rather be a country servant-maid . . Richard III. i. 3 

were you tliis country's king — i. 3 

that did love their country's good . . — iii. 7 
here we waken to our country's good — iii. 7 
your coimtry's foes, your country's. . — v. 3 
tlieir o'er-cloyed coimtry vomits — — v. 3 
an honest country lord, as I am . . Henry VIII. i. 3 

in mine own country, lords? — iii. 1 

thou aim'st at, be thy country's — iii. 2 

in their country did them ttiaX. . Troilas fy Cress, ii. 2 

she 's bitter to her country — iv. 1 

bom to conquer my country. . Timon of Athens, iv. 3 
doth root up liis country's peace .... — v. 2 

but yet I love my country — v. 2 

services he lias done for his country?. Co;-(o(iinus, i. 1 
say, it was for his country, he did it — 1. 1 

eleven die nobly for tiielr country . . — i. 3 
his country's dearer thau himself . , — i. 6 
that's for my country; he, that has — i. 9 
deserved worthily of his country .... — ii. 2 
that hath thus stood for his country — ii. 2 

I got them in my country's service. . — ii. 3 
have deserved nobly of your country — ii. 3 
received many wounds for your country — ji. 3 
wounds received for his country .... — ii. 3 
youngly he began to serve Ms country — ii. 3 



[ 1-^4 ] 

COUNTRY— your country's friend.. Cori'otonus, iii. 1 
for my country I have slicd my blood — iii. 1 
for his comitry; and what is left {rep.) — iii. 1 

when lie did love his country — iii. 1 

I do love my country's good — !!!•'* 

enemy to tlie people, and liis country — iii. 3 
I would lie had continued to his country — iv. 2 
being now in no request of his country — iv. 3 

I'll do his country service — iv. 4 

slied for my thanlcless country — iv. 5 

shame seen tlirongii thy eountry .... — iv. 5 
figlit against my cankered country . . — iv. 5 

blood out of thy coimtry's breast — iv. 5 

tliy country's strength and weakness — iv. 5 
if you would be your country's pleader — v. 1 
solicit him for mercy to his country. . — v. 1 
tearing his country's bowels out .... — v. 3 

how can we for our country pray — v. 3 

the country, our dear nurse (rep.).... — v. 3 

tread on thy country's ruin — v. 3 

no sooner march to assault thy country — v. 3 
destroyed his eountry; and his name — v. 3 
more infected with my country's love — .v. 5 
men that gave our country liberty.. /ui. Cissar,m. 1 
vile, that will not love his country?. . — iii. 2 
wiien it shall please my country to need — iii. 2 
from this country Pindarus shall run — v. 3 

Brutus, my country's friend — v. 4 

most useful for thy country Antony gfCleo. iv. 12 

in praise of our eountry mistresses . . Cymbeline, i. 5 

that ever country called his! — . i. 7 

wars shall find 1 love my country .. — iv. 3 
if in yom- country wars you chance.. — iv. 4 

the princess of this country — V. 1 

in doing this for his country — v. 3 

lads more like to run tlie country — v. 3 

striking in our country's cause — v. 4 

love and favour of ray country commit. TOas^nd.i. 1 
to re-salute his country with his tears — i. 2 

slain in your country's wars! — i. 2 

valiant doings in their country's cause? — i. 2 
that iu yom- country's service drew.. — i. 2 
led ray country's strength successfully — i. 2 

and service of their nolile country — _ i. 2 

this ungrateful country done the like — iv. 1 
here's tliem in our country of Greece . . Pericles, ii. 1 

he's but a country gentleman — ii. 3 

that fed my country with your corn .... — iii. 3 
next, he's the governor of this country .. — iv. 6 
if he govern the country, you are bouud.. — iv. 6 
in the cheapest country under the cope . . — iv. 6 
who, frighted from my country, did wed — y. 3 

shape his old course in a country new Lear, i. I 

the country gives me proof and precedent — ii. 3 
as the manner of our country is. Romeo ^T'^nliet, iv. I 

where is the country's page — v. 3 

if thou art privy to thy country's fate . . Hamlet, i. 1 
or the addition, of man, and country — — ii. 1 
undiscovered country, from whose bourn — iii. 1 
do you think, I meant country matters? — iii. 2 

of eountry, credit, every thing Othello, i. 3 

'tis pride that pulls the eountry down — ii. 3 (song) 
and the condition of this country stands — ii. 3 

I know our country disposition well — iii. 3 

may fall to match you with her coimtry — iii. 3 
her fatlier and lier country — iv. 2 

COUNTRYMAN— 
Antonio, your countryman? ..Two Gen. ofVer.ii. 4 
is your countryman, according to . . — iii. 2 
what countryman? what name?. . TwelflhNight, v. 1 
here you shall see a countryman ..All's Well, iii. 5 
what countryman? Born in Verona. Taniinffo/SA.i. 2 

what countryman, I pray? — iv. 2 

my countryman; but yet I know Macbeth, iv. 3 

Welsh, you know, good countryman.. Henji/T. iv. 7 
my countryman. By Cheshu(rep.) — iv. 7 

Froissart, a countryman of ours 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

Charles of France, thy countryman — iii. 3 

dear countryman, bring in thy.. Timonof Athens, v. D 

might stop our countryman Coriolanus_, v. 1 

my helmet to my countryman.. /Iraiojii/^Cteo. iv. 13 
a simijle eoimtryman, that brought — y. 2 
glad I did atone my countryman . . Cymbeline, i. 5 
one Muliteus lives,my countryman.. Tilus And. iv. 2 
my friend, and my dear countryman . . Othello, v. 1 

COUNTRYMEN-and countrymen.il/er. of Ven. hi. 2 

and to Chus, his countrymen — iii. 2 

visit his countrymen, and banquet. jTamtnj' ofSh. 1. 1 
om- well-dealing countrymen . . Comedy of Errors, i. 1 
thy seditious countrymen and us.. — i. 2 

with tlianks my countrymen Richard II. i. 4 

liardly kept our countrymen together — ii. 4 
our countrymen are gone and fled . . — n. 4 
I thank you, countrymen : and thus — v. 2 

then, forth, dear countrymen Henry V. ii. 2 

brothers, friends, and countrymen . . — iv. (cho.) 
have we done, thrice-valiant countrymen — ly. 6 

hark, countrymen! either renew 1 Henry VI. i. 5 

my friends, and loving countrymen — in. 1 

jometli Rouen to her countrymen .. — 111.2 
thou fight'st against thy countrymen — iji. 3 
country and sweet countrymen! — — in. 3 
stain to thy countrymen! thou hear'st — iv. 1 
ah, countrymen! it when you make — iv. 7 
what say ye, countrymen? will ye .. — iv. s 

loving coimtrvmen the leisure Richard III. v. 3 

if Alcibiades Kill my countrymen. Timon ofAlh. v. 2 

me to my loving countrymen — y- 2 

what works, my countrymen Coriolanus, 1. 1 

Rome, and thy petitionary countrymen — y. 2 

go, go, good countrymen JuliusC(esar,\. 1 

Romans, countrymen, and lovers! ,. — ^!!- - 
my countrymen — peace, silence! .... — ill* "^ 
friends, Romans, countrymen, lend.. — iji. 2 
what a fall was there, my countrymen! — iji. 2 
stay, countrymen. Peace there .... — iij. 2 
yet hear me, countrymen: yet hear.. — iii. 2 
before blows: is it so, countrymen?. . — v. 1 
countrymen, O yet hold up your heads! — v. 4 
couutrymen, my heart doth joy — v. 5 



COU 



COUNTRYMEN— countrymen are men. . Cymb. ii. 4 
countrymen, my loving followers.. TitusAndron. i. 1 
unto our climatures and countrymen ..Hamlet, i. 1 
COUNTRYWOMAN— 
too bitter to your countrywoman. 7">o/7.<5- Cress, iv. 1 
what countrywoman ? here of tliese . . Pericles, v. 1 
COUNTY— in tile county of Gloster. Merry Wives, i. I 
messenger, the county's man .... Twelfth Night, i. 5 
is there tlie county Palatine . . Merch. of Venice, i. 2 

a ring the county wears All's Welt, iji. 7 

a poor esquire of this county 'iHenry IV. iii. 2 

the couuty Blaine, and Anjou I Henry VI. v. 3 

Aiijou, and the county of . .iHenry VI. i. 1 (articles) 
from each county some, and try .... — iii. 1 

in every county as we go along ZHenry VI. y. 3 

county, where this is questioned Henry VIII. 1. 2 

Juliet, the county stays Romeo 4r Juliet, i. 3 

best you married with the county .. — iii. 5 

next be maiTied to this county — iv. 1 

send for the county; go tell him .... — iv. 2 

let me see the county : ay, marry — iv. 2 

be married to the county? ICol. Ani.-then 

to-morrow morning?] — iv. 3 

the county will be here with music . . — iv. 4 

let the county take you in your bed. . — iv. 5 

pitiful sight! here lies the county slain — v. 3 

COUPE-coupe le gorge, that's the word. Henri/ r. ii. 1 

COUPER—de eoupervotre gorge (rep.) — iv. 4 

COUPLE— eyes of this young couple . . Tempest, iv. 1 

on this couple drop a blessed crown — y. 1 

so prettily he couples it to his . . Two Gen. of Ver. i. 2 

a couple of Ford's knaves Merry Wives, iii. 5 

have ta'en a couple of as arrant .... Much Ado, iii. 5 
wood-birds but to couple now? . . Mid. N.'s Dr. iv. 1 
these couples shall eternally be knit — iv. 1 

so shall all the couples tliree — .'^•^ 

of the forest, and to couple us AsyouLikeit, iii. 3 

these couples are coming to the ark ! — v. 4 

and couple Clowder with TamingofSh.X (ind.) 

let them go, a couple of quiet ones .. — ijj- ^ 

I'll go in couples mth her Winter's Tale, ii. 1 

I lost a couple, that 'twixt heaven . . — v. 1 
as you, gracious couple, do! and then — v. 1 
of this fair couple) meets he on the way — v. 1 

a couple of short-legged hens iHenry IV. v. 1 

[CoZ.]— did couple in his arms . . Troilus 4r Cress, i. 3 
and a couple of pigeons here ..Titus Andronicus, iv. 4 
couple [Co*. Kn/.-pronouneeDbut— ..i?oi«. <5-/Mi. ij. 1 

couple it with something — iii. 1 

what else? and shall I couple hell? Hamlet, i. 5 

COUPLED— still we went coupled.. ^syt/U Likeit,i. 3 

for honesty coupled to beauty — iii. 3 

with slaughter coupled to the name,.Kin^/oAn,_ii. 2 
married in league, coupled and linked — iii. I 
coupledin bonds of perpetuity .... 1 Henry VI. iv. 7 
let your mind be coupled with . . Troilus Sf Cress, v. 2 
unremoveably coupled to nature.. IVmon ofAth. v. 2 
COUPLEMENT— royal couplemeiit!.L«j)e'si.L. v. 2 
COUPLET— o'er a couplet or two. Twelfth Night, iii. 4 
that her goldeu couplets are disclosed . . Hamlet, v. 1 

COUR^je m'en vals a la cour Merry Wives, i. 4 

COURAGE-courage and hope both. Twelfth Night, i. 2 
courage; there will be pity taken.Meas./o?- Afeas.i. 2 
you have courage to maintain it ... . — iii. 2 
what! courage, man! what though .. Much Ado, v. I 

Whatman? courage yet! Merch. of Venice, iv. 1 

therefore, courage, good Aliena . . As you Like it, ii. 4 

but what though ? Courage ! — iji.3 

beauty, wisdom, courage, virtue All's Well, ii. 1 

your courage to the sticking-plaee Macbeth,!. 7 

and ill that heart courage, to make — _ii. 3 

patience, courage, fortitude — iy . 3 

courage mounteth with occasion .... King John, 11. 1 
courage and comfort! all shall yet .. — iii- 4 

away then, with good courage — v . 1 

cry, courage, to the field! 1 Henry IV. ii. 3 

show greatness, courage, blood — lii. 1 

their courage with hard labour tame — ^iy. 3 
best tempered courage in his troops. .iHenrylV. i. 1 

doth any deed of courage — iv. 3 

the bloo'd and courage, that renowned.. Henry r.i. 2 

boy, bristle thy courage up — n- 3 

with men of courage, and with means — 11. 4 
mastiffs are of unmatchable courage — iii. 7 
greater therefore should our coui-age be — iv. 1 
may show what outward courage he will — iv. 1 
dout them witli superfluous courage — iv. 2 

they had such courage and audacity ?.l /Jen ryF/. 1.2 

my courage try by combat — }. ' 

with straining of my courage — ..?• 5 

and doth beget new courage in our . . — 111. 3 

full of haughty courage, such as — iv. 1 

her valiant courage, and undaunted.. — y. 5 
iu courage, courtship, and proportion.2Hemy VI. 1. 3 

fear you not her courage — . i- < 

heart and courage to proceed — ly. 4 

tlirice cried, comage, father! SHenryVI.i. 4 

this soft courage makes your followers — }}■ 2 

this may plant courage in their — 11. 3 

which are so weak of courage — >v. 1 

courage, my masters; honour, now .. — iv. 3 

-^cry, courage! and away — V- 3 

industry and courage might have — v. 4 

why, courage then! what cannot .... — v.* 
and children of so high a courage! .. — v. 4 

our ancient word of courage Richard III. y. 3 

the thing of coiu-age, as roused . . Troilut Sr Cress.]. 3 

deject the courage of our minds — JJ. 2 

whose present courage may beat .... — i'. 2 

can think , or courage execute — ;v. 1 

anticipating time with starting courage — iv. 5 

O courage, courage, princes! — .X- J 

such a courage to do him good. Timon of Athens, 111. 3 

nor check ray courage for what Coriolanus, 111. 3 

here is your ancient courage? — iv- ' 

our thoughts that they have courage. /uJ. Casar,v.\ 
to lack -the courage of a woman./intony ^Cleo. iv. 12 

with the courage which the heart — v. 1 

my courage prove my title! — X- j 

winning will put any man into courage.. Cywid. u. 3 



cou 

CO ITRAOE— their couriisfo worthy liis Ci/mlufline,\\. 4 
(now iniiiRlwl with their courages) .. — _ii. -1 
and Britons strut witli couni^je — lii. I 

(iri'ttv sflf,) to 11 «iiLri;isln'uuni!,'0 .. — ill. 4 

iiliidoit witlui |irin(.r'sc(nini>,v — iii. 4 

thoi.u'lil Init l'aitlil'uliu>s uiul courage ..PvricUi, i. 1 

i-lmHilriviM-oiinwc troiii tlie state — i- 2 

1 do uiMiliuid Ills couniijo — ji. 5 

what coiiruw, sir? (onl save you (.irp.) .. — iii- 1 
couriiOT. iniiii; ll\r liiiil c'uiinot./(om™ (J- ./u/iW, iii. 1 
I mean, luni-.i , . . in.' ..and valour. . f)(/iW/o, iv. •-• 

COl'l-i.Vdl M - > I, -alls mad. . U,n;,)r.>,..<, iv. 1 

Omostcou: I - ii <l 1 ■ Miil. .\. Drain,, iv. i 

tlu-most V...U . '. >Mi- h. nd h\iU.. M,-i.iirlri,ic.'. ii. -2 
»how itself i-oiua-vuiis lo i.eItiL-oat..l»i/<'ti /.■/..■ <V,ii. 1 

well said, eouniijeous I'eehk! ■illmiiill'. iii. 2 

counuieous Bedford, let us now ....1 llfnnji 1. iii. 2 
(■he.Tiv no, |.,.iini.A'oiiB friends . . . . lihhuiU HI. v. 2 

,■,.„. '^ ilhlinuind, well luist thou — v. 4 

,...1,1. I,-, ■< h. immalcliulile . . Anlnuy ^Cleo. u. 3 
i.,ii,i.,.. ,,. .i; . .iiiufcMmi>linieiits.Rome.i.5-Ju<.ii. 1 

Curi;.\t,l.uL-.>lA-and ei>urii^eously..Uiii..V.i)i-. i. 2 
ilisloyul; eoiuugeously, ami »ith....H/c/inrd i/. i. 3 

COURIER— sightless couriers of the aiT.Macheth, L. 7 
I met a courier, oue mine ancient. Timon of .'!"'.. v- 3 
vaimt couriers to oak-cleavinp Lear, iii. 2 

C( )U Kt>N N E— la fin eouroiine les 2 Hemy VI. v. 2 

C( )URSK— set her two courses Tempest, i. 1 

who should not uphraid our course — ii. 1 

the swift course of time Two Gen.of Verona,}, i 

his fair course is not hinder'd — ji. 7 

and hinder not my course — ii. 7 

she did so com-se o'er my exteriors.. Aftrry Wines,i. 3 
let him continue in his courses.. A/eos. /or Meas.n. 1 

this beini; ^[ranted in course — iii. 1 

to he aiied in any kind of course .... — iii. 2 
von kiiow the course is common .... — iv. 2 

111 pervert your comse — iv. 3 

rut ott'hy course of justice. By course — v. 1 
wav unto this course of fortune ....Much Ado, iv. 1 

dream I on this strange covu'sc — iv. 1 

in the true course of all the question — v. 4 
eoui-se oftrue love never did run... -Mi'rf. JV. Dr. i 1 
to us seemeth it a needful course. . Love's L, Lost, ii. 1 
of all elements, courses as swift as.... — iv. 3 
cuuuut deny the course of law ..Mer. of Venice, iii. 3 

lo iiualify his rigorous course — iv. 1 

that in tlie eom-se of justice — iv. 1 

n. t marvel, Helen, at uiy course ....Alt's «VH, ii. 5 
from tlie Ijhvody course of war — iii. 4 (.letter) 
as in the comiiiou course of all treasons — iv. 3 

whatc'cr the eourie, the end is — iv. 4 

I Could not answer her in that course — v. 3 
all iinpetliiuents hi fancy's course are — v. 3 

say, thou wilt course Taming of Shreic, 2 (indue.) 

a coiu-se of learning, and Ingenious — i. 1 

restraining from cour^e required .. Winter' sTalc, i. 2 
as mine own course have set down .. — _i. 2 
unless he take the course that you .. — ii. 3 
which shall have due course, even to — iii. 2 

what course 1 mean to hold — iv. 3 

a course more promising than a wild — iv. 3 
<lid they bend their course .... Comedy of Errors, i. 1 

wliat is the course and drift of — _ii. 2 

this course 1 llttest choose — iv. 3 

creat natm^e's second course Macbeth, ii. 2 

bear-like, I must fight the course — v. 7 

weeks before the course of time King John, i. 1 

with course distiubed even thy confining — ii. 2 
all direction, purpose, coiurse, intent — ii. 2 

stays in his course, and plays — iii. 1 

the yearly course that brings — iii. 1 

bv any secret course thv hateful .... — iii. 1 

i t makes the course of tnoughts — iv . 2 

our rankness and irregular course .... — v. 4 

rivers take their course through — y. 7 

are dried by natm-e's course Richard II. i. 2 

but by bad courses may be vinderstood — ii. 1 

kept on his course, while all — v. 2 

i)y letters shall dii-ect your course 1 HenrylV.i. 3 

and the general course of the action — ii. 3 

and all the courses of my life — iii. 1 

how he bears his course, and runs. ... — iii. 1 

heart being set on bloody courses 2 Henry IV. i. 1 

to so rough a course to come by — ii. 1 

thev take their courses east, west .... — iv. 2 
to tne which course if I be enforced.. — iv. 3 
and makes it course from the inwards — iv. 3 
with every course, in his particular . . — iv. 4 

heard the course of it so far! — iv. 4 

and found no coiu'se of breath — iv. 4 

my Harry, be It thy course to busy . . — iv. 4 
to trip the course of law, and blunt.. — v. 2 

the courses of his youth promised Henry V. i. 1 

his addiction was to courses vain .... — i. 1 

and oaths must have their course.. ., — ii. I 
holding due course to Harfleur .. — iii. (chorus) 

into a second course of mischief — iv. 3 

numbers, and due course of things — v. (chorus) 
never changes, but keeps his course.. — v. 2 
tlie full course of their glory .... — v. 2 (chorus) 
persuade you take a better course . . 1 Henry VI. iv. 1 

m the course of this contract — v. 4 

he be condemned by course of law. .illenry VI. iii. 1 

say, it is the wisest course 3Hinry VI. iii. 1 

towards Coventry bend we our course — iv. 8 
keeps an ujiward course, and we are — v. 3 

hold their course toward Tewkesbury — v. 3 

but keep our course, though — v. 4 

IMinos, that denied our course — v. G 

convict by cinirse of law Richard III. i. 4 

needs no indirect nor lawless course — i. 4 

p.nil may direct his course as please .. — ii. 2 
indirect and peevish course is this.... — iii. 3 
unto a lineal true-derived course .... — iii. 7 
thus hath the course of justice wheeled — iv. 1 
and made his course again for Bretagnc — iv. 4 
bend their course [Co/. Kn/.-powcr].. — iv. .'j 

to alter the king's course Henrj/VIII. i. 1 

niid is not this course pious? — ii. 2 



[ 145] 



COUUSi^— many courses of the fuu.. Henry VIII. ii. 3 
if, in the course and iiroccss of this time — ii. 4 
this course, whicli you are running here — ii. 4 
follow your envious courses, men of. . — iii. 2 



1 he has 



the 


tn.ng L 
il fnim 


a'th 


.iisuud 



uli-al o 
.1111(1 tin 



fiiiv authority .. 
r..e"ofgrowth..-/V 
roportion, season., 
te courses of the .. 
li\' your consent . . 
,.iiiVc 1 hold.yvmoi 
luiiise allows .... 
i lilic the sun's.... 



— iv. 1 

— v. 3 
nf Athens, i. 1 

— iii. 3 

— iii. 4 
V. I 



will (Ml the wav it takes. CoWo(uhh, 
to.i \i.ik.iit lor 11 seci.nd course of fight — \. h 

tlie (itlier course will prove too bloody — iii. 1 

dctirniine on some course — iv. 1 

Mlieii lie doth iilil his i-.nirse JnliusC<rsnr, \. 2 

will idu go sec the onhT of the coiu-seV — i. 2 

our cmu>e will seem too IjliHidy — ii. 1 

take thuuwliat course thou wilt!.... — iii. 2 
myself resolved upon a course.. . Antony ($-CVra._jji. 9 
tocoursej'our ilying flags, and leave — iij. H 
'tis your noblest course: wisdom .... — iii. 11 
which keiit their course, and lighted — v. 2 

by taking Antony's course — .}'•'- 

1 have con.-,idered of a course Cytnbetine.m. 4 

j'QU should tread a course pretty and — iii. 4 
canst not in the course of gratitude. . — iii. !> 

stick to your journal course — iv. 2 

if each of you would take this course — v. 1 
a speedier course than lingering. . Titus Avdron.ii. I 

I'll teach thee another course — iv. 1 

in course of this revenge, to do — iv. 4 

■will shun no course to keep them I'ericlrs, i. 1 

he'll stop the course by which it — ..j. 2 

alter thy course for Tyre — iii. I 

content in course of true delight — iii. 2 

no care to your best courses — iv. 1 

he did not flow from honourable courses.. — iv. 4 

though you call my course unnatural — iv. 1 

and bear his courses to be ordered — iv. 4 (G;)w.) 
we must take another course with you . . — iy. G 

by monthly course, with reservation Lenr, i. 1 

he'll shape his old course in a country new — i . 1 

you shall run a certain course — j. 2 

to hold my very course — i. 3 

that you protect this course — i. 4 

this milky sentleness, aud com-se of yours — i. 4 

been iiil'.iniKil of my obscured course — ii. 2 

aud tixed he is in his own course — . ii. 4 

to course his own shadow for a traitor . . — iii. 4 
I will persevere in mj; course of loyalty.. — ijj' ^ 

meet the old course of death — ill. 7 

might have the freer course — iv. 2 

by aught to change the course — v. 1 

liath tne steerage of my course . . . Romeo S; Jutiet, i. 4 

uneven is the course, 1 like it not — iv. 1 

do not interrupt me in my course — v. 3 

their course of love, the tidings of her — v. 3 

had made his course to illumiue that Hamlet, \. 1 

is a course of impious stubbornness — i. 2 

it courses tlirougli the natural gates — _i. 5 

if he do blench, I know my course — ii. 2 

in our circumstance and comse of thought — iii. 3 
and Guildenstern hold their course for— iv. B (let. ) 

and course of direct session Otliello, i. 2 

with due course toward the isle of Rhodes — i. 3 
now do they re-stem their backward course — i. 3 

deliver of my whole course of love — i. 3 

liv indirect and forced courses subdue — _i. 3 

or from what otlier course you please — ii. 1 

the course to win the Moor a^ainV — ii. 3 

counsel Cassio to this parallel course .... — ii. 3 

in my whole course ot wooing — iii. 3 

compulsive course ne'er feels retiring ebb — iii. 3 
\_Col. Knt.'] the sun to course two hundred — iii. 4 

shut myself up in some other course — iii. 4 

the lethargy must have his quiet course — iv. 1 
and Ills own coiu-ses wiU denote him so. . — iv. i 
we have done our course; there's money — iy. 2 

COURSED— round tears coursed ../Isi/ou Lifei/, ii. 1 
we coursed him at the heels Macbeth, i. B 

COURSER — his foaming comser's back. /Mc/i(/r;(//.i. 2 

their neighing coursers daring iHcnrylV. iv. 1 

composed to my courser He..ry '■'. iii. 7 

ne'er spurred their eoursers at ZHenry VI. v. 7 

of a bay courser I rode on Timon ofAtlicns, i. 2 

which,' like the courser's hair, \\ath.ArU. <y Cleo.i. 2 
upon a courser, whose delightful steps. Pcririw, ii. 1 

COURSING— I am coursing myself.. toue'sL.L. iv. 3 
not mean the coursing snatchers only.. Hen ri/F. i. 2 

COURT— if now 1 court not Tempest, i. 2 

this cell's my court -; y. 1 

the emiieror in his royal court.. Tu'o Gen, of tcr. i. 3 
dispaten him to the emperor's court.. — i. 3 
witn Valentine in the emperor's court — i. 3 
with sir Proteus to the Imperial's court — ii. 3 

her company, and my com-t — iii. 1 

and happy being at your coiurt — iii. I 

I have forgot to court — ii). 1 

to leave our royal court — iii. I 

come after my heel to de coiurt — Merry IVives, i. 4 

come to the court vit me — j. 1 

when the court lay at Windsor — ii. 2 

let the court of France show — iii. 3 

and will be to-morrow at court — iv. 3 

I hear not of him in the court — iv. 3 

and his friends potent at court — iv. 4 

dat de court is know to corne — iv. 5 

if it shoidd come to the car of the court — iv. S 
bound to the count Orsino's court. Twctflh Sight, ii. I 

many enemies in Orsino's court — ii. 1 

and saw me court Margaret in Hero's. .V«c/i.-lrfo, y. 1 
our court shall be a little Academe. ioce'jL.LojV.i. 1 

stay here in your court for three — i. I 

shall come within a mile of my court — i. 1 

as the rest of tin nrt can possibly.. — i. 1 

our court, \'ou 1. now, is hauuted with — i. 1 



COU 



COUil'l :ii.|Hi.:ii'h liij silent court. y.TOf'j/,. Lour, ii. I 

that iiPiiH . Ill IT t'. ln-sit'ijc his court — ii. I 

wclcoiiii to the court of Navarre .... — ii. 1 

the roof 1.1' this court is ton high .... — ii. 1 

welcome, madam, to my court — ii. 1 

retire to the court of his eye — li. 1 

that keeiis here in court; a phantasm — iv. 1 

to parle, to (.'oiirt, and dance — v. 2 

the king will court thee for his dear.. — v. 2 

to lead you to our court — v. 2 

come into the court, and swear. ..Mer. of Venice, i. :'. 

and call the Jew into the court — iv 1 

I may dismiss this court, unless .... — iv 1 

doctor to our Court: where ishe? .... — iv. 1 

the court shall luar liellario's letter — iv. 1 

holds this pnsi lit (iiu>tioii in the court — iv. I 

this strict ciiuit of \'enii'e muKt needs — iv. i 

I tender it for hini in the court — iv. I 

I do beseech the court to give — iv. 1 

the court awards it, and the law — i v. 1 

law allows it, and the court awards it — iv. 1 

he hath refused it in the onen court.. — iv. 1 

and all the court, to quit tne tine — iv. 1 

here in the cmirt, of all he dies possessed — iv. 1 
at the new court? There's no(ir/).)./l.«HoK ;.i/.ei7, i. I 

she is at the court, and no less Deloved — i. 1 

and get you from our court — i. 3 

so near our public court as twenty .. — i. 3 

fool out of your father's court? — i. 3 

from peril than the envious court? .. — ii. I 

the country, city, court, yea — ii. I 

some villains ot my court are — .i'- - 

not in the court, it is tedious — iii. 2 

wast evci in iiiiirt, shepherd? — iii. 2 

at youi (iiiiri: viiur reason (rfp.).... — iii. 2 

good iiKiiiiur- at the court — iii. '- 

most ill. ickalik- ill the court — iii. 2 

you salute not at the court — iii. 2 

thrown into neglect the pompous court? — v. 1 

the court's a Uaniing-place All's IVeU, i. 1 

I will think of thee at court — i. 1 

to those of mine in court; I'll stay .. — i. 3 

but to the court. To the court! (rep.) — ii. 2 

before me all the lords in court — ii- 3 

since 1 was at court: our old lings , . — iii. 2 

and your Isbels o' the cinirt — iii. 2 

some despatch in hand at court — iii. 2 

drive thee from the s[iorti\'e court .. — iii. 2 

let his iioliility remain in his court.. — iv. ;> 

I have Mvii. ^'"ll ill the ciiiiit of I'rance — v. I 

last that eVi- 1 took her leave at court — v. 3 

one here in court could witness it — y. 3 

to court her at your (ilcasure. . Taming of s/neir, i. I 

unsuspected, to court her by herself — . i. 2 

the knave doth court my love — iii. 1 

see, how they kiss aud court! — iv. 2 

how beastly she doth court liim! — iv. 2 

in courts and kingdoms known . . tVinter'sTate, i. 2 

I must forsake the court — j. 2 

what is the ne\v6 i' the court? — _i. 2 

nocourt in Europe is too good for thee — ii. 2 

both landed, hasting to the com't .... — .!!■•' 

ap^lear in person here in court — iii. 2 

before Polixenes came to your court — iii. 2 

why he left your court, the gods .... — iii. 2 

he is of late much retired from court — iv. 1 

certainly wdiipped out of the court .. — iv. 2 

no virtue whipped out of the court .. — iv. i 

follow us to the court— thou churl . . — iv. 3 

sun, that shines upon his court — iv. 3 

see'st thou not the air of the court .. — iv. 3 

to your court whiles he was hastening — v. I 

are they returned to the court? — v. 2 

how fomid thy father's court? — v. 3 

is Banquo gone from court? Macbeth, iii. 2 

arc i' the court. His horses — J!!- ■' 

lives in the English court — iii. G 

fly to tlie court of England — iii. i> 

wliat brings you here to court so hastily?. ../"An. i. 1 

meet him iuthe eoiirtof heaven — iii. 4 

with too great a court, and liberal . . Richard II. i. 1 

he hath forsook the court, broken .. — ii. 3 

keeps death Ids court; and there — — iii. 2 

my lord, in the base court he doth .. — iii. 3 

imruly jades; in the base court? (re/).) — iii. 3 

from the restful English court — iv. 1 

as well as waiting in the court XUenrylV.i. i 

there is a nobleman of the court .... — ii. 4 

you must to the court in the morning — ii. 4 

I'll to the court in the morning — ii. 4 

trained up in the English court — iij. 1 

of all the court and priuees — i i i. 2 

now, Hal, to the news at court — iii. 3 

dismissed my father from the court. . — iv. 3 
the tennis court keeper knows better.2He)i;y/;'. ii. 2 

when Arthur first in court — ii. I 

you must away to court, sir, presently — ii. 4 

he must then to the inns of court — — iii. 2 

in all the inns of court again — iii. 2 

break Skogan's head at the coiu-t gate — iii. 2 

I will with you to the court — jlj. 2 

was a mansion for him, a court — in 2 

with scorn shoved from the court ... . — iv. 2 

despatch we toward the court, my lords — \\. 3 

and, when vou come to court, stand.. — iv. 3 

to the English court assemble now .. — iv. I 

a friend i' the court is better — v. 1 

the English, not the Turkish court .. — v. 2 

call we our high court of parliament — v. 2 

the court with news. From tlie court? — v. 3 

if sir, you eoinc from the court — v. 3 

that all the courts of France will Hevry V.i. i 

the mistress court of mighty Europe — ii. 4 

knowledge at the court of guard \HenryVl.\\. I 

as princes do their courts when — ii. /i 

a gentler heart did never sway in court — iii. 2 

shouldering of each other in tlie court — iv. 1 

mine oflice-bodgc in court 1! Henri/ /'/. i. 2 

fvshion in the court of England? — i. 3 

she aweeiw it through the court with — i. 3 



cou 

■COUIIT— strangers in court do take ..illenry VI. \. 3 

left I the court, to see this — ii. 3 

all tlie court admired him — iii. 1 

and princes' courts be filled with — iii.-' 

the city, and your royal coui-t — iv. 4 

others to the inns of court — iv. 7 

must sweep t!ie court clean of such . . — ."'-^ 

live turmoiled in the court — iv. 10 

I thy force so near the court — v. 1 

I to call a present court of parliament — v. 3 

' grief and sorrow, to the court ZHenry VI. i. 1 

as befit the pleasures of the court? .... — v. 7 

nor made to court au amorous Uichitrd III. i. 1 

John de la Court [Cot. A'n(.-Car] HenrijVIII.i. 1 

John de la Coiu't [Co/. A'h(. -Car] my — 1.2 

that fill the court with quarrels — i. 3 

John Court [Co/. A')i(.-Car], confessor to — ii. 1 

and far enough from court too — ii. 1 

by whose virtue (the court of Rome — ii, 2 

been begging sixteen years in court.. — ii. 3 
king of England, come into the court — ii. 1 
queen of England, come into court (rep.') — ii. i 

tliat longer you desire the court — ii. 4 

appearance make in any of their comts — ii. 4 
no reverend person in tills coiu-t .... — ii. 4 

adjourn tliis court till further — il. 4 

break up the court; I say, set on — ii. 4 

farewell, the hopes of court! — iii. 2 

held a late court at Dunstable — iv. 1 

my way, whicli is to the court — iv. 1 

do you take the court for Paris-garden? — v. 3 

witn the great tool come to court — v. 3 

even to the court, the heart Coriolanus, i. I 

let courts and cities be made all of — i. 9 

must return to the com't of guard. . Anl. <§• Cleo. iv. 9 
let us bear him to the court of guard — iv. 9 
wait ijinioned at your master's court — v. 2 
lived 111 court (which rare it is to do). Cymbeline, i. 1 
thou fraught the court with thy .... — 1.2 

the good remainders of the court! — i. 2 

commend me to the court where your — i. 5 

a suucy stranger, in his court — i. 7 

he huth a court he little cares for.... — i. 7 
take my power i' the court for yours — i. 7 

tliat's come to court to-night? — ii. 1 

cold dishes, with scraps o' the court — ii. 3 

Caius Lucius in the Britain court . . — ii. 4 

i' tlie court; before her father — ii. 4 

of courts, of princes, of the tricks ... . — iii. 3 
the art o' the court, as hard to leave — iii. 3 

perturbed court, for my being absent — iii. 4 

you sliall be missed at court — iii. 4 

back to the court— No court, no father — iii. 4 
if not at court, then not in Britain .. — iii. 4 
suspected of your carriage from the court — iii. 4 

but our great court made me — iii. 5 

to the court I'll knock her back — iii. .5 

great men, that had a court no bigger — iii. 6 
courtiers say, all's savage, but at court — iv. 2 
perhaps, it may be heard at court .... — iv. 2 
Komans, and not o' the court of Britain — v. & 

remember me at court, where I — v. 5 

why fled you from the court? — v. 5 

if the emi^eror's court can feast ...TUusAndron. i. 2 
so dishonoured in the court of Bome — ii. 1 
that knows to court it with words .. — ii. 1 
tlie emperor's court is like the house — ii. 1 

tiiat all the court may echo — ii. 2 

and I'll go brave it at the court — iv. 1 

this tempest whirling in the court . . — iv. 2 
slioot all yoiur shafts into tlie court . . — iv. 3 
both the ram's horns in tlie court.... — iv. 3 
ill the emperor's court there is a queen — v. 2 

here pleasures court mine eyes Pericles , i. 2 

so this is Tyre, and tills is tfie court .... — i. 3 

is Ills court distant from this shore? — ii. 1 

guide me to your sovereign's court — ii. 1 

and I'll bring thee to the court myself . . — ii. I 

the entertainment in our court — ii, 3 

I came unto your court, for honours .... — ii. 5 
to the court of king Simonides. . . . — iii. (Gower) 
long in our court have made their amorous™ Lear, i. 1 

this our court, infected with theu* — i. 4 

O nimcle, court holy- water in a dry — iii. 2 

poor rogues talk of court news — v. 3 

happiness courts thee in herbest.Romeo^ Juliet , iii. 3 

though lewduess com't it in Hamkt, i. 

vouchsafe your rest here in our court ... , — ii. 2 
shall we to the court? for, by my fay .... — ii. 2 

they are about the court — iii. 1 

sir, here is newly come to court, Laertes — v. 2 

■watches on the court of guard Othello, ii. 1 

and on the court and guard of safety I . . . . ii . 3 

if I court no women, you'll couch — iv. 3 (soul') 

COUItT-CONTEMPT— 
on thy baseness, court-contempt? Winter^ Tale, iv. 3 

COUKT-CUPBOARD- 
reniove the court-cuiiboard .... Romeo <5- Juliet, i. ,5 

COURTED— I am courted now . . Winter'sTale, iv. 3 

COUIITEOUS— this courteous office., ruiei/z/i A', iii. 4 
and courteous to tills gentleman ..Mid.N. Dr. iii. 1 

thanks, courteous wall — v. 1 

coriiniends, and courteous breath. Afer. of Venice, ii. 9 
go :;i ve him courteous conduct to tliis — iv. 1 
we iitely cope your com-teous pains.. — iv. 1 
tills i' called the retort courteous . . As you Like il, v. 4 

the first, the retort courteous — v. 4 

and most courteous feathers AlVs Well, iv. 5 

affuljle, and courteous gentleman . . Taming of Sli . i. 2 
pleasant, gamesome, passin" courteous — ii. 1 
wittj', coiirteous, liberal, full of spirit.SHenry VI. i. 2 

my courteous lord, adieu Troilus ^ Cressida, v. 2 

parasites, courteous destroyers. 7'/7nojnj''.4(/it'nj-, iii. G 
sujiple and courteous to the people. . Coriolanus, ii. 2 

courteous lord, one word Antony ^Cleopatra, i. 3 

our courteous Antony, whom ne'er . . — ii. 2 
a most courteous exposition .... Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 4 

and a eomteous, and a kind, and — ii. 

O courteous Tybalt! honest gentleman I — iii. 2 
with wJiat courteous action it waves .... Hamlet, i. 4 



[ 14() ] 



COU 



COURTEOUSLy— 

dost not use me courteously . . Troilua 4- Cress, iv. 4 
COUKTESIES-outward courtes'iea.ilea.for Mea. v. \ 
mauliood is melted into courtesies ..Much Ado, iv. I 
for your many courtesies I thank you — v. 1 
elves, and do him courtesies. . ..Mid. N. Dream, iii. I 
for these courtesies I'll lend you.. Mer. of Venice, i. 3 
unwearied spirit in doing courtesies.. — iii. 2 
but as wc change our courtesies .... All's Well, iii. 2 

let tliy courtesies alone, they are — v. 3 

tliesc lowly courtesies, miglit fire .JuliusCiesar, iii. I 

he liath laid strange com-tesies ..Antony tj-Cleo. ii. 2 

been debtor to j'ou for courtesies .... Cymliellne, i. 5 

COURTESY-scorn our courtesy. Two Gen. ofVer. iv. 1 

the com-tesy of it is so fearful Twelfth A'ight, i. 5 

use the devil himself witli courtesy . . — iv. 2 
present and a dangerous courtesy. Mea.for Mea. iv. 2 
courtesy itself must convert to disdain.M«c/i Ji/o,i. 1 

tiieii is courtesy a tm*n-coat — i. 1 

for loi'C and courtesy lie furtlier ofl.Mid. N.'s Df.ii.3 
if you were civil, and knew courtesy — iii. 2 
lea\'c yoiu- courtesy, good monsieur , . — iv. I 
but yet, in courtesy. Ill all reason .... — v. 1 

remember thy courtesy Love's L. Lost, v. 1 

kissed away his hand in courtesy . . — v. 2 

in courtesy, gives undeserving praise — v. 2 

the smiling courtesy of love — v. 2 

pleasant jest, and courtesj-, as bombast — v. 2 

these ladies' courtesy miglit well . . — v. 2 

money for a christian courtesy .Mer. of Venice, iii. 1 

to offices of tender com-tesy — i v. I 

I scant this breathing courtesy — v. 1 

I was beset with shame and courtesy — v. 1 
the courtesy of nations allows you.^s youLike it, \. 1 
that com-tesy would be uncleanly — iii. 2 

your com-tesy, for a ring-carrier ! . . . . All's IVetl,m . 5 
lowly courtesy, and say . . Taming of Shrew, 1 (ind.) 

to do you courtesy, this will I do — iv. 2 

if this be courtesy, sir, accept of it .. — iv. 2 
■with humble and familiar courtesy. . Richard II. i. 4 
my unpleased eye see your courtesy — iii. 3 

deal of courtesy thisfa-wning IHenrylV. i. 3 

yet I am the king of courtesy — ii. 4 

then I stole all courtesy from heaven — iii. 2 
he shall shrink under my com-tesy . . — v. 2 
a second time to do such a courtesy,. — v. 2 

if thou wert sensible of com-tesy — v. 4 

was more of his courtesy than your. IHenrylV. iv. 3 

to prove this lady's courtesy 1 Henry VI ii. 2 

I need not crave his courtesy — v. 3 

French nods and apish courtesy. . . . Richard III. i. 3 
the mayor in courtesy showed me.... — iv. 2 
the mirror of all courtesy;— stay ..Henry VII I. ii. 1 
but none for courtesy: his legs .. Troilus ^ Cress, ii. 3 
which looks like pride, is com-tesy . . — iv. .5 
as they contend with thee in courtesy — iv. b 

I do disdain thy courtesy, proud — v. 6 

and all this com-tesy! the strain. Ttmon of Athens, i. 1 

digest the senate's courtesy? Coriolanus, iii. 1 

showed thy dear mother any courtesy — v. 3 
you for your pains and courtesy . . Julius Casar, ii . 2 
with com-tesy, and with respect enough — iv. -i 
the queen shall theu have com-tesy .Ant. ^C/i-o. iii. 1 1 
dissembling com-tesy! how fine this. . Cymbeliiie, i. 2 
tohavethe courtesy yoiu- cradle promised — iv. 4 
tliese words in princely com-tesy.. Titus Andraii. i. 2 
how courtesy would seem to cover sin ! . . Pericles, i. 1 
with such a graceful courtesy delivered? — ii. 2 
would be denied of your fair courtesy .... — ii. 3 

sir, a courtesy, which if we should deny — v. 1 

etfects of courtesy, dues of gratitude Lear, ii. 4 

and force their scanted com-tesy — iii. 2 

tills courtesy, forbid thee, shall the duke — iii. 3 

yet our power shall do a comrtesy to — iii. 7 

a man may strain courtesy .... Romeo 4' Juliet, ii. 4 
nay, I am the very pink of courtesy — ii. 4 

he is not the flower of courtesy — ii. 5 

this courtesy is not of the right breed . . Hamlet, iii. 2 
they do discharge their slrot of courtesy . OWicito, ii. 1 

gives me this bold sliow of courtesy — ii. 1 

well kissed! an excellent coiu-tesy! — ii. 1 

that I did! but that was but courtesy .... — ii. 1 

1 could well wish com-tesy would invent — ii. 3 
COURTEZAN-shameless courtezan!.! Henry VI. iii. 2 

friends, and give to courtezans 2Henry VI. i. J 

dallying with a brace of courtezans. Bj'c/iarrf ///. iii. 7 

some Roman courtezan Cymbeline, iii. 4 

a brave night to cool a courtezan Lear, iii. 2 

COURT-GATE-upon the court-gate. Heni-yF///. i. 3 
COURT-HAND— write court-hand..2Hi?nryr/. iv. 2 
COURTIER— the best courtier .... Merry Wives, ii. 2 

now I see, you'll be a courtier — iii. 2 

thou wouldst make an absolute courtier — iii. 3 
that youth's a rare courtier! .... TwelfthKight, iii. 1 
French courtier for a new-devised . . Lore's L. L.i.i 
one that hath been a courtier ....As you Litie it, ii. 7 

If courtiers were shepherds — iii. 2 

do not your corn-tier s hands sweat? — iii. 2 

the courtier's hands are perfumed. ... — iii. 2 
nor the courtier's, which is proud .... — iv. 1 
he hath been a courtier, he swears . . — v. 4 
tlie cut of a certain courtier's beard . . — v. 4 

'tis an unseasoned corn-tier All's Well, i. 1 

like an old courtier, wears her cap.... — i. 1 

I will return perfect com-tier — i. 1 

be capable of a courtier's counsel — i. 1 

like a com-tier, contempt nor bitterness — i. 2 

ask me, if I am a com-tier — ii. 2 

Ipray you sir, are you a courtier?.... — ii. 2 
are you a courtier, aii't like you.. Winter'sTale, iv. 3 
tills cannot be but a great courtier . . — iv. 3 

lawyers, courtiers, gentlemen 2HenryVI. iv. 4 

to think an English courtier may ..Henry VIII. i. 3 

(am yet a courtier beggarly) — ii. 3 

ceremonious courtiers. Com-tiers..7'7-o?7.<5"Cre.s*.s. i. 3 

tliou'dst com-tier be again Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

courtiers of beauteous freedom . . Antony <§- Cleo. ii. 6 
obey the heavens, than our courtiers. Ci/mte/ine, i. 1 
but not a courtier, although tliey wear — i. 1 
or a that way accomplisJied courtier — i. 5 



COURTIER-so accomplished aconrticr. Cymbeline, i. £. 
courtiers say, all's savage, but at court — iv. 2 

to be most imlike our courtiers — v. 4 

you are right courtier knights Pericles, ii. 3 

on courtier's knees, tliat dream. . Romeo ^- Juliet, i. 4 

she gallops o'er a courtier's nose — 1.4 

our chiefest courtier, cousin, and our son. /fam/e/, i. 2 
courtier's, soldier's, scholar's, eye, tongue — iii. I 
a com-tier; wliicli could say, good-morrow — v. 1 
comes so near the heel of the courtier. ... — v. 1 
the king, the queen, the corn-tiers — v. 1 

COURT-LIKE— 
war-like, court-like, and leaxned.. Merry Wives, ii. 2 

COURTLY — too courtly a wit for .As you Like it, iii. 2 
forth from courtly friends ..All's Welt, iii. 4 (letter) 

in courtly company, or at my 2HejiryVI.i. 1 

I am too courtly, and thou art.. Troilus 6f Cress, iii. 1 

and very com-tly counsel — iv, 5 

is most courtly and fashionable . . Timon ofAlh. v. 1 
all courtlv parts more exquisite .... Cymbeline, iii. 3 

COUKTNiY-sir Edward Comtnay. liicliard III. iv. 4 

COURT-ODOUR^nose court-odour.. (fVnier'sT.iv. 3 

COURTSHIP— full of courtship . . Love's L. Lost, v. 2 
rated them at courtship, pleasant jest — v. 2 
your chiefest thoughts to courtship, ilfer. of Ven. ii. 8 
one that knew courtship toowell./lsi/oM Like i', iii. 2 
observed his courtsliip to the common. /(/c/mnf //. i. 4 
in courage, courtship, and proportion. 2H('7!7-i/ (^7. i. 3 
courtship lives in carrion flies . . Romeo S; Juliet, iii. 3 
I will gyve thee in thine own courtship. 0/Ap//o, ii. 

COURT'SIED— court'sied when...7'«/!/ies(,i. 2 (son; 

COURT'SIES— court'sies there to me..Tuetflh A. ii. 
lay out their wealth on court'sies. . TimonofAth. i. 
low-crooked court'sies, and base.. /«//usCrr«//-, iii. 
dream on court'sies straight Romeo ^-Jul el, i. 

COURT'SY — com-t'sy to their will. Afeas. ./or Meas. ii. 
my cousin's duty to make com-t'sy ..Much Ado, ii. 

or else make another court'sy — ii. 

courtier for a new-devised court'sy. . Love's L. L. i. 

court'sy, sweet hearts : a.id so — v. 

that court'sy to them, do them ..Mer. of Venice, i. 
when I make court'sy, bid m&...Asyou Like ii, (epil.! 
let them court'sy with their left. Taming of Sh. iv. ' 
heels and court sy at his frowns ..\ Henry IV. iii. 

if a man will make court'sy 2 Henry! V. ii. 

my court'sy, last my speech (rfp.) — (epil.^ 

nice customs court'sy to great kings . . Henry J', v. 2 
is made; she seals it with a court'sy .3 Henri/ K/. iii. 2 

what is that court'sy worth? Coriolanus, v. 3 

worse, must court'sy at the ccnsMxe.Cynibetiue, iii. 3 
whom mighty kingdoms court'sy to. . Ti'UsAnd. v. 3 
the hams. Meiining,to court'sy. Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 4 

COURT- WORD— the court-word. Winter's Tale. iv. 3 

COUSIN — ay, cousin Slender Merry Wives, i. 1 

• • - — i. 1 



IN— ay, 

can you tell, cousin? 

I ■will do as my cousin Shallow says — i. 1 

cousin Abraham Slender — i . 1 

at your request, cousin, in any reason — i. 1 

ay, I think my cousin meant well .. — i. 1 

go, wait upon my cousin Shallow.... — i. 1 

Anue Page and my cousin Slender . . — iii. 2 

mistress Anne, my cousin loves yoa — iii. 4 

there is tlii-ce cousin Germans — i\'. .'j 

your cousin, my lady, takes great. TwelfthNight, i. 3 

what is he at the gate, cousin? — i. h 

cousin, cousin, how have you come so — i. 5 

saying, cousin Toby, my fortunes.... — ii. 5 

Where's my cousin IToby? — iii. 4 

your drunken cousin rule over me — v. 1 (letter) 
cousin Juliet? Is slie your cousin?. .Meo./or Mea. i. o 

my very wortliy cousin, fairly met . . — v. 1 

come, cousin Angelo ; in this I'll ... . — v. 1 

you, lord Escalus, sit with my cousin — v. 1 

my noble and well-warrantea cousin — v. 1 
my cousin means signior Bencdiclc ..Much Ado, i. 1 

tliere's her cousin, an slie were not . . — i. 1 

where is my cousin, your son? — i. 2 

cousins, you know what you have to do — i. 2 

good cousins, have a care this busy time — i. 2 

it is my cousin's duty to make — ii. 1 

for all that, cousin, let him be — ii. 1 

fault will be in the music, cousin — ii. 1 

cousin, you apprehend passing shrewdly — ii. 1 

speak, cousin; or if you cannot, stop — ii. 1 

my cousin tells him in his ear — ii. 1 

and so she doth, cousin — ii. 1 

cousins, God give you joy! — ii. 1 

to help my cousin to a good husband — ii. 1 

how to liumovu- your cousin — ii. 1 

find my cousin Beatrice proposing .. — iii. 1 

to stain ray cousin witli — iii. 1 

do not do your cousin such a wrong — iii. I 
wake my cousin Beatrice, and desire — iii. 4 
your cousin will say so. JVIy cousin's — iii. 4 

tis almost five o'clock, cousin — iii. 4 

1 am stuttlid, cousin, I cannot smell — iii. 4 
why, how now, cousin, wherefore sink 

how now, cousin Hero? 

O, on my soul, my cousin is belied . . 
believe your fair cousin is wronged . . 

I am sorry for my cousin 

go, comfort your cousin 

you sliould have given her cousin . . 
now doth your cousin? Very ill .... 
wdiy, then my cousin, Margaret .... 

come, cousin, I am sure you love 

■wi-it ih my cousin's hand 

live unbruised, and love my cousin . . 
if my cousin do not look exceeding . . 



1. 2 



is 



1. 3 



— IV. 1 

— iv. 1 

— iv. 1 

— iv. 1 

— iv. 1 

— V. 1 



the duke's daughter, her cousin As you Like it, i. i 

shall we see this wrestling, cousin? .. — 

how now, daugliter, and cousin? .... — 

gentle cousin, let us go thank him .. — 

why cousin, why Rosalind — 

theu there were two cousins laid up — 

they ai-c but burs, cousin, thrown upon — 

you, cousin ; withiu these ten day s . . — 

thou hast not, cousin; pr'ythee, be . . — 

cousin, what if we assayed to steal .. — 



cou 



CI jUSIN— Jliiughtcr and hercou8iii..<i j/om Likeil, ii 2 

■:i lino iiiut.il"; iinilgooil cousin, sing .. — ii. 7 

llu 1-.' ii niiMV ill it: oi>u<in,— — iv. 3 

i,.,i.!i,,l h.uii ,mro.m»in Austria ....AU'sH'eU.i. 2 

i'i;r n,^i:i i'liuu-f, wouM, in 90 just -- ill. I 

lal my civu ill IVrdiimndcomeliither — iv. 1 
1) viiliiuit lou^iii! wortliy gcntlemimI..iV«c6f/A, i. 'i 

ioii>vimiii.e; ciiuaiiis, a word, I pray .... — i. 3 

(1 «..iiliicst i-mi-iini the 8iu ofmy — i. 1 

no, ccmsiii, I'll to i-'ilb — ij. •! 

our blooily ooiisiii> iiro Ix'stowfil in — iii. 1 

inv pretty cou.-iii: lilvssiiu' upon you! .. — iv. 2 

my ever L'eutle cousin, welcome liiJii-r .. — iv. 3 

cousins, I iioi>e, tile tiu^'s are near — v. 4 

w i I h my cousin , your right noble son .... — _ y . G 

I ii-ia, aoilraw our puissance King John, iii. 1 

cousin, iiMik not sad — Hj* '* 

cousin, away for Kncland — iii. 3 

tiirewell, my peiitle cousin — iii. 3 

for England, cousin; Hubert shall .. — iii. 3 

Ivar with me, cousin — iv. 2 

I) my t;cntle cousin, hear'st thou .... — iv. 2 

10'. cniiM.'ience, and my cousin's death — iv. 2 

( 1 iniisiu, thou art coine toset — v. 7 

cou>iu of Ileivtbrd, what dost thou . . lUchard II. i. 1 

wliat dotli our cousin lay to Jlowbray's — i. 1 

cousin, throw down your gage — i. 1 

there to iK'hold our cousin Ilereford.. — i. 2 

recreant to my cousin Hereford I .... — i. 2 

cousin of Hereford, as thv cause .... — i. 3 

my lu.lilc cousin, lord Ai'miorlc — i. 3 

cousin, I'arcwcll; and. uncle, hid him — i. 3 

We did observe; cousin A unierle .... — i. 4 

what said our cousin, when you .... — i. 4 

lie is our cousin, cousin; but 'tis doubt — i. 4 

why, cousin, wert thou regent of — ii. 1 

come, sister,— cousin, I would say ,. — ii. 2 

come, cousin, I'll dispose of you .... — ii. 2 

if that my cousin king be king of .... — ii. 3 

had feeling of my cousin's wrongs .. — ii. 3 

diseomfortable cousin! know'st thou — iii. 2 

beshrew thee, cousin, which didst. ... — iii. 2 

take not, good cousin, further — iii. 3 

thy thrice-noble cousin, HaiTy — iii. 3 

his noble cousin is right welcome.... — iii 3 

we do debase ourself, cousin — j'l* "^ 

my tender-hearted cousin! — iii. 3 

fair cousin, you debase your princely — iii. 3 

up, cousin, up; your heart is up .... — iii. 3 

cousin, I am too young to be your .. — iii. 3 

towards Ixindon: cousin, is it so? .. .. — iii. 3 

cousin, stand forth; and look upon.. — iv. 1 

cousin, seize the crown; \_Col. KiU,-(rep.Ti — iv. 1 

name it, fair cousin. Fair cousin? .. — iv. 1 

our two cousins coming into London — v. 2 

what means our cousin, that he stares — v. 3 

what is the matter with our cousin now? — v. 3 

my dangerous cousin, let your mother in — v. 3 

farcwelf; and cousin too, adieu — v. 3 

my gentle cousin Westmoreland MJennjlI'. i. 1 

a gallant prize? ha, cousin, is it not? — i. 1 

cousiu, on Wednesday next our coxmcil — i. I 

cannot blame his cousin king — i. 3 

peace, cousiu, say no more — i. 3 

good cousiu, give me audience for .. — i. 3 

hcaryou, cousin; a word — i. 3 

gentle Harry Percy, and kind cousin — i.3 

cousin, farewell ; lio further go in this — i.3 

cousin, of many men I do not bear .. — iii. 1 

teach vou, cousin, to command — iii. 1 

shall 1 tell vou, cousin? he holds.... — iii. 1 

my cousin Vernon ! welcome — i v. I 

gdixicousin, be advised; stu- not .... — iv. 3 

this to my cousin Scroop — iv. 4 

misled upon your coiisiu's part — v. 1 

so tell your cousin, and bring me word — v. I 

good cousin, let not Harry know .... — v. 2 

here comes yom* cousin — v. 2 

cousiu, I thiuit, thou art enamoured — v. 2 

come, cousin Westmoreland, our duty — v. -1 

I am the king's poor cousin, sir i'lJenry II'. ii. 2 

how doth mv cousin, your bedfellow? — iii. 2 

were called lusty Shallow, then, cousin — iii. 2 

we shall all follow, cousin — iii. 2 

ha, cousin Silence, that thou hadst .. — iii. S 

now, cousin, wherefore stands — iv. 2 

wliich, cousin, vou shall bear — iv. 3 

cousin WarwieV. Good-rnorrow, cousin — v. 2 

now sit down ; come, cousiu — v. 3 

not yet, m.v cousin; we would be licinyV.i.'i 

pleasure of our fair cousin Dauphin — i. 2 

no more cousin. Nav, the man hath — iii. 7 

m/ cousin Westmoreland? trsp.) — iv. 3 

wish more help from England, cousin? — iv. 3 

most fair and princely cousin Katharine — v. 2 

yet leave our cousin Katharine here — v. 2 

my royal cousin, teach you our — v. 2 

my fair cousin, how penectly 1 love her — v. 2 

teach your cousin to consent to winking — v. 2 

shall catch the flv, your cousiu, in .. — v. 2 
cousins both, of York and Somerset. 1 Henri/ VI. iv. 1 

cousin of York, we institute your. ... — iv. 1 
cousin of York, we here discharge . .2Hennj VI. i. 1 

cousin of Somerset, join you — i. 1 

cousin of Buckingluim, though — i. I 

well hast thou spi^ken, souaiu ZHenryVI. i. 1 

cousin of lixetcr, frowns, words — i. 1 

come, cousin, let us tell the queen .. — i. 1 

come, cousin, you shall be the messenger — i. 1 

cousin of Exeter, what thinks your.. — iv. 8 
my pretty cousins, you mistake . . UicUard III. ii. 2 

mv dear cousiu, I, as a child — ii. 2 

why, my youjig cousin? it is good .. — ii. 4 

dear cousin, my thoughts' sovereign — iii. I 

liow faresour cousin, noble lord of York? — iii. 1 

U mv fair cousin, I must not say so.. — iii. I 

my dagger, little cousin? with all.... — iii. I 

give my cousin. A greater gitt! (rep.) — iii.) 

ray noble lords and cousins, all — iii. 4 

cousin of Buckingham, a word with you — iii. 4 



[ 147 ] 



COUSIN — cousin, canst thou quake. Ric/iarc/ ///. iii. 6 
my noble cousin should susjicct me — iii. 7 

farewell, good cousin; farewell — iii. 7 

cousin, thou wast not wont to be so .. — iv. 2 
had slain my cousins. Cousins indeed — iv. 4 
dream on thy cousins smothered in.. — v. 3 
cousin Cressid: what do you (rep.). '/'ro//.^ f Vi'ss. i. 2 

well, cousin, T told you a thing — i. 2 

who, uiy cousin Cressida? — iii. I 

you have broke it, cousin — iii. 1 

iny cousin will fall out with you .... — iii. 1 

have you seen my cousin? — iii. 2 

your hand: here, my cousin's — iii. 2 

cousin, all honour to thee ! — iv. Ti 

I came to kill thee, cousin — iv. .'i 

I would desire my famous cousin .. — iv. .'i 

give me thv hand, my cousin — iv. .') 

do not chafe tliee, cousin — iv. 5 

he killed my cousin Marcus Coriolanns, v. :> 

cousin, a word ; where is your .... Til us Andron. ii. S 
you, cousins, shall go sound the ocean — iv. 3 
gootl-morrow, cousin. Is theday.fiomeo(^/w//e^ i. 1 
in sadness, cousin, I do love a woman — i. 1 
Wol. Kn^] an hour hath been my cousin — iii. 1 
Tybalt, my cousin! O my brother's — iii. 1 

rc'oi. /inf.] O prince,— O cousin — iii.! 

blood of Montague. O cousin, cousin — iii. 1 
my dear loved cousin, and my dearer — iii. 2 
kill my cousin? that villain cousin.. — iii. 2 
weeping for your cousin's death? .... — iii. .'J 
but I might venge my cousin's death — iii. h 
I see my cousin's gliost seekingont .. — iv. 3 
that murdered my love's cousin .... — v. 3 
forgive mo, cousin! all, dear Juliet .. — v. 3 
chiefest courtier, cousin, and our son. . , . Hamlet, i. 2 

how fares our cousiu Hamlet? — iii . 2 

cousin Hamlet, you know the wager? . . — y. 2 

you'U have coursers for cousins Olhdloy i. 1 

cousin, there's fallen between him and . . — iv. 1 

COUSIN-GERM AN— a cousin-gcrman to great _ 
Priam's seed Troilus ^- Crpasld-i^ iv. 5 

COUTU.AIE— il n'est pas lacoiltume. . . . Ilcnri/ V. v. 2 

Cl)VEN.VNT-coveuantsmaybekept.rnm. (i/S/i ii. 1 

my heart this covenant makes liielmrd II. ii. 3 

such strict and severe covenants — IHcnnjI'I. v. 4 

agree to any covenants — v. 5 

let there be covenants drawn Cymhelme, i. & 

your hand ^ a covenant: we will have — i. 5 

.you must, if you keep covenant — ii. 4 

[Krit.'] as bv the same covenant Handel, i. I 

COVENTRY— at Coventry, upon . . . . 7(iV/i«r<J //. i. 1 
thou goest to Coventry, there to behold — i. 2 
I must to Coventry : as much good . . — i. 2 

fet thee before to Coventry 1 Henry IV, iv. 2 
'11 not m:irch through Coventry .... — i v. 2 
ne'er had borne it out of Coventry. .2r7cn)y/F. iv. 1 
sweet lords; let's meet at Covcntry..3He»r!/r/. iv. 8 
and lords towards Coventry bend we — iv. 8 
warriors, march amain towards Coventry — i v. 8 

COVER—the cover of the salt.. Tmo Gen. o/Ver. iii. 1 

tlie hair tliat covers the wit — iii. 1 

help to cover your master, boy ! ..Merry Wires, iii. 3 
to invest and cover in princely. .il/eas..ftr .Mens. iii. I 

but they have a good cover Much Ado, i. 2 

can cunning sin cover itself withal!.. — iv. 1 
death is tlie fairest cover for her shame — iv. 1 

why seek'st thou then to cover — iv. 1 

the starry welkin cover thou anon..jl/iV/.A'.X)r. iii. 2 
a tomb must cover thy sweet eyes . . — v. 1 

fair fall tlie ftce it covers! Love's L. Lost,n. 1 

how many then should cover . . Mer. of Venice, ii. 9 
cover is tiie word. Will you cover .. — iii. 5 

bid them cover the table — iii. .5 

sirs, cover the while : the duke ..As you Like it, ii. 5 

cover thy head, cover thy head — v. 1 

is yet the cover of a fairer mind .... Khiff .John, iv. 2 
as paste and cover to our bones .... Richard II. iii. 2 
cover your heads, and mock not — — iii. 2 
why then, cover, and set them ilvwn.illmri/IV. ii. 4 
and cannot cover the monstrous . . VV:, .i/ • / lih. v. I 
a garment nobler than that it e .i\ li-. ' ■/..'.//)/<■, v. 4 
how courtesy would seem to cover siu!..i'c7'Wes, i. 1 

who cover faults, at last shame Lear, i. 1 

even so: cover their faces — v. 3 

to beautify him, only lacks a cover. Homeo ^Jul. i. 3 
the cover."of the win^sofgrashoppers — i. 4 

CO"VERED-like covered fire, consume. jI/mc/i ^Wo, iii. 1 
the meat, sir, it shall be covered, jl/er. of Venice, iii. .'i 

nay ; ])ray be covered As you LiUe it, iii . 3 

as concave as a covered goblet — iii. 4 

nay, pr'vtliee, be covered — v. 1 

in the desk that 's covered o'er.. Comedy of Er. iv. I 
covered with the night's black — 3Henry VI. iv. 2 
what good is covered with the face. Ulchard III. iy. 4 
all covered dishes! royal cheer ..TimonofAth.ui.^ 
when my face is covered, as 't is . . Julius Cmsar, y. 3 
mouth is covered with rude-growing. TilusAnd.ii. 4 

as yet tlie face of it be covered with Lear, iii. 1 

covered with an antick face .... Romeo ^-Juliet, i. f> 
you'll have your daughter covered Othello, i. 1 

COVERING— the covering sky is. . tyinter'sTale,\. 2 
Bolingbroke, covering your fearful, n/o/inrd//. iii. 2 
Roman Enitus, covering discretion . . Henry V. ii. 4 

these covering heavens fall on Cymbelitie, v. 5 

without covering, save yon field of stars. Pcn'c(es,i. 1 
some covering for this naked soul Lear, iv. I 

COVERLET-thisway the coverlet. Tamlm; of Sh. iv. 1 

COVERT— wardsofoovertbosom. ;t/ens../;ir Mcas.y. 1 
retire yourself into some covert.. Wm(er'j Tale,iv. 3 

while covert enmity, under iHenrylV. (ind.) 

and in this covert will we make SUenryVI. iii. 1 

how covert matters may be best . . Julius Cirsar, iy. I 

under covert and convenient seeming Lear. iii. 2 

stole into the covert of the wood. . Romeo J^- Juliet i. 1 

COVKKT'.ST— he was the covert'st../trWi,,r(J ///. iii. 5 

COVERTURE— woodbine coverture... Viir'i. .Wo, iii. 1 
in niajit's coverture, thy brother . .Sllenry VI. iv. 2 

COVET— if it be a sin to covet honour. HenruV. iy. 3 
in my greatness covet to be hid . . Hichnrd III. iii. 7 
he covets less than misery itself — Coriolanut, ii. 2 



. 4 



.2 



COW 



COVICTED— scarcely have coveted Mm-lielh, iv. n 

COVETING— tlian, coveting for more.l Henry VI. v. 4 
ambitions, eovctings, change of Cymheline, ii. 5 

Cf)VETOUS— she, more covetous.. Comerf!/ fi//;r. iv. 3 

I am not covetous for gold Henry V, iv. 3 

if I were covetous, ambitious [Henry VI. iii. 1 

never more covetous of wisdom. . . . Henry VI It. v, 
or covetous of praise? ay .... Troilus Sf Cresnida, ii, 

kindness subtle, covetous Timon of Athens, iy 

in no way siiy, lie is covetou.i Coriolanns. i. 

Miirnis i'.i iiin ,r,ws BO covetous ..Jul. Ciesur, iv. 

CoVi:!''; . '.tously reserve it. STi'moMoAVl.iv, 

covfri' 'I ... 

is the lii..i... . ! IISIIC93 Twelfth IVighl,V. 

why, tloit iveii c..ivetousness..../lK!/o« Like it, ii' 

con'foiiii'l tlirirslull in covetousness. Kin;? ./o/oi,i\ 

separate a.Lje iiiid eovetousness 2 Henry IV. i. 

cow-sends a curst cow short horns irep.)MachAdo,ii. 

leaped your father's cow, and got — v. 

the cow's dugs that her pretty .... At youLike it, ii. 

this calf, bred from his cow King Jo/m, i. 

that I would not for a cow Henry Vltl.y. 

like a cow in .June, hoists sail ..Antony SfCleo. iii. 

■where the bull and cow are both . Titus Andron. v. 
COWARU — ever man acoward Tempest, m. 

he is de coward ,Tack priest of .... Merry Wives, ii. 

you are de coward, dejaek-dog — iii. 

lie hath thejjift of a coward Twelfth Sight, i. 

he's a coward and a coystril — i. 

and more a coward than a hare — iii. 

a coward, a most devout coward .... — iii. 

we took him to lic a coward — v. 

faitliless cou ;iri I ! O dishonest. ..Veos./or.Vroj. iii. 
a fool, 011.1 :i r .\.,.anl, as you then .... — v. 
thatkii \'. I.) 1.. I :i I'.jol, acoward .... — v. 

1 will sui. : .11 ... Iiiiu acoward Much Ado, v. 

thou ruiia.Mu , tiiiu coward .. Mid. N. Dream, iii. 

thou coward,' art thou bragging ' — iii. 

ho, ho! ho, ho! coward, why comcst — iii. 
hide your heads like cowards .... Love'sL. Lost, v. 
how many cowards, whose hearts. . Mer.nf Ven. iii. 
many other mannish cowards ha.ve..Asyou Like, i. 
who shut their coward gates on atomies — iii. 

a great way fool, solely a coward All's Well, i. 

he s a most notable coward, an inlinite — iii. 
excels his biother for being a coward — iv. 

an I were not a very coward — iv. 

that way, tliou art a coward Winter's Tale, i. 

live acoward. in thine own esteem Maebfth,i. 

then yield tiice. coward, and live to be .. — v. 
than e'er the eo«aid hand ot France. KingJohn, ii. 

thou wretch, thou coward — iii. 

a slanderous eo«ard, and a villain ..Richard II. i. 
pale trembling coward, there I throw — i. 
lilte a traitor coward sluiced out .... — __i. 
[Co(.] awake, thou coward majesty!.. — iii. 
thou darest not, cow ard, live to see .. — iv. 

as true-bred cowards as ever IHenrylV.i. 

what, acoward, sir .lohn Paunch? .. — ii. 

but vet no coward, Hal. Well — ii- 

and Poius be not two arrant cowards — ii. 
to play the coward with thy indenture — ii. 

a plague of all cowards, I say — ii. 

a coward is worse than a cup of (rcji.) — ii. 
I call thee coward! I'll see tliee (rep.) — ii. 
tills sauguinc coward, this bed-presser — ii. 

I was a coward on instinct — ii. 

and thou a natural coward — ii. 

shaked like a coward. Why, so it . . — iii. 

generally fools and cowards iUenrylV. iv. 

in thy teeth, mott recreant coward base! — y. 
for coward do"S most spend their .... Henry V.W. 
lest a' should he thought acoward .. — iii. 
sir .John Fastolfe played the coward..! Henry VI. 
dogs! cowards! dastards! I would .. — i. 

coward of France! how much he — ii 

let him that is no coward, nor no — ii 

such cowards ought to wear this — iv 

and make the cowards stand aloof .. — iv. 
forfeiting a traitor and acoward .... — iv. 

the coward horse that bears me — iy 

murderous coward, on thy knee. ..2Hei.ry/V. iii 
fie, coward woman, and soft-hearted — iii 
proclaimed a coward tlu'ough the world — iv 
O monstrous coward ! what, to come — iv 

all the world to be cowards — iv. 

so cowards fight, when they can SHenryVI. i 

a dastard and a treacherous coward.. — ii 
if a coward heard her speak these .... — y 
it makes a man a coward Richard III. i 

fo, coward, as thou art — j 
prove a needless coward! — iii 

coward cinscieuce, how dost thou — v. 
conscience is hut a word that cowartls — v. 
the bold, niid coward, the \yise ..Trollut ^ Cress, i 

Troilus, thou coward Troilus! — v 

Troilus, thou eowaad Troilus, show.. — v, 

the devil take thee, coward! — v 

and thou, great-sized coward! — y. 

old. .young; coward, valiant . . Ti'mon (i/".,4//iei«, iv. 
sound to this coward and lascivious. . — y 

come on, you cowards: you were Coriolanus.i 

made the coward turn terror into sport — ij 
coward lips did from their colour.. JuiiujC'^csor,) 

lircenough to kindle cowards — ii 

swear priests, and cowards, and men — ii 
cowards die many times before their — i| 
cither a coward, or a flatterer — iii 

1 slew the coward, and did take it from — v 
O coward that I am, to live so long — y 

it concerns the fool, or coward Antony 4- Cleo.i 

and have instructed cowauls to run.. — ui 
ships, legions, may be a coward's — — in., 
but now thou secin'st o coward .... Cymbellne, I'li 
lilcnty, and peace, breeds cowards .. — iii 
cowards fother cowards, and bate things — iv 
but that of coward hares, hot goats .. — iv 
cowords living, to die with lengthened — v 
some, turned cowanl but by example — v 
and now, our cowards (like fragments — v 



. 1 



cow 



[ 148 ] 



CRA 



COWARD— foul-spokcn coward! . . Titus Andron. ii. 1 

bringing the murderous coward to Lear, ii. 1 

a Icnave, beggar, coward, pander — ii- 2 

none of these rogues, and cowards — u- 2 

the house witli loud and coward cries — — i}. l 
and thee: have at tliee coward .. Romeo S-Juliei,]. 1 
am I a coward? who calls me villain?. . Hamlel,ii. i 
conscience does make cowards of us all . . — lu. 1 
part wisdom, and, ever, three parts coward — ly. 4 
COWARDED— cowarded and chased .. Henry V.n. i 
COW ARDICE— cowardice, and. Two Gen. of Ver. lu. 2 
' ' — vs it cowardi — "^^ '- 



whensliekm „ - --. ,, t ,, , 

or I will protest your cowardice Much Ado, v. i 

cowardice pursues, and valour flies.. il/id. N.Dr.n. 2 
I am a risjht maid for my cowardice — ui. 2 

cold cowardice in noble bre.i.sts Richard II. i. i 

pure fear, and entire cowai-dice ....2Henryiy.ii. 4 
badge of pusillanimity and cowardice — iv. 3 
•with cowardice a man half dead? . . 1 Henry f'l. iii. 2 
cowardice liath made us by-words ..SHenry VI. i. 1 
that slanders him with cowardice. . . . — .1-4 
I hold it cowardice, to rest mistrustful — iv. "- 
our |)0lify, and call it cowardice. Troll, S,- Cress, i. 3 
soil the fiict witli cowardice ...Timonof .ithens, iii.5 
gods do this in shame of cowardice. Ju/ 
counsel, lad, smells of no cowardice. . 7 
COWARDLY— a cowardly knave. Movv IVives, m. 1 
same cowardly, giant-like, ox-beef.. (U/d.iV.Dr. iii. 1 
not a more cowardly rogue in all. Winter' sTale, iv. 2 
lellow had destroyed so cowardly.. ..IHeHry/r.i. 3 
you are a shallow cowardly hind — — ii. 3 
and the cowardly rascals, that ran ....Henry V. iv. 7 
vou are a counterfeit cowardly kuave — v. 1 

3'ollow them) cowardly fled 1 Henry Vl.\. 1 

cowardly knight! ill fortune follow.. — ui- 2 
no, he'll" say, 'twas done cowardly. . Richard III. i. 4 
relent! 'tis cowardly, and womanish — i. 4 

yet are they passing cowardly Coriolanus, i. 1 

in our stands, nor cowardly m retire — . i. B 

like beasts, and cowardly nobles — iv. 6 

I do find it cowardly and vile JuliusCcBsar, v. 1 

not basely die, norcowardly . . Antony S^Cleo. iv. 13 

you cowardly rascal, nature disclaims — Lear, u. 2 

COWARDS HIP— his cowardship. I'mjcZ/iIA Night, lu. 4 

COW-DUNG— eats cow-dung for sallets . . Lear, lu. 4 

COWED— it hath cowed my better part..J)fac6eWi,_v. 7 

and of how cowed a spirit Pericles, iv. 4 

COWEK— knight that cowers i' the hams? — iv. 3 
C(J\\'ERED— splitting rocks cowered.2Henryf'/. in. 2 
(.'.DWISH— the cowish terror of his spirit... Lear, iv. 2 
C( >WL-STAFF— tlie cowl-staff? . . Merry Wives, iii. 3 
COWSLIP— in a cowslip's bell . . Tempest, v. 1 (.song) 
the cowslips tall her pensioners he.Mid.N.'s Dr.ii. 1 
and hang a pearl in every cowslip's ear — ii. 1 

these yellow cowslip cheeks — v. 1 

the freckled cowslip, buruet Henry V. v. 2 

violets, cowslips, and the primroses. . CymbeUne,i. 6 

drops i' the bottom of a cowslip — ii- 2 

COX— one word then:Cox' my passion l.^ii'sWcH, v. 2 

CtlXCOMB— a coxcomb of frize? ..MerryWires, v. f> 

given sir Toby a bloody coxcomb. TwelfthNighi, v. 1 

ifa bloody coxcomb be a hurt — v. 1 

you set nothing by a bloody coxcomb — v. 1 

and a coxcomb, and a knave? — v. 1 

off, coxcomb! MuchAdo,iv. 2 

the prince's officer, coxcomb — iv. 2 

O most profane coxcomb ! Love's L. Los', iv. 3 

bv tills same coxcomb that we All's Well, iii. 6 

what is your crest? a coxcomb? . . Taming of Sh. ii. 1 
capon, coxcomb, idiot, patch! . . Comedy of Er. iii. 1 
and a prating coxcomb, is it meet .... Henry r. iv. 1 

■wound, and your ploody coxcomb — v. 1 

is goot for your proken coxcomb .... — v. 1 
as many coxcombs, as you threw ..Coriolanus, iv. 6 

hire him too: here's my coxcomb Lear, i. 4 

you were best take my coxcomb — i.4 

there, take my coxcomb — ;• 4 

wear my coxcomb: how now, uncle? (rep.) — i. 4 

I'd keep my coxcombs myself — .i- * 

rapped 'em o' the coxcombs with a stick.. — u. 4 

O murderous coxcomb ! what should Othello, v. 2 

COT— coy looks, with heart-sore.. Two Gen. of fer.'i. 1 

but she is nice, and coy — Ui- 1 

her spirits are as coy and wild as — Much Ailn,m. 1 

while I thy amiable cheeks do coy. M/d. N.'sDr. iy. 1 

were rough, and coy, and sullen. . . Taming of Sit. ii. 1 

COYED-it he coyed to hear Cominius.. Coriolan ns,v.\ 

COYSTRIL— coward and a coystril. r«)ri/"i Night, i. 3 

door-keeper to every coystril that Pericles, iv. 6 

COZ— I may quarter, coz? Merry Wives, i. 1 

come, coz; come, coz; we stay for you — i. 1 
a word with you, coz: marry, tliis, coz — i. 1 

conceive me, sweet coz — i. 1 

is to pleasure yon, coz — . i. ' 

she's coming; to her, coz — lu. 4 

shecallsyou, coz: I'll leave — m- 4 

and let him sit o' my coz TwelfthNighi, i. 5 

.'ood-morrow, coz Much Ado, in. 4 

help to dress me, good coz, good Meg — ni. 4 

sweet my coz, be merry As youLike it, i. 2 

heneefortli, I will, coz, and devise . . — i. 2 
were I my father, coz, would I do this? — i. 2 
shall we go, coz? Ay: fare you well.. — i. 2 

will you go, coz? Have with you — — i. 2 

r faith, coz, 'tis he — i"- ? 

O coz, coz, coz, my pretty little coz .. — iv. i 

my dearest coz, I pvay you Macbeth, _iy. 2 

coz, farewell. Comenither King John, m. 3 

■what think you, coz, of this XHenry Il'.i. 1 

and I can teach thee, coz — !;;• 1 

and, dear coz, to you the remnant . . — in- 1 

therefore be merry, coz — iv. 2 

no, 'faith, my coz, wish not Henry V. iv. .s 

our tongue is rough, coz — \.'- 

no, coz, I rather weep Romeo Sf Juliet, i. 1 

farewell, my coz. Soft, I ■will %o — }■ j 

fair mark, fair coz, is soonest hit .... — !• ' 

content the«, gentle coz, let him — .i- •'' 

COZEN-go about to cozen fortune.Mer.o/r ■• " 

T *i.;»,T.'4- 



COZEN— I would cozen the man 'ill's Wcll,iv. A 

as if the vicar meant to cozen liim . . Tam. ofSh. iii. 2 
a' means to cozen somebody in — v. 1 

COZENAGE— Mecr Cozenage! .... Merry Wives, iv. b 
this town is full of cozenage ..Comedy of Errors, i. 2 
with such cozenage; is't not perfect Hamlet, v. 2 

COZENED— cozened him of it Merry Wives, iv. 5 

tliat has cozened all the hosts — iv. rj 

not convenient you should be cozened — iv. 5 
all the world miglit be cozened (rep.) — iv. .5 
tliat you have cozened of money — — v. .0 
by gar, I am cozened; I ha' married — v. •> 

not Anne Page; by gar, I am cozened — y. 5 
like to be cozened with the semblance. A/uc'i.-ldo, ii. 2 
trusting of the cozened thoughts — .-ill's Well, iv. 4 
how I -ft'as cozened by the wa.^y .. Winter' sTaU; iv. 3 
by their uncle cozened of comfort. . Richard HI. iv. 4 
basely cozened of that true hand.. Titus .indron. v. 3 
not vanquished, but cozened and beguiled. Lear, y. 3 
hatli cozened you at hoodman-blind?..Ha?i?/e/, iii. 4 

COZENER— ■with the cozeners .... Merry Wives, iv. .'> 
sir, there are cozeners abroad .... Whiter' sTale, iv. 3 
O, the devil take such cozeners! .... XHenry I r.\. 3 

....,..,, the usurer hangs the cozener Lear, iv. G 

Caisar, ii. 2 j COZENING-anoldcozeningqueanljVerry Wives, ly. 2 

And. ii. 1 I be at enmity with cozening hope — Richard II. u. 2 

been damned for cozening the devil . . 1 Henry IF.\.2 

some cogging cozening knave Othello, iv. 2 

COZIER— out your coziers' catches. Twelfth Night, u. 3 

CRAB— bring thee where crabs grow Tempest, ii. 2 

I think Crab my dog be. . . . Two Gen. of Verona, n. 3 

he that's tied here; Crab my dog — .n- 3 

knew it was Crab — i.y- "* 

in very likeness of a roasted crab . . Mid. N. Dr. ii. 1 
like a crab, on the face of terra. . Love's L. Lost, iv. 2 

■tt'hen roasted crabs hiss in — v. 2 (song) 

see a crab. Why, here's no crab. . . Taming of Sh. ii. 1 

as like this as a crab is like an apple Lear, i. 5 

as a crab does to a crab — .i- ^ 

if, like a crab, you could go backward. . Hamlet, ii. 2 

CRABBED— than her father's CTdhhed.. Tempest, iji. 1 
something too crabbed that way .Mea.for Mea. iii. 2 
three crabbed months had soured . Winter's Tale, i. 2 

CRABTREE-graft ■«'ith crabtree 6lip.2He«ry VI. iii. 2 
fetch me a dozen crabtree staves . . Henry VIII. y. 3 
some old crabtrees here at home Coriolanus, ii . 1 

CRACK— the fire and cracks of Tempest,}. 2 

I had rather crack my sinews — m- 1 

my charms crack not — .y- 1 

my heart is ready to crack with . . Merry Wives, u. 2 
of their sweet complexion crack.. Lot)e'sL.Los(,iv. 3 

is sound, sans crack or flaw — y. 2 

when the clouds in autumn eraci:.. Taming of Sh. i. 2 
I cannot believe this crack to be . . Winter's Tale,]. 2 

he cracks his gorge, his sides — ii- 1 

overcharged ■with double cracks Macbeth, i. 2 

stretch out to the crack of doom — iy. 1 

shall make your shoulders crack King John,i i . 1 

when he was a crack, not thus — 2Henry IV. m. 2 
by the mass, you'll crack a quart .... — v. 3 
from my shoulders crack my arms .. XHenry VI.]. 5 
should crack their duty to you. . . . Henri/ VII L in. 2 
divert and crack, rend and deracinate. Trail. ■§- Cr.i. 3 
a' were as good crack a fusty nut .... — .n- 1 

cr.ack my clear voice with sobs — iv. 2 

now crack thy lungs, and split — iv. .5 

crack 



i think t no sin to cozen him . 



...Alt's Well,iv. 2 



ick the laivyer's voice, that he.. TimonofAth. ly. 3 

a crack, madam. Come, lay aside Coriolanus, i. 3 

thy continent, crack thyfrail case ! ^ji(. ^Cteo. iv. 12 

should make a greater crack — .v. 1 

voices have got the mannish crack . . Cymbeline, ly. •_' 
secm-e of thunder's crack, or lightning. Titus. ind. n. 1 

to break one, will sure crack both Pericles,]. 2 

a heart that even cracks for woe! — i"- -' 

crack the glass of her virginity — JX- *> 

blow, wind, and crack your cheeks! — Lear, iii. 2 

crack nature's moulds, all germens — ni. 2 

and the strings of life began to crack — v. 3 

so that heaven's vault should crack — y. 3 

not to crack the wind of the poor phrase. Ham(e(, i. 3 
now cracks a noble heart: good-night .. — }[. 2 

this crack of your love shall grow Othello, ii. .1 

CRACKED-so cracked and sphtted. Comedi/ <!/■ Er. v. 1 
of my heart is cracked and burned . . King John, y. 7 

is cracked, and all the precious Richard II. i. 2 

for there it is, cracked m a hundred. . — iv. 1 
bloody noses, and cracked cro\vns ..XHcnryll . ii. 3 
are cracked in pieces by malignant.iJi'c/iarrf ///. ;;. 2 
for, now he has cracked the league. Hen; i/r/JJ. u. 2 

their hours at a cracked drachm! Coriolanus, i. 5 

whom with a cracked heart I have — — . y- 3 

mine eye-strings, cracked them Cymbeline,]. 4 

cracked as easily 'gainst our rocks . . — i"- 1 

my cracked one to more care — i^- ^ 

either our brags were cracked of kitchen — v. b 
her bond of chastity quite cracked . . — y^ 5 
the bond cracked between son and father. . Lear,]. 2 

my old heart is cracked, is cracked! — ]]. X 

gold, be not cracked within the ring . . Hamlet, ii. 2 
CRACKER- what cracker is this same. K:ing^./oA)!, ii. 1 
CRACK-HEMP— 

come hither, crack-hemp. Ihope.TamingofSh.v. X 

CRACKING— cracking the stones.. Mea. /orMen.ii. 1 

lest my heart, cracking it, break. Winter's Tale, lii. 2 

and cracking the strong warrant . . Richard II. iy . 1 

cracking ten thousand curbs Coriolanus, i. 1 

with a man for cracking nuts . . Romeo Sr Juliet, iii. 1 
CRADLE— so near the cradle of fbe.. Mid. N. Dr. iii. 1 
gives the crutch the cradle's infancy. Loue'sL.L. iv. 3 
m the cradle where it lies.Mer. of Venice, iii. 2 (song) 
being ever from their cradles bred... 4s you Like it, i. 1 
his pend.ant bed, and procreant cradle ..Macbeth, i. 6 

in our country's cradle draws nichard II. i. 3 

in cradle of the rude imperious surge.2 Henr;///'. iii. 1 

was I crept out of my cradle 2HenryVI. iv. 9 

rough cradle for such little pretty.. /i/c/mrd ///. iv. 1 
from his cradle, he was a scholar ..Henry VIII. iv. 2 
though in her cradle, yet now promises — r, 4 

unveil in their dumb cradles Troilus ^ Cress, ni. 3 

spare tliy Atlienian cradle Timon of Athens, v. S 



CRADLE — your cradle promised . ...Cymbeline, iy. 4 

a son for her cradle ere slie Lear, i. 1 

if drink rock not his cradle Othello, ii. 3 

CRADLE-BABE-asthecradle-babe.2Hejw-y »'/. iii. 2 
CRADLE-CLOTHES— 

in cradle-clothes our children where. 1 Heni'y IV. i. 1 
CRADLED— wherein the acorn cradled.. Tempest, i. 2 

CRAET— loses the name of craft Merry Wives, v. tj 

will not else thy craft so quickly.. Twelfth Night, v. X 
that craft, being richer than .... Meas.for Meas. iii. 2 

craft against vice I must apply — iii. 2 

ne'er knew tlic crafts, that you All's Well, iv. 2 

had yon that craft, to reave her — y. 3 

that taught me craft to counterfeit . . Richard II, i. 4 
with the craft and jiatient underbeai-ing — i. 4 
wherein cunning, but in craft? .... 1 Henry IV. i\. 4 

he is not his craft's master iHenrylV. iii. 2 

unto an enemy of craft and vantage. . Henri/ V. iii. 
all the serpentine craft of thy .Troilus ^ Cressida,]]. 3 

I show more craft than love — iii. 2 

fish with craft for great opinion — iv. 4 

or wrath, or craft, may get him Coriolanus, i. 10 

and your crafts, you liave crafted fair! — iv. 6 
she had fitted you with her craft .... Cymbeline, y. 5 

harboru' more craft, and more Lear, ii. 2 

your modesties have not craft enough. . Hamtef, ii. 2 

not in madness, but mad in craft — iii. 4 

in one line two crafts directly meet — — iii. 4 

CRAFTED- you have crafted fair ! . . Coriolanus, iv. 6 

CRAFTIER— a craftier Tereus hast ..Titus And. ii. 5 

CRAFTILY— 

or seem so, craftily |;Cot.-crafty]..iV/cas./orMeas. ii. 4 

and that was craftily qualified too Othello, i i . 3 

CRAFTSMEN- wooing poor craftsmen.fiic/iard //.i.4 
CRAFTY-rCo;.] or seem so, crafty.. itfea. /or iVfea. ii. 4 

little Cupid's crafty arrow made Much Ado, iii. 1 

a vengeance on your crafty withered T'a;n. of Sh. ii. X 
my love was crafty love, and call it. .KingJohn, iv. X 

wherein crafty, but in villany ? I HenrylV. ii. 4 

they say, a crafty knave does 2Henry VI. i. 2 

apair of crafty knaves — .L 2 

who being accused a crafty murderer — iii. 1 

like a shag-haired crafty Kerne — iii • 1 

of those cr.afty swearing rascals . . Trail. Sr Cress, v. 4 
such a crafty devil as is his mother. . Cymbeline, ii. 1 
but, witli a crafty madness, keeps aloof.Ham(e(,iii. 1 
CRAFTY-SICK— lies crafty-sick.2Hen,ry/f. (indue.) 
CRAM-cram these words into mine ears. Tempest, ii. 1 
whose scull Jove cram with brains. TwelfthNighi, i. b 

what 'tis to cram a man Meas.forMeas. iii. 2 

cram us with praise, and make Winter'sTale, i. 2 

or may we cram, within tliis . . Henri/ I'.i. (chorus) 

crams his rich thievery up . . Troilus ^- Cressida, iv. 4 

I'll cram thee with more food! . . Romeo ^Juliet, v. 3 

CRAMMED-crammed in the basket, il/en-i/ Wives, in.5 

so crammed as he thinks Twelfth Night, ii. 3 

as would be crammed up inasheet.LoDe'si..Los(, y.2 
hath strange places crammed with. .4s you Like it, ii. 7 

to rest, crammed ■K'ith distressful Henry V. iv. 1 

heart is crammed with arrogancy .. Henri/ f///. ii. 4 
thoughts with this crammed reason. Trail. ^ Cres. u. 2 
their storehouses crammed with grain. Corialanus,i. X 

CRAMP- thou Shalt have cramps Tempest, i. 2 

I'll rack thee with old cramps — .1-2 

their sinews with aged cramps — iv. 1 

I am not Stephano, but a cramp — _v. 1 

being taken with the cramp As you Like it, iv. 1 

in coming on he has the cramp .ill's Well, iv. 3 

CRANKS— through the cranks Corlnia „«.,,). 1 

CRANKING— comes me cranking in. 1 HenrylV. iii. 1 

CRANMER— servant, Cranmer ....HenryVIII. n. 4 

but, my lord, wlien returns Cranmer — in- 2 

this same Cranmer 's a worthy fellow — hi. 2 

heretic, an arch one, Cranmer — iii. 2 

Cranmer is returned with welcome . . — iii. 2 

the archbishop's, the virtuous Cranmer — iv. 1 

when it comes, Cranmer will find .. — iv. 1 

till Cranmer, Cromwell, her two hands — v. 1 

CRANNIED— in it a crannied hole..i>/id. N. Dr. v. 1 

CRANNIES— creep in crannies. . Comedy of Err. ii, 2 

CRANNY— through that cranny. Mid. iV. Dream, ni. 1 

tliis the cranny is, right and sinister — v. 1 

GRANTS- her ■virgin crants [Jf n(.-rites] . Jfamiei, v. 1 

CR.-VRE— coast thy sluggish crare Cymbeline, iv. 2 

CRASH— and with a hideous crash takes. Hamie/, ii. 2 

CRASSUS— to Crassus, and bid.. Meas. /or Meas. iv. 5 

does of Marcus Crassus' death ..Antony fyCleo. lii. 1 

pays this for Marcus Crassus — iii- 1 

CRAVE— this must crave (and if this . . Tempest,y. X 

wortliier come to crave her Merry Wives, iy. 4 

I shall crave of you your leave. . Twelfth Night, ii. 1 
do that well, craves a kind of wit — — iii. 1 
I crave your honour's pardon . .Meas. /or Meas. ii. 2 

I sh:ill crave your forbearance — jv. 1 

I crave but four days respite — iv. 2 

if any crave redress of injustice — iv. 4 



I crave no other, nor no better (rep.) — 
" " "lingl: 



V. I 



„hat i crave death more willini_,.„ 

to crave your assistance Love's L. Lost, 

I crave the law, the penalty Mer. of Venice, iv. i 

I'll crave the day when I shall . . Tamingof Sh. ii. 1 

and craves no other tribute — y. 2 

I crave your pardon; soon Comedy of Errors, i. 2 

the Norway's king, craves composition. Mncie/A,i. 2 

but, 'crave your pardon — iv. 3 

of swift speed crave [Knf.-craves] KingJohn, ii. 1 

and craves to kiss your hand Richard II.]. 3 

for his designs crave haste 

and vantage crave my company 
do crave admittance to your .... 
when ladies crave to be eneountered.l Henri/ VI. n. 2 

for my lady craves to know — 

no other satisfaction do I crave — 

who craves a parley with the Bm-gundy?- 

and crave I may have liberty — 

and wherefore crave you combat? — 

I crave the benefit of law of arms — — 

I need not crave his courtesy — 

we'll crave a parley, to confer. . . . 
that craves a quick expedient — 



iHenrylV. ii. 3 
" !/ V- ii 



V. 3 
•IHenryVt. iii. I 



CRA 



[ 149] 



r cravoB aid .'i Hfnry VI. iv. 4 
Ill's sister ..iUtnrijVl. iii. 1 
iiul liiwt'ul .. — iii. 3 



CRAVK-thulimlimiv 
to cruvc tlif KiTiKili k 
Clime to erave tliy jiisi 

to cnive II li'iitjiie nruMiitv — in. a 

I ilieti cnivejiimlon ot'yoiir iiiiijcsty — iv. (1 

on niv knee I inive vinir lile<.-.ing..KiV'mri; ///. ii. i 

inivi" kiive to view these Indies Hennj fill. I. I 

iiiitme enives, nil iloes l)ereiulei-ed.7Voi7.^C'rM. ii. 2 
-.Ills, I criive no |ielf. . . . YVmoM tif Athens, i. 2 (grace) 

which enives to lie renienilKircd 

tli.ui emve the liire wliieli Brst CorM, 

nohler tViemls, I enne tlieir pardons 



I dc 

the \ 



i. 2 

us, ii. 3 

iii. I 

iii. 1 



iit 



— iii. 2 



iv. 1 



liu'h. 



id of till 



.■to Ik 



lit tito' tlie tim 

line, erines :i imhle cunning 

craves \viir\" w ;ilkin>r. . . . J«/'U5 C^''Jfart ii. I 

■ss' psirdoM ...4iitony ^Cleo. ii. 5 

itiou miiy be .... — ii. iJ 

he circle — iii. HI 

iiundcd Cymbetine, iv. 2 

he craves ii piiilev Tihis Aiulrimicus, V. 1 

whence he comes, and whiit he craves ..Periclt-s, i. 1 

dciith ill iieiicc is nil he'll crave — ii. 1 

1 did hut emve. Uut crave? — ;;. 1 

what he will, not what they crave — ii. 3 

who craves to conic aboard — v. 1 

] crave no more than hath your liighucss.. Lear, i. 1 

which craves the instant use — ii. 1 

niadiiin, craves a speedy answer — iv. 2 

\ our mother craves a word with you.Itom.^Jul. i. 5 
liis help to crave, and niv dear Imp . . — ii. 2 
wlKit M>rrow craves aciiuuiutauee at — iii. 3 

which craves as des|iciutc nu execution — iv. 1 
Vortinhrus craves [Col. A'/iJ. -claims] . . Haml, f. iv. 1 

1 crave tit disposition for my wife OMc//o, i. ;) 

H VVKD— that in-tant, craved anilience. llmrji I'.i. 1 

cnivcd death rather than I wouUl , . 1 Henry C/.i- 1 

by niessage craved, so is lord Talbot — ii. 3 

(.'It'.VVEX— crow too like a craven. '/'nm/ng-o/S/i. ii. 1 

he is a craven and a villain else Henry I', iv. 7 

for liis craven heart, say thus 1 Henry VI. ii. I 

to tear the garter from thy craven's leg — i\'. 1 

that cravens my weak hand Cymbetine, iii. 4 

or some craven scruple of thinking .... Hamlet, iv. 4 

C K A \' I" It— then I'll turn eraver too Pericles, ii. 1 

CK A V'I'.rU— Salisbury cravethsupi)ly.l/f()i>yr/.i. 1 
CI!. WIaVU— craving quick despatcn. toi'c's L. t. ii. 1 

cause of state, craving us jointly Macbeth, iii. 1 

in craving your opinion of my title. .'-'Heiirv''. ii. 2 

lett side, craving aid for Henry ZHenry VI. iii. 1 

CK.VWL— I can no further crawl. . Mid.X.'s Dr. iii. 2 

unliurdeued crawl toward death Lc.i;-, i. 1 

CUAWI, El)— one hath crawled into.Hc«;y (7;/. iii. 2 

CKAWLlNG-this crawling serpent ..V«;.;V./);'. ii. 3 

crawling between earth and heaven?. . Htimtet, iii. 1 

CK.VZl-:!)— yieid thy crazed title. .lUit/.A'.Orc.i.ii, i. 1 

to a notiuii crazed" say, thus did Mucbctti, iii. 1 

so iiMUiy miseries have crazed ....Rldiard III. iv. 1 

the grief luitli crazed ray wits Lear, iii. A 

CHA2Y— sickness, and for crazy age.i Henry VI. iii. 2 

CKKAKING— creaking my shoes on . . All's tVell, ii. 1 

not the creaking of shoes, nor the rustling. Lear, iii. 1 

CUKAM— do cream, and mantle ..Mer. of Venice, i. I 

nor your clieek of cream As you Like it, iii. .') 

is the queen of curds and cream. tVinter'sTale. iv. 3 

steal cream. I think to steal cream. IHciir;///'. iv. 2 

CRE.VM-FACED— cream-faced loon! ..Macbe'h,v. 3 

CREATE— and the issue, there create. it/'V.A'.iJ;-. v. 2 

I can create the rest: virtue All's IVetl.n. i 

would von create me new? . . Comedy of Errors, iii. 2 
in Scotland would create soldiers .... Macbeth, iv. 3 
we'll create young Arthur duke .... King John, ii. 2 

being create for comfort — iv. 1 

and we create, in absence of Richard II. ii. 1 

might create a perfect guess 2HenryIV. iii. 1 

witli hearts create of duty and of zeal.Heiin/r.ii. 2 
here create you earl of Shrewsbury.! Henry VI. iii. 4 

we here create thee first duke 2Henry VI. i. 1 

1 will create thee duke of Gloster ..ZHenryVI. ii. 6 
come now to create you duke of York — iv. 3 
her ashes new create another heir. . Henry VIII. y. 4 

he creates Lucius pro-consul Cynibeline, iii. 7 

I create you companions to our person — v. 5 
you create your emperor's eldest son. Tilus And. i. 2 
we create, lord Saturninus, Rome's. . — i. 2 
will create tliee empress of Rome .... — i. 2 

tecin, crctitc her child of spleen Lear,i. 4 

that 1 create tliee here my lord and master — v. 3 

lirst cicute [Cnl. Knl.-cte&teH . . Homeo ^Juliet, i. 1 

CIiE.VTED— new created tlie creatures.. Tempes/, i. 2 

are created of every creature's best — iii.! 

with our neeldscre«tcdbothone.iV/rf.;V.Drram,iii.2 
tliou wast created for men to breathe. /IW's tVell, ii. 3 
since thou, created to he awed by ....Richard II. v. 
therefore was I created with a stubborn .Henry V. v. i 

if tliou be not then created York 1 Henry VI. ii. 4 

and rise created princely duke of — iii. I 

created, for his rare success in arms. . — iv. 7 
created knight for his tiood service ..'IHcnryVl, v. 1 
whom heaven created for thy ruler . . — v. 1 

tu the end they were created 3 ffcn? i/ VI. ii. h 

created only to calumniate . . TroHus i\- Cressida, v. 2 
things created to buy and sell with.C'nri"/.i;ii/.v, iij. ■/ 

unfl thou hast createtl a mother f'l/mbeline, v. 4 

Uol. Kii/Jofnothirafirstcrcated'./loraco .^Juliei, i. 1 

CkE.VTl.NMi- liail praise for creating.. I«'s)iw/, iv. :, 

shares with great creating nature, ll'mirr's 'I'uie, iv. 3 

creating awe and fear in other men? .. llenn/V. iv. 1 

L-o to the creating a wliole tribe of fops i,m,r, i. 2 

C i(i;A'rin\-nientlieirereationniar..i/co./brA/ra.ii. 4 
al'nr tin d'lwniright way of creation — iii. 2 

luitli come SI near creation? .. .thrch.of Venire, 'iii. 2 
what great creation, and what dole... /IU'»M'V//,ii. .( 

a false creation, proceeding from Macbeth, ii. 1 

that from the iirinie creation ere . . Richard III. iv. 3 
tliis bwliless ereution ec>t:isy i^: very . . Ilnmtel, iii. 4 

in the es.sential vesture of creation Othello, ii. 1 

CREATOR— and my creator's praiscSHeoiT/f/. iv. 6 

CKE.VTt'RE— some nohle creatures ....Tempest, i. 2 

betid lo any creature ill the vesiml — i.'i 



CREATIIRE— creatures that wore mine.Tempestji. 2 
no, prccioiis crcntiirc — iii. 1 

are ci-c:ii, I <ii iirr. n ."iinrr's best — iii. 1 

all thc-i> M ■: leace — iii. 3 

miiuN ' !f II ' I 1 ii. re herel .. — v. 1 

soveivi;'!! I I ill 1 li; ri II Tico Cen.olVir. ii. 4 

siui's a jMi.iil .■iv:iluiv Mer,ylVircs,Vt. 2 

1 am not such a siclcly creature .... — iii. 4 

as foolish chrLstian creatures — iv. I 

the virtuous creature, that hath — iv. 2 

image of the creature that is Tweflh Ninhl, ii. 4 

not more twin than these two creatures — v. 1 
a creature unprepared, unmeet for.A/ra./ur/l/p'i. iv. 3 

to lie known a reasonable creature Much Ada, i. I 

the chiiugc of words with any creature — iv. I 
the next live creature that it sees. .^UiV/. A'. '»nr. ii. 2 

bring mc the fUirest creature Mer. of Venice, ii. 1 

never did I know a creature, that did — iii. 2 

hath made a fair creature As you Like if, i. 2 

he used as creatures of another place.. /IC'sWd/, i. 2 
madam, a wicked creature, as .vou .. — j. 3 
canst like this creature as a maid .. .. — ii. 3 
a right giioil creature: whcrcsoe'er she is — iii. b 
a fair civ:iture; will vou go see her?.. — iii. (i 
of his creatures not daring the reports — iv. I 
ilcieu that's dead, was a sweet creature — V. 3 
this is a loud and desperate creature — v. 3 
she was the fairest creature. TaiyiingofShreii', 2 (ind.) 

is for a precious creature Winter's Tate, i. 2 

not call a creature of thy place — ii. I 

the sweetest, dearest creature's dead — iii. 2 

famous for the creatm-es of prey — ill' 3 

to me comes a creature, sometimes her — iii. 3 
such a creature, would she begin a sect — v. I 
luajesty of the creature, in rcscmhliLtice — v. 2 

aiul let no creature enter Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

teach me, dear creature, how to ... . — iii. 2 

being a very beastly creature, lays claim — iii. 2 

no, not a creature enters in — v. 1 

not such a gracious creature born . . Kin^Jnhn, iii. 4 
creatures of note for mercy-lacking.. — iv. I 
from the commonest creature pluck. K/c/mrrf //. v. 3 

here is not a creature but myself — v.h 

then am I no two-legged creature . . 1 Henry IV. ii. 4 
liow uow my sweet creature of bombast? — ii. 4 
a noble earl, and many a creature else — v. 5 

tlie poor creature, small beer 2 Henry IV. ii. 2 

the honey bees ; creatures, that by Henry V,i. 2 

ingratcfiil, savnc^e, and inhuman creature! — ii. 2 

breeds Very valiant creatures — iii. 7 

divinest creature, bright Astraja's I HenryVI.i. 6 

God in all his creatures works! 2Henry VI. ii. 1 

unreasonable creatirres feed their. .. .'.i Ileiiry VI. ii. 2 
curse not thyself, fair creature ....Richard III. i. 2 
for the plainest harmless't creature.. — iii. 5 
gods, and meaner creatures kings.. .. — v. 2 

tliere is no creature loves me — v. 3 

my chaiilain to no creature living. . Hem-y VIII. i. 2 
heavenly blessings follow such creatiues — ii. 3 

before tlie primest creature that's — ii. 4 

a creature of the queen's, Aune Bullen — iii. 2 
she is a gallant creature, and complete — iii. 2 
she's a good creature, and, sweet lady — v. I 
that's the more capable creatnxe .Trail. ^- Cress, iii. 3 
of glib and slippery creatures... Timon r.f .thens, i. I 
tills thy creature liy night frequents — i. 1 

they were the most needless creatiues — i. 2 

call the creatures, whose naked — iv. 3 

you idle creatures, get you home ..Julius Crpsar, i. 1 
and Cassius is a wretched creature .. — i. 2 

such creatures as men doubt — ii. 1 

it is a creature that I teach to fight . . — iv. 1 
and kindly creature-i turn all tu...4nlony ^-Cteo. ii. ."i 
b.v him, this cre:iture's no such thing — iii. 3 
most sovereign creature, — His legs . . — y. 2 

is a creature such as, to seek Cymbetine, i. I 

on such creatures as we count not .... — i. 6 
two creatures, heartily. Am I one, sir? — i. 7 

O the dearest of creatures — iii. 2 (let. ) 

these are kind creatures — iv. 2 

and cook to honest creatures — iv. 2 

forbear; creatures may be alike — v..') 

only in killing creatures vile — v. .^ 

all beastly creature, the blot and..Tilus.tndron. ii. 3 
creatures want our hands and cannot — iii. 2 
while their creatures want, they may . . I'ericles, i . 4 
they gave their creatures iu abundance.. — i. 4 
liundreds call themselves your creatures — iii. 'i 
fair creature, rare as you seem to be! .... — iii. 2 

but yet she is a goodly creatiu'e — iv. I 

ill tiurn to any living creature — iv. 1 

we were never so niucli out of creatures.. — iv. 3 

is she not a fair crcatiu'c? — iv. 

proclaims you to be acreatnre of sale.... — iy. Ii 

intend to make this creature fruitful! Lear, i. 4 

those wicked creatures yet do look — ii. 4 

hurts the poor creature of earth — iii. 4 

and the creature ni:\ I'rum the cur? — iv. 6 

the fair creature died, and ht;Yc .. Romeo ^- Juliet, v. 3 
that guilty creature^, sitting at a play . . Hamlet, ii. 2 

and nick-name God's creatures — iii. I 

confederate season, else no creature .seeing — iii. 2 

we fat all creatures else, to fat us " — iv. 3 

or like a creature native and indued unto — iv. 7 
she is a most fresh and delicate crealu'e.UfAcHo, ii. 3 

goiMl wine is a gooil familial- creature — ii. 3 

this honest creature, doiihtii ^^, >t ls — iii. 3 

can call tliese delicate crc:Ltnres oiu-s .... — iii. 3 
wi-ing my hand, ei'.v, O sweet creature!... — iii. 3 
no such uascness as jealous creatures arc — iii. 4 

it is a creature that dotes on Cassio — iv. 1 

<), the world hath not a sweeter creature — iv. 1 

CREDENCE— for amplest credence ....AIl'slVell,i. 2 
lay our best love and credence, upon — iii. 3 
there is a credence in mv' heai't.. Trnilus ^ Cress, v. 2 

CREDENT— a credent bulk ....Meas.for Meas. iv. I 
'tis very credent, thou may'st .... Winter' sTale, i. 2 
if with'too credent car you list his songs. H(i»i/e/, i. 3 

CUEDIKI.E— nnv, 'tis most credible ..All's iVcIl, i. 2 

CREDIT — to credit liis own lie Tempest, i. 2 



CRE 



CREDIT— indeed almost beyond credit. '/'empe»(, il. 1 
ond what iloes else want credit 



Mcrrii Wives, iv. 2 

...TteelfthNiiiht. ii, 3 



ii. I 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 
V. 3 



'tis a goodly credit fur you 
thisismiicli credit to you. 
there i f.iuuil this ciedit . 
whose iM-cdit Willi the jiidw .... Meas. Tor Meas. ii. 4 

testi iiics llgllill^t his wiirth and credit — v. 1 

glanci' at my credit willi l!ipiiiilyta..»/.(/. N.Pr. ii. 2 

thuBwill 1 save my credit in l.ove'sL.Lott,iv. 1 

what my credit can in Venice do.Mer. of Venice, i. 1 

and there's an oath of credit — v. I 

sir, I wrestle for my credit As you Like it, i. 1 

you must hold tlie credit of your All's Well, i. I 

now sliall the.v credit a |ioor — i. 3 

and our credit, to esteetn a senseless 

upon my reputation and credit 

wdiat credit I have with the diikc... 

yet I was in that credit with tliem 

I call them forth to credit her. 7'<imi;iffo/.s7ircui,iv. I 

his name and credit shall von — iv. 2 

what! lack I credit? I hadratlier.(*'i;i(fr'»7a/ff, ii. 1 
give us better credit: we have always — ii. 3 
will bear no credit, were not the .... — v. 1 

thougii credit be asleep — v. 2 

the one ne'er got me credit . . Comedy of Errors, iii. I 
being compact of credit, that you love — iii. 2 

how it stands upon my credit — iv. 1 

of credit infinite, higlily beloved — v. I 

as I am a gentleman, I credit liim../?(V/j'7rri //. iii. 3 

I have used ray credit I Henry IV. i. 2 

for their own credit sake, make — ii. 1 

I have but a very little credit with..2f/cHr!///'. v. I 

grown to credit by tlie wars I Henry VI. iv. 1 

right for credit of the prentices 2 Henry VI. ii. 3 

and will you credit this base drudge's — iv. 2 
thereon I pawn ray credit and mine. 3/7enryr/. iii. 3 

fot credit, that Bcvis was believed.. //(r/iry *'///. i. 1 
his talking lord can lay iqmn my credit — iii. 2 
fraeted dates have smit my credit. Timon ofAlh. ii. 1 
and kept his credit with his purse.... — iii. 2 
my credit now stands on such . . Julius Ca-sar, iii. 1 
partly credit things that do presage . . — v. 1 
credit that thy lady hath of thee — Cymbetine, i. 7 
perfect goodness her assured credit!.. — i. 7 

and your goodness teach me credit Pericles, iii. 3 

our credit comes not in like — iv. 3 

make my senses credit thy relation — v. 1 

hath letters of good credit, sir — v. 3 

if on my credit you dare build so far .... Lear, iii. 1 

in these news, that gives them credit Othello, i. 3 

of country, credit, every thing — i. 3 

loves him", 'tis apt. and of great credit .... .— ii. 1 

shall undo her credit with the Moor — ii. 3 

CREDITOlf— glory of a creditor.. il/ra.«. /or ,Vra«. i. I 

send for certain of my creditors — _ i. 3 

divers of Antonio's creditors in . . Mer. of Venice, iii. I 
my creditors grow cruel, my estate — iii. 2 (let.) 
to-morrow to m.v bloody creditor .... — ui. 3 
forthwith unto his creditor . . Comedy of Errors, iv. 4 
is a soul, counts thee her creditor . . King John, iii. 3 
and you, m.v gentle creditors, lose.2H('nf.i//r. (epil.) 

his creditors most straight Timon of.Wiens, i. I 

the slaves: Creditors!— devils — iii. 4 

no true debitor and creditor but it . . Cymbetine, v. 4 
debitor and creditor, this coiuiter-caster. OMe/(o, i. 1 

CREDO- baud credo (,rep.) Love's L.Lost, iv. 3 

CREDULITY— ignorant credulity. Winter'sTate, ii. I 

CREDULOUS— poor credulous monster. rempeW, ii. 2 

and credulous to false prints .... Meas.for Meas. ii. 4 

may not be so credulous of cure All's Well, ii. I 

if lie be credulous, and trust my tale. Tnm. n/.s/i. iv. 2 

ah me, most credulous fool Cymbetine, v. S 

and, being credulous in this mad..ri7Ms Andron. v. 2 

a credulous father, and a brother noble /.mr, i. 2 

thus credulous fools are caught Othello, iv. 1 

CREED— there's my creed: as I am..HenryVIII. ii. 2 

CREEK-creeks, and narrow lands. Comedy rf Er. iv. 2 

I'll throw 't into the creek behind . . Cymbetine, iv. 2 

CREEP— to creep under his gaberdine . . 7'einppii(, ii. 2 

love will creep^ in service . . Two Gen. of Verona, iv. 2 

he may creep in here Merry Wives, iii. 3 

let me creep in here — }'!••* 

he cannot creep into a half-penny purse — iii. .') 

I'll creep up into the chimney — iv. 2 

creep into tlie kiln-hole — i v. 2 

to creep in at mine eyes Twelfth Night, i. 5 

now will he creep into sedges MuchAdo, ii. I 

sliall sweetly creep into his study .... — iy. 1 
tor fear, creep into acorn cups .. Mid. N. Dream, ii. I 

may through the centre creep — ijj- ® 

and batty wings doth creep — iii. 2 

mouse that creeps on floor — v. 1 

and creep into the jaundice Merch. of Venice, i. I 

creep into the dreaming bridegroom's — iii. 2 I 
let trie sounds of music creep into.... — ^" ' 
that creep like shadows by him . . Winter's Tale, ii. 3 

but creep in crannies Comedy of Errors, ii. i I 

and to-morrow, creeps in tliis petty .Macbeth,v. .""j I 

and creep time ne'er so slow Kin/c John, iii. .< ' 

into the Dosoni creep of that same \ Henry IV. i. 3 

and creep into it far before thy time?.3//fii>-j/<7. i. I ! 
they used to creep to holv nltur«.. 7'roi7, ^ Cress, iii. 3 I 

how some men crce|i in skiltish — iii. 3 \ 

lust and liberty creep iu the minds. Timon of.ith. iv. 1 
creeps upiice iiit) the hearts of such. . .int.^ Clro.i. 3 ] 
she creeps; her motion ami her station — iii. 3 ; 
with you; how creejis aennaintance?.Cywi(ir(iiif. i. .'> | 

in the basket creep, and break your Hamlet, iii. 4 

CREEI'ING-the creeping lowler eycWi*. A'.Dr. iii. 2 
neglect the erciping horn . ni' time. As you Like it, li. 7 

creeping like siuiil unwillingly — ii. 7 i 

of harm isereciiing toward me Winter sTale.i. 2 

the invisible and ereei>ing wiiid..Hi-nr^/'. iii. (cho. ) 
when cree|>ing mnrniur, and tlie — — iv. (cho. i 
or any creeping veiiomed thing ....Richard III. i. 2 
lie's more than a creeping thing ....Cnriolanui, v. 4 
CREPT— this music crept uy ine upon . . Tempest, i. 2 

arc you crept before us? 7'ko Uen.of Verona^ iv. 1 

which is uow crept into a lute-string. .Uiir/i.ldo, iii. 2 
ai-c yuu crept liillier to tec Ai[ioK Like it, i. i 



CRE 



[ 1-50 ] 



CRO 



CREPT— crept .into any alderman's — 1 Henry ! r. ii. 

is crept into tlie bosom of the sea . .iHenry 11. jv. 

is crept into the palace of onr king .. — iv. 

no sooner was I crept ont of my — iv. 

si nee I am crept in favour Richard III. i. 

tliere were crept (as 'twere in scorn .. — _ i. 

hath crept a hell-liound — iv. 

crept too near liis conscience (rrp.). Henry I'lII. ii. 

emulation in tlie armv crept.. TroUus ^-Cressiila, ii. 

■were slilv crept into his liunian .... Corhlaiins, ii. 

tlie dcop'of niiiht isurcpt uiion lnliiisCrrs.rr, iv. 

CR;::-:i'i:XT-!io i. !v,ci-v-."..il ..M'.!. X. /^'.v/'". V. 

my power's a crcccnt, and my, . Aniony ,' Clfo. ii. 

he was tlien of a crescent note Cymlieline, i. 

for nature, crescent, does not grow alone. Hamlet, i. 
CRESCIVE— yet crescive in his faculty. .Henry T. i. 

CRESSETS— of burninn cressets \Henn/ir. iii. 

CRESSID— Cressid lav'that nii:lit..Vc>-. of Ve 

I am Cre^sid's uncle, tliat dare leave.. ^H's»V», ii. 

lazar kite of Cressiil's kind Henry I', ii 

fair Cressid comes into my tlioujjlits. Troil. ^ Ores 

I tell thee, I am mad in Cressid's love — 

I cannot come to Cressid — 

wliat Cressid is, wliat Fandar, and what — 

good-morrow, cousin Cressid: what do — i. 

and ily witli me to Cressid! — iii. 

Troiliis shall l)e such to Cressid — iii. 

why was ray Cressid then so hara .... — iii. 

3'our leave, sweet Cressid? — iii. 

as false as Cressid — iii. 

all false women Cressids — iii. 

desired my Cressid in risht gi-eat .... — iii. 

and bring us Cressid hither — iii. 

the enfreed Antenor, the fair Cressid — iv. 

than Cressid borne from Troy — iv. 

O foolish Cressid! I might have still — iv. 

you maid! Where's my cousin Cressid? — iv. 

make Cressid's name "the very crown — iv. 

Cressid. I love thee in so strained .... — iv. 

a woful Cressid 'mongst tire — iv. 

name Cressid, and thy life shall be . . — iv. 

fair lady Cressid, so please you — iv. 

is this the lady Cressid? Even she — iv. 

amorous view on the fair Cressid .... — iv. 

Cressid come forth to liini! — v. 

was Cressid here? I cannot conjure .. — v. 

Cressid was here but now — v. 

by Cressid's rule: rather think (rep.) — v. 

tills is, and is not, Cressid ! — v. 

Cressid is mine, tied with — v. 

as ranch as I do Cressid love — v. 

O Cressid! O false Cressid! false, false — v. 

tlie fair steed to my lady Cressid — v. 

CR ES8IDA— to bring a Cressida . . TwelflhNight, iii. 

Cressida was a beggar — iii. 

sweet niece Cressicla TroUus ^ Cressida, i. 

who, my cousin Ci-essida? — iii. 

tliou hast not seen the lady Cressida — iii. 

with my disposer, Cressida — iii. 

why should you say, Cressida? — iii. 

thy master? at my cousin Cressida's? — iii. 

O "Cressida, how often have I — iii. 

O Cressida! but tliat the busy day .. — iv. 

to Diomedes' hand the lady Cressida — iv. 

was this Cressida in Troy? — iv. 

no, tills is Diomed's Cressida 

CRESSY— Cressy battle fatally was Uenry V. ii. 

CRES'T — coat, and several crest .... Merry Wives, v. 

'tis not the devil's crest Meas. for Meas. ii. 

and crowned with one crest .... Mid. N. Dream, iii. 

and beauty's crest becomes the . . Love^sL.Lost, iv. 

a crest ere thou wast born . . As you Like it, iv. 2 (sonj 

what is yom' crest? a coxcomb? . . TamingofSh. ii, 

thy blade on vulnerable crests Macbeth, v. 

no plume in any English crest I^ing John, ii. 

thecrest, or crest unto the crest — iv. 

bristle his angry crest, and snarleth. . — iv, 

the burning crest of the old, feeble ., — v. 

and bristle up the crest of youth \HenryIV. i. 

budding honours on thy crest I'll .... — v. 

shown upon our crests to-day — v. 

when from the Dauphin's crest thy.. 1 Henry VI. iv. 

France must vail her lofty crest — v. 

and make him fall his crest .. TroUus €f Cressida, i. 

on whose bright crest Fame with — iv. 

his crest up again, and the man .... Coriolanvs, iv. 

they fall their crests, and, like lulius Ctesar, iv. 

even thou hast struck upon my crest.. Tilua And. i. 
'CRESTED— arm crested the world. /ln.'ony<S-C/eo. v. 
CREST-FALLEN— 

as crest-falleu as a dried pear Merry Wives, iv. 

shall T seem crest-fallen m my father's. /£fWf. //. i. 

.and let it make thee crest-fallen 'iHenryTI. iv. 

CRlCSTLF.SS-spring crestless yeomen. 1 Henry r/,ii 
Cl!i:T.\.X-kissed tlfo Cretan strand. rmmnq- or S/i. i, 
CUiiTE— when in a wood of Crete.. jV/J. A'. 'si)r. iv, 

in Crete, in Sparta, nor in Thessaly. . — iv, 

O hound of Crete, think'st thou Henry V. ii, 

thv desperate sire of Crete 1 Henry r/, iv, 

pe'evish fool was that of Crete ZHcnryVI. v. 

CR KVICE— the crevice of a wall . . Tilus Andran. v 
Cl'.E \V— bring thee to our crews. TwoGcn. ofl'er. 

a ciew of patches, rude mechanicals. M/d.Af.Dr. 

there are a crew of wretched souls Macbeth, iv, 

t'> support so dissolute a crew Richard 11. v. 

all the rest of that consorted crew .... — v. 

art thou of Cornish crew? Henry V. iv. 

and all the crew of them 2Henry VI. ii. 

to London all the crew are "one ....SHenryVI. ii. 

Rice ap Thomas, with a valiant crew. Rich. III. iv. 

a crew of i)irates came and rescued rae.. Pericles, v. 

about to speak A\-hen the cock crew Hamlet, i. 

tlic morning cock crew loud — i. 

CRIB — liest thon in smoky cribs . . . .2HenryIV. iii. 

anil his cril) shall stand at tlie king's . . Hamlet, v. 
CRIBBED— cabined, cribbed, confined... VnW,<M, iii. 
CRICKET— Cricket, to Windsor. . . . Mernj irirn. y. 

thou nil, thou winter cricket thou..7'«;n. nf Sh. iv. 
yon crickets shall not hear it .... Winter s 'I'nie, ii. 
the owl scream, and the crickets cry . . Macbeth, ii. 



V. 2 



CRICKET— as_ merry as crickets \HenryIV. ii. 4 

the crickets sing, and man's Cymbetine, i i. 2 

and crickets sing at th' oven^s.. Pericles, iii. (Gower) 
her whip of cricket's bone Romeo ^Juliet, i. 4 

CRIED—liow I cried out then Tempest, i. 2 

cried, hell is empty i. 2 

I shaked you, sir, "and cried — ii. 1 

I cried to dream again — iii. 2 

women have so cried and 8hrieked..il/err!/>f'iiies, i. 1 

cried game, said I well? — ii. 3 

and cried mnm, and she cried budget — v. 5 
ct'xjl i'.'.m'.' and honour on him . . Twelflh Night, v. 1 

my motiier cried; hut then there .'>fuch Ado, ii. 1 

and his thiunb, cried via! ., Love's L.Lost, v. 2 

the third he capered, and cried — v. 2 

and never cried, have patience . . As you Lilie it, iii. 2 
and cried, in fainting, upon Rosalind — iv. 3 
he cried ujion it at the merest. Taming ofSh. 1 (ind.) 

how I cried; how the horses — iv. 1 

how he cried to me for help IVinter'sTalc, iii, 3 

and one cried, murder ! Macbeth, ii. 2 

one cried, God bless us! and, amen.... — ii. 2 

still it cried, sleep no more! — ii. 2 

who was it, that thus cried? — ii. 2 

and cried aloud, O that these hands. KingJohn, iii. 4 
while all tongues cried, God save . . Ilicliard II. v. 2 

no man cried, God save him ! — v. 2 

that ever cried stand, to a true man.. iHenry/r. i. 2 

I cried humpli, and well, go to — iii. 1 

general voice, cried hate upon him. .'IHenrylV. iv. 1 

so a' cried out, God, God, God! Henry V. ii. 3 

they say, he cried out of sack — ii. 3 

a'Talbot! cried out amain IHenry/'/. i. 1 

his tail between his legs, and cried . .'illenry VI. v. 1 

thrice cried, com'age, Tiither! ZHenry Vl.i.i 

Richard cried, charge! (rep.) — i. 4 

he cried, like to a dismal clangoiu' .. — ii. 3 

the night-crow cried, aboding — v. 6 

and the women cried, O, .Jesus bless us ^ v. H 

and cried all hail '. when as he — v. 7 

who cried [iiTni. -spake] aloud Rictiard III. i. 4 

and some ten voices cried, God save. . — iii. 7 

and cried, on! victory! I promise — v. 3 

as he cried, thus let be Henry VIII. i. 1 

is cried up, for our best act — i. 2 

the king cried, Ira I at this — iii. 2 

Irit that woman, who cried out, clubs! — v. 3 

for you all cried, go, go TroUus fy Cressida, ii. 2 

clapped your liands, and cried — ii. 2 

he used me kindly; he cried to me .. Coriolanvs, i. 9 

Csesar cried, help me, Gassius Julius Ccssar, i. 2 

alas ! it cried, give me some drink — i. 2 

cried, alas, good soul! and forgave . . — i. 2 

in her sleep cried out, help, ho! — ii. 2 

when that the poor have cried, Cffisar — iii. 2 
he cried almost to Toar\x\g.. Antony 6f Cleopatra., iii. 2 
of late, when I cried, ho! like boys — iii. 11 

cried he? and begged he pardon? .. — iii. II 

a German one, cried, oh! Cymbeline, ii. ^ 

cried to those that tied — v. 3 

but cried, good seamen, to the sailors. . Pericles, iv. 1 
cried her through the market? (rep.) .. — iv. 3 

and cried, down, wantons, down Lear, ii. 4 

cried, sisters! sisters! shame of ladies! .. — iv. 3 
and it cried bitterly: yea, quotli../,'"m("i A-Jiiliel, i. 3 
and who still hath cried, from the first. . Hamlet, i. 2 
in such matters, cried in the top of mine — ii. 2 

that he cried out, 'twould be a sight — iv. 7 

and then cried, cursed fate! that gave.. OWieito, iii. 3 
who is't that cried? Who is't that cried? — v. 1 

CRIEDST-thatthousocriedstout?.,/M(n«sCa>.?or, iv. 3 
thou criedst, indeed? and didst 0(/ie(to,iii. 3 

CRIER— crier Hobgoblin, make Merry Wives, v. 5 

hear the crier. What the devil art . . King Jolm, ii. 1 
I had as Uef the town crier spoke Hamlet, iii. 2 

CRIES— she cries, budget; and by . . Merry Wives, v. 2 
cries, ah, ha! to the devil.. TwelfthNiglU, iv. 2 (song) 
mercy of the law cries out most..Mea,\'../br Meas. v. 1 
and tailor cries, and falls into . . Mid.N. Dream, ii. 1 

he murder cries, and Irelp from — iii. 2 

OJove! the other cries Loj)e'sL.Lo,!(, iv. 3 

why, who cries out on pride As you Like it, ii. 7 

as your gesture cries it out — v. 2 

our own love waking cries to see All's Well, v. 3 

become a loss, cries, O thy mother. Winter's Tale, v. 2 

the lapwing cries away Comedy of Errors, iv. 2 

he cries for you, and vows — v. 1 

outfacing me, cries out — v. 1 

witch ! the rump-fed ronyon cries Macbeth, i. 3 

that wliich cries, thus thou must do — _i. 6 

harper cries: 'tis time; 'till time — iv. 1 

and damned be him that first cries hold — v. 7 
a widow cries ; be husband to me . . King John, iii. 1 

and defence, cries out upon — t. 2 

like sacriflcing Abel's, cries Richard II. i. 1 

for wisdom cries out in the streets. ... I Henry IV. i. 2 

cries out upon abuses, seems to — iv. 3 

even now cries out on us. . : 2Henry /F. iii. 1 

the widows' tears, the orphans' cries . . Henry V. ii. 4 

upon his face ; and cries aloud — ,iv.6 

cries out for noble York 1 Henry VI. i v. 4 

even now he cries aloud for him.... 2Hcnr!/FJ. iii. 2 

and dead men's cries do fill — y. 2 

and every drop cries vengeance 2Henry VI. i. 4 

that cries, retire, if Warwick — ii. 1 

filled it with cursing cries Richard III. i. 2 

sucli hideous cries, that, with — i. 4 

thy plaints, and drown thy cries? — ii. 2 

cr:es— excellent! 'tis Agamemnon .TroU.tlr Cress, i. 3 
yet pood Achilles still cries, excellent! — i. 3 
sir Valoiu dies; cries, O! enough.... — i. 3 

with her loudest O yes cries, tins is he — iv. o 
how Hecuba cries out! how poor .... — v. 3 

cries, of itself, no more Timon of Alliens, v. .'i 

was timed with dying cries Coriolanus, ii. 2 

which great nature cries, deny not . . — v. 3 

he cries out, no more Antony fyCleopatra, ii. 7 

cries, fool, Lepidus! and threats .... — iii. .5 
laughs from's free lungs, cries, O! . . . . Cymbeline, i. 7 
such fearful and confused cries .. Titus Andir'n. ii. 3 



CRIES— so cries a pig, prepared .. Titus Andron. iv. 2 
to hear what pitiful cries they made . . Pericles, ii. 1 
the house witli loud and coward cries .... Lear, ii. 4 

Hop-dance cries in Tom's belly for — iii. 6 

Romeo he cries aloud, hold friends! Borneo ^-Jul. iii. 1 
then on Romeo cries, and then down — iii. 3 

thy form cries out, thou art — iii. 3 

my fate cries out, and makes each petty. Ham(e(, i. 4 
■whips out his rapier, erics, a rat! a rat!.. — iv. 1 

cries cuckold, to my father — iv. .5 

this quarry cries on havock! — v. 2 

tile ati'aij cries liuste, and speed must Othello, i. 3 

whose noise is this, that cries on murder? — v. I 
CRIiME — as you from crimes would . . Tempest, (epil.) 
such like petty crimes as these. Two Gen. of Ver. iv. 1 
know the nature of their crimes.. Meas. /br Meas. ii. 3 
how may likeness, made in crimes .. — iii. 2 
grows guilty of detested crimes . . Love'sL.Lost, iv. 1 
and our crimes would despair, if fhey.All'sWell, iv. 3 
impute it not a crime, to me.Winter sTale,\v. (clio.) 
is mingled with the crime of lust. Comedy of Err. u. 2 

division of each several crime Macf>eth, iv. 3 

and these grievous crimes Ricliurd II. i v. I 

■v;dien capital crimes, chewed Henry V. ii. 2 

wipes the crime of it out of us — iv. 1 

of thy vile outrageous crimes 1 Henry VI. iii . 1 

but mightier crimes are laid 2 Henry VI. iii. 1 

[ A'n/.] of these supposed crimes . . ..Riclmrd 111. i. 2 
weigh but the crime with this.T™(mo/,/l(/iens, iii. S 

if by this crime he owes the law — iii..") 

crimes, like lands, are not inherited.. — v. 5 
we commit no crime to use . . Pericles, iv. 4 (Go^w^er) 

flashes into one gross crime or other Lear, i. 3 

hast within thee undivulged crimes .... — iii. 2 
our nether crimes so speedily can venge! — iv. 2 

till the foul crimes, done in my days Hamlet, i. .0 

in the prenominate crimes, the youth .— ii. 1 

with all Ills crimes broad blown, as flash — iii. 3 

if .you bethink yourself of any crime . . Othello, v. 2 

CRIMEFUL— socrimeful and so capital. Ham/e/, iv. 7 

CRIMELESS— true, and crimeless ..2HenryVI. ii. 4 

CRUMINAL— being criminal ..Mid. N.'s Dream,-v. 1 

more criminal in thee, than it .. Winter's Tale, iii. 2 

even this, so criminal, and in ewch. Coriolanvs, iii. 3 

CRIMSON— lap of the crimson rose.. Mid. N. Dr. ii. 2 

painted with the crimson spots King Jolm, iy. 2 

such crunson tempest should Rictiard II. iii . 3 

in drops of crimson blood Henry V. iv. 4 

yet rosed over with the Wrgin crimson — v. 2 
be stained with crimson blood ....'iHenry VI. iii. I 

with murder's crimson badge — iii. 2 

like the crimson drops i' tlie bottom. C7^m(<eJme, ii. 2 
a crimson river of warm blood . . Titus Andron. ii. 6 
wretched stump, these crimson lines — v. 2 

yet is crimson in thy lips Rnmeo^- Juliet, v. 3 

CRIMSONED— and crimsoned m..Jul'usCr!-sar. iii. 1 

CRINGE— you see him cringe ..Antony ^-Cleo. in. U 

CRIPPIiE— counsel the cripple . . Mer. of Venice, i. 2 

chide the cripple tardy-gaited .Henry V. iv. (chorus) 

restore this cripple to his legs again? .iHenry VI. ii. 1 

some tardy cripple bore Richard 111. ii. I 

cold sciatica, cripple our senators. '/'l»lI)no/^l^/^. iv. 1 

CRISP — leave your crisp channels Tempest, iv. 1 

hid his crisp head \ Henry IV. i. 3 

below crisp heaven whereon . . Timon of .ithens, iv. 3 

CRISPED— those crisped snaky. . 21/er. of Venice, iii. 2 

CRISPIAN— called the feast of Crisi.ian. Hcnrty V. iv. 3 

rouse him at the name of Crisiiian .. — iv. 3 

and Crispin Crispiau shall lie er go by — iv. 3 

CRISPIANUS-day of Crispin Crisiiiaiius — i^•. 7 

CRISPIN — wounds I had on Crispin's day — iv. 3 

and Crispin Crispian shall ne'er go by — iv. 3 

fought with us upon St. Crispin's day — iv. 3 

on the day of Crispin Crispianus — ia-. 7 

CRITIC— a critic; nay, aniglit-watch.I.oj'e'sL.l.iii. 1 

and critic Timon laugh at idle toys ! — iv. 3 

advantage to stubborn critics . . Troilns i5- Cress, v. 2 

CRITICAL— keen, and critical ..Mid.N. Dream., v. 1 

for I am nothing, if not critical Othello, ii, 1 

CROAK — that croaks the fatal entrance. il/ac(ie;/i, i. 

I would croak like a raven TroUus <?■ Cress, v. 2 

croak not, black angel; I have no iear, iii. li 

CROAKING— the croaking raven doth..Ham(e,', iii. 2 

CROCODILE-the mournful crocodile.2Hen?y Vl.in. 1 

of your sun: so your crocodile .. Antony^- Cleo. ii. 7 

■what manner o' thing is your crocodile? — ii. 7 

eat a crocodile? I'll do 't Hamlet, v. 1 

drop she falls would prove a crocodile.. Oihelln, iv. 1 

CROMER — sir James Cromer, and ..illenry VI. iv. 7 

CROMWELL-CroiuwellofWinglield.l Henry ;'/.iv. 7 

Cromwell, gave it you the king? ..HenryVllI. iii. 2 

■why, how now, Cromwell? — iii. 2 

60 truly happy, m.y good Cromwell.. — iii. 2 
'tis a burden, Cromwell, 'tis a liurUen — iii. 2 

O Cromwell, the king has gone — iii. 2 

go, get thee from me, Cromwell — !!!•'-' 

good Cromwell, neglect him not .... — iii. 2 
witli what a sorrow Cromwell leaves — iii. 2 
Cromwell, I did not think to shed .. — iii. 2 
and thus far hear me, Cromwell .... — !!'■ - 
Cromwell, I charge thee, fling away — iii. 2 
O Cromwell, thou fall'st a blessed .. — jll- - 
O Cromwell, Cromwell, had I but .. — iii. 2 
Thomas Cromwell; a man in much — iv. 1 

Cranmer, Cromwell, her two hands. . — v. I 

as for Cromwell, beside that — v. 1 

CRONE— I say ; give 't to thy crone. Winter's Tale, ii. 3 

CROOK— crook the pregnant hinges Hamlet, iii. 2 

CROOK-BACK— valiant crook-back..3Henry VI. i. 4 

ay, crook-back; here I stand — ii. 2 

this scolding crook-back rather — v. ;i 

CROOKED— if crooked fortune.. Ttt'oGen.o/Ker. iv. 1 
he is deformed, crooked, old. . Comedy of Errors, ]v. 2 
foolish, crooked, swart, prodigious.. ffing-./iAn, iii. 1 

unkindness be like crooked age Richard 11. ii. 1 

bypaths, and indh-ect crooked ways.2Henrjrjr. iv. 4 

a crooked figure may attest Henry V. i. (chorus) 

to imbare their crooked titles — i..'.' 

as crooked in thy manners 2Henry VI. v. ' 

let hell m.ake crooked my mind ZHenry VI. v. 6 



(JROOKKD— envy and cniokcd malice.ffcn. I'lll. y. 2 

I make a crooked ttice at it Coriolanns^ ii. 1 

ot'KT ot'tlicin inay h:ivo crocked noses. . Cy/;i6. iii. 1 

and let onr enN>ked snit-ikes etimb — V. 5 

CUOOKKD-rATKD— 

neniokeil-iuited old euckoldj" ram./4' uouLikc iV, iii. 3 
CKOOK-KNKKU- 

irook-knecd, nnd dcw-lappc<l ..Mid. AT*. Dr. iv. 1 

CHOI'— niglit ta|icr», crop their wttNcn — iii. I 

tliink it n most plenteous crop ..Asyou Like il, iii. a 

eivea me leave to in tlic crop .Ul's U'l'll. i. 3 

to crop at once a too long witliered. . llaliarJ II. ii. 1 

on thv crest I'll crop, to make i Henry 1 1', v. A 

and their crop l)c fteneral leprosy; 7'imoM nJAIh. iv. I 

nnd tile rich crop of sea and land Ci/mbeliue., i. 7 

111 >r crop tlie ears ot" them — ii. 1 

but ^'irlds a crop as if it had — iv. '2 

CK(il'-i;Ali-acr.M>-Lur, isitnot? .. Heml/IV.n.^ 
CUOrriCD— lest vm he c.o;.ped ....Kkhnnl H. v. 2 

cropped arc the H.nvcr-.k-hKes \llenryri. i. 1 

ro.^cs arc ci'oppcd from the tree — ii. -1 

a plant have you untimely croppedi.SJ/Piiri/ff. v. ii 
that cropped the golden prime .... liichmd III. i. 2 

m ust or now be cropped Troitus <S- Cress, i . 3 

lie plouL'hed her, and she cropped-.^ln/ojiyiSMfo. ii. a 

lest niv^ifc be cropped to keep l\-ricles^ i. 1 

CKOSUV-PI.ACE— [K/i'.-house] nnd presently 

repair to Crosbj'-placc Kichaid III. i. 2 

you nave done, repair to Crosby-place — i. 3 

at Crosbv-place, there shall you find us — iii. I 

CKU.'^S— ril quickly cross by. Two Gen. o/lnona, ii. 6 

I rather choose to cross my friend .. — iii. 1 

more to cross that love — v. 2 

he would never else cross me thus .Merry Hires, v. 5 
temptation where prayers cross.. iVeas. /or Meas. ii. 2 

to cross this in the smallest — iv. 2 

if I can cross liiin any way Much Ado, i . 3 

I can cross it. Any bar, any cross .. — ii. 2 
how cnn'st thou cross this marriage? — ii. 2 
OerossI toohigh to be enthrallea ....Wit/. ;V.ni. i, 1 

be ause it is a customary cross — i. I 

why should Titnnia cross her Oberon? — ii. 2 
we cannot cross the cause why . . Love's L. Los!, iv. 11 

of my intent is, to cross theirs — \'. 2 

never dare misfortune cross \\&r .. Mer. of Venice, ii. 1 

lest the devil cross my prayer — iii. 1 

yet I should bear no cross As you Like it, ii . 4 

you and you no cross shall part — v. 4 

when did she cross thee with.. Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 

pleasure to be cross in talk — ii. 1 

ne will bless that cross with other ..Co;n.o/£n'. ii 1 

I cross me for a sinner — ii. 2 

the ensign of the Cliristian cross Richard 11. iv. 1 

here delivered me to my sour cross .. — iv. 1 

under whose blessed cross we are 1 Henry II'. i. 1 

advantage, on the bitter cross — i. I 

»o honour cross it from the north .. ., — i. 3 

liegeman upon the cross of a Welsii hook — ii. J 
cousin Percy! how j^ou cross my father! — iii. 1 

when you do cross his humour — iii. 1 

to cross the seas, and to be crowned. 1 Hem ;/F/. iii. I 

whiles they each other cross — iv. 3 

to come to cross the seas to England — v. 5 
waft me safely cross the Channel . .'IHenry VI. i v. 1 

to Britany I'll cross the sea ZHenry VI. ii. u 

to cross me from the golden — iii. 2 

shall cross the seas, and bid false .... — iii. 3 
with mildness my misfortune's cross — iv. 4 
embarked to cross to Burgundy .... Richard 111. i. 4 
my lord of York will still be cross . , — iii. 1 

go cross the seas, and live with — iv. 1 

what cross devil made me put Henry Vlll. iii. 2 

who dare cross them? liearing — iii. 2 

[An'.] admits no qiialif\ing cross. Troi'/.tS- Cress, iv. 4 
ere they lacked power to cross ^ou.. Coriotanus, iii. 2 
and when the cross blue lightning. .y«//«sCrt'sar, i. 3 
cross me in this exigent? I do not cross — v. 1 
give him way,crofs liim in nothing ..Anl.^Cleo. i. 3 

whom best I love, I cross Cymbeline, v. 4 

be cross with him i and I'Ugo.... ri'iM.ln((;on. ii. 3 

(which who shall crosj?) Pericles, iii. (Gower) 

who can cross it, unless you play — iv. 4 

it is not good to cross him — v. 1 

nimldc stroke of quick, cross lightning?.. /,s(jr, iv. 7 
kutiw'st, is cros« and full of sin. .Romeo ^Juliet, iv. 3 
to cross my obsequies, and true love's — v. 3 
I'll cross it, though it blast me Hamlet, i. 1 

CRI IS.>i-BOW-master of the cross-bows.Hcnry;'. iv. 8 
the noise of thy cross-bow willscare.3H<nri//'/. iii. 1 

CKOSSKD-crossed the Hellespont. '/"uoGen.o/rer. i. 1 
a man I am, crossed with adversity — iv. 1 

that you are so crossed Merry Wives, iv. s 

have been ever crossed, it stands. .W/i/. A'. Dream, i. 1 
I Love not to be crostcd Love's L. Lost, i. 2 



with your arms crossed on your thin 

but liodst thou not crossed me . . Tamingof 



Sh. 



iii. 1 
V. 1 



had then not crossed the c.ves IVinier'sTalc, i. 2 

we have crossed to execute the charge — v. 1 
their hopes prodigiously be crossed.. AVn^ John, iii. 1 

that suddenly liatli crossed us? 1 Henry VI. i. 4 

bed lie crossed tlien, an' he conld..7'i«iono/.JM. i. 2 
hc('rii-sed hiiMselfby't: and I cannot — iii. 3 
bcin.' cr<i-i I ill conference by soinc../u(i«»CfPiur, i. 2 
'scain^^d 1 killing, when I crossed you so? — iv. 3 

I cros/ied the sc;us on purpose Cymbeline, i. 7 

till he have crosa-d the >^'veru — iii.;, 

this fool's speed be crossed with slowness— iii. .0 
after your will, have crossed the sea — iv. 2 

CKOSSjES— crosses love not him Lope'i L. Lost, i. i 

doth .'tray about by holy crosses.. iWtr. of Venice, v. 1 

nothing lives, but crosses, cure Richard II. ii. 2 

arc too impatient to bear crosjies 'illcnry IV. i. 2 

what crosses to ensue, would shut.... — iii. 1 
but onr crosses oil the way have . . Wic/inr J III. iii. 1 

yet, that after all my crosses /Vr«,7f/, ii. 1 

to mourn thy crosses, with thy daughter's — v. 2 
and these same crosses sjioil me Lear, v. 3 

CKOSSE.ST— thus thou crosscst inc?..U/cnr«/;'. v. 3 

CKOS.S-GAKTEKED- 
to see thee ever cross-gortcrcd . . TirelfihS. ii. S (let.) 



CROSS-G ARTKRED- 

I praise my leu bcingcross-gartcred. Twelfth Sight, ii. 5 

I cross-gartered e\cn with the swiftness — ii. 5 

cross-gartered, a fushiun she detests.. — ii. 6 

and cross-gartered? — iii. 1 

sec thee cross-gurtinil. Cro.ss-gartcred? — iii. 4 

come smiling', nnil ciii.ss-gartcred to you — v. 1 

' CK<i.ss-(;.\.!n'i:nK\(;— 

in Ihc lilniid, this cross-nartcring .... — iii. 4 

CIiU!j.SING-oncros.,inglhe plain. .A/t-r.i/r.n. iii. I 

to Jo, you arc still crossing it ..Taming of Sh. iv. 3 

I do not bear these crossings \ Henry IV. iii. 1 

crossing the sea from England 1 Henry VI. iv. 1 

is no crossing him in his liumour. . Timon ofAfh, i. 2 

by crossing tlieir hiLihwill Romeo K Juliet, iv. ij 

CROSSLY— and cnisslv to thv good ..IticLnl II. ii. 4 
CROSSNE.'^S— accustomed croL-<nes3 . . .Iturn Ado, ii. 3 
CR()SS-K()\V— from the cross-row. .. Wc/mii/ III. i. 1 
CliO.'^SWAY—crosswaysand floods. ..3/it/. N. Dr.Vu.'i 
CHOST— ni.\' fortune be not crost. . Mer.of Venice, ii. 5 
cverninre crust, and crost (rep.) .. Taming of Sh. iv. 5 
CRO'l't 1 1 1 i _ li;, 1 oinc crotcliuts...i;c;ri/ ;(•/•,•«■, ii. 1 
thcihi' . 'i I.I . I :i,t,-^in h\u\..Mrris.lhr M,-ns. iii. 2 

whv II" ,< iDtchcts tliiit he..V»r/i..|!;o,ii. 3 

I will i:iii V 111. >i. tchuts l!inneo.<i-JuliH, iv. .', 

CROirCI I— to crmicli in litter of King Jnlm, v. 2 

and fire, crouch for cniploymeut. . Henry V. i. (eho.) 

must I stand and crouch under .. Julius Ccpsar, iv. 3 

CROUCHING— crouching narrow.. Timon ofAih. v. 5 

CROW — first begins to crow? Tempest, ii. 1 

to crow like a cock Tiro Gen. of Verona, ii. 1 

I take these wise men that crow so. TwelflhNigltt, i. 5 
rather hear my dog bark at a crow . . Much Ado, i. I 

and crows are fatted with Mid. N. Dream, ii. i- 

meet me ere the first cock crow — ii. 2 

turns to a crow, when thou — iii. 2 

the crow doth sing as sweetly. . Merch. of Venice, v. 1 
my lungs began to crow like ....As you Like i/, ii. 7 

e'en a crow of the same nest All's ll'cU, iv. 3 

you crow too like a craven. . . . Taming of Shrew^ ii. I 
easting forth to crows tliy baby. . IVinler'sTule, iii. 2 
Cyprus, black as e'er was crow.... — iv. 3 (song) 
borrow me a crow. A crow .Comedy of Errors, iii. 1 

a crow help us in, sirrah (rep.) — iii. 1 

fetch me an iron crow — iii. 1 

and the crow makes wing to Macbeth, iii. 2 

at the crying of yoiir nation's ciovf.,KingJoUn, v. 2 

he'll yield the crow a pudding Henry V. ii. 1 

the country cocks do crow — iv.(cho.) 

the knavish crows, fly o'er them all.. — iv. 2 
thy trmik for crows to feed upon..2Henry VI. iv. 10 

a prey for carrion kites and crows — v. 2 

crows and daws, crows and daws! . Trail. ^ Cress, i. 2 

hath roused the ribald crows — iv. 2 

and bring in the crows to peck Coriolanus,i\i. I 

i' the city of kites and crows (rep.) .. — iv. 5 
ravens, crows, and kites, fly o er . . Julius Ctesiir, v. 1 

have made him as little as a crow Cymbeline, i. 4 

and you crow, cock, with your comb on — ii. I 
our crows shall fare the better for you — iii. I 

above perceive me like a crow ^ iii. .i 

what crows have pecked them here.. — v. 3 

might the crow vie feathers Pericles, iv. (Gow.) 

the crows and choughs, that wmg Lear, iv. 6 

make thee think thy swan a crow ..Horn, t; Jul. i. 2 
a snowy dove troopmg with crows . , — i. 5 

get me an iron crow, and bring it — v. 2 

CfiO WD— crowd to his presence. ..Afeas. /or Afeos. ii. 4 

in common sense, crowd us 2 Henry 1 V. iv. 2 

among the crowd 1' the abbey .... Henry Vlll. iv. 1 

will crowd a feeble man almost.... /«<('«sC(esor, ii. 4 

CROWDED— so crowded humom-s.. Troi';. .5- Ccess. i. 2 

CROWDING— for crowding among .illenrylV. iii. 2 

crowding in their heavy burdens Henry V. i. 2 

CROWED— second cock hath erowca.7Iom.*J»;. iv. 4 

CROW-FLOWER— of crow-flowi IS ll.uuM, iv. 7 

CROWING— vet he will be crowiiii,'...2H../o;//;'.i. 2 

it faded on the crowing of the code Humlel, i. 1 

CROW-KEEPER— like a crow-keeper. . . . I ear, iv. G 

the ladies like a crow-keeper Rojneo ^Juliet, i. 4 

CROWN — Ills coronet to his crown Tcmpesf, i. 2 

sees a crown dropping uixm thy ' 
and crown what I profess with 



CROWN— enkindle you unto the crown .Macbeth, i. i ■ 

why chance may crown me — i. a 

from the crown to the toe i. 5 

head they ]ilaccd a fruitless crown .... — iii. 1 

mortal inunlers on their crowns — iii. 4 

thy crown does sear mine eyeballs .... — iv. I 

to crown my thoughts with ai;ts — iv. I 

the maiden virtue of the crown King John, ii. 1 

which owe the crown that thou — ii. 1 

doth not the crown of England prove — ii. 1 

now imsured assurance to the crown — ii. 2 

find liable to our crown and dignity — ii. 2 

great birth, nor deserve a crown .... — iii. I 

should (lcli\cr up your crown — iv. 2 

I shall 3'icl(l lip niv crown — iv. 2 

my crown I should give oil? — v. 1 

this eas^V match played for a crown?.. — v. 2 
add an immortal title to yoiu: cruwnl. Richard 1 1, i. I 

flatterers sit within thy crown — ii. 1 

from broking pawn the hlemi.shcd crown — ii. 1 

steel against our golden crown — iii. 2 

unwieldy arms against thy crown 

within tlie hollow crown, that nuinds 
threat t)ie glory of my precious crow n 
crown he looks for live in iicace (r /j.) 

himself had borne the crown 

offer of a hundred thousand crowns . . — iv. I 

and if you crown him, let me jiroiihcey — iv. I 

and crown to Henrv Bolingbroke Ircp.) — iv. I 



- iv. 1 

dost crown my bosl<y acres — iv. 1 

with your sedged crowns, and ever — iv. I 

from toe to crown he'll fill — iv. I 

on this couple drop a blessed crown .... — v. 1 

and crown thee for a finder Tuelflh Night, iii. 4 

one day shall crown the alliance on't — v. 1 

a French crown more Measure for Measure, i. 2 

not the king's crown, nor the deimted — ii. 2 

for, from the crown of his head Much Ado, iii. 2 

some of your French crowns have wo. Mid.N. Dr. i. 2 
crowns him with flowers, and makes — ii. 1 

chin, and icv crown, an odorous — ii. 2 

of a huudretl thousand crowns . . Love's L. Lost, ii. I 

crowns; and not demands (/•<■/).) — ii. 1 

it is a fairer name than French crown — iii. 1 
monarch better than his crown. ..Ver. of Venice, iv. 1 

but a poor thousand crowns As youLike it, i. 1 

and yet give no thousand crowns neither — i. 1 
I have five hundred crowns, the thrifty — ii. 3 

wedding is great Juno's crown — v. 4 (song) 

his crown bequeathing to his banished — v. 4 
your French crown for your taffeta . . All's Well, ii. 2 
I'll add three thousand crowns to what — iii. 7 

still the fine's the crown — iv. 4 

crowns in my purse I have .... Taming nf Shrew, i. 2 
in possession, twenty thousand crowns — ii. 1 
coffers I have stuffed my crowns .... — ii. 1 
twenty crowns. Twenty crownsi .... — v. 2 
their losses twenty thousand crowns — v. 2 

hath cost ine a hundred crowns since — v. 2 
plot against my lilc, my crown .. Winter's Tale, ii. 1 
the crow n and comfort of my life ... . — iii. 2 

crowns what you are doing — iv. 3 

the crown will fliid an lieir — v. 1 

beheld one joy crown another — v. 2 

against my crown, my oath . . Comedy of Errors, i. 1 



— 111. 2 



— 111. 1 



— i.3 

.3 



ii.4 



this golden crown like a deep well 
my crown, I am; but still ray griefs. . 
cares you give me with your crown .. 

the crown, yet still with me (rep.) 

own hands I give away my crown . . 

must ^vin a new world's crown 

'twixt my crown and me 

stuff' your purses full of crowns MIenrylV. i. 

Edmund Mortimer heir to the crown? 
that ftt the crown upon the head .... 
bloody noses, and cracked crowns. . . . 

and this cushion mv crown 

rich crown, for a pit^iful bald crown ! . . 

on your e^'elids crown the god of sleep — iii. I 

that did help me to the crown — iii. 2 

crown's worth ofgoodinterpretation.2Henryif'. ii.2 
give crowns like pin.i: have we not .. — ii.4 
uneasy lies the head that wears a crown — iii. 1 
ten shillings in French cro\nis for yuu — iii. 2 
set me the crown HI on rav pillow litre — iv. 4 
why doth the crown lie there ui.on .. — iv. 4 
from thee, is this imperial crown .... — iv. 4 

where is the crown? who took it — iv. 4 

wherefore did he take away the crown? — iv. 4 

there isyourcrown: and he (re;).) — iy. 4 

I spake unto the crown, as having sense — iv. 4 

crooked ways, I met this crown — iv. 4 

how I came by tlie crown, O God forgive! - 



.. Henry V. i. I 



ii. 2 



— 11. 4 

— ii. •) 

— ii. 4 



— IV. 1 I 



— IV. 4 



— in. I 



to the crown and seat of France 

to the crown of France {rep.) ... 

wearing the crown of France — i. 2 

reunited to the crown of France — i.2 

shall strike his father's crown into . . — i. 2 

with crowns imperial, crowns — ii. (cho.) 

which he fills with treacherous crowns — ii. (cho.) 
for a few light crowns, lightl.y conspired " " 

the crown, and all wide-stretched.. .. 
of times, imto the crown of France . . 
then resign your crown and kingdom 

for if you hide the crown even in 

of the Lord, deliver up tlie crown .... 

twenty French crowns to one 

to cut Frencli crowns; and, to-morrow 

the mace, the crowni imperial 

in compassiiig the crown ! I Richard's 

and crowns for convoy put into 

unless thou give me crowns (rep.) . . 
hundred crowns. Tell him {rep.) .... 
fill tliis glove with crowns; and give 
give him the crowns; and, captain .. 

his crown shall be the ransom II 

to crown lumself king, and suppress 
I will divide my crown with her .... 
what a scandal is it to our crown .... 
lord bishop set the crown upon his head — 
they ma.v upbraid me with my crown — 

his cap co-etiual with the crown — v 

and set a precious crown upon — v 

become true liegeman to his crown .. — v 
crown of England; thou, nor thy (re;i.) — v 
crown her queen of England . .iHenry VI. i. 1 (ar; 
heir-apparent to the English crown. . — i 

claim the crown, for that's — i. 

humours fit not for a crown — i. 

I'll make him yield the crown — i. 

was rightful heir to the crown {rep.) — i. 

and .set the triple crown upon his head — i. 

rightful heir unto the English crown — i. 

beat on a crown, the treasure of thy.. — ii. 

I'll shave your crown for tills — ii. 

infallible, to England's crow n — ii. 

got the house of Lancaster the crown — ii. 
(from whose line I claim the crown) — ii. 

read, laid claim unto the crown — ii. 

being heir unto the crown, married .. — ii. 
claim the crown from .7ohn of (iaunt — ii 
honour of his birthright to the crown — ii. 
a thousand crowns, or else lay down — iv. 
to pay two thousand crowns, and iK'ar — iv. 
thrust from the crown, by shameful.. — iv. 
for I am rightful heir unto the crowu — iv. 
went to span-counter for French crowns — iv. 
vows to crowu himself in Westniiusler — iv. 

the king, his crown, and dignity Iv. 

a thousand crowns for his reward iv. 

and get a thousand crowns of the king — iv. 

to pluck the crown from feeble v. 

head of thine doth ii»_>t iH'come a crown — v. 
treason 'gaiii.-it the king and CKiwn .. — v. 

'tisfor acr.pwn thou figiit'st _ v. 

claim the English crown SHenryVJ. i. 



CROWN"— to ttspire unto the crown ..ZHenryyi. i. 1 
to the crown. Exeter thou art (rep.) — i. 1 

show our title to the crown? — j. 1 

liiist thou, tri\itor, to the crown? — i. 1 

tear the crown from the nsin'iter's — i. 1 

by conquest got the crown — i 1 

resij^ned the crown to Henry the Jr^ourth — i. 1 

to resiu-n his crown perforce — i. 1 

'twere prejiulieial to his crown? (/-ep.) — i. 1 

Hein-y of Luncaster, resign tliy crown — i. 1 

confirm tlie crown to me, and to mine — i. 1 

the crown to thee, and to tliine heirs — i. 1 

and liis licirs unto tlie crown — i. 1 

will cost my crown; and, like — i. 1 

the ci'owu of England, father — i. a 

how sweet a thing it is to wear a crown — i. 2 
andcried, acrown.or else aj;lorious — i. 1 
wear a crown ; a crown for "i ork .... — i. 4 

the crown ; and with the crown — i. l 

to be encompa-sed witliyourcro«Ti.. — ii. 2 

York did ICN'el at thy crown — ii, 2 

draw it as apparent to the crown — ii. 2 

though he do wear the crown — ii. 2 

wilt thou yield the crown? — ii. 2 

unless thou yield the crown — ii. 2 

of straw were worth a thousand crowns — ii. 2 

sedition on his crown at home — ii. 2 

some store of crowns; and I, that — ii. ,'j 

where is tliA' crown? My crown is in — iii. 1 
crown is called content'; a crown it is — iii. I 

your crown content, and you — iii. 1 

so do I wish the crown, being so far off — iii. 2 
to accomplish twenty golden crowns! — iii. 2 

to dream upon the crown — iii. 2 

a glorious crown. And yet (rep.) .. .— iii. 2 

to catch the English crown — iii. 2 

I do this, and cannot get a crown .... — iii. 2 

title to the crowir be weak — iii. :i 

impale him witli the regal crown? .. — iii. 3 
tlie chief that raised him to the crown — iii. a 
now shall wear the English crown .. — iv. 3 

true heir to the English crown — iv. J 

to set tlie crown once more on — iv. 4 

pray that I may repossess the crown . . — iv. 5 

my head still wear the crown — iv. (i 

an oUa'c branch, and laiu"el crown . . — iv. 6 
by nature framed to wear a crown . . — iv. 6 

if Edward repossess the crown — iv. 6 

state for Henry's regal crown — iv. 7 

now forget our title to the crown — i\'. 7 

by what sale means the crown may . . — iv. 7 
fearless minds climb soonest unto crowns — iv. 7 
miglit'st repossess the crown in peace — v. 7 
on Edward's ))arty for the crown . . likhnnl III. i. 'i 
wlien tliou didst crown his warlike . . — i. :) 

lost his life to get the crown . . .-. — i i . 1 

dost thou mean the crown? — iii. 2 

this crown of mine cut from (i-ep.) .. — iii. 2 
would make his son heir to the crown — iii. :) 

my path were even to the crown — iii. 7 

looks proudly on the crown — iv. 3 

that forehead with a golden crown . . — iv. 4 

the prince that owed that cro\iTi — i v. 4 

my george, my garter, and my crown — iv. 4 

thy crown, usurped, disgraced his — iv. 1 

for England, here to clann the crown? — iv. 4 

I, that helped thee to the crown — v. 3 

for high feats done to the crown Henry VI] 1. i. 1 

his title to the crown, upon our fail? — i. 2 
there 'longed to the crown no more . . — ii. 3 

did crown liis word upon you — iii. 2 

Edward Confessor's crown, the rod . . — iv. i 
no day without a deed to crow^l it . . — v 4 
prerogative of age,cro\vns, sceptres. Trop'J. aCres. i. 3 

whom opinion crowns the sinew — 1.3 

opinion cro^vns with an imperial voice — i . 3 

till merit crown it — iii. 2 

Troilus shall crown up the verse ... . — iii. 2 

Cressid's name the very crown of — iv. 2 

with cunning gild tlieir copper crowns — iv. 4 

the end crowns all; and that old — iv. 5 

mine's three thousand crowns. r/moao/'/M/icns, iii. 4 

live thousand crowns, my lord — iii. 4 

now the gods crown thee! Coriolmnn, ii. 1 

why, there was a crown otferedhim.yM(i«.srf7"M(/, i. 2 
was the crown otFered him tlirice?.... — i. 2 

who otli;red him the crown? — i. 2 

the crown: yet, 'twas not a crown — i. 2 

because Ca-sar refused the crown .... — i. 2 

was glad he refused the crown — i. 2 

and he shall wear his crown, by sea. . — i. 3 
crown him? Th;it; and then, I grant — ii. 1 
this day, a crown to mighty CaBsar .. — ii. 2 
I thrice i)resented hini a kingly crown — iii. 2 

he would not talce tlie crown — iii. 2 

to lay ni3' crown at his feet -tnioiii/ »,■ fit", iii. II 

turpitude thou dost so crow-n with gold! — iv. (i 

the crown o' the earth doth melt — iv. 13 

in his livery walked crowns, and — v. 2 

bring our crown and all — v. 2 

give me my robe ; put on my crown — v. 2 

yoiu' crown's awry; I'll mend it ... . — v. 2 

my supreme crown of grief! Cijmbeline, i. 7 

by the consequence o' the crown ... . — ii. 3 
his Ijrows within a golden crown .... — iii. I 
have the placing of the British cro%vn — iii. 5 
son into the adoption of the crown . . — v. .O 
crown him, and say, long live our.. TilusAndrnn. i. 2 
crown you king o^this day's happiness. i'er/c/cA-, ii. 3 
did vail their crowns to his supremacy . . — ii. 3 

like diamonds sit about his cro\vn — ii. 4 

would set on the crown of Tyre .... — iii. (Gowcr) 
their doom, will take the crown.... — iii. (Go^wr) 

to scatter his crowns in the sun — iv. 3 

to equal any single crown o' the — iv. 4 

two crowns. What two crowns shall Lear, i. 4 

two crowns of the egg. When thou (rep.) — i. 4 

little wit in thy bald crown — i. 4 

upon tlie crown o' the cliff — iv. 6 

thy father's life, now wears his crown . . Hmnlei, i. 5 



[_152_] 

CROAVN"— of life, of crown, of queen Hamlet, \. 5 

three tliousand crowns in annual fee ... . — ii. 2 

my crown, mine own ambition — iii. 3 

our crown, our life, and all that we — iv. .0 

in Denmark's crown have worn — v. 2 

breeches cost him but a crown . . . Othello., ii. 3 (song) 

love, thy crown, and hearted throne — iii. 3 
CROWNED— shall be crowned -nith .. Merry W. iii. 5 

you were crowned tlie nonpareil. . Twelfth Aight, i. 5 
lie sits cro'vvnied in his master's spite. . — . v. I 
and crowned with one crest . . Mid. K.'s Dream, iii. 2 
love is crowned with tlie . . .is you Like il, v. 3 (sons) 
were I crowned the most imperial. H'inier'sTale, iv^3 
vouchsafed, with your crowned brother — v. 3 
seem to have thee crowned withal .... Macbeth, i. 5 

we invite to see us crowned at Scone — v. 7 

once again crowned, and looked King John, iv. 2 

you were crowned before, and that high — iv. 2 
anointed, crowned, planted many. . Uichard II. iv. 1 
in the presence of the crowned kmg.l Henry If. iii. 2 

that thou art crowned iHenry IV. iv. 4 

Harry the fifth is crowned — iv. 4 

crowned with faith, and constant Henry V. ii. 2 

up in the air cro^\Tied mth the — ii. 4 

in infant bands crowned king — v. 2 (cho.) 

Charles is crowned king in Klieims. . 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

the Dauphin crowned king! — i. 1 

and to be crowned in France — iii. 1 

forsooth, the king of Scots is croivned — iv. 1 
and be crowned king Henry's faithful — v. 6 
in his infancy been crowned in Paris. 2Henri/r/. i. 1 
■where kings and queens are crowned — i. 2 

crowned by the name of Henry the fourth — ii. 2 

1 am not your king till I be_ crowned — ii. 2 
a queen, and crowned with infamy! — iii. 2 
when I was crowned, I was but nim.ZHenryVI. i. 1 
great Piantagenet is crowned so soon . . — i. 4 

who crowned the gracious duke — ii. 1 

to be crowned England's royal king — ii. 6 
if you be a king crowned with content — iii. 1 
let him be crowned: in him your. . Richard III. ii. 2 

to be crowned our king — ii. 2 

was crowned in Paris out at nine. . .. — ii. 3 
may it please you to be crowned?.... — iii. 7 
to be crowned Richard's royal queen — iv. 1 

a very caitiff crowned with care — iv. 4 

turned crowned kings to merchants. Troil. i^- Cr. ii. 2 
these wants of mine are crowned. . Timon ofAth. ii. 2 
incertain pomp, is crowned before . . — iv. 3 
for aye be crowned with plagues .... — v. 1 
he would be crowned: how that ..JullusCeesar, ii. 1 
better parts shall now be crowned in — iii. 2 
wlie'r he have not crowned deadCassius! — v. 3 
this grief is crowned with consolation. /4»!(.<S-Cteo. i. 2 

like a fury crowned with snakes — ii. 5 

with thy grapes our hairs be crowned — ii. 7 (song) 

for the crowned truth to dwell in Pericles, v. 1 

and crowned with joy at last — v.3(Gow.) 

crowned with rank fumiter, and furrow. . Lear, iv. 4 
where honour may be crowned. fiomeo <^ .Juliet, iii. 2 

CROWNER-the crowner hath set on her. Ham/e^, v. 1 

CROWNER'S-QUEST— 
ay, marry, is't; crowner's-quest law — v. 1 

CR'OWN^T-theirerownetsregal.rroi?. (5Cres.(prol.) 
whose bosom was my crownet. . Antony <$• Cleo. iv. 10 
in his livery walked crowns, and crownets — v. 2 

CROWN-IMPERIAL- 
oxlips, and the crown-imperial. . Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

CROWJSriNG-crowning of the king./fic/iard ///. iii. 4 

CRTTDY— dull, and crudy vapoui'S ..iHenrylV. iv. 3 

CRUEL— fell and cruel hounds Twelfth Night, i. 1 

I am slain by a fair cruel maid — ii. 4 (song) 

still 60 cruel? — v. 1 

tear him out of that cruel eye — v. 1 

were not you then as cruel aa . . Meas.for Meas. ii. 4 

whose cruel striking kills — iii. 2 

died this morning of a cruel fever. ... — iv. 3 
this is that face, fliou cruel Augelo . . — v. 1 
and most cruel death of Pyramus . . Mid. N, Dr. i. 2 

sat smilin" at Ills cruel prey — ii. 3 

and conned with cruel pain, to do you — v. 1 
my creditors grow cruel . . Mer. of Venice, iii. 2 (let.) 
and curb this cruel devil of his will . . — i v. 1 
you have seen cruel proof of this . . As youLike it, i. 2 

tis a boisterous and a cruel style — iv. 3 

what a cruel father's he ! Taming of Slirew, i. 1 

but this most cruel usage of your. JVinier'sTale, ii. 3 

a death as cruel for thee — iv. 3 

too cruel, anywhere: dear Duff Macbeth, ii. 3 

not confessing their cruel parricide ... . — iii. 1 

but cruel are the times — iv. 2 

producing forth the cruel ministers. ... — v. 7 
this most cruel act, do but despair. . King John, iv. 3 

I do see the cruel pangs of death — v. 4 

thou cniel, ingrateful, savage Henry r. ii. 2 

hathj by cruel fate, and giddy — iii. 6 

wasting ruin of the cruel foe! 1 Henry VI. iii. 3 

beliold thy timeless cruel death — y. 4 

such a cruel threatening look ZHenry VI. i. 3 

reap at thy too cruel hand! — i. 4 

Clifford, that cruel cliild-killer — ii. 2 

but is't not cruel, that she should.. Henry VIII. ii. 1 

out of the gripes of cruel men — v. 2 

thou hast a cruel nature, and a bloody — v. 2 
and instruments, of cruel war. Troilus ^- Cress, (prql.) 
that find such cruel battle here within — i. 1 

make cruel way through ranks — iv. 6 

civil laws are cruel; then ^yhat. Timon of Athens, iv.S 

to a cruel war I sent him Coriolanus, i. 3 

more cruel to your good report — i. 9 

you cruel men of Rome, knew yon.JuliusCcesarji. 1 
we must appear bloody and cruel ... . — iii. 1 
how the people take the cruel issue . . — iii. 1 

Lepidus was grown too cruel Antony %-Cleo. iii. 6 

a father cruel, and a step-dame false. Cymbeline, i. 7 

could not be so cruel to me — iii. 2 (letter) 

cruel to the world, concluded most cruel — v. 5 

O cruel, irreligious piety ! Titus Andronicus, i. 2 

the cruel father, and his traitorous sons — i. 2 
till cruel Cleon, with his wicked vrite.. Pericles, v. 1 



CRUEL — look! he wears cruel gartersl..., Lear, ii. 4 
because I would not see thy cruel nails,, — iii. 7 

all crnels else subscribed — iii. 7 

Ocruell Dye gods! one side — iii. 7 

I will be cruel [Coi. Kn/. -civil] .. Romeo ^Juliet, u i 
and cruel death hath catched it from — iv. .') 
by cruel cruel thee quite overtlirowu! — iv. .'> 

let nie be cruel, not unnatural Hamlet, iii. 2 

I must be cruel, only to be kind — iii. 1 

I must weep, but they are cruel tears . . Othello, v. 2 

I, that am cruel, and yet merciful — v. 2 

she loved thee, cruel Moor: so come .... — v. 2 
CRUEL-HEARTED— 

did not this cruel-hearted cur. . Tivo Gen. of Ver. ii. 3 

CRUELLER — crueller in suffering . . Coriolanus, v. 2 

CRUELLEST— the cruellest she alive. . TwelflhN. i. S 

CRUELLY— most cruelly didst thou. . . . Tempest, v. 1 

whom fortune hath cruelly scratched. ^K's/feW, v. 2 

because I love thee cruelly Henry V.y. 2 

none but tyrants use it cruelly Timon of Ath. iii. ^ 

CRUELTY— farewell, fair cruelty !. 7'u-e//tt Night,]. 5 
get thee to yon same sovereign cruelty — ii. 4 
in his visage no great presage of cruelty — }]]•'- 
the lieart with your stern cruelty . . Mid. N.Dr. iii. 2 
the state of hellish cruelty? ..Merch. of Venice, iii. 4 

thy strange apparent cruelty — iv. 1 

excuse the current of thy cruelty .... — iv. 1 

too m ucli of Phoebe's cruelty As you Like it, i v. 3 

against this cruelty, fight on Winter's Tale, ii. 3 

top-fnll of direst cruelty ! Macbeth^ i. 5 

his duteous land audacious cruelty..! Henry IV. iv. 3 

born an household cruelty 2 Henry IV. iv. 1 

for when lenity and cruelty play for. . Henry V. iii. 

thy cruelty in execution 'ZHenry Vl.i.'i 

show what cruelty you can — iv. 1 

in cruelty will I seek out my fame . . — v. 2 
'tis a cruelty, to load a falling man. Henry VIII. y. 2 
the cruelty and envy of the people . . Coriolanus, iv. 5 
to lay on me a cruelty, by taking.. Antony A- Cleo. v. 2 

if there be any cunning cruelty Othello, v. 2 

CRUM-rub your chain with crums. TwelflhNight, ii. 3 

he that keeps nor crust nor crum Lear, i. 4 

CRUIMBLE-my bowels crumble up to dust. ^o/m, v. 7 
CRUPPER— crupper of velure .... Taming ofSh. iii. 2 
how I lost my crupper; with many . . — iv. 1 
the saddler for ray mistress' crupper. Co?n. of Er. i. 2 
CRUSH— to crush this a little .... Twelfth Night, ii. ,■) 
crush this herb into Lyander's eye.. Mid. N.Dr. iii. 2 
quail, crush, conclude, and quell ! . . . . — v. 1 
let nature crush the sides o' the. . Winter' sTale, iv. 3 
to crush our old limbs in ungentle ..\ Henry 1 1', v. 1 

crowd us, and crush us, to this 2HenryIV. iv. 2 

that they may crush down with .... Richard III. v. 3 
our main opinion crush in taint . . Troil. Sf Cress, i. 3 
I thought to crush him in an equal.. Coriolanus, i. 10 

when he hath power to crush? — ii. 3 

crush him together, rather than Cymbeline, i. 1 

come and crush a cup of wine.. ..Romeo '^Juliet, i. 2 

CRUSHED— be crushed with a plot? . . All's Well, iv. 3 

[Knt.'j that is but a crushed necessity . . Henry V. i. 2 

have their heads crushed like rotten — iii. 7 

his valour is crushed into folly. . Troilus Sr Cress, i. 2 

CRUSHEST—crushest the snake!. .ioiie'sl. Los/, v. 1 

CRUSHING— then crushing penury.. fii'c/iard II. v. 5 

CRUST— because I love crusts.. Two Gen. of Ver. iii. 1 

that he could gnaw a crust at two. .Richard III. ii. 4 

infinite malady crust you quite o'er. Tim. of Ath. iii. 6 

he that keeps nor crust nor crum Lear, i. 4 

with vile and loathsome crust Hamlet, i. 5 

CRUSTY-thou crusty batch of nature. Troil.^Cres. v. 1 

CRUTCH— the crutch the cradle's . . Lore's L. L. iv. 3 

hence therefore, thou nice crutch . . . .2HenryIKi. 1 

king Henry throws away his crutch. 2 HeHrt/F/. iii. 1 

and leave you to the crutch ..ZHenry VI. iii. 2 

as give a crutch to the dead Henry VIII. i. 1 

he IS thy crutch; now if thou lose.. rro<7. .5 Crfss. v. 3 
pluck the lined crutch from . . Timonof Alliens, \\. 1 
I'll lean upon one crutch, and fight. . Coriolanus, i. 1 
turned my leaping time into a crutch. Cymbeline, ix. 2 
a crutch, a crutchi why call jon.ltomeo 4- Juliet, \. 1 
CRUTCHES— time goes on crutches ..Much .Ida. u. I 

that went on crutches ere he Winter's Tale, i. 1 

desire to live on crutches till he had oue — i. ! 

plucked two crutches from my feeble. Richard III. ii.2 

CRUZADOES— purse full of cruzadoes.. Otte«o, iii. 4 

CJRY— the cry did knock against my Tempest, i. 2 

which thou heard'st cry — i. 2 

will cry it o'er again — i. 2 

to cry to the sea that roared to us _ — i. 2 

cry, cock-a-doodle-doo — i. 2 (song) 

every cubit seems to cry out __ — ii. 1 

would cry to a sailor, go hang — ii. 2 (song) 

and breathe twice, and cry so, so — iv. I 

I couch when owls do cry — v. 1 (song) 

will make me cry baa TwoGen. of Verona, i. 1 

why dost thou cry alas? — iv. 4 

tliiiiking on it makes me cry, alas! . . — iv. 1 

O, cry you mercy, sir — y . 4 

I have a great dispositions to cvv.. Merry Wives, iii. 1 

all my neighbours shall cry aim — iii. 2 

I cry you mercy: give your — iii. 5 

if I cry out thus upon no trail — iv. 2 

I come to her in white, and cry, mum — v. 2 
babbling gossip of the air cry out.. Twelfth Night, i. 5 

Sowter will cry upon't, for all — ii. 5 

and make liini cry, O — ii. 5 

I cry bail; here's a gentlevaan.. Mens.. for Meas. iii. 2 
I cry you mercy sir; and well could — iv. 1 

O, 1 cry you mercy, friend; go you . . Much Ado, i. 2 

the hearers may cry, amen ! — ii.l 

sit in a corner, and cry, heigh-ho! .. — ii.l 

I cry you mercy, uncle — ii.l 

if you hear a child cry in the night . . — iii. 3 
earthly thing cry shame upon her? . . — iv. 1 
cry, sorrow, wag! and hem, when he — v. 1 
my griefs cry louder than advertisement — v. 1 
though he cry, cuckoo, never so? ..Mid. N.Dr. iii. 1 
I cry .your worship's mercy, heartily — iii. 1 

seemed all one mutual cry — iv. 1 

a cry more tuneable was never — iv. 1 



CRY 



fllY— vou nmyery: well done ....Love'i L.Lott,v.\ 

Iho butchvr Iilmu-s you cry — .y- 2 

t.iery, aixicl JKV; ROiKlioy Merrh. tif I eiiiee, lu. 2 

if I coiilil crv I'lini, nnil httvc l\im../l»!/oii Likeil.i.'i 
and til iTV like a woman: but £ must — ij. I 

crv, h.ilhil ti> tliv touk'uc — i'i- - 

i'nr all inarkit-i: iTV thi.' man mercy — in. A 

tlmt laiiu' uiav I'ly'v"" '"'"1 Ul'sH'rII, ii. 1 

il.> vmnTV, 1) lonl, sir, lit y.mr — ii. 2 

llie'e\i.\-irtioii dill crv mit uvaiust.. nhUrr'tTiiU; i. 2 
both voiir^olt'aiiil me iMV. lust, anil so — i. 2 

ni'arcVt ot' kin erv, fk' uium my mavel — in. 2 
when I have sai.l.crv. wu,-! the nneeu — )ii. 2 
O, the most piteous (TV ot'the poor .. — m. 3 
biiv. la.ls, or else your lasses cry .. — iv. 3 (son^') 

beiiniet, when we he;iritcry Comedy o/ Err. ii. 1 

you^lleiv for this, minion — lii- I 

L'ood master, crv, the devil — iv. 4 

1 am faint, mv ijaslas crv for help Macbeth, i. 2 

ofthednrk, tocry, li..l(l,"hold! — j. S 

scream, anil the crickets cry — ii. 2 

I heard a voice cry, sleep no — u. 2 

new orphans crv; new sorrows — iv. 3 

tlie cry is still, they come — v. .5 

it is tlie cry of women — v. 5 

wherefore was that cry? — v..') 

to crv aim to these ill-tuned repetitious ..John, u. I 

crv, navock, kings! back to the — ii. 2 

having breath to cry — iii- I 

being Deaten, will cry out — v. 2 

in hoiie, I cry, amen Uicluinl II. i. 3 

cry, woe, destruction, ruin, loss — iii. 2 

child's children, cry against von — — iv. I 
dill they not sometime cry, all hail! . . — iv. 1 

Buppliant makes this eager cry? — v. 3 

I cry vou mercy. Those same \HennjlV, i. 3 

crv, courage, to the Held! — ii. 3 

they erv, horn! and bid you — ii. 4 

rather he a kitten, and cry mew — iii. 1 

lonl of Wcstmoielniid, Icry youmerey — iv. 2 
upon thiscliarge, cry, God tor Harry.. //fiirvf. iii. I 
let him crv, praise and glory on his — iv. (cho.) 
and cry all— we died at such a place — i v. 1 

to cry amen to tlmt, thus we appear — v. 2 

I erv. a ro|)C I a rope I now beat 1 lien ry VI. i . 3 

no longer on saint Dennis will we cry — i. a 

tlie cry of Talbot serves — ii. 1 

1 cry yon mercy, 't is but quid — v. 3 

will' cry for vengeance — v. 4 

I cry you mercy, madam, was it you?.2Heni!/ FI. i. 3 

the time when scriteli-owls cry — i. 4 

and therefore do they cry, though .. — iii. 2 

and cry out for thee to close up — iii. 2 

pinched a few, and made them cry..3Wfn»i/ VI. ii. 1 

and imce again cry — charge — ii. 1 

good father; cry, St. George! — ii. 2 

cry, content, to that which grieves . . — iii. 2 
the drum; cry, courage! and away.. — v. 3 

I cry thee mercy then; for I did Richard III. i. 3 

and cry, O Clarence, my unhappy son! — ii. 2 

my mother, I do cry you mercy — ii. 2 

you live, that shall cry woe — iii. 3 

crv, Ood save Richard, England's . . — iii. 7 
I cry you mercy ; there is my piu-se. . — iv. 4 

cry mercy, lords, and watchful — v. 3 

quite cry down tliis Ipswich Henry VIII. i. 1 

my guiltless blood must cry against — ii. 1 

ehall cry for blessings on him — ii. 1 

and let nim cry ha, louder! — iii. 2 

now, if vou can blush, and cry giiilty — iii. 2 

methints, I could cry the amen — v.! 

I crv yoxir honour mercy — v. 2 

and' to cry,— that's witty! — (epil.) 

hear the people cry, TroilusL-jTroi'/ns ^Cress:(ta,i. 2 

more ready to cry out ...w^ — ii. 2 

crv, Trojans, cry! (rep.) — ii. 2 

infancy, that nothing canst but cry.. — ii. 2 

cry, cry ! Troy burns — ii. 2 

the death tokens of it cry, no — ii. 3 

tliese lovers cry, oh! oh! they die!.. — iii 1 (son?) 

tile erv went once on thee — iii. 3 

and all cry— Hector! Hector 's dead! — v. 3 
and cry you all amain, Achilles .... — v. 9 

my uses cry to me, I must Timon nf Athens, ii. 1 

you cry against the noble senate — Coriotanus, i. 1 

will then cry out of Marcius — i. 1 

into a rapture lets her baby cry — ii. 1 

to cry aaainst the rectorship — ii, 3 

the people cry, you mockeii them. . . . — iii. 1 

do not cry, havock, where — iii. I 

say, fine.crv flue; if death, cry death — iii. 3 
such time they have Ijegim to cry .. — !!!■■' 

you common cry of curs! — iii. 3 

made good work, vou and your cry! — iv. 6 
and cry, be blessed for malting up . . — v. 3 

crv, welcome, ladies, welcome ! — v. 4 

shriller than all the music, cry JulaisC'Csar, i. 2 

what was the last cry for? — i. 2 

cry it alwnt the streets (rep.) — iii. 1 

and children, stare, cry out, and nm — iii. 1 

let's all cry , peace ! freedom! — iii. 1 

crv luivcwK, and let slip the dogs .... — iii. 1 

1 do not know tlmt I did cry — iv. 3 

why did you so cry out, sirs — iv. 3 

start forth, and cry, your vt'M't.Anlany ^Clro. iii, 1 1 

and cry. take all. Well said — iv. 2 

dream of him, and cry myself awake?Cj/m(if(i'ne, iii. 4 

crv out for service — iv. 2 

will cry to tlie shining synod — v. 4 

I hiaril a iliil.l crv niidcrneath.Ti(u»/lnrfronici/», v. 1 

their mmitlis. il llicv liegin tocry — v. 2 

tlie connain voice do cry, it shall be — v. 3 

and rave and cry for fiKHl — v. 3 

gentle to tliosc that cry by night Periclft, iii. 1 

onderv, he that will give most — iv. 3 

cry out. she ilied by foul play — iv. 4 

tin it cry, sleep to death Lear, ii. 4 

cry to it, nunclc, as the cockney , — ii. 4 

shall of acorn cry woe — iii. 2 (song) 

and cry thew drraidful sunimoncrs — iii. 2 



r. 153 ] 



CUN 



CKY— cry you mercy, noble philosopher . . Lear, HI 

cry vou mercy, I took you for "' 

tifl It do cry out itself, enough 

Binell the inr, wc wawl and cry 

when we arc horn, we cry 

rigour of our stale lorced to cry out. 
let but tlic hcnilil ciy, and I'll appei 
cry hut -ah nic! couple but — ..Uomeo ^-Juliel, ii. 

or" I'll crv a niateli — ii. 

I crv vou iiicrcv! von are the singer — iv. 
the "iicople in tlic street cry— Uoiiico — v. 

that ITV nut on the top of i|ucstioii llamlel, ii. 

get nic'a t'ello«>liip ill a erv of pliivcrs .. — iii, 
they crv, clioose wc; Lucrtcssliall Iw.... — iv. 
how cheerfully on tlie false trail they cry! — iv. 
cry to be heard, as 't were from heaven 
of people, and they cry— a sail 

§0 out, and erv— a mutiny 
ut one that nils up the cry 

wring my imiul, cry, () sweet creature! 

faith, the cry goes, that you shall 

cough, or ory— hem, if any body come 
I cry yon mercy, tlien ; 1 took you 



— iii. fi 

— iv. G 

— iv. 6 

— iv. (•) 

— V. 1 

— V. I 
1 



.0//it>«o, ii. 1 
.. — ii. 3 



— iv. 1 



the cry [ '''"'■-voice] is very direful . . . . 

unsati; to come in to the cry 

did you not hear a cry? llere, hero — 



— V. 1 

— V. 1 



you here, that cry so grievously? . 

1 cry you merey ! here's Cassio hurt , , . . — v. I 

I cry you gentle pardon — v. 1 

alas! what cry 's that? That! what? — v. 1 

all, all, crv shame against me — v.; 

CH YXNG— me, and thy crying self Tempcsl, i. : 

sister crying, our maid howling. TiroOen. of Ver. ii. S 
on the t'orehead, crying, peer out. .Merry lyives, iv. i 
let the child wake her with crying. . MuchMo, iii. ; 
follow liim, crying— his stones ,.Mer. of Venice, ii. t 

sour offence, cryinj', that's good AWs IVelt, v. ; 

leave it crying, and for the uabe. IVinler's Tale, iii. ; 
even at the crying of your nation's. . King John, v. 1 
and spent with crying— bring in .... 1 Henry I V. i. i 

some, crying for a siu-geon Henry V. iv. 1 

like to whelps, we crying run I Henry VI. i. ; 

and crying with loud voice iHenryVl. i. 1 

by crying comfort from a hollow .... — iii. ! 
crying- Villageois! unto all they meet — iv. h 

to the bar, crying all, guilty I Uichard III. v. ; 

what, is she ciying out? Henry VIII. v. 1 

come to him, crying on Hector. . Troilus ^ Cress, v. ; 
about the streets, crying, confusion. Corio(a»ms, iv. i 

crying, long livel hail, Ciesarl Julius CfBsar,\. 1 

that prayer, by crying out as loud../)n(. ffCleo. iii. : 

came crying 'mougst his foes Cymbeline, v. ■ 

tlie crying babe eontrouled with this. TitusAnd. v. I 
we came crying hither, thou know'st ....Lear, iv. ( 

the pretty wretch left crying Romeo ^Juliet, i. i 

to tlxink it should leave crying — i. i 

comes a fellow, crying out for lielp .... Othello, ii. ; 
my self the cry mg fellow did pursue ... . — ii. i 
crying, O dear Cassio! as it were — iv. 1 

CRY'ST— Bolingbroke, cry'st now IHenrylV. i. i 

sitt'st still, and cry'st, Alack! why does.. Lnir, iv. : 

CRYSTAL— in her crystal \ooks..Tii-oGen ofVn: ii. • 
thine evue? crystal is muddy — Mid.K.'s Dr. iii. : 
as jewels in crystal for some prince . Love's L.L. ii. ! 
were gold, crystal the other's eyes . . — iv. ; 

these crystal beads heaveu shall King John, ii. 1 

the more fair and crystal is the sky. ..Richard 11. i. I 
go, clear thy crystals; yoke-fellows . . . Henry V. ii. : 

brandish yoiu- crystal tresses 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

thy crvstal window ope CymljHine, v. ■ 

but in" those crvstal scales, let there.. iJom. fiJal. i. : 

CKYSTAL-BUtTON— 
this leathern-jerkin, crystal-button.l Jfcnry/r. ii. - 

CRYSTALLINE— palace crystalline.. Ci/mftd/Hc, v. ' 

CUB— thou dissembling cub ! . . . . Twelfth Night, v. 
voung suckin" cubs from the. . Merch. of Venice, ii. : 

CtTB-DRAWN— tlie cub-drawn bear Le,:r,'n\. 1 

CUBICULO-call thee at the cubiculo. Twf //(/i A'. iii. : 

CUBIT— whose every cubit seems to cry. Tempest, ii. : 

CUCKOLD— the cuckold's horns . . Merry Wives, ii. ; 
know him for a knave and a cuckold — ii. : 

but cuckold I 'VVittol cuckold 1 — ii. : 

fie, fie, fle! cuckold! cuckold! cnckoldl — ii. : 

ordaining he should be a cuckold — iii.; 

you shalleuckold Ford — iii.! 

now, sir, who's a cuckold now? — v. : 

is no true cuckold but calamity ..TicelflhAighl, i. : 
in making me a cuckold . . Measure for Measure, v. 

like an old cuckold, with horns Much Ado, ii. 1 

a gig of a cuckold's horn! Love's L. Lost, v. 

what, are we cuckolds, ere we have. .Ver. ofVen. v. 
the clerk, that is to make me cuckold? — T. 

if I be his cuckold, he's my drudge All's IVell.i. ; 

the cuckold to his horn, as a scoldiu" — ii. : 
much deceived, cuckolds ere now.. IVinler's Tale, i. ■ 

is thicker than a cuckold's horn — i. : 

and made Lucifer cuckold \ Henry IV. ii. 

he or she, cuckold or cuckold-maker.. Hen. ;;//. v. ; 
argument is, a cuckold, and a whore. Trail. ^- Cr. ii. : 
What, docs the cuckold scorn me?.... — iii. I 
like a puling cuckold, would drink .. — iv. 

obliiine memorial of cuckolds — v. 

the cuckold, and the cuckold-maker — v. i 
peace is a great maker of cuckolds. . Coriolanus, iv. 
to his grave, fifty-fold a cnckoldl. /Infoni/ .J- Cto. i. : 
their hands to niakc me a cuckold.. — i. 

deny thou hast made me cuckold Cymbeline, ii. 

cries, cuckold, to mv father Hnmld, iv. 

if thou ciinst cuckold him, thou dost ....Othello, i. 
that cncknid lives ill bliss, who, certain.. — iii. 
I will chop her into messes: cuckold mel — iv. 
would not iniike her husband a cuckold.. — iv. 

CUfKOLDLY— poorcuckoldly knavcMerrylV. ii. 
the kev of the cuckoldly rogue's cotVer — ii. 
Falsta'irsa knave, acuckiddly knave! — v. 
acrook-pated.oUl, cuckoldly Asyou Like il,'i'i\. 

CI'CKDLb-.M AD— not cuckold-mad. Com. o/Kr. ii. 

CUCK(I1,I)-.M AKi;il— 
he or she, iiukold or cuckold-maker. W™.»7f/. v. 
cuckold, and the cuckold-maker. . TroiL^ Crei. v. 



CUCKCH)— plain-song cuckoo.. A/i'ii. A'. D. iii 1 (song) 
though he cry enckoo never 60? .... ■- iii. 1 
praise of the ^>wl and thecnckoo.. Loue'j L.Aoi/, v. 2 
the othiT by the cuckoo. Ver, begin — v. 2 
the cuckoo then, on every tree .... — V. 2 (song) 
sings he, cuckoo, (tiickoo, cuckoo .. — v. 2 (song) 
knows the cuckoo, by the bad .... Mer. of Ven. v. 1 

your cuckoo sings by kind AlViWell, i. 3 (song) 

()' horse-back, ye cuckoo! IHenrylV. ii. 4 

he was but as the cuckoo is in June.. — iii. 2 
that ungentle gull, the cuckoo's bird — v. I 
since IhciTickoo builds not for ..Antony ^Cleo. ii. fi 
the hedL'c--pariou' fed the cuckoo so long.. Lenr, i. 4 

CUCKt )i I- 111 Ii U-or cuckoo-birds., il/crrj/ Ifivei, ii. 1 

CUCK(lo-lii;i)- 
euckou-huilsof \ellow hue ..Love's L.L. v. 2 (song) 

CUCKOO-FLOWKH- 
nettles, ciickoo-llowers, darnel, and all . . Lenr, iv. 4 

CUCULLUS— ciiculliis non liicit .. Tirclflh Nighl, i. b 
cnc^ullns non farit niomicluiiu ..Meas.for Mem. v. 1 

CUDGEL-awebiiii with inv cudgel.. VerryWirM, ii. 2 
to thy husband's cudgid ; and the {_rep.) — iv. 2 

I'll have the eiMl-ci hallowed — iv. 2 

his cudgel, and twcntv pounds of ... . — v. .'> 

ay, or I will cudgel him Twelfth Night, ii. a 

look like a cudgel, or a liovel-iiost...Wer. of Ven, ii. 2 
to cudgel you, and iiiiike you take . . KingJohn, v. 2 
I would cudgel biin like a dog .... I Henry IV. iii. 3 
and said, lie would cudgel you (rep.) — iii. 3 

quiet tbv cudgel; thou dost See IlenryV.y. I 

1 will |iiiy you ill cudgels — v. 1 

not tbcrcl'iie luiudle an English cudgel — v. 1 
as one sound cihIl'cI of four foot. ... //eiij-i/r///. v. 3 
to have struckeu iiiiii with a cudgel. C'or/o/Mrtw*, iv. .'> 
cndwl thv brains no more about it Hamlet, v. 1 

CUUGELED-washed and cudgeled.. Werrylf-iiM.i v. .i 

I might have cudgeled thee out Much Ado, v. 4 

our ears are cudgeled; not a word .. KingJohn, ii. 2 
my weary limbs honour is cudgeled .. . Henry V. v. 1 
been to-night exceedingly well cudgeled.(.«/icHo, ii.3 

CUDGELLINCi-hcroical cudgelling.' /'roiV. <5-t>. iii. 3 

CUE— the eloek gives me my cue. . Merry IVives, iii. 2 

remember you your cue — iii. 3 

epeak, count, 'tis your cue Much.-ido, ii. I 

so every one according to his cue.Mid.SV.'s Dr. iii. I 
cues and all. Pyramus enter; your cue — iii. 1 

wlieu my cue conies, call me — iv. I 

deceiving nie is Thisby's cue — v. 1 

now we speak upon our cue Henry V. iii. tj 

had you not come upon your cne.. Richard III. iii. i 

my cue is villanous melancholy Lear, i. 2 

he the motive and the cue for passion .. HomW, ii. 2 
were it my cue to fight, I should have . . Othello, i. 2 

CUFF— do cud" him soundly Twelfth Night, iii. 4 

I swear, I'll cuff you, if you .. Taming of Shrew, ii. I 

such a cutt, thiit down fell — iii. 2 

and this cuff was but to knock — iv. I 

with ruff's and cuff's, and farthingales — iv. 3 

to tug it, and to cuff you soundly I Henry VI. i. 3 

tlie player went to cuffs in the question. Wam(i'((ii. 2 

CITISSES— his cuisses on his tliigli6..1HeHr!//r. iv. 1 

CULL— fortune shall cuU forth out KingJohn, ii. 2 

and cull their fiower, Ajax .. Troilus ^-Cressida, ii. 3 

aud cull the infected forth Timon of.ithena, v. b 

do you now cull out a holiday? Julius Cccsar, i. 1 

CULLED— culled sovereignty ilo..Love'sL.Losl, iv. 3 

the word is well culled — v. 1 

and cidled these liery spirits from John, v. i 

these culled and choicc-drawni . . Henry V. iii. (cho.) 
that are culled out of the powerful.. 1 Henry VI. v. 3 
perhaps she culled it from among . . TilusAnd. iv. 1 
we have culled such necessaries. /?o?neo<S-Ji</ie/, iv. 3 

CULLING— [A,n/.] bee, cuUmg from.2Henry IV. iv. 4 
culling the principal of all the deer.. SHenrv r/. iii. I 
brows, culling of simples Romeo ^Juliet, v. \ 

CULLION— L'od of such a ciillion.3'amins'o/SA. iv. 2 

fciil. Knt.'] avauiit, you cullions HenryV. iii. 2 

awav, base cullious; Sutt'olk iUenry VI. i. 3 

CULLIONLY— cuiiionlv barber-monger.. Lr.ir, ii. 2 

CULl'ABI.E-in pmutis"e culpable ..•illmryVI. iii. i 

CULVKKIN— oiiiinnon, eulverin ..IHenrylV. ii. 3 

Cir.MBKR— let itnot cumber your . 7"imoii of.ilh. iii. (i 
slmll eunilier all the parts ot ItaW.Juliui Casnr, iii. I 

CUMBEl'.LAXD— prince of Cumberland. >/afM/i,i. 4 
the prince of Cumberland! that is a step — i. 4 

Clifford of t'niulwTlaud iHenryVl. v. 2 

northern lord, Clirt'inl of Cumberland — v. 2 

CUNNING— hciuv bashful cunning! .. Tempcsl, '\\\. 1 
that by his euiiiiiiig hath cheated me — — iii. 2 
with all the cunuiug manner . . Two Gen. of Tcr. ii. 4 

my cunning drift excels — iv. 2 

nature's o^vn sweet and cunning.. Tweiflh Sight, i. i 

the cunning of her passion invites — ii. 2 

force that oh you, in a shameful cunning — iii. I 

and so cuuninL' in fence — iii. 1 

Ids false cunning, inot meaning to .. — v. 1 

cunning eneniv, that, to catch.. Vea»./orA/en». ii. 2 
<), 'tis the cunniii- livery of hell .... — iii. 1 
but in the boldness of my cunning .. — iv. 2 

be euniiini.' in the workiuL' this MuchAdo, ii. 2 

and my cunniiiL; -ball not shame me .... — ii. 2 

can cuiiuing sill co\eritsclfwithall — iv. 1 

const'ible is too ciiiniiiii; to be understood — v. 1 
with cunning hast thou lilehed my..i)firf. iV. Or, i. 1 
advance your cunning more and inore^ — iii 2 
is as cunning as fast and loose ..I^re'd.. L«</, iii. I 
cunning times put on to eutrap....'/er. of Ven.i-i. > 
your cunning can assist me .. TamingofSn. I tiiiil ) 
to cunning men I will Iw very kind — i. I 

cunning schoolmasters to instruct her — i. 1 
a man of mine, cunning in music .. — ii. I 
OS cunning in Gre-ek, Latin, oud other — ii. I 

if I fail not of my cunning — ii. I 

crafty love, and call it, cnuning .... KingJohn, iv. 1 
trust not those eunning waters of his eyes — i\ S 
like a cunning instruiucnt ciuicd np..KirAar(/ //. i. 3 

what cunning match have you \ Henry IV. ii. 4 

wherein cunning, but in craft? — ii. 4 

whatsoever euniung fiend it won HenryV. ii. 2 

1 have uo cunning m protcstatiou .. — v. 2 



CUN 



CUNNING— is this thy cunning ...Alleiuijn. ii. 1 
of'thycunnins had no (littidenoe .... — iii. 3 
MarLtery .rDunlaiii, the ennuing witeli.2ni'ii)-j/ I'l. i. 2 

think tluit (niniiinir to 1}C great — ii. i 

a cunninM Ulan dill caluulate my birtli — iv. 1 

so oonniiu', and so young HidmnlHI. iii. 1 

tliis cuiiniug Cl^^dinal tlie articles ..Henry I' III. i. 1 
too weak to oppose your cunning .... — ii. 4 
courtly, and thou art too cunning. TroU. <5- Crcs. iii. 1 
your sdence cunning in dumbness .. — iii. 2 
vitli cunning gild their copper crowns — iv. 4 
in voiy .^liiteo! cunning, hade him .. — Y. ft 
putting on tlienuining'of acarper.rimon^o/J^/i.iv. 3 

tliat they wanted cunning — v. 5 

craves a noble ciuming Coriotanus^ iv. 1 

she is cunning past man's thought ..AiU.SfCko. i. 2 

tills cannot lie cunning in her — i. 2 

my better cunning faints under his.. — ii. 3 
try thy cunning, I'liyreus; make thine — iii. 10 

a cunning thief, or a that way Cymbt'line^ i. 5 

her bracelet (O cunning how I got it! — v. 5 
I'll find some cunning practice . . Titus Andron. v. 2 
virtue and cunning were endowments.i-'mc/fs, iii. 2 

unfold what plaited eimning hides Lear, i. 1 

there's the cxmning of it — i. 2 

in cunning I must draw my sword — ii. 1 

he covered with mutu.al cunning — iii. 1 

not from one opposed. Cunning — iii. 7 

than those that havemorecunnmg.Koraeo ^Jul, ii. 2 
go hire me twenty cunning cooks ... , — iv. 2 
tis an ill cunning that cannot lick . , — iv. 4 
with as much modesty as cunning .... Hainlnl, ii. 2 

by the very cunning of the scene — ii. 2 

ecstasy is very cunning in — iii. 4 

waier on your cunnings [A'nf.-comraings] — iv. 7 

of deaths put on by cunning — v. 2 

to find out practices of cunning hell Othello, i. 3 

in ignorance, and not in cunning — iii. 3 

be tound most cunning in my patience . . — iv. 1 

took you for that cunning whore of Venice — iv. 2 

if there be any cunning cruelty, that can — v. 2 

CUNNINGLY— so cunningly ... r«)oGen. ofVer. iii. 1 

ne'er so cunningly you smother it . . 1 Henry FI. iv. 1 

that tempts most cunningly.. Troilus fy Cressida, iv. 4 

cunningly effected, will beget a very.. Titus And. ii. 3 

CUNNING'ST— thou cunnmg'st pattern. 0(/if Ho, v. 2 

CUP— much as sip on a cup with . . Merry Wives, ii. 2 

thou lack'st a cup of canary Tuielflh NIghl, i. 3 

creep into acorn cups, and hide ..Mid. N.\ Dr. ii. ' 
welcome the sour cuji of prosperity ! Love's L. Lost, i. 
poured out of a cup into a glass . . As you Like it, v. 
lordship drink a cup of sack?.. Taming of Sli. 2 (ind. 
take it to you, trenchers, cups, and all — iv. 
niightest bespice a cup, to give .... Winter's Tale, i. 
may be in the cup a spider steeped . . — ii. 
you all have drank of^Circe's cup. Comedy of Er. v. _ 

unless hours were cups of sack 1 Henry I V. i. 2 

for a cup of JIadeira, and cold — i. 2 

let a cup of sack be my poison — ji. 2 

give me a cup of sack, boy — ii. 4 

worse than a cup of sack with — ii. 4 

villain, thou stolest a cup of sack.. — ii. 4 

give me a cup of sack, to make — li. 4 

Pistol, I charge you with a cup of ..2Henryir. ii. 4 

fill the cup ot alteration — iii. 1 

a cup of wine, that's brisk and fine .. — v. 3 (sons) 

fill the cuj), and let it come — v. 3 (song ) 

'twould drink the cup and all Henry F. i." 1 

in their flowing cups freshly — iv. 3 

being in his ales and his cups — iv. 7 

1 drink to you in a cup of sack . , ..iHenry VL ii. 3 
neighbour, here's a cup of eharneco.. — ii. 3 

often hast thou waited at my cup — i v. 1 

viands sparkling in a golden cup . . . .ZHenry VI. ii. ."j 
keeper? give me a cup of wine .... Richard III. i. 4 
one that loves a cup of hot wine .... Coriolanus, ii. I 
till the wine o'er-swell the cup . . Julius Cresar, iv. 3 

Where's this cup I called for? Antony ^-Cleo. ii 7 

I have kept me from the cup — ii. 7 

fill, till the cup be hid — ii. 7 

cup us, till the world go round {rep.) — Ii. 7 (song) 
scant not my cups; and make as ... . — iv. 2 
hides him in fresh cups, soft beds.... Cymbdine, v. 3 

of Plenty's cup and her prosperities Pcriclrs, i. 4 

here witli a cup that's stored — ii. 3 

the cup of their deservi ngs Lear, v. 3 

come and crush a cup of wine Romeo ^ JuUet, i. 2 

by the operation of the second cup . . iii. 1 

what's here? a cup, closed in my .... v. 3 

in the cup an union shall be Hamlet, v. 2 

give me tne cups; and let the kettle v. 2 

five him the cup. I'll play tliis bout — v. 2 
t is the poisoned cup; It is too late — v. 2 

give me tne cup ; let go ; by heaven — v. 2 

one cup: I'll drink for you (rep.) Othello, W. 3 

if I can fasten but one cup upon him .... ii. 3 

flustered with flowing cups, and they .... — ii. 3 

everv inordinate cup is unblessed ii. 3 

CUP- JBEARER— thou, his cup-bearer. Winler'sT. i. 2 

I am his cup-bearer; if from me he .. — i. 2 
CUPBOARDING— still cupboarding.. Corw/-in,»s, i. 
CUPID— is one of Cuind's carriers . . Merry '.Vires, ii. 

now is Cupid a child of conscience . . — v. 

and challenged Cupid at the flight Much Ado, i. 

subscribed for Cupid and challenged him — i. 

to tell us Cupid is a good hare-finder i. 

for the sign of blind Cupid — i. 

nay, if Cupid have not spent all — i. 

if we can do this, Cupid is no longer — ii. 

is little Cupid's crafty arrow made .. — iii. 

some, Cupid kills with arrows — iii. 

twice or tnrice cut Cupid's bow-string — iii. 

I swear to thee, by Cupid's strongest .Mid.N.Dr. i. 

therefore is winged Cupid painted blind — i. 

and the earth, Cupid all armed — ii. 

young Cupid's fiery shaft quenched.. — ii. 

marked I where the bolt ot Cupid fell — ii. 

hit with Cupid's archery — iii. 

Cupid is a knavish lad, thus to — iii. 

Dian's bud o'er Cupid's flower — iv. 



[ 15-^ ] 

CUPID— I should out-swear Cupid . . . Love's L. L. i. 

Cupid's butt-shaft is too hard for .... — i. 

he is Cupid's grandfather, and learns — ii. 

giant-dwarf, Dan Cupid; regent of. . - iii. 

a plague that Cupid will impose .... — iii. 

proceed, sweet Cupid: thou hast — iv. 

are guards on wanton Cupid's hose . . — iv. 

saint Cupid, then 1 and, soldiers — iv. 

was fain to seal on Ciipid's name .... — v. 

saint Dennis to saint Cupid! — v. 

if they could, Cupid himself would. 71/er.o/ I'en. ii. 

I long to see quick Cupid's post — ii. 

why Rosalind; Cupid have mercy I. /fs you Like it, i. 

that Cupid hath clapped him on .... — iv. 

that blinking Cupid gossips All's Well, i. 

the brains ot my Cupid's knocked out — iii. 

us all. O Cupid, Cupid, Cupidl^rjoZ/..^- Cress, iii. 

from Cupid's shoulder pluck his ... . — iii. 

in all Cupid's pageant there is — iii. 

and Cupid grant all tongue-tied — iii. 

and the weak wanton Cupid shall . . — iii. 

dimpled boys, likesmiling Cupids. ...1h/. ffCleo. ii. 

were too winking Cupids of silver . . Cymheline, ii. 

you clasp young Cupid's tables — iii. 

martjTS, slain in Cupid's wars Pericles, i. 

no, dotliy worst, blind Cupid Lear, iv. 

she'll not be hit witli Cupid's arrow. Borneo ijJul.'i. 

we'll have no Cupid hood-winked . . — i. 

borrow Cupid's wings, and so.ar with — i. 

young Adam Cupid, he that shot so — ii. 

therefore hath the wind-swift Cupid — ii. 

liglit-winged toys of feathered Cupid . . Othello, i. 
CUR— hang, cur, iiangi Tempest, i. 

this cruel-hearted cur shed .... Two Gen. o/l'er. ii. 

shall play the cur with liim — iv. 

when a cur cannot keep — iv. 

what cur is that? — iv. 

your dog was a cur — iv. 

a cur, sir Merry Wives, i. 

the cur is excellent at faults Twelfiti Night, ii. 

out dog! out curl thoudriv'st..j1//d, iV. Di-eam, iii. 

a stranger cur over your tlireshold . . Mer. of Ven. i, 

is it possible, a cur can lend — i. 

it is the most impenetrable cur — iii. 

to be cast away upon curs AsyouLikeit, i. 

the poor cur is embossed ..Taming of Sh. 1 (indue. 

mongrels, sixiniels, curs, shoughs .... Macbeth, iii. 

except, like curs, to tear us all Richard II. ii. 

shall dunghill cm'S confront iHenryll'. v. 

thou prick-eared cur of Iceland! Henry V. ii. 

foolish curs! that run winking — iii. 

yield, cur. Je pense, que vous — iv. 

brass, cur I thou damned — iv. 

follow me, cur. Suivez vous le — iv. 

and make the curs stand aloof 1 Henry VI. iv. 

small curs are not regarded ...'.... .2Henry VI. iii. 

astonish these fell lurking curs — v. 

a hot o'er- weening cur run back — v. 

when a cur doth grin ZHem-yVI. i. 

that this carnal cur pre3''3 on Richard lll.iv. 

this butcher's cur is venom-mouthed. Henry VI II. i. 

like to village curs, bark when — ii. 

two curs shall tame each other . . Troilus <§- Cress, i. 

you whoreson cur? Do, do — ii. 

youcur! Mars his idiot ! do — ii. 

thou damned cur! I shall — ii. 

you whoreson indistinguishable cur — v. 

cm-, Ajax, against that dog {rep.) — v. 

what would you have, you curs .... Coriolanus, i. 

you common cry of curs — iii. 

must give this cur the lie — v. 

spurn thee like a cur out of my ■waj.Jul.Ccesar, iii. 

like a cur, behind, struck — v. 

fell curs of bloody kind, have here . . TitiisAnd. ii, 
you whoreson dog! you slave! you cm-! ..Lear, i. 

avaunt, you curs ! I5e thy mouth — iii. 

and the creature run from the cur? — iv. 

CURAN— save thee, Curan. And you, sir — ii. 
CURATE-art sir Topas the cmnte.TwelfthNight, iv. 

sir Topas, the curate, who comes .... — iv. 

understanding that the curate ....Love'sL. Lost, v. 

the parish cm'ate, Alexander — v. 

CURB— the needful bits and curbs. Meiis./or Meas. i. 

and curb this crueldevilof his will.Mer. of Ven. iv. 

the horse his curb, and the falcon. .^.« you Like, iii. 

I'll curb her mad and headstrong. Tamingof Sh. iv. 

reverence of your highness curbs me.Ricliard II. i. 

with the rusty curb of old 1 Henry IV. i. 

and curbs himself even of his — iii. 

his headstrong riot hath no curb.... 2 Henry /F. iv. 

to curb those raging appetites . . Troilus <§- Cress, ii. 

your curb and wnip, in their rough. Timon ofAlh. iv. 

ten thousand curbs of more strong . . Coriolanus, i. 

to curb the will of the nobility — iii. 

but curb it, spite of seeing Pericles, v. 

yea curb and woo, for leave to do Hamlet, iii. 

either curb ICol. Kn/. -master] tlie devil — iii. 
CURBED— daughter curbed by the. .Mer. of Ven. i. 

distil now in the curbed time All's Well, ii. 

from curbed licence pi ucks 2HenrylV.'\v. 

yet you are curbed from that Cymbeline, ii. 

CURBING— curbing his lavish spirit. . . . Macliem, i. 
CURD— does it curd thy blood, to say . . Alt's Well, i. 

she is the queen of curds and cream. Winter's T. iv. 

the shepherd's homely curds ZHenry VI. ii. 

and feed on curds and whey .... Titus Andron. iv. 

it doth posset and curb, like eager Hnmlet, i. 

CURDED— that's curded by the'frost.Cor/oJfi/iws, v. 
CUKE— sir, would ciu'e deafness Tempest, i. 

cure thy brains, now useless — v. 

it is past her cure -^ v. 

were past cure of the thing you . . Meas. for Meas. ii. 

and the cure of it not only saves your — iii. 

and severity must cure it — iii. 

that the dissolution of it must ciu'e it — iii. 

strangely they strain the cure Much Ado, iv. 

gained, cures all disgrace. . Lmt's L. Lost, iv. 3 (ver. 

for, past cure is still past care — v. 

did 5"0u ever cure any so? As you Like it, iii. 

1 would cure you, if you would but. . — iii. 



CVil 



CURE— cure the desperate langui3hing3..-(«'* Well, i. 3 

life of mine on iiis grace's cure — i. l 

may not be so credulous of cure — ii. i 

past cure. Art thou so confident? (re/;.) — ii. 1 
past cure of the fives, stark spoiled.. Tain. ofSh. iii. 2 

childness, cures in me thoughts Winter'sTale, i. 2 

sr.uls, that stay his cure Macbeth, iv. 3 

the mere despair of surgery, he cures .. — iv. 3 

to cure this deadly grief 'ix.'i 

cure her of that; canst thou not — v. 3 

give her sadness very little cure King John, ii. 3 

and falsehood falsehood cures — iii. I 

widow comfort and my sorrow's cure — iii. I 

the which no balm can cure Ricliard II. i. i 

to the cure of those pliysicians — ii. i 

bid thy ceremony give thee cure Henry V. iv. \ 

care is no cure, but rather corrosive. 1 Henry VI. iii ^ 

with the change to kill and cure 2Henry VI. v. i 

can cure their ICol. A'«<.-hclp oxaX.Iiicliardlll. ii. 3 

to cure that blow of thine — iv. 4 

for my little cure, let me alone Henry VI 1 1, i. 4 

thou art a cure fit for a king — ii. 2 

to cure me, and the cure is, to remove — ii. 4 

we are to cure such sorrows — iii. 1 

is there no way to cure this? — iii. 2 

oft cures the worst Troilus (iCressida, in. 2 

must I take the cure upon me?. Timon of Athens, iii. 3 

to cure tliy o'er-night's siu-feit? — iv. 3 

leave us to cure tins cause Coriolanus, iii. 1 

to out it off; to cure it, easy — iii. 1 

no more be mad; that cures us both..Cym()e;/;ie, ii. 3 
the cure whereof, my lord, 'tis time. . — iii. .'. 

nature works, and of her cures Pericles, iii. a 

will not allow, stand in hard cure Lear, iii. 6 

his despair, is done to cure it — iv. li 

you kind gods, cure this great breach. . — iv. 7 
we would as willingly give cure . . Rmneo f,- Juliet, i. 1 
onedesperategrief cures with anotlier'a — i. 2 

past hope, past cure, past hel]) ! — iv.I 

confusion's cure lives not in these — iv. .'i 

blood he rages, and thou must cure me. Hamlet, iv- 3 

to death, stand in bold cure Oiliello, ii. 1 

so strong that judgment cannot cure .. — ii. i 
would do much to cure him of this evil — ii. 3 

CURED— ere he be cured Much Ado. i. i 

are not so punished and cured ..Asyou Like it, iii. 2 
and thus I cured him; and this way — iii. 2 

1 would not be cured, youth — ii i . 2 

will you be cm-ed of your infirmity?.. /MCs- Well, ii. I 
be cm-ed of this diseased opinion . . Winter'sTale, i. 2 
of this madness cured, stoop tamel3'.2He;ir;/ //'. iv. 2 

cannot be cured by words ZHeniy VI. W.-z 

the king has cured me Henry VIII. n], 2 

given ill time, had cured me — iv. 2 

for with a wound I must be cu~ei.. Ant. ^-Clen.jv. 12 
cured by the sure [ihysician death .. Cymbeline, v. 1 
you see, is cured [A(i<. -killed] in him Lear, iv. 7 

CURELESS— fall to cureless ruin . . Mrr. of Ven. iv. 1 
and cureless are my wounds '.Ulcnryl'l. ii. i; 

CUREK-he is a curer of souls {rep.).M''iryn'irrs, ii. 3 
I'll be a curer of madmen Trnilns .'j- Crealiln, v. 1 

CURFEW— to hear the solemn cmiK:\v.. Tempest, v. I 

none, since the curfew rung Meas. for Mens. iv. -' 

he begins at curfew, and walks till the ..Lear, iii. ; 
the curfew bell hath rung Romeo ^- Juliid, iv. 1 

CURING— curing it by counsel As you Like ii, iii. 2 

before the curing of a strong disease. KingJnlm, iii. 4 

CURIO— what, Curio? The hart. . . . ra-ellVi.\ight. i. I 

CURIOSITY"- too much curiosity.. Tiino;; ofAlh. iv. 3 
that curiosity in neither can make choice., i.ear, i. 1 

and permit tne curiosity of nations — i. 2 

blamed as mine own jealous curiosity .... — i. 4 

CURIOUS-rather curious than in haste. ^U's Well, i. 2 
for curious I cannot be with you. . Taming ofSh. iv. 4 
so fraught with curiaus business. . Winter sTale, iv. 3 

body couched in a curious bed ZHenry VI. ii. 5 

what too curious dreg espies .... Troilus <?• Cress, iii. 2 
though you be therein curious .. Antony^ Cleo. iii. 2 

and I am something curious Cymbeline, i. 7 

was lapped in a, most curious mantle — v. ^» 

nothing but curious pleasiures Pericles, i. 1 

thought naught too curious, are ready — i. 4 

mar a cuiious talc in telling it Lear, i. 4 

what curious eye doth quote ... .Romeo &Julict, i. 4 

curious-knOtted- 

thy curious-knotted garden.. Love's L.Lost, i. 1 (let.) 

CURIOUSLY— carve most curiously ..Much Ado, v. 1 

whereiu so cm-iously he had set this. . All's Well, iv. 3 

the sleeves curiously cut . . Taming of Sh. iv. 3 (note) 

'twere to consider too curiously Hamlet, v. 1 

CURL— it will not curl by nature.. Twelfth i\i«hl, i. 3 
his hawking eye, his curls, in our .... .4ll's Well, i. 1 

Hyperion's curls; the front of Jove Hamlet, iii. 4 

CURL'D-PATE-curl'd-pate ruffians. Tim of Alh. iv. 3 
CURLED— to ride on the curled clouds. . Tempest, i. 2 

a curled pate will grow bald Henry V. v. 2 

if she first meet the curled Antony.. yl;i/. fCten. v. 2 

or swell the curled waters 'bove the Lear, iii. 1 

that curled my hair; wore gloves in .... — iii. 4 

shunned the wealthy cm-led darlings Othelli. ;. 2 

CURLING — curling their monstrous.. 2HeH./r. iii. 1 
CirRRANCE— [Kn;.] a heady currance..H<.«rv^'. i. 1 
CUllRANT-five pound of currants. Winter's Tale, i\-. 2 
CURRENT-the current .. ..Tu-oGen. of Verona, n. I 
like an impediraentintliecurrent.J>/ea./uri)?ea.iii. 1 
excuse the current ofthy cruelty. . Mer. of Ven. iv. 1 

the current of our right run on? King John, ii. 2 

two such silver currents, when they.. — ii. 2 

thy word is current with him Richard II. i. 3 

your bloods, currents that spring from — iii. 3 

liath held his current, and defiled — v. 3 

pardon, as 'tis current in our land . . — v. 3 

come current for an accusation 1 Henry IV. i. 3 

as to o'er-walk a cui-reut — i. 3 

it holds current, that I told you — ii. 1 

all the currents [A'n/. -current] — ii. 3 

and pass them current too — ii. .•? 

I'll liave tlie enrrent in this place.... — iii. 1 
the otlier with current repentance ..iHenrylV. ii. 1 
such a heady cmrent f. A'"'..-cun-ancej. . Henry V. i. 1 



CUIl 



[ l->5 ] 



CUT 



CUKUENT—noexcuap current RichardUI. i. 2 

st.impof honour is nciircc current .... — i. 3 
iinil yi't po current fniin suspicion .. — ii. 1 
ncluir tlu>iriMirnMit-i to mine eves .. — ii. 2 
to liv il'tlioii l)i' i-iirriMitgold imiecd.. — iv. 2 

li.M i-iirix-Mt niusi.' too Hennil'lll. i. 3 

likctluMiintMt. Iliisi.iu'l\ Tinwnnf.lllie,,,, i. 1 

W\l turn v.Mirouniiit in ii ilit.'ll . . rmio/.miu, iii. 1 
tnke Ilu' .-unTiit wIhmi il serves ..Jiiliun Cnnr, iv. 3 
tlieii- enrrents turn uwrv, unci lose the..;/a»iW, iii. 1 
in theeorrupteil eurreiiNoftliis world.. — iii. 3 

wliose ii'V enn-ent, nnd eninp'i1?ive OHullo, iii. 3 

lohutain tVoni Liie w liieii niv current nnis — iv. 2 

Cri{lUSll— <'llrrisll tluinks !s. . ru'o f.Vii. o/ /Vr. iv. 4 
tliy eurrish spirit irovernecl a wolt"..,Vcr. o/>'cn. iv. 1 
pome power to ehiiiifie this enrrisli Jew — iv. I 
swift siuule, hut sonietliiu); eurush..7'iim. ofSli. v. 2 
liis enrrisli ridUles sort not with . . . .iHenru Vl. v. h 

Cl'ItKY— I would ctnry with raastcr..2H(Tir!//;'. v. 1 

CUKSK— I I<now how to curse Tempest, i. 2 

iind yet I needs must curso — ii. 2 

do curse tlie grace tliat , ...TtvoQen^ of Verona, \\\. \ 

I curse myself, for they — iii. 1 

O 'tis the curse in love — v. 4 

s-4 curses all Eve's daughters .... Merry If't'res, iv. 2 
do curse the gout, serpigo ...... Mecu.for Mens. iii. I 

i trays, curses ;~0 sweet Bencdiclc.. . .Much Ailn, ii. 3 
'- give him curses, yet he gives . . Mid. N. Dream, i. 1 

hast given mc cause to curse — iii. 2 

Iwjing sensible, should ctirse again . . — v. I 
the curse never fell upon our nation. JIfcr.o/f'cn. iii. 1 
hut you will curse your wooing . . Taming ot Sh. ii. 1 

it is a curse he cannot be IV inter' sTule, ii. 3 

burn it now, than curse it then — ii. 3 

the curses he shall have, the tortures — iv. 3 
tliongli my tongue do curse . . Comedy of Errors, iv. 2 

and an eternal curse fall on you Macbeth, iv. 1 

Imt in their stead, curses, not loud — v. 3 

baited with the rablile's curse — v. 7 

no cause to curse the fair proceedings. KmffJo/in, iii. 1 
dreading the curse tliat money {rep.) — iii. 1 

tlie iieril of our eni-scs liglit — iii. 1 

it is tlie curse of kings to be — iv. 2 

those whom you curse, have felt. . . . Hichrird II. iii. 2 
my sliill were subject to thy curse .. — iii. 4 

a world of curses undergo Mh>nrylV, \.Z 

liotli the degrees prevent my curses.. 2 Hcm-v/C. i. 2 

have cause to curse the Dauohin's llenrij V. i. 2 

sliall we curse the planets of 1 Henry II. i. 1 

make thee curse the harvest — iii. 2 

but curse the cause I cannot — iv. 3 

to curse awhile. Curse, miscreant .... — v. 3 

withwhomIleavcmvcur.se — v. 4 

fmm his t'lither's wratliful curse.. ..'illenryVI. iii. 2 
to curse tiiine enemies? A plague {rep.) — iii. 2 
every joint should seem to curse and ban — iii. 2 
would break, should I not curse them — iii 2 
and these dread curses, like the sun.. — iii. 2 
well could I curse away a winter's night — iii. 2 

ignorance is tile curse of God — iv. 7 

God's curse light upon y(ra all — iv. 8 

may England curse my wretched reign — iv. 9 

the cur.se of her that bare thee T — iv. 10 

and, with the crown, my curse SHcnryTI. i. 4 

I'll make tliee curse the deed — ii. 2 

to curse thv cursed self Richard III. i. 2 

curse not thyself, fair creature — i. 2 

with curses m her mouth — i. 2 

the ciu-se my noble father laid on — i. 3 

his curses, tuen from bitterness of . . . . — i. 3 

did York's dread c\irse prevail — i. 3 

can curses pierce the clouds (.rep.) — i. 3 

make the period to my curse — i. 3 

breathed your curse against yourself — i. 3 
curse tills poisonous hunch-hacked (rep.) — i. 3 

of my curse. Nor no one here; for curses — i. 3 

stand on end to hear her curses — i, 3 

now iMargaret's curse is fallen upon — iii. 3 

now thy heavy curse is lighted on poor — iii. 4 
die the thrall of iVTargaret's curse .... — iv. 1 

ere I can repeat this curse again — iv. 1 

subject of mine own soul's curse — iv. I 

help me curse that bottled spider — iv. 4 

in curses, stay awiiile, and teach (rc/j.) — iv. 4 
this will teacn thee how to curse .... — iv. 4 
take with thee my most lienvy curse — iv. 4 

yet much less spirit to curse abides .. — iv. 4 
tlius Margaret's ciu'se falls heavy on — v. 1 
their curses now, live where their ..HcnryVIII. i. 2 

too many eiu^es on their heads — ii. 1 

his curses and his blessings toucli me — ii. 2 

allyour studies make me a curse — iii. I 

is the curse dependant on those.. 7'roi(!ij<5- Crew. ii. 3 

tlie common curse of mankind — ii. 3 

you will catch cold, and curse me. . . . — iv. 2 

to curse thus? l;o I curse thee? — v. 1 

heaven's curse upon thee Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

if thou wilt curse, thy father iv. 3 

thou art too bad to curse iv. 3 

but all, save thee, I fell with curses. . iv. 3 

hate all, curse all; show eliarity iv. 3 

if thou hatest curses, stay not iv. 3 

pass by, and curse thy fill _ v. .5 (epitaph) 

when you curse them' as enemies .... Coriolanus, i. 1 

and curse that justice did it i. 1 

a cur.se liegin at very root of his heart — ii. 1 
voices might be curses to yourselves.. — ii. 3 

anil did curse against thc'Volccs — iii. 1 

but to confirm my curses — iv. '2 

reiK'tition will l>e dogged with curses — v. 3 

shake otf tlicir stcril curse JutiutCiPsar, i. a 

a curse shall light upon the limbs — iii. 1 

detest them, curse them Cymbeline, ii. .'> 

I'isanio, all curses madded Jlccuba .. — iv. 2 
curse the day (and yet, I think [rep.) . TilusAnd. v. I 
some devil whisper curses in mine ear — v. 3 ! 
a curse upon liim, die he like a thief . . I'ericl", iv fi j 
dowered with our curse, and Btriuigcred ..I,cur, i. I j 
woiinilinssoftt futlier's curse pierce .... — i. ■! . 
from all blames. My curses on her — ii. < 



CITKSE— the general curse which twain . . Lear, iv. 

we liave a curse in having her. .Homen^ Juliet, iii. 

it hath the jirlmal ehlest curse upon't..//«m/*V, iii. 

'tis the cm seoC service; pnCennent IJthrlln,\. 

invent some otlier eiir^e oreiitertainnient — ii. 

O, curse of iii!irriui;e, thiit we can call. . .. — iii. 

rciiuite it with tile sei|ieiit's curse — iv. 

vea, curse his lutter aii/elfrom his shlo.. — v. 
Cl'KSKD-.Mirsed lie 1 that 'lid sol .. ..Tempest, \. 

I cursed tluMii Willi, mt cause — v. 

a tlu>iisiiii(l irrci:;.'ions cursed hours ..MerrylV. v. 

cursed hr mv tril;o if t forgive him.. W-r. o/ >'<•«. i. 

() cursed wreti-h! that knew'st... tVinter's Tale,\v. 

restrain in me the cursed thoughts Mactieth, ii. 

where stMiiils the Msiirper's cursed head.. — v. 

stand cursed, imcl evenmniunicate../\:/»;.' John, iii. 

if thou stand cxeomiminicate. and cursed — iii. 

a second fall of eurscl man? Hichard II. iii. 

ever fell upon this cm-seil ciirtli _ iv. 

musing and curseil nieluiieholy?.. ..IHcnrj//;'. ii. 

that is but acMrsed [Ah /.-crushed] .... Henry V. i. 

be Damiiseiis, be thou cursed Cain ..MlenryCI. \. 

centre of tills riirscd town — ii. 

wiisciirsed iiistiunient of his disease — ii. 

now cursed he the time of — v. 

deny tliv f:it her, cursed drab? — v. 

but cursed the wii tie gusts 2HenryVI. iii. 

Oeur.sed be t!ie hand that (rc/i.) ....Hichard III. \. 

cursed the blood, tliat let this blood.. — i. 

circumstance, to curse tliy cursed self — i. 

had I cursed now, I had cursed myself — i. 

cursed she Hastings, then cursed (re;).) — iii. 

unless a man were cursed, I cannot, rroil.^ Crca. v. 

nothing level in our cursed natures. Timon of A. iv. 

how cursed Athens, mindless of thy — iv. 

he plucked his cursed steel away. Julius Ccesar, iii. 

cursed be that he.irt, that forced. . . . Tilas And. iv. 

and be aveii-'ed on ciir.sed Tamora.. .. — v. 

pair of em sed hcll-huuuds, and their- dam — v. 

that cursed Cliinm mid Demetrius .. — v. 

and cursed be he that will not Pericles, ii. 

ciu-sed Dionyza hatli the pregnant .. — iv. (Gow 

her gain siie" gives the cursed nawd . . — v. (Gow 

fame had sorcad their cursed deed — v. 

cursed by tiiose that feel their sharpness. . Lear, v. 

the nurse eiu.sed in the pantrv ..Borneo ^Juliet, i. 

as that name's cursed hand murdered — iii. 

what cursed foot wanders this way .. — v. 

witli juice of cursed helienon in a vial ..Hamlet, i. 

O cursed spite ! that ever I was born .... — i. 

what if this cursed hand were thicker .. — iii. 

ten times treble ou that cursed head — v. 

O cursed, ciused slave! whip me Othello, ■v. 

the practise of a cursed [Co/. -damned] slave — v. 
CUKSED'SX— cm-sed'st among man.Mer. ofVen. ii. 
CURSING — be a cursing hypocrite MnchAdo, v. 

blasp'ncming God, and cursing mon.2 1/cioy /'/. iii. 

filled it with cursing cries Richard HI. i. 

good for Imd, blessings for cursings .. — i. 

weeping, cursiiig, vowing vengeance. Trail. <S- Cr. v. 

beating .your officers, cursing Coriohinus. iii. 

and falla cursing, like a very drab llnmlei, ii. 

CURSOKARY — with a cursorary aye. ..Henry V. v. 
CURST— item, she is curst Two Gen. of Ver. iii. 

time most cursti — v. 

curst and brief: it is no matter . . Tieelfih Night, iii. 
curst. Too curst is more than curst.. Much Ad'\ ii. 

a curst cow short horns (rep.) — ii. 

so by being too curst, God will send. . — ii. 

1 was never curst, I have no gift Mid. N. Dr. iii. 

nor longer stay in your curst company — iii. 

here slie comes, curst, and sad — iii. 

curst be thy stones for thus deceiving — v. 

do not curst wives hold that Lore's L. Lost, iv. 

elder sister is so curst and shrewd. Tnmiiif; ufSh, i. 
cirrst and slirewd as Socrates' Xaiitipiie — i. 

she is intolerably curst and shrewd . . — i. 

till Katharine the curst have got (rep.) — i. 
will undertake to woo curst Katharine — 1. 

and sometimes Kate the curst — ii, 

if she be curst, it is for policv — ii. 

she shall still be curst in company .. — ii. 

thou hast tamed a curst shrew — v. 

they are never curst, but when.. PVinier'sTale, iii. 
as ciu*st, as liarsh, as horrible to.. ..tHenryVl. iii. 
saint, for eliarity, bo not so curst ..Richard II L i. 
with curst speech I threatened to Lear, ii. 

CUHSTElt— curster than she? why.. 7'am. o/iVi. iii. 
CUllSTEST— make the curstcst shrew — ii. 
CURSTNES.S — nor curstness tirow . Antony ^-Cleo. ii. 
CURTAIL— cm-tail rKn(.-cnrtttll] dog..^ifrry >('. ii. 

she had transformed me to a curtail. Com. ofEr. iii. 

8tanders-bv to curtail his oaths .... Cymbeline, ii. 
CURTAIbED— curtailed of this ....Richard III. i. 
CURTAIN— curtains of thine e,ye Tempest, i. 

these gifts a ciutain before them? . Twelfth Night, i. 

but we will draw the curtain — i. 

draw aside the curtains, and ....Mer. of Venice, ii. 

draw tlie curtains, go — ii. 

draw the curtains straight , — ii. 

come, draw the curtain, Ncrissa — ii. 

do 11 It draw tlie i-iutain lfintcr\Tale,v. 

I'll draw the curtain — v. 

tire curtain? no, not these twenty 3'ears — v. 

draws a curtain, that shows the ....1 IlenryllWv. 

drew Priam's curtain in the dead ot..'i Henry IV. i. 

their ragged curtains poorly ai-e Henry V. iv. 

eyes, and draw the curtain close. . . .'illenrii VI. iii. 

and draw the curtain close Henry VIII. v. 

come draw this curtain, and let's. 7'roi/.<5-6'r«.«. iii. 

draw tlie curtains: so, so, so Lear, iii. 

shady curtains froni Aurora's l)ed../?oin<ro fy Jul. i. 

sprbad thv close curtain, love-performing — iii. 

let me the enrtainsdraw ()lhrlln,v. 

CUR TA I .V i;i)— tiic curtained sleep . ....Mael,eih, ii. 

(rnrtaiued with a eonncil-keeping. 7'i/ii« /l»(/roii.ii. 
(;UI(T.\l,-biivCurtal and his turniturc./l«'»HV«,ii. 
CURT.MJKK.i/.] hofic is a curtail dog. ,W«rv IF. ii. 
Ol'KTlH-hoflo, houl Curtis; who.. 7'(imi«(,'iy-a-/i. iv. 

giKMl Curtis. 1» my master and (i-c;).) — iv. 



CUKTI.S— she was, good Curtis ..TamingofSh. iv. 1 

and myself, fellow Curtis — iv. 1 

a cold world, Curtis, in every — iv. 1 

CURTI/E-AX— cnrtlc-ax upon my. Atyou Like it, i. 3 
each naked curtlc-ax u stain Henry V. iv. 2 

CUR VET—it curvets very As you Like it. iii. -J 

bound and high curvet of iMara's flerv./fH'jMW/, ii. 3 

CUSUION-u cu-hion foi- the se.xtonh/Ww/i/Wo, iv. 2 
sitting on im- eushi.in. hntli.... M.d.N. Dream, iii. 2 
Tui-kev cushions l«.ssctl with pearl., rniii. oft^h. ii. 1 

and this cushion mv crown \ Henry IV. ii. 4 

sliiill have a dozen of cushions n'^a'm.'illenrylV. v. 4 

cushions, leaden spoons, irons of Coriolanus, i. ii 

as to stuff a botcher's cushion, or to Ijc — ii. I 

let them have cushions by you — iii. I 

moving from the casque to the cushion — iv. 7 
with no softer cushion than the flint — v. 3 
I'll have them sleep on cushions. .Ju/iu«Crt'*ar, iv. 3 
right cheek reposing on a ciisliion . . Cymbeline, iv. 2 
lie down and rest upon the cushions? Lear, iii. G 

CUST-AI,ORUJl_und cust-alorum Merry irivei,i. 1 

CUSTARD— leaped into the custard . . All's tfcU, ii. 5 

CUSTARD-COFFIN— 
a custard-coffin, a bauble. . . . Taming nf Shrne, iv. 3 

CUSTODY— to thy custody .... Comedy of Errors, i. 1 
a eluirge from thine own custody? — i. 2 

nor shall not. whiht 'tis in my custody. OMcHo.iii. 3 

CUSTO.M— serious than my custom ....Tempest, ii. I 

'tis a custom with liim i' "the — iii. 2 

our dance of custom, round ahoiit.. Merry IVives, v. .'j 
till custom make it their perch. .A/i-tw./or Mens. ii. 1 

speak after my custom as l)eing MuchAdo,i. I 

rU break a custom Merchant of Venice, i. 3 

more kind than is her custom.... — iv. I 

old custom made this life As you Like it, ii. 1 

shall hop without my custom. Taming of Shrew, iv. 3 
plant and o'erwhelm custom. IVinter'sTale, iv. (elio.) 
digest it with a custom, I should blush — iv. 3 

beguile nature of her custom — v. 2 

but as a thing of custom Macbeth, iii. 4 

to time, and mortal custom — iv. I 

Kate, nire cost, mis court'sy to Henry V. v. •/ 

new ciet'.nis. thoii^di they be Henry VIII. i. 3 

by custom of the coronation — iv. 1 

hiul I not known those customs — iv. I 

ofhcc, and custom, in all line Troilui ^Cress. i 3 

acfjnaintance, custom, and condition — iii. 3 
ohservaneee, customs, and laws. .. Timon nfAth. iv. 1 
their rotten privilege and custom . . Coriolanui, i. 10 

let me o'erlcap that custom — ii 2 

go fit yon to the custom — ii.-.i 

custom calls ine to't; what custom wills — ii. 3 
custom of reciucst you liave discharged — ii. 3 

aged custom, but by your voices — ii. 3 

choked with custom of fell deeds .Julius Cmsar. iii. 1 
custom stale her infinite variety. ^n(ony ^- Cleo. ii. 2 

is l)ut a custom in your tongue Cymbeline, i. b 

the breach of custom is breach of all — iv. 2 
by custom, what they did begin.. i'encto, i. (Gow.) 

you'll lose nothing by custom — iv. 3 

stand in the plague of custom Lear, i. 2 

as the custom is, in all her heat. .Romeo^ Juliet, iv. 5 

is it a custom? Ay, marry, is't Handel, i.i 

it is a custom more honoured in — i. 4 

my custom always of the afternoon — i. 5 

forgone all custom of exercises — ii. 2 

if damned custom have not brazed it so.. — iii. 4 
that monster, custom, who all sense .... — iii. 4 I 
antiquity forgot, custom not known .... — iv. 5 

nature her custom holds, let shame — iv. 7 

custom hath made it in him a property.. — v. 1 
the tyrant custom, most grave senators.. OWi«Uo, i. 3 
are tricks of custom; but, in a man — iii. 3 

CUSTOMARY— it is a customary.. A/ii/.A'.Drfnm, i. 1 
customary can enforce you ..Merch. of Venice, iii. 4 

with eust'anary compliment Winter' sTale, i. 2 

charters, and his customary rights.. Tfi'cAnrd //. ii. 1 

1 have licre the customary gown Coriolanus, ii, 3 

nor custonmry suits of solemn black .... Hum W, i. 2 

CUSTOMED— no eustomeil event. . , . King Joint, iii. 4 
the widow from her customed right..2Wcnri/''7. v. I 

CUSTOMER— her old customers.. .A/fa. /or A/ra.iv. 3 
thee now some common customer , ...All's li'ell, v. .'i 
so fit his customers with gloves. . Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

are these your customers? Comedy of Err. iv. 4 

would but '^ive way to cu-itomers .... Pericles, iv. 6 
I marry lier! what? a customer!- Vihello,\v. 1 

CirsTO.M-SllRUNK— 
po\ertv, I am custom-shrunk ..Meas. for Mens. i. 2 

CUSTURE-[/ui/.] Calcn o' Ctisture mcilennif. iv. 4 

CUT— cut his weazand with thy knife.. 7'fmp'c.i(. iii. 2 
ladyshii) must cut your hair .. 2'm-o Gcn.ofVer. ii. 7 

I vill cut his troat Merry IVives, i. 4 

X vill cut all bis two stones — i. 4 

by gar, me vill cut his ears — ii. 3 

come cut a:id loiiL'-tail — iii. 4 

can cut a caper. And I can cut. . Twelfth Night, i. 3 
hast her not i' the end, call me cut .. — ii. 3 
and rather cut a little .... Measure for Measure, ii. 1 

can you cut olf a man's licad? — iv. 2 

and I can never cut off a woman's head — iv. 2 

cut ott'by course of justice." — v. 1 

and not nave cut him olf — v. 1 

see tlie tisli cut with her golden Much Ado, iii. 1 

on agate ven,' vilely cut — iii. I 

he hiitli twice or tlu-ice cut Cupid's . . — iii. 2 

and cuts, and laced with silver — iii. 4 

hold, or cut bow-strings Mid. N. Dream, i. 2 

if 1 cut my finger, I shall — iii. I 

swift dragons cut the clouds full fast — iii. 2 

cut thread, and tliruin — v. 1 

whose edge hath |>owcr to cut ..Lore's L. Lost, ii. I 
cut nic to (licecs with thy keen c<inccit — v. 2 
hisgrandsirecut in a\a\mi.tCT .. Merch. qf Venice, i. I 

to he cut oir mill taken in what — i. 3 

to cut the loifeitnie from _ 

to be by him cut olf _ 

of such a niisei-y ilntli she cut me off — 

if the .lew do eiit hut deep enough .. — 
and you must cut this flesh from .... — 



iv. 1 
iv. I 
iv. 1 



CUT 

CUT- prepare thee to cut off the Aesh. Sler.o/I'en. iv. 1 

nor cut thou less nor more — iv. 1 

I were best to cut my left hand off . . — v. 1 
this fool to cut oft' the argument?. . .-I.'! you Like il, i. 3 

other means to cut you ott' — ii. :5 

and beard of formal cut — ii. " 

dislike the cut of a certain courtier's {rep.) — v. 4 

eay his beard was not well cut — v. 4 

and cut the entail from all All's H'elt, iv. 3 

cut oft' all strife, here sit we down.. Tarn. o/Sh. iii. 1 

nip, and cut, and slish, and slash — iv. 3 

but did you not request to have it cut? — iv. 3 
cut out the gown; but I did not (/c//.) — iv. 3 

the sleeves em-iously cut — iv. 3 (note) 

the sleeves should fie cut out, and sewed — iv. 3 

cut my lace; lest my heart .. IVinler's Tale, iii. 2 

1 cut out the purity of his _ iv. 3 

I picked and cut niost of their festival — iv. 3 

eoxddeveryet cut breath? — v. 3 

false hand cut the wedding-rins. Comedy of Err. ii. i 

we will draw cuts for the senior — v. 1 

my lord, his throat is cut Macbeth, iii. 1 

I shordd cut off the nobles for — iv. 3 

but gentle heaven, cut short all — iv. 3 

their chm-lisli drums cuts off more . . King John, ii. 1 
Iiis la\rful king, cut off the sequence — ii. 1 

if you will, cut out my tongue iv. 1 

artificer cuts ott' Ms tale iv. 2 

cut him to pieces. Keep the peace . . iv. 3 

those branches by the destinies cut . . Richard 11.1.2 

the king had cut off my head ii. 2 

and cut out his way, to find out — ii. 3 

like an executioner, cut oflT the — iii. 4 

this festered joint cut off v. 3 

knife, no more shall cut his master. .IHenry IV. i. 1 

rob them, cut this head from _ i, 2 

1 pr'ythee, Tom, beat Cut's saddle . . — ii. 1 
down with them; cut the villains' .. _ ii.2 
my buckler cut tlirough and through _ ii. 4 

and cuts me, from the best of all _ iii. 1 

cut me off the heads of all the iv. 3 

that he cuts me from my tale v. 2 

Bardolph; cut me oft' the villain's ..2HenrylV. ii. I 

of a wheel have his ears cut off? — ii. 4 

which to avoid, I cut them off — iv. 4 

I will cut thy throat Henry F. ii . 1 

knives to cut one another's throats . . ii. 1 

will cut their passage through — ii. 2 

and there is throats to be cut, and works — iii. 2 

save me, I will cut off vour head .... iii. 2 

vital tliread be cut with edge of ... . — iii. 6 

beard of the general's cut — iii. G 

would have all such offenders so cut off — iii. G 

but, when our throats are cut — iv. 1 

no English treason, to cut French .. — iv. 1 

for I will cut Ms throat iv. 4 

every soldier to cut his prisoner's — iv. 7 

besides, we'll cut the throats of _ iv. 7 

there my rendezvous is quite cut off — v. 1 

coat one half is cut away 1 Henry J'l. i. 1 

counsel cuts off many foes iii. 1 

flint doth cut my tender feet 2Henry VI. ii. 4 

cut both the villains' throats _ iv. 1 

inicjuity's throat cut like a calf — iv. 2 

war shall cut them short _ iv. 1 

or cut not out the burly-boned — iv. 10 

and there cut off thy most ungracious — iv. 10 

into as many gobbets will I cut it — v. 2 

should cut off our spring-time SHenryf'I. ii. 3 

shall Warwick cut the sea to France — ii. G 

I'll cut the causes off iii. 2 

whiles the head is warm, and new cut off v. 1 

in Ms youth to have him so cut off . . — v. .5 

some unlocked accident cut off Richard III. i. 3 

to cut off those that have offended .. — i. 4 
I'll have this crown of mine cut from — iii. 2 

if all obstacles were cut away iii. 7 

ah, cut my lace asunder! _ iv. i 

the fearful time cuts off the v. 3 

are after such a pagan cut too Henry Fill. i. 3 

through liquid mountains cut . . Troilus % Cress, i. 3 

I shall cut out your tongue ii. 1 

and cut off all fears attending _ ii.2 

thy guard, I'll cut thy throat _ iv. 4 

cut my heart in sums Timon of Athens, iii. 4 

let the foes quietly cut their tMoats — iii. .5 

aud cut yoiur trusters' throats I _ i v. i 

pronounced thy tliroat shall cut — iv. 3 

there's more gold: cut throats — iv. 3 

mine own use invites me to cut down — v. 2 
a disease, that must be cut away . . Coriolanus, iii. 1 

mortal, to cut it off? to cure it iii. 1 

which not to cut, would show thee but — iv! 5 

our general is cut i' the middle — iv. 5 

cut me to pieces. Voices _ v. .3 

you'll rejoice that he is thus cut off. . — v. '5 
and offered them his throat to avA..JuliusC(esar, i. 2 
to cut the head off, and then hack . . — ii 1 
that cuts ott' twenty years of life, cuts — iii! 1 



[ 166 ] 



DAL 



the most unkindest cut of all iii. 2 

how to cut off some charge in iv! i 

advantage shall we cut him off — iv! 3 

then had you indeed a cut. .Antony i^- Cleopatra, i! 2 

cut my lace, Charmian, come i. 3 

let me cut the cable ii. 7 

he could so quickly cut the Ionian sea — iii! 7 

paper hath cut her throat already. . Cymbeline, iii, 1 

thy garments cut to pieces before — iv. 1 

lie cut our roots in characters iv. 2 

cutoffone Cloteu'shead,son to — iv. 2 

hast here cut oft' my lord iv. 2 

I cut off 's head; and am right glad. . — v! 5 
of a cut loai' to steal a shive . . Titus Andronicus, ii. 1 

who 'twas that cut thy tongue — ii. ,'5 

detect him, cut thy tongue _ ii .■> 

that mean is cut from thee _ ii o 

he hath cut those pretty fingers off . . — ii 

the one will help to cut the ctlicr. ... — iii 1 

or sluiU we cut away our hands _ iii 1 



CirX — cut off the proudest conspirator. Titus And. iv. 4 

they cut tiiy sister's tongue (;-™.).... v. 1 

she was -washed and cut'and trmimed — v. 1 
my hand cut off, and made a merry . . — v. 2 
one.hand yet is left to cut your throats — v. 2 
ravished her, and cut away her tongue — v. 3 

destinies do cut his thread of life Pericles, i. 2 

half the flood hath their keel cut . . _ iii. (Gow.) 

ay, he ott'ered to cut a caper at the — iv. 3 

thou may 'st cut a morsel off the spit — iv. 3 

wash his face, nor cut his hairs . . — iv. 4 (Gow.) 

why, after I have cut the egg Lear, i. 4 

unless things be cut shorter _ i. 5 

to cut off m^ train, to bandy _ ii. 4 

preferment falls on him that cuts him off — iv. 5 

a surgeon, I am cut to the brains — iv. 6 

many opportunities to cut Mm off. . . . — iv. 6 (let.) 

I wdl cut oft' their heads liomeo ^Juliet, i. 1 

and cut the winds, who, nothing hurt — i. 1 

cuts beauty off from all posterity — i. 1 

and cut him out in little stars _ iii. 2 

that hand that cut thy youth in ... . _ v. 3 

cut off even in the blossoms Hamlet, i. 5 

to cut Ms throat i' the chru-ch iv. 7 

I had rather have this tongue cut Othello, ii. 3 

my leg is cut in two v. 1 

CUTLliR— like cutler's poetry.. il/ercA. of Venice, v. 1 

CUT-PURSE— for a cut-purse Winter' sTale, iv. 3 

away, you cut-purse rascall 2HenryIV. ii. 4 

a bawd; a cut-purse Henry V. iii. 6 

and sometliing lean to cut-purse — v. 1 

nor cut-purses come not to throngs Lear, iii. 2 

„J'£.'i'"l™''s'' of the empire aud tlie \\i\c. Hamlet, iii. 4 
CirTT'ST-thou cutt'st my head otf./.'o»i. &Jul. iii. 3 
CUTTER-cutter off of nature's . . As you Like il, i. 2 

the cutter was as another nature Ctimbeline, ii. 4 

CUT-THROAT-cut-throatdog.MfrcA. 0/ Venice, i. 3 
thou art the best o' the cut-throats . . Macbeth, iii. 4 
CUTTING— deity cutting the clouds . . Tempest, iv. I 
cuttmg a smaller hair than may he..Love'sL.L. v. 2 
but, in the cutting it, if thou . . Mer. of Venice, iv. 1 
I would the cutting of my garments. JH's IVell, iv. 1 

by cutting off your heads King John, v. 4 

hangs on the cutting short 2HenryVI.iu. 1 

aud cutting the web Troilus Sf Cressida, ii. 3 

dreams he of cutting foreign .... Romeo i?- Juliet, i. 4 

CUTTLE- play the saucy cuttle ....2HenryIV. ii. 4 

CYCLOP— framed of the Cyclop's size. Titus And. iv, 3 

never did the Cyclops' hammers fall . . Hamlet, ii. 2 

CYDNUS— the river of Cydnns . . Antony tj- Cleo. ii. 2 

I am again for Cydnus, to meet — v. 2 

Cydnus swelled above the banks Ci/mbeline, ii. 4 

CYGNET— I am the cygnet to this . . king John, v. 7 
the swan her downy cygnets save . . 1 Henry VI. v. 3 
the cygnet's down is harsh . . Troilus k Cressida. i. 1 

CYMBALS— tabors, and cymbals Coriolanus, v. 4 

CYMBELINE— Cyinbeline loved me. Cymbeline, iii. 3 
swore to Cymbeline, I was confederate — iii. 3 
nor Cymbeline dreams that they are alive — 
the heir of Cynibeliue and JBritain . . — 
Cymbeline I heaven, and my conscience — 

hath to Cymbeline performed v. 4 

ask of Cymbeline wliat boon thou wilt — v. 5 

cedar, royal Cymbeline, personates thee — v. 5 

in favour with the radiant Cymbeline — v. 5 

CYNIC— how vilely doth this cynic. J«(. drsar, iv. 3 

CY'NTHIA— by the eye of Cynthia hath. P<./-/f/fs, ii. .5 

the pale reflex of Cynthia's brow..i;onieo ii-Jul. iii. h 

CYPHER— cypher of a function . . ilea, for Men. ii. 2 

to prove you a cypher Looe'sL. Lost, i. :: 

either a fool, or a cypher Asyuu Like it, iii. 2 

like a cypher, yet standing H'inler's Tale, i. 2 

and let us, cyphers to this great. Henry V. i. (chorus) 
CYPRESS— and in sad cypress.. Twelfth N. ii. 4 (song) 

in cypress chests my arras Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 

a grove of cypress trees 1 2 Henry VI. iii. 2 

I am attended at the cypress grove.. Coriolanus, i. 10 

CYPRUS— a Cyprus, not a bosom. Twelfth Night, iii. 1 

Cyprus, black as e'er was.. Winter' sTale, iv. 3 (song) 

of lower Syria, Cyprus, Lydia ..Anlonyt^Cleo. iii. 6 

the proof, at Rhodes, at Cyprus Othello, i. 1 

such loud reason to the Cyprus wars ' ' 

something from Cyprus, as I may divine 
Turkish fleet, and bearing up to Cvprus 
the importancy of Cyprus to the I'urk . . — i. s 

their purposes toward Cyprus i. ,3 

'tis certain then for Cyprus 1.3 

so let the Turk of Cyprus us beguile — i. a 

mighty preparation makes for Cyprus . . — i. 3 

in full commission here for Cyprus _ ii. 1 

and bring all Cyprus comfort ! — ii. 1 

men of (jj'prus, let her have your knees — ii. 1 

you shall be well desired in Cyprus — ii. i 

once more well met at Cyprus ii. i 

cause these of Cyprus to mutiny ii. 1 

heaven bless the isle of Cyprus ii. 2 

without are a brace of Cyprus gallants .. — ii. 3 
three lads of Cyprus, noble swelling spirits — ii. 3 

is of great fame m Cyprus _ iii. 1 

made demonstrable iiere iu Cyprus — iii. 4 



iii. 3 
iii. 3 
iii. 3 



— 1.3 



BiKiiior; welcome to Cyprus (rep.) — iv. 1 

CYRUS— Thom,yri8 by Cyrus' death. . 1 Henry VI. ii. 3 

CYTHEREA— or Cytherea's breath.. Winter'sT. iv. 3 

and Cytherea all in sedges hid. Taming ofSh. 2 (ind.) 

Cy therea, how bravely thou becom'st. Cymbeline, ii.2 

D 

DABBLED— hair dabbled iu blood . . Richard Ill.i. 1 
D.VCE— if the young dace be a bait . .2Henryir. iii. ■- 
DAD— pare thy nails, dad. . Twelfth Night, iv. 2 (sou") 

first called my brother's father, dad. . KingJolin,i\^2 

was wont to clicer his dad in iHenry VI. i. 4 

DiEDALUS — I Daidalus; my poor boy — v. 6 

DAFF— can'st thou so daff me? Much Ado, v. 1 

D^VFFED— have daffed all other respects. . — ii. 3 

that daffed the world aside 1 Henry IV. iv. 1 

DAFFODIL— daffodils, that come . Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

when datt'odils begin to peer — i v. 2 (song) 

DAFTS-[K;i/.] thou dafls [C'o/.-dafTst] me. Othrllo, iv. 2 
DAGGER— at swurd aud dagger Merry Wives, i. 1 



DAGGER— throwyourdaggero'er.^weMAiV|■^•/l^ iv. 1 

who with dagmr of lath _ iv. 2 (souk) 

the rapier aud dagger man Meas. for Mens, iv.'s 

hath no man's dagger here a point . . Much Ado, iv. 1 

his dagger drew, and died Mid. N. Dream, v. 1 

tliou stick'st a dagger in me Mer. of Venice iii I 

and wear my dagger with the braver - ^ iii. 4 

in the chape of Ins dagger All's Well, iv. 3 

and Walter's dagger was not come. Taming ofSh.iv. I 
my dagger muzzled, lest it should. Winter's Tali; i. 2 

used their very daggers, that they Macbeth, i. 7 

is this a dagger, wlucli I see before me — i i 1 

or art thou but a dagger of ii' i 

Ilaid their daggers ready !!!! _ ii' 2 

why did you bring these daggers from .. — ii! 2 

give me the daggers ; the sleeping _ ii.2 

so where their daggers, which, unwiped. . — ii. 3 

their daggers unmanncTlv breeched ii 3 

where we are, there's dag'gers in men's .. — ii. 3 

this 15 the air-drawn dagger, which — iii 1 

thy kingdom with a dagger of lath .. IHrnrw/F. ii. 4 
why, he hacked it with his dagger .. _ ii. 4 
this dagger my sceptre, and this cushion — ii. 4 
thy golden sceptre for a leaden dagger — ii, 1 
now IS this 'Viee's dagger become . . . .iHenruIV. iii. 2 

thou hid'st a thousand daggers in _ iv. 1 

do not you wear your dagger in \o\xv..HenryV. iv! 1 
pare his nails with a wouilt-ii dugger _ iv 1 

sword, weapon, or dagger. ... 1 Hrmy VI. i. 3 (proci.) 
can better brook thy dagger's point. .ZHenry VI. \. G 

stabbed with bloody daggers liichardlll. i. i 

give me this dagger. My dagL'cr, little — iii. 1 

with one hand on Ms dagger.'. Henry VIII. i. 2 

I know where I will wear this dagger. /«;. Ccesar, i. 3 
1 have the same dagger for myself .. — iii 2 
the honourable men, whose daggers — iii 2 

ran Cassius' dagger through _ iii 2 

there is my dagger, and here my _ iv 3 

sheathe your dagger: be angry when _ iv. 3 
when j'our vile daggers haela-d one.. — v. 1 
I wear not my dagger in my mimth.Cymbeline, iv. 2 
av, with my dagger in their bosoms.. 7',V«s And.iv. ! 
christen it with thy dagger's point . . — iv 2 
lay the serving-creature's dasger.. Romeo ^ Jul. iv. i 

pray you, put up your dagger — iv. 5 

wit, and put up my iron dagger — iv 5 

oh dagger 1 this is thy sheath _ v 3 

this dagger hath mista'en,— for — ^-.3 

will speak daggers to her, but use none.HamleLin. 2 

these words like daggers enter in _ iii 1 

racier and dagger. That's two of Ms ... . — v. 2 

DAGpNET— then sur Dagonet 2Henry IV. iii. 2 

DAILY— how daily gi-aced by . . Two Gen. of Ver. i. 3 

aud daily heart-sore sighs _ ii 4 

what men daily do! Much Ado, iv. 1 

so long I daily vow to use it Winter's Tale, iii. 2 

made daily motions for our home.. Comedy ofKr. i. 1 

that daily break-vow King John, ii. 2 

and daily new exactions are Richard II. ii. 1 

they say, he daily doth frequent _ v . 3 

bein^ daily swallowed by men's ..\HenryIV. iii. 2 

which daily grew to quarrel 2Henry IV. iv. 4 

we lose, they daily get 1 Hennj VI. iv. 3 

as are daily seen by om- _ v. 4 

commonwealth hath daily run to 2Henry VI. i. 3 

quarrel daily doth beget! SHenry VI. ii. 5 

for hunting was his daily exercise . . — iv. G 
great promotions are daily gi \eu . . . Richard III. i . 3 
showered on me daily, I have been. Henry VI 1 1. u\. 2 

conscience in doing daily wrongs v. 2 

to heaven in daily thanks v 2 

you daily paint her thus Troilus ^-Cressida, i. 1 

doth dady make revolt in Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

men daily find it such _ iv. 3 

may beat thy gravestone daily _ i\-. 3 

repeal daily any wholesome act Coriolanus, i. I 

provide more piercing statutes daily — i. 1 

which out of daily fortune ever — iv. 7 

daily she was bound to proffer Cymbeline, iii. :, 

why such daily cast of brazen cannon ..Hamlet, i. 1 

he hath a daily beauty in his life Othello, v. 1 

DAINTIER— hath the daintier sense Hamlet, v. 1 

DAINTIES-fed of the dainties .... Love's L. L. iv. 2 

for dainties are all cates Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 

I hold your dainties cheap, sir ..Comedy of Err. iii. 1 

DAINTtEST-the daintiest last Riclmrd II. i. 3 

gall, the daintiest that they taste ..2HenryVI. iii. 2 
DAINTILY— daintily brought up ..Ant. ^ Cleo. i. 4 

their mother daintily hath fed TitusAndron. v. 3 

DAINTINESS— the daintiness of ear.B/cAort/ //, v. ."i 

DAINTRY— innkeeper at Daintry....! HCTirj/Zr. iv. 2 

by this at Daintry, with a pidssant..3H<?/!rr/;''/. v. 1 

DAINTY— why, that's my dainty Ariel. Tempes/, v. I 

O dainty duck ! O dear! Mid. N. Dream, v. 1 

and dainty bits make rich the ribs ..Love'sL.L. i. 1 

O a most dainty man I iv. 1 

were much too dainty for such tread! — iv.' 3 
proves dainty Bacchus gross in taste — iv. 3 
ewers, to lave her daintv hands .. Taming of Sh. ii. 1 
my dainty duck, my de:u--a?. Winter's T.iv. 2 (son') 
makes scarce one dainty dish . . Comedy of Er. iii. 1 
let us not be dainty of leave-taking . . Macbeth, ii. 3 
king IS weary of dainty and such . .2HenryIV. iv. t 
but Ills can please your dainty eye.. 1 Henry F/. v. 3 

by heaven, slie is a dainty one Henry VIII. i. 4 

grows daiuty of his worth .... Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 3 

gives memorial dainty kisses to it .... v- 2 

pleased with tMs dainty Ijit v. '1 

your laboursome and dainty trims.. Cymbeline, iii! i 
you thither then tliis dainty doe. . TitusAndron. ii. I 

to pluck a dainty doe to ground ii. ' 

she, that makes dainty, she Romeo S,- Juliet, i. j 

DAISIED— the prettiest dai.sicd lAot.Cymbeline. iv. 2 
DAISIES— when daisies pied..Loi'e's L.' L. v. 2 (soiv) 

nettles, daisies, and long puriiles Hnmlel, iv."? 

D--\.ISY— there's a daisy; I would give you — iv. i 
D^VLE— over dale, thorough \>\iA...Mid.N.Dream,i\. \ 

in dale, forest, or mead ii.2 

the doxy over the dale Winter'sTale, iv. 2 (sun-) 

my name is Colevile of the dale. . . .iilenrylV. iv.' 3 



DAL 



[ 157 J 



DAN 



T) VLB— onil vour ptiioe tlie ilnle illmnj IV. iv. 3 

DALIilAXCK— ilii not give dalliance.. 7Vki;im(, iv. 1 



llinii 



ymi HA- tl\i 
inv lni'iiiu--;s ouiii 
pilTccM (lullimu'c ii 
than wanton .lull 



Cmimlij of Knars, i V. 1 

oiik tliis ilallian'cf — iv. 1 
■ wardrobe.. Hftin/C. ii. (clui.) 
• with XHfnryl'l. v. 1 



the nfimmsc patl\ ui' .hilliinwi' tixwli . . llimM, i. 3 
D V1-I-IEI>— ull-secr wiiiili I diiUied .Richard III. v. 1 
DAM.IKS-anil diiUics witli \.\\ti .. Twelfth Mghl. ii. 1 

nnil chillies with the wind liichuni lit. i. 3 

DAl,I.Y->hiUv r.ieelv witli words ..TwelflhN. ni. 1 

and t..dallv With that word , - m- 1 

thn^ (hillv with niv excrement.. Lniip* L. Lost, v. 1 

dallv not with tlie "gtxls Taming of Shrew, iv. 4 

teli nie, and dnllv mil, where.. Comi-i/i/ nf Errors, i. 2 
i-'t a time to lest and dally now? . . I HenrylV. v. 3 
conie,.lallv not. Ik- cone MUiirijlI. v 



,1111. i 



..Cijmbflhif 



. Tempest, i. i 



iv. 1 



V. 2 
V. 2 
. Othello, iv. 1 



ilallv not liefoi-e 
if thou <hnuld'*t dallv half an 1 
v,m do hot dallv; 1 |iray y.m |.i 

DAl.LVlNi.-dnllyin- w.tlial.n 
ifleonld seetlici>ni>|H-t--dallyi 

DAL.MATIA.N'-and the Dnlniuii 
the I'unnouiansand DalniulUins ... 

DA.M— hin>.-L-lf upon thy wicked dara 

it would eontroul mv dani's god — i. ^ 

no more da\na I'll make for fish .. — ii. 2 (song) 

but only Sveorax mv dam — iii. 2 

and hisilam the other Merry Wives, iv. 5 

nor else no lion's dam Mid. N.'s Dream, v. 1 

them all to leave the dam. . Merchant of reiiice, iii. 1 
thnulav'st in thy unhallowed dam — iv. 1 

you may go to the devil's dam Taming of Sh.i. 1 

a devil and the devil's dam — iii- - 

can thy dam? may't be irinter s Talij.u 'i 

together with the dam, commit — n- 3 

blemished his gracious dam — m.i 

she is the devil's dam Comedy of Errors, iv. 3 

prettv chickens, and their dara .Macbeth, iv. 3 

or devil to his dam King John, ii. 1 

devil's dam, I'll conjure thee 1 Henry VI. i. !> 

and as the dam runs lowing ■IHeiiryVLiu. I 

now will I dam up this thy — iv. 1 

neither like thy sire nor dam 3 Henry VI. ii. 2 

oarries no impression like the dam .. — in. 2 
a kind of puppy to the old dam — Henry VIII. i. I 

like an imnatiiral dam Coriolanns, m. 1 

tiger's young ones teach the dam.7'/''iM Aiulron. n 
the dam wiU wake; and if she wind 

why then she's the devil's dam 

half me, and half thy dam! 

cursed hell-hoimds, and their dam!.. 

vour unhallowed dam, like to 

let the devil and his dam haunt you! 

DAMAGE-growth may damage me. Richard III. iv. 2 

tushi it can do me no damage HenryVlII.i. 2 

and all damage else, as honour.. Troilus (; Cress, ii. 2 

DAMASCUS— this be Damascus 1 Henry VI. i. 3 

DAJI ASK^feed on her damask cheek. Twelfth A'. Ii. 4 
their damask sweet commixtm-e.. Lore's L. Los/, y. 2 
constant red, and mingled damask.-Js youLike, iii. h 
as sweet as damask roses. . lI'inler'sTale, iv. 3 (song) 
the war of white and damask Coriolanus, 11. 1 

DAMASK-COLOURED- 
tKnt.] a damask-coloured stock . . Twelflh^lght, i. 3 

DA.ME— the fairest dame that Iived...il/i'rf.A'.L)c. v. I 

the fairest dames, that ever Love'sL. Lost, y. 2 

how now dame! whence gi-ows . . Taming of Sh. ii. I 
unroosted by thy dame Partlet ..IVinler's Tale, ii. 3 
both dame and servant; welcomed all — iv. 3 
plead you to me, fair dame? . . Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

bless you, fair dame ! Macbeth, iv. 2 

we have willing dames enough — iv. 3 

my old dame will be undone nov!..2HenryIV. iii. 2 

for my old dame's sake, stand — iii. 2 

non pour les dames d'houneur d'user. Henry r. iii. 4 

les dames et damoiselles — v. 2 

thy cunning, thou deceitful dame?..) Henry VI. n. 1 
to woo so fair a dame to be his wile .. — v. 3 

perfectionsof this lovely dame — v. 5 

presumptuous dame, ill-nurtured . .2Henry VI. i. 2 
proud dame, the lord protector's wife — .1.3 
marriage with a dame of France . .SHenry VI. iii. 3 
the Grecian dames are sim-burned. rroiV..?- Cress, i. 3 
our veiled dames commit the war . . C'ori'o/anus, ii. 1 

fare thee well, dame Antony SfClenpntrn, iv. 4 

the gallant'st dames of Rome TitusAndron. i. 2 

that chaste dishonoured dame — iv. 1 

a thousand Roman dames at such .. — iv. 2 
the beauty of tliis sinful dame . . I'ericles, i. (Gower) 

whose men and dames so jetted — i. 4 

behold yon simpering dame Lear, iv. G 

shut your mouth, dame — .v. 3 

and liiiiiiv worthy and chaste dames . . Othello, iv. 1 

DA.M.MEIJ— in this place dammed up. IHeHi-j/O'. iii. 1 

dammed with dead men Cymbeline, v. 3 

D.V.MX— almost damn those ears ..Mer.of Venice, i. 1 

damns himself to do, and dares AU'slVeU, iii. G 

if I dij not, damn me — iv. 1 

say, god damn me Comedy of Errors, iv. 3 

the devil damn thee hiaek Macbeth, y. 3 

nav, rather danni them witli king ..'IHenrylV. ii. 4 
ilainn others, and let this damn you.7"im. of Ath.iv. 3 
look, with a Hiw-)t I damn him. . ..Julius Caisar, iv. 1 
(•erform t, or else we <lamn tivia.. Antony ^Cleo. \. 1 

thou shalt not danm my hand Cymbeline, iii. 4 

:ibu''es ine to damn me llamlel, ii. 2 

if thou wilt nei-ds damn thyself Olhelln, i. 3 

da;nn them then, if ever mortal eyes — iii. 3 

diiinn her, lewd inin.x! O damn herl .... — iii. 3 

come, swear it, damn thv^elf — iv. 2 

DA.MXABI-E— ifitneredamnable.iVea./or.Wea.iii. I 
in themindheit, were<luninable.... — iv. 3 
O thou danmable fellow! did not I .. — T. 1 
in his art, and yet not damnable.. -<»!/oii Like it, y. 2 

is it not meant ilamnahic in us All's Well, iv. 3 

damnable, both sides rogue! — iv. 3 

inoimstant, and damnable Ifinter's Tale, iii. 2 

deed you undertake is damnable . . tiicliurd III. i. 4 



DAMNABLE— damnable iteration ..MlenrylV. i. 2 
why thou damnable box of envy. Troilus Sf Cress, v. 1 
leave thv damnable faiTS, and begin . . Hamlet, iii. 2 
DAMN Alii, Y-.nlo^tdanlnal)lv .. ..\HenryIV. iv. 2 
DAMN A'l'KIN— sluiivchunnation.A/<Tr|/Wii)f», iii. 2 
she will not add to licr damnation ..Much Ado, iv. 1 
't were damnation, to think . . Mm-h. „f Venice, \\. 7 

is sin, and sin is damnation ts ijuu l.il<e it, iii. ;.' 

the deep damnation of his tsiking \l<i<liflh. I. 7 

witness against ns to diiioniUion! .. King Jnhn, iv. 2 
bnnL'le npdaniiuilion ullli p:itrhes .. lie jirr/ F. ii. 2 
the anthorol'tlu' h. r\aii('siliunnation — iv. 1 

the kin^' LOiiltv ol tluii- <l loition.. — iv. 1 

lelnioliencoiu lie 111 \danm;ilion.r.mono/ .•!(/.. iii. 1 
aneientil;nnnidionMli.iost«ieUeil./(omfo,S-./»/.iii.i 
Idaiedamniili on: to this p..inl 1 sla.ul. //..m/,7.iv. .', 
nolhinL' eanst tliou to diinmation add. .(J"i.'«n, iii. 3 
death linil ilaniiialioni O! it were a tedious — iii. 3 
iiied witch Syeora.\. I'empf»(, i. 2 
■on the damned .... — i. 2 
II, tor swearing.A/erry'rjDfs, ii.2 

what a damned iMiieureau rascal — ii. 2 

the devil will not luive me damned .. — v. 5 
I 'd have seen hiin ilanmed ... .Twelfth Night.,n\. 4 

most dannuil AuL'elo! Mcasurefor Measure, iv. 3 

damned spirits all, that inerossways.A/W. Af.flr. iii. 2 

she is damned for it Merchant of Venice, iii. 1 

in religion, what danmed error — iii. 2 

for h-uly, I think, you are damned .. — iii- 5 

Ifear you are damned both — iii. ■'J 

O be thou damned, inexorable dog . . — iv. 1 
art damned. Nay, I hope (.rep.) ..is you Lil<e it, iii. 2 
wilt thou rest damned? God help thee — jij- 2 
if thou be'st not damned for this — — iii- 2 
thougli many of the rich are damned.. /liCs ll'ell.i. 3 
wdiere dust, and damned oblivion — — ii. 3 
and dares tetter be damned than do 't — iii. 6 
where is that damned villain . . Taming of Shrew, v. 1 
some putter-on that will be damned. Winter sT. ii. 1 
confederate with a damned pack. Conierfi/ o/Krr. iv. 4 
fortune, on his damned quarrel smiling.A/(i<'6c//i,i. 2 
kill their gracious father? damned fact! — iii. G 
and damned, all those that trust them ! . . — i v. 1 

can come a devil more damned — iv. 3 

out, damned spot I out, I say ! — v. 1 

and damned be him that first cries — v. 7 

it is a damned and a bloody work . . King John, iv. 3 
art damned as black— nay (repeated) — iv. 3 
by some damned hand was robbed . . — v. 1 
untread the steps of damned flight . . — _y. 4 
vipers, damned without redemption! /(/c/iMrd//. iii. 2 

thou art damned to hell for this — iv. 1 

%rith a blot, damned in the book — — iv. 1 

I'll be damned for never a king's IHenrylV. i. 2 

damned for keeping thy word (rep.) — i. 2 
great magician, damned Glendower.. — i. 3 
and that damned brawn shall play . . — ii. 4 
I'll see thee damned ere I call thee . . — ii. 1 
an old host that I know, is damned — ii. 4 

let him be damned like the glutton.. 2IJe«)'!/ IV. i. 2 
thou abominable damned cheater — — ii. 4 
damned first;— to Pluto's damned lake — li. 4 
and whether she be damned for that — ii. 4 
if damned commotion so appeared . . — iv. 1 
thou damned tripe-visaged rascal — — v. 4 

vile, and damned furious wight . . Henry F. ii. 1 

prevented from a damned enterprize — ii- '^ 
a damned death! let gallows gape .. — jij. 6 

die and be damned : a figo for — ui. 6 

thou damned and Uuxunous mountain — iv. 4 
that witch, that damned sorceress. . 1 Henry VI. iii. 2 

die, damned wretch, the eurse 'iHenryVI. iv._ 10 

thou may'st be damned for that . . Richard III. i. 2 
but to be damned for killing him.... — i. 4 
outrage, end thy damned s|)leen — — _ii. 4 
a knot you are of damned bloodsuckers — in. 3 
devilish plotsof damned witchcraft.. — iii. 4 
protector of tliis damned strumpet . . — iii. 4 

let's smother my damned son — iv. 4 

O thou damned cm- 1 I shalL.T'roifus.S-Cress/.'/a, ii. 1 
fly, damned baseness, to him that. riniono/zlWi. iii. 1 
come, damned earth, thou common . . — iv. 3 
when damned Casca, like a enr . . Julitis Cwsar, v. 1 

a true election, she is damned Cymbeline, i. 3 

with a (Irug of such damned nature.. — i. 6 
should I (damned then) slaver OTth lips — i. 7 
O damned paper! black as the ink .. — in. 2 
damned Pisanio hath with his (rep.) — iv. 2 
in war, danmed in the first beginuers? — y. 3 

here grow no damned grudges ri7i(s Andron. i. 2 

reveal the darrmed contriver of this . . — iv. 1 

and damned her loathed choice — iv. 2 

damned [Coi.-aud] as he is, to witness — v. 3 
justieedoneto Aaron, thatdamnedMoor — v. 3 

avaunt, thou damned doorkeeper Pericles, iv. G 

thou'rt the damned doorkeeper to every — ly. 6 

suggestion, plot, and damned practise Lear, ii. 1 

damned saint, an honourable villain. iiom.<S-J«/. iii.2 
like damned guilty deeds to sinners' — iii. 2 
the damned use that word in hell — — i;i 3 
by doing damned hate upon thyself? — in. 3 

a spirit of health, or goblin damned Hamlet, i. 4 

a couch for luxury and damned incest .. — i. .0 
villain, villain, smiling, damned villain — i. 5 
a tvrannoiis and a damned li^'ht to their — ii. 2 

life, a damned defeat was maile — ii. 2 

it is a danmed ghost that we have seen .. — in. 2 

that his soul may be as damned — !1>- -i 

if damned custom have not brazed it BO.. — in. 4 

in your neck with his damned hngers — ni. 1 

is't not to lie damned, to let tliis canker.. — v. -J 
incestuous, mnrih'rous, ilamned Dane.... — y. 2 
a fellow almost ihunned in a tair wife ..Otiiello, i, 1 
danmed as thon art, Ihoii luist enchanted — 1.2 

what (hiinned minnte-i telMie o'er — in. 3 

rot, and iierish, and be tlamned to-night — iv. 1 

therefore be double damned, swear — iv. 2 

() damned lago! (I inhuman dog — v. 1 

1 were damned beneath all depth in hell — v. 2 
an odioub.damued lie; uiKin my soul .... — v. 2 



D.\MNED— for 'tis a damned slave Othello, v. 2 

[r'o/.J in the praetice of a damned slave .. — v. 2 
meant to bav(- sent this damned villain.. — v. 2 
DAMNKD'ST-tln-damned'stbiMlv.A/en.ftrA/en. iii. 1 
l)A,M<>lSi;Ll,KS-<biinesetilamoiselles.He(/rv ". v. 2 
l)A\lii\_ilo-t know, (I Damon dear ..Hamlet, iii. 2 
DA.Mi )SI-;i, -taken w ith a dalnosel (rep.)Lot-e'sLL.i. I 
l)A.\l()Si;i,l„\— but, dainosella virgin — iv. 2 
UAMI'— murk and occidental damp ..All's IVell, ii. 1 

the poisoniHisdainp of night Antony^ Cleo. iv. 9 

DA.M.S1-;L— for this daiMHel, I must.. Lot'e'»L.Loi(, i. 2 
damsel, I'll have a boot with you ..\ Henry VI. Hi. 'Z 

damsel of 1- ranee, I think — v. 3 

DAAISON— rlesired some damsons. .. .2Henri/r/. ii. 1 
D.VAI'ST— thoudain'st it up. Two Gen.of Verona, ii. 7 

DANCE— to dance on sands — iii.2 

he cajiers, he dances, he has Merty Wives, iii. 2 

I'll make him dance — iii.2 

ourdance of custom, round about., .. — v. 5 

I will dance and eat plums — v. .^ 

make the welkin dance indeed?. . TteelflhNight, ii. 3 
acknowledge it this night in a dance.. A/i/c/i/frfo, i. 2 
and so dance out the answer .. 



out of m^ sight, when the dance is done — 
)U sing it, and I'll dance it — 



do you I- „ - . 

let s have a dance, ere we are — v. 4 

to dance our ringlets to the. Mid. N. Dream, ii. 2 

if you will patiently dance in our. ... — ii. 2 
with dances and delight; and there — ii. 2 

solemnly dance in duke Theseus' house — iv. I 
what masks, wliat dances shall we have — v. 1 
or to hear a Ber^omask dance, between — v. 1 

sing, and dance it trippingly — v. 1 

did not I dance with you (.rep.) . . Love'sL. Lost, ii. I 
for revels, dances, masks, and merry — iv. 3 

I'll make one in a dance, or so — v. 1 

and let them dance the hay — v. 1 

to parle, to court, and dance — v. 2 

but shall we dance, if they desire .... — v. 2 
no dance, thus chaiige I like (rep.) .. — v. 2 
we will not dance. Why take we .... — v. 2 

if you deny to dance, let's hold — v. 2 

wish thee never more to dance — v. 2 

but one to dance with! By heaven.... /Ki'sjreH, ii. 1 

and make you dance canary — ii. 1 

burthen of my wooing dance .. Taming of Shrew, i. 2 
must dance barefoot on her wedding-day — ii. I 
my heart dances, but not for joy . . Winler'sTalc^ i. 2 
would sing her song, and dance her turn — iv. 3 
when you do dance, I wish you a wave — iv. 3 
hut come, our dance, I pray; your hand — iv. 3 
which dances with your daughter? . . — iv. 3 
she dances featly. So she does anything — iv. 3 
you would never dance again after . . — iv. 3 
they have a (lance which the wenches — iv. 3 

a delightful measure, or a dance Richard II. i. 3 

and ruffians dance and leap, the one — ii. 4 
madam, we will dance. My legs .... — iii. 4 

swear, drink, dance, revel 2HenryIV. iv. 4 

to dance out of your debt — (cpil.) 

or to dance for your sake, Kate Henry V. v. 2 

and sooner dance upon a bloody 'iHenryVl.iv. 1 

that I may sing and dance 'iHejiry VI. i. 4 

I dance attendance here: I think. . Richard III. iii. 7 

to dance attendance on their Henry VIII. v. 2 

there they are like to dance — v. 3 

they dance! they are madwomen.. TimonofAlh. i. 2 

those, that dance before me now — i. 2 

more dances my rapt heart Coriolanus, iv. 5 

hearts dance with comforts — v. 3 

make the sun dance. Hark you — v. 4 

very well become a soldier's dance .... Pcn'des, ii. 3 
that I can sing, weave, sew, and dance — iv. G 

she dances as goddess-like to her — v. (Gow.) 

Romeo, we must have you dance . . Romeo ffJul. i. 4 
of you all will now deny to dance? .. — i. 5 
follows there, that would not dance? — . i. 5 

here's that shall make you dance — iij. 1 

some to dance, some to make bonfires . . 0//)e//o,_ii. 2 
free of speech, sings, plavs. and dances well — iii. 3 

DANCED— that danced w-itii her Much.ido, ii. 1 

but then there was a star danced — ii. 1 

hath danced before the king Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

last time, I danced attendance on ..illenry VI. i. 3 
many a time he danced thee on . . Titus Andron, v. 3 
even now of one I danced withal. Romeo i§-J"''e(,i. 5 

DANCER— me with a good dancer Much Ado, ii. I 

kept his sword even like a dancer. . /lii(. ^Cleo. iii. 9 

DANCETII— only danceth at so harsh . . I'ericles, i. I 

DANCING — dancing up to the chins ..Tempest, iv. 1 
fencing, dancin{j, and bear-baiting. Twelfth i\'ight, i.3 

we'll have dancing afterwards Much .Ido, v. 4 

the dancing horse will tell you . . Lot-e's L. Lost, i. 2 
other than for dancing measures.. .4s j^ou Like it, v. 4 
the dancing banners of the French.. King John, ii. 2 

more than my dancing soul Richard II. i. 3 

therefore, no dancing, girl — iii. 4 

the emptier ever dancing in the air . . — iv. 1 
on the inconstant hi Hows dancing. Henry /'.iii. (eho.) 

with dancing is a little heated Henry VI II. i. 4 

say, I am dancing; if in mirth ..Antony SfCleo. i. 3 

thy deitv aboard our dancing boat Pericles, iii. I 

have dancing shoes, with nimble.. /(oiiieo ^Juliet, i. 1 
you and I are past our dancing days . . — i. 5 

DANCING-K.U'IKK— 
a daneiie'-rapier liv your side .... TitusAndron. ii. 1 

DAN(.:ixr;-si'!iii(ii;— 

to the Kii-lihli daiieing-sehools Henry r. in. 5 

D.VNl)l>l-;-dandlc thee like a baby ..iHenryVI. i. 3 

let the emiK-ror dandle him for .. TitusAndron. iv. 2 

DANE— German or Dane, Low Dutch. All's Well.iv. 1 

and liegemen to the Dane. Give you Hamlet, i. I 

you cannot s|)eak of reason to the Dane. . — i. 2 
king, father, royal Dane: O, answer me.. — i. 4 

this is I, Hamlet the Dane — v. 1 

damned Dane, ilrink oil' this potion — v. 2 

um more an antiiiue Roman than a Dane — v. 2 

your Dane, v<iiir German, and your Otliella, ii. 3 

with faeilitv, your Dane dead drunk.... — ii. 3 
DANGER— toresees the ilanger that Tempest, ii. I 



DAN 

DjINGER— nm into no further dangCT.Tcmpfst, ni.2 
in thy danger, if over danger ..TwoGen.ofl'er. i. 1 

regai'd tliy danger, and along — iii. I 

tlnit danger sluul seera sport .... Twelfth Night, ii. 1 

I do not without danger Wiilk — iii. 3 

into the danger of this adverse — v. 1 

moaning to partake with me in danger — v. 1 
ac(iuain"t lier w\l]\ tlic danger of. Mens. /or .Ueos. i. 3 

to save me from t)ie danger that — iv. 3 

let the danger light upon your. . Mer. of I'enice, iv. 1 
you stand within Iris danger, do you not? — iv. 1 
"thou hast incxured the danger formerly — iv. 1 

what danger will it be to us As you Like i7, i. 3 

as she is, and mthout any danger .... — v. 2 

have left off the danger to itself? All's ll^ell,l 3 

the danger is in standing to't — iii- - 

but of danser wins a sear — iii. 2 

where deatli and danger dog the. ... — iii- 4 (let.) 
no further danger kno%vn, but the .. — iii. 5 

in a main danger, fail you — iii. G 

have I run in to this danger — iv. 3 

will stand 'twixt you and danger.. Winter's Tale,n. 2 
save him from danger, do him love . . — iv. 3 
what dangers, by his highness' fail of — v. 1 

no more be in danger ot losing — v. 2 

age and dangers make thee dote. Comedy of Err. v. 1 

remains in danger of her former Macbeth, iii. 2 

I doubt, some danger does approach.... — iv. 2 
much danger do I undergo for tUec.Ki'n? John, iv. 1 
to be employed in danger, I faintly . . — iv. 2 

nor tempt the danger of my true — iv. 3 

the tliorns and dangers of this world — iv. 3 
even in the jaws of danger and of death — v. 2 

to find tliis danger out — v. 2 

some apparent danger seen in him ..Biehard II. i. 1 
you pluck a thousand dangers on. . . . — ii. I 

and unavoided is the danger now — ii. 1 

to worthy danger, and deserved death — v. 1 

tell us how near is danger — v. 3 

for I see danger .and disobedience .... 1 Ilenrt/IF. i. 3 

send danger trora the east — i- 3 

out of this nettle, danger — ii. 3 

without the taste of danger and reproof — iii. 1 
did outdare the dangers of the time. . — v. 1 
where most trade of danger ranged ..illenrylV. i. 1 

and meet with danger there — ii. 3 

and with what danger, near the heart — iii. 1 
tlie dangers of the days but newly . . — iv. 1 
ruminate the morning's danger. . Henry V. iv. (cho.) 
'tis true, that we are in great danger — iv. 1 
a terrible and uuavoldeadanger. ... 1 Henry VI. iv. b 

climb, with danger of my life 2Henry VI. ii. 1 

but I in danger tor the breach of law — ii. 4 

collect these dangers in the duke — iii. 1 

your grace's person be in danger .... — iv. 4 
still where danger was, still there I . . — .v. 3 
not on thy danger and dishonour . .ZHenry VI. iii. 3 
with danger and with sorrow (rep.) .. — iv. 1 
foretold — that danger lurks within . . — iv. 7 
full of danger is the duke of Gloster.iJ;c/iai-d ///. ii. 3 
men's minds mistrust ensuing danger — ii. 3 
shun the danger that his soul divines — iii. 2 
daring an opposite to every danger . . — v. 4 

and danger serves among them Henry VIII. i. 2 

perfidious to the king's dauger — i. 2 

and there scatters dangers, doubts — ii. 2 

I weighed the danger which my realms — ii. 4 
a precipice for no leap of dauger .... — v. I 
soever rounded in with danger . . Troilus ^- Ci-ess. i. 3 

to a blank of danger; and danger — iii. 3 

to danger as iniiuite as imminent ! (rep.) — i v. 4 

address theu- dangers in — v. It 

his heart, to bring it into danger.. Timon of.ilh. iii. 5 
was pleased to let liim seek danger . . Coriolanus, i. 3 
the extreme dangers, and the drops . . — iv. b 
we'll deliver you of your great danger — v. 5 
the great danger which this man's life — v. 5 
when they are in great danger .... Julius Caisar, i. 1 
into what dangers would you lead me — i. 2 
and dangers are to me indifferent .... — i. 3 

his will he may do danger with — ii. 1 

danger knows full well, that Cassar. . — ii. 2 

clouds, dews, and dangers come — v. 3 

tlie sides o' the world may danger ..Ani.^ Cleo. i. 2 

and we in negligent danger — ii i. 6 

but there is no danger in what Cymbeline, i. B 

only seems to seek out danger i' the — iii. 3 

may prove his travel, not her danger — iii. 5 

what pain it cost, what danger! — iii. 6 

nor seek for danger where there's — iv. 2 

madness, of which her life's in danger — iv. 3 

her purpose was of more danger — v. 5 

your danger is ours. And our good. . — v. 5 
warded him from thousand dangers. Titus And. iii. 1 
the danger of tlie task you undertake . . Pericles, i. I 

I'll slum the danger which I fear — i. 1 

and danger, which I feared, is at Antioch — i. 2 

or my life imply her dauger? — iv. 1 

the commodity wages not with the danger — iv. 3 

aud to no other pretence of dauger Lear, i. 2 

wer't not in danger of kibes — i. 5 

iiith that both care and danger e]jeak — ii. 4 

come to me (for now I spy a danger) — ii. 4 

so much fear and danger, tliat his jicrscmal — iv. 3 
and yet it is dauger to make him even . . — iv. 7 
neglecting it may do much danger. /(omco ^Jut. v. 2 
out of the shot and danger of desire .... Hamlet, i. 3 
aud the disclose will be some dauger .... — iii. 1 

to be too busy, is some dauger — iii. 4 

fortune, death, and dauger, dare, eveu .. — iv. 4 
let our beard be shook with dauger .... — iv. 7 

and wage, a danger proiitless Othello, i. 3 

she loved me for the dangers I had passed — i. 3 

worthy Othello, I am hurt to danger — ii. 3 

on your love; shared dangers with you .. — iii. 4 
D ANGERO US-dangerous to pass. Two Gen. of V. iv. 3 
what dangerous action, stood it. . — v. 4 

for tlie revolt of mien is dangerous. A/erry Wives, 1.3 
most dangerous is that tenijAatiou. Mea.for Mea. ii. 2 
it is as dangerous to be aged iu any.. iii. 2 



[ 108 J 



DANGEROUS-dangerous courtesy. il/ra.ybrA/to.iy. 2 
with dangerous sense, might, in the. . — iy. 4 
recovered the most dangerous \>\Q.QQ..MuehAdo, iii. 3 
speak off half a dozen dangerous words — v. 1 
they are dangerous weapons for maids — v. 2 
a dangerous law against gentil ity. Love's L. Lost, i. 1 
a dangerous rhyme, master, against . . — i. 2 
bethink me straight of dangerous. A/er. of Venice,'i. I 

a very dangerous flat, and fetal — iii. 1 

the guilcd shore to a most dangerous sea — iii. 2 
oaths that are not dangerous ....As you Like it, iy. 1 

my state that way is dangerous AWs Well, ii. 5 

to be a dangerous and lascivious boy — iv. 3 
ornaments oft do, too dangerous . . Winter' sTale, i. 2 

betimes; for 'tis most dangerous — 1.2 

dangerous unsafe liines o' the king! — ii. 2 

sometime, accounted dangerous ioily., Macbeth, iv. 2 

into tills dangerous argument KingJohn, iv. 2 

know the meaning of dangerous majesty — iy. 2 
foul and dangerous to God of heaven.ifi'cAard Il.'i. 3 
let the dangerous enemy measure . . — iij. 2 
makes upon my laud, is dangerous .. — iii. 3 
my dangerous cousin, let your mother — v. 3 
two of tlie dangerous consorted traitors — v. 6 
read you matter deep aud dangerous.lHcjiry/F. i. 3 

you undertake, is dangerous — ii.2(letter) 

tis dangerous to take a cold — ii. 2 

to lay so dangerous and dear a trust — iv. 1 
unkind usage, dangerous countenance — v. 1 

ventured on such uaiigerous seas 2lIenryIF, i. 1 

there is not a daugerous action can .. — i. 2 

wdiose daogerous eyes may well be . . — iv. 2 
discover^' of most dangerous treason . . Henry T. ii. 2 
brought to light this dangerous treason — ii. 2 

delays have dangerous ends 1 Henry VI. iii. 2 

to rive their dangerous artillery .... — iv. 2 
our colours in tliis dangerous light — iv. 2 

will be found a dangerous protector..2He;!j-i/ VI. i. 1 
pernicious protector, dangerous peer — ii. 1 
as I do, in these dangerous days, wink — .jj- -^ 
what's more dangerous than this fond — iii. 1 
these days are dangerous! virtue is.. — iii. 1 

slain, or wounded dangerous ZHenry VI. i. 1 

more honour, because more dangerous — iv. 3 
like it better than a dangerous honour — iy. 3 
inductions dangerous, by drunken. .BtcAard ///. i. 1 

it is a dangerous thing, it makes — i. 4 

towns and cities for a dangerous thing — _i. 4 
would be so much the more dangerous — Ji. 3 
which you want, were dangerous..., — iii. 1 

knot of dangerous adversaries — iii. 1 

dangerous and unsuspected Hastings — iii. 5 
the aim of every dangerous shot — — iv. 4 
and dangerous success of bloody wars — iv. 4 
thrive I in my dangerous attempt . . — iv. 4 

note this dangerous conception Henry VIII. i. 2 

'twas dangerous for him to ruminate — i. 2 
new opinions, divers and dangerous — v. 2 

we first put this dangerous stone — v. 2 

'twixt the dangerous shores of. . Troilus Sf Cress, ii. 2 
as Hector, but more dangerous . . — iv. 5 

this place is dangerous; the time — v. 2 

my wind pipe's dangerous notes. Timon of.ilhens,_ i. 2 
are foul, and his drink dangerous. . . . — iii. b 
turns my dangerous nature wild .... — iv. 3 
rather pliysical than dangerous .... Coriolanus,i. 5 

it will be dangerous to go on ._. — iii. 1 

if none, awake your dangerous lenity — iii. 1 

a body with a d.angerous physic — jii. 1 

not what is dangerous present — iii- 2 

than fear thy dangerous stoutness .. — iii. 2 
the rout, then hold me dangerous../«(i«s Cccsar, i 2 

such men are dangerous («p.) — i- 2 

and therefore are they very dangerous — i. 2 
honourable dangerous eonseguence . . — _i. 3 
to show thy dangerous brow by night — ii. 1 
Cassar is more dangerous than he.. .. — ii. 2 
and wherein, Caasar was dangerous .. — iii. 1 
a mourning Rome, a dangerous Rome — iii. 1 
lovers and men in dangerous bonds .CymhcUne,'iil. 2 
dangerous fellow, hence ! breathe not — v. b 
unfold a dangerous speech, though . . — y. b 

think you not how dangerous Titas Andron.ii. 1 

youth was spent in dangerous wars.. — iii. I 
yet more dangerous, than baits to fish — iv. 4 

but dangerous to be touched Pericles, i. \ 

as dangerous as the rest — i. 1 

hanged at home ; 'tis dangerous — . i. 3 

'tis dangerous to be spoken Lear, iii. 3 

stay with us; the ways are dangerous — — iv. 6 
her father counts it dangerous. .Romeo ff Juliet, iv. 1 
witli turbulent and dangerous lunacy.. Hj/iiic-;, iii. 1 
[Co;. A'n(.] endure hazard so dangerous . . — iii. 3 
how dangerous is it, that this man goes. . — iv. 3 
for she ma^ strew dangerous conjectures — iv. b 
yet have I in me something dangerous . . — v. 1 
'tis dangerous, when the baser natm-e — — v. 2 
I have lost him on a dangerous sea — Olhellu, ii. 1 
dangerous conceits, are in their natures — iii. 3 
DANGEROUSLY— upon it dangerously ..Jolin, iy. 2 
have practised dangerously against.. 2He«f!/ I'l. u. 1 
most dangerously you have with him.... Corio/. v. 3 
DAiSTGLU^G-you dangling apricocks./iiWiord //. iii. 4 
DANIEL— a Daniel come to irep.).Mer.of Venice, iv. 1 

a second Daniel, a Daniel, Jew! — iv. I 

a Daniel, still say I; a second Daniel! — iv. 1 
DANISH— red after the Danish sword . . Hamlet, iv. 3 

from me greet the Danish king — iv. 4 

O, this is counter, you false Danish dogs — iv. 5 

tlie model of tliat Danish seal — v. 2 

the French bet against the Danish — v. 2 

DANK— on the dank and dirty ..Mid. N. Dream, ii. 3 
beans are as dank here as a dog .... 1 Henry IV. ii. I 
tlie humours of tlie dank nwramg? JuliusCasar, ii. 1 

and niglit's dank dew to dry Romeo ^ Juliet, ii. 2 

DziNKISU— darkanddankishvault.com. of Err. v. 1 

DANSKERS— Danskers are in Paris Hamlet, ii. 1 

DAPHNE— Daphne holds the chase. .Mid. iV.jDr.ii. 2 
or Daphne, roaming through.. Tarn. ofSh. 1 (indue.) 
ApoUo, for thy Daphne's love. Tjoiius e^Cressida, i. 1 



DAR 

DAPPLE— dajiples the drowsy east .... Much Ado, v. 3 
DAPPLED— poor dappled fools. . . . As you Like it, ii. 1 
DARDAN-on Dardau plains. Troil. if Cress, (prologue) 
Dardan, and Tyrahria, Ilia, Clietas — (prologue) 
DARDANIAN— Dardanian wives. . /Ifi-r. o/;V«. iii. 2 
DARDANIUS-hark thee,Dardaniusyu(/i(sCVfs(//-, v. 5 
DARE-that dare not ofter what I desire. Tcmpes', iii. 1 

but this thing dare not — iii. 2 

dare you presume to harbour . . Two Gen. of Ver. i. 2 

we dare trust you ill this kind — iii. 2 

now I dare not say I have — v. 4 

I dare thee but to breathe upon my love — v. 4 

I dare be bold with our discourse — v. 4 

that he dares in tliis manner Merry Wives, ii. 1 

the folly of my soul dares not present — ii. 2 
in their so sacred paths he dares to tread. — iv. 4 

no, no, no, no, you dare not . . Twelfth Night, ii. 3 
for his love dares yet do more than . . — iii. 4 

1 dare lay any money — iii. 4 

I dare not for my head fill Meas. foi Mens. iv. 3 

yet reason dares her? no — iv. 4 

dare no more stretch this finger («p.) — y. 1 

I dare swear he is no hypocrite Muck Ado, i. 1 

but who dare tell her so ? — iii. 1 

and the little hangman dare not shoot — iii. 2 

if you dare not trust that you see — iii. 2 

I dare make his answer, none irep.) .. — iv. 1 
you dare easier be friends with me . . — iv. 1 
I'll prove it on his body, if he dare . . — v. 1 
that dare as well answer a man (rep.) — v. 1 
Iiow you dare, with what you dare (rcp^) — v. 1 
and dares not answer, nay ..Mid.N.Dr. iii. 1 (song) 

and still dares me on — iii. 2 

he dares not come there for the candle — v. 1 
and every man that dares not fight I.Loue's L. L. i. 1 
eagle-sighted eye dares look upon. . . . — iv. 3 
your mistresses dare never come in . . — iv. 3 

I dare not call them fools — v. 2 

and never dare misfortune cross her. Afer. ofVen. ii. 4 
who dare scarce show his head on the — iii. 1 
I dare be sworn for him, he would .... — v. 1 

I dare be bound again, my soul — v. 1 

she thought, I dare vow for her All's Well, i. 3 

than I dare blame my weakness .... — ii. 1 

that dare leave two together — ii. 1 

I dare not say, I take you, but I . . . . — ii. 3 
what I dare too well do, I dare not do — ii. 3 

nor dare I say, 'tis mine — ii. 5 

therefore dare not say what I think. . — iii. I 
and dares better be damned than .... — iii. G 

great ones I dare not give — iv. 1 

half of the which dare not shake the — iy. 3 
she stands, touch her whoever dare. . Tarn. ofSh. iii. 2 
no, no, forsooth, I dare not, for my life — iv. 3 
I dare assure you, sir, 'tis almost .... — iv. 3 

I dare swear, this is the right — v. 1 

nay, I dare not swear it — v. 1 

I dare not know, my lord (rep.) . . Winter'sTale, i. 2 

and cannot say, you dare not' — i. 2 

if therefore you dare trust my — i. 2 

to prove, I dare not stand by — i. 2 

I dare my life lay down, and will. . . . — ii. 1 
I dare be sworn: these dangerous .... — ii. 2 

if she dares trust me with her — ii. 2 

yet that dare less appear so — ii. 3 

that come before the swaUow dares . . — iv. 3 

whom son I dare not call — iv. 3 

nor dare to know that whicli I know — iv. 3 

I dare, and do defy thee Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

letting I dare not wait upon I would . . Macbeth, i. 7 
I dare do all that may become (rep.) . . — i. 7 

who dares receive it other, as we — i. 7 

look on't again, I dare not — ii. 2 

'tis much he dares; and, to that — iii.! 

that dare look on tliat whicli — iii. 4 

what man dare, I dare — ill. 4 

aud dare me to the desert with — iii. 4 

how did you dare to trade — iii. .'j 

I dare not speak much further — i v. 2 

preserve you! I dare abide no longer .. — iv. 2 

for goodness dares not check thee — i\'. 3 

I think, but dare not speak — v. 1 

heart would fain deny, and dare not . . — v. 3 

who dares not stu- by day King John, i. I 

who lives aud dares but say — _ i. 1 

but yet I dare defend my — iv. 3 

and dares him to set forward Richard //. i. 3 

but I dare not say how near — ii. 1 

how dare thy joints forget to — iii. 3 

how dares tliy harsh rude tongue .... — iii. 4 
if I dare eat, or drink, or breathe .... — iv. 1 

what my tongue dares not — v. 5 

my lord, I dare not; sir Pierce — y. 5 

that they dare not meet each \HenryIV.i\. 2 

as thou art but man, I dare — iii. 3 

a larger dare to our enterprize — iv. 1 

and I dare well maintain it — iv. 3 

so dare we venture thee, albeit — v. 1 

should a brother dare to gentle e.'cci'cise — v. 2 

that time and spite dare bring 'iHenrylV. i. 1 

rCoi.] aud dare speak the truth — i. I 

I dare say, my cousin William is ... . — iii. 2 
and I dare swear, you borrow not.... — v. 2 
tliat dares do justice on my proper son — v. 2 

I dare not fight, but I will wink lleiay F. ii. 1 

you must not dare, for shame — ii. 2 

that dare eat his breakfast on the — — iii. 7 
I dare say, you love him not so ill . . — iv. 1 

shall so much dare the field — iv. 2 

andever dare to challenge this glove — iv. 7 
and dai'e not avouch in your det:ds . . — v. 1 
by which honour I dare not swear . . — y. 2 
what these dastard Frenchmen &me..\lIenryVI. \. 4 

dare no man answer in — ii. 4 

but dare maintain the party — ii. 4 

wliere false Plantagenct dare not .... — ii. 4 
I dare say, this quarrel will di'ink .... — .]]• ^ 

an uproar, I dare warrant — iii. 1 

do what ye dare, we are as resolute . . — \\V ^ 
dare you come forth, aud meet us — iii. 2 



UA 111':— mill (liiic nut tii 



I'll I 



.hire ,K 



• up arms.. lHc» /'!//'/. 



I .Ian.' 1 

yet I Jmv not speiik : I'll ciUl lor . 

II ml (liUT luit tiiui'li his own , 

1 iliiro not say, from the rich 

■ulnit flan's not Wiirwieli, if falsi 

thoii-h SiilVolk .hire him 

iliiri' yo\i Ik so liol.l? why what 



— V. 3 
.iHenryVl. 1. 1 



{rep.) — 



iv. 1 



— n. 2 



ill. 1 
iii. 1 
iii. 2 



as woiikl Onit tliiit tluy <liiro not) . . . _ 

(lure liny 1)0 so liold to Miinicl retreat — iv. S 

ay, here be they tliiit clai-e. unil will.. — iv. S 

or dure to brim; tin foree so near v. 1 

daivs stir a wiiij;, if Wuvwiek (n-p.). .Xli-itri/l'I. i. 1 
1 lUiro your iiueueliless fury to more ni^'e — i. 4 

AVarwieky dare you speak? — ii. 2 

diuv he presume to scorn us — iii. 3 

witli. nil your siieeial panlon dare not — iv. 1 
yes, Warwick, Kdward dares, and leads — v. 1 
wr«n may prey where eagles dare not..«a'/i. ///. i. 3 

I dare adventure to he sent — i. 3 

than I dare make iiuilts i,rrp.] Henry nil. ii. 1 

all, tluit dare look into tliese attairs.. — ii. 2 

how dare you tlirust Yourselves 

any Kiitilishni.iu dare yive ine counsel? — 

a woman (.1 dare say, without — 

iny lord, 1 dare not make myself so. . — 
who dare erci-s them? bearing the.. .. — 

I dure, and must deny it — \n. ■• 

dare mate a sounder man than _ iii. 2 

and dare us with his cap, like larks.. — iii. 2 

speak on, sir; I dare your worst iii. 2 

my weak-hearted enemies dare otter — iii. 2 

is all I dare now call mine o\yn — iii. 2 

I dare avow (and now I should not lie) — iv, 2 

who dare speak one syllable (rep.) — v. l 

nourishment, dare bite the best _ v. 2 

no man dare accuse you v. 2 

shall know many dare accuse you boldly — v. 2 

he, that dares most, but wag — t. 2 

boats dare sail upon her Troilus <j- Cressida, i. 3 

dare avow her beauty and her worth — i. 3 

that dare maintain, I know not wliat ii. 1 

without a heart to dare, or swoid .... — ii. 2 

think we dare not move ii. 3 

that dares not challenge it — v. 2 

but dare all imminence _ v. 11 

let Titan rise as early as he dare .... v. 11 

we must not dure to imitate them., rmion o/Alli. i. 2 
I wonder, men dare trust themselves — i. 2 

doyoudarc our an'.'cr? 'tis in iii. 5 

who then dares to be half sokiud .... iv. 2 

who dares, who dares, ill jnirity of .. — iv. 3 

yet dan; I never deny your Coriolumis, i. 6 

which, I dare vouch, is more than that — iii. 1 
it cannot be, the Voices dare break .. — iv. 6 

for I dare so far free him iv. 7 

I dare be sworn, you were v. 3 

to dare the vile contagion of Julius Ccesar, ii. 1 

and that I dare not, falser ii. 2 

if vou dare fight to day, come to .... v. 1 

I (uirO assure thee, that no enemy .. — v. 4 

hath given the dare to Caisar Antonrj^Cleo. i. 2 

of Jewry dar* not look upon you — iii. 3 

for he Clares ns to't _ iii. - 

Idare liim, therefore, to lay his iii. 1 1 

if that the former dare but — iii. 1 1 

dares me to personal combat iv. 1 

aud dare not speak their knowledge — iv. 111 

I dare not, dear (dear my lord (rep.) iv. 13 

ere def*h dare come to us? iv. 13 

I dare „j inine honour Cymbeline, i. 2 

I dare, thereupon, pawn the moiety i. 5 

I dare you to this match i. 5 

they dare not liglit with me, because — ii. 1 

that not dares to stride a limit — iii. 3 

none dare come about him _ iii. 5 

I dare not call: yet famine, ere clean iii. (i 

1 dare speak it to my.self _ iv. 1 

the fellow dares not deceive me .... iv*. 1 

I dare be bound he's true _ iv. 3 

who dares not stand his foe — v. 3 

how dare you ghosts, accuse — v. 4 

dare I undertake for good lord TilusAndron. i •' 

thou iierceive how much I dare — ii. 1 

near the emperor's palace dare you draw — ii. 1 

if .iove stray, who dares say Pericles, i. 1 

how dare the plants look up to i. 2 

X rlarc pawn down my 1 ifo tor him Lear, i •' 

I dare avouch it, sir ; what, fifty _ ii. 4 

dare, U|ion the warrant of my art — iii 1 

if on my credit you dare build so far .... — iii.' 1 
why she dares not come over to thee — iii. 6 (son") 

his spirit, that dares not imdertake — iv"' 

if you dure venture in your own behalf. . — iv. 2 
he that dorts approach, on him, on you .. — v .1 
nay, us they dare. I will bite . . Homeo fy Juliet, i. 1 
what! dares the olttve come hither .. — i. .', 
love can do, that dares love attempt — ii •' 
letter's master, how he dares being dared — ii! -i 
1 Unre draw as soon as another man — ii 4 
love-devouring death do what he dare — ii. 6 

that he dares ne'er come back to .... iii .i 

I dure not, sir; my master knows not — v .i 
I dare stay no longer. Go, get thee — v 3 

spirit dares stir [ATn/.-can walk] abroad.. Wam/e/, i. 1 

and dare scarce come thither ii. a 

fortune, death, and danger, dare ... 

I darvdamuation: to this point 

1 dare not coiiles.') that, lest I should 

I dare not drink vet, madam _ v. 2 

I dare think, hcTl prove to Desdemona. OMcMo, ii 1 
I dare be sworn, I think that he is honi'st — iii 3 
pranks they dare not show their hu»baiids — iii. 3 

I dare not say, he lies anywhere _ iii. 4 

more I will than for my.self I dare — iii. <■ 

beds, which they dare swear peculiar _ iv 1 

ny, ifyou dare do yourself a profit _ iv! i 

U.(VKEI)— many \\aa. not dared iQ.Meas.for Meat. ii. ! 



DARKD-lmvcnotda 

fortiidden legs dared 
why have tliev darei 
hath (hired, on lliis 1 
what? am I diin'.l, a 
my lord dure<l lino 1 
how he dales, hrin ■ < 
Jirido, ilared to the c. 

I)AUI';i'-UI_haveiiiettl... 

UAKlNCi-thy daring folly 



break. IFinler'iTale, iii. 2 
to touch.. Wic/iar(<//. ii. S 

lareh _ ii. 3 

lliv llcnri/l'. i. (eho.) 

"■li'd ....U;/',i,i,''/. i. 3 
Ir li.L'ht...////. A r''''o.iii.7 



liat . 



I kn 
nion 



stdarii 

,p^;;;:i;5h: 

■ mu 



1 the'eartli 


. Me 


■.oil 


,,„/,.,, 


ts lit my . . 




. .iir 


»V«, i 


rdy, as to . 




Itieh 


ml II. 


tongue scorns . 




i 


ebold 




1 He, 


rilir. 



nri/ ir.iv. 1 
i/rv/7. iii. 2 
■ir,/ri. iv. 1 

n/ III. iv. 4 



— IV. 

— iv. 

— V. 



coursers daring of the spur 'ill,- 

of late were daring witii their BOott's.l He 

for daring to att'v amiu'htv lord ille 

prime of manhood, daring, hold ..Uiclu 

daring an opposite to every danger .. — v. 4 

daring the evvnt, of the teeth Henry nil. i. 1 

upon the daring luiiitsinan that li.'is — iii. 2 

DAUlXli'ST— the daring'st counsel .. — ii. 1 

DAUIUS— cotter of Darius \ Henry VI. i. 6 

DARK— in the dark backward, and Tempest, i. 2 

in the dark out of my way _ ii. 2 

the night is dark ; light and Merry Wives, v. 2 

we'll have him in a dai-k room. . Twelfth A'iglu, iii. 4 

eay'st thou, that house is dark? iv. 2 

I say to .you, tliis house is dark — iv. 2 

as dark as ignorance (rf;^.) iv. 2 

kept in a dark house v. 1 

yet would have dark deeds darkly. Mea. forMea, iii. 2 

but only a repair i' the dark ' iv. 1 

fantastical duke of dark corners iv. 3 

partly by tlie dark night, viiieh did.-Wuc/i.-lrfo, iii. 3 
dark night, that from the eye 'ii\s..Mid.N.\Dr. iii. 2 
that fallen am I ill dark uneven way — iii. 2 
a dark iii'^ht too of half the day ..Love's L.Lost,i. 1 

.voiir li-ht grows dark by losing _ i. 1 

dark nee-i,'. no candles now, for dark iv. 3 

ivliat's your dark meaning, mouse .. — v. 2 
a light condition in a beauty dark . . — v. 2 

you do it still i' the dark _ v. 2 

it grows dark, he may stumble — v. 2 

his affections dark as Erebus Mer. of Venice, v. 1 

I should wish it dark, that I were — v. 1 

deserves as well a dark house As youLike it, iii. 2 

may go dark to bed _ iii. 5 

to the dark house, and the detested . . AW 3 IVell, ii. 3 

fill-, with the dark, poor thief _ iii. 2 

I'll keep liim dark, and safely locked — iv. ] 
and laid in some dark room..Comc(/i/<)/"£/rors.iv. 4 

in a dark and dankish vault v. I 

tlirough the blanket of the dark Macbeth, i. 5 

and yet dark night strangles the — ii. 4 

for a dark hour, or twain iii. 1 

the fate of that dark hour iii. J 

hemlock, digged i' the dark _ iv. 1 

to dark dishonour's use thou shalt . . Richard II. i. 1 

conceal this dark conspiracy? v. 2 

for it was so dark, Hal, that 1 Henry IV. ii. 4 

when it was so dark thou couldst — ii. 4 

the poring dark, fills the wide . . Henry V. iv. (cho.) 
deep night, dark night, the silent. . ■iHenryVI. j. 4 

dark shall be my light, and night — ii. 4 

dark cloudy death o'ershades his ZHenryVI. ii. 6 

can this dark monarchy afford Richard, III. i. 4 

dark forgetfulness and deep oblivion iii. 7 

comfort that the dark night can alford — v. 3 
an 'twere dark, you'd close. . Troitus^Cressida, iii. 2 
death, that dark spirit, in's nervy . . Coriolanus, ii. 1 

find a cavern dark enough JuliusCmsar, ii. 1 

is done, and we are for the dar]i... Antony ^Cleo. v. 2 
ram and wind beat dark December .Cymbeline, iii. 3 
■«'ear a mind dark as your fortune is — iii. 4 
dark, blood-drinking pit (rep.)TiiusAndronicus, ii. 4 
this so darks in Philoten all . . Fcrides, iv. (Gower) 

here stood he in the dark, liis sharp Lear, ii. 1 

gal low the very wanderers of the ilark . . — iii. 2 
child Rowland to the (hirk tower . . — iii. 4 (song) 

all dark and comfortless _ iii, 7 

the dark and vicious place where v. 3 

all's cheerless, dark and deadly . . , 

that make dark heaven light Romeo <S- Juliet, i. 

love, and best befits the dark ii. 1 

whieli the dark night hath so discovered 
a bird's nest soon, when it is dark . . 
liglit.' More dark and dark our woes 
keens thee lure in diu'k to be his .... 
in tlie dark groped I to find out them 

I might do't as well i' the dark 

kill men i' the dark! where bo these — ... 

Cassio hath here been set on in the dark.. — v. 1 

DARKEN— darken not the mirth. . ll'inler'sTale, iv. 3 

their blaze shall darkeuliiniforever.Coi'Mu.iM«,ii. 1 

enough to darken all his goodness.. ^;i(. * Cleo. i. 4 

than gain, which darkens him _ iii. 1 

the two latter darken and cxjicud I'ericlri iii' 2 

DARICENED— darkened in J-oiu'..i»/fa. r<i<-,Vra. iii " 

you are darkened ill this action CorioUmui iv 7 

D.lRKENING-darkeuing my clear sun.//e«.r;//.i.i 

darkening [A;i?.-dui'kingj of the sun.3'r(»(.*C';'. v. 9 

DARkKR-soineuiMt il,i Iver than Helen's — i. 1 

we shall express onr > la 1 Iter piu'iiosc Lear, i. 1 

D.'UtKE.ST— tiie darkest elouds ..Tamijij; of Hh. iv. 3 

like a star i' the darkest night Hamlet, v 2 

DAHK-EVED-dark-eyed night !....l.rr, ii! 1 

1)ARK1NG-[Kh(.] darkiiig of the aun.rroi(. *t')'. v. 9 

D.VRivLlN(j— darkling leave me?... Mid. A'. '« Dr. ii. 3 

darkling stand the varying s\wni..Anl. i-Clvo. iv. 13 

the candle, and we were left darkling .... Uar, i. 4 

IJAKKEY— shine darkly over me.. Twelfth Nii;ht, ii. 1 

have dark deed') darkly answered. .Wea./orjl/ou. iii. 2 



DAKKNE 

this tliiii:j 
laid me li 
there is no ihn I 

remain (lion . 1; 
keeii me in liio 1 
we intended to 
thiiiigh von l,ar 
will iiieounteril 
thejaWMifdiirk 



'• -melting the darkness Tempcil, v. 1 

t (hirkneaa I acknowledge mine — v. 1 
e in hiih'.ins ii:l<kl\etui.Twelfthl\'i;fht, iv.2 



dark 



S^llod,' 



le.-s .... _ v. I 

1 darkness — v. I (let.) 
Iiriile..!/™. forMen. iii. 1 
ir it \\\\.Mid. N.Ur. i. I 

1 — v. 2 

I' - , / ' I'.-'n ;.. Lot', i. I 

').All'tH'etl,\\.;, 

■ ■ ",„rdyofEr.iv. 4 

Macbeth, i. 3 

4 



V. 3 



U. 2 



— v. 3 

. Hamlet, v. 2 
.Olliello,iv. 3 
— v. 



find wl 

thei.ii ' .1 M. ,.. 

V. 1 to tlu' : ;:.:■ ..: i;., ,.,1. :,,. i. 
I instr'uuKiii., ol liail.iic.-^ ieli 1. 

that darkness, does the face of _ ,,. 

villains, and the sons of darkness ..IHenrylV ii 
thy face, the son of utter darkness . . _ iii! 3 

and let darkness Ix; the burier of 2Henry IV. i 1 

but darkness and the gloom.v 1 Henry VI. v. 4 

descend to darkness, and the hiiTnitig.illenry VI ( 4 
gives light in darkness, comfort in .. — ii ' 1 
breathe foul contacious darkness in.. — iv' 1 
hath in eternal darkness folded np../(iWiii;'d /// i" ') 
whom I, indeed, have laid in darkness — i' 3 

and fiaky darkness breaks within _ y' 3 

call her from this cloud of darkness.HfPnri/ ;'///. v 4 
hide their faces even from darkness.. ^uf. Crrsar, ii 1 
send to darkness all that stop me.. Ant. ^ Cleo. iii 11 

to darkness fleet, souls that fly Cymbeline v 3 

the which hath fire in darkness Pericles, ii 3 

y she'd do the deeds of darkness — iv. 6 

darkness and devils! saddle my horses Lear i 4 

and did the act of darkness with her _ iii 4 

the prince ofdarkness is a fine gentleman — iii 4 

there's hell, there's darkness, there is the — iv G 

flecked darkness like a drunkard reels. Itnm.A-Jul. ii 3 

DAKK-SEATED-in dark-seated hell.2/i<;Hri/ VI. iii. 2 

DARK-WORKING— 

the eye, dark-working sorcerers. . Comedy of Err. i. 2 

^A^T-''^NG— and iny loved darling .... n-m;)c»(, iii. 3 

of his old cxiicrience the only darling, j/i's (>■,// ii. 1 

n.aught but wail her darling^s loss..2/;c;i)'y /'/. iij 1 

where is your darling Rutland? illenryVI. i. 4 

Censorious, darling of the people Coriolanus, ii. 3 

to eat those little darlings whom Peiicies i 4 

curled darlings [An/.-dearling] of om- ..Othello, i. 2 

make it a darling like your precious eye iii 4 

DARNEL— the darnel, hemlock Henry V. v. 2 

twas full of darnel I do you like \ Henry VI. iii. 2 

darnel, and all the idle weeds that grow.. Lenr, iv. 4 
DARKAIGN— darraign your battle.. 3 Htiir^ VI. ii 2 

DAR ST— but dar'st not strike Tempest i 2 

for I know thou dar'st _ iii. 2 

call me what thou dar'st ..Tiro Gen. of Verona, ii! 3 
it thou dar'st tempt me further.. Tirelflh Night iv. I 

dar'st thou die? Measure fur Measure, iii. I 

now follow, if thou dar'st, to try.. Afid. N.'sDr. iii. 2 

abide me, if thou dar'st; for well — iii. 2 

and dar'st not stand, nor look _ iii! 2 

thou dar'st venture to be drunlc .. Winter'sTale, v. 2 

what dar'st thou venture? All's Well, ii. 1 

swear, if thou dar'st. Nay, 1 dare. Taming of Sh. v. 1 

how dar'st thou trust so great Comedy of Err. i. 2 

arrestme, foolish fellow, if thou dai-'st — iv. 1 

if thou dar'st stand y! 1 

thou dar'st not say so, 'villain King John, iii' I 

out dungliill I dar'st thou brave — iv. 3 

dar'st with thy frozen admonition . . Richard II. \\. 1 

dar St thou, thou little better _ iii. 1 

thou dar'st not, coward, live — iv 1 

seize it, if thou dar'st _ iv. 1 

if thou dar'st not stand for ten 1 Henry I V.i.'i 

but, Erancis, dar'st thou be 80 — ii. i 

dar st thou be as good as thy — iii. 3 

do if thou dar'st tor thy heart ■IHenrylV. ii. 4 

if ever thou dar'st acknowledge Henry V.iv. 1 

thou dar'st as well be hanged — iv. 1 

if thou dar'st, and thou shalt find I Henry VI. i. 2 

do what thou dar'st; I beard thee — i. 3 

dar'st thou maintain the former iii. 4 

marry, when thou diur'st 'iHenry VI. ii. 1 

thou dar'st not peep: and if thou dar'st — ii. 1 

say, if thou dar st, proud lord iii. 2 

this presence thou dar'st go with me — iii. 2 

thou dar'st not for thy own — iv. 1 

which dar'st not, no, nor canst not rule — v. 1 

if thou dar'st bring them to the — v. 1 

battle, Edward, if thou dar'st illenry VI. v. 1 

dar'st thou resolve to kill Ric/iard III. iv. 2 

if so he thou dar'st net this Coriolanus, iv. 5 

dar'st thou, Cassius, now leap in .. Julius Caesar, i. 2 
It thou dai'st he, the earthly Jove..<lri(oni/<S-C;<'o.ii. 7 

that dar'st appear thus to us? — y. 1 

thy Weapon nothing dar'st perform.. TV(us/4ii(/. ii. I 
dar'st thou support a publislied traitor . . Ltar, iv. 6 
if thou dar'st, Til give thee reniedy.Aom. tiJut. iv. 1 

that thou dar'st wag thy tongue Hamlet, iii. 4 

D A K i —the dribbling dart of love. . Mea. lor Men. i. 4 
here stand I, lady; dart thy skill.. Lovc'iL. Lost, v. 2 
and dart not scornful glances .... Taming t./ SA. v. 2 
and darts his light through every. . Richard II. iii. 2 
his thighs with darts were almost.. 2;Jeriri/;'7. iii. I 

sliakiiig the bloody darts, as he — iii. I 

not extend, thither he darts it Henry nil. i. 1 

and (larts, we prove this very hour .. C'ono/uHi.i, i. U 
piercing steel, and darts envenomed. ./u/. Cirsar, v. 3 
wlUch all the rarthiaii darts ...Intony fyCleo. iv. 12 
not as death's dart, being laughed. . Cymbeline, Iv. 2 

if there be such a ihirt in iiriuccs' Pcrir.',^s, i. 2 

dart .your blinding flames Lear, ii. 4 

of accident, nor dart of chance Othello, iv. 1 

D.ARTEfi- 1 have darted at thee...4«!/oM Like it, iii. ;> 
cusemeuts daited their desiring .... Richard II, v. 2 




DAS 



■. i. 2 



DASH — iipon lier bravely at first clash. 1 Henry VL i. 2 
and would not dash me with their. .2HeHri/K/. iii. 2 

to dasli our late decree in SHennj I'l. ii. 1 

tliey dasli themselves to pieces Richard III. i. 3 

all your thunderbults, dash him ..JiUiusCwsar, iv. 3 
as with a club, dasli out my Homeo (fJuliel, ir. 3 

DASHED— and daslicd all to pieces Tempest, i. 2 

look you, and soon dashed! Loi'e'sL.Lost,v, 2 

had his brains dashed out with ..AsyouLike it, iv. 1 
and dashed the brains out, liad I 80. . . . Macht'lh,\. 7 
that we have dnslicd thein to the. . . . Kiw^'Joltn, ii. 2 
reverend heads daslied to the walls . . Hcjirv/ C. iii. 3 
this hath a little dashed your spirits ..Olliello, iii. 3 

DASHES— dashes the tire out Tem!,rsl, i. 2 

DASHING— dushiiiL' the ^'arment ..Henrijllll. i. 1 
run on the dasiiiii;,' idcks Romeo &- Juliet, v. 3 

DASTARD— this .uit-ilared dastard?.. «/i7i,/)i; //. i. 1 
unto his dastard t'oenieu is betrayed.. IHeiwi/ri. i. 1 

doKs! cowards! dastards! — i. 2 

wliat these dastard Frenchmen dare — i. 4 

tills dastard at the battle — iv. 1 

vou are all recreants and dastards.. 2 Henry/'/, iv. 8 

like a dastard, and a treacherous SHenryl'I. ii. 2 

permitted by our dastard nobles. . . . Coriolanus, iv. 5 

DATCHET-LAN"E- 
of fciul clothes to Datchet.-lane ..Merry Wives, iii. 5 

DATCHET-MEjUJ— in Datehet-mead — iii. 3 
by your two men to Datehet-mead .. — iii. 3 
to tire laundress in Datehet-mead — — iii. 3 

DATE—whose date till death shall. .Md. N.Dr. iii. 2 

vour date is better in your pye Alt's Well, i. 1 

inace— dates,— none ; that 's out.. IVinler'sTale, iv. 2 
tlie almanack of my true date.Comedy of Errors, i. 2 
and will weep my date of life out . . Kin^ John, iv. 3 
teeming date drunk up with time?. . Ric/iard II. v. 2 

hut their date is out I Henry IV. ii. 4 

time thou gavest new date [Henry VI. iv. 6 

telling than thy kindness' date Richard III. iv. 

no date in the pye; for then (.rep.').Troil.^-Cr 
reliances on his fracted dates have. Timon ofAth. ij. 1 

and have the dates in compt — ii. 1 

and fame's eternal date, for virtue's . . Titus And.i. 2 

may bide until your date expire Pericles, iii. 4 

the date is out of such prolixity. /iomeo (J- Juliet, i. 4 

hcgin his fearful date witli this — _ i. 4 

they call for dates and quinces — iv. 4 

for my short date of breath — v. 3 

DATE-BR<1KE— demands of date-broke ICol.Knt. 
delit, broken] bonds Timon of Athens, ii. 2 

DATELESS -the dateless limit Richard II. i. 3 

with a righteous kiss a dateless. .iiomeo ^Juliet, v. 3 

DAUB— shall daub her lips with \HenryIV. i. 1 

and daub the wallof ajakes with him ..Lear, ii. 2 
poor Tom's a-cold; I cannot daub it further — iv. 1 

D.\.UBED— smooth he daubedhis vice.. fliWi. III. iii. 5 

DAUBEBY- such daubery as this. Aferri/ Wives, iv. 2 

D AUGU TER— thee my daughter I Tempest, i. 2 

she said — thou wast my daughter — 1. 2 

and his more braver daughter — i.2 

of the king's fair daughter Claribel' — ii. 1 

the marriage of your daughter — ii. 1 

I wore it at your daughter's marriage .. — ii. 1 
would I had never married my daughter — ii. 1 
not bless our Europe with your daughter — ii. 1 
my brother's daughter 's queen of Tunis — ii. 1 

is the beauty of his daughter — iii. 2 

liis daughter and I will be king and queen — iii. 2 

take my daughter: but if thou dost — iv. 1 

that dusky Dis my daughter got — iv. 1 

use me, and my daughter — v. 1 

for I have lost my daughter — v. 1 

a daughter? O heavens! — v. 1 

when did you lose your daughter? — v. 1 

she is daughter to this famous duke — v. 1 

now, daugliter Silvia, you are.. TwoGen.of Ver. ii. 4 

shall wed his daughter — ii. 6 

to steal away your daughter — iii. 1 

whom your gentle daughter hates .... — iii. I 

sir Thurio, to my daughter — iii. 1 

such a wife as your fair daughter.... — iii. 1 
the love I ever bore my daughter .... — iii. 1 
my daughter takes liis going grievously — iii. 2 
between sir Thurio and my daughter — iii. 2 

saw you my daughter? — v. 2 

for your daughter's sake — v. 4 

daughter to master George Page . . Merry Wives, i. 
not kissed your keeper's daughter? .. — i. 

nay, daughter, carry the wine in — i. 

are come to see my daughter Anne?. . — ii. 

love him, daughter Anne — iii. 

mv daughter is disposed of — iii. 

1 fovc your daughter in such a righteous — iii. 
my daughter will I question how.. .. — iii. 4 

so curses all Eve's daughters — iv. 2 

Nan Page my daughter — iv. 4 

remember, son Slender, my daughter — v. 2 

my daughter is in green — v. 3 

tlie doctor's marrying my daughter.. — v. 3 
Slender hath married her daughter.. — v. 6 

if Anne Page be my daughter — v. 5 

how you should know my daughter.. — v. 5 

turned my daughter into green — v. .^ 

the daughter of a count that died . . Twelfth Night, i. 2 
my father had a daughter loved a man — ii. 4 
I am all the daughters of my father's — ii. 4 

't is meet so, daughter Measure for Measure, ii. 3 

nor gentle daughter, fear you not .... — iv. 1 
to yuu, fair ana gracious daughter .. — iv. 3 

show your wisdom, daughter — iv. 3 

I think, this is your daughter MuchAdo,\. 1 

the daughter of signior Leonato? .... — i. 1 
with Hero, Leonato's short daughter — i. 1 
that he loved my niece, your daughter — i. 2 
I will acquaint my daughter withal — i. 2 

the daughter and heir of I^eonato — i. 3 

daughter, remember, what I told you — ii. 1 

count, take of me my daughter — ii. 1 

for I have heard my daughter say . . — ii. 1 
shall marry the daughter of Leonato — ii. 2 
you heard my daughter tell you how — ii. 3 



[ IGO ] 

DAUGHTER— so your daughter says.Much Ado, ii. 3 

my daughter tells us all — ii. 3 

a pretty jest your daughter told us of — ii. 3 

my daughter says so: and the ecstacy — ii. 3 

that my daughter is sometime afraid — ii. 3 

hear further of it by your daughter. , — ii. 3 

your daughter and ner gentlewoman — ii. 3 

to give your daughter to her husband — iii. S 

give rae tliis maid, your daughter? . . — iv. I 

Cut move one question to your daughter — iv. 1 

daughter here the jirinces left for dead — iv. 1 

hcai-t is sorry for your daughter's death — v. 1 

the old man s daughter told us all . . — v. 1 

you, princes, for my daughter's death — v. 1 

I cannot bid you bid my daughter live — v. 1 

mj- brother hath a daughter, almost — v. 1 

well, daughter, and you gentlewomen — v. 4 

be father to your brothers daughter — v. 4 

that eye my daughter lent her — v. 4 

to marry with my brother's daughter? -=- v. 4 

my eliild, my daughter Uerraia Mid. N.Dr. i. 1 

hast thou filclied my daughter's heart — i. 1 

made love to Nedar^s daughter, Helena — _ i. 1 

this is my daughter here asleep — iv. 1 

the French king's daugliter Love's L. Lost, i. 1 

tell him, the daughter of the king .. — ii. 1 

pray you, sir, whose daughter? — ii. 1 

their "daughters profit very greatly .. — iv. 2 

if their ditughters be capable, I will. . — iv. 2 
Cato'a daughter, Brutus' Portia. . Mer. of Venice, i. 1 

will of a living dai^hter curbed by. . — i. 2 

though I am a daughter to his blood — ii. 3 

for liis gentle daughter's sake — ii. 4 

a father, you a daughter, lost — ii. 5 

my daughter! O my ducats! (re;;.) ., — ji. 8 

my ducats, and my daughter ! — ii.8 

stolen from me by my daughter! .... — ii.8 

stolen by mydaughtev! justice! — ii.8 

his stones, his daughter, and his ducats — ,ii. 8 

as you, of my daughter's flight — iii. 1 

my daughter is my flesh and blood . . — iii. 1 

hast thou found my daughter? — iii. 1 

ray daughter were dead at my foot.. — iii. 1 

your daughter spent in Genoa — iii. 1 

that he had of your daughter for — iii- 1 

that 3'ou are not the Jew's daughter — iii. 5 

because I am a .lew's daughter — iii. 5 

I have a daughter; would, any of — iv. I 

that lately stole his daughter — iv. 1 

his son Lorenzo, and liis daughter . , — iv. 1 
the duke's daughter, be banished., ^sj/om Like it, i. 1 

for the duke's daughter, her cousin . . — i. I 

of her uncle than his own daughter. . — i. 1 

how now, daughter and cousin? — i. 2 

the two was daughter of the duke — — i. 2 

neither his daughter, if we judge by — i.2 

his daughter, the other is daughter to — i. 2 

to keep n is daughter company — i.'i 

thou art th.y fatlier's daugliter — i. 3 

hath banished me his daughter? — _i. 3 

your daughter, and her cousin — ii. 2 

your daughter; you yours (rep.) — — v. 4 

lively touches ot my daughter's favour — v. 4 

Ire was a brother to your daughter . . — v. 4 

good duke receive thy daughter . — — v. 4 (vers.) 

m sight, you are my daughter — v. 4 

even daughter welcome in no less . . — v. 4 
the daugtiter of Gerard de Narbon? . . All's Well, i. 1 

why? that you are ray daughter? — i. 3 

but I your daughter, lie raust be my — i. 3 

mean it not! daughter, and mother.. — _i. 3 

poor physician's daughter my wife! . . — ii. 3 

dislikest, a poor physician's daughter — ii. 3 

the count he wooes your daughter — — iii. 7 

but that your daughter, ere slie seems — iii. 7 

instruct my daughter how she — iii. 7 

to be your daughter's dower — i v. 4 

to speak in the behalf of ray daughter — iv. :> 

what says he to your daughter? — v. 3 

remeraher the daughter ot this lord — v. 3 

in the spirits of ray daughter, that . . — v. 3 

comes too short for my daughter .... — y. 3 
to bestow my youngest daughter .. Taming of Sh. i. 1 

eldest daughter to a husband, we set — i. 1 

such as the daughter of Agenor had — i. 1 

indeed had Baptista's youngest daughter — i. 1 

his voungest daughter, beautiful — — i. 2 

lie that has the two fair daughters . . — i. 2 

Leda's fair daughter had a thousand — i. 2 

you yet ever see Baptista's daughter? — i.2 

the youngest daughter whom you . . — _i. 2 

a daughter called ICatharine (rep.) .. — ii. 1 

but for my daughter Katharine — ii. I 

a suitor to your daughter, unto Bianca — ii. 1 

toward the education of your daughters — ii. 1 

lead these gentlemen to ray daughters — ii. 1 

if I get your daughter's love — ii- 1 

ray daughter prove a good musician? — ii. 1 

practice with ray j'oiinger daughter — ii. 1 

send my daughter Kate to you? .... — ii. 1 

how speed you with my daughter? .. — ii. 1 

how now, daughter Katharine? {rep.) — ii. 1 

Baptista, to your younger daughter — ii. 1 

assure my daughter greatest dower . . — ii. 1 

if I may liave your daughter to my. . — ii. 1 

my daughter Katharine is to be ■ — ii. 1 

one Baptista's daughter here — iv. 2 

love beween your daughter and liimself — iv. 4 

he beareth to your daughter, and .... — iv. 4 

doth love my daughter, and she loveth — iv. 4 

and pass my daugliter a sufficient . . — iv. 4 

Bhall have my daughter with consent — i v. 4 

send for your daughter by your — iv. 4 

his daughter is to be brought by — — iv. 4 

marriage made tliy daugliter mine . . — v. 1 

have you married ray daughter — v. 1 

another dowry to another daughter . . — v. 2 

1 have three daughters Winter's Tab', ii. 1 

a daughter: and a goodly babe — ii. 2 

hath brought you torth a daughter . . — ii. 3 



DAU 



DAUGHTER— daughter of a king. »r(,i(er'sra(e, iii. 2 

a great kiiig'^ daughter, the mother — iii. 2 

here beholding his daughter's trial . . — iii. 2 

fortli to crows thy baby daughter — iii. 2 

a shepherd's daughter, and what.... — iv. (cho.) 

such a man, who hath a daughter..., — iv. 1 

fie, daughter! when my old wife .... — iv. 3 

which dances with your daughter? . . — iv. 3 

he says, he loves my daughter — iv. 3 

read, as 'twere, my daughter's eyes . . — iv. 3 

but, my daughter, say you the like . . — iv. 3 

I give ray daughter to hira, and will — iv. 3 

i' the virtue ot your daughter — iv. 3 

your hand ; and, daughter, yours .... — iv. 3 

his daughter and the king's son .... — iv. 3 

have married a shepherd's daughter — iv. 3 

have liis daughter come into grace !. . — iv. 3 

none of your daughter, nor my sister — iv. 3 

whose daughter his tears proclaimed — v. 1 

might I a son and daughter now have — v. 1 

and with a shepherd's daughter — v. 1 

is this the daugliter of a king? — v. 1 

the king's daughter is found — v. 2 

certainty, to be the king's daughter.. — v. 2 

for joy of his found daughter — v. 2 

worries he his daughter, with clipping — v. 2 

attentiveness wounded his daugliter — v. 2 

over-fond of the shepherd's daughter — v. 2 

sons and daughters will be all — v. 2 

that wliich my daughter came to ... . — v. 3 

and from thy admiring daughter took — v. 3 

graces upon my daughter's head!.... — v. 3 

is troth-plight to your daughter — v. 3 

your wives, your daughters, your .... Macbeth, iv. 3 

that daughter there ot Spain KingJoh n,n. ■> 

command thy son and daughter .... — ii. 2 

'tis true, fair daughter — iii. 1 

whose daughter, as we hear 1 Henry IV. i . :i 

my daughter will run mad — iii. 1 

my daughter weeps: she will not part — iii. 1 
loving wife, and gentle daughter.... 2Hc)ir!//F. il. 3 

beshrew your heart, fair daughter .. — ii. 3 

and your fairest daughter, and mine — iii. 2 
which was daughter to king Clothair. . Henry V. i. 2 

lady Lingare, daughter to Charlemaiu — i. 2 

lady Ermengare, daughter to Charles — i.2 

descend unto the daughter ■ — i.2 

ofl:'er him Katharine his daughter . . — iii. (cho. ) 

of your shrill-shrieking daughters .. — iii. 3 

liis fairest daughter is contaminate.. — iv. i 

his daughter^ first; and then — v. 2 

thereupon, give me your daughter . . — v. 2 

by birth a shepherd s daughter I Henry VI. i. 2 

nor yet saint Philip's daughter — i.2 

brignt Astrsea's daughter — i. i; 

profl'ers his only daughter to your .. — v.. i 

my name; and daughter to a king .. — v. 3 

Reignier, see, thy daughter prisoner — v. 3 

daughter shall be wedded to my king — v. 3 

gained thy daughter princely liberty — v. 3 

my daughter shall be Henry's, if he — v. 3 

ah, Joan, sweet daughter Joan — v. 4 

a poor earl's daughter is unequal. . . . — v. .'i 

Margaret, that is daughter to a king? — v. a 

daugliter unto Reignier iHenry VI. i. 1 (art.) 

dukedoms for a duke's fair daughter — i. 1 

gave two dukedoms for his daughter — i. 3 

a daughter, who married Edmund .. — ii. 2 

daughter unto Lionel, duke of Clarence — ii. 2 

unto the daughter of a worthless king — iv. 1 

she was, indeed, a pedlar's daughter — iv. 2 

married the duke of Clarence' daughter — iv. 2 

ravish yoiu- wives and daughters — iv. 8 

nay, bear three daughters ZHenry VI. ii. 1 

than when my daughters call thee .. — iii. 2 

I'll join mine eldest daughter, and . . — iii. 3 

only Warwick's daughter shall be thine — fii. 3 

iSdward marries Warwick's daughter — iv. 1 

will hence to Warwick's other daughter — i\-. 1 

my daughter shall be thine — iv. 2 

wnen he sacrificed his daughter — v. I 

Warwick's youngest daughter Richard III. i. 1 

unto their servants, daughters, wives — iii. •') 

daughter, well met. God give your.. — iv. 1 

marry straight to Clarence' daughter — iv. 2 

married to my brother's daughter . . — iv. 2 

daughter meanly have I matched — iv. 3 

young Elizabeth, my brother's daughter — iv. 3 

for my daughters, Richard, they shall — iv. 4 

you have a daughter, called Elizabeth — iv. 4 

confess she was not Edward's daughter — iv. 4 

I love thy daughter. My daughter's — iv. 4 

that thou dost love my daughter — iv. 4 

thy daughter, and do intend to make her— iv. 4 

not the way to win your daughter . . — iv. 4 

I'll give it to your daughter — iv. 4 

your blood upon your daughter — iv. 4 

your daughter is made queen — iv. 4 

calls 3'our beauteous daughter, wife.. — iv. 4 

my mother, to thy daughter go — iv. 4 

thy daughter to a conqueror's bod — iv. 4 

not thy beauteous princely daughter! — iv. 4 

in your daughter's womb I bury them — iv. 4 

shall I go win my daughter to — iv. 4 

shall espouse Elizabeth her daughter — iv. 5 

ravish our daughters? Hark, I hear. . — v. 3 
sir Thomas Bimen's daughter .... Henry VIII. i. 4 

certain, the daughter of a king — ii. 4 

duke of Orleans and our daughter Mary — ii. 4 

whether our daughter were legitimate — ii. 4 

a knight's daughter, to be her mistress' — iii. 2 

our chaste loves, his young daughter — iv. 2 

a queen, and daughter to a king .... — iv. 2 
grace, or a daughter a goddess. Troilus <§- Cressida, i. 2 

and he shall buy my daughter — iii. 3 

with one of Priam's daugliters — iii. 3 

Dioniud, with Calclms' daughter?.... — iv. 5 

and daughters of the game — iv. 5 

a token from her daughter, my fair.. — v. 1 

Where's your daughter? she comes ,, — v. 2 



DAU 



[161] 



DAUOUTER— one only rtonglitcr. . 7Vi»ori •//(«. ;. I 
it raimt not bciir ray ilunglitcr — •• 

five liini thy iliuishtur — •• ' 
pniv v.)u, Jaiiitlitor. sing Con.Mntu, \. 3 

I teU'tliei', cliumhior, I sprangnot.... — .'• •' 
Nunm's (lum!hti.r'» 8on, who, iiftor great — ii. -i 
holp to ravish your own dnuglUors . . — iv. U 
viiginul linlmaof yourilttuglitcrs .... — v.'. 
(laiit;lilor, sjwttli you; he ciirc.< not tor — v. J 

lie killed my si.n ; uiy ihiughter — v- i 

Cnlo's <liius,'1ilcr. Tliiuk you ....JiUiii4iCaitnr,\\. \ 
thou wast not nimle his ilaughtor./<ii/. * 6'/co. ni. II 
hi-<<'.anghler. uml the heir of his ....Cymbeline, i. 1 
mil tiniliue. ihio-litor, lifter the slander — 1.2 
wiiulil 1 «eie 11 rKiitluTd'sihui.diter: — i. - 

iieaee, dear la.lv .huuhter. iieuee .... — \- i 

inarrviii- his kind's diui-hter - }■ !> 

and a daut-'liter « Uoni he not lespceta — .!• / 

the dotir of our stern duUL'liter.' — >;• • 

that mav piefer yuu to liis dau-'hter — n- ■} 

where is our cUiUMhterV she h.Uh .... - lu. :, 
your daiiu'liter, wlioni she bore in hand — v. j 
yet <> niv lUuiKliter! that it was folly — v.,') 

that parii'pm, thy .hiu;;hter — v. S 

mv daughter 1 «lial ol her — ^•;' 

Vour daughter's eluistity— there .... — v. .i 
1 was taui!htufyoui-eluisted:iu.;.'hter — v.;, 
Vosthnmus, that killed thy .huijrhter — v. ., 
ofteuderair, thy virtuous dau'diter — v. ., 
this was thv chiii;;hter. Why Mareus.ri/us/lm/. iii. 1 

tliv man-led dauehter here — ">• ' 

thiiu I'iiiloiuel vou used my daughter — v. 2 
to sliiv his daiu'hter with his own right — v. 3 
slain thine only daughter thus? .... - v. a 
bring in our daUL-hter, elothed like ....Pericles,]. 1 
he iiath a fair diiuiihter, and to-morrow — n. 1 
our daii','hter, in honour of whose birth.. — 11.2 
now vour honour, dau^ihter, to explain. . — ij. ■- 

(forilanuditer. so vou are).hcre Uke — \\- 3 

seated, lind his daughter with him — ij. 1 

from mv daughter tliis I let you know . . — ii. ■> 

now to mv daughter's letter ;•■• • ~ !!• '' 

what do you tliink, sir, of my daughter? — ii. .0 
mv daughter, sir, thinks very well of you — u. .'i 
never ttuned so high, to love your daughter— ii. .i 

thou hast bewitched my daughter — n. a 

comes my daughter, she can witness it ••...— >'• ^ 
Antiiwhus and his daughter 's dead — lu. (Orove.J 
a little daughter; for the sake of it....... — m.l 

she was the daughter of a king . . — ni; 2 (ecroll) 

hath our Cleon one daughter — iv. (Gow. ) 

her daughter might stand jicerless .. — iv. (Gow.) 
how chance my daughter is not with you — iv. 1 

perforin to your sole daughter —i^- -J 

see liis daughter, all his life's delight— iv. 4 (Gow.) 

to fetch his diuiL'hter home — iv. 4 (dow.) 

kiii"'sdan'liter.'.iii whom foul — iv. 4 (Gow.-ius.) 

believe Ids dant'liier 's dead — iv. 4 (Gow.) 

display his daiiiiliter's woe and .... — iv. 4 (Gow.) 

here n'liere his daughter dwells — v. (Gow.) 

loss of a beloved daughter and a wife — — v. 1 
sui-h a one my daughter mi-ht have been — v. I 
a king's daughter? and called Marina? — v. 1 
my mother was the daughter of a king.. — v. 1 
this cannot he; mv daughter's buried. ... — v. 1 

I am the daughter to king Pericles — v. 1 

is it no more to be your daughter — v. 1 

how sure you are my daughter — v. 1 

with thy daughter's, call, and give them — v. 2 
prevail, were It to woo my daughter .... — v. 2 
she made known herself ray daughter . . — v. 3 

the fair-betrothed of your daughter — v. 3 

son and daughter shall in Tyrus reign . . — v. :i 
.tVntioeh and his daughter you have — v. 3 (Gow.) 

his nueeii, and daughter, seen — v. 3 (Gov.-.) 

our daughters' several dowers Leai;i. I 

rivals in our youngest daughter's love .. — i. 1 
tell me, my daughters, since now we — — i. 1 

what says our second daughter — i. 1 

as thou, my sometime daughter — i . 1 

my two daughters' dowers digest this — — i. 1 
youngest daughter does not love thee — — i. I 

hath rivalleil for our daughter — i. I 

thy dowerless daughter, king, tlirown .. — i. 1 
forwe have no sucli daughter,nor shall.. — i. 1 

you, sirrali, Where's ray daughter? — i. I 

says, m}' lord, vour daughter is not well — i. 1 
the duke him.-elf also, and your daughter — i. 4 
tell my daughter 1 would speak with her — i. 1 

has banished two of his daughters — i. I 

two coxcombs, and two daughters — i. 4 

beg another of thy daughters — i . i 

mildest thy daughters thy mother — i. 4 

» hat kin thou and thy daughters are — i. I 

how now, daughter? what makes that . . — i. 4 

are you our daughter? Come, sir — i. 4 

false persuaded I had daughters — i. 4 

vet have I left a daughter (rrp.) — i. 4 

iind such a dough tcr, should sure to the — i. 4 

acquaint my daughter no further — i. 5 

thy other daughter will use thee kindly — i..'> 

not to give it away to his daughters — i. .'< 

both he and she, your son anil daughter — ii. 4 

sou and daughter found this trespass — ii. 4 

liave OS many dolours for thy daughters — ii. 4 
where is this daughter? With the earl .. — ii. 1 
dear daughter, I confess that I am old . . — ii. 1 
I pr'vthce, daughter, do not make rae mad — ii. 4 

my flesh, mv blood, my daughter — ii. I 

if It be you that stir these daughters' — — ii. 4 

in and ask thv daughter's blessing — iii. 2 

wind, thunder. Are, are my daughters .. — iii. 2 
with two pernicious daughters joined .. — iii. 2 

given all to thy two daughter?? — iii. 4 

what, have his daughters brought him to — i 1. 4 
on thy daughters I He hatli no daughters — iii. 4 

a lowness, but his unkind daughters — iii. 4 

this flesh begot those iwlican daughters.. — in. 4 
in all your daughters hard coinniauda .. — ii ■ 1 
his daughters seek his death — iii. 4 



DAUGIITKR— tigers, not daughters Lear, iv. 2 

nomeans will yield to see his daughter.. - '" " 



rights to his do 
my daiighteri g..t 'twt 



ted daughters — iv. 3 

lawful sheets — iv. (i 

— Iv. 

redeems — iv. G 



■d Ikt diuii-dit. 



I the fairdu 



:rlitr 



;,iii !ii: IS and — v. :i 

li.ivi li.ic-doomed — v. 3 
IS . . ll,>meo &Juliel, i. 2 (note) 

lighter? call her — i. 3 

xttv age — i. 3 

r. that vou talked — i. ■') 

of rich Capulet — ii. 3 
.111 ■ 



sluill tlmiik til. 

not hii.l time to move our daughter.. — 

eouiiiieii.l me to your daughter — 

ho, daughter! are you up? — 

leisure servLS me, pensive daughter now — 

hold, daughter; I do spy a kind of hope — 

is mv daii^-liter gone to friar Laurence? — 
inv ."laugli't.'r he lilith ucdded! 



daii.'.htiT 1)1 



.'.Is I 



— v. :i 



v. 3 



Ii. 2 



lis-fheutlie.l ill iny daiiiiliter's bosom — 

as it iiiU."iVLS inv iliiiiu^liler, and your Handel, i. 3 

these lihi.'es. dii'iiLrliter. -iviiig more light — i. 3 

rK/if.]fr..iii lliistiuie, ..i.uiLditer,be — .1.3 

I have ailauL'lit.i ; liave, while she is mine— ii. 2 
in obedience, hatli luv daughter shown me — 
tell y.ni tluU, lief.ire luy daughter told me — 
atsucha time I'll loose my daughter to — 11.2 
have you a daughter? I have, my lord .. — 11.2 

but as yoiu- daughter may conceive — }!• 2 

still harping on my daughter — 11. 2 

meeting between hint and my daughter. . — u. 2 

one fair daughter, and no more — u- 2 

still on my daughter. Am I not i' the — — 11.2 
I have a daughter, that I love passing well — u. 2 
blood of fathers, mothers, daughters, sons — _u. 2 
tliey say, the owl was a baker s daughter — iv. 5 
steward, that stole his master's daughter — iv. .i 

look to your house, your daughter Olliello, 1. I 

lioiir.l ine Miy. ni\ .Iau_'liter is not for thee — 1. 1 
you'll ha\r '\ mil' d:ui_'rili;;' eoveredwith.. — i. 1 

your .Uui-I.Ui ;ni>l tin' Aloor are now — i. 1 

that your fair ilaii^litL-r, at this odd-even — i. 1 
your'diiuL'litcr-il'you have not giveu her — i. 1 
trust not 'j'our daughters' minds by what — i. 1 
where hast thou stowed my daughter? .. — 1.2 
my daughter! O my daughterl dead? .. — 1.3 
thus beguiled your daughter ol herself . . — 1. 3 
charced withal), I won liis daughter with — 1. 3 

this tale would win my daughter too — 1-3 

I am hitherto your daughter; but here's — 1. 3 

DAUGllTKK-BEAMKD- 
bcst call it, .lauLdiUT-heamed.... tones L. Lost, v. 2 

DAUGllTEK-liN-LAW— , , . „ 

you might lie my daughter-in-law ....Alls II ell, i. 3 
I have sent you a daughter-in-lnw — iii. 2 (letter) 
vour daughter-ill-law hod been alive — iv. .'> 

DAUNT— a little din can daunt. . . . Taming ofSh. 1. 2 
discontent daunt all your hopes . . Tilus AnUron. i. 2 

DAUNT£D-be daunted at a woman's.! Henij/ yi.v. 3 

unspotted is not easily daunted 2Henry I' 1. 111. 1 

what, are ye daunted now? now wiU — iv. 1 

DAUNTLESS— that dauntless temper.. il/uctett, 111. 1 
a braver choice of dauntless spirits . . King John, 11. 1 
put on the dauntless spirit of resolution — _ v. 1 
but let thy dauntless raind still . . . .3Henrij VI. in. 3 

DAUI'HIN— of Lewis the Dauphin ..King John, u. 2 
is the voung Dauphin every way _ — — ]}-'^ 
if that the Dauphin there, thy princely — }]■ ^ 

speak then, prince Dauphin — .ii- 2 

thou virtuous Daupliin, alter not .... — in. 1 

O noble Dauphin, go with me to — 111. 4 

under the Daujihin. Thou hast — iv. 2 

of the Dauphin's love, is ranch more — jv. 3 
away toward Bury, to the Dauphin. . 
llii 



— V. 1 

— V. 2 

— y. 2 

— V.2 

— V.3 



the Dauphin and liis powers 

the powers led by the Dauphin 

and, noble Dauphin, albeit we swear 
the Dauphin is too wilful opposite .. 
shalt find it, Dauphin, do not doubt 

expected by the Dauphin here 

where is ray prince, the Dauphm? — — v 
the Dauphin is preparing liithcrward — v 
the Dauphin rages at our very heels — v 

since came froni the Dauphin — v 

the messengers sent from the Dauphm. /Icnri/r.i 
of our fair cousin Dauphin; for, we hear — 1 
Dauphin's meaning, and our embassy? — i 

tell us the Dauphin's mind — > 

this the l^auphin speaks. VflMt, treasure — i 
glad, the Dauphin is so pleasant with us — 1 
but tell the Dauiiliin, I will keep .... — i 
strike the Dauphin blind to look — — i 
have cause to ciu-se the Dauphin's scorn — 1 
we'll chide this Dauphin at his father s — 1 
and you, prince Dauphin, with all . . — 11 
O peai;e, prince Diui]iliinl you are too — 11 
uuless the l)iui|ihiii he in presence here — 11 
for tlie Uaupliiii. I stand here for him — .11 
the Daupiiiii. wliom of succour we .. — 111 
priiHv Daiii'hiii, -.on shall stay with 

the Diiiipliiii longs for morning 

the lirase sir (iuischard Dauphin — iv. « 

the Dauphin Charles is crowned king.l Henry VI. 1. 1 

the Dauphin crowneil king! — !• 

to win the Diinphin's grace — !• 

I'll hale the Daiiiihiu headlong — !• 1 

either toquell the Dauphin utterly.. — \- ] 

Where's the iirince Dauiihin? 1 have 
stand thou lus Uauohin in iny place, 
where is the Daniihin? come, come from 
Dauphin, 1 am by birth a shepherd's 
'tis till- Inui'h Diiiiphin sueth to .... 

the D.uiplini, Willi ..lie .I.ian la 

Dauphin, coiuniand the citizens 



ni. 7 



i. 2 



DAY 

DAUI'IIIN— the I)u uphin's grace .... I Henry VI. ii. 2 
I scared the Daiijihin, and his trull .. — ii. 2 
that Charles the Oaupbin may encounter— iii. 2 
entiT, iiii.l .TV— the Daiipliiiil presently— iii. 2 
if Diiupliiii mill the rest, will he but.. — iii. 3 

the Duiiphiu, well-appointed — iv. 2 

hark! hark! the Oaiiphiu'sdrum.... — iv. 2 
dogged the mighty army of the Dauphin — iv. 3 
mightier troops than that the Dauphin — iv. 3 
when from the Daiijihin's crest thy.. — iv. « 

coiiiluct me to till- Diuijihin'stent — iv. 7 

mhiiiissioii, Diuiiiliin? tis amerc — iv. 7 

('liail.s till- DiUipliiii isajirouerman — v.3 
nil. I (he Uaiipliiii have heen juggling — v. 4 
and here lit haii.l tlie l)aii|.liiii,an.l his - v. 4 
the Daiipiiiii Imtli |.reviiil.-.l he> .ind..2;;cnr!, /V. i. 3 
hi; w.Mi iiitotlu- l)all|.llill'^llal,ds.... — i.3 

Htisiiiie.-ii, til.' Uaupl.iuof Irunce? .. — iv. 7 
iniiilL the Dauphin and the French ..ZHcnryVI. 1. 1 

anil iiui.le the Dauphin stoop — ii. 2 

D.VVY— what, Davy, I say! iHenrylV. v. I 

why Davvl Here, sir (rep.) — v. 1 

wit1i red wheat, Davy — v. 1 

601IU- pigeons, Davy; couple — v. I 

\ IS, Davy 1 X will use him well — v. 1 

well conceited, Davy; about thy {rep.) — v. I 

there are inauy complaints, Davy — v. 1 

look about, Davy; where are you — — v. 1 

spread Davy ; spread Davy [rep.) — v.3 

give master Bardolph some wmc, Davy — v. 3 
I)avv,-yourworsliii.V I'll he with y.ni - v.3 

an' I might see vou there. Davy — .v.3 

about his pate, upon saint Davy's day. /kvirj/; ..iv. 1 

sir Richard Ketly, Davy Gam, esquire — iv. S 

your leek to-day? Saint Davy's day. . — v. 1 

DAW— nightingales answer d&ws.. TwelJIhNiglU, 111. 4 

and choke a daw withal MuchAih, n. 3 

and daws, and maidens Love's L.Losi, v. 2 (song) 

I am no wiser than a daw 1 Henry VI. 11. 4 

crows and daws, crows and dawsl Troilui S,- Cress, i. 2 
then thou dwell'st with daws too? . . Coriolan us, iy. 5 

upon my sleeve for daws to peck at Olliello, 1. 1 

DA WN— it is almost clear dawn. . Meas.forMeiu.iv. 2 

next day, after dawn, doth rise Hennj V. iv. 1 

DAWNING— us near the dawning.jV/ra.^rA/ra. iv. 2 
he lonirs not f.jr the dawning as we ilo.Ilenry V. ui. 7 
dawning nuiv bare the raven'scye ..Cymbeline, 11. 2 

but dawning' day new comfort Tilus Anttron. ii. 2 

good dawning to thee, friend: art of iear. 11. I 

this bird of dawning siugeth all night . . Hamlet, i. I 

DAY— woe the day I Tempest, 1. 2 

what is the time 0' the day? — ■•2 

and after two days I will discharge tliec — 1. 2 

that burn by day and night — !• 2 

once a day behold this maid — .!• 2 

every day, some sailor's wife — n. I 

as fresh as the lir-t .lay I wire it? — n. i 

as I hope for quilt .la', , iair is>ue — iv. I 

the edge of that diu-'Mikiaatiiin — iv. 1 

never till this day, saw I liiiii — 'v- ' 

how's the day? — v. I 

for 'tis a chronicle of day by day — v- I 

affection chains thy temler days, '/'wo Oen. 0/ 1 er. 1. 1 
that every day witn parle encounter me — |. 2 

deliberate a day or two — !• •' 

uncertain glory of an April day — .1.3 

that hour o'erslips me in the day — — 11.2 

and fair advantage of his days — .11.4 

no man hath access by day to her — — in. I 

I look on Silvia in the day — in.' 

there is no day for me — in. 1 

I think 'tis almost day .■••:• ~ '.^' - 

have you been these two days loitering — iv. 4 
our day of marriaire shall be yours .. — v- 4 

the other day with playing at lilerriillivvs, 1. 1 

by day or night — ii- 1 (letter) 

this raw rheumatic day? — nn ' 

and this day we shall have our answer — in. 2 

and you shall one day find it — i'i- 3 

my sins at the day ot judgment — in- 3 

alas the day! Good heart — in- •'> 

alas the day, 1 know not — iv- 2 

give you many, many merry days! .. — y. ■> 

water once a day her ehauiber Twelflh .\ighl. j. 1 

he hath known you but three days .. — i- 1 

put down the other day with — .1. ■') 

alas.thcday! — !!' ' 

now alas the day! what thriftless — — ii- 2 

the twelfth day of December — 11. 3 

his eyes do show his days arc almost — n- 3 

both "day and night did we — v- ' 

and died that day wlien Viola — v. 1 

that dav, that made my sister — v- 

that severs day from night — v- ' 

one dav shall crown the alliance on t — v. I 
the rai'n it i-aineth every day (rep.) — v. 1 (song) 
we'll strive to [.lease you every .lay — v. 1 (sout,) 
within these three days his heiui's..Wc<i./or Mea. 1. 2 
this day my sister should the cloister — ..J 3 

yet it is every day's news .— "'■ - 

and those eves the break of day .. — iv. 1 (song) 

1 have sat here all day — i^- \ 

for, as I take it, it is alraost day — iv. '2 

many times a dav, if not many days — iv. • 
I crave but four days respite ........ — iv. 2 

within these two days he will he here — iv. J 
for he this very day receives letters . . — iv. '2 
mav slcci) the sounder all the next day — iv. .1 
I \viU not consent to die this day .... — iv. 3 

well, vou'U answer this one day — i.v- 3 

live we a-s merry as the day is long; ..jWucA Ado, 11. 1 
1 hoiic to see you one day fitted with — 11. I 
iiaiue the day of marriage, ond God.. — 11. 1 
your grace is too ei«.-tly Ui wear every day — 11. 1 
presently go learn their dav of marriage — 11. 2 

bv this (lay, she's a fair lady — .11. 3 

why, every day; to-morrow; come .. — in. I 
((((ay untowurdly tnmeJI .......... — iii- 2 

ami bruise of many days, ilo challenge — v. 1 
praised thy w it tlie other day — v. I 

M 



DAY— the gentle day, before the ■wheels.MuchAdo,v. 3 

this day to be conjoined in the — v. 4 

but, by this good day, I yield upon . . — v. 4 

happy days bring in another moou. Mid. N.'sDr. i. 1 

four days will quickly steep themselves — i. 1 

upon that day cither prepare to die .. — i. I 

as one shall see in a summer's day . , — 1. 2 

in the shape of Corin sat all day .... — ii. 2 

and tarry for the comfort of the day.. — il. 3 

intendedfor great Theseus' nuptial day — iii. 2 

not so true unto the day, as he to me — iii. 2 

fear lest day should loo'k their shames — iii. 2 

efl'ect tliis business yet ere day — iii. 2 

come, thou gentle day I for if but .... — iii. 2 

by day's approach look to be visited — iii. 2 

will f rest me, till the break of day.. — iii. 2 

since we have the vaward of the day — iv. 1 

is not this the day that Hermia should — iv. 1 

a day during his life: he could (.re/i.) — iv. 2 

given him sixpence a day for playing — iv. 2 

sixpence a day, in Py ramus, or notliing — iv. 2 

most courageous day ! — iv. 2 

joy, and fresh days of love, accompany — v. 1 

which ever art, when day is not — v. 1 

now until the break of day, through — v. 2 

meet me all by break of day — v. 2 

one day in a week to touch (rep.)..Loi}c's L. Lost, i. 1 

not be seen to wink of all the day — i. 1 

make a dark night too of half the day — i. 1 

bide tlie penance of each three years' day — i. 1 

four days ago. Let's see the penalty.. — i. 1 

affliction may one day smile again . . — i. 1 

appertaining to thy young days — i. 2 

but a' must fast tliree days a week . . — i. 2 

the merry days of desolation that I . . — i. 2 

what time o' "day? — ii. 1 

in fair, fit for these days — iv. 1 

'twill be thine another day — iv. 1 

as fair as day. Ay, as some days — iv. 3 

on a day (alack the day!) — iv. 3 (verses) 

turns tlie fashion of the days — iv. 3 

1 did converse this quondam day with — v. 1 

in the posteriors of this day — t. 1 

the posterior of the day, most — v. 1 

in the posterior of this daj^, to be ... . — v. 1 

and fair time of dav! — v. 2 

(to tlie manner of tiie days) — v. 2 

I have seen the day of \vrong — v. 2 

a twelvemonth aniJ a day 111 mark. . — v. 2 

from day today visit the speechless.. — v. 2 

it wants a twelvemonth and a day — v. 2 

yon shall seek all day ere you . . Merch. of Venice, i. 1 

you spurned me such a day — i. 3 

if you repay me not on such a day . . — i. 3 

if he should break his day — i.3 

come home a month before the day . . — i. 3 

alack the day, I know you not — ii. 2 

spoke with me this day, and hath.... — ii. 2 

and he sleeps by day more than — ii. 5 

look he keep his day, or he shall — ii. 8 

a day in April never came so sweet . . — ii. 9 

pause a day or two, before you hazard — iii. 2 

m break or day, t'nat creep "into — iii. 2 

been this day acquitted or grievous . . — iv, 1 

and be a day before our husbands — iv. 2 

before the break of day be here — v. 1 

it sounds much sweeter than by day — v. 1 

if slie should sing by day, when every — v. 1 

'tis a day, such as the day is when .... — v. 1 

/e should hold day with the Antipodes — v. 1 

bein" two liours to day {rep.") — v. 1 

gentlemen flock to him every &s,y..Asyou Like it, i. 1 

so young and so villanous this day living — i. 1 

whipped for taxation, one of these days — i. 2 

thus men may grow wiser every day — i. 2 

within these ten days if that i. 3 

all this day to look you {rep.) ii. 5 

have looked on better days — ii. 7 

that we have seen better days — ii. 7 

I was seven of the nine days out iii. 2 

alas, the day I what shall I do — iii. 2 

as he did the day he wrestled? — iii. 2 

ask me, what time o' day — iii. 2 

and the day it is solemnized ^ iii. 2 

and I set him every day to woo me . . — iii. 2 

and come every day to my cote — iii. 2 

and a day. Say a day, without the . . — iv. 1 

to-morrow is the joytiil day, Audrey — v. 3 

that every day men of great v. 4 

have endured shrewd days and nights v. 4 

by our remembrances of days foregone.^ifs Wrif, i. 3 

by such a day, and hour i.3 

and not be all day neither — ii, 1 

'twiU be two days ere I shall ii. 5 

will, day by day, come here for-physic — iii. 1 

come, night; end day! for, with — iii. 2 

this very day, great Mars _ iU. 3 

and writ to rae this other day iv. 3 

this exceeding posting, day and niglit — v. 1 

made the days and nights as one .... v. 1 

I am not a day of season _ v. 3 

I do hope good days, and long.. Tamingof Shrew, i. 2 

and every day I cannot come to woo — ii. 1 

I'll crave the day when I shall ask . . — ii. 1 

now is the day we long have looked. . — ii. 1 

this is the 'pointed day that — iii. 2 

'point the day of marriage — iii. 2 

ere three days pass; wluch hath — iv. 2 

be wooed and wedded in a day — iv. 2 

is here looked for every day to pass . . — iv. 2 

looked for him this day in Padua.... — iv. 4 

farewell for ever and a day — iv. 4 

the night in storms, the day in cold. . — v. 2 
such a day to-morrow as to-day . . IVinter's Tate, i. 2 

in those unfledged days was my wife — i. 2 

he makes a July's day short as — i. 2 

departui-e two days ago — i. 2 

one of these da.vs; and then you'd .. — ii. 1 

nor night, nor day, no rest ii. 3 

twenty-three days they have — ii. 3 



iday 



CAY— once a day I'll visit the. ... H'inter'sTate, iii. 2 

the day frowns more and more — iii. 3 

I never saw tlio heavens so dim by day — iii. 3 

'tis a lucky day. boy; and we'll do .. — iii. 3 

sir, it is three days, since I — iv. 1 

your merry heart goes all the day — i v. 2 (song) 

as it were the day of celebration — iv. 3 

upon this day, she was both pantler. . 

take on me tne hostess-ship o' the da; 

might become your time of day 

tlie hottest day prognostication proclaims — iv. 3 

twice or tlirice a day, ever since — v. 2 

to fight with rae this other day — v. 2 

I'll limit thee this day, to seek . . Comedy of Err. i. 1 

tills very day, a Syracusan merchant — i. 2 

well, I \vill marry one day, but to try — ii. 1 

fiassage of the day, a vulgar comment — iii. 1 

ocking me out of my doors by day . , — iv. 1 

stealing on by night and day? — iv. 2 

turn back an hour in a day? — iv. 2 

most unliappy day! — iv. 4 

tills ill day a most outrageous — v. 1 

that she this day hath tlirown — v. 1 

this day, great duke, she shut — v. 1 

ne'er may I look on day — v. 1 

one day's error have suSfered — v. 1 

neither niglit nor day, hang upon Macbeth, i. 3 

so foul and fair a day I have not — i. 3 

o' the self-same day, he finds — i.3 

runs through the roughest day — i. 3 

where every day I turn the leaf — i. 3 

they met me in the day of success .. — i. 5 (let.) 

our nights and days to come — i. 5 

shall his day's hard journey — i. 7 

the death ot each day's life — ii. 2 

by the clock, 'tis day; and yet — ii. 4 

or the day's shame, that darkness — ii. 4 

alas, the day! what good could — ii. 4 

in this day's council — iii. 1 

the tender eye of pitiful day — iii. 2 

good things of day begin to — iii. 2 

glimmers with some streaks of day .... — iii. 3 

under coldest stone, days and nights . . — iv. 1 

and each new day a gash is added .... — iv. 3 

see thy wholesome days again? — iv. 3 

died every day she lived — iv. 3 

that never finds the day — iv. 3 

the days are near at hand — v. 4 

petty pace from day to day — v. 5 

the day almost itself professes — v. 7 

so great a day as this is cheaply — v. 7 

by night, or day, when I was got King John, i. 1 

who dares not stir by day — i. 1 

this day hath made much work — ii. 2 

commander of this hot malicious day I — ii. 2 

in favour she shall give tlie day — ii. 2 

will quake and tremble all this day.. — iii. 1 

and this blessed day, ever in — iii. 1 

to solemnize this day, the glorious . . — iii. 1 

a wicked day, and not a holy day (rep.') — iii. 1 

fair day, adieu! which is the side — iii. 1 

this day grows wondrous hot — iii. 2 

and the proud day, attended with . . — iii. 3 

in despite of brooded watchful day . . — iii. 3 

by losing of this day? All days of glory — iii. 4 

no distempered day, no common .... — iii. 4 

1 should be as merry as the day is . . — iv. 1 

choke his days with barbarous — iv. 2 

died three days before — iv. 2 

and on that day at noon — iv. 2 

two long days' journey, lords, or e'er — iv. 3 

whose office is this day to feast — v. 2 

how goes the day with us? — v. 3 

alone upholds the day — v. 4 

be lords of this loud day — v. 4 

if Lewis do win the day, he is — v. 4 

behold another day break in — v. 4 

feeble, and day wearied sun — v. 4 

by your assistance win the day — v. 4 

the day shall not be up so soon — v. 5 

years of hajjpy days befal my Richard IL i. 1 

each day still better other's happiness — i. 1 

upon saint Lambert's day — i. 1 

shorten my days thou canst with — i. 3 

wiiich elder days shall ripen — ii. 3 

we have stayed ten days, and hardly — ii. 4 

stay yet another day, thou — ii. 4 

not able to endure the sight of day . . — iii. 2 

one day too late, I fear, my lord (.rep.) — iii. 2 

and death will have his day — iii. 2 

like an unseasonable stormy day .... — iii. 2 

blows with tliee for our day of doom — iii. 2 

stateandinelinationof the day — iii. 2 

night, to Bolingbroke's fair day .... — iii. 2 
alack, the heavy day, when such .... — 

coward, live to see tnat day — 

that honourable day shall ne'er — 

assigu you to your days of trial — 

keep him safely till his day of trial . . — 

sureties for your days of answer — 

send him many years of sunshine days! — 

alack, the heavy day, that I — 

that every day under his household. . — 

shall feel this day as sharp — 

shall show us all a merry day — 

like Hallowmas, or shortest of day . . — 
gay apparel, 'gainst the triumph day — 
some two days since I saw the prince — 
which elder days may happily bring — 

never see day that the happy sees — 

that coronation day, when Boliugbroke — 

thy head by day nor liglit — 

on Iloly-rood day, the gallant 1 Henry I V. i. 1 

what time of day is it, lad? 

to demand the time of tlie day . . . 

thieves of the day's beauty 

rated me the other day in the 

well then, once in my days I'll be 
in these days, or fill u]) chronicles 
who studies, day and night 



DAY— an't be not four by the day \Henryll'. ii. 1 

and then to horse before day — ii. 2 

since the old days of goodman — ii. 4 

[Co/.] thousand pound this day morning — ii. 4 

there let him sleep till day — ii. 4 

need his help these fourteen days.... — iii. 1 

the difference betwixt day and night — iii. 1 

and as sure as day: and givest such.. — iii. 1 

in tlie closing of some glorious day .. — iii. 2 

and that sliail be the day, whene'er.. — iii. 2 

tills advertisement is five days old . . — iii. 2 

some twelve days hence our — iii. 2 

and said, tliis other day, you ought. . — iii. 3 

Falstaffdo, in the days of villauy? .. — iii. 3 

four days ere I set forth — iv. 1 

draw his power tliis fourteen days . . — iv. 1 

powers of us may serve so great a day — iv. I 
ICot. Knl.'} any Scot that tliis day lives — iv. 3 

a day wherein the fortune of ten .... — iv. 4 

the day looks pale at his — v. 1 

a tempest, and a blustering day — v. 1 

not sought the day of this dislike .... — v. 1 

posted day and ni^ht to meet — v. 1 

to pay him before nis day — v. 1 

if he outlive the envy of this day .... — v. 2 

the adventure of this perilous day . . — v. 2 

stand full fairly for the day — v. 3 

as I have done this day — v. 3 

soimds retreat, the day is ours — v. 4 

the fortune of the day quite turned . . — v. S 

tlie check of such another day — v. 5 

O such a day, so fought, so followed..2Henr!/2K. i. 1 

your son have not the day — i. 1 

your lordship good time of day — i. 2 

your day's service at Shrewsbury..., — i. 2 

join not in a hot day — i. 2 

if it be a hot day, an' I brandish .... — i. 2 

alas, the day! take heed of him — ii. 1 

fubb'd off, from this day to that day — ii. 1 

the other day; and, as he said to me — ii. 4 

cannot go but thirty miles a day .... — ii. 4 

abridge my doleful days I — ii. 4 

fighting o days and foiningo' nights — ii. 4 

and the very same day did I fight.... — iii. 2 

O the mad days that I have spent! .. — iii. 2 

by this good day, I know not — iii. 2 

upon his coronation day, sir — iii. 2 

O the days that we have seen! ...."■ — iii. 2 

the dangers of the days but newly . . — iv. 1 

the bruises of the days before — iv. 1 

booked with the rest of this day's deeds — iv. 3 

open as day for melting charity — iv. 3 

congealed in the spring of day — iv. 3 

the unguided days, and rotten times — iv. 3 

sings the lifting up of day — iv. 4 

worn in heat of day, that scalds — iv. 4 

my day is dim — iv. 4 

waste the memory of the former days — iv. 4 

lost the other day at Hinckley fair?.. — v. 1 

Harry's happy life one day — v. 2 

O joyt'ul day! I woulduot talce — v. 3 

welcome these pleasant days! — t. 3 

he would make this a bloody day . . — v. 4 

as it were, to ride day and night .... — v. 5 

is at this day in Germany Henry V.i.2 

the kings of France unto this day . . — i. 2 

comes o'er us with our wilder days . . — i. 2 

the crow a pudding one of these days — ii. i 

worm-holes of long- vanished days . . — ii. 4 

the promise of his greener days — ii. 4 

the day is hot, and the weather — iii. 2 

our expectation hath this day an end — iii. 3 

as you shall see in a summer's day . . — iii. 6 

w^ould it were day! you have — iii. 7 

mafoi! the other day, methought .. — iii. 7 

will it never be day? I wiU trot .... — iii. 7 

upon St. Davy's day — iv. I 

yom' dagger in your cap that day. ... — iv. 1 

of day. We see yonder the (rep.) .... — iv. 1 

join together at the latter day — iv. 1 

he let him outlive that day to see. . . . — iv. 1 

next day, after dawn, doth rise — iv. 1 

winding up days with toil — iv. 1 

twice a day their withered hands.... — iv. ! 

the day, my friends, and all things . . — iv. 1 

and we outwear the day — iv. 2 

tills day's called the feast of (rep.) .. — iv. 3 

live in brass of this day's work — iv. 3 

pleasest, God, dispose the day! — iv. 3 

if the day be ours, or no — iv. 7 

tlie day is yours. Praised be God . . — iv. 7 

fought on the day of Crispin — iv. 7 

wear the leek upon St. Tavy's day . . — iv. 7 

as you shall desire in a smnmer's day — iv. 8 

by this day and this liglit, the fellow — iv. 8 

your leek to-day? St. Davy's day is — v. 1 

I will peat his pate four days — v. 1 

health and fair time of day — v. 2 

of this good day, and of this gracious — v. 2 

that this day shall change all griefs. . — v. 2 

on which day, my lord of Burgundy — v. 2 

yield day to niglit! comets 1 Henry VL i. 1 

to this day is not known — i. 2 

halcyon days, since I have entered .. — i. 2 

to survey the Tower this day — i.3 

assembled here in arms this day.. — i. 3 (procl.) 

I will have for this day's work — i.3 

even these three days have I watched — i. 4 

this day is ours, as many more — i. 5 

that one day bloomed, and fruitful . . — i. (s 

by whom the day is won — i. 6 

after this golden day of victory — i. 6 

having all day caroiised — • ii. 1 

the day begins to break, and night is — ii. 2 

live asunder day or niglit — ii. 2 

in our late king's days? — ii. 4 

will drink blood another day — ii. 4 

tills day, in argument upon — ii. b 

like a hermit overpassed thy days .. — ii. .') 

his days may finish ere that — iii. I 



DAY 



DA Y— lost, and recovcnxl in a day . . 1 Henri/ 

shurtvniii); of my lilc one diiy - 

\\ave found ii liKHKly day of this .... - 

otitainol the glory of the day - 

bvdav. by ni.^-ht .2Hcm 

a day will come, when 'V ork shall . . - 
'mongst her minions t'other diiy .... — 
correct him for his fiuilt Uie "ilier day — 
and let these have a d-.iy :i|Mioiiit.il .. - 
and the dav of conilmt sliiiU \k the last - 
better sport these seven years' day . . - 
let never day nor ny'M unhallowed - 

clear as dav; I thank liod - 

Howns, before this day, a nniny (.n-;).) 

von made, in a day, my lords — 

in these dan^'erous days, wink at - 

shall one <lav make tlie earl of — 

after three ifiivs' open penanee - 

piiile dies in her v.iiiiiLtest days — 

thisis thed.iv appniiileil for 

hath the liriiihtest (hiy a eloud .. 

niv li^ht, and niglit my day 

these few davs' wonder will be 

every one will sive the time of day . . 

the ti>vvn8 each day revolted 

these davs are danmrous 

and hold lis here all day 

the day is almost spent 

within fourteen days, at Bristol 

three days longer, cm the pain of .... 

if. alter three d.iv,' spui'e, thou 

liUilihinL', and remorseful day is erei)t 
thev have heen up these two days. . . . 
whipped tliiee market ilays to,L;ether 

aiv alive at this day to testify it 

sohliers, tliis day have yon redeemed 

these live davs have I hid me 

1 have eat no meat these five dayu . . 
this dav I'll wear aloft my burgouet 

flames "of the last day, kmt 

we will live to see their day 

this happv day is not itself, nor 

a(,'lorious"day: St. Alhan's battle.... 

and more sueh days as these to 

the queen, this day, here holds Slleii 

live in prison all my days 

ten days ago I drowned these 

no ho|)C t") win the day 

to see a sunshine day, that cries 

have kept that ^'lory to this day 

thy jMor sire with his bridal day — 
neither call it perfect day, nor night 
briiii; about the day, how many days 

so many days my ewes have 

hours, days, weeks, months, and years 

and thou tliis day hadst kept 

what befel me on a day 

ten days wonder at the least (,rep.) .. 

<iueen"in former golden days 

often ere this day, wlien I 

shall be the day, if Warwick 

lose, that now hath won the day 

in devotion spend ray latter days 

doubt not of the day 

the midst of this bnght-sliining day 

like the owl by day, if be arise 

will sort a pitchy day for thee 

triumph, Heury, in thy day of doom 
days, X am determined to (rep.) .... liichui 
this i\a.v should Clarence closely be. . 
from whence this present day 

food time of day unto my gracious . . 
ath not another day to live 

my day, my life. Black night (rep.) 
good time of day unto your royal — 

some two days since, were worth 

those busy days, which here you urge 

thy happy days before thy death 

the day will come, that thou 

(), but remember this another day .. 

to buy a world of liappy days 

now have I done a good day's work . . 
I every day expect an embassage. . . . 
of day! Happy, indeed, as we (/r/).).. 

iHifore the days of change 

to-morrow, or next day, they will . . 
accursed and umiuiet wrangling days'. 

with health and happy days! 

Boine day or two, your highness 

even to the general all-ending day . . 
this same very day, your enemies — 
[Co/. Kn(.l never, in my days, I do . . 

how soon the day o'er-cast 

the Tower'; the day is spent 

this day those enemies are put 

soeak, when is the royal day'i' 

to-morrow then I judge a happy day 
not yet set down this day of triumph 
I would l)e, were the day prolonged.. 

this day had plotted 

visit liiio to-morrow, or next day — 
ill the afternoon of her best days — 

a joyful time of <lay ! 

■wear these glories for a day? 

obstraet and record of tedious days . . 

the night, and fast the day 

ill the day of battle, tire thee 

wi liavc many go<jdly days to see.. .. 

day, yield me not thy lii'lit 

this is All-souls' day, fellows {rep.).. 
tliis is the day, whicli in king lid ward s 
is the day, wficrein I wislie<l t<) fall .. 

this All-souls' day to my fearful 

thither, is but one day's march 

for U)-morrow is a hii.sy day 

to her of a coxlly day to-morrow 

awake, and win the day'. 

in a bloody Imtlle end thy days! — 

it is not vet near day 

a black day will it be to soineljody .. 



yi. iii. 2 
iv. 6 
iv. 7 
iv. 7 

i.3 
i. 3 



_ 11. 1 



V. 2 
V. 2 
V. 3 
V. 3 
V. 3 
y ri. i. 1 
i.3 



— n. B 

— iii. 1 



— V. li 



— 11. ; 



— in. 



IV. I 

iv. i 
iv. 4 



[ 163 ] 

DAY— or else the day is lost! Kicliard III. v. 

the day is ours, the bloody dog — v. 

plentv, and fair piosuerousdaya .... — V. 

rediuT the-e liloiidv davs again — "V. 

f, ill. iwiuL.' (lay heeiiiiie the next day's. H«nri/ ;'///.!. 

cverv day itVuiiKl infect his speech — i. 

bv ihiy anil night, he 's traitor — .j. 

I'h.ive this ilav leeeived a traitor's .. — ii. 

will niiike the'in one lUiy groan for 't — ii. 

did von not , if lute davs hear — !!• 

the kin- will know hlin one day — ii- 

a.liiiurn this court till further day .. — li- 
the tliinl dav, eoinis a frost — in- 

this .lav was viewed in open ...... — in- 

in i-elebration of tliis dav with shows — iv. 

that i-laiiu their olHees this day — .iv. 

this dav thev lia.i been lost — iv. 

business that seeks despatch by day — v 

and indeed, this day, sir, I may tell — v. 

saw this many a day ~ '^'■ 

as, ofUite davs, our neighbours — v. 

like to (hinee these three days — v. 

in her ilavs, every man shall eat .... — v. 

many davs shall see her, and yet no day — v. 

thisday, no man think be has — y. 

swore the other day, that Troilus.rroi/us.'j- Cress. _i. 

she came to him the other day — i. 

the livelong day breaks — .». 

were your days as green as Ajax — .n- 

alas, the day, how loath — J!|- 

I have loved you night and day .... — in. 

as sun to day, as turtle — ■;!• 

ay, and good next day too — !!!• 

It' to-morrow be a fair day — (i i - 

a wliole week by days — ;''• 

but that the busy day, waked — ;v. 

doth this day lie on his fair worth . . — iv. 

't is but early days — i^- 

never 's ray day, and then a kiss — — iv. 

time, will one day end it — P'- 

you may have every day enough — — iv. 

prove ominous to the day — ^ . 

I shall leave you one o' these days . . — v. 

now is my day's work done — v. 

to close the day up. Hector's life — y. 

what time o' day is 't, Aperaantus?rim(jno/,i(/i. i. 

would one day stamp upon me — i. 

the other day of a bay courser I rode — _i. 

his days and times are past — }]■ 

succession of new davs this month .. — ii. 

die then, that day thou art han.'ed .. — .ii. 

that I sh.mld pureliase the day before — i;i. 

iiv, lint tlie davs are waxed — •!!■ 

3us (lays are Ibul, anil Ids drink — iii. 

if after two days' shiue — if'. 

the good time of day to you, su: — iii- 

did but try lis this other day — ni- 

your lordship this other day sent — iii- 

ho gave me a jewel the other day — iii- 

oiie day he gives us diamonds, next day — in. 

we have seen better days — iv. 

spices to the April day again — jv. 

where feed'st thou o' days, Apemantus? — iv. 

true ; when the day serves — v. 

the fortunes of his former days — v. 

once a day with his embossed — v- 

interpreter, though young in days .. — y. 

't is not four days gone, since Corioljnus, i. 

whenfor a day of kings' entreaties .. — i. 

as when our nuptial day was done . . — ;• 

tell thee o'er this thy day's work — i. 

to a second da,y of audience — ;.'- 

in that day's feats — .V.- 

but with a gi-ain a day — \i'- 

could I meet them but once a day — iv- 

well saved me a day's journey — iv- 

the day serves well for them now — iv. 

as far as day does night — iv. 

a merrier day did never yet — y- 

walk, upon a labourin" day JiUius Ciesar, i. 

there have sat the livelong day — i • 

upon a raw and gusty day — '. 

shake him, or worse days endure — J. 

ere day, see Brutus at his house — i. 

and ere day, we will awake liim — i. 

give guess how near to day — !!• 

It is Uie bright day, that brings — ii. 

get you to bed again, it is not day — ii. 

sir, March is wasted fourteen days . . — ii- 

O, then, by day, where wilt thou. ... — ii- 

doth not the day break here? — ;;- 

that fret the clouds, are messengers ot day — ii. 

two lions littered in one day — ii- 

this day, a crown to mighty Ciesar . . — ii. 

and drawing days out, that men — iii. 

that day he overcame the Nervn ... . — in. 

() woeful day! O traitors, villains! .. — in- 

Octavius, I have seen more days than — iv. 

from this day forth, I'll use you — iv- 

the enemy increaseth every day — iv- 

as this very day was Cassius born.... — v. 

lead on our days to age I — •*'■ 

but this same day must end — v. 

the end of this day's business (rep.) .. — v. 

this day I breathed first — v. 

Cassius" day is set (rpp.) — v. 

I ehall have glory by this losing day — v. 

to part the glories of this happy day — y. 

born that day when I forget Antony f)- Cleo. i. 

my salad days: when I was green.. .. — i. 

shall have every day a several greeting — i. 

but, next dav, 1 told him of iny-self .. — ii- 

we did sleep day out of countenance — >'• 

you'll win two days upon me — !;• 

I'ompey doth this day laugh away .. — n- 
I had rather fast t'l-nm all, four days — .li- 
the go<ldess Isis that day ap|icared .. — 111- 

to-morrow is the day. It will — .'v. 

make this a hoppy (lay to Antony ! .. — iv. 



DAY 



I iXny. Auluny fyCleo.i\. fi 



DAY— prove this iipr 
() thou cluy o' the worm, eiiain .... 
cannises to the next clay's fate .... 
this lust day was a shrewd one .... 

the long day's task is done 

most heavy day 1 Nay, good my . . 
shown to tiiee such adeclining day 

the brieht (lav is done, and we — v. z 

and, within liilee davs, you with — V. 'i 

lan','ni.-li a drop of blood a day Ci/mbetlne, i. 2 

aiiii everv dav that c-oines (repealed) — i. 6 

almost incirning, is't not? Day, my lord — ii. 3 
and wish that warmer clays would come — 
make paslimo with ns a day or two — 

may not I glide thither in a day? .... — 

a goodly day not to keep house — 

every dav do honour to her grave — 

day, night, are they not but in Britain — 
hath tendered the duty of the day .. — 

I have not seen these two days — 

forestal liini of the coming clay! — 

I had no mind to hunt this day — 

the day that she was missing — 

it is a day turned strangely — 

the day was yours by accident- ... 
lives not this day within the city, 
outlive thy father's days, and liini 
in our elec'^tion this day, t give the 
the dismal'st day is this, that e'er 
I'll find aday to massacre them all 



iv. 8 
iv. !l 
iv. 12 
iv. U 



iii. I 



ill. 1 



. Tilus.lnJron. I. 1 



— i.2 



— ii. 2 



this day shall be a love-day, Tamora 

but dawning dav new comfort 

this the dav of (loom for Bassianus .. 

pass the remainder of our hateful days? — iii. 1 

see that you take no longer days .... — iv. 2 

by day and ni:;ht to attend hini — iv. 3 

to press heaven in my young days . . — iv. 3 

in hottest summer's day, led by — v. 1 

even now I curse the day — v. I 

witness the tiring day, and heavy — — v. 2 

servile footman, al I day Ion" — v. 2 

and day by day I'll do this heavy — y. 2 

proceed to cancel of your days Periclet, i. I 

forty days longer we do respite you — — i- 1 

in the day's glorious walk — !■ 2 

day serves not light more faithful — i. 2 

would have been that day in the belfry — ii- 1 

if it be a day fits you — H- ! 

marry, sir, naif a day's journey — | j • 1 

this day I'll rise, or else add ill to ill .. — n- 1 
until this day, to scour it in the dust .. — ji- 2 
crown you k'ing of this day's happiness - n- ;' 

what you will, the day is yours — ii- 3 

your presence "lads our days — ii. 3 

and welcome: happy day, my lords.... — n. i 
never more to view nor day nor light . . — n- -j 
as a fair day in summer; wondrous. ... — ii- -i 

by break ot day, if the wind cease — ii i- 1 

while summer days do last — iv. 1 

we every day expect him here — iv. 1 

not worth the time of day — iv. ■' 

in tliat kingdom spend our following days — y. 3 

five days we do allot thee Lear, ;. I 

if on tlie tenth day following — i. 1 

a prediction I read this other day — 1.2 

by day and night! he wrongs me — _i 3 

is it two days ago, since I trioped — n. 2 

for the rain it raineth every day . . — iii. 2 (song) 
and tears were like a better day [Co(.-JMay] — iv. 3 

alack, alack, the day 1 — !^- li 

as this day's battle's fought — iv. 7 

the opposites of this day's strife — v. 3 

I have seen the day, with ray good — y. 3 

is the day so young? liomeo 6r Juliet, i. 1 

and odd days. Even or odd, of all days — i.3 

daysof the year, upon that day — i.3 

for even the day before — i.3 

seek happy nights to happy days — — 1.3 

in vain, like lamps by day — i. • 

I have seen the day, that I have worn — i. i 
you and 1 are past oiu- ilancing days — i. i 
reels from forth day's pathway, made — i). 3 

his burning eye, the day to cheer — ii- 3 

consent to marry us this day — "■ 3 

highmost hill ot tliis day's journey . . — 
the day is hot, the Caiiulets abroad .. — 
for now, these hot days, is the mad . . — 
this day's black fate on more days doth — 
Komeo! come, thou day in night: .. — 
so tedious is this day, as is the night — 
alack, the day! he's gone, he's killed — 
it did, it did; alas, the day; it did .. — 
or by the break of day disguised from — 
wha"t day is this? Monday, my lord. . — 
it is not yet near day: it was the — — 
and jocund day stands tiptoe on .... — 

let's talk, it is not day — 

hence with hunts-up to the day — 

the day is broke, be wary (rep.) ...... — 

every day i' the hour, for in i,rep.) . . — 

sorted out a sudden day of joy — 

in happy time, what day is that? — 

day, night, late, early, at home 

when he shuts up the day of life . . . 

good faith, 'tis dav; the county — 

lamentable day! What is the (rep.).. — 
alack, the day I Alack, the day! .... — 

uiihappv, wretcheil, hateful day ! — 

woeful Jay! most lamentable day! (rep.) — 
Oday! ()"day! Oday! O hateful (rrp.) — 
all this day, an unaccustomed spirit — 
here hath lain these two days buried — 
the night joint labourer with the day . . Hai 

tliroat awake the g(xl of day 

or ever I had seen that day, Horatio! - 

must follow, as the night the day 

and, for the day, eonflued to fast in fires - 

crimes, done in inv days of nature ■ 

<> day und night, but this is wondrous . . . 
I saw liiin yesterday, or t'otlier day - 



iii. I 
iii. 1 



— iv. 1 



DA" 



DAY— being of 80 young days brought up.Hamlel,n. 2 
dav is day, night, niglit, and time (rep.) — _ii. 2 

all' his days of quiet with turbulent — iii. 1 

how does your nonmu: for this many a day — iii. 1 
and repose, loclc from me, day, and night — iii. 2 

beguile the tedious day with sleep — iii. 2 

as tlie bitter day would quake to look on — iii. 2 
this physic but prolongs tliy sickly days — iii. 3 

'tis saiiit Valentine's day — iv. 5 (song) 

as dav does to your age — iv. 5 

ere we were two clays old at sea . . — iv. 6 (letter) 
of all tlie days i' the year, I came (rep.) — v. 1 
it was that very day that young Hamlet — V. 1 

will mew, and"dng will have his day — v. I 

now, the next dav was our sea-fight — v. 2 

it is tlio breathing timeof day with me .. — v. 2 

increase, even as our days do grow! Olliello, ii. I 

whv, no; tlic dav luul brolce before — iii. I 

but let it notexcct'I tli.vc.lavs — iii. 3 

witiiin tliose tlirji' iliivs let me hear thee — iii. 3 
alas, tlie day! I never gave him cause .. — iii. 4 

seven days and niglits? eight score — iii. 4 

alas, tlic lieavv day! why "do you weep? — iv. 2 
do not weep, uo not weep ; abas, the day! — iv. 2 

every day tliou dofTst nie with some — iv. 2 

soul rot half a grain a day — v. 2 

I luive seen the day, that, with this little — v. 2 

D.VY-BED— come from a day-bed. Twelflh Nighl. ii. 5 
lewd day-bed [_Col. Knl.-\ove-)xd'].Iiicftard III. iii. 7 

DAY-IjItJHT— we bm-n day-light.. A/er)i/ »'<>«, ii. 1 
day-light and cliampian (lJscovers.r«'e//WiA'ig/!^ii..'j 

I can see a church by day-light Much Ado, ii. 1 

if ever I thy face by 'day-light see.. Mid. N. Dr. iii. 2 
back to Athens, by day-light, frnm these — iii. 2 
metliinks, is but the day-li'.:lit sick.jl/er. of Ven. y. I 
liow lotli you are to offend day-liglit! Trail, fy Cr. iii. 2 

fair day-light? I am mightily abused Lear, iv. 7 

luclis fair day-light out, and makes, fiomeo fJul.i. I 

come, we liurn day-liglit, ho — i. 4 

those stars, as day-light doth a lamp — ii. ^ 
yon light is not day-light, I know it — lli. 5 

DAY-WOMAN-for the day-woman. LoDe'sL. Los*, i. 2 

D.ASIZLE— I will dazzle all the eyes .... Henry V.L 2 
dazzle mine eyes, or do I see three.. 3 Henri/)-'/, ii. 1 
when mine begins to dazzle.. Titus Andronicus, iii. 2 

D AZZIjED-daz"zled my reason's. Two Gen. of Fer. ii. 4 
dazzled and drove back his enemies..! Hejiri/rj. i. 1 

DAZZLING — who dazzling so .... Love's L.Losl, i. 1 

DEAD— and i' tlie dead of darkness Tempest, i. 2 

[Col. Knt.'] now he's like, that's dead . . — ii. 1 

dcadoralive? — ii* 2 

to see a dead Indian — ii. 2 

I hid me under the dead moon-calf's . . — ii. 2 
which I serve, quickens what's dead .. — iii. 1 

we were dead or sleep — v. 1 

niv love to her is dead Two Gen. of Verona, ii. (i 

is Silvia dead? — iii. 1 

tlie night's dead silence — iii. 2 

Vmt she is dead — iv. 2 

liear tliat Valentine is dead — iv. 2 

siie's dead, belike — iv. 4 

and would I iniglit be dead — iv. 4 

till my motlier lie dead Merry Wives, i. ! 

by gar, .Jack Kugby, he is dead already — ii. 3 

by gar, de herriiig is no dead — ii. "- 

is lie dead, my Etliiopian? is he dead — ii. 3 
is he dead, bully stale? is he dead? . . — ii. 3 
I think if your liusbands were dead. . — iii. -' 

I would thy liusband were dead — iii. 3 

and he's but a dead man — iv. 2 

to season a brother's dead love. . . . Twelflh Night, i. 1 

loud even in the dead of night — i. ■'i 

dead to infliction, to {rep.) Meas.for Meas. i. 4 

the law hath not been dead though . . — ii. 2 
'tis now dead midnight, and by eight — iv. 2 
for the old women were all dead .... — iv. 2 

dead, I think ; help, imcle Much Ado, iv. 1 

here the princes left for dead — iv. 1 

and publish it, that she is dead indeed — iv. 1 
I must say she is dead, and so farewell — iv. 1 
and she is dead, slandered to death by — v. 1 
the lady is dead upon mine and my . . — v. 1 
almost the copy of my child that's dead — v. 1 
graves, yawn, and yield your dead .. — v. 3 (song) 
the former Hero 1 Ilero that is dead ! — v. 4 
that you were well-nigh dead for me — v. 4 
on the ground! dead? or a.s\eei>1. Mid. N. Dream, ii. 3 
so shoiild a murderer look, so dead . . — iii. 2 

nor is he dead, for aught that I — iii. 2 

whether he be dead or no — iii, 2 

strike her, kill her dead? ' — iii. 2 

and stril<e more dead than common. . — iv. 1 

now am I dead, now am I fled — v. 1 

for he is dead; he is notliing — v. 1 

what dead, ray dove? O Pyramus .... — v. 1 
quite dumb? Dead, dead? A tomb.. — v. 1 
and lion are left to bury the dead .... — v. 1 
for when the players are all dead .... — v. 1 

by the dead and drowsy fire — v. 2 

sweet war-man is dead and rotten, tone's L.Losl, y. 2 

for Pompey that is dead by him — v. 2 

dead, for my life — v. 2 

curbed by thewillof a dead father. Mer. of Venice^i. 2 
(God rest his soul!) alive or dead? .. — li. 2 
I would my daughter were dead .... — iii. 1 

lie bold to say, Bassanio's dead — iii. 2 

some dear friend dead — iii. 2 

beginning, that is dead and buried. ^s you LiVfeii, i. 2 
but one dead that is willing to be so. . — i. 2 
bring liim dead or living, within .... — iii. 1 

strikes a man more dead than — iii. 3 

dead shepherd! now I find tliy — iii. .5 

on nothing that doth seem as dead .. — iv. 3 
lamentation is the right of tile dead . . AWs Well, i. 1 
when you are dead, you should be . . — iv. 2 
to marry me, when his wife's dead . . — iv. 2 

spoken it, 'tis dead, and I am the — iv. 3 

I am supposed dead; the army breaking — iv. -i 

of his great oiTence is dead — v. 3 

Helen that's dead, was a sweet — v. 3 



__[}^^ 

DEAD— she is dead; which nothing AWsWell, v. 3 

when his wife was dead — v, 3 (petit.) 

dead though she lie, she feels — v. 3 

one that's dead, is qxiick — v. S 

liere? one dead, or drimk?.. Tamingof Sh. \ (indue.) 

my father dead, my fortune — i. 2 

as cold as is a dead man's nose . . W inter' sTale, ii. 1 

is dead. Apollo's angry — iii. 2 

sweetest, dearest creature's dead .... — iii. 2 

I say, she's dead; I'll swear't — iii. 2 

bring me to tlie dead bodies — iii. 2 

spirits of the deiul may walk again .. — iii. 3 

on wdien thou art dead and rotten — iii. 3 

one being dead, I shall have — iv. 3 

free thee from tlie dead blow of it — iv. 3 

be three quarters and a dram dead . . — iv. 3 

and all eyes else, dead coals! — v. 1 

so her dead likeness, I do well believe — v. 3 

■n-oiild I were dead, hut that, metliinks — v. 3 

or, how stolen t'n m\ the dead — v. 3 

I saw her, as I thought, dead — v. 3 

your grave when you are dead. . Comedy of Err. iii. 1 

a liidng dead ni.an; tills pernicious .. — y. I 

who, almost dead for breath Macbeth, i. 5 

nature seems dead, and wicked dreams .. — ii. 1 

and the dead, are but as pictures — ii. 2 

and grace is dead; the wine of — ii. 3 

better be with the dead, whom we — iii. 2 

marry, he was dead; and the right — iii. 6 

sirrah, your father's de.ad — iv. 2 

father is not dead, for all your (rep.) .... — iv. 2 

if he were dead, you'd weep for — iv. 2 

the dead man's Icuell is there scarce — iv. 3 

the queen, my lord, is dead — v. 5 

then he is dead? Ay, and brought off — v. 7 

of this dead butcher, and his fiend-like . . .— v. 7 
■whose valour plucks dead lions .... King Jnlin, ii. 1 

or add a roj'al number to the dead . . — ii. 2 

line his dead chaps with steel — ii. 2 

my mercy which lies dead — iv. 1 

the fire is dead with grief — iv. 1 

must not know but you are de.ad — iv. I 

which you demand is gone and dead — iv. 2 

what ! mother dead? how wildly .... — i v. 2 

my mother dead! my lord, they say.. — iv. 2 

to wish him dead, but thou — iv. 2 

shame, I'll strike thee dead — iv. 3 

forth this morsel of dead royalty — i v. 3 

they found him dead, and cast into . . — v. 1 

first kindled the dead coal of wars . . — v. 2 

he will be dead, or ere I come — v. 6 

dead, forsook, cast off — v. 7 

you breatlie these dead news in as dead — v. 7 

but not revenge thee dead lliclmrd 11. i. 3 

but dead, thy Kingdom cannot — 1.3 

is not Gaunt dead? and doth not .... — ii. 1 

lords, the duke of X/ancaster is dead. . — ii. 1 

'tis thought the king is dead — ii. 4 

assm'cd, Kieliard their king is dead . . — ii. 4 

hearing thou wert dead, are gone .... — iii. 2 

not reason to look pale and dead?.... — iii. 2 

and the earl of Wiltshire, dead? .... — iii. 2 

what, are they dead? They are — iii. 4 

in that dead time when Gloster's .... — iv. 1 

why, bishop, is Norfolk dead? — iv. I 

of Golgotha, and dead men's skulls . . — iv. 1 

think, I a,ra dead; and that even — v. 1 

this dead king to the living king .... — v. 5 

though I did wish him dead — v. 6 

upon whose dead corjise there 1 HennjIV. i. 1 

as the soldiers bore dead bodies by .. — i. 3 

by Richard that dead is, the next .... — i. 3 

and pressed the dead bodies — iv. 2 

all in England did repute him dead.. — v. 1 

insensible then? Yea, to the dead — v. I 

this earth that bears thee dead — v. 4 

Percy, though he be dead — v. 4 

this fat man was dead? (rep ) .— v. 4 

what friends are living, who are dead — v. 4 

so dull, so dead in look iHenrylf. i. 1 

Priam's curtain in the dead of night — i. 1 

brother, son, and all are dead — i. 1 

why, he is dead: see, what a ready .. — i. 1 

say not that Percy's dead — i. 1 

the dead; not he, which says the dead! — i. I 

think, my lord your son is dead — i. 1 

let darkness be the biirier of the dead! — i. 1 

wouldst eat thy dead vomit up — i. 3 

how now? whose mare's dead? — ii. 1 

answer, thou dead elm, answer . ._ — ii. 4 

certain instance, that Gleudower is dead — iii. 1 

mine old acquaintance are dead! .... — iii. 2 

living yet? Dead, sir. Dead! see .. — iii. 2 

and is old Double dead! — iii. 2 

after I am dead, between his greatness — iv. 4 

leave her comb in the dead carrion . . — iv. 4 

crowned, not that I am dead — iv. 4 

tliinking you dead (and dead almost — iv. 4 

I hope, not dead. He's walked — v. 2 

come the heavy issue of dead Harry — v. 2 

to the king my master that is dead . . — v. 2 

yet weep, that Harry's dead — v. 2 

what I is the old king dead? — v. 3 

for the man is dead, that you — y. 4 

remembrance of these valiant dead .... Hrnrij V.i. 2 

for Falstaff heis dead — ii. 3 

the dead men's blood, the pining .... — ii. 4 

England, as dead midnight still .... — iii. (cho.) 

wall up with our English dead! — iii. 1 

though we seemed dead, we did — iii. G 

though defunct and dead before — iv. 1 

being dead, like to the bullet's grazing — iv. 3 

to book our dead, and then to buiy . . — iv. 7 

armed heels at their dead masters .... — iv. 7 

and dispose of their dead bodies — iv. 7 

of the numbers dead on both — 1^.7 

Herald; arc the dead uuiiibered? — iv. 8 

there lie dead niic hundred — iv. 8 

those their nobles that lie dead — iv. 8 

is the number of our iCiiLdi.-ili dea'l? .. — iv. 8 



DEA 



BEAD— the dead with charits' enclosed. Henry f. iv. 8 

that my Nell is dead i' the spital — v. 1 

Henry is dead, and never shall revive. IHe/iryr/.i. 1 

avail not, now that Henry's dead — i. 1 

none but women left to niourn the dead — i. 1 

before dead Henry's corse? — i. I 

contrivedst to murder our dead lord. . — i. 3 

wlien I am dead and gone, remember — i. 4 

when she is dead, her ashes — _ i. 6 

pitch a field; when we are dead — iii. 1 

twit with cowardice a man half dead? .— iii. 2 

blood v, pale, and dead — iv. 2 

that, ^I'albot dead, great York — iv. 4 

if he be dead, brave Talbot — iv. 4 

to revenge my death, when I am dead — iv. G 

let lis not wrong it dead — iv. 7 

to survey the bodies of the dead — iv. 7 

could biit call these dead to lite! — i'. . 7 

heir, being dead, the issue of the . . . .2Hei>ry VI. ii 2 

I am dead and ^oiie, may honourable — ii. 3 

so he be dead; tor that is good deceit — iii. 1 

but I would have him dead, my lord — iii- 1 

which now is dead, in face, in gait .. — iii. 1 

for Humphrey, bein^ dead, as he .... — iii. 1 

ay, my good lord, he s dead — iii. 2 

dead in his bed, mv lord (rep.) — iii. 2 

the king is dead. Rear up his — iii. 2 

but diiuble death, now Gloster's dead — iii. 2 

that he is dead, good Warwick — iii. 2 

to survey his dead and earthy — iii. 2 

wdio finds the heifer dead — iii. 2 

may imagine how the bird was dead — iii. 2 

by nie, thou art but dead — iii. 2 

clip dead men' ' glints, and from — iv. 1 

if that I had been dca.l — iv. 4 

never saw, ami Ntreek them dead — iv. 7 

leave you all as dead as a door-nail . . — iv. 10 

o'er iny tomb, \vben I am dead — iv. lo 

let me view his visage being dead .... — v. 1 

and dead men's cries do fill the — v, 2 

is your grai'C dead, my lord ^llenryVI. i. 1 

not till king Henry he- dead — i. 2 

how now! IS he dead already? — i. 3 

take time to do him dead — i. 4 

'would I were dead! if God's good will — ii. 5 

as tills dead man doth me — ii. .0 

wheresoe'er he is, he's surely deiul — ii. 

I know by that he's dead — ii. li 

ay, but he's dead: off with — ii. 

why, am I dead? do I not breathe — iii. I 

but were he dead, yet here — iii. 3 

come quickly, Montague, or 1 am dead — v. 2 
see! dead Henry's wounds open .... Kirhard 111. i. 2 

with lightning strike the miuderer dead — i. 2 

not dead; [Co/. ivnV. -slain] but dead. . — i. 2 

nay, he is de.ad; and slain by Edward's — i. 2 

w^ere basilisks, to strike thee dead! .. — i. 2 

if he were dead, what wouhl betide . . — i. 3 

some lay in dead men's skulls — i. 4 

and mocked the dead bones that .... — i. 4 

novice, was struck dead by thee? .... — i. 4 

tha,t the gentle duke is dead? — ii. 1 

who knows not, he is dead! . — ii. 1 

is Clarence dead? the order was — ii. 1 

tell us, is our father dead? — ii. 2 

3'ou conclude that he is dead — ii. 2 

thy son, our king, is dead — ii. 2 

sorrow in dead jfidward's grave — ii. 2 

yes, the king's dead. Ill news — ii. 3 

his nurse I why she was dead ere .... — ii. 4 

I fear no uncles dead. Nor none .... — iii. I 

smile at me, who shortly shall be dead — iii. 4 

enerease the number of the dead — iv. I 

and that dead [C'o(. A')i(.-dear] saint.. — iv. 1 

I wish the bastards dead — iv. 2 

but didst thou see them dead? — iv. 3 

Planta^enet, why art thou dead? .... — iv. 4 

dead lite, blind sight, poor mortal.... — iv. 4 

thj' Edward he is dead (je.p.) — iv. 4 

thy Clarence he is dead, that stabbed — iv. 4 

live to say, the dog is dead! — iv. 4 

compare dead happiness with — iv. 4 

are too deep and dead, too deep and dead — iv. 4 

is the king dead? the empire — iv. 4 

it is now dead midnight — v. 3 

the bloody dog is dead — v. 4 

from the dead temples of this — v. 4 

as give a crutch to the dead Henry Vlll.i. I 

thau the grave does to the dead — ii. 4 

of honour, cardinal Wolsey, was dead — iv. 2 

when I am dead, good wencli — iv. 2 

should strike his father dead. . Troilits ^Cressiduj i. 3 

there's many a Greek and Trojan dead — iv. 5 

where thou wilt hit me dead? — iv. 5 

Hector! Hector's dead! O Hector! .. — v. 3 

he's dead; and at the murderer's horses' — v. 1 1 

Hector's dead; there is a word will .. — v. 11 

Hector is dead; there is no more to say — v. 1 1 
all thy living is 'mongst the dead . . Timon of Ath. 1. 2 

now his friends are dead, doors — iii. 3 

poor thin roofs with burdens of the dead — iv. 3 

would 'twere so; but not till I am dead — iv. 3 

oui- hope in liim is dead — v. 2 

Timon is dead, who hath outstretched — v. 4 

dead, sure ; and this Ms grave — v. 4 

Timon is dead; entombed upon — "v. 5 

dead is uoble Timon; of -n'hose — v. 5 

as the dead carcases of unburied Coriolanus, iii. 3 

and waked half dead with nothing . . — iy. b 

our fathers' minds are dead JuliusCcesar, i. 3 

have yawned, and yielded up their dead — ii. 2 

tyranny is dead! run hence, proclaim — iii. I 

shall not love Caisar dead so well as. . — iii. I 

than that Ciesar were dead — iij. 2 

I rather choose to wrong the dead — — iii. 2 

would go and kiss dead Caesar's wounds — iii. 2 

Portia IS dead. Ha! Portia? she is dead — iv. 3 

ay, Cicero is dead, and by that order — iv. .1 

for certain she is dead, and by strange — iv. 3 

wlie'r he have not crowned dead Cas.-iius — v.:: 



DEA 



L 1«5 ] 



Die AD— more ti-ara to tliin detul nmn.Ju/iuiCixar, v.:i 
do flml liii» or iilivo, or liead v. 4 

*e Khc'r UnitiiM he ulive or iloiid .... _ v. 4 

Kuhhi tl\v wilV- isili'iul Iiil'mij^-Clcnpalra,'!. 2 

Kiilvin is .l.'ii.l. sii-y l';ilvi.i is ili^uil (ten.) -1 i. 2 

kI.oV (lead, n.v oiuvn: l..,,li Iumv .... _ i. 3 

hiswiH', tli!irs,(,:i.l.ili.l hvMiii>srs.. _ ii. 1 
.\iitoii.v'sile:id? iltiinu s:iy SI., viliiiiii — ii. ■'> 

ve use to Niy, till' ili-:i4 !ii\' Will _ ii. .'i 

wiioii .Viitooy loimd Julius C':usar dead iii. - 

cold upon dead Ca?sar'8 tiviioIuT .... iii U 

and siiul him word you ari' dead .... iv. 11 

deailtlK'n? lV;id Kros, luHirm iv. 12 

howl not yotdind? uot di'ad? _ iv. 1'.; 

let him tliiit lows mi;, striki' nio dead — iv. 1'-' 

she sent v.ill word she was dead _ iv. I-' 

iBhedeaili' His death's upon liim (re/).) — iv. 1:1 

slic is dead tiH), oin- soverei^'u iv. Ki 

I sav, I) t'a-sar, .Vntonv is dead v. 1 

he is dead, C'lesar; not'liy _ v. 1 

the diadem on her dead mistress v. - 

another wile, w lun Imo^'en is dead ..Cijmlivlhu; i. 2 

vonr nnr,ura;;.>iud mi.^lress is dead .. i. .') 

iMU'ivehulnoticrvoH are dead .... _ iii. 1 
wlien I am dead to inv liushand? .... _ iii. 1 

I'll MTite to mv lord, she's ilead _ iii..') 

insnltment ended on his dead boily .. iii. a 

the hird is dead, that we have — iv. -2 

or dead, or sleepintj on himV but <lead — iv.'l 

or sleep ULion the (lead — iv. 2 

iMiss was dammed with dead men — v. .■? 

heing dead many years ^rc;i. V. .')).. — v. 4 (scroll) 
than a gaoler; no nolts tor the dead .. — v. 4 
hecn searched among the dead and living — v. f> 

I must report the iiueen is dead — \.:> 

the some dead thing alive v.h 

but we saw him dead — v. .'j 

most like I did, for I was dead — y.h 

Imogen, thy mother's dead — v..') 

endure our law; tho»» art dead — \.'i 

for many years thought dead — \. h 

poor remains, alive, and dead ....Titus Anthnu. i. 'J 

\n silence, as the dead are wont — i . 2 

.vou tioths beheld alive, and dead — i. -' 

deiul, if yon will; hut not to he his .. — i. 'J 

hereat dea«l timei'f the niL'ht — ii. :( 

ond make his dead trunk pillow to .. — ii. .'! 

shine upon the deal man's eartliy — ii t 

Kassianus dead. Mv lirother dead'?.. — ii. 1 

here have we found liim ilead — ii. 1 

than had he killed me dead — iii. I 

thvhnshand he is deal ()'■/'.) — iii- 1 

where tliedeui! i-or-e of ISussiannslay — v. I 

olt have I diL'Jod up dead men — v. I 

sorrow die, thou:;h I am dead — v. i 

would I were dead, so you did li^'C . . — v. .'J 

with dead cheeks advise thee to I'm'rlrs, i. i 

unless thou say, prinee Pericles is dead . . — i. 1 

till Pericles be dead, my heart can — i. 1 

who are hunger-starved, half dead — i. I 

refuse when I am dead, for I am a man . . — ii. I 

which my dead father did beciueath — ii. 1 

or dead, gives cause to mourn — ii. t 

AntiocluH and his daughter's dea<l — iii. ((;> c-i 

this niece of your dead queen — iii. 1 

till the ship be cleared of the dead — iii. I 

vour master will 1)6 dead ere you — iii. 2 

liad nine hours lien dead, by good — iii. 2 

I.vchoridtt. our nurse, is dead .... — iv. (Gower) 
I'll swear she's dead, and thrown into.... — iv. 2 

the |K)nr Transilvanian is dead — iv. .1 

that she is dead. Nurses are not — iv. ) 

how she carne dead, nor none — U\ i 

Pericles 'oclieve his daughter's dead — iv. 4 (Gow.) 
not dead at Tharsus, as she should have — v. 1 

the voice of dead Tliaisa! (.rep.) — v. :s 

will you deliver l:ow this dead ciuecn .... — v.li 
B'Xid credit, sir, that my father's dead.... — v. 3 

the d uke of Corn wall 's dead tc/ r, i v. 2 

amongst them felled him dead — iv. 2 

my lord is deiul; Edmund and I have. . . . — i v. .'> 

alive, or dead';" ho.yousir! friend! — iv. li 

what, is tie dead? Sit yon down — iv, li 

he's dead: I am only sorrv — iv. (i 

rc'o'. A'n/.JU she's dea<l! VVhodead? .... — v. 3 

iHKlics, be they alive or dead — v. 3 

I know when one is dead, and when .... — v. 3 

quickly too: he's dca/1 and rotten — v. 3 

themselves, and desperately are dead .... — v. 3 

Edmund is dead, my lord — v. 3 

do I live dead, that live to tell llomeo/yJuliii, i. 1 

to strike hiiu dead I hold it not — i. ;'> 

the ape is dead, and I must couiurc.. — ii. I 

he is already deadi stahlKid with — ii. 4 

many feign OK they were dead — ii. .'i 

brave Mercutio's dead; that gallant.. — iii. 1 

he's dead, he's dead, he's dead! iii. 2 

he's gone, he's killed, he's dead! .... — iii '2 
ever I should live to see thee dead! .. — iii. 2 

slaughtered? and is Tybait dead? — iii. 2 

Tybalt's ilead, that would have slain — iii. 2 

Tvbalt is dead, and lUimeo— banished iii. 2 

when she said— Tyhalt's dead _ iii. •> 

all slain, all deail: Uomco is _ ii,. ■.■ 

tliou wast hut latelv dead — iii. :| 

Bsone ilead ill the liottom of a tomb — iii. .'i 

till I iK-hold Idm — dead— is my poor — iii. :, 

your first is dead; or 'twere as giKKl., — iii. .'i 
o'cr-covered ^|uite with dciul men's .. — iv. I 
and hide me with a dead man in his — iv. I 

from thy !)ed, there art thou dead.... — iv. I 
liath ministered to have me dead .... — ix. 3 

help! hell)! my la<ly'sdead! — iv. .', 

dlic 8 dead, deeea.sed, she's di«d irep,} — i\'. ;, 

found me dead! (strange dream! (n/).) v. I 

the life-weary taker may fall dead .. v. 1 

corw;, closed tn d(!ad man's ^)lnb: .... — v. 2 
lieing dead, with {Col. A'n/.-to strew thy] — v. 3 
from her dead linger a precious ring.. * — v. 3 
villanuus Blmmu to thedcou Iwdica .. v. 3 



DICAD— bya dcml man interred ..HnmmifJulivl, v. 3 

that consorts, so late, the dead? — v. 3 

inthv hosoni tlK-n- li.'.-dcail — v. 3 

warni, iiiii! n.'wiv ilva.i, win. here .... — V. 3 

lloiiu'oiln.d; aoiMiilivt.doud helbro — v. 3 

fit to oi.cii llivsc dviol inrn's tombs .. _ v. 3 

mv liv,'c, inv wile isiUiiil lo-ni.,dit .. — v. 3 

It.'.uico, tlurV dvM.I,wasliu.~l.;uiil(«7i.) — V. 3 

the iiohic I'ai is, aiul true ltonico,dead — v. 3 

figure, like Ihv kin.' tli;.l'sdead lliimh-!,\. 1 

and iunip at this ckad hour, with martial — i. 1 

and the sheeted dviiil did sniieak — i. 1 

a fault against the dead, a fault — i. 2 

hut two luouths (leud! iiav, not so much — i. 2 

in the dead waste and middle of the night — i. 2 

il the sun hiecd nni'.'i-'ots in a dead dog .. — ii.2 

a sc'ond time 1 kill luv husband dead .. — iii. 2 

wh.'ii thv lirst lunl i<c\cad — iii. 2 

aral? Dead, for a clui';it, dead — iii. I 

YOU (h.nc. mv lord, with the dead body?.. — iv. 2 

where the dead body is bestowed — iv. I'. 

he is dead and gone, Indy, he is dead — iv. .'i (song) 

where is my father? Dead — iv. .') 

bow eame he dead? I'll not be juggled .. — iv. .') 
no, he i.s dead, go to thy deatli-beu . . — iv. ;> (song) 

maids do dead men's fingers call them .. — iv. 7 

'tis for the dead, and not for the quick .... — v. \ 

but, rest her soul, she's dead — v. I 

sore deeayer of your whoreson dead body — v. I 

imperious Cajsar, dead, anil tnriieil to clay — v. 1 

we should profane the service of'the dc;id — v. 1 

file vour dust upon the (juick and dead — v. 1 

follow tlu'c; I am dead, Horatio — v. 2 

Horatio, 1 am dead; thou liv'st — v. 2 

Ivoscnvrant;^ and Guildcnstcrn arc dead.. — v. 2 
() nivdau-hter! Dead? Ay, to me .. ..OWcHo, i. 3 

with facility, vour Dane ilr;id drunk — ii. 3 

lau'o, that look'sl dr;i(l with !;rieving .... — ii. 3 

inv friend is dead; 'tis do.ir, at \our .... — iii. 3 

iniuion, vonr dear lii-s .U:ia, and your .. _ v. 1 

he's alin.'ist -lain, ami Uoduri-o dead .... — v. 1 

be tlius vvlirt. tliMii ;nl :W~m\, ,mi.| 1 «ill .. _ v. 2 

wli:lt,is he (IrU'ly Ihid all liisliaijs heeu — V. 2 

not dead! not \'et iiaitc dead? I, that am — v, 2 

she's dciiil. "i'is like she comes to speak — v. 2 

I am glail thy father's dead — v. 2 

IJcsdeniona! dead? dead? O! — v. 2 

alter long seeming dead, lago hurt hiin.. — v. 2 

di:ai)-kh,i,ing— 

swoon with this dead-killing news. Kic/iro-rf ///. iv. 1 
DK.VIJI A'— deadly banishment. r«io Gen. o/Ter. iii. 1 

to (ly his deadly doom — iii. 1 

sucli a sutl'ering, such a deadly life. Tmlflh Night, i. 5 
thy assailant is quick, skilful, and deadly — iii. 4 
the deadly seven it is the least.. Meas./or ,V««. iii. 1 

an' if she did nut hate hiin deadly MucliA'Jo, v. 1 

'tis ilciidiv sin to keep that oath. . Loot's L.Losl, ii. 1 
thou didst hate her deadly, and she ..AWslVvU, v. 3 
and prme iintnie, deadly divorce step — v. 3 
'lw 1 , >: ' II sickness, or else .. Taming nf S/t. iv. 3 
l>v I I :'ii(| deadly looks.Co)rttf(/f/q/'ii)rors, iv. 4 

|imI : 1,1 ,, le;i lly than aniad .. — v. 1 

to eii.e till- .lea dly grief Machelli,'iv. 3 

pro\e a ileadly bloodshed but a, jest. King Jnlni. iv. 3 
tills their hearts with deadly hate ..Kidmrd II. ii. 2 
to the sourest and most deadly hate.. — iii. 2 
shall excuse this deadly blot in thy.. — v. 3 
working with such deadly woiuids . . 1 HenrylV. i. 3 

this is the deadly spite that — iii. I 

of deadly [Co/. -heady — Knt.-\Ka,<Wy1..HeiirijV. iii. 3 
souls to death and deadly nii»ht .... 1 Hcurij I'l. ii. 4 
full as man}' signs of deadly hate ..•IHennjn. iii. 2 

but that I hate thee deadly Sllennj H. i. 4 

thisdeadlyciuarrel daily doth beget! — ii. .') 

the :iii- luilh L'ot into mv deadly wounds — ii. ti 
ademlh. L'i. -an like life and death's .. — ii. ti 

in Heaill> hale the one against Ridmrd III. i. 1 

naked to the deadly stroke — i. 2 

no Bleep close up that deadly eye of thine — i. 3 
whose deadly web ensnareth thee about? — i. 3 
darkly, and how deadly dost thou speak! — i. 4 
on each other, and looked deadly pale — iii. 7 
anointed let me be with deadly venom — iv. 1 

was punched full of deadly holes — v. 3 

O deadly sjall, and theme of all .. Trail. ^ Cress, iv. .') 
not now, sir, she's a deadly theme. ... — iv. b 
the time right deadly; I beseech you, go — v. 2 

and Thoas, deadly hurt — v. h 

yet tlie,\' lie deadly, that tell Coriolanus, ii. 1 

so it is a deadly sorrow to behold. ^(n/D«v S,- Ctt-u. i. 2 

but, though slow, deadly ci/nilirliiir. i. 6 

set deadly enmity between two .. TitusAnJron. v. I 

meed, death fur a deadly deed — v. 3 

wither, and come to deadly use Lear, iv. 2 

all'scheerless, dark, and deadly — v. 3 

turns deadly point to point liomi;oi^Juliel,\\\. 1 

deadly sill! <) rude unthankfulnessl — iii. 3 
shot I'roin the deadly level of a gun .. — iii. 3 
scapes i' the iminineot deadly lireuijh Othelln, i. 3 

r)KAl)lA'-llAM>i;i)- 
tbc (leadlv-handed Clilford slew .. ..iHonnjII. v. 2 

niOAl)l,V-Sr.VNl)l.\(i— 
whiit >iL'n;iiesnn deadlv-standingCVC. 7i/m«..(m(/. ii.3 

DIO .\ !■■ - 1 w i.old 1 \v ere (leaf!. 7'(ro?;fn. ollrrmm. iv. 2 
n.v dull deaf ears a little use .Cnmedy uf lirrnrs, v. 1 

to'tbeir deaf iiilh.ws will discharge M(uhelh,v. 1 

deal's onr eai-s w ith this iibimdanee.. A'lH;,' Jn/iii, ii. I 

is not iialf so deaf, lions more — ii.2 

in rage deaf as the sea, hasty Iticliard II. i. I 

a little while be deaf, till I — i. 1 

1 am deaf. You must speak (rep.) ..illenr\ill'. i. 2 

like the adder, waxen deaf? ilienrijyi. iii. 2 

unto bis .liimb deaf trunk — iii. 2 

wrath makes him deaf aHeiinjVI. i. 4 

eiirs more deaf than adders .... Troilus €f Crest, ii. 2 
the gods are deaf to hot and peevish.. — v. 3 
ears should be to counsel deal' . . '/'I'lnon or .I'Acnn, i. 2 
mulled, deaf, sleepy, io'-eusible .. ..Coriolauus, iv. .'i 
this ear is deaf, and tcl I me truly . . Jtttiut Ctrsnr, i. 2 
be deaf to my uiipiti..'d fully Anloiiu ^ Cleo. i. 3 



DEA 

DEAF— <lrcadful, deaf, and dull ....TilutAndron. ii. I 
lie not o'xUirutc, ofien thy deuf can .. — ii.3 
his old ears deal, yet sliouhl both car — 'v. 4 

what! deaf? no; not a word? — v. I 

of Tybalt deaf to peace Ilomeofy Juliet, iii. 1 

T will be deaf to phiiding and excuses — iii. I 

l)K.\l''Kl>_dcafedwith the clamours. Lorf'i /../.. v. 2 

l»CAI'K.NEl>-throu|;li hisdeafened parts.i'/>)H*«,v. 1 

DE.VlKMiN'ti-dcafciiing elaniours.2Jl()ir(///'. iii. I 

U still thy deafening, thy dreadful.. ../Vr/rto,iii. 1 

DEAFNES.S— would cure deafness Tempest, i. 2 

in (Jalen; it i.< u kind of deafness iHenryir. i. 2 

DEAli — and deal in her command Tempest, v. 1 

Page to deal with poison Merry Ifices, i. '■'• 

than a great deal oi' heart-break — v. 3 

U what a deal of scorn looks Tieel,nh \iglii,ii\. I 

we must deal gently with him — iii. 4 

I will deal in this as secretly J/uc/i Ad,i, iv. I 

let inc deal ill this — v. 1 

an infinite deal of nothing .. Merchant nf f'rnice, i. 1 
1 will deal in poison with thee .,As ynu Litieit, v. 1 

the fellow huj a djal of that All's IVeil, iii. 2 

escape a preat deal of discoveries .... — iii. <■ 
BO shuuhl I be a great ileal of his act — iv. 3 

greater a great deal in evil — iv. 3 

like a father you will deal with., 'i'mnm^' ofSh. iv. 4 

you pay a <'reat deal too dear Winter'tTule,\. 1 

such a deal of wonder is broken out.. — v. 2 

but God above deal between Maelielh, iv. 3 

we cannot deal but with KingJnhn, v. 2 

wdiatadeal of world I wander Uichmd II. i. 3 

the king is come; deal mildly — ii. I 

what acandy deal of courtesy \Henryll'. i. 3 

a weasel hath not such a deal — ii.3 

to this intolerable deal of sack! — ii. 4 

such a deal of skimble-skamble — iii. 1 

out uf a ileal of old iron I chose i Henry J' I. i.,2 

in mercy so deal with my soul 'ilhnryVl. i. 3 

never able to deal with my master .. — ii.3 

fori will deal with him — iii. 1 

and doubt not so to deal, as all — iv. 9 

should not deal in her soft laws. . ..SHenry VI. iii. 2 
that I would have thee deal upon../iic/iar<i ///. iv. 2 

men shall deal unadvisedly — iv. 4 

so deal with liim, as I prove true .... — iv. 4 
he privily deals with our cardinal . . Henry VIII. i. 1 
even so? a great deal of your wit.. Tro/f. ^Cresi. ii. 1 
great deal misprising the knight .... — iv. .ij 
could deal kingdoms to my friends. Timon ofAlh. i. 2 
and undo a great deal of honour? .... — iii. 2 
as rich men deal gifts, ex|ieeting .... — iv. 3 
rob you of a gi'cat deal of patience . . Cnriolanus, ii. I 
uttered such a deal of stinking ....JuliitsCtesar, i. 2 

a great deal from the matter Cymbeline, i. a 

you are a great deal abused — i. 5 

live, and deal with others better — v. a 

that weep doth ease some deal . . Titus Androti. iii. I 
show me a murderer, I'll deal with liim — v. 2 

lie may law fully deal for Pericles, ii. 1 

have you that a man may deal withal. . — iv. 6 
and put ution hiin such a deal of man .... Lear, ii.2 

let us deal justly — iii. 6 

heavens, deal 50 still! — iv. 1 

started away to deal with grief alone — iv. 3 

to deal plainly, I fear, I am not — iv. 7 

Maria! what a deal of brine Itomeo^Jutiet,i\.Z 

if j'ou should deal double with her .. — ii. 4 

come, come, deal j ustl.v with me Hamlet, ii.2 

DEiVIiER — tne plainer dealer .,Comedyo/Errors,ii.'i 
DEALING- find better dealing . . Tu-elfih \ight, Iii. 3 
in plain dealing, Pompey, I snail. jVea./ur .Mea. ii. 1 
avouch the justice of your dealing? .. — iv. 2 
whose own hard dealings teach ..Mer. of Venice, i. 3 
there is no honesty in such dealing. .ZKenrylV. ii. i 

dealing with witches, and with 'IHenryVI. ii. I 

this is close dealing — ii. 4 

whose dealings have deserved ....Richard III. \\\. 1 
when such bad dealing must be seen — iii. C 

truth loves open dealing Henry VIII. iii. I 

Jupiter is .yonder, dealing life! ..Troilus^ Cress, iv. 5 

I like not this unnatural dealing Lear, iii. 3 

and very weak dealing lioineo ^Juliet, ii. 4 

a learned st.irit, of iiuinan dealings ....Othello, iii. 3 
DEAlVsr— that thou deal'st justly with me — iv. 2 
DEAljT — bow \ou have dealt for lum.Kin;^ John, v. 2 

I never dealt lictter since I was I Henry IV. ii. 4 

than to be dealt in by 1 Henry VI. v. 5 

uncharitably with me have you dealt .Kich. III. i. 3 
he alone dealt on lieutcnantry ...intony^Vleo. iii. 9 
the uobleinaii would have dealt with.. I'encles, iv. 6 

tlicv have dealt w ith me Hamlet, iv. 6 (letter) 

have dealt most directly in thy alfair ..Dllwlto, iv. 2 
DEANERY— and at the de.-.nery .. Merry If'ices, iv. 6 

away with her to the deanery — v. 3 

is now with the doctor at tlie dcojiery — v. .') 

DEAIl— of thee, my dear one! Ti mpesl, i. '4 

dear, they durst not — i. 2 

so dear the love my iieople — i. 2 

now my dear lady, hath — i. 2 

awake,' dear heart, awake! — i. 2 

O, dear I'.iiiiei. m:'. not too — i. 2 

thy ca-e, J , ,,i, i.„hall — ii. I 

Omosl ih 1 :.,; , . — iii. 1 

you, g'.iil Ir, 1,1. I.I 1 iny dear father.. — iii. I 

my dear sou li nliiiaud — v. I 

portalile to make the dear loss — v. I 

onedear son, shall 1 twice lose — v. 1 

pardon, dear madam 7'iro <Vpii. o/ Verona, i. 2 

welcome dear Proteus I — ii. 4 

is made to one so dear — ii, 7 

O my dear Silvia! — iii. I 

what dear good will I bear — iv. 3 

for whose (lenr sake thou didst — v. 4 

apcntleman, my dear friend ....Merry Wires, iii. 3 

with the dear love 1 bear to fair — iv. o 

for whose dear love, they say Tire(nh Kighl, i. 2 

liiiurqiio.N', my dear knight? — i 3 

with discourse of my dear faitli — i. 4 

dear !a>l, Ihdicvv it — i. i 

farewell, dear heart, siiicv I — li. 3 



DEA 



— V. I 



...Much Ado, i. 1 



_ ii. 1 
_ iii. 1 
— iii. 3 



ii. 1 
ii. 1 

ii. 1 
Iv. 3 
V. 2 

V. 2 

V. a 

V. 2 
V. 2 



DEAR— exquisite reason, dear kmghl? TuK'/,rih N. ii. 3 

etill smile, deai- my sweet, I pr^ytuce — 

dear lady — — 

thy reason, dear venom, give thy .... — 

tills is a dear manakin toyou — 

I have been dear to him, lad — 

in tills place I shall pay dear — 

that I, dear brother, he now ta'eu — 

be not ott'ended, dear Cesario — 

in terms so bloody, and so dear — 

Antonio, O my dear Antonio'. — 

be raaile of our dear souls — 

dear sir, ere long I'll visit you. . Meas.for M> 

thanks, dear Isixbel — 

liow doth my dear morsel — 

and now, dear maid, be you as free 
O my <leiir lord, I crave no other . 

de;ir Is;il)rl, I have a motion 

what, niv ilcar U'jh- Uisdain! 

a dear halll.illc?^ U) women 

my dear tiieiid l^eoiiato, hath 

not till iMonday, my dear son ...... 

alwavs excepted my dear Claudio 

that any villany sliould be so dear? 

dear my lord, it you, in your own — — ;.. . 

to link my dear friend to a common. . — iv. 1 

shall render me a dear account — iv. 1 

have thanks, it is a dear expcnee . . //W. IV.'s Dr. i. 1 

my lover dear; thy Thisby dear' (rfp.) — _!. 2 

when thou wakest, it is thy dear — ii. 3 

for my sake, my dear, lie further — — n. 3 

thy breath, my dearest Thisby dear. . — iii. 1 

that cost the fresh blood dear — xii. 2 

dear: look, where thy love (rep.) — lu. 2 

thou Shalt buy tliis dear, if ever — in. 2 

and most dear actors, eat no — iv. 2 

O dainty duck! O dear! — v. 1 

and the death of a dear fi-iend — v. 1 

deflowered my dear, which is— no, no — y. 1 
60 raucli, dear liege, I have already.. Love s L. L. i. 1 

one and the self-same thing, dear imp — J. 2 

more authority, dear boy, name more — i. 2 
who was Samson's love, my dear Moth? 
of all dear giaee, as nature (j-ep.) — 

hear me, dear lady ; I have sworn 

dear princess, were not his requests . . 

knew man hold vile stuff so dear 

will court thee for his dear 

that he did hold me dear as precious 

lord Biron, I thank him, is my dear. . 

fidl of di:ar guiltiness; and therefore 

the clamours of their own dear groans 

your worth is very dear in ray . . Mer. of Vemceji. 1 

somedear friend dead; else nothing.. — in. 2 

and yet, dear lady, rating myself at. . — in. 2 

engaged myself to a dear friend — ?!!• ^ 

is it your dear friend, that is — iii. 2 

since you are dear bought, I will (rep.) — in. 2 

how dear a lover of my lord — lu. 4 

O dear discretion, how his words — ni. 5 

which is as dear to me as life itself . . — iv- I 

dear sir, of force I must attempt — iv. 1 

dear lady, welcome home — v. 1 

the verv life of my dear friend — v. 1 

dear Celia, I show more mirth — As yoxiLike it, i. 2 

Rose, my dear Rose, be merry — J. 2 

then, dear imcle, never so much as . . — J. 3 

dear sovereign, hear me speak — _i- 3 

dear master, I can go no tmther — .i'.C 

O, dear Phoebe, if ever — lii. .5 

good day, and happiness, dear Rosalind — iv- 1 

pardon me, dear Rosalind — iv. 1 

alas, dear love, I cannot lack — iv. 1 

O my dear Orlando, how it — v. 2 

O my dear niece, welcome thou — v. 4 

a tra'itress, and a dear; his humble AlVs Wed, i. 1 

my master, my dear lord he is — _i. 3 

than mine own two, more dear — li. 1 

tlie honour of my dear father's gift . . — if. 1 

dear sir, to my endeavours give — ii. 1 

thy life is dear; for all, that life _— li. 1 

your dear son may hie — iii. 4 (letter) 

it would not seem too dear, howe'er.. — iii. 7 

I'll lend it thee, my dear, but have no — iv. 2 

a desired office, dear almost as his — iv. 4 

whose dear perfection, hearts — v. 3 

makes the rememlirance dear — v. 3 

dear sovereign pardon me — v. 3 

tiian the first, O dear heaven, bless! . . — v. 3 

O, my dear mother, do I see you .... — y. 3 
as secret, and as dear, as Anna .... Taming nf Sh.i. 1 

thou canst not love so dear as I — ii. 1 

while you, sweet dear, prove — iv. 2 

pardon, dear father — v. 1 

you pay a great deal too dear Winter' sTale, i. 1 

■let what is dear in Sicily, be cheap . . — _i. 2 

dear gentlewoman, how fares our — ii. 2 

as recompense of our dear services .. — ii. 3 

go mourn for that, my dear? — iv. 2 (song1 

softly, dear sir; good sir, softly — iv. 2 

( ) but, dear sir, your resolution — iv. 3 

for ray lads to give their dears — iv. 3 (song) 

my dainty duck, ray dear-a? — iv. 3 (song i 

purchase the sight again of dear Sicilia — iv. 3 

dear, look up; though fortune — v. 1 

chide me, dear stone; that I may .... — v. 3 

lady, dear queen, that ended when . . — v. 3 

dear my brother, let him — v. 3 

for from him dear life redeems you . . — v. 3 
than thy dear self s better part . . Comedy of Err.'\\. 2 

elienp, and your welcome dear — iii. 1 

teach me, dear creature, how — iii. 2 

my dear heart's dearer heart 
shall buy this sport as dear . 

buried some dear friend? — y. i 

anywhere; dear Duff, I pr'ythee Macbeth, \\. 3 

full of scorpions is my mind, dear wife!.. — jii. 2 

and to our dear friend Batiquo — iii. 4 

for their dear causes woidd — y. 2 

your face for five pence, and 'tis dear..A'mff./o/i7i, i. I 



— iv. 1 



[ J66] 

DEAR— ray dear sir, (thus, leaning on.King; John, i. 

thou art the issue of ray dear otfence — i. 

and, out ofmy dear love, I'll give.. .. — ii. 

and at thy birth, dear boy I — iii. 

thy uncle will as dear be to thee .... — iii. 

divers dear friends slain? — iii. 

of your dear mother England — v. 

where we swore to you dear amity . . — v. 

remainder of a dear accoimt Richard II. i. 

dear deal' lord, the purest — i. 

then dear my liege, mine — i. 

but Thomas, my dear lord, my life . . — i. 

with that dear blood which it hath . . — i. 

limit of thy dear exile — i. 

what thy soul holds dear, imagine . . — i. 

dear souls, this dear dear land, dear. . — ii. 

holds you dear as Harry duke of .... — ii. 

dear earth, I do salute thee — iii. 

to a dear friend of the good duke — iii. 

cheapest of us is ten groats too dear.. — v. 
in forwarding this dear expedience . . 1 Henry I V. i. 

here is a dear and true industrious . . — i. 

shed my dear blood drop by drop — _ i. 

dear coz, to you the remnant — iii. 

so dangerous and dear a trust on any — iv. 

dear men of estimation and conunand — iv. 

the lord of Stafford dear to-day — v. 

borrowed title hast thou bought too dear — v. 

BodearrA'nf. -great] a show of zeal .. — v. 
heart's dear [C'oi.-heart-dearJ JLtary.iHenry IV. ii. 

we would, dear lords, unto the Holy — iii. 

shall, O dear father, pay thee — iv. 

forestalled this dear and deep rebuke — iv. 

when flesh is cheap and females dear — v. 3 (song 

God forbid, my dear and faithful Henry V. i. 

let their bodies follow, my dear liege — i. 

mock out of their dear husbands .... — _i. 

in their dear care and tender — ii. 

of all vour dear oflFences — ii. 

then, forth, dear countrymen — ii. 

imto the breach, dear fnends — iii. 

for us, dear uncle, the mnter — iii. 

my dear lord Gloster, and my good . . — iv. 

tarry dear cousin Suffolk ! — iv. 

dear my lord, commend my service . . — iv. 

he is my dear friend, an' please — iv. 

dear nurse of arts, plenties — v. 

I said so, dear Katharine — v. 

and while thou livest, dear Kate — v. 

dear Kate, you and I cannot be — v. 

in love and dear alliance — v. 

and this dear conjunction plant — y. 

to thy dear cost, be sure \ Henry VI. i. 

as dear as mine, and they shall find dear — Iv. 

therefore, dear boy, mount on my — — iv. 

my dear lord, lo, where — iv. 

and bought his climbing very dear..2Henri/K;. ii. 

the queen, that living held him dear — iv. 

who would not buy tnee dear? — v. 

wast thou ordained, dear father — y. 

withhold revenge, dear God! SHennj VLii. 

dear brother, how shall Bona — iii. 

in Clirist's dear blood shed for Richard Ill.i. 

broke it in such dear degree ? — i. 

loves me, and he holds me dear — i. 

said dear brother, live, and be a king? — ii. 

image of our dear Redeemer — ii. 

dear lord Edward! Ah, but (rep.) — ii. 

widow had so dear a loss (rep.) — ii. 

comfort, dear mother — ii. 

my dear cousin, I, as a child — ii. 

welcome, dear cousiru my thoughts' — iii. 

are dear to princely Richard — iii. 

1 hold my life as dear as yours — iii. 

be satisfied, dear God, with our true — iii. 

so dear I loved the man, that I — iii. 

right well, dear madam — iv. 

[Coi. Kn(.] that dear saint which then — iv 

made me by ray dear lord's death! . . — iv. 

some little pause, dear lord — iv. 

hisbondof life, dear God, I pray — iv. 

[Kn(.] with dear heart's love — iv. 

therefore, dear mother (I must — iy. 

loved her so dear in heart Henry VIII. ii. 

have bought her dignities so dear — iii. 

out of dear respect, his royal self — v. 

how dear I hold this confirmation . . — v. 

their dear brothers, are able to endure — v. 

what else dear that is Troilus Sr Cressida, ii. 

hath been as dear as Helen — ii. 

dear lord, go you and greet him — _ii. 

dear lord, you are full of fair — di. 

have business to my lord, dear queen — iii. 

my dear lord, and most esteemed .... — iii. 

•Proy holds him very dear — iii. 

and' dear in use what things (rep.) — iii. 

perseverance, dear my lord, keeps . . — iii. 

dear, trouble not yourself — iv. 

strangles our dear vows even — iv. 

in loud and dear petition — v. 

holds dear: but the dear man (rep.) .. — v. 

therefore, dear sir, let me not shame — y. 
believe't, dear lord, you mend . . Timon of Alhens,i. 

my dear lord,— What if it — iii. 

and pity thee, dear Timon — jv. 

O, a root, — dear thanks! dry up — iv. 

and dear divorce 'twixt natural son. . — iv. 

left to us in our dear peril — v. 

then, dear countryman, bring in .... — v. 

tiiey think, we are too dear Coriolanus, i. 

and none less dear than thine and my — _i. 

ah, my dear, sueli eyes the widows . . — .ii. 

my dear wife's estimate — iii. 

shall grow dear friends, and interjoin — iv. 

in a most dear partieidar — v, 

that loss I carried from thee, dear. . . . — v. 

hangs on Dian's temple: dear Valeria — v, 

the country, our dear nurse; or else.. — v. 

showed thy dear mother any courtesy — y, 
the, fault, dear Brutus, is not in ... . JuliasCtcsar, i 



DEA 



DE AR — dear ray lord, make me . . Julius Crcsai; ii. 1 

as dear to me, as the ruddy drops .... — ii. 1 

for my dear, dear love toyour proceeding — ii. 2 

any dear friend of Ca3sar a — iii. 2 

some will dear abide it — iii. 2 

ray dear brother! this was — iv. 3 

dear jjoddess, hear that prayer Antony f)-Cleo. i. 2 

therefore, dear Isis, keep decorum .. — i. 2 

help me away, dear Charmiau — i. 3 

last thing he did, dear queen — i. .■> 

good-night, dear lady. Good-night, sir — ii. 3 

from Rome are all too dear for me . . — ii. 5 

hail, most dear Caesar! ^ iii. 6 

nothing more dear to rae — iii. H 

welcome, dear madam: each heart .. — iii. 6 

do, most dear queen. Do! — iii. 9 

ah, dear, if I be so, from my cold heart ^ iii. 1 1 

my dear master, my captain — iv. 12 

be comforted, dear madam. No — iv. 13 

1 dare not, dear, (dear ray lord, pardon) — iv. 1 3 

this I'll report, dear lady — v. 2 

no, dear queen ; for we intend — v. 3 

pays dear for my offences Cymtnline, i. 2 

peace, dear lady daughter, peace .... — i. 2 

my ring I hold dear as my finger — i. 5 

what, dear sir, thus raps you? — i. 7 

exinilsion is of thy dear husband — ii. 1 

the walls of thy dear honour — ii. I 

our dear son, when you have given . . — ii. 3 

whose tailors are as dear as yours — ii. 3 

■ray dear lord! thou art one o' the false — iii C 

dear life, take mine; and though (rep.) — v. 4 

their dear loss, the more of you — v. 5 

ever dear to thee, O think {rep.) ..THusAndron. i. 2 

dear father, soul and substance of — i . 2 

to whom I sued for my dear son's life — i. 2 

how now, dear sovereign, and our. ... — ii. 3 

refuse to di'ink my dear son's blood . . — iii. 1 

is dear Lavinia, dearer than ray soul — iii. 1 

patience, dear niece: good Titus .... — iii. 1 

and yet dear too, because I bought . . — ii i . 1 

do then, dear heart; for heaven — iii. 1 

;irith this dear sight struck pale — iii. 1 

loves me as dear as e'er my mother . . — iv. 1 

upright at their dear friend's doors . . — v. 1 

more dear than hands or tongue — v. 2 

speak, Rome's dear friend — v. 3 

the end of all is bought thus dear Pericles,]. 1 

terrible child-bed hast thbu had my dear — iii. 1 

O dear Diana, where am I — iii. 2 

shall not be more dear to my resjieet . . — iii. 3 

take from you the jewel you hold so dear — iv. (i 

speak would own a name too dear — iv. b 

embrace him, dear Thaisa; this is he .. — v. 3 

in your dear highness' love Lear, i. 1 

dear sir, forbear. Do; kill thy physician — i. 1 

the gods to their dear shelter take thee .. — i. 1 

when she was dear to us, we did — i. 1 

folly in, and thy dear judgment out! — i. 4 

hear, nature, hear: dear goddess, hear! . . — i. 4 

my dear lord, you know tlie fiery quality — ii. 4 

the dear father would with his daughter — ii. 1 

dear daughter, I confess that I — ii. 4 

commend a dear thing to you — iii. 1 

farewell, dear sister; farewell, my lord .. — iii. 7 

ah, dear son Ed"ar, the food of thy — iv. 1 

my most dear Gloster! O, the ditt'erence . . — iv. 2 

gave her dear rigiits to his dog-hearted . . — iv. 3 

some dear cause will in concealment .... — iv. 3 

O, dear father, it is thy business — i v. 4 

but love, dear love, and our aged father's — i\-. 4 

sir, your most dear daughter — iv . li 

O my dear father! Restoration — iv. 7 

kind and dear princess! — iv. 7 

dear my lord, be not familiar with her .. — v. 1 
too rich for use, for earth too dear!. iJomeo Sr Jul. i. :> 

O then, dear saint, let lips do — 'i. b 

O dear account! ray life is ray — i. a 

retain that dear perfection which he owes — ii. 2 

my name, dear saint, is hateful to myself — ii. 2 

if my heart's dear love — Well, do not — ii. 2 

dear love, adieu! anon, good nurse! . . — ii. 2 

tliree words, dear Romeo, and good-night — ii. 2 

[Co<.] Romeo! ray dear! At what o'clock — ii. 2 

and my dear [Coi.-goud] hap to tell . . — ii. 2 

my heart's dear love is set on the f ah' — ii. 3 

whom thou didst love so dear — ii. 3 

what say'st thou, ray dear nurse?.. .. — ii. 4 

O God's lady dear! are you so hot? . . — ii. ;> 

receive in either by this dear encounter — ii. i; 

the blood is spilled ofmy dear kinsman! — iii. 1 

the price of his dear blood doth owe? — iii. I 

too farailiar is my dear son with such — iii. 3 

this is dear mercy, and thou see'st it not — iii. 3 

the white wonder of dear Juliet's hand — iii. 3 

thy dear love, sworn, but hollow perjm'y — iii. 3 

for whose dear sake thou wast but. . . . — iii. 3 

help afford: farewell, dear father .... — iv. 1 

full of charge, and dear import — v. 2 

that I must use in dear employment — v. 3 

ah, dear Juliet, why art thou yet so fair? — v. 3 

of Hamlet our dear brother's death Hamlet, i. 2 

by our late de.ar brother's death — i. 2 

fear it, my dear sister — i. 3 

if thou didst ever tliy dear father love .. — i. ,'> 

dear Rosencrantz and Guildenstern! .. — ii. 2 

he tells me, my dear Gertrude — ii. 2 

dear Ophelia, I ara ill at these. . . . — ii. 2 (letter) 
thine evermore, most dear lady . . — ii. 2 (letter) 

or my dear majesty your queen here. ... — ii. 2 

my most dear lord! My excellent — ii. 2 

dear friends, my thanks are too dear — ii. 2 

by what more dear a better proposer .... — ii. 2 

in what, my dear lord? I am but mad . . — ii. 2 

and most dear life, a damned defeat was — ii. 2 

the sou of a dear father mm'dered — ii. 2 

come hither, my dear Hamlet, sit by me — iii. 2 

for thou dost know, O Damon dear — iii. -2 

dear my lord. O, my offence is rank ... . — iii. 3 

a gib, such dear concernings hide? — iii. 4 



DEA 



[107] 



DE All— England', farowi'll, dear mother. Humlel, jv. 3 

O, my iluurUcrtniile, this, like t — iv. 5 

theecrt«intvotvi>ur(kiirfiitlicr«di'ath — iv- •> 
O n>8C of Miwl (K:ir niuiil. kind MSter . . — ;v- •> 
lAKvUf, « H- y..iM- fiither .k-ttr to you? . . - iv. 7 
tKiii.) whvn our .Icr plots ,U. pull ...... — v. 2 

ftro viTVileur to t'uiirv. very responsive — v. i 
Omvikar Miimkt'. tliedriok.tlie drink — v.i 
ao tliiit. ik'av kirtls, if I be M\ lieliind. . . . OlMln, i. S 

Bluill siip|>ort by his diar alwciioc — .;• •' 

niv dour Othello! It vives nif wonder — n. 1 

to"l)usdemonn a most dear hiislmnd — ![. I 

come mv dear love: the pureha-se made — ii. 3 
he held thein sixpenee all too dear — ii. 3 (aoiiK) 
what's the matter, duar? All's well now — 11.3 

in man, and woman, dear my lord — in. 3 

lieriesscB were mv dear heartstnnffs — ill. 3 

liow now, my dear Othello? your dinner — in. 3 

ervins, O dear Cassio! as it were — iv. 1 

minion, voiir dear lies dead, and your fate — v. 1 

O mv dear Ca^sio! my sweet Cussio — v. 1 

alas!" my friend, and mv clear eountrymau — v. \ 
Blainhere.Cassio, was my dear friend.... — v. 1 
if thou attempt it, it will eo>t thee dear.. — v. -2 
dear pcneral, I never gave you eausc — v. L 

DEAK-BEI.t>Vi:iJ- . , „ 

of these our dear-heloved solcmuizea. . rempeji, V. 1 

DE\H-BorilliT— 
and Kngland'B dear-bought queon ..2HenryVl. i. 1 

comes deared iCnl. Kn/.-feared] by...^n(. ^- Cleo.i. 4 

DE VHER— dearer than a friend. Twodm. ofVer.n. 6 

knowledse with dearer love.. ..A/ecs./or />/«w. iii. 'i 

wliose loves arc dearer than As you Like i(, i. 2 

mv son's no dearer Mt iVell^ i. 2 

ha"d been the dearer, bv I know. . IVinter s Tale, iv. 3 
mv dear heart's dearer heart.. Conif';.v ".'' h:rrors, iii. '2 

a dearer merit, not so deep Il-chnrcl II. i. 3 

thouih nmnv dearer, in this bloody..! llcnnjll .\. 4 
you should have won them dearer. .'iHe/iri///. iv. 3 

that his country's dearer than Corioianus^i. 6 

to earn a dearer estimation of them . . — li. 3 
grieve thee, dearer than tliydeath../uliu»C«"!ar, in. I 
» heart dearer than Hutus mine .... — iv. 3 

is dearer, in mv respect, than all Cymbetine. u. 3 

Lavinia, deareV than my soul TilusAndron. iii. 1 

he leaves his pledces dearer than .... — iii. 1 

ha\-e been sold dearer than physic Pericles, iv. 6 

who yet is no dearer in my account Lear, i. 1 

dearer than evesifjht, space, and liberty — i. 1 
loved him, friend, no father his son dearer — ni. 4 
Shalt find a dearer father in my love .... — iii. S 

cousin, and my ilearer lord? Homeo SrJul/el, in. 2 

DEA REST— my dearest father Tempest,]. 2 

so is the dearest of the loss — ii. 1 

worth what's dearest to the worldl — in. 1 

my mi.itress, dearest, and I — iii. 1 

no, ray dearest love — .v- ' 

breath, my dearest Thisby dear. iXfid. ff. Dream, ill. 1 
summon up your dearest spirits.. LoBt''.v L. Losl, ii. 1 
in the dearest desigu of industry . . — iv. I (let.) 

the dearest friend to rae Mercli.nf Venice, iii. 2 

the dearest ring in Venice will — Iv. 1 

the touches dearest prized. .•!» youLike it, iii. 2 (vers.) 

our dearest friend prejudicates All's Well, i. 2 

rav dearest madam, let not your .... — i. 3 
as" the dearest issue of his practice .. — li. I 

my dearest master, your dear — iii. 4 (let.) 

which of them both is dearest to me — iii. 4 

COit me the dearest groans of a mother — i v. 5 
Hermione, my dearest, thou never. Winter's Tale, i. 2 
most dearest! my coUop! can thy .. — _ i. 2 
the sweetest, dearest creature's dead — iii. 2 
thou dearest Perdita, with these .... — iv. 3 

throw away the dearest thing Macbeth, i. 4 

my dearest partner of greatness — i. 5 (let.) 

in"v dearest love, Duncau comes — i. 5 

of'the knowledge, dearest chuck — iii. 2 

my dearest coz. I pray you — iv. 2 

the blood, and dearest valued blood.. Kins' Jo/in, iii- 1 

my nearest and dearest enemy? 1 Henry IF. iii. 2 

at the dearest chandler's in Europe.. — iii. 3 
we were the first and dearest of your — v. 1 
bend you, with your dearest Sliced .. — v. 5 

should broach thy dearest blood 1 Henry r/. iii. 4 

have left thy dearest heart-blood "iHcnryVL i. 1 

even with the dearest blood your bodies — v. 1 
deei) traitors for thy dearest friends!. «'C/mrd III. i. 3 

which, in his dearest need, will fly — v. 2 

that you love the dearest in this ..Henry VII I. iv. 2 
taste our dearest repute with .... Troilus fy Cress, i. 3 
bred her at my dearest cost .... Timon of Athens, i. 1 

my dearest lord,— blessed — iv. 2 

my dearest master! Away! what art — iv. 3 
dearest mother, and my triends .... Corlolanus, iv. 1 
now, my dearest queen, pray you.. Antony SrCleo. i. 3 
farewell, my dearest sister, fare thee well— iii. 2 
known to patience: my dearest sister! — iii. 6 

for thy dearest ([Uit tliee — iii. 11 

my dearest husband, I something. . . . Cymbetine, i. 2 
enjoyed the dearest bodily part of. ... — i. 5 

O dearest soul I your cause doth strike — i. 7 

O the dearest of creatures — iii. 2 (letter) 

since death of my dearest mother .... — iv. 2 
ond cast from her bis dearest one .... — v. 4 

a>ine, dearest madam Pericles, iii. a 

my dearest wife was like this maid — v. 1 

second daughter, our dearest Regan Lear, i. 1 

most best, most dearest, should in this .... — .. 1 
[An/.] mv dearest cousin: anil. .Homeo ^Juliet, iii. 2 

gorged with the dearest morsel — v. :» 

tlittt which dearest father Ifears his Bon..//am/t/, i. 2 
would I had met my dearest foe in heaven — i. 2 
their dearest action in the tented field . . Othello, i. 3 

DEAIlLINtJ— A/if.] wealthy curled dearling — 1. 2 

DEAR-LOVEU- 
my dear-loved lonl, though.... Timon of Athens, ii. 2 
dear-loved r An<. -dearest] cousin. Woinfo.^Ju/<f(, iii. 2 

DEARI>Y— <Iearly. my delicate Ariel .. Tempest, iv. 1 
my iimster loves' her dearly Tieel/lhMghl, ii. 2 



DEARLY— I swear I tender dearly. 7'«'(;{nAA'.>/i(, v. 1 
his advantage that I dearly low. Meas.far Mens. il. 4 

she w.aild love him dearly Much Ado, v. 1 

i^diarlv lioi;i.'bt, is mine Merch.qf Venire,'iv. 1 

to thill enil riders dearly hired.... /!> yi^u Like it, i. 1 
mv I'atlur love.l bis lather dearly .... — i. 3 

that v.,uKlio.dd love hi,^s.,u dearly? — i. 3 

for iilvliillier hated his ratlorilearly — i. 3 

whieh I lender deiO'ly, tluoiL-li I say — V. 2 

wi-lielia<lelv; aiellove deiuly AU's>Vdl,'i.3 

1 loved von dearlv, would von believe — iv. 2 
I'll love" lier ill arlv, ever, ever dearly — v. 3 

nio,t ilearly welniiiie! and vour.. Winter's Tnlr, v. 1 
how dtiiriy would it touch thee.. fomn/yo/Zji-r. ii.2 
in this hosoni, dearly cherished .... KingJohn, iii. 3 

shall pav lull dearly for this \Henry IV. v. 1 

which held lliee dearly, as his sours.3iicnri/ VI. ii. 1 
av, full asdearlvas [ lovemyself .. — iii. 2 
\vould love me ilearlv aJ Ids cliild ..llichnrd III. ii. 2 

him, lieaven knows liow dearly HenryVlII. iv. 2 

upper (iernnvnv, eau dearly witness.. — v. 2 
man— how dearly ever p;irted. Troilus ffCressida, iii. 3 
most ilearlv weleonie to tlie Greeks .. — iv. .') 

lie loved his motlier dearly Cor!olnnus,\. 4 

how dearly Cie-ar loved him! JullnsCiesur, iii. 2 

if yon did'love liini dearly ..Antony ^Cleopatra, i. 3 
no" hrotlier (lid ever love 80 dearly .. — ii. 2 

bTit how dearly he adores Mark — iii. 2 

and greets your hi^'iuiess dearly Cymbetine, i. 7 

ruliies unparagoneil, how dearly they — ii. 2 
bought the TKune of whore thus dearly — ii. 4 
hold thee dearly for thy mother's . TitusAndron. v. I 

kept, 1 so dearly loved it l'erictes,'n. 1 

he loved me dearly, and for his sake — ii. 1 

wine loved I deeply; dice dearly Imi-,iii.4 

I tender asdearlvas mine ov/ix. . Romeo if Julifi ,u'\. 1 
she loved her kinsman Tybalt dearly — iii. 4 

tender yourself more dearly Hamlet, i. 3 

as we dearly grieve for that which — iv. 3 

love him dearly, comfort forswear me! .Othellu, iv. 2 

DEARN— by many a dearn Pericles, iii. ((Jower) 

DEARNESS— in dearness of heart.. ..;>/uf/i/J(//., iii. 2 

DEARTil— pity the dearth that.TwoGen. of Ver. ii. 7 

make a dearth in this revolting. . . . Richard II. iii. i 

make men e.\:peet a dearth Richard III. ii. 3 

your sulfering in tliis dearth Coriotanus, i. 1 

for the dearth, the gods, not the — i. I 

the dearth is great ; the people — — i. 2 (letter) 
if dearth, or toison, follow.. /l/ifony^Cieopa/ra, ii. 7 

death, dearth, dissolutions of ancient Lear, i. 2 

his infusion of such dearth and rareness. Hamlet, v. 2 

DEATH 1 would fain die a dry death.. Tempest, i. I 

this were death that now hath — ii. I 

I shall laugh myself to death — ii. 2 

bite him to deatli, I pr'ythee — iii. 2 

worse than any death can be at once — iii. 3 

I shall be pinclied to death — v. I 

destined to a drier death uu shore. rM'oGen.o/Tfr.i. 1 

and, why not death, rather — iii. 1 

I fly not death, to fly liis — iii. 1 

I but attend on death — iii. I 

whose death I much repent — iv. 1 

stood it next to death — v. 1 

or else embrace thy death — v. 4 

upon his death's bed Merry Wives, i. 1 

and bowled to death with turnips — — iii. 4 

a death that I abhor — iii..') 

the pangs of three several deaths — iii. 6 

he shall die a flea's death — iv. 2 

either in nativity, chance, or death . . — v. I 
take the death of her brother thus?. Twelfth Night, i. 3 
good fool, for my brother's death .... — i. 5 
till the pangs of death shake him.... — i. 5 

come away, come away, death — ii. 4 (song) 

my part of death no one so true .... — ii. 4 (song) 
be boiled to death with melancholy.. — ii. b 
but by pangs of death and sepulclire — iii. 4 

out ot tne jaws of death — iii. 4 

at point ot death, kill what I love .. — v. 1 

a tnousand deaths woidd die — v. I 

than fall, and bruise to death . . Meat, for Meat. ii. 1 

judgment pattern out my death — ii. 1 

it grieves me for the death of Claudio — ii. 1 

he 's not prepared for death ! — ii. 2 

were I under the terms of death .... — ii. 4 
strip myself to death, as to a bed — — ii. 4 
die the death, but thy unkiudness (rep.) — ii. 4 

and fit his mind to death — ii. 4 

absolute for death: either death, or life — iii. 1 

merely, thou art death's fool — iii. 1 

yet grossly fear'st thy death — iii. 1 

and death unloads thee — iii. 1 

thousand dcatlis: yet death we fear.. — iii. 1 

and seeking death, find life — iii. 1 

but fetter you till death — iii. I 

Bcnseof death is most in apprehension — iii. I 

for your death to-morrow - iii. 1 

death is a fearful thing — iii. 1 

to what we fear oi' deatli — iii. 1 

a thousand prayers for thy death — — iii. I 
therefore prepare yonrscli to death .. — iii. 1 
what a merit were" it in death, to take — iii. 1 

for the entcrtaimnenl nf death — iii. 2 

the warrant, (Jlamlio, lor thy ileath, . — iv. 2 
a man that apprehends death no more — iv. 2 

in the delaying death — iv. 2 

O death 's a great disguiser — iv. 2 

to be so bared before liis death — iv. 2 

|icrehanee,of the duke's death — iv. 2 

to rise anil be put to death — iv. :i 

unprepared, nnineet for de;illl — iv. 3 

and sequent death, is all the grace .. — v. 1 
your brother's death, I know, sits.... — V.I 
It was the swift celerity of his death. . — v. 1 

post fearing ileath — V.I 

for Claudio, death for death — v. 1 

where Clandio stoojieil to death — V. 1 

away with him to death — v. 1 

he dies for Claudio's death — v. I 

that I crave death more willingly — v. I 



DEA 



DEATH— is pressing to death Mens, for Mens. v. 1 

to the death, my lord Mucli Ada, i. 3 

to be the death of this marriage? .... — ii. 2 

iire.ss me to death with wit — iii. I 

It were a iK'tter death than die with.. — iii. 1 

deatliisthel'airesteover forhershaine — iv. 1 

hate me, tortnre mi' todeath — iv. 1 

the sllpjlc.^itii)ll oltlie lady'sdeath .. — iv. I 

slandered to death by villains — v. 1 

is sorry for your dauL'hter's death — v. I 

and her death shall fall heavy on you — v. 1 

ratherseal witli my deatli, than repeat — v. I 

for my daughter's death — v. I 

done to death by slanderous tongues — v. 3 (scroll) 
death in goerch)n of her wrongs .... — v. 3 (scroll) 
lives in death with glorious fame .. — v. 3 (scroll) 

till deatli be uttered, heavily — v. 3 (song) 

tell vol largely of fair Hero's death.. ~ v. 4 
to this gentleman, or to her death ...Mid. N. Dr. i. I 

either to die the death, or to abjure .. — i. 1 

todeath, or to tt vow of single life.... — i. I 

war, death, or sickness did lay — i. I 

and most cruel death of I'y ramus — \.'i 

either death, or you, I'll find — ii. 3 

and will do to mv ileath — iii. ';i 

whiehilialli.Miillirnre, soon shall.. — iii. 2 

wlioM.'iliii.' nil ■! Mill hall never end — iii. '-• 

I-lr.ill -i,,_' il I' >i , (Lath — iv. I 

monniiii. ,■.,!■ I'l ,1 niU of learni;i,' .. — v. I 

tide life, tide (lentil, I eoine without.. — v. I 

and the deatli (if a dear friend — v. I 

grace u.^ in tin/ ili^i;raee of death.. /.^ueV /-./.o*/. i. 1 

ail eiiitaph ou tlie death of the deer? — iv. 2 

sick to deatli, wished himself — iv. 3 (ver.scs) 

no; to the death, we will not move .. — v. 2 

a death's face in a ring — v. 2 

the remembrance of my father's death — v. 2 

the sudden hand of death close up — v. 2 

wild laughter in the throat of death? — v. 2 

at their death, have good MerclianI of Venice, i. 2 

he married to a death's head — i. 2 

a carrion death, within whose — ii. 7 

she wept for the death of a third — iii. I 

if I might but see you at ray death .. — iii. 2 (let.) 

nieetesi for death; the weakest — iv. 1 

lest he do bleed to death — iv. 1 

speak ine fair in death — iv. 1 

to render it, upon his death, unto — iv. I 

wear it till your hour of death — v. 1 

after his death, of all he dies — v. 1 

I faint almost to death As you Like it, ii. 4 

tliv conceit is nearer death — ii. 6 

hold death awhile at the arm's end .. — ii. 6 

the accustomed sight of death makes — iii. 

and so, come death: two o'clock .... — iv. 1 

translate thy life into death — v. 1 

her anil death V. ere both one thing .. — v. 4 

weep o'er my fitlier's death anew All's Well, i. I 

death sliould leive play for lock of work — i. 1 

it would be tlie death of the king's .. — i. 1 

ou Ills bed of death many receipts — ii. I 

as one near deatli to those that wish.. — ii. 1 

ministers tliiiie own death, if Idle .. — ii. I 

nut Uelping; death's my fee — ii. I 

uncertain life and sure death — ii. 3 

let the white deatl-i sit on thy cheek. . — \\. 3 

I am the e-xuse his death was so — iii. 2 

where death and danger dog the heels — iii. 4 (let. 1 

and fair for death and me — iii. 4 (it.) 

to the point of her death: her death.. — iv. :i 

or let me see my death! — iv. 3 

let death and honesty go with your.. — iv. 4 

it was the death of the most virtuous — iv. S 

since I heard of the good lady's death — iv. .': 
grim death, how foul and.. Tamingof Sh. 1. (indue.* 

after my death, the one half of my lands — ii. 1 

are almost frozen to death — jv. 1 

'tis death for any one in Mantua .... — iv. 2 

or else present cleath; I pr'ythee go .. — iv. 3 

and beat me to death with a bottom of — iv. 3 
had soured themselves to death .. Winter' sTale, i. 2 

not only be death to thyself — i). 3 

though a present death had been .... — ii. 3 

look for no less than death — iii. 2 

look down, and see what death is doing — iii. 2 

though I with death, and with rewarcT — iii. i 

the death of the young prince — iii. 2 

the causes of their death appear — iii. 2 

Hermione hath suffered death — iii. 3 

eitlier for life, or death, upon the .... — iii- 3 

a death, to grant this — iv. 1 

offthese rags; and then, death, death! — iv. '2 

not yet on summer's death, nor on .. — i\'. 3 

I will devise a death as cruel for — iv. 3 

but that death is too soft for him — iv. 3 

all ileaths are too few, the sharpest . . — iv. 3 

with flics blown to death — iv. 3 

with divers deaths in death — v. 1 

instant of their master's death — v. 2 

at the relation of the (queen's deatli .. — v. 2 

ever since the death ot Hermione ... . — v. 2 

oa ever still sleep mocked death — v. 3 

benueatli to death your numbness .. — if. 3 
by the doom of death, end woes .. Comedy nf lirr. i. I 

tfU my factor's death : and he — j. I 

warrant of immediate death — i. I 

were I in my timely death, could all — i- I 

thou art adjudged to the death — _ j. 1 

he gains bv death, that hath — iii. 2 

the place of death and .sorry — v. 1 

we will behold his death — v. I 

unless the tear of death doth — v. 1 

go, pninounee his death Macbeth, i. t 

by Sinel'sdeath, 1 know I am — i. 3 

strange imavesoi' death — i. 3 

hath been slndied ill his death — 1.4 

lie. us in a death, what cannot — i. 7 

and clamour roar uiHin his death? — i. 7 

that death and nature do contend — ii- 2 

the death of each day's life — ii. 2 



DEATH strange screams of death Mucbclh, ii. 3 

death's counterfeit, and look on death — ii- 3 

■which in liis death were perfect — iji- ' 

the least a death to nature — l]\- j 

in riddles, and atfaivs of death — in- ■') 

scorn death, and hear his hopes — ;i>. 5 

to add the death of vou — iv- 3 

death of thvsoni I those linen cheeks.. — v. 1 
1 wil 1 not he afraid of death and bane . . — v. 3 

the wav to dustv- death — v- 5 

elamor'ons harbingers of blood and death — v. 6 
I wonld not wish'them toafairer deatli — v. 7 
and took it, on his death, that this ..King John, ;. 1 

I'll follow you unto the death — .!• 1 

forgive you Cceur-de-lion's death — 1 1 • 1 

now doth deatli line his dead chaps . . 
till then, blows, blood, and death! . . 
industrious scenes and acts of death.. 

no, not deatli himself in mortal 

the rotten carcase of old death 

that spits forth death, and moimtains 

lives but by the death of faith 

would live again by death of need. ... 
though that my death were adjunct 

death. Sly lord? A grave 

death, death: O amiable lovely death! 
corruption of a sweet child's death . . 
we heard how near his death he was 
life achieved by others' death 






iii. 1 
iii. 3 
iii. 3 
iii. 4 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 



yoimg Arthur s death is common — iv. 2 

and talks of Arthm-'s death — iv. 2 

broke with thee of Arthiu's death — iv. 2 

my conscience, and my cousin's death — iv. 2 

O death, made proud with pure — iv. 3 

bold, and blushes not at death — iv. 3 

if thou didst this deed of death — iv. 3 

even in the jaws of danger and of death — v. 2 

a bare-ribhed death whose oflfice .... — v. 2 

wounded to death. Fly, noble — v. 4 

have I not hideous death within — v. 4 

see the cruel pangs of death — v. 4 

death, having preyed upon — v. 7 

strange, that death should sing — v. 7 

a doleful hymn to his own death — v. 7 

did plot the duke of Orloster's death. . Richard II. i. 1 

for Gloster's death, I slew him not . . — i 1 

despite of death, that lives — i- 1 

measm-e to thy father's death — ;• 2 

to 'venge ray Gloster's death — i. 2 

in his sight, hath caused Iris death . . — i- 2 

on pain of death, no person — i-3 

although I have to do with death — — i. 3 

upon pain of death [Coi.- life] till twice — i. 3 

but speechless death, which robs my — i. 3 

and blindfold death not letme see — i- 3 

word is cm-rent with him for ray death — i. 3 

my death's sad tale may yet undeaf — ii. 1 

happy then were my ensuing death! — ii. 1 

though death be poor, it ends — ii- 1 

not Gloster's deatli, nor Hereford's .. — ii- 1 

through the hollow eyes of death — ii- 1 

a keeper back of death, who gently . . — ii. 2 

forerun the death or fall of kings — — ii. 4 

unfold some causes of your death — iii . 1 

to the death; see them delivered (rep.) — iii. 1 

tlirow death upon thy sovereign's — iii. 2 

worst is death, and death will have liis — iii. 2 

have felt the worst of death's destroying — iii. 2 

notliiug can Ave call our ovnx, but death — iii. 2 

sad stories of the death of kings — iii. 2 

keeps death his court; and there — iii- 2 

Is death destroying death (rep.) — iii. 2 

O, I am pressed to death, through — — iii. 4 

dost know of noble Gloster's death . . — iv. 1 

when Gloster's death was plotted — iv. 1 

in tills your cousin's death — iv. I 

the manual seal of death — iv. ! 

cause of noble Gloster's death — iv. 1 

will keep a league till death — v. 1 

worthy danger and deserved death . . - v. 1 

the true man's put to death — v. 3 

death in this rude assault? (rep.) — y. 5 

on my face he turned an eye of death. 1 Henry IV. i. 3 

and for whose death, we in the — i. 3 

the bloody payment of your deaths . . — i. 3 

his brother's death at Bristol — _i. 3 

of oats rose; it was the death of him — ii. 1 

to die a fair death for this — ii. 2 

Falstati sweats to death, and lards . . — ii- 2 

aud I know, liis death will be — ii- 4 

I will die a Iiundred thousand deatlis — iii- 2 

as many a man doth of a death's liead — iii- 3 

out of fear of death, or death's hand . . — iv. 1 

why, thou owest God a death — v. 1 

cherisiied, still the nearer deatli — v. 2 

if die, brave death, when princes — v. 2 

that will revenge lord Staiford's death — v. 3 

whose deaths are unreven^ed — v. 3 

I hearkened for your deatli — v. 4 

the earthy and cold hand of death lies — v. 4 

deatli hath not struck so fat a deer . . — v. 4 

I'll take it upon my death, I gave.... — v. 4 

bear 'VVoreester to the death, aud Vernon — v. 5 

head as low as death IHenrylV. (lnduc.1 

is almost wounded to the death — i. 1 

where hateful death put on — i. 1 

and I my I'ercy's death, ere tliou .... — i. 1 

offends not, that reports his death.... — i. 1 

in few, his death (whose spirit — i. 1 

I were better to be eaten to death with — i- 2 

led his powers to death, and, winking — _i. 3 

tlieiiduatli r(jck me asleep — ii- 4 

do not sj;eak like a death's head .... — ii- 4 

with the liurly, death itself awakes? — jii- 1 

very sure; death, as the Psalmist saith — iii- 2 

death is certain. Is old Double of your — iii. 2 

we owe God a death; I'll ne'er bear.. — iii. 2 

to end one doubt by death, revives . . — iv. 1 

to sword, and life to death — iv. 2 

cuard these traitors to the block of death — iv. i! 



UeiirijI'.W. 1 

— ii. 2 

— ii. 2 

— ii. 2 

— ii. 2 



iv. 2 
iv. 6 
iv. 8 



DEATH— tliey weep for thy death ..'iUennjIV.\ 

beyond the hour of deatli — i 

suppose nij' sleep my death? — i 

and, at my death, thou hast sealed . . — J 
and now my deatli changes the mode — i 
Goodman de.ath ! Goodnian bones'. .. — 

I banish thee, on pain of death 

doth gape, and doting death is near. - - 
sovereign's life to death and treachery! 
repent my fault, more than my death 

the golden earnest of our death 

miserable wretclies to your death 

ay, or go to deatli; and aile pay it. . . . 
a damned death! let gallows gape . . 

hath given the doom of death 

for they purpose not their death .... 

where they feared the death, they 

dying so, death is to him advantage 

their prayers, and they stay for death 

and so, espoused to death, with blood 

iiere was a royal fellowsliip of death! 

and be it death proclaimed througli — i\. b 

■ cimsented unto Henry's death! XHenryyi. i. 1 

and death's dishonourable victory — !■ 1 

burst his lead, and rise from death .. — ;■ 1 

him I forgive my deatli, that — !• 2 

with Henry's death, the English — — ;• 2 
since Henry's death, I fear, there is . . _ — i- 3 
henceforward upon pain of death. . — i. 3 (procl.) 
and craved death rather than I would — i. 4 

for fear of sudden death — V "! 

consented unto Salisbury's death — .!• 5 

manner of his mournful death — ij - 2 

as Scvthian Thomyris by Cyrus' death — u. 3 
thousand souls to death and deadly night — ii. 4 
tlie pursuivants of death, Nestor like — ii- 5 

just death, kind umpire of — >;- 5 

upbraid me with my fatlier's death . . — ii- -i 
and death approach not ere my tale. . — ii. 5 
my fainting words do warrant death — \\. 5 
humble service, till the _point of death — ii; - 1 
run a tilt at death witlim a chair? . . — in- ^ 
when death doth close his tender .... — lu- 3 
draws a sword, 'tis present death .... — lu- 4 

not fearing death, nor shrinking — iv. 1 

banish thee, on pain of death — J'^- • 

and fearful owl of death, our — iv- 2 

canst not enter but by death — iv. 2 

but death doth front thee — jv- 2 

friends greet in the hoiur of death — iv. 3 

to beat assailing deatli from — iv. 4 

art come unto a feast of death — p'- 5 

fly, to revenge my death, if I be slain — iv. -■) 

upon my death the French can — jv- 5 

if death' be so apparent — ly. a 

and rescued thee from death — Jv- 6 

fly, to revenge my death, wlien X am dead — iv. 6 

my death's revenge, thy youtli — y-^ 

triumphant death, smeared with — Jv. 7 

thou antick death, which laughest . . — iv. 7 
wounds become hard-favoured death — iv. 7 
brave death by speaking, whether . . — iv- 7 
had death been French, then death had — iv. 7 

thy timeless cruel death? — 'v- '1 

and so her death concludes — ^- ^ 

altho' ye hale me to a violent death. . — v. 4 

and the gloomy sliade of death — y. 4 

now, by the death of him that died. .2Hennj VI. i. 1 
outlive, and die a A'iolent death (rep.) — .i- 4 

of king Henry's life and death — iJ. ' 

after Edward the tliird'sde.ath — H- ^ 

shall find their deaths, if York — n. 2 

by God's book are adjudged to death — H- ;; 
is banishment, welcome were my death — ii - 3 

will take my death I never — J!- i* 

for, by his death, we do perceive — U- ^ 

till the axe of death hang over — "'i- "1 

my j oy is death ;— death, at whose . . 

devise strange deaths for small 

if ray death might make this 

we want a colour for his death 

mistrust, that shows him worthy death 

hath more reason for his death 

chicken should be siu-e of death 

resign to death, it is not worth 

of death, I shall find joy (rep.) 

christian-Uke, laments nis death 

this get I by his death 

until they hear the order of his death 
comment then upon his sudden death 

I see mv life in death 

the coniaict tliat it holds with death 

who should do the duke to death 

of duke Humphrey's timeless death 



..2 Henry VI. v. 2 



iii. 1 
iii. 1 
iii. 1 
iii. 1 



am faulty in dulie Humphrey's death 
Suffolk s'traight be done to death — 

with gi-ievous lingering death 

in him they fear your highness' deatli 

your dislike, or pain of death 

days longer, on the pain of death — 

Beaufort is at point of death 

were torture more than death 

this Wiiy fall I to death 

if thou be'st death, I'll give thee — 

when death's approach is seen 

see, how tlie pangs of death do 

so bad a death argues a monstrous . . 

doth death affright thee? (rep.) 

at good duke Hiimphrey's death 

I must waft thee to thy death 

that this my death may never be 

mourning for Suffolk's death? 

his brother's death hath given 

caterpillars, and intend tlieir death. . 
injiu-ed, that ye seek my death? — 

lead you to your deaths? 

your'liiglmess' doom, of life or death 
or unto death; to do my country good 

we'll bait thy liears to death 

I am resolved for death, or dignity . . 



— 111. ! 

— iii. 2 






.Z Henry VI. i. I 



i. 4 



ii.2 



DEATH— hunt this deer to death 

the wizard famous in his death 

defended me from imminent deatli 

as shall revenge his death 

depends not on his life, or death . . 

pray before I take my death 

born to renown, by life, or death 

eyes can water for his death 

can fall for Rutland's deatli? 

Henry had shook hands with death. . 
mounted, run their horse to death . . 

cries vengeance for his death 

here's for my father's death 

I'll venge thy death, or die renowned 

stern lord Clifford done to death 

blood and death, I cannot judge 

that quarrel use it to the death . . .... 

in the very pangs of death, lie cried.. 

brother, revenge my death ! — ; 

till either death hath closed these.... — i 

that triumphs in their death — ; 

willhunt this wolf to death — ! 

O that my death could stay — > 

for a father's death, take on — i 

son, so rued a father's death? — ! 

away! for death doth hold — ; 

no mourning widows for our death . . — J 
like life aud death's departing ...... — j 

nothing sung but deatli to us (rep.) . . — \ 

dark cloudy death o'ershades — ] 

which in the time of death he gave . . — .] 
my love till death, my humble thanks — ii 
Aubrey Vere, was done to death? — — \\ 

brought him to the door of death? — ]] 

father came untimely to his death? . . — n 
are dimmed with death's black veil — 

famish, that's a threefold death — 

I'll pardon thee my death — 

what scene of death hatli Roscius — 

for their parents' timeless death .... — 

weeps for the poor king's death I — 

to purge his fear, I'll be thy death . . — 
wretched by the death of thee ...... Richard III. 

more miserable by the death of hira — 
his death! O earth, which this ((rep.) — 
the timeless deaths of these PlantaMnets — 
undertake tlie death of all the world — 

thy day, and death thy life ! — 

kill me with a living death — 

the sad story of my father's death — — 
humbly beg the death upon my knee — 
though I wish thy death I will not . . — 

to both their deaths shalt thou be — 

banished, on pain of death? — 

than death can yield me here — ■ — 

that Henry's deatli, my lovely (rep.) — 
ICnl. Knt.ito wail thy children's death — 
thy happy days before thy deatli — 
my son, now m the shade of death . . 

tooth will rankle to the deatli 

sin, death, and hell, have set their . . 
what sights of ugly death within .... 

leisure in the time of death 

sentence of poor Clarence' death 

to threaten me with death 

Edward will for tidings of my death 

'tis death to me, to be at enmity 

a tongue to doom my brother's death 
yet Ms punishment was bitter death 

frozen almost to death 

when they did hear of Clarence' death? 
to lose him. not your father's death.. 

fuess who caused your father's death 
ewept a worthy husband's death . . 
cracked in pieces by malignant death 
but death hath snatched my husband 
you wept not for our father's death.. 

of good king Edward's death? 

to look on death no more ! 

death makes no concinest of this .... 
which by his death hath lost much 

I will not do it, to the death 

this day those enemies are put to death 
the second here was hacked to death 

tlie hour of death is expiate 

that do conspire my death with ...... 

my lord, they have deserved death .. 
thus rashly in the villain's death .... 

he deserved his death 

us in him, and wail his death 

how Edward put to death a citizen . . 

death and destruction dog thee 

if thou wilt outstrip death, go cross . . 

accursed womb, the bed of death 

by my dear lord's death ! 

unto a close exploit of death? 

in their death's sad story 

shall tell the process of their death . . 
drop into the rotten mouth of deatli 

that doth hunt us all to death 

and the du-e death of my poor sons . . 
thy life, and doth thy death attend . . 
were destined to a fairer death ...... 

in such a desperate bay of death 

my father's death,— thy life hath .... 
death, desolation, ruin and decay . . 
owls! nothing but songs of death? .. 

to death by fulsome wme (rep.) — "■•• 

to ruin, shame, and death ! — ^- -^ 

of bloody deeds and death . . . -..••-• — '^^ ;; 
for Richmond in the throat of death — .,, Y- J 
death! my lord, their clothes are . . Henry VIII. i. .i 

I do not think, he fears death — !V ' 

I bear no malice for my death — },\- j 

nothing but death shall e'e 
his physic after his patient 
till death, that wl 
O Gritfith. sick to aciccii ....... 

after my death I wish no other 
teU him, in death I blessed him 



i. ;i 



— ii. 1 

— ii. 1 
_ ii. 1 

— ii. 2 

— ii. 2 



— 11. 2 



jii. 1 



— iv. 1 



iv. 1 
iv. 4 
iv. 4 



s death 
.kill it 



DEATH— almost cneli pang n ileuth.Hnnyt'lll. v. 1 

ill iH'Htoweil, or (Ifuthunfiimcrt ..Tmilm i^t'/fss. ii. 2 

lil.kiil Iw thv iliriTtinii till tliy di'iitlU — ii. 3 

nn.llilcol t'liK-itli uiKiii — ii. .1 

timf thfdwith t..ki-iis..fitciV — ii. 3 

luvliir? iliiith, I le:iL- im — iii. •.' 

iiivs-i it to.l.Mtli — iii. 2 

(;i-,vk-.inil'rr..j-i»-^"ll'iTol(ltiitli.. — iv. 1 

I km'w. tli.Mi w.iil.lst lu'liisili'Utli .. — iv. L' 

■nviU lu- liis.l.iilh; 'twill lie his iKiiio — iv. •.' 

tiim-.lonv, iiMiliU'iith,.l.>to thisiiodv — iv. 2 

tlir.iw mv iilc.vf t'Mli'iitli himscir ...'. — iv. I 

il.l,liti..n eiirnol in tliv .Ir-itli — iv. ."i 

do I iii.rt th.L', IVIl !i,.lu:ltll — iv. .', 

tlHMi li:ist tin lill .if lil.H)d and duiitli! — v. 9 

iC ill his di'iilli tliv Mods hiiTC lis — V. 10 

oriliL.'ht.ol'1'viir. ot'diiith — V. 11 

doiii4 ii..lhin- bo dintli tiv the law. TVmoii nf.llli. i. 1 

thou slmlt l':unish. iMloi;''sd«Uh .... — ii. 2 

l.v whoso .K-iUh. he's sU-|>iK'd into.... — ii. 2 

whculieissiok todouth. lot not .... — iii. 1 

wciiit; hisrvputution tonoliod todoath — iii. .') 

that death ill me lit oihois' livos _ iv, ;! 

men's works; and doatli thoir L-aiii!.. — v. 2 

hvdeeimation.anda tithod death — v. .'j 

eoiiiloninin- soiuo to doath CoriiiUiiius, i. H 

bnno doaih .uitwoiLfhs had lite — i. H 

and lent thomsolvos with death — i. U 

death, that dark spirit, ill's nervy .. — ii. 1 

his sword (death's stamp) where .... — ii. 2 

that sure of death without it — iii. 1 

this deserves death. l)r let ns stand — iii. 1 

Marcius is worthy of present death .. — iii. 1 

that ever he heard the iianio of (luuth — iii. I 

keeps him horo, onr I'ortain (loath .. — iii. 1 

done to Konio. that's worthy death'? — iii. I 

pivscnt me doath on ttu* wheel — iii. 2 

for 1 mook at doath with as bi;,' — iii. 2 

for doatli. for tine, or banishment (./c/).') — iii. :i 

nat twontv thonsand deaths — iii.:! 

deserves tlio oxtronio-'t death — iii. H 

nroiiMinoo t!io stoop Tavneian death — 'ui.3 

had foaro.l death, of all the men — iv. .'i 

or of MMiio do:itU inoio lout; in — v. 2 

thov'lU'ivo hiin doath liv inehcs .... — v. 1 
hmioiir'in one eye, and doath in ..JiUimCu'snr, i. 2 

of honour more than 1 tl:ar death — i. 2 

it must be by his doath — ii. 1 

like wrath in death, and envy — ii. 1 

blaze forth the death of princes — ii. 2 

beftirc their deaths, the valiant (rep.) — ii. 2 

sooin_- '!i:^t drnfh, a necessary end .. — ii. 2 

or • ! ~ : '' iiinn almost to death — ii. 1 

yo:i -i : . Mouth ((-pp.) — iii. 1 

abri.ij i i[i- luiio of fearing death .. — iii. 1 

deserved to lie in death, Mark Antony — iii. 1 

no hour so tit as Ciesar's death's hour — iii. I 

no mean of death, as here by Caisar.. — iii. 1 

Antony, beg not your death of ua — iii. 1 
grieve thee, dearer than thy death .. — iii. 1 
show tlie reason of our Cajsar's de.ath — iii. 1 
shall be rendered of Gesar's death .. — iii. 2 

and death, for his ambition — iii. 2 

the question of his death is enrolled — iii. 2 

ciiforeetl for which he suffered death — iii. 2 

though he hod no hand in his death — iii. 2 

please my countrj* to need iny death — iii. 2 

we'll revenge hisdeath — iii. 2 

nothing but death shall stay me — iv. 3 

for with her death that tidings eanie — iv. 3 

have put to death a hundred senators — iv. 3 

blame Cato for the death wliioh he . . — v. 1 

and Ijc honoured in his deatli — v. 4 

no man else hath honour by liis death — v. 5 

though in his tale lie death Antony .§- Cho. i. 2 

our departure, death's the word — i. 2 

there is mettle in death, wdiieh eominits — i. 2 

for not alone the death of Fulvia .... — i. 2 

safe myf going, is Fulvia's death — i. 3 

1 see, iiiFulvia's death, how mine .. — i. 3 
of Mureiis Cnu-isus' ileath make me . . — iii. 1 

till death enlarge his eonfine — iii. .^ 

ixjstilenec where death is sure — iii. 8 

and death will seize lier — iii. a 

I'll make death love me — iii. 11 

Btay till death; tend me to-night .... — iv. 2 

viet<jrious life, than death and honour — iv. 2 

the hand of death hath raught him .. — iv. 9 

for one death might have prevented — iv. 10 

bring me how he takes my deatli .... — ii. 1 1 

shall die the death. Death of one .. — iv. 12 

which, by her death, our Ca>sar tells — iv. 12 

cscaiie the sorrow of Antony's death — iv. 12 

I will lie a bridegroom in iiiv death.. — iv. 12 

death and fortunes bid thy followers — iv. 12 

give me fulfieing strokes for death .. — iv. 12 

his death's upon him, but not dead .. — iv. 13 

1 here imisirtiine death awhile — iv. 13 

Bceret house of death, ere death dare — iv. 13 

and make death proud to take us ... . — iv. 13 

the death of .\nti>iiy is not a single .. — v. I 

what, of death too, "that rids our dogs — v. 2 

your death will never let eome (.rep.) — v. 2 

stroke of death is as a lover's pincli.. — v. 2 

now Iwast thee, death! — v. 2 

the manner of their deaths? — v. 2 

from u ne.vt with bonds of death! ....Cymbdine,i. 2 

there cannot be a pinch in death more — i. 2 

the movers of a languishing death .. — i. 6 

in what show of death it makes — i. 6 

Ave times redeemed from doath — i. Ii 

th'm a|ie ot' death, lie dull upon hor! — ii. 2 

peril to my iiiiKlesty, not death out.. — iii. 4 

and strokes deat I to her — iii. 6 

gone she is to lie 111., or to dishonour — iii. 5 

thy condemnation and thy death — iii. 5 

die the death: when I have slain.... — iv. 2 

or what his deatli will briu'i us — iv. 2 

sinee death of my dearest mother ... . — iv. 2 

not u death's dart, being luu«;hed at — iv. 2 



DKATH— newness ofCloten's death . C.'j/m//c/i'H 
whose answer would he death drawn — 

is, overv breath, a doatli — 

eoiiM u,.t (lii.l iloath, whore I did .... — 



for 


1110 niv ra 


isoin'siloutli 


_ 


V. 3 


0,',', 


od by thos 


1110 phvsi.-ian. .loath .. 
on ro.i.h Inr.l-.ithy .. 


- 


v. 1 
v. 1 


VO 


ir.lo:i(h lo 


s.-v.-. in'. l.,"0l then .. 





v. 1 


VO 


.lonth will 


-.i/,.- Ih.-.lor|.„-to.) .. 


__ 


v. 5 


Is 


■on, Ihiiig 1 


ittor (.1 111.' a. doath.... 







IS 1 


,.t this boy 


r.'viv.dfniin. loath? .. 





V. :> 


to 


strike mot. 


ilonth with mortal joy 





v. .') 


it \ 


'as inv insi 


int.l.'ath 





V. fl 


nil 


snroas.lo 


ith Isw.ire I w.juld.. .. 3 


ilUH.i, 


,(. i. 2 


Vo 


1.1.1 but pi. 


t v.nir iloaths (rfp.) .. 





ii. 1 


in 


iivhonrt,.! 


-.ah in mvhand 





ii. 3 


Ion 


voiiiobith 


IS iiii-orable death 





ii. 3 


'tis 


invsontilo 


ith 1 bog 





ii. 3 


at 


.irliil sioht 


of 111. «.d and death.... 





ii. 1 


wo 


■0 thoro w.i 


-so end than doath .... 

ni ..('.l.'^itb 


- 


ti. 1 



thoir t.i 

m' 

till 



1 broth. 



tb. 



I to doath. 
ntll 



lav to.ioatli iiiv wiot.'ho.l s.ms — iii. 1 

f.ir bis doath, thy bi-.ilhors are — iii. 1 

my two nophows from their death .. — iii. 1 

roilooni in: iirotbors both from death — iii. 1 

roinotnliiMn.-o of mv father's death .. — iii. 1 

lioiitodatis.loiiblj.loath — iii. 1 

tlint ovor .lo;ith sh..ulil lot lifo b.'ar . . — iii. 1 

a.U'odof.loath, .1.1110 .111 tho inn. .cent — iii. 2 

ill his rn-o will .lo.ini b.rilonlli .... — iv. 2 

shall all bo bnriod by inv death .... — v. 1 

orolso.lo^is,■hisdeath — v. I 

So suoot n .lonth, as hanging presently — v. 1 

of mnnlor aiul of death — v. 2 

d.i on tiioiii s.imc violent death — v. 2 

hor br.ithors wore ooiidemned to death — v. 2 

mooil, .loath fir a il.-i.lly deed — v. 3 

sonio.lirofulslanghtoring death — v. 3 

think doath no hazard I'erhle.'i, i. 1 

for goiiiL' on death's net — i. 1 

f'lr .leatn remembered, should be like.. — i. 1 

tor the wivy of life or death — i. 1 

ag.iinst tlio face .if .loath — i. 2 

ofii'li mi unto tlircatona life or death — i. 3 

t.i think on, but oiisning doath — ii. 1 

horo to lui\o doatli in noaco, is all — ii. 1 

a shield 'tuixt mo an.l .loath — ii. 1 

whose death's, in. loo. 1, tlio str.intjost — ii. 4 

as a whis|ior in tho oars of death — iii. 1 

to please tho f.i.il and. loiilli — iii. 2 

doatli may usurp on luitiiro inaiiv — iii. 2 

fho ooincs f.ir hor ol.l luuso's doalh .... — iv. 1 

whoroin my iloath might yield her pr.ilit — iv. 1 
on wli.jin loiii death hath — iv. 1 (Uow. inserip.) 

a tonipcst, a birth, an.lileath? — v. 3 

uiibnrileneil crawl t.iward death Lear, i. 1 

tlio momoiit is thy (loath — i. 1 

doath, doarth, dissolntions. if aiioient — i. 2 

lite and doatli! I ;mo a^lnniod tliat — i. I 

he, that. o.-:.!. Iiiin, .louMi — ii. 1 

profits of my iloatli woiv vory pregnant .. — ii. 1 

liut him oil the old man's death — i i . 1 

vengeance! plague! death! eoufusioul .. — ii. 1 

death .m my state! wherefore — ii. 4 

till if ,.r,,, «l,„,p t0.1.-"tll _ Ii. I 

d:';i 'i,:: (■' r' ii ■'' r : ■/ oould have — iii. 1 

los 1 I, ,.■:,,,■, . ^> :. ;ii- <l^utli _ iii. 4 

o\il iii-|ii' Ii ion oiiiio iiini seek his death — iii..') 

lia\'o oorlioard a plot of death upon him — iii. i> 

meet the old course of death — iii. 7 

yours in the ranks of death — iv. 2 

benefit, to end itself by death? . — iv. G 

O untimely death! I know thee well — iv. G 

that of thy deatli and business I can tell — iv. G 

with the pain of doath we'd hourly die .. — v. 3 

do, with tlieir death, bury liiimco ^Julir', (prol.) 

on pain of death, all men depart .... — i. 1 

some vile forfeit of untimely death .. — i. 4 

and the place death, considering who — ii. 2 

my death prorogued, wanting of thy — ii. 2 

full soon the canker death eats — ii. 3 

to catch my death witli jaunting — ii. .■■) 

love-devouring doatli .lo what lie dare — ii. G 

acat, to .scr.itoh ;i iioin to death! — iii. 1 

the prinoo u i.l ilooin thoe death .... — iii. I 

with one IkiihI !)i"ii -mid death aside — iii. 1 

worser than 'I'vliiilfs .loath — iii. 2 

Tybalt's (loath was woo oiiongh — iii. 2 

a rearward following Tybalt's d.'ath — iii. 2 

measure, hound, in that wor.l's .ioiith — iii. 2 

not body's doath, but body's b.-inishment — iii. 3 

be merciful, say— death — iii. 3 

in his look, much more than death .. — iii. 3 

exile is death: then banishment (rc/i.) — iii. 3 

that black word death to banishment — iii. 3 

yet, that exile is not death? — iii. 3 

no sudden mean of death, though..., — iii. 3 

well, death's the end of all — iii. 3 

the law, that threatened death, becomes — iii. 3 

let me be put to death — iii. .^ 

come, death, and welcome! Juliet wills — iii. 3 

weeping for your cousin's death? — iii. 5 

thou weop'st n.it so much for his death — iii. 5 

but I iiii.dit voiige mv cousin's deathi — iii. .^j 

she woeps for Tybalt's death — iv. I 

death to ohiile away this shame (rep.) — iv. 1 

like doath when ho shuts up — iv. 1 

like death: an.l in this borrowed (rep.) — iv. 1 

the horrible o.ni.oit of death and night — iv. 3 

death, that hath ta'oii her hence — iv. ii 

hath death lain with thy bride — iv. .■) 

death is iny soii-in-hiw, death is ray heir — iv. .■> 

life leaving, all is death's — iv. .'i 

and cruel death hath eatched it from — iv. 5 

most detestable death, by thee beguiled — iv. .^ 

not life, but lovo in death! — iv. .'i 

you uoiild not keep from death — iv. .'i 

whose i>alc is present death in Mantua — v. I 



DIOATK— but Alantiia'a law is death. /fnm. J)- Jul. v. i 
descend into this bed of death, is, partly — v. 3 

thou womb of doath gorged with — v. 3 

vengeance bo luirsnoil further than death — v. 3 
death, lie thou there, by a dead man — v. 3 

poiiitof .loath, have Ihoy been merry? — v. 3 

11 lightning hi-f..re. loath — v. 3 

donlh that hath snekod the honey.... — v. 3 
and doiith's pale flag is n. it advanced — v. 3 
that nnsuhstantial death is amorous — v. 3 

a dateless bargain to engrossing death I — v. 3 
fearfully did menace me with death.. — v. 3 
(if death, contairion, and unnatural sleep — v. 3 

this sight of death is as a bell — v. 3 

and lead you even to doath — v. 3 

wdiose iintimoly doath banished — v. 3 

it wrought. m hor til.' form of death.. — v. 3 
my iniistor news of . I idiot's doath .... — v. 3 
and tliro;il. mil loo « itii doath, going — v. 3 
the tidino, i.riniil.iitli: an.l here.... — v. 3 
they say, v.. II spiril^ ..ft walk in death .. //iii/iW, i. 1 

onr dear brotlior's .l.-jitli the memory — 1.2 

brother's doatli, oiir state to be disjoint .. — i. 2 

tboine is doath of fathers — i. 2 

hearsed in death, have burst their — i. 4 

Iiroeess of my death rankly abused — i. .^i 

rnorc than his father's dea'tli, that thus . . — ii. 2 

his father's death, and our o'er hasty — ii. 2 

and the orb below as hush as death — ii. 2 

after your death, vou were hotter — ii. 2 

for in that sleep o'f .loath what dreams .. — iii. 1 

the drea.l .if s.iniothiio-'urtor iloath — iii. I 

1 have t.d.l tlioe. if my father's ileath.... — iii. 2 
(> bosom, black as doath! 1) limed soul .. — iii. 3 
will answer well the doath I gave him .. — iii. 4 

the present doatli of Hamlet — iv. 3 

all that fortune, death, and danger — iv. 4 

I see the imminent death of twenty — iv. I 

it springs all from her father's death .... — iv. 5 

whispers, for good I'olonius' death — iv. 5 

Iiestilent speeches of his father's death .. — iv. 5 

gives me superfluous death! — iv. 5 

the certainty of your dear father's death — iv. f> 

I am guiltless ot your father's death — iv. .'> 

his means of ileath, his obscnro funeral .. — iv. .^ 
much haste as thou wonldst Hv .loath — iv. G (let.) 
and for his de:itli 111. wind of blame shall — iv. 7 

can save the thing fnini ..loath — iv. 7 

gall liiin slightly, it may be death — iv. 7 

from her melodious lay to muddy death — iv. 7 
not guilty of his own death, shortens not — v. I 
her death was diiubtful: and, but that .. — v. 1 
put to suddon doath, not sluiving-time .. — v. 2 

mine and my I'uthoi's .loullio.iiiio not — v. 2 

as this fell sorgouiit.ilouth, is .strict — v. 2 

proud death ! what feast is to ward — v. 2 

gave conimaudmeut for their death — v. 2 

of deaths put on by eunning — v. 2 

when death is our iihvsieiau OlhcUo, i. 3 

my hopes, not surfoitod to doath, stand in — ii. 1 

blow till thov have wakoni. I .loath! — ii. I 

Ibloo.lstill.'lani bnrlto tliodeath — ii. 3 

'tis destiny iinsiiuniiable, like death — iii. 3 

death and damnation! O! it were a tedious — iii. 3 

some swift means of death for the — iii. 3 

show you such a necessity in his death . . — iv. 2 
nobody come! then shall I bleed to death — v. I 
that death's unnatural, that killsfor loving — v. 2 

she comes to speak of Caasio's death — v. 2 

a guiltless death I die — v. 2 

did you and he consent in Cassio's death? — v. 2 
the death of Cassio to lie uiidortook — v. 2 

DEATH-BED-death-bedfor Wnu.Mer.offenice, iii. 2 

upon his doath-bod ho by will King John, i. I 

t i . death-bod is no Iosslt than thy../{i'c/iar<( //. h. I 
from my iloiUh-bod. niv last living leave — v. 1 
on thy .lo:ith-liod play the ruffian ..iHcnryVI.v. 1 
desiriiduth in his.le;itli-be(llie..Kom..5-Jwi. i. h (cho.) 
go to thy death-bod, bo noior will. Hiim/i?/, iv. 5 (song) 
tliou'rton thv doath-bod. Ay, but not ..OlheUo, v. 2 

DE.\TH-COUNTi:i;i'l.ITl.V<;— 
brows ilea th-ciiuntorloiting slecp..l/ii/.A'.Drcam, iii. 2 

DE ATU-n.V 1;T1i\ ti- 
the death-. larting eye of cockatrice. .Worn. .5" •'«'• '"■ 2 

DE.VniFUE— to a (loathful wouiid..2Hciir!/ yi. iii. 2 

Dl'..vril-1,1KE— f.ir death-like dragons. iVnd«,i. I 

DE VTII-.M.VKKEI)— 
.if thoir .loath-niarked love ..liomeo^Juliel, (prol.) 

DEATH- I'KACTI.SED— 
tho si4bt of tho .loiith-iiractisod duke.... /.for, iv. G 

DE.\.Tll.'i.M.\X— rob iho iloutlisman.2iic-nr!/*'/. iii. 2 
only sorry bo bad no .tho,' doathsman ..Lenr, iv. 6 

DE A'TI l.S.Sl EN— doathsmon 1 you lmve.3Hc;iiy F/.v.S 

DEBASE— we do debase ourself ....Richard II. iii. 3 

you debase your princely knee — iii. 3 

we debase the nature of our seats ..Con'oMniu, iii. I 

DEB.VTE— from our debate.. ..iWd. JV.'j Uream, ii. 2 

lost in the world's debate Love's L. Lost, i. I 

and sickness debate it at their leisure.. /(U'» (CfU, i. 2 

1 will debate this matter .... Comedy nf Errors, iv. 1 

end to this debate that biccdeth 2 Henry W. iv. 4 

hoar him debate of commonwealth .... Henry ('. i. 1 
I and niv bosom must debate awhile — iv. I 
we'll doliiito, by what safe means ..3Henry VI. iv. 7 

that did debate this business Henry I'l II. ii. 4 

we debate our trivial (litfereuce. ..4n/oii!/ <tC/eo. ii. 2 

she is not worth our doliate CymheHne, i. 5 

stands on mo to dofond, not to debate Ijar, v. 1 

will not .lob.ito thoiin.stion HamUt,\v. 4 

DEH.Vl'KI) -that yon houril ilolmted. . .U«,-A.4./o, v. 4 
bion ooiisiiloio.l an.l dol.ato.l on ....\ll,nryll. v. 1 
liuari-.ds ninst bo .piiollv doliatod. Viltis Andron. V. 3 

DEHAl'EMlON r-iiiiioh(loliatoinent..Wf.i..ft)r.Wfa. v. 1 
witbonl dobaloiiuiit I'urthor 'Hiimlel,v. 2 

DEH.VTl.Ni; — I am .l.batiii;-' of ..tier. of I'eniee, i. 3 
ill debating which was best. . t:oiwdy nf Errors, iii. 1 
early and late, debating to and t'l-o . .'iHcnryyi. i. I 

what Uilk you of debating? -iUenry I'l. iv. 7 

sent on the (lobating a marriage ..llenryl'tll. ii. 4 

DEBADCllKD-iiu OubuuuheU, and bold ..Lear, \. 4 



u. i 
ii. 2 
iii. 4 
iii. 4 



DEBAUCHED— [C»'J debauched fish . Tempest, iii. 2 

a sliive delmiiclied on every tomb Aid iVell, li. 3 

[Co/.] o' the world taxed and debauched — v. 3 
DEBlLE—debile minister, great yower — ii. 3 

or foiled some debile wretch Corialnnus, i. 9 

DEBILITY— weakness and debility, .-is ijouUke II, ii. 3 
DElilTOK— you have no true debitor. Cyindc//?!?, v. 4 

by debitor and creditor Olhello, i. 1 

DEBONAIR— as free, as debonair. r)0(7iM*CmM. i. 3 
DEr.MKAII— the sword of Deborah ..IHemyVI. i. 2 
DEBdSIIED— why, thou deboslied IColUer— 

debiuiclu'd] iish, thou Tempest, iii. 2 

taxed and dcbushed [Co(.-debanched]..4«'s IVell, v. 3 
DEBT— he that dies, ijays all debts .... Tempest, iii. 2 

to par this debt of love Twelftli Nigid, i. I 

f.ir debt, Ponipey? or how?il/c«si!)-£ /or j)/eas«re, iii. 2 

the verv debt of vour calling — iii. 2 

for debt that bankrupt sleep Mid.N.Dream, iii. 2 

det, when lie should pronounce, debt. . Love's L. L. v. 1 

that will not die in debt — v. 2 

from the great debts, wlierein. . Merch. of Venice, i. 1 

clearof all thedebts lowe — __;. 1 

to pav the petty debt twenty — iii. 2 

all debts are cleared between — iii. 2 (^let.) 

to see me pay his debt, and then .... — iii. 3 
repents not that he pays yom- debt . . — iv. 1 

he ne'er pays after debts All's U'ell, iv. 3 (letter) 

to gather in some debts, my son. . Taming of Sh. iv. 4 
too little payment for so great a debt — v. 2 
go hence in debt; and therefore .. Winter's Tale, i. 2 
should be in debt; tell me ..Comedy of Errors, iv. 2 

as if time were in debt! — iv. 2 

if he be in debt, and theft — iv. 2 

the debt he owes, will be — jv. 4 

knowing how the debt grows — Iv. 4 

h;i s jiaid a soldier's debt Macbeth, v. 7 

my .sovereign liege was in my debt ..Richard II. i. 1 
aiul pay the debt I never promised . . 1 Henry II'. i. 2 

to answer all the debt he owes — i. 3 

will always think hiin in our debt . . — i. 3 
no more in debt to years than thou.. — iii. 2 

pay her the debt you owe her •2Henryiy. i\. 1 

to dance out of yoiu: debt — (epil.) 

upon the debts they owe Henry V. iv. 1 

our debts, oiur careful wives — i v. 1 

unwillingness to repay a debt Richard III. ii. 2 

reipiires the royal debt it lent you . . — ii. 2 

I am iu your debt for your last — iii. 2 

for Edward pays a dying debt — iv. 4 

what nearer debt in all numanity. Trail. Sr Cress, ii. 2 

five talents Is his debt Timon of Alliens, i. 1 

I'll pay the debt, and free him — i. 1 

that what he speaks is all in debt — — i. 2 
[Col. Knt.2 clamorous demands of debt — ii. 2 
detention of long since due debts .... — ii. 2 

and your great flow of debts 

to pay your present debts 

and fawn upon his debts 

he should the sooner pay his debts . . 

these debts may well be called — m. i 

and be in debt to none — iii. 5 

iu debt to my importunate business — iii. 6 
swallow them, debts wither them.... — iy. 3 

ambition's debt is paid Julius Ceesar, iii. 1 

his steel was in debt; it went Cymbeline, i. 3 

paid more pious debts to heaven .... — iii. 3 
what is now due debt: to the grave. . — iv. 2 
paid as debts, and not as given.. Pei-icles, iv. (Gow.) 

no squire in debt, nor no poor knight Lear, iii. 2 

or else die in debt Romeo if Juliet, i. 1 

my life is my foe's debt _. — _ i. 5 

jiay ourselves what to oui'selves is debt. Hamlet, iii. 2 

DE l^TED— debted to this gentleman. Com. of Err. iv. 1 

DEBTOR— I am yet thy debtor. . . . Merry IVives, ii. 2 

how? let me not die your debtor.. Loue's L. Lost, v. 2 

rest debtor for the first Merchant of Venice, i. 1 

and not my master's debtor As you Like it, ii. 3 

as most debtors do, promise you. .2Henry IV. (epil.) 
I am your debtor, claim it . . Troilus ^- Cressida, iv. 5 
Dolabella, I shall remain your debtor. Anl.^ Cleo.v. 2 
when I have been a debtor to you. . . . Cymbeline, i. 5 

I must die much your debtor — ii. 4 

a prison for a debtor, that not dares., — iii. 3 

who of their broken debtors take — v. 4 

till then, rest your debtor Pericles, ii. 1 

DECAY— to be the decay of lust Merry Wives, v. .5 

infirmity, that decays the wise.... r«'ei/(/iMg7i(,i. ,'j 
this muddy vesture of decay doth.Mer. of Venice, v. 1 

presage of your own decay King John, ii. 1 

the imminent decay of wrested pomp — iv. 3 

destruction, ruin, loss, decay Richard //. iii. 2 

must perforce decay; you cast 2He7iryIV. i. 1 

fronting peril and opposed decay .... — iv. 4 
good king Henry, thy decay I {eaT..2Henry VI. iii. 1 
fair hope must liinder life's decay. .ZHenry VI. iv. 4 
death, desolation, ruin, and decny.. Richard III. iv. 4 
swifter tiian blood decays! . . Troilus ^Cressida, iii. 2 

full of decay and failing? Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

coin words till theu' decay Coriolanus, iii. 1 

love begins to sicken and decay . . Julius Ciesar, iv. 2 

decays the tiling we sue for Antony Sf Cleo. ii. 1 

comes to decay a day's work Cymbeline, i. 6 

that from your first difference and decay.. Lear, v. 3 

comfort to this great decay may come — v. 3 

DECAYED— like a poor decayed All's Well, v. 2 

my decayed fair a sunny look . . Comedy of Err. ii. 1 

that takes pity on decayed men — iv. 3 

of life had not so soou decayed 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

of such a decayed dotant as Coriolanus, v. 2 

DEC AYE R— a sore decayer of joiu- Hamlet, v. 1 

DECAYING— my weak decaying age.lHenry Vl.ii. 5 
DECEASE — following your decease. .2 Henry F/. iii. 1 
enjoy the kingdom after my decease.. 3 Henry F/. i. 1 
DECi)ASED — deceased in beggary ..Mtd.N.'sDr. v. 1 
is indeed, deceased; or, as you . . Afer. of Venice, ii. 2 
Antonio, my father, is deceased. Taming of Shreu:, i . 2 
and he knew my deceased father well — i. 2 
true behalf of thy deceased brother ..King John, i. 1 

a bastard of tlie king deceased — ii. 1 

tells us, Arthur' is deceased to-niglit — iv. i 



DECEASED— of the times deceascd..2;/cnry/F. iii. I 

duke of Bedford, late deceased I Hmry VI. iii. 2 

is gone, now Suffolk is deceased illennjl'l. iy. 4 

deceased as he was born Cymheline, i. 1 

she's dead, deceased, she's dead.. Womeo ^■Juliet, iv. .■) 

DECEIT-this deceit loses the name. Merry Wives, v. .■) 
defends the deceit from reproof.. il/eus./br Meas. iii. 1 

to him doth flourish the deceit — iv. 1 

with this deceit so lawful All's Well, iii. 7 

meaning of your word's deceit ..Comedy of Err. iii. i 
yet, to avoid deceit, I mean to \eara .King John, i. 1 

must lose the use of all deceit? — v. 4 

tongues of men are full of deceits? Henry V. v. 2 

best to quittance their deceit \HeinyVI. ii. 1 

and full of deep deceit -IHenry VI. iii. I 

a sliape, that means deceit? — iii. 1 

good deceit which mates him first (rep.) — iii. 1 
but from deceit, bred by necessity. .3Henri/r/. iii. 3 
Clarence, but a quicksand of deceit?.. ■ — v. 4 
ah, that deceit should steal such . . Richard III. ii. 2 
from my dugs he di'ew not this deceit — ii. 2 
not yet dived into the world's deceit — iii. 1 
if that be called deceit, I will be.. TitusAndron. iii. 1 

fairest show, means most deceit Pericles, i. 4 

that deceit should dwell in such./iomco .§- Juliet, iii. 2 

DECEITEUL— to deceitful men. TwoGen. of Ver. ii. 7 
deceiving father of a deceitful son. Taming ofSh. iv. 4 

false, deceitful, sullen, malicious Macbeth, iv. 3 

thy cunning, thou deceitful dame?.. lHe»ri/r/. ii. 1 
harbourin" foul deceitful thoughts.2He)/r!/ VI. iv. 7 

deceitful Warwick! it was thy 3Hejir.i/F/. iii. 3 

like deceitful iades, sink in the . . Jidius Ciesar, iv. 2 

DECEIVjVBLE-that's deeeivable. Twelfth Night, iv. 3 
whose duty is deeeivable and false . . liiehard II. ii. 3 

DECEIVE— would sure deceive. TwoGen. of Ver. iv. 2 

if my augury deceive me not — iy. 4 

by gar, he deceive me too Merry Wives, ill. 1 

which means she to deceive? — iv. 6 

which did deceive them, but e\\iefiy.. Much Ado, iii. 3 
most of those they did deceive.. Afid. N. Dream, ii. 3 
with eyes, deceive me not now . . Love's L. Lost, ii. 1 

my project may deceive me All's Well, i. 1 

with a witness, to deceive us all! . . Taming of Sh. v. 1 
jugglers, that deceive the eye. . Comedy of Errors, i. 2 

or mine eyes deceive me — v. 1 

sliall deceive our bosom interest Macbeth, i. 2 

I will not practise to deceive, yet King John, i. 1 

should make me now deceive, since I — v. 4 

to deceive de most sage demoiselle Henry V.v.2 

deceive more slily than Ulysses — 3 Henry VI. iii. 2 

smooth, deceive, and cog Richard III. i. 3 

come, you deceive yourself; 'tis he . . — i. 4 

advantage will deceive the time — v. 3 

thyself and all our Troy deceive. Troilus <5- Cress, v. 3 
a knave, that mightily deceives you. Timon ofAlh.v.X 

the fellow dares not deceive me Cijmbeline, iv. 1 

I'll deceive them both; lend me. . TitusAndron. iii. 1 
deceive men so; but I'll deceive you — iii. 1 
[&i(.] O she deceives me past thought! . . Othello, i. I 

than to deceive so good a commander — li. 3 

she did deceive her father, marrying you — iii. 3 

DECEIVED— deceived so many. Two Gen.ofVer. iv. 2 

if he have deceived me Alerry Wives, iii. 1 

I have deceived you both — iii. I 

how have you deceived me ! — iii- 3 

that my husband is deceived — iii. 3 

are you therein, by my life, deceived. Twelfth N. v. 1 
the good duke deceiveil in Angelo.Mea./or Mea. iii. 1 

sir, you are deceived — iii. 2 

thou art deceived in me, friar — iii. 2 

1 have deceived even your very eyes.. MuchAdo, v. 1 

and Claudio, have been deceived — v. 4 

are much deceived; for they did swear — v. 4 
am much deceived, but I remember. Love's L. L. iv. 1 
woo contrary, deceived by these removes — v. 2 

you are deceived, 'tis not so ^ . . — v. 2 

get thee, I am much deceived Mer.of Venice, ii. 3 

world is still deceived with ornament — iii. 2 

or I am mucli deceived, of Portia — y. 1 

pray heaven, I be deceived in you! . As you Like it, i. 2 
yori are deceived, sir ; we kept time . . — v. 3 
think, I am so far deceived in \\im'i.. All's Well, iii. 6 
has deceived me, like a double-meaning — iv. 3 

you are deceived, my lord; this is — iv. 3 

or I am deceived by him that in — iv. .5 

you are deceived, my lord, she never — v. 3 
I be deceived, our fine musician.. Taming ofSh. iii. 1 
your worship is deceived: the gown is — iv. 3 
and, but I be deceived, signior Baptista — iy. 4 
or I am much deceived, cuckolds. . Wintir'sTale, i. 2 
deceived in tliy integrity, deceived in — i. 2 

you have deceived our trust IHenrylV.v. 1 

by heaven, thou hast deceived me .... — y. 4 
you are deceived, my substance is . . 1 Henry rz. ii. 3 
you are deceived ; my child is none . . — v. 4 

thou art deceived, I am thine ZHenry VI. i. 1 

thouart deceived: 'tis not thy southern — _ i. 1 

friend, unless I be deceived — iv. 7 

but he's deceived, we are in readiness — y. 4 
you are deceived; your brother ....Richard III. i. 4 
with yellow, will be deceived . . Henry Vlll. (prol.) 

this monk might be deceived — _i. 2 

you are deceived, I think of no.. Troilus % Cress, iv. 2 

no, you are deceived; therefore Coriolanus, v. 2 

Cassins, be not deceived : if I have . . Jul. Ccesar, i. 2 
confess, that you are both deceived .. — ii. 1 
I do not greatly care to be deceived. ./lnf.<S-Cteo. v. 2 
you are deceived : for what I mean . . Titusjind. v. 2 

thou art too much deceived — y.2 

yon are much deceived; in nothing Lear, iv. « 

thou art deceived, I would have. Homeo :^ Juliet, ii. 4 
tush, thou art deceived; leave me .... — v. 1 

and atmt-raother, are deceived Hamlet, ii. 2 

I loved you not. I was the more deceived — iii. 1 
she has deceived her father; and may ..Othello^ i. 3 
I am sorry, that I am deceived in him . . — iv. 1 

DECEIVER— pardon'd the deceiver.. 7'cmijes/, (epil.) 

men w^ere deceivers ever Much Ado, ii. 3 isong) 

DECEI VETH~hc deceiveth me .... 1 Henry IV. ii. 4 
DECEIVING- deceiving promises.Mca. for Mea. iii. 2 



— ii. 1 

— ii.2 

— ii.2 

— ii. 2 
ii. 3 (paper) 

— iii. 1 



DECEIVING— thus deceiving me\..Mid. N.'sDr. v. 1 

deceiving me, is Thisby's cue — v. 1 

the deceiving father of a deceitful. Taming of Sh. iv. 4 
flattering, hers; deceiving, hers Cymbeline, ii. 5 

DECJOIV'ST— O thou deceiv'st IKnt.-she 

deceives] me past thonglitl Othello, i. 1 

DECEMBER— day of December ..Twelfth Night, ii. 3 

of May doth the last of December Much Ado, i. 1 

they woo, December when they wed.. -Is ;/ou L/Ai',iv.l 
a July's day short as December .. Win'ier'sTale, i. 2 
or wallow naked in December enow. .Richard II. i. 3 
rain and mnd beat dark December., tj/iiitf/oie, iii. 3 

DECENT— and decent carriage .... Hen, y VIII. iv. 2 

DECEPTIOUS-deceptiou3fuuctions.7Vo/i. <5- Cr. v. 2 

DECERN— that decerns you nearly. . Mjich Ado, iii. 5 

DECIDE — decides that which long.iot'c'si.Los(, v. 2 
the swords which must decide it.... 2 Henry IV. iv. 1 
betwixt ourselves let us decide it . . 1 Henry VI. iv. 1 

DECIMATION— by decimation, rimoii of Athens, v. 5 

DECIPHER— white will decipher.. yi/errt/HVres, v. 2 
the spirit? who deciphers theni'i. Comedy of Err. v. 1 

DECIPHERED-seen deciphered there.l He/iri/ *-'/. iv. 1 
that you are both deciphered Titus Andmn. iv. 2 

DECISION— decision hath much blood. .4H's Well, iii. 1 

that will with due decision make .Macbeth, v. 4 

the voice of any true decision Troilus^- Cress, ii. 2 

DECIUS— Dccius Brutus, and lulius Ca-sar, i. 3 

this Deeius Brutus. He is welcome too — ii. 1 
Deeius, well urged: I think, it is not 
liere's Deeius Brutus, he shall tell . . 
tell them so, Deeius. Say, he is sick . . 
Deeius, go tell them, Caesar will not. . 

Deeius Brutus loves thee not — 

now, Deeius Brutus, yours; now yours 
some to Deeius' house, and some to Casca's — 

DECK — now in the waist, the deck Tempest, i. 2 

when he has a house, he'll deck withal — iii. 2 
that decks a thing divine! . . Two Gen. of Verona, ii. 1 
I'll be sure to keep him above deck. jV''?ri/»7i'e.sii. 1 
to deck his fortune with his . . Ta}ning of Shrew, i. 1 
to deck thy body with his ruffling — — iv. 3 

to deck our soldiers for these Richard //. i. 4 

that now must deck our kings. . Henry V. i. (chorus) 

deck my body in gay ornaments ZHenry VI. iii. 2 

was slily fingered from the deck I — — v. 1 

stand on the dying deck I'imoii of Athens, iv. 2 

he did keep the deck Cymbeline, i. 4 

upon whose deck the sea-tost . . Pericles, iii. (Gower) 

a sea that almost burst the deck — iv. 1 

from the deck yon may discern the place — v. 1 
to .Tuliet, help to declt tip her . . Romeo ^- Juliet, iv. 2 

DECKED— when I have decked the sea. . Tempest, i. 2 

my lady's brows be decked Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 

garnished and decked in modest Hennj V. ii. 2 

decked with five flower-de-luces 1 Henri/ VI. i. 2 

not decked with diamonds ZHenry VI. iii. 1 

as I see thee now, decked in th3' Richard III. i. 3 

find them decked with ceremonies. .yu(i«s Ccesar, i. 1 
thy bride-bed to have decked Hamlet, v. 1 

DECKING-decking with liquid xteail.Mid.N.Dr. i. 1 

DECLAKE-scuteheon plain declares.. Lojie'sL./,. v. 2 
that tliou declare what incidency.. Winter' sTale, i. 2 

with a ready guess, declare, before Henry V. i. 1 

and now declare, sweet stem from . . 1 Henry VI. ii. 5 
■alliance' sake, declare the cause — ii. 5 

g lease you to declare, in hearing . . Henry VIII. ii. 4 
e it SO; declare thine oifice Antony ^Cleo. iii. 10 

read, and declare the meaning Cymbeline, v. 5 

DECJiENSION-declensions of your.jVerr?/ Wires, iv.l 
\Knt.'\ toabull? a heavy declension!2H(/irj(/;'. ii. 2 
declension and loathed "bigamy ..Richard HI. iii. 7 
by this declension, into the madness . . Hamlet, ii. 2 

DECLINE— to you do I decline. . Comedy of Err. iii. 2 
decline all this, and see what novi..Rirlmrd III. iv. 4 

a great man sliould decline? Henry Vlll. iii. 2 

I'll decline tlie whole question.. Troilus i^- Cress, ii. 3 
not letting it decline on the declined — iv. 5 
decline to your confounding ..Timon of Athens, iv. 1 

who thrives, and who decliues Con'otoniu, i. 1 

whicli being advanced, declines — ii. 1 

at the height, are ready to decline. J«/ms Ceesar, iv. 3 

spare speech ; decline your head Lear, iv. 2 

and to decline upon a wretch Hamlet, i. .■) 

DECIjINED-and be thus declined.Merry Wives, iv. 1 
he straight declined, drooped .... Winter'sTale, ii. 3 
had one eye declined for tne loss .... — v. 2 
what the declined is, he shall ..Troilus^ Cress, iii. 3 
not letting it decline on the declined — iv. .■) 
her head's declined, and death viil. Ant. SfCleo. iii. 9 
answer me declined sword aminst.. — iii.il 
[Co/. Kn(.] perfect age, and fathers declined. Lear, i 2 
I am declined into the vale of years . . Olhello, iii. 3 

DECLINING— deelming head. Jum/n-q/- Sh. ) (iiul.) 
declining their rich aspect. . . . Comedy of Errors, iii. 2 
noble blood in this declining land ..Richard II. ii. 1 
accompanying his declining foot . . I'imon ofAlh. i. 1 
shown to thee such a declining day. Ant. ^ Cleo. v. 1 

fathers declining ICol. Knt.-declined] Lear, i. 2 

was declining on the milky head of. . . . Hamlet, ii. 2 

DECOCT— broth, decoct their cold .... Henry V. iii. 5 

DECORUM— goes all decorum Meas. for Meas. i. 4 

keep decorum, and fortune him. .Antony ^-Cleo. i. 2 
to keep decorum, must no less beg . . — v. 2 

DECREASE— heaven may decrease.jVerry Wives, i. 1 
tyrants' fears decrease not Pericles, i. 2 

DECREASED— rather than decreased. Tam. ofS. ii. 1 

DECREASING— a decreasing leg? ..2HenryIV. i. 2 

DECREE— so our decrees, dead . . Meas. for Meas. i. 4 
force, dispense with this decree . . Love's L. Lost, i. 1 

will not obey an old decree — iv. 3 

leaps over a cold decree Merchant of Venice, i. 2 

no force in the decrees of Venice — iv. 1 

can alter a decree established — iv. 1 

or as the destinies decree As you Like it, i. 2 

and on our quickest decrees All's Well, v. 3 

return these dukes what we decree. . Richard II. i. 3 
my acts, decrees, and statutes, I deny — iv. 1 
yesternight our council did decree ..iHenrylV. i. 1 

some straight decrees, that lie — iv. 3 

break my aecrees: for now a tixnc..2HenryIV. iv. 4 



DEC 



[ 171 ] 



DKCKKK— wt vourdeorcca at iiought.U/fnr!/;*'. v. 2 

to diwli our Into di'Oivc in a Henry VI. ii. 1 

11 man bii^ird iilK^iit difiiTs Coriolnnus, i. 

tin- l>rotli.T liv diiTiv isli:nii^lu'd..7u/iustVi'»or, iii. I 
so'iiiv will ikrVei's iniiv Ih iiw.iv. . Tiltin Ambon, v.i 
vou doliveml tu lar our iUtvvv.Uomro /j-JudW, iii. 5 
DhCKKKD-whnt is doRt<l, mu«t. /Vc/yTA >'!>/.(, i. 5 
tliiMvlon.- I liiivo dii-ricd not to sing..:WMc/i /Wo, i. 3 
in soK'iiiii synods Iiliu ck'crocd .. Comedy of Krr. i. I 
it is deoLVi-.l — Ik-ctor tlie gnat.. Troiluat^Crets. v. 7 

tUi'ii't'ori-, it is decreed, l>e dies Coriotaniis, iii. 1 

wc doi ired to Iniry Bassianus . . Titus Ami. ii. IClct.) 

'tis dicrwd. us tlicso l)cfore thee Pericles, I. 1 

art liiitli tlius decreed, to make some — _ii_. 3 

thee to thv love, as was decreed. Wnmeo ^Juliet, iii. 3 
DKCRKriT— to her decrepit, sick. LoivVL. Lost,i. I 

deerejiit miser! biise, ignoble \ Henry I' I. v. 1 

DEJ)ICATK-nll ilnlii':ite to closeness ..T,'miiesl,\. 2 
ure dc.iicnH- to notliin- ti lii[.nial.l/,„s. f„rM,;,s. ii. 2 
when In- dedicates liis hchsivimii-s ..M„,'h .l-l„. ii. It 
will to uTc:ilncss dedicate tlieuisclvcs..l/,ie>»'//i. iv. :! 

nor ilotli he dcdicute one jot Henry I', iv. (cho.) 

he tlnit is tndv dedicate to war ....•iilenryl'I. v. 2 

he dedicates to fair content Hc;irv till. \. 4 

I coiiiuut, I dedicate to you . . Troilus <j Cress, iii. 2 

I dedicate myself to your sweet CyniUiine, i. 7 

of iwril myself I'll dedicate — v. 1 

or dedicate his beauty to tl\e euu. Romeo ^ Juliet, i. \ 

DEDICATED— [Co(. K;i(.] all dedicated to. Temp. i. 2 

a dedicated beggar to the air . . Timon of Athens, iv. 2 

DEDIC.VTION— liis in dedication. Twelfth Mi;ht, v. 1 

a wild dedication of yonrselves .. Winter'sTale, iv. ;! 

some dedication to the i;rcat lord.. TimonofAlh. i. 1 

DEE O— for which foul deed the powers. Tempci/, iii. 3 

botli in word and deed — v. 1 

for truth hath better deeds. Two Gen. of Verona, ii. 2 

'twere as good a deed, as to Twelfth ^'iifht, ii. 3 

when evil deeds have their Meat, for Meas. i. 4 

had answered for his deed — ii. 2 

most good in deed — iii. 1 

disjieuses with the deed so far — iii. 1 

have dark deeds darkly answered .. — iii. 2 

this deed unshapes me (iiiite — iv. 4 

a due sincerity governed his deeds .. — v. 1 
hud you a special warrant for the deed? — v. 1 

with vour high and worthy deeds MuchAdo, v. 1 

one that will do the deed Love's L. Lost, iii. 1 

in the doing of the deed of kind..il/fr. of Venice^ i. 3 

to render the deeds of merey — iv. l 

my deeds upon my head! — iv. 1 

clerk draw a deed of gift — iv 1 

send the deed after me, and I — iv. 1 

give liim this deed, and let hira — iv. 2 

tliis deed will be well welcome — iv. 2 

80 sliines a good deed in a naughty .. — v. 1 

a special deed of gift, after his — v. 2 

better pleased me with this deed . . As you Like it, i. 2 

by doing deeds of hospitality — ii. 1 

is it honest in deed and word? — iii. 3 

my deed shall match thy deed .4U's Well, ii. I 

is'dignified by the doer's deed — ii. 3 

will make no deed at all of this — iii. 6 

wicked meaning in a lawful deed .. - iii. 7 

to the future our past deeds — iv. 2 

till your deeds gam them — v. 3 

lively painted as the deed was. Turning of Sh. 2 (ini..) 
Ills fortune with his virtuous deeds . . — i. 1 

and that my deeds shall prove — i. 2 

'tis deeds, must win the prize — ii. 1 

one good deed, dying tougueless . . IVinter'sTale, i. 2 

my last good deed was, to entreat — i. 2 

to do tliis deed, promotion follows . . — i. 2 
circumstances made up to the deed .. — ii. 1 
in more than this deed does require! — ii. 3 
docs my deeds make the blacker .... — iii. 2 
that's a "ood deed; if thou may st .. — iii. 3 

and we'll do good deeds on 't — iii. 3 

the present deeds, that all your acts — iv. 3 

to sneak your deeds; not little — iv. 3 

ill (leeds are doubletl with an . . Comedy of Err. iii. 2 

stron'' both against the deed iijacbelh, i. 7 

shall blow the horrid deed in every eye. . — i. 7 
words to the heat of deeils too cold ..... . — ii. I 

and not the deed, confounds us — ii. 2 

I have done the deed — ii. 2 

these deeds must not be thought — ii. 2 

a little water clears us of this deed — ii. 2 

to know mv deed, 'twere best — ii. 2 

even like the deed that's done — ii. 4 

whodid this more tlian bloody deed?.... — ii. 4 

puts upon thcra suspicion of the deed — ii. 4 

be done a deed of dreadful note — iii. 2 

till thou applaud tlic ileed — iii. 2 

we arc yet but young in deed — iii. 4 

a deed without a name — iv. 1 

unless the deed go with it — iv. 1 

this deed I'll do, before this iv. 1 

unnatural deeds do breed unnattiral .... — v. 1 

your sliarpest deeds of malice on King John, ii. 2 

your warrant will l)car out the deed — iv. 1 

pleased to be from such a deed — iv. 1 

the man should do the bloody deed. . — iv. 2 
deeds, makes deeds ill [*.'»(. -ill deeds] — iv. 2 

signed, to do a deed of shame — iv. 2 

the deed, which both our tongues. ... — iv. 2 

had not a hole to hide this need — iv. 3 

if thou didst this deeil of death — iv. 3 

renowned lor their dee<l8 as far .... Kicliard II. ii. 1 

heinous, block, obscene adeed! — iv. 1 

O, would the dee<l were Kood! — v. .'> 

that this deed is chronicled in hell . . — v. a 

wrought tt deed of slander — v. 6 

mouth, my lord, did 1 tliis deed .... — v. 6 

asgoo<l a deed as drink \ Henry IV. ii. 1 

whose high deeds, whose hot — iii. 2 

exchange his glorious deeds for my., — iii. 2 

to engrriss up glorious deeds on — iii. 2 

this latter age with noble deeds — v. 1 

never did such deeds in arms — v. 3 

how to cherish such liigh deeds — v. & 



DEED-car with their bold deeds ....-iHenrylV. I. I 

prince's luiine, in deeds dishonourable — iv.'i 

witli the rest of this day's deeds .... — iv. 3 

dotli any ileed of courage — iv. 3 

if tile de'eil were ill, be you contented — _ v. '.i 
malelied with us few good deeds ....HenryV. iii. 2 

dare not uvciiieli ill voiir deeds any .. — v. I 

his deeds exeeed all'siieeell \HcnrvVI. 1. 1 

wli.ise blooilv deeds shall make — i. 1 

t) let no wolds, but deeds, revenge .. — iii. 2 

tliy noble deeds, as valour's — iii. 2 

deeds of rage, and stern impatience.. — iv. 7 

your deeds of war, and all our iHenry VI. \. 1 

thvdecds, thv plainness, and thy.... — i. 1 

clurislidiike'lliiniphrcy'sdeeds .... — i. 1 

seeiiis' tlie deed is iiieiitorious — iii. I 

and eciisiire well the deed — iii. 1 

the deed is worthy doing — iii. 1 

reward vou fur this venturous deed.. — iii. 2 

luillow thee I'm- this tliy deed — iv, 10 

todo ainnnlerousdeed, torob — v. 1 

hands for this unmanly deed! SHenrij VI. i. 1 

iin[iiidcnt witli use of e'vil deeds — i. 1 

alas, it WHS a piteous deed! — i. 4 

shown it diiity by thy deeds — ii. 1 

my son mv virtuous deeds behind .. — ii. 2 

I'll make thee curse tlie deed — ii. 2 

deatli would stay tlicseviitliliildcedsl — ii. .") 

art fortunate in all thy deeds — iv. (i 

if this foul deed were by — v. .'> 

to stop devoted charitable deeds? . . Kichiud 111. i. 2 

delight to view thy heinous deeds .. — i. 2 

thy deed, inhuman, unnatural — i. 2 

be damned for that wicked deed ! . . . . — i. 2 

hath plagued thy bloody deed — i. 3 

O 'twas the foulest deed, to slay — i. 3 

our reward, when the deed's done .. — i. 1 

the deed you undertake is damnable — i. 4 

sake did I that ill deed? — i. 4 

will be avenged for the deed — i. 4 

to do this deed, will hate you (rep.).. _ i. 4 

bloody deed, and desperately despatched! — i. 4 

brother, we have done deeds of — ii. I 

if they liave done tliis deed — iii. 4 

most arch deed of piteous massacre . . — iv. 3 

when such a deed was done? — iv. 4 

a letter of thy noble deeds — iv. 4 

and he a happy mother by the deed. . — iv. i 

dream on, of bloody deeds, and death — v. .i 

for hateful deeds committed by — v. 3 

that I gainsay my deed, how Henry ' III. ii. 4 

good deed, to say well {rep.) — iii. 2 

and with his deed did crown — iii. 2 

no day ^vithout a deed to crown it . . — v. 4 
do a deed that fortune never.. rroiVus % Cressida, ii. i 

valiant and magnanimous deeds .... — ii. 2 

but in the deed, devours the deed in — ii. 3 

hot deeds, and hot deeds is love .... — iii. i 

and hot deeds? why, they are vipers — iii. 1 

give her deeds, but slie'U bereave (,rep.) — iii. 2 

what, are my deeds forgot? — })!• 3 

those scraps are good deeds past — iii. 3 

whose glorious deeds, but in — iii. 3 

speaking in deeds, aud deedless in . . — iv. a 

ril endeavour deeds to match — iv. .■) 

do deeds worth praise, and tell — v. 3 

but edifles another with her deeds . . — v. 3 
that's a deed thou'lt die for ....Timonof Athens, \. 1 

to set a gloss on faint deeds — i. 2 

to make an ugly deed look fair — iii. 5 

forgetting thy great deeds — iv. 3 

wonder of good deeds evilly bestowed! — iv. 3 

deedof saying is nuite out of use .... — ^'- ' 

now we'll show 'em iu deeds Coriolnnus, i. 1 

thou'lt not believe thy deeds — i. 9 

outdone his former deeds doubly .... — ii. 1 

without any other deed to heave — ii. 2 

the deeds oi' Coriolanus should not be. — ii. •• 

rewards his deeds with doing thein . . — ii. 2 

tell us his deeds, we are to put — ii. 3 

so, if he tell us his noble deeds — ii. 3 

as his worthy deeds did claim no less — ii. 3 

let deeds express what's like to be .. - iii. 1 

3'on have done a brave deed — iv. 2 

thou hast done a deed whereat — v. s 

quite through the deeds of men ..Jtciiu!. Cirsar, i. 2 

buy men's voices to commend our deeds — ii. \ 

let no man abide this deed — iii. 1 

hath done this deed on Cxsar — iii. l 

ciioked with custom of fijU deeds .... — iii. 1 

that this I'oul deed shall smell — iii. i 

they, that have done this deed — iii. 2 

our deeds are done! — v. 3 

tills deed. Mistrust of good (rep.) .. — v. 3 

it is a deed in fashion! — v..') 

1 do such a deed ! ODardauiusI — v. 5 

hoiie of better deeds to-morrow . . Antony /)■ Cleo. i. 1 

not in deed, madam: for lean (ri;).) — i. 5 

assist the deeds of justest men — ii. 1 

'tis a worthy deed, and shall become — ii. 2 

than by our deed aceiuire too high .. — iii. 1 

to lament our most persisted deeds .. — v. 1 

that thing that ends all other deeds.. — v. 2 

I approve your wisdom in the deed. . — v. 2 

an instrument may do a noble deed! — v. 2 
be our goixl deed, though Home .... Cymbeline, iii. I 

thou hast robbed me of this deed .... — iv. 2 

this is Pisanio's deed; and Cloten's .. — iv. 2 

such precious deeds iu one that — v. 5 

I would not thy good deeds should from — v. 5 
with deeds requite thy gentleness.. 'A7iiii.4ii((ron. i. 2 

aiiree these deeds with that proud.... — i. 2 

the deed that hath dishonoured — i. 2 

my nephew iMiitius' ileeds do plead.. — 1.2 

in all his deeds, a father, and a friend — i. 2 

leave to nleail iny deeds — i. 2 

who hatli done this deed? — iii. 1 

they would not ilo so foul a deed .... — iii. I 

adeed of dcatli, done on the innocent — iii. 2 

thou host done a charitable deed .... — iii. 2 



DEE 

DEED— damned contriver of thiadced. Titus And. iv. 1 
it was durst do the (Iced — iv. 1 

performers of this heinous, bloody deed? — iv. I 

'tisadeedoriinliev _ iv. 2 

honoiirahle deed-., iiiurateful Rome.. — v. 1 

abominalilc deeds, cmplots of — v. 1 

but adeed of charity, to that — v. I 

let my deeds be witness of my — v. I 

sorry for these licinous deeds'? — v. 1 

tell, wlio did tlie deed? — v. 3 

die, frantic wretch, for this occursed deed — v. :s 

nieeil, death for a deadly deed — v. 3 

ifoiie good deed in all my life I did — v. 3 

awful both in deed and word I'rrieles, ii. (Cow.) 

to place upon the volume of your deeds — ii. 3 

a deed might gain her love — ii. .O 

not to reason of the deed, but do it — iv. 1 

I'd give it to undo tlie deed — iv. 4 

if slie'd do the deeds of darkness — iv. fi 

wlieii fame hud spreiul their cursed deed — v. 3 

she names my very deed of love Lear, i. 1 

large siieeches may your deeds approve . . — i. 1 
damned guilty deeds to sinners'. Homeo ^Juliel,\\\. 2 

be the label to another deed — iv. 1 

foul deeds will rise, though all Hamlet, i. 2 

may give his saying deed — i. 3 

than is my deed to my most painted — iii. 1 

bloody deed is this! A bloody deed — iii. 4 

O, such a deed, as from the body — iii. 4 

Olieavy deed! it had been so with us — iv. i 

how shall this blooily deed be answered? — iv. 1 
and this vile deed we must, with all our — iv. 1 

Hamlet, this deed, for thine especial — iv. a 

to show yourself iu deed your lather's .. — iv. 7 
whose wicked deed thy most ingenious . . — v. I 

do deeds to make heaven weep Othello, iii. 3 

modesty, did I but speak thy deeds — iv. 2 

in discourse of thought, or actual deed .. — iv. 2 
do such a deed for ali the world? (^rep.) . . — iv. 3 
I have no great devotion to the deed .... — v. 1 

O who hath done this deed? — v. 2 

hates the slime that sticks on filthy deeds — v. 2 

do thy worst : this deed of thine is no — v. 2 

tlioii hast done a deed,— I care not for. ... — v. 2 
when you shall these unlucky deeds relate — v. 2 
DEKU-AClilEVlMi- 

hy ileed-aeliieviiig honour newly . . Coriolanus, ii. I 

Dl-:!', I)l,i;ss-(leedlcss in his tongue. 7';oi7. ^Cres. iv. .i 

LtKKAl— ynii deem eamion-buUets.. ru'e//!AWg-A/, i. 5 

as ,\nu sliall ileem yourself lodged ..Love'sL.L. ii. 1 

wlien lielji past sense we deem All's iyell,ii. 1 

would you not deem, it breathed?. »»7)i/er's 'lale.v.S 
may deem tliat ynii arc worthily ..Richard II. iv. 1 
how the world may deem of me? ..'2 Henry VI. iii. 2 
that I deem you an ill husband ...Henry VI 1 1. Hi. 2 
what wicked deem is this? . . Troilus ^Cressida, iv. 4 
that best could deem his dignity? ..Cymbeline, v. 4 

[A■n^] of himself, I cannot deem of Hamlet, ii. 2 

DEEMED— <leemed me not secure 1 Henry VI. i. 4 

who deemed our marriage lawful . . Henry VIII. ii. 4 

DEEP- in the deep nook Tempest, i. 2 

to tread the ooze of the salt deep i. 2 

could make a chou"h of as deep chat — ii. 1 

that deep aud dreadful organ-pipe — iii. 3 

some shallow story of deep love.. Two Gen. ofVer. i. 1 
that's a dee') story of a deeper love . . — i. 1 

sad sighs, deep "roans — iii. I 

forsake unsounded deeps to — iii. 2 

the anchor is deep Merry IVives, i. 3 

if the bottom were as deep as hell. ... — iii. 5 

do fear in deep of ni"ht to walk — iv. 4 

a pond as deep as hell lUeas. for Meas. iii. 1 

and so deep sticks it in my — v. 1 

till morrow deep midnight Mid. A'. Dream, i. 1 

shall fetch thee jewels from the deep — iii. I 
plunge in the deep, aud kill me too.. — iii. 2 

suli-eribe to your deep oath Love'sL.Losi,i. I 

that will not be deep searched — i. I 

the transparent bosom ot the deep — iv. 3 (verses) 
set a deep glass of Rhenish w'mi: .. Mer. of Venice, i. 2 
if the Jew do cut but deep enough .. — iv. 1 
many fathom deep I am in love !./l»i/ou Lite i(, iv. 1 
be judge, how deep I am in love. . — iv. 1 

how deep? Thirty fathom All's IVell, iv. 1 

to plunge him in the deep Taming of Shrew, i. 1 

were sin as deep as tliat, though . . Winter's Tale, i. 2 
always wind obeying deep gave . . Comedy of Hrr. i. 1 
and took deep sears to save thy life . . — v. 1 

for those deep shames and great — v. 1 

set forth a deep repentance Macbeth, i. 4 

see niy black and deep desires — i. 4 

against those honours deep and broad . . — i. 6 

against the deep damnation of — i. 7 

our fears in Banqiio stick deep — iii. I 

curses, not loud, nut deep — v. 3 

deep shame had struck me dumb . . King John, iv. 2 

thou art more deep damned — iv. 3 

thrust thy hand as deep into tlie purse — v. 2 
deep malice makes too deep incision. Wi'cAard //. i. 1 

not so deep a maim as to be cast — i. 3 

enforce attention, like deep harmony — ii. I 
crown like a deep well, tliiit owes.... — iv. 1 

of true zeal and deep integrity — v. 3 

read you matter deep and dangerous.l/IrnrK/r. i. 3 

the bottom of the deep — i. 3 

drinking deep, dying scarlet — ii. 4 

hold me pace in deep experiments .. — iii. I 

call spirits from the vasty deep — iii. 1 

shall not wind with such a deep indent — iii. I 
fill the mouth of deep defiance up.... — iii. 2 
to the infernal deep, with Erebus ..iHenrylV. ii. 4 
well, master Shallow j deei), muster.. — iii. 2 
how deei) you were within the books — iv. 2 

o place ileep enough _ iv. 3 

with such a deep demeanour in — iv. 4 

forestalled this dear aud deep rebuke — iv. 4 

this would drink deep Henry (V i. 1 

fret fethiok deep in gore iv. 7 

the .spirit of deep prophecy she hath..lHfnr!/r/. i. 2 
yeuuieu from so deep a root? ii. 4 



DEE 



n72j 

DEER— my deer? My male doer? ..Mnryirires, v. f) 
l)ut I will always count you my deer — v. :> 

all sorts of deer are chased — v. a 

seek to spill tlicpoor deer's blood. to»e's if,. Losl, iv. 1 

and who is yoiu: deer? — iv. I 

tlie deer was as you know — i v. 2 

liaud credo for a deer. I said, the deer — iv. 2 
an epitaph on the death of tire deer? — iv. 2 

I have called the deer the princess killed — iv. i 

the king he is hunting the deer — iv. 3 

poor deer, quoth he, thou makest../ls;/oMii7fe!/, ii. 1 
and conimentinj: upon the sobbing deer — ii. 1 

the noblest deer hath them as — iii. 3 

which is he that killed the deer? — iv. 2 

to set tlie deer's horns upon Ms — iv. 2 

he have, tliat killed tlie deer? — i v. 2 (song) 

like any deer i' the herd All's Well, i. 3 

your deer does hold you at a bay .... — v. 2 

as 'twere the mort o' tlie deer WinterWale, i. 2 

too unruly deer, he breaks Comedy of Errors, ii. 1 

on the quarry of these miu-dered deer..Mac(<c(/i, iv. 3 

not struck so fat a deer to-day \HenryIV.\..i 

herd of England's timorous deer. ... 1 Henry VI. iv. 2 

if we be Englislideer — iv. 2 

they shall And dear deer of us — iv. 2 

must hunt this deer to death 2Henry VI. v. 2 

this laund anon the deer will come..3Henri/r/. iii. 1 

the principal of all the deer — iii. 1 

ay, here's a deer wliose skin's — i i i . 1 

close, to steal the bishop's deer? — iv. ."> 

how like a deer, stricken Julius Caesar, i i i . 1 

yield up their deer to the stand of ..Cymbeline, ii. 3 

tlie elected deer before tliee? — iii. J 

as doth the deer, that liath received. Titus And. iii. 1 
it was my deer; and he, that woimded — iii. 1 
mice, and rats, and such small deer, iear, iii. 4 (song) 
why, let the strucken deer go weep. . . . Hamlet, iii. 2 

DEESSE — trSs chere et divine deesse? . . Henry V. v. 2 

DEFACE— and deface the bond..A/er. of Venice, iii. 2 
and deface the patterns that by God . . Henry V. ii. 4 
and not deface your honour with. ... 1 Henry VI. v. .'j 

DEFACED-tlie towns defaced by wasting — iii. 3 

my arms torn aud defaced HHenry VI. iv. 1 

and defaced the precious image ot.Iiichard III. ii. 1 
her face defaced with scars of infamy — iii. 7 

DEFACER— that foul defacer of God's — iv. 4 
defacers of a public peace Henry VIII. v. 2 

DEFACING— defacing monuments ...iHenryVI. i. 1 

DEFAMED— that England was defamed — iii. 1 

DEFAULT-in the demult, he is a man.^Z('s»re/(,ii. 3 
are penitent for your default to-day. Com. of Err. i. 2 
this was yom- default; that being . . 1 Henry VI. ii. 1 
perisheth by your default — iv. 4 

DEFEAT— defeat of lier virginity MuchAdo.iv. 1 

whicli to defeat, I must produce All's Well, ii. 3 

making defeat on the full power Henry V.i.i 

and be all well borne without defeat — i. 2 

sharp reasons to defeat the law Henry VIII. ii. 1 

activity may defeat and quell Timon ofAth. iv. 3 

ye gods, you tyrants do defeat Julius Casar, i. 3 

some mortal stroke she do defeat us. Ant. ifCleo. v. 1 

and damned defeat was made Hamlet, ii. 2 

my stronger guilt defeats my strong . . — iii. 3 
their defeat does by their own insinuation — v. 2 
defeat thy favour with an usurped beard. O/Arito, i. 3 
and his unlcindness may defeat my life. . — iv. 2 

DEFE ATED-thereby to have defeated. jWd.iV. Dr. iv. 1 
if these men have defeated the law — Henry V. iv. 1 
as 'twere, with a defeatedjoy, with one.. Hamlet, i. 2 

DEFEAT'ST— CsEsar thou defetit'st.Ant.erCleo. iv. 12 

DEFEATURE— of my defeatures. C07ne(Zi/ o/firr. ii. 1 
written strange defeatures in my face — v. 1 

DEFECT— but some defect in her Tempest, iii. 1 

saying tlius, or to the same defect ..Mid. N.Dr. iii. 1 
tlusistlie very defect of the matter. i)Jej-.o/ Ten. ii. 2 
for those defects I have before.. Taming of Shrew, i. 2 
our will became the servant to defect.. Jkfac6c/A, ii. 1 

harsh rage, defect of manners IRenrylV. iii. 1 

and so many, my defects, that I ..Richard III. iii. 7 
the faint defects of age must be ..TroilusSf Cress, i. 3 

wlietlier defect of judgment Coriolanus, iv. 7 

by laying defects of judgment to ..Antony^Cleo. ii. 2 
that she did make defect, perfection . . — ii. 2 
[Kjii.] for defect of judgment, as oft.. Cymbeline, iv. 2 
our mere defects prove om' commodities. . Lear, iv. 1 

I say, the stamp of one defect Hamlet, i. 4 

thecauseof this defect; for this effect.. — ii. 2 

DEFECTIVE— in her defective scule.. All's Well, ii. 3 
and hedges, defective in their natures. . Henry V. v. 2 
our state^a defective for requital .... Coriolanus, ii. 2 
for this effect, defective, comes by cause, Ham/ei, ii. 2 
all which the Moor is defective iu Othello, ii. 1 

DEFENCE— otlier her defences Merry Wives, ii. 2 

that defence thou hast, betalce .. Twelfth Night, iii. 4 

stand in your own defence Love's L.Lost, v. 2 

by how riiuch defence is better . . As you Like it, iii. 3 

tliougli valiant in the defence All's Well, i. 1 

keeps her guard iu honestest defence — iii. ■'> 

iu his kingdom's great defence Macbeth, i. 3 

put up that womanly defence; to say. . — iv. 2 
so strongly urged past my defence. . . . KingJohn,}. 1 
we must awak^ endeavour for defence — ii. 1 
tlie danger of my true defence: lest I — iv. 3 

saw we had a purpose of defence — v. 1 

rescue, and defence, cries out upon . . — v. 2 

well sinewed to our defence — v. 7 

the widow's champion and defence ..Bicliard II. i. 2 

and prepared defence, wliilst iHenrylV. (iiid.) 

England, being empty of defence Henry V.i. 2 

to answer royally in our defences.... — ii. 4 

but that defences, musters — ii. 4 

in cases of defence, 'tis best — ii. 4 

so the proportions of defence are filled — ii. 4 
or, guilty m defence, be thus destroyed? — iii. 3 
in &feuce of my lord's worthiness..! Henry VI. iv. 1 

wisdom, and defence, to give iHenry VI. v. 2 

vows to fight in thy defence SllenryVI.i. 1 

their own lives in their young's defence — ii. 2 

tliose that fight in your defence — ii- 2 

the city bciiig but of small defence .. — v. 1 



DEF 



DEEP — comest thou with deei) 1 Henry VI. iii. 1 

received deei) scars in France 'iHenrijVI. i. 1 

deep niglit, dark ni^^ht, tiic silent .... — i. 4 

the water, wliere tlie brook is deep . . — iii. 1 

and full of deep deceit — iii. 1 

that is to see how deep my grave .... — iii. 2 
was troubled with deep melancholy. . — v. 1 
whence springs tliis deep despair? . .ZHcnrtj VI. iii. 3 

in the deeji bosom of the ocean Richard III. i. 1 

this deep disgrace in brotherhood .... — i. 1 

if I fail not in my deep intent — i. 1 

cursing cries, and deep exclaims .... — i. 2 
and take deep traitors for thy dearest — i. 3 

the slimy bottom of the deep — i. 4 

u]«)u these secrets of the deep? — i. 4 

U Cinl, if my deep prayers cannot — i. 4 

in that sin he is as deep as I — i. 4 

deep, hollow, treacherous, and full .. — ii. 1 

a virtuous visor hide deep vicel — ii. 2 

guilty of so deep iCol. A'n(.-great] a sin — iii. 1 

into the fatal bowels of the deep — iii. 4 

I can counterfeit the deep tragedian — iii. 5 
intending deep suspicion : ghastly . . — iii. 5 
in deep designs, in matter of great .. — iii. 7 
but meditating with two deep divines — iii. 7 

forgetfulness and deep oblivion. — iii. 7 

two deep enemies, foes to my_ rest — iv. 2 

repays he my deep service with such — iv. 2 
too deep and dead, too deep and dead — iv. 4 

of state was a deep envious one Henry VIII. ii. 1 

wish liira ten fatliom deep — ii. 1 

so deep suspicion, where all faith .... — iii. 1 
in how many fatlioms deep they. Troilus ^ Cress, i. 1 

from his deep chest lauglis out — i. 3 

tliough greater hulks draw deep .... — ii. 3 
bottom in the uucompreheusive deeps — iii. 3 
would I were as deep under the earth — iv. 2 
one may reach deep enough . . Timon of Athens, iii. 4 
'tis much deep: and it should seem .. — iii. 4 

fall deep iu love with thee Coriolanus, i. 5 

of thy deep duty more impression .... — v. 3 
the deep of night is crept upon ... . JuliusCcesar, iv. 3 

and wrinkled deep in time? Antony ^ Cleo. i. h 

but said so, 'twere as deep with me. . Cymbeline, ii. 3 

as deep as these poor pickaxes — iv. 2 

womb of this deep pit TitusAndronicus, ii. 4 

my heart's deep languor, and my soul's — iii. 1 
deep extremes. Is not my sorrow deep — iii. 1 
this sight should make so deep a wound — iii. 1 

leave these bitter deep laments — iii. 2 

whose loss hath pierced him deep .... — iv. 4 

sound deep our woes into the air Pericles, i. 4 

thunder above, and deeps below .. — ii. (Gower) 
having called them from the deep ! . . . . — iii. 1 

knives sharp, or waters deep — iv. 3 

deep clerks she dumbs — v. (Gower) 

natures of such deep trust we Lear, ii. 1 

looks fearfully in the confi.ned deep — iv. 1 

like monsters of the deep — iv. 2 

to stand against tlie deep dread-bolted . . — iv. 7 
more clouds with his deep sighs. .Borneo fy Juliet, i. I 

but no more deep will I endait — i. 3 

of healths five fathom deep — i.4 

as boundless as the sea, my love as deep — ii. 2 

no, 'tis not so deep as a well — iii. 1 

why should you fall into so deep an O? — iii. 3 

we'll teach you to drink deep Hamlet, i. 2 

i' the throat, as deep as to the lungs? — ii. 2 

O ! this is the poison of deep grief — iv. .'j 

when our deep [Kn«.-dear] plots do pall . . — v. 2 
to-night caroused potations pottle deer). Othello, ii. 3 

DEEP-CONTEMPLATIVE— 
should be so deep-conteinplative...4s?/oM Lihe it, ii. 7 

DEEP-DIVORCING- 
with a deep-divorcing vow? . . Comedy of Errors, ii, 2 

DEEP-DRAWING— 
and the deep-drawing barks.. Troilus ^ Cress, (prol.) 

DEEPER— I'll seek him deeper than . . Tempest, iii. 3 
deeper than did ever plmnmet sound . . — v. I 

a deep story of a deeper love Two Gen.ofVer.i. 1 

and deeper than oblivion we do All's Welt, v. 3 

the conceit is deeper than you. Taming ofShreu', iv. 3 

this avarice sticks deeper Macbeth, iv. 3 

no deeper wrinkles yet? Richard II. iv. 1 

face of mine, and made no deeper wounds — iv. 1 
dogs, which hath tlie deeper mouth..! Henry VI. ii. 4 

touches me deeper than you can Richard III. i. 1 

but thou art deeper read TitusAndronicus, iv. 1 

or something deeper, whereof, perchance. Lear, iii. 1 

DEEPEST — wound is deepest . . Two Gen. of Ver. v. 4 
the deepest loathing to the stomach.Mid. A'. Dr. ii. 3 

to betray us in deepest consequence Macbeth, i. 3 

'tis deepest winter in lord Timon's. Timon ofAth. iii.4 
and with the deepest malice of the.. Coriolamis, iv. 6 

DEEP-FET— my deep-fet groans iHenryVI. ii.4 

DEEPLY— most deeply to consider Tempest, iii. 2 

entertained them deeply in \-ieT..TwoGen.of Ver. v. 4 

O peace! now he's deeply in Twelfth Night, ii. b 

yet not so deeply as to thee belongs. Taming ofSh. ii.l 
or both dissemble deeply their atfections — iv. 4 
declined, drooped, tooK it deeply.. Winter'sTale, ii. 3 

consider it nob so deeply Mnctteth, ii. 2 

sound, and half so deeply sweet 2 Hen ry I V. iv. 4 

that I will deeplj' put the fashion .... — v. 2 

are deeply indebted for this •ZHcnry VI. i. 4 

as deeply to effect what we intend. /i/r/iard III. iii. 1 
if your affiance were deeply rooted . . Cymbeline, i. 7 
how deeply you at once do touch me 1 — iv. 3 
she's with the lion deeply still in.Titus.indron. iv. 1 

wine loved I deeply; alee dearly Lear, iii. i 

'tis deeply sworn. Sweet, leave me .... Hamlet, iii. 2 

DEEP-MOUTHED— 
with the deep-mouthed brach. Tamingof Sh. 1 (.ind.) 
mock the deep-mouthed thunder. . . . King John, v. 2 
out- voice the deep-mouthed sea . . Henry V. v. (cho.) 

DEEP-REVOLVING- 
dee|i-revolving witty Buckingham. Tfic/iardiTJ. iv. 2 

DEEP-SWORN— deep-sworn faith. . King John, iii. 1 

DEEP-VOW— master Deep-vow.jVfo.!. /or Meas. iv. 3 

DEER— -killed my deer, and broke . . Merry Wives, i. 1 



DEFENCE-not cooped here for defence.SHcnr?/ VI.v. I 

spent more in her defence Troilus ^-Cressida, ii. 2 

in defence, by mercy, 'tis most ..Timon ofAth. iii. 5 
and thy defence, absence: what beast — iv. 3 
for tlie defence of a town, our general Co;io/anMs,iv. 5 
policy, strength, and defence, that Rome — iv. 6 
fuU of rest, defi;nce, and nimbleness.yui. Cwsar, iv. 3 
go, put ou thy defences ....Antony ^ Cleopatra, i v. 4 

soft, soft; we 11 no defence Cymbeline, iii. 4 

he is bold in liis defence Lear, v. 3 (herald) 

dismembered with thine own defenee.i?om.<5-./ui. iii.3 
for art and exercise iu your defence. . . . Hamlet, iv. 7 
she drowned herself in her own defence? — v. 1 
give him defence against the elements.. Othello, ii. 1 

DEFEND— O defend me ! Tempest, ii. 2 

defend your reputation, or bid Merry Wives, iii. 3 

heavens defend me from that Welsh. . v. 5 

pray God defend mel a little Twelfth Night, iii. 4 

drew to defend him, when he v. 1 

the benefit defends the deceit .... Meas.forMeas. iii. 1 
for God defend, the lute should be . . Much.ido, ii. 1 
O God defend me! how am I beset! .. — iv. 1 
for God defend but God should go before — iv. 2 

and God defend the right! Love'sL.Lost, i. 1 

God defend me from these two! ..Mer. of Venice, i. 2 
gain sliouldst defend mine honour? . . King John, i. 1 
but yet I dare defend my innocent life — iv. 3 

let this defend my loyalty Richard II. i. 1 

iu myself I boldly will defend — i. 1 

God defend my soul from i. i 

Bodefend thee heaven, and thy valour! i. ? 

whicli, heaveu defend, a knignt (rep.) i. 3 

as I truly fight, defend me lieaveu !. . i. 3 

thy lance, and God defend the right I — i. 3 
botli to defend himself, and to approve — i. 3 

my oath and duty bids me defend. ... ii. 2 

and God defend, but still I should.. IHtoj)//;'. iv. it 

1 will assay thee; so defend thyself .. — v. 4 

to defend against the Scot Henry V. i. 2 

sufficient to defend our inland i. 2 

the advised head defends itself i. 2 

cannot defend our own door from i. 2 

and God defend the right! 'illenry VI. ii. 3 

to defend the city from the rebels .... — iv. 5 
their helps only defend ourselves ..ZHenry VI. iv. 1 

but to defend his person from — iv. 3 

for Edward will defend the town — iv. 7 

which no warrant can defend me ..Riclmrd III. i. 4 

sworn to cherish and defend — i. 4 

defend thee, here are euemics (rep.).. — iii. 5 

marry, God defend his grace sliould say iii. 7 

which, God defend, that I should wriug — iii. 7 

aud waking, O defend me still: " v. 3 

defend my belly; upon my wit liep.) Troil.Sf Cres. i. 2 
to defend my honesty; my mask (rep.) — i. 2 

that defend her (not palating iv. 1 

what shall defend the interim? Timon ofAth. ii. 2 

five tribunes, to defend their vulgar.. Co»7o/u«i«, i. 1 

or defend yourself by calmness — iii. 2 

the mighty gods defend thee!./M;.C(Esa>-,ii.3 (paper) 

the goQS defend him from so great .... v. 4 

Isis else defend, and serving you. . Ant. <5- Cleo. iii. 3 

defend the justice of my cause Titus Andron. i. 1 

roots they grow by, and defend thera . . Pericles, i. 2 
protect thee from! it may defend tlice — ii. 1 
the gods defend me! If it please {rep.) — iv. 3 

seem to defeud yourself: now quit Lear,i\. 1 

defend you from seasons such as these?. . — iii. 4 
and all that offer to defeud him, stand . . — iii. 6 
stands on me to defend, not to debate. . . . — v. 1 

the gods defend her ! bear him lieuce — v. S 

angels aud ministers of grace defend us'.. Hamlet, i. i 

the Polack never will defeud it — iv. 4 

O, yet defeud me, friends, I am but hurt — v. 2 

and heaven defend your good souls oihelln, i . 3 

and to defend ourselves it be a sin ii. 3 

of all my tribe defend from jealousy! — in. 3 

heaven defend [A>i(.-forgive] me! .... — iii.3 
DEl''END.flNT-of the defendant.. .Wee. of Venice, iv. 1 

of courage, aud with meaus defendant. Henry r. ii. 4 
are the appellant and defendant ....'2 Henry VI. ii. 3 

DEFEND£D-to have defended it.Mer. of Venice, v. 1 

not only well defended, but taken Henry V. 1. 2 

have defended me from imminent . .illenry VI. v. 3 

when Helen is defended Troilus SfCressida, ii. 2 

hands hath not defended Rome. . Titus Andron. iii. 1 

DEFENDER-bauish your defenders. Corioia«us, iii. 3 
your gates the very defender of them — v. 2 
thou great defender of this Capitol . . Titus And. i. 2 

DEFENDING-the ring defending it.Mer. of Ve/i. v. 1 
in defending of myself; a traitor Richard II. i. 3 

DEFENSIBLE— did seem dei(;usible..2Henry/F. ii. 3 
for we no longer are defensible Heyiry V. iii. 3 

DEFENSIVE— defensive to a. liouse.. Richard II. 11. 1 
holy Joan was his defensive guard. . 1 Henry VI. ii. 1 

DEFER— defer no time, delays iia,ve.\ Henry VI. iii. 2 
soldiers, defer the spoil of the eity.. iHenryVI. iv. 7 

DEFERRED-C Co/. Knt.2 deferred the visitation 
of my friends Richard III. iii. 7 

DEFIANCE— take my defiance.. Meas. /or Meas. iii. 1 

then take my king's defiance King Jotm, i. 1 

and send defiance to the traitor Richard II. iii. 3 

fill the mouth of deep defiance up.. I Henry IV. iii. 2 

1 have thi-own a brave defiance in — v. 2 

of Richard, gave him defiance 2flenri/ /f. iii. 1 

scorn and defiance, slight regard Henry V. 'ti. i 

greet England with om- sharp defiance — iii. 5 

to tills add defiance: and tell him.... iii. 6 

as black defiance, as heart can.. Troilus/^ Cress, iv. 1 
defiance, traitors, hurl we in youv. Julius Caesar, v. 1 
he breathed defiance to my ears.. Romeo ^-Juliet, i. 1 

DEFICIENT- the deficient sight topple. . Lear, iv. 6 
not deficient, blind, or lame of sense Othello, i. 3 

DEFIED— so she defied him Meas. for Meas. ii. 1 

and breaths that I defied not . . As you Like it, (epil.) 
I defied them still: when suddenly. JJe«ry *'///. v. 3 
thus defied, I thank thee for myself. C'!/mOe(;;ic, iii. 1 

DEFIES-she defies me, like Turk..4s you Like it, iv. 3 

DEFILE— and his soft couch defile. . Merry Wives, i. 3 
pitch, that defiles; defile! Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 



DEF 



[ 173 J 



DKFILE— (Ipnios the liitohv i)i)?lit! W«in«,iv. ■! 

wriliM-.-.l.>iv|ioit,(l.itli cWllU' \lli;i,iili: ii. 1 

villi f..ii1 Imiul il.lik' the l.«-ks tl,;,nir. iii. 3 

like t.>|iit.li. ilolik' ll..t>ilUv ■illcinill. ii. 1 

wli.wo wn.UL.' Ihou-lit .lullli'S tlioe /.iMi-. iii. <i 

DKrn Kl) litili will iKiktlkMl ....jViicA.I./o, iil. :i 
ot\o IKto ilir.l .litil.il; Imt 1 do live. — v. -I 
ho is .K'tll;-,!, tluit (Iniws a sword ..Afi'rf. \. Dr. iii. 2 

niv lu'd iK'luilli ditih'.l JH". IFcH, v. 3 

liis.-urriiit,;in.l.lctili.(lhimsclfI....KirA./rrf;/. V. 3 

nv..lililnl liiuil. mv i.ml Ti'niono/' /l/Aciis, i. i 

MS houses uiL' lie riloil I'or want of vise /VnV/M, i. i 

ni''.l'lI.i;U-<li lilcror 1 1 vmen's piiiTst. '/Viii.f.f .I//1. iv. 3 

1 )l':i-'I I, I Nc!-.kllliii->.'t' her inuviits' heel. ;•,,.,/'■.«. i. 1 

dp: l''lXK—.li'Hiio,.k'lii\o.\v>-ll-i.'(liU'uteil. ;..»•.••-/.. ;..i. 'J 

ns niiiv MMWurthinessdL'iine . . Il,;ui, r. iv. iilioriis) 

I.mI. tiiu' triu' imiiliicss. what is 't ll,imM,n. a 

DKl'l N KM r.N'l"— his diliiu iiuiit sullers no — v. i 
I)i:i' I.M'l'K-wdohnio wi-ilv definite. rj/niMi'w, 1. 7 
DKl'l N I rn'K- we lire deliiiitive.iWeus./oril/cnj. V. 1 
DKl-INl IIVICLY— 

detioitiveli thus I answer von.... Richnrd III. iii. 7 

l)K I'l.l i\V KU— this trull deflower.. 7V(usyln(;roH. ii. 3 

1) i: n .1) \V I', K !■: D-u detl. iweied maid ! lltna.for Mea. i v.l 

vile hiith here deflowered mv dear.. Mid. K.Dr. v. 1 

fionie Tereus hath dellou eied thee.7"i/«s/liirf)-oK. ii. 5 

eiilOreed, stained, anil deflowered? .. — v. 3 

as she was. deflowered liv liiiu . . Romeo ^JiilM, iv. 5 

OK Kt IK M-thiit deform the \H*\y .Coniedi/ i,f Err. i. 2 

l)l'.rilK.MKI)-she was def.mned.ywo&VH.o/rcr.ii. 1 

hi.w loui; hath she lieeii deformed? .. — ii. I 

none euii he ealle.l deformed .... Tirelflh Niu'M, iii. -1 

a deformed tliief this fashion is'. Much Ado, iii. 3 

I know tluit Deformed; he has been — iii. 3 

1 say, what a deformed thief this — iii. 3 

and "one Deformed is one of them — iii. 3 

v.nril he made hriu2 Deformed forth — iii. 3 
lienrd them talk of one Deformed.... — v.l 

h.iw def'i.rmed dost thou look! .. Love'sl.LosI, iv. i 
liatli nuieU deformed us, fashionini;.. — v. 2 
def.iriiud, en inked, old, and fere.Comedy o/Er. iv. 2 
Willi Time's deformed himdlmve.... — v.l 

an iiidi-'e>t deformed Iiunp 'UlenryVI. v. 6 

drfirmed, untinished, sent before ..Richard III. i. 1 
Di;!'i)i;Mn'Ii;S— iiu.ite deformities?.«om. ^-Jid. i. 4 
Di:i I >i;.M IT V_i>as-in,'defiirmity. Ttro Gen. off. ii. 1 

where sits deforniit.v to mock aUennjVI. iii. 2 

ileseant on mine own deforniit.v Richard III. i. 1 

blush, thou lump of foul deformit.v.. — i. 2 

liioner defnrmitv seems not in the fiend. . Lear, iv. 2 

I ) i;i 'TIA'-thvself, and office, deftl v show. Macbeih,\\'. 1 

DKKUNCT— though defunct and rtead.We»/-.vr. iv. 1 

to make his bed with the defunct . . Ci/mMine, iv. i 

[f ol. Kiil.'i ilcfunct and proper satisfaction. 0//ip;/o, i. 3 

Di: 'r'T'XCTIDX— dcfunetion of king. . . . H,-«n/ /'. i. '.' 

l>lvl'V— I detv thee:— mercy upon us! ..Temprsi, iii. i 

but I def'v all angels Mem/ Hires, ii. ■> 

lechery! I defy lechery TiveljlhMghi.L '.> 

what man ! defy the devil — iii. 1 

I for him defy you — iii. 4 

tiir a tricksy word defy the mattcr.^/sr. of Ven. iii. .'i 
and do defy thee for a villain . . Comedy of Errors, v. I 

I do defy thee, France king John, ii. 1 

why. then defy each other — ii. 2 

no,"I defy all counsel — iii. 4 

I do defv him, and I spit at him ....Richard II. i. I 

all studies here I solemnly defy IHenryll'. i. 3 

I defv thee: I was never — iii. 3 

I del V the tongues of soothers — iv. I 

defy him by the lord of 'Westmoreland — v. 2 

I thee defy again; Oliound HenryV.M. 1 

defy us to our worst — iii. 3 

Gloster, I do defy thee 1 Hfnrv r/. iii, 1 

and I 'd defy them all 2Henrijri.iv. 10 

defv them tiieu, or else hold Slhnryfl.ii. 2 

ill this resolution, I defy thee — ii. 2 

AVarwii'k, Idcfy thee — v, I 

at heel of that, defy him Anion;/ ^Cleopatra, ii. 2 

deal withal, and defy the surgeon'!'. ...Penctes, iv. 6 

and defy the foul fiend Lear, iii. 4 

then I defy .vou, stars! Romeo ^Juliet, v. I 

I do defy thy eonj urtttions — v. 3 

not a whit ; we defy augury Ilamlel, v. 2 

Dri'VIN'i— and here defying those.Cori'o(u/iia, iii. 3 
UECJE N E RATE— more degenerate. Tiro Geii.of V. v. 4 
you degenerate, you ingrate revolts. . King John, v. 2 
recreant and most degenerate traitor./(i"c/iard//. i. I 
most degenerate king! but, lords .... — ii 1 
show how much degenerate thou art.l Henry IV. iii. 2 
makes it fearful and degenerate.. ..illenry yi. iv. 4 
faint-hearted, and degenerate king. .SHpury VI. i. 1 
so degenerate a strain as this ., Troilm ^C'ress. ii. 2 
or Biit-sianns so degenerate.... T/i«x//»^/rn;i/cus, ii. 1 
dej^cnerate bastard! I'll not trouble thee..X.enr, i. 4 

most barbarous, most degenerate! — iv. 2 

DICG HADED— be quite degraded.... IWcnn/F/. iv. 1 

then I degraded you ZHcnrijVI. iv. 3 

DEtJllEE— the degree of a 6fiuirc..iWir/!/)Kiw.f, iii. 1 
will not match above her degree.. Ttrelflh NiglU, i. 3 

under the degree of my betters — i. 3 

misprision in the highest degree! .... — i. .'> 
for lie's in the third degrccof drink.. — i. 5 

tliat's a degree to love — iii. 1 

nor after my degree, but fellow — iii. 4 

I'll requite it in the highest degree . . — iv. 2 
now to liave no successive degrees./l/en./orA/ra, ii, 2 
to the strictest degrees I'll write . .Love' iL, Lost, i. 1 
that breaks them in the least degree — i. I 

I'll leave it by degrees _ v. 2 

I know not the degree of the worthy — v. 2 
that e.statcs, degrees, and offices. . Mer. of Venice, ii. 8 
ill these degrees have they made.. At you Like it, v. 2 
in order now the ilegreesof a lie? .... — v. 4 

I will name you the degrees — v. 4 

welcome in no less degree — v. 4 

hv degrees we mean to look into. Taming of Sh. iii. 2 
Ifkc language use t*> all degrees .. lf'intrr'$Tnle, ii. 1 
you know your own degrees, sit down..V«rfcr//i, iii. 4 

answer thee in any foir degree Richnrd II. i. 1 

our subjects' ucxt degree in ho|ie .... — i. 4 



DEGIIEE— condition of tlio worst degree. HWi.l/.ii. 3 

and BO both the degrees prevent illinrylV. i. 'I 

o knight is your degree — Iv, 3 

a traitor your degree, and the dungeon — iv. 3 
but place, degree, and form, creating.. Henri/ T. iv. 1 
quite from the answer of his degree.. — iv. 7 
iniike von t'l-dav a siinire of low degree — v.l 
fliMirisli to the lieiLdit nf mv riegree ..MlemyVI.W.X 

of fli\' professii.ii, and degree — iii. 1 

niemlier.s rot but liv degrees — iii. I 

in.-talleil ill that liiijli degree — iv. 1 

ealle.l out" a enniiniil'sdegrec! — v.l 

called':' and wlnit i^ thy dcL-rec? ....iUenr]/ VI. v. 1 
the next de^'ree is, EiiL'land's royal, ,3H™r)//';. ii, I 

of what degree soever, with Richurdlll. i, 1 

broke it ill such dear degree! — i, 4 

best tlttetli mv degree or your condition — iii, 7 
ICol. Kill.} iiitVli and height of liis degree— iii, 7 

perjury, in the highest degree — v, 3 

direst degree; all several sins (;-ffp,),, — V, 3 
is not Troiliis, in some degrees,. Trodusf) Cms. i. 2 
degree being vizarded. the unworthicst — i. 3 
observe degree, iiriority, and place .. — i. 3 

' -^hakcd — i. 3 

VIM in schools — i, 3 

mthentic (rep.) ,. — 

■ ■te («•;).) - 

n.auces ..TimonofAlh 

I. t this brief — iv. 3 

i! L reo — v. 2 

.es as those.... Cor/o/f7n7«, ii. 2 

lie Imth abused — v. 5 

i: I ^, V. lueh../uii'u.iC«isur, ii. 1 

I ■ i.e — iii. 1 

I !,;>,,,... iil',..4n/07iy <5-C(po.iii. 11 
1 r.ueli uiiuiitural degree. .i-e«r,i. 1 
dity, or degree.... — v. 3 (herald) 
degree of this fortime. 0//i«Hd, ii. 1 



1.3 



s, iv. 1 



whc 

comnimrtii , i' 
by degi' . 
when ill I. : 
trades, ili : 
theswr; I n 
in the, I .,,1 •••■ 
not hv Ml :, I : 
in the 111.: . 
scoriiin Ii 

pre-orili:i;i m 
till, by iU..ii 
oft'ence inui-t In 
if any mau of u 
eminently in t! ^ 

and thou art but of low degree.... — ii. 3 (song) 
what wound did ever heal, but by degrees? — ii. 3 
of her own elime, complexion, and degree — iii. 3 

DEIFYIKC;— deifving the ua.mii..Asynu Like il, i\i. i 

DE lUN— not deigii my lines Two Gen. of Ver. i. I 

will dei"n to sip, or touch one,... rawing- o/SA. y. 2 

nor womd we deign him burial Macbeth, i. 2 

since thou dost deign to woo 1 Henry VI. v. 3 

friends that deign to follow me ....'iHenryVl. iv. 7 

thy palate then did deign the .... Antony ^Cten. i. 4 

DEIGNED- deigned to appear to me,,l Henry VI. i. Ii 

DEIl'HOBUS— that's Deiphobus.. Troilus fyCress. i. 2 

Hector, Deiphobus, Helenus, Antenor — iii. 1 

and Deiphobus, the Grecian Diomed — iv. 2 

DEITIES— humbling their deities. IVinter'sTale, iv. 3 

cold lips blow to their deities .... Troil.Sr Cress, iv. 4 

your deities be despised. . . Timon ofAlh. iii. 6 (grace) 

when it iileascth their deities Antony ^Cleo. i. 2 

DEITY— I feel not this deity in my .... Tempesl, ii. 1 

1 met her deify cntting the clouds — iv. 1 

there he tliiit d'eity in my nature. Twelfth ^^ight^v. 1 

which makes llesli a deity Love's L. Lost, iv, 3 

complaining to her deity giit my ..Richard III. i. 1 
by some other deit.v than nature ..Coriolnnus, iv, U 
synod of the rest, against th.v deity. . Cijinheline, v. 4 
convey thy deity aboard our duneing.. /'■ / /e/ci, iii. 1 

DE.IA — n'avez vous pas deja ouldie llrmyi'. iii. 4 

DEJECT — and lustiliood deject .. Trodus .5 Ciess. ii. 2 

nor once deject the comage — ii. 2 

of Ladies most deject and wretched Hamlet, iii. I 

DEJECTED— I am dejected Merry IVives, v. 5 

resides this dejected .Niariana ..Meas.fnr Meas. iii. 1 
Antony is valiant, ;uiil ilvieetPd..4n/on;/.5-t'teo. iv. 10 
from the dejected ^t;ltl' wlieriin he is ..I'ericlcs, ii. 2 

and most dejeeteii thing ni iiirtune Leur.iv. 1 

nor the dejected huviour ol the visage ..Hamlet, i. 2 

DE-LA-BKET— Ciiarlcs Ue-hi-hret ..Henry T. iii. !) 

Charles De-la-liret, hi!.'h eimftalile . . — iv. 8 

DELATION— [Co/. Kill'.'] close delations. O/M/o, iii. 3 

DELAY— with a line-baited delay ..Merry Wives, ii. 1 

of my people hold him in delay?. . TwelfthNighi, i. 5 

in delay there lies no plenty — ii. 3(6ong) 

make no delay; we m.ay effect. .if/ id. JV.Dre/im, iii. 2 
life, tide death, I come without delay — v. 1 

one inch of delay more is As you Like it, iii. 2 

if thou delay me not the knowledge — iii. 2 

whose want and whose delay AWs Welt, ii. 4 

now, God delay om- rebellion — iv. 3 

to seek delays for them and me. . Comedy of Err. i. 1 

to tarry for "the hoy. Delay — iv. 3 

woe wanton witii this iiiiid delay . . Richnrd II. v. 1 

feeds liim fat, while men delay \ Henry W. iii. 2 

here himself to question our delay.. ..Henry I', ii. 4 

leave oft' delays and let us raise \ Henry VI. i. 2 

no time, delays ill! 1; il:!ii-.iiius ends — iii. 2 

that thus dehi-i m . ir mi nl — iv. 3 

'long all of Sill,, , ;. itiiMii, delay.. — iv. 3 

husinesswill imt lir mk dehiy illenry VI. i. 1 

I cannot brook delay 3//t'n;i/ VI. iii, 2 

therefore delay not, give thy hand , , — iii, 3 

their suits with slow delays — iv, 8 

if we use delay, cold biting — iv. 8 

not ta'en tardy by unwise delay . . Richard III. iv. 1 
to dull delay ; delay leads imjiotent. . — iv. 3 
make no delay; for, lords, to-morrow — v. 3 

to be levied without delay Henry VIII. i. 2 

and that, without delay, their arguments — ii. 4 

that you not delay the present Coriotanus^i. G 

delay not, Cicsar ! read it instantly. /M/i'iMCf''«nr, iii. 1 
what they do delay, they not deny. Am. ^ Clen. ii, I 

to feed me with delays Tiliis.indronicus, iv, 3 

without an V further "delay than tliis Lear, i. 2 

I might well delay by ru"le — v. 3 

I mean, sir, in delay we wa-stc. . . . RomeotyJtdiet, i. 4 
that thou dost inak"e in this delay.... — ii. .'1 
delay this marriage for a month .... — iii. .'1 
the law's delay, the insoleiiceof office.. HoniW, iii. 1 

with Sliced alioaril, delay it not — |v. 3 

ftbatcnienls and dehivs as many — iv. 7 

dull not device bv eoldnessaiid dclav ..OtheUo, ii. 3 

DELAVI'.D- delayed, but nothing. ».«/fr'»'/'n/r,iv.3 

my gift, the more delayed, tlcViahtvd.Cymbeline, v. 4 



DEL 



DELAYED— no longer have it be delayed. /'tTi'r/f», ii.5 
r would not he delayed; if my otteiice..OWipHo,iii. 4 

DELAVINt!— the |iowers, ilelaviiig ..Tcmpisi, iii, 3 
in the delaying death Pleasure for Measure, iv 2 

DELi;CT.VfiLE— sweet aiwl delectable,. Wi'c'i. /;. ii. 3 
nimble, ficrv, and dvlcetublv shapes.2i/eni'!/Jr, iv. 3 

Di;i.IlJKHA'l'E- 

deliber;ite a day or two Ttro Gen. of Verona, i, 3 

and delilieratc word nips youth,. jVra./or il/m. iii. I 

these deliberate fools! .... .1/croAnn/ 0/ Venice, ii. 9 
not to delilKratcnot to remcmlicr ..2Hfnri/;;'. v. 4 
.vourniost grave belly was delilwratc. C'or/o(«nM, i. I 
must seem dclilvrate pause Handel, iv. 3 

DELI CAT K— a rniirit too delicate to act.'J'em/ieal, i. 2 

delicate Ariel, I'll set llice free — i. 2 

subtle, tender, and delicate teinperanee.. — ii. I 

temiierance was a delicate weiieli — ii. 1 

a most delicate monster! — ii. 2 

dearly, my delicate Ariel — iv. 1 

thronging soft and delicate desires .... Much Ada, i. I 
more moving delicate, and full of life — iv, I 

with delicate fine hats, and most AU'slt'ell, iv. 5 

the climate's delicate; the air.... IVinler'iTate, iii. 1 
with such delicate burdens of — iv. 3 

1 have observed, the air is delicate .... Martielli, i. G 

first spring, and be most delicate Henry v. ii. 4 

beyond a prince's delicates SHemy VI. ii. .'i 

fresh, loved, and delicate wooer.. TimonofAlh. iv. 3 

to glow the delicate checks Anlonyfif Cleo. ii. 2 

our sense in soft and delicate Lethe . . — ii. 7 
proud of that most delicate lodging.. Ci/mfif/inc, ii. 4 

most delicate fiend! who is't can .. — v. 5 

a delicate odmir. .Vs ever liit Pericles, iii. 2 

when the miiid'.s free, the body'sdelieatclcur, iii. 4 
tear trilled down her delicate check .... — iv. 3 

it were a delicate stratagem — iv. ti 

led by a delicate and tender prince .... Hamlet, iv. 4 
most "delicate carriages, and of very ,,,. — v. 2 
abused her delicate youth with drugs . . Olhello, i. 2 
do it a more deiieate wav than drowning — i. 3 
hcrdelicate tenderness will find itself.... — ii. I 
she is a most tie II and delicate creature — ii. 3 
that we can call liie.-e iklieate creatures — iii. 3 
sodelieate V, i;li 1 11,.: — iv. 1 

DELICll)lI,-^ ,; , , , I |iict...7'am. o/SA. l(ind.) 

mvsclfwith 1,1 iiuison ..Anl.^Cleo.i.A 

tire other riifUi! iiii ilul 1, lous feed.. TOiM/lwd. iv. 4 

DELICl()i;.'<.\i:.-^S— 
in his own delieiousness ....^,.. Romeo Sf Juliet, ii. G 

DELIGUT-laliour delight in them sets. Tf/npeW, iii. 1 

that give delight, and liurl not — iii, 2 

love delights in praises TwoGen.of Verona, ii. 4 

you delight not m music — iv. 2 

our pageants of delight were played — iv. 4 

could liuve made you our delight?, .Verrr/ IVives, v. .'> 

1 delight in masques and reveds .. TueJIh Night, i. 3 
I marvel your ladyship takes delight in — i. :> 
lady Olivia's father took much delight — ii. 4 

you li;i r ;i ill Ii jM ti sit Meas. for Meas. ii, 1 

none 1.1 I ill , . .li light him MuchAdo, ii. \ 

letii'i' : ' ii_lit mine ear — v, 1 

with 1 1,: Ii ■ -Mil II li_:ht;andthere.iWi'i. A'.'»C»'.ii.2 
taiicst true delight in the sight of .... — iii. 2 

if not with sonic delight? — v. 1 

all for your delight, we are not here — v. 1 (prol.) 
manner of these world's delights. .Lord's L. Losi,\. 1 
to vain delight. Why, all delights are — i. 1 

how you delight, my lords, 1 kfiow not — i. I 

you innst let him take no delight — i- 2 

nor I, delight in iierjured men — v. 2 

do iiaint file memious with delight — v. 2 (song) 
I desire m. iiu.re deli^-ht l\\:\\\. . Mirch.of Venice, ii. 6 
heavine.-s with iinie delii-dil or other — ii. 8 

will take liitle deli:;ht in it As you Like il, i. 2 

trust they'll end. in true delights .... — v. 4 

whom heaven delights to hear AU'slVell, iii. 4 

she taketli must (kl'ight in mufXe. .Taming of :ih. i. I 
teach her that whercui she delights .. — i. 1 
wdiat to delii-dit in, what to sorrow ..Com.ofEr. i. 1 
hast thou delight to see a wretched ,. — iv. 4 
the labmir we deliLdit in, phvsicks.. ..iVacl<f/A, ii. 3 

and show the best of our delLdits — iv. 1 

auddeli'-'ht nil les.- in truth, fluui life.... — iv. 3 

never ti/lie inl'eeted with delight KingJohn, iv. 3 

can keep no measure in deligiit Richard II. iii. 4 

in aft'ectiuns of delight 'illenry IV. ii. 3 

the sight will nuieli deligiit thee XHenryVl. i. 4 

clinrcTimen take delight 111 broils? .. — iii. I 

with choice of all delights — v..') 

and delight to live in slavery to iHenryVI.iv. 8 

now am I seated as my soul delights.3l/rnr!//'/. v. 7 

have no delight to pass away Richard III. \. i 

if thou deligiit to view thy heinous — i. 2 

hours for iiecessiticii, not for delights. Henry VIII. v. 1 
iK'sotted on your sweet delights .. Trod. 1^ Cress, ii. 2 

if sanctimony be the god's delight — v. 2 . 

and go to it with deliu'ht Aniony^Cteopalra, iv. 4 ' 

his delights were dolpliin-like.... — v. 2 

the silken strings delight to kiSs..'A'/i« AnJron. ii. a 
unless the gods delight in tragedies! — iv. 1 

not so miicn to feetlon, as delight Perictct, i. 4 

inventions to delight the taste — ..i.4 

in course of true ileligbt than to be — iii. 2 

his daughter, all bis life's delight — iv. 4 (Gower) 
even such delight among fresh . . Romeo Sf Juliet, i. 2 
find delight writ there with beauty's — i. 3 
the drudge, and toil in yourdelight.. — ii. a 
violent deliglits have violent ends .. — ii. (1 

if sour woe delights in fellowship — iii. 2 

equal scale weighing delight with dole. HamVw, i. 2 

man delights not me (r./<i'ii.'cil) — ii. 2 

if youdeiight not in inau, what lentcn .. — ii. 2 

wont to take such delight in — ii. 2 

drive his purpose on to these delights — iii. I 

poison his deliLdit, proclaim him in ....Othello, i. I 

thing lus thou; to lear, not to delight — i. 2 

delight shall she have to look on the devil? — ii. I 

DEI.lGlirKD-liicilelighted spirit. . >/ca./or iWra. iii. I 
Jlei'tor; we an- iniieh delighted... LoiVi L. Lost, v. 2 
the more delayed, delighted Cymtrdnr, v. 4 



DEL 



[ 174 ] 

DEhlVEIlANCE— 
your deliverance with an unpitied.A/en. /orMea. iv. 2 
teivcli me answers for deliverance !.3/t';-. of Ten. iii. '^ 
in tliis my li|^ht deliverance, X ha\-e . . AWstVelt, ii. I 
you haveit troni his own deliverance — li. :> 
desire deliverance from these oiticcrs.2HeHri//r. ii. I 
and, at eacli word's deliverance, stab. 3 Henry VI. ii . 1 
and heartily, for our deliverance ..Henry VIII. ii. 2 
mother rejoiced deliverance more. . . . Cymbcline, v. 5 
DEHVERKD-most learnedly delivered /'empes/, ii. 1 
may be both at once delivered . . Two Gen.of fer. i. 1 

delivered by a friend that eame — i. 3 

that letter hath she delivered — ii. 1 

sliall be delivered even in the — iii. 1 

she loved me well, delivered it to rae — iv. 4 
unadvised delivered you a paper that — iv. 4 
of an old woman, delivered me ..Merry Wives, iv. 5 
not be delivered to the world .... Twelfth Nighl, i. 2 
if he may be conveniently delivered. . — iv. 2 
notmuen, when they are delivered .. — v. 1 

see Mm delivered, Fabi an — v. 1 

I have delivered to lord Angelo. . Meas.forMeas. i. 4 
not either delivered him to his liberty — iv. 2 
I have already delivered him letters ..Much Ado, i. 1 

see him delivered o'er Love's L. Lost, i. 1 

and delivered upon the mellowing .. — iv. 2 

see these letters delivered Mer. of Venice, ii. 2 

I oft delivered from his forfeitures ., — iii. 3 
this she delivered in the most bitter ..All's Well. i. 3 
back again this ring shall be delivered — iv. 2 
I have delivered it an hour since .... — iv. 3 

before her time, delivered Winter's Tale, i i. 2 

by the hand delivered of great Apollo's — iii. 2 

given already, but not delivered — iv. 3 

was delivered of such a Inu'den . . Comedy of Err. i. 1 
he came to me, and I delivered it ... . — iv. 4 
are delivered [Co/.-burden vmdellvered] — v. 1 

I may be delivered of these woes KingJohn,\\\. 4 

see them delivered over to execution. flic/mrrf i/._iii.l 

care my greetings be delivered — ill. 1 

what once it hath delivered — i v. 1 

have here delivered rae to my sour cross — iv. 1 

as is delivered to yoru- majesty 1 Henry IV.'\.% 

to be delivered as far as Clianng-cross — ii. 1 
she was delivered of a firebrand . . ..'iHenrylV. ii. 2 

delivered with good respect — ii. 2 

which, delivered o'er to the voice .... — iv. 3 
the constables have delivered her over — v. 4 
a letter was delivered to my hands.. lH»nrj/F/. iv. 1 
should be delivered to liis holiness.... — v. I 

and delivered to the king •IHenryVI.i. 1 (art.) 

delivered up again with peaceful words? — i. 1 
delivered strongly through my fixed — iii. 2 
might hear delivered with a groan . .3Henry VI. v. 1 

this present day he is delivered? Richard III. i. 1 

he delivered his gracious pleasure — iii. 4 

is the queen delivered? Say, ay Henry VIII. v. 1 

delivered such a shower ot pebbles .... — v. 3 
and our Antenor, delivered to us. Troil. fr Cress, iv. 2 
'twill be delivered back on good ,.... Coriolanus, i. 10 

have delivered the matter well — .ij. 1 

and more, more fearful, is delivered. . — iv. i; 
is delivered, lords, she is delivered . . Titus And. iv. 2 
no one else but the delivered empress — iv. 2 
they shall be immediately delivered. . — v. 1 

of this was i'amora delivered — v. 3 

such a graceful courtesy delivered? Per!cles,_ii. 2 

whether there delivered or no, by the holy — iii. 4 

hath oft delivered weepin" — v. 1 

till I have delivered yoiu: letter Lcar,\. 5 

delivered letters, spite of intermission .... — ii. 4 

delivered to her our decree? Romeo Sf.1uliei, iii. 5 

as they had delivered, both in time Hamlet, i. 2 

could not so prosperously be delivered of — ii. 2 

of time, which will be delivered Othello, i. 3 

my muse labours, and thus she is delivered — ii. 1 
DELIVERING— 
ducat for delivering your letter.. Two Gen.of Ver. i. 1 
I, delivering you, am satisfied . . Mer. of Venice, iv. 1 

in delivering my son from me All's Well, i. 1 

delivering o*er to executors pale Henry V. i. 2 

DELIVERY— a broken dehvery of. Winter'sTale, v. 2 

was to her for his delivery? Richard III. i. 1 

that he would labour my delivery — i. 4 

of her delivery to this valiant.. Tj-oiVmsiS- Cress, iv. 3 

DELPHOS— to sacred Delphos Winter's Tale, ii. 1 

being well arrived from Delphos — — ii. 3 

have been both at Delphos; and from — iii. 2 

DELUDED— I have deluded you . . ..I Henry VI. v. 4 

DELUDING-false deluding slave. Taming of Sh. iv. 3 

of the state, for thus deluding you Othello, i. 1 

DELUGE— provokes this deluge .... Richard III.}. 2 
a deluge, overflowed and drowTied .. Titus And. iii. 1 

DELVE— delve Mm to the root Cymbcline, i. 1 

it shall go hard, but I wUl delve one . . Hamlet, hi. 4 
DELVEK— but hear you, goodman delver — v. 1 

DEilAND— is't thou ean'st demand? Tempest, i. 2 

upon any reasonable demands Merry Wives, i. 1 

you will demand of me, why I d.o..Mea.for Mea.i. 4 

than to demand what 'tis — }}. ^ 

agree with his demands to the point. . — iii. 1 
demand to have repaid {rep.) .... Love's L. Lost, ii. 1 
what visor? why demand you tMs?.. — v. 2 
of flesli, which Idemaud o'ihJxn..Mer.of Venice, iv. 1 
shall be paid her, than she'll demand..^«'s Well,\. 3 
language to deny when they demand — ii. 1 
(for'that is her demand) and know her — ii. 1 
make thy demand. But wUl you .... — ii. 1 

that must fit all demands — ii. 2 

will nought deny that she'll demand — iii. 7 
I perceive, by this demand, you are not — iv. 3 
first demand of him how many {rep.) — iv. 3 (note) 
each one demand, and answer to.. Winter'sTale, v. 3 
please you what you will demand. .Com. of Err. iv. 4 

speak. Demand. We'll answer Macbeth, iy. 1 

impatient of your just demands .... King JoAn, ii. 1 
religiously demand, why thou against — iii. 1 

innocent, I do demand of thee — iii- 1 

the suit which you demand is gone . . — iv. 2 
why may not I demand of thine — v. 6 



DEM 



DELIGHTED- no delighted beauty lack.O/AciJo, i. 3 

delighted them in any otlier form — iv. 2 

DELIGHTFUL-delightful ostentation.Lot'e'sL. Z-.v.l 

than a delightful measure Richard //. i. 3 

inarches to delightful measures .... Richard III. i. 1 
that delightfulengineof lierthoughtsTifMs.lnd. ill. 1 

whose delightful steps shall make Pericles, ii. 1 

with such delightful pleasing harmony — ii. 5 
DELINQUENT— two delinquents teai-./Vac6eWi, iii. 6 

DELIVER- I'll deliver all Tempest, v. 1 

I am going to deliver them.. TwoGen.of Verona, iii. 1 

if his enemy deliver it — iii. 2 

I was sent to deliver him — iv. 4 

deliver it to madam Silvia — iv. 4 

charged me to deliver a ring — v. 4 

deliver to a joyful resun-ectionsl . . Merry Wives, i. 1 

and did deliver to our age — iv. 4 

and I will deliver his wife into your. . — v. 1 

some hideous matter to deliver Twelfth Night, i. 5 

or I'll deliver thy indignation to him — ii. 3 

but you'll not deliver it — iii. 2 

now will not I deliver tMs letter — iii. 2 

but sir, I will deliver his challenge . . — iii. 2 
when the fool delivers the madman.. — v. 1 
than we must yet deliver. . Mea.forMea. iv. 2 (note) 
to deliver his head in the view of Angelo — iv. 2 
and to deliver us from devices hereafter — iv. 4 

at fit time deliver rae — iv. ."i 

so deliver I up my apes, and away . . Much Ado, ii. 1 

deliver me from the reprobate Love's L. Last,i. 2 

delivers in such apt and gracious words — ii. 1 
deliver this paper into the roj'al hand — iv. 2 
deliver me the key; here do I. .Merch. of Venice, ii. 7 

to this deril, to deliver you — iv. 1 

deliver all the intelligence in his All's Well, iii. 6 

in fine, delivers me to fill the time — iii- 7 

in the nature he delivers it — iv. 3 

pray you, sir, deliver me tMs paper . . — y. 2 

good Lord, deliver us! Taming of Shrew, i. 1 

and must here deliver them — iv. 2 

and so deliver, I am put to sea . . Winter'sTale, iv. 3 

as from your father sliall deliver — iv. 3 

the old shepherd deliver the manner.. — v. 2 

he can deliver you more — y. 2 

didst thou deliver to me on ..Comedy of Errors, a. 2 
angels that you sent for, to deliver you — iv. 3 

some blessed power deliver us — iv. 3 

the sum that may deliver me — v. 1 

thought good to deliver thee Macbeth, i. 5 (letter) 

since he delivers om- offices, and what . . — iii. 3 
to deliver sweet, sweet, sweet poison. .iCing' John, i. 1 

should deliver up your crown — iv. 2 

deliver him to safety — iy. 2 

care-tuned tongue deliver hira ! . . . . Richard II. iii. 2 
his ruined ears, and thus deliver .... — iii. 3 

deliver them up without ransom IHenrylV. i. 3 

deliver what you will, I'll say — v. 2 

deliver up my lord of Westmoreland — v. 2 

and deliver mm up to his pleasure — v. b 

captain, and deliver to the army iHenrylV. iv. 2 

to that that I am to deliver! — iv. 4 

that would deliver up his greatness so — v. 2 
I pr'ythee now, deliver them like a man — v. 3 

but truth. I will deliver her — y. 5 

to her laws we do deliver you Henry V. ii. 2 

let us deliver our puissance into — ii- 2 

of the Lord, deliver up the crown — ii. 4 

I shall deliver SO; thanks to — iii. 6 

her ransom, I deliver her 1 Henry VI. v. 3 

deliver up my title in the queen 2Hemy VI. i. 1 

then we may deliver our supplications — i. 3 
will deliver you, or else lie for you..BtcAanZ ///. i. 1 

cormnanded to deliver the noble — i. 4 

when he delivers you from this earth's — i. 4 
from your grace I shall deliver to hira — iv. 4 
cardinal, deliver all with charity . . Henry VIII. i. 2 
deliver this with modesty to the qxieen — ii. 2 
do not deliver what here you have heard — ii. 3 
and to deliver, like free and honest men — iii. 1 
to deliver this to my lord the king . . — iv. 2 
I could not personally deliver toner — v. 1 
this ring deliver them, and yom: appeal — v. 1 
deliver Helen, and all damage else. Troil. ■fCres. ii. 2 
now to deliver her possession up .... — ii. 2 

deliver a fly from a spider — ii. 3 

to this hand when I deliver her — iv. 3 

wliich for Antenor we deliver you. ... — iy. 4 

but, an't please you, deliver Coriolanus, i. 1 

see what I do deliver out to each .... — i. 1 
as is the wind: deliver him, Titiis.. .. — i. 9 
deU ver you, as most abated captives.. — iii. 3 
the sorrow that delivers us thus changed — v. 3 
deliver them this paper: having read it — v. 5 
we'll deliver you of your great danger — v. 5 
and we here deliver, subscribed by the — v. 5 
I'll deliver myself your loyal servant — y. 5 
from bondage will deliver Cassiu8.../u^ius Ccesar, i. 3 
then we will deliver you the cause . . — iii. 1 
most certain that I shall deliver.. .4n(onj/(^ Cleo. ii. 1 

shall deliver you the keys that Cymbeline, i. 2 

I pray you, sir, deliver with more openness — i. 7 
some message to deliver to us. . . . Titas Andron. iv. 2 
I pray you, deliver him this petition — iv. 3 
deliver the pigeons to the emperor (,rep.) — iv. 3 
with a grace deliver a supplication?.. — iv. 3 

then deliver up your pigeons — iv. 3 

safely from this place deliver me! Pericles, iv. 6 

great with woe, and shall deliver weeping — v. I 
by the syllable of what you shall deliver — v. 1 
will you deliver how this dead queen . . — v. 3 

and deliver a plain message bluntly Lear, i. 4 

loathed warmth whereof deliver me — iv. 6 (let.) 

see thou deliver it to my lord Romeo Sr Jaliel, y. 3 

till I may deliver, upon the witness of . . Hamlet, i. 2 

shaU I deliver you so? — v. 2 

all this can I truly deliver — y. 2 

a round unvarnished tale deliver of my. . Othello, i. 3 
thou dost deliver more or less than truth — ii. 3 

from me, to deliver to Desdemona — iv. 2 

DELIVERANCE-your deliverance. */ea./oiilfeo. iii.l 



DE.MANI>— deiuand of yonder cliampion./(ic/i.//. i. 

of his fair demands shall be accomplished — iii. 

fofLrotteu to demand that truly 1 Henry IV. i. 

superfluous to demand the time — i. 

and of him I did demand, what r\a\<is.iHenrylV. i. 

appear that yoiu" demands are j ust .. — iv. 

in grant of all demands at large Henry V. ii. 

if 1 demand, before this royal — v. 

accord to all our just demands — v. 

in, or out of, our demands; and we'll — v. 

slie is our capital demand, comprised — v. 

where yom- majesty demands — v. 

give tiiee answer of thy just demand. lHf»?/n/r/. v. 

should demar.d a whole fifteenth ... .2 Henry VI. i. 

hath yielded unto thy demand — v. 

dost say no, to my demand 3 Henry VI. iii. 

his demand springs not from Edward's — iii. 

shall answer his demand — iii. 

not stopped mine ears to their demands — iv. 

the late demand [Kn(. -request]. . ..Richard III. iv. 

of me demand what was the speech.. Henri/ r///. i. 

my good lord, not your demand — ii. 

make that demand of the prover. Troilus S^ Cress, ii. 

of us, Troian? make demand — iii. 

let Patroclus make demands to me .. — iii. 

aspect, a visage of demand Timon of Athens, ii. 

clamorous demands of date-broke bonds — ii. 

they gave us oiu' demands Coriolanus, iii. 

a good demand. Ifit be honour .... — iii. 

I do demand, if you submit you to . . — iii. 

if then that friend demand Julius Ccesar, iii. 

answering before we do demand of them — v. 

kingdoms, I demand the like. . . . Antony <?■ Cleo. iii. 

on what fair demands thou mean'st . . — v. 

he'll make demand of her, and spend — y. 

your answers to my demands Cymbeline, i. 

mannerly demand thee of thy story — iii. 

and a demand who is't shall die .... — iv- 

though thou do demand a prisoner . . — v. 

make thy demand aloud ^ v. 

bid him demand what pledge . . Titus Andron. iv. 

willing you to demand your hostages — v. 

noble Pericles shall demand his clwH'i. Pericles, iv. 

than comes from her demand out of Lear, i. 

for no more can I demand Romeo f; Juliet, v. 

your particidar demands will touch it. . Hamlet, ii. 

of our demands, most free in his reply . . — iii. 

for the demand of our neglected tribute — iii - 

let Mm demand his fill — iv. 

I pray, demand that demi-devil Otliello,v. 

demand me nothing: what you know .. — v. 
DEMANDED— well demanded, veach.. Tempest, i. 

in your highness' name demanded ..\ Henry IV. i. 

among the rest, demanded my prisoners — i. 

they crave to be demanded Cymbeline, iv. 

much more, should be demanded .... — v. 

being demanded that, she would sit. . . . Pericles, v. 

our pleasure might have been demanded. . Lear, v. 

but, to be demanded of a spunge ! Hamlet, iv. 

ere it be demanded ( as like enough .... Othello, iii. 
DEMANDING— demanding of king..2Hsnr!/ri. ii. 

even but now, demanding after you .... Lear, iii. 
DEMEAN-never so demean himself .Cum-o/iJrr. iv. 

and demean himself unlike -iHenry VI. i. 

DEMEANED— he demeaned himself- Com- ofErr. v- 

if York have ill demeaned Mmself ..'iHenry VI. i. 

they have demeaned themselves ZHenry VI. i. 

DEAIEANOUR — your demeanour. Comeiiy o/firr. ii. 

with such a deep demeanom- in 2HenryI V. iv. 

ignoble in demeanour! if ever \a.dLy.2HenryVI. iii. 

cold demeanour in Octavius' wing. . JidiusCiesar,v. 
DEMERI'T- not for their own demerits. 3iacie/A,iv. 

shall of his demerits rob Cominius . - Coriolanus, i. 

and my demerits, may speak, unbonueted. Otiiello, i- 
DEMESNE— and these demesnes . - . . Cymbeline, iii. 

demesnes that there adjacent We. .Romeo Sr Juliet, ii. 

of fair demesnes, yoiithful, and noblv — iii. 
DEMETRIUS-stand forth, Demetrius.Afid.A'.Dr.i. 

consent to marry with Demetrius. . . . — i. 

Demetrius is a worthy gentleman — i. 

if I refuse to wed Demetrius — i. 

or else to wed Demetrius, as he would — i. 

you have her father's love, Demetrius — i. 

I do estate unto Demetrius — i. 

if not with vantage, as Demetrius' .. — i. 

Demetrius, I'll avouch it to his head — i- 

with Demetrius thought to have spoke — i- 

but, Demetrius, come; and come Egeus " — i- 

Demetrius, and Egeus, go along — i- 

Demetrius loves your fair: O happy — i- 

were the world mine, Demetrius being — i. 

sway the motion of Demeti-ius' heart — i. 

good luck grant thee thy Demetrius ! — i. 

you on Mm, Demetrius dote on you! — i. 

what of that, Demetrius tMuks not so — i- 

ere Demetrius looked on Hermia's eyne — i- 

Demetrius, the more you beat me — — ii - 

fie, Demetrius! your wrongs do set - . — ii. 

though thou kill me, sweet Demetrius — ii- 

though Demetrius, do as a monster-. — ii- 

where is Demetrius? O, how fit — ii- 

a sweet look from Demetrius' eye .. — ii. 

ah, good Demetrius, wilt thou give- . — iii- 

will cause Demetrius to awake — iii - 

Demetrius loves her, and he loves -. — iii. 

you are unkind, Demetrius — iii. 

made your other love, Demetrius — — iii- 

Demetrins, I will keep nry word — — iii. 

in love unto Demetrius, I told Mm . . — iii- 

with Demetrius- Benotatraid — iii. 

Demetrius up with bitter wrong {rep.) — iii. 

where art thou, proud Demetrius? .. — iii. 

I'll tind Demetrius, and revenge — iii- 

this Demetrius is, this Helena — iv- 

Demetrius, thereby to have defeated — iv. 

and 1 have found Demetrius like — iv. 

Demetrius, thou dost over- ween. . Titus Andron. ii. 

Stuprum— CMron — Demetrius — iv. 

Demetrius, here's the son of Lucius.. — iv. 

hadhenot reason, lord Demetrius? .. — iv. 



DEM 

nEMETHIUS— 
1 take them, Cliirnn, nnd TtvmcMxia.Tilut And. v. 2 

villains. I'liir.. II :iml IVnielriUii! .. — V. a 
Chiron iiiul IVim-li ins: tliev nivislied — V. 3 
cursed (.'lunni iin.l Dii.Ktrfiis were they — V. 3 

DK.Ml-.VTl.AS llHMleini-iitl;isor..ln/oiii/<S-C/fo. i. a 

nKMK'.\N:\O.N-likeu.Unru-.n.non.7V.»i.((/-i.-A. iv. 3 

UKMl-DKVU.-iind this ik iniMUvil ..7V«ipc»(, v. 1 

yon, I prav, demand tliut denii-devil ..tUliMu, v. 2 

DKMr-tiOD-tlluse.m the iIemi-tMtl.;V<'.i./-.r Men. i. 3 

likeiidenii--.«l here sil 1 in .... Loiv's. /-.;..«(, iv. 3 

whiit diini-:;oil h:itli emne so near. jWer.o/' (Vii. iii. 'I 

I)K .M l-.\ ATI' li 1. D— luid demi-uatiired. llumW, iv. 7 

UE.Ml-r.MiADlSE— 

this cither IMen, ileini-paradiso nichardll. ii. 1 

DE.MlSi;-<kniise to any cliild Richard III. iv. I 

I)E.Ml-Wi_H,Vi;S— and demi-wolves ..Muehelh, iii. 1 

I)i:.\lt)lSi:i,Li:-sii;.'e .lemoiselleilat h.llvnryK v. 2 

l)i;.MOX-if that same demon, tlnit hath — ii. 2 

Ihv demi)n, that's thv sj.irit K\m'h...lul.^-Cleo. ii. 3 

l)K.\H).\sri! A BMO-n'uldedemnn-tralile. ()//„//„, iii. 1 

DliMO.NSl'ltATK-demoii-tiate tllem...l/r.s ir,7M, \> 

dem.>ns!nile the lite ol'sueh a hattle. . //f;i/ v ''. iv. 2 

that sliall demonstrate these .[niek. VVmoii ./.IW. i. I 

lliv outward ueti.m doth demon.strate ..Ullwllo, i. 1 

other |)r"ol's tliat do demonstrate thinly — iii. 3 

ui::.M().\>ii;Ari;u- 

heavenand earth together demonstrated. HiimW, i. 1 
Ui;.M(i\S I'll All N'G— 

yon ilenionstratinf.' a careless . ... As you Like it, i>i. 2 
Dli.Mti.NsritATlUN— 

demonstration of the working Love'sL.Lotl^ i. 2 

the iMieen to auv demoustration of grief y. Lear, iv. 3 
nK.MuN'STIi.VTIVE— 

in everv hraneh ti-ulv demonstrative. . Heitri/y. ii. 4 
UKM II KE-demure trtivel of regard. Tirplflh Niffht^ ii. S 

never any of these demure boys 'Zllcunjll'. iv. 3 

demvire eontidenee this iiausiuBly..//f»r.v (';//. i. 2 

DE.MUUELY— look demurely. . Mcrch. nf yeiiice.n. 2 

(Irums demurely wake the 8leeiK;rs../lnJ.<5t'/t'o. iv. 9 

DE.MUUINti— no honour demuring upon — iv. 13 

DE.MY-l'Ul'PET— you demy-puppets., i'em/ws/, v. 1 

UEN— the murkiest den, the most — i v. 1 

his rage, rcpasture for his den . . Love's L.Losl, iv. 1 

at your den, sirrah, with your King John, ii. 1 

shall thev seek the lion iu hie den? . . — v. 1 

from elxm den with fell 2HenrijIV.v. !> 

heast that would usurp their den ..illenryVl. ii. 2 

and battle for their dens — ii. 5 

and citizens to their dens . . Antony ^- Cleopatra, y. i 

and thou look down into this den. Titus Andron. ii. 4 

should nature biuld so foul a den .... — iv. 1 

DENAY — no jilace. hide no denay.. Tu'elflh Night, ii. 4 

DENAYED— let hira he denayed ....iHenryVl. i. 3 

DENLVL— word of denial in (rep.).. Merry Wit^es, i. 1 

he's fortified against any denial .. TwelfihKigia, i. .'i 

in your denial I would find no sense — i. S 

that gracious denial which .... Meas.for Meas. iii. 1 

seem to have us make denial Ati's i^elt, i. 2 

never make denial, I must and will. Tuin. a/Sh. ii. 1 

your grant, or your denial XHenry VL iii. 3 

oe not ceased with slight denial . . Timon o/Ath. ii. 1 

mav never he held by you denials . . Coriolanus, v. 3 

mate denials increase your services. Cymbeline, ii. 3 

DENIED— all these matters denied . A/erry Wives, i. 1 

be not denied access Twelflh Night, i. 4 

denied me mine own piu-se — v. 1 

and not denied by himself Meas. for Meas. iv. 2 

it must not be denied but 1 am Much Ado, i. 3 

thou wouldst have denied Beatrice — v. 4 

though so deuied fair harbotir in.. Love's L.Losl, ii. 1 
if it he denied, will much impeach. Mcr. of Ven. iii. 3 

how if the kiss be denied? AsyouLikeil.iv. 1 

Kloreiice is denied before he comes All's Well, i. 2 

miracles have by the greatest been denied — ii. I 
although 'twere needful I denied.. Winter's Tale, i. 2 

lest she should be denied — ii. 2 

the child-bed privile(fe denied — iii. 2 

you denied to tight with me thisother — v. 2 

1 durst have denied that Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

in his blows denied my house for his — ii. 2 

first, he denied you had in him — iv. 2 

and I denied to enter into mv house? — iv. 4 
denied thyself a Faulconbridge? .... King John, i. 1 
I am denied to sue my livery here . . Richard II. ii. 3 

ottomies are denied me — ii. 3 

but faintly, and would be denied .... — t. 3 

not with siich strength denied 1 Henry IF. i. 3 

we are denied access unto his — iv. 1 

when ever yet was your appeal denied? — iv. 1 

of speech is utterly denied me IHenrylF. iv. 4 

80 denied, but your request Henry V. v. 2 

Minos, that deiued our course 3Henry I'l. v. 6 

man that has denied the force Henry Fill. i. 2 

whom Troy hath still denied .. Troilus ^ Cress, iii. 3 
and yet was denied. How? (rep.). Timon of Ath. iii. 2 

denied that honourable man? — iii. 2 

should ne'er have denied his occasion — iii. 2 

and he, that's onrc denied, will — iii. 2 

all denied him. How? have they denied — iii. 3 
and Ix; denied such common grace .. — iii. .^ 
you, ere now, denied the osker? .... Coriolanus, ii. 3 

so it cannot l>c denied — iv. .'j 

hath denied my access to thee — v. 2 

sums of gold, which you denied.. Ju/i'iu Cipsar, iv. 3 
poy my legions, which you denied me — iv. 3 

I uenied you not — iv. 3 

I that denied thee gidd, will give .... — iv. 3 
the which you hoth<lenicd ..Antony ^Cleopatra, ii. 2 
though it eaTinot lie <lenied what .. .. — ii. 6 

presently denied him rivality — iii. 5 

will not 1)C denied vour highness'.... — v. 2 
1 will not lie denied: sweet heart . . Tilus Andron. i. 2 
would Ik; denied of your fair eoiirteBy../'<'rii./<'i, ii. 3 
demanding after you, denied me tu come. L«ar, iii. 2 
his grievance, or lie much tlenied . . liomeo ^Jul. i, 1 
anil denied his access to me Hamlet, ii. I 

DENIEll— no, not a denier. 7"aminy ijC S/ircu', 1 (ind.) 

I'll not pay a denier i Henry If. iii. 3 

my dukedom to a beggarly denier. . Richard III. i, 2 



L 175 J 



I)ENIES-a gentlewoman denies all.iWe«./«rA/ea. v. I 
wonliNt deny, denies thee vantage.. — v. 1 

she not denies it: whv scek'st Mueh Adn,'\v. 1 

and otlier, he cknies iiie now ..Comedy of lirr. iv. 3 
the (^oMMiiitli here denies that saying — V. I 

whatsoever n man denies, you arc .. — v. 1 

thai Alacdiiir denies his person Macbeth, iii. 4 

than we, denies all this King John, ii. 2 

denies tlie yi.ldin^r ol' her np? ..Troilus/i Cress. 11. 2 
woHiauhood dunies inv tongue ..Titus Andron. ii. 3 

does it not, Hamlet denies It '■•,/iW,v.2 

now he ikiiies it i'aintiv, and laughs . . .jihello. iv. 1 

DENAlAKK-niajistv ol' hiiried Denmark. 7/«m/W, i. I 
is the throne olDeiunark to thv father.. — i. 2 
thou-h wiliiie-dv i eame to Denmark.... — i. 2 
thine eve look like a friend on Denmark — i. 2 

be as oiirseirin Uennuirk. Madam — i. 2 

joeiind health that Denmark drinks to day — i. 2 
the main voice of IXnmark goes withal — i. 3 

is rotten in the state of Deniiiark — i. 1 

so the wliole ear rif Denmark is by — i. .'j 

not the ro> al bed of Denmark he a couch — i. .'> 

I am sure, it iiiav be so in Denmark — i. .'j 

dwelling in all Denmark, but lie's an .. — i. .■> 

prison, my lord! J)L'nniark's a prison — ii. 2 

Denmark being one oft lie worst — ii. 2 

for my uncle is kill;; of i^enmark — ii. 2 

comeet thou to heard me in Denmark?.. — ii. 2 
himself for your siircession in Deiuuark? — iii. 2 

the beauteous majesty of Denmark? — iv. fi 

why, here ill Denmark — v. 1 

reasons, importing Denmark's health.... — v. 2 

is right welcome back to Denmark — v. 2 

in Denmark's crown have worn — v. 2 

DENNIS-saint Dennis to saint Cupidl.LoBs'L.L. v. 2 

llola, Dennis ! Calls your As you Like it, i. 1 

St. Dennis be my speedl Henry y. v. 2 

between St. Dennis and St. George . . — v. 2 
no longer on saint Dennis will we ...IHenryTI. i. 6 
saint Dennis bless this happy stratagem! — iii. 2 

DENNY— where is he, Denny? ....Hennil'IlI. v. 1 

DENOTE— better to denote her . . Merry Wires, iv. G 
acts denote the unreasonable . . Romeo ^Juliet, iii. 3 

that can denote me truly Humlel^ i. 2 

his own courses will denote him so Othello, iv. 1 

DENOTED— denoted a foregone conclusion — iii. 3 

DKNOTEMENT— 
denotement [Co;. K't!(.-devoteraent] of her — ii. 3 
close denotements rCo(. A'7i(. -delations].. — iii. 3 

DENOUNCE-will denounce a curse .King John, iii. 1 
denouncercoi. K;!(.-if not denounced]. /J)i(. ■J- C/. iii. 7 

DENOUNCED— denounced against.. «ic/iard ///. i. 3 
[C'o/.A'n/.] if not denounced against. ^iK.iJ-Weo. iii. 7 

DENOUNCING— plainly denouncing John, iii. 4 

DENUDE— denude [A'»i/.-deuy't]. . TiinonofAth. iv. 3 

DENUNCIATION— 
we do the denunciation lack .... Meas. for Meas. i. 3 

DENY— how to deny thera Tempest, i. 2 

to be yoiu- fellow, you may deny me — iii. 1 

I can deny by a circumstance. . Two Gen. of Ver. i. 1 

shall you ask, that I'll deny TwelflhNighl, iii. 4 

will you deny me now? — iii. 4 

do not deny : heshrew his soul — iv. 1 

ay husband; can he that deny? — v. 1 

you must not now deny it is — v. 1 

I not deny, the jury, passing.... Meas. for Meas. ii. 1 
which though thou wouldst deny ... — v. 1 

could she here deny the story Much Ado, iv. 1 

I confess notliing, nor I deuynothing — iv. 1 

you kill me to deny it... ■ — iv. 1 

more, masters, than you can deny . . — iv. 2 

I would not deny you — v. 4 

no bed-room, me deny, for lying . . Mid. N.'s Dr. ii. 3 
wherefore doth Lysarider deny your love — iii. 2 
if it were, I deny her virginity .... Love's L.Lost, i. 1 

and deny himself for Jove — iv. 3 (verses) 

if you deny to dance, let's hold — v. 2 

you may not deny it — v. 2 

if this thou do deny, let om- hands — v. 2 

or more than this, I would deny .... — y. 2 

you must not deny me Merchant of Venice, ii. 2 

the state, if they deny him justice — iii. 2 

authority, and power deny not — iii. 2 

the duke cannot deny the course of law — iii. 3 

not to deny this imposition — iii. 4 

if you deny it let the danger lii;ht .. — iv. 1 
if you deny me, fle upon .vom- law ! . . — iv. I 
not to deny me, and to pardon me . . — iv. 1 

in love shall not deny me this — iv. 1 

not for my heart deny it hira — v. 1 

I would deny it, but you see my finger — v. 1 
the which I did deny him, and suil'ered — v. 1 
I'll not deny him any thing I have .. — y. 1 
deny so fair and excellent ladles . . As you Like it, i. 2 

or else by him my love deny — iv. 3 (letter) 

Ia<:k language to deny when they — All's Well, ii. 1 

do all thev deuv her? an' they — ii. 3 

will noiiglit deny that she'll — iii. 7 

I neither eau, uor will deny but ..., 

if she deny to wed, I'll crave 7'< 

yonder he is; deny him, forswear.. . 
if they deny to come, swinge me ... 

if I then deny it, 'tis none of Winter's Tateji. 2 

whicli to deny, concerns more than.. — iii. 2 
thou didst deny the gold's receipt. Comet/v o/ £r. ii.2 
that I did deny my wife and house — iii. 1 

dost thou deny the bag of gold? — iv. 4 

though most dishonestly he doth deny it 

HO to deny this thain 

can you deny it? I think, I had (rep.) 
I thfiik I did, sir, I deny it not ... 

to hear the men deny it 

deny me this, and an eternal curse 
the poor heart would fain deny . . . 
as faithfully as I deny the devil... 
to do me wrong deny their ottice . 

and deny his youth the rich 

so ungrateful, you deny me that .... — y. 7 

and (Icny his otfercd homage Richard II. ii. 1 

own tongue deny my Bocreu state .... — iv. I 



— V. 3 
■'ofSh. ii. 1 

— V. 1 
_ V. 2 



V. 1 
V. 1 
V. 1 

.Macbeth, iii. r> 
.... — iv. 1 

— y. 3 

.King John, i. 1 

— iv. 1 

— iv. 2 



DEP 

DENY— decrees, and statutos, I deny.Hi'Winn/ /;. iv. 1 
ray liege, I ilid deny no prisoners ....\ Henry 11'. i. 3 
why, yet he doth deny hiH prisoners.. — i. 3 

a whoremaster, that 1 utterly deny.. — ii. i 
1 denv your major; if yon will deiiy — ii. i 
thon «|jeak'st as if 1 would deny .... — V. 4 

and would ileiiv it, 1 would make him — v. 4 

canst thou ileuv it? did not 2HenryIV.i\.\ 

thv hook-oath; denv it, ilthon canst — ii. I 
do vmi think, 1 would deny her?.... — ii. 4 
and iiieaiis to hoot, denv it to a king? — iii. I 

if she deny the appearance of Henry I', v. 2 

Hhe will denv tliv suit, before illenryVI. v. 3 

■wilt thou lie. IV thv parentage? — v. 4 

deuv me not, 1 |ir\ thee — v. 4 

dost thou ileuy thy father — v. 4 

his son am I; deny it, if you can ..2HenryI'I. iv. 2 
to testify it; therelbre, deny it luit .. — iv. 2 

to deny their hail — v. 1 

if thou deny, their blood upon thy . . 3He/iry ff. ii. 2 

in justice cannot well deny — iii. 2 

it were dishonour to deny it her .... — iii. 2 

can you deny all this? Richard III. i. I 

you may deny that you were — i. 3 

and then deny her aiding hand — i. 3 

if she deny, lord Hastings, go with him — iii. 1 
if yon deny them, all the land will .. — iii. 7 

m.v lord, he doth deny to come — v, 3 

not to den.y her that a woman of . . Henry VIII. ii. 2 
I do deny it: the king isjiresent .... — ii. 4 

I dare, and must deny it — iii. 2 

a suit which you must not deny me — v. 2 

my lord, do not deny hira . . TroUus ^ Cressitla , iv. 2 
does deny him, in respect of his. . Timon of Ath. iii. 2 
[Kn/.] this beggar, and deny 't that . . — iv. 3 

yet dare I never deny your Coriolanus, i 6 

our voices, we ought not to den.y him — ii. 3 
we may den.v him yet. And will deny — ii. 3 
whichgreat nature cries, deny not .. — v. 3 

which you deny already — v. 3 

more strength than thou hast to deny't — v. 3 
though thou deny me a matter... /l/Wony^' Ceo. i. 2 

do delay, they not deny — ii. 1 

the wise powers deny us for our good — ji. 1 
yes, something you can deny for .... — ii. 6 

there I deny ray land service — ii. 6 

if thou dost deny thou hast (rep.) . . Cymbeline, ii. 4 

your highness cannot deny — v. 6 

valiant youth, deny 't agiiin — v. 5 

who should deny it? come, .voung one. P«rtcle», iv. 3 
which if we should deny, the most just.. — v. 1 
what I should deny (as tnis I would .... Leur, ii. 1 

would he deny his letter? — ii. 1 

to deny thou know'st me? — ii.2 

deny to speak with me? they are sick? .. — ii. 4 
is your name Goneril? She cannot deny — iii. G 
you all will now deny to dance . . liomeo ^Juliet, i. 5 
deny thy father and refuse thy name — ii. 2 

fain deny what I have spoke — ii.2 

do not deny to Mm, that you love me — iv. 1 
if you deny your griefs to your friend.. Ilamirt, iii. 2 

your grief, or you deny me right — iv. 5 

1 should deny or stand so mammering. OtfieHo, iii. 3 

I will deny tnee nothing (rep.) — iii. 3 

shall I deny you? no; tarewell, my lord — iii. 3 
for to deny each article with oath — v. 2 

DENYING— and denying him.... r(re/MAV»/,/, iii. 4 
which 1 denying, they fell sick . . jV«-. o/ /'eji/ce , iii. 4 
sickness, deii.ying thee anything.. Winier'sTale, iv. 1 
WTong me more, sir, in denying it.Cnnedyoflirr. iv. I 
of your country, in denjingrae a kiss. i/e«rv r. v. 2 
do more, sir, than denying that .... Richard lll.i. 3 

DENY'ST— if thou deny'st it Richard II. iv. 1 

since thou deny'st the gentle king . .illenry VI. ii. 2 
to dogs what tliou deny'st to men.Timon of Ath. iv. 3 
if thon deny'st the least syllable Lear, ii. 2 

DEO— laus deo, bone intelligo Love's L. Lost, v. I 

DEPAKT-vcnture to depart. Tuo Gen. of Verona, iv. 3 

at mv depart, I gave this — v. 4 

and will by andiiy depart Tnelfh Night, iii. 4 

I pr'vthec, foolish Greek, depart from me — iv. I 
wlieu you dcjiart from hira .... Mras.for Meas. iv. 1 
hearing how hastily .you are to depart — iv. 3 

but when you depart from me Much Ado, i. I 

why then, depart in peace, and let .. — iii. 3 
I humbly give you leave to depart .. — v. 1 
sigiiior, and depart wdien you bid me — v. 2 
therefore I will depart unkissed — — v. 2 
mueli rather had depart withal ..Lot>e'» t.Loj/, ii. 1 

we shall be rich ere we depart — v. 2 

well mocked, depart away with shame — v. 2 
embrace the occasion to depart.. iVercA. of Venice, i. 1 
therefore, tremble, and depart ....As you Like it, v. 1 
when you depart, and save your .. Wiuler'sTale, i. 2 

depart', and vet partake no venom — ii. 1 

let them depart, proceed — V. 3 

ruled by me: depart iu patience. fomn/i/o/Err. iii. I 

I will depart in <iuiet — iii. I 

not I in rage depart from thence? .... — iv. 4 

therefore depart, and leave him — v. 1 

he (piiet, and depart, thou Shalt — v. 1 

come like sliadows, so depart Macbeth, iv. I 

to him, and so depart in iitace King John, i. I 

nay, vet depart not so Richard II. i. 2 

depart the chamber, and leave us ..2IUnrylV. iv. 4 

let him depart; his passinirt HemyV.w.'i 

cleared, and then we will ilepart .... 1 Henry VI. i. 3 
now, (|uiet sonl, depiu-t when heaven — ui. 2 
and then depart to Paris, to the king — iii. 2 

at my depart for franee 2HenryVI. i. 1 

if I depart from thee, I cannot live .. — iii. 2 

our iileasiire. one of them depart — iv. 1 

of vour loss, and his depart ZHenry VI. li. I 

highness would depart the field — ii.2 

at my dejiart, these were his very words — iv. 1 

then both depart to him — iv. 1 

let him depart, before wc need — v. 4 

that von ik|iart, and lay no hands.. /KcAarrf ///. i. 4 
if todepart in silence, or bitterly — — iii. 7 
let us depart, I pray you Troilus <$■ Cresiida, v. 2 



DEP 



DEPART-ero wc depart, wc'U share. rmioKO/^KA. i, I 

a fool of Mice: depart — iv. 3 

bv my limioiir deimrt imtouched. Julius Cfvstir, iii. 1 
■with this I depart; that as I slow. ... — iii. 2 
goi"id ciunitrymen, let me depart alone — iii. 2 

lint a man depart, save I alone — iii. 2 

tlie loatlmcss to depart would grow. . . CijmbeUnc, i. 2 

bcttcreiieer ere you depart — iii. 6 

depart reeling with too much drink — v. 4 

madam, depart at pleasure TititaAndronicus^ v. 2 

of voiir hi\cs, he would depai-t Puricles, i. :) 

vet, ere vnu shall depart — i. 3 

he must lienee deiwrt t.) Tyre — iii. (Gower) 

should so depart from home, and not send. Lcnr, ii. 1 

ere I depart his house — iii..') 

for this time all the rest dep.art . . lioineo^-JidiL't, i. 1 
on pain of death, all men depart .... — i. 1 

.A'our grievances. 'ir else depart — iii. 1 

palace of dim niplitdeiiart again — v. 3 

teach \-on to drink deep, ere vou depart .Hamlet, i. 2 

DEl'ARTED-frnm thee dejiarted. . H'inlpr'sTalc. i. 2 

hath willingly departed with a pavt.KhigJolui, ii. 2 

fare with your departed souls? iHinryri. iv. 7 

christian peace to souls departed . . Heiirij VIII. iv, 2 

if I departed not, and left nim . . Romeo Si- Juliet, v. :i 

out a maid never departed \woxQ. Hamlet, iv. .5 (song) 

DEPiVItTED'ST— thou deiiartcd'st. Comeity of Err. i. I 

DEPARTING— praise in departing Tempest, iii. 3 

the iirst departing of the king Richard II. ii. 1 

Icnolling a departing friend 2HenryIl'. i. 1 

like life and death's departing ZHenry VI. ii. 6 

BEPART'ST— thoudepart'st hence.^n*. f^-Cleo. iv. 12 

DEPARTURE— thy departure.. Two Gen. of Ver. iii. 1 

gave it him at his departure — iv. 4 

frant them a fair departure Mer. of Venice, i. 2 
amgladof your departure . ...As ijou Like it, iVi. 2 
this morning your departure henee . . All's IVcll, iv. ,3 

did expect nly hence departure lIlntcr'sTale, i. 2 

knew of his departivre, as you know — iii. 2 
which is another spur to my departure — iv. 1 
on their departure most of all show. A'/wg- John, iii. 4 
a^vry upon your lord's departure .... Ric/iard II. ii. 2 

more than your lord's departure — ii. 2 

licence your departure witli your IHenrylV. i. 3 

your wives of your departure hence.. — iii. 1 
at the time of my departure thence . . — iv. 1 

cause of your abrupt departure 1 Henry VI. ii. 3 

shall ring thy dire departure out — iv. 2 

have I since your departure had . . Ricliard III. v. 3 

if they sniffer our departure Antony S^ Cleo. i. 2 

needs must know of her departure . . Cymbeline,iv. 3 
to question of your king's departure.. ..Pericles, i. 3 

ancf laughs at my departure Lear, i. 4 

DEPECHE— depSche, quickly Merry Wives, i. 4 

DEPEND— my zenith doth depend upon. 7'em;)e.s'(,i. 2 
that more depends on it than . . Meas. for Meas. iv. 2 

there's more depends on this Mer. of Venice, iv. 1 

whereon the likelihood depends . . As you Lil<e itj i. 3 
bidding me depend upon thy stars.. Aw? g- John, iii. 1 

yom- right depends not on his life ZHenry VI. 1. 2 

depend upon him, I mean? (rep.). Trail. <§- Cres. iii. 1 
he that depends upon your favours . . CoriolanuSj i. 1 
■we on, and not depend on you? . .JidiusC(esar,\\\. 1 
wholly depends on your aooie.. .. Antony /^Cleo. i. 2 
but oirr jealousy does yet depend . . Cymbeline, iv. 3 
poor ■wretches that depend on greatness — v. 4 

on whose grace you may depend Pericles, iii. 3 

that shall still depend, to be such Lear, i. 4 

fate on more days dotli depend.. fiomso ^Juliet, iii. 1 
for on his choice depends the safety .... Hamlet j i. 3 

upon whose weal depend and rest — iii. 3 

if I depend on tlie issue? Othello, i. 3 

and wit depends on dilatory time — ii. 3 

DEPENDANCE-dependiince upon. Trail. fyCres. ii. 2 
DEPENDANCY— adependancy..il/eas./or Jl/rai. v. 1 

him your sweet dependancy Antony fy Cleo, v. 2 

whom there is no more de\}endiiucy.. Cymbeline, ii. 3 
DEPENDANT— free dependant., il/eas./orilfeas. iv. 3 
tliereon dependant, for your brother's — v. 1 
is, rewarding my dependants. . . . Love's L.Lost, iii. 1 
the eurse dependant on those that. Trail. ^ Cress, ii. 3 
all his dependants, which laboured. Timon ofAth. i, 1 

as well in the general dependants Lear^ i. 4 

with some other of the lord's dependants — iii. 7 
DEPENDED— late on hopes depended . . Othello, i. 3 

DEPENDER— to be depender on Cymbeline, i. 6 

DEPENDING— not-depending. . Two Gen. of Ver. i. 3 
life, so stiukingly depending?. . Meas. for Meas. iii. 2 

depending on tlie caskets Merchant of Venice, i. 2 

on you depending, counts it your . . King John, iv. 2 

the care on thee depending, hath . .iHenrylV. iv. 4 

whom depending, their obedience . . Coriolanus, iii. 1 

nicely depending on their brands. . . . Cymbeline, ii. 4 

DEPLORE- tears to you deplore, rwci/i/i Night, iii. 1 

DEPLORING— deploring dump. TwoGen. of Ver. iii. 2 

DEPOPULATE— depopulate the city ..Coriol. iii. 1 

DEPOSE— I'll depose I had him ..Meas. for Meas. v. I 

to our law depose him in the j ustice. .ii/cAarrf //. i, 3 

possessed now to depose thyself — ii. 1 

cannot depose the deputy elected by — iii. 2 
may my glories and my state depose — iv. 1 

depose me? if thou dost it half 'iHenrylV. ii. 4 

lives, that Henry shall depose (rep.)..->HenryVI. i. 4 
'twas he that made you to depose.. . .ZHenry VI. i. 2 

loath to depose the child Hicliardlll. iii. 7 

DEPOSED— kin^ purged and deposed. A'ing- Jotin, ii. 2 
our deposed bodies to the ground?. . Kiclmrd II. iii. 2 
been deposed, some slain in war (rep.) — iii. 2 

must he be deposed? the king — iii. 3 

be deposed? Depressed he is (rep.) .. — iii. 4 

say, king Richard is deposed? — iii. 4 

deem that you are worthily deposed — iv. 1 
Bolingbroke deposed thine intellect? — v. 1 
be deposed, and, shortly, murdered ..\HenryIV. i. 3 
short time after, he deposed the king — iv. 3 
king Pepin, wliieh deposed Childoriek..Henr!/r. i. 2 

deposed his neplie w Richard I Henry VI. ii. A 

deposed the rightful king iHenry VI. ii. 2 

and bashful Henry deposed ZHenry VI. i. 1 

Henry shall be so deposed. Deposed — i. 1 



Li!!!J 

DEPOSED—her Henry is deposed ..ZHenry VI. iii. 1 
the king, king Edward hath deposed — iii. 1 

by you deposed, you quake like Ricliard III. i. 3 

triumvirate should he deposed.. /lK/o«!/.S-Cteo. iii. G 
DEPOSING— deposing thee before ..Ricliard II. ii. 1 

containing the deposing of a king — iv. I 

for the deposing of a rightful king .. — v. 1 

DEPOSITARIES— ray depositaries Lear, ii. 4 

DEPR A VATION-for depravation . Trail. ^ Cress, v. 2 

DEPRAVE— deprave, and slander Mitch Ada, v. 1 

that's riot depraved, or depraves. Timon of Athens, i . 2 
DKPli.'VVED— that's not depraved, or '- i. 2 

of how ilenraved a quality Lear, ii. 4 

DEPRESSED- depressed lie is Ricliard II. iii. 4 

DEPRIVE— curiosity of nations to deprive. Len?-, i. 2 

deprive your sovereignty of reason Hamlet, i. 4 

DEPRIV!ED— deprived him of his ..iHenrylV. iv. 3 
deprived of honour and inheritance..! Henry VI. ii. a 

that hath deprived me of your grace I ear, i. 1 

is wretchedness deprived that benefit .... — iv. 6 
deprived of supple government . . Romeo^ Juliet, iv. 1 
most ingenious sense deprived tliee oP... Hamlet, v. 1 
DEPTH— depth of tliis knavery . . Taming ofSh. v. 1 
raised from depth of under ground ..iHenry VI. i. 2 

to make less the depth of grief 3 Henry VI. ii. 1 

but far beyond my depth Henry VIII. iii. 2 

sounded all the depths and shoals . . — iii. 2 
which is past depth to those that. Timon of Ath. iii. .'i 
to the ■whole depth of mv tale . . Romeo ^ Juliet, ii. 4 

diimned beneath all depth in hell Othello, v. 2 

DEPUTATION— his deputation... Veos../brA/eos. i. 1 

by deputation could not so soon be..l HcnrylV. iv. 1 

that the absent king in deputation left — iv. 3 

thy topless deputation he puts on. Troilusfy Cress, i. 3 

DEPUTE— to depute Cassio m Othello's. OWirfto, iv. 2 

DEPUTED— nor the deputed sword. Mea.forUea. ii. 2 

DEPUTIES— deputies of heaven! KtngJo/m, iii. 1 

DEPUTING— deputing Cassio in his .... Ol/ieUa, iv. 1 

DEPUTY— and the new deputy.. Meas. /or Meas. i. 3 

make friends to the strict deputy .... — i. 3 

this outward-sainted deputy — iii. 1 

and the corrupt deputy sealed — iii. 1 

which we have sent to the deputy . . — iii. 2 

he must before the deiiuty, sir — iii. 2 

the deputy cannot abide a whoremaster — iii. 2 
what is the news from this good deputy? — iv. 1 

it is a bitter deputy — iv. 2 

sworn to the duke or to the deputy? — iv. 2 

satisfy the deputy with the visage . . — iv. 3 
hath yet the deputy sent my brother's — iv. 3 

to this pernicious caitiff deputj' — v. 1 

great deputy, the welkiu's.LoTC'sL.Lo.s^i. 1 (letter) 

our own great deputy King John, ii. 2 

his deputy anointed in his sight Ricliard II. i. 2 

cannot depose the elected deputy .... — iii . 2 

captain, steward, deputy elect — iv. 1 

be the deputy's wife of the ward IHenrylV. iii. 3 

before master Tisick, the deputy. ...2H(;»rif/r. ii. 4 
deputy unto that gracious king .... 1 Henry VI. v. 3 
whose far unworthy deputy I am ..iHenry VI. iii. 2 
his contract by deputy in France. iiicAorrf ///. iii. 7 

then deputy of Ireland Henry VIII. ii. 1 

you sent me deputy for Ireland — iii. 2 

DERBY — Lancaster, and Derbv (rep.). Richard II. i. 3 

DERACINATE-that should deracinate. Henry V. v. 2 

rend and deracinate the unity . . Troilus <§■ Cress, i. 3 

DERCETAS— I am called Dercetas ..Ant.^ Cleo. v. 1 

DERIDES— at last shame them derides Lear, i. 1 

DERISION — scorn, and derision . .Mea. /or il/ea. iii. 2 

in a poor maid's eyes, with your derision! — iii. 2 

to bait me with this foul derision? . . — iii. 2 

all this derision shall seem a dream. . — iii. 2 

I have derision med'cinable. Troilus ^ Cressida, iii. 3 

DERIVATION— in the derivation of.. Henry V. iii. 2 

mv derivation was from ancestors .... Pericles, v. 1 

DERIVATIVE— 't is a derivative. Winter's Tale, iii. 2 

DERIVE— indignation derives itself.. TweZ/ilAiV. iii. 4 

this shame derives itself from Much Ado, iv. 1 

this doctrine I derive (rep.) Love'sL.Losl, iv. 3 

or, if we did derive it from As you Like ii, i. 3 

she derives her honesty, and achieves.. .4H's Well, i. 1 

from our acts we them derive — ii. 3 

things that would derive me ill will . . — v. 3 
free face put on; derive a liberty.. Winter's Tale, i. 2 

derives from heaven his quarrel iHenrylV. i. 1 

and blood, derives itself to me — iv. 4 

derive this : come Troilus i?- Cressida, ii . 3 

I should much derive from it.. Timon of Athens, iii. 4 
of the war derive some pain from you — iv. 3 

till you can derive from him better Lear, i. 2 

DERIVED— you are well derived. Two Gen of Ver. v. 2 

a gentleman, and well derived — v. 4 

this abuse, whence 't is derived. . Meas. for Meas. v. 1 
I am, my lord, as well derived as he. Mid. N.Dr. i. 1 
were not derived corruptly ! . . Merch. of Venice, ii. 9 
a wretched Florentine, derived tiom.. All's Well, v. 3 

conceit is still derived tirom Richard II. ii. 2 

how is this derived? iHenrylV. i. 1 

every slight and false derived cause. . — iv. 1 
seat of France, derived from Edward . . Henry V. i. I 

evenly derived from liis most — ii. 4 

by my mother I derived am from . . 1 Henry VI. ii. 5 
derived from famous Edmund Langley — ii. 5 
of whom derived, were shame enougli. SHenry VI. i. 4 

had to him derived your anger Henry VIII. ii. 4 

from whose help I derived hberty.. Timon of Ath. i. 2 

brave son, derived from honourable.JuliusCo'sar, ii. 1 

DEROGAT'E— you cannot derogate ..Cymbeline, ii. 1 

being foolish, do not derogate — ii. 1 

and from her derogate body never Lear, i. 4 

DEROGATION— no derogation iu'thCymbeline, ii. 1 
DEROGATED Y-name you derogately.y4n(.<5-C/r'o.ii.2 
DES ARTLESS — most desartless man. MmcA Ado, iii. 3 
DESCANT— too harsh a descant. Two Gen. of Ver. i. 2 

descant on mine o^vn deformity Richard III. i. 1 

I'll make a holy descant — iii. 7 

DESCEND— let her descend (rep.). Merry Wives, iv. 5 

the flame will back descend — v. 5 

descend, for you must be my. . . . Mer. of Venice, ii. (i 
move indeed; descend, and take. . Winter's Tale, v. 3 



DESCEND— 'tis time; descend.... Winter's Tale, v. 3 

we will descend, and fold him Richard II. i. Z 

pardon me, that 1 descend so low 1 Henry IV. i. 3 

it shall descend with better quiet . .iHenry IV. iv. 4 

let the inheritance descend unto Henry V. i. 2 

I descend, to give thee answer 1 Henry VI. v. 3 

descend to darkness, and the biu-ning.2Henry VI. i. 4 

of York, descend my throne ZHenry VI. i. 1 

our Henry lineally descends — iii. 3 

descend, and open your uncharged. Timon afAih. v. 5 

descend, and keep your words — v. 5 

shall I descend? and will (rep.).. Julius Cresar, iii. 2 
that latel.y didst descend into tliis. TilusAndran. ii. 4 

a word ; descend : brother, I say Lear, ii. 1 

one kiss, and I'll descend Rameo^ Juliet, iii. 5 

why I descend into tliis bed of death — v. 3 

DESCENDED-oaths descended into. Two Gen.afV. v. 4 

hadst thou descended from another. As you Like it, i. 2 

as I descended ? Ay. Hark! wholies..il/ac6ei:A, ii. 2 

being descended of Blithild Henry V. i. 2 

I am descended of a gentler blood . . 1 Henry VI. v. 4 
being all descended to the labouring. 2Henri/ VI. iii. 2 

my wife descended of the Lacies — iv. 2 

descended from the duke of Clarence' — iv. 4 

one thus descended, that hath Coriolanus, ii. 3 

descended of so many royal Vings. Antony <5- CVeo. v. 2 
'mougst men, like a descended god . . Cymbeline, i. 7 

as well descended as thyself — v. a 

DESCENDING-descendingnowfrom.BtcAardJ/. iv. 1 

thou camest from good descending? Pericles, v. 1 

DESCENSION— a heavy descension [Xn/.-declen- 

sion] it was Jove's ease iHenrylV. ii. 2 

DESCENT— and poor descent. . Two Gen. of Ver. iii. 2 

some fom' or five descents since All's Well, ii i . 7 

such descent, of such possessions. Tarn, of Sh.2 (ind.) 
by the glorious worth of my descent. i?icAard II i. 1 

my inheritance of free descent — ii. 3 

king, the third of that descent 1 Henry VI. ii. 5 

whence you spring by lineal descent — iii. 1 

that he is near you in descent iHenry VI. iii. 1 

reputing of his high descent — iii . 1 

a preachment of your Iiigh descent ?..31ffcnr!/K/. i. 4 

show thy descent by gazing — . ii. 1 

that I ■was not ignoble of descent .... — iv. 1 
my master's heirs in true descent., fl/c/iard J//, iii. 2 

Neptune's ear in Ms descent Troilus ^- Cress, v. 2 

how of descent as good as we? Cymbeline, v. .5 

never relished of a base descent Pericles, ii. 5 

to the descent and dust beneath, thy feet. . Lear, v. 3 
their head, their true descent. . . . Romeo & Juliet, v. 3 
DESCRIBE— I will describe them. Afer. of Venice, i. 2 
how he describes himself! .... Troilus i§- Cressida, ii. 3 
by that the poet here describes . . Titus Andron. iv. 1 
DESCRIBED — thou hast descvibed.Julius Caisar, iv. 2 

DESCRIED— we are descried Love'sL.Losl, v. 2 

and fear I was descried: wait Jou.Taming aj Sh. i. 1 
who hath descried the number oi.tRiclmrd III. v. 3 
he is descried; Csesar has taken .Antony fyCleo. iii. 7 
we have descried upon our neighbouring. Pericles, i. 4 
DESCRIPTION— I will description.Mcrry Wives, i. 1 
a right description of our sport . . Love's L. Lost, v. 2 
and, according to my description. Mer. of Venice, i. 2 
before a friend of this description shall — iii. 2 
I should know you by description. .4s you Like il, iv. 3 
for tliis description of thine honesty ? . All's II 'ell, iv. 3 
and undoes description to do it . . Winter'sTale, v. 2 
amost excellent description of fortune. Henri/ V. iii. G 

descriiitiou cannot suit itself in — iv. 2 

your wondi'ous rare description 1 Henry VI. v. 5 

his description. He; I know him. Timon of Ath. iv. 3 

by all description, this should be — v. 4 

person, it beggared all description. Aitony<f-C/eo.ii. 2 

will this description satisfy liini? — ii. 7 

description of what is in her chamber. Cymbeline, ii. 4 
very description of their meeting-place -^ iv. 1 
or his description proved us unspeaking — v. 5 
he went to bed to lier very description. PcnWes, iv. 3 

a maid that paragons descrixition Othello, ii. 1 

DESCRY— to come, she can descry 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

Helicanus may you well descry. Pen'ctes, v. 3 (Gow.) 

moreover, to descry the strength Lear, iv. 5 

the main descry stands on the hom-ly . . . . — iv. 6 
cannot without circumstance descry. iiomeo frJitl. v. 3 
'twixt the heaven and the main, descry. 0(AeWo, ii. 1 
DESDEMON— rA'n(.] sweetDesdemou.... — iii. 3 
[Kn<.] ah, Desdemon, away, away, away! — iv. 2 

[Arii.] praj'ed to-night, Desdemon? — v. 2 

[A'ni.] poor Desdemon! I am glad thy .. — v. 2 

[Kn(.] O Desdemon! dead Desdemonl . . . . — v. 2 

DESDEMONA— the gentle Desdemona ..Othello,!. 2 

fetch Desdemona himer. Ancient — i. 3 

■would Desdemona seriously incline — i. 3 

what would you, Desdemona? — i. 3 

adieu, brave Moor! use Desdemona well — i. 3 
lago, my Desdemona must I leave to thee — i. 3 
Desdemona; I have but an hour of love. . — - i. 3 
Desdemona should long continue her love — i. 3 
letting go safely by the divine Desdemona — ii. 1 
love's quick pants in Desdemona's arms — ii. 1 
come, Desdemona, once more well met ., — ii. 1 
Desdemona is directly in love ■with him — ii. 1 
prove to Desdemona a most dear husband — ii. 1 
thus early, for the love of Ms Desdemona — ii. 3 
toDesdemonahath to night caroused.... — ii. 3 
come, Desdemona; 'tis the soldier's life . . — ii. 3 
will I beseech the virtuous Desdemona .. — ii. 3 
easy the inclining Desdemona to subdue.. — ii. 3 
plies Desdemona to repair his fortunes .. — ii. 3 
that she will to virtuous Desdemona .... — iii. i 

some brief discourse with Desdemona — iii. 1 

not now, sweet Desdemona [A7l^Desdemon] — iii. 3 
farewell, my Desdemona: I will come.... — iii. 3 
I do not think, but Desdemona's honest — iii. 3 

Desdemona [A'n( look where she] comes — iii. 3 

that the Moor first gave to Desdemona . . _ iii. 3 
I heard Mm say— sweet Desdemona .... — iii. 3 
how do you, Desdemona? Well, m}' good — iii. 4 
ply Desdemona well, and you are sure .. — iv. 1 
O Desdemona, [Kn(. -Desdemon] away! .. — iv. 2 
from ine, to deliver to Desdemona — iv 2 



DES 



[ 177 ] 



DKSDEMONA— known to Doclcnionii. . Othello, iv. 2 
nik'lit tolUiwinm'njoyest not Uesilemona — iv. a 
tliiii (HIr'IIo niul liosileinoiiB return .... — iv. a 
tukes u'.vuv with liini tlic lair Dvsdcniona — iv. a 

O,— lX.cliiiiun:i,-niv l.ir.l? — iv. 3 

fruni him as(;itts to IX'Mleniona — v. I 

who's thuri.'? Othvlii.y Ay, Dfsdomonii — v. 
to-nijiht, llcsilcMionu? [/vM(.-l)i's(ii'mon] — v. 
BWLi'f Dt'sdenionii'. I) swivt MiistrcsB .... — v. 

Sjor JXsdcniona! [KH/.-Dis(ienion] — V. 
Dcsdenioini! IXsdcnionuI i hii/.-Ucsderaon, 
Uosdimon] dead? dead? Ol O! O! .... — v. 
DESKllT— tliis island ncem to be desert. Tempesl, ii. 

desirt so well reputed Tiro Oeii. of Verona, ii. 

my patience more tlian tliy desert — iii. 

soiue sijin ol' good desert — iii. 

shtuUnvv desert, unlVequented woods — v. 

as tlion'lsnuw'st tiieir deceits — v. 

tliat Miv deserts to \..iieaii TweMh \i\'h',i\i. 

voiir desert si>e:iks loiul Mens, for Mcas. v. 

tlie ill eoimsel of :i desert i\\i\.ve..Mi'l.\.l>ream, ii. 
elnilleneenie liv Uivsi- deserts .... Loue'sL.Lost, v. 
the Ilyreaiiiiiu iKsii:s, ami ..Merck, of Venire, ii. 

1 will assume dcs^Tt — ii. 

arc my deserts no better? — ii. 

native burghers of this desert ...As you Like tl, ii. 

cnn in this desert plaee buy — ii. 

it" there live nn.v uung in this desert — ii. 

that in this desert iniieeessible — ii. 

wliyslionld this iles>-Tt silent he? — iii. 2 (verses) 
how 1 eame into that desert place.... — iv. 3 
never know ho-.e that desert should be.-lM'* Ife/i, i. 3 
ehuekle up my lo\e, and her desert.. — ii. 3 
to si>me rein 'te ami desert, place.. fVinter^sTate, ii. 3 
tonehed uiHjn the clesrrts ol' Bohemia? — iii. 3 
(but, I protest, williout ilesert)...CoHi«i/j(o/£rr.ii_i. 1 

atire me to the desert with thy Macbeth, iii. -i 

be howled out iu tile disert air — iv. 3 

more approved service and ilesert ..Richard IT. ii. 3 
any way your good deserts forgot .. MiennjtV. iv. 3 
have right, and let desert mouiit ..tUenrylV. iv. 3 
than (quittance of desert and merit . . Henry V. ii. 2 
able to load him with his deserti .... — iii. 7 
for these good deserts, we hear .... I Henry VI. iii. 4 
any ehjillenge of desert, or we — v. 4 

fuerdoned for these good ileserta iHenry VI. i. 4 
have heard your king's desert. ...SHeiiry *'/. iii. 3 

for my desert is honour — iii. 3 

those honours on your high desert.. Ki'cAarf ///. i. 3 
that all without desert have frowned — ii. 1 

but my desert unmeritahle — iii. 7 

not my deserts, but what I will — iv. 4 

the duke by law found liis deserts. He nii/r/Zr. iii. a 
■we will not name desert . . . . Tmilus ^ Ci essida, iii. 2 
desert in serrice, love, friendship .. — iii. 3 

is ranked with all deserts Timonof Alhens.S. 1 

talce my deserts to his, and join.. — iii. 5 

own desert- Your own desert? Coriolanui:. ii. 3 

deserver, till his deserts are past ..Antony ^Cleo.'i. 2 

tljat set thee on to this desert Cymheline, i. 6 

let desert in pure election shine .. TilusAndron. i. 1 

good and great deserts to Rome — i. 1 

plead your deserts in peace and — i . 1 

thanks in part of thy deserts — i. 2 

the least ot these unspeakable deserts — i. 2 
none of both but are of high desert . . — iii. 1 
desert must gain; and which (rep.) .... Pericles, i. 1 

f)leasure to commend, not my desert .... — ii. .'i 
ess know how to value her desert Lear, ii. 4 

use them according to tlieir desert Handel, ii. 2 

use every man after his desert — ii. 2 

I antres vast, and deserts idle, rough Olhello, i. 3 

DESEKVE— love deserves more.. TwoGen.ofVer. i. 2 
well deserves the honotrr and . . — ii. 4 

only deserve mv love — ii. 7 

and truly, she deserves it Merry Wines, ii. 2 

I know not how I mav deserve to be — ii. 2 
keep in that mind; I'll deserve it.... — iii. 3 
then let me be your jest; I deserve it — iii. 3 
as ever thou wilt deserve well at. Twelfth Sight, iv. 2 
the wish deserves a welcome ..Meas.for Meas. iii. 1 
when it deserves with characters .... — v. 1 

slandering a prince deserves it — v. 1 

doth not the gentleman deserve as ..j1/ii(;/i.-Wo, iii. 1 
I know he doth deserve as much as.. — iii. 1 

otliers say thou dost deserve — iii. 1 

how mneh might tlie man deserve . . — iv. 1 
Margaret, deserve well at my hands — v. 2 

how pitiful I desen'e — v. 2 (song) 

did I deserve this scorn? Mid. N. Dream, ii. 3 

nor never can, deserve a sw eet look — ii. 3 

hindCootard; she deserves well ..Love't L.Lost,\.-i 
broke, deserve not punishment. . — iv. 3 (verses) 

and we deserve to die — iv. 3 

shall get OS much as he Oamrvea.Mer. of Venice, ii. 7 

OS much as he deserves? — ii. 7 

thou dost deserve enough — ii. 7 

as I deserve! why that s the lady trr/).) — ii. 7 

than these, in love 1 do deserve — ii. 7 

did I deserve no more than a fool's .. — ii. 9 

doth he not deserve well? is yon Like il, i. 3 

I tell you, deserves as well _ iii. 2 

no, he deserves no pity — iv. 3 

njid your virtue, well deserve it — v. 4 

have' him, till I do deserve him AU'tH'ell,\.'i 

nr will deserve at my hand — ii. !j 

and she deserves a lord, that twenty — iii. 2 

only to seem to deserve well — iv. 3 

deserves a name as rank as any . . H'inler's Tale, i. 2 

on my faith, deserves high H|)eech.... ii. 1 

whose every word deserves to taste .. — iii. 2 

(well he deserves that name) .Macbeth, i. 2 

that life which he deserves to lo-e — i. 3 

something you may desene of luiii — iv. 3 

nor thou deserve a crown KinxJohn, iii. 1 

the one deserve to have an heir? .... It'chard II, ii. 1 

shall de.-ene your love (r.r;i.) — iii. a 

deserves the scourge of greatness 1 Henry IV. i. 3 

sin-ak of you than you deserve iHenry IV. iv. 3 

doth deserve a coronet of gold I Henry VI. iii. 3 



UESEIl'VE— for she well deserves \t..3HenryVI. iii 3 
lord Hastings well deserves to have.. — iv. I 
to deserve well at my brother's liantls — v. 1 

'tis more than you tieserve Itiehard III. i. 2 

deserve not worse than wretched — ii. 1 

'tis more than we deserve, or I expect — ii. 3 
tell me whiit tliey deserve, that do ., — iii. 4 

your lovi' deserves my thanks — iii. 7 

my de-r.N. I'oi uliiit I will deserve - iv. 4 

thesiil. .' [ .'.i il iveit Ih-myVIIl. (prol.) 

your-'. .!. I I Is deserve all .. — ii. 2 
my eon . .. II. , il. . r\es aeorner .... — iii. I 
what he ocellus of you and mo .... — iii. 2 

he will ileserve more iv. 1 

you are a saney fellow: deserve we no — iv. i 

(I hope, she will deserve well) — iv. 2 

but will drsiiir, f.ii' \irtn,- _ jv. 2 

doeScU'-rnrnnr InUrr iillu'S — V. 1 

(few or\.iti (ir rnr llilMlllr) — V. 2 

llOwniii.\ I il.nr\e it, that mil — v. 2 

gentleman, that well deserves a help.7'im.o/yI(/i. i. 1 

imd my estate deserves an heir — i. 1 

nor all deserve the common stroke ., — v. 5 

who deserves greatness, deserves Coriolunus, i. 1 

yoiu- beards deserve not so honourable — ii- I 
the hire which lirst we do deserve . . — ii. 3 
we pray the gods, he may desei've your — ii. 3 

let me deserve 60 ill as you — iii. 1 

did not deserve corn gratis — iii. 1 

this deserves death. Or let us stand — iii. I 
kind, deserves the extremest death . . — iii. 3 
the people deserve such pity of liim.Corio/oniis, iv. G 
ladies, you deserve to have a temple . . — v. 3 
and did deserve liis change .... Antony ^- Cleo. iii. G 
attempt, as you call it, deserve more . CymbeUne, i. a 

in me deserves your pity? — i. 7 

hath of thee, deserves tiiy trust — i. 7 

doth ill deserve by doing well — iii. 3 

neither deserve, and yet are steeped.. — v. 4 
to deserve my mistress' grace ....Titus.indron.W. I 

and lie deserves so to be called Fericl-s,\\. 1 

as tliev deserve their grace — ii. 3 

shall deserve our thanks, bringing Lear, ii. 1 

which way thou luiglit'st deserve — ii. 4 

the less they deserve, the more merit .. Hamlet, ii. 2 
good Roderigo: I'll deserve your pains.. 0//ie(/o, i. I 

DESERVED-hadst deserved "more than. Tempest, i. 2 
for thou hast deserved her .... TieoGen. of Ver. v. 4 
wherein have I so deserved of . . Meas.for Mens. v. ! 

much deserved on Ms part Much Ado, i. 1 

he would have deserved it Mid. N. Dream, iv. 2 

well I have deserved this ring ,.Mer. of Venice, iv. 1 

and indeed, deserved it too — v. 1 

we cuckolds, ere we have deserved it? — v. 1 

sir, you have well deserved .4.1 you Like it, \. 2 

you have deserved iii':!h eommeudation — i. 2 

let me die; and well ileservcd All'siyell, ii. 1 

I have not, my lord, deserved it — ii. 3 

how I have deserved to run into my. — ii. 5 

hi s heels have deserved it — iv. 3 

your mistress has deserved prison, ivinler's Tale, ii. 1 
I have deserved all tongues to talk . . — iii. 2 

very nobly have you deserved — iv. 3 

would thou had'st less deserved Macbeth, i. 4 

that hast no less deserved, nor must — i. 4 

what hath this day deserved? King John, iii. 1 

have I deserved at your highness' ..Ricnard II. i. 3 
worthy danger, ana deserved death . . — v. 1 
vary deserved praise on my palfrey .. Henry V. in. 7 

Richard hath best deserved of all S Henry VI. i. 1 

hath he deserved to lose his birthright — i. 1 
at their hands, I have deserved no pity — ii. 6 
if thou never hadst deserved our hate — v. 1 

whose dealings liave deserved ilichard III. iii. 1 

neither claimed it, nor deserved it .. — iii. 1 

and I have well deserved it — iii. 2 

my lord, they have deserved death .. — iii. 4 
befalyoul he deserved his death .... — iii. 5 
I have deserved this hearing . . Timon of Athens, ii. 2 
deserved worthily of his country ..Corioianus, ii. 2 
deserved noblv of your country (rfp.) — ii. 3 
nor has Corioianus deserved tills so.. — iii. 1 
gratitude towards her deserved children — iii. I 

give him deserved vexation — iii. 3 

have deserved no better entertainment — iv. :i 
should do that had deservid his hate — iv. Ii 
into one coal, we have (U.'er\'ed it .. — iv. 6 
I have not deserved it, hut, worth".. — v. a 
Ca;9ar liatli ,l,srn.d to ii: iu death. Jui.Ctesar, iii. I 
hathC.L'sia- tiiii. .|i M I-.. I vurloves? — iii. 2 
were will -ir , i \ . I . : i i i\i\'--i^,. Antony ^- Cleo. ii. 2 

which w.irihil;. ac-e;Ms| n.itiiig _ ii. 2 

when you have well deserved ten times — ii. 6 
constrained blemishes, not ;ts deserved — iii. 11 
he hath deserved it, were it carbuueled — iv. 8 
king hath not deserved my service ..Cymbeline, iv. 4 
who deserved so long a brectling .... — v. 3 
that he deserved the praise o' the world — v. 4 
question, thou hadst well deserved it .... i-mir, ii. 4 
his own disorders deserved mucli less .... — ii. 4 

deserved at the hands of fortune Hamlet, ii. 2 

I have not deserved this. My lord .... Olhello, iv. I 

DESERVEDLY— deservedly eontlned ..Tempest, i. 2 

DESE llVElt — shine on all dcservers. . . . Macbeth, i. 4 
lily beds proposed for the deserver I. rrort.^C'''- ''■■ 2 
is never linked to the deserver ..Antony k-Cleo. i. 2 

DESERVEST— thou deservest it .. Merry IVives, iii. 3 
in moat comely truth, tlioii deservest. MucA .4f/o, v. 2 
to s|ieak truth thou deservest no lC98.2He«i-!/*'/. iv. 3 

DE.SEllVINU—'tismy deserving. .A/ra./or .>/«!. v. I 
the best deserving u fair lady.. ..Mer. of Venice, i. 2 

to be afeard of my deserving — ii.7 

unlike my hopes, and ray dcservings? — ii. U 
let his deservings, and my love withal — iy. 1 
foul the clearness of our deservings . . AlVs H'ell,i. 3 
all her deserving is a reserved honesty — iii. a 
some envy your great deservings ..\ HcnrylV. iv. 3 
spoke your dencrvinga like a chronicle — v. 2 
of his courtesy tlian your deserving.a Wenryi ''. iv. 3 
virtue he liatf, deserving to command. lM«iri/K/.i.l 



DES 



DESERVINH-grave of your deserving. Cori'otanui, i. 9 
shall give thee thy deserving ..Antony g^Cleo. iv. 10 
no whit less tliuTi in his feats deserving.. Cym6. iii. I 

sir, 1 shall stu.h deserving Lear,\. 1 

this seems a fair deserving, and mu3t draw — iii. 3 
and all foes the eup of their deservings .. — v. 3 
I confess me knit to thy deserving with..O(/n!/(o, i. 3 
cnuldst thou bestow on a deserving woman — ii. I 
without merit, and lost without deserving — ii.3 

DEtilUN— master of this design Tempest, i. 2 

from his true meant ileeign. Measure forMeasure, i. a 
dearest design of industry.. 7.')r('fL./,o«(, iv. 1 (let.) 
serious designs, and of great im|>ort .. — v. 1 
doth backwartl pull our slow t\vsiy,na..Alt*s}Fell, i. 1 
hinder not the humour of his design — iii. G 
he has discovered my desi"n .... IVinler's Tale, ii. 1 
hut to-day, Imiiiniered of tills design — ii. 2 

but not prepared for this design — iv. 3 

tow^ards his design moves like Macbeth, ii. 1 

chivalrous desiu'ii of knii^htl.v trial ..Richard II. i. 1 
justice design the victor 8 chivalry .. — i. I 

to direct these fair designs — 1.3 

for his designs crave haste ^ — ii. 2 

leave these siul designs t>i him Ilichard III. i. 2 

doth neglect no great design — iii. 4 

ill deep designs, in matter — iii. 7 

peevish found in great designs — iv. 4 

it forged him some design HenryVIll. i. 2 

all designs begun on earth below. Troilus tfCress. i. 3 

ladder of all high designs — i. 3 

lies mocking our designs — i. 3 

touehetl the life of our design — ii. 2 

lame the toot of our design Corioianus, iv. 7 

and sway our great desigiisl.4^i/07iy Sf Cleopatra, ii. i 
my competitor in top of all design .. — v. i 
but my design? to note the chamber.Ci/mWm*, ii. i 

a voluntary mute to my design — iii. 5 

away to Britain post I in this design — v. a 

DESIGNED— of the article designed .... Hamlel, i. 1 

DESIGNMENT— served his dcsignments.Conol. v. a 
the Turks, that their desigmnenc halts.. 0//i(-//',ii. I 

DESIRE- what I desire to give Tempest, iii. 1 

votary to fond desire? Two Gen. of Vcronuj i. I 

to tangle her desires — iii. 2 

I do desire thy worthy company — iv. 3 

I do desire thee, even from — iv. 3 

I'll force thee yield to ray desire .... — v. 4 

shall desire to hear Merry IVives, i. 1 

as just as you will desire — i. I 

and desire a marriage between — i. I 

carry her your desires towards her .. — i. 1 
father desires your worship's company — i. I 
to desire and reciuu-e her to (r.;;.). . . . — i. 2 

ay, forsooth, to desire her to — i. 4 

to desire this honest gentlewoman . . — i. •! 
would you desire better sympathy?. . — ii. 1 (let. ) 
mistress I'age would desire you to send — ii. 2 
I desire more acquaintance of yon .. — ii. 2 

never so good means, as desire — ii. 2 

my desires had instance and argninent — ii. 2 

I most I'ehemently desire you — iii. 1 

you would desires to be aciiuainted.. — iii. I 

I desire you in friemlship — iii. I 

I desire you, that we nun' be friends — iii. 1 
as 1 will desires among five thoujund — iii. 3 

she desires you once more — iii. a 

mistress Ford desires you to come — iv. I 

creatures as I would desires — iv. 1 

the Germans desire to have three .... — iv. 3 

he shall have no desires — iv. 4 

anil tainted in desire! — v. a 

kindled with unchaste desire — v. a (song) 

serve Got, and leave your desires .... — v. a 

whore 1 i.ill ('... I.i' thee to laugh — v. a 

my (i i ,1 I and cruel Twelfth Kight, i. 1 

I del:. :i iiutance — i. 3 

iiiiulio. : i.iliwithyou — i. a 

desire him not to ilatter — i. a 

whom you have recovered, desire it not — ii. 1 

il'you desire the spleen — iii. 2 

my desire, more sharp than filed steel — iii. 3 
some toy you have desire to purcliase — iii. 3 

desire some conduct of the lady — iii. 4 

and give him his desire — iii. 4 

do not desire to see this letter — v. 1 

in recompense, desire my do^ again.. — v. 1 
that my desire of having is tlie sin .. — v. 1 
I shall desire you, sir, to give ma.Mccu.forMeat. i. 1 

why I desire thee to give me — i. 4 

desires access to you — ii 2 

and most desire should meet — ii. 2 

not with more tame a tongue desire.. — ii. 2 
shall we desire to raze the »aiietuary — ii. 2 

dost thou desire her foully — ii. 2 

that I desire to hear her speak again — ii. 2 

a sister desires access to you — ii. I 

desire you to make your answer .... — iii. 2 

and let me desire to know how — iii. 2 

I do desire the like — iv. 1 

I do desire to learn, sir — iv. 2 

Bay, it was the desire of the penitent — iv. 2 
truly, sir, I would desire you to clap — iv. 3 

him I'll desire to meet me — iv.3 

I desire his company at Mariana's .. — iv.3 
and delicate desires, all prompting mc.fl/i«:A.4iio, i. 1 
none, but to de.ire.vour good company — ii. I 

ami desire her to rise — iii. 4 

Gotl send every one their heart's desire — iii. 4 

I would desire they were — iii. a 

1 will not desire that — iv. 1 

and briefly, I de.sirc nothing — v. I 

good friar, I shall desire your hel|i .. — v. i 
she lingers my desires, like.... ;>/)</. iV.'# Dream, i. 1 

question your desires, know of — i. 1 

with duty, and desire, we follow you — i. i 

and desiix' you, to etm them — i. 2 

out of this wooil tlo not tlesire to go .. — iii. I 
I sliall desire you of more aeqimiiitancc — id. 1 
desire you of more ucquuiutaiiee too .. — iii. I 
I desire you mure acquaintance — iii. i 



DES 



BESIRE-never did desire to see tliee.il/id.jV. Dr. iii. 2 
can keep no pace witli my desii-es .. — 

methiuLvs, I liave a great desire — 

woidd you desire lime and liair to speak — v. 
liuge army of tire world's desires .Lovers L. Lost, i. 
at Cl\ristmas I no more desire a rose 

I would take desire prisoner 

sweet heal tli and fair desu'es consort 
I desire lier name. Slie hatli ii-ep.).. 

peeping through desire 

would you desire more? 

dance, if tliey desire us to 't? 

how many months do you desire? Me, 
and desire Gratiano to come anon . . 
and I have a desire, as my father. . . . 

I desire uo more deliglit tlian 

shall gain what many men desire 

all the world desires her 

many men desire, because I will not 

desires to speak witli you both 

I do desire you, not to deny this .... 
for thy desires are wolfish, bloody.... 
I humbly do desire your grace 



[ 178] 



DES 



iv. 1 
1 



1 
i. 2 
ii. 1 
ii. 1 
ii. 1 
iii. 1 
V. 2 



ii. 9 
iii. 1 
iii. 4 
iv. I 
iv. 1 

four heart's desires be wftli you!.. .4s you Like it, i. 2 
shall desire more love and knowledge — i. 2 
acquaintance witli mine own desires — i. 3 
I do not desire you to please me (r«p.) — ii. 5 

I do desire we may be better — iij. 2 

so man hath his desires — iii. 3 

33 good cause as one would desire — iii. 4 

can one desire too much of a good thing? — iv. 1 
more giddy in my desires than a monkey — iv. 1 
when he had a desire to eat a grape . . — v. 1 
do desire it with all my heart (.rep.) .. — v. 3 

I desire you of the like — v. 1 

madam, I desire your holy wishes ....Alt's Well, i. 1 
I have a desire to hold my acquaintance — ii. 3 
onlj', he desires some private speech — ii. 5 

seems as won, desires this ring — iii. 7 

give tliyself unto my .sick desires .... — iv. 2 

yet you desire to marry — v. 3 

the CTCat desire I had to see fair. . Taming of Sh. i. 1 
but how did you desire it should be. . — iv. 3 

was born, desire yet tlieir life IVinler's Tale, i. 1 

should desire to live. If the king (?r/i.) — i. 1 

I desire to lay my bones there — iv. 1 

since my desires run not before — iv. 3 

only therefore desire to breed by me — iv. 3 

I have Uved to die wlien I desire — iv. 3 

belield), desires access to your high.. — v. 1 
I desire my life once more to look . . — v. 1 

desires you to attacli his son — v. 1 

honour not o'erthrown liy your desires — v. 1 

lest they desu-e, upon this push. — y. 3 

see my black and deep desires Macbeth, i. 4 

" " i. 5(let.) 



— iii. 2 

— iv. 3 
■— iv. 3 

V. 7 



ii. 1 



when I burned in desire to question 

and valom', as tliou art in desire? 

where our desire is got without 

and my desire all continent 

desire his jewels, and tliis other's house 

wliose voices I desire aloud with 

now hast thou thy desire A'/zig- John, 1. 1 

Faulconbridge, desires your majesty. . — v. 3 
with contemplation and devout desires — v. 4 
and with a free desire, attending .... Kichard IJ. i. 3 
have thy desire. My liege, beware . . — v. 3 
and low desires, sucli poor, such. ... 1 HenrylV. iii. 2 

you shall have your desires — i v. 3 

trimmed in thine own desires 2Henrij IV. i. 3 

whereby thou didst desire to eat some 
I do desire deliverance from these . . 
vilely in me, to desire small beer? . . 
as extraordinarily as heart would desire 
is it not str.auge tliat desire should . . 
have a desire to stay with my friends 
of our most j ust and right desires .... 

sweating with desire to see him 

you would desire the king were made.. Henri/ V. i. 1 

m lieu of this, desires you — ' " 

for I desire nothing but odds with . . — 
I would desire the duke to use his . . — 
anon, desire them all to my pavilion — 
no great cause to desire the approach — 
I do not desire he should answer .... — 
outward things dwell not in my desires — 
in mercy, the constable desires thee. . — 
as you shall desire in a summer's day — 

where that his lords desire liim — i 

a little piece of my desires — 

at my desires, and my requests — 

I would desire you to eat it — 

I will desire you to live in the ... 

impatiently I burn with thy desire . . 1 Henry VI. \. 2 

swift-win^ed with desire to get — ii. 5 

with proud desire of bold-faced — iv. 6 

I desire no more ifJenryVl.'w.'i 

spirit, winged with desire SHeury VI. i. 1 

between my soul's desire, and me. ... — iii. 2 
hath tempted judgment to desire .. — iii. 3 

he desires to make atonement Richard III. i. 3 

I desire to reconcile me to liis — ii. 1 

I hate it, and desire all good men's love — ii. 1 

fieediness of Ms desires, and his .... — 
ow far I am from the desire of this — 

and be inheritor of thy desire — 

desire the earl to see me in my tent 



V. 5 



iii. 6 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv: 8 
. (cho.) 
V. 1 



— V. 1 



ill. 7 
iii. 7 
iv. 3 
V. 3 



desire you, do me right and justice. Henry VIII. ii. 4 

I ever contradicted your desire — ii. 4 

thiit longer you desire the court — ii. 4 

ever come too short of my desires. . . . — iii. 2 

you do desii-e to know wnerefore — v. 1 

your queen desires your visitation . . — v. 1 

1 shall desire to see what this child. . — v. 4 

as when desire did sue Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 2 

I do desire it. You are in — iii. 1 

fair desires, in all fair measiu-e — iii. 1 

and my lord, he desires you — iii. 1 

that the desire is boundless — iii. 2 

his own will shall have desire to — iii. 3 

and desire him to invite the 'Trojan. . — iii. 3 



iii. 3 



11. 2 
ii. 3 
ii. 3 
iii. 1 



DESIKE— desire the valiant Ajax. Troil. ^ Cr 

who most humbly desires you ' — 

I do desire it. Wliy, beg then — 

I would desire my famous cousin — iv. .■> 

desire them home: give me thy hand — iv. 5 
he desires to those have shut .... Timon of.UhenSj i. 1 

I not desire to know — iv. 3 

thou shouldst desire to die — iv. 3 

till we have sealed thy full desire — v. 5 

who desires most that which Coriolanus, i. 1 

and the desu'e of the nobles — ii. 1 

to desire the present consul, and .... 
you must desire them to thmk upon 

not mine own desii'e (rep.) 

let me desire your company 

that shall say, yea, to thy desires .... — iv. 5 
desire not to allay my rages and .... — v. 3 
gave him way in all his own desires. . — v. 5 
not hinder, Cassius, your desires ..JullusCwsar,\. 2 

who doth desire to see you — ii. 1 

Trebonius doth desire you to o'er-read — iii. 1 

belt SO; I do desire no more — iii. I 

last night you did desire it ..Antony Sf Cleopatra, i. 1 

thus did I desire it — i. 2 

so your desires are ours — iii. 4 

my lord desires you presently _ — iii. 5 

of audience, nor desire, shall fail . . . 

did desire to burn this night 

of thy intents desires instruction . . . 
that should desire you to touch him 

desires your higlmess' company Cymbeline, i. 4 

preferment such as thou'lt desire .... — i- 6 
miserable is the desire that's glorious — i. 7 
should make desire vomit emptiness — 
that satiate yet unsatisfied desire .... — 
beseech you, sir, desire my man's. . . . — 
thy master's bidding, when I desire it — 

f resent yourself, desire his service .. — 
desire of you a conduct over land . . — 
abatement ; that's not my desire .... — 

verier knaves desire to live — 

will a handmaid be to his desires. . TitusAndr 
though Venus govern your desh'es . . — 
if foul desire had not cond'icted you? — 
when you have the honey you desire — 

there is that she desires to see — iv. i 

desires to be admitted to your presence — v. 1 
have inflamed desire in my breast .... Pericles, i. I 
adventurous by desire, tell thee with .... — i. 1 

we have no reason to desire it... — i. 3 

this we desire, as friends to Antioch — i. 3 

fulfil liis prince' desire, sends word — ii. (Gower) 
did but my fortunes equal my desires . . — ii. 1 
andfurthertellhim, we desire to know.. — ii. 3 
and fm'ther he desires to know of you . . — ii. 3 
makes her desire (which who shall .. — iii. (Gow.l 

welcomed, to his own desire — iv. (Gow.) 

but yet I have no desire to it — iv. ) 

I desire to find him so, that I — iv. 6 

such pay as thy desires can wish — v. 1 

I pray, desu-e her call her wisdom to her. Lear, iv. 5 

mistress, as badness would desire — iv. 6 

he has lost. Desire him to go in _ — iv. 7 

now old desire doth in his.Romeo Sr Juliet, i. 5 (cho.) 
I desire some confidence with you . . — ii. 4 

it is most retrograde to our desire Hamlet, i. 2 

out of the shot and danger of desire — i. 3 

some impartment did desire to you alone — i. 4 

and desire, shall point you (rep.) — i. 5 

your desire to know what is between us — i. 5 

return of greetings, and desbes — ii. 2 

she desires to speak with you in her closet 

if you desire to know the certainty 

had my desire; fingered their packet — — v. 2 
the queen desires you, to use some gentle — v. 2 
a shorter journey to your desires Othello, ii. 1 



iii. 10 
iv. 2 
V. 1 



i. 7 



iii. 4 



V. 4 



ii. 1 
ii. 3 
ii. 3 



iv. 5 



the gallaiits desire it. Where are they? — ii. 3 
tiiat lie desires you, of all loves, to make — iii. 1 
bv selling her desires, buys herself bread — iv. 1 

alfections? desires for sport? — iv. 3 

which wrought to his desire. Ofool! — v. 2 

DESIRED— is a life I have Asshed... Merry Wives,!. 3 
finding yourself desired of such.. Meos./iw-Meas. ii. 4 
and desired her to try her gracious . . — v. 1 

in all desired employment Love's L. Lost, iy. 2 

under which Loreuzo desired us.Mer. of Venice, ii. (i 

I did him a desired office All's Well, iv. 4 

I desired him to come home. . Comedy of Errors, ii. 1 
should have else desired your good ..Macbeth, iii. 1 
which hath desired toseetheemore.life7)ry/f. iii. 2 

great honours, as can be desu-ed Henry V. iv. 7 

redeemed I was as I desired . ._ 1 Henry VI. i. 4 

according as your ladyship desired . . — ii. 3 

my wife desired some damsons iHenry VI. ii. 1 

desired help from Biurgundy ZHenry VI. iv. 7 

the emperor thus desired Henry VIII. i. 1 

the duke desired to him brought — ii. 1 

never desired it to be stirred — ii. 4 

and desired your highness most hea-rtily — y. 1 

he touclied tire ports desired Troilus §■ Cress, ii. 2 

desired my Cressid in right great — — iii. 3 
he desired their worships to tlxiu^.. JuliusCrpsar, i. 2 

begs to be desired to give Antony ^Cleo. iii. 11 

wliich hurts and is desii-ed — v. 2 

queen tliat most desired the match.. . Cymbeline, i. 1 
she's flown to her desired Posthumus — iii. 5 

tyves, desired, more than constrained — v. 4 
esired he might know none of his .... Pericles, i. 3 

be then desired by her, that else Lear, i. 4 

when I desired their leave that I might — iii. 3 

you shall be well desired in Cyprus Othello, ii. 1 

DESIREK-bountifuUy to the'desirers.Co»-('o/onii.s ii. 3 
DESIREST-if thou desirest to be. TicelfthN. ii. 5 (let.) 

art made, if thou desirest to be so — iii. 4 

sweet love, what thou desirest to. Mid. N.'s Dr. iv. 1 

in love's grief desirest society Love's L. Lost, iy. 3 

justice, more than thou desirest.. /l/er. of Venice, iv. I 

thou desirest me to stop in my .. Pomeo ^Juliet, ii. 4 

DESIRING-not as desiring moTe..Meas.J'or Meas. i. !> 

desu-iug thee to lay aside the sword. . King John, i. 1 



DESIRING— their desiring eyes upon. R/VAar(i II.v. 2 

in heart desiring still 1 Henry VI. iv. 1 

desiring thee, that I'ublius Cimh&r. Jul. Cnsnr, iii. 1 

DESIROUS — my niece is desirous. 7'm'<?(/'/AAV;,'/i(, iii. 1 
that is so desirous to lie with his. . As you Lihe it, i. 2 
not been desirous of their wealth ..3 Henry VI. iv. 8 
ladies most desirous of admittauce. TimonofAlh. i. 3 

and how desirous of our sight Titus Andron. v. 1 

wlien you are desu'ous to be blessed . . Hamlet, iii. 4 

DESIST— at least desist to build a.ta.l\i2HenryIV. i. 3 
condemn it now: desist, and dii-ak... Ant. ^Cleo. ii. 7 

dead cheeks advise thee to desist Pericles, i. 1 

I will desist; but there is soraetliing .... — v. 1 

DESK— in the desk that's covered. Como'i/ 0/ JBr. iv. 1 

here, go; the desk, the purse — iv. 2 

the money in the desk ? — i v. 2 

if I had played the desk, or table-book. Hamfe/, ii. 2 

DESOLA'rE— in this desolate isle .... Tempest, iii. 3 
poor lady ! desolate and left ! . . Two Gen. of Ver. iv. 4 
let us seek out some desolate shade . . Macbeth, iv. 3 

desolate, desolate, will I hence Ricliard II. i. 2 

in a moment makes them desolate.. 1 Hejuj/ VI. ii. 3 
and makes them leave me desolate.. 2 Henri/ F/. iv. 8 

DESOLATIOlSr-a careless desolation. .Js youLilie, ii\.2 

merry days of desolation Love's L. Lost, i. 2 

you have lived in desolation here — v. 2 

even till unfeneed desolation King John, ii. 2 

his whole kingdom unto desolation. . . . Henry V. ii. 2 
enlinked to waste and desolation? .. — iii. 3 

where thou art not, desolation 2Henry VI. iii. 2 

death, desolation, ruin, and decay. Ricliard III. iv. 4 
desolation does begin to make . . Antony^ Cleo. v. 2 
O, there were desolation of gaolers . . Cymbeline, v. 4 
and seen the desolation of your streets. . Pericles, i. 4 

DESPAIR— my endin" is despair Tempest, (epil.) 

heavenly comforts of desjiair . . Meas. for Meas. iv. 3 
and rash-embraced despair. Merchant of Venice, iii. 2 

coldest, and despair most sits All's Well, ii. 1 

and our crimes would despair, if they — iv. 3 

celsa senis, despair not Taming of Shrew, iii. 1 

should all despair, that have Winter's Tale, i. 2 

betake thee to nothing but despair . . — iii. 2 
to grim and comfortless despair. . Comedy of Err. v. 1 

the mere despair of sm'^ery Macbeth, iv. 3 

despair thy charm; and let the angel — v. 7 

but, in despair, die under their King John, iii. 1 

do but despair, and, if thou want'st.. — iv. 3 

not patience, (iaunt, it is despair Richard II. i. 2 

and driven into despair an enemy's. . — ii. 2 

despair not madam (rep.) — ii. 2 

speak of nothing but despair — iii. 2 

sweet way I was in to despair! — iii. 2 

as despair, that frosts will bite 2 Henry IV. i. 3 

arbitrator of despairs, j ust deatli .... 1 Henry VI. ii. 5 
till mischief, and despair, drive you . . — v. 4 

in darkness, comfort in desijair! 2Hemi/ ri. ii. 1 

his bosom purge this black despair! — iii. 3 

our liope but sad despair ZHenry VI. ii. 3 

whence springs this deep despair? .. — iii. 3 

rescue him from foul despair? — iii. 3 

rather wean me from despair — ^v. 4 

by such despair, I should accuse . . Richard 12/. i. 2 
I'll join with black despair against . . — U. 2 

despair therefore, and die! (rep.) — v. 3 

I shall despair. There is no creature — v. 3 
fears, and despau-s, and all these . . Henry VIII. ii. 2 

fan you into despair! Coriolavus, iii. 3 

hint which my despair proclaims . . .-int. if Cleo. iii. 9 

past hope, and in despair Cymbeline, i. 2 

haply, despair hath seized her — iii. 5 

then why should he despair Titus Andron. ii. 1 

why I do trifle thus with his despair Lear, iv. 2 

begged for him, saved him from despair . . — v. 3 

lay the blame ujiou her own despair — y. 3 

merit bliss by making me despair. Romeo <§- Juliet, i . 1 

lest faith turn to despair — i. 5 

DESPAIRING- 
agamst despairing thoughts ..Two Gen. of Ver. iii. 1 

despairing of his own arm's 1 Henry VI. ii. 1 

base, fearful, and despairing Henry!. SHenri/T/. i. 1 
by despairing, shalt thou stand .... Ricliard III. i. 2 

despairing, yield thy breath! — v. 3 

not effected; so, despairing, died .... Cymbeline, v. 5 
DESPATCH-I will despatch hun. Taio Cen.of Ver.i. 3 

despatch me hence — ii. 7 

despatch, sweet gentlemen — v. 2 

obey him ; n uiclTly , despatch .... Merry Wives, iv. 2 

and despatch it quickly — v. 3 

affairs, and their despatch TwelJthNight, iv. 3 

and despatch with Angelo .... Meas. for Meas. iii. 1 

despatch it preseutly; the hoiu' — iv. 3 

quick, despatch, and send the head . . — iv. 3 
to have a despatch of complaints — — iv. 4 
despatch, I say, and find the . . Mid. N. Dream, iy. 1 
craving quick despatch, importunes. love's L.L. ii. I 
to day we shall have our despatch . . — iv. 1 

love, despatch all business. . Merch.of Venice, iii. 2 
mistress, despatch you with your../lss/o« Lilce it, i. 3 
will you despatch us here under — iii. 3 

after some despatch in hand All's Well, iii. 2 

despatch the most convenient — iii. 4 

between these main parcels of despatch — iv. 3 
nay, pr'ythee despatch Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

1 pray you, sir, desjiatch Comedy of Errors, iv. I 

great business into my despatch Macbeth, i. 6 

come, sir, despatch: if thou coiddst — v. 3 

I will be sudden, and despatch KinuJolin,iv. 1 

my lord, despatch; read o'er these. .K/c/iard II. iy. 1 
some music: despatch; the room ..2HenryIV. ii. 4 
and now despatch we toward the eom-t — iv. 3 
the coronation: despatch, despatch .. — y. 5 

mth all swift despatch, to line Henry V. ii. 4 

despatch us with all speed — ii- 4 

I will despatch the horsemen \ Henry VI. iv. 4 

despatch, this knave's tongue begins. 2Henri/r/.ii.3 
bear me hence, despatch me here . .3Henry VI. y. h 

nay, now despatch; 'twas I that Richard III. i. 2 

now going to despatch this thing?. . . . — i. 3 
go, go, despatch. We will, my noble — __i. 3 
despatch; the limit of your lives is out — iii. 3 



DES 



DESPATCH-desimtili, my lord ..RidtarJIII. \\\. 4 

coino, conic, ilusjmtch: 'tin buotlcM .. — iU. I 

I wilUlesiwtch it stniiylit — iv. a 

buttinu^fl tfiut scoks dcsimtchby dtty.HcHri/r///. v. 1 
I will des/likll yoil svviTllUy .. Timnnnf Alhriu, ii. 2 
anil licitr how tliv cU'siMit'.li 18 miidf..Coiio(ii«u», i. I 
il' I do Bfiiil. di.<iiiitcli tliosc centuries — i. 7 

to <los|i:iti-U this viiiorous traitor — iii. 1 

yd t,'ivc us our dos|,iitcli — V. 3 

witli words: lU'siMtcli — v. 5 

deapntcli we tlic lui^iucss wc have. . Anl. ^ Cteo. ii. 2 
de9|iatch; from Antony win Cleopntni — iii. 10 
de.spiiteh: O love, tlmt tlioii couldstsee — iv. 1 

honest men: Kros,des]iiiti'li — iv. .'> 

the guanU ho! O despiilch me — iv. 12 

Chttrmiun,'wo'll despiitili indeed .... — v. 2 
l)e iiiii,'rv,iinddesim!e:i: (leoiddst .. — V. 2 
oimoe, iles|i:iti'h; 1 imrtlv feel tlico .. — v. 2 

des]wleli: now. niusler doctor Cynibeline,i. (i 

pr'vtlKe.de>ijnti'lr. ihe liunli entreats — iii. 4 

and tlve time ol'tluir iU->p:iteh — iii. 7 

my sword ^lK^U so,)n de-palth it. . TilusAndron. iv. 2 

I lim swoin, nnd will lUspateh Pericles, iv. 1 

terrible de.^riiteh otit into vour pocket? ..Lear, i. 2 
reinuin uui-MUu'lU; iiu.l tound— despatch — ii. 1 
ine^-euL'iT- tV.iin lieiu'o nttend despatch.. — ii. I 

to despatch his ni-hteil life — iv. .'. 

it would dL'spiiteh von straii;ht ... llomeo^Julut,v. 1 
wc here deHj.nteh you, j;ood Cornelius . . llaiiiM,}. 2 
your coinnus>ion will lorthwith despatch — iii. 3 

wish him post post-luiste; despatch OII\Mo,\. 3 

as she eouid with haste despatch — \. 'i 

your my.-Iery ; nay, desnatch — iv. 2 

pr'vtliei'. despatch. Shall I go fetch your — iv. 3 

DE.^l'ATCHKU— 
have you despatched? despatched! Mfrri/Tii'i?.?, v. h 

despatched sixteen businesses Aifs iVell, iv. 3 

see this despatched with all. Tainijii'o/S/ireu', 1 (ind.) 

I have despatched in post IVinler's Tale, ii. 1 

is he despatched? My lord, his throat. /l/actc/A, iii. 4 

despatched him in an embassy Kiiij; John, i. 1 

posts despatched for Ireland Iticfiard II. ii. 2 

see them despatched: tmcle, you say — iii. 1 

I have despatched with letters — iii. 1 

you shall be soon desiiatched Henry V. ii. 4 

a field should be despatched 1 Henry yi.i. 1 

we have despatched the duke 2Henry yi. iii. 2 

sirs, have you despatched this thing? — iii. 2 
deed, and desperately despatched !..iiic/iari( ///. i. 4 
have despatched with Pompey...4n(on!/ t^Cleo. iii. 2 
I bid you do, get them despatched . . Cyinbeline, i. 4 

what shall be, is despatched Tilus Amiron. iii. 1 

they 're well despatched Pericles, ii. ti 

of crown, of nueeii, at once despatched. . Hamlet, i. 5 

DESl'EKATE— of them are desperate . rcmp,?.?/, iii. 3 
am desperate of obtaining her. TwoGen.of Ver. iii. 2 

my suit then is desperate Merry IVivex, iii, 5 

into a desiwrate assurance Twelfth Night, ii. 2 

state is desi)erate for my master's love — ii. 2 

desperate of shame and state — v. 1 

afraid she will do a desperate outrage. 3/Mc/i^rfo, ii. 3 

of many desperate studies As you Like il, v. 4 

a dlsperate oft'endress against nature.. All' slVell, i. 1 
to cure the desperate languisliings . . — i. 3 
skill infinite, or monstrous desperate — ii. 1 
this is a fond and desperate creature — v. 3 
venture madly on a clesperate . . Taming of Sh. ii. 1 
this is desperate, sir. So call it .. »V(i(cr's7'n/e, iv. 3 

two desperate men, which King John, iii. 1 

as dissolute as desperate Diehard II, v. 3 

she's desiierate here : a iieevish 1 Henry/r. iii. 1 

yon island carrions, desperate Henry y. iv. 2 

^5alisbury is a desperate homicide .... 1 Henry yi. i. 2 
venturous, or desjierate than this .... — ii. 1 
moody mad, and desperate stags .... — iv. 2 
imheedful, desperate, wild adventure — iv. 4 

thy desix;rute sire of Crete — iv. 6 

so desi)eiL.t iiir.. -. j|l hopeless ZHcuryVI. i. 4 

needful in i id/ case — iv. 1 

drown cU-i .v in dead ..IticUard lll.u.2 

frightful.'!' : L'ti. ,, ilil, and furious — iv. 4 

in such a de^llel■lUe baj- of death — iv. 4 

to desperate ventures and assured — v. 3 

in de»|)crate manner daring Henry y III, i. 2 

so desi>erate to be honest — iii. 1 

may well be called desperate.. T'lwwn o/,4Mcns, iii. 4 

has desperate want made — i v. 3 

purge by any desjxirate change ..Antony^Cleo. i. 3 

my (lueen uiion a desperate bed Cymbeline, iv. 3 

grew shameless desiHirate; opened .. — v. ,^ 
are you so desperate grown, to threat. TiimAnd. ii. 1 
like a forlorn and desperate castaway — v. 3 

attended with a desperate train Lear, ii. 4 

go after her, she's desixjrate; govern her.. — v. 3 
one des[x;rate grief cures with . . ilomeo 4 Juliet, i. 2 

hold thy desiierate hand — iii. 3 

I will make u des|>erate tender iii. 1 

OS desiHirate an execution as (rep.) . . — iv. 1 

*hish out my desi)erate brains? — iv. 3 

in the thoughtsof desperate men!.... — v. I 

tempt not a desperate man — v. 3 

thou ilesiicrate pilot, now at once run — v. 3 
she, too des|>erate, would not go with me — v. 3 
he wa-xes desperate with imagination . . Hamlet, i. 4 
leads the will to desperate undertakings — ii. 1 
desiierate grown, by desiierate appliance — iv. 3 

a sister driven into desperate terms iv. 7 

with desiierate hand fordo its own life .. — v. 1 
the desperate tempest hath so banged . . ()lhi:lo, ii. 1 

1 am des|K'rate of my fortunes — ii. 3 

sight would make do a deaiicrute turn .. — v. 2 

DKSl^EliATElA'- 
aiid desiKiratelv mortal . , Measure for Metuure, iv. 2 
llc^^)cralely hehurricfl through .. Com<?dy o/ iirr. v. 1 
toiling desperately to find ilout ..Sllenry yi, iii. 2 

and des|)erately despatched Ilichard III. i. 4 

themselves, and de^^ierately are deaxl .... I^nr, v. 3 

Dl';sl'i;i{.\TIUX— tricks of desiiemtion.r^m/jrif, 1. 2 

des|>i ration is all the iwlicy CorioJuiiiu, iv. 6 

UUi very place puts toys ol dcspcratioo../fani^(, i. 4 



[_179] 

DESPRKATION-to desperation turn. . Hamlfl,\\\. 2 

DKSl'lSK-thal I '1' ,-I ' Ii' ..rnoden.iffrer.xy.i 
Idodespisea Ii", :' I'l- p.\ ..Merry mret,\. \ 

shoiil.l pitv, iiitl' ' ' e..iU.'t/. A'.'«7Jr. iii. 2 

de-pise lice, '.vli'" I " itll. /.occ'ir /,. L. V. 2 

if lie woiilil ile.pi'.' I'l' . I i'l...l/,'r. .1/ /Vmer, i. 2 

let not voilr ears clespi<e iiiv toiii.'ue . . \l,u-l,rlh, iv. 3 

awake, 1 do despise iiiv (inani ■Jll,'„ri/ir. V. 5 

niv ll>^l,ll^•spi^e lier f,'elltle nut . . . Mleiin/ ri. ii. 2 
1 eouKl lle-pi^e Ihi.- muii, but that./lcii-y C///. iii. 2 
I doile:.pise tliiiii; liir they do .. ..Coriolanus, iii. 1 
but I'linil'ort^ we (ies]iise ..Antony ^- Cleopatra, iv. 13 
Home will ilespise her for this foul., 7V<h»vIh!/. iv. 2 

the ,:.'ieut. nor ilo the low despise Pericles, ii. 3 

to ilesiii-e prolit. wlierc you have most — iv. 3 

in thy hate. Despise me, if I do not Othello, i. 1 

to niake me fniiiklv despise myself — ii. 3 

DKSI'l.SKD-lmth despised me mosi.Tiruden.nfy. iii. 2 
his old hetiotheil, hut despi5ed../WCT«./or Mens. iii. 2 
mv niiister said, ilespi icd the .. Mid. N.'s Dream, ii. 3 

siieh iisarede-piseil in liutivity — v. 2 

osteiit;ilion oriles|ii^e.; anus IticharUII. ii. 3 

foul we.ither with despised teiirs .... — iii. 3 

nephew, late desiiised Uielianl IHenry yi. ii. b 

say — of late thou wert despised? — ii. 5 

in" peace, abandoned, and despised!.. S/Jfiiri/ yt.i. 1 
the state of our despised nubility.. Henri/ r///. iii. 2 
thus is tlie poor agent despised!. jTroiVusL^CVeKji. v. II 
lest your deities be despised. 'Am. o/VlWi. iii. 6 (.grace) 
but art des^lised for the contrary .... — iv. 3 
is yon despised and ruinous man my — iv. 3 
she hath despised me rejoicingly . . Cymbeline, iii. .'i 

our father's tears despised TilusAndron, v. 3 

and most loved, despised! Lear^ i. 1 

a poor, infirm, weak, and despised old man — iii. 2 

the term of a despised life Romeo ^ Juliet, i. 4 

despised substance of divinest show! — iii. 2 
despised, distressed, hated, martyred — iv. 5 
pangs of despised [A'ji^.-disprized] love. Humfc(, iii. 1 
what's to come of my despised time .... Olhello, i. 1 
I will rather sue to be despised, than .... — ii. 3 

DESPISEK— else a rude despiscr. . .4s you Like it, ii. 7 

DESPISETII— despiscth me? . . Two Gen. of Ver. iv. 4 
hecaus", lie lows her, he des|iiscth me — iv. 4 

DESI'ISINU — Icspisinj: many [An/.-aud seen 

thee scorning] tbrte-its .... Troilns ^Cressida,iv. 5 
dcspisinc;, for vou, the citv, thus . . Coriolanus, iii. 3 

DESPITE— in despite of the ttiCth. ..Merry Wives, v. .j 
full of despite, bloody as tlie .... TwetfthNighl, iii. 4 
is grace, despite of all controversy. .Wea. /or ,Wt'o. i. 2 
a wicked villain, despite of all grace .. — i. 2 

heretic in the despite of beauty .tluch Ado, i. 1 

thot in despite of liis quick wit — ii. 1 

only todesiiite them,will I — ii. 2 

ancl in despite of all, dies for him. . . . — iii. 2 
and yet now, in despite of his heart.. — iii. 4 
despite liis nice fence, and his active — v. 1 
we come but in despite . . Mid. S. Uream, v. 1 (prol.) 
have the grace, despite of suit .... Loce'.« L. Lost, v. 2 
try in time, in despite of a fall .... As youLike it, i. 3 
yesterday in despite of my invention — ii. .^ 
in despite enforce a watery. Taming of Sh. 1 (indue.) 
in despite of the flesh and the blood — 2 (indue.) 

keep mine own, despite of all — iii. 2 

ill despite of mirth, mean to he. .Comedy of Err. iii. 1 
in despite of brooded watclifid .... King John, iii. 3 

my fair name, (despite of death liidiard //. i. 1 

on whom, as in despite, the sun Henry V. iii. 5 

hag of all despite, encompassed .... 1 Henry yi. iii. 2 

sword, despite of fate, to my — iv. 6 

in thy despite, shall 'scape — iv. 7 

in Paris, in despite of foes IHenry yi.i. 1 

protector, despite duke Humphrey . . — i. 1 

m despite of tlie devils and hell — iv. 8 

all contempt, despite the bearward .. — v. 1 
deposed he shall be, in despite of all..3//enry yi. i. 1 
set the duke up, in despite of me .... — i. 1 
the gracious duke, in high despite .. — ii. 1 

thot I in all despite might rail — ii. 6 

in despite of all that shall withstand — iv. 1 

in despite of all mischance — jv. 3 

wretch! despite o'erwhelm thee! ..Cor/oianu*, iii. 1 
as he hatli fidlowed you, with all despite — iii. 3 
in your despite, upon your yivm&'i ... .Cymbeline, i. 7 

thing loves him in my despite — iv. 1 

opeue'l. in despite of neaven and men — v. 5 
Would ynu liury him in my despite?. . TilusAnd. i. 2 
des|iile'thy victor sword, and fire-new.... Lear, v. 3 

despite of mine own nature — v. 3 

in despite, I'll cram thee with . . Romeo &■ Juliet, v. 3 
no, in despite of sense, and secrecy. . . . Hamlet, iii. 4 
thi'own such despite and heavy terms ..0^/ie/lo, iv. 2 
or scant our former havini; in desiiite . . — iv. 3 

DESPIT£FlJL-to seem despiteful. ./,<v"« Likeil, v. 2 
his despiteful ,Iuno, sent him ... til's >l, It, iii. -I (let.) 
(J despiteful love! unconsliint . . Tinning of Sh. iv. 2 
des|)itelnl tiilin'-'*: <J unpleii-illL' ..Kicliard III. iv. 1 
nio,t 'le.'pitelult^ii/.-de,|'itelillVst].7>0/7. i5-CV. iv. 1 
jn-ratii.iile tluit ilispitefnl Koine ...Int.i^ Cleo.ii. G 
despiteful and int'jlerabio'svrones!.. I'lVtis^l/id. iv. 4 

DESPITEl'UEL'ST- 
rAn(.] most desiiitefuU'st gentle. 7'r«i7uji5-CrM». iv. 1 

DESPOILED— despoiled of your . . . .2Henry yi. ii. 3 

DESTINED— destined to|)crforra Tempest, ii. 1 

being destined to a drier deatli. Two Gen. of yer. i. 1 
by putting on tlie destined livery.;Uca./m- Mea. ii. 4 
rny babes were destined to a lairer.WiMard ///. iv. 4 
take thou the destined tenth . . Timon of Athens, v. !> 

DESTINIES- to fates anddestinies.iWer. o/rfnice, ii. 2 

or as the destinies decree As you Like it, i. 2 

those branches by the destinies cut. . Kicliard II. i. 2 

by the destinies to lie avoided ZHenry yi. ii. 2 

or destinies do cut his threatl of life ... . Pericles, i. 2 

DESTINY— the rope of his destiny Tempest.i. I 

whom destiny, that hath to — iii. 3 

you orphan-heirs of lixed destiny.. .Wrrry Wires, v. 5 
it stands as an edict in destiny ...1/i<i. N. Dream, i. 1 
lottery of my destiny bars ine . . ,\ter. of yenice, ii. 1 
hanging and wiving goes bv destiny.. — ii. 9 
he brings his destiny with Iiiiu ,,Asyou Like it, iv. 1 



DET 



DESTINY-comos by destiny. . . . All's WeU, i. a (song) 
most c'"ii-f-ti'i. clic'ci,ih destiny .. lKiH//T'«7*«/e, iv. 3 

will c' I" I II", s lii< destiny Macbeth, iii. a 

I bear il'i li I" "i 'ic'stiny? King John, 'iv. 2 

an't III I ' I 111' , i; an't be xiot.i Henry I y. iii. 2 

the diioiii of lie: tiny nep.) Richard III. iv. 4 

labouring for destiiiy, make cruel. V'roiV. ^Cres. iv.S 
I would conspire against destiny .... — v. 1 
he painted with slinnless destiny . . Coriolanus, ii. 2 
toifc'tinvhiilil unliewailcd their way. yln/.*C'(<ro.iii.6 
'tisdestinv un.liiinnable, like death . . 0(/ieHo, iii. 3 

DESTITUtE-i.f his wings destitute. Cj/mfcedne, v. 3 
we are nut destitute for want Pericles, v. 1 

DESTKOY— that hour destroy us? Tempest, i. 2 

my valiant master would destroy thee.. — iii. 2 

wilt thou destroy him then? — iii. 2 

ourselves unjust, destroy our friends.. y4W'»(ffH, v. 3 
destroy your sight with a new Gorgon. A7ac6e/A, ii. 3 
to be that which we destroy, than .... — iii. 2 
no conscience to destroy a prince . . KingJohn, iv. 2 
should destroy his sons, from forth. ./ii'c/iure/ II. ii. 1 

teaeli pardon pardon to destroy? — v. 3 

sovereign, and destroy the realm . . 1 Henry yi. iii. 1 
purposing the bastard to destroy .... — iv. 6 
he that scuds us to destroy you .... Richard III. i. 4 
his Iwdy: shall I destroy liira?. 7'roi7uii<S' Cress, iv. 5 

to friglit them, ere destroy Coriolanus, i v. b 

war destroy what lies before them .. — iv. B 
thereby to destroy the Voices whom — v. 3 
pravB, and destroys the prayer .. Antony ffClco. iii. 4 
so tliou destroy Kapine and Murder.. Titus And. v. 2 

I'll thus your hopes destroy; and Pericles, ii. S 

the sword is out that must destroy thee . . Lear, iv. b 
own enaetures with themselves destroy. Hamfe/, iii. 2 

DESTROYED— Prospero is destioyed..y"emp«f, iii. 2 
destroyed the sweetest companion ff'inler'sTate,v. I 
a world ransomed, or one destroyed . . — v. 2 
the sentence my own life destroyed.. iJicAard 77. i. 3 
my sorrow hatii destroyed my face . . — iv. 1 

had destroyed so cowardly 1 Henry I y. i. 3 

in defence, be thus destroyed? henry y. iii. 3 

chief nobility, destroye<l themselves. 1 //cm i/ *''•'*'• • 
destroyed his eountr\'; and his nanie.Corio/u>i«»,v. 3 
had destroyed in such a shape .. Antony ff Cteo. iv. 8 

DESTIIOY'EIl-courtcous destroyers. 7Vinon r/j .A. iii.6 
than wars a destroyer of men Coriolanus, iv. .1 

DESTROYING— destroying them Xm.. Macbeth, Iv. 3 
worst of death's ile-trovii",' wound. .iiecAard 77. iii. 2 
and die, is 'U':itii .le^li-"VMi_; death .. — iii. 2 

DESTiUX riOX— In di-l: uction ....Macbeth, iii. 2 
even till destruction sicken, answer .. — iy. I 
send destruction into this city's bosom ..John, ii. 2 
to push destruction, and perpetual shame — y. 7 

cry, woe, destruction, ruin, loss Richard II. iii. 2 

destruction straight shall dog them.. — v 3 

winking, leaped into destruction iH'nryiy. i. 3 

like to men proud of destruction Henry /'. iii. 3 

and pale destruction meets thee .... 1 Hemy yi. iv. 2 
hemmed about with grim destruction — iv. 3 
gallop fast enough to her destruetion.2 7/ejiry yi. i. 3 

welcome destruction, blood liichard III. ii. 4 

death and destruction dog thee — iv. 1 

for revenge mock my destruction ! . . — v. 1 
ventures and assured destruction .... — v. 3 
and woo your own destruction .... Henry yill. v. 1 
swooning destruction; or some joy. TroiY. ifCrcs. iii. 2 
to gi-eat destruction [Co(. -distraetioiij — v. 2 
behold, destruction fCoi.-distractioii] — v. 3 
linger not our siure uestruetions on! .. — v. 11 
suitable for destruction .. Timon of Ath. iii. 6 (grace) 

destruction fang mankind! Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

hath in her more destruction than . . — iv. 3 
our good wills; a sure destruction . . Coriolanus, ii. I 
from thence into destruction cast him — iii. 1 
incenses them to send destruction.. JadiMCfl-rar,;. 3 
blood and destniction sliall be so in use — iii. 1 
your children to that destruction ..Ant. t^Cleo. y. 2 
dreads not yet their lives' destruction. THus And.)}. 3 
destruction on the enemy's castle? .. — iii. I 
fronUell destruction's blast. . . . Pericles, v. ? (Gow.) 
half the wooer, destruction on my liead..o«if«o, i. 3 

DETAIN— may detain us longer jlIucA Ado, i. 1 

detain you liere some month.. .UercA. of I'enice, iii. 2 

alone he would detain, so he Comedy tif Err. ii. I 

not sickness should detain me ..Antony ^C'/«o. ii. 2 

that we detain all his revenue — iii. 6 

detain no jot, I charge thee — iy. 5 

either to detain or give it tear, i. 2 

burnins shame detains him from Cordelia — iv. 3 

DET Alls' ED— here detained by her./ls you LiAeiV. i. 2 
hath all so long detained you ..Taming of SA. iii. 2 

wliieh he hath detained for lewd Richard II. i. 1 

hath detained ine, all my flowering..! Hcnij/'/.ii. 5 

DETECT— this, detect mv wife Merry Hifm, ii. 2 

detect the lazy foot of time 4.« yon Like ii, iu. 2 

thy tongue detect tliv base-born ilienryl I ii. 2 

neighbour's H ile. but it detects lum./iicAiird 7/7. i. 4 
lest thou shoulii^t detect liiin ....TilusAndron. ii. .1 
men approve, or men detect! Pericles, ii. 1 

DETECrED— to lie detected with..,Wfr»tf»rirM, ill. 5 
duke much detected for women. .Mcas./or Meas. ill. 2 

DETECTI.N'G— and scape detecting . ...Hamlet, iii. 2 

DETECTION— witli auv detection.. Veiry llic<i, ii. 2 

DETECTOK— not, or not I the detector!.. Lr-ir, in. S 

DETENTlU.N'-aud the detention . Timon qfAlh. ii. 2 

DETER.MIXATE- . ^ ,^, ,.. ^, .. , 

my determinate voyage is mere. . Tue'flh ^lght, ii. 1 
not determinate the dateless limit . . Richard //. i. 3 

ere a determinate resolution Henry y III. \\. 4 

wherein none can lie so determinate — Oihello, iv. 2 

DETERiMlN.VnoN-. 

she change her determination? . . Merry '» ires, iii. 5 
to the deterniinatioii ul ju3tiee..Wea»./ur .Me.is. iii. 2 
me with their deti i niiiuilions . . .Merch. (jT yenice. i. 2 

you wereoi onrdeleriniuation! Mlrnryiy. iv. 3 

a free dcteriniiittliou 'twixt right. 7'roi7. f,- Cress, ii. 2 
I have, in uiiiek determination Hamlet, '\ii. 1 

DETEU.MINE— 
determine our proceedings. Two Gen. itf' lerona, in. 2 
ahc determiues herself the glory. A/f<«./or Meas. i. I 



DETERMINE— better determine. Meas./orMeas. ii. 1 
I have sent for to clefermiuethi3.i>/e)-.o/r(?H;'tr,iv. 1 

I will determine this Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

determine what we sliall do KingJolin, ii. 1 

abfolutcly to determine of what 21Ienryl I', iv. 1 

and yet I determine to light lustily . .Henry V. iv. 1 

sitting to determine iioor men's iHmryVI. iv. 7 

go we to determine wlio thev shaIl./i/cAar(< III. ii. 2 
[Knt.'i sonictlung we will determine — iii. 1 

IS, to determine of the coronation. ... — iii. 4 
know liOM- lie determines turther . . Henry nil. i. 1 

must nil determine here? Coriolanus, iii. 3 

determine on some conrse — iv. 1 

till tliese wm'ii determine — v. 3 

will dctei-mine how to cut oif Julius Casar, iv. 1 

as it deternnnes, sti dissolve my. Antony ^-Cleo. iii. 1 1 

it will deterniineone way — iv. :) 

miylit determine this L'reat war — iv. 1 

how kindly we deterniinu for lier — v. 1 

the laws ofRome iktei mine all . . Titus.inrlrnn. i. 2 
let ns then determine witli the ancient . . Lenr, v. 1 
and our safety ni;i3- equallj' determine . . — v. 3 

this shall determiiie that liomeo Sf Juliet. \\\. i 

brief sounds determine of my weal .. — iii. 2 
what we do determine, oft vre break . . Hamlet, iii. '1 
be it as you shall privateh' determine . . Otlwlto, i. 3 
DETERMINED- 
our flight, determined of . . Tuo Gen. nf Verona, ii. 4 
you ha^■e determined to bestow her — iii. 1 

you h.ad, to a determined seojie.il/eas./or Meas. iii. 1 
till yon lni\e well determined upon..' — v. 1 

yet determined to-d,ay to marry Much Ado, v. 4 

frmn his own determined aid KingJolin, ii. 2 

Miend .■■ieknct^s hath determined illenrylF. iv. 4 

my determined time thou gavest ..1 Henry I'l. iv, 6 
and fliat sueeession be determincd..3HeHrj/ VI. iv. 6 
am determined to prove a villain . . Richard HI. i. 1 
it is determined, not concluded yet .. — i. 3 
that may be determined at the one . . '" ^ 

had we not determined he should die 
is tile determined respite of my wrom 

Iiiiving determined of the Voices C 

are vou then determined to do? . . Jul .... „ , 

let determined things to destin3'...J«/o;iy SfCleo. i 
have governed our determined jest?. . TilusAnd. v. 2 
following him with determined sword. . Olhello, ii. 3 
PKTKST— we detest such vile ..Two Gen.ofVer. iv. 1 
t do detest false perj ured Proteus — v. 4 

but, I detest, an honest maid Mem/ IVives, i. 4 

a fashion she detests Twelflli Niglii. ii. 5 

wliom I detest before heaven . . Meas. for Meas. ii. 1 

dost thou detest her therefore? .... ii. 1 

I will detest myself also ii. 1 

these that my poor company detest. Mi'rf.iV. Dr. iii. 3 

a man, that more detests Henry VIII. v. 2 

that the gods detest such baseness.. ^»i/.(§Cteo. iv. 12 

write against them, detest them Cymbeline, ii. ,'j 

DETESTAIlLE-detcstable things . Winter' sTale, iv. 2 

I will kiss thy detestable bones Kim^Jnlm, iii. 4 

nakedness, thou detestable town]. Timonoi Aili. iv. 1 
O detestalile villain! call'st thou . Titus Audron. v. 1 
most detestable death, by thee . . Romeo^- Juliet, iv. 5 

tliou detestable maw, thou womb .... v. 3 

DETESTED— ah me, detested! .... Twelfth Night, v. 1 
grows guilty of detested crimes.. Lo?-e's L. Lost, iv. 1 
the dark house, and the detested wife. All' stVell, ii. 3 
grops rebellion, and detested treason. fl/cAarrf //. ii. 3 
treasons, and detested sins, the cloak — iii. 2 

^vear the detested blot of 1 Henry IV. i. 3 

tliou detested— iMargaret Richard III. i. 3 

smooth, detested parasites ,Timon of Alliens, iii. 6 

spotted, detested, and abominable. 7Y(«s.l;i.;ron. ii. 3 

a ban-en detested vale, you see, it is.. ii. 3 

this detested, ilark, blond-ilrinking pit " ■ 

yet detested life not shrink thereat .. 

bloody mm-dcr, or detested rape 

imnatural, detested, brutish villain! 

detested kite! thou liest 

and sumpter to this detested groom. . . 
DETESTING-wife of a detesting lord. All's Well,iii. 5 
DETRACT— speeches, and to detract . . Tempest, ii. 2 



— III. 2 

— iii. 5 

— V. 1 
'olanus, ii. 2 

Ca'sur 



— 111. 1 

V. 2 

. Lear, i. 2 

— i. 4 



DETRACTION 
more detraction at your heels. . . . Twelfth Night, ii. 5 

that hear their detractions, and Much/ldo, ii. 3 

unspeak mine own detraction Maclieth, iv. 3 

detraction will not suffei it XHenrylV. v. 1 

DETTC KI K") \T tar than Deucalion. )rm(er's7'a(6',iv. 3 
^ ' r since Deucalion.. CoriotanKs, ii. 1 

D 1 ot (lent c ace . . Love's L. Lost, i. 2 

1^^ dcuxmjtsd Vnglois. Henry F. iii. 4 

I* "1 dcu cents escus .. — iv. 4 

Dt \ ■'iiiv(.—de\c=ting them tor bed .. Othello, ii. 3 
DEVICE— O excellent dcMce! ..TwoOen.nfVer.i'u 1 

also another device in my prain Merry Wives, i. 1 

marry, this is our device iv. 4 

well, husband your device iv! 6 

excellent! I smell a device TwelflhNight, ii. 3 

I could marry this wench for this device — ii. .5 

taken the infection of tlie device .... iii. 4 

lest the device take air, and taint iii. 4 

we will bring the device to the bar .. _ iii. 4 

set this device against Malvolio v. 1 

deliver us from devices hereafter.. /l/«a. forMea.iw 4 

and our devices known Mid. N. Dream, i. 2 

I have a device to make all well .... iii. l 

that is an old device; and it was played — v. 1 

an excellent device! so, if any Love's L.Losl, v. 1 

butl^\iil lovwari! witli my device .. — v. 2 
I'll tell tine all n;y ■.vlioledevice.il/e»-. o/re«TO,iii. 4 
tliee by some tieielieri.us device ..Asyou Likeit,i. 1 

lull of noble device; of all sorts ' — i. 1 

a letter of yonr own device iv. 3 

of tlie maid: that's your device. Taming of Shrew, i. 1 
by this device, at least, have leave .. — i. 2 

some device or other, the v{\\am..ComcdynrErr. i. 2 

and not alone in habit and device King John, i. 1 

what trick, what device IHenrylV.i'i. i 

to hear his monstrous devices — ii. 4 I 

some odd girnmals or device '.\Uenry VI. 'i. 2 ) 



DEVICE— it was thy device bythi8..3Hrar!/r/. iii. 3 
O excellent device! and make a sop.llichard III. i. 4 

cannot see this palpa,ble device? — iii. 6 

perish under device and practice . . Henry VIII. i. 1 
no new device to beat this from his . . — iii. 2 
by device, let blockish Ajax. . Trollus ^- Cressidn, i. 3 

mc with mine own device Timon of Athens, i. 2 

'tis plate, of rare device; and ]e\ve\s..Ci/iittirtiiie, I. 7 
whether by device, or no, the lieavens. Titus.-lud. i. 2 
but plot your deaths by this device . . — ii. 1 
plot some device of further misery .. — iii. 1 
whence tills same device proceeds.. .. — iv. 4 

bury all thy fear in my devices — iv. 4 

what says Andronicus to this device? — v. 2 
o'er-rcach them in their owm devices — v. 2 
labour of each knight, in his device....ren'c/ffs, ii. 3 
the device he bears upon his shield (,rep.) — ii. 2 
and his device, a wreath of chivalry . . . . — ii. 2 
that our devices still are overthrown , . Hamlet, iii. 2 



— IV. 7 
. Othello, ii. 3 

Tempest, i. 2 

— i. 2 



— IV. 1 

— V. 1 

y Wives, I. 3 

— ii. 1 

— ii. 2 



exploit, now ripe in my device 

dull not device by coldness and delay 

doff'st me with some device, lago .... 

DEVIL— and all the devils are here .. . 

fot by the devil himself ujion . 
ave we devils here? 

where the devil should he 

and these are devils 

this is a devil, and no monster 

and the devil take your fingers 

if tlrou be'st a devil, take't as 

are worse than devils 

a devil, a born devil 

tile devil speaks in him 

as many devils entertain Me 

picked (with the devil's name) out . . 

yet tliey are de\'ils' additions 

the devil himself hath not — ii. 2 

what devil suggests this imagination? — iii. 3 
but, lest the devil that guides him .. — iii. 5 

and the devil guide his cudgel _ iv. 2 

now shall the devil be shamed — iv. 2 

if the devil have him not in fee-simple — iv. 2 

like three German devils — iv. .'> 

the devil take one party — iv. .5 

hath the finest mad devil of jealousy — v. 1 

no man means evil but the devil — v. 2 

and the Welch devil, Hugh? — v. 3 

I think the devil will not have — v. ft 

that ever the devil could have — v. 5 

let hira be the devil, an' he will. . Twelfth Night, i. b 

but if you were the devil — i. 5 

the devil a Puritan that he is — ii. 3 

thou most excellent devil of wit! .... — ii. 5 

if all tlic devils in hell be — 

Whatman! defy the devil — 

an' you speak ill of the devil — 

but he is a devil in private brawl — 

why, man, he's a very devil — 

have persuaded him, the youth's a devil — 

o'crflourished by the devil — 

that will use the devil himself — 

cries, ah, ha! to the devil — iv. 2 (song) 

rCoL Kra^] adieu, goodman devil.. — iv. 2 (song) 
but he's the very devil inoardinate ., — v. 1 
on the devil's horn (rep.) . . Measurefor Measure, ii. 4 

is yet a devil; his filth being — iii. 1 

nay, if the devil have given thee — iii. 2 

you bid me seek redemption of the devil — v. '. 
and let the devil be sometime honoured — v. 1 
make avoyage with liim to the davir!. MuchAdo, i. 1 

and there will the devil meet me — ii. 1 

but the devil my master knew she . . — iii. 3 
one sees more devils than vast liell.il//d.A'.'sDr. v. 1 
love is a devil, there is no evil angel. .Lotc'sL.L. i. 2 

devils soonest tempt, resembling — 

no devil will fright thee then — 

some quillets how to cheat the devil — 

feared her, had she been a devil — 

if the devil be within, and that . . .Mer. of Ve. 
and the complexion of a devil, I had — 
tile Nazarite, conjured the devil into — 

the devil can cite scripture for — 

(God bless the mark!) is a kind of devil — 
the devil himself: certainly (rep.) . . — 
and thou a merry devil, didst rob it. . — 
lest the devil cross my prayer; for here — 

if the devil may be her judge — 

unless the devil himseli turn Jew .. — 

curb this cruel devil of his will — iv. 1 

sacrifice them all here to this devil . . — iv. 1 
why then, the devil give him good of iti — iv. 1 
the devil himself wilt have no . . As you Like it, iii. 2 
nay, but the devil take mocking ...'. — iii. 2 
he must needs go, that the devi Idrives. All's Well, i . 3 



111. 4 



111. 4 



iv. 2 



IV. 3 



V. 2 



li. 2 



lu. 1 
iii. I 
iii. 1 



11. 1 
ii. 3 
iv. 1 
iv. 5 
V. 2 
ofSh. i. 1 



IV. 3 



though the devil lead the measure 
the devil it is, that's thy master .... 

what the devil should move me 

the prince of darkness, alias, the devil 
both the office of God and the devil? 
from all such devils, good Lord . . Tami: 

you may go to the devil's dam 

a devil. I say, a hjisband. I say, a devil 
he's a devil, a devil, a very fiend (rep.) 

why, what o' devil's name, tailor 

3'our queen and I are devils Winter's Tale. 

though a devil would have shed water — iii. 2 

a devil in an everlasting — iv. 2 

it is the devil. Nay, she is (rep.). Comedy of Err. iv. 3 

that muKt cat with the devil iv. 3 

some devils ask but the paring — iv. 3 

the devil will shake her chain — iv. 3 

cry the devil. God hell) — iv. 4 

what, can the devil sjieak true? Macbeth, i. 3 

that fears a painted devil — ii. 2 

who's there, i' the other devil's name? ii. 3 

that which might ai)iial tlie devil — iii. 4 

can come a devil more damned in — iv. 3 

would not betray the devii to his fellow — iv. 3 

the devil damn thee black — v. 3 

the devil himself could not pronounce — v. 7 



to water, or devii to his dam 

the devil art thou? One that will (rep.) — ii. I 
that sly devil'; that broker, that still — ii. 2 
look to that, devil! lest that France — iii. 1 

the devil tempts thee here, in likeness — iii. ! 

some airy devil hovers in — iii. 2 

thou wert better gall the devil — iv. 3 

that you shall think t!ie devil is come — iv. 3 
that misbegotten devil, Eaulconbridge — v. 4 
the devil take Henry of Lancaster, .liichard II. v. 5 

for now the devil, that t(jld me — v.."; 

what a devil hast tliou to do with 1 HenrylV. i. 2 

how agrees the devil and tliee about — i. 2 

the devil shall have his bargaiu (lep.) — i. 2 
the devil. Else he had been (rep.).. .. — i. 2 
as well have met the devil alone .... — i. 3 
and if the devil come and roar for.... — i. 3 

O, the devil take such cozeners! — i. 3 

but, as the devil would have it — ii. 4 

and swore tlie devil his true liegeman — ii. 4 
Percyj and that devil Glendower? .. — ii. 4 

there IS a devil haunts tliee — ii. 4 

heigh, lieighl the devil rides upon .. — ii. 4 
command the devil. And I can (rep.) — iii. 1 
'scapes he agues, in the devil's name — iii. 1 
reckoning up the several devils names — iii. 1 
I perceive, the devil understands Welsh — iii. 1 
if that the devil and mischance look big — iv. I 

as lief hear the devil as a drum — iv. 2 

what a devil dost thou in Warwickshire? — iv. 2 

he will foin like any devil •iHenrylV. ii. 1 

as far in the devil's book, as thou — ii. 2 

what the devil hast thou brought there? — ii. 4 

but the devil outbids him too — ii. 4 

a mere hoard of gold kept by a devil — iv. 3 
why the devil should we keep knives.Henry V. ii. 1 
and otlier devils, that suggest by ... . — ii. 2 
and said, they were devils incarnate — ii. 3 
a' said once, the devil would have him — ii. 3 

give the devil his due — iii. 7 

there stands your friend for the devil — iii. 7 

with — a pox of the devil — iii. 7 

like wolves, and fight like devils .... — iii. 7 
make a moral of the devil himself .. — iv. ! 
than this roaring devil i' the old play — iv. 4 

the devil take order now ! — iv. ij 

the devil was in arms \ Henry VI. i. 1 

more haughty than the devil — i. 3 

devil, or devil 's dam, I'll conjure thee — i. b 

fit for the devil's grace! — v. 3 

wonders, but by help of devils — v. 1 

come amiss, were she a devil 2Henry VI. i. 2 

my lord, let's see the devil's writ — i. 4 

this devil here shall be my substitute — iii. 1 

the devil make a third ! — iii. 2 

in despite of the devils and hell — iv. 8 

let ten thousand devils come — iv. 10 

where is that devil's butcher SHenryVI. v. 5 

and good devil, were alike — v. (1 

cannot endure the devil; avaunt . . Richard III. i. 2 

foul devil, foi: God's sake, hence — i. 2 

O wonderful, when devils tell the truth — i. 2 
but the plain devil, and dissembling — i. 2 
out devil ! I remember them too .... — i. 3 

with a hell of ugly devils! — i. 3 

and sooth the devil that I warn — i. 3 

a saint, when most I play the devil . . — i. 3 

take the devil in thy mind — i. 4 

brother's love, the devil, and my rage — i. 4 
but, O, the devil,— there the villain . . — iv. 3 
of the devil thus? Ay, if the devil tempt — iv. 4 
the devil speed him! no man's pie. . Henry Vlll. i. ! 
not from hell, the devil is a niggard. . — i. I 
why the devil, upon this FrencTi .... — i. 1 

by the devil's illusions this monk. . . . — i. 2 
the devil fiddle them ! I am glad.... — i. 3 
what cross devil made me put this . . — iii. 2 
whose lionesty the devil and his disciples — v. 2 
the devil was amongst them, I think — v. 3 
an' the devil come to him .... Troilus fy Cressida, i. 2 
learn to conjure and raise devils .... — ii. 3 

and devil, envy, say, Ainen — ii. 3 

fears make devils of cherubims — iii. 2 

the devil take Antenor! — iv. 2 

a still and dumb-discoursive devil .. — iv. 4 
sometimes we are devils to ourselves — iv. 4 

how the devil luxury, with his — ^'. 2 

wert thou the devil, and wor'st it .... — v. 2 

a burning devil take tliein — v. 2 

the devil take tliee, coward! _ v. 8 

the devil knew not wliat he did.. Tnnon of Ath. iii. 3 

creditors! — devils. My dear lord — iii. 4 

lie's the devil Coriolanus, i. 1 

eternal devil to keep Ms state Julifis Ccesar, i. 2 

some angel, or some devil — iv.3 

now gods and devils! authority. .4n(ony (J- C/eo. iii. 11 
I luiow the devil himself will not eat — v. 2 

if the devil dress her not — v. 2 

these same whoreson devils do the.... — v. 2 
ten that they make, the devils raar . . — v. 2 
disdains thee and the devil alike .... Cymlndine, i. " 
that such a crafty devil as is liis .... — ii. 1 

his garment? now the devil — ii. 3 

O, all the devils? this yellow — ii. .5 

the very devils cannot plague — ii. ,'> 

conspired with that irregnlous devil — iv. 2 
pray to the devils; the gods have. Titus Andron. iv. 2 
a devil. Why then she^s the devil's dam — iv. 2 

this is the incarnate devil ~ v.! 

bring down the devil — v. 1 

if there be devils, would I were a devil — v. 1 

all hell afford you such a devil? — v. 2 

convenient you had such a devil .... — v. 2 
this accursed devil; let him receive . . — v. 3 

some devil whisper curses in — v. 3 

she would make a puritan of the <Ve\\\. Pericles, iv. 6 
darkness and devils! saddle mj' horses . . Lear, i. 4 
see thyself, devil! Proper deformity .... — iv. 3 
tiie devil should this iiouieo bel.Iiomeo ^Juliet, ii. 4 



DEVrL— why the devil, came you.noineo c5-Ji(/i'e/,iii. 1 

what (li'vil iirt tlnm, tli!it(lu!.t tiirineiit — iii. 2 
bcnili-vil: 1111. 1 tliriU'vil liiUh |i,)«er . . //.i-h/W, ii. 2 

we.liiMi-iirnVr lli.iK-vil liiiiM'lf — iii. 1 

nuv,tlK-ii let th.a.vil «i'.irlil:ii-k — iii. 2 

wliat.kvil Hii>'t, tlml tliiiihiilh — iii I 

oniuliifsJevil, iMiii^'il vet ill tliis — iii. I 

mill either eiirli Ihe ilexil. or throw — iii. I 

vows. tiitliel.liiekii-t.Uvil! — iv. .0 

tlieilevil tiiUe thy M.ul! — v. 1 

or else the ilevil will make agramlsiru.. 0</iW(o, i. 1 
will not serve G."l. if tlie ilcvil hid you.. — i. I 
in yiuir iiiiuries, devils lieiiii; "ffeiufcd .. — ii. I 

shi'ill sliehiive t.i Ki.)k nil llieilevil? — ii. I 

be known hv. ht useiill thee-ilevill .... — ii. 3 
devil, dninkeiuiess, to i,'ive phii-e (rep.) .. — ii. 3 
\uibles-sea, niul the iimiiilieiil is n devil.. — ii. 3 
when devils will their blarkest sins pnt — ii. :1 
swift means ol dentil lor the I'liirilevil .. — iii. ;i 
liere'sa voiiiig :uid swiiitini,' devil here .. — iii. 1 

like the devil, tVoin his verv iiriii — iii. I 

ill the devil's teeth. IVoiii wheiiee vuii.... — iii. 1 

it islivpoerisvii-aiiist thedevil _ iv. 1 

tliedeVil their virtue tempts _ iv. I 

eoiil'ess! haiidkereliiet'l Oilivil! — iv. 1 

let the devil and his (hull haunt von! — iv. 1 

how, sweet tlthello':' Devil! I have not — iv. 1 
Odevil. devil! if that the earth e.nild.,.. — iv. 1 
the devils themsvlvus should tVar to seize — iv. 2 
anfe'elshe,andvoiitheliluekerdevil! .... _ v. 2 
tlioudost belie ^ur.andtlioii art adevil.. _ v. 2 
let heaven, and men, and devils, katlieni — v. 2 
whlli me. ve devils, from the possession. . _ V. 2 
ifthat thonlie'st a.levil, leamiot kill .. — v. 2 
Di'.Vll.I.-^Il— a devilish iiinev iu..V<-n.v. iniMeas. iii. 1 
hildiiii; ol'a deNilish spirit.. .. r<imi„g of Shrew, ii. 1 
with a iiio>t impatient devilish spirit — ii. 1 

devilish Marbrth by many ofthese ..MwbetU,\v. :! 
now the devilish eaniioii tonelies. Henry/', iii. (clio.) 

began herdevilisli inactiees iHcnnjl'l. iii. 1 

by devili.sh policy art thou grown — iv. 1 

be possessed with chvilish spirits .... — iv. 7 
they arc, and devili^h slave, by thecWic/iarJi/i. i. 2 
relent, is beastly, sa^•age, and devilish — i. 1 
conspire my death with devilish plots — iii. 4 
(unless thou think'st me devilish) ..Cymheline, i. 6 
a devilish knave! besides the knave.... OWeUo, ii. I 
DEVILISU-UDLY— 

kills troth, i > devilish-holv frnv! ..Mid.S'.Dr. iii. 2 
DEVII.-MKNiC— that devil-monk. .Henii/F///. ii. 1 
DEVII--VORTEU— I'll devil-porter it..Macbelh, ii. 3 

I>E"V1SE— then she devises Merry Wives, ii. 2 

good hearts, devise something — iv. 2 

devise but how you'll use him — iv. 4 

let us two devise to bring him thither — iv, 4 
that yon can devise to send me on . . Much Ado, ii. 1 
truly, I'll devise some honest slanders — iii. 1 
I'll devise thee brave punisliments .. — v. 4 
falls out tjctter than I eoukl devise. .^//d./V.iDr. iii. 2 
rest of the court can possibly devise.. Lome's L.L. i. 1 

devise wit ; write pen i for I am — i. 2 

let us devise some entertainment .... — iv. 3 
the brain may devise laws for ..Merch.ofl'enice, i. 2 

I will, coz, and devise sports As ijou Like it, i. 2 

therefore devise with me, liow we.... — i. 3 

I shall de\ise sometliing — iv. 3 

I will devise a death as cruel iyinler\Tnle,\y. 3 

can'st not, cardinal, devise a 'aViXi\Q,,KingJohn, iii. 1 
out of your grace, devise, ordain .... — iii. 1 

or thou causl worse devise Uichard U.\. \ 

what sport shall we devise here — iii. 4 

whatever I shall happen to devise . . — iv. 1 
I will devise matter enough out ....iliennjll'.v. I 
and withal, devise something to do.. — v. 3 
for his safety there I'll best devise . . 1 Hcnnj ri.\. 1 
where are vou? what devise you on? — i. 2 

this doth .Toan devise — iii. 3 

devise strange deaths for small . . . .'iHennj VI. iii. 1 
you did devise strange tortures for .. — iii. I 

we'll deWse a mean to reeoneile — iv. 8 

Clifford, devise excuses for (rep.) 3Uenry Vt. ii. Ii 

by such invention as I can devise ! .. — iv. 1 
niistress to devise imposition .. Troitus ^- Cress, iii. 2 

see, and hear, devise, instruct Corialimus, i. 1 

fit the honours which we devise liim — ii. 2 

deviec with thee where thou — iv. I 

all good you can devise of CiEsar..'K/i'tis Ccrsar, iii. 1 

or else devise his death Tilus Androiiicus, v. I 

devise his speedy taking off Leur, v, 1 

bid her devise some means .... Romeo ^ Juliet, Ii. 4 
love thee better than thou canst devise — iii. I 

bid me devise some means to rid — v. :i 

if you could devise it so, that I Ilamti-l, iv. 7 

I'll devise a mean to draw the Moor . . Othello, iii. I 
and for me to devise a loilging, and say.. — iii. 1 

and devise engines for mv life — iv. '^ 

DE'VISEU— they have devised.. riooGen.o/rer. iii. I 
no sauce that can lie devised to it. . . . MwhAilo, iv. 1 
gates have wc devised to steal .... Mid. A'.'j Dr. i. 1 
who devised this? Marry, that did I.torc'jL.L, i. I 

for a new devised court'sy — i, 2 

tliat he hath devised in these ..Merch. of Venice, i. 2 
heavenly synod was devigeU.i<« you i-iAtf, iii,2(ver8.) 

though devined, and played H'i,,tersi'jle, iii. 2 

new exactions lire devised liichardll.W. 1 

reproof of nianv tales devised \lienry IV. Iii. 2 

was not devised for the realm of Uenrtf V. i. 2 

pamphlets studiously devised MIeiiryVI. ill. 1 

devised lin|>eai.'hments !o imprison. Ai'c/iurii /J/, ii, 2 

a thing devised hy the enemy — v. 3 

devi.^}d at lir^l to keep the strong — v. 3 

they say, they arc devised by you . . Henry VI U. i. 2 
ceremony wiis but devised at lirst .Timon ofAlh. I. 2 
or my reporter devised well for. ./In'oiij/ ^- Cteo. ii. 2 

until we nave devised some TiltuAndrnn. ii. 4 

devised a new commission linrnlei, v. 2 

office, have not devised this slander. . . . Othello, iv. 2 
DEVISING— his gift is In densing ..lUuch.tdn, ii. I 
DE'VtJID— and devoid of pity ....Tinu Andron. v. .") 
l>EVONSmKE— in Devounhire ..Richard HI. iv. 4 



DEVOTE— so devote to Aristotle's. T'om.'ng'o/S/i. 1. 1 
DEVOTED-devolcd lulKriin . . Two Uen. of Ver. il. 7 

voiir iK-rfii't sell' is else de\dteil.... — Iv. 2 

e.mipliments ol'dvvnted nmX.Uwe'l L.LosI, I, 1 (let.) 

this i-c Miiir devoUd fiieiid, sir All'slVell, Iv. 3 

to stoli'devoted c-liiiritable d.'vls? . .Iticliurdlll. i. 2 

and it lliv poor devoted servant may — 1.2 

he lialli .Icvoted ami given up himself. . O.'/icH^, ii. 3 

DE\'i ll'I'.'M i;.\'r-L('"'. A■'l^3 devotemeiit of — ii. 3 

DE\'0'l'I(>N~did 1 devotion ....TwelfthNight, Iii. 4 

that e'er devotion tendered! — v. 1 

lowliness, devotion, patience, courage. i>/iir!(e(A, Iv. 3 
in the devotion of a subject's lovo ..Kicliard Il.i. 1 

mv dev.ition. It doth •iUenrylV. V. 5 

devotion, to this liolv shrine? (.reo.) .'iUtiiry VI. ii. 1 
tell our devotion with reveiij'eful ..'ilienryVI. II. I 
and in ilevotion s|HMid iny latter days — iv. G 
the interruption ol' lliy devotion ..Richard III. iii. 7 
upon tlie like dev.ition as yourselves — iv. 1 
iinniaeiihite (levoti..ii, holy thoughts — iv. 4 
the dev..ti..ll wbi.ii cold lllia . . ■frwlus ^- Cirss. iv. 4 
with L'1-eater.lev..li..ii than thev ."in, ('er, .,/.,„./(, ii.2 



til. 



i.l.le 



ol'th. 



: thi 



llf,mri„\Ji,l,rl. i. f, 

(hid shield, I should disturb .levotion! — iv. 1 
that with devotion's visaL,'e, and pious. ;/'im/e^ iii. 1 

I have no great clevoti.ui to the deed . . Oihelh, v. 1 
DEVOL'K— they devour their reason ..Teinpi-il,v. 1 

greedily devour the treacherous Mucli.hio,\\\. 1 

the jaws of darkness do devour it up. /l/iV. A. D/. i. 1 

devours uj) all the fry it finds All\ ll'ell, iv. 3 

and devour inccrtain lookers-on.. Wialer'sTak,\. 1 

to devour so many as will to Macbeth, iv. 3 

in running to devour the way iHenrylV. \. 1 

devours ttu ileed ill the praise.. '/"ra/dM <5-6Vcm. ii. 3 

til 1 i. Ill ,, us devour him Coriolanits, i. I 

in. . loui; as the hungry .... — ii. 1 

II 111 I I I Ill's them all /'metes, ii. I 

til. - - i: -,Kill devour tlicm, flesh Lear, v. 3 

a "re.'iU ear ilev.mr ni) mv dii-course. . . . Oi/iWio, i. 3 

DEVOUm:!)— surL'es Inn e devoured.. 7'wrfmi A'. V. 1 
hath devoure.l maiiv a -entleman. . Mid. N. Dr. iii. 1 
Lincoln washes have devoured them. King- John, v. G 

all unwarily, devoured by the — v. 7 

which arc devoured as fast as.. Troilus ^Cress. iii. 3 
forsook me, hath devoured the vest.Cariolanus, iv. A 

in sorrow all devoured Pericles, iv. 4 (Gower) 

DEVOURER— from these devomers. TitusAnd. iii. 1 

DEVOURING— it had, devouring .... Tempest, iii. 3 

spite of cormorant devoiu'ing time. . Love's L. L. i. I 

or suj)pose, devouring pestilence .... Richard Il.i. 3 

tinder his devouring paws SHenryVI. i. 3 

out of this fell devouring receptacle. . TitusAnd. ii. 4 
DEVOUT— a most devout coward ..Tu-ctftk X. iii. 4 

but more .lev.uit than this Lore's L. L.v. 2 

contemiilatioii and devout desires .. KingJnIiii, v. 4 
which men devout by testament have. . /h'/iri/ C. i. I 

holy and devout religious men Riclmrd UL iii. 3 

what, art thou devout? Troilus d^- Crtssida, ii. 3 

the devout religion of mine eye. . Romeo r^ .lulirt, i. 2 

much eastigation, exercise devout Olhrllo, iii. 4 

DEVOUTLY— dotes, devoutly dotes.. i»i/(/. N.Dr. i. 1 
to heaven, and prayed devoutly ..Henry VIII. iv. 1 
consummation devoutly to be wished.. l/nmte(, iii. 1 

DEW— to fetch dew frorn the Tempest, i. 2 

as wicked dew as e'er my mother — i. 2 

to dew her orbs upon the green .Mid. N. Dream, ii. 1 

bedabbled with the dew, and torn — iii. 2 

and that same dew, which sometime — iv. 1 
that sweep away the morning dew . . — iv. 1 
the night of dew that on.. Loir's L. Lost,iv. 3 (vers.) 
fearfully o'ertrip the dew . . Merchant of Venice, v. 1 
roses newly washed with dew. jTami'/j^'o/.s/jrew', ij.l 

the want of which vain dew iVinter'sTute, ii. 1 

to dew the sovereign flower Macbeth, v. 2 

before the dew of evening fail King John, ii. 1 

let me wipe off this honourable dew.. — v. 2 

in pity may dissolve to dew Richard II. v. 1 

signieur Dew should be a (rep.) Henry V. iv. 4 

that I may dew it with my 2 Henry VI. iii. 2 

even as the dew to fire — v. 2 

enjoy the golden dcsv of sleep Richard III. iv. 1 

\_Vol. Kn(. J the dew is raw and cold . . — v. 3 

his dews fall everywhere Henry VIII. i. 3 

which God's dew quench! — ii. 4 

the dews of heaven fall thick — iv.2 

melted away with rotten dews Coriolanus, ii. 3 

his new plants with dews of flattery.. — v. 5 
the honey heavy dew of slumber. .Julius Ccesar, ii. I 

clouds, dews, and dangers come — v. 3 

whiles yet the dew's on ground Cymbeline, i. G 

have on them cold dew o' the night. . — iv. 2 

fall on their heads like dew! — v. & 

as dotli the honey dew upon Titus.lndron. iii. 1 

augmenting tlie fresh morning's dew./iom..^ Jul. i. 1 

night's (lank dew to dry, I must — ii. 3 

the uir doth drizzle dew but for — iii. .'J 

[Col. Kiit.] water niiihtlv I will dew — v. 3 

triiins of hre and dews of blood Hamlet, i. 1 

will ks o'er the dew of yon high — i. 1 

thaw and resolve itself into a dew! — 1.2 

the morn and linui.l .lew of youth — i. 3 

sw.irds, for the dew will rust them 0//ie(/o, i. 2 

DEWliEILKIES— and dewberries ..Mid. iV. Dr. hi. 1 
DEW-DROP— go seek some dew-di-ops — ii. 1 
a dew-drop from the lion's niano. '/'roi'/. <<-C;<'». iii. 3 
DEW-DKori'LVG— 

face to the dew-droitpiii'.r south ..Romeo^- Juliet, i. 4 

I)EW-I>Al'— herwitIiereil.l.«-lap..,V.'./..V. Dr.i: 1 

DEW-LAPI'ED-dew-lappea like [>ulU,remprst iii. 3 

dew-hipned like Tliessalian bulls,. ..l/«/.A'./Ji-. iv. 1 

DEWY- 1 would these dewv tears.. iiiWum/ ///. v. 3 

UEX'l'ER-oii the dexter ch"eek.r>oi'/i«,5- Cress, iv. 6 

DIOXTK H IT Y- dexterity of wit . . Mcmj Hires, iv. ."i 

with us ([Uiirk dexterity, and roared. I HenrylV. ii. 4 

dexterity bo olnying appetite. '/"i oi(«« i5C'irs«iiu,v. 4 

whose dexterity retorts It Homi-o ^Juliet, \ii. I 

with such dexterity to iuccstuoiu slieets. HunWW, i. 2 
DEXTEROUSLY- 
dcxterously, good Madonna Twelfth Night, i. S 



DI.VBLE- O dlable, dhiblc! vat \s.. Merry yvivet, i. 4 

(liablel Jack Kngbv,- mine — iii. 1 

I). liable' n seignenr! le jour est .. ..Henry V. '\v. -j 

1)1 A Hl,( I -diablo, ho! the town will risc.O(/ie//o, ii. 3 

Dl.VI)i;.M-iiistailed me in the diudem.Wlcnu/l'/. ii..'j 

wear tlie diadem upon his bead illenryVI. I. 1 

king Ihnrv's.iiiidem, en. Iiiised with — i. 2 

on my luiid di.l set the.lia.l.-m — i. 2 

neither siibje.-l. w.allli, nor diadem.. — iv. 1 
aii.l n.b bis temples of the diadem ..3 Henry VI. i. ■* 

can pluek the. llii.lem from — ii. 1 

and set tliy dia.l.'in upon my lieiul .. — ii.2 
nil. 1 ileiiry but usurps the diadem .. — iv. 7 
trimming up the iliadem on lier..,4«(ony.^CiM.v . 2 
ware the imperial iliadem of Rome ..TUusAnd. i. 1 

where late the diadem stood llamlel, ii. 2 

from a shelf the jjieeious diadem stole.. — ill. 4 

DIAL— drew a dial from his poke.. /Isyou Li/ieii, ii. 7 

an hour by his dial — ii. 7 

then my dial goes not true AlVsWell, ii. h 

by this," I thiiiK, the dial points.. C'omfft/;^ of Krr. v. 1 

HI . Iiii;,'cr, like a dial's jioint Richard II. v. b 

iliiil : llie signs of leaping-houscs ..,.\Henry IV. i. •> 

di.l riile upon a dial's point — V. 2 

close in the dial's centre Henry V. i. 2 

to carve out dials quaintly SHenry VI, ii. b 

the bawdy hand of the <lial is . . Romeo ij- Juliet, ii. 4 
more tedious than the dial eight score.. Othello, iii. 4 

Dl ALECT-aiul spee.'liless dialect .Meas.for Meat. i. 3 ■ 
to go out of m\' .lial.el, wliieli vou Lear, il. 2 

DliU.OGUE— s"ki|i;:iiig a dinlo-iie.. 7-(re(/?/iAV4'/i/_,_i. b 
fear yon not my j.art in the dialogue. jUuc/i Ado, iii. 1 
"will you hear the .lialoiiue that .. Love'sL.Losl, v. 2 
shall we have this .liai.igiie between. yl«'s WeU, iv. 3 

saving in dialogue ofeouijiiiment Ki7igJohu,i. I 

the wooden dialogue and sound.. Troilus ^- Crest, i. 3 
dost dial.iL'ue with tliv shadow? ..Timon of Ath. ii. 2 

Dl .\.\l IJ'l'KK— the world's diameter. . . . Hamlet, iv. 1 

DI.\iMU\U— emulate the diamond. A/erry IVires, iii.3 
lady walled about with diamonds. Lore's L.Lost,v.'i 
a diamond gone, cost me two.il/crcA. o/ Venice, iii. 1 
for my diamond, the chain yon. Comedy i^ Err. iv. 3 
sir, I must have that diamond from you — v. 1 

this diamond he greets your wife .Macbeth, il. i 

set this diamond safe in golden I Henry VI. v. 3 

it was, bound in with diamonds . .ilhnry VI. iii. 2 

not decked with diamonds 'iHeury VI. iii. I 

one day he gives us diamonds. Timon ofAtiiens, iii. 6 

this diamond was my mother's Cymbeline, i. 2 

as that diamond of yours oiitlustres — i. 5 

seen the most precious diamond that is — i. 5 
I shall but lend my diamond till your — i. 5 
BO is yoiu: diamond too: if I come off — i. ."i 
must he married to that your diamond — ii. 1 
that diamond upon your iinjjer, say — v. f» 
to me he seems like diamond to glass. . Pericles, ii. 3 
like diamonds sit about his crow 11 .... — ii. 4 
the diamonds of a most praised water — iii. 2 

as pearls from diamonds dropped Lear, iv. 3 

Df AN— as Dian in her orb; as chaste... WucA.Jdo, iv. I 
Dian's bud o'er Cupid's fiuwer hath. .U/J. A. /)c iv. 1 

that your Dian was both liei-self .Ill's fell, i. 3 

now, Dian from thy alter do I — ii. 3 

Dian : the count's a fool, and full . . — iv. 3 (let.) 
and say a soldier, Dian, told thee this — iv. 3 (let.) 
did ever Dian so become a gro\ e.. Taming(irSh. ii. I 
thou Dian, and let her be Kate (rep.) — ii. 1 

or modest Dian, circled with her 3Henn/VI.iv. 8 

snow that lies on Dian's lap! . . Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

and hangs on Dian's temple Cnriot'inus, v. 3 

the chimney-piece, chaste Dian .... Cymbeline, ii. 4 
yet luy mother seemed the Dian of that — ii. 5 

as Dian had hot dreams — v. 5 

or is it Dian, habited like her Titus Andron. ii. 3 

the power, that, some say, Dian had — ii. 3 

to Dian there a votaress Pericles, iv. (Gower) 

vail to her mistress Dian — iv. tGower) 

celestial Dian. goddess argentine — v. 2 

done his sacrifice, as Dian bade. . — v. 2 (Gower) 

hail, Dian! to perform thy just — v. 3 

immortal Dian! Now I know you .... — v. 3 
Cupid's aiTOW, she hath Dian's vi'it. Romeo^Jul. i. 1 
that was a.s fresh as Dian's visage Othello, iii. 3 

DIANA— Diana's lip is not more . . Tuelf.hKight, i. i 

or on Diana's altar to protest Mid. X. Dream, i. 1 

die as chaste as Diana, unless..3/^rc/i. tiT Venice, i. 2 

and wake Diana with a hymn — v. 1 

bought a pair of cast lip.s of Diann. .U you Like, iii. 4 
weep for nothing, like Diana in the.. — iv. 1 

Diana, no queen of virgins AU'slVeU, i.3 

well, Diana, take heed of this — ill. 4 

beware of them, Diana; their promises — iii. 5 

no, my good lord, Diana — iv.2 

one Diana, to take heed of — iv. 3 

you writ to Diana in behalf of — iv. 3 

you, Diana, under my iKior instructions — iv. 4 
poor maid Is undone. Diana Ca)iulet — v. 3 diet.) 

let us he, Diana's foresters ..IHenrylV. i. 2 

by all Diana's waiting-women. . Troilut s Cress, v. 2 

make me live like Diana's priest Cymbeline,'}. 7 

makes Diana's rangers false themselves — ii. ;t 

more she'll wear Diana's livery Pericles, ii. S 

OdearDlanu, where am 1? Where's .. — iii. 2 
by bright Diana, whom we honour all — iii. 3 
Diana s temple is not distant far •■■ ' 



Diana, aid iiiy purjiose! (>.;'.) 
if vou have told Diaiui'i 



iv. 3 



.. ._ _. alter true — v. ;f 

oiul iilaeed her liei-e in Diana's tcniiile — v. S 

pure Dlami! I bless thee for thy vision — v. 3 

DlAl'ER-lhe tbini a diaper ..Vaminji ofSh. 1 (ind.) 

Dll!Hl.E--pm the dibble in earth. Il'mter's Title, iv. 3 

DICE- agumester from ihe dii-e ..Merry Hires, iii. \ 

he won It of ine witii false dice .ViicA .ido, li. 1 

well run, dice! there's half Love'sL.Losl, v. i 

chides the dice, in honourable — v. 2 

play at dice wlileh is the liettcr . . Mer.of Venice, ii. I 
as dice are to lie wished, by one . . ll'uiler'sTate, i. 2 
low-rate'd Engli.sh play at dice . .Henry V. iv. tclio.) 
the wretclicii tliat wo played at dice for? — iv. -j 
tlic very dice obey him Anlnni ^ Cltmalra, il . 3 



Die 



[ 182 ] 

DIE— that will not die In debt Lovt's L. Lost, v. 2 

or else die my lover — v. 2 

die when you will, a smock — v. 2 

and the contents die in tlie zeal — v. 2 

among potentates? thou shalt die — v. 2 

I will die as chaste as Diaua . . Merch, of Venice, i. 2 

and die with grieving — ii. 1 

IJoison us, do we not die? — iii. 1 

with gazing fed; and fancy dies .... — iii.2(song) 
of all lie dies possessed, unto his .... — iv. 1 

I'll die for't, but some woman — v. 1 

of all he dies possessed of — v. 1 

and truly, when he dies As youLike it, i. i 

in the greatness of my word, you die — i. 3 
than to die well, and, not my master's — ii. 3 

IdieforfoodI — ii. 6 

I'll give thee leave to die — ii. 6 

thou shalt not die for lack of — ii. 6 

he dies, that touches any of this .... — ii. 7 
answered with reason, I must die.... — ii. 7 

1 almost die for food, and let me .... — ii. 7 

I to live and die her slave — iii. 2 (verses) 

that lives and dies by bloody drops? — iii. 5 

I die. No, faith, die by attorney .... — iv. 1 

did what he could to die before — iv. 1 

then I'll study how to die — iv. 3 (letter) 

and here live and die a shepherd .... — v. 2 

should I die the hour after — v. 4 

by the lion, must die for love All's Well, i. 1 

tliougli therefore I die a virgin — i. 1 

and so dies with feeding his own — j. 1 

and will his vassal die: he must not — 1.3 

lives sweetly where she dies — i. 3 

live free, and sickness freely die — ii. 1 

ministers thine own death, if I die .. — ii. 1 

unpitied let me die — ii. I 

I'll live and die a maid — iv. 2 

not that I am afraid to die — iv. 3 

you must die : the genei'al says — iv. 3 

therefore you must die — iv. 3 

in hope I shall see him ere I die — iv. 5 

if I die to-morrow, this is hers . . Taming of Sh. ii. 1 

if you should die before him — ii.l 

may not young men die, as well — ii. 1 

show pity, or I die — iii. 1 (gamut) 

I should die with laughing — iii. 2 

which now shall die in oblivion — iv. 1 

would they else be content to die?. Winter'' s Tate, i. 1 

that I should fear to die? — iii. 2 

with die, and drab, I piu-chased this — iv. 2 

pale primroses, that die unmarried . . — iv 3 

to die upon the bed my father died . . — iv. 3 

might die within this hour (rep.) — iv. 3 

until you see her die arain — v. 3 

to the bay of Ephesus, he dies. Comedy of Errors, i. 1 

by law thou art condemned to die. ... — i. 1 

then thou art doomed to die — i. 1 

dies ere the weary sun set — i. 2 

away, and weeping die — ii.l 

that hath such means to die — iii. 2 

he shall not die, so much we — v. 1 

witli one that saw him die Macbeth, i. 4 

whether they live, or die — ii. 2 

the man would die, and there an end. . — iii. 4 

at least we'll die with harness on .... — v. ■"> 

and die on mine own sword? — v. 7 

lives to die in beds that here KingJoh n , ii . 2 

sorrow how to make me die — iii. 1 

in the very meeting, fall, and die.,.. — iii. 1 

in despair, die under their black .... — iii. 1 

my fortune lives, there my life dies.. — iii. 1 

make my mother die with grief — iii. 3 

and so he'll die; and, rising so again — iii. 4 

even at that news dies — iii. 4 

as good to die, and go, as die, and stay — iv. 3 

that I must die here, and live — v. 4 

I live, and for that will I die Richard Ji. i . 1 

seest thy \vretched brother die — i. 2 

will I hence, and die — i. 2 

tliere lives, or dies, true to — i. 3 

leased out (I die pronouncing it) ... . — ii.l 

men living flatter with those that die — ii.l 

but die not shame with thee! — ii. 1 

and let them die, that age — ii.l 

fight and die, is death destroying.... — iii. 2 

defiance to the traitor, and so die? .. — iii. 3 

leave to live till Richard die? — iii. 3 

lives when his dishonour dies — v. 3 

they cannot, die in their own pride . . — v. 5 

sinks downward, here to die — v. 5 

in peace, die free from strife — v. 6 

may reasonably die, and never 1 Henry I y. i. 3 

but to die a fair death — ii. 2 

old Jack ; die when thou wilt — ii. 4 

and I \vill die a hundred thousand . . — iii. 2 

thousand rebels die in this — iii. 2 

doomsday is near; die all, die merrily — i\'. ! 

if die, bravedeath, when princesdie.. — v. 2 

to die, is to be a counterfeit — v. 4 

let order die! and let this world no. .'iHenrylV. i. 1 

would have him die, are now become — i. 3 

though that be sick, it dies not — ii. 2 

die, men, like dogs — ii. 4 

shut the book, and sit him down and die — iii. 1 

is certain to all: all shall die — iii. 2 

a man can die but once — iii. 2 

he that dies this year, is fiuit for .... — iii. 2 

thou wilt have me die assured — iv. 4 

let me In my present wildness die — i v. 4 

I should not die but in , Jerusalem... . — iv. 4 

see London once ere I die — v. 3 

which king, Bezonian, speak or die . , — v. 3 

I would I might die, that I might . . — v. 4 

I fear, that you will die in, sir John.. — v. b 

Falstatf shall die of a sweat — (epilogue) 

seemed to die too Henry V'.'i. 1 

when the son dies, let the — i.2 

tliis grace of kings must die — ii. (chorus) 

God's vassals drop and die — iii. 2 

die and be damned; and figo for — Iii. 6 



DIE 



DICE— wine loved I deeply; dice dearly. . Lear, iii. 4 

DICED— diced, not above seven 1 Henry 1 1', iii. 3 

DICEK— as false as dicers' oaths Hamlet, iii. 4 

DICH— good dich tliy good hea.H.Timon of Athens, i. 2 

DICK-did'st see Dick surgeon, sot?. Tuetfth Night,v. 1 

some trencher-knight, some lD\ck..Love'sL.Losl, v. 2 

and Dick the shepherd blows his . . — v. 2 (song) 

as Xmn, Diek, and Francis 1 Henry IK ii. 4 

and Dick the bntc^her 2 Henri/ FI. iv. 2 

Where's Dick tlic butcher of Ashford? — iv. 3 

nnil thou, mif'-ohapoii Diok, I tcU . .3Henry VI. v. 5 

to Ilea of Hob and Dick, that do.. ..Corlolnnus, -ii. 3 

DK'KKNS-tho dii'keus his name {s..Meny (F7i'es,iii. 2 

DICKO.N-Diekon thy master. B/f/wni ///. v. 3(scroll) 

DICKY— Diekv, vour bov. that, with..3Hpnr!/;7. i. 4 

DICTATOR— our then dictator Coriolanus, ii. 2 

DICTION—to make true diction oi him.. Hamlet, v. 2 
DICTYNNA— 

Dictvnna goodman Dull (lep.) . . Love'sL.Lost, iv. 2 
DIDO— not since widow Dido s time.... rempes/, ii. 1 

widow Dido'. What if he had said — ii.l 

widow Diilo, said you? you make — ii. 1 

'bate, I boscerh you, widow Dido (rep.) — ii. 1 
in enoli a night "stoixl Dido. . . . Merch. of Venice, v. 1 
when he to madding Dido, would, .illenry VI. iii. 2 
Dido and her Apneas shall want ..Ant.'SfCleo. iv. 12 
the wandering prince and Dido once.ri(us/l;id. ii. 3 
to love-sick Dido's sad attending ear — v. 3 
to be-rhyme lier: Dido, adowdy. Borneo S,- Juliet, ii. 4 

'twas iEneas' tale to Dido Hamlet, ii. 2 

DIE— I would fain die a dry death Tempest, i. 1 

thou lett'st thy fortune sleep— die rather — ii. 1 

for else his project dies — ii.l 

here shall I die ashore — ii. 2 (song) 

what I shall die to want — iii. 1 

if not, I'll die yoxu- maid — iii. I 

he that dies, pays all debts — iii. 2 

I'll die on him that Two Gen. of Verona, ii. 4 

to die, is to be banish'd — iii. 1 

let him die: but first Merry Wives, ii. 3 

why, now let me die — iii. 3 

you die, sir John — iv. 2 

he shall die a flea's death — iv. 2 

he that speaks to them shall die — v. 5 

may sicken, and so die Twelfth Night i. 1 

but I will never die — ii. 3 

die, even when they to perfection grow — ii. 4 

Bonos dies, sir Toby — iv. 2 

a thousand deaths would die — y. 1 

when we drink, we die .... Measure for Measure, i. 3 

sir, he must die — ii.l 

and he to die for it I — ii. 2 

vour will Claudio shall die to-morow? — ii. 2 
I have a brother is condemned to die — ii. 2 

must he needs die? — ii. 2 

he must die to-morrow — ii. 2 

your brother dies to-raorrow — ii. 2 

than die for this. When must he die? — ii. 3 

Bs I hear, must die to-morow — ii. 3 

m\ist die to-morrow! -O injurious love — ii. 3 

yet he must die — ii. 4 

your brother is to die — ii. 4 

then must your brother die — ii. 4 

redeeming nim, should die for ever. . — ii. 4 

else let my brother die — ii. 4 

tell me, that he shall die for it — ii. 4 

he must not only die the deoth — ii. 4 

Isabel, live chaste, and brother die .. — ii. 4 

and am prepared to die — iii. 1 

I find, I seek to die — iii. 1 

darest thou die? the sense of death .. — iii. 1 

as when a giant dies — iii. 1 

if I must die, I will encounter — iii. 1 

yes, tliou must die — iii. 1 

ay, but to die, and go we know not . . — iii. 1 

take my defiance; die, perish! — iii. 1 

to-morrow you must die — iii. 1 

had rather my brother die by the law — iii. 1 
die to-moiTOW, or no? Why (rep.) .. — iii. 2 

Claudio must die to-morrow — iii. 2 

and now is he resolved to die — iii. 2 

are to die Claudio and Barnardine . . — iv. 2 

but he must die to-morrow? — iv. 2 

1 will not consent to die this day.... — iv. 3 

I swear I will not die to-day — iv. 3 

nnfit to live, or die : O gravel — iv. 3 

this rude wretch willingly to die .... — iv. 3 

but Barnardine must die tills — iv. 3 

he dies for Claiidio's death — v. 1 

let him not die: my brother — v. 1 

is it possible, disdain sliould die Muc/iAdo, i. 1 

I will die in it at the sta.ke — i. 1 

I shall see thee, ere I die, look pale. . — i. 1 
she will die, for she says, she ivill die — ii. 3 
die ere she make her love known (rep.) — ii. 3 

that she will rather die than give — ii. 3 

when I said, I would die a bachelor — ii. 3 

than die with mocks (rep.) — iii. 1 

in despite of all, dies for him — iii. 2 

thou would'st not ciuiekly die — iv. 1 

hence from her; let her die — iv. 1 

come lady, die to live — iv. 1 

therefore, I will die a woman — iv. 1 

and so dies my revenge — v. \ 

his own trnnb ere he dies — v. 2 

I will live in thy heart, die in thy lap — v. 2 
gives her fame wliich never dies . . — v. 3 (scroll) 

either to die the death, or to Mid.N. Dream, i. 1 

grows, lives, and dies, in single — i. 1 

so die, my lord, ere I will yield — i. I 

upon that day either prepare to die . . — i. I 
slie, being mortal, of that boy did die — ii. 2 

to die upon the hand I love — ii 2 

thus die I, thus, thus, thus — v. 1 

now, die, die, die, die, die. No die . . — v. 1 
wealth, to pomp, I pine and die ..Love'sL.Lost, i. 1 

and we deserve to die — iv. 3 

how? let me not die your debtor .... — v. 2 

then die a calf, before your — v. 2 

i;> private with you, ere I die — v. 2 

L- 



DIE— not die anywhere so contented . . Henry V.iv. ) 

few die well, that die in battle — iv. 1 

if these men do not die well , it will . . — iv. 1 

die in many irreconciled iniquities . . — iv. 1 

then if they die unprovided — iv. 1 

every man that dies ill, the ill — iv. 1 

if we are marked to die iv. 3 

not die in that man's company (rep.) — iv. 3 

let us die instant; once more — iv. .'> 

English, or else die with fame — iv. b 

base Trojan, thou shalt die — v. 1 

eheerer of the heart, unpruned dies.. — v. 2 

that I shall die is true — v. 2 

thou shalt not die, whiles 1 Henry VI. i. 4 

would I wore to die with Salisbury ! — i. 5 

condemned to die for treason — ii. 4 

here dies the dusky torch — ii. 5 

to get the town again, or die — iii. 2 

and mightiest potentates, must die .. — iii. 2 

that thus we die, while remiss — iv. 3 

he dies, we lose; I break my — iv. 3 

to fight, and die in shame — iv.4 

but dies, betrayed to fortime — iv. 4 

we both are sure to die — iv. 5 

my followers here, to fight, and die? — iv. 5 

for live I will not, if my father die . . — iv. 5 

side by side together live and die .... — iv. 5 

if I to-day die not with — iv. 6 

in thee thy mother dies — iv. 6 

that bears me, fall and die! — iv. 6 

to Talbot, die at Talbot's foot — iv. G 

commendable proved, let's die in pride — iv. 6 

I'll die with thee ! — v. 4 

it dies, an' if it had a thousand — v. 4 

labours, and these honours, die? . . . .2Henry VI. i. 1 

and all om- counsel, die? — i. 1 

outlive, and die a violent death (»ep.) — i. 4 

by water shall he die, and take (rep.) — i. 4 

thus dies in her youngest daj'sl — ii. 3 

an' if Idle, Igive tliee my apron .... — ii. 3 

that he should die, is worthy policy — iii. I 

by this, you would not have him die — iii. 1 

let him die, in that he is a fox — iii. 1 

a hundred times to part than die — iii. 2 

and in thy sight to die, what were . . — iii. 2 

to die by tliee, were but to die in (rep.) — iii. 2 

where should he die? can I make.. . . — iii. 3 

lie dies, and makes no sign — iii. 3 

for die you shall ; the lives — i v. 1 

to revenge it, shalt thou die — iv. 1 

that by Water I should die — iv. 1 

that I should die by such — iv. 1 

great men oft die by vile — iv. 1 

and Suffolk dies by pmites — iv. 1 

not find him guilty, he shall not die — iv. 2 

go forward: therefore yield^ or die .. — iv. 2 

should not mourn, but die tor thee . . — iv. 4 

lie shall die, an't be but for — iv. 7 

die, damned wretcli, the crn'se — iv. 10 

to use, so Somerset may die — v. 1 

thus to die in ruffian battle? — v. 2 

he that flies, shall die ZHenryVI. i. 1 

and die ill bands for this unmanly .. — i. 1 

I will be king or die — i.2 

slew my father; he shall die — i. 3 

here me speak before I die — i. 3 

then let me die, for now — i. 3 

slew my father; therefore die — i. 3 

or die renowned by attempting it. . . . — ii. 1 

burns my candle out, ay, here it dies — ii. G 

take us, we are sure to die — iv. 4 

die thou, and die our fear — v. 2 

how we can, yet die we must — v. 2 

no more ; die, prophet, in thy speech — v. 6 

and must not die, till George be Richard 111. i. 1 

that I might die at once — i. 2 

by siu'feit die yom' king — i. 3 

die in his youth, by like — i. 3 

long die thy happy days before — i. 3 

die neither mother, wife — i. 3 

come, he dies; I had forgot — i. 4 

never, my lord; therefore prepare to die — i. 4 

with (jod, for you must die, my lord — i. 4 

if die, be brief ; that our swift-winged — ii. 2 

make me die a good old man! — ii. 2 

or, let me die, to look on death — ii. 4 

or die a soldier, as I lived — iii. 1 

of the queen, must die at Pomfret .. — iii. 2 

'tis a vile thing to die, my gracious .. — iii. 2 

, shalt thou behold a subject die — iii. 3 

had we not determined he should die — iii. 5 

make me die the thrall of Margaret's — iii. 7 

and die, ere men can say— God save — iv. 1 

ray queen is sick, and like to die .... — iv. 2 

either thou wilt die, by God's just .. — iv.4 

and must she die for this? — iv.4 

despair therefore, and die! (rep.) .... — v. 3 

and die in terror of thy guiltiness.. .. — v. 3 

and, if I die, no soul will pity me — v. 3 

after the battle let George Stanley die — v. 3 

and I will stand the hazard of the die — v. 4 
for that die is on me, which makes. .Henry VIII. i. 1 

the king should without issue die. ... — i. 2 

and by that name must die — ii. 1 

fall asleep, or, hearing, die — iii. 1 (song) 

when the bird of wonder dies — v. 4 

but she must die, she must; the samts — v. 4 
I could live and die i' the eyes ot.Troilus^ Cress, i. 2 

at this sport, sir Valour dies — i. 3 

cry— oh! oh! they die! — iii. 1 (song) 

and together die m the fall — iii. 3 

let liini die, with every joint — iv. 1 

to liiiii tliat instantly must die — iv.4 

die I a \-illaiii then ! — iv. 4 

they fiv, or die, like scaled sculls .... — v. 5 

decreed— Hector the great must die.. — v. 7 

that's a deed thou'lt die for Timon nf Alliens, i. 1 

who dies, that bears not one spurn . . — i. 2 

there will little learning die tlien — ii. 2 

a bastard, and thou'lt die a bawd - ii. 2 




];iE_'ti»iK-cciisnry, ho sluniUI Mt.lSmonqfAlli. in. i 

hediea. IIiiiil Ciitcl he miulit — ijj. i 

wc Btv fur law, ht' (lios; \ir^i' it — '"• ■'' 

tliDii shoulilut iltsiri' t.idif, biinc .... — ;v. :i 
loimlivcso, iiiids.. (lir! I unmuit .. — iv. 3 
of tlic spoltid ilii'. li't ■lit' thu spotted — v. 6 

mtlur to I lie, tlmii to I'lUiii^ih Coriolaiiut, 1. 1 

Ihu.l nillR'.hiiiU'ii'Vih .licnol>ly .. — i- 3 

lot the tlrr.t luuk'crilif (hi-otla-r'i.... — i. « 

ndviiiicfa, ilciliiR-s, and then iiicii dio — ii- 1 
botl.T it i< t.idic. lu'tlor tosUuve .... — ii. 3 
iio; I'll ilii' hen: IIuti-'h sumo among — iii. 1 

it is dfCiTtd, In' dii's to-iUL-lit — iii. 1 

ho that hnlli II will todieby liimsclf — v. H 

mid dio union.' our noi^hhours — v. 3 

thoroforo shall he die, ami I'll renew — v. .'> 

Jot him dio tort — v..') 

tiiko thoinrhl, and dio for Cxsar ..Julias Cesar, n. 1 

lot him lu.t dio; for ho will livo — il. 1 

wlion liOL'-'ars dio. thoro are no — ii. 1' 

cowurd.s.lio iiianv tinios hoforc — ii. '.i 

that wo shall dio, wo know — iii. 1 

not find mysoll'so apt todie — i;|. 1 

wore living' and dio all sluvo9 — lo. - 

we'll folk.w him, wo'U dio with him — iii. 'J 
ehall dio; thoir nainos are priokod {rep.) — iv. 1 
his voioo who should ho prioked to diu — iv. 1 

womnstdio, Mossala (re;-.) — iv. 3 

CttJsar tlKui oanst not dio by — v. 1 

tliou oouldst not dio more honourable — v. 1 
onlv I viold to dio: tlioro i8 60 mueh — v. 1 
iinil let'hor dio too, and give hini...J«/(»it/.tC(co. i. 2 

lot women dio: it woio pity to — j- - 

dies instantlv; I havo poen licr die .. — i. 2 

can Kulvia dio! Sho's dead, my quceu — i. 3 

wliioh some dill die to look on — i. 1 

and dio with looUiiiL! on his life — i. :i 

to Aiitonv, shall die a hognar — i. .'> 

think, and dio. Is Antony, or we . . — iii. II 

I have many other ways to die — iv. 1 

«ime ditoh, wherein to ilie — iv. (> 

the witeh shall die; to the Roman .. — iv. 1(1 

Bhe dies for't: liros, hoi — iv. 10 

and shall dio the death — iv. 12 

thv nnistor dies thy scholar — iv. 12 

dii', where thou hast lived — iv. 13 

and do now not basely die — iv. 13 

noblest of men, woo't die? — iv. 13 

puv, I would die. Most noble empress — v. 2 
those, that do die of it, do seldom — — v. 2 

infinite of easy wavs to die — v. '2 

lot it die as it was born Cijmheline, i. 5 

I must die much your debtor — ii. ■! 

wliich dies i' the search; and hath .. — iii. 3 
■why, I must tUe; and if I do not — — iii. 4 
sweat of industry would dry and die — iii. fi 

to seem to die, ere sick — iv. 2 

and let me die, stealing — iv. 2 

and a demand who is't shall die — iv. 2 

die the death; when I have slain — iv. 2 

that I never did see man die? — iv. ■! 

in your countrv wars you chance to die — iv. 1 

so I'll die for tfice, O fmogcn — v. 1 

to die with lengthened shame — v. 3 

our Britain's harts die flying — v. 3 

tliose, that would die, or ere resist . . — v. 3 

1 am merrier to die. than thou — v. 1 

that die against tlieir wills — v. 1 

briefly die their joys, that place — v. .'. 

than "die ore I hear more — v. .'> 

mv soul, till the tree diel — v. 5 

and thou shall die lor't. We will die — v.h 

and dio he must to appease Titus Andronicus, i. 2 

honour thee, and will do till I die .. — i. 2 

that dies in tempest of thy angry — i. 2 

this day all quarrels die, Andronicus — i. 2 

fall mojl, or else die suddenly — ii. 3 

for fear they die before their pardon — iii. 1 

die, Andronicus; thou dost not — iii. 1 

or die with this reproach — iv. 1 

it shall not die. Aaron, it must — iv. 2 

he dies upon my scimitar's — iv. 2 

let not your sorrow die, though — v. 1 

for lie must not die so sweet — v. 1 

die, die, Lavinia, and thy shame irep.) — V. 3 

die, frantic wretch, for this — v. 3 

for tile ofl'enoc lie dies — V. 3 

so for her manv a wight did dicPericiM, i. (Gower) 

or die in the adventure — i. 1 

all thv whole heap must die — i. 1 

and the |ioor worm doth die for't — i. 1 

therefore iii-taiitlv this prince must die — i. I 

wiio first sliidl die to lengthen life — i. l 

die, quotha? now gi«l9 forbidl — ii. 1 

would die as I om like to do — iii. I 

his hands, where I was like to die .... — iv. 3 
a curse U|)on him, die he like a thief .. — iv. G 

age I am, and ilie a.s I would do — v. 1 

the woman? she dies! help, gcutlcmen! ' — v. :) 

ho dies, that strikes again J-oar, ii. 2 

if I die for it, as no less is threatened me — iii. 3 

away, and let mc die — iv. 6 

cry out itself, enough, enough, and die .. — iv. Ii 
thou shultnot die: die fonulultery! no.. — iv. (i 
I will die bravely, like a bridegroom.... — iv. 6 

to die liefore yon jilcasci — iv. (i 

when did voii die.' Still, still, farwidc!.. — iv. 7 

I sliould even die with pity — iv. 7 

hourly die. rather than die at oncci — v. 3 

wbenshedies, with beauty dies \\a.Uomeo ^- Jut. \. 1 

or else clie in tiebt — i. 1 

the rank poison of the old will die .. — i. 2 

often drowned, could never die — i. 2 

groaned for, and would die — i. A (chorus) 

and iu their triumph die — ii. (> 

the truth, or let lioiivolio dio — iii. 1 

and when he shall die, take him .... — iii. 2 

1, a maid, flic maiden-widowed — iii. 2 

take heel, for sueli die miserable.... — iii. 3 
well, wc were bom Iodic — iii. 4 



DIE— gone am! live, or stay and ULlcRumeoi^Jul, ill. 5 
hang, beg, starve, dio i' the streets .. — iii. Ii 

else fail, nivselfhiive iiowor to liie .. — iii..') 
1 Ion;; to life, if what thini speak'st .. — Iv. 1 
theiediostnui^rlodoro inv Komeo .. — iv. 3 

lonk up, or I will die with thee — iv. .'> 

I will dio. and leave him all — iv. .'i 

host married, that dies married vonng — iv. .') 
full ofwreti'heihH-;s, and fear'st to die? — v. 1 

for thon must die. 1 must, indeed — v. 3 

thus with aki,s I ilie — V. 3 

to make ine die with a restorative .. — V. 3 

there rust, and lot me die — v. 3 

came to this vault to die, and licwith — v. 3 

all that live, in list die, passing Hamlrl, i. 2 

not of that die I /ill/. -the eye] which tlieir — i. 3 

todie,— to sleep, no more — iii. 1 

to die;- to slee|d porehance to dream.. .. — iii. I 

I) IieiivensI die t« lonths ago — iii. 2 

hilt die thv tlioiit;lits, when thy first lord — iii. 2 

tlie eease ofniajestv dies not alone — iii. 3 

no laii-e without whv the man dies — iv. t 

a pleiiris\, dies in his own too-much — iv. 7 

fuitli. if he henol rotten hefore hedie.... — v. 1 

() 1 dio, Horatio: the potent poison — v. 2 

then have we a prescription to die OlluUn.i. 3 

if it were now todie, 'twere now to be .. — ii. I 

I am hurt to the death; lie dies — ii. 3 

his soul light; he dies upon his motion.. — ii. 3 

thy solicitor shall rather die — iii. 3 

if Idodie before thee, pr'ytheesliroud .. — iv. 3 

forth, mv sword; he dies — v. 1 

no, he nuist dio: hut so, I hear — v. 1 

slie niiisl dio, el.se she'll hetrav more men — v. 2 
thy death- lied. Av, hut not yet to dio . . — v. 2 
thou art to die. Tlioii, Lord have uierey — v. 2 

a guiltless death Idle — v. 2 

1 will plav the swan, and die in music .. — v. 2 

so speakinLT as 1 tliink, I die,— I die — v. 2 

for, in inv sense. 'tis happiness to die ,... — v. 2 

killing.' nivself, todie uiion a kiss — v. 2 

DIKD— uit'hin wliioli time she died Temped, i. 2 

and thv true love died .... Two Gen. of yeromi, iv. 3 

that died some twelvemonth Twelfth Nighl, i. 2 

who shortly also died — 1.2 

but died thv sister of her love — ii. 4 

anil died that day when Viola — v. 1 

whoso father died at Hallowmas. .il/eas./or.l/oas. ii. 1 
who is it that Inith died for this .... — ii. 2 
bettor it were a brother died at once — ii. i 

there died this morning of — iv. 3 

the thing for which he died — v. 1 

by private order else have died — v. 1 

that should have died when Claudio — v. 1 

hear she died uyion his words .1/«c/i .Ida, iv. 1 

and upon grief of this, suddenly died — iv. 2 
in IMossina here how inuoeent she died — v. 1 
so the life that died with shame .. — v. 3 (scroll) 

one Hero died defiled — v. 4 

she died, my lord, but whiles — v. 4 

his dagger drew, and died Mid. N. Dream, v. 1 

so she died; had she been light ..Lui:e'sL.Losl,v. 2 
have been a grandam ere she died.... — v. 2 

they fell sick and died Merch. of Feuice, iii. 4 

or have died to stay hcliind \\er....AiyouLikeilj i. 1 
not any man died in lais own person — iv. 1 

men liave died from time to time — iv. 1 

the physician at yova father's died? . . AWs ll'ell, i. 2 
die upon the bed my father died.. Winter' sTalc, iv. 3 
not a month 'fore yoiu' (inecn died. . — v. 1 

]ie died as one that hath been Macbelh, i. 4 

had I hut died an hour before this — ii. 3 

which should indeed have died witlL — iii. 2 

feet, died every dav she lived — iv. 3 

who have died holily in their beds — v. 1 

she should have died heivafier — v. 3 

hefought, but likoaiiian hedied — v. 7 

that large, which died iu Uellrey KingJahn, ii. I 

the first of Aiiril, died yom- noble — iv. 2 

before I came, the dueiiess died Richard //. ii. 2 

had you first died, and he been thus.. — ii. 3 
upside down, since Robin ostler died. 1 HcnnjIV. ii. 1 

lie that died o' Wednesday -^ v. 1 

Richard, being infected, died 'iHenrylV. iv. 1 

grandsire, Edward, sicked, and died — iv. 4 

for Oldcastle died a martyr — (cpil.) 

who died within the year of our Henry I'.X. 2 

we died at such a place — i v. 1 

Sufliilk first died: and York — iv. 6 

least five Frenchmen died to-niglit .IJ/cHri/ VI. ii. 2 

and tliere died my Icarus — iv. 7 

tlieii death had died today — iv. 7 

death of Him that died for all •iUeimjVl. i. 1 

black prinei-, died hefore his father.. — ii. 2 

of Hatfield died without an heir — ii. 2 

in captivitv, till he died — ii. 2 

but how ho died, (iod knows — iii. 2 

bv him the goeiil duke Humphrey died — iii. "J 

d'ied he not in his bed? — iii. 3 

would I had died a maid yHenryli: i. 1 

say how he died, for I will hear — ii. 1 

by your first order died Itichard IU. ii. 1 

too late he died, that might have — iii. 1 

when holv Ihirrv died, and mv sweet — iv. 4 
only in that sal'etv died her brothers — iv. 4 

Rivers, tliat died at ronifret! — v. 3 

I died for hope, ere 1 eoiild lend — v. 3 

that he ran mad. and <lied Henry fill. ii. 2 

or died wliore thev wei-e made — ii. 4 

tell 1110 how he di'eil — iv. 2 

oouhl give him. lie died, fearing Ood — iv. 2 
ho ini;;lit have died iu war.... Timon of Athens, iii. ft 

but liiul he died in the business Corinlnmis, I. 3 

and died .so? Kvcu so JuliutCtesur, iv. 3 

that died by their proscriptions — iv. 3 

how died my iiiiustor, .Strato? — v. h 

where died she? In Sicyon. ..inloni/ ^Cleopatra, i. 2 

eee when and where she died — i. 3 

bincc Cleopatra died, I have lived.... — iv. 12 
remember st tliou any tliat have died — v. 2 



DIED- she died of the bitingof it..^n/an|^4-Cfeo. v 

most probable, that so she died — v. a 

ilieil with their swords in hand Cymbelinc,i. 1 

being iired, died of this follv! — i. 2 

I should have died, had I not mode it — iii. 6 
took heel to. lo't, and vet died too?.. — v. 3 

1 died, « hi l.t in the womb — v. 4 

not elleeted; so despairing, died .... — v. s 
rosy hid, who died, and was lidcle .. — v. & 
continued so, until we thought he died — v. i 
that died in honour and J,avinia's.7'i(ui./ln(/ron. i. 2 
ill fame that died ill virtue's oausc .. — i. 2 

was slain when IJa-sHianns died — ii. 3 

they died iu honour's lofty bod — iii. I 

that died hv law for iniiruer of our .. — iv. 4 
who died and left a female heir ..Pericles, i. (Gow.) 

when iny inotlicr died, this world — iv. 1 

she died by iiiL;lit; I'll say so — iv. 4 

cry out, she died by foul play — iv. 4 

who died the very niinutc I was born.. .. — v. I 

at sea in (-111111-11011 died she — v. 3 

is suiiposcd, the fair creature died . .Rom. ^ Jul. v. 3 
froiu the first cor.se, till he that died. . . . llamtel. i. 2 
my father died within these two hours .. — iii. 2 
they withered all, when my father died. . — iv. 
as tiiiis, Alexander, died, Ale-\aiider was — v. I 
her fortune, and she died singing it ... . Othello, iv. 3 

DIE] )ST— thou diedst, a most rare . . Cymbeline, iv. 2 

DIEST— ooiirtesy, thou diest. Two Gen. of Verona, iv. 1 

conceal tlieni. or thou diest Merry Wives, iv. Ii 

or else th Iie>t U'-mottovr ... .Meat, forileus. iii. 1 

'tis liest tliat thon diest quickly — iii. 1 

thou diest, and all thy goods Mer. of Venice, iv. 1 

as twenty miles, thou (fiest for it. . As you Like it, \. 3 

but if thou diest before I come — ii. 6 

to thy bettor xindcrstandimr, diest.. .. — v. 1 
thou diest in thine iiiitliankl'ulnes8..../l«'»;FfH, i. 1 

thou diest within this hour _ v. 3 

snouk, ere tliou iliest. I oannot. , Winter'sTale, iv. 3 
tluiu diest, tliongh I the sicker be . . Richard II. ii. 1 

thou diesl on point of fox Henry V.i\. 4 

stay, or thou diest ZHenryVI. iv. 3 

look, how thou diest! Troilus ^Cressida, v. 3 

why, now thou diest as bravel.v . . Julius Ctntur, v. 4 
yield, or thou diest. Only I yield.... — v. 4 
with thy unwortliincss, thou diest . . Cymbeline. i. 2 

let go, slave, or thou diest Lear, iv. 6 

villain, thou diest. That thrust Othello, v. I 

ay, and for that thou diest — v. 2 

DIET— like one that takes diet .. TwoGen.nfVer. ii. 1 

I will bespeak our diet Twelfth Mght, iii. 3 

they kept very good diet ..Measure for Measure, ii. 1 

may j ustly diet me All's Well, v. 3 

be his nurse, diet his sickness Comedy of Err. v. I 

for your diet, and by-drinkings 1 Henry IV. iii. 3 

in diet, in affections of delight iUenrylV. ii. 3 

to diet rank minds — iv. 1 

or are they spare in diet Henry ".W.i 

kept an evil diet long Richard lll.i. 1 

your diet shall be in all places . . Timon ofAlh. iii. 6 

to the tub-fast, and the diet — iv. 3 

breaths, rank of gross diet Antony ^ Cleo. v. -i 

the gods will diet me with Cymbeline, iii. 4 

for food and diet, to some enterprize Hamlet^ i. 1 

your worm is your only emperor for diet — iv. 3 

partly led to diet my revenge Othello, ii. I 

or feed upon such iiiee aiid waterish diet — iii. 3 

DIETED— lor he is dieted to his All's H'eH, iv. 3 

they must be dieted, like inules ....\HenryVI. i. 2 
should lie dieted in praises sauced . . Coriolanus, i. 9 
till he be dieted to mv request — v. I 

DI KTEK—and he her "dieter Cymbeline, iv. 2 

DlliU-Dieu vous garde, monsieur.7'u:W/i'A.Vit'/i(, iii. 1 

O seigneur Dieu! je m'en oublie Henry V. iii. 4 

d'apprendre par la grace de Dieu. ... — iii. 4 

O seigneur Dieu! ces sunt mots — iii. ♦ 

ODieuvivantI shall a few sprays .. — iii. C 

Dieu de batta lies! where have — iii. S 

O seigneur Dieu! 0, signieur Dew .. — iv. 4 

eupplie poiu: I'amour de Dieu — iv. 4 

O bon Dieu ! les langnes des ..- v. 2 

iieaceful words? Mort Dieu! iHenry VI. i. I 

DIEFEIi— I'agc and Eord difl'ors . . Merry Wives, ii. I 
do men from cliildren nothing differ.. .VurA/Wn, v. I 
that differs not from the stalling. ./Ijyou Likeil,i. I 
iiotliincr ditfers hut the outward .. ..KicAard //;. i. 4 
the world should so nuich differ.. Timono/zlf/i. iii. I 
but cla\' and elav ditl'crs in dignity.. Ci/mie/ine, iv. 2 

DIKl'i;i!i:.N(i:-a'U the difforeiioe. i'lroGeii. ofV. iv. 4 
to make ditVerenee of men's liking. Merry Wires, ii. I 

let him bear it for a ditfereiice MuctiAdo,i. 1 

the ditfereiice of old ^iliyloek ..Merch. of Venice, ii. 5 
there is more differeiiee lietwcen your — iii. 1 
arc you ai'ipiainted with the difference — iv. 1 
thou shall sec the dilleienee of our spirit — iv. I 
the seasons' dilferenee; as, the icy. Asyou Likeit, ii. 1 
'twosjn.st the (htl'oronce betwixt the — iii. .I 

that had put such ditl'ereuce betwixt ..All'sWell, i. 3 
yet stand oft' in dift'crencos so mightv — ii. 3 
"difference betwixt our Uuhemia . . il'ititer'sTale, i. 1 

to me, the differeuce forges dread — iv. 3 

midetermined differences of kings ..King John, ii. 2 
for tlie ditfereuce is, purchase of a heavy — iii. I 
the fearful dilferenee of incensed kings — iii. I 
swelliiiL' ditlorenec of voiu- settled ..Richard II. i. I 
these (liffereiiies >hall'all re.«t under — iv. 1 

making such dilVereiioo 'twixt (rep.).\ Henry IV. iii. 1 

or to the plaee oi'dilfercnoe eall illeurylV. iv. I 

be assured, you'll 11 ud a dilferenee Henry V. ii. 4 

notice of the private ditl'erenee ....Henry VIII. i. 1 

there's dilVereiioo in no per^ons — i. i 

in the wi'ighty dill'eriiieo between .. — iii. I 
and thy honour at ditt'eeiiie iu lhce,Caria/aiiut', v. 3 
whilst'twixt yon thole's dilferenee .. — v. i 

passions of svuno dillerenei' Julius Cirsar, i. 2 

and bind up the peltv dilferenee. .-l/t/oiiy ^ clco. ii. 1 

debatt! our tri\ ial differeiiee loud — ii. 2 

Qsk what WHS the tlifforence? Cymbeline, i. & 

the wide dillerciiee 'twixt amorous .. — v. 5 
'tis not the difference of a ycur ..THut Jndson. ii. I 



DIF 



[ 181 ] 



DIFFERENCE— the difference o{a\]... Pericles, iv. 3 
1"11 teach vou dittereiiccf ; awny, away Lear, i. 4 

dost thou know the ilirtercmc. "my boy .. — i. 4 

so hath otir sister, ot iliilereiiecs .."...." — ii. 1 

■what is y».'iir dirt'ei'enei.'? si C-ilv? — ii. 2 

O the ditlVixnce of mun and man ! — iv. 2 

from your first of ditterence and decay .. — v. 3 
clioice, to seri'C in such a ditFerence. . . . Hamlet, iii. 4 
yon may wear your me ^nth a difference — iv. 5 

full of most excellent differences — v. 2 

the aim reports, 'tis oft with difference. . Othello, i. 3 
Drb'FEREiVCY— there is differency. . Coriolarius, V. 4 
DIFFERENT— for different iiiunes.Merri/Wives, ii. 1 
but either it was different in blood ..Mid. N.Dr. i. 1 
different from the man he was . . Comedy o.l'Err. v. 1 
too well I feel the different plague. . King John, iii. 4 

time in different pleasure Timon of Athens^ i. 1 

in different beds of lust — iv. 3 

could not beget such differen t issues .... Lear, iv. 3 
tremble in their dirt'ereiit irreetiuj;. . Romeo 4 Jul- i. 5 

hut for some, and yet all different — ii. 3 

the seas, and countries different Ilamlel, iii. I 

DIFFERING-ditlering in t!ie owners. Timnn of.i. i. I 
conditions so dift'erin;; in their aets...tj(/.<S-r/t'o. ii. 2 

ffift of differing multitudes Cijmbeliiie, iii. 6 

DTFFICILE-il est trop difficile Henri/ r. iii. i 

DIIFICUET- 

rcol. KiiLl full of poize and difficult . . Othello, iii. 3 
DIFFICUI.TIES- 
all difficulties are but easy •whcn.iVci./or Mea.ir. 2 
were I alone to pass the Llifiicnlties. Troll. ^Cres. ii. 2 
DIFFICULTY- be of any difficulty ...J/.''sire/;, iv. 3 
xmdergo any diffienIt^• imposed., f mil. 4- Cress, iii. 2 
difficulty [Cnl. Kn/.-iiiffi>-ult weight] . . Othello, iii. 3 

it were a tedious dilHrultv. T think — iii. 3 

DIFFIDENCE— -n-ith this"(liffi.lence.../w;i»- .lohn, i. 1 

of thy cunning had no diilidence ..IHeirnjf'I. iii. 3 

needless ditRdences, banishment of friends. Lear, i. 2 

DIFFUSE- that can nivs|.eechditVuse .. — i. 4 

DIFFTTSED— some diffused son^ . . Merri/ H'ires, iv. 4 

stern looks, diffused attire, and every.. i/fjof/ I', v. 2 

ditt'iised infection of a man liiclinrd III. i. 2 

DIFFUSEST— lyfinsest licney-drops . . Tempest, iv. 1 

DIG— will dig thee pig-nuts — ii. 2 

and dig my grave thyself 2 Henry IF. iv. 4 

wilt thou go dig a grave to 'IHennj VI. v. 1 

kin", but I could dig his grave? SHenri/FI. v. 2 

as these poor pickaxes can dig Cijmbeiine, iv. i 

thou so much as dig the grave.. Titus .-Ind. ii. 4 Uet.) 

'tis you must dig with mattock — iv. 3 

for who digs liill's because they Pericles, i. 4 

could he dig without anas? Hamlet, v. 1 

what man dost thou di'S it i'or? — v. 1 

DIGEST— and can digest as much. Tirclf/I, Night, ii. 4 
will dige-t tl:is liar;h iudiinitv . . Lore's L.Losl, v. 2 
other thiiiL's I shall di-esf it. .".l.'oW,. of l-enicr; iii. h 
and the tecdcrs dJK'tt it with .... IV Inter's rule, iv. 3 
do diL-cst the poison of thv tlosh. . Comed'i ni'E, r. ii. 2 
well .li,4X>t theabu~c of dinnncc.. Wciiryr. ii. (cho.) 

and dii-Tst your angrv choler 1 Henry VI. iv. 1 

may fli^\'>t 'ua- coni;ilnts in some.. lu'clmrd III. iii. 1 
willth^' ;;ii!gilige-t tliis letter . ...Henry VIII. i'li. 2 
digest things rightly, touching the . . Coriolaniis, i. 1 
multiplied iligijst tlie senate's courtesj'? — iii. 1 

to digest his words with better Jtilim Casar, i. 2 

by the gods, you shall digest the venom — iv. 3 

mv twt-TdaiiL'hters' dowers digest this Lear, i. I 

DIGESTED— name must be digested . . All's IVM, v. 3 

chewed, swallowed, and digested HenryV. ii. 2 

the disgrace v.e have dige.-tcd — iii. 1; 

what may be digetted iil aphiy . Vroil,^- Cress, (prol.) 
t'nat matters are so well dJ£ested../«'(j«y f^-Cleo. ii. 2 
well digested in the scenes, set down . . Hamlet, ii. 2 
DrGV.STIi i>T-make ill digestions. Con!«?.yo/&T. v. 1 
now. ' ■' -c'on wait on appetite. .3/t7o6f^/i, iii. -1 
\}i-' '■' I 1 sour; you urged . . liichard II. i. 3 

yoiii .1 ;. .1—. Luulj'our digestions HenryV. v. 1 

agood uiiCfJiuii to you all Henry VIll.'i. 4 

in hot digestion of tills cormorant. Trail. 4' Cress, ii. 2 
my cheese, my digestion, why hast . . — ii. 3 
for your liealth and vour digestion sake — ii. 3 
DIGGED— hemlock, disgcd i the dark..1/ao?K//i, iv. ) 
two kinsmen, digged fl'ieir graves . . Ilichurd II. iii. 3 
should be digged out of the bowels . . I Henry IV. i. 3 

and with my nails disged stones 1 Henry VI. i. 4 

thy grave is digged alreadv in 2IJenry VI. iv. 10 

no, iT I digged up thy forefathers' 3 Henri/ VI. i. 3 

oft have 1 digged up dead men . . Titas Andron. v. 1 

the scripture says, Adam digged Hamlet, v. 1 

DIGGING-with digging up of graves ./iom. 4-Jid. v. 3 

DiGHTON- Di.^hton and Forrest. . Rictiard IIL iv. 3 

tlius, (|Uoth Dighton, lay the gentle — iv. 3 

when niLditon thus told on . — iv. 3 

DIGNTl'l ;;i) -^rtiL'nitiedwith this.r//'of7rn.of rer.ii. 4 
the phir- is ;li' railed by the doer's ...All's /;>((, ii. 3 

thou \\\i I .iiL^aiiied enough, even Cymbf-hne, ii. 3 

soiiieiime's Ijv action di'}aiued ../?on;eo .^-^wJiX, ii. 3 

DIGNIFIES— dignifies an impair.. rro/(.'<lCces,i.iv. ;, 

virtue, and most dignifies the !iaver.Co)v'o;ani(,s, ii. 2 

that dignifies the renown of a bawd Pericirs, iv. 6 

DIGNH'Y— to dignify them morc.ruoG.'n.nfV.r. i. 1 

to dignify the times since Cicsar's ..'IHenry IV. i. 1 

DIGNITIiiS— more mature dignities .. IJV, //,V'» 7'. i. 1 

and the late dignities, heaped un Murhr^ih, i. g 

without corrival, all her dignities ..^ Henry II'. i. 3 
double-charge thee with dignities ..2Henry! v. v. 3 

pope. Or di^aiities of church 1 H:-nry VI. i. 3 

shall e'er divorce my dignities Henry fill. iii. 1 

have bought her dignities so dear — iii. 1 

the waj-s you have for dignities — iii. 2 

a peace above all earthly "dignities .. — iii. 2 
our joint and several dignities . . Troilns 4' Cress, ii. 2 
have thought on special dignities. Timon nf .I/A. v. 2 
in the disposing of^new dignities. ../«(/«sC<r.\'ar, iii. 1 

all hisdignities, upon his son inlony 4^ Cleo. i. 2 

dignities becoming your estates Cymbeline, v. 5 

DIGNITY— being so" reputed in dignity, rempesl, i. 2 
can transpose to form and dignity. .1//rf. N.'s Dr. i. 1 
several worthies make one dignitv . . I.nre'sL. L. iv. 3 
to wear an underserved dignrty.."A/er. of fenlce, ii. 9 



DIGNITY— this new-fallen dignity, .-is you Like iV, v. 4 

the great dignitv. tlia't his valour .4irs Well, iv. 3 

my tlignity would last but till . . IVinter'sTule, iv. 3 
this dignity and duty both cast off) .. — v. 1 
the dignity of this act was worth .... — v. 2 
my crown, my oath, my dignity. . Corned;/ 0/' .Bit. i. 1 

for the dignity of the whole body ilacbeth, v. 1 

liable to our erowni and dignity .... Kin^f Joli /i, ii. 2 

of youth, against your dignity 1 Henry I V. i. 1 

for my cloud of dignity is held 2HeiirylV.iv. 4 

hear your own dignity so much — v. 2 

advantageable for our dignity Henry V. v. 2 

still enjoy thy regal dignity ". 1 Henry VI. v. 4 

thought, but "thinlvs on'diguity 2Henry VI. iii. 1 

slander to your royal dignity — iii. 2 

his crown and dignity, thou hast .... — iv. 7 
I am resolved for death, or dignity . . — v. 1 
this proffered benefit of dignity . . Richard III. iii. 7 
a sim of dignity, a breath, a bubble.. — iv. 4 
to the dignity and height of fortune. . — iv. 4 
what state, what dignity, what honour — iv. 4 

high promotions, aud great dignity — iv. 4 

the ilignity of your office, is tlie .... Henry VIII. i. 2 

by my life, and kingly dignity — ii. 4 

tins hath not a finger's dignity .. Troilus 4r Cress, i. 3 
holds liis estimate and dignity as well — ii. 2 
things of such dignity as we ^teet.Anlony ScCleo.Y.2 
clay and clay I'dffers in dignity .... Cymbeline, iv. 2 

that best could deem his dignitj'? — v. 4 

both alike in dignity Romeo 4- Juliet, (prologue) 

wliose love was of tliat dignity Hamlet, i. .'> 

after your own honour and dignity — ii. 2 

DIGRESS-part enforced to digress. "Arm/ng-o/S/i. iii. 2 
methinks, I do digress too much. . Tilns.lndron. v. 3 

DIGRESSlNG-in tliy digressing son. Iticlmrd II. v. 3 
digressing from the valour of . . Romeo A- Juliet, iii. 3 

DIGRESSION— my digression hy .. Lore's L. Lost, i. 2 
mere digression from my purpose . .2HenryIV. iv. 1 

DIGT— is digt himself four yards Henry V. iii. 2 

DIG-YOU-i)EN-God dig-you-den. Lare'sL.L. iv. 1 

DII — dii facial! t, laiidis sumnia ZHcnryVI.i. 3 

DILATE— to dilate at full what . . Comedy i.f Err. i. 1 
that I would all mv pilgrimage dilate . . Othello, i. 3 

DILATED— more dilated farewell..... -l/rs H'ell, ii. 1 
thy spacious and dilated parts .. Tmilnsi'^-Cress. ii. 3 
thescope of these dilated articles allow.. Handel, i. 2 

DILATORY— I abhor tliis dilatory.. He/iry/v;/. ii. 4 
and wit depends on dilatory time Olhello, ii. 3 

DILEMMA— doubtful dileuima . . .tleri 1/ IVives, iv. 5 
presently pen down my dilemmas ...-Ill's IVcIl, iii. 6 

DILIGENCE— hence, with diligence Tempes', i. 2 

bravely, my diligence — v. 1 

most guilty diligence in action . . Meas.,for Meas. iv. 1 
true diligence, he is no less ..Taming of Sh. 1 (ind.) 
of your accustomed diligence tome. . I Henry VI. v. 3 
there wants no diligence in seeking. Ci/mie/^ne, iv. 3 
with all due diligence, that horse. ft'nWes, iii. (Gow.) 

and the best of me is diligence Lear, i. 4 

if your diligence be not speedy, I sliall ... — 'i. -i 
sir, with all diligence of spiri't Hamlel, v. 2 

DILIGENT— my too diligent ear Temp.'st, iii. I 

tliou see'st how diligent I am Taming of ih. iv. 2 

he knows you are too diligent. Timon of.-itiiens, iii. 4 
but be a diligent follower of mine . . Cymbeline, iii. 5 
so duteous, diligent, so tender over . . — v. 5 
and forces by diligent discovery Lear, v. 1 

DILUCULO— diluculo surgere. . . . Tn-elfili .Mghi, ii. 3 

DIM— greater glory dim the less. ..Mer. of Venice, v. 1 

never saw the heavens so dim Winter' sTale, iii. 3 

violets, dim, but sweeter than the lids — iv. 3 
as dim and meagre as an ague's fit. . KingJottn, iii. 4 

are bent to dim Iiis glory Richard II. iii. 3 

my day is dim 2 Henry IV. iv. 4 

let not sloth dim your honours 1 Henry I'l. i. 1 

wa.x dim, as drav.'iug to — ii. 5 

that dims the honour of this 2Henry VI. i. 1 

that which seems to dim thy sight? .. — i. 2 

mine eyes grow dim: farewell Henry VIII. iv. 2 

not Erebus itself were dim enough. J«//HJCrt'sar, ii. 1 

we'll breathe the welkin dim TitusAndron. iii. 1 

in that dim monument where ..Romeo 4- Juliet, iii. 5 
never from this palace of dim night .. — v. 3 

DIMENSION— in dimension, and.. Tn-eifHi A'lg/i/.i. 5 
but am in that dimension gi-ossly clad — v. 1 
organs, dimensions, senses . . Merch. of Venire, iii. 1 
his dimensions to any thick sight ..2HenryIV. iii. 2 
when my dimensions are as well compact .Lear, i. 2 

DIMINISH— as diminish one dowle . . Tempest, iii. 3 
that reason wonder may diminish.^s voit Like it,\. 4 

DIMINISHED— diminished to her cock . . Lear, iv. 6 

DIMINISHING— or diminishing. Comcdi/orA'/r. ii. 2 

DIMINUTION-diminution in our. .4«(. <S-Cieo. iii. 11 
till the diminution of space had .... Ci/mbeline, i. 4 

DIMIisaiTIYE- diminutive of birds. . Macbeth, iv. 2 
dimiuuti^'e as fears and reasons?.. Tro//. 4' Cress, ii. 2 
water -flies; diminutives of nature! .. — v. 1 
shov\-n for poorest diniinnti\cs...4«/o»v 4-Cleo. iv. 10 

DIMMED— and dimmed mine eyes ..2 Henry VI. i. 1 
and with dimmed eyes look after him — iii. 1 

these eyes that now are dimmed 'Mlennj VI. v. 2 

hath dimmed your infant morn ..Ricliard III. iv. 4 
is the sun dimincil, that gnats z\o. TitusAndron. iv. 4 

DIM.MING— towail the dimming ..Ricliard III. ii. 2 

DIMPLE— pretty dimples of his chin. IVinler'sT. ii. 3 

DIMPLED-you know, 'tisdimnled.7'roi/. 6i-Cress. i. 2 
the babe, whose dimpled smiles.. TimonnfAlh. iv. 3 
stood pretty dimpled boys, like.. Antony ii- Cleo. ii. 2 

DIN— beasts shall tremble at thy din . . Tempest, i. 2 
O, 'twas a din to fright a monster's ear — ii. 1 
might hardly endure the din?.. Taming of Shrew, i. 1 

think you, a little din can — i. 2 

when by and by the din of war Coriolanus, ii. 2 

but with a din confused enforce — iii. 3 

with brazen din blast you the ..Antony ffCleo. iv. 8 

no further with your din express Cymbeline, v. 4 

no din but snores, the house . . Pericles, iii. (Guwer) 
minstrelsy, and prettv din — v. 2 ((lower) 

DINE— dine, sup, and sleeo.. T/z-o Gen.of Vnona, ii. 4 
we have appointed to dine witli.. M^rry il'ires, iii. 2 
I am fain to dine and sup witli.iI/.-/n. Ihr Meas. iv. 3 



DIN 

DINE— study where I well may dine. Love's L. L. i. I 

I do dine to-day at the father''s — iv. 2 

if it please you to dine with us . . Mer. of Venice, i. 3 
think to dine with me to-day . . Turning ofSh. iii. 2 

dine with my father, drink — iii. 2 

to my inn, aud dine with me?.. Comedy of Errors, i.2 

food sister, let us diue, and never fret — ii. 1 
'11 dine above with you to-day .... — ii. 2 

say, he dines forth, and let no ' — ii. 2 

Antipholus, we diue too late — ii. 2 

there will we dine: this woman — iii. 1 

you did not diue at home — iv. 4 

to day did diue together — v. 1 

where Balthazar aud I did dine together — v. 1 
which of von two did dine with me . . — v, 1 
there to-day; he dines in London . .'ZHenrylV. iv. 4 

that ne'er shall dine, unless 3 Henry VI. ii. 2 

will not dine until I see tlie saine.fiic/iard ///. iii. 4 
we must needs dine together . . Timon of Athens, i. 1 

wilt dine mth me, Apcmantus? — i. 1 

you must needs dine with me — i. I 

will you dine with me to-moiT0W?./u(i'«sCn!S(2r, i. 2 

where shall we diue? O me! Romeo 4 Juliet, i. I 

I sliall not dine at home: I meet Othello, iii. 3 

DINED— I have dined 'Tiro Gen. of Verona, ii. 1 

is, that the duke hath dined . . Mid. i\. Dream, i v. 2 
hast thou dined? the tailor . . Taming of Shreut, iv. S 
bear half dined on the gentleman. IVinter's'Tale, iii. 3 

I have not dined to-day Comedy of Errors, iii. 1 

that is where we dined, where — iv. 1 

you dined at home — iv. 4 

I dined at home! thou villain — iv. 4 

that he dined not at home — v. 1 

you say, he dined at home — v. 1 

and often I have dined with. . Timon of Athens, iii. 1 
feast, having fully dined before .... Coriolanus, i. » 
he had not dined: the veins luifilled.. — v. 1 

has he dined, eanst thou tcl 1 ? — v. 2 

and when ray lust liath dined Cymbeline, iii. .■> 

what, have you dined at hoiue?./io/neo 4- Juliet, ii. .'> 

DING— ding— dong, bell Tempest, 1. 2 (song) 

DINING-CIIAMBER— 
into the dinin^-ehamber .. Two Gen. of Verona, iv. 4 
the tapestry ot my dining-cliaiiibers.2/Jp»ri//r. ii. 1 

DINNER— I must pat my dinner 'Tempest, i. 2 

is it near dinner time? Tteo Gen. of Verona, i. 2 

madam, dinner's ready, and your .... — i.2 

it was presently after dinner — ii. I 

why muse you, sir? 'tis dinner time.. — ii. 1 

a hot venison pasty to dinner .Merry ll'iees, i. 1 

the dinner is on the table — i. 1 

the dinner attends you, sir — i. 1 

I will make an end of my dinner — i.2 

you'll come to dinner, George? — ii. 1 

some of yon go home with uie to dinner — iii. 2 

well, I promised j'ou a dinner — iii. 3 

pray you home to dinner with ms.Mea.for Mca. ii. I 
an after dinner's sleep, dreaming ., — iii. I 

will you walk? dinner is ready Much .Ulo, ii. 3 

let us send her to call him in to diuuer — ii. :i 

to bid you come in to dinner — ii. 3 

sent to bid you come in to dinner — ii. 3 

your reasons at dinner have been.Lnt'e'.i L. Lost, v. 1 
my e.^hortation .after dinner. /Ue/c/in/i/ of Venice, i. 1 
after dinner your hazard shall be made — ii. 1 

bid them prepare for dinner — iii. 5 

then bid them prepare dinner — iii. 5 

and we will come m to dinner — iii. 6 

for your coming in to dinner, sir ... . — iii. .5 

first, let us go to dinner — iii. 6 

entreat you home with me to dinner — iv. 1 
doth entreat your company- at dinner — iv. 1 
shalt not die "for lack of a dinner...-/,«j/,-iii L/.^-i>i'/, ii. 6 
dinners, and suppers, and sleeping hours — iii. 2 
I must attend tlie duke at dinner.... — iv. 1 

at the latter end of a dinner All's n'ell, ii. i 

I were as sure of a good dinner . . Taming of Sh. i. 2 
and then to dinner; you are passing — ii. 1 
let us entreat you stay till after diuuer — iii. 2 

forward to the bridal dinner — iii. 2 

as you sit at dinner : I from .... Comedy of Errors, i . 2 
to dinner; my mistress, and her sister — i.2 
to dinner, and prays, that you will {rep.) — i.2 
somewhere gone to dinner: good sister — ii. 1 
desired him to come home to dinner — ii. I 

sent to have me home to dinner? .... — ii. 2 

of a mistress and a dinner — ii.2 

that at dinner they should not drop in — ii. 2 

by Dromio home to dinner — ii.2 

go bid the servants spread for dinner — ii. 2 
come, sir, to dinner; Dromio, keep .. — ii.2 

wherefore? for my dinner — iii. 1 

let us to the Tiger all to dinner — iii. 1 

to her will we to dinner — iii. 1 

we'll mend our dinner here — iv. 3 

the ring of mine you had at dinner . . — iv. 3 

he told"to-day at dinner, of his — iv. 3 

locked me out this day from dinner. . — v. 1 
our dinner done, and he not coining — v. 1 

me for von to-day at dinner — v. 1 

better Welsh: I will to dinner .. .. 1 Hen?-///r. iii. I 

he's indited to dinner to tlie iHennjlV. ii. 1 

shall I entreat \ou with me to dinner? — ii. 1 

go in with me to dinner . — iii. 2 

let's to dinner; come, let's to dinner — iii. 2 
go with me to dinner; come, lieutenant — v. 5 

shall we go send them dinners Henry V. iv. 2 

come, let' us four to dinner: I darc.l Hch;;/ I'I. ii. 4 

enough, for I stay dinner there Richard III. iii. 2 

my lord; the duke would be at dinner — iii. 4 
aud, when dinner's done, show me. 7'mon of.-ith. i. 1 
of enemies, than a dinner of friends . . — i.2 
so soon as (.tinner's done, we'll forth.. — ii.2 
importnnacy cease, till after dinner. . — ii. 2 

our dinner will not recompense — iii. 6 

hazard thy life for thy tlinner — iv. 3 

not siteak'with him till after dinner. Cor/o^anws, v. 2 
and vuar dinner wortii the eating. ..///////a C<esnr, i. 2 
jNlai-k Antony in Hgypt sitsat dinner..!///. 4-Cleo.'u.\ 
aud bring him to diuuer presently. . Cymbeline, iv. 2 



DIN 



DINNER— very course; proimre for dioner-tear, i. 3 

let me not stny a jot tor dinner — i. 4 

no worse after dinner, I will not part (rep.) — i. 1 
we'll <o dinner thither, twill . . Uomto ^Ju!ifl,\\. i 

?;o, I'll to dinner; hif you to the cell — ii. S 
arry for the mourners, and stay dinner — iv. '> 
to-morrow dinner then. I shall not.. ..0(MIo, iii. 3 
vour rlinncr, iind tlie generoua islanders — iii. 3 

DlNNI'.lt-TIMK— atdiuner-tinie..A/pr..!r/>nic'e,l. 1 
we will leiivi' you tli.u till dinner-time — i. I 
may eonie there hv iHuTUT-liuie. 7'iimiMg-o/SA. iv. 3 
this hour it will lie diiuui-tiluc. .Tomfrfyo/^rr. i. 2 
'tis dinner-time, oiiulh I; my b'old .. — ii. 1 

but say, »ir, is it ilinner-tiine'i' — ii, "2 

by to-morrow dinner-time, send Mm. I llenrylV. ii. 4 
miles to ride vet ere dinner-time .... — iii. 3 

DINT— and by dint of sword iUenrylV. iv. 1 

vou feel the Clint of pity Julius Cmsttr, iii. 2 

DlO.MKD— and stout Uiomed 3 Henri/ CI. iv. 2 

let Diomcd hear him, and bring. 7'roi'l. i^- Cress, iii. 3 
pood Diomed, furnish you fairly ... — iii. 3 
now Dinmed, a whole week by days — iv. 1 

tlie one and other nionied embraees — iv. 1 

and teli me, utthio Diomed; 'faith..,, — iv. 1 
fair Diomed, vnu dcMis chapmen do.. — iv. 1 
the Greeian Di'iuu-d, mid our Antcnor — iv. 2 
welcome, sir nioniL'd! here is the lady — iv. 4 
and to Oiomed vou siuill he mistress — iv. 4 

I'll tell thee. Diomed, this brave — iv. 4 

it not yon Diomed, with Calchas'. . .. — iv. 5 
here is sir Diomed; go, Rcntle knight — iv. a 
since first 1 saw vonrself and Diomed — iv. & 
tliere Diomed doth feast with him .. — iv. S 
you too, Diuniei I, keep Hector company — v 1 
Ihut same Diomed's u false-hearted.. — v. 1 

when Diomed kee|is his word — v. 1 

who calls? Diomed. Calchas, I think — v. 2 
Diomed— no, no, gocHl-night: I'll be — v. 2 

here, Diomed, keep this sleeve — v. 2 

I pr'ythee, Diomed, visit me no more — v. 2 

you shall not have it, Diomed — v. 2 

thou never shalt moek Oiomed again — v. 2 

no, this is Diomed's Crcssida — v. 2 

faith, arc bound to Diomed — V. 2 

by wetuht hate I her Diomed — v. 2 

sword falling on Diomed — v. 2 

and Diomed, stand fast, and wear — v. 2 

would I could meet that ro^ne Diomed! — v. 2 
proud Diomed, believe I come to lose — v. 3 
abominable varlet. Diomed, has got.. — v. 4 
haste we, Diomed, to reinforcement. , — v. .0 
O traitor Diomed!— turn th.v false face — v. 6 
flght with him alone, stand Diomed! — v. 6 
there, Diomed, there. Ivives ht? .intony^Cleo. iv. 12 

art thou there, Diomed? — Iv. 12 

too late, good Diomed; call my guard — iv. 12 

DIOMEDES- to Diomedes' ha,nA..Trn;t.^ Cress, iv. 2 

DtON— Cleomenes and Dion mnter'sTale. ii. 1 

Cleomenes and Dion, being well arrived — ii. 3 
and Dion, liave been both at Delphos — iii. 2 

DIONYZA — mv Dionyza, shall we rest.. Pericles, i. 4 

O Dionvza, wlio wanteth food — i. 4 

cursed Dionyza hath the pregnant — iv. (Gower) 
O, Dionyza, such a piece of slaughter.. — iv. 4 
for Marina writ by wicked Dionyza — iv. Gower) 

DIP— to see so many dip their meat. Timon o/Alh. i. 2 
friend, that dips in the same dish? .. — iii. 2 
dip their napkms in his sacred ..JuliusCwsar, iii. 2 
but dip a knife in it. where Hamlet, iv. 7 

DIPP'DST— thou dipp'dst in blood . .3Henn, VI. i. 4 

DIPPING— who, dipping all his faults. . Hamlet, iv. 7 

DIKE— dire lamenting elegies . . TuoGen.njVer. iii. 2 
bear the extremity of dire mishap.Cowerly of Er. i. 1 

of dire combustion, and confused Macbeth, ii. 3 

todott'their dire distresses — iv. 3 

do hate the dire aspect of civil Richard II. i. 3 

at Oxford thy (lire overthrow — v. (i 

il me eommande de vous dire que .... Henry r. iv. 4 
shall ring thy dire dcjiarture out ..^Henryl'I.'w. 2 
a dire induction am I witness to . . Richard III. iv. 4 
and the dire death of my poor sons . . — iv. 4 

divided, in their dire division — v. 4 

attending on so dire a project .. Troilm ^ Cress, ii. 2 
and brings the dire occasion in his. . Ci/mhelinc, iv. 2 
strange plots of dire revenge . . Titus Andronicus, v. 2 

been breeder of these dire events — v. 3 

come hither as this dire night ..Romeo fy Juliet, v. 3 
thy natural magic and dire property. . Hamlet, iii. 2 
like timorous accent, and dire yell Othello, i. 1 

DIRECT— first direct my men .... Mirry Wires, Iv. 2 
but direct thy feet, where thou ..TwelflhMuhl. v. 1 
and yield me a direct answer ..Mens, for Mi as. iv. 2 
some god direct my judgment! . . Mer. of Venice, ii. 7 

by direct, or indirect attemi)ts — iv. 1 

circumstantial, and the lie direct. /)» you Like it, v. 4 

he durst not give the lie direct — v. 4 

the lie direct: all these you may (rep.) — v. 4 

In mine own direct knowledge WstVeU,in. 6 

OS we'll direct her how 'tis best — iii. 7 

yet inilireetion thereby grows direct. K'«i'./o/iii, iii. 1 
ready to direct these home-alarms ..Richard II. i. 1 

to direct these fair designs — i. 3 

direct not him, whose way Iiimself .. — ii. I 
by letters shall diivet your course ..MIenrylV. i. 3 
direct mine arms, I may embrace ..MIenryVI. ii. 5 

ond I'll direct thee how thou — iv. .^ 

ond may direct his course as Richard III. ii. 2 

more stronger to direct you than . . Henry VIII. i. I 
aside from the direct forthright.. Troif. ^Cress. iii. 3 

of our eye directs our mind — v. 2 

cursed natures, but direct villany.7'imono//</A. iv. 3 
and their consentof one direct way,C'orio(a«ui, ii. 3 
and I'll direct you how you shall go — ii. 3 

direct me, if it DC your will — iv. 4 

the gods (lireet you to the best! ....Cymbetine, iii. 4 
to direct them tiie way I am going . . — v. 4 

your rule direct to aii.v Pericles, i. 2 

of my eonrsc, direct nivsaill ....linmeo/^ Juliet, i. \ 
heaven will direct it. Nay, let's follow. Hamlet, i. 4 
be even and direct with mc — il. 2 



[J8^ 

DIRECT-by director by collateral hanil.Hamlet, iv, 

that you may direct me to him from — iv. 

law, and cimrsc of direct session Othello, i. 

to he direct and honest, is notsafe — iii. 

DI KKCrKD-dircctcd you to wrong. A/crryirirc, iii. 

I am directed by you Measure for Measure, iv, 

virgin, was this directed to you?..Loi'c'» L. Lost, iv. 
hath directed, how I shall take. .Mer. of Fenice, ii. 
to he dirv'ct^'d, as from her lor<l 



DIS 



the 

alln^.rth. 



tlu'V 
ed li\ 



dil 

Iri^lii 

■e(.-d 



cted..U/c,i 
. llr 



■ill: 



V. 4 



place.!, il lid lllc.le^tlv direct, d Ml,, in, 11 

thev llHisilirected. wc ourscif wilL/dc/i^ir^/ /// 

I was directed hitlicr Timon of Athens, iv. 

you must eillicr he directed by mme.CymOeliiie, v. 

"which directed liim tn seek heron the — V. 
DIRECT! NU-heuvens directing . . IVinlcr'sTale, v. 
DIRECTION- lack no direction ..Merry irives,]ii. 

as I shall give you direction Much Ada, ii. 

give him mrection for this merry. Mer. of Venice, i. 

by nice direction of a maiden's eyes — ii. 

just as my master had direction.. Tamingof Sh. iv. 

cinhrttco but my direction Winter'sTale, iv. 

to the direction just Macbeth, iii. 

I put my.-elf to thv direction — iv. 

from all direction, piiriiose, course . . King John,'\\, 

to your diiecticin, 11 ulicrt, what news — Iv. 

then witli direction to re|)air to Richard II. ii. 

than giving direction doth from ....\ Henry II'. ii. 

your well-iiraetised, wise directions.. 2;/cn>y/F. v. 

if there is not lietfer directions Henry V. iii. 

he has no more directions in the true — iii. 

particular knowledge of his directions — iii. 

as touching direction of the inilitar.y — iii. 

according as I gave directions illenry VI. iii. 

will go by thy direction Richard III. ii. 

all indirectly, gave direction — iv. 

call for some men of sound direction — v. 

time to arm, and give direction — v. 

a good elireetion, warlike sovereign .. — v. 

let thy blood be thy direction . . I'roilus^ Cress, ii. 

by whose direction found'st tiion. Romeofy Julie' , ii. 

by indirections find directions out .... Handel, ii. 

of worldly matters and direction Othello, i. 

lago hath direction what to do — ii. 

fit to stand hv Caisar and give direction .. — ii. 
DIRECTIVE— and liows directive. Troilus& Cress, i. 
DIRECTION-GIVER- 

I'roteus, mv direction-giver ..TwoGen.ofVcr. iii. 
DIRECTITUDE- 

he's in directitude. Directitude! ..Cariolnnus, iv. 
DIRECTS Y-this concurs directly. Twelfth Nigh', iii. 

you would say, directly interest. .Jtfcr. of Venice, i. 

that indirectly, and directly too .... — iv. 

nor is't directly laid to thee IVinter's Tale, iii. 

will she go now to bed? Directly Macbeih.v. 

which shall directly lead thy foot ..KingJohn, iii. 

answer me directly to this <iuestion.l Henry IV. ii. 

to answer them directly, how far ..'IHenrylV. iv. 

but directly, to say— I love you Henry V. v. 

would swear directly, their very nosesHejiri/ ^7//. i. 

that you directly set rae against Coriolanus, i. 

he was too hard for him directly — iv. 

trade art thou? answer me directly. Ju//KsC«?sar, i. 

stand you directly in Antonius' way — i. 

as the Capitol, directly here — ii. 

answer every man directly — iii. 

dii-ectly and briefly, wisely and truly — iii. 

proceed directly. Directly, I am going — iii. 

that matter is answered directly — iii. 

to rim directly on ; his corporal — iv. 

give me directly to understand Cymbetine, i. 

rather, directly fly — i. 

to [lerform it, directly and truly — iii. 

directly seasons him his enemy Hamlet, iii. 

one line two crafts directly meet — iii. 

Dcsdemona is directly in love with him. Othello, ii. 

parallel course, directly to his good? .... — ii. 

whicli lead directly to the door of truth.. — iii. 

I have dealt most directly in thy affair . . — iv. 
DIREFUL— the direful spectacle Tempest, i. 

storms and direful tliunders break .... Macbeth, i. 

more direful hap betide that Ricliard III. i. 

index of a direful pageant — iv. 

some direful slauglitering death. . Titus Andron. v. 

mc, of this direful murder Komeo ,^ Juliet, v. 

s'liiic niischance, the cry is very direful.. OfAeWo, v. 

DI RIO X |;SS— direness, familiar to Macbeth, v. 

DIRICST— top-full of direst cruelty! — i. 

stern murder, in the direst degree .. /i/cAnnf ///. v. 
DIRGE— livmns to sullen dirges.. «o»ira<5- Juliet, iv. 

in funeral, and with dirge in marriage. . Hamlet, i. 
DIRT— saddles into the dn-t.... Tamingof Hhrew, iv. 

waded through the dirt to pluck — iv. 

whose filth and dirt troubles iHenry VI. iv. 

Paris is dirt to him Troilus ^Crcssida, i. 

match us in comparisons with dirt — i. 

gold and silver rather turn to dirt!..t'«MWi;i(?, iii. 

borest thine ass on thy hack over tlie dirt..trai-, i. 

to have his fine jiatc full of fine dirt? . . Hamlet, v. 

spacious ill tlie possession of dirt — v. 

Oijidl! (Idnltl as ignorant as dirt! Othello, v. 

DIR I'-ROTTEN-dirt-rotten livers. TioiV. A- Crw. v. 
DIRTY- (luaiitity of dirty lands .. 7'«e(yr/i .\"iVf/i(, ii. 

on the dank anil dirty ground .. Mid. N. Dream, ii. 

most mechanical anil dirty hand iHenrylV. v. 

a slobbery and a dirty farm Henry V. iii. 

I kiss his dirty slioc — iv. 

of those who worship dirty g';d3 Cymbetine, iii. 

about the sconce with a <lirty shovel . . Hamlet, v. 
DIS— that duskv Dis mv daughter anU.Tempesi, iv. 

Icfst fall rniin Dis's wii.-l'ou! ....Winter's Tale.iv. 
Dl.SAlill,lTV_.,fdivMl,iliiv..;VoGcn.o/»'frona, il. 
DI.S.\lil.E-di-ilile all the l.'eneiits./l.j/oit Like it, iv. 

I)c la I'.iole! disul.le ii..t lliv.elf ... .1 Henry VI. V. 
DlSAHI,i:i)-I luivedis.il.ledniinc.A/er. n/;Vmce, i. 

lie di-aliled niv juiL'incnt As you Like it, V, 

DISAI;l.!.\(;-di^:iliruiL!ofmy8elf..Wfr. oZ/'eniM, ii. 

disai>vanta(;e— 

hideous god of war in disa<lvantagc..2Henrv/r. ii. 



DISADVANTAGE- 

wc have at disadvantage fought .... Coriolanus, i. 6 
DISAtiREE— ourselves we disagree.. 1 /(crirj/ C/. iv. 1 
DIS.VIJ.OW -if wc disallow of this?...KiHA'A)/in, i. 1 
DISANIMATE— it disaniinates his.. 1 /)«■»)-(/ '''.iii. 1 
DI.SANNIII,- may not disannul.. Comri/j/ o/ "irr. i. 1 
Warwick disannuls great John ....ZHenryH. iii. 3 
DI8AI'P()INTED- 

unhcMiseled, disap|Kjiiited, unaneled. ...//nmW, i. ;> 
DISAR.VI— I can here disarm thee witli..7'cwipM(, i. 2 
disarm them, and let tlicin question. .jV/tT;sr(f. ill. 1 
kiiiL's. disarm great Hector. . TroilnsSfCresnda,i\\. I 
DISASTEIt—faith, his Hweet disaster ..AU'sWeU/i. 1 
it was a disa^slcr of war that Oaisar .. — iii. 6. 
this very in.stant disaster of his setting — iv. 3 

sent it us ujion her great disaster — v. 3 

so weary with disasters, tugged with.. Mactieth, iii. 1 

disasters grow in the veins Troilus ^ CressiJa, i. 3^ 

>viiich pitiiully disaster the cheeks. ./fiif.^-CTeo. ii. 7 
till tlie disaster that, one mortal night. Pericles, v. 1 

[ A;i(.] to shield thee from disasters of Lear, i. 1 

we miikeguilty of our disasters — i. 2 

dews of blood, disasters in the sun Hamlet, i. 1 

DI.SASTROUS— most disastrous chances.. OMeMo, i. 3 
DI.S-BENCIIED-dis-benchedyouiiotCor/V)/<in«», ii. 2 
DISBRANCH— sliver and disbranch from.Lrar, iv. 2 
DISBUiiDENED— cre't hcdishurdened.«iWi. //. ii. 1 
DISBURSE-hidmy wife disburse. CuMirJi/ oflir. iv. 1 
DISBURSED— sum, disbursed hy. Love's L. ImsI.H. 1 
till he disbursed, at saint Colmes' incli.jV/«c6f//i, i. 2 
for Calaia, disbursed I duly to liis ..Richard II. i. I 
DISCANDEltING— 

[K'n/.] hv the discandering of this. /In/. ^ Clco. iii. II 
Dl.SC.\Ni)Y— dodiseandv, melt tlieir — iv. 10 
Dl.SCA.N'lJVI.N'G- 

bv the di.-.eaiidving [ATn/.-discandering] — iii. 11 
DISCARD— discard, bully Hercules. i>7«rrf/ fVives.i.'i 

fo oft'; I discard you Tuetflh Night, iii. 4 
here discard my sickness Julius Cirsar, ii. 1 

DISC AKDED-of Iiis discarded men.jWfrry ll'ires, ii. 1 

home again discarded faith KingJohn, v. 4 

are fooled, discarded, and shook off. .l/Zcnry IV. i. 3 
but discarded unjust ser\ing-men .. — iv. 2 
that discarded fathers should have thus. . Lear, iii. 4 
to be discarded tlicncc ! or keep it as . . Othello, iv. 2 

DIS-CASE— I will dis-case me Tempest, v. 1 

therefore dis-case thee instaiitlv..'fin/er'*7'a/e, iv. 3 
DISCERN— if thou niay'st discern by that — iii. 3 

I could discern no part of his tllenrylV. ii. 2 

as I could well discern, for smoke . . 1 Henry VI. ii. 2 

what wreck discern you in me Cymbetine, i. 7 

from the deck you may discern Pt-riclet, v. 1 

that discerns your state better than Lear, ii. + 

as I discern, it burnetii in Itomeo (f Juliet, v. 3 

from the cape can you discern at sea? . . Othello, ii. 1 
DISCERNED— once discerned, shows..! Hen. VI. iii. 2 
DISCERNER— no disecrner durst ..Ilcnn/VlII. i. 1 
DISCERNING— discemings are lethargieil.7.ear, i. 4 

.an eve discerning thine honour from — iv. 2 

DISCERN'ST— discem'st thou aught in.Othello, iii. 3 
DISCH ARGE— I will discharge thee .... Tempest, i. 2 
what to come, in yours and my discharge — ii. I 
before I shall discharge what I must .. — iii. I 
there thev always use to discharge. il/frry IHves, iv. 2 
wdiich I do discnarge you of your., ^/m. /or Mea. v. 1 

fo, I discharge thee or thy prisoner . . Much Ado, v. 1 
will discharge it in either your. W/rf. A'. Dream, i. 2 
able to discharge Pyriirans, but he . . — iv. 2 
money to discharge the Jqw. Merchanlof Venice,iii. 2 

is he not able to discharge — iv. 1 

tliat tlieir discharge did stretch ..As you Like it, ii. 1 
I will discharge my bond .. .. Comedy of Errors, iv. 1 

I v.ill.discliari;e thee, erel — iv. 4 

to their deaf pillows will discharge Macbeth, v. 1 

that power I have, discharge Richard II. iii. 2 

discharge mv followers, let them hence — iii. 2 
as hv dischaVL'e of tlieir artillery ....IHenrylV. i. I 
■ ' .11 ininr liiwle-s (rcp.")..2j;cnr!//r.ii. • 






— ii. 4 



irthi 



\iiU. ::l:.l 'il-i 1 ir^^e you — 111.2 

^il(:)-e \'..ii. di-eiuii-ge'your — iv. 2 

here dlscliarge your grace ." iHenrylV. i. 1 

witliout discharge, mone.v •illcnryVI. i. 3 

discharge the common sort with pay . 3 //cnrv '/. v. 5 

he did discharge u horrible oath Henry VIII. i. 2 

rude brevity and discharge of one.. Trail. tifCr. iv. 4 
never I shall discharge to the litb . . Coriolanus, iii. 2 

we will discharge our duty Cymbetine, iii. 7 

past, is, and to come, the uiscliargc . . — v. 4 
)ia\e in my name took their discnarge. . . . Lear. v. 3 
the\ do discharge their shot of courtesy. 0/Ae//o, ii. 1 
DIsCll.VlUi ED— part discharged so.Mid. N. Dr. V. 1 
truly; and very notably discharged.. — v. 1 

yon'have discharged tli"is honestly .ill's WeH,\. 3 

noped, his sickness is discharged.. )rin(rr'j7'a/c,ii. 3 
see him incsently discharged ..Comedy of Err. iv. I 
and let our army he discharged too. .'iHenrylV. it. 2 
the army is discharged all, and gone — iv. 3 

thy ottiee is discharged •> Henry VI. ii. 4 

rest, discharged me with these wordf3//i'«ry VI. iy. 1 
he was from theuce discharged? . . Henry VIII. ii. 4 
three times was his nose discharged.. — v. 3 
would wc were .ill discharged !. 7 iinono/y4(/irn»,ii. 2 

of request you have discharged Corio/anm, ii. 3 

that she ha.s discharged ..Antony ^Chopatra,iv. 12 
that hath dischorged her fraught. . TilusAndron. i. 2 

mav be discharged of breath Romeo <(■ Juliet, v. 1 

DtsOlIARGING— tlischarging less.. TroiV. * Cr.iii. 2 
DISCIPEE— his disciples only envy.. Henry VIII. v. 2 
DISCU'l.ED- andwiis discipkxl oi the.. AU'slfeU.i. 2 
DISCIl'I.INE-diseipline shows. rK-o«cn.o/r,;r. iii. 2 

and this moral discipline Tamingof Shrew, i. 1 

for our cliielcst men of discipline KingJohn, ii. 1 

and their discipline, were harboured ill — ii. I 
pnidciit disciplincl from ntirth to south — ii. 2 
according to the disciplines of the war. Henry V. iii. 2 

true difciplincs of the wars (r»-p.) — iii. 2 

in the disciplines of the pristine wars — iii. 2 
concerninjg tlie disciplines of the war — iii. 2 
the direction uf the military discipline — iii. 2 



DIS 



[ ISO] 



DIS 



PTSCIPLINE— »hc disciplines of w-nrs. Henry >'. iii. 8 

1 know the (Jiscipliiicsof war — iii. S 

valinntly, witli oxoollent discinlino. . — iii. 6 

for di<oiplini\'i oiijlit to In- nsiM — iii. li 

O uesliwnt nn.l Ivooilloss ilis-iplim-:.! HfHrv)"/. iv. 2 

bringinn tlioni to civil .iiscipliuc SHriin/JV. i. 1 

vour discipline in war, wisdoni . . AicAmxi ///. ill. 7 
lot's want no discipline, niakc no .... — V. 3 
discipline come not near tlicc!.. Tiw'/Mji^-fVws. ii. 3 
their di.^'iplinc (now niiiKUnl \vith,.CV"'>'''"<'. "• < 

t<xi lond, or tiiintiiiu' his discipline OlMlo, ii. 1 

I)ISCU'l.I\Kl)-di>cu>limHl thy itrntf.TVoiV. ■<•(>. ii. 3 

has he disciplined .Vnrtdiiis sonndlv. Cori'o/oMHS, li. 1 

mSCl.AIM-^straix'htdischiioi their.. — iii. 1 

hciv 1 dischiini all my patenial car« Lfar. i. 1 

nature diselainus in tiiec; a tailor — ii. 2 

DtSl'I.AIMi:n-I have .iisclainied sir. Kms-yalii, 1. 1 
InsrV.AlMlNi; -ai>cl:uniin- here ..Kichnr.i II. i. 1 

let niv ilix-hiimhic iV.'ni a purposi-d Hamlrl.y. i 

l>ISCl.AlM'Sl'-aise!:iiin'st rtintv. 7Vmi)iior'.-l//i. iv. 3 

Jnsi'l.OSK-diselose the state ot' voiir...l.7'sll>H. i. 3 

counsels, 1 will not disclose thei-.\..Jn.'ri« Crsnr. ii. I 

tl\e hatch. :ind the disclose, will he.. .. irnii/cJ, iii. 1 

think, and ne'er disclose her mind OlMlo, ii. 1 

Dl!>C1.0Si:n-disclosed to me, . 7V,. Gni. nfler. iii. I 
still rhetoric, disclosed witli eves. I.nvr's L. Lost, ii. 1 
which his eve hath disclosed: I only — ii. 1 
once disclosed the ladies did chause".. — v. 2 

nil I can, I have diselosoii T . Hichard ///. ii. I 

matters may be best disclosed JiiliusCrrs^ir, iv. 1 

oft before their buttoiis lie disoI(%sed Hamlri, i. 3 

colden couplets are disclosed, bis silence — v. 1 
DlSCOLOrU— though it discolours ..2 Hcarvfr. ii. 2 

with vour red hUwi discolour Ilmii, J: iii. r, 

msCOlAH'U i:0-discolonred earth.. K7„- Jo',„. ii. 2 
Mood stain this discolomwl shoix'..2Hcm-j/ ;•/. iv. 1 
to lie diseohnned In this plaiv. . Komro AJiiliel, v. 3 
PlSCllMFlT^uisCvMnlit ivitrns in.. ..2Hcii™r/. v. 2 
l>lSCO.MFrrKl)-so iliseonnited. . Tami,,gqfS^. ii, 1 
the earl ot" Douirlas is diseomlited .... 1 HenrylV. i. I 
m hiscnterpri/.es aiseomlitcdffixntt .. — Iii. S 
ho since 1 heard to lie diseonitited..2Hciiryr/. v. 1 



DIi^CO.MFlTlKl- 
of slaughter, and d 

DISCO.MFOKT-ilis 
niy disjrrai-e, and \ 
disconilort jzuide 



coniiittire 1 tlenrv VI. i. 1 

omlort swells Macbeth, i. 2 

ur discomfort.... — iv. 2 
my toni;ue Richni-d II. iii. 2 



returned with some diseoint'o 

you do diseonnoii all the host.. />,^; 

our camp, lest it diseomlort us '.■ 

to Erfve them this discomfort? ...l«.-i 
disconn'ort yon. my loi-d, it notliiilg 



iiACU-o. IV. 2 
HanUcl, iii. 2 



DISCO.MFdKTAKLK 

discomfortahle cousin! know'st. . , . Richard II. iii. 2 
pise (iMMEXll-discommend so iinich . . Lear, n. 2 
l>lSCOXSOLATl-:-all disconsolate..^»(msCn..Mi-, v. 3 
J>lsCOXTENT-lirawlin^'disoontent.1/c(i.«irJ/ra.iv.I 

make no use of your discontent? Much.ido, i. 3 

contenl you in mv discontent.. T.ivtinsitfShreir.K. 1 
be wnniuht out of their discontent.. Kiiii'/oAii, iii. 4 
move the munnnrins: lips of discontent — iv. 2 
fi-om homo, and discontents at imme _ iv. 3 
your brow s are full of iliseontent ..Richard II. iv. 1 
yoiu- quiek-csuen inc diseoutcuts . . 1 Uc»n,l r. i. 3 
changehn_'~. and ,>oor discontents.... _ v. 1 
more miserable tlian discontent? ..■2Henryir. iii. 1 
heart s discontent, and sour atHietiou — iii. 2 
full ot sorrow luid heart's discontent. 3 llrnri/ VI. ui.3 
the Arinter of our dise.mtent made . . . Kic/mir'( III. i. 1 
leans womlrously to discontent.. Timonof .ilh. iii. 4 

his discontents arc unix'moviibly "_ v. 2 

to the ports the discontents repair. Jii^oii!/* C(co. i. 4 

sir. to the worst of discontent Cijmbeline, ii. 3 

let not discontent daunt all vour..7'i^iM Andron. i. 2 
,^;'''^';!,'-'.,V ■'" y'^'"' S'''^'''* «"-' discontents — i. 2 
DIM ON 1 l-.M K 1 )-my discontented peers!./oAn, iv. 2 

our ihsconteiitcil counties do revolt — v. 1 

the hlnshin J di>eontentcd sun .... liichnrd II. iii. 3 
banished moody liiscontentcd fnry..l Hoii-i/r/. iii. I 

I know- a discontented gentleman. .R/r/iurd ///. iv. 2 
leads disc.niteiitcd steps in foreign soil — iv. 4 

II that your nioo.ly diseoiilcnted souls — v. 1 
be sdiscoutente.l. :\lay he. he hears. HcHi-t/r/;/. iii.2 
cheer up mv diseonscnted troops. Timnn of.ilh. iii. 5 
replied to the diseon tented mcmlvrs.roriWunuj:, i. 1 
but as a discontented friend, trrief-shot _ vl 

twill tie up thy discontented.' sword. ./;i/.^-r/co. ii! 6 

TvyiVir.v'S'i'.-'i-"'.'!!";- 'Either strive, ir,-,,*,-,--., Tatr. iv. 3 

l)!8cox'ri\i rii '""*'^'*'^''°''""«-- •'""«* ^<'<'.'>'- ' 

lia\c discontinued school ahove.;Vcr. af renice, iii. 4 

DIt-t O li D—disdain, and disconl, shall.' TempM*, iv. I 

so musical a discord, such sweet... Wirf. A.'sDr. iv. 1 

tlnd the eoneonl of this discord'? .. — v. 1 

rd in the Si'heves ....As tjou Likf it, ii. 7 

Td dulcet. Ids faith AU'sJVcU.i. 1 

'seord. which of late. Comedy (;/■&■. i. 1 

ord 'twixt these KingJohn, in. 1 

some discird 2IIenrti If. ii. 4 

i-oid doth atliict ....\Hcnrij VI. iii. 1 
tins base and envious discord breed.. — iii. 1 

this jarring discord of nobility iv. 1 

private disconl keep away iv. 4 

an age of discord and continual _ v. 5 

pies in dismal disconls sung Sllettn/ri. v. 6 

hark, what dismal discord follows. . Troil.^'Crcss. i.3 
know this disconl's ground . . Titus .^ndronicus. ii. 1 
m countries, discoixl; in palaces, treason. . Urn; i. 2 
to hear nothing but discords . . Itomeo ii- Juliet, iii. 1 
straining harsh discords, and unpleasing — iii. 5 
and 1, tor winking at your disconls too — v. 3 
my soul is full of discord, and dismav..H(T)>i)r(, iv. 1 
ri wr * "li '.".S.?,''^''''**' discoi-ds be ..'.... OtIieUo, ii. 1 

i.",'',"','''"!-;"' \^''i™""g multitude ..•illenniir. (ind.) 

imV*^ Kt.F— dumb discourse rcm;«rs£, iii, 3 

1 1 1 waste with such disconrse — v. 1 

hear sweet discourse, converse . . Two Gen. x\f Fer. i. 3 



sh.M-tlv 
and his diseo 
enmity and e 
set an'ned di- 
but vou fall I 
O, how this (lis. 



DISCOII KS K— leave off discourse. T>is)Gen.<if Vt 

now, no discourse, cxevpt it be — 

how likes she my diseoncse'? 

when 1 discourse of love and jieaee?. . — 



stand not to di; 



ith , 



she 

admirahlc 
witli di>co 
exceed all instane 
to all'eet siweh an 



■ to make our . 



the IhhIv 
of iTiXid diseoiirs(\ a 
and onr whole disc, 
of this diseom-se we 



— V. 4 

Merry Wives, i. 3 

liseonrsc. of uivat adniithvnce — ii. 2 

use oi'inx dear faith .. IVefftA Mghl. i. 4 

1 discourse .... — iv. 3 

seoin-sc .\tras.,fl>r.yieas. i. I 



maste 



disc 



is sonictiine.jW«cA.4</o, i. 1 
cut musician — ii. 3 
all of her .. — iii. 1 
, ill hear.. .Wi'd.jY.Br.iv. 1 
iv, 2 



at laru'C diseouise, while here tlicv . 
that e\cr 1 heard discourse, nn lonl — v. I 

sweet and voluble is his diseomse ,;.«rc',5/.,/..M/.ii. 1 
it is an epilogue or diseoui-sc, to make — lib 1 
his discourse pcivmptoiy. his tongue — v. 1 
discoui'sc grow commendable . , , .I'/cr. C(f I'enice, iii. 5 
mv discourses dull? banen iiv;i.1, remedy ij/'iVcii. i 
I know a wench of CNCellent discinir*e — iii. 1 
such enchantiUL: presence and discourse — iii. 2 
yet your fair discourse hath liecn ..liichanl II. ii. 3 
list his diseoul■^c of war. and vou ....Hrnri/I'. i. 1 
it is no time to diseoui-sc. so Ohrish. . _ " iii. 2 
discourse. I pr'\thee, on this tnnvfs.l llrnnil'l. i. 4 

means this passionate discourse? 2 ll.-iic'i/ 1 7. i. 1 

in this smooth discourse, von told . .3llc)iri/') (. iii. 3 
or slichtlv handled in discourse .. liictxirdlll. iii. ; 

interchange of sweet discourse — v. 3 

handiest in thy discourse. Ot\\at.Troilus^Cress.i. 1 
good sha;ie. iliseourse. manhood .... — i. 2 

tliat no diseom-.sc of reason — ii. 2 

such swollen and hot disconrse ii. 3 

O madness of discourse, that cause ,. — v. 2 

white o' the e\e to his discourse Coriolanm,rv. i 

shalt discmirse tii \ oimg (.>cta\-ius.,/i(/i'twC(r,«ir, iii. 1 

we discourse the I'ree. iou' hours Cyinbeline, in. 3 

. lasliiig — iii. f, 

ith this discourse. . TOiM And. v. 1 

? our w oes I'ericles, i. 4 

, 1 will •' 



DISCO'V'KUY— tloubts discovery thoK-.Tempetl, ii. 1 
that my discovery be not . , TiroGen. <i/ />»-oim, lit. I 
'tis an otiiiv ot discovery, love . . Mer.'of Femce, ii. 6 
delay is a south-sea oli'iliseo\crv..-lsvi>ii Lite I'J, iii. 2 

to hriu^' I'orlh this discovcrv .Ill's llell^v. 3 

arc here by this discovery lost .. ..II inler'sTale,i.i 

make diseovciy err in report of us Macbeth, v. 4 

at the discovery of ino>t danueroiis .. Henry l\ ii. S 
diseoverv of the inliiiite datlerics..7'iiiinii .^f JfA. v. 1 

by the discovery, we shall lie c'ori'o/iiii.iji, i, S 

and forces by diligent diseo\ cry i.<vir, v. 1 

far t'cm sou'uding and diseovei v,Hnmro<* Jiiliel.i. I 
my antieipationinvvent vour diseoverv. l/.iiiiW, li. S 

rUSe'lUlLlil'— will discredit our ...Mea'.lhr Mea.W. 2 

among my other discredits Il'inter's Tale, v. 3 

breach, diseivdit more in hiding KingJohn, i\: 2 

weaken and discredit our cxposni-c.7'»-oi'/. *C(r.«. i. S 
it would discredit the blessed gods .. — iv. 5 
iiitheriliscivdit iii\ authority with ..4n^*CTM. ii. 2 

-DI.SOKFnil'Kn-diseiedited to,..Wf(«,.ft)riUnM.iii. 2 
have ilisciedilcd M^ur travel Antony ii-Cleo. i. 2 

disci; 1-: iri'-a known disiuect man. Twel/thS'ight, i. 5 
with such a smooth, discreet, and.... — iv. 3 

with tellinu' oldiseivet stories iHenryir. ii. 4 

will he less tearful than discreet . . Coriol'anus, iii. 1 
iicecssity will call di.seieet proceeding ....Lear, i. i 
madness most discreet, a choking. A'ompo ^Jiid'rt.i. 1 
let not thv diseivet licart think it Otbello,u. 1 

mSL'KKF ri.Y-great discreetly as.Merry Hires, i. 1 
use your maniu is diseivellv in. laming ql'Shreie,!. 1 

DISCI! IM'RiN' -adventme mv diseix'tion.re»i;)>s/,ii.l 
with .some discretion di\ .. firit Gen.<\/rerona, iv. 4 
jiriiigs goot discretions with it .... Merry Ifives, i. 1 



it i 



babe eont 
solemn to 
I'll then , 
her cv e di 
woes slial 
a beast, il 
should ad 
put vour I 
It will dis 
OTththe i 
tliat mad< 
a crocilv I 
diix-omie 
of some bi 
cither in . 
DISCOFHj 



w ill answer, Komco ^JxHel.n. 2 
sweet diseoni-scs — lii. 5 



' tor 
ntsdi; 
1 diseours 



liseonrsc into 



■ of reason . . Uamlet, i. 2 
1 your beauty — iii. 1 
'frame. 



lociucnt music — iii.2 

orjioral air do hold diseom-se'? — iii. 4 
IS with such large discourse.. — iv. 4 
I' devour up mv diseourse....O(Ae//o, i. 3 
stian with one's own .shadow? — ii. 3 
>f diseouise with Desdemona — iii. 1 
.cnivse of thought, or actual — iv. 2 
;i"l— ai laix'c discoursed.. Com. nrA'rr..v. 1 

used in this paper here Richard 11. v. li 

IK'Sl'll-ln a cood diseourser. JfcHM/ /■//:. i. 1 



di^ 
PlSCi 

msCiU'l! PK.^V-e.iual diseourtesv..O/mMi',i 
1>ISC0\'EK— to discover islands. JmoC.'ch. on\r. i. 3 

that might her mind <liseover — ii. 1 

that wliieh 1 wouhl discover — iii. 1 

that niav discover such integrity . , , . — iii, 2 
I shall discover a thing to y'ou.I..,Vci-i'j/(l7rcs, ii. 2 

ehampian discovers uot more 7'irrirtA Aight, ii. b 

tJiat thou wouldst discover if ..Mcas.for Meas. ii. 1 

or discover his govcrument — iii. 1 

and will discover the favour — iv. 2 

the life of passion, as she discovers it.Mud>.ido, ii. 3 

if she will not discover it — ii. 3 

any impediment, 1 pray yeiii discover — iii.2 
what your wisdoms could not discover — v. 1 
discover the se\ eral c.iskets . . iliich. i\l' Venice, ii. 7 
will diseox er that which shall undo...l/r,< IVcll, iv. 1 

shall the contents discover Uinter's Talc, iii, 1 

that is tilting to be known, discover — iv. 3 

discover how . and thou shalt tlmX.Comedyqf Er. v. 1 
to diseoi er what pow er the duke. . . . Rici'mrd II. ii. 3 
and send diseo\eis forth, to know. .2Hcnijr/r. iv. 1 

and thence discover, how, with \IIenryVI. i. 4 

discover more at Iari:e what cause .... — ii. .5 
then, .loan, discover thine iiitirmity .. — v. 4 
your painted sloss discovers to men. Henri/ VI 1 1, v. 2 
the torch ina\- not disco\er us ,. 7'/(i('/ii,< <s'^ Cress, v. 2 
tlicn .von shouKl discov er a brace . . Curiolanus, ii. 1 
that niay fully discover him their.... — ii. 2 

modest i.v di^eover to yourself Julitts Cirsnr, i. 2 

by no means I may discov er them by — ii. 1 
appointment we niav best discovcr..4«<. ^Cleo. iv, 10 
pine does stand, I shalUliscover all — iv. 10 

discover to inc what both CymbcUne, i. 7 

villain! discover where thy mistress is — iii, 5 
what comiiany discover you abroad? — iv. 2 

I will discover naught to thee TitusAndron. v, 1 

I threatened to diseov or him Lear, ii. 1 

I can discover all the unlucky.. iioineo H-Juliet, iii. 1 

Ithink, lean discover him i.OtheUo,i. 1 

DISCOVEKFD-loves discovered. r«-o Gen. o.lV. V. 4 
the prince discovered to Claudio ....AfucA Ado, i. 2 

that you have discovered thus — ii. 2 

that have so traitorously diseoveitd... ll/'.^TcW, iv, 3 

he has discovered my d'esign IVinler's Tale, ii. 1 

discovered two sliips from far. . Comedy o/Ki rors, i. 1 
justly hath diseo\-ercdj and I repent.". lienryV. ii. 2 

oy your espials were discovered 1 Henri/ VI. iv, 3 

to lie discovered, that can do me,., Uicliniit ill. iv. I 
discovered the fever whereof. froi!us,\Cr,-ssida. i. 3 
thou hast painfully diseioeied. Timon rf Alliens, v. 3 
I fear, our purixisc is discovered.. ./»/i».«Cu'.«.ir, iii. 1 

if I discovered not which way CymbcUne, v. ,'> 

how easily murder is discovered.. Titus.indron. ii. 4 
will have discovered for revenge .... — iv. 1 

if might, shall he discovered Pericles,v. (Gow.') 

dark nii;ht hath so discovered ..Hoineo'S- Juliet, ii. 2 
DISCOVKKIES- 

discoveries of dishonour Mcas.Jbr Meat. iii. 1 

escaiic a groat deal oi' discoveries All's Well, iii, 6 

sucli preposterous discoveries . . . Troilia ij- Ot'ss. v. I 



old folks, vou kll 
one of thc'pcst di 
think the man oi 
avoids them will 
would have no n 
for his diseielion 
his discretion, 1 ; 
leave it to his dis 
appears, by his si 
thou piceon csg of dis 
throiiu-h the liitle hoi 
Odea'rdiserelion! ho 
thcrelbrc use tin disci 
better part of valour i 
coveriui; diseietion wi 
allabiliiv as in diseiet 



— 1. 

cix'tioii — ii. 2 
a 'oman — iv. 4 
ion,.We,is. /ar.Wcas. i. 1 
tion ..Much Ado, ii. 3 
ill ..Mid.y.Orenm, i, 2 
7'-1 - V, 1 



ot,,. 



v. 1 



11 li 



I, and Ictus 

Jit oldiscrction — v. I 

et ion Lore'sL. Lost, v. 1 

if discretion .. _ v. 2 
his w ords,.Ucf.(tr/'<rni'rc, ii. & 

iion As you Like it, i. 1 

liserelion ..lllenn/IV. v. 4 

1 a coat of Henry V. ii. 4 

n you ought 



hut \ our disevetions better can 1 Henry VI. iv. 1 

by the ttood diseielion of the right ..HenryVIll. i. 1 
was it diseietion, lords, to let tills man — v. 2 
his follv sauced with diseietion.. Troilus^ Cress, i. 2 

liave vou any liiseretion? — i. 2 

alimidanllv tliev lack discretion CoriolanusA. 1 

between him ami his discretion . . .intony ^Cleo. li. 7 
and had good diseielion, that being bid,, /Vn'c/es, i. 3 
and led bv some discretion, that dtscerns.,Leac, ii, 4 
yet so far halh discretion loimlit with ..llaiiilel. i. 2 
for the younger sort to lack discretion .. — ii. 1 
with good aeeent, and good discretion .. — ii. 2 
but let V our own discretion be .1 oiu' tutor — iii. 2 

stop, not to out-sport diseivtion 0/AcHo, ii. 3 

well, well, devour diseietion. 11a! .... — iii. 3 
DlsCl'SS— will discuss the humour,, .l/crn/Ti'i'ct. i. 3 

speak, bieathe, discuss '_ iv. ,'. 

you ma.v discuss unto the duke Henry V. iii. 2 



dis 

what is thy nam 
discuss the same 
DlSOAlX-soui-c 
eontemptuouslv 
disdain to root'tl 
dearladv nisdai 



t thou olliec 

discuss — iv. 4 

L Freiieli unto him — iv. 4 

.■d disdain, and Tempest, iv. 1 

I th\ disdain.. I'lro Gen^Tler. i. 2 
smnmer-swfUiug — ii. 4 
are you (rep.) "..Much .ido, i. 1 
courtesy itseii must com ert to disdaiu — i. 1 

disdain and scorn ride sparkling in.. — iii. 1 
glow of scorn and proud disdain". .Is yoM I.ikeit, iii. 4 

all hut new- things disdain AU'sWell, i. 2 

disdain rather eorriuit me ever! — ii. 3 

believe not Ihv disdaiu. but presently — ii. 3 
that 1 disdain : but for these. . Tamingci'' Shreu\ ii. 1 
these are, theieloie 111 uot disdain, il'mycr'sr. iv, 3 
to see if they'll disdain inc ..Coniedy ojHrrors, iii. i 
hanghtiness, opinion, and disdain., iiicmj/ IV. iii, 1 
holding in disdain the licrman Henry /'. i. 2 



it .shall be so, disdain thev 
through thee, disdaiu to ea 
envv. init not from disdain 
uttered with milddisdaiii, 
then he disdains to shine , 
the disdain : 



le'cr .... \ Henry VL v. 
liislonl,2H«iry'"'- iv. 1 

unless..3HcHr!/ri. iii. 3 

— iv. 1 

Richard in. V. 3 

'of, . 7'rei/i(s <! Cress, i. 2 



I do disdain thv councsv, jiroud 'rrojiin — 
yea, himself, Tlmon disdains.... fimonqr.ith. iv. 3 
good success, disdains the shadow ..Coriolanus, i. 1 
Uiev do disdain US much bevond .... — i. 4 

which we disdain should teller us .. — iii. 1 
where one part does disdain with cause — iii. 1 
that disdains thee and the devil alikcCi/mOcWric, i. 7 
change of prides, disdain, nice longings" — ii. 5 
tlic bov disdains me, he leaves me .... — v. 5 

she did disdain my eliild Pericles,i\. 4 

of knighthood. 1 disdain and spurn Lear, v. 3 

DISDA'KN FU-to be .lisdained of all ..Much Ado, i. 3 

for mv heart disdained that my Richard U. i. 4 

as if he disdained the ground — v. 5 

the icerinc. and disdained contempt.. I //run/ J T. i. 3 

von'rsei f so bv a son disdained •llleniylV. v. 2 

1 ili.sdaiue.i it, and did scorn to dv./.W.,.r,/ III. iii, 4 
the general's disdained bv him ,", ri,.ili,s\fie.i.i. i, 3 
thing ihe most disdained ol'foiluiic.Ci/).'W.e;i;ie, iii, 4 
likclies disdained in the reporting .. .. l'ericles,\. 1 

a scmblanee that verv docs di.sdain Lear, v, 3 

DISDAIN Fl'll-itdisdiiiiietli b.'iiuds. 7'i.'i/s .-DKf.iii. 1 
DISDAUXFF 1.— I was diulainful ....Much ,)</o,ii. 1 
she is too disdainful: 1 know her spirits - iii. 1 
is in love with :i disdainful youIli.jUiii. A''s. Dr. ii. 2 
in such disdainl'ul manner nie to woo — ii. 3 
the inoud disdainful Blicphcriless..4s!/0M Like it, iii.* 
this proud disdaiul'iil haggard, laming o/Shreic,iw. a 




Ihim art always (!i:nniit'(li».;''W"'"'™ r^ , •? 
win l.uiiu upon lii". I.kr .1 ,l|-.a«;....W.irA^'/o, . 1 
that rhiu.niair .li^..MrH(l.MM,miml..A/.J./V./Jr. 1 . 2 
»ulijc<.t to the Biimt- ili..:a'<c». .W.ri/.««( nf Vrmte. ilj. I 
Ik; llie.Uiith ulllu' kin«'K ili«!0«e ....AUiWelU i. [ 

llic kiiiK'mlim-unc,— my (irojict — . I- • 

Ills liiily inoiiriiB at ni» (Iihchsc. TaminiiqfSh. 1 (iml.) 
thi>ui.'li"»lic' liiivc ttHiimnyd'meosciiu*.. — }-'i 
hove thu (liKCiwe, iinil fcel't )iiit. . . . ((infer > rale, i. 2 

Imt I ciitin.it imine tlic. discttsu - .1.2 

wImt'H the Jinease lie ineaim/ MarMli, iv. 3 

thin iliseoHC i» IjeyoiKl iny praetiec — v. I 

fliiil liur (liseaM:, ami purKC it • • • r •"' ? 

lictore the curing of tt strong fhiu:tt.K.hini!Ji>lin, iii. ■! 
lie mixht have more (lineases than ..•iHciini If. i. 2 
you are fallen into the disease — \-'i 



11. 4 



ill. 1 



it is the disease of not listening 

but the disease is incuralilc 

I will turn diseases tocominiKlity .. 
gluttony anil diseases make tlicin..., 
you help to make the diseases, Doll.. 

what rank diseases grow ... 

what disease hast thou? A whoreson — in. i 
of whieh disease our late king, ItUluiru — iv. 1 
conjoins with inv disease, and helps — iv. \ 

as men take diseases, one of another — v. 1 
that ea.se, I'll tell thee my disease ..1 llimryVt. ii. .'> 

ctirsed instrument of his disease — .". •' 

full of siekness and diseases ■illcnrvyi.iv. 7 

only, wliich your disease reciuires ..HenryVllI. i. 1 
their discaacs arc grown so catching. . — i. 3 

the rotten diseases of the south . . Trntlus t; Creu. v. 1 

time bei|ueath ymi my diseases — y... I j 

tliou disease ofa friend, and not..7Vmonof/l(A. in. 1 
O may diseases only work upon'tl .. — in. I 
hisdi'scascof all-shunned poverty .. — iv. 2 
give them discuses, leaving with thcc — iv. 3 
mav diseases lick up their false blood.')! — iv. 3 
iihe'will but disease our better mirth. C'orio(anM»,i. 3 
poisonous where the disease isviolent — ii). 1 
adisease, that must 1)C cut away (r^T).) — m. 1 
we do lance diseases in our \\nA\XS...Ant.f( CTco. v. 1 

discasi^s have been sold dearer Pericles, ly. 6 

fee bestow on the foul disease Lear, i. I 

shield thee from diseases [K;i(.-di8astors] — .;. 1 

rather, a disease that's in my flesh — ii. 4 

like the owner of a foul disease, to keep./MmW, iv. I 
diseases, desperate grown, by desperate . . — ly. 3 
DISEASED— this diseased opinion.. (fm/<r siiile, i. H 
thou not minister to a minddiscased.. Mucdc'/i, v. 3 
diseased nature oftentimes breaks..! ffcni'i//^' ';.'• ' 
() lord, sir! I am a diseased man ..'IHcnrylV. in. '2 

we are all diseased — P'- ' 

hii" their diseased perfumes . . 7'imon nf Alliens, iv. 3 

wiOi iliseased ventures, that play C<imbeliiic,\. 7 

wholesome answer; my wit's diseased. HnmW, in. 'i 

l)ISi;i)f',KIJ— thou slialt bo disedged. Ci/m Wine, lii. i 

mSKMBAKK-to disembark ... TirnOen. of In: n. 4 

go to the hay, and diHemlmvk my (■ollers.O//ie(/ri, ii. 1 

DISFKUIKE— tljfurc, or dihllijure n.Mid. N.'s Dr.l. 1 

becomes to disflgure, or present — i.n. 1 

Cupid's hose; di:^li;;ure not his slop.t-ow « L.L. iv. 3 

BodisHgure her witli it, Ih'it Taiahig of Sli. i. 2 

vonrfoiT, and to disli.-iiiT yun..Comedi/of Err. v. 1 

ntSb'KillRED-i-; loiiili di-llvTired.. Kiiif.'o/m, iv. 2 

iinlmpiMiil mill ili-lit'oriil i-lean..../JiWia>-rf//. iii. 1 

DISI' IH.NlSII.-ilisriiriiish iiie..rM-o GenofVcr.w. 1 

to di-lMriiish Mi.v-elf u-'iiiiihtsuch.7'imono//lWi. iii. 2 

she'll ilMiirnisli us of iill our cavaliers. /'fncta, iv. 6 

DIXKiKlii;— vi'iiilil -t tliou disgorgc./f»i/oi(ti4e,ii. 7 

<liil-t th.iu ili>;;or;:.' Ihv glutton 2Henry IV. i. 3 

do there disi.'orge their warlike. Troif. *Cr«i. (prol.) 
disirorges su^'h a ttmiiest forth. . I'ericlei, iii. (Uow.) 

DI.'^O It ACi;— is not only disgrace Tempett, iv. 1 

unworthily disgrace the man..'/'Mio Gen. o/Ccr. iii. 1 
take him, "and disgrace him for it. MerrjiH'ive>,}V. 4 
will join with thee to disgrace her.. Much Ado, in. 2 
to disgrace Hero before the whole.... — iv. 2 
that (Ud their own disgrace bewail .A/W. N.Dr. iy. 1 
grace us in the disgrace of death.. /.oDe'n L.Loit, i. I 

Ills disgrace is to be called boy — 1.2 

cures all disgriu,c in me — iv. 3 (verses) 

or brook such disgrace well ashc./liynu Likeil, i. 1 
for If thou dost him any slight disgrace — .i. 1 
in inv heart to <llsgrucc my man'ii 

shttirtiike this disgrace oil me 

Olid disgraces have of late knocked 

Mai-dull" lives In disgrace 

it would be my disgrace, and your 

but. to my own disgrace, neglected. . Ilicliard II. i 

ill his high disgrace, where shame .. — .j. ■ 

nor iny own disgrace, have ever — ii. I 

I will'take it as a sweet disgrace — 2IIetiryir.i. 1 
what a disgrace is it to me, to rcmemlKT — il. 2 

the disgrace we have iligested llcnnjV. ill. fi 

and for our ilisgrucc, his own person — iii. fi 
wc shall much disgrace, with four — iv. (chorus) 
let it not disgrace nie, if I demand .. — v. 2 
'tis only I that must disgrace thee ..\Ucnrij VI. i. .'> 
niid, indisgracL". bespoke him thus . . — iv. 

disgrace not so your king — v. 6 

top of honour to disgrace's feet? 2lltiinjVI. i. 2 

brought duke Ilumphrcv in disgrace — i. 3 

have laid dlsgnuTS on my head — iii. 1 

to thy foul disgrace, and utter niii>..3/fenij/C/. 1. 1 
this deep disgrace in brotherhood . . tticharil III. i. 1 
the disgrace and downful of your houBC — iii. 7 
suatain more new dit^racc Henry VIII. ill. 2 



„.i,ce bonds disgraced them .... Tirelfih ,V 
you disgraced her, when you should.. iWiii'i^l/o, y. 1 
disgraced me, and hindered mu.Aler. of Veiiire, in. 1 
Bo disgraced a jiart, whose issue .. H'i'iter i Tale, i. 2 

I am disgraced, Impeached Itichard 11. i. 1 

disgraciil me in my happy victorics.l //enn/"'- 'v. 3 

who was shut, wlio'dis;/raecd UcnrijV. in. 6 

be disgraced by tin inkhorn-matc..U/eiir|/ VI. iii. 1 

when you disgrai'Cil me MIenrfiVl. iv. 3 

myself disgraced, and the nobility., yto/wii/;/. i. 3 

disgraced his kingly glory — i.y. ■) 

'■ ' Henry VIII. lit. I 

i..rhmn(>r Alh. iii. 3 
tiiciiil../lii/onl/'S a™, iii. 10 
•cfiil Wiiiling.l //eiirj/C/. i. 1 
iH'nf these colours — iii. 4 
lisgracious./(if/i«)-rf ///. iii. 7 
your sight .. — iv. 4 



you'll part away disgraced. . ... 
Tic has 1 >■ I '* 



lrivclicr:ili-.lisi;r 

OIS(iH,A('IOKIll.-ilis,- 
I)IS(ili.A('lNli-diKgr! 
J)IS(ili.A(;i()lJS-seen 

flhcsiidi 



1)181 IONE8T-thc dlnhonest man (rrp.M'uielfUi N.\. b 

a very dislionest paltry boy 

fie, thou dishonest Mataii I 

dishonest wretch! wilt thou be.Mea$.f<ir .Veai. lii. 1 

to be a dishonest nersim? 

it isnodisiionest desire.... /(»|/i 



I ho|ic it 



DistilllSE— In a disguihc of love. '/'woOen.n.rrer. y 4 
I baveadlsguise to sound I''alstaff.A/errv(f>t;e.',.n. 1 

how might we disguise him? — iv. 2 

in which disguise, while other jests . . — iv. 6 
my aid for such disguise as, haply. rice(/JAAig/i(,.i. 2 
disguise, I see, thou art a wickedness — .i.i.. 2 
BO disguise shall, by the disguiscd.A/ea./orA/eo. in. 2 

assume thy part in some disguise Much /Wo,;. I 

fancy that he hath to strange disguises — in. 2 
disguise MS lit mv lodging ..Merchant of Venice, ii. 4 
when his ili-i/iiisc iiiid lie Is parted ..All'tlVell, lii. 6 
in thisili-|.MiHc. I tliiiik 't nosin .... — iv. 2 
that sciini to live in this disguise. '/'nimnoro/.S/i. iv. 2 
best Camillo! we must disguise.. Wm/er iTale, ly. I 

Ned, where are our disguises? \HenrylV. n. 2 

disguise fair nature with hard-favoured Henry V. iii.l 
disguise the holy strength . . Troiltu ^Cresmda, ii. 3 
the wild disguise hath almost ..Antony ijrCleo.u. 7 
but disguise that, which, to appear.. C'l/mMine, ill. 4 
who in disguise followed his enemy Lear,y. 3 

DISGUISED— you go out disguised. A/crry fVives, iv. 2 

disguised like Heme, with huge — iv. 4 

the disguised, pay with falseliood.A/eu./.irA/ea. ill. 2 

love doth apiiroaeh disguised Lore's L. Lost, v. 2 

by-and-by, disguised they will be here — v. 2 

as well known, as disjfuiscd — v. 2 

were here, disguised like Muscovites — v. 2 
here, but even now, disguised? — v. 2 



v. 1 
yon Like •l,v.3 

lishoiiest manners Henri/ V. 1. 2 

I)ISI|ii.\i;sri-Y-most dishoncstly.C'imieJi/nr/i;!-. v. I 

di»lion(»llv ufflicteil, but yet honest. C'|/mfce(ine, iv.2 

DISIli I.NESTV-in any dislioncsty..UerrvH'irei,iv. 2 

hlsdishoncsty appears, in leaving. rii-e(///iAi(f/i', in. 4 

that no dishoncstv shall appear III inc. A/iwA ,4i/'.,ii. 2 

fri>in all dishonesty, he can iVinler't Tale,\\.Z 

DISUONDUK-sucbdislioiMiuriMirlcrgo.T'empM/, ill. 1 
not only disgrace and dishonuiir in that — ly. 1 
in her, discoveries of ilish.,iioiir...U,<i»../i)i-A/c<«. lu. 1 
butkeepsyonfromdislioiioiir in doing it — iii. 1 
dishonour not your eye by throwing — v. 1 
more amazed at his rlishonoiir, than — v. 1 

all of them, that thus dishonour her.. A/ne/i Ado. v. 1 
Bome dishonour we had in the loss ..AWtlVell, lii. 6 
conceiving the dishonour of his .. fl'inler'sTide, i'l. 3 
not my jealousies be your dishonours.. A/ucde/A, iy. 3 
to dark dishonour's use thou slialt ..lUchard II, i. 1 

shall I BO much dishonour my — iv. I 

his dishonour dies, or my shamed {rep.) — y. 3 

see riot and dishonour stain \HenryIV.\. 1 

dishonour not .your mothers Henry V. lii. 1 

lord Talbot, do not so dishonour mc.lHeiirj/r/. in. 2 

my mother, dishonour not her — iv. 5 

will not anv way dishonour rnc — v. 3 

this dishonour in thine age will •UlenryVI.n.Z 

bring a burden of dishonour home .. — iii. ' 
ne'er yet did base dishonour blur our — iv. 1 
it were dishonour, to deny it her . .iHcnry VI. in. 2 
with dishonour laid me on the groimd — ill. 3 

on thy danger and dishonour — in. 3 

no iiiiiic Miy king, for he dishonours me — in. 3 
• ilishonourof lier ..Henry VIII. ii.i 
r ili-hoiiour ..7'ioi7ui^Cre«ida,iv. I 
r t, lilies with man's. 7'imon ofAlh.i. 1 
I I' true judgment. .Cono/anui, iii. 1 
i-liurioursyou at all .. — '.'.'.■"'' 
lishonour, than thou .. — iii. 2 

....honour shall be humour Julius Crrtar, iy. 3 

left behind 'stroyed in dishonour.^ntonj/^J-C/co.iii.D 

I have lived in such dishonour ...— ,'^- '* 

the pander to her dishonour. CymdcKne, lii. 4 (letter) 
gone slie is to death, or to dishonour — ni. 5 
suffer not dishonour to approach ..TitutAndron. i. I 
iny sons would never so dishonour me — i. 2 
cinifcdciates nil. thus to dishonour me — i. 2 

I should he niithiir to dishonour youl ~ .i. 2 
hath brciitlKil in my dishonour here — li. 1 
may dishonour him: and what may..../'ericle»,.i. 2 
none so rank as may dishonour him. . . . Hamlet, ii. 1 
my lord, that would dishonour him 



to come in disgi 
offer me, dis, 
disguised tin 



All's H'ell, ii. 3 

— iv. 1 

.Macbeth, iii. fi 

— iv.2 



;d against mc ..As j/ou Utie it, l. 1 
in Miliri- robes.. 7'nmin4'o/.S/i. i. 2 

ctviiui-love — iii.l 

deform the lush ; ilis;.'uisi-il, cheaters.Com. o/7ir. i. 2 
ttndtoinvse:f.li-/iiisiil; rilsiiy .... . - .n. 2 
all this wliili ^|.u wcic ilisf-'uiscd ..Kmi; John,\v. 1 
Bcmbliiiirr liiiili ili-.L-oisisI iiie iiuitc .. — IV. 3 

.Tovesoiiiutiuic wtiitilis-nised illenryVl.w. 1 

comes the lord Lysimacliiis disguised.. /'eriWe»,iy. fi 

by the break of day disguised . . Uomeo f^Juliel, in. 3 

DI.'^fUriSEIi— agreat(liHguiser..A/eM../'or A/ea«. ly.. 2 

DIS(jii;iSING-oftheirdi9guising.rtt)o6'«n.o/^'c)-..n.6 

to our hearts, disguising what they are. Macbeth, in. 2 

DISH— nor wash dish Tempest, ii. 2 (song) 

for a dish of stewed prunes Merry Wives, i. 1 

stewed in grease, like a Dutch dish . . — iii. !> 

what a dish of poison has Tuelfth Nii;ht, ii. b 

a dish of some three-pence Meas.for Meas. ii. 1 

no matter for the dish, sir — >;■ 1 

and having but two in the dish — n. [ 

sir, here's a dish I love not Much Ado, u. 1 

four woodcocks in a dish 1 1,i3t>c'« L. Lost, iy. 3 

I have here a dish o{ilo\e3.. Merchant of Venice, n. 2 
good meat into an unclean dish . . At you Like it , in. 3 
a dish that I do love to feed. . Tajning of Shrew, iv. 3 

here, take away this dish — iv. 3 

a velvet dish; fie, tic! 'tis lewd — iv. 3 

a quart of ale is a dish for. Winler'sTale, iv. 2 (song) 
makes scarce one dainty dish ..Comedy of Err. in. I 

goblets for a dish of wood Ilichard II. in. 3 

moving such a dish of skimmed i Henry IV. n. 3 

never see Titan kiss a dish of butter? — li. 4 

she had a good dish of prawns 2HenryIV. n. 1 

once set adisb of apple-johns — ".4 

with adisli of carraways, and soforth — V. 3 
there is adisli ofleiither-coatsforyou — v. 3 
fruit in an iiii wholesome dish .. TroilusfyCress. ii. 3 
why, thoufnll ili'li. ■ " 
friend, thiitilir '" '' 



avrve him ii^ 
will to hi 
woman 



ilish?7'mmno./-..lf/i. iii. 2 

(■ god8../K/i««C'<rMr, ii. 1 

.Antony fyCli 



■lis 



— v. 2 



the dish 1 

marry cm 

ofthcciii 

DISIlCl/i) 



ever pm 
the tii-ti 
since 'li 
dishoM.. 
Ibis no I 
it is my 



ii. 1 



ers . . Cymbrliue, iv. 2 

;,lie shot...." — .V. 4 

p, mv dish of eliastity . . Pericles, iv. fi 
Mi's dish; I eat the air ..Hamlet, iii. 2 
li.lii-limtofJaiiuenetta'8J.nft'fI../-.v.2 

,^ ^ iliiloiit lohiui Itiimeo/ii- Juliet, ill. 

rUSII A IHTKl)— bad been dislllibited.KiH^ John, ii. 1 
DISllEAK'I'K.N'-aiiil disheartens him., tf(ic6e//i, n. 3 

should dishciu ten his army HenryV. iy. I 

niSlllCl) be dishiil f.ir me to try . If I'n/cr'i 7'ii*i% in. 2 
DISHES— seen such dishes (re/;.). A/ca».. for Af«i.«. ii. 1 

just so nninv strange dishes Much Ado,n. 3 

all covcreil ilishesl roviil cheer . . Timon of Ath. iii. 6 
to sauce thv dishes. The middle .... — ly. 3 

and losterell with cold dishes Cymlieline, il. 3 

two dishes, but loone table Hamlet, \y. 3 

or feed mi mnirishing dislies, or keep . .0'A'"o. !,"• 3 , 
DISllO.N'ES T-disluinest rascal !.. .Werry IVives, >ii. 3 

hang him, dishonest viirlct! --, >y. - 

licsiucs, you grow dishoucst 7 iceljlh yighl, i. o 



DI.s'HONOUKABI-E- 

dishonourable boy! tiiat lie shall he.Tlnhard II. iv. I 

ten times more dishonourable i Henry IV. iv. 2 

name, in deeds dishonourable? illenrij IV. ly. 2 

and death's dishonourable victory . . 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

find ourselves dishonourable graves.Julius Ctis,ir.\. 2 

dishonourable, vile submissionl./fomeoi^- JuUet,iu. 1 

DISIIONOIJKED- , . , 

receiving a dishimourcd life Meat, for Meas. iv. 4 

Istiiiiil ili liMiMiui\Tl, that have Much Ado, iv. 1 

scorniit: 'Il II red my kinswoman? — iv. 1 

he is ill II III nn I hv a man Winter' t Tale, i. 2 

iuith iihii 111 niiil liishonouredrae.Comerfyo/yirr. v.) 
fiiiil thou hast dishonoured me ....\HenryVI. iii. I 
hnth dishonoured Gloster's honest. .2He"ri/»'/.ii. 1 
dishonoured by this new marriage.. 3//e/iri/C/. iv. 1 
profaned, dishonoured, and the third./drA. ///. iv. 4 

thy life hath that dishonoured — i.y. 4 

deserved this so dishonoured rub . . Corioianut, iii. I 
I am so dishonoured, that the very. . — in. 3 
.vour wives dishonoured to your noses — ly. 6 
ciishonourcd thus, and clmllenged. TitutAndron. i. 2 
that hath dishonoured all our family — ;. 2 
to be dishonoured by my sons in Komel — i. 2 
and those, that have dishonoured me — ;■ 2 
be dishonoured oiienlv, and basely put — .i- 2 
be so dishonoured in the court of Rome — n. I 

of that clniste dishonoured dame — ly. 1 

nouinhaste action, or dishonoured step ..Lear. i. 1 

hcshiiulil lie ili^bonoured Romeo Sf Juliet, iv. 3 

DIS-lli ii;.\ — ilis-liorn the spirit .. Merry li'ires, iv. 4 
DISINlli:KIT-imnatnrally disinlierit.3»ciirj//';. i.l 

father, you cannot disinherit me — .i. I 

vield consent to disinherit him — n. 2 

DlSINIIEKITED-disinheritedthinconly— i. j 

wherchv mv son is disinherited — i. 1 

his issuV disinherited should be Ilicliard III. l. 1 

DISIOIN- 1 iniiv disjoin my hand.. Ki«i'Jo/in, iii. 1 
when it ilisioins ivinorse from power../"/. Cirjar, u. I 
DIS.IDINED— ilisioincd from fellowship.. Jo/in, iii. 4 
l)lS.I()lN'IN<i— '.nid, bv disjoining hands — iii.l 
DIS.IOINT— tVume of things disjoint .. Macbeth, n\. 2 

state to be disjoint .and out of frame Hamlet, i. 2 

DIS.I UNCTUJN-no disjunction to be. Winter' tT. iv. 3 
DISLIKE— and people dislike it . . Tirelfih Xight, i. & 
never beard anv soldier dislike it.. .Wea. /or Mea. i. 2 
nor refuse whom I dislike . . Merdiant of Venice, i. 2 
I did dislike the cut of a certain.. /)< you Likeil, y. 4 
mere dislike of our proceedings .... 1 Henryl V. iv. I 
not sought the day of this dislike.... 



in pain ol vour dislike, or pain of..2 Henri/ VI. in. 2 
»n vour di-likcs, to whom 1 would..3;/' nri/J'/. iv. 1 
ever in fciir to kimllc vour dislikc.f/enri/ VIII. ii. 4 
for no dislike i' the world against .... — ii. 4 
feed too much on this dislike ..Troilui^ Cress, ii. 3 

aa bo<l as that which he dislikes Coriolanus, ii. 2 

Ido not much dislike the mattcr..4nfon!/,Sr'eo. ii. 2 
not minding whether I dislike or no! . . Pericles, ii. 5 

is he dislike [Oil. Kn/.-distaste] it Lear, i. 3 

each complaint, dislike, he may cnguard — . i. 4 

what most he should dislike, seems — iv. 2 

cither thee dislike [Co/. -displease], fiiimco ^Jul. ii. 2 
if your mind dislike any thing Hamlel, v. 2 



DIS 

DISLIKE— I'll do't; but it dislikes me. . Othello, ii. 3 
DISLIKEN— disliken tile truth .. mnler'sTnlP, iv. 3 
DISLIKEST-thou dislikest a poor (rep.).4irs n'cll, ii. 3 
DISLIMN— the rack dirilimns ..AntoniiffCleo. iv. 12 
DTSLOCATE-enough to dislocate and tear. Lc„r, iv.2 
DISLODGED— Voices are dislodged.. Cor/o(«7i«.«, v. 4 

DISLOYAL— disloyal man I Two Gen. offer . iv. 2 

the lady is disloyal Much Ado, iii. 2 

disloyal? the word is too good to — iii. 2 

arraign our most disloyallady . . Winter's Tale, ii. 3 
assisted by that most disloyal traitor . . Macbeth, i. 2 
his sovereign, and to dim, 'disloyal . . Richard II. i. 3 
that I have been disloyal to thy bed. . — v. 2 

0_ disloyal thing, that shouldst Cymbeline, i. 2 

disloyal? no: she's punished for her — iii. 2 
dishonour, and equally to me disloyal — iii. 4 (let.) 
such things, in a false disloyal knave. . Othello, iii. 3 

five me a living reason she's disloyal — iii. 3 
SLOYALTY-in Hero's disloyalty. ^/«M Ado, ii. 2 
become disloyalty ; apparel vice. Corned?/ of Err. iii. 2 

DISMAL— in dismal thinkings All's Well, v. 3 

'gan a dismal conflict ; till that Macbeth, i. 2 

ICol. Knl.J unto a dismal and a fatal end — iii. 5 

would at a dismal treatise rouse — v. 5 

Eolingbroke my sorrow's dismal heir. Richard II. ii.2 

inform you of a dismal fight \ Henry VI. i. 1 

whose dismal tune bereft my iHenry Fl. iii. 2 

like to a dismal clangour heard ZHenryl'I. ii. 3 

shall stop his dismal threatening — ii. 6 

pies in dismal discords sung v. 6 

80 full of dismal terror was the Richard III. i. 4 

more slander to thy dismal seat — iii. 3 

unto the body of a dismal yew TitusAndton. ii. 3 

and be this dismal sight the closing. . iii. 1 

a joyless, dismal, black, and sorrowful — iv.2 

that makes me look so dismal Pericles, v. 3 

should be roared in dismal \vA\. Romeo {/■ Juliet, iii. 2 
my dismal scene I needs must act ... . — iv. 3 

with heraldry more dismal Hamlet, ii. 2 

thesight is dismal; and our affairs from — v. 2 

DISMAL- FATAL— spend unto a dismal-fatal 

iCol. Kn/.-dismal and a fiital] end . . Macbeth, iii. 5 

DISMAL'ST— the dismal'st day is this. Titus And. i. 2 

brother, with the dismal'st 'object _ ii. 4 
DISMANTLE— dismantle you. . . . Winier'sTale, iv. 3 

to dismantle so many forms of favour] Lear i 1 

DISMANTLBD-this realm dismantled. HnrnW, iii. 2 
5I§?I^*^'-^-^'''^'^'^'^^^'^'i*'^'^''''iamaskI.oi)f'sL.I.v.2 

DISMAY— of sorrow and dismay Tempest, v. 1 

no, she shall not dismay me Merry Wives, iii. 4 

ill this there can be no dismay . . Mer. of Venice, i. 3 
with much much more dismay I view — i'ii. 2 

dismay not, princes, at this 1 Henry VI. iii 3 

_"1,X soul is full of discord, and dismay.. Zfemie*, iv. 1 
DISMAYED— as if you were dismayed. Tempest, iv. 1 

be not dismayed Merry Wives, iii. 4 

the conqueror is dismayed: proceed. Lore's L.L. v. 2 
himself, andrandismaycdaway.. iMer.o/ren/ce,v. 1 

dismayed not this our captains Macbeth, i. 2 

be not dismayed, for succour is at . . I Henry VI. i. 2 

be not dismayed, fair lady _ ii. 3 

heart, and be thou not dismayed .. R<c/iard ///. v. 3 

be not dismayed; these are a 'side . . Coriolanus, iv. 6 

T^To,??,",J5SS?f '' dismayed? 'tis a lost . . Othello, v. 2 

DlisMtiMBEK—dismember Cxsarl. JidiusCirsar, ii. 1 

DrSMEMBEEED''^ dismember me..King John, iii. 1 

tntI??^?^'"'''^'^^^'**'^"^ ""^ defence./?om.«-/«7.iii.3 

i;io,}fe,o ™''"y thousand dismes.. Trail. ^- Cress, ii. 2 

DISMISS— you will, to dismiss it . . Twelfth Niglil. i. 5 

tor the present, and dismiss him.. Mea. forMea. iv 2 

dismiss this audience, and I shall. . Love's L. L. iv 3 

1 may dismiss this court, unless. Mer. of Venice iv' 1 

Of Fife; dismiss me; enough 'Macbeth iv 1 

prornised to dismiss the powers led . . King John, v 1 

ere the king dismiss his power 1 Henry I v. iv. 4 

enlargement doth dismiss me hence. 1 Henr!/ VI. ii 5 

BO, now dismiss your army _ y 4 

I do dismiss you to your several 2Henry VI. iv' 9 

I do dismiss my powers _ y ] 

please you dismiss me, either with..3'f7«M-i/F/. iii! 2 
dismiss the controversy bleeding. . . . Coriolanus, ii. 1 

will you dismiss the people? ...... _ ii 3 

dismiss them home. Here comes his — iv' 2 
do not bid me dismiss my soldiers — y' 3 

never lacks power to dismiss itselt.JuliusCa-sar, i. 3 
dismiss your followers, and, as suitors. Tites ^nd. i. 1 
1 will here dismiss my loving friends — i 1 
dismiss yoiu attendant there Othello, iv'. 3 

DISMIShED-the dismissed bachelor. . Tempest, iv. 1 
which a dismissed ofience would.Meas. for Meas. ii 2 
trom your Sicihan shores dismissed. . Winter' sT v 1 
that hath dismissed us from our ..Richard II iii' 3 

m rage dismissed mv father I Henri/ IV iv 3 

ere they he dismissc!], let them . . . .'IHenrylV iv « 
untilthis army be dismissed from..2Hemi/ VI. iv q 

dismissed me thus, with his Coriolanus, v. 1 

rvTSlyT'ic?^??.''' ^""^ ^^^^ "^<^" dismissed? ..ieor, ii. 4 
n?IJ?Ti«rJ^^-'^'™,'-''''".S. half .your train - ' ii. 4 
DlhMlbSlON-your dismision is come.Ant. &Cleo. i 1 
T^?2?iS?T".S-i" ■^,'?"'' dismission tends.. CymJelme, ii. 3 
DIbMOUNT-dismouut thy tuck.rwe/ftAA'iVAMii. 4 

DTSMOn'l^Tpn*',''"'' ''-T-"'^ waggon. -A7,«.4nd. v. 2 
DISMOUNTED- brags dismounted ..HenryV. iii. 7 
T>T«Mr'l^"A'^on^,?°Vy''''r snow-white.. ra«s^lnd. ii. 3 
^JcS^,i^'^,^°"'^'s'iatured torment to her.ieaj-, i. 4 

J.»lsJNJ!/hv — allons nous a disner HenryV iii 4 

DISOBEDIENCE— of disobedience.Mem/friKe's, v. 5 
lor disobedience to your father's will.Mirf. N. Dr. i 1 
which IS most infallible disobedience.. .4«'s Well. i. 1 
both disobedience and ingratitude Wmfer'iTaie, iii 2 

and disobedience in thine eye 1 Henry IV i 3 

to wilful disobedience, and rebel? ..I HenrvVI iv 1 
they nourished disobedience Coriolatius, iii! 1 

DreI)BEDIENT-°''°'' ''" '''"= ' ' '^'""'^"■"^' "'' " 
proud, disobedient, stubborn.. 7'«!DG,.n or Ker iii 1 
most disobedient and refractory., r™// & Cress ii' ■> 
youngbaggage! disobedient wretch! flom.^yuUii.5 



DISOBEDIENT— 

the sin of disobedient opposition. Romeo * Juliet, iv. 2 
DISOBEY— ne'er dost disobey the wife. Tempest, iv. 1 

whom to disobey, were against all Henni V. iv. ) 

never to disobey, nor be rebellious . . I Henri/ VI. v. 4 
make a corse of him that disobeys. . Richan'l 111. i. 2 
DIS-ORBED-a star dis-orbed?. .Troilus *&-■»•». ii. 2 
DISORDER— allied to your disorders.. Tirelfih N. ii. 3 
meeting, with most admired disorder. ■l/«r'/p(/i, iii. 4 
when there is such disorder in my. . King John, iii. 4 

disorder, that hath spoiled us lienry V. iv. i 

fear frames disorder, and disorder ..2Henry VI. v. 2 
to disorder wander, what plagues. rroiV7M(5'CVe.s. i. 3 
and the disorder's such as war KeTe..Cymbeline, v. 2 

and all ruinous disorders, follow us Lear, i. 2 

his own disorders deserved much less — ii. 4 

DISORDERED-but all disordered.iWd. N.'s Dr. v. I 

her knots disordered, and her Richard II. iii. 4 

hath suffered this disordered spring. . — iii. 4 

time broke in a disordered string — v. 5 

put forth disordered twigs Henry V. v. 2 

men so disordered, so debauched Lear, i. 4 

and your disordered rabble make servants — i. 4 

DISORDERLY- thus thrust disorderly, n/c/i. II. ii. 2 

DISPARAGE— I will disparasre her...W«cA Ado, iii. 2 

disparage uot the faith thou 'dost . . Mid.N.Dr. iii. 2 

DISPARAGE MENT- 

committed disparagements unto you. . Merry W. i, 1 

to our honour's great disparagement. Com. of Er. i. I 

in my house, do nim disparagement. -Rom. i,-Jul. i. 5 

DISPARKED— disparked my parks.ie/c/iarti //. iii. 1 

DISPENSATION-seekadi3pensatiou.Z,oTC',57-,.L.ii.l 

and yet a dispensation may be had. . 1 Henry VI. v. 3 

DISPENSE- dispense with trifles. . Merry Wives, ii. 1 

nature dispenses with the deed. Meas. /or Meas. iii. 1 

might you dispense with your leisure — iii. 1 

of force, dispense with this decree. Loue's L. Lost, i. 1 

cau with such wrongs dispense.. Co7nerfvo/£rr. Ii. I 

how shall we then dispense 1 lietiry VI. v. 5 

canst thou dispense with heaven IHenryVI.v. 1 

learn now with pity to dispense. . Timon ofAth. iii. 2 

DISPERSE— away , disperse Merry Wives, v. 6 

therefore we will disperse ourselves. Rj'c/iarrf 77. ii. 4 

spreading, it disperse to nought 1 77enr.v VLi.l 

I thank you all; disperse yourselves. 277e;i;v 7'7. v. 1 
gale will soon disperse that cloud ..377en>T/' VI. v. 3 

tongues that durst disperse it Henry Fill. ii. I 

sin", and disperse them, if thou canst — iii. 1 
and, friends, disperse yourselves ..JuliusCcesar, ii. 1 
scatter and disperse the giddy Goths.. Titus And. v. 2 
as will disperse itself tlirough all..7?omt'o .§-./«/. v. 1 
DISPERSED— I have dispersed them .. Tempest, i. 2 

which I dispersed — i. 2 

the earth, dispersed those vapours. Comedy of Err. i.I 

and dispersed the household of Richard II. ii. 3 

gone to Eolingbroke, dispersed, and fled — iii. 2 
we learn, the Welshmen are dispersed — iii. 3 

our army is dispersed already iHenrylV. iv. 2 

dispersed are the glories it included..! Henri/ F/. i. 2 
scattered and dispersed, and lay new — ii. 1 
driven back, his men dispersed . . . .•2Henry VI. iv. 9 
army is dispersed and scattered . . Richard III. iv. 4 

navy is dispersed by tempest — iv. 4 

DISPITEOUS-tiirning dispiteous torture.. ^oAn, iv. 1 
DISPLACE— to displace it with your. Cor/o(anus, v. 4 
DISPLACED— displaced tlie mirth. . . . Macbeth, iii. 4 

a fear to be asjain displaced iHenrylV. iv. 4 

if Gloster be displaced, he'll be 'IHenry VI. i. 1 

DISPLANT— displant a town . . 7?omeo ^Juliet, iii. 3 
DISPLANTING— displanting of Cassio.. Othello, ii. 1 

DISPLAY— display to the niglit Merry Wives, v. 3 

did display them when we first King John, ii. 2 

and here display, at last, what God.. Titus And. iv. 1 

display [Co;. i:n/.-must play]. .Pericles, iv. 4 (Gow.) 

DISPLAYED-being once displayed. TwelfthNight, ii.4 

than beauty could displayed Meas.forMeas. ii. 4 

with visages displayed, to talk Love'sL. Lost, v. 2 

are at hand triumphantly displayed. Amj7o/m, ii. 2 
parching heat displayed my cneeks..! Henry VI. i. 2 
his hands abroad displayed, as Qn..iHenrv'VI. iii. 2 
displayed the effects of disposition.. 77e«rj/ '7^7/7. ii. 4 

of their white flags displayed Pericles, i. 4 

the very fellow that of late displayed Lear, ii.4 

DISPLEASE-displeaseherbrotlier'^s..ilfid.iV.r>r. iii.2 
and let it not displease thee . . Taming of Shrew, i. 1 
a kind from me as mil displease you. 17-7enri/77'. i. 3 

ICol.J if either thee displease 7?omeo & Juliet, ii. 2 

we must not now displease him Othello, iv. 3 

DISPLEASED-who'e displeased. r«io<?en.o/7'er. ii. 7 
my mirth it much displeased .. Meas. for Meas. Iv. 1 
suffered him to go displeased away.ilTer. of Ven. v. 1 
thou felt'st I was displeased . . Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 
reason he should be displeased at it. .i'HenryVI. i. 1 
God is much displeased, that you. . Richard III. ii. 2 
as he pleased, and displeased them..7«(ms Cmsar, i. 2 
you are not displeased with this. . Titus Andron. i. 2 
having displeased my father . . Romeo f( Juliet, iii. h 
DISPLEASING-disiileasing service.! 7-7enr?/7r. iii. 2 
in the end of a displeasing play ..illenryiv. (epil.) 
DISPLEASURE- 

take a disijlcasure against voii Tempest, iv. 1 

may prove food to my displeasure Much Ado, i. 3 

I am sick in displeasure to him — ii.2 

the strength of your displeasure., jl/er. of Venice, v. 1 

hath ta'en displeasure 'gainst .is you Likeit, i. 2 

to run into my lord's displeasure All's Well, ii. 5 

the everlasting displeasure of the king — iv. 3 

to stop up the displeasure he hath — iv. 5 

strong displeasure. Truly (rep.) — v. 2 

the unclean fishpond of her displeasure — v. 2 
oft our displeasures, to ourselves unjust — v. 3 
fearing the displeasure of your master — v. 3 

on your displeasure's jieril Winter's Tale, ii. 3 

though full of our displeasure, yet we — iv. 3 
and displeasure to himself? . . Comedy of Errors, iv. i 

doing displeasure to the citizens — v. 1 

to meet displeasure further from King John, v. 1 

my fear is, your displeasiu-e iHenrylV. (epil.) 

a poor and private displeasure can Henry F. iv. 1 

his displeasiu-es, and his imaginations — iv. 7 



DISPLEASURE-ln your displeasure. 77e«r(/F//7. i. 2 
behaviour given to your displeasure — ii. 4 

not to come off, in liis displeasure — iii. 2 

is your displeasure with the king,... — iii. 2 
lest your displeasure should enlarge- rro(7. <5- Cr. v. 2 
on height of our displeasure.. r<n!0)io/'.4//jens, iii. 5 

and displeasure of the people Coriolanus, ii. 2 

the malice and displeasure which thou — iv. 5 
turn your displeasure that way. Antony ^-Cleo. iii, 4 

not how much of his displeasure Cymbeline, i. 2 

took some displeasure at him Pericles, i. 3 

gain her love, or your displeasure — ii. 5 

with our displeasure pieced, and nothing. .Lear, i. 1 
found you no displeasure in him, by word — i. 2 

qualified the heat of his displeasure — 1.2 

I should win your displeasure to entreat — ii. 2 
and flattering his displeasure, tripped me — ii. 2 
on pain of their perpetual displeasure . . — iii. 3 
leave him to my displeasure: Edmund.. — iii. 7 
urged withal your high displeasure.7Jo7/i. frJul. iii. 1 

wrong stay, and her displeasm-e fly Othello, ii. 1 

I am sorry for your displeasure — iii. 1 

a man that languishes in yoirr displeasure — iii. 3 
stood within the blank of his displeasure — iii. 4 

DISPORT— way to disport himself ..3/7c??ri/r/. iv. f, 
ourselves fools, to disport ourselves. Timon ofAlh. i. 2 
that my disports corrupt and taint Othello, i. 3 

DISPOSE— leave at thy dispose. Two Gen. of Ver. ii. 7 

all rest at thy dispose iv. ! 

dispose of them, as thou know'st — v. 4 

dispose of her to some more fitter.. Meo.ftrTI/eo'. ii. 2 
dispose for henceforth of poor CiaMAio.MuchAdo, v. 1 
she is mine, I may dispose of her. . Mid. N.'s Dr. i. 1 
to your own bents dispose yon. . . . Winter's Tule, i. 2 
confiscate to the duke's dispose . . Comedy of Err. i. 1 

lay yom- heart at his dispose King John, i. 1 

come, cousin, I'll dispose of you Itichard II. ii. 2 

your grace, I may dispose of him ! Henry IV. v. 5 

dispose of us, and ours ; for we Henry V. iii. 3 

charitably dispose of anything — iv. 1 

pleasest, God, dispose the day! — iv. 3 

and dispose of their dead bodies — ii'. 7 

on the stream of his dispose . . Troilus S,- Cressida, ii. 3 
please you to dispose yourselves . . Timon ofAlh. i. 2 
for we intend so to dispose you . . Anloiy f^Cleo. v. 2 
there to dispose this treasure.. r^VHs.indroji/cHs, iv. 2 

by whose letters I'll dispose myself Pericles, i. 2 

dispose of them, of me; the walls Lear, v. 3 

I'll dispose of thee among Romeo ^- Juliet, v. 3 

a person, and a smooth dispose Othello, i. 3 

DISPOSE-est dispose tout a cette heure. 77e)i!i/ V. iv. 4 

DISPOSED— how thou hast disposed Tempest, i. 2 

I find not myself disposed to sleep — ii. 1 

my daughter is dispo.sed of Merry Wires, iii. 4 

if he be disposed, and so do I too. Twelfth Kight, ii. 3 

Boyet is disposed But to speak. LoiJe'sL. Los!, ii. ! 

my lady laugh, when she's disposed. . — v. 2 
you are disposed to be merry ....As you. Like it, iv. 1 

the children thus disposed Comedy of Errors, i. ! 

how thou hast disposed thy charge. ... — i. 2 
a speed with such advice disposed. . King John, iii. 4 
to see how fortune is disposed to us.li7en»!/77'. iv. 1 

your father is disposed to sleep iHenryl V. iv. 4 

right ill disposed, in brawl .... Henry V. iv. (chorus) 
he's disposed as tlie hateful raven. .iHenry VI. iii. ! 

shall prove not well disposed Henry VIII. i. 2 

liis'blows are well disposed.. Troilus SrCressida, iv. .'i 
thein how you were disposed ere , . Coriolan us, iii. 2 
be Wrought from that it is disposed. ./ii//«sC«'sar, i. 2 

masters, if I were disposed to stir your — iii. 2 
he was disposed to mirtli. . . . Antony ^ Cleopatra, i. 2 .. 
suspect she had disposed with Ctesar — _iy^f2r' 

is he disposed to mirth? Cymbetine, i. 7 

when a gentleman is disposed to swear — ii. ! 

DISPOSER-disposer Cressida irep.^.Troil^-Crcs. iii. ! 
C.i-essida? no, your poor disposer's sick — iii. 1 

DLSPOSING- t>.e disposing of thecardinal./o/m, v. 7 
to the disposinjj of it naught rebelled. Henry VIII. i . 1 
to fail in the disposing of those ....Con'o/r/nws, iv. 7 
the disposing of new dignities ..Julius Crvsar, iii. 1 

DISPOSITIO'N— sworn liis disposition. jV/erri/W. ii. 1 

1 have a great dispositions to cry .... — iii. 1 

inconstancy of man's disposition — iv. 5 

guiltless and of free disposition . . Twelfth Might, i. 5 
be so unsuitable to her disposition . . — ii. .'j. 

food disposition 'tend your ladyship! — iii. 1 
do it not in evil disposition Meas. for Meas. i. 3 

with the disposition of natures — iii. 1 

of what disposition was the duke? .. — iii, 2 
he is of a very melancholy disposition. il7ucA.4(7o, ii. 1 

the bitter disposition of Beatrice — ii. ! 

a disposition to come in disguised.. Js you Like it, i. 1 
father's rough and enyious_ disposition — 1.2 
my master IS of churlish disposition — ii.4 

a doublet and hose in ray disposition? — iii. 2 

in a more coming-on disiiosition — iv. ! 

'tis the royal disposition of that beast — iv. 3 

her dispositions she inherits All's Well, i. 1 

drum sticks soreb' in your disposition — iii. U 
against thy better disposition.. .. Winier'sTale, iii. 3 
robe of mine does change my disposition — ' iv. 3 

even to the disiiosition that I owe Macbeth, iii. 4 

and entertain a cheerful disposition. /i/c/irtni 77. ii. 2 

of his own royal disposition Diehard 111. i. 3 

the effects of disposition gentle Henry VIII. ii. 4 

the hi tter disposition of the time. Troilus ft Ci ess. i v. 1 
to express his disposition, and follow. C'or(o/u;rHs, i. 6 

give your disposition the reins — ii. 1 

knowledge he has in their disposition — ii.2 
the thwartiugs of your dispositions .. — iii. 2 
away, my disposition, and possess me — iii. 2 

well-divided disposition! note him. /In/. «§-C7eo. i. 5 
pincli one another by tlie disposition — ii. 7 

carry authority with such disjiositioiis I^ear, i. 1 

to lay his goatish disposition to the charge — i. 2 
put away these dispositions, which of lale — i. 4 

but let his disposition have that scope — i. 4 

whose disposition, all the world well — ii.2 

your brother's evil disposition made — — iii. ,'> 

1 fear your disposition; that nature .... — iv.2 



DISPOSITI(1X-st:iii.Is thy .li^l^oHitiull.HoI»..5■JH^ i.3 
1 tUoiiulit tliv ilis|iHsit;,.n ill tur i> iiipered — iii. 3 

n trimnc di^iui. iiiiui, yjhi\ mv lor. I Hamlel, i. 'i 

Bolu>rriill,v t..sl,;il.r "i'r.li^|;..-iti..u — i. -1 

to l>ut ail until' di>[n>sirn)ii oil — i. 5 

it KiH.'S so liciivily witli my (liamieition .. — ii.2 
but witli imu'li I'ouin,' ol' liis dispoaition — iii. 1 

I crave tit ili-jpositioii for my wite OlheUa,\. 3 

I know oiir i-oiiiitiv ilis|iojition well .... — iii. 3 

DlSl'OSSI-'.SS-thou ilisii.issuss thu 60Ul.'riCf//>/iA'.iv. i 

to iliaiKissos^i tliut I'hi 111 ( > .71.) KingJohn, i. 1 

oftlu' woilil, anil ilispossuss her all.rimoii n/Ath. i. 1 

llIsi'()SSi:ssi:i)-iiisiio*je9si!il himself. /iiiiffVo/m.iv.a 

i)isi'()ssi;ssiN(i— 

ilisiiossi.Msim,' all mv other parts. Wfos./or Meai. ii. ■! 
I)lSl>KAl.-!i;— ill liisili-iuaise ..TiroUcn.o/yer. iii. 2 
■ Valentine — iii. 'i 
e Lovers L, Lost^ iv. 3 



in worth vou Ui!.|n;;i_>c 
that wouUl avoid ili;i.r 



no abuse. Not I 
to hor, dispiui- 
Iwill notili-: 
dispraise tlu- t , 
what, my lonl: 
to dispraise my 1 
DISl»RAISED-1i. 



..'iHi-nryiy. ii. t 

i ill me Henry V.v.i 

WT .. Troilus ^ Cress, i. \ 
i \ 111 desire .. — iv. 1 

! , i 11 . .- Timon of Athens, i. 1 

d with th.at.. liomeo if Juliet, iii. .'> 

__._ e dispraised. T/ro 6-'eH.o//Vr. iv. t 

I dispraised him before the wicked. .aHpiiiy//'. ii. 4 
Antonv, I have dispraised Cicsar ..Ant.^-Cleo, ii. 5 
UlSl'H.USIN'ii— dispraisins praise .AHenrylf. v. '1 
not di^priiisim; whom we praised.... C.V'"("'''nf, v. '.1 
DISl'H AISl i\ci LY-of voudispraisingly.OMeHo, iii. 3 
niSl'lllZKD— [A)i(.] ot'disprized love.. Homie(, iii, 1 
DlSl'KIZINd— 

[Kii/.ldisiiri/.ing the knight.. Troiius ^ CrMsida, iv. 5 
DISPKOPEKTIED— 

and dispropertied their freedoms . . Coriolanus, ii. 1 
DISPRt)P0RT10N— 
to disproportion me in every part ..ZllenryVl. iii. 2 
foul disproportion, tlinugltts unnatural. 0(/id/o, iii. 3 
DISPRORORTIONED- 
is as disproportioned in his manners .. Tempest, v. 1 

indeed, tlioy are disproportioned Othelln, i. 3 

DI.SPIIDVE— disprove me TwoGen.o/Verona, v. 1 

and Warwick shall disprove it ^llenryVl. i. 1 

Is|>enk not to disprove what Brutus./«(.Crt'siir, iii. 2 

disprove this villain, if thou be'st Ollieltn, v. 2 

DISPROVED— vou hear disproved. .Vra./or.Vra. v. 1 
J>l.SPROV'ST-tIiou disprov'st report! C!/m(jc(iH<>,iv. 2 
JUSPUNGE— dispungc upon me.. Antony ^Cleo. iv. 9 
|)ISPU1?SED— haveldispursed .. ..iHenryVl. iii. 1 
DISPUTABLE— is too disputable. .4s you Like il, ii. 5 
DISPUTATIOX-feelinudisputation.U/c«ry/K. iii. 1 

a few disputations with you Henry ''.iii. 2 

in disputation I kiss his . . Antony ^-Cleopatra, iii. 1 1 
DISPUTE— my soul disputes .... Tieelflh Niglil, iv. 3 

dispute his own estate? Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

dispute it like a man Macbeth, iv. 3 

yea, or no, dispute not that 2 Henry fl. i. 3 

dispute not witli her, slic is lunatic. i?fc/irtr(/ ///. i. 3 
disimte with thee of thv i;statc.. liomeo ^Juliet, iii. 3 
DISPUTED— I'll have it disputed on .... Olhelto, i. 2 
DISPUTEST— thou disputest like..Loi)(^'sJ(-.Z.os(, v. 1 
DISPUTING— are disputinfj of your..lHc«ri/ Vl. i. 1 
DIStiUANTITY— disiiuantity your Irai n . . ira;-, i. 4 

DISQUIET— all disquiet, horror Much Ado, ii. 1 

iiusband, be uot so disquiet . . Turning of Shreui, iv. 1 
did you too much disquiet. ./In^ony & Cleopatra, ii. 2 

DISQUIETLY- followusdisquietly Lear,\. 2 

DISRELISH— disrelish and abhor Othello, ii. 1 

DISROBE— that did disrobe the lion. . King.lohn, ii. 1 
disrobe tlie images, if you do find ..Julius Ctcsar, i. 1 
I'll disrobe me of these Italian weeds. Cj/mMine, v. 1 
DISSEAT— me ever, or disseat me now.. Macbeth, v. 3 
DISSEMBLE— dissemble mYSQ\f. . Tit-et/thNight, iv. 2 
lovest best: seetlioudissemolenot. Tz/miH^o/S/i. ii. 1 
or both dissemble deeply their affections — iv. 4 
so help me God, as I dissemble noti.l Henry VI. iii. 1 

sent him, sure; I must dissemble •IHennjVl.v. 1 

dissemble not vour hatred, swear . . Richard III. ii. I 
iny uncle did dissemble, grandam .. — ii. 2 
gee him dissemble, know liis gross. Timon o/Ath. v. 1 
I would dissemble with my nature . Corio(ani/s, iii. 2 

dissemble all your griefs TitusAndronicus, i. 2 

here he comes : I must dissemble it ... . Pericles, ii. 5 

O hardness to dissemble! how do you. . Othello, iii. 4 

DISSEM BLED-that ever dissembled. Twelflli N. iv. 2 

whose furv, not dissembled. . . . Titus Andronicus, i. 2 

DI.SSEiMBf.,ER— thou dissembler Much Ado, v. 1 

arise, dissemhlerj though I wish Richard III. i. 2 

all naiulit, all dissemblers Romeo ^- Juliet, iii. 2 

DISSE.NfBLING-dissembling knight!. iV(/m/;r. iii. 3 

( ), thou dissembling cub! Twelfth Nigh , v. 1 

what wicked and dissembling glass.iUi'i/. A'. Dr. ii. 3 
hair is of the dissembling coloiu...-ls you Like il, iii. 4 
dissembling villain, thou (rep.). .Comedy of Err. iv. 4 
found such false dissembling guileV.l Henry n. iv. 1 
all dissembling set aside, tell me ...aHenryVI. iii. 3 

of feature by dissembling nature Richard III. i. 1 

the plain devil, and dissembling looks — i. 2 
dissembling abominable varlet . . Troilus ^ Cress, v. 4 
back to the dissembling luxurious drab — v. 4 
one scene of excellent dissembling An'ony f^C'eo. \. 3 
dissemblinscijui-tcsy! how fine thi3..Cyml/p/inf, i. 2 
DISSEiMBLY-is our whole dissembly.A/i/c'i/Wo.iv. 2 
DI.SSENS ION— from our dissension..J»//d. A'. Ur. ii. 2 

and (lUttrrvls, and dissensions Henry V. iv. 8 

and tor dissension, who preferreth..li/<rnr!/r/. iii. 1 
civil dissenciou is a vijierous worm .. — iii. 1 
this late disMMision, grown betwixt .. — iii 1 

let this dissension first be tricJ — iv. 1 

if they perceive dissension in our looks — iv. I 
such sharji dissension in my breast . . — v. .'1 
no dissension hinder government ..^HenryVt. iv. 6 
on a dissension of a doit, break. otit.Corio/aniix, iv. 4 
DISSENTIOUS— dissentious pranks.l Hfriri/r/. iii. 1 
with sni'li dissentious rumuurs . . . . Riclvird lit, i. 3 
the matter, you ilisentions rogues ..Coriol/musj i. 1 
liehold dis..entions numbers pestering — iv. B 
DlSSEVEli— ilissever so our great self. /W'» KVH, ii. 1 

dissever your united strengths King John, ii. 2 

DISSEVERED— were dissevered.. Jfin/er*! Tate, v. 3 



DISSIPATION— dissipation of cohorts .... Lear, i. 2 

DISSOLUTE-his dissolute disease. Wern/'^"'""". 'i'. 3 

to support so dissoluto a crew liicliurd II. v. ^ 

as dissolute as desperate — v. 3 

DlSSOLUTELY-and dis3olutelv..«en-i/ lyives, i. I 
the faul' is in the 'ort dissolutely .... — i. 1 
most dissoldtelv spent on Tuesday ..\HenryIV. i. 2 

DISSOLUTIOM- 
a man of eontiimal dissolution .. Merry Wives, iii. 5 
the dissolution of it imi.t i'iire...:U™j./lir A/ra». iii. 2 
reproach, and dissolution, liaii^'cth. .«(c/mr(i //. ii. 1 
deartli, dissolutions of ancient amities Lcur,\. 2 

DISSOLVE— it inherit, shall dissolve.. Tcm/JM/, iv. 1 

the charm dissolves apace — v. 1 

hour's heat dissolves to water,. TwoOen.oft^er. iii. 2 

that nothing can dissolve us Merry ll'iues, v. a 

gently wouia dissolve the bands RicliardU. ii. 2 

that yon in pity may dissolve to dew — v. 1 



iiy lifel ../lii(. c!f.C'/co. iii. 11 

llie life. Lrar, iv. 4 

■of this.. — V. 3 

'\..Merryll'ires, i. 1 

i)roatlis.it/iV(. A". Dr.i.l 



determiurs. 
dissolve, thick eloiii!. u 
lest his uni;overncil 
almost ready to di-'i 

DISSOLVED— am fmi 
so he dissolved, and slii 
I quickly were dissolved from my hive..'I/r.v/rd;ji.2 

were all dissolved to tears Richard II. iii. 2 

are shipi)ed. dissolved, and loosed. Trail, if Cress, v. 2 
thev lire ilissolvud; hang 'em! Coriolnniis, i. 1 

D1S-'STA1.\EI)^I livedis-stained.t'omct/j/ny Kc. ii.2 

DISSli A I )i:-ais^:uide him from her. . Much Ado, ii. 1 
labonrud to dissuade hini from it. .As you Like it, i. 1 
1 would Ihin dissuade him, but he .. — i. 2 

inaniloldly disMiadfiactVom All'sfrell,ii.3 

cannot for all that dissuade succession — iii..') 

DISSU.\l)i;U— we were dissuaded by. Cymbeline, v. 5 
when 1 di.-snaded him from his intent Lear, ii. 1 

DISTAFi — like lla.N: on a distaff . . Tieelflh Nighl,\. 3 
thwaidc him hence with distaff's... Winter'sTale, \. 2 
vea, distatf women manage rusty ..Richard II. iii. 2 
liavc liiriiLd a distaff to a lance Cymbeline, v. 3 

five the ili..ta11into my hu.sbaud"s hands. Leur, iv. 2 
ST.VlX-tlie one, distain the other. «(c/itird ///. v. 3 
of praise distains his worth Troilus •?• Cress, i. 3 

DISTANCE— mimeasurable distance .. Afcrry /f. ii. 1 
in these times .you stand on distance — ii. 1 

thy distance, thy montiint — ii. 3 

an infinite distiincc from his .... Meas.for Meas. i. 5 

I will hohl a long distance All's (*'e((,.iii. 2 (let.) 

she knew her distance, and did angle — v. 3 
in such bloody distance, that every . . Macbeth, iii. 1 

to hold what distance his wisdom — iii. 6 

just distance 'tween our armies?.... 2 //enn/"'. iv. 1 
the abuse of distance, while we ..Henryl'. ii. (cho.) 

fell off a distance from her Henry VIII. iv. 1 

nor yet tlie other's distance comfort me. /'I'ru-ics.i. 2 
time, distancCj and proportion . . lloinco ^ Jatit't, ii. 4 

their honours m a wary distance Othello, ii. 3 

no fmtlier off than in a politic distance — iii. 3 

DISTANT— very distant time....jUfas./o)- ;>/<'«.«. ii. I 
so far be distant; and good night. . . Mid. N. Dr. ii. 3 

his court distant from this shore? Pericles, ii. 1 

temple is nut distant far, where you — iii. 4 

as 'twere, some distant knowledge of . . Hamlet, ii. 1 

DISTASTE— my will distaste what. Trail. ^Cres. ii. 2 

cannot distaste the goodness of — ^ ii. 2 

\_Col. Kni.l if he distaste it, let him to my. .Lear, i. 3 
at the first, are scarce found to distaste. 0(/it'(/o, iii. 3 

DISTASTED— distasted \_Col. Km — distasting] 

with the salt Troilus 4 Cressidti, iv. 4 

DIST.VSTEFUL— distasteful looks. Timon ofAlh. ii. 2 

DISTASTING- 
ICol. Kni.'] distastinsr with the salt. Troil.^Cress. iv. 4 

DISTEMPElt-liaM' your distemper ...McrrylV. iii. 3 
provoked and i;i :[i_aKd Ijy his distemper — iii. 5 

to this his distriiiper hf is in now — iv. 2 

miglit, perhaps, distemper yours.. TwelfthNiglil, ii. 1 

puts some of us in distemper Winter'sTale,i. 2 

faults proceeding on distemper Henry V. ii. 2 

this will drive away distemiicr Cymlieline, iii. 4 

and source of all your son's distemper.. Hamlet, ii. 2 
mvloid, wliat is your cause of distemper'? — iii. 2 
uiKju the iKat and flame of thy distemper — iii. 4 

DISTE.MPEKATUKE— 
thorough this distemperature ....Mid.N.'s Dr. ii. 2 
of pale distemperatures, and foes. Comedy of Er. v. 1 

having this tUstemperature I Henry IV. iii. 1 

the day looks pale at his distempcratm-e — v. 1 
what ground is his distemperature? .. Pericles, v. 1 
ujironsed by some distemperature. Kohico ^Jul. ii. 3 

DISTEMPERED— so distempered Tempest, '\v. 1 

taste with a distempered appetite . /'wc'/V/i A'/yi<, i. .'> 
this distempered messenger of wet .... All's Well, i. 3 
buckle ills distempered cause within. . Macbeth, v. 2 
no distempered day, no common. . . . King John, iii. 4 

well met, distempered lords! — iv. 3 

as a bod.v, yet, distempered illenrylV.iM. I 

passion ot tiistempered bloixl ... Troilus ^-Cress. ii. 2 

It argues a distempered head Rimeo ^-Juliet, ii. 3 

retirement, marvellous distempered ..Hamlet, iii. 2 

DISTEMPERING— 
supper, and distempering draughts Othello, i. 1 

DISTIL— which they distil now in ... . All's Well, ii. 4 
would men obscrvinely distil it out . . Henry V. iv. 1 
to make perfumes? distil? preserve?..C'(/m6e/me,i.G 
disti I from these two ancient urns . . TilusAnd. iii. 1 

DI.STILLATION— 
in, like a stron;,' distillation Merry Wives, iii. 5 

DISl'l I, Li:i)-lliis distilled Carduu3..W«c/i .-We, iii. 4 
cartlilier liapiiv is the rose distilled.. <W/t(. N.Ur. i. I 
l)ruseiitlvdi>lilkd llelcn's.Jiyoii /w*ri;i(,iii. 2 (.ver.s) 
with warm distilled waters .. Taming of Sh. 1 (ind.) 
and that, disti I kil by magic slights ..Macbeth, iii. ,'> 
man distilled out ot our virtues ..Trail. ^Cress. i. 3 

dew distilled on llowcrs? TiiusArulronieus,\\. l 

distilled liquor drink tlum off.. Romeo ^- Juliet, iv. 1 
tctil. Kill.] witli tears di.stilled by moans — v. 3 
distilled L K';/.-lie.,tilled] almost to jelly. r/(jmW,i. 2 

DIs'I'll..Mi;;s'T— the leiierimsdistilmeni.. — i. 5 

DlSTINC'T-are distinct ofiices ..Mer. of Venice, ii. D 
with distinct breath and consigned.. Troil.fyCr. iv. 4 



DISTINCT— make distiuet the verv..7V.i,7.A fr. iv. ! 
ill my distinct [Co/. A';;r-ilefinietl and. . o/Ae/'u, i. : 

DISTINCTION— maliedistinrlion. rirei/ih.\;-hi, ii. ; 

would quite confound distinction All's ll'iU.'n. i 

in sense to make distinction — iii. < 

your distinction? I would cozen the — iv. .' 
distinction, with abroad and.... '/'rot/u«^C'rexff. i. ' 

lose distinction in my joys — iii.: 

he throws without distinction Coriolanus, iii. 1 

grants scarce distiiietion ..Antony ^Cleopatra, lit. 1 
oth make distinction of place Cymbeline, iv. ; 

which distinction should be rich in.. — v..' 
DISTINCTLY— I flame distinctly Tempest, i. : 

thou dost snore distinctly — ii. I 

did distinctly his full function ....Henry VIII. i. 

all, which yet distinctly ranges Corio/anm, iii. 

and their charges, distinctly Tiilleted — iv. : 

mass of things, but nothing distinctly.. OUu-Wo, ii. I 

not, in position, distinctly speak of her.. — iii. r 

DISTINGUE— et trts distingue Henri/ V. iv. 

DISTINGUISH— distinguish form ..Richard II. ii. ; 

sight may distinguish of colours ... .iHenryl'l. ii. 

can you distinguish of a man .... Richard III. iii. 

eye or ear distinguish him from Cymbeline, i. 

can distinguish twixt the fiery orbs .. — i. ; 

hears that which can distinguish sound.. Ltar, iv. 1 

could of men distinguish her election.. HnmW, iii. ; 

since I could distinguish a benefit and . . OllielU, i. : 
DISTINGUISHED— 

we be distiiiguished b^ our faces. . TamingofSh. i. 

could not be distin^ished but .. Comedy of lirr. i. 

tliat might not be distinguished ....illenryVl. v. 
DISTINGUISH ES- 

the valued file distinguishes the swift. iVac(ie(/i, iii. 
DISTINGUISHMENT— 

mannerly distinguishment leave. Winter's Tale, ii. 
DISTRACT — news distracts me! . . Merry Wives, ii. : 

jzentleman, he's much distract . . TteetfihNighl, v. 

fellow is distract, and so am I . . Comedy of lirr, iv. ; 

fixed on end, as one distract 'iHenry VI. iii. ; 

with this she fell distract, and JuliusCiPsar, iv. : 

distract your army, which doth. Antony <5- Cleo. iii. ; 

to see thy noble uncle thus distract?. TilusAnd. iv. ; 

better I were distract; so should my Lear, iv. I 

distract; her mood wiU needs be pitied. Hiim/c/, iv. 

of herbs, or distract it with many Othello, i. ! 

DISTRACrED— all three distracted .. Tempest, v. 

imeven and distracted manner.. Meas.for. Mens. iv. 

them on in this distracted fear.. .Vid. A'. Dream, iii. ; 

beams distracted clouds give way ....All's Well, v. 

fete'li my iioor distractednusband.Comcrf(/o/£r. V. 

they stare' I, and were distracted Macbeth, ii. : 

tractcd her 2Henry IV.i'i. 

Troilus fyCreasida, v. 



accept di tr 
speak froio 
adistraeir 
a seat in lii 
does confess, lie lee 



ted soul..7'mono/.4rA. iii. 
. etched being — iv. 3 

-■lobe Hamlelji. :, 

mself distracted.. — iii. 1 
he's loved of the distracted multitude .. — iv. 3 
those whom this vile brawl distracted.. OWieHo, ii. 3 

DISTRACTEDLY'— 
did speak in starts distractedly. . Twelfth Night, ii. 2 

DISTRACTION— in their distractions. Tempest, iii. 3 

and Ford's wife's distraction Merry Wives, iii. 

not what 'twos, but distr,action .. Tuelf.h Night, v. I 
this savours not much of distraction.. — v. 1 
held a brow of much distraction .. Winler'sTale, i. 2 
with a countenance of such distraction — v. 2 
madam, this is a mere distraction. //<?/jryr/7/. iii. I 
ICol.'] you flow to great distraction. TroiL fyCres. v. 2 

[Co;.] behold, distraction, frenzy — v. 3 

power went out in such distractions. /l«/.iS-C/ffo. iii. 7 

make boot of his distraction — iv. 1 

tears in his ej'es, distraction in's aspectHnmlet, ii. 2 
how I am punished with a sore distraction — v. 2 

DISTR.VINED— are all distrained . . Richard II. ii. 3 
here distrained the Tower toiiis uscl Henry VI. i. 3 

DISTK A V ( ; 1 IT— thou wert distraught. Uicli. ///. iii. 5 
wake, shall I not be distraught?. /fumffo f,Juliel,i\-. 3 

DISTRESS— in the same distress .. Merry Wives, iii. 3 
boldened, man, by thy distress . . As you Like il, ii. 7 

fointof bare distress hath ta'en . : . . — ii. 7 

do pity his distress in my smiles.... v4(i'«)re;(, v. 2 

in pity of my hard distress I Henry VI. ii. 5 

nor shrinking for distress, but always — iv. I 

beg, were you in my distress Richard III. i. 4 

our fatherless distress wa-s left — ii. 2 

this supposed distress of his Timon of Athens, v. 1 

do not upbraid us with our distress.. Conn(ujiui, v. 1 

he wrings at some distress Cymlieline, iii. 6 

they cannot answer my distress.. 7'iVuf Andron. iii. 1 

in the good man's distress! Lear,iv. 4 

as one incaiiable of her o«ni distress ..Hamlet, iv. 7 
DISTRESSLD-poor distressed soul!. Com. o/Krr. iv. 4 
some succour to the distressed lordl.l //>•«•(/ //-i v. 3 
'twixt Cade and Y'ork distressed . .'IHenry VI. iv. 9 
tliy help to this distressed queen?. .3Hp;irv/'y. iii. 3 

on me, threefold distress Richard III. ii. 2 

a beauty-waning and distressed widow — iii. 7 

wife, a most distressed widow — iv. 4 

being distressed, was by that HentyVlII. ii. 1 

this youth, howe'er distressed Cymbeline, iv. 2 

eldest son of this distressed nucen THus.ind. i. 2 

rather comfort his distressed plight. . — iv. 4 

O my distressed lord, even such /VnWcj, i. 4 

a stranger and distressed gentleman .... — ii. .'1 
the poor distressed I*ar is i' the town . . Lear, iv. 3 



DI 



despised, distressed, hated, martyred.yfom.^ Ju/. i 
IS'IRESSliS-tunc my distresses. Tiro Gen. qfV. 1 



V. 4 



to doff their dire distresses Macbeth, I 

DISTRESSFUI^distre^sful bread .... Henry V. iv. 1 

case your country of distressful war.l Henry VI. v. 4 

ruins of distressful times repaired. HicAard III. iy. I 

1 did »|icak of some distressful stroke . . Othello, i. 3 

DISTRIBUTE— could distribute. ...Hfiiry »'/;/. v. 3 

ministers that do distribute it Coriolanus, iii. 3 

DISTRIBUTED— was ne'er distributed — iii. 3 
DISTRIBUTION— com.non distribution — i. 9 

so distribution should undo excess Lear, iv. 1 

DISTRUST-to distrust mine cycs.TireffthNighl, iv. 3 



DIS 

DISTRUST— tear, ami sad distrust ..King Johnny. 1 

foil shall never breed distrust 1 Hfiiry VI. lii. 3 

not ofibndetl in vour distrust Antony SiCho. iii. 2 

I distrust voii; Vet, though I distrust.. Hmiii:*, iii. i 

DISTRUrfFUL-distrusttul reereantsl.l He/i. Vl. i. i 

DISTURB— disturb this liallowed ..Hid. N. Dr. v. ■-' 

shall we disturb him, since he ktxps..l Henry f'l. i. 2 

to trouble and disturb the king — iv. 1 

no man should disturb your rest . .iUenry VI. m. i 

ilisturb him not, let him pass — iii- 3 

that dare, and mil disturb thee — iv. S 

Buckingham, to distnrb me? — v. 1 

most uunt time to disturb him Henry I'll I. ii. 2 

let none disturb us: why this i'ericles,i.i 

if ever voxi disturb our streets . . llomeo ijr JuUet, i. i 
God shield, I should disturb devotion! — iv. 1 
DISTURB.VXCC— of the disturbances.. Periclrs, iii. 2 
DISTURBED— be not distnrlied with. . Tempesl, iv. 1 
thou hast lUstmrbed our sport ...Ui'd. lY. Dream, ii. 2 
to be distiu-bed, would n\ad or . . Comedy nfErr. v. 1 

neither distm-bed with the eti'oct — v. 1 

with course disturlied even thy King John, ii. 2 

bubbles in a late tlisturbed stream ..\Henryiy. ii. 3 

France will be distiu-bed with chaees . . Henry I', i. 2 

thisdistmbed sky is not to wall in.Julius Cwsar, i. 3 

nor we disturbed with prodigies . . Titus .4ndron. i. 2 

have thrice disturbed the timet of.Romeo4Juliet,i. 1 

DISTURBER-sweet sleep's disturbers.RiVA. ///. iv.2 

these disturbers of our iieace .... TitusAndron. iv. 4 

DISTURUINU— disturbini: the lords ..Coriol. iv. 5 

DISlfNlTE— a fool could disunite. Troilus»Cres. ii. 3 

DISVALUED-disvnlued in levity.iVfn./or.Vfa. v. 1 

DISVOUCIIED— writ hath disvoiiclted — iv. 4 

DITCH— it in the muddy ditch. . . . Merry Wipes, iii. 3 

safe in a ditch he bides Macbeth, ii|. 4 

he'll tm-n your current in a ditch. . Conolanxis, iii. 1 
seek some "ditch, wherein to die .An:oity ffCleo. iv. 6 
rather a ditch in Eiivpt be gentle.... — v. 2 
DITCH-DELIVERliU- 

babe, ditch-deliveivd bv a drab .Macbeth, iv. 1 

DITCH-DOG— old rat, and the ditch-dog.. Lnir, iii. 4 

DITCHED— bT the battle, ditched Coriotanus, v. 3 

DITCHER— tlitchers and grave-makers.. Ham(e(, v. 1 
DITCHES— ditches of the'abbey . . Comedy of Err. v. 1 

and ditches grave you alU Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

DITES— dites moy.sije parle bien Henry F. iii. 4 

dites moy en Anglois, le bras — iii. 4 

DITTIES'— sine; no more ditties. iVucA.-jrfo, ii. 3 (song) 
as s-.veet as ditties highly penned.. IHe/n-y IF. iii. 1 

DITTY— the ditty does remember Tempest, i. 2 

and this ditty, after me, siDg..Mid. K.'s Dream, v. 2 

no great matter in the ditty As you Like it, v. 3 

manv an English dittv IHenryll'.iii. 1 

DIURNAL- Ills diurnal ring All'sWetl, ii. 1 

DIVE— to dive into the fire Tempesl, i. 2 

to dive, like buckets, in concealed . . King John, v. 2 

how he did seem to dive into Richard II. i. 4 

or dive into the bottom of 1 Henry IT. i. 3 

dive, thoughts, down to my soul! . . Hichard III. i. 1 

he dives into the king's soul Henry VIII. U. 2 

dive in the earth, and fence not . . Timon ofA'h. iv. 1 
I'll dive into the burning lake . . TiiusA}iJron. iv. 3 

as a duck for life tlmt dives /'<v iVVs, iii. ^Gower) 

DITED-Vet dived into the \yvrUr<..li,\'':arJ III. iii. 1 
l>IV£R-tbr divers pliilosopliers h^'WX. Merry IVires, i. 1 
I will give out diver? seheilulcs .. Tu-el/s'i Sight, i. 5 
came aivers of Antmiic's creditors. -l/er. ofl'en. iii. 1 
divers paces with di\\is persons. ..Jsi/o" Likeil, iii. 2 
tlireatens them \\ itli di\ers deaths. Il'inler's Tale,Y. 1 

divers dear friends slain? Ki/ig John, iii. 4 

which — for divers reasons IHenrylF. i. 3 

alteration with divers liquors? 2HenryIV.n\. 1 

the state of man in divers functions . . Henry V. i. 2 

myself, and divers gentlemen 1 He.niy VI. iv. 1 

for divers imknowm reasons Richard III. i. 2 

confessions of divers ^vitnesses Henry VIII. ii. 1 

new opinions, divers, and dangerous. . — v. 2 
ease ourselves of divers slanderous. .Au^AtsCn'snr, iv. 1 
when your diver did ho.n\*...-lntony i^- Cleopatra, ii. ."j 

cliildrcn oi' divers kind Romeo Si- Julie', ii. 3 

DIVERSE-COLOURED— 

with diverse-colom'ed fans...-lH/ony i^r Cleopatra, ii. 2 

DIVERSIT'if-more diversity of sounds, rempes/, v. 1 

DIVERSLY — so diversly coloured ..Coriotanus, ii. 3 

DIVERT— to divert the English .. Henry V. ii. (cho.) 

and divert his grain tortive . . Troilus ^- Cressida, i. 3 

horrors, divert and crack — i. 3 

DIVERTED— of a diverted blood., yls you Lite iV, ii. 3 

could have well diverted her intents. .l/Cs Well, iii. 4 

DIVES-and Dives that lived in ....IHenrylV. iii. 3 

DIVEST— that you divest yourself .... Henry V. ii. 4 

since now we will divest us, both of Lear, i. 1 

DIVlDABLE-from dixidable shores. Trail. ^-Cres. i. 3 
DIVIDANT— scarce is dividaut .. Timon of Ath. iv. 2 

DIVU)E— sometimes, I'd divide Tempest, i. 2 

divide me like a bribe-buck Ilerry Wives, v. 5 

he that will divide ammute into..-ts!/oM Lilce il,iv. 1 
and o'er divides him 'twixt his .. IVinier'sTale, iv. 3 
lilindiii" tears, divides one thing. . . . liicliard II. ii. 2 
though lie divide tlie realm, and give — v. ! 
O, I could divide myself, and go io..\HenryIV. ii. 3 
shall we (livide our right, according — iii. 1 

that we divide our power — v. 5 

did divide the action of their bodies.. 2Hfiii!//r. i. 1 
a tliousand parts divide one m&a. . Henry V. i. (cho.) 

therefore doth heaven divide — i. 2 

my liege, divide your happy England — i. 2 
I will di vide my crown with her ....\ Henry VI. i. G 

yourself in twain divide — iv. 5 

then to divide the times ZHenry VI. ii. S 

valour's worth, divide in storms .. Troil. ^ Cress, i. 3 

burden, divide thy lips — i. 3 

let Mars di\ide eternity — ii. 3 

inseparate divides more wider — v. 2 

and you shall divide in all with us. . Coriotanus, i. 6 
will sometimes divide me from your. Anl.^Cleo. ii. 3 
take that, divide it, fly, and make .. — iii. 9 

divide our equalness to this — v. 1 

the fiends of hell divide themselves.. Cymie.'ine.ii. 4 
blBthcrs divide; in cities, mutinies Lear, i. 2 



190 ] 



DOE 



I DIVIDE — does not divide the Sui\thvy....//<iin/f/, i. 1 
' to divide him inveutoriallv. would dizzy — v. 2 
DIVIDED— were we divided from thmi. Tempest, v. 1 
o'erU>i>ked me. and dl\ided iiic.^Uw. rit' Venice,\n.'2 
and she a fair divided exeelleiice .... King John, ii. 2 
must we be divided;' unijt we purt?..A'ii'/i.iri/ //. v. 1 
the archdeacon hath divided it .... I Henri/IV. iii. 1 
the untirm king in three divided ....■^IlennilV. i. 3 
the English armv. tliat divided was.lHciirvr/. v. 2 
thought of this dnided friendship ..Richard III. i. 4 
we to-niovrow hold divided councils — iii. I 
this divided York and Lancaster, divided — v. 4 
or shall tliev be divided bv aiw .Troilns if)- Cress, iv. i 
bre;ith of him in a di\ ided draught. Timon of.ilh. i. 2 
the throe-fold world dixidcd . T. .JtUius Ciesar, iv. 1 
it was divided between \\cv..iiitony^-Cleopalra, iv. !2 

know, that we have divided, in three Lear, i. 1 

poor Ophelia divided from lierself Hamlet, iv. 5 

I do pereeivo heiv a divided dutv Othello.i. 3 

DIViDEt'U— for she divideth us."«oin.-o iiJulitt. iii. b 

DIVINATION— his divination Ues ..2 Henry IV. i. 1 

these liigli strains of divination . .. Troilus <S- Cress, ii. 2 

unless my sins abuse my divination. CymbeUue, iv. 2 

DIVINE— ^bv Providence divine Tenipisl, i. 2 

I miglit call him a thing divine — i. 2 

that decks a tliiug di>'iue! . . Tiro Gen. of Verona, ii. 1 

call her divine — ii.4 

if not divine, yet let licr be — ii.4 

of siieh divine perfeetion — ii.7 

let him lie funiisheil with divines.-Udi. for Mea. iii. 2 
I know him for a m:iii dixine and holy — v. 1 

like power divine, hath looked " — V. 1 

now divine air! now is his soul Much.-ido.W. 3 

goddess, nymph, perfect, divine!. .WiJ. .V.iJ,rum, iii. 2 

iiympli, divine, and i-aiv, pieeious — iii. 2 

O most divine Kate! Loee'sL.Lost, iv. 3 

O wood divine! awifeof — iv. 3 

a good and divine that follows.. .UercA. of Venice, i. 2 
with tlie divine forfeit of his soul .... All's Well, iii. 6 
by Apollo's great divine sealed \if..lVinler'sT. iii. I 
if powers divine beluild our human.. — iii. 2 

for has not the divine Apollo said — y. 1 

more divine, the masters of all. . Comedy of Err. ii. 1 

more than earth divine — iii. 2 

more needs she the divine, tlian ...... Macbeth, v. 1 

my divine soul answer it in hectveh.. Richard II. i. 1 
than earth, divine his downfall? .... — iii. 4 

as thoughts of things dixine — v. 5 

your tongue divine to a loud 2HenryIV. iv. 1 

\vith a seal divine, and consecrate. ... — • iv. 1 

mon trbs chere et divine deesse? Henry V. v. 2 

she is not so divine, so full I Henry VI. V. J 

that makes them seem divine iHenry VI. i. 4 

love, wliich greybeards call divine . . — v. 6 

divine perfection of a woman Richard III. i. 2 

by a divine instinct, men's minds. . . . — ii. 3 

the danger that his soul divines — iii. 2 

meditating with two deep divines . . — iii. 7 
liath an operation more divine.. J'^oiius ^ Cress, iii. 3 
Oyou godsdivine! make Cressid's .. — iv.2 

with most divine integrity — iv. 5 

which our divines lose by them Coriotanus, ii. 3 

both divine and human, seal what .. — iii. 1 
from voneloud speak divine things.. — iv. 5 

boimd to divine of this unity Antony ^Cleo. ii. 6 

thou divine Imogen, what tliou Cymbeline,il. 1 

there is a prohibition so divine — iii. 4 

fly from so divine a temple — iv. 2 

O thou goddess, thou divine nature . . — iv. 2 
whicli mulier, I divine, is tliis most. . — y. 5 

by a divine tluusting on Lear, i. 2 

a divine, a ghostly eoui'essor . . . Romeo ^- Juliet, iii. 3 
spirit, with divine ambition pntfed .... Hamlet, iv. 4 

from Cyprus, as I may divine Othello, i. 2 

letting go safely by tlie dixiue Desdemona — ii. 1 
DIVINELY— most divinely vowed . . King /o/m, ii. 1 

divinely bent to meditation Richard III. iii. 7 

DIVINIJNESS- behold diviueness. . Cymbeline, iii. 6 
DIVINE R— drudge, or diviner . . Comedy of En: iii. 2 

DIVINEST— divinest creature IHenry VLi. 6 

Lucina, O divinest patroness, and Pericles, iii. 1 

despised substance of divinest show!. i?om. ^-Jut. iii. 2 
DIVINING— my divining thoughts..3H<'«r;/r/. iv. 6 
DIVINITY— there is d'muity in ..Merry Wives, v. 1 

to your ears, diviuity_ Twel/ih Night,- i. 5 

we will hear this divinity — . i. 5 

nor divinity, if this sweet lady Much Ado. iv. 1 

hear hiin but reason in divinity Henry V.i. 1 

but to have divinity preached there! ..Pericles, iv. 5 
ay, and no too was no good divinity^ .... Lear, iv. 6 
tliere's such divinity doth hedge a king. Ham/c(, iv. 5 
there's a divinity that shapes our ends . . — v. 2 
divinity of hell! when devils will iheh. Othello, ii. 3 
DIVlSlClN- I'll make division ..TwelfthNight, iii. 4 
how have you made division of yourself? — v. 1 

and in his'own division : and Much Ado, v. 1 

division of the twentieth part .. Mer. of Venice, ly. 1 
but abound in the division of each. . . . Macbeth, iv. 3 
will the wofullest division prove ..Richard II. iv. 1 
with ravishing division to her lute..lHenj-i/iF. iii. 1 
of our attempt brooks no division — ^ iy. 1 

for his divisions, as the times do iHenrylV.K. 3 

and the division of our amity — iii. I 

envy breeds unkind division 1 Henry VI. iv. 1 

divided, in their dire division Richard III. v. 4 

breadth of this division admits . Troilus ^- Cress, v. 2 
them in the heat of their division. ..Co?-io(a»iu«, iv. 3 
never come such division ^Uveen.. Julius Ctesar, iy. 3 

may cement their divisions intony ^- Cleo. ii. 1 

unhappy lady, if this division chance — iii. 4 
but now, in the division of the kin,gdom ..Lear, i. 1 
these eclijises do portend these divisions! — i. 2 

divisions in state, menaces and — i. 2 

there is division, although as yet — iii. 1 

there is division between the dukes — iii. 3 

the lark makes sweet division.. Tiomeo ij- Juliet, iii. 5 
nor the division of a battle knows more-.O/Zn-Ho^i. 1 
is there division 'twixt thy lord and Cp.ssio?— iv. 1 
DIVORCE— divorce his memory . . Love's L. Lost, v. 3 
deadly divorce step between me All's Well, v. 3 



DIVORCE— mark your divorce . . Winter's Tate, iv. 3 
in this unjust divoix-e of us ..Cotnedy nf' Errors, i. 1 
made a tlivonc betwixt his queen.. iWcAiird /i. iii. 1 
that would divorce this terror from .. — v. 4 

sweet curl, divorce not wisdom SHenrylV. i. 1 

to make divorce of their incorporate .. Henry V. v. 3 
I here divorce nivself, both from ....'iHenry VI. i. I 
as the Ion;; divuico of steel iiMs. ... Henry VIII. ii. 1 






to di' 
deutl 
this i 

to Stll 



: the ii. 
ivoree 
e divor 



■ til, 



jud.- 



e, h 



It o' tlie divorc 



of her . . 


_ 


ii. 2 




— 


ii. 3 


iguitics 


— 


iii. 1 


s contrary 


— 


ill. 2 



— 111. 2 



ti.-liedthekinL; torliisdi' 
divorce "twixt mil ii rill sou and.. .. Timon of. -ith. iv. 3 
thiit weep this lunjentnlile divoi-co ..Cymbeline, i. 5 

ofthcdivoive he'd miikc! — ii. 1 

would divorce me from thy mother's tomb. Lenr, ii. 4 

he will divorce vou: or init upon you ..Othello, i. 2 

DIVOKCK— hatli he divorced three .. TirelJ1h\. iii. 4 

doubly divorced— Li:id men, yc Richard II. v. 1 

divorced so many English kings •illeiui/ll'. iv. 4 

divorced, and the late' marriage llfnn/l III. iv. I 

divorced, wronged, siitcd Rumto ti- Juliet, iv. 5 

Dn'ORCEM EN T-licggarl v divorcement. OlheUo, iv. 2 
DIVULGE— divulge i'age ■liiniself...Ue))V Wires, iii. 2 
DIVULGED— voices well divulged. 7'wc(yyA Night, i. !t 
strumpet's boldness, adivnlgcd shame. .4(('»/(V«,ii. 1 
shall be divnU'od w cU in characters. Troil. ^Cr. v. 2 
D1\'ULGINL)— keep it fiom divulging.. HawiW, iv. 1 
DI/A'_have wc here vouul' Dizv.. iUca./brA/ra. iv. 3 
DIZZY— diz/.y witli more clamour. Tro/V. ^Cress. v. 2 

how fearful and dizzv 'tis, to cast Lear, iv. t> 

would di/.zv the ariliuiietic of mciuorv..»(.mIc(, v. 2 

DIZZY-EYED— dizzv-cved fiirv. . ..li/c/iry;/. iv. 7 

DOBBIN— Dobbin my tliill-horsc.iUfr. q/' ;V«ice,ii.3 

that Dobbin's tuil grows Inickward — ii. 2 

DOCK— or docks, or niii 1 lows Tempesl, ii. 1 

hateful docks, rough thistles Henry V. v. 3 

DOt'RlOD— Andrew'dockcd in sand..Vc;-.o//V;iicc, i. 1 
Dt iCl'i 1 U—1'iench doctor, niv master.J/erri/ Wives, i. 4 
■ ■ ■ ii. 1 

ii. 3 
ji.3 
ii. 3 
ii. 3 
ii. 3 
ii. 3 
ii. 3 
iii. I 



■ French doctor 

bless tliee, bully doctor 

now, "ood master doctor I 

he is tlie wiser man, master doctor .. 
though we are justices, and doctors .. 
you must go with me, master doctor 

1 will bring the doctor about 

adieu, good master doctor 

that calls himself doctor of physic . . 



so do vou, good niastcr tloctor 

shall 1 lose my doctor? No 

but my wife, iuaster doctor, is for. . 

master doctor, you sha 1 1 go 

that's mv master, master doctor . . 

I'll to tlie doctor! he hath 

the doctor is well monied 

three doctor Faustuses 

here, master doctor, in perplexity . . 
hath made promise to tlie doctor 



ill. 1 
iii. 1 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 
iii. 4 



IV. 6 
iv. 6 
iv. 6 
iv. 6 



to denote her to the doctor 

and when the doctor spies 

master doctor, my daughter is — v. 3 

at the doctor's miurying my dauglitcr — v. 3 

doctors doubt that: if Anne Page — v. 5 

she is now with the doctor — v. 5 

why went you not with master doctor — v. 5 

then is an ape a doctor to such i>/Hc/i Ado, v. 1 

a learned doctor, whom 1 have..il/«-. of Venice, iv. 1 

with Ictter.-i from the doctor — iv. 1 

a young and learned doctor — iv. I 

with iiic a young doctor of Rome — iv. 1 (let.) 

here I take it, is'the doctor come .... — iv. I 

reverend doctor, heie it is — iv. 1 

a civil doctor, whicli ditl ret\ise — v. 1 

to give the worthy doctor (rep.) — v. 1 

I'll have that doctor for my betlfellow — v. 1 

the same I gave the doctor! — v. 1 

the doctor lay with me — v. 1 

the doctor's clerk, in lieu of this .... — v. 1 

that Portia was the doctor — v. 1 

you the doctor, and I knew you not? — v. I 
"sweet doctor, you shall be my bedfellow — v. 1 
1 were conching with the doctor's clerk — v. I 
why, doctor she; my lord, there's one.. •i;rs»KeW,ii. 1 
when our most learned doctors leave us — ii, 1 
for so your doctors hold it. Taming of Shrew, 2 (Iiid.) 
good tloctor Pinch, you are . . Comedy of Errors, iv. 4 
gootl master doctor, see him safe .... — iv. 4 

bound the doctor, whose beard — v. 1 

I thank yon, doctor .Macbeth, iv. 3 

good-night, good doctor — v. 1 

how docs 3'oiir patient, doctor? — V. 3 

Doctor, the thanes fly from me — v. 3 

if thou couldst, doctor, cast the water — v. 3 

our doctors say, this is no time Richard II. i. 1 

what says the doctor to my water?.. 2Wenri/ 7/'. i. 2 
of the laud, and doctors leameil . . Henry VIII. ii. 4 

now, master doctor; have you Cymbeline, i. 6 

I do wonder, doctor, thou ask'st me.. — i. G 

doctor, your service for this time is . . — i. G 
no further service, doctor, until I send — i. 6 

yet death will seize the doctor too.... — v. 5 

to signify this to the doctor Uamle!, iii. 2 

DOCTRINE-comfortable doctrine. Twetrih Night, i. 5 

eyes this doctrine I derive Love sL. Lost, iv. 3 

tiiis doctrine I derive: thc^' sparkle.. — iv. 3 

embowelled of their doctrine All's Well, i. 3 

knew not the doctrine of ill-doing. Wmti-r's 'Tule, i. 2 

show a worse sin than ill doctrine. . Henry VIII. i. 3 

homiy learn a doctrine of obedience. .■bl^ ACleo. v. 2 

I'll pay that doctrine, or else i.\iK..Romeri\Juliet, i. 1 

DOCUMENT— a document in madness. IlamM, iv. ;> 

DODGE-dodge and palter in the shifts..4H/.^-(Vra.iii.Si 

DOE— w ho comes here? my doe? . . Merry Wives, v. ."i 

mv doe with the black scut? — v. S 

whiles like a doe, I go to find As you Like It, ii. 7 

shoots buck and doe Troilus <$• Cress, iii. 1 (song) 

hast thou not full often struck a ilix.TitusAnd. ii. 1 
single you tliither then this dainty doe — ii. 1 



DOE 

DOE— tonltick ailnlnty ilcic toKroiind.TOui/dii/. II. 2 
DOEK—Iiive, nut I, i» doer rif tVilii.7-trW/»AA'.VA/, iii.4 

all irrvat iIdcm iii n^ir triuic Meat.fnr Mnii. iv. 3 

Id di(rnitl-<l by tin- rl.Kr'n deed AU'i Well, II. 3 

now junlicf on Ilir d'KTsI — v. 3 

talkcra are no fo.«l dcar« Riehard III. 1. 3 

«l)idc this dc-ifl, iMit wu tlip dixTS.Ju/iui Cviar, iii. 1 

tiicm dread it to the- rlo.jr'« thrift. . . . Ci/mhelini; v. 1 

DOKF— <loft' this huliit, slmnie. Taming nf Shrnr, iii. i 

todutf tlic'ir dire distresHCa Machrth, iv. 3 

doff it for ehanie. and liang KmgJulin.'m. 1 

and rna/lc us doff our fasy robcn ....MIrnryty. v. 1 
dofftliv hanicM. yocitli, I am ..Troitutfr Crrii. v. 3 
do idriiw to doff't for our rt'poBe . . Anl. ffClfn. iv. 1 

doffthy name; and fortiiat ItomeoArJutirt,\\.'l 

DDFF'ST— thou doff'st rA'n/.-tlaft«} mc OlMlo, iv. i 
DOG— lilasphcnioui', ini;fiaritablcdog ..Tmipett,i. 1 

tlie wutch-doir< hark — i. 2 (eong) 

tliv dotr. and husli — ii. 2 

liiit you'll 111- like dops — iii. 2 

Crafi my doif be the trpp.).. Tiro Gen, <jf Verona, ii. 3 
no more pity in him than a dog .... — ii. 3 
I am the dojr; no, the doj; is himself — ii. 3 
and I am tiie dojj: O, the dog is mc. — ii. 3 

now the do? all this while — ii. 3 

he that's tied here; Crab, ray dog — ii. 3 

auk my do-' — ii. .'i 

g^,n(' to BC"k IiIh dog — iv. 2 

thuK I would tcaeh a dog — iv. 4 

to lie a doa indeed — iv. 4 

to Ik.', as it were, a dog at all thingii . . — iv. 4 
three or four gentleman-like dogs.... — iv. 4 

out with the dog, lavH one — iv. 4 

to the fellow that wnipn the dogs .... — iv. 4 

vou mean to whip the dog — jv. 4 

t carried mt^^tres!* Silvia tiic dog .... — iv. 4 

Bhe fiays, your dog wa« a cur — iv. 4 

but she received my dog? — iv. 4 

who is a dog as big ail ten of yours .. — iv. 4 

and find my dog again — iv. 4 

'tis a giwJ ilog . . . .' Merry Wivet, i. I 

Iic'h a gooil dog, and a fair dog — i. 1 

whv do your dogs bark BO? — i. I 

shall not have a stone to trowathisdog — i. 4 
liorx: is a curtail dog in some affairs — ii. I 

and give them to a dog for — iii. 5 

I am dog at a <'atrh Twelph Sight, ii. 3 

and some dogs will catch well — ii. 3 

I'd iKat him like a dog — ii. 3 

to give a dog, and, in recompense (rep.) — v. I 
I had rather hear my dog bark at .... Much Ado, i. 1 
an' he had been a dog, that should . . — ii. 3 
I would not hang a dog by my will.. — iii. 3 
to lie used asyou use your dog....i/iVi.iV.'« /)r. ii. 2 

out, dog! out, cur! thou drivct — iii. 2 

with lantern, dog, and bush of thorn — v. 1 
my thorn-bush; and this dog, my doe; — v. I 

the dogs did veil Lnre't L. LotI, iv. 2 (epitaph) 

ope my lips, let no dog bark I . . Merch. of Venice, i. I 
cut-tiiroat dog, and spit upon my .. — i. 3 

hath a dog money? is it possible — i. 3 

another time you called mc — dog .... — i. 3 

as the dog .Jew did utter — ii. 8 

call'dst me dog, before thou Iiadst (rep.) — iii. 3 
and your dogs, and mules, you use .. — iv. 1 
O, be thou damned, inexorable dog! — iv. 1 

not one to throw at a dog Aif you Like i*. i. 3 

dangerdog the heels of worth.. /fU'ii »Ff«,iii. 4 (let.) 
lose the dog for twenty pound. Taming o/S/i. 1 (ind.) 

I take him for the better dog — 1 (ind.) 

wliat dogs are these? where ia — iv. 1 

than a matl dog's tooth Comrdij of Errors, v. 1 

all by the name of dogs; the valued.. jt/acMA, iii. 1 

and tongue of dogs, adder's fork — iv. 1 

throw physic to the dr)gs; I'll none — v. 3 

maidfl of thirteen do of puppy dogs!. Kins' yo/m, "• '!■ 

and like a dog that is compelled — iv. i 

dogs, easily won to fawn on Richard II. iii. 2 

straight shall dog them at their heels — v. 3 
Iiut that sad dog that brings me fixid — v. 5 

are as dank here as a dog MJenry ir.]'i.\ 

to dog his heels and court' sy at — iii. 2 

I would cudgel him like a dog — iii. 3 

where the glutton's dogs licked his tores — iv. 2 
with the great belly, and he my iu^.i Henry IV. i. 2 

so, thou cimmon dog, didst — i. 3 

as familiar A'ith me ail my (log — ii. 2 

down, down, dogs! down, faitors! .. — ii. 4 
die. men, like dogs; give crowns .... — ii. 4 

ond the wild dog shall flesh — iv. 4 

our own door from the dog Henry V. i. 2 

pish for thee, I<\.'land dog! — ii. 1 

«olus, egregious dog? O viixjr vile! .. — ii. 1 

as dogs upfin their masters — ii. 2 

and holdfast is the only dog, my duck ii. 3 

for c/»war(l dogs most s'liend. — ii. 4 

[f'o/.A'ii/.] up to the preach, you dogs! — iii. 2 
disi'iplines, than is a puppy dog .... — iii. 3 

let gallows gajic for dog _ iii. o 

by a slave, no gentler than my dog . . — iv. 5 
what men have I? I>ogsI cowards! ..\HenryVI. i. 2 

for our fierceness, Knglish dogs — i. .'j 

between two dogs, which hath — ii. 4 

is quickly found to Kat a dog 'i Henry VI. iii. 1 

to make dog's leather of. _ iv. 2 

encompassed round with dogs ZHenryVI. ii. I 

dogs howled, and hideous temiicsta .. — v. 6 
should snarl, and bite, and play the dog? — v. 6 

that dogs bark at me. a< I halt Itichard III. i. I 

nnmannercd dog! staiiil thou — i. 2 

Btav, dog. f„r thou shall hear me .... — 1.3 

l» . II. I' , !,Ir.r dog; look — i. 3 

i" ! ' I 1 'log thee at the heels — iv. 1 
" I I I , IiIikhIv dogs, melting — iv. 3 

tiru <;..', i.,;:i I, u,| his" teeth — iv. 4 

live t'l ?:iv, tlK- dog is dead! — iv. 4 

the biwxiy dog is deo<l — v. 4 

dog— then would come some matter.. Vroil.'fCrM. ii.l 

you dog! you scurvy lord ! — il. 1 

a wlioreson dog, that shall palter ... . — ii. a 



[ 191 ] 



DOO— 1« be a dog, a mule, a cat . . Troilut ^Creti. V. I 
fci sec Hector, than not to dog him .. — v. I 
against that dog of as liail a kind .. .. — v. 4 
now bull! now rlog! Mik>. Paris, 'loo! — V. ft 

when thou art Tiinon's dog Timon ofAlheru, i. I 

you arc a dog. Thy mother's (rep,).. — i. I 

dog, or I'll spurn thee hence (rep.) .. — i. I 

or a dog, that secnis a sleeping — i. 2 (grace) 

but tt begear's dog, and give it (rep.) — ii. I 

a plague iijion him, dog! — ii. 2 

a dog; and thou shalt famish, a dog's — ii. 2 

uncover, ilogs, and lap — iii. C 

I do wish th'iu wert adog — iv. 3 

dost not keep a dog whom I would .. — iv. 3 

never clasped; but bred adog — iv. 3 

sfime meilns to keep adog — iv. 3 

I ha/I rather be a beggar's dog — iv. 3 

away, thou issue of a mangy dog!.... — iv. 3 

give t/) (logs what thou deuy'st — iv. 3 

make gold of that: out, rascal dogs! — v. 1 
he's a very dog to the commonalty . . Coriolanua, i. I 

that, dogs must eat; that, meat — i. 1 

as easy, as to set dogs on sheep — ii.l 

make them of no more voice than dogs — ii. 3 

I'd have beaten him like a dog — iv. .'> 

and let slip the dogs of war yufi'ui C'ii>iar, iii. 1 

I had rather be a dog, and bay — iv. 3 

does Ijccoinc a dog that's mad .. Antony f^Cleo. iv. 13 

that rids our dojis of languish? — v. 2 

slave, si^iulless villain, dog! — v. 2 

she'll prove on cats, and dogs Cymheline, i. 6 

whoreson dog! I give him satisiaction? — ii. 1 

lay hands on him; adog — v. 3 

set tlie dogs o' the street to bay me . . — v. 4 

as cats and dogs, of no esteem — v..'; 

I have dogs, my lord, will rouse.. 7'i(m.4ndron. ii. 2 

and therein, liellish dog, thou — iv. 2 

as true a dog as ever fought — v. I 

ay, like a black dog — v. I 

away, inhuman dog! unhallowed .. — v. 3 
you whoreson do"! you slave! you cur! ..Lear, i. 4 

truth's a dog that must to kennel — i. 4 

knowing naught, like dogs, but following — ii. 2 
if" I were your father's dog, you should .. — ii. 2 

dogs, and bears, by the neck — ii. 4 

wolf in greediness, dog in madness — iii.4 

the little dogs and ail. Tray, Blanch .... — iii. G 

dogs leap the hatch, and all are fled — iii. G 

how now, you dog? If you did wear .... — iii. 7 

they fl.attered me like a dog — iv. 6 

seen a farmer's dog bark at a beggar?.... — iv. 6 

a dog's obeyed in office — iv. 6 

mine enemy's dog, though he had — iv. 7 

asemblance that very dogs disdained.... — v. 3 

why should a dog, a horse, a rat — v. 3 

a dog of the house of .Montague. . Romeo f^ Juliet, i. I 

adog of that house shall move — i. I 

that's the dog's name: R is for the dog — ii. 4 
because he hath wakened thy dog .. — iii. 1 

zounds, a dog, a rat, a mouse — iii. 1 

every cat, and dog, and little mouse — iii. 3 
if the sun breed magjjots in a dead dog.Hamlel, ii. 2 
this is counter, you false Danish dogs ., — iv. 

will mew, and dog will have his day — v. 1 

and ofl'ence as my young mistress' ilog.. Othello, ii. 3 
as one would beat his offeuceless dog .... — ii. 3 

better have been Ijom a dog — iii. 3 

but not that do^ I shall tiirow' it to — iv. 1 

inhuman dog! O! O! O! Kill men — v. 1 

1 took by the throat the circumcised dog — v. 2 
<) Spartan dog! more fell than — v. 2 

DOG-APK — of 'two dog-apes Am yf)uLikeil, ii. 5 

Di )fiBKRIlY— neighbour Dogberry. . Much Ado, iii. 3 
DOG-D-W- the dog-days now leign.lIenryVIll. v. 3 

DOGKlSII-dolphin, or dogfish \HenryVI. i. 4 

DO(jr-KOX— dog-fox, Ulysses Troilus ^ Cress, v. 4 

DO(iGED-I have dogged him .. Twelfth Mghl, iii. 2 
we shall be dogged with company. ..M<V(. N. Dr. i. 2 
fill these dogged spies with false.... King- John, iv. 1 
doth dogged war bristle his angry.. .. — iv. 3 

that dogged the mi"hty army 1 Henry VI. iv. 3 

and dogged York, that reaches at ..2 Henry VI. iii. I 
dogged'with two strange followers. 7"roi7. ^ Crest, i. 3 

whose repetition will be dogged Coriolanus, v. 3 

DOfi-HEARTIoD- dog-heartcddaughtcrs.Lfur, iv.3 
DOG-HOl/K— France is a dog-hole .... AlCs H'ell, ii. 3 
DOG-WE.VKY— I'indo5-weary..7'amin4'o/S/i. iv.2 
DOIfiT- les doigts. J/ea ao'igts'! (rep.).. Henry /'.iii.4 
DOIT— will not give a doit to relieve . . Tempest, ii. 2 

and take no doit of usance Merch. of Venice, i. 3 

little .John Doit of Stati'ordshire....2Wcnri^/r. iii. 2 

that doit that e'er I wrested 2 Henry VI. iii. I 

which will not cost a man a doit . . Timon ofAlh. i. 1 

irons of a doit, doublets that Coriolanus^ i. 5 

on a dissension of a doit — iv. 4 

I'd not have given a doit — v. 4 

rCo(.] poor'st diminutives, for doits./ln*."?- CTco. iv. 10 

I cannot be hated one doit Perict/'s, iv. 3 

DOI..\Bf';f.f>A-go to him, Doliil)ella./fn/. ^ Cleo. v. I 
Where's Dolabclla, to second (.rep.).. — v. 1 
Dolabclla. it shall content me best .. — v. 2 
I>olabel la? madam, as thereto sworn — v. 2 
Dolaliella, I shall remain your debtor — v. 2 
there's Dolabclla sent from Cxsar .. — v. 2 
come, Dolabclla, see high onler in .. — v. 2 

DOIjE— happy man be his dole! Merryll'ires, iii. 4 

what dreadful dole is here? ....Mid. N. Dream, v. I 

making such pitiful dole over As you Like it, i. 2 

and what dole of honour, flies where.. All's Well, ii. 3 

luippy man be hisdolc! Tamimi of Shrew, i. I 

happy man lie his dole! ll'inler'sTale, i. 2 

hapiiy man lie his dole, say I IHenrylV. ii. 2 

in the dole of blows, your son 2 Henry IV. i. \ 

(omit we all their dole and wtyv). Pericles, iii. (Gow.) 
ciiual scale weighing delight and dole . . Hrimlrl, i. 2 
D<JLEFUl.-if it beilolcful mattcr.ifmfcr'r/'ate, iv.3 
here's one, to a ycr>" doleful tune .... — iv. 3 
wlio chants a dolef'ul hj'inn to his . . King John, v. 7 

abridge my rloleful daysl 2Henrt/lV.ii. 4 

doleful dumps the mlud . . Uomeo ^ Jul. iv. 5 (song) 



DOO 

DOLI>— will you have Doll Tcor«heet.2H™ry;r. ii. 1 



- ii. 
ii. 2 
ii. 4 
ii. 4 
ii. 4 
ii. 4 
ii. 4 
ii. 4 
ii. 4 
ii. 4 
ii. 4 
V. S 

— V. 5 



Quick ly, and mi»lres« Doll Tcamliect 
this Doll Tearsheet should be some.. 

how now, mistress Doll? 

you make fat rascals, mirtrcsa Doll., 
diseases. Dill; we cateli of you, Doll 

hork thee hither, mistress Doll 

sit on my knee, Doll 

Iieacc, good Doi I ! do not six-ak 
lissmeDoll. fiaturn and Venus .. 
farewell, Doll; you sec, good wenches 

O run, Doll: run, run, good Doll 

thy Doll, and Helen of thy noble 

for Doll is in; I'ist^il siieaks 

kind, IVjH Tearsheet she by name IlenryV. i 

rc/.] that my Doll isdead — v. I 

' DOI,I,Ali— a dollar Tempest, ii. I 

j to three thousand dollars a year .Meat, for .Mens. i. 2 

ten thousand 'lol lars to our general .... .Vae'jeth^ i. 2 

D<)I..')K<)US — in too dolorous a eenee.Ant.'^Cleo. iv. 2 

DOLOUR — dolour cimes to him Tempest, ii. 1 

anthem of my endless dolour.. Two Oen. of Ver. iii. 1 

one sign of dolour t^i another Winter's Tale, v. 2 

yelled out like syllable of dolour .Vnclielh, iv. 3 

to breathe the abundant dolour of . . Richard II. i. 3 
Andromaf;lie shrills her dolours. '/"roiVM ^Ctets. v. 3 

being all to dolours turned? Cymbeline, v. 4 

slialt have as many dolours for thy I^ar, ii. 4 

D<JL1'HIN— on tlie dolphin's iyac\i...TwelfthNi^hl,i. i 

a mermaid, on a dolphin's tjack Mid. \. Dr. ii. 2 

why, your dolphin is not lustier All' s Welt, ii. 3 

sitting in my dolphin chamter 2Henry IV. ii. 1 

I'ucelle or puzzel, dolphin or dog-flsh. I H^nryf/. i. 4 

ilolphin mv l»oy, my bov, sessa Lear, iii. 4 

DOLl'UIN-DIKE-wcre dolphin-like..4n(..va<>o. v. 2 

DOl/i'— asses, fools, doltsl .... Troilui Sf Cretsida, i. 2 

diminutives, to dolt [C'o/.-fordoits]..47i«..5- C(fo. iv. 10 

Ogulli Odolt! as ignorant as dirt! Othello, v. 2 

DOMESTIC— malice domestic, foreign. Jlfac6«/A, iii. 2 
domestic broils clean over-blown . . Richard III. ii. 4 

your words, domestics to you Henry VIII. ii. 4 

justice, truth, domestic awe.. . Timon of Alliens, iv. 1 

domestic fury, and fierce civil Julius Crrsar, iii. 1 

equality of two domestic powers. . Antony fy Cleo. i. 3 

servants, than th^vself domestic officers. . Cymb. iii. 1 

for theise domestic and particular broils . . Lear, v. I 

to manage private and domestic quarrel. OW^Uo, ii. 3 

DO.MIjrATlOX- usurp the dominations. ./oAn, ii. 1 

DO.MIXAT(JR-Eoledominatorof.tore'«L.L.i. 1 (let.) 

.Saturn is dominator over mine .. Titus Andron. ii. 3 

maL'ne Dominator iHili, tarn lentus .. — iv. 1 

DO.^^IN"E— a verse; lege, domine..toBe'j /,. Lost, iv. 2 

nc intelligisdomine? — v. 1 

DO.M rXEE R-revel and domineer. Taming ofSh. iii. 2 
DOMINEERING— 

domineering pedant o'er the hoy. Love's L. Lost, iii. I 

DOMINICAL— my red dominical .... — v. 2 

DO.MINION-out of our dominions. Winler'sTale, ii. 3 

sliall tythe or t<jil in oiu- dominions. Ki/i? John, iii. 1 

shall not regreet our fair dominions.. /(/c/iart/ //. i. 3 

bom out of your dominions Henry I' III. ii. 4 

he take me in his dominions.. Cyinbeline, iii. 2 (let.) 

trunk be found in our dominions Lear,i. I 

your dominions for this enterprise Hamlet, ii. 2 

DO.UITIUS- more, Domitius . . Antony ^ Oeo. iii. 5 
he will not fight with me, Domitius.. — iv. 2 
DON— what! should I don this rotKTilus Andron. i. 2 
DONAXBAIN— chamber? Donalbain..A/a<:6e/A, ii. 2 
Banquo, and Donalbain! Malcolm! .... — ii. 3 
Slalcolm and Donalbain. the king's two — ii. 4 
and for Donalbain to kill their gracious — iii. 6 

who knows, if Dgnalbain be with — v. 2 

DON ATKJN— some donation freely Tempest, iv. I 

put my wealth into donation.. Timon of Athens, Hi. 2 
native of our so frank donation .. ..Coriolanus, ill. I 

nature's end in the donation Cymbeliw, v. 5 

DONCASTER-thatoatliatDonca8ter.lH«iry/f.v. 1 
forgot j'our oath to us at Doncaster. . — v. I 

DONfi— ding-dong l>ell Tempest, i. 2 (song) 

DONNE — donne mille rernercimens . . Henn/ V. iv. 4 

DONNED— have donned his helm ...Ant.^Cleo. ii. I 

he rose, and donned his ciothes.. Hamlet, iv. 5 (song) 

DONNER — de vous donner la lilierte .. Henry V. iv. 4 

I3(JNNERAY — donneray deux cents escus — iv. 4 

DOO.M— to fly his deailly doom-.TwoGen. of Ver. iii. 1 

she hath ottered to the doo:n .... — iii. I 

held me glad of such a doom .... — iv. I 

stand till the perpetual doom Merry Wives, v. 5 

hath repented o'er his doom Meas.for Meas. ii. i 

firm and irrevocable is mv doom. . As you Like it, i. 3 
by the doom of death, en*! woes ..Comedy of Err. i. I 

and see the great doom's image Macbeth, ii. 3 

stretch out to the crack of doom? — iv. I 

alter not tlie doom forethought ....King John, iii. I 

for thee remains a heavier doom Richard II. i. 3 

blows with tliee for our day of doom — iii. 2 
kingly doom, and sentence of his (rep.) — v. 6 

that, in his secret doom, out I Henry IV. iii. 2 

hath given the doom of death Henry V. iii. 6 

thou hear'st thy di lom 1 Hen ry VI. i v. I 

this doom, my lord, if I may judge . .illenryVI. i. 3 
law, and this duke Humphrey's doom — i. 3 

greatly who impugns our doom — iii. 1 

exiicct your highness' dixim, of life .. — iv. 9 

revoke tliat doom of mercy illenryVI.ii. 6 

by whose injurious doom — iii. 3 

triumph, Henry, in thy day of doom — v. 6 

a tongue to iloom my brother's Richard III. ii. I 

to doom the offenders — iii.4 

be not fixed in iliKini perpetual — iv. 4 

all uimvoidcd is the doom of destiny — iv. 4 

and the g^xts d*Kiin him after! Corir-lanus, i. 8 

breath, I hear the doom of Egypt. ./In/. tyCleo. iii. II 
the death of Antony is not a single dfxim — v. I 
this is the day of doom for Basslanus. Titus .ind. ii. 3 

reverse the doom of death — iii. 1 

with their tongues doom men to death — iii. I 
my everlasting doom of banishincnt — iii. I 

in his rage, will doom her death — iv. 2 

tliis is our doom: aoiDC stay — t. 3 



DOO 

DOOM— obedient to their doom.. Pcricies, iii. (Gower) 
reverse thy doom i; /inf. -reserve thy state].. L^'ar.i. 1 
the prince will doom thee death. Romeo ^Juliel,\n. 1 

sound the general doom! — }}]■- 

what is the prince's doom? — '.'.!•'' 

prince's doom. What less than (re/).) — in. 3 
displant a town, reverse a prince's doom — lii. 3 
as anainst the doom, is thought-sick . . Hamlet, iu. 4 

DOOSlED-art doomed to die . . Comedy of Errors, i. 1 
he doomed this beauty to a grave . . Kins; John. w. 3 

is doomed a prisoner by proud Ricli ard II. v. 1 

nobly doomed; we'll learn our CymbeUne, y. f> 

dridmcd for a certain term to walk Uamlel. .i. 5 

DDOMSUAY— till doomsday here. .. f-ore's L. L. iv. 3 

she lives till doomsday Comedy o/ Errors, iii. 'i 

doomsdav is near; die all \HcnrvIV.\v. 1 

dav is my body's doomsday Richard IH-v^- 1 

and run, as it were doomsday . . Julius Crcsar, iii. 1 

leave to play till doomsday Anlony^Cleo.y. 2 

doomsday is the prince's doom?. Romeo ^Juliet, hi. 3 
marriage-day was Tybalt's doomsday — v. 3 
sick almost to doomsday witli eclipse . . Hamlel.i. 1 

then is doomsday near — ii. 2 

houses, that he makes, last till doomsday — v. 1 

DOOR— turn my mercy out of doors . . Tempest, iii. 2 
ay, but the doors be loek'd..r«-oGen.o/reroiin, iii. 1 

I'will peat the door for Merry Ifivcs, i. 1 

shall turn your head out of my door — i. 4 

here's mistress Page at the door — iii. 3 

jealous knave their master in the door — iii. 5 

watch the door with pistols — iv. 2 

to meet him at the door with it — iv. 2 

your master is hard at door — iv. 2 

out of my door, you witch! — iv. 2 

stand at her doors Twelfth Night, i. 4 

he'll stand at your door like — i. 5 

and bid him turn you out of doors . . — ii. 3 

let the garden door be shut — iii. 1 

doth command a little door Meas. for Meas. iv. I 

up at the door of a brothel-house Mucli .Ido. i. 1 

watch about signior Leonato's door.. — iii. 3 
sweep the dust behind the door . . Mid. N. Dream, v. 2 
came out of door, and stayed tlie.-ioi'e'sL. L. iii. 1 
came out of door, staying the odds . . — iii. 1 
another knocks at the door. . Merchant of Venice, \. 2 
lock up my doors; and when you hear — ii. 5 

shut doors after you: fast bind — ii. 5 

I will make fast the doors, and gild.. — ii. a 

he's ready at the door — iv. 1 

here at the door, and importunes.. JJf(/o^i hilicit,\. 1 

come not within these doors . — ii. 3 

well, push him out of doors — iii. 1 

make the doors upon a woman's wit — iv. 1 

knocked too often at my door All's Well, iv. 1 

ye were beatou out of door.. Taming of Sh . i (indue") 

the door is oijen sir, there lies — iii. 2 

what, no man at door, to hold — iv. 1 

that come unto my father's door — iv. 3 

sir, here's the door, this is Lucentio's — v. 1 

and is here at the door to speak — v. 1 

lioncc with her, out o' door Winter's Tale, ii. 3 

some behind door work — iii. 3 

did but hear the pedlar at the door . . — iv. 3 

why, they stay at door, sir — iv. 3 

still lies out o door Comedy of Errors, ii . 1 

soft, my door is locked — iii. I 

either get thee from tlie door — iii. 1 

go, get thee from the door (rep.) — iii. i 

theBoors are made against you — iii. I 

since mine own dooi-s refuse — iii. 1 

locking me out of my doors by day . . — iv. 1 

shnt the doors against his way — iv. 3 

driven out of doors with it — iv. 4 

shall beg with it from door to door . . — iv. 4 

upon me the guilty doors were — iv. 4 

were not my doors locked up — iv. 4 

she shut the doors upon me — v. 1 

against his murderer shut the door .... Macbeth, i. 7 

tlie doors are open — ii. 2 

this is the door. I'll make so — ii. 3 

now to the door, and stay there. . , — iii. 1 

at mine hostess' door, teach us King John, ii. 1 

tui-ning disiiiteous torture out of door! — iv. 1 
meet displeas\n*e further from the doors — v. 1 
even at your door, to cudgel you .... — v. 2 
not out at windows, nor at doors .... — v. 7 

out of the weak door of our — T. 7 

open the door, secure fool-hardy Richard II. v. 3 

open tlie door, or I mil break it open — v. 3 

pity me, open the door — v. 3 

,at the door, shall I let themiu(rep.).lHen;!/ZF. ii. 4 

hostess, clap to the doors — ii. 4 

there is a nobleman of the court at door — ii. 4 
a most monstrous watch, is at the door — ii. 4 
is the wind in that door, i'faith? .... — iii. 3 

shut the door; there comes no 2HenryIF. ii. 4 

swaggerer comes not in my doors — ii. 4 

have you turned him out of doors? . . — ii. 4 

so loud at door? look to the door — ii. 4 

a dozen captains stay at door for you — ii. 4 
debate that bleedeth at oiu' doors .... — iv. 4 

how now? rain within doors — iv. 4 

this door is open; he is gone this way — iv. 4 

look who's at door there: ho! — V 3 

as nail in door: the things I speak .. — v. 3 

cannot defend our own door from Henry V. i. 2 

chide this Dauphin at his father's door — i. 2 

up for example at their doors 2 Henry I'l. iv. 2 

brought hira to thedoor of death?..3He)tr.'//'/. iii. 3 

contempt shut door upon me HenryVlll. ii. 4 

shame to make me wait else at door. . — v. 2 
who iiolds his state at door, 'niongst.. — v. 2 

and at the door too like a post — v. 2 

sweep thera from the door with cannons — v. 3 

keep the door close, sirrah — v. 3 

what a fry of fornication is at door !. . — v. 3 

a til low somewhat near the door — v. 3 

I stalk about her door, like.. Troilus ^Crcssida,\u.2 
wliat, are all the doors open here? . ... — iv. 2 
who's that at door? good uncle — iv. 2 



[192] 



DOOR— will you beat down the door?'/Vot(.!S-Cr. iv. 2 
have thee tlirust me out of doors . . Timon of Ath. i. 2 

men shut their doors against — i. 2 

doors, that were ne'er acquainted .. — iii. 3 
what, are my doors opposed acainst.. — iii. 4 
not out of doors. Not out of doors!. Cortoianus, i. 3 

turn thy solemness out o' door — i. 3 

pray, go to the door — iv. .'j 

your brother Cassius at the door. . Julius Carsar, ii. 1 
as rushing out of doors to be resolved — iii. 2 

to wander forth of doors — iii. 3 

Lucius and Titinius guard our door — iv. 2 

will make no wars without doors. /-In/on)/ ^-Cleo. ii. 1 

that is out of door, most rich! Cymbelinc, i. 7 

attendyou here the door of our stern — ii. 3 
her doors locked? not seen of late? .. — iii. 5 
the bier at door, and a demand who — iv. 2 

with my sword I'll keep this door safe. Tiius.-lnd. i. 2 

^knock at my door, and tell me — iv. 3 

ripriglit at their dear friends' doors . . — v. 1 

to make me ope the door — v. 2 

not annss to keep our door hatched Pericles, iv. 3 

to me the very doors and windows savour — iv. B 
she had never come within my doors! . . — iv. 6 
and keep in-a-door, and thou shalt have..Lcfir, i. 4 

or at their chamber door I'll beat — ii. 4 

shut up your doors; he is atteuded — ii. 4 

your doors, my lord; 'tis a wild night .. — ii. 1 

than this rain-water out o' door — iii. 2 

injunction be to bar my doors — iii. 4 

that now is going out of door? . . . Romeo t,- Juliet, i . 5 

nor so wide as a church door — iii. 1 

O shut the door, and when thou hast — iv. 1 
sealed up the doors, and would not . . — v. 2 

you the doors of breath, seal with.. — v. 3 

for out o' doors he went without Hamlet, ii. 1 

let the doors be shut upon him — iii. 1 

bar the door upon your own liberty — iii. 2 

let them guard the door — iv. 5 

the doors are broke. Where is this king? — iv. S 

1 thank you: keep the door — iv. 5 

are your doors locked? Why? Othello, i. 1 

not to haunt about my doors — i. 1 

you are pictures out of doors, bells in. . . . — ii. I 
liere at the door; I pray you call them in — ii. 3 

lead directly to the door of truth — iii. 3 

leave procreauts alone, and shut the door — iv. 2 

speak within door. O fye upon him! — iv. 2 

come, guard the door without — v. 2 

DOORKEEPER— 

avaunt, thou damned doorkeeper! .... Pericles, iv. 6 

thou'rt the damned doorkeeper to every — iv. 6 

DOOR-NAIL— dead as a door-nail..2Henr!/r/. iv. 10 

DORCAS-those flowers there, Dorcas. Winter' sT. iv. 3 

DOREUS— hath Doreus prisoner . . Troil. ^ Cress, v. 5 

DORICLES-O Doricles, your praises. Winter's T. iv. 3 

might fear, my Doricles, you wooed me — iv. 3 

they call him Doricles; and he boasts — iv. 3 

if young Doricles do light upon her. . — iv. 3 

DORMOtlSE-your dormouse valoiu- . rwei/z/i A', iii. 2 

DOROTHY— mistress Dorothy 2 Henry IF. ii. 4 

I know you, mistress Dorothy — ii. 4 

to Dorotny ray woman hie thee CymbeUne, ii. 3 

DORSET— Rivers, and Dorset Richard Ul.i.% 

[Kni.j to be revenged on Riv.ers, Dorset — i. 3 
nor your son Dorset, Buckingham . . — ii. 1 

Dorset, embrace him; Hastings — ii. 1 

look I so pale, lord Dorset — ii. I 

O Dorset, speak not to me, get thee . . — iv. I 
the marquis Dorset, as I hear, is fled — iv. 2 

Dorset is fled to Richmond — iv. 2 

Dorset your son, that, with a fearful — iv. ■) 

shall call thy Dorset— brother — iv. 4 

stirred up by Dorset, Buckingham . . — iv. 4 
and lord marquis Dorset, 'tis said — — iv. 4 
marquis Dorset: and that the earl. Henii/ f'///. iv. 1 
and ladv marquis Dorset; will these — v. i 
DORSETSHIRE— in Dorsetshire . . Richard III. iv. 4 
DOTAGE-bestowed this dotage on ms.MuchAdo, ii. 3 
hold one an opinion of another's dotage — ii. 3 
her dotage now I do begin to ^ilj.Mid. N.'s Dr. iv. 1 
banish your dotage; banish usury, rim. ofAih. iii. 5 
but this dotage of our general's .. Antony^ Cleo. i. 1 

or lose myself in dotage — i- 2 

that scope his dotage gives it Lear, i. 4 

he may enguard his dotage with their . . — ii. 4 

indiscretion finds, and dotage terms — — ii. 4 

or voluntary dotage of some mistress . . Othello, iv. 1 

DOTANT— such a decayed dotant . . Coriolanus, v. 2 

DOTARD— I speak not like a dotard. . Much Ado, v. 1 

away with the dotard Taming of Shreu', v. 1 

dotard, thou art woman-tired Winter's Tale, ii. 3 

a child that guided dotards CymbeUne, i. I 

DOTE— to dote thus on such luggage?.. Tempest, iv. 1 
seest me dote upon my love — TwoGen. ofVer. ii. 4 

how shall I dote on her — _ii. 4 

you dote on her, that cares — iv. 4 

a woman so dote upon a man .... Merry Wives, ii. 2 
mistaken, seems to dote on me . . Twelfth NiglU, ii. 2 

and dote upon the exchange Much Ado, ii. 1 

she should so dote on signior Benedick — ii. 3 
if he do not dote on her upon tliis . . — ii. 3 
dotes, devoutly dotes, dotes in..il/i(/.A'.'sDrcam, i. 1 
as you on him, Demetrius dote on you! — i. 1 
madly dote upon the next live creature — ii. 2 
whicli she must dote on in extremity — iii. 2 
how I love thee! how I dote on thee! — iv. l 
which in my childhood I did dote upon — iv. 1 

where all alike do dote Love'sL.Lost, iv. 3 

when wit doth dote; since all — y. 2 

but I dote on his very absence. .i^/erc/i. of Venice, i. 2 
is there yet another dotes upon . . As you Like (7,1.2 

Mars dote on vou for his novices! All's Well, ii. 1 

fir thyself, and I will dote ..Comedy of Errors, iii. 2 

of death doth make me dote — v. 1 

thy age and dan:-'ers make thee dote. . — v. 1 

as much they love and dote on Henry VIII. ij. 1 

and the will dotes, tliat is . . Troilus Sf Cressida. ii. 2 

tliree, that Rome should dote on Coriolanus, ii. 1 

has sorrow made tlieu dote already?. Titus And. iii. 2 



DOU 



DOTE— so old, to dote on her for any tiling. Lear, i. 4 

I know, the drossy age dotes on Hamlet, v. 2 

and I dote in mine own comforts Othello, ii. 1 

who dotes, yet doubts; suspects — iii. 3 

it is ;i, creature, that dotes on Cassio .... — iv. 1 

DOTED— whom they doted on •2Henry IV. iv. 1 

DOTER-should ravish doters with.i.o?'e'ji..ios(, iv. 3 
DOTETH— doteth on her Mortimer.. I«e«ry/;'. iii. 1 
DOTING- with a doting observance. A/en-i/ Wives, ii. 2 
as he errSj doting on Ilermia's eyes.. Mid. N. Dr. i. 1 
peace, doting wizard, peace . . Comedy of Errors, iv. 4 
old folk, time's doting chronicles . .'iHenrylV. iv. 4 
doth gape, and doting death is near . . Henry V.W. 1 
than is the doting title of amother.Ric/iiirii III. iv. 4 
that same scurvy doting foolish . . Troil. Sy Cress, v. 4 
and like a doting mallard, leaving.Anl. fyCleo. iii. 8 
and they them for fear and doting . . — iii. y 
for doting, not for loving, pupil nune.Rom.SfJul. ii. 3 
Tybalt murdered, doting like me. . . . — iii. 3 
that, doting on his own obsequious .... Othello, i. 1 

DOUBLE— a thrice double ass was I Tempest, v. 1 

I'll double your folly Two Gen. of Verona, ii. 4 

is there not a double excellency.. Merry Wives, iii. 3 
double gilt of this opportunity .. Twelfth Night,'m. 2 
with allher double vigom', art . . Meas. for Meas. ii. 2 
double and treble admonition, and still — iii. 2 
being criminal, in double violation.. — v. 1 
a double heart for his single one .... Much Ado, ii. 1 
there's a double meaning in that .... — ii. 3 
there's a double tongue, there's two _— v. I 
snakes, with double tongue .. Mid.N.Dr. ii. 3 (song) 
pays the hearing double recompense — iii. 2 
like to a double cherry, seeming parted — iii. 2 

when every thing seems double — iv. 1 

to every power a double power. . Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 

you have a double tongue within — v. 2 

my griefs are double — v. 2 

double ducats stolen from me. .Merch.of Venice, ii. A 

double six thousand, and then — iii. 2 

swear by yom- double self — v. 1 

an' he were double and double a lori. All' sWell, ii. 3 

you do me double wrong Taming of Shrew, iii. 1 

fans, and double change of bravery .. — iv. 3 

now with a double occasion Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

for then yon kill her double — v. 3 

't is doulile wrong, to trnsLWi.. Comedy of Errors, iii. 2 

overcharged with double cracks Macbeth, i. 2 

and then done double, were poor .... — i. 6 

he's here in double trust — i. 7 

double, double toil and trouble (rep.') — iv. 1 
I'll make assurance double sure .... — iv. 1 

palter with us in a double sense — y. 7 

wdiy answer not the double majesties. Kin^/o/tn,ii. 2 

to be possessed with double pomp — iv. 2 

some reasons of this double coronation — iv. 2 

whose double tongue may Richard II. iii. 2 

he does me double wrong that wounds — iii. 2 
paying back, 't is a double labour. . 1 HenrylV. iii. 3 

as if he mastered there a double — v. 2 

one England brook a double reign .. — v. 4 

I am not a double man — v. 4 

who with a double surety binds . . . .iHenrylV. i. 1 
your chin double? your wit single?.. — i. 2 
rumour doth double, like the voice . . — iii. 1 
is old Double of your town living yet? — iii. 2 

and is old Double dead! — iii. 2 

England shall double gild — iv. 4 

tliis is a double honour. Burgundy. 1 Henry VI. iii. 2 
a pot of good double beer, neighbour.2 Henry VI. ii. 3 
this knave's tongue begins to double — ii. 3 

in life, but double death — iii- 2 

a double shadow to Henry's body . .3Henry VI. iv. 6 

with double riches of content Richard III. iv. 4 

ten times double gain of happiness .. — iv. 4 
be ever double, both in his words . . Henry VIII. iv. 2 
this double worship, where one .... Coriolanus, iii. 1 

whose double bosoms seem — iv. 4 

make the greatest kiug double! CymbeUne, i. 7 

CLoten, thou double villain — iv . 2 

as if a double hunt were heard . . Titus Andron. ii . 3 

sorrow flouted at is double death — iii. 1 

fifty yet dotli double five-and-twenty Lear, ii. 4 

should deal double with her .... Romeo ^-Juliei, ii. 4 

a double blessing is a double grace Hamlet, i. 3 

like a man to double business bound.... — iii. 3 
and set a double varnish on the fame .... — iv. 7 

his double vouchers, his recoveries — v. 1 

of his purchases, and double ones too — v. 1 

a voice potential as double as the duke's. 0/AeHo, i. 2 

a double knavery ,— how ? how ? — i.3 

he'll watch the horologe a double set .... — ii. 3 

tlrerefore be double damned, swear — iv. 2 

DOUBLE-CHARGE- 

double-charge thee with dignities ..2HenryIV. v. 3 

DOUBLED— ill deeds are do lib led. Comerfy of Err. iii. 2 

foul words doubled down his throat .Richard II. i. 1 

shall still be doubled on her Henry VIII. v. 4 

do return those talents, doubled. ri?non<i/.i4<Aens,i. 2 

when straight his doubled spirit Coriolanus, ii. 2 

the last of many doubled kisses . . Antony ^ Cleo. i. 5 

double-deaLer- 

a sinner, to be a double-dealer. . . . TwelfthNight, v. 1 
to make thee a double-dealer Much Ado, v. 4 

double-dealing— 

it would be double-dealing, sir . . TirelflhKight, v. 
DOUBLE-EATAL-double-fatal yewRicliardllL iii. 2 
DOUBLE-HENNED- 

now mv double-henned sparrow! TroiiUKj- Cress, v. 8 
DOUBLE-MEANING— 

like a double-meaning prophcsier.. ..All's Well, iv. 3 

DOUBLENESS-thedoublencssof.Jli™. /or iVea. iii. 1 

DDUBLER— with doubler tongue.. M/d. N. Dr. iii. 2 

DOUBLET-is not, sir, my doublet as fresh. Te>npesi,\\.\ 

my jerkin is a doublet .... Two Gen. of Verona, ii. 4 

in your doublet and hose Merry Wives, iii. 1 

shall make thee a new doublet and hose — iii. 3 
thy doublet of changeable tatfeta . . TwelfthNight, ii. 4 
carving the fashion of a new doublet. Much.4do, ii. 3 
from the hip upward, no doublet ... . — iii. 2 
the fashion of a doublet, or a hat .... — iii. 3 



DOU 



[ 193 ] 



DOW 



DOlIBIiKT— in lii" doublet nnd linm;.. Muc>i Ado, v. 1 
"he Slight hU ,l.ml.U.t in U«l.v..M"r/j. nf IVmr. .. -i 

I liuv.-iiii..Mi.ii'tiiMahi.^e — !!!•; 

shnll I .U. with M.y .l..ul.lut rt.i.l hose.' - M- ■ 

IIZ tinu.s tluM.st llu„u,.h tl,.; .l..ublet - u- •! 

unless yo\i (.mvo me ynur .Imil.Iet •• •• ..• •. 

off«-itftyo..r.l...il.let.|vm-kly iH,-n,^l /.,1^>- ^ 

^;;r cll^kirutonbl' is! 1 thlnkV::Hej.r!/.';///. i- ' 

.1 iihlut< that hiinmi.uii woulil \mry..Conolanus, . 5 

e' , K-k.^1 me ope his .l„„l.U.t ^"'""C^'f ''"•„•/ ^ 

3^il^^rt;;\l^xl;Mi^::n.e.::.;;i^^;^|:; 



he m 
tiotli 
let II 
mv tond 
doiihl 



'loubly 

(lonl.lv iv.h.ul.lc.l sti-..U 



;in..l.lv rwUmble.!. 



All's li:n.' 
.MucMh, 
idwrdll. 



i. ;i 



il..i.l>l.\ 



ovitiloiie his for 

Dianvi'-wiioh 

1 n..t.loulit, he 
lnit.l..iilits,\isL' 
ami, "o.loul.l. 
as. I iv.tdmibt 
she i.Kikes no .1 
I doi.ht, he 1 



.11.111 piirtuuUiscd 

•eil-Um\n\cn — X- ' 

on.Kil with will. . . . Trolltu fj-Crm.i. 3 
..iiiKT ilee.ls doubly . . Corwiaiius, ii. 1 

l.„,l. no il.illht Trmp.sl,]. 2 

•anie alive to land — !|- ' 

verv there - "■ 

lurketable — ^■ 

Oiall make — ■*'• ' 

nbt of that. Two Gen. of terona, V. i 
Jtferryllitws, 1. 4 



he will print them out of doubt., 
doetors doubt that: if Anne Page 



_ ii. 1 

V.lnnbt not '^"^^.Taelflh Night, ii. 3 

^^h'th^'whiX I'donbt u,U ....... -V. Uletl.ro 

1 doubt-ouv doubts are traitors.. .Wmj./oi Mi-as.i. J 
von know the character, I doubt not — iv- - 
he meet with von. I doubt it not .... Much Ado, i. 

were you in doubt, sir, that you — .!• 

null I'diHibt not but to fashion It .... — .n- 
,l,.uht not but success will fashion .. — '^ J 
hail wc fon^'ht, I doubt, we should . . — ..\ '^ 
out of hope ..fiiuestion, doubt.. iVirf- N.Drcciiu, in. - 
ii,..l..nbt thev rose up early, to observe — jv. I 

o\itofdonbt.lieistransp.irted — \'--- 

I lb. not doubt but to hear them say T , , ' ; ■; 

fine when he should savdoubt Lore sL.L. v. I 

thev made a doubt, presence - v. - 

and I make no iloubt, the rest — . ^• f 

lint of (hnil.t woiil.l make me sad.Mer. of Venice, i. 1 

I do n.it .l..nbt, as I will watch — !• 

an.lout of .loiibt, voudomenow — !• J 

will no .lonbt, never be chosen — ..!■ - 

in a'd.iuht whether those peals ...... -.,"'• T 

to make these doubts all even ....Asijou Like i(, \ . i 

ifany man d.iuht that, let him •••;••, ,,.-., .J/ ' 
doubt not hut heaven liath hrought...-lH »".'", n- 4 
if it were, doubt not, her care., iumin^o/ .-.hreir.u 
T d..ubt it n.it. sir: but you will .... - "■ ' 

no d.mbt, but he hath got a quiet — ,\\- ' 

ari;ning still upim that doubt... — '.''• | 

if thou doubt it, thou ma.y3t slide.... — P-- 

then whereloreshouldldoubt.'...... - ly f 

but that's past .lonbt; you have . . 'f mle, slnle,i. f 

then, 't were past all doubt — .!!• :; 

I doubt not then, but innocence — !!!• - 

arrive, shall clear that doubt — ])!■ f 

and doubt not, sir, but she vnU.Comedy of hir. in. i 

notorious shame, I doubt it not — p-' 

iK.w.outofdouht, Antipholusi.1 .... — }}•■> 
bonn.l in to saucy doubts and fears ..Ma('.e//i, i.n. 4 
I doubt, some danger does approach — iv- - 

where I did And my doubts — ly- ^ 

shall never sag" with doubt, nor shake — ^ ■ ■' 

we doubt it notning ■. — ;• } 

an.i l)Cgin to doubt the equivocation — \- f 
of that! doubt, as all men's children. AuifJo/m,;. 1 

ay, who doubts that? a will'. — .;.'■{ 

hang no more in doubt — '"• ' 

but that I doubt my uncle practises. . — 

an eve of doubt upon my face — 

findit, Dauphin, do not doubt — 

I doubt, he will be dead, or ere I come — 

but 'tis doubt, when time shall Hichnr 

urge doubts to them that fear 



iv. 1 

iv. 2 

v. 2 

V. 6 

.( ;/. i. 4 

_ ii. 1 

_ ill. 4 



and deposed, 'tis doubt, he will be 

T doubt not but to ride as fast. .......— „ ■. - - 

but. I doubt, they will be too hard ..\Uenrij II .]■ i 

well, I doubt not but to die — ."• ^ 

doubt not, my lord, they shall — Jv- ' 

to end one doubt by death iHenri/ 1 f. iv. 1 

I d.) not doubt you. I am glad — 'V- j 

l...th which, we doubt not but your.. — ,".\\ 
will I tloubt, prove mine own mamng — (epil.; 
no iloubt, ga-w like the sunimer-grass..H(?nr!/»'. i. 1 
no doubt, mv liege, if each man (top.) — ii. ^ 
we doubt not of a fair and lucky war — !!• ^ 
we doubt not now, but ever>- rub " ' 

your breeiling: which I doubt not 
out of d.mbt, the organs, though . 
out (.f doubt. Ix; of the same relish .. 
[/>)(. K.i/.". doubt them with suiierfluous — ■». ' 
out .jf doubt, and out of questions too — v, 1 

I doubt not, hut with honour 1 Hfnn/' /. ii. » 

will, Idoul)t it not, see vou well ....ilhnryl I. i. 4 

oiiour side (Umbt uot of victory — iv. 8 

and iloubt not BO to deal • „ ~" ,,,'^' „ 

1 doubt not, uncle, of our victory. ...aWMri/f^':.!- £ 

b.it answer ine one doubt — 

and .Montague, resolve my doubt — 

whv ..tauil y.iu in adoubt? — 

I d^inbt n.it, r, but wc sholl soon — 

doiil.t ii..t of tliedav; and(rrp.) — 

the .l.iul.t is. that he will «cducc .... — 
for tliey, no doubt, will iiauc out ftKain — 



— iii. 1 
_ iv. 1 

— iv. 1 



I 



— iv. I 

— iv. 2 
_ iv. 4 
_ V. 2 
_ V. 3 

,1/ ;■;//. i.3 



ii. 'i 



DOUBT— no iloul.t, no doubt; and so.Richard III. \. 1 
and.nodoubt.riglit royal............ - "• 2 

there's no. lonbt, his majesty will.... - .;• J 

himself, no d..ul.l,shal^hen. ....... - »■ -i 

u,. ilo.d.t, he is. my gnu-loUH tn')).) .. - 
no doubt, n.. d..iibt; O tis a parlous — 

lui.l do n..t il.nibt, right noble princes — 

doubt ...it, inv lo.-d; I'll play :•• — 

ii.> doubt we'll bring it to a happy issue — 
make no iloubt, us haiipy by his reign — 
uo.li.ubl.sli.irtly be rid of me. . .. .. .. - 

will no doubt, t.'uii.t him t.i anything — 

no doubt the ..iiirdeio.is knife was .. - 

1 doubt not, but bi> fiielids will .... - 

pri.vr all true? no iloubt, my lord.... 

no iliuil.t, he's noble; he liail He 

at his return, no doubt, he will requite 

\ini do not doubt mv faith, sir? 

doubts, wringing of the conscience .. 

eounsel whidi I had, to doubt ....... 

ever i asts such doubts, as false coin. . 

nodiiubt in tinu> will tiud their 

no doubt', sball thank you .... ...... 

deserv.i more. Ves, without all doubt 

I make as little doubt, as you do .... 

room no doubt, left for the ladies.... 

I doubt he lie luirtj fare ye welLTcoiJus i^-Crm.J. f 

bill nioi'le4 doubt is called the 

and doubt thou not, brave boy.... .. . 

O, no doubt, .uv -i.od friends ..7 1 mo 

woiil.l not hold takinii, Idoubtmc. 

I doubt whether their legs be worth 

doubt not tluU, if niouey ............. 

for I must ever doubt, though no cr so 

in whose breast doubt and suspect . . 

doubt it not, worthy lord — ;■ ... 

we never yet made doubt but Roine..Cono/«>»«, i. 2 

Odouht not that; I speak from — >■ ^ 

they nothing doubt prevailing 

(asit were sin to doubt) that love 

thing wanting, which I doubt not . . 

douirt not, the commoners, tor whom 

stay, past doubt, for greater 

more than you doubt the change ot t 

that you make doubt of It? .•• „ „,^^ ■; , 

such creatures as men doubt Ji'lnis L,psar,_u. 

1 doubt not of your wisdom — '•' 

and will, no doubt, with reasons .... — "'• J 

I do not doubt, but that my noble ■•, ^ — , 'V ;; 
partaker. Doubt not, sir .... Antotiy p- Cleopatra, i. 4 

I will be even with thee, doubt It not -;- lu- 7 
I doubt not, a great deal from the .... Cymbelme, i. 5 

I donothing doubt, you have........ — -^ 

and I doubt not you sustain what. ... — ■ » 

I doubt not you'll give me — "■ ^ 

and will, no doubt, be found — v. j 

all other doubts, by time let them .. — y- j 
this is, sir, a doubt, in such a time . . — iv- J 
and should he doubt it (as no doubt he.. Pencte*, i. 2 

tolo|. that doubt, he'll till this — i- -^ 

a thousauil doubts, how I might stop 

I d.i not doubt thy faith 

( I si r, we di.ubt i t not 

I d.iubt not Init this populous city .. 
I doubt not but I shall find them .... 

th.uigh doubts did ever sleep 

I doubt not of his temperance ........ 

nay more, I doubt it not Jlnmci 

I doubt it not ; and all these woes . . 

I will do it without fear or doubt.... 

his looks I fear, and his intents I doubt - v. i 

we doubt it nothing; heartily farewell. . Hamlet, i. . 

all is not well; I doubt some foul play . . — ]■ ^ 

do you doubt that? For Hamlet. — .}■ ^ 

I doubt, it is uo other but the mam .— ii. ^ 

doubt thou, the stars are fire, doubt ..—!!• ^ ( ^U 
doubt truth t.) bo a liar, but (r-'P.) .... - u- 2 (let.) 
I do doubt, the hatch, and the disclose . . — ]}]■ } 

the littlest doubts are fear — "'• ^ 

speaks things in doubt; that carry ••••••,- .'.V i! 

ifo not doubt, Cassio, but I wil have . . Othello, ni. •! 

, i .1 ...1.1 .u„.. Unft.../! Pniilin liprA .. — 111. J 

— iii. 3 

— iii. 3 



I)ni r HT1 ' ( ' I ,LY-spake he 
sodo.ibtrullv that 1 .'ouli 
doul.tr.illy |r„(.K///.-.l..ii 
nniide bulb doubtfully l.l 

DmUiTINCi ..loubliugtb 



DOI'lil'l.l 
ileei 



ofAllie 
— i. 2 



iv. 3 
iv. 3 
V. 1 



_ i. 6 

_ ii. 1 
— ii. 1 



iii. I 



— i. 2 



....;.rar, iv. 7 
) ,§- Juliet, iii. 4 



iv. 1 



— iii. 3 

— iii. 3 
_ iii. 3 
ires, iv. 4 
: 'I ale, i.2 

ii. 2 



do not doubt that; before Emilia here 
whodotes, yet doubts; susiiects, yet .... 

to be once in doubt, is— once to be 

smallest fear, or doubt of her revolt. ..... 

I'll see, before I doubt; when I doubt .. 

nor loop, to hang a doubt on ••■•■••• 

'tis a shrewd doubt, though it be but .... 

DOlIBTED-let it not be doubted..A/e)i!/ '; 
thing, where I the issue doubted. . li'mler 
let it not be doubteil 1 shall do good. . 
'tis to be doubted, he would waSen.SHe.iii, J/, iv. ^ 
doubted, 'twould prove the verity lenryl'lll.u 2 
is notdoubte.l: a word, Lueilins.. J.</>«f "•."o^,iv. 2 
and to be doubted, that your Moor .. I ilus.Uid. u. i 
'tis to be doubted, madam ..■••• ••./•''"''.•• ' 

Dl)UBTFUl.-doubtful cblemma.. /Um-i/K ine,, iv. ft 
jealous, and too iloubtful soul .. lu-elJiliSmht, iv. 3 
as doubtful thoughts, and .... Merch. of I emce, m. I 
doubtful Whether what I see be true — iii. i 
am doubtful of vour modesties. Tamoiffo/ Ml. I (111(1.; 
a .louluful warrant of inunediate.Comfi/i/orArr. 1.1 
\i;,l. h-„f.] doubtful itsto...!; astwo....iWacte//i,,.i. 2 
,v destruelion, dwell in doubtfnljoy - m. '2 
nuiuber of voiir doubtful friends .... K,ui;John,\. 
nice Imzaril of one doubtful hour?..l Hfiiri//* . iv. 1 

he is certain, ours is doubtUil.. — 'v 6 

be umpire in this doubtful strife . . 1 Henry Vl. iv. 1 
Sy " Itfnl fear my iov of liberty. .SH.-i.;!,/. iv. 6 
many doubtful bollow-liearted ..Itiehari III. iv. 4 
no eaui-e to hold u.y tVien.bhip doubtful - iv. 4 
and aid tbee ill this doubtlul shock.. - v- 3 
ourd.nibllul hope, our eouvoy ..Tro,lu> ACress,,. 1 
convenieuies, 1.1 .loubltnl loruincs .. — "}.■•> 
but it is .loiibllul vet, whe'r Cicsar./ii/ms C<r,ar,u. 1 
vet I am doubtful; for I am mainly . ....'-<■«>•. iv. 7 
Jiui doubtful tlu.t you have been eoiijuuct - v. 
bv orononn.iii' ol .M.iue do.ibti..l phrase. (/<iniW,i. 
her d.uUb wa. .Lulbtful; ami, but that.... - v. 1 

DOU UXl'Ui>l.Y-very doubtfully. V«o(,cn.o;». 11.1 



soilimbtfully f.'om.o/Kr.il.l 
il seared' .... — ii. I 
btl'ull itHtood.A/iii'''eM, i. 2 
rollonili-cd.r,m.oC.4f/i.iv. 3 
V birth ..MIriiryl'l. iii. :< 
:,h.n\,Ci,vjunv...M Henry II. v. 1 
vourpreseiit(r.,7).)7'im."//l".. iii. 1 

IriL' go ill Cymheline,!. 7 

t bat he had erred Pericla, i. 3 

I-, doubtleBB../>/ea«./or A/en». iii. 2 

„,^^ , .. l.l sL'eure, that King John, iv. 1 

as well as, 1 am doulilless, I can ..Mlenryll'. iii. 2 
doubtless, he shrives this woman.. ..IHunry*'/. i. 2 

doubtless, he would have made ~ „,!*'■ ' 

for, doubtless. Burgundy will 3Henni fl. w. (■ 

slain, sir, doubtless Coriodmm, i. 4 

doubtless, with joy he will embrace.C'i/mtWuie, iii. 4 

this honest creature, doubtless, sees OllieUo, ui. 3 

DOIT BT'ST— why dolibt'et thou of . . I llemy I'l. i. 1 
Dt)UlilI— cake's dough on both sides. 7'am. of ah. i. 1 
mv cake is dough: but I'll in among — v. 1 
DOUCJllTY-llANDED- , • <, 

for doughty-handed are you. Antony ft Cleopatra, iv. a 
DOUGMY-unbaked and doughy youth. /)(/'i»V«,iv. :, 
DOUGLAS— Douglas is discomfited ..\Henryl I', i. I 

and eldest son to beaten Douglas — |. I 

make the Douglas' son your only.... — i- •; 

where you and Douglas, and our powers — i. -i 
is there not, besides, the Douglas? .. — i;. 3 
that sprightly Scot of Scots, Douglas — ii. 4 
that fiend Douglas, that spirit Verey — .);. 4 

against renowned Dou'las — iii- « 

discomfited gi-eat Douglas — iii- 2 

fraceof York, DouLdas, Mortimer .. — iii. 2 
)ougla3, and the English rebels, met — in- 2 
attribution should the Douglas have — iv. I 

do me no slander, Douglas — Jv. 3 

you need not fear; there's Douglas .. — iv. 4 
the Douglas and the Hotspur both .. — v. I 
lord Douglas, go you, and tell him so — v. 2 
know then, mv name is Douglas — — v. :i 

Douglas, hadst thou fought — v. 3 

this Douglas? no, I know this face .. — v. 3 

1 am the Douglas, fatal to all t'.u.se .. — v. 1 

who, Douglas, grieves at heart — v. 4 

insulting hand of Douglas over yon.. — v. 4 

lord Douglas, when he saw — v.,') 

at iiiv tent the Douglas is — v. ft 

go to" the Douglas, and deliver him . . — v. .) 
before the Douglas' rage stooped ..illenryir. (ind.) 

killed by the hand of Douglas - !• 1 

so fought the noble Douglas — !• ' 

Douglas is living, and your brother.. — i. 1 
thatfuriousScot, the bloody Douglas — i- ' 

DOUT-auddoutCCo/. Kn(.-doubt] them. Henry I. ly. 2 
doth all tlie noble substance often dout..Ham(e/,i. 4 
TKiii.! but that this folly douts it — ly. 7 

DOUTE— je ne doute point d'apprendre. Henry r. ui. 4 

DOVE— his dove will prove Merry Ifiues, i. 3 

a raven's heart within a dove .... Ticelflh Night , y. 1 
by the simplicity of Venus' doves.il/it/. A. £>r«im, i. 1 

as gently as any sucking dove — .!• 2 

the dove pursues the griffin — H- "; 

who will not change a raven for adove? — ii. 3 
what dead, mv dove? O Pyramus .. — v. 1 
I have here a dish of doves. . . . Merch. of Venice, ii. 2 

notfroward, but modest as the dove. ram.i'/iVi.u. 1 
she's a lamb, a dove, a fool to him . . --111.2 
soft as dove's down, and as white. IVtnler sTale,iy. 3 
as valiant as the wrathful dove . . . .'ZHenryll. 111. 2 

the dove and very blessed spirit...... — ly. 1 

was JIahomet inspired with a dove?..lHeiijyf/. 1. i 

and doves with noisome stench — ..!■ S 

sucking lamb, or harmless dove. . ..•iHenryH. 111. 1 

seems he a dove? his feathers — u.i- j 

so doves do peck the falcon's 3H«nry VI. 1. 4 

anddoves will peck, in safeguard.... — .11.2 
he eats nothing but doves, love. 7 roilus ^Crets. 111. 1 
those doves' eyes, which can make. . Corioianiij, v. 3 
the dove will peck the estridge.J'i'ony ^Cleo. 111. 1 1 
with the dove of I'aphos inight./'cr.r/es, iv. tGower) 
so shows a snowy dove trooping with.ifom.<^Ju/._i. 5 

couple but— love and dove — •!■ ' 

nimble-pinioned doves draw love.. .. — ."• •> 

fare you well, my dove ! Hamlet, iv. .> 

as patient as the female dove — v. 1 

Dt )VE-t'OTE— eagle in adove-cote . . Conolanut, v. 5 
IJi IVIC-DK VWN— her son dove-drawn. Tempest, iv. 1 

d()Ve-fi;atiieked- ,,,•,-, 

■ni-elieal! dove-feathered raven! flomfo^-Ju(ic(, 111.2 
d'i>\"E-UOUSE— under the dove-house — 1. 3 

shake, quoth the dove-house -- >• 3 

D; IVEK— holds out, hut Dover castle, /vm? Jolin v. 1 

and safelv brought to Dover 1 He'iry / /. y. I 

to make Vuur siK:e.l to Dover Lear, 111. 1 

and drive toward Dover, Ir.eud - m. b 

arc gone with l.iin towards Dover ...... — ni. 7 

to iVover. Wherefore to Dover? (Iff.) .. — iii. 7 

let him smell his way to Dover 

a mile or twain, i' the way to Dover 
know'st thou the way to Dover? — 
dost thou know Dover? Ay, master .... ..; . 

DOWAGEB-a dowager long withering. .Vid.A. Dr. 1. 1 

a dowager of great revenue •• -- '• ] 

our marriage with the dowoger.... HfnryK///. 11. 4 

iirincess dowager, and widow to prince — 111. 2 
Katharine, the princess dowager?. ... -- ly. 1 

DOWOY — Dido, adowdy;Cleoi)atra.7(omfo4-Ju/.ii.4 
DOWEH-the jewel in my dower.. .... 7em;)M(, ui. I 

a dower reinaining in the coaer..,W«.i for Meat. ■ « 



iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 



and she, is her own do' 
to lie your daughter s d 
thy husband, and I'll 1 
assure my daughter ^n 
die before hiin, when 
lia.s8 assurance of a ib ■ 
jioss my daughter a m.i 
and the value of her d 



.AU'tWtU,\\.Z 
iv. i 



.Tam.nfSh. i 



.\ Henry VI. \'. 1 



liberal dower: while Re gnicr (rf/).) — .. 
mine honesty shall be my dower ..Jllenry VI. 111. 



DOW 

DiJWER— our daughters' several dowers ..Lear, i. 1 

tliy trutli then be tliy dower — i. 1 

two daughters' dowers digest this tliird.. — 1. 1 

require in jjrcsent dower with her — i. 1 

[K/i/.] ifthis suit lav iu Bianca's dower. OMrito, iv. 1 

DOWEKE D— dowered with our curse Lear, i. 1 

DUWEIIEESS— tliy dowerless daughter.. — _i. 1 

Franee, that dowerless took our youngest — ii. 4 

DOWLAS— dowlas, filthy dowlas .AHcnrylV. ill. 3 

DOWLE-one dowle that's iu my pUuuo. Tempest,m. 3 

DOWN—and my xmshruhbed down — iv. 1 

soft as dove's down, and as wliite H'mter's Tale, iv, 3 

oil soft as young down \ Henry 1 1', i. 3 

light and weiglitless down perforce .'IHenryiy. iv. 4 
our pinnace anchors in tlie Downs.. 2Hpnr!//7. iv. 1 

tlie cygnet's down is harsh Troilus Sj- Cressida,i. 1 

the swan's down featlier . . Antony <§- Cleopatra, iii. 2 
sloth finds the down pillow hard . . Cymbeline, iii. 6 

my tluice-driven bed of down Othello, i. 3 

DOWN-BED— easy as a downi-bed . . Henry VUL i. 4 
DOWNFALL— divine his dowiifaU?.fi)cAard //. iii. 4 

or to worlc my downfall 2Henry VI. iii. 1 

in the downfall of liis mellowed ZHenryVI. iii. 3 

that wish the downfall of 'our house! — v. 6 

and downfall of youi- liouse Richard III. iii. 7 

his very downfall in the sea .... Titus Andron. v. 2 

down-Ifallen- 

bestride our down- fallen birthdom . . Macbeth, i v. 3 

DUWN-GYVED— do\™-gyved tohis ..Hamlet,i\. 1 

DOWNRIGHT— downriglit \va.y..Mea.forMea. iii. i 
shall chide downright, if I longer . . Mid. N. Dr. ii. 2 
they'll mock us now dowiirijiht. . . Love's L. Lost, v. 2 
have heard liira swear downriglit. As you Like it, iii. 4 
sleep, and dowuriglit langaislied.. iyinter'sTale,n. 3 
downright oaths, whicli 1 never use . . Henry F. v. 2 
have at tliee with a downright blow.2Henri/r/. ii. 3 

his beaver with a downright blow SHenry VI. i. 1 

with downright payment, sliowed — i. 4 

certainly lie tiouted us downri^lit .. Coriolanus, ii. 3 
brother's son, it rains downright. ./Borneo ^Jut. iii. 5 
mv dovv-nriglit violence and storm Othello, i. 3 

DOWN-KOPING— 
do\>ii- roping from their pale-dead. . ..Henry V. iv. 2 

DoWN-s lAIKS— 
imkistrv is— up-stairs and down-stairs. 1 Hen. VL ii. 4 

DOWN-TROD— down-trod Mortmier.lHe;iry/r. i. 3 

DOWN-TKODDEN- 
for this down-trodden equity King John, ii. 1 

DOWNWARD— the waist downward.3/uc/i Ado, iii. 2 
tliat downward hath succeeded in his..JH's Well, iii. 7 
flesh sillies downward, here to die . . Richard Ii. v. 5 

and downward loolc on us Julius Cccsar, v. 1 

loolting all downwards, to behold . . TitusAnd. iii. 1 

DO'WN Y— shalce off this downy sleep . . Macbeth, ii. 3 

there lies a downy feather 2HenryIV. iv. 4 

the swan her downy cygnets save . . 1 Henry VI. v. 3 
downy windows, close Antony <§- Cleopatra, v. 2 

DO WRIES— gold, and dowries, with ..iHenry VI. i. 1 

DOWRY-upongood do.vry, macvy. Merry IVives, i. 1 
and aslc no otlier dowry witli her. TwelfthNiyht, ii. 5 

for the half of mj' dowry — iii. 4 

tliat perislied vessel tire dowry.. Meas. for Meas. iii. 1 

a dowry for a queen Love'sL. Lost, ii. 1 

to be the dowry of a second Merch. of Venice, iii. 2 

that is the dovf ry of his wife As you Like it, iii. 3 

as lief take her dowry with this. Taming of Shrew, i. 1 
and to marry her, if lier dowry please — i. 2 

wliat dowry ^hall 1 have with her .. — ii. 1 
for ttiat iltj\\ry, I'll assure her of .... — ii. 1 

your dowry 'greed on — ii. 1 

her dowry wealtliy, and of wortliy birth — iv. 5 
another dowry to another daughter.. — v. 2 

gi ve with our niece a dowry King John, ii. 2 

her dowry shall weigh equal with — ii. 2 

with her, to dowry, some petty . . Heniy V. iii. (cho.) 
with a large and sumptuous dowry... IHtrtrj/F/. v. 1 
cliarges, without having dowry. 2 He«rj/;'Y. i. 1 (art.) 
her dowry shall be counterpoised ..ZHenryVI. iii. 3 
nature this dowry gave, to glad Pericles, i. 1 

fou have her':' she is herself a do\vry . . Lear, i. 1 
'11 give thee this plague for thy dowry . HamW, iii. 1 
DOWSABEL-Dowsabel did claim. Comedy ofEr. iv. 1 
DOXY— doxy over the dale.. Winter'sTale iv. 2 (song) 

DOZEN— remain a dozen years Tempest, i. 2 

the dozen white luces in their cout. . Merry tVives,i. 1 

the dozen white louses do become — i. I 

No? A dozen times at least Meas.forMeas. i. 2 

speak of half a dozen dangerous .... Much Ado, v.) 

there's half a dozen sweets Love's L, Lost, v. 2 

faith, there's a dozen of 'em All's Well, iv. 5 

esteem him worth a dozen such.. Tarn. ofSh. 1 (ind.) 
if but a dozen Frencli were there . . King John, iii. 4 
a dozen of them here have ta'en .... Richard II. v. 2 
sir John, with half a dozen more . . 1 Henry IV. ii. 4 
some six or seven dozen of Scots .... — ii. 4 
at half-sword with a dozen of them.. — ii. 4 

we four set upon some dozen — ii. 4 

a dozen of sliirts to your back — iii. 3 

a dozen captains, bareheaded iHenry IV. ii. 4 

a dozen captains stay at door for you — ii. 4 

half a dozen sufficient men? — iii. 2 

X must a dozen mile to-night — iii. 2 

I should make four dozen such — v. 1 

you shall have a dozen of cusliions . . — v. 4 
a dozen or fourteen gentlewomen .... Henry V. ii. 1 
have half a dozen healths to drink.. Henry F///. i. 4 
but knock them down by the dozens? — v. 3 
let a dozen of them he.. Timon of Athens, iii. 6 (grace) 

had I a dozen sons, each in my Coriolanus, i. 3 

bear of wounds two dozen odd. — ii. 3 

some dozen Romans of us Cymbeline, i. 7 

how a dozen of virginities? Pericles, iv. G 

have some half a dozen friends. JJomeo ^ Juliet, iii. 4 
a speech of some dozen or sixteen lines. Ham^e^ ii. 2 
thirty dozen moons, with borrowed sheen — iii. 2 
that m a dozen passes between yourself . . — v. 2 
have sent a dozen sequent messengers . . Otiiello, i. 2 
yes. a dozen; and as many to the vantage — iv. 3 
UK.VB— take order for the drabs. . Mens, fir Meas. ii. I 
with die, aiiddiab, I j)urchased.. ll'Intir's'l'ule, iv. 2 



[ 194 



DRAB — ditch-delivered by a drab Macbeth, iv. I 

deny thy father, cursed drab? 1 Henry VI. v. 4 

the knave; and take tliis drab a,\va,y.'J:Hcnry VI. ii. 1 
say, he keeps a Tiojan drah. .Troilus ^Cressida, v. 1 

than he for a commodious drab — v. 2 

back to the dissembling luxurious drab — v. 4 
cursing, like a very dral), a scullion! . . Hamlel, ii. 2 

DRABBING— quarrellin-, drabbing — ii. 1 

DRACHM — at a cracked drachml Coriolanus, i. 5 

DRACHMA — seventy-ii\e drachmas. ./«/. C(Bsar,S^. 2 

and drop my blood for drachmas — iv. 3 

DR AFF-still swine eat all the dratf. Merry Wives, iv. 2 

from eating dratf and husks \HenrylV. iv. 2 

DRAG-my aft'airs do even di-ag me . Winter's Tale, i. 2 

drag back om' expedition 1 Henry I V. iv. 3 

I'll dra)» thee up and down 1 Henry VI. i. 3 

or I will drag thee hence 2 Henri/ A-7. iii. 2 

iades that drag the trajjic melancholy — iv. 1 

hence will I drag thee headlong — iv. 1 

drag hence her husband Titus Andronicus, ii. 3 

sirs, drag them from the pit unto .... — ii. 4 

fo, drag the villain hither — iv. 4 
rag thee on a hurdle thither.. ./iomeo<5-Ju((e/, iii. 5 

DRAGGED— shall be dragged at -IHenry VI. iv. 3 

dragged through the shameful field. Trail, fy Cres. v. 1 1 
mother's closet hath he dragged him . . Hamlel, iv. 1 

DR AGON-night's swift dragons cut. Mid . N. Dr. iii. 2 

scale of dragon, tooth of wolf Macbeth, iv. 1 

faces, and fierce dragons' spleens .... King John, ii. 1 
St. George, tliat swinged the dragon — ii. 1 

and of a dragon, and a finless fish . . 1 Henry I V. iii. 1 
spread wider than a di-a"on's wings . . 1 Henry VI. i. 1 
with the spleen of fiery dragons! . . Richard III. v. 3 
di'agon wing of night o'erspreads. Troilus fy Cress, v. 9 
with tigers, dragons, wolves . . Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

like to a lonely dragon Coriolanus, iv. 1 

grown from man to dragon — v. 4 

swift, you dragons of the night ! Cymbeline, ii. 2 

for death-like di-agons here affi-ight Pericles, i. 1 

between the dragon and his wrath Lear, i. 1 

under the dragon's tail; and my nativity — i. 2 
ever dragon keep so fair a cava'!. Romeo fy Juliet, iii. 2 

DRAGONISXI— that's dragonish./in<orti/^C(eo. iv. 12 

DRAGON-HivE-fights dragon-like. CorfotejiMs, iv. 7 

DRAIN— I will drain him di-y as hay ..Macbeth, i. 3 
to drain upon his face an ocean .... 2 Henry VI. iii. 2 
couldst thou di-ain the life-blood. . . .3Henry VI. i. 4 

did di'ain the purple sap from Richard III. iv. 4 

as he drains his draughts of Khenish . . Handel, i. 4 

DRAINED— sword be drained! . . Troilus i^- Cress, iv. 5 

DRAM-that no dram of a scruple . Tuielfth.\'ight, iii. 4 
empty from any dram of mercy. /l/er.o/ Venice, iv. 1 

yes, good faith, every dram of it All's Well, ii. 3 

but with a lingering dram Winter's Tale, i. 2 

ay, every dram of woman's flesh, is false — 11. 1 
he be three quarters and a dram dead — iv. 3 
may make some dram of a scruple . .iHenry IV. i. 2 
can weigh down by the dram . . Timon of Athens, v. 2 

ladies' flesh at a million a dram Cymbeline, i. 5 

a dram of this will drive away — iii. 4 

cannot a dram of worth be drawn.... — iii. 5 
by the queen's dram she swallowed. . — v. 5 
rCo(. Km ] an unaccustomed dram. .Borneo fyJul. iii.5 

let me have a dram of poison — v. 1 

the dram of base doth all the noble .... Hamlel, i. 4 
with some dram conj ured to this efl'ect . . Othello, i. 3 

DRANK— thy father drank wine All's Well^ ii. 3 

I ne'er drank sack in my life. 'Taming of Sh. 2 (md.) 
make known how he hath drank. Winter's Tale, ii. 1 
I have drank, and seen the spider .... — ii. 1 
vou all have drank of Circe's cup. Comedy of Err. V. 1 
I never drank with him in all my life. 'TitusAnd. iv. 3 

DRAUGHT- draught of sack Merry Wives, ii. 2 

one draught above heat makes him. Twelflhi\igiu,'i. 5 

for shallow draught, and bulk — v. 1 

wliich draught to me were cordial. Winter'sTale, i. 2 
taken my last di'aught in this world.2Henry VI. ii. 3 
yoke you like dranght oxen.Troilus ^ Cressida, ii. 1 

sweet draught: sweet, quoth 'a! — v. 1 

breath of liim m a divided draught. Timon ofAlh. i. 2 
with liquorish draughts, and morsels — iv. 3 
di'own them in a draught, confound — v. 1 
on him so sure a drauglit [Knt.-givii him such 

an unaccustomed dram] Romeo 4r Juliet, iii. 5 

he drains his draughts of Rhenish down. Hamlet, i. 4 
of supper and distempering draughts Othello, i. 1 

DRAVE— that I drave my suitor. /is i/om Like it, iii. 2 
and drave great Mars to faction. Troilus ^ Cress, iii. 3 
the first encounter, drave them . . Antony tf Cleo. i. 2 
a troubled mind drave me to walk. .iiomeo ^Jul. i. 1 

DRAW— draw thy sword; one stroke . . Tewpes/, ii. 1 

draw together; and when — ii. 1 

let's draw our weapons — ii. 1 

please you draw near — v. 1 

good should draw from me. TicoGen. of Verona, iii. 1 

he shall draw; he shall tap Merry Wives, i. 3 

the hour draws on — v. 3 

the minute draws on — v. 5 

thou might' st never draw sword. . Twelfth Night, i. 3 
I would I might never draw sword again — i. 3 

but we will draw the curtain — i. 5 

that will draw three souls out of ... . — ii. 3 
so soon as ever thou see'st him, draw — iii. 4 
therefore di aw, for the suuportaiice.. — iii. 4 

but never draw thy sworcf — iii. 4 

me further, draw thy sword — iv. 1 

it draws something near .'Pleasure for Measure, i. 2 

they will draw you, master Froth . . — ii. 1 
shall his death draw out to lingering — ii. 4 

to follow, as it draws! — ii. 4 

di'aw with idle spider's strings — iii. 2 

the hour draws prefixed Ijy Angelo . . — iv. 3 

a meet hour to draw don Tearo Much Ado, ii. 2 

draw it. Hang it! — iii. 2 

first, and draw it afterwards — iii. 2 

it is ill my scabbard; shall I draw it? — v. 1 
draw, as we do the minstrels; draw.. — v. 1 
our nuptial hour draws on apace ..Mid.N.'sDr. i. I 

I will draw a bill of properties — i. 2 

you draw me, you lund-hearted cr<7?.) — ii. 2 



DRA 



DRAW-leave you your power to draw. Mid. A'. Dr. ii. 2 
I'yramiis must draw a sword to kill — iii. 1 
he is defiled, that draws a sword on thee — iii. 2 

Pyramus draws near the wall — v. 1 

go, draw aside the curtains Merch. of Venice, ii. 7 

a gentle riddance: draw the curtains — ii. 7 
I pray thee, draw the curtain straight — ii. 9 

come, draw the curtain, Neris&a — ii. 9 

and to draw it out in length — iii. 2 

than any that draws breath in Italy — iii. 2 
I would not di-aw them, I would have — iv 1 

clerk, draw a deed of gift — iv. I 

do not draw back your hand — iv. 1 

and draw iier home with music — v. 1 

pray you, di'aw homewards As you Like it, iv. 3 

measure draw^ a belief from you — v. 2 

to sit and draw his arched brows .... All's Well, i. 1 

a man may di'aw his heart out — i. 3 

will you draw near? — iii. 2 

Grumio, draw forth thy weapon .... — iii. 2 
pursue me as you draw your bow. Taming of Sh.v. 2 

will draw in more than Winter's'Tale, i. 2 

draw our throne into a sheep-cote! . . — iv. 3 

do not draw the cm tain — v. 3 

I'll draw the curtain; my lord's .... — v. 3 
shall I draw the curtain? No, not these — v. 3 
draw within the compass of suspect. Com.o/ fir. iii. 1 

and yet draws dry-foot well — iv. 2 

good sir, draw near to me — v. 1 

sorry now, that I did draw on him . . — v. 1 
nor ever didst thou draw thy sword. . — v. 1 

we will draw cuts for the senior — v. 1 

as palpable as tlus which now I draw..Jlfac6e<A, ii. 1 
shall draw him on to his confusion ... . — iii..') 
again should hardly draw me here .... — v. 3 

it draws towards supper King John, i. 1 

of time shall draw tins brief into as.. — ii. 1 
to draw an answer from thy articles? — ii. 1 
not his mother's shames, draw those — ii. I 
cousin, go draw our puissance together — iii. i 
that I must cU-aw tills metal from . . — v. 2 

draw near, and list, what with Richard II. i. 3 

draws the sweet infant breath of — i. 3 

uneven ways, draw out our miles .... — ii. 3 

your father's draws a cm'tain 1 Henry I V.iv. 1 

fie cannot di-aw his power tliis — iv. 1 

and that no man might draw short . . — v. 2 
and here draw I a sword, whose .... — v. 2 

the plot, then draw the model iHenry IV. i. 3 

shall we go dr-aw our numbers — i. 3 

draw, Bardolph; cut me ofi* — ii. 1 

go, wash thy face, and draw thy action — ii. 1 

fou do draw my spirits fi'om me — ii. 3 
pray thee, do not draw — ii. 4 

and I come to draw you out by — ii. 4 

and draw no swords but what — iv. 4 

wind, draw the huge bottoms . . Henry V. iii. |(chorus) 
it now draws toward night: beyond — iii. 6 

gallants shall to-day di-aw out — iii. 6 

and draw their honours reeking up . . — iv. 3 
draw, men, for all this privileged....! Henri/ f'/. i. 3 

blood will I draw on thee — 'i. ■> 

that, who so draws a sword — iii. 4 

words of yours draw life-blood — iv. 6 

to di'aw conditions of a friendly peace — v. 1 

and draw the curtain close iHenry VI. iii. 3 

draw thy sword in right ZHenry VI. ii. 2 

I'll draw it as apparent to the crown — ii. 2 

thou draw not on thy danger — iii. 3 

draw near, queen Margaret; and be — iii. 3 

for this I draw in many a tear — iv. 4 

wilt thou draw thy forces hence .... — v. 1 
falsely to draw me in these vile .... Richard III. i. 3 
to draw the brats of (-lai'ence out.. .. — iii..') 
to draw him from his holy exercise.. — iii. 7 

'tis hard to draw them thence — iii. 7 

yet to di-aw forth your noble — iii. 7 

I'll draw the form and model of our — v. 3 
draw your willing swords: for me .. — v. 3 
diaw, archers, draw your arrows .... — v. 3 

as di'aw the eye to flow Henry VIII. (prnl. ) 

poverty could never draw them from me — iv. 2 

and draw the curtain close — v. 2 

forty truncheoneers draw to her succour — v. 3 
that I was fain to diaw mine honour — v. 3 
trial did draw bias and thwart . . Troilus ff Cress, i. 3 

let blockisli Ajax draw — i. 3 

or sword to draw, when Helen — ii. 2 

to draw emulous factions — ii. 3 

though greater hulks draw deep .... — ii. 3 
an' you draw backward, we'll put .. — iii. 3 
come draw this curtain, and let's .... — iii. 3 
from ray weakness draws my very .. — iii. 3 
his insolence draws folly from my lipa — iv. 5 

your passion draws ears hither — v. 2 

so, so, we draw together — v. 5 

I pray, di-aw near. Stay, stay. Timon of Athens, ii. 2 

draw nearer, honest Flaminius — iii. 1 

worthy friends, will you draw near? — iii. 6 

draw trom the earth rotten — iv. 3 

shall quickly draw out my command. Corio(a?iMs,i. 6 

since lie could draw a sword — iii. 1 

draw near, ye people — iii. 3 

achieve as soon as draw his sword . . — iv. 7 

draw them to Tiber banks Julius Ccesar, i. 1 

wliich busy care draws in the brains — ii. 1 
he draws Mark Antony out of the way — iii. 1 

I draw my sword against — v. 1 

cause enough to draw their swords.. /Inf. <5-C'(eo. ii. 1 

loves to botli, draw after her — ii 2 

I did not think to draw my sword . . — ii. 2 

if we draw lots, he speeds — ii. 3 

my purposes do draw me much — ii. 4 

and, as I draw them up, I'll think .. — ii. 5 
let your best love draw to that point — iii. 4 

do draw the inward quality — iii. 11 

draw that thy honest sword — iv. 12 

accidents unpurposed: draw, and — iv. 12 

draw thy sword, and give me — iv. 12 

let's diaw liira liither — iv. 13 



DRA 

DiJAW— wo must draw thee up.. Aniony /^ CIro. iv. 13 

toilniw 11,11111 nil exile! Ct/mbeline, i. !i 

to n|)|irelieiiil tims, dniws im a prollt — iii. 3 
wlml shiiU I need tdilraw mv sword? — lii. 4 

look ! I draw tlie sword mvself — iii. 4 

best diiiw my s«Mrd; mid it'mino — iii. 

iimv.draw iie;ir (ri-p.) — iii. !• 

tlmfdrttw his knives i' the war — v. 3 

drow iii'-ir till' nature of the tri-/,-.). /"iViM/lHi/ron. i. 2 
Piitrieiiiiis, draw vourswoiils, and .. — i. 2 

tlic ciii|ieror'j paliux' dare you draw — ij. 1 

<lo not draw back, for we will — .ii. 4 

look ye draw home enough — iv. 3 

itow, nm-iters, draw. () well said — iv. 3 

tlierefiiiv, driiw iii^'h. and take your.. — v. 3 

Imt, uiii'le,.ha«-v..iiiic-ur — V. 3 

the imiu ami w\t\: draw lots l'ericle$, 1. i 

hut, master. I'll >;» draw up the net — — ii. 1 

eim draw him hut to answer — v. 1 

when the eart draws the horse? Lear, i. 4 

I must draw my sword upon you: draw — ii. 1 
ilruw, vou ro^'ue; fur, tho;i;;hit be (rep.) — ii. 2 

the hill, let him draw tlRO after — ii. 4 

draw me that wliii-li my father loses — lu. 3 

make no noise, draw ilie curtains — iii. 6 

draw me aelotliier's yard — iv. U 

please you, draw near — iv. 7 

enemy 9 in view ; draw up your powers . . — v. 1 
I cauiiot ilraw a. eart, nor eat dried oats. . — v. 3 

draw thy swordj that, if ray 8i)eech — v. 3 

in eholcr we'll draw (rep.) liomeo ^ Juliet, i. 1 

draw thy tool; here comes two — i. 1 

draw, if you be men — }• 1 

[*:«/.] what! draw, and talk of peace! — !• I 

beuin to draw the sliady curtains — i. 1 

we'll draw thee from tlie raire — i. 4 

I dare draw as soon as another man — ii. 4 

ninible-piiiioned doves draw love.. .. — .!}• ^ 
draws it on the drawer, when, indeed — iii. 1 
therefore turn, and draw. I do .... — iii. I 

draw, Bonvolio; beat down — in. 1 

ere I eon Id draw to part them — iii. 1 

it then draws near tiie season ..Hamlet, i. 4 

and draw you into madness? think of it — i. 4 

of my face, as he would draw it — ii. 1 

to draw hiin on to pleasures — ii. 2 

doth draw what's near it, with it — jjj* * 

to draw towani an end with you — Hi. 4 

to draw apart the body he hath killed .. — iv. 1 

vou will draw both friend and foe — iv. 5 

where it draws blood, no cataplasm — iv. 7 

in this luirsh world draw thy breath .... — v. 2 

whose voice will draw on more — v. 2 

the house affairs would draw her thence. OJ/icUo, i. 3 
to draw from her a prayer of earnest .... — i. 3 
the next way to draw new mischief on .. — i. 3 

the while, to draw the Moor apart — ii. 3 

devise a mean to draw the Moor out — iii. 1 

from mine own weak merits will I draw — iii. 3 

tliafs but yoked, may di'aw with you — iv. 1 

let me the curtains draw — v. 2 

nilAWBllIDGE-thc drawbridge... fiicAanZ III. iii. 5 
UR VWEll— :,'ive us leave, drawer.. Merry (f ices, ii. 2 
swiirn brother to a leash of drawers. IHejiry IV. ii. 4 
while I nue-tion my puny drawer .. — ii. 4 
made witli this jest of the drawer? .. — ii. 4 
wait upon iiim at his table as drawer3.2Henr!//P'. ii. 2 

call him up, drawer. Cheater — ii. 4 

I am a jientlenian, thou art a drawer — ii. 4 
draws it on the drawer, when . . linineo ^-Juliet, iii. 1 
DHAWKTII— that ilraweth ..Lnne's L.Lost.i. 1 (let.) 
he draweth out the threadof his.... — v. 1 

DU.WVINU— drawing of an antick . .Much.ilo, iii. I 
ifdrattinji ray sword against thcLow'sZ,. Lost, i. 2 
tills vile drawing bias, this sway .... King John,\i. 2 
young, and cheerly drawing breath,. /f/c/iard //. i. 3 

ilim, as drawing to their exigent 1 Hennj I'l. ii. 5 

drawing their massy irons Troilua SrCress. ii. 3 

of the earth, drawing all tilings to it — iv. 2 

the time, and drawing days out .. Julius Cmmr, iii. 1 

DllAWfvING— such a drawling.... Merry (C.ues.ii. 1 

UKAWN— it hath drawn me rather Tempest, i. 2 

why arc you drawn? — ii. 1 

I wiw their weapons drawn — ii. 1 

well drawn monster, in good sooth — ii. 2 

drawn my love from her ..TwoGen. ofVernna, iii. 1 

hath drawn him and the rest Merry Wives, iv. 2 

thou^di our silence be drawn from. Ticel/lh Nialitjii. b 

a» might have drawn one to — lii. 3 

be drawn in little, and Legion — iii. 4 

a tail-house, but I am drawn in..i>/e««./or.Veas. ii. 1 
here villain, drawn and ready. . Mid. N. Dream, iii. 2 

he hath drawn my picture ....Love's L. Lost, v. 2 
hast th lU Iwcn drawn to by thy.. As you Like it, ii. 4 

with udders all drawn dry — iv. 3 

the blixxl and tears arc drawn. 7'ammgo/SA. 2 (ind.) 

be therefore drawn between U9 — ii. 1 

there it is in writing fairly drawa . . — iii. 1 
you had drawn oaths from him . , Winter sTale, i. 2 

the rich stake drawn, and takest — i. 2 

pull^ion, with drawn swords .... Comedy of Err. v. 1 

the wine of life is drawn, and Macbeth, ii. 3 

drawn in the flattering table of King John, ii. 2 

that hanged, and drawn, and (quartered — ii. 2 

hath drawn hiin from liis own — ii. 2 

an army could lie diawn in I'Vanee.. — iv. 2 
a seribbleil form, drawn with apen .. — v. 7 
with tears drawn from her eyes .... Ilirhard II. iii. 1 
our indentures tripartite are drawn. l//cnrj//»'. iii. 1 

you may have drawn togetlier — iii. 1 

uru the indentures drawn? _ iii. i 

will our biKjk, I think, Ik; drawn — iii. 1 

truth in thee, than in a drawn fox .. — iii. 3 
dcjiutation could not so soon lie drawn — iv. 1 
the king hath drawn the sjieeial head.. — iv. 4 

1 have drawn it in my funtiLsy •illenryiy. v. 2 

thou hast drawn my shoulder out .... — v. 4 

ludy, if he lie not drawn now ! Henry f. ii. 1 

every drop of blood wa« drawn from. I Henry yi. ii. 2 
bluud, druwu from thy country's bouoiii — iii. 3 



[ 195 



Dlt AWN— wrathful weaii.nis drawn,.3//eiirtf ^l. iii. 2 
Bword** were never drawn in vaiu .... — iv. I 

shall ailieles be drawn touching 3WtTir|//'7. iii.3 

from mii.e have drawn ^:ilt tiars. .. Uiehardlll. i. i 
Will. Kii/.J are von ilriiwn lorlh among — i. 4 

shall be ilrawiront nllin K-n-'lli .... — v. 3 
of wealth I have drawn to.'ftlier.. Henri//'///, iii. 2 

how long her luce i> drawn? — iv. 2 

was drawn ahunt tlii^ ijuestion.. 7'roi7iu4-C're«. ii.2 

with yonr true >.wnrd ilrawn — V. 3 

when von have drawn vonr n umber. Cori'olunint, ii. 3 

drawn"tnns..f hhin.l.intof thy — iv. 5 

there were drawn upon a hua|i . . ..JuliusCwsar, i. 3 
fortunate t'av-^ar, drawn before liiin. /ln«./f-C(co. iv. 12 
is drawn, 't'hen let it ilo at once (rep.) — iv. 12 
how liardlv I was rlrawii into this war — v. 1 

let there lie covenants ilrawn between. Cl/inlieiine,i. 5 

will soon lie ilrawn to head — iii. 5 

cannot a dram of worth he drawn .. — iii. .^ 
of m,y body are as well drawn as his.. — iv. 1 

legions, all from (ial ha drawn — iv. 3 

be death drawn on with torture — iv. 4 

too liglit, being drawn of heaviness .. — v. 4 
came to nic with Ids sword drawn.... — v.b 

thon with thv weapon ilrawn Titus Andron. iii. 1 

ray wea|i'in drawn, 1 ruslied upon liim — v. 1 

like thvself, ilrawn by report Pericles, i. 1 

I have "drawn her picture with iny voice — iv. 3 
who having drawn, a crew of pirates .... — v. I 
the how is bent and drawn, make from ..Lear,_i. 1 
some blood drawn on me would beget .... — ii. 1 

fogs, drawn by the powerful sun — ii. 4 

art thou drawn among these heartless. /iomi^-yui. i. 1 

what, drawn [K/i(. -draw], and talk of — i. I 

drawn with a team of little atomies .. — i. 4 

DR.\\V'ST-as thou draw'st, swear. Twelfth Ni-^ht, iii. 4 

thou draw'st a counterfeit best.. Timon of Athens, v. I 

DRAY.M.\.N— Achilles? a dravman.7'r(»7.4-C'rci.s. i. 2 

DRAY.MKN— a brace ol' .Iraxinen ....Hiehard II. i. 4 

DItE.vn— yea. his dread trident sliake . . Tempest, i. 2 

to the dread rattling tliiinder — V. 1 

Omvdread lord, 1 sh.inld hi.. ..Meas.for Meas.v. 1 

hence witli that drcail i.enalty Love's L.Losl,i. 1 

dreiul prince of plackets, king — iii. 1 

what judLjmeiit shall i dread. ..Verc/i. o/fciiicc, iv. 1 
doth sit the dread and fear of kings . . — iv. 1 
bv your dread veril.v, one of them. Winter's Tale, i. 2 
this crack t' I be in liiy dread mistress ^ — _i. 2 
he dreads his wife. So, I would, .you did — ii. 3 
to me, the ditl'erence, forges dread .. — iv. 3 
thou antieipat'st my ili-ead exjiloits ..Maebeth, iv. I 
if guilty dread hutli left thee so much. iiic/iard //._i. 1 
myself^ I throw, dread sovereign .... — i. I 
the sentence of dread banishment. ... — iii. 3 
rebuke and dread correction wait . . 1 Henry IV. v. \ 
the sin upon my head, dread sovereign. //enri/ K. i. 2 

go, my dread lord, to vilur great — i. 2 

therefore, dread kin-, we yield — iii. 3 

howdrearl an anm- l;atl\ enrouuded — iv. (cho.) 

to live with that dreul Iviiig iHenryVI. iii. 2 

dread lord, the cnuiiiiMus send you .. — iii. 2 
and these dre.id cur-es like the sun.. — iii. 2 

from llenrv, our dread liege — v. 1 

thou sljaltnot dread the scattered ..■Ulenryri.ii. 6 

be pitiful, dread lord, and grant — iii. 2 

did York's dread curse prevail liickard III. i. 3 

not heavily, ami full of dread — ii. 3 

well, my dread lord, so must I call .. — iii. 1 
and conseouence of dread, that I. . Henry VIII. ii. 4 
most dreafl liege, the good I stand on — v. 1 
dread sovereign, how ranch are we bound — v. 2 

thus far, my most dread sovereign — v. 2 

yet, dread i'rrain, there is no lady. Troll. Sr Cress, ii. 2 

so great as our di'ead father — ii. 2 

ay, dread ipieen. Where? Madam.. .4ii«. ^Cleo. iii. 3 

amli.iiiM II I'-, I dread, too late — iv. 12 

III;; I , ,: I it to the doer's Cymbeline, v. \ 

wli: i; : ii>il yet ttieir lives'.. V/7«.(.l/iJroji. ii. 3 

welcii.i:;,, ,1._.: 1 fury, to my woful house — v. 2 
welcome, dread queen; welcome .... — V. 3 

an angry brow, dread lord Pericles, i. 2 

that duty shall have dread to speak Lear,i. 1 

in the lleshment of this dread exploit — ii.2 

from the dread summit of this chalky .. — iv. 6 
ray dread lord, .your leave and favour .. Hamlet, i. 2 
your dread pleasures more into command — ii. 2 
hath nowtliis dreiul and black complexion — ii. 2 
that the dread of something after death.. — iii. 1 
important acting of your dread eoinmand?— iii. 1 
Jove's dread clamours counterfeit .... Ulhelln, iii. 3 
DHE.\.I)-liOLT[.;D_ 

the deep dreail-holteil thunder? Lear, iv. 7 

DUEADED-necil not he dreaded .. ..2f/ejir.v/r. i. 3 
in the prc?.ence of dreaded justice ..Coriolanus, iii. 3 
bids beware of what is to be dreailed — iv. C 

to see performed the dreaded iMl..lnliiuy ^Cleo. v. 2 
touching this dreadea sight, twice seen..Ham/c(, i. I 
DREADFUL— o' the dreadful thunder.. 7'eM/«ji, i. 2 
that deep and dreadful organ-pipe .... — iii. 3 
most hideous anddremlfnl manner.A/errtfH'ires, iy.4 
and it in .vou more dreadful would.. Veu. /or Mea. i. 4 

I do fear, too dreadful — i. 4 

ladies, is a most dreadful thing.. Mid. .V. Dream, iii. 1 

what dreutlful dole is here? — v. I 

his almighty tlreadfiil little might.. Love' sL.L. iii. I 

thy voice lu^ ilreadfiil thunder — iv. 2 

the dreadful tiauh of inercluiut..)/er. ti/Tenire, iii. 2 

thisisaclreailliil .^entcnee AU'sH'elt, iii. 2 

of the dreadful Neptune, to grvet. »'i«<er'i 7"ii/«, v. 1 
I have seen hours (Ireadful, and things. ;Uur6el/i,ii. 4 
ihall be done a deed of dreadful note.. — iii. 2 
in dreiulful trial of mir kingdom's .. King John, i\. 1 

'twixt two dreadful battles set — iv. 2 

thy speed, dreadful ..ei:a>ii>nl — iv. 2 

with dreadful pomp of stout iu^'asion — iv. 2 
the dreiulful motion of a ninrderous — iy. 2 

resounding truiiHiets' dreadful itrtiy. Hiehard II. i. 3 

see your inont dreadful laws so 'IHenriflV, v. 2 

of this most dreadful preparation. //eiiii/r. li. (cho.) 
give dreutlful note of preiiaratiou .. — iv. (cho. ) 



DUE 

UREADl'U L-dreiulfiil judgment- dyyO-ep.) I //.»'/.i.l 
this dreadful lord, retirimr from .,.. — 1.1 

the rumour of this dreadful knight.. — ii. 3 
tumour stern uiion a dreiulful rtji:\i.?.2Henry VI. iii. 2 

a dreadful oath, sworn with — iii. 2 

whose dreadful swords were never .. — iv. I 
adreadfiil lay! luldress thee instantly — v. 2 

in dreailful war may'st thou be illenryVl. i. 1 

some dreiulful story hanging ou thy — |i. I 

or li/ard's dreiulful stings — ii.2 

but dreadi'ul war shall answer his .. — iii. 3 
our dreadful inarches to delightful.. /?/r/iar(/ ///. i. 1 
avaunt, th. ill iheadfiil minister of helll — i. 2 

wdiatdrcadlnl iioiM- of water — 1.4 

urge God'^ dreadful law to us — i. 4 

for, by the ilrcadful I'luto ..Trolluif^Cresiida, iv. 4 

to Troy, thou dreadful Ajax — iv. .5 

not the dreaill'iil spout, which shipmen — v. 2 
thedreadfnl S:i-ilt;.rv ai'l"ilsonr.... — y.h 
such dreaill'iil In i iil I > :i ' uisll . .yul/uuCduar, i. 3 
ainall most like l;;i .1; . ;!. ii night — 1.3 

between the acliii' Ml ;i .ii, ,,liiil thing — ii. 1 

and dreiulfnl oliject^ Ml laiiiiliar — iii. 1 

hover on the dreadful shore uf r^XvKt .Titus And. i. 2 
are ruthless, dreadful, deaf and dull — ii. 1 
done a thousand drciidfiil thiie-'s .... — v. I 

their ear- tell tie m in. dreadful name — V. 2 

tin- ile;i/r;iiii ', li;, -hradful thunders.. Per/ci'-«, iii. 1 
keep till- '1;; :;'lii;l I'litlicr o'er our heads .Lear, iii. 2 
and erv 111' e ilr; ;Miriil snminoners grace — iii. 2 

gathers samphire; ilreailfnl trade! — iv. 6 

tlien, dreadful trninpet, sound. . Homeo ^Juliet, iii. 2 
this to nie in dreailfnl scereev impart ..Hamlet, i. 2 
or to the dreadful summit of the cliff.... — i. 4 

anon, the dreadful thniider doth rend — ii. 2 

silence that dreadful bell, it frights .... Othello, ii. 3 

DRE.VDFULLY— more dre;idfuUy.jl/»a./or;Vra. iv. 2 
I am nil ist dreadful 1 v attended Hamlet, ii. 2 

DREADING— dreading the ciurse. . . . King John. iii. 1 
dreading that her purpose was Cymbeline, v. 5 

DREAM— and rather like a dream Tempest, i. 2 

my spirits, as in a dream, are all — i. 2 

I cried to dream again — iii. 2 

such stuff as dreams are made of — iv. 1 

even in a dream, were we — y. 1 

that I do not dream on thee. TwoGen. of Verona, u. 4 

then never dream on infamy — ii. 7 

she dreams on him that — iv. 4 

how like a dream is this I see — v 4 

I'll tell you my dream Merry Wives, iii. 3 

is this a'dream? do I sleep? — iii. .^ 

she were better love a dream .... Twelfth Night, ii. 2 

and dream on the event — ii. 3 

thou hast put him in such a dream.. — ii. •''> 

or else this is a dream — iv. 1 

if it be thus to dream, still let — iy. 1 

hath but as offended inaclreara!..l/ea.s-. /or Mens. ii. 2 

what is't I dream ou? : — ii.2 

the father of their idle dream — iv. I 

■we will hold it as a dream MudiAdo^ i. 2 

or do I but dream? — iv. 1 

but not for that, dream I on tliis — iv. 1 

■will quickly dream away the time.Mid. N.'s Dr. i. I 
short as any dream ; brief as the .... — i. 1 

as thoughts, aud dreams, ar.d sighs . . — i. I 

for pity! wdiat a dream was here? . . — _ii. 3 

shall seem a dream, aud fruitless — iii. 2 

as the fierce vexation of a dream .... — iv- I 

that yet we sleep, we dream — i v. I 

by the way, let us recount our dreams — iv. 1 
I have had a dream , past the (rep. ) . . — iv. 1 
if he go about to e.xpouiid this dream — iv. 1 

to report, what my dream was — iv. 1 

of this dream: it shall be called (rep.) — iv. 1 

following darkness like a dream — v. 2 

no more vieliliUL,' hut a dream — (epil.) 

canyon still dreain, aud pore Love'sL.Lost,iv. 3 

for Idid dream ..f inouey-bags.. 3/er. o/ /V/oVe, ii. S 
if that I do iiotdream, or he not ...is you Like il, i. 3 
that canst not dream, we, poising — All's Well, ii. 3 

even as a flattering dream TamingofSh. 1 (ind.) 

that he tlreains, for he is nothing — 1 (ind.) 
hence these abject lowly dreams. . — 2 (ind.) 
or do I di-eara? or have I dreamed — 2 (ind.) 
years yon have been in a dreara . . — 2 (ind.) 
be loath to fall into my dreams again — 2 (ind.) 
sits as one new risen from a dream — iy. 1 

communicatest with dreams Winler'sTale, i^ 2 

stands in the level of your dreams .. — iii. 2 

vour actions are m.v dreams — iii. 2 

for ne'er was dream so like a waking — iii. 3 
dreams are toys; yet. for this ouee .. — iii. 3 
bring him tlmt wdiich he di-eams not of — iv. 3 

more than you can dream of yet — iv. 3 

this dream of mine being now awake — iv. 3 

married to her in mv dream.. Comedy qf Errort,ii. 2 

if I dream not, thou art -Kmilia — v. 1 

if this lie not a dream, I see, and hear — y. 1 
wicked dreams abuse the curtained ..Macbeth, ii. 1 

these terrible dreajns that shake us — iii. 2 

full of idle dreams King John, iv. 2 

our former state a liappv dream ISichard II. v. 1 

Athea's dream, away 1 (rep.) illenry I V. ii. 4 

I do despise my tU-eam, make less .... — y . 5 
interception which they dream notof..//f/iry*'. li. 2 
no, thou proud dream, that phiy'st .. — iv. 1 
than is ill your knowledge to druiin of — ly. 8 

waking, and in iny dreams illenryVl. j. 1 

mv troublous dreiim this night — 1.2 

reliearsal of my morning's dream — — i. 2 
this was luy dream; what it doth .... — i. 2 

but her di-eam? next time (rep.) — i. 2 

to dream on evil, or to work my — in. 1 

I did dream to night, the duke — iii. 2 

if dreams prove true (r'p.) — v. 1 

I do but dream on sovereignty 3 Henry VI. in. 2 

to dream uiwu the crown — iii. 2 

lilxds, and dreams, to set my brother. /Ji'cAard ///. i. 1 
hearkens after prophecies, and dreama — i. I 

while some t<irinentuiglrcain alfrights — i. 3 



DRE 



DllEXyi—so full of fearful dreams.. iiiWiard III. i. 4 
wliat was your dream, my lord? .... — i. 4 

uo, my dream was lengthened .... — i. 4 

imijression made ray dream — i. 4 

and for his tlreams— I wonder, he's so — iii. 2 

Stanley did dream, the boar did — iii. 4 

with his timorous dreams was still .. — iv. 1 

a dream of what thou wast — Iv. 4 

dream on thy cousins smothered in .. — v- 3 
dream of success and happy ™tnrj'.. — v. 3 
dream on, dream on, of bloody deeds — v. 3 
soft; I did but dream — v. 3 

1 have dreamed a fearful dream .... — v. 3 
and fairest boding dreams that ever.. — v. 3 
the remembrance of so fair adream.. — v. 3 
let not our babbling di'eams atfright — v 3 
and then let's dream who's best . . Henry VIII. i. i 
such good dreams possess your fancy — iy. 2 
you are for dreams and slumbers.. 5"roi7.(^- Cress, ii. 2 
my dreams will, sure, prove ominous — v. 3 
live but in a dream of triendship. Timonof Alh. iv. 2 
fantasy, of dreams, and ceremonies. JuimsCtPsa?-. ii. 1 
this dream is all amiss interpreted .. — ii. 2 
by Calphnrnia's dream is signified .. — ii. 2 
wife shall meet with better di-eams . . — ii. 2 
didst thou dream, Lucius, that thou — iv. 3 
he dreams; I know, they are h\..-intony ^ Cleo. ii. 1 
60 fairly shows, dream of impediment! — ii. 2 
that he should dream, knowmg all.. — iii. 11 

or wotnen, tell their dreams — v. 2 

let her lie still and dream Cymbdine, ii. 3 

nor Cymbeline dreams that tliey are — iii. 3 
break it with a fearful dream of'liim — iii. 4 
I hope, I dream ; for so, I thought . . — iv. 2 

the dream's here still — iv. 2 

dream often so, and never false — iv. 2 

favour, di-eam as I have done — v. 4 

many dream not to find — v. 4 

'tis still a dream; or else such — v. 4 

as Dian had hot dreams — v. 5 

if I do dream, would all my wealth. . Titus.ind. ii. 5 
did you ever dream of such a thing . . Pericles, iv. 5 
the rarest dream that e'er dull sleep .... — v. 1 

awake, and tell thy dream — v. 2 

yes, that on eveiy dream, each buz Lear, i. 4 

an honour that I dream not of . . Romeo^ Juliet, i. 3 

I dreamt a dream to-night i. 4 

while tliey do dream things true — i. 4 

then they dream of love (rep.) — i. 4 

dream on fees; o'er ladies' lips (rep.) — i. 4 
then dreams he of smelling out a suit — i. 4 
then dreams he of another benefice . . — i. 4 
tlien dreams he of cutting foreign .... — i. 4 

true, I talk of dreams — i. 4 

all this is but a dream, too flattering — ii. 2 
iny dreams presage some joyful news — v. 1 
strange dream I that gives a dead man — v. 1 
or did I dream it so? or am I mad . . — v. 3 

colleagued with this dream of iiis Hamlet, i. 2 

himself, I cannot dream [K7i/.-deem] of — ii. 2 
bad dreams. Which dreams, indeed .... — ii. 2 
adream. A dream itself is but a shadow — ii. 2 

in a dream of passion, could force his — ii. 2 

perchance to dream; ay, there's the rub — iii. 1 
what dreams may come when we have . . — iii. 1 
if ever I did dream of such a matter .... Othello, i. 1 
this accident is not unlike my dream .... — i. 1 
couFeciuence do but approve my dream .. — ii. 3 

nay, this was but his dream — iii. 3 

doubt, though it be but a dream — iii. 3 

DREAJMED—I have di-eamed to-night. ilf err i/ W. iii. 3 

news that you yet dreamed not of Much Ado, i. 2 

she hath often dreamed of unhappiness — ii. 1 

or have I dreamed till now Taming ofSh. 2 (iud.) 

that I have dreamed and slept above — 2 (ind.) 

no, nor dreamed that any did Winter^ Tale, i. 2 

I but dreamed it: as you were — iii. 2 

my lord, Althea dreamed she 2Henr!/ir. ii. 2 

I nave long dreamed of such a kind. . — v. 5 

what dreamed my lord? tell me iHenry VI. i. 2 

I have dreamed a fearful dream . . Richard III. v. 3 

(or long have dreamed so) Henry VIII. ii. 4 

one that ne'er dreamed a joy beyond — iii. 1 
I dreamed, there wasanemperor./lnfoni/^- Cleo. v. 2 

such a man as this I dreamed of? — v. 2 

now sir, what have you dreamed . . Cymbeline, iv. 2 
dreamed, who thought of such . . Pericles, iii. (Crow.) 
spoke so well; ne'er dreamed thou couldst — iv. 6 

DRE AMER— thou idle dreamer King John, iv. 2 

of the dreamer Merlin, and his 1 Henry IV. iii. 1 

he is a dreamer; let us leave him. . Julius Ccesar, i. 2 

that dreamers often lie Romeo 4- Juliet, i. 4 

DHE.'V MING— and then in dreaming. . Tempest, iii. 2 
after-dinner's sleep, dreaming. .A/eas. /or A/eas. iii. 1 
into the dreaming bridegroom's .Mer.of Venice, iii. 2 

no longer dreaming of renown SHenry VI. ii. 1 

their dreaming on tliis fond exploit. fii'cAard ///. v. 3 
dreaming ni^ht will hide our joys.. Troii. ^Cr. iv. 2 
this foolish, dreaming, sviperstitious girl — v. 3 
it's past the size of dreaming./liiiony ^ Cleopatra, v. 2 
DllEAM'ST— thoudream'st notof ..IHenrylV. ii. 1 

look, how thou dream'st! Richard III. iv. 2 

DKEAMT— I dreamt last night of the.. iV/acdeW, ii. 1 
kind of fear before not dreamt of . . 1 Henry IV. iv. 1 

dreamt on aught but butcheries Richard III. i. 2 

he dreamt to night the boar had — iii. 2 

dreamt of a silver bason and ewer. Ti'mon ofAth. iii. 1 
nightly since dreamt of encoimters.Gor/o;a;ms, iv. 5 
she dreamt to-night she saw my. . Julius Ceesar, ii. 2 

I dreamt to-night that I did feast — iii. 3 

I dreamt a dream to-night Romeo ^ Juliet, i. 4 

I dreamt my lady came and found . . — v. 1 
I dreamt my master and another fought — v. 3 
than are dreamt of in yomr philosophy. . Hamlet, i. 6 

DRE A RY— out of these dreary Titus Andron. i. 2 

DKEG— the dregs of the storm be past. . Tempest, ii. 2 
some certain dregs of conscience . . Richard III. i. 4 
what too curious dreg espies . . Troilus <§■ Cress, iii. 2 

more dregs than water iii. 2 

the lees and dregs of a flat — iv. 1 



[ 196 ] 



DRI 



DREfJ—fricndship's full of dregs. Timon of Athens, i. 2 
turn the dregs of it upon this Coriolanns, v. 2 

DRENCH— my roau horse a drench., 1 Henri/ IV. ii. 4 

a drench for sur-reined jades Henry V. iii. .') 

so do our vulgar drench their peasant — iv. 7 
boj' did drench his over-mounting..! Henry FA iv. 7 
to drench the Capitol .inlony SfCteopnlra, ii. (i 

DRENCHED— drenched in the sea .... Tempest, \\. 1 
and drenched me in the sea.. Two Gen. of Verona, i. 3 

sleep their drenched natures lie Macbeth ,1.7 

spout till you have drenched our steeples. Lear, iii. 2 

DRESS— dress meat and drink Merry Wives, i. 4 

we'll come dress you straight — iv. 2 

let's go dress him like the — iv. 2 

we'll dress like urchins — iv. 4 

I do with him? dress him in my Much Ado, ii, 1 

help to dress me, good coz — iii. 4 

and help to dress your sister's. Taming of Shrew, iii. 1 
to dress thy meatnivself, and bring — iv. 3 

set to dress this garden Richard 11. iii. 4 

wherein tlie noble youth did dress. .2He)iri//F. ii. 3 

prove that ever I dress 1 nyself — ii. 4 

to dress the ugly form of — iv. 1 

that we sliould dress us fairly for Henry V. iv. 1 

means to dress the commonwealth. .'IHenry VI. iv. 2 

we'll dress him up in voices Troilus 4-Cress. i. 3 

see you in your soldier's dress Antony^ Cleo. ii. 4 

for the gods, if the devil dress her not — v. 2 
boys, we'll go dress our lnmt Cymbeline, iii. 6 

DRESSED— has she dressed him!.. Tweljth Night, ii. 5 

because we'll be dressed together — v. 1 

to be dressed in an opinion oL..Merch. of Venice, i. 1 
see him dressed in all siuts .. Taming of Sh. 1 (ind.) 

hojie drunk wherein you dressed Macbeth, i. 7 

so trimmed and dressed his land . . Riclmrd II. iii. 4 
horse, that I so carefully have dressed ! — v. .■) 

neat, and trimly dressed, fresh as 1 Henry IV. i. 3 

and dressed myself in such humility — iii. 2 
dressed! and in your clothes! ..Romeo ^Juliet, iv. 6 
the abilities that Rhodes is dressed in . . Othello, i. 3 
let's go see poor Cassio dressed — v. 1 

DRESSE R— from the dresser. . . Taming of Shrew, iv. 1 

DRESSING— in all his dressings.. ;Vfeas./tir,V/ens. v. 1 

DREST— drest him with our love. J/eas. /or Meas. i. 1 

drest in a little brief authority — ii. 2 

bei ng drest to some oration Troilus ^ Cress, i. 3 

DREW — how near the god ih'Q^ .... Merry iVives, v. 5 

drew on my side Twelfth Night, v. 1 

a witchcraft drew me hither — v. 1 

drew to defend him, when — v. 1 

you drew yoiu' sword upon me — v. 1 

nature to her bias drew in that — v. 1 

his dagger drew, and died Mid. N, Dream, v. 1 

feign that Orpheus drew trees. .jUerc/i. nf Venice, v. I 
then he drew a dial from his poke. .-Is you. Like it, ii. 7 
so drew the rest of the herd to me. Winter's Tale, i v. 3 
random left, di-ew me from kind.. Comedy of Err. i. 1 

that drew him oft from home — v. ) 

I drew my sword on you — v. 1 

before Idrew this gallant head King John, v. 2 

drew Priam's curtain in the 'IHenrylV. i. 1 

he drew a good bow; and dead! — iii. a 

that drew blood from thee \HenruVI, iv. B 

wonder wliy I drew you Mther ZHenry VI. iv. 5 

from my dugs he drew not this Ricliard III. ii. 2 

the articles o' the combination drew. Henry VI I L i. 1 
that drew their swords with you.Antony ^Cleo. ii. 2 
wliich he with fervency drew up .... — ii. 5 
lord your son drew on my master. . , . Cymbeline, i. 2 
country's service drew your swords. . Titns And. i. 2 

drew sleep out of mine eyes Pericles, i. 2 

drew froni my heart all love Lear, i. 4 

dread exploit drew on me here — ii. 2 

more man than wit about me, drew — ii. 4 

I drew to part them Romeo ^- Juliet, i. 1 

by and by, my master drew on him . . — v. 3 
born, drew all such hinnours fromliim. Orte/io. iii- 3 

DREW'ST-tliy scorns drcw'st rivers.fl/c/inr'i ///. i. 3 

DKlBBLING^-the dribbling dart ..Mea.for Mea. i. .1 

DKIE D— crest-fallen as a dried pear. Merry Wines, iv. 5 
laid my brain in the sun, and dried it — v. s 
and dried not one of them with his. vVea. /or Mea. iii.l 
time hath not 3'et so dried this blood Much Ado, iv. 1 
a handful, or two, of dried peas ..Mid.N.'sDr. iv. 1 
in a neat's tongue dried .... Merchant of Venice, i. 1 
great seas have dried, when miracles.. .4W'sH'eW, ii. 1 
'twas burnt, and dried away.. T'ammgq/'S/frew', iv. 1 

are dried by nature's course Richard //. i. 2 

you dried neat's tongue \ Henry IV. ii. 4 

stewed prunes, .and dried cakes ....IHenrylV. ii. 4 
my merc3' dried theirwater-flowing.3Henry/r. iv. 8 
which, being dried with grief ..Antony SfCleo. iv. 9 

draw a cart, nor eat dried oats Lear, v. 3 

his roe, like a dried herring Romeo S; Juliet, ii. 4 

DRIER- to a drier death Two Gen. of Verona, i. 1 

sirrah, fetch drier logs Romeo 4- Juliet, iv. 4 

DRIES-dries me there all the foolish.2Henry/r. iv. 3 
the blood upon your visage dries. . . . Coriolanns, i. 9 
my cuiTent runs, or else dries up Othello, Iv. 2 

DRIFT — the sole drift of my purpose . . Tempest, v. 1 

wit to plot this drift! Two Gen. of Verona, ii. 6 

in his intended drift — iii.l 

my cunning drift excels — iv. 2 

O, understand my drift ! Merry Wives, ii. 2 

keep you ever to our special drift.il/eo. /or ATea. iv. h 

and I will tell you my drift Much Ado, ii. 1 

and drift of j'our compact Comedy of Eirors, ii. 2 

sliall rain tlier drift of bullets .KingJofin,ii. '2 

yet tlie king not privy to my drift ..A Henry VI. i. 2 

but at the author's drift Troilus 4- Cressida, iii. 3 

my free drift halts not Timon of Athens, i. 1 

M'c know your drift: speak what ..Coriolanns, iii. 3 
good son, and homely in thy drift. /Jo?neo 4' Jul. ii. 3 
Romeo by my letters know our drift — iv. 1 
encompassment and drift of question ..Hamlet, ii. 1 

marry, sir, here's my drift — ii. I 

and can \'ou by no drift ot conference. . — iii. 1 
tliat oiu drift look through our bad . . — iv. 7 

DRINK — sea- water shalt thou di'iuk .. Tempest, i. j 
but that the poor monster's in di-ink .. — ii. 2 



DRINK— will drink water, not a drop . Tempest, iii. 2 

servant-monster, drink to me — iii. 2 

he shall drink nouglit but brine — iii. 2 

I drink the air before me — v. 1 

we'll drink within Merry Withes, i. I 

I hope we shall drink down all — i. I 

that s meat and drink to nie now. ... — i. I 

he was gotten in drink — i. 3 

dress meat and drink — i. 4 

and drink canary with him — iii. 2 

I shall drink in pipe-wine first — iii. 2 

food enough to drink in Twelfth Nig/il, i. 3 
'11 drink to her as long as there's .. — i. 3 

a,nd drink in Illyria — i. 3 

that will not drink to my niece — i. 3 

to the buttcry-h.ar, and let it drink . . — i. 3 

that drink and good counsel will amend — i. 5 

for "ive the dry fool drink — i. h 

for he's in the third degree of drink.. — i. s 

let us therefore eat and drink — ii. 3 

as to drink when a man's a-hungry. . — ii. 3 

but if he had not been in di'ink — v. 1 

forget to drink after thee. . Measure for Measure, i. 2 

and when we drink, we die — i. 3 

shall have all the world drink brown — iii. 2 
1 drink, I eat, array myself, and live — iii. 2 

for he that drinks all mght — iv. 3 

drink some wine ere you go Much Ado, iii. ri 

make the drink to bear no barm. . Mid. iV.'s Dr. ii. 1 
and when she drinks, against her lips — ii. 1 

fools would fain have drink Lrvr 'a L. Lost, v. 2 

eat w'itli you, drink with you. . Merch. of Venice, i. 3 
the duke will drink under this tree. As youLitic, ii. Ct 

that I may drink thy tidings — iii. 2 

it is meat and drink to me to see a clown — v. 1 
that drink, being poured out of a cup — v. 1 
but I will cat and drink, and sleep ..All's Well. iv. 3 
lordship drink a cup of ^ack?. Taming of Sh. 2 (ind.) 

but eat and drink as friends — i. 2 

dine witli my fatlier, drink a health — iii. 2 
hold thee tliat to drink; here comes. . — iv. 4 
not choose but drink before you go . . — v. I 

we will give you sleepy drinks Winler'sTale, i. I 

and one may drink; depart, and yet — ii. 1 

when my drink is ready Macbeth, ii. 1 

and, drink, sir, is a great provoker — ii. 3 

therefore, much di-iiik may be said — ii. 3 

I believe, drink gave tliec the lie — ii. 3 

anon, we'll drink a measure — iii. 4 

I (b'ink to the general joy — iii. 4 

that were the slaves of drink — iii. 6 

these e.yes, would drink my tears . . King John, iv. 1 
if I dare eat, or drink, or breathe . . Richard 11. iv. 1 

and three times did they drink 1 Henry IV. i. 3 

as good a deed as drink, to break .... — ii. 1 
sooiier than drink, and drink sooner — ii. 1 
an' 'twere not as good a deed as drink — ii. 2 
to sleep, to drink ; but I tell you .... — ii. 3 

that I can drink with any — ii. 4 

your brown bastard is your only drink — ii. 4 

I do not speak to thee in drink — ii. 4 

but to taste sack and drink it? — ii. 4 

constrained, as men drink potions ..IHenrylV. i. 1 
I'll drink no proofs, nor no bullets (le;).) — ii. 4 
drinks off candles' ends for flapdragous — ii. 4 

come, I will go drink witli you — iii. 2 

let's drink together friendly — iv. 2 

thereupon I drink unto your grace . . — iv. 2 

peace, you woidd drink freely — iv. 2 

feiit that's no marvel, he drinks no wine — iv. 3 
for thin drink doth so over-cool their — iv. 3 

that will swear, drink, dance — iv. 4 

want in meat, we'll have in drink — v. 3 

and drink unto the lemnn mine . . — v. 3 (song) 
I'll drink to master Bardolnh. and to all _ v. 3 
this wo\dd cb-ink de-i). 'Twould drink. Zfe»ry r. i. 1 

this quarrel will drink blood XHenrijVI. ii. 4 

I drink to you in ai;up of sack iHenry VI. ii. 3 

drink, andvear not your man — ii. 3 

licre, Peter, I rhink to thee — ii. 3 

I thank yon all, drink, and pray for me — ii. 3 

poison be their (Irink — jll- 2 

give me some drink, and liid — iii. 3 

tlie silver spring where England drinks — iv. 1 

felony, to drink small beer — iv. 2 

all shall eat and drink on my score., — iv. 2 
instead of a quart-pot to drink in.... — iv. 10 

his cold thin drink out of his SHenryVl. ii. 5 

I drink the water of my eyes — v. 4 

there, drink that for me Richard III. iii. 2 

we give up our guiltless blocd to drink — iii. 3 

the air will driiikthe sap HenryVIII. i. 2 

to drink to these fair ladies — i. 4 

his silence drinks up his applause! Troil.S,' Cress.Vi. 3 

shall have disire to drink — iii. 3 

would drink up the lees and dregs . — iv. 1 
through him drink the free air.. Timon of .ithens, i. 1 
I should fear to drink at meals — i. 2 

freat men should drink with harness — i. 2 

drink to you. Thou weei 'st (rep.).. — i. 2 
to drink those men, upon whose age — .1-2 
he ne'er chinks, but Timon's silver .. — iii. Z 
are foul, and his drink dangerous — — iii 5 

drink wine, lie soft — iv. 3 

eat roots, and drink cold water? no.. — v. I 
if the drink you give me, touch .... Coriolanns, ii. 1 
by and by; but we will drink together — v. 3 

five me some drink, Xitinius Julius Ccesar, i. 2 
cannot drink too much of — iv. 3 

Cleopatra's health to drink Antony 4r Cleo. i. 2 

he fishes, drinks, and wastes — i. 4 

thou didst drink the stale of horses . . — i. 4 
ha, ha! give me to drink rrandragora — i. 5 
they have made him drink alms-drink — ii. 7 

and himself to the di'ink — ii 7 

condemn it now: desist, and drink . . — ii. 7 

driuk thou; increase the reels — ii. 7 

than drink so much in one — ii. 7 

Bacchanals, and celebrate our drink? — ii. 7 
and drink carouses to the ne.xt day's — iv. 8 



DRI 



DlvINK-eatnomi'at.l'll iiotilriiik./ln»onK<5C/eo. v. 2 
luul Ibruwl to liiiiik their vapour .... — v. 2 

I'll ilrink tlu- wiM-di* vmi si'iicl Cymbeline.'i. i 

iloimit riclinu with too imioli ilrink .. — v. ■! 
n'liise to ilriuk my dear sons' lilooil.. Tilm.lnd. iii. I 

tliv iiii|ikio riuioot drink a tear — iii. 1 

lu'Vc i> iiodiii\k; luirk, iMarnis — iii 2 

sill- ilrinKs no utiur drink but tears.. — Iii. 2 

We drink this luiillli to von /VriWi'*, ij. 3 

we drink this ftandinu'-'bowl of — ij. 3 

leave tliy drink and tiiy wliorc ^""'.'.i' ' 

drinks the green mantle of — iii. I 

(Irv sorrow drinks our Wood . . Ilomeo ij- Juliet, iii. .'> 
this distilled lienor drink tImuotV .. — iv. 1 
this do [Co/. Aii/.-here's drink] I drink — iv. 3 
liquid thinit von will, and drink it olf — v. 1 
(.) ehuri; drink all and leave no friendly — v. 3 

health that IXnnnirk ilrinks to-day llumlel,]. S 

we'll teaeh vo\i to drink deei), ere — i. •-' 

with drink, sir? Xo, niv lord, with choler — iii. 2 
now eould I drink hot\ilo.,d. and do such — iii. 2 

that he ealls for ilrink, I'll Inive — iv. 7 

garments, heavv with their drink — iv. 7 

woid't tear tlivsilf? wo\d't drink up Esil? — v. 1 
thekingshaU'drinktollandi't'shetter.. — v. 2 

now tliekiu^' drinks to Hamlet — v. 2 

ttav.^'ive n\e drink: Hamlet — v. 2 

Gertrude, do not drink. I will, my lord — v. 2 
I dure not ilrink yet, madam; by and by — V. 2 
the drink, tlte drink,— O, my dear (rep.) — v. 2 

drink otf this potion — v. 2 

the wine she drinks is made of grapes . . Olhelto, ij. 1 

but mie eup; I'll drink for you — ii. 3 

why then, let a soldier drink — ii. 3 (song) 

drink, ho! are nothiui; to your English — ii. 3 

why, he drinks you, with faeility — ii. 3 

a double set, if nrink rock not his cradle — ii. 3 
a t>eggar, in his drink, could not have laid — iv. 2 

Di<I>nvING— sack, and djinking do ..Tempest, iii. 2 

they were red-hot with drinking — iv. 1 

ami to drinkiugs, and swearings . . Mernj lyives, v. 5 

and drinking will undo you Twclflh Night, i. 3 

with drinkinj; healths to my niece . . — i. 3 
it rather consists of eating and iljinking — ii. 3 
eating and drinking be put dowu..>/fa./oriV<?o. iii.2 

1 have been drinking all night — iv. 3 

I have been drinking hard all night.. — iv. 3 
than I will get again with drinking . . Much.ido, i. 1 
ask him sops as ho was drinking. 7'ami«^o/S/i. iii. 2 
Bunds, and drinking oceans dry .... Richard II. ii. 2 
full of teari, am I, drinking my griefs — iv. 1 
fat-witted, with drinking oi'old sack.lHcnrj/ IV. i. 2 

they call, drinking deep, dying — ii. 4 

glosses, glasses, is the only drinking 2Uenry IV. ii. 1 
with excellent endcavom' of drinking — iv. ? 
come, leave your drinking, and faU..2HpHri/F/. ii. 3 
rather heat my liver with drinkiug ..Ant. ^- Cleo. i. 2 
and made the night light with drinking — ii. 2 
I am sorry it is turned to a drinking — ii. (i 

ay, or drinking, fencing, swearing Hnmlel, ii. 1 

poor and unhappy brains for drinking. . Othello, ii. 3 
Enilishman so expert in his drinkiug? .. — ii. 3 

DRlN'K'ST— what drink'st thou oft . . Ilcnrij I'. \\. 1 
Dearth, which this blood drink'st.. /;iV/iar</ ///. 1. 2 

DRI"^'E— I could drive the boat. Two Gen. of I'cr. ii. 3 

by strength drives out another — ii. 4 

1 could drive her then from Merry ll'ires, ii. 2 

drives me to these habits Twelfth Night, ii. 5 

and drive the gentleman (as I know — iii. 4 
to drive liking to the name of love . . Much Ado, i. 1 
here's that shall drive some of them — iii..') 
but none can drive him from . . Merch.of Venice, iii. 2 
humbleness may drive unto a fine .. — iv. i 
must needs go, that the devil drives . , AWs Well, i. 3 

this drives me to entreat you — ii. S 

is it I that drive thee from — iii. 2 

whaterror drives oureyes and ears. Com. of Err. ii. 2 
and candle shall not drive me back. K/ng-Jo/m, iii. 3 

lluberti drive these men away — iv. 1 

to drive away the heavy thought ..Richard II. iii. 4 

exploit drive's him beyond I Henry I V. i. 3 

but Ned, to drive away the time .... — ii. 4 
and drive all thy subjects afore thee — ii. 4 
rogues in buckram let drive at me .. — ii. 1 
came at my back, and let drive at me — ii. 4 
should drive the prince of Wales .... — t. 4 
my lord, he will drive you out . . ..'illenry IV. ii. 4 
I shall drive von then t<5 confess .... — ii. 4 

and drive tlie" English forth 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

drive them from Orleans — 1.2 

slay thee, but I'll drive thee back — i. 3 

like Hannibal, drives back — i. .'j 

and despair, drive you to break — v. 4 

reasons, drive this forward Henry VII I. ii. 4 

80 soon we shall drive back. . . . Timon of Athens, v. 2 

one fire drives out one fire Co'riolanut, iv. 7 

and drive away the vulgar JuliusCtBsar, i. 1 

streets of Koine the Tarquin drive .. — ii. 1 

as fire drives out fire, so pity, pity .. iii. 1 

quickly drive him to Home .intony fyCleo. i. 4 

which drives o'er your content — iii. B 

from Egypt drive lier all disgraced .. — iii. 10 
of this will drive away distemper ..Cymbcline, iii. 4 

mav drive us to a render — iv. 4 

ami the hounds shoulddrive upon.7'i(u«.4ndron. ii.3 

imttzcment shall drive courage Verictes, i. 2 

so up and down the [Kwr ship drives — iii. (Ook er) 

if e'er this coffin drive a-land — iii. 2 (scroll) 

I'd drive ye cackling home to Canielot . . Lear, ii. 2 
laj'him in't, and drive toward Dover.... — iii. H 

Pyrrhns at I'riani drives Hamlet, ii. 2 

drive his purpose on to these delights.... — iii. I 
us il'you woulil drive me into a toil? .... — iii. 2 

DKIVEL,— lulieu, goodmun drivel [Co/. Knt 

devil Tirelfth Sight, iv. 2 (song) 

DKIVELINCf-this driveling Xwc.Ronieo^ Juliet,ii. 1 

DRIVEN— of fortune she is driven. /ii you LiArc it, v. 2 

I am driven on by the flesh AtCt IVell, i. 3 

as white as driven snow .. Winter's Tale, iv. 3 (song) 
driven out of door« with it . . Comedy of Errors, iv. 4 



[ 197 ] 



DRIVION— and driven into despair ..Richard 11. ii. 2 

liives, and houses, driven nwuy I Henry VI. i. !t 

so am 1 driven, by breath of — v. 5 

but n.nv is t'udi' driven back _ 'illenryVI. iv. 9 

our piirly to tln'ir tienehes driven ..Coriolanus^ i. 6 
either led or diiven, as we point. .7«ii'i/» Ctf'sar, IV. I 
we had driven them hiiine...l"'()H!/ <5-C(eo/)a/ra, iv. 7 
sliipw rick, driven h|inn lliis shore .. ,.l'ericles,u. S 
have no more ^.'entlemen driven away.. — iv. 6 

whenee, driven t.efori- the winds — v. (Gow.) 

a sister driven inlu .les|.er;ile Wnm. . . . llamlct. iv. 7 
DKlVETll-somctimeshedrivelh./i'oMrv, A./i./(W,i, 1 
DKIVINC-Inm- nn our driving hual. Tirrln/i .V. i, -J 

driving the poor hy before him /•,■,■„■(•■.<, ii. 1 

driving back sluuh.ws ,uer Hnmrofi- Juliet, ii. ft 

nHn"ST-Ilinn (Iriv'st mepast ...W«/.A'.Umi»i, iii. 2 

D1U/.Z1<E— for it driz/.les rain 1/i/c/i .Uo, iii. 3 

the air doti\ drizzle dew Rnmco H-Julie', iii. S 

DKl/./.l.i;i>— winter's drizzled suow.Com. o/ii'n-. v. 1 

drizzled liloinl upon the Capitol ..Julius Cwsar, ii. 2 

DI<( )U' T— 11 iissi droict que les natifs . . Henry V. iii. 4 

DKDLLKllV— a living drollery Tempest, iii. 3 

a prettv slight drollery illenrylV. ii. 1 

Dlit ).MH )— stay there, Dromio. . Comedy of Errors, i. 2 
eonie, Dromiii, come, these jests are.. — i. 2 

the Kiild I t,':ive to Dromio is laid U|) — ii. 2 
1 eon Id nut speak with Dromio, since — ii. 2 
J)r(imi.. home todinner. By Dromio? — ii. 2 

Dromio, go bid the servants — ii. '.i 

Dromio, thou drone [Co(.-Dromioj .. — ii. 2 
toilinner; Dromio keep the gate. ... — ii. '.J 

])roniio, play the ijortcr well — ii. 2 

my name is iJronuo — iii. I 

been Dromio to-day in my place — — iii. I 
Dromio, who are those at the gate? . . — iii. 1 

■why, how now, Dromio? where — iii. 2 

am lDroinio?amIyourman?(r(;p.) — iii. 2 

called me Dromio; swore, I was — iii. 2 

to the mart, and there for Dromio . . — iii. 3 

where is thy master, Dromio? — iv. 2 

go, Dromio"; there's the money — iv. 2 

why, Dromio? Marry, he must — iv. 3 

come, Dromio, let us go — iv. 3 

by Dromio here, who came — iv. 4 

bind Dromio too, and bear them .... — v. I 
see my son Antipholus, and Dromio — v. 1 
is not that yoiu- bondman, Dromio?.. — v. 1 

now am I, Dromio, and liis man — v. 1 

ueither. Dromio, nor thou? — v.) 

I, sir, am Dromio; command (n;;.).. — v. 1 
and the twin Dromio, all were taken — v. I 
by force took Dromio, and rny son . . — v. 1 

and these two Dromios, one in — v. 1 

by Dromio, but I think he — v. 1 

aud Dromio my man did bring — v. 1 

Dromio, what stuff of mine — v. 1 

DKONE— drones hive not with...)/e«'/i. of Venice, ii. & 
Dromio, thou ilrone, thou snail Cumedy of Err. ii. 2 
yea, or the drone of a Lincolnshire . . I Henry IP', i. 2 

the lazy yawning drone Henry V. i. 2 

drones suck not eagles' blood iHeury VI. iv. 1 

like a drone, from others' labom's. Pf ric/M, li. (Gow.) 

we would purge the land of these drones — ii. 1 

DROOP— fortunes will ever after di-oop. . Tempest, i. 2 

that makes your servants droop. 7'am. ofSh. 2 (ind.) 

begin to droop and drowze Macbelli, iii. 2 

but wherefore do you droop? King John, v. 1 

sieknowl droop now! thissickuess.lWcdryir.iv. I 
that droops his sapless branches .... 1 Henry VI. ii. 5 
droops my lord, lilce over-ripened.... 2i/e;i(yr/. i. 2 

thus droops this lofty pine — ii. 3 

droop not, adieu; farewell Coriolanus, iv. I 

DROCiPED— declined, drooped Winler'sTale, ii. 3 

DROOPETH— thy glcjrv droopeth .... 1 Henry VI. v. 3 
DROOPING-anon with drooping fog. .Wrf. .V.i)r. iii. 2 

imp out our drooping country's Richmd II. ii. 1 

orient to the drooping west '^HenrylV. (indue.) 

thy father to liis di'ooping ehair 1 Henry VI. iv. b 

may cheer our drooping spirits — v. 1 

cheered up the drooping army SHenry VI. i. 1 

words revive my drooping thoughts — iii.;; 

who haxl not now been drooping here. Cymbrlinr, v. 3 

his silence will sit drooping Hmulct, v. 1 

DROP— tliough every drop of water .... Tempest, i. 1 

deek'd the sea witli drops full salt — i. 2 

drop on you both I — i.2 

ancf make thy weapon drop — i. 2 

not a drop before: therefore bear up — — iii. 2 

riches ready to drop upon me — iii. 2 

like winter's drops from eaves — v. 1 

fall fellowly drops — v. I 

on this couple drop a blessed crown .... — v. 1 
me out of my fat, drop by drop . . Merry Wines, iv. 5 
will droj) in Ills way some obscure. Twelfth Night, ii. 3 

by the letters that thou wilt drop — ii.3 

tliere's no true drop of blood in him. il/uc/i.4do, iii. 2 
tliat the wide sea hath dro])S too few — iv. 1 
and drop the liquor of it in her eyes... Vi'rf. A'. Dr. ii. 2 
morning drops upon the rose. Love's L. L. iv. 3 (vers.) 

no drop hut as a coach doth — iv. 3 (.vers.) 

I'll drop the paper; sweet leaves .... — iv. 3 
to allay with some cold drops oT.Mer. of Venice, ii. 2 
these toolish drops do somewhat .... — ii.3 

lose for ine one drop of blood — iv. I 

weakest kind of fruit diops earliest .. — iv. 1 
if thou dost shed one drop of christian — iv. 1 
fair ladies, you drop manna in the .. — v. 1 

wijied our eyes of drops that As you Like it, ii. 7 

when it clrup^ forth such fruit — iii. 2 

lives an. Mies by liloody drops? — iii. 5 

conid n"t di"ii i'orili ^ueh giant-rudc — iv. 3 

bid liimcli,.,>f;.,hlund lakeit — iv. 3 (let.) 

to sill, i.r liim-li one droji of it.. 7Vimi'ng-o/.S/ircMi, v. 2 
she drops Imoliesin my in^.nth .. )»'i)i/er'« Tale, iv. 3 

mav drop upon his kiiigdnm — v. 1 

woiild preferment drop on my head .. — v. 2 
like a drii|) of water (re/j.) .... Comedy qf Errors, i. 2 

should not drop in his porridge — ii. 2 

a drop of water in the breaking (rep.) — ii. 2 
a hair, a drop of bluod, a pin — iv.3 



DRO 

UK(JP-hide themselves in drops of sorrow. Mactjeth, i. 4 

whose loves I may not drop — iii. I 

there hangs a voporons drop profound — Iii. 5 
our country's purge, eaeli dro|i of us — v. 2 

shall repent each (iro|) of blood Ki';i4' John, ii. 1 

thou hast not sa\'ed one drop of blood — ii. 2 

a silver drop bath fallen (x'/i.) — iii. 4 

lest resolution (lro]i .Hit at mine — iv. 1 

effusion of such Til, ml V il mi B — v. 2 

to drop them still upon one place. . /(ic/inrd //. iii. 3 
here did she drop [(■„'. -fall] a tear .. — iii. I 

his eve.s do dro|i no tears — V. 3 

my dear blond drop by drop IHenry IV. i. 3 

till one dro]i down aeor.se — iv. I 

dole of blows, your son might ilrnii..2HenrylV. i. I 
and drop upon our bare unarmed iieuda — ii. 4 

they are drops of thy lovers — iv. 3 

that it will quickly drop — iv. 4 

be drops of balm, to sanctify — iv. 4 

shall drop their blood in approbation.. //erirj/T. i. 2 
whose guiltless drops are e. 'Cry one.. — ..\''^ 

God's vassals drop and die — iii. 2 

frosty people sweat drops of gallant — Ijj- •'' 
he'll drop Ills heart into the sink .. .. — iii. & 
from it issued forced drops of blood . . — iv. I 

in drops of crimson blood — iv. 4 

every drop of blood was drawn 1 Henry VI. ii. 2 

one drop of blood, drawn from thy . . — iii. 3 
there drops bloody sweat from his .. — iv. 4 

than drops ot blood were in my SHenry VI. i. 1 

and every drop eiiis vengeance lor .. — i. 4 

with store nfeliildl.h drops Richard lU.i. 2 

your eves drop millstones, when fools' eves 

drop [Co(. A";i(.-fall] tears — i. 3 

and drop into the rotten mouth of . . — iv. 4 

the liquid drops of tears that you — iv. 4 

cold fearful drops stand on my — v. 3 

the more must pity drop upon her. .HenryVllI. ii. 3 

iny drops of tears I'll turn — ii. 4 

with my three drops of blood.. .. '/>oi7Ki(5Crc«». i. 3 
I would not wish a drop of Trojan .. — ii. 2 

for every false drop in her — iv. 1 

tliat any drop thou borrow'st from . . — iv. .^ 
will cost a drop of Grecian blood .... — iv. 5 
even he drops down the knee . . Timon of Athens, i. 1 

five thousanil drops pays that.. — iii. 4 

the blood I drop is rather physical ..Coriolanus, i. 6 
wine with not a drop of allaying Tiber — ii. I 

have I heard groan, and drop — iv. 4 

dangers, and the drops of blood shed — iv. 5 
the drops that we have bled together — v. 1 

at a few droiis of women's rheum — v. 5 

for certain drops of salt — v. ,'> 

till each man di'op by lottery ....JutiusCrpsar,'u. 1 

when every drop of blood — ii. 1 

as are the ruddy drops that visit my — ii. I 

these are gracious drops — iii. 2 

and drop my blood for drachmas — iv. 3 

will turn to redder drops — v. 1 

ill our own filth drop our clear.. .4n/oHy^C/eo. iii. II 

the first stone drop in my neck — iii. 1 1 

grace grow where those drops fall? .. — iv. 2 
let her languish a drop of blood a day.Ci/mtfiine, i. 2 
like the crimson drops i' the bottom — ii. 2 

as small a di'op of pity as . — iv. 2 

for whom my heart drops blood — v. ."j 

unrelenting flint to drops of rain.Ti/KS Andron. ii. 3 
whose leaves are drops of new-shed. . — ii. 4 

I'll drop upon thee still. . — iii. 1 

these sorrowful drops upon thy — v. 3 

shed yet some small drops from thy — y. 3 
your tributary drops belong to.. Romeo fy Juliet, iii. 2 
drink all, and leave no friendly drop — v. 3 

that drop of blood, that's ealm Hamlet, iv. 5 

she let it drop by negligeuee Othello, iii. 3 

each drop she fails would prove a croeiHlile — iv. 1 
some part of my soul a drop of patience — iv. 2 

drop tears as fast as the Arabian — v. 2 

DROP-HEIR— young Drop-heir. .l/ens./oi.Weaj. iv. 3 
DROPLET— those our droplets.. T.moiio/.JWenj, v. 5 

DROPPED— they dropped, as by Tempest, ii. 1 

hast thou not di'opped from heaven? .... — ii. 2 
letter that I drojiped to betray. . Twelfth Night, iii. 2 
under a tree, like a dropped acorn. ./fj you Like, iii. 2 
vengeance for' t not dropped down. Winler'sTale, iii. 2 
as if an angel ilropped down from . .\ Henry 1 V. iv. 1 
my heart dropped love, my pow'er. Henry VIII. iii. 2 
tongue of roaring T)'phon dropped. Troil.Sf Cress, i. 3 

he dropped it for Ids country Coriolanus, iii. 1 

instigations have been often dropped. Ju/. C(P«ar,ii. I 
as plates dropped from his pocket . . Ant.S; Cleo. V. 2 

and on the sudden dropped — v. 2 

he would have dropped his knife... riYui And. ii. b 

as pearls from diamonds dropi^ed Lear, iv. 3 

that there he drojiped it, for a special ..Othello, v. 2 

DROPPETII— it droppeth, as 1/er. of Venice, iv. 1 

DROPPING— dropping upon thy head.. Tempest, ii. 1 

dropping the hides and hips Henry V. iv. i 

through a temiiest drojiping fire. . . .JuliusCcrsar, i, 3 

and with a dropping iuuustry I'iricles, iv. 1 

one auspieious and one dropping eye . . Hamlet, i. 2 

like eager droppings into milk — i. 5 

DROPSIED— it is a dropsicd honour . . Alt's Welt, ii. 3 
DRtJPSIES — svi'oln parcel of dropsies.! Henry tV. ii. 4 
DROPSY— the dropsy drown this (ooW.Tempcsl, iv. 1 

DROSS- not to shows of dross Mer. of Venice, ii. 7 

it is dross, usurning ivy, briar . . Comedy of Err. ii. 2 

merit of vile gold, dross, dust Eing John, iii. 1 

no ((tialifving dross [/iHf.-cross]. . Trail. I^Cress. iv. 4 

DKO.SSV— "tlic drossy age dotes on Hamlet, v. 2 

Dlv(iliTll-in summers drouth.. TOiij/lnrfi on. iii. I 
as the blither for their drouth ..Pericles, iii. (Gow.) 

Dili I \E -drove the grossness of Merry Wives, v. 5 

in enneliisinn, drove us to seek ....1 Henry IV. iv. 3 

more dazzlel and drove back \HenryVI. i. 1 

frnm i;n_'lniid's bank drove bBck..2/fenry *'/, iii. 2 

ClitlVud. ilr.ive me thence SHenryVI, ii. 2 

drove him into this melancholy.. Timon of Alh. iv. 3 

he diovv the bristled lips before Coriolnnw, ii. 8 

oue mortal uii^ht, drove liim to this Pcriclei, v. I 



DRO 



[ 198 J 

DROWSY— with their drowsy, slo-w..2HenryVI. iv. 1 

ever entered iu a drowsy head Richard III, v. 3 

amazement to tlieir drowsy spirits. Troil. <$• Cres. ii. 2 

have roxised his drowsy blood — v. 6 

run a cold and drowsy humour., /?omeo«§-yH//>/, iv. 1 
nor all the drowsy syrups of the world. O/Ac/fo, lii. 3 
DRUDGE— and common drudge.. ^f(?r. of l^imice, lii. 2 
if I be his cuckold, he's my drudge . . All's Well, i. 3 
you whoreson malthorse drudge! Tamingnf s/i. iv. 1 
this drudge, or diAaner, laid claim.. Cmn. ofErr. iii. 2 
these paltry, serxile, abject drudges! 'iHcnryyi.iv. 1 

credit this base drud'^e^s words — iv. 2 

this carl, a very drudge of nature's.. CymWine, v. 2 
I am tlie drudge, and toil in your. Homeo <j- Jul. ii. .■) 
DRUDGKRY— and lier drudgery. ...2f/(';n;//;'. iii. 2 
DRUG— wholesome syrups, drugs. . Comedi/ :y'Eir. v. 1 
or what purgative drug would scour . . Maclietli, v. 3 
passive drugs of it freely command. Timon ofAth. iv. 3 
if knife, drugs, serpents, have . . Antony f,- Cien. iv. 13 

have you brought those di'ugs? Cijmbeline, i. H 

with a drug of such damned nature.. — i. 6 

he hath a drug of mine — iii. 5 

Pisanio, I'll now taste of thy drug . . — iv. 2 
the drug he gave me, which, lie said — iv. 2 

such mortal drugs I have Romeo ^Juliet, v. 1 

true apothecary, thy drugs are quick — v. 3 

hands apt, drugs fit, and time Hamlel, iii. 2 

abused her delicate youth with dru^s . . Othello, i. 2 
what drugs, what charms, what conjuration — i. 3 
DRUG-DAMNED- 

that drug-damned Italy hath Cymbeline, iii. 4 

DRUGGED— drugged their possets Macbeth, ii . 2 

DRUM— but the drum and fife Much Ado, ii. 3 

be still, di'um! for yom- manager.. Loi'e','jL.Los(, i. 2 
and when j-ou hear the drum . . Mer. of Venice, ii. .') 
shake my sword, and hear tbe drura.^AlVsH'ctl, ii. .*> 
a lover of thj' drum, hater of love . . — iii. 3 

lose our di-uni ! well — iii. .5 

to let him fetch off his drum (rep.) . . — iii. 6 
to undertake the recovery of this drum — iv. 1 
I would, I had any drum of the enemy's — iv. 1 

he has led the drum before — iv. 3 

apla"ue of all drums! — iv. 3 

how does your drum? O my good lord — v. 2 

he's a gooa drum, my lord — v. 3 

good Tom Drum, lend me — v. 3 

a drum, adrum; IMacbeth doth come.. Macbeth, i. 3 
interruption of their churlish drums. KingJohn, ii. 1 
trumpets, and loud churlish drums.. — iii. I 

come tripping after drums — v. 2 

of thy drum, and even at hand a drum — v. 2 

with boisterous untuned drums Riclmrd II. i. 3 

the noise of threatening drum — iii. 3 

of gtms, and drums, and wounds \Henry Il'.\. 3 

could wish, this taveru were my drum! — iii. 3 

as lief hear the devil as a drum — iv. 2 

a rout of rebels with your drum , , . .%Henry IV. iv. 2 

strike up our drums, pursue — iv. 2 

did sound, or drum struck up 1 Henry VI. i. 4 

hark ! by the sound of drum — iii. 3 

the Dauphin's driun, a warning bell — iv. 2 

let your drums be still — v. i 

sound, drums and trumpets 2 Henry VI. v. 3 

sound drums and trumpets ZHenry VI. i. 1 

I hear their drums; let s set our men — i. 2 
strike up, drums; God, and St. George — ii. 1 
at hand, I hear liis drum. It is not his — v. 1 

the drum your honour hears — v. I 

strike up the drum; cry, courage!.... — v. 3 

sound, drums, and trumpets! — v. 7 

hark, hark 1 a drum. Catesby Richard. HI. iii. b 

hear his drum [^Col. /fn(.-the trumpet sounds] — iv. 4 

strike alai-um, drums! letnot — iv. 4 

strike up the drum. I pr'ythee, hear . . — iv. 4 
sound, drums, and trumpets, boldly . . — v. 3 

hark, I hear their drum — v. 3 

peace, drums. Achilles! Troil. ff Cress, y. 10 

ha ! a drum ! thou'rt quick Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

follow thy drum ; with man's blood . . — iv. 3 
beat thy drum, and get thee gone .... — iv. 3 
strike up the drum towards Athens . . — iv. 3 
the enemies' drum is heard, and fearful — v. 3 
each other's leech: let our drums strike — v. 5 
I hear hither your husband's drum . . Coriolanus, i. 3 

the swords, and hear a drum — i. 3 

our drums are bringing forth our youth — i. 4 

briefly we heard their drums — i. 6 

when drums and trumpets shall .... — _i. 9 
ran from the noise of our own drums — ii. 3 

which quired with my drum — iii. 2 

you shall have the drum struck up . . — iv. 5 
beat thou the drum, that it speak — — v. 5 
that drums him from his sport — Antony SrCleo.\. 4 
the drums demurely wake the sleepers — iv. 9 
honours, lords, with trump and drum. Titus And. i. 2 
at their chamber door I'll beat the drum..i.eaj-, ii. 4 

Where's thy drum? France spreads — iv. 2 

metliinks, I hear the beaten drum — iv. 6 

let the drum strike, and prove my title . . — v. 3 
and then anon drums in his ear. . Romeo Sr Juliet, i. 4 

on, lusty gentlemen. Strike, drum — i. 4 

why does the driim come hither? Hamlet, v. 2 

spirit-stirring drum, the ear- piercing. . Othello, iii. 3 
DRUMBLE— how you drumble! . . Merry Wires, iii. 3 
DRUMMER— drummer, strike up..3Henry VI. iv. 7 
DRUMMING-I'll no more drumming.. lU's/rpf/.iv. 3 
DRUNK — 'scape being drunk, for want. Tempest, ii. 1 
if he have never drunk w^ine afore .... — ii. 2 

that hath drunk so much sack — lii. 2 

he is drunk now — v. 1 

and made me drunk Merry ffives, i. 1 

what I did when you made me drunk — i. 1 
the gentleman had drunk himself . . — i. 1 

I'll ne'er be drunk whilst I live — i. 1 

if I be drunk, I'll be drunk with — i. I 

drunk nightly in your company. . Twelfth Night, i. 3 

by mine honour, half drunk — i.5 

O he's drunk, sir Toby — y. I 

he would be drunk too . . Measure for Measure, iii. 2 
drunk many times a day (rep. J — iv. 2 



DRY 



DROVE R — like an honest drover .... Much .ido, ii. 1 
DK(^)WN— shall we give o'er and drov/nt Tempest, i. 1 

the Bca cannot drown me — iii. 2 

men hang and thown their proper selves — iii. 3 

tile dropsy drown tills fool! — iv. 1 

I'll drown my l)Ook — v. 1 

this fellmv could nut drown — v. 1 

and a tlurd drowns liim TirelfihNlght, i. 5 

thuugli I seem to dnuvn lier remembrance — ii. 1 
cougliiii-r driiuns tiie parson's. Lot'e'sL. L. v. t (song) 
sonieu liiit drown mv manly spirit .. Mer. of Ven . ii. 3 

and I'leasure drown' tlie brim All'sfrell,ii. 4 

or to drown my clothes, and say .... — iv. 1 

we drown our gain in tears! — iv. 3 

burns worse than tears drown Winter' sTale,ii. I 

to drown me in thy sister's .. Comedy of Errors, iii. 2 

that tears shall drown the wind Macbeth, i. 7 

and drown the weeds; make we — v. 2 

or, wouldst thou drown thyself King John, iv. 3 

the silver rivers drown their shores. R/Mar'i ii. iii. 2 
vaulting sea refused to drown iae..'iHenry VI. iii. 2 

I'll drown more sailors than ZHenry VI. iii. 2 

my sighs or tears I blast or drown — iv. 4 

what pain it was to drown ! Richard III. i. 4 

I'll drown you iu the Malmsey-butt — i. 4 
thy plaints, and drown thy cries? .. — ii. 2 
plenteous tears to drown the world! — ii. 2 

drown desperate sorrow in dead — ii. 2 

thus will I drown your exclamations — iv. 4 
thou drown the sad remembrance. ... — iy. 4 
a sin that often drowns him . . Timon of Alliens, iii. 5 

and drown themselves in riot! — iv. 1 

drown them in a di'auglit — v. 1 

come, and drown consideration. .^^i/ony 8,-Cleo. iv. 2 
storm win drown the fragrant . . Titus Andron.i). 5 
drovra the lamenting fool in sea-salt — iii. 2 
floods of tears will djown my oratory — v. 3 

and drowm me with their sweetness Pericles, v. I 

lie would drown the stage with tears ..Hamlet, ii. 2 
that this fnlly drowns [X'«(.-douts] it .. — iv. 7 
if I drown myself wittingly, it argues — v. 1 

to this water, and drown himself — v. i 

and drown him, he drowns not himself — v. I 
this world to drown or hang themselves — v. 1 

I will incontinently drown myself Othello, i. 3 

I would drown myself for the love — i. 3 

drown thyself? drown cats, and blind . . — i. 3 

DROWNED— less afraid to be drowned.. Tempest, i. 1 

does remember my drowned father.... — i. 2 

that Ferdinand is drowned? — ii. 1 

but he's drowned and tliese — ii. 2 

but art thou not drowned Stephauo? .. — ii. 2 

I hope now thou art not drowned — ii. 2 

all our company else being drowned . . — ii. 2 
my man-monster hath drowned his . . — iii. 2 
he is drowned, whom thus we stray — — iii. 3 

whom they suppose is drowned — iii. 3 

the mean is drowned with .. TwoGen. of Verona, i. 2 

in the sea, where I am drowned — i. 3 

have drowned a bitch's blind puppies — iii. h 

I had been drowned, but that — iii. 5 

perchance he is not drowned .... Twelfth Night, i. 2 

like a drowned ma,n, a fool — i. 5, 

the tliird degree of drink, he's drowned — i. 6 

was my sister drowned — ii. 1 

she is drowned, already, sir — ii. 1 

thrice welcome, drowned Viola ! — v. 1 

is't not drowned i' the last rain?.il/e(i./or Mea. iii. 2 
stands empty in the drowned &c\d.Mid.N's.Dr. ii. 2 

he is drowned in the brook As you Like it, iii. 2 

being taken with the cramp, was drowned — iv. 1 
being light, be drowned if she sink! Com. of Er. ill. 2 

pluck up drowned honour by 1 Henry IV. i. 3 

lie drowned and soaked in mercenary. Henry V. iv. 7 

they will look like drowned mice \ Henry VI. i . 2 

my heart is drowned with grief 2 Henry VI. iii. 1 

wouldst have me drowned on shore.. — iii. 2 

I drowned these news in tears ZHenry VI. ii. 1 

wliile heart is di'owned in cares? — iii. 3 

for all his wings, the fowl was drowned — v. 6 
there my hopes lie drowned. . TroHus fy Cressida, i. 1 
for his wits are drowned and lost. Timonof Alh. iv. 3 
thy vats our cares be drowned.^n(. ■§• Cleo. ii. 7 (song) 
hast drowned it with thine own. Titus Andron. iii. 1 
a deluge, overflowed and drowned . . — iii. 1 

who drowned their enmity in my — v. 3 

my drowned queen's name Pericles, v. 1 

supposed dead, and drowned — v. 3 

drenched our steeples, drowned the cocks! .Lear, iii. 2 
often drowned, could never die . . Romeo Sf Juliet^ i. 2 
sister's drowned, Laertes. Drowned ! . . Hamlet, i v. 7 
she is drowned? Drowned, drowned .... — iv. 7 
unless she dro\vned herself in her owm . , — v. 1 
argal, slie drowned herself wittingly .... — v. 1 
than to be drowned and go without her..O(/ieWo, i. 3 
inslieltered .and embayed, they are drowned — ii. 1 
our wars are done, the Turks are drowned — ii. 1 

DROWNING— no drowning mark Tempest, i. 1 

'would thou might'st lie dixiwning .... — i. 1 
I have not 'scaped drowning, to be .... — ii. 2 
that I saved from drowning . . Two Gen. of Ver. iv. 4 
then, to 'scape drowning thrice .. JV/er. o/ Fen/ce, ii. 2 

a more delicate way than drowning Ottiello, i. 3 

a pox of drowning thyself! it is clean out — i. 3 

no more of drowning, do you hear — i. 3 

DROWSE — begin to droop and drovrst. Macbeth, iii. 2 

DROWSED— but rather drowsed. ... 1 Henry IV. iii. 2 

DROWSILY-thou speak'st drowsily ?/u(.C(Ssar, iv.3 

DROWSINESS — a strange drowsiness.. Tempest, ii. 1 

DROWSY— drowsy and neglected. A/eas./orMeas. i. 3 

sleep when I am drowsy, and tend . . Much Ado, i. 3 

dapples the drowsy east with spots . . — v. 3 

by tiie dead and drowsy fire . . Mid. N.'sDrram, v. 2 

makes heaven drowsy with Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 

beetle, witli his drowsy hums Marlieih, iii. 2 

unto tlie drowsy race of night King Jolin, iii. 3 

vexin" the dull ear of a drowsy man — iii. 4 
third hour of drowsy morning . . Henry V. iv. (cho.) 

break up their drowsy grave — iv. I 

the sudden from their drowsy beds..l Henry VI. ii. 2 



D RUNK— he was drunk then Meas.for Mens. v. 1 

bid those that are drunk get them. . Much Ado, iii. 3 

make misfortune drunk with — , v. 1 

I have drunk poison, whiles he uttered it — v. 1 

he hath not drunk ink Love's L. Lost, iv. 2 

when he is drunk, when he is Mer. of Venice, i. 2 

one dead, or drunk? see, dotli.. Taming of Sh. 1 (ind.) 
wilt not be drunk; hut I (rep.) . . Winter's Tale, v. 2 

was the hope drunk wherein you Macbeth, i. 7 

that which hath made tliein drunk. . . . — ii. 2 

intelligence been drunk? King John, iv. 2 

teeming date drunk up with time?../e;c/iarrf //. v. 2 

what, di-unk with choler? ] Henry IV. i. 3 

be else; I have drunk medicines .... — ii. 2 
I am a rogue, if I drunk to-day .... — ii. 4 
but the sack that thou hast driink me — iii. 3 
you have drunk too much canaries.. 2HenryZr. ii. 4 
the rascal's drunk; you have hurt him — ii. 4 
by the mass, I liave drunk too much sack — v. 3 
against a post when he was drunk . . Henry V. iii. 2 

the thirsty earth liatli drunk SHenry VI. ii. 3 

unlawfully made drunk with .... Richard III. iv. 4 
unless they are drunk, sick .. Troilusfy Cressida, i. 2 
to-night, shall be,— drunk to-hed. Antony l^-Cleo. i. 2 

I drunk him to his bed — ii. .^ 

hast thou drunk well? — ii. 7 

the third part then is drunk — ii. 7 

my fatlier, sir, has drunk to you Pericles, ii. 3 

if thou hadst drunk to him — iv. 4 

have not yet drunk a hundred . . Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 2 

with his own tears made driuik — iii. 3 

when he is drunk, asleep, or in his .... Hamlel, iii. 3 

1 have drunk but one cup to-night Othello, ii. 3 

with that which he hath druuk'to-night — ii. 3 

with facility, your Dane dead drunk — ii. 3 

do not think, gentlemen, I am drunk .. — ii. 3 

I am not drunk now; I can stand — ii. 3 

you must not think then that I am di-unk — ii. 3 

come, come, you're drunk. Drunk! — ii. 3 

drunk? and speak parrot? and squabble? — ii. 3 
I drunk? You, or any man living (rep.) — ii. 3 
as gross as ignorance made drunk — iii. 3 

DRUNKARD— our lives by drunkards.. Tempes/, i. 1 
to make a wonder of a potir drunkard. . — ii. 2 
to take this poor drunkard for a god . . — v. 1 

this Flemish drunkard picked Merry Wives, ii. 1 

and I will, like a true drunkard Much Ado, iii. 3 

one drunkard loves another Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 

censure, worse than drunkards. . .-ts you Like it, iv. 1 
to the drunkard's chamber .. Taming of Sh. I (ind.) 

duty to the drunkard let him do — 1 (^iiid.) 

to hear him call the drunkard, husband — I (iii<l.) 
thou drunkard, thou, what didst.Comedy nf Er. iii. 1 

rivo, says the drunkard IHennjI V. ii. 4 

but like a drunkard must I vomit . . Titus.ind. iii. 1 

drunkards, liars, and adulterers Lear, i. 1 

I have seen drunkards do more than this — ii. 1 
darkness like a drunkard reels. . Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 3 

they clepe us, drunkards, and witli Hamlet, i. 4 

now, 'mongst this flock of drunkards . . Othello, ii. 3 
he shall tell me I am a di-uukard! — ii. 3 

DRUNKEN— a drunken monster Tempest, ii. 2 

Stephano, my drunken butler? — v. 1 

and not with drunken knaves Merry Wii^es, i. 1 

what's a drunken man like, fool?. Twelfth Night, i. b, 

I hate a drunken rogue — v. I 

your drunken cousin rule over me.. — v. I (let.) 

still had drunken head — v. i (song) 

but as a drunken sleep . . Measure for Measure, iv. 2 
practise on this druuken raan. Taming of Sh. 1 (ind.) 
thou drunken slave, I sent thee. Comedy o/ £rr. iv. 1 

let the earth be drunken with SHenry VI. ii. 3 

by drunken prophecies, libels Richard Ill.i. I 

have done a drunken slaughter — ii. 1 

lives like a drunken sailor on a mast — iii. 4 
wept with drunken spilth of wine. Timon ofAth. ii. 2 
shall be brought drunken forth. . Antony ^ Cteo. v. 2 

what a drunken knave was the sea Pericles, ii. 1 

so slight, so drunken, so indiscreet Ot/iello, ii. 3 

DRUNKENLY-drunkenly caroused.. yJicAard/Z.ii.l 

DRUNKENNESS— 
must amend your drunkenness.. Twelfth Night, ii. 5 
babbling, drunkenness, or any taint — iii. 4 
a fool: drunkenness is his best virtue. .4zr* ff^e//,iv.3 
it liatli pleased the devil, di-unkenness..OtteHo, ii. 3 

DRUNK'ST— thou drunk'st last . . . .IHenry IV. ii. 4 

DRY— I would fain die a dry death .... Tempest, i. 1 

so dry he was for sway — i. 2 

their joints with dry convulsions — iv. 1 

if the river were dry Two Gen.of Verona, ii. 3 

write till your ink be dry — iii. 2 

or his dry nurse Merry Wives, i. 2 

it's dry, sir Twelfth NiglU, i. 3 

but I can keep my hand dry — i.3 

adryjest,sir — i.3 

go to, you're a dry fool — i. 5 

give the dry fool drink, then {rep.) .. — i.5 
nay, dry your eyes; one of our. Meas. for Mens. iv. 3 

here's his cUy hand up and down Much Ado, ii. 1 

I could munch your good dry oats. Mid. N. Dr. iv. 1 

this jest is dry to me Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

till my very roof was dry with. .il/er. of Venice, iii. 2 
as dry as the remainder biscuit . . As you Like it, ii. 7 

high top bald with dry antiquity — iv. 3 

with udders all drawn dry — iv.3 

none so dry or thirsty will deign.. ramme-o/S/i. v. 2 
perchance, shall dry yom' pities.. Winter sTale, ii. 1 

the coloui- s not dry — v. 3 

so many summers dry; scarce any .. — v. 3 
then 'twill be dry. It it be, sir .. Comedy of Err. ii. 2 

Purchase me another dry basting — ii. 2 
will drain him dry as hay Macbeth, i. 3 

drinking oceans dry; where one. . . . Richard II. ii. 2 

nay, dry your eyes; tears show — iii. 3 

when I was dry with rage IHemylV. i. 3 

or a dry wheel grate — iii. 1 

a dry hand? a yellow cheek? iHenrylV. i. 2 

these six dry, roimd, old, withered .. — ii. 4 

as rheumatic as two drj' toasts — ii. 4 

wheu I have been dry, and bravely .2 Henri/ VI. iv. 10 



DRY 

DRY— to dry thv checks withal 

will nnickly dry thy nicltiu(? tears . 



[ 199 ] 



DUK 



ii. I 
iii. 2 
iv. 8 



..lllcharillll. i. 3 
.Henrul'llt. iii. 'J 
rroilus^- Cress, i. 3 



I'ttvc him, toiirv liisciiecKa 

he'll hulc it drv to h.ivo liis wny 
mv sea slmll sm-k thiiii dry.... 
tliy very l:eiiins will dry those, 
and then, to dry thoni, iravest . . 
let's dry our eyes; and thus far 
AiKiUo "knows, 'tis dry enough . 

now the drv scriiiiio on — ;■. j 

jiour in; his nmliilion isdry — ii. 3 

old niouso-e:iteM drv cheese — v. 4 

dear thanks; drv no thv 7"imonn//</*?iM, iv, 3 

to kindle their drv stnl>t)lc Coriolnnus, ii. 1 

the sweat ot'indnstry would dry ..Cymbeline, iii, G 
staunch the earth's dry amietite.Tilus Antlron. iii. 1 

yet not ilrv with inirv slinic — ii>. 1 

pKKl Titus, dry thine eyes — ill. 1 

dry up in iier tlie organs of increase Lear, i, 4 

kevp their fur dry, unbonneted lie nins — iii, 1 

court holy-water" in a dry house — iii. 2 

poor Tom, thy horn is dry — ii;- II 

and night's dank dew to <lry . . Rnmeo Jj- Jitliel,_\\- 3 
siwnt, when theirs are dry, for Homeo's — iii. 'i 

dry sorrow drinks our bloo<l — iii. 5 

dry up your tears, and stick your.... — iv. 5 
and, 8pun!;c, you shall be dry again . . Hamlet, iv. 2 

heat, dry up my brains ! — iv. .'> 

motion you arc hot and drv — iv. 7 

DRY-BE.\T— dry-beat the rest.. Homeo 4- JwiiW, iii. 1 

1 will drv-licat von witli an iron wit — iv. .') 
DUY-HK.'VTEN— all drv-he;iten.. Loup's L. Lo»(, v. 2 
l)KY-FOl)T— draws drv-loot wM.Comedy nfKr. iv. 2 

OKYl.Y-it looks ill, it eats dryly AU'stVell,\. 1 

UKYXUSS—drvnessof his holies.. .-in'oni/ 4- Cko. i. 4 
Dl'B— and duhme knight ilienryll'. v. 3 (song) 

unless to dub thee with the Hennj V. ii. 2 

vour sword, and dub him presentlv.3 Henri/ VI. ii. 2 
DlIBBED-dubbed with unliacked. ;'«WftA.Vis-/iMii. 4 

what! I am duhlied KinaJnhn.X. I 

were but yesterday dubbed knii-'lits . . Henry I', iv. 8 

brother dubbed tlieni gentlewomen. flicAnrd III. i. 1 

DUC.VT— not so much as a ducat. Two Gen. of I'er. i. 1 

three thousand ducats a year TwelflhSii;hl, i. 3 

but a year in all these ducats — i. 3 

to put a ducat in her clack-dish. 3/e(«. /or Mens. iii. 2 

and thy fee is a thousand ducats Much .lilo, ii. 2 

earned of don John a thousand ducats — iii. 3 
received a tluiusand ducats of don John — iv. 2 
three thousand ducats, — well . . .tlerch. of I'enice, i. 3 
three thousand ducats, for three months — i. 3 

three thousan<l ducats: I think — i. 3 

of full three thousand ducats — i. 3 

av, ay: tliree thousand ducats — i. 3 

tfiree thousand ducats. 'tis a good.... — i. 3 
can lend three thousand ducats? .... — i. 3 
go and purse the ducats straight .... 

there is a ducat for thee 

rild myself with some more ducats . . 

O my ducats: Omydaughterl 

O my christian ducats! Justice (^rrp.) 
bags" of ducats, of double ducats stolen 
the stones upon her, and the ducats. . 

his daughter and his ducats 

two thousand ducats in Frankfort 1 . . 

two thousand ducats in that 

and the ducats in her coffin! 

one night, fourscore ducats 

fourscore ducats at a sitting! irep.) . . 
the first boy, for a thousand ducats . . 

for me, three thousand ducats 

than to receive three thousand ducats 

to give ten thousand ducats 

ducats here is six. If every ducat (rep.) 
three thousand ducats, due unto .... 
did refuse three thousand ducats of me 
two thousand ducats by the year. Tamil 

two thousand ducats by the year — 

amount to three odd ducats more. . Com. of Er 

there is purse of ducats — 

hatli of mine worth forty ducats 

for forty ducjxts is too much 

five hundred ducats, villain — iv. 4 

to her for a purse of ducats? — iv. 4 

two hundred ducats — iv. 4 

for certain ducats; he with none — v. 1 

this purse of ducats I received — v. 1 

tliese ducats pawn I for my — v. 1 

I will lav you ten thousand ducats ..Cymbctinc, i. .'j 

mv ten tliousand ducats are yours — i. S 

liiild, there is forty ducats Romeo ^Juliet, v. 1 

flftv, a hundred ducats a-piece Hamlet, ii. 2 

a rat? Dead, for a ducat, deafl — iii. 4 

to pay five ducats, five, i would not — iv. 4 

twentv thousand ducats, will not debate — iv. 4 
DUCD.iME-ducdime (rep.). As you Likeit, ii. 5 (song) 
what's that ducdime? Tis a Greek — ii. 5 
DUCIIES.S— duchess of Milan's gown.;Vur/i yl(/o,iii. 4 
before the duke and duchess. . . . Mill. S.'s Dream, i. 2 
would friglit the duchess and the latlics — i. 2 

before 1 came, the duchess died HirliarJ //. ii. 2 

make merry with the duchess' coXd. .iHenry VI. i. 2 
hire<l me to undermine the duchess.. — i. 2 

knavery will l)e the duchess' wreck.. — i. 2 

the duchess, I tell you, exiiccts — i. 4 

the coming of my punished duchess — ii. 4 

whilst I, his forlorn duchess — ii, 4 

like to a duchess, and duke Humphrey's — ii. 4 

the duchess, by his suliornatioii — iii. I 

the bcillam brain-sick duchess — iii. I 

what think you of a duchess? Henry fill. ii. 3 

I know y(tur back will l>ear a duchess — ii, 3 

go with "me to the duchess Lear. iii. 5 

DUCHIES— the duchies of Anjou aw\.2H'nryVI. i. 1 
DlfCK— swam ashore, man, like a duck. Tempest, ii. 2 

I can swim like a duck — ii. 2 

thouili thou canst swim like o duck . . — ii. 2 

O dainty duck ! IJ dear! W.J. N.'t Dream, v. I 

dainty duck, my dcar-a?. . Winter's Tale,iy. i (song) 
is tlicouly dog, my duck Henry v. ii. 3 



DUCK -duck with I'rcnch nods 
for all the ilncks i' the river., /'i 

ah, sweet ducks! () Troilus! . 
learned |.„te .lucks to the coldc 
asailiick lor lite lluit dives..., 



-I'll. 



l\v. 



.illvdu.'l. 
.11 thy hh 



DUDdl 

DrE-their lie~v..l.;-w, 
irimpri-oiiiiuiit W tl 
I have la'eii a ilue an 
a due sin.vritv pivcn 
obcilience. whi.-h i^ d 
as due to l.ivc, as th..i 
due Imt t.i one. ami e 
forf.ml w,.rdsisni..r, 
pavhinithe.li.e..fh 
theducaii.l loiieit ol' 
here apiieareth .lue u 
ducats, due unto tlie 
which as v.-iur due, tii 



— ii. 3 



iii. 1 



— iii. I 



iv. I 



;ofSh. 



ii. 1 



— iv. 3 



lUehard III. 1. 3 

iyCressida, iii. 2 

— iv. 4 

imnnnf.Mh. iv. 3 

■;.•«, ill. (C.iwer) 

i\eii.r///„»<..ii. 1 

ii.Uiii.!..lM/..S('/f... iii.7 

i-crvailLs .... Lear, ii. 2 

liiilgcon...War/jc(/i, ii. 1 

\-. .lue west. Twelfth Nigltt, iii, 1 

'.- .lue .if . . Meas.for Meas. iii. 2 

I wary n..tc.... — iv. 1 

e.l hi's deeds . . — v. 1 

!.■ to ine...Wi!/. S.'s Dream, i. 1 

-lits 



DTIKE— if the duke continue these. Tirelflh Mghl,\. 4 
if the duke, with the other dukes. /V/i-uj.yor ,Wcaj.i. 'J 
" the ilukcB fall upon the king — i. 2 



lied with. 



— iii. 2 



Lore's L. Lost, iv 
.y-toiu'ued .. — _v, 2 
y bond. . Mer. of Venice, iv, 1 
1 the bond ,. — iv, 1 
IV, we freely.. — iv. 1 
claims All's fVell, \i. i 



which shall have due course fVinler'sTale,i\\.2 

a saving, sir, not due to me — iii. 2 

my errand, due unto my tongue. Comfrfy of Err.]]. I 

1 ivm due to a woman — iii. 2 

since Pentecost the sura is due — iv. 1 

say, how grows it due? Due for — iy. 4 

more is thy due than more than Macbelli, i. 4 

not lose the dues of rejoicing — i. S (letter) 

this tvruut holds the due of birth — iii. Ii 

a lec-'i;;iet', line to some single breiust?., — iv. 3 

that will with due decision make — y- 4 

with all due e.\:i)edience Richard II. u. 1 

and form, ami due proportion — iii. 4 

no; I'll give thee thy due IHcury Jr. i. 2 

he will give his devil his due — i. 2 

'tis not due vet; I would be loath — — v. 1 

look to taste the due meet for 2 Henry IV. iv. 2 

thy due, from me, is tears — iv. 4 

mv <lne, from thee, is this imperial .. — iv. 4 
holding due course to llarfleur. Henry f'. ill. (chorus) 

but let my ho se have his due — '■'• ' 

numbers, and ilue course of things — v. (chorus) 

thy enemy, due thee withal 1 Henry VI. iv. 2 

ere you can take due orders 2Henry VI. in. 1 

I cannot give due action to my words — v. 1 
enlargement what are thy due fees?.3Hcrw!/ VI. iv. B 

state, and seat, is due to me Itichard IIL]. 3 

of fortune, and your due of birth — iii. 7 

the ripe revenue, and due of birth — — iii. 7 

the gift, my due by promise — iv. 2 

grave's due by life usurped — iv. 4 

and blame the due of blame — v. 1 

carries the due o' the verdict with it. Henri/ VIII. v. 1 
with due observance of thy . . Troilus fy Cressida, i. 3 

priraogenitive and due of birth — i. 3 

natiu-e craves, all dues be rendered . . — \\.2 

claim it when 'tis due — \\'.h 

show their sears, a mock is due — iv. 5 

a note of certain dues. Dues?.. Timon of Athens, ii. 2 
to stop the mouth of present dues .... — ii. 2 

to whom 'tis instant due — .})■ 2 

give thee thy due;— and one that knows — iii. I 
the due of honour in no point om\t..Cymbetine, iii. 5 
with admiration what is now due debt — iv. 2 
the hazard therefore due fall on me. . — iv. 4 

the graces for his merits due — v. 4 

any thing that's due to all — v. 5 

should again do their due functions.. — v..') 

due to tliis heinous capital offence Pericles, ii. 4 

with all due dili{»ence — iii. ((Jowcr) 

lust the dTie and just reward — v. 3 (Gower) 

abode make with you by due turns Lear, i. 1 

myself, to be in a due resolution — i. 2 

the kingdom may have due note of him. . — ii. 1 
effects of courtesy, dues of gratitude .... — ii. 4 

to thee a woman's services are due — iv. 2 

your soul to give it due content Hamlet, 

_. : :*u J.,.. ....,,»..« t..,.-....,^ f\ih,-n 



urd 



.OIhillo,\. 3 



steering with due c.jurse t. 

profess due to the .M.:«ir, m.\- l.inl 

due reference of place, an. 1 exhibition.. .. — \.'^ 

but keeps due on to the Pro]. untie — iii. 3 

in the due reverence of a sacred vow — — iii. 3 
DUELLIST— a duellist, a duellist., ffomeo fyJul. ii. 4 
DUELLO— by the duello avoid il.TwelfihNight, iii. 4 

the duello he regards not Love's L.Los', i. 2 

DUER— finer paid to the hearer 2 Henry IV. iii. 2 

DIIFF-dear Duff, I pr'ythee, contradict. .WnrdcM, ii. 3 
DUG— anil the cow's dugs that her.. As you Like it, ii. 4 

shall thv old dugs once more Itichard 1 1, v. 3 

dying with motlier's dug bet ween.. 2 Hen ri/T/. iii, 2 
yet from my dugs he drew not .... Richard III. ii. 2 
then laid wormwood to rav dug.. Romeo ^ Jutiel,i. 3 

on the nipple of my dug, and felt — i. 3 

tetchv, un.l fall out with the dug — i. 3 

he .lid e.mipl V with his dug Hamlet, v. 2 

DUKE— lather was the duke of Milan ..Tempest, i. 2 

and thy father was duke of Milan — i. 2 

and l*rosnero the prime tluke — i. 2 

he did Ixdieve he was thediike — i. 2 

the duke of Milan, and his brave son — i. 2 

the ilukc of .Milan, an.l his more braver.. — i. 2 

mv lonl the. 1 like, stand too — iii. 3 

tlfc wrmiw.l .luke ..f .Milan — v. 1 

that very iliike whi.'h was thrust — v. 1 

daULditeV to this liimoiisd'Uko of Milan.. — v. 1 
near allied iiiitilhe iliike ..TwoGen.ofVerona,iv. 1 

under the duke's table — iv. 4 

hang him up, BBVs the duke — iv. 4 

here comes the iluke — v. 2 

it is mv lord the duke — v. 4 

thedulte himself will be Aferrj/ Ifi'cej, iv. 3 

what duke should that he — iv. 3 

they arc pone to meet the duke — iv. 5 

preparation for a duke de Jarmany.. — iv. 5 

dere is no duke, dat de court — iv. 5 

a noble duke in nature Twelfth Sight, i. 2 

no kind of suit, no, njt the duke's — i. 2 

I'll serve this duke — i. 2 



the new deputy now for the duke.. .. 
sc'iiil alter the duke, and apjieal 



— ii. I 

— ii. I 



.•d - 



ii!. I 



iii. 2 



iii. 2 



_ iv. 3 



iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 6 
iv. 6 
V. 1 
V. 1 



V. 1 



▼. 1 



.Much .4rfo. iii. J 



the duke is very strangely gone 
I aiii the poor duke's constable ... 
think me the i.oor duke's officer . 
h.iw iiiiiili i» tlic good dukedeceiv 

an.l lunch |il.:i-c the absent duke — 

what new?.. Ii iar, of the duke? — 

lonl .\iiL;el.i .hikes it well in his .... — 

w.nil.l the .Inkc, that is absent — 

lic\cr heard the absent duke much .. — 

who? not the duke? yes, your — 

the duke had crotchets in him — 

a shy fellow was the duke — 

of the subject held the duke to be wise — 

but, if ever the duke return — 

well known to the duke — 

you hope the duke will return no more — 
I would, the duke wc talk of. were. . . — 
the duke yet would have dark deeds — 

the duke, I say to thee again — 

with child by him in the duke's time — 
of what disposition was the duke? .. — 
how came it that the absent duke. . . . — 
were you sworn to the duke or to the — 
if the duke avouch the justice of .... — 
here is the hand and seal of the duke — 
contents of this is the return of the duke — 

perchance of the duke's death — 

the duke comes home to-morrow .... — 

f trace of the duke, revenges to — 
le that sent me of the duke's return — 
he shall bring you before tlie duke .. 
but thev say, the duke will be here., 
if the old fantastical duke of dark . . 
sir, the duke is marvellous little .... 
thou know'st not the duke so well . . 
can tell thee prettv tales of the duke 
such vantage on the duke he shall not 
very near upon the duke is entering 

justice, O royal duke! 

O worthy duke, you bid me seek — 

gracious duke, harp not on that . . 
most villanous speeches of the duke 
where is the duke? 'tis he should (rep.) 
is the duke gone? then is your (rep.) 
from him to the duke himself. ....... 

the duke dare no more stretch this . . 

in the absence of the duke 

what you said of the duke? 

and was the duke a fleshmonger .... 

1 love the duke, as I love myself 

first knave, that e'er made a duke . . 
said even now, I made you a duke 

we are the poor duke's officers 

happy be Tlieseus, our renowned dvke.Mid. N. Dr.i. 1 
m.v gracious duke, this hath ........ 

my gracious duke, be it so she will . . 
in our interlude before the duke — 

that I will make the duke say 

at the duke's oak we meet 

as we will do it before the duke 

do not you think, the duke was 

end of a play, before the duke 

masters the "duke is coming from the 
an' the duke had not given him .... 

is, that the duke hath dined 

which i> the duke's own person?. .ioc 
to stii.iy three vcars with the duke .. 
sir, the'duke's jdeasure is, that you .. 
vow-fellows with this virtuous duke? 
the duke of Saxony's nephew? . . Mer. qf I 

with outcries raised the duke 

but there the duke was "iveu to — 

.(Vntonio certi£*:d the duke 

he plies tlie duke at morning 

twentv merchants, the duke himself 

the duke shall grant me justice 

I am sure, the duke will never 

the duke cannot deny the course — — i 

in the mercy of the duke only — 

and beg mercy of the duke — 

so please my lord the duke, and all. . — 

Charles, the duke's wrestler As you Like it 

the old duke is banished by his (rcj).) — 
an.l revenues enrich the new duKe .. — 

if R.isaliii.l. the duke's daughter — 

Olio, for the duke's daughter, her cousin — 

where will the old duke live? — 

wrestle t.i-morrow before the new duke? — 

thv uncle, the duke my father — 

with Charles, the duke's wrestler — 

we will make it our suit to the duke — 
yet such is now the duke's condition — 
the duke is humorous; what he is . . — 
daughter of the duke that here was. . — 

daughter to the banished duke — 

of late Ibis duke hath ta'en displeasure — 

from tvrant duke, unto a tyrant — 

the dulke niv father loved his father — 

l.i.ik. here .OHIO the duke — 

kuo^v'^t thou n t, the duke hath — 

the bonv iiriser .it' the humorous duke? — 
the duke will drink under this tree. . — 

and I'll go seek the duke — 

1 am the duke, that loved vour — 

the duke vour father. I nut the duke — 

I must attend the duke at .liuiier — 

let's prei-ent him to the .hike — 

he le.l me t.i Ihe gentle duke, who giu'e — 
the duke, and all his eonti-iUeil followers — 
1 will bill the duke to (he nuptial.... — 

two of the l.aniBhed .lllke'^ pages — \. i 

keep vou vour word, ( ) duke, to give — T. 4 
gooil i"Iuke rc'-eive thy dau^ihter . . — v. 1 tverse> 

the duke hath put on a religious — v. 4 

from below your duke, to liaueath.,.. All's Hell, ii. : 



i. 1 



iii. I 
iv. I 
iv. 1 
iv. 2 



ii. 1 



_ ii.B 



— ii. 8 



iii. 3 



iv. 3 
V. 2 
V. 2 



DUK 



DUKE-the duke will lay upon him. . All's Well, iii. •-' 

witli liis own Inmd he slew tlie duke's — iii- '■> 

Antonio, the duke's eldest ton — iii. 'o 

the duke shall both speuk of it — iii- B 

he met the duke in tlie street, sir — iv. 3 

the duke hath ottered liim letters — iv. 3 

I have eonge'd with the duke _ — iv. 3 

how many norse the duke is strong — iv. 3 (note) 

what eredit I have with the duke.... — iv. 3 
what Ills reputation is with the duke — Iv. 3 (notel 

■with the duke? the duke kuowa him — iv. 3 

with the duke's other letters — iv. 3 

this is not tlie duke's letter, sir — iv. 3 

to his reputation with the duke — iv 3 

and the duke (for private (rep.).. Taming of Sh. iv. i 

I cliarge you, in the duke's name — — y. 1 

of your duke to merchants Comedy of Errors, i. 1 

his goods confiscate to the duke's dispose — . i. 1 

charge you, iu the duke's name — iv. 1 

complain unto the duke of this — v. 1 

I am sure the duke himself — v. 1 

kneel to the duke, before he — v. I 

justice, most sacred duke, against .. — v. 1 

therefore, most gracious duke — v- 1 

justice, most gracious duke, oh, grant — V. 1 

this day, great duke, she shut — v. I 

most mighty duke, vouchsafe me — v- 1 

the duke, and all that know me — v. 1 

most mighty duke, behold a man .... — v. 1 

renowned duke, vouchsafe to — v. 1 

the duke, ray husband, and my — v. 1 

by this brave duke came early to hh. King John, ii. 1 

before the gates of Anglers, duke — ii. 1 

appeal tlie duke on ancient malice . . Richard II. i. 1 

we return these dukes what we decree — .i- 3 

for now his son is duke — !!• 1 

but by robbing of the banished duke — ji- 1 

alas, poor duke I the task he — ]}■ '^ 

to know him now; this is the duke.. — ij- 3 

the noble duke hath been too — iu 3 

the noble duke hath sworn — ii. 3 

where is tlie duke my father — iii. :i 

to execute the noble duke at Calais.. — iv. I 

as I said, tlie duke, great Bolingbroke — v. 2 
where tlie mad-cap duke his uncle . . 1 Henry I y. i. 3 

either earl ol* duke, I can assure you — _ v. 4 

be merciful, great duke, to men Henry V. iii. "2 

abate thy rage, great duke ! — iii ■ ^ 

tell you the duke, it is not so good . . — iij- 2 

you may discuss unto the duke — !!!■ - 

and the king, and the dukes; it is no — ill" "'^ 

high dukes, great princes, barons.. ., — !!!••' 

the duke will hear thy voice — ill''' 

I would desire the duke to use his .. — iii. (i 

your majesty, the duke is a prave man — iii. b 

I tliink tlie duke hath lost never a man — iii. G 

have patience, noble duke iHenryVI.u 3 

tliat hatli incensed the duke — iii. I 

the duke liatli banished moody — ?U- 1 

thanks, gentle duke: but where is .. — iii. 2 

comes the duke, and his; fortune — iii. 3 

welcome, brave duke! thy frieudsliip — iii. 3 

to Bourdeaux, warlike dukel — iv. 3 

Charles, nor yet the duke I named . . — v. 4 

the new-made duke that rules iHenryVl. i. 1 

for Sutfolk's duke, — may he be suttbcate — i. 1 

for a duke's fair daughter — i. 1 

m.v Humphrey, ray sweet duke — i. 2 

a duke, and next of blood — i. - 

she bears a duke's revenues on her back — i. 3 

the duke yet lives, that Henry {lep.) — i. 1 

injurious duke, that threat'st where — i. 4 

father, the duke hath told — ii. 2 

collect these dangers in the duke — iii. 1 

and say, I wronged the duke — iii. 1 

hath your highness seen into this duke — iii. 1 

the duke is virtuous, mild — iii. 1 

[A'///.] Suffolk's duke, thou slialt not see — iii. 1 

sirs, take away the duke, and guard — iii. I 

we have despatched the duke, as he. . — iii- i 

I did dream to-night, the duke was . . — iii. 2 

althouijh the duke was enemy — iii . 2 

anil all to have the noble duke alive — iii. 2 

bo judged, I made the duke away .. — iii. 2 

the life of this thrice-famed duke. . . . — iii. 2 

who should do the duke to death? . . — iii. 2 

had the good duke to keep — iii. 2 

these rags are no part of the duke .... — iv. I 

the meanest of you earls and dukes? — iv. -S 

bid her hide him quickly from the duke — v. 1 

of this most renowned duke — v. I 

but when the duke is slain SHenry VI. i. 1 

can set the duke up, in despite of me — i. I 

made that savage duke thine heir .. — i. I 

and the duke, enforced me — i. 1 

the duke is made protector of the realm — i. 1 

may she be on that hateful duke .... — i. 1 

the brat of this accursed duke — i. 3 

who crowned the gracious dulie :, . . . . — ii . 1 

his name that valiant duke hath .... — ii. 1 

the duke is «dth the soldiers — ii. 1 

he, but a duke, would have his son . . — ii. 2 

here's the duke. The duke! why.... — iv. 3 

to serve a king, and not a duke — iv. 7 

conference with the noble duke Richard III. \. 1 

ga vest the dulce a? clout, steeped — i. 3 

the king against the duke my brother — i. 3 

there sits the duke asleep — i. I 

persuadiu" me not to kill the duke. . — i. 4 

the duke shall know how slack — i. 1 

I repent me that the duke is slain . . — i. 4 

till that the duke give order for — i. 4 

in good time, here comes the noble duke — ii. I 

dukes, earls, lords, gentlemen — ii. 1 

that the gentle duke is dead? — ii. 1 

mighty dukes, Gloster and Buckingham — ii. 4 

instalment of tills noble duke in .... — iii. 1 

most inward with the noble duke? . . — iii. 4 

and in the duke's behalf I'll give .. .. — iii. 4 

in happy time, here comes the duke — iii. I 



[ 200 ] 



DIIKE— the duke wouldbe at dinner. RidiardlU. iii. -I 
nothing like the noble duke my father — iii. .'j 

being not like the duke — iii. 7 

thus saith the duke, thus hath the duke — iii. 7 
the duke will not be spoke withal .. — iii. 7 
good Catesby, to the ["racious duke . . — iii. 7 

ny to the duke. I will, my loril — iv. 4 

here, .and goest not to the duke? — iv. 4 

as the duke said, the will of heaven. Henry /'///. i. I 

the didie bein^ at the l^osc — i. 2 

presently the duke said, 'twas the fear — i. 2 

nor hij heirs (tell you the duke) shall — i. 2 

the duke shall govern England {n-p.) — i. 2 

I told my lord the duke, by the devil's — ■ i. 2 

had reiinived the dukeabout sir William — i. 2 

servant, the duke retained him his .. — i. 2 

after — the duke his father — i. 2 

the great duke eaine to the bar — ii. 1 

wliich the duke desired to him brought — ii. 1 
this duke as much they love and dote — ii. 1 
prepare there, the duke is coming .. — ■ ii. 1 

if the duke be guiltless, 'tis full — ii. 1 

my fatlier-iu-law% the duke — iii. 2 

the duke by law found his deserts . . — iii. 2 

it appears not which of the dukes lie Lear, i. 1 

not all the dukes of waterish Burgundy — ■ i. 1 

as iu the duke himself also — i. I 

the noble duke my master, ray worthy .. — ii. 1 

hark, the duke's trumpets! — ii. 1 

the duke must grant me that — ii. 1 

the duke's pleasure, whose disposition .. — ii. 2 

the duke's to blame in this — ii . 2 

you know the fiery quality of the duke — ii. 4 

the fiery duke? tell tlie hot duke — ii. 4 

this reinotioii of the duke and her — ii. 4 

tell the dnke and his wife, I'd speak .... — ii. 4 
in snuffs and packings of the dukes .... — iii. 1 

there is division between the dukes — iii. 3 

and maintain talk with the duke — iii. 3 

forbid thee, shall the didce instantly know — iii. 3 
advise the duke, where you are going. . . . — iii. 7 
the sight of the death-practised duke. ... — iv. 
knowof the duke, if his last purpose hold — v. 1 

she, and the duke her husband — v. i 

Gonzago is the duke's name Hamlet, iii. 2 

voice potential as double as the duke's. . Otiiello, i. 2 
servants of the duke, and my lieutenant — i. 2 

the duke does greet you, general — i. 2 

and met, are at the duke's already — i. 2 

how may the duke be therewith satisfied — i. 2 
the duke's ill council; and your noble .. — i, 2 

how! the duke in council! in this — i. 2 

the duke himself, or any of my brothers — i. 2 
most gracious duke, to my unfolding .... — i. 3 

'tis Lodovico, come from the duke — iv. 1 

the duke and senators of Venice greet you — iv. 1 

DUKEDOM-was dukedom largeeuough. Tempest, i. 2 

and bend the dukedom yet — i. 2 

out of the dukedom — i.2 

that I prize above my dukedom — i.2 

thy dukedom I resign — v. 1 

and require mjr dukedom of thee — v. 1 

my dukedom since you have given — v. 1 

as much as me my dukedom — v. 1 

Prospero his dukedom iu a poor isle — v. 1 

siuce I have my dukedom got — (epil.) 

your highness took his dukedom. . As you Lilie it, i. 3 

at large, a potent dukedom — v. 4 

of Gaunt, dukedom of Lancaster 1 Henry IV. v. 1 

'twere better than your dukedom . .2Henry IV. iv. 3 
true titles to some certain dukedoms. . . Henry V.\.\ 
all her almost kingl,y dukedoms .... — i.2 

did claim some certain dukedoms.... — i.2 

cannot revel into dukedoms there — i.2 

some petty and unprofitable dukedoms — iii. (cho.) 
but I will sell my dukedom, to buy.. — iii.o 
change two dukedoms for a duke's . .2Henry VI. i. 1 
gave two dukedoms for his daughter — i. 3 

for sellin" the dukedom of Maine — iv. 2 

his dukedom and his chair 'iHenryVI.ii. 1 

for chair and dukedom, throne and. . — ii. 1 
for Gloster's dukedom is too ominous — ii. 6 

enter, as into our dukedom — iv. 7 

challeuse nothing but iny dukedom — iv. 7 
and outy claim our dukedom. ....... — iv. 7 

is not a dukedom, sir, a goodly gift?. . — v. 1 
ray dukedom to a beggarly denier. . Richard III. i. 2 

DULCET— is dulcet in contagion. . TwelfthNietit, ii. 3 

such dulcet and liariuonioiis Mid.N. Dream, ii. 2 

as are those dulcet sounds Merch. of Venice, iii. 2 

and such dulcet diseases As youLike it, v. 4 

and liis discord dulcet, his faith All's Well, \. 1 

a dulcet and a heavenly . . Taming ofSlirew, 1 (ind.) 

DULCUR.\— pin per dulsura que per . Fericles, ii. 2 

DULL — dull thing, I say so Tempest, i. 2 

and worship this dull fool — v. 1 

blunt Thiu-io's dull proceeding. TwoGcn. ofVer. ii. 6 
upon the dull earth dwelling .... — iv. 2 (song) 

and dull to all proceedings Meas.for Mem. iv. 4 

the prince's jester; a very dull fool..i>/«L'/i .-Idn, ii. 1 

of dumps so dull and heavy — ii. 3 (soug) 

she was in her dull and sleeping . . Mid. A'. Dr. iii. 2 
grace's officer, Antony Dull . . Lace's L. L. i. i (let.) 

please you; I am Antony Dull — _ i. 1 

a metal heav^', dull, and slow? — iii. 1 

Dull; Dictynna, goodni.au Dull — iv. 2 

via, goodnian Dull! thou hast — v. i 

most dull, honest Dull, to om- — v. 1 

tliird, dull lead, with warning .. Mer. of Venice, ii. 7 

she is not bred so dull buf she — iii. 2 

of his spirit are dull as night '. . — v. 1 

too dull to reason of such goddesses.. /^.sj/oit trtCj i. 2 

or comes of a very dull kindred — !!!• 2 

peace, you dull fool ; I found them . . — iii. 2 
designs, when we ourselves are dull . . All's Well, i. 1 
for what dull part in't you chose. IVinler'sTale, iv. 3 

when I am dull with care Comedy of Errors,]. 2 

ray discourses dull ? barren my wit? — ii. 1 
but moody and dull melancholy .... — v. 1 
my dull deaf ears a little use — v. 1 



DUM 

DULL— my dull brain was wrought Macbeth.^ i. 3 

vexing the dull ear of a di'owsy iuai^.King Jo/i7i,in, t 

dull, unfeeling, barren ignorance Iticliardll.i. S 

by my dull and hciivv t'vc - i'i. 2 

fits a dull fighter, and a keen 1 Henry IV, iv. 2 

with hard labour tame and dull — iv 3 

so dull, so dead in look 'lllenrylV. i. I 

like dull and heavy lead — ^ i. 1 

O thou dull god, why liest thou with — iii. 1 

of heaven, and our dull workings — iv. 2 

foolish, and dull, and crudy vapours — iv. 3 

unless some dull and favorable — iv. 4 

should not so dull a kingdom He/iryV. ii. 4 

foggy, raw, and dull? on whom .... — iii. 5 

and the dull elements of earth — iii. 7 

piercing the night's dull car — iv. (cho.) 

able to ravish any dull conceit .... 1 Ucnry VI. v. .0 
give way, dull clouds, to my quick. /^ic/iarrf ///. i. 3 
with dull unwillingness to repay .... — ii. 2 
thou wast not wont to be so dull .... — iv. 2 

servitor to dull delay — iv. 3 

my words are dull, quicken thera.. — iv. 4 
raitrderous knife was dull and blunt — iv. I 

dull unmindful villain — iv. 4 

and sleep in dull cold marble Henry VI U. iii. 2 

iu this dull and long-continued.. V'roiVus .5- CVcss. i. 3 

if the dull brainless Ajax — • 1.3 

amongst the dull and factious — ii. 2 

for the journc V, dull and heavy — ii. 2 

where tlie dull tribunes Coriolanus, i. 9 

like a dull actor now — v. 3 

,vou are dull, Casea; and those TuliusCfPsnr.l. 3 

(lull of tongue, and dwai-fish! ..Antony ^Cteo. Iii. 3 

shall I abide in this dull world? - iv. 13 

with the sober eye of dull Octavia. ... — v. 2 

will stiipify and dull the sense Cymbeline, i. ti 

of death, he dull upon her — ii. 2 

not too dull for your good wearing .. — ii. 4 
ruthless, dreadful, deaf, and dull, .TitusAndron. ii. I 

my sight is very dull — ii. 4 

that c er dull sleep did mock Pericles, v. 1 

within a dull, stale, tired bed Lear i. 2 

this is a dull sight; are you not Kent? .. — v. 3 

bound a pitch above dull woe Romeo 1^ Juliet, i. 4 

turn back, dull earth, and find — ii. 1 

but do not dull thy palm Hamlet, i. 3 

borrowing dulls tlie edge of husbandry . . — i. 3 

a duU'and muddy-mettled rascal — i. 3 

ray spirits grow dull, and fain I would . . — iii. 2 

and spur my dull revenge! — iv. 4 

that we are made of stuff so flat and dull — iv. 7 
for your dull ass will not mend his pace.. — v. 1 
this odd-even and dull watch o'tlie nightO/Zirito, ii. 1 
when the blood is made dull with the act — ii. i 
dull not device by coldness and ilelay .. — ii. 3 

thou dull Moor! that handkerchief .. — v. 2 
DULLAKD— me a dullard iu this Cymbeline, v. :> 

must make a dullard of the world Lear, ii. 1 

DULL-BKAINED— 
rebel, dull-brained Buckingham. . Richard III. iv. 4 

DULLED— r Co/. Knt.'] he hath dulled... Hf /uy T. ii. 2 

DULLER— duller than a great thaw. . .Much Ado, ii. I 

only sensible in the duller parts Lore's L. L. iv. 2 

peribrraance is ever the duller.. Timon of .itiicns, v. 1 

111 your duller Britain operate Cymbeline, v. ^ 

and duller shouldst thou be than Handel, i. .5 

DULLEST— the dullest scent. . Taming of Sh. 1 (ind.) 
that may strike the dullest nostril, n inter's I'ulc, i. 2 
even to the dullest peasant tllenrjlV. i. 1 

DULL-EYE D-duU-eyed fool. Mcrch. of Venice, iii. 3 
sad companion, diill-e.yed inelaneliol.v../'c//r/c,?, i. 2 

DULLING — the dulling of niv spirits.. Tempest, iii. 3 

DULLJSTESS— 'tis a good dullness — i.2 

always the dullness of the fool 4s you Lilie 'I, i. 2 

thy uuUncss would torment thee. Timon of.Uh. iv. 3 

even till a Lethe'd dullness .intony Si-Cleo.i\, 1 

with wanton dullness niv speculative ..Othello, i. 3 

DULLY— dully sluggardized at.. Tu-o Gen. of Ver. i. 1 
the time shall not go dully by us Much Ado, ii. 1 

DULY-be duly performed.. Vtus./or Mens. iv. 2 (note) 

1 duly am informed his majesty is . . .ill's Well, iv. 4 

disbursed I duly to his highness' Richard //. i. 1 

as duly, but not as truly Henry V. iii. 2 

duly waited for my coming forth?..2H(?n;-i/r/. iv. 1 

are not words didy h allowed Henry VIII. ii. 3 

have their wages duly paid them .... — Iv. 2 
rather than unfold his raeasm-e duly. Cymbeline, i. 1 
[Co/.jduly quench thv nimble Pericles, iii. 1 

DUMAIN— Biron, Dumain, and . . Love's. L. Lost, i. 1 
my loving lord, Dumain is mortified — i. 1 

young Dumain, a well-accomplished — ii. 1 
I have my wish ; Dumain transformed — iv. 3 
Dumain, thy love is far from charity — iv. 3 

tell me, good Dumain? — iv. 3 

sent to you from the fair Dumain.... — y. 2 
Dumain is mine, as sure as bark .... ^ v. 2 
one captain Dumain be i' the. . .411' s Welt, iv. 3 (note) 
do you know this eai)taiii Dumain?.. — iv. 3 
once more to this cai)tain Dumain .. — iv. 3 
the other captain DmnainV — iv. 3 

DUMB— of e.Kcelleut dumb discourse ..Tempest, iii. 3 
strikes poor lovers dumb .. Two Gen. of Verona, ii. 2 

dumb jewels often, in their — iii. 1 

tlien in dumb silence will — iii. 1 

1 can be as secret as a dumb man Much Ado, i. 1 

which will be merely a dumb show. . — ii. 3 

praising her when 1 am dumb — v. 3 (scroll) 

quite dumb? Dead, dead? Mid. N.'s Dream, v. 1 

one of these same dumb wise men.Mt'r. of Venice, i. 1 
who can converse with a dumb sliow? — i.2 
I am dumb. Were you the doctor . . — v. 1 

as oft is dumb, where dust All's Well, ii. 3 

a dumb innocent, that could not say — i\. 3 
deep shame had struck me dumb . . King John, iv. 2 

master Dumb, oiir minister ■IHrnryW. W. 1 

in dumb significants proclaim 1 Henry (7. ii. 4 

to-night, the duke wasdumb illenryi^I. iii. 2 

unto his dumb deaf trunk — iii. 2 

like dumb statues, or breathless. . Ricliard III. iii. 7 
tliuughts unveil in their dmnb.. Trailus if Cress, iii. 3 



Dl'.MB— «HMi the iliimb men throiig..Coiio/(iHu», ii. 1 

like iliimb moutlis, do one Ju/i'iu Ctpnar, iii. 1 

vouiiils, p(><>r, poor (lunil) months.. .. — ii'i.'i 
i-iiltiT WHS lis annll\i-r niitiiriMUnnb .Cijmbelnie, ii. i 
in ilunili sliuws puss tlio ivinMimler.. TilusAnd. iii. 1 

in thv aiinil>.n'tion will 1 hens — iii. a 

si'ir^'ciin wiliu'ss. iliunli iiltlio' they arc — v. 3 

wnilli Ih- mute, iinil I'urv (llililli? — V. 3 

wIkh's ilunili in slunv, f II plain. y'«ic/M, iii. (Gow.) 

il.i|.c-l(rl<s sluMlnnibs — '/.(Gow.) 

[(■.,(. K„iA .1 litllo, anil (hen ilunib — v. i ((iow.) 
this siiiritiUnnb to us. will spiak to ....Hu»i/W, i. I 

Btanililnnibanilspeiik not toliini — i.i 

mv boiirt ft workiinz. niuto iinil dumb — ii. 2 

ni'ilhini; but imxplii-nlilf <lnmb shows .. — in. 'i 
in lliiuo e:ir. will m.xVc tlu'C dumb — iv. 6 (letter) 
DT!Ml!-l)ISC(>ri!snK— 

ftill iind dund)-disr"nisivc devil. 7-™;i«,S-C)rs. IV. 1 

ni'MBKn-lK-astlv diinilnd l.v llinl...■l/l^* VIeo. i. b 

DUMBl/KTON-nnistiT I)unibk'ton..2Hf»n/ II'. i. -i 

DU.MBLY— dumblv have broke otr...l//J. N.Di. v. 1 

stop our mouths, ami dunddv part. . Ilk-hard II. v. 1 

DIIMBN'KSS— vooth into dumbness. r«'W/?A A', iii. 2 

was speeeh in their ihnubness .... n'inler's Tale, v. 2 

sileiu'e.ennnini; in dumbness.. Troilut ^ Cress, iii. 2 

to tiio dunilmuss of the gesture. . Timono,f Athens, i. 1 

II..|>l)idid:ini'L-, prince of dumbness Lear, iv. 1 

DTMl'— a deploring dmnp.. TuoGm.nf Verona, iii. 2 
of dmups so dull and heavy . . M"<-h Ado. ii. 3 (song) 
in voiu- dumps? Call vou me. Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 
sti-'p out of these dre:uT dumps. . . . Tilus.-indron.x. 2 
SOUK' uierrv dump, to comfort (re;).). /(om.i5J«'. IV. .') 
and dolcfiil dumi's the mind oppress — iv. 5 (song) 



;e (;r/,.).«u, 
J of Duncan ..J 

Diuican comes here to-niL.'ht 

besides, this Duncan hath home his . . . 
when Duncan is asleep (» hereto the . . . 
perforin upon the unu-narded Dmu'an? . 
lu'ar it not Duncan; for it is a knell ... 

wake Duncan with thy knocUing! 

here lay Duncan, his silver skin laced . 
and Duncan's liorses (a thing most . . . 

where is Duncan's body? 

for them the gracious Duncan have I . . . 

Dutican is in his grave 

which, you said, led you to Duncan . . . 
gracious Dimean was pitied of ^laebetli 
had lie Duncan's sons under his key .. . 
the SOB of Duncan, from whom 



-Juliet,'!, i 
•beth, i. .') 



DURST— our love durst not come \Heiiry If. v.\ 

weariness durst not have uttaidicd ..iUmrull'. ii. 2 

if he durst steid anything Henry I'. \\. 4 

and non.-ilurst staiiil him \ Henry ri. i. 1 

dinst not presume to look once — i. 1 



no 






_ i. 4 



and du 
luMlur. 
tlmtdu 
hu.dm 
and wl 



and d 11 



otpi 



DU.N'G— palates more the dung Antony ffCleo. v. 2 

DUNGEON— the hue of dungeons ..Lore's L.L. iv. 3 

let me live, sir, in a dungeon All's Well, iv. 3 

and the dungeon your place iHenrylV. iv. 3 

■within a loathsome dungeon 1 Henry I'l. ii. h 

some dungeon. Your bedchamber.. Hichard lU. i. 2 
nor airless dungeon, nor strong. . . . Julius Ctrsar, i. 3 
solace i' the dungeon by a snuff? — Cymbeline,\. 7 
many confines, wards, and dungeons .. Handet,\i. 2 
and live upon the ^'apour of a dimaeon.O(/ic//o, iii. 3 
DUNG-HII.I.— on duuL'-hill fhmo..MarryWivh, i. 3 
tliou hast it ud duii^.'-hill. at t\\it..Love'sL.Lost, v. 1 
false latin; dung-liill tor ungucm — v. 1 

his animals on his dung-hills are .. ^s i/om Li'*e iM. 1 
out dung-hill! darcst thou brave ..King John, iv. 3 

shall duiighill curs confront the 'iHenry W. v. 3 

though buried in your dunghills .... Henry V. iv. 3 

flouted thus by dunghill grooms? 1 Henry VI. i. 3 

dunghill ^Uain, and mechanical.... 2 Hejiry VL i. 3 
unto a dunghill, which shall be thy grave — iv. 10 

throw this slave upon the dunghill Lear, iii. 7 

out, dunghill! Ch ill pick your teeth — iv. (i 

DUNGY— of the whole dungy earth. IVivter'sTale, ii. 1 

our dungv earth alike feeds Antony ff Cleo. i. 1 

DUNNEST— thedunnest smokeof hclll..1/ar(-ri/i,i. 5 
DUNSINaNE— wood to high Dunsinane — iv. 1 
great Dunsinane he strongly fortifies .... — v. 2 
till Birnam wood remove to Dunsinane.. — v. 3 
to Dunsinane. Were I from Dunsinane — v. 3 
keeps still in Dunsinane, and will endure — v. i 
t) Dunsinane; now a wood conies (rpp.) — v. 5 

Birnara wood become to Dunsinane — v. 7 

DUNSMt)RE— by this at Dunsmore..3Wfnry VL v. 1 
Dl'.NST.VBI.E-eourtat Dunstable.HcHri/ VIII. \v. 1 
DUPPED— dupiied the chamber. . Hamlet, iv. 5 (song) 
DURANCE— action is now in durance. 7'u'f/fl/i A', v. 1 
I)er|)etual durance? ay (rep.) ...Mens. for iVcas. iii. 1 

set thee from dnranec Loee s L. Lost, iii. 1 

and gives 'em suits of durance ..Comedy of Err. iv. 3 
jerkin a most sweetirobe of durance?.! IlenrylV. i. 2 
IS in base durance, and contagions.. 2 Hcnrj/ IV. v. b 
DURING— during which time 'he..Comedyoj- Err. v. 1 
in his own language during my life..l Henry IV. ii. 4 
of myself, and thee, during my life .. — ii. 5 

town's end, to beg (luring life — v. 3 

during the time Edward the third ..IHenryVI. i. 2 

during whose reign, the Pereies — ii. 4 

wc have fled during the life — iv. 7 

times, during the wars of York Richard III. i. 4 

during all question of the gentle. Troif. ^- Cress, iv. 1 

office may, during his power Coriolanus, ii. 1 

revolts during their use Cymbeline, iv. 4 

we will resign, during the life of tills ....Lear, v. 3 

DURST— ilear, they durst not Tempest, i. 2 

if they durst, and" this is all Much Ado, v. I 

pretty soul! she durst not lie near. .Mid. N.Dr. ii.3 

durst thou have locked uj on him — iii. 2 

never durst jwKt t"U -h a |>en Lore'sL.LosI, iv. 3 

1 durst go no further than {rep.).. As you Like il, v. 4 

that which I durst not speak ylH'jffcH, ii. 3 

ere in v heart durst make too — v. 3 

howdurst you, villains, bring Taming of Shrew, 'w. 1 

you that diirst swear that your — iv. 2 

tint durst not tempt a minister .. fVinler'sTale, ii. 2 

she durst not call uie so, if she — ii.3 

I durst have denied that .... Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

when you <lurst do it .Macbeth, i. 7 

in mine ear I durst not stick a ruse .. King John, i. 1 

Englishman durst set his foot Richard II. i. I 

he durst as well have met lllcn>y IV. i. 3 



iii. 4 
iv. 1 
— iv. 2 



•avcn heart — ii. 4 

t, for all . . ..'illenry VI. iv. 10 

not sit there illenry VI. i. 1 

st miike vou stay — ii. 2 

t the traitor breathe out .... — iv. 1 
1 iliirst smile, wlicn Warwick — v. 2 
riier durst wag his tongue. . Wrarv »'///. i. 1 

that durst disperse it — ii. 1 

lur,-l better have burnt that — iii. 2 

st< iiiiend n seeret — v. 1 

■luliou durst never meddle. '/'rn''/.'5-C)-c«. iii. 3 

durst not (look you, sin show Coriolanus, iv. 5 

and durst not once peep out — iv. 6 

I durst not hinirh, for fear of JnliusCa'sar, i. 2 

durst not thus have moved me ("■/).) — iv. 3 
I durst not? No. What, durst not (re/).) — iv. 3 

durst I have done my will — v. 3 

1 durst attempt against any lady Cymbeline, i. 5 

Komau lord it was durst do thedeed.7"i(i/«/l)i(/. iv. I 

how durst, thy tongue move anger I'ericles, i. 2 

I durst wager, would win some words .... — v. 1 
(which we "durst never yet), and with — Lear, i. 1 

I durst swear it were his — i. 2 

the.v durst not do't ; they could not — ii . 4 

this kiss, if it durst speak, would — iv. 2 

I durst, my lord, to wager she is honest. OWie/to, iv. 2 
DUSKY— dusky Dis my daughter got... Tempest, iv. 1 

ami dusky vapours of the night \ Henry VI. ii. 2 

here dies the duskv torch of Mortimer — ii. .'i 

and when the dusky sky began 'IHenryVI. iii. 2 

called them blind and dusky spectacles — iii. 2 

smothered in their dusky graves. . Richard III. iv. 4 

DUST-I lay the dust witli my.. Tu-o Gen. of Ver. ii. 3 

are they like to take dust Twelf/h Night, i. 3 

that issue out of dust Measure for Measure, iii. 1 

with a piece of valiant dust? .1/kc/i Ado, ii. 1 

to sweep the dust behind the door. . Mid. A'. Dr. v. 2 
where dust, and damned oblivion .... All's Well, ii.3 

was in mine eye the dust that — v. 3 

and after weep their dust; our own .. — v. 3 
where no jiriest shovels in dust . . Winter'sTjile, iv. 3 

lile gold, dross, dust, purchase A'in4'./o/in, iii. 1 

of breath with fulsome dust — iii. 4 

each dust, each straw, each little .... — 
a grain, a dust, a gnat, a wander' 

her ear is stopped with dust 

crumble lip to dust — v. 7 

wipe off the dust that hides our Richard II. ii. 1 

dared once to touch a dust of England's — ii.3 
make dust our paper, and with rainy — iii. 2 
lay the summer's dust with showers — iii. 3 
dust and rubbish on king Richard's.. — ' y. 2 

but dust was thrown upon his — v. 2 

blood drop by di-op i' the dust 1 Henry 1 T. i. 3 

no, Percy, thou art dust, and food .... — v. 4 
threw'st dust upon his goodly he!ui..2HenryIV. i. 3 
comiJound me with forgotten dust .. — iv. 4 

nor from the dust of old oblivion Henry V. ii. 4 

thy glory droopeth to the dust 1 Henri/ VI. y. 3 

no eyes, thedustlhath blinded them. 2Ht';i(,v'''. ii". 3 

write in the dust this sentence 3 Henry VI. y. 1 

smeared in dust and blood! — v. 2 

rule, rei™, but earth and dust? — v. 2 

give to dust, that is a little gilt. Troilus ^ Cress, iii. 3 
doth choke the air with dust. . . Timon of Alliens, v. 3 
the dust on antique time would lie. . Coriolanus, ii. 3 
and throw their power i' the dust.... — iii. 1 
they to dust should grind it, and throw — iii. 2 
lies along, no worthier than thedu8t./«(.Cn"«or, iii. 1 
the dust should have ascended ..Anlony^Clea. iii. 6 

whose dust is both alike Cymbeline, iv. 2 

rotting together, have one dust — i v- 2 

as chimney-sweepers come todust .. — iv. 2 (song) 
all follow this, and come to dust.. .. — iv. 2 (song) 
consign to thee, and come to dust .. — iv. 2 (song) 
in the dust I writemy heart's. TOus^n^/roju'cus, iii. 1 

I will grind your bones to dust — v. 2 

blows dust in others' eyes, to spread.... PeriWcs, i. I 

to scour it in the dust — ii. 2 

not worth the dust which the rude wind.. Leur, iv. 2 
ay, and for laying the autumn's dust.... — iv. 6 
to the descent and dust beneath thy feet — y. 3 
\Col. Knt.} thy canopy is dust and.. Uomco ^-Jul. v. 3 

for thy noble father m the dust Hamlet, i. 2 

to me, what is this quintessence of dust? — ii. 2 
compounded it with dust, whereto 'tis kin — iv. 2 

trace the noble dust of Alexander — y. 1 

Alexander returneth todust; the dust is — v. I 
pile your dust upon the quick and dead. . — v. 1 

DUSTY— the way to dusty death Macbeth, v. 5 

are grated to dusty nothing .... Troilus c^- Cress, iii. 2 

DUTCH-like a Dutch dish .Mem/ Wires, iii. b 

or Dane, low Duteh, Italian All's HVH, iv. 1 

DUTCIIIlCS-duteliicsof Aniou..2/f<-»;;/;7.i. I (art.) 
DUTCHM A N-on a Dutchman's beard. rKc/(WiA.iii. 2 

as to be a Dutchman to-day Much Ado, iii. 2 

veal, quoth the Dutchman Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

lustiek. as tlie Dutchman says All's Well, ii. 3 

DUTCIlY-thcdutchy of Anjou..2;/cniyr/.i.l (art.) 
DUTEOUS-rclcase all duteous oaths 

[Co(.-duties, rites] Richard II. iy. 1 

teaching his duteous land andaeious.l Henry I V.iv .3 
and inward duteous spirit teacheth.2HeHrr///'. iv. 4 
but with all-duteons love doth ....Richard III. ii. 1 
I will piiieluise with my duteous service — ii. 1 
I'll aeouiiint our duteous citizens with — iii. .'i 
Ik* butduteou-, iiiul true preferment. CymbWiiie, iii. 5 
so duteous, diligent, so tender over . . — v. .') 
as duteous to tlie vices of thy mistress . . Lear, iv. 6 
many a duteous and knee-crooking ....Othello, i. 1 
DUTIES— their particular duties .... Much Ado, iv. I 
to receive our duties; and our duties . . Macbeth, i. 4 
my duties are with a most indissoluble — iii- I 
our duties and the pledge — iii- 4 



DUTIES— duties did his welcome i>ay.. Macbeth, iy. 1 

rf'o(.] release all iluties, rites Richard II. iv. 1 

lie gave vou all the duties of a man. .\ Henry IV. v. 2 

they know tb.ir duties 'illenry IV. iv. 2 

tongues siiit their duties out llennjVIII. i. 2 

keep your duties, as I have set Coriolanus, i. 7 

inspired to do those duties which ..Cymbeline, ii. 3 
the boy hiith tiiiight us manly duties — iv. 2 
bv ull'the duties that I owe to Rome. TOui Jtirf- i- 2 
tfu' last true iluties of thy noble son! — v. 3 

1 return those iluties back as are Lear, i. 1 

prescribe not us our duties — i. 1 

that stretch their duties nicely — ii. 2 

these mourning duties to your father . . Hamlel, i. 2 
do my duties to the state: that done ..Othello, iii. 2 
say, that they slack their duties — iv. 3 

DUTll'UL-slinw men dutiful? llenryV. ii. 2 

vou know me dutiful; therefore. 7'ri)i7ii..5-r)™. v. 3 

DirTY-mv duty to vour ladyship. Tirodcn.of Vtr. ii. 1 

myduty, will'l hi.astof — ii. 4 

and duty never yet did wont — ii. 4 

my duty pricks me on to — iii 1 

thus, for my duty's sake — iii. 1 

stubborn, lacking duty — iii. I 

by her child-like duty — iii. I 

iriy duty, madam, and most .... Twelfth KiglU, iii. 1 

my duty hushes me — v.' 

leave my duty a little unthought of — v. 1 (let.) 
your brother, I owe you all duty .. ..Much Ado, i. \ 
it is my cousin's duty to make courtscy — ii. 1 
with dutv, and desire, we follow. -. .J)/id. A'. Dr. i. 1 



111 lUit.i 



tender it. - 
ling 



V. 1 



— V. 1 



rlul duty 



,.••,«;..),. i.ldet.) 
— i. I (let.) 



i. 2 
ii. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 



ii. 1 
ii. 2 
ii.3 



whe 

and dut\- ii 

and what | 

and in the 

ever-cstceiiieililutviirielcsineon./ 

and heart-burning heat of duty . 

I forgive thy duty; adieu — iv- z 

our (luty is so rich, so infinite — ..X- ^ 

I know niy duty Merchant nf Venice, iii. 5 

with all resiiect and duty As you Like if, i. 2 

when service sweat for duty, not for — ii.3 
all adoration, duty and observance.- — v- 2 
thanks and duty are your majesty's ..All'sWell, i. 2 
which I held my duty, speedily — — _i. 3 

my duty then shall pay me for — ii. 1 

both thy duty owes, and our power-. —_ ii- 3 
my duty to .yon; your unfortunate — iii. 2 (let.) 
my mother tlid but duty; such, my lord — iv. 2 
your lordship to accept ourduty.7'am. ofSh. 1 (ind.) 

such duty to the drunkard let — 1 (ind.) 

may show her duty, and make known — 1 (ind.) 

be behind in duty to fair Bianea ' ** 

80 well I know my duty to my ciders 
do thy duty, and have thy duty — 

no regard? no duty? where is 

now do your duty thoroughly — iv- 4 

a foolish duty call you this? (rep.) .. — v- 2 
fool you, for laying on my duty .... — v. 2 
what duty they do owe their lords .. — v- 2 

sueli duty as the subject owes — v. 2 

in token of which dutv, if he please — v. 2 
his dignity and duty tioth east off. Winter's Tale, v. 1 

where you were tied in duty — v. I 

a charitable duty of my order . . Comedy of Err. v. 1 
to pay that duty, which you truly. .Kwig- JoAii, ii. 1 

attend on you with all true duty — iii. 3 

neglected my sworn duty in that Richardll. i. 1 

the one my duty owes — i- I 

the appellant in all duty greets — i- 3 

swear by the duty that you owe . . 
shall tender duty make me suffer. . 

and duty bids nie defend 

whose duty is deceivable and false 
form, and ceremonious duty, for you — iij- 2 
my stooping duty tenderly shall — — iii- 3 
their awful dutv to our presence? -- •- iii. 3 
and show fair duty to his majesty . . — ii;- 3 

he to taste their fruits of dut.y — ni- 4 

our duty this way lies ] Hc/iry I V. \. 1 

my humble duty remembered 2HenrylV. ii- 1 

my court'sy, my duty — (ci>il-) 

hearts create of duty and of zeal Henry V. ii. 2 

and my duty, and my life, and my livings — iii. 6 

every subject's duty is the king's — iv. 1 

my dutv to vou both, on equal love .--- — v. 2 

how nn'ich in dutv I am bound IHenryVI. ii. 1 

it were your duts- to forbear — iii. 1 

in reguerdun of that duty done — iii- I 

and as my duty springs, so perish.... — iii. 1 

to do mv duty to my sovereign — iii- 4 

I owe him little duty, and less love-- — i\'. 4 

as I in duty love my king 'iHenry VI. i. 3 

disdiiiningduty that to US belongs .. — iii 1 

in duty bend thy knee to me — _ v. I 

I know my duty, you are all SHmryVI. v. 5 

with all expedient duty see you Richard III. i. 2 

your dutv. To serve me well (rep.) .. — i- 3 

and teach yourselves that duty — >■ 3 

thy brother's love, our duty, and thy — .i- 4 
charity, obedience, and true duty! .. — n- 2 
for triith, for duty, and for loyalty - - — '•[- 3 
as he made semblance of his duty ..Henry Vlll. i- 2 

with my love and duty I would 

our breach of duty, this way 

or my love and duty, agoinst your -_- 
your" bond of duty, as 'twere in love's 
all the world should crack their duty 
yet my duty, as doth a rock against 

it is niv duty, to attend your 

to strcnL-then that holy duty — v. 2 

receive of us in dutv, gives us . . Troilus <>■ Cress, iii. I 

and hearts of incu at duty Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

dutv and zeal to your unmntehed .. — iv. 3 
of tliy deep duty more iinpiessi.m . . Coriolanus, v. ? 
and unproperly show duty, as mistaken — v. 3 
that thou restrain'st from me the duty — \. 3 
it is mv duty, sir. I should (rep.). Julius Ctrsar, iv. 3 

J resent thought, by duty ruminated. /Inf. <i-t'/»u. ii. 2 
have done my duty — ii. S 



— ii. 2 



iii. S 



V. 1 



DUT 

DUTY— lay my duty on your him<l.Anl.^Cleo. iii. 11 
may be, it is the period of your duty — iv. 2 

always reserved my holy duty Cymbeline, i. 2 

tendered the duty of the day — iii. 6 

more made of malice, than of duty ,, — iii. 5 
she should that duty leave unpaid .. — iii. 5 

we will dischai-ge our duty — iii. 7 

would force me to my duty Pericles^ iii. 3 

half my care, and duly: sure Lear, i. 1 

that duty shall have dread to speak .... — i. 1 

for my duty cannot be silent — i. 4 

all particulars of duty know — i. 4 

'twas my duty, sir. tie did bewray — ii. 1 

that showed my duty kneeling — ii. 4 

than she to scant her duty — ii. 4 

my duty cannot sutfer to obey — iii. 4 

my lady charged my duty in this business — iv. 5 
needful in our loves, fitting our duty? . . Hamlet, i. 1 

commend yoiu- duty. In that (rcB.) — i. 2 

my duty in your coronation (rep) — i. 2 

^\e did think it writ down in our duty . . — i. 2 

our duty to your honour — i. 2 

I hold my duty, as I hold my soul — ii. 2 

what duty is, why day is day, night, night — ii. 2 

who, in her duty and obedience — ii. 2 

if my duty be too bold — iii. 2 

we shall express our duty in his eye .... — iv. 4 
I commend mj; duty to your lordship . . — v. 2 

in forms and visages of duty Othello, i. 1 

not I for love and duty, but seeming — i. 1 

tying her duty, beauty, wit, and fortune — i. 1 
with his free duty, recommends you thus — i. 3 

I do perceive here a divided duty — i. 3 

you are the lord of duty, I am hitherto. . — i. 3 

and so much duty as my mother — i. 3 

a knave! teach me my duty! — ii. 3 

forgot all sense of place and duty! — ii. 3 

though I am bound to every act of duty — iii. 3 

the love and duty that I bear you — iii. 3 

all the duty iCol. Knl.- office] of my heart — iii. 4 

DWARF — follow him like a dwarf.i/erri/ Wives, iii. 2 

get you gone, you dwarf Mid. N.'sDream, iii. 2 

this is a cliild, a silly dwarf 1 Henry VI. ii. 3 

a stirring dwarf we do allowance. Troil. * Cress, ii. 3 

DWARFISH— I am so dwarfish.. ..ikfid. A^. Dr. iii. 2 
giant's robe upon a dwarfish thief .... Macbeth, v. 2 

to whip this dwarfish war King John, v. 2 

dwarfish pages were as cherubims. . Henry VIII. i. 1 
dull of tongue and dwarfish! . .Antony fyCleo.'xii.'i 

DWELL— nothing ill can dwell in such. Tempest, i. 2 
good things will strive to dwell with't . . — 1. 2 

she that dwells ten leagues — ii. 1 

dwell in this bare island — (epil.) 

the eating canker dwells Tiro Gen. of Verona, i. 1 

there dwells one mistress Quickly. Merri/ Wives, i. 2 

I myself dwell with master — ii. 2 

she dwells so securely — ii. 2 

if a beggar dwell near him Twelfth Kighl, iii. i 

here dwells Benedick Much Ado, v. 1 

what graces in mj love do dwell. */;'(/. A'. fl/t-am, i. 1 
I'll rather dwell in my necessity.. ilfer. of Venice, i. 3 
that dwells with him, dwell with him — ii. 2 

here dwells my father Jew — ii. 6 

where dwell you, pretty YO\ii\x'!..AsyouLike it, iii. 2 

that you see dwell where she is — iii. 2 

rich honesty dwells like a miser, sir — v. 4 

we that dwell in't, jades AWs Well, ii. 3 

let it dwell darkly with you — iv. 3 

and dwell upon yovir grave . . Comedy of Errors, iii. 1 
by destruction, dwell m doubtful joy. Macbeth, iii. 2 

seek out sorrow that dwells Richard II. i. 2 

to dwell in solemn shades — i.3 

such outward things dwell not in Henry V. iv. 3 

to all that do dwellin this house..2Hc«)!/ /'/. iv. lo 
where did you dwell, when I was . .ZHenry VI. iii. i 
empty veins, where no blood dwells, if ic/iard ///. i. 2 

pity dwells not in this eye — iv. 2 

sundered friends should dwell upon — v. 3 

time forbids to dwell on — v. 3 

should still dwell in his musings . . Henry VIII. iii. 2 

my hopes in heaven do dwell — iii. 2 

when I shall dwell with worms — iv. 2 

in the trial much opinion dwells. Troilus fy Cress, i. 3 
but value dwells not in particular .. — ii. 2 

that dwells with gods above — iii. 2 

dwell I but in the suburbs Julius Ccesar, ii. 1 

where do you dwell? — iii. 3 

where do I dwell? am I a married .. — iii. 3 

briefly, I dwell by the Capitol — iii. 3 

blest infusions that dwell in vegetives.Pcr/c(es, iii. 2 
why, the house you dwell in, proclaims. . — iv. 6 
here where liis daughter dwells .... — v. (Gower) 

for the crowned truth to dwell in — v. 1 

dwells in the fickle grace of her Lear, ii. 4 

fain would I dwell on form .... Romeo fy Juliet, ii. 2 

sleep dwell upon tWne eyes — ii. 2 

that deceit should dwell in such .... — iii. 2 

and hereabouts he dwells — v. 1 

though he in a fertile climate dwell Othelln i. 1 

that dwell in every region of his face — iv. 1 

DWELLING— upon the dull earth dwelling 

Two Gen. of Verona, iv. 2 (song) 
dwelling in a continual 'larum . . Merry Wives, iii. 5 
not for dwelling where you Ao..Meas.for Meas. ii. 1 
assigned and native dwelling rAaae.Asyou Like, ii. 1 
purchase in so removed a dwelling . . — iii. 2 
my dwelling, Pisa; and bound .. Taming of Sh. iv. 5 

the place ot your dwelling IVinters Tale, iv. 3 

a goodly dwelling, and a rich iHenrylV. v. 3 

for your dwelling,— briefly JuliusCasar, iii. 3 

ne'er a villain, dwelling in all Denmark. Hamlet, i. 5 

DWELLING-HOUSE-irail dwelUng-house John,-v. 1 

DWELLING-PLACES— repair to your several 
dwelling-places 1 Henry VI. i. 3 (proclam.) 

DWELL ST— where dwell'st thou?. . Coriolanns, iv. 5 
then thou dwell'st with daws too? — iv. 5 

DWELT— there dwelt a man Twelfth Night, ii. 3 

dwelt by a churchyard Winter's Tale, ii. 1 

DWINDLE— shall he dwindle, peak M.irlieih, i. 3 

do I not dwindle? why my skui 1 H';nry I V. iii. 3 



[ 202 ] 



DYE— flower of this purple dye . . Mid. iV. Dream, in. 2 
shall dye your whitt rose 1 Henry VI. ii. 4 

DYED — being rather new dyed Tempest, ii. I 

this napkin, dyed in this blood. ./Is you Like it, iv. 3 

with purpled hands, dyed in King John, ii. 2 

dyed even in the lukewarm blood ..ZHenryVI. i. 2 
and it was dyed in mummy Ui hello, iii. 4 

DYING— it had a dying fall Tirelflk Night, i. 1 

is still a dying horror! Measure for'Measure, ii. 3 

she dying, as it must be so maintained. iUucA tido, iv. 1 
one good deed, dying tongueless.. Winter's Tale, i. 2 

thou met'st with things dying — iii. 3 

dying, or ere they sicken Macbeth, iv. 3 

dyed in the dying slaughter King John, ii. 2 

the tongues of dying men Richard II. ii. 1 

should dyin" men flatter with those — ii. 1 

thou now a dying, say'st — ii. I 

where fearing dying, pays death .... — iii. 2 

the lion, dying, thrusteth forth — v. 1 

call, drinking deep, dying scarlet ..\HenrylV. ii. 4 
talk not of djang; I am out of fear .. — iv. I 
but to counterfeit dying, when a man — v. 4 
and dying so, deatli is to him (rep. ) . . Henry V. iv. 1 

in France, dying like men — iv. 3 

how d/ing Salisbury doth groan ! \ Henry VI. i. i 

let dying Mortimer here rest — ii. 5 

undaunted spii'it in a dying breast!.. — iii. 2 

doth close his tender dying eyes — iii. 3 

dying with mother's dug between.. 2 Henrj/f/. iii. 2 

when dying clouds contend ZHcnry VI. ii. 5 

for Edward pays a dying debt .... Richard I II. iv. 4 

only dying, go with me HenryVIII. ii. 1 

this from a dying man receive — ii. 1 

sodying love lives still. .J'™iM<S-Cr<?ss. iii. 1 (song) 

stand on the dying deck Timon of.-llhens, iv. 2 

motion was timed with dying cries.. COT/otonus.ii. 2 

and dying men did groan JuliusCcesur, ii. 2 

shall receive the benefit of his dying — iii. 2 
dying, mention it within their wills — iii. 2 

hath such a celerity in dying Antony <$■ Cleo. i. 2 

than with an old one dying — iii. 11 

or bathe my dying honour — iv. 2 

I am dying, Egypt, dying — iv. 1 3 

dying, Egypt, dying; give me — iv. 13 

some dying; some, their friends .... Cymbeline, v. 3 

madly clying, like her life — v. 5 

but she spoke it dying, I would not. . — v. .'j 

he has my dying voice; so tell him Hamlet, v. 2 

she, dying, gave it me; and bid me Otiiello, iii. 4 



EACH— each pinch more stinging Tempest, 1. 2 

taught thee each hour — i. 2 

each putter-out on five for one — iii. 3 

each one tripping on his toe — iv. 1 

and with each end of thy blue bow .... — iv. 1 

think of each thing well — v. 1 

I'll kiss each several paper . . TwoGen. of Verona, i. 2 

till I have found each letter — i. 2 

a pastime of each weary step — ii. 7 

she excels each mortal thing — iv. 2 (song) 

acquainted each other how Merry Wives, ii. 2 

like a bribe buck, each a haunch .... — v. 5 

each fair instalment, coat — v. 6 

the vows we made each other .... Twelfth Night, v. 1 

till each circumstance of place — v. 1 

swear down each particular saint.Meas../br Meas. v. 1 

masters; each his several way Much Ado, v. 3 

wink at each other Mid. N. Dream, iii. 2 

and from each other look thou — iii. 2 

in mouth like bells, each under each — iv. 1 

to each word a warbling note — v. 2 

through this house each fairy stray . . — v. 2 

and each several chamber bless t. 2 

but like of each thing, that in season. Lot'e'sL. L.i. 1 
and bide the penance of each three . . — i. i 
each to other hath so strongly sworn — i. 1 

a beam do find in each of three — iv. 3 

in that each of you hath forsworn — iv. 3 

while 'tis spoke, each turn away her face — v. 2 

take each one in his vein — v. 2 

in each eye, one : sweav by.. Merchant of Venice, v. 1 
that we may enjoy each other. ...As you Like it, v. 2 

to each of you one fair All's Well, ii. 3 

marry, to each, but one! — ii. 3 

two hundred and fifty each — iv. 3 

and each one to his office.. Taming of Shrew, 1 (ind.) 

each in his office ready '. . — 2 (ind.) 

let's each one send unto his — v. 2 

by each particular star Winter'sTale, i. 2 

do sigh at each his needless heavlngs — ii. 3 

I am a feather for each wind — ii. 3 

weeds to each part of you do give — iv. 3 

she would to each one sip — iv. 3 

each your doing, so singular in each — iv. 3 

leisurely each one demand — v. 3 

each one with ireful passion. . Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

did meet each other's man — v. 1 

by each at once her choppy Macbeth, i. 3 

our free hearts each to other — i. 3 

bend up each corporal agent — i. 7 

did wake each other — ii. 2 

the death of each day 's life — ii. 2 

'tis said they eat each other — ii. 4 

violent sea, each way, and move — iv. 2 

each new morn, nevr widows — iv. 3 

and each new day a gash is — iv. 3 

division of each several crime — iv. 3 

each minute teems a new one — iv. 3 

in our country's purge, each drop of us. . — v. 2 

and to each one, whom we invite — v. 7 

we shall repent each drop of blood . . King John, ii. 1 
then defy each other; and pell-mell — ii. 2 
Austria and France shoot in each other's — ii. 2 

I am with both; each army hath — iii. 1 

the different plague of each calamity — iii. 4 
blow each dust, each straw, each little — iii. 4 

each day st\U better other's Richard II. i. 1 

to appeal each other of high treason — i. 1 

embrace each other other^ love — i. 3 



EAC 

EACH— each substance of agrief hatli.iJic/mrrf //. ii. 2 
three Judases, each one thrice worse — iii. 2 
the variation of each soil betwixt. . . .IHcnrylV. i 1 
they dare not meet each other; each — ii. ?. 

let each man do his best — v. 2 

that, each heart being set 2HenryIV. i. 1 

each several article licrein redressed — iv. 1 

like a school bruke up, eacli hurries.. — iv. 2 

my liege, if each man do Ids best Henry V. ii. 2 

you will mistake each otiier — iii. 2 

we shall have each a hundred — iii. 7 

the secret whispers of each other's . . — iv. (cho.) 
each battle sees the other's numbered — iv. (cho.) 

to give each naked curtle-ax — iv. S 

with envj' of each other's happiness — v. 2 
French Englishmen, receive each other! — v. 2 
each hath his place and function .... 1 Henry VI. i. 1 
with five flower-de-luces on each side — i. 2 
[Co/. Kn(.] this grate, I count each one — i. 4 

this shouldering of each other — iv. 1 

whiles they each other cross — iv. 3 

and each of them had twenty times.2IIenryVI. ii. 4 

the towns each day revolted — iii. 1 

and, 'twixt each groan, say — iii. 1 

from each county some — iii. i 

three glorious suns, each one SHenry VI. ii. 1 

each one already blazing by — ii. I 

and at each word's deliverance — ii. 1 

my masters, each man take his stand — iv. 3 

doth fear each bush an officer — v. 6 

ready to catch each other Richard III. i. 3 

live each of you the subjects of — i.3 

from his soul to love each other — i. 4 

and Hastings, take each other's hand — ii. 1 
now cheer each other, in each other's — ii. 2 

we know each other's faces — iii. 4 

stared on each other, and looked deadly — iii. 7 

and each hour's joy wrecked — iv. 1 

their summer beauty, kissed each other — iv. 3 

limit each leader to his several — v. 3 

all used in each degree — v. 3 

succeeders of each royal house — v. 4 

each following day became Henry VIII. i. 1 

order gave each thing view — i. 1 

pride peep through each jiart of him — i. 1 
when we see each grain of gravel .... — i. 1 
which compel from each the sixth . . — i. 2 

a slave to each incensed will — i. 2 

sixth part of each? a trembling — 1.2 

free pardon to each man that — i. 2 

that went on each side of the queen? — iv. 1 

made almost each pang a death — v. i 

each Trojan that is master of . . Troilus ^ Cress, i. 1 
'tis just to each of them; he is himself — i. 2 

each thing meets in mere — i. 3 

so shall each lord of Greece — i.3 

two curs shall tame each other — i.3 

the justice of each act such — ii. 2 

there is a law in each well-ordered . . — ii. 2 
so do each lord; and either greet .... — iii. 3 

salutes each other with each — iii. 3 

each other well. We do; and long (rep.) — iv. 1 

each weighs nor less nor more — iv. 1 

thousand sighs did buy each other . . — iv. 4 
that in each grace of these there .... — iv. 4 

extremity pursue each other? — iv. 5 

flies each bound it chafes Timon of Athens, i. 1 

each man to his stool, with — iii. 6 

lend to each man enough — iii. 6 (grace) 

let each take some; nay — iv. 2 

nature, on each bush lays her iv. 3 

each thing's a tliief — iv. 3 

each man apart, all single and alone — v. 1 
for each true word, a bbster ! and each — v. 2 
make each prescribe to other, as each — v. 5 

what I do deliver out to each Coriolanus, i. 1 

a dozen sons, each in my love alike.. — i.3 
not unlike, each way, to better yours — iii. 1 
what each of them, by th' other lose — iii. 2 

a wild exposture to each chance .... iv. 1 

O Marcius, Marcius, each word — iv. 5 

fisting each other's throat — iv. 5 

and each in either side give — v. 3 

looked wondering each at other v. 5 

till each man drop by lottery .... Julius Ciesar, ii. 1 
let each man reader me his bloody hand — iii. 1 

in each thing give him way Antony ^ Cleo. i. 3 

each to other, and all loves to both . . — ii. 2 
on eafth side her, stood pretty dimpled — ii. 2 
we'll feast each other, ere we part .. — ii. 6 

[ Col.'] they'll grind each other — iii. 5 

each heart in Rome does love — iii. 6 

and tiiroes forth, each minute, some — ii'. 7 
whose several ranges frighted each other? — iii. ri 

as it had been each man s like — iv. 8 

mortal a purpose, as then each bore. . Cymbeline, i. 5 

each on one toot standing — ii. 4 

if each of you would take this coiu'se — v. 1 

with ills, each elder worse — v. 1 

are now each one the slaughterman — v. 3 

hitting each object with a joy — v. 5 

we may, each wreathed in tlie other's. TOwj^nrf. ii.3 
may turn me to each one of you .... — iii. 1 
with whom each minute threatens .... Pericles, i. 3 

where each man thinks all — ii. (Gower) 

the labour of each knight — ii. 2 

therefore each one betake him — ii. 3 

in each several clime, where.... — iv. 4 (Gower) 

fisting of each rogue thy ear — iv. 6 

each buz, each fancy, each complaint Lear^ i. 4 

excess, and each man have enough — iv. 1 

ten masts at each make not — iv. 6 

my love ; each jealous of the other — v. 1 

with that part cheers each part.. /Borneo ^Juliet, ii. 3 
wliich shall seize each vital spirit. ... — iv. 1 

each part, deprived of supple — iv. 1 

each word made true and good Hamlet, i. 2 

with entertainment of each new-hatched — i.3 
take each man's censure, but reserve .... — i. 3 
makes each petty artery in tliis body — i. 4 



EAC 



[ 203 ] 



EACH-each pnrticiilftr liairto stand on cnd.HamW^l.5 

his knies kuookiiiK i:iu.'l> otl'c ~ !!• l 

utiwlic.iriiliiMiRr — !!■;; 

tlKii iMiiiH' I'lK-li iictiir on hisass — "• » 

cmh iijii'i'^ito. ttmt hliinks tliefiiccof joy — iu.'i 



it lulls 



iH'h 



ciu-ti U>\ 



ol, 
y,\ stood lu 



I uiuiL'Xinent . 
iriH' til soirn; grcnt 



- iii.3 



tollielirst OlMlo,i. 1 



til. 



ilmU tlmt ciu-li otiuT eat . 
ituvvluitsp 



rlMlrop sIk' lulls 



it uiid revels his 
iilci I 



— ii. 2 

— iv. 1 

— iv. 2 



illulilc, that . 

oiU'luU. kill the otluT, every w.iy — v. i 

for to ileiiv eiieh urii.-le wit^i oiith — y. 2 

K Vtil'R-oluinoiir of two euiier tongues ./eir/i. //..!• [ 

withenuerteedii.'.'. to.i.liloth .. 
supidiuiit inukes thiseuHerery? 



to 

folio 



, to til, 



of old 1 know 
■ foe . 



— V.3 
...] Henry ri. i. 2 
...3H<fnryVI. i. 4 



Hamlcl, i. \ 

into milk — i. 5 

«. Henry VIlIAW.'i. 

1,1.. _ iv. 2 

hdius Cirsnr, v. .1 



vords 

it is a nippiiii,' uiid uii eager air 

like euwr [^i./.-ui.:;re] ilroppiii;,'; 

EAGEHLY-how euL'erly ye foll< 

where ea^-erly his siekiiess pursi 

on l_)etuvius, took it too eagerly 

EAGEKNESS— madding my eagerness. /)« s Well,v.3 

EAGLE— will gaze an eagle blind. Lore s L. Lost, iv. 3 

yes; as sparrows, eagles; o* the hare . . Macbeth, i. 2 

like an eagle o'er his airy towers — KinjJolin,-v. i 

as bright as is the eagle's Richard U. m. 3 

I was not an eagle's tttlon in the ...AHenrylV.n. 4 
bated like eagles having lately bathed — iv. 1 

for onee the eagle England being Henry > • !• || 

thoii with an eiutle art inspired 1 Henry I 7. i. 2 

nil eiiiptv eagle were set to guard . .'IHenry yL in. 

drones siiek not euiiles' blood — i\'- ' 

like an emptv euude, tiro on SHetiryVI.i. 1 

be that priiuvlyeui-'le's bird — "• ' 

gave shelter to the princely eagle — \- ' 

that the eutrle should lie mewed .... Kic/mrrf ///. i. I 
wrens mav prev where eunles dare not — i. 3 
ne'er look': theiu-les are •■olie..TroUus ^- Cress, l. 2 
but flies an ea-le flight, lioVd . . Timon of Athens.^ i. 1 
trees, that have outlived tlie eagle . . — iv- 3 

the crows to peck the eagles Coriolanus, m. 1 

like an eagle in a dove-cote — v. a 

two mighty eagles fell Julius Ciesar, v. 1 

this was but as a fly bv an ea^ie.Antony <§C(ra. n. 2 

I chose an eaale, and did avoid CymbeUne,\. 2 

thanis the fiill-winged eagle — in- 3 

the Koman eagle, winged from the . . — JV. 2 
the wav which they stooped eagles .. — v.3 
mounts ea^'le, to my palace crystalline — v . 4 
the holy eagle stooped, as to foot us. . — v. 4 
great J iipiter upon his eagle backed . . — v. 5 
for the Koman eni;le, from south to .. — v. 5 
which fore-showLil our princely eagle — v. 5 
the eagle sutlers little liirds to smg.. Titus And. yv. 4 

seize with nii ea^-le's talons I'ericles, iv. 4 

an eagle, madam, hath not so ..Romeo ^Juliet, in. 5 

eaglE-siguted- , , . ^ 

peremptory eagle-sighted eye dares. Love s L. L.iV.3 
EAGLE-WINGED— 

we think the eagle- winged pride Rictinrd //. i. 3 

EAXING— did in eaning time faW.Mer.of Venice, i. 3 

E.VXLIXG— that all the eanlings — J. 3 

E AK— bids thee ope thine ear Tempest, i. 2 

to what tune pleased liis ear — 1.2 

hark in thine ear — .?• 2 

you cram these words into mine ears — u. 1 

it struck mine car most terribly — ii- 1 

a din to fright a monster's ear — ii. 1 

brought my too diligent ear — lU- 1 

will hum about mine ears — in. 2 

thev urick'd their ears — iv. 1 

so I cnarm'd their ears — iv. 1 

though I lie o'er ears for — iv. 1 

which must take the ear strangely — y. 1 

my ears are stopiied TwuGen.of Verona, iii. 1 

breathe it in mine ear — iii. 1 

give some evening music to her car .. — iv. 2 

you have a q nick ear — iv. 2 

he hears witli ears Merry Wives, i. 1 

he hears with ear? — i. 1 

give ear to his motions — i. 1 

to tell you in your ear ' ' 

and let me tell you in your ear 

mc vil! cut his ears — ii. a 

let-a me siwak a word vit your ear . . — iii. 1 

if it should come to the ear of the court — iv. 5 

it came o'er my ear like the Twelfth N.ght, i. 1 

it alone concerns your ear — i. .^ 

to your cars, divinity — i. h 

go shake your ears — ii. 3 

most pregnant and vouchsafed ear .. — iii. 1 

as fnt and fulsome to mine ear — v. 1 

periiend, my princess, and give ear . . — y. 1 
strewed it in the common ear ..Meat, for Meas. i. 4 

if he took you a box o' the ear — ii. 1 

fasten your ear on my advisings .... — iii. 1 

hath a story ready for your car — iv. 1 

hath to the public car professed — iv. 2 

that wont no ear but yours 

I have heard your royal ear abused., 
and in the witness of his proper ear.. 

il you'll a willing ear incline , 

with the ears of Clnudio 

tells him in his car, that he is 

whisper her ear, and tell her 

that her ear lose nothing of the false 

what Arc is in mine ears? 

a. woni in your car, sir; Isay to you 

falls into mine ears as profltless 

let no comforter delight mine ear — 
shall I speak a word in your car? — 
they say, he weors a key in his ear 



— ii. 2 



— iv. 3 
_ v. 1 

— V. 1 

— v. 1 
MuchAdo, ii. I 

— ii. 1 

— iii. 1 

— iii. 1 

— iii. 1 



V. 1 

...^^ V. 1 

tuneable than lark to sficiiherd's ear. A/iJ. A'. Dr. i. 1 

my ear should cateh your Voice — i. I 

hang a pearl in every cowslip's car .. — i'uA 
mine ear is much enamoured of ... . — iif. I 



EAU— ear more quick of apprehension. MW. A'. U. Iii. 2 

mine ear, I thank it, brought me — iii. 2 

and kiss thv fair large ears — iv. 1 

I liave a reusonuhle giHidear ill music — IV. I 

hung with curs that sweep away the — iv. 1 

flieearof man Inith not seen — iv. 1 

tliat aged ears play truant at his ..Love's L. t. ii. ) 

and everv one give ear — iv. I 

like a iewel in Iheear ofcoclo — iv. 2 

uiKl reading:: listen, ear — iv. 3 

tt lover's ear will hear the lowest .... — iv. 3 

would ruvi>li savage cars, and |)lant — iv. 3 

ourears vouclisule it — V. 2 



and pretty 



, give ear 



— v. 2 



did yon w'liisper in voiir lady's ear?.. — v. 2 

the linssian whisper in your ear?.... — v. 2 

best pierce the ear of grief — v. 2 

lies in the ear of liiin that — v. 2 

then, if sickly cars, dcaled with .... — v. '2 

nnpleasing to tt married ear! — v. 2 (song) 

■would almost damn those ears . . Mer. of Venice, i. 1 

a box of the ear of the Englishman .. — .;. '2 

stop my house's ears, I mean my — _ii- S 

at mv toot, and the jewels in her ear! — ni. 1 

into the dreaming bridegroum's ear.. — in. 2 

soundsof music cncii intoonrears.. — v. 

sweetest lonches iiIliit >r,ur mistress' ear — v. 1 

nnv air of nuiHe lourh tlieir eai-s — v. I 

tell vou friendiv in your ear ....Asyou Likeit, iii. :> 

the firokeii ears after the man -- ni; & 

Florentines and Senoys are by the ears. .4(1 s Well,\.\ 

scattered not in ears, but grafted — J. 2 

he, that ears my land, spares my team — i. 3 

her own words to her own ears — . i- 3 

to consolate thine ear — ii)' 2 

but by the ear, that hears most — ni. .■) 

vowed to thee in thine ear, ParoUes — iv. 3 (letter) 

may help me to his majesty's ear — v. 1 

whose words all ears took captive — — v.3 

she does abuse our cars ; to prison — v. 3 

mortal cars might hardly endure. .7'am(ng-o/S/i. i. 1 

a little din can daunt mine ears? — i. 2 

a blow to the ear iCnl. Kjif.-hcarJ. ... — . i. 2 

lend thine ear. Here. There — iv. 1 

was but to knock at your ear — >v. 1 

cannot, best you stop your ears — iv. 3 

pitchers have ears, and I have — ly. 4 

o'er head and cars a forked one Winter' sTale, i. 2 

to have, nor eyes, nor cars — .;• 2 

and give't me in mine ear — .n. 1 

and all men's ears grew to his tunes — iv. 3 

their other senses stuck in cars — iv. 3 

to have an open ear, a quick e.ve .... — iv. 3 

even yoiu- ears should rift to hear me — v. 1 

Bohemia stops his ears, and threatens — v. 1 

be asleep, and not an ear open — v. 2 

that my two ears can witness . . Comedy of Err. u. 1 

he told'his mind upon mine ear — ii. 1 

words were music to thine ear — ii. 2 

error drives our eyes and ears amiss? — _ii. 2 

I'll stop mine ears against — ni. 2 

and teach yoiu- ears to listen with .. — iv. 1 

'twill sound harshly in her ears — iv. 4 

prove it by ray long cars — iv. 4 

and let it feel yoiu ear — iv. 4 

these ears of mine, thou knowest — v. 1 

these ears of mine heard you confess — v. 1 

my dull deaf ears a little — y. 1 

pour my spirit in thine ear Macbeth, i. 5 

m a woman's ear, would murder — — n. 3 

too terrible for the ear — iii. 4 

ha<l I three ears I'd hear thee — iv. 1 

let not your ears despise — iv. 3 

a title more hateful to mine ear — v. 7 

keep the word of promise to our ear — y. 7 
my conscience wdiisjiers in your ear. . King John, i. 1 

that in mine ear I durst not — i. 1 

that deafs our cars with this abundance — ii. 1 

a faithless error in your ears — ii. 1 

our ears are cudgeled — ii- 2 

rounded in the car with that same .. — ii- 2 

hear me without thine ears — iii. 3 

without eyes, ears, or harmful — in. 3 

vexing the dull ear of a drowsy — in. 4 

her ear is stopped \vith dust — iv. 2 

whisper one another in the car — iv. 2 

rattle the welkin's ear, and mock — — v. 2 

the true acquaintance of mine ear.... — v. 6 

tliese dead news in as dead an car. . . . — v. 7 

bid his ears a little while be deaf Richard II. i. 1 

areour eyes, and ears..... — i. 1 

in vain comes counsel to his ear — ii. 1 

may yet undeaf hisear — jj. ' 

the open ear of youth doth — n. 1 

quickly buzzed into his ears? — ii. 1 

quick is mine ear, to hear of — n. I 

mine ear is open, and my heart — in. 2 

let them go to ear the land — iii. 2 

into his ruined ears, and thus deliver — in- 3 

in thy treacherous ear from sun — iv. 1 

heart plant thou thine ear — v.3 

and here have I the daintiness of ear — V. .0 

had not an ear to hear my true — v. 5 

and he the ears of profiting XHenrylV. i. 2 

lend no car unto mv purposes — 1.3 

and in hisear I'll holla— iMortimcrl — i. 3 

tying thine ear to no tongue but — — ,i. 3 

liiv tiiiiie ear close — .!!• '2 

wfiich oft the ear of greatness — in. 2 

on his altar sit, np to the ears in blood — iv. 1 

trust our e.vcs, without our ears — _ v. 4 

0|ien your cars; for which of you..2Hcnr!//)'. (ind.) 

stuffing the ears of men with — (ind.) 

stopping' mv greedv ear with their .. — i- 1 

oinenil llie attention of vour ears — i. 2 

for the box .i' the ear that — .1.2 

I can hear it with mv own ears — ii. 2 

ofa wheel have his ears cut oflV .... — ■!• 4 

1 come to draw y.m out by the ears. . — n. 1 

bid the merry bells ring to thine ear — iv. 4 



EAR 

EAH OS yon do prompt mine ear •illenryiy. y. 2 

mute wonder lurketh in men's ears Henry I', i. 1 

working with the eve, without the car — ii. 2 
the blast of war blows in our ears. ... - lii. 1 
fain l«- about tin ears of the English — in. 7 

piercing the night's dull car — iv. (chorus) 

I will take thee a box on the ear — iv. I 

to take him a box o' the ear — iv. 7 

])urehase him a box o' theear — iv. 7 

as will enter at a lady's ear — v. 2 

bless mine ear withal — X' 2 

eyes be witness with mine ears MlenryVl.u. 3 

as no christian ear can endure 'IHenry VI. iv. 7 

give him a I/ox o' the ear — iy. 7 

whose warlike ears eiadd never ....3HenryVI. i. I 

hnz, to ollend thine eurs — .li. 6 

late entering at his heeilful ears — "i. 3 

mineeurliuth teniptedjudgincnt.... — iii.3 
stopped mine ears to their demands — iv. 8 

heat the stones about thine ears? .... — v. 1 

than can mv ears that tragic — y. 6 

fill his ears with siieli dissentious ..Richard III. i. 3 
dreadful noise of water in mine cars! — i. 4 

howled in mine cars such hideous .. — 1.4 

niteliers have ears. Here comes — .ij- 4 

lend favourable ear to our requests . . — iii. 7 
rise, and lend an ear: there is no .... — iv. 2 
should to thy ears not name my boys — iv. 4 

prepare her ears to hear a wooer's — iy. 4 

in hearing of all these ears Henry VIII. ii. 4 

left to some ears unrecounted — iii. 2 

suffered, gave no ear to't — iv. 2 

commend a secret to your ear — v. I 

given ear to our complaint — y- I 

knit all the Greekish ears to..Troi7u« <5- Cretsida, i. 3 

having his ear full of his — j. 3 

a fair message to his kingly ears?,.,, — j. 3 

'tis for Agamemnon's ears — j. 3 

I bring a trumjiet to awake liis ear. . — i- 3 
his evasions have ears thus long .... — ii. 1 
enkindled by mine eyes and ears .... — ii. 2 
have ears more deaf than adders .. .. — ii. 2 

hark 1 one word in your ear — v. 2 

invert the attest of eyes and ears — — v. 2 

Neptune's ear in liis descent — v. 2 

your passion draws ears hither — v. 2 

to stoj) his ears against admonishment? — y- 3 
sacrificial whisperings in his ear .. Timon ofAlh. i. 1 
the ear, taste, touch, smell, all — ;• 2 

tliat men's ears should be to — i- 2 

feast your ears with the music — iii. 6 

jtiit armour on thine ears, and on — iv. 3 

thou ga vest thine ears — iv. 3 

half to half the world by the ears . . Coriolanus, i. 1 

carry with us ears and eyes — ii- 1 

rebuke from every ear that heard it — ii. 2 

we do request your kindest ears .... — ii. 2 

than one of his ears to hear it? — ii. 2 

let them pull all about mine ears — iii- 2 

ignorant more learned than the ears — iii- 2 
that's worthily as any ear can hear. . — iv. 1 
unmusical to the Vofsciaus' ears .... — iv. i 

of Kome gates by the ears — iv. .■> 

shake your Koine about your ears .. — iv. B 

my name hath t'lnrhed jour c>ars — v. 2 

mine ears ag:unsl yoiii- suits — v. 2 

stopiied your ears aijuinst — v.3 

hereafter will 1 lend ear to — v.3 

in theirs and in the commons' ears . . — V. 5 

'fore your own eyes and ears? — y. 5 

right hand, for tnis ear is deaf ....JuliusCtesar, i. 2 

your ear is good : Cassius — i. 3 

their hats are plucked about their ears — ii. 1 

had you a healthful ear — ii. 1 

more sweetly in great Caesar's car — iii. 1 

lend me your ears; I come to bury .. — iii. 2 

to shake'his ears, and graze — iv. 1 

thrusting this report into his ears — — v- 3 
as welcome to the ears of Brutus .... — y. 3 

1 cannot scratch mine ear . . Antony fy Cleopatra, i. 2 
which they ear and wound with keels — i. 4 

mine ear must pluck it thence — i- 5 

thy fruitful tidings in mine ears — — ii. 5 

the pack of matter to mine car — ii- -^ 

say in mine ear: what is't? — ii- 7 

make battery to our ears with the loud — ii- 7 

I'll tell vou "in your ear — iii- 2 

and read it to public ear — iii. 4 

acquainted my grieved ear withal .. — ..iji-'i 

I have no ears to his request — iii. 10 

have vou no ears? I am Antony yet — iii. 11 

braze'n ilin hliist you the city's ear .. — iy- ^ 

with tills eye or ear distinguish Cyml/etine, i. 4 

that both n'liue ears must not — j- 7 

away! I do condemn mine ears — i- 7 

nor crop the ears of them — ii- 1 

it is a vice in her ears, which horse-hairs — ii- 3 
will to curs, and tongues, lie theme .. — iii- 1 

infection is fallen into thy ear? — iii. 2 

and mine ear, therein false struck .. — iii. 4 
should render him hourly to your ear — iii. 4 
if that his head have ear in music .. — iii. 4 
have both their eyes and ears so cloyed — iv. 4 

mine cars, that heard her flattery — v. 5 

Chiron, thy cars want wit 7'i(i« .4n<iroriictu, ii. 1 

full of tongues, of eyes, of col's — ii. 1 

that ever ear did hear to such efl'ect. . — n. 3 
he not obdurate, oiieii thy deaf ears.. — ii. 3 
variednotes, enchanting every earl.. — iii. 1 

buz in the people's cars — iv. 4 

and nil hisear with golden iiromisca — iv. 4 
his old cars deaf, yet should both car — iv. 4 

and in their ears tell them — v. 2 

some devil w liisper curses in mine ear — v. 3 
to love-siek Dido's Slid attending ear — v. 3 
wliat Sinon bath iK'witched our ears — v. 3 

to ghul vour eur, ond please I'ericles, i. (Gowcr) 

siuuild fet tlicir ears hear their faults.... — i. 2 
the rest 1 hark in thine car) OS black .... — i. 2 
my ears, I do protest, were never — il- 5 



EAR 



[ 204 ] 



EAR 



EAR — as a whispev in the ears of death . Pericles, iii. 1 

for the rikIs lire ijuick ot'enr — iv. 1 

what! do you stop your ears? — iv. 3 

your ears unto your eves — iv. 4 (Gower) 

each rogue thy car is "liahle — iv. 6 

and whispers in mine ear, go not — v. 1 

wlio starves the ears she feeds — v. 1 

to ray sense bend no licentious ear — v. 3 

give ear, sir, to my sister Lenr, ii. 4 

heing apt to have his ear abiised — .j!' "^ 

litrht of car, bloody of hand ^ iii. 4 

look with thine ears: see how — ;v. 6 

hark, in tliine ear; cliange places — iv. 6 

that ever ear received — v. 3 

if yon witli patient ears attend. .Romeo SfJul. (prol.) 
OS he breathed defiance to my ears .. — i. 1 

wherein tliou stiek'st up to the ears. . — i. 4 

then anon drums in his ear — i. 4 

a whis|iering tale in a fair lady's ear — i. 5 

rich jewel in an Ethiop's ear — i. .^ 

my ears liave not yet drunk a hundred — ii. 2 

softest music to attending ears'. — ii. 2 

groans ring yet in my ancient ears .. — ii. 3 
shot through the ear with a love-song — ii. 4 
I mil bite tliee by the ear i'or that jest — ii. 4 

by the cars? make haste C?'??.) — iii 1 

I see that madmen have no ears .... — iii. 3 
pierced the fearful l\ollo\v of thine ear — Iii. 5 
holding thine ear close to the hollow — v. 3 

tliis, wliicli startles in our ears? — v. 3 

let us once again assail your ears Hamlet, i. 1 

nor shall you do mine ear that violence. . — i. 2 
with an attent ear; till I may deliver. ... — i. 2 

if with too credent ear you list — i. 3 

give every man thine ear, but few — i. 3 

must not'he to ears of flesh and blood .... — i. 5 

so the whole ear of Denmark is by — is 

and in the porches of mine ears did — i. 5 

jneans, and place, all given to mine ear .. — ii. 2 

at each ear a hearer — ii. 2 

takes prisoner Pyrrhus' ear — ii. 2 

and cleave the general ear with horrid . . — ii. 2 

the very faculties of eyes and ears — ii. 2 

in the ear of all their conference — iii. 1 

to split the ears of the groundlings — iii. 2 

like a mildewed ear, blasting his — iii. 4 

cars mthout hands or e;)'es — iii. 4 

like daggers enter in mme ears — iii. 4 

a knavish speech sleeiis in a foolish ear .. — iv. 2 

wants not buzzers to infect his ear — iv. 5 

our person to arraign in ear and ear .... — iv. 5 
I have words to spelik in thine ear — iv. 6 (letter) 
heard, and with a knowing ear, tliat he.. — iv. 7 
the ears are senseless, tlrat should give . . — v. 2 

to your grave ears I'll present Othello, i. 3 

with a greedy ear devour up my discourse — i. 3 
bruised heart was pierced through the ear — i. 3 

to my unfolding lend a gracious ear — i. 3 

abuse Othello's ear, that he is too familiar — i. 3 

pour this pestilence into his ear — ii. 3 

inakest his ear a stranger to thy thoughts — iii. 3 
pish! noses, ears, and lips: is it possible? — iv. 1 
or that mine eves, or ears, or any sense . . — iv. 2 

EAR-DEAFEIS^ING- 
ear-deafening voice o' the oracle.. Winter\Tale, iii. 1 

EAR-KISSING- 
but ear-kissing [CoZ.-bussing] argimieuts?. tear, ii. 1 

EARL— yet there has been earls .... Merry Wives, ii. 2 

de earl, de knight, de lords — ii. 3 

take heed of this Freucl^ earl AlVs Well, iii. 5 

those suggestions for the young earl . . — iii. 5 

hencefortn be earls, the first Macbeth, v. 7 

kept the earl from hence? 1 Henry IV. iv. I 

enterprize, tlran if the earl were here — iv. 1 

I look to be either earl or duke — v. 4 

a noble earl and many a creature .... — v. 5 
where is the earl? What shall {rep.) .iHenry IV. i. 1 
noble earl, I bring you certain news — i. 1 

tell thou thy earl, his divination lies — i. 1 

sweet earl, divorce not wisdom — i. 1 

full fifteen eai-ls, and fifteen hundred . . Henry V. i. 1 
of lusty earls, Grandpre and Roussi . . — iv. 8 

so fell that noble earl 1 Henry VI. ii. 5 

an earl I am, and Sufiblk — v. 3 

welcome, bra.ve earl, into o\\x territories — v. 3 

rare descrintion, noble earl — v. .^ 

a poor earl s daughter is — v. 5 

no better than an earl, altho' — v. .i 

seven earls, twelve barons 2Henry VI. i. 1 

the meanest of you earls and dukes? — iv. 8 
with all the northern earls and lords. SHcnrj/ VI. i. 2 

for a poor earl to give — v. 1 

dukes, earls, lords, gentlemen Richard III. ii. 1 

desire the earl to see me in my tent . . — v. 3 

with the earl, sir; here within Lear, ii. 4 

let's follow the old earl, and get — iii. 7 

be married to this noble earl Romeo ^-Juliet, iii. 4 

EARLDOM— title of an earldom .... 1 Henry VI. iii. 3 
my inheritance, as the earldom was, .ZHenryVl. i. 1 
claim tliou of rae the earldom of . . Richard III. iii. 1 
earldom of Hereford, and the moveables — iv. 2 
vour promise for tlie earldom — iv. 2 

EXRLIER-.come in earlier o' nights. TweWh Night, i. 3 

EARLIEST— earliest to the ground. Mfr.o/- Fen. iv. 1 
then it will be the earliest fruit . . As you Like it, iii. 2 
with our earliest, let me liave speech Othello, ii. 3 

EARLINESS-therefore thy eAxMnQm.Rnm. if Jul. ii. 3 

EARLY — I am thus early come . TwoGen. ofVer. iv. 3 

and to be up early Merry Wives, i. 4 

how have you come so early by . . Twelfth Night, i. 5 

and to go to bed then, is early — ii. 3 

they rose up earlv, to observe.. ATiW. N.^sDream, iv. 1 
and in the mornfn^ early will . . Mer. of Venice, iv. 1 
in the morning early, they found. /Is i/OM Like il, ii. 2 

the next year, and 'tis too early All's Welt, ii. 1 

by this brave duke came early to his. King.hlin, ii. 1 
by four o' clock, early at Gadshill . . 1 Henry IV. i. 2 
in the morning early shall mine uncle — iv. 3 

a.s in an early spring we see iHenrylV. i. 3 

an early stirrer, by the rood — iii. 2 



EARLY — makes us early stirrers Henry V. iv. 1 

in the council-house, early and late.. 2 Hen ii/r/. i. 1 
you are early stirring: what news.. /(/cAard 111. iii. 2 

prepare thy battle early in — v. 3 

the early village eoek I'lath — v. 3 

betwixt too early and too late Henry VIII. ii. 3 

Hector was stirring early .... Troilus ij- Cressida, i . 2 

what business, lord, so early? — iv. 1 

what news with you so early? — iv. 2 

'tis but early days — iv. 5 

rise as early as he da,re — v. 11 

are you stirred so early too? JuliusCrrsar, ii. 2 

early to-morrow will we rise — iv. 3 

Brutus gave the word too early — v. 3 

early though it be, have on.. Antonys-Cleopatra, iv. 4 
that's the reason I was up so early . . Cymbeline, ii. 3 
somewhat too early for new-married. Titm And. ii. 2 

why do you stir so early? Pericles, iii. 2 

the cause we trouble you so early — iii. 2 

should at these early liours shake oif . . — iii. 2 

early, one blustering morn — v. 3 

early walking did I see your son. iJomeo ^Juliet, i. 1 

marred are those so early made — i. 2 

I fear, too early; for my mind — i. 4 

too early seen unknown, and known — i. 5 
what early tongue so sweet saluteth me? — ii- 3 
and know her mind early to-morrow — iii. 4 

we may call it early by and by — iii. 4 

not down so late? or up so early? — iii. 5 

marry, my child, early next Tliursday — iii. 5 

late, early [Co(. Kn/.-hour, tide] — iii..') 

on Tliursday early will I rouse you. . — iv. 1 

that I, so early waking — iv. 3 

early in the morning see thou deliver — v. 3 

what misaflventure IS so early up — v. 3 

early up, to see thy son and heir ^rep.) — v. 3 
this letter he early bid me give his . . — v. 3 
our general east us thus early Othello, ii. 3 

EARN — his excellence did earn it .... Much Ado, iii. 1 

I earn that I eat, get that As you Lilce it, iii. 2 

a barber shall never earn sixpence ..'ZHenrylV. i. 2 

to earn a dearer estimation Coriotanus^ ii. 3 

andeams a place i' the story . .Antony ^Cleo. iii. 11 
and my sword will earn our chronicle — iii. U 
the act that might the addition earn . . Othello, iv. 2 

EARNED— itself would have earned. Twelfth N. iii. 4 

I have earned of Don John Much Ado, iii. 3 

the one for ever earned a royal. . . . Winter'sTale, i. 2 

before you have earned them 2HenryIV. ii. 4 

addition earned in thy death . . Troilus .§- Cress, iv. 5 

though Marcius earned them not Coriolanus^ i. 1 

and they have earned the ■wmt/i. Antony ^Cleo. iv. 1 
the wrack of earned praise Pericles, iv. (Gower) 

EARNEST— perceive her earnest. TwoGen.ofVer. ii. 1 

after they closed in earnest — ii.5 

sixpence in earnest of the bear-herd. . Much Ado, ii. 1 
in earnest. In most profound earnest — v. 1 
forbid! in earnest, shall I sayl.. Mid. N. Dream, iii. 2 
but love no man in good earnest, .^^s you Like it, i. 2 

let us talk in good earnest — i. 3 

in good earnest, and so God mend me — iv. I 

that it was a passion of earnest — iv. 3 

no, in good earnest: how Winter'sTale, i. 2 

are you in earnest, sir? I smell — iv. 3 

I liave had earnest, but I cannot with — iv. 3 

now your jest is earnest Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

that he did plead in earnest, yea or no? — iv. 2 
and, for an earnest of a gi-eater honour. i)/ac6e//i, i. 3 
given me earnest of success, commencing — i. 3 

pleads he in earnest? look upon Ricliard II. v. 3 

tell me now in earnest, how 1 Henry IV. ii. 4 

my plate, in good earnest, la 2HenryIV. ii. 1 

the golden earnest of our death Henry V. ii. 2 

thy groat, in earnest of revenge — v. 1 

in earnest of a fui'ther benefit 1 Henry VI. v. 3 

stumble in mine earnest words . . ..2Henry VI. iii. 2 

an earnest advocate to plead Richard III. i. 3 

importune with earnest prayers .... — ii. 2 
who, earnest in the service of my God — iii. 7 
given in earnest what I begged in jest — v. 1 
must be an earnest motion inade . . Henry VI J I. ii. 4 
hath sent me an earnest inviting. rimoM.o/'/l;/i. iii. G 

nay, stay thou out for earnest — iv. 3 

I have given you earnest — iv. 3 

in earnest, it's true ; I heard Coriolanus, i. 3 

the nobles, in great earnest, are going — iv. 6 

it is an earnest of a further good Cyniheline,\ 6 

are you in earnest then, my lord?.. Titus Andron. i. 2 
we are strong in earnest [Xni. -astern] .Pericles, iii. 1 

if not, I have lost my earnest — iv. 3 

there's earnest of tlvy service Lear, i. 4 

an earnest conjuration from the king ..Hamlet, v. 2 
draw from her a prayer of earnest heart. O'Jiello, i. 3 
so earnest to have me filch it? ^ iii. 3 

EARNEST-GAPING— 
mv earnest-gaping sight of thy 2 Henry VI. iii. 2 

EARNESTLY— knife so earnestly ?...W<?)-.o/ fen. iv. 1 

he wishes earnestly Winter's Tale, iv. (chorus) 

have earnestly implored a general . . 1 Henry VI. v. 4 
earnestly he cast his eyes upon me ! . Henry VIII. v. 2 
how earnestly they kriock ! . . Troilus tf Cressida, iv. 2 
how earnestly are you set a'work .. — v. 11 
(the rather, for I earnestly beseech).. /4n<.<5-C/fo. ii. 2 
as I earnestly did fix mine eye . . Titus Andron. v. 1 
why so earnestly seek you to put up Lear, i. 2 

EAR'NESTNESS- myearuestnessof.2H™ri//f'. V. 5 
all agreeing in earnestness to see him. Coriolarnts, ii. 1 
with a solemn earnestness (more than ..Otluilo, v. 2 

EAR-PIERCING— the ear-piercing fife . . — iii. 3 

EARTH— sunk the sea mtliin the ea,rth.Tempest, i. 2 

in the veins o' the earth — i. 2 

thou earth thou! speak — ■ i. 2 

i' the air, or the eartli? — i. 2 

nor no sound, that the earth owes — i. 2 

all the comers else o' the earth let — i. 2 

no better than the earth he lies upon .... — ii. 1 

O heaven, O earth, bear witness — iii. 1 

rich scarf to my proud earth — i v. 1 

earth's increase, and foison plenty.. — iv. 1 (song) 
certain fathoms in the earth — v. 1 



EARTH— no such joy on earth!. 7'«!oGe)t. nfVer. ii. 4 

to all the creatures on the earth — ii. 4 

lest the base earth should from — ii. 4 

as heaven from earth — ii. 7 

upon the dull earth dwelling — iv. 2 (song) 

let me rake it from the eartli — iv. 2 

is nor of heaven , nor earth — v. 4 

as ijositive as the earth is firm . . Merry Wives, iii. 2 
I had rather be set quick i' the eai'th — iii. 4 

I smell a man of middle earth — v. 5 

the elements of air and earth Twelfth Night, i. b 

now heaven walks on eartli — v. 1 

so in heaven, but not in earth . . Meas. for Meas. ii. 4 
men of some other metal than earth .. jl/wc/i .Jdo, ii. 1 
unfolds both heaven and earth . .Mid. N. Dream, \. 1 
between the cold moon and the earth — ii. 2 

round about the earth in forty — ii. 2 

this whole earth may be bored — iii. 2 

heaven to earth, from earth to heaven — v. 1 
soul's earth's God, and body's.. Lowe's L. L. i. 1 (let.) 

the soil, the land, the earth — iv. 2 

a good lustre of conceit in a turf of earth — iv. 2 

which on my earth dost shine — iv. 3 (verses) 

by earth, she is but corporal — iv. 3 

the richest beauties on the earth! — v. 2 

heart most daring on the earth. , Mer. of Venice, ii. 1 

comers of the earth they come — ii. 7 

a kinder gentleman treads not the earth — ii. 8 
here on earth, and, if on earth he do not — iii. 5 

to lie with his mother earth? As you Like it, i. 2 

that she's in earth, from whence All's Well, i i . 4 

a heaven on earth I have won — iv. 2 

echoes from the hollow earth.. raming-o/S/i. 2 (ind.) 
as heaven sees earth, and earth . . Winter's Tale, i. 2 
to sweeten of the whole dungy earth — i i . 1 

upon tlie earth of its right father — iii. 3 

I'll not put the dibble in earth to set — iv. 3 

tlie earth, the lieavens, and all — iv. 3 

crush the sides o' the earth together.. — iv. 3 

or the close earth wombs — iv. 3 

the most peerless piece of earth, I think — v. 1 
heaven and earth might thus have stood — v. 1 

as is the spring to the earth — v. 1 

they kneel, they kiss the earth — v. 1 

another earth tliat the oracle was — v. 2 

gazing u]jon the earth, dispersed. Comed!/<)/'£n-. i. 1 
in earth, ill sea, in sky: the beasts .. — ii. 1 

am I in earth, ill heaven — ii. 2 

our earth's wonder; more than earth — iii. 2 
my sole earth's heaven, and my .... — iii. 2 

like the inhabitants o' the earth Macbeth, i. 3 

the earth hath bubbles as the water. . — i. 3 
thou sure and firm-set earth, hear .. — ii. 1 
some say, the earth was feverous .... — ii. 3 

does the face of earth intomb — ii . 4 

let the earth hide thee! — iii. 4 

confound all unity on earth — iv. 3 

do bear their privilege on earth King John, i. 1 

and earth! Thou monstrous (rep.) .. — ii. 1 
coldly embracing the discoloured earth — ii. 2 
that sway s the earth this climate ... . — ii. 2 

but the huge firm earth can hold — iii. 1 

the meagre cloddy earth to glittering — iii. 1 
'twixt heaven and earth is to be made — iv. 2 
the earth had not a hole to hide .... — iv. 3 

as it on earth hath been thy — v. 7 

envying earth's good hap, add an. ...Richard II. i. 1 

shall make good upon this earth — i. 1 

from the tongueless caverns of the earth — i. 1 
when he sees the liours ripe on earth — i. 2 
our kingdom's earth should not be soiled — i. 3 
tills earth of majesty, the seat of Mars — ii. I 
tliis earth, this realm, this England — ii. 1 

and we are on the earth, where notliing — ii. 2 

looks bloody on the earth — ii. 4 

fall to the base earth from — ii. 4 

dear earth I do salute thee (rep.) .... — iii. 2 

all thy happy days on earth — iii. 2 

sorrow on the bosom of the earth .... — iii. 2 
small model of the barren earth .... ~- iii. 2 
earth I rain my waters; on the earth — iii. 3 
a pair of graves within the earth .... — iii. 3 

to make the base earth proud — iii. 3 

thou little better thing than earth .. — iii. 4 

I take the earth to the like — iv. I 

in earth as quiet as thy father's — iv. 1 

to that pleasant country's earth — iv. 1 

ever fell upon this cursed earth — iv. I 

if this rebellious earth have any .... — v. 1 
wounds the earth, if notliing else .... — v. 1 
may my knees grow to the earth .... — v. 3 

a god on earth tliou art — v. 3 

the sovereign'st thing on earth 1 Henry IV. i. 3 

the bowels of the harmless earth — i. 3 

and lards the lean earth as he — ii. 2 

bend thine eyes upon the earth — ii. 3 

forgot upon the face of the eartii — ii. 4 

and the foundation of the earth shaked — iii. 1 

I say, the earth did shake when I — iii. 1 

the eartli did tremble. then the earth — iii. 1 
oft the teeming eartli is witli a kind of — iii. I 

shakes the old Deldam earth ._ — iii. 1 

our grandam earth, having this — iii. 1 

for, heaven to earth, some of us — v. 2 

two paces of the vilest eartli (rep.) .. — v. 4 
commenced on this ball of earth. .2He«7i//r. (ind.) 
the never-daunted Percy to the eartli — i. 1 

let heaven kiss earth! — i. 1 

O earth, give us that king again — — i. 3 
whose memory is written on the earth — iv. 1 

goes with me into the earth — ^ iv. 4 

proud hoofs i' the receiving earth.. Henry V. i. (cho.) 
monarchs of the earth do all expect. . — _i. 2 

he bounds from the earth, as if — iii. 7 

the earth sings when he touches it . . — iii. 7 
dull elements of earth and water — — iii. 7 
trod upon Got's ground and his earth — iv. 7 
so in the earth, to this day is not .... 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

Venus, fallen down on the earth — i. 2 

pitchy mantle over-veiled the earth — ii. 2 



EAU 



EAKTII— even with tlic earth g\m\\..l Henry n. iv. 8 
so iieeill'ul (111 thc'iHith 111' Kianco.. .. — iv. 3 
the powtil'iil iVitii'iis uiulcr eiirth.... — v. 3 

exicciiiiii; iiiinulfs im curth — v. 4 

ey>s lixnl t.' the -.ulk-ii euitli iHeiiryCl. i.i 

liiosti-.ite, iiiul ^rovul ou tlie earth .. — i. 4 

thy heavt'ii is on eartli; tliine eyes .. — ii. i 
bles:3e4l are tlic pcui'cnialicrs ou eurtli — ii. I 

ami cursing men on eartli — iii. 2 

tlicirs for tnc earth's inercosc — iii. a 

thy grave is ditjKed already in tlie earth — iv. 10 

tlnd a harhour lu the eartli? — v. 1 

knit earth and licnveii togctlierl .... — v. 2 

and ovor-shiiic the earth, as this SHenryVI. ii. 1 

the thirstv earth hiUli ilruuk — ii. 3 

then let tile e.irth he ilnmken with.. — ii. 3 

rise iViiin the earth's euld I'aee — ii. 3 

ill heaven, or on earth — ii. 3 

car never had scorehed the earth .... — ii. G 

since this earth alfords no joy — iii. 2 

must viold my hod V to the eartli .... — v. 2 
rule, leifin. hilt eurtli nud dust'? .... — v. 2 
liiiule tlie li:i|ipv earth thv hell ....Iticluml III. i. 2 
Ueiirth, «lii.'irtliishh.,Hldi-|iik'st .. — i. 2 

or, earth, i^iipe open wide, and eat .. — i. 2 

Jitter for tliat ulace, than earth — i. 2 

doth not hreathe upon the earth .... — i. 2 
from this earth's thraldom to the joys — i. 4 
made niv friends at peace on earth .. — ii. 1 

that hreiitlied upon the earth — iii. .0 

or. KiiL'huid's huvful earth, iiulawfully — iv. ■! 
eKeelle.it .u'raiid tyrant of the earth . . — iv. 4 
earth gapes, hell hums, fiends roar .. — iv. 4 
thou eaiuest on earth to make the earth — i\'. 4 
iuHierial type of this earth's glory .. — iv. 4 
colli corpse on the earth's cold face . . — v. 3 

and keep it from the earth Heniy fill. i. 1 

1 had never trod this Knglish earth — iii. 1 

contemplation were ahove the earth — iii. 2 

branches, bow to the eartli — iv. 2 

give him a little earth for charity — iv. 2 

here lie lived upon this naughty earth? — v. 1 
designs l)egun on earth hclow . . Troilus ^ Cress, i. 3 

shaking ot earth i' commotion — i. 3 

as earth to the centre, yet — iii. 2 

wind, or sandy earth, as fox — iii. 2 

as deep under tlie eartli, as I — iv. 2 

the very centre of the earth — iv. 2 

lifts him from the earth — iv. a 

wider tlian the sky and earth — v. 2 

wing of night o'erspreads the earth . . — v. 9 
no space ot earth shall sunder our . . — v. ll 
as it grows again toward earth. Tlmon of Athens, ii. 2 
dive in the earth, and fence not Athens ! — iv. 1 
draw from the earth rotten humidity — iv. 3 

earth, yield me roots! — iv. 3 

come, damned earth, thou common.. — iv. 3 

behold, the earth hath roots — iv. 3 

the earth's a thief, that feeds — iv. 3 

what viler tliiiii.' upou the earth .... — iv. 3 
that of all things upon the earth ..CorioUuius, iii. 1 
heaven will not have earth to know — iv. 2 

not of stronger earth than others .... — v. 3 

sink, my kuee, i' the earth — v. 3 

folds in this orb o' the earth — v. 5 

when all the sway of earth shakes. /ui/us C<rsar, i. 3 

known the earth so fidl of faults — i. 3 

nor lieaven, nor earth, have been. ... — ii. 2 

thou bleeding piece of earth — iii. 1 

shall smell above the earth with — iii. 1 

find out new heaven, new earth ..Antomj^Cleo. i. 1 
our dungy earth alike fecda beast .. — i. 1 

the demi-.\.tlas of this earth — i. .i 

levying the kings o' the earth for war — iii. 6 
standing on the earth, and fighting foot — iii. ^ 
breathe between the heavens and earth — iii. 10 

music i' the air. Under the earth — iv. 3 

that heaven and earth may strike. ... — iv. 8 
the crown o' the earth doth melt .... — iv. 13 

lighted the little O, the earth — v. 2 

no i-'rave upon the earth shall clip .. — v. 2 
seek through the rerions of the aatt\\.CijmMinr; i. 1 
more vexed at anj'tuing in the earth — ii. 1 
the abhorred things 0' tlie earth amend — v. .'> 
disturbed with prodigies ou earth. Tilus Andron. i. 2 

tears of joy shed ou the earth — i. 2 

as Titan's rays on earth, and ripen .. — i. 2 

into this gaping hollow of the eartli'i? ii. 4 

staunch the earth's dry appetite .... — iii. 1 
O earth! 1 will befriend tlice more .. — iii. I 

and bow this feeble ruin to the earth iii. 1 

doth not the earth o'ertlow? iii. 1 

the weeping welkin, I the earth — iii. 1 

then must my earth with her iii. 1 

enough written upon this earth iv. 1 

the inmost centre of the earth — iv. 3 

no justice iu earth nor hell — iv. 3 

like to the earth, swallow her v. 2 

set him breast-deep in earth — v. 3 

to see him foateneu in the earth v. 3 

iny riches to the earth from whence Peridm, i. 1 

the earth is wronged by man's i. 1 

kings arc earth's gods: in vice — i. 1 

we'll mingle bloods together in the earth — i. 2 

of late, earth, sea, and air i. 4 

woter, earth, and heaven can make. ... — iii. I 

shook, as the earth did (piake — iii. 2 

equal any single crown o' the earth.... — iv. 4 
some parte' the earth (re/).).... — iv. 4 (Uower) 
heaven and earth! Kdmund, seek liim. . . . Leur, i. 1 

shall be the terrors of the earth — ii. 4 

blow the earth inbj the sea iii. 1 

aud hurts the poor creature of earth .... — iii. 4 

she's dead as earth; lend me v. 3 

the earth hath swallowed (rep.). . Iloineo ijjiilici, i. 2 

for use, for earth too dear I — 1.5 

turn back, dull earth, and find thy .. — ii. 1 
the earth, that's nature's mother .... — ii. 3 
ou the earth doth Ii ve, but to the earth — ii. 3 
tuu untimely hexe did suuiu the eurtU — iii. I 



[ 205 ] 

EAUTIl— vile earth, to earth resign. Wonico 4- ./u^. iii. 2 

sole monarch of the universal earth — Hi. 2 

earth'i' since liirlli, and heaven, and earth — iii. 3 

[Co;.A-,i^J the eartli doth ilri/zle dew — iii. 6 

my husband is on earth, my faith .. — iij. .'> 

return again to earth, unless that.... — jj!* ^ 

from heaven b^ leaving earth? — iii. ii 

yet but green in earth, lies festering — iv. 3 

like mandrakes' torn out of the earth — iv. 3 

the dearest morsel of the earth — v. 3 

heaven and earth tngetlierdeinonstrated. HnmW, i. 1 

treasure in the wninli of earth — i. 1 

in sea or tire, in earth or air — i. 1 

we [iray you throw to earth this — i. 2 

heaven and earth! must I remember? .. — i. 2 

though all the earth o'erwlielm them — i. 2 

O eartlil what else? and shall I couple. — i. ,') 

canst work i' the earth so fast? — i. 

more tliinL,'s in lieiuen and earth, Horatio — i. .') 

as the inilillerent eliildren of theearth .. — ii. 2 

this goodly frame, the enrlli, seems to me — ii. 2 

crawling between earth and heaven? .... — iii. 1 

nor eartli to me give food, nor heaven . . — iii. 2 

examples, gross as eartli, exhort me .... — iv. 4 

as 'twere from heaven to earth — iv. 5 

a man lie i' the earth ere he rot? — v. 1 

lain you i' the earth three-and-twenty . . — v. 1 

looked o' this fashion i' the earth? — v. 1 

the dust is earth, of earth we make loam — v. 1 

that that earth, which kept the world — v. 1 
lay her i' the earth; and Irom her fair .. — v. 1 
holdofftheeartha while, till 1 have.... — v. 1 
the heaven to earth, now the king diinks — v. 2 

all earth amazed, for nothing canst Olliello, iii. 3 

if tliat the earth could teem with woman's — iv. 1 

hushed within tlie hollow mine of earth — iv. 2 

she comes more near the eartli than she — v. 2 

E-\UTH-BOUND- 
the tree unfix his earth-bound root? . . Macbeth, iv. 1 

E.VKTHED— when he is earthed Tempest, ii. 1 

E.\.KTI[E\'— green earthen pots., fiomeo .^Jiid'rf, v. I 
EAKTHLlfiR— earthlier happy (.Col. KnI. 

earthlv happier] is the rose Mid.N.'sDream,i. 1 

EAIITUI.,Y— her earthly aud abhorred.. Tempest, i. 2 

for the liiiuor is not earthly — ii. 2 

but she is an earthly paragon. . TwoGen. of Ver. ii. 4 
there were no earthly mean .... Meas.forMeas. ii. 4 

but, for those earthly faults — v. 1 

doth not every earthly thing cry..... 17uc/i /Wo, iv. 1 
(Col. Knl.'i but earthly happier is. . Mid. N.'s Dr. i. 1 
earthly godfathers of lieaven's ..Lovers L. Lost^ i. 1 

with sucli an earthly tongue — iv. 2 

my vow was earthly, thou — iv. 3 (verses) 

the wager lay two earthly women. ^/er. of Ven. iii. 5 
and earthly power doth then show . . — iv. 1 
earthly things made even. As you Like it, v. 4 (verse) 
a heavenly effect in an earthly actor.. •)//'! Well, ii. 3 

1 am in this earthly world Macbelli, iv. 2 

what earthly [Co(.-earthy] name . . Kini; John, iii. 1 

thou the earthly author of Uicliard II. i. 3 

leaving their eartlily parts to choke . . Henri/ V. iv. 3 

a world of earthly blessings to ilienryl'l.K. 1 

great is his comfort in this earthly vale — ii. 1 
ever king that joyed an earthly tlu'oue — iv. 9 

or an earthly sepulchre! Sllenry VI. i. 4 

lost the view of earthly glory Henry P'lII. i. 1 

the queen of earthly queens — ii . 4 

to keep your earthly audit — iii. 2 

a peace above all earthly dignities . . — iii. 2 

and the moon, were she earthly Coriolanus, ii. 1 

if thou darest be, the earthly Jove../4n(.<5C';eo. ii. 7 

or, if not, an earthly paragon! Cymbeline, iii. B 

this earthly [Col. A'n(. -earthy] prison. TitusAnd. i. 2 

doth earthly honour wait — ii. 1 

gripe not at earthly joys, as erst Pericles, i. 1 

reiTiember, earthly man is but a substance — ii. 1 
again, re-speaking earthly thunder Hamlet, i. 2 

EAKTHQUAKE-make an earthquake. rempfs(,ii. I 

1 look for an earthquake too then .... Much Ado^ i. 1 
may be removed with earthquakes. .4s you Like, iii. 2 
blazin" star, or at an earthquake .... All's Well, i. 3 
do make an earthquake of nobility. . Kin^John, v. 2 

in thunder, and in earthquake Henry V. ii. 4 

since the earthquake now eleven . . Romeo SfJul. i. 3 

EARTH-TREADING-earth-treading stars — i. 2 

EARTH- VEXING— earth- vexing smart .Ci/mti. v. 4 

EARTHY— earthy gross conceit.. Comedy of Err. iii. 2 

(Col.'] whatearthy uametointerrogatones../oA7i, iii.l 

Boon lie Richard in an earthy pit ! . . Richard II. iv. 1 

but tliat the earthy and cold hand . . 1 Henry IV. v. 4 

to survey his dead and earthy image. 2 Henry VI. iii. 2 

she looks, aud of an earthy cold?.. Henry VIII. iv. 2 

(Col. Knt.] before this earthy prison. . Tilus.lnd. i. 2 

upon the dead man's earthy cheeks. . — ii. 4 

EAR-WAX— brain as ear-wax ..Troilus ^ Cress, v. I 

E.VSE— do it with much more ease .... Tempest, iii. I 

can with ease attempt you .... Meas.for Meas. iv. 2 

to ease the anguish of a torturing . . Mid. N. Dr. v. 1 

seeking his wealth and ease. /Is you Like it, ii. 5(soug) 

the worse at ease he is — iii. 2 

that surfeit on their ease, will Ait's Well, iii. 1 

is ready, may it do liira ease.. Taming of Hhrem, v. 2 

I can with ease translate it King John, ii. 2 

nor conversant with ease and idleness — iv. 3 
wliom youth and ease have taught.. /iic/mrd //. ii. 1 

they find a kind of ease, bearing — v. 5 

for I will ease my heart MIenrylV. i. 3 

afoot a while, and ease our legs — ii. 2 

got with much ease — ii. 2 

shall I not take mine case in — iii. 3 

vaulted with such case into his scat. . — iv. 1 

well; of sutl'erttiice comes ease illenrylV.v. 4 

in pomp and ease, wliilst I Henry y I. i. I 

and, in that ease, I'll tell — ii. & 

to case your coiuitry of — v. 4 

and mine age would case 2Henry VI. ii. 3 

rusted with ease, that shall be — iii. 2 

mine ire, nor ease my heart ZHenry VI. i. 3 

lives ill .Scotland, at'his ease — iii. 3 

enjoys the honour, and lift case — iv. 6 



EAS 



EASE— not do thee so much case ZHenry VI. v. 5 

yet do they case the heart Kiclmrd III. iv. 4 

now, methinks, 1 feel a little cax.. Henry I'lll. iv. 2 
at what ease might corrupt minds .. — v. I 

some conic to take their ease — (cpil.) 

his honour higher than his ease. Troi'/i/s ^ Cress, i. 3 
because thou canst not ease thy smart — iv. 4 

and seek about for eases — v. 11 

to ease them of their griefs .... Timon of Athens, \. 2 
sit aud iiaiit in your great chairs of ease — v. 5 

he never stood to case his breast Coriolanus, ii. 2 

as he be never at heart's ease Julius Ctrsar, i. 2 

to ease ourselves of divers slanderous — iv. I 
probation, I can with ease i>roilncQ. .Cymbeline, v. 5 
rail at him to eii^e my mind. . Tilus Andronicus, ii. 5 

could our mourning ease th.y misery I — .);•'' 
sonic sign how I may do thee case .. — iii. I 

to ease their stomachs with their — iii. I 

that weep doth ease some deal — iii. 1 

to case the gnawing vulture of — v. 2 

Shalt thou ease thy angry heart — v. 2 

men been, there's seldom ease . . Pericles, ii. (Gowcr) 

trouble, for a minute's ease — ii. 4 

seek till lie own ease Lear, iii. 4 

cannot sit at ease on the old bench. /iomeo^./"/. ii, 4 

be done, that may to do thee ease Hamlet, i . 1 

that rots itself in ease on Lethe's wharf'. . — i. .^ 
so that, with ease, or with a little shuffling — iv. 7 

for mv ease, in good faith — v. 2 

neglecting an attLinpt "feasc Othello,\.3 

1 ani very ill at l;il, (iiili! for mine — iii. 3 

EASED— till he lie ea-ed with being..i?ifAard //. v. 5 

so the spirit is eased Henry V. iv. i 

it shall be eased, if France 3Hi-nry VI. iii. 3 

EASEFUI/— attain his easeful western bed — v. 3 
EASIER — with a reproof the easier .Merry Wires, ii. 2 
you dare easier be friends with me . . Much Ado, iv. 1 
thou art easier swallowed than . . Lovc'sL. Lost, v. I 
I can easier teach twenty wliat.-VercA. of Ve7iice,i. 2 
your spirit were easier for advice. Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

our old robes sit easier than our Macbeth, ii. 4 

forafricnd: forego the easier King John, 'm.\ 

is my beaver easier than it was? Bichard III, v. 3 

you think, I am easier to be played on. Hamlet, iii. 2 
EASIES'T-in whose easiest passage. '♦''n(fr'j7'a/f, iii. 2 
EASILIEST— casiliest harbour in? . . Cymbeline, iv. 2 
EASILY— as easily as I do tear. .TwoO'en. of Ver. iv. 4 

nut off my opinion so easily Merry Wives, ii. 1 

lie will hear you easily Twelfth flight, iii. 4 

rupture that you may easily heal.il/ea./or.Vea. iii. 1 
very easily possible ; he wears his faith.Much Ado. i. 1 
your wit ambles well; it goes easily. . — v. 1 
measure then of one is easily told. Lore's L. Lost, v. 2 
for my great suit so easily olitained . . — v. 2 
t'or the one sleeps easily, liecause. . As yon Like it, iii. 2 

he may easily put it off at court All's Well, ii. 2 

came the posterns so easily open? . Winier'sTale, ii. 1 

may easily win a woman's King John, i. 1 

I will enforce it easily to my love — — ii. 2 

dogs, easily won to fawn on Richard II. iii . 2 

be assured, will easily be granted 1 Henry IV. \. 3 

bring tliis prize in very easily 'iHenrylV. iii. 1 

unspotted is not easily daunted iHenry VI. iji. 1 

3'ou cannot easilj- purge yourself .... — iii. 1 

and be not easily won to om- Richard III. iii. 7 

folly may easily untie Troilus ^Cressida,!!. 3 

he will supply us easily Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

which easily endures not article Coriolanus, ii. 3 

in Rome, as easily as a king JuliusC/rsar, i. 2 

how easily she may be surprised,. /In/ony i^C/eo. v. 2 

not easily, I tliink Cymbeline, ii. I 

cracked as easily 'gainst our rocks .. — iii. 1 
how easily murder is discovered! .Titus Andion. ii. 4 
by and by is easily said Hamlet, iii. 2 

for a chair to bear him easily hence! . . Oiltelio, v. 1 
of one, not easily jealous — v. 2 

EASINESS— out ot OUT easiness ....Henry nil. v. 2 

shall lend a kind of easiness to Hamlet, iii. 4 

made it in h im a property of easiness — — v. 1 

EASING— easing me of the carriage.-Verry H'l'rM.ii. 2 
a spendtlirift sigh, that hurts by easing.i/amW, iv. 7 

EAST— be my east and west Indies.. A/erri/ICirei, i. 3 
dapples the drowsy east with spots . . .tluch Adu^v. 3 
shine, comforts, from the east.. WW. /V. Dream, iii. 2 
north-north east and by east, tone's L.Lost, i. 1 (let.) 

first opening of the gorgeous east — iv. 3 

bv east, west, north, and south — v. 2 

from the east to western Ind. .-Is youLike, iii. 2 (verses) 
from east, west, north aud soutli .. Winter's Tale, i. 2 

and the rich east to boot Macbeth, iy. 3 

by east and west let France King John, ii. 2 

aiiother day break in the east — .y. 4 

rising in our tlirone the east Richard II. 111. 2 

fiery portal of the east — iii- 3 

danger from the cast unto [Henry IV. 1. 3 

by south and east, is to my part — 111. 1 

liegins his golden progress in the east — in. 1 
they take their courses east, west . .iHenry IV. iv. 2 
on the east side of the grove (rep.) ..illenry VI. ii. I 
darkness breaks within the east . . Richard III. v. 3 
he should have braved the cast an hour — y. 3 
come knights from east to west .. Troilus ^ Cress. 11. 3 

whether for cast, or west Coriolanus, i. 2 (letter) 

they would flv east, west, north — 11. 3 

here lies the east Julius Cresar,\\. 1 

and the high east, stands, as the Caiiitol — 11. I 
all the east, say thou, shall call ..Antony ifCteo, i. 5 
for my peace, 1' the cast ray pleasure lies — ii. 3 

the beds i' the east are soft — H- 6 

we must lay his head to the east — Cymbeline, iv. 2 

1 may wander from east to Occident.. — iv. 2 
llyiierion's rising in the east . . Titus Andronicut, v. 2 
the gohlen window of the east ..liomeofy Juliet, i. I 

should in the furthest east begin — i. 1 

it is the east, and Juliet is the sun! .. — ii. 2 
the severing clouds in yonder east .. — iii. 5 
this heavy -lieaded revel, east and west. . Hamlet^ i. 4 
even from the cast to the west! Othello, iv. 2 

EASrClllO.Vl"- night in Eaetchcap .. W/enryVf. i. 2 
you blmll find me in Kuetchcap — i. 2 



EAS 



EASTCHEAP— lads iu Eastcheap .AHennjir. ii. 4 

my noble lordj from Eastclieap — ii. 4 

1 am a poor widow of Eastcheap 'MienrylV. ii. 1 

at the old place, my lord: in Eastcheap — ii. 2 
EASTER-new doublet before Easter? Horn. .5-Ju(. iii. 1 
EASTERN— with the eastern wind..jVid. N.Di. iii. 2 
even till the eastern gate, all fiery-red — iii . 2 
the proud tops of the eastern pines. liichard II. iii. 2 
up to the eastern tower Troilus ^- Cress, i. 2 

eastern star! Peace, peace!.... /^ii/oni/ ffCleo. v. 2 
checkering the eastern clouds ..Romeo ^-JuUcty ii. 3 
e'er the dew of yon Iiigh eastern hill . . Hamlet, i. 1 

EASY — matter will he make easy next. Tempest, ii. 1 

how easy it is to be such Merry Wives, li. 2 

as easy as a cannon will — iii. 2 

how easy is it, for the proper-false. TwelfthNight, ii. 2 
'tis all as easy falsely to take . , Meas.for Meas. ii. 4 

whicli are as easy broke as they — ii. 4 

all difficulties are but easy when — iv. 2 

1 take for you is as easy as thanks . . Much Ado, ii. 3 
how easy is a bush supposed. . ..Mid. N. Dream, v. 1 
and how easy it is to put maxs. ... Love's L. Lost, i. 'i 
'twere as easy for you, to laugh.. Afer. of Venice, i. 1 

if to do were as easy a^ to know — _ i. - 

it is as easy to count atomies ....As you Like it, iii. 2 

you sirall as easy prove that I All's tTell, v. 3 

tills woman's au easy glove — v. 3 

is for me less easy to commit Winter' sTale^ 1. 2 

are too few, the sharpest too easy .... — iv. 3 

for 'tis as easy to make her speak — v. 3 

my love, as easy may'st thou iaX\. Comedy of Er. ii. 2 
how easy is it tfieu? your constancy ..Macbeth, ii. 2 

which the false man does easy — ii. 3 

as easy may'st tliou the intrenchant . . — v. 7 
with very easy arguments of love . . King John, i. 1 
how easy dost thou take all England — iv. 3 
to win this easy match played for.... — y.i 

an easy task it is, to win Richard IT. iii. 2 

it were an easy leap, to pluck 1 Henry IF.i.S 

made us doff our easy robes of — v. 1 

and of so easy and plain a stop . . 2Henry IV. (ind.) 
practised upon the easy yielding .... — ii. 1 

sits not so easy on me as you — v. 2 

was this easy'!' may this be washed. . — v. 2 
a soul so easy as that Englishman's... iff nri/T. ii. 2 

it is as easy tor me, Kate — v. 2 

tliese faults are easy, quickly 2HenryFI. iii. 1 

au easy task ; 'tis but to love a li.ing.3 Henry VI. iii. 2 

found the ad ventine very easy — iv. 2 

is it not au easy matter to Richard III. iii. 1 

easy peuancel Faith, howeasy (_rep.)HenryyiII. i. 4 
wlieu he tliinks, good easy man .... — iii. 2 

at last, with easy roads — iv. 2 

that's as easy, as to set dogs Coriolanus, ii. 1 

not by such easy degrees as those .... — ii. 2 

to cut it off; to cure it, easy — iii. 1 

with the easy groans of old women. . — v. 2 

might have found easy fines — v. .5 

with a snaffle youmay pace &a.sy.Antonyfi-Cleo. ii. 2 
'tis easy to 't; and there I will attend — iii. 8 
at this time most easy 'tis to do't. . . . — iii. 11 

infinite of easy ways to die — v. 2 

else an easy battery might lay flat . . Cymbeline, i. 5 
not a wliit, your lady being so easy . . — ii. 4 
and easy it is of a cut loaf to steal. TitusAndron. Li. 1 
as jewels purchased at an easy price — iU. 1 

my practices ride easy! Lear^ i. 2 

'tis as easy as lying: govern these .... Hamlet, iii. 2 

the next more easy; lor use — iii. 4 

for 'tis most easy the inclining Othello, ii. 3 

do it witli gentle means, and easy tasks — iv. 2 

EASY-BORROWED— 
whose easy-borrowed pride dwells in .... Lear, ii. 4 

EASY-HEL,D— 
this her easy-held imprisonment . . 1 Henry VI. v. 3 

EASY-MELTING— 
wrought the easy-inelting king ..,.3HenryVl.'n. 1 

EAT — I must eat my dinner Tempest, i. 2 

it eats and sleeps — i. 2 

i'faitli, I'll eat nothing Merry Wives, i. 1 

I'll eat notliing; I thank you — i. I 

still swine eat all the draff — iv. 2 

thou slialt eat a posset to-night — v. 5 

dance and eat plums at your wedding — v. h 

let us therefore eat and driuk Twelfth Night, ii. 3 

I'll cat tlie rest of tlie anatomy — iii. 2 

I drink, 1 eat, array myself. ...A/eas. /or Meas. iii. 2 

Would eat mutton on I ridays — iii. 2 

I iiriiinised to eat all of his killing. . . . Much Ado, i. 1 

and he hatli holp to eat it — i. 1 

cat when I have stomach.. ., — i. 3 

for the fool will eat no supper that . . — ii. 1 
lie eats his meat without grudging .- — iii. 4 

nor age so eat up my invention — iv. 1 

do not swear by it, and eat it , — iv. 1 

and I will make hira eat it, that says — iv. 1 

will you not eat your word? — iv. 1 

would cat his heart in the market-place — iv. 1 
a serpent eat my heart away. . . . Mid. N. Dream, ii. 3 

what thou desirest to eat — iv. 1 

m-tst dear actors, eat no onions — iv. 2 

he liath not cat paper, as it were. Z.ot>c's L. Lost, iv. 2 
to eat of the habitation wliich. . . . Mer. of Venice, i. 3 

but I will not eat with you — i. 3 

and eat husks with them? As you Like it, i. 1 

learned, played, eat together — i. 3 

seeking the food he eats — ii. 5 (song) 

if I bring thee not sometliing to eat . . — ii. 6 

forbear, and eat no more (,rep.) — ii. 7 

I earn that I eat, get that I wear .... — iii. 2 
when he had a desire to eat a grape. . — v. 1 

f rapes were made to eat, and lips to — v. 1 
will not eat my word — v. 4 

it looks ill, it eats dryly All's Well, i. 1 

true gait, eat, speak, and move under — ii. 1 

will you eat no grapes, my royal . . — ii. 1 

1 thiuk, sir, you can eat none of — ii. 2 

to eat with us to-uiglit, the charge .. — iii. 5 

but I will eat and drink, and sleep as iv. 3 

1 will heuecfortli eat no fish of — v. 2 



206 j 



EAT— you shall eat; go to, follow .... All's Welt, v. 2 
but eat and drink as friends .. Taming of Shrew ^ i, 2 
she eat no meat to-day, nor none (jep.) — iv. 1 
if I should sleep, or eat, 'twere deadly — iv. 3 

eat it up all, Hortensio, if thou — iv. 3 

Kate, eat apace ; and now, my honey — iv. 3 
as well as eat. Nothing but sit (rep.) — v. 2 
she longed to eat adder's heads. . Winler'sTale, iv. 3 
I pray you, eat none of it .... Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

that must eat with the devil — iv. 3 

'ti s said they eat each other Macbeth, ii. 4 

ere we will eat our meal iu fear — iii. 2 

and the ague, eat them up — v. 5 

sir Robert might have eat his part ..King John, i. 1 
now will canker sorrow eat ray bud — iii. 4 
if I dare eat, or drink, or breathe . . Richard II. iv. 1 

that jade hath eat bread from — v. a 

a micher, and eat blackberries? ....I Henry IV. ii. 4 
but to carve a capon and eat it? ... . — ii. 4 

to powder me, and eat me too — v. 4 

I would make him eat a piece of my — v. 4 

wouldst eat thy dead vomit up 2HenryIV. i. 3 

desire to eat some; whereby — ii. 1 

made a sliift to eat up thy holland . . — ii. 2 
make liim eat it. That's to make (rep.) — ii. 2 

and eats conger and fennel — ii. 4 

hast eat thy hearer up — iv. 4 

we will eat a last year's pippin — v. 3 

do nothing but eat, and make good — v. 3 (song) 

havock more than she can eat Henry V. i. 2 

to eat the English. I think (rep.) .... — iii. 7 

that dare eat his breakfast — iii. 7 

they will eat like wolves — iii. 7 

only stomachs to eat, and none to .. — iii. 7 

and bid me eat ray leek: it was — v. 1 

petitions, to eat, look you, this leek — v. 1 

so goat, scald knave, as eat it? — v. 1 

the mean-time, and eat your victuals — v. 1 
can mock a leek, you can eat a leek — v. 1 

make him eat some part of my — v. 1 

I eat, and eat, X swear. Eat, I pray you — v. ! 

thy cudgel; thou dost see, I eat — v. I 

in my pocket, which you shall eat . . — v. 1 
consuming canker eatshis falsehood .1 Henry VI. ii. 4 

caterpillars eat my leaves away IHenry VI. iii. 1 

all shall eat and drink on my score. . — iv. 2 

to see if I can eat grass — iv. 1 

but I'll make thee eat iron like — iv. 10 

I have eat no meat these five days . . — iv. 10 

I may never eat grass more — iv. 1 

open wide, and eat him quick Richard III. i. 2 

every man shall eat in safety Henry VIII. v. 4 

would eat chickens i' the shell . . Troilus ^ C7-ess. i. 2 

and, last, eat up himself — i. 3 

lie that is proud, eats up himself .... — ii. 3 

he sliould eat swords first — ii. 3 

he eats nothing but doves, love — iii. 1 

live in file, eat rocks, tame — iii. 2 

how one man eats into another's ... . — iii. 3 

I will go eat with thee, and see — iv. 5 

in a sort, lechery eats itself — v. 4 

I eat not lords. Au' thou {rep.).Timon ofAthens,i. 1 
what a number of men eat Timon . . — i. 2 

rich men sin, and I eat root — i. 2 (grace) 

when your false masters eat of — iii. 4 

keep't, I cannot eat it — iv. 3 

in this I thus would I eat it — iv. 3 

or, rather, where I eat it — iv. 3 

there's a medlar for thee, eat it — iv. 3 

the lamb, the fox would eat thee .... — iv. 3 

eat, Timon, and abhor them — iv. 3 

and fishes; you must eat men — iv. 3 

can you eat roots, and drink cold — v. 1 

if the wars eat us not up Coriolanus, i. 1 

that, dogs must eat; that — i. 1 

should we encounter as often as we cat — i. 10 
unnatural dam should now eat up . . — iii. 1 
it will not let you eat, nor talk . . JuliusCcesar, ii. 1 
thou didst eat strange Aesh.. Antony /jr Cleopatra, i. 4 

for what his eyes eat only — ii. 2 

it eats the sword it flglits with — iii. U 

sir, I will eat no meat — v. 2 

will it eat me? You must not (rep.).. — v. 2 

as the wolf, for what we eat Cymbeline, iii. 3 

but that it eats our victuals — iii. 6 

and thanks to stay and eat it — iii. 6 

look you eat no more than will.. Titus Andron. iii. 2 

gentle girl, eat this — iii. 2 

pleaseyoueat of it — v. 3 

will't please you eat? will't please .. — v. 3 

to eat those little darlings Pericles, i. 4 

not to eat lioney, like a di-one — ii. (Gower) 

the great ones eat up tlie little ones — ii. 1 

all the viands that 1 eat do seem — ii. 3 

and to eat no fish Lear, i. 4 

aud eat up the meat, the two crowns — i. 4 

poor Tom; that eats the swimming frog — iii. 4 

eats cow-dung for salads — iii. 4 

I cannot draw a cart, nor eat dried oats — v. 3 
canker death eats up that plant. Romeo ^ Juliet, ii. 3 

I eat the air, promise-crammed Hamlet, iii. 2 

who all sense doth eat of habit's devil .. — iii. 4 

not where he eats, but where he — iv. 3 

that hath eat of a king; aud eat of the fish — iv. 3 

list, eats not the flats with more — iv. 5 

driuk up Esil? eat a crocodile? — v. 1 

cauuibals that each other eat Othello, i. 3 

they eat us hungerly, and when they are — iii. 4 

EATEN— is eaten by the canker. Two Gen. of Ver. i. 1 
hath eaten uxi my sulferance .... Merry Wives, iv. 2 
having eaten the rest, as I said. . Meas.for Meas. ii. 1 

she hath eaten up all her beef — iii. 2 

how many hath he killed and eaten. . Much.ido, i. 1 
thy master hath not eaten thee . . Love's L. Lost, v. 1 
and worms have eaten them ....As you Like it, iv. 1 
the oats have eaten the horses . . Taming of Sh. iii. 2 

and how much he hath eaten Winter's Tale, iii. 3 

he utters them as lie had eaten ballads — iv. 3 

or liave we eaten of the insane root Macbeth, i. 3 

sow's blood, that hath eaten her niuc. — iv. 1 



EDG 



EATEN— better to be eaten to death. .'iHenry IV. i. 2 

he hath eaten me out of house — ii. I 

sulfering flesh to be eaten in thy house — ii. 4 
some ravenous wolf had eaten t\\vi:\..\HenryVI. v.4 
miglit have broiled and eaten liira..C'(<r/c(a«us, iv. 5 

he eats, but where he is eaten Hamlet, iv. 3 

I see, sir, you are eaten up with passion. Olheito, iii. 3 

EATER— lam a great cater of beef. TwetfthNighi, i. 3 
and she an eater of her mother's flesh . . Pericles, i. 1 
an eater of broken meats Lear, ii. 2 

EATING— the eatiug canker. Two Gen. of Verona, i. 1 

60 eating love inhabits — i. 1 

consists of eating and drinking. . Twiiflh Night, ii. 3 
eating and diiuking be put down.il/ca. /or Aiea. iii. 2 
let it oe au art lawful as eating .. Winter's Tale, v. 3 

eating the bitter bread of Richard II. iii. 1 

that seemed, in eating him — iii. 4 

from eating di-aff and husks \HenrylV. iv. 2 

eating the air on promise 2 Henry IV. i. 3 

stinks with eating toasted cheese . .2Henry VI. iv. 7 

your dinner worth the eatiug Julius Crrsar, i. 2 

eating the flesh that she herself.. Titus Andron. v. 3 

EAUX— \ia! les eaux et la terre Henry V. iv. 2 

EAVE— drops from eaves of reeds Tempest, v. 1 

not build in his house eaves Meas. for Meas. iii. 2 

to chide liini from our eaves All's Well, iii. 7 

EAVES-DROPPER- 
I'U play the eaves-dropper Richard III. v. 3 

EBB— ne er since at ebb Tempest, i. 2 

do so: to ebb, hereditary sloth — ii. 1 

make flows and ebbs — v. 1 

the sea will ebb and flow Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 

the very very means do ebb? ....As you Like it, ii. 7 

doth ebb and flow like the sea 1 Henry IV. i. 2 

as low an ebb as the foot of — i. 2 

for it is a low ebb of linen 2HenryIV. ii. 2 

thrice flowed, no ebb between — iv. 4 

and ebb back to the sea — v. 2 

so much the higher by their ebb ..3 Henry VI. iv. 8 

his ebbs, his flows, as if Troilus ^ Crcssida, ii. 3 

in the ebb of yom- estate Timon of Athens, ii. 2 

as it ebbs, the seedsman upoa.. ..Antony ^Cleo. ii. 7 

that ebb and flov/ by the moon Lear, v. 3 

do ebb and flow with tears? Romeo ^Juliet, iii. 5 

com'se ne'er feels retiring ebb Othello, iii. 3 

ne'er ebb to humble love — iii. 3 

EBBED— 'tis shrewdly ebbed, to say. Winter's Tale, v. 1 
and the ebbed man, ne'er loved . . Antony t^ Cleo. i. 4 

EBlilNG— ebbing men, indeed, most . . Tempest, ii. 1 
do chase the ebbiug Neptune — v. 1 

EBON — revenge from ebon den 2HenruIV. v. 5 

EBON-COLOURED- 
the ebon-coloured ink Love's L. Lost, i. 1 (letter) 

EBONY— are as lustrous as ebony. Tu-elfthNight, iv. 2 
as black as ebony. Is ebony .... Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 

EBREW— a Jew else, an Ebrew Jew .1 HenrylV. ii. 4 

ECCE — like a hand-saw, ecce signum — ii. 4 

ECHE — fancies quaintly eehe . . Pericles, iii. (Gower) 

ECHO— gives a very echo to the seat. TwelfthNight, ii. 4 

and echo in conj unction Mid. N.'s Dream, iv. I 

if Echo were as fleet Taming of Shrew, I (ind.) 

all the church did echo — iii. 2 

applaud thee to the very echo Macbeth, v. 3 

do but start an echo King John, v. 2 

like the voice and echo "iHenry I V. iii. 1 

all the court may echo Titus Andronicus, ii. 2 

whilst the babbling echo mocks — ii. 3 

tear the cave where echo lies Romeo fy Juliet, ii. 2 

ECHOES— fetch slu-ill echoes. . Taming of Sh. 2 (ind.) 
he echoes me [A'h(. -alas! thouechoestj.. Othello, iii. 3 

ECIKJEST— [a:«(.] alas! thou echoest me — iii. 3 

ECLIPSE— in the moon's eclipse Macbeth, iv. 1 

to eclipse thy life this afternoon 1 Henry VI. iv. 5 

these late eclipses in the sun and moon . . Lear, i. 2 
these eclipses do portend these divisions! — i. 2 

what should follow these eclipses — i. 2 

sick almost to doomsday with eclipse . . Hamlet, i. 1 
it should be now a huge eclipse Othello, v. 2 

ECLIPSED— is half eclipsed SHenry VL iv. 6 

terrene moon is now eclipsed . . Antony Sf Cleo. iii. 1 1 

ECSTACIES— his feigned ecstacies . . Titus And. iv. 4 

ECSTACY'— what this ecstacy may Tempest, iii. 3 

ecstacy hatli so much overborne b.et..Much Ado, ii. 3 
allay thy ecstacy, iu measure. iV/ercA. of Venice, iii. 2 
he trembles in Ms ecstacy! . . Comedy of Errors, iv. 4 

to lie in restless ecstacy Macbeth, iii. 2 

sorrow seems a modem ecstacy — iv. 3 

Marcus attend him in liis ecstacy . . Titus And. iv. 1 

this is the very ecstacy of love Hamlet, ii. 1 

blown youth, blasted with ecstacy — iii. 1 

sense to ecstacy was ne'er so thralled .. — iii. 4 
ecstacy is very cunning in. Ecstacj'! .. — iii. 4 
and laid good 'sense upon your ecstacy. Olheito, iv. 1 

EDEN— this other Eden Richard II. ii. 1 

EDGAR — Edgar, I must have your land ..Lear, i. 2 
the beloved of your brother, Edgar — i. 2 (let. ) 

my son Edgar! had he a hand — i. 2 

Edgar and pat lie comes, like — i. 2 

my fatlier named? your Edgar? — ii. 1 

something yet; Edgar I nothing am .... — ii. 3 
O my follies! then Edgar was abused.... — iii. 7 
dear son Edgar, the food of thy abused . . — iv. 1 

if Edgar live, O bless him! — iv. 6 

they say, Edgar Ins banished son — iv. 7 

my name is Edgar, and thy father's son — v. 3 

EDGE— take away the edge of that Tempest, iv. 1 

and blunt his natural edge Meas. for Meas. i. 5 

shall bate liis scythe's keen edge. . Love's L.Losl, i. 1 

whose edge hath power to cut — ii. 1 

upon the edge of yonder coppice .... — iv. 1 

as is the razor's edge invisible — v. 2 

with the edge of a feather-bed.. Jl/crcA. of Venice, ii. 2 

to the extreme edge of hazard Alt's Well, iii. 3 

not removes, at least, atfection's edgeTam.ofSh. i. 2 
my pugging tooth on edge. Winler'sTale, iv. 2 (song) 

give to tile edge o' the sword Macbeth, iv. 1 

with an unbattered edge, I sheathe — — v. 7 

cloy the hungry edge of appetite Richard II. i. 3 

the edge of war, like an ill-sheathed, liie/try IV.i. \ 
would set iny teeth notliing on edge — iii. 1 



EDG 



I -^07 J 



EDGE— on on edge, more likely to {aM.iHenrylf. i. 1 

level at the eilge ofn iK-nknife — Hi. 4 

coiiuoeiate commotion'a bitter c<lge? — W. 1 

lylioae wrmiijs iiivo lmI^'u unto Henry V. i. 'i 

Miiif suy,kiiivc!i luvvc edges — jj. 1 

Iw cut wilU t'dvo ul'iioMiiv cord — iii. 6 

luitli tmiiol v.'iir Ky:a\wnacdiie....iHenryyi. ii. 1 

il'llioii turn tlic iikv. limit not — iv. 10 

lli.mv'li tlic cil-'i' lii'illi siniietliing hit.3J/tiirj/r/. ii. a 

tlioi-.liir t.. tlie iixe's I'llije — v. 2 

niKitc tlnedue of traitors Richard til. v. 4 

his swiiiil hiitli ft sharp edge Heiiryl'll I. i. I 

than to the edge of steel Trnilut <J CretsiJii, iii. 1 

rc.l.l cir educ aside from the direct .. — iii. 3 

shull to the cd).v »f all extremity — iv. .') 

ri|n' f.T his chI;,'i', full diiwu — v. i 

and lie shall feci mine edge Coriolanus, i. 4 

stain all your cdi;es on me — v. 5 

from edge to edge o' the world . . Antony ^- Clco. n. 2 

to part with unhacked edges — ii. 6 

have edge, sting, or oiwrution — iv. 13 

slander; whose edw is sharper ....Cymbeline, iii. 4 
thy wit wants cilu'c, and manners ..Titus And. ii. I 

even to the cdu'e o' the shore Pericles, iii. 3 

dulls tlic cil-c lit hnsliandrv Hainlcl,i. 3 

give him a liirthiT Lik'c. and drive — iii. 1 

',M-t v.iu a irniiuiini.'. t" t;ike otl'my edge — iii. 2 

IClHilM)— with spirit iif h.Midur edged.. Henry r. iii. b 

turn tliv vi\-4cd swi^rd another way.lHciiri/ Z'/. iii. 3 

l-:i)(ii:i.l>.SS-tlivea-elesssword(rep.)..«ic-/../i/. V. 3 

EDICT— tluit did tlie edict infringe. Meas. /or j)/.m. ii. 2 

it stMudsasau edict in destiny ..Mid.N.Drcnm.i. 1 

uur late edict sliall stroni;ly stand. . Lore's L. L. i. I 

proclaimed edict and continent .. — i. 1 (letter) 

to rci'orni some certain edicts XHennjir. iv. 3 

such a straight edict tlltiinjyi. iii. 2 

spurn at his edict, and fulfil a mau'8?i(icAar(( ///.;. 4 

make edicts for usury, to support Coriolanus, i. I 

make thineowu edict forthy pcdns.Anl.^Cleo. iii. 10 

liv the tenor of our strict edict Pericles, i. 1 

EDIFICE— I have lost ray edifice.. jV/erry Wives, ii. 2 

and see the holv edifice of stone.. Afer.o/Z'emiv, i. 1 

many an heir of these fair edifices. . Coriolanus, iv. 4 

E Dl ElED— to be well edified .... Twelfth Sight, v. 1 

you must be edified by the margent .... Hamlet, y. 2 

eninnrelumout, andbe edified Othelln, iii. 4 

EDIFIES— but edifies another .. Troilus ^ Cress, v. 3 
EDITIOX— of the second edition .. Merry IVives,u. 1 
ED.ML'XD— to my brother, Edmund.. /Jic/iurii //. i. 2 

my brother Edmund Mortimer IHenry /T. i. 3 

loid Edmund Jlortimer, my lord — ii. 3 

the cud of Edmund Mortimer 1 Henry VI. ii. 5 

from famous Edmmid Lan"ley — ii. 5 

heads of Edmund duke of Somerset. .2Henryri. i. 2 

the fifth, was Edmund Langley — ii. 2 

Edmund Mortimer, earl of March (rep.) — ii. 2 
Edmund, Anne, and Eleanor (jep.) — ii. 2 

son to Edmund Langley — ii. 2 

was the son of Edmund Mortimer — — ii. 2 

marry, this: Edmund Mortimer — iv. 2 

I'll send duke Edmund to the Tower — iv. 9 

know this noble gentleman, Edmund? Lear, i. 1 

love is to the bastard Edmund, as to — i. 2 

Edmund the baseshall top the legitimate — i. 2 

Edmund! how now? what news? — i. 2 

heaven and earth ! Edmund, seek him out — i. 2 

find out this villain, Edmund — i. 2 

liuw now, brother Edmund? — i. 2 

now, Edmund, Where's the villain? (rep.) — ii. 1 
Edmund, I hear that you have sliown .. — ii. 1 
you, Edmund, whose virtue and obedience — ii. 1 
alack, Edmund, I like not this unnatural — iii. 3 
some strange thing toward, Edmund .... — iii. 3 
Edmund, keep you oiu- sister company .. — iii. 7 
Edmund, farewell: go, seek the traitor .. — iii. 7 
Where's my son Edmund? Edmund .... — iii. 7 

back, Edmund, to my brother — iv. 2 

lord Eflmund spake not with your lord . . — iv. 5 

Edmund, I think, is gone, in pity of — iv. 5 

why should she write to Edmund? — iv. 5 

in ist speaking looks to noble Edmund .. — iv. 5 

Edmund and I have talked — iv. .'j 

to Edmund carl of Gloster; seek him out — iv. 6 
i'Mmund. I arrest thee on capital treason — v. 3 

will maintain upon Edmund — v. 3 (herald) 

what's he, tiiat speaks for Edmund earl of — v. 3 
no less in blood tlmn thou art, Edmund. . — v. 3 

speak, Edmund, Where's the king? — v. 3 

yet Edmund waa beloved — v. 3 

Eilmund is dead, my lord — v. 3 

EDlICATE-you not educate youth. Lodc's L. LosI,v. 1 
EDUCATION— with my education./l»i/ou Lilie it, i. 1 
her good, that her education promistis.. AtrstVell, i. 1 
by educution a cord-maker. Taminif of Shrew, 2 (ind.) 
toward the education of your dauguliers — ii. 1 
as siie in beauty, education, blood . . Kint; John, ii. 2 
my education lieing in arts and arms . . Pericles, ii. 3 
gained of education all the grace.. — iv. (CJower) 
and education; mv life, and education . . Otiietlo, i. i 
EDWAKU—Mward shovel-boards ...Vfrrtfiriwj, i. 1 
received of the most pious Edward . . Macbeth, iii. ti 
E<lward's seven sons, whereof thyself.iiicAon/ //. i. i 

fidl of Edward's sacred blixnl — i. 2 

not brother to great Edward's son.... — ii. 1 
my brother Etlw-anl's son (repro^d).. — ii. 1 
resiKCt'st not spilling Edward's bluod — ii. 1 

the last of noble Edw;urd'a sons — ii. 1 

grandsirc, Edward, sicked and died.2//enri//r. iv. 4 

derived from Edward, his gnat Henry y. i. I 

your great uncle's, Edward the black — i. 2 

to fill king E<lward's fame with .... — i. 2 

your great predecessor, king Edward — i. 2 

nlack name. Edward black prince of — ii. 4 
of famous ancestors, Edward the third — ii. 4 
onrl your great uncle Eilward the ploek — iv. 7 

and Edward duke of Bar — iv. H 

Edward the duke of York: th<; earl of — iv. 8 
during the time Edward tlic third ..IHenryf'l. I. 2 
the third Edward king of England .. — ii. 4 
Edwanl's son, the first-begotten (ri.p.; — ii. .'i 



EDWAUD— to king Edward the tliird.l Henry VI. ii. 5 
Edward the thinl, mv lords (rep.) . .-IHenry VI. ii. 2 

Edwaril the lilaek iirlncc, died before — ii. 2 

who, after Edward the tliini's death — ii. 2 

Langlcv, Edward the tliir.l's llfth son — ii. 2 
gentle sou Edward, thou wilt stay . .SHenry VI. i. 1 

Edward, shall unto my lord t;,ihham — i. 2 

Edward, and Kic-lnird, you shall stay — i. 2 

oft came Edward to my side — i. 4 

wanton Edward, and the lusty George? — i. 4 

king Eihvard, valiant liiehard — ii. I 

Edward, kneel down. Edward — ii. 2 

stay, Edward. i\'o. wrant-'ling woman — ii. 2 

anil Edward's Sim is ehni.led — ii. 3 

Edward and Itiehiiril, like a brace .. — ii. & 

sister to wife for E.lward — iii. 1 

on his ri.^'ht, a>kinL; a wife for Edward — iii. 1 

and says, his Edsviinl is installed — iii. 1 

and support kin-; Eilward's place — iii. 1 

the king, king E.lward Imth deposed — iii. 1 

true suhjects to tlie kiii,^, l.ing Edward — iii. 1 

if he were seated as king Edward is.. — iii. 1 

say, that king Edward take thee for — iii. 2 

Edward, will use women honourably — iii. 2 

Eilward's title buried (repfd/et/) — Ml* '^ 

wdiile proud ambitious Edward — iii. 3 

prince Edward, Henry's heir — iii. 3 

our earl of Warwick, Edward's greatest — ;;;• 3 

from worthy Edward, king of Albion — iii. 3 

not from Edward's well-meant honest — iii. 3 

yet here prince Edward stands — iii. 3 

leave Henry, and call Edw;ird king — iii. 3 

prince Edward, and Oxford, youchsafe — iii. 3 

IS Edward your true king? — iii. 3 

our sister shall be Edward's — iii. 3 

to Edward but not to the English — iii. 3 

as may appear by Edward's good success — iii. 3 

this proveth Edward's love — iii. 3 

I am clear from this misdeed of Edward's — iii. 3 

Edward, thy supposed king (rep. iv. 1) — iii. 3 

and bid false Edward battle — iii. 3 

till Edward fall by war's mischance — iii. 3 

I came from Edward as embassador — iii. 3 

but seek revenge on Edward's mockery — iii. 3 

or tarry, Edward will be king — iv. 1 

so long as Edward is thy constant friend — iv. 1 

that young prince Edward marries . . — iv. I 

I stay not for the love of Edward — iv. 1 

as he favours Edward's cause! — iv. 1 

Clarence, Edward's brother, were but — iv. 2 

may beat down Edward's guard .... — iv. 2 

but follow me, and Edward shall be — iv. 3 

that £dward needs must down — iv. 3 

Edward will always bear himself. ... — iv. 3 

his mind, be Edward England's king — iv. 3 

forthwith duke Edward be conveyed — iv. 3 

misfortune is befallen king Edward? — iv. 4 

for love of Edward's offspring in ... . — iv. 4 

king Edwiird's fruit, true heir — iv. 4 

king Edward's friends must down . . — iv. 4 

save at least the heir of Edward's right — iv. 4 

sliaken Edward from the reg;il seat.. — iv. 6 

that Edward be pronounced — iv. 6 

that Edward is escaped from your .. — iv. B 

I like not this flight of Edward's — iv. B 

ay, for if Edward repossess the crown — iv. B 

yet Edward, at the least, is duke of "^ork — i v. 7 

for Edward will defend the town .... — iv. 7 

to help king Edward in his time of. . — iv. 7 

now will I be Edward's champion [rep.) — iv. 7 

Edward the fourth, by the grace -- iv. 7 (pr9cl.) 

whosoe'er gainsays king Edward's right — iv. 7 

long live Edward the fourth ! — iv. 7 

Edward from Belgis, with hasty — iv. 8 

the power, that Edward hath in field — iv. 8 

should they love Edward more than me? — iv. 8 

is sportful Edward come? where slept — v. 1 

call Edward kin^, and at his hands — v. 1 

Warwick's king is Edward's prisoner — v. 1 

pardon me, Edward, I will make — v. 1 

bid thee battle, Edward, if thou (rep.) — v. 1 

what is Edward, but a ruthless sea? — v. 4 

for Edward is at hand, ready to fight — v. 4 

who finds Edward, shall have a high — v. 5 

and lo, where youthful Edword comes — v. !> 

Edward, what satisfaction canst .... — v. 5 

lascivious Edward, and thou, perjured — v. 5 

sweet boy, thy brotlier Edward — v. 6 

that Edward shall be fearful of his . . — v. 6 
if king Edward be as true and just.. H/c/inrcf III. i. 1 

of Edward's heirs the murderer — i. 1 

to call king Edward's widow, sister.. — i. 1 

God take king Edward to his mercy — i. 1 

breathes; Edward still lives, and reigns — i. 1 

wife to thy Edward, to thy slaughtered — i. 2 

and slain by Edward's hand — i. 2 

these l'lanta"enets, Henry, and Edward — i. 2 

when my father York and Edward wept — i. 2 

' twas I that stabbed young Edward . . — i. 2 

that brave prince, Edward, her lord — i. 2 

C({uals not Edward's moiety? — i. 2 

Edward, my poor son, at Tewkesbury — i. 3 

to flf?ht on Edward's party — i. 3 

like Edward's, or Edward's soft .... — i. 3 

mv lovely Edward's death — i. 3 

Edward thy son, that now is (rep.) .. — i. 3 

against my soul, for Edward's sake — i. 4 

for Edward, for my brother, for his sake — i. 4 

than Edward will for tidings of my — i. 4 

to comfort Eilward with our company? — ii. 1 

Edward, my lord, thy son, our king — ii. 2 

my feeble hands, Clarence and Edward — ii. 2 

for my dear lord Edward I — ii. 2 

Edward and Clarence 1 What stay (rep.) — ii. 2 

she for an Edward weeps, ond so do I — ii. 2 

1 for an Edward weep, so do not they — ii. 2 

dead Edward's grave, and plant (rip.) — ii. 2 

news hold of go.Kl king Edward's death?— ii. 3 

this is Edward's wife, that monstrous — iii. 4 

of Edwanl's children: tell them (icp.) — iii. i 



E'ER 



EDWAKD— that insatiate Edward. /iic/iard ///. iii. 
the bastardy of Edward's children? — iii. 

this prince IS not an Edward! — iii. 

that Edward is y<mr brother's son (rep.) — iii. 
he got this Edward, whom our manners — iii. 
young Edward lives; think now .... ■ — iv. 

tis so; but Edward lives — iv. 

that Edward still should live — iv. 

the sons of Edward sleep in Abraham's — iv. 
Edward I'lantagcnct, why art (rep.) — iv. 
I had an Edward, till a llicliard (rep.) — |v. 

thy Edward he is dead (rep. ) — iv. 

he is dead, that statibcd mv Edward — iv. 
little souls of Edward's children .... — iv. 
as false to Edward's l)ed; throw over — iv. 
confess she was not Edward's ilaughter — iv. 
thereon engrave Edward and York.. — iv. 
sir Edward Courtney, and the haughty — iv. 
Hastings, and Ewdard's children, Kivers — v. 

thv fair son Edward. Vaughan — v. 

wfiich, in king Edward's time, I wished — v. 
Edward's unhappy sons do bid thee. . — v. 

now, poor Edward Bohun Henry VHI .11 . 

as holy oil, Edward Confessor's crown -^ iv. 

EEL-an eel with the same praise (rep.). Lov '. L.. L. i. 
is tlie adder better than the eel . . Taming of Sh. iv. i 
shall not so awake the beds of eels .... Pericles, iv. 3 
as the cockney did to the eels Lear, ii. 4 

EELSKIN— arms such eelskins stuffed. Kini'^o/in, i. 1 
all his apparel, into an eelskin iHenry II'. iii. 2 

E'EN— with liiin e'en standing water.. TweZ/M N. i. b 
one man. — e'en one jioor man . . . . Love\L.Lost,v. 2 
enougli before, e'en as many as..Mcr.o/ren/ee, iii. .', 
madam; e'en [An/. -in] great friends... 4W'»'>'cH, i. 3 

e'en as soon as thou canst — ii- 3 

what have we here? E'en that you have — iii. - 

e'en a crow of the same nest — iv. 3 

is our master. E'en at hand.. Taming nf Shrew, iv. I 
and one, e'en at turning o' the tide . .Henry V. ii. 3 

we'll e'en let them alone \ Henry VI. i. 2 

e'en so; Hector was stirring early.. Troil.^ Cress, i. 2 
e'en made away ere it can be . . Timon of Athens,]. 2 
she's e'en setting on water to scald . . — ii. 2 
and e'en as if your lord should wear — iii. 4 

they have e'en put my breath — iii. 4 

I am e'en sick of shame, tliat — iii. C 

good e'en to your worships Coriolanus, ii. 1 

Slark Antony will e'en but kis8..4/i(ony {f Cleo. ii. 4 

no more, but e'en a woman — iv. 13 

good e'en, good fellow (rep.) Romeo «§- Juliet, i. - 

is it e'en so? why, then I thank .... — i. .0 
we'll e'en to't like French falconers ..Hamlet, ii. 2 
Horatio, thou art e'en as just a man .... — iii. 2 

I'll silence me e'en here — iii. 4 

of politic worms are e'en at him — iv. 3 

'tis e'en so: the hand of little employment — v. 1 
why, e'en so: and now my lady Worm's — v. 1 

'faitn e'en with losing his wits! — v. 1 

the king's jester. This? E'en that — v. 1 

e'en so. And smelt so? pah! E'en so — v. I 

E'ER— or e'er it should Tempest, i. 2 

as wicked dew as e'er my mother — i. '.i 

this the third man that e'er X saw — i. 2 

the first that e'er I sighed for — _i. 2 

and the rarest that e'er came there — ii. 1 

OS bondage e'er of freedom — iii. 1 

deeper than e'er plummet sounded .... — iii. 3 
return or e'er your pulse twice beat . . — v. 1 

as strange a maze as e'er men trod — v. I 

as strange a thing as e'er I looked on . . — v. 1 

that e'er I watch d Two (Jen. of f-Vrona, iv. 2 

if e'er you know her — iv. 4 

as e'er I did commit — y. 4 

e'er since pursue me Twelfth Sight, i. 1 

that e'er devotion tendered ! — v. 1 

than e'er I shall love wife — v. 1 

that e'er invention played on? — v. 1 

as e'er I heard in madness Meas.for Meas. v. I 

the first knave, that e'er made — v. I 

wast thou e'er contracted to — v. 1 

stranger Pyramus than e'er played. Mid. N. Dr. iii. I 

if e'er I loved her, all that love — iii. 2 

at a beast, my lord, that e'er I saw . . — v. 1 

e'er shall it in safety rest — v. 2 

tliree studied, e'er you'll thrice wink. Loce'sL. L. i. 2 
if e'er the .Jew her father come to. jl/er.o/ /Viiicf,ii. 4 

no bed shall e'er be guilty — iii. 2 

let not that doctor e er come — v. I 

that e'er I heard ™'inn exclaim in ...ill's li'ell, i. 3 

the first truth that eer thine — iv. 1 

the last that e'er I took her — y. 3 

ten times more than e'er I did .. Taming of Sh.ii. I 

as willingl.v ose'er leamefrom — iii.: 

greatest infection that e'er was. . . . Winter' tTale, i. 2 

Cyprus, black as e'er was crow — iv. 3 (song) 

as you have e'er been my father's. . . . — iv. 3 

has the old man e'er a son, sir — iv. 3 

the sweetest companion, that e'er man — v. 1 

that e'er the sun slioue bright on — v. I 

that e'er I put between your holy — — v. 3 

of woman, shall e'er have power Macbeth, v. 3 

be judged hy you, that e'er I heard. . King John, i, 1 
than e er the coward hand of France — ii. I 
the dragon, and e'er since, sits on his — ii. 1 

journey, lords, or e'er we meet — iv. 3 

if e'er those eyes of yours behold .... — v. 4 

that e'er tills "tongue of mine Richard U. iii. 3 

strangest tale that e'er I heard \ Henry IV. v. 4 

better than I love e'er a sciurvy iHenrylV. ii. 4 

who would e'er suppose they IHenry VI. i. 2 

OS loud as e'er thou canst — i. 3 

the greatest miracle that e'er ye — — v. 4 

ase er thy father Henry made 'iHenry VI. ii. 3 

that e'er I'll look inwn the world.... — ii. 4 

that doit that e'er I wrested — iii. I 

that e'er I proved thee false — iii. I 

saddest siicctoclc that e'er I viewed. 3 Henry VI. ii. I 
merciless, that e'er was heard of . . Richard III. i. 3 

again, frcslicr than e'er it was Henry VI 1 1, ii. 1 

but death shall e'er divorce iny dignities — iii. 1 



E'ER 



E'ER — what goddesse'er she be. Troilm ^ Cressida, i. 1 

liateful love, that e'er I heard of — iv. 1 

if e'er tliou stand at mercy — i v. 4 

first man that e'er received . . Timnn of Athens, iii. 3 
1 love thee better now than e'er I did — iv. 3 

if e'er again I meet him Coriolanus, i. 10 

more a friend than e'er an enemy — iv. .^ 

lip hath virgined it e'er since — v. 3 

repent, that e'er thy tongue Anlony S,- Clco. ii. 7 

if e'er thou look'dst on majesty — iii. 3 

ley alcst husband that did e'er plight. CymbeUne^ i. 2 

excuse be born or e'er begot? — iii. 2 

did you e'er meet? — v. 5 

daj' is this, that e'er I saw Titus Andronicusj i. 2 

as dear as e'er my mother did — iv. 1 

vanquished, e'er they do resist Pericles, i. 2 

if my tongue did e'er solicit — ii. 5 

that e'er was prince's cliild — iii. 1 

to understand, if e'er this coffin.. — iii. 2 (scroll) 

the rarest dream that e'er dull — v. 1 

as mucli as cliild e'er loved Lear^ i. 1 

I am worse theu e'er I was — ■ iv. 1 

if e'er j'our grace had speech — v. 1 

jii-ettiest babe that e'er I nursed. .iiomco ^Juliet, i. 3 
if e'er thou wast thyself, and these . . — ii. 3 
most miserable hour, that e'er time saw — iv. 5 
as just a man as e'er my conversation. Ha/n/e/, iii. 2 

tliat e'er our hearts shall make ! Othello, ii. 1 

if e'er my will did trespass 'gainst his.... — iv. 2 

innocent, that e'er did lift up eye — v. 2 

EFFECT— that you resolved to effect.. rempes«, iii. 3 
the fair effects of futui-e hopes.. Tuio Gen. ofVer. i. 1 

use them to so base effect — ii. 7 

I would effect the match — iii. 2 

as mucli as I can do, I will effect .... — iii. 2 
they may effect, they mil (rep.) ..Merry Wives, ii. 2 
have attained the effect of your.. Afeas./oi' Meas. ii. 1 

shifts to strange effects — iii. 1 

understand this in amanifested effect — Iv. 2 

with all the effect of love — v. 1 

what effects of passion shows she? . . Much Ado, ii. 3 

what effects, my lord! she will — ii. 3 

holp to effect your ensuing marriage — iii. 2 

effect it with some care Mid. N. Dream., ii. 2 

we may effect this business yet — iii. 2 

tlie et&ct of my intent is, to cross. Love's L. Lost, v. i 

blacker in their effect than in As you Like it, iv. 3 

what strange effect would they . . — iv. 3 (letter) 
miglit witli effects of them follow .... All's Well, i. I 
of rare and proved effects, such as . . — i. 3 

of a heavenly effect in an earthly — ii. 3 

steals ere we can effect them — v. 3 

o'.ir good-will effects Bianca's grief. Taming of Sh. i.l 
to labour and effect one thing specially — i. 1 
found tlie effect of love in idleness .. .. — i.l 

thou know'st not gold's effect — i. 2 

leaving the effects of his fond.. Winter's T. iv. (cho.) 
besides the king, to effect your suits. . — iv. 3 

light is an effect of fire Comedy of Errors, iv. 3 

dfsturbed with the effect of wine — v.) 

between the effect, and it Macbeth, i. .5 

and do the effects of watching — v. 1 

too fairly, Hubert, for so foul eSect. King John, iv. 1 

to tins effect, before you were — iv. 2 

to banish their effects with him .... Richard II. i. i 

but to effect wdiatever I shall — iv. 1 

the cause of his effects in Galen 2Henry IV.i.'i 

his effect of gravity. His effect of gravy — i. 2 
answer in the effect of your reputation — ii. 1 
ofiices thou may'st effect of mediation — iv. 4 

the sooner to effect what I Henry V. ii. 2 

whose tenors and particular effects you — v. 2 
the poor and untempering effect of . . — v. 2 
the sooner to effect, and surer bind. . 1 Henry VI. v. 1 

travail turned to this effect? — v. 4 

to effect this marriage 3Henryf'I. ii. 6 

and most accursed effect (rep.) Richard III. i. 2 

with earnest praj'ers, all to that effect — ii. 2 
as deeply to effect wliat we intend . . — iii. 1 

go, effect this business soundly — iii. 1 

his high hatred would effect Henry VIII. i. 1 

and displayed the effects of disposition — ii. 4 

late marriage made of none effect — iv. 1 

to this effect, Achilles, have I . . Troilus <?- Cress . iii. 3 

and ready to effect it — iv. 2 

the effect doth operate another way . . — v. 3 

effect your rage vnth speed I .". . . — v. 1 1 

few words, but spacious in eSect.Timon ofAth. iii. b 

to what effect? nay, an I tell Julius CcBsar, i. 2 

hoping it was but an effect of — ii. 1 

thoughts touch their eft'ects in this.. /In*. fyCleo. v. 2 
their several virtues, and effects .... Cymbetine, i. 6 

the seeing these effects will be — i. 6 

she is fooled with a most false effect — i. 6 

for the effect [iin(.-defect] of judgment — iv. 2 

let thy effects so follow, to be — v. 4 

did ever hear to such effect . . TilusAndronicus, ii. 3 

1 have written to effect — iv. 3 

the efiects of sorrow for his valiant .. — iv. 4 

all my study be to no effect? — v. 2 

and all the large effects that troop Lear, i. I 

that good effects may spriiig from — i.l 

scourged by the sequent effects — i. 2 

I promise you, the effects he writes of . . — i. 2 
bond of childhood, effects of courtesy. . . . — ii. 4 

few words, but, to effect, more than — iii. 1 

on the way, may prove effects — iv. 2 

while my prayers effect I take . . Romeo i^ Juliet, i. 5 

which so took effect as I intended — v. 3 

I shall the effect of this good lesson Hamlet, i. 3 

whose effect hold such an enmity with . . — i. 5 

find out the cause of this effect — ii. 2 

for tliis effect, defective, comes by cause — ii. 2 
still possessed of those effects for which I — iii. 3 

you convert my stern effects — iii . 4 

by letters conjuring to that effect — iv. 3 

wilt thou know the effect of what I wrote? — v. 2 
to this effect, sir; after what flourish .... — v. 2 
and hath, in his effect, a voice potential. 0(Ae/to, i. 2 
some dram conj ured to tills effect — 1.3 



[ 208 J 

EFFECT— a sovereign mistress of ett't;cts..O//ir'Ho, i. 

and seek to effect it to my uttermost — iii. 

EFFECTED-hisdeath wassoeffected..4;/'s(F(.//, iii. 
of despatch, effected many nicer needs — iv. 
my lord, and I wish it happily effected — iv. 

we'll see these things effected to iHenryf'I. i. 

ancient proverb win be effected — iii. 

that has but effected Us good-will . . Coriolanus, i. 
word of war, we have effected . .Antony fi-Cleo. iii. 
e\ils slie hatched were not effected. . Cymbetine, v. 
which, cminingly eftijcted, will beget. filusAnd. ii. 
EFFECTLESS— served me to eff'ectless use — iii. 
sure all's effectless; yet nothing we'll ..Pericles, v. 
EFFECTUAL-in effectual force. TwoGen.of Ver. iii. 

pleasant, pithy, and effectual Taming ofSh. iii. 

else conclude my words effectual . .'IHenry VI. iii. 

reason, mighty, strong, and effectual. Titus And. v. 

EFFECTUALLY— shall I do effectually — iv. 

EFFEMINATE— be effeminate ..AsyouLihe it, iii. 

young, wanton, and effeminate boy .Richard II. v. 

like but an effeminate prince IHenry VI. i. 

at last conclude effeminate peace?.... v. 

gentle, kind, eifeminate remorse . . Richard III. iii. 

than an eft'emiiiate man in time of. Troil.^Cres. iii . 

beauty hath made me effeminate.. i?omeo<5-/«;. iii. 

EFFIGIES-his etHgies witness most.. .-Is youLike,\i. 

EFFUSE— much effuse of blood doth.3Hen?!/K/. ii. 

EFFUSED— thus rigorously effused.. IHenri^ VI. v. 

EFFUSION— the mere effusion of. Mea.for Mea. iii. 

this effusion of such manly drops. . . . KingJolm, v. 

for the effusion of our blood Henry F. iii. 

stop effusion of our christian blood. .1 /fenri/ VI. v. 

EFTEST— that's the eftest way Much Ado, iv, 

EFTSOONS— eftsoons I'll tell thee why. Pericles, v. 
EGAL— of egal [Coi.-equal] justice. TitusAndron. iv. 

EGET—non eget Mauri jaculis — iv. 

EGEUS— thanks good Egeus Mid. N.'s Dream, i. 

and come, Egeus; you shall go with — i. 

Demetrius and Egeus, go along — i. 

but speak, Egeus; is not this the day — iv. 

Egeus, I will overbear your will — iv. 

EGG— with eggs, sir? Merry Wives, iii. 

thou pigeon egg of discretion .... Love's L. Lost, v. 

as a weazel sucks eggs As you Like it, ii. 

like an ill-roasted egg, all on — iii. 

steal, sir, an egg out of a cloister .... All's Well, iv. 

we are almost as like as eggs Winter's Tale, i. 

will you take eggs for money? — 1. 

what, you egg? young fry Macbeth, iv. 

be prologue to an egg and butter .... 1 Henry IV. i. 

and call for eggs and butter — ii. 

and so sucks her princely eggs Henry V. i. 

esteem an addle egg (rep.) Troilus S^ Cressida, i. 

finch egg I My sweet Patroclus — v. 

some trick not worth an egg Coriolanus, iv. 

think him as a serpent's egg JuliusCccsar, ii. 

give me an egg, iiuncle, and I'll Lear, i. 

the egg i' the middle, and eat up ()'ep.),. — i. 

some flax, and whites of eggs — iii. 

thou hadst shivered like an egg — iv. 

of quarrels as an eg^ is full ot meat. flom. ^Jul. iii. 

as addle as an egg, for quarreling . . — iii. 

EGG-SHELL-like egg-shells moved.Cymbeline, iii. 

danger, dare, even for an egg-shell .... Hamlet, iv. 

EGLAMOUR— sir Eglamour....rK'o Gen.ofVer. i. 

sir Eglamour, a thousand times — iv. 

O, Eglamour, thou art a gentleman — iv. 

sir Eglamour, I would to Valentine — iv. 

urge not my father's anger, Eglamour — iv. 
good-morrow, kind sir Eglamour.... — iv. 

go on, good Eglamour — v. 

which of you saw sir Eglamour of late? — v. 
andEglamour is in her company.... — v. 
more to be revenged on Eglamour . . — v. 

than hate of Eglamour that goes — v. 

EGLANTINE— and with eglantine.. iWirf. N.Dr. ii. 

no, nor the leaf of eglantine Cymbetine, iv. 

EGM A — no egma, no riddle Love'sL. Lost, iii. 

EGREGIOUS— egregious indignity All's Well, ii. 

solus, egregious dog? O viper vile! .... Henry F.ii. 

do give to me egregious ransom — iv. 

egregious murderer, thief, any thing. Cymbeime, v. 

EGREGIOUSLY— egregiously an ass . . Otliello, ii. 

EGRESS — have egress and regress.. A/errj/ (fines, ii. 

EGYPT— beauty in a brow of Egypt..»iid. A^. Dr. v. 

against all the first-born of Egypt. .4s youLike it, ii. 

for all the mud in Egypt Henry VIII. ii. 

I am Egypt's queen, thou blushest../ln(. <S-Cteo. i. 
know there were a heart in Egypt .. — i. 
and say, the tears belong to Egypt . . — i. 

may not fly fortli of Egypt — i. 

sovereign of Egypt, hail! How much — i. 
the firm Roman to great Egypt sends — i. 
his remembrance lay in Egypt with his — 1. 

greeting, or I'll unpeople Egypt — i. 

Slark Antony in Egypt sits at dinner — ii. 

since he went from iigypt, 'tis — ii. 

can from tiie lap of Egypt s widow . . — ii. 
my being in Egypt, Cassar, what was't — ii. 
at Rome might be to you in Egypt . . — ii. 
your being in Egypt might be my .. — ii. 
Fulvia. to have me out of Egypt .... — ii. 

welcome from Egypt, sir — ii. 

you stayed well by it in Egypt — ii. 

you do wish yourself in Egypt? — ii. 

but yet hie you again to Egypt — ii. 

I will to Egypt: and though I make — ii. 
melt Egypt into Nile! and kindly.. — ii. 
so half my Egypt were submerged .. — ii. 
we have used our throats in Egypt . . — ii. 
your serpent of Egypt is bred now . . — ii. 
three in Egypt cannot make better note — iii. 
he gave the 'stablishment of Egypt.. — iii. 
yon' ribald-rid nag of Egypt — iii. 

whither hast thou led me, Egypt? — iii. 

Egypt, thou knew'st too well — iii. 

requires to live in Egypt — iii. 

from Egypt drive her all disgraced . . — iii. 

1 hear tlie doom of Egypt — iii. 

power to beat me out of Egypt - — iv. 



ELD 



E(; YPT— this false soul of Egypt ! .4ntouy fy Cleo. i v. 1 

I made these wars for Egypt — iv. 12 

I am dying, Egypt, dying (rep.) — iv. 13 

royal Egypt! Empress! Peace, jieace — iv. !3 

greeting to the queen of Egypt — v. 2 

to give me conquered Egypt for my son — v. 2 
rather a ditch in Egypt be gentle.... — v. 2 

which is the queen of Egypt? — v. 2 

I pray you, rise; rise, Egypt — v. 2 

no more the juice of Egypt's grape shall — v. 2 

EGYPTIAN— than the Egyptians. r«ie///A Mght,iv. 2 

like to the Egyptian thiet — v. 1 

these strong Egyptian fetters ....Antony^ Cleo. i. 2 
rare Egyptian 1 Upon her landing . . — ii. 2 
your fine Egyptian cookery shall nave — ii. 6 
ne will to his Egyptian dish again .. — ii. 6 
dance now the Egyptian Bacchanals — ii. 7 
let the Egyptians, and the Phoenicians — iii. 7 
the Antoniad, the Egyptian admiral — iii. 8 
together with my brave Egyptians all — iii. 1 1 
tlus foul Egyptian Iiath betrayed me — iv. 10 
a poor Egyptian yet: the queen my — v. I 

thou, an Egyptian puppet, shall be shown — v. 2 

I have heard of an Egyptian Pericles, iii. 2 

did an Egyptian to my mother give Othello, iii. 4 

EIGHT— to-morrow, eight o'cXoak. . Merry Wives,\i\. 3 
to come to her between eight and nine — iii. h 

eight and nine, sir — iii. 5 

'twixt eight and nine is the hour .... — iii. 5 

'tis past eight already, sir — iii. 5 

eyes \vere set at eight i' the morning., TwelfthN. v. 1 
by eight to-morrow thou must. .Meas./b?- Meas. iv. 2 
have studied eight or nine wHse words. Much Ado, iii. 2 
it shall be written in eight and A?L..Mid.N. Dr. iii. 1 
let it be written in eight and eight .. — iii. 1 
I'll rhyme you so, eight years ..As you Like it, iii. 2 

here's eight that must take hands — v. 4 

hath received eight thousand nohles. Richard II. i. 1 

with eight tall snips, three — ii. 1 

eight yards of uneven ground 1 Henry IV. ii. 2 

some eight, or ten. Zounds! — ii. 2 

than— eight shillings and sixpence .. — ii. 4 

I am eight times tlirust through — ii. 4 

hoUandof eight shillings an ell — iii, 3 

it is but eight years, since this iHenry IV. iii. 1 

truly, sir, this eight years — v. 1 

in the year eight hundred and five .... Henry r. i. 2 
you'll pay me the eight shillings .... — ii. I 
eight thousand and four hundred .... — iv. 8 

about the hour of eight Henry VIII. iv. 2 

than an eight year old horse Coriolanus, v. 4 

Cfesar, 'tis strucken eight JuliusCcusar, ii. 2 

eight wild boars roasted whole ..Antony^ Cleo. ii. 2 

because they are not eiglit? Lear, i. 5 

dry-beat the rest of the eight . . Romeo % Juliet, iii. 1 

he will last j'ou some eight year Hamlet, v. 1 

eight score eight hours? (rep.) Othello, iii. 4 

EIGrHTEEN-at eighteen years. Comedy of Errors, i. 1 
for these eighteen years complotted.. ii/cAard //. i. 1 
a cup of sack eighteen years ago.... 1 Henri/ />'. ii. 4 

for eighteen months concluded iHenry VI. i. 1 

till term of eighteen months be — i.l 

for his heart, and leave eig.hteen. . . . Cymbetine, ii. 1 

EIGHTH— and yet the eighth appears. A/acie/A, iv. 1 

his son, Henry the eighth Henry VIII. ii. 1 

by the eighth hour JuliusCiPsar, ii. 1 

EIGHTPENNY-eightpemiy matter. 1 Henri/ IV.iii. 3 

EIGHTY— eighty odd years of .... Richard III. iv. 1 

EiTECT- to eject him hence, were . . Coriolanus, iii. 1 

EKE— I to Ford shall eke unfold . . Merry Wives, i. 3 

and eke cavalero Slender — ii. 3 

and eke most lovely Jew, as true ..Mid.N.Dr. iii. 1 
to peize the time, to eke it....ilfercft. o/Ten!'ce, iii. 2 

and mine, to eke out hers As you Like (7,1.2 

observance seek to eke out that All's Well, ii. f> 

and eke out our performance Henry V. iii. (cho.) 

ELBE— the floods of Sala and of Elbe — i. 2 
as I said, twixt Elbe aud Sala — i. 2 

ELBOW— and my name is Elbow. Afens./orikfeos. ii. 1 
Elbow is your name? why dost (rep.) — ii. 1 
he's out at elbow. What are you sir? — ii. 1 
tliis mistress Elbow, being, as I say.. — ij. 1 

what was done to Elbow's wife — ii. 1 

done to Elbow's wife, once more?.... — ii. 1 
come hither tome, master Elbow.... — ii. 1 
at thy elbow. Mass, and my elbow. .Afuc/i Ado, iii. 3 

one rubbed his elbow, thus Love'sL. Lost, v. 2 

the fiend is at mine elbow Merch. of Venice, ii. 2 

thus, leaning on mine elbow, I begin. Xing' Jo/rn, i. 1 

now my soul hath elbow — v. 7 

rub the elbow, at the news IHenrylV. v. 1 

fo, pluck him bv the elbow iHenrylV. i. 2 
'U be at your elbow. An' I but fist — ii. 1 

etlecoude? De elbow. De elbow.. Henry r. iii. 4 

it is even now at my elbow Richard lH.i. 4 

than I have in mine elbows Troilus 3f Cress, ii. 1 

in Cassar's blood up to the eVaows.JuUusCcesar,in. 1 

a sovereign shame so elbows liim Lear, iv. 3 

I'll be at thy elbow ; it makes us Otliello, v. 1 

ELD— and idle-headed eld received. A/en-y Wives,iv. 4 

beg the alms of palsied eld Meas. for Meas. iii. 1 

ICol.'} mid-age, and wrinkled eld. T7-oil. ^- Cress, ii. 2 

ELDER— my heart of elder? MerryWives, ii. 3 

the woman take an elder than . . Twelfth Nigtd, ii. 4 
you are my elder. Well (re/i.) ..Love'sL. Lost, v. i 
now much more elder art thou..A/cr. of Venice, iv. 1 
come, come, elder brother, you are. .4s you Like it, i. 1 
it was hie brother, his elder brother. . — iv. 3 

ahusbaudfor the elder Taming of Shrew, i. 1 

her elder sister is so curst and shrewd — i. 1 
until the elder sister first be wed — — i. 2 
achieve the elder, set the younger free — _i. 2 

I know my duty to my elders — ii. ! 

has an elder sister, or I mistake . . Winter'sTale, i. 2 
not I, sir; you are my elder. . Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

is that the elder, and art thou KingJolm, i. 1 

Geffrey was thy elder brother born .. — ii. 1 
son to the elder brother of tliis man. . — ii. 1 

which elder days shall ripen Richard //. ii. 3 

which elder days may happily bring — v. 3 



ELD 



EI.DEK^thc withered eWor hath not.2He>ir!/;»'. il. 1 

lieriliMia shot o>it ot'iiu older gun nemyV. iv. 1 

the elder I wux, the better . — v. 2 

if the i^siie ol tl>e elder sou succeed.. 2/J<iiry/7. ii. 2 
the eldeniflheui. lieinj,' put to nurse — iv. 2 
mv elder hnitlicr, the lord Aubrey.. 3 //<•«/•!/*'/. iii. 3 

belike, the elder; Clurcnco — iv. I 

tiishop of Kxeler, hib elder brother. HicA/ird f//. iv. 4 

he is elder. I'nrdou me Trmlus fr Cressida, i. 2 

wrinkled elders rCo/.-eld Kn(.-old] .. — ii. 2 
h)ver. elder brother, and ■woman. .Timonnr.lth. ii. 2 

see, our U'st elders. Mttrcius Coriolanus,i. 1 

most reverend and crave elders — ii. 2 

for our elders siiv, the barren Juliia C<vsar, i. 2 

find I the elder luid more terrible — ii. 2 

1 siiid, an elder soMier, not a better.. — iv. 3 

or rather ours tlie elder iiitomj (/-Cleopatra, iii. 8 

divineness n.i elder than a boy Cymbeline, iii. G 

and let the stinking; elder, grief — iv. 2 

with ills, eaeh elder worse — v. 1 

I.aviniii IS tliine elder brother's hopcTOKs.-dirf. ii. 1 
among the nettles at the elder tree — ii. 4 (letter) 

the i)it, and this the elder tree — ii. 4 

grows elder now, and carea it be not .... Pericles, i. 2 

some yeai- elder than tliis l^ar, i. 1 

his son is cider, sir; liis son is . . Romeo <(• Juliet, i. b 
till by some elder masters, of known ..Hamlet, v. 2 

ELDEST— vour eldest acquaintance Tempest, v. I 

if thy eldest son should be a tool.. Twelfth Night,]. 5 

too like my lady's eldest son Much .itlo, ii. 1 

you are my eldest brother As you Like it, i. 1 

the eldest of the three wrestled with . . — i. 2 

Antonio, the duke's eldest son All's Welt, iii. 5 

played a farmer's ehlest son . . Taming of Sh. 1 (ind.) 
helping Baptista's eldest daughter .. — i. 1 
iu the preferment of the eldest sister — ii. 1 
the eldest is eleven; the eecond .. trinter'sTale, ii. 1 
yet my eldest care, at eighteen ..Comedy of Err. i. 1 

iipon our eldest, Alalcolm Macheth, i. 4 

and eldest son, as I suppose King John, i. 1 

good old sir Robert's wife's eldest son — _i. 1 

this is thy cUlest son's son — ii. 1 

and elde.-it son to beaten Douglas MJenrylV. i. 1 

that her eldest son is like you 2Henryll', ii. 1 

the eldest son and heir of John of ..2Henry VI. ii. 2 
his eldest sister, Anne, my mother .. — ii. 2 

command my eldest son, nay — v. 1 

I'll join mine eldest daughter SHenryVI. iii. 3 

like the eldest son of fortune Henry nil. ii. 2 

the eldest of them at three years old.. Cymi/«(me, i. 1 
the eldest son of this distressed (lueen. Titus And. i. 2 

create your emperor's eldest son — i. 2 

your eldest daughters have foredoomed . . Lear, v. 3 
it hath the primal eldest curse upon't..Ham(f<, iii. 3 

ELDEST- BORN— Goneril, our eldest-born, tear, i. 1 

ELEANOK-nav, Eleanor, then must.2Henr!/ II. i. 2 

ill-nurtured lileanorl art thou — . 1.2 

with Eleanor, for telling but — i. 2 

dame Eleanor gives gold, to bring .. — i- 2 
knowing dame Eleanor's aspiring .. — i. 2 
strike dame Eleanor unrevenged rep.) — i. 3 
of lady Eleanor, the protector s wife — ii- 1 
issue— Edmund, Anne, and Eleanor — ii. 2 
stand forth, dame Eleanor Cobham.. — ii. 3 
Eleanor, the law, thou see'st, hath .. — ii. 3 
thus Eleanor's pride dies in her .... — ii. 3 

ELECT— deputy elect, anointed Hichard II. iv. 1 

that you elect no other king 1 Henry VI. iv. 1 

yea, the elect of the land Henry VIII. ii. 4 

then if you will elect by mv advice . . Titus And. i. 2 

ELECTED-special soul elected liim.MM./oril/ra. i. 1 

the deputy elected by the Lord Richard II. iii. 2 

distaste what it elected Troilus ^ Cressidn, ii. 2 

whose jiower we were elected theirs. Cor/o/a;iH.«, iii. 1 
the elected deer before thee? Cymbeline, iii. 4 

ELECTION-eomes to his election. iV/er. of Venice, ii. 9 

to stay you from election — iii. 2 

thy frank election make All'slVell, ii. 3 

before we make election, give me 2 Henry VI. i. 3 

makes merit her election Troilus ^Cressida, i. 3 

and my election is led on in — ii. 2 

all revoke your ignorant election . . Coriotanus, ii. 3 

must cast your election on him — ii. 3 

almost allrepentin their election.... — ii. 3 
bv her election may be truly read . . Cymbeline, i. 1 
if it be a sin to make a true election. . — i. 3 

in the election of a sir so rare — i. 7 

desert in pure election shine .. Titus Andronicus, i. 1 

in election for the Roman empery — i. I 

name thee in election for the empire., — i. 2 
in our election this day, I sive thee . . — i. 2 

and leaves us to our free election Pericles, ii. 4 

election makes not up on such conditions. Lear, i. \ 
could of men distinguish her election.. Ha/n/e/, iii. 2 

between the election and my hopes — v. 2 

the election lights on Fortinbras — v. 2 

but, he, sir, had the election: and I Othello, i.\ 

ELi;(iANCY— but for the elegancy.. to»e'» L.L. iv. 2 

LLEGIES— lamenting elegies.. Tuo Gen. (!/'»'er. iii. 2 
and elegies on brambles As you Like it, iii. 2 

KLE.MENT— command these elements.. 7'eiKpM(, i. 1 
the elements of whom your swords.... — iii. 3 

then to tlio elements be free — v. I 

beyond our element: we know . . Merry Wives, iv. 2 

the element itself, till seven Twelfth Night, i. 1 

between the elements of air and earth — i. 5 
our lives consist of the four elements? — ii. 3 
I might say element; but the word . . — iii. 1 

I am not of your element — iii. 4 

of the melancholy element in \\Ki...,Much.ido, ii. 1 
the motion of all elements, courses. Lorc'i L.L. iv. 3 
than the elements of (ire and water. WicAart/ //. iii. 3 

doth the cinders of the element 2//(riiry/F. iv. 3 

and the dull elements of earth Henry V. iii. 7 

the element shnvra to him, as it doth — iv. 1 

no element in such a business Henry VIII. i. 1 

between the two moist elements . . Troil. tf Crest, i. 3 
to the conflicting elements exposed. rim.o/^M. iv.3 

by the elements, if eer again I Coriotanus, \. 10 

and tlu: complexion of the elumeat.JuUuiCtrsar, i.3 



[ 209 ] 

ELEMENT— the elements bo mixed. ,>ii(iu>f.'n'«Mr, v. S 
and the elements onee out of it ..AntonyiifCleo. ii. 7 

the elements be kind to thee — iii. 2 

above the element tliey lived in .... — v. 2 
my other eleoieiits X give to baser life — v. 2 
the nntViendlv eleuients forgot thee .. Pericles, iii. 1 
climbing sorrow, tli.v element's belowl .. Lear, ii. 4 
contending with the frell'ol element .... — iii. I 

I tax not you, yon elements, with — iii. 2 

native nnd indued unto that element.. HrmiW, iv. 7 
give him det'enee iiLrainst the elements.. 0(/iri(o, ii. 1 

tlie very elements of this warlike isle — ii. 3 

as fruitful us tlie tree elements — ii. 3 

vou elements that clip us round about! — iii. 3 

El.EPIl ANT— at the Elephant.. 7'kc(/M Sight, iii. 3 

to the Elephant — iii. 3 

I could not find him at the Elephant — iv. 3 

slow as the ele|ihunt Troilus ^Cressida, i. 2 

shall the elepliunt Ajax carry it thus? — ii. 3 
the ele|'h:nit hiilh joints, but none for — ii. 3 
with giiisses, elephants with holes. ./ii/ius Co'sar, ii. 1 

ELEVA'L'ED— another elevated . . Winler'sTale, v. 2 

ELE VE N — ten and eleven (rep.) . . Merry Wives, ii. 2 
ten and eleven; woman, commend .. — ii. 2 
shall be with her between ten and eleven — ii. 2 

eleven o'clock the hour — ii. 2 

hurt liim in eleven places Twelfth Night, iii. 2 

what's o'clock, think you? Eleven. ,*/ea. /or A/ea.ii. i 
a bawd of eleven years continuance — iii. 2 
eleven widows, and nine maids... >/er. of Venice, i\. 2 
'twill be eleven; and so, from.... /Ix you Likeil, ii. 7 
tricks eleven and twenty long . . Tamingof Hh. iv. 2 
the eldest is eleven; the second . . Winter'sTale, ii. I 
seven of the eleven I paid (rep.) .... 1 Henry / /'. ii. 4 

you have but eleven now 2 Henry I V. v. 4 

eleven hours I have spent to write. /(/c/iari/ ///. iii. 6 
by eleven o'clock it will go.. Troilus <$- Cressida, iii. 3 
I had rather had eleven die nobly . . Coriolanus, i. 3 
hrought u|) some eleven— Ay, to eleven, i'cri'c/t's, iv.3 
eartluiuake now eleven years (rci>.).Rom. ^- Jul. i. 3 
'twixt eleven and twelve, I'll visit you., llandet, i. 2 
till the bell hath told eleven Othello, ii. 2 

ELEVEN-PENCE- 
eleven-pence farthing better. . . . Love's L. Lost, iii. 1 

ELEVENTH— the eleventh of this.. 1 Henry IV. iii. 2 
in the eleventh year o' the last king's. .//enrj/T. i. 1 

ELF— every elf, and fairy sprite.. Mid. N. Dream, v. 2 
elf all my hair in knots Lear, ii. 3 

ELF-LOCKS-and bakes the elf-locks. 7Jom. 4- Jul. i. 4 

ELF-SKIN— you elf-skin, you dried.lHenri/ IV. ii. 4 

ELIZABETH— at young Elizabeth./iicAard ///. iv. 3 
a daughter called— Elizabeth, virtuous — iv. 4 
he shall espouse Elizabeth her daughter — iv. 5 
let Richmond and Elizabeth, the true — v. 4 
princess of England, Elizabethl . . Henry VIII. v. 4 
what is her name? Elizabeth. Stand up — v. 4 

ELlj — an ell and three quarters . . Comedy of Err. iii. 2 

holland of eight shillines au ell \ Henry IV. iii. 3 

an inch narrow to au ell broad. . Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 4 

ELLEN— my god-daughter Ellen? ..2H<.;i?«/;'. iii. 2 

EI;M— the barky fingers of the elm.W/i/. N. sUr. iv. 1 
thou art an elm, my husband ..Comedy of Err. ii. 2 
answer, thou dead elm, answer 2Henry I V. ii. 4 

ELOQUENCE-aged eloquence.. r«'oGen.o/rcr. iii. 1 
of saucy and audacious eloquence . .Mid. N. Dr. v. 1 
moves me more than eloquence.. Vfr. 0/ Venice, iii. 2 
she uttereth piercing eloquence . . Turning of Sh. ii. 1 

his eloquence, the parcel of IHi-nrylV. ii. i 

nor gasp out my eloquence, nor I Hmry V. v. 2 

there is more eloquence in a sugar touch — v. 2 
action is eloquence, and the eyes . . Coriolanus, iii. 2 
to try thveloquence, now 'tis time. Ant. ^Cleo. iii. 10 
with sucfi pleasing eloquence . . Titus. ind ran. iii. 1 
speaks heavenly eloquence .... Itomen '^■Jtdiet, iii. 2 

ELOQUENT— so it be eloquent.. 7"w<-/./;;iA/V/i/, iii. 2 
tiu'n the sands into eloquent tongues. Henry v. iii. 7 
be eloquent in my behalf to her ..Richard. III. iv. 1 
it will discourse most eloquent music.. //((Hi(f/, iii. 2 

ELSINOKE— is your attair in Elsinore?. . Hamlet, i. 2 
friendship, what make you at Elsinore? — ii. 2 
gentlemen, you are welcome to Elsinore — ii. 2 
till night; you are welcome to Elsinore.. — ii. 2 

ELTHA.M— toElthain will I, where ..\HenryVI. i. 1 

the king from Eltham I intend — i. 1 

at Eltham place 1 told your majesty — iii. 1 

ELVES— ye elves of hills, brooks Tempest, v. 1 

elves, list your names Merry Wives, v. 5 

searcli Windsor Castle, elves, within — v. 5 
and all her elves come here anou.Mid.N. Dream,ii. 1 

that all their elves, for tear — ii. 1 

to make my small elves coats — ii. 3 

nod to him, elves, aud do him courtesies — iii. 1 
like elves and fairies in a ring Macbeth, iv. 1 

ELVISH — owls, and elvish sprites. Co;iie'/y o/£;t. ii. 2 

ELVISH-MAHKED- 
elvish-marked, abortive, rooting hog!. /iic/iard///.i. 3 

EI^Y— my lord of Ely, when I was last — iii. 4 
Ely with Richmond troubles — iv.3 

EL'Y-HOIISE— lies he? At Ely-house.RiWian/ //. i. 4 
hid him repair to us to Ely-house — ii. 1 

ELYSIUM— doth iu Elysium. TivoGen. nfVernna,i\. 7 

my brother he is in Elysium Twelfth Night, i. 2 

and all night sleeps in Elysium Henry V. iv. 1 

ond then it lived in sweet Elysium .illenry I'l. iii. 2 

within whose circuit is Elysium iHenryVI. i. 2 

poor shadows of Elysium, hence Ci/mbetine, v. 4 

ESIB.VLLING- an embaliing Heiiry VIII. ii. 3 

EMB.VLM— embalm me, then lay me — iv. 2 
embalms and spices to the April.. '/Vmon of .■tth. iv. 3 

EMHARK— to embark for Milan. 7«o6V;i. o/rer. i. 1 
at Hainiiton pier embark . ...Henry V. iii. (chorus) 
leaves Tbarsus, and again embarks . . Pericles, iv. 4 

EMB.A.RKED— the embarked traders. iWrf.A'. Dr. ii. 2 
of mine hast thou embarked?. C'omcf/y of Errors, v. 1 
was embarked toeross toBiurgundy.yWeAord///. i. 4 

he embarked at Milford Cymbeline, iii. 6 

mv necessaries are embarked; farewell.. i/am/cf, i. 3 
he^s endiarked with such loud reason ..Othello, i. 1 

EMBARQUEMENTS- 
cmbarquemeuts of all fury Coriolanus, i. 10 



EMB 



EMBASSADE— in my embassade ..ZHenry VI. iv. .1 
EMBASSADOR— Bwii'tembassoilor.A/ra./or A/to. iii. 1 
horse to lie an embassador for an OAilLove'sL.L.Vn. i 
your favours, the embassadors of love — v. 2 
so likely an embassailor of love. . Mer. of Venice, ii. !) 
the French embassadfir, upon that .... Henry V. i. 1 

shall wc call in the embassador — i. 2 

question your grace the late emba-ssadors — ii. 4 
embassadors from Henry king of .... — ii. 4 

the embassador from the French — iii. (cho.) 

yet, call the embassadors \ Henry VI. v. I 

my lords embassadors, your several — v. 1 

Suffolk, embassador for Henry. 2 /(/•nryr/.i. 1 (art.) 
we come embassadors from the king — iv. H 
my lord embassador, these letters. .'JHenry VI. iii. 3 
I came from Edward as embassador — iii. 3 

know not how to use embassadors — iv.3 

the embassador is silenced? Henry VIII. i. I 

embassadors from foreign princes.... — i. 4 
of Bayonuc, then French embassador — ii. 4 
you went embassador to the emperor — iii. 2 

you should be lord embassador — iv. 2 

thou must be my embassadfir. Troilus <S- Cressida, iii. 3 
like you, sir, enibassivlors from .... Cymbeline, ii. 3 
the embassador, Ijucius the Roman.. — iii. 4 
go thou before, be our embassador .. Titus And. iv. 4 

the embassmlors from Norway Hamlet, ii. 2 

give first admittance to the embassadors — ii. 2 

it comes from the embassador — iv. G 

to the embassadors of England gives this — v. 2 

EMBASSAGE— such an embassage Much Ado, i. 1 

do you any embassage to the Pigmies — ii. I 
by heart hath conned his embassage. Lore'jt L. /_.. v. 2 

not thy embassage belong to me Richard 1 1, iii. 4 

expect an embassage from Richard III. ii. 1 

EMBASSIES— lovin" embassies . . Winter's Tale. i. 1 

fresh embassies, and suits Coriolanus, v. 3 

EMBASSY— another embassy Merry Wives, iii. 5 

once more hear Orsino's embassy. Twelflh Night, i. !> 
here comes in embassy the French. . Love's L.L. i. 1 

and what's his embassy — ii. 1 

hear the embassy. Philip of France.. A'ln^'/o/m, i. 1 
the furthest limit of my embassy.... — i. 1 

despatched him in an embassy — i. 1 

stay for an answer to your ernbassy — ii. 1 
then we go in, to know his embassy.... Henry f^. i. I 
dauphin s meanin", and our embassy? — 1. 2 
great state he heard their embassy .. — ii. 4 
on your Greekish embassy . . TroUus ^ Cressida , iv. 
down the stream, in embassy to ... . Cymbeline, iv. 2 
EMBATTLE— we shall emhattlc-Jn'oni/^iCTeo. iv. 9 
EAIBATTLED-strongly embattled. iVerryirirej, ii. 2 

that were embattled and ranked King John, iv. 2 

the English are embattled Henry V. iv. 2 

EMBAYED— insheltered and embayed.. 0(/ic«o, ii. 1 
EMBELLISHED— 
all o'er embellished with rubies . Comedi/ of Err. iii. 2 

EMBER— stirno embers up Antony ^Cleo. ii. i 

EMBER-EVES— on Ember-pves . /'cWc/m, i. (Gower) 
EMBLAZE — to emblaze tlie honour.liienri//'/. iv. 10 
EMBLEM— cicatrice, an emblem of war./l// s Well, ii. 1 
and all such emblems laid nobly . . Henry VIII. iv. 1 
EMBODIED— am so embodied yours. .All'sWell. v. 3 
EMBOLDENS— emboldens sin so.. Timon ofAlh. iii. .') 
EAIBOLDENED— emboldened vae.Men-y Wives, ii. 2 

a soul emboldened with the glory Pericles, i. 1 

EMBOSSED— the embossed sores. . As you Like it, ii. 7 
but we have almost embossed him . . All's Well, iii. 6 
the poor cur is embossed. . Taming of Shrew, I (ind.) 

impudent, embossed rascal \Heni-ylV. iii. 3 

once aday with his embossed froth, rono/i of.ith.v. 2 
of Thessaly was never so embossed. .4nf.,^ Cleo. iv. 1 1 

a plague-sore, au embossed carbuncle Lear, ii. 4 

EMBOUNDED—emboundcd in this. . KingJohn, iv. 3 

EMBOV/EL—ifthou embowel me.... li/cii.i//r. v. 4 

EilBOWELLEU— embov.elled of then: All'sWell. i. 3 

embowclledwill I see thee by and hy.\ Henry IV. v. 4 

embowelled! if thou embowel me to-day — v. 1 

in your embowelled bosoms Richard III. v. 2 

E JIBRACE — I embrace thy body Tempest, v. I 

let me embrace thine age — v. 1 

still embrace his heart, that doth — v. 1 

now kiss, embrace, contend.. 7"«'o Gen. o/rerona, i. 2 

or else embrace thy death — v. 4 

aud spirit embrace them . . Twelf:h Night, ii. 5 tlet.) 

do not embrace me, till each — v. 1 

I am most apt to embrace your offer, . — v. I 
embrace your charge too ■vvilllugly . . Much Ado, i. 1 
she did embrace me as a husband. ... — iv. 1 
I do embrace your offer; and dispose — v. 1 

let us embrace! as true Love'sL.Lost, iv. 3 

you embrace the occasion to depart. .Wer.o/ Ven. i. I 

to embrace your own safety Is you Like i7, i. 2 

whom I myself embraee All's Weil, Hi. 4 (letter) 

sweet Kate, embrace her for her..7"n7nin^o/4Vi. iv. .'> 
let me embrace with old Vincentio . . — iv. 5 
his body more with thy embraces. Winter'sTale, iv. 3 

embrace but my direction — iv.3 

then embraces his son-in-law — v. 2 

she embraces him. She hangs about — v. 3 
embrace thy brother there, rejoice. Co77». of Err. v. 1 
must embrace the fate of that dark . . .Macbeth, iii. 1 
embrace him, love him, give him . . KingJohn, ii. 1 
and we must embrace this gentle ofter — iv. 3 

embrace his golden uncontrolled Richard 11. i. 3 

embrace each other other's love — i.3 

1 will embrace him with a soldier'.'., 1 Hrtir^yr. t. 2 

by that music let us all embrace — v. 2 

and I embrace this fortune patiently — v. 5 

together friemlly, and cinlirace IHenrylV. iv. 2 

1 embrace it. How shall I know thee. i/'-nry/'. iv. I 
embrace we then this opportunity ..\ Henry VI. ii. 1 

I may embracv his neek — ii. .■> 

accept this hearty kind embrace — iii. ;! 

1 do embrace tine, as I would embrace — v. 3 

condemned embrace, and kiss iHenryVI. iii. 2 

the l)ody tliat I should embrace? .... ~ iv. 4 
the king, and will embrace his pardon — iv. H 

Plantaf^enet, embrace him iHenry VI. i. 1 

they jom, embrace, and seem to kiss — ii. ) 

P 



EMB 



EMBRA.CE— let me embrace thee. . . .ZHenry VI. ii. 3 
let me embrace these soiu" adversities — iii. 1 
Dorset, embrace him; Hastings ..Richard III. ii. 1 

let us here eml)race; farewell — iii. 3 

no more ado, let all embrace him. . Henry VI II. v. 2 

I charge you, embrace this man — v. 2 

a passion doth embrace my Troilus ^-Cress. iii. 2 

the one and other Diomed embraces — iv. I 

let me embrace too: O heart — iv. 4 

let me embrace thee, Ajax — iv. 5 

let an old man embrace thee — iv. 5 

let nie embrace thee, good old — iv. .5 

embrace and hug with amplest. Timon of Athens, i. 1 
and yet he would embrace no counsel — iii. 1 

when lirst I did embrace him Cmiolanus, iv. 7 

he would embrace the means hdius Cusar. ii. 1 

that you embrace not Anitiay. Aidony ^- CIco. iii. U 
I embrace these conditions: let us . . Cymheline. i. 5 

with ioy he will embrace you — iii. 4 

I will embrace thee in it by and by. . Titus And. v. 2 

to embrace me as a friend — v. 3 

I will embrace your oti'er Pericles, iii. 3 

I embrace you, sir; sive me my robes. . — v. I 
embrace him, dear Thaisa; tins is lie., — v. 3 

unsubstantial air, that I embrace! Lear, iv. 1 

I must embrace thee ; let sorrow — v. 3 

arms, take your last embrace! ..Romeo i9;Jul!et, v. 3 

I embrace it freely; and will this Hamlet, v. 2 

with sorrow I embrace niv fortune — v, 2 

EMBRACED— we had emljraeed . . Merry irives, iii. .5 
cannot lie eschewed, must be embraced — v. ^ 

and his lover have embraced Meas. for Mnis. i. 5 

and embraced by the strumpet. . Mer. of Venice, ii. 6 
quicken his emljraced heaviness witli — ii. 8 

and embraced, as it were Winter's Tale, i. 1 

myself would gladly have embraced. Com. of Err. i. 1 
heaven yields must be embraced ..Richard II. iii. 2 
see your Rome embraced witli fire . . Coriolnn us, v. 2 
weigh what it is worth embraced. ^n(o«)/c§-C/eo. ii. 6 
embraced by a piece (,rep.v. !i).Cymbeli?ie, v. 4 (scroll) 
that tlieir breaths embraced together .. Othello, ii. 1 
EMBRACEMENT— 
with kind embracements .. Taming of Sh. 1 (indue.) 
bring them to our embracement . . Winter' sTale, v. 1 
drew me from liind embracements. Comeihj ofEr. i. 1 
thy embracements to my wife's . . Richard III. ii. 1 
they clung in their embracement . . Henry VIII. i. 1 

the issue is embracement Troilus ^- Cress, iv. 5 

than in the embracements of his hed. Cor iolanus, i.3 

and sear up my embracements Cymbeline, i. 2 

if one arm's embracement will . . Titus Andron. v. 2 

for the embracements even of Jove Pericles, i. 1 

EMBRACING— her in embracing. . Winter's Tale, v. 2 

coldly embracing the discoloured KinaJohn, ii. 2 

EMBRASURE-locked embrasm-es. Troil. ^- Cres. iv. 4 
EMBRE WED-lies embrewed here. Titus Andron. ii. 4 
EMBROIDERED- 

a rich embroidered canopy to kings. 3 Henri/ ^'J. ii. 5 
EMBROIDERY-rich embroidery ..Merry Wives, v. 5 
EMERALD— in emerald tufts, flowers — v. 5 
EMILIA— any of them? Emilia?.. /Finfej-'s Tale, ii. 2 

I shall bring Emilia forth — ii. 2 

pray you, Emilia, commend my — ii. 2 

tell her, Emilia, I'll use that tongue — ii. 2 
do not learn of him, Emilia, though he.Olhello, ii. 1 
before Emilia, here, I give thee warrant — iii. 3 

Emilia, come; be it as your fancies — iii. 3 

beshrew me much, Emilia, I was — iii. 4 

do not talk to me, Emilia; I cannot weep — iv. 2 

therefore, good Emilia, give me my — iv. 3 

tell me, Emilia— that there be women .. — iv. 3 
pr'ythee, Emilia, go know of Cassio wliere — v. 1 

Emilia, run you to the citadel — v. 2 

'tis Emilia:— by and by: — she's dead ... . — v. 2 
T had forgot thee; O, come in, Emilia .. — v. 2 
EMINENCE — or in his eminence. Mcas. /or Jlfpas. i. 3 
present hira eminence, both with eye.Macbctli^ iii. 2 
ever yet affected eminence, wealth.Hpnr;/ VIII. ii. 3 

in noble eminence enthroned Troilus ^- Cress, i. 3 

should not have the eminence of him — ii. 3 

strength, youth, place, and eminence Lear. v. 3 

EMINENT— by an eminent body.Mea../brMea. iv. 4 
and bowed his eminent top to their . . All's Well, i. 2 
neither allied to eminent assistants. Henry VIII. i. 1 

one, an eminent monsieur, that Cymbeline, i. 7 

a pantler, not so eminent — ii. 3 

EJIINENTLY— stands so eminently. . . . Othello, ii. \ 

EMMANUEL— name? Emmanuel.'. 2Henri/r/. iv.2 

EMPERIAL— of the eraperial's men. Titus And. iv. 3 

EjMPEROR— a present for any emperor.. Teini>rsl, ii. 2 

the emperor in his royal court . . Two Gen. of Ver. i. 3 

will dispatch him to the emperor's coiut — i. 3 

are journeying to salute the emperor — i.3 

how daily graced by the emperor — i. 3 

with Valentine in the emperor's court — i.3 
as meet to be an emperor's counsellor — ii. 4 

thou'rt an emperor, Cxsar Merry Wires, i. 3 

he is with the emperor of Russia, ^/ea./or Mea. iii. 2 
the emperor of Russia was my , . Winter'sTale, iii. 2 
there, witli the emperor, to treat of . . King John, i. 1 
my innocent life against an emperor — iv, 3 

to Lewis the emperor, and Lewis Henry V. i. 2 

to the tent-royal of their emperor .... — _ i. 2 
as good a gentleman as the emperor.. — iv. I 
the emperor's coming in behalt of — v. (chorus) 
emperor, and the earl of Armagnac?.! Henry F/. v. 1 
Charles the emperor, under pretence.HenryVIII.i. 1 

the emperor paid ere he promised — i. 1 

the emperor thus desired; that he would — i. 1 

to revenge him on the emperor — ii. 1 

ilie league between us and the emperor — ii. 2 
you went embassador to the emperor — iii. 2 
lord embassador from the emperor . . — iv. 2 
my brave emperor! shall we dance./-ln/on7/e5-CT'?o. ji.7 
hyre comes the emperor. Is't not strange — iii. 7 
O noble emperor, do not fight by sea — iii. 7 

the emperor calls for Canidius — iii. 7 

my brave emperor, this is fought indeed! — iv. 7 

my captain, and my emperor! — iv. 12 

what ho! the emperor's guard! — iv. 12 



[ 210 1 

EMPEROR— 'tis the emperor, madam. y<ii(..§-C/eo. v. 

to buy a present for tlie emperor Cymbeline, i. 

my emperor hath wrote ; I must .... — iii. 

wrote already to the emperor how . . — iii. 

the tenor of the emperor's writ — iii. 

the Roman emperor's letters — iv. 

our late deceased emperor's sons. . Titus Andron. i. 

till Saturnine be Rome's emperor — i. 

create your emperor's eldest son .... — i. 

and say, long live ouremperor! — i. 

lord Saturninus, Rome's great emxieror — 1. 

the wide world's emperor,- do J .... — i. 

are you prisoner to an emperor? .... — i. 

where is the emperor's guard? — i. 

restore Lavinia to the emperor — i. 

no; the emperor needs her not — i. 

your noble emperor, and his lovely bride — i. 

come, sweet emperor, come Audi'oiilcus — i. 

must advise tlie emperor for Ms good — i. 

my word and promise to the emperor — i. 

nay, nay, sweet emperor, we must all be — i. 

the emperor's court can feast two brides — i. 

so near the emperor's palace dare — ii. 

Bassianus be the emperor's brother . . — ii. 

emperor's court is like tire house of fame — ii. 

wake the emperor and Ms lovel.y bride — ii. 

to tend the emperor's person carefully — ii. 

high emperor, upon my feeble knee.. — ii. 

the emperor sends thee this word — iii. 

gracious emperor! O gentle Aaron — iii. 

I'll send the emperor my hand — iii. 

that good hand thou sent'st the emperor — iii. 

emperor's trumpets flourish thus? t_rep.) — iv. 

the emperor, in his rage, will — iv. 

received for the emperor's heir — iv. 

let the emperor dandle him — iv. 

this wicked emperor may have — iv. 

we will afflict the emperor in his — iv. 

deliver the pigeons to the emperor . . — iv. 

an oration to the emperor with a grace? — iv. 

give your pigeons to the emperor — iv. 

when thou hast given it to the emperor — iv. 

an emperor of Rome thus overborne — iv. 

but yonder sits the emperor — iv. 

wished that Lucius were their emperor — iv. 

thou emperor, I will enchant — iv. 

say, that the emperor requests a parley — iv. 

and now, sweet emperor, be blithe again — iv. 

what hate they bear their emperor . . — v. 

thou might'st have been an emperor — v. 

the Roman emperor greets you all . . — v. 

let the emperor give nis pledges — v. 

in the emperor's court tlrere is a queen — v. 

the emperor himself, and all thy foes — v. 

the emperor and the empress too feasts — v. 

whiles I go tell my lord the emperor — v. 

1 fear, the emperor means no good . . — v. 

show, the emperor is at hand — v. 

Rome's emperor, and nephew, break — v. 
my lord the emperor, resolve me this 
miu'dered our emperor's brother . . . 
bring oiu- emperor gently in thy (rep.) 
Lucius, all hail; Rome's royal emperor! — v. 
friends convey the emperor hence .... — v. 
I revived, and was an emperor. . Romeo ^ Juliet, v. 

worm is your only emperor for diet Hi:mlet, iv. 

she might lie by an emperor's side Othello, iv. 

EMPEPbY— in large and ample empery. Henry V. i. 

of birth, your empery, yo\ii o-aa. . Richard ///.iii. 

and fastened to an empery Cymbeline, i. 

ambitiously for rule and empery.. '/'((ks Andron. i. 

in election for the Roman empery — i. 

Shalt obtain and ask the empery — i. 

EMPHASIS-such another emphasis !..47i(. fyClea. i. 

whose grief bears such an emphasis? .. Hamlet, v. 
EMPIEKCED— too sore empierced.. iiomeo ^-Jul. i. 
E JVIPIRE— contend for empire in thee . . .Ul's Well, i. 

for the contempt of empire — iii. 

got an empire by his marriage 2HenryVI. i. 

tlie empire unpossessed? Richard HI. iv. 

may have the world in empire!.. Timon of .4th. iv. 

arch of the ranged empire fall! ..Antony SfCleo. i. 

commands the empire of tlie sea — _ i. 

he hatlr given his empire up to a whore — iii. 

as when mine empire was your fellow — iv. 

mate in empire, friend and companion — v. 

to Cajsar, and to the Roman empire. Ci/m6etme, v. 

name thee in election for the empire.. ri'ais/ind. i. 

I begged the empire at thy hands — i. 

from their watery empire recollect .... Pericles, ii. 

influence Neptune's empire stands Hamlet, i. 

a cut-purse of the empire and the rule . . — iii. 
EMT?IRIC-past-cure malady to empirics^H's Well, ii. 
EMPIRICUTIC--is but erapirioutic. Cor(o(aniJs, ii. 
EMPLOY-she'd employ me in.riuo Gen. of Ver. iv. 

and will employ thee in some — iv. 

we shall employ thee in . . Measurefor Measure, v. 

must employ you iu some business.. Mid. A'. Dr. i. 

in this affair do.th.ee employ — iii. 

I must employ him in a letter . . Love's L. Lost, iii. 

I must eraplo.y thee: as thou wilt .. — iii. 

allons ! we will employ thee — v. 

employ yom chiefest thoughts .. >/er. of Venice, ii. 

I'll employ thee too: but do not..4s you Like it, iii. 

for her, employ them all Winter's Tale, iv. 

yoiu brother did employ my f&t\\zv .. King Joim, i. 

employ the countenance and grace .'iHenry IV. iv. 

employ thee then, sweet virgin .... 1 Henry VI. iii. 

whatsoe'er you will employ me in-Richard III. i. 

most need to emploj' a friend — ii. 

I will employ thee back again. . Antony <§- Cleo. iii. 

if you'll employ me to him — v. 

when it pleased you to employ me . . Cymbeline, i. 

toemploy you towards this Roman .. — ii. 

to employ those soldiers, so levied Hamlet, ii. 

we must straight employ you against Otiiello, i. 

EMPLOYED-shall be employed. Two Gen. of Ver. i. 

have employed and pained your. Meas. for Meas. v. 

you cannot better be employed. .3/er. of Venice, iv. 

marry, sir, be better employed As youLike it, i. 



EMP 



— v. 3 



EMPLOYED— thou art employed..4s i/ou Like it, iii. 5 
1 employed, was pre-employed .. Winter's Tale, ii. 1 

how he employed my mother King John, i. 1 

to be employed in danger — iv.2 

and all, are all amiss employed .... Richard II. ii. 3 
you thus employed, I will go root .. — iii. 4 
m Scotland being thus employed . . 1 Henry IV. i, 3 
at tills time ha\'e employed him .... . — ii. 4 
was employed in passing to and fro.lHenry VI. ii. 1 
begged I might have been employed — iv. 1 

that lucky ruler be employed IHenry VI. iii. 1 

were glad to be emjjloj'ed, to show how — iii. 2 

while you are thus employed SHenry VI. i. 2 

thyself Shalt highly be employed. . Richardlll. iii. 1 
how is tlie king employed? I left . . Henry VIII. ii. 2 
employed you where high profits .... — iii. 2 
Ajax, employed, plucks doivn ..Troilus^ Cress, i. 3 

a sword emploj'ed is perilous — ii. 2 

must be employed now to guaTd..Timon of Alh. iii. 3 
I remember now how he's employed. Anl.^- Cleo. v. 1 
Shalt be employed in these things . . Titus And. iii. 1 

she is so employed, he thinks — iv. 3 

how shall we be employed? — v. 2 

EMPLOYER^eraployer of panders ..MuchAdo, v. 2 

EMPLOYMENT- 
fit for great employment . . Two Gen. of Verona, v. 4 
when 'tis upon ill employment! .. lUerry Wives, v. 5 
what employment have we heie?.TwelfthNiglU, ii. 5 

his employment between his lord — iii. 4 

you have no employment for me? MuchAdo, ii. I 

proud of employment, willingly.. LoDe'sL.ios/, ii. 1 
ladyship's in ail desired employment — iv. 2 

not much employment for you All's Well, ii. 2 

at your employment; at your King John, i. 1 

detained for lewd employments . . ..Richard II. i. 1 

is there not employment? iHenry IV. i. 2 

being upon hasty employment — ii. 1 

and tire, crouch for employment. . Henry V. i. (cho.) 
will find employment, and far .... Henry VIII. ii. 1 
tlian I could frame employment.. Timon of ,ith. iv. 3 

to lose so bad employment Cymbeline, iii. 4 

imdergo those employments, wherein — iii. 5 
on whose employment I was sent to you . Lear, ii. 2 

thy great employment will not bear — v. 3 

must use in dear employment . . Romeo S,- Juliet, v. 3 
the hand of little employment hath. , . . Hamlet, v. 1 
they did make love to tliis employment . . — v. 2 

EMPOISONED-own alms empoisoned ConoZanws.v.S 

EMPRESS-for an empress' love. Two Gen. of Ver. ii. 4 
worthy of an empress' love — v. 4 

sweet Maria, empress of my love!.ioBe'sL.I.. iv. 3 
the general of om- gracious empress. Henry V. 5 (cho.) 
the looks of an empress; take me .... — v. 2 

more like an empress, than duke SHenry VI. i. 3 

madam, O good empress! Antony 1^- Cleo. iii. 9 

roj'al Egypt! Empress! Peace, peace — iv. 13 
most noble empress, you have heard — v. 2 
Lavinia will I make my emijress.. TiiusAndron. i. 2 
and will create tliee empress of Rome — i. 2 
rise; my empress hath prevailed .... — i. 2 
to wait upon tills new-made empress — ii. 1 
an' should the empress know tliis. . . . — ii. 1 
our empress, with her sacred wit ... . — ii. 1 
their alms out of the empress' chest. . — ii. 3 
hark, Tamora, the empress of my soul — ii. 3 
no more, great empress, Bassianus comes — ii. 3 
Rome's royal empress, unfurnished.. — ii, 3 
under your patience, gentle empress — ii. 3 
proud Saturnine and his empress beg — iii. 1 
like to the empress' Moor; therefore — iii. 2 
from me to the empress' sons presents — iv. 1 

our ^vitty empress well afoot — iv.2 

our empress' shame, and stately Rome's — iv. 2 

the empress sends it thee — iv. 2 

tell the empress from me, I am — iv. 2 

wliat shall I say unto the empress? . . — iv. i 
but tlie delivered empress? The emjiress — ■ iv. 2 
go to the empress; tell her, tills I said — iv. 2 
secretly to greet the empress' friends — iv. 2 
find them but the empress' villain?.. — iv. 3 

empress I am, but yonder sits — iv.,4 

he knows thou art the empress' babe — v. 1 
tlie pearl that pleased your empress' eye — v. 1 
bear it from me to the empress — v. 1 

1 begot him on the empress — v. 1 

I told the empress of this sport — v. 1 

I know thee well for our proud empress — v. 2 
like the empress' sons they are! (rep.) — v. 2 
how like tlie empress and her sons .. — v. 2 
the empress never wags, but iu lier . . — v. 2 
I w-ill ijring in the empress and her sons — v. 2 
the empress too feasts at my house . . — v. 2 

these two? Th' empress' sons — v. 2 

forbear, we are the empress' sons ■ — v. 2 

brought unto the empress' face — v. 3 

your highness, and your empress .... — v. 3 

ElVIPTIED— colfers then be emptied . . 1 HenrylV. i. 3 

EMPTIER-the emptier ever dancing. /{(c/iard //. iv.l 
as they say, the emptier vessel 2HenryIV. ii. 4 

EMPTIES-llis state empties itself.itfer.o/ Venice, v. 1 
whoso empties them, by so much . . Richard II. ii . 2 

EMPTINESS— poverty and emptiness.2He)iri//F. i. 3 
Caesar will answer his emptiness!. .^n^ SfCleo. iii. 1 1 
should make desire vomit emptiness. Cs/m6e<i;ie, i. 7 

EMPTY— cried, hell is empty, and all . . Tempest, i. 2 
barns and garners never empty .. — iv. 1 (song) 

and there empty it in Merry Wives, iii. 3 

empty tlie basket, I say — iv.2 

beauteous-evil are empty trunks. Twelfth Night, iii. 4 
heaven hath my empty words.. il/eas. ./or Meas. ii. 4 
fold stands empty in the drowned ..Mid.N.Dr. ii. 2 
I shall find you empty of that.... /.one's L.Los*, v. 2 
within whose empty eye there . . Mer. of Venice, iX. 7 

void and empty of any dram of. — ^7* ^ 

wlien I have made it empty As you Like it, i. 2 

in civility thou seem'st so empty? .. — ii. 7 
filling the one doth empty the other — v. 1 
now is sharp, and passing empty. Taming of Sh. iv. 1 

weep our sad bosoms empty Macbeth, iv. 3 

an empty casket, where the jewel . , King John, v. 1 



EMP 



EMPTY— the empty hollowncss liichardll. i. 2 

Imt iimitv Iixlglngs, iind unfuniisliecl — i. 2 

I'llonipty nil these veins \ Henry II'. i. 3 

in eourt— empty the jorden •iHtnrylV. li. 4 

Clin a weak empty vessel hear — li. 4 

80 huiiwr for inv empty chair — iv. 4 

beiiifieMiiity nl ilili-m'e, hath Henry V. i. 2 

a voice isjvi'e from fo empty a heart .. — iv. 4 
■'the empty vessel nuikes the greatest — iy. 4 
an cmptv eagle were set to guard . .iHenry VI. iii. 1 

cries do fill the empty air — v. 2 

and, like an empty eagle, tire on . . . .ZHenru I'l. i. 1 

from cold anil empty veins Hichardlll. i. 2 

to seek the empty, vast, and wandering — 1. 4 
is the ehair empty? is the swoi-d .... — iv. 4 
more worth than emjity vanities. . Henry yill. 11. 3 

behold that chair stand empty — v. 2 

you are so empty of thorn . . Troitns ^ Creuida^ ii. 2 

as infant's empty of all tliouu'ht! — iv. 2 

and all out of aii empty eollVr-.Timono/ Alheni, i. 2 
faith, nothing but an empty box .... — iii. 1 
I returned you an empty messenger — iii. 6 

like einiity purses picked — iv. 2 

like to the empty ass, to shake ..JutlusCtemr. iv. 1 

have empty left their orbs tnlony ^Cleo. iii. 11 

'tis empty of all things, but grief . . Cymbrline, iii. 4 
on empty nurse, there was no money — iv. 2 

purse and Drain both empty — v. 4 

empty old receptacles, common Pericles, iv. 

her cuariot is an empty hazel-nut. .Homco 4' Jul- i. 4 
a beggarly account of empty boxes , . — v. 1 
more inexorable far, than empty tigers — v. 3 
liis house is empty on the back of ... . — v. 3 

his purse is empty already Hamlet, v. 2 

the town is empty ; on the brow Othello, ii. 1 

KMP'ry-HEARrED— 
nor are those emptv-heartcd, whose low..I.rar, i. I 

EMPTYING— emptying our bosoms. /Wii/. N. Dr. i. 1 

hath been the untimely emptying Macbeth, iv. 3 

the emptying of our fathers' luxurv..HtfHrf/r. iii. 5 

EMULAT"E-eraiiIatethediamonds."'Verry n'ives, iii. 3 

S ricked on by a most emulate pride Hamlet, i. 1 
lUl.ATION- which is emulation .Asynu Like, :v. I 

factious emulations shall arise! 1 Henry I'l. iv. 1 

aloof with worthless emulation — iy. 4 

for emulation now, who shall be ..liidtard III. ii. 3 
of pale and bloodless emulation. Troilas <$ Cress, i. 3 
whilst emulation iu the army crept. . — ii. 2 
for emulation hath a thousand sons — iii. 3 

a gory emulation 'twixt us twain — iv. a 

the moon, shouting their emulation. .Cor/oianut, i. 1 
mine emulation hath not that honour iu't — i. 10 
out of the teeth of emulation .... Jutius Crcsar, ii. 2 
EMULATOR-an enviousemulator..4.« you Like it^ 1. 1 
liMULOUS — emulous factions .. Troilus ^- Cress, li. 3 
he is not emulous, as Achilles is ... . — ii. :) 

made emulous missions 'mon^st — iii. 3 

in mine emulous honour, let him die — iv. 1 
E^f ACT— to enact my present faucies.. Teini)esf, iv. I 

the king enacts more wonders Ilirliardlll. v. 1 

the close enacts and counsels of.. Titus. -indron. iv. 2 
and what did you enact? I did enact . . Hamlet, iii. 2 
ENACTED-it is enacted in the laws.. il/er.o/Tra.iv. 1 
enacted wonders with his sword ....I Henry I' I. i. 1 
hath been enacted thro' your enmity — iii. 1 

and the rest, it is enacted thus — v. 4 

ENACTURE — their own enactures Hamlet, iii. 2 

ENAMELED-enamclcd stones.. Tu-oGen.on'er. ii. 7 

snake throws her enameled skin.. Mid. N.''s Dr. ii. 2 

the jewel, best enameled, will lose .Com. of Err. ii. 1 

ENAArOURED-euamoured on Uaxo.Much .Mo, ii. 1 

mine ear is enamoured of thy ncitii..Mid.N.Dr. iii. 1 

methought, I was enamoured of an ass — iv. 1 

thou art enamoured upon his follies.! /feriri/^^'. v. 2 

become enamoured on his grave ... .iHenryir. i. 3 

affliction is enamoured of thy parts. Rom. ^Jul. iii. 3 

ENCVMP — we'll encamp ourselves . . Hemy V. iii. 6 

bid him encamp his soldiers where. . Titus .ind. v. 2 

foes encamp them still in msi\\..Iiomeo/^ Juliet, ii. 3 

El^fiRVMPED- the king encamped?..! Hcjiry/r. iv. 2 

brother being carelessly encamped.. SHpn;!/^/. iv. 2 

EKCAVE— do but encave yourself OtlieUo,iv. 1 

f.NCEL.VDUS— uot Enccladus . . Tilus Andron. iv. 2 
iC NCII AFEL»-on th' enchafed flood .... Othello, ii. 1 

ENCIIANT—art to enchant Tempest, (epil.) 

and eneliant him with thy words . . 1 Henry VI. iii. 3 
8(1 sweet that it enchants my sense.. Troil.if Cr. iii. 2 
that he enchants societies uuto him. . Cymbeline, i. 7 
will enchant the old Audronieus. T'lVus/lni/ron. iv. 4 
ENlHANTED— some enchanted trifle. T*m;)rs(, v. 1 
ravish, like enchanted harmony. . Love's L. Lost,i. 1 
saw his eyes enchanted with gazes .. — ii. 1 
gathered the enchanted hcrbs..A/ercA.o/renicc, v. 1 

as thou art, thou hast enchanted her Othello, i. 2 

KNClIA.Vf ING-enchanting presence. Cf)m.o/£r.iii.2 
enchanting all that you put in Macbeth, iv. 1 

{our white enchantingfinger8..7'roi7u»<SCrf.it. iii. 1 
must from this euchanting tiucen. . Anl. /^Clco. i. 2 
varied notes, enchanting every ear.. Tilus And. iii. 1 
ENCHA.VTI.NGI.Y- 

of all sorts enchantingly beloved.. /Ijuou Like it, i. 1 
ENt;UANT.MENT- 

afterthe last enchantment Twelfth Night, iii. 1 

enehanttrient. worthy enough .. tVinier't'J'ale, iv. 3 
KN<'HA\T!U;SS-hag! enchantress..! Hoiri/*'/. v. 3 

KNCIl A--i:iJ-encliased with all 2 Henry Vl. i. 2 

ENl IKbl.K-eiicircle him about .. Merry IVioes, iv. 4 

ENCIUCLEU— encircled you tHenrylV. iv. 2 

ENULOSEO— that lies enclosed . . Winter's Tale, i. 2 

with charity enclosed in clay Henry V. iv. 8 

enclosed were they with their I Henry VI. i. ! 

we by Antony are all enclosed JutiusCtriar, v. 3 

Titinius is enclosed round about with — v. 3 

to nee the enclosed lights Ci/mbeline, ii. 2 

ENCLOSETH— encloseth my iioor . . Iliehard III. i. 2 
ENCLO.SING— 

for enclosing the commons of. .iHenryVI. i. 3 (pet.) 
ENCLoirOEIJ— we be enclouded..'ln/«/iu4' Cleo. v. 2 
ENCOMPASSED— 
iuve I encompassed you ? Merry IVirei, iL 2 



[_211_] 

ENCOMPASSED— 
round encompassed and set upon ..\ Henry VI. i. 1 
hag of all despite, encompassed with — iii. 2 
us a bear, eneompassed round with..3//£'nr!/r/. li. I 
that sought to be encompassed with . . — ii. 2 
her wide walks encompassed but ..JuliusCwiar, i. 2 

ENCOMPASSETJI- 
this ring encompasseth thy flngcr..iiicAord /;/. i. 2 

ENCO.MPASS.ME.VT— 
by this encompiissmont and drift Hamlet, ii. 1 

ENCORE— encore ii nil est contre Henry F. iv. 4 

ENCt)UNTja{-fa'r encounter of two. 7Vm;;e,«, iii. 1 
these fresh nymphs encounter every one — iii. 1 
at this encounter do so mucli admire .. — v. 1 
every day with parle encounter. TwoClen.of Ver. i. 2 
loose encounters of lascivious men .. — ii. 7 
in the instant of our encounter ..Merry Wives, iii. 5 
will von eucoimter the house? .. Twelfth Night, iii. 1 

I will eiieomiter darkness Meas.J'or Meas iii. 1 

if the eiifoiinter acknowledge itself.. — iii.! 

avoid cost, and you encounter it Much Ado, i. 1 

strong encounter of my amorous tale — i. 1 
in the orchard this amiable encounter — iii. 3 

confessed the vile encounters — iv. 1 

I did encounter that obscene. X-ore'x A, Lo«/, i, 1 (let.) 
wenches, arm! encounters mounted — v. 2 

the encounter of two dog-apes As you Like it, ii. 5 

with eartliquakes, and so encounter — iii. 2 

let not your hate encounter with All's Well, i. 3 

appoints him an encounter — iii. 7 

give you over at this first encoimter. Taming ofSh. i . 2 

with yoiu" strange encounter — iv. 5 

encounters thougil not personal .. Winter'sTale, i. 1 

good time encounter her! — ii. ! 

and wilt encounter with my wrath.. — ii. 3 
with what encounter 60 uncurrent .. — iii. 2 
I never heard of such another encounter — v. 2 
they encounter thee with their hearts' Macbeth, iii. 4 

let belief and life encounter so KingJohn, ill. 1 

that we may arm us to encounter it.llicliard II. v. 3 
never did encoimter with Glendowcr.l HenrylV. i. 3 
if they 'scape from your encounter .. — ii. 2 
Iiay full dearly for this encounter. ... — y. 1 

to encounter you, ray lord 2HenryIV. i. 1 

if thou encounter any such Henry V. iv. 7 

the dauphin may encounter them. . 1 Henry VI. iii. 2 

not be able to encounter mine Sllenry VI. iv. 8 

that will encounter with our glorious — v. 3 
this keen encounter of our wits. ...Richard III. i. 2 

at our last encounter, the duke Henry VIII. iv. 1 

speak of your pretty encounters. . Troit. ^ Cress, iii. 2 
we cncnnntcr as often as we cat .. ..Coriotanus, i. 10 
tliey shall encounter such ridiculous — ii. I 
thus accidentally to encounter you .. — iv. 3 

dreamt ufeacouiitcrs 'twixt — iv. 5 

upon the next encounter, yields ..Julius Ccpsar, i. 3 
upon the nrst encounter, di-ave ...intony^Cteo. i. 2 
till which encounter, it is my business — i. 4 

to encoimter me with orisons Cymbeline, i. 4 

at one time encounter such revolt — i. 7 

and she should from encounter guard — ii. 5 
I will encounter with Andronicus .. Titus And. y. 2 

rouseil to the encounter, or whether Lear, ii. 1 

nor hide the encounter of Itomeo {,- Juliet, i. 1 

and is he a man to encounter Tybalt? — ii. 4 
in eitlier by this dear encounter — — ii. 6 
mark the encounter: if he love her not. HumW, ii. 2 
we may of their encounter frankly judge — ii. 2 
and outward habit of encounter — v. 2 

ENCOUNTERED— oft encountered. . Much Ado. ii. 3 

men of peace well encountered Love' sL. Lost, v. ! 

at home be encountered with shame.. .JH'sM'cH, iv. 3 
were encountered by a mighty . . Comedy of Err. i. 1 

you ore well encountered here -i Henry IV. iy. 2 

ladies crave to be encountered with..l Henry VI. ii. 2 
I soon encountered; and, interchanging — iv. 6 
once I encountered him, and thus .. — iv. 7 
shall be encountered with a man ..iHenryVI, iv. 2 

to match I have encountered him — v. 2 

I encountered as the battles joined ..SllenryVI.i. 1 
bloodof those that had encountered him — J. 4 
I am thus encountered with. . . Timon of Alliens, ii, 2 
thoughts tiring, when we encountered — iii. 6 
well encountered! 'tis almost night. Cj/mW/ni?, iii. C 
to he encountered with a cloud . . Tit us. ■Indron. ii. a 
of the night, been thus encountered Hamlet, i. 2 

ENCOUNTEREBS— these encounterers, so 

glib of tongue Troilus fy Cressida, iv. 5 

ENCOUNTERING— encounteringthe eye — iii. 2 
witli smiling fronts encountering . . Cnrialmus, i. 6 

ENCOURAGE— andencourage him.. 4s you /../(rf i(, i. 2 
my dilemmas, encourage myself in., .■I//'* Welt, iii. 6 
did threaten and encourage aim. Winter's Tale, iii. 2 
tractable to us, encourage him Richard ///. iii. ! 

ENCOURAGED— and encouraged.Juh«»C<*si«-, iv. 3 

ENCOUR.VGEMENT— 
for the encouragement of the like. Men. for Mea. i. 3 
of fair comfort and encouragement/iiWicrd III. v. 2 

ENCROAClIING-proudencroaching.2//f n>!/ VI. iv.l 

ENCUMBERED— wjtharmsencumbered. //<""'<•(, i. 5 

END— thus neglecting worldly ends .... Tempest, i. 2 

painted their foul cuds — 1.2 

at which end o' the beam she'd bow .... — ii. 1 

the latter end of his commonwealth — ii. 1 

poor matters point to rich ends — iii. 1 

and witli each end of thy blue bow — iv. 1 

in the very end of harvest — iv. 1 (song) 

shortly shall all my labours end — iv.l 

to work mine end upon their senses.. — v.! 
I will, and there an end ....Two Oen.ofVerona, i. 3 

and there an end — ii. I 

you always end ere you — ii. 4 

still an end, turns nie — iv. 4 

to the west end of the wood — v. 3 

like a soldier, at arm's end — v. 4 

the sword should end it .Iterry Wives, i. I 

friends is the sword, and end it — i. 1 

to hear it, and end it between them.. — i. ! 

I will make an end of my dinner — i. 2 

at tlic latter end of a sea-coal Are.... — i. 4 



END 



END— liard by; at street end Merry Wives, i v. 2 

I have them at my flngers' ends .. Twelfth, \ixlit, i. 3 

journeys end in iovers meeting — ii. 3 (song 1 

if thou hast her not i 'the end — ii. 3 

and the end— what should — Ii. .*> 

and O shall end, I hojie — ii. .'i 

attends thee at the orchard end — iii. I 

this sluiU end without the perdition — iii. 4 
he has hurt me, and there's the end on't — v. I 
he holds Beelzebub .at tiie stave's end — v. 1 
the aims and ends of hui niug. . . . Meas.for Meas. i. 4 

but, when they live, to end — ii. 2 

I'll go with thee to the lane's end — iv. 3 

that B bitter to sweet end — iv. 6 

is truth to the end of the reckoning.. — v. 1 
you always end with a jade's trick . . /1/uc/i Ado, i. 1 
ere you flout old ends any longer.... — i. 1 

wasH not to tliis end, that thou — i. 1 ^ 

graces will appear, and there's an end — ii. 1 

any service to the world's end? — ii. I 

to what end? he would but make .... — ii. 3 

this is the end of the charge — iii. 3 

till t!iy sweet lifte end! Mid, N.'s Dream, ii. 3 

and then end life, when lend loyalty! — ii.3 
whose date till ill- itli -li;ill never end — iii. 2 
I \rill sing it ill (■. I :! i I ■ ! d of a iday — iv.l 
that is the trur Driin,,,! ufourend — v. 1 (pnil.) 

and her passion eiii-ls I'k- )il;iy — v. 1 

thus Thisby ends: adieu, ailieu, adieu — v. 1 

what is the end of study? Love's L.Lotl, i. 1 

at the tongue's end, canary to it .... — iii. 1 

at the fingers' ends, as'they say — v. 1 

to the end to crave your assistance .. — v. 1.^ 

not so big as the end of his club .. — v. I 

therefore, I'll darkly end the argument — \. i 

and so the measure ends — v. 2 

and to what end their shallow shows — v. 2 

my wit is at an end — v. 2 

for the latter end of his name ; — v. 2 

even to the opposed end of our — v. 2 

at the twelvemonth's end — v. 2 

doth not end like an old pl.ay — v. 2 

and then 't«ill eiuL That's too long — v. 2 

followed in the end of our show — v. 2 

I'll end my exhortation after ..Merch.of Venice, i. 1 

iu the end of autumn turned to — i. 3 

but in the end, truth will out — ii. 2 

I sliall end this strife, become — ii.3 

why the end is, he hath lost — iii. 1 

prove the end of his losses! — iii. i 

he makes a swanlike end — iii. 2 

tell her the process of Antonio's end - iv.l 

and to that end riders dearly hired.y4»you Like it, '\. 1 

I hope, I shall see an end ot him — i. 1 

you may see the end; for the best .... — _i. 2 

well, I'll end the song — ii. .'> 

hold death a whCe at the arm's end. . — ii. 

that ends this stranL'C eventful _ — ii. 7 

or at every sentence end — iii. 2 (verse,) 

and to tliat end, I have been with — iii. 3 

no end of his goods C''7'ci^"'rfl — iil.,"t 

let us do those ends tint iiere — v. 4 

as we do trust they'll end, in true.... _ — y. 4 

an end, sir, to vour business All's Well, ii. 2 

[Co/.] end, ere I do begin — ii. S 

at the latter end of a dinner — ii. a 

come, night; end day! — iii 2 

you may so in the end — iv. 2 

they attain to their abhorred ends — iv. 3 

ends well: still the fine's the crown (rf/).) — iv. 4 

all's well that ends well — v. I 

and if i t end so meet, the bitter past . . — y. 3 
to what end are all these words?... yarning- o/SA. i. 2 

'tis ray hope to end snece&sfuUy — iv.l 

bring our horses unto long-lane end — iv. 3 

and see the end of this controversy .. — v. 1 

to see the end of this ado — v. 1 

and there an end. Now, by my — y. 2 

from the ends of opposed winds Winter'sTale, 1. 1 

not weighing well the end — \. '- 

where chance may nurse, or end it .. — ii- 3 

will clear, or end, the business — iii-! 

but to make an end of the ship — iii. 3 

at upper end o' the table, now — i\.i 

every lane's end, every shop, chnrc'a -- iy. 3 

of death, end woes anil all Comedy of Errors, \. ! 

ray woes end likewise with — }• 1 

that my end was wrought by nature — i. 1 

at either end the mast — i- 1 

but here must end the story of — j- 1 

but to procrastinate his lifeless end .. — J. ! 

to the world's end, will have — ii. 2 

go thou and buy a rope's end — iv.l 

end. You sent me, sir, for a rope's end — iv. 1 
end did I bid thee hie thee home? irep.) — iv. 4 
your end; or rather the prophecy (rep.) — iy. 4 
and there an end; hut now, they tisq.. Macbeth, iij. I 
loves for his own ends, uot for you — — iii. 5 

unto a dismal fat:il end — iii- * 

O mv breast, thy hope ends here! — iv- 3 

for then it hath no end — .v. 7 

all things begun come to ill end .... King John, in. ! 

bring tills labour to a happy end — iii. 2 

but timt which ends all counsel — — ni- 4 
out of the bloody fingers' ends of John — iii. 4 

there end thv brave; and turn — y. 2 

let this end where it begun Richard II. i. 1 

grief must end her lil'e — j- 2 

for sorrow ends not when it seemeth — i. 2 

to make the end most sweet — i. 3 

four wanton springs, end in a word.. — i. 3 
ond in the end, having my freedom. . — _i. 3 
more are men's ends marked — ij. 1 

Coor, it ends a mortal woe — ii. 1 
loo<ly ollice of his timeless cud — iv. 1 

to make mv end too sudden — v. I 

on my head, and there an end — y. I 

to what end he gave ine \HeurytV. ii. 4 

if not, the end of life cancels — ill. 2 

Peto meet me at the town's end — iv. 2 



END 



END— to the latter end of a fray . . . A Henry I K iv. 2 

and tliey are for the town's end — v. 3 

unlooked for, and there's an end — v. 3 

to end tlie one of us — v. 4 

but in the end, to stop niineear iUenrylF. i. 1 

the rude scene may end, and darkness — i. \ 

let the end try the man — ii. 2 

do not bid me remember mine end . . — ii. 4 

drinks olf candles' ends for flap-dragons — ii. 4 

well, hearken the end — ii. 4 

let time shape, and tliere an end .... — iii. 2 

the question stands, briefly to this end — iv. 1 

and either end in peace, which heaven — iv. 1 

to end one doubt by death — iv. 1 

give successful end to this debate — iv. 4 

tliis apoiilcx will, certain, be liis end — iv. 4 

disease, and helps to end me — iv. 4 

even there my life miist end — iv. 4 

lately here in the end of a displeasing — (epil.) 

ouce afoot, end in one purpose Henry f. i. 2 

r Co^ A'n/.] and there's an end — ii. 1 

made a finer end, and went away . . . . — ii. 3 

aud smile upon liis fingers' ends .... — ii. 3 

to that end, as matching to his — ii. 4 

diseipliuesof war; and there's an end — iii. 2 

hath this day an end, the Daupliin. . — iii. 2 

dress us fairly for our end — iv. 1 

we shall never see the end of it — iv. 1 

ere it is made an end and finished . . — iv. 7 

in the latter end, and she must ■ — v. 2 

verses have contrived his end? \HenryVI. i. 1 

death, the Englislr cu-cle ends — i. 2 

argue the end of Edmimd — ii. 5 

delays have dangerous ends — iii. 2 

for that's the end of human misery.. — iii. 2 

bring this matter to the wished end.. — iii. 3 

shall lie die, and take his end (,rep.)..2Henry VI. i. 4 

here let them end it, and God — ii. 3 

and, in tlie end being rescued — iii. 1 

my hair be fixed on end, as one — iii. 2 

which fly before the battle ends — iv. 2 

thy arms be to no other end — v. 1 

let the vile world end, and the premised — v. 2 

outrun you, father, in the end ZHenryl'IA. 2 

and here ray life must end — i. 4 

over to the end they were created. ... — ii. 5 

my suit is at an end — iii. 2 

and to that end, I shortly mind to .. — iv. 1 

take that, to end thy agony — v. 5 

and ends in— Margaret Richard III. i. 3 

woman, end thy frantic curse — i. 3 

dotli stand on end to hear her curses — i. 3 

with old odd ends, stolen forth — i. 3 

either of you to be the other's end . . — ii. 1 

I see, as iu a map, the end of all .... — ii. 4 

outrage, end thy damned spleen — ii. 4 

your lordship came to see his end.... — iii. 5 

and to that end we wished your .... — iii. 6 

when my oratory grew to an end — iii. 7 

at lower end o' tlie hall iii. 7 

lie wonders to what end you have . . — iii. 7 

his piteous and unpitied end — iv. 4 

bloody will be thy end iv. 4 

unto her fair life's end iv. 4 

and in a bloody battle end thy days! — v. 3 

that puts him to these ends Henry Fill. i. 1 

to as much end, as give a crutch .... i. 1 

and to what end is this? nay, ladies — i. 4 

the cardinal is the end of tms — ii. 1 

like good angels, to my end ii. 1 

old time shall lead him to his end .. ii. 1 

who undertakes you to your end .... ii. 1 

heaven has an end in all ii. 1 

see this main end, tire French ii.2 

brought to know, our ends are houest — iii. 1 

mine own ends have been mine so . . iii. 2 

drawn together for mine own ends . . iii. 2 

any private malice iu his end _ iii. 2 

let all the ends, thou aim'st at ..... . — iii. 2 

she'll with the labour end v. 1 

and the end was ever, to do well .... v. 2 

I see your end, 'tis my undoing .... v. 2 

as I found it, and there an end. . Troilus .§- Cress. 1. 1 

time must friend, or end i. 2 

to end a tale of length _ i. a 

as near as tlie extremest ends of — i. 3 

be called to tlie world's end after _ iii. 2 

the end crowns all: and that old (jep.) — iv. 5 

I reck not though I end my life v. 6 

but, in the end, the villanies... Timon of Athens, iii. 3 

my lord and I have made an end — iii. 4 

but the extremity of both ends — iv. 3 

bring noblest minds to basest ends! . . — iv. 3 

words go by, and language end — v. 2 

famously, he did it to that end Coriolanus, i. 1 

and shrug, i' the end, admire i, 9 

from where he should begin, and end ii. 1 

for an end, we must suggest ii. 1 

to spend the time, to end it ii.2 

seal what I end withal! iii. I 

a brand to the end o' the world iii. i 

aud the end of it unknown — iii. i 

• which, for your best ends, you adopt — iii. 2 

he'd make an end of thy posterity . . iv. 2 

set at upper end o' the table iv. .5 

at table, and their thanks at end .... — iv. 7 

only their ends you have respected . . v. 3 

than seek the end of one v. 3 

great son, the end of war's uncertain — v. 3 

down; an end: this is the last v. 3 

and, to tills end, he bowed liis natm-e — v. 5 

fame wliich he did end all his — v. & 

but there to end, where he was v. .5 

wliose end is purposed by the mighty. Jul..Ccesar,iL 2 

a necessary end, will come, when — ii.2 

must end that work, the ides — v. 1 

might know the end of this day's — v. 1 

the day will end, and then the end.. — v. 1 

where I did bei;in, there shall I end — v. 3 

toon that war had end Intony §■ Cleopatra, i. 2 



L^i^J 

END— of Romans serve your iin<is\ Antony S,- Cleo. iii. 2 

I was of late as petty to his ends — iii. 10 

my chief end, like a right gipsy .... iv. 10 

left us ourselves to end ourselves — iv. 12 

make an end of what I — iv. 12 

the miserable change now at my end iv. 13 

but resolution, and the briefest end . . — iv. 13 

that thing that ends all other deeds. . v. 2 

not for such an end thou seek'st Cymbeline, i. 7 

to what end? wh.y should I write — ii. 2 

sou, let your mother end — iii. 1 

the better for you; and there's an end — iii. 1 

1 see into thy end, and am almost . . — iii. 4 
aud my end can make good use .... — iii. 5 

but for the end it works to — iii. 6 

'lack, to what end? who dares not . . — v. 3 
but end it by some means for Imogen — v. 3 
Posthumiis end his miseries [tep.) _ v. 4 (scroll) 
shall you speed in your journey's end — v. 4 
failing of her end by his strange absence — v. 5 

let me end the story; I slew — v. 5 

unto my end of stealing them — v. 5 

it was wise nature's end in the donation — v. 5 
worse end than death, that end . . Titus Andron. ii. 4 

I kept it to a worthy end — iii. 1 

will this fearful slumber have an end? — iii. 1 

brought up a neck to a fair end — iv. 4 

ordained to an honourable end — v. 3 

yet the end of all is bought Pericles, i. 1 

yet the end must be as 'tis — iii. 3 

and mine, to the end of generation .... — iii. 3 
and have not money enough in the end — iv. 6 

your iieace, I will end here — v. 1 

who did end, the minute I began — v. 1 

more craft, aud more corrupter ends Lear, ii. 2 

and to such wholesome end, as clears . — ii. 4 

and, in the end, meet the old course of .. — iii. 7 

benefit, to end itself by death? — iv. 6 

business of the world hath so an end .... — v. 1 

is this the promised end? — v. 3 

but their children's end Romeo 4' Juliet, (JJvol.) 

tliese violent delights have violent ends — ii. G 
but begins the woe, others must end — iii. 1 
the law should end, the life of Tybalt — iii. 1 
to earth resign ; end motion here .... — iii. 2 
there is no end, no limit, measm-e .. — iii. 2 

well, death's tlie end of all — iii. 3 

half a dozen friends, and there an end — iii. 4 
poison, I see, hath been his timeless end — v. 3 

each particular hair to stand on end Hamlet, i. 5 

all his bulk, and end his being — ii. 1 

to what end, my lord? — ii.2 

the humorous man shall end his part ... . — ii.2 
by opposing, end them? to die,— to sleep — iii. 1 

to say we end the heart-ach — iii. 1 

whose end, both at the first, and now, was — iii. 2 

but, orderly to end where I begun — iii. 2 

their ends none of our own — iii. 2 

shall be the end of iny business — iii. 2 

starts up, and stands on end — iii. 4 

to draw toward an end with you — iii. 4 

do the king best service in the end — iv. 2 

but to one table, that's the end — iv. 3 

without an oath, I'll make an end on't . . — iv. 5 

they say , he made a good end — iv. .') 

make your bouts more violent to that end — iv. 7 
there's a divinit.y that shapes our ends .. — v. 2 

seeming so, for liiy peculiar end Othello, i. 1 

blessed fig's end! the wine she drinks .. — ii. 1 
here is my journey's end, here is my butt — v. 2 

END-ALL— be-all and the end-all here.-l/acteW, i. 7 

ENDAMAGE-endamage him. r«'o Gen. of Ver. iii. 2 
new platforms to endamage them .. \ Henry FI. ii. 1 

ENDAMAGEMENT— 
marclied to your endamagement King John, ii. 1 

ENDANGER-endanger his body. TwoGen.of Fer. v. 4 
I will endanger ray soul gratis? . . Merry Wives, ii. 2 

ENDART-will I eudart mine age. i?omeo <§■ Juliet, i. 3 

ENDEARED— endeared to a king . . KingJohn, iv. 2 
when you were more endeared to ..IHenry IV. ii. 3 
so infinitely endeared, — ail to you.. Timon of.ith. i. 2 
I am so miich endeared to that lord — iii. 2 

ENDEAVOUR— sweat or endeavour .. Tempest, ii. 1 

endeavour thyself to sleep Twel/thA'ight, iv. 2 

will I endeavour any thing Much Ado, ii. 2 

the endeavour of this present breath. Lode's L. L. i. 1 

for al 1 your fair endeavours — v. 2 

witli all the fierce endeavour of your wit — v. 2 
best endeavours shall be done ..Mer. of Venice, ii. 2 
use thou all the endeavour of a man — iii. 4 
in the calendar of my past endeavours..<4U's'rri;, i. 3 

to my endeavours give consent — ii. 1 

with ray best endeavours Winter'sTale, iv. 3 

must awake endeavour for defence ..King JoJin, ii. 1 

excellent endeavour of drinking iHenrylF. iv. 3 

setting endeavour in continual moiioa. Henry F. i. 2 
my pains, and strong endeavours .... — v. 2 
you will endeavour for your French. . — v. 2 
and, with your best endeavour . . ..^Henry VI. iii. 1 
to live well, endeavours to trust.... jRic/iard ///. i. 4 
beyond all man's endeavour (rep.). Henry VIII. iii. 2 
I'll endeavour deeds to match.. Troilus ^ Cress, iv. o 
why should our endeavour be so loved — v. 1 1 
and look on their endeavour . . Antony Sr Cleo. iv. 10 

with our travels will endeavour it Pericles, ii. 4 

opinion of my more fierce endeavour Lear, ii. 1 

their endeavour keeps in the wonted ..Hamlet, ii. 2 

ENDEAVOURED— 
endeavoured my advancement ....\Henry VI. ii. b 

ENDED — our revels now are ended . . . .^Tempest, iv. 1 

would we had so ended! Twelfth Night, ii. 1 

went onward on this ended action ..Much Ado, i. 1 

the music ended, we'll fit — ii. 3 

after that tlie holy rites are ended . . — v. 4 

na.v, my choler is ended Lovers L. Lost, ii. 1 

and he ended the market — iii. 1 

torture let my life be ended AlVsWell, ii. 1 

but that I have not ended yet — iv. 3 

not ended, as fearing to hear — iv. 3 

all is well ended, if this suit — (epU.) 



END 



ENDED— dear queen, that ended. . Winter's Tale., v. 3 

this sword hath ended him \ Henry IF.y.Z 

when every thing is ended iHenrylF. iv. 3 

his cares are now all ended — v. 2 

our simple supper ended 2 Henry FI. ii. 2 

and, now the battle's ended SHenry FI. ii. 6 

and our sharp wars are ended.. Troilus^- Cress, v. 10 

hath been! Is it ended then? Coriolanus, iv. 3 

you have ended my business — iv. 3 

after my speech is ended Julius Ccesar, iii. 1 

hath almost ended his life's history . . — v. 5 
that the mad Brutus ended .... Antony ff Cleo. iii. 9 
your service for tliis time is ended . . Cymbeline, i. (i 
of insultment ended on his dead body — iii. 5 

how ended she? With horror — v. 5 

were better ended by their hatc/fomeo % Juliet, ii. 2 
was woe enough, if it had ended there — iii. 2 

this business is well ended Hamlet, ii. 2 

the griefs are ended, by seeing the worst. Ortd/o, i. 3 

ENDING— my ending is despair Tempest, (epil.) 

as ending anthem of my . . Two Gen.nfFerona, iii. 1 

for ending thee no sooner Meas.for Meas. iii. 1 

very ominous endings: no, I was Much Ado, v. 2 

a good I'envoy, ending in the goose. ione'sL.L. iii. 1 

foretel the ending of mortality King John , v. 7 

still ending at the arrival of 1 Henry IF. v. 2 

this praise, ending with— brother iHenrylF. i. 1 

engrossments to the ending father . . — iv. 4 
particular endings of his soldiers .... Henry V. iv. I 
this da.y to the ending of the world . — i v. 3 

here our play has ending Pericles, v. 3 (Gower) 

tlie passion ending, doth the purpose. . Hamlet, iii. 2 

ENDLESS— my endless dolour. Two Gen. of Ver. iii. 1 

an infinite and endless liar Alts Well, iii. 6 

[Col.'} thou and endless night KingJo/m, v. 6 

m solemn shades of endless night liicliard li.i.3 

e.xtinct with age, and endless night.. — i. 3 

sing her endless praise 1 Henry VI. i. 6 

heaven, from thy endless goodness. Henry VIII. v. 4 
between whose endless jar justice. Troil. ^ Cress, i. 3 

ENDOW— endow a child of thine ..Richard III. iv. 4 
within endows a man but he Cymbeline, i. 1 

ENDOWED— I endowed thy purposes.. Tempest, i. 2 
though she were endowed with all ..Much Ado, ii. I 
how shall she be endowed, if . . Timon of Athens, i. 1 
not forgot, wherein I thee endowed Lear, ii. 4 

ENDOWMENT-by his endowments.iii'fAard //. ii. 3 
the catalogue of his endowments had. Cymbeline, i. 5 

cunning were endowments greater Pericles, iii. 2 

how achieved you these eudow-ments.. — v. 1 

ENDURANCE-endurance of a block..^/McA.4(Zo, ii. 1 
the thousandth part of my endurance . . Pericles, v. 1 

ENDURE — would no more endure Tempest, iii. 1 

this I endure for thee! TwoGen. of Verona, v. 3 

'twill endure wind and weather. . Twelfth Niglit, i. 5 
youth's a stulf will not endure.... — ii. 3 (song) 

I could not endure a husband Much Ado, ii. 1 

I cannot endure my lady Tongue ,. — ii. 1 
.she cannot endure to hear tell of ... . — ii. I 
that he cannot endure in his age .... — ii. 3 

have patience, and endure — iv. 1 

when he shall endm-e the like — v. 1 

could endure the tooth-ach patiently — v. 1 
you can endure the livery ot a nun..Af/rf. N. Dr. i. 1 
ne shall endure such public shame. . Love'sL. L. i. 1 
I should endure, I would not yield .. — v. 2 

I will no longer endure it .AsyouLikeil,i. 1 

and I will no longer endure it — i. 1 

irksome to me, I will endure — iii. 5 

I could endure any thing before AWs Well. iv. 3 

to endure her loud alarums . . Taming of S/irew, i. 1 

might hardly endiure the din? — i.l 

hardly will he endure your sight. Winter'sTale, iv. 3 
and will endure our setting down .... Macbeth, v. 4 

let me endure your wrath, if 't be — v. S 

not able to endure the sight of dip(. Richard II. iii. 2 
never yet endure the moody frontier. I Hen ry/F. i. 3 
endure this tempestof exclamation?. 2Henry/>'.ii. 1 

cannot endure an apple-john — ii. 4 

I cannot endure such a fustian — ii. 4 

it will endure cold as another ina.n's.. Henry F. ii. 1 

give you patience to endure — ii.2 

and then they will endure handling — v. 2 
the substance sliall endure the like. 1 Henri/ FI. ii. 3 
braved, and must perforce endure it! — ii. 4 

for more I hardly can endure 2HenryFI.i. 4 

may she endure the flinty streets .... — ii. 4 

I am able to endm-e much — iv. 2 

as no christian ear can endure to Iiear — iv. 7 
shall I endure the sight of Somerset? — v. 1 
mortal eyes cannot endui-e the devil. i??cAard III. i.2 
these eyes could not endure that beauty's — i.2 
do me wrong, and I will not endure it — i. 3 

patience to endure the load — iii. 7 

ye endure to hear this arrogance?. HenryFXll. iii. 2 
to endure more miseries, and greater — iii. 2 
their dear brothers, are able to endure — v. 3 

I did endure not seldom Timon of Athens,]]. 2 

and not endure all threatenings? — iii. 5 

vows we have made to endure friends. Coriolanus, i. 6 
which easily endures not article .... — ii. 3 
or endure your heaviest censiure .... — .v. .'> 
can both endure the winter's cold.. JuUusCcesar, i. 2 
vill shake him or worse days endure — i. 2 
they should endure the bloody spur.. — iv. 2 
Bnitus, bay not me, I'll not endure it — iv. 3 
ye gods! must I endure all this? .... — iv. 3 
patience, to endure it now (rep.) .... — iv. 3 
cannot endure my absence.. /ln(ony ^Cleopatra, i. 2 
and covdd not endure a further view — iii. 8 
yet he, that can endure to follow .... — iii. 1 1 

sir, will not endure his yoke Cymbeline, iii. b 

and must endure our law — v. 6 

have I patience to endure all this? TOus^nfJron. ii. 3 
did endure to have his princely paws — ii. 3 
shall I endure this monstrous villany? — iv. 4 

I'll not endure it; his knights Lear^ i. 3 

too rough for nature to endure — iii. 4 

pour on; I will endure — iii. 4 

1 never shall endme herj dear my lord. . — v. 1 



iv. 1 



iii. 7 
V. 3 
V. 3 



END 



ENDURE— must endure their going Lear, v. 2 

I'll not eiulurc him. He Hlmll....Wo"Hfo4"*'«'''«^'»I» & 
vou'U iiiit fiiiluiT liiin! (ind shiiU mend — 1.5 
ul'imr cstiitL' niuv ri.it iiulm l- luizai-d.. HiiuiW, Hi. 3 

h.iwlieit thiit I cMihin- liini nut 0(AW(o, ii. 1 

or siill'oeatiin slriums. I'll lint endure it — iii. 3 

I will iiulwil.iioloii-iTendiiivit — iv. 2 

ENl)URi;i)-uiiil ii.it tip he ciuliucd...Uui-A Ado, iii. 3 
not to 1)0 eiiiliiiiill well, f-'o \i.mr...4sijou Like it, iv. 3 

tli;ithiivofii(liiivil»iii\'waa.iva — v. 1 

vour hftti'i-s Imvt ciuhiri.i \\w.TamiiigqfShrew,iv.3 

liitoIei-iiUU', not tolioeiidiiirdl _ v. 2 

till now, nuluieil nil wliuIkts .. .. Winter'sTalcv. 1 

hiive U't'oiv cudunil tlu' lilic Richnrd II. v. 5 

what extivniilics he eudinxd \U,;iryiy. i. 2 

to hear \vli:it li.iiiRiils ndu endured. . 1 Hiviry C/. i. \ 

taunts 1 often lune eiuhired Richard III. i. 3 

u night of groans endured of her .... — iv. 4 

till uow, 1 ne'er endiued Pericles, 

clasping to the mast, endured a sea .... - 
hath enilna'd a griel might eciual yours - 

ill rank and not t.i be endured riots I 

in hell-Maek night endured 

finding who 'twas that so endured • 

the wipiider is, he hath endured bo long .. 

he shall he endured Unmco &-Jnliel, i. a 

E-NDriUNti— 'tis past eiidurhlg ..Ifiiiler'sTale, ii. 1 

EN Dr K'S l'— what thou endnr'st! Ci/mbeline, ii. 1 

EXDY.MlON-sleeps with Kndymion..1/f;-.o/r«i. v. 1 
ENEMIES— mine enemies hrou^ht to .. Tempest, i. 2 

and these mine enemies, arc all — iii. 3 

lie at my nieiey all mine enemies — iv. 1 

sir; we are your enemies ..Two Gcii. ofVerotia, iv. 1 
manyeuemiesin Orsino's court.. .. Tweflh Sight,l\. 1 

that very oft we pity enemies — iii. 1 

hast made thine enemies — v. 1 

liurt their cuemies, if they durst Much Ado, v. 1 

vou two are rival enemies Mid. N.'s Dream, iv. 1 

licatcd mine enemies Merchant of renice, iii. 1 

overthrown more than your enemies, .is you Like iiji.2 
their graces serve them but asenemies'i' — li. 3 
such friends are thine enemies, knave ..■llt'siyelt^ i. 3 
in arms to spill mine enemies' blood. /i(H^yo/i«, iii, 1 
that the time's enemies may not have — iv. 2 

let me have no snlijeet enemies — iv. 2 

against your other enemies, I'll malse — iv. 2 

and fill up her enemies' ranks — v. 2 

bloody with the enemies of his kin.. Richard II. ii. 1 

stinging nettles to mine enemies — iii. 2 

death upon thy sovereign's enemies . . — iii. 2 
the mightiest of thy greatest enemies — v. 6 
pick tliee out tlirce such enemies. . . . 1 Henry IV. ii. 1 
under the hoofs of vaunting enemies — v. 3 
to know the numbers of our enemies.2Henry/r.iv. 1 

so much as think you enemies — iv. I 

from enemies heaven keep your — iv. 4 

why then be enemies with me too .... Henry V. ii. 1 
those, that were your father's enemies — ii.2 

and drove bock liis enemies 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

not fly hut to our enemies' throats . . — i. 1 

enclosed were the}' withtheir enemies — i. 1 

they left me 'midst my enemies — i. 2 

strike such terror to his enemies — ii. 3 

as it disanimates his enemies — iii. 1 

for I have seen our enemies' overtlrrow — iii. 2 
digest your angry choler on your enemies — iv. I 

of these our baleful enemies — v. 4 

overcome mine enemies in this 'iUenry VI. ii. 3 

and ban thine enemies — ii. 4 

60 mighty are his vowed enemies .... — iii. 1 

snares to trap mine enemies — 

thou not spirit to curse thine enemies? — 
he shall have the skins of our enemies — 

for our enemies shall fall before — 

the Frenchmen are our enemies — 

priests pray for enemies, but princes kill — 

made us by- words to our enemies. . . .SHenry VI. i. 1 

ay, to be rnurdered by his enemies .. 

with his enemies; so fled his enemies 

shines now, but Henry's enemies? .. 

to shroud yourself from enemies? .... 

all these the enemies to our poor .... 

rcpurcha.<e<l with the blood of enemies 

they, that were your enemies, are his. Richard III. i. i 

to prove us enemies, we followed . ' " 



[ 213 ] 



— 111. 1 



V. 2 



IV. 3 
V. 4 
V. 7 



111. 2 
iii. 2 
iii. 4 



_ _r enemies, the kindred of the queen — 
this day those enemies are put to death — 
how mine enemies, to-day at Pomfret — 

defend thee, here arc enemies — iii. S 

two enemies. Why, then thou hast (rc/i.) — iv. 2 

to watch the waning of mine enemies — iv. 4 

tcaeli me how to curse mine enemies — iv. 4 

the spirits of thine enemies — iv. 4 

if not to tight witli foreign enemies ., — iv. 4 
taught that you have many enemies. Henry VIII. ii. 4 

than my weak-hearted enemies dare — iii. 2 

have lett me naked to mine enemies.. — iii. 2 

I, with mine eiiemies, will triumph o'er — v. 1 

your enemies are many, and not small — v. 1 
observant toil, the enemies' weight. 7'roi;.^C< pji. 1.3 
rather be at a breakfast of enemies. rimo;i ofAth. i. 2 

those flatterers were thine enemies then — i. 2 

such as do even enemies exceed — i. 2 

slain in tight many of your enemies.. — iii. ,'1 

was wished to love his enemies iv. 3 

the enemies' drum is heard, and fearful — v. 3 

those enemies of Tiinon's, and mine own v. i 

when you curse them as enemies .... Curiolanta, i. 1 

thou inadcst thine enemies shake. ... — i. 4 

3'ou have been a scourge to her enemies — ii. 3 

we have as many friends OS enemies — iii. 1 

killingonr enemies? the blood he liath — iii. I 

her enemies' marks upim me iii. 3 

vour enemies, with nodding iii. J 

he has a.s many friends as enemies .. — iv. ,'» 

your enemies, and his, find sometliing — iv. 8 

and therein showed like enemies — iv. (i 

of frieudrthip with thine enemies.. Ju/mfCf7Mir, iii. I 

the enemies of Cxsur shall say this. . iii. I 

bayed atiout with many enemies ... . — iv. I 



ENEMIES— wnmg I mine enemie8?.,'u/. Caiiar, Iv. 2 
such men my friends than enemies . . — v. 4 
our enemies have beat us to the pit .. — v. !> 
will not bear your enemies' buats . . Cymheline, iii. 1 
chastised with arms our enemies', litus Andron. i. 1 
brought to voke, the enemies of Rome — i. 2 

thrown (l.)wn Ml limiiv enemies — iii. 1 

work oiiiil'usioii on his enemies — v. 2 

to be a torment tt) iHiiu' enemies? — v. 2 

least, niuke lliem liis enemies — v. 2 

sent her enemies iiiit'i liie grave — v. 3 

to beg ri-iiet'uiiinii^ K. Hue's enemies — v. 3 

to wage against mine enelnies Lear, i. 1 

find out their enemies now — iii. 2 

to know our enemies' minds — iv. 6 

subjects, enemies to peace Romeofy Juliet, i. 1 

where be these enemies? Capulet! .. — v. 3 

makes friends of enemies Hamlet, iii. 2 

none hut his enemies — iv. 5 

ENIO.M Y — being an enemy to me Tempest, i. 2 

till mine enemy has more power — i. 2 

Valentine I'll hold an enemy.. Two Gen. of Ver. ii. 6 

if his enemy deliver it — iii. 2 

I will not be your friend, iior euemy — iii. 4 

care's an enemy to life TwelflhNight, i. 3 

wherein the pregnant enemy does mucii — ii. 2 
consider, he's an enemy to mankind — iii. 4 
sworn enemy, Andrew Ague-cheek — iii. 4 (elial.) 
ground enough, (Jrsiiio's enemy .... — v. 1 
U cunning enemy, that, to eaten. Mcas./or Meas. ii. 2 
than fight with mine enemy yrep.).. Much Ado, iv. I 

lend it rather to thine enemy Mer. of Venice, i. 3 

engaged my friend to his mere enemy — iii. 2 
would not hold out euemy for ever . . — iv. 1 
I did find him still mine enemy . . .is you LiUe it, i. 2 
the enemy of all your graces lives . . — ii. 3 
here shall he see no enemy but winter — ii. 5 (song) 

smooth with mine enemy — v. 4 

the enemy to tlie living (_rep.) AWs Well, i. 1 

be able for thine enemy rather — i. 1 

captain, and an enemy, a guide — i. 1 

he knows not from the enemy — iii. G 

any drum of the enemy's — iv. I 

friend, and then mine enemy .... Winter's Tale, i. 2 

it will let in and out the enemy — i. 2 

to give mine enemy a lasting wink . . — i. 2 
visible an enemy, should chase us. . . . — v. 1 
given to the common enemy oi nvm .. Macbeth, iii. 1 
whose execution takes your enemy off — iii. 1 

know, Banquo was your enemy — iii. 1 

Bceurity is mortal's cliiefest enemy — iii. s 

being no further enemy to you King John, ii. 1 

faith an enemy to faith — iii. 1 

to offer service to your enemy — v. 1 

thy adverse pernicious enemy Richard II. i.Z 

so far as to mine enemy — i. 3 

into despair an enemy s hope — ii.2 

proportionable to the enemy — ii.2 

let the dangerous enemy measure .... — iii. 2 
and, though mine enemy, restored . . — iv. 1 
for though mine enemy thou hast ever — v. 6 
as Owen Glendower for an enemy ..IHenrylV. i. 3 
art my nearest and dcarest'Cnemy?.. — iii. 2 

so arc the horses of the enemy — iv. 3 

stand against us like an enemj; — iv. 3 

not so terrible to the enemy as it is ..2HenryIV. i. 2 
as many holes in an enemy's battle.. — iii. 2 

presents no mark to the enemy — iii. 2 

m goodly form comes on the enemy — iv. 1 

nor do I, as an enemy to peace — iv. 1 

plucking to unfix an enemy — iv. 1 

fmious knight, and valorous enemy — iv. 3 
as with an enemy, that had before . . — iv. 4 
joined with an enemy proclaimed .... Henry V. ii. 2 
the enemy more miglity than he seems — ii. 4 

what terras tlic enemy stood on — iii. (i 

unto an enemy of craft and vantage — iii. 6 
the enemy is loud; you heard (rep.) — iv. 1 

it may be, his enemy is a gentleman — iv. 7 

and an enemy to our person — iv. 7 

love de enemy of France? No (rep.).. — v. 2 
arm, arm! the enemy doth make . . 1 Henry VI. ii. 1 
froward by nature, enemy to peace . . — iii. 1 
and set upon our boasting enemy. . .. — iii. 2 
when they heard he was thine enemy — iii. 3 

that I, thy enemy, due thee — iv. 2 

he fables not, I hear the enemy — iv. 2 

mine enemy; nay, more, an enemy.. 2Ht'«ry^7. i. 1 
my liefest liege to be mine enemy .. — iii. 1 

proved an enemy to tlic flock — iii. 1 

hath he conversed with the enemy .. — iii. 1 
although the duke was euemy to liim — iii. 2 

for guinanee 'gainst the enemy — iii. 2 

'tis well seen, he foimd an enemy.... — iii. 2 
Biicaks witli the tongue of an enemy — iv, 2 

but tliat tliou art so fast mine eneniy — v. 2 
to give the enemy way; and to secure — v. 2 

as the enemy hath been ten SHenryVI. i. i 

apprehend you as his enemy — iii. 1 

king Lewis becomes your enemy — iv. 1 

I never sued to friend, nor enemy. . Richard III. i. 2 
I must be held a rancorous enemy .. — i. 3 

and to myself become an enemy — ii.2 

God's enemy: then if you fight (re/).) — v. 3 

a thing devised by the enemy — v. 3 

my lord, the eneniy is passctt — v. 3 

I knew he were mine enemy? Henry VIII. ii. 4 

that you are mine enemy — ii. 4 

as I could wish mine enemy — iii. 2 

the repining enemy commends.. 7>oi(u»i5-CrMi. i. 3 

an enemy intends you harm — ii.2 

charge on heaps theenemy flying.... — iii. 2 

wou Id be rid of such an enemy — iv. 5 

my retentive enemy, my gaol? 7'imono//((Ae'nt.iii. 4 

I'll believe him as an enemy — iv. 3 

Marciusis chief enemy to the people. Con'ofaniw, i. 1 

Marcius your old enemy — i. 2 (letter) 

say, has our general met the enemy? — i. 4 

where is the enemy? — i. 6 

every gash was uu enemy's grave... — ii. I 



ENF 



ENEMY— he was your enemy Coriolanut, ii. 3 

that he's your fixed enemy, and revoke — ii. 3 
follow thine enemy in a fiery gulf .. — iii. 2 
enemy to the people, and his country — iii. 3 
the people's enemy is gone (;»/).) .... — iii. 3 

say, their great eneniy is gone — iv. 2 

my love's upon this enemy town .... — iv. 4 
more a friend than e'er on enemy.... — iv. 5 

given your enemy your shield — v. 2 

wiut ne'er so niueli your enemy JuliutCa^tar, ii. 2 

as tt friend, or an enemy? — iii. 3 

'tis better, that the enemy seek us .. — iv. 3 
the enemy, inarching along by them — iv. 3 
the enemy inereasctn every day .... — iv. 3 
the enemy would not come down. ... — v. 1 

the enemy comes on in gallant — v. 1 

myself have to mine own turned enemy — v. 3 

troops are friend or enemy v. 3 

that no enemy shall ever take alive.. — v. I 
my glory unto an enemy's t\ium\)\\. Ant. ^Cleo. iv. 12 
though enemy, lost aim, and could not? — iv. 12 

am no further your enemy Cymbdine, i. :> 

for his master, and enemy to my son — i. 6 
thine enemy; receive it from me, then — iii. 1 
thus mine enemy fell; and thus I set — iii. 3 
I must report ye my master's enemy — iii. 5 

fortii I wear it as your enemy — iii. 5 

and if mine enemy but fear the sword — iii. 6 
though he came our enemy, remember — iv. 2 

the enemy full-hearted, lolling — v. 3 

and enemy to our general name!. Titus .indron. ii. 3 
destruction on the enemy's castle? .. — iii. 1 
besides, this sorrowMs an enemy .... — iii. I 
she is thy enemy, and I thy friend .. — v. I 
from her bosom took the enemy's point — v. 3 
canst thou wish thine enemy to be? . . Pericles, iv. 6 

profess myself an enemy to al 1 Lear, i. 1 

to descry the strength o the enemy — iv. 5 

mine enemy's dog, though he had "bit me — iv. u 

eombine together 'gainst the enemy — v. 1 

the enemy's in view, draw up — v. I 

followed liis enemy king, and did him .. — v. 3 
the only son of your great eneniy. /(cnnco 4- /u/iX, i. 
that I must love a loathed enemy . . — i. a 
'tis but thy name, that is my enemy — ii. 3 

because it is an enemy to thee — ii.2 

I have been feasting with mine enemy — ii. 3 
to sunder his that was thine euemy? — v. 3 

I would not hear your enemy say so Hamlet, i. 2 

directly seasons him his enemy — iii. 2 

his madness is poor Hamlet's enemy .... — v. 2 

against tlie general enemy Ottoman Othello, i. 3 

that men should put an enemy in their.. — ii. 3 
that thrust had been mine enemy indeed — v. 1 
ENFEEBLE— revengingly enfeebles.. Cj^mfte/inff, v. 2 
ENFEEULED-sickncssmueheufeebled Hen.V. iii. 8 
or with light skirmishes enfijcblcd ..i Henry VI. i. 4 
ENFEOFl EU-eni'eotfed himself to.lHenry/;'. iii. 2 
ENFETTEKED— soul is so enfettered . . Oihelh, ii. 3 
ENFORCE— enforce them to this place. Tempest, v. 1 

spirits to enforce, art to enchant — (epil.) 

enforce me marry vain Thurio. TiroGen.nfVer. iv. 3 
so to enforce, or qualify tlie its-wa. Meas. fur Meas. i. I 

and entbree them against Mm — v. 1 

shall I enforce thy love?.. Lore's L.Lost, iv. 1 (letter) 

to enforce the pained impotent — v. 2 

customary bounty can entbree you.Mer. of Ven. iii. 4 
sword, enforce a thievish living. . .is you Like a, ii. 3 

I will no more enforce mine otrice All's Well, ii. 1 

in despite entbree a watery eye.. Tarn, of ah. 1 (ind.) 
to enforce tiiese rights so forcibly .... King John, i. 1 

spleen than powder can enforce — ii. 2 

1 will enforce it easily to my love .. — ii.2 

men enforce attention, like Richard II. ii. 1 

we will enforce his trial — iv. 1 

to enforce a poor widow illenrylV. ii. I 

lack of means enforce you not to evil — v..'! 
and his countenance enforces homage. Henry V. iii. 7 

love is blind, and enforces v. 2 

and hunger will enforce them 1 Henry Vl.i.t 

could it not entbree them to relent. . 2 //eiir!/ /'/. iv. 4 

will you enforce me to a world Hicltard HI. iii. 7 

be evils, and enforce us kill . . Timon nf Athens, iii. 5 

thou rather shalt euforec it with v. a 

enforce his pride, and his old hate. . Corlolanus, ii. 3 

enforce him with his envy to the people iii. 3 

enforce the present execution of .... — iii. 3 

to enforce the like from him Antony fj Cleo. i. 3 

to enforce no further the griefs between — ii. 2 
we will extenuate rather than enforce — v. 2 
we'll enforce it from thee by a sharp. Ci/mdc/Zne, iv.3 

with prayers, enforce their charity Lear, ii. 3 

thus 1 enloree thy rotten j,aws ..llomeo 4- Juliet, v. 3 

with all his might, to entbree it on Othello, i. 2 

the place, the torture— O enforce it! — v. 2 

EN FORCED-eii forced my heart. Tuo Gen. of Ver. i. 2 
that enforced the law against it!..Uea./or .Ven. iv. I 
being else by faith enforced to call . . litucli Ado, v. 4 
lamenting some enforced eluistity..;»/i(/..V. Ur. iii. I 
where men enforced do speak. .i/ocA.o/ )'cnice, iii. 2 
I was enforced to scud it after him .. — v. I 

forgive me this enforced wrong — v. I 

in some part enforced to digress. Taming t^ Sh. iii. 3 

did, myself enforced him to — v. 1 

the spot of this enforced cause King John, v. 2 

finds it an enlbrcod pilgrimage Richard II. i. 3 

we are enforced to faiiii our royal .... — i. i 
we were enforced, for safety sake . . 1 HenrylV. v. 1 

and are eiifurceil from our most 2 Henry IV. iv. 1 

to the which course if I be enforced. . — iv. 3 
he is enforced to retire, and the dukcHciiri//'. iii. 6 

as stones enforced from the old — iv. 7 

enforced me. Enforced thee! 3 Henry VI. i. 1 

at my service, like enforced smiles. Kic/iurd III. iii. 5 

enforced us to this execution? — iii. 5 

nor his on'ences entbrccd Julius Cresar, iii. 2 

it usetli an enforced ceremony — iv. 2 

who, much enforced, shows a hasty.. — iv.3 
thy mistresscnforced; thy gni-menls. Cymif /in», iv. 1 
garments, wliich he enforced from me — v. & 



ENF 



[ -314 ] 

ENGLAND— brother of England ....King John, ii. 2 

France friend with England! — iii. 1 

from the mouth of England add thus — iii. 1 

brother of England you blaspheme .. — iii. 1 

what is opposite to England's love .. — iii. 1 

away for England; haste before .... — iii. 3 

for England, cousin — iii. 3 

bloody England into England gone — iii. 4 

well could I bear that England had — iii. 4 

to England, if you will — iii. 4 

lead thy foot to England's throne ... . — iii. 4 

Faulconbridge is now in England . . — iii. 4 

for England go; I will whet on the king — iii. 4 

from i ranee to England; never such — iv. 2 

ray soul, and England keep my bones! — iv. 3 

easy dost Oioutalve all England up! — iv. 3 

and England now is left to tug — iv. 3 

of your dear mother England, blush — v. 2 

to the revolts of England here — v. 4 

of the part of England. "Whither — v. 6 

this England never did, (nor never.. — v. 7 

if England to itself do rest but true.. — v. 7 

save back to England, all the Richard II. i. 3 

then England's ground, farewell .... — i. 3 

as were our England in reversion his — 1. 4 

this England, this nurse, this teeming — ii, I 

pelting farm: England, Ijound in — ii. 1 

that England, that was wont to — ii. 1 

for sleeping England long time have I — ii. 1 

landlord of England art tiiou now .. — ii. 1 

nor England's private wrongs — ii. 1 

to seek that name in England — ii. 3 

to touch a dust of England's ground? — ii. 3 

be king of England, it must be granted — ii. 3 

my lords of England, let me tell — ii. 3 

to me, than Bolingbroke to England — ii. 3 

become the flower of England's face — iii. 3 

Bolingbroke's return to England.... — iv. 1 

if my word be sterling yet in England — iv. 1 
gallows standing in England whsa-.X Henry IV. i. 2 

when I am king of England, I shall — ii. 4 

Bworn upon all the books in England — ii. 4 

three good men unhanged in England — ii. 4 

he would swear truth out of England — ii. 4 

shall the son of England prove a thief — ii. 4 

that chides the banks of England .. — iii. 1 

very enually: England, from Trent — iii. 1 

that all in England did repute him dead — v. 1 

England did never owe so sweet — v. 2 

nor can one England brook a double — v. 4 
is not a better wench in England . .^UenrylV. ii. 1 

did all the cMvalry of England move — ii. 3 

is the foulmouth'dst rogue in England — ii. 4 

in England the most valiant gentleman — iv. 1 

whiles England shall have generation — iv. 2 

England shall double ^ild (rep.) .... — iv. 4 

the' immediate heir of England! .... — v. 2 
never king of England had nobles .... Henry P.S. '2 

left their bodies here in England — i. 2 

that England, being empty of defence — i. 2 

once the eagle England being in prey — i. 2 

divide your happy England into four — i. 2 

never valued tills poor seat of England — i. 2 

all the youth of England are on fire — ii. (cho.! 

O England! model to thy inward .. — ii. (oho.) 

no king of England, if not kin" of . . — ii. 2 

for England his approaches maiies . . — ii. 4 

if we heard that England were busied — ii. 4 

from Henry king of England do crave — ii. 4 

from our brother England? From him — ii. 4 

back to our brother of England — ii. 4 

what to him from England? Scorn .. — ii. 4 

nothing but odds with England _ ii. 4 

leave your England, as dead — iii. (chorus) 

whose limbs were made in England — iii. I 

God for Harry! England! and — iii. 1 

let him greet England with our sharp — iii. 5 

bar Harry England, that sweeps — iii. 5 

and let him say to England, tliat we — iii. ."j 

bring us word of England's fall — iii. 5 

say mou to Harry of England, though — iii. B 

England sliall repent his folly — iii. B 

alas, vioor Harry of England! he longs — iii. 7 

peevish fellow is this kuig of England — iii. 7 

that island of England breeds — iii. 7 

my brotliers to my lords of England — iv. 1 

that England shall couch do\\'n in fear — iv. 2 

ten thousand of those men in England — iv. 3 

wish not a man from England — iv. 3 

tentlemen in England, now a-bed . . — iv. 3 

ost not wish more help from England — iv. 3 

tin-ice- worthy signieur of England . . — iv. 4 

or in France, or m England — iv. 8 

to Calais; and to England then — iv. 3 

invites the king of England's stay — v (chorus) 

to England will I steal, and there I'll — v. 1 

most worthy brother England, fairly met — v. 2 

happy be the issue, brother England — v. 2 

freat kings of France and England! — v. 2 

cannot speak your England — v. 2 

sooner persuade Harry of England . . — v. 2 

is't so, my lords of England? — v. 2 

kingdoms of France and England . . — v. 2 

sword 'twixt England and fair France — v. 2 
greatly lived this star of England . . — v. 2 (cho.) 
crowned king of France and England — v. 2 (clio.) 

and made his England bleed — v. 2 (cho.) 

England ne'er lost a king (rfp.) \HenryVl.\. I 

of England's coat one half is cut away — i. 1 

England all Olivers and Rowlands bred — i. 2 

or tear the lions out of England's coat — i. .'J 

third Edward king of England — ii. 4 

was he not in England prisoner? .... — iii. 3 

the sea from England to France .... — iv. 1 

from tlience to England; where I. . .. — iv. 1 

in arms to Harry king of England .. — iv. 2 

a little herd of England's timorous.. — iv. 2 

Talbot, anil England's right — iv. 2 

Talbot, Fiance, and England's honour — iv. 3 

the trust of England's honour — iv. 4 



ENG 



ENFORCED— she was enforced . . TUusAndron. v. 3 
bv an enforced obedience of planetary .... Lear, i. 

E>r FORCE DLY-dost it enforcedly. Timon ofAth. iv. 

ENFORCEMENT— let gentleness my strong 

enforcement be As you Like if, ii. 

by what rougli enforcement you got. . All's Well, v. 

upon enforcement, flies with iUenryll'. i. 

his enforcement of the city wives. . Richard III. iii. 
mere enforcement shall acquittance me — iii. 
leisure and enforcement of the time .— v. 

F.Nl-'OKCEST- enforceBtlaughter.iojje'sL.Losi, iii. 

KMFR.VNCllISE— 

I will enfrancliise thee Two Gcn.of Verona, iii, 

Costard, I will enfranchise thee.im'c '^ L. Lost, iii. 

perform it, to enfranchise you Richard III. i. 

tluit kingdom, and enfranchise ..Anlony^-Clen. i. 

E NFRANCHISED— 
she hatli enfranchised thera. Two Gen.of Verona, ii. 

and enfranchised with a clog Much .Irfo, i. 

thence freed and enfranchised.. .. IVirtter^sTale, ii. 
being enfranchised, bid him come.. Timon o/Alh.^ i. 
Hipparchus, my enfranchised. . Antony Sr Cleo. iii. 1 
entranchised and come to light . . TUusAndron. iv. 

ENFRANCHISE.MENT— 
request the enfranchisement of Arthur ..John, iv. 

uncontrolled enfrauchisement Richard 1 1, i. 

and to beg enfranchisement immediate — iii. 

swords for my enfranehiseraent 2Henry VI. v. 

beg enfranchisement for Pnblius. ./ui/us Ccesar, iii. 
libertv, freedom, and enfranchisement! — iii. 

ENFREED— the enfreed Antenor. Trail. & Cress, iv. 

ENFREEDOMING— 
enfreedoming thy person Love^sL. Lost, iii. 

ENGAGE— I do engage my \l{e....Asyou Like it, v. 

engage it to the trialT if thou Ricliard II. i v. 

I will engage my word to thee \ Henry IV. ii. 

I here engage my words Olltello, iii. 

ENGAGED— enough, I am engaged. . Much Ado, iv. 
too old to be engaged to yoxmg'. .. Mid.N. Dream, i. 
break the vow I am engaged m.. Love' sL. Lost, iv. 
I have engaged myself to (rep.").Mer. of Venice, iii. 
to thee engaged a prince's wovd.. Comedy of Err. v. 
hither come engaged by my oath. . ..Richard II. i. 

impressed and engaged to fight I Henry IV. i. 

[Co/. A■n^] to be engaged in Wales..., — iv. 
Westmoreland, that was engaged .... — v. 
we all, that are engaged to this loss. .iHenrylV. i. 
our several honours all engaged. TroiVw^ <§• Cress, ii. 2 
I do stand engaged to many Glreeks — v. 3 
'tis all engaged, some forfeited. Timon of Athens, ii. 2 
than honesty to honesty engaged. Jwi?'ws Ctesar, ii. " 
we have engaqied ourselves too far. .intony % Cleo. iv. 
struggling to be free, art more engaged! Hamlet, iii. 

ENGAGEMENT-allmyengagements../iiZ.C«'scr)-,ii. 

ENGAGING-engagingandredecniing.rroiZ.<5-C;-.v. 

ENGAObED— engaoled my tongue . . Richard II. i. 

ENGENDER— engenders maladies. Love'sL, Lost, iv. 
for it engenders cnoier, planteth.. Taming ofSh. iv. 

and that engenders thunder 1 Henry VI. iii. 

of a Idng engenders love amongst.... — iii. 
every ckiud engenders not a storm.. 3Hci!r!/ VI. v. 

engenders the black toad Timon of Athens, iv. 

let heaven engender hail.. ,^in/o7n/<§-C/eopa/ra, iii. 1 

ENGENDEKED-isengenderedjlfCT.o/reji.iii.2(son= 
that sacred pity hath engendered. /Is you Like it, ii. . 
the mother that engendered thee.. ./"w^msCcpsar, v. 3 
it is engendered: hell and night must . . Othello, i. 3 

ENGENDERING— 

the engendering of toads .... Troitus ij Cressida, ii. 3 

ENGILD-moreengildstlienight.iV/<'i.A'.'s£)rmm,iii.2 

ENGINE — any engine, would Inot have. Tempest, ii. 1 
and here an engine fit for. . Two Gen. of Verona, iii. 1 

and all these engines of lust AlCsWell, iii. 5 

like au engine not portable.. Troilus Sr Cressida, ii. .3 

he moves like an engine Coriolanus, v. 4 

shall fill our engines with SidvicG. Titus Andron. ii. 1 
tliat delightful engine of her thouglits — iii. 1 

hath brought the fatal engine in — v. 3 

like an engine, wrenched Lear, i. 4 

O you mortal engines, whose rude Othello, iii. 3 

and devise engines for my life — iv. 2 

ENGINEER— a rare engineer. ...r)-oi7us<5-Cress. ii. 3 
the engineer hoist with his own putar.. Hamlet, iii. 4 

ENGIRT— my body round engirt. ...2Henjj/r/. iii. 1 
that gold must round engirt these . . — v. 1 

EN(iI>AND— were I in England now . . Tempest, ii. 2 

as any man in England Merry Wives, i. 1 

for the bed of Ware in England. Tu'elfth Night, iii. 2 
the young baron of England? . . Merch. of Venice, i. 2 
a fourtii for England, — and other .... — i. 3 

they have in England a coin — ii. 7 

from Mexico, and England — iii. 2 

the old Robin Hood of England . . As you Like it, i. 1 
where England? I looked mr. Comedy of Errors, iii. 2 
false man does easy: I'll to England. . Macbeth, ii. 3 
are bestowed in England, and in Ii-eland — iii. 1 
fl V to the court of England, and unfold . . — iii. 6 
is fled to England. Fled to England? .... — iv. \ 

from gracious England, have 1 offer — iv. 3 

since my here remain in England — iv. 3 

gracious England hath lent lis — iv. 3 

the borrowed majesty of England. . . . King John, i. 1 

even till tliat England, hedged in — ii. 1 

may from England bring that right — ii. 1 

whiit England says, say oriefly — ii. 1 

England, impatient of your just — ii. 1 

toISngland; if that war return (rep.) — ii. 1 
thou trom loving England art so far — ii. 1 

England was Geffrey s right — ii. 1 

England and li'elan'd, Anjou, Touraine — ii. 1 
'tis France for England. England for — ii. 1 
we arc the king of England's subjects — ii. 1 
doth not the crown of England prove — ii. 1 

hearts of England's breed — ii. 1 

Artliur of Brctagne, England's king — ii. 2 

England, thou liast not saved one — ii. 2 

for England; wlio's your king? (rep.) — ii. 2 

let France and England mount — ii. 2 

is near to Englo.nd: look upon — ii. 2 

speak England first; that hath been — ii. 2 



ENGLAND—the fraud of England. . I Henry VI. iv. 4 

never to England shall he bear — iv. 4 

tliy youth, and England's fame — iv. B 

wliose life was England's glory — iv. 7 

tlie realms of England, and of'France — v. I 

intend slie shall be England's queen — v. 1 

before tliat England give the French — v. 3 

let her head fall into England's lap. . — v. 3 

if happy England's royal king l3e tree — v. 3 

I'll over then to England with this news — v. 3 

may be England's royal queen — Y.:> 

to cross the seas to England, and be — v. .'i 
in sight of England and lier lordly.. 2 f/enri/ VI. i. 1 

great king of England, and my gracious — ;. 1 

queen Margaret, England's happiness! — i. 1 

for Hem-y king of England, that — i. 1 (art.) 

and crown hsr queen of England .. — i. 1 (art.) 
the king of England's own proper cost — i. 1 (art.) 

brave peers of England, pillars of .. — i. 1 

[leers of England, shameful is .... — i. I 

but England's kings have had — i. 1 

the realms of England, France — i. 1 

1 have of fertile England's soil — i. 1 

and England's dear-bought queen . . — i. 1 

rule hatli pulled fair England downi — i. 1 

the fashion in the court of England? — i. 3 

your highness came to England [rep.) — i. 3 

can do more in Eucland than the king — i. 3 

more in England tKan the Nevilg . . — i. 3 

so bad as tlime to England's king .. — J. 4 

England knows thine insolence .... — ii. 1 

wliicli is infallible to England's crown — ■ ii. 2 

sovereign Richard, England's king! — ii. 2 

greatest man in England, but tlie king — ii. 2 

king Henry govern England's helm — ii. 2 

Humphrey is no little man in England — iii. 1 

as I hope for fertile England — i i i. 1 

in studying good for England! — iii. 1 

that England was defamed by — iii. I 

I will stir up in England some — iii. 1 

by awkward wind from England's bank — iii. 2 

blow towards England's blessed shore — iii. 2 

I lost fair England's view — iii. 2 

or banished fair England's territories — iii. 2 

I'll give thee England's treasure — iii. 3 

the silver spring where England drinks — iv. 1 

in England, since gentlemen came up — iv. 2 

there shall be, in England, seven .... — iv. 2 

for thereby is England maimed — iv. 2 

only, that the laws of England may — iv. 7 

shall be the iiarlianient ot England . . — iv. 7 

spare England, for it is your native — iv. n 

may England curse my wretclied reign — i\'. i' 

ne'er be said, while England stands.. — iv. 10 

to entertain great England's lawful king^ — v. ! 

of Nwles, England's Dloody scourge — v. 1 

rightful heir to England's royal seat . — v. I 
and now in England, to our heart's. .2fo!?ri/ VI. i. 1 

what good 'is this to England — i. I 

the crown of England, father, which is — i. 2 

you that would be England's king? — i. 4 

George from Burgundy to England? — ii. 1 

degree is, England's royal tlirone (rep.) — ii. I 

to be crowned England"'s royal king — ii. B 

dwell, when I was king of England? — iii. 1 

fair queen of England, worthy Margaret — iii, 3 

the seat of England's true-anointed — iii- 3 

to England's king in lawful marriage — iii. 3 

then England's messenger, return .. — iii. 3 

become my wife, and England's queen — iv. 1 

that of itself, England is safe, if true — iv. 1 

his mind, be Edward England's king — iv. 3 

come hither, England's hope _ — iv. B 

king of England and France — i v. 7 (proel. ) 

once again proclaim us king of England — iv. 8 

sit in England's royal throne , — v. 7 

have I in being England's queen . . Richard III. i. 3 

mother, wife, nor England's queen! — i. 3 

thence we looked toward Engl and .. — i. 4 

lose the royal ty of England's throne — iii. 4 

woe, woe, for England! not a whit,. — iii. 4 

O bloody Richard! miserable England! — iii. 4 

the peace of England, and our ))ersons' — iii. -'j 

save Pjehard, England's royal king! — iii. 7 

happy were England, would this .... — iii. 7 

Richard. England's worthy king! .. — iii. 7 

nor England s counted queen — i v. 1 

thy unrest on England's lawful earth — i\'. 4 

intend to make her queen of England — iv. 4 

infer fair England's peace by this.... — iv. 4 

he makes for England, here to claim — iv. 4 

who is England's king, but great York's — iv. 4 

aud conquer for fair England's sake! — v. 3 

Erecious by the foil of England's chair — v. 3 

gilt, gentlemen of England! fight.. — v. 3 

England hath long been mad — v. 4 

make poor England weep in streams — v. 4 
not a man in England can advise. . Henry VIII. i. I 

betwixt England and France, might — i. 1 

the duke shall govern England — i. 2 

for little England you'd venture .... — ii. 3 

Henry king of England, come into . . — ii. 4 

Katharine, queen of England (rep.) 

in England, but little for my profit 

mighty princess of England, Elizabeth 

to the happiness of England, an aged — v. 4 

he shall with speed to England Hamlet, iii. 1 

■■"•'"■ — iii. 1 



— iii. 1 



iii. 4 



if she find him not, to England .send hii 
and he to England shall along with you 

I must to England; you know that? 

for England. For England? Ay, Hamlet 

but, come, for England! farewell (rep.).. — iv. 3 

and, England, if mv love thou hold'st .. — iv. 3 

do it, England? for like the hectic — 'iv. 3 

embassador that was bound for England — iv. 6 
hold their course for England .. — iv. 6 (letter) 

into Enu'land. Ay, marry, why (rep.) — v. I 

Denmark's health, and England's too .. — v. 2 

.as England was Ids faitld'ul tributary .. — v. 2 

shortly known to him from England .... — v. 2 



KNGLANU— cmbiissiulors of England . . Hamlel, V. 2 
live t" lieur tliu new.'i from EngUuul .... — v. 2 
our alt'nirs I'mm ICiiiThuul coniv too lute.. — v. 2 
nnil V"U IVoni KiiLrliinil, are here arrived — v. 2 

I ica'nied it in lOn-huul, wheiv Othello, ii. 3 

I'll do vim jiistiii. O sweet England! — ii. 3 

KNtJl,E"-[r<)(.]enaleeonrmgd(i«-u.7'aHi. (iTS/i. iv. 2 
ENGl^lSIl— honesty into English .. Merru Wives, i. 3 

and the kioij's English — i. 1 

[Col.] frights English out of liis wits — ii. I 

in our English tongue — ii. 3 

ond hack our EngPisli — ill. 1 

they speak English? — iv. 3 

to woo her in good I-^nglisli — v. ."i 

one thnt nink.-s tVittcrs of English .. — v. i 
be a list of lui ICiiglish kersey ..Mean, for Meat. i. 2 
poor pcnnvworth in the English.. A/w. ofl'enice, i. 2 
that imrt the Kreni-h inid English .. — ii. 8 
drntn heforc tlie Eiit;li.-.h tragedians.. /liCs lfV/(, iv. 3 

he has an English naiue — iv. 5 

here's an Enu'lish tailor come luther...V(ic(<WA, ii. 3 

lives in the English court — iii. 6 

tl\c English power is near, led on — v. 2 

mingle with the English epicures — v. 3 

the English force, so please you — v. 3 

would scour these English hence? .... — v. 3 
thy unnatural uncle, English John..Ai)i^,/oAn, ii. 1 
now tile English bottoms nave waft.. — ii. 1 
all those English, and their discipline — ii. 1 
for tears in many an English mother — ii. 2 

no plume in any Kni^lish iTost — ii. 2 

come our lusty EuLcllsh, all with .. .. — ii. 2 

now hear our English king — v. 2 

tiy, uohic English, you are bought .. — v. 4 
when the English measured backward — v. 5 
the English lords, by his persuasion — v. 5 

surveyed by English eye liichard II. i. 1 

lo, as at English feasts, so I — i. 3 

my native English, now I must forego i. 3 

and sighed my English breath — iii. 1 

grass witli faithful English blood.... — iii. 3 
besides himself, are all the English. . — iii. 4 

from the restful English court — iv. 1 

the blood of English shall manure .. — iv. 1 
forthwith a power of English s\\a,\\..\ Henry IV. i. 1 
never spake other English in his life — ii. 4 
I can speak English. Ford, as well. ... — iii. 1 
many an English ditty, lovely well — iii. 1 

my wife can speak no English — iii. 1 

Douglas, and the English rebels, met — iii. 2 

the trick of our English nation iHenrijIV. i. 2 

great power of English, and of Scots iv. 4 

divorced so many English kings .... iv. 4 

to the English court assemble now . . iv. 4 

this is the English, not the Turkish v. 2 

O noble English, that could entertain.. Henri/ F. i. 2 
winged heels, as English Mercuries — ii. (chorus) 
seek to divert the English pm-poses — ii. (chorus) 

these English monsters! — ii. 2 

thus come the English with full .... ii. 4 

neglected Euglisli upon our fields .. — ii. 4 

take ujj the English short — ii. 4 

the wall up with our English dead! 

on, on, you noblest English 

to the lust of Englisli youth 

to the English dancing-schools 

upon one pair of English legs did 

shall be paved with English faces 

fain be about the ears oT the English 

he longs to eat the English 

the English lie within fifteen hundred 
if the English had any apprehension 
ay, but these English are slircwdly.. 

do the low-rated 'English play — ... ^ 

the ijoor condemned English — iv. (chorus) 

be friends,"you English fools — iv. 1 

but it is no English treason iv. 1 

may spin in English eyes iv. 2 

the English are embattled, yon French iv. 2 

a liounding valour in our English. . . . iv. 3 

ofi'er up our lives unto these English iv. 5 

to smother up the English iv. 5 

the number of our English dead? _ iv. 8 

behold the English beach pales in . . — v. (chorus) 
not speak English in the native (rep.) 
teach yon a good English correction 

princes Engfish, every one 

English princes all, I do salute yon. . 
brokenly with your English tongue. . 
thou canst sneak no better English . . 
understand tnus much English? .... 

half French, half English 

and for my English moiety, take .... 
in true English, I love thee, Kate. . . . 
thy English broken; therefore irtp.) 
cannot tell what is baiscr, en English 

teach you our princess English? .... v. 2 

and that is good English. Is she not apt? — v. 2 

that English may as French _ y. 2 

awake, awake, English nobility! i Henry fl. i. 1 

France is revolted Irom the English i. l 

the English army is grown weak — i. i 

thine upon the Engli.sh side i. 2 

the famished English, like pale i.2 

and drive the English forth i.2 

am I to lie the English scourge i.2 

Henry's dentil tlie English circle ends — i.2 

the tnglish have tlie suburbs _ j. 4 

how the English, in the suburbs close — i. 4 

our English triKips retire 1.5 

called, t(ir our fierceness, English (logs i. o 

is Orleans from the English wolves.. .— i. 

for the right of English Henry ii. 1 

watchmen of our English weal iii. 1 

as sure as English Henry lives — iii. 2 

the troops of English after him — iii. 3 

but English Henry will be lord — iii. 3 

English John Tallxit. captains iv. 2 

no christian soul but English Talbot iv. 2 

if wc be English deer — iv.2 



iii. 1 



iii. 7 
iii. 7 
iii. 7 



V. (chorus) 
' 3) 



v. 1 

v. 2 
V. 2 
V. 2 
V. 2 
V. 2 
V. 2 
V. 2 
T. 2 
V. 2 
V. 2 



ENGI,ISH— leader of our Enclish ..XHenryyi. iv. 3 

the English army, that divided — V. 2 

heir-a|>piireiit Icilhc English crown ..iUenryVI,\. 1 
rightl'ul heir unto the English crown — i. 3 

claim the English crown iUcnnjFI. 1. 1 

so wcaltin' lis an iMii^lish yeoman.. .. — i. 4 

ofNapK's, liiil with Englishgilt .... — ii. 2 

to catch the Eir-'lish crown — iii. 2 

wife to Ihe English king (rep.) — iii. 3 

my (luariel, and this English queen's — iii. 3 
now shall wear the English cro\vn .. — iv. 3 

true heir to the English crown — iv. 4 

these English woes shall make ..liichard III. iv. 4 

shone do\ni the English lleiiry yill. i. I 

is no En^'lish soul more stronger .... — i. 1 

all the giioil our English have got — i.2 

think an English courtier may be wise — i.2 

because they s|ii'uk no English — i. 4 

pray, si>o:ik' in English — iii. 1 

may be absi lived ill English — iii. 1 

1 had ne^e^ trod this English earth.. — iii. 1 

when she Inis so iiuicli English — v. 4 

lKni.'\ seek him Out upon the English party tear, i v. 6 
are iiotliing to your English Othello, ii. 3 

ENGElSilED— beengliBliedrightly.A/enyfrifes, i. 3 

ENGLISUMAN— as de Englishman.. — ii. :i 
box of the ear of the Englishman. yi/er.o/ Venice, i. 2 

his voice an armed Englishman King John, v. 2 

my grandsire was an Eiiglishman . . — v. 4 

Englishman durst set his foot Richardll. i. 1 

banished, yet a truehorn Englishman — i. 3 
a soul so easy as that Englislimau's .. Henry V. ii. 2 
an Englishman? An't please your majesty — iv. 7 
not kiiow^ that Englishman alive.. /I'/cAurf; ///. ii. 1 
that any Englishman dare give me. He/iry ('///, iii. 1 
is your Englishman so expert Othello, ii. 3 

ENGEISH.MEN— 
wounds of slaughtered Englishmen. KicAard //. iii. 3 
have each a hundred Englishmen.... Hejirj/r. iii. 7 

Englishmen, receive each other — v. 2 

putthe Englishmen unto the sword. 2//(?m-yr/. iii. 1 
with the bmod of Englishmen — iii. 1 

ENGLISHWOMAN— 

Srincess is the better Englishwoman. . Henry V. v. 2 
GLUTS— it engluts and swallows Othello, i. 3 

ENGLUTTED— must be englutted.... Henry F. iv. 3 

Seasaiits, this night englutted!.'Amoiio/'.-J(/iens, ii. 2 
GRAFFED— so much engraifed ..iUenrylV. ii. 2 

ENGRAVE— thereon engrave Riclmrdlll. iv. 4 

ENGRAVED-and engra\ed . TwoGen. of Verona, ii. 7 

shall be engraved the sack of Orleans.! Henry VI. ii. 2 

ENGROSS-engross up glorious deeds. 1 Henry IV. iii. 2 

to engross his idle body Richard III. iii. 7 

ENGROSSED-engrossed opportunities. A/erry )f. ii.2 

for this they have engrossed 2HenrylV. iv. 4 

in a set hand fairly is engrossed . . Richard III. iii. 6 
ENGROSSEST— if thou engrossest M. All's tVctl, iii. 2 
ENGROSSING-to engrossing deathl/(onieo ^Jul. v. 3 
ENGROSSMENT— his engrossments.2Henr!//)-'. iv. 4 
ENGtJARD— he may engiiard his dotage . . Lear, i. 4 

ENIGMA— some enigma Love's L. Loj(, iii. 1 

your enigma? You have been Coriolanus, ii. 3 

ENlGiMATICAL— sir, is enigmatical ..MuchAdo, v. 4 

ENJOIN — weight that he'll enjoin me to — v. 1 

enjoin thee, as thou art liegeman . Winder's 7'a/e, ii. 3 

ENJOINED— you are enjoined topilel.rejHpesMii. 1 

enjoined me to write some lines. 3'mjo Gen. of Ver. ii. 1 

as you enjoined me, I have writ — ii. 1 

and it was enjoined him in Rome.ioi'e'i L.Lost,v. 2 
I am enjoined by oath to observe. A/er. of Veiiice.ii. 9 
of enjoined penitents there'sfour or.. .4(i'sireW, iii. a 
to be by oath enjoined to this . . Winter's Talc, iii. 3 
am enjoined by holy Laurence..i?omcci^-y«/(e/, iv. 2 
ENJOINETH— Uelicane enjoineth us . . Pfricles, ii. 4 
ENJOY- win what you would enjoy?. ileny Wives, ii. 2 

if you will, enjoy Ford's wife — ii.2 

let me enjoy my private Twelfth Night, iii. 4 

whiles we enjoy it Much .ido, iv. 1 

out of heart that you cannot enjoy.. Loi)e'.vZ,.L. iii. 1 
will you persevere to enjoy her? . . As you Like it, v. 2 

that we may cujoy each other — v. 2 

quietly enjoy your hope .... Taming of Shrew, iii. 2 

you may enjoy your mistress Winter' sTale,iv. 3 

that you might well enjoy her — v. 1 

like thy brother, to enjoy thy land . . King John, i. 1 

o'er liiin, and all that he cnjoj's — ii. 1 

to lose what they enjoy ircpeated) . . Richard II. ii. 4 
demands are just, you shall enjoy . .'iHenrylV. iv. 1 

your majesty shall soon enjoy — iv. 4 

nave abundance, and enjoy it not — iv. 4 

kings neglect, that private men enjoy?. Henry V. iv. 1 

of the country's peaee, enjoys it — iv. 1 

I may quietly enjoy mine own 1 Henry VI. v. 3 

shall well and quietly enjoy — v. 3 

and still enjoy thy regal dignity — v. 4 

them happy, that enjoy the sun? — iHenry PI. ii. 4 
and may eiijoy such quiet walks as . . — iv. 10 
enjoy the kingdom after my decease. ZHenryVI. i. 1 

therefore enjoy it now — i.2 

secure and sweetly he enjoys — ii. 5 

it is, that seldom kings enjoy — iii. 1 

to enjoy thee for my love — iii. 2 

while he enjoys the honour — iv. 6 

enjoy, were you this country's Richard III. i. 3 

I cnloy, being the queen thereof (rep.) — i. 3 

did I enjoy the golden dew of sleep .. — iv. 1 

shall these enjoy our lands? — v. 3 

wear it, enjoy it, and make much of it — v. 4 
bade me enjoy it, with tlie place ..Henry VIII. iii. 2 
I do enjoy at ample point .. Troilus fyCrestida, iii. 3 

a comfort that all but we enjoy Coriolanus, v. 3 

enjoy the honey heavy dew of slumber./fiV.^,V/-*'ir, ii.i 
enjoy thy plainness, it nothing. -Aiilony ^ Clcn. ii. 6 

more than tlie world enjoys Cymiieline, i. 5 

I was about to say. enjoy your — 1.7 

to enjoy thy banished lonl — ii. 1 

to enjoy a second night of such sweet — ii. 4 
a valiant son-in-law thou slialt enjoy. T'lViMjnd. i. 2 
now, perforce we will enjoy that .... — ii. 3 
Bhouid enjoy half liie rcveiine (rep.)..Lear, i. 2 (let.) 



ENJOY— mean you to enjoy him? Lear, v. 3 

thou shall enjov herj therefore make O'helto, i. 3 

ENJOYED- hath enioyed nothing.iUerri/ Hires, v. .') 
more spirit eliiitrit tliiiii eijjoyed.A/er. of Venice, ii. (i 

in joy, tliaii ho|ii- eiijoyid Richard II. ii. 3 

Alcn'jon. that eiijoved my love 1 Henry VI. v. 4 

contented hup whieli I enjoyed Richard III. I. 3 

I have enjoyed the dearest bodily Cymbeline, I. S 

he hath enjoyed hir: the cognizance — ii. 4 

prince and Dido once enjoyed Tilus Andron. ii. 3 

neither can he enjoyed, if both Lear, v. 1 

though I am sold, not yet enjoyed.. Kom. ^^111!. iii. 2 
ENJOYEST— enjoyest not Desdeniona..O(/ie/(o, iv. 2 
ENJOY'^ING— your enjoying her.. A/erry Wives, iii. h 

as (or the enjoying ot tiiy life Meas.for Meas. i. 3 

fear the enjoying of my love...WercA. of Venice, iii. 2 
tliy world, enjoying but this land ..Richard II. ii. 1 

it IS not worth the enjoying ilJenryVI. iii. I 

E>i'KINDl,E— might yet enkindle you..Marljrth. i. 3 

enkindle all the siiarks of nature l.r'ir.Vii. 7 

ENKINDLED— which enkindled it. . KingJ'dm, v. 2 

my will enkindled by mine eyes. Troilus if Cress, ii. 2 

which seemed too much enkindled.. yu/.Ca'jnr, ii. 1 

ENLARD-to enlard lus fat-already. Troil./^Crct. ii. 3 

ENLARGE-he shall enlarge \mn .Twelfth .Sight, v. 1 

and doth enlarge his rising with 'iHenrylV.i. 1 

uncle of Exeter, enlarge tlie man .... Henry V. ii. 2 
we'll yet enlarge that man, though .. — ii.2 

never ceaseth to enlarge itself 1 Henry VI. i. i 

should enlarge itself 10 wrathful. Trail, ff Cress, v. 2 

Cassias, enlarge 3-our griefs JuliusCirsar, iv. 2 

till death enlarge his confine Anlnny^Cko. iii. 5 

ENLARGED— wide enlarged. /(j you Like, iii. 2 (ver.) 

ta'en him once, enlarged him \ Henry IV. iii. 'i 

as far enlarged as we have warranty . . Hamlet, v. 1 
ENLARGEMENT- 
give enlargement to the swain . . Lore's L. Lost, iii. 1 
which, for enlargement striving ..illcnri/IV. iii. 1 

sweet enlargement doth dismiss I Henry VI. ii. 5 

nt our enlargement what are thy ..'illenry VI. iv. 6 

enlargement by the consequence Cymbeline, ii. 3 

ENLAHGETH-enlargeth her mirth. A/erryX'iues, ii.i 

ENLINKED— enlinked to waste Henry V. iii. 3 

ENMESH— shall enmesh them all Othello, ii. 3 

ENMEW— follies doth enmew..il/ea»./(jr Meas. iii. ) 
ENMITIES— how lesser enmities..4n(on!/ ^Cleo. ii. 1 

ENMITY— whose enmity he flung Tempest, ii. 1 

by hate, and fear no enmity? ..Mid. N. Dream, iv. I 
the enmity and discord, wliich . . Comedy of Err. i. 1 
be at enmity with cozening hope . . Ricliard II. ii. 2 
while covert enmity, luider the ..illenrylV. i^ind.) 

been enacted thio' your enmity \ Henry VI. iii. 1 

harmless lambs abide their enmity.3 Henry VI. ii. 5 

storms be past of civil enmity — iv. 6 

made peace of enmity, fair love of.. Richard III. ii. 1 

'tis death to rae, to be at enmity — ii. 1 

long hath frowned upon their enmity ! — v. 4 
the push and enmity of those . . Troilus (f Cress, ii.2 

break out to bitterest enmity Coriolanus, iv. 4 

thine enmity's most capital — v. 3 

set deadly enmity between two ..Titus Andron. v. I 

who drowned their enmity unto — v. 3 

against the enmity 0' the air Lear, ii. 4 

I am proof against their enmity. Romeo ^Juliet, ii.2 

poor sacrifices of our enmity! — v. 3 

such an enmity with blood of man .... Hamlel, i. h 

ENNOBLE -to ennoble those that ../ii'c/iarJ///. i. 3 

ENNORLED— -who, so ennobled, is ..All's Welt, ii. .1 

ENOBARBE-strongEnobarbe i6..4n(<mwiS-t'(eo. ii. 7 

ENOBARBUS—Enobarbus,— Madam — i. 2 

how now, Euobarbus? What's your — i. - 

good Euobarbus, 'tis a worthy deed. . — ii. 2 

good Enobarbus! We have cause to be — ii.2 

food Euobarbus, make yourself my.. — ii. j 
hiobarbus, welcome. Fill, till the cup — ii. 7 
why, Enobarbus? When Antony found — iii. 2 

what shall we do, Enobarbus? — iii. II 

call for Enobarbus, he shall not hear — iv. .i 

fCo/.A'n^.] despatch: Enobarbus! — iv. :. 

Enobarbus, Autony hath after thee.. — iv. r, 

mock me not, Eiiooarlms: 1 tell you — iv. li 

[loor Enobarbus did before thy (rep.) — iv. 9 

ENOU.MITY— in what enormity ....CorioJam«, ii. I 

ENOUGH— if room enough! Tempcii, i. I 

there's wood enough within — i.2 

space enough have I in such a prison . . — i.2 

and get thee wood enough — ii. 2 

beat him enough : after — iii. 2 

I know that well enough . . Two Gen. of Verona, ii. I 

enough ; I read your fortune — ii. 4 

you are not sharp enough — iii. 2 

IS good enough for such a present. ... — iv. 4 
if we recover that, we are sure enough — v. I 
for I have lived long enough .... Merry Wives, iii. 3 

I have had ford enough — id..'. 

they'll do fast enough of themselves — iv. 1 
no woman's gown big enough for him — iv.2 

we cannot misuse him enough — iv.2 

but long enough to say my prayers . . — iv. .1 
white will decipher her well enough — v. 2 
this is enough to be the decay of ... . — v. s 

enough; no more; 'tis not so Tirelflh Sight, i. 1 

these clothes arc good enough to drink in — i. 3 

but it becomes me well enough — i. 3 

not yet old enough for a man {,rep.).. — i. 5 

ay, he does well enough, if he be ... . — ii. 3 
I'have wit enough to lie straight .... — ii. 3 

but I have reasuu good enough — ii. 3 

tills fellow's wise enough to play — iii. 1 

of your receiving, enough is shown.. — iii. 1 

big enough for the bed of Ware — iii. 2 

let there lie gall enough in thy ink .. — iii. 2 

I am not fat enough to become — iv.2 

nor lean enough to be thought — iv.2 

on base and ground enough — v. 1 

are not these large vnoujihy.. Measure for Measure, i. 5 

having wiusto ground enough ,- ii.i 

there is scarce truth enough alive. . . . — iii, 2 
hut security enough to make fellowships — iii. 2 
thisnewsiaoldeaough, yetitis ..,.. — iij. s 



ENO 

ENOUGH— thinks it big enough..Meas.forMeas. iv. 2 

jour tliief thinks it little enough .... — iv. 2 

if not true, none were enough — iv. 3 

enough, my lord — v. 1 

is't not enough, thou hast suborned . . — v. I 

lay bolts enough upon him — v. 1 

could not show itself modest enough. .MuchAUo, i. 1 

so that if he have wit enough to keep — i. 1 

I have almost matter enough in me — i. 1 

and money enough in his pui'se — ii. 1 

I know you well enough — ii. I 

I am sure you know him well enough — ii. 1 

proof enough to misuse the prince . . — ii. 2 

thou sing'st well enough for a sliift . . — ii. 3 

faith, like enough — ii. 3 

I will show you enough — iii. 2 

if your husband have stables enough — iii. -1 

is not seen enough, you sliould wear it — iii. 4 

there is not chastity enough in language — iv. 1 

enough, I am engaged, I will challenge — iv. 1 

and a rich fellow enough, go to — iv. 2 

thou hast mettle enough in thee — v. 1 

that were enough to hang us al\.. Mid. N. Dream, i. 2 

enough: hold, or cut bow-strinffs.. .. — i. 2 

weed wide enough to wrap a fairy iu — ii. 2 

is't not enough, is't not enough — ii. 3 

but if I had wit enough to get out {rep.') — iii. 1 

enough, enough, my lord ^rep.^ — iv. 1 

it is not enough to speak, but — v. 1 

enough for a ilint; pearl enough. Lome's L. Lost, iv. 2 

worthy enough to present them? .... — v. 1 

he is not quantity enough for that — v. 1 

of God sir, and he hath enough.. A/er.o/re;»'ce, ii. 2 

become tliee happily enough, and in — ii. 2 

the patch is kind euougli — ii. 6 

dost deserve enough; and yet enough — ii. 7 

I had a title good enough to keep. ... iii. 1 

we were christians enough before.... — iii. 5 

enough to press a royal merchant .... — iv. 1 

that thou hast wit enough to make . . — iv. 1 
whereof I cannot enough commend — iv. 1 (let.) 

if the Jew do cut but deep enougli . . — iv. 1 

where the ways are fair enough — v. 1 

love is enough to honour (;f /)0 . ■ As you Like tt, i. 2 

thy father's daughter, there's enoush — i. 3 

and like enough to consent .". . — iv. 1 

so it make noise enough — iv. 2 

the priest was good enough, for all . . — v. 1 
he was skilful enough to have lived. . All's Well, i. 1 

have abilitj' enough to make such . . — i. 3 

received, and is enough for both — ii. 1 

knowing him, is enough; on his bed of — ii. 1 
there be breadtli enough in the world — iii. 2 (let.) 

gabble enough, and good enough .... — iv. 1 

twill be time onougTi to go home — iv. 1 

for here is cheer enough Taming of Sh. 2 (ind.) 

with all faults, and money enough . . — i. 1 

one rich enough to be Pctruchio s wife — i. 2 

with wealth enough, and young — i. 2 

only fault, (and that is faults enough) — i. 2 

her father's name, and 'tis enough . . — i. 2 
that's enough. Madam, he hath. . IVinter'sTale, ii. 3 

which is enough, I'll warrant, as this — ii. 3 

that's true enough; though 'tis — iii. 2 

places remote enough are iu Bohemia — iii. 3 

which if I have not enough considered — iv. 1 

your purse is not hot enough — iv. 2 

enough then for your wonder — iv. 3 

worthy enough a herdsman iv.3 

to miseries enough; no hope to help you — iv. 3 

sir, you have done enough, and have — v. 1 

there's time enough for that — v. 3 

lest I come not time enough. . Comedy of Errors, iv. 1 

ay, but not enough. It was the copy.. — v. i 

till then, enough; come, friends Macbelh, i. 3 

have napkins enough about you .... — ii. 3 

committed treason enough for God's — ii. 3 

dismiss me; enough. Wliate'er — iv. 1 

yet i' faith, with wit enough for thee — iv. 2 

and swearers enough to beat — iv. 2 

we have willing dames enough — iv. 3 

I liave lived long enough , v. 3 

now near enough; your leavy — v. 6 

that first cries, hold, enough v. 7 

our niece a dowTy large enough King John, ii. 2 

as all the ocean, enough to stifle such — iv.3 

want pains enough to torture me — iv. 3 

thou hast said enough: beslirew . . Richard II. iii. 2 

though you are old enough to be my — iii. 3 

were enough noble to be upright judge iv. 1 

I'll read enough, when I do see — iv. 1 

in hell were hot enough for him? IHemyir. i. 2 

time enough to go to bed with — ii. 1 

villains know it well enough _ ii. 2 

there's enough to make us all — ii. 2 

are straight enough in the shoulders — ii, 4 

have done enough to put him — iii. 1 

thou that art like enough, tlirough . . — iii. 2 

virtuous enough ; swore little ; diced — iii. 3 

50 to; I know you well enough — iii. 3 

tind linen enough on every hedge.. ., — iv. 2 

tut, tut, good enough to toss — iv. 2 

like enough, you do; to-morrow .... — iv. 4 

of the vilest earth is room enough.... — v. 4 
I shall have time enough to mourn..2Hen»-!/ IV. i. 1 

bold and big enough upon the power — i. 3 

a body strong enough, even as — i. 3 

never shall have length of life enough — ii. 3 

I was pricked well enough before.... — iii. 2 

thj' mother's son! like enough) and — iii. 2 

aplace deep enougli; soshall you.... — iv.3 

thou art not firm enough, since — iv. 4 

1 will devise matter enough out of . . — v. I 

wliipping-cheer enough, I warrant her — v. 4 

there was not time enough to hear Henri/ f'. i. 1 

and, Pauca, there's enough. Mine host — ii. 1 

you have power enough, and in .... — iii. 5 

lor we know enough, if we know .... — iv. 1 

we have French quarrels enough — iv. 1 

not work enough for all our hands (rep.) — iv. 2 



[216] 



ENS 



ENOUGH— enough to purge this field.. Henry r. iv. 2 

we are enough to do our country loss — iv. 3 

we are enough yet living in the field — iv. a 

fellow has mettle enougli in his pelly — iv. S 

enough, captain ; you liave astonished — v. 1 

there is not enough leek to swear by v. 1 

French enough to deceive de most . . v. 2 

reverently worship thee enough? I He7iry VI. i. 2 

enough; my soul shall then be satisfied — ii. ."j 

and strong enough to issue out — iv. 2 

it were enough to fright the realm . . iv. 7 

yes, there is remedy enough, my lord v. 3 

no faggots, let there be enough v. 4 

it is enough; I'll tliink upon 2HenryVI. i. 2 

the king IS old enough himself to give — i. 3 

if he be old enough, what needs your — i. 3 

gallop fast enougli to her destruction — i. 3 

neighbour, you shall do well enough ii. 3 

that's bad enough, for I am but ii. 4 

enough, sweet Suft'olk ; tliou torment'st iii. 2 

a wilderness is populous enough iii. 2 

England's treasure, enough to purchase — iii. 3 

is't not enough, to break into my garden — iv. 10 

'tis not enough our foes are this — v. 3 

you are old enough now, and yet ZHenry VI. i. 1 

Richard, enough; I will be king or die — i. 2 

'tis prize enough to be his son — ii. 1 

so I am, in mind; and that's enough — iii. 1 

with force enough to bid his v. 1 

you shall have wine enough Richard III. i. 4 

cousin, were it light enough iii, 1 

nay, like enough, for I stay dinner . . — iii. 2 

being now seen possible enough Henry VIII. i. 1 

and far enough from court too — ii. 1 

that's christian care enough ii.2 

sharp enough, Lord, for thy justice ! — iii. 2 
I have told you enough of this .. Troilus ^ Cress, i. 1 

why, Paris hath colour enough — i. 2 

having colour enough, and the other — i. 2 

cries, O!— enough, Patroclus; or give — i. 3 

Apollo knows, tis dry enough i. 3 

to devise imposition enough — iii. 2 

princes, enough, so please you — iv. 5 

have every day enough of Hector iv. 5 

Agamemnon, an honest fellow enough — v. 1 
'tis not enough to help the feeble.. r«mon of ,J(A. i. 1 

to heart, 'tis not euouL'h to give — i. 2 

and thou kiiow'st well enough, although — ii i . 1 

one may reach deep enough, and yet — iii. 4 

as your waiting, 'twere sure enough — iii. 4 

he's poor, and that's revenge enough — iii. 4 

were enough alone to overcome him — iii. 6 

now the gods keep you old enough . . — iii. .^ 
lend to each man enough, that . . — iii. 6 (grace) 

enough to make a whore forswear. ... — iv. 3 

all the whips of heaven are large enough — v. 1 

I'll give you gold enough — v. 1 

you liis, and last so long enough! _ v. 2 

he's one honest enough; 'would all. . Coratonus, i. 1 

they say, there's grain enough? — i. 1 

Meuenius, you are known well enough — ii. 1 

that I am known well enough too? . . — ii. 1 

enough too? Come, sir, come (rep.) , . — ii. 1 

enough. Enough, with over-measure — iii. 1 

he hath said enough. He has spoken — iii. I 

you might have been enough the man — iii. 2 

he was always good enough for him j— iv. 5 
and room enough, when there is ..JuliusCcesar, i. 2 

find a cavern dark enough to mask. . — ii. 1 

not Erebus itself were dim enough to — ii. 1 

bear fire enough to kindle cowards . , — ii. 1 

that is enough to satisfy the senate . . — ii. 2 

courtesy, and with respect enough .. — iv. 2 

have you not love enough to bear.... — iv.3 

this hill is far enough: look — v. 3 

Brutus is safe enough: I dare assure — v. 4 
wine enough, Cleopatra's he&Wii.. Antony fyCleo. i. 2 

evils enough to darken all his — i. 4 

entertained cause enough to draw .. — ii. 1 

make space enough between you ... . — ii. 3 

I have done enough; a lower place .. — iii. 1 

all may be well enough. I warrant you — iii. 3 

yes, like enough, hi^h-battled Cassar — iii, 1 1 

out late, enough to fetch him in ... . — iv. 1 

enough to purchase what you have . . — v. 2 
you have land enough of your own . . Cymbeline, i. 3 

were wealth enough for the purchase — i. 5 

fentlemen, enough of this: it came in — i. 5 

have enough; to the trunk again . . — ii. 2 

thou wert dignified enough, even to — ii. 3 

this is not strong enough to be believed — ii. 4 

sun and sun, madam's enough for you — iii. 2 

thy favour's good enough — iii. 4 

she's far enough; and what he learns — iii. 5 

though valour becomes thee well enough — iv. 2 

'tis enough, that, Britain, I have killed — v. 1 

is't enough, I am sorry? So children — v. 4 

returned with similar proof enough to — v. 
thy sons, they shall do well &^ough.,Tiius And. ii. 4 

there is enough written upon this earth — iv. 1 

'tis sure enough, an you knew how . . — iv. 1 

look ye draw home enough — iv. 3 

I know thee well enough; witness this — v. 2 

tut, I have work enough for you to do — y. 2 

it is enough you know Pericles, i. i 

enough; lest your breath, cool your.self — i. 1 

courage enough ; I do not fear the flaw — iii. 1 

these pirates, (not enough barbarous) . . — iv.3 

what tis to say, well enough — iv. 6 

and have not money enough iu the end — iv. 6 

can never be confirmed enough — v,l 

fbr a king, thou art poor enough Lear, i. 4 

and each man have enough — iv. 1 

they are apt enought to dislocate — iv. 2 

do cry out itself, enough, enough, and die — iv. 6 

I remember thine eyes well enough — iv. 6 

I'know thee well enough; thy name .... — iv. 6 

put strength enough to it — iv. 6 

enough 01 this; I pray thee Romeo fy Juliet, i. 3 

it is enough I may but call her name — ii. 6 



ENOUGH— find me ant enough. Romeo (f Juliet, iii. I 
marry, 'tis enough. Where is my page? — iii. 1 
but 'tis enough, twill serve; ask tor — iii. I 
was woe enough, if it had ended there — iii. 2 
for it was bad enough, before their spite — iv. 1 

there is time enough. Go, nurse — iv. 2 

the chariest maid is prodigal enough . . Hamlet, i. 3. 

have not craft enough to colour ii.2 

for wise men know well enough iii. I 

heard of your paintings too, well enough — iii. 1 
not rain enough in the sweet heavens .. — iii. 3 

which is not tomb enough, and continent iv. 4 

with modesty enough, and likelihood to — v. 1 
nay, it is possible enough to judgment . . Othello, i. 3 

put money enough in your purse — i. 3 

she oft bestows on me, you'd have enough ii. 1 

I cannot speak enough of this content . . ii. 1 

stand well enough, and speak well enough — ii. 3 

why, but you are now well enough — ii. 3 

poor, and content, is rich, and rich enough — iii. 3 
it were enough to put liira to ill thinking — iii. 4 

demanded, (as like enough, it will) — iii. 4 

she says enough; yet she s a simple bawd — iv. 2 
ENQUIRE— enquire you forth.. T«)o Ren. ofVer. ii. 4 

go enquire for my master Merry Wives, i. 4 

that you enquire after her? Much Ado, i. 1 

presently enquire, and so will I . . Mer. of Venice, i. 1 

and enquire my lodging out — ii. 2 

enquire the Jew's house out — iv. 2 

of the house I did enquire for? . . As you Like it, iv. 3 

sirrah, enquire further after me All's Well, v. 2 

I promised to enquire carefully . . Taming of Sh. i. 2 
tell the king, he may enquire us out. King John, iv. 3 

hath a power, enquire of him Richard II. iii. 2 

enquire at London, 'mongst the taverns — v. 3 
enquire me out contracted bachelors 1 Henry IV. iv. 2 
enquire me out some mean-born.. Richard III. iv. 2 
I'll follow, and enquire him out..7'imon ofAth. iv. 2 

you must enquire your way Coriolanus, iii. 1 

I did enquire it ; and have Antony <^ Cleo. ii.2 

thou Shalt enquire him out among. . Vitus And. v. 2 

the most strong enquire Pericles, iii. (Gower> 

first did prompt me to enquire. . Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 2 
young lady bade me enquire you out — ii. 4 
look you, sir, enquire me first what. . . . Hamlet, ii. 1 

can you enquu-e him out, and be Othello, iii. 1 

ENQUIRED— enquired for me. . Meas.for Meas. iv. 1 

you have not been enquired after — iv. 1 

you have oft enquired after As you Like it, iii. 4 

have you enquired yet who picked.) ifenry/F. iii. 3 

I have enquired, so has my husband — iii. 3 

ENQUIRING— enquiring fbr his tib . . Pericles, iv. 6 

ENQUIRY-made enquiry oiyou.Mcas.for Meis. v. 1 

to make enquiry of his behaviour Hamlet, ii. I 

ENRAGE— question enrages him Macbeth, iii. i 

blunt not the heart, enrage it — iv.3 

once enrage the gentle Tfietis . . Troilus ^ Cress, i. 3 

ENRAGED— who, all enraged. . Two Gen. of Ver. ii. 6 

the rude sea's enraged and foamy. TwelfthNighl, v. 1 

loves him with an enraged afieotiou. .Mmc/i /Wo, ii. 3 

away went Claudio enraged — iii. 3 

the sea enraged is not half so deaf . . King John, ii. 2 
never saw the giant world enraged .. — v. 2 

being now enraged with grief 2HenryIV. i. 1 

frown upon the enraged Northumberland — i. 1 

that hatn enraged him on to offer — iv. 1 

upon the enraged soldiers in their Henry V. iii. 3 

everywhere, enraged he slew 1 Hetiry VI. i. 1 

whether his fall enraged him Coriolanus, i. 3 

why is my lord enraged against .. Ant. ff Cleo. iv. 10 

who, thereat enraged, flew on him Lear, iv. 2 

ENRANK-had he to enrank his men.IHenry VI. i. 1 

ENR APT— suddenly enrapt . . Troilus (f Cressida, v. 3 

ENRICH — to enrich raj \}iiin. . . . Mid.N.'sDream, i. 1 

revenues enrich the new duke. ...As you Like it, i. I 

Henry is able to enrich his queen . . 1 Henry VI. v. 5 

Ills valour did enrich liis wit Richard III. iii. 1 

praying, to enrich his watchful soul — iii. 7 

enrich the timeto come with — v. 4 

to enrich mine inventory Cymbeline, ii. 2 

doth enrich the hand of yonder.. iJomeo ^Juliet, i. 5 

ENRICHED— hath enriched any.. itfeas..ftrMeas. i. 1 

the captive is enriched . . Love's L. Lost, iv. 1 (letter) 

tutors have enriched you with? — iv. 3 

summers have enriched our fields . . Richard II. i. 3 
which, more enriched, shall be your love — ii. 3 
if thy pocket were enriched with . . 1 Henry IV. iii. 3 
whose chin is but enriched with. Henry F. iii. (cho.) 
famously enriched with politic. . . . Richard III. ii. 3 
likewise enriched poor straggling. jTimon of Alh. v. 1 

her gift, and yet enriched it too Cymbeline, ii. 4 

ENRICHES— which not enriches him, . Othello, iii. 3 
ENRIDGED— waved like the enridged sea. tear, i v. 6 
ENRING— curings the barkyfingers.il/id.JV.Or. iv. 1 
ENROBE— enrobe the roaringwaters. Mer. 0/ Fen. i. 1 
ENROBED — shall be loose enrobed. Merry Wives, iv. 6 
ENROLLED— enrolled penalties.. Meas. for Meas. i. 3 
I hope well, is not enrolled there. Love's L. Lost, i. I 

I hope, is not enrolled there — i. 1 

is not enrolled there — i. 1 

his oath enrolled in the parliament. .SHerary VI. ii. 1 
who was enrolled 'mongst wonders.. Henry F///. i. 2 
is enrolled in Jove's own book .... Coriolanus, iii. I 
question of his death is enrolled.. /u(ms Ctesar, iii. 2 
ENROOTED— so enrooted with his..2Hcjiry/F. iv. 1 
ENROUNDED— how dread an army hath 

enrounded him Henry V. iv. (chorus) 

ENSCHEDULED— enscheduledbritefly — v. 2 
ENSCONCE-v/ill ensconce your ragsMerry Wives^ ii. 2 
I will ensconce me behind the arras — iii. 3 

my head, and ensconce it too. Comedy of Errors, ii, 2 
ENSCONCING— ensconcing ourselves. /l/('s«'e«, ii. 3 
ENSE AMED— of an ensearaed bed .... Hamlel, iii. 4 
ENSE AR— ensear thy fertile , . Timon of Athens, iv. 3 
ENSEIGNEE— .je vous ay enseignee?.. Henry F. iii. 4 
ENSEIGNEZ— je te prie, ra'enseignez — iii. 4 

ENSEMBLE— ma leijou ensemble — iii. 4 

ENSHIELD— an enshield beauty.. Men. /or Afea. ii. 4 
ENSHRINE— enshrines thee in his. .1 Henry »'/. iii. 2 
ENSIGN — the ensign of the christian.BicAarii II. iv, I 



ENS 

ENSIQN-an ensign there at the priilgc. Henrii V. iii. 6 

hang up your enuigntt 1 Henry I'/. V. 4 

on our foriucr ensign two mighty . . JiMuiCasar, v. I 

this ensign here of nihie was — v. 3 

a Konian and a British ensign wave. Cyinicd'nr, v. 5 
mine himour'sensigns humbled. ri7ui.4iirfio;iicM»,i. a 
K'autv's ensign 3'et is erimson . . Hompo Jjr Juliet, v. 3 
ENSK^KD— as a thing ensltyed. . . . jWra. for Mea. i. 5 
ENSNAKK-will I ensnare as great a fly. 0(/icHo, ii. 1 
EXSXAKKD-whvlieh.ulitlu.sensimred - v. 2 
ENSN AlU-rril— woii eiismuvtli llaL-./di/.i/r./ ///. i. 3 
ENS'l'KKl'Kl)— t^.^t^1^.■iL■ll^lL■cpL•.lt.u■l..-.0//lW/n,ii.l 
ENSl'E-iigninst wluit should ensue. . . . Tnuprsl, i. 2 

why, then, let Itihes ensue Merry M'l'iif «, i. 3 

must perforce ensue some true. . Mid. N, Dream, iii. 2 
doth it therefore ensue, that yow.. As you Like il, i. 3 

wliat oi her ensues ;('iM(er".t Tale, iv. (chonis) 

tliis w ill ensue, they'll suck . . Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

what doth ensue, hut moody — v. 1 

u kind of light, what would ensue . . Kins' •'o'' "i 'v. 3 

or overthrow incurable ensues — v. 1 

to-morrow then ensue to-day Richard II. ii. I 

what will ensue hereof, there's none — ii. 1 
what crosses to ensue, would 6hut..2Heiir!//F, iii. 1 
not seeing what is likely to ensue. . 1 Henry fl. iii. I 
ensues his piteous and unpitied . . Itichard III. iv. 4 
foretold you then what would ensue. J><n7.<S- Cr. iv. 5 

nor liere, nor what ensues Cymbeline, iii. 2 

what now ensues, to the judgment. I'ericles^i. (Gow.) 
und what ensues in this fell storm — iii. (Gow.) 

the fruits are to ensue Othello, ii. 3 

ENSUED— this pansiiiglv ensued Henry fill. i. 2 

his baseness that ensued? Antony Sf Cleo. iv. 12 

ENSUING— a clear life ensuing Tempest, iii. 3 

the next ensuing hour Two Gen.of Verona, ii. 2 

to effect your ensuing marriage .... Much Ado, ijj. 2 

then were my ensuing deatli! Hicha?d II. ii. 1 

of May next ensuing 2 Henry VI. i. 1 (articles) 

ensuing [Col. -jmrsuing] danger. . . . Richard III. ii. 3 
the ensumg night made it a tool. . . . Henry VIII. i. 1 
give you inkling of an ensuing evil.. — ii. 1 
tiis name remains to the ensuiug age. Coriolanus, v. 3 
nothing to think on, but ensuiug deatli..A't'nc/e,v, ii. 1 
ENTAIL— cut the entail from all ... . All's Welt, iv. 3 

I here entail the crown to thee 3HenryVI.i. 1 

to entail him and his heirs inito — i. 1 

ENT.VME- can cntame my spirits. yl> youLike it, iii. 5 
ENTANGLE.S— entangles itsvU. Antony ^Cl^o. Iv. 12 
ENTANGLED— more entangled by.. Cor/'o(oiius, ii. 1 
entangled witlitliose mouth-made<^n(OHJ/ (^C/eo. i. 3 
ENTENDKE-entendre bettre que moy. Henry V. v. 2 

ENTER — to enter human hearing Tempest^ i. 2 

no noise, and enter — iv. 1 

one may enter at her window?, rico Gen. o/Fer. iii. 1 

nought enters there TwelflhNighl, i. I 

so wide as a bristle may enter — i. 5 

my niece is desirous you should enter — iii. 1 

I mean, to go, sir, to enter — iii. 1 

the competitors enter — iv. 2 

my sister should the cloister enter.Mea./orMea.i. 3 

and enter there, ere sunrise — ii.2 

I am bound to enter publicly — iv. 3 

he ought to enter into a quarrel ....MuchAdo,ii. 3 

forbid the sun to enter — iii. I 

your 6i>eech, enter into that brake.. A/id.i\M)r. iii. 1 

I'yramus, enter; your cue is past — iii. 1 

slie is to enter now, and I am to spy — v. 1 
before we enter his forbidden gates. . Love'sL.L. ii. 1 
to let you enter his unpeopled house — ii. 1 
his enter and exit shall he strangling — v. 1 
shallow foppery enter my sober.. //er. of Venice, ii. 5 
let it not enter in your mind of love — ii. 8 

fear it, do not enter it As you Like it, ii. 3 

too little for pomp to enter All's IVell, iv. 5 

you must not enter. Nay, rather.. Winter' sTale, ii. 3 
let no creature enter: come . . Comedy of Errors,\\. 2 

ay, and let none enter, lest I — ii.2 

with foul intrusion enter in — iii.'l 

and I denied to enter in my house?.. — iv. 4 
good people, enter, and lay hold .... — v. 1 

not a creature enters in my house — v. 1 

saw'st thou him enter at — v. 1 

enter, sir, the castle Macbeth, V. 7 

to enter conquerors, and to proclaim. /Ct>i^'./o/m, ii. 2 
it may enter butcher Mowbray's.... /ii'c/iurd //. i. 2 
at all points; and longs to enter in . . — i. 3 

that it may enter Mowbray's — i. 3 

please to enter in the castle — ii. 3 

bent on him that enters next — v. 2 

that no man enter till my tale — v. 3 

if not, let him enter \ Henry IV. ii. 4 

go you and enter Ilarfleur Henry V. iii. 3 

sucli as will enter at a lady's ear .... — v. 2 

here's Gloster that woiUd enter 1 Henry VI. i. 3 

bold verdict enter talk with lords? .. — iii. 1 
enter, go in; the market-bell is rung — iii. 2 

enter, and cry — the Dauphin I — iii. 2 

canst not enter, but by death — iv. 2 

to enter the lists, so please your . . . .'ZHenry VI. ii. 3 

enter his chamber. Mew his — iii. 2 

where thy words should enter iHenryVI.i.3 

that we enter, as into our dukedom? — iv. 7 

or foul means we must enter in — iv. 7 

let us enter too. So other foes — v. 1 

pierce the clouds, and enter heaven?nicAairf III. i. 3 

thanks; we'll enter all together — iv. I 

saw ye none enter, since I slept?.. Henry VIII, iv. 2 

your grace may enter now - — v. 2 

"Ulysses enter. What is he mare.Troilut fr Cress, ii. 3 

of the world enter his thoughts — ii. 3 

as is Araehnc's broken woof, to enter — v. 2 
they enter my mistress' house.. 7'i>no/io/^//ien«, ii. 2 

and enter in our ears, like great — v. 2 

to say, thou'It enter friendly — v..') 

the very heels, with them he enters. .Cori'o/anuj,i. 4 
may enter 'twixt the gap of both .... — iii. I 
never more to enter our Jtome gates — iii. 3 
I'll enter; if he slay me, he docs .... — iv. 4 
come, enter with us: ladies, you deserve — v. 3 
almost at point to enter — v. 4 



[ 217 



ENTER— let them enter. They aK.Jutiusdvsar, ii. 1 
enter the city, clip your wives . . Antony .5 Cleo. iv. 8 

shall enter mc with him — iv. 12 

let instructions enter where folly. .. . Cymbeline,\. fl 

this viperous slander enters — .'.'!• ^ 

no answer? then I'll enter — •'.!• ^ 

good my lord, enter (re/).) Lrar, iii. 4 

knock, ond enter; and no sooner ..Romeo Sfjul. i. 4 
when he enters the cbnflnes of a tavern — iii. 1 

ini.^chicf ! thou art swift to enter in — v. 1 

1 suw him enter such a house of sale ..Hajnlet, ii. 1 
the soul of Nero enter this firm bosom.. — iii. 2 
like daggers enter in mine ears — iii. 4 

ENTEKtD— ciitLicd tlieir frail shins.. Tempest, iv. 1 
see her chanilKr-window entered ..Much.hlo, iii. 2 
his seem-, uiid entuiTcl in a hiake.^/id. N.'s Dr. iii. 2 
I have nut yet entered my house. Mer.o/Z'emVe, v. 1 
I am here entered in bond . . Comedy of Errors, iv. 4 
within this bosom never entered yet. AV)i/rJn/m,iv. 2 
some bond, that he is entered into . . Richard II. v. 2 
have you entered the action? {rcp.)..2HenryIV. ii. 1 

I have entered him and all — ii. 1 

since my exion is entered, and — ii. I 

that war hath never entered Henry V. v. 2 

since I have entered into these wars.l Henry VI. i. 2 

Pucelle is entered into Orleans — i. 5 

here entered Pucelle, andherpractisants — iii. 2 
for weakness, which she entered — — iii. 2 

that would have entered Troy SHenryVI. ii. 1 

but, being entered, I doubt not — iv. 7 

that ever entered in a drowsy head. /iMar'( ///. v. 3 

of my conscience, entered me HenryVIII. ii. 4 

like to an entered tide, they all. Troilusff Cress, iii. 3 
of Rome are entered in our counsels. Cor/olanus, i. 2 
alone he entered the mortal gate .... — ii. 2 
are entered in the Roman territories — iv. 6 
the city ports by this hath entered .. — v. 5 
your native town you entered like a post — v. 5 

before 1 entered here, I called Cymbeline, iii. 6 

he is entered his radiant roof — v. 4 

sith I am entered in this cause so far. . Ofliellc, iii. 3 

ENTERlNG-enterin" into same. Mens, for Meas. iv. 2 
proclaim it an hour before his entering — iv. 4 
very near upon the duke is entering — iv. 6 
the revellers are entering; brother . . Mttrh .4do, ii. 1 

for entering his fec-simi)le iHcnry VI. iv. 10 

late entering at his heedful ears . ,3I1enry VI. iii. 3 
his grace is entering; nay, you .. ..Henry VIII. i. i 

ENTEllPRIZE-taketheenterprize.A/ca..ftrWea.iv.l 
a manly enterprize, to conjure . . Mid. N.'s Dr. iii. 2 
60 far blameless proves my enterprize — iii. 2 
you to a more equal enterprize . . .-is you Like it, i. 2 
both from his enterprize, and from . . — v. 4 
be magnanimous in the enterprize . . All's il'ell, iii. 6 
made you break this enterprize to me't.Macbe/h, i. 7 
tlu'ust this enterprize into my heart. Kin;^ John, v. 2 
to line his enterprize: but if you ..IHenry IV. ii. 3 
tills infant warrior in his enterprizes — iii. 2 
the very life blood of our enterprize.. — iv. 1 
a larger dare to our great enterprize — iv. 1 

sworn to us in your younger enterprize — v. 1 
this present enterprize set oti' his head — v. 1 
this bold enterprize brought forth ..iHenry IV. i. 1 
for exploits and mighty enterprizes . . Henry V. i. 2 
prevented from a damned enterprize — ii. 2 
the enterprize whereof shall be to you — ii. 2 
heard I of a warlike enterprize .... 1 Henry Ti. ii. 1 

and aid me in this enterprize'. — v. 3 

whet on Warwick to this enterprize. .SHcnry^'/. i. 2 

so thrive I in my enterprize Richard III. iv. 4 

he offers in another's enterprize. Troilus tf Cress, i. 2 

the enterprize is sick! how could — i. 3 

of any bold or noble enterprize Julius Cccsar, i. 2 

an enterprize of honourable dangerous — i. 3 
stain the even virtue of our enterprize — ii. 1 

speed thee in thine enterprize! — ii. 4 

3'our enterprize to day may thrive (rep.) — iii. 1 
our enterprize might tlirive; I fear .. — iii. 1 
death no liazard, in tliis enterprize .... Pericles, i. 1 

as an enterprize of kindness — iv. 4 

some enterprize that hath a stomach . . Hamlet, i. 1 
through 3'our dominions for this enterprize — ii. 2 
and enterprizes of great pith and moment — iii. 1 

ENTERTAIN-Ceres, her to entertain. Tempest, iv. 1 

entertain him to be my Two Gen. of Verona, ii. 4 

entertain him for your servant — ii. 4 

for this I entertain thee — iv. 4 

I will entertain Bardoljjh Merry Hires, i. 3 

as man}' devils entertain — i. 3 

to entertain him with hope — ii. 1 

I'll entertain myself like one — ii. 1 

a feverous life should'stentertaiu. Wra./or Mea. iii. 1 
a wilful stillness entertain . . Merchaut of Venice^ i. 1 
then entertain him, then forswear.v4s you Like it, iii. 2 

to entertain it so merrily with All's Well, ii. 2 

fit to entertain such friends as . Taming of Shrew^ i. I 

to entertain them spri^'htlv Winter's Tate, iv. 3 

I'll entertain the- ottered tiiUiicy .Comerfy of Err. ii. 2 
mine own doors refuse to entertain me — iii. 1 

John sh()uld entertain uu liour King John, iii. 4 

and entertain a cheerful disposition .Ricliard II. ii. 2 

to entertain the lag-end of my llknry IV. v. 1 

but entertain no more of it illenrylV. v. 2 

that could entertain with half their. . . . Henry V. i. 2 
now entertain conjecture of a time — iv. (chorus) 
1 did not entertain thee as thou art.. 1 Henry >'/. ii. 3 

for here we entertain a solemn — v. 4 

to entertain my vows of thanks and.2 Henri/ ('/. iv.9 
entertain great England's lawful king — v. 1 
to entertain these fair well-spoken. .J/ic/mri/ ///. i. 1 
entertain a score or two of tailors .... — i. 2 
for God's sake entertain good comfort — i. 3 

there's few, or iii>iie, w ill entertain it — i. 4 

let me alone to entertain liiin — iii. s 

pray, entertain tlieni : give them. 7Vmon of Athens, i. 1 
to entertain me as your steward still — iv. 3 

served Brutus, I will entertain tlieni./u/. C^nar, v. 3 
but entertain it, and, although ..Antony ^ Cleo. ii. 7 

so please you entertain me Cymbeline, iv. 2 

to entertain your highness .... Titus Andronicus, v. 3 



ENT 

ENTERTAIN- yourentertain shall be../'enc/e», 5. I 

I entertain you for one of inv hundred . . Lear, iii. 

not entertain ho liail a thouglit ..Ilomeo «rJuliet,iv. 3 

ENTIC UT A 1 1\' 1 . 1 )— grief is entertained . Tempest, ii. 1 

that entertaineil uiiiliition — v. 1 

1 have entertained thee TwoGen. of Verona,\v. i 

thou hast entertained a fox to be — iv. 4 

and entertained them dceiily in — v. 4 

is royally entertained by Leonato ....Much Ada, 1. 3 

being entertained for a perfumer — . i. 3 

returning; entertained my convoy ..All's Well, iv. 3 

not, how tliou welt entertained \ Henry VI. i. 4 

which entertained, limbs are. . Troilut SfCressida, i. 3 
entertained me with mine own.. TimonnfAtlient,i.2 
let the iiresi'nts be worthily entertained — i. 2 

see them well entertained — ii.2 

have entertained cause enough ..Antony f^Cleo. ii. I 
him be so entertained amongst you ..Cymbeline, i. .■> 

vour highness is not entertained with ^''"'t.\- * 

hut newly entertained revenge.. ftomeo^Jud'e/, iii. 1 

ENTERTAINER— to the entertainer .. 7em;)e«/, ii. I 

ENTERTAINEST-ifthouentertainest.VVfVJ/iA'.ii..^ 

mildness entertainest thy wooers., '/"aming- ofish. ii. I 

ENTERTAINING— 

entertaining great Hyperion.. Troiiut .5- Cre«i(/u, 11. 3 
ENTERTAINMENT— 

no, I will resist such entertainment Tempest, i. 2 

I spy entertainment in her Merry Wives, i. 3 

have a care of your entertainments .. — iv. .^ 
I learned from my entertainment . TwelfthNight,i. b 
pardon me, sir, your bad entertainment — ii. 1 
our most mutual entertainment. . Meat. for. Veas.i. 3 
him for the entertainment of death .. — iii. 2 
entertainment for them in their tents. Love's L. L. i v. 3 
concerning some entertainment of time — v. I 
desert place buy entertainment ..As you Like it, ii. 4 
gave me fresh array, and entertainment — iv. 3 
worthy your lordship's entertainment../lU'» Well, iii. 6 
him not John Drimi's entertainment — iii. 6 
i' the adversary's entertainment .... — iv. 1 
an entrance to my entertainment.. Taming of Sh.'ii. 1 
soon forgot the entertainment her sister — iii. i 
our entertainment shall sliome us. WinJer's Ta'.e, i. 1 
entertainment may a free face put on — i. 2 
that is an entertainment my bosom . . — i. 2 
give entertainment to the nightof it.2Henrj//f'. iy,4 
entertainment to my princely queen .iHenry VI. i. I 
hug with amplest entertainment, rimou of Athens,}. I 
set a fair fashion on our entertainment — i-2 
provided to show them entertainment — i. 2 

already in the entertainment Coriolanus, iv. 3 

I have" deserved no better entertainment — iv. 5 
but by my entertainment with him — y. 2 

tell hiratliyentertainment./4n(ony.5-C/eopo^ra,iii. 11 
have entertainment, but no honourable — iy. 6 

for my more free entertainment Cymbeline, i. !> 

as if the entertainment in our court JVricto, ii. 3 

she may not be raw in her entertainment — iy. 3 
shall lue needful for your entertainment . . Lear, ii. 4 
with entertainment of eacii new-hatched. Hunite(,_i. 3 
what lenten entertainment the players — ii. 2 
appear like entertainment than yom's. . — ii. 2 
use some gentle entertainment to Laertes — y. 2 
some other custom of entertainment .... 0(Ae/(o, ii. 3 

if your ladv strain his entertainment — iii. 3 

ENTERTISSUED—entertissued robe.. Henry/', iv. 1 

ENTUKALLED— 

from my enthralled eyes . . Two Gen. of Verona, 11. 4 

too high to be enthralled to low!.<Ui'J.A'. Dream, i. 1 

so is mine eye enthralled to thy shape — iii. I 

but being enthralled as I am Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

what though I be enthralled? 1 Henry VI. v. 3 

ENTHRONED- it is enthroned.. jtfer.o/ Venice, iy. 1 
many courses of the sun entlironed.Henry (-'///. ii. 3 
entlironed and sphered amidst .. Troilus i)- Cress, i. 3 
enthioned in the market-place. . Antony <)• CVeo. ii. 2 
chairs of gold were publicly enthroned — iii. 6 
ENTICE-do I entice you? do I speak.Mid.N. Dr. ii. 2 
will entice the duke of Burgundy.. IHenry*'/. iii. 3 

bad father, to entice his own I'ericles, i. (Gower) 

ENTICEMENT— enticements, oaths./lH'j ((>«, ui. a 

ENTKJETH— cnticeth thee to N-iew I'ericles, i. 1 

ENTICING— of enticing lines 1 Henry VI. y. 5 

a quire of such enticing birds 2 Henry /'/.;. 3 

ENTIRE— one half of an entire sun. Lore'* L. L. ii. 1 
your entire atlection to Bianea. . Taming ofSh. iy. 2 
divides one thing entire to many . . Richard ii. ii. 2 
pure fear, and entiie cowardice . . . .'IHenry I V. ii. 4 
a carbuncle entire, as big as thou . . Coriolanus, i. 4 
and the man entire, upon the next. Julius Ciesar, i. 3 

that stand aloof from the entire point Lear, i. 1 

of one entire and perfect chrysolite — UthelU, v. 2 
ENTIRELY-days entirely drunk. Men. /or i«ea. iy. 2 
Benedick loves Beatrice so entirely ?iliMcA/l('o, in. I 
slow arts entirely keep the brain.Lore'sL.Loi/, iy. 3 
tliey are entirely weleome..j>/erc/ian/o//'eniee, iii. 2 
you love your gentlewoman entirely.. .4«'»'<'eU, i. 3 
mingled with thine entirely . . .4ii(ony ^Cleo. iv. 12 

60 tenderly and entirely loves him Lear, 1. 2 

subdue my father entirely to her love. . Othello, iii. 4 

all the duty of my heart, entirely honour — ui. 4 

ENTITLE— I may entitle thee ..Taming of Sh. ly. 5 

in mean men we entitle patience Richard II. 1. 2 

ENTITLING— in so entitling me.. ir,n/er'i7'<iie, 11. 3 
ENTOML!— entuMib thyself alive. 3'ro;7iM<^CreM. in. 3 
ENTOiMBEU-entonibed upon the.. 'i'lnion o/yl/A. y. 5 
entombed in ;ui :i~s's pack-saddle .. Coiioluniu, 11. 1 
ENTRAlL.'^-thee in his knotty entrails, reni/ifj/, i. 2 

and of intolerable entrails Merry Wires, v. b 

in the poisoned entrails throw Macbeth, ly. 1 

as if his entrails were hairs Henry V. iii. 7 

fiery heart so parched thine entrails.3Henry VI. i. 4 
them in the entrails of the woU"? ..Richard III. iv. 4 
to revel in the entrails of my lambs — iv. 4 

plucking the entrails of an offering.. Jul. Casar, ii. 2 
our swor<l3 in our own proiicr entrails — v. 3 
entrails feed the sacrificing fire . . 7'i(uj Andron. i. 2 

the ragged entrails of this pit — ii. 4 

NTRANCE-with gait ond entrance. Twelfth K. iii. 1 



ENI 



tjieir exits, and their entrances ..As you Like it, ij. 7 



ENT 

ENTRANCE— an entrance to my., ramini; ofSh. ii. 1 
to his entrance or hoop his body. Wiu'er's Tale, iv. 3 
being shut against his entrance. Comedy of Err. iv. 3 
croaks the fatal entrance of Duncan . . Macbeth, i. 5 

for ruin's wasteful entrance — ii. 3 

and lineal entrance to our own ! King John, ii. 1 

and give you entrance; but, without — ii. 2 

my lord, against thy entrance Richard II. iii. 3 

iCol. Knt.'] thirsty entrance of this ..\HenryVl. i. 1 
make our entrance several ways .... — ii. 1 

if we have entrance, tas, I hope — iii. 2 

admit him entrance, Griffith Henry I'lll. iv. 2 

stands i' the entrance of his tent. Troilus ^ Vres. iii. 3 

fives entrance to such companions?Cor/o/ojiMs, iv. 5 
e barred his entrance here TitusAndronicus, i. 2 

to make's entrance more sweet Pericles, ii. 3 

the prompter, for our entrance. . Romeo fy Juliet, i. 4 
the stony entrance of this sepulchre .. — v. 3 

beware of entrance to a quarrel Hamlet, i. 3 

ENTRANCED— been entranced aboye.Fericles, iii. 2 

ENTRAP— to entrap the wisest.. i)/er. of Venice, iii. 2 

a golden mesh to entrap the hearts. . — iii. 2 

entrap thee by some treacherous, .^s you Like it, i. 1 

sought to entrap me by intelligence.) jHcn);//;'. iv. 3 

seek not to entrap, my gi-acious lord . . Pericles, ii. 5 

ENTRAl^PED-hiith now entrapped.l Henry FI. iv. 4 

ENTREASURED— and entreasui-ed ..Pericles, iii. 2 

ENTREAT— do entreat thou pardon ..Tempest, v. 1 

would entreat thy company Two Gen. of I'er. i. 1 

I do entreat your patience iv. 4 

could hardly entreat him baxik. .TioelfthNighl, iii. 4 

I must entreat of you some iii. 4 

and entreat him to a peace _ v. 1 

to him again, entreat him Meas.for Meas. ii. 2 

let me entreat you speak the former . ii. 4 

if lor this night he entreat you to — iii. 1 

we shall entreat you to abide here . . — v. 1 

'tis my deserving, and I do entreat it v. 1 

they did entreat me to acquaint Much Ado, iii. 1 

I must entreat your pains, I think . . v. 4 

I do entreat yoiu- grace to pardon.. 3/iii. N.\Dr. 1. 1 
and I am to entreat you, request you — i. 2 

1 would entreat you, not to tear — iii. 1 

entreat, I can compel {repeated) iii. 2 

one thing for me that Ishall entreat. LoKf'si.L. iii. 1 
shall I entreat thy love? I will . . _ iv, 1 (letter) 

and entreat, out of anew-sad soul.... v. 2 

would entreat you ratlier to -gwi.. Mer.of Venice, ii. 2 

he did entreat me, past all saying . . iii. 2 

so she could entreat some power .... iv. 1 

sir, I entreat you home with me — iv. 1 

and doth entreat your company at . . — iv. 2 
shall not entreat him to a second.. .ils you Like it, i. 2 
I did not then entreat to have her stay — i. 3 

un less thou entreat for her iv. 3 

this drives me to entreat you AlVs Well, ii. 5 

than ask, why I entreat you _ ii. 5 

I will entreat you, when you see my — iii. 2 
more I'll entreat you written to bear — iii. 2 
let me entreat of you. . Taming of Shrew, ii. (indue.) 
you would entreat me rather go than — iii. 2 

let us entreat yoir stay till after iii. 2 

let me entreat you. It cannot be {rep.) — iii. 2 
shall entreat me stay; but yet not (rep.) — iii. 2 
marry her though she would entreat — iv. 2 
how to entreat, nor never needed (rep.) — iv. 3 
and entreat my wife to come (rep.) . . _ v. 2 
good deed was, to entreat his stay. Winter's Tale, i. 2 
yet when we can entreat an hour .... Macbeth, ii. 1 
nor entreat the north to make his . . King John, v. 7 
to entreat your majesty to visit him. Richard II. i. 4 

and so let me entreat you leave ] Henry IV. ii. 4 

use it oft, let me entreat you _ iii. i 

master Gower, shall I entreat yon.. 2Henry IV. ii. 1 
if my tongue cannot entreat you . . — (epil.) 
and my speech entreats, that I may . . Henry V. v. 2 

by me entreats, great lord 1 Henry VI. ii. 2 

entreat you to your wonted fm-therance? — v. 3 
entreat her not the worse, in that . .'iHenry VI. ii. 4 

did I purpose as they do entreat — iii. 2 

O, let me entreat thee, cease iii. 2 

my gracious lord, entreat him iv. 1 

some holy bishop to entreat _ iv. 4 

write unto them, and entreat them.. 3 Henry Fi. i. 1 

let me entreat, for I command no more iv. 6 

came to you, would not entreat Richard III. 1. 4 

and entreat for me, as you would beg — i. 4 
fii-st, madam, I entreat true peace .. — ii. 1 

toentreat ofher, tomeetyouat — iii. 1 

he doth entreat your grace, my noble iii. 7 

your citizens entreat you iii. 7 

we will entreat no more iii! 7 

either be patient, and entreat me fair — iv! 4 
the king, that may command, entreats — iv. 4 
entreat an hour of revels with them. Henry F/Ii.i. 4 
and did entreat your highness to this — ii. 4 
the cardinal did entreat his holinL.,s _ iii. 2 
I do entreat your highness' pardon. . — iv. 2 
and heartily entreats you take good — iv. 2 
entreat her fair; and, by my soul. Troil.^ Cress, iv. 4 

can scarce entreat you to be odd .... iv. 5 

dost thou entreat me, Hector? iv. 5 

concur together, severally entreat him — iv! 5 
I must entreat you, honour me. Timon of Athens, i. 2 
lord Lucullus, entreats your company — i. 2 

I come to entreat your honour to supply — iii. 1 

entreat tliee back to Athens — v. 2 

stand naked, and entreat them Coriolanus, ii! 2 

so with love I might entreat you . . JuliusCcesar, i. 2 

shall I entreat a word? Here lies — ii. 1 

I do entreat you, not a man depart. . — iii. 2 
to entreat your captain to soft (,rep.)Ant.^Cleo.u. 2 

CiEsar entreats, not to consider _ iii. 1 1 

gooa queen, let ns entreat you _ v. 2 

to entreat your grace but in a sma\\..Cymlielinc, i. 7 

the lamb entreats the butcher _ iii. 4 

this one thing only 1 will entreat .... — v! 5 
let us entreat, by honour of his name. Titus And. i. 1 
but entreat of thee to jmrdon Mutius — i. 2 
yield at entreats, and then let me alone — i, 2 



[ 218 ] 



EPI 



ENTREAT— entreat her hear me.. Titus Andr 
do thou entreat her show a woman pity — 
Andionicus, I will entreat the king _ u. 4 

once more I entreat of you _ iii. 1 

he will not entreat his son for us (rep.) — iv. 4 
to play upon, entreats you pity him ..Pericles, ii. 1 

let me then entreat you to torbear .... ii. 4 

let me entreat to know at large v. 1 

displeasure to entreat me to it Lear, ii. 2 

I'll entreat for thee. Pray, do not, sir ii. 2 

I entreat you to bring but five and twenty — ii. 4 

my lord, entreat him by no means _ ii. 4 

neither to speak of him, entreat for him — iii. 3 

whom I'll entreat to lead me iv. 1 

do entreat her eyes to twinkle ..Romeo t^- Juliet, ii. 2 
my lord, we must entreat the time alone — iv. 1 

I entreat you both, that,— being of Ham.'el, ii. 2 

he beseeched me to entreat your majesties — iii. 1 

all alone entreat him to show his grief . . iii. 1 

to Cassio, and entreats his pause Othello, ii. 3 

and her husband, entreat her to splinter — ii. 3 

one Cassio entreats her a little favour .. iii. 1 

as I should entreat you wear your gloves iii. 3 

entreat you then ICal.Knt.-that your wisdom]— iii. 3 
I might entreat yovir honour to scan this — iii. 3 

I do entreat that we may sup togetlier . . iv. 1 

ENTREATED— entreated to it.. TwoGen. ofVer. iii. 2 
madam Silvia entreated me to call . . — iv. 3 
the youth will not be entreated ..AsyouLikeit, i. 2 

but he will not be enterated _ i. 2 

yours mil not be entreated . . Taming of Shrew, v. 2 

fairly let her be entreated Richard II. iii. 1 

whom of succour we entreated Henry f. iii. 3 

am I entreated then to speak Julius Cwsar, ii. 1 

which she entreated Antony ^ Cleopatra, ii. 2 

which do not be entreated to — ii. 6 

and I entreated her come forth..JJomeo ff Juliet, v. 3 
therefore 1 have entreated him along ..Hamlet, i, 1 
ENTREATIES-tears unto entreaties Js you Like it, i. 2 
the entreaties of our most (rep.). . Winter's Tale, i. 2 
not temporize with my entreaties . . King John, v. 2 
be obdurate to mild entreaties .... Richard III. iii. 1 
on our entreaties, to amend your faiilt! — iii. 7 
penetrable to your kind entreaties . . — iii. 7 

if entreaties will render you no Henry VIII. v. 1 

might in entreaties find success. Troilus /i- Cress, iv. 5 

for a day of kings' entreaties Coriolanus, i. 3 

with our fair entreaties haste them on v. 1 

ENTREATING-humblyentreating...4«'s Well,\L 1 

ENTREATMENT-setyourentreatments.Ham/ei,i. 3 

ENTREATY— but my entreaty too.i»/ea./ori)/ca. iv. 1 

then she puts you to entreaty.... ^s you LifcezV, iv. 1 

upon entreaty, have a present . . Taming of Sh. iv. 3 

at the good queen's entreaty Winter's Tale, i. 2 

use no entreaty, for it is in vain 1 Henry VI. v. 4 

my mild entreaty shall not make. .iHenry VI. iii, 1 

with letters of entreaty Timon of Athens, v. 3 

by the entreaty and grant of Coriolanus, iv. 5 

reconciles them to his entreaty. . Antony ^ Cleo. ii. 7 

at my entreaty, forbear liis presence Lear, i. 2 

more into command than to entreaty . . Hamlet, ii. 2 
with an entreaty herein further shown . . — ii. 2 
ENTRENCHED— sword entrenched it. ,4«'s Well, ii. 1 
ENTRY— at the south entry; retire we .Macbeth, ii. 2 
ENTWIST-honeysuckle gently entwist Mid. A. D.iv.l 
ENVELOPE— night envelope you. Mea. for Mea. iv. 2 
envelope and contain celestial spirits. . Henry V. i. 1 
ENVENOM— comely envenoms him. A you L'ike,ii. 3 

envenom him with words King Jolm, iii. 1 

did Hamlet so envenom with his envy. Hamlet, iv. 7 
ENVENOMED— 
whose envenomed and fatal sting. .2He7ir2/ VI. iii. 2 
steel, and darts envenomed, shuil. .JuliusCwsar, v. 3 
in thy hand, unbated, and envenomed. . Hamlet, v. 2 

the point envenomed too! — v. 2 

EN VIED— you envied him Henry VIII. ii. 2 

that envied his receipt Coriolanus, i. 1 

from time to time envied against — iii. 3 

I liave envied thy behaviour.... ./In (on?/<5-Cteo. ii. 6 

ENVIES— star now envies thy 2HenryVl. iii. 1 

I hope, is none that envies it Pericles, ii. 3 

ENVIOUS— appear to the envions.Mea.forMea. iii. 2 
Biron is like an envious sneaping. Love's L. Lost,i. 1 
drive him from the envious plea,. Mer. of Venice, iii. 2 
envious emulator of every man's.. yis you Like it, i. 1 
father's rough and envious disposition — i. 2 
free from peril than the envious court? — ii. 1 
like envious fioods, o'er-rau. . Taming of Sh. 2 (ind.) 

beats back the envious siege Richard II. ii. 1 

the envious clouds are bent to dim . . — iii. 3 

from envious malice 1 Henry VI. iii. 1 

this base and envious discord breed.. — . iii. 1 
the envious barking of your saucy ., — iii. 4 

with envious carping tongue — iv. 1 

with envious looks still laughing . .iHenryVI. ii. 4 
when I start, the envious people laugh — ii. 4 

the envious load that lies upon — iii. 1 

to make an envious mountain iHenry VI. iii. 2 

whose envious gulf did swallow — v. 6 

the envious slanders ofher false Richard III. i. 3 

but still the envious flood kept — i. 4 

of state was a deep envious one Henry VIII. ii. \ 

follow your envious courses, men. . . . — iii. 2 

to silence envious tongues — iii. 2 

grows to an envious fever Troilus ^Cressida, i. 3 

to envious and calumniating time .. — iii. 3 

necessary, and not envious Julius Ccesar, ii. 1 

what a rent the envious Casca — iii. 2 

when some envious surge will. TitusAndronicus, iii. 1 
bud bit with an envious worm ..Romeo ^Juliet, i. 1 

and kill the envious moon — ii. 2 

be not her maid, since she is envious — ii. 2 
an envious thrust from Tybalt hit . . — iii. 1 

can heaven be so envious'? ,,. — iii. 2 

look, love, what envious streaks .... — iii. 5 

an en^aous sliver broke Hamlet, iv. 7 

ENVIUUSLY-sptu-nsenviously at straws — iv. a 

ENVIRON— do environ thee Two Gen of Ver. i. 1 

crudy va]>ours which environ it iHenry IV. iv. 3 

shade of death environ you \HenryVl. v. 4 



ai. 3 1 ENVIRONED— lamb, environed with.3He»rw J'/, i.l 
11.3 environed he was with many foes .. — ii 1 
" wert thou environed with a Wazen wall — ii! 4 

ot foul fiends environed me liicliard III i 4 

environcdwitha wilderness of sea.. ra«s/lnrf iii 1 

a hand environed with clouds Pericles, iS 2 

_^!";'™"'^4 f itli si'l these hideous. /fomeo ^Juliet, iv. 3 
V. V— with age, and envy, was grown. Tempest, i. 2 
that envy coufd not but call fair.. Twelfth Night, ii. 1 

that very envy, and the tongue of — v. 1 

stands at a guard with envy Meas.for Meas. i! 4 

either this is envy in you, folly iii. 2 

carry me out of h is envy's reach. Mer. of Venice, iv! 1 

the keenness of thy sharp envy _ iv 1 

envy no man's happiness As tjou Like it, iii! 2 

is It tor him you do envy me so?. Tamingof Sh. ii. 1 
but now I envy at then- liberty .... King John, iii. 4 

by envy's hand, and murder's Richard II. i. 2 

with rival-hating envy, set you on . . i. 3 

against the envy of less happier — ii. i 

m envy that my lord Northumberland! Henry I F. i. 1 
either envy, therefore, or misprision _ i. 3 
those some envy your great deservings — iv. 3 

11 he outlive the envy of this day v. 2 

with envy of each other's happiness . . Henry V. v. 2 

when envy breeds unkind 1 Henry VI. iv. 1 

as lean-faced envy in her loathsome.2Henri/ VI. iii. 2 

I care not with what envy _ iv 10 

exempt from envy, but not SHenry VI. iii. 3 

you envy my advancement Richard Ill.i. 3 

I envy not thy glory; to feed my ... . _ iv. 1 

whom envy hath immm-ed _ iv. 1 

no black envy shall make my grave HenrwF///. ii. 1 
what envy reach you? the Spaniard — ii. 2 
envy and base opinion set against them — iii. 1 

tm-n the good we oifer into envy _ jii. 1 

coarse metal ye are moulded,— envy _ iii! 2 

that make envy, and crooked malice v. 2 

and his disciples only envy at v 2 

as full of envy at his greatness.. Troi/us 4- Cress, ii! 1 

and devil, envy, say Amen _ ii. 3 

as what envy can say worst — iii. 2 

have the gods envy? Ay, ay, ay iv. 4 

liow now, thou core of envy? V. 1 

why, thou damnable box of envy — v! 1 

with poisonous spite, and envy. Timon of Athens, i. 2 

more than thy fame and envy Coriolanus, i. 8 

enforce him with his en-sT to the — iii. 3 

a soldier, rather than envy you iii. 3 

the cruelty and envy of the people . . — iv. 5 
from my heart a root of ancient envy _ iv. ,5 
wrath in death, and envy afterwards. /ui.CtEsar, ii. 1 

they did in envy of great Caesar v. .5 

by addition of his envy! Antony ^Cleopatra, v. 2 

even to the point of envy Cr/mbeline, ii. 3 

but envy much, thou hast robbed — iv. 2 

here no envy swells, here grow no. Titus Andron. i. 2 
above pale envy's threatening reach. . — ii. 1 
envy the great, nor do the low despise. .Pei-zc?es, ii. 3 

but alack! that monster envy.... iv. (Gower) 

Cleon's wife, with envy rare — iv. (Gower) 

pluck such envy from liim Hamlet, iv. 7 

did Hamlet so envenom with his envy . . — iv 7 
ENVYING-envying earth's good \\a,p.Richard II. i. 1 

■„iS?4?,??/y"iS his nobility Coriolanus, 1. 1 

ENWHEEL— enwheel thee round! Othello, ii. 1 

ENWOM BED— were enwombed mine. .All'sWell, i. 3 

ENWRAP— that enwraps me tlius . . Twelfth N. iv. 3 

EPHESIAN-thine Ephesian, calls. JV/erry Wives, iv. 5 

what company? Ephesians, mv lord.2Henr)//F. ii. 2 

EPHESS— leave at Ephess ". Pericles, iv. (Go^^e^■) 

EPHESUS— any born at Ephesus. Comedy of Err. i. ) 
come to the bay of Ephesus, he dies.. — i. 1 

cause thou earnest to Ephesus i. 1 

coasting homeward, came to Ephesus — i. 1 
try all the friends thou hast in Ephesus — i. 1 

in Ephesus I am but two hours old.. ii. 2 

sir, I shall have law in Ephesus _ iv. 1 

I should be attached in Ephesus iv. 4 

has through Ephesus poured Pericles, iii. 2 

my temple stands in Ephesus v. 2 

toward EpheSus turn our blown sails . . — v. 2 

at Ephesus the temple see, our king — v. 2 (Gow.) 

EPICURE— with the English epicures. .Macdc/Zi, v. 3 

else he is a very epicure Antony 4- Cleopatra, ii. 7 

EPICUREAN— epicurean rascal . . Merry Wives, ii. 2 
epicurean cooks, sharpen with . . Antony 4- Cleo. ii. 1 
EPICURISM— epicurism and lust make it. Lear, i. 4 
EPICURUS-I held Epicurus strong. Julius Ca'sar, v. 1 
EPIDAMNUM-made to Epidamnum. Com. ofEr. i. 1 
a league from Epidamnum had we sailed — i. 1 

you are of Epidamnum, lest that your i. 2 

there is a bark of Epidamnum iv. 1 

■what ship of Epidamnum stays for me? iv. 1 

by men of Epidamnum, he, and I — v. 1 

they left with those of Epidamnum. . — v. 1 
EPIDAURUS— of Epidaurus tills .... — i. 1 
EPIGRAM— a satire, or an epigram?. . Much Ado, v. 4 
EPILEPSY— is fallen into an epilepsy. . Othello, iv. 1 
EPILEPTIC— upon your epileptic visage!. Lear, ii. 2 
EPILOGUE— to see the epilogue. Afid. JS. Dream, v. 1 

no epilogue, I pray you v. 1 

let your epilogue alone ~- v. 1 

it is an epilogue or di.'icourse Love'sL.Lost, iii. 1 

to see the lady the epilogue As'you Like it, (epil.) 

that a good play needs no epilogue — (epil.) 

by the help of good epilogues — (epil.) 

neither a good epilogue, nor cannot — (epil.) 
EPISTLE-obscm-o epistles of iove.Twelfth Night, ii. 3 
as a madman's epistles are no gospels — v. 1 
■JSPISTROPHUS- 

the kings Epistrophus and Ceims.Truil. fyCress. v. 5 
EPITAPH— hang mournful eyitaphs.Muc/i Ado, iv. 1 
hang her an epitaph upon her tomb . . — v. 1 
hear an extcmporal epitaph on..jLoDe's L.Losl, iv. 2 
live still, and write mine epitaph..j)/er. of Ven. iv. I 

lives not his epitaph, as in your All's Well, i. 2 

of graves, of worms, and epitaphs., flic/iard II. iii. 2 

not remembered in thy epitaph! \ Henry IV. v. 4 

not worshipped with a waxen epitaph..Henry V. i. 2 



EPI 



[ 219 



KPIT vrit— make thini' cpituph. rimoit <if Athens, iv. 3 
vhv. I was writiiiK' of my cpitiiph. . .. — .v. - 

hiiOi lis ort a slimiloroiis i-piUpli ... . Cijmhrline, in. 3 

ami lior ipiliiplvs in jtliltcriiij; golden ...'W", iV- ■« 

the epitapl. U for Miuinii wrft.. . - iv. 1 (Oower) 

you were better luive u \m>\ epitupli . . ■■"'•>•"'• "• * 

Ef ITU ET-a good ei.itlKt !,....... ''«'•■■'' o.^- 2 

the epithets uix- sweetly v.irie.l . . l.ove tL.LosI, iv. 2 
a most siii.^iilur an>l ihoi.v ep;thet. . . . — N ■ 1 

thev will not imsuei- to (hut epltllet .. — v. 2 

liorril.lv slullVa will, ei.itl.ct. ..t- war ...0.'/«.iio. .. 1 

EPITlir.TON-c.n-rueiit cpitlietou.Lore « L.L.I, i 

EVITOME-ft poor epitome ol yimrs..to.;o(a.iw, y 3 

EQUAlv— oil e<iuul mutes .. I I'-o Gen.itf lerona, in. I 

sad and merrv miulnesa equal be. Tu'elflhAighl, in. 1 

equal poize of sin unil eliarity ..Meas.for Mem. n. \ 

she is uo equal for his butU ^'""^ ( ' • 3 



always whirls in 



u.xu.o „.....» ... equal measure. tocf' 
nominated for an equal poiind..A/prcA. o/ n-mcc, i. i 
whose souls do bear an equal yoke . . — "i. ;i 
von to a more eijnal enterprise .....U you Like \l,\.i 

have fou'ht witk equal fortune AU s H'cll, i. 2 

if thev were, his equal Had awaked them — .1. 2 
fuilecl to equal my f-'ivat fortune ...... . — ii- 5 

equal with w.m.lern.-. . . . innler'tTaU, iv. (chorus) 

make her iRirtion equal his . . ..... — iv. •! 

you equal potents, Ucry kimlled.... A.mj ^oAn, ii. 2 

shall wei^'li equal with a qneeu...... - u. 2 

on equal terms to give him .Richard 11. }V. 

in quantity equals not one of 1 Henry H .m. l 

to equal w'llh the king -IHmrylV.^ i. 3 

I have in eciual balanee justly — iv. 1 

iu equal rank with the best governed - v. 2 

to yiu both, on e,,ual love r„ ■',"' ^' ^ 

his wroui; iloth equal mine \Henr<j ri.n. 5 

mv vows are equal partners —,,'.'!• 'f 

the cause injustice ecinal scales.... 2Henr;/f/.ii. 1 
to equal him, I will make myself. ... — iv. 2 
thv tongue be equal with thy heart .. — v. 1 
so "is the equal poise of this fell war..3ilenryr/. ii. a 
wishing his foot were equal with — — iif. - 

and strength could equal them — m- 2 

deed were by, to equal it ■„■ , ~, ,,r^'., 

whose all not equals Edward s . . . .RKhardlll. i. 2 

the two kings, equal in lustre .Htnry I'UJ.i. 1 

for he is equal ravenous as he is subtle — .;. l 
two equal men. The queen shall be. . — ii. 2 
of equal friendship and proceeding . . —,,,'!• J 
be mated with an equal liushand.. Timon ofAth. i. 1 

this, and my food, are equals. — i- 2 

is this Marcius? He has no equal . . Conolanus^ i. 1 
thouiiht to crush him in an equal force — i,.. 10 
our fiiults can never be so equal. .-("(o/i!/ .§■ Cleo.iii. ■( 
that this world did equal theirs. ..... — iv. 13 

and honours waged equal with hun. . — v. 1 
I shall unfold equal discourtesy .... Cymbeline,u. S 

and so more equal ballasting to thee — ni. i) 
did but my fortunes equal ray desires.. Pertc/esjii. 1 
to equal any single crown o' the earth — iv. 4 

endured a grief might equal j'ours — v. 1 

good parentage— to equal mine ! ...... — v. 1 

thought'st thy griefs mi"ht equal mine — v. 1 
in equal scale weighing delight and dole. Ham(e(, i. 2 
hast ta'en with equal thanks — m. 2 

EQUALITIES— for equalities [K«(.-qualities] . 
are so weighed •,;•■•/■'''"■'.!• I 

EQUALITY— whose equality by ouT..hingJohn, n. 2 
equalitv of two domestic powers, .^n/oni/ .5- C/eo. 1. 3 

EQUALLEU— not to be equalled. . 't'inirr's Tale, v. 1 
else, surely, his had equalled.. 7"imono//)(. 



into three liinits, very equally I Henry' I ■ m. I 

and equally, indeed, to all estates.. RiV/iari/ ///. in. 7 
consisting equally of horse and foot . . — v. 3 
love can equally move with them..-l)i;. ^-Cleo. 111. 4 
and equally to me disloyal ..Cymbetine, iii. 4 (letter) 

and our safety may equally determine Lear, v. 3 

EQir ALNESS— divide our equalncss./lnf. ^Cleo. v. 1 
EQi;iNOCTIAI.^the equinoctial of. . Twel/lh N. 11. 3 
EQUIXOX— to his virtue a just equinox .Of/icHo, ii. 3 
EQUIPAGE— the sum in equipage. .A/crri/Jfices, ii. 2 
EQUITY— this down-trodden equity .Ki«4'Jo/m, ii. 1 
cowards, there's no equity stirring ..I Henry W. ii. 2 
and equity exiled your highness' ..'iHenry VI. 111. 1 

thou, his yoke-fellow of equity Lear, 111. 6 

EQUIVALENT— stood equivalent with. iVr/cta, v. 1 

EQUIVOCAL-an equivocal companion. /IK'j»>//, v. 3 

being strong on both sides, are equivocal. OMr;(r;, i. 3 

EQUIVOCATE— equivocate to heaven .Macbeth, ii. 3 

in conclusion, eqmvocates him in a sleep — ii. 3 

ECiUIVCJCATltiN— the equivocation of — v. 5 

tlie (-arcl, or e(juivocation will undo us. . Hiimlel, v. 1 

EQUIVOCATUK-here's an cqiiiv-oeiitor./V/<K/jc'//i,ii. 3 



EKE— enter there, ere sun-rise . . Af«i». /or jW«o». 11. 2 
ere I'd yield my body up to shame . . — !!• ? 
dear sir.eie long I'll visit you _ hi. 1 

imisi both work, ere this rude beast.. — iii. 2 
eie he woul.l have hanged a man .... — in. 2 

they will tlu'u.ere't belong — iv. 2 

you shall hear more ere morning .... — iv. 2 

ere twice the sun hath made - iv. 3 

ere yon make that my leiiort .... .,"7,. ^ , 

a thousand iiound ere he be ciiied Much Ado,]- 1 

I shall sei- tlico, ere I die, look pale . . — i. j 

ere von limit old cuds any longer .... — i- j 

I liked her ere 1 went to wars — >. ' 

and she will die ere she make her. . . 

did earn it, ere he had it 

drink some wine ere yon go 

as chaste as is the bud ere it be 

and yet, ere I go, let me go 

lus own tomb ere he dies 

let's have a dance ere we are 



come in, equivoeator; knock, knock .. — 
said to be an equivocator witli lechery 



i.3 
ii. 3 

EKCLES— could" play Erelea rarely.. A/Vd. A'.'j Dr. i. 2 
this is Ercles' vein, a tyrant's vein . . — i. 2 

EKE— ere thou earnest here Tempest, i. 2 

and melt, ere they molest! — ii. 1 

for vet, ere supiwr time — iii. 1 

ere 1 could recover the shore — lii. 2 

thou slialt ere long Ix; free — v. 1 

or should have snokc ere this — v. 1 

eaten by the canker ere it blow .'/'wo Gen. o/; 
tliis hour ere I have done weeping .. — 

you always end ere you begin — 

and ere I part with thee — 

unhappy were you, madam, ere I came — 
falls olr, ere it begins 



ii.3 

— ii. 4 

— iii. 1 

— v. 4 

— V. 4 
. Mtrry Wieet, ii. 1 

ii. I 



ere one chostc man 

ere summer comes, or cuckoo-birds . 
into the Thames, ere I w^ill leave her 

may I not go out ere he come 'if — iv. 2 

you migiit slip away ere became .... — iv. 2 

that ere she sleep, has thrice — v. S 

I'd have seen him damned ere rd.7'ir(;//7AA'i^/i(,lii. 4 

ere I will allow of thy wits — iy. 2 

fault's cODdcmned, ere it be done. Mtai. for Meat. 11. 2 



iii. 1 



v. 4 



i will yield my virgin patent up.-UW. A". Dr.i. 1 
and ere a inau h;ifh power tosay 



fair lie 
for ere 
hath ni 
be thuii 
and ere 
fare tia 
meet m 



■ I 

iislunkedon 

liis youth attained .. 
!i ill, ere the leviathan 
his rharm oft' from .. 
lyiiqih; ere he do leave 
:'<ir.-.t cockcrow 



i. 1 



ii.2 
iii. 1 

iii. 2 

iv. 1 

(epil.) 



— v. 1 



hiitli made mv eyes water ere uow .. 

effect this business yet ere day 

was I betrothed ere I saw Herraia . . . 
we will make amends, ere long ..... 

so, ere you tlnd where light iu Lore s l,. 1.0s 

fast for thy offimccs, ere thou be — 

we shall be rich ere we depart — 

might have been a grandara ere she died — 

Biron I'll torture ere I go — 

in private with you, ere I die — . 

secK all day ere you ftnd Merctiant of t emc 

anything, Nerissa, ere I will be — 

yoii shall look fairer, ere I give — 

ere I ope liis letter, I pray you — 

and all, ere thou shalt lose for me one — 

saw the lion's shadow ere himseif — 

ray master will be here ere morning. . 

we cuckolds, ere we have deserved it? — v- > 

unto entreaties, ere he should thus./f.*- youLike ?(,_]. 2 

and ere we have thy youthful wages — 11. 3 

for I have loved ere now — .H- J 

you'll be rotten ere you be halt — 111. 2 

it was a crest ere thou wast horn . . — iv. 2 (song) 

unnoted, ere thev can hide their All .v H'eil, 1. 2 

[Cot.] bom but ere [JC/i'.-for] every blazing — 1. J 

his heart out, ere he pluck one — .1. ^ 

leudiuz grace, ere twice — ]\- ' 

ere twiee'in murk and occidental — 11. J 

of the bride, and, ere I do begin — \\. ■> 

'twill be two days ere I shall — .u- •' 

with the fox, ere we case him — 111. " 

your daughter, ere she seems as won . . — in- ' 

'tis needfiU, ere I can perfect — iv- < 

a thousand salads, ere we Ught — iv. .j 

I hope I shall see him ere I die — ly- -j 

I have ere now, sir, been better — v. ^ 

steals ere we can eifect them — v. 3 

upon her, ere ray heart durst — v. J 

or, ere they meet, in me, O nature . . 

sir, a word ere you go 'I'ami 

will be done, ere you have tuned . . . 

better ere he go to church 

in my belly, ere I should come by . . . 
to a wealthy widow, ere three days . 

time, ere you come there Irep.) 

or ere I journey toward your 

went on crutches ere he was born . '( 
a thousand furlongs, ere with spur. . . 

ere I could make thee open thy 

much deceived, cuckolds ere now . . 
come between, ere you can say — 



ofShreii-.\.2 
'— iii. 1 



— iv. 3 

— iv. 5 

,■■.< Tale, i. 1 



— 111. 2 

— iv. (chorus) 

— iv. (chorus) 
iv. 3 



. . Comedy of Errors, i. 1 



shed water out of fire, ere do 

the same I am, ere ancientest 

spent time worse, ere now . . . 

die unmarried, ere they can behold . . — 

speak, ere thou diest 

but ere they came 

ere the ships could meet . 

dies ere the weary suu set 

ere I learn love 

it was two ere I left him 

I'll give thee, ere I leave thee 

discharge thee, ere I go from thee . 

that will be ere set of sun 

friend, ere you ^vent to bed 

sufi'er, ere we will eat our meal . . . 

ere the bat hath Hu\vn 

shed ere now, i'the olden time, ere . . 
acted, ere they may be scanned . . . 
business must be wrought ere noon. 
I'll catch it ere it come to ground . 

unfold liis message ere he come 

dying, or ere they sicken 



— iii. i 

— iii. 6 

— iv. 3 
John, i. 1 



iii. 1 
iii. 3 
iv. 2 



for ere thou can'st report, I wiil .... A' 

and so, ere answer knows what 

but, ere sunset, set armed discord 

to ashes, ere our blood shall 

and ere our coming, see thou shake 

our sorrows, and ere long. I doubt .... 

that, ere the next Ascension-day — iv. i 

r apple with him, ere he come — v. 1 
doubt, he will be dead, or ere I come — v. 6 
(so please my sovereign) ere I movu .. Richard 1 1. 1. 1 

but ere I last received — j. j 

ere my tongue shall wound — i. i 

confess thy treasons, ere thou fly . . 

ere the six years, that he 

ere further leisure yield them — 
with silence, ere't be disburdened 

perliaps, they had ere this 

armed soldiers, ere her native — 



i.3 



ii. 4 



— V. 3 



ERE 

ERE— but ere the crown he looks fm. Richard 11. Ui. 3 

tonnent'st me ere I come to hell — iv. 1 

ore thou bid goo<l-nij?ht — v. 

more than ills, ere toul sin — v. 1 

thv iiardon ere he do accuse thee — v. 2 

paVdon, ere I rise or speak — v..) 

how heinous ere it be — v. It 

'twas, villain,! le thv hand did — v. 3 

I'll starvi ire I'll n.1> \Henry Il'.n.-i 

ere I lead this lile long — \\- * 

I'll see thee damned ci-c I enll thee — .n. I 

deaths, ere break the smallest — iii- 2 

miles to ride yet ere dinner-time — i". 3 

four days ere I set forth — jv- ' 

first been whole, ere he by sickness — iv. 1 

thrive not, ere the king dismiss — iv. ' 

yet once ere night I will embrace — — v. 2 

make it greater, ere I part from ...... — v. 1 

found the fire, ere he his tongue . ...iHenry IV.\. 

saying, that ere long they should call 
perfumes the blood ere one can say... 

I will see you aijain ere I go 

ere they come, bid them 

long ere this, we oft'ercd to 

ere they be dismissed — 

rebuke, ere you with grief had 

merry twice and once, ere now 

to see Ijondon once ere I die 

it will be two o'clock ere they come .. — v. -i 

that, ere this year expire •„-.— , ''•'l 

ere he take ship for France. ..Henri/ K. 11. (choriis) 

by the mess, ere these eyes — iii- 2 

to hazard, ere you have them — in. 7 

yet ere night they'll he in — jv. 3 

ere it is made an end and finished — — iv. 7 

I intend to have it, erelong IHenry T/. 1. 3 

S rove not masculine ere long — ]]. \ 

eath approach not ere my — .11. .i 

ere that we will suffer such — m. 1 

his heart out, ere the priest should ever 

mav finish ere that hapless time 

I trust, ere long to choke thee 

there will we be too, ere it he long 

but, ere we go, regard tliis dying 

where I hope ere long to 

for ere the glass, tiiat now — 1 v. 2 

speak to thy father ere thou — iv. 7 

women have been captivate ere now . . — v. 3 
of England, ere tlie thirtieth ..2Htnry I'l. 1. 1 (art.) 

France will be lost ere long — J.' 

ere thou go, give up thy staff — .H- f 

remedy this gear ere long — ii;. 

my lord of Suffolk, ere you can take . . — m. 1 

her maidenhead ere they have it — . 1 y. " 

great pin, ere thou and I part — iv. in 

of beef ere thou sleep in thy — iv. 10 

I know, ere they will have me go — v. I 

speak blasphemy ere bid you (ly — v- -' 

let lis pursue him, ere the writs — v- ■' 

but 'twas ere I was born iHenry I L 1. 3 

made thee faint and fly ere this — \- \ 

but ere sun-set. I'll make thee — ii- '2 

and, ere my knee rise from — 11.3 

weeksere the poor fools (re;).) — ii- ■> 

may yet ere night yield both — i|. .1 

ere I can place myself — \\\- '• 

often ere this day •. . — !(!• :* 

uncrown him ere't be long {,rep. iv. 1) — 111. -i 

ere thou 50, answer — !!'■:' 

ere I go, llostings — "i- •; 

ere he attoin his easeful — v. .. 

hewn up yet ere night — v, 1 

ere ye come there, ue sure ~, , r , ^ ' v 

ere vou were queen Richard IU.\-, 

whiit y ou have been ere now — . I • ■ ■ 

ere I could get a tooth — !!• ' 

dead ere thou wast bom — .! ! • ' 

long ere this have met us — !;!• ' 

from vou, Catesby, ere we sleep ? — u). I 

1 well.'Catesby, ere a fortnight — 111.- 

I in better state than ere I \vas -^ I'l- - 

will lose his head, ere give consent . . — in. 4 

die, ere men can say— God save .... — iv- | 

lo, ere I can repeat tliis curse again.. — iv. 1 

the prime creation ere she framed . . — iv- 3 

ere from this war thou turn — ; v- ' 

misused ere used, by times — iv- 4 

ere I let fall the windows of mine. . — v. .t 

I died for hope, ere I could lend thee — v. .' 
ere he promised; whereby his (rep.) Henry I III. 1. 1 

the other moiety, ere you ask — .1.2 

a runuins banquet ere they rested .. — .!• 4 

this business, ei-e a determinate — n- ' 

gone, ere ye came to Ilium? ..Troilus^Cressida.i. 2 

whose wit was mouldy ere your — !;■ [ 

ere I come any more to your tents .. — .n. 1 

must be watcliedereyoubeniadc.... — lu. ■- 

iii. 4 fight vour hearts out, ere I part you.. — in. - 

though thev be long ere they arc wooed — ni. x 

he shall pay for me ere he has me.... — \"- ■> 

you'll do him wrong ere you are ware — iv. •- 



— iii. I 



— 111. 2 



— iv. 1 



lofAtlints, 



forthwith, ere the first sacnhee ... 
a coasting welcome ere it comes... 
my otfice, ere that correction ..... 

ere we depart, we'll share Ti 

goixlness, sorrv ere 'tis shown ^ 

nuideaway ere itcan be born! — .;. - 

wherefore, ere this time — .!,'•; 

behave his anger, ere 'twos spent ... — in- ' 

to let the meat cool ere we — ;"• '' 

ere thou relieve the lieggar. .......... — >y. ; 

come hither, ere my tree hatli tclt — v. . 

ere thou hadst |M)wer, or we — v. .i 

our pikes, ere we liecomc rakes Conolanut, 1. 1 

the city, ere so prevailed with me .... — '• 1 

ere stay behind this business — 1. ' 

to bodily act ere Koine hod — i- 2 

ere, almost Kome should know — i- 2 

these base slaves, ere yet the fight .. — 1. ■'> 

to oiu- tent! where, ere wc do rci>ose — 1. '■' 



ERE— ere in oiir own house I do .... Corinlanus, ii. 1 

hare you, ere now, denied — ii. S 

ere they lacked power to cross you .. — iii. 2 

ere >^ou go, hear this — iv. 2 

to fright them, ere destroy — iv. 5 

to be executed, ere they wipe — iv. !; 

yield to hira ere he sits down — iv. 7 

I shall ere long have knowledge — v. 1 

ere he express nimself — v. 5 

but ere we could arrive the point. .JuliusCwsar, i. 2 

I will, yet, ere day, see Brutus — i. 3 

ere day, we will awake him — i. 3 

ere I can tell thee what thou — ii. 4 

eud of this day's business, ere it come — v. 1 

yet ere night we shall try fortune.... — v. 3 
sir, he fell upon me, ere admitted. /fji(ony<S-c;eo. ii. 2 

yet, ere we put ourselves inarms .... — ii. 2 

next morn, ere the ninth hour — ii. 5 

I have a mind to strike thee ere thou — ii. 5 

we'll feast each other ere we part — ii. B 

approach, long ere she did appear ... — iii. 6 

you were half blasted ere I knew you — iii. 1 i 
ere death dare come to us'r' 



or less, ere left to after-eye him Cymlieline, i. 4 

ere I could tell him, how I would. ... — i, 4 
ere I could give liim that parting kiss — i. 4 

ere he wakened the chastity he — ii. 2 

many Ctesars, ere such another Julius — iii. 1 

ere wilduess vanquish my — iii. 4 

yet famine, ere clean it overthrow. ... — iii. 6 

better cheer ere j'ou depart — iii. u 

to seem to die, ere sick — iv. 2 

that would die, or ere resist — v. 3 

than die ere I hear more — T. 5 

here's my knee ; ere I arise — v. 5 

ere the stroke of this yet scarce cold .. — t. 5 

war did cease, ere bloody hands — v. 5 

ere half an hour can pass TilusAndronicus, iii. I 

some service, ere I come to thee — v. 2 

stop this tempest ere it came Pericles, i. 2 

yet, ere you shall depart — i.3 

adored them ere their fall — ii. 4 

dead ere you return — iii. 2 

wreath of iiowers, ere the sea mar it . — iv. 1 

ere she had a husband for her bed Lear, i. 1 

.... — ii. 4 



IV. 10 
iv. 12 
iv. 12 
iv. 12 
iv. 12 
iv. 12 
iv. 12 
iv. 12 
iv. 12 
iv. 12 
iv. 12 
iv. 12 
iv. 12 



— iv. 6 
V. 3 
V. 3 
V. 3 



— i. 2 

— i. 4 

— ii. 2 



ere 1 was risen from the place 

flaws, or ere I'll weep 

I'll speak a prophecy ere I go 

revenge, ere I depart his house 

ere long you are like to hear 

ere they nave done their mischief 

beard, ere the black ones were there . . . 
flesh and fell, ere they shall make us . . . 

demanded, ere you had spoke so far 

on thy heart, ere I taste bread 

close fighting ere I did approach Romeo ^-Juliet, i. 1 
ere he can spread his sweeet leaves . . 

ere we may think her ripe to be 

ere once in our five wits 

thou over-heardest ere I was 'ware . . 

cease to be, ere one can say 

now ere the sun advance his biu-ning — ii. 3 

I'll tell thee ere thou ask it me again ii. 3 

stale and hoar ere it be spent — ii. 4 

when it hoars ere it be spent — ii. 4. (song) 

be about your ears ere it be out — iii. 1 

for ere I could draw to part them ... — iii. 1 
go you to her ere you go to bed (rep.) — iii. 4 

ere I again behold my Romeo iii. .5 

must wed, ere he, that should be ... . — iii. 6 

ere this hand, by tliee to Romeo .... iv. 1 

there die strangled ere my Romeo . . iv. 3 

I have watchea ere now all night .... iv. 4 

some minute ere the time v. 3 

a little ere the mightiest Julius fell Hamlet, i. 1 

or ere those shoes were old i.2 

ere yet the salt of most unrighteous .... — i. 2 
teacn you to drink deep ere you depart . . — i.2 

^Col. Kiil.'i ere ever I had seen that day . . i. 2 

ere this, I should have fatted all ii. 2 

again count o'er, ere love be done ! iii. 2 

in her closet, ere you go to bed iii. 2 

I'll call upon you ere you go to bed — iii. 3 

to be forestalled, ere we come to fall — iii. 3 

ere we were two days old at sea — iv. 6 (letter) 

lie i' the earth ere he rot? v. 1 

by the margent, ere j'ou had done v. 2 

ere I would say I would drowu myself. . Othello, i. 3 

ere the next pottle can be filled ii. 3 

I like the work well ; ere it be demanded — iii. 4 

I kissed thee, ere I killed thee _ y. 2 

EREBUS— dark as Erebus Merch. of Venice, v. 1 

with Erebus and tortures vile iHenrylV. ii. 4 

not Erebus itself were dim enough. JwimsC^sarjii. 1 

ERECT— do not erect in this age Much Ada, v. 2 

I'll erect a tomb, wherein 1 Hermj VI. ii. 2 

and there erects thy noble deeds iii. 2 

erect his statue then, and worship. .2HenryVI. iii! 2 

on him erect a second hope. . Troilus <§• Cressida, iv. 5 

ERECTED— where I erected it .... Merry IVives, ii. 2 

walls of ours were not erected. . Tiiiion of Athens, v. 5 

ERECTING-erectinga grammarschool.2Hen. VI. iv.7 

ERECTION-mistook their erection. Merri/ iVives, iii. 5 

we rate the cost of the erection 'ZHenryl V. i. 3 

quell the som-ce of all erection. Timon of Athens, iv. 3 
EKEWHLLE— as I was erewhile.A/jrf.iV.Dreani.iii. 2 
is bad, going o'er it erewhile .... Love's L. Lost, iv. 1 
swain that you saw here e.KVf\\i[e. As youLikeit, ii. 4 
the youth that spoke to me erewhile? — iii. 5 
erewhile mad [Coi.Kn(.-o'erwhelmed]. . Othello, iv. 1 

ERG A— tanta est erga te mentis Henry VIII. iii. 1 

ERGO— ergo, he that kisses my wife . . .ill's Well, i. 3 
will burn; ergo, light venches.. Comedy of Err. iv. 3 
ERLNGOES— and snow eringoes . . Merry Wives, v. 5 
ERINNYS—thirsty Ermnys [Co/.Xn^.-entrauce] 

of this soil \ Henry IV. i. 1 

ERMENGARE— the lady Ermengare . . Henry V. i. 2 
EROS— how now, friend Eros? . . Antony \- Cleo. iii. ,■) 

Etos! mine armour, Eros! Crep.) — iv. 4 

thou fiunblest, Eros; and my queen's — iv. 4 



EROS— go, Eros, send his treasure Antony g-Cli 
despatcli, Eros rCo(.A'M<.-Enobarbus] — 

heart of loss. What, Eros, ErosI — 

Eros, ho! the shirt of Nessus is upon mo — 

she dies for't. Eros, hoi _ 

Eros, thou yet hehold'st me? 

good knave, Eros, now thy captain . . — 
she, Eros, has packed cards with Ctesar — 

nay, weep not, gentle Eros _ 

Eros, unarm ; the long day's task — 

apace, Eros, apace; no more a soldier — 

Eros! I come, my queen: Eros! stay 

Eros, Eros 1 What would my lord? .. — 

thou art sworn, Eros, that when .... 

Bros, wouldst thou be windowed .... 

now, Eros. Why, there then 

thou teachest me, O valiant Eros .... 

my queen and Eros have, by their brave — 

and, Eros, thy master dies thy scholar iv. 12 

ERPINGHAM— sir Thomas Erpingham.«/c/i.7/.ii. 1 

old sir Thomas Erpiugham Henry V. iv. 1 

under sir Thomas Erpiugham iv. 1 

ERR— my jealous aim might err. TwoGen.ofVer. iii. 1 

authority, though it err like Meas. lor Meas. ii. 2 

and as he errs, doting on Hermia's . . Mid. N. Dr. i. 1 

to me religious; else, does err All's Well, ii. 3 

shall borrow, err in bestowing it ... . iii. 7 

these old witnesses (I cannot err). Comedi^o/£rr. v. 1 

and make discovery err in report Macbeth, v. 4 

who cannot err, he did it Henry VIII. i. 1 

what error leads, must err . . Troilus <5- Cressida, v. 2 

which you know, cannot err Cymbeline, i. 7 

cau trip me, if I err _ v. 6 

as they are men, for they may err Pericles, i. 2 

for madness woiUd not err Hamlet, iii. 4 

for nature so preposterously to err Othello, i. 3 

perfection so could err agamst all rules.. i.3 

errs in ignorance, and uot in cunning. ... — iii. 3 

is't frailty, that thus eri's? it is so too iv. 3 

ERRAND— he came of an errand Merry Wives, i. 4 

another erraud to sir John Falstali'.. iii. 4 

she comes of errands, does she? iv. 2 

as good go a mile on his errand.Meas. forMeas. iii. 2 

I will go on the slightest errand Much Ado, ii. 1 

my errand is to you, fair youth . . As you Like it, iv. 3 
but hast thou done thy errand. 7'om<ng-o/S/ire«,-,iv.4 
so meet for tliis great erraud .... Winter's Tale, ii. 2 

but, first, I'll do mme errand — ii. 3 

upon which errand I now go toward — v. 1 
my errand, due unto my tort^ue.Comedy of Err. ii. 1 

my holy errand is. I Pandiilph King'John, iii. 1 

thy tongue to tell tliy errand 2HenryIV. i. 1 

I know thy erraud, I will go with thee. Henry V. iv. 1 

drab, on a sleeveless errand Troilus 4- Cress. V. 4 

I'll say an errand for you Coriolanus, v. 2 

to know my errand, madam Julius Ccesar, ii. 4 

meet to be sent on errands — iv. 1 

shall bear us an errand to him./4n/o7i)/ ^Cleo. iii. 11 

you shall know my errand .... llomeo fy Juliet, iii. 3 

ERRANT— and errant from his . . Troilus S^ Cress, i. 3 

ERRED-in your life erred in i'h.is.Meas.for Meas. ii. 1 

lest that he had erred or sinned Pericles, 1. 3 

ERREST— madman, thou errest. . Twelfth Night, iv. 2 

ERRING— this erring love .. Two Gen.of Verona, ii. 4 

runs his erring pilgrimage. .^s youLikeit, iii. 2 (ver.) 

the extravagant and errmg spirit Hamlet, i. 1 

an erring barbarian and a supersubtle ..Othello, i. 3 
and yet, how nature erring from itself . . — iii. 3 
ERRONEOXJS-erroneous, mutinous.3 Henry VI. ii. 5 
erroneous vassal! the great king . . Richard III. i. 4 
ERROR-that one error fills him. Tiro Gen. of Ver. v. 4 
that this may be some error .... Twelfth Night, iv. 3 

but thou art full of error Meas. for Meas. i. 2 

to burn the errors that these princes. J)/«cA Ado, iv. 1 
guiltless here rmder some biting error — iv. i 
upon the error that you heard debated — y. 4 
to take from thence all error . . Mid. N. Dream, iii. 2 
this is the greatest error of all the rest — v. 1 

pardon sir, error : he is not Love's L. Lost, v. 1 

m will, and error. Much upon — v. 2 

the error that love makes is — v. 2 

what damned error, but some sober. Mcr. ofVen. 

and many an error — iv. 1 

religious in mine error, I adore All's Well, i. 3 

error i' the bill, sir; error i' the. . Taming ofSh. iv. 3 
make, and unfold error .. Winler'sTale, iv. (chorus) 
what error drives our eyes and ears. Com. of Err. ii. 2 
smothered in errors, feeble, shallow.. — iii. 2 
and thereupon these errors are arose — v. 1 
this synipathised one day's error .... — v. 1 
make a faithless error in your ears. . King John, ii. 1 
wrangling Somerset in the error? . ... 1 Henry VI. ii. 4 
thy tongue will not confess thy error — ii. 4 
the error of our eye directs (rep.'). Trail. ^ Cress, v. 2 
with words and errors still she feeds. . — v. 3 
mountainous error be too highly. . . . Coriolanus, ii. 3 
hateful error, melancholy's cliild! . . JuliusCcesar, v. 3 

error soon conceived, thou never . . — v. 3 
make us adore om- errors. .^n(ony iS- Cleopatra, iii. 1 1 

my boys, there was om' error Cymbeline, v. 5 

but breath; to trust it, error Pericles, i. 1 

mischance, on plots, auderrors, hupi^cu. Hamlet, v. 2 

1 do not secvu-e me in the error Othello, i. 3 

she will find the error of her choice — i.3 

it is the very error of the moon — v. 2 

ERST— which erst was irksome ..Asyitu Likeit, iii. 5 

that erst brought sweetly forth HenryV. v. 2 

that erst did follow thy proud iHenry VI. ii. 4 

as Tarquin erst, that lett TilusAndronicus, iv. 1 

as erst omr ancestor, when with — v. 3 

as erst they did; so I bequeath Pericles, i. 1 

ERUDITION-beyond all erudition. Trail. SfCres. ii.3 

ERURTION—at such eruptions ..Love'sL.Lost,v. 1 
breaks forth in strange eruptions . . 1 Henry IV. iii. 1 

as these strange eruptions are Julius'Ca:sar,i. 3 

bodes some strange eraption to our state. Hnm(c(, i. I 

ESCALUS— Escalus, — Measure for Measure, i. 1 

old Escalus, though first in question — 1. 1 

'tis one tbJng to be tempted, Escalus — ii. 1 
notice to Escalus and Augelo — iv. 3 



ESCALUS-come, Escalus; youmust.Meo./o»-A/ea.v. 1 

you, lord Escalus, sit with my cousin — v 1 

thanks, good friend Escalus, for thy _ v 1 

T^o,?1''i?l.%'^'"'''^ '*' *'^'^ Frenchman?...4;r.!W'f«, iii. 5 

^ . I'Sv^""""' ,"°' W Escaues Pericles, ii. 4 

iran A wr>Sn^ lu'""? Helicanus late — iv. 4 (cJow.) 
SS>i . i,.i^''J~''^'^" '^"^ ">'"■' escap'dst. Temues/, ii. 2 
EbLAPE- tor our escape is much beyond — ii. ! 

and a kerchief, and so escape Merry Wives, iv. 2 

mme own escape unfoldeth to my. Twelfth Night, i 2 

give him liberty to escape Meas. for Meas. iv. 2 

he that escapes me without some. .AsyouLikeit, i. 1 
tor a week, escape a great deal of . . . . All's Well, iii. 6 
I tor my escape have put on his . . Tamingof Sh. i 1 
privy to this their late escape ... . Winter's Tale, ii. 1 

to tell the kmg of this escape — iv. 3 

I wot not by what strong esaapa. Comedy of Err. v! 1 
m him that escapes, it were not sin. . Henry V. iv. 1 

Shalt escape by sudden flight 1 Henry VI. iv. ly 

happy tidings of his good escape . . . .ZHenry VI. ii. 1 
no, tis impossible he should escape.. — ii 6 

but how made he escape? _ iv s 

even he escapes not language Henry VIII. i! 2 

thus X do escape the sorrow Antony ^ Cleo. iv. 12 

despise her for this foul escape . . Titus Andron. iv. 2 

thou Shalt not escape calumny Hamlet, iii. 1 

If he by chance escape your venomed — iv 7 

•cS'A}:i?J^^^^'^ ^""''i *<^a«h me tyranny.. 0(Ai?/(o, i. 3 

Ji&L.Ai'Jt.U— I escaped upon a butt .... Tempest, ii. 2 

sailors that escaped the wreck. . Mer.of Venice iii 1 

well-mounted, hardly have escaped.. Xin£-./o/i«, v. 6 

hardly we escaped the pride 1 Henry VI. iii. 2 

1 wonder, how the king escaped o\iX..ZHenry VI. i. 1 

that Edward is escaped from _ iv. B 

the blood that has to day escaped . . Ant.fyCleo. iv. 8 

T^o^ .?i'^?t ^ *''^*'' escaped the hunt Lear, ii. 3 

i^gXfr.?,^;:rl.*'"^''P*^" '^"' himself, fwicies, ii. (Gower) 
^^c^^f rf^SFJi?""'^ eschapper la force . . Henry V. iv. 4 
:§;5^i^-'!' WED— cannot be eschewed. Men-i/ Wives, v. 5 
^gj<^-n!^y^',1"'^ je ^'^^ ^e t'°° cscolier. Hf«ry ;'. iii. 4 

f^^J^l^TrS.^T;"''^ ^""^ *'^<^y escoted? Hamlet, ii. 2 

ESOUUlEZ—de nails; escoutez HenryV.iii 4 

excusez moy, Alice; escoutez; de hand — iii 4 

escoutez; comment estesvous appelle? — iv. 4 

ESCUS-je vous douneray deux cents escus— iv' 4 

pour les escus que vous I'avez promis — iv 4 

^SS'.T;?'?'?''' ^"^'""^ "P ^'^'l' Hamlet, v. 1 

JiSii'Ji.ClAlj-upon especial cause. IHereryF/.iv. 1 (let ) 

this deed, for tliine especial safety Hamlet, iv. 3 

tor your rapier most especial — iv.7 

■p en ^ol^ especial commission come from. Othello, i v. 2 
ESPECIALLY- especially, against his very 

*™tiu Two Gen. of Verona,iii. 2 

especially to know himself Meas. for Meas. iii. 2 

and especially, when I walk away . . . Much Ado, ii. 1 
my lord ; especially against Benedick — ii. 3 
and especially of my ovm people .. As you Likeit, i. I 

I especially think, under Mars All's Well, i. 1 

especially he hath incurred the everlasting — iv. 3 

does drink especially provoke? Macbeth, ii. 3 

Kichardright; especially for those.. 1 He/ire VI. iii 1 
especially, since Charles must father it — v. 4 
especially to you,fair queen !. Troihis^Cressida,iii. 1 
especially upon bare friendship .. Timon of Alh. iii. 1 
proceed especially against Caius .... Coriolanus, i. 1 

especially in pride _ ij 1 

ladies of Rome, especially his mother' — v' 4 
esirecially that of Cleopatra's ....Antony &Cleo. i. 2 

especially of the younger sort ? Pericles, iv. 3 

of It especially, where he speaks Hamlet, ii. 2 

ESPERANCE-0 esperance ' 1 Henry /F. ii. 3 

now,— esperance ! Percy I y. o 

an esperance so obstinately strong. Trail. & Cress, v. 2 

stands still in esperance Lear iv. 1 

ESPIAL— the prince's espials have ...iHe'nnj VI. i 4 

by your espials were discovered _ iv 3 

her father, and myself, lawful espials. . Hamlet, iii. 1 

ESPIED— we are espied TilusAndronicus, ii. 3 

where I espied the panther fast — ii. 4 

ESPIES— the next thing he espies . . Mid. N. Dr. ii! 2 

our Tyrian ship espies Pericles, v. (Gower) 

.2 ESPOUSE— by name, and Iier espouse.. Hcnra F. ii 1 

' Henry shall espouse the lady iHenry VI. i. 1 

he shall espouse Elizabeth Richard III. iv 5 

in the sacred Pantheon her espouse.. r//us And. i. 2 
ESPOUS ED-and so, espoused to death. . Henry V. iv. 6 

my task, and was espoused IHenry VI. i. 1 

I lead espoused my bride along . . . Titus Andron. i. 2 
ESPY— when his love he doth espy. A/id. N.'s Dr. iii. 2 

he doth espy himself King John. ii. 2 

securely I espy virtue with valour ..Richard II. i. 3 
EbQUIRE— Robert Shallow, esquire. Merry Wives, i. 1 

Robert Shallow, esquire, saith — i. 1 

a poor esquire of this county iHenry IV. iii. 2 

visit Robert Shallow, esquire — iv. 3 

and two hundred good esquires Henry V.i. 1 

of knights, esquires, and iv. 8 

Davy Gam. esquire _ iv. 8. 

Alexander Iden,an esquire ofKent.2Henryr/. iv. 10 

a poor esquire of Kent, that loves — v. 1 

ESSAY— gleaned land with hot essays .... Henry V.i. 2 

but as an essay or taste of my virtue Lear, i. 2 

ESSENCE— she is my essence. . . Two Gen. of Ver. iii. 1 

his glassy essence,— like an Meas.for Meas. ii. 2 

her lionom- is an essence that's not seen. Othello, i v. 1 
ESSENTIAL— in the essential vesture .. — ii. 1 
ESSENTIALLY— essentially mad .. iHenry IV. ii. 4 

hath not essentially 'IHenry VI. v. 2 

that I essentially am not in madness . . Hamlet, iii. 4 
ESSEX_power,of Essex,Norfolk....3Hpnr!/ VI. i. 1 
ESTABLISH— establish him in . . Comedy of Err. iv. 4 

we will establish our estate Macbeth, i. 4 

but to establish here a peace iHenry IV. iv. 1 

and, what we do establish iHenry VI. iii. 1 

mean to establish C<Bsar as a 'king.Julius Ccesar, i. 3 



ESTABLISHED— 
establislied proclaimed edict ..Love's L. L. i. 1 (let.) 
cau alter a decree established . . Mer. of Venice, iv. 1 

establislied there this law Henry V.i. 2 

established between these realms . .\ Henry VI. v. a 



EST 



ESTABLISHED- 

aiul uno in blocnl ostnWis'iH liicharil Ill.y.i 

any wholc.-ionic r.n , i ii h !i. 1 Corinlanut, i. 1 

eslablialial the i^n", :. in:i i.^liig — lii. 1 

ESTATK— (lonati.u In, I. ;.. iiio .. r<r»ipM(, iv. 1 

oc<'n.-=ion nu'llow, \Mi;i( m.v isiuU- is ..Ticelflh N. i. 2 

mitlier ill istutt, yourti, nor wit — 1.3 

but wliou 1 v.wK to niun'3 estate . . — V. 1 (song) 
I do i>tiiti.' unto DcnK'tiius .... Mid. N. Unaiii, i. 1 
you oil an istalis will oxicutc .. Lore's L. Lost. v. 2 
nor is my wlioie' ii.tulf upon . . Menh. nf /Vm'cc, i. 1 
iliMilik-il Miiiio i'.~tiilf, liv something.. — i. 1 
O that I'-tuIcs. ilt-'ivcs, iiiul oHiws .. — ii. 9 
• letter there i\ ill show voii his estate — ill. 2 
my estate is very low, my hoiiil. . — iii. 2 (letter) 

tlie eonilition ot my estiite As you Likcii, i. 2 

will I estate ii|ioii von, iinil here — v. 2 

(liirerenee liet« ixt their two estates.... /!«'»»«;, i. 3 
ransom nature from her inaidubie estate — ii. 1 

if not to thy estate, a balance — ii. 3 

though my estate be fallen, I was .. — iii. 7 
shame to your estate, an eyesore. 7'aminffo/.'>/i. iii. 2 

into an unspeakable estate tFinlei's Tale, iv. 1 

dispute his own estate? lies he not .. — iv. 3 
beinij in so prosiierous estate as we are — v. 2 
we will estiiDlisli our estate upon our . . Macbpth, i. 4 
aud wish the estate o' the world were now — v. 5 

walks my estate in France! Kin\iJohii, iv. 2 

tts in a nuxlel, our firm estate? ....Richard II. iii. 4 

know onrown estate, how able 'iltenrulf. i. 3 

w hat thinks he of our estate? Hennj I', iv. I 

to shine on my contemptible estate.. I Henri/ VI. i. 2 

stiur now envies thy estate illinryl'I. iii. 1 

that your estate requires illenry VI. iii. 3 

knew in what estate he stands — iv. 3 

by how much tlie estate is green ..Richard III. ii. i 

equally indeed to all estates — iii. 7 

by this so sickened their estates Uenry VIII. i. 1 

this way, is business of estate — ii. 2 

remember the estate of my poor queen — v. 1 
and my estate deserves au \\eir..Timon qfAlhem, i. 1 

in the 6l)b of your estate — ii. 2 

he's stepped into a creat estate — ii. 2 

and his estate shrinks from him .... — iii. 2 

supported his estate; nay — iii. 2 

these tliree owe their estates unto him — iii. 3 
still comes where an estate is least . . — iv. 3 

we sin ogainst our own estate — v. I 

an estate of seven years' health .... Cmlhlaniis, ii. 1 
should we sliift estates, yours would. ^ljj/.,$-neo. v. 2 
pawn the moiety of my "estate to .... Cymbeline, i. 5 
would I had put my estate, and my — i. 5 
with dignities becoming your estates — v. 5 

60, think of your estate — y. 5 

we could pick up some pretty estate . . Pericles, iv. 3 
in time to great and liigu estate — iv. 4 (Gower) 

haring seen me in my worst estate Lear, v. 3 

dispute with thee of thy estate. ./iomeo f,- Juliet, iii. 3 
poisons him i'the garden for his estate. Ha;nii>(, iii. 2 
the terms of our estate may not endure . . — iii. 3 
'twas of some estate: coueii we awlule .. — v, 1 

ESTEEM— of good esteem TiroGen.of Verona, i. 3 

aud my possessions she esteems not.. — iii. 1 
nought esteems my aged eloquence.. — iii. 1 
60 high in his esteem, because I ara.Mid. N.Dr. ii. 2 
this their jangling I esteem a sport.. — iii. 2 
held precious in the world's esteem.. /.ore's L.t. ii. 1 
a greater esteem than may in some.^s you Like, v. 2 

to esteem a senseless help, when Alt'sWcU, ii. 1 

our esteem was made much poorer . . — v. 3 
I would esteem him worth .. Taming of Sh. 1 (ind.) 
so high esteem, should be infused ... . — 2 (ind.) 
she is of good esteem, her dowry. ... — iv. .i 
and besiwch so to esteem of us. . . . H'inter'sTale, ii. 3 

a coward in thine own esteem Macbeth, i. 7 

the poor state esteem him as — iv. 3 

thy weary steps esteem a foil Ricliardll. i. 3 

he esteems himself happy that he Henry V. iv. 4 

five hundred jirisonei-s ol esteem . . 1 Henry VI. iii. 4 

esteem none frieuds, but such — iv. 1 

unto another lady of esteem — v. 5 

otg'xnl esteem, he be approved iHenry VI. iii. 2 

thy prowess want praise and esteem . . — v. 2 

in much esteem with the king Henry VI 1 1, iv. 1 

he esteems her no more (rep.) . , Troilus ^ Cress, i. 2 
aiirl esteem no act but that of hand . . — i. 3 

things again most dear in tlie esteem iii. 3 

what do you esteem it at? Cymbeline, i. 5 

a.s cats and dogs, of no esteem — v. 5 

here in Verona, ladies of esteem.. Borneo ,^ Juliet, i. 3 

my noble lord esteems me honest Othello, iv. 2 

ESTEEMED— he is esteemed Lom'j L. Loj(, ii. 1 

but, most esteemed greatness, will you v. 2 

with me esteemed above thy life.il/er. of Venice, iv. 1 

the world esteemed thy father As ynu Like it, i. 2 

Imth esteemed him no more.. Taming ofSh. 1 (ind.) 
how is the man esteemed here ..Comedy of Err. v. 1 
raostesteemed friend, your brother. TroH.fy Ores. iii. i 
thou shalt lie no less esteemed.. Timon of Athens, ii. 2 
they should be esteemed nothing.. ^n(oni/(5-C/eo. i. 2 

proclaims how she esteemed him Cymbeline, i. 1 

side of our known world esteemed him.. //am(e/, i. 1 

ESTEE.M EST-e»teemest thou mo? TwoGen.of Ter.ii.l 

which tliou cstecmest the ornament ot'.. Macbeth, i. 7 

ESTEE.MKTIl-she esteemeth . Wo Gen. of Ver. iii. 2 

ESTlMABEE-such estimable wonder. 7'«ic//7/i X. ii. 1 

is not so estimable, [iroli table . . Merch. of Venice, i. 3 

ESTIMATE— in thee liuth estimate ..AlVslVell, ii. i 

else of name, and noble estimate . . Ricliard II. ii. 3 

it holds his estimate and dignity. Troilus iy Cress, ii. 2 

ifhc will touch tlieeBtiniatc....7'i'niono/.4//icn>, i. 1 

my dear wife's estimate Coriolanus, iii. 3 

ESTIiMATKjN-worthy estimation. 7'iro6'eii.o/r.ii.4 

cannot plead his estimation Meat, for .Mras. iv. 2 

whose estimation do^iiu mightily ...Much Ado, ii. 2 
liearing, and estimation . . Lore's L. Lost, i. I (letter) 
be'st ruled by thy estimation.. iWere/i.o/ Venice, ii. 7 
to let him lack a reverend estimation — iv. 1 
turn but in the estimation of a hair.. — iv. 1 
to know her cstimatioa home /Ill's H'ell, v. 3 



[ 221 ] 



ESTIM ATION-ungalled estimation. Com.o/Brr. iii. 1 

I speak not this in estimation I Henry IV. i. 3 

dear men of estimation, and command — iv. 4 

of his greul, name alul estimation — v. 1 

a man o( no e.,t ination in the 'orld .. Henry V. iii. 8 
bei-'-iir thee limalion kUxcU yim.Troilus^Cres. ii. 2 

who. ill a ehe:'.|i estiinaiion Coriolanus, ii. I 

at all into their estimation and report — ii. 2 
to earn a dearer estimation of them.. — ii. 3 
he would use me with estimation.... — v. 2 

know now, thai 1 am in e--liination.. — v. 2 
brace of impiizalile estinmlions . . . . Cymlietine, i. S 

do tliev hold (he same estimation i/.iin/c/, ii. 2 

against my estiniati.m ! [('„/. -re|iutatioiOo//iW;„, i. 3 
ES'riAllC-et je m'estime heiiienx . . . . Ilrnn/ V. iv. 4 
ESTRANCilOl)-voil thus est la ived ?. Lr,.v's ;.. /,. v. 2 
art tlieil estran-ed from tlivsell7.Com,-Jj/ o/' /;>/■. ii. 2 
ESTi; 1 1 Hi lO-all pi limed liKeestridges I /ie»'ry/;'. iv. I 
the ilove will |ieek the e»trid^'e./l;i(onj( ^j-Cteo. iii. 11 
ETC'ICTICKA-are eleeteras nothing 1.. 'IHenry IV. ii. 4 
ETEUNAL-Kternul's wrath's .. 7W Gen.ofVer. v. 4 

for an eternal inonient, or so Merry ivives, ii. 1 

give eternal food to his jealousy .... — ii, l 
a contract of eternal hoiid >it' iovc.Tirelftli Night, v. 1 
stands in attainiler of eternal shame. /.one'j L. L. i. I 

and my poor doing eternal Alt's H'ell, ii. 3 

and sworn to make the not eternal. . — iii. 2 (let.) 
as to-day, and be boy eternal .... Winter's Tale, i. 2 

and mine eternal jewel given iUacdei/i, iii. 1 

an eternal curse fall on you I — iv. 1 

hoUliiig the eternal spirit King John, iii. 4 

shame, and eternal shame Henry V. iv. 5 

thy lingers for eternal peace 1 Henry VI. v. 3 

Asmatli, by the eternal God illenry VI. i. 4 

worm might make the sleep eternal.. — iii. 2 
of thou eternal mover of the heavens — iii. 3 

his love was an eternal plant 3 Henry VI. iii. 3 

hath ill eternal diirkiiess Inlded ui). Uichur'd HI. i. 3 
into the blind cave <ileteriiul night .. — v. 3 
promised me eternal hapiiiuess . . Henry VIII. iv. 2 
so eternal and so fixed a soul.. Troilus <§- Cressida, v. 2 

have brooked the eternal devil Julius CcBsar, i. 2 

would be eternal in our triumph. .4H(o;ii/'5'C/eo. v. 1 
no noise, but silence and eternal sleep: Tiius And. i. 2 

and fame's eternal date — i. 2 

may slumber in eternal sleep ! — ii. 5 

keep eternal spring-time on thy face. — iii. 1 
keeps his part in eternal life . . Romeo ^- Juliet, iv. 5 
but this eternal blazon must not be .... Hamlet, i. 5 

feast is to\sard in thine eternal cell — v. 2 

by the worth of mine eternal soul Othello, iii. 3 

1 will be hanged, if some eternal villain . — iv. 2 

ETERNALLY- eternally be knit..jV/i/. N. Dr. iv. 1 

ETERNE— nature's copy's not etarni:.. Macbeth, iii. 2 

JIars's armour, forged for proof eterne./iam(e/, ii. 2 

ETERNITY— heirs of all eternity Love's L. Lost, i. 1 

who, had he liimself eternity .... Winter's Talc, v. 2 

wished this world's eternity -iHenry VI. ii. 4 

divide eternity in twain Troilus ^Cressida, ii. 3 

but eternity, and a heaven Coriolanus, v. 4 

eteruity was in our lips Antony 4 Ctenpalra,i. 3 

model of eternity iCol. /fn/.-niglitly I will 

dew] Romeo ^Juliet, v. 3 

passing through nature to eteruity Hamlet, i. 2 

ETERNIZED— eternized in all use.. 2 Henry VI. v. 3 
ETUIOP— but a swarthy Ethiop. Ta-oGcn of Ver. ii. 6 

my mind, were she an Ethiop Much Ado, v. 4 

away, you Ethiop I Mid, N. Dream, iii. 2 

Juno but an Ethiop were. . Loi-e's L.L. iv, 3 (verses) 
and Ethiops of their sweet complexion... — iv. 3 

such Ethiop words is you Like it, iv. 3 

upon his shield is a black Ethiop Pericles, ii. 2 

rieii jewel in an Ethiop's'ear .... Romeo i^- Juliet, i. 5 
ETUIOPIjUST— my Ethiopian? ....Merry Wives, ii. 3 

or Ethiopian's tooth Winter'sTale, iv. 3 

ETON— and marry her at Eton Merry Wives, iv. 4 

so soon as I came bey'ond Eton ^ iv. 5 

and with him at Eton immediately.. — iv. 6 

I came yonder at I'^toii — v. 5 

EUNUCil-present me as a eunuch. r(ce(/7A Night, i. 2 
be you his eunuch, and your mute ., — i. 2 

sung by an Athenian eunuch ..Mid, N. Dream, v. 1 
though ArL'us were her eunuch ..Love's L. L. iii. 1 

to the Turks to make eunuchs of All's Well, ii. 3 

and made it an euuuch 'iHenry VI. iv. 2 

into a pipe small as an eunuch Coriolanus, iii. 2 

thou enuiieh! Mardiau! Antony^ Cleo.i.b 

no pleasure in aught an eunuch has.. — i. 5 

woman with an eunuch played — ii. 5 

that Photinus an eunuch — iii. 7 

hence, saucy eunuch; peace — iv. 12 

voice of unpavcd evmuch to boot Cymbeline, ii. 3 

if she do, I Would I were an eunuch.. Tilus And. ii. 3 
EUPHRATES- A-ia fnim Eiiphrates./(«(. <!J- C/eo. i. 2 
EURlPIULK-linrii.hiie, thou wast. Cj/mtedne, iii. 3 

by good l",nri|iliile, our mother — iv. 2 

save that I'^uiiphile must be I'ldele .. — iv. 2 

their nurse, iOnriiiliile — v. 5 

EUHOPA— a hull lor thy Eiiropa ..Merry Wires,\. h 

all lOiiropa shall rejoice at thee (rep.) Much Ado, v. 4 

EUROPE— bless our Europe with your. 7'empe»(, ii. 1 

no court in Eurone is too good . . Winter's Tale, ii. 2 

the dearest chandler's in Europe ..\Henry IV. iii. 3 

and sir John, with all Euroiie 'iHenry IV. ii. 2 

tlie must active fellow in Enroiic .... — iv. 3 

mistress court of mighty Europe Henry V. ii. 4 

it is the best horse ol Europe — iii. 7 

shall make all Europe qualie 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

theflowerof Enro|ic for his chivalry. 31/e/iry Vl.ii. 1 
a revenue of any king's in Europe ..Cymbeline, ii. 3 

E'VADE— if he evade us there Coriolunus, iii. 3 

purposes, evades them, with a bombast. . Otlwllo, i. I 

Ev'AN'S— tell master parson Evans.. iWerrv"'ire», i. 4 

EVASION— no more evasion .... Meas.far Mens. i. I 

his evasions have eai"S thus long. TroiUu ^ Cress, ii. I 

there can be no evasion to bleiieh.... — ii. 2 

but his evasion, wiii^'ed thus s«ift .. — ii. 3 

an admirable evasion of whoremastcr man. tear, i. 2 

EVE— it was Eve's leguey . . Two Gen. of Verona, iii. I 

so curses all Eve's daughters .... Merry Wives, iv. 2 



EVE 

£V E— as witty a jiiece of Eve's flesh. Twelfth Night, i. 5 

All-hollond eve Measure for Measure, ii. I 

child of our giandiiiother En. .Love's L. L. i. 1 (let.) 
been Adam, he had tenii.ted Eve .... — v. 2 
what i:\e, what seriient hath ....Richard III. iii. 4 

EVEN— that even ambition cannot Tempest, ii. I 

even now, we heard a hollow _ ii. i 

do even refresh my labours _ iii. l 

even here I will put off my hope — iii. s 

and even with sneli like valour — iii. 3 

even toroarin.;: eome _ iv. 1 

which even now I do _ v. I 

even social. le to the show of tliine — v. 1 

would even infect my mouth — v. 1 

where, hilt even now v. I 

e\'cn ill a dream, were we — v. I 

thrive therein even as I would.. Tu-oGen. of Ver. i. I 

even so by love the young j. i 

losing his verdure even in the prime — i. 1 
even witli the siieediest expedition .. — i. 3 

even she I mean jj. i 

even she; and is she not ii. 4 

even as one heat another ii. 4 

and even that power ji. 

and, even in kind love, I do ii. 7 

why, even that fashion _ ii. 7 

even in the milk-white bosom — iii. 1 

even now about it in. 2 

my will is even this — iv. 2 

even for this time I spend iv. 2 

even from a heart as full iv. 3 

even as one would suy jirecisely iv. 4 

at Patrick's cell this even v. 2 

who even now gave me good eyes. . Merry Wives, i. 3 

even as you came in to me ii. 2 

an old fat woman eveu now with roe — iv. 5 

even to my wish iv. B 

her mother even strong against _ iv. t> 

o'erlooked even in thy birth v. ,«/ 

even in a minute 1 Twelfth Night, i. 1 

the book even of my secret soul — i. 4 

even to the least sinister usage i. .') 

sing them loud even in the dead of . . — \. b 

eveu so quickly may one catch i. .'> 

even now with the countess (rep.) — ii. 2 

is'tevenso? ii. 3 

even when they to perfection grow ! . . — ii. 4 
cross-gartered even with the swiftness — ii. .'> 

even to a mortal arbitrement iii. 4 

even such, and so, in favour was — iii. 4 

even what it please my lord v. 1 

even for the vows we made v. I 

a woman as the rest goes even v. 1 

unhappily, even so Measure for Measure, i. 3 

even liKe an o'ergrown lion 1.4 

even so her plenteous womb i. .'> 

even for our kitchens we kill ij. 2 

from thee; even from thy virtnel — ii. 2 

and even so the general, subject to .. ii. 4 

even so? Heaven keep your honour! — ii. 4 

that makes these odds all even — iii. 1 

the time is come, even now — iv. I 

paralleled even with the stroke — iv. y 

even so niav Angelo, in all his v. I 

most audible, even from his proper .. v. 1 

your highness said even now — v. I 

even so much, that joy could not MuchAdo, i. 1 

even he i. 3 

therefore I will even take sixpence .. — ii. I 

who even now is couched in — iii. 1 

'tis even SO; Hero and Margaret have — iii. 2 
even she. Leonato's Uero, your Hero — iii. 2 
even the night before her wedding-day — iii. 2 
a very even way, but no such friend — iv. I 

what they wi.iL'h, even to the utmost — v. I 
I ha\X' deceived even your very eyes — v. 1 

yea, eveu I alone — v. 1 

in the e^en road of a blank verse ,. .. — v. 2 
aud even Jbr that do I love you.jUii/. N. Dream, ii. 2 

tell true, even for my sake — iii. 2 

put in two scales, will even weigh .. — iii. 2 
who even hut now did spurn me .... — iii, 2 
may tread, even till the eastern gate — iii. 2 
whom e\eii .love would swear. /.ot'e'sL.X.. iv. 3 (ver.) 

now the nuniher iscven — iv. 3 

here, but even now", disguised? — v. 2 

dead, for my life. Even so — v. 2 

fashioning our humours even to ... . — v. 2 

and even that falsehood, in itself — v. 2 

but even now worth this Merchant of Venice, i. I 

shall be racked, eveu to the uttermost — i. I 
he rails, eveu there where merchants — i. 3 

even for that, I thank you — ii. I 

so arc you, sweet, even in the lovely — ii. 6 
weigh thy value with uii even hand.. — ii. 7 
eveu there, his eye being big with .. — ii. » 

tlie outward wall, even in — ii. 9 

then music is even as the flourish,... — iii. 2 

stand 1, even so; as doubtful — iii. 2 

even now, but now, this house — iii. 2 

1 do beseech you, even at that — iii 2 

even such a husband hast thou of me — iii. 5 
even from the gallows did his fell. . . . — iv. i 

even so void is your false heart — v. I 

even he that had held up — v. 1 

1 swear to thee, even by thine own .. — v. 1 

and but even now returned — v. 1 

is it even so? liegin you to gi-ow ..As you Like it, i. I 
is yonder the nian? Even he, madam — i. 2 

upon my bixly, even till I shrink.... — ii. I 
choke their service up even with .... — ii. 3 

lie is but even now gone hence — ii. 7 

is anatomized even liy — ii. 7 

reputation even in the caunon's — ii. 7 

horns? even so; poor men aloue? .... — iii. 3 

even a toy in hand here, sir — iii. .> 

to make lill this matter even — v. 1 

t» make these doubts all even — v. 4 

earthly things made even — v. I (verse; 

welcome thuu art to me, cvea daughter — v. 4 



EVE 



[ 222 ] 



EVEN— have had to even your coatent.AU's Well, i. 3 

even so it was vrith me — i. 3 

but will you make it even? — ii. 1 

find in you, even to the world's — ii. 4 

his greatness, even to the utmost — iii. 6 

even such as you speak to me — iv. 1 

who had even tuned his bounty — iv. 3 

true, even to the point of her — iv. 3 

to make the even truth in pleasure. . — v. 3 

even as a flattering dream Tamingo/Sh, 1 (ind.) 

with her breath, even as the waving — 2 (ind.) 

is't he you mean? Even he — i. 2 

food sooth, even thus — iii. 2 

will be free, even to the uttermost. . — iv. 3 

even as your mind; what you (.re/3.) — iv. 5 

owes the prince, even such, a woman — v. 2 

do even drag me homeward Winter'' s Tale, i. 2 

many a man there is, even at this.... — i. 2 

even for your son's sake — i. 2 

dost advise me, even so as mine — 1.2 

even now I met him with customary — i. 2 

I eyed them even to their ships — ii. 1 

she 6 a bed-swerver, even as bad as . . — ii. 1 

even thou, that hast a heart so tender — ii. 3 

something rare, even then will rush. . — iii. 1 

we pronounce, even pushes 'gainst . . — iii. 2 

with a love, even such — iii. 2 

love had spoke, even since it could ... — iii. 2 

ay, my lord; even so as it is here set — iii. 2 

he hollaed but even now — iii. 3 

are even now to be afresh lamented . . — iv. 1 

I will even-take my leave of you .... — iv. 2 

even now I tremble to think — iv. 3 

I love a ballad but even too well .... — iv. 3 

even here undone! I was not much . , — iv. 3 

CamiUo. Even he, my lord — iv. 3 

as I maj' say, even blessed — iv. 3 

then, even now, I might have looked. — v. 1 

that even your ears should to hear me — v. 1 

1 thought of her, even in these looks . — v. 1 

the ciiild, were even tlien lost — v. 2 

thus she stood, even with such life — v. 3 

even now, even here Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

for even her very words didst — ii. 2 

Antipholus, hate, even in the spring.. — Iii. 2 

even my soul doth for a wife — iii. 2 

even just the sum, that I — Iv. 1 

I gave it you even now — iv. 1 

even now a tailor called me — iv. 3 

invisible : even now we housed — v. 1 

«ven for the service that long — v. 1 

even for the blood that then X lost. ... — v. 1 

dishonoured me, even in the — v. 1 

the sin of my ingratitude even now. . . . Macbeth, i. 4 

'tis uimatural, even like the deed — ii. 4 

both sides are even : here I'll — iii. 4 

you make me strange even to the — iii. 4 

all together, even till destruction — iv. 1 

and even now to crown my — iv. 1 

perchance, even there, where I — iv. 3 

for even now I put myself : — iv. 3 

even so? To bed; to bed — v. 1 

that even now protest their first — v. 2 

and make us even with you — v. 7 

even till that England King John, ii. I 

even till th at utrSost corner — ii. 1 

while they weigh so even, we hold ... — ii. 2 

with course disturbed even thy — ii. 2 

■upon these jades, even till unfenced. . — ii. 2 

lay this Anglers even with — ii. 2 

made to run even, upon even ground — ii. 2 

and even before tliis truce, but new. . — iii. 1 

even for that name, upon my knee .. — iii. 1 

hath fallen, even to that drop — iii. 4 

for even the breath of what I — iii. 4 

«ven at that news he dies — iii. 4 

even in the matter of mine innocence — iv. 1 

my eyes are out, even with the fierce. — iv. 1 

is braved, even at my gates — iv. 2 

even so I have; I did suppose — v. 1 

and even there, methinks, an angel . . — v. 2 

and to win renown even in the jaws. . — v. 2 

had the strength, even at your door.. — v. 2 

even at the crying of your nation's. . . — v. 2 

and even at hand a drum is — v. 2 

brought to Richard but even now .... — v. 3 

even on that altar where we — v. 4 

bleeds away, even as a form of wax. . — v. 4 

but even this night, whose black — v. 4 

run on in obedience, even to our ocean — v. 4 

left him; even now he sung — v. 7 

even so must rim I on, and even so .. — v. 7 

to run a-foot even to the frozen Richard II. i. 1 

even from the tongueless caverns — i. 1 

a loyal gentleman even in the — i. 1 

shame doth harboiu", even in — i. 1 

of Gaunt, even in the lusty 'haviom* — i. 3 

and make us wade even in our — i. 3 

uncle, even in the "lasses of — i. 3 

for even so looked ne, accomplished — ii. 1 

not SO; even through the hollow eyes — ii. 1 

even in condition of the worst — ii. 3 

hither come even at his feet — iii. 3 

all must be even in our government — iii. 4 

rue, even for ruth, here shortly — iii. 4 

and that even here thou takest — v. 1 

even so, or with much more contempt — v. 2 

even such they say, as stand in — v. 3 

trembling even at the name I Henry IV. i. 3 

owes to you, even with the bloody ... — i. 3 

bear ourselves as even as we can — i. 3 

that's even as fair as— at hand — ii. 1 

horse, my lord, he brouglit even now — ii. 3 

clapped, even now, into my hand .... — ii. 4 

thou said'st but two, even now — ii. 4 

then he runs straight and even — iii. 1 

curbs himself even of his natural — iii. 1 

even in the presence of the — iii. 2 

and even as I was then, is Percy — iii. 2 

yea. even the slightest worship — iii, 2 



EVEN— hither, even to our camp lllennjll'. iv. 1 

even those some envy your great ■ — iv. 3 

followed Mm, even at the heels — iv. 3 

even those we love, that are misled. . . — v. 1 

and even in thy behalf, I'll thank — v. 4 

even in the bosom of our adversaries. — v. 5 

even with the rebels' blood 2 Henry I V. (indue.) 

even such a man, so faint — i. 1 

lent a fire even to the dullest peasant — 1. 1 

even so my limbs, weakened with — i. 1 

a body strong enough, even as we are — i. 3 

he called me even now, my lord — ii. 2 

even like that are kin to — ii. 2 

even such kin, as the parish — ii. 2 

give even way unto my rough — ii. 3 

how vilely did you speak of me even now — ii. 4 

yea, for my sake, even to the eyes . . — iii. 1 

that same word even now cries out . . — iii. 1 

denied access unto his person even by — iv. 1 

that even our corn shall seem — iv. 1 

with you lord bishop, it is even so . . — iv. 2 

laud he to God! even there my life .. — iv. 4 
on the knight, that's the even of it . . Henry V. ii. 1 

how smootn and even they do bear . . — ii. 2 

even those, that were your father's . . — ii. 2 

a' parted even just between twelve . . — ii. 3 

hide the crown even in your hearts . . — ii. 4 

weighs time, even to the utmost grain — ii. 4 

from morn till even fought — iii. 1 

even as your horse bears your — iii. 7 

the puissant pike? Even so; What are — iv. 1 

even as men wrecked upon a sand . . — iv. I 

and even play of battle, was ever — iv. 8 

that even now you may imagine .... — v. (cho.) 

the even mead, that erst brought — v. 2 

even so oiu- houses, and ourselves — v. 2 

moving, even as in the heavens 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

and fully even these tliree days — i. 4 

is it even so? Nay, then, I see — ii. 2 

even like a man new haled from .... — ii. 5 

and even since then hath Richard . . — ii. 5 

in a moment, even with the earth — iv. 2 

even as I have fertile England's soii..2HenryVl. i. 1 

knees he would be even with me .... — i. 3 

and even as willingly at thy feet — ii. 3 

even so, remorseless, have they borne — iii. 1 

even so myself bewails good — iii. 1 

and even with this, I lost fair England's — iii. 2 

even so suspicious is this tragedy — iii. 2 

away even now^, or I will di'ag thee . . — iii. 2 

and even now my burdened heart . . — iii. 2 

even now be gone; O go not yet! Even — iii. 2 

that even now he cries aloud — iii. 2 

even as a splitted bark, so sunder we — iii. 2 

may, even m their wives' and children's — iv. 2 

even the presence of lord Mortimer . . — .iv. 7 

should say, I'll be even with you — iv. 7 

even to afc'ight thee with the view . . — v. 1 

even of the bonny beast he loved .... — v. 2 

even at this sight, my heart — v. 2 

to me even as the dew to fire — v. 2 

rebel sits, even in the cliair of state ! .3 f/enr j/ VI. i. 1 

be dyed, even in the lukewarm blood — i. 2 

yea, even my foes will shed — i. 4 

even with those wings which sometime — ii. 2 

even then that sunshine brewed — ii. 2 

even as thou wilt, sweet "Warwick .. — ii. 6 

am I stolen, even of pure love — iii. 1 

tell me, even upon thy conscience . . — iii. 3 

'tis even so; yet you are Warwick still — v.) 

shall buy this treason even with — v. 1 

even now forsake me — v. 2 

even now we heard the news — v. 2 

even so? and please your worship. . Kichard III. i. 1 

and even with the word, this hand . . — i. 2 

zounds, it is even now at my — i. 4 

how he did lap me even in his garments — ii. 1 

even to the general all-ending day . . — iii. 1 

even where liis raging eye — iii. 5 

and even here brase oft', and came away — iii. 7 

even that, I hope, which pleaseth God — iii. 7 

my path were even to the crown .... — iii. 7 

even in the afternoon of her best .... — iii. 7 

even when you please, since you .... — iii. 7 
even in so short \_Col. if nf. -within so small] — iv. 1 

from which even here I slip my — iv. 4 

even all I have; ay, and myself and all — iv. 4 

even he, that makes her queen — iv. 4 

even so; what tliink you of it, madam? — iv. 4 

but one step below, even of your mettle — iv. 4 

lies now even in the centre of this .... — v. 2 

even here in Bosworth field — v. 3 

whose figure even this instant Henry VIII. i. 1 

even he escapes not language — i. 2 

even to the hall, to hear what shall. . — ii. 1 

let it sink me, even as the axe falls. . — ii. 1 

evenof her, that, when the greatest.. — ii. 2 

spread then even of yourself — ii. 2 

even the billows of the sea — iii. 1 (song) 

I know my life so even: if your business — iii. 1 

a soul as even as a calm — iii. i 

no? saw yon not, even now — iv. 2 

even now co-rivalled greatness?.. Troilus <§- Cress, i. 3 

even so doth valour's show — i. 3 

even this. May one, that is a herald., — i. 3 

a lance. Even so raucli — i. 3 

perspicuous even as substance — i. 3 

even so? a great deal of your — ii. 1 

even such a passion dotli — iii. 2 

wl\y, even already they clap — iii. 3 

subtly taints even then wlien — iii. 3 

his visage, even to my full of view .. — iii. 3 

even in the soul of sound good-fellowship — iv. 1 

strangles our dear vows even in tlie.. — iv. 4 

use her well, even for my charge — iv. 4 

is this the lady Cressid? Even siie .. — iv. 5 

give even, or give none — iv. 5 

odd, and he is even with you — iv. 5 

knows the youtli even to his inches. . — iv. 5 

even in the fan and wind of your — v. 3 



EVE 



EVEN— even in the faith of valour. Troil.fy Cress, v 

even with the vail and darkening .. — v 
even he drops down the knee .. Timon of Athens, i 

make sacred even his stirrup — i 

even on their knees and hands — i 

are even such as they give out — i 

even as Apemantus does now — i 

my lord, you take us even at the best — i. 2 

such as do even enemies exceed — i. 2 

good even, Varro: what, you come for — ii. 2 

even so thou outrun'st grace — ii. 2 

of whom, even to the state's best — ii. 2 

naught but even the mere necessities — iv. 3 

even so, sir; as I say: and, for thy . . — v. 1 

that thou art even natural in — v. 1 

ay, even such heaps and sums of love — v. 2 
wliich he is, even to the altitude of. . Coriolamis, i. 1 

but even thus, (for, look you — i. 1 

even so most fitly as you malign — i. 1 

even to the court, the heart — i. 1 

thou wast a soldier even to Cato's wish — i. 4 

even like a fawning greyhound — i. 

even there against the hospitable .... — i. 10 

even when tlie navel of the — iii 1 

this but done, even as she speaks .... — iii. 2 

even this, so criminal, and in such .. — iii. 3 

we, even from this instant, banish .. — iii. 3 

sir, even by your own. I cannot .... — iv. 7 

more proudlier even to my person .. — iv. 7 

but he could not carry his honours even — iv. 7 

commanding peace even with the — iv. 7 

and I am out even to a full disgrace — v. 3 

even he, your wife, this lady — v. 3 

even in theirs' and in the commons' ears — v. 5 

even to the gates of Rome — v. 5 

good even, Casca: brought you fuliusCtcsar, i. 3 

even at noon-day, upon the — i. 3 

even in the aim and very flash of it.. — i. 3 

but do not stain the even virtue of . . — ii. I 

hide their faces even from darkness . . — ii. 1 

a little show it, even in this — iii. 1 

walk we forth even to the market-place — iii. 1 

even at the base of Pompey's statua. . — iii. 2 

and died so? Even so — iv. 3 

even so great men great losses should — iv. 3 

the left hand of the even field — v. I 

even so, Lucilius. Now, most noble.. — v. 1 

even bj' the rule of that philosophy.. — v. 1 

be here" again, even with a thouglit .. — v. 3 

even with the sword that killed thee — v. 3 

it runs over even at his eyes — v. 5 

even for that our love of old — v. 5 

even as the o'erflowing Nilus Antony ■^^ Cleo. i. 2 

even till a Letlie'd duluess — ii. 

round even to faultiness — iii. 

I will be even with thee, doubt it not — iii. 

kept his sword even like a dancer . . — iii. 

give me a kiss; even tliis repays me. . — iii. 

contend even with his uestilent scythe — iii. 1 

he's Inmted even to falling — iv. 

even here do we shake hands — iv. 1 

a horse, even with a thought — iv. 1 

now thy captain is even such a body — iv. 1 

does even make me wild '. . — v. 

I honour him even out of yoiir report. Ci/w6e/rne,i. 

rather shunned to go even witli what — i. 

make her "o back, even to the j'ielding — i. 

but even the very middle of my heart — i. 

even to the point of envy — ii. 

for even to vice they are not constant __ — ii. 
not even renew me with your e3'es — iii. 2 (letter, 

even tlien the princely blood flows .. — 

to read would be even mortal to me . . — 

but we'll even all that good time — iii. 4 

■will pursue her even to Augustus' throne — iii. 5 

even there, thou villain Posthumus . . — iii. .'j 

but even before, I was at point to sink — iii. 6 

I'll follow those that even nowfledhence — iv. 2 

lie went hence even now .. — iv. 2 

even when I wake, it is without me.. — iv. 2 

even to the note o' the king — iv. 3 

O Imogen, even for whom my life — v. 1 

who, even now, answering the letter — y. 5 
Marcus, even thou hast struck. Titus Andronicus, i. 2 

now uncurls, even as an adder — ii. 3 

even at thy teat thou hadst thy — ii. 3 

even for his sake am I pitiless — ii. 3 

even like a stony image — iii. 1 

even in their throats that have committed — iii. 1 

but even with law, against — iv. 4 

even so may'st thou the giddy men . . — iv. 4 

even thus he rates the babe — v. 1 

even by my God; I swear to thee — v. 1 

even now I curse the day — v. 1 

even when their sorrows almost — v. 1 

even from Hyperion's rising in — v. 2 

even at thy solemn feast — v. 2 

even i' the time when it should — v. 3 

gi-andsire ! even with all my heart . . — v. 3 
the embracements even of Jove liiraself .Pfri'cte, i. 1 

even such our griefs — i. 4 

strewed even in the streets — i. 4 

cast away before us, even now — ii. I 

(even as he left his life) keep it — ii. 1 

even in your armours, as you are — ii. 3 

even in the height and pride of — ii. 4 

shriveled up tlieir bodies, even to loatliing — ii. 4 

even in his throat, rmless it — W.h 

even as my life, my blood that — ii. .'> 

patience, good sir, even for tliis charge — iii. 1 

even at the first, thy loss is more . — iii. 1 

a heart that even cracks for v('oe ! — !'!• ** 

■ft'e'll bring your grace even to the edge — iii. 3 

even on my yearning time — iii. 4 

even ripe ibr marriage fight — iv. (Gower) 

pity, winch even women have cast oif.. — iv. I 

are even as good as rotten — iv. 3 

and even yet we mourn — iv. 4 

tliat even her art sisters — y. (Go'wer) 

in bounty expect even here — T. 1 



EVE 



[ 22:) ] 



— i. 1 



— iv. 4 



- iv. 7 

— V. 2 



_ V. 3 



i,\'1';N— even ftom this line to thin £.ear, i, 

slio, that even but now WHS your best ... , — i 

but even tor wiint of tliut, lor wliich 

« liich even but now, dfuiunding alter you 

he was met even now as mud 

niethinks, the ground is even — iv 

I slundd even die with pity — iv 

to make him even o'er the time he 

a nuiu may rut even liere 

ciuni; lience. e\ en us their Cuming hitlicr — 

It came even fn.ni the he.u-tof 

even !io: edver tluir liu-es — V, 

even sueh ilcli^jht ainoni: fivsh . . Itameo ^Juliet, i 
even or odd, oi'all days m the year .. — j 

for eveu tile day bel'ore, slie broke.... — i 

who wotK'S even ntiw tlu-tVo/cn lu>soni — i 

tt rhyme 1 learned even now tiii»ne .. — ^i 
wlio even in pniv and vestal mmlesty — iii 
O, he i;i e\en in my mistress' ease .. .. — iii 
even so lies she, bUibbering and wccpiug — iii 

but thankful even for hate — iii 

is it even so? then 1 dely vou, stoi's! — v 

and lead you even to death — v 

whoso image even but now appeared .... Hamlet, i 

no other, but even so — 

and even the like prceurse of fieree events — 
why she, even she, — O heaven! a beast .. 
but', oven then, tiie nu)rnin^ eock crew .. 
even in tlieir proiuise, as it is a makiiii; .. 
went li;uid-in-luui.l even with the vow., 
eut otl'even in the blossoms of my sin .. 

lam even poor in thanks; but l" 

be even and direet witli me, whether .... 
even tliose you were wont to take sueh .. 
even with the very eouuueiit of thy soul 

fear too mueh, ev'en as the.\' lo\e 

even our loves should with our fortunes 

even to the teeth and forehead of our 

even now, out at the portal I 

let it feed even on the pitli of life 

to lienr all sanuotb and even 

and daiijrer, dare, even for an eg^'-shcU.. 
brands tlie harlot even here, between.... 

but even his mother shall unehorge 

more than their even christian 

why, even in that was heaven ordinant. . 

even while men's minds ore wild — v 

even now, very now, an old black Othdto, i 

which even now stand in act 

apix;arance, even on the instant 

let your sentence even fall upon my life 
I ran it tlu-ough, even from my boyish .. 
heart's subdued even to the very quality 

even till we make the main 

for even her folly helped her to an heir., 

even as our davs do grow! 

for, even out of that, will I cause these . . 
till I am eveti \Col. /Cn^-eveued] with liim — 
upon his iieace and quiet even to madness — 
friends all but now, even now, in quarter — 

even as again they were, ■when you — 

even so as one would beat his olieneelcss — 
even as her appetite shall play the god .. — 
even then this forked plague is fated .... 

even so my bloody thoughts, with 

*ti3cvenso; for let our linger ache 

healthful members even to that sense . . 
even thu.** all guiltless meet reproach .... 
the addition, whose want even kills me. . 
she was here even now; she haunts me .. 

you gave me even now? I was a fine 

even the bed she hath contaminated 

that quicken even with blowing 

the world, even from the east to the west? 
even, from this instant, do build on thee 
that even his stubbornness, his cheeks . . 
Imrk! 'tis even so. Olielp! ho! light! .. 

even he, sir; did you know him? 

cold, my girl? even like thy eliastitv 

but even now, that there he dropjied it .. 

and even but now he spake, after long . . — v. 

EVEXKD-r Co/. Anf.] am evened with Iiim — ii. 

EVEN-UANDED- 
this even-handed justice commends . . Machclh, i. 

EVENlXG-some evening music. '/'uoGen.o/ Ver.i\. 

this evening coming — iv. 

a happy evening — v. 

morning nor evening prayer Merry Wives, ii. 

my knees every morning and evening. Ai«cA.J(/o,ii. 
how still the evening is, as hushed .. — ii. 

have you for this evening? Mid. N.'$ Dream, v, 

I'll almut it this evening; and I will. AU'siyell, iii, 
end likewise with the evening sun. Comfft/y n/Er.i, 
and, about evening, come yourself alone — iii. 

lx;fore the dew of evening fall King John, ii. 

this evening must I leave you \ Henry II'. ii. 

thisevening, on the east sidcof ....'i Henry I' I. ii. 
made an evening at the noon-tide ..iHenryVl. i. 
a bright exhalation in the evening. Henry >'///. iii. 
'twas on a summer's evening . . ..Juliut Ctesar, iii. 

delay than this very evening Lear, i. 

I have this present evening from my .... — ii. 
come to you at evening mass?. . Homeo ^ Juliet, iv. 

EVENLY— ranges evenly with niine..yi/uc/i Ado, ii. 
In a new chunnel, fair and evenly.. I i/cnry//'. iii. 
And him evenly derived from Henry /'. ii. 

EVEN-PI>EACIIEn-lieilges.cven-i)lcochcd — v. 

EVENT— Ills condition and the event . . Tempeil, i. 
crown what I profess with kind event — iii. 

these arc not natural events — v. 

and dream on the event Twelfth Kight, ii. 

come, let's see the event — iii. 

but leave we him to his itventa.. Meat, for Mem. iii. 

OS the event stamps them Much Ado, i. 

will fashion the event in better — iv. 

and most preiiosteruns event. . Lom't L. L. i. 1 (let 
not satisfied of these events at full .Mi-r.o/yen. v. 

of these most strange events At you Like it, v. 

to the event of the none-sparing war?/<«'»(f>(/, iii, 
and sec the event of tliit .... laming (^f Hhreu; iii. 



— i. 1 
1 



_ i. 2 
— i. 3 



— iii. 3 

— iii. I 

— iv. 1 

— iv. 3 



— iv. 5 



— V. 1 



— i. I 



— ii. 1 

— ii. 1 

— ii. 1 
1 
1 
1 



— iii. 3 



— 111. 4 

— iv. 1 

— iv. 1 



— iv. I 



— iv. 2 

— iv. 2 



— V. 1 

— V. 1 



— V. 2 



EVENT— the event o' the journey. »ri7i(fr'»7'uif, iii, 1 
ond eonf\ised events, new hatched .... Macbeth, ii. 3 
let iMU' just I'ensiire attend the true event — v. 4 
noc^nstolned event, liut thev will .. King John, iii. 4 
tlnil their events can iu:ver"fall ....Richard 11. ii. I 

huili a hand in these events — v. 2 

you .■list the event of war 'IHenrylV. i. I 

init heaviness foreruns the good event — iv. 2 
dotli presiiw sojiie ill event IHenryf'l. iv. 1 

• to llnil the like event in love — v. & 

you anil i must talk of that event..2H<'nri/K/. iii. 1 
tliis tile heaven figures some event.. 3Hi";iri/»7. ii. 1 

tinu's. beuetting sueh events! — ii. .'j 

(huin- tlieexent to the teeth Henrjl »'///. i. 2 

no other IIkui e\ent doth form it.Troitus if- Cress, ii.2 
how to observe a strange event .. Timnn of Alh. iii. 4 
for the time, but hearts for the event. Cori'o/anu»,ii. 1 
all strange and terrible events Q,ve.Anl.^Cleo. iv. 13 

high events as these strike those — v. 2 

sir, the event is yet to name Cymbeliiie, iii. b 

been breeder of these dire events.. 7'i(us/ini/ron. v. 3 
that like events may ne'er it ruinate — v. 3 
the unborn event I do commend. /"crictet, iv. (Gow.) 

nay then— Well, well ; the event Lear, i. 4 

the like precurse of fierce events Hamlet, i. 1 

thinking too precisely on the event — iv. 4 

makes mouths at the invisible event .... — iv. 4 
there are many events in the womb .... Othello, i. 3 

E\' i:XTFUL— eventfid history . . .Is you Like it, ii. 7 

EViCK — I might ever see that man Tempest, i. 2 

will ever after droop — i. 2 

penetrate the breasts of ever-augry bears — i. 2 
fur nothing natural I ever saw so noble — i. 2 
■we have h >st yoin^ son, I fear, for ever. . — ii. 1 

can lay to hell lor ever — ii. 1 

as ever went uiion four legs — ii.2 

emperor that ever trod on neat's leather — ii. 2 

anil I thus luunble ever — iii. 1 

was there ever man a coward — iii. 2 

let me live here ever — iv. I 

and ever harmless looks — iv. 1 

make this island thine own for ever .. — iv. I 

than did ever plummet sound — v. 1 

than nature was ever conduct of — v. I 

youth have ever homely wits ..TwoGen.of Ver. i. 1 

if ever danger do env'iron thee — i. 1 

ever since you loved her — ii. 1 

I have loved her ever since I — ii. 1 

was there ever heard a better? — ii. 1 

that ever any man tied — ii. 3 

that I ever yet have shunned — iii. 1 

myself have ever kept — iii. 1 

the love I ever bore ray daughter — iii. 1 

blackest news that ever thou heard'st — iii. 1 

no grief did ever come so near — iv. 3 

didst thou ever see me do — iv. 4 

I have iny wish for ever — v. 4 

as ever servant shall come Merry iVives, \. 4 

as honest a maid as ever broke bread — i. 4 

did you ever hear the like? — 

patience, that e^'er you sa\v — 

you are undone for ever — 

or bid farewell to your good life for ever — 



ii. 1 
iii. 1 
iii. 3 
iii. 3 
iii. .5 
iv. 2 
JV. 2 
iv. 4 



— V. 1 



iii. 3 
iii. 4 
Sii. 4 



that ever oifended nostril 

any madness, I ever yet beheld 

let' me for ever be your 

as ever I did look upon 

more wit than ever I learned 

that ever governed frenzy 

that ever the devil could have made 

doth ever make the better fool . . Twelfth Night, i. 5 

if ever thou Shalt love — ii. 4 

wished to see thee ever cross-gartered — ii. 5 (let.) 

than ever she bestowed upon me .... — iii. 2 

can ever believe such impossible .... — 

and thanks, and ever thanks — 

as soon as ever thou seest him, draw — 

more approbation than ever proof itself — 

■will it he ever thus? — iv 

the first that ever dissembled — iv, 

as ever thou wilt deserve well — i v 

more than ever the bearing of — iv 

having sworn truth, ever will be true — iv 

and he was ever precise in Meas. for Meas. i 

liow I ha\'e ever loved the life — i 

that she was ever respected with man — ii 

if ever I was respected with her — ii 

ever, till now, when men were fond.. — ii 

by redeeming him, sliould die for ever — ii 

should keep the bodv of it ever fair. . — iii 

if ever he return, anil I can speak.... — iii 

if peradventure, he shall ever return — iii 

in nis love toward her ever most kind — iii 
ever your fresh whore, and your ... 

but if ever the duke return 

I have heard it was ever his manner 
hold you ever to our special drift . . . 

that ever he knew me — v. 

or else fur ever be confixed here — V. 

and as pleasant as ever he was MuctiAdo, i. 

it ever changes with the next block.. — i. 

the sweetest lady that ever I looked on — i. 

thou wast ever an obstinate heretic. — i. 

prove, that ever I lose more blood — i. 

well, if ever thou dost tall from — i. 

but if ever the sensible lieuediek — i. 

if this should ever hapjien, thou would'st — _i. 

and not ever sad then; for I have.. .. — ii. 

men were deeeivers ever — ii. 3 (song 

the fraud of men was ever BO — ii. 3(song 

seemed ever to abhor — ii. : 

more than ever man did merit — iii. 

as ever Beatrice shall couch upon? . . — iii. 

ever woa known in the commonwealth — iii. '. 

ever since you left it — iii. 

tts ever broke bread — iii. 

and seemed lever otherwise to you? — iv. 

why ever wast thou lovely in my eyes? — iv. 

if ever love hod interest in his liver. . — iv. 

fiat burglary, as ever was committed — iv. 



— iii. 2 

— iv. 2 

— iv. 5 



KV I-: 



EVEK — to abjure for ever the society . A/iV/. yv. Vr. i. I 

for aught that ever I could remi irep.) — i. I 

then true lovers have been ever crossed — i. 1 

that ever men have broke (>•!?;).) — i. 1 

did ever keep your counsels, never .. — iii. 2 

if ever I thy face by doylight sec ... . — iii. 2 

more than rool reason cvereomitrchends — v. 1 

jiartition that ever I heard discourse — v. 1 

() night, wliieli ever art. when day .. — v. 1 

this is the "Jllicst stuff tiiat ever 1 heard — v. I 

there create, ever shall be fortunate — v. 2 

the couples three, ever true in loving lie — v. 2 
have continual |)loddcrs ever wun.Love'iL. Lost, i. I 

but the liest tliat ever I heard — i. I 

well, if ever I do see the merry — i. 2 

still a rejiairing, ever out of frame .. — iii. 1 

did you ever hear better? — iv. 1 

love, whose month is ever May.. — iv. 3 (verses) 

for all the wcaltli that ever I did see — iv. 3 

and ever and anon they made a doubt — v. 2 

fairest dames that evci turned their — v. 2 

that ever turned their eyes to — v. 2 

or ever, but in visors, snow their .... — v. 2 

for ever to be true to those — v. 2 

hence ever then my heart is — v. 2 

your father was ever virtuous. .il/crcA.o/ Venice, i. 2 

an' the worst fall that ever fell — i. 2 

of all the men that ever my foolish . , — i. 2 

for lovers ever run before the clock.. — ii. 6 

that ever holds: who riscth from .... — ii. G 

I will ever be your hea<l — ii. 9 (scroll) 

as ever knapped ginger, or made .... — iii. I 

un pica san test words, that ever blotted — iii. 2 

the most impenetrable cur, that ever — iii. 3 

as I have ever found thee honest — iii. 4 

she would not hold out enemy for ever — iv. 1 

did make him swear to keep for ever — iv. 2 
being ever from their cradles bred. .-Is you Like it, i. 1 

if ever he go alone again, I'll never.. — i. I 

before ever he saw those pancakes . . — L 2 

it is the first time that ever I heard . . — i. 2 

as true a lover as ever sighed upon . . — ii. 4 

thy love were ever like to mine — ii. 4 

that ever love did make thee run into — ii. 4 

well then, if ever I thank any man.. — ii. 5 

if ever you have looked on better (rep.) — ii. 7 

if ever sat at any good man's feast (,rep.) — ii. 7 

wast ever in court, shepherd? — iii. 2 

did you ever cure any so? — iii. 2 

your chestnut was ever the only ... . — iii. 4 

if ever (as that ever may be near).... — iii. S 

who ever loved, that loved not — iii. 5 

for ever, and a day. Say a day (,rep.) — iv. 1 

did you ever hear such railing? — iv. 3 

kindness, nobler ever than revenge .. — iv. 3 

if ever I marry woman — v. 2 

if ever I satisfied man - v. 2 

the first time that I ever saw — v. 4 

by being ever kept, it is ever lost All's Jl'ell, i. I 

who ever strove to show her merit .. — i. 1 

wilt thou ever be a foul-mouthed. . . . — i. 3 

did ever, in so true a flame — 1. 3 

his B]ieeial nothing ever prologues ., — ii. 1 

may serve long, but not serve ever .. — ii.2 

sit on thy cheek for ever — ii. 3 

fortune, if you ever wed' — ii. 3 

my service^ ever whilst I live — ii.3 

disdain ratlier corrupt me ever ! .... — ii.3 

throw thee from my care for ever.... — ii.3 

if ever thou be'st bound in thy — ii.3 

and forfeited to cores for ever I — ii.3 

and shall do soever, though I took .. — ii. .'> 

and ever shall with true observance.. — ii. ■'J 

my lord is gone, for ever gone — iii. 2 

you have him ever after — iii. G 

will for ever do thee all rights of — — iv. 2 

and ever, my love, as it begins — jv. 2 

nor you, mistress, ever a friend — iv. 4 

thatever nature had praise for — iv. 5 

I speak of, ever keeps a good fire — iv. 5 

if her fortunes ever stood necessitied — v. 3 

prove this ring was ever hers — v. 3 

if ever I knew man, 'twas you — v. 3 

I'll love her dearly, ever, ever dearly — v. 3 

nor no man ever saw Taming of Sh. 2 (iud.) 

that ever Katharina will be — i- 2 

did you yet ever see Baptista's — i. 2 

was ever gentleman thus grieved as I? — ii. 1 

did ever Diau so become — j.i. I 

was ever match clapped up so — ii. 1 

was ever man so beaten? was ever man — iv. 1 

Peter, didst ever see the like? — iv. 1 

forswear Bianca and her love for ever — iv. 2 

have you ever been at Pisa? — iv» 2 

will repute you ever the patron — iv 2 

master, if ever I said loose-bodied .. — iv. 3 

bid liiauca farewell for ever and a day — iv. 4 

brought him up ever since he was.. .. — v. 1 

that ever came into my note IVinter'tTale, 1. 1 

didst thou utter, I am yours for ever — 1.2 

the one for ever earned a royal — !• * 

if ever I were wilful negligent — i- '- 

if ever fearful to do a thing — )• '- 

liy a man which ever professed to him — 1.2 

as gross as ever touched conjecture . . — ii- 1 

for ever un venerable lie thy hands .. — 11. 3 

OS ever oak, or stone, was sound — .11.3 

is counted lost forever, Pcrdita — !•;• 3 

the chase: I am gone forever .— in. 3 

if ever yon have spent time worse — iv. (chorus) 

O thatever I was born! — iv. 2 

I'd have von do it ever — iv. 3 

that vou might ever do nothing — iv. 3 

lass, 'that ever ran on the greeinward — iv. 3 

the fairest youth that ever niode — iv. 3 

if ( may ever know, thou dost — iv. 3 

if ever, henceforth, thou these — iv. 3 

[Col.] for I do fear eyes ever — iv. 3 

O that »ver I had s<iuarcd nie — v. I 

if ever truth were pregnant — v. 2 



EVE 



[ 224 ] 

EVER — more ugly than ever Henry VIII, 

the fairest hand I ever touched! .... — 

if ever any malice in your heart .... — 

ever beloved, and loving, may his. ... — 

has taken for ever from tJie world — 

be commanded, for ever by your grace — 

tongue could ever pronounce dishonour — 

whichever yet affected eminence.. .. — 

'tis too weak ever to get a boy — 

ever in fear to kindle your — 

when was the hoiu-, I ever contradicted — 

who ever yet have stood to charity . . — 
no, nor ever more, upon this business 

whether ever I did broach tliis — ii. 

or ever have to yon, but with thanks — ii. 

you ever have wished the sleeping . . — ii. 

plants, and flowers, ever sprung . . — iii. 1 (son; 

the willing'st sin I ever yet committed — iii. 

ever casts such doubts, as false coin.. — iii. 

that for ever mars the honey of — iii. 

ever God bless your highness I — iii. 

and ever may your higliness yoke .. — iii. 

my endeavours have ever come — iii. 

my loyalty, which ever has, and ever — iii. 

for your highness' good I ever laboured — iii. 

my ever royal master, dare mate ... . — iii. 

stream, that must for ever hide me . . — iii. 

one woman I have lost for ever (civp.) — iii. 

my prayers for ever, and for ever — iii. 

they are ever forward in celebration — iv. 

the sweetest face I ever looked on.... — iv. 

woman that ever lay by man — iv. 

ever ranking himself with princes .. — iv. 

and be ever double, both in his — iv. 

ever witness for him those — iv. 

Christendom shall ever speak — iv. 

BO may he ever do! and ever flourish — iv. 

and not ever the justice and the truth — v. 

both now and ever bless her! — v. 

and the end was ever, to do well .... — v. 

you were ever good at sudden — v. 

and he is your friend for ever — v. 

prosperous life, long, and ever happy — v, 

heaven ever laid up to make — v. 

fairer than ever I saw her look. . Troilus <§■ Cress, i. 

hath ever since kept Hector fasting.. — i. 

if I ever saw him before, and knew him — i. 

that ever knew love got so sweet — i. 

than ever Greek did compass — i. 

that ever Hector and Achilles meet.. — i. 

with the first glance that ever — iii. 

if ever you prove false to one — iii. 

how dearly ever parted — iii. 

welcome ever smiles — iii. 

the man's undone for ever — iii. 

if ever she leave TroilusI — iv. 

your lordship ever binds him . . Timon of Athens, i. 

carries, tliat ever governed man — i. 

I gave it freely ever; and there's — i. 

but yond' man's ever [A'ni.-veryJ angry — i. 

my heart is ever at your service — i. 

should think ourselves for ever perfect — i. 

as good a trick as ever hangman .... — ii. 

he's ever sending: how shall I — iii. 

have I been ever free, and must — iii. 

we banish thee for ever — iii. 

ever at the best, hearing well of .... — iii. 

I'll ever serve his mind with — iv. 

forgot that ever Timon was — iv. 

what man didst thou ever know unthrift — iv. 

didst thou ever know beloved? — iv. 

thou ever young, fresh, loved — iv. 

grant, I may ever love — iv. 

for I must ever doubt, though ne'er. . — iv. 

performance is ever the duller — v. 

ever to read them thine — v. 

than can ever appear in your Coriolanus, i. 

we liave ever your good word — i. 

was ever man so proud as is — i. 

what ever hath been thought — i. 

we shall ever strike till one can — i. 

bear tlie addition nobly ever! — i. 

ever right. Menenius, ever, ever .... — ii. 

tlieir blaze shall darken him for ever — ii. 

ever spake against your liberties .... — ii. 

nor ever will be ruled — iii. 

a graver bench than ever frowned . . — iii. 

does forget that ever lie heard the — iii. 

he hath been used ever to conquer .. — iii. 

which doth ever cool i' the absence .. — iv. 

than ever thou wise words — iv. 

pluck from them their tribunes for ever — iv. 

a strange one as ever I looked on ... . — iv. 

since I nave ever followed thee with hate — i v. 

as ever in ambitious strength — iv. 

he was ever too lulrd for him — iv. 

I ever said, we were i' the wrong .... — iv. 

of daily fortune ever taints the — iv. 

for I have ever verified my — v. 

thefirst time that ever I was forced... — v. 

that ever heraid did follow to — v. 

as ever trod upon neat's leather. . . . JuliusCasar, i. 

keep ever with their likes — i . 

who ever knew the heavens menace so? — i. 

the noblest man, that ever lived in . . — iii. 

the first time ever Ca;sar put — iii. 

you, and to your heirs for ever — iii. 

ever not, Lucilius, when love begins — iv. 

lovedst him better than ever thou. . . . — iv. 

that ever Brutus will go bound — v. 

for ever, and for ever, farewell (rep.) — v. 

my sight was ever thick — v. 

that ever Rome should breed thy fellow — v. 

no enemy shall ever take alive — v. 

did I, Charmian, ever love Ctesar so?A7it.^C!eo. i. 

wliom no brotlier did ever love so dearly — ii. 

and his quails ever beat mine — ii. 

and he are greater friends than ever — ii. 

let him for ever go — ii. 

and he, for ever knit together — ii. 



EVE 



EVER— ever since the death of ... . trinter'sTalc, v. 2 

tears that ever we shed — v. 2 

as ever still sleep mocked death — v. 3 

scarce any joy did ever so long live . . — v. 3 

chizzel could ever yet cut breath? — v. 3 

was there ever any man thus . . . Comedy of Err. ii. 2 

for ever housed, where it once gets. . . — iii. 3 

and ever as it blazed, they threw .... — v. 1 

nor ever didst thou draw thy — y. 1 

to alter favour ever is to fear Macbeth, i. 5 

your servants ever have theirs — i. 6 

tie for ever knit — iii. 1 

beggared yours for ever ? — iii. 1 

shall Banquo's issue ever reign in — iv. 1 

more sundj-y ways than ever — i v. 3 

my ever .gentle cousin, welcome.. : — iv. 3 

ears despise my tongue for ever — i v. 3 

tills jiusn will cheer me ever — v. 3 

the iii-st that ever Scotland — v. 7 

have I not ever said, how that King .John , i. 1 

my bed was ever to thy son as true . . — ii. I 

and this blessed day, ever in France.. — iii. 1 

thou ever strong upon the stronger side! — iii. 1 

(if ever I remember to be holy) — iii. 3 

that ever wall-eyed wi-ath, or staring — iv. 3 

that ever spider twisted from her — iv. 3 

the blood tliat ever fury breathed .... — v. 2 
that ever was surveyed by English. . Richard II. i. 1 

if ever I were traitor, my name — i. 3 

have ever made me sour my — ii. 1 

we ever have been near tlie king — ii. 2 

for once, for all, and ever — ii. 2 

that ever fell upon tliis cursed — iv. 1 

the emptier ever dancing in the — iv. 1 

for ever may my knees grow — v. 3 

for ever will I kneel upon my — v. 3 

mine enemy tliou hast ever been — v. 6 

that ever valiant and approved Scot ..\ Henry IV. i. 1 

did I ever call for thee to pay — i. 2 

that ever cried, stand, to a true — i. 2 

cowards as ever turned back — i. 2 

which ever and anon he gave Ms nose — i. 3 

veriest varlet that ever chewed — ii. 2 

both we and ours for ever — ii. 2 

and a good jest for ever — ii. 2 

a good plot as ever was laid — ii. 3 

that ever this fellow should h.ave — ii. 4 

and roared, as ever I heard buU-calf. — ii. 4 

and ever since thou hast blushed .... — ii. 4 

harlotry players, as I ever see — ii. 4 

as ever offered foul play in a state ... — iii. 2 

making you ever better than his .... — v. 2 

that ever said, I hearkened for — v. 4 

tlius ever did rebellion iind rebuke . . — v. 5 
sounds ever after as a sullen bell . . ..illenrylV. i. 1 

well, I cannot last ever — i. 2 

whether I shall ever see thee again .. — ii. 4 

prove that ever I dress myself — ii. 4 

good phrases surely, and ever were .. — iii. 2 

lie came ever in the rearward — iii. 2 

when ever yet was your appeal — iv. 1 

against ill chances, men are ever merry — iv. 2 

vaiich ever in the haunch of winter.. — iv. 4 

let God for ever keep it — iv. 4 

counsel that ever I shall breathe — iv. 4 

and ever among so merrily.... — v. 3 (song) 

tlian ever at one time the Henry V. i. 1 

as 'tis ever common, that men — i. 2 

as ever you came of women — ii. 1 

and murder, ever kept together — ii. 1 

if ever man went to Arthur's bosom.. — ii. 3 

then if ever thou darest acknowledge — iv. 1 

if ever thou come to me and say — iv. 1 

if ever I live to see it, I will — iv. 1 

and ever dare to challenge this glove. — iv. 7 

as ever his plack shoe trod upon — iv. 7 

was ever known so great and little... — iv. 8 

if ever thou be'st mine, Kate — v. 2 

who ever saw the like? what men ... 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

than Rhodope's, or Memphis', ever was — i, 6 

will I for ever, and my faction — ii. 4 

should ever get the privilege — iii. 1 

because I ever found them as — iii. 2 

for ever should they be expidsed .... — iii. 3 

no hojie that ever I will stay — iv. .i 

shall Suffolk ever have of — v. 3 

ever marquess gave, the fairest irep.),2Henry VI. i. 1 

if ever I spake the words — i. 3 

nor ever had one penny bribe — iii. 1 

didst ever hear a man so penitent? . . — iii. 2 

if ever lady wronged her lord so much — iii. 2 

that ever did contain a thing — iii. 2 

was ever feather so lightly blown .... — iv. 8 

V.'a.'! ever king that joyed an earthly — iv. 9 

best blood that ever was broached — iv. in 

champion that ever I heard — iv. 10 

and to thine heirs for ever ZHenry VI. i. 1 

ill-got had ever bad success? — ii. 2 

ever son, so rued a father's death? (rep.) — ii.5 

that did ever fence the right — iii. 3 

if you ever chance to have a child .... — v. 5 

rue the hour that ever thou wast — v. 6 

if ever he have child, abortive Richard III. i. 2 

if ever he have wife, let her — i. 2 

dost confirm his happiness for ever .. — i. 2 

ever woman in this humour wooed? (rep.) — i. 2 

so do I ever, being well advised — i. 3 

if ever any grudge were lodged — i i. 1 

that ever wretched age hath — iii. 4 

traitor that ever lived — iii. .5 

whichever sincerCoi. Kn/.-hitherto]liath — iv. 1 

and for ever let them last! — iv. 2 

that ever yet this land was guilty of — iv. 3 

that ever graced me in thy company? — iv. 4 

ever you or yours by me were harmed! — iv. 4 

shall that title, ever, last? iv. 4 

that ever entered in a drowsy head . . — v. 3 

one that hath ever been God^s enemy — v. 3 

and ever dince a fresh admirer Henry VIII. i. 1 

svliich ever as ravenous fishes , i, 2 



— II. 4 



EVER — have ever held my cap ofi. Antony SfCleo. ii. 7 
have ever won more in their officer.. — iii. 1 
that ever I should call thee, cast-away! — iii. 6 

and ever welcome to us — iii. 6 

pray you, be ever known to patience — iii. 6 

that I have lost my way for ever — iii. 9 

you have been a boggier ever — iii. 1 1 

who? one ever near thee — iv. ft 

of the full-fortuned Cjesar ever shall — iv. 13 

wishers were ever fools — iv. 13 

if there be, or ever were one such .... — v. 2 

which I will be ever to pay Cymbeline, i. 5 

that ever country called his ! — i. 7 

was there ever man had such luck ! . . — ii. 1 
stronger than ever law could make.. — ii. 2 

coldest that ever turned up ace — ii. 3 

that ever hath but clipped his body — ii. 3 

be theme, and hearing ever — iii. 1 

to kill the marvel, shall be so ever .. — iii. 1 

the first that ever touched him — iii. 1 

hardness ever of hardiness is mother — iii. 6 

and so shalt be ever, this youth — iv. 2 

O melancholy! whoever yet could .. iv. 2 

scarce ever looked on blood — iv. 4 

pick that bolt, then free for ever! — v. 4 

of Clotens had ever scar for — v. 5 

so we'll hold thee ever — v. 5 

truest princess, that ever swore her faith — v. 5 
if ever Bassianus, Ca3sar's son.. TilusAndronicus, i. 1 

if thy sons were ever dear to thee — i. 2 

was ever Scythia half so barbarous?.. — i. 2 

in justice thou hast ever been — i. 2 

if ever Tamora were gracious in those — i. 2 
that ever ear did hear to such effect. . — ii. 3 
that ever eye, with sight — ii. 4 

Tamora! was ever neard the like? — ii. 4 
expecting ever when some envious . . — iii. 1 
did ever raven sing so like a lark .... — iii. 1 
that ever deatli should let life bear . . — iii. 1 

man that ever lived in Rome! — iii. 1 

by this our mother is for ever shamed — iv. 2 
was ever seen an emperor of Rome . . — iv. 4 

as much as ever Coriolanus did — iv. 4 

the sire for ever being good — v. I 

sure a card as ever won the set — v. 1 

dog as ever fought at head — v. 1 

worse than ever yet I did — v. 3 

as from thence sorrow were ever rased. . Pericles, i. 1 
and if that ever my low fortunes better — ii. 1 
thus knit, a kingdom ever stands — ii. 4 

1 held it ever, virtue and cimning — iii. 2 

I ever have studied physic — iii. 2 

odour. As ever hit my nostril — iii. 2 

and set up your fame for ever — iii. 2 

she would ever with Marina be .. — iv. (Gower) 

to foster it, nor ever to preserve — iv. 4 

who ever but his approbation added . . — iv. 4 

did you ever hear the like? — iv. 5 

did you ever dream of such a thing? .. — iv. b 

out of the road of rutting, for ever .... iv. 5 

marry, hang her up for ever ! iv. 6 

though douDts did ever sleep — v. 1 

hereditary ever, remain this ample Lear, i. 1 

hold thee, from this, for ever i. 1 

whom I have ever honoured as my king i. 1 

nor shall ever see that face i. 1 

yet he bath ever but slenderly kno\vti . . — i. 1 
should enjoy half his revenue for ever — i. 2 (let.) 
ever since thou madest thy daughters .. — i. 4 

think I have cast off for ever .. ; — i. 4 

most poorest shape, that ever penury — ii. 3 

served you ever since I was a child — iii. 7 

if ever thou wilt thrive, bury — iv. 6 

if ever I return to you again — v. 2 

way, where they shall rest for ever — v. 3 

if ever I did hate thee — v. 3 

that ever ear received — v. 3 

she is gone for ever! — v. 3 

all sorrows that ever I have felt — v. 3 

now she's gone for ever! v. 3 

her voice was ever soft — v. 3 

are ever thrust to the wall Romeo ^Juliet, i. 1 

if ever you disturb our streets again — i. 1 

who ever would have thought it? — iii. 2 

that ever I should live to see thee dead? — iii. 2 
didever di-agon keep sofair acave?.. — iii. 2 
was ever book, containing such vile — iii. 2 
think'st thou, we shall ever meet again? — iii. f> 

1 cannot choose but everweep the friend — iii. 5 
henceforward I am ever ruled by you — iv. 2 

well-a-day, that ever I was born! — iv. 5 

that ever, ever, I did yet behold! iv. 5 

that ever 'gainst that season Hamlet, i. 1 

do not, for ever, with thy veiled lids — i. 2 

and your poor servant ever — i.2 

in heaven or ever I had seen that day. ... — i. 2 
if thou didst ever thy dear father love . . — i. 5 

that ever I was born to set it right! — i. 5 

if, once a widow, ever I be wife ! — iii. 2 

let not ever the soul of Nero enter — iii. 2 

and, ever, three parts coward — iv. 4 

he was the first that ever bore arms — v. 1 

1 loved you ever; but it is no matter — v. 1 

if thou didst ever hold me in thy heart . . — v. 2 
if ever I did dream of such a matter .... Othello, i. 1 

lawful prize, he's made for ever — i.2 

would ever have, to incur a general — i.2 

ever as she could with haste despatch — i. 3 

thus do I ever make my fool my purse . . — i. 3 
she that was ever fair, and never proud. . — ii. 1 
was a wight, — if ever such wight were .. — ii. 1 

youwillpe shamed for ever — ii. 3 

what wound did ever heal, but by degrees? — ii. 3 
to him that ever fears he shall be poor . . — iii. 3 

I am bound to thee for ever — iii. 3 

he conjured her, she should ever keep it — iii. 3 

shall ever medicine thee to that sweet .. iii. 3 

for ever, farewell the tranquil mind! — iii. 3 

if ever mortal eyes do see them bolster . . iii. 3 

[A'n(.] what bloody business ever — iii. 3 



EVE 



i:VEH— I am your own forever Othello, iii. 3 

tliuy are not ever jealous Cur the eiiuse . . — iii. 4 

nor ever lieftnl; nor ever did suspetrt .... — 'w.'i 

iiiulcver did, orever will,— tlioui;li licdi) — iv. 1 

n licttor opinion tliiin ever Iwlure — \v.i 

fnmter renson to believe now than ever. . — iv. 2 

am iiiuiniod t'luever: help, liol nuirder — v. 1 

1)nt dill v.iu I'vii- tell liini,shc was falscy — v. 2 

Evi:iMiri(X!.\n- 

niv heuit an ever-lmrnine \\c\\\..TitusAnilrnn. iii. I 

witiH'ss, von evi'i-hnmin); lights (Uhello, iii. 3 

EV1:im:s1'1:i',MKI)— (us mv ever-esteemed 

diitv prieU.; mo on) .... l.w's I.. Losi, i. 1 (letter) 
EVKK-I'IXri)-of the ever-flxed pole . . 0//.fHo, ii. 1 
K \' K li -(i y, XT 1 . K — you ever-geutle gods. . Lear, iv. 6 

kvi;ri>asting- 

mukc ronch winter everlasting. 7'iro Ren. o/'Vr. ii. 4 
to piit n>e into everlnstinp liherty. jVeir;/ II ires, iii. 3 
von shall bean everliistin;.' liefier.il/di.ybrjVcn. iii. I 

into everlttstinii redeno'tinn Much Ado, iv. 2 

for everlasting'' lioiitl ..tf.Howsliip ..Mill. K. Dr. i. I 
ineiirred tin -^. i):' lini displea-sure./JHV »W(, iv. 3 
i n an evi' 1 1 I 1 : i > ' n t . . Comedy i.f Errors, iv. 2 

way to tlir , M iii.iirire Jl/arirt/i, ii. 3 

totheiriMi; m i-ilenec King John, \l.\ 

dear amity and eveilasting love .... — v. 4 

nn evcrliistin!; bonfire light? ......\lienrylV. iii. 3 

reproneh and everlasting shame sits.. Henry V. iv. 5 
the ti-easnry of everlasting joy! ....illenry VI. ii. 1 

set ope thy evirlasting gates — iv. 9 

by nil the everlasting gods . Troilus ^Cressida, v. 3 
made ids e^■t'rlasting mansion.. Timrtno/'^//iens, v. 2 

our everlasting farewell take JutiitsCtPsur, v. 1 

everlasting doom of banishment. 7'i7i(SylHd)OK. iii. 1 
to live and burn in everlasting tire .. — v. 1 
ne'er wear out tlieeverlastingllint. Romeo ^Jul. ii.6 
will I set np mv everlasting rest .... — v. 3 
oi that the K\eVlasting had not fixed ..Hamlet, i. 2 

evi;ki,asti.\(;lv— 

a true subjection everlastingly Kin-^John. v. 7 

I'll hate hinirverlastinglv llirhrird ll.m. 2 

sav, I will l,.ve Iier everlastinglv..K'Wirtr(( ;//. iv. 4 
EVi: IM .1 Vl.\( ;_ever-living man . . 1 Hemiill. iv. 3 
Y.W. \\ .M( 1 1! I '—evermore be Ijound. Memj li'/rcs, iv. fi 
with loyal blazon evermi^re he blest! — v. .^ 
hath evermore had the liberty. . Meas./nr Mens. iv. 2 
lady's eldest sou, evermore tattling . . MuchAdo, ii. I 
1 evermore did love you, llermia. . Mid. N.Dr. iii. 2 
and will for evermore be true to it .. — iv. 1 

so study evermore is overshot Lore's!.. Lost, i. 1 

that will evermore peep through .Mer. of I'enice, i. 1 
love and servleo to you evermore .... — iv. 1 
now in ward, evermore in subjection.. /KCslOHj i. 1 
evermore erossed and crossed. Taming of Shrew, iv. h 

without a spot for evermore kingJohn, v. 7 

evermore thanks, the exchequer.. ../ii'cAnrd //. ii. 3 
after summer evermore succeeds. . . .2Heiiri/ I'l. ii. 4 

that evernmre they pointed to Henrij I'lU. iii. 2 

I'aris, and I, kiss evermore for.. Troilus 4 Cress, iv. 5 
or woe betide thee evermore!. 7')7i(s.lHrf/n»itiis, iv. 2 

nn yom- patience evermore Per ivies, v. 3 (Gower) 

evermore weeping for your cousin's. /i'o/;i.i§yiii. iii. .'> 
still in tears? evermore showering?.. — iii. 5 
thine evermore, most dear lady ..Hamlet, ii. 2 (let.) 

evermore the prologue to his sleep Othello, ii. 3 

that she reserves it evermore about her.. — iii. 3 
F,VER-PKi:SEKVED— 

obligation of (un* ever-preserved love . . flamlet, ii. 2 
RVER-RUNXING-ever-rnnningyear./£tHri/r. iv. 1 
I'^'V'EH'y— tlion";h every drop of water . . Tempest, i. 1 

to every article — i. 2 

ineverycabin — i. 2 

i uvisible to every eveball else — i. 2 

every day, some sailor's wife — ii. 1 

when every grief is entertained — ii. 1 

here is every thing advantageous to life — ii. 1 

a space whose every cubit seems — ii. 1 

fir every trifle are they set upon me . . — ii. 2 

I'll show thee every fertile inch — ii. 2 

are created of every creature's best — iii. 1 

encounter every one in country footing — iv. 1 

of every these happen'd accidents — v. 1 

every man shift for all v. 1 

where eiery third thouglit shall — v. 1 

every day with parle encounter. 7"ho Gen. o/l-'cr. i. 2 

l)e in eye of every exercise — i, 3 

a gentle kiss to every sedge ii. 7 

that longs for every thing — iii. 1 

fee'd every slight oeea.sion Mernj Hires, ii. 2 

every way; old "Windsor way (rpp.).. — iii. 1 

he W'ill every way be moekcd — v. 3 

on every saered room — v. a 

and every precious flower — v. S 

let us every one go home v. 5 

and every particle, and utensil . . Tuelph Night, i. ii 
cverv wise man's son dothknow.. .. — ii. 3 (song) 
might be every thing, and their (rep.) — ii. 4 
for every one of these letters arc .... — ii. .I 

every rcoson excites to this — ii. 5 

I will do every thing that thou — ii. 5 

like the sun, it shines every wliere .. — iii. 1 
at every feather that comes liefore .. — iii.! 

Honour, truth, ond every thing — iii. 1 

he docs olK-y every point of the letter — iii. 2 
■why, every thing adheres together .. — iii. 4 

of here and every where — v. i 

the rain it raineth every da.v (rep.).. — v. 1 (song) 

strive to please you every d'oy — v. I (song) 

so every scone by the immoderate. jWea. for Mea. i. 3 
why, every fault's condemned, ere .. — ii. 2 

for ever}' pelting iwtty officer — ii. 2 

j'ct it is every day's news — iii. 2 

every true man's appuivl fits — iv. 2 

so every true man's opparel fits iv. 2 

which you shall flndbvevery syllabic iv. 3 

every letter he hath writ — iv. 4 

every month a new sworn brother MuchAdo, i. 1 

I bless m.vself every way — i. 3 

at him upon my knees every morning — Ii. I 
there is a measure in every thing — ii. I 



r '^'^ ] 

E'VERY. Ml uvoiy uood thing MuchAdo, ii. 1 

let every cj c nug iliate for itself — ii. 1 

Biieaks poniards and cverv word 8t4ib8 — ii. 1 

lluisg.iesever.'oni- to the world .... — ii. 1 

is too costiv to winr evcrvdav — ii. 1 

in every tlHii-, but in loving liencdiek — ii. 3 

tm-ns slie evi-i-y man tlie wrong side out — iii. I 

why, every da.v; to-moiTOW — iii. I 

well, uvciy one I'aii master a grief .. — iii. 2 

vour I lero. e\i.'rv num's Hero — iii. 2 

hut G.«l send ev'crv one their heart's — iii. 4 

wliv, (loih not rvciv tartldv tiling.... — iv. 1 

pitiud ;iii. I excii-eii'orivirv hearer .. — iv. 1 

ttud e\ery lovely orjian oilier life .... — iv. 1 

ami every thing handsome about him — iv. 2 

and let it answer every strain for strain — v. 1 

in every lineament, branch, shape .. — v. 1 
mv fortunes everv wnv asfairlv.iV/'/. A'.'s Oream.i. 1 

so'thebnv love i^'cri'iireil eve'rv where — i. \ 

here is tlii' scroll of every man's name — i. 2 

that would luiiig lis eveiy mother's son — i. 2 

I do wander every where, swifter .... — ii. 1 

ninl hang a ijearl in ever.v cowslip's ear — ii. I 

have every iielting river made so .... — ii. 2 

eoinc, sit (low n, ever.v mother's son .. — iii. I 

null M, I , lA "ur according to his cue — iii. 1 

\, '.ill" llower — iii. 1 

b. .-'■■ 1 1 in.' every place — iii. 2 

tii 1 , • .1) n sliould take his own — iii. 2 

tile li-nntiiins every region near seemed — iv. I 

and ever\' tiling seems double — iv. 1 

1 will tell you every thing — iv. 2 

every man look o'er his part — iv. 2 

ever.v one let's forth his siiritc — v. 2 

every elf, and fairy sprite — v. 2 

every fairy take his gait! — v. 2 

but one meal on ever.yda,v beside.. I.ovc'iL.LosI, i. 1 

that give a name to every fixed star .. — i. 1 

and every godfather can give a name — i. I 

for every man witli his affects is born — i. 1 

be to me, and everv man that dares not — i. 1 

for every object that the one doth .... — ii. 1 

that every one her own hath garnished — ii. 1 

tliy own wish wish I thee in every place! — ii. 1 

and every jest but a word — ii. I 

and e\'er\ one give ear — iv. 1 

anil my heart on thy every part .. — iv. 1 (letter) 

thou sliiiiest in every tear'that I.. — iv. 3 (verses) 

in every power; and gives to every power — iv. 3 

then, homeward, every man attach .. — iv. 3 

and every one his love-feat will — v. 2 

we will every one be masked — v. 2 

that smiles on every one — v. 2 

for eveiy one mu-sents three — v. 2 

to every varied object in his glance .. — v. 2 

the cuckoo then on every tree — v. 2 (song) 

and every object, that might make. Mer. nfl'enicc, i. 1 

where every man must play — i. I 

blow in from every coast renowned .. — i. 1 

he is every Hum in no man — i. 2 

and his helm, ionr e' cry where — i. 2 

you may Icll e\er\ finger I have .... — ii. 2 

to these iiiiiinctions evxM-v one doth .. — ii. 9 

where every something, heing blent — iii. 2 

and every word in it a gaping — iii. 2 

how every fool can jilay upon — iii. 5 

every offence is not a hate at first — iv. 1 

if every ducat in six thousand ducats — iv. 1 

and every part a ducat — iv. 1 

when every goose is cackling — v. 1 

gentlemen flock to him every day..,4s ijou Like it, i. 1 

emulator of every man's good parts — i. 1 

men may grow wiser every day! .... — i. 2 

in stones, and good in every tiling .. — ii. I 

sans tat. e, sans every thing — ii. 7 

witnes'sed every where; run (cpj).) .. — iii. 2 
tongues I'll hang on ever}' tree . . — iii. 2 (verses) 
or at every sentence' end, will I — iii. 2 (verses) 
the qiiintesseiice of e^erv sprite.. . — iii. 2 (verses) 

siL'liin- every niinntc, ami o.'/i.) — iii. 2 

evcrx' one lanlt seeming mnnstrous .. — iii. 2 

every thing aliont yon dem<nistiatlng — iii. 2 

au'J I set liiin evciy day to woo me . . — iii. 2 

for every passion something — iii. 2 

and come every da.y to my cote — iii. 2 

betray themselves to every modern . . — iv. 1 

that abuses every one's eyes, because. — iv. 1 
'tis Hymen peoples evei-y town.... — v. I (song) 

to Hyinen, god of every town — v. 4 (song) 

hearing how that every day — v. 4 

and after, everv of this haiipy — v. 4 

to see 1dm every hour; to sit and Ul's Well, i. 1 

too cajiable of every line and trick... — i. 1 

born but every blazing scar — i. 3 

on every tuinb; on every grave — ii. 3 

yes, good faith, every dram of it — ii. 3 

and every man should beat thee — ii.3 

in every tiling I wait upon Ids will .. — ii. 4 

let every word weigh heavy of her .. . — iii. 1 

ever.v night he comes with musics of. — iii. 7 

therefore we must everyone be a man — iv. 1 

can have everv thin" in him — iv. 3 

he has everv thing tliat an honest. ... — iv. 3 

that every braggart shall be found... — iv. 3 

and means, for every man alive — iv. 3 

and nod at every man — iv. .'i 

warped the line of every other favour — v. 3 

by my ohl beard, and every hair — v. 3 

von boggle shrewdly, every feather. . . — v. 3 
friendly welcome every one. Ttimi/ig o/ i/i. 1 (indue.) 

at the high-cross every morning — i. 1 

and every day I eaniiot come to woo . — ii. I 

thy mildness iiraisid in every town.. — ii. I 

oast th.v wanderiii'' e.\es on every stale — iii. 1 

Curtis, in every oliice but thine .' — iv. 1 

cverv officer his wedding garment on> — iv. I 

my Tather inhere Uifikei! for every flay — iv. 2 

go, hop me over every kennel home.. — iv. 3 

that every thing I look on seemeth .. — iv. .'> 
in every one of these no man is. . . . H'inler'i Tatr, i. 2 



EVE 



I EVEIIY— every inch of woman (rep,).lf'inter'tT, Ii. 1 

myself on every nost proclaimed — iii. 2 

whose every word deser\'es to taste... — iii. 2 

everv 'leven wether tods; every tod.. — iv. 2 

our feasts in avery mess have lolly ... — iv. 3 

and flies of every wind that blows ... — iv. 3 

point you forth at every sitting — iv. 3 

every lane's end, every shop, ehureb. . — iv. :i 

I will tell the king all, every word ... — iv. 3 

Ilermioiie, as ever.v jiresent time — v. 1 

every wink of an eye, some new — v. 2 

your e.xiiltation partake to ever.v one. — v. 3 
for they say every whv \\M\... Comedy of I'rrort, ii. i 

who, every* word by all m.v wit — ii. 2 

is common that ever.v churl affords .. — iii. 1 

if every one know ns, and we — iii. 2 

shapeless every where; vicious — iv. 2 

and every one doth call me by my ... — iv. 3 

and every one did bear thy praises Macbeth, i. 3 

where every day I turn the leaf — i. 3 

by doing ever.v thing safe toward — i. 4 

in every point twice done — i. G 

blow the horrid deed in every eye — i.7 

when every noise aiipals mc7 — ii. 2 

let every man he master of his time ... — iii. I 

the hunter, every one according to — iii. 1 

that every minute of his being — .'.'.'■' 

your charms, and every tiling beside... — iii. ."> 

and everj' one shall share i' the — jv. 1 

every one that does so is a traitor — iv. 2 

smacking of every sin that has — iy.3 

died every day she lived — iv. 3 

let every sold'icr hew him down — v. 4 

I'd give it every foot to have his faceting' Jo/in. i. 1 

young Dauphin, every wa>' complete — ii. 2 

since all and every part of^what — iv. 2 

sorrow that dwells every where Richard //. i. 2 

nay, rather, every tedious stride — i. 3 

and every thing is left at six and seven — ii. 2 

through ever.v giiiU.V hole — iii.-' 

for every man that Uolingbroke — iii. 2 

that every stride he makes U|ion — iii. 3 

for every one doth so against — id. 1 

no more than everv one dotli know .. — iii. I 

that every day under his bouseliolil.. — iv. 1 

every man to" his business 1 HennjlV. ii. 2 

they were bound every man of them — ii. 4 

and the soul of every man — iii. 2 

the push of every bcirdless vain — iii. 2 

for every honour sitting on his helm.. — iii. 2 

if promises he kept on every hand.... — iii. - 

stop all sight-holes, ever.v loop. from.. — iv. 1 

find linen enough on every hedge.... — iv. -' 

if every owner were well placed — iv. 3 

yea, every man, shall be my friend .. — v. 1 

therefore, every leader to his charge.. — v. I 
the which in every language I..2llenryir. (indue 

every minute now should be — i. 1 

and counsel everv man the aiitest. . . . — i. I 

and every part ahout you blasted — i. ; 

to bear every knave's wrong — ii. I 

it would be every man's thought — ii. J 

John Falstaff, knight; every man — ii. 2 

for in every thing, the purpose — ii. 2 

asking every one for sir .Tolin — ii. 1 

and every third word a lie, diier paid — iii. 2 

examples of every minute's instance — iv. i 

every thing set on that might so — iv. 1 

that every slight and false (>r;;fa/e(/).. — iv. 1 

when every thing is ended, then yon . . — iv. 3 

and every thing lies level to our wish — iv. i 

puts forth her olive every where — i v. 1 

with every course, in his particular. . — iv. I 

toliing from every flower the virtuous — iv. i 

from every region, apes of idleness!., — iv. 4 

his tooth in every innocent — iv -I 

'tis all in ever}' part. "Tis so indeed . — v. 5 

are every one a woe, a sore Hem yV. i. 2 

let every man now task his thought. . -- i. 2 

in the breast of every man — ii. (chorus ) 

doubt not, but ever.v rub is smoothed. — ii. 2 

in every branch truly demonstrative.. — ii. i 

and bend up every spirit to his — iii.] 

that eveiy wretch, pilling — iv. (chonis) 

liberal eve doth give to every one — iv. (eliorns) 

every subject's duty is the king's (rep.) — iv. I 

'tis certain, every man that dies ill... — iv. I 

subjected to the breath of every fool.. — iv. I 

that every one may pare his — iv. i 

then every soldier kill his pi'isoners.. — iv. G 

ever.v soldier to cut his prisoner's ... . — iv. " 

princes l-hi.eli'li, ever.v one — ^.2 

and every thing that seems unnatural — v 2 
the king hath granted every articl 
here, tliere, and ever.v where " 
walked about me evt'ry min 

I can count every iCol. Knt each] one — i. 4 

for every drop of blood was drawn... — ii. 2 

that every one may read — ii. 2 

broke down in every street — iii. I 

if .your grace mark ever.v circumstance — iii. 1 

in the raouth of every slicking babe .. — iii. I 

sell every man his life as dear — iv. 2 

for vantage, every one will swear — iv. 5 

'stablish (luietness on every side — v. 1 

have their answers every one — v. 1 

liavc I sought every country — v. i 

whipped through every marKet town. 2 7/™ ri///. ii. 1 

to every idle rascal follower — ii. 4 

when everv one will give the time ... — iii. I 

every word you .speak in his iKlittlf.. — iii. 2 

ay, every joint, should seem to curse. — jii. 2 

with every several pleasure in — iii. 2 

throughout every town, proclaim — iv.2 

at ever.v corner, nave them kiss — iv. " 

have pay, and every thing you wish.. — v. 1 
tliou art OS opposite to every good... .SH/'/iiyr;. i. i 

and everv droj) cries vengeance — i. i 

in evevyhorough aswe iMisaalong. ... — ii. I 

hut every thing is right — ii. 2 



EVE 



I EVERY— ns every loyal subject ouglit.3(/e"r!/ I'J. iv. 7 

for every cloud "engenders not — v. 3 

I augmented in every county as we.... — v. 3 

1 for every word I speali, ye see — v. 4 

I wings misdoubtcth every bush — v- 6 

I since every Jack became Itichard III. i. 3 

and every "man that means to live — — _i. 4 

I I every day expect an embassage — ii. 1 

where every horse bears his — ii. 2 

ready with every nod, to tumble down — iii. 4 

look back, and pry on every side — iii. 5 

be the aim of every dangerous shot. . . — iv. 4 

and every hour more competitors — — iv. 4 

every man's conscience is a thousand — v, 2 

every tongue brings in a several (rep.) — v. 3 

and every one did threat to-morrow's — v. 3 

every man unto his charge — 'V'. 3 

daring an oi'posite to every danger. .. — v. 4 

every man, that stood, showed Henry I'lU. i. 1 

the tract of every thing would by — i. 1 

every man, after the hideous storm.. — i. 1 

from every tree, lop, bork^ and part. . — i. 'i 

to every county, where this is — i. 2 

letters "writ to every shire — i. 2 

every day it would infect his speech. . — i. 2 

who fed him every minxite with words — i. 2 

his dews fall every where — i. 3 

lead in your ladies every one — i. 4 

news are every where; every tongue {rep.) — ii. 2 

a wise eoiuieil to them of every realm — ii. 4 

every thing that heard him play. . — iii. 1 (song) 

were tried oy every tongue, every eye — iii. 1 

honour every good tongue blesses.... — iii. 1 

such news as this once every hour.... — iii. 2 

and every function of your power ... . — iii. 2 

ye appear in every tliin" may — iii. 2 

in her days every man sliall eat — v. 4 

thou lays't in every gash that . . . Troilus Sf Cress, i. 1 

where every flower did, as a prophet — i. 2 

the joints of every thing; but every. . — i. 2 

with every action that hath gone .... — i. 3 

then every thing includes itself — i. 3 

60 every step, exampled by — i. 3 

and every Greek of mettle, let — i. 3 

and railest every hour on Achilles... — ii. 1 

every tithe soul, 'mongst many — ii. 2 

knows almost every grain of Plutiis' — iii. 3 

si til every joint a wound — iv. 1 

for every scruple of her — i v. 1 

lady? every man is odd — iv. 5 

at every joint and motive of her — ■ iv. & 

to every ticklish readerl — iv. .'i 

tlie fall of every Phrygian stone — iv. .5 

I'll kill thee every where — iv. .'i 

you may have every day enough — iv. 5 

every syllable that here was spoke — — v. 2 

but vows to every purpose, must not — v. 3 

life every man holds dear — v. 3 

here, there, and every where, he — v. 5 

in every thing illegitimate — v. R 

he owes for evevy word Timon of Athens, i. 2 

when every feather sticks in — ii. 1 

wlien every room hath blazed — ii. 2 

every manhas his fault, and honesty — iii. 1 

of the same piece is every flatterer's — iii. 2 

every man liere's so: what would — iii. 6 

for eveiy prize of fortune is smoothed — iv. 3 

bare for every storm that blows — iv. 3 

that speak'st with every tongue (rep.) — iv. 3 

hath in every figure skill — v. 4 

witli every minute you do change . . Coriolanus, i. 1 

I will obey 3'ou in every thing hereafter — i. 3 

tongue from every meaner man's — i. i> 

every gash was an enemj^'s grave ... . — ii. i 

'tis thought oi:' every one, Coriolanus will — ii. 2 

and rebuke from every ear that heard it — ii. 2 

wliose every motion was timed with — ii. 2 

wherein every one of us has — ii. 3 

and be every man himself? — iii. 1 

let every feeble rumour shake — iii. 3 

I'd with thee every foot — iv. 1 

standing every flaw, and saving . — v. 3 

bid every noise be still: peace JuiiusC<esar, i. 2 

to every" new protester; if you know — i. 2 

every time gentler than other (ccp.).. — i. 2 

so can I: so every bondman in his . . — i. 3 

yes, every man of them; and no Crfp.) — ii. 1 

opinion of yourself, which every noble — ii. 1 

and every man heuce to his idle bed — ii. 1 

when every drop of blood, that every — ii. 1 

and so, good-morrow to you every one — ■ ii. I 

sometime hath his hour with every man — ii. 1 

that every like is not the same — ii. 2 

and every one doth shine; but there's — iii. 1 

ay, every man away: Brutus shall .. — iii. 1 

put a tongue in every wound of Cresar — iii. 2 

to every Boraan citizen he gives (rep.) — iii. 2 

answer every man directly — iii. 3 

every man dkectly, and briefly, wisely — iii. 3 

that every nice offence should bear . . — iv. 3 

you wrong me every way — iv. 3 

the enemy increaseth every day — i v. 3 

let it not, Brutus. Every tiling is well — iv. 3 

farewell, every one. Give me tlie gown — iv. 3 

thou hast misconstrued every thing . . — v. 3 

how every thing is chanced — v. 4 

whom every thing becomes (rep.'). Antony fyCleo. i. 1 

if every of your wishes hadawomb (rep.) — i. 2 

and every hour, most noble Caesar . . — i. 4 

and wound with keels of every kind — i. 4 

he shall have every day a several — i. a 

Mark Antony is every hour in Rome — ii. 1 

every time serves for the matter — ii. 2 

I'll think them every one an Antony — ii. ;> 

the holding every man shall bear — ii. 7 

supplying every stage with an — iii. 6 

in every power that moves — iii. in 

for in every ten that tliey make — v. 2 

and questioned'st every sail Cymbeline. i. 4 

than in my every action to be — i. 5 



[ 22(3 ] 



E"VERY— and every day tliat comes. . Cijinheline, i. 6 

whose every touch, would force — i. 7 

every jack-slave hath his belly full. . — ii. I 
should undertake every companion that — ii. I 
but not every man patient after .... — ii. 3 
with every thin" that pretty bin . . — ii. 3 (song) 
and every day do honour to her gi'ave — iii. 3 
from every one the best she hath — iii. .^> 

Pisanio I every good servant does.. — v. 1 

my life is, every breath, a death — v. 1 

they weigh not every stamp — v. 4 

every villain be called, Posthumus . . — v. .■) 
with voices and applause of every sort. TilusAnU. i.2 

shall be thy usage every way — i.2 

every thing in readiness for Hynieneus — i.2 
my foes I do repute you every one .. — i.2 
when every thing doth make (rep.).. — ii. 3 
yet every mother breeds not sons alike — ii. 3 

notes, enchanting every ear! — iii. 1 

my aunt Lovinia follows me every where — iv. 1 
blazoning our injustice every where? — iv. 4 
come, come, be every one otficious . . — v. 2 
of every virtue gives renown to menl . . Pericles, i. 1 

as every prince should do — i. 1 

since every worth in show commends.. — ii. 3 

give to every one that comes — ii. 3 

and every one with claps 'gan sound — iii. (Gow.) 

we every day expect him here — iv. I 

conscience to be used in every trade . . _ iv. 3 
well, if we had every nation a traveller — iv. 3 
the damned doorkeeper to every eoystril — iv. 6 
for every gratf would send a caterpillar — v. 1 

every hour he flashes into one gross Lear, i. 3 

upbraids us on every trifle — i. 3 

pierce every sense about thee ! — i. 4 

yes, that on every dream — _i. 4 

smooth every passion, that in the natiu*es — ii. 2 
with every gale and vary of their masters — ii. 2 
for the rain it raineth every day. . — iii. 2 (songl 

when every case in law is right — iii. 2 

search every acre in the high-grown .... — iv. 4 
to say ay, and no, to every thing I saidi — iv. 6 

they told me I was every thing — iv. 6 

ay, every inch a king — iv. ti 

every one hears that, which can distinguish — iv. 6 

and every measure fail me — iv. 7 

examine every married lineament.. Romeo SrJul. i. 3 

and every thing in extremity — i. 3 

but every man Tjetake liim — i. 4 

keeps his watch in every old man's eye — ii- 3 
and sufi'er every knave to use me .... — ii. 4 
that every part about me quivers. . .. — ii. 4 
and every tongue, that speaks but . . — iii. 2 
and every eat, and dog, and little (rep.) — iii. 3 
from time to time every good hap .. — iii. 3 
hear from thee every day i' the hour — iii. 5 
every one prepare to follow this fair corse — iv. 5 

give everj' man thine ear Hamlet, i. 3 

without more motive, into every brain .. — i. 4 
for every man hath business, and desire — i. 5 

use every man after his desert — ii. 2 

where every god did seem to set his seal . — iii. 4 

to you yourself, to us, to every one — iv. 1 

and every thing is bent for England .... — iv. 3 

for every thing is sealed and done — iv. 3 

ratiflers and props of every word — iv. 5 

cannot you tell that? every fool can .... — v. 1 

stranger, of here and every where Othello, i. 1 

at every house I'll call; I may command — i. I 

of country, credit, every thing — i. 3 

good-night to every one: aud, noble .... — i. 3 

for every miuute is expectancy of — ii. 1 

and on every hand, enwheel thee round; — ii. 1 
if after every tempest come such calms . . — ii. 1 
every man put himself into triumph .... — ii.2 

every inordmate cup is unblessed — ii. 3 

I'll intermingle every thing he does .... — iii. 3 

1 am bound to every act of duty — iii. 3 

so help me every spirit s,anctiSed — iii. 4 

every bearded fellow, that's but yo'sed . . — iv. i 
that dwell in every region of his face .... — iv. I 

she haunts me in every place — iv. 1 

and put in every honest hand a whip — iv. 2 

every day thou doft"st me with some — iv. 2 

every way makes my gain; live Roderigo — v. 1 
but every puny whipster gets my sword — v. 2 

EVIDENCE— as modest evidence. . . . Much Ado, iv. 1 

thou art too fine in thy evidence AWs iVell, v. 3 

and many other evidences Winter'' sTale, v. 2 

true C'/idence, of good esteem 2Hemy FI. iii. 2 

that now give evidence against .... Richard HI. i. 4 

where is the evidence that doth — i. 4 

upon this evidence, have found Henry VIII. ii. I 

and give true evidence to his love..4H(07ii/ <5 Cleo. i. 3 
donation, to be his evidence now. . . . Cymbeline, v. & 

bring in the evidence : tliou robed Lear, in. 6 

of our faults, to give in evidence Hamtei, iii. 3 

EVIDENT^this is evident to any. Twelfth Night, ii . 5 
and your goodness, is so evident. . WMler'sTale, ii. 2 
so evident that it will glimmer ....\HenryVI. ii. 4 

a tomb so evident as a chair Coriolanus, \v. 7 

we must find an evident calamity . . — v. 3 
sign about her, more evident than . . Cymbeline, ii. 4 

EVIL — awaked an evil nature Tempest, i. 2 

to bring this woman to e^il MerryWives, iii. 5 

no man means evil but the devil — v. 2 

that I may bear my evils alone. . Twelfth Night, ii. I 
I do it not in evil disposition .... Meas.fur Meas. i. 3 

a thirsty evil; and when we — i. 3 

when evil deeds have — i. 4 

had not dared to do that evil — ii.2 

that shows what future evils — ii.2 

and pitch our evils there? — ii.2 

repent me, as it is an evil — ii. 3 

and swelling evil of my conception.. — ii. 4 
the evil that thou causest to be done — iii. 2 
unfold the evil which is here wrapt. . — v. 1 

your evil quits you well — ■\'. I 

so politic a state of evil Much .4do. v. 2 

tills same progeny of evils comes Mid. N. Dr. ii. 2 



EXA 



EVIL— is no evil angel but love.. ..Looe's L.Losl^ i. 2 

some flattery for tills evil — iv. 3 

an ant'cl is not evil — v. 2 

an evil soul, producing holy . . Merch. of Venice, i. 3 

obscm-es the show of evil? — iii. 2 

embossed sores, and headed tvils.. .is youLihe it, ii. 7 

oppressed with two weak evils — ii. 7 

any of the principal evils, that he laid — iii. 2 
yet these fixed evils, sit so fit in him. . AWs Well, i. 1 

we must do good against evil — ii. ,5 

but greater a great deal in evil .— jv. 3 

eyes at once see good and evil Winter' sTale^ i. 2 

ill comforting your evils — li. 3 

forget your evil ; with them — v. 1 

my evils conjured to remembrance .. — v. 3 
are doubled with an evil word. . Comedy of Err. iii. 2 

no evil lost is wailed when — iv. 2 

like an evil angel, and bid you — iv. 3 

more damned in evils, to top Macbeth, iv. 3 

these evils, thou repeat'st — iv. 3 

'tis called the evil; a most — iv. 3 

evils, thattake leave, on their (rep.). King John, iii. 4 

to acquaint you with this evil — v. G 

[Kn/.Jand down, like his evil angel.. .'H™;;//r. i. 2 

turning past evils to advantages — iv. 4 

of means enforce you not to evil — v. 5 

out of thee extract one spark of evil . . Henry V. ii. 2 
some soul of goodness in things evil.. — iv. 1 

to dream on evil, or to work 2Henry VI. iii. 1 

what a sign it is of evil life — iii. 3 

impudent with use of evil deeds . . . .SHenry VI. i. 4 

how evil it beseems thee — iv. 7 

at thy birth, an evil sign — v. 6 

he hath kept an evil diet long .... Richard III. i. 1 
of these supposed evils ^i^n^-crimes] — j. 2 

for these known evils. But to give — i.2 

God bids us do good for evil — i. 3 

your eyes the evidence of their evil.. — iii. 4 
were he evil used, he would out-go. Henri/ VIU. i. 2 
nor build their evils on the graves .. — ii. I 

an ensuing evil, if it fall — ii. 1 

madam, men's evil manners live — iv. 2 

the ill aspects of planets evil Troilus SfCress. i. 3 

when the planets, in evil mixture . . — i. 3 

breed a nursery of like evil — i. 3 

wrongs be evils, and enforce us kill. . — iii. 5 
that which would increase his evil . . Coriotan us,i. 1 
by night when evils are most fvte? JuHusCtssar, ii. 1 

Ijortents, and evils imminent — ii. 2 

the evil that men do lives after them — iii. 2 
if you give place to accidental evils. . — iv. 3 

thy evil spirit, Brutus — iv. 3 

not think, there are evils cnoMgh. Antony S,-Cleo. i. 4 

the evils she hatched were not Cymbeline, v. 5 

repent the evils I have done. . Titus Androiiicus, v. 3 

to entice his own to evil Pericles, i. (Gower) 

heaven and men succeed their evils! — i. 4 

I'll tell thee, thou dost evil Lear, i. 1 

and all that we are evil in — i.2 

not altogether your brother's evil disposition — iii. 6 

read thine own evil — v. 3 

of our nature come in further evil? Hamlet, v. 2 

disclaiming from a purposed evil free . . — v. 2 

it is too true an evil ; gone she is Othello, i. 1 

in Cassio, and looks not on his evils — ii. 3 

would do much to cure him of this evil . . — ii. 3 

are you of good, or evil? — v. 1 

EVIL-EYED— evil-eyed unto you. . . . Cymbeline, i. 2 

EVILLY— this act, so evilly born Kingjohn, iii. 4 

of good deeds evilly bestowed! Timon of Athens, iv. 3 
EVITATE— doth evitate and shun.il/erri/ Wives, v. 5 

EWE — whereof the ewe not bites Tempest, v. 1 

for the ewe that will not hear Much Ada, iii. 3 

the ewes, being rank Merchant of Venice, i. 3 

before the fulsome ewes — i.3 

is your gold and silver, ewes and rams? — i. 3 

made tlie ewe bleat for the lamb — iv. 1 

we are still handling oui- ewes . . As you Like it, iii. 2 

to see my ewes graze — iii. 2 

to bring the ewes and the rams — iii. 2 

but milk my ewes, and weep .... Win ler's Tale, iv. 3 
of ewes now? Thereafter as (rep.)..2Henry IV. iii. 2 

so many days my ewes have 3 Henry VI. ii. a 

is tupping your white ewe Othello, i. 1 

EWEK— another bear the ewer. Tarn. ofSh. 1 (indue.) 
basons and ewers, to lave her dainty '— ii. 1 
dreamt of a silver bason and ewer. Timon of Ath. iii. 1 

EXACT— my power might else exact Tempest, i. 2 

with better face exact the pensdty.Mer .of Ven ice, i. 3 

to the true and exact performer All's Well, iii. 6 

to set tlie exact wealth of . .' 1 Henry IV. iv. 1 

and generals of grace exact Troilus ^Cress. i. 3 

I have with exact view perused thee — iv. 5 

in the most exact regard support Lear, i. 4 

an exact command, larded with many. . Hamlet, v. 2 
EXACTED-have I aught exacted a,t.2nenry VI. iv 7 
EXACTEST— theexactest auditoTs.Timonor .ah. ii. 2 
EXACTING— false exacting .. ..Meas. for Meas. iii. 2 
EXACTION-by the exaction of the. .Mer. of I -en ice. i. 3 

daily new exactions are devised Richard II. ii. 1 

as putter-on of these exactions Henry VIII. i. 2 

these exactions, whereof my sovereign — i.2 
still exaction! The nature of it? (re/).) — i.2 

EXACTLY— exactly is performed Tempest, i. 2 

but then exactly do all points of — i.2 

exactly begged your grace's pardon. . Richard II. i. I 
'tis exactly valued; not petty things. Ant..^ Cleo. v. 2 
be so rarely and exactly wrought. . . . Cymbeline, ii. 4 

armed at point, exactly, cap-i-pS Hamlet, i. 2 

EXACT'ST-exaot'st the penalty.. We)-, of Venice, iv. 1 

EX ALT- he doth exalt himself, more than. Lear, v. 3 

EXALTED-a more exalted respect. Tioelfth Night, ii. ,'> 

kiss the most exalted shores of all. /ui/us Co'sar, i. I 

to be exalted with the threatening clouds — i.3 

EXAMINATION-their examination. AfHc/i^do, iii. r> 

we are now to examination these men — iii. 6 

and show him their examination .... — iv. 2 

lordship present at his exaroination.. All's Well, iii. 6 

lia? Where's his examination? Henry VIII. i. 1 

urged on the examinations, proofs .. — ii# I 



EXA 



[ 227 ] 

EXCEL — to excel the (loldeii use Tempeil, ii. 1 

excels each imih tal thiuf;. TwoUtn.of Ver. iv. 2 (nong) 

my cuiiMiii^; iliift L'x.els — iv. !! 

1 (lo exoi'l tlitc in my rupier ....Love'i I.. Loll, i. 2 

how (iir ilciMt thijii excel! — iv. 3 (verses) 

lie cxi'fls Ills linjther All'sH'ell,iv. 3 

1 ilu wull hiliive, excels whatever. Winffr't /'«(», V. 3 
nlUiu' ill f:hirii>ii9 titles he excel ....I Henri/ FI. v. 6 
vulciiir uiiil iiriile excel themselves. 7'ro/7.i5-Crc».iv..O 
yet liis k'u' cvtcU nil men's .. ..Romeo i^ Juliet, ii. 6 

i'ur it i-vcils vuiir first — iii. 

one that i'xclIs the quirks of OMcUo, ii. 1 

EXCKl.LKU— she excelled many ....C'jwbrline, i. .') 

EXCEIJ.KNCK— is thy excellence. 7■l«•(rtA^■lV,'/l^ i. 3 

us he thinlis, with excellences — ii. •! 

smalloat scruple of her excelkMice../Ucn./or Mm. i. 1 
his cxi-L-llcufc.liil cam it, cic lie liad.jl/ufA/lrfo, iii. 1 
the I'liilMid i,rt!tililv's cx<t'llriii.c..Lni)e''si:,./.o»(, iv. 3 
tile iii'.rc iHir caivir's cxfcl Icncc. (fmdT'K'/'off, v. 3 
uud slic a fair dividi'd cxc'cllciu'e. . . . Kinn John, ii. 2 
breathing to his breathless excellence — iv. 3 
got the voice in hell for excellence.. . .Henry V. ii. 2 
sue unto your excellence, to have . . I Henry yi. v. 1 
I do greet your excellence with letters — v. ■! 

as procurator to your excellence iliennjVl. i. 1 

Jesu maintain your royal excellence! — i. I 

to be protector of his e.xcellence? — i. 3 

that loves him with that excellence. H<^nri/ ;'/(/. ii. i 

to Buch neat excellence opposed Cymbellue, i. 7 

on those shall praibc your excellence . . lUunlel, iv. 7 
vou are not ignorant of what excellence. . — v. 2 
I should compare with him in excellence — v. 2 

EXCELLENCY-nii the exii_-lleiic,v. il/en-i/ WiveSjW.'i 
is there not a double exrellenry in this? — lii. 3 
it is tlie witness still of excellency ..Much Ado, ii. 3 
all excellency [A'ni.-tire the ingener] ..Olhello, ii. 1 

EXCELLEN't—Trinculo?— excellent.. VWn/)es(, iii. 2 

a kind of excellent dumb discourse — iii. 3 

is an excellent pass of pate — iv. 1 

OexecUent motion! TwoGcn. of Verona, ii. 1 

U excellent device! — ii. 1 

a gentleman of excellent breeding. i^/erry Wives, ii. 2 
av. dttt is very good!— Excellent! .... — iii. 1 

w"oulil (jive an excellent motion — iii. 3 

tliat will lie exeellent. I'll go buy... — iv. 4 
hndst thou luul an excellent heoA-.Twel/thNighl, i. 3 

excellent; it hangs like flax on — i. 3 

bv the e-xcellent constitution of thy leg — i. 3 

higher: ha! ha! excellent! — i. 3 

so excellent a touch of modesty — ii. I 

the fool has an excellent brea-st — ii. 3 

excellent! why tliis is the best fooling — ii. 3 

e.xeellent good, i'laith! — ii. 3 

excellent! I smell a device — ii. 3 

excellent wench, say I — ii. 5 

the cur is excellent at faults — ii. ."i 

thoumost excellent devil of wit! — ii. .') 

most excellent accomplished lady — — iii. 1 

and with some excellent jest — iii. 2 

why, this is excellent — v. 1 

it is excellent to have a giant's. . Meas.fnr Meas. ii. 2 

he hath an excellent stomach Much Ado,\. 1 

he were an excellent man, that were . — ii. 1 
not know yon by your excellent wit? — ii. I 
your father got excellent luisbands... — ii. I 
she were an e.xeellent wife for Benedick. — ii. 1 
good discourse, an excellent musician — ii. 3 

■ get us some excellent music — ii. 3 

she's an excellent sweet lady ...... .. — ii. 3 

having so swift and excellent a wit.. — iii. 1 

he Imtli an excellent good name — iii. 1 

graceful, and excellent fashion — iii. 4 

they are an excellent perfume — iii. 4 

O excellent! sweet, do not scorn. . . Mid. N. Dr. iii. 2 

they may pass for excellent men — v. 1 

and he had an excellent strength . Love's L. Lost, i. 2 
none at all in aught proves excellent . — iv. 3 

an excellent device! so, if any — v. I 

O excellent young man ! ... Merchant of Venice, iv. I 
young men of excellent growth . . . As you Like il, j. 2 
to deny so fair and excellent ladies. . . — i. 2 

O excellent young man! — i. 2 

an excellent colour: your chestnut... — iii. 4 

very good, very excellent good — v. 1 

hewu^iM'. II ".L in II.', I, madam All's iretlji. 1 

tbeie \\ :i :i I : i cninmand!.... — iii. 6 

pii-iiini I I I ,. lit... 7'am!n4'o/.S/i. 1 (indue.) 

th-,u di.l'-i II .. ■ ,- I", — 1 (indue.) 

'tisa very excellent (liccc of work — i. 1 (indue.) 

O excellent niiitioii! lellows — i. 2 

piece of exiellent wltcberaft n'inler'sTale. iv. 3 

a wench of cxeellent discourse. .Comfi/tfo/fi'rr. iii. I 
an excellent plot, very good friends..! Heiu-y/;'. ii. 3 

this is excellent sport, i faith! — ii. 4 

let it be an excellent good thing iHenrylV. ii. 2 

it will be an excellent stratagem — ii. 4 

you are in an excellent temperulity.. — ii. 4 
which was an excellent (rood word. ... — ;i. 4 

which is an excellent thing — iii. 2 

ha, ha, ha! most e.xeellent, i'faith! .. — iii. 2 
becomes excellent wit. The second (iv/).) — iv. 1 
with excellent endeavour of drinking — iv. 3 
Excellent, modame. C'estasiiez pour.. //i-nrj/F. iii. 1 

there is very excellent service — iii. ti 

valiantly, with excelieiit discipline .. — iii. « 
excellent debcripticm of fiirtiinc (If/).) — iii. li 

you have an excellent uniionr — J!!- '^ 

a most alisolnte and excellent horse.. — iii. 7 
exiellent I'lieelle. if thv name be su..\lIennjVI. i. 2 
for the heaiitv. thinks it excellent.. 2 //ra>-i/ (7. iii. 1 
() excellent device! and make a son. /(ic/inril ///. i. 4 
excellent grand tyrant of the earth.. — iy. 4 
an excellent and ttninatched wit .. . tlentyVIlL ii. 4 
so excellent in art, and still so rising.. — iv. 2 
here, here's an excellent place.... 7Voi7«i4'<^"»- '• 2 
cries, excellent! 'tis Agameinnou just — 1.3 

Aehilles still cries, excclkiit! — i. 3 

this comes off well and excellent. Vimoni^f. Athens, i. I 
excellent! your lordship's a goodly.. — Hi. 3 
strain, and call it cxocllent — iv. 3 



EXC 



EX.VMINE— examine vour eonscience.A/ucA/Wo, i. 1 
wish he would ni.Hlesllv examine himsolf— ii. 3 
we huvo tlie exibitioii to examine.... — iv. 2 
you go not the way to examine ^ iv. ! 

tirav vou, examine him iipnii that point — V. 1 
tnoVof vom- v. .nth, examine wM ..Mid.N.Dr. i. 1 
the old justice that examines all. .4* j/nii LideiV, iv. 1 
examine me upon the paitienlars ..MienrylV. ii. 4 
but to examine tlie wars of I'ompey . . Henry /', iv. I 

siriah, I must examine thee 'IHenryVI. iv. 2 

for examine their eouiisels, andtlieir.Corio/i/iiii«, i. 1 

to tiiiiie eyes; examine other llomeo ^Juliet, i. I 

examine every iiian-ied lineament .... — i. 3 

EX.VMINEU-exainined iiiv parts.. ,Wcr)!/»nrM,i. 3 

cxiuniued IwCore your worsliip .Much Ado, iii. i 

the otl'enders that are h< lie examined'/ — iv. I 
and tluit 1 liave not heard examiued. /(/('« "VH, iii. 6 
h.Htli well cxaniiiied bis parts Kin^'JoUn, i. 1 

EX.V.Mri.lO-tlieie is example for't. T'wc.rtA .SiglU, ii. .i 
HS f.ir example; thou thyself art. Mens. /oi' Meas. i. 2 

to make him an example — i. 5 

but that frailty examples for his falling — iii. 1 

no siieh cxamide have we — iv. 2 

yourself, for the example of others . . Much Ado, V. 1 
that I may example my digression.. /.ore's i. L. i. 2 
hath tofore been sain. I wiU example it — ill. 1 
ill, to example ill, would from my . . — iv. 3 
sufferance be by christian exaraple?A/cr.<i/ Ven. iii. 1 
by the same example, will rush into — iv. 1 
and the misery is, example, that so. . AU'slVell, iii. 5 
if I could example of thousands.. Winter's Tale^ i. 2 
hang him, he'll be made an example — _iv. 3 

a cause, doth want example King John, iii. 4 

grow great by your example, and put — v. 1 
the examples of every minute's.... 2 Henry /)'. iv. 1 
lest example breed, by his sufteranccHcnrj/r. ii. 2 

out of late examples left by the — ii. 4 

love their present pains, upon example — iv. 1 
lie hanged up for example at tlieir. .2Henry VI. iv. 2 
as myself, for example, that am a butcher — iy. 7 

things done witltout example Henry VI U. i. 2 

they are set here for examples — i. 3 

before me, happily, for my example — iv. 2 

and gave the clergy ill example — iv. 2 

there's nmch examjile for't Timon of Athens, i. 2 

I'll examiile yon with thievery — iv. 3 

his rare example, made the coward.. Cor<o(aims,ii. 2 
three examples of the like have been — iv, 6 
he has given example for our flight. y4n(. •5' C/ra. iii. 8 

turned coward but by example Cymljeline, v. 3 

exantples, gross as earth, exhort rae . . Hamlet, iv. 4 

I'll make tliee an example Olhello, ii. 3 

must make examples out of their best .. — iii. 3 

KXAMPLED— exampled bv this heinous.. Jo/oi, iv. 3 
for hear her but examplecl l)y herself. . Henry V. i. 2 
so every step, exampled by the first. Troil. ^Cres. i. 3 

EXASPERATE— to exasperate you..'/'«e/./»/i A', iii. 2 
report hath so exasperate the king ..Macbeth, iii. 6 
why art tliou then exasperate. TroilusS/ Cressidu, v. 1 
to take the widow, exasperates, makes .. Lear, v. 1 

ICXCEED— far exceed the love. Tmio Gen.ofVer. iii. 1 

so far exceed all instance Twelfth Night, iv. 3 

your own science, exceeds, in that.Mea.forMea. i. 1 

exceeds her as much in beauty Much Ado, i. 1 

O that exceeds, they say — iii. 4 

livings, friends, exceed account. iUer.o/ Venice, iii. 2 

his deeds exceed all speech 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

slialt find that I exceed my sex — i. 2 

let not her penance exceed the king's. 2Hsnri/r/. ii. 4 

my mind exceeds the compass 3 Henry VI. iv. 3 

better shall exceed [Kn/.-yet to show] Troil. ^Cres.i.3 
wise, and love, exceeds man's might — iii. 2 
such as do even enemies exceed. Timon of Athens, i. 2 
or exceed the common, or be caught. C'(irio/anus,iv. 1 
as doth the Caviitol exceed the meanest — iv. 2 
whom you have banished, does exceed — iv. 2 

it e.xceeds peace as far as day — iv. 5 

not exceed the jirescript of tins scroll. Ant. if Cleo. iii. 8 

exceeds what we expected — iv. 7 

my mistress exceeds in goodness .... Cymbeline, i. 5 

this lout, us he exceeds our lords — v. 2 

make some good, but others to exceed.. Pericles, ii. 3 

he shall not exceed you three hits Hamlet, v. 2 

but let it not exceed three days Othello, iii. 3 

H.KCEEDED— exceeded promise . . As youLike it, i. 2 
hath exceeded law, and left thee iHenryVI. i. 3 

lOXCii^EUETII— king exccedeth OMia.l Henry IV. iv.3 

KXCEEDlNG-exceeding puppet! TwoGen. ofVer. ii. 1 
and exceeding good senseless .. Twelfth Night, iii. 4 

and she is e.Yceeding wise Much Ado, ii. 3 

for my heart is exceedin" heavy ! . . . . — iii. 4 

by my troth, I am exceeding ill — iii. 4 

do not look exceeding narrowly to thee — v. 4 

is exceeding fantastical Lave'sL.Lost,v. 2 

you grow exceeding strange Merch. of Venice, i. 1 

13 an honest exceeding jjoorniau .... — ii. 2 

but tliis exceeding posting All's Well, v. 1 

to please you, day exceeding day — (epil.) 

parents were exceeding poor. . Comedy of Errors, i. I 
they are excecdi ng poor and bare . . 1 Henry I V. iv. 2 

trust me, I am exceeding weary IHenrylV. ii. 2 

o word of exceeding goon command — iii. 2 
BO to; very goKlj cxeeedinggood.... — iii. 2 
how doth the king? Exceeuing ill .. — iv. 4 
exceediiig well; his cares are now all — v. 2 
exceeding the nine siliylsof old Rome.) Henry VI. i. 2 

to work e.xcetding miracles on — v. 4 

wrought me sucli exceeding trouble. 2//enr«r/. v. 1 
plague in store, exceeding tliose. . . . Diehard III. i. 3 

O, very mad, exceeding mad Henry VIII. i. 4 

exceeuing wise, fair Biioken — iv. 2 

the giver a return exceeding all . . Timon of Ath. i. I 
exceeding pleasant; none a stranger. C'ymfcfiine, I. 7 
this fellow s of exceeding honesty .... Olhello, iii. 3 

EXCEEDINGLY- 

exccedingly well met Love's L. ImI, iii. 1 

faith, it is exceedingly well aimed . .MIenry 1 V. i. 3 
a worthy gentleman: exceedingly well — iii. I 
exceedingly, my lord; it is very sultry. HumW, v. 2 
to-night exceedingly well cudgeled Othello, ii. 3 



EXCELLENT— an excellent piece.. Tintonii/'^f/i. v. I 
excellent workman thou canst not .. — v. 1 
I'll tell you exiellent news of your ..Coriolanus, i. 3 
of a town, our general is excellent ... — iv. 5 
excellent falsehood! why did he. .Antony ^ Cleo. i. 1 
good now, suiiie excellent fortune!... — i. 2 

I) excellent! I love long life — i. 2 

one scene of excellent dissembling ... — i. 3 

iilied them both with excellent praises — iii. 2 

liasgootl judgment: excellent — iii. 3 

a very excel lent good-conceited thing. Cj/mfceiin*, ii. 3 
for my vniituf.'.', excellent; and to lie. — v. 5 
a vcr\' fx I! m' I ■- r. nf villany.. 7'/ ?w ^nrfron. ii. 3 
excelleiii i ■ I elies trip (ri'p.)../'fn'dfi, ii. 3 

reserve tl. n . li i c.iinplexion — iv, 1 

and h:is ,., h ,1 ,..,1 elotlies — iv.3 

this is tlm exiillint, liippery of the world... if ar, 1. 2 

an exixlleiit tiling in woman — v. 3 

ynnr |ilantiiin leaf is excellent. .. /(omeo<S-.7uii>/, 1. 2 
many for niaiiy virtues excellent .... — ii. 3 
so excellent a kin" that was, to tliis.... H'lniM, i. 2 

in her excellent wiiite bosom — ii. 2 (letter) 

excellent well ; you are a fishmonger — ii. 2 

my excellent good friends! how dost thou — ii. 2 

this most excellent canopy, the air — ti. 2 

un excellent play; well digested — ii. 2 

excellent, i'faith; of the eameleon's dish.. — iii. 2 

there is much music, excellent voice — iii. 2 

of most excellent fancy: he hath borne.. — v. 1 

full of most excellent differences — v. 2 

well kissed! an excellent courtesy! ....Olhello, i't. I 

'fore heaven, an exec! lent song — ii. 3 

and siieak well eiion;.'li. Excellent well.. — ii. 3 

excellent wretch ! perdition catch my soul — iii. 3 

hear more bv midnight. XOxcclleiit good. — iv. I 

EXCELliE.NTLY— isexcellentlv wen.TwelflhN. i. ."> 

excellently done; if God did all — _ i. 5 

this letter, being so cxcellentlv ignorant — iii. 4 
like the new tire within exceltentlv..yi/wcA/4i/o, iii. 4 
interpreter does it well. Excellently. /((/'• Well, iv. 3 
means to kill, more excellently. Troilus ^Crcss. iv. I 
EXCELLING-isexeelling.'/'«>oGfn.o/»'er.iv. 2(6ong) 
eunning'st pattern of excelling nature.. Olhello, v. 2 
EXCEP'r— except mine own.. TwoGen. of Verona, i. 2 

except an angry word — ii. 1 

except it be of love — ii. 4 

except my mistress — ii. 4 

sweet, exee|it not any — ii. 4 

except tliiiu wilt except against my love — ii. 4 
except I be by Silvia in the night.... — iii. I 

let her except before excepted Twelfth Night, '\. 3 

change this liue, except to steal .. 3/cr. of Venice,'n. I 
I know not: except, in that country. /f/f* Well, iv. 3 
except [,(:ol. Kn(. -expect] they are. 7 nming of.>li. iv. 4 
to none of these, except it he. . Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

upon tlic foe: except they meant to Macbeth, i. 2 

why, except to get the land King John, i. I 

except this city now by us besieged . . — ii. 2 
not reverence, makes thee to except. .fficAorrf II. i. 1 
to touch the lists; except the marshal — i. 3 
by me: except the north-east wind .. — i. 4 

except, like curs, to tear us all — ii. 2 

point of fox, except, O signieur HenryV. iv. 4 

goest, except it be to pray against ..I Henry VI. i. 1 

except some petty towns of no — i. 1 

mourn not, except thou sorrow for .. — ii. 5 
more than I do— except I be provoked? — iii. 1 
yield Winchester; except you mean — iii, 1 
at peace, except ye thirst for blootl .. — iii. I 

except so much were done 2HenryVI, iii. 1 

except a sword, or sceptre, balance it — v. i 

except I cannot do it 3IIenry VI. iii. 2 

Kichard except, those, whom we . . Richard III. v. 3 
(except immortal Cajsar,) speaking. ./h/(u« Cretar, i. 2 
after, except she bend her humour ..Cymbeline, i. 6 
except my life, except mv life, except. . Hnmirt, ii. 2 
EXtjETTED— he excepted most.J'no Gen. ofVer. i. 3 

let her except liefore excepted Twelfth Night, i . 3 

loved of all ladies, only you excepted. iWucA Ado, i. \ 
always excepted my deiir Chiudio .. — iii. 1 
and sleeping hours excepted ....As you Like i/, iii. 2 
is it excejited, I should know no. .Julius Ctvsar, il. I 

EXCEPTING— excepting your Much .Ido, iii. :, 

excepting one, I would he were ....Kichard II. iv. 1 

excepting none but good duke illenryVl.i. 1 

naui;ht with her, excepting one liichard III. i. I 

EXCEPTION— take exceptions. 7'iro Gen. o/*'er. i. 3 
she takes exceptions at your person . . — v. 2 
trreat exceptions to your ill hours. 7'«'c/M Nighl, i. 3 
the true niiniite when exception bid...4«'» Hell, i. 2 
but with |iii>viso, and exception ....\ Henry IV. i. 3 

how inodesL in exception HenryV. ii. 1 

'gainst all exceptions, lords — iv. 2 

took exceptions at this badge 1 Henry Vt. iv. 1 

take exceptions to my boon 3Henry VI. iii. 2 

your nature, honour, and exception .... HimM, v. 2 

Utken against me a most just exception. OWirt/o, iv. 2 

E.KCEP'l J..ESS— and excejitless. 'ATno7H'/<J"ic/i«, iv.3 

EXCESS— now excess of it will..7"H'o Gen.ofVer. iii. I 

give me excess of it Tuelflh Nighl, i. 1 

burns not with such excess Love's L, Lost, v. 2 

nor by giving of excess, yet..;l/frc'iiin(o/ Venire, i. 3 
scantthis excess; I feel too much .. — iii. 2 

the excess makes it sixm mortal AU'i Well, i. 1 

is waKtefiil, and ridiculous excess . . Kin!;J"hn, iv. 2 
it wa.s excess of wine that set him on. . llentyV. ii. 2 

in excess hnth broke their 7'inion ofAlhens^ v. 5 

so distribution should undo excess Lear,iv. I 

true love is u'lown to such excess. Womeo ^Juliet, ii. 6 

refrain fn, 111 the excess of laughter Othello, iv. 1 

E XC 1 . SS j \' E— e xeessi ve grief 4«'ii Well, i. 1 

E.KCIl.VMii;— make exchange. 7'iroG«n.o//'cr. ii. 2 

to cxchaii^.e tlie had for the better - ii. 6 

of your time in exchange of it Merry Wires, ii. 2 

and dote upon the exchange ,VuchAdt>,i\, \ 

thou exchange for rngs? Love's L. L. iv. 1 ( letter) 

in the exchange. 'Tis true (rep.) .... — iv. 2 
in the exchange. And I say (rrp.) .. — iv. 2 
much ashamed of my exchange.. Vw. 0/ Venice, ii. 6 
by exclmuge from Florence. .Taminjn/S/ireic, iv. 2 



EXC 



EXCHANGE— exchatifre my state.TamhiL'ofSh. v. 1 
would not exchange flesli witli one Winter s Tale, \ v. 3 

we must make an exirlumj^e — iv. 3 

wliat an exchange liiul this been without — iv. 3 

this northern youtli exclin^nge 1 Hennj 1 1', iii. 2 

I have got. in exchange of a liundred — }X-'^ 

iu right great exchange Trnilns ^-Cressida, iii. 3 

I'd exchange for tliis one wisli.7Vmo/i ofAlhens, iv. 3 
my poor self did exchange for you . . Cymbeline, i. 2 
is to excliange one misery witli another — i- 6 

and tlie excliange, my brother ! Lear, iv. 6 

there's my exchange; what in the world — v. 3 

let's exchange charity. I am no less — v. 3 

the exchange of thi' love's faithful. i?omeo ^Jut. ii. 2 
we wooed, and made exchange of vow — ii. 3 
it cannot countervail the excliange of joy^ ii. 6 

in answer of the third exchange Hamlet, v. 2 

exchange forgiveness witli me — v. 2 

exchange me for a goat, when I shall. . Othello, iii. 3 

EXCHANGED-fairy had exchanged..! H(?nr,y/r. i. 1 
I was exchanged and ransomed 1 Henry VI. i. 4 

EXCHEQUEK-au exchequer of. TimGen. ofVer. ii. 4 

tliey shall be exchequers to me Merry Wives, i. 3 

thanks, the excheciucr of tlie poor . . Richard 7/. ii. 3 

coin in thy father's exchequer 1 Henry IV. ii. 2 

'tis going to the king's exchequer.. .. — ii. 2 

rob me tlie exchequer the first — iii. 3 

his exchequer is too poor Henry V. iii. 6 

EXCITE— reason excites to this . . Tmelftli Night, ii. 5 
the grim alarm excite the mortified ..Macbeth, v. 1 
those this quarrel would exalte'.. Tnilus ^- Cress, ii. 2 

EXCITED— for loyalty excited me . . Cymbeline, v. 5 

EXCITEMENT— 

excitements to the field Troilus ^- Cressida^ i. 3 

excitements of my reason, and my Hamlet, iv. 4 

EXCLAIM— to exclaim on you. Merch. of Venice, iii.2 
that e'er I heard virgin exclaim in ..AIVs Weil, i. 3 
than .your exclaims, to stir against. . Richard II. i. 2 

and France exclaims on thee 1 Henry VI. iii. 3 

what makes you thus exclaim? — iv. 1 

as fast upon your grace exclaims .... — iv, 4 
or to exclaim on fortune's fickleness — v. 3 

tliat tlms you do exclaim — 2 Henry VI. iv. 8 

cursing cries, and deep exclaims ..Ricliard III. i. 2 

despatch; 'tis bootless to e.xclaim — iii. 4 

his drum; be copious in exclaims.... — iv. 4 

my liege, at her exclaim Troilus 4- Cressida, v. 3 

the minds of infants to exclaim. . Titus Andron. iv. 1 
to make them exclaim against tlieir ..Hamlet, ii. 2 
well used; exclaim no more against it. . Othello, ii. 3 

EXCLAIMED-the French exclaimed.l Henri/ >'/. i. 1 
when she exclaimed on Hastings. .i?/cAard ///. iii. 3 

EXCLAMATION-"ood exclamation. Mucft Ado, iii. 5 
that we shall stop her exclamation. .K/n^ John, ii. 2 
endure this tempest of exclamation?.2Henj-!//F. ii. 1 
will I drown your exclamations ..Ricliard III. iv. 4 
suifer too hard an exclamation .... Henry VIII. i. 2 

EXCLUDE— excludes all pity..Co»ierf!/ of Errors, i. 1 

EXCOMMUNICATE -and excommunicate ,/o/m,iii.l 

EXCOMMUNICATION— 
to set down our excommunication . . Much Ado, iii. 5 

EXCREMENT— with my excreraent.Lore'sZ,. L. v. 1 
assume but valour's excrement.. Mer. of Venice, iii. 2 
pocket up my pedler's excrement. Wintei-'sTale, iv. 3 
it is, so plentiful an excrement. . Comedy of Err. ii. 2 
stolen from general excrement . . Timon ofAth. iv. 3 
like life in excrements, starts up Hamlet, iii. 4 

EXCUSABLE-that were excusable. Ant.^ Cleo. iii. 4 

EXCUSE— excuse it not, for I . . Tin Gen. ofVer. i. 3 

the vantage of mine own excuse — 1.3 

thy tempted subject, to excuse it — ii. 6 

I mil not hear thy vain excuse — iii. ) 

I must excuse myself, master Ford . . — iii. 2 

and excuse his throwing into the — iii. 3 

in way of th}' excuse Twelfth Night, i. 5 

make your excuse wisely, you were best — i. 5 
I something do excuse tlie t\\\\\g. . Mea. for Mea. ii. 4 
let me excuse me, and believe me so — iv. 1 

mth excuse that which appears Much .ido, iv. 1 

hear my excuse ; my love, my life . . Mid. N. Dr. iii. 2 

needs no excuse. Never excuse — v, 1 

yom- own good thoiights excuse xae.Love's L. L. ii. 1 

transgression some fair excuse — v. 2 

to excuse, or hide, the liberal — v. 2 

excuse me so, coming so short of — v. 2 

unless she do it imder this excuse. . Mer. of Ven. ii. 4 
to excuse the current of thy cruelty.. — iv. 1 
would be a good excuse for mc . . As you Lttic it, iii. 3 

could wit have to excuse that? — iv. I 

that you niight excuse his broken — iv. 3 

how you excuse my brother, Rosalind — iv. 3 
stands for my excuse . . Taming of Shrew, 2 (indue.) 

I will so excuse, as you shall well . . iii. 2 

if there were no other excuse Winter'sTale, i. 1 

Angelo, you must excuse us aU.. Comedy of Err. iii. 1 
but she will well excuse why at tliis — iii. 1 

to excuse your breach of promise — iv. 1 

excuse; it is to beat usurping down. .KingJo/m, ii. 1 

fault the \rorse by the excuse — iv. 2 

shall excuse this deadly blot Richard II. v. 3 

with as clear excuse, as well as .... 1 Henry IV. iii. 2 

it hath the excuse of youth — v. 2 

pleading so wisely in excuse of it ..'2HenryIV. iv. 4 
you must excuse me, master Robert . . — v. I 
excuses shall not be admitted (7Tp.) .. — v. 1 
to admit the excuse of time . . Henry V. v. (chorus) 

I know it will excuse this 1 Henry VI. v. 5 

tlie duke of York excuse himself! ..iUenry Vl.i.Z 

devise excuses for thy faults 3Henry VI. ii. 6 

Clarence, excuse me to the king — v. 5 

lei.-^nre to excuse myself Richard III. i. 2 

no excuse current, hut to hang — i. 2 

excuse me; tlie king hath sent me.. Henry VIII. ii. 3 
my lord cardinal, r do excuse you .. . — ii. 4 

to let my tongue excuse all — v. 2 

mail than Troilus. Excuse me.. 'Troilus ^5- Cress, i. 2 

what's Ids excuse? He doth rely — ii. 3 

at supper, you will mal>:e his excuse — iii. 1 

well. I'll make excuse. Ay, good iii. I 

you'll remember your brother's excuse? — iii. 1 



[ 228 



EXI 



EXCUSE— thus to excuse yourseU .Timon of Ath. ii. 2 

give me excuse, good madam Coriolanus, i. 3 

1 must excuse vAuxt cannot be amended — jv. 7 
a yielding; tliis admits no excuse.... — v. S 

no way excuse his soils Antony {^Cleopatra, i. 4 

but .vou iiatt^hcd up your excuses .... — ii. 2 

to excuse their after'wrath — v. 2 

to excuse: but first, how get (rep.). Cymbeline, iii. 2 
prayed rae to excuse her keeping close — iii. 5 
mine own; excuse it how she can .. Titus And. iv. 2 

I will not have excuse, with saying ;vi /.■/(•.<, ii. 3 

speech be spoke for oiu- excuse?. . linmco /y.lnliei, i. 4 
the excuse, that thou dost ini' kc (M7;. ) — ii. .') 
doth much excuse the apiicrtainiu'' rage — iii. 1 
shall not excuse the injuries tiiat tliou — iii. i 

deaf to pleading and excuses — iii. 1 

skill, both countenance and excuse Hamlet, iv. 1 

these bloody accidents must excuse Oihrltn, v. 1 

EXCUSED— may hold excused. TiruGcn. 0/ ; Vr. iv. ) 
pitied and excused of every hearer . . Mnfli Aln, iv. 1 

well excused: that thou didst All's iVell, v. 3 

past do stand excused in this Kint.^ John, iv. 3 

you shall not be excused (rep.) iHinryW. v. 1 

they are then excused, my lord Henry r. v. 2 

shalt thou stand excused; fordoing. K/c/ian/ ///. i 2 
you are excused; but will you be. . Henry VIII. ii. 4 
condemned and myself excused. Borneo <?■ Juliet, v. 3 

EXCUSEZ — excusez moy, Alice Henry V. iii. 4 

excusez moy, je vous supplie, mon trfes — v. 2 

EXCUSING— excusing of a fault .... King John, iv. 2 

EXECRABLE-this execrable wveteh.Titus And. v. 3 

EXECRATION— these execrations. .2 Henry f 7. iii. 2 
issue of my spiteful execrations. . Trail. ^-Cress. ii. 3 

EXECUTE— execute all things Tempest, ii. ) 

yoii have a warrant to execute. .Meas. /or il/eas. iv. 2 
you on all estates will execute . . Love's L. Lost, v. 2 
you teach me, I will execute . . Merch. of Venice, iii. 1 
that thyself execute; to iria.ke.Tamin\; of Shrew, i. I 
must either stay to execute them. Winter'' s Tale, iv. 1 

to execute the charge my father — v. 1 

to execute the noble duke at Calais. K/c'ian/ 11. '\v. 1 

I have a jest to execute, that 1 Henry IV. i. 2 

a business that this night may execute — ii. 1 
with my bare fists I would execute. . 1 Henry VI. i. 4 

I bear, than you dare execute 2 Henry I' I. iv. 1 

to execute the like upon thyself SHenry VI. ii. 4 

the way, and thou shalt execute — v. 7 

yet execute thy wrath on me Richard III. i. 4 

your office, sergeant: execute it Henry VIII. i. 1 

we'll execute your purpose.. Troilus ^- Cressida, iii. 3 

can think, or com'age execute — iv. 1 

in fellest manner execute your arms — v. 7 
will execute in the clothes that she. Cymbeline, iii. 5 
the common hangman shall execute it. Pericles, iv. C 
determined sword, to execute upon him.O</ie((o, ii. 3 

EXECUTING— executing the outward.. Tempest, i. 2 
murdering innocents be executing.. 3 Henry F/. v. 6 

EXECUTED-had been executed. TwoGen.of Ver. iv.4 
and commands shall be executed. TwelfthNight, iii. 4 
that Clavidio be executed by nine.JV/ea./or.Wea. ii. 1 
let Claudio be executed by four . . — ' iv. 2 (note) 
who is to be executed in the afternoon? — iv. 2 
delivered him to his liberty, or executed — iv. 2 
Barnardine be this raoming executed — iv. 2 
awake till you are executed, and sleep — iv. 3 
and see our pleasure herein executed — v. 1 
to be executed for robbing a church. . Henry V. iii. 6 
his nose is execxited, and his fire's out — iii. 6 

for treason executed in our late 1 Henry VI. ii. 4 

because his pm'pose is not executed. 2 Henr;/f 7. iii. 1 
be executed in his father's sight. . . . Richard III. v. 3 
he shall he executed presently. Timon of Athens, iii. 5 
and to he executed ere they wipe . . Coriolanus, iv. ."j 
vengeance 011 me had they executed. Titus And. ii. 3 
that end upon them should he executed — ii. 4 
what is written shall be executed — v. 2 

EXECUTION— execution of it.. Two Gen. of Ver. i. 3 
that wait for execution iu the morn.. — iv. 2 
the hopeful execution do I leave. A/eas. /or Meas. i. 1 
hath a warrant for his execution .... — i . .'> 

M'hen, after execution, judgment — ii. 2 

help you to-morrow in your execution — iv. 2 

as it" to carry him to exectition — iv. 2 

\\ hereof the execution di-d cry out. Winter'sTale, i. 2 

ttiereon his execution sworn — i. 2 

place of death and sorry execution. Comedy ofEr. v. 1 

smoked with bloody execution Macbeth, i. 2 

is execution done on Cawdor? — i. 4 

whose execution takes your eiiem3' ofi" — iii. 1 

like lightning in the execution Richard II. i. 3 

delivered over to execution and the hand — iii. 1 
present execution of our wills to us.'lHenrylV. iv. 1 

that was uprcared to execution — iv. 1 

and e.xecution stayed. Send (re/j.) .. ^ iv. 3 

doing tlie execution, and the act Henry V. ii. 2 

pleasure, and put liim to executions — iii. 6 

my father's execution was nothing..! Henry VI. ii. b 
arid then do execution on the watch — iii. 2 
ay, ay; away with her to execution — v. 4 

tills sudden execution of my will — v. .5 

thy cruelty in execution 2Henry VI. i. 3 

thence unto the iilace of execution .. — ii. 3 
execution of my big-swoln heart . .ZHenry VI. ii. 2 
be sudden in the execution, withal. .Jiic/mrd/i/. i. 3 

enforced us to this execution? — iii. .5 

'tis like a pardon after execution. . Henry VIII. iv. 2 
by reason guide his execution .. Troilus ^ Cress, i. 3 

and the execution confined. — iii. 2 

mad and fantastic execution — v. b 

and to put it in execution Coriclanns, ii. 1 

enforce the present execution of what — iii. 3 

and prepare for your execution — v. 2 

and stay upon execution. Is't possible — v. 4 
in execution of any bold or noble . . Julius Cresar, i. 2 
why, one that rode to his execution. C)/m)je((ne, iii. 2 
uin-oil to do sonic fatal eKvcnt'wn't'l'iUis Andron. ii.3 
dnr-ccciiti.m on nivfle'sli and hlood.. — iv. 2 
d'.;)i:i,n,c(ul execution on herself.... — v 3 
tlic sway, revenue, execution of the rest . . I.mr, i. 1 
as desperate an execuliou as llnmen ^-Jnllel, iv. I 



EXECUTION— the execution of his w'lt.Oihello, iii. 3 

EXECUTIONER- 
our prison a common execntioner..»/ea./orilfea. iv. 2 
call your executioner, and ott' with .. — iv. 2 

the common executioner Asyou Liheit, iii. 5 

I would not be thy executioner — iii. 5 

like an executioner, cut oft'the \\ea&s.RichardII. iii. 4 

I'll provide his executioner iHenry VI. iii. 1 

executioner, unsheath th,y sword ZHenry VI. ii. 2 

think'st thou, I am an e.xecutioner?.. — v. G 
why, then thou art an executioner . . — v. 6 

as hlamcful as the executioner? Richard III. i. 2 

I will not lie thy executioner — i. 2 

but soft, here conic mycxccntiouers.. — i. 3 

play judge, am! i-xen dinner Ci/mbeline, iv. 2 

EX:i:CUTOR— liiid ne'er I il;c executor Irem/jes.', iii. 1 

let's choose excciit'irs, and talk Richard II. iii. 2 

their executors, tlie knavish crows. . . . Henry V. iv. 2 

EXEJIPT- exempt from public . . .).•. y<,ij Like it, ii. ! 

you are from me exempt Cnmedy of Errors, ii. 2 

and exempt from ancient gentry ? . . 1 Henry VI. ii. 4 

not qiute exempt from envious — iii. i 

true nobility is exempt from fear . .2Henry VI. W. 1 
exempt from envy, but not from ..3 Henry VI. iii. 3 
yourself are not exempt in this .... liichard III. ii. 1 

with a care, exempt themselves Henry VIII. i. 2 

not wish to be from wealth exeniiit.r/mo« of Ath. iv. 2 

EXEMPTED— exempted be from me. .All's Well. ii. 1 

EXEQUIES— but see his exequies...! Henry VI. iii. 2 

EXERCISE— all exercise on thee Tempest, i. 2 

for any, or for all these exercises. TwoGen. of Ver. i. 3 

and be in eye of every exercise — i. 3 

such exercises as may beconie As youLihe it, i. 1 

he's all my exercise, my mirth ... Winter's Tale, i. 2 
bear up with tlus exercise, so long.... — iii.2 
less frequent to his princely exercises — ■ iv. 1 

rich advantage of good exercise King John, iv. 2 

to gentle exercise and proof of arms.. 1 Henry I V. v. 2 
with arts, and martial exercises ... .2 Henry IV. iv. 4 

i hunting was his daily exercise ZHemy VI. iv. 6 

in your debt for your last eserc'ise. liichard in. iii. 2 
to draw him from his holy exercise. . — iii. 7 
swelling o'er with arts and exercise.. 7'ro/7..$-Cr. iv. 4 
thy e.xerci.se hath been too violent ...Coriolanus, i. 5 
whose meal and exercise are still .... — iv. 4 
show-place, where they exercise. /In/ony .5- C(eo. iii. 6 
no longer exercise, upon a valiant — Cymbeline, v. 4 

now starved for want of exercise Pericles, i. 4 

forgone all custom of exercises Hamlet, ii. 2 

for art and exercise iu your defence — iv. 7 

comes the master and riiain exercise Othello, ii. 1 

much castigation, exercise devout — iii. 4 

EXETER- from the duke of Exeter.. fl/c/mi-d //. ii. 1 

uncle of Exeter, enlarge the man Henry V. ii. 2 

and uncle Exeter, we will aboard. . . . — ii. 2 
come, uncle Exeter, go you and enter — iii. 3 

is the duke of E.xeter safe? (rev.) — iii. (i 

the duke of Exeter doth love tliee ... — iii. 6 

but Exeter hath given the doom — iii. ti 

the duke of Exeter has very gallantly iii. ti 

the duke of Exeter is master of — iii. 6 

my good lord Exeter, and my kind. . . — iv. 3 
Bedford and Exeter, Warwick and.. . — iv. 3 

go you with me, micle of Exeter — iv. 7 

here uncle Exeter, fill this glove .... — iv. 8 

go uncle Exeter, and brother — v. 2 

that Exeter doth wish his daj's 1 Henry VI. iii. 1 

cousin of Exeter, frowns, words 3 Henry VI. i. 1 

Exeter, thou art a traitor — i. ! 

art thou against us, duke of Exeter?.. — i. 1 
ah, Exeter! why should j'ou sigh .... — i. 1 
I'll steal away. Exeter, so will I .... — i. ! 

with thee, good sweet E.xeter — ii. 5 

cousin of Exeter, what thinks your . . — iv. 8 

no, Exeter, these graces challenge — iv. 8 

w hen last I was at Exeter liichard III. iv. 2 

bishop of Exeter, his elder — iv.4 

EXHALATION— natural exhalation. K';n,;,'7o/m, iii. 4 
do you behold these exhalations? ... 1 UenrylV. ii. 4 
a bright exhalation in the evening. Htnr;/ v'lll. iii. 2 
exhalations whizzing in the air hUias Cresnr, ii. 1 

EXHALE — therefore exliale Henry V. ii. 1 

thy presence that exhales this Richard III. i. 2 

sorrows could not thence exhale — i. 2 

some meteor that the sun exhales. i?o??i.eo ^-JuJ. iii. 5 

EXHALED— an exlialed meteor 1 Henry I V. v. 1 

EXHALEST 
cxhalest this vapour voAV.. . Love's L. L. iv. 3 fvevses) 

EXHAUST— fools exhaust their . . Timon r» .4'/i. iv. 3 

EXHIBIT— why I'll exhibit abill..Afe);;/(f7i-e.s ii. 1 

they should exiiibit their Meus.fnr Meas. iv. I 

adieu! tears exiiibit my tongue. .Me?-, of Venice, ii. 3 
we do exhibit to 3'om' majesty IHenryVI. iii. 1 

EXHIBITER — the exhibiters against us. Henry V. i. 1 

EXHIBITION— 
like exliibition thou shalt have. Two Gen. of Ver. i. 3 
we have the exhibition to examine. . Much Ado, iv. 2 

confined to exhibition! all this done Lear, i. 2 

due reference of place, aud exhibition . . Othello, i. 3 
nor capsj nor any petty exhibition — iv. 3 

EXHORT- exhort all the world to.. SHenryrj. iv. 10 
gross as earth, exhort me, witness Hamlet, iv. 4 

EXHORTATION— 
I'll cud my exhortation after. . Merch. of Venice, i. 1 

EXIGENT— drawing to their exigent. 1 Henry VI. ii. 6 
Mdiy do you cross me in this exigent?. Jui. Ccesar, v. 1 
wlien the exigent should come. .Antony ^-Cleo. iv. 12 

EXILE— since his exile she hath. TwoGen. of Ver. iii. 2 
let them be recalled from their exile.. — v. 4 
they wilfully themselves e.xile..il/irf.A'.Drc,i?n, iii. 2 
put themselves into voluntary exile. /Is youLike it, i. 1 
she would have followed her exile — — i. 1 
brothers in exile, hath not old custom — ii. 1 

dateless limit of thy dear exile Richard II. i. 3 

four years of my son's exile — i. 3 

omittiug Suft'olk's exile, my soul's. .'iHenry VI. iii. 2 
some to death, and some to exile .... Coriolanus, i. 6 

Tarpeiau death, vagabond e.xile — iii. 3 

iu hooting at Coriolanus' exile — iv. (i 

long as my exile, sweet as my — v. 3 



EXl 



[ -229 ] 



EXP 



i.XK.E— wc littve led since tliy exile.. CoWnlanm, y. 3 
to ilmw upon un t'xile! Cyinbelinr, i. i 

tlK' ixilcol'ln-r iniui.in is tciii MOW.... — ii. 3 

siiKvtlK'txilcof r^^liuiiuiis — iii. 5 

wli.i tinil ill niv exiK' llu- wiiiit 111'.... — iv. 4 

tlioii iirt mi exik'. luid ilimi must TilutAml. iii. I 

iiliiiu'.liati'lv wt'ilotxilr hiiu . . Itninfo ^Juiiel.m. I 

iiiul wiiilcl'si-xile isikMth — iii. 3 

sin 'st tlioii yet. tliiit exile is not tlcatli? — iij. 3 

uiiil tunia it til exile — iii. 3 

crici' of niv soil's exile luitli stninied.. — v. 3 
KXII.KD— were with liiiu exileil....,<s!/o«Li'*f •'/, v. 4 

iiseiiUiiie liome our exiled lii^Mids Mm-bell,,v. 7 

iiml iiot-tliekiii^ exiled thee Ili.hanI II. i. 3 

e.iuitv exiled v.iir lii-liness' hiiid..-.'/J<'/i'!/r/. iii. 1 

to Ik- exiled, iiiid tluowu tVoiii CtjmMiiu; v. 4 

lor Koiueo is exiled: lie made .../('."i«.^ .Iul„-i. iii. •> 
K.KlO.N'-sinee luv exioii is eiitereil ...■illeiui/l i: ii. 1 

E.\lSr_nolii whom wedoexist l.r,ir,i. 1 

I miiv iiOTiii exist, niid lie « member ...0(/iW/o, ui. 4 
KXlSt"ST— lor thou exist'st oii...l/™s./or Mms. iii. 1 
KXIT— his enter iiiul exit shall lie..i.0M's L.Lost, v. 1 

keeji some state ill thv exit — v. 2 

tlicv luive their exits, and their... /Is i/ou Lilieil, ii. 7 
EXl)K(.'ISt;K— no exoreiser. ..ri/mMinc iv. 2 (song) 

K.KUKCISM— hear our cxorcisins'if •>H-i:ryVl. i. 4 

K.XUKCISI'— i- there no e.xoreist AU'snell,v. 3 

like an exon ist. liiist conjured u\i. Julius Ciesar, ii. 1 
EXl'luC T— anil they expect it from me. Tempest, iv. 1 
at the road expeet's my coming. '/'iro Gen. of Ver. i. 1 
than you must expect of me to tell ..Much Ado, i. 1 
to-morrow then I will expect your .. — TJ. I 

I do expect return of thrice Mer.of /'eni'ee, i. 3 

doth expeet your reiiroie'h — li. 5 

we all expect a gentle answer, Jew .. — iv. 1 
let's in, and there expect tlicir coining — V. 1 

ill store for von, than vou expect — V. 1 

[r'a;.Kii(.l expect that thev are .. Taming of Sli. iv. 4 
mv peojile did expect liiv hence .. Iliiilei'sTale, i. 2 
if you il>ex|iect spoon meat., roi/ict/i/ o/ Brrors, iv. 3 

do all ex(ieet that yon should rouse llennjJ'. i. 2 

expect saint .Martin's summer XtlcinyVl. i. i 

Talliot doth expect my aid — iv. 3 

I tell you, expects iicrformance of ..IHenryVl.i. 4 

at Bristol I expect my soldiers — iii. 1 

expect your hiahucss doom — iv. 9 

and do expect him here iUenryVl.y. 1 

J every day expect an embassage . . Ilichard III. ii. I 
hate in those where 1 expect most love! — ii. 1 

mukc men expect a dearth — ii. 3 

than we deserve, or I expect — ii. 3 

duke of York, antm expect hira here — iii. 1 

what other would voii expect? Henry Vlll. v. 2 

be't of less exjieet. 'that matter .. TroilusSyCiess. i. 3 
save the thanks this prince expects.. — iv. 4 
of Timou, nothing of him expect. . Timon of.ith. y. 3 

good : I will expect you Julius Cmsur, i. 2 

rather I'll expect victorious WScAniouy (,V'.eo. iv. 2 

and at the port expect you — iv. 4. 

what slialt thou expect Cymhclinv, i. 6 

as certain as I expect ray revenge — iii. 4 Uet.) 

when expect you them? — iv. 2 

comfort 18 too far for us to expect Pericles, i. 4 

more than you expect, or more thau'a fit — ii. 3 

we every day expect him here — iv. 1 

in bounty expect even here — v. 1 

KXPlCCT.-VNCE-isexpectance here. Troil.^ Cress, iv. 5 
EXPECTANCY— expectancy and rose.. WumW, iij. 1 

expectancy of more arrivauce Otlielto, ii. 1 

EXPECTA'nON— 
better bettered expectation, than .... Much Ado, i. 1 
I will never trust my expectation..,. — ii. 3 
oft expectation fails, and most oft. . . . All's Well, ii. 1 

on tile expectation of plent;y Macbcth,ii. 3 

within the note of ex^iectation — iii. 3 

expectation troubled not the land . . King John, iv. 2 
friends, and full of expectation ....\ Henry 1 1', ii. 3 
the liope and expectation of thy time — iii. 2 
conjecture, expectation, and suvmise.'iHenry I y. i. 3 

tlic utmost man of expectation — i. 3 

thou ha.st sealed up my expectation.. — iv. 4 
you stand in coldest expectation .... — v. 2 
to mock the expectation of the world — v. 2 
now sits ex|ieclation in tlic air . . Henry V. ii. (cho.) 

as were a war in expectation — ii. 4 

our expectation hatli this day an end — iii. 3 
cxiicctation, tickling skittish. 7'roiius ij" Cress, (prol.) 

expectation whirls nie round — iii. 2 

it opens the eyes of expectation. Timon of Athens, v. 1 

witii patient expectation Julius('fPsnr,i. 1 

cxix.'ctatioii fainted, longing An ony ^- Cleo. iii. 6 

expectation that it would lie thus . . Cymheline, iii. .') 

our [ireparation stands in cxtiectation Leur, iy. 3 

were no cxiicctation of our prosperity . . Olfwtto, ii. 1 
returned ine expectations and comforts . . — iv. 2 
EXPECTEl>-it is least expected.. >/c,<.../or.l/ra.<.iv. 3 
the great siipiily, that was expected.. King John, v. 2 
the exitected giKxl we are like to. Henry l' III. (epil.) 

what honey is exiiccted? Troilus ifCressida, i. 3 

a fresher man, luid I expected thee .. — v. 6 
pardon when it was less expected ..Coriolanus, v. 1 
every hour in Rome expected . . Antony i)- Cleo. ii. 1 
oppression exceeds what we exiiccted — iv. 7 

exiiected to prove so worthy Cymheline, i. 5 

was expected then, but not approaelied — ii. 4 
EXl'ECTEK— to tlieeXK'CterBof./'roihisACrwf.iv. ,'i 

EXPECTINCi— cx|)ectiiig overthrow P-riclet, i. 4 

thus, exiiecting thy reply. Loiv'si,.Loi/, iv. 1 (letter) 

space, exiiectinjf absent friends All's Well, ii. 3 

expecting hut tnc aid of Buckingham/ficA.///. iv. 4 

deal gifts exiiecting in return.. 7ii/iono//*//ifiii, iv. 3 

exjH-'Ctin'.! ever when some envious.. 7'i7kx .And. iii. 1 

E.<PECT'S'l'— thou expect'st not../(omfociS- Jul. iii. 5 

EXPEDlENCi;— alldiie cxiiedieiice..«icAnr,; //. ii. I 

l'.»rwanling this dear exiiedieiice \Henryll'.\. 1 

with all ex|H:dieiiie ehar;;e on us Henry I', iv. 3 

break the caii^e of our ex|HMlienee..iii'o(.!; fiCleo. i. 2 

EXI'EDiENl' -expedient lor the wiscWii./i.ti/n, v. 2 

MX'in exiicdieiit on 111" now-horn In ief. .I"'> ll'W, ii. 3 

inarelies are exi>edieiit I > tliis town. . KingJohn, ii. I 



EXPEDIENT— much expedient inarch ..John. n. 1 
lords, with all exiiedient huste — iy. 2 

expedient iii;ina;.'e mint be made ll\rU,ird II. i. 4 

craves a qni-k exprdienl sh.pl . . . .-J llrnry fl. iii. 1 
will Willi all evpedieul duly sec Joil./.'.W../i.//;/.i. 2 

i E. \ I'K 1)1 1 :X1'IA'— this ex|iediently..-l.Ni/oi< /,.;.<■, 111. 1 

• EXI'KUI ri<i.\ — 

with the speeilicst expedition TwoGen.off'er. i. 3 

to lia-iten on his expedition — i. 3 

loiiL'er tlian swiftest exiieditioii will — iii. 1 

so uiueli thev spur their expedition.. — v. 1 

good evpediiiiiii he iiiv IViend Winter's Tale, i. 2 

the hark expedition i^iit UntU-Comedyoflin-ors, iv. 3 

the expcdilion of mv ^i;•lent love Mncliilh, ii.3 

shall iia\' tliis expedition's charge.... Ki''i«'./o'"i,,i. I 
much iiiilooked lor is this exnedition! — n. 1 
set forth upon his Irish exiiedition ..\HenryII . l. 3 

dra',' hack our expedition - iv. 3 

before your expedition to Shiewsbury.2HeHr!/i/'.i. 2 

aiicUiod bless vour expedition; — .i.2 

motion, tlieex|iediti. ill of til. iiiLtht? .. — iv. 3 

give fintheranre to our ox|«'dition HenryV. i. 2 

iinttin;,' it fU 



ufi 



jliti. 



,d l;i 



— IV. 1 
3 



1 (i/-..l'/i. ' 



■dl'lolippi 



ess. '/'( 



atled 



lolanus. 
llumlet, 
flaw 1 — 
se and . . Tempest, V. 1 
inuch./lieny /('iii('S(ii. 2 



V. 1 



: IfJcJiri/r/. i 

host, c.'illei-ted for tliii expedition.... 

then Ii. n expedUioii he my willg..«ic/mrd ///. 

who iiiterrepls nie in mv expeilition? 

bc.shles, liisexpedilion promises . . 7'n 

he had, hcH 

their exped 

more stuhboin and lioi.-tero 

EXP£DiTliJUS-sail so exi 

EXPEL— another heat cxiiel 
should not expel these iiicu 
of any power to expel siekn 
ashastv to ex|iel him tlieiK 
shall expel this sometliiiiL'- 
iiateh a wall to expel the w 

EXPEIJ.KU— exiielled lem. 

EXPENCE-the exiieiice of s. 

beinggallcd with my cxpenee — in. 4 

hold, there's expcnccs for thee. . Twelfth Night, in. 1 

thanks, it is a dear cxpenee Mid. N.'sDream, i, 1 

so much expeuec of thy royal sweet. T-oiJe'sL.L.y. 2 
this jest shall cost me some cxpenee. Com. of Er. iii. 1 

a large cxpenee of time, before Macbeth, v. 7 

thinks, without cxpenee at all 1 He7iry I'l. i. 1 

for your expellees and snltieient — v. 5 

whatexpenee \>\ the lioui- seems.. Henri/ T///. ni. 2 
loss of time, lni\ el, and ex|ienee. Troilus ^ Cress, ii. 2 
so senseless of cxpenee, that lie . . 7'/hioh o//1«i. ;;. 2 

so have rated my expeuec, as I — u.'i 

and sail, and high e.xpence Pericles, m. (Gower) 

care in ns at whose expence 'tis done . . — iv. 4 
sable, trimmed witli rich cx|.ence — V. (Gower) 

[Col. Knt.} expeuee iind waste of his Lear, ii. 1 

what company, at « hat ex|ieiieo Hamlet, u. I 

EXPENU—I would expeii.l it 2Hcnn/r7. 111. I 

the two latter darken and expend .... I'ericlcs, in. 2 
as to expend your time with us awhile.. /-/«/"('■', ii. ^ 
would time ekiiend « itli such a sniiie . . Ulhelh,, i. 3 

EXPERIE XCE-experience is by. Tu-oGen. ofler.i. 3 

but his experience old — jj. 4 

unless experieiiee be a jewel Alerry Wires, ii. 2 

thou purchased tliis cxperieuce?.i.oi)c's L.Lost, iii. 1 

gained my experience (rep.) As you Like it, i\. 1 

than experieuee to make nie sad .... — iv. 1 
his reading, and manifest exiierience../IH's'*'e/i, i. 3 

and of his old experience the only — ii. 1 

I have sinned against his experience — ii. 4 
where small experience grows — Taming of Sh.i. 2 
long experience of her wisdom.. Cometi;/ of Err. iii. 1 

old, and want'st experience? •ZHennj VI. y. 1 

3*ears with your experience Itichard III. iy. 4 

pawn their experience to their AnIonyiijrCleo.i. 4 

experience, manhood, honour — iii. 8 

to be guided hv others' experiences . . Cymheline, i. .i 
expeiTeuee. II lliou ilispro\est report! — iv. 6 
"ravewitiie->e. .M tiiu experience. J'lV hs /l/idron. v. 3 
gi\e expriieiire t..n^ue; tliey do nhuac. Pericles, i. 2 
hiive so iniieli c xpeiieuce for my imius. . Oi/ic(to, ii. 3 

EXl'lCHIKiVClOD— 
clerklike, experienced, which no.. Winter's Tale, i. 2 
cars to his experienced tongue ..Troilus^- Cress, i. 3 
as best thou art exiierienced Coriolanus, iv. 5 

EXl'ERlAIENT-another experiment. .Verry If. iy. 2 

not me, make an exiieriineiit -Hi's Will, ii. 1 

hold me pace in deep experoneiits..! llenryir. in. I 
siiitrled forth to try e.xperimcuts. . 7'.iuj.4iiUroii. ii.3 

EXl'ERl.MlCNTAL- 
V liich 11 ilh experimental seal A/«c/i Ado, iv. 1 

EXl'EKT— most expert gentleman! ..Henryl'. iii. 7 
placing; the ' 



Id appi 
.ipi 



vhats 



I toll 



iilexi.e.lr 



1 Henry VI. Hi. 2 
. . Othello, ii. 1 
inking — ii.3 
.'■-;/, iv. 3 (note) 
It? — iv. 3 
::<idin. iii. 3 
• ■.< L.Lost, \.i 
,.nhard 11. ii. 3 

Lear, ii. 4 

•r. of Venice, i. 3 
r...-lH's WelLi.'i 



EXPIAII 
EXPIRATHi.\-al til... . 

before the expiration ol l;i . 

if, till the expiration of n our moiitl 

EXPlKE-hcfore this bond expires. .W 

whose coiistaucies expire hetore the 

good men's lives expire before the Machelh, iv. 3 

your breathing siiall expire KingJohn,\. 4 

tliat ere this year expire, we hear ..'2 Henry IV. y. !> 

may 'biot until your date expu'C Pericles, iii. 4 

expire the term of a de.s|iiscd life./(oraeo,|j-J«/ie/, i. 4 
EXPlKED-likcMise wereexiiiied . .1 Heiir|/(7. ii. 5 
of cii-'hteeu months he full exiiircd..2//ciir|/ VI. i. 1 
your time's expired; either exiiound . . 7'erie(e«, i, I 
if in wdiieh time expire, he not return — ii. 4 

mv twelve months are expired — iii. 3 

KXl'lKING-aiid thus expiring ....Itichard II. ii. 1 

EXi'l,AIN- to explain the labour Pericles, ii.i 

E.\l'I.K'AI'Il)\-wav of explication. /.ore's L.L. iv. 2 ' 

EXl'l.ori'-a trim eX|iloit .Mid. .\. Dream, iii. 2 | 

to vii-w the issue ot the ex|iloit. . ilicr. qf /'c/iiiT, iii. 2 ■ 
biek lor breathing and exploit All'sWell, i. 2 



and say, I got them in exploit 

do more exploits \eit'i hi.. miu-o..Comedy ofKrr. iv. 3 

thou antieipa!' I op, .In lel exploits .,Mariielh,\v, 1 

upon the evploii il ■■ . . \ Henry IV. i. 2 

of some '.ireiit e V |.l. ill , ■ him — i. 3 

your night's e\ 1.1. .11 ..n l.a.lsiiill itlenrylV. i. 2 

forexidoits ami iiii..hty enterprizcs HenryV. i. 2 

of all exi.loits, sinie first I \Henry VI. ii. 1 

aji famous l.e by this exploit — ii.3 

that no exploit have done — iv. j 

thy hiteeNp|..il d..iie in the ■'Henri, VI. i. I 

lllitoael —e expl. lit. if death? . . .. Ilicliard III. iv. 2 

drcamiu;/ on tlii^ fond exploit — v. 3 

what ex[iloit's ill hand? 7'roi7ws ,5''^'r''ss'V/'f, iii. I 

exploit wortiiy tlic name (rep.) ..J uliusCicsnr, ii. 1 
whose liigh c.xphjits, and honourable. 7*(7ks And. v. 1 

of this dread exploit l.enr, ii. 2 

I will work him to an exploit Ilamlei, iv. 7 

EXI'oSE-did I expose mvself .. .. 7Ve//;/, ;V,>/i(, v. 1 

and expose those tender limbs of l//'s He//, iii. 2 

which allied to eX|iose the child. . Ilmler's I ale, v. 2 
fond men expose theinselves.. Timon of A'hent, iii. 5 
cx|iosc thyself to feel what wretches Lear, iii. 4 

EXl'O.-iElJ— exposed unto the sea Tempest, iii. :i 

art thus exposed t.i loss Winter's Tale, iii. 3 

and hath lie too exposed this paragon — v. 1 
exposed myself, IVoi.i certain... IroilusffCress. iii. 3 

O, M.ii shall I.,' ex] ..sed, mv lord — iv. 4 

e.:.n;;..ii.i.. ,!. ;.,, ...., exposed .. Timon rf Athens, iv. 3 
.1,. ;. ... i i, . , .. .d L'v""'.-"Pposed]../.e.o,iv. 7 

I ., .'• : . . !. . . -.oosiogit fywlii-linr. iii. 1 

' lo J ■ I: I 1 . iii..rtai, and unsure .. llumlet, i\'. 4 

EXi'iiSITlOX — 
have an exjiosition of sleep .. ..Mid. N. Dream, iv. I 

your exiiositioii hath been Meich. of Venice, iv. 1 

your exposition on the holy text ...-lllenrylV. iv. 2 

your exposition misinterpreting Pericles, i. 1 

a most courteous exposition .... Romeo ^-Juliet, ii. 4 

EXPOSITI Hi — conceit's expositor., Lore's L.Lost, ii. 1 

EXPOSTIU.ATE- 
now ser\'es not to expostidate. . TwoGen.of Ver. iii. I 

nay, stay not to expostulate AHenryVI. ii. 

more bitterly could 1 expostulate.. /(ic/iari/ III. iii. 7 
to expostnliilc uhat iiiajesty should \K..Hamlel, ii. 2 
I'll not exp.istiilate with her Olhello.iv. I 

EXPUTIU.ATION- 
111 list use expostulation kindly.. T'roi/i/s.^- Cress, iv. 4 

EXl^OiSTUKE— more than a wild exposture 

[K7i/. -exposure] to each Coriolanus, iv. I 

EXPOSUKE— sutl'er in exposure Macbeth, ii. 3 

and discredit our exposure — Troilus fy Cressida^ i. 3 
[Kii/.] wildexposure to each chance. t'or/o^iiius,iv. I 

EXPOUND— ,L;oali..iittoexpound.<WiVy.A'.i>rea7n, iv. 1 

to expound the meaning Tamingof Shreir,iv. 4 

expound niito me, hoy Henry V. iv. 4 

to expound his beastly mind to us. ...Cymheline, i. 7 
citlicr expound now, or receive your....7'eriWes, i. I 

EXPOUNDEU-well expounded it.Julius Ca-sar, ii. 2 
which read and ii.it expound Peiicles, i. J 

EXl'KESS--t.. ex|.riss myself TuelfihMghl, ii. I 

my words express my inirposc ..Meas.for Meas. ii. 4 

aiid an express eoiiniiaiid — iv. 2 

tluit shall exiaess my true love's.. /-oBc'si./,os(, iv. 3 
rhyme nor reason can express.... /(.< yon /.I'AciV, iii. 2 
J ct I express to vou a mother's care . . All's Well, i. 3 

more leisure shall exjiress — v. 3 

that you ex|iress content — (cpil.l 

toexpress the like kindness . .Taming of Sliren-, ii. 1 

1 Iiave express commandment Winter's Tale, ii. 2 

shall, as 1 express it, be so received .. — iii. 2 

cannot be able to express it — v. 2 

sums I have collected shall exprcss..King-Jo/i>i, iv. 2 

tell my talc in exi.ress words — iv. 2 

and we give express charge, that HenryV. iii. K 

1 have express cominandment MlenryVl. i. 3 

let me have your express opinions — i. 4 

1 can express no kinder sign . iHenryVI. i. 1 

in justice and true right express it!... — v. 2 
here his passion doth express? Troilus Sf Cressida, v. 2 

we might express some part Timon of Alliens, i. i 

these well express in thee thy latter. . — y. U 

or express yourself in a more Coriolanus, i. 3 

to exi.ress Ills <lis|iosition — i. fi 

lel deeds express what's like to be — iii. 1 

ere he exi.ress him.self, or move — v..') 

eoiihl best ex|iiess how slow his soul.. Cymte/ine, i. 4 

with your din express impatience — v. 4 

to express mv eommendations great.. ..yer/cles, ii. 2 
golden characters express a general . . — iv. 4 

meantime we shall express our darker Lear, i. 1 

strove who should express her goodliest.. — iv. 3 
toexpress his love and friending to you..Wain/c/, i. 5 

how express and admiiable! — ii. 2 

we shall express our diitv in his eye — iv. 4 

EXl'lU;S,"ii;i) -expres-e'l by all...Ue«.t./nr .^leas. ii. I 

ill his eye pride exp:es-ed Loee'sL.Lost, ii. I 

shall be expressed 111 iiisset yeas — y. 2 

as are expressed in the condition. .Wer. of Venice, i. 3 
save of joy, cxpres-ed, and not cxi^ircssed — iii. 2 
it is not so expressed; hut v. hat ot tliat? — iv. 1 
a lair colour, or expressed it -tolcn ...Ml'sWrll, v. 3 
he well expre-e.l in our cudition. J'onoii of Ath. 1. 1 
that hath expressed hioi.-ell', in all.'/'i'i«.4"''ro)i. i. 2 

lint not cxi'iesed in I'aiiey Humlel, i. 3. 

'twas, but it expressed her lortunc Olhtlo, iv. 3 

EXIKI^^E ril-exiircsseth liis fnll..Wra./or -Weu. i. 5 

E. M'KESSl.Nti-sucli sound, expressing. 7>mpei/, iii. 3 
past all expressing: it is very ..Mer. of Venice,ii\.b 

EaPKESSiVE— be more expressive ..AU'sWell, ii. I 

EXl'UEhSEY-expressly am forbid. /-ore 'sL. Lost, i. 1 
the words expressly are, a pound.. Wer. (jf/'yiiiw, iv. I 
have expressly chaiged . . 7'nmiiii,' ofahreir, 2 (ind.) 
and I expressly am lorbid to touch it — iv. 1 
to whom expressly I bring greeting ..HenryV. ii. 4 
'tis expressly against the law of arms — iv. 7 
will from his mouth expressly? ..HenryVIII. iii. 2 
Ills circumstance, expressly proves. Trail./) Cres. iii. 3 
siiit expressly to your lonlsliip .. Vimonof .4lh. ii. 2 
the iirincc expressly hath forbid. . Itomeo ^Jul. iii. 1 



EXP 



EXPRESSXJRE- 

the expressiire that it bears .Vcrry rvives, v. 5 

the expressure of l>is eye TicelfHtNighl,\\. 3 

or pen, eau give expres:5iire to. . Troilus^ Cress, iii. 3 
EXPULSED— expulscil from France.l Henry VI. iii. 3 
EXPULSION— not the expulsion oi..Cmioiamu^, v. 1 

tlie fonl expulsion is of thy dear Cymbeline, ii. 1 

EXQUISITE-i? exquisite. . Tu^o Gen. of reromi, ii. 1 

exquisite, ami unuiatehable Tatlf.h Nighl,_i. 5 

thy exquisite reason, dear knight.... — ii. 3 

I have no exquisite reason for t — .ii- 3 

my most ex(inisite ^ir Tonas! — iv. 2 

wlio, the most exquisite Claudio? Miieh Ado.i. 3 

lord, mv very exquisite friend. Timon o.f Alliens, iii. 2 
jevrels, of rich and exiuisite form ..Cymbeliiie, i. " 
courtly paits oi.'iv exquisite than lady — iii. 5 
eall hers, exipii-it.'. in question.. Tiomeo f,-JuUe>, i. 1 

she's a most exquisite lady OIUeUo,i\. 3 

[Col. Ktit.l so exquisite in his drinking? — ii. 3 

IS a more ex<inisite song than the other — ii. 3 

EXSUEl'EICATE— tosuehexsuiJlicate — iii. 3 

EXTANT— the proof? are extant . . Merry Wives, y. 5 

is there no virtue ext;\nt? 1 Henry W. ii. 4 

but in tills extant muuient. . TroUus ^-Cnssida, iv. h 

the storv is cxtnut, and written Humlel. iii. 2 

EXTEMPOUAi>— extemporal god.. Low's L.LosI, i. 2 
will you hear an exteuiporal epitaph — iv. 2 
sudden and exteinporal speech .... 1 Henry F/. iii. I 
EXTEMPORALLY- 

comediansextemporallvwill stn!reus..-l7i'.*C/po. v.2 
EXTEMPORE-may do it exter.qmre. ;)/;,/. X. Dr. i. 2 
extempore, from my motiier-wit. T.uniNf; m' !<li. ii. 1 
we may do any thing extempore. Il'inler's iaie. iv. 3 
shall \ve have "a play extempore? . . 1 Henry If. ii. 4 
ever since thou hast blushed extempore — ii. 4 
EXTEND— doth extend not a frown . . Tempest, v. 1 
I extend my hand to him thus . . Twel/lh Xiglii, ii. 5 
favour, I extend this friendship.. .iVer. o/renice, i. 3 

may not extend so far as to the — ii. 7 

that would not extend Ids miglit All's Welt, i. 3 

and extend to you what further — iii. 6 

offend Irim, anil extend his passion . . Macbeth, iii. 4 
and iron, extends, creatures of .... King John, iv. 1 

and where 'twill not extend Henry VIII. \. 1 

to Lacedaemon did my land extend. Timon ofA'h. ii.2 

von do extend these thoughts Antony ^ Cleo. v. 2 

1 do extend him, sir, within himselt'.Cynibeline, i. ! 

are wonderfidly to extend him — i. 5 

on us we mivst extend our notice .... — ii. 3 

may extend where merit doth Lear, i, 1 

good lago, that I extend mv manners. . Othello, ii. 1 
EXTENDED-mercy's so exfendediWea./or Mea. iv. 2 

no worse of worst extended All's Well, ii. 1 

extended or contracted all proportions — v. 3 
report of her is extended more . . Winter's Tale, iv. 1 
aoplause where tliey are extended. Troil.^- Ores. iii. 3 
extended Asia from Euphrates ..Antony SfCleo. i. 2 
EXTENT— unjust extent against. Ta-elfth Night, iy. 1 
make an extent upon his house. . As you Like it, iii. 1 
for the extent of egal j ustice . . Titus Andronicus, iv. 4 

lest my extent to the idayers Hamlet, ii. 2 

of mv oifending hath tliis extent Othello, i. 3 

EXTENU ATE-60 extenuate his..l/eus./o)- Meas. Ii. 1 

and so extenuate the 'forehand sin. . Much Ado, iv. 1 

l)y no means we may extenuate.. il//ii. A'. Dream, i. 1 

extenuates not wrong, but makes. Tro//. ^ Cress, ii. 2 

will extenuate rather than enforce.. /lii(. .5- C<eo. v. 2 

notliing extenuate, nor set down aught.. 0(AeZ;o, v. 2 

E iTENUATED— not extenuated./uZmsCiKsar, iii. 2 

E.XTENUATION-such extenuation.! Henry IV. iii. 2 

EXTERIOR— o'er my exteriors ....Merry Wives, i. 3 

a maid, by these exterior shows? . . Much Ado, iv. 1 

and device, exterior form, outward . . King John, i. 1 

prostrate and exterior bending! 2HenryIV. iv. 4 

nor the e.^terior nor the inward man . . Hamlet, ii. 2 

EXTERIORLY— rude exteriorly .... King John, iv. 2 

r.XTERMINED-both extermined../(s you Like, iii. a 

]:XTERN— heart in compliment extern.. 0(/irf/o, i. 1 

EXTERNAL-external warrants. /Jfeas./or Meas. ii. 4 

agree with our external parts? ..Taming of Sh. v. 2 

having no external thing to lose .... King John, ii. 2 

these external manners of lament. . Ricliard II. iv. 1 

graced with external gifts 1 Henry VI. v. 5 

twould appear by external svieWiag.Ant.^- Cleo. v. 2 

EXTINCT— be extinct with age Richard II. i. 3 

extinct in both, even in their promise . . Hamlet, i. 3 
EXTINCTED— to our extincted spirits. . Othello, ii. 1 
EXTINGUISH— that extinguish axLlHenry VI. v. 3 
EXTINGUIT — me alit, me extinguit..Pencte.v, ii. 2 
EXTIRP— impossible to extirp it.Meas.forMeas. iii. 2 
EXTIRPATE— presently exturpate me.. Tempest, i. 2 
EXTIRPED— be extirped from om:..\ Henry VI. iii. 3 
EXTOL— extol their graces. Tn-o Gen. of Verona, iii. 1 
of you, that you extol me thus?. /l/eas. /or Mras. v. ! 

has a charter to extol her blood Coriolanusj i. 9 

to extol what it hath done — iv. 7 

EXTOLLED— for't as 'tis extolled.. Timon ofAlh. i. 1 
EXTOLJMENT— the verity ofextolment. HomW,v. 2 
EXTON— sir Pierce of Exton, who . . Richard II. v. 5 

Exton, thy tierce hand hath — v. 5 

Exton, I thank thee not; for thou — v. 6 

EXTORT-will not extort from me. TwelflhNight, ii. 1 

do not extort thy reasons from — iii. I 

and extort a poor soul's patience.. M/(Z.A''s Dr. iii. 2 

Romans did extort this tribute .... Cymbeline, iii. 1 

and so extort from us that which we've — iv. 4 

EXTORTED-up with extorted go\A'>.iHenryVI. iv. 7 

thv 1 fe extorted treasure in the womb . . Hamlet, i. 1 

EXTORTION— with tiiy extortions ..'ZHenryVI. i. 3 

own hands, cardinal, by extortion. Henri/ VIII. iii. 2 

EXTRACT— extract one s;jark of evil . . H- nry V. ii. 2 

EXTRACTED— simples, extracted. .-l.s you L//ie i(.iv. 1 

EXTRACTINCJ-extractin:,' iVenzy. Tuelfth Mghl, v. 1 

pocket and extracting it ciutclied?.J/ea./or>Jea. iii. 2 

EXTRAORDINARILY— 

I mean not to sweat extraordinarily. .aHenry//'. i. 2 

as extraordinarily as heart would desire — ii. 4 

EXTRAt)RDINARY— 

something extraordinary in thee.. Merry Wives, iii. 3 

any extraoi-dinary pleasure is you. Like it, i. 2 



[ 230 ] 



EXTRAORDINARY'— 

of hc:id-|Hece extraordinary WInler'sTale, i. 2 

have marked me extraorili'nary \ Henry IV. iii. 

atford no extraordinary gaze — iii. 

EXTR.VUGHT-thon art extraught..3He»r!/F/. ii. 
EXTRAVAGANCY— 

vovage is mere extravagancy ....Twelfth Night, ii. 
EXTRAVAGANT- 

a foolish extravagant'spirit Love's L. Lost, iv. ; 

the extravagant and erring spirit hies . . Hamlet, i. 

in an extravagant and wheeling stranger. 0//ieHo,i. 
EXTREME— fire's extreme rage. Two Gen. of Ver. ii. 

be not as extreme in submission ..Merry Wires, iv. 

the extreme parts of time Love's L. Lost, v. : 

to the extreme edge of liazard All's Well, iii. : 

would grow into extremes .. Taming of Sh. 1 (indue 

yet extreme gusts will blow out fire .. — ii. 

for I have caught extreme cold — iv. 

to chide at your extremes Winter's Tale, iv. ; 

to be used in undeserved extremes. . King John, iv. 

fierce extremes, in their continuance — v. 

dry with rage, and extreme toil I Henry IV. i. 

the inwards to the parts extreme . .'iHenrylV. iv. 

always resolute in most extremes . . ! Henry VI. iv. 

who can be patient in suchextremes?.3He»ryr/. i. 

so much is the wonder in extremes . . — iii. 

that the extreme peril of the case. .Richard III. iii. 

grief and extreme age shall perish .. — iv. 

extremes [ ivn«. -extremity] you can. Trail. ^- Cres.iv. 

painful service, the extreme dangers. Cor(o/anHs,iv. 

between the extremes of hot and cold. .4«/. ^Cleo.i. 

no midway 'twi.xt these extremes at all — iii. 

break intothesedeepextremes. 7V/H,¥.4»dr07?icws, iii. 

broke my heart with extreme laughter — v. 

now within a toot of the extreme verge . . Lear, iv. 

'twixt two extremes of passion — v. 

with extreme sweet Romeo ^■Juliet, i. 5 (chorus 

'twixt my extremes and me this bloody — iv. 

being wrought, perplexed in the extreme. O^/ieHo, v. 
EXTREMELY— extremely stretched. .W/i/. A". Or. v. 

of time extremely form all causes. Love's L. Los', v. 

he sweat extremely, and something.HenryF///.ii. 

to hear the city abused extremely — (epil. 

nav, urged extremely for't. ... Timon of Athens, iii. 
EXTREMEST-the ex'tremest shore. Mea.forMea. iii. 

ray extremest means, lie sM... Merchant of Venice, i. 

stooti on the extremest verge AsyouLikeit, ii. 

on thee to the extremest point .... Richard II. iv. 

very extremest inch of possibility.. 2 Henry/F. iv. 3 

in her heart's extremest hate Richard III. i. 2 

the extremest ends of parallels .. Troilus ■a Cress, i. 3 

I grant, is sin's extremest gust .. Timon nf Alh. iii. b 

deserves the extremest death Coriotonus, iii. 3 

from the extremest upward of thy head . . Lear, v. 3 
EXTREMITIES— what extremities . . 1 Henry I V. i. 2 

but when extremities speak Coriolanus, iii. 2 

run to these, and these extremities. .'«//«,sC'<jsnr, ii. 1 

tempering extremi ties with.iiomeo S,- Juliet, i. 5(cho.) 
EXTREMITY— any extremity. . . . Merry Wives, iv. 2 

show no colour for my extremity — iv. 2 

she must dote on in extremity . . Mid. N.'s Dr. iii. 2 

that are in the extremity of either.. 45 j/ouLfte i(,iv. 1 

turned into the extremity of love — iv. 3 

save your life in this extreiuity.. Tammg of Sh. iv. 2 

but in the extremity of the one . . Winter's Tale, v. 2 

extremity of weather continuing — v. 2 

bear the extremity of dire mishap ! Comedy of Err. i. ! 

ne'er brake into extremity of rage . . — v. 1 

time's extremity! hast thou — v. 1 

false hope lingers in extremity .... Richard II. ii. 2 

tempers him to this extremity Richard III. i. 1 

they say, in great extremity Henry VIII. v. 1 

[/t)j(.] what extremity you can. . Trail. Sf Cress, iv. 2 
to the edge of all extremity pursue . . — iv. .5 
in the extremity of great and little . . — iv. b 
but the extremity ot both ends. Timon of Athens, iv. 3 
extremity was the trier of spirits . . Coriolanus, iv. 1 

now this extremity hath brought — iv. 5 

may take oif some extremity Cymbeline, iii. 4 

extremity of griefs would make. . Titus Andron. iv. 1 

and smiling extremity out of act Pericles, v. 1 

this extremity of the skies Lear, iii. 4 

make much more, and top extremity — v. 3 

and every thing in extremity Romeo 4' Juliet, i. 3 

1 suffered much extremity for love Hamlet, ii. 2 

in neither aught, or in extremity — iii. 2 

upon just grounds to this extremitj' Othello, v. 2 

EXULT— I would exult, man .... TwelflhNight, ii. i, 
that you insult, exult, and all ...4syouLikeit, iii. 5 

EXULTATION— your exultation.. Winier'sTale, v. 3 

EY'ASES- little eyases, that cry out Hamlet, ii. 2 

EYAS-MUSKET- 
liow now, my eyas-musket? Merry Wives, iii. 3 

EY'E- wipe thou thine eyes Tempest, i. 2 

it is a hint, that wrings mine eyes — i. 2 

those are pearls that were his eyes . . — i. 2 (song) 

the fringed curtains of thine eye — i. 2 

who with mine eyes, ne'er — i. 2 

they have changed e3'e3 — i. 2 

with an eye of green in't — ii. 

is banished from your eye — ii. 

I wish mine eyes would — ii. 

to be ajileep with eyes wide open — ii. 

the setting of thine eye — ii- 

as mine eyes open'd, I saw — ii. 

thy eyes are almost set in thy head — iii. 

upon the eyes of tliis young couple — iv. 

no tongue, all eyes ; be silent — iv. 

mine eyes, even sociable — v. 

their eyes do offices of truth — v. 

our master capering to eye her — v. 

and be in eye of every exercise. . Two Gen. of Ver. i. 
that not an eye, that sees you — ii. 

th.at you had mine eyes — ii. 

mv grandam havim: no eyes — ii. 

did liold his eyes locked — ii. 

love hatli twenty pair of eyes — ii. 

love hath not an eye at all — ii. 

chased sleep irom my enthralled eyes — ii. 

1 read your fortune in your eye — ii. 



EYE 



EYE— mine eye [Kri^.-her mien]. 7"a'o Gen.ofVer. ii. 4 

in her sun-brignt eye — iii. 1 

love doth to her eyes repair — iv. 2 (song) 

her eyes are grey as glass — iv. 4 

scratched out your unseeing eyes. ... — iv. 4 

pearls in beauteous ladies' eyes — v. 2 

such pearls as put out ladies eyes. .. . — v. 2 

nought but mine eye could . . .". — v. 4 

in Julia's with a constant eve? — v. 4 

who even now gave me good eyes . . Merry if'ives, i. 3 

that the appetite of her eye did — i.2 

a wart above your eye? — i. 4 

as long as I have an eye to make .... — ii. 1 

take heed; have open eye — ii. 1 

as you have one eye upon — ii.2 

lead mine eyes, or eye your — iii. 2 

hath he any eyes? — iii. 2 

he has eyes of youth, he writes — iii. 2 

I see how thine eye would emulate.. — iii. 3 

no man their works must eye — v. !> 

O, when mine eyes did see Twelfth Night, i. 1 

then let mine eyes not see! — i. 2 

item, two grey eyes, with lids — i. 5 

to creep in at mine eyes — i. 5 

fear to find mine eye too great — \. b 

mine eyes will tell tales of me — ii I 

there it lies in your eye — ii.2 

Iier ej'es had lost her tongue — ii.2 

his eyes do show liis days are almost — ii. 3 

the expressure of his eye, forehead .. — ii. 3 

thine eye hath stayed upon some .... — ii . 4 

to hit him in the eye! — ii. ."> 

an' you had an eye behind you — ii. 5 

every featlier that comes before his eye — iii. 1 

let us satisfy our eyes — iii. 3 

haply, your eye shall light — iii. 3 

if it please the e3'e of one — iii. 1 

ready to distrust mine eyes — iv. 3 

tear him out of that cruel eye — v. 1 

more than I love these eyes — v. I 

his eyes were set at eight — v. 1 

not like to stage me to their eyes. i)/eas./or Meas. i. 1 

that have worn your eyes almost out — i. 2 

and feast upon her eyes? — ii.2 

and those eyes, the break of day .... — iv. 1 (song) 

of false eyes are stuck upon thee !... . — iv. 1 

I will to nim, and pluck out his eyes — iv. 3 

nay, dry your eyes — iv. 3 

these fretting waters from your eyes — iv. 3 

to see thine eyes so red — iv. 3 

dishonour not your eye — v. 1 

shall you hear disproved to your eyes — v. ! 

I see a quickening in his eye — v. 1 

in mine eye, she is the sweetest Much Ado, i. I 

pick out my eyes with — i. I 

I looked upon her with a soldier's eye — i. 1 

I have a good eye, uncle — ii. I 

let every eye negotiate for itself — ii. I 

and see with these eyes? — ii. 3 

and scorn ride sparkling in her eyes — iii. 1 

look with your eyes as other womeu do — iii. 4 

are our eyes our own ? — iv. 1 

do not ope thine eyes — iv. 1 

why ever wast thou lovely in my eyes? — iv. ! 

and in her eye there hath appeared . . — iv. 1 

into the eye and prospect of his soul — iv. 1 

out of all eyes, tongues, minds — iv. 1 

I have deceived even your very eyes — v. 1 

let me see his eyes; that when — v.! 

and be buried in thy eyes — v. 2 

with an eye of favour. That eye — v. 4 

I do with an eye of love requite her. . — v. 4 
with my eyes. Rather your ej'es.jUu/. A'. Dream, i. 1 

from the tempest of mine eyes — i. 1 

to choose love by another's eye ! .... — i. I 

your eyes are lode-stars — i. 1 

my eye your eye, my tongue should — i. 1 

tiu'n away om' eyes, to seek — i. 1 

doting on Hermia's eyes — i- 1 

love looks not with eyes — i. 1 

let the audience look to their eyes .. — i. 2 

drop the liquor of it in her eyes — ii.2 

I'll streak her eyes, and make her .. — ii.2 

anoint his eyes; but do it — ii. - 

in thy eye tfiat shall appear — ii. 3 

thatwisn thewisher'seyes bepressedl — ii. 3 

on whose eyes I might approve — ii. 3 

upon thy eyes I throw all the power — ii. 3 

she hath blessed, and attractive eyes — ii. 3 

her eyes so bright? not with (rep.) .. — ii. 3 

and leads me to yom* eyes — ii . 3 

a sweet look from Demetrius' eye — ii. 3 

so is mine eye enthralled — iii. 1 

and gambol in his eyes — iii- 1 

light them at the fiery glowworm's eyes — iii. 1 

the moonbeams from his sleeping eyes — iii. I 

hath made my eyes water ere now . . — iii. 1 

looks witli a watery eye — iii. I 

next came in her eye — iii. li 

geese that the creeping fowler eye. ... — iii . a 

yet latched the Athenian's eyes — iii. 2 

charm his eyes, against she do appear — iii. 2 

sink in apple of his eye! — iii. 2 

conjure tears up in a poor maid's eyes — iii. 2 

that from the eye his function takes — iii. 2 

thou art not by mine eye, Lysander — iii. ^ 

all j'on fiery oes and eyes of light — in. 2 

and praise my eyes and face? — iii- a 

my nails can reach unto thine eyes . . — iii. 2 

that I have 'uointed an Athenian's eyes — iii. 2 

crush this herb into Lysauder's eye.. — iii. 2 

then I will her charmed eye release.. — iii. 2 

tliat sometime shuts up sorrow's eye — iii. 2 

I'll apply, to your eye, gentle lover.. — iii. 2 

in the sight of thy former lady's eye — iii. 2 

within the pretty flowret's eyes — iv. 1 

this hateful imperfection of her eyes — iv. 1 

O how mine e3'es do loath tliis — iv. 1 

with thine own fool's eyes peep — iv. 1 

and the pleasure of mine eye, is only — iv. 1 



EYE 



V. 1 



— ii. 1 



- iv. I (Ift.) 

— iv. 1 (let.) 



EYE— sec tlifSf tilings with paittd cyc.MiJ.Af. Dr. H-. } 

tlitcyu ofiuuii Imtli not lieurd — iv. 1 

the iKict'8 eye, in ii line frenzy — v. 

I ninst eonl(:.«ii, made mine i-ves wuter — v. I 

eve», do you we? liow oun it Ih.'i' — — 
BJiied liim nlready, with those sweet eyes — 

u tomb must cover thy ewcet eyes. ... — 

his eves were green U3 leeks — \- \ 

by losing of v"ur eyea iore » /.. Loil, 1. 1 

how to plcftse the eye indeed (rep.) .. — i. j 

that eve shall be his heed — .!• [ 

i» bought by judj^nient of the eye — !|. | 

his eye begets oeettaion fur his wit. . . . — ii- j 

will vou priek't with your eye? — ;|- [ 

diseloscd with eyes, deeeive me not .. — !■• [ 

to the court of Ins eye, peeping — !)• [ 

in his eve pride expressed — ]\- \ 

were locked in hi.s eye. us jewels .... 
that all eves unv his eves ei\chanted 
hiseyehuthdi-cli.Ma: I only (rep.) 

o'er the shoii of vuur eyes 

iiitch balls stuck in her face lor eyes 

king Cophetutt set eye upon 

my eyes on Ihv picture 

and makes lus"book thine eyes 

thy eye Jove's lightning bears — iv. ^ 

O, but her eye,— by this light (rep.) — iv. 3 

yes, for her two eyes — ''•'■■^ 

r.hetoric of thine eye ('gainst whom — iv. 3 (yer.) 

the wonder of a mortaloyc! — !^- J 

crystal the other's eyes — jv- ^ 

your eyes do make no coaches — iv. 3 

a face, an eye, o gttit, a state — ;>'• 3 

eagle-sighted e.ve dares look upon .. — iv. 3 

my eyes are then no ej'es, nor — jv- 3 

• looking in her eye — !^-3 

leam not of her eye to look — ;v. -3 

were paved with tlune eyes — iv. 3 

from women's eyes tliis doctrine — iv- 3 

in that forsworn the use of eyes.. — — iv. 3 

teaches such beauty as a woman's eye — iv. 3 

when ourselves we see in ladies' eyes — iv. 3 

as the prompting eyes of beauteous . . — iv. 3 

6 ist learned in a lady's eyes — .... — iv. 3 

seeing to the eye; a lover's eyes will — iv. 3 

from women's eyes this doctrine — — iv. 3 

his eye ambitious, his gait majestical — v. 1 

I thought to close mine eyes some . . — v. 2 

their eves, villain, their eyes (re/).) .. — v. 2 

with your sun-beamed eyes (rf/>.) — — v. 2 

best call it, daughter-beamed eyes .. — v. 2 

tlie virtue of your eye must break .. — v. 2 

with eyes best seeing heaven's fiery eye — v. 2 

wise ond rich i for in my eye — v. 2 

and caught it of your eyes — v. 2 

Iniigh upon the apple of her eye? — — v. 2 

there's an eye, wounds like — v. 2 

formed bv tlie eye, and, therefore (rep.) — v. 2 

as the eye doth roll to every — v. 2 

in your hcavenlj' eyes, have misbecomed — v. 2 

those heavenly eyes, that look — v. 2 

haud of death close up mine eye — — v. 2 

the window of my heart, mine eye .. — v. 2 
evermore peep through their eyes..Uer.o/ I'mice, i. 1 

within the eye of honour, be assured — i. 1 

sometimes from her eyes I did — i. 1 

that ever my foolish eyes looked upon — i. 2 

nice direction of a maiden's eyes — — ii. 1 

1 would oiitstare the sternest eyes .. — ii. 1 

nav, indeed, if you had your eyes — — ii- 2 

of the Je« in the twinkling of an eye — ii. 2 

and in such eyes as ours api>ear — ii. 2 

hood mine eves thus with my — li. 2 

thy eyes shall be thy judge ~ ii- 5 

will be worth a Jewess' eye — 11. 5 

if that mine eyes be true — ;;• 6 

witliin whose 'empty eye there is — — ii. 7 

his eye being big with tears — ii. 8 

than the fond eye doth teach — ii. H 

lujth not a Jew eyes? hath not — iii. 1 

beshrew your eyes, they have o'erlooked — iii. 2 

my eye snail be the stream — iii. 2 

it 13 enk'endered in the eyes — iii. 2 (song) 

move these eyes? or whether, riding — iii. 2 

but her eves,— how could he see to .. — iii. 2 

he hath done well in people's eyes . . — iii. 2 

my eyes my lord, can look aa — iii. 2 

glancing an eye of pity on his — iv. 1 

to viev/ with hollow eye, and wrinkled — iv. I 

their savajje eyes turned to — v. 1 

even by tlilnc own fair eyes — v. 1 

my eyes he doubly sees himself (rep.) — v. I 

saw yourself with your eyes A$ you Like il, i. 2 



but let your fair eyes, and gentle . 
had a tliunderbolt in mine eye . 



i. 2 
— i. 2 



..itli his eves full of anger 

with a hick-lustre eye, says, very, 
and wipeil our eyes of drops that . 

with eyes revere, and beard of 

saiH teeth, snns eves, sans taste — ii. 7 

and as mine eve (loth h's eftigiea — ii. 7 

survey with thy cha.ste eye — iii. 2 

that cverv eye, which in this forest.. — iii. 2 
of many faces, eyes, and hearts.. — iii. 2 (verses) 
a blue eye, and sunken; which you.. — iii. 2 

there is muriler in mine eye — iii. 5 

that eves — that are the frailest 

and, if my eyes can wound 

mine eyes are murderers {rrp.) 

but now mine eyes, which I have — 
no force in eyes tliat can do hurt — 

to tangle niv eyes too 

hia e.ve di<l heal it up 

he said, mine eyes were black 

to have rich eyes, and jKior hands — 

that abuses every one's eyes, liccause — iv. I 

whiles the eye of man did woo me — iv. 3 (letter) 

if that an eye may prollt by — iv. 3 

he threw his eye aside, and, mark . . — iv. 3 
it is, but with the eyes of a la<ly — v. 2 



- ii. 7 



iii. 5 
iii. i 
iii. 5 



— iv. I 



i 


3 


i 


3 


II 


1 


11 

ii 


3 


iii 


3 
2 


IV 


1 



— V. 3 



— ii. 1 



[_ 23_1^ J 

EYE— through another man's eyes! Am you Like i(, v. 2 

to set her before your eyes to-morrow — v. 2 
his hawking eye, his curls, in our — AU'tWell, i. 1 
her eye is sick on't; I observe lier now 
iiianv-coloured Iris, rounds thine eye! 
Olid thine eyes see it so grossly shown 

OS a triple eve, safer than mine 

senil forth tliine eye: this youthful.. 

that flames in your fair eyes 

the help of mine own eyes 

I submit inv fancy to your eyes 

where tlinu wiist shot at by fair eyes 

do nut hiilc mine eyes 

did iistouiali the survey of richer eyes 

the impression of my eye infixing 

was in mine eye the dust — >. .1 

for mine eye, while I was speaking . . — v. 3 

but to close her eyes myself — v. 3 

the truer office of mine eyes? — v. 3 

mine eves smell onions — v. 3 

despitcenforce a watery ey^. . Taming n/Sli. 1 (ind.) 

I)Ut finger in tlie eve, and she knew why — '• I 

Biglit hath thralled my wounded eye — i. I 

no more eyes to see withal than — — i- 2 
to make mine eye the witness of — 
youth, in lailics^ eyes that flourislieth 

to cast thy wandering eyes on every — m. 

and since mine eyes are witness of .. — iv 

painted skin contents the eye? — iv 

as those two eyes become that — iv, 

pardon.oMfatlier, my mistaking eyes — iv. 

scornful glances from those eyes — v. 

had then not crossed the eyes of .. li'mter's'l'ulr, i 

look on me with your welkin eye . . — i 

to have nor eyes, nor ears — i 

and all eyes lilind with the pin — i 

that canst with thine eyes see at once — i 

tliat bare e3'es to sec alike mine — i 

wafting his e.ve3 to the contrary — i 

the abhorred ingi'cdient to Ills eye ... . — ii 

spotless i' the eyes of heaven — ii 

him, that makes but trifles of his eyes — ii 

of the father; e.ve, nose, lip — .ii 

vet with ej'es of pity — 111 

in her lip, her eye, heat outwardly .. — iji 

her eyes became two spouts — iii 

that 1 have eyes under ray service . . — iv 

but sweeter than the lids of Juno's eyes — iv 

read, as 'twere, in my daughter's eyes — iv 

fairest youth that ever motle eye swerve — iv 

(for I do fear eyes over you) — iv 

a quick eve, and a nimble hand — iv 

looking with a southward eye upon him — iv 

looked upon my queen's full eyes — — v 

I'd bid you mark her eye ~ v 

and all eyes else, dead coals! — v 

as is her picture, affront his eye — ^ 

when she has obtained your eye — v 

your eye hath too raueh youth in't . . — v 

to tear the cases of their eyes — \- ~ 

there was casting up of eyes — v. 2 

she had one eve declined for — v. 2 

that which angled for mine eyes — v. z 

every wink of an eye — v. 2 

the fixture of her eye has motion in't — v. 3 
fi.\ing our eyes on whom our care. Corned;/ nf Err.i. I 

that deceive the eye, dark-working . . — i. 2 

situate under heaven's eye — ii. I 

I know his eye doth homage — 11. 1 

cannot please his eye, I'll weep — ;i. 1 

pleasing in thine eye — li- -' 

error dnves our eyes and ears amiss? — u. 2 

put the finger in the eye, and weep . . — iv. 2 

let not my sister read it in your eye.. — iii. 2 

a fault that siiriiigeth from your eye — iii. 2 

mine eye's clear eye, my dear heart's — iii. 2 

in his eye that he did plead — iv. 2 

herein others eyes were worse — iv. 2 

I'll pluck out tliese false eyes — iv. 4 

hath not else his eye strayed — v. 1 

who give their eyes the liberty — v. 1 

gazing in mine eyes — v. 1 

or mine eyes deceive me — v. 1 

haste looks through his eyes! iMacheth. i. 2 

the eye wink at the hand! (rep.) — i. 4 

bear welcome in your eye — i. •') 

blow the horrid deed in every eye — 1. 7 

mine eves are made the fools — ii. 1 

which informs thus to mine eyes — ii. I 

'tis the eye of childhood, that fears — — ii. 2 

ha! they pluck out mine o.ves! — ii. 2 

to the amazement of mine eyes — ii. 4 

from the common eye, for sundry — iii. 1 

eminence, both with eye and tongue . . — iii. 2 

scarf up the tender cj'e of — iii. 2 

no speculation in those eyes which thou — lii. 4 

eye of newt, and toe of frog — iv. 1 

snow his eyes and grieve his heart — iv. 1 

start, eyes! What! will the — iv. I 

pitiful to the eye, the mere despair — iv. 3 

your eve in Scotland would — iv. 3 

I eoulcl play the woman with mine eyes — iv. 3 

you see, Tier eyes are open — v. 1 

ond still keep eyes upon her — v. 1 

as lightning m the eyes of France KinvJohn, 1. I 

mine eye hath well examined — .;. 1 

tlicse eyes, these brows, were — 11. 1 

heaveii-moving |>earls from his poor eyes — ii. I 

before the eye and prospect of your . . — 11. 1 

confront your city's eyes — ii. 1 

whose equality by our best eyes cannot — 11.2 

and in her eye I find a wonder — li. 2 

in the fluttering table of hercye (rep.) — 11.2 

on the outwuid eye of fickle — 11. 2 

whv holds thine eye that lamentable — iji. 1 

witii splendour of his precious eye .. — ijj 1 

keep men's eyes, and strain — iji. 3 

couldst sec me without eyes — iii- 3 

without eyes, ears, and harmful sound 
throw thine eye on yon young 



iii. 3 



1. S 



— 11 3 



— iii. 2 



EYE 



EYE— with a threatening eye KingJohn, iii. i 

resolution drop out at mine eyes .... — iv. I 

burn out both mine eyes? — iv. 1 

will you put out mine e.vcs? — iv. I 

these eyes, that never did — iv. I 

approaching near these eyes — iv. 1 

lire to harm mine eye — iv. I 

Iluiiert snouM put out mine eyes — |v. I 

my eyes are out even with — iv. I 

none, but to lose your eyes — iv. 1 

want pleading for a pair of eyes — iv. I 

keep mine eyes; O 6J)are mine eyes .. — jv. I 
perchance, will sparkle in your eyes — iv. 1 

I will not touch thine eyes — iv. 1 

looked u|)on, I hope, with cheerful eyes — iv. 3 
beauteous eye of heaven to garnish... — iv. 3 

fault lives in his eye — jv. '' 

a fearful eye thou liast — |v. i 

with eyes as red as new enkindled . . — iv. 2 

with nods, with rolling eyes — )>. 2 

or turned an eye of doubt — i'.2 

and foul imngmary eyes of bliwd — — iv. 2 

those cunning waters of his eyes — jv. 3 

snarleth in the gentle eyes of peace . . — iv. 3 
govern the motion of a kingly eye ... — v- i 

BO shall inferior eyes that borrow — v. I 

startles mine eyes; and makes me — v. 2 

these waters to those baby eyes — v. a 

unthread the rude eye ot rebellion... — v. 4 

if e'er those eyes of yours behold — v . 4 

of death right ill thine eye — *•■' 

thou art come to set mine eye — \-7 

ever was surveyed by £nglish eye Hiclmrd II. i. 1 

impartial are our eyes, and ears — }• I 

leave of thee takes my weeping eye. . — j- - 

O let no noble eye profane — j- 3 

with valour couched in thine eye — }■ 3 

for our eyes do hate the dire — i. 3 

of thine eyes I see thy grieved 

all piaces that the eye of heaven 

witli a prophet's eye, seen how 

even through the hollow eyes of death 

for sorrow's eye, glazed with 

'tis with false sorrow's eye 

on my wrongs with an indifferent eye 

with "the eyes of heavy mind 

drawn from her eyes by your foul. . . . 

searching eye of heaven is hid 

and with rainy eyes write sorrow. . . . 

by my dull and heavy eye 

behold, his eye, as bright 

digged their graves with weeping eyes 

than my unpleasedeye see 

naj', dry your eyes; tears show 

mine eyes are full of tears 

if I turn mine eyes upon myself 

of sorrow, and your eyes of tears 

darted their desiring eyes rpon 

the eyes of men, after a well-graced.. 

men's eyes did scowl on Richaid 

his eyes do drop no tears 

thine eye begins to sjieak 

thread the postern ot a needle's eye .. 

tlicir watches on to mine eyes 

those opposed eyes, which like illeiiryll'. i. I 

and attract more eyes, than that 

and disobedience in thine eye.. 

on my face he turned an eye of death 

hast thou never an eye in thy head? . 

bend thiuc eyes upon the earth 

to make mine eves look red 

do stop the floodgates of her eyes 

a villanous trick of thine eye 

a pleasing eye, and a must noble 

hackneyed m the eyes of men 

being daily swallowed by men's eyes 

seen but with such eyes as 

seldom shines in admiring eyes 

not an eye but is awearj' of thy — 

whence the eye of reason may pry . . . 

no eye hath seen such scarecrows — 

please the eye of fickle ehangcUujs .. 

suspicion shall be all stuck full ot eyes 

nothing confutes me but eyes 

we will not trust our eyes 

knowledge from others' eyes 'iHenryiy. i. I 

strange confession in thine eye 

but these mine eyes saw him in 

a moist eye? a dry hand? 

at laat, I spied his eyes — 

remembrance with mine eyes — 

seal up the ship-boy's eyes — 

even to the eyes of Kichard — 

with Ills eye nrim-fuU of tears — 

their eyes of fire sparkling through. . — 

whose "dangerous eyes may well lie. . . — 

that all their eyes may bear those — — 

his eye is hollow, and he changes .... — 

dazzle all the eyes of France Hrnryl 

how shall we stretch our eye — 

mv eye will scarcely see it — 

not working with the eye — 

then lend the eye a terrible aspect ... — 

not noble lustre in your eyes — 

these eyes of mine take themselves 

with a muffler before her ey- 



iii 


3 


III. 


3 


111. 


3 


iv 


\ 


IV 


1 


v 


2 


v 


2 



_ v. 5 



. 3 



ii. I 
ii.3 
il. 4 



_ 1. I 



— 1. 2 



ii 2 
ii. 3 
iii. I 



ii. 2 
il. 2 
ii. I 
iii. I 
iii. I 
iii. 2 
iii. 6 



have at the very eye of that proverb — ^ "i- 7 

his liberal eve doth give to — iv. (choru.) 

sweats in the eye of Phoebus — iv. 1 

blood may spin in English eyes — ;v. 2 

from their pale-dead eyes — iv. 2 

all my mother came into mine eyes. . — jv. 6 

{lerforce compound with mislful eyes — iv. 6 

lis eves are humbler than — iv. 7 

and your eyes advance alter your — v (chorus) 

to behold your eyes; your eyes — v. 2 

face to face, and royal eye to eye .... — v. 2 

with acursorary eye o'erglauccd .... — '-.2 

let thine eye be thy cook — v. 2 

a full eye will wax hollow — v. S 



EYE 



[ 232 ] 



EYE— tlioiiErh tlicv liavc their eyes ....Hrnn/ J', v. 2 

Ills siKirklini; eves re|ilete witli Mleiu'i/n. i. 1 

!lt theil- lii.ithers' imiist eves lahes .. — i. I 

lend tiie Fi-eiieh, ill^l^•:l(l .>|■e^■^s .... — i. 1 

line. il' tin- eves, ami tin- elieek's side — i. 4 

ci.- e\-etiu.ri leist ti. IomL; t i he-.iveil (rep.) — i. \ 

i)u:\ w,>idd mine eves lie aitiie.ss .... — ii. 3 

wliieli luith tlie inen'iest eve — ii. ■! 

thatanv imi-liliiide\e iiiav iiiiil .... — il. 4 

will -linimei- thn.' a Miiui lean's eve — ii. 4 

these eves, like lainps whose wasting — W. :> 

il.ith elose his tendei-ihin- eves .... — ili. 3 

these eves, tlijt .-ee thee line — iv. 1' i 

hut his eaii jilvLi-e Vi.nr daiiitv eye .. — v. -3 

this anraeeus heantv 1. 1 mine eyes .. — v. 3 

and llhlinied mine ews, that I iUennjVI. i. 1 

hilt hhioihiniue eve' no tears — i. 1 

Whv are thine eves li\cd to the — i. 3 

thiiie eves and liiouuhts heat oil — ii. 1 

let mt see thine eyes; wink now .... — ii. 1 

mine e\'es are fnli ol' tears, my heart — ii. 3 

iny tear-stained eyes to see her — ii. 4 

•aiifl throw their e.ves on thee'. — ■ ii. 4 

and shows ail angry e.ye — ili. 1 

red sparkling eyes blab liis — ili. 1 

begins to flow wiihiu mine eyes — iii. 1 

and with dimmed eyes look after him ^ iii. I 

t), llemy, op^ thine eyes! — iii. 'i 

on me, for thine e.\'es are womicUng. . — iii. 2 

and bid mine eyes be paeking — iii. 2 

mine eyes slionh-1 sparkle like — iii. 2 

for thee to close up mine e,ye3 — iii. 2 

lie hatli no eyes, the dust liatli — iii. 3 

look with a gentle eye upon this wretch! — iii. 3 

close up Iris eyes, and draw — iii. 3 

I lost mine eye in laying the — iv. 1 

sight of me is odious in their eyes — iv. 4 

thy steadfast-gazing eyes to rame.. . — iv. 10 

these eyes sliall never close ZHennj VI. i. 1 

that makes Mm close his eyes? — i. 3 

I throw mine eyes to heaven — i. 4 

and, if thine eyes can water — i. 4 

the father wipe his eyes withal — i. 4 

iiardly can I clieck my ej^es from. ... — i. 4 

dazzle mine eyes, or do I see — ii. 1 

face be fearful to their e.yes — ii. 2 

hath closed these eyes of mine — ii. 3 

mine eyes, my heart to thee — ii. 3 

heartSi'aud eyes, like civil war — ii. 5 

throw up thine eye; see, see — ii. 5 

that kill mine eye and heart — ii. 5 

with tiery eyes, sparkling for very .. — ii. 5 

foot were eciual with his eye — ■ iii. 2 

my eye's too quick, mj' heart — iii. 2 

as fills mine eyes with tears — iii. 3 

gracious in the people's eye? — iii. 3 

these eyes that now are dimmed .... — v. 2 

witli tearful eyes add water — v. 4 

I drink the water of my eyes — v. 4 

the fatal object in my eye — v. 6 

many an orphan's water-standing eye — v. 6 

a bonny eye, a passing pleasing Richard III. i. 1 

the helpless balm of ray poor eyes . . — i. 2 

and mortal e.yes cannot endure — 1.2 

these eyes could not endure that — i. 2 

iniect mine eyes. Thine eyes — i. 2 

those eyes of thine front mine — i. 2 

these eyes, which never shed remorseful — i. 2 

my manly eyes did scorn an humble — i. 2 

tears in her eyes, the bleeding — i. 2 

will she yet abase her eyes on me.... — i. 2 

thy scorns drew'st rivers from his eyes — i. 3 

close up that deadly eye of thine — 1.3 

your e,yes drop millstones (rep.) .... — i. 3 

of ugly death within mine eyes! — i. 4 

where eyes did once inhabit (rep.) .. — 1. 4 

your eyes do menace me — i. 4 

if thine eye be not a flatterer — i. 4 

reduce their currents to mine eyes . . — ii. 2 

many of you have mine eyes beheld? — ii. 4 

then be your eyes the witness of ... . — iii. 4 

even where his raging eye — iii. .^ 

seems disgracious in the city's eye .. — iii. 7 

jiri/e and purchase of his wanton eye — iii. 7 

whose unavoided eye is murderous! — iv. 1 

hath held mine eyes from rest — iv. 1 

look into me with considerate eyes . . — iv. 2 

pity dwells not in this eye — iv. 2 

that had his teeth before his eyes .... — iv. 4 

in galled eyes of weeping souls — iv. 4 

{^CoLKnf..} be so disgracious in your eye — iv. 4 

my nails were anchored in thine eyes — iv. 4 

wipe her weeping eyes withal — iv. 4 

my forces with a gracious eye — v. 3 

the windows of mine eyes — v. 3 

scenes a.s draw the eyeto flow . . Henry VIII. (prol.) 

him in eye, still liini in praise — i. 1 

let some graver eye pierce into that. . — i. 1 

and his e.\'e reviled me, as his abject — i. 1 

mounting his eyes, he did discharge — i. 2 

will one day open the king's eyes.... — ii. 2 

every eye saw them, envy and base.. — iii. 1 

and came to the eye o' the king — iii. 2 

he casts his eye against the moon .... — iii. 2 

to bless your eye witlial — iii. 2 

as if ruin leaped from his eyes — iii. 2 

let's dry our eyes: and thus far — iii. 2 

cast her fair eyes to heaven — iv. 1 

mark you her eyes? she is going .... — iv. 2 

mine eyes grow dim: farewell — iv. 2 

earnestly he cast his eyes upon me 1.. — v. 2 
her eyes, her hair, Jier cheek . . Troilus % Cressida, i. 1 

Argus, all eyes, and no sight — i. 2 

laughed, that her eyes ran o'er — i. 2 

of her ej'es; did her eyes run o'er too? — i. 2 

to change, would give' an eye to boot — i. 2 

could live and die i' the eyes of Troilus — i. 2 

have you any eyes? Do you know . . — i. 2 

of that shall from mine e.ves appear. . — i. 2 

whose ined'cinable eye ctjrrects — i. 3 



EYE— from eyes of other mortals? Troilus^ Cress, i. 3 

when she coldly eyes the youthful .. — i. 3 

I see them not with my old eyes .... — i. 3 

the pride and salt seorii nf his eyes .. — i. 3 

as will stoii tlie eve of ilvli.'n's needle — ii. 1 

cnkindlvil hv mine eves and cars.... — ii. 2 

lend me ten thousand eyes, and I will — ii. 2 

practise your eyes with tears! — ii. 2 

d'l, in our eyes, begin to lose — ii. 3 

iinav.arcs encountering the ej'e of .. — iii. 2 

if my fears have eyes — iii. 2 

sucli unplausive eyes arc bent — iii. 3 

as soon iv;id in tiiu eyes of others — iii. 3 

commenils itself tu others' eyes (rep.) — iii. 3 

but eye to e\'e opiiosed — iii. 3 

play the idiots in her eyes! — iii. 3 

the present eye praises'the — iii. 3 

things ill motion sooner catch the eye — iii. 3 

slecii kill those pretty eyes — iv. 2 

the lustre in your eye, heaven — iv. 4 

and let thy eyes spout blood — iv. 5 

there's language in lier eye — iv. 5 

my own searching eyes shall find.. .. — iv. 5 

I have fed mine eyes on thee — iv. 5 

so oppress me with thine eye? — iv. 5 

raw eyes, dirt-rotten livers — v. 1 

green sarcenet flap for a sore eye .... — v. 5 

one eye yet looks on thee (?-fp.) — v. 2 

the error of our eye directs our — v. 2 

minds, swayed by eyes, are full — v. 2 

invert the attest of eyes and ears .... — v. 2 

swagger himself out en's own eyes ! . . ■ — v. 2 

their'eyes o'ergalled with — v. 3 

look, how thy eye turns pale — v. 3 

a rhcuin ill mine eyes too — v. 3 

and my proceedings eye — v. 7 

your eyes half out, weep out — v. 1 1 

a mental power this eye shoots. . Tiinon of Athens, i. 1 

whose eyes are on this sovereign — i. I 

that mean eyes have seen — i. 1 

mine eyes cannot hold out water — i. 2 

the like conception in our eyes — i. 2 

now come but to feast thine eyes — i. 2 

bounty had not eyes behind — i. 2 

and set mine eyes at flow — ii. 2 

do't in your parents' eyes! — iv. 1 

showing me again the eyes of man!.. — iv. 3 

window-bars bore at men's eyes — i v. 3 

on thine ears, and on thine eyes — iv. 3 

the tongues, the eyes, and hearts of . . — iv. 3 

he has caught me in his eye — iv. 3 

undone lord, than mine eyes for you.. — iv. 3 

whose eyes do never give, but thorough — iv. 3 

it opens the eyes of expectation — v. 1 

a fool's heart, and a woman's eyes.... — v. 2 

the vigilant eye, the counsellor Coriolanus, i. 1 

marked you his lip and eyes? — i. 1 

that yon could turn your eyes towards — ii. 1 

whither do you follow your aym .... — ii. 1 

such eyes the widows in Corioli .... — ii. 1 

clambering the walls to eye liim — ii. 1 

carry with us ears and eyes for the. . . — ii. 1 

so planted Iris honours in their eyes.. — ii. 2 

and the eyes of the ignorant more ... — iii. 2 

within thine eyes sat tsventy — iii. 3 

and venomous to thine eyes — iv. 1 

has the porter his eyes in liis head .... — iv. 5 

turns np the white o' the eye to Ms. . . — iv. 5 

go whip him 'fore the people's ej'es... — iv. 6 

no less apparent to the vulgar eye — iv. 7 

his eye red as 'twould burn Kome. ... — v. 1 

or those doves' eyes w^hich can make.. — v. 3 

these eyes are not the same I wore ... — v. 3 

and saving those that eye thee — v. 3 

which should make our eyes flow — v. 3 

to pierce a corslet with his eye — v. 4 

'fore your own eyes and ears? — v. 5 

I have not from your eyes that Julius Ccesar, i. 2 

for the eye sees not itself — i. 2 

hidden worthiness into your eye — i. 2 

that noble Brutus had Ms eyes — i. 2 

set honour in one eye — i. 2 

and that same eye, whose bend doth.. — i. 2 

such ferret and such fiery eyes — _i. 2 

betwixt your eyes and night? — ii. 1 

so appearing to the common eyes .... — ii. 1 

have au eye to Cinna — ii. 3 (paper) 

had I as many eyes as thou hast wounds — iii. 1 

for mine eyes, seeing those beads — iii. 1 

poor sold! his eyes are red as fire .... — iii. 2 

before the eyes of both our armies ... — iv. 2 

a friendly eye could never see — iv. 3 

weep my spirit from mine eyes! — iv. 3 

canst thou bear up thy heavy eyes ... — iv. 3 

it is the weakness of mine eyes — iv. 3 

it runs over even at his eyes — v. 6 

night hangs upon mine eyes — v. 5 

his goodly eyes, that o'er the Antony /^ Cleo. i. 1 

I Icnow by that same eye — i. 3 

eternity was in onr lips, and eyes — i. 3 

when they do not eye well to you — i. 3 

and make his eyes grow in my brow.. — i. h 

could not with graceful eyes attend . . — ii. 2 

tended her i' the eyes — ii. 2 

for what his eyes eat only — ii. 2 

or I'll spurn thine e.yes like balls — ii. 5 

if our eyes had authority — ii. (i 

are the holes where eyes should be . . . — ii. 7 

the April's in her eyes — iii. 2 

tMs in the public eye? — iii. 6 

I have eyes upon him, and his alfairs — iii. 6 

in eye of Ca3sar's battle — iii. 8 

to see 't, mine eyes are blasted — jlj- 8 

mine eyes did sicken at the sight — iii. 8 

my sliame out of thine eyes — ..l^^- ^ 

the wise gods seel our eyes — iii. 1 1 

would you mingle e>es with one that — iii. 11 

whoso eye becked forth my wars — iv. 10 

and mock our eves with air — iv. 12 

Octavia, with her modest eves — iv. 13 



EYE 



EY'E— to wash the eyes of kings . . Antony ^ Cleo. v. 1 

with the sober eye of dull Octavia.... — v. 2 

but I'll catch thine eyes, though — v. 2 

my nails are stronger than mine eyes — v. 2 

beheld of eyes again so royal! — v. 2 

abide the hourly shot of angry cycs...Cymljelhie, i. 2 

and with mine eyes I'll drink the — i. 2 

could make me with this eye or ear. . — i. 4 

have turned mine eye and wept — i. 4 

the sun with as firm eyes as he — i. 5 

hath nature given them eyes to see. . . — i. 7 

it cannot be i the eye — i. 7 

with his eyes in flood with laughter.. — i. 7 

the wild motion of rny c.ye — i. ' 

then lie peeping in an" eye — i. 7 

mine e.yes are weak: fold down — ii. 2 

may bare the raven's eye — ii. 2 

to ope their golden eyes — ii. 3(song) 

it is a basilisk unto mine eye — ii. 4 

remembrance yet lives in men's eyes — iii. 1 
even renew me with your ej'es . . — iii. 2 (letter) 

first kill him, and in her eyes — iii. .^j 

no single soul can we set eye on — iv. 2 

our very eyes are sometimes like — i v. 2 

drop of i^ity as a WTen's eye — iv.2 

be cheerful: wipe thine eyes — iv. 2 

have both their eyes and ears so — iv. 4 

fruitful object be in eye of Imogen. . . — v. 4 

your death has eyes in 's head then . . — v. ■) 

there are none want eyes, to direct — v. 4 

a man should have the best use of eyes — v. 4 

mine eyes were not in fault — v. .'j 

he eyes us not; forbear; creatures .. — v. 5 

which strikes the eye:— I stand on fire — v..') 

tM'ows her eye on him, her brothers — v. 5 
gracious in the eyes of royal Rome. '/';7«s/i;i(//-o;i. i. 1 

triumpher in the eyes of Rome ! — i. 2 

gracious in those prineel.y eyes of thine — i. 2 

faster bound to Aaron's charming eyes — ii. 1 

full of tongues, of eyes, of ears — i i . 1 

shadowed from heaven's eye — i i . I 

what signifies my deadly-standing eye — ii. 3 

where never man's eye may — ii.3 

that ever eye, with sight, made — ii. 4 

suspects more than mine eye can see — ii. 4 

will not permit mine eyes once — ii. 4 

such a sight will blind a father's eye — ii. .') 

whole mouths of tears thy father'seyes? — ii. i 

prepare thy noble eyes to weep — iii. 1 

good Titus, dry thine eyes — iii 1 

closing up of our most vrretched eyes! — iii. I 

would usurp upon my watery eyes . . — iii. 1 

the tears that thy poor eyes let fall . . — iii. 2 

mine eyes are cloyed with view of .. — iii. 2 

I would hide from heaven's e.ye — iv. 2 

and as I earnestly did fl.x mi'ne eye.. — v. I 

the pearl that pleased yom' empress' eye — v. 1 

that both mine eyes were rainy — v. 1 

miserable, mad, mistaking eyes — v. 2 

can the son's eye behold his — v. 3 

your ear, and please your eyes. . Pericles, i. (Gower) 
to the judgment of your eye I give — i. (Gower) 

because thine eye presumes to — i. 1 

five heaven countless eyes to view — i. 1 

lows dust in others' eyes — i. 1 

and the sore eyes see clear to stop — i. 1 

hits the mark Ms eye doth level — i. 1 

gleasures court miue eyes, and mine eyes — i. 2 

er face was to mine eye beyond — i. 2 

di-ew sleep out of mine eyes — i. 2 

and seen with raistful eyes — i. 4 

om" eyes do weep, till lungs — i. 4 

our cheeks and hollow eyes do witness it — i. 4 

like a beacon fired, to amaze your eyes — i. 4 
contrary are brought your eyes . . — ii. (Gower) 

nor outward eyes, envy the great — ii.3 

that all those eyes adored them — ii. 4 

this by the eye of Cynthia hath — ii. 5 

throw their best eyes upon it' — iii. 1 

Mther, to have blest mine eyes! — iii. 3 

which did steal the eyes of young and old — iv. 1 

your ears unto your eyes I'll reconcile — iv. 4 

that ne'er before invited eyes — v. 1 

turn your e.ycs again upon me — v. 1 

her eyes as jewel-like — v. 1 

ICol. A'/ii.] slumber hangs upon mine eyes — v. 1 

the true blank of thine eye Lear, i. 1 

a still-soliciting eye, and such a tongue.. — i. 1 

with washed eyes Cordelia leaves you — i. 1 

where are his eyes? either his notion — i. 4 

old fond eyes, beweep this cause again .- — i. 4 

how far your eyes may pierce — i. 4 

to keep his eyes on either side his nose .. — i. .'> 

heavy eyes, not to behold — ii. 2 

are led by their eyes, but blind men ... . — ii. 4 

flames into her scornful eyes! — ii. 4 

her eyes are iicrce, but thine — ii. 4 

squirits the eye. ami makes the hare-lip — iii. 4 

want'st thou eyes at the trial, madam? .. — iii. 6 

pluck out his eyes. Leave him — iii. 7 

cruel nails pluck out his jioor old eyes .. — iii. 7 

upon these eye of thine I'll set my foot. . — iii. 7 

you have one eye left to see some — iii. 7 

no way, and therefore want no eyes — iv. 1 

I'd sa,y, I had eyes again ! — iv. 1 

an eye discerning thine honour — iv.2 

other eyo of Gloster. Gloster's eyes — iv.2 

lost he his other eye? — iv.2 

when tlie.v did take his eyes? — iv. 2 

the king, and to revenge thine eyes — iv. 2 

not to know what guests were in her eyes — iv. 3 

the holy water from her heavenly ej'es . . — iv. 3 

and bring hira to our eye — iv. 4 

will close the eye of anguish — iv. 4 

Gloster's eyes being out, to let — iv. 5 

imperfect by your eyes' anguish — iv. 6 

anddizzy 'tis, to cast one's e.yes so low!.. — iv. 6 

alack, I have no eyes: is wretchedness . . — iv. 6 

inethought, his eyes were two full moous — iv. 6 

I remember thine eyes well enough — iv. 6 



i:YK — cttsoofeyefi? O ho, are you (ri-p.) ,,Lear,iv. 6 

your eyes are in n heavy ense — iv. 6 

n iiy i-iT liow tliis worlil goes, with no eyes — iv. (i 

;.'i t Itici' jiliuscyes; iiml, lilic — iv. il 

w.cp iiiy fortunes, take mj' eyes — iv. li 

t" ll^.' Ills eyes for sarclen wiiter-jiots .... — iv. G 

wi|M' tliim- evfS; tlie u-oujeres simli — v. ;! 



■a hi 



holiii. li,,ll:i: llmt i-Vi-. tli.it Inlcl voii so .. — 
wlu'iv till-.' lie -..t, n.st him his eyes .... — 
hiiil 1 your tongues nt\(l eyes, I'd use tliem — 
eyes are none o' the hest 



without eyes, see i)iithwiivs to Romeo ^Juliel, i. 1 

n fire simrklin^ in h'vers eyes — i. 1 

nor hiile ttie e;icoiMittr of ivssailing eyes — i. 1 

liy f;ivin!; lihurty to iliiue eye.s — i. 1 

soni! new inteetiuo to thy eye — i- 2 

anil, with uimttuiuteil eye. comimre her — i. 'i 

tle\.>iit reliuiini uf nunetvo nmintains — i. - 

|.,.iMMl with luTselfiic eiOier eye .... — i. 2 

written in the niiu-L.'in of his eves .... — i.:l 

in nmny's eyes ilntli share the glory.. — i. 3 

no more ileep will 1 emhirt mine eye — i. 3 

wluit cMirioiisevedi'tli (iiiote — i. 3 

liv Hosaline's hriL'ht eves, by her high — ii. 1 

herevecliM'onrsos, I w'illanswerit .. — ii. 2 

clountn-ut her eves to twinkle — ii. 2 

V h,\t if their eves were there — ii. 2 

lier eve \_C;I. eves] in heiiven would _ ii. 2 

the white-n|itm-ned wonderini; e\LS — ii. 2 

there lies nioivneril in thine eve.... — ii. 2 

[Cd;. K,i^] to hide me IVoni their eyes — ii. 2 

eonnsel.and Ilent himeves — ii. 2 

slee-,. dwell noon thine eyes - ii. 2 

ere tlie sun advunee his hurninu: eye — ii. 3 

his watch in everv old man's eve — ii. 3 

their liearts, hut in their eyes — ii. 3 

with a white wench's black eye — ii. 1 

Thishe, a grey eye or so, but not — ii. 4 

hazel eyes: wliat eye, but such an eye — iii. 1 

hero al( e.ves coze on us ((v/).) — iii. 1 

that runaway s eyes may wink — iii. 2 

the death-darting event eoekatriee .. — ?).'• '^ 

or those eyes shut, that make — iii. 2 

I saw it with mine eyes — iii. 2 

to prison, eyes! Ne'er look on liberty! — iii. 2 

when that wise men have no eyes.... — iii. 3 

infold me from the search of eyes. ... — iii. 3 
yon jrrey is not the morning's eye. . . . — 
the lark" and loathed toiulciiangeeyes — 

in m>' eye so do you — 

still thy eyes, wriieh I may call — 

so iairan'eye, as Paris hath — 

thy eyes' windows fall, like death — 

flattering eye [Co(. A'h/. -truth] of sleep — 
need ana oppression starveth in thy eyes — 

eyes, look your last! — 

he may approve our eyes Hamlet^ i. 1 

and true avouch of mine own eyes — i. 1 

to tnnible the mind's eye — i. I 

one auspicious, and one dropping eye .. .. — i. 2 

let thine eye look like a friend on — i. 2 

nor the friutfnl river in tlie eye — i. 2 

in the cheer and comfort of our e.ve — i. 2 

left the Hushing in her galled eye's — i. 2 

in my mind's ej'e, Horatio — i. 2 

oiipressed and fear-surprised eyes — i. 2 

and fixed his eyes upon yon? — i. 2 

earth o'erwhelm them, to men's eyes .... — 1.2 

[ A ii(.] eye which their investments show — i. 3 

make thy two eyes, like stars, start — i. 5 

to find his way without liis eyes . 



iii 


.■) 


IM 


."l 


111 


i 


111 


!) 


iii 


.") 


iv 


1 


V 


1 


V. 


1 


V. 


3 



— ii. 2 



nay, then I have an eye of you 

with eyes like carbuncles 

the burning eyes of heaven 

and has tears in 's eyes 

tears in his eyes, distraction in 's aspect 

the very faculties of ej^es and ears 

S4i!dier's, scholar's, eye, tongue 

I mine eyes will rivet to his face 

an eye liVe Mars, to threaten 

have .vou eyes? 

eyes without feeling, feeling without 

ears without hands or eves 

thou tnrn'st mine eyes into my very soul 
that you do bend your eye on vacancy .. 

forth at your eyes your spirits wildly 

not in their judgment, but their cj'es .... 
we shal 1 express our duty iu liis eye .... 

as day does to your eye 

burn out the sense aiid virtue of mine eye! — iv. r> 
\ki} leave to see your kingly eyes — iv. 7 (letter) 

neither motion, guard, nor eye — iv. 7 

you, the j udges, bear a wary eye v. 2 

of whom his eyes had seen the proof Oihelto, i. 1 

impatient thoughts, by being in his eye. — i. 3 
a quick eye [Coi. Kn(. -if thoii hast eyes] — i. 3 

to throw out our eves for br.ivc Othello.. ii. 1 

her eve must be feu ii. 1 

that has an eye can stamp and counterfeit — ii. 1 
witli my jiers'inal eye will I look to 't.. .. — ii. 3 
eye she hasl methinks it .sounds (rep.) .. _ ii. 3 

for she had eyes, ami chose me 

yoiu' eye [A.'»i'.-eye.s] thus, not jealous.. .. 

to seel lier father's eves up 

if ever mortal ej'es do .see them bolster .. 
my father's eye should bold her loathly 

a darling like your precious eye 

let me sec your ej'cs 

or that mine eyes, mine ears 

mine eves do i ti.'h 

those eliarms, thine eyes, arc blotted .... 
do you [lerceive the gliastness of her eye? 

fatal then, wln.n your eyes roll no 

innooent, that e'er did lift up eye 

of one, whose snhdned eyes, allieit 

EYE-BALL— invisible to every eve-ball. Tempeil, i. 2 
make his eye-balls ndl with ..Mid. N. I>r--nm, iii. 2 
your bugle cyc-balls Anjou Like it, iii. 5 



iii. 4 
iv. 3 
iv. t 
iv. 5 



111. 3 
iii. 3 
iii. 3 
iii. 3 
iii. i 
iii. 4 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 
iv. 3 
V. 1 
v. 1 
V. 2 
V 2 
V. 2 



EYE-BAIili — docs scar mine eye-balls... Uor'jfM, iv. I 
and put my eye-balls in tliv vanity .King John, iii. 4 
mine cvo-tKilfs into liulli'ts turned. .U/fiiryr;. iv. 7 
np.>n lliy .yi-huii, mnnhTous ....-illenry Vl.\\\. 2 

hisev.-l.alis fiirlluroiit tiniu — iii. 2 

I'll wiike niinr eve-lialls blind first .Cumbelini; iii. 4 

EVK-lUOAM-lliye.M-heams./.-iw'jL. L. iv. 3 (verses) 

EVKHIiOW — liis mistvess' eyebrow. ^1» (/iiu IiVici/, ii.7 

whiit I'olour Mil' your eyebrows? .. Wintei't'lale, ii. I 

hfcn hi ue. hilt not her eyebrows .... — ii. I 

EYKI)-1 have eved «itli best regard ..Trmiml. iii. I 

of tone slie miut lie eved Mi,l.i\.l)ini,n, iii. 2 

1 e\ed them even to tlieir sliips .. II nil,;\lul,; ii. 1 

eieil iiwrv. di>tinguisli form Hidiunl II. n. 2 

EY I'M) Iviir— with gentle eye-droiis ..•>ll,inyl r. iv. 4 
EYE-(il,.VSS_or voureve-glasa is.. ll'inler'sTale, i. 2 
EVKLESS-uvclcss ['■„/. -endless] night. AVnA'Jo/in.v. 6 

uud eveli" xrnomrd worm Timono/Athem, iv. 3 

blasts, will) . .,!, - inge Lfur.iii. 1 

turn oiii 111 I > \ I 1. villain — iii. 7 

thate.\i.K - i" lmI "i tliiiie was first framed — iv. 6 

liiiht to m iilis mid LV'eless sculls. ./(o/Heo^f-^"/'''', v. 3 

EYELID— not llieii I'liir eyelids sink? ..Tcmpi'sl,i\. 1 

advanced tlieir eyelids _ iv. 1 

on my eyelids shall conjecture hang. Mucli Ado, iv. 1 
juice of it, on slceiiing ej'elids laid..;Uiti. N. Di 



forbid sleep his scat on thy eyelid 

with turning up your eyelids . . Lor^e 



ii. 3 
L. Lost, iii. 1 



and on your eyelicrs crown thegod.lWcn»i//r. iii. I 

and hung their eyelids down — iii. 2 

no more wiltweighmy eyelidsdown,2/7CTir!//r. iii. 1 
eyelids, cases to those heavenly jewels. I'erictcs, iii. 2 
liuiigs on mine eyelids \^Col. K«/.-eyes] — v. 1 

until my eyelids will no longer wag Hamlet, v. 1 

EYE-Ol'EENDING— 

round with eye-oft'cnding brine. . Twelfth Night, i. I 

foul moles, un'd evc-otlcnding \nax\ia.KingJolm, iii. 1 

EYiOSIU 1 IT— eyesight of his took. . Love's L.Lost, i. 1 

with haste in Ills eyesight to be — ii. 1 

hold me dear :\s incuions eyesight — v. 2 

fantasy that plays uponourej'esiglit?.l/le)iri//>'. v. 4 
dearer than evesight, space and liberty .... Lecir, i. 1 

treasure ot his eyesight lost Hoineo ^-Juliet, i. 1 

my cyesiglit fails, oi- thou look'st pale — iii. ft 
E Y 10.^1 )K E— e> csore to our solemn. 'I'awing o/Sh. iii. 2 
E Y EST— « hvrefore eyest him so? .... Cymbellne, v. 5 
EYE-STUING— broke mine eye-strings — i. 4 
EYE- WINK— an eye-wink ot Jier . . Merry Wives, ii. 2 
EY'LIAD— judiciouse3'liads[Coi.-a;iliadsJ — i. 3 
EYNE— looked on llermia's eyue.. Mid. N. Dream, i. 1 
made me compare w'ith Hermia's eyne? — ii. 3 
my love, shall I compare thine eyne? — iii. 2 

to blink through with mine eyne — v. 1 

upon our watery eyne Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

scorn of your bright eyae.Asyou Like il, iv. 3 (letter) 
supposes bleared thine eyne .. Taming of Shreu; v. 1 
Bacchus, withpinkeyne../4«(ojiy <5-Wra. ii. 7 (song) 
the cat, with eyne of burning coal. I'ericles, iii. (Gow.) 



FABIAN-thy ways, siCTiior Fabian. Ttrelflh Nighl, ii. , 
I will do so. Signior Fabian, sta.y you — iii. 
Fabian can scarce hold him yoniler. . — iii. ' 

come hither, Fabian _ — iii, 

and for his cowardsiiip, ask Fabiau. , — iii. ■ 

good master Fabian, grant me — v. 

see him delivered, 1 abian — v. 

FABLE— these antique fables .... Mid. N. Dream, v. 
by the world I recount no fable . . Love's L. Lost, v. : 
sans fable, she herself reviled . . Comedy of Krr. iv. ' 

he fables not, I hear the \ Henry y I. iv. ! 

let jEsop fable in a winter's SHenry VI. v. ! 

towards his feet; but that's a fable Othello, v. ; 

FABKIC — baseless fabric of this vision. 7V/fl/wsV, iv. 1 

shake the fabric of his folly Winter's Tale, i. : 

helps in this our falnic, if tliat CoriolanuSj i. 1 

when it stands against a falling fabric — iii.! 

FABULOUS— is fabulous and false . . 1 Henry VL ii. ! 
that former fabulous story Henry I III. i. 1 

FACE— the outward face of roj'alty Tempest, i. 1 

I see it in thy face, what thou should'st — ii. 1 

no woman's face remember — iii. I 

for breathing in their faces — iv. I 

as a nose on a man's face ,. Two Gen.of Verona, ii. 1 

say they have angels' faces — iii. 1 

but, chiefly, for thy face — iv. ■( 

the lily tincture of thy face — iv. 4 

this face of mine were full as — iv. 4 

what says she to my face? — v. S 

my face is black — v. i 

what is in Silvia's face — v. 4 

he in the red face had it Merry Wives, i. I 

he hath but a little wee face — i. 4 

he is not show his face — ii. ,•! 

shall not behold her face at ample. Twelfth \ighl, i. 1 

come, throw it o'er my face — i. E 

good madam, lot me see your face. ... — i. £ 

to negotiate with ray face — i. .'i 

thy tongue, thy face, thy limbs — i. 5 

he does smile liis face into more .... — iii. 2 

as a sad face, a reverend carriage — iii. 4 

all they can to face me out of my wits — iv. 2 

that face of his I do remember — v. I 

taught him to foec me out — v. 1 

one face, one voice, one habit — v. i 

must not show your face {rep. ) . . Meat, for Meas. i . .'i 

but as she spit in his face — ii. 1 

look in this gentleman's face — ii. 1 

doth >'oiir honour mark his face? .... — ii. 1 

see anv Imrin in his face? — ii. 1 

his fiiec is the worst thing — ii. 1 

if his face be the worst thing _ ii. 1 

let her show her face; and, after — v. 1 

I will not show my face, until — v. I 

let's sec thy face — v. 1 

this is that face, thou enicl Angelo.. — v. 1 

show your sheep-biting face — v. 1 

ore no faces tiiicr than tlifi.se that .... Much Ado, i. 1 
'scape a predestinate scratched face .. — i. I 



FACE- an 'twere such a face as yonrs.. .Much Ado, i. 1 

melancbiily in signior Benedick's face — ii. I 

u husband with a beard on his face.. — ii. 1 

to put a strange face on his own — ii. 3 

when was he wont to wash his face? — iii. 2 

shall be buried with her tiu-c ujiwurds — iii. 2 

is this face Hero s? are our eyes .... — iv. 1 

blushing iipiniritioiiH start into her face — iv. 1 

shall luce to liicc he brought to Alarguret — v. 1 

that you have such a I'cbruary face. — v. 4 

HWcet, let mc sec > our face — v. 4 

he no more shall i-ce iny face .. Mid., \'.'i Dream, i. 1 

an' 1 may hide my face, let mc — i. 2 

when I do see your face, therefore .. — ii. 2 

and hall' his face must be seen through — iii. 1 

and [inline m>' e\'cs and face? — iii. 2 

nor look me ill the face — iii. 2 

if ever 1 thy luce liy daylight see .... — iii. 2 

I am marvellous hairy about the face — iv. 1 

to siiy an I can hear my TJiisby's tiice — v. 1 

with that face? I love thee Love's L. Lost, i. 2 

fair fall the face it covers — ii. I 

his face's own inargent did quote .... — ii. 1 

I must sigh in thy face: most rude .. — iii. I 

balls stuck in her face for eyes — iii. 1 

falleth like a crab, on the face of terra — iv. 2 
as doth thy face through tears .. — iv. 3 (verses) 

a foot, a face, an eye, a gait — iv.3 

heaven show his face — iv. ;j 

no tiicc ib fair, that is not — iv.'.i 

I'll find a fairer face not washed .... — iv. 3 

my foot and her face see — iv.3 

without the beauty of a woman's face — iv.3 

for not looking on a woman's face .. — iv. ;* 

you knew: an if my face were but .. — v. i 

tliat your face were not so full .... — v. 2 

and mirth is in his face — v. 2 

to see a lady's face v. 2 

each turn away her face — v. 2 

to show the sunshine of your face — v. 2 

my face is but a moon, and clouded too — v. 2 

but ill visors, show their faces? — v. ',; 

and showed the better face — v.'.! 

can any face of brass hold — v. 2 

because thou hast no face — v. 2 

a death's face in a ring. The face of an — v. l' 

the carved bone face on a flask — v. 2 

false; we have given thee faces — v. i 

or a painter; fur he makes faces — v. 2 

better face exact the penalty . . Merch. of I'enice, i. :i 

than 1 hu\e on my fiiec, when I .... ' — ii. l' 

christian fools witli varnished faces.. — ii. S 

spits in tlie face of heaven — ii. 7 

turning his face, he put his — ii. 8 

and let him stand before our face — iv. I 

ne'er wear hair on his face, that had it — v. I 
a kind of umlicr smircli my face ..Asyou Likeil, i. 3 

and shining morning face, creeiiing.. — ii. 7 

and living in yonr face — ii. 7 

let no face be ]<ept in mind — iii. 2 (ver.) 

of many faces, eyes, and hearts. ... — iii. 2 (ver.) 

or good faces, or sweet breaths — (epil.) 

youth, thou licar'st thy father's face ..All's Well, i. i 

was this fair face the cause — i. 3 (song) 

that the first face of neither — iii. 2 

his face I know not. Whatsoe'er he is — iii. 5 

and it shall be read to his face — iv. 3 

■with a patch of velvet on's face — iv. 5 

but it is your carbonadoed face — iv. 5 

o'erran her lovely face Taming of Sh. 2 (indue.) 

and paint your face, and use you .... — i. 1 

1 saw sweet beauty m her face — i. 1 

distinguished by our faces, for man . . — i. 1 

will throw a figure in her face — i. i 

that special face which I could fancy — ii. I 

what, you iiiciin my face? — ii. I 

thinks Willi oatlis to face the matter — ii. I 

the sops ullin the sexton's face — iii. 2 

why, she hath a face of her own — iv. 1 

face not me; thou hast braved — iv.3 

eyes become that heavenly face? .... — iv. 5 

may a free face put on Winler'sTale, i. 2 

looking on the lines of my boy's face — i. 2 

saw his heart in his face — i. ; 

I learned it out of women's faces .. .. — ii. I 

the face to sweeten of the whole .... — ii. 1 

her face o' fire with labour — iv.3 

masks for faces, and for noses .... — iv. 3 (song) 

where they should hear their faces?.. — iv.3 

mnffie vour face; dismantle you — iv.3 

flout me thus unto my face ..Comedy of Errors, i. 2 

how iiKiiaiicncc low reth ill your face! — iL 1 

hurl tile name of husband in my face — ii. 2 

that would face me down he met nie — iii. 1 

changed til \ fitce for a name — iii. 1 

ay. and break it in your face — iii. I 

but licr face nothing like so clean.. .. — iii. 2 

heart's meteors lilting in his face? .. — iv. 2 

to scorcli your face, and to disfigure — v. 1 

and with no lace, as 'twere — v. 1 

straiwc defeatures in my face — v. 1 

this grained tiice of mine be hid — v. 1 

the mind's construction in the face .... Macbeth, i. 4 

your face, my thane, is as a book — i. .'> 

while it was smiling in my face — i. 7 

false face must hide what — i. 7 

I'll gild the faces of the grooms — ii. 2 

their bands and faces were all budged — ii. 3 

does the face of earth intoinb — ii. 4 

and make our faces vizards to our .... — iii. 2 

there's blood njion thy face — iii. 4 

why do you make siieni faces? — iii. 4 

what are these faees? Where is — iv. 2 

strike heaven on the face ,— iv.3 

go, prick thy face, and over-red — v. 3 

take thy face hence : Seyton ! — v. 3 

tyrant, show thy face — v. 7 

compare our faces, and he judge ....King John, i. I 

a trick of CiBiir-ile-lion's laoo — i. 1 

my face so thin, that in mine — i. I 



hn, 1 
ii 




ii 




1] 
iv 




IV 




V 




V 




n.i 

i 




!• 












iii. 




IV. 




iv. 





iv. 1 



HI. 3 



— V. 4 



ii 


2 


11 


4 


ii 


4 


IV 


1 


IV 


3 



— V. 1 



FACE— every foot to have this face King John, i. 1 

3'onr face hath got five hundred (rep.) 
with ladies' faces, and fierce dragons' 

uiion thy brother Geffrey's face 

stand in his face, to contradict 

turn face to face, and bloody point to 

look in the lad}''s face 

and well-noted face of plain old 

turned an eye of doubt upon my face 

how to know the face of right 

and turn thy face in peace 

face to face, and frowniing brow to . . Rich: 

turn away his face, and bid .liis 

doth harbour, even in Mowbray's face 

never look upon each other's face 

blew bitterly against o>ir faces 

his face thoii hast, for even so 

did triumph in ray face and they .... 

the flower of England's face 

tlien set before ray face the lord 

show me what a &ce I have 

blows upon this face of mine (rep.) . . 

destroyed the shadow of your face .. 

his face still combating with tears. ... — v. 2 

for love, speak treason to thy face? . . — v. 3 

look upon his face; his eyes do — v. 3 

to look upon my sometimes master's face — v. .'i 

and on my face he turned an eye 1 Hen n/ IV. i. 3 

to behold the face of that occasion .... _' i . 3 

and in thy face strange motions — ii. 3 

be not forgot upon the face of — ii. 4 

never wear hair on my face more .... — ii. 4 

give me them that will face me — ii. 4 

spit iu my face, call me horse — ii. 4 

now my masters, for a true face — ii. 4 

slept ia his face, and rendered — iii. 2 

do thou amend thy face, and I'll .... iii. 3 

my face does you no harm _ ; i i rt 

I never see thy face, but I think (rep.) 

'sblood, I would my face were in 

look upon his face; what call you rich? 
and, by this face, tbis seeming brow. . 

to face the garment of rebellion 

no, I know this face full well .... 

let myr favours hide thy mangled face 

not stick to say, his face is a face royal.2Hc;iry / /'. 

not a white hair on your face 

go, wash thy face, and draw 

or to know thy face to-morrow? 

could discern no part of his face from 

come, let me wipe thy face 

the Lord bless that sweet face of thine 
and his face is Lucifer's privy-kitchea 

and face them in the field 

it illuraineth the face 

before my face murdered my father.. 

till his face be like a wet cloak 

borrow not that face of seeming sorrow 

in thy most marvellous face Henry F. ii. 1 

a 'faces it out, but fights not _ iii. 2 

his face is all bubukles, and whelks. . — iii. 6 
way shall be paved with English faces — iii. 7 

sees the other's umbered face — iv. (chorus) 

upon his royal face there is no note — iv. (chorus) 

fanning in his face with iv. 1 

bloodily did yawn upon his face _ iv! 6 

he smiled me iu the face _ iv. 6 

behold your face most worthy brother — v. 2 

face to face, and royal eye to eye — ■>' ■> 

whose face is not worth sun-burninj 

a fair face will wither 

can do no more spoil upon my face 
though I speak it before his fVe . . 
Bim, fierce bent against their faces . 
presume to look once in the face . . 

beard thee to thy face (rep.) 

till now we never saw your face. . . . 
destruction meets thee in the face.. 

might shoot them at your faces _ iv 7 

dotli not flatter, face, or feign _ v. 3 

in this beauteous face, a world iHenrt/Vl ( \ 

in thy face I see thy fury _ ' i" 1 

and grovel on thy face __ j.' 2 

my ten commandments in your face ' — i' 3 

gazing on thy face, with envious _ ii' 4 

in thy face I see the map of honour. . — iii' 1 

m face, in gait, in speech iii j 

turn away, and hide thy face? .. _ iii' 2 

to drain upon his face an ocean _ iii' 2 

how the blood is settled in his face!.. _ hi' 2 
his face is black, and full of blood .. _ jii' 2 

hath this lovely face ruled _ iv 4 

it will be proved to thy face _ iv' 7 

and daughters before your faces _ i v' 8 

stand, and front him to his face v' 1 

canst for blushing, view this face ZHenni !'I i 4 

but that thy face IS, visor-like _ ' j] 4 

to bear a woman's face? . :' * 

that face of his the hungry cannibal's' — 

laughed in his face : _ 

that spoils her young before her face _ 

though man's face be fearful _ 

let his manly face, which promiseth — 
from the earth's cold face, I throw . . — 

p God ! it is my father's face 

is tliis our foeman's face ! 

red rose and the white are on his face — 

before his face I speak the words 

blow this feather from my face i 

frame my face to all occasions _ j 

fling it at thy face 

thy heavenly face that set '.'.'.. Richard III. 

smile in men's face, smooth 

we know each other's faces .'. 

by his face straight shall you know (rep.) 

her face defacedTwith scars 

I looked on Richard's face '. 

never look upon thy face again '.. 

covered with the face of heaven 

stand before our faces 



V. 2 



.)Henr!/ri.i. 1 



111. 4 



iii.4 
iii. 4 
iii. 7 
iv. 1 
iv. 4 



V. 3 



FACE— corse on the earth's cold face.«ic 

a fit or two o' the face He 

viva voce, to his face 

ye have angels' faces, but heaven 

thou hast the sweetest face 

had their faces been loose 

whose bright faces cast tlxousand 

how long her face is drawn? 

may stand forth face to face 

he should be a brazier by his face 

I'll ^asli hira over the face Trollus 



-Ore 



but tis before his face 

borne here in the face 

will fly with his face backward . . 
thou boy-ciueller, show thy face . . 
turn thy false face, thou traitor.. 

sprinkles in your faces Tii> 

that see I by our faces 

horse may mire upon your face . . 

wl 10m thy upward face hath 

let me behold thy face 

once more strike at TuUus' face . 

backs red, and faces pale 

and when my face is fair, you sliall. . — 

I make a crooked face at it 

that tell, you have good faces 

you make faces like mummers 

from face to foot he was a thing 

bid tliem wash their face 

thy face bears a command in't 

by his face that there was something (rep.) — 

I have not the face to say 

nor cliild nor woman's face to see 

the tartness of his face sours ripe grapes 



l.i 


3 


iii 


1 


IV 


1 


IV 


1 


IV 


2 


IV 


2 


V. 


2 


V. 


3 


11. 


3 


11 


3 


IU 


3 


IV. 


1 


V. 


5 


V. 


6 



. . Hamlet, i. 



— n. - 



n of A/hens, iii. 6 



— iv. 3 

. CorioLanus, i. 1 



.Julius Cipsar, \. 2 



before me, let me see his face 

can you see your face? 

I'll ne'er look you i' the face again ., — i". : 

the climber-upward turns his tace . . ii. 

half their faces buried in their cloaks — ii. 
if not the face of men, the sulferauce — ii. 
hide their faces even from darkness.. — ii. 
when they shall see the face of Cajsar — ii. i 
in his mantle muffling up his face . . — iii. i 

at Philippi we do face him iv. ; 

thinking, by this face, to fasten in . . — v. I 
my best friend ta'en before my face ! — v. i 

and, when my face is covered — v.' 

Titiuius' face is upward — v. a 

turn away tliy face, while I do run. . — v. 4 
there's no goodness in tliy face . . Antony e,-Clto. ii. £ 
hadst thou Narcissus in thy face .... — ii. 5 

harsh fortune casts upon my face — ii. li 

all men's faces are true (rep.) — ii. 6 

he has a cloud in's face iji. 2 

I looked her in the face — iii. 3 

bear'st thou her face in mind? — iii. 3 

from that great face of war — iii. 1 1 

you see hira cringe his face — iii. 1 1 

did before thy face repent ! — . iv.9 

his face subdued to penetrative iv. 12 

and would gladly look hira i'tlie face — v. 2 

his face was as the heavens _ v. 2 

they wear their faces to the bent .... Cymbeline, i. 1 

he fled forward still, toward your face — i. 3 

cut to pieces before thy face — iv. 1 

the flower that's like thy face, pale.. — iv. 2 

upon their faces: you were as flowers iv. 2 

his Jovial face— murder in heaven?. . _ iv. 3 

let's see the boy's face. He is alive . . — iv. 2 

to the face of peril myself I'll dedicate — v. 1 

with faces fit for masks, or rather. ... — v. 3 

whose face I never saw? v. 4 

tliere's business in these faces v. 5 

thou bear'sta woman's face . . TitusAndronicus, ii. 3 

wonder greatly that man's face can . . ii. 4 

thou turn'st away thy face for shame I — ii. ."i 

thy cheeks look red as Titan's face . . — ii. ."> 

keep eternal spring-time on thy face — iii. 1 

have his soul black like his face — iii. 1 

the welkin with his big-swolu face?.. — iii. 1 

ray seal be stamped in his face iv. 2 

image of thy fiend-like face? v. 1 

brought unto the empress' face — v. 3 

drops upon thy blood-stained face . . _ v. 3 
buxom, biythe, and full of {nee.. Pericles, i. (Gower) 
"- - '- - ■he ■ ■ " ■ ^ - 



FACE— never after look rae in tlie tace. liom.&Jul. iii. 5 
to yom- face. Poor soul, thy face ia .. — iv 1 
spake it to ray face. Tliy face is mine — iv' I 

to see tills morning's face iv f> 

partly, to behold my lady's face. _ v 3 

let me peruse this face -' ■> 

of heaven visit her face too roughly 

then saw you not his face 

he fal Is to such perusal of my face 

that their faces are wrinkled 

thy face isvalancedsince I saw... 1, 

beard, and blows it in my face? .'. _ ij ' 

God hatli given you one face [Kn/.-pac'e] — iii 

I mine eyes will rivet to his face _ iii' 

that blanks the face of joy _ ijj' 

leave thy damnable faces, and begin' .'.' — iii" 

heaven's face doth glow _ jii' 

of a sorrow, a face without a heart? _ iv 

come, let rae wipe thy face _ v' 

knavery's plain face is never seen, m\..QihHln, ii.' 

1 have no judgment in an honest face .. _ iii 

begrimed and black as mine own face — iii' 

dwell in every region of his face '. _ iv' 

let me see vour eyes; look in my face. ... — iv' 
know we this face, or no? alas! ray friend _ 
weep'st thou for him to my face? 



— V. 2 
)/S/i. ii. 1 



her face, the book of praiseL ... 

her face, like heaven, enticeth — i. 1 

tongue move anger to our face i. 2 

against the face of death, I soiiglit .. — i. 2 
her face was to inine eye beyond .... — i. 2 

she has a good face, speaks well — iv. 3 

cast their gazes on Marina's face — iv. 4 

to betray, doth wear au angel's face.. — iv. 4 

never to wash Ms face, nor cut — iv, 4 (Gower) 

to stink afore the face of the gods .... — iv. 6 
nor shall ever see that face of hers again . . Lear, 1. 1 

so your face bids me _ i. d 

nose stands i' the middle of his face? .... — i. 5 

I have seen better faoss in my time ii. 2 

my face I'll grime with filth — ii. 3 

although as yet the face of it be covered. . — iii. 1 

broke them in the sweet face of heaven. . iii.4 

to apply to his bleeding face _ iii. 7 

wliich the rude wind blows in .your face.. — i\. 2 
whose face between her forks presageth . . — iv. ti 

was this a face to be exposed — iv. 7 

even so: cover their faces v. 3 

compare her face wit)i some Romeo %■ Juliet, i. 2 

dost tliou fall upon tliy face? (rep.).. 

tlic volume of youn » Paris' face 

his face to the dew-dropping south . . 

covered with an antick fkce 

nor arm, nor face, nor any otlier part 

the mask of night is on my face 

to hide her face; for her fan's 

playing it to me with so sour a face. . 

though his face be better than an v . . 

he will make the face of heaven so fine 

hid with a flowering face! 

out, you baggage! you tallow face! . . 



i 


3 


1 


4 


1 


i, 


11 


2 


u 


2 


u 


4 


11 


.■) 


11 


5 




2 


11 


2 


11. 


'•' 



FACED— yet I have faced it with.. Ta. 

thou hast faced many things _ ,, .^ 

I will neither be faced nor braved _ iv' 3 

that faced and braved me v 1 

ill faced, worse bodied Comedy of Errors iv' 2 

till he faced tlie slave Macbi-t), ( i 

this the face that faced so many . . . '. Uirhard n iv 1 
ragged than an old faced ancient . . 1 Henry 1 1'' iv ■' 
I for fear I should be faced out of. Henr,, y iii ' 7 

l< ACE-KOYAL-faoe is a face-royal. .2He>i)-»/r. i. 2 
keep It still as a face-royal _ i 2 

f '^-oif ?^^5^''i^ "??'''* ^^"^^ question .... O/hetlo, i. 3 

* -^*-ILI V "*'"' ■' ar;|ues facility. Lwe'sL. lost, iv. 2 
tor the elegance, facility, and golden _ iv 2 

vIpTmJ? 'I''i»''^,y2". with facility Olkelh, ii! 3 

x>.?;frn^^^'^H?—™'^"^°''0"S spirit ....AWsyyelt, ii.3 

lACir- cucuUusnonfacit raoaachum.7-«-^OT/iA" i 5 

cucullus nou faeit monachum . . Meas.for Meas v I 

FACT— and, indeed, his fact, till now _ 'iv' 2 

111 mercy of this fact, her brother's . . — v 1 

all shame (those of your fact are so). Winter'sT iii 2 

tlamnedfact! how it did grieve Macbeth iii 6 

this fact was infamous, and ill 1 Henry VI iv ' 1 

and a fouler fact did never traitor ..^HenrnVl i' 3 
whom we have apprehended iu the fact — 'ii' 1 

soil the fact with cowardice TimonofAth iii h 

80 much as tliis fact comes to Cymbeline in ' '■' 

T^ 5 i^.S^'K'Jr"",?^^'''^'''^'^ j" "le fact. Tilus Andron. iv.' \ 
FACnON-for our wild faction. 7'«.oGen.o/;'«- iv 1 
will bandy with tliee in faction ..AsyouLikeH v'l 
ot the revolting faction, traitors? . . Richard II. ii.' 2 
\_Kni.j gentlemen in arms upon his faction — iii 2 
may turn the tide of fearful faction. IHemi/jr iv' 1 

you maintain several factions IHeaniVI i 1 

iCol.'] I scorn thee and thy faction — 'ii ' 4 

for ever, and my faction, wear _ i,' 4 

to this faction, in tlie Temple-garden — ii' 4 
forsaken your pernicious faction — iv. 1 (letter) 
her faction will be full as strong as. .SHeni-y VI v 3 
or any of your faction? a plague ..Richard III. ( 3 
they upon the adverse faction want . _ v 3 

so many hollow factions Troilus & Crestida i' f 

and leave the faction of fools . . . ''^'^^_'^^"_^s,aa,i. 3 
to draw emulous factions, and bleed — ii' 3 

more our wish, than their faction _ ii' 3 

and drave great Mars to faction — iii '3 

sects and factions were newly.. Timon of Alliens iii 5 
commit outrages, and cherish factions — ' iii ' 5 
sidefactions, andgiveoutconjectural.Co™/n)iu.s' i 1 
let them enter. They are the faction. y«i.C(Psi!;- ii 1 
powers breed scrupulous faction. . Antonys- Cleo. i 3 
princes, that strive by factious.... 7'rtus.ln*o,i i 1 

my faction if thou strengtiien with — i 2 

thou and thy faction shall repent _ i' 2 

and raze their faction, and their family — j' 2 
18 of tiie faction that is wronged Hamlet v' 2 

•Ftr-rm??^^ Vi''T-''^'^^'="?".?''y ■ ■ Coriolanus, v. 2 
j' ACiXUUb-suchfactiousemulations.li/ewTOA'/. iv I 

this factious bandying of their — iv.' 1 

make up no factious numbers 2Henri/ VI ii 1 

chop away that factious pate of his .. — v' 1 
thou factious duke of York, dcscend.SH-jirt; VI i 1 

were factious for tlie house of Richard III i' 3 

you have been factious one against . . — ii ' 1 
makes factious feasts; rails on .. Troilus &■ Cress \ 3 
the dull and factious nobles of the .. — 'i\ •> 
-c^^?lS^'!?"^ ^'"' redress of all these. .Juims Ca-sar, (. 3 
■tACIOR- till my factor's death.. Com(?di/o/£;v i 1 
Percy is but my factor, good my lord. 1 Henr\i IV.iW 2 
or lowly factor for another's gain.. 7iic/mirf'/iy iii 7 

only reserved their factor, to buy — iv' 4 

chief factors for the goAs.... Antony ^Cleopalra, ii' 6 

which I, the factor for the rest Cymbeline i 7 

FACULTIES-whose faculties inclusive. /JU'.s- tVell. i. 3 

hath borne his faculties so meek Macljell, i 7 

such other gambol faculties he hath.2HenryIV 'ii' 4 
which neither know my faculties.. Htviry VJII. i 2 
natures, and pre-formed faculties.. yuttusCn-.ra;-, i] 3 

how infinite in faculties! in form Hamlet, ii. 2 

the very faculties of eyes and ears _ ii ' 2 

F-A-CULTY— yet crescive in his faculty.. Henry F. i'. 1 
i ADE-the roses there do fade so fast?.j)/irf. N. Dr i 1 

rise and fade! he shall be \un\ of Cymbeline, v. 4 

thy lips and clieeks shall fade . . Ilonu-o 4-Juliel,'iv' 1 

FADED— insubstantial pageant faded.. Tempi-st] iv' 1 

old, wrinkled, faded, withered .. 2'a»i/n,§-o/'.s7i iv b 

leaves all faded [A'/i^.-vaded] Richard n i' '> 

it faded on the crowing of the cock Hamlet i \ 

FADGE— how will this fadge? .... Twelfth i\,.rht 'ii' 2 

we will have, if this fadge not Loce'sL. Lost y' 1 

FADING— one fading moment's.. TwoGen.or Ver. i 1 
swan-like end, fading in music. Mer. of Venice, iii. 2 



FAD 



FADING— of dililos ami fadings.. Il'intet't 7'ii/^ iv. 3 

son\o I'luliiii; alimmer left Comedy of Errors, v. I 

iftlint mv fiuliiu liiviilli pormit ....lHciirv/7. ii. 5 

FAKllY— room, Fiicrv, lure rninca ..H d.y.Ur. ii. 1 

FAtiGOT— siuirf for i\o ('..■.■t'"l>i MlrnryVI. V. \ 

hroii^'lit n faj^unt to liriglit-lnirning. TOiij And. iii. 1 

F.MI.-orclso mv (iro'wt luils Tempml, (eiiil.) 

I will not full vour ladyship .. IVotffn.o/fcr. Iv. 3 

slu' will not lull _ V. 1 

I will not liii 1 luT Merry IViers, ii. 2 

wlu'ivin ifhu tluiniv to fiu\ . . . . Mmu. /or Mms. iii. 2 

tliiis luil not toilo M.iir ollirc _ iv. 2 

iiml Ii'll lii:ii I will'n.'t tail liim MiichAilo,\. 1 

wt will not fuil. T..-iii_'lit, ru — V. 1 

I |.r:iy yi.li I:ul nu- net Mid. i\. Dream, i. •> 

u million liiil, iMMl'ounding ontli — iii. 2 

1 will not liiil yon Merchant of Venice, i. I 

Vi.n mivlit Tail of till' knowing me .. — ii. 2 
t.'ll L'lntle .Jes.-ii-.i. 1 will not tail lier — ii. I 

lint if von tail, witliont more — ii. fl 

nrxt. it 1 tail of the riu'ht — ii. n 

if I il.i fail in lorliiiR- of my — ii. 9 

if liu fail of tliat. he will have . . . . At you Likeil.ii. 3 

I'll not fail, if 1 live — V. 2 

ott expectation tails, and most oft All'tU'en.U. I 

^rouiiils to fail as often a.s I guessed.. — iii. 1 

in a main danger, fail yon — iii. 6 

then, tail not; vou have von — iv. 2 

if 1 fail not of my cunning . . Tawinifof .'fhreir. ii. I 
persuades, when speaking fails .. lI'inlcr'sTdle.'A. •_> 

for the fail of any point in't — iii. 2 

it cannot fail, hut l)y the violation .. — i\'. 3 

liy his lii.L'hness' fail of issue — v. 1 

it we shonUl fail, — we fail! but screw.. A/ac'lic(/i. i 7 

fail not our tVast — iii. 1 

wherein it is at our pleasure to fttil..lfrc7i7(/ ly. i. 2 
and now my sight fails, and my....2He;iry/r. iv. 4 

and upright innoeeney fail nie — v. 2 

that, if requiring fail.'he will Henry J', ii. 1 

my purpose shoiiM not fail with me — iii. 2 

tlioiigh thy speech doth fail IHenry Vl. i. 4 

chance the one of us d ■ iail — ii. 1 

or all mvfence shall fail 'iUenryVI. ii. 1 

issue fails, his should not reign; it fails — ii. 2 
if thou fail us, all our Iwpe is done..3i/?7ir.i/r/. iii. 3 

if 1 fail not in my deep intent Itichurd III. i. 1 

title to the crown, upon our fail? ..Henry yill. i. 2 



[ 2;3o ] 



I shall not fail to ajj^irove. 
I>y this my issue's fail ... 



if my sight fail not, you sliould — iv. 2 

if they shall fail, I, with mine enemies — v. 1 
Iiersuasions to the contrary fail not to use — v. 1 
fails ill the promised largeness .. Troitus^ Cress, i. 3 

if he fail, yet go we under — i. 3 

fall, Greeks, tail, fame; honour — v. 1 

and sweat notes together fail — r. 1 1 

obedience fail in ciiildren ! Timon 0/ Athens, iv. 1 

their obedience fails to the greater.. Corio(aHus, iii. 1 

to fail in the disposing of those — iv. 7 

strengths by strengths, do fail — iv. 7 

that, if you fail in our request — v. 3 

the uttermost, and fail not then ..Juliita CfPsar, ii. 1 

but if we fail, we then can Antony frCleo. iii. 7 

of audience, nor desire, shall fail .... — iii 10 
and perjured, from thy gre.at fail . . Cymbeline, iii. 4 

and 1 will never fail beginning — iii. 4 

ill the least would fail her obligation .... Lear, ii. 4 

and every measure fail me — iv. 7 

I will not fail: 'tis twenty years. Womeo ^Juliet, ii. 2 

my wits fail, bwitch and spurs — ii. I 

either my eyesight fails, or thou look'st — iii. 5 

if all else fail, myself have power — iii. 5 

if this should fail, and that our drift . . Hmnlel, iv. 7 
this fail you not to do, as vou will .... Othello, iv. 1 

FAILKD— all his ventures failed'.jVci-.o/ Venice, iii. 2 
have failed to equal my great fovinua. AWstVell,\\. 5 
such intelligence hathseldom failed — iv. .5 

ond 'cause he failed his presence Macbeth, iii. fi 

the king in his last sickness failed. .HcTiri/ ;'///. i. ■> 
not failed to pester us with message .... Hamlet, i. 2 

FAILING— which, failing to him.. 'Amono/.4//!. i. 1 
full of decay and failin"? O monument — iv. 3 
would be something failing in liim ..Cymbeline, i. 1 
they failing, I must tlie much your. . — ii. 4 
but failing of her end by his strange — v. h 
or, failing so, vet that 1 put the Aloor ..Othello, ii. 1 

FAIL'ST-and when thou fail'st ....ZHenryVI. ii. 1 

FAIN— 1 would fain die a dry death Tempest, i. 2 

I must be fain to bear with you. TwoGen. of Ver. \. 1 

and would fain have meat — ii. 1 

am fain to shuffle, to hedge Merry fVives, ii. 2 

would fain speak with you — ii. 2 

I am fain to dine and nw^.Measurefor Mecuure, iv. 3 

but was fain to furswearit — iv. 3 

Would fain proclaim favours that.... — v. 1 

I'd fain have said, a maid! — v. 1 

I know you'd fain lie gone — v. 1 

1 would fain liave it a match Much.ido. ii. I 

I wonlil fain know what you — iii. 5 

and would fain liave it beaten away — v. I 
that he was fain to seal on Cupid's". Lore'sL.L. v. 2 

fouls would fain iiave drink v. 2 

which tain it would convince v 2 

I would lain dissuade him As you Lilie if, i. 2 

I would tiii II see this meeting — iii. 3 

such as you are fain to be licnolden.. — iv. 1 

most fain would steal what law All'i It'ell, ii. f, 

we bIuiII be fain to hang you — iv. 3 

whieli I would fain shutout — v. 3 

1 would fain be doing Taming o/Shreir, ii. 1 

1 would fain soy, bleed tears Winter' iTale. v. 2 

we would fain have either . . Comedy 0/ Errors, iii. 1 
wliicli theixxir lieart would fain deny. Macbeth, v. 3 

I must be lain to pawn both 'i Henry IV, ii, 1 

fain would I go to meet the archbishop — ii. 3 

would fuin hear H4iine music — ii. 4 

his grace woiilil fain have dune HenryV. i. I 

I would full fain heard s<imc question — iii. 2 
for I would tain U- about the ears of — iii. 7 
I would fain see the man — iv. 7 



FAIN— fain would iniiic eyes be ....IHenryfl. ii. 3 

are glad and fain liv flight to — iii, 2 

fain would I woo her, vet I dare not — v. 3 
and birds, are fain of climbing high.2;/<-nr!/ f/. ii. 1 
ail. York, no man ali\e HO tain as I.. — iii. I 
fain would 1 go to ehale his paly lips — iii. 2 

and liiiii togo withastair — iv. 2 

w.inlil lain lliat all were well 3Henri/ VI. iv. 7 

heavv.ancl I lain wool. I sleep Uiclmrd 111 i. I 

how tiiiii, like I'ilate, would 1 wash.. — i. -I 

tile tciidei- priiu'L! wi-nhl fain have come — iii. I 
he lain wuuhl lune lliiiig trom Urn. Henry VIII.W. 1 
that I was ruin toilrau- mine honour — v. 3 

w.inid lain have anned to-day .. rroid/j Sf Cress, iii. 1 

I would lain see them meet — v. 1 

how fain would I have hated all .7'imono/-/J(/i. iv. 3 

he would lain have hail it JuliuaCtPtar, i. 2 

1 w.iuld lain think it were not Lenr, i. 2 

which 1 would lain e;iU master — i. 1 

1 would lain learn to lie — i. 1 

and wast thou fain, poor father — iv. 7 

lain would I dwell on form {rep.). . Romeo f^- Jul, ii. 2 
that would fain lay knife aboard .... — ii. 4 
I would forget it fain; but, O, it presses — iii. 2 
I would fain prove so. But what might. Hamlet, ii. 2 
hath there been such a time (I'd fain.... — ii. 2 
and fain I would beguile the tedious day — iii. 2 

that fain would blaze, but that this — iv. 7 

tliat would fain have a measure to Othello, ii. 3 

for T would verv fain s|ieak with vou.... — iv. 1 

F.\ I NT- whieli IS most liiiut Tempesl, (einl.) 

chanting faint liynuis to the cold ..Mid. A'. Dr. i. 1 
upon faint priniiose-heds were wont.. — i. 1 
3'ou faint with wandering in the wood — ii. 3 
than my faint means would grant. . Mer. of Ven. i. 1 

I faint almost to death As you Like it, ii. 4 

much oppressed, and faints fur succour — ii. i 

but I am faint, my gashes cry Macbeth, i. 2 

possesseth lue, and I am faint King John, v. ? 

their own ground in faint retire — v. 5 

the cvgiiet to this pale faint swan .... — v. 7 

but if you faint, as fearing Richard II. ii. 1 

with heavy nothing faint and shrink — ii 2 
breathless and faint, leaning upon. . 1 Henry IV. i. 3 

in thy faint slumbers, I by thee — ii. 3 

60 faint, so spiritless, so dull 'IHenry I V.\. I 

rendering faint (luittancc, wearied .. .. — i. 1 

of indigent faint souls, past HenryV. i. I 

of his kingdom too faint a number .. — iii. 6 

army is grown weak and faint 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

why faint you, lords, my title's gooA.ZHenry VI. i. 1 
hath made thee faint and fly ere this — i. 4 

the diadem from taint Henry's head — ii. I 
soft courage makes your followers tiiint — ii. 2 
ert'use of blood doth make me faint . . — ii. 6 
and warriors faint! why, 'twere .... — v. 4 
it faints me, to think w-liat follows. Henry VIII. ii. 3 
the faint defects of age, must.. Troilus <§- Cressida. i. 3 

nor faint in the pursuit — ii. 2 

to set a gloss on faint deeds .... Timon of Athens, i. 2 
has friendship such a faint and milky — iii. 1 
with their faint reply this answer jtiiii — iii. 3 
leave this faint puling, and lament. (Vin'o/am/s, iv. 2 

O, I grow faint: run, Jvueius JutiusCtesur, ii. 4 

cunning faints under his chance. /l?t(o/i?/ ^C'leo. ii. 3 
I faint; O Iras, Charmian, — 'tis no .. — ii. 5 
villain hath mocked me: I amfaint. C!/m6eiine, iv. 2 
you come in faint for want of meat .. — v. 4 

give me leave; I faint — v. 5 

if fear hath made thee faint. . Titus Andronicus, ii. 4 
I have perceived a most faint neglect .... Lear, i. 4 

he faints! my lord, my lord— Break — v. 3 

or I shall faint: aplague o' hoth.Romeo^Juliet, iii. I 
I have a faint cold fear thrills through — iv. 3 
speech so faint [Kn/. -speak so faintly?]. 0//irfto, iii. 3 
alas, he faints: O Cassio! Cassio! Cassio! — v. 1 
FAJNTED— and now he fainted . . As you Like it, iv. 3 

and expectation fainted Antony^ Cleopatra, iii. H 

FAINTER— but in a lainter kind ..Cymbeline, iii. 2 
FAINT-HEAKTED- 
fttint-hearted Woodville, prizest him.l Hmry VI. i. 3 

faint-hearted degenerate King 3Henry IT. i. 1 

faint-hearted boy, arise, and look. Titus Andron. iii. 1 
F.\INTING— and cried, in fainting.^liyoK Like,\v. 3 

almost at fainting, under Comedy of Errors, i. 1 

the weak door of our fainting land ..King John, v. 7 

kindlv give one fainting kiss 1 Henry VI. ii. 5 

ond that my fainting words do warrant — ii. a 

fainting, despair; despairing, y\c\(X. Richard Ifl. v. 3 

help me with thv fainting hand . . TitusAndron. ii. 4 

FALNTLY-I faintly broke with thee. King John,\\. 2 

perceives it is but faintly borne Hic/iardll. i. 3 

prays but faintly, and would be denied — v. 3 
faintly through a rusty beaver yeepB.. HenryV. iv. 2 

like pale ghosts, faintly besiege IHenry VI. i. 2 

'twas very faintly he said, rise Coriolanus, v. 1 

seen and heard, Gut faintly Lear, i. 2 

fainth' siutke after the prompter. fiowico -^ Juliet, i. 4 

IKiii.] why do you speak so laintly?.. .. 0//i«Ho, iii. 3 

now he denies it faintly, and laughs .... — iv. 1 

F A I N T N ESS-faintness constraineth. il//(/. iV. Dr. iii. 2 

licwrayed the faintness of my I Henry VI. iv. 1 

FA Hi— "and confer Itiir Milan Tempest, i. 2 

if the ill-spirit liiive so fair a house — i. 2 

the marriage of the kinui's fair daughter — ii. I 

and the fair soul herselt weighed — ii. 1 

fair encounter of two most rare aft'cetions — iii. I 

quiet days, lair issue, and long life — ie. 1 

and I would call it fair ploy — v. I 

and all the fair effects of TwoGen.nf Verona, i. I 

of all the fair resort of gentlemen — i. 2 

think'st tliou of the fair sir Eglainour? — i. v 

not so fair, boy, as well-favoured — ii. I 

that she is not so fair _ — ii. I 

80 painted, t<^) make her fair — ii. I 

miulc use and fair advantage — ii. 4 

she's fair, and so is Julia — ii. f 

to love fair Silvia — ii. li 

that miule her fair! — ii. 1; 

when his fair course is ii. r 



FAI 



FAIR— OS your fair daughter . . Two Oen. of Ver. iii. 1 

by her fair influence fostered — iii. I 

but Silvia Is too fair — iv. 2 

holy, fair, and wise, is she — iv. 2 (song* 

is Hiie kind, as she is fair? — iv. 2 (sung, 

is she not passing fair? — iv. 1 

was ns fair as you — iv. 1 

she says, it is tt fair one — v. 2 

but iiearls are fair — v. 2 

for luy meed, but one fair look — v. 1 

he's a good dog, and a fair dog Merry ll'iees, i. 1 

he iagood andfair — i. I 

here comes fair mistress Anne — i. i 

I will wait on him, fair mistress Anne — i. I 

two thousand, fair woman — ii. 2 

like a fair house, built — ii. 2 

what is fair, William? — iv. I 

the dear love I bear to fair Anne — iv. 6 

each fair instalment, coat — v. 5 

helow fair knighthood's bending linec — v. 5 

do not these fair yokes become — v. 5 

he did seek tlie love of fair Olivia .7'H'e(y7/iAVff/i/, i. 2 

there is a fair behaviour in thee — i. 2 

this thy fair and outward character — i. 2 

blessyou, fair shrew! — i. 3 

fair lady, do jou think you hove .... — i. 3 

'tis a fair young man — i. 4 

if you were the devil, you are fair.... — i. .'i 

farewell, fair cruelty! — i. 5 

that envy could not" but call fair — ii. I 

whose fair flower, being once displayed — ii. 4 
I am slain by a fair cruel maid .. — ii. 4 (song) 

is your servant's name, fair princess — iii. 1 

for the fair kindness you have — iii. 4 

but I bespake you fair — v. i 

and the fair sister to her unhappy. .Ueoj. /or /Wra». i. .'> 

fciitle and fair, your brother ' — i. 5 

y your fair prayer to — i. i> 

be you content, lair maid — ii. 2 

repent you, fair one, of the sin — ii. 3 

how now, fair maid? — ii. 4 

my mother played my father fttirl .. — iii. 1 

the liand that hath made you fair .. — iii I 

should keep the body of it ever fair . . — iii. 1 

to you, fair and gracious daughter .. — iv. 3 

too brown for a fair praise Much Ado, i. I 

prompting me how fair young Uero is — i. 1 

if thou dost love fair Hero — i. I 

and tell fair Hero I am Claudio — i. 1 

but by the fair weather that you — i. 3 

and fair Hero is won — ii. I 

one woman is fair; yet I am wel I — ii. 3 

fair, or I'll never look on her — ii. 3 

they say, the lady is fair — ii. 3 

by this day, she's a fair lad V — ii. 3 

fair Beatrice, I thank you for — ii. 3 

fare thee well most foul, most fair! .. — iv. ! 

I do believe your fair cousin is wronged — iv. 1 

"ood-inorrow to this fair assembly . . — v. 4 

I'll tell you largelj' of fair Hero's death — v. 4 

soft and fair, friar. Which is Beatrice? — v. 4 
now fair Hippolyta, our nuptial . .Vid. A'. Dream, i. 1 

be advised, fair maid — i. 1 

therefore, fair Herinia, question — i. 1 

for you, fair llermia, look you — i. I 

God speed, fair Helena! — i. I 

fair? that fair again nnsav (r«p.) .... — i. 1 

Yours would I catch, fair Hermia.. .. — i. I 

I am thought 06 fair OS she — i. 1 

tell him of fair Uermio's flight — i. 1 

and make hira with fair .i^gle break — ii. 2 

at a fab vestal, throned by the west — ii. 2 

wliere is Lysander, and fair Herinia? — ii. 2 

do I speak you fair? or, rather — ii. 2 

fair love, you faint with wandering.. — ii. 3 

amen, amen, to that fair prayer — ii. 3 

ladies, or fair ladies, I would wish you — iii. 1 

if I were fair, Thisby, I were only . . — iii. 1 

thy fair virtue's force, perforce doth — iii. 1 

that would not let him bide, fair Helena — iii. 2 

my life, my soul, fair Helena! — iii. 2 

I am as fair now, as I was erewhile. . — iii. 2 

oiiening on Neptune with fair blessed — iii. 2 

and k iss thy fair large ears — i v . I 

and bless it to all fair posterity — ii-. I 

we will, fair ci ueen, up to the — iv. 1 

my lord, fair Helen told me of — iv. 1 

fair Helena in fancy following me .. — ie. 1 

fair lovers, you are fortunately met.. — iv. I 

my next is, most fair Pyromus — iv. 1 

for parting my fair PyramuB and me — v. 1 

fair weather after you! Love's L.Lost, i. 2 

OS our best-moving fair solicitor — ii. I 

the only soil of his fair virtue's gloss — ii. 1 

which hislair tongue (eoiieeit'sexpositor) — ii. I 

Navarre had notice of your liiir approach — ii. I 

fair princess, welcome to the court {rep.) — ii. I 

not ftTr the world, fair inatlam — ii. 1 

now fair befal your mask! Fair fall — ii. 1 

and hold fair friendship with his .... — ii. I 

yinirfair self should make a yielding — ii. 1 

yon may not come, fair princess — ii. I 

though 80 denied fair harbour in my — ii I 

sweet health anil fair desires consort — ii I 

to feel only looking on fairest of fair — ii. 1 

I am fair that shcRit, Olid tlierenpcm.. — iv.l 

not fair? alack, for woe! Yes, madam, fair — ie. I 

where fair is not, praise cannot mend — iv.l 

fair payment for foul words — iv. I 

nothing hilt fair is that which you .. — iv.l 

O heresy in fair, fit for these days! .. — iv. I 

though'foul, shall have fair praise .. — iv.l 

that tiiou art fair, is most infolliblc — iv. 1 (let.l 

more fairer than fair, beautiful — iv. I (let.) 

then thou, fair sun, which on my.... — iv. 3 

OS fair as day — iv. 3 

a blossom, pa-ssing foir, playing — iv. 3 (verses! 

ilo meet, as at a fairj in her fair cheek — iv. 3 

no face is fair, that 18 not — iv. 3 

is she liorn to make black fair — iv. 3 



FAI 



— V. 2 






FAIR — I'll prove lier fair, or talk.. Lav, 

the hand of his fair mistress 

ibrerun fair L/^n-e, strewing her 

an' if my face were but as fair as — 
compared to twenty thoufand fairs .. 

fair as a text B in a coity-hook 

sent to von from the fair Dumain? ,. 
fair UulV,— ?ay you so, fair lord (rep.) 
a calf fair lady? No, a fair lord ealf. . 

fair ladies, i aasked, are roses in 

fair sir, God save yon ! where is 

meetings, markets, fairs — 

and fair time of day! I'.air, in all . . . . — 

fair, gentle sweet, yoiir wit — 

transgression some fair excuse — 

I was, fair madam — 

thou partest a fair fray — 

all one, my fair, sweet, honey monarch — 

for all yoiu' fair endeavours — 

for your fair sakes ha^'c we neglected — 

mate us both,— fair ladies, you — 

a beard, fair health, and honesty — 

she is fair, and fairer than that. . Mer. of I'enice. 
I did receive fair speechless messages — 

to Belmont, to fair Portia — 

God grant them a fair departru-e .... — 
was tiie best deserxing a fair lady .... — 
rest you fair, ^ood signior 
say this, fair sir. you spit 



— i. 3 

— i. 3 



— ii. a 

— iii. 2 
. — iii. 2 

iii. 2 (scroll) 

— iii. 2 



iii. i 



Biiy llll^, litil BIJ . \ l.',l C[riL lilt 

an equal pound (.if your fair llesh 

I like not fair tcrnis — ]■ •^ 

then stood as fair as any comer — ii. 1 

in faith, 'tis a fair hand; and whiter — ii. 4 

is the fair hand tliat writ — ii. J 

was not that letter from fair Jessica? — ii. 1 
fair Jessica shall he my torch-bearer — ii. 1 
and fair she is, if that mine eyes — — ii. 6 

like herself, wise, fair, and true — ii. tj 

do it in hope of fair advantages — ii. 7 

to come view fair Portia — ii. 7 

as o'er a brook, to see fair Portia .... — ii. 7 

and such fair ostents of love as shall 

tlie grossness with fair ornament — 

find I here? fair Portia's counterfeit? 

chance as fair, and choose as true! — 

a gentle scroll ; fair lady, by your .... 

so, thrice fair lady, stand I, even so. . 

a thousand times more fail- 

I was the loi"d of this fair mansion . . 
I got a promise of this fair one here. . 
I shall obey you in all fair commands 

fair thoughts, and happy hours 

speak me fair in death; and, when .. 

ikir sir, you are well overtaken — iv. 2 

even by tliine own fair eyes, wherein — v. 1 

where the ways are fair enough — v. 1 

fair ladies, you droj) manna in — v. 1 

that they are fair with their As you Like it^ i. 1 

those that she makes fan', she scarce — i. 2 
when nature hath made a fair creature — i- 2 
fair princess, you have lost much ... . — i. 2 
no, fair princess; he is the general .. — i. 2 
fair and excellent ladies any thing {rep.) — i. 2 

fare .von well, fair gentleman — i. 2 

fair sir, I pity her, and wish for her sake — ii. 4 

if ladies be but yomig, and fair — ii. 7 

in fair round belly, with good — ii. 7 

tlie fair, the chaste, and nnexpressive — iii. 2 

but the fair of Rosalind — iii. 2 (verses) 

fair y outli, I would I could make . . 
well, I am not fair; and therefore 
my tair Rosalind, I come within . . 
would have lived many a fair year 

my errand is to you, fair youth 

she says, I am not fair, that I lack 
good-morrow, fair ones: ^n-ay you .. — iv 

the boy is fair, of female favom- — iv 

a fair name : wast born i' the — v 

and you, fair sister — v 

these tidings to this fair assembly.. .. — v 

which make fair gifts fairer AlVs Well, i 

save you, fair queen — i 

was tliis fair face the cause, quoth she — i. 3 (song) 
jiow, fair one, does yorn* business .... — ii. 1 

fair maid, send forth thine eye — ii. 3 

to eacli of you one fair and virtuous — ii. 3 

that flames in your fair eyes — ii. 3 

fair one, I think not so 

slie is young, wise, fair; in these ... 
where thou wast shot at by fair eyes 
he is too good and fair for death — 

she's a fair creature; will you go 

but fair soul, in your fine 

the time is fair again 

scorned a fair colour, or expressed . . 
your amorous token for fair JIandliu 

ny the fair grace and speech of 

I will buy me a son-in-law in a fair 
to see fair Padua, nursery of arts.. Taim 

have access to our fair mistress 

about a schoolmaster for fair Bianca 

to fair Bianca, so beloved of me 

and if you speak me fair 

he that has the two fair daughters . . 

fair Leda's daughter had (rep.) 

have Grcmiu to keeii you fair 

Katliarina, fair, and virtuous? 

unto Bianca, fair and x'irtuous 

the jacks fair witliin, and the Jills fair 

she Ijears me fair in liand 

fair lovely maid, once more 

young budding virgin, fair, and fresh 

the parents of so fair a child 

fair sir, and you my merry mistress. . 

my fair Bianca, bid my father 

now, fair befal thee, good Petruchio! 
wisdom of your duty, fair Bianca. . . . 

as whi rlwinds shalce fair buds 

but love, fair looks, and true obedience 

we were, fair queen, two lads .... Winter's Tiile,i.2 



iii. 3 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 



— ii. 3 

— ii. 3 

— iii. 2 
iii. 4 (letter) 

— iii. 6 

— iv. 2 

— V. 3 

— V. 3 

— V. 3 

— V. 3 

— V. 3 
ingofSh.i. \ 



i. 2 
ii. 1 

ii. 1 
ii. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 2 
iv. 5 
iv. ,5 
iv. 5 
iv. 5 
V. 2 
V. 2 
V. 2 
T. 2 



[ --^^^ 3 

F.\.IR-shouldnot produce fair issue. (rM(^e7-'s7'«/(?, ii. 1 

tliat I now may be in fair Bohemia — iv. (cho.) 

haunts wakes, fairs, and bear-baitings — iv. 2 

or I'll be thine, my fair, or not — iv. 3 

shepherdess, (a fair one are you) .... — iv. 3 

how now, fair shepherd? — iv. 3 

to wash the hand, was fair before! .. — iv. 3 

nothing else but fair posterity — iv. 3 

my oatli to this my fair beloved — iv. 3 

yourself, and your fair princess — iv. 3 

all that you speak, shows fair — iv. 3 

and your fair princess, goddess! .... — v. 1 

in the chase it seems of tliis fair couple — v. 1 

please you to interiiose, fair madam. . — v. 3 
at any Syracusan marts and fairs. c'omci/;/ of Err. i. 1 

my decayed fair a sunny look of his — ii. 1 

so he wouhl keej) fair (iuai'tcr with .. — ii. 1 

keep then fair league and truce — ii. 2 

plead 3'ou to n'lC, fair dame? — ii. 2 

speak fair, ijccunic disloyalty — iii. 2 

bear a fair presence — iii. 2 

yom- beams, fair sun, being by — iii. 2 

but her fair sister, possessed with.. .. — iii. 2 

would refuse so fair an oft'ered chain — iii. 2 

wind blows fair from land — iv. 1 

did'st speak him fair? — iv. 2 

they speak us fair-, give us gold — iv. 4 

at a burden two fair sons — v. 1 

and this fair gentlewoman, her sister — v. 1 

anon: fair is foul, ami foul is fair Macbelh,\. 1 

so foul and fair a dav I hax'e not seen.. — i. 3 

things that do sound so fair? — i. 3 

fair and ntjble hostess, we are — i. G 

bless yon, fair dame! I am not — iv. 2 

most lawful claim to this fair island.. AV/i^'/u/i/i, i. I 

at least from fair five hundred — i. 1 

fair fall the bones that took — i.l 

till then, fair boy, will I not _ ii. 1 

and she a fair divided excellence — ii. 2 

for Anjou, and fair Touraiue, Maine — ii. 2 

and this rich fair town we make .... — ii. 2 

when his fair angels would salute .. — ii. 2 

but thou art fair; and at thy birth .. — iii. 1 

to tread doxvn fair respect of — iii. 1 

'tis true, fair daughter — iii. 1 

to curse the fair proceedings of — iii. 1 

of fair Milan cardinal, and from pope — iii. 1 

O fair return of banished majesty ! .. — iii. 1 

fair day, adieu! which is the side.... — iii. 1 

for your fair safety ; so I kiss — iii. 3 

fair affliction, peace — iii. 4 

in the fair multitude of those — iii. 4 

my Arthur, ray fair son ! — iii. 4 

read it? is it not fair WTit? — iv. 1 

knew you of this fair work ? — iv. 3 

make fair weather in your blustering — v. 1 

having our fair order xvritten down.. — v. 2 

of this most fair occasion — v. 4 

to try the fair adventure of to-morrow — v. f> 

the more fair and crystal is Richard II. i. 1 

first, the fair reverence of your — i.l 

I'll answer thee in any fair degree . . — 1. 1 

but my fair name (despite of — i. I 

or seven fair branches, springing .... — i. 2 

to direct these fair designs — i. 3 

quiet confines fright fair peace — i. 3 

shall not regreet our fair dominions — i. U 

the flowers, fair ladies; and thy steps — i. 3 

whom fair befal in heaven 'mougst . . — ii. 1 

but by fair sequence and succession? — ii. 1 

the wind sits fair for news to go .... — ii. 2 

and yet your fair discourse hath .... — ii. 3 

stained the beauty of a fail' queen's . . — iii. 1 

Richard's night, to BolingbrtMie's fair day — iii. 2 

the news is A'ery fair and good — iii. 3 

lap of fair king Richard's land — iii. 3 

our fair appointments may be — iii. 3 

should stain so fair a show ! — iii. 3 

number of his fair demands — iii. 3 

so poorly, and to speak so fair? — iii. 3 

and show fair duty to his majesty . . — iii. 3 

so much dishonour my fair stars — iv. 1 

by tliat fair sun that shows me — iv. 1 

in so fair a troop, to read — iv. 1 

name it, fair cousin. Fair cousin! — iv. 1 

do not see, my fair rose wither — v. 1 

join not witli grief, fair woman — v. 1 

pluck my fair son from mine age — v. 2 

a fair hot wench in flame-coloured. Alhnirn IV. i. 2 

he, that wandering knight so fair.... — i. 2 

that's even as fiiir as— at hand — ii. 1 

to die a fair death for all this — ii. 2 

and show it a fair pair of heels — ii. 4 

by'r lady you fought fair — ii. 4 

these promises are fair; the parties . . — ill. 1 

in a new channel fair and evenly .... — iii. 1 

the moon shines fair, yon may — jjj' * 

sung by a fair queen in a suinmer's.. — iii. 1 

where you did give a fair and natural — v. 1 

from this svvarm of fair advantages.. — v. 1 

we offer fair, take it advisedly — v. I 

tlie arras are fair, when the intent .. — v. 2 

in this fair rescue thou hast bronglit — v. 4 

for doing these fair rites of tenderness — v. 4 

this business so fair is done ■— v. 5 

with the blood of fair king Richard.. 2H(?«ri/ IV. i. 1 

(yet likely of fair birth) — i. 3 

tap for tap, and so part fair — ii. 1 

beshrew your heart, fair dangliter! . . — ii. 3 

then feed, and lie fat, my fair Caliiiolis — ii. I 

good j'oke of buUoclis at Stamford fair? — iii. 2 

health and fair greeting fnun our — iv. 1 

insurrection with xour fair honours.. — iv. 1 

but write her fair words still — iv. 4 

lost the other day at lliuclcley fair?.. — v. 1 

now speak sir Jolm Falstalf fair — v. 2 

1 like this fair proceeduig of tlie king's — v. 
make you merry with fair Katharine — (ciiil.) 

full of grace, and fair regard llrmijl'. i. I 

that fair queen Isabel — i. 2 



FAI 



FAIH — the pleasure of our fair cousin . . llcnnj I', i 

that this fair action may on foot ... . — i 

as I may, in fair terms — it 

one time or otlicr, in fair terms — ii 

now sits the wind fair, and we will. . — ii, 

that grows not in a fair coosent — ii. 

we doubt not of a fair and lucky war — ii. 

say, if my father render fair re^)ly .. — ii. 

soon despatched with fair conditions — ii. 

disguise fair nature with hard-favoured — iii. 

ycmr fresh fan- virgins, and your — iii. 

and your fair show shall suck away — iv. 

no, my fair cousin; if we are marked — iv. 

health and fair time of day — v. 

to our most fair and princely cousin — v. 

will yon, fair sister, go witli — v. 

fair Katliarine, and most fair! will you — v. 

fair Katharine, if you will love in'e — v. 

what says she, tair one? — v. 

a fair face will wither — v. 

speak, my fair, and fairly, I pray tlieo — v, 

what say st thou, my fair"flower-de-luce? — v 

most fair Katharine, will you have me? — v 

1 would have her learn, my fair cousin — v. 
many a fair French city, for one fair — v. 
take her, fair son, ami finm licr lilood — v, 
sword 'twi.xt England anil fair I ranee — ■ v, 
your fair minds let tills acceptance — v. 2 (ch( 

by guileful fair words iicace 1 Henry VI. i 

fair maid, Is't thou wilt do — i. 

be not dismayed, fair lady — ii 

that cause, fair nepiiew — ii 

farewell, and fair be all thy hopes! . . — ii 

by fair jiersuasions, mixed with — iii 

my leave of thee, fair son — iv 

to woo so fair a dame to be — v. 

fair Margaret knows, that Suffolk . . — v 

as is fair Margaret, he be linked — v, 

dukedoms for a duke's fair daughter. 2.Hfnryrj. i. 

hath pulled fair Fugland down .... — i, 

thy sons, fair slips of such a stock . . — ii. 

have you laid fair the bed? — iii. 

I lost fair England's view — iii. 

or banished fair England's — iii. 

entreat him, speak him fair — iv. 

he hath a very fair warning — iv. 

but I must shake fair weather — v. 

and entreat them fair; come 3Hemy II. i. 

upon my target three fair shining suns — ii. 

how now fair lords? what fare? — ii. 

fair queen of England, worthy Margaret — iii 

why, say, fair queen, whence springs — iii. 

lady Bona, thy fair sister — iii. 

that our fair queen and mistress — iii. 

thy news? and yours, fair gueen? .. — iii. 

and mine, fair lady Bona, joins — iii. 

son Edward, she is fair and virtuous — iii. 

till then, fair hope must — iv. 

bj^ fair or foul means we must — iv. 

fair lords, take leave, and stand — iv. 

the waves, as speak tliein fair — v. 

curtailed of this fair proportion Richard III. i. 

to entertain these fair well-spoken .. — i. 

in years; fair, and not jealous — i. 

curse not thyself, fair creature — i. 

sliiue out, fair sun, till I have — i. 

because I cannot flatter, and speak fair — i. 

help you to many fair preferments .. — i. 

now fair befal thee, and thy noble .. — i. 

enmity, fair love of hate — ii. 

O my fair cousin, I must not saj' so. . — iii. 

in air of yom- fair [Coi. ifn(. -good] looks — iii. 

now, fair befal you! he deserved .... — iii. 

bounty, virtue, fair humility — iii. 

looker-on of two fair queens — iv. 

only mocked with two fair babes .... — iv. 

and entreat me fair, or with — iv. 

virtuous and fair, royal and gracious — iv. 

this fair alliance quickly shall — iv. 

infer fair England's peace — iv. 

in force unto her fair life's end — iv. 

king Henry, and thy fair son Edward — v. 

lines of fair comfort and encouragement — v. 

andconquer, for fair England's sake! — v. 

the remembrance of so fair a dream.. — v. 

wordof corn-age, fair saint George .. — v. 

rescue, fair lord, or else the day — v. 

upon this fair cor.j unction — v. 

by God's fair ordinance conjoin — v. 

plenty, and fair prosperous aa.vs! — v. 

wi th treason wound this fair land's peace — v. 

than ever they were fan- Henry I'lll. i. 

dedicates to fair content, and you — i. 

the very thought of tlus fair company — i. 

a sweet society of fair ones — i. 

if these fair ladies pass a.way — i . 

yon are welcome, my fair guests .... — i. 

rise ill their fair cheeks, my lord — i. 

so noble and so fair assembly — i. 

and, under yom" fair conduct, crave. . — i. 

3'ou hold a fair assembly — i. 

come hither: what fair lady's that?.. — i. 

healths to drink to these fair ladies . — i. 

so fair parts of woman on you — ii . 

that you may, fair lady, perceive — ii. 

to approve the fair conceit — ii 

ha.tli married the fair lady — iii. 

there is more in it than fair visage .. — iii. 

cast her fair eyes to heaven — iv. 

simony was fair play — iv. 

wise, fair spoken, aud persuading — iv. 

and fair purgation to the world — v. 

a fair young maid that j'ct wants.... — v. 

as if \ve keiJt a fair here! — v. 

of wisdom, and fair virtue, than — v. 

to tell j'ou, lair hclioUcTS.. Troitus ^- Cressiila, (prol. 

and when fair Cressid comes — i. 

thou answer'st, she is fair — i. 

if she be fair, 'tis tile better for her .. — i. 

so fair as Helen: au' she (ri-7Jra/i,'(() .. — i. 



FAl 



TAIR— «ay I, she i> not foir? . . Troilut ttCrntida, \. I 

llolcn must iii'i'iU Ih' fair — i. I 

lUi a fair iiu->Mmo to his kiii(?ly — i. 3 

tUir li'tivi, 1111(1 luif-'c MTurity — i. 3 

iiiir Inril -■Km-iis, U*t nil' toiicii — i. 3 

slic.ulil lie 'siaiK' Hector liiir — i. 3 

tile soil of hiT lair raiic willed oft' .... — ii. 2 

tliuii ait a fair lorse — ii. 3 

like fair fniit ill an tinuliolcHunie .. — ii. 3 

111'. )ii our fair rc<tue>t. iiiiteiit — ii. 3 

f.iir lie to yon, iiiv lor.l. and to l;r;<.) — iii. 1 

fair ile>ire.-i, ill all fair measure — iii. 1 

tair iiueen'. fair llioii^ilits be i.rep.) .. — iii. 1 

cf fair words. Yuu speak your lair .. — iii. 1 

tiiir iirinee, here is good broken — iii. 1 

IVw words to fair faith — iii. a 

if to-morrow lie a fair day — iii. 3 

tile eiit'ieed Antenor, the fair Crcssid — iv. 1 

merits fair 111 len best — iv. 1 

i.ii: Dioiiied, you do as chapmen .... — iv. I 

iair\irlues all, to which the Grecians — iv. 4 

cntivAt her fair; and, by my soul, fair — iv. 1 

fair lady Ciessid, so 1 lease you — iv. 1 

in your'eheck, pleads your fair usage — iv. 1 

lie on his tail" worth — \\\ \ 

in aiipoiiitment fre>h and fair — iv. 5 

that winter IVom your lips, fair lady — iv. 5 

stand fair. I pray thee; let me — iv. .'; 

amorous view on the lair Cressid — iv. 5 

from her daiiLTlitcr, my fair love — v. 1 

so now, fair prince of Troy — v. 1 

farewell, revolted f;iirl andDiome^l.. — v. 2 

and wind of youi- fair sword — v. 3 

t) 'tis fair play. Fool's ploy — v. 3 

pre.^nt the fair steed to my lady — v. ,'> 

putielled core, so fair without — v. 9 

the maid is fair, o' the youngest. Timon of. Miens, \. 1 

faults that are rich, are fair — i. 2 

much grace, fair ladies, set a fair — i. 2 

received, not without fair reword — i. 2 

with a iiiible fury, and fair spirit .... — iii. 5 

to make an ugly" deed look fair — iii. 5 

has done fair service, and slain — iii. b 

foul, fair; wrong, right — iv. 3 

but if he sack fair Athens — v. 2 

now the fair goddess, Fortune Coriolanus, i. b 

and when my face is fair — i. 9 

my us fair as noble ladies — ii. 1 

ou fair grimnd, 1 could beat forty — iii. 1 

could he not sjieak them fair? — iii. 1 

speak tiiir: you may salve — iii. 2 

only fair speech. I think 't will — iii. 2 

at tile price of one fair word — iii. 3 

many an heir of these fair edifices . . — iv. 4 

he does fair justice; if he give — Iv. 4 

you have made fair work (repra(crf).. — iv. 6 

fairhandsl you, and your crafts I (/c/i.) — iv. 6 

with our fair entreaties haste — y. 1 

yours is as fair a name Julius Cepsar, i. 2 

it was a vision, fair, and fortunate . . — ii. 2 

in thee, foir and admired! Aniony ^-Cleo. i. 1 

iiave fair meanings, sir. And fair words — ii. 6 

but there is never a fair woman — ii. G 

give light to thy fair way! — iii. 2 

the morn is fair: ^ood-morrow — iv. 4 

advantage serves for a fair victory . . — iv. 7 

on what fair demands — v. 2 

I do not think, so fair an outward . . Ci/mbcliiie, i. 1 

to be more fair, virtuous, wise — i. 5 

as fair, and asg:ood — i. 5 

something too tiair, and too good .... — i. 5 

get ground of your fair mistress — i. 5 

so precious 'twixt fair and foul? — i. 7 

a lady so fair, and fastened to an cnipcrj' — i. 7 

that temple, thy fair mind — ii. I 

luiil, thou fair heaven ! — iii. 3 

as record of fair act — iii. 3 

for she's fair and royal — iii. 5 

jir'ythee, fair yotith, think tis no — iii. 6 

tair youth, come in: discourse is heavy — iii. 6 

this forwardness makes our hopes fair — iv. 2 

moulded the stuff so fair — v. 4 

how fair the tribune sjieaks Tilus Andrnn. i. I 

fair lords, your fortunes are alike — i. 2 

clear up. fair queen, that cloudy — i. 2 

ascend, fair mieen, Fantheon — i. 2 

with w*ords,fa!rlooks, and liberality? — ii. I 

li«*l*'r, fair mo/lam: let it be ".. — \^.'^ 

tair Vhilomela, she but lost her — ii. .'j 

and fair men call for grace — iii. I 

like to her, fair as you are — iv. 2 

brought up a neck to a fair end — iv. 4 

smooth and speak him fair — v. 2 

before thee stands this fair Ilesperides. . rerirU's, i. 1 

fair glass of light, I loved you — i. I 

you're a fair viol, and your sense — i. 1 

from so fair a tree as j'our fair self — i.l 

lie hath a fair daughter, and to-morrow — ii. 1 

would Ik- denied of your faircourtesy.... — ii. 3 

and she is fair too, is she not? ticy)cu/c!/).. — ii. .5 

a.s voii are as virtuous as fair — \\. b 

to near your fate, fair creature — iii. 2 

is she not a fair creature? iv. B 

welcome, fair one ! is't not ogooflly — v. I 

fiiir one, all goodness that consists — v. 1 

111 be wive<l to fair ilariim — v. 2 (Gower) 

did wed the fair Thai.^o, at I'entnpolis .. — v. 3 

yet was his mother fair Lear, i. 1 

thisamplc third of ourfair kingdom .... — i.l 

queen of us, of ours, and our fair France — i.l 

Clinic, my fair Cordelia — i.l 

your name, fair gentlewoman? — i. 4 

"there was never yet fair woman — iii. 2 

this seems a fair dcKrviiig — iii. 3 

march to wakes and fairs — iii. 6 

where am I? fair daylight? — iv. 7 

fur your claim, fair sister — v. 3 

thy riutside looks so fiiir and w arlike .... — v. 3 
in fair Verona, where we iay.. Homeo^JuUrl, (prol.) 

lair 1 love. A right fair mark, fair cu/. — i. 1 



^7] 

FAIR— locks fair daylight out .... Ilmnm /fJuliel, i. 1 
she is too fair, too wise; wisely too fair — i. 1 

fair ladie.s' brows, being black (rep.).. — i.l 

show me 11 mistres.s that is jiassiug fair — 1. 1 

who pasjcd that pas-.ing fair? — i.l 

my I'uiiMMt iiiiil fair according voice — i. 2 

trndire :ilHmt through fair Vefoiio .. — i. 2 

mv I'liir niece Kosaline — i. 2 (note) 

aiMiriis.eiiil.lv - i. 2 

Klips the tiiir K'lsiiline, whom thou .. — i. 2 

tilt! voii Nuw heruiir, nunc else — i. 2 

iihsiMired ill this liiir volume lies .... — i. 3 

for fair without the fair wiiliin — i. 3 

the game was ne'er so fair — i. 3 

a whisiiering tale in a fair lady's car — i. 5 
show a fair prcseliec, and put off these — i. .'> 
that fair, which love groaned for (rep.) — i. i(cho.) 
Venus one fair word, one nick-name — ii. 1 
my invocation is fair and honest .... — ii. I 
arise, l'air8un,andkilltheeiiviousmoou — ii. 2 
her maid art far more fair than she. . — ii. 2 
neither, fair saint, if either thee dislike — ii. 2 
in truth, fair Montague, I am too fond — ii. 2 

strained from t!i;it l';iir use — ii. 3 

set oil III, r'li: n;(iiMer of rich Capulet — ii. 3 
(Indyr- ii : : i L'eutlewoniau . . — ii. 4 
liiaiieut! I I I 111 I'air, bade him — ^ii. 1 
did e\er III :i_ II Ix - |i M) fair a cave? — <ii. 2 

offairdeiiiesiies, youthful, and iiolilv — iii. .'i 
so quick, so fair an eye, as Paris hath — iii..') 

had part in this fair maid — iv. .'> 

stick your rosemary on this fair corse — iv. S 
to follow this fair corse unto her grave — iv. a 
three hours will fan- Juliet wuke .... — v. 2 
l'air.Iuliet[(-W. A/i/.-iir wanting] that — v. 3 
it is snpiiosed, the fair creature died — v. 3 

why art tliou yet so fair? — v. 3 

toi-'ether with that fair and warlike form. Hamlet, i. 1 

take tliy fair hour, Laertes — i. 2 

why, 'tis a loving and a fair reply — i. 2 

most fair return of greetings — ii. 2 

one fair daughter, and no more — ii. 2 

soft you, now! the fair Ophelia — iii. 1 

are you fair? What means — iii. 1 

and" fair, you should admit no discourse — iii. 1 
the expectancy and rose of the fair state — iii. I 

that's a fair thought to lie between — iii. 2 

Shalt live in this lair world behind — iii. 2 

from the fair forehead of an innocent — iii. 4 

could you on this fair mountain leave . . — iii. 4 

to the use of actions fair and good — iii. 4 

but a queen, fair, sober, wise, would from — iii. 4 
fair, and bring the body into the chapel. . — iv. 1 

from herself, and her fair judgment — iv. ."i 

and from her fair and unpolluted flesh . . — v. 1 

what, the fair Ophelia! — v. 1 

■wrote it fair: I once did hold it — v. 2 

a baseness to wTite fair — v. 2 

a fellow almost damned in a fair wife . . Oihello, i. 1 
that your fair daughter at this odd-even — i. 1 

60 tender, fair, and happy — i. 2 

and such fair question as soul to soul.... — i. 3 
how I did tlirive in this fair lady's love.. — i. 3 
your son-in-law is far more fair than black — i. 3 
if she he fair and wise,— fairness and wit — ii. 1 
fair and foolish? She never yet was {rep.) — ii. 1 
foul pranks which fair and wise ones do — ii. 1 
she that was ever fair, and never proud, . — ii. 1 
O my fair warrior! My dear Othello! .... — ii. 1 

not I, for this fair island — ii. 3 

other things grow fair against the sim. . . . — ii. 3 

to say — my wife is fair, feeds well — iii. 3 

meansof death for the fair devil — iii. 3 

how is it with you, my most fair Bianca? — iii. 4 

a fine woman ! a fair- woman ! — iv. 1 

who art so lovely fair, and smeU'st so sweet — iv. 2 
was tlus fair paper, this most goodly book — iv. 2 
"what name, fair lady? Such as, she says — iv. 2 
takes awav w-ith him the fair Desdemona — iv, 2 

FAIR-BETROTHED 
the fai r-betrothed of your daughter .... Pericles, v. 3 

F.MKER — with colours fairer painted ..Tempest, i. 2 
she hath been fairer, madam .. TtroGeii.of p'er. iv. 4 
there are fairer things thjn poulcats..^/prr(/H'. iv. 1 
coniiiQiiy is i'airer than holiest. . Meas.for Metis, iv. 3 

by tixing it upon a fairer eye Lovc'sL.Losl, i. 1 

w liy. it IS a fairer name than — iii. 1 

I'll tiiid afairer face not washed .... — iv. 3 
and. fairer than that word .. Merchant 0/ Venice, i. 1 
any mail ill Italy have afairer table — ii. 2 

you shall look fairer, ere I give — ii. 9 

which make fair gifts fairer All's Well, i. 1 

in your bed find fairer fortune — ii. 3 

fairer prove your honour, than in . . — v. 3 
his dauL'hter fairer than she is . Taming of Shrew, i. 2 

not wish them to a fairer death Macbeth, v. 7 

should he find it fairer than in Blanch? ..Jolm, ii. 2 

the cover of a fairer mind — iv. 2 

upon thee in omore I'airer sort tHenri/ir. iv. 4 

of Greece was fairer far than tliou ..ZUemijVI. ii. 2 

fairer than tongue can name Kichard HI. i. 2 

thy babes were fairer than they were — Iv. 4 
to a fairer death, if grace had ()-p/<.) .. — iv. 4 

so much fairer, and spotless Henry ft II. iii. 2 

she looked yesternight fairer than. 7'roiV. ^Crcst. i. 1 

a lady wiser, fairer, truer — i. 3 

that my lady was I'airer thon his .... — i. 3 

and your virtues the fairer — ii.3 

time, with his fairerhand.offcring. J'iwioiio//l(/i. v. 2 
yet far fairer than you are . . .inlony ^ Cleopatra, i. 2 

proved a fairer former fortune — i. '.i 

or rather fairer than those for Cymbeline, v. 3 

one fairer than my love ! Romeo ij- Juliet, i. i 

for her fan's the fairer of the two .... — ii. 4 

FAIREST— the fairest that would.. A/crryH'irw, ii. 2 
I'll rent the fairest house in it.. Meas./ur Mcas. ii. 1 

the fairest grant is the necessity MiuhAilo. i. 1 

death is the fairest cover for her — iv. 1 

was the fairest dame, that lived ..Mid. K.'s Dr. v. I 
to feci only lookiuir in fairest of fair. torr'nL.L.ii. I 



FAI 



FAIIIEST— make the fairest shoot.. I^or'j/.. L. Iv. 1 

thou speak 'st, the fairest shoot — iv. I 

I were the fairest goildesH 011 the .... — v. 2 
a holy parcel of the fairest dames.... — v. 2 

the fairest is confession — v. 2 

the fairest creature northward. .UcrcA.o/ Venice, ii. 1 
all the pictures, fairest lined. /lij^ou Lilie, iii. 2(ver. I 

but upon the fairest boughs — iii. 2(ver) 

gently to my fairest clmnilicr.. Taming ofSh. 1 tind. ) 

she was the'fairest creature in — .'(ind.) 

the fairest flowers o' the season . . ft'inter'sTate, iv. 3 
now my fairest friend, I wouhl I had — iv. 3 
were I the fairest youth that ever .. — iv. 3 
she, tiie fairest I have yet beheld .... — v. 1 

mock the time with fairest show Maclielh, i. 7 

her fairest flowers choked up Ilichard II. iii. 1 

your fairest daughter, and mine . .iHenrylV. iii. 2 
Ills fairest daughter is contaminate .. Henry V. iv. 'o 

C» fairest beauty, do not fear 1 Henry VI. v. 3 

the fairest queen that ever king 'IHenryVI. i. 1 

sweetest sleep, and fairc.-it hodiiig.. idcAnrrf III. v. 3 
the fairest hand I ever touched!.. ..;/<•«< i//'/;/. i. 4 
among the faire.-t of tirecce . . Truilut ff Cretsidti, i. 3 
will conceive the fairest of me. Timon nj Alliens, iii. 2 
and sweetest, fairest, as 1 my poor . . Cymbeline, i. 2 
I'll place it upon this fairest prisoner — i. 2 

thanks, fairest lady: wliatl are — i. 7 

good-morrow, fairest sister; your sweet — ii. 3 
your lady is one the fairest that I have — ii. 4 

sweetest, fairest lily! my brother.. — iv. 2 
with fairest flowers, whilst summer lasts — iv. 2 
the fairest breeders of our clluie.. I'ilus Andron. iv. 2 

the fairest in all Syria Pericles, i. (Gower) 

■who makes the fairest show, means.... — i. 4 

the fairest, sweetest, and best — iv. 4 (Gower) 

all as happy as of all the fairest — v. 1 

fairest Cordelia, that art most rich Lear, i. 1 

tivo of the fairest stars in all the heaven — ii. 2 

FAIR-FACED— if fair-faced, she'd ..MuehAdo, iii. 1 
you peace, and fair-faced Icasue. ... King John, ii. 2 

FAIRIES— ouphes, and fairies Merry ll'ices, iv. 4 

let the supiiosed fairies pinch him. . . . — iv. 4 
shall be the queen of all the fairies .. — iv. 4 

and tricking for our fairies — iv. 4 

till we see tlie light of ourfairics .... — v. 2 

and her troop of fairies? — v. 3 

trill, trill, fairies; come — v. 4 

fairies, black, grey, green, and white — v. 
they are fairies; he that siieaks to tliem — v. .'» 
fairies use flowers for their charnctery — v. i 
about him, fairies; sing a scornful .. — v. .0 

pinch him fairies, mutually — v. 5 (song) 

and these are not fairies? — v. ;> 

in the thought, they were not fairies — v. ;> 
rhyme and reason, that they were fairies — v. 6 

and fairies will not pinse you — v. S 

fairies, away: we shall chide. . Mid. X.'s Dream, ii. 2 
I'll give thee fairies to attend on thee — iii. I 

fairies, he gone, and be all w-ays — iv. 1 

and M'e fairies that do run by — v. 2 

should he rich hy the fairies IVinler'sTale, iii. 3 

like elves ami fairies in a ring .Macbeth, iv. I 

from fairie., and the tempters Cymbeline, ii. 2 

with leiiiale fairies will his tomb .... — iv. 2 

what fairies liaiiiit this ground? _ v. 4 

fairies, and g"ds, prosper it with thee L''<ir, iv. ti 

she is the fairies' midwife Romeo ^-Juliet, i. 4 

time out of mind the fairies' coachmakers — i.l 

FAIRING— if fairings come thus . . Looe'sL. Lost, v. 2 

FAIRLY— fairly spoke, sit then Tempest, iv. 1 

parted very fairly in jest .. TwoUen. of Verona, ii. i 

so it be fairly done, no matter Merry fVives, ii. 2 

goes as fauly, as to say Twelfth Might, iv. i 

that they may fairly note this — iv. 3 

my very worthy cousin, fairly met . . — v. 1 
fortunes every way as fairly ranked. Mid. .V. Dr. i. I 
to come fairly off from the . . Merchant of Venice, i. 1 
as, after some oration fairly spoke . . — iii. 2 
thou offer'st fairly to thy brothers'.. /!« you Like, v. 4 
and fast it fairly out; our cake's.. Tammg of Sh. i. 1 
I'll have thein very fairly bound .... — i. 2 
there it is in writing, fairly drawn .. — iii. 1 

for her name fairly set down in — iii. 2 

which fairly peeus through it Winter' sTale, iv. 3 

fairly oft'ered. This shows — iv. 3 

then fairly I bespoke the officer.. Comprfy or Err. v. 1 

too fairly, Hubert, for so foul King John, iv. 1 

for heaven's sake, fairly let her be../(<r/i'ir/ //. iii. 1 

our soldiers stand full fairly for IHcnryl V. v. 3 

sii followed, and .so fairly won -illenry IV. i. 1 

thou dost thy office fairly HeniyV. iii. A 

should dress us fairly for our end ... . — iv. 1 
brother England; fairly met: so arc — v. 2 
of such looks, we fairly hope, have lost — v. 2 
siieak my fair, and fairly, I pray thee — v. 2 
ill u set hand fairly is engrossea . . Richard HI. iii. 6 
but how long fairly shall her sweet.. — iv. 4 

60, nuw^you are fairly seated ...Henry VIII. i. 4 

fairly answered; a loyal and obedient — iii. 2 
to let the troop pass fairly; or I'll . . — v. 3 
shows as fairly in the mask.. Troilus ^Cressida, i. 3 

what 'Troy means fairly, shall — i. 3 

in all fair measure, fairly guide them! — iii. 1 
furnish you fairly for tins interchange — iii. 3 

OS fairly built as i lector — iv. S 

tliey are fairly welcome Timon of Athens, i. 2 

1 shall accept them fairly — i. 2 

how fairly tliis lord strives to appear — iii. 3 

that he bears all things fairly Coriotanus, iv. 7 

purpose, that so fairly shows .... Antony rt Cleo. ii. 2 

to greet them fairly Pericles, v. 1 

the counterfeit fairly last night.. Romeo ^./u/i'et, ii. 4 
such vile matter, so fairly bound? .. — iii. 2 
must show fairly outward, should Hamlet, ii. 2 

FAlKNESS-uiionsupiiosed fairness. Jlfer.n/Tra. iii. 2 
addition, to tile fairness of iiiy power. Corio/aiiii», i. 9 

that hook of wiving, fairness Cymbeline, v. h 

fairness, and wit, the one's for use Othetlo, ii. 1 

FAIK-1'L.-VY— send fair-play onlers..Kiii^Jo/i», v. 1 
according to the fuir-play uf tlie world — v. 2 



FAI 



FAIRY — j'oiir fairy, which, you irep.)..Ttmpeit.^ iv. 1 

yet this 13 your liarmless fairy — iv. 1 

why, that hour of fairy revel .... Merry Wives, iv. -1 
sweet Nan present tlie fairy qneen . , — iv. 6 

make the faiiy o-ye3 — v. 5 

defend me from that Welsh fairy! .. — v. 5 

well snid, fairy lliiph — v. .5 

and I serve the faiiy queen Mid. N.^sDream, u. 1 

those he rallies, fairy favours — ii. 1 

thou liast stolen awaj' from fairy land — ii. 2 

the fairy land buys not tlie cliild — ii. 2 

[Co/. Knl.^ not for tliy fairy kingdom — ii. 'i 
weed wide enougli to wrap a fairy in — ii. - 
come, now a roundel, and a fairy song — ii. 3 
come not near our fairy queen .... — ii. 3 (song) 
so near the cradle of the tairy queen? — iii. I 
captain of our fairy band, Helena is — iii. 2 

iny fairy lord, this" mubt be done — — iii. 2 
I have a venturous fairy that shall seek — iv. 1 
and her fairy sent to bear liini (rep.) — iv. 1 

first I will release the fairy queen — iv. 1 

fairy kiue, attend, and mark — iv. 1 

antique fables, nor these fairy toys . . — v. I 

'tis almost fairy time. I fear — v. 1 

every elf, and fairy sprite :.. — v. 2 

hand in hand, with fairy grace — v. 2 

through this liouse each fairy stray.. — v. 2 

every fairy take his gait! — v. 2 

this IS fairy ^old, boy, and 'twill. ll'inlei-'sTale, iii. 3 
this is the fairy land; O spite. .Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 
a fiend, a fairy, pitiless and rough . . — iv. 2 

some night-tripiiing fairj' had 1 Heiirylf. i. 1 

to this great fairy I commend . . Antoui/ij-Cteo. iv. 8 
I should thinlc here were a fairy . . Cymbeline, iii. 6 
are no fairy? no motion? [Co/. -fairy motion?] 

[A'Tji. -fairy-motion] Per ides, v. 1 

no fairy takes, nor witch hath power . . Hamlet, 1. 1 
FAIRY-LIKE— fairy-like, to ■ginc\\. Merry Wives, iv. 4 
FAIRY-MOTION— 

[A'jif.] and are no fairy-motion? Pericles, v. 1 

FAITH-brealcing faith with Julia. TuoGeii.o/T. iv. 2 
upon whose faith and honour I repose — iv. 3 

to praise liis faith — iv. 4 

rend thy faith into a thousand oaths — v. 4 

thou hast no faith left now — v. 4 

better have none, than plural faith. . — v. 4 

that's without i^ith or love — v. 4 

at night, in faith, at the latter end.Merry Wives, i. 4 
good faith, it is such another Nan .. — i. 4 

as firm as faith — iv. 4 

with discourse of my dear faith . . TwelflliNight, i. 4 

apt in good faith: very apt I — i. 6 

give me faith, I say — i. 6 

that it is his ground of faith — ii. 3 

in faith, they are as true of heart — ii. 4 

the full assurance of your faith — iv. 3 

to non-regardance cast my faith — v. 1 

hold little faith, though thou ' — v. 1 

upon my faith and honowv. Measure for Measure, v, 1 
he wears his faith but as the Mucli Ado, i. 1 



•238 ] 



in faith, my lord, I spoke mine {rep.) 
if ever thou dost fall from this faith.. 

in faith, she is too curst 

against whose charms faith melteth. . 

by my faith, you say honestly 

in faith, lady, you have a merry heart 

but, in faith, honest as the skin 

in faith, I will go 

in faith, my hand meant nothing. . . . 
being else by faith enforced to call . . 
with fair vEgle break his faith , . Mid. N 
bearing the badge of faith, to prove. . 
disparage not the faith thou dost not 
and all the faith, the virtue of 



— i. 1 
i. 1 
ii. I 
ii. I 
ii. 1 
ii. 1 
iii. 5 
iv. 1 



V. 4 
; Dr. ii. 2 

— iii. 2 

— iii. 2 

— iv. 1 
L. Lost, i. I 

— iv. 2 

— iv. 3 



f I break faith, this word shall . . Love\ 
never faith could hold, if not to beauty 
for paradise break faith and troth . . 
a faith infringed, which such a zeal 

and our faith not torn — iv. 3 

yes, in good faith — v. 2 

Biron hath plighted faith to me — v. 2 

my faith, and this, the princess — v. 2 

content, in faith; I'll seal to . . Mercli. of Venice, i. 3 

in faith, 'tis a fair hand 

love- news, in faith. By your leave . . 

to keep obliged faith untorfeited! 

the bargain of your faith, I do 

mean good faith? Yes, faith, my lord 

almost makest me waver in my faith — iii. 2 

with many \ows of faith, and ne'er.. v. I 

ill faith, I gave it to the judge's v. 1 

rivited so with faith unto your flesli — v. 1 

now, in faith, Gratiano, you give — v. 1 

will never more break iaith advisedly v. 1 

but, good faith, I had as Uef .4s youLike it, iii. 2 

now, by the faith of my love — iii. 2 

as, by my faith, I see no — iii..') 

a traveller! by my faith, you have .. — iv. 1 

all made of faith and service — v. 2 

by my faith, he is very swift — v. 4 

thy faith my fancy to "thee doth — v. 4 

that your true faith doth merit — v. 4 

his faith, his sweet disaster All's Well. i. 1 

good faith, across: but, my good lord — h". J 
now by ray faith and honour, if seriously — ii . 1 
in good faith, if the learned sliould .. — ii. 2 

.ves, good faith, every dram of it — ii. 3 

tetake thee to thy faith, for seventeen — iv. 1 
I'll pheese you, in faitli . . Taming oj A'A. 1 (indue.) 
you lie, in faith; for you are called . . — ii. 1 
foundation is piled upon his faith. Winter's Tale, i. 2 
which, on my faith, deserves high speech — ii. 1 
contrary to the faith and allegiance — iii. 2 (indict.) 

bum hotter than my faith — iv. 3 

adventure to mingle faith with him.. — iv. 3 

but by the violation of my faith — iv. 3 

as, in faith, I mean not to see him . . — iv. 3 

you do awake your faith: then v. 3 

liad not been made of faith.. Cojnerfyo/ J?rrors, iii. 2 
at no time broke my faith Macbeth, iv. 3 



ii. 4 
ii. 4 
ii. 6 
iii. 2 



FAITH— by my faitli, this league. . . . King Mm, ii. 2 

that still lirea'ks the pate of faith — ii. 3 

since kings break faith upon — ii. 2 

yea, faith itself to hollow falsehood.. — iii. 1 

speaks not from her faith — iii. I 

but by the death of faith (j-fp.) — iii. 1 

the faiths of men ne'er stained — iv. 2 

keep our faiths firm and inviolable. . — v. 2 

zeal, and unurged faith — v. 2 

welcome liome again discarded faitli — v. 4 

show now j'our mended faiths — v. 7 

break tlieir faith to God, as well . . Richard II. iii. 2 

and true faitli of heart, and sends — iii. 3 

there is my bond of faith, to tie — iv 1 

[ A')i/.] the faith itself against the faith — v. A 

1 a thief? not I, bj' my faitli \ Henry IV. i. 2 

be hanged; hast no faith in thee? — ii. 1 

in faith, I'll know your business .... — ii. 3 

stuif as puts me from my faitli — iii. 1 

in faith, lie is a worthy gentleman .. — iii. 1 

there's neither faith, truth, nor — iii. 3 

there's no more faith in thee than in — iii 3 
there's no room for faith, truth, nor. . — iii. 3 

ay, by my faith, that bears — iv. 1 

violation of all faith and truth — v. 1 

in faith, sir Jolm, we have illenrylV. iii. 2 

our royal faiths martyrs in love — iv. 1 

will you thus break your faith? — iv. 2 

your faith, and services, to this Henry V.i.'l 

crowned with faith, and constant — ii. 2 

men's faiths are wafer-cakes — ii. 3 

by faith and honour, our madams . . — iii. .5 

by my faith, sir, but it is — iii. 7 

do you in faith? I wear out my suit — v. 2 
as i have a saving faith within me .. — y. 2 

good faitli, I am no wiser than 1 Henry VI. ii. 4 

among professors of one faith — v. 1 

for sign of plighted faith — v. 3 

or feared thy faith 2Henry VI. iii. 1 

ay, by my faith, tlie field is — iv. 2 

why hast thou broken faith with me — v. 1 
O where is faith? O where is loyalty? — v. 1 
now by my faith, [Co(. Kn^-hand] lords — v. 3 
or good faith, you U catch a blow. .SHenry VI. iii. 2 
with thy hand, thy faith irrevocable — iii. 3 
him that hath once broken faith .... — iv. 4 

ay, by my faitli, for a poor earl — v. 1 

good faith, good faith, the saying.. iiic/mrd III. ii. 4 

good faith, and when I met this — iii. 2 

your lionour and your faith is pawned — iv. 2 
tliy broken faith hath made a prey . . — iv. 4 

by the false faith of him whom — v. 1 

renouncing clean the faith Henry VIII. i. 3 

by my faith, I thank your lordship.. — i. 4 

my faith, sir? The secret is so (rep.) — - ii. 1 
in faith, for little England you'd venture — ii. 3 

where all faith was meant — iii. 1 

if there be faith in men — y. 2 

few words to fair faith Troilus t^- Cressida, iii, 2 

word, and my firm faith — iii. 2 

and yet, good faith, I wished myself — iii. 2 
I do not call your faith in question . . — iv. 4 

faith and ti'Oth, strained purely from — iv. 5 
in faith, I cannot: what would you.. — v. 2 

in faith, I do not; come hither — v. 2 

in faith I will, la; never trust me else — v. 2 

beauty, Where's tliy faith? — v. 2 

fractions of her faith — v. 2 

rellques of her o'er-eaten faith — v. 2 

even in the faitli of valour — v. 3 

1 must not break my faith — y. 3 

a fine spot, in good faith Coriolanus, i. 3 

yet, by the faith of men, we have — — ii. 1 

good faith, I'll prove liim, speed — v. 1 

uutrod state, with all true faith . . Julius Ctesar, iii. 1 
no tricks in plain and simple faith . . — iv. 2 
hast served me with much faith.. .4n(o7j!/ iJ-Cieo. ii. 7 

our faith mere folly — iii. 11 

if thy faith be not tainted . . Crjtnbeline, iii. 4 (letter) 
away, away, corrupters of my faith! — iii. 4 
good faith, I tremble still with fear. . — iv. 2 
its thy faith: thy faith, thy name .. — iv. 2 

friiicess, that ever swore her faith . . — v. 5 
do not doubt thy faith Pericles, i. 2 

I'll take thy word for faith — 1.2 

ay, by my faith, they shall not be — iv. 3 

no, good faith; lam the daughter — v. I 

of truth, of faith, of loyalty — v. 3 (Gower) 

must be a faith, that reason Lear, i. 1 

a flower; in faith a very flower . .Romeo ^Juliet, i. 3 

lest faith turn to despair — i. 5 

no faith, no honesty in men — iii. 2 

with him, that is renowned for faith? — iii. 5 
on earth, m.y faith in heaven (rpp. ). , — iii. 6 
good faith, 'tis day: the county will.. — iv. 4 

no money, on my faith — iv. 5 

in faith, I will: let me peruse — v. 3 

but what, in faith, make you from ^Hamlet, i. 2 

in faith, my lord, not I. Nor I (,rep.) .... — i. 5 

I like thy wit well, in good faith — v. 1 

for my ease, in good faith — v. 2 

yet, in faith if you did, it would not .... — v. 2 

ui faith, are very dear to fancy — v. 2 

by the faith of man, I know my price . . Othello, i. 1 

in faith, 'twas strange, 'twas passing — i. 3 

mj' life upon her faith. Honest lago — i. 3 

in faith, too much; I find it still — ii. 1 

good faith, a little one; not past a pint . . — ii. 3 
in good faith, I am a child to chiding.... . — iv. 2 
FAITH-BREACH— . 

revolts upbraid his faith-breach Macbeth, v. 2 

FAITHED— make thy words faithed? .... Lear, ii. i 
FAITHFUL— a faithful verity. . Meas.for Meas. iv. 3 

our old and faithful friend — v. I 

pairs of faithful lovers be wedded. . Mid. A'. Dr. iv. 1 

to tliee I'll faithful prove Love's L. Lost, iv. 2 

some thousand verses of a faitliful lover — v. 2 
my black gown for a faitlrful friend.. — v. 2 
I will your very faithful feeder he.AsyouLikeit, ii. 4 
will the faithful offer take of me .. — iv. 3 (let.) 



FAI 

FAITHFUL— a faithful shepherd. /Is i/ou Lilteil, v. 2 
to this most faithful shepherd? .... — v. 4 

do faithful homage, and receive free. . Macbeth, iii. 6 
your faithful subject 1, a gentleman. . King John, i. 1 
inseparable, faithful loves, sticking.. — iii. 4 
I do bequeath my faithful services . . — v. 7 

with faithful English blood Richard II. iii. 3 

and his heart to faithful service — iii. 3 

God forbid, my dear and faithful iord. Henry V. i. 2 
never did faithful subject more lejoice — ii. 2 
your faithful service, and your toll. I Henry VI. iii. 4 
King Henry's faithful and anointed — v. 5 
as 1 am a christian faithful man . . Ricliard III. i. 4 

with your faithful love to me — iii. 7 

if I be not faithful ! Henry VIII. ii. 1 

are all these your faithful friends.... — v. 3 

'faith, we hear faithful news Coriolanus, iv. 6 

my friend, faithful and just to me.JuliusCn-sar, iii. 2 
this hath been your faithful servant.. C(/m6e/(7(e, i. 2 
and my faithful friends, I have . . Titus Andnm. v. I 

not light more faithful than I'll be Pericles, i. 2 

of thy love's faithful vow Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 2 

that Romeo's faithful wife — v. 3 

as that of true and faithfulJuliet .. — v. 3 
madam, stay awhile; I will be faithful. Hom?e<, ii. 2 

as of a man faithful and honorable — ii. 2 

as England was his faithful tributary.... — v. 2 
FAITHFULLEST— 

the faithfullest oflTerings hath. . . . Twelfth Night, v. 1 
FAITHFULLY— so faithfully been.Loce's L. L. ii. 1 

I'll serve thee true and faithfully — v, 2 

will answer all things faithfnll.y.i>/f7', of Venice, v. I 
as you have whispered faithfully . . As youLike it, ii. 7 

but wilt thou faithfully? All's WeU,iv. 1 

was faithfullj' confirmed — iv. 3 

as faithfully as I deny the devil .... King John, i. 1 

their own authors faithfully affirm Henry V. i. 2 

both my fortunes faithfully Henry VIII. iv. 2 

not urge it half so faithfully . . Timon of A/hens, iii. 2 

dost love, pronounce it imthlidly.. Romeo &Jul, ii. 2 

FAITHFULNESS- 

thought but faithfulness and courage . . Pericles, i. 1 

for your faithfulness we will advance you — i. 1 

FAITHLESS— O faithless coward! Mea.forMea. iii. 1 

she is issue to a faithless Jew. . Merch. of Venice, ii. 4 

to make a faithless error in your ears. King Jolm, ii. 1 

unnatural and faithless service ! . . Henry VIII. ii. 1 

FAITORS-down faitors! have v/e.not.iHenry I V. ii. 4 

FALCON— as falcon doth the fowl.. Mea./orMeo. iii. 1 

and the falcon her bells As youLike it, iii. 3 

my falcon now is sharp Taming nf Shrew, iv. I 

m.y good falcon made her flight. . Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

a falcon, towering in her pride Macbeth, ii. 4 

as is the falcon's fiight against Richard II. i. 3 

point, my lord, your falcon made . .iHenryVI. ii. 1 
his thoughts above his falcon's pitch — ii. 1 

so doves do peek the falcon's SHenry VI. i. 4 

the falcon as the tercel, for all.. Troilus ^ Cress, iii. 2 
FALCONER— a falconer's voice. .Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 2 

we'll e'en to't like French falconers Hamlet, ii. 2 

FALL— fall to't yarely Tempest, i. 1 

to fall it on Gonzalo — ii. 1 

fens, flats, on Prosper fall — ii. 2 

mount their pricks at my foot fall .... — ii. 2 

I'll fall flat: perchance fie — ii. 2 

cannot choose but fall by pailfuls — ii. 2 

else falls upon your heads — iii. 3 

shall the lieavens let fall to make — iv. 1 

the blind mole may not hear a foot fall — iv. 1 

fall fellowly drops — v. 1 

then counsel me to fall in love?. TwoGen.of Ver. i. 2 
to take a paper up that I let fall .... -1 i. 2 
growing ruinous, the building fall . . — v. 4 

inconstancy fails off — v. 4 

rivers, to whose falls (y-ep.). Merry Wives, iii. 1 (song) 

it had a dying fall Twelfth Niglit, i. 1 

but falls into abatement — i. 1 

if both break, your gaskins fall — i. 6 

doth fall that very hour — ii. 4 

if this fall into tliy hand — ii. 5 (letter) 

better to fall before the lion — iii. 1 

I should m.y tears let fall upon — v. 1 

all the dukes fiiU upon the Ving.. Meas. for Meas, i. 2 
your brother's life falls into forfeit .. — i. 5 

than fall, and bruise to death — ii. 1 

another thing to fall — ii. 1 

and some by virtue fall — ii. i 

it oft falls out, to have what — ii. 4 

if any thing fall to you upon this ... . — iv. 2 

a scandalous breath to fall on him — v. 1 

if ever thou dost fall from this faith., .it/uc/i^do, i. 1 

falls into the cinque-pace faster — ii. 1 

that she shall fall in love with — ii. 1 

he shall fall in love with Beatrice — ii. 1 

upon her knees she falls, weeps, sobs — ii. 3 

for it so falls out, that what — iv. i 

falls into mine ears as profitless — v. 1 

her death, shall fall heavy on you — v. 1 

didst thou first fall in love with me ? — v. 2 

and falls into a cough Mid. N. Dream, ii. 1 

frosts fall in the fresh lap — ii. 2 

here o'er and o'er one falls — ii i. 2 

this falls out better than I could devise — iii. 2 
upbraid her, and fall out with her.... — iv. 1 

her mantle she did fall — v. 1 

you shall see, it will fall pat — v. 1 

fair fall the face it covers! Love's L. Los', ii. 1 

submissive fall his princely feet — iv. 1 

the people fall a hooting — iv. 2 (epitaph) 

he falls straight a capering Mer. of Venice, i. 2 

an' the worst fall that ever fell — i. 2 

should fall as Jacob's hire — i. 3 

in eaning time fall party-coloured .. — i. 3 

since this fortune falls to you — iii. 2 (scroll) 

so did mine too, as the matter falls . . — iii. 2 
I fall into Charybdis, your mother .. — iii. 4 

or it will fall to careless ruin — iv. 1 

disguised against me to try a fall ..As you Like it,i. 1 

not by fortune fall into the fire? — i. 2 

you shall try but one fall — i. 2 



i'AL 



FALIi— in despite of a t'lill .(» you Like it, i. 3 

yuu should full into !!» strong n liking — 1.3 

welcome, full to; I will not — ii. 7 

(US softly as toot cun tall — iii. 2 

falls not the axe upon — iii. 5 

why now full down — iii. 5 

anil she'll fall in love with my — iii. 5 

do not tiill in h»ve with nie — iii. .'> 

gone near to fall ill love withhim.... — iii. S 

and fall into our rustie revelry — v. 4 

in iov, to llie measures fall — V. 4 

pluck down, fall on thy heiul I AWiH'ell, i. I 

that inherit but the fafl of the — ii. 1 

one fair and virtuous mistress fall . . — ii. 3 

when better fall, hut your avails — iii. 1 

you shall see his fall to-uiv'ht — iii. B 

forli'it to the next tile that fulls — iv. 3 

lieeause I would not fall out with thee — iv. 5 

well tliaiiked, whate'er fall more ..., — T. 1 

hcnve'er the matter fall, shall tux .... — v. 3 
I would he loulh to fall. T„ming of Shrew, 2 (indue.) 

full to them, as vou tiud yoiu* — i. 1 

the priest let fall the hook — iii. 2 

will you let it fall? — iv. 1 

that, frighted, thou let'st fall ll'iiiler's Tale, iv. 3 

Soliuus, to procure my fa.ll....ComeiJy of Errors, i. 1 

the pig falls from the spit — i. 2 

as easy may'st thou fall a drop — ii. 2 

I will fall prostrate at his feet — v. 1 

on which I must fall down Macbeth, i. 4 

o'erleaps itself, and falls on the other side — i. 7 

the sovereignty will fall upon Macbeth — ii. 4 

but wail his fall whom I — iii. 1 

and an eternal curse fall on you! .... — iv. 1 

and fall of many kings — iv. 3 

let fall thy blade on vulnerable — v. 7 

fair full the bones that took King John, i. 1 

before the dew of evening fall — ii. 1 

in the very meeting, fall, and die — iii. 1 

burdens may not fall this day — iii. 1 

now fall over to my foes? — iii. 1 

England, I'll fall trom theel — iii. 1 

then Arthur needs must fall — iii. 4 

unheard, full on your head — iv. 2 

the truth will fall out so — iv. 2 

and fall before his feet — v. 4 

grief boundeth where it falls Richard II. i. 2 

redoubled, fall like amazing — 13 

the riiK'st fruit fii-st falls _ ii. 1 

can never fall out good — ii. I 

forerun the death or fall of kings — ii. 4 

fall to the base earth from — ii. 4 

weak men must fall; for heaven .... — iii. 2 

met with the fall of the leaf — iii. 4 

to make a second fall of cursed — iii. 4 

[Cof.] here did she fall a tear — iii. 4 

rise thus nimbly by a true king's fall — iv. 1 

the lamentable fall rco(.-taIe]ofme.. — v. 1 

would he not fall down (rep.) — v. 5 

will't please you to fall to? — v..') 

he never did fall off, my 1 Henry IF. i. 3 

if he fall in, good-night — i. 3 

does forethink thy fall — iii. 2 

how would thy guts full about thy knees — iii. 3 

since not to be avoided it falls on me — v. 5 
more likely to fall in, than to get o'er.2Hcnry/r.i. 1 

but you fall to some discord — ii. 4 

shall we fall foul for toys? — ii. 4 

might not full in love with him — ii. 4 

and though we here fall down — iv. 2 

that they fall into a kiud of — iv. 3 

may they fall as those that — iv. 4 

how quickly nature falls into — iv. 4 

falls upon tnee in a more fairer .... — iv. 4 

old man: fall to thy prayers — v. 5 

without much full of blood Henry V. i. 2 

and thus thy fall hath left a kind .... — ii. 2 

is like another fall of man ii. 2 

pure maidens fall into the hand — iii. 3 

bringus word of England's fall — iii. 5 

ride not warily, full into foul bogs .. iii. 7 

some of them will fall to-morrow.... iii. 7 

I pray you full to; 11' you can — v. 1 

agood leg will fall; a straight — v. 2 

if oil things fall out right IHenryf'I. ii. 3 

and fal 1 on my side so against ii. 4 

we'll full to it with our teeth _ iii. 1 

thrive Richard, as thy foes may fall! — iii. 1 

and flesh, and sinews, fall awav — iii. I 

a prophet to the fall of all our "foes!.. — iii. 2 

lets full his sword before your iii. 1 

to fall down with a pinch _ iv. 2 

that liears me, fall and die! — iv. ti 

and let her head fall into England's — v. 3 
from wondering, fall to weepmg joys.2J/f»/!/;7. i. I 

attainture will be Humphrey's fall .. — i. 2 

a fall oft' of a tree ii. 1 

drinking, and fall to blows ii. 3 

should you fall, he is the next _ iii. i 

to frame our sovereign's fall — iii. 1 

this way fall I to death _ iii. 2 

come, come, let's full in with them .. — iv. 2 

for our enemies shall fall before us .. iv. 2 

not a tear can fall for Rntland'8death.3Hcnry;';. i. 4 

must Edward fall, which peril heaven ii. 1 

now I fall, thy tough commixturea . . — ii. ti 

unless she chance to fall iii 2 

likely now to fall from him — iii. 3 

till Edward fail bv war's mischance — iii. 3 

ond, by my fall, the conquest to — v. 2 

untimely fall of virtuous Lancaster. RicAard ///. i. 2 

and fall somewhat into a slower — i. 2 

that full out in sharing that — i. 3 

and, if they fall, they dash — i. 3 

ICot. /in/.] when fools' eyes fall tears — i. 3 

come, shall we fall to work? i. 4 

when great leaves fall, then winter .. — ii. 3 

and so falls it out with Kivers — iii. 2 

stay him from the fall of vanity — iii. 7 

by sudden ilooda and full of wateni ., — iv. 4 



[ 239 j 






I' ALL— I wished might fall on me ..Richard III. v. 1 
wherein I wisheil to full by the — v. 1 

curse fails heavy on inv ne(;k — v. I 

let his son (ieoi'!.'c lull ii.lo the — v. 3 

withttlieavv full 
ere I let full" the \' 

and fall thy edgeless sword (M-;).) — v. 3 

with guiltv fear, let tall tliv lance! .. — v. 3 
Richard fiills [Cnl. K,ii.-t\ilQ in height — v. 3 

think it well, let full a tear Henry fill, (prol.) 

his dews fall every where — i. 3 

even as the axe fulls 

the long divorce of steel falls on me., 
in your fortunes, fall uwaylike water 

if it full, greuter thun this 

will have his will, and she must full., 
the greatest stroke of fortune liiUs. . . . 

fall asleep, or, hearing^dic — 

burden oi my sorrows tall ujjou ye... 
will fall some blessing to this land ... 

fit for a fool to fall by! 

I shall fall like a bright exhalation.. 

fall into the cduipass of a prwmuuire — iii. 2 

and tlien he fulls, as I do — iii. 2 

when he falls, he falls like Lucifer.. — iii. 2 
mark but my full, und that thttt .... — iii. 2 

the dews of neaven full thick in — iv. 2 

or I fall into the trap is laid for me! .. — v. 1 

may hourly full u]iou ye ! — v. 4 

and make liim fall his crest . . Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 3 

' ' " ' ' ii. 3 

iii. 1 
iii. 3 
iii. 3 



— ii. 1 

— ii. 1 

— ii. 1 

— ii. 1 

— ii. 1 

— ii.2 
iii. I (S'.ng) 

— iii. 1 

— iii. 2 

— iii. 2 



— v. .' 



: of Athens, i. 1 
i. 2 (grace) 
— ii. 2 



— V. 4 



— V. 



stand till they fall of themselves .... 

my cousin will full out with you 

must fall out with men too 

as feel in his own full 

which, when they falh as being 

together die in the fall 

would have them full upon him .... 

the fall of every Phrygian 

full, Greeks ! fall, fume 

the captive tlrecians fall, even 

Troy on thee, fall all together 

fall down before him, lilJe the 

60, Ilion, fall thou ne.xt! 

weep out at Pandar's fall 

or fortune full into my keeping.. Timo 
BO full to't : rich men sing. ... — 

that now they are at fall 

and the gods fall on you ! 

wouldst thou have thyself fall in .... 

sense withal of its own fall 

om's is the fall, I feur, our foes 

whose fall the mark of his ambition 
and schools should fall for private . . 

must fall with those that have 

for reproof, fall, and no more 

which from niggurd natui-e fall 

or whether his tall enraged him Coriolanus, i. 3 

fortune, fall deep in love with thee . . — i. 5 
must fall out to him, or our authorities — ii. 1 
he fall in a rage with their refusal .. — ii.3 

stop, or all win fall in broil — iii. 1 

a mile before his tent fall down — v. I 

but the fall of either makes the v. ."j 

and I'll renew me in his full — v. 5 

yoiu- houses, full upon your knees.. Jm/ii 
that this shull be, or we will fall for it? 
let Antony, and CaBsur, full together 
as low as to thy foot doth Cassms fall 

et tu Brute? then fall, Csesar 

Mark jVntony, bid ine fall down .... 
still falls shrewdly to the purjiose . . 
here didst thou fall; and here thy . . 

I know not what may fall 

what a fall was there, my countrymen ! 
they fall their crests, and, like deceitful 

for fear of what might fall 

arch of the ranged empire fall ! . .Antony ^ Cleo. 

dear Charmian, I shall fall — i. 3 

put off, fall to their throats — ii. 7 

take heed 3'ou fall not: Menos, I'll not — ii. 7 

no disgrace shall fall you for — iii. 7 

fall not a tear, I say I one of them .. — iii. 9 
portends alone the fall of Autonv! .. — iii. II 
grace grow where those drops fall! . . — iv. 2 

and I fall under this plot — iv. 1 

it smites me beneath the fall I have — v. 2 

and, when we fall, we answer — v. 2 

dost fall? if thou and nature — v. 2 

imless it had been the fall of an ass . . Cymbeline, i. 3 

if yon full in the adventure — iii. 1 

for you fall 'mongst friends — iii. H 

some falls are means the happier — iv. 2 

note o' the king, or I'll fall in them.. — iv. 3 
the hazard therefore due fall on me. . — iv. 4 
that's love, to have them fall no more — v. 1 
with Mars full out, with Juno chide — v. 4 

my tears, that full, prove holy — v. 5 

heavens fall on their heads like dew 1 — \. h 
should straight fall mad, or else.. TilusAndron. ii. 3 
confusion fall— Nay, then I'll stop .. — ii.3 
hast thou hurt thee with the fall?.... — ii. 4 

doth rise and fall between tli.v — ii. 5 

tears that thy poor eyes let fall — iii. 2 

come, let's full to; and, gentle girl .. — iii. 2 
hand in hand, Lucius and I will fall — v. 3 

for by his fall my honour Periclet, i. 1 

yet those which see them fall — i. 4 

ere their fall, scorn now their — ii. 4 

will soon to ruin fall, your — ii. 4 

doth fall in travail with her fear — iii. (Gower) 
people's prayers still fall upon you .. .. — iii. 3 
wishes fall out as they're willed — v. 2 (Gower) 

let it full rather, thou;jh the fork Lear,i. 1 

(Kn/.} when majesty fulls to folly — i. 1 

affection fall into taint — i. I 

friendslup falls off', brothers divide — i. 2 

the king falls from his bias of nature .... — i. 2 
of heaven fall on her ingrateful top! .... — ii. 4 

to fall and blast her pride! — ii.4 

why, then, let full your horrible — iii. 2 



— V. 1 



FAL 

FALL-younger rises, when the old dothfall. Lear, iii.3 

preferment falls on him that cuts iv. f, 

and not full to (|icaricl with your — iv. f, 

fall, and i-eusi-! This feather 8tir» — v. 3 

and fall out with the dug Romeo ^Juliet, I. 3 

dost thou fall upon thy face? (rep.).. — i. 3 

that fall hack to gaze on him — ii.2 

women may fall, when there's no — ii.3 

it heats as It would fall in twenty pieces — ii. !> 

and yet not full, hO light is vanity .. — ii. C 

didst thou not full out with u tailor.. — iii. I 

tear thy liuir, and full U|irni the ground — iii. 3 

why should you tall into so deep an O? — iii. 3 

and now falls on her bed; and then — iii. 3 

erics, and then down fulls again — iii. 3 

thy eyes' windows full, like death .. — iv. 1 

to full prostrute here, and beg — iv. 2 

that the life-weury taker may fall dead — v. i 

he fulls to such perusal of my face Hamtct, ii. 1 

lies where it fulls, repugnant to command — ii. 2 

the unnerved father falls — ii.2 

never did the Cyclops' liamniers fall on . . — ii.2 

now fulls on Priam — ii.2 

and fall a cursing, like a very drab — ii.2 

but fall, unshaken, when they mellow be — iii. 2 

when it falls, each small annexment .... — iii. 3 

ere we come to fall, or pardoned — iii. 3 

otfenee is, let the great axe fall — iv..'j 

he shall not choose hut fall — iv. 7 

it falls right: you have been talked of .. — iv. 7 

treble woe fall ten times treble on — v. 1 

to Laertes before you full to play — v. 2 

providence in the fall of a sparrow — v. 2 

[ A'n/.] what a fall I'ortune does the thick. 0(Ae/(o, i. 1 

to full in love with whut she feared — i. 3 

even fall upon my lite — i. 3 

the town might fall in fright — ii.3 

1 heard the clink and fiill of swords .... — ii.3 
speech should fall into such vile success — iii. 3 
may fall to match you with her country — iii. 3 

she falls thus about my neck — iv. I 

each drop she fulls would prove a crocodile iv. 1 

which I will fashion to fall out between — iv. 2 

your attempt, and he shall fall between us — iv. 2 

husbands' faults, if wives do fall iv. 3 

from his side, and fall to reprobation .... — v. 2 

the woman falls; sure, he has killed — v. 2 

FALLACY— theoffercd fallacy. Comedy o/ Errors, ii. 2 

FALLEN— had not fallen flat-long Tempest, ii. 1 

he hath fallen by prompture. . . . Meas.for Meas. ii. 4 
why she— O she is fallen into a pit. . Much Ado, iv. i 
that fallen am I in dark .... Mid. N.'s Dream, iii. 2 
grieve not that lam fallen into. Mer. of Venice, iv. 1 

he's fallen in love with her As you Like it, iii. 5 

that you are not fallen from the All's Well, v. 1 

that has fallen into the unclean — v. 2 

master and mistress tivUen out.. Taming of Sh. iv. I 
my way of life is fallen into the 6ear...>/acfte.'/i, v. 3 

a silver drop hath liillen King John, iii. 4 

persuasion, are again fallen off — v. 5 

Bardolph, am I not fallen away . . 1 Henry IF. iii. 3 

his highness is fallen into 2 Henry II'. i. 2 

I think, you are fallen into the disease — i. 2 

hath fallen into the hands of Henry (■'. iv. 4 

star of Venus, fallen down on the....lHenryri. i. 2 

mischief never could have fallen — ii. I 

with the peers be fallen at jars iHenryl'I. i. I 

are all fallen upon thee Ricltard III.i.3 

now Margaret's curse is fallen upon — iii. 3 

the net has fallen upon me Henry Fill. i. 1 

weak woman, fallen from favour ?.. — iii. 1 

naj', an' you weep, I am fallen indeed — iii. 2 
I am a poor fallen man, unworthy . . — iii. 2 

once fallen out with fortune Troilus^ Cress, iii. 3 

like a gallant horse fallen in first.... — iii. 3 
so noble a master fallen! .... Timon of Athens, iv. 2 

your friends fallen oft'. — v. I 

IS when she's fallen out with Coriolanus^ iv. 3 

follow with allegiance a fallen lord..4n(. ^ Cleo. iii. II 

the star is fallen — iv. 12 

the soldier's pole is fallen — iv. 13 

3'ou have fallen into a princely hand — v. 2 
one the other, or have fallen both . . Cymbeline^ i. i 

infection is fallen into thy ear — iii. 2 

I am fallen in this oft'enee — iii. ti 

what, art thou fallen! Titus Andron. ii. 4 

but now her price is fallen Lear, i. 1 

and am fallen out with my more .... — ii. 4 

but have I fallen or no? — iv. 6 

things have fallen out, sir Romeo «§- Juliet, iii. 4 

be not from lus reason fallen thereon ..Hamlet, ii. 2 

purposes mistook fallen on the — v. 2 

my lord is fallen into an epilepsy 0/neUo, iv. I 

there's fallen between him and ray lord — iv. I 

fallen in the practise of a cursed slave — v. 2 

FALLEN-Ul' t— fallen-off BriU.ns. . Cymbeline, iii. 7 

FALLETH— anon fallethlikeacrab. Lore'*;,. L. iv. 2 

FALLIBLE-hopes that are fallible. ,Wea../br.Wra. iii. 1 

but this is most fallible Antony^ Cleo. v. 2 

FALLING— falling in the &amea.Meas.for Meat. ii. 3 

examples for his falling — iii. I 

of his own scorn by falling in love ..Much Ado, ii. 3 
which falling in the laud .... Mid. A'.'i Dream, ii. 2 

falling out that year on Ash- Mer. of I'enice, ii. 5 

what think you of fulling in love ? As you Like ii, i. 2 
falling a lip of ranch eoiueinpt .. II inter's Tale, i. 2 
falling there to find his fellow. Comedy of Errors, i. 2 

falling from a hill \HenrylF. v. 5 

is held from falling with so weak ..'IHeury IF. iv. 4 

and, in fulling, struck me Richard III. i. 4 

press not a falling man too far ....Henry Fill. iii. 2 

and, sometimes, lulling ones — iv. 1 

a cruelty, to load a falling man — v. 2 

falling in, alter falling out .. 7'roi7iu<5-Cre»»iJa, iii. I 
prompted eword falling on Diomed.. — v. 2 

It stands against a falling fabric Coriolanus, iii. 1 

he's hunted even to fulling Antony Sf Cleo. iv. 1 

certain falling, or so slippery (rep.). Cymbeline, iti. 3 
some fulling merely tlu'ough tear .... — v. 3 
there falling out at tennis Hamlet, 'li. I 



FAL 



FALLING-FROM— 
thti falUng-from of his friends. .TimonorAilieiis,iv.:i 

FALLING-OFF— a folUug-off was there! . Wamfc;, i. a 

FALLING-SICKNESS— 
he hath the falling-sickness (rep.). .Julius Cfr.':nr, i. 2 

FALLOW— yonr fallow greyho\iu(l..jV(;));/ If'h'cs, i. 1 
the bare fallow brings to teeming.. Mea.forMm. i. 5 

her fallow leas the darnel liennj I-', v. -l 

and as our vineyards, fallows, meads — v. 2 

FALL'ST— fall'st on me so Uiekily . . 1 UenrijlV. v. ■) 
fall'st, O Cromwell, thou lall'st . . Henry Fill. iii. 2 
fall'st thou upon tliy face? liomeo /f-Juliel, i. 3 

FALOROIJS— falorous gentleman Henry F. iii. 2 

FALSE— thy false uncle— Tempest, i. 2 

in my false brother — i. 2 

sweet lord, you play me false — v. 1 

unless it have a false interpreter. TwoGen. ofFer. i. 2 

or my false transgression — ii. 4 

without false vantage — iv. 1 

already liave I been false to Valentine — iv. 2 

he plays false, fatlier — iv. 2 

but yet so false, that he — iv. 2 

thou subtle, perjured,false disloyal man! — iv. 2 

'twere false, if 1 should speak it — iv. 2 

and adore false sliapes — iv. 2 

unless I prove false traitor- — iv. 4 

though his false linger hatli profaned — iv. 4 
than nave false Proteus rescue me. . . . — v. 4 

I do detest false perjured Proteus — v. 4 

as I do despise one tliat is false .... Merry tVives, i. 1 

it is false, if it is a pick-purse — i. J 

see the heU of having a false woman! — ii. 2 

a false conclusion; I hate it Twelfth Night, ii. 3 

and words are grown so false — iii. 1 

his false cunning (not meaning — v. 1 

wiser souls to thy false seeming?, il/eas./oril/eas. ii. 4 

to make a false one — ii. 4 

aud credulous to false prints — ii. 4 

my false o'erweighs your true — ii.4 

pay with falseliood false exacting. . . . — iii. 2 

millions of false eyes are stuck — iv. 1 

run with these false and most — iv. 1 

aud Ixide tire false, seems true — v. 1 

what he dotli know is true, and false — v. 1 
'tis false. How! know you where .. — v. 1 

he won it of me with false dice Much Ado, ii. 1 

if he be so, his conceit is false — ii. 1 

lose nothing of the false sweet bait . . — iii. 1 

not a false gallop — iii. 4 

if all aim but this be levelled false . . — iv. 1 

little better than false knaves — iv. 2 

it is thought you are false knaves — iv. 2 

in a false quarrel tliere is no true .... — v. 1 
sir, they have committed false report — v. 1 
mine aud my master's false accusation — v. 1 
when the false Trojan under sail.il/id. N.Dream,i. 1 

and not a false turned true — iii. 2 

to fashion this false sport in spite.. .. — ■ iii. 2 
to prove him false, that says I love . . — iii. 2 
heart to this false perjury ?..Lot)e'si.L. iv. 3 (verses) 

ravish doters with a false aspect .... iv. 3 

O, I smell false Latin v. 1 

false; we have given thee faees — v. 2 

ourselves prove false, by being once false — v. 2 

played false with a smith Merchant of Fenice, i. 2 

whose hearts are all as false as stairs — iii. 2 

even so void is your false heart — v. I 

is the very false gallop of verses . . .4s you Like it, iii. 2 
botli the confli-mers oi false reckonings — iii. 4 

and play false strains upon thee! — iv. 3 

fly with false aim; move the All's Well, iii. 2 

the story then goes false, you tlirew . . — v. 3 
get thee gone, thou false deluding. Taming of Sh. iv. 3 

false as o'er-dyed blacks (rep.) Winter'sTale, i. 2 

that false villain, whom I employed — ii. 1 
every dram of women's flesh is false — ii. 1 

to bring false generations — ii. 1 

shall make false accusation blush — Iii. 2 

I am false of heart that way iv. 2 

you wooed me the false way — iv. 3 

if it be false, son? If it be ne'er so false — v. 2 
from my false hand cut tlie . . Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

and tiiou play false, I do digest _ ii. 2 

mufae your false love with some — iii. 2 

thou speak'st false in both _ iv. 4 

I'll pluck out tliese false eyes — iv. 4 

and tliat is false, thou dost report .... . — v. 1 

as this is false, he burdens — v. 1 

and this is false you burden me — v. 1 

wouldst uot play false, and yet wcin\ilit.M,i,-heth,\. 5 
false face must hide what false heart — i. 7 
a false creation, proceeding from tlie — ii. 1 

which tlve false man does easy ii. 3 

avaricious, false, deceitful — iv. 3 

my first false speaking was iv. 3 

then fiy, false thanes, and mingle — v. 3 

if thou speak'st false, upon tlie — v. .5 

if she did play false, tlie fault King John, i. 1 

false blood to false blood joined ! — iii. i 

you think them false that give — iii. 1 

fill these dogged spies with false _ iv. 1 

if true, or false, I know not — iv. 2 

whose tongue soe'er speaks false — iv. 3 

wliy shoidd I then be false _ v. 4 

like a false traitor, and injurious Richard II. i. 1 

fetch from false IMowbray i. 1 

tlirough the false passage of _ i. I 

pain to be found false and recreant (rep.) — i. 3 

tis with false sorrow's eye ii. 2 

whioli false hope lingers in e.-stremity — ii. 2 
whose duty is deceivable and false . . — ii. 3 

what thou hast said, is false iv. 1 

as false by heaven, as heaven iv. 1 

his prayers are full of false hypocrisy — v. 3 

thou judgest false already 1 Henry IV. i. 2 

(for recreation sake) prove a false thief — i. 2 

have it, as you are a false tliief — ii. 1 

sblood, my lord, they are false — ii.4 

ears of men with false reports... 2H(;/iryff'. (indue.) 
they bring smooth comforts false — ii. 4 



[240 ] 



FAL 



FALSE — the truccause the false way. .2ZffHry/r. ii. I 
Northumherlaud, tlien false to liini.. — iii. i 
cver.y slight and false derived cause.. — iv! 1 

as a false favourite dotli his . i v. 2 

now, fie upon my false French! Henry F. v.' 2 

will I trust, if she prove false 1 Henry FI. i. 2 

nor any of liis false confederates — ii. 2 

report IS fabulous and false -_ ii. 3 

study and my books be false — ii.4 

where false Plautagenet dare not be. . — ii. 4 
found such false dissembling guile? .. — iv. I 

you, his false hopes, tlie trust iv. 4 

as for your spiteful false objections ..2HenryFI. i. 3 

false fiend, avoid! Lay hands 1.4 

and Beaufort, that false priest _ ii.4 

by false accuse, doth level at — iii. 1 

I sliall not want false witness iii. 1 

to swear false allegations ;ii. 1 

tire winners, for tliey played me false! iii. 1 

all, that my fear were false! iii. 1 

that e'er I proved tliee false iii. 1 

return we to the false duke iii. 1 

or thou not false like him? — jii. 2 

if my susyect be false, forgive iii. 2 

if false Sulfolk dares him? iii. 2 

I would, false murderous coward _ iii. 2 

unless false Suffolk straight — iii. 2 

sueli fell serpents as false Suffolk — iii! 2 

the false revolting Normans iv. 1 

that's false. Ay, there's the question — iv! 2 

they call false caterpillars iv. 4 

false king ! wliy hast thou broken — v! 1 

by Warwick, that false peer ZHenryVI. i. 1 

Clifford, and thee, false Frenchwoman — i. 4 

by that false woman, as this king ... . ii. 2 

and thy lord's false love _ iii. 3 

tell false Edward, thy supposed (rep. iv. 1) — iii. 3 

and bid false Edward battle iii. 3 

I am subtle, false, and treaolierous .. Richard III. i. 1 

I fear me, both are fiUse i. 2 

the envious slanders of her false _ i! 3 

afford false Clarence? and so he i. 4 

Clareuce is come; false, fleeting _ i! 4 

for false forswearing, and for murder i. 4 

by false intelligence, or wrong ii. 1 

for comfort have but one false glass. . — ii. 2 

and from such false friends! (rep.) Iii.) 

to warn false traitors from the like . . iii. b 

slander myself, as false to Edward's.. — iv. 4 

never was, aud never will be false iv. 4 

when I was found false to liis children v. 1 

by the false faith of him whom _ v. 1 

my surveyor is false Henry Fill. i. 1 

trusted, for speaking false in that .... ii. 4 

woe upon ye, and all such false — iii. 1 

such doubts, as false coin, from it. . , . — iii. i 

credit, I answer, is most false iii. 2 

if I be false, or swerve a hair. Troilus ^ Cressida,ui. 2 
from false to false, among false maids — iii. 2 

as false as air, as water, "wind iii. 2 

heart of falseliood, as false as Cressid iii. 2 

if ever you prove false one to another — iii. 2 

all false women Cressids iii. 2 

for every false drop in her bawdy. . . . iv. 1 

so true to liim, to be false to him .... iv. 2 

O false wench, give ' t me again v. 2 

false Cressid! false, false, false — v. 2 

turn thy false face, thou traitor v. 6 

methinks, false hearts should never. Timon ofAlh. i. 2 

when your false masters eat of — iii. 4 

leave their false vows with Mm iv. 2 

never more false title plead iv. 3 

1 am sick of this false world — iv. 3 

you should have feared false times . . iv. 3 

diseases lick up their false bloods .... iv. 3 

and each false be as a caut'rizing . . — v. 1 

would you have me false to my Coriolanus, iii. 2 

his clothes made a false report — . iv. b 

boy I false hound! ifyouliave v. 5 

cannot, is false; and that I dare not. JuliusCtesar,ii. 2 

the strings, my lord, are false — iv. 3 

■who have been false to Fulvia? . . Antony Sf Cleo. i. 3 
O most false love! where be tlie sacred — i. 3 

'tis false. From Silvius, sir ii. 1 

false, false, this, this. Sooth, la — iv. 4 

O tills false soul of Egypt! iv. 10 

aud false played my glory unto — iv.l2 

that the false housewife Fortune — iv. 13 

is fooled with a most false effect (rep.).CymbeUne, i. 6 

and a step-dame false ; a foolish — 1.7 

to try your taking a false report — i. 7 

makes Diana's rangers false — ii. 3 

to allure false hearts, and be false with — ii. 4 

above measure false ! — ii. 4 

what false italiaii (as poisonous — iii. 2 

whose false oaths prevailed — iii. 3 

false to his bed! what is it, to be false? — iii. 4 

that's false to his bed, is it? — iii. 1 

like false jEneas, were, in his time (rep.) — iii. 4 
shall be false, and perjured, from thy — iii. 4 

poor fools believe false teachers — iii. 4 

mine ear, therein false struck — iii. 4 

that, which I fear, prove false! — iii. 5 

true to thee, were to prove false — iii. 5 

dear lord! thou art one 0' the false ones — iii. 6 
with them, since Leonatus false .... — iii. G 

di-eani often so, and never false — iv. 2 

wherein I am false, I am honest .... — iv. 3 
and my false spirits quail to remember — v. 5 
he_ takes false sliadows for true.. Titus Andron. iii. 2 
if it be true that I interpret false Pericles, i. 1 

1 should be false persuaded I had Lear, i. 4 

false of heart, liyht of ear — iir. 4 

true, or tiilse, it iiath made thee — iii. 5 

false justicerlwly hast thou let — iii. 6 

when false opinion, whose wrong — iii. 6 

cunning. And false. Where hast — iii. 7 

could else outfrown false fortune's frown — v. 3 

false to thy gods, thy brother — v. 3 

thou may'st prove false Romeo ^- Juliet, ii. 2 



lALlr-E— affection makes him false.i!o;nCT.S/"'. iii. 1 

canst not then be false to any man Hamlet, i. 3 

what! frighted with false fire! — iii. 2 

as false as dicers' oaths: O such a deed .. — iii. 4 
on the false trail they cry! U this is (rep.) _ iv. 5 

it is the false steward, that stole his — iv. ;> 

a pageant, to keep us in false gaze Othello, i. 3 

framed to make women false 1. 3 

is an idle aud most false imposition — ii. 3 

such things, in a false disloyal knave — iii. 3 

whv, say. they are vile and false — iii. 3 

if she be false, O then heaven mocks itself! — iii. 3 

ha! ha! false to me? to nie? — iii. 3 

false as hell. To whom, my lord? (rep.).. — iv. 2 

I called my love, false love — iv. 3 (sonn) 

she was false as water. Thou art (rep.) . . — v.°2 

that she was false to wedlock? — v. 2 

my husband say, that she was false? — v. 2 

tliou told'st him that his wife was false . . — v. 2 
but did you ever tell him, she was false? — v. 2 
slie false with Cassio! did vou say — v 2 

FALSE-BODING-false-boJing woman. «/(A. ///. i. 3 
FALSE-FACED-false-iiiced soothing! tt>;vo/./)i«s, i. 
FALSE-HEAIiT-a false-lieart traitor.2Heji,;/ I'l. v. I 
FALSE-HEARTED- 

Diomed's a false-hearted rogue.. Troilus /r Cress, v. 1 
FALSEHOOD— of him a falsehood .... Tempes', i. 2 
slander Valentine with falsehood. Two 6r'e«.n/;'. iii. 2 
she twits me with my falsehood to .. — iv. 2 
since your falsehood shall heeorae .. — iv. 2 
pay with falsehood false exa.at\ng.Mea.forMea. iii. 2 
is a great argument of falsehood . . Love's L. Lost, i . 2 

and even that falsehood, in itself — v. 2 

goodly outside falsehood hathl.^/erc/i. of Fenice, i. 3 
being counted falsehood, s]\aX\ ..Winter's Tale, iii. 2 
shallproceed; this is mere falsehood — iii. 2 
but falsehood and corruption. C'omcrfi/o/'£nors, ii. 1 
itself to hollow falsehood change ! . . King John, iii. 1 

and falsehood falsehood cures; as fire iii. 1 

turn thy falsehood to thy heart Richard II. iv. 1 

truly as a man of falseli()od may \HenrylF. ii. 1 

consuming canker eats his falsehood. 1 Henry 11. ii. 4 
by treason, falsehood, and by treachery — v. 4 
buckler falsehood with a pedigree?.3Hc)!)i/ ;/. iii. 3 
betrayed by falsehood of his guard . . ~ iv. 4 
confound your hidden falsehood . . Richard III. ii. I 

and worthily my falsehood? Henry Fill. ii. 4 

in love, upbraid my falsehood!. rroiZiis 4-Cress. iii. 2 

to stick the heart of falsehood — iii. 2 

the very crown of falsehood, if ever.. — iv. 2 
my husbandry, or falsehood . . Timon of Athens, ii. 2 
excellent falsehood! v/hy didhe.. Antony 4-Cleo. i. 1 

with hourly falsehood (falsehood Cymbeline, i. 7 

and falsehood is worse in kings iii. 6 

shall winnow the truth from falsehood — v. 5 

maintains such falsehood Romeof Juliet, i. 2 

your bait of falsehood takes his carp . . Hnmlet, ii. 1 
FALSELY— or very falsely pocket up.. Tempest, ii. 1 
'tis all as easy falsely to take . . Meas.for Mens. ii. 4 
lady Hero hath been falsely accused. Mwc/i Ado, v. 1 
truth the while doth falsely blind. Lot'e's L.Lost, i. I 
true love, which is falsely attempted? — i. 2 

thou speak'st it falsely, as I love All's Well, v. 3 

had falsely thrust upon contrary , . King John, iv. 2 

most falsely doth he lie Ridmrd II. i. 1 

most truly falsely, must needs Henry V. v. 2 

I am falsely accused by the villain ..iHenn/FI. i. 3 

falsely to draw me in these vile Richard lll.i.s 

England's chair, where he is falsely set — v. 3 

laid falsely i' the plain way Coriolanus, iii. 1 

was falsely borne in hand Hamlei, ii. 2 

the witness, and he's indited falsely . . Othello, iii. 4 

falsely, falsely murdered! Alas — v. 2 

FALSENESS— a greater falseness ..2Hcnn//r. iii. 1 

pr'ythee speak; falseness cannot come. Pericles, v. 1 
FALSER- 1 am falser than vows..AsyouLil<e H, iii. .5 

and that I dare not, falser Julius Cirsnr, ii. 2 

FALSIFY-shall I falsify men's hopes.l Hcnii/ / ;'. i. 2 

FALSING— in a thing falsing., Comedi/o/ Errors, ii. 2 

FALSTAFF-twenty su-JohnFalstafts..3/e/;!/ir. i. 1 

if sir John FalstaiS have committed.. — i. 1 

is Falstaff there? — i. 1 

is sir John Falstaff here? — i. 1 

1 am sir John Falstaff' s — i. 3 

Falstaff will learn the humour of ... . — i.3 

how Falstaff, varlet vile — i.3 

for thee to fight, John Falstaff — ii. 1 (letter) 

Falstaff loves your wife — ii. 1 

I will seek out Falstaff — ii. 1 

a disguise to sound Falstaff — ii. 1 

be revenged on falstaff, and laugh .. — ii. 2 
sir John Falstaff, sir John Falstaft' ! .. — iii. 2 
to my wife, aud Falstaff''s boy with. . — iii. 2 

ajid Falstatf's boy with lier — iii. 2 

there I shall find Falstaff — iii. 2 

that Falstaff' is there; I will go — iii. 2 

I will to my honest knight i'alstaff.. — iii. 2 
what, sir John Falstaff 1 are these .. — iii. 2 
special suspicion of Falstaff 's being here — iii. 3 
yet have more tricks with Falstaff .. — iii. 3 
another errand to sir John Falstaff . . — iii. 4 

that Falstaff' at that oak shall — iv. i 

as Falstaff, she, and I, are newly met — iv. 4 

go, send to Falstaff' straight — iv. 4 

I come to speak with sir Oohn Falstaff — iv. 
wherein fat Falstaff liath a great scene — iv.a 
rejoice so much at the abuse of Falstaff — v. 3 

of Falstalf's and our meeting — v. 3 

Falstaff 's a knave, a euckoldly kna^^e — v. 5 
sir John Falstaff, serve Got, and leave — v. a 

Falstaff, Bardolph, Pctii, and IHenry IF. i. 2 

I have removed Falstaff'shor?c — ii. 2 

Falstaff sweats to death, and lards .. — ii. 2 

no proud Jack, like Falstaff — ii. 4 

dri\'e away the time till Falstaff come — ii.4 
Falstaff and the rest of the thieves . . — ii. 4 

I pr'ythee, call in Falstaff — ii.4 

and Falstaff, you carried your guts., — ii. 4 
how came Falstaff''s sword so ha-cked — ii.4 
remember me, his name is Falstaff.. — ii. 4 



FAL 



[ 241 J 



FAN 



FA liSTAFF— virtue in thnt VaUtuS .\ Hrnry I y. ii. 4 
Falstaff, that iildwiiitf-heank'il Satan — ii. 4 
owovt Jack Knl^tall'. kin.) Jaik Cirp.) — ii. 4 

to snv in lioliult'iif tlmt liUslatl' — ii. I 

Kalsiniri mst a.skrp lioliiiul tlu- — ii. 4 

wliut^liouia puDr.huk liilslnlVdo .. — ili. a 
Imt it'I bo luit.liu'k Fiilstiilf, tliun .. — v. 4 
Falstiitl', lui't please vuur lindsliip ..2Henry IV. i. "2 

i.ir John I'ftlstalV ! Bov, lull liim — i. ii 

Bir John !■ aliiintl", a wdiiI witli you . . — i. 2 

Suai-o,«eiiinstarrc!.tsir,l"li]ilalstttft' — ii. 1 
118 thou, mill rulstul!', fill ob.luracv .. — ii. - 
and so iniu-li fn-rallod to I'alstatf . . — ii. 2 

und tho hoy thiu 1 iravc 1 ulstiiir — ii. ti 

John Falstaff, kiii-lu: cvciv imui .. 
Jack Falsttttl', with iiiy laiiiiliiLrs.. .- 
how miglit we sic I iil»talV bestow . . 
uxkint' every one tor .sir John Fulstatt' 
Kword, and eloak : Fnlstalf, good-uit'ht 
then wiui Jack Falstaff, now sir John 
lierc come two of sir John Falstalf's.. 

mj' cantuin, sir John Falstaff 

1 think, you are sir John Falstaff. . . . 
now, Falstaff, where have you been .. 

fare you well, Falstatf 

you iuust now cpeak sir John Falstaff 
'«". carry sir John Falstatf to the Fleet 
I know^ Falstatf shall die of a sweat.. 

for I'ttlstulf he is dead 

sir John Falstaff. That is he 

FAl.TEU— shall falter under foul . . Dichnrd 11. 

FA.MlC-aiid tlie things of fame.. . Tirelflh M^'ht 
cried fame and honour on hiin . 
I have played the jiart of lady Fame. Mucli Ada, ii 



— 11. d 
. -i (.letter) 

— ii. 2 

— ii. 4 
_ ii. 4 

— iii. 2 

— iii. 2 

— iii. 2 

— iv. 3 

— iv. 3 

— iv. 3 

— V. 2 

— V. 5 

— (eijil.) 
niyi: 11. i 



— V. 1 
I 



her fame which never dies (irp.) 

Tct fume, that all hunt after Love's L. Lost, i. 1 

to know nought but fame — _i. 1 

ull-telling fame doth noise abroad.... — ii. 1 

when, for fiime's sake, for praise — iy. 1 

that fame may cry you loud All's »reH,ii.l 

thnt set him in high fame — v. 3 

con founds thy fame, as Turning of Sli . v. 2 

shame hath a bastari:! I'ame ..Cbmedy o/'JiVror 



1 am in good name and fame.. . . 

in the clear sky of fame 

and keei), most royal imp of fame'. 

«., UM I...... i..^n...^ri'^ *\ ...;*t. 



ilUiiryll'. ii. 4 

— iv. 3 

— V. 5 
....lU-nnjy.-\.2 



till king Kdward's fame with. 

doth win immortal fame 

would j;ive all my fame for a pot of ale — iii. 2 

of life, and imp of fume — iv. 1 

tliese English, or else die with fame . . — iy. 5 

how much he wrongs his fame \UenryVl. ii. I 

thou art no less than fiune hath — ii. 3 

reproach be Talbot's gi cutest fame ! . . — iii. 2 

his fame lives in the world — iv. 4 

thy youth, and England's fame — iv. li 

life, and slay bright fame — iv. C 

cancelling your fame 2 Henry VI. i. 1 

in cruelty will I seek out my fame .. — y. 2 

where fame, late entering at his Sllt'inylV. iii. 3 

mv meed hath got me fume — iv. 8 

nothing difters but the oiituaid farac.fticA. ///. i. 4 
without charari> . ;' i;;v Inus long. . — iii. 1 
I in life.. — iii. 1 



1 and worth — iv. 5 
..HcnryVIll.i. 4 



IV. 5 



— V. 5 



he lives in faun . 
of great fami' [ ( . 
having hearil Uy i: 

as great in famo as she was — 

fnll of his airy fame Tioilus ^ C 

that's their fame in peace — 

tliat breath fame blows — 

and fame, in time to come — 

when fame shall in our islands — 

my fame is shrewdly gored — 

on whose bright crest Fame with her — 

fail, fame; honour, or go, or stay — v. 1 

Fame, at the which he aims CorManus,i. 1 

■where he was like to find fame — i. 3 

more than thy fame and envy — i. 8 

with fame, a name to Cains AlaiciuB.. — ii. 1 

read his fame unparalleled, haply — v. 2 

liolp to reap the fame, which he did 

and Ills fame folds in this orb 

80 is the fume. 'Would vrcha-d... Antony ^-Cteo. ii. 2 
Kgyptian cookery shall have the fame — ii. tl 
by our deed acquire too high a fame . — iii. 1 

unregistered in vulgar fame — iii. 11 

j' the name of fame, and honour Cyniheline, iii. 3 

lord and father, live in fimiel .... 'I'iliis .Inilron. i. 2 

and fame's eternal date — i. 2 

survive, and you that sleep in fame. . — i. 2 

repose in fame; none basely — i. 2 

he lives in fame that died III — i. 2 

court is like the house of fame — ii. 1 

fame answering the most strong. fericfcs, iii.2 (Gow.) 

and set up your fame for ever — iii.2 

when fame had spread their cursed — v. 3 (Gower) 
and trick of fame, go to their graves... . Hamlel, iv. 4 
varnish on the fame the Freneliman.. — iv. 7 
paragon's descrijition, and wild fame .. Olhrllo, ii. 1 
IS of great fame in Cvpru.') — iii. 1 

F.A.MKl)— he was much famed AU'siydl.i. 2 

from his most famed of famous HenyyV. ii. 4 

they shall be famed; for there — iv. 3 

as he is famed for mildness 3 Henry VI. i\. 2 

still been famed for virtuous iv. 6 

famed lie thy tutor, and thy parts. 7"roi7..^Cr«»f. ii. 3 

but it was famed with more Juliun Cwtar. i. 2 

the famed Cassibclan, who was once. CymMiiiif.iii. 1 

FAMILIAli— it is a familiar beast . . .Mvrry IVivei, i. 1 

the action of her familiar style — 1.3 

mieiicliinf; my familiar smile .... Tirelflh Kight. ii. 5 

tiiuiigh 'tis iny tkniiliar sin Meat, for Meat. i. h 

let wonder seem familiar Much Ado, v. 4 

hy a familiar demonstration Lovc'iL.Loil, i. 'i 

love is a familiar; love is a devil — i, 2 

and my familiar, I do assure you .... — v. 1 
to make modern and familiar thing ..AlTslVell, ii. 3 
direness, familiar to mv slaugh'trous . . Mncbclh, v. 5 
with humble and familiar courtesy.. /li'cAarrf //. i. 4 
tu U: as familiar with me as my dog .•UlrnrylV. ii. i 



FAMII-IAR— be not too familiar .2HTOri//Kli,2 (let.) 
things n<'i|iminte(l and familiar to 118 — V. 2 
he will nnlooso, I'ainiliur as his garter.. Henry V. i. 1 
hanntcil OS in imr tkniiliar paths .... — ii. 4 

as fiiniiliiu- «ith men's pockets — iii.2 

tlu: worhl (familiar tons, uiid — iii. 7 

then shall our names, familiiu- in — iv. 3 

1 think, lar old familiar is asleep ..\HenryVl. iii. 2 

now, ve fiinii liar spirits, that are — v. 3 

he haii a familiar under his tongue. .2Henr|//'/. iv. 7 
and most liuniliar to iny nature. 7'ioi7u»<5-Crds. iii. 3 

it is funiiliar; l.nlut the author's — iii. 3 

yea, so lamiliar! .'^lif will sing — v. 2 

so his liuniliars to his buried. . 7Vmo/i o/^/Afn», iv. 2 
that we lia\e been lanjiliar, ingratc.forio/anur, v. 2 
and drcudliil nhjecls so I'aniiliar. . Jiiiiiij Civsar, iii. I 
but not with -iieh fumiliar instances.. — iv. 2 
be familiar with mv playfellow. ./fji/ony.<Cf^'"'.i'"'. " 

we ure laniiliar at tUst Cymbdi)u;i. 5 

his favour is fa mi liar to me — v. i 

made familiar to me and to my aid FerieJes, Mi. 2 

dear my h)rd, be not familiar with her Lair, y. 1 

too fum'iliar is my dear son with. /(nmco .J- ./«/iW,iii. 3 

be thou fumiliar, but by no means llmnlel, i. 3 

that he is too fumiliar with his wife OlkeUa,}. 3 

good wine is ajjood familiar creature — ii. 3 

FAMILIAlilTY-upou lamiliaritv..l/«T!/ Wnes.i. 1 

1 have lield familiarity \vith fresher. . . All's Well, V. 2 

added to their familiarity Winler's Tale, ii. 1 

to be no more so familiarity with ..'lllennjll'. ii. 1 
FAM ILIAIII.Y-that I familiarly. Co»i("'.v uf Kn: n. 2 
talks as familiarly of roaring licnis. . Kinv John, ii. 2 
talks as familiarly of John of Gaunt .2 Hp»./r. iii. 2 
fumiliurly shall call thy Dorset.... idWmri/ 7//.iv.4 
FAiMU.Y— and on your fumily's old. . Murli .Uln, iy. 1 

come thev of noble family? Henry V. ii. 2 

let us assiiil the family of York ailenry VI.i.\ 

tliy name, and honourable family .3i7uj/lntiron. i. 2 

hath dishonoured all our family — i. 2 

their faction, and their family — i. 2 

signior.isall youi- family within? ()lhello,\. 1 

FaSuXE— till lauiiue, and the ague, eat.A/uc(/e(/i, V. 5 

hang alive, till laniiuc cling thee — y. 5 

he was the very genius of famine ..-iHenrylV. iii. 2 
should famine, sword, and fire. . Henry I', i. (chorus) 

lean famine, quartering steel 1 Heniy I' I. iv. 2 

famine, and no other, hath slain ..illenryl'I. iv. 10 
am v-anquishcd by famine, not by . . — iv. 10 
o'crflowing Nilus presageth fa.m\}i&..Ant./iCleo. i. 2 

at thy heel did famine follow — i. 4 

yet famine, ere clean it o'erthrow...CV/"i''r///i#', iii. (i 

famine is in thy cheeks, need Domeo ^- Julie/, v. 1 

FAMISK-did he marry mc to famish. 7Voi;. <,f sh . iv. 3 

and vet am ready to famish 1 2 Henry I' 1. iv. 10 

orelse-onfamisli, that's ailenry Vl. v. i 

thou sll;:U I'liiMi,! ,]"/- ile.aOi.. J'ii»o)ifj//l«. ii. 2 
rathi- 1 I - i: , 1 ,, , I 1 ■ i:in,i^h? Coriolanus, i. 1 

suffer il~ 1m lalliili, i.ihl llieir — 1.1 

whilst their iiwu Ijinli laiiiish in.. J'tViM /Iniiron. ii. 3 
breast-deep ill the earth, and famish — v. 3 

eiiiiee;rl his hunger, till he famish? Pericles, i. 4 

FAJIISUED— I am famished in.. Mei. of Venice, ii. 2 
yim filthy famished correctioner! ..•IHenrylV. y. 4 

his soldiers sick, and famished in Henry V. iii. 5 

the famished English, like pale \ Henry VI. i. '?. 

I see, this city must be famished — i. 4 

Paris was besieged, famished, and lost. 2 /feiirj/F/. 1.3 
odds to combat a poor famished man — iv. 10 
tliese famished beggars, weary of ..Richard 111. v. 3 
with a single famislicd kiss.. Troilus fyCressida, iv. 4 
let the famished flesh slide from.. Timon o/Alh. iv. 3 
FAMOUS-tothis faniousduke of iMilan. 7'em/)e.«/, v. 1 
he was famous, sir, in his profession ..AU'sU'elt, i. 1 
the one as famous for a scolding ..TarningofSh. i. 2 

this place is famous for the Winter' sTale, iii. 3 

by that most famous via.rnor..Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

and famous by their birth Richard It. ii. 1 

upon my head, and all this famous land — v. (> 

a famous rebel art thou {reii.) i Henry IV. iv. 3 

his most famed of famous ancestors ..HenryV. ii. 4 
vour grandfather of famous memory — iv. 7 
1-lenry the fifth, too famous to live ..\Hcnry VI. i. 1 

I sliallasfani.)i!s 1>- liy this — ii. 3 

then derived fVuni I'.iiiinns Ednmnd — ii. b 

make thee famous thro' the world .. — iii. 3 

so, in the famous ancient eity illenryVl. i. I 

made the wizard famous in Ills death — v. 2 

won by famous York, shall be — v. 3 

were lie as famous and as bold 'illenryVI. ii. 1 

thy famous grandfather doth live .... — v. 4 
Julius Cffisar was a famous man.. Richard III. iii. 1 
in the seat royal of this famous isle? — iii. 1 
famous Plantagenet, most gracious . . — iii. 7 
all famous colleges almost in — Henry VIII. iii. 2 
thouj'h unfinished, yet so famous — — iv. 2 
would desire my famous cousin to. Troll. ^ Cress, iv. S 
and Menas, famous pirates. ./4;i(on!/<5-CTt'o;)<i^r(i, i. 4 

clip in it a pair so famous — v. 2 

thine uncle (famous in Ciusar's Cymheline, iii. 1 

von sometime famous prinecs Pirieles, i. 1 

like the famous ape, to try conclusions. //um/c', iii. 4 

FAMf)USlA'— famously enriched ..Uielmrd III. ii. 3 
what he hath done famously Coriolanus, i. 1 

FA N— lost the handle of her fan Merry ll'i res, ii. 2 

to fan the moonbeams from . . Mid. N.'s Dream, iii. 1 
before a lady, and to bear hcrfan!/.urc'»/../.'i,</,iv. 1 
the air of jiarariise did fan the house. /(//'j Well, iii. 2 
with scarfs, and funs, and double. Taming of sh. iv. 3 

and fun our iicople cold Miichelh, i. 2 

brain him with his lady's fan I Henri/;*', ii. 3 

give me my fan; what, minion! ....2Henry VI. \. 3 
with a broad and powerful fan.. Troilus ^ Cress, i. 3 
even in the fan and wind of your .... — v. 3 

fan you into despair! Coriolanus, iii. 3 

and the fan, to cool a gipsy's \ust..inlony ^ Cleo. i. 1 
Cupids, with divei'sc-eolourcd fans . . — ii. 2 

maile me to fun you thus CymMinr, i. 7 

my fan, I'cter. I'r'ythee, do (rrp.Miomeo^ J uliet,ii. 4 

Peter, take my fan, and go liefore — ii. 4 

to fetch her fan, licr gloves, licr mask . . Olhello, iv. i 



?'ANATlCAi.-fanatical plianta>.m../,oi'<''«7..i««',v. 1 
!'ANCIKS— enact my present fancies .. Tempest, iv. I 

our fancies are more giddy Twelph i\iglit, ii. -1 

and rack thee in their faueies! . . Meas.for Meas. iv. I 
ill your fancies to ycuir father's will. .Wi'/. A'. Ur. i. I 
the humour of forty fancies pricked. 7'ain. of aii. iii.2 
jealousies, fancies too weak for hoys. Winfer'sT. iii. 2 
of sorriest fancies your cumnaninns . . Maebeih, iii. 2 
were his fancies, orhis gooti-night8.'.i//<'/i>y//'. iii. 2 

play with your fancies Henry V. iii. (chorus i 

your fine fancies (juaintly cc]\e..l'ericles, iii. (Gow.i 

uc it as your fancies teach you Olhello, iii. 3 

his siiirits should hunt after new fancies — iii. 4 

l^'ANCY— to an unsettled fancy Tempe>t,y. 1 

gnu:e win her to fancy him?, . 7'u'O Gen. of Ver. iii. 1 

so ful I of shapes is fancy Twelfth Night, i. I 

that should she fancy it should be .. — ii. .^ 

let fancy still my sense in — iv. 1 

and his fancy's queen — v. 1 

as fancy values them Measure for Measure, ir 'z 

with me,niudum. speaking my fancy. J/ur/i^Jo, iii. I 
no upiiearance of tancy in him (It;;.) — iii.2 

unk^s he have a fimey to this — iii. '2 

he is no i'uul f >!■ laucy, asyou — iii.2 

and tears, iiirtu- laney's followers ..Mid. K.'s Dr. i. I 
fair Helena in lancy following ine .. — iv. I 
more witnesseth than fancy's images — v. 1 
thisehilil of fancy, that Armatlo ..I.ove'sL.Losl,i. I 

the odoriferous tlnwers of fancy — iv. 2 

tell me, where is fancy incd.Mer.nf Ven. iii.2 (soniO 
with ga/.ing fed ; and fancy dies . . — iii. 2 (soii^ ) 

let us all ring fancy's knell — iii.2(8ongi 

fresh el leek tl;e [juwcr of fane v ..As you Like it, iii. ;i 

the fiod .ils« eel and bitter fancy — iv. 3 

thy laiili my l:iiiey totheedoth — v. 4 

my iilirlatnjiis lancy must sanctify.... /<H'« Well,i. 1 
for I submit my faiicy to your eyes.. — ii. 3 
every one to he a man of his own fancy — iv. I 
in fancy's course are motives of (»r/^.) — . ^'. '* 
or wortnlcss fancy ; then take. I'aming-o/S/i. 1 (iiid.) 
could fancy more than any other .... — ii. 1 

belike, you fancy riches more — }i. \ 

tlmt Bianea doth fancy any otlicr.... — iv. 2 
your own weak-hiugcd fancy. . . . Winler's Tale, ii. 3 
and by my fancy; it my reason will — iv. 3 

lest your fancy may think anon .... — v. 3 

but liis fancy, blame him not 1 Henry VI. iv. I 

yet so uiy fancy may be satisfied — v. 3 

although we fancy not the cardinal. .2 Henry VI. i. 3 
mirth with your particular fancy. .7/c)iryr///. ii. 3 
such good dreams possess your fiuiey — iv. 2 

my fancy's on my play — v. 1 

as'angry with m.v fancy, more. . Troilus^ Cress, iv. 4 
never did young man fancy with so . . — v. 2 

and the buildings of my fancy Coriolanus, ii. I 

the fiuicy out-work nature.. ^l;i/oify ^Cleopalr 

V. 2 

v. 2 

by your fancy^s thankful boow.I'erictes, v. 2 (Gow.) 

each buz, each fancy, each complaint Lea 

all the building in my fancy jnuek... 



ine liuicy out-worit nuhum.. ^intoiry <yi^ieopuir 

to vie strange forms with fancy — 

were nature s piece with fancy — 

by your fancy s thankful hoow.l'ei ides, v. 2 ( 



. — IV. 2 

Hamlet, i. 3 

— V. I 



but not expressed in fancy ; rich 

infinite jest, of most exeellciit fancy .... 

aie very deiu- to fancy, very responsive.. — v. '2 

what horrible fancy's tills?' Some of. . . . Othello, iv. 2 

FiVT\CY-f i;ee— 
in uirtiden meditation, fancy-free ..Mid.N.Dr. ii. 2 

FANCV-.Mn:s(.;EK— 
1 could meet that fancy-monger ..fs you Like it, iii. 2 

FAKCV-SlCK-all faucy-sick sTie is.iViJ. A. Dr. iii. 2 

FAN E— nor fane, ueir Capitol C'or'oi«»i«, i. 10 

than priests und fanes that lie Cymljeline, iv. 2 

FAJSG-liy the very fangs of malice. r«<.(ft/i Muhl, i. li 
since i am a diu, lieware mj' fangs.^/p/.').'' ''<■". iii. 3 

as, u ■ I' '\n' J anil churlish Asyou Like it, ii. I 

6oh !eth, his fangs KingJohn, ii. J 

ma- n 1 . 1 - I ' e you entered . . ..'IHemyl /'. ii. 1 
gouu uiaoie. i aii^. hold him sure .... — ii. 1 

do your olhees, master Fang — ii. 1 

destruction fang mankind!.... 7'imo/to/vi//'fn<,jv. 3 
in his anointed flesh stick boarish faiigs. .;.«<;, iii. 7 

FANGED— as 1 will adders fauged . . . . /J<o»(cMii. 1 

FAKGEED— as is our faiigled world.. f7/"jf;<'/'^/', v. 4 

F.VNGEES^S— like to a fungless Iion..2;/r/ii!;"'. iv. 1 

FAN NEU-Xaurus" snow, fmiieil with ,«iV/..\./;r. iii.2 
or the fanned snow, that's bolted. (f'i)i/cr'«7'u/f', iv. 3 

FANNING— Phoebus fanning.. Henri/ V. iii. (.ehoriist 
with fanning in his face — iv. 1 

FANTASIED— strangely fautasicd..Kin;<yo)iH, iv. 2 

FANTASIES— of hateful fantasies. /»/<(/. A'.'s Dr. ii. 2 
such shaping fantasies, that apprehend — v. i 
many legions of strange fantasies ..King John, \. 7 
no figures, nor no fantasies Julius Casar, ii. 1 

FANTASTIC— to be fantastic . . Tiro Gen. of Ver. ii. 7 
plays such fantastic tricks before.iVro. .for Men. ii. 2 
thinking on fantastic summer's hcat./dV/iurrf //. i. 3 
mad and fantastic execution. Troilus ffCress'da,y. .'> 
fantastic garlands did she make Hamlet, i\. 7 

F'ANTASTIC.fU^fcrv fantastical, if/en !/ Ilirf«,iii. 3 
tliat it alone is high fantastical . . Tirrlfth .Y,«/i/, i. 1 
it was a mad fantastical trick .. iWnn. ./or .>/iuj. iii. -J 
if the old fantastical duke of dark .. — iy. 3 
u Scotch jig, and full as fantastical . . Much Ado, ii. i 
his words are a very fiiutastical banquet — ii. 3 
6ehoohna.ster is exceeding fantastical. Lore's L.L.v.i 
prinid, fantastical, apish, shallow. As you Like it, iii.2 
ne'er a fantastical knave of them all — iii. 3 
nor the musicion's, which is fantastical — iv. I 
more noble in being fantastical .. Winter'sTale, iv. 3 

are vc fiiutastical, or that indeed Macbeth, i. 3 

whose murder yet is but fantastical. . . . — i. 3 
and telling her fantastical lies Olhello, ii. I 

FANTASTICALEY— 
head fantastically curved unon it ..iHenrylV. iii. 2 
lier sceptre so taiitastieally borne Henry V, ii, 4 

F^VNTASTICOES— 
lisping, affecting fantnsticoes.. . . Aomro 4' .'■•'''^', ■>■ 4 

FANT.ASY— organs of her fantasy. .iWcrri/ Hiririi, v. i 

tic on sinful faiiliusy! — v..'<(s«ng) 

the impression of her fantasy? ..Mid.X.Uretun, 1. 1 



FAN 

FANTASY-drami to liy thy faiitasy./lsi/ou Like, ii. 4 
to be all made of fantasy, all made . . — v. 2 

or is it fantasy that plays \HertryII'.Y. 4 

than I have drawn it in my fantasy .•iHenry IV. j. 2 
fantasy, of dreams, and ceremonies. yii/ii«C<8sar, ii. 1 
^thines unluckily charge my fantasy.. — iii. 3 
begot of nothing but vain fantasy. llomeo^- Juliet, i. 4 

IloratJii says, 'tis but our fantasy Hainlel, i. 1 

is not this sometliing more than fantasy? — _ i. 1 

for a fantasy, and trick of fame — }v. i 

nothing, but to please liis fantasy Othello, iii. 3 

FyVP— and being fap, sir, was Merru ll'ives, i. 1 

FAll— 'tis far otf Tempest, i. 2 

know thus far forth — i. 2 

who is so far from Italy removed — ii. 1 

but she as far surpasseth Sycorax — iii. 2 

catch your ro3'al fleet far off — v. 1 

to discover islands far away.. TwoGen. of rerona,\. 3 

for far behind his worth — ii. 4 

as far from fraud — ii- 7 

far from the ground — iii. 1 

shall far exceed the love — iii. 1 

I am so far from granting ..Two Gen. of Verona, iv. 2 

that's far worse than none — v. 4 

he's as far from jealousy Merry Wives, ii. 1 

she enlargeth her mirth so far — ii. 2 

so far fortli as herself might — iv. 6 

yet tlius far I will boldly Twelfth Night, ii. 1 

for I am now so far in offence — iv. 2 

so far exceed all instance — iv. 3 

so f;ir beneath your soft — v. 1 

tongue far from heart Meas.for Meas.i. 5 

dispenses with the deed so far — iii. 1 

thus far can I praise him Much Ado, ii. 1 

shall sliine from far Mid.N.'sDream, i. 2 

so far be distant, and good night — ii. 3 

and so far blameless proves my — iii. 2 

and so far am I glad it so did sort.... — iii. 2 
that hatred is so far from jealousy — — iv. 1 
requests so far from reason's yielding. Lome's L.L.ii. I 

how far dost thou excel ! — iv. 3 (verses) 

thy love is far from charity — iv. 3 

this Hector far surmounted Hannibal — v. 2 
I will run as far as God has.. Merchant of Venice, ii. 2 

extend so far as to the lady — ii. 7 

yet look, how far the substance — iii. 2 

so fai' tins shadow doth limp — iii. 2 

you press me far, and therefore. .i>/e>'. of Venice, iv. 1 

t'rom Venice as far as Belmont — v. 1 

how far that little candle throws — v. 1 

to travel forth so far? As yoiiLikcil, i. 3 

had it stretched so far, would have ....AlCsWeU,i. 1 

he did look far into the service — i. 2 

do not plunge thyself too far in anger — ii. 3 

"whilst I from far, his name — ill. 4 (letter) 

1 am so far deceived in him? — iii. 6 

reposing too far in his virtue — iii. 6 

let me buy your friendly help thus far — iii. 7 

out- villained villany so far — iv. 3 

know how far I may be pitied — v. 3 

a lady Var more beautiful ... Taming ofSh. 2 (indue.) 

it sliall be so far forth friendly — i. 1 

since we have stepped thus far in ... . — i. 2 
were my state far worser than it is . . — i. 2 

that never read so far to know — iii. 1 

travel you far on, or are you — iv. 2 

np further; and as far as Rome — iv. 2 

since we have come so far — iv. 5 

mingle friendship far, is mingling. Winter's Tale, i. 2 

'tis iar gone, when I shalt gust — i. 2 

and go not too far i' the land — iii. 3 

so far, that I have eyes under my — iv. 1 

is it not too far gone? — iv. 3 

not our kin, far than Deucalion off . . — iv. 3 

for being so far officious — iv. 3 

almost so far transported — v. 3 

sorry, sir, I have thus far stirred you — v. 3 
I'll not seek far, (for him, I partly .. — v. 3 
ships from far making amain , . Comedy of Errors, i. 1 

far more, far more, to you do I — iii. 2 

far from her nest the lapwing — iv. 2 

t'nus far I witness with liim — v. 1 

howfaris't called to Fores? Macbeth, i. 3 

thou art so far before, that swiftest . . — i. 4 
is't far you ride? As far, my lord. ... — iii. 1 
stept in so far, that, should I wade ... — iii. 4 
or far off, well won is still well shot .... King John, i. 1 
art so for, that thou hast underwi'ought — ii. 1 
and now 'tis far too huge to be blown — v. 2 

too far in years to be a pupil Richard 77. i. 3 

Norfolk, so far as to mine enemy .... — i. 3 

since thou hast far to go — i. 3 

as far as land will let me — i. 3 

how far brought you high — i.4 

as far from home, for Christian — ii. 1 

York iii too far gone with grief — ii. 1 

he is gone to save far off. — ii. 2 

how far is it,my lord,toBerkley,now? — ii. 3 

and far surmounts our labour — ii. 3 

howfar off lies your power? — iii. 2 

Richard, not far from hence — iii. 3 

how far off from the mind — iii. 3 

so far be mine, my most redoubted. . . — iii. 3 

court as far as Calais, to my — iv. 1 

better far off than near, be ne'er — v. 1 

as far as to the sepulchre of Christ. . . 1 Henry IV.i.l 
[Kni.] far more uneven and unwelcome — i. 1 

so far as my coin would stretch — i. 2 

to be delivered as far as Charing-cross — ii. 1 

mine own flesh so far afoot again — ii. 2 

so far afoot, I shall be weary, love ... — ii. 3 
so far v/ill I trust thee, gentle Kate, {rep.') — ii. 3 

in a windmill, far, than feed — iii. 1 

you strain too far — iv. I 

we should not step too far till we iHenrylV. i. 3 

thou think'st me as far in the — ii. 2 

how far forth you do like — iv. 2 

heard the course of it so far — iv. 4 

fire, as far as France — v.U 

ehow you far off the Dauphin's Henry r. i. 2 



[ 242 J 



FAR — to threaten, runs far before them.Henry V.ii. 4 

so far my king and master — iii. 6 

60 far out of his knowledge! — iii. 7 

my office hath so far prevailed — v. 2 

thus far, with rough, and all unable — v. 2 (chorus) 

a far more glorious star IHenry VI. i. 1 

a baser man of arras by far — i. 4 

better far, I guess, that we — ii. 1 

myself, as far as I could well discern — ii. 2 

every country far and near — v. 4 

[Co(.A')ji.]far enough toher destruction. 2Hen.r/. i. 3 

far truer spoke than meant — iii. 1 

far as I could ken thy chalky cliffs . . — iii. 2 

whose far unworthy deputy I am — iii. 2 

far be it, we should honour such — iv. 1 

and thou art far the lesser; thy hand — iv. 10 

I am far better born than his — v. 1 

far be the thought of this ZHenry VI. i. 1 

good, and better far than is — i.l 

and creep into it far before thy time ? — i. 1 

of Greece was fairer far than thou.. . . — ii. 2 

clangour heard from far — ii. 3 

is far beyond a prince's delieates — ii. 5 

but far unfit to be a sovereign — iii.2 

wish the crown, being so far off — iii.2 

'tis far from hence to France — iv. 1 

yet thus far fortune maketh — iv. 7 

how far hence is thy lord — v. 1 

how far off is our brother Montague ? — v. 1 

thus far our fortune keeps — v. 3 

kill a far truer love, to both Richard III. i. 2 

far be it from my heart — _ i. 3 

hath outgrown me far — iii. 1 

and as it were far off, sound thou. . . . — iiL I 

thus far come near my person — iii. .'j 

touch this sparingly, as 'twere far off — iii. 5 

how far I am from the desire — iii. 7 

but I am in so far in blood — iv. 2 

though far more cause, yet much — iv. 4 

thus far into the bowels of the earth — v. 2 

how far into the morning is it — v. 3 

O, you go far. As I belong Henry VIII. i. 1 

it may be said, it reaches far — i. 1 

to ruminate on this so far — i.2 

as far as I see, all the good oiir — _i. 3 

and far enough from com-t too — ii. 1 

you that thus far have come — ii. 1 

yet thus far we are one in — ii. 1 

now far I have proceeded, or how far — ii. 4 

and thus far clear him — Ii. 4 

to say, how far you satisfied me — ii. 4 

trutli and him (which was too far) ... — iii. 1 

as all my other comforts, far hence . . — iii. 1 

far from his succour, from the king.. — iii.2 

Eress not a falling man too far — iii.2 

ut far beyond my depth — iii.2 

and greater far, than my weak-hearted — iii. 2 

and thus far hear me, Cromwell — iii. 2 

yet thus far Griffith, give me — i v. 2 

who hath so far given ear to — v. 1 

bid ye so far forget yom-selves? — v. 2 

thus far, my most dread sovereign.. . . — v. 2 

I miglit see from far some forty — v. 3 

will notcome far behind him. . K-oiiMs^Cresa'da, i. 2 

short of oiu: purpose so far — _i. 3 

as far as toucheth my — ii. 2 

she is as far high-soaring o'er — iv. 4 

holds honour far more precious dear.. — v. 3 

and thus far I can confirm Timon of Athens, i. 2 

I am so far already in your — i.2 

will you befriend me so far, as to — iii.2 

if it be so far beyond his health — iii. 4 

it cannot be far where he abides — v. 1 

how far oft' lie these armies? Coriotanus, i. 4 

hark you; far off; there is Aufidius. . — v. 4 

and thus far having stretched it — iii.2 

so far as thou hast power and person — iii. 2 

as far as doth the Capitol exceed (rep.") — iv. 2 

as far as day does night — iv. 5 

for I dare so far free liim — iv. 7 

I will set this foot of mine as far . . Julius Caisan^i. 3 

may well stretcli so far — ii. 1 

in conquest stretched mine arm so far — ii. 2 

press not so upon me; stand far off . . — iii. 2 

fly far off. Tiris hill is far enough . . — v. 3 

far from this country Pindarus — v. 3 

a bourn how far to be beloved Antony S,- Cleo. i. 1 

yet far fairer than you are — i. 2 

twenty times upon far poorer moment — i- 2 

tempt liim not so too far ,. — _i. 3 

do so far ask pardon, asbefits — ii.2 

there, my music playing far off — ii. .5 

so far as we have quarter — iv. 3 

we have engaged ourselves too far. . . . — iv. 7 

you speak him far Cymbeline, i. 1 

so far prefer her 'fore ours (jep.) — i. 5 

only thus far you shall answer — i. 5 

havin" thus far proceeded — j- C 

so far 1 read aloud — i- 7 

who is as far from thy report — i. 7 

I'll make a journey twice as far — ii. 4 

and tell me how far 'tis thither — iii. 2 

how far it is to this same blessed Milford — iii. 2 

my name was not far off — iii. 3 

why Iiast thou gone so far — iii. 4 

thus far, and so farewell — iii. 5 

BO far as tliou wilt speak it — iii. 6 

madness could so far have raved — iv. 2 

pray, how far thither? Ods pittikins! — iv. 2 

111 tliat he spake too far — v. 5 

for thisliigh good turn so far? Titus Andron.i. '?. 

as far from help as limbo is — iii. 1 

not far, one Muliteus lives — iv. 2 

whose arm seems far too short Pericles, i. 2 

comfort is too far for us to expect — i.4 

heard yom' miseries as far as Tyie — i. 4 

how far is his court distant — ii. 1 

Diana's temple is not distant far — iii. 4 

your kindness we have stretched thus far — v. 1 

whose nature is so tiir from Lear, i. 2 



FAR 

FAR— well, you may fear too far Lear, i. 4 

[Co/. A'n^j safer than trust too far — i.4 

how far your eyes may pierce — i.4 

let him ny far; not in this ■ — ii. 1 

his picture I will send far and near — ii. 1 

dare build BO far to make — iii. 1 

[A'n<.] mareschal of France, monsieur le Far — iv. 3 
the shrill-gorged lark so far cannot be . . — iv. 6 

far off', metliiuks, I hear the beaten — iv.6 

still, stUl, far wide! He's scarce — iv. 7 

bosomed with her, as far as we call hers — v. 1 

demanded, ere ^ou had spoke so far — v. 3 

far from sounding and discovery. Borneo ^Juliet, i. 1 

art far more fair than she — ii.2 

wert thou as far as that vast shore . . — ii. 2 
proves thee far and wide a broad goose — ii. 4 
more fierce, and more inexorable far — v. 3 

yet so far hath discretion fought Hamtet, i. 2 

your wisdom so far to believe it — i. 3 

you may go so far. My lord, that would — ii. 1 

lie is far gone, far gone — ii. 2 

so sick of late, so far from cheer — iii.2 

they shall go far with little — iv. 5 

so far he topped my thought _ iv. 7 

her obsequies have been as far enlarged. . — v. 1 
free me so far in your most generous .... — v. 2 
your son-in-law is far more fair than . . Othello, i. 3 

I'll not be far from you — ii. 1 

sith I am entered in this cause so far — iii. 3 

FARCED— the farced title running . . Henry V. iv. 1 

FARDEL—that in this fardel, will. >»'i»ito's7'u/e,i v. 3 

the condition of that fardel — iv. 3 

the fardel there? what's i' the fardel? — iv. 3 
such secrets in this fardel, and box . . — iv. 3 
at the opening of the fardel, heard . . — v. 2 

I heard them talk of a fardel — v. 2 

would fardels bear, to grunt and svfeat. Hamlet, iii. 1 

FARE— how fares the king and his Tempest, v. I 

how fares my gracious sir? — v. I 

be free, and fare thou well! — v. 1 

fare thee well; commend Merry Wives, ii.2 

well, fare you well — iii.2 

should be cozened: fare you well .... — iv. 5 

fare you well, sir — v. 3 

fare you well, gentlemen Twelfth Night, i. 3 

fare you well : I thanlc you — i.5 

fare ye well at once — ii. 1 

fare thee well; and God — iii. 4 (chall.) 

come again to-morrow; fare thee well — iii. 4 

fare thee well: remain thou — iv. 2 

of thy grandam; fare thee well — iv. 2 

so, fare you well Measure for Measure, i. 1 

once more, fare you well — i.l 

I thank, you, fare you well — i. 1 

Pompoy, fare you well — 11.! 

to my house; fare you well — ii. 1 

sense breeds with it. Fare you well.. — ii.2 

fare you well, good father — iii. 1 

to visit the prisoner; fare you well .. — iii.2 
answer this one day. Fare ye well . . — iv. 3 

I shall sir: fare you well — iv. 4 

no stomach, signior; fare you well ..Much Ado, ii. 3 
some wine ere you go: fare you well — iii. :< 

but fare thee well, most foul — iv. 1 

so will it fare with Claudio — iv. 1 

well, fare you well, my lord — v. I 

fare you well, boy — v. 1 

then is spoken ; tare you well now .. — v. 2 

and leave us ; fare you well — v. 3 

fare thee well, nymph Mid.N.'s Dream, ii. 2 

but fare you well: perforce I must .. — ii. 3 

but fare 3'e well; 'tis partly mine — iii. 2 

for the day- woman: fare you well.io»e'si.Z.os(, i. 2 

monsieur, fare you well — li. 1 

well, I will do it, sir: fare you well. . — iii. 1 

how fares yom- majesty? — v. 2 

and Lorenzo: fare you 'VJ^W... Merchant of Venice, i. 1 

fare ye well, a while — i.l 

but fare you well, I have some — ii. 2 

but fare thee well; tliere is a ducat .. — ii. 3 
fare you well; your suit is cold .. — ii. 7 (scroll) 

so fare you well, till we shall — iii. 4 

on you: fare you well, Jessica — iii. 4 

your hand, Bassiano; fare you well! — iv. 1 

fare yovi well: pray heaven As you Like it, i. 2 

but tare thee well; thou art a gallant — i. 2 

fare you well, fair gentleman — i. 2 

have with you : fare you well — i.2 

sir, fiire you well ; hereafter — i.2 

much bouuden to you; fare you well! — i.2 

to thee, shepherd: fare you well — iii. 5 

so fare you well ; I have left — v. 2 

leave two together; fare you well All's Well, ii. 1 

I must not hear thee ; fare thee well — ii. 1 

of lattice, fare thee well — ii. 3 

at his prayers; fare you well, my lord — ii. 5 
but fare you well. You are undone — iv. 3 
an impudent nation; fare you well.. — iv. 3 
how faies my noble lord? . . Taming ofSh.2 (indue.) 

how fares my Kate? — iv. 3 

how fares our gracious lady? .... Wititer'sTale, ii. 2 

then fare thee well; I must go — iv. 2 

a merry man, sir; fare you KelhComedy of Err. iii. 2 

fare thee well, my lord Macbeth, iv, 3 

fare thee well ! these evils — iv. 3 

fare you well: do we but find — v. 6 

madam, fare you well; I'll send . . King John, iii. 3 
fare you well; had you such a loss .. — iii. 4 
canst outseold us; fare thee well .... — v. 2 

how fares your majesty? — v. 3 

how fares your majesty? Poisoned .. — v. 7 

how fares our noble uncle Richard II. ii. 1 

HaiTy, how fares your uncle? — ii.2 

so, fare you well; unless you — ii. 3 

how fares your grace? sir Nicholas..! H«nr!/JT. v. 4 

brave Percy: fare thee well, great — v. 4 

fare you well: commend me 2HenrytF. i. 2 

fare ye-well; go: this Doll Tear-sheet — ii.2 
well, fare thee well; I have known.. — ii. 4 
fare you well, gentlemen both — iii. a 



FAR 



[ 243 ] 



FARE— fare you well. FiiUtaff 2Henri/lV. iv. 3 

youRmojcaty? how fiirv's your crncf? — iv. « 

with eafc conduct: fare you well Ilertry ) . I. i 

ondso.Montjov.fnre you well — !"• u 

keej) thy wonl; lure tliee well ...... - jv. 1 

potiire thee WL'U: thou never ehalt.. — iv. 3 
Enirlisheomliti.Mi; line ye well .... — „, .X- ) 

so fare mv linitis«ith lon.^; \Henr\jVl.\\. 5 

how dostth.m CireV « lit thou - IV. b 

tiircwell; and better than 1 turc .. ..2HeiirvK/. ii. 1 
how furea my lord '{ hel |> lor.ls !••..•• — •!!• } 
how fares mj craeious Uud? Comfort — in- 1 
how fares my lord? sneak, Beaufort — in. 3 
how would it fare with your departed — iv. 7 

how fares my brother? wliy is 3Ilenry VI. ;i. 1 

what fare? what news abroad? — !!• 1 

this battle fares like to the mornings' — .ii. 5 

then fare you well, for I will — iv. 7 

our gentle queen how well she tares ~, ,„ X- '! 

of wisdom; fare you well Richard III.i. i 

how fares our loving brother? ..•..•■ — i!!- j 
how fores our cousin, noble lord oi York — in. 1 
motlier, how fares your grace? ..•••• — '^'- ' 
tell me. how fares our loving mother? — y. 3 
mv lord Aberga'nv, fare you well . . Henri/ I'll';,]- 1 
so' fare you well, niv little good lord — in. 2 
fare yewell. good nicee. Adieu.. rioi7i« fyCress.i. 2 
fareVouwell, with all my heart .... — m. 3 
fare thee well; I would have been .. — v. b 
fore you well. M\ happiness to.Timono/Alhens, i. 1 

well fare vou, gentlemen — !■ ] 

fare thee well, fare thee well — ..!• j 

say, thou saw'st me not: fare thee well — i.'.'- ' 
fare thee well: commend me to thy — lu. 2 

pcntlemcn both: and how fare you? — iii- 8 

if thev will fare so harshly on — iii- 6 

whv, "fare thee well: here s some — — iv- 3 

fare you well then: come, good Coriolanut,i. 3 

hath yet not warmed me; fare you well — .i- 5 

fare you well, lie has it now — .ii-3 

fare ve well : thou hast years — iv. 1 

fare you well: there was more ruliiisC<e>ar,\. 2 

fare vou well. Whatsaid Popilius Lena — in. I 
to this little measure? fare thee well — ui- 1 
of all the Romans, faro thee well I . . — v. 3 

so. fare vou well at once — v. .5 

vour haiid first: fare you well, my lord — y. 5 

fare thee well a while Anlo7iy ^ Cteopalra.i. 2 

mv dearest sister, fare thee well — — in- 2 
detcrmineouc way: fare you well .. — iv. 3 

fare thee well, dame, wliate'er — iv. 4 

so, fare thee well : now boast thee — — v- 2 

fare thee well, Pisanio; think on Cyinbelme, i. 6 

our crows shall fare the better — lii- 1 

vet to name the winner: fare you well — lii- 5 

how fores my mistress? — .v. 5 

vou shall fare well; you shall have ..Peridrs, ly. 3 

fare thee well, king : since thus Lcor, i. 1 

in time: fare you well, sir — ji. 1 

how fares your grace? What's he — in- 4 

conceive, and fore thee well — iv. 2 

how fares your majesty? You do me wrong — iv. 7 

why, fare thee well ; I will o'erlook — v. 1 

how fares [Knf.-doth] my Romeo ^Jiilwl, v. 1 

60, fare you well: upon trie platform Hamlet, i. 2 

farethee well at once! the glowworm .. — _i. 5 

God be wi' you; fare you well — u. 1 

fare you well, my lord. These tedious .. — ii. 2 

how fares our cousin Hamlet? — ^ iii- 2 

how fares my lord? Give o'er — iii- 2 

fare you well, my liege: I'll call upon you— in. 3 

fare vou well, my dove! — jv. 5 

FARllD— so fared our father with — ZHenry VI. ii. 1 

FAR E WELL— fai-ewell my wife (rep.) .. Tempest, i. 1 

farewell, master, farewell, farewell — ii. 2 (song) 

and so farewell! TwoGen.nfferima.i. 1 

Julia, farewell! what! gone — .ii. 2 

at saint Gregory's well. Farewell — — iv. 3 
because thou lovest her. Farewell . . — iy. 4 

well, farewell! I am in Merry Ifives, i. 4 

farewell to your worship — J. 4 

the horn, I "say, farewell — .ii- 1 

farewell, my hearts: I will to my — iii. 2 

or bid farewell to your good life for ever — iii. 3 

till then, farewell, sir: she must — iii- 4 

farewell gentle mistress; farewell. Nan — iii. 4 

farewell, mistress Page — iv. 1 

farewell, fair crueltvT Tirelflli Night, 1. r> 

to the count Oisino s court: farewell — ii. 1 
bidyou farewell- Farewell, dear heart — ii, 3 
anddream on the event. Farewell . . — ii. 3 
a go(«l voyage of nothing, farewell .. — ii- 4 
farewell - "Slie that wouldialter .... — ii. 5 (letter) 

farewell, and take her — v, 1 

of it, master Froth: farewell.. ..A/ea». /or A/caj. ii. 1 

hold you there: farewell — iii- 1 

farewell: go; say I sent thee thither — iii, 2 
farewell, good Pompey; commend me — iii. 2 

farewell, good friar; I pr'ythec — iii. 2 

say that I paid so: farewell — iii. 2 

farewell therefore. Hero! Miich Adn, ii. 1 

do so; farewell- Come hither, Leonato — ii. 3 
contempt farewell! and maiden pride — iii. 1 

farewell, thou pure impiety -— iv. I 

you kill me to deny it; farewell .... — iv. I 
1 must say she is dead, and so farewell — iv. I 
lords, farewell- Farewell, my lords .. — v- I 

farewell, sweet playfellow; pray Mid. N. Dr. i. I 

farewell, thou lob of spirits, rilbc - — ii. 1 
and farewell, friends; thus Thisby ends — v. 1 

and so farewell. Fair weather Love's L. Lost, i. 2 

thoughts excuse me, and farewell — — ii. 1 
farewell to me, sir, and welcome to you — ii. 1 
farewell, mad wenches; you have .. — v. 2 
farewell, worthy lord! a heavy heart — v. 2 
farewell: I'll grow a talker... Wfrc'inn<<i/'/'f ru'«, i. I 
as I can bid the other four farewell.. — i. 2 

do it secretly, and BO farewell — ii.3 

farewell. good Launeelot — ii.3 

bia words were, farewell, mistress. ... — U. & 



FAREWELL— farewell; and if my.A/cr. H/fVii. ii. h 
then, farewell, heat; and welcome, frost — ii, 7 
farewell, good Charles: now will...f» ii'iit l.ikeit,\. I 
measure out my grave; furiwcll, kind — n. fi 
no longer with you; farewell, good.. — in. 2 

farewC'll.goiKl master Oliver! — in. 3 

farewell, monsieur tnivellir: look, you — iv. I 
make conrt'sv, hill iiie farewell .... — a-pil.) 

on thv head! farewell: inv lord Alfilfrll, i. 1 

heaven bless him! farewell Bertram — i. 1 

farewell, pretty lady: you must hold — i. 1 

Helen, farewell; if I eau — 



little Helei , 

makes thee away; farewell — J- 1 

use him as he uses thee; so farewell — .!• 1 

farewell, young lord, these warlike (rep.) — ii. 1 

and take a more dilated farewell,... — ii- I 

is very gnat, fuvewcll; hie home — ii- S 

monsieury liirewfli; go thou toward — ii. ■'J 

will suhsLMilie fur tlice; farewell — m- l> 

and so farewell: Kathariua ..Taming o/ Slirew, i. 1 

on both sides: farewell; yet, for the love — \. 1 

and so farewell. What, with my tongue — ii- 1 

farewell, sweet masters, both; I must — iii- i 

hence, and farewell to you all — iii- 2 

and so, farewell, signior Lucentio — — iv. 2 

bid Bianca farewell for ever and a day — ly. 4 
to save both., farewell, our brother. lyinler'sTale.i. 2 

so, so; farewell; we are gone — .ii-3 

enjoined to tliis: finewell! the day.. — in- 3 

come, ladv, cumo; farewL-ll my friend — iv. 3 
farewell till then: I will go lose. t'omci/i/ of Err. i. 2 
shook bauds, nor bade farewell tohim.jUacde'/i, i, '2 
lay it to thy heart, and farewell , . — i. 5 (letter) 

father, farewell. God's lienison go — .li- 4 

commend you to their backs: farewell — iii- 1 

Pembroke, look to't: farewell KingJohn,]. I 

farewell, my gentle cousin. Coz, farewell — in. 3 

and 90, farewell. Stay yet, lord Salisbury — ly. 2 
farewell, old Gaunt; thou goest to ..Ricliard II. i. 2 

and loving farewell, of our several .. — 1-3 

farewell, ray lord; secuiely I espy .. — 1-3 

farewell, my liege ; now, no way — — i- 3 

cousin, farewell: and, uncle, bid him — i- 3 

then, England's ground, farewell — — i- 3 

the word farewell have lengthened -. — }. ^ 

should have had a volume of farewells — .i- "I 

my liege, farewell: what will ensue — ii- 1 

save bidding farewell to so sweet — ii- 2 

farewell: if iieart's presages be not ,. — ii- 2 

will disperse ourselves: farewell — .ii. 1 

lords, farewell- My comfort is — lii- 1 

farewell kin^! cover your heads — iii- 2 

uncle farewell; and cousin too — y- 3 

farewell: you shall find me (rep.) ..XHenrylV. i. 2 

farewell, kinsman! I will talk to you — i. 3 

cousin, farewell: no further go — .1.3 

farewell, you muddy knave — u- 1 

farewell, and stand fast — ij- 2 

he shall be answerable: and so farewell — ii, 4 

Iwill, captain; farewell- If I be not — iv- 2 

our purposes ; and so farewell — iv- 3 

other friends; and so farewell — iv- 4 

say thy prayers, and farewell — v. 1 

poor Jack, farewell! I could have better — v. 4 
and so farewell ; thine, by yea.SHen?-!/ IV. ii. 2 (let.) 

farewell hostess; farewell Doll — ii- 4 

and march- F'arewell, hostess Henry r. ii. 3 

I thee command. Farewell, adieu . . — .ii. 3 

farewell, good Salisbury; and good luck — ly. 3 
farewell, my masters; to ray task . . 1 Henry VI. j. 1 

mayor, farewell: thou dost but — i- 3 

Talbot, farewell; thy hour is not — — .i- 5 

and so farewell, until I meet thee (rep.) — ii. 4 

so farewell; and fair he all thy hopes — .ii. 5 

so farewell, Talbot; I'll no longer .. — in- 3 

if he miscarry, farewell wars in France — iv- 3 

farewell Talbot, France, and England's — iv. 3 

so, farewell, Rei^nier! set this — v. 3 

farewell, my lord ! good wishes — v- 3 

lordings farewell; and say, when L.iHenry VI. i. 1 

farewell, good king: when I am dead — ii- 3 

and so, sir John, farewell (rep.) — |i- 4 

sberitf, farewell; and better than I fare — .ii- 4 

.vet now farewell; and farewell life-- — iii- 2 

i'arewell, my lord ; trust not the Kentish — iv. 4 

and so farewell, for I must hence again — iv. .'i 

farewell; and be proud of thy victory — iv. 10 

farewell, faiut-hearted and ZHeiiry VI. i. 1 

farewell, my gracious lord; I'll to my — i. 1 

takes her farewell of the glorious sun! — ii. 1 

once more, sweet lords, farewell! .-.- — ii, 3 

brother king, farewell, and sit you fast — iv, 1 

for a while farewell, good duke — iv. 3 

hisliop, farewell: shield thee from .. — iv. .'j 

farewell, my sovereign. Farewell — — iv, 8 

once more a happy larewell. Farewell — iv. 8 

with a groan, O farewell, Warwick! — v, 2 

bids you all farewell, to meet again in — v. 2 

farewell, sour annoy! for here — v. 7 

farewell: Iwill unto the king Richard III. i. 1 

I must perforce; farewell- Go, tread — i- 1 

bid me farewell. 'Tis more than — — i.2 

imagine I have said farewell alrcidy — i. 2 

madain, farewell- Stay, I will go — — ii- 1 

farewell, until we meet again in hcnvcn — iii. 3 

m.v good lord mayor, we bid farewell — iii, ■'■ 

farewell, good cousin; farewell, gentle — iii. 7 

farcwell^thou woful wclcomer of glory! — iv. 1 

sorrow bids your stones farewell — — iv- 1 

farewell, till then, I humbly take my — iv, 3 

farewell, York's wife; and uneen of siul — iv, 4 

my true love's kiss, and so farewell- . — iv- 1 

resolve him of my mind- Farewell -. — iv. ,^ 

farewell: the leisure and the fearful — y. 3 
my clear sun; my lord, farewell ..Henry VIII. \. 1 

farewell: and when you would say .. — ii. 1 

nay then, farewell! I have touched.. — iii- 2 

by a piece of sc;irlet, farewell nobility — iij. 2 

81) farewell to the little good (rep.) .. — iii. 2 

farewell the hopes of court I — iii. 2 



FAR 

FAREWELL— farewell, my lordfrffi).)H(m.»'//;.iv- 2 
contagious sickness, farewell, all physiek — v. 2 
'tis triLsh: farewell. Farewell .. Troiliu ^Creu. ii. 1 

farewell, sweet queen — iii, 1 

and farewell goes out sighing — iii- 3 

as many farewells as be stars in heaven — 
Ajax, farewell. If I might in entreaties — 
wliy then, farewell; thou never shalt — 
farewell till then. Good-night (rp/;.; — 
farewell, revolted fair! and Oiomed — v. 2 
O farewell, dear Hector. lx)ok, how thou — v, 3 
farewell, yet, soft: Hector, I take — — v, 3 

farewell: the gods with safety — v, 3 

farewell, bastard. The devil take thee — v. h 
a fool, to bid me farewell twice.. Timon ofAtlirnt, i. 1 
farewell; and come with better music — i. 2 

farewell, Timon ; if I thrive well — iv. .'! 

and so, farewell, and thrive. O let me ~ iv. 3 
safe! I'arewell. Farewell, I'arewell.. Cori'ofanui, i. 2 
much mirth. Well, then farewell.... — i, :; 
plaiteth liirlieit; so, faiewell ' ' 



iv. 4 
iv. 5 
V- 2 
v. 2 



L'f fa 

ix-11, iny will- 



;tl» 



ith 
..other! 



fart 

bid 

thank you, sir, larewell. O world .. 
now the gods keeji you! Farewell .. 



;ii you! 
oth- Wl 



do so: farewell, both- What a blunt, 
i not to walk in. Farewell, Cicero 



JidiusCcest 



i,3 
— iv. 2 



iv. 12 
v. 2 
v. 2 



— y. 2 
Cymbeline, iii. 4 



why, farewell, Portia: we must die 
farewell, good Messala; good night., 
goodnight, lord Brutus. Farewell.. 
our everlasting farewell, take (rep.).. — 
farewell to you: and you, and you (rep.) — 
farewell, good btratu: Ca;sar, now be still — 

but bid farewell, and go Antony ^Cleopal. 

mv business too: farewell. Farewell — 
which will become you both, farewell — 

sir, good success! farewell — 

we bid a loud farewell to these great — 
fortune, worthy soldier; and farewell — 

farewell, my dearest sister — 

fairway! Farewell, farewell! Farewell! — 
farewell. 'Tis said, man; farewell (rep.) — 

farewell, and thanks. Now, Iras — 

get thee hence ; farewell (rep.) — 

ay, 1 iirewell. Look you, the worm . . — 

get thee gone; farewell — 

farewell, kind Charmian (rep.) 
■we must take a short farewell . . 

thus far, and eo farewell 

so farewell, noble Lucius — iii. 5 

brother, farewell. I wish ye sport -. — iv. 2 
farewell, you are angry. Still going? — y- 3 
make this his latest farewell - - TitusAndronicui,i. 2 
farewell,my sons: see, that you make — ii-3 
now.farewell, flattery: die, Andronicus — iii- 1 
farewell, Andjonieus, my noble father — iii- 1 
farewell, proud Rome! till Lucius .. — iii. 1 
farewell, Lavinia, my noble sister .. — iii. 1 
fai-ewell, Androuieus: revenge now goes — v. 2 

and sweet revenge, farewell — v. 2 

bid him farewell: commit him to — y. 3 

An tioch, farewell !, for wisdom sees Pericles, i. 1 

so farewell to yom'iiighness — i- 1 

tliough loath to bid farewell — ii- s 

■whiles I say a priestly farewell to her — iii- 1 
farewell : thou art a piece of virtue . . — iv- ti 

bid them farewell, Cordelia 

bid farewell to your sisters 

so farewell to you both 

torches! so, farewell- Some blood 

not trouble thee, my cliild, farewell - . 

farewell, dear sister; farewell, my lord 

farewell, sweet lord, and sister (rep.) 

farewell, and let me hear thee going.. 

gone, sir? farewell. And yet I know not — iv. 6 

preserving sweet: farewell, my coz. Itoineo^ Juliet, i. 1 

farewell; thou canst not teach me — — i. I 

but farewell compliment! — ii- 2 

farewell, ancieut lady; farewell (rep.) — ii- i 
farewell, be trusty, and I'll quit thy — ii, I 

high fortune! honest nurse, larewell — ii- J 
villain am I none: therefore farewell — 
bid him come to take his last farewell — 

thy hand; 'tis late: farewell — 

so'brief to part with thee; farewell -. — 
against this wedding-day; farewell . . — 

farewell, farewell! one kiss — 

farewell; I will omit no opportunity — 
help alTord: farewell, dear lather !.... — 
farewell! God knows when we shall meet — 
farewell, buy food, and get thy self iu flesh — 
farewell, good fellow. For all this... — v. j 
good-night, O farewell, honest soldier... HaiiWef, i. 1 
farewell ; and let your haste commend — i- 2 
we doubt it nothing; heartily farewell — i. i 
your loves, as mine to you: tai-ewell. . — i- 2 
my necessaries are embarked; farewell — i- 3 
farewell; my blessingseason thisin thee! — " " 
farewell, Ophelia; and remember well — 

farewell! how now, Ophelia? — 

but farewell it, for I will use no art . . — 

farewell. O help him — 

get thee to a nunnery; farewell (rep.) — 

rash, intruding fool, farewell! — 

for England! tarewcU, dear mother- . 
farewell. He that tliou knowest- . — 

sweets to the sweet: farewell! — v. i 

farewell, for I must leave you: Oihello,i. I 

so, farewell. It is too true an evil — 
go to; farewell- Do you hear (rep.). . 
Fetch his necessaries ashore: farewell 

farewell my lord. Farewell, my 

farewell, farewell; if more thou dost 

farewell the tranquil mind! (rep.) 

O farewell! farewell the neighing steed 
farewell! Othello's occupation's gone! 

farewell: eonimeud me to (rep.) 

FAR-FET— with all hisfar-fet i)olicv-2Hpnr!/F/. iii. i 
FARM— then, at my farm, I have.. Taming of Sh. ii. i 



. . . Lear, 



— IV. 6 



iii. I 
iii. 2 
iii. 3 
iii. 3 



iii. 6 
iv. 1 
iv. 3 
V. 1 



i. 3 
ii. I 
ii. 2 



iv. 6 (lette 



1. 3 

ii. I 
iii. 3 
iii. 3 
iii. 3 



— V. 2 



FAR 



FARM— to farm our royal realm Uicliuril II. i. i 

a tenement, or pelting farm, England — ii. 1 
iif Wiltshire Iv.ith the realm in farm — li. I 

asl..liher.v ami a dirty fiiini in that ...Hcjui/F. iii. 3 
had sold my farm to Imy my crown — v. 2 

from low farms, [tour peltins villages hear., ii. 3 

but keep a farm, and carters Hamlel,\\. 2 

five ducats, five, I would not farm it — iv. 4 

FARM E It— a farmer's eldest son. T'am.o/'S/t. 1 (indue.) 
as will a chestnut in a farmer's fire?.. — i. 2 

here's a farmer, that haiiged himself ..Macbeth, ii. 3 
thou hast seen a farmer's dog bark Lear, iv. 6 

FAK^M-UOUSE— at a i-M-M-\\ousi.. Merry Wives, ii. 3 

FAIv-^ill'—far-otf mountains tm-ned. M/d.JV.Dc. iv. 1 

did but '-dance a far-off look 2HenryVl. iii. I 

and spies a far-oft' shore where ZHenryVI. iii. 2 

FAllllAKA— 
between his liighness and Farrara . Henri/ F///. iii. 2 

I'ARKDW — hatn eaten her nine farrow. */ac6(;(/i, iv. i 

1 AR'ST— how far'st thon, mirror of. . 1 Henry Vl. i. 4 
bow far'st thou, soldier? well. .. .^n(o)ii/ <^Cfeo. ii. 6 

FARTHER— disparage hernofarther.il/uc/i /(do, iii. 2 
aird for me, I have no farther gone.. Hen;-!/ VIII. i. 2 

FARTHEST- vou at the farthest. Tempest, iv. 1 (song) 

from the fartliest inch of Asia Mtcch Ado, ii. 1 

from the farthest steep of India.?. Mid. N. Dream, ii. 2 
he ready at the farthest by five. . Mer. of Venice, ii. 2 
mine as far, as who goes tartliest ..Julius Ciesar. 1. 3 

F ARXHING-for three farthings (rep.) Love'sL.L. iii. 1 

marry, sir, halfpenny farthing — iii. 1 

eleven-pence farthing better: most .. — iii. 1 
say, look, where tlrree farthings go! . . King John, i. 1 

FARTHINGAEE- 

yuu wear your farthinga.le? Two Gen. ofVer. ii. 7 

against a gentlewoman's farthingale? — jv. 4 

in a semi-circled farthingale iSTerry Wives, \\\. 3 

and cuffs, and farthingales, and.. Taming of Sh. iv. 3 

FARTUOUS— she's as f artuous .... Merry Wives, ii. 2 

FASHION"— iu the same fashion as yon. Tempest, v. 1 

what fashion, madam TwoGen.ofVer. ii. 7 

even that fashion thou best — ii. 7 

the fashion of the time is changed — iii. 1 

how shall I fashion me to wear — iii. 1 

thou friend of an iU fashion! . . Two Gen. ofVer. v. 4 

'tis no de fashion of France Merry Wives, iii. 3 

in such a righteous fashion as I do. . . — iii. 4 

a fashion she detests Twelfth Mght, ii. 5 

and be went still in this fashion — iii. 4 

but as the fashion of his hat, it ever. . Much Ado, i. 1 
the fashion of the world is to avoid .. — i. 1 

than to fashion a carriage to rob — i. 3 

what fashion will you wear the garland — ii. 1 
and I doubt not but to fashion, it ... . — ii. 1 

1 will so fashion the matter — ii. 2 

carving the fashion of a new doublet — ii. 3 
and from all fashions, as Beatrice is.. — iii. I 
thon know'st, that the fashion of . . . . — iii. 3 
mean the fashion. Yes, the fashion (rep.) — iii. 3 
what a deformed thief fJris fashion is? (yep.) — iii. 3 
and see, that the fashion wears out . . — iii. 3 
thyself f^iddy with the fashion too. ... — iii. 3 

into telling me of the fashion? — iii. 3 

yom: gown's a most rare fashion — iii. 4 

graceful, and excellent fashion — iii. 4 

but success will fashion the event in — iv. 1 
fashion this false sport in spite. .il/trf. N. Dream, iii. 2 
in all the world'snew fashion planted. Love'sL.L. i. 1 
of fire-new words, fashion's own knight — i. 1 
unconfirmed fashiSn, to insert again . — iv. 2 
observed your fashion; saw sighs reek — iv. 3 

turns the fashion of the days — iv. 3 

in their own fashion, like a merriment — v. 2 
not in the fashion to choose me . . Mer. of Venice, i. 2 
thou but lead'st this fashion of thy... — iv. 1 
upon this fashion bequeathed me..^.! you Like it, i. 1 
'tis just the fashion, wherefore do you — ii. 1 
art not for the fashion of these times — ii. 3 
iiassion is much upon my faslrion .... — ii. 4 
but yet, for fashion sake, I thank.. .. — iii. 2 
it is not the fashion to see the lady . . — (epil.) 

wears her cap out of fashion All's Welt, i. 1 

expire before their fashions — i.2 

garter up thy arms o' tliis fashion?... — ii. 3 
It is my fashion, when I see a crab. Taming of Sh. ii. I 

old faslrions please me best — iii. 1 

infected with the fasliions, full of . . . . — iii. 2 

pricks him to this fashion — iii. 2 

according to the fashion, and the time — iv. 3 
why, here is the note of the fasliion . . — iv. 3 

'longs to women of all fashion Winier'sTnle, iii. 2 

that mourned for fashion Comedy of Errors, i. 1 

fashion your demeanour to my looks — ii. 2 
and chargeful fashion; which doth... — iv. 1 

report of fashions in proud Italy Richard II. ii. 1 

(as X will fashion it), shall happily..! Henry //'. i. 3 
yea, two and two, Newgate fashion.. — iii. 3 

this is the old fashion: you two 2HenryIV. ii. 4 

ever in the rearward of the fashion . . — iii. 2 

the wearing out of six fashions — v. 1 

I will deeply put the fashion on — v. 2 

that you should fashion, wrest, or bow.. Henry V. i. 2 

ajipear a little out of fashion _ — iv. I 

dat it is not be de fashion pour les ladies — v. 2 

it is not a fashion for the maids — v. 2 

the weak list of a country's fashion .. — v. 2 
tlie nice fashion of your country .... — y. 2 
thee and thy fashion [CoL faction] .,\ Henry VL ii. 4 
study fashions to .adorn my body . . Richard III. i. 2 
or let me lose the fashion of aman!Hen7-j/F///. iv. 2 
iu this fashion all our abilities. Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 3 

wit would be out of fashion — ii. 3 

to hanrj quite out of fashion — iii. 3 

to fashion in my sequent protestation — iv. 4 

nothing else holds fashion — v. 2 

fair fashion on o\ir entertainment. . Timonof.-Vh. i. 2 
and in what fashion, more than hi^..Coriolanus, i. 1 

he did fashion after the inveterate — ii. 3 

after his sour fashion, tell you Julius Cresar, i. 2 

construe things, after their fashion .. — i. 3 
for the thing he is, fashion it thus.,.. — ii. 1 



[ '^44 ] 

FASH I( )N— and I'll fashion him . . Julius Cmsar, ii. 
by other men, begin his fashion — iv. 

bear \vith him, Brutus, 'tis his fashion — iv. 

it is a deed in fasliion. Hark thee. ... — V. 

after the high Roman fashion. . Antony /y Cleo. iv. 

stale, agarmeut out of fashion Cymbeline, iii. 

I will begin the fasliiou, less without — v. 

and taste gentlemen of all fasliions. ...Feric/es, iv. 

meet, that I can fashion fit Lear, i. 

is it the fashion, that discarded fathers — iii. 

do not like the fashion of your garments — iii. 

hold it a fashion, and a toy in blood. . . . Hamlet, i, 

in honourable fashion. Ay, fashion .... — i. 

these are now the fasliion — ii. 

of welcome is fashion and ceremony .... — ii. 

glass of fasliion, and the mould of form.. — iii. 

puts him thus from fashion of himself .. — iii. 

looked o' this fashion i' the earth? — v. 

I prattle out of fashion, and I dote in. . . Othello, ii. 

which I will fashion to fall out between — iv. 
FASHIONABLE-fashionable host. Troit.^Cres. iii. 

most courtly and fashionable. . Timon of Athens, v. 
FASHIONED— fasliioned to Beatrice.. Mnc/i.^do, v. 

and fashioned by the hand . . Merchant of Venice, i. 

never saw a better fashioned gown.. Tarn, of Sh. iv. 

on so new a fashioned robe KingJohn, iv, 

that self- mould, that fashioned thee./S/c/ioj-d //. i. 

copy and book, that fashioned others.2Henri/ IV. ii 

and fashioned thee that instrument. 1 Henri/ F/. iii. 

fashioned into what pitch he please. Henry F///. li, 

was fashioned to much honour — iv. 

is fashioned for the journey Timon of Athens, ii. 

FASHIONING-fashioning them lilte .MuchAdo, iii. 

fasliioning our humours Love's L. Lost, v. 

FASmON-MONGER— 

these fashion-mongers Romeo & Juliet, ii. 

FASHION-MONGERING- 

out-facing, fashion-mongering boys. . MuchAdo, v. 
FA, SOL, LA, MI— divisions! fa, sol, la, mi.. Lear, i. 
FAST— stand fast, good fate Tempest, i. 

as fast as mill-wheels strike — i. 

and yet so fast asleep — ii, 

to fast, like one that Two Gen. of Verona, ii. 

punished with bitter fasts — ii. 

now can I break my fast — ii. 

judged me fast asleep — iii. 

whither away so fast? — iii. 

fellows, stand fast — iv. 

by my halidom, I was fast asleep — iv. 

Allien they'll do fast enough Merry Wives, iv. 

not too fast:— soft! soft! TwelfthNiglit, i. 

surfeit is the father of much fast. .Mcas. for Meas. i. 

she is fast ray wife — i. 

profits of the mind, study and fast.... — i. 

as fast locked up in sleep — iv. 

was fast belocked in thine — v. 

the roses there do fade so fust?.. Mid. N.'s Dream, i. 

cut the clouds full fast — iii. 

I followed fast, but faster he did — iii. 

'tis but a three years' fast Love's L. Lost, i. 

not to see ladies, study, fast — i. 

you shall fast a week with bran — i. 

but a' must fast three days a week . . — i. 

villain, thou Shalt fast for thy — i. 

I will fast, being loose (rep.) — i. 

it speeds too fast, 'twill tire — ii. 

is as cunning as fast and loose — iii. 

whither away so fast! — iv. 

to fast, to study, and to see no — iv. 

say, can you fast? — iv. 

if frosts, and fasts, hard lodging — v. 

I make it breed as fast Merck, of Venice, i. 

fast bind, fast find; a proverb — ii. 

I will make fast the doors — ii. 

who comes so fast in silence 

as fast a&slie answers thee AsyouLilce it, iii. 

as fast as she can marry us — 

that as fast as you pour affection — 

and fast it fairly out Taming ofShr 

she vied so fast, protesting — 

that both of us did fast — 

we'll fast for company — 

1 have a vessel rides fast by Winter's Ta 

broke your fast (rep.) Comedy of Errors, i, 

she that doth fast, tiU you come home — i. 

where ruii'st thou so fast? — iii. 

by running fast. "Where is thy — iv. 

tiiat we may bind him fast — v. 

hold fast the mortal sword Macbeth, iv. 

yet all this while in a most fast sleep — v. 

upon my life, fast asleep — v. 

Good-Friday, and ne'er broke his fast. KingJohn , i. 

I.,ewis, stand fast — iii. 

play fast and loose with faith? — iii. 

witii me, fast to the chair — iv. 

but slowly; run more fast — iy. 

that spur too fast betimes Richard II. ii. 

hath kept a tedious fast — ii. 

is my strict fast I mean — ii. 

doubt not but to ride as fast as York — v. 
farewell, and standfast \ Henry IV. ii. 

1 could run as fast as thou canst — ii. 

Falstalfl first asleeii beliind , — ii. 

do pelt so fast at one another's 1 Henry VI. iii. 

the duke of Burgundy will fast — iii. 

and York as fast upon your — iv. 

I think, I have you fast — v. 

she'll gallop fast iCot. Km. far] enough.2Henri/ VI. i. 

we will make fast within — i. 

as fast as horse can carry them — i. 

and sees fast by a butcher with an axe — iii . 

whither goes "Vaux so fast? — iii. 

but that thou art so fast mine enemy — v. 
thousand men have broke their fasts.SHenry VI. ii. 
and sit you fast, for I will hence .... — iv. 

the gates ma^le fast; Brother — iv. 

tlus hand, fast wound about — v. 

now, Montague, sit fast: I seek — v. 

to haste thus fast, to find us — y. 

wliither awaj' so fast? I promise . . liichnrd III. ii. 



FAT 



FAST— 1 would not grow so fast liictiard III. ii. 4 

they say, my uncle grew so fast — ii. 4 

idle weeds are fast in growth — iii. 1 

the night, and fast the day ' iv. 4 

whither awa/ so fast? O God save you! Henry Vlll.ii.l 

springs out into fast gait iii. 2 

all fast! what means this? hoa! .... — v. 2 
our main of power stand fast. Troilus ^Cressida, ii. 3 

as fast as they are made — iii. 3 

comes fast upon: good my brother .. — iv. 3 

stand fast, and wear a castle on — v. 2 

Priam, hold him fast — v. 3 

bankrupts, hold fast Timon of Alliens, iv. 1 

if you'll stand fast, we'll beat Coriolanus, i. 4 

whither do you follow your eyes so fast? — ii. 1 

remain fast foe to the plebeii — ii. 3 

stand fast; we have as many friends — iii. 1 
friends now fast sworn, whose double — iv. 4 

than in our priest-like fasts — v. 1 

boy ! Lucius ! Fast asleep? Julius Cteaar, ii. 1 

stand fast together, lest some friend.. — iii. 1 
as fast as they stream forth thy blood — iii. I 

standfast Titinius: we must — V. 1 

I had rather fast from all . . Antony fy Cleopatra, ii. 7 

hath, at fast and loose, beguiled — iv. 10 

as we do air, fast as 't was ministered. Cymbeline, i. I 

to hold the hand fast to her lord — i. 6 

will continue fast to your affection . . — i. 7 
I fast, and prayed, (or their intelligence — iv. 2 
I espied the panther fast asleep.. Titus Andron. ii. 4 
my niece, that flies away so fast?.... — ii. .5 

look, that you bind them fast — v. 2 

and 'tis our fast intent to shake all Lear, i. 1 

bind fast his corky arms — iii. 7 

father that went hence so fast!. .Borneo ^Juliet, i. 1 

Juliet! fast, I warrant her — iv. 5 

confined to fast in fires, till the foul .... Hamlet, i, 5 

canst work i' the earth so fast? — i. 5 

then into a fast; thence to a watch — ii. 2 

upon another's heel, so fast they follow.. — iv. 7 

woul't fast? woul't tear thyself? — v. 1 

but, I pray, su-, are you fast married Olhello, i. 2 

wilt thou be fast to my hopes, if I depend — i. 3 
drop tears as fast as the Arabian trees — v. 2 

FAST-CLOSED- -om' fast-closed gates. KingJo/m,n. 2 

FASTED— when you fasted Two Gen. offer, ii. 1 

FASTEN — fasten your ear on my. Meas, for Meas. ii i . 1 

I will fasten on this sleeve Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

to fasten in our thoughts that they. JutiusCresar, v. 1 
if I can fasten but oue cup upon him . . Otiiello, ii. 3 

FASTENED-oft was fastened to 't. . . . Alt's Welt, v. 3 
took it deeply; fastened and fixed. Winter'sTale, ii. 3 
had fastened him unto a smaU . . Comedy of Err. i. 1 

fastened ourselves at either — i.l 

and fastened to an empery Cymbeline, i. 7 

to see him fastened in the earth . . Titus Andron. v. 3 

strong and fastened villain! Lear, ii. 1 

he fastened on my neck, and bellowed — v. 3 

FASTER— bring my wood home faster.. 7'einpes/, ii. 2 
into the cinque-pace fasterand faster. jW«c/).-ido,ii. 1 
I followed fast, but faster he did Ay. Mid. N. Dr. iii. 1 
ten times ftister Venus' pigeons.. Mer. of Venice, ii. 6 
the hearts of men, faster than gnats — iii. 2 
and faster than his tongue did . . As you Like it, iii. 5 
several tunes, faster than you'll. iVinter's Tale, iv. 3 
grow, faster than thought, or time . . — iv. 3 

trodden on, the faster it grows 1 Henry IV. ii. 4 

faster than spring-time showers -i Henry VI. iii. 1 

then thou wouldst sin the faster. Timon of Athens, i. 2 
to foUow faster, as amorous of . . Antony ^ Cleo. ii. 2 
faster bound to Aaron's charming .. Titus And. ii. I 

but gi'ow faster than their years Pericles, i. 2 

ten times faster glide than the sun's. Romeo^Jul. ii. 5 

FASTEST— he that runs fastest, gets Taming of Sh.i. 1 
like the summer-grass, fastest by night. Henry V. i. 1 

FAST-FALLING— 
my foes will shed fast-falling tears . .SHeni-y VI. i. 4 

FAST-GROWING-fast-growing sprays. n/c/i.Z/. iii. 4 
fast-growing scene must find. . Pericles, iv. (Gower) 

F ASTING-not to be kissed fasting. Two Gen. of V. iii. 1 
from fasting maids, whose minds. .V/eas./oril/eas. ii. 2 
express my true love's fasting pain..Lo!)e'sI,.L.iv. 3 
thank heaven, fastmg, for a good. . .AsyouLike, iii. 5 
fasting, upon a barren mountain. Winter'sTale, iii. 2 

to keep my pack from fasting — iv. 3 

a fasting tiger safer by the tooth . . King Jolm, iii. \ 

and, therein fasting, hast thou Richard II. ii. 1 

give their fasting horses provender .. Henry V. iv. 2 
icept Hector fasting and waking. Troilus ^- Cress, i. 2 

while pride is fasting in his — iii. 3 

discourse is heavy, fasting Cymbeline, iii. 6 

from liberty, fasting and prayer Othello, iii. 4 

FASTING-DAYS— 
fish for fasting-days, and nioreo'er Pericles, ii. 1 

FAST-LOST— feast-won, fast- lost.. r/mon nf Alh. ii. 2 

FASTO.LFE— if sir John Fastolfe had. 1 Heiiry VI. i. 1 

the treacherous Fastolfe wounds — i. 4 

whither away, sir John Fastolfe — iii. 2 

F.-VT- Robin flood's fat friar. 3'woGen.o/ fej-ono,iv. 1 
I shall think the worse of fat men. Merry Wives, ii. 1 
I am glad the fat knight is not here. . — iv. 2 

my maid's aunt, the fat woman — iv. 2 

the poor unvirtuous fat kiiigdit — iv. 2 

a meeting with this old fat fellow . . — iv. 4 

a fat woman, gone up into — iv. ."i 

ha! a fat woman ! the knight — i v. 5 

the '.'omiug down of thy fat woman .. — iv. .'j 

an old fat woman even now — iv. i 

they would melt me out of my fat .. — iv. .'j 

wherein fat Falstatt' hath — iv. G 

I am not fat enough TwelfthNight, iv. 2 

it is as fat and fulsome — v. I 

a fat and beau-fed horse Mid. N.'s Dream, ii. 1 

fat paunches have lean pates Love's L. Lost, i. 1 

is good, an' your goose be fat — iii. 1 

let me see a fat I'envoy ; ay, that's a fat — iii. 1 

then the boy's fat I'envoy — iii. 1 

gross, gross; fat, fat — v. 2 

1 will teed fat the ancient grudge.jl/er. of Venice, i. 3 
sweep on, you fat and greasy citizens. As you Lil^e, ii. 1 



FAT 

FAT— Rood pasture miikcs fiit sheep. A' youlike il, iii. 2 
lliicki't, the Cut iilc-will- or..Tamingq/Sli. a liiuUic.) 

six score tut oxiii stiiiidiiif; in — _ii. 1 

tou tut triiif, liiiL'ly broik'tiy — iv. 3 

niiilie us lis tkt lui tiiun: tilings .... It'intrr'tTalf.i. 2 
n wnmln>us lut nuirriai^c (rtp.)..Comedy qf Krr. iii. 2 

thtrv is 11 fut friend at your — _ v. 1 

the flit rilia of iM;ai'e must by KingJnhn, iii. 3 

riiliiiv ti> I.ouilon witli fttt purses . . . A Heurti 1 1', j. 2 

lies thiit tills sun.cfut rogue — i. 2 

I'll iimke 11 flit pair of giillowB — ii. 1 

no, ve flit eliutVs — ii. 2 

eoin'e out of thiit flit room — ii. 4 

mill iMie i>ftlK'ui is flit, uud grows old — ii. I 

zounds. \e fat piiuueh — ii. 4 

in tlie likeness of u flit old man — ii. 4 

if to lie tilt lie to be hated — )i. 4 

a gross fat man. As fiit as — ii. 4 

I'll proeurc this fat ro;ue — ii. 4 

advantage feeds him fat — iii. 2 

why, you ai-e so fat, sir John — iii, 3 

not" struek so fat a deer to-day — v. 4 

tell nie, tliis fat man was dead? — v. 4 

substance into that tot belly of hi3..2He'n)!//r. ii. 1 
and look, if the fat villain have not.. — ii. 2 

von make flit rascals — ii. 4 

then feed, mid he fat, my fair Calipolis — ii. 4 

how! yon flit foul, I scorn you — ii. 4 

too nu'icli cluycd with fat meat — (epil.) 

is turn awav llie fat knight Henry y. iv. 7 

porridge, and their fat hull-beeves?.. 1 He/iry ('/. i. 2 
your eouiitrv's fat shall pav your . . Richard III. v. 3 
would they "hut fat tlieir thouglits. Troil. ^ Cress, ii. 2 

luxury, with his fat rump — v. 2 

have men about me, that are fat ..JuliusCtBsar,i. 2 

grew fat with feasting there Antony ff Cieo. ii. 6 

now this villttny dotlxfatme with. T'ldis.tm/ron. iii. 1 

than the fat weed that rots itself Hamlet, i. o 

we fat all creatures else, to fat us (rep.) . . — iv. 3 
your fat king, and your lean beggar .... — iv. 3 
he's fat, and scant of breath — v. 2 

FATAL— and fatal opposite TwetfUi Kiglit, iii. 4 

a very dangerous flat, and fatal .lUer. of Venice, iii. 1 

of that fatal country Sicilia Il'inter's Tale, iv. 1 

floated with thee on the fatal raft?.Come(/!/o/Br.v. 1 
croak.s the fatal entrance of Duncan ..Macbeth, i. 5 

art thou not, fatal vision, sensible — ii. 1 

the fatal bellman, which gives — ii. 2 

ICol.Knl.'] unto a dismal and a fatal end — iii. 6 
with thy fatal hand, upon my head .Richard II. v. 6 

I am the Douglas, fatal to all 1 Henry IF. v. 4 

by the fatal and neglected English Henry V. ii. 4 

witli fatal mouths gaping on girded — iii. (chorus) 

fold up Viirca's fatal web? — v. 1 

the fatal halls of murdering basilisks — v. 2 

accursed fatal hand, tliat hath 1 Henry VI. i. 4 

and now I fear that fatal prophecy . . — iii. I 

burning fatal to the Talbotitcs — iii. 2 

of pitch upon the fatal stake — v. 4 

fatal tliis marriage! 2HenryVI. i. 1 

as did the fatal brand Althea — i. 1 

whose envenomed and fatal sting. ... — iii. 2 
fatal colours of our stri\in" l\ouses..3Htn/-!/F/. ii. 5 

bring forth that fatal scritcli-owl — ii. 6 

from thence the Thracian fatal steeds — iv. 2 
to lieiid the fatal instrument of war . . — v. 1 

Richard, but a raMed fatal rock? — v. 4 

have now the fatal object in my .... — v. 6 
fatal and ominous to noble peers!. .i?ic/iarrf ///. iii. 3 
into the fatal bowels of the deep .... — iii. 4 
a canopy most fatal, under which. ../ud'usCn'sar, v. 1 
to do some fatal execution? .. TilusAndronicus, ii. 3 
give the king this fatal plotted scroll — ii. 3 

tlienightly owl, or fatal raven — ii. 3 

a very fatal jilace it seems — ii. 4 

then all too late I bring this fatal writ — ii. 4 

hath brought the fatal engine in — v. 3 

from fortli the fatal loins of . . Romeo ^Juliet, (prol.) 
unlucky manage of this fatal brawl.. — iii. j 

beats down their fatal points — iii. 1 

Jiurry from the fatal cannon's womb — '^v. 1 

so sweet was ne'er so fatal Othello, v. 2 

for you are fatal then — v. 2 

FATALLY— battle fatally was struck .Henry V. ii. 4 

FAT-ALUEADY-fat-alieady pride. Troil &Cres. ii. 3 

FAT-BU.\INED— 
mojie with his fat-brained fbWovcrs... Henry V. iii. 7 

FATE— stand fast, good fate Tempest, i. 1 

I and my fellows, are ministers of fate — iii. 3 
but fate, ordaining he should , . . . Merry IVives, iii. 5 

wives are sold by fate — v. 5 

fate, show thy force Twelfth Night, i. .') 

the malignancy of my fate might.... — ii. 1 

thy tales open their hands — ii. 5 Qetter) 

reprieve thee from thy fate — iii. 1 

fate, take not away thy heavy hand ! . Much Ado, iv. 1 
make and mar the foolish fate8.;Wid. N.'s Dream, i. 2 

then fate o'er-rules iii. 2 

like Helen, till the fates me kill .... — v. 1 

<) fates! come, come v. I 

be my fool, and I his fate Love'sL.Lo!l,v. 2 

according to fates and destinies. . Mcr. of Venice, ii. 2 

since fate, against thy tiettcr Wintcr'tTale, iii. 3 

<.)thefate«! how would he look — iv. 3 

whom the tiites have marked.. Corned]/ o/jBrrorj, i. 1 

which fate and metaphysical aid Macbeth, i. .■> 

■where our fate, liid within an — ii. 3 

come, fate, into the list — iii, 1 

must embrace the fate of tliat — iii. 1 

be shall spurn fate, scorn death — iii. 

and take a iKind of fate — iv. 1 

that one might read the book of fttte.2Hpnri//r. iii. 1 

mightiness and fate of him Henry V. ii. 4 

by cruel fote, and giddy fortune's.,.. — iii. 6 
despite of fate, to my determined . . I Henri/ VI. iv. 6 
fate awaits the duke (rc/i.) ..-iHenryVI. \.'\ (pajicr) 

Muat fates im|)Ose, that men '.Sllenryl'l. iv. 3 

wives fur their husbands' fate — v. (i 

tis but the fate of place Henry VIII. i. 2 

you (.O fate!) a very frcsli-flsh here — ii. 3 



[ 245 ] 



FAT 



FATE— that mirth fate turns to . . Troilus ^ Cren. 1. 1 

his fate be not the glory — Iv. I 

keeps the weiilher of my fate — V. 3 

nor fate, ohediencc, nor the hand of.. — v. 3 

fate, hear Die what I sayl — v. a 

Belling' his fatiuside. of comely. '/'<mo;i o/zK/ieiis, iii. 5 
lianiriite! he niif/lit have died ill war — iii. .I 

are masters of their fates JuliusCceiar, i. 2 

if not, the liites with traitors do — ii. 3 

fates! we will know your pleasures.. — iii. 1 
where I will oppose his i'aic. ... Antony ^ Cleo. iii. II 

carouses to the next day's fate — iv. 8 

do not please sharp fate to grace it .. — iv. 12 
and make us weep to hear your into., Pericles, iii. 2 

the strict fates had pleased you — iii. 3 

nurses arc nut the mtes, to foster it.... — iv. 4 
black fiile on iim,t .hn ^ dotli .. Romeo ^Juliil, iii. 1 

harbint-'iTs i nvii;iii ■ -ii!l llie fates Hamlet, i. 1 

art privy tM tli;c-niili \ 's i.ite — i. 1 

my fates crie^ unt, iiiiil ui^il.is each petty — i. 4 
our wills, and liites, do so contrary run.. — iii. 2 
like to this sueceeds in unknown fate ..Othello, ii. 1 

who, certnin of his fate, loves not — iii. 3 

cursed late! that gave thee to the Moor! — iii. 3 

when my fate would liave me wive — iii. 4 

and your fate hies apace — v. 1 

who can controul his fate? 'tis not so now — v. 2 

FATED— midnight fated to the purpose. 7'('in;je.i(, i. 2 

the fated sky gives us free scope All's H'ellj i. I 

as it hath fated her to be tlie — iv. 4 

hang fated o'er men's faults Lear, iii. 4 

then this forked plague is fated to us. . Othello, iii. 3 

FAT-GUTS— peace, ye fat-gutsi ....XHenry IV. ii. 2 

FATHER— my dearest father Tempest, i. 2 

thy no greater father — i. 2 

thy father was the duke — i. 2 

sir, are not you my father? — i. 2 

and thy father was duke — i. 2 

again the kimx my father's wreck .... — i. 2 
full fatlioin live tl"iv father lies .... — i. 2 (song) 
does reir.eiiiher inv" dn.wn'd father .... — i. 2 
beheld the king niy father wreck'd.... — i. 2 
why sjieiiks my fatlicr so ungently? .. — i. 2 
move my father to be inclined my way ! — i. 2 

dear father, make not too rash — i. 2 

beseech you, iather! — i. 2 

my father's loss, the weakness — i. 2 

my father's of a better nature, sir — i. 2 

than her father's crabbed — iiii 1 

my father is hold at study — iii. 1 

O, my father, 1 have broke your — iii. 1 

than you good friend, and my dearfatlier — iii. 1 

and my father's precepts — iii. 1 

so rare a wonder d father, and a wife . . — i\-. 1 

your father's in some passion — iv. I 

all the blessings of a glad father — v. I 

ask my father for Ins advice — v. I 

and second father this lady — v. 1 

my father at the road expects .. Tu-oGen.o/Ver. i. 1 

and your father stays — i. 2 

that our fathers would applaud — i. 3 

1 ffcared to show my father Julia's letter — i. 3 

your father calls for you — i. 3 

my father stays my coming — ii. 2 

my father wailing, my sister — ii. 3 

tliis shoe is my father — ii. 3 

no, this left shoe is my father — ii. 3 

and this my father — ii. 3 

now come X to my father — ii. 3 

father, your blessing — ii. 3 

now, should I kiss my father — ii. 3 

here comes my father — ii. 4 

your father's in good health — U. 4 

the honour and regard of such a father — ii. 4 

my lord your father would speak — ii. 4 

that her father likes — ii. 4 

I'll give her father notice — ii. B 

as it I were her father — iii. 1 

those at her father's churlish feet.... — iii. 1 

know not their fatiicrs — iii. 1 

he plays false, father — iv. 2 

nor how my father would enforce . . — iv. 3 

urge not my father's anjjer — iv. 3 

ay, and her father is make Merry ll'ives, i. 1 

fatlierdesiresyourworship'scompany — i. 1 
I have your good nill.fatnerl'agc?.. — iii. 2 

I cannot get thy father's love — iii. 4 

thy father's wealth was the first .... — iii. 4 

yet seek my father's love — iii. 4 

this is my father's choice — iii. 4 

thou had"st a father! I had a father.. — iii. 4 

how my father stole two geese — iii. 4 

your father, and my uncle — iii. 4 

you may ask your father — iii. 4 

her father win be angry — iii. 4 

her father hath commanded her to slip — iv. 6 
her father means she shall be all in.. — iv. 6 
means she to deceive? Father or mother? — iv. 6 
whoo, ho! hoi father Page! — v. 5 

fardon good father! Good my mother — v. 5 
have lieaid my father name him. TwetfthNighl^i. 2 
my fatlier was that Sebastian of .... — li. 1 
that the lady Olivia's father took much — ii. 4 
my fatlicr had a daughter loved .... — ii. 4 
all the daughters of my father's house — ii. 4 

then lead the wav, good father — iv. 3 

call forth the holy lather — v. 1 

welcome father! Father, 1 charge thee — v. 1 
of iMessaline: Sebastian was my father — v. 1 
my father hail a mole upon his brow — v. 1 
surfeit is the father of much fast. . Mca.for Mea. i. 3 

no, holy father, throw away — i. 4 

now, as fond fathers having bound up — i. 4 

therefore, indeed, my father, I have — i. 4 

hod u most noble father — ii. I 

whoee father died at Hallowmas .... — ii. 1 

and repent it, father — ii. 3 

tlicre my father's grave ilid utter forth — iii. I 
my motlier played my father fair! .. — iii. 1 
what's your will, father? — iii. 1 



FATIIER-show me how.good father 3/ira./oriWcii. iii. 1 

fare you well, good father — iii. 1 

bIcHH you, goiKl father friar — iii. 2 

good nrotner father: what oflence .. — iii. 2 

good even, good father — iii. 2 

make thee the father of their Idle .. — iv. 1 

take the cnteriiri/e upon her, father — iv. 2 

most gentle ('(audio. Weleumc father — iv. 2 

pardon nie. '-''"'d I'tthir: ir i.i against — iv. 2 

here (■111, les j^iiii 'i'>|^ i >; ler — iv. 3 

here in the I'i i I . I I - I iluiedied — iv. :', 

this shall be li. 11. , I iiin-,-, presently — iv. 3 

a ghostly f'ltliei, l/elilve,— who knows — v. I 

truly, the lady fathers herself Much Ado, i. 1 

like an honourable fatlier (rc/j.) .... — i. 1 

with her father, and thou shalt have — i. 1 

then, after, to her father will I hj-eak — i. I 

I trust, you will be ruled by your father — ii. I 

and sayi father as it please "S'ou — ii. I 

and say, father as it please ine — ii. 1 

hath withdrawn her father to break — ii. 1 

I have broke with her father, and his — ii. I 

rather have one of your father's getting — ii. 1 

your father got excellent husbands. . — ii. I 
father, by your leave; will you. 
oh, my father, prove yi 



— IV. I 

— iv. 1 



. t that any 

briug"ine a father, that BO loved his.. — v. I 

you must be father to your brother's — v. 4 

strange bull leaped your father's cow — v. 4 
your father should be as a gfid..Mid.M.*sIJrcani, i. \ 

wanting your father's voice, the other — i. 1 

I would, my father looked but with — i. 1 

if you yield not to your father's choice — i. I 

for disobedience to your father's will — i. 1 

you have her father's love, Demetrius — i. i 

to fit your fancies to your father's will — i 1 

steal forth thy father s house to-morrow — i. 1 

you Pyramus's father; myself (rep.) — i. 2 

and to master Peascod your father... — iii. 1 

yea, and my fatlier. And Uiiipolyta — iv. I 

Detween her father's ground and mine — v . I 

wall is down that parted tiieir fathers — v. 1 
her decrepit, sick, and bed-rid father. LoDc'jL.t. i. 1 

father's wit, and my mother's tongue — i. 2 

who the king your father sends — ii. 1 

madam, your father here dotli intimate — ii- I 

disbm'sed by my father in Ms wars .. — ii- 1 

if then the king your father will — ii. I 

and have the money by our father lent — ii. I 

you do the king my father too much — ii. 1 

specialofticersof Charles his father.. — ii. 1 

for her father is but grun — ii. I 

being of an old father's mind — iv. 2 

a certain father saith-sir, tell (rfp.).. — iv. 2 

at the father's of a certain pupil — iv. 2 

what a joyful father wouldst thou make — v. i 

the king your father — dead — v. 2 

the remembrance of my father's death — v. 2 
curbed by the will of a dead father.. 3/c)'.o/rcii. i. 2 

your father was ever virtuous — i. 2 

refuse to perform your fiither's will.. — i. 2 

otlier sort than your father's imposition — i. 2 

by the manner of my father's will — i. 2 

in your father's time, a Venetian — i. 2 

father Abraham, what these christians — i. 3 
but, if my father had not scanted me — ii. 1 

my father did something smack — ii. 2 

tins is my true-begotteu father! — ii. 2 

his father, tliough I say it — ii. ; 

well, let his father be what he will. .. — ii. 2 

talk not of master Launcelot, father — ii. 2 

do you know me, father? — ii. 2 

do you not know me, father^ — ii.2 

it is a wise father, that knows — ii.2 

father, I am glad you are come — ii. 2 

to him father, for I am a Jew — ii.2 

to him father. God bless your — ii.2 

sir, as my father, shall specify — ii.2 

a dCBire, as my father shall specify .. — ii. 2 

as my father, Deing I hope an — ii.2 

yet, poor man, my father — ii.2 

fo, father, with tliy son — ii.2 

'ather, in; I cannot get a service — ii.2 

Father, come; I'll take my leave of. . — ii. 2 

sorry, thou wilt leave my father so.. — ii.3 

1 would not have my father see me. . — ii. •> 
ashamed to be my father's child! — — ii.3 

take her from her father's house — i i . 4 

if e'er tile Jew her father come to.... — ii. i 

I ha%'e a father, you a daughter, lost.. — ii. ■"> 

here dwells my father Jew — i'. li 

the sins of the father are to be laid .. — iii. •> 

hope that your father got you not.... — iii. 6 

by father and mother: thus (re/).) — — iii. .j 

and the spirit of my father AtyouLikeit, i. I 

1 have as much of my father in me . . — j. 1 

my father; and he is tlirice a villain (rep.) — i. I 

for your father's remembrance be at.. — i. 1 

my'father charged you in liis will — — i. I 

the spirit of my father grows strong.. — i. I 

the poor allotterv my lather left me.. — i. I 

daughter, be banished with her father — i. I 

toforget a banished father, you must — i. 2 

thy banished father, had banished thy — i. i' 

to take thy father for mine — i. 2 

know my father hath no child but I — i. 2 

taken away from thy father jierforee — i. ■•■ 

yim must come away to your father.. — i. 2 

one that old Frederic, your father (rep.) — i. 2 

their father, making such pitiful dole — i. :; 

world esteemed thy fatlier honourable — i. '.' 

told mc of another father (recfufrii).. — i. 2 

my father loved sir Rowland (rep.) .. — i. 2 

father's rough and envious disposition — i. 2 

pity her for liergoixl father's ..ake — — i. 2 
for your father? Xo, some of it is for my 

child's latlier[K'ii(.-follier'schild].. — 

the duke my father loved his tatlier. . — 

for my father hateil his father dearly — 

thou urt thy fatlicr's duughtcr — 



FATHER— my father was no traitor. ^si/ouLiAeiV, i. 3 

witli her father rangeJ along — i. 3 

wilt thou change fathers? I will give — i. 3 

let my father seek another heir — i. 3 

fool out of yourfather'8 court? — i. 3 

I was about to call his father — ii. 3 

hire I saved under your father — ii. 3 

the duke, that loved yom' father .... — ii. 7 

on the duke your father — iii. 4 

but what talK we of fathers — iii. 4 

thy fother's father wore it (lep.).... — iv. 2 (song) 

my fatlier's house, and all tlie revenue — v. 2 

I'll have no father, if you bo not he. . — v. 4 
weep o'er my father's death anew .... All's Well, i. 1 

you, sir, a father: he that so — i. 1 

this 3'oung gentlewoman had a father — i. 1 

the remembrance of her father never — i. 1 

and succeed thy father in manners... — i. 1 

of your father. O were that all! (jrp.) — i. 1 

youth thou bear'st thy father's face.. — i. 2 

thy father's moral parts may'st thou — i. 2 

as when thy father and myself — i. 8 

to talk of your good father — i.2 

mere fathers of their garments — i. 2 

the physician at your father's died? .. — i.2 

you know my father left me some. ... — i. 3 

more tlian my father's skill — i. 3 

Gerard de Narbon was my father — ii. 1 

of my dear father's gift stands chief.. — ii. 1 

sovereign power and father's voice... — ii. 3 

not one of those, but had a noble father — ii. 3 

I am sure, thy father drunk wine — ii. 3 

had her breeding at my father's charge — ii. 3 

that I am father too, then call me iii. 2 (letter) 

since the first father wore it — iii. 7 

and by my father's love and leave. Taming of Sh.i. 1 

and my father first, a merchant of . . — i. 1 

I will wish him to her father i.l 

though her father be very rich — i. 1 

till the father rid his hands of her. ... — i.l 

what a cruel father's he I — i.l 

for so your father charged me at — i. 1 

Antonio, my father, is deceased — i. 2 

tell me her father's name — i.2 

her father is Baptista Slinola — i. 2 

her father, though I know not (t-ep.S — i. 2 

my father dead, my fortime lives .... — i.2 

to wliom my father is not all imknown — i. 2 

her father keeps from all access i.2 

you knew my father well , — ii. 1 

for I tell you, father, I am ii. 1 

your father hath consented — ii. 1 

here comes your father — ii. 1 

father, 'tis thus, — yourself and all — ii. 1 

provide the feast, father, and bid the — ii. 1 

it'ather, and wife, and gentlemen, adieu ii. 1 

I am my father's heir, and only son. . — ii. 1 

m3' father hath no less than tliree. ... — ii. 1 

and let your father make her — ii. 1 

your father were a fool to give — ii. 1 

supposed Lucentio must get a fatlier — ii. 1 

fathers, commonly, do get tlieir eliildren — ii. 1 

mistress, your father prays you leave — iii. 1 

how does my father? Gentles iii. 2 

to add her father's liking — iii. 2 

the narrow-prjring father, Minola.... — iii. 2 

dine with my father iii. 2 

father, be quiet; he shall stay — iii. 2 

and countenance surely like a fatlier — iv. 2 

he is my father, sir; and sooth to say — iv. 2 

my fatlier i s here Iccfeed for iv. 2 

that come unto my father's door iv. 3 

will we return unto thy father's house iv. 3 

we will unto your father's iv. 3 

and sport us at thy father's house — iv. 3 

such austerity as 'longeth to a fatlier iv. 4 

that your father was at Venice — iv. 4 

Btand good father to me now — i v. 4 

I am content in a good father's care ., — iv. 4 

that like a father you will deal — iv. 4 

there doth my father lie iv. 4 

Lucentio's father is amved in — iv. 4 

the deceiving father of a deceitful sou — iv. 4 

once more toward our father's — iv. 5 

ere I journey to your father's house.. — iv. 5 

pardon old father, my mistaking — iv. 5 

I perceive, thou art a reverend fatlier iv. 5 

entitle thee my loving father — iv. 5 

I do assure thee, father, so it is — iv. 5 

my father's bears more toward the v. 1 

that his father is come from Pisa v. 1 

his father? Ay, sir, so his mother says — v. 1 

see thy master's father, Vincentio? .. v. 1 

^ood father, I am able to maintain it ijcp.) — y. 1 

father Baptista, I charge you, see — v. 1 

sweet father. Lives my sweetest son (r^p. — v. I 

pardon him, sweet father, for my sake v. 1 

tliy father wUl not frown — v. 1 

bid my father welcome, while I v. 2 

I will respect thee as a father If'inler'sTale, i. 2 

the whole matter and copy of the father — ii. 3 

kneel and call me father — ii. 3 

no father owning it iii. 2 

the emperor of Russia was my father — iii. 2 

upon the earth of its right fatlier — iii. 3 

my father named me, Autolyeus — iv. 2 

my father hath made her mistress .. — iv 2 

made her flight across tliy father's ground — iv. 3 

your father, by some accident — iv. 3 

thine, my fair, or not my father's. . . . iv. 3 

welcome, sir! it is my father's will . . — iv. 3 

my father and t)ie gentlemen are in . . — iv. 3 

O father, you'll know more of that . . — iv. 3 

have you a father? I have iv. 3 

methinks, a father is, at the nuptial .. iv. 3 

is not your father grown incapable . . iv. 3 

the fatlier, (all whose joy is nothing.. — iv. 3 

not acquaint my father of this business — iv. 3 

why, how now, father? speak _ iv. 3 

die upon tlie bed my father died — i v. 3 



FATHER— your father's temper. . Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

from my succession wipe me, father! — iv. 3 

e'er been my father's honoured friend — iv. 3 

your father? veiy nobly have you <rep.) — iv. 3 

your discontenting father strive to . . — iv. 3 

as 'twere i' the father's person — iv. 3 

sent by the king your father to — iv. 3 

as from your father shall deliver — iv. 3 

you have your fatlier's bosom there . . — iv. 3 

shall not from your father's house . . — iv. 3 

preserver of my father, now of me .... — iv. 3 

shall satisfy your father — iv. 3 

should I now meet my father — iv. 3 

stealing away from his father — iv. 3 

no honest man neither to his father . . — iv. 3 

comes not like to his fatlier's greatness — v. 1 

she did print yoiu' royal father oft". ... — v. 1 

j'our fatlier's image is so hit — v. 1 

amity too, of j'our brave father — v. 1 

the enarge my father gave me — v.) 

you have a holy father — v. 1 

your father's blessed, (as he from heaven — v. 1 

tied from his father, from his hopes . . — v. 1 

the father of this seeming lady — v. 1 

my poor father! the heaven sets .. — v. 1 

by your good father's speed — v. 1 

should chase us, with my father .... — v. 1 

my father will grant precious tilings — v. 1 

1 will to your father; your honour . . — v. I 
gentlemau born before my father .... — v. I 
called my father, father; and so wc. — v. 1 

how found thy father's court? — v. 3 

bald pate of father Time himself.Comedy 0/ Err, ii. 2 

I never saw my father in my life ... . — v. 1 

for my father liere. It shall not (7-ep.) — v. 1 

had he not resembled my father Macbeth, ii. 2 

your royal father's murdered — ii. 3 

ah, gooci father, thou see'st — ii. 4 

father, farewell. God's benison — ii. 4 

and father of many kings — iii. 1 

hailed him father to aline of kings.... — iii. 1 

than is his father's, must embrace .... — iii. 1 

to kill tlieir gracious father? — iii. 6 

what 'twere to kill a father — iii. 6 

sirrah, your father's dead; and what.. — iv. 2 

my father is not dead, for all your (rep.') — iv. 2 

was my father a traitor, mother? — iv. 2 

that I should quickly have a new father — iv. 2 

thy royal father was a most — iv. 3 

and, as I think, one father King John, i. 1 

our father, and this son like him (rep.) — i. 1 

he hatli a half face like my father . . — i. 1 

my fatlier lived, your brother did (rep.) — i. 1 

time sojourned at my father's; where — i.l 

between my father and my mother.. — i. 1 

my father's land, as was my father's — i. 1 

your father's wife did after (rep.).... — i.l 

my father gave me honour — i.l 

let me know my father — i.l 

Richard Cceur-de-liou was thy father — i.l 

I would not wish a better father — i.l 

I thank thee for my father! — i.l 

liker in featm-e to Ills father Geffrey — ii. 1 

his father never was so true — ii. 1 

boy, that blots thy father — ii. 1 

first called my brother's father, dad — ii. 2 

in our foresaid holy father's name .. — iii. 1 

good father cardinal, cry thou, amen — iii. 1 

good reverend father, make my person — iii. 1 

my reverend father, let it not be so. . — iii. 1 

father, to arms! Upon thy wedding-day? — iii. 1 

father, I may not wish the — iii. 1 

dear be to thee as thy father was .... — iii. 3 

shall wait upon your father's funeral — v. 7 
the honourable father to my foe .... Itichard II. i. 1 

seem crest-fallen in my father's sight — i. 1 

some large measure to thy father's deatli — i.2 

the model of thy father's life — i.2 

have bid me argue like a father — i. 3 

that some fathers feed upon — ii.l 

that I was his father Edward's son . . — ii. 1 

of whom thy father, prince of Wales — ii.l 

which his triumphant father's hand — ii.l 

brave Gaunt, thy father, and myself — ii. 3 

3'ou are my father, for, methinks (irp.) — ii. 3 

where is the duke my father with. ... — iii. 2 

my father hath a power, enquire .... — iii. 2 

I am too young to be your fktlier. . . . — iii. 3 

as quiet as thy father's skuU — iv. 1 

loyal father of a treacherous son I — v. 3 

sons their scraping father's gold — v. 3 

my soul the father; and these two .. — v. 5 
the father of so blest a son: ii3on....lHenry IV.i. 1 

with tlie rusty curb of old father — i.2 

1 think his father loves him not — i. 3 

all the coin in thy father's exchequer — ii. 2 

is there not my father, my uncle .... — ii. 3 

these lies are like the father that .... — ii. 4 

he says, he comes from your father . . — ii. 4 

sir John Bracy from your father .... — ii. 4 

thy father's beard is tm'ned white .. — ii. 4 

when thou eomest to thy father .... — ii. 4 

do thou stand for my father — ii.4 

the father, how he holds his — ii.4 

for me, and I'll play my father — ii.4 

that father ruffian, that vanity — ii. 4 

to meet your father, and the Scottish — iii. 1 

my father Gleiidower is not readj' 3*et — iii. 1 

how you cross ray father! — iii. 1 

good father, tell Iier, that she, and my — iii. 1 

fear thee as I fear thy father? — iii. 3 

1 am good friends with my father . . — iii. 3 
these letters come from your father.. — iv. I 

your father's sickness is a maul — iv. 1 

I would your iiitlier had been here . . — iv. 1 

this absence of j'our father's draws . . — iv. I 

my father and Glendower being both — iv. 1 

my father, and my uncle, and myself — iv. 3 

my father gave liim welcome to the. . — iv. 3 

my father, m kind heart, and pity . . — iv. 3 



FATHER— vow made to my father. .IHe/wi//;'. iv. 3 
dismissed my father from the court.. — iv. 3 
yet tliis before my father's majesty .. — v. 1 
upon my head, and on his father's . . — v. 2 
if your father will do me any honour — v. 4 
where Hotspur's t'other, old ....ilimrt/IV. (indue.) 
sliould be the father of some stratagem — i. 1 
ever since his father was a bachelor. . — i.2 
for liking his father to asinging-nian — ii.l 
their fathers being so sick as yours . . — ii. 2 
inwardly, that my father is bo sick .. 
nearest his father, Harry prince of — 

the time was, father, that you 

to see his father bring up his 

thy father is to give me thanks for it 
the king your father is at Westminster 
and thy father's shadow; so the son of 
not much of the father's substance . . 
you, reverend father, and these noble 
father's? What thing, in honour {rep.} 
nothing could have staid my fatlier. . 
but, if J'our father had been victor .. 
ample virtue of his father, to hear . . 

of his substitute, my father 

not here against your father's peace 

my fatlier s purposes have been 

I hear, the king my father is sore sick 
he did naturally inherit of his father 
what would my lord and father? .... 
O my royal fatlier! Mj' sovereign. . . . 
the king your father is disposed .... 

my gracious lord ! my father 1 

shall, O dear father, pay thee 

over-careful fathers have broke 



— n. 2 
ii. 2 (letter) 

— ii.3 



iii. 2 



iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. I 
iv. 1 
iv. 2 



— )v. 4 



iv. 4 
V. 2 
V. 2 
v. 2 



engrossments to the ending father . . 
thy wish was father, Harry, to that., 
hath fed ufjon the body of my father 

before my face murdered my father. . — 

win the more thy father's love — 

and happmess, to my royal father ! . . — 

I'll be your father and your brother too — 

did use the person of your father — 

as an offender to your father — 

be now the father, and propose a sou — 

to speak my father's words — v. 2 

you shall be as a father to my youth — v. 2 

my father is gone wild into his — v. 2 

which you, father, shall have foremost — v. 2 

no sooner left his father's body Henry V. i. 1 

whiles his most mighty father on ... . — i. 2 

shall strike his father's crown into . . — i.2 

this Dauphin at his father's door — i. 2 

those, that were j'our father's enemies — ii. 2 

mj' most redoubted fatlier, it is most — ii- 4 

and by French fathers had twenty .. — ii.4 

for husbands, fathers, and betrothed — ii. I 

and, if your father's higliness do not — ii.4 

if my father render fair reply — ii.4 

is fet from fathers of war-proof ! fathers — iii. 1 
whom you called fathers, did beget you! — iii. I 

and by my father's soul, the work . . — iii. 2 

yom- lathers taken by the silver .— iii. 3 

the emptying of our father's luxury.. — iii. 5 

that is by his father sent about — iv. I 

tlie father of his son, nor the master.. — iY.\ 

tliiiiknotuijouthefaultmy father made — iv. 1 

his father was called, Philip of. — iv. 7 

now beshrew my father's ambition.. . . — v. 2 

here comes your father — v. 2 

father, I know; and oft have shot .... 1 Henry VI. i. 4 

father, I warrant you; take you — i. 4 

was not thy father, Richard, earl — ii.l 

my father was attached, not attainted — ii. 4 

upbraid me with my father's death . . — ii. 5 

for my father's sake, in honom- of. . . . — ii. 5 

declare the cause my father — ii. 5 

his father Bolingbrdke, did reign (rep.) — ii. 

my fatlier's execution was nothing .. — ii. 5 

BO kind a father of the commonweal — iii. 1 

so shall his father's wrongs be — iii. 1 

as liis father here was conqueror — iii. 2 

I do remember how my father said . . — iii. 4 

think upon the conquest of my father — iv. 1 

in travel toward his warlike father . . — iv. 3 

bring thy father to liis drooping — iv. 5 

stay ; and father, do you fly — i v 5 

part of thy father may be saved — iv. 5 

thy father's charge shall clear thee . . — iv. 6 

live I will not, if my father die • — iv. 5 

O twice my father! twice am I — iv. 6 

it warmed thy father's heart 

speak, thy father's care 

fight by thy father's side 

speak to thy father ere thou 

and lay him in his father's arms 

for tho' her father be the king of 

an' if my father please, I am content 

at your/ father's castle walla 

this kills thy father's heart outright. 

thou art no father, nor no friend 

deny thy father, cursed drab? 

since Chaides must father it — v. « 

her father is no better than — v. 5 

her father is a king, the king of Naples — v. 5 

to the king her father ZHenry VI. i. 1 (articles) 

O father, Maine is lost — i.l 

main chance, father, you meant — i.l 

worth than all my father's lauds . . . 

died before his father 

father, the duke hath told the truth 

then, father Salisbury, kneel we — 

would unfold his father's arts — 

so termed of our supposed father — 

mj' father was a Mortimer — 

for his father had never a house — 

villain, thy father was a plasterer. ... — 

made a chimney in my father's house — 

for his father's sake, Henry the filth — 

honours not his fatlier, Henry the fifth — 
this small inheritance, my father left me — 



— iv. 6 

— iv. G 

— iv. 7 

— IV. 7 

— v. 3 

— V. 3 

— V. 3 

— V. 4 

— V. 4 

— V. 4 



— n. 2 



iv 


2 


iv 


2 


IV 


2 


IV 


2 


IV 


K 


IV 


K 


JV. 


10 



FAT 



[ 247 ] 



FATHER— for their traitor fatlicr.. . .ilhnryl'l. v. 

dlmll Iw tluir ftttlior'n Imil — v. 

uv, noble lutliir, if our wimla will 9er\-0 — v. 

ii'.iw hv inv fiitlicr's Imilffo — v. 

victorfoiis futlii-r, to <iiiell tlic rebclii. . — v. 

want thou onliii mil, clear fiitlicr — v. 

my nohlc I'lithcr, three limes to-day.. — v. 
Stafford's father. iluke ol' Hu<:kin«ham.3He«ri/r/.i 

that this in true, tiitlier hehold — j. 

he slew thv father; and tliiui) — i. 

Bit there, hud your nailer lived — i- 

thy father wim a traitor to the — i. 

elewyourfiitherf, and with eolours .. — i. 

bloo<f were in my father's veins — _i. 

thy fothcr was, as thou art, duke of . . — i- 

father, tear the crown from the (rep.) — i. 

my (trau'lsire, ond my father, sat?.... — ;• 

whose heir mv t'other was — •• 

kneel to him thatslew mv fothcr! — — i. 

hast proved so unnatural a father! .. — 1. 

fhtlier, you cannot disinherit rac — i. 

the erown of Lngland. father — i. 

it will outrun von, father, in the end — i. 

fatherdohut tUiiik, how sweet a — i. 

with five hundred, father, for a need — i. 

whose father slew my lather or/).) .. — i. 

niv father's liliKid hath htniiped — i. 

then let my father's blood oiien — i. 

thy father hath. Hut 'twas ere — i. 

courage, father! light it out! — i. 

payment, showed unto my father — i. 

my ottiee, for my fatlier's sake — i. 

thy father hears the type of — i. 

to "hid the father wine his eyes — i. 

queen, a hapless father's tears — i. 

my oath, here's for my father's death — j. 

how our princely father 'seaixid — ii. 

our right valiant father is become.... — ii. 

fared oiu- father with his enemies (ri/).) — ii. 

your princely father, and my loving lord — ii. 

your fatlicr was suhdued — ii. 

your brave father breathed his lastest — ii. 

argue<l thee a most unloving father.. — ii. Z 

lose his birthright by his father's fault — ii. 2 

mv careless father fondly gave away? — ii. 2 

whose father for his hoarding — ii. 2 

would my father have left me no more! — ii. 2 

my gracious father, by your kindly .. — ii. 2 

my royol father, cheer these noble lords — ii. 2 

unsheath your sword, good father.... — ii. 2 

who should succeed tlie father — ii. 2 

I slew thy father: call'st thou him... — ii. 2 

whose father bears the title of a king — ii. 2 

his father revelled in the heart of — ii. 2 

that washed his father's fortunes — ii. 2 

that stabbed thy father York — ii. 4 

God! it is my father's face — ii. .0 

mv father, being the earl of Warwick's — ii. 5 

aiid pardon, father, for I knew not thee! — ii. ;> 

thy father gave thee life too soon .... — ii. 5 

how will my mother, for a father's death — ii. 5 

80 rued a father's death? (re/).) — ii. 5 

so obsequious will thy father be — ii. .'j 

fly, father, fly! for all your friends .. — ii. 5 

or as thy father, and his father, did. . — ii. (i 

i stabbed your lathers' bosoms — ii. 6 

our princely father, duke of York — ii. 6 

your father's head, which Ciilford placed — ii. G 

111 time of death he gave our father . . — ii. fi 

in the nlace where your father's stands — ii. 6 

my fatlier, and my grandfather were — iii. I 

pity, they should lo.sc their father's laud — iii. 2 

to be the father unto many sons — iii. 2 

the ghostly father now hath done.... — iii. 2 

because thy father Henry did — iii. 3 

more than so, my father — iii. 3 

you have a father able to maintain . . — iii. 3 

my father came untimely to his — iii. 3 

fiither of Warwick, know you what .. — v. 1 

1 will not ruinate my father's house.. — v. 1 

that I am now my father's mouth — v. 6 

that thy father had been so resolved.. — v. h 

iisurji'st my father's right and mine.. — v. 5 

thy father. Minos, that denied — v. 6 

a.s the father and the son, and two.... — v. 7 

Keignier, her father to the king of.... — v. 7 
and her father? the readiest (rpp.) . . Richard III. i. 1 

warlike father, like a child (rfp.) .... — i. 2 

her husband, and his father, to take. . — i. 2 

the curse my noble father laid on thee — i. 3 

loathed issue of thy father's loins! .... — i. 3 

tell us, is our father dead? — ii. 2 

if that our noble father lie alive? .... — ii. 2 

to lose him, not your father's death.. — ii. 2 

guess who caused your father's death — ii.2 

bade me rely on him, as on my father — ii.2 

wept not for our father's death — ii.2 

ah, for our father, for our dear lord .. — ii. 2 

both by his father and mother (re;;.) — ii 3 

he for nis father's sake so loves — iii. 1 

my princely father, then ha<l wars... — iii. .'i 

nothing like the noble duke my father — iii. ;, 

with reverend fathers, and well-learned — iii. h 

being got, your father then in I'rance — ill. 7 

being the ri"ht idea of your father . . — iii. 7 

with two right reverend fathers — iii. 7 

I am their father's mother _ iii. 7 

he hates me for my father Warwick.. — iv. I 

I thank (JikI, my father and yourself — iv. 4 

her father's brother would be lier lord — iv. 4 

my father's deatli, thy life hath — iv. 4 

[Co/. Kn/.] the children live who«; fathers — iv. 1 

receive we from our fntlier Stanley... — v. 2 

lie executed in his father's pij'ht — v. 3 

wliiiin our fathers have in their — v. 3 

the father rashly slaughtered his .... — v. 4 
the part my father meant to act.... Henttjyill. i. 2 

the duke his father, with the knife .. — i. 2 

he would out-go his father — i. 2 

forgive me, I had it from my father. . — i. 4 



FATIIER-he should helii his father. //en.;/ yiH. ii. 1 

noble father, Henry of Buekiiigham.. — ij. 1 

my father's loss, like o most royal.... — ij. 1 

happier than my wretched father — ii. 1 

the King, your father, was reputed .. — ii. 4 

Ferdinand, my father, king of Spain — ii. 4 

these reverenii fathers, men of singular — il. 4 

by all the revereiul fathers of the land — ii. 4 

come, reverend fathers, bestow your.. — iii. 1 

my father loved you: he said, he did — iii. 2 

learned and reverend fathers of his .. — iv. I 

here will be father, godfather, and .. — v. 3 
lest Hector or my father should. .J'roifuf .^Crfjj. i. I 

tt fool to stay behind her father — i. 1 

that white hair is my father — i. 2 

should strike his tiitlier dead — i. 3 

called Hector, (I'riam is his father). . — _i. 3 

so great as oiu* dread father — ii.2 

Eilioiild not our father bear the great.. — ii. 2 

shall I call you father? Ay — ii. 3 

thou must to thy father, and begone.. — iv. 2 

I have forgot my father — iv. 2 

I'll bring you to your father — iv. .'5 

my father 6 sister's son, a eousin-german — iv. .') 

th'is sinister bounds in my father's .. — iv. 5 

call my father to iiersuade — v. 3 

do not, dear father, Andromache .... — y. 3 

siieak. Freely, good father Timon ofAlhem, i. 1 

the '.'Oils reincnilier mv nitlicr's age .. — i. 2 

Veiitidiua lately liiiiial his father.... — ii.2 

Tiini.ii has lieei'i tliis lord's father.... — iii. 2 

thy fatlicr, tliat poor rag, must be.... — iv. 3 

who care for you like fathers Coriolanus, \. 1 

0' mv word, the father's SOU — i-3 

one of his father's moods — . i. 3 

was not a man my father? — iv. 2 

he called me father, but what 0' that? — v. 1 

no worse than thy old father Menenius — v. 2 

loved me above the measure of a father — v. 3 

and the father, tearinf; his country's.. — v. 3 

cousin Marcus; he killed my father.. — v.b 
and I have heard our fathers eo.y..JuUui Cwsar, i. 2 

our fathers' minds are dead — j. 3 

rich in his father's honour ..Anluny ^Cleopatra, ^. 3 

wherefore my father should revengers — ii. 6 

Rome cast on iny noble father — ii. 6 

o'er-count me of my father's house.. — ii. 6 

thy father, Fompey, would ne'er have — ii. 6 

you have my father's house — ii. 7 

whom they call my father's son — iii. « 

C.'csar's father oft, when he hath .... — iii. 1 1 

if that thy father live, let him — iii. 11 

his father was called Sicilius Cymbeline, i. 1 

their father, (then old and fond of issue) — i. 1 

I something fear my father's wrath. . — i. 2 

who to my father was a friend — i. 2 

your son's my father's friend — j. 2 

comes in my father, and, like — i. 4 

liisfather and I were soldiers together — i. 5 

a father cruel, and a steu-daine false — i. 7 

my father shall be made acquainted — i. 7 

betwi.xtafather by thy step-dame .. — ii. 1 

obedience, which you owe your father — ii. 3 

I will inform your father — ii. 3 

beforeher father: I'll do something — ii. 4 

man, which I did call my father — — ii. 5 
justice, and your father's wrath .. — iii. 2 (letter; 

say, she'll home to her father — iii. 2 

the king his father called Guiderius — iii. 3 

they take for natural father — iii. 3 

disobedience 'gainst the king my father — iii. 4 

no court, no father; nor no more ado — iii. 4 

that they had been my father's sons! — iii. 6 

spurn her home to her father — iv. 1 

as much, as I do love my father — iv. 2 

I'd say, my father, not this youth — — iv. 2 

cowards father cowards, and base .... — iv. 2 

lam not their father; yet who this.. — iv. 2 

worthy father, what have we to lose — iv. 2 

that let their fathers lie without — — iv. 2 

my father hath a reason for 't — iv. 2 

and rather father thee, than master. . — iv. 2 

children temporal fathers do appease — v. 4 

whose father then (as men report (rep.) — v. 4 

and begot a father to me — v. 4 

then, spai-e not the old father — v. 5 

gentlemen, that call me father — v..') 

BO sure as you your father's — v. 5 

you are my father too; and did relieve — v. 5 
then let my father's honours . . Tiius Amironicus, i. 1 

see, lord and father, how we have — i. 2 

noble lord and father, live in fame! — i. 2 

outlive thy father's days — J. 2 

nobleTitus, father of my life! — i. 2 

father, and in that name doth nature — i. 2 

dear father, soul and substance — i. 2 

a father, and a friend, to thee — i. 2 

cruel father, and his traitorous sons.. — i. 2 

for my father's sake, that gave thee life — ii. 3 

for by my father's reverend tomb.... — ii. 4 

make thy father liliiid; for such Irep.) — ii. 5 

whiile mouths of tears thy father's eyes? — ii. !, 

hear me, grave fatliers! — iii. 1 

() noble father, ynii lament in vain .. — iii. 1 

handless in thy'father's sight? — iii. 1 

sweet father, cease your tears — iii. I 

stay, father, for tliat noble hand .... — iii. I 

sweet father, if I should he thought. . — iii. 1 

and, for our father's sake, and mother's — iii. 1 

remembrance of my father's death .. — iii. 1 

farewell, Andronieus,mynoblefather — iii. I 

if that fly had a lather and mother?.. — iii. 2 

when my father was ill Home — iv. 1 

father, of that chaste dish )iired .. — iv. 1 

thy father hath full oft t.ir this — iv. 1 

this prey out of his father's hands — iv. 2 

the block slave smiles upon the father — iv. 2 

a eight to vex the father s soul withal — v. 1 

wrote the letter that thy father found — v. 1 

the cheater for thy fallicr'a hand — — v. I 



FAT 

FATHER— at your father's huuK.,TiluiAndron. v. I 

unto my father and my uncle Marcud — v. I 

regards his aged father's life — v. 2 

aincc 'tis my father's mind, that I . . — v. 3 

thy father's sorrow die! — v. 3 

lieliold his father bleed? — v. 3 

our father's t<:arB despised — v. 3 

in his father's grave: rny father — v. 3 

the father liking took (rep.) I'eridei, i. (Gower) 

in a father, he's father, son — i. I (riddle) 

now you 're both a father and a son. . — i. I 

fits a husband, not a father — i. I 

the sinful father seemed not to — i. 2 

which my dead father did bequeath.. — ii. 1 

since I have here my father's gift. ... — ii. 1 

of Sparta, my renowned father — ii 2 

nrince of Mucedon; my royal father — ii.2 

like to my father's picture — ii. 3 

what is it to me, my father? — ii- 3 

alas, my father, it befits not me — ii. 3 

resolve your angry father — ii. 5 

I love the king your father — iv. I 

my father, as nurse said, did never .. — iv. I 

hearkened to theii- father's testament — iv. 3 

my father, and a king — v. I 

my father, did in Tharsus leave me . . — v. 1 

another life to Pericles thy father — — v. 1 

king, my father, gave you such a ring — v. '■'• 

credit, sir, that my fatlier's dead — v. 3 

e'er loved, or father found Lear, i. 1 

my sisters, to love my father all — j. I 

I give her father's heart from her! — i. I 

loved as my father, as my master — i- I 

you have so lost a father — j. 1 

the jewels of our father — i- I 

use well om- father — ;• ' 

I think our father will hence to-night .. — i. I 

if our father carry authority with — i»l 

our father's love IS to the bajstard — i. 2 

ourfatherwouldsleeptilll waked him — i. 2(lct.) 

and fathers declining, the father should be — i. 2 

to his father, that so tenderly and entirely — i. 2 

cracked between son and father — j- 2 

there's son against father — i-- 

there's father against child — ' i. 2 

my father compounded with my mother — i. 2 

wfien saw you my father last? — j- 2 

a credulous father, and a brother noble. . — ;• 2 

did my father strike my gentlcnmn — i. 3 

my lady's father. My lady's father! .... — ;• 4 

which they will make an obedient father — i. 4 

woundlngs of a father's curse pierce — j. 4 

so kind a father! be ray horses ready? .. — i. ft 

I have been with your father — ii. 1 

my father hath set guard to take — ii. 1 

ray father watches; O sir, fly this place.. — ii. 1 

I hear my father coming,— pardon me .. — ii. 1 

come before my father : — ii- I 

father! father! stop.stop! no help? — ii. I 

the child was bound to the father — ii. 1 

my father's godson seek your life? (rep.) — ii. 1 

riotousknights that tend upon my father? — ii- 1 

you have shown your father a child-like — ii- I 

our father he hatii writ — ij- ' 

against the roj'alty of her father — ii. 2 

if I were your father's dog,you should not — ii- 2 

fathers, that wear rags, do make (rep.) .. — ii- 4 

dear father would with his daughter speak — ii- 1 

I pray you, father, being weak, seem so. . — ii- 4 

daughters' hearts against their father — ii. 4 

raust draw me that which my father loses — iii. 3 

Goneril! your old kind father — iii. 4 

discarded fathers should have thiis little — iii- 4 

loved him,friend,-no father his son dearer — jii- 4 

seek out where thy father is — iii- ■'» 

shalt find a dearer father in my love — — iii- •'' 

she kicked the poor king her father — iii-'' 

bound to take upon your traitorous father — iii- 7 

my father, i)oorly led? world, world -... — iv. I 

vour tenant, ancf your father's tenant.... — iv. 1 

Ihe food of thy abused father's wrath!.... — iv. 1 

a father, and a gracious aged man — iv. 2 

heaved the name of father pantiiigly forth — iv. ;i 

Kent! father! sisters! What? i' the storm? — iv. 3 

O dear father, it is thy business that I .. — jv. 1 

and our aged father's right — iv. 1 

therefore, thou happy father, think that — iv. i, 

was kinder to his fatlier, than my — iv. 1; 

well pray you, father — jv- li 

Bit you down, father; rest you — jv-'i 

come, father, I'll bestow you with a fViend — iv. u 

wind up of this child-changed father — jv. 7 

O my dear father! Restoration — iv. 7 

had you not been their father — iv. 7 

and wast thou fain, poor father — iv. r 

liere, father, take the shadow of this .... — v. 2 

the question of Cordelia, and her father.. — v. 3 

thy gods, thy brother, and th.v father. ... — v. 3 

my name is Edgar, and thy father's son — v. 3 

if ever I did hate thee, or my father! — v. 3 

known the miseries of .your father? — v. 3 

met I my father with his bleeding rings — v. 3 

threw him on my father — v. 3 

was that my father that went hence. /?ohi<'o,$-./u/.j. 1 

deny thy father, and refuse tlij- name — ii- 2 

glio8tly;father's[K;;(.-f'riar'sclose]cell — jj- 2 

good-morrow, father? liciiedicite!-... — ii. 3 

with Rosoline, my ghostly father? .. — ii. 3 

not to his father's; I s]K)ke with his man — il. 4 

hath sent a letter to his father's house — ii. 4 

Romeo, will you come to your father's? — ii. 4 

th.v father, or tliy mother, nay, or Iwth — iii. 2 

is father, mother, Tybalt, Romeo, Juliet — iii. 2 

where is my father, and my mother. . — iii. 2 

father, what news? what is the prince's — iii. 3 

thou hast a careful father, child .... — iii. 5 

tell my lord and father, madam, I will — iii. & 

here comes your father: tell him so — iii. 5 

good father, I beseech you on my knees — iii. i 

liaTing displeased my rather — iii. I 



FAT 



[ 248 ] 

FATHOM-LINE— 
where fathom-line could never toi\ch.\ Henryir. i. 3 

FATIGATE-vvhat ill flesU was fatigate. Coriolanus, ii .2 

FAT-KIDNEYED- 
peace, ye fat-kidneyed rascal IHennjII^. n. 2 

FATNESS — fatness of these pnrsy times. Ha>nte/,iii. 4 

FATTED— crows are fatted with ..Mid.N.Dream,\\. 2 
should liave fatted all tlie region icites. . Hamlet, ii. 2 

FATTER— would he were fatter .... JullusCmar, i. 2 

FATTEST-and the fattest, I think .MerrijWives^v. 5 
is the fattest soil to weeds i Henry ly. iv. •! 

FATTING— fatting for liis pains .... Richard III. i. A 

FAT-WITTED-tliou art so fat-\vitted.lHmn//r.i. 2 

FAUCONBEIiG- 

Ronssi, and Fauconberg, Foix Uenry V. iii. 5 

and Koussi, Fauconberg, and Foix . . — iv. S 

FAUL'-faul' is in the 'ort dissolutely. -V/prry mres,\. 1 

FAUI.CHION-of Caesar's faulchion. Love's L. Los', \-. 2 
thy murderous faulcliiou smoking. . Hichanl ill. i. 2 
with my good biting i'aulohion I would . . Lear, v. 3 

FAULCONBRIDGE— 
Jacques Faulconbridge solemnized. Love'sL. Lost, ii. 1 

she is an heir of Faulconbridge — ii. 1 

•what say you then to Faulconbridge. ,»/«)-.o/ I'en. i. 2 
I supiTOse, to Robert Faulconbridge ..King Joint, i. 1 
son and heir to that same Faulconbridge — i. 1 

be a Faulconbridge — i. 1 

go, Faulconbridge; now hast thou thy — i. I 
hastthoudeniedthyself aFaidconhridge? — i. 1 
tlie bastard l'"aulconbridge is now in — iii. 4 

or I shall gall you, Faulconbridge — iv. 3 

do, renowned i aulconbridge? — iv. 3 

your valiant kinsman, Faulconbridge — v 3 
that misbegotten devil, Faulconbridge — v. 4 
victorious lord of Faulconbridge.... l/Jem-i/r/. iv. 7 
stern Fardconbridge commands ZHrnryP'I. \. 1 

FAUET— the faidt's your own Tempest, ii. I 

I do forgive thy rankest fault — v. 1 

and frees all faults — (epil.) 

pardon the fault I pray Tn-o Gen. of Verona, i. 2 

and pray her to a fault for which I . . — i. 2 

the Lauuces have this very fault .... — ii. 3 

that fault may be mended — iii. I 

more faults than hairs (rcj).) — iii. 1 

that word makes the faults gracious.. — iii. 1 
were you banished for so small a fault? — iv. 1 

for we cite our faults — iv. 1 

to take a fardt upon me . — iv. 4 

that one error fills him with faults.... — v. 4 

'tis your fault, 'tis yoru- fault Merry Wives, i. 1 

his worst fault is, that he — i. 4 

but nobody but has his fault — i. 4 

ay, for fault of a better — i. 4 

'tis my fault, master Page — iii. 3 

what a world of vile ill-favoiu-ed faults — iii. 4 

good heart, that was not her fault — iii. 5 

a fault done first in the form — v. a 

a beastly fault! and then another fault — v. .5 

think ou't, Jove, afoul fault — v. 5 

two faiUts, Madonna, that Twelfth Night, i. 5 

the cur is excellent at faults — ii. 5 

reproves my fault (rep.J — iii. 4 

I take the fault on me — iii. 4 

whether it be the fault and glimpse. /l/ea. /or il/ea. i. 3 

sith 'twas my fault to give tiie — i. 4 

for I have had such faults — ii. 1 

condemned for a fault alone — ii. 1 

let it be his fault — ii.2 

condemn the fault, but not the — ii. 2 

every fault's condemned, ere it — ii. 2 

to find the faults, whose fine — ii . 2 

that's like my brother's fault — ii. 2 

is this her fault, or mine? — ii.2 

have it added to the faults of mine — ii. 4 

than faults may shake our frames — ii. 4 

free from our faults, as faults — iii. 2 

kills for faults of his own liking — iii. 2 

that for the fault's love, is the — iv. 2 

should pursue faults proper to himself — v. I 

laws for all faidts; but faults so — v. 1 

then Angelo, thy fault's thus manifested — v. 1 
best men are moulded out of faults .. — v. 1 
I have bethoiight me of another fault — v. 1 

I thought it was a fault — v. 1 

and for those earthly faults, I quit. . — v. 1 

tlie fault will be in the music Much Ado, ii. 1 

to be whipped! what's his fault? — il. 1 

Margaret was in some fault for this . . — v. 4 

no fault of mine (rep.) Mid. N. Dream, i. 1 

'tis partly mine own fault — iii. 2 

her faults will ne'er be known (rep.). Love's L.L. i. 2 

it is no fault of mine — iv. 3 (_ verses) 

it were a faidt to snatch words from. . — v. 2 

I made a little fault, iu, great — v. 2 

that look into these faults — v. 2 

are attaint with faults and pei'jury . . — v. 2 
I will have you, and that fault withal — v. 2 

find you empty of that fault — v. 2 

such eves as ours appear not faults. jVe/-. of Ven. ii. 2 
lose a hair through Bassanio's fault.. — iii. 2 

if I could add a lie unto a fault — v. I 

pardon this fault, and by my soul — v. I 

let me tlie knowledge ot my fault.. /Is you Like it, i. 3 

I know most faults (rep.) — iii. 2 

'tis a fault I wiU not eiiange — iii. 2 

one fault seeming monstrous (rep.).. — iii. 2 
cannot make her fault lier husband's — iv. 1 

we'd find no fault with the ty the All's Well, i. 3 

such were our faults — i. 3 

'tis not his fault — ii. i 

vow my faidts to have amended. . — iii. 4 (letter) 
that's all the fault: I spoke with her — iii. 6 

if our faults whipped them not — iv. 3 

our rash faults make trivial price — v. 3 

corner in the coldest i'M\\t'i. . Taming ofSh. 1 (indue.) 

would take her with all faults — i. I 

her only fault, (and that is faidts enough — i. 2 

have yoii told him all her faults — i. 2 

'twas a fault unwilling. A whoreson — iv. 1 
some undeserved faidt r'll find — iv. 1 



FAU 



FATHER— father counts it dangerous.i!om.<5-/t(i.iv.l 
to make confession to this father? .. — iv. 1 
are yon at leisure, holy father, uow. . — iv. 1 
help afford: farewell, 'dear father! .. — iv. 1 
is my father well? how fares my Juliet? — v. 1 

deliver it to my lord and father — v. 3 

to iiress before thy father to a grave? — v. 3 

he early bid me give his father — v. 3 

foresaid lands so by his father lost Hamlet, i. 1 

lost by his father, with all bands of law — i. 2 
the tlu'one of Denmark to thy father .... — i. 2 
iiave you your father's leave? what says — i. 2 
seek tor thy noble father in the dust ... . — i. 2 
these mourning duties to your father. . . . — i. 2 
your father lost a father: that father lost — 1.2 
whose common theme is death of fathers — i. 2 
think of us as of afather; for let the . . , . — i. 2 
that which dearest father bears his son .. — i. 2 

but no more like my father, than I to — i. 2 

I eame to see yoiu" father's funeral — i. 2 

my father,— methinks I see my father .. — i. 2 
the king your father. The king my father!— i. 2 
a figiu'C like .vour father, armed at point — i. 2 
T knew your father; these hands are not — i. 2 

if it assume my noble father's person — i. 2 

my father's spirit in arms! all is not well — i. 2 

but here my father comes. A double — i. 3 

Hamlet, kin" father, royal Dane — i. 4 

I am thy father's spirit; doomed for .... — i. 5 
if thou didst ever thy dear father love .. — i. 5 

that did sting thy father's life, now — i. ."J 

I know his father, and Ms friends ■ — ii. 1 

more than his father's death, that thus.. — ii.2 
still hast been the father of good news .. — ii.2 

his tiither's death, and oiu: o er-hasty — ii.2 

make mouths at him while my father lived— ii. 2 
with blood of fathers, mothers, daughters — ii. 2 

the unnerved father falls " — ii.2 

the son of a dear father miu'dered — ii.2 

something like the murder of my father — ii. 2 
her father, and myself, (lawful espials) — iii. 1 
Where's your father? At home, my lord — iii. 1 

told thee of my father's death — iii. 2 

ray father died witliin these two hours .. — iii. 2 
a villain kills my father; and, for that.. — iii. 3 
he took my father grossly, full of bread.. — iii. 3 

thy father much offended (irp.) — iii. 3 

my father, in his habit as he lived — iii. 3 

thy loving father, Hamlet (rep.) — iv. 3 

that ha\'e a father killed, a mother stained — iv. 4 

she speaks much of her father — iv. 5 

conceit upon her father. Pray, let us ... , — iv. 5 

it springs all from her father's death — iv. 5 

first, her father slain; next, your son. . . . — iv. b 
pestilent speeches of his father's death .. — iv. 5 
give me my father. Calmly, good Laertes — iv. 5 
cries, cuckold, to my father; brands the — iv. 5 
where is mj' father? Dead. But not by .. — iv. a 
revenged most throughly for my father.. — iv. a 
the certainty of yom- dear father's death — iv. a 
that I am guiltless of your father's deatli — iv. a 
they witliered all, when my father died. . — iv. a 
he which hath your noble father slain . . — iv. 7 

and so have I a noble father lost — iv. 7 

I loved yoiu' father, and we love ourself — iv. 7 

Laertes, was your father dear to you? — iv. 7 

tliink, you did not love your father — iv. 7 

your father's son more than iu words. ... — iv. 7 

requite him for your father iv. 7 

I had my father s signet in my purse .... — v. 2 

mine and my father s death come not — v. 2 

call up her father, rouse him Othello, i. 1 

here is her father's house; I'll call aloud — i. 1 
who would be a father? how didst thou — i. 1 

fathers, from hence trust not your — i. 1 

these ai'e the raised father, and his friends — 1. 2 

let her speak of me before her father — i. 3 

her father loved me ; oft invited me — i. 3 

my noble father, I do perceive here — i. 3 

preferring you before her father, so much — i, 3 

if you please, be't at her father's — i. 3 

to put my father in impatient thoughts — i. 3 
she has deceived her father, and may thee — i. 3 
she did deceive her father, marrying you — iii. 3 
to seel her father's eyes up, close as oak. . — iii. 3 

subdue my father entirely to her love — iii. 4 

my father's eye should hold her loathly — iii. 4 

if, haply, you my father do suspect — iv. 2 

her father, and her country, and her .... — iv. 2 
good father! how foolish are our mindsl — iv. 3 
I am glad, thy father's dead; thv match — v. 2 
token my father gave my mother — v. 2 

FATHERED- fathered he is, and yet..Macheth, iv. 2 
being so fathered, and so husbanded? Ja/.CVsar, ii. 1 
he childed, as I fathered! Tom, away. ..Lear, iii. 6 

FATHER-IN-LAW— 
my great father-in-law, renowned. .KicAard III. i. 4 

thy person, noble father-in-law! — v. 3 

remembrance of my father-in-law. Henry VIII. iii. 2 
of noble Buckingham, my father-in-law — iii. 2 

FATHERLESS— yet he's fatherless . . Macbeth, iv. 2 
our fatherless distress was left Richard III. ii.2 

FATHERLY- by that fatherly and..Jl/ric/i/ldo, iv. 1 
shown a tender fatherly regard . . Taming ofSh. ii. 1 
this service I have done, fatherly . . Cymbeline, ii. 3 

FATHOM-fathom five thy father. Tempest, i. 2(song) 

certain fathoms in the earth — v. 1 

how many fathom deep I am in love \. As you Like , iv. i 

thirty fatbom. Three great All'sWell.iv. 1 

forty thousand fathom above water. Winter's Tale,iv.S 

seas hide in unknown fathoms — iv. 3 

wish him ten fathom deep Henry VIII. ii. 1 

nor in how many fathoms deep. . Troilus 4-Cress. i. 1 

fathom and half! fathom and half! Lear, Iii. 4 

BO many fathom down precipitating.. — iv. 6 

of healths five fathom deep llomeo^Juliel, i. 4 

looks so many fathoms to the sea Hamlet, i. 4 

another of his fathom they have not Othello, i. 1 

FATHOMLESS- 
bnckle in a waist most fathomless. Troii.^ efess. ii. 2 



FAULT— you did continue faidt.... Winter'sTale, i. 2 
so forcing faults upon Hermione .... — iii. 1 

comes to me in name of fault — iii. 2 

you liave made fault i' the boldness. . — iii. 2 
all faults I make, when I shall come — iii. 2 
for thy mother's fault, art thus exposed — iii. 3 

no fault could you make — v. I 

to pardon me all the faults I have — v. 2 

for she will score your fault upon... Com. o/£rr. i. 2 
that's not iny fault, he's master of my — ii. 1 
it is a fault Lluit s}uingetli from your eye — iii. 2 
that's a fault that water will mend .. — iii. 2 

a grievous fault; say, woman — v.) 

false, the fault was hers; (rep.) KingJohii,\. I 

your fiiiult was not your folly — i. 1 

IS it my fault that I was Gieffre.y's — iv. 1 

exeusiui; of a iiiuit, doth make the fault — iv. 2 

of a wicked heinous fault lives iu — iv. 2 

this is my fault: as for the rert llicltard 11. i. I 

which made the fault that we — i. 2 

to smooth his fault I should have — i. 3 

minister correction to thy fault! — ii. 3 

or committed, was this fault? — v. 3 

glittering o'er my fault, shall show ..I Henry IV. i. 2 
is guilty of this fault, and not my son — i. 3 

if sack and sugar be a fiiult — ii. 4 

to anieud this fault — iii. 1 

neither, 'tis a woman's fault — iii. I 

punish this offence in other faults — v. 2 

the children are nut in the fault 'IHcnrylV. ii. 2 

for fault of a better, to call my friend — ii. 2 

chide him for faults, and do it — iv. 1 

scouring faults; nor never Henry V. i. I 

but see thy fault! France hath.. — ii. (chorus) 
if little faults, proceeding on distemper — ii. 2 
I do confess my fault; and do submit — ii. 2 

their faults arc open, arrest — ii.2 

and I repent my fault, more than — ii.2 

mj' fault, but not my body — ii.2 

an ! that's a foul fault — iii. 2 

think not upon the fault mj' father . . — iv. 1 

take it for your own fault — iv. S 

blame and lay the fault on me? } Henry VI. ii. 1 

correct him for his fault the other day .2 Henry VI. i . 3 

not privy to those faults — iii. I 

these are petty faults to faults unknown — iii. I 

pity was all the fault that was . — ii i . 1 

lowly words were ransom for their fault — iii. 1 

my lord, these faults are easy — iii. I 

O 'tis a fault too too unpardonable! . .^Henry VI. i. 4 

shall for the fault make forfeit — ' ii . 1 

'tis not my fault, nor wittingly have I — ii.2 
lose his birthright by his father's fault — ii. 2 
excuses for thy faults (j-ep.) — ii. 11 

moustrous fault! to harbour . — iii. 2 

and quite forget old faults — iii. 3 

do not frown upon mj' faults — v. 1 

ah, what a fault were this! — v. 4 

that fault is none of yours Richard II J. i. 1 

our duty, and thy fault provoke — i. 4 

his fault was thought, and yet his — ii. 1 

entreaties, to amend your fault! .... — iii. 7 

it is vour fault, that you resign — iii. 7 

gentlemen, whose fault is this? Henry VIII. i. 4 

more than I dare make faults — ii- I 

that might have mercy on the fault.. — iii. 2 

his faults lie open to the laws — iii. 2 

his faults lie gently on him! — iv. 2 

like, or find fault Troilus <5- Cressida, (prol.) 

it is my vice, my fault — iv. 4 

'tis Troilus' fault : come, come — iv. 4 

this fault in us I find — v. 2 

faults that are rich, are fair .... Timo7i of Athens, i. 2 
to forget their faults, I drink to you. . — i. 2 

every man has his fault — iii. 1 

the fault's bloody : 'tis necessary — iii. a 

in him, wliich bu3's out his fault .... — iii. a 
will thou whip thine own faults in... — v. 1 
must needs say, you have a little fault — v. 1 
should fall for private faults in them — v. 5 

low gra\-e, on faults forgiven — v. a 

he hath faults, \vifh surplus Coiiolanus,i. 1 

shall be the L;eiierars fault — i. 1 

and all his faults to Jlavcius — i. I 

he's poor in no one fault — ii. 1 

and the faults of fools, but folly — ii. 1 

lay a fault on us, your tribunes — ii. 3 

la.y the fault on us. Ay, spare us not — ii. 3 

so can I name liis faults — iii. 1 

for such faults as shall be proved — iii. 3 

what faults he made before the last.. — v. a 
fortbisfault, assemble all the poor. Julius Ccrsar, i. 1 
the fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars — i. 2 

known the earth so full of faults — i. 3 

1 woidd it were my fault to sleep — ii. i 

were so, it were a grievous fault — iii. 2 

your faults. A friendly eye (rep.) .. — iv. 3 

all his faults observed, set in — iv. 3 

taunt my faults with such full Antony SfCleo. i. 2 

of all faidts that all men follow — i. 4 

his faults, in him. seem as the spots .. — i. 4 

I have made no fault — ii a 

O that liis limit should maice a knave — ii. a 
for our faults can never be so equal.. — iii. 4 
is Antony, or we, in fault for this? .. — iii. 11 
the flint and hardness of my fault .. — iv. 9 
sir, it is your fault that I have \oweii. .Cymbeline, i. 2 

but that's no fault of his — ii. 3 

all faults that may be named — ii. a 

my fault being nothing, as I have.... — iii 3 

if you kill ine for my fault — iii. 6 

yoke me in my good brother's fault.. — iv. 2 

ta'en vengeance on my faults — v. 1 

j'ou snatch soiue heuee for little faults — v. 1 

mine eyes wove not in fault — v. ft 

these young men's heinous faults.. 7'/7iis Andron. i. 2 

fault of mv aci/nrsetl sons (rep.) — ii, 4 

shall be tlie ransom f .r tiieir fault .. — iii. 1 

and hear the faults of Titus' age — iv. i 

for that vile fault, two of herbrothers — v. 2 



— iii. 4 

— V. 3 
a ^ Juliet, ti. 1 

— iii. I 

— iii. 3 

— V. 3 
...Ilanikt, i. 2 

_ i. 4 

— ii. 1 



— iv. 7 



r VULT-for their fell faiilU . . Tihit Andronieu; v. 3 

'ivt tliiMr oiirs liciir their finilts hid I'l-rictei, i. 2 

the more mv limit, to 'sciipo his hiuiilB — jv. .) 
nliill tlio luiilts, hiiio'.ilh the hoiivuiiB — iv. 1 
ih. yini «imll ii tinilt? I cniinot wish {iep.).Uar, i. 
„mm..>l luiilhloculMoin-raults.... - i. 

wh'XMVcT liiult-;. ut hi^l shiime — !• • 

theliuiUi.l'it I'll uiiswcr — !• - 

the liuilt vv.iiiM not 'sc.i|.c eensure.... — \- ■ 

O imi-t si\i;iU I'nuU liow ugly Uldst .. — .1. \ 

rK,„l«h,.tisl,isliviilt? - >>-^ 

Ills tUnlt is imieh. iiml the pood king 
huiid lilted ..'ei- men's ftuilts... . .... 

iievev,i<><i'»lt'l ivvealiaiiiy.-eltunto 
thiit name, tor fault ol'ii worse.. Hmnt 
his fault e.meluiles Init, whiit the law 
fhv fault i.iiv law calls death.. ...... 

ni.v'ht in tins miscarried by my hiult 
a. find t to lieaven {irp- )........-. . . • • ■ • • 

corruption from thai |iartieiilar tault 
but hiv:illie his fanlls so niiaintly.. .. 

iin lank is past: hnl, l> « luit torm .. 
to'lhc teeth and foreiicad ol our lalllts 
iliiMiini; all hi^ lanlts in their alVection 
is not iilnio.-t a tault to incur a private .OrtcHo, !ii. 
iiiv iealousv shapes lanlts that are not — in- 
that is a fanlt: that handkerchief!.. - in. 
his Wood, and new-crcale this fault? — iv. 
it is tiuir lin. bands' I'aulls, il'wivea.. — iv. 
till'that thenatureofyonrtanlthe.. — v- 
V \ri/n.M:sS-e\ent.ifanltiiies.s..47i(o)i!/iS-C/fO. in. 
FAin.Tl.KSS— thvself he faultless ..iHtnnjI'l. ii. 
faultless may c.ndcmn a nobleman! — ni. 

stepped in the faultle.ss hloixl ot Uichard III. i. 

FAl' l.TY— hath laiiltv wandered . .1 }leunj I /'. lii. 

that I am faulty in duke illeiirt/ fl.'»- 

men so noble, however fatilty Honnjl'lll.v. 

FAUSSE— voiir nnijeste 'avc fttusse Henry V.y. 

F.\r.'< TK- I'auste, prceor gelida Lore's L. I., iv. 

FVl'SrilSKS— doetorFaustiises ..Mernj IVives 
FAA"Ul,' U-i-'ivc me thy favour still. . . . Tempest, ... 

but her favour infiiiitc TicoGcn. of Ver. ii. 

with some special favour — !)■ 

of so great a favour growing proud... — _ii. 

to mind vour griwious favours — in. 

more than for all the favours........ — . in. 

continue these favours towards ..Twelfth ^tghl, i. 
is he inconstant, sir, in his favours?. . — i- 

if you prized mv lady's favour at any — n. 
hath stayetl upon some favour that . . — ]]■ 

a little, by your favour — !;■ 

he hrouitht me out of favour with my — .ii. 
favoiirs'to the count's serving-man . . — iii. 
she did show favour to the youth in.. — in. 

and take't for a great favour — in- 

I know your favour well — !!!• 

ond so, in favour was my brother — — m. 
from mv true place in your favour .. — v. 
such clear liL'hts ol lavour.. 



FA'VOUR— wear thou this favour .... Henry V. Iv. 7 
which T have j'iven him for a favour — iv. 7 
,-..,l,„-.. M.t,, .,iM- foniicr favcnir — v.'/! 



e. 1 



by your "nodtavoui i/fp.).A/eiswi'c/o»- Mcosure, iv. 

and will di-covcr til.; favour — iv. 

proclaim favours tliat keep within .. — v. 

when I like your favour Much Ado, ii. 

much I am in the favour of Margaret — .n. 
for vour favour, sir, why give God . . — m. 

regards me with an eye of favour — v. 

is catching; O were favour so! . . Mid. N. Dream, \. 

those be rubies, fairy favours — .ii- 

bv thy favour, sweet welkin Luve sL.Lost,m. 

as thou wilt win my favour — in. 

her favour turns the fashion — iv. 

but Kosaline, you have a favour too.. — v. 

my favour were as great — 'v. 

which thev'll know by favours several — v. 

this favour thou shall wear — v. 

and cliange you favours too — v. 

wear the favours most in sight — v. . 

out of your favours, heavenly spirits — v. 2 

therefore, change favours — ^.'i 

the ladies did change favours — v. i 

wears next his heart, for a favour — v. '2 

your favours, the embassadors of love — v. 2 
therefore, if you my favour mean .... — y. 2 

I say, to buy his favour Metxluinl of Venice, i. 3 

that, for this favour, he presently — — iv. 1 
the boy is fair, of female favour... 4j you /.ifce it, iv. 3 
lively touches of in v daughter's favour — v. 4 
carries no favour ill it, but Bertram's.. /l«'s»re;(, i. 1 
cverv line and trick of his sweet favour '— .;. I 
roikI fortune, and the favour of the king — u. 3 
to flv the favours of so good a king .. — 111.2 

steal himself into a man's favour — in. C 

I'll read it first, bv your favour — iv. 3 

the line of every other favour — v. 'J 

give a favour from you. to sparkle . . — .v. 3 
free access anil favour as the rest. Tamingof Sli.u. 1 

tills favour will I do you for his — iv. 'j 

my favmir here begins to warp mntcr's Tale,\. i 

arid favour of the climate — .ii- ' 

your favour, I do give lost — in.' 

known by garment, not by favour .. — v.'. 
do me the favour to dilate at MLComedy of Err. 1. 1 
yet will I favour thee in what I can — i. 

nor fear, your favours, nor your hate ..Macbeth, i. ' 

give me vour favour — i. • 

to alter lavour ever is to fear — .1. 

to whom in favour she shall give KmgJolm, 11. 

speak on, with favour; we are bent . . — 11. 
but I do love the favour and the form — v. 
and do thee favour with my royal .. HicAarrf //. iii. 
rememlK-r the favour of these men .. — iv. 

and wear it as a favour — v. 

my good word, nor princelv favour . . -, ^ .X- 
and stain my favours in a bloody ..\ Henry IF. ill. 
turn your looks of favour from myself — v. 

let in'y favours hide thy mangled — v. 

misuses thv favours so much . .iHrnryW. ii. 2 (let 
ripens in the sunshine of his favour.. — iv. 
and graced with princely favours ....Hrmy f. 11. 
I thee heaecch to do me favours — m. 



I- her fa 



V. 2 



nto ladies' favours — v. 2 

ivoiir him IHenry VI. ii. 1 

nakeshim lag .. — iii. 3 
r him! — ' 



as von lovcoir liivonr, (inite ... 
all'lor this -nut favour done 



ate-t Iii 



■ fa' 



of till 



rid?. 



2/;car,/r;. i 

him — 1 

iminons.. — i 



iv. 1 



tl 

thci 

at thefavir 

for I beg ni -. 

untaught to plead for favour 

justice with favour have I always done 



nvty 



iHcnryVI. i. 1 

1 favour, humbly — iii- •' 



iv. 1 



the eily favours th 
with y.inr leave ai 

as he fiiMinr: Ivlwurd s can:..- 

if we will keep in favour with Richard III. 1. 1 

lieg one favour at tliy gracious — 1.2 

since 1 am crept in lavour with — ..;•■; 

mvself secure in grace and favour .. — 111. 4 
luay, give me favour, sir Henry VII 1. \. \ 



then let's dream who s best in favour 
generally whoever the king favours 

tied by blood and favour to her 

and my favour to him that does best 

muehjov and favour to you 

fortune, 'and his highness' favours .. 

woman, fallen from favour? , 

crawled into the favour of the king . 

tlint ImniTS on uriucCs' faVOlU's! 



i. 4 

— !!• ,' 

— ii. 2 
_ ii. 2 
_ ii. 4 
_ iii. 1 



FA 'WN— fawn upon his debts . . Timon of Alheui, . . 

than spend a fawn u|iou Ihciii Coriolniiui, in. 2 

if you know that I do fawn on max\..Jtil. Creiar. 1. 2 

and iirav, and fawn, lor him, I spurn — 111, I 

FAWNK'n-and fawned like hounds — .v. 1 

FAWNKTll-fawnethonhcrstill7'M'oGtn.o/;'fr. 1V.2 

FAWNlNtJ—thvfawniiig smiles — iii- 1 

how like a fawliinci nbliciin he.. iWci-. n/Tfnifc, 1. 3 
this fawning grcvhonnd then did.. ..U/fiirt//)'. 1.3 

even like a fawning greyhound Corinlnnm.i. 

coiirl'sies, and base siianiel fawiiing../u(. C</'«ar, 111. 1 

where thrift mav follow fawning Haml't, 111. 2 

FAY— bv my fay ,"a goodly nap. 'lamingoffih. 2 (ind.) 

by my 'fay, it waxes late Homeo AJHliel,i. !> 

for bv my fay, I cannot reason Hamlet, 11. 2 

FKA LTY-Tiawn for fealty. . Ttn Gen. of Verona, 11. 4 

lasting foalty to the new-made Ilwhard Il.v. 2 

asplcdgesofmy fealty and love ....2J/c»n/f7. v. 1 
our fealty, and Tenantitis' right .... Cymbelme, v. 4 
UomiiiiB, forget your fealty to me.'7'i("« Andron. 1. 2 



el. join n:i*lL.T V,/ inv.. . ..■.» ....... "... ... - 

you have done yourself., '/'emp^ii, i. 2 
•' "•-- '- ii. 1 



— V. 'i 



that hangs on princes' favour 

long in his highness' favour 

ana so near our favour, to dance . . 

by your good favour, too sharp — ■. • - 

for a brown favour, (for so 'tis . , Troilus <§- Cress. \. 2 

ifyou will favour the man — .H- * 

riches, favour, prizes of accident — i"- ^ 

I know your favour, lord Ulysses.... -- iv- J 
then, under favour, pardon mc.Timon of Athens, 111. a 

arm with favour never clasped — iv- 3 

he that deiicnds upon vour favours.. Conofamis, 1. I 
but your favour is well aiipearcd .... — I'V- ;; 
as I do know your outward UvouT.JulmsCwsar, 1. i 
[Col. Knf.] in favour's like the work we — .}• ■> 

by any mark of favour -- !!• J 

why so tart a favour to trumpet.. WriJoni/ .5- Cito. 11. .) 

by the minute, lost his favour — ..i.'i- 

favours, by Jove that thunders! — i" ' 1 



Horn , .. 

FEAU-Ifc.„,.,„„ „ 

have lost your son, I fear, ior ever . 

by their own fear, or sloth 

for fear of the storm 

faitli, sir, you need not fear 

I fear, a madness held me 

that, I fear nie, will never out 

I shall not fear fly-blowing 

I fear you'll prove Tiro Gen.nf I . 

I fear, she'll prove as hard 

1 fear, mv .lulia would not 

shunned 'the fire for fear of burning. . 

like one that fears robbing 

for fear thou shonldst lose 

I fear me, it will make 

I fear IPC, he will scarce 

the least, l.ucetta, of my fear 

that thou may 'st perceive my fear .. 



did ask fa 



our. If that thy father — iii-. II 
Id be Cymbelwe.i. 7 



sir Thurio, fear not 

the travellers do fear so much.. 

sir Thurio, fear not you 

I fear, I am attended by 

fear not; the forest is not 

fear not; he bears an 



— IV. I 

— iv. 2 



V. 3 



,M 



nuthiii^: 
that dv I 
yet are ~ 
his favoii 



fault -- 

s l'oihI enough — 
lie low I'osthumus — 

lines of favour 
ess' favour .... 



iii. 3 
lii. 4 
iii. b 
iv. 2 
_ V. 4 
_ V. 4 



iliartome — '^- ? 

again unite his favour with the radiant — \. .) 
inv fortunes, and the people's favour.. Titus And. 1. 1 

to" the love and fa\our of my country — i- .' 

may favour Taniora, the queen ol Goths — 1. ^ 

Titus Andronicus, for thy favours done — 1. - 

receive him then to faynnr, Saturn uie — .^i- ^^ 

ford! how your favour's changed.. ....ft™'"'' '^' \ 



V. 3 
Lear, i. 1 



— iii. 7 

— iv. b 



voice and favour!— you are, you 

so many folds of favour! sure 

deprived me of your grace and favour . . 
taking one's part that is out of favour .. 
o' the favour of other your new pranks . . 
my hospitable favours you should not .. 

but, by your favour, how near's the . 

out of her favour, where I am ... . Homeo ff Juliet, 1. 1 
latest favour iCol. Kn(.-tliat I for thee] — v. .i 
O what more favour can 1 do to thee ,~ , ,.t 
leave and favour to return to France . . Hamlet, i. - 
for Ilamlct, and the trifling of his favour — .1. i 

orin the middle of her favours? — ."• ; 

she turns to favour, and to prettiness .... — iv. o 

to this favour she must come — *• ' 

count his favours: but, sure, the bravery - v. i 

may help these lovers into your lavour.. Of/icHo, . .! 

defeat thy favour with an usurped heard — .1. J 

lovelincs's in favour; sympathy in yeai-s — .ii. j 

entreats her a little favour of speech .... — 111. 1 

should I know him, were he in favour . . — "i- 4 

unpin me,_have grace and favour in them - iv. .) 

FA'VOURABl^E-favourablc stars. TamineofJ.li. ly. i, 

with an aspect more favourable .. Winter sTale,u. 1 

some dull and favourable hand ....IHenry 11^. iv. 4 

lend favourable car to our requests. fi.cAarrf ///. i.i.i. 7 

had most favourable and happy speed. . Othello, 11. 

FA"VOURABLY— more favourably minister — 11. 1 

FA'S'^OUREU-alwavs favoured him.Cono/a»iiis, 111. 3 

is favoured [_Cot. Knt.An favour's]..J;Wms C'csar, 1. 3 

FAVOUKEK-for a favourer ot Wm.llenivl II. v. 2 

being now a favourer to the>oman .(-i/m/..'/"ic, v. i 

followers, favourers of my right .. Ijius.liution. 1. 1 

and enmc to us as favourers, not as Iocs./ ciieie>, 1. 4 

FAVOUKl.\(J-iu favouring the first. Corio(<in us, u. 1 

unto his liiis thv favouring hand./lnfoiny ^Cleo. iv. 8 

FAVtH'HITE-like favourites, made.A/«r'"/)"''>.i.i.i. 1 

vp lavoiiriles of a king; are we not. Itictt.nd II. ill. 2 

^fflhe heallsof all the" favourites .,•>//;■"'!/"■; -v. 3 

as afai.e laM.nrite doth Ins prince ,.■ rnryll. .v. 2 

bandying of their favourites 1 //■■"-!/ ' '. iv. 

his sons, his favourites, and his illenryH.i. 1 

vou mark, his favourite flies Hamlet, 111. 2 

F.\WN— 1 will fawn im vou....Mi'd. S.sUream, 11. 2 
how I would make him fawn .... Love » l-j-ost, v. 2 
to find my fawn, and give it focvX.AsyouLikei ,11. , 
I am too old to fawn upon a nurse ..Uichard II. t. .i 
easily won to fawn on any maul .... — m- '- 
and fawn on rage with base humility — .> ■ ■ 

to fawn on him by sending ''."'"''... •' ? 

forbear to fawn upon their frowns.. 3l/ciii!/» /. iv. 1 
when the lion fawns upon the lamb - iv. « 

look, when he fuwud, lie bilcii Kichard /;/. 1. 3 



icar noi; ue oeare an — . '.• " 

there is no fear of Got in a riot .... Merry » ium, 1. J 

shall desire to hear the fear of Got .. — i. i 

with those that have the fear of God — .1. 1 

leaving the fear of lieaven on the — .!!• 2 

I fear, vou love mistress Page — ii".. 3 

and 1 tear not mine own shame — ii). 3 

I quaked for fear, lest the — '."••' 

thatdofear in deep of night — iv. 4 

fearnotyou that: go, act us — iv. 4 

I fear not Goliath with a weaver's .. — v. 1 

you either fear his humour Twelfth Xighl, 1. 4 

needs to fear no colours — !■ (• 

he shall see none to fear — !• '^ 

of, I fear no colours — ■• ;' 

and fear to find mine eye — '■ ■> 

my servant, and I fear me, you.. 

by these arguments of fear 

and fear to kill a woodcock — ■-.- 

it is the baseness of thy fear — v. 

fear not, Cesario, take thy — v. 1 

though thou hast too much fear — v. I 

come, fear not you Measure forileasure, 1. 2 

I do fear, too dreadful — '-4 

he, (to give fear to use and liberty 



— iii 1 



_ ii. 1 
_ ii.3 



ii. 3 



setting It up to fear the birds of prey 

you need not to fear the bawds 

hut as we stand in fear 

dost fear the soft and tender fork of. . 

yet death we fear, that makes — i;:- ■ 

O, I do fear thee, Claudio — »]■] 

to what we fear of death — lu- _' 

I fear you not — !■■•'• 

fear me not. Nor, gentle daughter, fear — iv. 1 

to pluck all fears out of you — iv. 2 

her wits, I fear me, arc not firm — v. 1 

than that which lives to fear — v. 1 

with a most christian-like fear (rep.). Much Ado, 11. 3 

into a quarrel with fear and trembling — 11. 3 

for the man doth fear God — .!;■■' 

fear you not my part of the dialogue — m. I 

uiion thv sworcl, I fear thee not — v. 1 

give your age such cause of fear .... — v. 1 

tush," fear not, man, we'll tip thy — v. 4 

for fear, creep into acorn cups ..Mid. N. Dream, 11. 1 

fear not my lord, your servant ... " '' 

run away for fear: therefore 

look, how I do quake with fear. . . 

I swoon almo.st with fear .:; - 

hv'r lakin, a parlous fear — nj- 1 

this will put them out of fear — in- 

I fear it, I promise you — !!!■ ] 

not to fear, not to tremble — !!!■ ' 

lost with their fears, thus strong — ]i.\- - 

I led them on in this distracted fear — in- 2 

for thou. I fear, hast given me cau.se — in- 'J 

forfear lest davshonid look their.... — ni. 2 

by hale, and fear no enmity? — 'V- 

imagining some fear, how ea-sy. — ^- ] 

their practised accent in their fears.. — v. 1 

IfearmyThishysiiroiniscisforgot; — v. 

whose gentle hearts do tear the smallest — ^ - 

I fear, we shall out-sleep the coming , - , , \- \ 
and fears bv pale-while -hown ( rr;..l. tore iL.L. 1. 2 

vou have done this in the fear of God — iv. 2 

1 do fear colourable eohnirs.... - iv. 2 

I fear, these stubhorii lines lack 

vour grace needs not fear it 

for fear their colours should be .. 

vet. fear not thou, hut sjieak — 

"O wordof fear! iinpleasing to — — .. .^=-.1.^. 

make me fear misfortune to my . . Mer. of Venice, 1. 1 

1 fear, he will prove the weeping — > ' 

thcrefi're, for fear of the worst 

yon need not fear lady, the having .. 

whv, fear not, mail; I will not 

wh'idi makes inc fear the enjoying .. 



— Iv. 3 



— V. 2 (song) 



FEAR— ay, but I fear, you speak.il/tv.o/ f'cnice, iii. 2 

aud shuddering fear, aud green-eyed — iii. 2 

make it less, for fear I surfeit! — iii. 2 

tlierefore, I promise you, I fear you. . — iii. 5 

truly then I fear you are damned .. — iii. a 

you need not fear us, Lorenzo — iii. 5 

dotla sit tlie dread and fear of kings .. — iv. 1 

no telltales, madam; fear you not.... v. 1 

I'll fear no otlier tiling so sore — v. 1 

tlie fear of your adventure As you Like it, i. 2 

what woman's fear there will _ i. 3 

abhor it, fear it, do not enter it — ii. 3 

I fear, you have sold yom- own — iv. 1 

as those that fear they hope {rep.) — v. 4 

when fear proposes the safety All's Well, i. 1 

your valour and fear makes in you . . — i. 1 

there were no fear in marriage — i. 3 

my fear hath catched your fondness — i. 3 

his majesty seldom fears : I am — ii. 1 

submit ourselves to an unknown fear — ii. 3 

you shall not need to fear me — iii. 6 

the higliest compulsion of base fear. . — iii. 6 

my heart hath the tear of Wars — iv. 1 

a braggart, let him fear this _ iv. 3 

makest conjectural fears to come .... — v. 3 
shall tax my fears of little 



feai- not my lord; we can . . 1 

you shall never need to fear 

I killed a man, and fear I was descried 

fear boys with bugs. For he fears 

for fear, I promise you, if I look pale 

now I fear thee not; sirrah 

fear not, sweet wench 

I fear, it is too choleric a meat 

fear you not him ; sirrah 

tut! fear not me. But hast 

i'ear not Baptista; we will 

my life, Hortensio fears his widow . . 

I am questioned by my fears mnler's Tale, i . 2 

his negligence, his folly, fear, amongst — i. 2 

'twas a fear which oft infects the wisest i. 2 

fear o'ershades me; good expedition — i. 2 
you need not fear it, su-: the child . . — ii. 2 
do not you fear: upon mine honour — ii. 2 

fear you his tyrannous passion ii. 3 

that I should fear to die? iii. 2 

with mere conceit and fear of the queen's — iii. 2 
and fear we have landed in ill time.. — iii. 3 
which, I fear, the wolf will sooner . . — iii. 3 

but I fear the angle that plucks — iv. 1 

I fear, sir, my shoulder-blade is out — iv. 2 

hath not been used to fear iv. 3 

with wisdom I might fear, my Dorieles — iv. 3 

as little skill to fear, as I have purpose iv. 3 

fear not thou, man, thou shalt lose . . — iv. a 

endure your sight as yet, I fear — iv. 3 

my lord, fear none of this — iv. 3 

fear not, man; here's no harm — iv. 3 

(^for I do fear eyes over you) iv. 3 

fear thou no mfe, I'll have no wife . . — v. 1 

ignorant what to fear Comedy of Errors, i. 1 

I greatly fear, my money is not safe.. — i. 2 
for fear you ne'er see chain . . 

turns back for very fear 

fear me uot, man ; I will not 

stand by me, fear nothing _ 

unless the fear of death doth make . . — 
and seem to fear things that do sound.. il/aciett, 

neither beg, nor fear, your favours 

present fears are less than horrible . . 

which the eye fears, when it is 

yet do I fear thy nature 

which rather thou dost fear to do 

to alter favour ever is to fear . . , ^ . . . . 

for fear thy very stones prate 

listening their fear; I could not say .. 

that fears a painted devil 

fears and scruples shake us 

and I fear, thou played'st most 

our fears in Banquo stick deep 

is none, but he, whose being 1 do fear 

ere we will eat our meal in fear 

to saucy doubts and fears 

the very painting of your fear 

(impostors to true fear) 

when mine are blanched with fear... 

is the initiate fear, that wants 

"hove wisdom, grace, and fear 

thou hast harped my fear aright 

what need I fear of thee? 

that I may tell pale-hearted fear it lies 

our fears do make us traitors 

it was his wisdom, or his fear 

all is the fear, and nothing is the love 
from what we fear, yet know (rep.) . . 

thou'dst never fear the net 

not as in absolute fear of you 

but fear not yet to take..l 

yet do not fear 

what need we fear who knows it 

to Dunsinane, I cannot taint with fear 

tear not, Jlaebeth; no man 

with doubt, nor shake with fear 

and over-red thy fear 

cheeks of thine are counsellors to fear 

hang those that talk of fear 

almost forgot the taste of fears , . „ 

like truth; fear not, till BLmam _ v. 5 

such a one am I to fear, or none — v. 7 

kinged of our fears; until our {eaxB..KingJo!m, ii. 2 

sick, and capable of fears (_rep.} _ ii. 2 

let seamen fear no wreck. , ■" 



ing o/S/i. I (indue.) 



iv. 3 
iv. 4 
iv. 4 

v. 2 



— iv. 2 



i. 3 
i. 3 
i. 4 
i. 5 
i. 5 
i. 5 
ii. 1 
ii. 2 
ii. 2 



iii. 1 
iii. J 
iii. 2 



iv. I 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 
v. 1 
V. 3 
V. 3 
V. 3 
V. 3 
V. 3 
V. 3 



1 fear. My lord, I rescued her (rep.) 
I fear some outrage, and I'll follow. . 

xmcleanly scruple! fear not you 

when lesser is my fear 

why then your fears, which as'they .'. 

breaks, I fear, will issue thence 

what they fear, but full of fear 

to possess me with these fears? 



iii. 4 
iv. 1 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 



FE.'UR— fears might have wrought fears ..John, iv. 2 

let not the world see fear _ y. I 

badly, I fear: how fares your y.' 3 

the_ king, I fear, is poisoned v! 6 

which fear, not reverence, makes Richard II. \. 1 

or with pale beggar fear impeach i. i 

motive of recanting fear __ i.' j 

too soon, I fear, the king , j' 3 

urge doubts to them that fear _ ii' 1 

and will, I fear, revolt on Hereford's — ii' 2 

meet again, I fear me, never ij] 2 

the one, in fear to lose what ii'4 

fear not, my lord; that Power _ iii' 2 

too late, I fear, my noble lord _ iii' 2 

tofear the foe, since fear oppresseth.. — iiii 2 

tliis ague-fit of fear is over-blown — iii.' 3 

disorder, horror, fear, and mutiny .... iv! 1 

converts to fear; that fear, to hate v.' 1 

I fear, I fear. What should you fear v! 2 

thou hast no cause to fear y.' 3 

fear, and not love, begets his penitence v' 3 

yet am I sick for fear _ y. 3 

will rid me of this living fear? y] 4 

I present thy buried fear _ y' 6 

and indent with fears iKnt.-te^es]....lHemyIV. i 3 



— iv. 2 



— iv. 3 

— iv. 3 

— iv. 4 

— iv. 4 

— iv. 4 



and possessed with fear so strongly . . — ' ii. 2 

very sincerity of fear and cold heart.. — ii' 3 

I fear, my brother Mortimer doth stir — ii! 3 

and not in fear of your nativity iii! 1 

tlirough vassal fear, base inclination — iii! 2 

I fear thee, as I fear the roaring of„ . . — iii. 3 

I'll fear thee as I fear thy father? _ iii. 3 

shows the ignorant a kind of fear .... — i v! 1 

as this term of fear iy. 1 

I am out of fear of death jv! 1 

such as fear the report of a caliver i v 2 

tut, never fear me; I am as vigilant 

I fear, we shall stay too long 

you speak it out of fear 

hold as little counsel with weak fear 

in the battle, which of us fears 

and I fear, sir Michael, what with.... 
you need not fear; there's Douglas. .. 
yet needful 'tis to fear; and to prevent 

a prodigy of fear, and a portent _ y. 1 

near your sight, for fear of swallowing v. 1 

at London, I fear the shot here — y. 3 

I fear, thou art another counterfeit. . . t. 4 

all is men upon the foot of fear _ y. 5 

he that but fears the thing he 2HenrylV. i. 1 

too true, your fears too certain i. 1 

and hold'st it fear, or sin i. 1 

such lightness with their fear j. 1 

stumbling in fear, was took i.i 

at the heels : never fear that i. 3 

fear we broadsides? no, let the ii. 4 

pure fear, aud entire cowardice ii. 4 

from mercy, not from fear iv. 1 

admittance to a thought of fear iv. 1 

fear you not that: if we can make — 

therefore rouse up fear aud trembling 

the people fear me; for they do 

all tnese bold fears, thou see'et 

might lodge a fear to be again displaced — 

alas, I fear, all will be overturned .... 

you mix your sadness with some fear — 

fear not your advancement y. 5 

I fear, that you will die in (rej).) _ y. 5 

first, my fear, then my court'sy {rep.) (epil.) 

but fear the main intendment Henry V. i. 2 

shake in their fear; and with pale .. — ii. (chorus) 

as provident as fear may teach . ii. 4 

do it with no show of fear ii. 4 

youth, that fear attends her not ii. 4 

let us fear the mightiness and fate .... ii. 4 

drop his heart into the sink of fear . . — iii. 5 

for fear I should be faced out of my way — iii. 7 

to every one, tlla^ving cold fear.. . . — iv. (chorus) 

of fears, as we do, his fears, out of doubt — i v. 1 

any appearance of fear, lest he iv. 1 

creating awe aud fear in other men? — iv. 1 

possess them not with fear _ iv. 1 

shall couch down in fear iy. 2 

that fears his fellowship to die iv. 3 

I fear, thou'lt once more come again — iv. 3 

whom we wont to fear XHenry VI. i. 2 

o' God's name, I fear no woman i. 2 

since Henry's death, I fear, there is .. — i. 3 

for fear of sudden death i. 4 

so great /ear of my name 'mongst.... — i. 4 

a witch, by fear, not force i.s 

for pale they look with fear — ii. 4 

not for fear, but anger, that thy cheeks — ii. 4 

beside, I fear me, it thy thoughts .... iii. 1 

and me, for fear, compelled to — iii. 1 

ay, but I fear me, \vith a hollow iii. 1 

and now I fear that fatal prophecy . . — iii. 1 

I fear, we should have seen deciphered — iv. 1 

they'll say— it was for fear _ iv. 5 

you need not fear (rcj).) y. 2 

do not fear, nor fly y, 3 

alarums both of hope and fear y. 5 

ay, grief, I fear me, both at first — v. 6 

and no great friend, I fear me i Henry VI. i. 1 

I fear me, lords, for all this flattering — i. 1 

nay, fear not, man, we are alone — i. 2 

and thus, I fear, at last — i. 2 

what else? fear you not her courage .. — i. 4 

madam, sit you, and fear not 1.4 

and fear not. neighbour, you shall do — ii. 3 

drink, and fear not your man ii. 3 

Peter, and fear not thy master ...... "5 

but fear not thou, until thy 

call it a woman's fear; which fear 

fear were false (rep.) . iii.] 

to rid us from the tear we have of him iii. 1 

let pale-faced fear keep with _ iii 1 

I fear me, you but warm the — iii. 1 

in him they fear your liighness' death — iii. 2 

'tis thee I feai- (rep.) — jy. 1 



iv. 1 
iv. 3 
iv. 4 
iv. 4 
iv. 4 
y. 2 
V. 2 



— ii. 4 



i EAR- true nobility is exempt from fear.2Hen. VI. i v. 1 

I fear neither sword nor fire (rep.).. .. — jv 2 

he should stand in fear of fire — i v' 2 

fear not that, I warrant thee ! _ iv' 3 

I fear, my love, if that I had — iv" 4 

for fear you be betrayed _ iv! 4 

and not fear, provoketh me — iy' 7 

fear frames disorder . 



iii 


2 


11] 


3 


3V 


2 


IV 


6 


IV 


b 


IV 


7 


IV 


H 


V 


2 


V 


4 


V 


6 


y 


6 


V 


6 


^X- 


6 


• } 








j. 


3 


ii. 


2 


li. 


3 


ii. 


3 


li. 


» 


HI. 


1 


111. 




111. 


1 


iii. 


2 


lU. 


2 



iii. 7 



V. 3 
V. 3 
V. 3 



think'st thou, that we fear them...'..'.'3HeHry; 

I'll win them, fear it not _ 

a woman's general; what should we fear? — 

or, is it fear, that makes him _ 

what! multitudes, and fear? _ 

more than common fear of Clifford's — 
cheer them that fear their wreck .... — 

to kings, that fear their subjects' — 

not that I fear to stay 

Lancaster ! I fear tliy overtlirow ' ! ! 

my love, and fear, glued many _ 

1 fear her not, unless she chance — 

ay, but, I fear me, in another 

go fear thy king withal _ 

fear not that, my lord _ 

my fear to hope, my sorrows 

by doubtful fear my joy of — 

what 1 fear not man, but yield — 

that's not my fear 

die thou, and die our fear _ 

weakness to lament, or fear 

the tliief doth fear each bush 

mistrust no parcel of my fear — 

neither pity, love, nor fear __ 

then, to purge his fear, I'll be thy . . — 

his physicians feaj him mightily Richard III. 

I fear me, both are false — 

I fear, our happiness is at the height — 

God! I fear thy justice will _ 

as well'the fear of harm 

1 fear, I fear, 'twill prove a giddy world — 

come, come, we fear the worst 

the hearts of men are full of fear 

why, sir, what should you fear? 

I fear no imcles dead 

I hope, I need not fear 

bid liim not fear the separated 

tell him, his faults are shallow 

fear you the boar 

intend some fear 

but sure, I fear, we shall ne'er win . . 

I fear he will: here Catesby comes . . 

he fears, my lord, you mean no — 

the boy is foolish, and I fear not Mm 

I'll rid you from the fear of them — 

and fly to him, I fear 

the fear of that withholds my _ 

but who are friends for fear 

with guilty fear, let fall thy lance — 

what do I fear? myself? there's none 

Ratcliff, I fear, fear, — nay, good 

his fears were, that the interview . . . Henry nil. i. 1 

in the fear to cope malicious ' ~ 

in fear our motion will be mocked 

exempt themselves from fear 

'twas the fear, indeed; and that he . . — 
nay, ladies, fear not; by all the laws — 
your gi-ace, I fear, with dancing is (rep.) — 

1 do not think, he fears death 

it calls, I fear, too many curses — 

I fear, he will indeed; well, let him . . — 

wringing of the conscience, fears — 

I love him not, nor fear him — 

ever in fear to kindle your dislike. . . . 

(more near my life, I fear) — 

wrong the king's love with these fears — 

and hollow hearts, I fear ye — 

your fears are worse ■ — 

with these weak women's fears — 

gives way to us, I much fear — 

0, fear him not ; his spell in that ... . — 

I fear, the story of his anger — 

more pangs and fears than wars or . . — 

be just, and fear not — 

sit down quiet, for fear we wake her .. — 

I fear nothing what can be said — 

more than, I fear, you are provided for — 
then would seek you, not their fears . . — 
but those, we fear, we have frighted. . — 
that, I fear, all the expected good ... . - — 

fears his peril (repeated) Troilus ^ Cressida\ i. 3 

lesser fears the Greeks than I — ii. 2 

to suck in the sense of fear — ii. 2 

diminutive as fears and reasons? — ii. 2 

stolen what we do fear to keep! — ii. 2 

we fear to waiTant in our native 

nor fear of bad success 

all fears attending on so 

death, I fear me ; swooning 

I fear it much; and I do fear besides 
if my fears have eyes. Fears make . . 

blind fear, that seeing reason 

stmnbling without fear: to fear .... 

O, let my lady apprehend no fear. . . . 

I fear, we shall be much imwelcome 

fear not my truth 

the general state, I fear 

fear me not, my lord ; I will not 

of flight, of fear, of death 

but tliat my fear is this 

1 should fear to drink at meals . Timo\ 

I should fear, those that dance 

Timon, I fear me, thou wilt 

for, I do fear, when every feather .... 

all discharged! I fear it 

I fear, 'tis deepest mnter in 

I am of your fear for tliat 

piety, and fear, religion to the gods . . 

I will fear to catch it, and give way . . 

their fears of hostile strokes 

ours is the fall, I fear, our foes the snare 

with fear, and horrid flight 



— i. 2 

— i. 2 

— i. 2 



iv. 2 



(epil.) 
(epil.) 



ii 


2 


11 


2 


\l 


i 


ill 


2 


iii 


2 


111 


2 


in 


2 


111 


2 


111 


2 


IV. 


1 


IV. 


4 


IV 


.•> 


V. 


2 


V. 


1 


V. 


1 



lo/Athe 



FEA 



[251 ] 



_ iii. 9 

— iii. 11 

— iv. 10 

— iv. 12 

— V. 2 
V. 2 



FEAR— or we had cause of fear.. Timonqf Athens, V. 5 

to atone your leiirs witli ray more — — v. a 

you were ROt iu fenr Coriotanut, j. a 

no, nor a man tlmt fears you less — i. ■» 

they tl'or us not, hut issue forth — i. < 

imlc with flight, and ajjueil fear — i- 1 

if luiv fear lesser his [lersou than — — i.O 

fear not our earc, sir — ,},■' 

anil in tr\ic fear they Rave vis — lu. 1 

tlu' rnlihle call oiu- cares, fears — ii>. 1 

tlmn fear tliv (liiiiKcrous stoutness .. — m. 2 

neither ucedwc iVar him — iv. « 

you have imiile fair work, I fear me.. — ;v. « 

but I fear.thev'll roiir him in npaiu — iv. 6 

BO seem to fcuf: {:•> home (lepeiilcd) .. — iv. 6 

fears it not from „nntlu-r - v. 2 

and shake with fciir and sorrow — y. 3 

do fear, the iieople choose Ca!sar (iL-p.)Jtd. Cwsar, i. 2 

of honour more thim 1 fear death.... — i. 2 

fear him not. C.-csiir, he's not dangerous — 1.2 

I fear him not; yet if my name (rr;j.) — i. 2 

■what is to lie iVurcd, than what I fear — 1.2 

for fear of oiiening my lips — i-'i 

tnuisformeil with tlicir fear — i. 3 

it is tlie pait of men to fear and trcmhle — 1.3 

put on fear, and east youi-self in wonder — 1.3 

to make them instruments of fear — — .1.3 

yet I do fear him: for iu the ingrafted — i;. 1 

there is no fear in him — i;. I 

never fear that: if he be so — !)• I 

lievond all use, and I do fear them . . — n. 2 

most strange that men shoidd fear . . — ii. 2 

should stay at home for fear — i;- 2 

call it mv fear, that keeps you — 11.2 

how foolish do your fears seem now.. — ii- 2 

much tliat I fear may chance — _}>■ ■I 

1 fear, our purpose is discovered — — 11;. 1 

be sudden, for we fear prevention — in- ' 

n mind, that fears him much — 111. 1 

multitude, beside themselves with fear — ni. 1 

fear. I wrong the honoiu-able men {rep.) — 111. 2 

you'll bear me a bang for that, I fear — ui- 3 

have in their hearts, I fear, milUous — iv. 1 

for fear of what might fall — v. 1 

hate that which we often fear An(ony ^- Cleo.i. 3 

the fear of us may cement — ii- 1 

and all great fears, which now import — ;;■ 2 

thy angel becomes a Fear — }]• 3 

I t''ear me, you'll be in, till then .... — _ii. 7 

cause for what you seem to fear "■ " 

and they them for fear and doting . . 

to be frighted out of fear 

and fear, of what lie has, and has not 

fear of what hath come to pass 

into a princely hand, fear nothing . . 

that you did fear, is done 

I somethinj; fear my father's wrath.. Cymbetine, 1. 2 

subdues alfpange, all fears — i. 2 

notwithstanding, I fear not my ring — 1. .■> 

some religion in yon, that you fear — 1. 5 

my lord, I feor, has forgot Britain . . — _i. 7 

I lodge in fear — }'}■ i 

fear ii not, sir — .i.V "' 

that the fear's as bad as falling — — 111. 3 

and we will fear no poison — iii. 3 

into a 'haviour of Icssfear — iii. 4 

where, if thou fear to strike — iii . 4 

fear not; 'tis empty of all things — — iii. 4 

fear and niceness (the handmaids .. — iii. 4 

that which I fear, prove false I — iii. 5 

if mine enemy but fear the — iii. 6 

I fear some ambush — iv. 2 

to thy further fear, nay — iv. 2 

those' that I reverence, those I fear (rep.) — iv. 2 

of judgment is oft the cause of fear .. — iv. 3 

for we do fear the law? — iv. 2 

then on good groimd we fear (rep.) . . — iv. 2 

I fear, 'twill be revenged — iv. 2 

fear no more the heat o' the snn .... iv. 2 (song) 

fear no more the frown o' the gi-eat . . i v. 2 (song) 

fear no more the lightning-flash iv. 2(song) 

fear not slander, censure rash iv. 2 (song) 

good faith, I tremble still with fear. . — iv. 2 

w^e fear not what can from Italy — iv. 3 

but the villainy of our fears — v. 2 

some falling merely through fear . . — v. 3 

fear no more tavern bills — v. 4 

my lord, now fear is from me — v. 6 

fear not, lords, and you, Laviuia. . TilutAndron. i. 2 

surprised with an uncouth fear — ii. 4 

to fear I know not what — ii. 4 

if fear hath made tliee faint — ii. 4 

fear not thy sons, they shall — ii. 4 

for fear they die before their pardon . . — iii. 1 

do not fear tliinc aunt — iv. 1 

fear her not, Lucius — iv. 1 

that made me to fear — iv.l 

and rai)e, I fear, was root of tliinc .. — iv.l 

why sliould you fear, is not your city — iv. 4 

bury all thv Year in my devices — iv. 4 

can couch for fear, but I will — v. 2 

I fear the em|>cror means no good . . — v. 3 

shun the danger which I fear I'nkles, i. 1 

first but fear what might be done — i. 2 

'tis time to fear (re;<.) — i. 2 

and tyrant's fears decrease not — i. 2 

Antiochus you fear, and justly too (rep.) — i. 2 

that's the least fear; for, by the semblance— i. 4 

what need we fear ? the ground's — — i. 4 
doth fall in travail with her fear .. — iii.(Gower) 

I do not fear the flaw — iii. 1 

pure surprise and fear mode me to quit — iii. 2 

fear not, my lord : your grace — iii. 3 

did never fear, but cried, good seamen — iv.l 

nor fear to lose it, thy safety Uar, i. 1 

that's mv fear : 1 pray you, have a .. — i. 2 

to fear judgment; to flt'jit, when I .. — j. 4 

well, j'ou may fear t(3<> far — i. 4 

take away the harms I fear, not fear stlU — i. 4 

inlbrm her full of my particular fear — i. 4 



.FEAK— nevermore bo fear ofdoingliorm.. Lear, il. 1 

his ear abused, wisdom bids fear — ii. 4 

see Cordelia, (us fear not but vou shall) — lii. 1 

carry the iiilliction, iinr the I'ciir — iii. 2 

something fiursiHL- to lliink of — in. & 

in espernuci', lives n.it iu Ic.ir — iv.l 

I fenr vc.\ir dispiisition; that nature — iv. 2 

Fomncli feuru.idilunwr — iv. 3 

1 fear, not in niv iicrlcct mind — iv. 7 

feur me not : slie. and the duke .... — v. 1 

whom I fear, most just and heavy .. — v. 1 
fear me not. N". nuui-y, 1 fear thee! Homeo <(-Ju(. 1. 1 

Ifear, too early; for my mind — i. 4 

ay, so 1 fear; tlie more 18 my — .1. 5 

vengeance for it, fear thou not 



i will do it without fear or <loubt 

toy, nor womanish fear, abate 

O, give me! tell me not of fear 

ve a faint cold fear thrills 



— iv. 1 

— iv. 1 

— iv. 1 

— iv. 3 



environed with all these hideous fears? — iv. 3 

his looks I fear, and his intents — v. 3 

forfearof that, I will still stay — v. 3 

fear comes upon me; O, much I fear — v. 3 

what feiu- is this, which startles in our — v. 3 
it harrows me with fear, and wonder . . Ilamlcl, i. 1 

almost to jelly with tlie act of fear — i. 2 

but, vou must fear, his greatness weighed — 1. 3 

feai- it, Ophelia, fear it, my dear sister . . — 1. 3 

best safety lies in fear; youth to — 1. 3 

O, fear m'e not, I stay too long — i- 3 

why, what should he the fear? — .1.4 

but tndy I do fear it. What said lie — u. 1 

in the alarm of fear caught up — .;!• 2 

women fear too much, even as they (rep.) — 1;;. 2 

as mv love is sized, my fear is so — yi.'i 

doubts are fear; where little fears grow.. — iii. 2 

most holy and religious fear it is — 111.3 

we will fetters put upon tliis fear — iii. 3 

I'll warrant you; fear nie not — lu- 4 

do not fear our person: there's such — iv. 5 

now fear I, this will give it — iv. 7 

dangerous, which let thy wisdom fear — — v. 1 

mv fears forgetting manners — v. 2 

I do not fear it; I have seen you both — — v. 2 

to fear, not to delight Olhello,\. 2 

O, but I fear; how lost you company? . . — ii. 1 

for, I fear, my soul hath her content — — 11. 1 
for I fear Cas'sio with my night-cap too. . 
I fear, the trust Othello puts him in — 
the [leople's hearts brimful of fear 



ii. 1 



to him that ever fears he shall be poor . . — iii. 3 
thesmallest fear, or doubt of her revolt.. — iii. 3 
and fear your looks, she loved them most — 111. 3 

trust me, I fear it has. I hope — iii. 3 

though I may fear, her will, recoiling .. — 111. 3 
too busy iu my fears, (as worthy (rep.) . . — 111. 3 

fear not my government — in- •* 

devils themselves should fear to seize tliee — iv. 2 

quick, quick; fear nothing; I'll be at — v. 1 

and yet I fear you; for you are fatal — v. 2 

should fear, I know not, since (rf/7.) — v. 2 

my fear interprets then,— what, is he dead?— v. 2 

'tis a lost fear; man but a rush — v. 2 

tliis did I fear, but thought he had no . . — v. 2 
FEARED— but I feared lest I might . . Tempesl, iv. 1 
I feared to show my father.. TicoGen.of Verona, 1. 3 
becomes more mocked, than feared. Wca. /or il/ca.i. 4 
grown feared [CoL-seared] and tedious — ii- 4 
I am feared in field and town.. Mid. N. Dream, 111. 2 
I should have feared her, had slie./.ot'e'si,./.os(, y. 2 
this aspect of mine hath feared.. jV/er.o/rc;i/oc, ii. 1 

having vainly feared too little All's ll'cll, v. 3 

honoured lor'd, is feared and loved? IVinter's Tale,\. 1 
reigns that which would be feared — Macbeth, 111. 1 

what we so feared he had K-ing John, iv. 2 

indeed, we feared, his sickness — i.v- 2 

feared by their breed, and famous . . Richard //..ii- 1 
to monarchize, be feared, and kill .. — iii- 2 
mighty, and to be feared, than my ..XHenrylV. 1. 3 
the king himself is to be feared as . . — .1.3 
he was much feared by his physicians — iv. 1 

that what he feared is chanced illcnrylV. 1. 1 

the respect of likely peril feared — ...1. 1 

and echo, the numbers of the feared — m. 1 
been then more feared than banned ..HenryJ'.i. 2 

never was monarch better feared - .ii. 2 

where they feared the death — iv. 1 

less happy being feared, than they .. — iv. 1 
made thee feared, and honoured ....illetiryVI. 1. 1 
'tis to be feared, they all will follow hiin — 111. 1 
proved thee false, or feared thy faith — .111. 1 

I, that never feared any — iv. 10 

a bug, that feared us all SHenri/ VI. y. 2 

for one being feared of all Hiclmrdlll.iv. 4 

thou hadst feared to break an oath (rep.) — iv. 4 

in their issue are to be feared Henry VIII. 1. 2 

men feared, the French would prove — 1. 2 

and feared, she'll with tlie labour end — v. 1 

she shall be loved and le:i red — .v. 1 

should have feared false times. Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

that his fen makes feared Coriolanus, iv. 1 

Ihadfeareddoath.of all the — iv. .^ 

made him feared, so hated, and so . . — iv. 7 
rather tell thee what is to be feared. JudMCffjar,;. 2 
say, I feared Ca-sar, honoured him . . — iii. 1 
those that only have feared Ca3sar!..4ii(. ^ Cleo. 1. 4 
fc"o(.K«(.j comes feared by being lacked — ...■•'' 

did love, but OS you feared him — m... " 

in these feared [A')i(.-scared] hopes. . Cymbetine,u. 4 

feared gods, a part of it! — iv. '^ 

danger, which 1 feared, is at Antioch ..Pericles, 1. 2 
I feared, he did but trifle, and meant lo.Hamlet, u. 1 

with what she feared to look on? Othello, 1. 3 

FEAIIFUL— gentle, and not fearful Tempest, 1. 2 

guide us out of this fearful country! — ^ y- 1 

a ragged, fearful, hanging rock. Tiro Gen. 0/ Vcr. 1. 2 
the courtesy of it is to fearful .... Tteelflh Niglit, 1. .') 
death is a ffcarful thing . . Measure for Measure, 111. 1 
and goodness never fearful — "'. ' 



FEA 

FEARFUL- since I sec you tearful. Mea./orMea. iv. 2 
is not a more fearful wild-fowl — Mid. \. Hr. iii. 1 
and In the modesty of fearful duty .. — v. 1 
through which the fearful lovers arc to — v. 1 
left in the fearful guard of an.. A/ercA. ofVenire,i.3 

if he were of a fearful heart AtyonUkeit, iii. 3 

black and fearful on the onposcr AU'sWelt, ni. 1 

be negligent, foolish, and fearful.. H'inler'iTale. i. 2 

if ever fearful to do a thing — i. 2 

to the fearful usage (at least, ungentle) — v. 1 
convoy unto our fearful minds ..Comedy of F.rr. i. 1 

no, nor more fenrfiil. Thou liest Machrth, v. 7 

with fearful bloody issue arbitrate ..King Joh/t, i. 1 
the fearful diflcrcuee of incensed kings — iii. 1 

a fearful eye thou hast — iv. 2 

he, that hears, makes fearful action.. — iv. 2 
black, fearful, comfortless, and horrible — y. (i 
we hear this fearful tempest sing . . Richard II. ii. 1 

whisper fearful change; rich — ii. 4 

covering your fearful land with .... — 111.2 
to watch the fearful bending of thy. . — iii. 3 

a mighty and a fearful head 1 Henry IV. iii. 2 

may turn the tide of fearful faction.. — iv.l 

fearful musters, and prepared 2 Henry IV. (ind. ) 

and fearful meeting of their opposite — iv.l 

show a while like fearful war — iy. I 

a fearful battle rendered you iu Henry V.\.\ 

conspiracy with fearful I rauce .. — ii. (chorus) 
'tis a fearful odds; God be wi' you . . — iv. 3 
ominous and fearful owd of death ..\HenryVI. iv. 2 

steel thy fearful thoughts iHenry VI. in. 1 

after all this fearful homage done . . — iii- 2 
and makes it fearful and degenerate — iv. 1 
the fearful French, whom yim late .. — iv. 8 
the fearful king, and this the regal. .iHenry VI. i. 1 
base, fearful, and dcsjiairing Henry.. — .i. 1 

face be fearful to their eyes — ii. 2 

they have used with fearful flight — — ii- 2 
having the fearful flying hare in sight — ii. :> 
and, like a fearful lad, with tearful. . — v. 4 

Uid I luit suspect a fearful man — v. 4 

Edward shall be fearful of his life . . — v. 6 
the souls of fearful adversaries .... Richard ///. 1 . I 

60 full of fearful dreams — j. 4 

1 saw a thousand fearful wrecks .... — .1.4 

while my fearful head is on — iv. 2 

that fearful commenting is leaden .. — iv. 3 
with a fearful soul, leads discontented — iv. 4 

All-souls' day to my fearful soul — v. 1 

and the fearful time cuts oft' the — v. 3 

cold fearful dropsstaud on my trembling — v. 3 
Kalclifl', I have dreamed a fearful dream! — v. ;i 
I am fearful: wherefore frowns hcl. Henry VIII. v. 1 
fearful scouring doth choke. . . . Timon of Athens, y. 3 
will be less fearful tlian discreet . . Coriolanus, iii. 1 
more, more fearful, is delivered (rep.) — iv. 6 
a fearful army, led by Caius JNIarcius — iv. f, 

and fearful, as these strange Julius Casar, i. 3 

for now, this fearful night — i. 3 

and come down with fearful bravery — v. 1 
forgive my fearful sails! I little. v4n(o7iy^-nfo. iii. ;) 

to break it with a fearful dream Cymbelim; iii. 4 

hath been to me as fearful as a siege — iii. 1 

when fearful wars point at me — iy. 3 

such fearful and confused cries . . Titus Andron. 11. .1 
see a fearful sight of blood and death — li- 4 
when will this fearful slumber have — iii. I 

hear what fearful words 1 utter — v. 2 

and by those fearful objects to jirepare.. Penc/cj, i. ) 
but now grow fearful, by what yourself . . l.ear, i. 4 
how fearful and dizzy 'tis, to cast one's eyes — iv. u 
the fearful passage of their. . . . llomeo^Juliet, (prol.) 
shall bitterly begin his fearful date.. -;- i. 4 

love's sweet "bait from fearful hooks — i. b (cho.) 
come forth, thou fearful man; affliction — iii. 3 
that pierced the fearful hollow of. . . . — ii i. ■'> 
there s a fearf'ul point! shall I not .. — iv. 3 
so feai-ful were they of inlisction — — v. 2 
a guilty thing upon a fearful summons./Jim/f/, i. I 

I do approve in tearfnl sense Othello, i. 3 

difficulty, and fearf'ul to be granted — iii. 3 

FEARFU LLY— fearfully o'ertrin. Mer. of Venire, v. 1 
and I do fearfully believe, 'tis done.KingJohn. iv. 2 
ran fearfully among the trembliug ..IHenrylV. 1. 3 

as fearfuUv, as doth a galled rock Henry V. 111. 1 

you must seem to do that fearfully Pericles, iv. 3 

looks fearfully in the contiued deep l.ear. iv. 1 

and fearfully did menace me Romeo ^Juliet, v. 3 

FE ARFULN'ESS-sen-ile i't:arfnhiess.JuliusC<rsar, i. 1 
FEAHFUL'ST— thefearful'st time.K'cAord ///. iii. 4 
FEARING— or fearing else some. TwoUen. of 'Vr. ii. 1 

but fearing lest my jealous — iii- I 

nor fearing me as if^I were — ni- ' 

by fearing to attempt Measure for Measure, i. .'. 

past fearing death — .v. l 

fearing to hear of it hereafter AUs IVell, iv. 3 

not fearing the disjileasure of — .>;■ 3 

fearing you would not come.. Taming of Shreir, 111.2 
fearing to do so, stay, and be secret.. K/rAnrrf //. li. 1 
where fearhig dying, pays death .... — ni. '-' 

suppose, as fearing you it shook 1 Henry 1 1 . 111. 1 

being feared, than they in fearing.... Henri/ V. iv. 1 



not fearing death, nor shrinking ..I Henry 1 1, iv. I 

feiux'dof all, now fearing one Richard III. iv. 4 

and, fearing he would rise HenryVIIl.u. 2 

he died, fearing Gexl ••••.,•• ,— P'- T 

lie thou true, as fearing thee ..Troilus ^ Cress, ly. 4 

not fearing outward f^tn:e Coriolanus, 111. I 

so I dill; fearing to strengthen ^u/iu»Cir«ar, 11. 1 

so man V years of fearing death — lii. 1 

abridw'd Ids time of fearing death .. — iii. I 
fearing since lic^w it might work ..Anl.^Cleo. iv. 12 

fearing to lie o'er-llowed Pericles, iv. 4 (Gower) 

it spills itself, in fearing to be spilt H.iwiJcl, iv. ;> 

FEMlLE.-'S-fearless of what's past..Vra./or,Ui;«. iv. 2 
free siieech, and fearless, 1 to thee . . Richard II. i. 1 
and fearless minds climb soonest . .iHenry VI. iv. 7 

FE.\R'ST— as that thou fear'st Tieelflh Sight, v. I 

fear'ft thou tlittt, Antonio? — v. 1 

yet grossly fear'st thy death ..Meas.for Meas. iii. I 



FEAR'ST— and fear'st to die? .... Romeo ffJuUeL v. I 
FEAR-SURPRISED— 

oppressed and fear-surprised eyes Hamlet, i.2 

FEAST— one feast, one honse. TwoGen. of Verona, v. 4 

how shall I feast him Twelj'lhNighl, iii. 4 

impiety has made a feast of thee. Meas.for Meas. i. 2 

and feast upon her eyes? — ii. 2 

wliat, a feast? a feast? Much Ado, v. 1 

hold a feast in great solemnity Mid. N. Dr. iv. 1 

■when I to feast expressly am forbid. .Loi'c'sL.L. i. I 

at a marriage feast, between lord — ii. 1 

at a great feast of languages — v. 1 

I do feast to-night ray best-esteemedil/er.o/Fen. ii. 2 
who riseth from a feast, with tliat .. — ii. 6 
we are staid for at Bassanio's feast .. — ii. 6 

our feast shall be mucli honoured — iii. 2 

ever sat at any good man's i'emt.. Asyou Like it, ii. 7 

and sat at good men's feasts — ii. 7 

the solemn feast shall more attend AU'sWeU,n. 3 

provide the feast, father, and b\([..Tamini,'ofSh. ii. 1 
go to the feast, revel and domineer .. — iii. 2 

wants no j unkets at the feast — iii. 2 

hence forthwith to feast and sport us — iv. 3 
of all,— but my share of the feast .... — v. 1 
feast witli tlie best, and welcome .... — v. 2 

as friendship wears at feasts IVinter's Tale, i. 2 

to buy for our sheep-sheering feast?.. — iv. 2 
hath made her mistress of the feast .. . — iv. 2 
but that our feasts in every mess ... . — iv. 3 

darken not the mirth o' the feast — iv. 3 

mistress o' the feast; come on, and bid — iv. 3 

promised them against the feast — iv. 3 

makes a merry feast Comedy o/Errors, iii. 1 

revel and feast it at my house — iv. 4 

go to a gossip's feast, and go with — v. 1 

I'll gossip at this feast — v. 1 

ehiet nourisheriu life's feast ...Macbeth, ii. 2 

been as a gap in our great feast — iii. I 

fail not our feast ■ — iii. 1 

the feast is sold, that is not — iii. 4 

at the tyrant's feast, I hear — iii.fi 

free from our feasts and banquets .. — iii. 6 
now he feasts, mouthing the flesh . . King John, ii. 2 
shall our feast he kept with slaughtered — iii. 1 
with fortune other than at feasts .... — v. 2 
to feast upon whole thousands of the — v. 2 

lo, as at English feasts, so I Richard 71. i. 3 

this feast of Dattle with mine — i. 3 

by bare imagination of a feast? — i. 3 

but sumptuous showed like a feast.. 1 Henri/ /r. iii. 2 
of a fray, and the beginning of a feast — iv. 2 

great friends, did feast together, 2 Henry IV. iii. 1 

or else a feast, and takes away — iv. 4 

called, the feast of Crispian Henry V. iv. 3 

on the vigil feast his friends — iv. 3 

our great St. George's feast withal . . 1 Henry VI. i. 1 
and least and banquet in the open . . — i. 6 

to feast so great a warrior — ii, 3 

art come unto a feast of death — iv. 5 

would not feast him like a friend ..2 Henry VI. iii. 2 

where the feast is held Henry VIII. iv. 1 

makes factious feasts; rails on ..Troilus ^ Cress, i. 3 
yourself shall feast with us before. . . . — i. 3 

to feast with me, and see me at — iv. 5 

Uiomed doth feast with him to-night — iv. 5 

let us feast him to the heiglit — v. 1 

art going to lord Timou's feast . Timon of Alliens, i. 1 
feasts are too proud to give thanks , . — i. 2 
wish my best friend at such a feast . . — i.2 
now come but to feast thine eyes .... — i. 2 

what need these feasts, pomps — i.2 

I'll once more feast the rascals — iii. 4 

feast your ears with the music — iii. 6 

here's a noble feast toward — iii. 6 

make not a city feast of it iii. 6 

may you a better feast never behold iii. 6 

henceforth be no feast, whereat — iii. 6 

all feasts, societies, and throngs of men iv. 3 

here, I will mend thy feast — iv. 3 

false times, when you did feast iv. 3 

cam'st thou to a morsel of this feast.. Cori'oianus, i. 9 
aud feasts the nobles of the state .... — iv. 4 

the feast smells well : but I iv. 5 

a parcel of their feast, and to be iv. 5 

you know, it is the feast of Lupereal./uJ. Ccesar, i. 1 

I did feast with Cajsar iii. 3 

the libertine in a field of feasts . . Antony ^ Cleo. ii. 1 

more monstrous matter of feast — ii. 2 

goes to the feast — Ii. 2 

we'll feast each other, ere we part. ... — ii. 6 

four feasts are toward 

this is not j'et an Alexandrian feast. . 
since Pompey's feast, as Jlenas says 

done; and least the army 

shall be the lord of the feast Cymbeline, iii. 3 

and are master of the feast — iii . 6 

'twas at a feast — v. 5 

seal it with feasts: set on there — v. .5 

if the emperor's court can feast two . . Tilus And. i. 2 

even at thy solemn feast v. 2 

the empress too feasts at my house (rep.) v. 2 

your mother means to feast with me.. — v. 2 
this is the feast that I have bid her to — v. 2 
stem and bloody than the Centaur's feast — v. 2 

the feast is ready, which the careful. . v. 3 

we may feast in Tyre Pericles, i. 3 

feast here a while, mitil our stars i. 4 

for mirth becomes a feast — ii. 3 

come, queen o' the feast ii. 3 

of this most pompous marriage feast — iii. (Gower) 
1 hold an old accustomed feast.. /Sonieo ^Juliet, i. 2 
at this same ancient feast of Capulet's — i. 2 

show you, shining at this feast — i.2 

you shall behold liim at our feast i. 3 

ill-beseeming semblance for a feast .. i. A 

wedding cheer, to a sad burial feast . . — iv. 5 

shall be the trnit to that great feast Hamlet, ii. 2 

at night we'll feast together ii. 2 

what feast is toward in tliine eternal cell — v. 2 
FEASTED-youwere a feasted one. Winter's Tntr, iv. 3 



11. 6 
ii. 7 
iii. 2 
iv. 1 



FEASTED— feasted in my house. . Comedy of Err. v. I 
I have feasted with queen Margaret.2Henr!/^/. iv. 1 
which I have feasted, does it now. Timon of Ath. iii. 4 
tlu-ee kin^s I had newly feasted.. /fnJoKi/ fy Cleo. ii. 2 
FEASTING-at a farm-liouse a i'ea.s&ag.MerryW.n. 3 
no mind of feasting forth to-night.. .Affr. of Ven,\\. f> 

take your mind from feasting tVinter'sTule. iv. 3 

the persuasion of liis new feasting. . Tim.. ofAih. iii. 6 
grew fat with feasting tliere .AnlotiyS- Cleoputra, ii. 6 
been feasting with mine enemy. .flomeo ^-Juliet, ii. 3 

this vault a feasting presence — v. 3 

there is full liberty of feasting Otliello, ii. 2 

FEAST- WON— feast-won, fast-lost. Timono/'.-K/i. ii, 2 

FEAT— the feats of a lion Muc'hAdo, i. 1 

got a calf in that same noble feat .... — v. 4 
do this feat \^Col. Kn/.-seek] . . Taming of Shrew, i. 2 

that cannot do that feat Winter's Tale, li. 3 

each corporal agent to this terrible fent.Macheth, i. 7 
and the feats he hath done about . .2Henry IV. iii. 2 
your iiuissant arm renew their feats . . Henry V.\.2 

all fell feats enlinked to w'aste — iii. 3 

what feats he did that day — iv. 3 

wilt do these wondrous feats? Henry VI. i. 2 

for liigh feats done to the crown Henry VIII. i. 1 

in that day's feats Coriotanus, ii . 2 

tell them your feats Antotiy ^- Cleopatra, iv. 8 

than in his feats deserving it Cymbeline, iii. 1 

tell the warlike feats I have done .... iii. 3 

so featj so nurse-like — v. 5 

becoming well thy feat Pericles, i v. 4 

if that thy prosperous artificial feat . . — v. 1 

what feats, what shows — v. 2 iGower) 

proceeded not against these feats Hamlet, i v. 7 

FEATED— a glass that feated them ... Cymbeline, i. I 

FEATER— much feater than before Tempest, ii. 1 

FEATHER-brush'd with raven's feather. Tempest, i. 2 
check at every feather that comes. TwelfthNight, iii. 1 
a feather will turn the scale .... Meas.for Meas. iv. 2 

what plume of feathers is he Love's L. Lost, i v. 1 

and most courteous feathers All's Well, i v. b 

every feather starts j'ou — v. 3 

fancies pricked iu't for a feather.. Taming of Sh. iii. 2 
because his feathers are more beautifid — iv. 3 

I am a feather for each wind Winter's Tale, ii. 3 

when fowls have no feathers.. Comedy o/£r»ors, iii. 1 

a crow without a feather — iii. 1 

there's a fowl without a feather — iii. I 

set feathers to thy heels King John, iv. 2 

if her feathers turn back in 2HenryIV. ii. 4 

there lies a downy feather — i v. 4 

add more feathers to our wings Henry F.'i.i 

in his face with a peacock's feather . . — iv. 1 
there's not a piece of feather iu our . . — iv. 3 

his feathers are but borrowed 2 Henry VI. iii. 1 

was ever feather so lightly blown — iv. 8 

their feather, many more proud birds.SHen. VI. ii. 1 
as I blow this feather from my face. . — iii. 1 

are birds of self-same feather — iii. 3 

these remnants of fool aud feather. . Henry FIJI. i. 3 

I am not of that feather Timon of Athens, i. I 

when every feather sticks in Ms own — ii. I 

feathers plucked from Cassar's JuliusCcesar, i. 1 

the swan's down feather, that st&nAsAnt.^Cleo. iii. 2 

the best feather of our wing Cymbeline, i. 7 

the crow vie feathers white Pericles, iv. (Gower) 

feathers, air, so many fathom down Lear, iv. 6 

this feather stirs: she lives! — v. 3 

feather of lead, bright smoke Romeo fy Juliet, i. 1 

to soar with his light feathers — i. 4 

king and queen moult no feather Hamlet, ii. 2 

and a forest of feathers — iii. 2 

FEATHER-BED- 

with the edge of a feather-bed . . . Mer. of Venice, ii. 2 
FEATHERED— 
the ground like feathered Mercury. 1 Henry IV. iv. I 

in feathered briefness sails Pericles, v. 2 (Gower) 

light- winged toys of feathered Cupid Othello, i. 3 

FE ATLY— foot it featly here Tempest, i. 2 (song) 

she dances featly. So she does . . Winter's Tale, iv. 3 
FEATURE— how features are abroad. . Tempest, iii. 1 

he is complete in feature Two Gen. of Ver. ii. 4 

by voice, or any feature Twelfth Night, iii. 4 

Sebastian, done good feature shame.. — iii. 4 
feature content you? (.repeated) . . As you Like it, iii. 3 
liker in feature to his father Ge^rtj, King John, ii. 1 
my passion made upon thy feature . . — iv. 2 

her peerless feature, joined 1 Henry VI. v. 5 

cheated of feature by dissembling . . Richard III. i. 1 
and complete in mind and feature. Henry VIII. iii. 2 
report the feature of Octavia .... Antony (§- Cleo. ii. 5 

for feature, laming the shrine Cymbeline, v. 5 

for shame, bemonster not thy feature Lear, iv. 2 

form and feature of blown youth Hamlet, iii. 1 

to show virtue her own feature — iii. 2 

FEATURED— how rarely featured . . Much Ado, iii. 1 

FEBRUARY— such a February face . . — v. 4 

FED — I have fed upon this woe. Two Gen, of Ver. iii . 1 

unchaste desire, led in heart. Merry Wives, v. 5 (song) 

he hath never fed of the dainties.. . . Love'sL. L. iv. 2 

fed with the same food .... Merchant of Venice, iii. 1 

with gazing fed; and fancy dies — iii. 2 (song) 

I will show myself highly fed All's Well, ii. 2 

a good knave, i'faith, anc'i well fed .. — ii. 4 
waking, and with brawling fed . . Taming ofSh. iv. 3 

at board, he fed not Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

in his commendations I am fed Macbeth, i. 4 

by tlie hungry now be fed upon.... King John, ii;. 3 

whilst you have fed upon my Richardll. iii. 1 

and being fed by us MlemylV. v. I 

fed upon the body of mj' father 2HenryIV. iv. 4 

fed from my trencher, kneeled 2 Henry VI. iv. 1 

who fed him every minute Henry VIII. i. 2 

tliat fed him with his prophecies — ii. 1 

my disgraces, as if it led ye? — iii. 2 

I have ted mine eyes on thee. Troilus ff Cressida, i v. 5 

that frankly would have fed — v. 9 

fed the ruin of the state Coriolanus, ii i. 1 

we both have fed as well JidiusCresar, i. 2 

light that's fed with stinking tallow.. Ci/mWine, i. ^ 
sensibly led of that self-blood.... 7'i( us Andron. iv. 2 



FED-daintilyhath fed, eating the &esh..TilusAnd.\ 

were never better fed with Pericles, ii . 5 

your grace, that fed my countiy iii. 3 

the hedge-sparrow fed the euekoo so long., tear, i. 4 

had grown by what it fed on '^Hamlet, 1. 2 

eat of the fish that hath fed of that worm — iv. 3 

her eye must be fed; and what delight .Othello, ii. 1 

[Knt.^ slept the next niglit well, fed well — iii. 3 

FEDERARY-Camilloisafederary. (r,»/er'srn/e,ii. 1 

FEE-deserves more fee than hata.'Tu-o Grn.ofVer. i. 2 

and thy fee is a thousand ducats Much Ado, ii. 2 

pleading for a lover's fee Mid. N.'s Dream, iii. 2 

[Co/. A'?!/.] fee me an oflScer .... Mer. of Venice, iii. 1 

as a tribute, not as a fee iv. 1 

that begged it as a fee; I could not... v. 1 

I'il give them him without a fee ... . v. 1 

I'll fee [Col. Knt.-see] thee to stand up. All's Well, ii. 1 

death'smy fee; but if Ihelp — ii. 1 

so you shall pay your fees Winter's Tale, i. 2 

here is thy fee; arrest him Comedy of Err. iv. 1 

shall take in nature of a fee King John, ii . 1 

rob the deathsman of his fee 2Henry VI. iii. 2 

a deer whose skin's a keeper's fee...2Henryyi. iii. 1 
enlargement what are thy due fees ?.. — iv. B 

thy beauty is proposed my fee Richard III. i . 2 

take thou the fee, and tell — i. 4 

as if the golden fee, for which I plead — iii. 5 

and fee my friends in Rome Henry VI IL iii. 2 

are the proud man's fees Troilus <$■ Cressida, iii. 3 

the rest of your fees Timon of Ath. iii. 6 (grace) 

rob my sweet sons of their fee . . Titus Andron. ii. 3 
besides this treasure for a fee . . Pericles, iii. 2 (scroll) 

and the fee bestow upon the foul Lear, i. 1 

who straight dream on fees Romeo ^Juliet, i. 4 

set m.y life at a pin's fee Hamlet, i. ■". 

three thousand crowns in annual fee — ii. 2 
ranker rate, should it be sold in fee . . — iv. 4 
FEEBLE— with his feeble steps.. Two Gen.ofVer. ii. 7 
in errors, feeble, shallow, weak . Comedy of Err. iii. 2 
knows not my feeble key of untuned — v. 1 
cannot hear a lady's feeble voice. . ..King John, iii. 4 
of the old, feeble, and day wearied sun — v. 4 
mine honour with such feeble wrong. Richard II. i. 1 

we be thought too feeble 2HenryIV. i. 3 

Francis Feeble! here sir (rep.) — iii. 2 

well said, courageous Feeble ! — iii. 2 

let that suffice, most forcible Feeble.. — iii. 2 
I am bound to thee, reverend Feeble — iii. 2 
Mouldy, Bull-calf, Feeble, and Shadow — iii. 2 

this Feeble, the woman's tailor — iii. 2 

the sick and feeble parts of France He7uy V. ii. 4 

and with a feeble gripe, says — iv. o 

the crown from feeble Henry's hes.d.2HenryVI. v. i 

in Ms old feeble body — v. 3 

two crutches from my feeble hands., fi/c/mr;////. ii. 2 

to help the feeble up Timon of Athens, i. I 

let every feeble rumour shake Coriolanus, iii. 3 

a man of such a feeble temper Julius Caisar, i. 2 

old feeble carrions, aud such suffering — ii. 1 
vouchsafe good-morrow from a feeble — ii. I 

will crowd a feeble man almost — ii. 4 

upon my feeble knee I beg this ..Titus Andron. ii. 4 
and bow this feeble ruin to the earth — iii. 1 
FEEBLED-victorious hand be feebled. /iCmg- John, v. 2 
FEEBLElSrESS— age aud feebleness ..Tilus And. i. 2 
FEEBLING— and feehling such as.. . . Coriolanus, i. 1 
FEEBLY— should not be uttered feebly — ii. 2 

FEED— to feed my innocent people Tempest, ii. i 

I will stand to, and feed — iii. 3 

to feed on such sweet honey TwoGen. of Verona, i. 2 
the eameleon Love can feed on the air — ii. i 

more mind to feed on yom- blood — ii. 4 

and feed upon the shadow — iii. l 

feed on her damask cheek Twelfth Night, ii. 4 

and feed your knowledge — iii . 3 

as those that feed grow full .... Meas.for Meas. i. 5. 

such meet food to feed it, as Much Ado,^ i. 1 

feed him with apricocks Mid. N.'s Dream iii. I 

unless we feed on your lips Love'sL. L. ii. i 

I will feed fat the ancient grudge Mer. of Venice, i. 3 
to feed upon the prodigal cliristian. ... — ii. & 
if it will feed notmng else, it vriU feed — iii. 1 

enemy, to feed my means — iii. 2 

he lets me feed with his hinds As you Like it, i. 1 

as pidgeons feed their young — 1. 2 

and he that doth the ravens feed, yea — ii. 3 

where we may rest ourselves, and feed — ii. 4 
and bounds of feed, are now on sale . . — ii. 4 
there is nothing that you will feed on — ii. 4 

sit down and feed, and welcome to our — ii. 7 

and let him feed — ii. 7 

feed yourselves with questioning — v. 4 

see, and cannot feed mine eye All's Well, i. 1 

the thing that feeds their fury . . Taming of Sh. ii. I 
than feed it with such over-roasted . . — iv. 1 

that I do love to feed upon — iv. 3 

feeds from home, poor I .... Comedy of Errors, ii. 1 

to feed, were best at home Macbeth, iii. 4 

feed, and regard liim not — iii. 4 

in matter that should feed this fire. . King John, v. 2 

that some fathers feed upon Richard II. ii. 1 

feed not thy sovereign's foe — iii. 2 

than feed on cates, and have \He7!ry IV.iii. I 

advantage feeds Mm fat — iii. 2 

we shall feed like oxen at a stall — v. 2 

to feed contention in a lingering 2Henry IV. i. 1 

doth the old boar feed in the — ii. 2 

then feed, and be fat, my fau- Calipolis — ii. 4 

who doth feed upon my cost Henry V. iv. 3 

as your oppression feeds 1 Henry VI. iv. 1 (letter) 

feeds in the bosom of such — iv. 3 

I was wont to feed you with my — v. 3 

and fuel be brought to feed it with 'iHenry VI. iii. I 

word sallet must- serve to feed on — iv. 10 

thy trunk for crows to feed upon — iv. 10 

creatures feed their young SHenn/ VI. ii. 2 

to feed my humour, wish thyself. . Richard III. iv. I 
as fruitful as the land that feeds us. Henry VIII. i. S 
my lord, you feed too much on... Troilus ^-Cress. ii. 3 
to feed for aye her lamp and flame.... — iii. 1 



FEE 



FEED— supple knees fiM.ilarroKnncc.7yoil.ij-CiM. ill. 2 
witli woras niul errors still siie fi'cds . . — v. 3 
I tVtMl must himi-'rilvim viiurxiiilit Timnnnf Alh. i. I 
luinpier is he tliut hus 11,1 iVknil to Ibcd — i. 2 
inllnitc brcnst. tivtns, ami leeds all .. — iv. 3 

oil « lint I liiitt 1 teed not — iv. 3 

that t'liilH anil lueeds liy a . . . . Timon o/Atheni, iv. 3 
Imsir tcni|ili-, tlian where swine feed! — V. 1 

Uivf him. Iiiil liiiii, keep in — v. 1 

else woiihl foeil mi one another? ....Coriolnnut, i. 1 
what iiie.U ilotlilliisourC'iBsarrecd.yu/iujCrt>jar,i. 2 

one that iVed.s on ol)ji,-ts, arts — iv. 1 

alike feeds luast a-i iiuin Antony ^Cleo. i. 1 

now I leeil in\>elf with most delicious — i. 5 
other womenVlov til' aciieliles they feed — ii. 2 
feed, and sleep ; our ciiiv aiul pity .... — v. 2 

cinptiiiess, not so ulUiicd to Iced Cymbeline,\. 7 

hnnu'er to feed a^!uin, tho' fnll — ii. * 

slioiilil hv the numitc feed on life .... — v. ft 
entrails teed the saerirtcing fire .. 7'iVu> Andron. i. 2 
feed on berries, and on roots, and feed — iv. 2 
anil feeil his huniour kindly as we may — iv. 3 

to Iced me with delays — iv. 3 

the other rotted witn delicious feed .. — iv. 4 

to feed his brain-sick fits — v. a 

will t iilease vonr liii,'liness feed? — v. 3 

yd I leed on'inother's Hesh Pericles, i. 1 (riddle) 

though thev feed on sweetest flowers. . — i. 1 
not M> iniidi to feed on, as delight .... — . i. 4 

nun musl Iced yon, men must — iv. 3 

who stiirvcs tiic cars she feeds — v. 1 

fc'iHwl >piiits, to Iced and clothe thee? ..Hamlet, iii. 2 

voii eiiiinot feed caiHins so — iii. 2 

thiit li\e, and feed, upon your majesty — iii. 3 
vou on this fair nioniitain leave to feed — iii. 1 

let it Iced even on the pith of life — iv. I 

lie lint to sleep, and feed ? a beast .... — iv. 4 
feeds on liis wonder, keeps liimself in . . — iv. 5 
feed uiwii such nice and watcrisli diet Othello, iii. 3 

or feed on nourishing dishes — iii. 3 

which doth mock the meat it feeds on — iii. 3 
iny wife is fair, feeds well, loves company — iii. 3 

feed every slight occasion Merry ll'ives, ii. 2 

I am no feed iiost, lady . .' Twelfth Sight, i. 5 

house I keep n servant feed Macbeth, iii. 4 

thou wouldst be feed, I see, to make ailennjl-'l. i. 4 

FEKDKK— but a hu};e feeder... . Merch. of I'enice, ii. 5 

I will your very faithful ihedcrhe. As you Like it. ii. 4 

feeilers digest it with a custom .. Ifinier'sTale, iv. 3 

foiKl doth choke the feeder Itichard II. ii. 1 

tliou, beastly feeder, art so full ilienryiy. i. 3 

the tutor and tiie feeder of ray riots.. — v. 5 

with riotous feeders Timon of Athens, ii. 2 

bv one that looks on feeders Antony .§• Cleo. iii. 1 1 

FEKUETll—feedcth those in love. /(.! you Z.i*ei'(, iii. 4 
FEEDING— are fair with their feeding — i. 1 

dies with feeding his own stomach AlVs Well, i. 1 

himself to have a worthy feeding. Winter's Tale, iv. 3 
with eager feeding, food doth iA\dke. Richard II. ii. 1 

bv our ieeding to so great a bulk IHenrylf.v. 1 

like a horse full of high feeding 1 Henry If. i. I 

and so shall starve with feeding. . . . Coriolanus, iv. 2 
of our blood with wine and feeding . . — v. 1 
feeding from our soldiers' hands ..Julius Ca-snr, v. 1 
fee<iing mav prorogue his honour..4»(ony^C/eo. ii. I 

iu feeiUng tliem with those my — iv. 13 

for it is not worth the feeding — v. 2 

this woe, in feeding life Titus Andronicus, iii. 1 

FEED'ST- that feed'st me with ..Tamingof Sh. iv. 3 

where feed'st thou o' days ....Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

FEE-FAKM-a kiss in fee-farm !.7'ioiius^Crffss. iii. 2 

FEE-CilUEF— or is it a fee-grief Macbeth, iv. 3 

F'EEL- the weakness which I feel Tempest, i. 2 

but I feel not this deity — ii. 1 

since 1 feel the best is past — iii. 3 

let me feel thv cloak upon mc. Tu^o Gen. of fer. iii. 1 

methinks, I teel this youth's TwelfthNight, i. :> 

I do feel 't, and see 't — iv. 3 

lets it straight feel the spur Meas.for Meas. i. 3 

one who never feels the wanton — i. 5 

that I lo\ e her, I feel Much Ado, i. 1 

that I neither Icel how she should. . . . — i. 1 

which they themselves not feel — r. 1 

though I alone do feci the injury.. Mid. A"» Dr. iii. 2 
to feci only looking on fairest oi'.Lore's L. Lost, ii. 1 
I lecl too much thy blessing. . Merch. of Venice, iii. 2 

here feci wi- but the penalty Asyou Likeit, ii. 1 

your lips will feel them the sooner .. — iii. 2 

iKCause he feels no pain — iii. 2 

thou^di little he do feel it AU'i (rcH, iii. 1 

she leels her young one kick — v. 3 

Biul I feel sou things Taming of Shrew, 2 (indue.) 

thoii shalt soon feel, to thy cola — iv. 1 

tills is to feci a tale, not to hear — iv. 1 

luive the disease, and feel't not Winier'sTale, i. 2 

than when 1 feel, and see her — il. 1 

and feel't, as you feel doing thus irep.) — ii. I 

<i'i tliou shult feel our justice — iii. 2 

for 1 do feel it gone — iii. a 

the tortures he shall feel, will break — iv. 3 

not feci his meaning? (,rep.) .. Comedy of Errors, ii. 1 
that i might not feel your blows .... — iv. 4 

let me feel your pulse (rcB.) — iv. 4 

I feel now the future in the Macbeth, i. .'> 

but I must also feel it as a man .... — iv. 3 

now does be feel his secret — v. 2 

now does he feci his title hang — v. 2 

tiK> well I feel the ditferent King John, iii. 1 

will not feel themselves — v. 7 

like you, feel want, taste Richard II. iii. 2 

my heart might feel your love — iii. 3 

shall feel this dav as 'iliarp to tlicm... — iv I 

doth he feel it? N'o. Doth he I Henry 1 1', v. 1 

feel, musters, how I shake iUenrylV. ii. 4 

I'oins, I feel inc much to blame — ii, 4 

that feel the bruises of the days — iv. I 

to feel other men's minds Henry r. iv. I 

no more can feel but his own _ iv. 1 

1 feel such sharp dissension I Henry I' I. v. .') 

u itii my fingers feel his hand ...\..iHenryl'l. iii. 2 



[ 263 ] 



FEEL— let mo live, and feel no pain .•iHeuryVI. iii. 3 

thev shall feel the vengeance of 3HenryVI. iv. 1 

thev often feel a world of restless Hich. III. i. 4 

how dost tlion feci thvtelf now? — 1.4 

we cannot feci too little Henry VIII. i. 2 

that she .-hould feci the smart of this? — ii. 1 

which 1 (hen did feel full flick — ii. 4 

tf.M- I feci the last lit of my greatness) — iii. 1 

vou'd feel iiioie comfort — iii. 1 

now 1 feel oCvvhal coarse metal — iii. 2 

thou slionlil'st lecl niv sword i' the .. — iii. 2 

1 feel mv he.irt new oVeiicd — iii. 2 

1 feel within me a i)eucc above - iii. 2 

out of ulortituilc of soul I leel — iii. 2 

1 feel a little ease — iv. 2 

which Keel 1 uin not worthy yet to.. — iv. 2 
canst thou not lu'ar? feel then. '/';'o//u* (^-Crt'js/Ja, ii. I 

as feel in his own fall — iii. 3 

nor feels not what he owes — iii. 3 

nor have cognition of what I feel — v. 2 

he will not hear, till feel TimonofAtliens,\\. 2 

you goils, I feel inv master's passion — iii. 1 

1 feel't noon my li.;ncs — iii. 6 

walk, feel, uml mutoiilly participate. .Cori'oianus,i. 1 

he shall Icel mini' edge — i. 4 

let thv mother rather ffeel thy pride .. — iii. 2 

(whicli Ihids not, till it feels) — iii. 3 

let him feci your sword — v. .'i 

1 perceive, you feel thedint of pity. Ju/mjCwsor, iii. 2 

and feel 1 am so most Antony ^ Cleopatra, iv. i\ 

but thought will do't, I feel — iv. 1; 

but I do feel, by the rebound of — v. 2 

I partly feel thee. Approach, ho! — v. 2 

do feel the treason sharply Cymbeline, iii. 4 

nor feel him, wh.ere he struck — v. 3 

lie that sleeps feels not the tooth-ache — r. 4 

must feel war's blow Pericles, i. 2 

to feel my aii'ection to your honour Lear, i. 2 

that she may feel how shariier .— i.4 

expose thyself to feel what wretches feel — iii. 4 
not see because he doth not feel (rep.) .... — iv. 1 

he'll not feel wrongs — iv. 2 

feel you your legs? — iv.6 

I feel this pin prick — iv. 7 

by those that reel their sharpness — v. 3 

sneak what we feel, not what we — v. 3 

that feel it. Ale they shall feel . . Romeo ^Juliet, i. 1 

this love feel I, that feel no love — i. 1 

young men feel when well-appareled — i. 2 

speak of what thou dost not feel — iii. 3 

so shall you feel the loss — iii. S 

seeming to feel this blow Hamlet, ii. 2 

he feels himself distracted — iii. 1 

cannot but feel this wrong Othello, i. 2 

ne'er feels [K71/. -keeps] retiring ebb — iii. 3 

to the felt absence now I feel a cause — iii. 4 

but yet, I feel, 1 fear — v. 2 

FEEI,EK — would force the feeler's soul. CymMmf,!. 7 

FEELING— a feel in" of their afflictions. Tempest, v. 1 

and frame some feeling line .. Two Gen. ofVer. iii. 2 

with most painful feeling of .... Meas.for Meas. i. 2 

he had some feeling of the snort — iii. 2 

thou hast no feeling of it. Moth. .ioue'sL. Los/, iii. 1 
(which we of taste and feeling are) .. — iv. 2 
love's feeling is more soft, and sensible — iv. 3 
to whose feeling sorrows I viiight. Winter's Tale, iv. 1 
no hearing, no feeling, but my sir's song — ic- s 
mine eyes, feeling my pulse. . . Comedy of Err 



KiugJnhu,\v. 1 

fives but tlie greater feeling to Richard II. i. 3 
have had feeling of my cousin's wrongs — ii. 3 

this earth shall have a feeling — iii. 2 

that's a feeling disputation IJ/enji/Zr. iii. 1 

hast thou that holy feelitig in ihy . . Iticliard III. i. 4 
feeling in itself a lack of 'Timon's.. Timon ofAlh. v. 2 

ondjirove it in thy feeling Cymheline, v. !> 

beyond their feelin'', to the quick. TitusAndron. iv. 2 
see heaven, but feeling woe, gripe not ..Pericles^ i. 1 

from my senses take all feeling else Lear, iii. 4 

by the art of known and feeling sorrows — iv. ij 
ingenious feeling of my huge sorrows? — iv. B 

weep for such a feeling loss Homeo ^ Juliet, iii. S 

feeling 60 the loss, I cannot c'noose . . — iii. 5 
eyes without feeling, feeling without. . Hamlet, iii. 4 
has this fellow no feeling ot his business? — v. I 

FEELING LY— I speak feelingly . . Mea. for Men. i. 2 
these ore counsellors that teclingly./isyou Likcil,ii. 1 

I see it feelingly. What, art mad? ;,i"«r, iv. (i 

to speak feelingly of hiin, he is the card. Hmnlei, v. 2 

FEERE— woefur[K;i(.-fere]fcere..r/(«s/;ndroM. iv. I 

F'EE-SIMPLE— not in fee-simple.. iWern/ Wives, iv. 2 
sell the fee-simple of his salvation . . All's Well, iv. 3 
entering his fee-simple without. ...2Hc;ir!/>'/. iv. 10 
and the rivalled lee-simple . . Trollus ^ Cressida. v. 1 
the fee-simple of my life (r"p.).. Romeo 4 Juliet, iii. I 

FEET— I'll manacle thy neck and tcct.. Tempest , i. 2 

for kissing of their feet — iv. 1 

lake o'er-stunk their feet — iv. i 

at her father's churlish feet ..Tiro Gen.ofVer. iii. I 
as surely as your feet hit the .... Tirelflh !\'tght, iii. 4 

but direct thy feet where thou — v. 1 

canary to it with your feet Love's L. Lost, iii. I 

fall his princely feet before — i v. 1 

her feet were much too dainty — iv. 3 

as he treads on them, kiss his feet — v. :; 

in them more feet than the As you Like il, iii. 2 

the feet might liear the verses (rep.).. — iii. 2 
no more shoes than feet {rep.) Tain, of Sh. 2. (indue.) 
lest he catch cold on's feet . . Comedy qf Errors, iii. I 

I will fall prostrate at his feet — v. 1 

her knees than on her feet Macbeth, iv. 3 

ground before joung Malcolm's feet — v. 7 
fttl.scly thrust uiion contrary feet ..King John,iv. 2 
and fall lieforc his feet: for, if the.. .. — v. 4 
annoyance to the treuclieroiis feet.. Ai'cAarii //. iii. 2 

even at his feet to lay my arms — iii. 3 

where Riibjects' ftx't mav hourly .... — iii. 3 
those blessed feet, which, fourteen ..I Henry II'. i. I 
lay more clothes nn his feet Henry I', ii, 3 



FEL 

FEET— kneeling ot our feet Henry V. iii. 6 

under my feet I stump thy cardinal's. I Henry VI. i. 3 
yet are these feet, whose streiigthless — ii. 5 
Ills sword before your highncHs' feet.. — iii. 4 
and (ly-blown, lies here at our feet . . — iv. 7 
thou coiu'st to kneel at Henry's feet.. — v. 3 

top of honour to disgrace's feet ? 'iHcnry VI. i. 2 

as willingly at thy leet I leave it — ii. 3 

tread them with her tender-feeling feet — ii. 4 

flint doth cut my tender feet — ii. 4 

for grace ttii'l mercy at my feet SHenry VI. i. I 

kneeled at ray feet, and bade me . . Richard III. ii. I 

m list kiss their own feet Troitus ^ Cressida, iv. .'> 

like bondmen, kissing Caesar's feet.JuJi'u>C'a>iiir, v. 1 
success he strewed before your fectl ..Ant.fyCleo. i. 3 

at the feet, sat Ca-sarion — iii. 

to lay my crown at his feet — iii. 11 

my clouted brogues from oft' my feet. CymlWinc, iv. 2 

and at thy feet I kneel, with tears Titus And. i. 2 

honour's ensigns humbled at thy feet — i. 2 

at the Thraciun poet's feet — ji. .') 

they humbly at my feet receive — iii. I 

on the lame feet of^my rhyme. . Pericles, iv. (Gower) 

liave secret feet in some of Lear, iii. 1 

that going shall Iw used with feet — iii. 2 

dust lieneath thy feet [Co/.-below thy foot] — v. 3 
my old feet stumbled at graves?., ftornfo ijjud'c/, v. 3 
to lav our service freely at your feet . . Hamttl, ii. 2 

I loolt ilo«n towards his feet Othello, v. 2 

IKHKiMlCXTLV— fehemeutly desire.. Merry w.iii. 1 

IKKiN— in do feign, you Tuelfth Mght, v. 1 

the poet did feign that Orpheus. . Merch. of Ven. v. 1 

as lovers, they do feign As you Like it, iii. 3 

some hope thou didst feign — iii. 3 

if I do feign, O, let ine in i Henry IV, iv. 4 

doth not flatter, face, or feign 1 Henry VI. v. 3 

and all that poets feign of bliss 3 Henry Vl. i. 2 

go, bid my woman feign a sickness.. t'ymifliM?, iii. 2 

many feign as they were dead ..Romeo ^Jutiel, ii. 5 

F'EIGNED- like to be feigned .... Tirelfth Sight, i. :, 

feigned ashes of forged love 1 HeniTi VI. iii. 1 

were but a feigned friend ZHenryVI. iv. 2 

hath turned my feigned prayer Richard III. v. 1 

feigned Fortune to lie throned.. 7'iinon ofAthent, i. 1 
host feigned him o worthy fellow iiep.) — i. 1 
I had a feigned letter of my master's. Cjmftf/i'iif, v. 5 

his feigned ecstasies shall 7'i7ui Andronicus, iv. 4 

FEIGNING— fcigniugwas called. 7'u'e//7/i Sight, iii. 1 
with feigning voice, verses (r p,)...Vid.N.Drcam,i. 1 
most friendship is iei^ninft.AsynuLike it, ii. 7 (song) 

truest poetry is the niost leignmg — iii. 3 

FEITII— gud feith, gud captains \)s.\,)i.. Henry V. iii. 2 
F ELICIT ATE— I am alone felicitate in ... . Lear, i. 1 
FELICITY-of such wood were felicity. Love's L. L. iv.3 

absent thee from felicity a while Hamlet, v. 2 

FELL— they fell together all Tempest, ii. 1 

like fell and cruel hounds Twelfth Sight, i. 1 

how fell you besides — iv. 2 

Oberon is passing fell and wratli..Vi</. A'. Drram, ii. 1 
where the bolt of Cupid fell: it fell.. — ii. 2 

everything, right as it fell out — iv. 2 

a lion fell , nor else no lion's dam .... — v. 1 

ye furies fell! O fates! — v. I 

fell over the tlireshold, and hrohe.Love'sL.Losf, iii. 1 

on the toe, and down he fell — v. 2 

the w orst fall that ever fell . . Merchant of Venice, i. 2 

that ray nose fell a-bleediiig — ii. 5 

the curse nevei^fell upon our nation — iii. 1 

they fell sick and died — iii. 4 

from the gallows did his fell soul fleet — iv. 1 

my pride fell with ray fortunes AsyouLikeil. i. 2 

and their fells, you know, are greasy — iii. 2 

for there he fell in love — iii. 2 

who iiuickly fell before him — iv.3 

for your avails they fell All's Well, iii. 1 

that down fell priest and book . .Tamingof Sh. iii. 2 

how her horse fell, and she under — iv. I 

they fell upon me, bound me.. Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

to conclude, the victory fell on us Macbeth, i. 2 

shake my fell purpose, nor keep — i. 5 

would murder as It fell: U Bannuol .. — ii. 3 

were fel I crue'.ty — i v. ■.; 

though the brightest fell — iv.3 

at one fell swoon? Dispute it — iv.3 

but for mine, fell slaughter — iv.3 

my fell of hair would at a dismal — y. 5 

rouse from sleep tluit fell anatomy.. A'm^Jo/m, iii. 4 

miality of that fell poison — v. 7 

riereford, and fell Slowbray's fight. . 7?icAnrd II. i. 2 

fell sorrow's tooth doth never — i. 3 

that ever fell uiion this cursed earth — iv. I 

down fell their hose I Henry IV. ii. 4 

the other night I fell asleep here .... — iii. 3 

innoeeney, Adam fell — iii. 3 

such a flood of greatness fell on you . . — v. 1 

Harry Monmouth fell under 'iHenrylV. (indue.) 

by whose fell working I was — iv. 4 

from ebon den with fell Alecto's snake — v. 5 

all fell fieats enlinked to waste Henry V. iii. 3 

ill office, or fell jealousy — v. 2 

so fell that noble earl \ Henry VI. ii. 5 

fell, banning hag! enchantress — v. 3 

of Southiimpton fell upon Ascapart..2Hfnr!//V. ii. 3 

and this fell tempest sliall not — iii. I 

from such fell serpents as false — iii. 2 

stand, or I'll fell thee down — iv. 2 

they fell before thee like sheep — iv.3 

astonish these fell lurking curs — v. 1 

suffered with the bear's fell paw — v. I 

'gainst thee, fell Clilfonl, and thee ..SHenryVI. i.4 
liew down and fell the har<Iest-tiinbcrcd — ii. 1 
fell gently down, as if they struck .. - ii. 1 

tlic oiual poise of this fell war — ii. .'. 

stratagems, how fell, how butcherly.. — il. 5 
devise fell tortures fur thy faults .... — ii. ii 

fell Warwick's brother — iv. 4 

after he once fell in with Richard III. iii. .'1 

but he fell to hims<lf again Henry Vlll. ii. 1 

anil witliuut trial fell — ii. I 

lioth fell by our servants — ii. I 



FELL— that is sad, speak how I SeU. Henry Vlll. ii. I 

by that siu fell the angels _ jij. 2 

place iuthechoh-.feUoffadistaiice.. — iv. 1 

since the cardinal fell _ iv. 1 

he fell sick suddenly _ iv! 2 

one of wliich fell with him — iv. 2 

foreseeing those fell mischiefs — v. 1 

porringer fell oif her head — v.3 

they fell on ; I made good my — v. 3 

and fell so roundly to a large. Troitus 4-Cressida, iii. 2 

I meet thee, fell as death _ iv. 5 

this fell whore of thine hath . . Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

fell from their boughs _ iv. 3 

all, save thee, I fell with curses — iv. 3 

and shortly must I fell it v. 2 

bless my lord from fell Aufidius ! . . . . Coriolanus, i. 3 

60 men obeyed, and fell below his . . ii. 2 

then the people fell a shouting ....JuliusCcesar, i. 2 

he swooned, and fell down at it — i. 2 

he fell down in the market-place .... — i. 2 

but, I am sure, Ca;sar fell down i. 2 

marry, before he fell down _ i. 2 

among the rogues; and so he fell — i. 2 

choked with custom of fell deeds — iii. 1 

ran blood, great Ctesar fell iii. 2 

and all of us fell down iii. 2 

with this she fell distract _ iv. 3 

two mighty eagles fell v. 1 

his soldiers fell to spoil v. 3 

he fell upon me, ere admitted Antony fy Cleo. ii. 2 

the rest that fell away — iv. 6 

an argument that fell out (rep.) Cymbeline, i. 5 

thus mine enemy fell iii. 3 

■with him, you say he is so fell — iv. 2 

fell bravely, and were slain v. 4 

this fell devouring receptacle Titus Andron. ii. 4 

thy whelps, fell curs of bloody kind. . — ii. 4 

that this fell fault of my ii. 4 

dropped his knife, and fell asleep — ii. 5 

down fell both tlie ram's horns — iv. 3 

for their fell faults om- brothers — v. 3 

ensues in this fell [Co/, selfj storm. Pericles, iii. (Grow.) 
preserved from fell destruction's blast — v. ? (Gow. ) 

m tell motion, with Ms prepared Lear, ii. 1 

how fell you out? say that — ii. 2 

wliich thou hast perpendicularlv fell — iv. 6 
devour them, flesh and fell, ere they — v. 3 

as he fell, did Romeo tiu-n and fly. Aomeo ^ Jul. iii. 1 

article designed, his fell to Hamlet Hamlet, i. 1 

a httle ere the mightiest Julius fell . . — i. 1 
as they fell out by time, by means . . — ii. 2 

fell into a sadness _ ji. 2 

the whiflF and wind of his fell sword.. — ii! 2 

it so fell out, that certain players — iii. 1 

and herselffell in the weeping brook — iv. 7 
tell incensed points of mighty oppositea — v. 2 
(as this fell sergeant, death, 'is strict. . — v. 2 

by his clamour, (as it so tell out) Othello.ii. 3 

her salt tears fell from her _ iv. 3 (song) 

Spartan dog, more fell than anguish _ v. 2 
1 ELLED-felled my forest woods ....Richard II. iii. 1 

and amongst them feUed him dead Lear, iv. 2 

FELLEST— 
fellest manner execute your arms. Trail. ^ Cress, v. 7 

so, fellest foes, whose passions Coriolanus, iv. 4 

lELLIES— fellies from her wheel Hamlet, ii. 2 

FELLOW— comfort from tliis fellow Tempest, i. 1 

he hath lost his fellows _ i. 2 

brother's servants were then my fellows — ii" 1 

fellow Trinculo, we'll fill _ ii'2 

to be your fellow you may _ iii! 1 

1 and my fellows are ministers — iii 3 

fellow ministers are like invulnerable — iii! 3 
thou and thj' meaner fellows your last — iv! 1 

this fellow could not drown — v. 1 

twoof these fellows you must know.. — v. 1 

fellows, stand fast Two Gen.ofFerona,iv. 1 

this fellow were a king for iv 1 

to the fellow that whips the dogs — iv' 4 

an honest, willing, kind fellow 3Ierry Wives, i! 4 

here's a fellow frights humour out — ii. i 

twas a good sensible fellow ii' 1 

made you four tall fellows skip _ ii ' 1 

good soldiers, and tall fellows — ii' 2 

a meeting with this old fat fellow .... — iv' 4 
my shoulders for the fellow of this walk — v 5 
am a fellow of the strangest mind. Tivelflh Night, i! 3 

do you not hear, fellows? _ 15 

madam, yoiid young fellow swears he — i! 5 

O, fellow, come, the song we had — ii' 4 

shall this fellow live? _ ;•,'?, 

steward still, the fellow of servants — Ii. .5 (letter) 

I warrant, thou art a merry fellow .. iii 1 

this. fellow's wise enough to play — iii' 1 

good Maria, let this fellow be looked to — iii' 4 
let this fellow be looked to: fellow.... — iii. 4 

nor after my degree, but fellow ! _ iii! 4 

thou art but a scurvy fellow . . — iii. 4 (challenge) 
go to, go to, thou art a foolish fellow — iv. 1 

no words with him, good fellow — iv. 2 

how dost thou, my good fellow? — v! 1 

but for thee, fellow, thy words are _ v! 1 

fellow, why dost thou show me. . Meas./nr Meas. i! 3 

next, this is a respected fellow — ji. j 

I am a poor fellow, that would live . . ii. 1 

a shy fellow was the duke iii! 2 

ignorant, unwei^hing fellow _ iii! 2 

that fellow is a fellow of much licence — iii! 2 
instruction from my fellow partner — iv. 2 

here's a fellow will help you to-morrow — iv. 2 

after him, fellows; bring him _ iv. 3 

a very scm-vy fellow v! 1 

silence that fellow: I would, he had. . — v! 1 

find this friar a notable fellow v' 1 

O, thou damnable fellow ! ! ! . . _ v' 1 

such a fellow is not to be talked withal — v! 1 

what muffled fellow's tliat ? _ v. 1 

wronged by this lewd fellow ! _ v' 1 

hath the fellow any wit, that told Much .4do, i! 2 

a good sharp fellow; I will send — i2 



FELL()W— be a handsome fellow Much Ado, ii. I 

that the white-bearded fellow speaks it — u 3 

keep your fellows' counsels and your — iii' 3 

a marvellous witty fellow, I assure you — iv' 2 

pray thee, fellow, peace _ iv 2 

what else, fellow? _ ;,,] o 

lama wise fellow; and, which is'niore — jv' 2 

and a rich fellow enough, go to treu.) — iv •> 
bring you these fellows on .... .. _ 

acquaintance grew with this lewd fellow — 
"•way his fellows fly: and, atom. Mid.N.D, 



V. I 

!,iii.2 

iv. 1 

V. 1 



away his tellows fly: and, atour.il/irf.A-.Dra 
good hay, sweet hay, hath no fellow — 

this iellow doth not stand upon points — ». 1 

this, fellow; what would'st? Love's L.Lost, i. 1 

more bound to you, than your fellows — 12 

thou Shalt know her, fellow, by the rest — iv. 1 

thou, fellow, a word: who gave thee — iv 1 

this fellow pecks up wit, as pigeons . . — v 2 

the party is gone, fellow Hector _ v 2 

strange fellows in her time.. Merchant of Venice, i! 1 

1 shot his fellow of the self-same — i 1 

more guarded than his fellows' _ ii' -5 

I'U prove the prettier fellow of the . . _ iii' 4 

go to thy fellows; bid them cover... — iii' 5 

tlie poor rude world hath not her fellow — iii' 5 
It IS the Btubbornest young fellow. . As youLikeit, i. 1 

to catch the strong fellow by the leg — i. 2 

till his fellow fault came to iii! 2 

thisfellow will but join you together — iii' 3 

you are a melancholy fellow _ u \ 

of either, are abominable fellows .. . _ iv 1 

my lord, like this fellow _ v" 4 

is not this a rare fellow, my lord? — v' 4 

to you, madam, I am a poor fellow . . All's Well, i. 3 

worthy fellows, and like to prove — ii. 1 

such a fellow, to say precisely _ ii! 2 

all the learned and authentic fellows — ii" 3 

to be a pretty wise fellow _ ii. 3 

Italian fields, where noble fellows strike — ii' 3 

a very tainted fellow, and full of . . . — iii » 

the fellow has a deal of that — •'-■'" 

'tis a most gallant fellow, I would . . — 
IS not tliis a strange fellow, my lord' — 
with a snipt-taffeta fellow there ...'. _ 

I am a woodland fellow, sir _ ly a 

now, fellows, you are VfAmma.TamingofSh. 1 (ind.) 

this fellow I remember, since once . . — 1 (ind ) 

there be good fellows in the world . . — i 1 

has my fellow Tranio stolen your .. _ i" 1 

your fellow Tranio here, to save — i' 1 

O excellent motion! fellows, let's be — i' ■> 

were it not that my fellow schoolmaster — iii! 2 

and myself, fellow Curtis _ iv 1 

what, Grumio! Fellow Grumio! _ iv' 1 

whatyou, fellow you; and thus much — iv! 1 

thou'rt a tall fellow; hold thee — iv 4 

my noble fellows, if they please .. Winter's Tale, ii! 3 



iii. 5 



Iv. 5 
. 5 



iii. 2 
iv. 2 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 
V. 1 
V. 2 
V. 2 



a fellow of the royal bed 

was he that robbed you? A fellow,' sir 

this is a brave fellow 

of an admirable conceited fellow ! ! ! '. 
how now, good fellow, why shakest. . 

I am a poor fellow, sir 

we are but plain fellows, sir ! ! ! 

again with a sweet fellow to't? ! ! 

as honest a true fellow as any is 

art a tall fellow of thy hands (rep.) v 2 

there to find his fellow forth . . Comedy of Errors, i! 2 

arrest me, foolish fellow, if thou _ iv 1 

a fellow all in buff _ jv! 2 

the fellow is distract, and so am I.!!! iv! 3 

the fellow finds his vein _ jv! 4 

one ofmy fellows had the speed ..'.'...Macbeth i" 5 

cannot parallel a fellow to it — ii 3 

betray the devil to his fellow !.. _ iv"3 

many worthy fellows that were out. . — iv' 3 

a good blunt fellow: why King John, i 1 

God-a-mercy, fellow; and if his _ i j 

what becomes of me? fellow, begone — iii' 1 
tell me, thou fellow, is not France . . — iii. 1 

a fellow by the hand ofnature — iv! 2 

go, fellow, get thee home, provide ..Richard II. ii! 2 

and be his fellow so; revolt our _ iii. 2 

fellow, give place; here is no longer — v. b 

a good tall fellow had destroyed 1 Henry IV. i. 3 

poor fellow! never joyed since — ii 1 

each takes his fellow for an officer .. — =-' - 
that ever this fellow should have fewer — 
that same mad fellow of the north . 
a fellow of no mark, nor likelihood. 

a mad fellow met me on the 

whose fellows are these that come . ! ! . _ 
fellows, soldiers, friends, better consider — 
this IS the strangest fellow, brother John — 

he was some hilding fellow 2HenryIV, 

I am the fellow with the great belly — 
stand from him, fellow: wherefore . . — 
and thou art a blessed fellow to think ~ 
that I am a proper fellow of my hands — 

a good shallow young fellow — 

a good limbed fellow; young, strong — 

peace, fellow, peace; stand aside — 

fore God, a likely fellow! come, prick — 

well said; thou'rt a good fellow _ 

and this same half-faced fellow. Shadow — 
a httle quiver ll2llow, and a would . . — 
see such a fellow. These fellows will do — 

the most active fellow in Europe — 

ivith the hook-nosed fellow of Rome — 
but thou, like a kind fellow, gavest . . — 

and welcome, my tall fellow 

with a fellow that never had the _ v 1 

and such fellows are perfect in great.. Hem-wF. iii' 6 
peevish fellow is this king of England _ iii 7 
should they mock poor fellows thus? _ iv 3 

call yonder fellow hither. Soldier _ iv 7 

when thou meet'st the fellow _ iv' 7 

here is the fellow of it; and he, that I _ iv 8 
give it to this fellow; keep it fellow — iv' 8 

the fellow has mettle enough in — iv s 



— iv. 2 



ii. 1 
ii. 2 
ii. 2 
ii. 4 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 



iv. 3 
iv. 3 
V. 1 



i ELLOW— no petter than a fellow Henry y.-v 1 

It thou canst love a fellow of this — v 2 

take a fellow of plain and uncoined. . — v! 2 
tor these fellows of infinite tongue . . — v 2 
not fellow with the best king (rep.). . — v' 2 

this fellow here, with envious 1 Henry VI. iv' 1 

how now, fellow? wouldst any ihms.-iHenryVI. \. 3 
fellow, what miracle dost thou proclauu? — ii l 

I never saw a fellow worse bested — ii 3 

fellow, thank God, and the good wine — ii' 3 

and innocence of this poor fellow — ii" 3 

come, fellow, follow us for thy _ ii' 3 

here I am, thou particular fellow _ iv' 2 

■S"^.^ lyings, I tel! you, that that .... — iv. 2 

ifthis fellow be wise, he'll never — iv 6 

with Pembroke and his fellows.... 3i/enr!/ VI. iv' 3 

is thy lord, mine honest fellow? — v 1 

I tell tjiee, fellow, he that doth .... Richard III. i 1 

first, 1 11 turn yon fellow in his gra%'e 12 

what wouldst thou, fellow? and how _ i' ,1 
spoke like a tall fellow, that respects — i' 4 
go follow, go, return unto thy lord.. — iii. 2 

1 11 talk with this good fellow _ iii 2 

gramercy, fellow: there, drink that. . — iii' 2 
All-souls'day, fellows, is it not? .... — vl 
tellows in arms, and my most loving _ v 2 
but a paltry fellow, long kept in . . f. _ v' 3 
to see a fellow in a long motley.. Hen™ js'///. (proi.) 

this Ipswich fellow's insolence _ i 1 

this top-proud fellow, (whom from.. _ i' 1 

and a fiddle, has no fellow _ \ ^ 

noble friends, and fellows, whom to.'. — ii' i 

I find him a fit fellow _ ji' 2 

that good fellow, if I command hi'm ' _ ii' 2 

bark when their fellows do _ ji' 4 

a worthy fellow, and hath ta'en much — iii" 2 
this arrogance? and from thisfellow? _ iii 2 
you are a saucy fellow: deserve we . . _ iv' 2 

but this fellow let me ne'er see iv" 2 

a fellow counsellor among boys _ v' 2 

there is a fellow somewhat near _ v' 3 

ye have made a fine hand, fellows — v' 3 

you great fellow, stand close up _ v' 3 

tnere's a fellow! go thy way.. Troilus &■ Cressida, i! 2 
what sneaking fellow comes yonder? — 12 

a paltry, insolent fellow _ ii' ..j 

It should seem, fellow, that thou hast — iii' '1 
what mean these fellows? know they — iii 3 

a strange fellow here writes me _ iii 3 

an hone,st fellow enough, and one — v 1 

fellow, commend my service to her . . — v! .'> 

strike, fellows, strike; this is _ v9 

which were his fellows but of late. . Timon ofAth. i. 1 
this fellow here, lord Timon _ i 1 

hast feigned liim a worthy fellow.!.. — i' 1 
the fellow, that sits next him now . . — i 2 
a brave fellow! he keeps his tides.... _ i2 
these old fellows have their ingratitude — ii. 2 

give it these fellows to whom _ ii 2 

[CoZ. A'«(.] the fellow loaden with irons — iii' 5 
alack, my fellows, what should I say — iv 2 
more of our fellows. All broken — iv' ■> 

we are fellows still, serving alike .. — iv' » 

good fellows all, the latest of my _ iv' 2 

let s yet be fellows; let's shake our .. _ iv' •) 

fore me, this fellow speaks I Coriolanus, i. 1 

come on, my fellows: he that retires.. — i. 4 

noble iellow! who, sensible, outdares — i 4 
marchon, my fellows: make good .. — is 
a brave fellow, but he's vengeance proud — i i . 2 
and make me your fellow tribune — iii 1 

1 think, our fellows are asleep . . _ iv 5 

what fellow's tliis? a strange one _ iv' 5 

what have you to do here, fellow ... _ iv' 5 

where is this fellow? Here, sir — iv! 5 

come, we are fellows, and friends ...'. i v' 5 

than when these fellows ran about . . — i v' fi 

but reason with the fellow _ iv' 6 

and this brave fellow too, we are the — v! 1 
I tell thee, fellow, thy general is my.. — v' 2 
therefore, fellow, I must have leave. . — v! 3 
prythee, fellow, remember my name — v.3 
fellow, fellow,— what's the matter? . . _ v 3 

a noble fellow, I warrant him (rep.).. v 2 

this fellow had a Volcian to his — v 3 

mend me, thou saucy fellow? JuUusCasar, i. 1 

fellow, come trom the throng 1,2 

what a blunt fellow is this grown — i 2 

come hither, fellow: which way _ ii. 4 

what, is the fellow mad? _ iii. i 

there is no fellow in the firmament ! ! — iii! i 
how now, fellow? sir, Octavius is. . . . _ iii. 2 
a barren-spirited fellow; one that .. — iv 1 
saucy fellow, hence. Bear mth him — iv. 3 

Claudius! fellow thou! awake — iv 3 

that ever Rome should breed thy fellow — v. 3 
thou art a fellow of a good respect . . — v' 5 

fellow, wilt thou bestow thv time _ v5 

let this fellow be nothing of Antony &■ Cleo. ii! 2 

go to the fellow, good Alexas _ ii. 5 

there's a strong fellow, Menas _ ii' 7 

farewell to these great fellows _ ji' » 

whereis thefeUow? half afeardto .. — iii' 3 

the fellow has good judgement — iii' 3 

what.ai-t thou, fellow? one, that but — iii 11 

whip him, fellows, till, like a boy _ iii. n 

to let a fellow that will take rewards — iii 1 1 

and kings have been your fellows — iv. 2 

well, my good fellows, wait on me . . iv! 2 

as when mine empire was your fellow iv' •> 

good fellow, put thine iron on _ iv' 4 

see'st thou my good fellow? _ iv' 4 

nay, good my fellows, do not please. . Iv. 12 

here is a rural fellow, that will not . . _ v 2 
and that she should love this fellow.. Cymbetine, i! 3 

he's a strange fellow himself ii 1 

a worthy fellow, albeit he comes _ ii' 3 

profane fellow! wert thou the son of — ii' 3 

come, fellow, be thou honest — in' 4 

thesnitsof princely fellows _ iii' 4 



FEL 



[ 255 ] 



FET 



JfELLOW— good fellow, what nlmll J.Cymbrline, HI. 4 
am! tlic follow (lures not deceive me .. — iv. 1 
Dot lor tliii.', fi.llow. will) needs must.. — iv. 3 
VIS, inil.iil, ilo I.tiUow — V. 4 

I tell Iliir, tVllow. there nrc none — v. 4 

rtaiiReroii.'. Iillow, luMux'! Imiilhenot — v. 5 
how now, good iVllowV wniilil'^t..';V(i(i.47i//ro7i. iv. 4 
a wiBC fellow, ni\il Im.l uooil .liMTetiou../VnWM, i. 3 
not need, niv follow piirs ol"l"vre .... — .i. 3 

honest: t;ooil folliiw, wImt'H tliiit? — ;;. 1 

now, iil'oro 1110, n liiiiiilsonio followl .... — ii- 1 

if, with lior folloiv niiiidens. now — v. 1 

sir, this yoiiii^' I'.'llow'n mother could I.rar, i. 1 

voii uiul'voor follows; I'd have it — i. i 

iulvi>o voiir follows so: I would breed.. — i. 2 

II very lioMost-lienrteil fellow — j. 4 

dost thou know 1110, fellow — ». 4 

whiit suvs the fol low there? call the. . . . — i. 4 
I llmiik"thoo. f.liow; thou servest mo.. — i. 4 
why this follow hus hunished two of.... — i. 4 

thou wnst tt pixttv follow, when — i. 4 

follow, I know thoo. Wlint dost — ii. 2 

wliv, whut a niniKlroiis fellow art tliou — ii. 2 

tiKi'ii art a straii(,-o fol low ; a tailor — ii. 2 

what, are th.>o nuid.olil foUow? — ii. 2 

this is some lollow, wlio having hecn .. — ii. 2 

this isa follow of Iho folf-sunio — ii. 2 

iK'iiii; tlio vi.rv follow that of iato — ii. 4 

shewill toll von who yuiirfollowis.... — iii. 1 

where is this straw, inv follow? — iii. 2 

in, follow, thoro, to the luivol; keep.... — iii. I 
soothe liini; lot liim take the follow .. — iii. 4 

fellows, hold the ehaiv; upon these — iii. 7 

fellow whore goost? Is it a bcggar-niau? — iv. 1 

night's storm I such a fellow saw — iv. I 

is that the naked fellow? — iv. 1 

sirrah, naked fellow. I'oor Tom's a-cold — iv. 1 
now, fellow, fare thee well. Gone, sir! — iv. 6 

that fellow handles his bow like — iv. B 

liulf-blooded follow, yc8 — v. 3 

did I not, fellow? I have seen the day — v. 3 
lie's a gcxKl fellow, I can tell jou that. . — y. 3 

good e en, good fellow Ilomeo ff Juliel, i. 2 

stay, fellow; 1 can rend — i. 2 

yonder lady o'er her fellows shows .. — i. .^ 

thou art like one of those fellows — iii. 1 

am I like such a fellow? come, come — iii. 1 
now. fellow, what's there? things for — iv. 4 
honest good fellows, ah, put up, put up — iv. :> 
follows [Col. musicians] as yon have.. — iv. i 
prosiierons, and farewell, good fellow — v. 3 
you near this fellow in the cellarage .... Uamlet, i. .'i 
what should such fellows as 1 do crawling — iii. 1 
periwig-imted fellow tear a passion to — iii. "2 
I wouUI nave such a fellow whipiX!d — iii. 2 

we shall know^ by this fellow — iii. 2 

give these fellows some means to .. — iv. 6 (letter) 
these gooil fellows will brinp thee.. — iv. 6 (.letter) 

has this fellow no feeling ot his — v. 1 

this fellow might be in's time a great — v. 1 

I will s[)eak to this fellow — v. 1 

a whoreson mad fellow's it was — v. 1 

a follow of infinite jest, of most excellent — v. 1 
a fellow almost damned in a fair wife . . Othello, i. I 

these fellows have some soul — i. 1 

you see this fellow, that is gone before — ii. 3 
there comes a fellow, crying out for. . — ii. 3 
myself the crying fellow did pursue.. — ii. 3 
O," that's an honest fellow: do not .. — iii. 3 
this fellow's of exceeding honesty.... — iii. 3 
every bearded fellow, that's but yoked — i v. 1 
notorious knave, some scurvy fellow.. — iv. 2 
the same, indeed; a very vafiant fellow — v. 1 
bv K<MliTigo, ond fellows that are 'scaped — v. 1 

Ff:"l,Li)Wl>V-fiillfellowly drops Te,npesl,\. 1 

FKI.LOSV-SCIIOLAK— 
feilow-scholur. to keep those statutCB.Lotic'jt.I. i. 1 

FKLUJW-SEKVANT— 
to be mv fellow servant to your. TwoGen.ofVer. ii. 4 

FEI.LOWSIIIP— 

to make fellowships accursed Mea.forMea. iii. 2 

for everlasting bond of fellowship. . Mid. N.'s Dr. i. 1 

sweet fellowship in shame! Lovers L. Lost, iv. 3 

and disjoineil from fellowship Kinf,'John, iii. 4 

manlKKMl, nor good fellowship in thee. 1 Hen. /r. i. 2 
out upon this half-faced fellowship.. — i. 3 

all the titles of g(X)d fellowship come — ii. 4 
that fears his fellowship to die with us.HcMryf. iv. 3 
here was a royal fellowship of death 1 — iv. 8 
the fellowship I hold now with him. /f"nry>7//. iii. 1 
iniimrted his fellowship i' tlie cause. Tim. of.iih. v. 3 

holds up hands for fellowship Coriolauus, v. 3 

a name in great men's fcllowslup.y4n(ony<5-C'fco. ii. 7 
grief hath mates, and bcoring fellowship. . Lpar, iii. 
sour woe delights in fellowship.. /((,mco f^ Juliet, iii. 2 

by the rights of our fellowship Hamlet, ii. 2 

get me a fellowship in aery of players — iii. 2 
sea and skies parted our fellowship .... Othello, ii. 1 

FELLOW-SOLUIEIl- 
come, foUow-suldiur 3 Uenry VI. i v. 7 

FELL" )\V'.'<T-and fellow'bt nothing. Ilinler'tTale, i. 2 

FELL()\V-STi;i)E.\T- 
do not mook nio, fellow-student Hamlet, i. 2 

FELLIJW-TIMUU.VE- 
plelwians hav« got your fellow-tribune. . . Cnriol. v. 4 

FELL'ST— thou fell st into my tury. Ant. t^Cieo. iv. 10 

FELON— alKive the felon ■Ulenry VI. in. 1 

felon, [Col. A'n/.-fellowl loa<len with. Tim.o/Atl,. iii. ■, 
I do attach these as n felon here. . Ilomeo ^Juliel, v. 3 

FELONIOUS— or foul leloniousthief.2//<rHryf/.iii. 1 

FEIiONY— treason, felony, sword, inkc.Tempetl, ii. 1 
and I will make it felony 'iHenryVl. iv. 2 

FELT-not a soul but felt o fever Temjiett, i. -i 

if 1 in thought felt not \\<:r..TicoGen.n/Verona, iv. 4 
some heat Irom Ilermia felt ....Mid. N. Dream, i. 1 

I never iiflt it till now Mer. of Veniee, iii. 1 

alxxly in't wliioh might be felt AWtWell.i. I 

I have felt so many quirks of joy .... — iii. 2 
but I felt it, hot in her \iTK^\,Y..Comedy of F.rrori.iW.'i 
tiiut since have felt tlic vigour — iv. 4 



FELT— 09 if it felt with Scotland Mnebelh, iv. 3 

before the child himself felt he KiniiJnh,,, iv. 2 

have lilt tlio worst of death's Uiclmrd II. iii. 2 

intolholu.l..io.l folt them UennjV. ii. 3 

orfolttliiit iHiin which I did Slleiiiy 11. i. I 

tliv mother folt inoio than — v. 6 

wis I.that felt thy tyrnnny Itichurd III. v. 3 

one that never in his life felt so — v. 3 

or folt the lliiltoriiH that grow .... Henry VIII. iii. 1 

and not till thou, ho iolt himself — iv. 2 

vonr ^'ilt.-i, and swoitiv folt it .. Timnn of Athens, v. 1 

oroniv livo Imth folt ilie axe — v. 2 

toll th'omsolvos, when they be felt ..Ant.fiCleo.ii. 6 

what piiinslic folt — v. 2 

whioli 1 hud nitlier von felt Cymlmlinc'u.'i 

and I'olt thoni knowingly — iii. 3 

as witliiii mo; not imagined, felt .... — iv. 2 

loss, the more of you 'twas lelt — v. 5 

here they're but felt Pericles, |. 4 

our woes, felt several years — i. 5 

the lesser is scarce felt hear, iii. 4 

to shoe a troop of horse with felt — iv. (! 

all sorrows that ever I have felt — y. 3 

and felt it bitter, pretty Ibol! .. ..ltomeoS)-Juliet,\. 3 
jests at sours, that never felt a wound — ii. 2 
It yot 1ms folt no age, nor known no ... . Othello, iii. 4 
to'llio tolt ulisonce now I feel acause — iii. 4 

FKL'l"ST-I hope thou felt'st Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

I'EMAl.E — poor females mad Mid. A'. '5 Dream, iii. 2 

the female ivy so curings the _ — iv. I 

a female ; or, for thy Love^sL.Losl, i. 1 (letter) 

the hoy is fair, of female favour. . As you Like it, iv. 3 
of this female, which in the common. . — v. 1 

abandon the society of this female — v. 1 

carry this female bastard hence. . Winler'sTaie, ii. 3 
are masters to their females . . Comedy of lirrors, ii. 1 

and claj) their female joints in UicUurd II Wi. 2 

my brain I'll prove the female to — v. 5 

the sou of the female is the shadow •iHenrylV. iii. 2 

flesh is cheap, and females dear v. 3 (song) 

of tills law and female bar Henry V. i. i 

no female should be inheretrix in — i. 2 

in right end title of the female — i. 2 

Vi.iir lii -lin>^~ ilniniinj frijiii the female — i. 2 
\.] \ ■, /,; ; V lil lii, i.iinb ..Cymbeline,\v.2 
M, I II 1: :ilo 111 ir../'f'riW«, i. (Gower) 
nii; -1: i).-li I !n:ii, I i:ii In ^lial 1 you iiomra .J-./kL i. 2 
as itiitioiit as tlio ioniale dove, when ihiinlet, v. 1 

FKMlNIiVE-soul feminine soluteth. Lore'sL.L. iv. 2 

FEN— from unwholesome im Tempest, i. 2 

or, as 'twere perfumed by a fen — ii. 1 

sucks up from bogs, lens, flats — ii. 2 

as reek o' the rotten fens Corlotanus, iii. 3 

that his fen makes feared — iv. 1 

FENCE— with a master of fence Merry Wives, i. 1 

alas 1 sir, I cannot fence — ii. 3 

valiant, and so cunning in fence Twelfth Night, iii. 4 
despite his nice fence, and his active Much Ado, v. 1 
I'll wliip you from your foining fence.. — v. 1 
fence with liis own ehtiiiow .. Merchant of Venice, i. 2 

teach ns some fence ! sirrah A'/ni; Joliti,n. 1 

or all my fence shall fail IHemyVI. ii. 1 

he hathlearut so much fence already. . — ii. 3 
captain Margaret, to fence you now? 3 Henry VI. ii. 6 

that did ever fence the right — iii. 3 

he hath given for fence impregnable . . — iv. 1 
the earth, and fence not Athens ! Timon of Ath. iv. 1 
wliich fence the roots they grow by Pericles, i. 2 

FENCED— sheep-cote, fenced about As you I.ike,\v. 3 

FENCER— been fencer to the Sophy Twelfth N. iii. 4 
vour's as blunt as the fencer's foils ..MuchAdu, v. 2 

FENCING— I have in fencing, dancing ri/W/Wi A', i. 3 

this is the right fencing grace .. iHenrylV.ii. 1 

without any more virginal fencing Pericles, iv. fi 

drinking, iencing, swearing, quarreling llamlei, ii. 1 

FENNE1>— eats conger and tfcnnel ..'illevrylV. ii. 4 
there's fennel for you, and columbines Hamlet, \v. f) 

FENNY— fillet of a fenny snake Mucbctli,i\. 1 

FEN-SUCKED— you fen-sucked fogs .... Lear, ii. 4 

FENTON-master Fenton, I'll be sworn Merry If. i. 4 
what say you to young master Fcnton ? — iii. 2 

gentle master Fenton, yet .seek — iii. 4 

and how does good master Fenton ? .. — iii. 4 

what does muster I'enton hero ? — iii. 4 

good master Fenton, come not — iii. 4 

no, good master Fenton — iii. 4 

you wrong me, master Fenton — iii. 4 

trouble not yourself, good master Fenton — iii. 4 

look on, master Fenton ; this is — iii. 4 

I would master Fenton had her — iii. 4 

but speciously for master Fenton — iii. 4 

master Fenton, talk not to me — iv. 6 

I will hear you, master Fenton — iv. 6 

here comes master Fenton (rep.) — v. S 

Fenton, heaven give thee joy I — v. 5 

master Fenton, heaven give you many — v. 5 

FEOD.\RY— if not afcodary.Vras«ri'/oc Mea!.ure,\\. 4 
art thou a feodary for this act Cymbeline, iii. 2 

FEU- Fer, he says his name is, (rep.).. Henry V. iv. 4 

the French for fer, and ferret — i v. 4 

monsieur le Fer f An(.-Far] Lrar, iv. 3 

FEHDINAND- king'sson Ferdinand.... '/'emprW, 1.2 

that Ferdinand is drowned? — ii. 1 

whilst 1 visit young Ferdinand — in. 3 

O Foidlnand.do not smileat me .... — iv. 1 

my dear son, Ferdinand — v. I 

and Ferdinand, her brother — v. 1 

bid my cousin Ferdinand come Tarn, of Sh. iv. 1 

Fcrdinand.mvfathcr, king of Spain. ;;c)ir|/K///. ii.4 

FEltE-[A'iir.] "and indent with feres. .IH^nry/T. i. 3 
[An'.] as with the woful fere. . Titus Andronicus, iv. 1 

FERN-SEED— receipt of fern-seed ..\He%\ry IV. ii. 1 
to the night, than to fcrn-sced — ii. 1 

FEKREKS— Walter lord Ferrers.... /(icAnnf ///. v. 4 

FERRET— and ferret him Henry V. iv. 4 

the French for fer and ferret — iv. 4 

with such ferret and such flery cyc8.yu/iu.« C<i'»ar,i.2 

FERRY— to the coniinon ferry ..Mer. of Venice, iii. 4 

FERRYMAN- 
griiu ferryman wliich poets write ot.ltichard III, i. 4 



FERTILE— barren place, and fertile.. .. 7'CTnp«(, i. 2 

every fertile inch o' the island — ii. a 

with adorations, with fertile Wan.Tteelflh Xighl.i.;, 

from honnly, fertile bosom ,. Winter' tTale, i. 2 

most swoot; fertile the isle — iii. t 

and all the fertile land within ....\ Henry IV. iii. ) 

good store of fertile sherris illenrylV. iv. 3 

our fertile France, [lut up her Henry V. v. 2 

look on fertile France, and see i\\K..\HenryVI. iii. 3 
as I have of fertile England's 80il....2H.jiry*'/. 1. 1 

as I hope for fertile England — iii. 1 

cnsear thy fertile and eouceptious. Timon itfAth. iv. 3 

and fertile every wish Antony Sf Cleopatra, i. 2 

he hath imioh rand, and fertile llamU-t,v. 2 

thoMirh Ik- in a I'ortile climate dwell OtheUo,i. I 

FlOin'll.K-FHKSll- 
iiimo ibrlih-irosh than all the Ht:h\.MerryWivet,v.!) 

FERTILlTY-suck Ihesoil'Bfertility./dWi.ir// //.iii. 4 
corrupting in its own fertility Henry V. v. 2 

FERVENCY-with fervenev drew u|l.An^./^(len. ii. .■> 

FERVi )UR— and let your fervour. . 7u(//r/uV/(,'/i/, i. .', 
his nunio with zealous fervour.//U'i»<>/(, iii.l (letter) 
win^'od \\ltli fervour of her li)VC....Cyml>elini', iii. :» 

FESTH— Fosto, the jester, my loTd.TueirihMnlit. ii. 1 

FESTKK—liodies mnst lie and fester ..llrmyV. iv. 3 
thov foster 'guinst inv'ratitude Coriolanus, i. 9 

FEStEKi;i)-lhis foslorod joint cutoff. /(icAfiri/ //.v. 3 
lostorod loonchors rot bnt liv dcgrees.l //cnry/'/. iii. 1 

FESTEIil.Vli-fostering in his shroud. /^<m. i^l- y«/. iv. 3 

FlOSTl NA'I'i;— most festinate preparation. /.car, iii. 7 

FESTINATKLY- 
hring him fostinately hither ....Locc'sL.Losl,'m. I 

FESTIVAL- 
nor I cannot woo in festival terms . . Much Ado, v. 2 
an eyesore to oui' Bolemu festival. Taming ofSh. iii. 2 
cut most of their festival purses . . Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

in France shall be kept festival Kint;John, iii. I 

at high festivals before the kings . . I //c;iry VI. i. 6 
it hath been sung at festivals . . Pericles, i. (Gower) 
as is the night before some festival. y/oineo^ Jul. iii. 2 
all things, that we ordained festival — iv. .'> 

FET— blood is fet from fathers of Henry V. iii. I 

FETCH— to fetch dew from Tempest, i. 2 

fetch in our wood — i. 2 

fetch us in fuel — i. 2 

nor fetch in tiring at requiring — ii. 2 (song) 

I will fetch oil' my bottle — iv. 1 

I'll fetch them, sir — v. 1 

fetch me tlie hat and rapier — v. 1 

with acorded hulder fetch her.ru-o Gen.ofVer. iii. 1 

she can fetcli and eaiTy — iii.l 

a horse cannot fetch — iii.l 

I'll fetch it you Merry Wives, i. 4 

I am come to fetch you home — ii. 3 

go fetch me a quart of sack — iii. 5 

fetch him off, I pray you Twefth .Xight. i. !> 

I will fetch you light, and paper — iv. 2 

fetch Malvolio hitlier — v. 1 

could fetch yonr brother from ..Meas.forMeas. ii. 4 

I can a resolution fetch from — iii. 1 

go in to him, and fetch him out — iv. 3 

and he may fetch him — v. 1 

go, fetch him hither — v. 1 

you do this to fetch me in Much Ado, i. I 

I will fetch you a toothpicker — ii . 1 

fetch you a hair of the great — ii. 1 

are come to fetch you to cliurch — iii. 4 

to fetch me trifles, and return.. A//d. N.'s Dream, ii. 2 

fetch me that flower — ii. 2 

fetch me this herb — ii. 2 

shall fetch thee jewels from the deep — iii.l 

and fetch thee new nuts — iv. I 

fetch liither the swain Love's L. Lost, iii. I 

to his brother; fetch that gallant. ^« you Like it, ii. 2 

I will fetch up your goats — iii. 3 

than to let him fetch off his drum . . All's Well, iii. 6 

let him fetch his drum — iii. G 

good mother, fetch my bail — v. 3 

go fetch the thirdborough ..TamingofSh. 1 (indue.) 

and fetch shrill echoes trom — 2 (indue.) 

we will fetch thee straight, Adonis.. — 2 (indue.) 

go, and fetch my supper in — iv. 1 

good Grumio, fetch it me — iv. 3 

my boy shall fetch the scrivener. — iv. 4 

go on, and fctoli our horses back — iv. 5 

go, fotoh tlioin hither — v. 2 

and will lotoh oil' llohomia for't.... Winler'sTaie, i. 2 

what he is, lot<h mo to tlie sight — iii. 3 

hut to fvtoli yon I'lom the mavt... Comedy of Err. i. 2 

tliou slave, and fetch him home — ii. I 

prating peasant; fetch tliy master ... — ii. 1 

go, fetch me something — iii.l 

get thee gone, fotoh me an iron — iii.l 

fet vou homo, and lotcli the chain ... — iii.l 
'UVotcli loy sifter, together — iii. 2 

to my wife, and fotch yonr money.... — iv. 1 
go fetch it, 6i»tcr: this I wonder at .. — iv. 2 
come to the Centaur; fetch our stuff — Iv. 4 

to fetch my iHior distracted — v. 1 

not suffer us to fetch him out — v. 1 

to go fetch a chain — v. 1 

master, shall I fetch yonr stuff'. — v. I 

course of thoughts to fetch about.... AVnjrJoAn, iv. 2 

fetch from false Mowbray their Richard II. i. 1 

to fotoh his (iiiooii — .i.l 

fetch hitlior Itichurd, that in common — iv. 1 
some of vou, and fotoh aliKiking-gluss — iv. 1 
bid ine fotoh tlioo thirty shillings? ..2If<!riri//r. ii. 1 

or they will tetoh it from Jnnhet — ii. 2 

as I return, I will fetch off these justices — iii. 2 

fetch forth the lazar kite of Henry T. Ii. I 

I will fetch thy rim out at thy — iv. 4 

I will fotoh hiin. i"dv lord of — iv. 7 

go forth and fotoh their ooniinering.. — v. (cho.) 
Birridi, go fotoh tho l.oudlo (rep.') ....'illenryVI. ii. 1 

of York fotoh down the head 3»c-nr|/'7. ii. G 

so few should fotoh the prince Itichurd III. ii. 2 

must fotoli liim ill he papers Henry VIII. i. I 

fetch me a do/on crab-tree staves .... — v. 3 
I'll fetch her: it is the prettiest. Troitiu ^Cress. iii. 2 



FET 



FETCH— yet go fetch him hither. 7';o(7iis^CjeM. iv. 2 
I'll fetch you one. You have sworn .. — v. 2 

let's fetch him oif, or make Coriolanus, i. 4 

all of us be there to fetch him . . ..Julius Cinsar, ii. 1 
I come to fetch you to the senate-house — ii. 2 
look where I'ublius is come to fetch me — ii. 2 
I'll fetch him presently. I know — — iii. 1 
so, fetch fire. Pluck down benches . . — iii. 1 
fetch the will hither, and we will — — iv. 1 
but late, euoueh to fetch hira in. Antony Sf Clco. iv. 1 
Mercury shouCl fetch thee up — iv. 1.3 

?o fetch my best attires — v. 2 
'11 fetch a turn about the garden — Ci/mbeline, i. 2 
1 will fetch mv gold, and have our two — i. 5 
first service tlibu dost me, fetch that suit — iii. 5 

and swear he'd fetch us in — iv. 2 

pray you, fetch him hither — iv. 2 

if you'll go fetch hira, we' 11 say — i v. 2 

I'll go fetch thy sons to back.. TitusAndronicus, n. 3 

now will I fetcn the king to find — .ii. 4 

then I'll go fetch an axe — iii. 1 

go, fetch them hither to us presently — v. 3 

till lungs fetch breath that Pericles,}. 4 

or I'll fetch thee with a warnnion .... — ii. 1 
fetch hither all the boxes in my closet — iii. 2 

to fetcli liis daughter home — iv. 4 (Govver) 

fetch fortli the stocks, ho! (rep.) Lear, ii. 2 

feteli me a better answer — ii. 4 

go tliou; I'll fetch some flax, and whites — iii. 7 

fetcn me my rapier, boy Romeo^- Juliet, i. 5 

to fetch a ladder, by the which yoiu: love — ii. 5 

go, lillain, fetch a surgeon — iii. 1 

the cords, that Romeo bade thee fetch? — iii. 2 

go, I sa3', and fetch him hither — iv. 2 

and fetch more spices, nurse — iv. i 

sirrah, fetch drier logs; call Peter — iv. 4 

I believe, it is a fetch of warrant Hamlet, ii. 1 

and fetch me a stoup of liquor — v. 1 

I fetch my life and being from men Othello, i. 2 

fetch Desdemona hither — i. 3 

must fetch his necessaries ashore: farewell — ii. 1 

fetch 't, let me see it. Why, so lean — iii. 4 

fetch me that handkerchief — iii. 4 

to fetch her fan, her gloves, her mask — — iv. 2 

sliall I go fetch your night-gown? — iv. 3 

I'll fetcn the general's surgeon — v. 1 

FETCHED— witli forms being fetched. .He/iji/T. ii. 2 
Ludlow the young prince be fetched. .W/V/i. III. ii. 2 

FETCHES-how hard he fetches breathl Henry I F. ii. 4 
blush, and fetches her wind so. . Troilus ff Cress, iij. 2 
she fetches her breath as short as ... . — iii. 2 
mere fetches; the images of revolt Lear, ii. 4 

FETCHING- fetching mad bounds. . Mer.of I'en. v. 1 

FETLOCK— fret fetlock deep in gore. . . Henry V. iv. 7 
stained their fetlocks in his smoking.3 Henri/ F/. ii. 3 

FETTER— with reason fetter. . . . Twtlftli Night, iii. 1 
but fetter j'ou till death . . Measure for Measure, iii. 1 

fetter strong madness in a silken Much Ado, v. 1 

these strong Egyptian fetters Antony ^ Cleo. i. 2 

fetter hira, till ne be brou^jht Titus Andron. v. 3 

we will fetters put upon this fear Hamlet, iii. 3 

FETTERED— our wretches fettered in..He»);//'. i. 2 
their chains fettered the kingly lion..3Henr_vr/. v. 7 

my conscience! thou art fettered Cymbetiue, v. 4 

fettered in amorous chains TitusAndron, ii. 1 

FETTERING— there is no fetterin" ..AWs Well, ii. 3 

FEU— Pegasus, gui a les narinesde iau. Henry V. iii. 7 
Rien puis? Pair et le feu — iv. 2 

FEUD— made of our rank feud .. Troi'tes <5- Cress, iv. 5 

FEVER— but felt a fever of the mad .... Tempest, i. 2 
so great a fever on goodness .... Meas.for Meas. iii. 2 
there died this morning of a cruel fever — iv. 3 

sick , my lord, of a strange fever — v. I 

but a fever she reigns in my .... Love^sL. Lost, iv. 3 

a fever in your blood ! — iv. 3 

fire of fever bred: and what's a fever. Com. o/ J?;-, v. I 

after life's fitful fever, he sleeps Macbeth, iii. 2 

to make a shaking fever in your King John, ii. 1 

this fever, that hath troubled — v. 3 

tills tyrant fever burns me up — v. 3 

ourselves into a burning fever 2 Henry IV. iv. 1 

the fiery fever will go out with Henry V. iv. 1 

fever ot pale and bloodless (rep.). Troilus 4' Cress, i. 3 

the fever wliereof all our power — i. 3 

potent and infectious fevers heap. Timon ofAlh. iv. 1 

till the high fever seeth your — iv. 3 

had a fever wlicn lie was in Spain. ./u^'ms Crvsar, i. 2 
white hand i.,f a lady fever thee . . Ant. & Cleo. iii. 11 
a fever with the absence of Cy^tbeline,iv.'S 

FEVi'lKOUS-feverouslifeshouUl'st Mea.forMcn. iii. I 
the earth was feverous, and did shake .Madtelh, ii. 3 

thicker than a feverous pulse Trail, fy Cress, iii. 2 

as if the world were feverous Coriolanus, i. 4 

FEVER- WEiVKENED- 
tlie wretch, wliose fever-weakened ..2HenryIV. i. 1 

FEW— in few, they hurried us Tempest, i. 2 

few in millions can speak like us — ii. 1 

here have 1 few attendants — v. 1 

some few odd lads — v. 1 

faith, sir, few of any wit in such.il/eas./o;' Meas. ii. 1 

in few, bestowed her on her — iii. 1 

is it sad, and few words? — iii. 2 

but few of any sort, and none of uame.il/uc/i^^o, i. 1 

liath drops too few to wash her — iv. 1 

though few have the graeeto do it.Love'sL.Losl,v. 1 

the liker you: few taller are — v. 2 

here are a few of the unpleasantest.jtfCT-.o/'-'cn. iii. 2 

trust a few, do wrong to none AWs Ifell i. 1 

but, in a few, signior Ilortensio — i. 2 

friends as we, few words suffice — i. 2 

deaths are too few, the sharpest.. Winter^s Tale, iv. 3 
what train? But few, curl those but mean — v. 1 

his leisure for a few words Macheth, i!i. 2 

there's few, or none, do know me . . King John, iv. 3 

I have too few to take iiiy Richard 11. \. 3 

with si.tme I'l-w ltri^'ate friciuls — iii. 3 

and somt' fl;w v:iiiitii:s tiuit iii;:'.:e. . .. — iii. 4 

put :l tLV- filll•k^ in tliu- poiTit \U,:nrv IV. ii. 1 

in I'l-w, hiideutluv.lioe spirit sHcrii I f. i. 1 

never so fcv,-, and never yet nioie — i. 1 



[ 256 ] 

FEW— which, after some few hours ..2HenryIV. iv. 

thus then, in few, your liighness Henry V. i. 

hath, for a few liglit crowns — ii. 

that men of few words are the best .. — iii. 
his few had w[ords are matclied (rfp.) — iii. 
a few disputations with you — iii. 

Dieu vivant! shall a few sprays .. — iii. 
his numbers are so few, his soldiers . . — iii. 
and those few I have, almost no better .— iii. 
there are few die well, that die in .... — iv. 

we ffew, we happy few — iv. 

BO few, watch such a multitude 1 Henry VI. i. 

these few days' wonder will be 2 Henry VI. ii. 

who having pinched a few SHenry VI. ii. 

with some lijw bands of chosen — iii. 

no letters, and few words — iv. 

for few men rightly temper — iv. 

in few words, if you'll not — iv. 

there's few, or none, will entertain. .Richard III. i. 
meet so few should fetch the prince . . — ii. 

1 took the vantage of those few — iii. 

not by a few, and those of true Henry VIII. i. 

but few now give so great ones — i. 

you few that loved me, and dare .... — ii. 
and capable of our flesh, few are angels — v. 
this good man, (few of you deserve . . — v. 
(but few now living can behold .... — v. 

few words to fair faitli Troilus <§• Cressida, iii. 

that few things loves better .... Timon ofAUtenSj i. 

'tis in few words, but spacious — iii. 

at a few drops of women's rheum . . Coriolanus, v. 

here's a few flowers, but about Cymbeline, iv. 

few come witliin the compass of . . Titus Andron. y. 

great king, few love to hear Pericles, i. 

few words, but to effect Lear, iii. 

these few precepts in thy memory Hamlet, i. 

every man thine ear, but few thy voice — i. 
in few, Ophelia, do not believe — i. 

FEWER- should have fewer words . . 1 HenrylV. ii. 

draw anew the model in fewer GSiees.2HenryIV. i. 

[ A'n/.j Cheshu Christ speak fewer .... Henry V. iv. 

thefewer men, the greater share — iv. 

FEWEST— the fewest roses \Hcnry VI. ii. 

if I have fewest, I subscribe in silence — ii. 
FEWNESS— fewness and truth . . Meas. for Meas. i. 
FICKLE- eye of fickle France King John, ii. 

please the eye of fickle changelings. .IHenrylV. v. 

fortune's furious fickle wheel Henry /'. iii. 

amongst a fickle wavering nation . . 1 Henry VI. iv. 

dwells in the fickle grace of her Lear, Ii. 

all men call thee fickle (rep.).. Uomeo Sf Juliet, iii. 

be fickle, fortime ; for then, I hope . . — iii. 
FICKLENESS— fortune's fickleness 1 Henry VI. v. 
FICO — steal! foh; a fico for the phrase Merry W.i. 
FICTION— an improbable fiction Twelfth Kight, iii. 

for thy fiction, why, thy verse Timon of Alliens, v. 

but in a fiction, in a dream of passion. . Hamlet, ii. 

FIDLLE— and a fiddle (rep.) Henry VIII. i. 

FIDDLER— rascal fiddler Taming of Shrew, ii. 

fiddler forbear : you grow too forward — iii. 

unless the fiddler Apollo get his Troilus Sf Cress, iii. 
FIDD]>E-STICK-upon a fiddle-stick 1 HenrylV. ii. 

here 's my fiddlestick Romeo g,- Juliet, iii. 

FIDELE— what is your name? Fidele Cymbeline, iii. 

the boy Fidele's sickness did make . . - iv. 

you and Fidele play the cooks: I'll stay — iv. 

poor sick Fidele! 1 11 willingly — iv. 

summer lasts, and I live here, Fidele — iv. 

save that Euriphile must be Fidele . . — iv. 

thy name? Fidele. Thou dost approve — iv. 

Fidele, sir. Thou art my good youtli — v. 

lad, who died, and was Fidele — v. 

this is sure, Fidele. Why did you . . — v. 
FIDELICET- 

that is master Page, fidelicet Merry Wives, i. 

and there is myself, fidelicet, mj'self — i. 

FIDELITY— by ray fidelity Merry Wives, iv. 

FIDES— sic spectarida a fides Pericles, ii. 

FIDIUS'D— been so fidius'd for all . . Coriolanus, ii. 
FIELD— doctor about by the field Merry Wives, ii. 

go about the fields with me — ii. 

than all the field to see — v. 

to challenge him to the field .... Twelfth Night, ii. 

stands empty in the drowned field Mid. N's.D. ii. 

in the town, the field, you do — ii. 

I am feared in field and town — iii. 

means to lodge you in the field . . Lovers L. Lost, ii. 

and welcome to the wide fields too base — ii. 

and I to be a corporal of his field .... — iii. 

and soldiers, to the field ! — iv. 

tills field shall hold me — v. 

that oft in field with targe — v. 

that won three fields of sultan Merch. of Venice, ii. 

in respect it is in the fields As yon Like it, iii. 

to those Italian fields, where noble . . All's Well, ii. 

they fell: to-morrow to the field .... — iii. 

heard great ordnance in the field Taming of Sh. i. 

my houseliold stuft', my field, my barn — iii. 

the field is won. Well, forward .... — jy. 

wander in an uuknown field?Comerf7/ r^ Errors, iii. 

since his majesty went into the field . . Macbeth, v. 

ay, and brought off the field: your .. — v. 

of Coeur-de-Kon knighted in the field King- Jo/in, i. 

to take advantage of the field — ii. 

back to the stained field, you equal.. — ii. 

that here come sacrifices for the field — ii. 

zeal and charity brouglit to the field — ii. 

when he intendeth to become the field — v. 

silken AS'anton brave our fields — v. 

your majesty to leave the Held — v. 

sore sick, hath left the field — v. 

the noise and rumour of the field . — v. 

last iu the field, and almost lords of it — v. 

five summers have enriched our iicXiXsRichud II. i. 

in glorious christian field streaming — iv. 

be called the field of Golgotha — iv. 

channel her fields, nor bruise her \ Henry IV. i. 

in those holy fields, over whose — i. 

till fields, and blows, and groans — i. 

cvy, (Hiurage, to the field! and thou liast — ii. 



FIE 



FIELD— to the frighted fields iHenrylV. ii). 1 

he doth fill fields with harness — iii. 2 

Percy is already in the field — iv. 2 

from such a field as this — v. 4 

seek Percy, and thyself, about the field — v. 4 

let's to the highest of the field — v. 4 

how goes the field? The noble Scot . . — v. 5 
in a bloody field by Shrewsbury . .2HenrylV. (ind.) 

and Stafford, fled the field — i. 1 

saw you the field? came you — i. 1 

their safety, fly from the field — i. 1 

to abide a field, where nothing — ii. 3 

the windmill in saint George's Fields — iii. 2 

and face them in the field — iv. I 

lead on to higher fields, and draw no — iv. 4 

the vasty fields of France? Henry V. i. (chorus) 

pavilioned in the fields of France — i. 2 

and a' babbled of green fields — ii. 3 

neglected English upon our fields .. — ii. 4 

in bloody field doth win — iii. 2 

of gallant youth in our rich fields .. — iii. 5 

than your swords, hie to the field.... — iii. ."i 

to purge this field of such a hilding. . — iv. 2 

approach shall so much dare the field — iv. 2 

ill-favouredly become the morning field — iv. 2 

on, to the field: I will the banner — iv. 2 

from off these fields, where (wretches) — iv. 3 

marching in the painful field — iv. 3 

we are enough yet living in the field — iv. 5 

yet keep the French the field — iv. 

glorious and well-foughten field — iv. 6 

come down, or void the field — iv. 7 

may wander o'er this bloody field .. — iv. 7 

to view the field in safety — iv. 7 

peer, and gallop o'er the field — iv. 7 

then call we this, the field of Agineourt — iv. 7 

that in the field lie slain — iv. 8 

whilst a field should be despatched. . 1 Henry VI. i. I 

ne'er leave striking in the field — i. 4 

for refuge in the field — ii. 2 

shall pitch a field when "we are — iii. i 

come forth, and meet us in the field? — iii. 2 

came to the field, and vanquished .. — iii. 2 

the great Aleides of the field — iv.7 

that France may get the field — \ . 3 

so often lodge in open field 2Henry 11. i. 1 

the cardinal 's not ray better iu the field — i. 3 

by my faith, the field is honourable — iv. i 

one blow in the field? — iv.7 

to-morrow in St. George's field — v. 1 

keep thee from the tempest of the field — v. 1 

which chased you from the field SHenryl'I. i. 1 

shall plead it in the field — i. 1 

return witli victory frora the field. ... — i. 1 

we'll meet her in the field — i. 2 

army of the''queen hath got the field — i. 4 

cites us, brother, to the field — ii. 1 

highness would depart the field — ii . 2 

bide the mortal fortune of the field? — ii. 2 

at St. Alban's field this lady's — iii. 2 

liimselfkeepeth in the cold field?.. ., . — iv. 3 

power, that Edward hath iu field .... — iv. 8 

lords, to the field — v. I 

having now the best at Baruet field . . — v. 3 

in the field by Tewkesbury Richard Ill.i. i 

in the field at Tewkesbury — ii. 1 

when we both lay in the field — ii. 1 

is in the field, and still his power — iv. 3 

when traitors brave the field — iv. 3 

spoiled your summer fields — v . '-' 

even here in Eosworth field — \.S 

saddle White Surrey for the field — v. 3 

the foe vaunts iu the field — v. 3 

there be six Itichmonds in the field. . — v. i 
that once was mistress of the &el(l. Henry VIII. iii. I 

her foes shake like a field of — \. i 

let lum to field; Troilus, alas. . , . Tmihts ^ Cress, i. I 

news, .^neas, from the field to-day? — i. I 

and to the field goes he — i. 2 

hark, they are coming from the field — i . 2 

excitements to the field — i- 3 

Achilles will not to the field to-morrow — ii. 3 

they are come from field — iii. 1 

swift transpoi'tance to those fields — iii. 2 

but in these fields of late — iii. 3 

Aj ax goes up and down the field .... — iii. 3 

did haunt you in the field — iv. 1 

to the field. 'Tis Troilus' faidt (irp.! — iv. 4 

any voice or order of the field? — ]\'. ■> 

let us see you in the field — iv. fi 

in what place of the field doth — i\'. ■') 

a thousand Hectors in the field — v. -i 

along the field I will the Trojan — v. H 

yet are we masters of tire field — v. \ I 

dragged through the shameful field. . — v. 1 1 

your heart's in the field now Timon of Athens, i. 2 

lands thou hast lie in a pitched field . . — i. 2 

our army's in the field Coriolanus, i. 2 

are you lords o' tlie field? — i. 

if we lose the field, we cannot — i. 7 

the treasure, in this field achieved . . — i . 9 

shall i' the field prove flatterers — i. S 

he proved best man i' the field — ii. 2 

called both field and city ours — ii. 2 

the left-hand of the even field J alius Cirsar, v . 1 

come to the field; if not — v.) 

tell me what thou not'st about the field — v. :i 

let us to the field: Labeo, and Flavins — v. 3 

proclaim my name about the field. ... — v. 4 

here in Philippi fields; 1 know — v..') 

so, call the field to rest: and let's away — v. .'i 
thy wife first came into tlie Held.. .intony SfCleo. i. 2 

show ourselves i' the field — 1.4 

Ca2sar and liCpidus are in the field .. ^ ii. 1 

tie up the libertine in a field offcasts — ji. 1 

we have jaded out o' the field — iii. 1 

if from the field I shall return — iii. 11 

Antony is come into tlie field — i^•. li 

to the field, to the field: we'll leave. Oym/jW/jie, iv. 'J 

are grown the mortal bugs o' the field — v. h 



FIE 



FIELD— to be i' tho tU'lil, luid ask .... Cymbetiiuf, v. 
more swoct tlmn our blessed Ileitis. ... — y. 

in eofFlns fh>in tbe tletd Titus Anttronicut, i. 

kiiiplitcd ill tielil, sliiin iimiiriiUy .... — i. 
the fields are trnxront, mid the woods — ii. 

the tields are iieiir, mid vou iiiv — iv. 

their ninstor to the tlowereil fields. . . . — v. 

save von tleld i.f^turs. tliev here Peiichs, i. 

usurers teiniu-irt;.. Id i' the lield — lii. 

a little lire in ii v\U\ tield were tfnr, iii. 

every nere in the lii;.'h-i.'n>wii llild — iv. 

this field is t.vi i-,.ld for me to fhcv.ltomeo^Jul. ii. 

80 before to lielil, he'll hi- vciur tollowcr — iii. 
10 sweete,-.! Ilower ofnll l1n' Held.... — iv. 

sueh a sight ii.s this heiMiiu's the field ..llamlel, v. 

that never set u squ.uln.n in the tield ..Olhello, i. 

dearest netiun in the tented lield — i. 

oecidents, hv |1..,h1 imd tield — i. 

FlKl.D-DKW-tiiisneUl-cleweonseeratcW.d.A'.Di-.v, 
KIKl.nKD-^lulp cor lieUled Irieiids.. C'orio/anw, i. 
FIKND-hnt inie fiend iil u time Tempest, iii. 

ndditions, the numes of fiends Meny Wires, ii. 

lo, how Imllow tlie fiend speaks.. 7Vc(/VAAVffA', iii. 

the fiend is ront;h, and will not — iii. 

a tieiid, like thee, might hear — iii. 

out, hy perbolieal fiendl — iy . 

the fiend is at mine elbow .. Merchant of Venice, ii. 

courageous fiend bids me pack (irp.) — ii. 

a brave mind says the fiend, and run — ii. 

budge, says the fiend; budge not — — ii. 

vou counsel well, fiend, say I — ii. 

1 should be ruled hy the fiend — ii. 

the fiend gives the more friendly .... — ii. 

1 will run, fiend ; my heels are — ii. 

mew her up for tlus fiend of hell.. Taming of Sh. i. 

a devil, a devil, a very fiend — iii. 

a fiend, a fairy, pitiless and rou"li. Com. of Err. iv. 

avoid then, fiena I what tell'st thou.. — iv. 

the fiend is strong within him — iv. 

bring thou this fiend of .Scotland Macbeth, iv. 

I doubt the equivocation of the fiend — v. 

these juggling fiends no more believed — v. 

not yet so ugly a fiend of hell King John, iv. 

as a fiend, confined to tyrannise — v. 

fiend I thou torment'st me ere Richard II. iv. 

as that fiend Douglas, that spirit.... IHsnry/F. ii. 

no, let the fiend give fire 'iHenrylV. ii. 

the fiend hath pricked down — ii. 

and fiends for rood howl on Henry I', ii. 

whatsoever cunning fiend it was — ii. 

like to the prince of fiends, do — iii. 

this Talbot is a fiend of hell 1 Henry VI. ii. 

scoff on, vile fiend, and shameless .. — iii. 

foul fiend of France, and hag of all. . — iii. 

false fiend, avoid! Lay hands upon.. 2 Henry Ti. i. 

beat away the busy meddling fiend.. — iii. 

conjures up this fiend Richard III. i. 

a legion of foul fiends environed me — i. 

liell burns, fiends roar, saints — iv. 

the spleen of all tlie under fiends . . Coriotanris, iv. 

the fiends of hell divide themselves. .Cym6eime, ii. 

thou art straiglitway with the fiends — iii. 

O most delicate fiend! whois'tcan.. — V. 

ay, so thou dost, Italian fiend! — v. 

otliousand fiends, a thousand hissing. TilusAnd.M. 

the ottspring of so foul a fiend! — iv. 

thon marble-hearted fiend, more hideous ..Lear. i. 

away! the foul fiend follows me! — iii. 

whom the foul fiend hath led through fire — iii. 

some charity, whom the foul fiend vexes 

take heed o the foul fiend 

books, and defy the foul fiend 

this is the foul fiend Flibbertigibbet 

when the foul fiend rages, eats 

thou fiend! What, hath your grace not. . 

how to prevent the fiend, and lo kill 

the foul fiend bites my back 

the foul fiend haunts poor Tom 

from the foul fiend! Five fiends have been — iv. 

seems not in the fiend so horrid — iv. 

howe'er thou art a fiend, a woman's — iv. 

it was some fiend : therefore — iv. 

often 'twould say, the fiend, the fiend .. — iv. 

beneath is all the fiends — iv. 

beautiful tyrant! fiend angelical!. Romeo ^Jul. iii. 

didst bower the spirit of a fiend in .. — iii. 

O most wicked fiend! is it more sin — iii. 

as low as to the fiends! Hamlet, ii. 

the fiend's arch-mock, to lip a wanton .OWicHo, iv. 

from heaven, and fiends will snatch at it — v. 
FIEND-LIKE— his fiend-like queen . . Macbeth, v. 

image of thy fiend-like facet.. Titus Andronicns, v. 
FIERCE- in this fierce vein ..Mid. N.'t Dream, iii. 

though she be but little, she is fierce — iii. 

but as the fierce vexation — iv. 

with all the fierce endeavour of. . Love's L. Lost, v. 

control of fierce and bloody war .... King John, i. 

ladies' faces, and fierce dragons' spleens — ii. 

order into so fierce a cause — iii. 

even with tile fierce looks of these .. — iv. 

which fierce fire, and iron, extends . . — iv. 

to fierce and bhHMly inclination — v. 

O vanity of sickness! fierce extremes — v. 

his rash fierce blaze of riot cannot . . Richard II. ii. 

was never lion raged more fierce .... — ii. 

Exton, thy fierce hand hath with .. — v. 

his approaches makes as fierce Henry f. ii. 

therefore in fierce tempest is he — ii. 

down the hill he holds his fierce career — iii. 

sun, fierce bent against their faces ..I Henry VI. i. 

euch fierce alarums both of hope — v. 

for he is fierce, and cannot brook ..'i Henry VI. iv. 

no beast so fierce, but knows Richard III. i. 

he to do in these fierce vanities? Henry VIII. i. 

fierce to their skill, and to their.. Troilut^ Crest, i. 

renew, renew ! the fierce Pnlydanius.. — v 

the fierce wretchedness that glory. Timon ofAth. iv. 

not fierce and terrible onlv in strokes. Con'ofunun, i. 

wash my fierce hand in liis heart — i. 

fierce flery warriors fight upon JuliusCasar, ii. 



— lu. 4 



— 111. 6 
1 



[_ 257 ] 

FIERCE— and fierce civil strife ..Julius Cirsar, iii. 1 
yet have I fierce utfeetions . . .intony ^Cleopatra, i. 5 
this fierce abridgement hath to it. . . . Cymbeline, v. 6 
fierce .\iiilnniicn-i wnnlil iint relent.. 7'iVufJn((. ii. 3 
with I'nLtniu- lierco unil keen. . I'ericles, V. 3 (Gower) 

mori' coiiniositiim and fierce nuality Lear, i. i 

opinion ol niv moiv tierce eiiiteavoiir .... — ii. 1 
her eves arc ilerce, hut thine do comfort — ii. -1 

nor tliv lieriT sister in his anointed — iii. 7 

iiutre Ijerce, iind more inexorable. /'oiiitfo ^JuiiV/, V. 3 
even the like precnrsi.' of fierce events . . llamlel, i. I 

FIEKCKI.Y-sKles fiercely fmight ..iHcnryVI. ii. 1 

FIEWC'KNIO.SS— with your fierceness.. H^wri/r. iv. I 

tlu'v ciilk'd ns, for our fierceness \ Henry I' I. i. 5 

iinJ to tlu-ir lieii'ciiess vuliimt . .Troilus ^- Cress, i. 1 

FlKltV - to Intthe in licrv ll...i.ls..l/ras./or Mro». iii. 1 
yonn- Cnpiirs liery sluil't 4iH'nched..Wid. N.Dr. ii. 2 
light'tluni lit the liery glowworm's eyes — iii. 1 
all yon fiery oes and eyes of light.... — iii. 2 
have foundout such fiery numbers.. I.oi)e's/..L. iv. 3 

best seeing heaven's fiery eye — v. 2 

shall bring their fiery torcher All's IVell, ii. I 

of iMiirs's fiery steed'; to otherregionsi — ii. 3 
fiery imd forward our pedant is'.-Tamingof Sh. iii. 1 
alus. how liuiy ami how sharp ..Comedy of Err. iv. 4 

ineousideriite, ticry voluntaries King John, ii. 1 

equal potents, flery kindled spirits!.. — ii. 2 
and quench his flery indignation .... — iv. 1 

and culled these flery spirits from — v. 2 

from out the fiery portal of Richard J J, iii. 3 

mounted upon allot and fiery steed. . — v. i 
of heaven was full of fiery shapes ..\ Henry IV. iii. 1 
to turn and wind a fienr Pegasus .... — iv. 1 
and look whether the fiery Trigon..2 Jfenry IV. ii. 4 
full of nimble, fiery, and delectable. . — iv. 3 

the fiery fever will go out with Henry V.'iv. 1 

hath thy fiery heart so parched aHenryVI. i. 4 

with fiery eyes, sparkling — ii. 5 

should check, thy fiery steeds — ii . 6 

then fiery expedition be my wing../ticAar'i///. iv. 3 

the bright track of his fiery car — v. 3 

with the spleen of fiery dragons! — v. 3 

beckoning with fiery truncheon. TroiVus •S.-Cress.v. 3 
follow thine enemy in a fiery gulf. . Coriolanus, iii. 2 

proud cedars 'gainst the flery sun — v. 3 

such ferret and such fiery Ci'Cs Julius CtBsar, i. 2 

most bloody, fiery, and most terrible — i. 3 

fierce fiery warriors flglit upon — ii. 2 

more fiery bj' night's blaclcness ..Antony SrCleo. i. 4 

*twixt the fiery orhs above Cymbeline, i. 7 

irou know tlie fiery inmlity of the duke . . Lear, ii. 4 

fiery? what qualit\'? why, (iloster — ii. 4 

fiery? the flery duke? tell the hot duke.. — ii. 4 
in the instant came the fiery Tybalt. i?om. ^Jul. i. 1 
[Coi.Kiif.] and Titan's fiery wheels .. — ii. 3 

and outbreak of a flery mind Hamlet, u. I 

send thee hence with fiery quickness .... — iv. 3 
darkest night, stick fiery off indeed — v. 2 

FIEHY-FOOTED- 
apace, you fiery-footed steeds . . liomeo ^-Juliet, iii. 2 

FIERY-RED— gate, all fiery-red . . Mid. N. Dr. iii. 2 
spurring, fiery-red with haste Richard II. ii. 3 

FIFE— but the drum and fifi; A/nc/i Ado, ii. 3 

squeaking of the wry-necked flfc.Ver. of Venice, ii. 5 

from Fife, great kin^, where Macbeth, i. 2 

no, cousin, I'll to Fife — ii. 4 

beware the thane of Fife — iv. 1 

seize upon Fife, give to the edge — iv. 1 

the thane of Fife had a wife — v. 1 

Mordake, the earl of Fife \HenryIV. i. 1 

none but Mordake, the earl of Fife . . — i- 1 
sackbuts, psalteries, andfifes, tabors. Cor/o/nnwsj v. 4 
the ear-piercing fife, the royal banner. .Ortrito, iii. 3 

FIFTEEN— not fifteen pence? Merry IVivcs, ii. 2 

blind puppies, fifteen i' the litter .... — iii. .I 
alas, fifteen wives is nothing ....Mer.of Venice, \\. 2 

amounts not to fifteen thousand .4/^8 Wcli.'w. 3 

these fifteen years you have. . Taming of Sh. 2 (ind.) 

these fifteen years! by my fay — 2 (ind.) 

above some fifteen years and more.. — 2 (ind.) 

it is fifteen years since I saw Winter's Tale, iv. 1 

and odd shilling: fifteen hundred shorn — iv. 2 

twice fifteen thousand liearts King John, ii. 1 

no, fifteen hundred foot 2 Henry I V. ii. 1 

full fifteen earls, and fifteen hundred.. Henry V. i. 1 
the English lie within fifteen hundred — iii. 7 
full fifteen hundred, besides common — iv. 8 
p.av one and twenty fifteens i Henry VI. iv. 7 

FIF'TEENTH-deniand a whole fifteenth — i. 1 

I'IFTH— repeat them, or the fifth. . Lore's L.Los', v. 1 
come from a fifth, the prince ni'.Merch. of Venice, i. 2 

if I could bid the fifth welcome — i. 2 

tlie fifth, the countercheck As you Like it, v. 4 

third, or fourth, or fifth Taming of Sh. 1 (ind.) 

and the filth did whirl about King John, iv. 2 

Harry the fifth is crowned 'iHenrylV.iv. 4 

for the filth IhuTV from curbed — iv. 4 

Harry the fonrtli"? or filth? — v. 3 

Harry the fifth 's the man — y. 3 

Henry the fifth, too famous to live . . I Henry VI. i. 1 
Henry the fifth! thy ghost I invocate — i. I 

Henry the fifth he first trained — j- 4 

when Henry the fifth, succeeding. . . . — ii. j 

time of Henry, named the fifth — iii. I 

man of memory , Henry the fifth — iv'i 

Henry tlie fifth did sometime prophesy — y. I 

the fifth, was Edniond Langlcy 'iHenry t'l. ii. 'J 

Edward the third's fifth son — ii. 2 

Henry the fifth, in whose time hoys — iv. 2 
Henrv the Hftli, that niiicle all I'ninco — iv. K 
the son of llenrv the fifth, tluit thus — iv. » 

the name of Henry the fifth hales .. — iv. « 

I am the son of Henry the fifth 3Hciii!/''/. i. 1 

Henry the fifth, wholly his prowess — iii. 3 
which Henry the fifth nad gotten? .. — iii. 3 
[CW.^■^^] the fifth hourof tliesun.ri-oi/..SC'f.<»- ii- I 
the fifth, a hand environed with Vertctes, ii. 2 

FIFTY— hundred and fifty pounds. ilferr.v '*'ieM, iii. 4 
yes, your beggar of fifty . . Measure for Measure, iii. 2 
then L to sore makes fifty sores.. /.ovc'>/<. Lost, iv. 2 



FIG 



FIFrV-niight shake olf fifty .... /.ore'i L. Los', iv. 3 
kill thee tt hundred iind fifty wttyH..4iv"" Like it, v. 1 

a hundred anil fifty, .Scbaitian so All's ll'ell, iv. 3 

two liiiiiilred mid fifty each — Iv. 3 

di:eiisr< u,H two mid fifty horses Taming of .'Sh. i. 2 

though reoMui'il fifty times IV.., in', I ,le. iv. ,< 

fouglit not with lifiy of them \ Henry I V. ii. I 

two or three mid liti\' upon |ioor old Jack — ii. t 

his age some fifty, oi, hy'r hidy — ii. 4 

exchange of a hiindn-il mill titty soldiers — iv. 2 
a hundred and fil'tv tiittercil prodigals — iv. 2 
there's but three of my liundred and fitty — v. 3 
Northumlierhuid iiielifty tliousand.2;/"i.r!,/f. iii. 1 
to your ohedieliee fitly fortresses. .. .1 //««;■)//';. iii. 4 

that two and fifty kingdoins hath - ii.7 

heie's but one aiid fifty hairs on .. 7'roiV. i Cress, i. 2 

one and fifty hairs, qnotli he — 1.2 

let tiie request be fifty talents. . Timon of Athens, ii. 2 
iii.4mit li'HM-ioii to use fifty talents .. — iii. 1 

mine fil'tv talents. Tell out iny — iii. 4 

let me liiive ii child at fifty Antony^ Cleo. i. 2 

wliMt, lifty of my followers at Lfiir, i. 4 

return to hi'i', and fifty men dismissed? — ii. 1 

what, fitly followers? is it not well? — ii- ■• 

tliy fifty yet doth double five and twenty — ij. 4 
give iweiitv, forty, fifty, a hundred .... Hamlet, ii. 2 

FIFTY-FIVE-fiftv-five year ago . .illenrylV. iii. 2 
he cannot want fifty-five hundred. Timon ofAlh. iii. 2 

FIFT Y-FOLD-fifty-fold a cuckold. . Ant. <5 Cleo. i. 2 

FIG— green figs, and mulberries. .Mid.K.'s Dream, iii. 1 
a cherry, and a fig; there's a good . . King John, ii. I 

and fig me, like the bragging 'iHemylV.y. 3 

the fig of Spain! very good Henry V.W'i. 6 

and a fig for Peter ! iHenryVI.n.i 

I love long life better than figs ..Antony fyCleo. i. 2 

presence, he brings you figs — v. 2 

country man, that brought her figs .. — v. 2 

virtue? a flg! 'tis in ourselves Olhello, i. 3 

blessed fig's end! the wine she drinks.. — ii. 1 

FIGHT— fll fight their legions o'er. ... Tempest, iii. 3 
I slew him manfully in fight. . 7'«'o Gen. offer, iv. I 

for thee to fight .Merry Wives, ii. 1 (letter) 

rather hear tliein scold than fight — ii. 1 (letter) 

pursue, up with your fights — ii. 2 

to see thee figlit — ii. 3 

if you should fight, you go — ii. 3 

he s the man should fight with him.. — iii. 1 

me the count's youth to fight Tuelfth Night, iii. 2 

he will fijjht with you for his oath sake — iii. 4 
[Col.Kni. mature never in thefight.jVca. /or A/ca.i. 4 

and couinel him to fight against Much Ado. iii. I 

than fight with mine enemy — iy. 1 

we cannot fight for love Mid.N.'sDream, ii. 2 

tliese lovers seek a place to fight — — iii. 2 
and every man that dares not tight !..J!.o«e'»L.L. i. 1 

that certain he would fight, yea — v. 2 

I will not fight with a iiole — v. 2 

I view the fight, than thou Merch. of Venice, iii. 2 

but the fight of two rams As you Like il, v. 2 

go so much backward, when you Aght. All's Well, i. 1 
no, my lord, I'll fight. You will?. W„Uer's Tale, i. 2 

this cruelty, fijjht on thy side — ii. 3 

you denied to fight with me — v. 2 

pretence I fight of treasonous Macbeth, ii. 3 

let them fight against the chiu'clies . . — iv. I 

will fight, her young ones in — i v. 2 

make our women fight — iv. 3 

I'll fight, till from my bones — v. 3 

beaten, if we cannot fight — v. 6 

hear-like, I must fight the course — — v. 7 

jicople on both sides do fight — v. 7 

to our hope: I'll not fight with thee.. — v. 7 

could not wage the fight King John, \. I 

to parley, or to fight — ij. I 

theu.after, fight who shall be king .. — ii. 2 
that dost never fight but when her .. — iii. I 
like a dog that is compelled to fight . . — i\ . I 

the french fight coldly, and retire — v. 3 

if 1 bo traitor, or unjustly fight! Riclmtd II. i. I 

Hereford, and fell Mowbray fight — i. 2 

and as I truly fight, defend nie heaven — i. 3 

so be thy fortune ill this royal fight! — i. 3 

do I with Jlowbray fight — i. 3 

as to jest, go! to fight — i. 3 

dares him to set forward to the fight — i. 3 

where one on his side fights — ii. "- 

fight with Glendower and his complices — iii. 1 

theii,if angels fight, weak men — iii. 2 

fight against yourself: fear (rep.) — iii. 2 

let's fight with gentle words — iii. 3 

impressed and engaged to fight I Henry IV. i. I 

to fiiflit nL-'iiinstthe in'cgular andwild — i. 1 

if lu' liL'lit longer than he sees reason — i. 2 

when the fiulit was done — i. 3 

that he did lead to fight against — i. 3 

currents of a heady tight — ii. 3 

and then say it was in fight? — ii. 4 

make you believe it was done in fight — ii. 4 
to fight against me under Percy's — — iii. 2 

we'll fight with him to-night — iv. 3 

try fortune with liim in a single fight — v. 1 

challenged you to single fight — v. 2 

to fight with Glendower — v. ."> 

and the shows of men to fight i Henry IV. i. I 

and they did fight wi-th queasiness . . — i. 1 

the very same day did I fight with one — iii. 2 

and true order of' the fight — iv. 4 

the arineyl hand doth fight abroad Henry V. i. 2 

I dare not fight, but I will wink — ii. 1 

faces it out, 'but fights not — iii. 2 

like wolves, and fight like devils — — iii. 7 
stomachs to eat, and none to fight .. — iii. 7 
I determine to light lustily forhim .. — iv. 1 

to make us fight cheerfully — iv. I 

and after figlit with them ? — iv. 2 

farewell. kindlord;fightvaliantlyto-day — iv. 3 
which hath no stomach to this light.. — iv. 3 

might fight this battle out! — iv. ". 

if they will fight with us — iv. 7 

of ono that I should fight withal — iv, 7 



FIG 



FIGHT— I'll fight fiir France 1 Henry VI. i. 

if thou be slack, I'll fidit it out — i. 

int'orni you of a d i smal light — i. 

more than three hours the fight contimied — i. 

fight till the last gasp : — i. 

I'll confirm; we'll fight it out — i. 

I niyseirii;_'l>; lint once in forty years — i. 

eitlur ioiie« tiir tight, or tear — i. 

when till' li-;lit lir_'ini, roused on the.. — ii. 

set this un.K'L-nstoaied fight aside — iii. 

and cliildron,:ill will figlit — iii. 

like soldiers, come and tiirht it out?.. — iii. 
this dissen.dnn first he tried by tight — iv. 

strong enough to issue out and fight — iv. 

colours in tl'iis dangerous fight'. — iv. 

with iiis power, to fight with Talbot — iv. 

York set him on to Aght — iv. 

to figlit I will, but not to fly — iv. 

my followers here, to fight, and die'/ — i\'. 

arid victory I fight, soldiers, tight 

the maidcnliood of thv tirst tight 

if thou wilt tight, tight by thy 

left rae proudly, as unworthy fight . . 

alas, ray lord, 1 cannot fight *2 

to fight a blow (rep.) 

your highness to beliold the fight .... 

or moreafraid to fight 

fight for credit of the prentices 

tliose which we have lost in figlit — 

fight for your king, your country 

come then, let's po tight with them . 



[ 258 ] 



FIL 



— IV. 6 



ii.3 



ii.3 
iv. 1 
iv. 5 

iv. 6 
iv. ID 



iv. 7 



my foot shall tigTit with all the strength — 

hew up rocks, ami tiglit mth fiiut — 

to-tight aaaiust that monstrous rebel — v. 1 

come forth and fight with me — v. 2 

you'll nor fight, nor flv — v. 2 

let's fight itout, and not stand iHcnryf'I. i. I 

vows to fight' in thy defence — i. 1 

courage, father ! fight it out ! — i. 4 

so cowards fight, when they can — i. 1 

thev had no heart to fight — ii. 1 

mailing another head to fight araiu — ii. 1 

be it with resolution then to fight — ii. 2 

hearteu those that fight in your defence — ii. 2 

lords, give signal to the fight — ii. 2 

hand to hancl I slew in fight — ii. 5 

and let them fight that will — ii. 5 

fight closer, or good faith — iii. 2 

why should we fight, if you pretend 

I cliallenge him to single fight 

leave the town, and figlit — v. I 

march on to fight 'irith us — v. 3 

that will not fight for such a hope — v. 4 

ready to fightj therefore, be resolute — v. 4 

give signal to the fight — v. 4 

you fight in justice (rep.) — v. 4 

to fight on Edward's party Richard III. i. 3 

to fight in quarrel of the house — i. 4 

■Warwick, and did fight for me? .,,. — ii. 1 

prayers on the adverse party fight . . — iv. 4 

if not to fight with foreign enemies . . — iv. 4 

to fight against that bloody homicide — v. I 

of butchered princes fight m thy behalf — v. 3 

good angels, fight on Richmond's side — v. 3 

our good cause, fight upon our side . . — v. 3 

those, whom we tight against — v. 3 

then, if you fight against God's enemy — v. 3 

if you do fight against yoxir country's — v, 3 

fight, gentlemen of England (rep.) .. — v. 3 

all on foot he fights — v. 4 

as fool and fight is Henry Vlll. (prol.) 

as fights and fireworks — i. 3 

and fight for bitten apples — v. 3 

I cannot fight upon tlus argument. Tcoi'^.i^- Cress, i. I 

fight, uncle? Helenus? (lep.) — i. 2 

the sort to fight with Hector — i.3 

for whom he comes to fight — ii. 1 

to fight for and maintain I — ii. 2 

well may we fight for her — ii. 2 

you must prepare to fight without ,. — ii.3 

discipUued thy arms to fight — ii. 3 

nay, you shall fight your hearts out — iii. 2 

virtuous fight, when right with — iii. 2 

I'll fight no more 'gainst Troy — iii. 3 

shall Ajax fight with Hector — iii. 3 

he must fight singly to-morrow — iii. 3 

the order of their fight, so be it — iv. ,') 

not warm yet, let us fight again — iv. 5 

I'd fight with thee to-morrow — iv. 5 

a fight of this strange natm-e — v. 2 

unarm, and do not fight to-day — v. 3 

meanest thou to fight to-day? — v. 3 

I would not have you fight to-day . . — v. 3 

we'll forth, and fight — v. 3 

now here he fights on Galathe — v. 5 

I'll fight with liim alone — v. 6 

tiu-n, slave, and fight — v. 8 

if the son of a whore fight for a whore — v. 8 
andslain in fight many of your, r/mon ofAlhens,\\i. o 
one crutch; and fight with the other. CorioZan us, i. i 

and fight mth hearts more proof .,.. — i. 4 

ere yet the fight be done, pack up — i. a 

too violent for a second course of fight — i. 5 

thus I will appear, and fight — i. 5 

the business in some other fight — i. 6 

I'll fight with none but thee — i. 8 

alone Marcius did fight within Corioli — ii. i 

saw him fight, when with his — ii. 2 

for I will light against ray — iy.t> 

fights dragon-like, and does achieve.. — iv. 7 

but then I'll fight — v. 3 

fierce fiery warriors fight upon ths. Julius Ccesar, ii. 2 

a creature that I teach to fight — iv. 1 

if you dare fight today — v. 1 

we shall try fortune in a second fight — v. 3 

in the scufflesof great fights hath Ant.^-Cleo. i. 1 

and to fight, I shoidd — ii. 2 

and we shall talk before we fight .... — ii. o 

I have seen t'nee fight, when 1 have.. — ii. c 

we came hither to fight with you .... — ii. li 



FIGHT— we will fight with hira...-lH^0H,v,5- Cteo. iiy 7 
my lord dared him to single fight.... — iii. 7 
I'll fight lit sea. I have sixty Sails . , — iii. 7 

noble cin[iL'ror, do not fight hy sea — iii. 7 
how appears the ti^'llt? ononr side .. — iii. S 
i'tlie midst o' tlio tight, whon vantage — iii. 8 

leaviii- tlie li'-:lit in lieiiiht — iii. 8 

brenl!ic>l.an,t i;;;ht maiieiouslv — iii. 11 

tlie next liiMc id., tiixlit — iii.U 

it eiiis tlie sword it tiglits witli — iii.U 

the last of many battles we mean to fight — iv. 1 
he will not figlit with me, Doiuitius.. — iv. 2 

by sea and laud I'll fight — iv. 2 

woo't thou fi"ht well? I'll strike .... — iv. 2 
you, that will figlit, follow me close . . — iv. 4 
determine this great war in single fight I — iv. 4 

to make rae figlit at land! — Iv. 5 

and begin the tight; our will is — iv. 6 

1 tight against tliee! No: I will .... — iv. 6 
I would they'd tight i'tlie fire (rep.).. — iv. 10 
like the Parthian, I shall flying fight. Cymie/i'iie, i. 7 
and to fight against my lady's Kingdom — v. 1 
so I'll fight against the part I come with — v. 1 
stand, stand, and fight! Away, boy.. — v. 2 

fight I will no more, but yield — v. 3 

and, Komans, fight for freedom Titus Andron. i. 1 

successful in the battles that he fights — i. 2 
01 if to fight for king and common weal — i. 2 
ripe for marriage figlit [ Coi.-sight]. Pericles, iv.(Gow. ) 

to fight, when I cannot choose Lear, i. 4 

before you tight the battle — v. 1 

he tights as you sing prick-song. Komeo fy Juliet, ii. 4 
a villain that tights by the book .... — iii. 1 

Olord! theytiglit: I will go call — v. 3 

fight for a plot whereon the members . . Hamlet, iv. 4 
why, I will fight with him upon tliis — v. 1 

woul't fight? woul't fast? — v. 1 

were it my cue to fight, I should have . . Olhello, i. 2 

FIGHTEli— been a great fighter . . Merry IVires. ii.3 

I am no fighter Twel/lh Night, iii. 4 

confess to you, sir, I am no fighter.. Winter's T. iv. 2 
fits a dull tighter, and a keen guest. , 1 Henry IV. iv. 2 

FIGHTEST— fightest with the sword. . 1 Henry VI. i. 2 
thou tightest against thy countrymen — iii. 3 
'tis for a crown thou flglitest 2 Henry VI. v. 2 

FIGHTETH-he fighteth as one wearv.l Henri/ VI. i. 2 

FIGHTING- steaUng, fighting . . Winter's Tale, iii. 3 
have twelve thousand fighting men. Ricliard II. iii. 2 
leave fighting 0' days and foiuing . .'IHenry IV. ii. 4 

of fighting men they have full Henry V. iv. 3 

thrice up again, and fighting — iv. 6 

some among you have beheld me fighting. Coriot. iii. 1 

and fighting foot to foot .-tnlony^- Cteo. iii. 7 

hath his belly full of fighting Cymheline, ii. i 

close fighting ere I did api^iroach. .fio»;eo ^Juliii, i. 1 
step between her and her fighting sovX.. Hamlet, iii. 4 
there was a kind of fighting — v. 2 

FIG-LEAVES— and these fig-leaves.. v4n*. ffCleo. v. 2 

FIGO— and figo for thy friendship Henry V. iii. 6 

the figo for thee then! I thank you.. — iv. 1 

FIGUKE— bravely the figiu-e of tnis . . . . Tempest, iii. 3 
she wooes you by a figure . . Two Gen. 0/ Verona, ii. 1 

what figure? — ii. 1 

is as a figure trencli'd in ice — iii. 2 

by the figure, and such daubery ..Merry Wives, iv. 2 
if it be but to scrape the figures out . . — iv. 2 
what figure of us think you he ..J/eas./or ^/eas. i. 1 

and so great a figure be stamped — i. 1 

doing, in the figure of a Iamb Much Ado, i. 1 

to leave the figure, or disfigure it.Mid. N. Dream, i. 1 
and no eyes, figure unheedy haste. . . . — i. 1 

a most fine figure? Love's L.Losl, i. 2 

full of forms, figures,shapes,objeets.. — iv. 2 
what is the figure? what is the figure? — v. 1 
spruce affectation, figures pedantieal — v. 2 
that bears the figure of an angel., iv/er. 0/ Venice, ii. 7 

shaU see mine own figure As you Like it, iii. 2 

for it is a figure in rhetoric — v. 1 

that the great figure of a council .... All's yVell, iii. 1 
he wH! throw a figure in her face. . Taming o/Sh. i. 2 
resolveth from his figure 'gainst .... King John, v. 4 
shall the figure of God's majesty . . Richard II. iv. 1 
apprehends a world of figures here ..iHenrylV. i. 3 

we see the figure of the house 2HenryIV. i. 3 

and in figures, using the names — i.3 

whose white iuvestmentsfigure innocence — iv. 1 
since a crooked figure may attest ..Henri//', i. (cho.) 

for there is figures in all tnings — iv. 7 

I speak but in the figures — iv. 7 

the heaven figures some event SHenry VI. ii. 1 

poor kev-cold figure of a holy king!..-R/e/(arrfy//. i. 2 

whose ligure even this instant Henry VIII. i. 1 

unbodied figure of the thought . . Troilus ^ Cress, i. 3 

the baby figure of the giant mass — i. 3 

renders back his figure and his heat — iii. 3 
these penciled figures are even. . Timon of Athens, i. 1 

in thee the figures of their love — v. 2 

hath in every figure skiU — v. 4 

hast no figures, nor no fantasies ...JuliusCtPsar, ii. 1 
tongues, figures, scribes, bards ..Antony IfCleo. iii. 2 
arras, figures^ why, such, and s\ifih..,Cymbcline, ii. 2 

never saw I figures so likely to — ii. 4 

in as like a figure, strikes life — iii. 3 

take pieces for the figure's sake — v. 4 

descry a figure of truth, of faith."Penc/es, v. 3 (Gow.) 

now thou art an O without a figure Lear, i. 4 

no figure at such rate be set Romeo S,- Juliet, v. 3 

in the same figure, like the king Hamlet, i. 1 

that this portentous figure comes armed — i. 1 

a figure like your father — i. 2 

a foolish figure; but farewell it — ii. 2 

what would your gracious figure?. . . . — iii. 4 

figure of my heart in compliment Othello^ i. 1 

but (alas!) to make me a iixed figure — iv. 2 

FIGURED— figured quite o'er with. . . King John, v. 2 

my figured goblets for a dish Richard II. iii. 3 

'tis figured in my tongue Richard III. i. 2 

FIGURING-figuring diseases in me.Mra.jbrMea. i. 2 
all men's lives, figuring tire nature .2Hen7i//r. iii. 1 

FILBERD— to clustering fllberds Tempest, ii. 2 



; FILCH— earnest to have me filch it Ollielto, iii. 3 

! FILCHED-cunning hast thou ftlched.iV/t/. N. Dr.i. 1 
} FIl.CHES-hnt hcthnt filches from uw. Othello, iii. 3 

FlIA'llINd— liisiilrliiiv- was like . . Mei ri/ »f I'ties, i. 3 
arc sw.M-ii Ill-others in ti^-liinir Henry V. iii. 'i 

Fll.li-grcater tile ol tlie sulijcrt. . .Meas. for Meas. iii. 2 

Ipnt myself into thy file All's Well, iii. 3 

so that the muster file — iv. 3 

it is upon a file, with the duke's .... — iv. 3 
to instruct for the doubling of files .. — iv. 3 

if you have a station in the file Macbeth, iii. 1 

I have a file of all the gentry — v. 2 

grow ujion the file to five iHenrylV. i. 3 

lie makes up the file of all the Henry VIII. i. I 

but in that file where others tell — i. 2 

when suddenly a tile of boys — v. 3 

are his files as full as thy report?. . Timon ofAlh, v. 3 

the common file, ( a plague I Coriolanus, i. 6 

I mean of us o' the right-hand file? . . — ii. 1 

let him choose out of my files — v. 5 

the files and musters of the wai- ..Antony (fCleo, i. 1 

within our files there are — iv. 1 

(for thi'ee performers are the file Cymheline, v. 3 

she shall file our engines with .. Titus .indron. ii. 1 

FILED-more sharp than tiled steel. Twelfth Night,iii.3 

liis tongue filed, his eye Lovc'sL. Lost, v. 1 

I would have filed keys off Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

Banuuo's issue have t filed my mind. .lUaoie/A, iii. 1 
yet, tiled with my abilities Henry Vlll. iii. 2 

FILIAL— love, and filial tenderness. .2Hen)-y/r. iv. 4 
tilial ingratitude! is it not us this mouth .Lear, iii. 4 
bound in filial obligation for some term.HamW, 1. 2 

FILIUS— tilius noster llcnrieus Henry V. v. 2 

FILL- fill all thy bones wdth aches .... Tempest, i. 2 

we'll fill him by and by again — ii. 2 

he'll fill our skins with pinches — iv. 1 

shortly fill the reasonable shores .... — v. 1 

my sails must fill — (epil.) 

a mean to fill your song Tieo Gen.ofVer. i, 2 

I am able to fill it with — ii.3 

that one error fills him with faults . . — v. 4 
in his eminence that fills it up . . Meas. for Meas. i. 3 

I dare not for my head fill my — iv. 3 

many inches do fill up one Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

fill up your grace's request. .l/er. of Ven. iv. 1 (letter) 
only in the world I fiU up a place.. .Js yuuLike it, i. 2 

I fill a place, I know't All's Well, i. 2 

delivers me to fill the time — ill. 7 

mum ! and gaze yom' fill Taming of .Shrew, i. 1 

thought to till his grave in Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

come; I'll fill your grave up — v. 3 

and fill me. from the crown to Macbeth, i. 5 

as will fill up the time — iii. 1 

give me some wine, fiU full — iii. 4 

could net fill up the cistern — iv. 3 

foisons to fill up your will — iv. 3 

if not fill up the measure of KijigJolin, ii. 2 

frief fills the room up of my — iii. 4 
'11 fill these dogged spies with — iv. 1 

and fill up her enemies' ranks — v. 2 

by so much fills their hearts Richard II. ii. 2 

and fill another room in hell ^ v. 5 

or fill up clii-ouicles in 1 Henry IV. i.3 

he doth fill fields with harness — iii. 2 

to fill the mouth of deep defiance .... — iii. 2 
to Coventry; fill rae a bottle of sack.. — iv. 2 
such have I, to fill up the rooms of . . — Iv. 2 
they'll fill a pit, as well as better .... — iv. 2 
changes fill the cup of alteration . .iHenrylV. iii. 1 

to fill up the muster book — iii. 2 

fill the cup, and let it come — v. 3 (song) 

to fill king Edward's fame Henry V. i. 2 

he fills with treacherous crowns. . — ii. (chorus) 

fills the mde vessel of the — iv. (chorus) 

here, uncle Exeter, fill this glove .... — iv. 8 

whose glory fills the world 1 Henry VI. ii. 2 

to fill the world with vicious — v. 4 

cries do fill the empty air '2 Henry VI. v. 2 

or I will fill the house with illeniyVI. i. I 

till they have flowed their fill — ii. 5 

hence, where I may weep my fill — ii. 5 

cause as fills mine eyes with tears. ... — iii. 3 

mine, such as fill my heart — iii. 3 

to fill the world with words — iii. 3 

that fill his ears with such Richard III. i. 3 

it fills one full of obstacles — i. 4 

only to fill the scene — iv. 4 

fill me a bowl of wine — v. 3 

now fills thy sleep with perturbations — v. 3 
that fill the court with quarrels .... Henry VIII. i. 3 

and he till up one monument! — ii. 1 

I will fill them with prophetic . . Troilus ^- Cress, ii. 2 

we'll put j'ou i' the fills — iii. 2 

behold thy fill. Nay, I have — iv. 5 

thou hast thy fill of blood aud death — v. 9 
his lobbies fill with tendance . . Timon of Athens, i. 1 

ay, to see meat flU knaves — i. ! 

fill me some wine ' — iii. 1 

pass by, and curse thy fill. . — v. 5 (epitaph) 
did but fill Ithaca full of moths .... Coriolanus, 1. 3 
ransoms did the general coffers fill Junius C<Esar, iii. 2 
fill, Lucius, till the wine o'er-swell . . — iv. 3 
thou shouldst fill with sorrowful. ...4n(on!/ SfCleo. i. 3 

if he fill his vacancy with — i. 4 

fill, till the cup be hid — ii. 7 

lie will fill thy wishes to the — iii. 1 1 

fill our bowls; once more let's mock . . — iii. 1 1 
should fill the bores of hearing .... Cymbeline, iii. 2 
aud fill his aged ear with golden. Titus Andron. iv. 4 
be poor, 'twitl fill your stomachs — — v. 3 

he'll fill this land with arras Pericles, i. 2 

you do love, fill to your mistress' lips — ii. 3 

let liim demiHid his fill Hamlet, iv. 5 

fill thy purse with money Othello, i. 3 

but one that fills up the cry — ii. 3 

he fills it up with great ability — iii. 3 

FILLED— all supplied and filled ..Twelfth Night, i. 1 

rather than filled with me — iii. 1 

morris is filled up with mud Mid. N. Dream, ii. 2 

should be filled with all graces . . As you Like it, iii. 2 



FIL 



[ -259 ] 



rri,LED—aj<ain would bi'flllcil up.. Jrin/rr'fro/*, i. 2 
nioitt liumuiie, nnd lillcd with livniimr — Hi. S 
s.< lilk'il.aiiil sn Ini'iiiiiin);; iu jiun.'.. — Ml. 3 

it is all fllliil Mpwitli L-ms \Hrnrvli: iii. .1 

his li»[irs lillcil u]. with riots HnuiyV. \. 1 

|.ri.p.Mli..iis,.rilifVmTUrotilk'il — ii. ■! 

wU.>. with 11 Ih.ilv lillL'il.iiiiil vm:iillt.. — iv. 1 

Ii.ni-IIIUM Ihrii'puckct.sl'ull \lIpor\i VI. iii. 1 

roi.rls W iniiM Milh \n\ r,'|)n.urh. . illenryyi. iii. i 
arc liUiil up »ilh uxtortc.l K'nld? .... — iv. 7 
u.-nil, tllli-a with 11 IVi'tlinjjgust ....!> Henry VI. ii. U 

tin pliiic 18 lillf.l, tli\ fccptre — iii. 1 

inv hrows. iimv lilk'il' with blood .... — v. 2 

tilled it « itii iMirsin^j cries Ilkhard III. i. 2 

Imvc v.uir inmith lillcil up, before Henry VIII. ii. 3 

»lid lillcd the time with limon of Athens, v . 'o 

\kmU tilled, nnd ridges horsed with..rorio/aHK», ii. 1 
tlint ttdt biitl) tilled luid running .. ..Cynibelinr, i, 7 

snila ore tilled I'ericles, v. 2 {(iowcr) 

ere the next imttle can be tilled Olhclln, ii. 3 

l-'II.I-KT— fillet ot'ttfennv 8nn!<c Mm-livlh, iv. I 

FII,I,IN'(!-lilliii^Mil).ittlewith..j>frai.fti;i/«i», iii. 2 
l.v lliruii- the micd<.tli empty . . . .Asyou Ukeil.v. I 
tiliiuf; their hciirers with strange . . . . .Vac(.c(/i, iii. 1 
two Imckcts tilling; line another ....nichard II. iv. I 

in nilini; the wli.iK reulin Hrnry VIll. v. 'I 

the one is llllin/ still Timttn of .Mhem,\s . 3 

hut. tilling the air with swords Corinlunia, i. Ii 

lillini; tile UL'cd wrinl<les in.. Tilui Andronicus, iii. 1 

Fll.l-Il'-il 1(1... tillip me illniry IV. i. 2 

Jon tillip me o' the liciid Troilua ^ Crewda, iv. 5 

on the himgrv heiK h tillip the stars.. Conn/djim, V. 3 

FIM-Y-in llWcncssot'iitiilyfoalW/d.A'.flrram.ii. 1 

FlI,M-the lushiiflilm Homeo ^Jnliel.i. t 

it will hut sl<in nnd lilm the ulcerous. .H«iii/c/, iii. 1 

FIjyril-tilth as thou art Temprsl, i. 2 

his tilth within Ijeing cast Measure for Measure, iii. 1 
wlio.sc lilth nnd dirt troubles the..' 2licHrj/ VI, iv. 1 

the fllth and scum of Kent — iv. 2 

clean of Mioh filth as thou art — iv.7 

to general filths convert Timon of Athens, iv. 1 

ill oiM- own filtli dro|i our .Antony ij- Cleopatra, iii. 11 

c.nnmon sewers, of til th I'ericles, iv. 6 

my face I'll grime with tilth imr, ii. 3 

tilths savour hut themselves — iv. 2 

Filth, thou liest. By heaven, I do not ..Othello, v. 2 

IMI.TJIY— i' the filthy mantled pool ..Tempest, iv. 1 
ha! fie these filthy vices!.. A/rasurc/or il/<?a«u)p,ii. 4 
clothe a hack, from such a fllthv vice — iii. 2 
old. tillhy, scurvy lord! well, I mmt..All'slVell, ii. 3 
a filthy officer he is in those suggestions — iii. .5 
lie, fie! "tis lewd and filthy ..Turning of Shreu; iv. 3 

through the fog and filthy air Macbeth, i. 1 

wash this filthy witness from — ii. 2 

like the former; filthy hags! — iv. 1 

and siuig to filtliy tunes I Henry IV. ii. 2 

dowlas, nlthy dowlas; I have given — iii. 3 

you filthj' bung, away! iHenrylV. ii. 4 

you filthy famished correctionerl.... — v. 4 
the filthy and contagious clouds .... Henry V. iii. 3 
knave; a very filthy rogue . . Troilus <$- Cressida, v. 4 
yet he's but a filthy iiiece of work . Timon of Ath. i. 1 

faith, for the worst is filthy — i. 2 

filthy worsted-stocking knave Lear, ii. 2 

filthy traitor! unmercifid lady — iii. 7 

the slime that sticks on filthy deeds Othello, v. 2 

she was too fond of her most filthy bargain — v. 2 

FII.Z— notre trcs cher fllz Henry roy.. . . Henry V. v. 2 

FIN— and his fins like arms! Tempest, ii. 2 

no feathers, and fish have no fine. Comerfyo/iiVr. iii. 1 

for a fish without a fin — iii. I 

la fin couronne les ujuvres 2Henry VI. v. 2 

swims with fins of lead Coriolanus, i. 1 

FINALI.Y— lastly, and finally Merrf/ Wives, i. 1 

FINCII-the finch, the sparrow.A/Zrf.A'. Dr. iii. I (song) 

out, gall! Finch egg! Trnilus^Cressida,v. \ 

FI^'I>— 1 find niv zenith doth depend .... rcmpcsf, i. 2 

what torment 1 did find thee in — i. 2 

and strnys about to find them — i. 2 

1 find they arc inclined to do so — ii. I 

I find not myself disposed to sleep — ii. I 

I could find in my heart — ii. 2 

whom thus we stray to find — iii. 3 

you should find many — iii. 3 

"which now we find, each nuttcr-out.... — iii. 3 
for thou slmlt find she will outstrip .... — iv 

there sluilt thou find the mariners — v 

did C'lurilicl her husband find at Tunis — v 
where shoiilil they find this grand liquor — v 

thus find I by tlieir loss TwoGen. of Verona, ii 

thereby to find that which — iii 

himwegotofind iii 

go sirrah, find him out — iii 

and find my dog again — iv 

where thou shalt find me — iv 

sir, I find her milder than — v 

the lesser blot, modesty finds — v 

fir, you shall find me reasonable... A/frri/H'i no, i 

and find nnyl)<)dv in the house — i 

ah me! he'll find the young man there — i 

you .shrill find it a great charge — i 

well. I will find you twenty — ii 

1 will find out this ii 

if I do find it, well — ii 

if I find lier honest — ji 

there I shall find Falstaff _ iii _ 

and you shall one day find it — iii. 3 

search, seek, find out — iii. 3 

I cannot find him — iii. 3 

and as I find her, so am I aflTccted-... — iii. 4 
search for voii, and could not find you? — iii. .^ 

I shall find you anon — iv. 2 

if you find man there — iv. 2 

if I find not what I seek — iv. 2 

if they can find in their hearts — iv. 2 

and wlicre you find a maid — v. 5 

your denial I would find no sense. Twelfth Sight, i. b 

and fear to fiml mine eye too — i. 5 

if not, lie it his that finds It — ii. 2 

will my rvvcngc find notable cause... — ii. 3 



iii. 4 
iii. 4 
iv. 3 



_ ii. I 



FIND— shall find himself feelingly. rmcf/VA Nighl, ii. a i 

where he shall find the letter — ii. 3 

re'er find iii\gnivc — ii. 4 (song) 

whcicsliiill I llud vou? — iii. 2 

and vou linii so iiiiiclibloixl — iii. 2 

you 'slionl.l lind better dealing — iii. 3 

lie will liiiil it ( ics from acTodixile — iii- 4 

you'll llii.l it otlierwise — iii. 4 

ns you lur liki; to find him — 

unci lie tinds thiit now scarce to be.. .. — 

Ic.Mild not liiid him at the — 

the jewel tliut «c llud Measure for Measure, ii. 1 

IioImul;, you'll liiicl good cause..., 
let me ii'.t (liid j ou hefore me... 
to find I ( W. A'<:^-lliie] the faults 

I Hud, I seek to die (r^fl.) — iii. I 

in corporal sutt'eruiice nuils a pang . . — iii. 1 

know how you find Claudioprejiared — iii. 2 

you on your knowledge find this way? — iv. 1 

for I do find, your hangman — iv. 2 

3'ou shall find me yare — iv. 2 

where vou shall find, within these .. — iv. 2 

now sir, how do you find the prisoner? — iv. 3 

you sliiil I liiid vonr safety manifested — iv. 3 

which .\ on shall find by every syllable — iv. 3 

to lind this iiractice out — v. 1 

to liiid out this abuse — v. 1 

we shall Hull this friar to be — v. 1 

I find all upl leuiission in myself .... — v. 1 

1 tinil here, that I>in Pedro Much Ado, i. 1 

anil I would I could find in my heart — i. I 

you sliall hud her the infernal — ii. 1 

go then, tiud me a meet hour — ii. 2 

tliere slinlt thou find my cousin Beatrice — iii. I 

I could liiid in my heart to bestow it — iii. .^ 

but tiiey shall liuil, awaked in such.. — iv. 1 

then we find the virtue, that possession — iv. I 

sliall I not find a woodcock too? .... — v. 1 

I can find out no rhyme to lady .... — v. 2 

his conscience, find no impediment . . — v. 2 
belt so, Ijysander; find vou out a bed. A//d. A'. Dr. ii. 3 
[KhI.] hut Athe 

■■ ■ find iiiiluediately 
cfi Mil out moonshine 
look thou Hud .... 



death, or you, I' I 
find out moonshi 
ilelenaof Atheii 
I'll tiiiil Demetri 



! this 



iii. 2 
iv. 1 



.fiii.lout tlu-ti 

(lespatch, i say, and find the forester — iv. 1 

unless you can find mmt in their — v. 1 

antl finds his trusty Thishy's mantle — v. I 

and findsher lover? siiewillfindliim — v. 1 

80, ere you find where light in Lovers L. Lost, i. I 

you find not the apo.strophcB — iv. 2 

'gan passage find; that the lover — iv. 3 (.verses) 

but I abeam do find in each — iv. 3 

I'll find a fairer face not — iv. 3 

lose our oaths, to find ourselves — iv. 3 

more light to find your meaning out — v. 2 

and I shall find you empty of that ,. — v. 2 
seek all day ere you find thcm.A/crc/i. of Venice, i. 1 

to find the other forth — i. 1 

or to find both, or bring your — i. 1 

fast bind, fast find; a proverb — ii. 5 

justice! find the girl 1 she hath — ii. 8 

let us go, and find him out — ii. 8 

a pause for that which you find there? — ii. a 

hear of her, but cannot find iier — iij. 1 

and so much to find the thief — iii. 1 

if vou do love me, you will find me out — iii. 2 

wliat find I here? fair Portia's — iii. 2 

60 let me find thee still — iii- 4 

he tluds the joys of heaven here on .. — iii. 5 

I cannot find it; 'tis not in the bond — iv. I 

and find it out by proclamation — iv. 1 

there you shall find, that Portia .... — v. 1 

there you shall find, three of your .. — v. 1 

which thou shalt find I will As you Like it, i. 1 

but I did find him still mine — i. 2 

finds tongues in trees, books in — ii. I 

I'll make him find him: do this .... - ii. 2 

I could find in mv lieart to disgrace — ii- 4 

little recks to find the way to heaven — ii. 4 

for I can nowhere find him like — ii. 7 

I go to find my fawn — ii- 7 

go find him out, and we will — ii- 7 

look to it; find out thy brother — iii. 1 

sweetest rose will find, must find — iii. 2 (verses) 

now I find thy saw of might — iii. 5 

I'll go find a shiulow, and sigh till .. — iv. 1 

we shall find a time, Audrey — v. I 

how did you fi nd the quarrel — v. 4 

you shall find of the king a husband.. iltt'jircU, i. 1 

and finds no other advantage in tlie.. — i. 1 

wliich men full true shall find .... — i. 3 (song) 

we'd find no fault with the tythe — i. 3 

t() as much love as she finds — i. 3 

and find your salt tears' head — i. 3 

that seeks not to find that her search — i. 3 

and find your grace in health — ii. I 

the bravest nuestant shrinks, find what — ii. I 

you shall find in the regiment — ii. 1 

in your bed find fairer fortune — ii. 3 

I liiiil. that she, wliich late was — ii. 3 

thou sliall liiid what it is to be proud — ii. 3 

did you tliid iiic in yourself (rep.).... — ii. 4 

much fool mav you find in you — ii. 1 

I cannot yet rind in my heart to .... — ii. 5 

find you that there? — iii. 2 

if your lordship find him not — iii. B 

what a sprat you shall find him .... — iii. 6 

I find, my tongue is too fool-hardy .. — iv. 1 

devours up all the fry it finds — iv. 3 

if you could find out a country wdicrc — iv. 3 

and you shall find yourself to be .... — v. 1 

find him, and bring him hither — v. 3 

wheredid you find it then? — v. 3 

ns vou find your stomach serves . . Taming ofSh. i. 1 

till I can find wcasion of revenge.... — ii. 1 

I sneak but as I find: whence — ii. I 

if tlie fool could find it where it lies. . — ii. I 



FIN 



FIND— I find you passing gentle. Tarn. o/.SAriic, ii. 

nnd now I find report a very liar .... — ii. 

if once I find thee ranging,lIortcnsio — iii. 

and that llic).'iil shulMlnd — iii. 

the luouile^t of you all shall find.... — iv. 

fault I'll Hud iiliout the making .... — iv. 

me slinl I you find most ready... — iv. 

beyond commisHion; and I find ii,.H'inter'sTale, i. 

tlie wolf will sooner find, than the .. — iii. 

the crown will find an heir — v. 

to find thee an honourable husband — v. 
hopeless to find, vet loath to leave. romeriyo/'/irr. i. 

falling there to And Ids fellow forth — i- 

so I, to Hnd a mother, and a brother — 1. 

1 could liiid out countries in her .... — iii. 

but I could Hnd no whiteness in .... — iii. 

the fellow lluds his vein — iv. 

1 could find in my heart to stay .... — iv. 

and thou shalt find me just — v. 

there's no art, to find the mind's Macbeth, i. 

do you find yoiu" jiatiencc so — iii, 

if it find heaven, must find it out — iii. 

they should find what 'twere to kill ., — iii. 

suen as thou may'st find him — iv. 

as I shall find the time to _ iv. 

where I did Hnd my doubts _ iv. 

long, that never finds the day — iv. 

of my land, find her disease — v- 

do we hut find the tyrants — v. 

let me find him. fortune! — v. 

and finds him perfect Richard KingJohn,\. 

where should he find it fairer — ii. 

fintl liable to our crowi — ii. 

and in her eye I find a wonder — ii. 

that I can find should merit — ii. 

so we could find some pattern of .. .. — iii. 

shall flud but bloody safcU' — iii. 

the boy, which you shall find with .. — iv. 

and find the inheritance of this poor — iv. 

1 find the people strangely — iv. 

I'll find a thousand shifts to get .... — iv. 

and find no check? let us, my liege .. — v. 

to find this danger out {rep. ) — v. 

of night, t^) find you out — v- 

fiiids brotherhood in thee no liich'ird II. i. 

which finds it an enforced pilgrimage — i. 

yom' lord's departure, finds shapes . , — ii. 

and I must find tiiat title in — ii. 

to find out right with WTong — ii. 

to London, and you'll find it so — iii. 

there shouldst thou find one heinous — iv. 

I find myself a traitor with — iv. 

they find a kind of ease — v. 

with care, find we a time for IHenrylV. i. 

you shall Hnd me in Eastcheap — i. 

but I will find him when he lies .... — i. 

there thou shalt find him; farewell.. — ii. 

I could find in my heart — ii. 

starting-hole, canst thou now find out — ii. 

find pardon on my true submission. . — iii. 

you shall not find it so; and God .... — iii. 

thou shalt find me tractable — iii. 

where shall I find one that can steal — iii. 

want, seems more than we shall find it — iv. 

they'll find linen enough on every .. — iv. 

the which we find too indirect for. ... — iv. 

and find a time to punish this ofi'cnce — v. 

and thou shalt find a king that will.. — v. 

nay, you shall find no boy's play here — v. 

thus ever did rebellion find rebuke . . — v. 
about it; you know where to find tnc.'lHennjW. i. 

if we find outweighs ability — i. 

and howl'st to find it. What trust is — i- 

and find me worse provided — ii. 

if thou canst find out Sneak's noise.. — ii. 

should i:ot find a ground to root upon — iii. 

and find our griefs heavier than .... — iv. 

good from bad find no partition — iv. 

find him, mj' lord of Warwick — iv. 

be assured what grace to find — v. 

{_Co(. A'71^] to fintl his title with some ..Henry V.i. 

and you shall find, his vanities — ii. 

when you find him evenlv derived . . — ii. 

be assured, you'll find a ditt'erence .. — ii. 

if I find a hole in his coat — iii. 

then we sliall find to-morrow — iii. 

you shall find, I warrant you — iv. 

you shall find the ceremoniesof the wars — iv. 

I am a king, that find thee — iv. 

seek through your camp to find you — iv. 

no doubt, find native graves — iv. 

yon shall find; in the comiiarisons .. — iv. 

that shall find himself aggriefed .... — iv. 

you find it otherwise; and, henceforth — v. 

wouldst find me such a plain king .. — v. 

shalt find the best king of good fellows — v. 
and thou shalt find that 1 exceed.. --I Henry 17. i. 

thou shult find me at the governor's — i. 

I find, thou art no less than fame. . .. — ii. 

any purblind eye may find it out.... — ii. 

well, I'll find friends to wear iny — i|. 

ay, thou shnlt find us ready — ii. 

shouldst find thou hast dishonoured me — iii. 

and that we find the slothful watch-. — iii. 

and they shall find dear deer — iv. 

my chaiicc to find thee out — v. 

we shall not Hnd like opportunity .. — v. 

with hope to llud the like event — v. 

yet I do Hud it so illenryVI. i. 

we must have vou find your legs — ii. 

shall find their rieaths, if York — ii. 

and find no harbour in a royal — iii. 

shade of death I shall find joy — iii. 

who finds the heifer dead — iii. 

wlio finds the partridge in the — iii- 

an Iris that shall find thee out — iii. 

unless I find him guilty — iv. 

find a harbour in tlie earth? (rrp.) .. — v 
such safely finds the trembling \a,m\}.ZHenryVI. i. 

how to find the oi>cn air (ri'p.) — iii. 



FIN 



f IND— here find his friencis with . . . .SHenrij VI. iv. & 

he'll soon find means to make — iv. 7 

shalt find men well inclined — iv. 8 

to find us xmprovidcd — v- 4 

that, who finds Edward, shall — v. 5 

she fin !s, although I cannot Uiehard III. i. 2 

but I do find more pain in banishment — i. 3 

[Co/.Kii/.] to find the empty, vast, and — ..i. 4 

if thou dost find him tractable to us — iii- 1 

there shall you find us both — nj- ■ 

and hopes to find you forward upon — iii- 2 

and finds the testy gentleman so hot — iij- ■! 

you shall find me well accompanied — m. 5 

find in my self no pity to myself .... — v. 3 

may here find truth too Henry nil. (prol.) 

my" counsel, vou'll find it wholesome — ;• 1 

could not find his hour of speech — — i. ^ 

if he may find mercy in the law — i- 2 

should find a running banciuet ere . . — ]■ i 

thev should find easy penance — i- •! 

woidd have your grace find out — ;• 4 

instantlr will find employment — ii- 1 

besides, you'll find a most unfit — u. 2 

I find him a fit fellow — .;!■ 2 

your graces find me here part of — — in- 1 

since virtue finds no friends — iii. 1 

madam, you'U find it so — iii- I 

which I find at such proud rate — ih- 2 

till I find more than will, or words. . — iii- 2 

in time will find their fit rewards — — iii- 2 

Cranraer will find a friend will not. . — iv. 1 

that it may find good time — v. 1 

the king may never find a heart .... — v. 2 

I shall both find your lordship — v. 2 

yet should find respect for what — — v. 2 

of my council, but I find none • — v. 2 

and find a way out to let the troop ^rep.) — v. 3 

for they '1 1 finii them truth — v. 4 

and ye shall find me thankful — v. 1 

like, or find fault Troilus <5- Cressida (prol.) 

that find such cruel battle here — j- 1 

to find persistive constancy — i. 3 

and find the welcome of a noble — — i. 3 

find Hector's purpose pointing — i. 3 

could you not find out that by her . . — iii. 1 

finds safer footing than blind — iii. 2 

find out something not worth — iii. 3 

finds bottom in the uncomprehensive — iii. 3 

vou did not find me here — iv. 2 

if I might in entreaties find success.. — iv. 5 

shall find him by his large — iv. 5 

this fault in us 1 find, the error — v. 2 

and you shall find, I like it .... Timon of Athens, i. 1 

but find supply immediate — ii. 1 

deep enough, and yet find little — iii. 4 

where he shall find the unkindest .. — iv. 1 

men daily find it such — iv. 3 

thou shalt find— A fool in thee — iv. 3 

where my stomach finds meat — iv. 3 

find that thou want'st by fi'ee — v. 1 

thus you still shall find him — v. 2 

you shall find, no public benefit Corioiamis, i. 1 

where he should find you lions, finds . — i. l 

you'U find they have not prepared . . — i. '2 

where he was like to find fame — i. 3 

can a treaty find i' the part that is . . — i. 1 

where I find him, were it at home .. — i. 10 

when I find the ass in compound — ii. 1 

we hope to find you our friend — ii. 3 

when it shall find the harm of — iii. 1 

which finds not, till it feels — iii. 3 

the Volscian state, to find you out there — iv. 3 

look pale before you find it other ... . — iv. ti 

and his, find something in him — iv. li 

we must find an evident calamity .. — v. .3 

that shall our poor city find — v. 4 

we must proceed, as we do find the people — v. .j 
if you do find them decked with ..JuliusCcesar, i. 1 

to find oui-selves dishonourable graves — i. 2 

and find a time both meet to hear.... — i. 2 

you shall find that heaven hath — i. 3 

to find out you: who's that? — i. 3 

where Brutus may but find it — i. 3 

to Pompey's porch, where you shall find — i. 3 

we shall find of him a shrewd — ii . 1 

they could not find a heart within — _i i . 2 

1 shall not find myself so apt — iii. 1 

what, shall I find you here ? — iv. 1 

but I do find it cowardly and vile — v. 1 

Cassi us' sword, and find Titinius' heart — v. 3 

I shall find time, Cassius (rep.) — v. 3 

when you do find him, or alive or dead — v. 4 
then must thou needs find out. . . .Antony ^ Cleo. i. 1 

find me to marry me with — i. 2 

if you find him sad, say, I am — 1.3 

you shall find there a man — i. 4 

so find we profit, by losing of — ii. I 

and did find her welcome friendly .. — ii. 6 

but you shall find, the band — ii. 6 

shall never find it more — ii- 7 

you shall not find, though you be — iii. 2 

I find thee most fit for business — iii. 3 

should I find them so saucy with the — iii. 1 1 

he never find more cause — iv. 5 

what she says, and how you find of her — v. 1 

and you shall find a conqueror — v. 2 

further than you shall find cause — v. 2 

you shall find a benefit in — v. 2 

you shall not find me, daughter Cymheline, i. 2 

"and shall find it so — i. 7 

when you shall find you need it not. . — ii. 4 

could I find out the woman's part — ii. 5 

so Ccesar shall not find them — iii. 1 

you shall find us in our salt-water girdle — iii. 1 

shall we find the sharded beetle — iii. 3 

and you shall find me wretched man — iii. 4 

shait hereafter find it is no act — iii. 4 

or rip thy heart to find it — iii..') 

and find not her whom thou pursuest — iii. 'i 

sloth finds the down pillow hard .... — iii. 6 



[ 260 ] 

FIND — cannot find those runagates . . CymSklme, iv. 2 

find the ooze, to show what coast thy — iv. 2 

seem to those which chance to find us — iv. 2 

let us find out the prettiest daisied plot — iv. 2 

wars shall find I love my country.... — iv. 3 

what pleasure, sir, find we in life ... . — iv. 4 

who find in my exile the want — iv. 4 

coidd not find death, where I did .... — v. 3 

well, I will find him; for, being now — v. 3 

sograze, as youfindj)astnre — v. 4 

wake, and find nothing (rep.) — v. 4 

without seeking find (rep. v. .^.) — v. 4 (scroll) 

he shall be happy that can find him.. — v. 5 

than I did truly find her, stakes .... — v. 5 
I'U find a day to massacre them all . . TilusAnd. i. 2 

till I find the stream to cool — ii. 1 

(^O could I Audit now!) the lion — ii. 3 

fetch the king to find them here — ii. 4 

to find thy brother Bassianus dead .. — ii. 4 

if you can find the huntsman out — ii. 4 

which way shall I find revenue's cave? — iii. 1 

what would she find? Lavinia — iv. 1 

that I may this treason find! — iv. 1 

you m.ay find [Co/.-catch] her in the sea — iv. 3 

and who should find them but the . . — iv. 3 

but I will find them out — v. 2 

and find out murderers in their — v. 2 

I'll find some cimning practice — v. 2 

to find another that is like to thee.... — v. 2 

and now I find it; therefore bind — y. 2 

whom if you find, and win unto return. Pe7'/c/e5,ii. 4 

with all thou canst find here — iii. 1 

who finds her, give her burying. . — iii. 2 (scroll) 

must find at Tharsus — iv. (Glower) 

and find our paragon to all reports .... — iv. 1 

how dost thou find the inclination .... — iv. 3 

yet I fmd, it greets me, as an — iv. 4 

I desire to find him so — iv. 6 

I doubt not but I shall find them — iv. B 

in my true heart, I find, she names Lear, i. 1 

and find, I am alone felicitate — i. 1 

losest here, a better where to find — i. 1 

I find it not fit for your overlooking — i. 2 

I begin to find an idle and fond.. .. — i. 2 (letter) 

as I shall find means, and acquaint — i. 2 

yet nature finds itself scourged — i. 2 

find out this villain, Edmund — i. 2 

shall find thee full of labours — i. 4 

let him be whipped that first finds it so .. — i. 4 

thou shalt find, that I'll resume — _i. 4 

that he, which finds him, shall — ii. 1 

and shall find time from this — ij. 2 

all's not offence, that indiscretion finds. . — ii. 4 

you shall find some that will thank — iii. I 

find out their enemies now — iii. 2 

If I find him comforting the Idng — iii..") 

shalt find a dearer father in my love — iii. 5 

villain, thou shalt find — iii. 7 

if you do find him, pray you, give — iv. 5 

as we shall find their merits and our — v. 3 

find those persons out (rep.) Homco Sr Juliet, i. 2 

and find delight writ there witli — i. 3 

find written m the margin of — i. 3 

dull earth, and find thy centre out . . — ii. 1 

any of my kinsmen'fiud thee here .. — ii- 2 

love me, let them find me here — ii. 2 

sucking on her natural bosom find . . — ii- 3 

riddling confession finds but riddling — ii. 3 

where I may find the j'ouug Romeo? — ii. 4 

I'll find those that shall — ii. 4 

you will find me apt enough — iii. 1 

you shall find me a grave man ■ — iii. 1 

find him! give this ring to my true — iii. 2 

till we can find a time to blaze — iii. 3 

I'll find out your man, and he shall — iii. 3 

madam, if you could find out but a man — iii- .^> 

find thou the means, and I'll find such — iii. 5 

a head, sir, that will find out logs .. — iv. 4 

going to find a barefoot brother — v. 2 

whoe'er j'ou find, attach — v. 3 

heaven finds means to kill youi' joys — v. 3 
we shall find him most convenient .... Hamlet, i. 1 

find thee apt; and duller should'st thou be — i. 5 

by indirections find directions out — ii. 1 

to find his way without his eyes — ii. 1 

that we find out the cause of tliis effect . . — ii. 2 

1 will find where truth is hid — ii. 2 

anon he finds him striking too short .... — ii. 2 

nor do we find him forward to he sounded — iii. I 

if she find him not, to England send him — iii, 1 

to seek him, and to find the body — iv. 3 

if you find him not within this month .. — iv. 3 

greatly to find quarrel in a straw — iv. 4 

by collateral hand they find us touched. . — iv. 5 

and finds it christian burial — v. 1 

till he find it stopping a bimg-hole? — v. 1 

in the dark groped I to find out them .... — v. 2 

for you shall find in him the continent . . — v. 2 
(as "partly, I find, it is) that yoru- fair . . Olhello, i. 1 

that you shall surely find him — i. 1 

I must be driven to find out practises — i. 3 

if you do find me foul in her report — i. 3 

prompt alacrity I find in hardness — i. 3 

and let me find a charter in your voice . . — i. 3 

she will find the error of her choice — i. 3 

I find it still, when I have list to sleep . . — ii. 1 

find a white that shall her blackness fit — ii. 1 

tenderness will find itself abused — ii. 1 

do you find some occasion to anger — ii. 1 

when he may Cassio find soliciting his.. — ii. 3 

lose this napkin, and let him find it — iii. 3 

now I find, I had suborned the witness . . — iii. 4 

if I do find him fit, I'll move your suit . . — iii. 4 

that you should find it in your chamber — iv. i 

I do iiot find, that thou deal'st justly — iv. 2 

respect and acquittance: but I find none — iv. 2 

and begin to find my self fobbed in it .... — iv. 2 

I am sorry, to find you thus — v. 1 

FINDER-for a finder of madmen. . Ticetfth A7s-;i/,iii.4 
FINDER-OUT— the finder-out of this. irinler'sT. v.2 



FIN 



FINDER-OUT-a finder-out of occasions. Orte//o,ii. I 

FIND-FAULTS- 
stops the mouths of all find-faults Henry V. v. 2 

FINDING-findingyourself desired. Mra. /or il/m.ii. 4 
overjoyed with fmding a bird's nest ..Much Ado, ii. I 
therefore finding barren practisevs.Love^sL.Lost, iv. 3 
take a taste of my finding him ..As you Like it, iii. 2 
in this alteration, find thyself thus. )fm/cr's7'a/e,i. 2 

the next way with your findings — iii. 3 

finding it so inclined Macbeth, iv. 3 

finding thee fit for bloody villany . . King John, iv. 2 
finding his usurpation most unjust. .1 Henry r/. ii. 5 
and finding little comfort to relieve .... Pericles, i. 2 

finding who 'twas that so endured iear, v. 3 

finding him, the searchers of the town. fiom.tS-Ju/. v. 2 
and finding, by this eneompassment . . Hamlet, ii. 1 
findin" ourselves too slow of sail.. — iv. 6 (letter) 

FlND'ST-fires thou find'st unraked.il/eni/ Wives, v. 5 

word how thou find'st him Tu-elflh Night, iv. 2 

when thou find'st a man that's . . TitusAndron. v. 2 

letters which thou find'st about me Lear, iv. 6 

thou find'st, to be too busy Hamlet, iii. 4 

FINE— fine apparition I Tempest, i. 2 

spirit, fine spirit, I'll free thee — i.2 

thou hast done well, fine .Ariel — i.2 

these be fine things, an if they — ii. 2 

how fine my master is — v. 1 

well spoken, neat, and fine. . Two Gen.of Verona, i. 2 

a fine volley of words — ii . 4 

what fine change is in — iv. 2 

I have a fine hawk for the Merry Wives, \\i. 3 

with fine and recovery — iv. 2 

would whip me with their fine wits . . — iv. 5 

hath a heart of that fine frame TwelflhNighl,i. 1 

finelj' touched, but to fine issues .A/eas./or Meas. i. 1 
find iCol. A'jif.-fine] the faults, whose fine — ii. 2 
and the fine is, ( for the which I Taa,y..MuchAdo, i. 1 

began'st to twist so fine a story — i. 1 

but for a fine, quaint, graceful — iii. 4 

a fine wit (rep.) — v. 1 

fine i' faith! have you no modesty. AT/rf. iV.'j Dr, iii. 2 
the poet's eye, in a fine frenzy rolling — v. 1 

it would have been a fine tragedy — v. i 

where to meet some mistress fine . . Love'sL. Lost, i. 1 

a most fine figure? — i.2 

dout, fine, when he should say, doubt — v. 1 

no, sir: but it is vara fine — v.2 

like a fine bragging youth Merch. of Venice, iii. 4 

humbleness may drive unto a fine . . — iv. 1 

to quit the fine for one half of — iv. 1 

let her. In fine, consent, as well AlVs Well, iii. 7 

in fine, delivers me to fill the — iii. 7 

in your fine frame hath love no — iv. 2 

in fine, made a groan of her — iv. 3 

still the fine's the crown ,..,, — iv. 4 

with delicate fine hats — iv. 5 

in fine, her insult coming — v. 3 

but thou art too fine in thy evidence — v. 3 

a fine musician to instruct Taming of Shrew, i. 2 

be sure, my Katharine shall be fine.. — ii. 1 
rings, and things, and fine array .... — ii. 1 
and canopies: fine linen, turkey .... — ii. 1 
our fine musician groweth amorous. . — iii. 1 
there were none fine, but Adam .... — iv. I 

Ofinevillain! a silken doublet! — v. 1 

services to a fine new prince Winter^ sTale, ii. 1 

what fine chizzel could ever yet cut . . — v. 3 
by fine and recovery? (rep.) . . Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 
the fine of rated treachery (rep.) ....King John, v. 4 

for a fine thief, of the age 1 Henry IV. iii. 3 

if speaking truth, in this fine age .... — iv. 1 

rebellion with some fine colour — v. 1 

he shot a fine shoot: John of G aunt. 2 Henri/ /r. iii. 2 
less fine in carat, is more precious.... — iv. 4 
but thou, most fine, most honoured , . — iv. 4 
cupof wine, that's hrisk and fine.. — v. 3 (song 

to fine [Col. Kni.-find] liis title Henry V.i.2 

your free purses with large fines . . . . i Henry VI. i. 3 

m fine, redeemed I was as I — i. 4 

ye have made a fine hand, fellows .Henry VIII. v. 3 

on your heads clap round fines — v. 3 

thou hast a flue forehead . . Troilus fy Cressida, iii. 1 

the grief is fine, full, perfect — iv. 4 

with stuft' so fine and smooth . . Timon of Athens, y. 1 

a fine spot, in good faith Coriolanus, i. 3 

for fuie, or banishment (rep.) — iii. 3 

thou hast affected the fine strains.. .. — v. 3 

might have found easy fines — y. 5 

in respect of a fine workman JuliusCrrsar, i. 1 

your fine Egyptian cookery shall. .4)i(un</ <5-Cieo. ii. 6 

a very fine one — iii. 2 

how fine this tyrant can tickle Cymheline, i. 2 

that makes them fine — iii. 3 

with your fine fancies quaintly. Pericles, iii. (Gowcr) 

fine word, legitimate! Lear, i. 2 

sir, in fine, seeing how loathly — ii. 1 

prince of darkness is a fine gentleman .. — iii. 4 
the gentle fine [Kn/.-sin] is this.. liomeo ^-Juliet, i. h 

hv her fine foot, straight leg — ij. 1 

1*^11 amerce you with so strong a fine — iii- 1 

make the face of heaven so fine — iii. 2 

but settle your fine joints 'gainst .... — ™- ^ 
and, in fine, makes vow before Ms .... Hamlet, ii. 2 
very much more handsome than fine — ^ii. 2 

nature is fine in love (rep.) — iv. 

bring you, iu fine, together — iv. 

liere s fine revolution — v. 

is this the fine of his fines — v. 

have his fine pate full of fine dii't .... — v. 
in fine, withdrew to mine own room — v. 

1 was a fine fool to take it Othello, iv. 

a fine woman! a fair woman — iv. 

FINE-BAITED— 

him on with a fine-baited delay... Merry If'ives, ii. 
FINED-trick be nerdurably &aed?Mea.forMea. iii. 

the nobles hath he fined for Kirhard II. ii. 

that I have fined these bones of Henry V. iv. 

riNELESS— but riches, fineless Othello, iii. 

FINELY-mc a bottle of sack finely. Aferry Wives,i\\.: 

finely attired in a robe of white — 



FIN 

II. VELY— we'll Ix'tray him llnely...Ufrr!/l»'ii!«, v. 3 

spiritii are iicit finely toiirlicd Meat, far Mem. i. 1 

tliu bow. Fiiioly pin ort'! Laee'tL. Loil, iv. I 

miscarry. Finely put on! — iv. I 

come near. Finely put on, indccdl.. — iv. 1 

we will turn it fmelv otr, sir — v. 2 

ton lilt tripe, tinclv hvoWcAT.. Taming of Slireii;\\-. 3 
sueli, .in. I so tioelv' liolteil Heniu V. ii. 2 

FIN KNKSS-tlie tineness of thegold.Com.q/'flVr. iv. 1 
tlic fineness of wliicli metal is not.. TroU'SfCrett.'i. .I 
that with the fineness of their souls.. — i. 3 

FINER— myself no finer than Twelflh Sight, i. 3 

(for the which I may <m the finer) .Wi<t7i .-Wo, i. 1 

of his verbosity ti.ier than the.. .. t'H'f'sL. LatI, v. 1 
a.'cent iss.imetl.i.ii;ti..ir thanyou..^«!/ouii*eiV, iii. 2 
is't, but of tiio line.- natures? .... lyinler'sTale, i. 2 
motle a fi.ier c.i.l, an.l went HenrijV. ii. 3 

FIN'KST— in the Hnest wits of all.i'iroGen.o/rfr. i. 1 
the ili.ost m.i.l devil of jealousy.. .M«ti/ (hiw, v. 1 
anil lli\e>t, liin-st, wear-a?. K'inler'tTale, iv. 3 (song) 
repute with tlieir finest palate... Troilus^' Cress, i. 3 
nothing but the finest part of pure . . Ant. S^Cleo. i. 2 

FINUER— the devil take your fingers.. Tempest, iii. 2 
put some lime upon your fingers .... — iv. 1 

monster, lay to your fingers — iv. I 

his false finger hath profaned.. Tiro Gen. nfVer. iv. 4 
I'll ne'er piU my finger in the &rii.. Merry Wivts, i. 4 

my finger itches to make one — ii. 3 

with the finger of mv substance — iii. 2 

I iiavc them" at my fl.\gers' ends .. Twelfth NigM, i. 3 
not worthy to touch f.>rtune's fingers — ii. 5 (letter) 
dare no m.>re stretch this finger uf.Mea.forMea. v. 1 
or let him hold his fingers thus. Mid. X.Dreain, iii. 1 

if I cut my finger, I shall make — iii I 

enrings the barky fingers of the elm — iv. 1 

at the fingers' ends, as tliey say.... Love'sL.Losi, v. I 

and with nis royal finger — v. 1 

another with his finger and his thumb — v. j 

I will kiss thy royal fi.iger — v. 2 

you may tell every finger I have. .Uer. qf Venice, ii. 2 
when this ring parts from tlus finger — iii. 2 

with oaths upon your finger — v. I 

nor pluck it from his finger — v. I 

but vou sec my finger hath not — v. 1 

didst break his neck as his finger. . .Is you Like it, i. 1 
get the ring upon my finger. . AU's l^'eU. iii. 2 (letter) 

and on your finger, in the night — iv. 2 

I saw upon her finger — v. 3 

never put it from her finger — v. 3 

like the same upon your finger — v. 3 

rings put upon Iiis hngers. . Taming ofSh. 1 (indue.) 

best put finger in the eye — i. 1 

though thv little finger be armed — iv. 3 

pinching finders, as now they are . Winter s Tale, i. 2 

and frame of hand, nail, finder — ii. 3 

put the finger in the eye and weep. . Com. o/'£n-. ii. 2 
(the ring I saw upon his finder now) — iv. 4 
and from my finger snatched tliat ring — v. 1 

at once her choppj' finger laying Macbeih. i. 3 

finger of birth-strangled babe — iv. 1 

and ring these fingers with thy King John, iii. 4 

out of the bloody fingers' ends of John — iii. 4 
to thrust his icy fingers in my maw. . — v. 7 
whereto my finger, Pike a dial's point. iJic/iard//. v. a 
and 'twixt his finger and his th.umb..l Henry I V. i. 3 
in faith, I'll break thy little finger .. — ii. 3 
you call three fingers on the ribs, bare — iv. 2 
never prick theirfinger, butthey say.2Henry/<'. ii.2 
between my finder and my thumb ... — iv. 3 
of evil, that might annoy my finger?.. Henri/ F. ii. 2 

and smile upon his fingers' encls — ii. ;i 

so like as my fingers is to my tinkers — iv. 7 
prick not your finger as you pluck. . 1 Henry t'l. ii. 4 

I kiss these fingers for eternal — v. 3 

with ray fingers feel his hand iHenryVl. iii. 3 

thy hand is but a finger to my fist — — iv. 10 
to prick thy finger, though to wound. 3Ht'ni!/ VI. i. 4 
this ring encompasseth thy finger . . Richard 111. i. 2 
is freed from his ambitious finger. .. Henry F///. i. 1 

lays his finger on his temple — iii. 2 

where a finger could not be wedged in — iv. 1 

but wag his finger at thee — y. 2 

this hatli not a finger's digtuty . . Troilut^Crest. i. 3 

lay thy finger on thy lips! — i. 3 

do not, my fingers itch — ii. 1 

white encnanting fingers touched — iii. 1 

fat rump, and potat.« finger — v. 2 

break my back, to heal his finj^er. Titnon of .iih. ii. i 
cambric were sensible as your finger.. Cor/o/aKus, i. 3 

alwut with his finger and thumb — iv. .5 

to displace it with your little finger.. — v. 4 
very loath to lay his fingers off \t.. Julius Carsar, i. 2 
ahaking the bloody fingers of thy foes — iii. 1 
contaminate our fingers with base bribes? — iv. 3 
rav ring I hold dear as my finger .... Cymbeli'ne, i. 5 

tliat diamond upon your finger — v. 5 

then he wore upon his honoured finger — v. 5 

the fingers of the powers above — v. 5 

upon his bloody finger he doth wear. ri(w And. ii. 4 

hath cut th.)se pretty fingers off — ii. 5 

with fingers, long, smalt Vericles, iv. (Gowcr) 

from the lazv finger of a maid.. . . Romeo ff Juliet, i. 4 
o'er lawyers' fingers, who straight dream — i. 4 
do not answer me; my fingers itch.... — iii. 

tr^ if they can lick their fingers — iv. 2 

his own fingei-s: therefore he (rpp.).... — iv. 2 
from her dead finger a precious ring.. — v. 3 

and still your fingers on your lips Hamlet, i. 5 

not a pipe for fortune's finger to sound. .. — iii. 2 
govern these ventages with your fingers.. — iii. 2 
m your neck with his damned fingers ... — iii. 4 
maids do dead men's fingers call tliein... — iv. 7 

take thy fingers from my throat — v. I 

kisse<l y<mr three fingers so oft Othello, ii. I 

f'ct again your Hngers to your lips? — ii. I 
ay thy finger thus, anil let thy s<ml — ii. 1 

for let our unger ache, and it Inrliiesonr — iii, 4 
to point his slow unmoving finger at .... — iv, 2 

FI X< i K KE D-wa« slily fingeri'd iHrnry VI. v. I 

who, fingered U> make man his lawfiil../'rrir<», i. I 



[ '-^01 ] 



FINO EREU— fingered their packet .... Hamlet, v. 2 

FlN(JEIl-E.VJ)— 
to.icli nil- his linger-end Merryyyives,v. !t 

FINUi;itl.\<;-lic fingering thum.TiooUen.of Ver. i. 2 
her hand t.i teach her Aakanm^. .. Taming of Sh. ii. 1 
to learn tlic order of my lingunng.... — iii. I 

rcnetrate her with your fingering... Ci/'iiM<iiff, ii. 3 
^fGlil•;-fingI■es; oiiy, de liiigrc8(re;).). Henry V. iii. 4 

de hail. 1, de Hngres, de nails — iii. 4 

FI.NICM.— siiperserviccnble, finical rogue. Leni', ii. 2 

FI.N'ISll-sluill that finish the je8t?i.orp'»i,./,o»(, ii. 1 

we met., an.l tlu'se thiiig.s finish ..Ali/ou Likeil, V. 4 

Uod niav linish it when he will iHenrylV. i. 2 

his days i.uiv Ihilsli ure that \UenryVt. iii. 1 

davs will liiiish up llie year iHenryVl. n. 5 

and finish uli f...il th. nights Antony » Cleo. iv. 9 i 

finish, g.i.j.l Ui.lv; the bright — v. 2 

aiul ini-ht have made von linish .... C'/mbeline, V. 5 

Fl.MlSIIKD-he linislie.l, iiidc.d . . ruvlflh Nighl,v. 1 

the ini|iti;.l tiiiishfd, let hii.i In. . ,17/..,.. lorMeas. v. 1 

isfiiiishe.l, t.i.i; and the Athuniaii..,i/r./. A'.Or. iii. 2 

left to be finishe.l by such a she King Jahn, ii. 2 

ere it is made an end and finished.... llei,ryV. iv. 7 

finished the process 1 Henry VI. iv. 2 

is finished with his bidding Coriolanus, v. 4 

thou hast tinislicd joy Cymbetine, iv. 2 (song) 

were iiresui.t when she finished — v.b 

lier m.ni.iiiifnt is almost finished Pericles, iv. 4 

FINISH KK-ofgreatest works is finisher. ,-//('sJf'e//,ii.l 
FINLESS— dragon, and a fin leas fish.l7:Ji'(i»-!//;'. iii. 1 
FINNY— how from the Hniiv subject of. Pericles, ii. 1 
FINSBURY— further than !• in.diury.lHrary/F. iii. 1 
F III AGO— ( Co(.] not seen such a firago. TwelfthN. iii. 4 

FIKE— dashes the fire out Tempest, i. 2 

to dive into the fire — i. 2 

the fire and cracks of — i. 2 

then all a fire with me — i. 2 

he d.U"s make our fire — i. 2 

are straw to the tire i' the Iilood — iv. I 

rattling thunder have I given fire .... — v.! 

fire that is closest kc|Jt TwoGen.of Verona, i. 2 

shunned the fire for tear of — i. 3 

for you gave the fire — ii. 4 

a waxen ima,ge 'gainst a fire — ii. 4 

kindle fire with snow — ii. 7 

quench the fire of love — ii. 7 

your love's hot fire — ii. 7 

qualify the fire's extreme rage — ii. 7 

at the latter end of a, sea-coal tire. . Merry Hires, i. 4 

ne'er put my finger in the fire ^ i. 4 

till the wicked fire of lust have — ii. 1 

give fire; she is my prize — ii. 2 

rim through fire and water — iii. 4 

should set hell on fire — v. 5 

where fires thou fiud'st unraked .... — v.b 

come, will this wood take firel* — v. 5 

lust is but a bloody fiie — v. 5 (song) 

laugh this sport o'er by a country fire — v. 5 

■with sighs of fire TwelfthNight, i. f> 

fire and brimstone I — ii. i 

to put fire in your heart — iii. 2 

the fire that severs day from night . . — v. 1 
is the opinion that fire cannot melt ..Much. Ida, i. 1 
have cleft his club to make the fire. . — ii. 1 

like covered fire, consume away — iii. 1 

what fire is in mine ears? — iii. 1 

hath appeared a fire, to burn — iv. 1 

and by that fu'e wliich burned .. Mid. .\'. Dream, \. 1 

thorough fire, I do wander — ii. 1 

and run through fire, 1 will — ii. 3 

a headless bear, sometime a fire — iii. 1 

hog, bear, fire, at every tm-n — iii. 1 

by the dead and drowsy fire — v. 2 

'tis won, as towns with fire Love's L. Lost, i. 1 

fire enough for a flint — iv. 2 

is music, and sweet fire — iv. 2 

doth spring the true Promethean fire — iv. 3 

still the right Promethean fire — iv. 3 

stand between her back, sir, and the fire — v. 2 
where Phoebus' fire scarce tha,Wii..Mer.of Venice, ii. 1 

with the unbated fire that he did — ii. 6 

the fire seven times tried this — ii. 9 (scroll) 

Hween snow and fire, as treason — iii. 2 

by fortune fall into the fire? As youLike it, i. 2 

is to wet, and fire to burn — iii. 2 

with sprightl.v fire and motion AIC>, IVcll, ii. 1 

upon the violent speed of fire — iii. 2 

yet, in his idle fire, to buy — iii. 7 

if the quick fire of youth light — iv. 2 

agreal fire; and the master (rpp.).... — iv. 5 
the broad gate, and the great fire .... — iv. 5 

when oil and fare, too strong for — v. 3 

as will a chestnut in a farmer's fire?.. Torn. ofSh. i. 2 
where two raging fires meet together — ii. 1 

little fire grows great with (rtp.) — ii. 1 

sent before to make a fire — iv. 1 

afire to thaw me (rr-p.) — iv. 1 

therefore, fire, fire; cast on no water. . — iv. 1 

but wilt thou make a fire — iv. 1 

and therefore fire: do thy duty — iv. 1 . 

there's fire ready ; and therefore — iv. 1 

they sit conferring by the jiarlour fire — v. 2 

given to the fire, a moiety of iviniei's Tale, ii. 3 

with the dam, commit them to the fire — ii. 3 

that makes the fire, not she — ii. 3 

see it instantly consumed with fire . . — ii. 3 

go, take it to the fire — ii. 3 

racks? fires? what flaying? — iii. 2 

would have shed water out of fire. . . . — iii. 2 

her face ()' fire with labimr — iv. 3 

aueftl-ct of fire, and fire will burn.Cninf./y n/lir. iv. 3 

the niging fire of fever bred — v. 1 

singedort with brands of fire — v. I 

stars hide your Uresl Mnebelh, i. 4 

at a winter's fire, aiithori/.eil by — iii. 4 

fire burn; and I'auldron bubble irep.) — iv. 1 
instead of bullets wrapped in tire ..King John, ii. 1 
rich blood of kings is set on fire! .... — ii. 2 
camion, fire, and smoke, and bounce — ii. 2 
as flrc cools flic, within the — iii. I 



FIR 



FIRE — shall quench that fire King John, iii. I 

for containin.g fire to harm — iv. 1 

the fire is deail with grief — iv. 1 

which fierce fire, and ir.m, extends .. — iv. 1 

as red asnew-cnkindlcd fire — iv. 2 

lie fire with fire; threaten the — v. I 

matter that should feed this fire — v. 2 

rcsolveth from his figure 'gainst the fire? — v. 4 

against tills fire do 1 shrink up — v. 7 

OS the sea, hasty as fire Uichurd II. i. I 

in thy old l)lo.>d no living Arc? — i. 2 

who can h.dd a fire in Ills hand.... — i. 3 

for violent lires S.MHI burn out — ii. I 

he fires the iiroii.l tops ol" the — iii. i. 

than the elements [if Iii-.' and water .. — iii. 3 
be he thofirc, I'll he the vielding.... — iii. 3 
sit by the fire with g.i...l ol.i folks .... — v. I 
in compassion, weep the fire out .... — v. 1 
shall burn in never-quenching fire .. — \. fi 

with fire our town of Ciccster — v. 6 

thou liad'st fire and sword IHenrylV. ii. 4 

well, an' the fire of grace be not — ii. 4 

the heavens were all on fire — iii. 1 

as hot lord Percy is on fire to go — in. 1 

my oath should be, by this fire — iii. 3 

that salamander of yours with fire .. — iii. 3 

1 am on fire, to hear this rich reprisal — iv. I 

but Priam found the fire illenrylV.i. 1 

whose spirit lent a fire even to — i. 1 

took fire and heat away — i. 1 

breaks like a fire out ot'liis keeper's.. — i. I 

with an incensed fire of injuries — i. 3 

by a sea-coal fire, upon Wednesday., — ii. i 

no, let the fiend give fire — ii. 4 

their eyes of fire sparkling — iv. 1 

swords, and native fire, as far — v. 5 

for a muse of fire Henry V. i. (chorus) 

should famine, sword, and fire .... — i. (ehorn. ) 
sword, and fire, to win your right .... — i. 2 

youth of England are on fire — ii. (chorus) 

and flashing fire will follow — ii. 1 

is gone, that maintained that fire .... — ii. 3 

and flames of fire; and liis lips — iii. 6 

nose is executed, and his fire's out . . — iii. 6 

he is pure air and fire — iii. 7 

fire answers fire; and through — iv. (chorus) 

by their watchful fires sit patiently — iv. (chorus) 

replete with wrathful fire 1 Henry VI. i. I 

quartering steel, and climbing fire . . — iv. 2 

crest thy sword struck fire — iv. 6 

w hen Troy was set on fire iHeury VI. \. 4 

Erove a raging fire, if wind and fuel. . — iii. I 
urns with revenging fire — iv. I 

1 fear neither suord nor fire — iv. 2 

he shoul.1 fitan.l in fear of fire — iv. 2 

and set London bridge on fire — iv. 6 

even as the dew to fire — v. 2 

coals, that fire all my breast .illenry VI. ii. I 

asredasflre! nay,thenher — iii. 2 

a little iii'e is onickly trodden — iv. 8 

I need not add more fuel to your fire — v. 4 
the fire that mounts the liquor .... Henry Vlll. i. 1 

but allay, the fire of passion — _i. 1 

I'll turn to sparks of fire — ii. 4 

blew the fire that burns ye — v. 2 

there was a more temperate fire.. Trailus^ Cress, i. 2 

one spark of fire to answer for — i. 3 

come in ; I'll go get a fire — iii. 2 

live in fire, eat rocks — iii. 2 

as coldly in him as fire in a flint — iii. .) 

hey-day! spirits and fires! — v. I 

the fire i' the flint shows not Timon of Athens, i- 1 

wouldsetwliole realms on fire — iii. 3 

let your close fire predominate — iv. 3 

Hyperion's quickening fire doth shine — iv. ;* 

and her pale fire she snatches — iv. 3 

than is the coal of fire upon the ice . . Coriolanus, i. 1 
thev'll sit by tlie fire, and presume .. — i. I 

or, oy the fires of heaven — i. 4 

will be his fire to kindle their dry — — ii. I 
consumed with fire, and took wdiat . . — iv. 6 

one fire drives out one fire — iv. 7 

forged himself a name i' the fire of .. — v. 1 
see your Rome embraced with fii"e.... — v. i 

to blow out the intended tire — v. 2 

thou art preparing fire for lis — v. 2 

certain, as I know the sun is fire — v. 4 

praise the gods, and make triuinphantfires — v. 4 
much show of fire from Brutus .... Julius Catsar, i. 2 

through a tempest dropping fire — i. 3 

not sensible of fire, remained unscorched — i. 3 

they saw men, all in fire — i. 3 

will make a mighty fire — i. i 

he first presents his fire — ii. 1 

bear fire enough to kindle cowards .. — ii. 1 
might fire the bloixl of ordinary men — iii. I 

they are all fire, and every one — iii. 1 

(as fire drives out fire, so pity, pity).. — iii. I 
poorsouU his eyes ore red as fire .... — iii. 2 
with tlie brands fire the traitors' houses — iii. 2 
go, fetch fire. Pluck down benches.. — iii. 2 

as the flint bears fire — iv. 3 

her attendants absent, swallowed fire — iv. 3 
my tents, where I perceive the fire?.. — v. 3 

can but make a fire of him — v. S 

bv the fire that quickens .4nlony ^Clropalra, i. 3 

blow the fire up in Cicsar — ii. 8 

and shot their tires into the abysm .. — iii. 11 

I would, they'd fight i' the fire — iv. 10 

1 am tire, and air — v. 2 

yet the fire of rage is in him Cymbeline, i. 2 

"towm with rejoicing fires bright — iii. 1 

behold their quartered fires — iv. 4 

I stand on fire : come to the matter . . — v. i 

and make a fire straight Titu* .indronicus, i. 2 

entroilsfeeil the sacrificing fire — i S 

set fire on barns anil hay-stacks .... — v. I 
(.1 live and Innii in everlasting fire .. — v. 1 

m.v unsputtc'l fire of !.)vc to you Pr/'Wrx, i. 1 

that were to blow at Urc, iu uupc — i 4 



FIR 



[ 262 ] 



FIRE— the which hath fire in darkness.. Per/di's, ii. 3 

a fire from heaven came — .ij- ^ 

as fire, air, water, earth, and heaven — — iij- I 

no light, no tire: the unfriendly — ni- 1 

get fire and meat for these poor men 

make tire within; fetch liither 

and yet the fire of life kindle apain . 



_ iii. 2 



— iii. 3 



_ i. 5 



well said i the fire and the cloths — lu. 2 

if fires be hot, knives sharp — ly- 3 

may stand by the fire and stink Lear, \. 4 

bring oil to fire, snow to then- colder — — n-'f 

like the wreath of radiant fire on — ii. 2 

sulphurous and thought-executing fires — iii. 2 

spit, fire! spout, rain 1 (rep.) — W'.- '^ 

such sheets of fire, such bursts of — in. 2 

led through fire and through flame — in. 4 

now a little fire in a wild field — i;i. 4 

look, here comes a walking fire — ni. 4 

bring you where both fire and food is ready— in. 4 

arms, arms, sword, fire ! — }}]-^ 

and quenched the stelled fires — in. 7 

stood that night against ray fire — iv. 7 

I am bound upon a wheel of fire — iv. 7 

and fire us hence like foxes — y. 3 

quench the fire of your Romen Sr Juliet, i. 1 

cold fire, sick healthi — i- 1 

a fire sparkling in lovers' eyes — i. 1 

one fire burns out another's burning — i. 2 

then turn tears to fires! — i. 2 

and quench the fire, the room is — i. 5 

like fire and powder, whicli as they kiss — " *■' 
is set on fire by thine own ignorance 
stars with trains of fire and dews of , 
whether in sea or fire, in earth or air 

you must not take for fire 

confined to fast in fires 

and 'gins to pale his ineffectual fire. 

doubt thou, the stars are fire ii. 2 (letter) 

roof fretted with golden fire — ii. 3 

roasted in wrath, and fire — ii- 2 

what frighted with false fire ! — iii. 2 

and melt in her own fire: proclaim no — iii. 4 
time qualifies the spark and fire of it — iv. 7 
I have a speech of fire, that fain — — iv. 7 

all the battlements their ordnance fire — y. 2 

the fire is spied in populous cities Othello, i. 1 

give renewed fire to our extincted spirits — ii. 1 
poison, or fire, or suffocating streams ... . — iii. 3 

bear to Cassio. Fire and brimstone! — iv. 1 

thou art rash as fire, to say that she — — v. 2 
wash me in steep-down gulfs of liquid fire — v. 2 

FIRE-BRAND— like a fire-brand Tempest, ii. 2 

she was delivered of a fire-brand. . ..%HenrylV. ii. 2 

our fire-brand brother Troihis <5- Cressida, ii. 2 

brands, ho! fire-brands. To Brutus' Jtd. Ciesar, iii. 3 

FIRED— wliich is fired from a gun? Love's L.L. iii. 1 

like a beacon fired, to amaze Pericles, i. 4 

hasty powder fired doth hurry. . Romeo ff Juliet, v. 1 

FIRE-DRAKE— fire-drake did Ihit.Hfnry F///. v. 3 

FIRE-EYED— the fire-ej'ed maid .A Henry. IF. iv. 1 
fire-eyed furv be my con&act. . Romeo Sr Juliet, iii. 1 

FIRE-NEW-fire-new from the mint Twelfth N. iii. 2 
a man of fire-new words, fashion's Lnve'sL.Losi, i. 1 
your fire-new stamp of honour .... Richard III. i. 3 
victor sword, and fire-new fortune Lear, v. 3 

FIRE-ROBED— the fire-robed god Winter' sTale, iv. 3 

FIRE-SHOVEL— stole a fire-shovel . . Henry V. iii. 2 

FIREWORK — or antic, or firework ..Love'sL.L.v. 1 
as fights and fireworks; abusing Henry VIII. i. 3 

FIRING— nor fetch in firing .... Tempest, li. 2 (song) 

FIRK— I'll ferhim, and firkhim Henry V. iv. 4 

the French for fer, and ferret, and firk — iv. 4 

FIRM— who was so firm, so constant Tempest, i. 2 

already love's firm votary TwoGen. ofVer. iii. 2 

as positive as the earth is firm ... . Merry Wives, iii. 2 

and the firm fixture of thy foot — iii. 3 

as firm as faith — iv. 4 

and firm for doctor Cains — iy. fi 

as is my conscience firm Twelfth Night, iii. 3 

and iirm abstinence Measure for Measure, i. 4 

her wits, I fear me, are not firm — — v. 1 
as there is no firm reason to Merchant of Venice, iy . 1 
firm and irrevocable is my doom . . As you Like it_\. 3 

nor is your firm resolve Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 

the world, by your firm promise .... — ii. 1 

and my firm nerves shall never Macbeth, iii. 4 

then the charm is firm and good .... — iv. 1 

but the huge firm earth can ........ King John, iii. 1 

and keep our faiths firm and inviolable — y. 2 

as in a model, our firm estate Riciiard II. iii. 4 

stand as firm as rocky mountain . .ilienryl V. iv. 1 

thou art not firm enough — iy. 4 

a soldier, firm and sound of heart .... Henry V. iii. 6 

oftheflrm truth of valour — iv. 3 

according to their firm proposed .... — v. 2 
before his legs be firra to bear his ..iHenry VI. iii. 1 

let us hear your firm resolve 3Henry VI. iii. 3 

have we of thy firm loyalty? — iii. 3 

and the compact is firm, and true. .Richard III. ii. 2 

look your heart be firm, or else — iv. 4 

content firm love doth bear ..Troilus ^Cressida, i. 2 

and to stand firm by honour — ii. 2 

word, and my firm faith — iii. 2 

firmof word; speaking in deeds .... — iv. 5 
wiio so firm, that cannot be sedueed.JuliusCresar, i. 2 
the firm Roman to great Egypt.. ^Jitoni/ SrCleo. i. b 

and hazard, from firm security — iii. 7 

tlie sun witii as firm eyes as he Cymbcline,\. ;> 

the heavens hold firm the walls — ii. 1 

nothing; 1 have sworn, and I am firm Lear, i. 1 

the som of Nero enter tliis firm bosom. Ham/c/, iii. 2 
and iix most firm thy resolution Otliello, v. 1 

riRMAIWENT- 

betwixt the firmament audit Winler'sTale, iii. 3 

the base earth from the firmament!. R(cAar<( H.,]]. 4 
there is no fellow in the firmament. Jut. Ciesar, iii. 1 
bath the firmament more suns . . Titus Andron. v. 3 

the maidenliest star in the firmament Lear,\. 2 

this brave o'er hanging firmament Hamlet, ii. 2 

FIRJMIjY— stands so firmly on his..A/er»^j/ Wives, ii. 1 



FIRiMLY— I fii-mly am resolred . . Taming of Sh. i. 

as firmly as yourself were still ..;... — _ i. 

and here I firmly vow, never to woo — iy. 

as firmly as I hope for fertile 2Henrv VI. iii. 

at last, I lirmly am resolved 3 Hen ji/ r/. iii. 

he firmly takes me for Revenge . . Titus Andron. v. 

my truth and honoui- firmly Lear, v. 

FIRMNESS— unstooping firmness of my. Rich. II. i. 

(wearv of solid firmness,) melt ....iHemijlV. iii. 
riRM-"SET— sure and firm-set earth ..Macbeth, ii. 
FIRST— it was the first, and Prospero ..Tempest, i. 

was the first man that leap'd — i. 

when thou earnest first — i. 

which first was mine own king — i. 

at the first sight they have — }■ 

the first that e'er I sighed for — .i. 

first begins to crow? — n- 

as when we put them on first in Afric — ;;• 

as fresh as the first day I wore it? — .i;- 

having fu-st seized his books — in- 

remember first to possess his books .... — in. 

and do the murder first — iv. 

when first I raised the tempest — v. 

first, noble friend, let me — v. 

nor befitting this first meeting — v. 

as when we first put out to sea — y. 

first, you have learn'd, like.. TwoGen.of Verona, ii. 

which gave me first my oath — ii. 

at first I did adore — .]!• 

for scorn at first makes — in- 

thy first best love — v. 

yourself shall go first Merry Wives, i. 

truly I will not go first — .;. 

let thine inherit first — ii. 

the first Irour I was born — ii. 

I will first make bold with — li. 

but first, master guest — jj. 

but first, sheath thy impatience — — n. 

I shall drink in pipe-wme first with him — iii. 

was the first motive that I — iii- 

first, an intolerable fright — iii. 

I'll first direct my men — iv. 

a fault done first in the form of — y. 

mine eyes did see Olivia first .... Tu-elfthNiglil, i. 

in the first of his heart — .i. 

'tis not the first time I have — ii. 

na3% but first, let me see — ii- 

mark his iirst approach before — ii. 

best, first, go see your lodging — iii- 

though I struck him first — iv. 

I would I were the first that ever — iv. 

that did bring me first on shore — v. 

it was sire first told me — v. 

though first in question, is thy . . Meas.for Meas.i. 

first, an' it like you, the house — ii. 

if the first man that did the — \\. 

so you must be the first...., — i\. 

the continuance of her first aflTectiou — in. 

first, that your stay with him — iii. 

I'll be hanged first — ni- 

first, here's young master Rash — i v. 

but send me Flavins first — iv. 

first his integrity stands without — v. 

first, hath this woman most — v. 

first, for this woman; to justify — v. 

first, let her show her face — v. 

thou art the first knave, that e'er (rep.') — v. 

whipped fii'st, sir, and hanged after. . — y. 

as the first of May doth the last Much.ido, i. 

the first suit is hot and hasty — ii. 

since summer first was leavy - ii. 3 (song 

she may wear her heart out first — u. 

you must hang it first, and draw — iii. 

first, who think you the most — iii. 

I should first tell thee, how the prince — iii. 

by his oaths, wliich first possessed them — iii- 

we'll be friends first — iv. 

and write God first; for God depend — iv. 

let him kill one first — v. 

first, I ask thee what they have done — v. 

in the rare semblance that I loved it first — v. 

Troilus the first employer of panders — v. 

didst thou first fall m love with me? — v. 

didyoufirst suffer love for me? — v. 

first, o' my word; therefore, play, music — v. 

first, good Peter Quince, say what. . Mid. N. Dr.\. 

meet me ere the first cock crow — .n. 

first, Pyramus must draw — ni. 

on the first view, to say, to swear — ni. 

two of the first, like coats — m. 

but fii-st I will release the fairy queen — iv. 

which your highness will see first — — v. 

coming first by night, did scare away — v. 

first, rehearse this song by rote -- y. 

the first and second cause will not . . Love sL.L.\. 

why, villain, thou must know first . . — iii. 

what, what? first praise me, and again — iv. 

it was a buck of the first head — iv. 

am I the first that have been — iv. 

at the first opening of — iv. 

consider, what you jh-st did swear .. — iv. 

but love, first learned in a lady's — — iv. 

but be first advised, in conflict — iv. 

first, from the park let us — iv. 

in their first show thrive — v. 

there is five in the first show — v. 

love's argument was first on foot — — y. 

which you did shoot the iu-st Mer. of Venice, i. 

rest dehtor for the first — i. 

first, there is tlie Neapolitan prince. . — ,i. 

first, forward to the temple — ii. 

tliat he did pace them first? — — ii. 

the first, of gold, who this inscription — ii. 

first, never to unfold to any one .... — ii. 

we'll play with them, the first boy .. — ii;. 

when I did first impart my love — in- 
first, go with me to church — iii. 

I wilfanon ; first, let us go — in. 

every offence is not abate at first.... — iv. 

you taught me first to beg — iv- 



FIR 

FIRST— with your wife's first- il/ercAan<o/ Venice, V. 1 

let it beso; thefirst inten-ogatory.... — v. 1 

it is the first time that ever I As youLike it, i. 2 

mightily persuaded him from a first — i. 2 

fii'st, for his weeping in the needless — ii. 1 

you touched my vein at first — ii. 7 

till he be first sufficed — ii- 7 

at first, the infant mewling — ji. 7 

borrow me Garagantua's mouth first — iii. 2 

but first begs pardon — iii. 5 

that loved not at iirst sight? — iii. 5 

nay, you were better speak first — iv. 1 

when from the first to last, betwixt. . — iv. 3 

the first time that I ever saw him .... — v. 4 

the first, the retort courteous — v. 4 

first, in this forest, let us do — v. 4 

till virginity was first lost All's Well, i. 1 

in friendsliip first tried our soldiership! — i. 2 

lend it you, shall lack it first — i. 2 

in the first assault, or ransom afterward — _i. 3 

at the first view; to you that know .. — ii. 5 

that the first face of neither — iii. 2 

he was first smoked by the old lord.. — iii. 6 

first, give me trust, the count he is . . — \\\.7 

since the first father wore it — iii. 7 

this is the first truth that e'er — iv. 1 

first demand of him how many — iv. 3 (note) 

- - — iv, 3 



— iv. 5 

— V. 2 

— V. 3 

— V. 3 

— V. 3 



i. 2 



ii. 1 
ii. 1 
ii. 1 
iii. 2 



— iv. 2 



i. 2 



— iv. 3 



nay, I'll read it first 

so great as the first in goodness 

remembrance, did first propose 

the first that found me ^repeated) 

but first I beg my pardon 

the first view shall kill all repetition 

at first I stuck my choice upon her . . 

which better than the first, O dear . . — v. a 

that turned off a fu-st so noble wife . . — v. 3 

I gave it his first wife — v. 3 

and my father first, a merchant . . Taming of Sh. i. 1 

tell me thine first — i. 1 

I will charm him first to keep — i- 1 

I should knock you first, and then . . — i. 2 

I had well knocked at first — i. 2 

give you over at this first encounter 

sir, sir, the first 's for me r. . 

the elder sister first be wed 

I knew you at the first 

on Sunday first. Hark, Petruchio ! (rep.) 
your neighbour, and was suitor first 

first, as you know, my house 

first were we sad, fearing you 

take it on you at the first so 

first, know, my horse is tired 

read you? first resolve me that 

advise yon; first, tell me have you . 

for our first merriment hath made .. — iv. o 

first kiss me, Kate, and we will — v. 1 

to come at first when he doth — v. 2 

come on, I say; and first begin — y. 2 

if you first sinned with us Winter's Tale, i. 2 

wliat was my fii-st? it has — i. 2 

take again your queen, as yours at first 

first hand me {rep.) 

than to perform it first 

second joy, and first fruits of my body 
but, first,"how the poor souls roared. . 

and let's first see more ballads 

pedlar, let's have the first choice .... 

they throng who shall buy first 

as walked your first queen's ghost . . 
when your first queen's again in breath 

I see, will kiss the valleys first 

and there was the first gentlemanlike 

but yet speak: first, you my liege 

when first I wooed her! 

since first we were dissevered Winter's Tale, j. 3 

since at first I sent him from the. Comedy o/£cr.ii. " 

why, fii'st, for flouting me — ii. 

you first begin to brawl — iv. 

first, he denied you had in — iv. 

first, he did praise my beauty — iv. 

after you first forswore it on — v. 

thou cam'st from Corinth first — v. 

till then, lead thou first — y 

first, as I am liis kinsman Macbeth,]. 

when first they put the name — iii. 

at first, and last, a hearty welcome . . — iii. 

boil thou first i' the charmed pot — iv. 

more potent than the first — iv. 

is like the first, a third is — iv. 

my first false speaking was — iv. 

now protest their first of manhood . . — v. 

lead our first battle — v. 

damned be him that first cries, hold . . — v. 

the first that ever Scotland in — y. 

therefore, hear us first; these flags . . King John, ii. 

when we first marched forth — ii. 

from first to last, the onset and retu-e — ii. 

since I first called my brother's — ii. 

speak England first (rep.) — ii. 

when I was first assiu-ed — u. 

thy vow first made to heaven, first be — iii. 
against thy first, is in thyself rebellion — iii. 

Cain, tlie first male child — iii. 

the first of April, died your noble — — iv. 
your breath first kindled the dead . . — v. 
but when it first did help to wound . . — v. 

fii-st, (heaven be the record to my Richard II. i. 

first, the fair reverence of your — i. 

their first head and spring — i. 

misfortune miss the first career...... — _i. 

physicians that first wounded thee . . — ii. 

the ripest fruit first falls — ii. 

princeof Wales, was first — ii. 

the first departing of the king — ii. 

my horse, and I wiU first be there . . — ji. 

had you first died, and he been — ii. 

if but the first, how heinous ere it be — v. 

but. pardon, first; and afterwards — V. 

that they are not thefirst of fortune's — v. 
taste of it first, as thou art wont — v. 



V. 2 
T. 3 
V. 3 



FIR 

FIRST— first, In thy sacred utato .. ..Ilirltiiril II. v. 6 

wlu're I tlrat bowed my kiioo \Hetiryll\ i. 3 

tlmii r hiivc licon since the first cock — ii. 1 

I'll sivthio lumped first — ii. I 

lirst piinliiii im', luv lord — ii. 4 

mil nil- tlif cxiliiiiuer the first thine — iii. S 

the stiiti' ol time hud first iK-'cn whole — iv. 1 

power wrts ill tlio first proportion .... — iv. 4 

we were tlie first luid dearest of your — v. I 

to speak so true at first? 'iHniryll'. (indue.) 

vet the first l)rinL;er of tuiweleonie .. — i. 1 

siiu-e I peroeiveil tlie first white — i.i 

and first, lord inarshul.wlmtsav .... — i. 3 

we first survev tlie plot, tlieu draw .. — i. 3 

first let Ihi-m'trv ;lnniselves — ii. :! 

when Artlinr first in eourt — ii. 4 

ril see tier ,l:nn. nil lirst — ii. 1 

the first hill. iiin |.iiiK-iple I would .. — iv. 3 

workius I wiis first lulvauced — iv. 4 

Itxliiin^i wllere I t!r>t ilitl swoon? — iv. 4 

first, mv fear, then my eourt'sy — (epil.) 

then with Scotland first licjiin llriinj I', i. i 

he that strikes the first stroke — ii. 1 

he that makes the first thrust — ii. 1 

those roots that shall first spring .... — ii. 4 

you must first go yourself to hazard — iii. 7 

'tis not the first time you were — iii. 7 

Suflolk first died; and York — iv. i; 

his daughter, first: and then, in sciiuel — v. 2 

but, first, ro try her skill I Henri/ I'l. i. 2 

slie takes upon her bravely at first dash — i. 2 

Henry the fifth he first trained — i. 4 

since first I followed arms — ii. 1 

didst thoii at first, to flatter us — ii. I 

or which way, should they first break in — ii. 1 

since Henry Monmouth first befian.. — ii. 5 

first, lean thine aged back against.. .. — ii. S 

conquest got, first to my God — iii. 4 

when firs-t this order was ordained .. — iv. 1 

first let me know and then I'll — iv. I 

and he first took exceptions — iv. 1 

dissension first be tried by flight — iv. 1 

rest where it began at first — iv. 1 

if, the first hour, 1 shrink — iv. 5 

the life thou gavest me first — iv. 6 

the maidenhood of thy first fight .... — iv. 6 

you shall first receive" the sum of money — v. 1 

she was the first fruit of my — v. 4 

first, let me tell you whom — v. 4 

1 fear mc, both at first and last — v. 5 

create thee the first duke of 2HenryFl. i. 1 

Poole first duke of Suffolk — i. 2 

I'll l)e the first, sure; come back — 1.3 

first, for I cannot flutter thee in pride — i. 3 

first, of the king. Wliat shall ofhim — i. 4 (paper) 

the first, Edward the black prince .. — li. 2 

Richard, the first son's luir — ii. 2 

be we the first, that shall salute .... — ii. 2 

at Bury the first of this next mouth — ii, 4 

first, note, that he is near you — iii. 1 

had I first been ptit to speak — iii. 1 

are gnarling who shall gnaw thee first — iii. 1 

which mates him first, that fii'st intends — iii. 1 

first let my words stab him — iv. 1 

the first thin" we do, let's kill — iv. 2 

wine tills first year of our rei^zu — iv. (i 

but, first, go and set London bridge.. — iv. (i 

first, let me ask of these, if the>' ...... — v. 1 

the first I warrant thee, if dreams .. — v. 1 

Plantagenet shall speak first SHenry VI. i. 1 

no, first shall war unpeople — 1.1 

how began it first? No quarrel — i. 2 

first; will I see the coronation — ii, (j 

first, to do greetings to thy royal — iii. 3 

ay, that's the first thing that we — iv, 3 

the first of all your chief affairs — iv. 6 

60 first the harmless sheep dotli — v. B 

wlieu first thou didst presume — v. 6 

but, first, I'll turn you fellow Richard III. i. 2 

and first begin to brawl — i. 3 

the first that there did greet — 1.4 

first, madam, I entreat true peace .. — 11.1 

by your first order died — ii. I 

flisl, he coniraends him to your — iii, 2 

and to avoid the first; and then — iii, 7 

first, if all obstacles were cut away .. — iii, 7 

for first he was contract to lady Lucy — iii. 7 

first, mighty liege, tell me — iv. 4 

the first was I, that helped — v. 3 

devised at first to keep the strong.... — v. 3 

but, tell me first, is young — v. 4 

the first and happiest hearers of.. Henri/ /'///. (prol.) 

requires slow pace at first — i. 1 

first, it was usual with him — i 2 

the red wine first must rise — i. 4 

first, Kildare's attainder, then deputy — ii. 1 

who first raised head against uauipiug — ii, I 

than 'tis sweet at first to acquire — ii.3 

my conscience first received — ii, I 

first, methought, I stood not in — ii, I 

first. I begun in private with you .... — ii. 4 

reek, when I first moved you — ii, .1 

the question did at first so stagger me — ii. 4 

and the first he vievvcd, he did It with — iii. 2 

have at you, first, that, without — iii ■> 

the duke of Sufl'olk is the first — iv. 1 

eincc first you knew me — iv. 2 

noble lady, first mine own service .. — rv. 2 

toward the king first, then his laws. . — v. 2 

when we first put this dangerous .... — v. 2 
exainjiled by the first pace . . Troilut fyCrettida, i. 3 
showing the worse first (./Cn/.-shall show 

the better^ _ i. 3 

the first [C»(. Kn/. -fifth] hour of the sun — ii. 1 

since the first sword was — ii. 2 

he should eat swords first — ii, 3 

with the first gianee that ever iii, 2 

men's privilege of sneaking first .... — iii, 2 

that heat again to tliefimt giver .... — iii, 3 

a gallant horse tiilleD iu the first rank — iii. 3 



[ 2(>3 ] 



FIS 



FIRST — ere the first sacrifice.... 7'roi7uj 4- C'rcji. iv. 2 

the first was Meuelaus* kiss — iv. 5 

since first I saw yourself and Diomed — iv. 5 

first, all you iieers of (irecce — iv. 

sing any inan at first sight — v. 2 

a man that from uiy first have..7'i«io/io//jWion«, i. 1 

ceremony was but ucvised at first.. .. — i. 2 

miglit have wooed me first — iii. 3 

I was the first man that e'er received — iii. 3 

had sent to me first, but fitr — iii. 3 

ere we ciiu agree iqiou the first place — iii. 

take thv iih.Vsie first, thou tin _ iii. 6 

mon; whore, more mischief first .... — iv. 3 

from our first swath _ iv. 3 

first inciid my comiiany — iv. 3 

let us first sec peace in Atheus — iv. 3 

upon their first lord's neck — iv. 3 

when thy first griefs were but — v. .^ 

motives tliat you first went out — v. 6 

first, you know, Cains iMarcius is Corlntunus, i. I 

against him first; he's a very dog — 1.1 

receive the general food at first — i. 1 

to run lead st first, to win some — i. 1 

the rabble should liavc first unroofed — i. 1 

than by a place below the first — i. I 

first lieariiig lie wns ;. min-child (re/),) — i. 3 

letthc first hii.l-^' .!i.- ('-- ilu-r'sslavc — 1.8 

ill fuvourin- ili ,, ' : .: nt .... _ ii. 1 

the liire which 111 1 1 c crve.... — ii.3 

the Voices stand lint as at iirst — iii. 1 

we'll proceed in our first way — iii. 1 

my praises made thee first a soldier.. — iii. 2 

first, hear me speak. Well, say — iii. 3 

my first son, whither wilt — iv. 1 

know thou first, I loved the maid, . , . — iv. 5 

than when I first my wedded mistress — iv. S 

let me commend thee first to those . . — iv. 5 

when first I did embrace him — iv. 7 

first he was a noble servant — iv. 7 

once more offered the first conditions — v. 3 

first, the gods bless jou for your tidings — v. 4 

'tis the first time that ever I was — v. 5 

since Cassius first did whet me. . . . JuliusCwsar, ii. 1 

of a dreadful thing and the first motion — ii. 1 

he first presents his fire — ii. 1 

read mine first; for mine's a suit .... — iii. 1 

Casca, you are the first that rears .. — iii. 1 

turn nre-ordinanee, and first degree — iii. I 

first, Marcus Brutus, will I shake .. — iii. I 

I will myself into the pulpit first — iii. 1 

the first time ever Cajsar put it on .. — iii. 2 

this day I breathed first — v. 3 

give me your hand first: fare you well — v. 5 
thy wife first came into the &i\(!i...lnlony /^Cleo. i. 2 

upon the first encounter, drave them — 1. 2 

yet, at the first, I saw the treasons . . — 1.3 

not if the small come first — ii. 2 

when she first met i\lark Antony — ii. 2 

first, madam, he's well — ii. 5 

most meet, that first we come — ii. 6 

but, first, or last, .your fine Egyi)tian — ii, ti 

and the first stone drop in my neck.. — iii. 11 

had we done so at first, we had — iv. 7 

if she first meet the curled Antony . . — v. 2 
the winning both of first and last. ...Cymlwlinc, i. .'j 

we are familiar ut first — 1.5 

upon liiin will I first work — 1.6 

wnich, first, perchance, she'll prove on — i. 6 

ravening first the lamb, longs ai'ter . . — 1.7 

fu-st, a very exi'clknt good-conceited — ii.3 

first, her bed-eliuml.ier (where I confess — ii. 4 

with shame (the first that ever — iii 1 

Mulmutius, who was the first of Britain — iii. I 

but, first of all, how we may steal .. — iii. 2 

but first, how get hence — iii. 2 

was once first with the best of note .. — iii. 3 

he, that strikes the veuison first — ili. 3 

ne er longed my mother so to see me first — iii. 4 

I'll wake mine eyeballs blind first ... — iii. 4 

first, make yourself but like one .... — iii. 4 

the first service thou dost me (.rep.) .. — iii. 5 

first kill him, and in lier eyes — iii. 5 

the ground that gave them first — iv. 2 

but, first, an't please the gods — iv. 2 

damned in the first beginners! — v. 3 

first, she confessed she never loved you — v. 5 

not too hot; first pay mc for the nursing — V. 5 

and at first meeting loved — v. 5 

your brothers? how first met them? — v. 5 

but, .vour ring first — v. .•> 

since first he undertook this cause Tilus.indron. 1. 1 

from whence at first she weighed .... — i. 2 

first, thrash the com, then .". — ii. 3 

that first gave life to you — iv. 2 

at the first approiich. vou — iv. .; 

first, hang the chilli, tiiat he — v. 1 

first, know thou, I liciiot him — v. 1 

the womb that tlicir first being bred. . . . IWicles, 1. 1 

have their first concciition by — 1.2 

and wiiat was first but tear what — 1.2 

who first shall die to len;:tlicii life — 1.4 

who is the first that doth iiref'er himself? — ii. 2 

even at the first, thy lo.ss is more — iii. 1 

give most, shall have her first — iv. 3 

his daughter home, who first is gone — iv. 1 (Gow.) 

first. I would have you note — iv. 

pr'y thee tell me one thing first — iv. 6 

first, sir, what is your |)lacc? — v. I 

first, sir, I [iray, what 18 your title? — v. I 

but I am for other service first — v. 2 

that can from first to last resolve you.... — v. 3 

beseech you, first go with me to my house — v. 3 

Goiieril, our eldest-born, siieak first Lear, i. 1 

we first address towanls you — 1.1 

let him be whij>|>ed that first finds it so.. — 1.4 

you we first seize on — ii. I 

lie that first lights on him — iii. 1 

in, boy, go first: you houseless poverty .. — iii. 4 

and walks till the first cock : — iii. 4 

first let mc talk with this pliilosopher .. — iii. 4 



ii.3 



iii. 3 
ill. 3 
iv. 1 
v. 2 
V. 2 



FIRST— I'll sec their trial flnt Lmr, iii. 6 

arraign her first; 'tis Goncril — iii. 6 

let him first answer that — iii. 7 

let mc wipe it first; it smells — iv. 6 

thou know'st, the first time that we — iv. 6 

was first framed flesh to raise — iv. (» 

Iilcasiires first he known that are — v, 3 

we arc not the first, who, with best — v. 3 

weep: we'll sec them starve first — v. 3 

and from first to last told him my — v. 3 

that from your first of difference — v. 3 

of nothing first create! O hvavy .. liomeo ff Juliet i. 1 
match, since first the world Ix'gun .. — i. 2 

learns them first to bear — i. 4 

by love, who first did iirompt me .... — ii. 2 
gentleman of the very first house («•/).) — ii. t 

hut first let me tell ye — ii. 4 

excels your first: or if it did not ficn.) — iii. .') 
from the first corse, till he that diecf .... Hamtel, i. 2 

enquire me first what Dauskers are — ii. I 

give first adrnittance to the embassadors — ii. 2 

upon our first, he sent to supjiress — ii. 2 

yet he knew me not at first — ii. 2 

the first row of the jiious chanson — ii. 2 

both at the first, and now, was, and is — iii. 2 

wed the second, but who killed the first.. — iii. 2 

when thy first lord is dead — iii. 2 

in pause where I shall first Ixjgin — iii. 3 

first mouthed, to be last swallowed — iv. 2 

first, her father slain; next, your son — iv. .') 

I shall, first asking your pardon.. — iv.7(letter) 
he was the first that ever bore arms .... — v. I 
Cain's jaw-bone, thatdidtheflrstiniirderl — v. I 
if Hamlet give the first or second hit .... — v. 2 

I'llplay this bout first; set it by — v. 2 

where each second stood heir to the first Ollielto, i. 1 
leave that latest, which concerns him first — i. 3 
first, I must tell thee this — Desdemona.. — ii. I 

she first loved the Moor — ii. I 

do suggest at first with heavenly shows. , 
fruits tnat blossom first, will first be ripe 

he did, from first to last: why dost 

this was her first remembrance from 

that the Moor first gave to Desdemona . . 
which, at the first, are scarce found to . . 

to such a one; 'twas my first gift 

first to be hanged, and then to confess . . 

ay : 'twas he tliat told me fiirst 

pledge of love, which I fu-st gave her. . . . 

FIHST-BEGOTTEN— 
Edward's son, the first-begotten .... I Henry VI. li. 5 

FIRST-BORN— first-born infants.. i.ocp'»/..to^^ i. 1 

in that you are the first-bom As you Like it, 1. 1 

rail against all the first-born of Egypt — ii. 5 

one spirit of the first-born Cain 2 Henry IV. i. 1 

I am his first-born son, that was.. 7'i7«a- .Andron. 1. 1 
snare my first-born son. Patient yourself — 1.2 
this my first-born son and heir! — Iv. 2 

FIRST-CONCEIVED— can chase away the 

first-conceived sound? 2HenryVI. ili. 2 

FIR8T-GOI 1D-Ii:st-L'..i»l company Henry VIII. 1. 4 

FIRSTLlNti— the vci -^ lh-.-tlin2s (rep.) Macbeth, \v. 1 
and firstlings ot tlc..-c luoils. . Troilus fyCreai. (prol.) 

FISH— what strange lisli hath made .... Teiapeit, ii. 1 

a man or a fish? — ii. 2 

a fish : he smells like a fish 

a very ancient and fish-like smell 

a strange fish! 

and had but this fish painted 

this is no fish, but an islander . . . 

I'll fish for thee, and ^et — ii. 2 

no more dams I'll make for fish . . — ii. 2 (song) 

why, thou deboshed fish thou — iii. 2 

being but half a fish, and half — iii. 2 

one of them is a plain fish — v. 1 

both as whole as a fish TuoGen. o.f Verona, ii. .'» 

the luce is a fresh fish; the salt fish is Merry IV. i. 1 

this fish will bite Much Ado, ii. 3 

to see the fish cut with her golden .. — ill. 1 
but fish not, with this melancholy, . Mer. of Ven. i. I 

tobait fish withal: if it will — iii. 1 

no more than a fish loves water AWs Well, iii. 6 

henceforth eat no fish but of fortutie's — v. 2 
fish that apiieared upon the coast. H^inter^s Tale, iv. 3 

turned into 0. cold fish, for she — iv. 3 

caught the water, though not the fish — v. 

than fish and fowds Comedy of Errors, ii. 

either at flesh or fish, a tabic — iii. 

no feathers, and fish have no fins .. ,. — ill. 

for a fish without a fin — iii. 

a dragon, and a finless fish 1 Henry IV. iii. 

she's neither fish nor flesh; a man .. — iii. 
froze them up, as fish are in a pond ..2HeriryIV. i. 
up Fish street! down saint Magnus'.2 Henry VI. iv. 
while others tisli with craft. . Troitui ^Creiwla, iv. 

as is the n>iirc>' tn tlic fish CorioUinus, iv. 

poor trilHitiu y rivers as sweet fish . . Cymbelinr, iv. 
than bait» t.. fish, or honey-stalks .. 7"i7i« And. iv. 
they say, they are half fish, half flesh.. i'f>ic/f», ii. 

unless thou canst fish for't — ii. 

for holidays, fish for fasting-days. ... — ii. 

liere's a fish hangs in the net Pericles, li. 

and to eat no fish. What art tliou? ifiir, i. 

'tis well, thou art not fish Borneo ^Juliet, i. 

the fish lives in the sea — i. 3 

may fish with the worm that hath (><p.)H.iniW. iv. 3 

FlSll ED-tliat sort was well fished for .. Trmpesi, ii. 1 
and his pond fished bv his next ..irinter'sTale, i. 2 

FISllEK-reft the fishers of their prey.Com.o/Krr.i. 1 

these fishers tell the iufirinities I'ericl'S, ii. I 

tlie fisher witli his pencil Homeo ^Juliet, i. 2 

FISHERAIEN— 
liquor fishermen's boots with mc. . Merry IVires, iv. 
fisnerineu of Corinth, us wcthnnght. Com. o/ifrr. 1. I 
rude fishermen of t'orinth by force .. — v. 1 

at vour labour. Iionest fishermen Pericles, ii. 1 

flsriermcu, that walk upon the lieach .... Lear. iv. t> 

FISHES-fishes, and the winged fowls.Cmn. of Err. ii. 1 

men, that fishes gnawe<1 upon Hirhard lll.i. 1 

as ravenous fishes, do a vessel follow. Hniry Vlll. i. ;' 



— ii. 2 



— 11. 2 



FIS 



FISHES— and fishes. Nor on (»ep.'). Thnon ofAlh. iv. 3 

he fishes, drinks, iind wastes Antony^rCleo.i. 4 

I will betray tawny-finned fislies.... — ii. 5 
tcli the fishes, lie's the queen's son. . Cijinhellne, iv. 2 

how the fishes live in the sea Periclea ii. i 

canst thou eatch any fishes then? — ii. 1 

other skins of ill-shaped fishes . . Romeo <5 Juliet, v. 1 
FISHIFlKD-how art thou fishified.... — ii. 4 
FISIl-ME.VL— many flsh-raeals ....iUenryll'.iv. 3 
FISIIMONGF.R— you are a fishmonger. HamW, ii. i 

he said I was a fishmonger — ii. 2 

FISH-POND-unolean fish-pond of hex. Alt's VV ell, v. 2 

FIST— better than a fist of Frauce KiT^gJnhn, ji. 2 

an' I but fist him once illenrylV. ii. 1 

give me thy fist, thy forefoot to Henry V. ii. 1 

of fist most valiant — iv.l 

whom with my bare fists I would \HenryVl. i. 4 

the sceptre in his childish fist IllenryVl. i. I 

is but a finger to my fist — iv. 10 

wring the awful sceptre from his flst.SHeiir.v VI. ii. 1 
pim thee into shivers with his list. Trod. ^- Cress, ii. 1 
with my armed fist I'll pash him — — ii. 3 
f'ISTING-fisting each other's throat. Cor/o/iznus, iv. 5 
to the choleric fistins of each rogue . . Pericles, iv. ti 

FISTULA— a fistula.'my lord All's Well, i. 1 

FIT — if now 'twere fit to do't Tempest, i. 2 

he's in his fit now — 'n.'i 

it will go near to remove his fit — ii. 2 

and in these fits Heave them — iii. 3 

you an officer fit for the place. . . Two Gen. of Ver. i. 2 

fit me with such weeds — ii. S 

that fits as well, as — ii. 7 

an engine fit for my proceeding — iii. 1 

woultl better fit his chamber — iv. 4 

served me as fit, by all — iv. 4 

and fit for great employment — v. 4 

I thought on her: she'll fit it Merry H'ives, ii. 1 

as in state 'tis fit — v. 5 

that he wisely shows, is fit Twelfth Night, iii. 1 

it doth not fit me — iii. 3 

you may have very fit occasion for't — iii. 4 

imgracions wretch, fit for the — iv. 1 

a young man more fit to do .... Meas.for Mcas. ii. 3 

fit thy consent to my sharp — ii. 4 

and fit his mind to death — ii. 4 

and make fit for his attempt — iii. 1 

every true man's apparel fits your thief — iv. 2 
so every true man's apparel fits yoiu- — iv. 2 

these letters at fit time deliver — iv. 5 

I thought your marriage fit — v. 1 

is fit; 'tis once, thou lovest (^ep.) ....Much Ado, i. ! 

and it better fits my blood to lie — i. 3 

we'll fit the kid-fox with — ii. 3 

a worse title, and I will fit her to it. . — iii. 2 
but it would better fit your honom- . . — iii. 2 
the most senseless and fit man for .. — iii. 3 

to fit your fancies to your Mid. A'.'s Dream, i. 2 

which is thought fit, through all Athens — i. 2 

howfit a word is that vile name — ii. 3 

fit in his place and time Love\ L. Lost, i. 1 

in fair, fit for these days! — iv.l 

for your waist should be fit — iv.l 

how both did fit it! — iv.l 

60 obscenely, as it were, so fit — iv. I 

none so fit as to present the nine — v. 1 

is fit for treasons, stratagems. . Merck, of Fe?iice, v. 1 
to cope him in these sullen fits ...As you Like it, ii. 1 

it fits my humour well — iii. 2 

evils sit so fit in him All's Well, i. 1 

nay, I'll fit you, and not be all day . . — ii. 1 
[Co(.]coldest, and despair most fits... — - ii. 1 

that fits all questions ( repeated) — ii . 2 

answer serve fit to all questions? (rep.) — ii. 2 

it were fit you knew him — iii. 6 

take a lodging, fit to entertain. . . . Taming ofSh. i. 1 

my house, fit to instruct her — i. 1 

by any means light on a fit man — i. 1 

w'as it fit for a servant to use — i. 2 

and behaviour, fit for her turn — i. 2 

we'll fit him to our turn — iii. 2 

this doth fit the time — iv.3 

what fit is this, good ladv? Winter's Tale, iii. 2 

well you fit our ages with fiowers — iv. 3 

no milliner can so fit his — iv.3 

where it fits not you to know — iv. 3 (song) 

which 'tis not fit you know — iv. 3 

if he think it fit to shore them — iv.3 

acquainted with his fits Comedy of Errors, iv. 3 

what's a fever but a tit of madness? . . — v. 1 

thy jealous fits have scared — v. 1 

a most outrageous fit of madness .... — v. 1 

then comes my fit again Macbeth, iii. 4 

the fit is momentary — iii. 4 

best knows the fits o' the season — iv. 2 

if such a one bo fit to govern .— iv.3 

and fits the mounting spirit King John, i. 1 

but I will fit it with some better .... — iii. 3 

and meagre as an ague's fit — iii. 4 

the fit is strongest — iii. 4 

finding thee fit for bloody villany .. — iv. 2 

of a feast, fits a dull fighter \ Henry IK iv. 2 

impatient of his fit 'iHenry IV. i. 1 

mend him, and make him fit to go .. — iii. 2 

these fits are with his highness — iv. 4 

it fits us then, to be as provident Henry V. ii. 4 

is it fit this soldier keep — iv. 7 

my wooing is fit for thy understanding — v. 2 

[irize, fit for the devil's grace! I Henry VI. v. 3 

fit to be made companion with a king — v. 3 

approves her fit for none — v. .5 

h\imonrs fit not for a crown 2Henry VI. i. 1 

a state fit for his liolincss — i. 3 

that time best fits the work — i. 4 

where it best fits to be — ii. 3 

see the lists and ail tilings fit — ii. 3 

not fit to govern and rule multitudes — v. 1 

I am a subject fit to jest witliai ZHenryVI. iii. 2 

and shall be thought most fit for. . liicharri III. iii. 1 

a fit or two o' the face Henry VIII. i. 3 

and fit it with such furniture — ii. 1 



[ 264 ] 



FIV 



FIT— thou art a cure fit for a king . . Henry VIII. ii. 2 

I find him a fit fellow — ii. 2 

it's fit this royal session do proceed . . — ii. 4 

(for I feel the last fit of my greatness) — iii. I 

negligence, fit for a fool to fall by . . — iii. 2 

in time will find their fit rewards — iii. 2 

it fits we thus proceed — v. 1 

well, you say so in fits Troilus ^- Cressida, iii. 1 

better would it fit Achilles much .... — iii. 3 

which better fits a lion — v. 3 

nor is he fit for it, indeed Timon of Athens, i. 2 

a fool, and fit for thy master — iii. 1 

fit I do meet them — v. 1 

and fit it is, because I am Coriolanus, i. 1 

tellValeriawe are fittobidherwelcome — i. 3 

with measure fit the honours — ii. 2 

go fit you to the custom — ii. 2 

the violent fit o' the time — iii. 2 

were fit for thee to use — iii. 2 

'tisfit you make strong party — iii. 2 

and when the fit was ou him JuliusCiesar, i. 2 

indeed, lie is not fit — 

a dish fit for the gods (rep.) — 

there is no hour so fit as Cajsar's death — i 

is it fit, the three-fold world divided.. — i 
find thee most fit for busiuess . .Antony ffCleo. i 

and says't, it is not fit — i 

the foulest best fits — i 

as the fits and stirs of his mind Cymbtline, 

it were fit, that all the plagues — 

if he shall think it fit, a saucy — 

only for the most worthiest nt! — 

it is not fit, your lordship should .... — 
but it is fit, I should commit offence — 

ay, it is fit for your lordship only — 

is it fit, I went to look upon hini? — 

than would fit a franklin's housewife — i 

1 have already fit ('tis in my cloak-bag) — i 

and fit you to your manliood — i 

it fits ns therefore ripely — ii 

how fit his garments serve me ! — i 

made the tailor, not be fit too? — i 

a woman's fitness comes by fits — i 

thy name well fits thy faith — iv. z 

with faces fit for masks — v. 3 

and will fit you with dignities — v. 5 

the fit and apt construction of th3' name — v. 5 
a better head her glorious body fits .. Titus And. i. 2 

one fit to bandy with thy — i. 2 

and fit thy thoughts, to mount aloft.. — ii. 1 

I am as able, and as fit, as thou — ii. 1 

a charm to calm these fits — ii. 1 

this valley fits the purpose — ii.3 

for no name fits thy nature — ii- 3 

laugh! it fits not with this hour — iii. 1 

unless some fit or frenzy do possess . . — iv. 1 

Lucius, I'll fit thee — iv. 1 

wll3^ sir, that is as fit as can be — . . — iv. 3 

his fits, his frenzy, and his bitterness? — iv. 4 

closing with him fits his lunacy — v. 2 

and it is fit, what being more Pericles, i. I 

which pleasure fits a husband — i. 1 

it fits tliee not to ask the reason — i. 1 

fits kings, as they are men — i. 2 

fit counsellor, and servant — i. 2 

and I, as fits ray nature, do obey you . . — ii. 1 

if it be a day fits you — ii. 1 

'tis fit it should be so; for princes — ii. 2 

than you expect, or more than's fit — ii.3 

some other is more fit — ii.3 

those duties back as are right fit Lear, i. 1 

I find it not fit for your over-looking — i. 2 

heai-d him maintain it to be fit — ;. 2 

meet, that I can fashion fit — i. 2 

that which ordinary men are fit for — i. 4 

thought it fit to answer from our home . . — ii. 1 

the indisposed and sickly fit — ii. 4 

provided for your fit welcome — ii. 4 

make content with his fortunes fit — iii. 2 (song) 

are not fit for your beholding — iii. 7 

sir, I thought it fit to send the old — y. 3 

it fits, when such a villain Romeo <§- Juliet, i. b 

as you think fit to furnish me — iv. 2 

with instruments upon them fit to open — v. 3 

it fits your wisdom so far to Hamlet, i. 3 

'tis not fit thus to obey liira — i. 4 

as fits a king's remembrance — ii. 2 

if you hold it fit, after the play — iii. 

drugs fit, and time agreeing — iii. 

when he is fit and seasoned for his — iii . 

you must translate; 'tis fit we understand — iv. 

in his lawless fit, behind the arras — iv. 

would not understand what was most fit — iv. 

botch the words up fit to their own thoughts — iv. 

may fit us to our shape — iv. 

thus awhile the fit will work on him — — v. 



till fit time of law, and course of direct. . Othello, i. 

I crave fit disposition for my wife — i. 

a white that snail her blackness fit — ii 

he is a soldier, fit to stand by CiEsar — ii. 

if you think fit, or that it may be done . . — iii. 

fit that Cassio have his place._. — iii. 

such observances as fit the bridal — iii. 

if I do find him fit, I'll move your suit . . — iii. 

this is his second fit; he had one yesterday — iv. 
FITCHEW— a fitchew, a toad. Troilus ^ Cressida, v. 

the fitchew, nor the soiled horse Lear, iv. 

'tis such another fitchew ! Othello, iv. 

FITF tJL— after life's fitful fever Macbeth, iii. 

FITLY-here, my lord. So fitly?. Timon of Athens, iii. 

even so most fitly as you malign Coriolanus^ i. 

that can judge as fitly of his worth. .. — ly. 

to nothing so fitly as to a wliale Pericles, ii. 

may fitly like your grace Lear, i. 

from whence I will fitly bring you to — i. 

FIT.MENT-a fitment for the purpose. Ci/mhetine, v. 

she should do her clients her fitment . . Pericles, i v. 
FITNESS— of necessary Mness': . . Meas.for Mens. ii. 

an answer of such fitness for all ill's Well, ii. 



FITNESS- fitness now does unmake Macbeth, i. 7 

a needful fitness that we adjourn . . Henry VIII. ii. 4 

when fitness calls them on Troilus <5- Cressida, i. 3 

nor fitness for the world Coriolanus, ii. 1 

a woman's fitness comes by fits Cymbeline, iv. 1 

were i t my fitness to let these Lear, iv. 2 

if his fitness speaks, mine is ready Hamlet, v, 2 

FITTED— he may be so fitted. . . . Meas.for Meas. ii. 4 

all night, I am not fitted for 't — iv. 3 

see you one day fitted with a husband. Miic/i/4t/o,ii. 1 

and I hope, here is a play fitted Mid. N's Dr. i. 2 

not one word apt, one player fitted . . — v. 1 
well fitted in the arts, glorious . . Love's L. Lost, ii. 1 

and may by us be fitted — iv.3 

that part was aptly fitted .... Taming of Sh. 1 (ind.) 

she better would have fitted me 3 Hen ry VI. iv. I 

she had fitted you with her craft .... Cymbeline, y. 5 
fitted by kind for rape and villany. . Titus And. ii. 1 
well are you fitted, had you but a Moor — y. 2 
thouglits and remembrance fitted Hamlet, iv. b 

FITTER— some more fitter place.. Weas.^br Meas. ii. 2 

but fitter time for that — v. I 

your son, there is no fitter matter All's Well, i v. 5 

thou art fitter to be worn in ZHenry IV. i. 2 

tliere are other men fitter to go out . . — iii. 2 

better place, fitter for sickness 1 Henry VI. iii. 2 

and fitter is my study, and my books — v. I 
the fitter for the King of heaven .... Richard III. i. 2 

for he was fitter for that place — i. 2 

fitter then the gods should have her . . Pericles, iv. 1 
rcqi dies a fitter place Lear, v. 3 

FITTEST— devise the fittest time . . As you Like it, i. 3 

this course I fittest choose Comedy of Errors, iv. 3 

fittest time to corrupt a man's v/ife.Coriolaiius, iv. 3 

are strewings fittest for graves Cymbeline, iv. 2 

madam, do you, 'tis fittest Lear, iv. 7 

FITTETH— it fltteth the spirit of. . Love's L. Lost, i. 2 
it fitteth not a prelate so to plead . . 1 Henry VI. iii. 1 
best fitteth my degree Richard III. iii. 7 

FITTING— fitting well a sheep. . Two Gen. of Ver. i. 1 

that is fitting to be known Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

news fitting to the night, black King John, v. 6 

as fitting best to quittance 1 Henry VI. ii. 1 

nothing, fitting-ior your purpose.. iiic/iord ///. iii. 7 
fitting for a princess descended . . Antony <S- Cleo. v. 2 

fittiii" my bounty, and thy state Cymbeline, v. 5 

neednil in our loves, fitting our duty? . . Handel, i. 1 

FITZWATER- Fitzwater, thou a.Tt.Richard II. iv. 1 
my lord Fitzwater, I do remember . . — iv. 1 
thy pains, Fitzwater, shall not be forgot — v. 6 

FIVE— had I not four or five women Tempest, i. 2 

full fathom five thy father lies — i. 2 (song) 

continue in it five weeks without — ii. 1 

there 's but five upon this isle — iii. 2 

five and thirty leagues — iii. 2 

each putter-out on five for one — iii. 3 

for one shot of five pence ..Two Gen. of Verona, ii. 5 

Shalt have five thousand — ii. 5 

out of his five sentences Merry Wives, i. 1 

it is his five senses — i. 1 

among five thousand, and five hundred — iii. 3 
some four or five attend him .... Twelfth Night, i. 4 

besides your five wits? — iy. 2 

was worth five thousand . . Measure for Measure, i. 2 

Claudio's head sent me by five — iv. 2 

of which he made five marks — iv. 3 

and five years since, there was — v. 1 

since which time, of fire years — y. 1 

four of his five wits went halting off ..Much Ado, i. I 
five shillings to one on 't, with any . . — iii. 3 
between fourteen, and five and thirty — iii. 3 

'tis almost five o'clock, cousin — iii. 4 

of all these five the sense Mid. N.'s Dream, iv.l 

that 's not five weeks old as yet? . . Love's L. L. iv. 2 

and raught not to five weeks — iv. 2 

the third of the five vowels — v. 1 

for he hath been five thousand years — v. 2 
present the other five. There is five . . — v. 2 

cannot prick out five such — v. 2 

by five of the clock , Merchant of Venice, ii. 2 

I have five hundred crowns As youLike it, ii. 3 

five and twenty, sir — v. 1 

there 's four or five, to great Saint . . All's Well, iii. 5 

some four or five descents since — iii . 7 

five or six thousand — iv.3 

five or six thousand horse, I said .... — iv. 3 
who hath for four or five removes — — v. 3 

past ciu-e of the fives Taming of Shrew, iii. 2 

the third, nine, and some five Winter's Tale, ii. 1 

five pound of currants — iv. 2 

and five or six honest wives — iv. 3 

five justices' hands at it — iv.3 

could meet by twice five leagues. . Comedy of Err. i. 1 

five summers have I spent — i. I 

soon, at five o'clock, please you — i. 2 

at five o'clock, I shall receive — iv.l 

five hundred ducats, villain — iv. 4 

the dial points at five — v. 1 

at least from fair five hundred King John, i. 1 

five hundred pound a year! — i. 1 

got five hundred pounds a year (rep.) — _i. 1 

these five provinces, with her — n. 2 

my lord, they say, five moons — iy. 2 

tiil twice five summers have Richard II. \. 3 

forsooth, five year, and as 1 Henry I T. ii. 4 

this advertisement is five days old .. — iii. 2 

to five and twenty thousand men 2Henry VI. i. 3 

our present five and twenty thousand — i. 3 
what! is the king but five and twenty — i. 3 
fifteen hundred toot, five hundred horse — ii. 1 

there were five more sir Johns — ii. 4 

worth five of Agamemnon, and ten. .. — ii. 4 

let ine have five hundred of my — y . 5 

in the year eight hundi-ed five Hevry /'. i. 2 

with four or iive most vile — iv. (chorus) 

five hundred poor I have in yearly .. — iv.l 
there's five to one; besides, they all . . — iv. 3 
thou hast unwislied five thousand men — iv.3 
of the whicli, five hundred were but. . — iv. s 
of all other men, but five and twenty — iv. 8 



FIV 



[ 265 ] 



FLA. 



I'lVE— with five llovvcr-(lc-lucc8 MIcnrDfl.l. 2 

at lenst five Frenchmen iliwl — .jl- 2 

iH-siile live hiinilrcd urisoners — .i". 4 

thu-u ftvc (hivs hftvel hid mc illmrijyi. i". 10 

niiiiifnt thisotlvedavs(r»';..) — iv. 10 

witli five tU.nis.nui men? («■;>/> Stint, yl'I. i. 2 

fiveiM.n totweutv! tlun.L-htlio - .■• 2 

will but umoiintti) live aii.l twenty.. — .11. 1 
nii.l <)\f.>ril. witli ti^e th.Mis.uul men — m. 3 
within these five liour.i Hustings ..«iVA(in/ //J. ui. li 

live hiive I slain tn-chty, insteiid — V. ■! 

live tiiUntsia hisdeht Timon nT Athens, x. 1 

the live best senses neltnowledge — .i- 2 

iin.l hite. live tlumsiiml to ViiiTO — n. 1 

wliiell nmkes it live inul twenty — "• ' 

I eleared liini with live talents 



•il w ith those five . 



liv 



11. '.' 
iii. 4 
iii. 1 



...^ >,.,,..,4inileni" ns, niv lord. Five — 

live tribniies. to ileiViiil tlieir CorManus, i. 1 

live times, Man'ius, 1 luivc fought .. — i-. 10 
five hundred vdires of that sound (;pp.1 — ii. 3 
thev make, the devils mar five. . . Auioiitj S,- Clm. v. 2 
witK five times so niueh conversation. C(/mtWmc,i. b 
hath the king five times redeemed .. — i- H 

five times lie liath returned.. . . TUus Andronicus, i. 1 
Komans, of Ave and twenty valiant sons — i. 2 
this monument five hundred years .. — .1.2 
not been entranced above five hours . . Pericles, in. 2 

were you a gamester at five — 'v. 6 

five days we do allot thee lear, i. 1 

I entreat you to bring but five and twenty — ii. 4 
come to you with five and twenty, Regan? — ii. 4 
need vou five ond twenty, ten, or five — — n. 4 

bless thy five wits! Tom's a-cold — m- 4 

bless thy five wits! — m- 6 

some five or six and thirty of Ids knights — in. 7 
five limes in that, ere once in our five. iioin. ffJul.y.i 

of healths five fathom deep — 1.4 

some five and twenty years — .1.5 

I have in niv whole five — n. 4 

to pav fivednoats five, I would not.... //'im(eMv. 4 

from'this present hour of five Olhello, ii. 2 

FIVE-FIXGEHED-TIED- 

anothcr knot, five-flngered-tied. rroi7iis ^- Crra. v. 2 

FIVE-FOLD-thee five-fold blazon. T«e(/V/. A'lV/i/, i, h 

FIVESCORE-he came to fivescore. Z.nue.< L. Losi,iv.'i 

withered hermit, fivescore winters worn — iv. 3 

FIX— and envy: fix th/ foot Corinlamn, i. 8 

I earnestly did fix mme eye .. TUusAndrotiicus, v. 1 

fix most firm thy resolution Othello, v. 1 

FlXED-the hour is fixed, the match. A/en-ydViw, ii. 2 

you orphan heirs of fixed destiny — v. 5 

there thy fixed foot shall grow. . . . Tu-elflh. Sight. \. 4 
an ass's nowl I fixed on liis head . . .Mid. X. Dr. iii. 2 
that give a name to every fi.xcd star.. Love's L. L. i. I 

vet these fixed e\i Is si t so fit AlVs tVeli, i . 1 

but my intents a-e fixed — i- I 

fastened and fixed the shame on't. Winter sTale, ii. 3 

the statue is but newly fixed — v;. 3 

eves on whom our care was fixed . Comedy o/ Err. i. 1 
fixed his head upon our battlements.. . . Mnchelh, i . 2 

from their fixed beds of lime King John, ii. 1 

four fixed: and the fifth did whirl .. — i.y. 2 

fright the fixed stars of heaven Richard II. ii. 4 

to which is fixed, as an aim or butt Henry t\ i. 2 

and her foot, look you, is fixed upon — iii. 6 

that the fixed sentinels almost .. — iv. (chorus) 

sit like fixed candlesticks — iv. 2 

thine eyes fixed to the sullen iHenrv I'l-i- 2 

strongly through my fixed teeth .... — iii. 2 

m.v hair be li.xed an end — iii. 2 

the root was fixed in virtue's iUenryl^I. iii. 3 

and be not fixed in doom perpetual. ii»'c/iar(i ///. iv.4 

and fixed on spiritual object Henry fill. iii. 2 

and so stand fixed: peace, plenty — — v. 4 
is, as a virtue, fixed, to-day was. Troilus Sf Cress, i. 2 

so eternal and so fixed a soul — v. 2 

nay, that's most fixed Timon of Athens, i. 1 

ou'this sovereign lady fixed — i. 1 

that he's your fixed enemy Coriolanus, ii. 3 

of nature from the fixed place Z.ear,.i. 4 

how unremoveable and fixed he is — ii. 4 

where the greater malady is fi.xed — iii. 4 

not fixed his canon 'gainst self-slaughter. Ha?nie(, i. 2 

and fixed his e.ves upon you? — i. 2 

fixed on the summit of the highest mount — iii. 3 

to make me a fixed figure Othello, iv. 2 

FIXES— that fixes no lx)urne 'tv!i-x.t.Winler'sTale, i. 2 

FIXING— fixing it upon a fairer eye ..Lone'sL.L. i. 1 

fixing our eyes on whom our care. Comedy of Err. i. 1 

mine eve, fixing it only here Cymheline. i. 7 

FIXTUkE-firm fixture of tliy foot. Merry ll'ives. iii. 3 

the fixture of liercve has motion.. Win/ei''i7'<//(», v. 3 

FIXURE-quite from their flxure!.7'roiiui.^Cri-.«. i. 3 

FLAG— these flags of France King John. ii. 1 

unwind your bloody flag Henry I', i. 2 

this token serveth for aflag of truce. lJ/e7'r,v''/- iii. 1 

a garish flag, to be the aim liicharj III. iv. 4 

Bet up the bUKxly flag against Coriolanus, ii. 1 

like to a vagabond flag upfm..intony ^ Cleoputrn.i. 4 

to course your flying fings — iii. 1 1 

semblance of their whiteflogsdisplayed./Vr/dej, i. 4 
death's pale flag is not advanced . . Ilnmeo ^ Jul. v. 3 
I must show out a flag and sign of love...O'/iW/o, i. 1 
FLAG(;i.\G-flaggingwingseirpileud..2H.>irr/F/. iv.l 
FLAGON— poured a flagon of Rlicnish on . llamlei, v. 1 
FLAIL— lazy thresher with a flail. . ..ailenryri. ii. 1 
FLAKE-these white flakes liad challenged. Lrar, iv.7 
FLAKY-flaky darkness breaks within.. (dV/i. //;. v. 3 

FLA.ME- would I flame distinctly Tempest, i. 2 

the flame will biiek deseend Merry Wives, v. 5 

whose flames aspire. OS thoughts .. — v. .^ (song) 
love you in inv master's flame. . . . Tirelfth Night, i. 5 
in tlie flames [Kn(.-flaws] of her.-Wrai./or Mens. ii. 3 

when my flame lacks oil AW t Well, i.2 

in so tnie a flame of liking — i. 3 

that flames in your fair eyes — ii.3 

throw into the flame Mncbelh, iv 1 

<iuenehiiig the flame of bold iHcurylf. 'indue.) 



FLA.ME— in flames, like to the prince ..Henri/ V. iii. 8 

and knobs, and fiames of fire — iii. 6 

and tlirouL;b their piilv flames — I v. (chorus) 

at lust breuk out iuto'a flame illenryl'I. i!i. 1 

and the pieiiii>eil HMlnesof the \mt . .•illenry ri. V. 2 

and luiin nie up with flames sneiiryl'l. ii. 1 

the ilS|iiriu.' fliuiie of golden day ..Diehard III. iv. 4 
ave lur liun|i and Ihimes of love . . Troi/. 4- CrcM. iii. 2 
bV the lluiue of yonder glorious heaven — v. 
our gentle llaiue provokes itself.. 7'iinono//(Mfn»,i. 1 
a small thing would make it flame, t'orio/aii u», iv. 3 
fire your city is ready to flame in — — v. 2 
ftom the flames of Troy niion his. . . JuliusCceiar, i. 2 

did flame and burn like twenty — j. 3 

flame o' the taper bows toward her ..Cymheline, \t. 2 

as near to lust, as flame to smoke I'erides,\. 1 

dart your blinding flames into her Lear, ii. 4 

led through fire and throuf^h flame — iii. 4 

to sulphurous and tormenting flames .. Hamlet, \. b 
threateuipL' Iheflameswith hissoii rheum — i|. 2 
the beat and f.anie of thy distemper — iii. 4 



FLA.MI'M 



)i.(inKi:i)- 



kind.... — iv.7 
veil in a flauK-eoloured 
1] stock ..Tii-iirihX,ghi.\. 3 

n Ihune-cnlnurcd taif. ta \llr,nyll'. i. 2 

FLAM l',I)— ill every cabin, I flamed Tempest, i. 2 

FLAM ION— and hoar the flarnen . . Tiwnn of A'h. iy. 3 

seld-sliown llaincns do press among.. f>r/»/'/ni(s, ii. 1 

FL-YMING-shall to my flaming wrath. 2HcHr|//7. y.2 

is too flaming a praise for a ^ood.. Troilus ^- Cress, i. 2 

with flaming ton stoops to his base Hamlet, 11. 2 

to flaming youth let virtue be as wax — — iii. 4 

if I quench thee, thou flaming minister. . Othello,v. 2 

FLAMINIUS-Flaminius! Servilius!.7';m. o/.li/i. ii. 2 

Ftaminins, honest Flaminius — iii. 1 

under thy cloak, pretty Flaminins?.. — iii. 1 
Flaminiiis, I have noted thee always — iii- I 

draw nearer, honest Flaminins — iii. 1 

FLANDEKS-t'rom thenee to 1 lauders.S Wcnri/T/. iv. .') 
carry into I'laiiders the great Bea\. Henry I III. iii. 2 
FLANNEL-tounswerthe Welshflannel.jWerry /r. v. 5 
FLAP— thou green sarcenet flap . . Troilus 4- Cress. V. 1 
FLAP-DRAGON- , , 

easier swallowed than a flap-dragon., tooe sL.L.y. 1 

olFcaniUes' ends for flap-dragons •2llenryiy. ii. 4 

FLAP-DRAGONED— 

see bow the sea flap-dragoned it.. Winter'sTale,in. 3 
FLAP-EAREU-flap-eared knave!. 7'.i)ni;is-o/.v/i. iv. 1 
FLAP-,IACK— puddings and flnp-i'.u^ks. . fcrirles.n. 1 
FLARIXIi— ribands pendant. Il:i 1 in- . . Mcrri/ W. iv. .■) 
FLASH-in the aim and very flashot il.Jul. C<rsor,i. 3 
tlie flash and outbreak of a fiery niiud.. Huwi/e/, ii. 1 
FLASHES— flashes now a phojuix. . Timon of A'h. n. 1 
thy nimble, thy sulphurous flashes! . . Pericles, 111. 1 

everv hour he flashes into one gross Lear, i. 3 

your flashes of merriment, that were Hamlet, \. 1 

FLASHING— flashingflre will follow. .Hoir;/ K. 11. 1 
FlyASK— carved bone face on a flask 
FLAT— an' it had not fallen flat-Ion] 

sucks up from bogs, fens, flats 

I'll fall flat: perchance he 

and flat meads thatch'd with stovei 
nay, now you are too flat Tiro Ge. 



L.h.y.i 

. Tempest, ii. 1 



— 11. 2 

— iv. 1 
jfl'erona,!. 2 

... tiie soldier is flat blasphemy. . Mens, for Meas. ii. 2 
the flat transgression of a school-boy. il/uc/i .-frfo, ii. 1 
why, this is flat perjury 
flat bui-glarly, as ever was committed _ 



iv. 2 



in. 2 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 



a goose, that s flat Love s L. Lost, 111 . 1 

flat treason 'gainst the — i\- 3 

think of shallows ani of ^ats. Merchant of Fenice,]. 1 

a very dangerous flat ; and fatal — m. 1 

why, this is flat knavery Taming of Shrew, y. I 

rebellion, flat rebellion! King John, uu 1 

passing these flats, are taken — X- Ii 

nay, I will; that's flat .1 HenrylV. 1. 3 

through Coventry with them, that's flat — iv. 2 

the flat unraised spirit Henry V. i . , chorus) 

and dregs of a flat tamed piece. . Troilus S; Cress, iv. 1 
with the nose, down with it flat . . Timon of Aih. ly. 3 

the city, and to lav all flat CorioUmus.m. I 

that is the way to lay the city flat.... — "i- 1 
else an easy battery might lay flat . . CymbeUne,\. b 

I'll tread these flats. Consider — in- 3 

strike flat the thick rotundity Lear, 111. 2 

eats not the fiats with more impetuous. Hum(e^ iv. ."i 

made of stuff so flat and dull — iv. 7 

till of this flat a mountain you have made — ..y. 1 

FLATLY— he tells me flatly • . Merch. of Vemce. in. .■) 

tells vou flatly what his mind is. . Taming of .-/i. 1. 2 

he flatly says," he'll not lay down .... Kiiig John. y. 2 

they tell me flatly I am no I Henry I r. 11. 4 

FLATNESS— did but see the flatness. H'.nfcr s 7. 111. 2 
FLATTER-I will not flatter her. Two Gen. ofl'er.n. i 

O flatter mo; for love — .!)• J 

flatter, and praise, commend — i". 1 

think not I flatter, for I swear I do not — iv. 3 
unless I flatter with myself too much — ly. 4 

desire him not to flatter with r,relfth.\i!;hi, 1. b 

to flatter up these powers of mine.. 7,m'c .< J,. Lnj',y. 2 
they flatter me; but yet I'll go ..;Mer. ofrenice.u. Ii 

but you, that flatters her As you Like it. in. :, 

further I will not flatter you King John. 11. 2 

yet one but flatters us Hichard II. 1. 1 

great king, to flatter thee (rep.) — .11. 1 

?o insinuate, flatter, how — iv. 1 

tendin" to content, flatter themselves — v. 5 

by heaven, I cannot flatter \HenryIF. iv. 1 

yet my blood begins to flatter me Henry I', v. 2 

to flatter lis withal \ Henry I'l. 11. I 

dotii not flatter, face, or feign — v. 3 

give consent to flatter sin — .v. .^ 

to flatter Henry, and forsake Sllenry ri. iv. 7 

'tis sin to flatter, good was little — y. 6 

teach mc how to flatter you Hichard III. 1. 2 

iK'cause I cannot flatter, and speak fair — .1.3 
flatter inv sorrows with report of it .. — iv. 4 

f<K)l, do hot flatter; my conscience — y. 3 

for I should ne'er flatter thee . . Timonnf .Vhens, 1. 2 

bid tlicm flalter thee; ( ) thou — iv. 3 

I flatter not ; but say, thou art a cBitiflf — iv. 3 



FLATTER— flatter beneath obhornng.Corio(anu». i. 1 

to flatter them for their love — |1. 2 

multiplving spawn how can he flatter — ii. 'i 
I will, sir, flatter mv sworn brother . . — ii.3 

regard me as I do not flatlir — iii. I 

lie would not flatter Neiitnne for his.. — jii. 1 

than flatter him in a bower — iii. 2 

Leiiidus flatters both Antony 4 Cleopatra, ii. I 

to flatter C'ajsar, would you mingle eyes — iii. 1 1 
Andnniicns, I do not flatter thee.. ri/u« Andron. i. 2 

abuse the king, that flutter him Pericles, i. 2 

he flatters yon, niukea war npini — i.2 

lie cannot flatter, he' an honest Lear, ii. 2 

nay.d<i not think I flutter f JnmW, iii. 2 

FL.\TTEREn— flattered her . . Two Gen. ofVer. iv. 4 

I have flattered a ladv AsyouLilie it, v. 4 

have fondly flattered her withal.. rammt'o/SA. iv. 2 
try his friends that flattered him . . Hichard II. ii. 2 
bending peers that flattered thce?..«ic/i'in/ III. iv. 4 

he, that loves to be flattered Timon of Athens, i. 1 

they never flattered thee: what hast — iv. 3 
men that have flattered the people.. Con'olanui, ii. 2 

being then most flattered Julius Ctrsar, ii. I 

I bear him as he flattered . . Antony ^ Cleopatra, i.2 1 

flatters both, of both is flattered — ii. 1 | 

the thinf; the which is flattered Pericles, i.2 

than still contemned and flattered icar, iv. I 

tliey flattered me like a dog — iy. K 

why should the poor be flattered? Hamlet, iii. 2 | 

FLAl'TERER— for my flatterer rem/vcx;, iii. 3 1 

too gi-eat a flatterer for my mind Tu-elPh ,\ight,\. :, 
a thousand flatterers sit within ....Richard II. ji. I 

but basely led by flatterers — ii. I 

lie is a flatterer, a parasite, a keeper — ii. 2 
flatterers were then but subjects (rep.) — i.y. 1 

no coward, nor no flatterer 1 HenryVI.ii. 4 

if thine eye be not a flatterer Hichard III. i. 4 

from the glass-faced flatterer .. Timon of Athene, i. 1 
to he flattered, is wortliy o' the flatterer — i. I 
all those flatterers were thine enemies — 
the same piece is every flatterer's spirit — 

and say, tnis man's a flatterer? — 

tli.v flatterers yet wear silk, drink wine — 
be thou a flatterer now, and seek .... — 
liadst been a knave, and flatterer. ... — 
nearest compare to thy flatterers! 



shall i' the held prove' flatterers Coriolanus,]. 9 

called them time-pleasers, flatterers, foes — iii. 1 

men with flatterers (rep.) Julius Ctesar,]']. 1 

either a coward, or a flatterer — iii. 1 

a flatterer's would not, though they do — iv. 3 

flatterers! Flatterers! now, Brutus — v. 1 
thou art no flatterer; I thank thee Pericles, i. 2 

1 know, sir, I am no flatterer Lear, ii. 2 

FL.\TTERIES— the flatteries of ... . Hichard II. iii. 2 

felt tlie flatteries that grow upon it! Ilenryl'III.ui. 1 

and spend our flatteries Timon of Athens, i. 2 

stuck and spangled you with flatteries — iii. 6 
the infinite flatteries, that follow — — v. 1 

must be used with checks, as flatteries Lenr,i. 3 

FLATTERING-are a flattering hoy Meny W. iii. 2 

to be a flattering liones t man .Vurh Ado, i. 3 

that flatter! ng tongue of yours . . As you Like it, iv. 1 
even as a flattering dream.. TamingofSh. 1 (indue.) 
honours in these fiatterinK streams ..Macfeth, iii. 2 
drawn in the flattering table of her eye. ..John, 11. 2 

with other flattering sounds Richard II. ii. I 

O flattering glass, like to my followers — iy. 1 

flattering himself with project 2Henry If'-i. 3 

thou dost give me flattering busses . . — 11. 4 
for all this flattering gloss, he will ..iUenryfl.t. 1 
flattering me with impossibilities ..iHenryf'I. 111.2 
the flattering index 01 a direful . . Richard III. iv. 4 

here comes a flattering rascal Cyjnbeline,i. 6 

the woman's; flattering, hers — . '!• ^ 

flattering myself, as if it Titus Andronicus, ui. 2 

and fluttering his displeasure, tripped Lear, 11. 2 

flattering sweet to he substantial.. TJomfo ^JuL 11. 2 
if I may tnist the flattering eye of sleep — v. 1 
not that flattering unction to your mui.Hamlet.uu 4 
FLATTER'ST— thou flatter'st me ..Hichard 1 1. 11. 1 
thou flatter'st misery. I flatter not Timon of.^th. iv. 3 
FLATTERY— by thy flattery . . TuoGen. of Ver. iv. 2 

some flattery for this evil Lore'sL.Lost, ly. 3 

and say, this is no flattery Asynu Like it, u. 1 

breath of flattery conquers strife Comedy of Err. in. 2 

were not thought flattery 1 Henry I y. ly . 1 

there is flattery in friendship Henry V. 11 1. 7 

but poisoned flattery? — iv. 1 

nor the heart of flattery about me . . — v. 2 
base insinuating flattery, I pluck ...1 Henry I'l. n. 4 
flattevv hath he won the eommons..2 Henri/ /'/. in. I 
come iiot to hear such flattery now Henry Vlll. v. 2 
let none think flattery, for tliey'U .. — \- 4 
to counsel deaf, but not to flattery! Timon ofAlh.i. 2 

can do i' the way of flattery CorioUmus, 111. 2 

his new plants with dews of flottery — ..v. !> 
I kiss tliv huud.luit not in flattery /«iii«CrPjar,iii. 1 
mine cars that luard lier flattery. . . . Cymheline, v. h 
now. farewell, tlatterv: die . . TOi/s.-fiidroiiiciiJ, in. I 

for flattery is the bellows blows up Pericles, 1. 2 

so well as' soft and tender flattery — iv. 4 (Gower) 

out of her own lo\c and flattery Olhello, ;v. 1 

FL\U NT— these borrowed flaunts Winter sTale, iv. 3 
FL.VVIUS-call at Flavins' house.. Mea.for.Vea. iv. f, 

but send me Flavins first — iv- .^ 

Flavins,- mv lord 7'imon of Athens, 1. 2 

Murnlluiand Flavius Julius CiBsar,i. 2 

Liibeo, and Flavius, set our battles on — .y. 3 

ri>.\W— [Kn(.] flaws of her own ...Meas. for Meas. u. 3 

sans crack or flaw Love'sL.Losl.y. 2 

these flaws, and starts, impostors . . Macbeth, iii. 4 

OS sudden as flaws congealetl in iHenrii IV. iv. 4 

the fury of this madbred flaw -iHenryl'I. 111. 1 

standing every flavs', ond saving Corio/diiui, v. 3 

how Antony becomes his flaw ..AntanySrClco. 111. 10 

1 do not fear the flaw Pericles, iii. 1 

break into a hundred thousand flaws Lear. 11. 4 

£»teh a wall to expel the winter's flaw.. //ninW, v. 1 
AWED— hath flawed the league. H^'iri/i'J/f i. 1 



FLA 

FLAWED— hath flawed the heart . . Hennj VIII. i. 2 

but his flawed heart, (alack, too weak Lear, v. 3 

FLAX— a bag of flax? Mern/ Wives, v. 5 

it hangs lilie flax on a distaff rirelfllt NigM, i. 3 

to my flaming wratli be oil and flax/JHo?/// ri. v. 2 

I'll fetch some flax, and whites Lear, iii. 7 

FLAXEN-all flaxen was his poll.tti»i/,'/,iv. 5 (song) 
FLAX- WENCH— as any flax-wench. Winter's T. i. 2 
FLAY— her nails slie'll flav thy wolflsli. . . . Lear, i. 4 
FLAYED— is half flayed already.. H'j)i(e»'sr«te, iv. 3 

a son, who shall be flayed alive — iv. 3 

remember, stoned, and flayed alive.. — iv. 3 
I hope I shall not lie fla3'e'd out of it.. — iv. 3 

FLAYING-what flaying? — iii. 2 

vagabond, exile, flaying Coriolanus, iii. 3 

FL12A— he shall die a flea's death. . Merry Wives, iv. 2 

as will clog the foot of a flea Twelflli Night, iii. 2 

iu's belly tliau will sup a tiea Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

thou flea, thou nit, thou winter.. Taming of Sh. iv. 3 

in all London road for fleas 1 Henry IT. ii. 1 

breeds fleas like a loach — ii. I 

a' saw a flea stick upon Bardolph's . . Henry V.n.Z 

that's a valiiint flea, that dare — iii. 7 

FLEANCE— goes Fleanca with j'ou? ..Mr,d)eth, iii. 1 
Fleance his son, tliat keeps him company — iii. 1 

Banquo, and his I'Meanee, lives — iii. 2 

fly, good Fleance, fly, fly, fly — iii. 3 

that did the like for Fleance — iii. 4 

most royal sir, Fleance is 'scaped — iii. 4 

Fleance killed, for Fleance fled — iii. 6 

so should Fleance; but, peace! — iii. 6 

FLECKED-and flecked darkness, ((omen &- Juliet, ii. 3 
FLED-why then, she's fled unto. Tiro Gen.of Ver. v. 2 

whither they are fled — v. 2 

we'll follow him tliat's fled — v. 3 

do not say, they be fled Merry Wives, iv. 6 

the bastard is fled from Messina Much Ado, v. 1 

did he not say, my brother was fled? . . — v. 1 

and fled he is upon this yillany — v. 1 

a tliird is fled, that had a hand _ v. 1 

who is fled and gone — v. 2 

art thou fled? Speak Mid. N.'s Dream, iii. 2 

aud, as she fled, her mantle she did . . — v. 1 
now am I fled; my soul is in the sky — v. 1 

my daughter! fled with a christian!. "il/ec. of fen. ii.8 

and wherefore I am fled; write to All's Well, ii. 3 

some two months since, fled from — iv. 3 

the treachery of the two, fled hence. Winter's T. ii. I 
fled from his father, from his hopes . . — v. I 
then they fled into this abbey. Comedy of Errors, v. 1 
and then you fled into this abbey here — v. 1 

are stolen away and fled Macbeth, ii. 4 

the sou is fled — iii. 3 

the worm, that's fled — iii. 4 

Fleance killed, for Fleance fled — iii. 6 

Macduff is fled to England. Fled to. . . . — iv. 1 

that fled the snares of watchful — v. 7 

of all this realm is fled to heaven . . King John, iv. 3 

powerful friends, are fled to him Richard II. ii. 2 

servants fled with him to Bolingbroke — ii. 2 

tlie nobles they are fled — ii. 2 

our countrymen are gone and fled .. — ii. 4 

thy friends are fled, to wait — ii. 4 

to Bolingbroke, dispersed, and fled .. — iii. 2 
they are fled, and tiU so much blood — iii. 2 

of fear,— fled with the rest 1 Henry IF. v. 6 

and Staftbrd, fled the field 2Henry IF. i. 1 

that arrows fled not swifter — i.l 

tlie ro"ue fled from me like quicksilver — ii. 4 

cowardly fled, not having struck 1 Henry FI. i. 1 

I would ne'er have fled — i. 2 

and night is fled, whose pitchy — ii. 2 

such a valiant company are fled — iii. 2 

could not, if he would have fled — iv. 4 

that basely fled, when noble — iv. 5 

you fled for vantage, every one — iv. 5 

for that which we have fled diuring . . — iv. 7 

with his soul fled all my -IHenry VI. iii. 2 

what, is he fled? go some, and follow — iv. 8 
he's fled, my lord, and all his powers — iv. 9 
tlie unconquered soul of Cade is fled — iv. 10 
not enough our foes are this time fled — v. .s 

the king is fled to London — v. 3 

so fled his enemies my warlike SHenry VI. ii. 1 

so that we fled; the king, unto — ii. 1 

belike, when valiant Warwick fled .. — ii. 1 

so much before, and yet you fled — ii. 2 

for all your friends are fled — ii. 5 

that Clifford fled with them? — ii. B 

and fled, as he hears since, to Burgundy — iv. 6 

with Oxford, fled to her v. 3 

is fled to Richmond, in the parts . . Richard III. iv. 2 
Dorset is fled to Richmond, I hear .. — iv. 2 

Morton is fled to Richmond — iv. 3 

a i>ardon to the soldiers fled — v. 4 

either to harbour fled, or made. Troilus fyCressida,\. 3 

and flies fled under shade — i. 3 

all are fled, save the gods only. Timon of.ithens, iii. 3 
I fled from words: you soothed not.Corinlanus, ii. 2 

fled to his house amazed JuliusCresar, W'l. \ 

thou art fled to brutish beasts — iii. 2 

this morning are they fled away .... — v. 1 
towards Peloponnesus are they fled. /(rji.<5-Cteo. iii. 8 
I have fled myself; and have instructed — iii. 9 
what although you fled from that .. — iii. 11 

but he fled forward still, toward Cymbeline. i. 3 

'tis certain, she is fled: go in, and cheer — iii. .'i 
follow those that even now fled hence — iv. 2 
eried to those that fled, our Britain's • — v. :i 

why fled you from the court? — v.h 

Marcus, she's gone, she's fled Tilus Andron. iv. 3 

my lord, prince Pericles is fled Pericles, i. 1 

I hither fled, under the covering — i. 2 

fled this way, sir: when by no means Lear, ii. 1 

full suddenly he fled ii. 1 

leap the hatch, and all are iled iii. 6 

shunned who gladly fled from me. Romeo ^-Julie/.i. 1 
and then Tybalt fled: but by and by — iii. I 

fled from her wish, and yet said Othello, ii. 1 

received, from him that fled, some strange — ii. 3 



[ 266 ] 



FLEDGED— the bird was fledged.il/pr. of Venice, iii. I 

whose chin is not yet fledized iHenrylV. i. 2 

FLEE— thump then, and I flee Love's L. Lost, iii. 1 

FLEECE— like a golden fleece . . Merch. of Venice, i. 1 

we have won the fleece (rep.) — iii. 2 

not sheer the fleeces that I graze. .4s you Like it, ii. 4 

down with them, fleece them 1 Henn/IV. ii. 2 

St. Michael, and tlie golden fleece . . 1 Henri} VI. i v. 7 

ere I shall sheer the fleece SHenry VI. ii. a 

harmless sheep doth yield his fleece . . — v. 6 

my fleece of woolly hair that now. TitusAndron. ii. 3 

FLEECED— fleeced poor passengers..2HenryK/. iii. I 

FLEER— never fleer and jest at me ..Much Ado, v. 1 

to fleer and scorn at our solemnity.^Jomeo <5- Jul. i. .5 

mark the fleers, the gibes, and notable .Othello, iv. 1 

FLEERED— and fleered, and swore . . Love'sL. L. v. 2 

FLEERING- is no fleering ten-ta.\e.JulinsC/rsar, i. 3 

FLEET— and all the rest o the fleet? Tempest, i. 2 

and for the rest o' the fleet — i. 2 

shall catch your royal fleet far off — v. 1 

most noble bottom of our fleet . . TwelfthNighl, v. 1 

I am sure, he is in the fleet Much Ado, ii. 1 

all the other passions fleet to air. Mer. of Venice, iii. 2 
from the gallows did his fell soul fleet — iv. 1 

aud fleet the time carelessly .4s youLike it, i. 1 

if Echo were as fleet, I would. Taming of Sh. 1 (ind.) 
shall fleet, in dreadful trial of our .. King John, ii. 1 
carry sir John Falstaff to the Fleet. .SHctu!/'''- v. 5 
and his brave fleet with silken . .Henry V. iii. (cho.) 

so appears this fleet majestical — iii. (oho.) 

aud joys abound, as seasons fleet . .iHenry VI. ii. 4 
waft them over with our royal Ruet.'iHenryVI. iii. 3 
in Cffisar's fleet are those, that often./lHi.<5- Cleo. iii. 7 
and fleet, threatenius; most sea-like — iii. 11 

my fleet hatli yielded to the foe — iv. 10 

to darkness fleet, souls that Cymbeline, v. 3 

all confirm a Turkish fleet, and bearing. 0!/ie/io, i. 3 
there injointed them with an after fleet.. — i. 3 

a segregation of the Turkish fleet — ii. 1 

that the Turkish fleet be not insheltered — ii. 1 
and sufferance on most part of their fleet — ii. 1 
mere perdition of the Turkish fleet .... — ii. 2 
FLEETER— fleeter than arrows ..Love's L.Lost, v. 2 
ay, fleeter than the roe . . Taming of Shreiv, 2 (ind.) 
FL'EETING-false, fleeting, perjured'.iJ/c/iard ///. i. 4 
and I, hence fleeting, here remain. ^«(oki/ i§-C(fo, i. 3 

now the fleeting moon no planet — v. 2 

FLEGMATIC— be not so flegmatic. Aferry Wives, i. 4 
FLEMING— a Fleming with my butter — ii. 2 
FLEMISH— hath this Flemish drunkard — ii. 1 

FLESH— at them wallets of flesh? Tempest, iii. 3 

flesh and blood, you brother — v. 1 

beats, as of flesh and blood — v.l 

methinks, his flesh is punished . . Merry Wives, iv. 4 

it is the flesh of a corrupted heart — v. 6 

as witty a jiiece of Eve's flesli as any.. Twelfth N.i.b 

and let your flesh and blood — v. 1 

as the flesh and fortune Meas. for Meas. ii. 1 

season give to her foul tainted Aesh... Much Ado, iv. 1 

as pretty a piece of flesh as any — iv. 2 

I will be flesh and blood _ v.l 

his own person in flesh and blood. Lo»e's!L. Lost, i. 1 
of man to hearken after the flesh .... — i. 1 

my sweet ounce of man's flesh I — iii. 1 

wiiich makes flesh a deity — iv. 3 

as flesh and blood can be — iv. 3 

an equal pound of your fair flesh. Mer. of Venice, i. 3 

a pound of man's flesh, taken — i. 3 

as flesh of muttons, beefs, or goats . , — i. 3 
thou art mine own flesh aud blood .. — ii. 2 

my own flesh and blood to rebel! — iii. 1 

is my flesh and blood. There is (?ep.) — iii. 1 

thou wilt not take his flesh — iii. 1 

he would rather have Antonio's flesh — iii. 2 
hardly spare a pound of flesh to-morrow — iii 3 
apoundof this poor merchant's flesh — iv. 1 

a weight of carrion flesh, than to — iv. 1 

the pound of flesh, which I demand.. — iv. i 
the Jew shall have my flesh, blood . . — iv. 1 
may claim a pound of flesh, to be ... . — iv. I 

balance here, to weigh the flesh? — iv. I 

a pound of that same merchant's ilesh — iv. 1 
and you must cut this flesh from off — iv. 1 
of flesh; take then thy bond (rep.) .. — iv. 1 

prepare thee to cut otf the flesh — iv. 1 

but just a pound of flesh : if thou — iv. 1 

riveted so with faith unto your flesh — v. 1 

of a good piece of flesh As you Like it, iii. 2 

the lioness had torn some flesh away — iv. 3 
I am driven ou by the flesh ; and he . . All's Well, i. 3 
as you, and all flesh and blood are . . — i. 3 
of my flesh and blood, he that (rep.) — i. 3 

if she had partaken of my flesh — \\. f> 

in despite of the flesh .. Taming of Shrew, 2 (indue.) 

with such over-roasted flesh — iv. 1 

every dram of woman's flesh is false. Winter' sT. ii. 1 
she would not exchange flesh with one — iv. 3 

and none of .yom- flesh and blood — iv. 3 

digest the poison of thy flesh.. Comerfy of Errors, ii. 2 

either at flesh or fish, a table — iii. 1 

for the mountain of mad flesh that . . — iv. 4 
till from my bones my flesh be hacked. WncdeW, v. 3 

mouthing the flesh of men King John, ii. 2 

within this wall of flesh there — iii. 3 

and flesh liis spirit in a warlike soil — v. 1 

of our flesh, as now our flesh is Richard II. i. 3 

as if this flesh, which walls about — iii. 2 

mock not flesh and blood with solemn — iii. 2 
whilst my gross flesh sinks downward — v. :> 

bear mine own flesli so fivr 1 Henry IV. ii. 2 

this huge hill of flesh,— Away ii. 4 

why? she's neither fish nor flesh — Iii. 3 

I have more flesh than another man iii. 3 

worse than thy sword my flesh — v. 4 

could not all this flesh keep in a little — v. 4 

his flesh was capable of wounds iHenry IV. i. 1 

by this light flesh and corrupt blood — ii. 4 

for suffering flesh to be eaten in — ii. 4 

says that which his flesli rel)els against ^ ii. 1 
shall flesh his tooth in every ........ iv. 4 



FLI 

FLESH— when flesh is cheap . .2HenryIV. v. jpsong) 

for thou lovest the flesh 1 HenryTI. i. 1 

till bones, and flesh, and sinews .... — iii. 1 

did flesh his puny sword — iv. 7 

thou art a collop of my flesh — v. 4 

proportion to my flesh and blood ^ Henry FI. i. 1 

men's flesh preserved so whole — iii. 1 

tired on the flesh of me, and of my ..SHenry VI. i. 1 

stab poniards in our flesh — ii. 1 

drop stand on my trembling flesh . . Richard III. v. 3 
capable of our flesh, few are ani;eU.HenryVIII. v. 2 
good traders in the flesh .... Trnilus 4- Cressida, v. 1 1 
against the quality of flesh . . Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

let the famiblied flesh slide from — iv. 3 

what in flesh was fatigate Coriolanus, ii. 2 

best of my flesh, forgive my tyranny — v. 3 

and men are flesh and blood JuHnsCwsnr, in. 1 

he means, in flesh Antony ^ Cleopatra, i. 2 

thou didst eat strange flesh — i. 4 

though written in our flesh, we shall — v. 2 
if you buy ladies' flesh at a million . . Cymbeline, i. 5 
to let an arrogant piece of flesh threat us — iv. 2 

how now, my flesh, my child? — v. 5 

ad manes fratrum sacrifice his flesh. . 7'/;ws And. i. 2 

in tills hollow prison of my flesh — iii. 2 

execution on my flesh and blood — iv. 2 

eating the flesh that she herself v. 3 

yet I feed on mother's flesh Pericles, i. 1 (riddle) 

she an eater of her mother's flesh — i.l 

half fish, half flesh; a plague — ii. I 

and we'll have flesh for holidays — ii. 1 

for flesh and blood, sir, white and red. . — iv. 6 
but are you flesh and blood? have you — v. 1 
look, who kneels there 1 flesh of thy flesh — v. 3 

come, I'll flesh you; come on Lear, ii. 2 

my flesh, my blood, my daughter {rep.).. — ii. 4 

mercy on their flesh? (rep.) — ii. 4 

our flesh and blood, my lord, is grown .. — iii. 4 

in his anointed flesh stick boarish — iii. 7 

and tear thy flesh and bones — iv. 2 

was first framed flesh to raise iv. 6 

devour them, flesh aud fell, ere they — v. 3 

I am a pretty piece of flesh Romeo ^Juliet, i. 1 

makes my flesh tremble in — i. ,'5 

O flesh, flesh, how art thou fishifled! — ii. 4 

paradise of such sweet flesh? — Iii. 2 

buy food, and get thyself in flesh — v.l 

stars from this world- wearied flesh.. — v. 3 

this too too solid flesh would melt Hamlet, i. 2 

to ears of flesh and blood — i.5 

natural shocks that flesh is heir to — iii. 1 

man and wife is one flesh — iv. 3 

from her fair and unpolluted flesh may . . — v. 1 
FLESHED~you are well fleshed.. Twelfth Night, iv. 1 

full bravely hast thou fleshed IHenry IV. v. 4 

princes, fleshed %vith conquest 'iHenry IV. i. 1 

of him hath been fleshed upon us Henry V. ii. 4 

and the fleshed soldier, rough and hard — iii. 3 
albeit they were fleshed villains ..Richard III. iv. 3 
FLESHES- he fleshes his will in .... All's Well, iv. 3 
FL ESHFLY-the fleshfly blow my mouth rempes/,iii. 1 
FLESHLY— body of this fleshly limA.KingJohn, iv. 2 
FLESHMENT— the fleshment of tills di-ead.iear, ii. 2 
FLESHMONGER- 

and was the duke a fleshmonger.il/eas. for Meas. v. 1 
FLEW— wings she flew withal ..Merch. of Venice, iii. 1 

pitch she flew above the rest! iHenry VI. ii. 1 

cloaks (doublets, I think,) flew up. Henry J'///, iv. 1 
whereout Hector's great spirit flew. Troil.^Cres. iv. 5 

thereat enraged, flew on him tear, iv. 2 

FLEWED— so flowed, so sanded. Mirf. A'. Dream, iv. 1 

FLEXIBLE— pitiful, and flexible . . . .ZHenry VI. i. 4 

makes flexible the knees of . . Troilus <5- Cressida, i. 3 

FLEXURE— give place to flexure Henry F. iv. 1 

legs for necessity, not for flexure. Troilus &■ Cress, ii. 3 
FLIBBERTIGIBBET- 

this is the foul fiend Flibbertigibbet Lear, iii. 4 

Flibbertigibbet, of mopping and mowing — iii. 4 
FLICK EBING-onflickeriug Phoebus' front — ii. 2 

FLIERS— not for the fliers Coriolanus, i. 4 

following the fliers at the very heels — i. 4 

he stopped the fliers; and, by his rare — ii. 2 

you, it seems, come from the fliers . . Cymbeline, v. 3 

FLIES— that flies her fortune. . . . Two Gen. of Ver. v. 2 

love like a shadow flies Merry Wives, ii. 2 

pursuing that that flies — ii. 2 

Apollo flies, and Dapiine holds . . Mid. N's. Dr. ii. 2 
cowardice pursues, and valour flies . . — ii. 2 
my taxing like a wild goose Kies. . AsyouLikeil, ii. 7 

of honour, flies where you bid it All's Well, ii. 3 

and flies of every wind that blows. Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

with flies blown to death iv. 3 

what, with worms and flies? Macbeth, iv. 2 

upon enforcement, flies with greatest.2HeHri/f F. i. 1 

our swift scene flies Henry V. iii. (chorus) 

are like flies at Bartholomew- tide v. 2 

which flies the higher pitch 1 Henry VI. ii. 4 

he, that flies so, w^ill ne'er — iv. 5 

gold, flies from another coast 2Henrt/ FI. i. 2 

assist you; he that flies, shall die SHenry VI. i. 1 

my soul flies through these wounds.. i. 4 

swarm like summer flies ii. 6 

never then had sprung like summer flies ii. H 

so flies tlie reckless shepherd from . . — v. 6 

reward, thy conscience flies out Richard III. i. 4 

is swift, and flies with swallows' wings v. 2 

and fliesfled under shade Troilus ft Cress, i. 3 

reason flies the object of all — ii. 2 

but flies the grasps of love — i v. 2 

flies each bound it chafes Timon of Athens, i. 1 

but flies an eagle flight, bold i. i 

showers, these flies are couched — ii. 2 

trencher-friends, time's flies — iii. (j 

or butchers.killing flies Coriolanus, iv. G 

so abides, and flies, that thou .... Antony 4- Cleo. i. 3 

hoists sail, and flies — iii. a 

the fight in height, flies after her .... iii. g 

till the flies and gnats of Nile iii. 1 1 

to chace what flies; our cage Cymbeline, iii. 3 

I'll liide my master from the flies.....' _ iy. 2 



I 



FLI 



FTiIES— thy spito on mortal fliiis C'l/mtcdiir, v. 1 

my niece, that flies iiwuy so t'list?. I'ilus AiiJron.ti. 5 
tiitlie Oollis, ns swift as swallow fliua — iv. 2 

tliiit viiiitii- kills the flies Perirlet,\v. t 

tlmt Hies i' tlk- purer air! — >v. 6 

lis tliis to « lint m liovs. arc wc to the gods. L-ur, iv. 1 
alHieteil willi lluse stnim;e flies. Hoi;ifo.fj-JuliV(,ii. 4 
more eourtsiiip liies in I'lirrion flies.. — iii. 3 
flies mav lio tliis, wlan I from this .. — in. 3 

von murk, liis luvoiuite flies HamM, lu. i 

iilULTUe liim witli llii-: tl>.iN!;h tluit ....Olliello. l. I 
us smnioci- Hies .ire in the sluii.ililes — iv. 2 

Fl.II"ril^.\len':..n llieili t.. liis side..! Hc/iiT/ ''/. i. 1 

KMUU T— nrinner .if our l1ii;lit.7Vo Gc-n.ofi'er. ii. 4 

mill pieteiiaed lli.'lit — !!• 6 

ami wlieii the lliitlit is tniulc — ."• " 

Theseus' peviurv, and unjust flii,'ht.. — iv. 1 

ennliriu her IliLTlit fpnnhenee — v. 2 

lahuir'st hv thv flight to sltun.. .Wnis./br.Wcnj. ni. I 
au,l ehallei'i-ed' ('lipid at tlie flight ..Much Ado, i. 1 
v.iiir lirotlier .lohn is ta'en in flight . . — v. 4 
tlial lovers' lliijlits ,lotl\ still.... AM. Af'.'sOrram, l. 1 

tell Iiiiu of fair llermia's flight — i. 1 

aiulin our rti.;ht. tell nie how iteaine — iv. 1 
m.mi, take tliv tliiilitl now. die, die.. — v. 1 
the self-same ilight the self-suincWcr. of Ifiiicc, i. 1 
well as you, of luv daughter's flight — in. 1 

that will be made after mv flight.. /l»j/o« Like it, i. 3 

away, and for our flight. Bravely All's IVM,\\. a 

rtim'our mav reiiort niv flight — in. 2 

Camillo's fll-ht, udde.t to their ..ll'inter'sTale, ii. 1 
her flight aeross thv father's ground — iv. 3 

resolved for Ilight; now were tlmpiiy — iv. 3 

but undergo this flight; make — iv. 3 

moy be to the flight of my master — — iv. 3 

Banquo, thy soul's fliglit, if it Macbeth, in. 1 

his. cloistered flight: ere, to black — ill. 2 

his fliglit was madness: when our — iv. 3 

where the flight so runs against — iv. 2 

untreiid the steps of damned flight ..King John, v. 4 

new flight; and hap|)V newness — v. 4 

as is the falcon's fliglit against Richard //. i. 3 

quite from the flight of all thy ....1 Henry/)', in. 2 
onil in his flight, stumbling in fear . .iHenr;/ II'. i. 1 

to save myself by flight \ Henri/ yi. in. i 

fain by fliglit to save themselves — — iii. 2 

from the liberty of flight — iv. 2 

shalt escape by sudden flight — iv. .'> 

flight cannot stain the honour — iv. 5 

renowned name; shall flight-Tibuse it? — iv. 5 

then talk no more of flight — iv. 6 

like the night-owl's lazy flight ZHenryVI. n. 1 

they have used with fearful flight — — ii. 2 

bootless is flight, they follow — ij- 3 

nor strength to hold out fliglit : — ii. fi 

our soldiers put to flight — iii. 3 

I like not tins flight of Edward's .... — iv. 6 
I do not speak of flight, of fear. . Troilus S^ Cress, v. 1 1 

flies an eagle flight, hold Timon of Athens, i. 1 

with fear, and horrid flight — v. 5 

pale with flight and agued fear Coriolnnus,i. 4 

given example for our i[\eht..inlnny^ Cleopatra, iii. 8 
my knowledge touching her flight . . Cijmbeline, iii. .'j 

but that her fliirht prevented it — v..') 

like a flight of fowl scattered . . TilmAndronitus, Y. 3 

bv flight'I'll shun the danger Pericles.i. 1 

it'' thy flight lay toward the raging sea Lear, iii. 4 

flij;hts of angels sing thee to tliy rest! . . Hamlet,v. 2 

FLK>HTY-tlie flighty purpose never is.Macbeth, iv. 1 

FLINCH— or flineli in iironertv All's WeU, il. 1 

if he flinch, chide me tor it . .Troilus^Cressida.m. 2 

FLING-here I'll flinc the pillow. . . Taming of Sh. iy. I 
of passage shall we fling wide ope . . King John, ii. 2 
would I have a fling at Winchester.lHeiiri/rf. iii. 1 
fling up his cap, and say, God save..2Hcnr!/;7. iv. 8 

with the other fling it at thy face iHenrij /'/. v. 1 

I charge thee, fling awav ambition. Henry fill. iii. 2 

FLINT-love raakeliis heart utAmt.Twelflh Night.i. :, 

fire enough for a flint Love's L.Loat, iv. 2 

and rough hearts of flint Merch. of Venice, iv. 1 

go, to Fnnt castle; there I'll pine ..liichard II. iii. 2 
to whose flint bosom my condemned — v. 1 

being incensed, he's flint 2HenrylF. iv. 4 

the ruthless flint doth cut my 2Henrij I'l. ii. 4 

should sparkle like the beaten flint ,. — iii. 2 
and fiirht with flint, I am so angry .. — v. I 
my heart were flint, like Edward s.. liichard III. i. 3 
as coldly in him as fire in a flint . Trail. Sf Cress, iii. 3 
the fire i' the flint shows not ... . rimoji of Athens, i. I 

no softer cushion tlian the flint Coriolamis, y. 3 

searching tlie window for a flint . .JuliutCasnr, ii. I 

anger, as the flint bears Are — iv._3 

against the flint and hardness o^. Antony S^Cleo. iv.'9 

can snore U|Kin the flint Cijmbeline, iii. 6 

unrelenting flint to drops of rain ..TitusAndron. ii. 3 
my heart is not compact of flint: .... — v. 3 

upon shores of flint I'ericles,iv. 4 (Gower) 

ne'er wear out the everlasting fWnt.Roineo fifjul. ii. 6 
shards, flints, and pehbles, should be . . Hamlet, v. 1 

FLINTY-througli flinty tartar's bosom. /KCsfCW;, iy.1 
the rtintv ribs of this contemptuous.. Ki in; John, ii. 2 
through' the flinty ribs nf this httrd...«.r/i«rrf //. v. .5 
resolve to scale their flinty bulwttrks.1 Henry >'/.ii. I 
may she endure the flinty streets.... 2 Heni-y f/. ii. 4 

because thv flinty heart — iii. 2 

obdurate, flinty, rough, remorseless. .SHenrj/ VI. i. 4 

shown it flintv hv tiiydccils — ii. 1 

and diselailn'^t llinty mankind. rimono/.l//ien«,iv. 3 
httth made the fliiitv and steel conch Olliello, i. 3 

FLIRT-UII-l.S-ii.jiie of his flirt-gills. Horn. i^-Jul. ii.4 

FLO.VT— float ii|>.)ti a wild and violent. Uir(.e//i, iv. 2 
never float upon the swelling tiile ... King John, ii. I 

FLOATED— floated with thee on .Comedy of Err. v. I 

FL<)ATIN'r,_un.l floating straight .... — . i. 1 
showed mastership in floating Coriolanns, iv. 1 

FLOCK-lmth killed the fl.K:k of all.rwp//lA Mghl, i. 1 
arc fatted with the murrain flock, .tfid. A^. Dream, ii. 2 
am a tainted wether of tlie flock .Mcr. of Venice, iv. ) 

young gentlemen flock tA> him is you Like il, i. I 

(lis cote, his flocks, and bouiuU of feed — ii.4 



[267 ] 

FLOCK— buy his flock and pasture':' .Asyon Like, ii. 4 
the cottage', pasture, and the flock . . — n- 4 

eoine, to (uir floek — iii. .'» 

OS your good lloek shall prosper.. Winter sTule, iv. 3 
were I of vonr Hock and only live by — iv. 3 

piitaffwiloi'ks in ih,' point MIeniylV. ii. 1 

likeartoi'kof Willi g.ese .' — ii.4 

and less, do Hock to follow him •iHenrylV.i. I 

when th;it v.uir Moidi. asseinhled .... — iv. 2 
that thev H<K'k t<igitlier in eonsent .. — V. 1 
snared llie slRT.heiil of the floek ....■illenryVI. 11. 2 

proved an eiiriii\ to the flock — iii. 1 

eatheied Hocks , if fnrn.ls -iHeniy Vl.n. 1 

hours innst 1 tend niv Hock — n. r, 

manv eiddv I'coplc lln.-k tohiin — iv. 8 

more competitors Hock to the rebels. H/rAnn/ ///. iv. 4 

but leave their Hoi-ks llenri/VIII. i. 4 

now. 'nion:,'st tliis H..ck of drunkards ..OtliMo, ii. 3 
FLI >i (D— thon'li lose the flood .. 'fu-o Gen. ofVer. ii. 3 

ill losing the Hood, lose thy — ii. 3 

this accnlent and Hood of fortune. TiefirtA Sight, iv. 3 
to Inithe in licrv Ho, ids, or to reside. A/eo. /or .Wea. iii. 1 
hrid'c nincli li'roadcr than the flood? ..MuchAdo, i. 1 
thorough Homt, tl'.or.ugh ttrc.iVirf. Af.'s Bream, ii. 1 
the governess of Hoods, pale in her .. — ii. 2 
the embarked traders on the flood.... — ii. 2 
in crossways and floods, have burial — in. 2 
and ricli burghers of the flood. . Merch. of Venice, i. I 

and bid the main flood bate his — iv. I 

drew trees, stones, and floods — v. 1 

sure, another flood toward As you Like it, v. 4 

great floods have flown from simple .. All's IVell. ii. 1 
like envious floods o'erranher. TamingofSh. 2(ind.) 
in thv sister's flood of tears ..Comedy of Errors,])!. 2 

Noah's flood could not do it — 111.2 

on the flood a whole armiulo of King John, lii. 4 

I breathe a-ain aluft the flood — iv. 2 

like alwtcl ;ii'l i, (ii.il Hood — v. 4 

devourcil i II [icctcd flood.... — v. 7 

ofswiftSi I \HenryIV.i.3 

and such ,1 iloo ! "1 -iciitnessfcU .... — y. 1 
imperious llool luitli left a witnesscd.2Henri//r. 1. 1 

keep the wild Hood conflncdl — i. 1 

sluill mingle with the state of floods — v. 2 

iie\ cr eamc reformation in a flood Henry V. i. I 

between the floods of Sala and of Elbe — .i. 2 
let floods o'erswell, and friends for .. — li. 1 

pales in the flood with men — v. (chorus) 

therefore, with a flood of tears 1 Henry »'/. iii. 3 

whose flood begins to flow within ..iHenryVI. iii. 1 

sometime the flood prevails 3 Henry VI. ii. b 

sailors swallowed in the flood? — v. 4 

but still the envious flood liichard III. i. 4 

the melancholy flood, with that grim — i. -1 
by sudden floods, and fall of waters. . — iv. 4 
a rock against the chiding flood . . Henry VIII. iii. 2 
the wild and wandering flood. Troilus SfCressida, i. 1 

his youth in flood, I'll prove — i. 3 

this great flood of visitors Timon of Athens, i. I 

the beached verge of the salt flood . . — v. 2 

like a bold flood o'er-beat Coriolanus, iv. .') 

with me into this angry flood Julius Caisar, i. 2 

by an age, since the great flood — _ i. 2 

to such a sudden flood of mutiny — iii. 2 

taken at the flood, leads oil to fortune — iv. 3 
with liis eyes in flood with laughter. . Cymheline, i. 7 

shine left on them by a flood? TitusAndron. iii. 1 

lave them hourlv in the flood — iv. 2 

but floods of teais will drown — v. 3 

half the flood hath their keel cut. Pericles, iii. (Gow. ) 
what, if it tempt you toward the flood . . Hamlet, i. 4 
moving accidents, by flood and field .... Othello, i. 3 

it is a high-wrought flood; I cannot — ii. 1 

like molestation view on th' enchafed flood — ii. 1 

FLOOD-GATE- 

do stop the flood-gates of her eyes ..i Henry IV. 11. 4 

of so flood-gate and o'er-hearing nature.. Othello, i. 3 

FLOOR— mouse that creeps on floor . . Mid.N.Dr. v. 1 

look, how the floor of heaven is . . Mer. of Venice, v. 1 

had found gold strewed 0' the floor . Cym6e(<rte, iii. 6 

o' the floor; his arms thus leagued .. — iv. 2 

FLOREfTCE— and Florence \s denied ...ill's IVell, i. 2 

he's gone to serve the duke of Floi-ence — iii. 2 

towards Florence is he? Ay, madam — iii . 2 

a young gentlewoman here in Florence — iv. 3 

in the duKe of Florence's camp? — iv. 3 

to a proper maid in Florence, one Diana — iv. 3 
in Florence was it from a casement . . — v. 3 
that I husbanded her bed in Florence — v. 3 
stole from Florence taking no leave — v.3(petitiqn) 

brought up in Florence Tnmingof Shrew, i. 1 

from Florence, and must here deliver — iv. 2 
is he not in to\vn? He's now in Florence. 0(AeHfi, i. 3 
FLOKENTTNE-ona voungFlorentinc./Vi<r/i.4'(o, i. 1 
the Florentines and 'Senoys are by \,)xe..ill'sWeU, i. 2 
thatthe Florentine will move us .... — i. 2 

I, with a troo]i .if l-'lorentines, will .. — lii. G 
that wliieh shall undo the Florentine — iv. 1 
undertake to betray tlic Florentine?.. — iv. 3 
here's a petition from a Florentine . . — v. 3 
I am, mv lord, a wretelied Florentine — v. 3 
some Florentine, some Neapolitan. V'./min^'o/ .S/i. i. 1 

one IMichael Casaio, a Florentine Othello, i. 1 

I never knew a Florentine more kind — iii. 1 

FLOKEN'l'IUS— was Florentius' love. Tarn. o/S/i. i. 2 

FLORIZEL- , . , , 

which Florizel I now name. Winter s Tale, iv. (chor.) 

the prince Florizel my son ? — j v. 1 

I have served prince Florizel — iv. 2 

priuec Florizel, son of Polixenes — v. 1 

FLOTE— u|)on the .Mediterranean flote.. Teinpei/, i.2 
FLDUR-rCo/. Kilt.] hack receive the flour.. Cor/of. i. 1 
FLOUKET-the ineltv fl,uiret'seyes..l/iV/. A'. Dr. iv. 1 
FLt iru I i^ 1 l-d,.th H.n.risli the deceit. .UeUj/brA/ra. iv. 1 

nee<ls not the paint. -d Hourisb Love $L. Lost, ii. I 

lendmcth.iH ish of all gentle .... — iv. 3 

even us tlic Hinrish when true.. .Uer. q/" /'en ice, iii. 2 
or flourish to theheiglitofmydegroe.lHenryJ'/.ii. 4 

rose and let the other Himrish! 3UrnryVl.i\. b 

vuiu flourish of my fortune! Kichardllt.'i.A 



FLO 



FLOURISH- flourishof mvfortnno.fiie/mr'i ///.iv. 4 
a flourish, trumpets! strike alarum.. — iv. 4 
in thv sleep! live, and flourish! (;r/).) - v. 3 
ever iLnirish, when I shall dwell . . Henry VIII. iv. 2 
lie shall Hoini-h. and like a mountain — V. 4 
an. I Hi.nn-h with II. c highest . .Timmi of Athens, \. 1 
H.mrisli in pca.'e (>.■;/. v. :il fi/wljeline,v. t (scroll) 
theemperor'striim|ietsflourishtliuB?..'/'i/u«/(n(/. iv. 2 
by you his fortunes vet may flourish ..Pericles, ii. 2 

them like thc|ialm might flourish Hamlet, v. 2 

afti-r what fl.nirisli vour nature will — v. 2 

FLi>iri!ISIli;i)_:in.l floiirislied after..H'in/er « 7". 1. 2 
aii.lfl.iiirish.-.l. I'll lianginv head. . //enr)/ /'///. iii. 1 
bloo.ly ti-.;is..ii H'Hirislie.l over ux.Jutius Cti;ar, iii. 2 
to liiiii that nourished for her.. '/'i(«>/ln</ro"i'cu», i. 2 

FLDUKISIIKS- 
otherwise a seducer flourishes. . All's Well, v. 3 (petit.) 
flourishes in thee, and in thy sons ..iHenry VI. ii. 2 
Hoinislies his blade in spite of me../?omeo<S- Jul.\. I 
the liinj.s anil outward floui-ishcs Hamlet, ii. 2 

FI-UinasiiKTll — 
in hiilics' e\es that flourisheth . . Taming of Sh. 11. I 

FLDUKISldNG- 
I better brook thanflouriBhing..riTOGen.n/Ter. v. 4 

one flourishing branch of his most liichard II. i. 2 

renowned Titus, flourishing in arms. . Titus And. i. I 

FLOUT— flout 'em, and (rep.) . . Tempest, iii. 2 (song) 

ere you flout olil ends any further MuchAdo, 1. 1 

to one that she knew would flout her — ii. 3 
for I should flout him, if he writ .... — 11. 3 
and cog. and Hunt, deprave and slander — v. 1 
cannotHont mcniit. of my lunnour .. — v. 4 
but you must Hout my iiisiirtii-iency?.Wit/.A'.Or.n.3 
why will yon surt'er her to flijiit me thus? — ill. 2 
kin'gly-poor flout! will they not ..Love'sL.Losl,v.i 

confound me with a flout — v. 2 

comparisons, and wounding flouts — — v. 2 

given us wit to flout at fortune As you Like it. 1. 2 

sluiii flout me nut of mv calling — iii. 3 

her -ih nrc llouts ine, and I'll h«.. TamingofSh. ii. I 
what, wilt thou Hinit me thus ....ComedyofErr.l. 2 

jeer, and Hout me in the teeth? — il. 2 

the Norweyan banners flout the sky Macbeth, 1. 2 

these scrov'les of Angiers flout you . . King John, ii. 2 
offence it is, to flout his friends .... 1 Henry VI. ly. 1 
have given my uncle's grace a flout.. ifiWiart////. 11. 4 
bring me to do, and then you flout. Troil.^- Cress, iv. 2 

FI..OUTED— shall I be flouted thus .. I Henry /'/. 1. 3 
so flouted in this royal presence? ..Richatd III. ii. 1 
certainly, he flouted us downright . . Coriolanus, 11. 3 
but sorrow flouted at is double death. Tihu .ind. 111. 1 

FLOUTING— play the flouting Jack ..MiichAdo,\. 1 
shall be floutini;; we cannot hold../l.« you Like it, v. 1 
whv, first, for flouting me Comedy of Errors, 11. 2 

riiO"W— I'll teach you how to flow Tempest, 11. 1 

make flows and ebbs — 7. 1 

confesses that his blood flows .... Mens. forMeas. 1. 4 

being that I flow in grief Much .ida, iv. 1 

that on mv cheeks down flows. Love's L. L. iv. 3 (ver.) 

the sea will ebb and flow — iv. 3 

doth it not flow as hugely as the sea. As you Like, 11. 7 

the even truth in pleasure flow All's Well, v. 3 

if wit flow from it, as boldness Winter'sTale, u. 2 

doth ebb and flow like the sea 1 Henry I V. i. 2 

in as high a flow as the — i- 2 

and flow henceforth in formal 'iHenri/IV.y. 2 

whose flood begins to flow within ..2Henr.v;'/. 111. I 
that makes small brooks to flow ..SHenri/ VI. iv. 8 
scenes as draw the eye to flow . . Henry /'///. (prql.) 

whom from the flow of gall X — .,i. 1 

seems to flow from him! — iJ!- 2 

Iiis ebbs, his flows, as it the .. Troilus ^ Cressida, 11. 3 

you flow to great destruction — v. 2 

let it flow this way, my good {rep.). Timon ofAlh.i. 2 

nor cease his flow of riot — ii- 2 

and your great flow of debts — 11. 2 

and set mme eyes at flow — !■• 2 

'tis cold, it seldom flows — u- 2 

BCornd'st our brains' flow, and those — v. 5 
should make our eyes flow with joy.Cono/anuj, v. 3 
they take the flow o' the Nile ..Antony (fCleo. u. 7 
that it flows over on all that need .... — .v. 2 
princely blood flows in his cheek ..Cymbeline, 111. 3 
flow, flow, you heavenly blessings .. — lii. S 
did not flow from honourable courses.. /»enc/ej, iv. 4 

that ebb and flow by the moon I-ear, v. 3 

do ehh and flow with tears? Romro^Juliel, 111. 5 

FLOWED-Howcd with her beauty. »'in/er'j Tale, v. 1 

the river Imtli thrice flowed 'IHenrylV. iv. 4 

prondlvfl.. wed 111 vanity — v. 2 

till thev have flowed their fill ZHenryl l.u.b 

numbers that I'etrarch flowed in . . Romeo * Jul. ii. 4 

FLOWICR— uiion my flowers ditfii8est..7'einpe«/, iv. 1 
the summer-swelling flower ..Tu-oGen. of Ver. ii. 4 

and everv precious flower Merry Wives, v. 5 

in emerald tufts, flowers purple — v- 5 

fairies use flowers for their charactery — v. 5 
before me to sweet beds of flowers. Turelflh ffighl, 1. 1 

BO beautv's a flower — .;. 5 

whose fair flower being once displayed — 11. 4 
not a flower, not a flower sweet — — n. 4 (song) 
not as the flower, corrupt with. . Meas.fnr.Veas. n. 2 
crowns him with flowers, and makeo.Mid.X.Ur.n. I 
it fell upon a little western flower .. — n. 3 

fetch me that flower — •!■ 2 

hast thou the flower there? — !!-"^ 

lulled in these flowers with daiiL-es .. — 11.2 

this flower's force in stirring love — ii. 3 

the flowers of odious savours sweet . . — 111. 1 
while thou on jiri'sscd flowers dost sleep — ;u. I 
weeps everv little Hower, lamenting — iii. I 

flower of lilis purple dye, hit with .. — iii. 2 
created both one Hower. both on one — 111.2 

of fresh and fragrant flowers — jv. I 

o'er Ciiiiid's flower hath such force. — iv. I 
the odoriferous flowers of fancy., tore'n L.LosI, iv. 2 

Bti-ewing her way with flowers — iv. 3 

this is the flower that smiles on — v. 2 

I am that flower.— that mint — v. 2 

that a life wua but a flower ...is you Like. v. 3 (song) 



FLOWER-a fresh uncropped flovrar . . AW s H'ell, v. 3 
and bestrewed with flowers ..TammgofSh. I (ind.) 

yet sweet as spring-time llowers — ii. 1 

f;ive me those flowers there Il'iiiter's Tale, iv. 3 

fit our ages with flowers of mnter — iv. 3 

the fairest flowers o' the season are . . — iv. 3 
here'sflowersfor yon; hot lavender.. — iv. 3 
these are flowers of middle summer.. — iv. 3 
I would I had some flowers o' the spring — iv. 3 

O Proserpina, for the flowers now — iv. 3 

come, take your flowers; mcthinks., — iv. 3 

look like the innocent flower Mnchelh, i . 5 

before the flowers in their caps — iv. 3 

to dew the sovereign flower — v. 2 

the flowers, fair ladies; and thy steps. Wic/in/<i //. i. 3 

a too long withered flower — ii. 1 

from thy bosom pluck a flower — iii. 2 

ill become the flower of England's .. — iii. 3 
fertility from wholesome flowers .... — iii. 1 

her fairest flowers choked up — iii. 4 

we pluck this flower, safety \ Henry IT. ii. 3 

tollin" from every flower iHemylV. iv. 4 

and play with flowers, and smile Henry V. ii. 3 

on my behalf would pluck a flower..! Henry VJ. ii. 4 

that the paleness of this flower — iv. 1 

the flower of Europe for his chivalry.SHenjj/ VI. ii. 1 

because sweet flowers are slow Riehard III, ii. 4 

my unblown flowers, new-appearing — iv. 4 
music, plants, and flowers. . HenryVlIL iii. 1 (song) 
strew me over with maiden flowers .. — iv. 2 
every flower did, as a prophet. Troitus^Cressida, i. 2 

he's one of the flowers of Troy — i. 2 

and cull their flower, Ajax shall cope — ii. 3 
receive the flower [Col. Knt. -Sour} of all.. Corioi. i. 1 
flower of warriors, now is't with .... — i. 6 
strew flowers before them: unshout.. — v. 4 
do you now strew flowers in his way. JuliusCtvsar^i. 1 
where souls docouch on flowers. ..j"n/o>(i/<5- Ceo. iv. 12 

gather those flowers; make haste Cymbeline, i. 6 

on chaliced flowers that lies — ii. 3 (song) 

■with fairest flowers, whilst summer lasts — iv. 2 

thou shalt not lack the flower — iv. 2 

moss besides, when flowers are none — iv. 2 

here's a few flowers; but about midnight — iv. 2 
you were as flowers; now withered .. — iv. 2 
these flowers are like the pleasures of — iv. 2 
your never- witherin" banks of flowers — v. 4 
morning's dew distilled on flowers?. . TUus.ind. ii. 4 
I han^ the head, as flowers with frost — iv. 4 
though they feed on sweetest flowers . . Pericles, i. 1 

to blow into life's flower again! — iii. 2 

to strew thy green with flowers — iv. 1 

give me your wreath of flowers — iv. 1 

not such a flower (rep.) Romeo fy Juliet, i. 3 

may prove a beauteous flower when . . — ii. 2 
and precious-juiced flowers, the earth — ii. 3 
the infant rind of this small flower .. — ii. 3 
pink for flower. Right. Why, then . . — ii. 4 
he is not the flower of courtesy, but I'll — ii. 5 
upon the sweetest flower of all the field — iv. ;■> 
flower as she was, deflowered by him — iv. 5 
our bridal flowers serve for a buried corse — iv. 5 
give me those flowers; do as I bid thee — v. 3 
s\veet flower, with flowers I strew thy — v. 3 
with flowers to strew his lady's grave — v. 3 
larded all with sweet flowers. . . . Hamlet, iv. 5 (song) 

FLOWER-DE-LUCE- 
the flower-de-luce being one! .... Winter's Tale, iv. 3 
sayest thou, my fair flower-de-luce? . . Henry I', v. 2 
are the flower-de-luces in your arms.l Henry I'l. i. 1 
decked with five flower-de-luces on each — i. 2 
I'll toss the flower-de-luce of France. 2 Heiiriy VI, v. 1 

FLOWERED-to the flowered fields . . Titus And. v. 1 
then is my pump well flowered. . Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 4 

FLOWERING-your flowering infants. He«r!/r. iii. 3 
detained me, all nvy flowering youth. I Henry VI. ii. 5 
snake, rolled in aflowering bank ..iHenryVI. iii. 1 
hid with a flowering face I Romeo &■ Juliet, iii. 2 

FLOWER-SOFT— 
of those flower-soft ]\B,nAs.. Antony fyCleopafra, ii. 2 

FljOWERY-flowery tenderness? iVeas./or A/cos. iii. 1 
wakes me from my flowery bed. Mid. N. Dream, iii. I 
sit thee down upon this flowery bed. . — iv. 1 
and they'll be for the flowery way All's Well, iv. .5 

FLO WING— be in their flowing cups. . . Henry V. iv. 3 

would call forth her flowing tides 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

no less flowing than marchioness .. Henry VIII. ii. 3 
with gifts of nature Aowiug. .Troilus ^Cressida, iv. 4 
to-ni|rht flustered with flowing cups Othello, ii. 3 

FLOWN-floods have flown from simple.^H's»'eH,ii. i 
having flown over many knavish. IVinler'sTale, iv. 2 
ere the bat hath flown his cloistered. . Macbeth, iii. 2 
with youthful wings is flown from. .iHenrylV. iv. 4 
she's flown to her desired Posthumus. Cymbeline, iii. 5 
O, well flown, bird I i' the clout Leor, iv. 6 

FI^OWRET- nor bruise her flowrets. .1 Henry/F. i. 1 

FLUELLEN— captain Fluellen, you .. Henry V. iii. 2 
I say, gud-day, captain Fluellen .... — iii. 2 

how now, captain Fluellen iii. g 

how now, Fluellen? camest thou from — iii. 6 

what men have you lost, Fluellen? .. iii. 6 

know'st thou Fluellen? Yes. Tell him — iv. 1 
captain Fluellen ! So! in the name of — iv. 1 

they did, Fluellen. Your majesty iv. 7 

what think you, captain Fluellen? .. iv. 7 

here, Fluellen, wear thou this favour — iv. 7 

follow Fluellen closely at the heels .. iv. 7 

for I do know Fluellen valiant iv 7 

FLUENT— a theme as fluent as the sea — iii. 7 

FLUNG— whose enmity he flung aside ..Tempe.!/, ii. 1 

broke their stalls, flung out Macbeth, ii. 4 

fain would have flung from him . . Henry VIII. ii. 1 

he's flung in rage from this Timonof Athens, iv. 2 

the matrons flung their gloves Coriolanus, ii. 1 

FLUSH— now the time is flush. . Timon of Athens, v. ij 

and flush yoiith revolt Antony if Cleopatra, i. 4 

broad blown, as flush as May Hamlet, iii. 3 

FLUSHING— flusliing in her galled eyes — i. 2 

FLUSTERED- ^ b y 
flustered mth flowing cups Othello, ii. 3 



FLUTE— Flute, the bellows-mender. . . Mid. N. Dr. i. 2 

Flute, you Thisby — i. 2 

Flute, the bellows-mender! — iv. 1 

to the tune of flutes kept stroke.. .4«7o»y<5-Cieo. ii. 2 
these trumpets, flutes! whati — ii. 7 

FLUTTERED— 
fluttered your Volsces in Corioli Coriolanus, v. 5 

FLUX— part the flux of company... 4s i/oij Likeit, ii. 1 
the very uncleanly flux of a cat — iii. 2 

FLY— be't to fly Tempest, i. 2 

did my heart fly to your service — iii. 1 

her peacocks fly amain , — iv. 1 

do fly him, when he comes back .... — v. 1 

on the bat s back I do fly — v. 1 (song) 

that hath love's wing's to fly .. TuoGen.ofVer. ii. 7 

I fly not death, to fly his — iii. 1 

but, fly I hence, I fly away — iii. 1 

in great amazedness will fly Merry Wives, iv. 4 

fly, run, hue and cry, villain! — iv. 5 

nay, do not fly; I think, we have .... — v. 5 
fly away, fly away, breath.. TwelfthNight, ii. 4 (song) 
Lysander and myself will fly . . Mid. N.'s Dream, i. I 

thou shalt fly him — ii. 2 

as a monster, fly my presence — ii. 3 

pray, masters! fly, masters! help! .... — iii. 1 

away his fellows fly — iii. 2 

hut faster he did fly — iii. 2 

like cowards, and fly hence Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

as they fly by them with .... Merchant of Venice, i. 1 

Venus' pigeons fly to seal — ii. B 

will we both fly toward Belmont .... — iv. 1 

how we may S.j, whither to go As you Like it, i. 3 

I fly thee, for I would not injure — ill..') 

it will not kill a fly — iv. 1 

'twill fly with the smoke out at — iv. I 

from your sound parts shall fly All's Well, ii. 1 

Dian, from thy altar do I fly — ii. 3 

that can fly from us _ iii. 1 

to fly the favours of BO good a king .. — iii. 2 

of fire, fly with false aim — iii. 2 

and that you fly them as you swear . . — v. 3 
I fly, Bioudello: but they may. Taming of Shreie, v. I 

to fly away by night Winter's Tale, iii. 2 (iudict.) 

let him fly, the curses he shall liave . . — iv. 3 
so fly I from her that would.. Comerfy of Errors, iii. 2 

fly pride, says the peacock — iv. 3 

I hear him, mistress, fly, begone — v. 1 

fly, good Fleance, fly, fly, fly Macbeth, iii. 3 

some holy angel fly to tlie court of . . — iii. B 

to make him fly the land? — iv. 2 

from whence liimself does fly? — iv. 2 

whither should I fly? — iv. 2 

let them fly all; till Birnam — v. 3 

then fly, false thanes, and mingle .... — v. 3 

doctor, the thanes fly from me — v. 3 

I cannot fly, but, bear-like — v. 7 

and fly, like thought, from them King John, iv. 2 

fly, noble English, you are bought.... — v. 4 

king John did fly, an hour — x.H 

seem the clouds that in it fly Richardll.i. \ 

ere thou fly the realm — i. 3 

on his side fights, thousands will fly — ii. 2 

be safe, fly from my side — iii. 2 

a rendezvous, a home to fly unto. ... 1 Henry IV. iv. 1 

to fly out of your sight — v. 1 

their safety fly from the field iHenrylV.S. 1 

fly to Scotland, till that — ii. 3 

shall his aflfections fly towards — iv. 4 

several ways, fly to one mark Henry V.\.i 

that shall fly with them — i. 2 

our scene must to the battle fly .. . — iv. (chorus) 
they have no wings to fly from God . — iv. 1 
the knavish crows, fly o er them all — iv. 2 
good argument, I hope, we shall not fly — i\. 3 
sweet soul for mine, then fly a-breast — iv. 6 
and so I shall catch the fly, your cousin — v. 2 

another would fly swift \ Henry VI. i. 1 

all fly to him ! O whither shall we fly — i. 1 

go back one foot, or fly — i. 2 

I'll ne'er fly from a man — i. 2 

countenance made others fly — i. 4 

as you fly from your oft-subdued. ... — '\. !> 
will you fly, and leave lord Talbot?.. — iii. 2 

for fly he could not (rep.) — iv. 4 

and shall I fly ? O, if yoxi love — iv. ."i 

fly to revenge my death, if I be — iv. .5 

and, father, do you fly; your loss. ... — iv. b 

but not to fly the foe.. ..' — iv. .') 

death be so apparent, then both fly .. — iv. 5 

from France to heaven fly — iv. i 

and fly, now thou art sealed (rep.) .. — iv. B 

are saved, if thou wilt fly away — iv. B 

before young Talbot from old Talbot fly — iv. 6 

an' if I fly, lam not Talbot's son — iv. B 

and the 1 renchmen fly, now help. ... — v. 3 

do not fear, nor fly — v. 3 

your grace could fly to heaven? 2 Henry VI. ii. 1 

the lame to leap, to fly away — ii. 1 

my lord, whole towns to fly — ii. 1 

arid, fly thou how thou canst — ii. 4 

fly, fly, fly! sir Humphrey Stafford . . — iv. 2 
tfiose, which fly before the battle ends — iv. 2 

fly, my lord! .lack Cade — iv. 4 

the citizens fly and forsake — iv. 4 

the wing wherewith we fly to heaven — iv. 7 

no home, no place to fly to — iv. 8 

let no soldier fly ." — v. 2 

you'll nor fight, nor fly — v. 2 

which can no more but fly — v. 2 

ere bid you fly; but fly you must — v. 2 

is slain, they'll quickly fly 3 Henry VI. i. 1 

and trumpets, and the king will fly .. — i. 1 

ah, whither shall I fly, to 'scape ..... — i. 3 

and fly, like sliips before the wind ... — i. 1 

when they can fly no further? — i. 4 

made thee faint and fly ere this — i. 4 

never once again turn back, and fly.. — ii. 1 

king, and many fly to him — ii. 2 

then 'twas my turn to fly — ii. 2 

counselgive you? whither riiall we fly? — ii. 3 



FLY— horse, because I will not fly . .ZHenryVI. ii. 

and give them leave to fly, that will not — ii. 

fly, father, fly! for all j'our friends... — ii. 

and whither fly the gnats — ii. 

no way to fly, nor strength to — ii. 

what are they that fly there? — iv. 

let us fly, while we may fly — iv. 

ah, could'stthoufly! (r'P?l — v. 

fly, lords, and save yourselves — v. 

some one of you would fly from us. . . — v. 

to fly the boar, before the boar Richard III. iii. 

disdained it, and did scorn to fly — iii. 

your gentle souls fly in the air — iv. 

wilt thou, O God, fly from such — iv. 

Catesby, fly to the duke. I will — iv. 

and fly to him, I fear — iv. 

dearest need, will fly from him — v. 

then fly,— what, from myself? — v. 

my chaff and corn shall fly asunder. Henry VIII. v. 

now, "ood angels fly o'er thy royal . . — v. 

and lly like chidden Mercury... Troilus 6f Cress, ii. 

deliver a fly from a spider — ii. 

and fly with me to Cressid! — iii. 

arms outstretched, as he' would fly .. — iii. 

will fly with his face backward . .' — iv. 

fly not; for should'st thou take — v. 

I do not fly, but advantageous — v. 

and there they fly, or die, like — v. 

why then, fly on, I'll hunt — v. 

I will fly, like a dog Timonof Athens, i. 

his promises fly so beyond his ^ i. 

fly damned baseness, to him that.... — iii. 

fly, whilst thou'rt blessed and free.... -- iv. 

itifly, Marcius, halloo me Coriolanus, i. 

for him shall fly out of itself — i. I 

do they still fly to the Roman? — iv. 

save your life, fly to your house — v. 

make him fly an ordinary pitch Julius C<rsnr,i. 

coward lips did from their colour fly.. — i. 

fly not, stand still; ambition's debt .. ^ iii. 

and kites, fly o'er our heads — v. 

look, the villains fly! — v. 

fly further off, my lord, fly — v. 

fly therefore, noble Cassius, fly far off — v. 

fly, fly, my lord, there is no tarrying. . — v. 

fly, my lord, fly. Hence; I will follow — v. 
thoughts may not fly forth ofEgypt.Ant. fyCleo. i. 

anduever fly off our loves again! .... — ii. 

this was but as a fly by an eagle — ii. 

the shelters whither tlie routed fly — iii. 

with all their sixty, fly, and turn — iii. 

fly, and make your peace (rep.) — iii. 

bid them all fly (rev.') — iv. 1 

fortunes bid thy followers fly — iv. 1 

rather, directly, fly Cymbeline, i. 

his spirits fly out into my story — iii. 

OJove! I think, foundations fly the.. — iii. 

it would flj' from so divine a temple. . — iv. 

soft! what are you that fly me thus?.. — iv. 

as some fly had tickled slumber — iv. 

till it fly out, and show them — iv. 

or betimes let's re-enforce, or fly — v. 

souls that fly backwards! — v. 

forthwith, they fly chickens — v. 

he'll quickly fly ray friendship too . . — v. : 

we appeal, and from thy justice fly . . — v. 
I have killed, my lord, a fly.. Titus Andronicus, iii. 

have but killed a fly. But now, if that fly — iii. 

poor harmless fly ! that with — iii. 

'twas a black ill-favoured fly — iii.: 

we can kill a fly, that comes in — iii. : 

down to throw my books, and fly ... . — iv. 

sweet scrolls to fly about the streets . . — iv. ■ 

dimmed, that gnats do fly in it ? — iv. 

willingly as one would kill a fly — v. 

so my sad decrees may fly away — v.: 

as thou wilt live, fly after Pericles., i. 

a mouse, nor hurt a fly — iv. ! 

wrens of Tharsus will fly hence — iv. ' 

when I did fly from Tyre — v. 1 

O, sir, fly this place; intelligence Lear, ii. 1 

fly, brother; torches! torches! — ii. 

let him fly far; not in — ii. 1 

if the wild-geese fly that way . 



and the small gilded fly does lecher — iv. 1 

gives strength to make it fly Romeo <§■ Juliet, i. ; 

as he fell, did Romeo turn and fly . . . . — iii. 

when I from this must fly — iii. I 

fly hence and leave me; think upon.. — v. ; 

fly at any thing we see Hamlet, ii . '■ 

than fly to others that we know not of ?. . — iii. 1 
my words fly up, my thoughts remain .. — iii.; 

house's top, let the birds fly — iii.' 

much haste as thou wouldst fly death — iv. 6 (letter 
her wrong stay, and her displeasure fly. .Othello, ii. 1 

will I ensnare as great a fly as Cassio — i i . I 

FLY-BITTEN— fly-bitten tapestries.. 2HeHrv//'.ii. I 
FLY-BLOWING -not fear flv-blowing. Tempest, v. I 
FLY-BLOWN-stinking,andflv-lilown.lHeN. f7. iv. ; 
FLYING-that send them flying. Two Gen.ofl'er. iii. I 

the j iistice of my flying hence — i v. ; 

and flying what pursues Merry Wives, ii. ; 

thou couldst not) flying between ..Mid. N. Dr. Ii. i 

there is nor flying hence Macbeth, v. .' 

thou art flying to a fresher clime Richard U. i. c 

with his pistol kills a sparrow flying. 1 Henry IV. ii. i 

for flying at the brook, I saw not iHenry VI. ii. I 

either turn my flying soul — iii. !; 

having the fearful flying hare 3Henry VI. ii. ; 

flying for succour to his servant Henry VIII. ii. I 

on heaps the enemy flying .. Troilus ^Cressida, iii. S 

to course yourflyiiig flags An'ony ^ Cleo. iii. i I 

like the Parthian, I shall flying fight. Cymfte/ine, i. ! 

all flying tlirough a straight lane — v. ; 

our Britain's harts die flying — v. : 

images of revolt and flying off"! Lear, li. i 

FLY-SLOW— the fly-slow \_Col. A'n/.-sly-slow] 

hours shall.not determinate Richard U.\.: 

FOAL— in likeness of a Ally foal.., U.W.A'.y?,<-am, ii. I 
foals me, straight, and able horses. Timon of .iih. ii. I 



FOA 

FOAM— niul fottins ut nioiitU . . Troiliit ^-CrenaJa, v. i 
vilicrothe liRht tbaiii ot'tlie sea ..Timon (if Alh. Iv. 3 
the bark., aiuL plou.iili'tit the t'ouni ... , — v. I 
and rage, nuil foam, to ha exalted.. Ju/riit CtPsar, i. 3 
the angered oeeiin t'nama... . Antony t^- Clenpalra, ii. 6 
if lint. Tic foams at the mouth OtluUo, iv. 1 

F0.\MI:D— and foamed at moiitli ..Julius Cirtar, i. 2 
foamed ut tlu' mouth, ai;d swore ....Ci/mbctine^v. S 

FOA Ml Nil- ill tlie foiuning brine rVm/iof, i. 2 

nitty break Ills tbuniing eourser's ..../iiWidrwE //. i. 2 

anion^ tbaininj: hot tics, and UennjV. iii. G 

again ucstriik' our f.uuniug ntceds ..3Henryl'l. ii. 1 
do but stand upon llu' foaming shore ..Olliello, ii. 1 

FO.\MY— enniL;ed and ftiamy mouth.. A™////! iV. v. 1 

FOB-givcs them a fob [C..;. SKh).Comfili/orHrr. iv. 3 
to folj otVour disuriuv with a t:ile fnriolanui, i. I 

FOUBED-imd resohdion thus t\Mm\. Minify IK i. 2 
and Iwciu to tinil mvsdf fobl)ed in it ..OIhello,lv. 2 

FOC.VTIVt;— is the foiativc ease .. Men y Hives, iv. 1 
rememhor, William; fooative is, caret — iv. 1 

FODDEK— theslRcii lor fodder.. Tn'o Gen.ofl'er. i. 1 

FOE— 'mon-st all foes — v. 4 

t«-o such friends should be long foes.. — v. 1 

if f irtune thy foe were not Merry H'ices, iii. 3 

truly sir, the better for ray foes .. Tuelflli Kighl, v. I 

now" mv foes tell me — v. 1 

so tluit by my foes, sir — V. 1 

and the better for my foes — v. 1 

so bitter on your bitter foe ..Mid. N.'s Dream, iii. 2 

did make my t\ic to sweat Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

strangers, and foes, do sunder All's Well, ii. 5 

with camping foes to live — iii. 4 (letter) 

disteniperatures, and foes to life?. . Com. of Err. v. 1 

redoubled strokes upon the foe Macbeth, i. 2 

good of bad, and friends of foes! — ii. 4 

we have met with foes that — v. 7 

in the dying slaughter of their toes..KingJohii, ii. 2 

now fall over to my foes? — iii. 1 

and count his friends my foes — iii. I 

our party may well meet a prouder foe — v. 1 
the honourable father to my foe .... Richard II. i. 1 

nor friends nor foes, to me — ii. 3 

fled, to wait upon thy foes — ii. 4 

feed not my sovereign's foe — iii- 2 

the foe, since fear oppresseth (rep.) .. — iii. 2 

since foes have scope to beat — iii. 3 

the glittering helmet of my foe! — — iv. 1 
the king's friend, and will rid his foe — v. 4 

his foes are so enrooted with iHenrylV. iv. 1 

we arm us 'gainst the foe Henry V. ii. 4 

fortune is Bardolph's foe, and fro^ms — iii. G 
to purge the field of such a hilding foe — iv. 2 

to pray against thy foes 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

chased all thy foes from hence — i. 2 

Uloster too, a foe to citizens — i. 3 

by these colours, for thy foes — ii. 4 

our bodies slaughtered by thy foes . . — iii. 1 
and so thrive Richard, as thy foes may — iii. 1 

to tlie fall of all our foes! — iii. 2 

to tlie field, and vanquished his foes — iii. 2 

wasting ruin of the cruel foe'. — iii. 3 

was not the duke of Orleans thy foe? — iii. 3 
and seek how we may prejudice the foe — iii. 3 

and none your foes, but such as — iv. 1 

and is become your foe. Is that — iv. 1 

behold confusion of your foes — iv. 1 

but not to fly the foe — iv. 5 

imagine him a Frenchman and thy foe — iv. 7 

in Paris, in despite of foes iHenry VI. i, 1 

seek prevention of thy foes — ii. 4 

twenty times so many foes — ii. 4 

preserve my sovereign from his foe . . — iii. 1 

for myself, foe as he was to me — iii. 2 

were vowed duke Humphrey's foes.. — iii. 2 

our foes arc this time fled — v. 3 

that seeks to make them foes'. ZHevry VI. i. 1 

to the eager foe turn back — i. 4 

yea, even my foes will shed — i. 4 

environed he was with many foes.... — ii. 1 
on the helmets of our foes tell our .. — ii. 1 
again cry. Charge upon our foes!.... — ii. I 
our foes are nigh; and this soft courage — ii. 2 

whiles the foe doth rage — ii. 3 

that to my foes this body must — ii. 3 

the foe is merciless, and will not .... — ii. 6 

if friend, or foe, let him be — ii.G 

the scattered foe, that hopes — ii.G 

Henry your foe is taken — iii. 2 

the stronger grows our foe — iii. 3 

return hie sworn and mortal foe .... — iii. 3 
I rather wish you foes, thau hollow. . — iv. 1 

or by his foe surprised — iv. 4 

and DV that our foe — iv. 4 

so otlier foes may set upon our backs — v. I 

proclaim myself thy mortal foe — v. 1 

friend, or foe, and tell me — v. 2 

by my fall, the conquest to my foe . . — v. 2 

is prisoner to the foe; his state — v. 4 

or wrong surmise, hold me a foe . . Ilichard III. ii. 1 

two deep enemies, foes to my rest — iv. 2 

do fight against your country's foes.. — v. 3 

the toe vaunts in the field — v. 3 

»et U|)on our foes; our ancient — v. 3 

a furnace for your foe so hot Henry V II I. i. 1 

I hold my most malicious foe — ii. 4 

her foes shake like a field of — v. 4 

the welcome of a noble foe Troilus ^ Cretsida, i. 3 

aiuraee may beat down oiu' foes — ii. 2 

that thought is bounty's foe ..Timon of Alliens, ii. 2 

he did oppose his foe — iii. .'> 

and let the foes quietly cut — iii..') 

if there were no Iocs, that were — iii. .'> 

I have kept back their foes — iii.!) 

I fear, our fix'S the snare — v. 3 

I'll leave the f<K*. and make Coriotanus, i. 4 

fast foe to the pleheii — ii. .1 

flatterers, foes to nobleness — iii. I 

a foe to the public weal — iii. I 

(still vniir own foes.) deliver you — iii. 3 

so, feflcst foes, whose passions — iv. 4 



[ 2(J9 ] 



FOE— bloody fingers of thy foes ..Julius Cmsar, iii. 1 
a foe to tyrants, and my country's friend — v. 4 
my fleet hath j lelded to tlic (on. Antony ^Cleo, iv. 10 

such a foe, goixl heavens! Cymbeline, iii. 

our foe was princely; and though («';). ) — iv. 2 

who dares not stand his foe — v. 3 

came crying 'mongst his foes — v. 4 

a terror to our foes, hath yoked . . Tilun Andron. i. 1 
the liloixly wrongs upon her foes .... — i. 2 
my foes I do repute you every one .. — i. 2 

wfcukful ve'm.'eiuH'e cm thy foes — v. 2 

the empin.r liiiii-icif, and all thy foes — V. 2 

to hiv II I'diiplot to lietray thy toes .. — v. 2 

look, thy lues are liound — v. 2 

come to us as favourers, not as foes .... Pericles, i. 4 
wareely think our miseries our foes .... Lear, iii. G 
and all foes the cup of their deservings . . — v. 3 
the fatal loins of these two toes. .Romeo ^Jul. (pro!.) 

stir one foot to seek a foe — i. 1 

this is a INIontague, our foe — i. .*) 

my life is my foe's debt — i. ."i 

but to Ills foe supposed he must — i. .'i (cho.) 

being held a foe, lie may not have.. — i. a (clio.) 
two such opposed foes [Co/. Kn(. -kings! — ii.3 
intercession likewise steads my foe .. — ii.3 

met my dearest foe in heaven Ilmmet, i. 2 

you will draw both friend and foe — iv. 5 

of being taken by the insolent foe Othello, i. 3 

FOEMAN — the foeinan may with as.'illenrylV. iii. 2 
is this our foemaii's face ZHenryVI. ii. .*> 

FOEMEN— unto his dastard foemcn..lWenr!/f/. i. 1 

what valiant foemen, like to ZHenryVI. v. 7 

than foemen's marks upon his .. Titus Andro^i. iv. 1 

FOG— the .Egyptians in their fog . . Twelfth Night, iv. 2 
sucked npil-om the sea contagious fogs.iV/i'rf. Af.Dr.ii. 2 
cover thou anon with drooping fog . . — iii. 2 
hover tlirough the fog aud filthy air . . Macbeth, i. 1 

to lose itself in a fog Coriolanus, ii. 3 

but have a fog in them Cymbeline, iii. 2 

stain the sun with fog TitusAndronicus, iii. 1 

blasts and fogs upon thee Lear, i. 4 

you fen-sucked fogs, drawn by — ii. 4 

FOGGY— like foggy south, puffing. .4s !/0MLi7[ei(, iii. 
sits in a foggy cloud, and stays for me.Macbelh, iii. 5 
is not their climate fogg3% raw Henry V. iii. .'i 

FOI— ma foi,il fait fort eliaud Merry li'ives,'\. 4 

ma foi! the other day, methought Henry V. iii. 7 

Sar ma foi, peasant, unless — iv. 4 
IL— and put it to the foil Tempest, iii. 1 

blunt as the fencer's foils, which \\it.. Much Ado, v. 2 

I would be loth to foil liim As you Like it, i. 1 

that did but lately foil the sinewy.... — ii.2 

esteem a foil, wherein thou art Richard II. i. 3 

that which hath no foil to set 1 Henry IV. i. 2 

five most vile and ragged foils. Henry ^. iv. (chorus) 

one sudden foil slial 1 never 1 Henry VI. iii. 3 

England give the French the foil .... — v. 3 

naked, foil a man at arms 3 Henry VI. v. 4 

by the foil of England's cliair Richard III, v. 3 

[Co(.] Antony no way excuse his foils. /ln(.<5-C((!o. i. 4 

{Col.^ must not foil the precious Cymbeline, ii. 3 

knight shall use his foil, aud target .... Hamlet, ii. 2 

willnot peruse the foils — iv. 7 

let the foils be brought, the gentleman — v. 2 

five us the foils; come on — v. 2 
'11 be your foil, Laertes — v. 2 

give them the foils, young Osrick .... — v. • 

these foils have all a length? — v. 2 

ICol.'] Cupid foil \vith wanton dulness . . OUiflh, i. 3 

Fl IILED- wherein if I be foiled . . As you Like ii,i.i 
if he were foiled, why, then we . . Troilus (f Cress, i. 3 
or foiled some debile wretch Coriolanus, i. 9 

FOIN — to see thee foiu Merry fVives, ii. 3 

he will foin like any devil iHenry IV. ii. 1 

come, no matter vor your foins Lear, iv. G 

FOIIS'ING- from your foiniiig fence . . Much Ado, v. 1 
fighting o' days and foiniug o' m^his.lUenry I V. ii.4 

FOIS— je reciterai ime autre fois Henry F. iii. 4 

.c'estassez pour line fois; al Ions — iii. 4 

F()ISON— all foison, all abundance Tempest, ii. 1 

earth's increase, and foison plenty.. — iv. 1 (song) 
fallow brings to teeming foison ...Meas.forMeas. i. 5 

Scotland hath foisons to fill up .\lacbeth, iv. 3 

if dearth, or foison, follow .. Antony S^ Cleopatra, ii. 7 

FOIX — Fauconberg, FoLx, Lcstiale Henry V. iii. 3 

Roussi, Fauconberg, and Foix — iv. 8 

FOLD— thus will I fold them.. Two Gra. of Verona, i. 2 

the fold stands empty in Mid. N.'s Dream, ii. 2 

take forth paper, fold it Macbeth, y. I 

descend, and fold him in our arms . . Richard II. i. 3 

to have me fold up parca's Henry V. v. I 

make the fox surveyor of the fold?. .2 Henry VI. iii. 1 

a thousand fold it doth ZHenry Vl.W.b 

in Troilus thousand fold I see. Troilus S^ Cressida,\. 2 

unloose his amorous fold — iii. 3 

approach the fold, and cull .... Timon of Athens^ v. !> 
V the lowest hell fold in the people.. Conoianus, iii. 3 

and his fame folds in this orb — v. 5 

fold down the leaf where I Cymbeline, ii. 2 

that man's face can fold in pleasing ...'/"iVus.-lm/.ii. 4 
here, Marcus, fold it in the oration .. — iv. 3 
so manv folds of favour! Lear, i. 1 

FOLDEO-lord of folded arms .... Love's L. Los', iii. 1 
folded meaning ofyour words' deceit. Com. o/Krr. iii. 2 

calm words, folded up in smoke K-ing John, ii. 1 

hath in eternal darkness folded up. . Richard III. i. 3 
tenfold grief with folded arms. Titus Andronicus, iii. 2 
folded the writ up in form of the other. . Hamlet, y. 2 

F(JLIO— for whole volumes in folio. /-ore'*/.. Lost, i. 2 

FOLK— give folks leave to prate .... Merry iVives, i. 4 

old folks, you know — ii.2 

walk aside the true folk Love'sL. Lost, iv. 3 

country folks would lie .is yon Like it, v. 3 (song) 

to liCLiiiili' the old folks Ocp.).. Taming of Shrew, i. 2 
liki's (irfinio these quick-witted folks? — v. 2 

bv the tire witli good old folks Richard II. v. 1 

alid tlie old folk, time's doting •iHenry IV. iv. 4 

what, to come behind folks? iHenry VI. iv. 7 

will |MX)r folks lie. that have Cymbeline, iii. G 

old folks, many feign as they were. Romeo^ Jul. ii. 6 



FOL 

FOLK--great folks should have Hamlet, v. 1 

I'OIJJES— without these follies. TwoGen. of Ver. ii. 1 

that these follies arc within you — ii. 1 

one eye upon my follies Merry Wives, i\. 2 

and lollies doth cnmcw . . Measure for Measure, iii. I 

laughed at such shallow follies Much Ado, ii. 3 

the pretty follies that themselves... Wcr. of Ven. ii. G 
thus so tender o'er his follies .... Winter sTale, ii. 3 
your follies fight against yourself ..Richard II. iii. 2 

ravel out my weaved up follies? — iv. 1 

the face, that faced so many follies .. — iv. 1 
tliou art enamoured upon fiis follies .1 /fenry/r. v. 2 

and all tliiit love his follies Ileiiry VIII. iii. 2 

I) my follies! then Edgar was abused Lear, iii. 7 

FOLLOW— follow me— speak not jou . . Tempest, i. 2 

wherein the acorn cradled: follow — i. 2 

fine Ariel! follow me — i. 2 

come, follow; speak not for him — i. 2 

no more sticks, tmt follow thee — ii.2 

the sound is giiiiii.' auav: h't'.s fullow — iii. 2 
wilteome? I IMnlluw, St[|j|mno .... — iii. 2 

follow them swiftly, and hinder — iii. 3 

follow, I jiray you — iii. 3 

follow, and do me service — iv. 1 

the sheep for fodder follow. . Two Gen. of Verona, i. 1 

for food follows not the sheep — i. 1 

thy master for wages follows thee not — i. 1 

here follow her vices — iii. 1 

it follows not that she will — iii. 2 

despatch, sweet gentlemen, and follow me — v. 2 
flies her fortune when it follows her . . — v. 2 

and I will follow, more for — v. 2 

and I will follow, more to cross — v. 2 

Moyses and Valerius follow him — v. 3 

we'll follow him that's fled — v. 3 

let him follow: let me see MerryWives,\. 3 

I am at a word; follow — i. 3 

Bardolph, follow him — 1.3 

follow my heels, Rugby — i. 4 

I follow, niiue host, I follow — ii. - 

follow me, lad of peace; follow (rep.) — iii. 1 

follow, gentlemen, follow — iii. 1 

pray you, follow — iii. 1 

th.an follow him like a dwarf — 5ii. 2 

follow your friend's counsel — iii. 3 

follow me, gentlemen — iii. 3 

nay, follow him, gentlemen — iii. 3 

and not follow the imaginations of .. — iv. 2 
will you follow, gentlemen? (r^p.) .. — iv. 2 

follow me: I'll tell you strange — v. I 

follow: strange tilings ill hand (rep.) — v. 1 

let's away; follow me — v. 2 

follow me into the pit — v. 4 

than any one else that follows her. Tuelflh Nighl,\\. h 
what follows? The numbers altered 1 — ii. 5 

A should follow, but O does — ii. 5 

soft, here follows prose — ii. .'> 

if you will see it, follow me — ii. 5 

laugh yourselves into stitches, follow me — iii. 2 

I'll follow this good man — iv. 3 

and follows close the rigour of the.. jl/«a. /or A/ea. i. 5 

but I shall follow it — ii. I 

to follow, as it draws! — ii.4 

being granted in course, now follows.. — iii. 1 
I will instruct thee in my trade; follow — iv. 2 

we must follow the leaders Much.4do, ii. 1 

the ladies follow her, aud but one .... — ii. 1 
horror, and perturbation follows her.. — ii. 1 
if you will follow me. I will show you — iii. 2 
I thought, there would a scab follow.. — iii. 3 
come, follow me, boy; come, boy, follow — v. 1 
with duty, anddesire, we follow ..Mid. N.'s Dr. i. I 
the more I hate, the more he follows.. — i. I 
get thee gone, and follow me no more — ii. 2 
and I shall have no power to follow. . — ii. 2 
unworthy as I am, to follow you .... — ii.2 
or if thou follow me, do not believe .. — ii.2 
I'll follow thee, and make a heaven.. — ii.2 
I'll follow you, I'll lead you about . . — iii. 1 
as in scorn, to follow me, and praise.. — iii. 2 

take on. as you would follow — iii. 2 

and follow you no further — iii. 2 

now follow, if thou darest, to try — iii. 2 

follow? nay, I'll go with thee — iii. 2 

follow me then to plaiuer ground .. .. — iii. 2 

follow my voice, we'll try no — iii. 2 

and bid ns follow him? — iv. 1 

bid us follow to the temple (rep.) — iv. 1 

how follows that? Follow it in h\s. Lore's L. Lost, i. 1 
as it shall follow in my conectiou.... — i. 1 

and do you follow with my I'envoy .. — iii. 1 

Moth, follow. I..ike the sequel — iii. I 

I beseech you, follow — v. i 

what follows is pure innocence. ..VerfA.o/;'fnirf,i. 1 

a good divine that follows liisown — i. 2 

to follow mine own teaching — i. 2 

the boys in Venice follow him — ii. 8 

follow not; I'll have no speaking .... — iii. 3 ■ 

I'll follow him no more with — iii. 3 

that I follow thus a losing suit — iv. I 

strange nature is the suit you follow.. — iv. I 
which, if thou follow, this strict court — iv. I 
goon, I will follow thee, to the last. /4j you Li*rfiV. ii. 3 

wherefore do von follow her — iii. ;. 

with effects of thein follow our friends. .<//'« Well. i. I 
I follow him not by any token of — — i. 3 

does your business follow ns? — ii. 1 

but follows it, my lord, to bring me . . — 11.3 
go to, follow. I praise God for you . . — v. 2 
and I follow him to his country . . — v. 3 (petition i 
then it follows thus, thou shalt.Taming of Shrew, i. i 

Ifollowyon. Cambiol — iv. 4 

husband, let's follow, to see the end .. — v. 1 

promotion follows; if I could Winler'sTale, i. 2 

but rather follow ourforceful instigation?— ii. 1 

come, follow us, we are to »i)eak — ii. 1 

away; I'll follow instantly — iii. 3 

to loss, and what may follow! — iii. 3 

which follows after, is the argument — iv. (chor.) 
first choice; follow me, girls — iv. 3 



FOLLOW— who.t follows this? W inter' xTale, iv. 3 

my words; follow lis to the court .... — iv. 3 

this follows; if you will not change — iv. 3 

look upon the hedge and follow you.. — iv. 3 

proselytes of how 9ie but bid follow . . — v, 1 

therefore follow me ; and mark the way — v. 1 

wliich lames report to follow it — v. 2 

come, follow us; we'll be thy good — v. 2 

the love that follows us, sometime Macbeth, i. 6 

what follows, if we disallow of Wm'i.. King John, i. 1 

I'll follow you unto the death — i. 1 

not think of home, but follow arms. . — ii. 1 

I fear some outrage, and I'll follow her — iii. 4 

that eliild, and follow me with speed — iv. 3 

and follow unacquainted colours here? — y.i 

shall follow in your conduct 1 Henry IV. ill. 1 

I'll follow, as tfiey say, for reward. . . — v. 4 

and less, do flock to fidlow him iHennjIV. I. 1 

to follow your prescriptions — i. 2 

follow the young prince up and down — _i. 2 

how ill it follows, after you have — ii. 2 

shadow, my lord, I'll follow you — ii. 2 

shall come, thus did he follow it — iii. I 

we shall all follow, cousin — iii. 2 

the heat is past; follow no further now — iv. 3 

we with sober speed will follow you.. — iv. 3 

I'll follow you, good master Robert.. — v. 1 

let their bodies follow, my dear Henry r. i. 2 

it follows then, tlie cat must stay — i. 2 

and flashing fire will follow — ii. 1 

or else wliat follows? Bloody constraint! — ii. 4 
follow, follow ! grapple your minds — iii. (chorus) 
that will not follow tliese culled. . — iii. (chorus) 

the game's afoot; follow your spirit .. — iii. 1 

and follows so the ever-running year — iv. 1 

some mercv show; follow me, cur. ... — iv. 4 

he that will not follow Bourbon now — iv. 5 

follow Fluellen closely at the heels . . — iv. 7 

follow, and see there be uo harm — iv. 7 

and the liberty that follows our places — v. 2 

purpose to relieve and follow them. A Henry VI. i. 1 

brave Talbot; we will follow thee.... — ii. 1 

we'll follow them with all the — ii. 2 

but thunder, rain will follow — iii. 2 

knight, ill fortune follow thee! — iii. 2 

leave the Talbot, and to follow us.... — iii. 3 

then follow thou thy desperate — iv. 6 

ambition follows him. While 2HenryVI.i. 1 

I'll follow presently. Follow I — i, 2 

1 will follow Eleanor, and listen after — i. 3 
follow the knave ; and take this drab — ii. I 
come, fellow, follow us for thy reward — ii. 3 
that erst did follow thy proud chariot — ii. 4 
'tis to be feared, they all will follow him — iii. 1 

the king's friends, follow me — iv. 2 

that love the commons, follow me. .. . — iv. 2 

we'll follow Cade, we'll follow Cade.. — iv. 8 

we' U follow the king, and Clifford ... — iv. 8 

go some, and follow him — iv. 8 

follow me, soldiers; we'll devise .... — iv. 8 

our safety is to follow them — v. 3 

should he follow, but his natural SHenry VI. i. 1 

go not from me; I will follow thee . . — 1.1 

will follow mine, if once they seeT. . . — i. 1 

till then, I'll follow her — i. I 

broke, and ruin follows us — ii. 3 

they follow us with mngs — ii. 3 

and prince shall follow with a fresh.. — iii. 3 

that love me and Warwick, follow me — iv. 1 

in person will straight follow you — iv. 1 

you, that will follow me to this — iv. 2 

but follow me, and Edward shall.., . — iv. 3 

I'll follow you, and tell what answer — iv. 3 

means to make the body follow — iv. 7 

all those friends that deign to follow me — iv. 7 

will never cease to follow him — iv. 8 

it follows in his thought Richard III. i. 1 

go you before, and I'll follow you.. . . — i. I 

like obedient subjects, follow him ... — ii. 2 

incense the boar to follow us — iii. 1 

that love me, rise and follow me — iii. 4 

without her, follows to myself, and thee — iv. 4 

they follow, for what is he they follow? — v. 3 

we ourself will follow in the main ... — v. 3 

I'll follow, and out-stare him Henry VIII. i. 1 

now this follows, which, as I take it — i. 1 

do a vessel follow that is new trimmed — i. 2 

command him, follows my appointment — ii. 2 

heavenly blessings follow such creatm'Cs — ii. 3 

it faints me, to think what follows... — ii. 3 

then follows, that I weighed the danger — ii. 4 

how eagerly ye follow my disgraces.. — iii, 2 

follow your envious courses, men of.. — iii. 2 

sir, what follows? sir, I have brought — v. 1 

right sorry to repeat what follows. ... — v. 1 

and what follows then? commotions — v. 3 
hark, what discord follows — Troilus fyCressida, i. 3 

degree is suffocate, follows the choking — i, 3 

who knows what foUovrs? — ii. 2 

do not you follow the young lord Paris? — iii. 1 

on, lord; we'll follow you — iv. 1 

follow his torch, he goes to — v. 1 

your heart before, tills follows it — v. 2 

follow me, sirs, and my proceedings.. — v. 7 
on the moment follow his strides., r/mon of Ath. i. 1 

I do not always follow lover — ii.2 

the swallow follows not the summer. — iii. 6 

I'll follow, and enquire him out — iv. 2 

follow thy drum; with man's blood.. — iv. 3 

the infinite flatteries, that follow youth — v. 1 
follow, Comiiiius; we must follow. .. CoWo^anu*, i. 1 

nay, let them follow: the Volsces — i. 1 

puts well forth : pray, follow .... — i. 1 

tCol.'] us to our trenches follow — i. 4 

Ilia disposition, and follow Marcius. . — i. 6 

follows it, that I am known well .... — ii. 1 

whither do you follow your eyes so fast? — ii. 1 

tiiese in honour follows, Coriolanus.. — ii. 1 

therefore follow me, and I'll direct... — ii. 3 

it follows, nothing is done to purpose — iii. 1 



FOLLOW— follow to thine answer. . Coriolanus, iii. 1 

or what is worst will follow — iii. 1 

rather follow thine enemy in — iii. 2 

follow liim, as he hath followefl you. . — iii. 3 

I'll follow thee a month, devise — iv. 1 

follow your function, go — iv. ,5 

and they follow him, aminst us brats — iv. 6 
that ever herald did follow to his urn — v. 5 

tributaries follow him to Rome Julius Crcsar,\. 1 

I plunged in, and bade him follow ... — i. 2 
if the redress will follow, thou receivest — ii. 1 
for he will never follow any thing ... — ii. 1 
I follow you, to do I know not what — ii- 1 

leads me on. Follow me then — ii. 1 

the throng that follows Caisar at — ii. 4 

but will follow the fortunes and affairs — iii. 1 
prepare the body then, and follow us — iii. 1 
then follow me, and give me audience — iii. 2 
that will follow Cassius, go -with him — iii. 2 
we'll follow Mm, we'll die with him. — iii. 2 
betimes before, and we will follow... — iv. 3 
hence; I will follow thee. I pr'y thee — v. 5 
then take him to follow thee, that did — v. 5 
and let worse follow worse (,rep.) .Antony l^-Cleo. i. 2 

of all faults that all men follow — i. 4 

at thy heel did famine follow — i. 4 

which they beat, to follow faster — ii. 2 

commission's ready; follow me — ii. 3 

e'en but kiss Octavia, and we'll follow — ii. 4 
and what may follow to try a larger.. — ii. Ii 

if dearth, or foison, follow — ii. 7 

I'll never follow thy palled fortunes . — ii. 7 

the fugitive Parthians follow — iii. 1 

I'll yet follow the wounded chance of — iii. 8 
why should he follow? the itch of his — jii. 11 

I'll write it, follow me — iii. U 

to follow with allegiance a fallen lord — iii. 11 

to follow CjBsar in Ills triumph — iii. 11 

follow the noise so far as we have.. .. — iv. 3 
you, that will fight, follow me close.. — iv. 4 
follow his chariot, like the greatest .. — iv. 10 

pray, let us follow 'em Cymbeline, i. 5 

let's follow him, and pervert — ii. 4 

out of this, advise you, follow . . — iii. 2 (letter) 

sou, I say, follow the king — ?!!• ^ 

would Iliad wings to follow it! — iii. 5 

I'll follow those tliat even now fled . . — iv. 2 
must all follow this, and come to dust — iv. 2 (song) 
I'll follow, sir: but, first, an 't please — iv. 2 
leaving so his service, follow you .... — iv. 2 

let thy effects so follow, to be — v. 4 

counters; so the acq.iiittance follows — v. 4 
follow, my lord, and I'll soon bring . . Titus And. i. 2 
and I have horse will follow where . . — ii. 2 

see, thou follow me: some bring — ii. 4 

my aunt Lavinia follows me — iv. 1 

let's go: Publius, follow me — iv. 3 

we'll follow where thou lead'st — v. 1 

follow me then : lord Helicane Pericles, ii. 4 

happy what follows! — iii. 1 

well, follow me. my masters — iv. 3 

performance shall follow — iv. 3 

come your ways: follow me — iv. 3 

follow us disquietly to our graves! Lear, i. 2 

so that it follows, I am rough — i. 2 

what should follow these eclipses — i. 2 

follow me ; thou slialt serve me — i- 4 

if thou follow him, thou must needs .... — i. 4 

so the fool follows after — _i. 4 

commanded me to follow, and attend — ii. 4 

follow me not! stay here — ii. 4 

aU that follow their noses, are led ...... — ii. 4 

I would have none but knaves follow it — ii. 4 

and follows but for form — ii. 4 

fickle grace of her he follows _ — ii. 4 

to follow in a house, where twice — .\^- ^ 

away! the foul fiend follows me! — iii. 4 

and follow me, that will to some provision — iii. 6 
follow me, lady; turn out that eyeless — iii. 7 

let 's follow the old earl, and get tlie — iii. 7 

I would show what party I do follow.... — iv. 5 
go, follow tliera to prison ; one step .... — v. 3 
follow straight. We follow thee./?o»ieo ^-Juliet, i. 3 

what 's he, that follows there — i. S 

and follow thee, my lord, throughout — ii. 2 

follow me this jest now, till thou — ii. 4 

follow me close, for I will speak — iii. 1 

to follow this fair corse unto her grave — iv. 5 
follows, that you know, young Fortinbras Hamlet, i.2 
and it m ast follow, as the ni^ht the day — i. 3 
it will not speak; then I will follow it — i. 4 
it waves me forth again ; I '11 follow it — i. 4 

go on, I '11 follow thee {repeated) — i. 4 

let 's follow ; 't is not fit thus {repeated) — i. 4 
nay, that follows not. What follows then — ii. 3 

follow him, friends; we '11 hear — ii.2 

very well: follow that lord; and look you — ii. 2 

where thrift may follow fawning — iii. 2 

look you now, what follows — iii. 4 

follow liim at foot ; tempt him — iv.3 

follow her close; give her good watch .. — iv. 5 

so fast they follow: your sister's — iv. 7 

let's follow, Gertrude: how much I had — iv. 7 

start again; therefore, let 's follow — iv. 7 

but to follow him tliither with modesty — v. 1 
who is this they follow? and with such — v. 1 
the corse, they follow, did with desperate — v. 1 

they follow the king's pleasure — v. 2 

is the union here? follow my mother . . — v. 2 

I follow thee ; I am dead, Horatio — v. 2 

I would not follow liim then (lep.) . ...Othello, i. 1 
in following him, I follow but myself . . — i. 1 

follow these wars, defeat thy favour — i. 3 

I do follow here in the chase, not like . . — ii. 3 

to follow still the changes of the moon. . — iii. 3 

FOLLOW'DST— thoufollow'dsthim.2/fenri//r. ii. 4 

FOLLOWED- thence I have followed it. Tempest, i. 2 

they my lowing followed — iv. 1 

followed her with a doting Merry Wives, ii. 2 

O had I but followed the arts! . . Twel/lh Night, i. 3 



FOLLOWED- it was followed. . . . Twelfth Night, v. 1 
that you followed not to Leonato's?. .Mwc/i.-frfo, i. 1 
he followed you ; for love, I followed. A//d. A'. Dc. iii. 2 

I followed fast, but faster he — iii. 2 

and I in fury hither followed them. . — iv. 1 
well followed; .Tudas was hanged. Lojjc's L.Lost, v. 2 
it should have followed in the end . . — v. 2 
would be better if well followed. . Mer. of Venice, i. 2 
she would have followed her e-xile.AsyouLike it, i. 1 
you are there followed by a faithful — v. 2 

followed well, would demonstrate AWs Well, i. 2 

such are to be followed: after them — ii. 1 

must be even as swiftly followed... Winter'sTale, i. 2 
and the words that followed should be — v. 1 
but I followed me close, came in. ... 1 HenrylV. ii. 4 
a hue and cry hath followed certain — ii. 4 

as pages followed liim, even at — iv. 3 

so followed, and so fairly won 2HenryIV. i. I 

followed both with body and with mind — i. 1 
this chase is liotly followed, friends . . Henry V, ii. 4 

since first I followed arms 1 Henry VI. ii. 1 

and followed with a rabble 2HenryVh ii. 4 

we followed then our lord Richard III. i. 3 

as I followed Henry's corse — iv. 1 

which then I weeping followed — iv. 1 

tlironging troops that followed thee? — iv. 4 
followed with the general throng. Henry VIII. (prol.) 
the hideous storm that followea .... ■ — i. i 

be unmanly, yet are followed — i. 3 

hut, pray, what followed? — iv. 1 

followed both my fortunes faithfully — iv. 2 

how this lord's followed Timon of Athens, i. 1 

but followed the sugared game — iv.3 

us to our trenches followed [C'oi. -follow]. .Cor/o^ i. 4 
follow him, as he hath followed you — iii. 3 

since I have ever followed thee — iv. 5 

how tlie blood of Cajsar followed iil.Jul. Ciesar, iii. 2 
Ifollowed that I blush to look upon.^ln(. f^Cleo. iii. 9 
I little thought you would have followed — iii. 9 
would have still followed thy heels . . — iv. 5 
O Antony! I have followed thee to this — v. 1 

behold, how pomp is followed! — v. 2 

followed him. till he had melted .... Cymbeline, i. 4 

so, followed my banishment — iii. 3 

fitment for the purpose I then followed — v. 5 
as my master followed, as my great patron. Z.ea;-j i. 1 
kept a reservation to be followed with .. — li. 4 

Gloster? Followed the old man forth — ii. 4 

that followed me so near — v. 3 

in disguise followed his enemy king .... — v. 3 

decay, have followed your sad steps — v. 3 

why followed not, when she said. .flomeo ^Jul. iii. 2 

she followed my poor father's body Hamlet, i. 2 

indeed, my lord, it followed hard upon — i. 2 

are they so followed? No, indeed — ii. 2 

nor all masters cannot be truly followed. 0/ /if //(i,i. 1 
he that you followed with your sword? .. — ii. 3 
FOLLOWER^ CoZ.Kni.] his followers?. Tempest, v. 1 
treasure to give your followers. Two Gen. of Ver. ii. 4 
turn away some of ray followers . . Merry Wines, i. 3 

you were wont to be a follower — iii. 2 

command her followers, take TwelfthNig/U, iv. 3 

a gentleman, and follower of my lady's — v. 1 
and tears, poor fancy's followers. iV/2d. N. Dream, i. 1 
to become the follower of so poor. Mer. of Venice, ii. 2 
duke, and all his contented foUowersvis you X.i7,-e, v. 2 
your followers I will whisper to . . . Winter's Tale, i. 2 
became of his bark, and his followers? — v. 2 

will have bald followers Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

discharge my followers, let them hence. B/rt. II. iii. 2 

your person, and your followers — iv. I 

like to my followers in prosperity. ... — iv. 1 

double surety binds his followers 2HenryIV. i. 1 

and other his continual followers .... — iv. 4 

of time, cast off his followers — iv. 4 

wonted followers shall all be very well — v. 5 

to Harry and his followers Henry V. ii. (chorus) 

he hath betrayed his followers — iii. 6 

to mope with his fatbrained followers — iii. 7 
wilt mind thy followers of repentance — iv. 3 
ourselves, and all our followers .... 1 Henry VI. iii. 1 

and leave my followers here — iv. 5 

to every idle rascal follower 2 Henry VI. ii. 4 

my followers' base and ignominious.. — iv. 8 
and I to Norfolk, with my followers .ZHettryVI. i. 1 
and all my followers to the eager foe — i. 4 
soft com'age makes your followers faint — ii. 2 
that his chief followers lodge in towns — iv. 3 
brave followers, yonder stands the . . — v. 4 

some followers of mine own Richard III. iii. 7 

where be thy tenants, and thy followers? — iv. 4 
dogged with two strange followers. TroiV.iSC! ess. i. 3 
'tis for the followers fortune widens.. Cor/o/anws, i. 4 
I seemed his follower, not partner . . — v. 5 
to make his followers weep .Antony ^-Cleopatra, iv. 2 
and fortunes bid thy followers fiy . . . . — iv. 1 2 
to wear all your true followers out . . — iv. 12 
but be a diligent follower of mine . . Cymbeline, iii. 5 
countrymen, my loving followers.. Titus Andron. i. 1 
Romans, friends, followers, favourers — i. 1 
dismiss your followers, and, as suitors — i. I 
use you nobly, and your followers . . — i. 2 

what, fifty of ray followers at a elap ! Lear, i. 4 

restrained the riots of your followers .... — ii. 4 
what, fifty followers? is it not well? .... — ii. 4 

him gladly, but not one follower — ii. 4 

beware my follower: peace, Smolkin .. .. — iii. 4 
to field, lie'll be your follower. . Romeo ^-Juliet, iii. 1 
FOLLOWING— following her womb.ylfirf. N.Dr. ii. 2 
there is no following her iu this fierce — iii. 2 
fair Helena in fancy following me .. — iv. I 
following darkness like a dream .... — v. 2 
in manner and form following, bit. Love' sL. Lost, i I 
following her into the park (rep.) .... — i. 1 

for the following, sir? — i. 1 

and then we, following the signs, wooed — v. 2 
walk with you and so following ...V/er. of Venice, i. 3 
not following my leash unwillingly. Winter's T. iv. 3 
made provision tor her following me . Com., of Br. i. I 
following the mirror of all chiistian. Hen. V. ii. (cho. ; 



FOL 



FOI.LOWINU-loUowiii- your (Kmise.S/frn. r/.iii. 1 
in following tliii< u»iir|iinV Ilciiry .. ..3//(-Hr|/'''. j- I 

ciii'li following iliiy Ik-ciuiu' the //**;iryr///. i, 1 

t'olloMiiiL' tlir Hills 111 tlie verv licclB.t'orinfciiiuj, i. 4 
luTii wliipiK.I (or rollottiiij,'him..lii/oiiy<S-C/rj).iii. II 
tliut kin^'itoni ^pcnii our tbllowinR(lfty8.iVric/«s,v.3 

it' on the tciitli iluy t'olUiwine Lear, i. 1 

knowing niuiglit, like dogs, but following — ii. 2 

iKsaultcil, for following her iitfiiirs — ii. 2 

lL'*t it hnak thy neck with following it.. — ii. I 
riiirwnril following Tvlmlfs iloiitli.«ow.,SJu/. iii. 2 
ill folli.wiii- liim.'l f.llow liiit nivM'lf ..(Wit«o, i. 1 

M'O suitors iollowi.l!.', .111(1 U.lt look llcllilKl - li. 1 

1111(1 C'lissio foil(.wiiig liiiii with lU'teniiiiica— ii. 3 
tlu' iR'Nt niulil folliiwiii-eiiiovi'st not — iv. 2 

FOLr.OWST toliiiii thou rdllow'st ..Tempeil,v. 1 
for Wit-cs f.lloivM tin iiiiisU'r.. Tuio Gen.ofVer. i. 1 

KOI.I.Y-thc follv (it thiv ishiuil! Trmpnl. iii. 2 

hut n folly houglit with wit . TiroGFu.o/ I'erona, i. I 
or else n wit hy folly vaniinished .... — i. I 

is turiRHl to folly — i. I 

to see what folly reigns in us — i. 2 

for my folly past — i. 2 

vour owni present folly — ii. 1 

vourfolly — ii.-l 

how quote von mv follv? — ii. 4 

well.theii.'rildouhlevourfolly .... — ii. 4 
with thy ihiriiiL' folly hum the world? — iii. 1 
timt the folly of iii.\' soul dares . . Merry Wives, ii. 2 

he L'ives her folly motion — iii. 2 

whv this is your own folly — v. 5 

the hitter ine.rea-sing your folly!.. TV/ici/y/i Night, i. 5 

tiK hi ly Olivia has no folly — iii. 1 

fir follv, that he wisely shows, is fit — iii. 1 

I pr'ytkie veiit thy folly somewhere else — iv. 1 

vent my I lly? He has heard — iv. 1 

vent iny folly! T am afraid — iv. I 

envy ill you, folly, or mistaking. .Wcas. /or Jl/cn.i.iii. 2 
iiiir no ijre'.it iirgiiinent of her folly ..Much /Wo, ii. 3 
his folly, llcKim, is no fault . . Mid. S.'sDream, i. 1 
to ,\thens will F hear my folly back — iii. 2 

sweet loaves, shade folly Lore's L. Lost, iv. 3 

folly, in wisdom hatched, hath — v. 2 

follv in fools bears not 60 strong — v. 2 

to check their folly, passion's solemn — v. 2 
remcinber'st not the slightest folly. /Is yoK trie i7, ii. 1 
all nature in love mortal in folly .... — ii. 7 

most galled with my folly — ii. 7 

the wise man's folly is anatomized .. — ii. 7 
suits his folly to the mettle of my.... — ii. 7 

most loving mere folly — ii. 7 (song) 

that youth mounts, and folly guides — iii. 4 
he uses his folly like a stalking-horse — v. 4 
wisdom waitin" on superfluous ihUy.. All'sff'ell, i. 1 
you lack not folly to commit them .. — i. 3 

as mad in folly, lacked the sense — v. 3 

nature will betray its folly IVinter's Tale, i. 2 

his negligence, his folly. His fear .... — i. 2 
wilful negligent, it was my folly .... — i. 2 

shake the fabric of his folly — i. 2 

in every mess have folly, and the feeders — iv. 3 

(all mine own folly,) the society — v. 1 

what! quite unmanned in folly? .... Macbeth, iii. i 
aceounted dangerous folly: why then — iv. 2 
your feult was not your folly.. King John, i. 1 

Surpose must weigh with the folly.. 2H(?n»v/r. ii. 2 
iscretion with a coat of folly Henry f'. ii. 4 

England shall repent his folly — iii. 6 

too much folly is it, well 1 Henry Vl. iv. 6 

crushed into folly, his folly sauced. Troil. ^ Cress, i. 2 
of mankind, folly and ignorance .... — ii. 3 

knits not, follv may easily untie — ii. 3 

well, uncle, what folly I commit .... — iii. 2 

draws folly from my lips — iv. 5 

tempt me no more to follv — v. 2 

what folly 'tis, to hazardlifefor ill. r/monq/VI(A. iii..") 

malioious, or be accused of folly Corioianus,i. 1 

nor did von think it follv, to keep .. — i. 2 

and the faults of fools, but folly .... _ ii. 1 
he said, 'twas folly, for one poor grain — v. 1 

age from folly could not give .inlony ^Cleo. i. 3 

therefore be deaf to my unpitied foUy — i. 3 

does make our faith mere lolly — iii. U 

Ixjing aged, die of this folly 1 Cymheline, i. 2 

cuter where folly now possesses? .... i. 6 

that it was folly in me, thou may 'st say — v. 5 

when majesty stoons to folly Lear, i. 1 

this gate, that let thy folly in — i. 4 

and must needs taste his ioUy _ ii. i 

hut that this folly drowns it Ilnmlel, iv. 7 

for even her folly helped her to an heir .0(AfHo, ii. I 

that fully uiid t'reen minds look after — ii. 1 

she turned to f,lly, and she was a whore — v. 2 

foi,ly-ia]-li;n— 

but wise men, follv-fallen Twelfth \ighl, iii. 1 

FOXD— votary to fond desire?. Tu^o Gen.o/ Verona, i. 1 

if this fond love were not iv. 4 

and I, ixior monster, fond as much. Twelfth Night, ii. 2 

as fond fathers having bound Meas'.for Meat. i. 4 

not with fond shekels of the tested gold — ii. 2 

when men were fond. I smiled — ii. 2 

by heaven, fond wretch, thou know'st v. 1 

he may prove more fond on her .Mid. N.'t Dr. ii. 2 

1 am out of breath, in this fond chase ii. 3 

shall we their fond pageant see? — iii. 2 

you see how simple and how fond I am iii. 2 

than the fond eye doth teach ..Merch.of I'enice, ii. 9 

that thou art so fond to come — iii. 3 

whv would you lie so fond to AtyouLikeit,\\. 3 

wit'li o world of pretty, fond, adoptious./4H'j(IV;/,i. I 

fond done, done fond i. 3 (song) 

my lord, this is a fond and desjicrate.. — v. 3 

are you so tVmd of your young Ifinter'tTale, i. 2 

for thee, fond boy, if I may ever — iv. 3 

how many fond i'ools serve mai. . Comflii itfP.rr. ii. 1 

you arc on fond of grief King John, iii. 4 

reason to tie fond ot (Ln*icf — iii. 4 

woe wanton with this fond deloy liichatd II. v. 1 

thou fond miwl woman, wilt v. 2 

away fond womau! were he twenty.. — v. 2 



[ 271 ] 

FOND— <) thou fond many! 'i Henry If. i. 3 

1 laugh to see your ladyship so fonil.l Henry t't. ii. 3 
fond niiin! remember, that thou — v. 3 

ifitlieioiid.eull it a w.uiuiirs fear. .2»(.«;;/(7. iii. 1 
more (hiugeroiis tliiiii this foiiil iilliiuicc? — iii. 1 
he's so f(.ii(U(V,/. K„r-siiii|ik) to trust. «/cA. ///. iii. 2 
for 1, ti.o t.n.l, ini '111 liilvc pievellttd — iii. 4 

by tlieii 'Ii M iliis fond exploit — v. 3 

I'nuiy ih ' . !i - I iii(l..r/mo;ior/l«i.i.2 (grace) 

why d" I i II I. iiise themselves — iii. .^ 

'tis full. I ti' mill (i.cMliilile Coriolamit, iv. 1 

foii(l(ifii..se('..ii,l I.i.p.kI — v.3 

bo not fond, to tliiiik that C<ss<u!..JulimC<esar, iii. 1 

(thou old 1111(1 fond of issue) Cymheline, \. 1 

loud woinuii, lot me go Titus Andronicus, ii. 3 

ail idle 1111(1 fond houdiige Lear, i. 2 (letter) 

old fond eyes, hcweeii tliis cause — i. 4 

I Hill 11 verv fiiiilish fond old man .... — iv. 7 
fiiir iMontnVue. 1 mil tw t\i\u\ .... liomeo ^ Juliet , ii. 2 

thiiii fund mad iniMi, hour 1110 — iii. 3 

for tliun-hli.ii.HA»^-.<onioJ nature bids — iv. 5 

wii'o .luiiv ;ill till iiil loud records Hamlet, i. S 

thndinh t1ie nio.-t Hmd mid wiiiuowed. . . . — v. •.; 

it is liiv sliaiiio to ho so r.iiid Ollietlii, i. 3 

those uVo (.Id loud p.inidoxes, to make.. .. — ii. 1 
all my fond h.ve tlius do I blow to heaven — iii. 3 

she WHS too food of her most fiUh.y — v. 2 

F( ).\ I )1';H— louder than ignorance. 7'ro/7ia<S- Cress, i. I 

FON Dl.Y— I have fondly flattered. '/'nmiV^'o/SA. iv. 2 

how fondly dost thou reason?. . Comedy of Errors, iv. 2 

but if you fondl.y pass our proffered.. Kni^io/in, ii. 1 

plays fondly with her tears Richard II. iii. 2 

speaks fontlly like a frantic man .... — iii. 3 
how fondly dost thou spur a forward — iv. 1 
fondly brought here, and foolishly.. 2Hc»rf//F. iv. 2 

father fondly gave away? SHenryVI. ii. 2 

fondly you would here impose on.. /(iWmrrf ///. iii. 7 
[A'n^J doubts; suspects, yet fondly loves ! Ol/iello,i\i.3 
FONDNESS- 

in obsequious fondness crowd Meas.farMea'. ii. 4 

my fear hath eatehed your fondness . . .ill's Well. i. 3 

of fondness, superstitious to him?.. [Irnrif I'l It. iii. 1 

FONT— to the gallows, not the fiiut. . Mrr.'n/lcn. iv. 1 

that name was gi\'en me at the font, liiclmrd II. iv. I 

FONTIBELL-your name was I'on tiboU.i'Cs Well, iv. 2 

FOOD— some food we had Tempest, i. 1 

thy food shall be the fresh-brook muscles — i. 1 
the shepherd for food follows not. TwoGen. ofVcr. i. 1 

his looks are my soul's food? — ii. 7 

for that food so long a time — ii. 7 

young ravens must nave food Merry Wives, i. 3 

it would give eternal food to — ii. 1 

if music be the food of love Tirelflh Niglit, i. 1 

she hath such meet food to feed it .... Much Ado, i. 1 
this inay prove food to my displeasure — i. 3 
from lovers' food, till morrow deep ..Mid.N.Dr.i. 1 

did I loath this food: but, as in — iv. 1 

one day in a week to touch no food. Love's L. Lost, i. 1 
food for his rage, repasture for his den — iv. 1 
fed with the same food .... Merchant of Venice, iii. 1 
hard food for Midas, I will Hone of .. — iii. 2 

have me go and beg my food? As you Like it, ii. 3 

if he for gold will give us any food? . . — ii. 4 

seeking tne food he eats — ii. 5 (song) 

O, I die for food! here lie I — ii. 6 

be food for it, or bring it for food to . . — ii. 6 

as I do live by food, I met a fool — ii. 7 

I almost die lor food, and let me .... — ii. 7 
then but forbear your food a little .... — ii. 7 

my fawn, and give it food — ii. 7 

chewing the food of sweet and bitter — iv. 3 

did he leave him there, food to thee . . — iv. 3 
what, so it be wholesome food.. .. Taming of Sh. iv. 3 
food, my fortune, and mj' sweet. Com«/i/ o/ £rr. iii. 2 
in food, in sport, and life-preserving — v. 1 

m.y joy, my food, my all . . , King John, iii. 4 

food (loth choke the feeder Richard II. ii. 1 

that brings me food, to make — v. 5 

food for powder; food for powder \ Henry IV. iv. 2 

thou art dust, and food for — v. 4 

a stomach, and no food IHenrylV. iv. 4 

and fiends for food howl on 1 HenryV.W. 1 

and that is but unwholesome food .. — ii. 3 

like lions wanting food 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

love is food for fortune's tooth .. Troitus^ Cress, iv. 5 
this, and my food, are equals . . Timon of Athens, i. 2 

care of your food and living — iv. 3 

hunger for that food, which nature .. — y. .I 

receive the general food at first Coriolanus,\. 1 

music, moody food of us that trade,, /!«(.(§- C'/eo. ii. 5 
between them all the food thou hast — iii. i 

T was at point to si nk fiir food Cymheline, iii, ti 

and rave and cr.v for food Titus Andronirus, v. 3 

who waiitoth food niid will not say I'ericles^ i. 4 

thy very food is siieh as hath been — iv. 6 

vouchsafe me raiment, bed, and food .... Lear, ii. 4 

this hand, for lifting food to 't? — iii. 4 

been Tom's food for seven long year — iii. 4 (song) 

where both fire and food is ready — iii. 4 

black angel; I have no food for thee — iii. 6 

the food of thy abused father's wrath — iv. 1 

kept without m.v food Itomeo ^Juliet, i. 2 

Iniv food, and get thyself in flesh — v. I 

I'll erum thoe with more food! — v.3 

for fooil and diet, to some enterprise ....Hamlet, \. I 

nor oortli to me give food — iii. 2 

tlio fo.id that to him now is as luscious . . Otliello, i. 3 

all hilt stonmohs, and weal! but food — iii. 4 

F< )l 11/— a holiday fool there but would. . Tempest, i'l. 2 

I am a fool to weep at — iii. I 

though fools at home condemn them — iii. 3 

vol! mols! I and my fellows — iii. 3 

let it alone, thou fiiol — iv. I 

the dropsy drown this fooll — iv. I 

and worship this dull fool — v. 1 

you call me foid TutoGen.tif Verona, i. 1 

what fool is she, that knows — i. 2 

why f'lKil, I meant not thee — ii. .') 

for why, the f<x)l» are mad — iii. I 

I am but a fool, look you — iii. I 



FOO 



Ft.>(>L—comc, fool, come Two Gen. o/ Verona, iii. I 

alas, poor fiKil: — iv. 4 

from a gentleman to a fool — v. 2 

I hold him but a fool - y. 4 

though i'age be a secure fool Merry Wives, ii. 1 

do not marry me to yond' fool — iii. 4 

will yon cast away your child on o fool — iii. 4 

that hath the jealous fool to her husband — iv. 2 
he's a very fool, and a ^irodigal .. Twelfth Night, i. 3 

for besides that he's tt i<iol — i. 3 

do you think you have fools in hand? — i. 3 

and those that are fools, let them.... — i. .'i 

do very oft prove fools — i. .'> 

bettor a witly fool, tlian — i. .') 

take the fool awa.v — i. '» 

go to, you're a dry fool — i. .'> 

give the dry fool drink, then is the fool — i. .'> 

tlie lady hade take away the fool .... — i. .') 

give me le:i\e to prove you a fool .... — i. ■'» 

piod IVii.!, r..r m.v linither's death .... — j. .'i 

111 hoa\eii. fi.i.l. 'i'l 10 more fool you .. — i. .'i 

tiikeiiwuv the f.iol, gentlemen — i. •'> 

what tliii'ik you of tills fool — i. .'. 

doth over make the hotter fool — i. •'< 

for two-peiice that you are no fool .. — i. •'. 

the other da.y with an ordinary fool — i. .'; 

set kind of fools, no better than the fool's — i. h 

there is no slander in an allowed fool — i- !> 

for thou speak 'st well of fools — i. .'> 

as if thy eldest son should be a fool . . — i. 

what's a drunken man like, fool? — i. .'i 

a fool, and a madman (rp/i.) — i. .^ 

and the fool shall look to the madman — i. .'< 

here e. Jill. 111. ImiI. i'l'iiith — ii. :i 

the f'o'. Ml ■ ,111 ... Il.^iit breast — ii. 3 

Boswoi.t • III lii ; -iug, asthefoolhas — ii. 3 

begin, r..<.l: ir !.. J.I-. hold thy — ii. 3 

and make ;i fool tit' him — ii. 3 

and let the food make a third — ii. 3 

a fool, that the lady tHivia's — ii. 4 

and we will fool him black and blue — ii. S 

for many do call me fool — ii. .5 

I do not now fool myself — ii. 5 

art thou not the lady Olivia's fool? .. — iii. I 

she will keep no fool, sir — iii. 1 

and fools are as like liusbands — iii. 1 

I am, indeed, not her fool — iii. 1 

Init the fool should be as oft — iii. 1 

fellow's wise enough to play the fool — iii. I 

for now I am yoiu- fool — ii:. 1 

and now applies it to a fool — iv.l 

these wise men, that give fools money — iv. I 

fool,— my lady is unkind, perdy. Fool — iv. 2 

fool, I say; — she loves anotlier (rep.) — iv. 2 

ay, good fool — iv. 2 

fool, there was never man BO — iv. 2 

as well in ray wits, fool, as thou art. . — iv. 2 

no better in your wits than a fool — iv. 2 

fool, fool, fool, I say — iv. 2 

good fool, help me to some light .... — iv. 2 

good fool, some ink, paper — iv. 2 

fool, I'll requite it in the highest — iv. 2 

you can fool no more money out of . . — v. 1 

when the fool delivers the madman.. — v. 1 

poor fool! how have they baffled thee? — v. 1 

by the lord, fool, I am not mad — y. I 

come, you are a tedious fool Meas. for Meas. i i . 1 

wrench awe from fools — ii- 4 

that none but fools would keep — iii. I 

merely, thou art death's fool — iii. I 

the vanit.y of wretched fools! — v. 1 

a fleshmonger, a fool, and a coward.. — v. I 

3'ou sirrah, that knew me for a fool .. — v. 1 
my uncle's fool, reading the challenge. .Vur/i/fdo, i. 1 

what is he for a fool, that betroths . . — i. 3 

a very dull fool; only his gift is — ii. 1 

the fool will eat no supper tliat night — ii. 1 

the prince's fool ! ha! it may be .... — ii. 1 

lest I should prove the mother of fools — ii. 1 

I thank it, poor fool, it keeps on the — ii. 1 

seeing how much another man is a fool — ii. 3 

he shall never moke me such a fool. . — ii. 3 

he is no fool for fancy, as you — iii. 2 

I may as well say, the fool's the fool — iii. 3 

my cousin's a fool, and thoii art another — iii. 4 

what means the fool, trow? — iii. 4 

I am not such a fool to tliink — iii. 4 

call me a fool ; trust not my retuling — iv. 1 

I speak not like a dotard, nor a fool. . — v. I 

these shallow fools have lirought to light — v. I 

for school, fo(d, a hiiliblin- ihvmc... - v. 2 
lord, what fix. Is tho-i in.. rials he! ..Mid.X.Dr. iii. 2 

sweet savours f..r tli:- liatiliil ffwl — iv.l 

with thine own hiol's ove'- peep .... — iv. I 

but man is but a patched fiKil — iv.l 

the hour that fools shotdd ask . . Love's L. Lost, ii. 1 

is the fool sick? — ii. 1 

indiscreet, or a fool, so, were there . . — iv. 2 

tlie fool said, and so say I, and I the fool — iv. 3 

the fool sent it, and the lady hath it — iv. 3 

sweeter fool, sweetest lady! — iv. 3 

one more fool, appear! — iv. 3 

what fool is not so wise — iv.3(Ter»e8l 

and wretched fools' secrets heedfuUy — iv. 3 

that you three fotils lacked me fool to — iv. 3 

thenfools you were, these women to — jv. 3 

you will prove fixds — iv. 3 

they arc worse fools, to purchase — v. 2 

that he should be my fool, and I his fate — v. 2 

they are cntched, OS wit turned fool.. — v. 2 

own grace to grace a learned ftxil .... — v.".; 

folly in fools bears not so strong — v. -' 

coniplain to them what fools were here — v. 2 

1 dare not coll them fools — v. 2 

are thirsty, fools would fiiin hove drink — v. 2 

I am a find, and full of |K)verty — v. i 

all the fool mine? — v. v 

the hedge-priest, the fool, and the boy — v. 2 

laughing hoi'-rcm give to fools — v. 2 

let nie pluy tlie fool Merctiant of Venice, i. 1 



FOO 

I'OOL— call their brothers, fools . . Mer. of Venice, i. 1 

for this fool's ^dgeon, this opinion.. i. 1 

to gaze on christian fools with — ii. .5 

what says that fool of Hagar's — ii. 6 

may be meant by the fool multitude _ ii. ;i 

deserve no more than a fool's head?.. — ii. 9 

tliere be fools alive, I wis — ii. 9 (scroll) 

still more fool I shall appear by — ii. 9 

witli one fool's head I came to ii.9 

O these deliberate fools'. _ ii. g 

the fool that lent out money gratis . . — iii. 3 

a soft and dull-eyed fool, to shake .. — iii. 3 

how every fool can play upon the word! — iii. 5 

the fool hath planted in his _ iii. 5 

a many fools, that stand in iii. 5 

tliis fool to cut oirthe argument?.. /).« you Li]<e it, i. 2 

the dullness of the fool is tlie whetstone i. 2 

where learned you that oath, fool ?. . — 1.2 

the more pit.y, that fools may not _ i. 2 

since the little wit that fools have .. i. 2 

thou art a fool, she robs thee i. 3 

you are a fool ; niece, provide yourself — i. 3 

to steal the clownish fool out of i. 3 

dappled fools, being native burghers — ii. | 

and thus the hairy fool, much marked — ii. 1 

the more fool I; when I was at home ii. 4 

jieace, fool; he's not thy kinsman! .. ii. 4 

gi-oss fools as he, an' iffie — ii. 5 (song) 

to call fools into a circle ii.5 

a fool, a fool ! I met a fool {rep.) _ ii. 7 

as I do live by food, I met a fool _ ii. 7 

yet a motley fool: good-morrow, fool — ii. 7 

call me not fool, till heaven hath — ii. 7 

when I did hear the motley fool thus ii. 7 

fools should be so deep-contemplative ii. 7 

O noble fool! a worthy fool! _ ii. 7 

whatfoolis this? O worthy fool! — ii.7 

that I were a fool I I am ambitious ii.7 

so fools have; and theythat are ii. 7 

he, that a fool doth very wisely hit .. ii.7 

by the squandering glances of the fool — ii. 7 

out, fool! For a taste _ iii. 2 

pea<;e, you dull fool; I found them . . _ iii. 2 

I_ was seeking for a fool, when I — iii. 2 

either a fool, or a cypher _ jii 2 

amaterialfooll Well, I amnotfair — iii. 3 

'tis such fools as you, that make iii. .5 

1 had rather have a fool to make me — iv. 1 

for she will breed it like a fool _ iv. 1 

you are a fool, and turned into — iv. 3 

the fool doth think he is wise (rep.'). . — v. I 

which in all tongues are called fools — v. 4 

according to the fool's bolt, sir — v. 4 

good at anything, and yet a fool — v! 4 

think Mm a great way fool AlVs Well, i. 1 

I will be a fool in q^uestion ii. 2 

entertain it so merrily with a fool ii' i 

thou art a witty fool, I have found . . — ii' 4 

and much fool may you find in you. . — ii, 4 

this dialogue between the fool and . . — iv 3 

for getting the sheriiTs fool with child — iv. 3 
Dian: the count's a fool, and full — iv. 3 (letter) 

the count's a fool, I know it iv. 3 (letter) 

that you would think truth were a fool — iv 3 

profess thyself; a knave, or a fool ? A. fool — iv.' b 

though you are a fool and a knave . . — v! 2 

thou art a fool Tafnhig of Shrew, 1 (indue ) 

and use you like a fool _ j j 

any man is so very a fool to be _ i ' 1 

ay, if the fool could find it where — ii! 1 

fool, and whom thou keep'st command — ii! 1 

your father were a fool to give ii! 1 

ne was a frantic fool, hiding his iii' 2 

but what a fool am I, to chat iii! 2 

a dove, a fool to him iii « 

J see, a woman may be made a fool.. _ iii' 2 

away, you three-inch fool ! _ iv.' 1 

the more fool you for laying on v 2 

or else a fool, that see'st a game . . Winter's Tale, i 2 

if industriously, I played the fool. . . . _ i '> 

do not weep, good fools ii j 

by acte, or thou wert born a fool — ii ' 1 

ofa fool, inconstant, and damnable.. — iii 2 

lo, fool again! I'll speak of _ iii' 2 

the royal fool thou copest with — iv' 3 

ha, ha! what a fool honesty is! — iv' 3 

unfeeling fools can with such. Corned)/ 0/ Errors, ii! 1 

how many fond fools serve mad .... ii, 1 

do use you for my fool, and chat — ii" 2 

no longer will I be a fool _ ji' .; 

with scissars nicks him like a fool . . — v 1 

peace, fool, thy master and Iiis _ v' 1 

are made the iools o' the other senseB ..Macbeth, ii' 1 

no boasting like a fool iv j 

I am so much a fool, should I stay . . _ iv! 2 

then the liars and swearers are foole _ iv 2 

have lighted fools the way v' 6 

why should I play the Roman fool . . — v' 7 
and fools, break off your conference.. Km^/oftn, ii. 1 

what a fool art thou, a ramping fool — iii 1 

a lunatic lean-witted fool Richard II. ii " 1 

wife, tliou art a fool ; boy, let me — v 2 

and impatient fool art thou IHenn/IF ,3 

my lord fool, out of this nettle _ 'ii' 3 

thou luiotted-pated fool _ jj" 4 

his royalty with capering fools _ iii' 2 

a fool go with thy soul _ v' 3 

and litis time's fool v' 4 

other shift; you'll be a fool still . '.'..2Henryir. ii' 1 

he was a fool that taught tliem me .. — ii 1 

lighten thee, thou art a great fool! . . — ii' 1 

you bashful fool, must you be blushing? — ii' 1 

thus we play the fools with the time — ii 2 

howl you fat fool, I scorn you _ ii' 4 

they are geuerally fools and cowards — iv'3 

how ill white hairs become a fool _ v. .■) 

why, 'tis a gull, a fool, a rogue Hevri/ V iii ti 

a fool's bolt is soon shot. 

and a fool, and a prating 

be friends, you English fools 



[ 272 ] 



FOO 



FOOL— to tire breath of every fool Henry I', iv I 

lordship takes us then for fools \ Henry FI iii' 2 

come back, fool : this is the duke .... iHenry ri. i. 3 

ere the poor fools will yean ZHenryCl. ii 5 

why, what a peevish fool was ' v 6 

fool, fool 1 tliou whct'st a knife .... Richard III. i! 3 

millstones, when fools' eyes drop tears — i. 3 

why, fool, he shall never wake -_ 14 

1 will converse with iron-witted fools — iv' 2 

relenting fool, and shallow, changing — iv 4 

fool, of thyself speak well (rep.) _ v3 

as fool and fight is He^iry Fill, (prol.) 

made it a fool, and beggar _ i ( 

leave these remnants of fool and feather _ i! 3 

he was a fool ; for he would needs be — ii' 2 

ntfor a fool tofall by! _ jii' 2 

a fool to stay behind her father. . Troilus * Cress, i. 1 

Iools on both sides! Helen _ j 1 

asses, fools, dolts! chaff and bran _ i' 2 

the wise and fool, the artist _ i ' 3 

thou art proclaimed a fool, I think . . — ii' 1 

I know that, fool (7-en.) _ {;_ 1 

peace, fool! I would have peace (rep) ii' 1 

your wit to a fool's? (r<?p.) _ ii' j 

and leave the faction ot fools _ ii' 1 

a fool. You rascal ! Peace, fool _ ii' 3 

a fool; Achilles is a fool ()(fp.) _ ji' 3 

a fool to offer to command Achilles (rep.) — ii' 3 

a fool to serve such a fool (»■£•/).) _ ii'3 

inveigled his fool from hira _ ii'3 

composure, a fool could disunite — ii' 3 

see, we fools! why have I blabbed? . . — iii 2 

will leave, to be another's fool _ iii 2 

the fool slides o'er the ice _ iii' 3 

I'll send the fool to Aiax _ iii' 3 

why, thou full dish of fool _ v' 1 

I'll be your fool no more v' 2 

fool's play, by heaven. Hector _ v' 3 

and wine heat fools (rep.) Tiynon of Athens, i! 1 

we make ourselves fools j 2 

thus honest fools lay out their ! ! _ i' 2 

stay, stay, here comes the fool with . . — ii' 2 

how dost, fool? Dost dialogue with . . _ ii. 2 

the fool hangs on your back already _ ii! 2 

Where's tlie fool now? _ ii. o 

speak to 'em fool (rep.) !! __ ii' 2 

fool, I will go with you to lord Timon's — ii! 2 

three usurers' men? Ay, fool _ ji. 2 

a fool to his servant (rep.) _ ii! 2 

what is a whoremaster, fool? (rep.) .. ii' -j 

thou art not altogether a fool _ ii! 2 

come with me, fool, come _ ii. 2 

ha! now I see thou art a fool — iii' 1 

amongst the lords be thought a fool . . — iii. 3 

you fools of fortune, trencher-friends — iii. 6 

slaves, and fools, pluck the grave _ iv 1 

ducks to the golden fool _ iv! 3 

smiles from fools exliaust their mercy — iv 3 

a madman so long, now a fool — iv. 3 

a fool of thee; depart iv. 3 

always a villain's office, or a fool's . . — iv! 3 

thou art the cap of all the fools alive — iv. 3 

lend me a fool's heart, and a woman's — v. 2 

away, you fool! it more becomes Con'olanns, i. 3 

testy magistrates (alias, fools) _ ii 1 

and the faults of fools, but folly — ii. 1 

rather than fool it so, let the high — ii! 3 

are learned, be not as common fools. . — iii. 1 

ay, fool; is that a shame? (rep.) _ iv 2 

would show thee but a fool — iv. 5 

and perish constant fools — iv. 6 

and patient fools, whose children — v! Ti 

why old men fools, and children . . JuliusCcesar, \. 3 

witli that which melteth fools — iii. 1 

as to say, they are fools that marry . . _ iii! 3 

he was but a fool, that brought _ iv. 3 

the wars do with such jigging fools?.. — iv. 3 
transformed into a strumpet's fool. Antony 6 Cleo. i. 1 

I'll seem the fool I am not _ i. 1 

out, fool; I forgive thee for a witch .. — i! 2 

when it concerns the fool, or coward.. — i 2 

thou teachest like a fool _ i! 3 

cries, fool, Lepidus! and threats _ iii' 5 

the loyalty, well held to fools _ i i i . 1 1 

wishers were ever fools _ iv. 13 

to fool their preparation _ v. 2 

poor venomous fool, be angry v. 2 

measured how long a fool you were . . Cymbeline, i! 3 

she shines not upon fools j. 3 

to have smelt like a fool _ ii! 1 

you are a fool granted _ ii! 1 

fools are not mad folks (rep.) — ii 3 

I am sprighted with a fool — ii! 3 

thus may poor fools believe false — iii! 4 

for, when fools shall— who is here? .. — iii. f, 

this fool's speed be crossed with slowness — iii. !s 

thou art some fool; I am loath — iv. 2 

at fools I laugh, not fear them _ !v!2 

this Cloten was a fool; an empty .... iv. 2 

the fool liad borne my head — iv 2 

ah me, most credulous fool _ v! 6 

and are ye such fools, to square ..Titus Andron. ii! ) 

what fool hath added water to — iii. 1 

let fools do good, and fair men call . . _ iii! 1 

di-o\\ n the lamenting fool _ ii; ! j 

opinion's but a fool, that makes Pericles, ii! 2 



a fool that will not yield 

to please the fool and death ! _ iii! 2 

did mock sad fools withal v! 1 

fools, by heavenly compulsion Lear, i! 2 

for chiding of his fool? Ay, madan _ i. 3 

old fools are babes again 13 

Where's my knave? my fbol? (rep.) ..!!.. _ i! 4 

Where's my fool, ho? i think the world's — i. 4 

but, Where's my fool? I have not seen — i. 4 

the fool hath much pined away _ i. 4 

go you, call hither m3' fool _ i 4 

why, fool? [Co(. /Cn(.-my boy] Why?.... — i. 4 

this is nothing, fool i. 4 

he will not believe a fool. A bitter fool ! . ! — i! 4 



FOOL— a bitter fool, and a sweet fool ! Lear, i. 4 

the sweet and bitter fool will presently . . — id 

dost thou call me fool, boy? .. — > 4 

this is not altogether fool, my lord !!!!'.' — {'4 

let me have all fool to myself — i' 4 

fools had ne'er less grace in a year — i. 4 'song) 

and go the fools among _ i 4 (sona) 

that can teach thy fool to lie _ i 4 

rather be any kind of thing than a fool . . — i 4 
I am a fool, thou art notliing . . _ i 4 

tills your all-licensed fool " — i' 4 

more knave than fool, after your . . ' " _ i' 4 
tarry, and take fool with thee . . " — i' 4 

60 the fool follows after !' _ j' 4 

thou wonldst makeagoodfool"!!!!!.!!!! — i! 5 

if thou wert my fool, nuncle ! _' is 

smileyoumy speeches, as I were a 'fool'!. — ii! 2 

and cowards, but Ajax is their fool — ii. 3 

why,fool? We'll set thee to scliool — ii. 4 

knaves follow it, since a fool gives it .... — ii. 4 

but I will tarry, the fool will stay _ ii. 4 

turns fool, and runs away; the fbol no .. — ii 4 

learned you this, fool? (rep.) _ ii. 4 

fool me not so much to bear it tamely.!.. — ii! 4 

O fool, I shall go mad! _ ii. 4 

none but the fool; who labours ! ! ! ! ! — iii! 1 

pities neither wise men nor fools — iii! 2 

that s a wise man, and a fool _ iii. 2 

poor fool and knave, I have one part ..!! — 111^2 

turn us all to fools and madmen — iii. 4 

bad IS the trade must play the fool to — iv. 1 

my fool usurps my bed _ iv. 2 

fools do those villains pity ... " — iv' 2 

whilst thou, a moral fool, sit'ststi'li!!!!!! — iv! 2 

vain fool ! thou changed iv 2 

to this great stage of fools !! _ iv' 6 

lameventhenaturalfoolof fortune !'.'.' — ive 

and my poor fool is hanged! no, no — v. 3 

part fools; put up your sw oris... Romeo S- Juliet, i. 1 

and felt It bitter, pretty fool! _ 1,3 

and pretty fool, it stinted, and said— ay — i! 3 

and none but fools do wear it — ii. 2 

ye should lead her into a fool's paradise — ii 4 
O! I am fortune's fool! Why dost... — iii. 1 
would the fool were married to her grave — iii 6 
peace, you mumbling fool! utter your — iii. 5 
have a wretched puling fool, a whining — iii 5 

you'll tender me a fool Hamlet, i. 3 

we fools of nature, so horridly to shake . . — i. 4 

these tedious old fools! — ji. 2 

that he may play the fool nowhere bii't .! — iii! I 

wilt needs marry, marry a fool — iii. 1 

a most pitiful ambition in the fool - iii 2 

they fool me to the top of my bent — iii. 2 

rasli intruding fool, farewell. iii' 4 

every fool can tell that: it was that. .'.". .. _ v! 1 
thus do I ever make my fool my purse. . OlheUo, i. 3 

to make fools laugh, i' the alehouse — ii. 1 

to suckle fools, and chronicle small beer . — ii. 1 

nowmy sick fool, Roderigo, whom — ii. 3 

by and by a fool, and presently a beast!. — ii. 3 
while this honest fool plies Desdemona. . — ii. 3 

p wretched fool, that livest to make — iii. 3 

for honesty's a fool, and loses tliat it — iii. 3 

fools as gross as ignorance made drunk.. — iii 3 
tlins credulous fools are caught — iv. 1 

1 was a fine fool to take it _ jv! 1 

you are a fool ; go to. O good lago — iv! 2 

should such a fool, do with so good a wife — v. 2 
O fool! fool! fool! There is, besides — v. 2 

?R8 J'"lSSS-^-P',""^^°°l-''Sgg^'l Comedy of Err. ii. 1 
i OOL-BORN-with a fool-born jest ..2HenryIf. v. i 
FOOLED— fooled, by foolery thrive! ..All'sWell, iv. 3 

that you are fooled, discarded 1 HenrylF. i. 3 

she is fooled with a most false effect.. Cymbeline, i. 6 
I^S^I^I' '^■^■'^^'"''^''SOne fooleries.. Winter's Tale, iii. 2 
FOOLERY— see his own foolery. .. Merry Wives, iv. 2 
be bold to say in your foolery .... Twelfth Night, i. 
foolery, sir, does walk about the orb ' — iii. 1 
a fancy to this foolery, as it appears.MwcA Ado, iii. 2 

what a scene of foolery I have.. Lot'e'si. Los/, iv. 3 

as foolery in the wise, when wit v. 2 

little foolery that wise men havens you Like it, i. 2 
thrown upon thee in holiday foolery! — i. 3 

being fooled, by foolery thrive! All's Well, iv. 3 

too much homely foolery already... Winter's T. iv. 3 

there rest in your foolery Comedy of Errors, iv. 3 

as much foolery as I have Timon of Athens, ii. 2 

and manhood IS called foolery Cor'iolanus, iii. 1 

was mere foolery, I did not mark it.JuliusCeesar, i. 2 
there was more foolery yet, if I could — i. 2 
but this is foolery: go, hidmy .... ..Cymbeline, iii. 2 

it IS but foolery; but it is sucli a kind. . Hamlet, v. 2 

FOOL-HAKDINESS-fool-hardiness; not.Coriol. i. 4 

FOOL- HARDY— is too fool-hardy All's Well, iv. 1 

the door, secure, fool-hardy king . . Richard II. v. 3 
FOOLING— this kind of merry fooling. Tempest, ii. 1 

put me into good fooling! Twelfth Night, i. 5 

how your fooling grows old . i. 5 

thou wast in very gracious fooling last ii. 3 

this is the best fooling, when all is done — ii. 3 

the knight's in admirable fooling ii. 3 

but after all this fooling. ...3/easure. /or Measure, i! 2 
have no more fooling about it.. Merc'h'.of Venice, ii. 2 
while I stand fooling here Richard II. v. 5 

1 do not like this fooling Troilus ^ Cressida, v. 2 

FOOLISH— foolish wench ! Tempest, i. 2 

wayward is this foolish love. 7'MoGe;i.o/Feror!o,i, 2 

my foolish rival, that her ii. 4 

no trusting to yon foolish lout iv. 4 

shall we send that foolish carrion Merry Wives, iii. 3 
to build upon a foolish woman's promise — iii. 5 
thon art as foolish christian creatures — iv. 1 
and of a foolish knight, that you.. Twelfth Night, i. 3 

than a foolish wit i. .5 

your time with a foolish knight ji! 5 

fo to, go to, thou art a foolish fellow iv! 1 
pr'ytliee, foolish Greek, depart — iv. 1 

what foolish boldness brought thee . . v 1 

a foolish thing was but a toy — v. I (son<») 



FOO 

FOOLISH— 60 piny the foolish . ..Mrat.for Meat. li. A 
thou riwliiih friur; uiul thou porniciouii — v, 1 
ami n\nlii' nml mur the foolisli fiitts..l/i(/. A'.Dr. i. 2 
wouhl «'t liis wit to ?,. inolisli 11 l)ird? _ iii. 1 

a IlKili.-li lu':irl. tli!U I U:ivo Iktc — iii. 2 

n foolisli ixlriiviuiiiil spirit Lovf'tL.LotI, iv. 2 

Tour wit niiil«'s\visi.- tluiiL:s foolish.. — V. 2 
wiso tilings Mi-m fooli.-li, unci rich things — V. 2 

n foolisli iniM limn: un lioiR'st — v. 2 

ever in\ loolisli c\cs looked in^on .^fer,o/Fenice, i. 2 
hilt, ndiiMi; tliis.'foolisli drops do.. .. — ii. 3 
bring iik'iiiii tlusi' toolisli rnniiwnvs./ltj/ouLi'A-f, ii. 2 
you foolisli slu'iilurd, wlierefore no... — iii. .'> 
and the foolish ihroiiiclcra of tliot age — iv. 1 

to hear such n foolisli song — v. 3 

Rousillou, n foolish idle boy /»/'« lyell, iv. 3 

ingenious foolish, rnseally Knave.,.. — v. 2 
foolish Itnave I sent on lifp.).'ramingnfShrew,iv. 1 
o foolish duty call you thi.s (ri'/>.).... ^ v. 2 
be negligent, foolish, and feiirtul .. Il'inler's Tale, i. 2 
a gross oud fool i.sh sire blemished his — iii. 2 
forgive a foolish woman: tlie love.... — iii. 2 
let foolish gnats muko sport .. Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

arrest me, foolish fellow — iv. 1 

ungentle, foolish, blunt, unkind .... — iv. 2 
a foolish tluniL'ht, to say a sorry sight. . Macbeth, ii. 2 

iaiiH', I'lHilish. crooked, swart King John, iii. 1 

how now. foolish rheum! turning... — iv. I 

why, foolish boy, the king is left Richard II. ii. 3 

peace, foolisli woman. 1 will not peace — v. 2 
brother-in-law, the foolish jrortimer 1 HenrylV. i. 3 
and a foolish hanginsj of thy netherlip — ii. 4 
blind itself with foolish tenderness.. — iii. 2 
brainofthisfooli.-licoiiipoiindedclay.2J/c)ii!//r. i.2 

but for these foolish ..tlicrrs — ii. 1 

what f.mlish master t:iii:;lit vou — ii. 1 

the foolish, niid dull, aiidcniilv vapours — iv. 3 
for this the foolish over-careful futliers — iv. 4 

O foolish youth! thou scek'st — iv. 4 

do bear tlieinselves like foolish justices — v. 1 

foolisli cms! that run winking HenrijF. iii. 7 

come, 'tis rt foolish saying — iv. 1 

trust or strensth of foolish man? ..\ Henry VI. iii. 2 

too full of foolish pity 2Hniry T/.iii. 1 

tut, that's a foolish observation iHenryVI. ii. 6 

so foolish sorrow bids your stones .Richard III. iv. 1 
the bov is foolish, and I fear not hiin — iv. 2 

foolish Cressid! I might . . Tmilus * Cressida, iv. 2 
this foolish, dreaming, sujwrstitious girl — v. 3 
and the fooUsh i'ortu'neot this pill... — v. 3 
doting foolish young knave's sleeve. — v. 4 

neit!:er foolish in our stands Coriolanns,\. 6 

how foolish do your fears seem htliu&Ctesnr, ii. 2 

they are foolisli that are so..inlony ^Chnpalrn.Wi. 3 
tliou foolish thing! they were again.. Ci/m6t(i?ie, i. 2 

a foolish suitor to a wedded lady .; — i. 7 

your issues being foolish, do not derogate — ii. 1 

if I could get this foolish Imogen — ii. 3 

no, foolisirtribune, no Titus Andronicus^ i. 2 

you are a young fool ish sapling Pericles, iv. 3 

why are you so foolish? — iv. 4 

on whose" foolisli honesty my practices.... Lear, i. 2 
no more, the text is foolisli — iv. 2 

1 am a very foolish fond old man — iv. 7 

forget and forgive, I am old and foolish — iv. 7 
have a trifling foolish banquet . . Romeo ^Juliet, i. 5 

back, foolish tears, back to vour — iii. 2 

a foolish figure; but farewell Hamlet, ii. 2 

who was in life a foolish pratin" knave . . — iii. 4 
a knavish speech sleeps in a foolish ear .. — iv. 2 
and foolish? she never yet was foolish . . Othello, ii. 1 
and foolish? There's none so foul (rep.) — ii. 1 

to have a foolish wife. O, is that all? — iii. 3 

pricked to it by foolish honesty and love — iii. 3 
to see how he prizes the foolish woman — iv. 1 

good father! how foolish are our minds! — iv. 3 
OLISHLY— thus foolishly lost. . Meas.for.Meas. i. 3 

what wise men do foolishly As you Like it, i. 2 

doth very foolishly, although he smart — ii. 7 

fondly brought here, and foolishlv. .2Henryiy. iv. 2 

what already I have fijolishly sufered.Of/ipMo, iv. 2 

FOOLI.'JIlNE.SS-done vour foolishness.CoM. of Hr. i. 2 

FOOLS-IIEAD-fools-head of yourown. . Merry ir. i. 4 

FOOT-foot it featly here and tliere. Tempest, 1. 2 (song) 

what, I say, my foot my tutor! — i. 2 

mount their pricks at rny foot-fall — ii. 2 

I'll kiss thy foot — ii. 2 

the blind mole may not hear a foot fall — iv. 1 

■with jirintless foot do chase — v. I 

her view gilded my foot Merry Ifires, i. 3 

thieves do foot by night — ii. I 

the firm fi.\ture of thy foot would. . . . — iii. 3 

arc something rank on foot — iv. (1 

there thy fixed foot shall grow Twelfth Night, i. 4 

wilt thou set thy foot o' my neck? — ii. 5 

as will clog the foot of a flea — iii. 2 

think with slower foot came im . . Meas.for Meas. v. 1 

with a good leg, and a good foot MuchAUo, ii. 1 

briiiij you the length of rrester John's font — ii. 1 
one to<»t in sea. and one on shore .... — ii.3(eong) 
of his head to the sole of his foot .... — iii. 2 
did spurn me with his foot .Vid.N.'s Dream, iii. 2 

fiided by her foot, whicli is basest. Lore's L. Lost, i. 2 
iirofane my lips on thy foot — iv. 1 (letter) 

a (land, a foot, a face, an eye — iv. 3 

my foot and her face see — iv. 3 

we will not move a foot — v. 2 

know my lady's foot by the squire . . — v. 2 

loves her by the ff>ot — v. 2 

love's argument was first on foot .... — v. 2 

and foot me, as you spurn Merch. of Venice, i. 3 

never dare misfortune cross her foot.. — ii. 4 
would my daughter were dead at my foot — iii. I 
would she were liearsed at my foot . . — iii. 1 

licence of free foot hast rauglit AtyouLikcit, ii. 7 

foot of time, as well as acliK:k (r'p.).. — Hi. 2 

go OS softly as foot can fall — iii. 2 

which were on fjot, in his own — v. 4 

the tread of a man's foot All'sWell, ii. 3 

will sjiced her foot again — iii. 4 



[ 273 ] 



FOOT— noiseless foot of time steals . , . . All's H'ell, v. 3 
age, set foot under thy table .. Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 
wTiy, thy horn is a foot, and so long . . — iv. 1 

you pluck my loot awry — iv. 1 

what say you to a neat 8 foot ? — iv. 3 

we mount, and thither walk on foot. . — iv. 3 

that liaulilo, throw it underfoot — v. 2 

voiii- Imiids liulow your husband's foot — v. "i 

iiiy strviics are now on foot "'niter's Tale,i. 1 

horsing' toot on foot? skulking in corners? — i. 2 

twelve foot mill a half by the squire.. — iv. 3 

proceed, no foot sluill stir _ v3 

no longer from lu;:ul to foot .. Comedy of Errors, iii. 2 

sorrow on the fuut of motion Macbeth, ii. 3 

swift, and sure of foot — iii. 1 

I'd give it every foot to have this fa.ce. King John, i. 1 
a foot of honour better than I was {rep.) — i. 1 
whose foot spurns back the ocean's .. ■ — ii. 1 

wliercioc'cr this foot of mine doth — iii. 3 

lead thy foot to England's throne — iii. 4 

I see this hnrly all on foot — iii. 4 

wlicn I strike niv foot uiion — iv. 1 

tliree foot of it lioth hold — iv. 2 

tlie better loot hi lore — iv. 2 

nor attend the foot that leaves — iv. 3 

or stir thy foot, or teach — iv. 3 

lie gently at the foot of peace — v. 2 

lie at the proud foot of a conqueror .. — v. 7 
wherever Englishman durst set his foot. ./i/c/i. II. i. 1 

this overweening traitor's foot — i. 1 

dread sovereign, at tliy foot — i. 1 

that art so light of foot — iii. 4 

as low an ebb as the foot of MIenrylV. i. 2 

I am joined with no foot landralcers — ii. 1 

if I travel but four foot by the — li. 2 

ere I'll rob a foot further — ii. 2 

and mend them, and foot them too . . — ii. 4 

close, came in foot and hand — ii. 4 

he will not budge a foot — ii. 4 

this fat rogue a cliarge of foot — ii. 4 

wlien I frOm France set foot at — iii. 2 

procured thee. Jack, a charge of foot — iii. 3 
and all his men upon the foot of fear — v. 5 
(a cause on foot), lives so in hope ....iHcnrylV. i. 3 

no; fifteen hundred foot — ii. 1 

laid his love and life under my foot. . — iii. I 

tamely to the foot of majesty — iv. 2 

Colevlle kissing my foot — iv. 3 

action may on foot be brought Henry V.\. 2 

de foot, m.^dame: et de con. De foot — iii. 4 

and her foot, look you, is fixed — iii. 6 

swear by her foot, that she may — iii. 7 

sees mego back oue foot, or fly 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

I will not budge a foot — i. 3 

and set your knee against my foot — iii. 1 

horsemen with his bands of toot — iv. 1 

die at Talbot's foot — iv. 6 

until thy foot be snared illenry VI. ii. 4 

thorns that would annoy our foot — iii. 1 

my foot shall fi'dit with all the — iv. 10 

and tread it under foot with all — v. 1 

won one foot, if Salisbury be lost .... — v. 3 

spura him with his foot away? iHenryVI.i. 4 

that sets his foot upon her back — ii. 2 

wishing his foot were equal — iii. 2 

Shore's wife hath a pretty foot Richard III. i. 1 

I'll strike thee to my foot — 1.2 

consisting equally of horse and foot . . — v. 3 

tlie leading of this foot and horse — v. 3 

and all on foot ho fights — v. 4 

one sound cudgel of four foot Hevry VII J. v. 3 

that keeps Troy on foot Troilus 4' Cressida, i. 3 

didst itch from head to foot — ii. 1 

as if his foot were oil brave — iii. 3 

her lip, nay, her foot speaks — iv. 5 

accompanying hisdeclining foot. T('wiorto//l(/iois,i. 1 
have seen the foot above the head ... . — i. 1 

it requires swift foot — v. 2 

set but thy foot against our — v. b 

fix thy foot. Let the first Coriolan us, i. 8 

from face to foot he was a thing of — ii. 2 

I'd with thee every foot — iv. I 

and to be on foot at an hour's warning — iv. 3 

we have a power on foot — iv. .^ 

I lame the foot of our design — iv. 7 

I will set this foot of mine as far . .JidittsCicsar, i. 3 
impatiently stamped witli your foot.. — ii. I 
set on your foot; and, with a heart .. — ii. 1 
as low as to thy foot doth Cassius fall — iii. 1 
at whose foot to mend the jietty . . Antony SfCleo. i. h 
on the earth, and fiditiiig toot to foot — iii. 7 
our foot upon the huls adjoining .... — iv. 10 

now from liead to foot I am — v. 2 

arm me, audacity , from head to foot?. . Cymbeline.i. 7 

each on one foot standing — ii. 4 

and thus I set my foot on his neck .. — iii. 3 
knock her back, foot her home again.. — iii. 5 
his foot mercurial; his martial thigh — iv. 2 
the holy eagle stooped, as to foot us . . — v. 4 

tlie better loot before Titus Andronicus, ii. 4 

then kiss his foot — iv. 3 

keep thy foot out of brothels Lear, iii. 4 

these eyes of thine I'll set my foot — iii. 7 

you are now within afoot of the — iv. 6 

near, and on speedy foot — iv. 6 

[Co(.j descent and dust below thy foot — v. 3 

not stir one foot to seek a foe .... Romeo fy Juliet, i. I 

give room, and foot it, girls — i. 5 

by her fine foot, straight leg — ii. 1 

it is nor hand, nor foot — ii. 2 

at thy foot I'll lay, and follow thee . . — ii. 2 
for a hand, and a foot, and a body .. — ii. .0 

O, so li'.,'ht a foot will ne'er wear — ii. b 

so shall no foot upon the churchyard — v. 3 
what cursed foot wanders this way .. — v. 3 

my lord, from lu :id to fcxit Hamlet, i. 2 

head to fiHit now is he total gules — ii. 2 

follow him nt foot, tempt hiin — iv. 3 

he, swift of foot, oiilriiu inv purpo.sc Othello, ii. 3 

FOOXU ALL— that like a football. Co/iiei/yo/irr. ii. 1 



FOR 

FOOTBALL— you base football player .... Lear, i. 4 

FOOTBOY— a christian footboy... Taming of Sh. iii. 2 

like peasant footboys do they keep..l Henry VI. iii. 2 

pursuivants, pages, and footboys ..Henry VIII. v. 2 

wait like a hnisy footboy — v. 2 

FOOT-CLOTH-by my foot-cloth mule.2//en. ('/. iv. 1 

thou dost ride on a foot-cloth — iv. 7 

mv foot-clotli horse did stumble ..Richard III. iii. 4 
FOOTED— for he is footed in this land. . Henry V. ii. 4 

part of a power already footed Lear, iii. 3 

saint Withold footed thrice the wold — iii. 4 (song) 

late footed in the kingdom? — iii. 7 

FOOTING-cvery oneiii country footing r(7mprsf,iv. I 

I hear the footing of a man .Merch. of Venice, \. 1 

charity would have lacked footing.. Cm/cr't 7". iii. 3 

upon the footing of our land King John, v. i 

hath set footing in this land Rtchaid II. ii. 2 

on the unsteudfast footing of IHenrylV. i. 3 

hath set footing once in Trance. .. .\ Henry VI. iii. 3 
nor set no footing on this unkind. .2Hf»r!/r/. iii. 2 
the giddy footing of the hatches. . . . Richard ///. i. 4 

wlieii she set footing here Henry V ill. iii. 1 

'twixt his stretched footing and ..Troilus^ Cress, i. 3 

sliould once set footing in your — ii. 2 

sai'er footing tlmn blind reason — iii. 2 

footing here anticipates our thoughts... OMW/o, ii. 1 

FOOT-LICKER— aye thy foot-licker.. rempci/, iv. 1 

FOOTMAN-or a footman? (rep.) . Winter's Tale, iv. 2 

should be footman, by the garments — iv. 2 

like a servile footman, all day long ..riVw-t/lnd. v. 2 

FOOTMEN— war-marked footmen.. Jn(. it Cleo. i'li. 7 

FOOTPATH— 

jog on, the footpath vmy . ..Winter' sTcde, iv. 2 (song) 

and gate, horseway, and footpath Lear, iv. 1 

FOOT.STEF-the footsteps of my rising. King John, i. 1 
FOOTSTOOL— made our footstool.... 3iJenrv A'/, v. 7 

FOP— creating a whole tribe of fops Lear, i. 2 

FOPPEKY-grossness of the foppery. Afcrri/H'it'w, v. 5 
lief have the foppery of freedom., ilfean. /or J(/eo«.i. 3 
sound of shallow foppery enter . . Mer. of Venice, ii. 5 
this is the excellent ibppery of the world! Lear, i. 2 
FOPPISH— men are grown foppish... Lcaj-, i. 4 (song) 
FORAGE— from forage will incline. Z.or<'» L. L. iv. 1 
forage, and run to meet displeasure. . King John, v. 1 

whelp forage in blood of French Henry V. i. 2 

FORAGE Il-foragers shall all repair. Troi/.^itYcM. i. 3 
FORBADE— forbade her my house. jVcrry>fii'e«, iv. 2 



FORBEAR-forbear, till Proteus. TwoGen. ofVer. ii. 7 

villain, forbear — iii. 1 

sirrah, I say, forbear — iii. 1 

jiatience to' forbear awhile — v. 4 

foi'liear, I say! it is my lord — v. 4 

forbear, here's company Merry Wives, ii. 3 

'Oman, forbear — iv. I 

can hardly forbear hurling things. TuelflhNigh', iii. 2 
forbearittlierefore; give yourcause.il/ea.rorjl/ea. iv.3 

to hear? or forliear hearing? Love^sL.Loit, i. 1 

laugh moderately, or to forbear both — i. 1 

forbear till this company be past — i. 2 

peace, peace, forbear; your oath once — v. 2 
therefore, forbear a while .. Merchantof Venice, iii. 2 

forbear, and eat no more As you Like it, ii. 7 

but, forbear, I say; he dies — ii. 7 

then, but forbear your food a little .. — ii. 7 

foibear; you "row too forward Taming ofSh. iii. 1 

good my lord, forbear Winter's Tale, v. 3 

either forbear; quit presently the chapel — v. 3 
I would forbear. Patience, unmoved. Com. ofEtr. ii. 1 

Bagot, forbear, thou shalt not Richard II. iv. 1 

canst thou not forbear me half. 2Henry IV. iv. 4 

it were your duty to forbear 1 Henry VI. iii. I 

persuade you to forbear a while — iii. I 

O, no; foroear: for that whicli we have — iv. 7 

ah, Nell, forbear; thou aimest all 'iHenryVI. ii. 4 

hands on me: forbear, I say — iii. 2 

forbear to judge, for we are sinners . . — iii. 3 
you cannot but forbear to murder me — iv. 7 

report what speech forbears — iv. 10 

forbear awhile; we'll hear a little ..iHenryVI. iii. I 

my lords, forbear this talk — iv. 1 

my love, forbear to fawn upon their.. — iv. 1 
and, withal, forbear your conference. /?icAorrf ///. i.l 

forbear to sleep the night — iv. 4 

this is too much; forbear, for shame. Wenri/ ;'///. v. 2 
forbear mc: tliere's a great spirit gone! /ln(.iS-C(eo. i.2 

I wish, forbear; in time we hate — i. 3 

my precious queen, forbear; and give — i. 3 

forbear me till anon — ii. 7 

I could well forbear it — ii. 7 

forbear, Seleucus. Be it known — v. 2 

forbear: here comes the gentleman ..Cymbeline,'\. 1 
beseech your majesty, forbear sliaip — iii. ii 

ghost unlaid, forbear thee! — iv. 2 (song) 

forbear; crcatiu'cs may be alike — \.!i 

villains, forbear; we are the .. Titus .indronicut, v. 2 

forbear your sutt'iiiges i.rep.1 1'ericles, ii. 4 

to forbear choice i' the absence of — ii. 4 

dear, sir, forbear Lear, i. 1 

forbear his presence till some little — i.2 

I'll forbear; and am fallen out with — ii. 4 

for sliame forbear this outrage . . Romeo^ Juliet, iii. I 
forbear, and let misdiance be slave .. — v. 3 

for love of God, forbear him Hamlet, v. I 

I did full hard forbear him 0(Ae«o, i. 2 

no, forbear; the lethargy must have — iv. 1 

FORBEARANLE- 
crave your forbearance a little. . Meas.for Meat. iv. 1 
learn him forbearance from so foiil../(icAard //. iv. 1 
tut, here is a mannerly forbearance..! Henry VI. il. 4 
learn, liciug tauijlit, forbearance .... Cymbetine, ii. 3 

prayed nio. o!;. t"vl'r;ir'ioce — ii. 5 

have a I'ontn ; 1 u !. i. mcu Lear, i. 2 

FulUilD-toi I I \ : iitine.Tu-oG<-Fi.o/J>r. iii. 1 

have 1 not 1 ; 1 1 ■ " U'mst:'! ..Merry Wites,\v.i 
fortune forliid, my oiiiscie have ...Ticelfth Sight, ii. 2 
in stanins that are I'orbid . . Meaturefor Metuure, ii. 4 

Gwl forhid it should be so (re;;.) Much Ado, i. I 

forbid the sun to enter — iii. I 

T 



FOR 



[ 274 ] 



FOR 



FORBID— and forbid him to wear it. . Much Ado, ui. 2 

let love forbid sleep_ his seat Mid. A. Dream, n. i 

O, the gods forbid ! in earnest . — "!• - 

the thing I am forbid to know .,..Love sl.Lost, i. 1 
when I to feast expressly am forbid . . — i- ' 

of progeny forbid the smiling courtesy — v- ^ 
marry, God forbid! tlie boy v;a,s.. Mer. of Venice, _n. !■ 



. All's Well, 
o/Sh. 



iv. 2 



you may as well forbid the 

the gods forbid else ! • ■ • • • 

let it be forbid, sir! so I should be 
I expressly am forbid to touch it. Ta 

marry, sir, God forbid! 

no sir, God forliid;lnit ashamed...... — _, , X' i 

beitforliid.mvlord? Hn,tcrsTale,i.2 

as well forbid the sea for to obey .... — ..!• - 
the higher powers forbid! I say ..... . — "'- - 

to mv face, being forbid? Comedy ofErron. i. - 

he sliall live a man forbid Mucbelh, i. 3 

Tour beards forbid me to interpret . . -- ..!• J 
how can the law forbid my tongue. . King John, ni. 1 

obedience I forbid my soul . — , , '-V V 

(God forbid, I say true!) Ifichard U. u. \^ 

now God in heaven forbid! — }}.- ' 

the King of heaven forbid — !"• ■> 

marrv, God forbid! worst in this — iv. i 

Ofor'bid[Co(. A'n(.-forfend]itGod .. — iv. I 
treason that mv liaste forbids me show — „, '^- ^ 

did you beg any? Godforbid! IHenry/f. v. 2 

and heaven forbid, a shallow scratch „ — ,„ "*'• \ 
but yet, God forbear, sir, butaknave.2H?r!ry/f . y. 1 
and God forbid, my dear and faithful.. .Hen»!/J . i. 2 
he forbids it, being free from . . .... . — v. (chorus) 

tlie cardinal of Winchester forbids . . 1 Henry VI. i. 3 
God forbid.any malice should prevail.2H£'nr!//'/._i!i.i 
though you forbid, that they will. . . . — i"- 2 

for God"forbid, so many simple — iv. 4 

Godforbid, your grace should be ZHenry I l.i. ^ 

as God forbid the hour! — .;!• ' 

God forbid that! for hell take vantages — in- f 
no God forbid, that I should wish them — iv. 1 
be here, as God forbid! lethim .... — .v. 4 
God in heaven forbid we should ..Richard III. in. I 

which the king's King forbids — iv. 4 

of the time forbids to dwell on ";,,,, y.„ 

him that does best; God forbid else Henry VIII.}}. 2 

the Lord forbid ! marry, amen ! — in- 2 

now heavens forbid such scarcity. 7'; o'/u,?* Cress.;, i 
and Jove forbid, tliere should be done — !!• ^ 
Jupiter forbid; and say in thunder. . — ."• 3 
obligation of our blood forbids a gory — iv. 6 

which vou do here forbid me — v. 3 

Hector? tlie Gods forbid! He's dead — v. II 
with me to forbid liimher resort. Timono/.-IWens,!. 
now the good gods forbid, tliat onx .Conolanus, ui. 1 

wrinkles forbid! Vex not his Anlony ^■Cleo._ i. 2 

the gods forbid! Well, my good — iv. 2 

the gods forbid! Nay, 'tis most — .v. 2 

Godforbid, I should be so bold... rtos.4?i(;ron. iv. 3 

and high heaven forbid, that kings Pericles,}. 2 

die quotha? now eods forbid! — .\\-\ 

this courtesv, forbid thee, shall the duke. Lear, in. 3 
I have read" the letter. I was forbid it. . — . , Y- ' 
God forbid! where's this girl? . . . Romeo fy Juliet, }■ 3 
expressly hath forbid [A'h(. forbidden] — m- 1 
no, no, this shall forbid it : lie thou . . — iv. 3 
forbid to tell the secrets of my prison ... HamZe/., i. 6 

and therefore 1 forbid my tears.. — iv. 7 

tlie heavens forbid, but that our loves . . Olhello, u. 1 
wliicli heaven hatli forbid the Ottoraites? — ii. 3 

m.arrv, heaven forbid: Reputation — n. 3 

marry, lieaven forbid! light, gentlemen.. — v. 1 

FORBIDDEN— his forbidden gates.. ioM'.s L. L. u. 1 

those banished and forbidden legs ...Richard II. v.. 3 

forbidden late to carry any weapon .1 Henry VI. iii. 1 

nay, if we be forbidden stones, we U.. — in- 1 

[Kn/.]hath forbidden bandying. flomeo S-.Tuliel, ni. 1 

FORBIDDENLY-queen forbiddenly . IVmler s T. i. 2 

FORBORJSTE— forborne the getting./!n«.<5-aeo. ui._ 1 1 

rORCE-wonld not force the letter. Two Gen.of Ver.i. 2 

stands in etfectual force — }\}-\ 

much the force of heaven-bred poesy — 111.2 
'gainst the nature of love, force you — v. 4 

rllforce thee Yield to my desire — y. 4 

fate, show tliy force! .Twelflh Aighf,}. n 

to force that on you, in a shameful . . — in. j 
when he would force it? . . Measure for Measure, 111. 1 

but in theforceof his will Much Ado, 1. 1 

with the force and strong encounter oi — .1. 1 
this flower's force in stirring love. jWrf. N. Drcam,i\. 3 
and thy fair ^'irtue's force perforce doth — in. 1 
when lie waked, of force she must be — i.u. 2 
hath such force and blessed power.... — iv- 1 
edict shall strongly stand in force ..Loce s L. L. 1. 1 
we must, of force, dispense with this — 1. 1 

you force not to forswear — y ■ 2 

even in the force and road of. Merchant of I enice.n. 9 

but of force must yield to such — iv. 1 

there is no force in the decrees — iv. 1 

his sceptre shows t'ne force of temporal — iv. 1 

dear sir, offeree I must attempt — iv. 1 

your gentleness shall force (rep.^.Asijou Like it, 11. 7 

there is no force in eyes that ^— '."• ^ 

their force, their purposes Alls If ell, iv. 1 

too strong for reason's force, o'erbears — y. 3 
■will you go yet? force me to keep.. iVmler s Tale.i. 2 
force her hence. Let him, tliat malces — n. 3 

had force, and knowledge, more — iv. 3 

who of force must know the royal.. . . — '^- 3 
by force took Dromio and my sou Comedy of Er. v. 1 

the English force, so please you Macbeih, y. 3 

my father's will be of no force King John, 1. 1 

of no more force to dispossess me — i- 1 

unmatched force the awless lion — .;• J 

turn your forces from this paltry siege — ii- j 

his forces strong, his soldiers — ,]}■ ' 

force perforce, keep Steplien Langton — ui- 1 
oiu- commission In his utmost force . . — in- 3 

what force will have us do Richard IT. 111. 3 

it must, of force 1 Henry I V. 11. 3 

our general forces at Bridgnorth — n>. 2 



ii. 1 
iii. 1 
iii. 2 
iii. 3 
iv. 4 
iv. 4 
iv. 4 
iv. 6 

V.!> 



— i. 3 



FORCE— I should force you to believe. .aHejiri//*-. ;. 1 

should lead his forces hither? — .!• ^ 

come all his forces back? — .•'• ' 

was force perforce, compelled to — — Jv- ' 
(as force perforce, the age will pour . . — iv. 4 
it shall not force this lineal honour . . — iv. 4 
on your imaginary forces work.He/iiy''. 1. (chorus) 

witli half their forces the full — \-- 

never went with his forces into France — }■ '■ 

and brim fulness of his force .r" , '• , 

distance, while we force a play.. — 11. (chorus) 
their passage tlu-ough the force of France — .11. 2 

la force de ton bras? — i^- \ 

my valour, and my force? ' Henry VI. 1. i> 

by fear, not force, like Hannibal 

vet may rise against their force 

occasions, uncle, were of force 

but gather we our forces out 

my forces and my power of men — 

all our general force miglit • 

set from our o'er-matched forces forth 

not the force of France 

which thou didst force from Talbot . . 
whetlier it be through force of your . . „ ■. , 

by main force Warwick did win .... 2 Henry VI. 1. 
force perforce, I'll make him yield .. — 1. 1 
of no little force, that York is most . 

which now they hold by force . . . 

turn the force of them upon thyself . 
are hard by, with the king's forces . 
to bring thy force so near the court . 
intend these forces thou dost bring? . 
to force a spotless virgin's chastity .. ,., . , 

we have broken in by force ZHenry f /. i. 1 

seek to thrust you out by force 

arguments of mighty force 

and force the tyrant from his seat. . . . 
secure from force and fraud .....•; — 
away betimes, before his forces .lom . . 

did I leave him with his forces — >• ■ 

w-ilt thou draw thy forces hence — v. 1 

of force enough to bid his brother .... —,,.'>'•' 

sweetly in force unto her fair Richardlll. iv. 4 

thus doth he force the swords of — v. 1 

look on my forces with a gracious. ... — y- f 
tlie force of his own merit makes. . . . Henry liU.i. i 
denied the force of this commission . . — 1. 2 
force should he right; or, rather .. Trodus <S- Cress.}. 3 

force him with praises — .\\- ^ 

or force of Greeklsh sinews — !"• j 

with all my force, pursuit, and policy — iv. I 
time, force, and death, do to this body — iv. 2 

with such a careless force — .y- » 

head, sword, force, means Timon of Athens, n. 2 

old love made a particular force .... — v. 3 

to crush him in an equal force Coriolanus,_i._ 10 

n ot fearing outward force — }!! • ' 

why force you this? — "^- ^ 

than, your gates against my force .... — .v. - 

of force, give place to better Julws Cmar, iv. 3 

ioining their force 'gainst Csesar. . Anlony Hf Cteo. 



iv. 2 
v. 1 
V. 4 
v. 1 



iii. 3 
iv. 4 
iv. 8 



i. 2 
iii. a 
iii. 11 



nbelir. 



with his Parthian force ,•■;-,--- 

our force by land hath nobly held . . 
and to night I'll force the wine iieep 

for his best force is fortli to 

yea, very force entangles itself 

I will try the forces of these Cy 

would force the feeler's soul — .;• ■ 

this secret will force him think X have — .in - 
is Lucius general of the forces? ...... — m- 7 

sinks my knee, as then your force did — y. .5 
and strike her home by force.. TOus Andromrus, 11. 1 

with hostile forces he'll o'erspread Pencles,}. 2 

would force me to my duty — "!• 3 

and force their scanty courtesy Lear, 111. 2 

guess of their true strength and forces. . . . — v. 1 

must I of force be married [Co(. Knf.-shall 1 . 

be married then to-morrow] . . Romeo Sr Juliet, iv. 3 
the potion's force should cease ....... — , , T- 3 

[Knt.'i peculiar sect and force may give. Hamlet.}. 3 
could force his soul so to his own conceit — .11. 2 
than the force of Ironesty can translate — in. } 

but this twofold force .-...■• — i"- 3 

FORCED— forced your honour... TK'offen. ofVer. v. 4 

which forced marriage would Merry Wives, v. 5 

he hath forced me to tell lum... . Meas.forMeas. ui. 2 
that I am forced to lay my reverence .MucIiAd^,,_v. I 
be forced to give my hand. . . . Taming of Shrew in. 2 
by that forced baseness which he., n inter s I ale,u. .i 
P'erdita, with these forced tlioughts . . — iv. o 
a visitation framed, but forced by need — y- j 
what to fear, forced me to seek ... .Comedy of Err. 1. 1 

were they not forced with those Macbeth , v. 5 

little kingdom of a forced grave .... King John, \y. 2 
like the forced gait of a shuffling . . 1 Henry IV. 111. 1 
but he hath forced us to compel ....2Henr,v/F. iv. 1 
from it issued forced drops of blood.. . . Henry V. iv. 1 
sweet mamier of it forced those waters — iv. 6 
what is wedlock forced, but a hell . . 1 Henri/ VI. y. 5 
art thou king, and wilt be forced?.... 3Heniyr/..i. 1 

forced by tlie tide to combat — }}■=> 

forced to retire bv fury of the wind . . — .n- 5 
and forced to live in Scotland a forlorn — in. 3 

whicli forced such way Henry VIII.}}. 4 

but thou hast forced me out of — 111.2 

and malice forced with wit . . Troilus ff Cressida, y. 1 

before I were forced out! Timon of Athens, 1. 2 

that I was forced to wheel Coriolanus, 1. 6 

that ever I was forced to scold — .v. 5 

do stand but in a forced affection .JulinsCipsar, iv. 3 

to the wav she's forced to inlony4-Cicopatra, v. 1 

and forced to drink their vapour .... — .v. 2 

forced in the ruthless, vast . . Titus Andronicus, iv. 1 
that forced us to this shift! .......... — iv- 1 

traitors vou constrained and forced . . — v. 2 

rigour of our state forced to cry out Lear, y. 1 

nor windy suspiration of forced breath . . Hamlet, 1. 2 
put on by cunning, and forced cause . . — y- 2 
bv indirect and forced courses subdue . . Olhelln.t. 3 
so shall I clothe me in a for."ed content — m. 4 



iii. 2 
iii. 2 
iii. 3 



iii. 3 
iii. 3 
iii. 3 
iii. 3 
iii. 3 
iii. 3 
iii. 5 
iii. 5 



FORCEFUL— forceful instigation?. IVinler'sTale, 11. I 

FOKCELBSS— and forceless care. . Troilus <§- Cress, v. 5 

FORCIBLE— so forcible is thy wit ... . Much Ado, y. 2 

let that suffice, most forcible Feeble .2HenrylV. 111. 2 

but I have reasons strong and forcible.3 Henry VI. 1. 2 

FORCIBLY— rights so forcibly withheld . . John, 1. 1 

forcibly prevents our locked .... Troilus ^ Cress. .iV- 4 

FORCII^CJ-so forcing faults upon. Winter s Tale, 111. 1 

of hot and forcing violation Henry V. 111. 3 

with much forcing of his disposition . . Hamlet, 111. 1 

FORD— how now, mistress Ford? Merry Wives, 1. 1 

mistress Ford, by my troth — J- 1 

whicli of you know Ford of tliis town? — 1. 3 

to make love to Ford's wife — i- * 

and thou this to mistress Ford — }■ 3 

and I to Ford shall eke unfold — .! • 3 

thou liest! Sir Alice Ford! — !!• J 

the name of Page and Ford differs .. — ii- j 

one with another. Ford (rep.) — }}■ ' 

how now, master Ford?..... — }!• ' 

there is one mistress Ford, sir — !;• - 

well on: mistress Ford, you say — — 11.2 
well: mistress Ford; what of her? .. — _ii. 2 
mistress Ford; come, mistress Ford.. — 11.2 
master Ford, her husband, will be . . — ii- 2 

has Ford's wife, and Page's wife — i}- 2 

ha! mistress Ford and mistress Page — ii- 2 

her husband's name is Ford — '!• „ 

siege to the honesty of this Ford s wife — ii- 2 

if vou will, enjoy Ford's wife — ij- 2 

want no mistress Ford, sir John — — ii- 2 

do you know Ford, sir? — n- * 

I would you knew Ford, sir 

well met, master Ford 

I must excuse myself, master Ford . . 
in at your back-door, mistress Ford , . 

mistress Ford, I cannot cog (rep.) 

mistress Ford, mistress Ford! here 3 
0, mistress Ford, what have you done? 

well-a-day, mistress Ford ! 

call your men, mistress Ford 

good master Ford, be contented 

you use me well , master Ford 

yourself mighty wrong, master Ford 

■fie, fle, master Ford! 

from mistress Ford (rep.) 

thrown into the ford (rep.) 

passed between me and Ford's wife., 
gives intelligence of Ford's approach 

and Ford's wife's distraction 

a couple of Ford's knaves, his hinds., 
master Brook, you shall cuckold Ford 

master Ford, awake (rep.) -^^ ■ \- 

made in your best coat, master Ford 

is he at master Ford's already 

mistress Ford desires you to come . . 
mistress Ford, vour sorrow hath eaten 
not only, mistress Ford, in the simple 
what hoa, gossip Ford! what hoal .. 

three of master Ford's brothers 

master Ford, vou are not to go . . ... . 

indeed, master Ford, this is not well 

come hither, mistress Ford Crep.) 

master Ford, you must pray 

as jealous as Ford, that searched 

go, mistress Ford, send quickly 

mistress Ford, good heart, is beaten . . 
that same knave. Ford, her husband . . — • . - 
you strange things of this knave Ford — v- 1 
enjoyed nothing of Ford's but his .... — v. j 

shall lie with mistress Ford — .y- » 

through ford and whirlpool, over bog .... Lear, 111. 4 

FORDID— despair, that she fordid herself — v. 3 
FORDO-desperate hand fordo its own life. Hamlet, v. 1 
FORDOES-makes me, or fordoes me quite. Olhello, v. 1 
FORDONE-with weary task fordone.. M/d.iV. Or. v. 2 
ICoL Knl.'] eldest daughters have fordone. . Lear,v. 3 
FORE-ADVISED— you were fore-advised. Cono(. II. 3 
FORECAST— had no more forecast ..SHenryVI. v. 1 
FOREDOOMED- your eldest daughters have 

foredoomed [Co/. Kn(.-foredone] themselves. Lear, y. 3 
FORE-END-the fore-end of my time. Cymbeline, 111. 3 
FORE-FATHER— „ „. , . rr •• o 

from some fore-fatlier grief Richard II. n. i 

our fore-fathers hod no other books .2HenryVI. ly. 7 
if I digged up thy fore-fathers graves.3Hen»-v VI. 1. 3 
plav with my fore-fathers' joints?.. Ro?neo lir-'uL iv. 3 
FOPv'EFEND-as heavens forefend!. 'f'm^er sTale, iv. 3 
now heaven forefend: the holy maid.l Henry Vl.y. 4 
marry, God forefend! God's secret. .'2 Henry VI. m. 2 
marry, the gods forefend! Iwouldnot.Cymbeline,y.a 
the "ods of Rome forefend .... Titus Andronicus, 1. 2 

heaven forefend: I would not kill Olhello, v. 2 

murdered in her bed. O heavens forefend! — v. 2 
FOREFENDED- , , ^ , ^ , , , 

mv brother's way to the forefended place. . Lear.y. 1 
FOftE-FINGER— Tom's fore-flnger ..Alls Well, n. 2 
agate-stone on the fore-finger. . . . Romeo Sr Juliet,}. 4 
FORE-FOOT— thy fore-foot to me g\ve. Henry F..11. 1 
FOREGO— forego the purpose that you. Tempest,}}}. 3 

for a friend: forego the easier King John, w. I 

my native English, now I must forego.. «(c/i. //.. 1. 3 

rents, revenues, I forego - . — }'^- } 

and let us not forego that 1 ^'■"•■liVI- }y.- 1 

must I needs forego so good Henry VI 11. 111. ^ 

1 am unarmed ; forego this vantage. Troil. <$• Cress._ y. 9 
quite forego the way which promises. ^n«.* Cleo 11.1. / 

FOREGO ER— than our fore-goers ....Alls Well, n. 3 

FOREGONE-remembrances of days foregone — .1. 3 
but this denoted a foregone conclusion. O'AfiJo, iii. 3 

FOREHAND-extenuate the forehand. jWucA/ldo, iv 1 
and carried vou a forehand shaft. . . .2 Henry IV 111. 2 
the forehand and vantage of a king . . He^iry V. ly. 1 
the sinew and the forehand of. Trodus Sr Cressida, 1. i 

FOREHEAD— foreheads villanouB low.. rempe.<(, IV. 1 
ay, but her forehead's low. . T,ro Gen. of Verona, iv. 4 
buffets himself on the forehead.. . . . Merry Wives,\j. i 
his eve, forehead, and complexion. J welfthNigM,\\. i 
a recheat winded in my forehead .... Much Ado, 1. 1 
and set them in my forehead — '■ ■ 



iv. 2 
iv. 2 
iv. 4 
iv. .5 



FOR 



[275] 



FOREHEAD-fruminv forehead wipe, torf'it.t. iv.S 

not with iHihastifUI ujre]ietid vrKM^Asyou LiKeit^M. 3 

no is the fi>n"lieacl of a married man .. — lii. 3 

with this rlivine In his forehead All's n'ell, iv. 3 

the trick of liistVown, his forehead. H'iTi/M-'ura/c.ii. 

in her forehead ; armed Cnmedy nf Errors^ iii. 

and in his forehead sits a hare-ribbed. Ki«ff./oAn, v. 

to loolt with forehead bold and big . .2 Henru I K i. 

hid'st thou that tbrchc.id with Richard III. iy. 

as smiles upon tl\e forehead .. Tmitxu ^ Cressida, ii. 

sweet lord, thou l\ast a tine forehead — iii. 

than Hector's forehead Coriolanus, i. 

than with tlie foR'lKiid of the morning — ii. 

and her foreliead is as low as she./liKony^C/rn. iii. 

by her hixh foreliead, and her ..Uomrofy JitUti, ii. 

to the teetli and f )rehead of oiir fanlts..//a»itf7, iii. 

from tlie fair forehead of an innocent love — iii. 

I have a pnin upon mv forehead here . . OHii'ltn, iii. 
FOU ICHORSE-stnv here tlie f.>rehorfo..J//'.< 'I'M. ii. 
FOKKIGN'-stop tlie foreign f,\m-\U.Mer.nf feiiicr. ii. 

a native slip to ns from forei^jn seeds... .^//'^ Il\-IK i. 

malice domestic, foreign levy, nothing. Mnchrili, iii. 

confident from foreign purposes Kiii^ John, ii. 

for any foreign preparation — iv. 

with ranks of foreign powers — iv. 

to stranger blood, to foreign royalty . . — v. 

eerve a hingapprenticehoodtoi'oreign./fi'c/mn<7/. i. 

my English breath in foreign clouds — iii. 

Kiddy minds with foreign quarrels. .2ffcjiry/r. iv. 

for 11 foreign purse, so sell Henry I', ii. 

that foreign hire could out of tlice — ii. 

more than streams of foreign gore . . 1 1lfnry VI. iii. 

when foreign princes shall — iv. 

hath parleyea unto foreign kings ..'lUenryl'I. iv. 

'gainst foreif;n storms Ztlcnry VI. iv. 

meet Warwick with his foreign power — iv. 

discontented steps in foreign soil . . Richard III. iv. 

if not to fight with foreign enemies .. — iv. 

out of a foreign wisdom HenryVIII. i. 

great embassadors from foreign princes — i. 

kept him a foreign man still — ii. 

or else to foreign princes. Ego et . . . . — iii. 

must as a foreign recreant Coriolanut, v. 

witli more than foreign heart Periclrs, iv. 

turned her to foreign casualties Lear, i v. 

dreams he of cutting foreign throats. Komeoc5/u(.i. 

and foreign mart for implements of war. HamW, i. 

and pour our treasures into foreign laps. oWcWo.iv. 
Foil EIGNER-thou mountain foreigner'. iVerry *r. i. 

when adverse foreigners affright KingJolln, iv. 

FOKEKXOVVrNG— foreknowing that — iv. 

happilv, foreknowing may avoid Hamlet, i. 

FUKElC'XOWLEDGE- 

hc seems to have a foreknowledge. Tirel/ih Sight, i. 
FOR EMOST— goes foremost in report. .Much Ado, iii. 

father, shall have foremost hand 'iUenryW. v. 

wise rebellion, thou goest foremost.. Conotanu,s, i. 

my wife comes foremost, then — v. 

the foremost man of all this world. 7«(iutC«snr, iv. 
FOR E^J'AM ED— forenamcd maid iV/ms. I'orMeas.m. 
FORENOON— at any time forenoon .. ■ — ii. 

wear out a good wholesome forenoon. Coriolmnns, ii. 

to three kings in a forenoon Antoni/^Cleo. i. 2 

FORE PAST— my forepast proofs Ail's Well, v. 3 

l'( IRE R.VNK— forerauk of our articles.. Henry V. v. Ii 
roilE-RECITED- 

rccount the fore-recited practices . . Henry VIII. i. 2 
FORERUN— forerun fair Love ..Lore's L. Lost, iv. 3 

these signs forerun the death Richard II. ii. 

woe is forerun w ith woe — iii. 

but heaviness foreruns the good 'IHcnrylV. iv. 

thought did but forerun mv necd./Jomco ^Juliet, v. 
FORERi:NNEK-a forerunner come. Mer.o/ Ven. i. : 

the great foreninner of thy blood King John, ii. 

there comes with them a forerminer. Timon ofAth. i.: 
FORKRUNNING- 

foreruniiing more requital Meat. /or Mean. v. 

FORES-how far is' t called to Fores? . . Macheih. i. : 
FOIiESAID— the foresaid prunes. j>/<?a«./nr Meas. ii. 

the parents of the foresaid child. . Loiy'^L. Lost, iv. 

in our foresaid holy father's name. . King John, iii. 

daughter to Charles, the foresaid ixiVe. Henry V. i. : 

an<i break the foresaid peace Henry V If I, i. 

those foresaid lands so by his father lost. Hnm/e(, i. 
FORES.VY— as thegodsi'oresay it ..Cymljetine, iv. 
FORESAW—what it foresaw.. Troiiusif Crensida, i. 
FORESEE-liis art foresees the danger... Tempest, ii. 

that you foresee not what 1 Henry I V. iv. 

■Warwick! I foresee with grief \ Henry VI. v. 

Cassandra doth foresee Troilus.^ Cressida, v. 

that his particular to foresee . . . Timon n/Athens, iv. 

but foresee. Fray then, foresee me.. Ant. A-Cleo. i. 
FOKE.SEEING—fore^eeing those.... Henri/ r///. v. 
FORES in )W-and your looks foreshow. . Pericles, iv 
FORESHOWED— which foreshowed.. C'l/inSf/inc, v. 
FQRESKUn'-than his foreskirt....Hc/ir!/r///. ii. 

FORESLOW—foreslowno longer ZHenryVI. ii. 

FORESPENT— his vanities forcspent.. Henri/ r. ii. 

his goodness foresiicnt on us Cymheline, ii. 

FORE-SPURRER-thisforc-spurrerjl/er. o/fen. ii. 
FOREST— the fjrest is not three. 7'/ro Gen.of Ver. v. 

wandered through the forest v. 

a keeper here in Windsor forest. . Merry If'ivei, iv. 

and the fattc't, I think, i' the forest.. — v. 

become the forest better than the v. 

to trai'c the forests wild Mid. .V. flrram, ii. 

in dale, forest, or mead — ii. 

through the forest have I gone — ' ii. 

is already in the forest of .\rdcn. . . As you Like it, i. 

to seek mj' uncle in the forest of Arden — i. 

this is the forest of .-Vrden — ii. 

if this uncouth forest yield any thing — ii. 

I met a fool i" the forest, a motley — ii. 

which in this forest looks iii. 

or no, let the forest j ndgc — iii. 

know that I am in this forest — iii. 

the forest. Then there i.s no true irep.'t — iii. 

in the skirts of the forest — iii. 

there is a man ImuntJi the forest — iii. 

tuU me where in tlic forest yon live.. — iii. 



FOREST— in this place of the fonft.Ai ymLike,i\i. 3 
he attends here in the forest on — iii. 4 

in the purlieus of this forest, stands .. — Iv.S 
jmcini; thr,.iiL'h tin- i;.n>i,c-hcwiiig ... — iv. 3 
ayoulb here in tlic forest lays claim. — v. 1 

Wi'ist born in the forest here? — v. 1 

obscured in the circle of this forci>t ... — v. 4 

60 often met in the forest — v. i 

men of great worth resorted to this forest — v. 4 

in this uirest, let us do those — v. 4 

who can impress the foresti Macbeth, iv. 1 

till Birnam forest come to Dunsinanc — v. 3 

and felled my forest woods Richard II. iii. 1 

what is this forest called? (.rep.) 'ZHenrylV. iv. 1 

west of this forest, scarcely off. — iv. 1 

the forest bear doth lick? SHenryVI. ii. 2 

secret ambush on the forest side — iv. H 

and made the forest tremble when the.v — v. 7 
Athens is become a forest of bea.sts7'iin<in o//l.'A.iv. 3 
thou wiust tile forest to this hart../w^«i Cirsar, iii. 1 
forest walks arc wide and spacious . . Titus And. ii. 1 
the general hunting in this forest?.... ^ — ii. 3 
with shadowy forests, and with champains. /.ear, i. I 
this, sir, and a forest of feathers Hamlet, iii. 2 

FORESTAIj-j;ou forestal our sport, tone's L. Lost, v. 2 

forestal prescience Troilus ^- CressidOj i. 3 

I shall forestal thee — iv. 5 

may this night forestal him Cymbeline, iii. a 

forestal their repair Wther Hamlet, v. 2 

FORESTALLED- 

forestalled this dear and deep iHenrylF. iv. 4 

a ragged and forestalled remission.... — v. 2 
be forestalled, ere we come to fall Hamlet, iii. 3 

FOREST-BORN-bov is forest-horn. /f.«!/o«LiA-e.7, v. 4 

FORESTER— and, like a forester. A/i'rf. iV. Dreom, iii. 2 

one of you, find out the forester — iv. 1 

despatch, I say, and find the forester — iv. 1 

then, forester, my friend Lore'sL. Lost, iv. I 

do .vou hear, forester? As youLike it, iii. 2 

no song, forester, for this purpose? — iv. 2 

let us be, Diana's foresters 1 Henry IV. i. 2 

FORES WORE-I foreswore myBelf..A/en!/;rii;es, iv. 3 

FORETEL- 

foretels, the great Apollo Winter's Tale, ii. 3 

foretel the ending of^ mortality King John, v. T 

expiring, do foretel of him Richard II. ii. 1 

foretels a tempest, and a blustering ..1 Henry IV. v. 1 

a title-leaf, foretels the nature iHenrylV.i. 1 

who.se hea\^ looks foretel some . . ..HHenry VI. ii. 1 
astronomers foretel it Troilus ^ Cressida, v. 1 

FORETELLING— 
so went on, foretelling this same ...2HenryIV. iii. 1 

FORETHINK-foretlunk thv faU . . 1 HrnrylV. iii. 2 

FORETHINKING-foretliinking this.Ci/mie/me, iii.4 

FORETHOUGHT— 
not the doom forethought by heaven. Kmg-/o/in, iii. I 

FORETOLD— as I foretold you Tempest, iv. 1 

are well foretold— that danger iHenryVI. iv. 7 

which he himself foretold Henry VIII. iv. 2 

I foretold you then what Troilus f,- Cressida, iv. 5 

FOREVOUCHED— forevouched affection.. Lenr, i. 1 

FOREW ARD— my foreward shall be.Ric/iard III. v. 3 

FOREWARN-forewarn him, that. Wn'er'j Tate,iv. 3 

FOREWARNED— thus forewarned .SHenryf/. iv. I 
we were forewarned of j'our coming — iv. 7 

FORFEIT— life falls into forfeit. . Meas./or Mean. i. h 
your brother is the forfeit of the law — ii. 2 
all the souls that were, were forfeit.. — ii. 2 
and still forfeit in the same kind? .. — iii. 2 
is no greater forfeit to the law than. . — iv. 2 

like the forfeits in a barber's shop — v. 1 

remit thy other forfeits — v. 1 

our states are forfeit, seek not. . . . Lore's L. Lost, v. 2 

that you stand forfeit, being — v. 2 

let the forfeit be nominated for ...Ver. of Venice, i. 3 

I will not forfeit it — i. 3 

I am sure, if he forfeit, thou wilt — iii. 1 

have the heart of hiin, if he forfeit .. — iii. 1 

my bond to the Jew is forfeit — iii. 2 (let.) 

to have the due and forfeit of my bond — iv. I 
the penalty and forfeit of my bond .. — iv. I 

on furfeit of my hands, my head — iv. 1 

this bond is forfeit; and lawfully — iv. 1 

thy wealth being forfeit to the state. . — iv. I 
my soul upon the forfeit, that your . . — v. I 

with the divine forfeit of his soul All's H'ell, iii. li 

his brains arc forfeit to tlie next tile — iv. 3 
shall for the fault make forf'eit . . ..Sllenry VI. ii. 1 
forfeit, sovereign, of my servant's.. /JicAar'/ /^/. ii. 1 

to forfeit all your goods, lands Henn/VIII. iii. 2 

many forfeits and subduements. Troilus ^ Cress, iv. 5 

he forfeits his own blood Timon o.r Athens, iii. 5 

I having ta'en the forfeit Cymbeline, v. ft 

shall pay the forfeit of the peace .Romeo ^Juliet, i. I 
some vile forfeit of untimely death — i. 4 

did forfeit, with his life, all those liis Hamlet, i. 1 

F0RFEITED-forf'eitcdtocarcs'forever'./<H'..HW;,ii.3 

his vows are forfeited to me — v. 3 (petit.) 

have lost and forfeited themselves? . . 1 Henry IV. i. 3 

without ransom to lie forfeited — iv. 3 

some ftjrfcitcd and gone Timon of Athens, ii. 2 

FORFEITER— forfciters you cast in.Ci/mWine, iii. 2 

FORFErriNG-forfeiting a traitor..! Ilenry VI. iv. 3 
beside forfeiting our own brains. Hfnrj/riyf. (prol.) 

FORFEITURE— 
by the exaction of the forfeiture?.Mer. of Venice, i. 3 

the envious plea of forfeiture — jii. 2 

never grant this forfeiture to hold . . — iii. 3 
thou wilt not only loose the forfeiture — iv. 1 
to cut the forfeiture fVom that bankrupt — iv. 1 
doth the .Tew pause? take thy forfeiture — iv. 1 
shalt have nothing but the fort'eitiire — iv. 1 
'twas due on forfeiture, ray lonl.. Timon of .4th. ii. 2 

FORFEND-rcol. A.;!/.] O forfeiid 'li.Richnrd It. iv. I 
which peril, lieaven forfend! 3 Henri/ V I. ii. I 

FORGAVE— and he forgave it her. Mer. of Venice, v. 1 
forgave him with all their hearts.. ./k'ihi Cirsar, i. 2 

FORGE— to the forgo with it then. .Merry IVires, iv. 2 
return and swear llic lies he forges . . All's Well, iv. 1 
to me, the difference forges dreoo. irinlrr'sTale, iv. 3 



FOR 

FOUOE— that I should forge quarrels.. Mii(-6e(/., iv. 3 
quick forge and working-nouse.. Henny V. v. (elio.) 
by the forge that stithicu yiare..Troilus^Creis. iv. .% 

what his breast forges Co7-iolanus, iii. 1 

whatc'er I forge, to feed his . . Titus Andronirus, v. 2 
I should make vervf'orgesof mvcheek«.0/AeHi>, iv. 2 

FORGED— Iwstwiffics that can be forged.y4«'i.H'e«,i.l 

it was forged, with mv rapier's Richard II. iv. \ 

08 you yourself have ibrgcd against..! HenrylV. v. 1 

of forged rebellion with a seal 'i Henry If. iv. 1 

that therefore I have forge<l MlenryVI. iii. 1 

feigned ashes of forged love — iii. I 

with forged quaint conceit — iv. 1 

until it forced him some design HenryVIII. i. 2 

till he harl forged himself a name . . Coriolnnns, v. 1 
Pisanio hath with his forged letters. C|/»nfce//ne, iv. 2 

is b.v a forged process of my death Hamlet, i. .•» 

Mars's iirmour, forged for proof eternc .. — ii. 2 

FORGERIES-forgeries of jealousy. .Afrd.iV.//r. ii. 1 
put on him what forgeries vnn please ..Hamlet, ii. 1 

FORGERY— to soothe your'forgery..3Henr!/'''- "'• 3 
in forgery of shaiws and tricks Hamlet, iv. 7 

FORGET— dost thou forget from whtit ..Tempest, i. 2 
his commonwealth forgets the beginning — ii. I 

I forget: but these sweet thoughts — iii. I 

my father's precepts therein forget — iii. I 

I will forget that .Julia Two Gen. of Verona, ii. C 

make the girl forget the love — iii. 2 

that his changing thoughts forget.... — iv. i 

I here forget all fonner griefs — v. 4 

if you forget your kies Merry Wires, iv. ! 

of Heme the "hunter, let us not forget — v. .'j 
fbrgct to drink after thee . . Measure. for Measure, i. 2 

3'et forget not that I am an ass Much Ado, i v. 2 

and masters, do not forget to s[)ecify — v. ! 

forget to do the thing it should Lore's I.. Lost, i. 1 

I would forget her; but a fever — iv. 3 

have .your love, forget the shames.Afer. of Venice,\. 3 

unless you teach me to forget As you Like it, i . 2 

well, I will forget the condition of .. — i. 2 

meantime, forget this new-fallen — v. 4 

Helen's knell, and now forj,'et her All's Well. v. 3 

beggar then forget h.\m?<i\ii .. .Taming of Sh. \ (ind.) 
I could not forget you for I never saw — v. 1 
yon of what you should forget .. Winter's TaU, iii. 2 

ibrgct your evil ; with them — v. I 

I cannot forget my blemishes in them — v. 1 

1 do forget; do not muse at me Macbeth, iii. 4 

new-made honour doth forget men's. King John, i. 1 
■we like not this; thou dost forget thyself — iii. I 
should forget myself; O, if 1 coiUd (rep.) — iii.4 

mad, I should forget m.v son — iii.4 

would not haveyou. lord, forgetyourself — iv. 3 

forget, forgive; conclude, and be Richard II. i. 1 

how dare thy joints forget to pay — iii. 3 

or that I could forget what I must . . — iii. 3 

forget to pity him, lest thy pit.v — v. 3 

thou'lt forget me, when I am gone.. 2 Henry/ 1', ii. 4 
a jmnce of my great hopes forget so. . — v. 2 

pleased to forget my place — v. 2 

and shall forget the office of oiu- hand. Henry V. ii . 2 

old men forget; yet all shall be — iv. 3 

I am forget liis name — iv. 7 

let's not forget the noble duke .... 1 Henry VI. jii. 2 

quite to forget this quarrel — iv. 1 

frirget this grief. Ah, Gloster (je/j.) ..2He»iryr/. ii. 4 
■who, in rage. foi"gets aged contusions — v. 3 

you forget, that we are those 3/Ie>iry/'/. i. 1 

did 1 forget, that by the house of York — iii. 3 
and I forgive and quite forget old faults — iii. 3 
they quite forget their loss of liberty — iv. fi 

but we now forget our title to — iv. 7 

if you forget, what vou have been ..Richard III. i. 3 
shall I forget myself, to be myself? .. — iv. 4 

bid yc so far forget yourselves? Henry VIII. v. 2 

forget that thou art ,Iove the king. Trail. ^ Cress, ii. 3 
to forget their faiilts,! drfnk to you. Timon (if.-llh. i. 2 

forget what we are sorry for — v. 2 

will forget, with the least cause Coriolantu, ii. I 

1 wonltTthey would forget me — ii. 3 

besides, forget not with whot contempt — ii. 3 

does forget that ever he heard — iii. 1 

forget not, in your s^K*ed, Antonins.Ji//ii«Crt'Mr,i. 2 
forgets the shows of love to other men — i. 2 
you forget yourself, to hedge me in . . — iv. 3 
iirge me no more, I shall forget myself — iv. 3 
when I forget to send to Antony.. '.4n/on>/ ^Clco. i. 5 
to forget them quite, were to remember — ii. 2 
put nie to forget a lady's manners . . Cymbeline, ii. 3 

you must forget to be a woman — iii. 4 

you must forget that rarest treasure. . — iii.4 
forget vourlaboursomeanddainty trims — iii.4 
when 1 do forget the lea,st (rep.) . . Titus Andron. i. 2 
as if we should forget we had no hands — iii. 2 

teach us to forget our own? Pericles, i. 4 

I will forget my nature Lear, i. .'> 

pray now, forget and forgive — iv. 7 

forget to think of her(rf;).) Romeo^ Jutiet,i. 1 

cannot forget the precious treasure .. — i. 1 
thou canst not teach me to forget — — i. 1 
I never shall forget it, of all the da.V9 — i. 3 
thousand years, I never should forget it — i. s 
shall forget, to have thee still stand there — ii. 2 
tohavetliee still forget, forgetting .. — ji. 2 

I would forget it fain — iii. 2 

Horatio, or I do forget myself Hamlet, i. 2 

that wc forget to pay ourselves what — iii. 2 

donot forget; this visitation is but — iii.4 

how to forget that learning — v. 2 

the best sometimes forget OWeUo, ii. 3 

general will forget my love and service .. — iii. s 
nay, vou must forget that — iv. I 

FORGteTFUI^of this forgetful imui..lHFnry//'. i. n 

forgetful in our long absence Henry VIII. ii. 3 

gave me, makes me forgetful ? JuliusCcrsar, iv. 3 

S[>ocl bov, I am much forgetful — iv. 3 
_ ROEtFUI-NESS- 
for my love's forgetf ulncss. . TtroGen. nf Verona, ii. 2 
steep my senses in forgctfulness? . .iHenrylV. iii. 1 
forgetf u'lness ond deep oblivion . . m-i-ard III, iii. 7 



FOR 

FORGETF V LNESS- 

forgct fulness too general Timon qC Alhf its, v. 2 

hi^!:i(e forsetfuluess shall poison . . Goiio/nni«, v. S 

Foia;i:m"E- 

quiok. tln-iretive, full of nimble . . . .i Hrmy Ij: iv. 3 

FC)K(.it;T";>'r— nliicli thou forget'st ....Temprsl.i. 2 

aiul \vh:\t thou h;>>t, forget'st ..iVrns./or.Wrus. lu, 1 

FOKG E 1 riNG-itolaviug, not foi-gettiug. rfiiipcs.'.iii.S 

foi^'ttius:, like a ilkMil man Hrnry I'lll. iii. 1 

forgetting thy ga^at deeds .... Timon (^Alhfns. ly. S 
forgetting sn'y other home but tliis.Komfo^Jii/. n. 2 

mv fetirs Torsitting manners Hamlel, v. 2 

FOftGlVE— forgive me niv sins! Tempesl, iii. 2 

I do foi-give theerunnatural — v. 1 

I do foi-give thv rankest fault — v. 1 

forgive nie, that I do not TicoGen.iif yerona, ii. •» 

forgive me, Valentine — v. 4 

forgive them what they have — v. 4 

heaven forgive me! Merry Hives, ii. 1 

■ft-ell, heaven forgive you — .;>• 2 

heaven forgive m.v sins at the day.... — iii. 3 

he:>ven forgi™ our sins! — v. 5 

forgive tluu sum, and so we'll — v. 5 

I forgive yon the praise Tire(flh Xlghl.i. 5 

good Antonio, forgive me your trouble — »• ' 
forgive him! and forgive us all... Ucus./or Meas. ii. I 

th.v slanders I forgive — v. 1 

forgive him, Ansrelo, that brought you — v. I 

whV then. God loigive me! Much Ad», iv. 1 

I foVgive thv duty Lore's L. LosI, iv. 2 

despuse mo. I woiikl forgive him...\/er. <if I'enice, i. 2 
cursed be my tribe, if 1 forgive him! — i. 3 
forgive a moiety of the principal .... — iv. 1 
Portia, foi^ive me tliis enfoR'ed wrong — v. 1 
labours bid him nie forgive. . All's H'ell, iii. 4 (letter) 
royal sir, forgive a foolish woman. H'inler's Tale, iii. 2 

with them, torgive yourself — .v. 1 

if he 'scape, heaven forgive him too! ..Macbeth, iv. 3 

God, forgive us all ! — v. 1 

God shall forsivcwii' Ca'ur-do-liou's.A'injrJoAii,ii. 1 

then God forgive the sin of all — ii. 1 

and I'll forgive you, wliatevcr torment — iv. 1 
forgive the comment that my passion — iy. 2 

forgive, Ci'»nelude, and be agreed Richard II. i. 1 

God forgive thee ibr it! 1 Henri/ 1 1', i. 2 

Gotl for^'ive me! good uncle — i. 3 

and God forgive tliem, tliat so much — iii. 2 
hostess. I forgive tl\ee; go make ready — iii. 3 

Gml. forgive! and grant it may..2Weiiry 11'. iv. J 

1 beseech your higliness to forgive Henry I', ii. 2 

yet, forgive me God. that I do'brag. . — iii. 6 

him I forgive my deatli I Henry VI. i. 2 

forgive me, country, and sweet — iii. 3 

be talse. forgive me, God •IHemyl'I. iii. 2 

God forgive him! So bad a death.. — iii. 3 

1 forgive and quite forget old fanlts.3 Henry K/.iii. 3 

Gixi: forgive my sins, and pardon thee! — v. 6 
thy rei'en"et\il heart cannot forgive. KicAiiid ///. i. 2 
talk a little wild, forgive me Henry Till. i. 4 

1 heartily forgive them — ii. 1 

to forgive me frankly (rep.) — ii. 1 

I have done, a'.id God forgive me! . . — ii. 1 
pray, forgive me. if I have used myself — iii. 1 
heaven forgive me! ever God bless your — iii. 2 
I forgive him. Loj-d cardinal, the king's — iii. 2 
forgive my general and exceptless- Timon oj'.Ath. iv. 3 

unapt to give or to forgive CorioJii»i«, v. 1 

forgive my tyranny: tut do not (rep.) — v. 3 

1 forgive thee for a witch Triton;/ fyCleo. i. 2 

but, sir, forgive me; since my — i. 3 

m3' lord! forgive my feai'ful sails I .. — iii. 9 
for^iive me in thine own particular . . — iv. 9 
malice towards you, to forgive you.. Cymdelinp, v. .■) 
heavens forgive it! And as for rericles. /Vnc.'.^s, iy. 4 
kind gods, torgive me that, and prosper.. Lear, iii. 7 
pray now, forget ancl forgive: I am old. . — iv. " 

if thou art nob'e. I do forgive thee — v. 3 

God forgive me, (marry. audamen!)flom.(5Ju/.iv.5 
forgive me. cousin ! ah, dear Juliet .. — v. 3 

forgive me my foul murder! Hamlet, iii. 3 

forgive me tliis my virtue — iii. 4 

forgive us our sins! gentlemen Othello, W. 2 

rKn/.]0 grace! O heaven forgive me! .. — iii. 3 

heaven forgive us I I cry you mercy .. — iv. 2 
FORGIVEN-all's forgiven at la<t..il/cn-v Wires, v. 5 

1 have forgiven and forgotten all W's iiV//, v. 3 

of yom- youth are forgiven you . . n'inler'sTnle, iii. 3 
gentlewomen here have foi^i\eii..2Hi"n)y//'. (epil.) 
forgive yon, as I would be forgiven. Hi-nry Till. ii. 1 
thv low grave, on faults forgiven.. 2"i«ion of .^th. v. 5 

FOftGlVEJSTESS— 
that I must ask my child forgiveness! .Tempest, v. 1 
he dotli oftener ask forgiveness. . .^lea.for Mea. iv. 2 
the son, forgiveness, as twere. . .. tVinter'sTale, iv. 3 

tiien asks Bohemia forgiveness — v. 2 

for this forgiveness, prosper may. . . . liichard II. v. 3 
forgiveness, horse! why do I rail on thee — v. 5 

oslt her forgiveness? do you but mark Lear, ii. 4 

and ask of thee forgiveness: so we'll live — v. 3 

exchange foi^iveness with me Hamlet, v. 2 

FOKGONE—rtiy mirth, forioue all custom — ii. 2 
FOUGOT— hast thou forgot'the fold .... Tempest, i. 2 

hast thou forgot her? — i. 2 

I had forgot tliat foul conspiracy — Iv. 1 

I Iiave forgot to court Tiro Gen.of Verona, iii, 1 

worthless Valentine shall be forgot.. — iii. 2 

on him that has forgot her love — iv. 4 

outupou'tl what have I forgot? ..MerryWives^i. i 

forsooth, 1 have forgot — iv. 1 

hast thou forgot thyself? Twelfth Sight, v. 1 

once our grace we liave forgot . . Meas.forMeas. iv. 4 
spealc troth. I have foraot our way.Afid. S.'sUr. ii. 3 
O, and is all forgot? all school-days' — iii. 2 
1 fear Kiy Thisby's promise is forgot! — v. I 

wliy, tliis was quite forgot Love'sL. Lost, i. 1 

(lie hobby-horse is forgot — iii. 1 

but linve you forgot your love? — iii. 1 

1 had forgot, tliree months .. Merchant of Venice, i. 3 
to nigh as benefits forgot ..Asyou Like it, ii. 7 (song) 
I have forgot him : my imagination All's IVell, i. 1 



[270] 



FOR 



FORGOT-have forgot your uarae.r,ini.iir^. 1 (ind.) 

so soim forgi't tlie entertainment — iii. I 

foraot me? I'or-Tot von? no, sir — v. 1 

what have we twain f.>r:;oI? Winter's Tale,\v 8 

the one I have almost forgot — v. 1 

?nite foriot a hn>band's oitiec?.. Comedy (if Srr. iii. 2 
have ;v(nuv-t I'or-ot tlu< taste Macbelh,\. 5 

my lorvl. I had for.'ot to toll vour ..Richard II. ii. 2 
have vou foru'i'l the duke of llercford — ii. 3 
I had'foisot my sell': am I not king? — iii. 2 

shall notV- f»rgot — v. 6 

be not forgot upon the face \HenryIV. ii. 4 

1 have forgot tlic nuui — iii. 1 

any way 'ioiir goiKl oeserts forgot.. . — iv. 3 
forgot vour.'aiii to ns at Ooncaster.. — v. 1 

tresiiass niav Ik- well tVnyot — V. 2 

but he liath torsot that 2H»nry/r. ii. 4 

like iiuu tliai had torgot to speak .... — v. 2 

vet all shall lie forgot Henry V. iv. 3 

nath he torgot he is bis sovei-eignf..! Henry/'/, iv. 1 

1 have forgot, but. as J tliink 2Hfnry VI. i. 2 

if she liave forgot lionour. and virtue — ii. 1 

my deatli ninv'nover be for:,'ot: — iv. 1 

hath thv- knee forgot to bow ? — V. 1 

hath she forgot already that brave.. fiiWinrd ///.;. 2 

my pains are quite forgot — i. 3 

come.lie dies: I had foruot the i-ewai-d — i. 4 

forgot mv pravtrs to eontont Henry VI 1 1, iii. 1 

is old a:iil hatli tVn'got itself. . Troilm ^Cressida, iii. 2 
stranselv b\ hiiii. as if lie were forgot — iii. 3 

whatr are niv deeds I'orwt? — iii. 3 

foraot as soon as done — iii. 3 

I have forgot my I'ather — iv. 2 

but vour ase li;is forgot me .... Timnnnf .Miens, iii. 5 
and'have toriot that ever Timon was — iv. 3 

have vou fori.'ot me, sir? — iv. 3 

forwt all men: tlien(r<^p.) — iv. 3 

bv Jupiter, forsot: I am weary Coriolanus, i. 9 

ti-ulv, 1 h:ive foriot vou — iv. 3 

I ha'\e forcot mv part — v. 3 

you lia\e t,n;;ot the will I told.. ...fn/iusCirsrtr, iii. 2 

be silent, I had almost forgot .4n(ony<5C(co. ii. 2 

mv lord, t f,':ir, lias forgot Britain Cymted'nr, i. 7 

h:id almost f.ugot to euti-eat yom- grace — i. 7 

she ha ill not yet forgot llim — ii. 3 

her aiuUvoiis '^I Ii;id forgot them) — ii. 4 

I foriiot to ask him one thing — iii. 5 

for Cloten is quite forgot — iv. 2 

their sorrows almost were forgot .. Tittts Andivn. v. 1 

his rage and anger be forgot Pericles, i. 2 

I have forgot to know — ii. 1 

unfriendly elements forgot thee utterly — iii. 1 
half o' the kingdom hast thou not forgot.. irar, ii. 4 

great thing of us forgot! — V. 3 

1 have forsot why I did call .... Uomeo ^Juliet, ii. 2 

I have forgot that name — ii. 3 

O, the hobliy-liorse is forgot Hamlel, iii. 2 

have you foreot me? — iii. 4 

alack, I had forgot — iii. 4 

antiquity forgot, custom not known. . — iv. 5 

tliat to taertes 1 forgot mj-self — v. 2 

you forgot all sense of place and duty?. .Othello, ii. 3 
comes it, Jliclmel, you are tlius forgot? — ii. 3 

I would most gladly have forgot it — iv. 1 

I h.ad forgot thee: 0, come in, Emelia .. — v. 2 

Fe')KGOTTEN— quite forgotten. Two Gen. ofVer. ii. 4 

on a foriotteu matter we can Tiretjth Sight, ii. 3 

a tllOU^aud tliat 1 have forgotteu.. .4syoni.('AeiV, ii. 4 

I have fornix oil and forgotten all Ill's ITell, v. 3 

was wrouglit with things forgotten Macbeth, i. 3 

if he had beeji forgotten, it had been.. — iii. 1 
thou hast forgotten to demand that.. IHenry//-'. i. 1 
an' I have not forgotten what the — — iii. 3 
compound me with forgotten dust. .'2HenryIV. iv. 4 
be washed in Lethe, and forgotten?. . — v. 2 

pitied in him, or forgotten Henry VIII. \\ 1 

■when I am forgotten, as I shall be . . — . iii. 2 

and I am all forgotten In/ony 4- CUopatra, i. 3 

die two months ;\go, and not foigotCeii.ll.;m/t'/, iii, 2 

FORK— the soft and tender fork. ..Vc.i.«./..r.l/e.is. iii. 1 
adder's fork, and blind- worm's sting... U.a''>f(/i,iv. 1 

though the fork im ade the region Lear, i. 1 

between her folks pre.-iimth snow — iv. B 

FORKED— with forked lu:uls /Is you Like it, ii. 1 

o'er head and ears a forked one . . iVinier's T,ih\ i. » 

like a forked radish iHrnnj / /'. iii. 2 

with forked tongue, that glided — iHrnryVI. iii. 2 

the forked one. quoth he Trnilns'^ Crrssidn, i. 2 

a forked mountara inloiiy S- Cleopatra, iv. 12 

poor, bare, forked animal as tliou lut Lear, iii. 4 

this forked pla^-ue is fated to us Othetlo, iii. 3 

FORLORN-poor forlorn Proteus. Tico Gen.of Ver. i. 2 
cherish thy forlorn swain! 



for the honour of the forlorn FrencJi .1 Henry VI. i, 

■whilst I, his forlorn duchess 2Henry;'/. ii. 4 

and kill thy forlorn queen — iii. 2 

shall I stab the forlorn swain? — iv. 1 

forsaken, as thou went'st forlorn... .SHenry/'/. iii. 1 
forced to live in Scotland a forlorn . . — iii. 3 

the forlorn soldier, that so nobly Cymbeline, v. .', 

though summer, yet forlorn and leanJVdiJt And. ii. 3 

that ravens foster forlorn children — ii. 3 

long have I been forlorn, aud all for thee — v. •> 
like a forlorn and despemte castaway.... — v. 3 
rogues forlorn, in short and musty 6traw?/,pnr, iv. 7 

FOR -M— it carries a brave form Tempest, i. o 

nor can im;igination form a shape.... — iii. 1 

and doth lose his form Two Gcn.ofVovna, iii. 2 

O thou senseless form ! — iv.4 

change you to a milder form — v. 4 

doiie"lirst in the form of a beast MerrylVirps,\. ■„ 

Bhall become the form of my intent . . Tierlfih N. i. 2 
women's waxen hearts to set tlieir forms! — ii. 2 

to read him by his form — iii. 4 

can assume both form and suit — v. 1 

Mid in such forms which liere were. . — v. 1 
O place! Oform! how often — .lleas.foi Mens. ii. 4 



FORM— »i! they make fbrnis M4ias..lbr Meas. ii. 

cold gradation and weal-balanced form — iv. 
cliaraets. titles, forms, be an arch-villain— v. 
only to the plain lonn of marriage .. ,Wiir/i Ado, iv. 

liraneli. shape, and form — v. 

whom you are but as a form in wax..Wii/. A'. Dr. i. 
love ean transpose to t'oriii and dignity — i. 

bodies t'ortli tlie forms of tilings — V. 

in manner and form following Love's L. Lo>l,i. 



man 11 



sittiii 
is, in 



proud with his 1 
full of forms, lis 
this is the ape o 



itiilier upon tlie form. 



id form Co 



lowing . 



— 1. 



their foi 
extr 



elv foi 



iilU 



es, shapes, objects 

ided inaiies iinwt form 
^ to the 



and of forms, varying in subjects as 

and if my H.rm he tlieiv .Merchant of Vtnicf, ii. 1 

whieli he vents in m;iimled forms. .4s i/iiit Likeit, ii. 
from meaner form have benehed .. IVinter'sTale, i. ; 

for this her witliont-door form — ii. 

thou liast thine o\\ 11 I'orm Comrdy (ifEiivrs, ii. I 

in form as palpable as this which now..Uiir(>i'//i, ii. '. 

bear his name «!i..se ilaiii (lum King John, i. 

exterior form, outward aeeoutrenient — i. 

all form is forniless. onler ord.M-le.ss.. — iii. ' 
itli bis form — iii. 



p this fo 



1 will 

of plain old f, 
slandered nam 
witliom this obieet. fo 



npi 



^mueh. 



e\e 



i a fo 



111 such another? 

lesolveth 

of this 



— V. 4 

— V. 4 



do loi 

to set albvin iipni tli:il indiiie 

I am a seribbUd form, drawn — v. 7 

distinguish lorni; so your sweet liichard II. ii. 2 

tnulitJon, foriii, and cereinonioiis duty — iii. 2 
keep law. and form, and due proportion — iii. 4 
but not the form of what he should, .1 Hrnri/Z/'. i. 3 

likelihoods, and forms i.f 1101^0 2/lenry //'. i. 3 

and, by the iieeessary l"orni of this.... — iii. 1 

in giHKllv form comes on the — iv. 1 

todress the ugly form of base — iv. 1 

nequilted by a true substantial form — iv. 1 
s. to this monstrous form — iv. 2 



when I do shap 
tinii ' 



.', Ill tonus imaginary — iv. ^ 

iiioek at form.' — iv. < 

beiiis; fetched from. . . . Henry /'. ii. : 



digest oui 


ci.mi 


lot 


that we M 


Ollld, 




both in VI 


nrto 


in ; 


draw the 


orni 1 


ml 



and with t 

under the form of a soldier — iii. 

and the forms ol it, and thesobriety of it — iv. 
degree, and lorni, creating awe and fear — iv. 

name your liigliiicss in this form — .v. 

contrarv to furiii of law, devise 2Hi'nr!//V. iii. 

s in some form../!iVAnrrf III. iii. 

iiist the form of law — iii. 

iiid nobleness of.. — iii. 

model of our battle — V. 

turn to vicious I'ornis, ten limes HenryVlIl. i. 

and appear ii 
proportion. SI 
no otlier tlun 

and put on a liiriii of str:iimeiiess — iii. 

each other with caeli otlier^s form .... — iii. 

to what form, but that he is — v. 

but shapes and forms of slaughter — v. 

'tis a good form Timon <tf .-ithens, i. 

to bring manslaughter into form — iii. 

your honour with your form Coriolanus, ij. 

by a lawful form (ni peace) — iii. 

however he puts on this tardy i'orm. JuliusCwsar,^'\. 
squadrons, mid right form of war.. .. — ji. 
pluck down forms, windows, anything — iii. 
this sober form of .yours hides wrongs — iv. 
to vie strange forms with fancy.. /Infony^-C/fo. y. 
.jewels, of rich and exquisite form .... Ci/iii6e/ine, i. 
will I, my loved Marina, elip to form . . /Vrie^rs, v. 

and follows but for form Lror, ii. 

life without the form of justice — ii. 

chaos of wcU-seemiiig forms! fioineo ^- Juliet, \. 

fain would 1 dwell oil form — ii. 

who stand so much on the new form — ii. 

thy form cries out, thou art — iii. 

thy noble shape is but a form of war — iii. 
it wrought on her the form of death.. 

tliat fair and warlike form 

with all forms, modes, shows of grief 

both in time, form of the thing 

the form of phiusivc iiianiiers 

nil forms, nil pressures past, that y 

ill form, and nun in;;, how express 

snitiiig with tonus to bis conceit? 

of fashion, and the mould of form 

that unmatched form and feature 

what he spake, though it lacked form . . . 
boil.v of the time, lus form and pressure. 



aYii.t<5-Ci-<'ssirfu,i. 3 



. Hamlet, i. 1 



uth,. - 



— ni. 1 

— iii. 1 



— iii. 4 



but 0, what form of pra 

a form, indeed, w liere everv aid did seem 

his form and cause eonioincil, preaching 

the writ up ill form of the other — y. 

trimmed in forms and visages of duty ..Othello, i. 

putting on the mere form ot civil — ii. 

to mutch vou with her country forms.... — iii. 

what forn'i ? what likelihood? — iv. 

deliebtcd them in any other form — iv. 

FOKM.V-L— to any formal capacity. 7'«'cWA Sight, ii. 

and beard of formal cut Asyou Like it, ii. 

are yon so formal, sir? Taming (tf Slireii\i'ii. 

but formal in niiporel — iv. 

make of him a tormal man again. Com«rfy(if/rrr. v. 

flow henceforth in formal majesty ..2HenryIV. v. 

like the formal vice. Iniquity .... Ilicliard 111. iii. 

untired spirits, and f.niial eonstaiicy..'n/.<;.cj,ir,ii, 

with snakes, not like a r.anial nuin.,.J/it, <S-nMi. ii, 

no nohle rite, nor foriual osteiitan,>ii ..llamltl, iv. 
FOUMALl.V -loniuilly in pcr,soii..U.-,i,<..(i.r.l/c,i.<. i. 

and foniiallv according to our law ..lUcliaril I!, i. 
F()KxMi:U--«as formed under the star. 7'icWf,'/i S. i. 

formed by the eve Imc's I.. LosI, v. 

shadow of myself formed in her eycKingJohn, ii. 



FOR 

I'OUMKD— formed In tliooppUuic.rr/irt.^CVMi. 111. 3 
luU.MKIl— ofiny former luvc ..Tu-aOen.o/l'er. il. i 

I here fcirifi't nil former Rriff« — v. 4 

lliiHalniilutloii In not lu llie former. '/'u-i-(/l/iA'iVA',il. .'j 
till' foriiiiT Ihro! Ilcrot'iiit Ih <leuiJI...I/ur/i/li/>>, v. i 
tli<- «iKlit of Ihy forini'r liuly'ii eyK.MiJ. A.'. Dr. ill. 2 

yoii to your fonntr honour Ai yon Like il, v. i 

Incur your loriniT nmliuly.. 7nmin»o/J>A. 2 (Indue.) 
unworthy all the former favour* .... — Iv. 2 
rejoice thi' forinir i|neen in well?.. It'inler'iTale, v. 1 

M vouuK Bt wdrt your (onuer — V. 1 

the (In.h i.finv former life in me .... — v. 2 
sod with hl» tornuT title vreet Macbetli.A/(icbr//i,l.2 
niKht hiilh trifled former knowinKS .. — II. 4 

In duutter of her former tuotli — 111.2 

my tornu'r H|>e<'( hi' have but lilt .... — 111.6 

a third i» like the former — iv. I 

former leruiile in our «trong-bttrrcd..Kiny./oAn,ll. 2 

not nil thy former tale — Hi. I 

to think our former iitatc a happy . . Itidutrd II. v. I 

wliieli to bin fonner Htrengtli 2i/fnrK/>'. iii. 1 

nnntc the memory of the former days — iv. 1 

turne<l away my former «clf — v. 5 

v did tlic former lionn Henryf. i. 2 

beur my former nnnwer baek — iv. 3 

reduce "into our former favour — v. 2 

and hleHii iis with her former qualities — v. 2 

maintain the former word» \ Henry fl. in. 4 

nil liin glos-i of former honour -- iv. i 

thought o erruu mv former time ....iHemyVI. i, 4 

queen in former golden days — ill. 3 

let former Kriiil(;ei pat's — ill. 3 

re[ilant Henry III hiB liirmerBtatc .. .. — ill. 3 
never more rememlK-r our former . . Ilirhard III. li. 1 

maile foi'mer woudera it's Ueiiry yill. i. I 

that former fabulous story — i. I 

besides my former sum Timon of Alheni, ii. I 

of bis former days, the former man .. — v. 2 
former agents, If they did complain . . Coriolanu$, i. 1 

It is your former promise — i. 1 

In thi-i action outdone his former deeds — ii. I 
I'll work myself a former fortune .... — v. 3 
on our former ensign two mighty...'ii/i«fC'wior, v. 1 
proved a fairer former fortune ..Antony ^ Cleo. i. 2 
must not take my former sharimcsB. . — iii. 3 
if that the former dare but what it can — iii. II 
stars, that were my former guides. ... — iii. 1 1 

with those my former fortunes — iv. 13 

friends o'erboVne i' the former wavc.Cymljvline, v. 3 

immortality attends tlie former t'ericli-t, iii. 2 

if you come slack of former services Lear, I. 3 

Vi, by my former lecture and advice,,.. //am/'^^ii. 1 

and from your former state, that — iii. 2 

madam, my fonner suit: I do beseech.. 0(/ie(;o,iii. 1 
or scant our former huving in despite .... — iv. 3 

I can again thy former light restore — v. 2 

FORMi';ftLY-thc danger formerly.it/er. ofVen. iv. I 

it was formerly better; marry AU'iU'ell.i. \ 

than formerly he hath apijcured.. Winter'sTate, iv. 1 
never they shall alxiund as formerly. Wcnri/ /'///, i. 1 

but what 1s like me formerly Coriotanuit,\w. 1 

letters he hod formerlv wrote ..Antuny ^Cieo. iii. 

FOR.MLESS— all form is formless.. ..Kin;^ John, iii. 1 

and forinlcHs ruin of oblivion. 7'roi7ui.§'C'r«iriV7a,iv. 5 

FOKNICATIOX— to fornications.. W/Try/f/rc, v. i 

have been necused in fornication Af(?««. /or yi/ra». ii. 1 

condemned uiKm the act of fornication — v. 1 

she that accuses him of foniication .. — v. 1 

wlrnt a frv of fornication in at, iloot'.. Henry VI 11. v. 3 

FOK.VICATKESS- 

the fornicatress be removed Mem. for Mem. ii. 2 

FOKKEST— iJighton, and Forrest.. /fiV'/iari/ ///. iv. 3 

thus, thus, quoth Forrest, girdling oue — iv. 3 

which once, quoth Forrest, almost .. — iv. 3 

FOKSAKi';_leviulhans forsake. TwoGen.nfVer. iii. 2 

and they none to forsake AUiWell, ii. 3 

that we II forsake ourselves: give me — iv. 2 

I must forsake the court IVinler'nTaU-j i. 2 

bid you forsake your \\\)ftriy .Comedy of Erron, iv. 3 

wilt thou forsake thy fortune A'm^ John, i. \ 

tear down, than forsake the siege. , . . I Henry yi. i. 2 

if you forsake the offer of their — iv. 2 

sec! they forsake me — v. 3 

to your cottages, forsake this groom.'iHenry yi. iv. 2 

fly and forsake their houses — iv. 4 

that will forsake thee, and go home.. — iv. 8 

and forsake thy brother! ^Hcnry f'l. iv. 7 

manors that I Iiarl. even now forsake me — v. 2 

did forsake his father Worwick Uiduird III. i. 3 

how the poor soul did forsake — ii. I 

I must not yet forsake you Henry yill. i. 4 

and, till my soul forsake me, shall cry — ii. I 

I must now forsake ye; the lost — ii. I 

would forsake the gwls . . Timnnof Alh. iii. 6 (grace) 
forsake thy scat, I do beseech thee../)n(. <t Cleo. ii. 7 

proved mad, and did forsake her Othello, iv. 3 

must forsake this rofjm, and go with us — v. 2 

FORSAKKN— as being forsaken MtirhAdo.i\. I 

forsaken your iiernicious ..\HenryVI. iv. 1 (letter) 
art then fjrsaken, as thou went'»t..3;/enri/r/. iii. I 
most choice, forsiikcn ; and moat loved. . . . Lear, i. 1 

love so dear, so soon forsaken'!' — ii. 3 

FOKSAKKTir-forsaketh yet the lists. 1 Henry f/. v..', 
FUK.S(J()K-hnth fi.rsmjk her. . TwoOen. of Vrr. iv. 4 
in their sp^»rt forsixik hissrcne..W»'i.A'.'ii;ri"«m,lii. 1 
dead, fors'Kik, cast off; and none. . . . King John, v. 7 
he hath forsook the W)urt, broken . . Ilirhnrd II. ii. 3 
colour hath fors<iok his cheeka ....Hirhard III. ii. 1 

tenijicr has fors'Hjk him Timon of Alhtnt, iii. 4 

who have all for/'Mjk me Cnrint/inui,iv. l) 

has she fnrrook so many noble matches. OMcH/i, iv. 2 

FO/..S<)<rril-I thank you, forsfKith.;Wcrry MVcm, i. I 

not a-hungry, I thank you, forsooth — 

ny, forsooth 



[277 ] 



■no. forsooth : he hath but 

ay, forsooth ; but he Is as tall 

»y, forxxith, Fll fetch it you 

ay, forrooth, to desire her to 

ay, forsooth; and I pray how does 
ay, forsooth; and then you moy .. 



i. 1 

- 1.4 

- 1.4 

- i. 4 

- i. 4 

- 1.4 
il. 1 

- ii. 2 



II 



rOItS(J<JTH-I had rather, fonooth.Merry fVivei, III. 2 

to the laundress, forsooth — Hi. 3 

and fors'ioth, to search his house for — 111,6 

forsiwlh, I have forgot — Iv. I 

from the two parties, forsfKith — iv. 5 

oy, forsooth; I have s|H>ke with her.. — v. 2 
notes, null's, for""otli, and noting! ..Much Ado, II. 3 
that, forsooth, the boiinciiig Amazon. ;t/i</.A'.r>. ii. 2 
and teiidir nil', fiirwxitb, aflection .. — iii. 2 
her height, lorsootli, she hath prevailed — Hi. 2 

O, and l,f'ori«s>tli, in love! Lore't L.l.otl, Mi. I 

all fors<Kitli, deifying the i\ame..Aiyou Like it, iii. 2 

1 am going, forsooth: the business .4/t'ii Wetl^ i. 3 

I must, forwKilli, he forced tog! ve.'/'amin^o/Vi. iil.2 
no, no, forsiKjthi 1 dure not. for my life — iv. 3 
this [lernicious slave, forsooth. 6'owMr(/y of Errort, v. I 

forswitli, have all my prisoners i Henry J y. 1. 5 

forsooth, five years, and as much .... — ii. 4 
and now, forsooth, takes on him to .. — iv. 3 
Ijccnuse forsooth, the king of Sciits..! Wenry/'/. iv. I 
and, yet, fiire'ioth, she is a virgin pure — V. 4 
the king, forsooth, will have it so ..■illtmyVI. 1. 3 
forsooth, a blind man ut saint Alhan's — ii. I 
Peter, forsooth. I'eter! what more '^. — li. 3 
fors<Kjth, had the g'x^ii duke to keep — iii. 2 

that I, forsooth, am stern, and Ilicliard III. i, 3 

nay, forsooth, my friends Henry Vlll.iW. I 

forsooth, an inventory, thus importing — iii. 2 
then, forwjoth, the faint defects of. 7io-/u«.VCrcii. i. 3 

wilt frame thyself^ forsooth Coriolanut, iii. 2 

yes, forsooth; I wish you joy Antony^ Cleo. V. 2 

yes, forsooth, on' your mistership . . TitutAud. iv. 4 

yes, foriuKJth, I will hold my tongue Lear, i. 4 

to friar Laurence '/ Ay, forsooth. /(omco ij- Ji/dV/, i v. 2 

forsooth, a great arithmetician Othello, i. I 

FORSI'KNT-fbrsiKjnt with speed.. ..2/7rar!//»'. i. 1 

fr>rs|ient with toil, as runners 3 Henry yi. ii. 3 

F()R.SI'f)Kf;— forsjMjke my being.. AnlonySirCleo. iii. 7 
F()RSWF,AR-forBWearnotthyBelf.'/'i»oGen.o/nr.ii.!> 

love bids me forswear — li. 6 

an I thought, I'd forswear it Twelfth Nightji. 3 

or ffH-swear to wear iron about you .. — lij. 4 
ou'Il forswear this again. jtfearure /or Jtfea*ure, iii. 2 

ut was fain to forswear it — iv. 3 

_n game themselves forswear.,.. Af id. N. Dream, i. I 

these women to forswear Lovc'iL. Loil, iv. 3 

I do forswear them — v. 2 

entertain him, then forswear inm. Am you Likeil,i'\i. 2 

to forswear the full stream of the — iii. 2 

to swear, and to forswear — v. 4 

i f it ix: not, forswear't AU't Well, i. 3 

forswear Bianca and her love.7'amm4'o/A/irp«;, iv. 2 

but do forswear her — iv. 2 

deny him, forswear him — v. 1 

let villany itself forswear't Winter' • Tale, i. 2 

forswear themselves as often as they speak — v. 1 
to deny it, or forswear iVt .... Comedy of I'.rrorn, v. 1 

and majesty, I do forswear Iliehard ll.iv, \ 

sees reason, I'll forswear arms 1 Henry I V. i. 2 

I'll forswear keeping house 'iHenryiy. il. 1 

to forswear thin potations — iv. 3 

I'll forswear half kirtles — v. 4 

thou usest to forswear thyself SHenry yi. v. ;> 

make a whore forswear her trade.. Timon or Alh. iv. 3 
some innocent, and forswear myself-. '/"/(uj And. v. 1 

forswear it sight! Hnmeo ffJulietj i. U 

love him dearly, comfort forswear muLOilieUo, iv. 2 
FORSWIiAKING— -" 

forswearing that he is forsworn 1 Henry I y. v. 2 

for false forswearing Itiehnrd III. i. i 

rORSW(jRE— forswore on Tuesday ..Much Ado, v. 1 
a woman I foreswore ....Lave'iL.Loil, iv. 3 (versesj 

I forswore not thee — iv. 3 fvera-s) 

he forswore most monstrously. . Comedy of Jirrori, v. I 

did, sir; and forswore it t'X) — v. 1 

first foreswore it on the mart — v. 1 

love foreswore me in my mother's.. 3;/i?nr!/ yi. iii. 2 

av, and foreswore himself liichard lll.i.3 

FOK.SWORN- 
fcandttl'd company I hove forewom ... Tempetl, iv. 1 

shall I be forsworn Tuoden. of ycrona, ii. 6 

love fair Silvia, shall 1 be forsworn .. — ii. li 

I shall lie much forsworn — ii. 

hath she forsworn me'/ — iii. 1 

if .Silvia have forsworn me! — iii. 1 

forsworn my company — iii. 2 

how I have l)een forsworn in — i v. 2 

so sweetly were forsworn. iVcaii. /or Mean. iv. 1 (song) 

that Angelo's forsworn — v. I 

my lord, you shall not be forsworn . . Much Ado, i. 1 
forsworn his bed and company. ...W/d.jV.i)rcam, ii. 2 
make us all forsworn three tliousand.Loce't/../,. i. I 
I am forsworn on mere necessity .... — i. I 

I shal 1 be forsworn — i. 2 

help my lord! he'll be forsworn — ii. I 

if love make me forsworn — iv. 2 

though to myself forsworn — iv. 2 

ah.nicl Inm forsworn — iv.3 

that I am fiiirsworn for thee — iv. 3 (verses) 

of all hands must we be forsworn .... — iv.3 

and thereby all forsworn — iv.3 

each of you hath forsworn his book .. — iv.3 
you hive in that forsworn the use of — iv. 3 

we have forsworn our books — iv. 3 

it is religion, to be thus forsworn — iv.3 

prove plagues to men forsworn — iv.3 

we ore again forsv/orn — v. 2 

lest you lie forsworn again — v. 2 

but then I am forsworn Merchant of yenice, iij. 2 

that I hail been forsworn — iii. 2 

yet was not the knight forsworn ..Aiyou Like it, \. 2 

yon arc not forHWorn — 1.2 

hut he, had quite forsworn! .. Tajning of Shrew, iv. 2 
forsworn you, witli Hortcnsio (rep.) — iv. 1" 

though yet forsworn he v/ktc. Comedy nf Errori, Iv. 2 

they arc both forsworn — v. I 

never was forsworn Macbeth, iv. 3 

fellow, is not Franc<^ forsworn? King John, iii. I 

j'ou are foresworn, forsworn — ill. I 

•wear only to be Ibrswoni {rep.) — iii. I 



FOR 



F0B8W0RN-hc Is forrwom, itii'CT..King John,\. 4 
earth to the like, forsworn Auinerle./'iV/iuri/ //. Iv.'l 
have forswoni his comiiany hourly.. I //enry//'. ii. 2 

forswearing that he is r.ir..worn — v, 2 

do you think I'll lie forsworn'/ HrmyV. iv. 8 

that have forsworn thy colours 3Henruyi. i. I 

forbid, your gru<:e should be forsworn — i, 2 

you are foresworn Troilut ^ Creitida, v. 2 

which can moke g«ls forsworn? CorioUinm, v. 3 

I have forsworn to grant — v. 3 

she hath forsworn to love Ilomeo Si Juliet, I. I 

all forsworn, all naught, all dissemblers — iii. 2 

bethink yon, I'll not he forsworn — iii..'. 

to wish me thu;i forsworn iii. & 

FORT— ma ioi, il fait trjrt ehBud....«iTri/ Wivei.i. 4 

surprised our forts, and sent illenryyi. iv. I 

break iiiK down the pales and forts of Hnmlel.i, 4 

F0RTI';D— aforted residence . . . . Mea$.for Mi um. v. 1 

FORTH— know thus far forth r«np«i7, i. 2 

come forth, I say _ i. 2 

come forth, thou tortoise! — 1.2 

come forth! — i. 2 

and your affection not gone forth — 1.2 

bring forth more islands — ii. I 

but nature should bring forth — 11. I 

and sends me forth (for else — ii. I 

if thou tx:eBt Trinculo, come forth .... — ii. 2 

and bring thee forth brave brood — iii. 2 

eall'd forth the mutii:ou9 winds — v. I 

ond let them forth v. 1 

which was thrust forth of Milan — v. 1 

at least, bring forth a wonder v. I 

that have chalked forth the way — , v. I 

put forth their sons to seek.. 7»o6'«i.(,/ A'erono, i. 3 

I shall enquire vou forth — ii. 4 

her linsbniid, will be forth MerryiVivei, ii. 2 

come forth, and (without any pause — iii. 3 
were called fijrth by their mistresa .. — ill. .5 

come, come forth — i v. 2 

you send forth to bleaching — iv. 2 

come forth, firrah iv. i 

let them from forth a saw-pit rush .. — iv. 4 
Bofarfbrthashersclf mightbelierchooscr— iv. 6 

one chin, and n> forth Titelfth Night, i. 5 

did spur me forth — iii. 3 

set forth in your iiursiiit — iii, 3 

habit of some sir of note, and eo forth — iii. 4 

call forth tlic holy father — v. 1 

if our virtues did not go forth o{ us.Mea.forMea. i. I 

lead forth, and bring you back — i. I 

they put forth to steal _ i. 3 

did utter forth a voice! — iii. 1 

tcstimonicd in his own bringings forth — iii. 2 

what, ho! within! come forth! iv. I 

cannot but yield you forth — v. 1 

it concerns to hear this matter forth — v. I 
you'll be marie bring Deformed forth. Much Ado, ill. 3 

you must call forth the watch — iv. 2 

let the watch come forth — iv. 2 

call her forth, brother — v. 4 

turn melancholy forth to funerals.. itfid. A'. Dr. i. I 
stand forth, Demetrius; mv noble .. — i. I 
stand forth, I^ysander; and my gracious — i. 1 

steal forth thy father's house — !. 1 

call forth your actors by the scroll . . — 1.2 

siieak, Pyramus: Tbisby stand forth — iii. I 

and forth rny mimic cr>meB — iii. 2 

an imagination IkmIIcs forth the forms — v. I 

every one lets forth his sprite — v. 2 

ruminat— and so forth. Ah,goodold.ioti<;'»I..i. iv. 2 
now step I forth to whip hypocrisy .. — iv. 3 

call them forth quickly — v. 2 

litul I such venture forth MercJiant of yenice, i. I 

to lind the other forth — i. 1 

thereCore go forth, try what — i, I 

I am bid iorth to supper, Jessica .... — ii. ii 
no mind of feasting forth to-night. ... — ii. .5 

come forth to view the issue — iii. 2 

well, I'll set you forth — iii. Ji 

and old Shyloek, both stand fortli.. .. — iv. 1 

it is meet, 1 presently set forth — iv. 1 

bring ^your music forth into tlie air .. — v. 1 

I set forth as soon as you — v.! 

stand vou both forth iiow AiymLikeU, i. 2 

will suddenly break forth — i. 2 

to travel forth BO far? — i. 3 

heaved forth such groans, that — ii. I 

when it drops forth such fruit — iii.:; 

he went but forth to wash him — iv. I 

and is gone forth,— to sleep — iv.3 

could not drop forth such giant-rude — iv. 3 

to choose from forth the royal AlCi Well. ii. I 

fair maid. Bend forth thine eye — ii. 3 

hath much blood let forth — iii. 1 

then go thou forth; and fortune play — Hi. 3 

sent linn forth from courtly — iii. 4 (letter) 

bring him forth; he lias sat in — iv.3 

would [leep forth, and answer, thanks — iv. 4 

so stand thou forth, the time IS — v. 3 

send forth your amorous token — v. 3 

to bring forth this discovery — v. 3 

so far forth friendly maintained . . Taming of Sh. 1. 1 

draw forth thy weapon, we're — iii. 2 

call forth Nathaniel, JoEeph — iv. 1 

call them forth. Do you hear, ho? .. — Iv. 1 

1 call them forth to credit her — iv. 1 

as he forth walked on his way — i v. I (song) 

lay forth the gown; what news — iv.3 

call forth an olllcer: carry this — v. I 

swinge me them soundly forth unto — v. 2 

this 18 put forth too truly ! lyinter'i Tatt, i. 2 

of the world, sometime puts forth.... — 1'. 2 

I shall bring Emilia forth — il. 2 

hath brought you forth a daughter .. — ii. 3 
therefore bring forth, and in A|iollo'9 — iii. 2 

the casting forlli ^) crows thy — iii. 2 

be known, when 'tis brought forth — Iv. (elic ) 

and weeping his welcomes forth iv.3 

shall point you forth, at every sitting iv 3 

step forth niine advocate — t i 



FORTII—to find his fellow forth. . Comedy of Err. i. 2 

■ is wandered forth, in care to seek — ii. 2 

say, he dines forth, and let no creature — ii. 2 

if any bark put forth, come to — iii. 2 

is there any ship puts forth to-nightf — iv. 3 

thou lock me forth to-day — iv. 4 

bring my husband forth — v. 1 

nor send liim forth, that we — v. 1 

set forth a deep repentance Macbeth^ i. 4 

bring forth men-cliildreu only! — i. 7 

and sent forth great largess to your — ii. 1 

brought forth the secretest mau — iii. 4 

■was settin" forth; nowwe'll together.. — iv. 3 

comes the Iting forth, I pray you? — iv. 3 

take forth paper, fold it, WTite — V. 1 

producing forth the cruel ministers — v. 7 

we'll set fortli, in best appointment.. /Cin^/oAii, ii. 1 

when we first marched forth — ii. 2 

shall cull forth out of one side — ii. 2 

that spits forth death, and mountains — ii. 2 

arise forth from the couch — iii. 4 

shall step forth, to check his — iii. 4 

rush forth, and bind the boy — iv. 1 

young lad, come forth; I have — iv. 1 

come forth. Do as I bid you do — iv. 1 

from forth the streets of Pomfret .... — iv. 2 

from forth tliis morsel of dead royalty — iv. 3 

from forth the noise and rumour — v. 4 

as to be cast forth in the conmiou . . Richard II. i. 3 

I sent thee forth to purchase — i. 3 

the world tlirust forth a vanity — ii. I 

from forth thy reach he would — ii. I 

ray soul brought forth her prodigy .. — ii. 2 

from forth the ranks of many — ii. 3 

bring forth these men; Bushy — iii. 1 

which didst lead me forth of that.. .. — iii. 2 

lightens forth controlling majesty .. — iii. 3 

c:ul forth Bagot; now Bagot — iv. 1 

cousin, stand forth, and look _ iv. 1 

thrusteth forth her paw, and wounds — v. 1 

from whence, set forth in pomp — v. 1 

elder days may happily bring forth.. — v. 3 
in setting forth? Why, we will irep.).lHennjlF. i. 2 

did set forth upon his Irish — i. 3 

lead him forth into the park — ii. 3 

to-day will I set forth, to-morrow you — ii. 3 

go, call him forth. FalstafF! — ii. 4 

oftentimes breaks forth in strange . . — iii. 1 

will set forth to meet your father — iii. 1 

earl of Westmoreland" set forth to-day — iii. 2 

four days ere I set forth — iv. i 

the king himself in person is set forth — iv. 1 

the prince of Wales stepped forth before — v. 2 

is walked forth into the orchard iHeyirylV. i. 1 

go forth; and none of this, though .. — i. 1 

this bold enterprize brought fortli . . — i. 1 

come, we will all put forth — i. 1 

thousand pound, to furnish me forth? — i. 2 

that you already have sent forth .... — iii. 1 

and send discovers forth, to know. ... — iv. 1 

how far forth you do like their articles? — iv. 2 

but jjeace puts forth her olive — iv. 4 

to bring forth so great an object . . Henry V. i. (cho.) 

and to put forth my tightful hand. . — i. 2 

but, till the king come forth, and not — ii. (cho.) 

fetch forth the lazar kite — ii. 1 

then, forth, dear countrymen — ii. 2 

and of Orleans, shall make forth . . — ii. 4 

'tis meet we all go forth, to view . . — ii. 4 

now, forth, lord constable, and princes — iii. 5 

for forth he goes, and visits aU — iv. (cho.) 

go forth, and fetch their conquering — v. (cho.) 

put fortli disordered twigs — v. 2 

brought sweetly forth the freckled . . — v. 2 

would call forth her flowing tides 1 Henry VI. i. I 

it sendeth forth to skirmish — i. 2 

drive the English forth the bounds . . — i. 2 

a deal of old iron I chose forth — i. 2 

bring forth the body of old Salisbury — ii. 2 

makes him roar these accusations forth — iii. 1 

dare you come forth, and meet us . . — iii. 2 

calls you forth, servant in arms — iv. 2 

o'ermatchcd forces forth for aid — iv. 4 

our captains, and our colours, fortli. . — v. 3 

bring forth that sorceress, condemned — v. 4 

contrary brin^eth forth bliss — v. 5 

put forth thy hand, reach at the 'IHenry VI. i. 2 

stand forth, dame Eleanor Cobliam. . — ii. 3 

bring forth the soldiers of our prizes — iv. 1 

duly waited for my coming fortli? .. — iv. I 

to shoot fortli thunder upon these paltry iv. 1 

come forth and fight with me! v. 2 

ere the writs go forth v. 3 

and issue forth, and bid them battle.SHoiri/ VI. i. 2 

may bring forth a bird that will _ i. 4 

how he singled CliiFord forth — ii. 1 

his father's fortunes forth of France ii. 2 

by the king was I pressed forth _ ii. .5 

when his leaves put forth ii. 6 

bring forth that fatal scritcli-owl .... — ii. 6 

bring fortli tlie gallant, let us — v. 5 

yet brought forth less than v. 6 

that let forth thy life Richard III. i. 2 

and let the soul forth that adoreth . . — i. 2 

stolen forth of holy writ i. 3 

and would not let it forth to seek _ i. 4 

are you called forth from out — i. 4 

not barren to bring forth laments — ii. 2 

may send fortli plenteous tears — ii. 2 

come, bring forth the prisoners iii. 3 

yet to draw forth your noble ancestry — iii. 7 

from forth the kennel of thy womb.. — iv. 4 

to breakfast once, forth of my company — iv. 4 

I will lead forth my soldiers to the plain — v. 3 

vomits forth to desperate ventures .. v. 3 

stand forth; and with bold spirit ..HenryVIII. i. 2 

to-day he puts forth the tender leaves — iii. 2 

no sun shall ever usher forth mine . . — iii. 2 

embalm me, then lay me forth _ iv. 2 

may stand forth face to face — v. 2 



[ 278 ] 

FORTH-forth toward Phrygia. TroiVMs ^Crtss. (prol.) 

I think, he went not forth to-day . . — i. 2 

[Kn/.] youth, liberality, and so forth — i. 2 

liimself bring the praise forth — i. 3 

as 'twere from forth usall — i.3 

when thou art forth in tile incm'sions — ii. 1 

Cressid come forth to him! — v. 2 

shrills her dolours forth! behold — v. 3 

we'll forth, and fight; do deeds worth — v. 3 
when comes your book forth? .. Timon of Athens, i. 1 

power this eye slioots forth! — i. 1 

an eagle flignt, bold, and forth on . . — i. 1 

we'll forth again, my Alcibiades .. .. — ii. 2 

is my lord ready to come forth? — iii. 4 

from fortli thy plenteous bosom — iv. 3 

break forth a hundred springs — iv. 3 

and send forth to us, to make — v. 2 

and cull the infected forth — v. 5 

siglied forth proverbs; that, hunger.. Cor/o/ri/ms,i. I 

and throw forth greater themes — i. 1 

your valour puts well forth — i. 1 

of their powers are forth already .... — i. 2 

then wiping, forth he goes — i. 3 

when it spit forth blood at Grecian . . — i. 3 

indeed, I will not fortli. In truth — i.3 

the Volsces have an army forth — i.3 

our drums are briuging torth om' youth — i. 4 

but issue forth their city — i. 4 

to be ta'eu fortli, before the common — i. 9 

you shout me forth in acclamations.. — i. 9 

to give forth the corn o' the storehouse — iii. 1 

if tlie time tiirust forth a cause — iv. 1 

when I am fortli, bid me farewell — iv. 1 

if he had gone forth consul — iv. 6 

thrusts forth his horns again — iv. ti 

lest I let forth your half pint of blood — v. 2 

that brought you forth this boy — v. 3 

no, I am promised forth JuUvjiCn-mr, i. 2 

that brings fortli the adder — ii. 1 

wlie'r Cossar will come forth to-day.. — ii. 1 

to walk forth? youshallnot stir (if/).) — ii. 2 

blaze forth the death of princes — ii. 2 

to stir forth to day; plucking (rep.) .. — ii. 2 

and Cassar shall go forth — ii. 2 

do not go forth to-day — ii. 2 

look well, for he went sickly forth .. — ii. 4 

then walk we forth, even to the — iii. 1 

what, shall we forth? — iii. 1 

as fast as they stream forth thy blood — iii. 1 

to wander forth of doors (jep.) — iii. 3 

and trained, and bid go forth — iv. I 

for, from this day forth, I'll use — iv. 3 

be'st a Roman, take it forth — iv. 3 

make forth, the generals would have — v. 1 

why didst thou send me forth — v. 3 

O, then we bring forth weeds .intony <$■ Cleo. i. 2 

brings forth a new petticoat — i. 2 

no vessel can peep forth — i. 4 

thy freer thoughts may not fly forth — i. .5 

and breathless, power breathe forth.. — ii. 2 

to brill" forth some monstrous — ii. 5 

did witTdiold our breaking forth _ iii, 6 

and throes forth, each minute — iii. 7 

kings would start forth, and cry — iii. 11 

call forth my household servants .... — iv. 2 

he ^oes forth gaUautl.v — iv. 4 

fo iorth, Agrippa, and begin the fight — iv. 6 

is force is forth to man his galleys . . — iv. 10 

whose e3'e becked forth my wars .... — iv. 10 

your deatli will never let come forth — v. 2 

shall be brought drunken forth — v. 2 

were but riding forth to air yourself.. Cj/in6e((;!e, i. 2 

our stern daughter? will she not forth? — ii. 3 

but from this time forth I wear it.... — iii. 4 

did make my way long forth — iv. 2 

step you forth; give answer to ■ — v. 5 

call forth your soothsayer — \.!> 

point thy two sons forth — v. 5 

till from forth this place I lead TitusAndron. i. 2 

are singled forth to try experiments. . — ii. 3 

I poured forth tears in vain — ii. 3 

is torn from forth that prett.y hollow — iii. 1 

may utter forth the venomous — v. 3 

on the ragged stones beat forth our brains — v. 3 

but throw Tier forth to beasts — v. 3 

to trumpet forth my infamy Pericles, i. 1 

put forth to seas, where when men — ii. (Gowert 
disgorges such a tempest forth. . . . — ill. (Gower) 

pom-ea forth your charity — iii. 2 

walk forth with Leonine — iv. 1 

well ; call forth, call forth — iv. 6 

yet I was mortally brought forth — v. 1 

but brought forth a maid-child — v. 3 

breaking forth in rank and not to be Lear, i. 4 

fetch forth the stocks, ho! (rep.) — ii. 2 

panting forth from Goneril — ii. 4 

give me my servant forth — ii. 4 

bid them come forth and hear me — ii. 4 

followed the old man forth — ii. 4 

grumble there i'the straw? come forth .. — iii. 4 

which since his coniin" forth is thought.. — iv. 3 

heaved the name of fatlierpantingly forth — iv. 3 

a century send forth, searcn every acre . . — iv. 4 

but are my brother's powers set forth ? . . — iv. 5 

from forth the fatal loins Romeo ^ Juliet, (prol.) 

peered forth the golden window — i. 1 

call her forth to me — i.3 

from forth day's pathway — ii. 3 

Romeo, come forth; come forth — iii. 3 

than thou went'st forth in lamentation — iii. 3 

tliey are all forth: well, I will walk.. — iv. 2 

for shame, bring Juliet forth — iv. 5 

would not let us forth ; so that my speed — v. 2 

bring fortli the parties of suspicion . . — v. 3 

and 1 entreated her come forth — v. 3 

coldly furnish forth the marriage tables. Hamlet, i. 2 

from this time forth, have you so slander — i.3 

it waves me forth again; I'll follow it — i. 4 

forth at your eyes your spirits wildly — iii. 4 

0, from tills time tbrth, my thoughts — iv. 4 



FORTH— I pray you, sir, go forth Othello, ii. 1 

forth, my sword; he dies — v. 1 

forth of my heart those charms — v. 1 

uncle, I must come forth. If thou attempt — v. 2 

that viper? bring the villain forth — v. 2 

from this time forth I never will speak . . — v. 2 

FORTHCOMING— 
see, that he be forthcoming . . Taming of Shrew, v. I 
your trinkets here all forthcoming ..iHenryVI. i. 4 
your lady is forthcoming yet at London — ii. I 

FORTHRIGHT— through forthrights.. Tempest, iii. 3 
and master Fortliright the tiltev.. Mea. for Mea.iv. 3 
aside from the direct forthriglit. Troilus <j- Cress, iii. 3 

FORTHWITH-meet me forthwith. A/cr. of Venice,!. 3 
we will hence forthwith to feast.. Taming of Sh.iv. 3 

to come to me forthwith — v. 2 

bear me forthwith unto his creditor. Com. of Err, iv. 4 

for you must part forthwith Richard II. v. 1 

forthwith a power of English shall ..\ Henry IV. i. 1 
in France forthwith I am to make . . 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

go victual Orleans forthwith — i. 5 

and now forthwith shall articles %Hcnry VI. iii. 3 

to him forthwith in holy wedlock bands — iii. 3 
see that forthwith duke Edward be . . — iv. 3 
I'll hence forthwith unto the sanctuarj' — iv. 4 
forthwith that Edward be pronoimced — iv. 6 

forthwith we'll send him hence — iv. 6 

forthwith from Ludlow the young. Richard III. ii. 2 

shall be acquainted forthwith Hejiry VIII. ii. 2 

that forthwith you be conveyed — v. 2 

of it forthwith to Agamemnon . . Troilus fyCress. i. 3 
for him forthwith, ere the first sacrifice — iv. 2 



shall forthwith be closed Titus Andro 

commission will forthwith despatch . . Hamlet, iii. 3 
I will be returned forthwith Othello, iv. 3 

FORTIFICATION-this fortification.... _ iu. 2 

FORlIFIED-he's fortified against. TwelfthNiglU, i. 5 

hath won, that hath he fortified King John, iii. 4 

we are w ell fortified, and strong .... 1 Henry VI. iv. 2 
so fortified against our story Hamlet, i. 1 

FORTIFIES- he strongly fortifies Macbeth, v. 2 

FORTIFY- we fortify in paper 2HenryIV. i. 3 

fortify it strongly 'gainst the Trench. Henry V. iii. 3 
view the Frenenmen how they fortify. lHe;n!/K/.i. 4 

and therefore fortify your hold iHem-y VI. i. 2 

be it but to ibrtity her judgment Cymbeline, i. 5 

FORTINBRAS- Fortinbras of Norway. .Hamtef, i. 1 
did slay this Fortinbras; who, by a sealed — i. 1 

to the inheritance of Fortinbras . — i. 1 

now, sir, young Fortinbras, of unimproved — i. 1 

you know, young Fortinbras : — i. 2 

Norway, uncle of young Fortinbras, who — i. 2 
sends out arrests on Fortinbras, which he — ii. 2 

Fortinbras craves the conveyance of — iv. 4 

the nephew to old Norway, Fortinbras. . — iv. 4 
that our last king overcame Fortinbras. . — v. 1 

young Fortinbras, with conquest come — v. 2 

the election lights on Fortinbras — v. 2 

FORTITUDE— a fortitude from heaven. Tempest^ i. 2 
courage, fortitude, Ihave no relish. ....Wac6e(A,iv. 3 
despairing of his own arm's fortitude. 1 Henry VI. ii. I 
(out of a fortitude of soul I feel) . . . Henry VII I. iii. 2 
Othello, the fortitude of the place is best. Othello, i. 3 

FORTNIGHT -a fortnight nhie.... Merry mves, i. 1 
a fortnight hold we this solemnity... M/d.JV. Dr. v. I 
bespeak him for a fortnight before. Jl/er. ofVen. iii. I 
fortnight, been a banished woman. ..IH^nry/K ii. 3 
majesty hath been this fortnight i\\.2HenryIV. iii. I 

ere a fortnight make me older Richard III. iii. i 

they have had inkling, this fortnight. Conoteiius.i. I 

within a fortnight? what's the matter Lear, i. 4 

a fortnight, and odd days Romeo ^Juliet, i. 3 

FORTRESS-fortresB, built by nature. R/c/.ajd //. ii. 1 

God is our fortress ; in whose 1 Henry VI. ii. 1 

to batter the fortress of it ...Antony ^Cleopatra, iii. 2 

FORTRESSES— fifty fortresses 1 Henry VI. iii. 4 

FORTUNA— fortuna della guerra. . Love'sL. Lost. v. 2 
si fortuna me tormenta, sperato 2HenryIV. ii. 4 

FORTUNATE-the Fortunate. r-we(//A A', ii. .'5 (letter) 
deserve as full, as fortunate a bed . ..Much Ado, iii. 1 
hung upon witli love, so fortunate .Mid. N. Dr. iii. 2 
there create, ever shall be fortunate.. — v. 2 
should questionless be fortunate . . Mer. of Venice, i. 1 

bless you my fortunate lady! AWsWell, ii. 4 

fortunate mistress, let my prophecy. Winter's T. iv. 3 

nothing so strong and fortunate \HenryIV. v. 1 

shalt be fortunate, if thou receive \Henry VI. i. 2 

and France be fortunate! — v. 2 

for thou art fortunate in all thy . . ..ZHenry VI. iv. 6 
well-minded Clarence, be thou fortunate — iv. 8 
most fortunate, thus accidentally. . . Coriolanus, iy. 3 

a vision fair, and fortunate .JuliusCcesar,n. 2 

as he was fortunate, I rejoice at it.... — iii. 2 
wheeled seat of fortunate C^ssir.Aniany ^ Cleo. iv. 1 2 
Britain be fortunate (rep.^ v. 5) Cymbeline, v. 4 (scroll) 
less gracious, thee more fortunate. 7"(7it;f.4ndroH.ii. I 

FOR'TUNATELY -fortunately iaet..Mid. N.Dr. iv. 1 
who hath most fortunately been informed. Loir, ii. i 
most fortunately : he hath achieved Oiliello, ii. 1 

FORTUNE— bountiful fortune Tempest, i. 2 

my fortunes will ever after droop — i.2 

thou let'at thy fortune sleep, die rather . . — ii. I 
content tender your own good fortune? ... — ii. 1 

for all is but fortune — v. I 

to try their fortune there.... Two Gen. of Verona, \. 3 
me with him, partner of his fortune.. — i.3 

I read your fortune in your eye — ii. 4 

do want my servant's fortune — iii . 1 

if crooked fortune had not thwarted rae — iv. 1 

nothing but my fortune — iv. 1 

which heaven and fortune still — iv. 3 

good bringing up, fortune, and truth — iv. 4 

that flies her fortune when it — v. 2 

no worse fortune! Merry Wives, i. 4 

not knit a knot in his fortunes — iii. 2 

if fortune thy foe were not — iii. 3 

now heaven send thee good fortune! — iii. 4 
master's fortune to have her or no (rep.) — iv. .5 
to call his fortunes thine Tuclflh Mghl, i. 4 



FOR 



[ 279 ] 



FORTUNE— aboTe in.v forluiies (rep.). Twtljlh S. 1. 5 

fortune forbid, my outfliilu Iwtve — li. '2 

tlic i>iirts thiit fortune halli bestowed — 11.4 

T l\i>l(l IIS .;i<lilily as fortune — ii. 4 

'tis but t'urtiiiiCi oil in fortune — ii. 5 

my lortiiiKs liavinR cast me on — ii. 5 

than fortunes before you — ii. 5 

not worthy to touch fortune's tingers — ii. & (let.) 

build me tliy fortunes npoii the basis — iii. 2 

well for a servant with my fortunes. . — iii. 4 

and fliio<l of fortune so far exceed .... — iv. 3 

take thy fortunes lip — v. 1 

of place, time, fortune, do cohere — v. 1 

all the occurrence of my fortune since — v. 1 
the flesh and fortune shall better.. .Ufa. /u/- .Vcn.ii. 1 

fortune hath conveyed to my — iji. I 

of her fortune, her "niurriagc-dowry.. — iii. 1 

more than thanks and good fortune .. — iv. 2 

to try her gracious fortune with lord — v. 1 

end with her my fortunes Jl/nc/i Ado, ii. 1 

is the gift of fortune — iii. 3 

given way unto this course of fortune.. — iv. 1 

nor fortune made such havock — iv. 1 

fortunes every way as fairly ranked..Wi</.A'.'iDr. i. 1 

to my fortunes anil me Love*sL.Losl, ii. 1 

I thank my fortune for it Merchant of Venice, i. ! 

U(Hin the fortune of this present year — i. 1 

that alt my fortunes arc at sea — i. 1 

abundance as your good fortunes are — i. '2 

to try my fortnnc — ii. 1 

may turn by fortime from the weaker — ii. 1 

blind fortune leading me — ii. 1 

good fortune then! — ii. I 

rare fortune! here comes the mail.. — ii. 2 

1 shall hare good fortune — ii. 2 

well, if fortune be a woman — ii. 2 

and if my fortune be not crost — ii. 5 

in fortunes, in graces, and in qualities — ii. 7 

if I do fail in fortune of my choice — ii. 9 

fortune now to my heart's hoi)c! .... — ii. 9 

go about to cozen fortune — ii. 9 

and instantly unlock my fortunes here — ii. 9 

let fortune go to hell for it — iii. 2 

me to my fortune and the caskets — .iii. 2 

continent and summary of my fortune — iii. 2 

since this fortune falls to you — iii. 2 (scroll) 

and hold your fortune for your bliss — iii. 2 (scroll) 

your fortune stood upon the caskets — iii. 2 

provided that your fortune achieved her — iii. 2 

Tor herein fortune shows herself more — iv. I 

I will ^o buy ray fortunes Ai you Like it, i. 1 

mock the good housewife, Fortune . . — i. 2 

thou poest from fortune's office ^rep.') — i. 2 

mav she not by fortune fall into the fire? — i. 2 

to flout at fortune, hath not fortune sent — i. 2 

is fortune too hard for nature (rep.) ,. — 1. 2 

this is not fortune's work neither — i. 2 

as wit and fortune will — i. 2 

one out of suits with fortune — i. 2 

my pride fell with my fortunes — i. 2 

translate the stubbornness of fortune — ii. 1 

inany their fortunes seek — ii. 3 

fortime cannot recompense me better — ii. 3 

my fortunes were more able to relieve — ii. 4 

railed on lady Fortune in good terms — ii. 7 

till heaven hath sent me fortune .... — ii. 7 

to cjuestion you about your fortimes.. — ii. 7 

the residue of your fortune — ii. 7 

all your fortunes understand — ii. 7 

he comes arm^^d in his fortune — iv. 1 

what straits of fortiuie nhe is driven . . — v. 2 

share the good of our returned fortune — v. 4 
the mightiest space in fortune nature. ..Jd'sTt//, i. 1 

have fought wi*h oqual fortune — i. 2 

fortune, she said, was no goddess — i. 3 

love made your fortunes twenty — ii. 3 

in your bed find fairer fortune — ii. 3 

do thine own fortunes that obedient.. — ii. 3 

good fortune, and the favour of — ii. 3 

to have mine own good fortunes — ii. 4 

failed to equal my great fortune — ii. 5 

upon thy promising fortune — iii. 3 

fortune play upon thy prosperous helm — iii. 3 

approves yon are great in fortune — iii. 7 

muddied in fortune's moat (rep.) — v. 2 

if her fort\mcs ever stood uecessitied — v. 3 

to mine own fortune — v. 3 

deck his fortune with his virtuous. ramiHg-o/SA. i. 1 

their fortunes further than at home.. — i. 2 

by good fortune, I have lighted — 1.2 

my fortune lives for me — i. 2 

whatever fortune stays him from _ iii. 2 

not the worst of all your fortunes — iv. 2 

the fouler fortune mine — v. 2 

put my fortunes to yonr service . . If'inter's Talc, i. 2 

as by strange fortune it cume to us . . — ii. 3 

quit his fortimes here — iii. 2 

which may, if fortune please — iii. 3 

lady fortune stand you auspicious! — iv. 3 
myself, and fortune, try for the time — iv. 3 

my fortunes do all lie there — iv. 3 

fortune sixfcd us? — iv. 3 

1 see, fortune would not suffer me — iv. 3 

though fortune, visible an enemy .... v. 1 

in the blossoms of their fortune — v. 2 

fortune had left to both of us alike.Com«i/y o/ J?r. i. 1 

my fortune, and my sweet hope's _ iii. 2 

to this fortune that you see me in — V. 1 

at large discoursed oil our fortunes .. — v. 1 

and fortune, on his damned quarrel Macbeth, i. 2 

disilaining fortune, with his brandished — i. 2 

our separated fortune shall keep — ii. 3 

which held you so under fortune .... — iii. 1 

tugged with fortune, that I would set — iii. 1 

nialcvolence of fortune nothing takes — iii. 6 

let me And him, fortune! — v. 7 

wilt thou forsake thy fortune King John, i. I 

good fortune come t<i tlicci — i. 1 

•old their fortunes at their native .... — ii. > 

a hazard of De^r fortunes here — ii. 1 



FORTUNE— fbrtune shall cull {otlh..K>ngJohn, Ii. 2 

nature and fortune joined to make .. — iii. I 

but fortune, O! she IS corrupted — iii. 1 

France is a bawd to fortune — ill. I 

thou fortune's champion — iii. I 

thy fortune, and thy strength? — iii. I 

I may not wisli the fortune thine — iii. I 

fortune lies. There where my fortune — jii. 1 

when fortune means t" men most .... — iii. 4 

with fortune otlici- lliiiij at feasts .... — v. 2 

so be thy fortune in tliis royal Richard II. i. 3 

however heaven, or fortune, cast .... — 13 

patient underbeoring of his fortune.. — i. 4 

rii)e in fortune's womb, is coming — ii. 2 

as my fortune ripens with thy love.. — ii. 3 

till my infant fortune comes to years — ii. 3 

to thy good all fortune goes — ii. 4 

a prince, by fortune of my birth .... — iii. 1 

thy joys, friends, fortune, and thy state — iii. 2 

and that my fortune runs against .. — iii. 4 

their fortunes both are weighed — iii. 4 

uot the first of fortune's slaves — y. S 

who is sweet fortune's minion \Henry If.i. 1 

for the fortune of us, that are — i. 2 

when this infant fortune came to age — i. 3 

to bear our fortunes in our own strong — _ i. 3 

to see how fortune is disposed to us . . — iv. 1 

utmost bound of all our fortunes — — iv. 1 

wherein the fortune of ten thousand — iv. 4 

H rained down fortune showering — v. 1 

try fortune with him in a single fight — v. 1 

and I embrace this fortune patiently — v. 5 

when he saw the fortune of the day.. — v. 6 
in the fortune of my lordj'our son ..iHenrylV. i. 1 

dignify the times since Caesar's fortunes! — _i. 1 

may the wench have no worse fortune! — ii. 2 

to ripe his growing fortunes — iv. 1 

whom fortune would then have smiled? — iv. 1 

ready are to try our fortunes — iv. 2 

will fortune never come with both . . — iv. 4 

not take a knighthood for my fortune — v. 3 

what thou wilt, I am fortune's steward — v. 3 
giddy fortune's furious fickle wheel . . Henry V. iii. 6 

fortune is i)ainted plind — iii. 8 

of fortune; fortune, look you (rep.) .. — iii. 6 

meschante fortune! do not run away — iv. 5 
doth fortune play the huswife with. . — v. 1 
fortune made his sword; by which — v. 2 (cho.) 
Ca;sar and his fortune bare at once ..WenryVl.y. 2 
cowardly knight! ill fortune follow thee! — ii.i. 2 
fortune, in favour, makes him lag . . — iii. 3 
no more ray fortune can, but curse . . — iv. 3 
betrayed to fortune by your strife . . — iv. 4 
commit them to the fortune of the sea — v. 1 
or to exclaim on fortune's fickleness — y. 3 

my part in fortune's pageant iWenryVI.K. 2 

his fortunes I will weep; and, 'twixt — iji. 1 

witness the fortune he hath had .... — iii. ' 

thy fortune, York, hadst tliou been.. — iji. 1 

try what your fortune is — iii. 1 

the bottom of all our fortunes — v. 2 

this breach now in our fortunes made _ v. 2 

their day, aud them our fortune give — Y" ^ 
their woes, whom fortune captivates. 3Hen)y V^-}.- ■* 

which promigeth successful fortune.. — ij* 2 

leave us to our fortime (rep.) — if- 2 

bide the mortal fortune of the field? — ii- 2 

father's fortunes forth of France — ij- 2 

or fortune given me measure of revenge — ij- -^ 

good fortune bids us pause, and smooth — ij- J 

take like Beat unto my fortune 

yield not thy neck to fortune's yoke 
than myself have had like fbrtune . 
though fortune's malice overthrow . 

1 may conquer fortune's spite irep.) 

and avoiding, fortune's malice 

for on thy fortune I repose myself , 

thus far fortune maketh us amends. . — iv- 7 

I'll leave you to your fortune — iv- 7 

if fortune serve me, I'll requite — iv 7 

thus far our fortune keeps — v. 3 

with patience to my fortune — v. S 

vain flourish of my fortune! Rich'inl III. i. 3 

for he bewept my fortune, aud hugged — i. ^ 

chide my fortune, and torment myself? — ii. - 

your state of fortune, and your due.. — iii. ^ 

the right and fortune of his happy stars — iii. 7 

you v?ill buckle fortune on my back — iii. ' 

Richmond, and good fortune guide thee! — iv. ' 

vain flourish of my fortune — iv. 4 

and height of fortune [Co(.-honour] . . — iv. * 

heaven, and fortune, bar me happy. . — iv. 4 

fortune and victory sit on thy helm! — v. 3 

and put tliy fortune to the arbitrement — v. 3 

thus far we are one in fortunes Henry VIII. ii. 1 

the least rub in your fortunes — ii. • 

like the eldest son of fortune, turns. . — ii. 2 

when the greatest stroke of fortune falls — ii. 2 

yet, if that quarrel, fortune, do divorce — ii. 3 

(fye, fye upon this compelled fortune!) — ii.-' 

you have by fortune, and his highness' — ii. 4 

where are now your f^irtuncs? — iii.' 

in spite of fortune will bring me off. . — iii. 8 

followed both my fortunes faithfully — iv. 2 
is not found in fortime's love..7'roi(uf ^Cressitla, i. 3 

divide in storms of fortune — i. ? 

returns to chiding fortune — i. 3 

do a deed that fortune never did — ii. 2 

conveniences, to doubtful fortimes .. — iii. 3 

once fallen out with fortune — iii. 3 

fortune and I are friends 

creep in skittish fortune's hall 

sweet love is food for fortune's tooth 

and the foolish fortune of this girl .. — v. 

till when, go seek thy fortune — v 

his large fortune, upon his good. 'Amon af.Uheni,i 

feigned Fortune to be throned — j. 

whom Fortune with her ivory hand — i. 

this Fortune, and this hill, methinks — i 

when Fortune in her sliift and change — >■ 



- t^ 

— iv- 3 



— iv-tJ 



— iii. 3 



FOR 



FORTUNE-quick blows of fortune. r/munqAJM. 1. 1 

to build his fortune, I will strain - i. ( 

that state or fortune fall into my — 1. I 

long may he live in fortunes! — i. 1 

are yc to my fortunes, than my fortunes — i. 2 

commanding one another's fortunes! — i. 2 

honour, and fortunes, keep with you — i. 2 

and men's fortune-i. ironld I frankly use — Ii. 2 

how von inistiike iiiy fortunes — ii. 2 

that 'riioon's lortunrs 'niong his friends — ii. t 

it pleases time, and fortune, to lie heavy — iii. & 

you fools of fortune, trencher-friends — iii. 6 

to take his fortune by the arm — iv. 2 

familiars to his buried fortunes — iv. 2 

a knell unto our master's fortunes .. — iv. 2 

thy great fortunes are made thy chief — iv. 2 

touch them with several fortunes — iv. 3 

can bear great fbrtune, but by — iv. 3 

for every gri/.e of fortune la smoothed — iv. 3 

but in thy fortunes am unlearned . . — iv. 3 

but for thy sword and fortune — iv. 3 

sprung from change of fortune — iv. 3 

whom Fortune's tender arm with — iv. 3 

oft'ering the fortunes of his former days — v. 2 
the followers fortune widens them . .'Coriolanus, i. 4 

now the fair goddess. Fortune, fall deep — i. i 

that he would pawn his fortunes — iii. I 

this man has marred his fortune — iii. I 

else would j)ut you to your fortune.. — iii. 2 

where my fortunes, and my friends. . — iii. 2 

fortune's blows, when most — iv. I 

to i>rove more fortunes thou art tired — iv. 5 

which out of daily fortune ever taints — iv. 7 

I purpose not to wait on fortune — v. 3 

I'll work nij'sclf a former fortune — v. 3 

put in mind of his blind fortune .... — v. .^ 
follow the fortunes and affairs . . JulinsCceiar, iii. 1 

joy, for his fortune; honour, for his — iii. 2 

fortune is merry, and in this mood will — iii. 2 

taken at the flood, leads on to fortune — . iv. 3 

we shall try fortune in a second fight — v. 3 
good sir, give me good fortune . . Antony frCleo. i. 2 

good now, some excellent fortune! .. — i. 2 

proved a fairer former fortune — i. 2 

all our fortunes. Mine, and most (jep.^l — i. 2 

but a working-day fortune (rep.) — i. 2 

of fortune better than she (?ep.) .... — i. 2 

come, his fortune, his fortune — i. 2 

and fortune him accordingly! Amen — i. 2 

make thee a fortune from thee — ii. .*> 

and make thy fortunes proud: the blow — ii. ^ 

to try a larger fortune. You have made — ii. 6 

what counts harsh fortune easts — ii. H 

this day laugh away his fortune — ii. 6 

held my cap oft' to thy fortunes — ii. 7 

follow thy palled fortunes more ii. 7 

now pleased fortune does of Marcus — iii. 1 

good fortune, worthy soldier iii. 2 

our fortune lies upon this jump — iii. 8 

our fortune on the sea is out of breath — iii. S 

making, and mnning fortunes iii. 9 

fortime knows, we scorn her most — iii. !• 

lord of his fortunes he salutes thee — iii. 10 

fortune pursue thee! Bring him — iii. 10 

are not, in their best fortunes, strong — iii. Id 

judgments are a parcel of their fortunes — iii. 10 

of his fortunes you should make a staff — iii. II 

wisdom and fortune combating together — iii. 1 1 

being twenty times of better fortune — iv. 2 

if fortune be not ours to-day — iv. 4 

my fortunes liave corrupted honest men — iv. 4 

his fretted fortunes give him hope .. — iv. !0 

fortune and Antony part here — iv. 10 

her fortunes mingled with thine entirely — iv. 12 

death and fortunes bid thy followers fly — iv. 12 

that the false housewife Fortune break — iv. 13 

those my former fortunes wherein .. — iv. 13 

not being fortune, he's but fortune's — v. 2 

I am his fortune's vassal — v. 2 

for his fortunes all lie speechless Cymbeline. i. 6 

(O giglot fortune !) to master Cffisar's — iii. 1 

as low, as were thy fortunes — iii. 2 

a thing the most disdained of fortune — iii. 4 

a mind dark as your fortune is — iii. 4 

stuck to the bare fortune of that beggar — iii. .') 

not beneath him in fortunes — iv. 1 

fortune, put them into my hand! — iv. 1 

inform us of thy fortunes — iv. 2 

fortune brings in some boats that — iv. 3 

Ills full fortune doth confine — v. 4 

to my fortunes, and the people's . . Tilus .indron. i. I 

honour and with fortune is returned — i. 2 

whose fortiuies Rome's bestcitizens.. — i. 2 

your fortunes are alike in all — i. 2 

wisdom hath her fortune conquered — i. 2 

safe out of fortune's shot — ii. I 

had you not by wondrous fortune come — ii. 3 

tliine. bcfal what fortune will — v. 3 

till fortune, tired of doing bad. . Pericles, ii. (Gower) 

bereft a prince of all his fortunes — ii. 1 

did but my fortunes equal my desires — ii. 1 

thanks, fortune, yet that after all — ii- 1 

if that ever my low fortunes better . . — ii. I 

by you his fortunes yet may flourish — ii. 2 

more by fortune, lady, than my merit — ii. 3 

all fortune to the good Simonidcsl . . — ii. S 
but fortune's mood [K(i«.-fortune moved] 

varies again -^ iii. (Gower) 

it is a good constraint of fortune .... — iii. 2 

your shafts of fortune — iii. 3 

yon have fortunes coming upon you — iv. 3 

stood between her and her fortunes . . — iv. 4 
to be ordered bv lady fortune .. — iv. 4 (Gower) 

most ungentle fortune hatli nlace<l . . — iv. 

though wayward fortune did malign — v. 'i 

ray fortunes— parentage— good parentage — V. I 

her fortunes brought the raaid aboard — v. 3 
although assailed with fortune fierce — v. 3 (Gower) 

lest it mav mar your fortunes Leor, i. 1 

respects of' fortime arc his love — i. 1 



FOR 



[ 280 ] 



FOU 



FORTUNE-received you at fortune salms. W,i. I 

keeps oiu- fortunes from us — i; '= (.leiiw ' 

when we are sick in fortune.. — i- ' 

briefness, aud fortune, work'. — !;• 

a good man's fortune may grow out - "• ^ 

rSrtune, goodnight; smile once more .. - i-^ 
Fortune,t1mt arrant wliore, ne er tm-ns. . - »• ^ 
make content witli his fortunes fit - lu. I (song) 
how malicious is my fortune .... ••■••■■• — ',"• •. 

lowest, and most dejected thmg of fortune - v. 1 
if thou wilt weep my fortunes .. .......... — | v. o 

I am even the natural fool of fortune .... - jv. b 

made tame by fortune's blows ■••••••••• — i;- ° 

first framedllesh to raise my fortunes.... - v. b 

lest that the infection ot his fortune take - iv. 6 
machination ceases: fortune love you! .. — \-\ 
could else outfrown false fortune s trown — v. J 

make thy way to noble fortunes — ;v. i 

and fortune led you well — ^- ^ 

sword, and fire-new fortune. . : ..... . . .... — ^- " 

but what art thou, tliat hast this fortune - Z-x 
if fortune brag of two she loved and hated - \-% 
mine own fortune in my mis_ery..i?om«o gfJuhel,}. - 
dii mv fnrtunes at thy toot I lUay . . — !;• - 

iii'. 1 



ii. 1 
iii. 1 

iii. 1 



iii'. 1 
iii. 2 
Iii. 2 



i. 3 
i. 3 
ii. 1 



iii. 3 
iii. 4 



all my fortunes at thy toot 

hie to high fortune ! honest nurse .... 

O; lam fortxme's fool! Why dost.. 

pout'st upon thy fortune and thy love - lu. 

O fortune, fortune! all men call thee — ui. 

be fickle, fortune; for then, I hope .. — i|!' 

in her fortune's tender, to answer . . — in 

unhappy fortime! by my brotherhood - | 

beiu" nature's livery, or fortune s star . . Hamlet,! 

fortune's cap we are not the very button — u 

in the secret parts of fortune? — !! 

deserved at the hands of fortune 

out, out. thou strumpet Fortune! ........ 

'gainst fortune's state would treason have 

stings and arrows of outrageous fortune.. 

a man, that fortune's buffeisand rewards 

not a pipe for fortune's finger to sound .. 

even our loves should with our fortunes.. — ii;- ^ 

love lead fortune, or else fortune love. . . . - in- - 

hitherto doth love on fortune tend — ii'- J 

if the rest of mv fortunes turn Turk .... — m- ^ 

for thy better; take thy fortune — ni. 4 

to all that fortune, death, and danger .... — iv. i 
the queen carouses to thy fortune, Hamlet — v. ^ 

with sorrow I embrace my fortune — Y- ' 

what a full fortune does the thick-lips . . Othello, i. 

beauty, wit, and fortunes, in an..... — ;■ ' 

to as proud a fortune as this that I have — i- f 
thebattles, sieges, fortunes, that I have.. — i. J 
cannot be preserved when fortune takes. . — ;. o 
slubber Uie gloss of your new fortunes .. — ' -^ 

■violence and storm of fortunes 

did I mv sold and fortune consecrate . . . . 
so eminently in the degree of this fortune 
fortunes against any lay worth naming. . 

I am desperate of my fortunes. 

plies Desdemona to repair his fortunes . . 

down the wind, to prey at fortune 

founded his good fortune on your love . . 
some other course, to fortune's alms. ..... 

would bear your fortunes [Kn/.-iortuneJ 

it is my wTetched fortune 

knows not vet of his honourable lortune 

it expressed lier fortune, and she died .... — '■•■■' 

I found by fortune, and did give my .... — v. ^ 

seize upon the fortunes of the Moor ......— v. j 

FORTUNED-what hath fortuned. Tiro Gen.of f er. v. 4 
FORTUNE-TELL— fortune-tell you.. Wctt.vI^'. IV. 2 
FORTXJN E-TELLER— a tlrread-bare juggler, 

an d a fortune-teller Comedy af hrrors, V. 1 

FORTUNE-TELLING— 

the profession of fortune-tellmg . . MerryWives, iv. 2 

FORTY— had rather than forty shillings — .?. i 

I had ratlier than fortv shillings. Twelfth Night, ii. 3 

I had rather than forty pound ......— v- i 

and, I think, forty more. . Measure for Measure, iv, i 
round about the earth in forty. Mid. N. s Dremn,i\. I 
humour of forty fancies pricked. Taming ofkh. lU. i 
of April, forty thousand fathom. Winter s Tale, iv. 6 
of mine wortli forty ducats . . Comedy of Errors, iv. i 
for forty ducats is too much to lose .. — ^\- % 
I have learned these forty years .... Kichard l,.\. i 

king's name forty [Co(. twenty] thousand — in. i 
my grandfather's worth forty mark. 1 Henri/ /r. _iu. i 
threeorfourbondsof forty pound .. — i"- ? 

forty let it be; my father — "• ' 

you shall have forty, sir iHenrylV. in. 2 

i will have forty moys...... \"""'^>^^rW 

I myself fight not once m forty years.l HemyVI.i. 3 

is it' hitter? forty pence, no Henry Vin.\\. i 

within these forty hours Surrey durst — m. .' 

some forty trunclieoneers draw — . X- 3 

I could beat forty of them Coriolanus, in. 1 

I saw her once hop forty paces ..Antany/fCleo. ii. ^ 
I have been thy soldier forty years. Tifus-lndj"" ■ 
forty days longer we do respite you 
remain full two and forty hours.Roi 

hold, there is forty ducats — ■ • • 

I loved Ophelia; forty thousand brothers. Hamlet, y. I 

and mine, a hundred and forty . •■•;•••■■ Othello,}. Z 

that the slave had forty thousand lives! — m- 3 

FORTY-EIGHT- „ . ^^ , • , 

I hnve years on mv back forty-eight Lear,\. 4 

FORWARD— his forward voice now is. . Tempesl.n. i 
now, forward with your tale .......... — H'- ^^ 

the most forward bud is eaten . . TwoGen.of Ver.i. 1 

you'll still be too forward. — ."• ' 

but let our plot go forward .... ■■Merry Hives, ly. 4 
look forward on the journey. . . . Meas.for Meas iv. 3 

a very forward march-chick! Much Ado.\^ 3 

andiiowforward with thy tale....... — V'- ^ 

it "oes not forward, doth it?. . Mid. N. s Dream, iv. . 

if our sport had gone forward ;■■ , ~, , 'Z' h 

and now, forward; for we have . . Love sL. Lost, ^ . ^ 
but I will forward with my device . . — . v. ^ 
fir'it, forward to the temple. . . . Merch. of Veritce, n. i 
wrestling might not go forward ...isyouLilieit,!. - 



FOBWABD-with the forward child.^s youL'ke, iii. 3 
whoever charges on his forward breast. All s Well, iii. - 
take the instant by the forward top . . - v. 3 
CO forward; this contents .... Taming of Shrew,}^ 1 
to show myself a forward guest withm 
Baccare! you are marvellous forward 
fiddler, forbear; you grow too forward 
how fiery and forward our pedant is! 
gentlemen, forward to the bridal .... — ;;;■ ' 

they shall go forward, Kate — " • ^ 

forward, I pray, since we have come — iv. s 
well, forward, forward: thus the bowl - iv. j 
she is as forward of her breeding. Winter sTale, iv. 3 

nay, forward, old man Comedy o.f Errors,]. 1 

that hath been forward first to speak. KingJohn,n. I 

or rather then set forward „ „ ~j j r ; q 

to set forward to the fight 7e,cftard //. . 3 

and set forward, combatants — "• ^ 

fondly dost thou spur a forward horse — iv. _i 
when a jest is so forward ... ...... ..lHs«';/^'--^ 

some of them, set forward already? . . — "■ ^ 

I will set forward to-night - -^ 

Harry, you shall set forward .. ...... - >"• ' 

what need I be so forward with him - v. 
bending forward, struck his armed ...2 Hen^y/F. . 
and that his forward spirit would Hit — i- 

in God's name then set forward -- i^ ■ ' 

go forward, and be choked with ... .1 Hem !/'/■"• f 

thus forward in his banishment .. .■tHenry VL in. 2 
if you go forward, therefore yield.... - iv- - 

most oSt of order; come, march fo>-ward - n. 2 
thou, and these thy forward sons .. ..3 Henry T/.. 1 , 

promised knighthood to our forward son — i . ^ 
whither the queen intends; forward — .ii- o 
if that go forward, Henry's hope is done - in. 3 
we'll forward towards Warwick .... — jy- ;; 

ah, forward Clarence! . ............... — jy- ' | 

nor forward of revenge, though they - i^ ■ » 
into the world with my legs forward - y. b 
lightly have a forward spring .... Hiehai d /i J. ni. i 

ingenious, forward, capable.. — j"- ' 

and hopes to find you forward ...... — i • ;^ 

makes me most forward in this noble — »u- ' 

1 may not be too forward • ~ .,, v % 

let him on ; go forward Henry mj. . 2 

drive this forward: prove but our. . . . — i . ' 
let his grace go forward, and dare us — i". ^ 
they are ever forward in celebration. — ly. i 

brought him forward l^'-nry f ' "• "• 2 

but when goes this forward? "^"I''"'" ",'!'' 'V \ 

but he fled forward still Cymbeline,i. 3 

hath made us forward — '"• '' 

set we forward: let a Roman ........ — . y. a 

been thus forward in my right. Titus ^ndromcus,_i. 1 
can I go forward, wlren my he3,tUiomeoSrJul>et, ii. 1 

forward, not permanent, sweet . Hamlet, u i 

nor do we find him forward to be sounded — ui. 1 
FORWARDING- . ,„«,„.„7k;, 

in forwarding this dear experience . . 1 H«iii ylV. i. 1 
FORWARDNESS— , ^ ,;„,■,; o 

his own peril on his forwardness . '^s V"« -L 'y', • 2 
douht'st thou of ray forwardness? ■■^""'y//-.^' ' 

I will requite thy forwardness ZHem y I !■ iv. 5 

mv heart, to see your forwardness . . — y. * 

" ardness makes our hopes fair . . Cymbelme, iv. j 

uv A-Rn^Ti—fni-wRsiriedm this.. Amg- Joftn, ii. i 



iii. 1 
v. 3 

. HamW, i.2 



FOUGHT— wherein we have fought . . Coriolanus, i. 6 
alone I fought in your Corioli walls — i- » 
Marcius, I have fought with thee .... — i- '» 

they fought together, but Aufidiiis . . — J • ' 
he fought beyond the mark of others — «■ ^ 
for your voices I have fought . . .... . — "• 

in the cause 'gainst which he fought. /fn«. frCleo.n. i 
where Cajsar fought with Pompey .. - •? 

that often have 'gainst Pompey fought — m. / 
emperor.this is fought indeed! ...... — 'y- ' 

and have fought not as you seiwed .... - " • » 

he hath fought to-day, as if a god ... . — ,. '\- % 

rather played than fought Cymbelme,!. 2 

all was lost, but that the heavens fought - y. 3 
the poor soldier, that so richly fought — y. » 

soldier, that so nobly fought — y. ' 

for they have fought for Rome . . Titus Andron. in. } 
as true a dog as ever fouglit at head . . - y- > 

that fought Rome's quarrel out „ ~, ,. :3i 

hurt in parting two tliat fought Perides ly. I 

or ill, as this day's battle's fought ........ ^^ <"j /V \ 

when I have fought witli the men., liomeo ^ Juf. i. i 

and fought on part and part — 

some twenty of them fought .... . . . . — 

I dreamt my master and another fought — 
discretion fought vpith nature ..........Ha! 

FOUGHT'ST— fought'st &ga.mzi....Antony/i-Uto. i. 4 

FOUL-what foul play had we 3 empesi, i. i 

by foul play, as thou say St — ]■ f 

painted their foul ends.. — i- 5 

hast thou forgot the foul witch — > • - 

it is foul weather in us all — V.- \ 

foul weather? Very foul — ' • ^ 

like a foul bumhard that would — u • - 

is to utter foul speeches — ?!■ - 

for which foul deed the powers - ii'/ ? 

I had forgot that foul conspiracy — !y- 

that the foul lake o'er-stunk — ly- ' 

that now lie foul and muddy ............— > ■ .' 

foul mischance torment me. Two Gen. of Kerona. u. - 

'tis a foul thing, when a cur ; — "-J 

and throw foul Imen upon \i\m... Merry Wives, 111. o 
foul shirts and smocks, socks, foul .. — i; ■ o 
to carry me in the name of foul clothes — in. J 

and away went I for foul clothes — ")• ■^> 

think on't, Jove, a foul fault ■;••.,. —... >;• .j 

I am a foul way out lu-elfih highuv.. -i 

hang him, foul collier! — '"■ ^ 

answering one foul y,-rong. Measure for Measure, 11. - 

but, in the less, foul profanation — V:- ' 

nothing akin to foul redemption — "■ ■» 

that appears not foul m the truth. ... — ">• 
but. in foul mouth, and in the . .... — 

drawing of an antick, made a foul. . 
«„.o thpp well, most foul, most fair! 



.MuchAdo,'!\\. 1 



...Pericles,!. 
<o ^Juliet, iv. 



FORWEARIED— forwearied in this., King- 

""^fornge^wiS-afosset-seller ■ -.f »7'™-' Ij' I 
FOSTER— foster forlorn children. . lilus.indron. 11. 3 

my blood that fosters it lenclcs, n-a 

to foster it. nor ever to preserve ■;■■■■ — J.V \ 

FOSTERED-influence fostered.. ru-oGen.o/Jer. 111. 1 

like a lion fostered up at harid ..... .hvigJoim, y. ^ 

dear blood which it hath fostered . . Richin d 11. 1. 3 
and fostered with cold dishes Cymbelme, 11. 3 

FOSTERING— . . , j „./ ; 1 Hpttprl 

and body's fostering patron. Lo«e sL.Lost, 1. 1 (.letterj 

FOSTER- NURSE- .„„ra^,7 ii 3 

to be my foster-nurse ^' J*"" ^J^^^'S"' 4 

our foster-nurse of nature is repose ... . . . ifar, ly. 4 

FOUGHT-fought with a warrener. .Meny W,ves,i. 4 

there is a fray to be fought "T j j„ ,r 1 

had we fougfo, I doubt • M«chAdo y. 1 

unshrinking station vyhere fie fought - X- ] 
fought the holy wars in Palestine . KivgJohn, 11. l 
what a noble combat hast thou fought - ,;• f 
hath banished Norfolk fought for ..Richard H. y. 

colours he had fought so long. ueZ-i.TV i 2 

thirty, at least, he fought with 1 Henry I F. . i 

what, fought ye with tliem all? - "■ * 

if I fouglit not with fifty of them.... - .^ 

by'r lady; you fought fair. "• 

h'adst thou fought at Holmedon ....... y. ^ 

fought a long hour by Shrewsbiu-y clock - v. 4 
fought, so foiiowed, andso fairly won.2HCTry7r. I. 

so fought the noble Douglas — '• ' 

hath safely fought to-day - J> • ^ 

from morn till even fought Henry I'. 1 . 1 

and if he be not fought withal. . . .... - l"- » 

fought with us upon St. Crispin s day — ly. 3 
fought on the day of Crispin Crispianus - ly. -; 
in the chronicles, fought a most prave - jy. ' 

that God fought for us ■ — . 'V ° 

of the Lord of hosts he fought . . . . . . \Hen, yU.!.\ 

a field should be despatched and fought - 1. j 
fought so long, till that his thighs. .iHenry VI. 111. 1 
well hast thou fought to-day ■■■■■,-^„„ ~ „i \\ ^ 
The bloody fray at Wakefield fought.3He»ryr/.. 
and both sides fiercely fought. .. ..... — "• ' 

when I have fought with Pembroke 7-„r J^' ^ 
bv the way they lie not fought. . . . Jlichard UI. iv. 5 

ttw grandSre, and once fought. Troilus S,- Cress, iv. 5 
O, well fought, my youngest brother! - y. b 
you have fmight together.^ .. . ... • . Coriolanus, 1. 1 

wellfou"ht; wearecomeoffUkeRomans — 1. ° 
Marcius, we have at disadvantage fought — 1. » 



iii. 3 
iii. b 
v. 4 



fare thee well, most foul, most ^-^ „ 
may season give to her foul tainted Besh. 
only foul words; and thereupon ..... . 

foul words is but foul wind (rep.) ..... - j^.^' f, 

bait me with this foul derision?. . .Mid. N. sD,. 11 . i 
fair payment for foul words is . ..Love s L. Lost, ly. 
though foul, shall have fair praise .... - jy- 

your lips grow foul — i;; ,\ 

defile! afoul word....... -...• — r- « 

her amber hairs for foul have amber — "• •* 

is foul, as I conceive — y- ; 

played foul play with our oaths - J-^ 

IS nipped, and ways be foul........ - ^;,^.,}^'^^S' 

cleanse the foul body of themtected. AsyouLike,!!^ 7 
most mischievous foul sm. . .......... — _"■ ' 

cast away honesty upon a foul slut . . — 

I thank the gods I am foul — 

foul is most foul, being foul to be ... . — 

as your pearl, in a foul oyster — 

as the winter to foul weather. ,,r.„„„ ; , 

and make foul the clearness of our. ... . All s fTcH, 1. 3 
how foul and loathsome. Taming of Shrew, 0." jj e-) 

balm Ms foul head with warm - 1 ( "due.) 

be infused with so foul a spirit ! . . . . — 2 (indue.) 
hesheasfoidaswasFlorentius love — .1.^ 
and all foul waysl was ever man .... — ly. j 

we came down a foul hill — "• .' 

what is she, but a foul contending .. - v. z 

lead on to some foul issue Winter s Tale,!!. 3 

break a foul gap into the matter ^ 
may with fom intrusion enter in, •''■ 

fair is foul, and foul is fair 

so foul and fair a day I have 

though all things fold would wear . . . 

foul whisperings are abroad • .. 

patched with foul moles K» 

O foul revolt of French inconstancy! 

Hubert, for so foul effect 

the foul corruption of a sweet 

so foul a sky clears not without ...... - jy- 

and foul imaginary eyes of blood.... — ly- 

ah, foul shrewd, news I beshrew _ . ,- „ \ 

with a foul traitor's name stuff I . . . . Rtchai iii.y 

men, hate so foul a liar j 

my soul from such foul sin ! — ; 

that he's a traitor, foul and dangerous 
from her eyes by j'our foul wrongs . . 
falter under foul rebellion s arms. . . . 

we'll make foul weather with 

forbearance from so foul a wrong .. . . 

is a foul traitor to proud Hereford s. . — ly. } 

groan for this foul act — "• } 

ere foul sin, gathering head... — y- .^ 

treason! foul treason! villain! ...... — y. - 

Bhe's come to pray for your foul sm . . — v. 3 
breaking through the foul and agXy .\HemyIV.i. I 
will she hold out water in foul way ? - .". } 
without boots, and in foul weather too. — lu. 1 
as ever offered foul play in a state .. — i". ^ 
for nothing can seem foul to those .. — ,„ ,^- ' 

shall we fall foul for toys? iHenrylV.!!. 4 

how foul it is, what rank — "!• | 

that foul sin, gathering head — 'H- > 

for they have marvellous foul linen 
if you grow foul with me. Pistol . . . 
Au! that's a foul faidt 



edy ofErr. iii. 1 
Macbeth,!. \ 

— vr'.Z 



ill. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 2 



iii. 1 
iii. 2 
iii. 3 
iv. 1 



. .Henry V.Vi. 1 



FOU 



L '^«i ] 



FOTJI.— with foul hand dcfllc tlie locks. Hfnrjr»'.lii. 3 

fall into foul bogs .— . >"• ( 

tliroujzli the fmil womb of ui«ht . . — iv. (chorus) 
who. fikcn foul iiud ugly witch .. — iv. (clu>rus) 

lies foul with tliewcd griu-w — iv- 2 

foul fiiMul of I'nuioc, mid luig 1 He/try I'l. in. 2 

ond t.ilicfoul«-..rn.t..luwn — iv. 4 

thou foul iUTur..iocl minister — v- ■• 

cull these tool ortVndvrs to their ....'i Henry VI. n. 1 

or foul felonious thief — !!!• ' 

virtueis cliokeil Willi Tnil ambition.. — i|!. 1 
foul sulKirnntion is pieiloniinftnt .... — !!!• ' 
(the agent of tliv ti.nl inionstaney) . . — H!- '\ 
all the foul terrors in d:irk-se;ited. ... — in- 2 
breathe foul eoiitn-ions d.irknes.s .... — iv. 1 
harbourin^'foul deeeitful tlioiiLdits .. — iv. 7 
heap of wnitli. foul indigested hiinp.. — v. 1 
foul etiematiok, thiU'ft more tliun ... 
to thy foul disgrace, und iitti 

many ecorns, many foul tiuiiii.-> — 

but like a foul inis-shaiwn stigmiitick — .11.2 

rescue liim from foul despair? — '.''• ^ 

by fair or foul means we must — iv. 7 

plague thee for thy foul misleading me — v. 1 
if this foul deed were by, to equal it. . — „ v. 5 
foul devil, for God's sake, hence .... Richard III. 1. 2 

thou lump of foul deformity — !• 2 

fCoI. K;ir.j in thy foul throat, thou liest — i. 2 
foulwriukled witch! what makest.. — !• 3 

foul shame upon you! — '.■ •> 

alegion offoulfiendsenvironedme.. — ..!■ ' 

see tlie crown so foul misplaced — i"- '- 

that foul defacer of Gotl's handy- work — iv. 4 

that foul hunchbacked toad — ;v. 4 

'tis full of thv foul wrongs - iv- * 

by underhand corrupted foul injustice — v. 1 
this foul swine lies now even " 



FOULEST— let the foulest contempt. Hcnn/f"///.!!. 4 
show our foulest wares, iind think. Trnil. ^Crei: 1. 3 
the f.inlest hest llts mv hitler ...Inlony^Cleo. iv. 

FOl'l,-lAl'i;i)-f...il-l';u'i'drcpr<iiicli..«ic/.<iny;;/. ill." 

FOlM.l.Y-lliou.lcsiiv licr foully. il/nii./or W<-n». ii. 2 
of Ihlcn ludv, was foiillv sniitclied. . /J/C« Hell, v. 3 

tllon pliivcd'st nin^t fnnllv for't Macbeth, ill. 1 

p,. hili/iHl.nnd foully spoken of... .lHf;irv;>'.i. 3 

F0U1--.MO1 III'D^'I'- 
it is tlu- fnnl-Mi..utli'(lst ro?uein....2Hpnri//r. 11. 4 

F()in,-Mi)rTm.;i)- 

lie a foul-nioiithcd iind calumnious ..All'tfVelt. 1. 3 
like u foul-nioiitliccl man as he is ..MlairylV. iii. 3 

Foil |,N lOSS-spcaking of her foulness. WuWi/l(/o, iv. 1 

be tlie L'nds fi.r tliy fiiiilncss! As you Like it, iii. 3 

tlie foulness is the punishment . . Henry fill. iii. 2 
ninrder. or foulness, no unchaste action . . Lear, i. 1 

F(>lfI.-l'l>AY-is apparent foul-play.. King- ./o/wi, iv. 2 

F()Ul.-SrnKi;N— .. , 

foul-spoken coward! that thunder st.riViis^fn'i. 11. 1 

FOUND— her brother found a wife Tenipcs!,v. 1 

we have safely found our king — v. I 

where you found it — \- \ 

till I have found each letter . . Two Gen. ofTer.]. 2 

for in print I found it — ».• 1 

ifhi' hud lound the young man Merry IVives,i. i 

it will Ix' found so, master Page — — .ij. 3 

I found thee of more value — 111.4 

you could possibly have found ..TwelflhSight, 111. 4 

and there I found this credit — iv- 3 

but he's not to he found . . Measure for Measure,}. 3 

found out the remedy — .".|- 2 

for we have found upon him — !!!• 2 

justice have I found so severe 



ii. 3 

iii. 1 
iv. 1 



— V. 3 



111. 4 
iii. 4 
iii. 4 



iii. 2 
iii. 3 
iv. 1 



i. 3 
ii. 1 
ii. 1 
ii. 1 
ii. I 
ii.3 



iv. 2 



a. base foul stone, made precious TT, , , ■ -" ^ 

his noble jury and foul cause Henry Vlll. 111. i 

but, thus much, they are foul ones . . — Hi- ; 
this lord strives to appear foul . Timon of Athens, in. 3 

his days are foul, ami his drink — V'-* 

black, white; foul, fair — J.X- ? 

this foul deed shall smell above ..Julius Ctesar, ui. 1 
a foul knave uucuckolded....yln/on!/^C;fopa(ra, 1. i 

and finish all foul thoughts — .iv.9 

this foul Eiiyptian hath betrayed me — iv. 10 
so precious twixt fair and foul? .... Cymbehne,\. 7 
more hateful than the foul expulsion — ii- 1 

if not, the foul opinion you had — i.V J 

if foul desire had not conducted you?. Titus And.\\. i 

thev called me foul adultress 

they would not do so foul a deed — 

naturcTjuild so foul a den 

the offspring of so foul a fiend! 

despise lier for this foul escape 

Kome requites with foul contempt .. 

makes the foul offenders quake 

testimonv of her foul proceedings — . 

as with foul incest to uljuse Pericles, 1. 1 

crv out, she died by foul play "-, >v. 4 

belief nmv suffer bv foul show! — iv. 4 (Gower) 
on whom" foul dcatli Imth made — iv. 4 (Gower) 

the fee bestow upon the foul disease ^^"'i.]- ] 

who's here, beside foul weather? — lu- I 

O! 'tis foul! He that has a house — !!!■ 2 

aw.ay, the foul fiend follows me 1 — ii;- 4 

whom the foul fiend hath led through . . — m. 4 
some charity, whom the foul fiend vexes 

take heed o the foul fiend 

books, and defv the foul fiend 

this is the foul fiend Flibbertigibbet . . . 

when the foul fiend rages — ;!!■•! 

prav, innocent, and beware the foul fiend — ui. 6 

the'foul fiend haunts poor Tom — lu- 6 

do me no foul play, friends .......... — in- 7 

bless the good man from the foul fiend! . . — iv. 1 
elf-locks in foul sluttish hairs . . nomeo ^ Juliet, 1. 4 

unwashed too, 'tis afoul thinj; — .1.5 

to whose foul mouth no healthsome.. — iv. 3 
and know how this foul murder comes — v. 3 

I doubt some foul play Hamlet, 1. 2 

foul deeds will rise, though all the earth — 1. 2 
till the foul crimes, done in my days of.. — 1. 5 
revenge his foul and most unnatural — — 1. .^ 

most Pml, as in the best it is (r- p.) — i- 5 

than a foul and pestilent congregation _. . — 
mv imaginations are as foul as Vulcan's — 

for gi ve me my foul murder ! — 

like the owneV of a foul disease — 

the foul practise hath turned — v. z 

O thou foul thief, where hast thou Oihello, 1. 2 

practi-e<l on her with foul charms — 1.2 

in this foul proceediiigj hath thus — '^ 

if vou do find me foul in her report — 

parted with foul and violent tempest — — 

her that's foul and foolish (mp.) — 

docs foul pranks which fair and wise ones — 
the history of lust and foul thoughts — — 
how this foul rout began, who set it on . . — 

foul things sometimes intrude not? — 

a will most rank, foul disproportion — 

O 'tis foul in her. With mine olficcr! — — 
the purest of their wives is foul as slander — 
for foul toads to knot and gender in 1 — — 

from any other foul unlawful toui'h — iv. i 

goo<l my lord, yondcr's foul murder done — v. 2 
s^c was foul! I scarce did know you uncle — v. 2 

FOVLKD— his stockings fouled Hamlet, ii. 1 

FOXJLKR— a little fouler than it \a..Vea.for Mea. ii. 4 

the fouler fortune mine Taming nf .Shrew, v. 2 

and a fouler fact did never traitor ..iHenry Vl.\.i 
fouler than heart can think thee ..Richard III. j. 2 
never hung poison on a fouler toad .. — .1.2 

that slew tliem, fouler than lie is — iv. 4 

rights by rights fouler, strengths ..r«rinM>itii, iv. 7 

mv brain, and it grows fouler AntonyJ^Clen. ii. 7 

with mine oltieer. That's fouler (tihi-ltn, iv. I 

FOULEST— still in foulest letters ..iHcuryll'. iv. 4 
O 'twas the tbule«t deed, to slay — Richard lll.\.3 



you had not found me here so musical — iv. j 
I know vou do; and have found it .. — iv- 1 
come, I liave found vou out a stand.. — iv- 6 

let this friar be found — X- \ 

and, if he found her accordant Much Adn,i. i 

1 found him here as melancholy — n- 1 

she found Benedick and Beatrice.... — ii- 3 
Athenian found [Kn(.-flnd] I none.. Mid.N. Dr. 11. 3 
not by mine eye, Lysander, found .. — i."- "2 

that I sleeping here was found — iv. 1 

and I have found Demetrius like — — iv- I 
I think, now 'tis not to be found . . Love sL. Lost. 1. 2 

you found his mote; the king — iv. 3 

nave found the ground of study's — — iv. 3 
have found out such fierj^ numbers . . — iv- 3 

rejoice at friends uewly found — v. 2 

caught it, found it, or came by it.Mei. of Venice, 1. 

since you have found Antonio — 1- ' 

I oft fiuind both — ..;■ 

hast thou found my daughter? — in- 1 

as I have ever found thee honest — iii- 4 

if that thou be'st found so near . . .-Is you Like il,\. 3 
they found the bed nntreasured of . . — 11. 2 
by hard adventure found mine own — .ii- i 

l"found them on a tree — ;!)• '2 

look here what I found on a palm-tree — in- 2 

I found him under a tree — »!!• 2 

for a fool, when I found you — in- 2 

chroniclers of that age found it was. . — iv- 1 
and found the quarrel was upon the — y. 4 

may be ten times found : by being Alls Well, 1. 1 

I w'ish might be found in the calendar — .1. 3 
in what he did profess, well found .. — u. I 
1 have now found thee; when I lose — 11. 3 

a witty fool, I have found thee — 11.4 

thcret'ore am I found so much unsettled — .11. ■') 
since I have found myself in my .... — iii-l 
found her wondrous cold; but I sent — 111. fc 
and pay again, wlien I have found it — 111. / 
every braggart shall be found an ass "' '' 

you were the first that found me ... 

find it then. I found it not 

I found you wondrous kind .„i . , 

till I found it to be true, I never.. 7'amiiig-o/SA. 1. I 
I found the effect of love in idleness . . — ;. 1 
you'll be found, be you beneath . . tVinler « Tale, \. 2 
if that, which is lost, be not found — ui. 2 (oracle) 
show those things you found about her — iv. 3 

till his lost child be found? — v. 1 

the manner how he found it — v. 2 

say, lie found the child — v. 2 

the king's daughter is found — v. ^ 

has the king found his heir? — v. 2 

lettersofAutigonus, found with it .. — v. 2 

for joy of his found daughter — v. 2 

even then lost, when it was found .. — v. 2 

our Perdita is found. You gods — v. 3 

how found thy father's court? — v. 3 

that's never to be found again — v. 3 

thou hast found mine, but how — y. J 

can be found by him not ruiued?. Comerfy of Err. 11. 1 

I found it out by the bogs — i;)- '2 

I found it by the barrenness — 111.2 

you have found the goldsmith 
we found upon their pillows . , 

be not found here; hence — ;v. » 

servants, all that could be found — iv. J 



FOU 

FOUND— have in wonder found Henry V. ij. 4 

'tis sure thev found some place .\ Henry VI. u. . 

because I ever found them as myself — \"f 
slK.nld be found such false dissembling — iv- 1 
we should Inivi-f.nud a bloody doy.. - iv- 7 

he will lie found a dangerous illenryVI.u 

la quickly found to beat a dog — !!!•.' 

'tis well seen, he found an enemy. . . . — !!]■ f 
thou here be'st found on any ground — lu- f 
if thou be found by me, thou art ... . — V'; f, 
our scouts have found the advcnture.SH'nr-/ VI. ly. i 
of gold, that by chance I found ....Richard /i'.-.i. 4 
found, that the issue was not his .... — I'l- ■> 
not peevish founil in great designs . . — iv. 4 
when I was found false to his children — v. 1 
this found I on my tent this morning — v. .1 

vou have found him, cardinal Henry VIII. i. 4 

is he found guilty? yes, truly, is he . . — ii- ] 
have found him guilty of high treason — ii- ' 
never found again but where they .. — >!• j 
but that slander, sir, is found a truth — 11. I 
havegreat care I be not found a talker — .ii- ^^ 
the king hath found matter against him — 111. 2 
and wot you, what I found there — — !.■!■ ■? 
I now pronounce, .you have found true — iii- 2 
thedukeby law found hisdeserts... — 111.2 
found thee a way, out of his wreck .. — i"- ^ 
andfound the blessedness of being httlc — . "X- f 
I will leave all as I found it ..Troilus^Cressida,\. \ 
is not found in fortune's love •.■••••• — '■% 
the nature of the sickness found, Ulysses — i- -i 
when I have the bloody Hector lound — v- 7 
found [Coi.Kii^.-soundJ his state . . 7'oiion ojAth 
you found them in mine honesty 
have found time to use them toward — 
been touclicd, and found base metal . . — 

I would therein liave found issue CorwIan 

but you have found, scaling his present — 

gone forth consul, found it so — 

might have found easy fines... — 

" md this paper, thus sealed up . Ju/i— '"— - 



V. 2 
V. 3 
V. 3 



.Macbeth, ii.^ 



whom I f 
found it t 
they found Wun ,W 
to be found fi.Nc a 
there arc found lai 
will be found in 11 
he should have on 
in twelve, liiund I 
to (!ixl, my lords, 1 



th many hundreds. KinyJoAn, iv. 2 
ous piiiicely for .... — iv. 3 



I recreant (I'i'p.) .Richard 11. i. 3 



and Willonglihv — 11. 3 
I his uncle (iaunt — ii.3 
h in all but one — iv. 1 

.„ x...«, ...., might be found — v. 3 

and you have found mo 1 Henry IV. 1. 3 

till he hath found u time — .»• 3 

nothing but roguery to he found .... — ".4 

lay in his Wttv, and he found it — v..l 

but Priam found the fire 2llenryty.u 1 

for he hath found— to end one — iv- ' 

as the year had found some months.. — iv- 4 

mv lord, 1 found the prince — iv- 4 

aiid fiuind iHMoursc of breath within — iv. I 
France hath iu thee found out.H<riiryC. ii. (chorus) 



— 11. ; 



iii. a 



,ii. 4 



E Andronicus, i. 2 



— iv. 2 



1 (riddle) 
i. 1 



if it be found so, some will dear...... — ui- - 

I found it in his closet, 'tis his will . . — in ■ 2 

he will be found like Brutus — v- 4 

I found no man, but he was true tome — v. j 

BO Brutus should be found — .X- = 

should have found it afterwards../lji(onv ^Cteo. 11. 7 
wlien Antony found Julius Ca;sar dead — m- 2 
when at Philippi he found Brutus slam — 

I found you as a morsel — 

(which never shall be found) — 

I fiiund her tri;nming up the diadem — 

lint found their courage worthy Cymbeli 

found no (i)iposition but what he — 

though I had found gold strewed — 

how found you him? stark, as you see — 

have I not found it murderous — 

and will, no doubt, be found — 

having found the back-door open .... — 

but none of them can be found — 

targe of proof, cannot be found — 

I found this label on my besom. . 
like a churl, 1 found a friend. . Til 

and I have found the path 

here have we found him dead 

■who found this letter? Tamora 

O, thus I found her, straying in 

the old man hath found their guilt . . 

I wrote tlie letter that tliy father found 

found that kindness in a father. Pcncfcs, 

ne has found the meaning (icp.) — 

which by mv knowledge found ...... — 1.2 

at Tharsus, and found at sea again! — v. 1 

and found there rich jewels — v. 3 

I long to hear how you were toi.nd . . — v- ^ 
be shown you all was found with her — y. j 

e'er loved, or father (ouiid Lear, 1. 1 

trunk be found in our dominions — 1.1 

I found it thrown in at the casement — 1.2 

found you no displeasure in him — i- - 

motley here, the other found out there . . — i- 4 

to have found a safe redress. — .1.4 

uncaught; and found— despatch — n- 

and found him pight to do it — ii- l 

your son and daughter found this trespass — 11. 4 

when we have found the king — i"- 1 

there 1 found them -.; — iv. b 

have vou never found my brother s way — .y. 
here, that means not to be found. Romeo Sr Juliet, 11. 1 
will be older when you have found him — 11. 4 
what host thou found? .No hare, sir — .ii. j 

when he's found, tluil hour IS bis last — 111. I 
my ludv came and found nic dead . . — v. ' 
we found him iu the churchyard .... — y. 3 
that 1 have found the very cause .... .■Hamlet, 11. 2 
he hath tonnd the head and soiu-ceof all — 11.2 

he truly found it was against — "• "2 

why, 'tis found so. It must be — v- ' 

where I found, Horatio, a royal knavery — y. 2 

I must be found; my parts, my title ... . Othello, 1. . 

being not at your lodging to be found.... — 1. - 

'tis well I am found by you — . — .. .. — ' - 

and found good means to draw from her 

I never found a man that knew how ... 

I have found great love amongst tliem . 

and the woman hath fniiid hun already 

I found tliem close logdlicr. at blow . . . 

1 am glad 1 have found this ini|.kin ... 

at the first are scarce lound to dittaste . 

I found not Cassio's kisses on her lips . . — 1. 

I found it in my chamber — 11 

I will be found most cunning..... — •' 

should have found in some jiarl of my soul — >■ 
he found it then; I never gave it him.... — 
what be found himself was opt and true — 
handkerchief thou sjicak'st of, I found .. — 
I found it, and I did give't my husbond. . — 
here is a Utter, touiid in the pocket {rep.) — 

I fiuind it in iiiv cliombcr — 

FOUKD.VTlON-savc the foun<lation! Much .ido. 



— i. 3 

— i. 3 



11. 




11. 




11 


3 


iii 


3 


iii 


3 



FOU 



[ 282 ] 

FOUK— diet himself four yards vmdet..He?tryy. iii. 2 

that treads but ou four pasterns — iii. 7 

with four or five most vile and ragged — iv. (cho.) 
eight thousand and four hundred .'. . . — iv. 8 

I will peat his pate four days — v. 1 

four of their lords I'll change for 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

come, let us four to dinner — ii. 4 

you four, from hence to prison iHenry f'l. ii. 3 

you shall have four, if you'll be.... 3 Hem!/ F/. i'i- '^ 

upon the stroke of four liidmrdHI. iii. 2 

towards three or four o'clock — iii. 5 

their lips were four red roses on a stalk — iv. 3 

upon tlie stroke of four — v. 3 

what four throned ones could ha,ve.. Henry VIII. i. 1 
are four barons of the Cinque-ports.. — iv. 1 

one sound cudgel of four foot — v. 3 

tliree or four hairs on his chin . . Troilus ^ Cress, i. 2 
to you four milk-white horses. . Timon nf Alliens, i. 2 

'tis not four days gone, since Coriolanus, i. 2 

to wheel three or four miles about .... — i. 6 
which of you but is four Volsces? .... — i. 6 

and four shall quickly draw out — i. 6 

tln-ee or four wenches, where I Julius Caesar, i. 2 

I perceive, four feasts are toward. yln/oni/ ^-Cleo. ii.6 

rather fast from all, four days — ii. 7 

canst awake by four o' the clock Cymbeline, ii. 2 

by the four opposing coignes . . Pericles, iii. (Gower) 

three or four thousand chequlns — iv. 3 

be it spoken, I have but four .... Romeo ^Juliet, i. 3 

he walks four hours together Hamlet, ii. 2 

than that which four successive kings.... — v. 2 

let four captains bear Hamlet — v. 2 

the world for four times seveu years Othello, i. 3 

FOUR-INCHED-over four-inched bridges.Lear.iii. 4 

FOURSCORE— lived fourscore years. . Merry W. iii. I 
a man of fourscore pound a year. . Mea.forMea. ii. 1 
are you of fourscore pounds a year? .. — ii. I 
one night, fourscore ducats . . Merck, of Venice, iii. 1 
fourscore ducats at a sitting! fourscore — iii. 1 
almost fourscore here lived I .,..As you Like it, ii. 3 
but at foiu-score, it is too late a week — ii. 3 
Wednesday the fourscore of April. .(fm(er's T. iv. 3 
have undone a man of fourscore three — iv. 3 
from fourscore to thirteen .... Timon of Athens, ii. 2 
father's tenant, these fourscore years .... Lear, i v. 1 
fond old man, fourscore, and upward .... — iv. 7 

FOURTEEN-after fourteen years'. TwelfthNight, iv. 1 
which for these fourteen years ..Meas.for Meas. i. 4 
between fourteen and five and thirty ?Muc/i.4do, iii. 3 

I am a youth of fourteen All's Well, ii. 3 

I am not fourteen pence on. . Taming of Sh. 2 (ind.) 

fourteen they shall not see Winter's Tale, ii. 1 

full fourteen weeks before the CQUYSt.KingJohn, i. 1 
which, fourteen hundred years ago . . 1 Henry IV.i.l 

some fourteen, an hour after — ii. 4 

need his help, these fourteen days . . — iii. 1 
draw his power this fourteen days . . — iv. 1 
a fourteen and fourteen and a half.2Henry IV. iii. 2 

a dozen or fourteen gentlewomen Henry V. ii. 1 

within fourteen days, at Bristol 2 Henry VI. iii. 1 

sir, March is wasted fourteen Aa.ys.JuliusCirsar, ii. 1 

whom at fourteen years he sought Fericles, v. 3 

and what these fourteen years no razor — v. 3 
am some twelve or fourteen moonshines . . Lear, i. 2 
not seen the change of fourteen . . Romeo ^Juliet, i. 2 
she's not fourteen. I'll lay fourteen.. — i. 3 
she is not fourteen : how long is it . . — i. 3 
at night, shall she he fourteen (j-ep.) — i. 3 

FOURTH-fourth turned on the toe. Loot's L.Z.os«, v. 2 
a fourth for England— and other.. il/e?:. of Venice, i. 3 

the fourth, the reproof valiant As you Like it, v. 4 

third, or fourth, or fifth borough. Tarn, of Sh. 1 (md.) 

afourth? start, eyes! Macbeth, iv. 1 

Henry, of that name the fourth Richard II. iv. 1 

Harry the fourth, or fifth? h-ep.) . . . .2 Henry IV. v. 3 

Henry the fourth, grandfather 1 Henry VI. ii. 5 

being but fourth of that heroic — ii. 5 

by the name of Henry the fourth . .'ZHenry VI. ii. 2 

John of Gaunt, the fourth son — ii. 2 

Henry the fourth by conquest got . .3 Henry VI. i. 1 
resigned the crown to Henry the fourth — i. I 
Henry the foui-th, whose wisdom .... — iii. 3 
Edward the fourth, by the grace of — iv. 7 (procl.) 

long live Edward the fourth — iv. 7 

fourth would return for conscience. . Coriolanus, ii. 3 

there was a fourth man Cymbeline, v. 3 

what is tlie fourth? A burning torch . . Pericles, ii. 2 

FOUTRA— a foutra for the world . . . .SHenrylV. v. 3 
a foutra for thine office ! — v. 3 

FOWL— in the semblance of a fov/l.. Merry Wives, v. 5 
we kill the fowl of season.. Measure /oj- Measure, ii. 2 

as falcon doth the fowl — iii. I 

alas, poor hurt fowl ! Much Ado, ii. 1 

stalk on, stalk on; the fowl sits — ii. 3 

fishes, and the winged fowls . . Comedy of Errors, ii. 1 
more pre-eminence than fish and fowls — ii. 1 

ay, when fowls have no feathers — iii. 1 

there's a fowl without a feather — iii. 1 

worse than a struck fowl \ Henry IV. iv. 2 

your man put up the fowl so suddenly.2 Henry VI. ii. 1 
a fowl? and yet, for all his wings (rep.).ZHenry VI. v.6 
fowl liglit upon neighbouring \soua.s.. Cymbeline, i. 5 
like a flight of fowl scattered by.. 7'i7us Andron. v. 3 

FOWLER— the creeping fowler eye.. Mid. N.Dr. iii. 2 

FOX-entertained a fox to be. Two Gen. nf Verona, iv. 4 
I'll warrant, we'll unkennel the fox ..Merry W. iii. 3 
will be sworn, that I am no fox . . Twelfth Night, i. 5 

though it be as rank as a fox — Ji. 5 

furred with fox and lamb skins .Meas. for Meas. iii. 2 

to seek the lamb here of the fox? — v. 1 

this lion is a very fox for his valour.Miii. N. Dr. v. i 

and the fox carries the goose — v. 1 

for the goose carries not the fo.x — v. 1 

thefox,theape,andthehumblebee..Z.oi'e'sL.L. iii. 1 

royal fox? yes, but you will (rep.) All's Well, ii. 1 

make you some sport with the fox .. — iii. 6 
an old Italian fox is not so kind. . Taming of Sh. ii. 1 
than in thee, than in a drawn fox ..\ Henry IV. iii. 3 

Is but trusted like the fox — v. 2 

is as bad as to smpU a fox i Henry IV. i. 2 



FRA 



— ii. 2 



— ii. 2 



FOUNDATION— 

whose foundation is piled upon . . Winter's Tale, i. 

those foundations which I build upon — ii. 

slope their heads to their foundations. .1/aci/eWi, iv. 

is no sure foundation set on blood . . King John, iv. 

and the foundation of the earth ....IHenrylV. iii, 

consent upon a sure foundation iHenrylV. i. 

to bring the roof to the foundation.. Coiioiaims, iii. 

I think, foundations fly the wretched. Ci/m6e/me, iii. 
FOUNDED— founded as the rock Macbeth, iii. 

founded his good fortune on your lovQ.Otlietlo, iii. 
FOUNDER— the founder of this law. . . . Henry V. i. 

idly supposed the founder of this law — i. 

in this point all his tricks founder. Henry VIII. iii. 
FOUNDERED— steeds are foundered.. Tcmpes(, iv. 

foundered nine-score and odd posts. 2Henry/f. iv. 
FOUND'ST— found'st thou out ..Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 
FOUNT— at the consecrated fount.. Mea./orMea. iv. 

you are the fount, ttiat makes 3 Henry VI. iv. 

as clear as founts in July Henry VIII. i. 

FOUNTAIN— by fountain clear.. Mid. iV. Dream, ii. 

by paved fountain, or by rushy brook — ii. 

the skies, the fountains, every region — iv. 

like Diana in the fountain As you Like it, iv. 

like a fountain troubled, muddy . Taming of Sh. v. 

the fountain of your blood is stopped. ..Mac6e/A, ii. 

immaculate, and silver fountain Richard II. v. 

in the fountain of our love? .. Troilus^- Cressida, iii. 

like a fountain stirred — iii. 

would the fountain of your mind.... — iii. 

like a foimtain, with a hundred ..JuliusCcesar, ii. 

bubbling fountain stirred with wind. Titus And, ii. 

sit round about some fountain — iii. 

and in the fountain shall we gaze so long — iii. 

fountains issuing from your veins . . Romeo ^Jul. i. 

fountain from the which my current . . Othello, iv. 
FOUR— had I not four or five women Tempest, i. 

to be afeard now of your four legs . 

as ever went upon four legs 

some monster of the isle, with four legs. . — 

four legs, and two voices 

or four of his blind brothers. Two Gen. of Ver 

three or four gentleman-like dogs — iv. 

I would have made you four tall.. Merry Wives, ii. 

one, two, tree, four, come for? — ii. 

and three or four more — iv. 

I was three or four times in the — v. 

he speaks three or four languages. Twelfth Night, i. 

it's four to one she'll none of me .... — i. 

some four, or five attend him — i. 

our lives consist of the four elements? — ii. 

if your fournegativesmake — v. 

to-morrow four o'clock . . Measure for Measure, iv. 

be executed by four of the clock — i v. 

I crave but four days respite — iv. 

some four suits of peach-coloured satin — iv. 

four of his five wits went halting off. . MuchAio, i. 

four happy days bring in another. .Mid. N.'s Dr. i. 

four days will quickly steep — i. 

four nights will quickly dream away — i. 

two of both kinds makes up four .... — iii. 

been proclaimed? Four days ago.. Lotie's L. Lost, i. 

of all the four, or the three (>-ep.) — i. 

is that one of tlie four complexions?.. — i. 

and stayed the odds by adding four. . — iii. 

staying the odds by adding four — iii. 

four woodcocks in a dish ! — 1 v. 

true, true ; we are four — iv. 

we four, indeed, confronted were (rep.) — v. 

if these four worthies in their first (rep.) — v. 

for the four winds blow in . . Merchant of Venice, i. 

the four strangers seek for you, madam — i. 

bid the other four farewell i. 

'tis now but four o'clock — ii. 

was four year in the afternoon — ii. 

from the four corners of the earth — ii. 

some three or four of you go give ... . — i v. 

three or four loving lords have put. As you Like it, i. 

I have had four quarrels — v. 

or four and twenty times the pilot's ...Ill's Well, ii. 

there's four or five, to great saint — iii. 

some four or five descents since — iii. 

who hath, for four or five removes .. — v. 

houses three or four as good . . Taming of Shrew, ii. 

hath made me four and twenty .. Winter'sTale, iv. 

four pound of prunes, and as many . . — iv. 

let's see these four threes of herdsmen — iv. 

any time tliese four hours — v. 

four fixed: and the fifth (rep.) King John, iv. 

banished years plucked four away . . Richard II. i. 

four lagging winters, and four wanton — i. 

he shortens four years of mv son's .. — i. 

by four o'clock early at G.adshill 1 Henry IV. i. 

heigh-ho! an't be not four by the day — ii. 

if I travel but four foot by the squire — ii. 

sirs, you four shall front them — ii. 

with tliree or four loggerheads (rep.) — ii. 

there be four of us here have ta'en .. — ii. 

a hundred upon poor four of us — ii . 

four, through the hose — ii. 

we four set upon some dozen — ii. 

four rogues in buckram let drive (rep.) — ii. 

four, Hal; I told thee four (rep.) — ii. 

saw you four set on four — ii. 

that I borrowed, three or four times — iii. 

lent you, four and twenty pound .... — iii. 

three or four bonds of forty pound . . — iii. 

he did. my lord, four days ere I set . . — iv. 

had not four such swinge-bucklers.2Hen)-i/ IV. iii. 

you must have but four here, sir — iii. 

and here is four Harry ten shillings ■ — iii. 

four, of which you please — iii. 

sir John, which four will you have?.. — iii. 

I should make four dozen such — v. 

which is four terms, or two actions.. — v. 

is't four o'clock? Itis. 'Then we go in..HenryV. i. 

until four hundred one and twenty.. — i. 

our redemption four hundred twenty-six — i. 

your happy England into four . . — i. 

God ! three or fom- times — ii. 



FOX — thou diest on point of fo.x Henry V. iv. 4 

fox barks not, when he would steal ,'iHenryVl. iii. 1 

to make the fox surveyor — iii. 1 

die, in that he is a fox — iii. 1 

but, when the fox hath once SHenryVI. iv. 7 

this holy fox, or wolf, or both Henry VI II. i. 1 

as fox to lamb, as wolf to Troilus ^ Cressida, iii. 2 

the fox would beguile thee Timon ofAthens,iv. 3 

the fox would eat thee (rep.) — i v. 3 

subtle as the fox, for prey Cymbeline, iii. 3 

a fox when one has caught her Lear, i. 4 

hog in sloth, fox in stealth, wolf — iii. 4 

ingrateful fox! 'tis he — iii. 7 

hide fox, and all after Hamlet, iv. 2 

FOXES— where foxes, geese Coriolanus, i. 1 

now you she foxes ! Look Lear, iii. 6 

and fire us hence like foxes — v. 3 

FOXSHIP— foxship to banish him . . Coriolanus, iv. 2 

FOY— les doigts? may foy, je oublie Henry V. iii. 4 

laissez, laissez; mafoy, je ne veux .. — v. 2 

FRACTED— his heart is fracted Henry V. ii. 1 

my reliances ou hisfracted dates. Timon of Athens, i. 2 

FRACTION-their fraction is more. TroiZ. ^ Cress, ii. 3 

the fractions of her faith — _v. 2 

and these hard fractions Timon of Athens, ii. 2 

FRAGILE-nature's fragile vessel doth — v. 2 

FRAGMENT-guarded with fragments. MucA^do.i. 1 
from whence, fragment? Why.. Troilus fy Cress, v. 1 

the fragments, scraps, the bits — v. 2 

it is some poor fragment Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

go, get you home, you fragments I . . Coriolanus, i. 1 
you were a fragment of C'neius.. <4)i(oni/ <5 Cleo. iii. 1 1 
(like fragments in hard voyages) Cymbeline, v. 3 

FRAGRA NT- 
thousand fragrant posies(rep.1.Meriy W. iii. 1 (song) 
coronet of fresh and fragrant flowers. Mid. N. Dr.i'v. 1 

the fields are fragrant Titus Andronicus, ii. 2 

will drown the fragrant meads .... — ii. 5 

FRAIL— enter'd their frail shins Tempest, iv. 1 

inhabits our frail blood Twelfth Night, iii. 4 

we are all frail Measure for Measure, ii. < 

nay, women are frail too — ii. 4 

nay, call us ten times frail — ii. 4 

the soul's frail dwelling-house King John, v. 7 

banished this frail sepulchre Richard II. i. 3 

is this frail and worthless trunk Henry V. iii. 6 

she did corrupt frail nature 3 Henry VI. iii. 2 

his head's assurance is but frail . . Rictiard HI. iv. 4 
her frail son, amongst my brethren. Henry VIII. iii. 2 

men, in our own natures frail — v. 2 

crack thy frail case ! Antony ^ Cleopatra, iv. 12 

the one is but frail, and the other Cymbeline, i. 5 

or loss of that, you terra her frail .... — i. 5 

taught my frail mortality Pericles, i. 1 

if sanctimony and a frail vow Othello, i. 3 

she that in wisdom never was so frail — ii. 1 

FRAILEST— that are the frailest. /Is i/ou Like it, iii. 5 

FRAILTIES— our naked frailties hid. . Macbeth, ii. 3 
been laden with like frailties.... ^n'oni/ t^Cleo. v. 2 

FRAILTY— on his wife's fraUty . . Merry Wives, ii. 1 

let her consider his frailty — iii. 5 

alas, our frailty is the cause Twelfth Night, ii. 2 

but that frailty hath examples. .Meas./or Meas. iii. 1 

by the instruction of his frailty — iii. 2 

from the organ-pipe of frailty King John, v. 7 

and therefore more frailty \ Henry IV. iii. 3 

which frailty, and want of wisdom, He/'ri/T/i/. v. 2 
tempt the frailty of our powers . Troilus 4' Cress, iv. 4 

frailty, thy name is woman! Hamlet, i. 2 

is't frailty, that thus errs? Othello, iv. 3 

for sport, and frailty, as men have?.... — iv. 3 

FRAME-frame some feelin » line. Two Gen. of ) er. iii. 2 

hath a heart of that fine frame TwelfthNight, i. 1 

than faults may shake our frames. Mea./orMea. ii. 4 

the maid will 1 frame — iii. 1 

madness hath the oddest frame of sense — v. 1 
frame the season for your ovfnhai'vest. MuchAdo,i.3 
chid I for that at frugal nature's frame? — iv. 1 

toil in frame of villanies — iv. 1 

sometime frame thy tongue . . Mid, N.'s Dream, iii. 2 
natm'e, didst thou lions frame? . . — v. 1 

ever out of frame Love's L. Lost, iii. 1 

a council frames by self-unable All's Well, iii. 1 

in your fine frame hath love no — iv. 2 

frame your mind to mirth.. Taming of Sh. 2 (indue.) 

therefore frame your manners — i. 1 

very mould and frame of hand . . Winter'sTale, ii. 3 
going I could frame to serve my turn — iv. 3 
but let the frame of things disjoint . . Macbeth, iii. 2 

the frame and the foundation 1 Henry 1 V. iii. 1 

the whole frame stands upon pins . .2HeniylV. iii. 2 

in peace, which heaven so frame ! — iv. 1 

were the whole frame here 1 Henry VI. ii. 3 



to frame our sovereign's fall 2Henry VI. iii. 1 

fear frames disorder — v. 2 

and frame my face to all occasions..3Heiij-!/ VI. iii. 2 

but you frame things Henry I'll I. i. 2 

personate of lord Timon's frame . . Timon of Mh. i. I 
more than I could frame employment — iv. 3 
thou wilt frame thyself, forsooth . . Coriolanus, iii. 2 

if lie can thereto frame his spirit — iii. 2 

my warrior; I holp to frame thee.... — v. 3 

I'll frame convenient peace — v. 3 

that yarely frame the office Antony^- Cleo. ii. 2 

preparedly may frame herself — v. I 

frame youi-self to orderly solicits Cymbeline, ii. 3 

sliould frame them to royalty unlearned — iv. 2 
made many princes thither frame. Pericles, i. (Gow.) 

frame your will to mine — ii. .V 

frame the business after your own Lear, i. 2 

wrenched my frame of nature — i.4 

to be disioint and out of frame Hamlet, i. 2 

this goodly frame, the earth — ii.3 

put your discourse into some frame — iii. 2 

gallows-maker, for that frame outlives . . — v. 1 

bloody passion shakes your very frame . Othello, v. 2 

FRAMED-he framed to himself .Meas./or Meas. iii. ? 

never framed a woman's heart Mwh Ado, iii. I 

eave this of hers, framed by thy villany — v. I 



FRA 



FUAMED— lUKl fnimed of tn'uchcry ..Much Adi 
lioiu lie Imili truiiifd u letter .... Lote'tL.Lotl, iv. 2 
utiturv Imth friimed strange fellows. Afrr. vfi'tn- 1- j 
not a visitation I'runicd, but forecd.. Winter .1 ■'. v. 1 

I framed to the harp many XHenryWAn. 1 

for tlio'i art friuued of the tirm Uenrij V. iv. 3 

bv nature fninud to wear a erown...1Hfiir !/('/. ly. 6 
framed in tlie prixlisality of natiiri'. Ilirhard til. 1. i 
from the prime ereiit.on ere slie Ihiiiied — iv. 3 
and griefs, that framed him tliua.. /VmoM (i/.1(A. v. '. 
wlierein this trunk was framed .... Co; I'ofani", v. 3 
a young lad framed of another lecr..7'<(i« And. iv. 2 

framed oftheCycIop's size — iv. 3 

when Nature framed tliis piece Pericles, iv. 3 

was tirst frameil flesli to raise my Lear, ly. 6 

framed to inal^e w omen false OlkeUa,\. 3 

phe's framed as fruitful as tl>e free elements — 11. 3 

FUAMINC— in framing artists ■ rericles,)}. 3 

Fl{.\Ml'i>1.0-a vcrv framnold life. Mernj Ifives.n. 2 
FltA.NC'i; let the court ot'France show — 111. 3 
11,1 (le f;ishi.m of France: it is not (rep.1 — in. 3 
the ilaufhter of the kinij of France. . Lure ,</.. /.. 11. j 
and go well satisfied to France again — 11. [ 
on Saturday we will return to FYance — iv. j 
to a ladv of France, timt he called . . — iv. 1 
when king Penin of France was a little — }V. 1 

to woo these Birls of France? — Iv. 3 

of this sweet lass of France — v. 2 

his round hose in France Merchant 0/ Venice, i 2 

stubborncst young fellow of Francc.'fs ynu Lilte i(, i.j 
from fiirth the royal blood of France.. .JH's tfeli, 11. 1 
F'rauce is a dog-hole, and it no more — " ^ 
France is a stiuile; we that dwell — 
our cousin France would, in so just 
I have nothuig in France (r«p.) — 

you came, I think, from France? 

he stole from France^ 'tis reported — 

or return again into France? — 

his lordshipVill next morniiig for France — 
to my lord Lafeu? I am for France . . — 
I am for France too; we shall speak — 
more hotter in France, than there . . — 
I have seen vou in tl>e court of France — 
where France? In her forehead. Comfi';/ o/E. 

that ran between France and it — 1 

what would France with us? (rep.') ..Kins; John 
Philip of France lu right and true behalf — 
for controlment; so answer France .. — 
OS lightning in the eyes of France .. — 

tillslie had kindled France — 

we must speed for France, for France — 
and the right tliou hast in France . . — 
peace be to France; if France in peace 



[ ^] 

1 I FRANCE— therefore to France, my liege. Henri/ »'.j. a I F 



_ ii.3 
— iii. 1 

iii. 3 (letter) 



iv. 3 



T. iii. -i 



— ii. 1 



ii. 1 
ii. 1 
ii. 1 



ii, 2 
ii. 2 
iii. I 
iii. 1 
iii. I 
iii. 1 
iii. I 
iii. 1 
iii. 1 
iii. 1 



iii. I 
iii. I 
iii. l 



iv. 3 



if not, bleed France, and peace ascend 

war return from France to England 

this great commission, France, to draw — 

dost call usurper, France? — 

I do defy thee, France ; Arthur of . . — 

the coward hand of France can win — 

'tis France for F.ngland. England . . — 

these flags of France, that are — 

who, by the hand of France, this day — 

removed by a staff of France — 

France, hast thou yet more blood — — 

more than we of France; rather .... — 

let France and England mount — 

I like it well: France, shall we knit — 

Austria and France shoot in each . . — 

better than a fist of France — 

a yielding in the looks of France. ... — 

Philip of France, if thou be pleased. . — 

and France (whose armour conscience — 

the outward eye of tickle France — — 

France friendVith England! — 

hath plucked on France to tread — — 

France is a bawd to Fortune — 

fellow, is not France forsworn? — 

ever in France shall be kept festival — 

Philip of France, on peril of — 

and rai?e the power of France upon. . — 

file, France? do not let go (rep.) — 

ranee, thou mav'st hold a serpent — 

France, thou shalt me this hour — 

France, I am burned up with — 

and dearest valued blood of F'rance . . — 

interruption, spite of France? — 

when I was in France, young — 

how goes all in France? From France — 
sucli an anny could be drown in France — 

in France! under whose conduct (rep.) — 

count Melun, a noble lord of France — 

hail, noble prince of France! — y- - 

since lost I went to France, to fetch.. HicAnrti //. i. I 

hie thee to France, and cloister thee — v. 1 

prepare thee hence for I'rance — v. 1 

speed you must away to France .... — v. I 

my wife to France; from whence — v. 1 

weep tliou for me in France — v.\ 

when I from France set foot at .... 1 Henry I ('.iii. 2 

native tire, as far a« F'rance 'itlenry W. v. i 

fair Katharine of France: where — (epil.) 

the vasty fields of France? Henry I', i. (chorus) 

at large, as touching F'rance — i. I 

to the crown and seat of France .... 
concerning us and France 

low 8ali<iue, that they have in France 

asainst your highness' claim to France 

to be the realm of France 

not devised lor the realm of France.. 

claim and title to the crown of France 

wearing the crown of France 

reunited to the crown of France — 

so do the kings of France unto this doy 

defeat on the full miwer of France .. 

forces the full pride of Franco 

povilioned in the Hehls of France 

never went with his forces into France 

all her chivalry halh been in France 

whom she did send to France 

if tbot you wUl France win 



take you one quarter into France 
France being ours, we'll bend it to . . — 
large and ample emnery, o'er France — 
lately sending into France, did claim — 
there's naught in France, that can be — 
we will, iuVraniT, by GikI's grace .. — 
all the eoiutn of FmnVc will be disturbed — 
FniiuT Imth in thee tiiunil out a nest — i 
guilt of Fniiiee, (I) guilt indeed! (rep.) — 

ere he take ship for France — 

and thence to France shall we convey — 1: 
all three sworn brothers to F'rance . . — 

we must to France together — 

their passage through the force of France — 
sworn unto the practices of France . . — 
the gold of France did not seduce . . — 
now, lords, for France; the enterprize — 
no king of England, if not king of France — 
let us to France 1 like horse-leeches — 

the sick and feeble parts of France . . — 
ofttimes, unto the crown of France . . — 
and woraby voultages of France — — 
your own losses, if ne stay in F'rancu 
choice-drawn cavaliers to France? . . — 

devant les seigneurs de France 

let us not live in France 

to new-store France with bastard — 

high constable of France 

this your air of F""rance hath blown . . 
though France himself and such anntlicr 
the most active gentleman of France 
better than a churlish turf of France 
stay so long, niv lords of France? — 

the constable of France 

leave their valiant bones in France . . 

shall breed a plague in France 

not angry since I came to France 

a most prave pattle here in France . . 

or in France, or in England 

of France: Janues of Chatillon (rep.) 
great-master of France, the brave . . 
ne'er from France arrived more hapjiy 
coming in liehalf of France 



FRA 

U ANtE-Fiauee innv get the field . . 1 Henry fl. 
that F'rance must vail her lofty-plumed — 



_ V. 3 



i. 2 



i. 2 
i.i 
\.i 

(eho.) 

(cho. ) 

ii. (cho.) 

ii. (cho.) 

ii. I 

ji. 1 

ii. 2 



ii. 4 

iii. (cho.) 



_ iv. 7 

— iv. 7 

— iv. 8 

— iv. 8 

— iv. 8 

— iv. 8 
V. (chorus) 



— v. 2 



- V. 2 (cho.) 



Harry's back-return again to France — v. (chorus) 

straight back again to France — v. (chorus) 

i' the spital of malady of France — v. 1 

unto our brother France, and to our — V. 2 

great kings of France and Ens'laud! — v. 2 
onrfertileFrance, put up her lovely — v. 2 

from i' ranee too long been chased — v. 2 

of France? No; it is not possible (rfp.) — v. 2 
the friend of France, for I love France — v. 2 
when France is mine, and I (rep.) .. — v. 2 
quaud j 'ay la possession de France .. — v. 2 
de most sage demoiselle dat is in France — v. 2 

Ireland is thine, France is thine — v. 2 

il n'est pas le coCituine de France — — v. 2 
pour les ladies ofFrance, I cannot tell — v. 2 

for the maids in F'rance to kiss 

that the king ofFrance, having 

heretier de France: and thus in Latin 
contending kingdoms of France and 

'twixt England and fair France 

crowned king of France and England 

that they lost France, and made — v. 2 (cho.) 

bring I to you out of France 1 Henry H.i. 1 

of France: give me my steeled coat (rep.) — ;• 1 
France is revolted from the English — i- j 

already France is overrun — !• 1 

whom all France, with their chict .. — ;■ I 

bonfires in France forthwith — ;. I 

the English forth the bounds ofFrance — ;■ 2 

wretched shall F'rance be only in — 1. 1 

France, triumph in thy glorious — i- 6 

all France will be replete with . . „ . . — 1.6 
before the kings and queens of France — i- 6 
la Pucelle shall be France's saint — — .1.6 

eowardof France! how much — n. 1 

what a terror he had been to France — 11. 2 
applauded through the realm of F'rance? — 

is this the scourge of F'rance? — 

the seas, and to be crowned in France — 

march in England, or in F'rance — 

Paisans, pauvres gens de France — 

F'rance, thou shalt rue this treason . . — 

we escaped the pride of France — 

foul fiend of France, and hag of all . . — 

base muleteers of France ! — 

public wrongs, sustained in France.. — 
i'rance were no place for Henry's — — 
be e.vpulsed from France, and not have — 

the princel y Charles of France — 

undoubted hope of France! stay — 

look on fertile France — 

the pining malady of France — 

all the French and I'rance exclaims on — 
Talbot hath set footing once in France — 
so Ion" hrtn resilient in I'rance? .. 
Charles the iiL!htnil king ofFrance 

ihe sea IVoni Enj;land into France — 

in France, amongst a fickle wavering — 

and lost the realm ofFrance? — 

our regent in these partji of France . . — 
if he miscarry, farewell wars in t ranee — 
never so needful on the earth ot France — 

else, farewell Tnlbot: F'rance — 

we mourn, F'rance smiles; we lose . . — 

not the force of France — 

from F'rance to heaven fly — 

to the rage of F'rance his sword — 

like me to the peasant boys of France — 

wars within the realm ofFrance? — 

to fright the realm of France — 

thatsliall make oil F'raniK; afcard — 

the realms of England and of Fruiiee — 
a man of great authority in France,. — 

transported presently to F'roucc — 

royal Charles of I'rance — 

oii, my lords, and I'rance be fortuiiote: — 



ii, 3 I 



iii. 2 
iii. 2 
iii. 3 
iii. 3 
iii. 3 



— iii. I 
iv. 1 (leltcrl 



1. I 
1.1 
i. I 



ii. 2 

iii. I 

iii. I 

iii. 1 

iii. I 

iii. 1 

iii. 1 

iii. I 



iv. 7 
iv. 7 
iv. 7 



iv. 8 



11. 2 
ii,6 
ii. 6 
iii. 1 
iii. 3 
iii. 3 



now, France, thy glory droopcth to,. 
damselofFrant*,! think, I have,.,. — ■. - 

Keignicr of France, I give thee kingly — v, .\ 

loss of all the realm of France — v, 4 

truce shall lie proclaimed in France — v, 1 

such great authority in France — v. S 

post, my lord, to France; agree to any — y. -i 

charge at mv deport for France •iHenryVl. 1. 

presence of the kiugsof France and Sicil — '- 

to conquer France • ■ ■ ; — 

deep scars in France and Normandy !• — 
how France and Frenchmen might be — 

monuments of conquered France — 

for France, 'tis ours; and we will keep — 
France should hove torn and rent my — 
staid in France, and starved in France — 
prophesied— France will be lost ere long — 

done in the hcort of France — 

which I will win from France — 

England, France, and Ireland — 

for 1 had hone of France — 

ill demeanea himself in France . . — — 
thy sale of offices, and towns in France — 
your regent in the realm of France , . — 
till France be won into the Dauphin s — 

sent his poor queen to France — 

for soldier's pay in France — 

what news from France? — 

for I hod hope of France, as firmly . . — 

that you tooK bribes of F'rance — 

his highness hath lost France — 

ever had one penny bribe from France — 
the fortune he hath had in France , . — 
would have staid in France so long. . — 

to France, sweet Suffolk — 

Anjou and Maine were sold to France — 
message from the queen to France .. — 

which sold the towns in I'rance — 

Basimecu, the dauphin of France? .. — 

giving up some more towns in France — 

that made all France to qiiake , • ■; . • — 

conduct vou through the lieart of France — 

to France, to France, and get what . . — 

I'll toss the flower-de-luce of France — •.• . 

talk not of France, sith thou hast. . . .'iUenry 1 1.\. 

colours, often borne in France — !• J 

many a battle have I won in France — i- J 
she-wolf of France, but worse than (rtp.) — .1. •< 

revelled in the heart of France — "• "-i 

his father's fortunes forth ofFrance. . 
cut the sea to I'rance, and ask the . . 

and, having France thy friend 

and son, are gone to France tor aid , . 
midity king ofFrance; now Margaret 

if France can yield relief 

what brings thee to France? 

by his prowess conquered all France 
peers of France should smile at that 

you troubled Mm than France 

the alliance that he seeks with France 
l>ewis ofFrance is sending (rep. ly. )) 
mocking marriage with a dameot France 

'tis far from hence to France 

as well as Lewis of France, or the Earl 
yet to have joined witli France in such 

backed with France (repealed) 

letters, or what news, from France? 

to return from France with speed 

the queen from France hath brought 
the friends of France our shrouds — 
to the king of France hath pawned . . 
and waft her hence to France ,,_,..... 
our ancient right in France again.. Wic/iard III.] 

father, then had wars in France — ' 

his contract by deputy in France .... — 

vour father then in France — 

iJona, sister to the king ofFrance 

and will to France — :•• 

shall make me smile in France — iv. 4 

these overweening rags of France — ~;.,,, ^ , 

since last we saw in France? HenryHII. 1. I 

for France hath flawed the league — !■ J 

as well in France as here at hdme — — !■ } 

betwixt England and France — !• • 

is named, your wars in France — \. ' 

before your highness sped to France — '■'- 
the spells of I'rance should juggle men — i. 3 
and feather, that they got in I ranee ^ — ,. !• * 

1 have seen him in France Cymbelme, 1. 5 

the rarest of our ladies in France .... — }• * 

being so far provoked as 1 was in I ranee — }. 5 
for the rest, nave done in France — — >• 7 
attend the lords ofFrance and BuigUndy..Z.far, 1. 1 
the princes, France and Burgundy ...... — }■ [ 

vines of France, and milk of Burgundy — 1. 1 
call France, who stirs; call Burgundy . . — 1. j 
France and Burgundy, my noble lord . . — 1. j 
uueeii of us, of ours, and our fair France — 1. 1 
tliou hast her, France; let her be thine . . — !■ ) 
of leave-taking between France and him — 1,1 
France in cholcr parted! and the king ,. — i '- 
since mv young lady's going into France — 1. 4 
the hot-bloo<lea France, that dowerlcss . . — 11.4 
are to I'rance the spies and speculations 

from France there comes a power 

party to the advantages of France 

the ilrmy of France is lauded 

letters had you late from France? 

France spreads his banners in our . . 

why the king of France is so suddenly .. — . 

the nmresohal of France, monsieur le Fer — iv. 3 

therefore great France iny mourning — iv. 4 

om I in France? In your own kingdom — iv. 7 

it toucheth us as France invades — v. I 

leave and favour to return to Franco . . Hamlet, 1. 2 
and wishes liend again toward France .. — i. 2 
in France of the best rank and station . . — _ 1. 3 
is in secret come from France — iv. 5 



V. 7 

V. 7 

.1 

.d 

iii. 7 



— iii. 7 



iii. I 
iii. 5 
iii. 7 
iii. 7 
iv. 2 
iv. 3 



FR .\NCE— since he went into France . . Hamlel^v. 2 
FR AXCES-raairv me to one Frances. Lore'sL.L. lii. 1 
FRANCHISE— aiul your franchiscs..Coriol<iiii.s, iv. 6 
wliosc repair, anil fnuidilse, shall ..CymbeUiie, ui. 1 
FKANCHISEMENT- 
donner la liliorte, le franehisement . . Hemy I', iv. 4 

FR AXCI.E— ct li.Trcs Franciie — v. 2 

FRANClS-iret von to Francis Seacoal..VucA.Jdo, iii. 5 

conic, tViar Fr:nicis, be I'rief — iv. 1 

Francis Flute, the liello\vs-mender...''irf. A',I>>-. 1. 2 

at the saint l'>ancis l\ere All's H'ell. iii. S 

AVaterton, and Francis Quoint KicfiarJ II. ii. 1 

Tom, Uick, and Francis. Tl>ey ttikeAHenryll'. ii, 1 
never leave calling— Francis, tliat .. — ii. 4 
Francis! Tliou art twrt'ect trc;>.l — — ii. 4 
some sack, Francis. Anon, anon, sir.2//eiir;/7r. ii. 4 

lix>k to the door there, Francis — ii. 4 

and Francis Pickbone, and Will Stjucle — iii. 2 

Francis Feeble! Here, sir — iii. 2 

holy sjiint Francis! what acliange.yfomeo <i- Jul. ii.3 

saint Francis be mv speed! — v. 3 

FRAXCISCAN— holv Franciscan friar! — v. 2 
FRAXCISCO— dead, n>y Francisco?. .Vcrii/HVrM.ii. 3 

pet thee to bed Francisco Hamlel, i. 1 

FliA\COIS-lc Frangois qne vons parlez. Henrii r. v, 2 
FRANK- how now, sweet Frank?.,jVt'f-r!/iri'iv.«, ii. l 

thy father's face; frank natnte All's H'ell, i. 2 

thy frank election make — ii. 3 

the old boar teed in tlie old frank? . .iHenriill'. ii, 2 

with frank and nncnrbcd plainness Uenn/ 1', i. 2 

the native of onr so frank donation, Corio/nHi(,«, iii. 1 

whose frank heart gave all Lenr. iii, 4 

bnt to be fniiik, and give it thee, Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 2 

bearing with frank appearance Olhello, i. 3 

'tis a good hand, a frank one — iii. 4 

FR ANKED-he is franked v>p to fatting.fl.cA. ///. i. 3 
George Stanley is franked np in hold — iv. 5 
FRAXK El!-bc:ir von with franker spirit. OfAeHo, iii. 3 
FRANKFORT-" 

two tlionsand dncats in Frankfort. .Vcr.nfJVn. iii. I 

FRANKLIN— boors and franklins.. Winler'sTale.v. 2 

there's a franklin in the wild of Kent. IHciui/n'.ii. 1 

wonld fit a franklin's housew ife Ci/mbeline, iii. 2 

FRANKLY— as frankly as a yin.. ^rms./nr.yms. iii. I 
very frankl v he cor fessed Iiis treason . . Machef/i, i . 4 

now to forgive me frankly Ilinn/ I'lII. ii. 1 

speak frankly as the wind . . Troilus 4 Cressiila, i. 3 

that frankly would have fed — v. 9 

could I fraiiklv nse Timon n/Alhens, ii. 2 

controlled in that he frankly sarcTitusAndron. i. 2 

of their encounter franklv jncTge Hamlel, iii. 1 

this brother's wager frankly play — v. 2 

to make me franSlv despise mrself .... Othello, ii. 3 
FRANKNESS— partlon the franlcness.. Hmri/f. v. 2 
FRANTIC- the lover, all as frantic.. Mirf. A'. Dr. v. 1 

to make frantic, Innatic Lore'sL. J.os', v. 1 

or be not frantic, as I do trust .4s you Like il, i. 3 

he was a frantic fool Taming of Shreir, iii. 2 

for he is frantic too Comedy of Errors, iv. 4 

stieak fondly, like a frantic man . . Iticliard II. iii. 3 
thou frantic woman, what dost thou — v. 3 

let frantic Talbot triumph 1 Hemy I'l. iii. 3 

woman, end thy frantic onrse Richard III. i, 3 

O preposterous nnd fr:intio outrage . . — ii. 4 
[^Co!. Kiit.j beholdei-s of tliis frantic piny — iv. 4 

sly frantic wretoli Titus Audronictis, iv. 4 

die. frantic wretch, for thi- accursed — v. 3 

FRANTICLT— how franticlv I square — iii. 2 
FR ATER ETTO-Fraterctto calls me .... Lear, iii. 6 
FRATRUM-ad manes fratrnni . . Titus Andron. i. 2 
FRAUD— as far from fraud. . TtroGeii. of Inmia, ii. 7 
the fraud of men was ever so..Jl/Mc/i.4rfo,ii. 3 (song) 

the fraud of England \ Henry I'l. iv."4 

secure from force and fraud ZHennil'I. iv. 4 

FRAUDFlTT^that fraudful man ..■IHenr'yri. iii. 1 
FRAUGHT-be full fraught. TwoGen. offeiona, lii. 2 

and her fraught from Candy Tirelflh Niaht, v. 1 

vessel of onr country, richly"franght.A/o-. ofl'en.ii. 8 
so fraught with curious Inisiness . Winler'sTnle, iv. 3 
frauglit witli tlie ministers . . Troilu SCress. (prol.) 

thou frauglit tlie coiut with thv Cymbeline, i. 2 

that hath discharged her frauglit.. TIlu'sAndron, i. 1 
wisdom whereof I know vou a"i-e fraught. . Lear. i. 4 

swell, bosom, with thv fraught Olhello, iii. 3 

FRAUGHT AGE-ourfrangh'tage, sir.Com.ofErr. iv. 1 
disgorge their warlike fraughtage. 7'roi7. <§■ Cr. (prol.) 
FRAlKillTING- 

[Col. Knl.'i the franghting souls within . Tempest, i. 3 
FRAY— there is a fray to he fought. .Ven;/ ll'ires, ii. 1 

come to part almosta frav Mucli Ado. v. 1 

kills truth, O derilish-holy fray!..W(d. A'.'s Dr. iii. 2 

are quicker for a fray — iii. 2 

shield Lysander; if they mean a fray! — iii. 2 

thou partest a fair fray Love's L. Lost, v. 9. 

than thou that inakest the fray. . Mer. qf Venice, iii. 2 

and speak of frays — iii. 4 

come you to part the fray? .... Taming of Shreir, i. 2 
well, to the latter end of a fray ....1 Henry //'. iv. 2 

many dearer, in this bloodv fray — v. 4 

after the bloody fray at Wakefield.. 3ffcnr.vr'/. ii. 1 

rumour, like a fray Julius Civsar, ii. 4 

glad I am, he was not in this fray.. y?o/nfo<5-yu(.i. 1 

Ome! what fray was here? I ... — i, 1 

where are the vile beginners of this frav? — iii. 1 

Benvolio, who began this hloodv fray? — iii. 1 

FRAYED— as if she were W.w&X^rroilusff Cress, iii. 2 

FRECKLE— in those tVoeklos Vwe ..Mid.N.'sDr. ii. 1 

FRECKLED— a freckled wlielp Tempest, '\,2 

sweetly forth the freckled cowslip Heuru I', v. 2 

FREDERICK— sister of Frederick. /UM.ftr.Vea. iii. 1 
her brother Frederick was wrecked at sea — iii. 1 
one that old Frederick, your fat!ier./lj you Like it, i. 2 

to be adopted heir to Frederick — i. 2 

duke Frederick, hearing how that .. — v. 4 

FREE- what a torment f did free thee?.. Tempest, i. 2 

I'll free thee within two days for this.. — i. 2 

I'll set thee free for this! — i. 2 

thou Shalt be as free as monntaiu winds — i. 2 

one stroke shall free thee from — ii. 1 

thought is free — iii. 2 (song) 



L '-^^^-i ] 



FR EE— thou shalt ere long be free Tempest, v, 1 

thou shal t be fn>e — v. I 

set Caliban and his companions free .. — v. i 

be tree, and lure thou well! — v, 1 

and fi-ecs all faults — (cpil.) 

let your i ndnlgciicc set mc ft-ec — (epil.) 

inav appear plain and free.. Tiro Oen.f^fl'erona, v. 4 

now. sir, tlunight is fi-ee Tiee{rihi\isht,i.S 

and oftVcc disuosition — i. 5 

free, learned, and valiant — i. 5 

and the free maids, that weave — ii. 4 

mv rcmcnibranco is vcrv five and — iii. 4 

1 will be free from thee — iv. 1 

to have free siK'cch with yon .Vc(is.,ror.l/ciis. i. 1 

whether thou art tainted or fi-cc .... — i. 2 

aiul free pardon, arc of two houses .. — ii. 4 

that will free your life — iii. 1 

free from our faults, as fiudts from (.if/>.) — iii. 2 

I am your free dependant — iv. 3 

who is as free from toucli or soil — v. 1 

be yon as free to us — v. 1 

you with fi'cc and unconstrained , . Mueh .4do, iv. 1 

>'ohible auki free of grace! Love's L.LosI, iii. 1 

you are not free, for Che Lord's — v. 2 

iio, thev arc not free, that gave — v. 2 

I breatne free breath — v. 2 

let them be free, marry them...UerrA. qfl'enice, iv. 1 

more free from peril than the .is youLike il, ii. 1 

with licence of free foot hast caught.. — ii. " 
if he be free, whv then, mv taxing .. — ii. 7 

skv iri\cs us free" scope. . . ." .' Ill's ll'elt, i. 1 

health sliall live free, and sickness .. — ii. 1 
is free for lue to ask, thee to bestow. , — ii, 1 
invsclf embrace, to set him free., — iii. 4 (lettei) 

we set Ills \ oungost free for Tamingqf Shrew, i. 1 

are not the stivers as free for me — i. 2 

the younger then is free, and not before — i. 2 

set the Vi'migcr free tor our access ,. — i. 2 

and free access and favour as the rest — ii. 1 
I will be free even to the uttermost . . — iv. 3 

niav a tree face put on Il'inter's Tate, i. 2 

every one of these no man i^ free .... — i. 2 

intimiities, that honesty is never free of — i. 2 

from our free person she should be . . — ii. 1 
that yoiu- free nndertakiug cannot .. — ii. 2 

more free, tlian he is jealous — ii. 3 

honour (which I would free), if I shall — iii. 2 

yet we free thee from the — iv. 3 

Leontes, opening his free arms — iv. 3 

to marry, but by my free leave? ,,.. — v. 1 

free from these slanders Comedy of Errors, iv. 4 

let us speak onr free hearts each to Mact)elh, i. 3 

which else should free have wrought .. — ii. I 

free from our feasts and banquets — iii. (i 

and rt'cci\o free honours — iii. 6 

the time is I'rci: I soe thee — v. 7 

more five iVoni iin'tion King John, ii. 2 

can task the five luvath of a sacred. . "— iii. 1 
and free from otiier inishugottcu .... lUchard 11. i. 1 
reins and spurs to my free s(ieeeh .... — i. 1 

free speech, and ti'iirless. I to thee.... — i. 1 

and with a free desire, attciuliiig — i. 3 

to my inheritance of free descent. ... — ii. 3 

die fiee from strife — v. e 

to his pleasure, ransomless. andfrec.l UennilV. v. 5 

to free .■\louldy and Bull-calf 2 Henry 11'. iii. 2 

free from gross passion Henry I', ii. 2 

let man go free, and let not — iii. (i 

making God so free an offer — iv. I 

being free from vainness — v. (chorus) 

take with you free power — v. 2 

free my country from calamity I Henry VI. i. 2 

o'ercharging your free piu*ses — i. 3 

they set "liiin free, without — iii. 3 

go, and be free again: as Suffolk's .. — v. 3 
ray hand would free her, but my .... — v. 3 

for princes should be free — v. 3 

England's royal king be free — v. 3 

free from oppression, or the stroke , . — v. 3 

she hath been liberal and free — v. 4 

is not so free from mud 2H«ir!/r/. iii. 1 

free lords, cold snow melts with — — iii. 1 

to free us from his Father's — iii. 2 

free from a stubborn opposite — iii. 2 

these hands are free from guiltless .. — iv. 7 

be as free as heart can wish — iv. 7 

Ijronounce free pardon to them all . . — i^■• S 
trom that torment I will free myseU'.3Hfnij/ I'l. iii. 2 

to set him free from his captivity — iv. ;i 

tiiou set'st me free, and chiefly " — iv. t; 

yield thee my free consent — iv. 6 

unexamined, free, at liberty Richard III. iii. 6 

if you do free your childien — v. 3 

with free pardon to cacJi man Henry I'm. i. 2 

I as free forgive you, as I — ii. 1 

and free us from his slavery — ii. 2 

have their free voices — ii. 2 

that I am free of your report — ii . 4 

I free you from't. You arc not — ii. 4 

speak this with as free a soul as I do! — iii. 1 
like free and honest men, our .just .. — iii. I 
courtiers as free, as debonair. 7 VoiYiis fy Crcssida, i. 3 
th.an to make uij a free determination — ii. 2 
to be a speaker tree; when I am .... — iv. 4 
both open, and both free; for what .. — iv. a 

too gentle, and too free a man — iv. s 

strike a free march to Troy! — v. li 

my free drift halts not Timon of Athens, i. 1 

througli him drink the free air — i. 1 

I'll pay tlie debt, and free him — i. 1 

I am bound to your free heart — i. 2 

out of his free lo\'C, hath presented .. — i. 2 
being free itself, it thinks all others so — ii. 2 
have I been ever free, and must my — iii. 4 

fly, whilst thou art blessed and free. . — iv. 3 

want'st by free and offered light — v. 1 

be should be free, as is the wind .... Coriolanus, i. !) 

did solicit you in free contempt — i i. 3 

as free as words to little purpose .... — iii. 2 
with a voice as free as I do pray — iii. 3 



FRE 



FREE— for I dare so far free him Coriolanus, iv. 7 

to be rough, unswavablc, luul ft'ee .. — i. 6 

I was born free as (^a-sar Julius Catut , >. 2 

when evils are most fVce? — ii, I 

to live all free men? _ jii, 1 

nor with such free and friendly — iv. 2 

so, I am free; ycl would not so — f . S 

fiiH? l"r\>m the bondage vou arc in -. . — T. 6 
well and five, if thoii so yield him. int. .J- Cltu. ii. b 

if .Vutoiiy he five and licaltliful — ii. S 

nnd thou say'st, free. I'lcc, madam! — ii. ,■) 

when I did make thcc free — !v. 12 

for my iii.>ic free ciircrluinment Cymbeline, i. 5 

laughs tVoin's tVcc lungs. cries — i. 7 

will his free hours laiiguisli for — i. 7 

this, tribute frem us, \vc were free .. — iii. I 
I could free 't! or 1; whatc'cr it he .. — iii. 6 

pick that holt, then, tree for ever! — v, 4 

I am called to he made free — v, 4 

here we set our prisoners tVec. . TilusAndronicus, i. 2 
Antiochus I'roni iiicc,-t li\ cd not free , , Ferieles, ii. 4 
and Icai'cs us to our free election .... — ii. 4 
would set mc free from this unhallowed — iv. 6 

no port is free : no place Lear, ii, S 

O, ai-e you five? some other time — ii. 4 

when the mind's tree, the body's delicate — iii. 4 

leaving five things, and lui|ipv shows — iii. 5 

arc fa-e men. but I am bauislicd ..liomeo/i-Jul. iii. 3 
and this shall free thee from this .... _ iv. 1 

been most free and bounteous Hamlel, i. 3 

is it a tVcc visitatioii? conic, come — ii. 2 

make mad the guilty, and appal the fix'C — ii. 2 
of our deiuaiuls. most iVcc in his reply. ... — iii. 1 

and wc that haw five souls — iii. S 

struffsiling to be iVic, art iiioic engaged! — iii. 3 

and thy ftec awe pays homage tons — iv. 3 

generous, and tVcc fioiii all contriving .. — iv. 7 
tree me so far ill your mojf generous .... — v. 2 

heaven make thee free of it! — v. 2 

would not my unhoused free condition.. OMcHo, i. 2 
if such actions may have passage free .. .. — i. 2 
with his free duty, ivcommciuls yon thus — i. 3 
bnt the free comfort w hicli from tliencc he — i. 3 

lether will have a free way _ i. 3 

bnt to be free and bounteous to her mind — i. 3 

the iMoor is of a live and open nature — i. 3 

slie is of so free, so kind, so apt, so blessed — ii, 3 
wdien this advice is free, I give, and honest — ii. 3 
framed as fruitful as the free elements . . — ii. 3 
converse and husiiicss may be more free — iii. 1 
not bound to that all slaves are free to .. — iii. 3 

is free of speech, sings, plays — iii. 3 

nothayevoiir five ami noble nature .... — iii. 3 
hold her free. I do beseecli your honour.. — iii. 3 
the next iiii;lit well, was free and mcrrv.. — iii. 3 
of hisdisplcasmv, fMiiiy free speech!.... — iii. 4 
FREE'D-thon uii-litst ho fivc'dy .Mens. i„rMeas. iii. 1 
theucc five'd and cntVaiu-hiscd. . . . IlinUv's 7'ii/c, ii. 2 

no man's pic is iVccM trom his Henn/llll. i. 1 

FKKKDOM— fivcdoui. licv-dav! (rep.).. Tempest. \\. 2 

as hoiida^oc'cr of freedom .: — iii. 1 

shall haw the air at tivcdom — iv. 1 

but yet thoii shaU have (rccdom — v. 1 

I play un- fiveaoni at trai-trip .. Tn-tlfth Night, ii. 5 
lief hnyc'thc foiipcry of freedom ...lMis../"oi-il/e«s. i. 3 
doth impeach the tVccdoni of thcWer. nT renice,ii\. 2 

charter; and your city's freedom — iv. 1 

I speak it in the freedom of my .. ll'inter'sTale, i. 1 

gained im* freedom Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

mv freodom, lunc^t of nothing else . . Richard ll.i.3 
what concerns liis fivcdom unto me?.l /(<'iiiv r7. v. 3 
had ivcuvivd your aiicicm tVccdoin.-'/lc;iM/;7. iv. S 
kingdom, kiiutivd. freedom, life ..lt:c/i.u:l III. iv. 4 
nniv his highness live in freedom ..Henry I'm. i. 2 

with sueli freeilom pnriie yourself — v. 1 

a keeper witli my freedom Vimonof.ith. i. 2 (gracel 

to give my poor host ficedom Coriolanus,i. 9 

and disproiierticd their t'rccdoms .... — ii. 1 
an immediate freedom of rejieal . .JnliusCafsar, iii. I 
Liberty! Freedom! Tyranny isdead! — iii. 1 
liberty, freedom, and enfrauehiseinent — iii, 1 
all crv. Peace! Freedom! and Liberty! — iii. 1 
foil V "could not i;i\e me iVeedom . . .Ih/'oh(/ *CTeo. i. 3 

courtiers of beauteous freedom _ ii. 6 

I have lived at honest freeilom Cymbeline, iii. 3 

if of my freedom 'tis the main part . . — v. 4 
tight for freedom in your choice .. Titus Androjt. i. 1 

freedom lives hence Lear, i. 1 

FREE-FOOTED— goes too free-footed. . Hamlet, iii. 3 
FREE-HEARTED— 

free-hearted gentlcinan of Athens. rimoiiof/J/A. iii. 1 
FREELIUH-t should freelier rejoice.. C()n'o(aiiH,s, i. 3 
FREELY— donation freely to estate . . Tempest, iv. 1 

that I am freclv dissolved Merry Hives, i. I 

and tlioii shalt live as freely as . . TwelflhNight, i. 4 

most freely I confess, myself — v, i 

their petitions are as freely theirs. .ilfM..ftr Mea. i. 5 
as freely, sou, as God did giveherme.iUucA /Wo,iv. 1 
yon have no reason, I do it fively .... — iv. 1 
'1 must freely have the half. .Vc/-c/m«f (if Venice, iii. 2 

1 freely told you, all the — iii, 2 

we freely cope your coiivtcoiis pains — iv. 1 

in tlie Tuseaii icryiec, frceh' have ....All's ll'elt, i. 2 
shall live free, and sickness freely die — ii. I 

so vou confess freely, tlieretbre — iv. 3 

I fi-eelv give unto yon this. . . . Taming of Slirew, ii. 1 
too dear," for what's given freely ..IVinler'sTale. i. 1 

speak, from an infant, freely — iii. 2 

speak, freely, Syraeusan Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

pale, at what it did so freely Macbeth, i. 7 

and the accused, freely speak Richard II. i. 1 

restored a._:ain, be freely granted — iii. 3 

now, Basnt, fivcl>- siicak thy — iv. I 

before I freelv speak my mind — iv. 1 

that freely icmleivil me these news ..'IHenrylV. i. 1 

you w.ndd drink freely — iv. 2 

speak freelv 1 if onr acts Henry V. i. 2 

to give US leave freely to render — i. 2 

tills prisoner Irccly give I thee illenryVI. iv. 1 

tliy husband's lands 1 freely give . .3Henry VI. iii. 2 



FRE 



[ 28.5 ] 



l"BEELY-»peok freely whot you thlnk.af/rn. /'/. Iv. I 
(|)C-ak frtefy. Kimt, it hub usuni .... Henry I'lll. i. i 



or gciitluinuii, that is not freely merry 
Id coiniiiitliiiK freely your i<eru|ile . . 

allowed freely ti> urgue for lier 

opiioKinx freely tile livauty of lieriwrson 

uul freely urge ogaiust irio 

hear ine siiuuk. Freely, good futlicr.TVmo 
I gave it rreely ever; auu there's nouc 



I. 

- il. 2 
_ ii. i 

- Iv. I 
_ V. 2 
ii//l(A. i. 1 

- i. 2 

- i. 2 



And cunie freely to gratulatc thy ... 

drugH of it freely comniund — iv. 3 

it U spoke freelv out of many Cnriotnnut, iv. 6 

ihall licar the olive freely ..Anlonij«rCUopatra,\v. 6 

full reference, freely to my lord — v. 2 

and sin J our bondage freely CymbeUne, iil. 3 

walk With nie, siK'uk freely — v. 5 

answer to tliih boy, un'l do it freely .. — v. 5 

leave to speak, freely I'll siieak Pericleui. 2 

who freely give to every one that.. .. — ii. 3 
which have fively gone with thi» affair.. HamW.i. 2 
to lay our Fcrvice freely at your feet . — ii. 2 
and the lady shall sav her mind freely — ii. 2 
'Kii/.] freely bar the floor of your own — iii. 2 

I embrace It freely — v. 2 

ray bout sails freely, both with wind Othello, ii. 3 

confess vourself freely to her — ii. 3 

I think It freely — jj. 3 

time to speak your bosom freely .... — iii. I 

confess tiiee freely of thy sin — v. 2 

FRIO I;MAN— now 1» a freeman JuliuiCieiar, v. 3 

FKKKNESS-we'll learn our fieene8S..C'!^mWinf, v. b 
FJtElOK— have the freer woing a.t.. Merry ll'ivei, iii. 2 

with a freer heart cast off his litchard II, i. 3 

thy freer tlioUj;ht9 may not fly ..Anlonyf^Cteo. i. .') 
thou shalt be then freer than a gaoler. Cymbelim^^ v. 4 
punishment might have the freer course.. Lear, iv. 2 
FREESTONE-COLOURED- 

a freestone-rolourcd hand At you hike it, iv. 3 

FREE-TmVN-to old F.-ee-town.Romw ^ Juliet, i. 1 
F'REE-WIl.L-did it on mv free-will. /Ih/.* C/eo. iii. 6 
FREEZE— freeze, freeic, thou bitter sky.. .. 

At you Like it, ii. 7 (song) 
greybeard! thy love doth freeze.. Taming of Sh. 'n. I 
my very lips might freeze to my teeth — iv. I 

and freeze up their zeal King John, iii. 4 

thy kindness freezes Richard Ill.iv.2 

cold hearts freeze allegiance in them. Henri/ /'///. i. 2 

nay, you must not freeze — i. 4 

and the mountain tops, that freeze — iii. 1 («ong) 
she is able to freeze the god Priapus . . Periclei, iv. 6 
almost freezes up the heat of life./(omeO'^./uii>', iv. 3 

freeze thv voung blood Ilamte!, i. 6 

FREEZir^Ci— freezing hours avrnyJ. .Cymljeline, iii. 3 
FREIGIlTING-the freighting [CW. Km. 

fraughting] souls witlim her Tempeit.i. 2 

FREXCIf-French thrift, you losues. Merry H'ivei, i. 3 
yea and the no is, the French doctor — i. 4 

and Cttius the French doctor — .ii. 1 

the renowned French physician — iii. 1 

Guallia and Gaul, French and Welsh — iii. 1 
thou art piled, for a French velvet. .Vca»./or^eo<.i. 2 

a French crown more — i; 2 

some of your French crowns have no. Mid. N. Dr. i.2 
comes in embassy the French king's. Love^t L. L. i. 1 
ransom him to any French courtier for — ^i.2 

with a French brawl? (rep.) - iii. i 

a fairer name than French crown — iii I 

how say you by the French lord..Ver. of yenice, \. 2 
neither Latin, French, nor Italian . . — i.2 

that part the French and English — ii. 8 

like one of our French withered |)ear9.v4/i'« If'ell, i. 1 
they say, our French lack language.. — ii. 1 
French crown for your taffeta punk — ii. 2 

the French ne'er got them — ii. 3 

they say, the French count has done — iii- .5 

take heed of this French earl — iii. 5 

Italian or French, let him sneak — iv. 1 

for stealing; out of a French nose Macbeth, ii. 3 

by these i rcnch confront your city's. Kin^' John,\\. 1 
behold, the French, amazed, voucnsafe — ii. 1 
the ilancing banners of the French .. — ii. 2 
O foul revolt of French inconstancy I — iii. 1 

if but a dozen French were there — iii. 4 

the French, my lord; men's mouths — iv. 2 

many thimsand warlike French — iv. 2 

go meet the French — v. 1 

go I to make the F' rcnch lay down . . — v. I 
upon whole thousands of the French — V. 2 
the French tight oldly, and retire . . — v. 3 

put spirit in the French — v. 4 

if the French be lords of this loud day — v. 4 

it was against the French Richard 11. ii. 1 

the ranks of many thousand French — ii. 3 

■iKiak it in French, king — v. 3 

chopping Freni.'ii we do not understand — v. 3 

one jiower against the French iHenrylV. i. 3 

the French and Welsh baying him . . — i. 3 
who is substituted 'gainst the French — i. 3 
shillings in French crowns for you .. — iii. 2 

the French embassador Henry f. i. 1 

the French unjustly gloze — i.2 

and settled certain French — i.2 

nor did the F'rench possess — i.2 

did seat the French Ijcyond — 1.2 

who on the French ground played . . — i.2 

forage in bIWMl of French nobility .. — i.2 

not only arm to inva<le the French . . — i.2 

the F'rench, advised by good intelligence — ii. (cho.i 

and now to our French causes — ii. 2 

by God, and by French fathers — ii, 4 

embassador from the French comes — iii. (chorus) 
fortify it strongly 'gainst the F'rench — iii. 3 
the French is gone otl, look you .... — iii. li 

noneof the French upbraided — iii. i! 

almost no better than so many French — iii. *i 

your I'reuch hose off — iii. 7 

the confident and over-lusty French — iv. (chorus) 
we have French nuarrels enough .... — iv. 1 
the French may lay twenty F'rench.. — iv. 1 
English treason, to cut F'rench crowni — Iv. I 



FRENCH— you French peers Henry f. Iv. 2 

that our French gallants shall to-day — Iv. 2 

the French arc bravely in their — jv. 3 

o'er the French soldiers' liea<l» — iv. 3 

ask me this slave in French — |v. 4 

discuss the same in French (r<-p.) — — iv. 4 

the French might have a giKXl — Iv. 4 

yet kee|) the French the held — Iv. 6 

the F'rench have reinforced their — iv. 6 

here comes the herald of the French — iv. 7 

the numl«r of the slaughtered French — iv. 8 

of ten thousand French — iv. 8 

the lamentation of the French — v. (chorus) 

princ'es French, and peers, health — v. 2 

against the French, that met them . . — v. 2 

love me soundlv with your French heart — v. 2 

I will tell thee 111 F'rench — v. 2 

more French: I shall never {rep.) .. — v. 2 

half F'rench, half English — v. 2 

for your F'rench part of such a bfjy . . — v. 2 

'ave fauBsc F'rench enough to deceive — v. 2 

now fie upon my lalse F'rench — v. 2 

ill the tongues of the French council — v. 2 

fair F'rench city, for one fair F'rench — v. 2 

with this wldition in F'rench — v. 2 

English may as F'rench, F'rench .... — v. 2 
we tliink the subtlc-witted F'rench ..\Henryf'I. i. I 

unto the I' rench the dreadful — i. 1 

wounds I will lend the French — i. 1 

the stout lord Talbot and the F'rench — i. 1 

thrceandtwenty thousand of the Flench — i. 1 

the F'rencli exefaimed, the devil .... — i. 1 



the honour of the forlorn French — 

'tis the F'rench Dauphin sueth to thee — 

said they, is the terror of the F'rench — i. 4 

remember to avenge me on the F'rench — i- 4 

the French have gathered head — i. 4 

undcmeath the standard of the French — ii. 1 
all French and I'rance exclaims .... — iii. 3 

and that the French were almost — iv. 1 

ten thousand French have — jv. 2 

yelping kennel of I'reneh curs'. — iv. 2 

my death the French can little boast — iv. .'> 
the clustering battle of the F'rench .. — iv. 7 

had death been F'rench — iv. 7 

rushing in the bowels of the French.. — iv. 7 

'tis a mere French word — iv. 7 

turn again unto the warlike French. . — v. 2 
that England give theFrench the foil — v. 3 
I shall be rescued by the French .... — v. 3 
our nation and the aspiring F'rench.. — v. 4 
our sove.-ui;;ii and tlie I'reneh king ..iHenryVI. i. 1 

thcFrencli kin-. Cluirles — i. 1 (.articles) 

and jMaiue ;ire i.'ive:i to the French.. — i. I 
Somerset lie rc^'fiit o'er the French .. — i. 3 

your grace lord regent o'er the French — _ i. 3 
went to span-counter for French crowns — iv. 2 

can speak F'rench, and therefore — iv. 2 

the fearful French, whom you late . . — iv. 8 
the Dauphin and the French to stoop-SHenryF/. i. 1 

to crave the French king's sister — iii. 1 

duck with French nods Richard HI. i. 3 

to day, the French, all clinquant .. Henry y HI. i. I 
the rlevil, upon this French going-out — i. 1 
the French journey; I replied (rep.) — i.2 

a French song, and a fiddle — j. 3 

you can speak the French tongue — i. 4 

the Frencn king's sister — ji. 2 

of Bayonne, then French embassador — ii. 4 
of Aleneon, the French king's sister — iii. 2 

do you know the F'rench knight Pericles, iv. 3 

there's a F'rench salutation (,rep.) ..Romeo i Jul. ii. 4 

we'll e'en to't like French falconers Hamlet, \\. 2 

French, and they can well on horseback — iv. 7 

six French rapiers and poniards — v. 2 

against six French swords — v. 2 

the French bet against the Danish .. — v. 2 

french-croaVn-coujur- 

or yoiir French-crown-colour beard. A/it/. A'. Dr. i. 2 

FRL'NCIIMAN— 
the I'renchman hath good skill . . .Vc rry If icei, ii. I 

a F'renchman to-morrow Much Ado, iii. 2 

the Frenchman became his surety.Mer. ofyeniccji. 2 
I reasoned with a I'renchmau yesterdoy — ji. 8 

which is the Frenchman All's tVelt. iii. 5 

be i'the camp, a F'renchman — iv. 3 (note) 

who's thafr' a I'renchman'^ F'aith, sir — iv. 5 
before the Frenchman speak a word . . J/cnri/''. i. ) 

done like a F'renchman \ Henry y I. iii. 3 

imagine him a F'renchman and thy foe — iv. 7 
stoop unto a Frenchman's mercy. . 'IHrnryyi. iv. 8 
there is a Frenchman his companion. Ci/mbedne, i. 7 
and hear hiin mock the Frenchman.. — i. 7 
the fame the F'renchman gave you Hamlet, iv. 7 

FIlENCIIMEN-ofvvorthy Frenchmen./«H'iH'<'H,ii. 1 

since F'renchmen are 60 braid — iy. 2 

market-place in FVenchmen's blood. King./o/m, ii. 1 
return all gilt with F'renchmen's blood — ii. 2 

did march tiiree Frenchjnen Henry V. iii. 6 

and view the F'renchmen \Henryyi. i.i 

Frenchmen, I'll be a Salisbury to you — i. 4 
try what these dastard F'renchmen ilarc — i. 4 

the Frenchmen are secure — ji. 1 

at least five Frenchmen died to-night — ii. 2 

die not witli Frenchmen's rage — iv. 6 

his puny sword in F'renchmen's blood — iv. 7 

the Frenchmen's only scourge — iv. 7 

and the F'renchmen fly; now help .. — v. 3 
shall the F'renchmen gain thereby .. — v. 4 
and keep the Frenchmen in allegiance — v. h 
Frenchmen might be kept in awe? ..iHenryVI. i. 1 
the F'renchmen are our enemies — iv. 2 

FREN{;H W(JMAN-proud Frenchwoman — i. 3 
and thee, false F'rench woman 3Henriiyi. i. 4 

FRICNZY— ever governed frenzy . . Merry It'iuei, v. 1 
extracting frenzv of mine own .. Tuelflh \ighr, v. 1 
poet's eye, in a fine frenzy rolling. .WiW.Af.'i. Dr. v. 1 

is the nurse of frenzy Taming of Sh. 2 (indue.) 

humours well his frenzy ....Comedy ofP.rrori, iv. 4 
In a frenzy died three aay« before . . K<n([ John, Iv. 2 



FRj-: 

F'RENZY— frenzy, and amazement. T'roa.^- Crew. T. 3 
goblins swift as frenzy thoughts .... — y. 11 
not frenzy, not absolute inailn ■*» .. Cymheline, iv. 2 
In a frenzy, in my master's garments — v. 4 
some fit or frenzy do possess her.. Tilut Andron. iv. 1 
his fits, his frenzy, and bis bitterness? — iv. 4 
FRECjIIENT-and is less frequent. Wmler't Tale, iv. I 

lie daily doth frequent Rirltard II. v. 3 

by night frequents my house . . 7'imon of Alhent, i. I 
groom that doth frequent your houte.. />r/cle», iv. « 

FRF;SII_some freshwater Temptil, i. 2 

the fresh springs — i.2 

food shall lje the fresh brook muscles — j. 2 

our garments are now as fresh — ii. 1 

our garments seem now as fresh .... — ij. 1 
not, sir, my doublet aii frcali as the first — ii. 1 

'tis fresh morning with me — jjj- 1 

as when they are fresh — iii. 3 

and these fresh nymphs encounter .. — iv. 1 

more fresh in Julia's Two Gen. of ytrona, v. 4 

the luce is a fresh fish Metry tyives, i. 1 

withered servinf^-man, a fresh tapster — . ** ^ 

of the prodigal, fresh and new — iv. .■> 

how quick and fresh art thou! . . . . Tu-elfth Night, i. 1 

which she would keep fre-Oi — i. 1 

and then 'twas fresh in murmur .... — i.2 

of fresh, and stainless youth — i. S 

humble slough, and apjjear fresh — ii. 5 (letter) 

and salt waves fresh in love — iii' 4 

ever your fresh whore .... Measure for Measure, iii. 2 

fall in the fresh lap of Mid. N.'s Dream,yi. 2 

that cost the fresh blood dear — iii. 2 

coronet of fresh and fragrant flowers — iv. 1 

joy, and fresh days of love — v. 1 

those fresh morning drops . Lotic'* L. L. iv. 3 (verses) 
when their fresh rays have smote — iv. 3 (verses) 
you meet in some fresh check. . . . As you Like it, iii. 5 

who gave me fresh array — iv. 3 

bc'st yet a fresh uncropiicd flower All's Well,y. 3 

virgin, fair, and fresh Taming of Shrew, iy. i 

makes old hearts fresh Il'inler's Tale, i. 1 

go, fresh horses; and gracious be .... — iii. 1 

and thou, fresh piece of excellent — iv. 3 

kisses the hands of your fresh princess — iy. 3 

of men, begun a fresh assault .Wacdertj j. 2 

and fresh in this old world! King John, iii. 4 

fresh expectation troubled not — iy- 2 

the fresh green lap of fair Richard 1 1, iii. 3 

and wash him fresh again — y. I 

fresh as a bridegroom \HenrylF.\. 3 

lost the fresh blood in thy cheeks — — li. 3 

some six or seven fresh men — ji. 4 

thus did I keep mj' person fresh .... — lii- 2 

as many fresh streams run in one Henry y.i. 2 

mowing like grass your fresh fair virgins — iii. 3 

casted slough, and f revh legerity — jv. I 

dinners, and Iresh suits — , — jv. 2 

besides, they all are fresh — iy. 3 

thy friendship makes us fresh 1 Henry VI. iii. 3 

dead, and bleeding fresh iHenryVI. iii. 2 

under a fresh tree s shade iHenryyi.W. It 

shall follow with a fresh supply — — •••i.3 

andever since afresh admirer HenryyiII. i. 1 

the old name is fresh about me — iv. 1 

fresh and yet imbruised Greeks. rioi/.^Creu. (prol.) 

fresh kings are come to Troy — ii. 3 

with a bridegroom's fresh alacrity .. — jv. 4 

in appointment fresh and fair — jv. 6 

fresh, loved, and delicate wooer . . Timon ofAth. iv. 3 

fresh embassies, and smts Coriolantu, v. 3 

look fresh and merrily Julius Cccsar, ii. 1 

for I am fresh of spirit — y- 1 

to be more fresh, reviving CymbeUne,i. 6 

fresh lily! and whiter than the sheets! — ii. 2 

is yet fresh in their grief — ii- 4 

'tis their fresh suppfies. It is a day.. — v. 2 

he hides him in fresh cups — v. 3 

as fresh as morning's dew Titus Andronicut.ii. 4 

then fresh tears stood on her cheeks — ji). 1 

till the fresh taste be taken — iii. 1 

this fresh new sea-farer, I would Pericles, iii. I 

for look, how fresh she looks — iii. 2 

therefore let's have fresh ones — iv.3 

give me fresh garments — v. 1 

we put fresh garments on him Lear, iy. 7 

the fresh morning's dew Romeo ^Juliet, i. I 

among fresh female buds shall you.. — j. 2 

and to give satiety a fresh appetite Othello, ii. I 

she is a most fresh and delicate creature — ii. 3 
of the moon with fresh suspicions? ...... — iii. 3 

her name, that was as fresh as Dian's visage — iii. 3 

the fresh streams ran by her — i v. 3 (song) 

FRESHER- but freslier than before ....Tempest, i. 2 
held familiarity with fresher clothes.. /IH'ilfe//, v. 2 
beheld a fresher gentlewoman?. . Taming of Sh. ly. 6 

art flying to a fresher clime Richard II. 1. 3 

they'll be in fresher robes; or they — Henry y. iv. 3 

there's fresher air, my lord Henry yiH.i- 4 

for it grows again, fresher than e'er . . — ii. 1 

much more a fresher man Troilus ^Crestida, v. 6 

FRESHES— the quick freshes are Tempest, ill. 2 

FRESHEST- my freshest reputation.. W'in(rr'f r. i. 2 
to the freshest things now reigning — iv. (cho.) 

mv best and freshest men Cori'olanin, v. h 

FRfcSn-FISH— a very fresh-fish . . Henry Till. ii. 3 

FRESllL'V- freshly beheld our royal ..Tempest, y. 1 

and neglected act freshly on me...Wf'ii..'i"' Meas. 1. 3 

looks he as freshly as he did As you Like it, iii. 2 

but freshlv looks, and overbears .. Henry »'. iv. (cho.) 
in their fiowing cups freshly remembered — iv. 3 
yet freshly pitied in our memories.. Henry yill. v. 2 
and frcbhly grow (np. v. i)..Cymbeline, v. 4 (scroll) 

FRESIINES.S— their freshness Tempest, ii. I 

voui'h and freshness wrinkles. 7'ror7i«^0««irf'i, ii.2 

FliET— donot fretyoursclf too much. il/i'd.A'.Dr.iv. 1 

she mistook her frets, and bowed. Taming ofSh. ii. 1 

frets call you these? quoth she — ii. I 

nor stare, nor fret; I will Iw master — iil. 2 

and never fret; a man is master. Comcdj/ of Krr. ii. I 
who clioJTes, who frets, or where iMacbeth,\v. \ 



"FRET— that struts and frets his hour . . Macbeth, v. .■> 
and he frets like a gummed velvet.. 1 He"?!/"' "• 2 

Iret fetlock deep in gore Henry f. iv. 7 

let Heriry fret, and all the world. ... 1 Henry VI. v. i 
sit, and fret, and bite his tongue . . . .2 Hem y VI. i. 1 
stamp, rave, and fret, that I may.. . ."iHeiiryVl.i. 4 

that would fret the string Heitry Vlll. m. 2 

grey lines, that fret the clouds .... Julius Caisar,n. 1 

fret, till your proud heart break — iv. 3 

lastly, he frets, that Lepidus . . Antony 4- Cleo. \u. 6 

with cadent tears fret channels Leoi-, 1. 4 

though vou can fret me, you cannot . . Hamlet, 111. 2 

FRETFUL— you are so fretful \ Henry IV. ui. 3 

though parting be afretful corrosive.. 2Henry VI. in. 2 
contending with the fretful element .... Lear, ni. 1 
like quills upon the fretful porcupine . . Hamlet, 1. 6 

FRETT KD-fretted in their own grease. Merry W. 111. 5 
fretted [Co(.-fretten] with the gasts.Mer.of Ven.\v.\ 

till they liave fretted us a pair Richard //. in. 3 

his fretted fortunes give him hope.^7i(. e,-Clco. iv. 10 

with golden cherubiins is fretted Cymbtline, u. 4 

this maiestical roof fretted with Hamlet, 11. 2 

FRETTEN-r Co(.] are fretten with.Mer. 0/ Venice, iv.l 

FRETTING-these fretting wa.ters.Mea.JorMea. iv. 3 
a commodity lay fretting by you. Taming ofSh. u. 1 
he may well in fretting spend his. ... I Henry VI.]. -' 
filled with a fretting gust SHenry VI. n. b 

FRIAR— 1-Jobin Hood's fat friar. Two Gen. of Ver. ly. I 
bear me like a true friar .. Measure for Measure, i. J 

what's your will, good friar? 

bless yiiu, good father friar 

adieu, trusty Ponipey. Bless you friar 

what news abroad, friar? 

what news, friar, of the duke? 

something too crabbed that way, friar 

impossible to extirp it quite, fnar 

thou art deceived in me, friar 

farewell, good friar; I pr'ythee — 

so please you, this friar hath been . . — 

good friar, I know you do — 

friar, not I; I have been drinking 

^oodeveu! Friar, where's the provost? — 



ii. 3 

— iii. 2 
iii. 2 

— iii. 2 

— iii. 2 



— 111. . 



iv 


1 

3 


IV 


H 


iv 


3 


iv 


3 


IV 


H 


V 


1 



V. 1 



— V. 1 



IV. 1 

iv. 1 
iv. 1 



— iv. 3 



— v. 3 



v. 3 



FRIEND— letters to my friends. ruioGfn.o/ Ver. jii. 1 

to match my friend, sir Thurio — iii. 1 

promised by her friends unto — iii. 1 

triend Valentine, a word — iii. 1 

and from me thy friend — ij;. 1 

whom she esteemeth as his friend. ... — iii. 2 

especially, against his very friend — iii. 2 

being entreated to it by your friend. . — iii. 2 

for your friend's sake — iii. 2 

and love my friend — iii. 2 

my friends — iv. 1 

my falsehood to my friend — iv. 2 

yet Valentine, thy friend, survives . . — iv. 2 

your servant and your friend — iv. 3 

friend, quoth I, you mean — iv. 4 

thou counterfeit to thy true friend .. — v. 4 

in love, who respects friends? — v. 4 

thou friend of an ill fashion! — v. 4 

thou common friend, that's without. . — v. 4 

(for such is a friend now) — v. 4 

I have one friend alive — v. 4 

that a friend should be worst! — v. 4 

two such friends should be long foes. . — v. 4 

petter than friends is the sword Merry Wives, i. 1 

Got's plessing, and your friend — i. 1 

beholden to his friend for a man — i. I 

he speaks but for his friend — i- 4 

and one that is your friend — i. 4 

grated upon my good friends for .... 
for swearing to gentlemen my friends 
id simple by your name 



friar, tliou kuow'st not the duke 

nay, friar, I am a kind of burr 

O peace ; tlie friar is come 

'tis a meddling friar; I do not 

this a good filar, belike! 

let tins friar be found 

and tliat friar I saw them (rep.') 

good friar, let's hear it 

IS this the witness, friar? 

thou foolish friar: and thou pernic!0U,s 

there is another friar that set them ou 

we shall find this friar a notable .... 

thou nnreverend and unhallowed friar! — v. 1 

for the friar and you must have a word — v. 1 

do you the office, friar — v. 1 

vour friar is now your prince — v. 1 

there was a friar told me of this man — v. 1 

friar, advise him; I leave him — v. 1 

to be married to her, friar Much Ado, iv. 1 

stand thee by, friar — iv. 1 

uncle! signior Benedick! friar! 
friar, it cannot be, thou see'st . . 

let the friar advise you 

friar, I must entreat your pains — v. 4 

in which, good friar, 1 shall desire your — v. 4 

here's the friar ready — v. 4 

before this friar, and swear to marry her — v. 4 
before this holy friar. I am your husband — v. 4 
soft and fair, friar; which is Beatrice? — v. 4 
as the nun's lip to the friar's mouth . . All's IVell,y\. 2 

wliom he supposes to be a friar — iv. 3 

the friar of orders grey. Taming of Shretr. iv. 1 (song) 

priests and friars in my realm 1 Henry VI. i. 6 

sir, a Chartreux fViar, his confessor.. Henri/ A7//. i. 2 
[Kn/.] mv ghostly friar's close cell.iJomco <§- Jul. ii. 2 
O friar, the damned use that word.... — iii. 3 

O holy friar, tell me, holy friar — iii. 3 

O tell me, friar, tell me, in what vile — iii. 3 
I'll to the friar, to know his remedy — iii. 5 

tell me not, friar, that thou hear'st . . — iv. 1 

I'll send a friar with speed — iv.l 

this reverend holy friar — iv. 2 

which the friar subtly hath ministered 
not bring me letters from the friar? (rep.) 
holy Franciscan friar! brother, ho! .. 

comfortable friar! where is my lord? 
here is a friar, that trembles, sighs .... 
a great suspicion; stay the friar too . . 
a friar, and slaughtered Romeo's man 
letter doth make good the friar's words 

FRlDAY-eat mutton on Fridays. .¥eas. /or iSIeas. iii. 2 
will I, Fridays, and Saturdays . . As you Like it, iv. > 
she would be as fair on Friday . . Troilus ff Cress, i. 1 

FRIEND— the wreck of all my friends. . 7empes(, i. 2 

thy case, dear friend, shall be — ii. 1 

tliat these, his friends, are in — ii. 1 

you cannot tell who's your friend — ii. 2 

IS to speak well of his friend — ii. 2 

thy good friend Trinculo — _ii. 2 

tlian yon, good friend — iii. 1 

mv good friends, hark! — iii. 3 

first, noble friend, let me — v. I 

welcome, my friends all — v. 1 

in absence of thy friend Two Gen, of Verona, i. 1 

he leaves his friends — i. 1 

1 leave myself, my friends — i. 1 

delivered by a friend that came — }• ^ 

he from his friends receives — i. 3 

the secret nameless friend of yours .. — ii. I 

the letter I write to her friend — ii. I 

a letter from your friends — ii. 4 

your friends are well — ii-4 

to wrong my friend — ii. 6 

am dearer than a friend — ii- 6 

as a sweeter friend — ii. 6 

sir Valentine, my friend — iii. I 

to cross iny friend in his — iii. 1 

not Imte unto my friend — iii. 1 



ii. 2 
iii. 1 
iii. 1 
iii. 3 
iii. 3 



and friend . . , 
that we may be friends 

nature is thy friend 

but, if you liave a friend here 

there is a gentleman, ray dear friend — iii. 3 

follow your friend's counsel — iii. 3 

I will not be your friend, nor enemy — iii. 4 

and his friends potent at court — iv. 4 

there is a friend of mine come — iv. o 

and so we'll all befriends — v. .^ 

what country, friends, is this? TwelflhNight,_i. 2 

now, good-morrow, friends — ii. 3 

not a friend, not a friend greet — — ii. 4 (song) 

save thee, friend, and thy music — iii. 1 

thy friend, as thou usest him .. — iii. 4 (challenge) 

in leaving his friend here in — iii. 4 

I pr'ythee, gentle friend, let — iv. 1 

belong you to the lady ()Uvia, friends? — v. 1 

and the worse for my friends — v- 1 

the better for thy friends — v. 1 

and bj' my friends I am abused — v. 1 

why, then, the worse for my friends — v. 1 

please you to be one of my friends . . — y. 1 

one word, good friend Measure for Measure, i. 3 

remaining in the coffer of her friends — i. 3 

that she make friends to the strict . . — j. 3 

I thank you, good friend Lucio — i. 3 

he hath got his friend with child .... — _i. •'J 

where were you born, friend? — ii. 1 

friend hast tliou none — iii- 1 

a gentleman, and a friend of mine .. — iii. 2 

when the steeled gaoler is the friend — iv. 2 

his friends still wrought reprieves — — |v. 2 

your friends, sir, the hangman — iv. 3 

there's other of our friends will greet — iv. 5 

our old and faithful friend, we are glad — v. 1 

thanks good friend Escalus — v. 1 

I will hold friends with you (r'7p.) MuchAdoi. 1 

mv dear friend Leonato, hath invited . . — i. I 

your loving friend. Benedick — i. I 

O, I cry you mercy, friend — _;. 2 

will you walk about with your friend? . . — ii. 1 

and his friend's reputation — _ii. 2 

what is it, my good friends? — i;i. .5 

give not this rotten orange to your friend 

to link my dear friend to a common 

my bad life reft me so much of friends . . 
and choice of friends, to quit me of them 

a very even way, but no such friend 

be friends first. You dare easier be friends — iv. 1 

or that I had any friend would be a man — iv. 1 

what is your name, friend? — iv. 2 

never love that which my friend hates . . — v. 2 

come, come, we are friends: let's have .. — y. 4 
it stood upon the choice of friends.. ^WW.iV.'s Dr. i. 1 

to seek new friends, and stranger — 1.1 

I grant you, friends, if that you — i- 2 

but. gentle friend, for love and courtesy — ii. 3 

and good-night, sweet friend — ii. 3 

neighbours will not make them friends — iii. 1 

in scorning your poor friend? — iii. 2 

good-morrow friends. Saint Valentine — 

joy, gentle friends! joy — 

aiid the death of a dear friend — 

and farewell, friends; thus Thisby ends — 
sweet friends, to bed.— A fortnight .. — 
give me .your hands, if we be friends 

then forester, my friend Love 

he's a good friend of mine... ._. 

very good friend: for what is inward 

3'ou'lV ne'er be friends with him — 

only to part friends; court'sy, sweet 

never come in visor to my friend — — v. ^ 

I must needs be friends with thee. ... — v, 2 

since, to wail friends lost — v. 2 

as to rejoice at friends but newly found — v. 2 

my bl.ack gown for a faithful friend — v. 2 
worthier friends had not prevented .Mer. of Ven, i. 1 

the ripe wants of my friend — j. 3 

lend it not as to thy friends — j- 3 

for barren metal of his friend? ■ — i. 3 

I would be friends with you — _i. 3 

my honest friend Launcelot _ — ii. 2 

your worship's friend, a.nd Launcelot, sir — ii. 2 

for we have friends that purpose — — ii . 2 

friend Launcelot, what's the news? . . — ii. 4 

sweet friends, your patience for — ii. 6 

our friends all stay for you — ii. 6 

cooled my friends, heated mine enemies — iii. 1 

should sunder such sweet friends ... . — iii. 2 



iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. I 
iv. 1 



V. 1 



- (epil.) 

Lost, IV. 1 

iv. 1 



FRIEN D— beauties, livings, friends. Mer. of Ven. iii 5 

ray old Venetian friend, Salerio? — iii 2 

I bid my very friends and countrymen — iii. 2 

tell me how my good friend doth — iii. 2 

some dear friend dead — iii. 2 

to a dear friend, engaged my friend.. — iii. 2 

the body of my friend, and every word — iii. 2 

your dear friend (rep.) — iii. 2 

before a friend of this description — iii. 2 

away to Venice to your friend — iii. 2 

bring your true friend along — iii. 2 

bid your friends welcome — iii. 2 

hear the letter of your friend — iii. 2 

that you shall lose your friend — iv. 1 

I and my friend, have by your wisdom — iv. 1 

a friend. A friend! what friend? (rep.) — v. 1 

my friend Stephano, signify — v. I 

give welcome to my friend — v. 1 

in the hearing of these many friends — v. 1 
I shall do my friends no wroijg . . As you Like it, i. 2 

if we did derive it from our friends . . — i. 3 

of his velvet friends [Co/. A'n(. -friend] — ii. 1 

good even to you, friend — ii. 4 

that your poor friends must woo — ii. 7 

so sharp as friend remembered not .. — ii. 7 (song) 

is without three good friends — iii. 2 

the souls of friend and friend — iii. 2 (verses) 

how now! back, friends — iii. 2 

a hard matter for friends to meet .... — iii. 2 

my friends told me as much — iv. 1 

good even, gentle friend — v. 1 

how old are you, friend — ' v. 1 

bid your friends; for if you will be .. — v. 2 

I have been politic with my friend . . — v. 4 
thy friend under thy own life's key . . All's Well, i. 1 

and a mistress, and a friend — i. 1 

with effects of them follow our friends — i. 1 

remember thy friends : — i. 1 

wherein our dearest friend prejudicates — i. 2 

I am out of friends madam (rep.) — i. 3 

such friends are thine enemies (rep.) — i. 3 

is my friend; ergo, he that kisses (rep.) — 1. 3 

my friends were poor, but honest — i. 3 

I am a poor friend of yours — ii. 2 

expecting absent friends — i i. 3 

make us friends, I will pursue — ii. .'i 

forth from courtly friends — iii. 4 (letter) 

this is your devoted friend, sir — iv. 3 

and take leave of all your friends — iv. 3 

ever a friend, whose thoughts — iv. 4 

make you and fortune friends — v. 2 

destroy our friends — v. 3 

you have them ill to friend — v. 3 

such friends as time in Padua. . Taming of Shrew, i. 1 

in law makes us friends — i. 1 

welcome his friends — i. 1 

my friends in Padua (rep.) — i. 2 

my old friend Grumio (rep.) — i. 2 

and tell me now, sweet friend — i. 2 

thou'rt too much my friend — i. 2 

'twixt such friends as we, few words — i. 2 

now shall my friend Petruchio do . . — i. 2 

say'st me so, friend? — i. 2 

but eat and drink as friends — _i. 2 

how now, my friend? — ii. 1 

make friends, invite, yes — iii. 2 

gentlemen and friends, I thank you.. — iii. 2 

neighbours and friends — iii. 2 

is't possible, friend Licio — iv. 2 

the other, for some while a friend.. Winter' sTale, i. 2 

mine honest friend, will you take — i. 2 

now my sworn friend, and then mine — i. 2 

good expedition be my friend — i. 2 

and toward your friend — iii. 2 

to poison my friend Polixenes — iii. 2 

unknown friends to us welcome (j-ep.) — iv. 3 

now my fairest friend I would — iv. 3 

and, my sweet friend, to strew him . . — iv. 3 

and, friends unknown, you shall bear — iv. 3 

e'er been my father's honoured friend — iv. 3 

farewell, my friend. Adieu, sir — iv. 3 

assisted with your honoured friends.. — v. 1 

that a king, at friend, can send — v. 1 

desires, I am friend to them — v. I 

in the behalf of his friend — v. 2 

try all the friends thou hast . . Comedy of Errors, i. 1 

their well-acquainted friend — iv. 3 

done wrong to this my honest friend — v. 1 

buried some dear friend? — v. 1 

if any friend will pay the sura — v. I 

haply, I see a friend will save — v, 1 

there is a fat friend at your — v. 1 

hail, brave friend! say to the king Macbeth, i. 2 

till then, enough; come, friends — _i. 3 

wlio's there? A friend — ii. 1 

was it so late, friend, ere you went . . — ii. 3 

good of bad. and friends of foes! — ii. 4 

for certain friends; that are both — iii. 1 

to all our friends; for my heart — iii. 4 

sit worthy friends; my lord is — iii. 4 

your noble friends do lack you — iii. 4 

muse at me, my most worthy friends — iii. 4 

and to our dear friend Banc^uo — iii. 4 

as I shall find the time to friend — iv. 3 

troops of friends, I must not look — v. 3 

I would the friends we miss — v. 7 

calling home our exiled friends abroad — v. 7 

in sooth, good friend, your father King John, i. 1 

be friends awhile, and both conjointly — ii. 2 

f one to be friends! shall Lewis have — iii. 1 

'ranee friend with England! — iii. 1 

and count his friends my foes — iii. 1 

the light loss of England for a friend — iii. 1 

do your pleasure, and continue friends — iii. 1 

my good friend, thy voluntary — iii. 3 

foodfriend, thou hast no cause — iii, 3 

'11 tell thee what, my friend — iii. 3 

divers dear friends slain? — iii. 4 

ten thousand wiry friends do glne .. — iii. 4 

see and know our friends in heaven. . — iii. 4 



FRI 



dear 



KRIEND— have chid away my ftiend.KingJolin, Iv. 1 

showed his warrant to a friiMiit of mine — Iv. M 

little iimnlK'r otyoiii- (Uiulittiil I'ricnda — v. I 

inv L-rii'viil I'li'iuils! thiit wo, tlie sons — v. 2 
not t'lunk tlif k'wifi sii stmu.l willi Inunds — v. i 

away, my iVii'iula' in.w Uiglit — v. -l 

a friend: wluU art tliou? — v. 6 

thou art my friend, tliat know'st — v. B 

we eaniiot do to inalie you friends . . Richard //. i. 1 

lovini; farewell, of our several friends — i. .3 

retnru'st no k'rcetini! to thy fricnds'i' — i. 3 

ciiK-t.i^eehi^f.ii-ncIs — i. « 

niv coiiMtryinL-n, my loving friends.. — i. 4 

ami iiol a.:uiiisi hi* friends — ii. 1 

Willi all tlu'ii- iiowcrfol friends — ii. 2 

now shall lie try lii< friends that .... — ii. 2 

a cool reniomlierini; my good friendi — ii. :j 

nor friends, nor foes, to me wcleome — ii. 3 

thy friends are Hed — ii. I 

in substanee and in friends [Co/, power] — iii. i 

ii'erthrows thy joys, friends, fortune — iii. 2 

need friends; subjected thus — iii. -J 

with some lew private tViends — iii. :i 

barren, an. 1 horelt of friends _ iii.;) 

, and friends their helpful — iii. 3 

id of the good duke — iii. 1 

iked friends converts .. — v. I 

lurd's friend — v. 2 

I friend will rid me — v. 4 

1 am the kind's friend, and will rid.. — v. 1 
till me. gentle friend, how went he.. — v..) 

tlierefore, friends, as fur as to 1 Henry 1 1.\. I 

ami true industrious friend, sir Walter — i. 1 

never hold that man my friend — i. 3 

the friends you have named, uncertain — ii. 3 (let.) 

our friends true and constant — ii. 3 

good friends, and full of expectation — ii. S 

call you that backing of your friends? — ii. 4 

your tenants, friends, and neighbouring — iii. 1 

to any well-deserving friend _ iii. 1 

and made a friend ot him, to fill — iii. 2 

I am good friends with my father . . — iii. 3 

and that his friends by deputation . . — iv. 1 

I must go write again to otlier friends — iv. 4 

the first and dearest of your friends. . — v. I 

yea, every man, shall be my friend . . — v. 1 

and fellows, soldiers, friends — v. 2 

your retirement do amaze your friends — v. 4 

to see what friends are living — v. 4 

knolling a departed friend iHenyf/lV.\. 1 

and make friends with speed — i. 1 

most noble friends, I pray you all . . — i. 3 

for fault of a better, to eiiU my friend — ii. 2 

come, I'll be friends with thee. Jack — ii. 4 

the part of a careful friend — ii. 4 

great friends, did feast together — iii. 1 

young, strong, and of good friends .. — iii. 2 

that thy friends shall ring for thee .. — iii. 2 

stand my friend, and liere is four — iii. 2 

a desire to stay with my friends — iii. 2 

lor my old dame's sake, stand my friend — iii. 2 

'tis well done, my friends — 

his foes are so enrooted with his friends — 

unfasten so, and shake a friend 

prove a shelter to thy friends — 

no noise made, my gentle friends .... — 

till his friend sickness hath — 

thy friends, which thou must {rep.).. — 

a triend i' the court, is better — 

some countenance at his friend's request — 

the knave is mine honest friend, sir. . — 

you have lost a friend, indeed v. 2 

1 am thy Pistol, and tiiy friend v. 3 

they which have been my friends. ... — v. 3 

are ancient I'istol and you friends Henry l'. ii. 1 

a breakfast, to make your friends — ii. 1 

come, shall I make you two friends? — ii. 1 

an' thou wilt be friends, be friends . . — ii. 1 

chase is hotly followed, friends — ii. 4 

iearfriendsl once more; or close — iii. 1 

there stands your friend for the devil _ iii. 7 
brothers, friends, and countrymen — iv. (chorus) 

qui va Ii? A friend. Discuss unto me iv. I 

art thou his friend? And his kinsmau — iv. 1 

who goes there? A friend — iv. 1 

befriends, you English fools, be friends iv. 1 

my friends, and uU things stay for me — iv. 1 

feast Ills friends r/C/i^-neighboiirBj .. — iv. 3 

spoiled us, friend us now! — iv. :> 

kill his )>est friend, Clytus iv. 7 

never killed any of his friends — iv. 7 

he is a friend to Alen^on — iw 7 

he is my dear friend, an' please you. . — iv. 7 

he's a triend of the duke of .\lenson'8 — iv. 7 

you must needs be friends with him iv. 9 

I will tell vou, as my friend — v 1 

you should love the friend of France — v. 2 

•hall be the ransom of mv friend IHennjt'l.i. 1 

thou art no friend to God i. 3 

and Piearrly, arc friends to us — ii. 1 

Charles impatient with his friend? .. — ii. 1 

lind friends to wear my bleeding roses — ii, 4 

for tliesc my friends, iu spite of thee ii. 4 

Richard I'lantaaenet, my friend?.... — ii. .'i 

my friends, and loving ebiintrymeu — iii. 1 

his subjects, and liis loyal friends.... — iii.) 

by a sign give notice to our firiends . . — iii. 2 

the beacon of our friend iii. 2 

Burgundy, and all his friends — iii. 3 

esteem none friends, but such (rep. ). . — iv. 1 

ottence it is, to flout his friendit — iv. I 

good my lords, be friends — iv. 1 

•hall find dear deer of us, my friends — Iv. 2 

that sundered friends greet in — iv. 3 

fiee airain, as .Suffilk's friend — v. 3 

no father, nor no friend of mine — v. 4 

no great friend, I fear me iHenrj/1'I. i. 1 

fiunrhase friends, ami give to eoiirtezaus — i. I 

t is known we were but hollow friends — iii. 2 

vould not feast him like a friend — Ui. 2 



[ 287 ] 

FRIEND— two friends condemned ..iHenryl'l. iii. 

revenge it not, yet will his friends .. — Iv. 

that be the kinir's friends, follow me — iv. 

rolllliM^ ofycmr I'liend?, and us _ iv. 

tell me, mv friend, art thiiii the man — v, 

and all the friends thou hast _ v. 

his favourites, and his friends SHenry T/. i. 

and thy friends, I'll have more lives — i. 

gathered flocks of friends — ii. 

as if tliev struck their frienils — ji. 

with all'thc friends that thou _ ii. 

would thv best friends ilid know .... — ii. 

for all v.mnrieiuN arc fled _ ii. 

glued many friciuls to thee — ii. 

if friend, or f.ie, let him be gently used — ii. 

cannot s|iare his friends an oatli .... — ii. 

and, having France thy friend — ii. 

of Warwick, I'Mward's greatest friend — iii. 

sovereign, and th.v voweil friend .... — iii. 

Lewis was Henry's friend (rep.) .... — iii. 

king Henry's friend (i-cp.) — iii. 

long as Bdward is thy constant friend — iv. 

is Warwick friends with Margaret?.. — iv. 

rather wish you foes than hollow friends — iv. 

suddenly, my lords, are we all friends? — iv. 

but a feigned friend to our proceedings — iv. 

for Warwick and liis friends — iv. 

the king's chiefest friend — iv. 

king Kdward's friends must down .. — iv. 

here tiiid his IVicmls with horse — iv. 

iiiiw that Uuil luid friends have shaken — iv. 

what news, my friend? — iv. 

hither will our friends repair to us .. — iv. 

we are king Henry's friends — iv. 

all those friends that deign to follow me — iv. 

our trusty friend, unless I be deceived — iv. 

will bring yon many friends — iv. 

1 have true-hearted friends — iv. 

slmlt muster up thy friends — iv. 

belike, unlooked-for friends — v. 

have wind and tide thy friend — v. 

come to me, friend, or foe, and tell me — v. 

■we are adi'ertized by our loving friends — v. 

our slaughtered friends the tacTcles . . — v. 

the friends of France our shrouds — v. 

I never sued to friend, nor enemy ,. lUchnrd III. i. 

and I no friends to back mv suit withal — i. 

envy my advancement, and my friends — i. 

a liberal rewarder of his friends .... — i. 

thy friends su.spect for traitors (r<?p.) — i. 

my friends, have I oli'ended you? .... — i, 

my friend, I spy some (lity in thy looks — i. 

since I have made my triends at peace — ii. 

a friend, and most assured that (rep.) — ii. 

no, 110, gooil friends, God wot — ii. 

friendsl God keep me from false friends — iii. 

bid my friend [Co/. A'h<. -lord], for joy — iii. 

at the other is my good friend Catesby — iii. 

vour friends at Fonifret, they do need — iii. 

ne patient, they are friends — iii. 

the loving haste of these our friends — iii. 

thanks, gentle citizens, and friends . . — iii. 

neglect the visitation of my friends.. — iii. 

very worshipful and loving friends . . — iii. 

the other side, I checked my friends — iii. 

good cousin; farewell, gentle friends — iii. 

resolve to kill a friend of mine? — iv. 

bad friends were contrar.y — iv. 

many doubtful hollow-hearted friends — iv. 

some light-foot friend post to the duke — iv. 

friends are in the north. Cold triends — iv. 

I'll muster up my friends — iv. 

as I by friends am well advertised . . — iv. 

any well-advised friend proclaimed.. — iv. 

and my most loving friends — v. 

cheerly on, courageous friends — v. 

his friends will turn to us (rep.) — v. 

so long sundered friends should dwell — v. 

your triends are up, and buckle on . . — v. 

will our friends prove all true? v. 

be praised, victorious triends — v. 

never an understanding friend.. Henri//'///, (prol, 

and sweat, of thousand friends — (prol, 

as you would to .vour friends — i. 

beyond you, to your friends i. 

freely merry, is not my friend — i. 

his noble friends, and fellows ii. 

for those you make friends — ii. 

which of "your friends have I not strove — ii. 

wliat friend of mine, that had to — ii. 

till I may be by iny friend in Spain — ii. 

think not at all a friend to trutli .... — ii. 

your hopes and fricnils are inlinite ,. — iii. 

or be a known friend — iii. 

my friends, they that must weigh out — iii. 

since virtue finds no friends — iii. 

no friends, 110 hope; no kindred weep — iii. 

peacemakers, friends, and servants. . — iii. 

to me, your friend, than any — iii. 

and fee my friends in Koine — iii. 

Cranmer will find a friend will not .. iv. 

and truly a worthy friend — iv. 

stand these poor people's friend — iv. 

j!ive j'our friend some touch of — v. 

18 rooted in us, thy friend — v. 

you are always my good friend — v. 

be friends, for shame, iny lords — v. 

and he is your friend for ever v. 

are all these your faithful frieniis — v. 

time must friend or end Troflus 4 Crenida^ i. 

wounds, friends, and what else dear.. — ii. 

friendt .youl pray .vtm, a word — iii. 

friend, know ine better — iii. 

grace! not BO, friend; honour — iii. 

friend? at mine, sir, and theirs (rtf/i.) — iii. 

friend, we understand not one another — iii. 

and most esteemed friend, your brother — iii. 

fortune Olid I are friends — iii. 

costly loss of wealth and friends — iv. 

and I'll grow friend with danger — iv. 



FRI 



FKIEND— to-night, all friends.. Traiftu ^Creit. iv. 5 

Ajax hath lost a friend — v. 6 

to shake oft' my friend when he-TimanofMlhent, i, 1 

what have you there, my friend? .... — i. I 

make thy requests to thy friend .... — i. 1 

my friends, it' I should need 'em — i. 2 (grace) 

wish my best friend at such a feast . . — i. 2 

O no doubt, my good friends — i. 2 

how had you been my friends else? .. — j. 2 

what need we have any friends — i. 2 

tlian the riches of our friends? — i. 2 

to their graves of their friend's gift? — 1. 2 

my friends, I have one word to say — i. 2 
happier is he that has no friend to teed — i. 2 

1 weigh my friend's affection with . . — i. 2 
I could deal kingdoms to my friends — i. 2 

ready for his friends — i. 2 

mine honest friend, I pr'y thee — ii. 2 

contain, thyself, good friend — ii. 2 

do so, my friends: see them well — ii. 2 

to think I shall lack friends? — ii. 2 

friends, you shall perceive (rep.) — ii. 2 

iu scarcity of friends, I cleared him.. — ii. 2 

some good necessity touches his friend — ii. 2 

fortunes 'mong his friends can sink. . — ii. 2 

disease of a friend, and not himself I — iii. 1 

he is my very good friend — iii. 2 

lord, my very exquisite friend — iii. 2 

who can call him his friend, that dips — iii. 2 

to mark me for his friend — iii. 2 

his friends, like physicians, tlirive .. — iii. 3 

now his fricnda are dead — iii. 3 

what do you ask of me, my friend? . . — iii. 4 

go, bid all my friends again — iii. 4 

to lie heavy upon a friend of mine .. — iii. 5 

friend, or brother, he forfeits his .... — iii. .^ 

in the trial of his several friends .... — iii. 6 

ah, my good friend! what cheer? .... — iii. 6 

my worthy friends, will you draw uear? — iii. B 

for these my present friends — iii. 6 (grace) 

all gone I and not one friend — iv. 2 

like his varnished friends? — iv. 2 

ungrateful seat of monstrous friends — iv. 2 

I am thy friend, and pity thee — iv. 3 

and the falling-from of his friends. ... — iv. 3 

than friends, who can briii" noblest.. — iv. 3 

been but a try for his friends — v. 1 

your friends fallen off — v. 1 

came not my friend, nor I — v. I 

for all this, my honest-natured friends — v. I 

look out, and speak to friends — v. 2 

tell my friends, tell Athens — v. 2 

one mine ancient friend — v. 3 

and made ns speak like friends — v. 3 

food friends, mine honest neighbours. Cori"o/anM«,i. I 

tell you, friends, most charitable . . — i. I 

note me this, my good friend — i, 1 

true is it, my incorporate friends .... — i. I 

my good friends (this says the belly) — i. I 

our greatest friends attend us — i. I 

to help our fielded friends! — i. 4 

thy friend no less than those she .... — i. 5 

breathe you, my friends; well fought — i. ti 

we have heard the charges of our friends — i- 6 

vows we have made to endure friends — i. ti 

teaches beasts to know their friends.. — ii. 1 

you have been a rod to her friends . . — ii. 3 

we hope to find you our friend — ii. 3 

make iiim good I'rieud to the people! — ii. 3 

and their friends to piece 'em (/<.p.).. _ ii 3 

my nobler friends, I crave their pardons — iii. I 

truly your cuuntr.v's friend — iii, 1 

we have as many friends as enemies — iii. I 

I pr'ythee, noble friend, home to thy — iii. 1 

like uusevered friends, i' the war — iii. 2 

and my friends, at stake, required .. — iii. 2 

iny masters, and my common friends — iii. 3 

and my friends of noble touch — iv. 1 

friends now fast sworn — iv. 4 

shall grosv dear friends, and interjoin — iv. 4 

what would you have, friend? — iv. .') 

and more a friend than e'er an enemy — iv. a 

come, we are fiillows, and friends — iv. 5 

he has as many friends as enemies (>ep.) — iv. 5 

his frieuds, whilst he's in direetitude — iv. 5 

here do we make his friends blush . . — iv. ti 

not much missed, but with his friends — iv. G 

for his best friends, if they should say — iv. 6 

his regard for his private frieuds .... — v. 1 

but as a discontented friend, grief-shot — v. I 

good my friends (rep.)... — v. 2 

1 have ever verified my friends — v. 2 

not with such friends tliat thought .. — v. 3 

nor from the state, nor private triends — v. 3 

friend, art thou certain, this is true? — v. 4 

seducing so my friends — v. ,'1 

over your friend that loves you /u/(i«C'/»far, i. 2 

but let not therefore ray good friends be — i. 2 

then, iny noble friend, chew upon this — i. 2 

a friend: Cinna, where haste you so? — i. 3 

gentle friends, let's kill him boldly .. — ii. I 

and, friends, disperse yourselves — ii. I 

best friends shall wish 1 had been (rep.) — ii. 2 

Ii ke friends, will straightway go together — ii. 2 

lest some friend of Cnisar's should cliauce — iii. I 

so are we Cicsar's friends — iii. 1 

who comes here? a friend of Antony's — iii. I 

that we shall have him well to friend — iii. 1 

tiieu, in a friend, it is cold iniKlesty.. — iii. I 

pricked in number of our friends — iii. I 

friends am I with yim all, and love you — iii. I 

as becomes a f'rieni!. speak in the order — ii-i. I 

give me audience, friends _ iii. 2 

anv dear friend of Cesar's, to him I say — iii. 2 

if then that friend demand _ iii. 2 

WU9 ray friend, faithful anjl just to me — iii. 2 

have patience, gentle frienils — iii. 2 

food friends, sweet friends, let me not — iii. 2 

come not, friends, to steal — Ui.'i 

blunt man, that love my friend — iii. 2 



FRI 



[ 288 ] 



FRI 



FKIEXI>— why, friends, you go ..Julms dri 
as a friend, or an enemy? As a friend — 

our best friends made — 

thou liast descrilHHi a hot tViend eo(>lnig — 
swell raset\l eountersfK^m his frii'nds — 
friend shouliUvar his tViend"sinniniities — 
love, and be tViends. as two snrlt men — 

trieil tl\e utniost of our tViends — 

vond' tiWH's arc tVieiid 01- enemy — 

see mv l>e>t (Viond ta'en K'foiv my t'aeel — 

did I not meet thy friends? — 

friends, I owe moiv teai-s to this dead — 
to tvnmts, and my ..vuiitry's friend.. 



— V. S 

— V. 3 

— V. 3 

— V. 4 



Brutus, nn- exnmtry's friend 

tltis is not Brutus, tViend 

sueti men my friends than enemies. . 

come, ^>^x■»^ rvunii us of friends — v. 5 

tl\at's not an office fora IVieud, my lord — v. J 

made lVicn,is of tlxcm Anioity ^ ClrBpalni, i. 3 

many of our contrivinsr friends iu.. " 

gvxxi friend, quoth hc'say 

noble friends, tl-.al which e^nnbined . . — 

mv honourable friend. -Vsrrippa! — 

is'well, or Iriends with(.';esar — 

and friends with Ovsar ^'^'.1 — 

pr'vthee friend, pour out the pack. ... — 

mends with Casjir; in state of health — 

bavins a son and friends . — 

Init what? we are friends: come, dowu — 

how now, tVieud Kv,w? — 

mv heart parteii betwixt two friends — 

friends, iwme hither: I am so lated in — 

friends, Iw gone; 1 have myself i-esolved — 

friends, be gone: you sliall have i.<rp.) — 

drive her nTl aissrraccd friend — 

none but friends; say boldly 1.1 /('."I .. — 

our master will leap to be his fru-nd — 
mine honest friends. 1 turn you not away — 

my lieiirty tViends, you take nic iu too — 

TOur w ivcs. vour tViends, tell them . . — 

I'll sixe tlu-c. friend, an armour — 

likeYrien.ls lon^ lost — 

I have lione my work ill, friends — 

bear me, gxKxl frieiuls — 

carry me uow, good friends — 

assist, good friends. O quick, or I — 



— V. i 

— V. t 



— i. 5 



ii. li 
ii. " 
iii. 5 
iii. B 
iii. 9 
iii. !> 
iii. 9 
iii. 10 
iii. 11 



V. 10 



iv. r-' 

iv. U 

iv. 13 

iv. 13 

V. 1 

v. 1 



we have no friend but resolution 

look vou sad. tViends? 

friend and c<impanion in the fn^nt .. 

hear me, i;ood frieiuls. but 1 will tell — v. 1 

and that to tVieuds: hut when he meant — v. 2 

as we greet nuxlern friends willial . . — v. 2 

that wx' remain yom' friend — v. 2 

who to my father was a friend Ct/mbeline, i. 3 

buy my injuries to l>e friends — i- 2 

your son's my father's friend — i. '- 

as a noble friend of tnine — i. •• 

adnrittanee. and opportmiity to friend — i- ■; 

nor has no friends, so much as but .. — i. [^' 

boldness be mv iVicnd! arm me — i- T 

mvsclf. and other noble friends — i. 7 

'tis thon4;ht. one of l.coiiatns' t'riends — ii. 1 

■we must'not continue friends — ii. -1 

for you fall 'm.nuist friends (yt-p^ .. — iii. 6 

eav, his name. !,'ood t'ricnd — iv. 2 

my friends, the boy hath taught us .. — iv. S 

for friends kill friemls — v. 'J 

some, their friends o'erborne i'the . . — v. 3 

not stand his f^x', I'll be his friend .. — v. 3 

is he thy kin? thy friend? — v. 5 

Romans, friends, followei-s Titus Andronicus, i. 1 

strive by factions, and by friends — i. 1 

I will here dismiss my loving friends — i. 1 
friends, that have been thus forwanl 
whoso friend iu justice thou hast — 
if thou strcnithen with thy friends .. 
bones, sweet "jlntins, with thy friends 

a father, and a friend, to thee — 

lose not so noble a friend on vain — 

have reconciled your friends and you — 
sweet emperor, we m\ist all be friends — 
I found a friend ; and sure as death.. — 
my guest, liavinia, and your friends — 
desptrate grown, to threat yoiu* friends? — 

for shame, be friends; and join — 

and purchase us thy lastint; friends 

for here are none but friends — iv. 1 

secretly to erect the empress' friends — iv. ".' 

my faithfid friends, I have received — v. 1 

dcadlv enmity between two friends.. — v. 1 

upriglit at their dear iVicnds' doors . . — v. 1 

she is thy enemy, nud I tliv friend .. — v. 'J 

the ambush of our friends l)e strong.. — v 3 

siieak, Rome's dear friend — v. 3 

their arms to emhmce me as a friend — v. 3 

for wlieu no frieiuls are by — v. 3 

friends should associate friends in grief — v. 3 

some loring friends convey the emperor — v. 3 

as friends to Antioch, we may feast Pfiiclcs, i. 3 

no, friend, cannot you beg? — ii. 1 

hark you, my friend, yoii said you — ii. 1 

not all, my friend, not all; for if all — ii. 1 

an armour, friends! I pray vou — ii. 1 

to beg of yon, kind friends, fhis coat .. — ii. 1 

ay, but luirk you, my friend — ii. I 

only, my friend,! yet am unprovided.. — ii. I 

whirring me from mv friends — iv. I 

what wei-e thy friends? didst thou not — v. 1 

thy friends? how lost thou them? — v. 1 

well, my companion friends — v. I 

hereafter as my honourable friend Lear, i. I 

banishment of friends, dissipation — i. 2 

how now, my noble friend? since I came — ii. 1 

our good old friend, lay comforts to — ij. 1 

food dawning to thee, friend — ii. 2 

am sorry for thee, friend — ii. 2 

I'll tell thee, friend, I am almost mad .. — iii. 4 

1 loved him,4j-iend, no father his son.... — iii. t 
come hither, friend ! where is the king . , — iii. 6 
good friend, I pr'ythee, take him in thy — iii. 6 



— 1. I 






ii. 1 
ii. 1 

ii. 4 (letter) 



FRIEND— drive towartl Dowr, tYicud .... Ltar, iii, 6 

Ixwst to have w ell-armeri tViends — iii. 7 

friends, consider \ on aiv luv ::;nests (n-p.) — iii, 7 
gvxxi friend, begone: thy c'Mi'iforls may .. — jv. 1 
yet mv inind was then scaivc friends .... — iv. I 
ixMuc hither, friend; tell me what moiv.. — iv. 2 

here, friend, is aiiotlicr purse — iv. 6 

ho. vou sir! friend! bear you, sir? — iv. Ii 

take that of mc. mv friend — iv. fi 

he svx-aks ot'. in;iv he niv friends — iv. ti 

father, I'll bestow vou with a IVieiul .... — iv. 6 

the friend hath lost his t'rieud — V. S 

'tis noble Kent, voiir t'ricnd — V. 3 

vou lords, and noble friends — v. 3 

"all friends sluiU taste the w;>j;cs — V. 3 

friends of my soul, you twain rule — V, 3 

mvsclt", and main other friends. . KoHi«><iJMW«/, i. 1 
m'v \crv friend, hath aot his mortal — iii. 1 

hold fricniis! t'riends, part ! — iii. 1 

Konico, prince, be was Mcivntio's tViend — iii. 1 
Ix-st tVicnd I bad! courleoiis Tybalt! — iii. S 
a sin-absolvcr. and nn' friend pivfessed — iii. 3 
Ix'comcs tin friend, aiul turns it to exile — iii. 3 
reconcile \-our iViends. beg pardon . . — iii. 3 
a friend, lir two: for bark you, Tybalt — iii. 4 

some half-a-do/.en friends .,. — iii. 4 

mv love! mv lonl! iiiv friend! — iii. 5 

biit not the tricnd which you weep for — iii. b 
I cann,>t choose but ever weep the tViend — iii. ."i 

I'll L:ivc vou (o inv friend — iii. f> 

the world is not thv friend — v. 1 

a friend, and one (iiat knows i..rp.1 . . — v. 3 

who is there? Friends to this !;round Hamlet, i. 1 

look like a friend ,ni Penniar'k — i. 2 

mv cood tViend; I'll chanae that muno .. — i. 2 
th'e friends thou liast, and tlu-ir adoptirm — i. 3 

oft loses both itself and tViend — i. 3 

once more i-einovc. s-'ood tViends — i. ti 

his friends, and in part, him — ii. 1 

or iVieud, or centlenien, aecovding to — ii. I 

welcome, mvu-oo.! friends! say, ^ oltiiuand — ii. 2 

mav eouivivc ; friend, look to't — ii. 2 

my' excellent good iViends! how dost tluni — ii. 2 

what have vou, mv L:ood tViends — ii. 2 

and smv, dear frieiuls, mv tliaiiks are .. — ii. 2 
welcome. :;ood friends -t). old friend! .. — ii. 2 
follow hin'i. friends: we'll hear a piny .. — ii. 2 

dost thou hear inc. old tViend — ii. 2 

mv wod friends. Vli leave y,ni till night — ii. 2 
poor advanced inake^ irieiuls of cnennes — iii. 2 
never lack a friend; a;id who in u'/i.l .. — iii. 2 

if vou denv vour griefs to your iViend — iii. 2 

lc;ive nic. tViciuls, 'tis now the vci-y — iii. 2 

friends both, io ioin von with some — iv. 1 

we'll call up our wisest frien.is — iv. 1 

vou will draw both tViend and foe — iv. ft 

to his good friends, thus wide I'll ope — iv. .'> 

whom'yonr wisest friends you will — iv. .'> 

must put me in your heart for friend .... — iv. 7 
O, \et defend inc. tVieiuls. 1 am hut luu-t — v. 2 

the raised I'ather, and his frien.is 0«if«o, i. 2 

Koodness of the ni;;ht upon vou, friends! — i. 2 

if 1 liad a friend thai loved her — i. 3 

1 have prolVssed me thv friend — 1.3 

our tViends, at least. 1 prav vou. sir — ii. 1 

this likewise is a friend, t^ec for tlu^ news — ii. 1 
news. tViemls; our wai-s are done — ii. I 

thev are our friends; but one cup .... — ii. 3 

1 do liot know; friends all but now — ii. 3 

my honest friend? no. I hear not i.-rn.l.. — iii. 1 
do, good mv friend: in happy time, lago — iii. 1 
thou dost conspire ;igainst thy friend .... — iii. 3 
Cassio's mv worthv friend: mv lord, I see — iii. 3 
I'll love no IViend.' since love breeds such — iii. 3 
friend is dead; 'tis done, at your request — iii. 3 

sa^e vou. friend Cassio! — iii. 4 

tills is some token fVom a newer friend. . — iii. 4 

or to be naked with her tViend n-bed — iv. 1 

nud her countrv. and her friends — iv. 2 

eood friend, so to him — iv. 2 

such noble sense of thy friend's wrong! .. — v. 1 

mv friend, and mv dear conntvynian — v. 1 

shiin here. Oassio.' was my dear friend. . . . — v. 1 
mv tViend, thv husband, honest — v. 2 

FKt!':XnKn-theolVendcrtVieuded..Ui\!./;ii- .Vc(..iv.2 

not friended bv liiswish Ihnnillll. i. 2 

be friended [ Jv"»?. -befriended] with . . Ci/mMiiu: ii, 3 

FKIFN inXtl-his love and friending ..ll,iwh-l. i. .'i 

FKIKMM.1':SS -friendless, hopeless. /lea;!/;///, iii. 1 

FRIFNnidNKSS-cliildish friendliness.. C'orio/. ii. 3 

FIUK\l>l.\-on his tViendly wish.y'Hot.'r;i.q/'rer. i.3 

trnlv. bnt in friendiv reeoinpence . . Mtu-li .(do, v. -1 

it is' not tVicndlv; 'tis not inaidcnly..l/i.(..V./)r. iii. 2 

gives tlic more Vrieiullv counsel. .VrirA.ciA /•(•mVc,ii. 2 

1 mn*t tell \on IVicndlv in your..4,«!/0H IJkeil, iii. :> 

let mc bnv vonr tViendlv help ill's llell. iii. 7 

give them" friendiv welcome. . V.imt'inr"/"*"'". 1 find.) 

so far forth frieiuilv maintained — i. 1 

in mv house von shall be friendiv Imlgcd — iv. 2 
I will seem friendly, as thou hast.. Iliiilei'srale, i. 2 
(a prosperous south- w intl iViendly) .. — v. 1 
this friendiv treatv of our threatened. A'i'n|r,'oAn, ii. 2 

let's drink toaether IVieudly iHenry I >'■ iv. 2 

look vou. and tViendlv eomnumication. Henrv f. iii.2 
friendiv counsel cidsolVmauv foes.l Henry fi. iii. 1 

conditionsof a tViendlv peace — v. 1 

nssnrniu'c with some friendly vow..3i;eiir!/r?. iv. 1 
reconcile me to his tViendlv peace. .Wc/inn' //'. ii. 1 
eompanv will not be friendiv to ..llenn/nil. v. 1 
like mail, is tViendlv with him. Timon of Alliens, v. 2 

to sav.thou'lt enter friendly — v. 5 

standing vour friendly lord Coriolnnns,[i. 3 

take our friendly senators by the — jv. 5 

going about their functions friendly — iv. 6 
such free and friendly conference. Jii/nwCrrsor, iv. 2 
a friendly eye could never sec sneh . . — iv. 3 

the gods to-day, stand tVicndly — v. 1 

did find her welcome IVicndly ..Anfony/iaeo.W. 6 
receive it friendly: but from this . . CymMhte, iii. 4 
a Britisli ensign wave friendly togetlier — v. i 



FRIKNDI.Y-bestow them flpieiull.v, ISiuxAnann. 1. 3 
use his daughter very tViendlv ' — iv. !l 

or else, look friendly upon tirce Priicles, iv. i! 

now. mv I'lieiullv kinne. 1 tlnnik tluf I.e.ii.i. 4 

now let tin liieiullv band put streiKth.. — iv. fi 
all and Ica'i e no friendly drop . . Itmnm .i- JuUrl. V. 3 

iii;ain as tViendlv as voii were OlMlo, iii. 3 

FHlKNl'Slur-" 

the law of iViendship bids me.. T'lro Gen. nfJVc. iii. I 

1 desire \ on in triendship Merrv K'l'fM, iii. I 

tViciuLship is constant iu all other . . Minh Ailo, ii. I 
is there anv wav to show sneh tVicn.lship? - iv. I 
all school-davs' triendship . . .V'„(. .Y.'s lhr,,m, iii. 3 
hold fair IViendship with bis niaiestv.l..iee'sL.i.,ii, I 
when did tViendshuitakca bived..>/r(',ii/' ;'iriiice,i. 3 
his f;n-,>ur. I extend this IViendship ,. — i, 3 

I do in IViendship counsel you: As you UKeil, i, 3 

most friendship IS leiuning — ii. 7 (song) 

in iVieiul>hip first tried our soldiership! .<H's"'rH. i. 3 

to mingle friendship far II , titer's l\ile, i. 3 

us IViendship we;irs at feasts — i. 3 

piMlit Iheivin the lica'ing tViend&hlpa — iv. 1 

p.>int of IViendship ^,,■|<^ 1 Henrvlf. v. 1 

ami friendship sludl combine Henry r. ii. t 

there is llaticry in iVieiulship — iii." 

but ioin in friendship, as vonr ....1 Henri/ (7. iii. I 

thv friendship makes lis Ircsh — iii. 3 

thev arc so linked in IViendship , . ..3Henri/(7. iv. 1 
tho'imlil of Ibis divided friendship.. «ir/uirii ///. i. 4 
no cause to hold nn IViendship doubtful — iv. 4 
equal iViendship aiid proeecding . . li.nnillll. ii. 4 
friends!ii|..eliaritv. arcsubieets. rrmliis .\ Cress, iii. 3 

bv friendship. m>rbv siieakim; — iv. 4 

bul wlierc lliere is true iViendship ,JVmoit(l^iil/A. i. 2 

friendship's full of drc-;s — i. 3 

es|H'ei;ilh ui.on bare friendship _ Ui. 1 

has friendship such u faint and niilkj' — iii. I 



ilky 

cly poisoitl 



iv. 1 
iv. 3 
— iv. 3 



their friendship, mav 

but in a dre;iin of iViemlslup.'. 

what friendship may I do tliee 

promise mc IViendship. bnt pcrtinaunone — iv. 3 

of friendship with tliiiie cncniies../n;iiis (■,e..iii-, iii. I 

wc shall remain in friendship ...^l.^)..y .1 Cleo. ii. 3 

seems to tie their fricmlsbip loscther — ii. 6 

he'll qiiicklv Ilv mv IViendship loo. .Cymbeline, v. 3 

love ools. fricndsldp falls olV Lear. i. 3 

some IViendship will it lend vou 'gainst — iii. 2 
so shall thou show me friendship. Komfo ,SJi//i'e(, v. 3 

in the bcalcn wav of friendsiiip HumW, ii. 3 

[K.if.l if v,nn' frien.lship were at leisure- .. — v. 3 
if 1 ilo v.iw a friendship. I'll perform ..Olhello.'m. 3 

FKlK/K-no inltv.frie.-.c, bnltress Miiclielli, \. 6 

FKUIill'-totViuht a monster's ear . . . . 7'e«ip«i, ii. 1 

or iVighl nie Willi urchin shows — ii. 2 

here's a fellow frichls humour .... jVerry ICii'm, ii, 1 
an intolerable frii^ht. to he detected.. — iii. 5 
this will so tVi^ht'thcni hot\x.... Twelfth A'li'Af, iii, 4 

von come to iViiht us — V. I 

"vou would fri-bt the duchess ...Wil.N.'sDream, i. 3 
if that vou should friiiht the Indies .. — i. 2 

that fri'aht Ihcmaideiisofthe — ii. 1 

to fii;;lit me, illliev could — iii, I 

to iVi-ht Ihein lienec with tluit, ., Lore's L. Lost, i. 1 
nodjxil will :Vii;bt thee Ilicnso .... — iv. S 
to iVl.bl the aniuiiils, and to kill .Asyoii Likeil, ii. I 
to tVi-ht me with vonr sprites. ... H'lH/ec'jJ'a;*, ii. 1 
on her friijhts. ami urriefs iwhich never — ii. 3 
the bm;. which \ on' would fright me — iii. 8 
her chain, and I'riaht us with h.Comedi/nr Kir. iv. 3 

to fri:;lil von thus, inetbinks Maehelli,\v. 2 

startles a'lid lVi;;lits consideration ..KingJohn, iv. 3 
in bis den. and' fri-ht him there .... — v. 1 

quiet eonliiiesfrislit fair peace Richard II. i. 3 

and friiiht our natiic peace with — ii. 3 

and meteors fri-lu the tixed stars ..,. — ii. 4 
his imliest mask, to frialit our p:irty.2Henryn', i. 1 
aforc'l'll he in these tirrits and frights — ii. 4 
come to woo ladies, 1 frii-dit them .... Henry »'. v. 3 
enouuli to fri::ht the rcalinof Franccl Henry I'l. iv. 7 

tofri.;lit the "world 'iHenryri. iii. 2 

uav. do not tViiild us with an angry .. -- v. I 

to fright the souls of fearful Kichard IU. i. 1 

mav iFriiiht the hopctVil mother — i. 2 

ft-ights. changes, horrors Troilus SCres.iida, i. 3 

to "IVight t hern, ere destroy (;oi-io/i)Mii.«, iv. 6 

cciennniies, vet now thev fright me..Jii/.(V.<iir, ii. 3 
hut in fnrv,'lVi.';llt mv volltll .... Tillis An.lion. iv. 1 

he'll frii;hl voii np, i'fiiilh /,'i.mci) .S ./ii'<W, iv. 5 

it flights th'e isle from her proprietv Ollielh, ii. 3 

the town iniLTht fall in tVi-ht — ii. 3 

these stops of thine frii;lit"me the more .. — iii. 3 
Fl-vUI ll'l'KD— friuhtcd the word out.. -Viic/i Ado, v, 2 

av, but not tVii:hted me Taming or flireir, v. 3 

for the llowcrs now. that. frii,'hlcd»'iii(rt's7'n;c, iv. 3 
find we a time for iVichtcd peace .. ..\ Henryll'. i. 1 

clamorous to the friLditcd fields — iii. I 

how luivc I fri-liled'thce, that tlion.2Hcmv/r. iii. 1 
have fri-hled with onr Irumpets. IJe/ii v IJ //. ^epil.■) 

where ladies shall be iVi^hted ( ■,'iiol.iiiiis. i. 9 

shall 1 he tViuhted. when a madman. ./i/;.C.c,,ni',iv. 3 
ranws iVi^ihled each oilier? .. ../lii(oii!/<!i-C/eu. iii. 11 

tobe IViurucdoiitoffcar — iii. 11 

frighted and anwred worse CymMine, ii. 3 

who, IVighted tVoin niv countrv, did wed. (Vw/cs,v. 3 
thnslVkhtcd.sweins'il prin er . . Knmro ,i.liiliel,i. 4 

what.frishtcd wilh I'nlse roe! ll.ia.'/.-Mii. 2 

FKUi U'l'l^r l,-lri:hltiil ;is I lie serpent's. 2 l/c». /•/.iii.2 

thvschooldavs, Irmlilliil, desrerate. /.'ir.'i.irj III. iv. 4 

Flvi(inTlN(i~for"lluisfrii;lilinginc.Ku<i,'.'.i/ui,iii. 1 

IVitdding her pale-faced vill.i:j;cs. . . . /.•iV/.,ir</ //. ii. 3 

thv neck, for Iri-hliim niel . . rmilus /i Cresmla. V. 4 

FIU'NfiK-tVinw iiiiona pel lieo.il..i.v !/,.» Likeil. iii. 3 

to imrt their triimes of In klil void Pericles, w. 2 

FRlNtlKl">~frim;ed,Mirt:iiiis,.illiinceve Tempesl,\.i 
FKn'l'UKY-wbal luloiiL's lou IVinpcrv? — iv. I 
FK IS K-lanibs,that did frisk i'llie sun (li'ii/ei-'srnle, i.3 
FKlT'l"i;K-niakcsfrittci-sofFni;lish.iU«ri/iritws,v.4 
FKlVOlAH'S- 
to lca\e fVivolous eireumstanecs.. 7'(imi'>iff(if ,SA. v. | 
for so slight nud frivolous a cause . . I Henry I'l.iv. \ 



I! 



I 



FlU 



[ 289 ] 



FUL 



FltlVUl.nilS^lHviiin uiiil frivolnim ..a/Zi-riri/rr I. K 

u. I.inlliii.c .!.*« fr lri/<% It l.li.ck. ..M,,la,l\. I 

Kl« K;K Ki «•« II iKH'k, .If lucry IhnnM, Ui. 1 

KlHu; t.«iiltV..(;. w..nl..ri,iit »l.ul,HI,,\v. 

KlltMi.MOUlO ^hK■U>*n^••ir«|^mm^•^trrnfll••^rl,\\.^ 
the- llil.ln Willi inf llir.ni>'li In i/niDrc — li. » 
ulic.iliir «ilitliiiiun t'n.lii li-");iiii.r« .. — Hi- 1 

rilLIISSAll'l-l' r,.i«!4irt, u tcimliyiimn 1 ''"'n/'''- '• I 

lU(H-lC-ii..w lire Ir.ilici iiotu ni(.u«c.A/i'/./V./>r. v. i 
llicri-tiirc, Irolic; we will Umix..TamijiKo/ Sli. Iv. 3 

I'ltilNT-IVcint lur, lioanl licr Tuel/1h Night. I. .1 

lli.rn. nuTiiiK in AprilV rrt.iit ..W.nlvr'ilnU, v. i 
ff.iiil I'l I'rnnl. l)ilti(.' lli'Mi lirn llciiil ..Miicttelh, Iv. a 

Dv, (.11 iiif in.i'.t. wi.y tiH 11, (; ,.r» .. - V. 7 

ulri., W>>il'"irBlinlllVcii.ttl..iii Ulc«.|//>'. li. f 

tl„lm„t..tluun.n w..»l,.ll/.l - In. 

w hut v,.ll-n|.iH.iiitc.l lcn.lertn>iit«ii».V!;/.'Hn//f. Iv. I 

but ikutl. .inth front tl.ic WI.-,.r|//7. Iv. 2 

Blttiiil. mill front liiin to I.Ik fiure ....illniryy . v. 

"luriiwl our main Imltk'H front ■Mtrmyl'l. i. 

ImtliKin.M.thcl l.i« wrinkK'.! front .. «;./im'''//. |. , 
mill front lint in thut Ilk- wlieru .... lUnruyill.l. i 
Hint pirtlv front your towii..7roi;i«iyfV<'»«i'M, iv. .; 
w illi Miiirint,' fronta tMiconntcring ..Vniiiilanui, i. 
think lolVontlii»revcMi)!i:3 with .... — v. "f 
ol lUi ir view n|ion a tiiwnv front AvIimyfrUeo. 1. 1 

l.,rr,.nlthi-lirwiittiiri(:: - 1. 1 

himI loioimnion ill tin/ front ol wiir .. — v. 1 

In lluk.-rinn !'h.i.hii«' front ;.mr, il. a 

the front of Jov... liiinnelf .....//WW. li|. J 

tlie very lieml anil front <it my offfnilMig.O(/ici/u, i. .) 

wiltst iiiT,a«ion liv the fiont — '!;• ' 

l''K(lN'TKI>-whii;li fionteil niiiit.../in(on|/.tf>". '1- ^ 
Fill >NTI1;K— the nioiKly frontier ....Mlrmyll .\. A 

orimlliMuloen, frontleni, |iurii|itt« — n. 3 

I'nliinil, «ir, or fornoine finntiery IhimM,\v. 4 

KKt)NTIN(J-towar(l» fronting |icril.i://«Hr(///'..iv. 1 

II cute of HUel froiitini; tlie kiim . TroiluM /j f ><■«. iii. 3 

KKONTliKT-wliut niuken thut frontlet on.'./.''ir. i. I 

FltnS T— when it i» Imkeil with front Ti-miu-tl, i. 'i 

full of froi-t. of storm, iinil clinidiiicxsy. Mwli .Wo. v. \ 

honry heuileil fio»t«full Mid.N.'t Drcitn, ij. i 

like nil envioiiH nnea|iini{ front ....Lote'i L.Loit, i. I 

if froBls mill fu»t.i, Imril IihIkJiiK — y.-'^ 

furewell, lieut: uiiil weloirnc. troBt.A/i-r. of I'rri. ii. 7 
liefore this frosi; lint tlion know'ot. Taming ofUh. iv. 1 

thy lieanty UK Hosts hite , — ,„\-'i 

Hint froHts will Lite them ■>lhiirvlV.\.,\ 

coi»ie» a front, a killing fro»t Henry I' I II. iii. ^ 

eiirile.l l.y the frost from piire»t Hiiow. . ..0„.<.(. v. :) 
haiiK the heail an llowera with frost.. ';v/««.l,»/. iv. 1 

like an untiriielv fio»t ll,w,rnJi.hiliH,iy. r, 

Hiiii.c fnwt itself as actively Uoth hiirn.//ion/''(, ni. i 

Fl{OSTY-a»aluBtv winter, frimty .//« i/ni< l.iUcit, ii. 3 

l>v thinkiiif! on the frohty CaueiiBusy./'Wiu/W //. i. 3 

that lieam u fronty Bonnil \ llniryir. iV. 1 

B|iiriteil with wine, ncem fronty? llcnryy. u\. !> 

whilen a more frosty people sweat .. — m- ■'' 

lianii"lic(l from the ft-osty head -iUenryVl.y. 1 

for all the frosty nights that I . . TitusAndron. iii. 1 
lint if my frosty siL'ns and chaps of aj;c — v. 3 
FKDS'l'V-SIMHlTCl)— 

wlnit a fro.-ty-spirited rogne in this? .1 HenrylV. ii. 3 
FltoTll— IV.ith uinl scum, thoii liest./lffrri/IJ'/iiM, i. 1 
we tlieern.lhnn.l lilne[^•,l^-live] .. — j. 3 

th here, tliis very nian.Wra./or.Wra. ii. 1 



. i.3 



_ iv. I 



niisli 



I'Votfi 



— ii. 1 
_ ii. I 



— II. 1 

— V. 1! 

— v. 2 
V. 2 



liMi"k into master I' roth here 

wan't not at llallowman, master Froth? — ii. i 

l'oikI mniiter Froth, look upon — ii. 1 

how eoiilil muster Froth ilo — n. I 

to nie, master Froth. Master Froth — |i. 1 

they will draw yon, muster Froth — ii. 1 

no more of it, ma..t<;r Froth — ". 1 

swallowed with yeiist and froth.. Iliiiifr'n Tidf, iii. 3 
fever seetli your lilood to froth. 7Vm-,;i .,//l(/ie;u,iv. 3 
with his embossed liotli the tiirhiilent — v. 2 
FltOWARD-Biillen, froward..7wi< '.'•«. o/;Vr. ill. 1 
btark niad, or wonderful frowurd . I'umini!"/ ■S'/i. i. 1 
and froward; so lieyiind all measure — i. 2 

for she's not frowaril, hut mislest .... 
and if she lie froward, then hast thou 
briiiKB your froward wives as prisoners — 
when she's froward, peevish, sullen.. — 
eoine, you froward and unable worms! — 
harsh nearim?, when women are froward — y. -j 
froward by nature, enemy to iieaiMj.l llevryl'l. iii. I 
ritOWN— extend not a frown further ..rvm/wtl, v. I 
pluck his highness' frown upon you.. — v. 1 
taiiL'Iit iiiy liiow to frown .. Tiro Oen.ofViironu,\. i 

sir Til iiriii frowns on you — \\. A 

if she do frown, 'tis not in — ill. I 

I frown the while Tu!e(flhMiihl,t\. U 

and til frown upon sir Toby — v. 1 

1 frown upon him frn,.) Mid. N. IJream,l. 1 

he doth iiothiii;,' but frown . . Mirrchant of VenicnX 2 
now I do frow n on thee with aW.Aiynu Like it, iii. ,'i 

iier frown mii-'lit kill me — >v. 1 

day, that she frown, I'll »ay . . Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 

thou ean'st not frown — _ll. I 

geiilles, methinks you frown — iii. 2 

IJianea. thy father will not frown .. — v. I 
wiiril lor word, and frown for frown — v. 2 

triek of his frown, his forehead . . WinterUTale, \\. 3 

are angrj', and frown niMin us — iii. 3 

the day frowns more and more 

liMik strunwe, and fi 

vi;.'onr ami rou;.'li fr 

never shall wi much as frown on you — iv. 1 

when, |s:rchaiue. it frowns more .... — iv. 2 

If thou hut frown on me — iv. 3 

and heaven itself doth fniwn U|M)ii .. — Iv. 3 

and ciiurt'sy at his frowns Mlemylf. ill. 2 

t<i frown iiiHiii tlieenra{<cd illrnry If. I. 1 

Uillinff their fruit with frowns? ...... Hrnry I'. Hi. .'i 

Uurdoliih's lot:, and frowna U|H>n him 



FROWN -If you frown upon iM». ...Mlenryl'l. W.'i 
smile mid frown, like to Achilles' ..■ilUnryy . y. 
consili of Kxeler, frowns, words . . . .ilhnry / /. l. I 
who.c frown hath maile thee faint .. — j. ^ 

foi this world frowns — • •• 

mill siiioolh the frowns of war with .. — .« 

while Warwick frowns ut his — Iii. •! 

forbear to fawn upon their frowns .. — v. I 
shield thee from Warwick's frown .. — iv. .) 

ilo not frown upon my faults — v. 1 

let my ((rlefii frown on the upper . . Ilnhard III. iv. 4 
the skv doth frown and lower iiimu .. - v. .;t 
the sc(r-»aiiie heaven that Ifowns on me — v. 3 

wherefore frowns he thus? Ilinryl'lll. v. !1 

wind and tempest of her frown.. 7'ro((ui tiC. 

frown on, you heavens, effect — 

liow you can frown, than spend .... t'orio/oir 

prepare thy brow to frown .......... — 

L'raver biihiness frowuB at this \ev\ty. Ant. fyCleo. U. 7 
yon do not meet a man, but frowns ..fi/m/jcdnc, i. 1 
fear no more the frown o' the Kreat - iv. 2 (sonK) 

but to look buck in frown — i;. -1 

riir ;,, (, .,i| I I .iltliy an({ry frown. 7'i7ui Andron.t. l 
n „,,, iinl ii iiil.les'at her frown .... — li- 1 

,,i , :, -i.ii II, ,,riiices' frowns Periclri, i. '^ 

nniil i.ni :i;ir, thritl'rown — >■* 

too lunch ol'hile i' tlie frown l-enr, 1. 4 

could else outfrowii false fortune's frown — v. 3 

I will frown US I liass by Ilomeo SfJuUcl, i. I 

mid iiut olV these frowns — }.■'■• 

I'll frown, and be [Kiryerse — .". ' 

hisBtiibhoniiiess, his checks, and frowns. 0«icHn,i v.. I 

KKI )W.\j;U-frowiied, it was unw'wwl.Knhurd II. ii. I 

wilhoiit desert have frowned on ine//it/i'i;'/ ///. ii. 1 

long hath frowned upon their enmity! — .v. 4 

than ever frowned in Greece I Coriolmiui, m. 

so frowned he ouce, when, in an ongry . . //um(e(, i. 1 

a better had habit of frownin(»..Werc/i.o/fcnicc,i. 2 

of llen:iiles, and frowning Mars — 'i}.- '^ 

answers thee with frownin'.^ looks./l«i/oi( l.ikeil,m.b 
the frowniiiu wrinkle of her brow! ..Kinn-lnhii, ii. 2 

mid frowiiiiii.; brow to brow... Ilirl„„dll. .. 1 

us frowning' at the favours of the .. ..'illinryl'l. i. I 
verdict up unto the frownin>!]udge?.«/W«ir./ ///.,i.4 

fair ladies pass away frowning Ih'nryl III.i. 4 

he parted Irowning from me ... . — '!!■ 2 

their courage wortliy hia frowning.. C)/mWinc,ii. 4 

he (/oes hence frowning — "i. ■'' 

Inclst no ni-iil to care for her Irowning .... I.i-nr,i. 4 
smiles on the frowning niglit ..llnwro A- JutM, 11. 3 
FltDW.NlINGI.V-lookedlicfrowiiingly?//"'"'"'', 1. 2 
FKI )/.!■; -of inv lihiod froze tip..Cmntdyu/- linori, v. 

rebellion, it had froze them up ■ilhnrylV. i. 1 

tlicv froze iiic into silenia; Timonof Alheni, ll. 2 

FKI ('/.KN-hcr frozen tlionghts. 7V'i Cen. ofVcr. ill. 2 
twenty iniicns, my frozen Al nscovites.iow/ sL.L. v. I 
and milk comes frozen home in pail - v. 2(8ijngJ 

are almost frozen to death Taminii of Sh. ly. 1 

to the frozen ridges of the Alps .. .lUchurd ll.i. \ 

Bix frozen winters spent, return .... — .1-3 

with thy frozen admonition make .. — ,"■ '. 

throw in the frozen bosoms of our ..•illenryVl.y. i 

in the field, frozen almost to death. /(/'c/mni ///. ii.. 1 

as IVozcii water to antarvcd snake. TihisAnrlrnn. in. 1 

the frozen bosom of tlie north. . . . /("""" '', .lulwl.u 4 

FHlurriFY-tliat do fructify in us. /.../'<•'.«/../.(•«/, iy.2 

FHIIGAl.-then frugalof my mirth. W'-rr;/ 'yo'cj.ii. 1 

for that at IVii|/al nature's fraiiie? . . Much Ad;, ly. 1 

FIUIIT— see tlie fruits of the sport. Tirrtph Ntt;hl,u. .'> 

tlie weakest kind of fruit dropB..M<T.'.//V)ii«., ly. 1 

that tipiiclies any of this fruit Atyoul.dicd,\\. 7 



FIMUTFI'l. 1 

notalrniiliili 



itfnl '.bjrc 

end tomal 

or the Ir 



ildsbi 
; earliest fr 



1 forth 



d fruit 

tlio country.. 



ch fruit. 



— iii. 2 

— iii. 2 



and (irtt fruits of my hisly H inter t lnle,ui. i 

bloom that iiromiseth a mighty lru\i.Knit;John, ii. 2 

the riiR-st fruit first falls tUvhard Il.ii. 1 

lie to tiiste their fruits of duty _ iii. 1 

bv the fruit, as the IViiit by llic ticc.l tlenrylV. i_i. 4 
W'hich, to pr-.ve frnit, hope ;.'iv.s nol.'jn.'/ir// / /'. I. 3 
Ipraytiod, the fruit of her wo.nli .. - y. 4 
neighboured by fruit of baser .|nality..//c»/-iy V.\. 

killing theirfrnit with frowiisV - „'''•■' 

she was the first fruit of my \UenryVl. v. 4 

murder not tlien the fruit within .... — .y. 4 
whose fruit thou art.and never of ...a/frnri///. ll". .^ 
fruits of love f mean. Thefruit8....3//i-«ri//-/._ii;. 2 

the leaves and fruit maintained — Hi- ■; 

king Kdward's fruit, true heir to .... — iv. 4 
not like the fruit of siieli a goodly.... — v. (> 

the loving kiss I give the fruit — v. 7 

this is the frnit of rashness! Hichnrd III.ii. 1 

treclmtli left ns lo.val fruit -,,,"'• I 

tliefruil I" .;ni Unryl'lll.v.\ 

;wholesome.7Vr,i(./jf,Vr».. ii. 3 
wii mellow frnit.. fonr./. iv. f, 
1 with fruit ..(■■(/HitHoic, iii. 3 



ll. 

lllBt..7'<'llf/l'l''''0". V. I 

iiistardy.. — y. I 
1 1 tree ....Tericlri,\.\ 



— iii. 3 



likclsii ;ii"i . 
Jlercol- iri 

WllOhlr t \' 

\uukV... III.' 

lheli:i-i- I 

mid bv Im III, 
taste ill. liiiiL 

with golden fruit, but dangerous - I. i 

Ills mistress were thatkind of \m\t.lt'mieii.^ Jnl.it. 1 

my ncwB shall be the fruit to thut tlwdet, ii. 2 

she took the fruits of my advice — !!• 2 

■which now, like fruit unripe — ",\- ^ 

purchase made, the fruits are to cnsiic. . Ulhello, ll. 3 
(•riilts, that blossom first, will first be npc — n. 3 
this is the frnit of wli ' 



iir.re friiitfiil than . . Timnn of Alh. v. 2 
irwi/no- li'iilioii.//)'''>"r/'t'-''''"P'"''a. j. '' 
rniitl.il tidii.ir" in mine — ii- ■'' 
bi. in eye of fmogen ..Cymlielinr,\. 4 
.this creature fruitful! .. .. I.e,ir,i. * 
lilliil river in the eye ....llmnln, i. 2 
framed as frnitlhl as the free elements. . itiln-llo, ii. 3 

FHUri'FUI-I.Y-most fruitfully All'ttleii. li. 2 

time and jilace will belrultfiilfy.. /.pnr, iv. fi (lett<;r) 

FIMirri I,I.NKS.S-urgnesl'rultfulnci'S..O//iW/o. in. 4 

FKIirriON-frnition of her love ....MIenryVI. v. ,'i 

FltlJITIj;SS~lriiitless pranks ..Tirelfh N>Kht,iv I 

liymns to the col.l fruitless mwrt. Mid. S. Dream, 1. 1 

shall seem a dream, and fruitless vision — iii. 2 

they plaied a fruitless i-rown Mnelielh, In. I 

Fltiri'l'-'IKKK— her fruit-trees all.. «it7iar<///. ill. 4 
the bark, the skill of our fruit-trees.. — iii. 4 
with silver all these fruit-tree tops, ft'/mfo f/Jul. il. I 

Fit I LSI I- I'll friish it 7r»iVii. ff Cre.niUi.y. « 

FIlFSTKATi;— onr frustrate starch ..Tempnt. in. 3 

to frnstratc prophecies •iUenryll'.y.'l 

to frnstrale liotli his oath ^Ilenry Vl.ii.X 

Iwing so frustrate, tell \\\m... Antony IfCteopnira.y. I 

011.1 frustrate his proud will '-''"'■. '.y. 

Fl'aiTlFY-shall frntify xmUi.Merehanl of Venire, ll. 2 

iJiY-devoins up all the fry it WwU ..AtCiWelt, iv. 3 

but thine doth fry: skipper ..'Taming of Shrew, U. 1 

young fry of treiu;lieryl Marlieth, iv. 2 

fry, lechery, fry! Troilui ^Crenid/i, v. 2 

driving the iioor fry before him I'ericlri, il. I 

FIIJJ'I)- have been fuWti.i)S(rep.)....iHenryiy. il. I 

Fi;i;i^fetcli us ill fuel T<mpe,t,\.'i 

well, the fuel isgone Henryf. li.H 

if wind mid fiieUie brought ilUnry yi. iii. 1 

1 need not add more fuel t'l your ..'.illenryyi. y. 4 

FUi;iU:A-)iiii |)cr diil.jiiruqiie iierfucrfJu/'friW-i, ii. 2 

FIIGlTlVi;— out, like a fugitive? ..I Henry yi. in. 3 

the fugitive I'urlhiunfl follow .. Antony fjf Cieo. ill. 1 

arnaster-leaver. and a fugitive — iv. 9 

FlJI.FII.-itself fnlftls the law ....Love'tL.ljiit, iv. 3 

but it does fulfil mv vow irinter'i Tale. iv. 3 

must their masters' minds fulfiLComff/i/ of tirr. ly. I 

hiseilict, and fnltll a man's? Welmrdlll. i. 4 

and siii..ke, fiillll vonr pleasure.. /«("« Crt-«ar, in. I 

to fulfil his priii.'c's ilesire I'erieln, il. (Gowcr) 

FIII.I- 1 IJ.KU-will have fulfilled. Winter't Tale, v. I 

the oracle is fulfilled - v. 2 

clevate.l that the oracle was fulfilled — v. 2 

Bie hisexe.iuies fnlfiMeil in Houen..! ;/<-nr!//'/. in. 2 
of (iod, your pU :.-... re b<- f.ilfilled!. //cnrv /'///■ »■ 4 
hut their i.leas.ircs most Is- fnltilled.. — v. 2 

tell him his c, :iii.liii.i.t is fulfilled. nnin;.-/, v. 2 

FU'l-FIliI.IN(J-f.ilfillinglsilt3.7'roi7«f.5-0«i. rprol.) 

Fi;J>I.— a lull poor c.!ll Tempnt, i. 2 

with drops full Rait — \-'j 

to bate nic a full year — 1. 1 

full fathom five til V father lies .... — i. 2 (eong) 

full many tt la<ly I have eyed — ni- [ 

never any with BO full Boul — in.' 

I am full of pleasure — !!!•'- 

the isle is full of noises — \"'i 

may with full and holy rite be ministered — iv. 1 

so full of valour, that they — 'V. 1 

in full of jealousy TtroGen. of Verona, w. 4 

the gentleman is full of virtue — !!.'•; 

I now am full resolved to — '!!- ' 

should be full fraught with — \».'j 

tt heart as full of sorrows — jv. .1 

and full of new-found oaths — ;v. i 

were full a-s lovely as is tlilB — >v. 1 

and full as much (for inor e — v. i 

reformed, civil, full of good — .>.■ J 

how full ofcholers I am Mrrry l>.r«, ii.. I 

I have iiiv belly full of f.ird - in- •; 

it be not inll of the knight again .... — iv. '.; 
mid full of gibes and vloutlng-stogs.. — iv. .> 
lie is full of lecheries and inirjuity .. — y. :, 

BO full of Bhapcfi is fancy Tirelfth Signt, i. [ 

are you full of them? 

my words arc as ful 1 of peace 

mv bosom is full of kindness 

tins is a practice, as full of li.b<.iir as 
BO it lie etoiinent, and full of invention 
lietw-ceii me and tin- full prospect of 
but thv infercepter, full of desi.itc .. 

plight'me the full uMurance of 

lie thou at full oiirself Me.iturefor Meantre, i. 1 

Init thou art full of error — 

as thos..- that kr.l grow full ...... . . - 

expresHlli his full tilth and hnsbandrj' — 
and with full line of hia authority .. — 
vou shall have your full time of — — 

lie says, to veil full puri«jse — 

will make up full dear . . . 
brings home full numbers 

youhave it full. Benedick . 

you must not make the full sliow of tins 

and full as fUntastical 

an a measure full of state and ancientry 
lier afleetionfl have their full bent . . 
deserve us full, as fortunate a bed 



_ 1.3 

— 1. .'» 

— ii. I 

— Iii- ' 

— iii'. 4 
_ iii. 4 

— iv. 3 



\.: 



..MuchAdo, i. 1 



....ComedyofErrori.W.i ' Fit I'lT-DISII-in a frnit-dish ..Mem.fOrMrnt.\\. \ 

wor KingJolin,\\\. 1 FHI I ITKKKIt-Stockllsh, a fruitercr.2Hr«r|;//'. in. i 

■ ■ FKUITFlJI,-oiiefriiillul iiiial...M«.«../.;r,yTO.. IV. 3 
wormwoo.l from yo.ir fr.iitl'nl biuin ./..nur il.. L. v. I 

am arrive.l f..r fridtf.il I il,ardy.7Vi,/ii)i(f /i/SA.j. I 

of fruitful Imid, all which shall be her - ii. I 
bloonii.l, and fniitfnl were the next.. U/enrKf/. i. 
miller you to breathe in fruitful iieace — v. | 
summer fields, ond fruitful vines ../(ic/iar<i ///. v. 1 
a hand OJi fruitful as the land Henry VIII. i. 3 | 



— iii. U 



mure moving delicate, and full ol life — 

thoii art full of piety, as shall — 

and very lull of proof — 

and a w-liole book full of these (juondam — 
so full of frost, of storm, and cloudiness? 



V. 4 



ii. t 

: - ii. 2 

_ ill. 1 (stmg) 

— iii. 2 

. — V. I 

V. 1 



full of vexation come I A'"''. A'- « /Jrc<"n..i. 1 

by night, full often hath she " " 

make her full ..f hateful fantosicii 
whose note full many a man — 

cut the clouds full fait 

the lovers, full of joy ami mirth . . 

wall, full often host thmi heard 

1 shall do it on a full stomach ....l,<ne'$L.Leil,\. i 
extravagant spirit, full of forniB, flfurcs — 'V. 2 

that Is not full so black - iv. 3 

that your face were not so full of Ocs! — v. 2 

you took the moon at full — ▼. 'J 

trim gnllonts, full of eoiirtsliip — v. S 

I oiii a fool, and full of imverty — ». * 



FULL— full of maggot ostentation.. Love'sL. Lost, v. 2 

full merrily hath tliiB brave manage — v. 2 

as love is full of unbefitting — v. '2 

like the eye full of strange "shapes — v. 2 

received your letters, full of love — v. 2 

pcriuredmucli, full of dear guiltiness — v. 2 

replete with mocks, full of comparisons — v. 2 
60 full of unmannerlv sa^ne^a. . Merch. of Venice, i. 2 

of full three thousand ducats — i. 3 

come, the full stop — iii. 1 

but the full sum of me is sum of — iii. 2 

hath full relation to the penalty — iv. 1 

with his horn full of good news — v. 1 

hard, and full of rage, but music for — \. 1 

not satisfied of these events at full .. — v. 1 

full of ambition, an envious .,45 you Likeit, i. 1 

full of noble device; of all sorts — i. 1 

thou lovest me not with the full weight — i. 2 

with his moutli full of news — i. 2 

how full of briars is this working-day — i. 3 

with his eyes full of anger — i. 3 

a careless herd, full of tne pasture .. — ii. 1 

for then he's full of matter — ii. 1 

a soldier, full of strange oaths — ii. 7 

full of wise saws and modern instances — ii.7 

that my full life doth sway — iii. 2 

you are full of pretty answers — iii. 2 

mconstant, full of tears, full of — iii. 2 

forswear the full stream of the world — iii. 2 

his kissing is as full of sanctity — iii. 4 

make the world full of ill-favo\ired.. — iii 5 

withal, full oft we see cold wisdom AU's IVcll, i. 1 

I am so full of businesses — i. 1 

which men full true shall find — i. 3 (song) 

yoiu- passions have to the full appeaehed — i. 3 

but, what at full I know _ ii. i 

tainted fellow, and full of wickedness — iii. 2 

to the full arming of the verity — iv. 3 

the count's a fool, and full of gold — iv. 3 (letter) 
silver bason, full of rose-water. rammi'o/.S/i . 1 (ind.) 

for I have it full _ i. 1 

a mad-brain rudesby, full of spleen — iii. 2 

the fashions, full of windgalls — iii. 2 

c.irousefull measure to her maidenhead — iii. 2 

come, you are so full of coney catching — iv. 1 

she must not be full gorged — iv. 1 

of tiiy arrival be full joyous — iv. 5 

that I have, to be full like me n'intm's Tale, i. 2 

it becomes thy oath full well.... — iv. 3 (song') 

your heart isfuU of something — iv. 3 

though full of our displeasure — iv. 3 

the king is full of grief — iv. 3 

looked upon my queen's full eyes — v. 1 

there was not full a month between . . — v. 1 
dilate at full what hath befallen.. Comedy of Err. i. 1 

this town is full of cozenage -^ i. 2 

a table full of welcome makes scarce — iii. 1 

shall make full satisfaction — v. 1 

to make thee full of growing Macbeth, i. 4 

he is full so valiant — i. 4 

it is too full o' the milk — i. 5 

full of scorpions is my mind — iii. 2 

the table's full. Here isa place — iii. 4 

give me some wine; fill full — iii. 4 

that speak him full of grace — iv. 3 

1 have 6up]ied full with horrors — v. 5 

told by an idiot, full of soimd and fury — v. 5 
into tlie world full fourteen weeks . . King John, i. 1 

but with a heart full of unstained .. — ii. i 

have their bowels full of wratli — ii. 1 

this addition more; full thirty thousand — ii. 2 

with wrongs, and therefore full of fears — iii. 1 

full of impleasing blots — iii. i 

and too full of gawds — iii. 3 

more ill news, for it is full — iv. 2 

rumours, full of idle dreams — iv. 2 

men's mouths are full of it — iv. 2 

at feasts, full warm of blood — v. 2 

are they both, and full of ire Richard II.\.\ 

one phial full of Edward's sacred .... 

full of careful business are 

and lie full low, graved in the hollow 

the world is full of rubs 

land, is full of weeds 

with full as many lies 

unseen, and full of water 

mine eyes are full of tears 

your brows are full of discontent 

tis full three months, since I v. 3 

hie prayers are full of false — v. 3 

as full of valour, as of royal — v. 5 

1 protest, my soul is full of woe — v. 6 



1.2 
ii. 2 
iii. 2 



— IV. 



stuflT your purses full of crowns 1 Henry 11'. i. 2 

as full of peril, and advent'rous — i. 3 

good friends, and full of expectation — ii. 3 

and our induction full of prosperous — iii. I 

of heaven was full of fiery shapes .... — iii. i 

glutted, gorged, and full — iii. 2 

thy looks are full of speed iii. 2 

our hands are full of business — iii. 2 

as full of spirit as the month of May — iv. 1 

the better part of ours are full of rest — iv. 3 

shall pay full dearly for this encounter — v. 1 

suspicion shall be all stuck full of eyes — v. 2 

I know this faee full well — v. 3 

our soldiers stand full fairly for — v. 3 

come, brother John, full bravely .... — v. 4 

like a horse full ofhigh feeding iHenrylV. i. 1 

tliis is the news at fuu _ i. i 

come against us in full puissance — i. 3 

beastly feeder, art so full of him — i. 3 

tear such a huge full hogshead? — ii. 4 

come we to full points here — ii. 4 

our battle is more full of names — i v. 1 

hath the prince .John a iull commission — iv. 1 

for full well he knows, he cannot — iv. 1 

as much as the full m\»n doth — iv. 3 

quick, forgetive, full of i.imble — iv. 3 

never come with both hantls full _ i v. 4 

I am here, brother, full of heaviness — iv. 4 



[ 290 ] 

FULL — king's honour, full fifteen earls. . Henry V. i. 1 

the king is full of grace — i. 1 

making defeat on the full power — i. 2 

forces the full pride of France — i. 2 

congruing in a full and natural — i. 2 

having fiill reference to one concent . . — i 

our history shall with full mouth .... — i 

rise there with so full a glory — i, 

the English with full power upon — ii. 4 

shall you bear our full intent back.... — ii. 4 

shall you know our mind at full — ii. 4 

every spirit to his full height I — iii. 1 

I would full feign heard some question — iii. 2 

injury, till it were full ripe — iii. 6 

they nave full threescore thousand — iv. 3 

he is as full of valour, as of kindness.. — iv. 3 

I did never know so full a voice — iv. 4 

he was full of jests, and gipes — iv. 7 

and squires, full fifteen hundred — iv. 8 

giving full trophy, signal, and ostent — v. (cliorus) 

wi th ful 1 accord to al 1 our — v. 2 

tongues of men are full of deceits? — v. 2 

a full eve will wax hollow — v. 2 

starts tlie full course of their glory — v. 2 (chorus) 
these letters, full of bad mischance ,.l Henry ri. i. I 

having full scarce six thousand — i. I 

and in a vision full of majesty — i. 2 

their pockets full of pebblestones.. .. — iii. 1 

'twas full of darnel — iii. 2 

virtuous, full of haughty coiu'age .... — iv. I 

60 full replete with choice — v. 5 

eighteen months be full expired IHenry VI. i. 1 

see these things eiFected to the full .. — i. 2 

work your grace's full content — i. 3 

my loi-d, I long to hear it at full — ii. 2 

we know your mind at full — ii. 2 

mine eyes are full of tears — ii. 3 

and full of deep deceit — iii. 1 

too full of foolish pity — ii . 1 

as full well he can — iii. 1 

full often, like a shag-haired — iii. 1 

his face is black, and full of blood .. — iii. 2 

staring full ghastly like a strangled.. — iii. 2 

with full as many signs of — iii. 2 

Ecritch-owls make the concert full?.. — iii. 2 

because full of riches — iv. 7 

hath made me full of sickness — iv. 7 

courteous, liberal, full of spirit ZHenry TI. i. 2 

coming with a full intent to dash — ii. 1 

who looked full gently on his — ii. 1 

full well hath Clifford played — ii. 2 

make the liour full complete — ii. 5 

ay, full as dearly as I love myself — iii. 2 

both full of truth, I make — iii- 3 

mine, full of sorrow and heart's .... — iii. 3 

confess, are full of grief — iv. 4 

his looks are full of peaceful majesty — iv. 6 

her faction will be full as strong .... — v. 2 

BO full of fearful dreams Richard 777. i. 4 

so full of dismal terror was — i. 4 

it fills one full of obstacles — i. 4 

treacherous, and full of guile — ii. I 

my soul is full of sorrow — ii. 1 

and, in his full and ripened years .. — ii. 3 

O full of danger is the duke — ii. 3 

of men are fiul of fear — ii. 3 

heavily, and full of dread — ii. 3 

'twas tuU two years ere I could get . . — ii. 4 

was full as long a doing — iii. 6 

full of wise care is this yoxir — iv. 1 

why should calamity be full of words? — iv. 4 

'tis full of thy foul wrongs — iv. 4 

by thee was punched full of deadly holes — v. 3 

full of state and woe Henry VIU. (prol.) 

did distinctly his full function — i. I 

shall shine at full upon them — i. 4 

O this is full of pitvl sir, it calls — ii. 1 

be guiltless, 'tis futl of woe — ii. 1 

fullof sad thoughts and troubles .... — ii. 2 

in full seeming, with meekness — ii. 4 

which I then did feel full sick — ii. 4 

the full cause of our coming — iii. 1 

full little, God knows, looking either — iii. I 

with all my full affections still — iii. 1 

:rou are full of lieavenly stuff — iii. 2 

from that full meridian of ray — iii. 2 

good easy man, full surely his — iii. 2 

have shown at full their royal — iv. 1 

which when the people had full view — iv. I 

with the same full state paced — iv. J 

full of repentance, continual — iv. 2 

tears, and love's full sacrifice.. Troilus ^Cressida, i. 2 

havinghisear full of his — i. 3 

in full as proud a place — i. 3 

nothing so full of heart — i. 3 

full, all over, generally? — ii. 1 

and thou art as full oi'^envy at — ii. 1 

sieve, because we now are full — ii. 2 

your breath with full consent — ii. 2 

your full consent gave wings — ii. 2 

dear lord, you are full of fau- words. . — iii. 1 

Nell, he is full of harmony — iii. 1 

when their rhymes, full of protest .. — iii. 2 

even to my full of view — iii. 3 

the grief is fine, full, perfect — iv. 4 

youths are full of quality — iv. 4 

there in the full convive we — iv. 5 

why, thou full dish of fool — v. 1 

bladders full of imposthume — v.l 

by eyes, are full of turpitude — v. 2 

full merrily the humble-bee — v. 11 

friendship's full of dregs Timon of A/hens, i. 2 

how full of valour did he bear — iii. 6 

lays her full mess before you — iv. 3 

full of decay and failing? — iv. 3 

that he is so full of gold? — v.l 

are his files as full as thy report? — v. 3 

till we have sealed thy full desire — v. 5 

did but fill Tthaca full of moths Coridnnns. i. 3 

being passed for consul with full voice — iii. 3 



rUIiL— too full of the wars' surfeits.. Con'o/onut, iv. 1 
to be full quitof thosemybanishers.. — iv. .5 
waking, audible, and full of vent .... — iv. 5 

I am out, even to a full disgrace — v. 3 

by the interpretation of fuU time — v. 3 

a city full ; of tribunes, such as you (rep.) — v. 4 

a full third part, the charges — v. 5 

known the earth so full of faults . . Julius Ccesar, i. 3 

thou receivest thy full petition — ii. 1 

danger knows full well, that Cassar. . — ii. 2 
our reasons are so full of good regard — iii. 1 

and that they know full well — iii. 2 

such as he is, full of regard — iv. 2 

full of rest, defence, and nimbleness — iv. 3 

on such a full sea are we now — iv. 3 

now is that noble vessel full of grief. . — v. 5 
I'm full sorry, that he approves .. Antony^ Cleo. i. I 
taunt my faults with such full licence — • i. 2 
but my full heart remains in use .... — i. 3 
full surfeits, and the dryness of his . . — i. 4 

say it will come to the full — ii. i 

etands upon the swell at fullof tide.. — iii. 2 
o'er my spirit thy full supremacy .. — iii. 9 
love, I am full of lead: some wine .. — iii. 9 
the full Caesar will answer his emptiness — iii. 11 

a brave army, and full of purpose — iv. 3 

make your full reference (rep.) — v. 2 

hath his belly full of fi'diting Cymbeline, ii. 1 

hunger to feed again, tho' full — ii. 4 

a course pretty and full of view — iii. 4 

are full weak to undertake our wars — iii. 7 

gods are more full of mercy — v. 4 

His full fortune doth confine — v. 4 

at this instant is full accomplished . . — v. 5 
full well, Andronicus, agree these. Titus Andron. i. 2 

full well shall thou perceive how — ii. l 

full well I wot the ground of all — ii. 1 

for that I am prepared and full resolved — ii. I 
hast thou not full often struck a doe — ii. l 

the palace full of tongues, of eyes — ii. i 

I have heard my grandsire say full oft — iv. J 

thy father hath full oft for this — iv. 1 

a charitable wish, and full of love — iv. 2 

be it known to you my full intent . . — iv. 2 

report is just, and full of truth .— v. 3 

so buxom, blithe, and full of face. Pericles, i. (Gow.) 

on whom plenty held full hand — i. 4 

their tables were stored full — i. 4 

how Thaliard came full bent with sin — ii. (Gow.) 

with bags of spices full ! — iii. 2 

yet glance full wanderingly on us . . — iii. 3 
and a wench full grown, even ripe.. — iv. (Gower) 

Mitylene is full of gallants — iv. 3 

you see how full of changes his age is .... Lear, i. 1 

to that full issue for which I raged — i. 4 

shall find thee full of labours — i. 4 

wont to be so full of songs, sirrah? — i. 4 

inform her full of my particular fear .... — i . 4 

noise I made, full suddenly he fled — ii. 1 

as full of grief as a»e — ii. 4 

I have full cause of weeping — ii. 4 

full oft 'tis seen, our mean secures us ... . — iv. 1 

his eyes were two full moons — iv. 6 

he's full of alteration, and self-reproving — v.l 

the wheel is come full circle — v. 3 

full soon the canker death eats. . Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 3 

that was so full of his ropery? — ii. 4 

as full of quarrels as an egg is full .. — iii. 1 
Shalt remain full two andforty hours — iv. 1 
thou know'st, is cross and full of sin — iv. 3 

I am sure, you have j'our hands full — iv. Z 

plays my heart is full of woe — iv. 6 

art thou so bare and full of wretchedness — v. I 

not nice but full of charge — v. 2 

a feasting presence full of light — v. 3 

been there? Full half an hour — v. 3 

of unimproved mettle hot and full Hamlet, i. 1 

the lists, and full proportions — i. 2 

in the full bent, to lay our service freely — ii. 2 
full thirty times hath Phoebus' cart — iii. 2 

frossly, full of bread; with all his — iii. 3 
is liberty is full of threats to all — i v. 1 

my soul IS full of discord, and dismay — iv. I 

■which imports at full, by letters conjuring — iv. 3 

so full of artless jealousy isguilt — iv. 6 

to have his fine pate full of n^ne dirt? .... — v.l 

full of most excellent differences — v. 2 

what a full [Knf.-fall] fortune does the. . Othello, i. 1 

now, in madness, being full of supper — i. 1 

I did full hard forbear him — i. 2 

and is in full commission here forCyprus — ii. 1 
the man commands like a full soldier .. — ii. 1 

she is full of most blessed conditions — ii. 1 

and there is full liberty of feasting — ii. 2 

and, I'll warrant her, full of game — ii. 3 

he'll be as full of quarrel and offence .... — ii. 3 

it shall be full of poise and difficulty — iii. 3 

I know thou art full of love and honesty — iii. 3 

lost my purse full of eruzadoes — iii. 4 

and when they are full, they belch us .. — iii. 4 
our full senate call all in all sufficient! .. — iv. 1 

speak, for my heart is fidl — v. 2 

rULL-ACORNEU-full-acomed hoa.x.Cymbeline,n. 5 
FULLAM— gourd, and fuUam holds. Merry Wives, i. 3 
FULL-CHARGED- 

level of a full-charged confederacy.. Henryr/JJ. i. 2 
FULLER— spinsters, carders, fullers . . — i. 2 
shall make a fuller number up ..Julius Ceesnr, iv. 3 
fuller blast ne'er shook our battlements. 0//ie(/o, ii. 1 
FtTLLEST-biddingofthefullest.>4n(o)i!/ SrClto. iii. II 
FULL-FLOWING— full-flowing stomach.. Lear, v. 3 
FULL-FORTUNED- 

show of the full-fortuned CiesBX. AntonySr Cleo.iv. 13 
FULL-FRAUGHT— full-fraught man. Henry V. ii. 2 
FULL-HEARTED— 

full-hearted, lolling the tongue Cymbeline, v. 3 

FULL-HOT— is like a full-hot horse. Henry nil. i. 1 
FULL-MANNED-rest full-manned. .4n(. ^Cleo. iii. 7 
FULL-WINGED-full-winged eagle. CvmiWi'ne, iii. 3 
FUI,LY-thvhistory fully unfold. /l/pn.?.>r Mens. i. ) 



FUL 

FULLY— infomiedhcrfiilly, I could not. /<H'i»ffH,v.3 
to instruct her fully in those ..Taming (tf Shrew, n. I 

coat, 9ir, was not fully mnde — jv. 1 

the match is fullv made, and all .... — „ '\- * 
here had the conquest fully been .... 1 Henry K/. i. 1 

and fullv even these thrue days —...'•'' 

not there at onoc nii.l fullv snti.sfied. Hfnrv^ III ii. 1 
had vou n.it I'liUv hii.l mv ^>Mc.Timonr,,r.ilheni,n.i 
the feiist, hiivin- fuUv .iim.! lHlore..Corio/anin,_i. 9 
that may fullv ilisoi.verliiui their .. — ,])■ '^ 

to oppose his liutred fully — "!• j 

whose every passion fully strives. /l"(on!/ ^Cleo. i. 1 

our hour is fully out — .'.\'- " 

it will stutf his suspicion more fully I.ear, ui. S 

FULXESS— wanton in fidnees Macbeth, \. 4 

fuhiess of perfection lies in him .... King John, n. 2 

and brim fulness of his force Hennj r.\.2 

such is the fulness of my heart's iHenrij VI. i. 1 

to lapse in fulness is sorer Cymbeline, in. 6 

FULSOME-and fulsome to minecar. Tveiflli Night, v.l 
before the fulsouie ewes, who . . Merch. of Venice, i. i 
tills gap of brcuth with tulsorae d\i3t. King John, lu. I 
washed to deuth witli fulsome wine. Iticltard III. v. 3 

lie with her: thnt's fulsome 0tlwUa,\\. 1 

FULVI.\-iulviii, peii-hiince, \s angty.A71t.Sr C'leo. i. 1 
Where's Fulvia's process? Ca-sar's .. — ;. [ 
when shrill-toiiRued Fulvia scolds . . — 1. 1 
why did he marrv Fulvia, and not love - 1. 1 

Fulvia thv wife first came into the field — i. 2 

rail thou In Fulvia's phrase - !• ^ 

Fulvia thv wife is dead — >■ ' 

Fulvia is dead. Sir? Fulvia is dead (rc/j.) — \. - 
if there were no more women but Fulvia — ;• 2 
for not alone the death of Fulvia ... . — !• 2 

■who have been false to Fulvia? — ;• ^ 

mv going, is Fulvia's death — '• 3 

can Fulvia die? She's dead — !• 3 

1 see, in Fulvia's death, how mine .. — 1. ;> 

BO Fulvia told me. I pr'ythee, turn.. — .1.3 

truth is, that Fulvia, to have me out of — 11. ^ 

FUMBLE— fumble with the sheets . ...HenryV. 11. 3 

he fumbles up into a loose adieu. Troitus^ Cress, iv. 4 

wrap and fumble in thine arm8?.ri(uj/fin/ro;i. iv. 2 

FUMBLEST— thou fumblest, Eros..^n(. i^Cleo. iv. 4 

FU.ME— ignorant fumes that mantle . . Tempest, v. 1 

Quoth she: I'U fuine with them. . Taming of Sh. 11. 1 

shall be a fume, and the receipt of — Macbeth. 1. 7 

her fume can need no spurs iHenryVl. 1. ?■ 

which the brain makes of fumes Cymbeline, iv. 2 

raised with the fume of siahs Romeo 4r Juliet, 1. 1 

FUMING— keep his brain tumin^^.-intony ^Cleo. a. I 
FUMITER— crowned with rank fumiter. . Lear, iv. 4 

FUMITORY— and rank fumitory HenryV. v. 2 

FUNCTION- tlie function well .. Twelfth NiglU, iv. 2 

sealed in mv function, by my — v. 1 

all the rest from their functions.. Meaj./orMMS.i. 2 

the very cvpher of a function — .11.2 

have paid trie heavens yoiur function — 111.2 
from the eye his function takes.Mid. A'jDreom, 111. ■.: 
above their fiuictions and their . .Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 
or what is he of basest function . . As you Like it, ii. 7 

and own no other function Winler'sTale, iv. 3 

that function is smothered in surmise.. Macde/A, 1. 3 

state of man in divers functions Henry l.\. 2 

their particular functions and wonder — 111. 7 

his place and function to attend IHenryVl.i. 1 

touching thy spiritual function .... — iii. I 
did distinctly his full function .... Henry VIH:]- ' 
and every function of your power — — iii. 2 
organs liad deceptious functions. Trnilus Sf Cress, v. 2 

follow your function, go Coriolanus, iv. 5 

going about their functions friendly — iv. 6 
should again do their due functions.. Ciymbc/ine, v. h 
his whole function suiting with forms. . Hamlet, n. 2 

powers their functions leave to do — 111.2 

play tlie god with his weak function . . Othello, n. 3 

some of your function, mistress — iv. 2 

FUNDAMENT.\L- 
tiie fuudameiital reason of this v!!Lr..All s IVell, 111. 1 
love the fundamental part of state.. Conofanus, iii. 1 
FUNEKAL— sing at a man's funeral ..Tempest, ii. 2 
turn melancholy forth to funerals. .iVi'rf.A'. s Dr. i. 1 
shall wait upon your father's funeral. King- JoAn, v. 7 

our tears wanting to this funeral 1 Hc/iri/ f/. i. 1 

only, give order tor my funeral — ii. i> 

breast shall bo thy funeral bell ,1 Henry fj. ii. 5 

speak in the order of his funeral . . JulimCcesar, iii. 1 
that Antony speak in his funeral — — Hi. 1 
not in your funeral speech blame us — iii. 1 
have any liand at all about his funeral — ■ iii. I 
come I to s|)eak in Cie-sar's funeral . . — jii. 2 

I am going to CiEsar'fl funeral — iii. 3 

his funerals shall not he in our — v. 3 

solemn show, attend this fnt\exe.\. Antony ff Cleo. y. 2 
safer triumph is this funeral pomp ... Titus And. i. 2 

graciously plead for his funerals — . i. 2 

must needs bestow her funeral — iv. 2 

no funeral rite, nor man in mournful — v. 3 

?;ives cause tn mourn his funeral Pericles, ii. 4 
irorn their office to black funeral./tomeo SfJuUet, iv. b 
with funeral praises do adorn thy tomb! — v. 3 
with mirth in fimeral. and with dirge . . Hamlet, i. 2 

I came to see your father's fimeral — i. 2 

the funeral baked meats did coldly furnish — i. 2 

his obscure funeral,— no trojihy, sword . . — iv. .> 

FUR-fur yoiu- gloves with reason.. TroidM^-CrMJ. li. 2 

wolf keep their fur dry, unbonneted Lear, iii. I 

FUKBISif— furbish new the name. . . . Uichard ;/. i. 3 

FURBISHED— with furbished arms Macbeth, i. 2 

FURIES— approach, ye furies fell!..jtfi<i./V.'« Dr. v. 1 
and of furies, and I know not what . . All's Well, v. 3 

lav thy head in Furies' lap 2 Henry I y. v. 3 

Olid his furies, and his wraths Henry f. iv. 7 

seize on him. furies, take him Hirhard III. i. 4 

FURIOUS-if vou sec him {imous.Ttretflh Night, 111. 4 

and furious, 'loyal, and neutral Macbeth, ii. 3 

and furious close of civil butclicry ..XHrnrylt .1. I 
that furious Scot, the bloody Dougla3.2H<>iirw/r. i. 1 
a most furious kniglit, and valorous — iy. 3 

vile, and dunined furious wiglitl Henry V. i\. I 



[291 ] 



FUR 




c,u-tiirii.iisan.lilnn;it\cnttlu-y 

^onii's tlu- t'lirioiis Tvbiilt hiu'k .llomeo^ Juliet, 11 

FUK1.0\(;S — thoiisiiiul fiirlcm','8of eea..r>'mpMf, i. 1 

a thnusuiicl riM-lniif;s, ire with spur. Wiuter'sTale, i. 2 

FURNACE-sii.!irMi'.' like furnace../!.! you LiUeii, li. 7 

heat not u funiuru lor vour foe Henry I III. i. 1 

he furnaces tW tliick sighs from him. Cymbeline, 1. 7 
FURNACE-BUHNINU— 

to quench my furnace-burning hcart.3 Henry VI. 11. 1 
FURNISH— I will furnish it anon ....Tempest, 11. i 

to furnish ine upon my Two Geu.nf Verona, li. 7 

can furni;.!! insui withal Tuietflh Night, 111. 4 

the best to furMi^li iiif to-morrow MuchAdo, 111. 1 

to furnish thte to Bulmont ..MercliaiU of Venice, i. 1 

of my tribe, will furnish me — .1.3 

we have two hours to furnish us — — 11. 4 
that thee mav furnish, and my \na.y(iTS.AllsWell,i. 1 
gift shall furnish me to those Italian — 11. 3 

tlie revenue whereof shall furnish us.Ric/iari II. 1. 4 
thousand pound, to furnish me fortli?.2Henry IV.i. 2 
to furnish him with all appertinents. . Henry V. 11. 2 
vouchsafe to furnish us with some.. 3 Henry f'/. 11.1. 3 
that he may furnish and instruct . . Henry Vlll.i. 2 
furnish Rome, and to prepare the ways — m. 2 
good Diomed, furnish you fairly. Troilus ff Cress, in. 3 
sent to your lordships to furnish.. 'rmiono./"/l(A. 111. 1 

to furnish out a moderate table — in. 4 

as vou think fit to furnish me ..liomeo ffJuhel, iv. 2 
colllly furnish forth the marriage tables. Hnm/e^l. 2 
to furnish me with some swift means . . Othello, 11.1. 3 

FURNISHED- he furnished me Tempest. 1, 2 

let him be fm-nished withdivines.Mea./or Men. lii. 2 
and jewels, she is furnished with.A/ec. of Venice, 11. 4 
he is furnished with my opinion.. — iv. 1 (letter) 
he was furnished like a hunter ../(jyou Li*ei(, ni. '2 

I am not furnished like a beggar — (epil.) 

furnished with plate and gold. Taming of Shrew, 11. 1 
not furnished like Bohemia's son. Il'inter s Tale,iv. 3 
not furnished with the present ..Comedy of F.rr. ly. 1 
furnished by the duke of Bretagne..ii;c/iarrf II. u. 1 

all furnished, all in arms \ Henry IV. iv. 1 

semblablv furnished like the king .. — y. 3 

he is fuin'ished with no certainties 2HenrylV. 1. 1 

that is not furnished in this sort. . . . 1 Henry VI. iv. 1 
ridden, and furnished .... Henry Vlll. 11. 2 (letter) 

my Wolsey, see it furnished — .1.1.2 

'tis furnished well with men .. ..Julius C<rsnr. in. 1 
I shall be furnished to inform you. Antony SClen. i.4 

less furnished than now he is Cymbeline, 1. 5 

if she be furnished with a mind — .1.7 

honoured triumph, strangely fciniished. Pendes, 11. 2 
FURNISHING— these are but furnishings. Acir. 11.1. 1 
FURNITURE— and his fiu-niture .... All's Uell.n. 3 

for this poor furniture Taming of .SAreu', iy. 3 

money, and order for their furniture. I Henry I V. 111. 3 

discharge, money, or furniture 2 HenryV I. u 3 

fit it with such furniture, as suits.. Henry T///. 11. 1 
FURNIVjVL— Fumival of Sheffield. . 1 Henry VI. iv. 7 
FUROR-that ira furor brevis est . Timon of Athens,}. 2 
FURRED-furredgowntokeep(rep.).Mea./orA;eo.iu.2 

to travel with her furred pack 2HenryVl.i\.2 

yea, tmd furred moss besides Cymbeline, iv. 2 

robes, and furred gowns, hide all Lear, iv. fl 

FITKROW-come hither from the furrow, rempesf.iy. 1 

time to furrow me with age Richard 11. 1. 3 

rank fumiter, and furrow weeds Lear, iv. 4 

FURROWED-the furrowed sea. Henry r. m. (choms) 

FU RTHER— inform thee further Tempes!, i. 2 

thou must now know further — ;• 2 

please you further — ?■ * 

hear a'little further — .!• ■- 

make further search for my poor son — 11. 1 

run into no further danger — in. 2 

interrupt the monster one word further — n|.'- 

I'll go im-ther ott" — !!!■ '^ 

I prvthee stand further off — i!;- -^ 

stand fiu-ther— come proceed — ni. 2 

1 can go no further, sir — i". 3 

dotli e-xtend not a frown fiu:ther — y. 1 

I will look further into't Merry If ires, n. 1 

let's obey his humour a little further — iv. 2 
pursue him with any fvirther revenge? — iv. 2 

shall be any further afflicted — iv. 2 

well, I will muse no further — v. .t 

trip no further, pretty sweeting. Twelfth N.ii. 3 (song r 

I will no further chide you — in- 3 

if thou darest tempt me further — iv. 1 

it may awake my bounty furtlier — — v. 1 

these things fiirtner thought on — y- ' 

you nuns no further privileges?.. A/e<it./or Meas. i. h 

let me hear vou speak further — lu. 1 

and by me tills further charge — )V- '^ 

I will go further than I meant ...... — iv. ^ 

that apprehends no further than this — y. 1 

ere you flout old ends anv further Mucli .4rfo, 1. 1 

we'll hear further of it by your daughter — .11. 3 

wonder not till further warrant — m. '2 

let me go no further to mine answer — .y- 1 

lie further off' yet, do not lie . . ;l/id. A". » Dream, u. 3 
for love and courtesy, lie further off — .11. 3 

and follow you no further — \n- 2 

lean no further crawl, no further go — 111.2 
what if I stra.ved nofurthcr ..MeicA.o/»'enice, 11. 7 

use no further means, hut — jv- [ 

of force I must attempt you further.. — ly. j 
I wi II no f u rther offend you than ..As you Like ''. !• ' 

nor no further in sport neither — .1.2 

I cannot go no further — !}■ * 

I can go no further; 0,1 die for food 1 — .11.6 
do not look for further recompense . . — ui- ■'> 
I durst go no further than the lie.... — v. 4 
I will speak with yon further anon . . i«( « "'elJ, 1. 3 
give us a further use to be made — >'•'•' 



— V. 3 



. . Macbeth, 1. 4 
- i. 5 (letter) 



— iii. 6 



rrah, inquire further after me 
we'll sift this matter further . 

do they charge me further? — y. 3 

importune me nofurthcr Tmningof Shrru;'. 1 

ecek their fortunes further than at home - . i. 2 
but then up further; and as far as . . — ly. S 
and see her, no further trust her. . Winter tTale, 11. 1 

I'll queen it no inch fnrllu-r — iv. 3 

hut I could afflict you further 

and hind us further to .vou 

in desire to ouestion them further 

we wi 11 sficak further — 

we will proceed no further in this — 

I'll tlevil-porter it no further — 

of work, to know it further — 

and went further, which is now our point — 
nothing, can touch him further! 

which can interpret further . 

I dare not speak much further — i.y. j 

being no further enemy to you King John, n. 1 

further I will not flatter you, my lord — .11.2 
for our goods we do no further usk .. — iv. 2 
and run to meet displeasure fnrthcrfrom — v. 1 
and he no further harmful than in show — v. 2 

further I say, and further will Richard II. 1. 1 

ere further leisure yield them further — 1. J 
nor near, nor further off, my gracious — Iii- 2 
uncle, further than you should (rep.) — iii- .- 

hither hath nofurthcr scope — I'j. ^ 

in more shame, be further spoken.. ..IHenry/F. 1. 3 

no further go in this — .;• ^ 

four foot by the squire further afoot. . — u- ^ 

ere I'll rob a foot further — ;!• ' 

but yet no further wise — 'u j 

not an inch further: but hark you .. — .n. 3 
never walk'st further than Fiiisbnry — i.n. 1 
ond further, I have learned, the king — iv. 1 
proceeded fm-ther; cut me off the heads — iv. 3 
claim no further than your new-fallen — y. 1 

to approve my youtli further 2HenrylV. 1. •: 

follow no further now — 'v. 3 

highness knows, comes to no further use — ly. 4 

didpushit out of further qiiestion Henry V.l. 1 

for us, wewill consider of tills further — u. 4 
if you urge me further than to say .. — v. - 
my lords, no further of tlie ease .... 1 Henry VI. 11. 1 

in'earnest of a furtherbenefit — v. 3 

that I can read no further iHennjVl.i. I 

it is further agreed between them — i. 1 (articles) 

until 3'our further time of trial — iii- 1 

his eyeballs further out than when .. — m- 2 
persuaded him from any further act — y. 3 

when they can fly no further? ZHenry VI. i. 4 

tut! were it further off, I'll pluck — in. 2 

while I use further conference with.. — in. 3 
then further— all dissembling set aside — in- 3 
my thoughts aim at a further matter — iv. 1 
and as I further have to understand — iv. 4 

no further than the Tower Richard III. ly. 1 

consider further, that what hishigh.HeKryC;;/. i. 1 
know how he determines further — ■— i. I 
benefit no further than vainly longing — \. i 
advise j'ou further in the proceeding — 1. '- 
adding further, that, hiul the king . . — 1.2 

canst thou s.ay further? I can. my liege — .i- '-' 
forfurther life in this world Ine er.. — n.- 1 
proceeded, or how far further shall . . — ii- 4 
adiourn this court till further day . . — .n. 4 
till vou hear further from his liighness — ui- 2 

thelring's further pleasure is — in- 2 

further, sir, stands in the gap — v. I 

tillfurther trial, in those charges.... — v.l 
heard you without induranee, further — v. 1 
not meddle nor make no further. Troilut ^ Cress, i. I 

what further you will do — ly. 6 

well, what further? Timon qf Athens, 1. I 

till you hear furtlier from me — .»• ] 

come, sermon me no further — >'• ^ 

trouble him no further — y- '' 

before we proceed any further Coriolanus, 1. 1 

abhorred further than seen — 1. 4 

without any further deed to heave them — 

and so trouble you no further — 

I have no fiu-ther with you — 

pass no further. Ha! what is that? {rep.) — 
not poison any further. Shall remain! — 
shall scorn him further trial than the — 
shall turn you to no further harm .. — .. 
being of catching nature, spread further — 111. 1 
my mother does not approve me further — in. 2 
can do i' the way of flattery, further — in . 2 
shall I be charged no further than . . — in- o 
consider further, that when he speaks — iii- 3 

I'll know no further: let them — \n.i 

he's gone, and we'll no further — »y. '- 

construe anv further my neglect ..JuhusCtrtar, i. 2 
entreat vou", be any further moved . . — .1. 2 
I urged you further; then you scratched — n. 1 
friends shall wish I had been further — .11. 2 
tempt me no further. Away •.,•.■•■• — "'•J 
fly further oft', mv lord, fly further off — y. 3 
p'ray you, stand ftirther from me.. Antony iCtto.i. 3 

'tis a spoce fur further travel — ;!. I 

to enforce no further the griefs . . — — 
let me hear Aerippa further speak . . — 

further this act of grace — 

trouble yourselves no further: pray you — 
say— Cwsar; go no further. Indeed.. — 
no further, sir. You take from me . . — 
could not endure a further view — — 
there I will attend what further comes — 
thou stand'st, furthei than he is Csesnr — 



ii. 3 
ii. 3 
iii. 1 
iii. I 
iii. I 
iii. 1 



li.2 



lii. 11 



FUl 



[ 202 ] 



V. 5 



— ii. 3 



i. 5 
iii. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 2 
iv. f> 



— V. 3 



j rilRTKER— peace; liavk imther. .Itiloiiij ^-CleoAv. !l 
further on, "where tlieir appointment — iv. 10 

lie down, and stray no further — iv. 1*2 

further tlian yon slniU find cause — v. 2 

I am no further your enemy CynibrUne^ i. .5 

no further service, doctor, until — i. 6 

it is an earnest of a further pood — i. 6 

I grant we were to quet-tion further.. — ii. 1 

if you seek for further satisfying — ii. 4 

no further halting: satisfy me liome — iii. 5 
to tliy furtlier fear, nay, to thy mere — iv. 2 
no furtlier with your din express .... — v. 4 
further to hoast were neither true nor — v. .'i 
peace, peace! see further; he eyes us not — 

be silent; let's see fm'ther — 

became of him, I furtlier know not .. — 

some device of furtliermisery. Toms /)nrfro)i(CK.t, iii. 1 

further to question of your king's PeriHes, i. 3 

if fmther yet you will be satisfied .... 

and further he desires to know of you 

and for a further grief, God give you joy — u. a 

but I'll see further; perhaps they — iv. 2 

there's no further necessity of qimlities — iv. 3 

let us beseech you further, that — v. I 

further compliment of leave-taking Lear, i. 1 

we shall further think of it — i. 1 

witliout any further delay than this very — i. '2 
I will look further into 't: hxit Where's . . — 1.4 
acquaint my d.aughter no further with . . 

I will talk further with .you 

I cannot daub it further. Come hither .. 

then sliall you go no further 

go thon further otf; bid me farewell 

no more, till further settling 

no fin-tlier, sir; a man may rot 

to-morrow, or at furtlier space 

to know our further pleasure Romeo <?• Juliet, 

and yet no further tlian a wanton's bird — ii. 2 
in what I further shall intend to do — v. 3 
vengeance be pursued further than death — v. 3 
what further woe conspires against.. — y. 3 

to suppress his further gait herein Hamlet, i. 2 

giving to yon no further personal power — i. 2 
whicli is no further than the main voice — i. 3 

speak, I'll go no fiu-ther. Mark me — i. .') 

herein furtlier shown, that it might — ii. 2 

how may we try it further? — ii. 2 

give him a further edge, and drive his .. — iii. 1 
ave you any further trade with us? .... — iii, 2 

go join yon with some further aid — iv. I 

let's furtlier tliink of this; weigh — iv. 7 

without debatemeiit further, more, or less — v. 2 
canker of our nature come in further evil ? — v. 2 
no further conscionable, than in putting. 0//te//o,ii. 1 
no further off than in a politic distance.. — iii. 3 

of my thought; no fiu'ther hai'ni — iii. 3 

to scan this thing no further; leave it .. — iii. 3 

I will hear fiu-ther reason for this — iv. 2 

trouble yourself no further. O pardon mc — iv. 3 

FIIRTIiERANCE-m.aygivefurtherance.Henr!/;-'.i.2 
you to your wonted fiirtlierance?. ..ABenri/FI. v. 3 
br .your' furtherance, I am clothed Pericles, ii. 1 

FlfRTIIERliR— afurthererintheact..re»i;)fs(, v. 1 

FURTHERMORE— 
furthermore, I pray you, show. . Mer.of Venice, iv. 2 
furthermore, we'll have the lord . .SHennjVI. iv. 2 

FUliTlIEST-at the furthest? ()-<'p.X7'ow/ng-o/S/i.iv.2 
brother-in-law was the furthest ofll Winter's T. iv. 3 
have I spent in furthest Greece.. Co?nec/i/ o/£)r. i. 1 

the furthest limit of ray embassy KingJolm, i. 1 

ti) the furthest x'ori^e that ever was .. liic/iard II. i. I 
as mv fmthost liand shall pass. . Antony SrCleo. iii. 2 
should in the fiuthest east negin,. Romeo ^ Juliet, i. 1 
sliore washed with the furthest sea ., — ii. 2 

FUKY— allaying both their fury Tempest^ i. 2 

fury, fury ! there, tyrant, there ! — iv. 1 

'gamst my fury do I take part — v. 1 

the fury of uugoverned youth.. Two Gen, of Ver. iv. 1 
skill, fury, and impetuosity .... Twelfth Night, iii. 4 
she were not possessed with a fury. . .. Much Ado, i. 1 
I ill fury hither followed them. .Mid. N.Dreaw, iv. 1 
a vessel of thy law's fury.. Love's L. Lost, i. 1 (letter) 

what zeal, what fury bath — iv. 3 

oppose my patience to his fury .. Mer.of Tenice, iv. 1 

the thing that feeds their fury Taming of Sh. ii. 1 

the fury spent, anon, did this IVinter'sTale, iii. 3 

till the fury of his highness settle — iv. 3 

that here and there his fury had. Comedy of Err. v. 1 

I do repent me of my fury Macbeth, ii. 3 

do call it valiant fury — v. 2 

full of sound and fury, signifying — v. 5 

against whose fury and unmatched . . King John, i. 1 
in mortal fury half so peremptory .. — ii. 2 
as doth the fury of two desperate .... — iii. 1 
that ever fury breathed, the youth . . — v. 2 

with fury, from his native Richard II. ii. 1 

and fury shall abate, give me thy Henry V. ii. 1 

tell him, my fury shall abate, and I — iv. 4 
banished moody discontented fury.l Henry VI, iii. 1 

tempt the fury of my three — iv. 2 

and wrathful fury, makes me weep. . — iv. 3 

dizzy-eyed fui-y, and great rage — iv. 7 

in tfiy lace I see thy fury illeiiryVI. i. 1 

the fury of this mad-bred flaw — iii. 1 

or oxen could I spend my f ury ! .... — v. 1 

is as a fury to torment my soiU ZHenry VI. i. 3 

to retire by fury of the wind — ii. .'j 

ne'er spend their fury on a child — v. .'j 

lost in the labyrinth of thy fury?. Trail, f,- Cress, ii. 3 
with a noble fiiry, and fair spirit. Timon ofAth. iii. 5 

in that beastly fury he lia.3 been — iii. 5 

worthy my spleen and fury — iii. 5 

the quality of lord Timon s fury? — iii. 6 

thy fury spent, confounded be thyself! — iv. 3 
thine ownself the conquest of thy fury — iv. 3 

embarquements of all fury Coriolama, i. 1 

domestic fury, and fierce evil JuliusCrrsar, iii. 1 

come lUce a fury crowned ..Antony ^-Cleoiiatra, ii. h 

to spend ills fury upon, himself — iv. 6 

thou fell's'' into my fury — iv. 10 



FURY— fury not to be resisted Ci/mbeliiu; iii. 1 

such noble fury in so poor a thing .. — v. .^i 
whose i'ury, notilissomhltnl, speaks. Titus.tndron. i. *J: 

but in fury, fright my youth — iv. 1 

as she in fury shall cii t nlf the — iv. 4 

dread fury, to my woful house — v. 2 

wrath be mute, and fury dumb? .... — v. 3 
catch in their fur.v, and make nothing . . Lear, iii. 1 

th.nt in the fury of his heart — iji. 4 

fire-eyed fury be my iiomiwctnovf I. Romeo ^ Jul. iii. I 
the iiurcasonable fury of a beast .... — iii. 3 

my licad, by urging me to fury — y. 3 

in her prophetic fury sewed the work. . Othello, iii. 4 
I understand a fury in your words — iv. 2 

FURZE— brown furze, any thing Tempest, i. 1 

tooth'd briers, sharp furzes — iv. 1 

FirST— reason to fust in us unused .... Hamlet, iv. 4 

FUSTIAN— a fustian riddle! .... Twelfth Night, ii. 5 
serving-men in their newfustian. Taming ofSh. iv. 1 
cannot endure such afustian rascal!. 2He)i;)//r. ii. 4 
and discourse fustian with one's own . . Othello, ii. 3 

FUSTILARIAN— youfustilarian! ..iHenryiV. ii. 1 

FUSTY— at this fusty stuff .... rroiiMs ^Cressida, i. 3 

crack a fusty nut with no ; — ii. 1 

that, with the fusty plebeians Con'olanus, i, 9 

FUTURE-eflfectsot' future hopes. rfMGen.o/fM-. i. 1 
that shows what future evils.... Meas./o?';Veas. ii. 2 

may token to the future our past All's Well, iv. 2 

present comfort, and for future good. Winter's T. v. 1 

feel now the future in the instant Macbeth.^ i. 6 

and future ages groan for this to\i\., Richard II, iv. 1 
give me signs of future accidents! . . 1 Henry VI. v. 3 
my heart's on future mischief set! ..2Henry VI. v. 2 
provide for thine own future safet.y. Hcnr;/ ('///. iii. 2 
on the present; in future, all .. Timon of Athens, i, 1 

the future comes apace — ii. 2 

he'd lay the future open Cymbeline, iii. 2 

that future strife may be prevented now . . Lear, i. 1 

FUTURlTY-purposed merit in futurity . 0(A<;Ho, iii. 4 

G 

GABBLE— wouldst gabble like a tiling.. Tempest, i. 2 

but to gablile like tinkers Twelfth Niglit, ii. 3 

chough's Language, gabble enough ..All's Well, iv. 1 

GABERDINE— under his gaberdine . . Tempest, ii. 2 

under the dead moon-calf's gaberdine. . — Ii. 2 

spit upon my Jewish gaberdine „Mer. of Venice, i. 3 

GABRIEL— and Gabriel's pumps. Taming ofSh. iv. 1 

GAD— and with a gad of steel.. Titus Andronicus, iv. 1 

all tills done upon the gad! Lear, i. i 

GADDING— you been gadding?.. Borneo <lj- Juliet, iv. J 
GADSHILL-shallweknowifGadshill.lH«!»-y/r.i. 2 

four o'clock, eaily at Gadshill — i. 2 

Gadshill lies to-night in Rochester .. — i. 2 
Peto, and Gadshill, shall rob those men — i. 2 

good-morrow, master Gadshill — ii. 1 

when thon ran'st up Gadshill — iii. 3 

your night's exploit on Gadshill iHenrylV, i. 2 

wlien you ran away by Gadshill .... — ii. 4 
GAGE-yon shall not gage me.Merchanl of Venice, ii. 2 

there 1 throw my gage Ridiard II. i, 1 

hui-1 down my gage upon — i. 1 

the duke of Norfolk's gage — i. 1 

give me his gage ; lions make — i. 1 

and I resign my gage — i. 1 

Cousin, throw down your gage — i. 1 

there is my gage, the manual — iv. 1 

there is my gage, Aumerle, in gage to — iv. 1 

there I throw my gage, to prove — iv. 1 

trust me with a gage, that Norfolk . . — iv. 1 
differences shall all rest imder gage.. — iv. I 

give me any gage of thine Henry V, iv. 1 

tis the .gage of one tiiat I should fight — iv. 7 

'GAGE— gage them both in an unjust.l HenryTV. i. 3 

GAGED-Jiath left me gaged. . Merchant of Venice, i. 1 

moiety competent was gaged by our king. Hamlet, i. 1 

GAGGED-occasiou to him, he is gagged. TwelflhN. i. .■] 

an' yon smile not, he's gagged — v. 1 

GAGING-and gating me to keep.. Troilus Sf Cress, v. 1 
GAGNE— gagne deux mots d'Anglois..He?iry V, iii. 4 
GAIN — perhaps a hapless gain. Tu-o Gen.of Verona, i. 1 

if study's gam be thus Love'sL, Lost, I. 1 

what gliould I gain by the exaction. Mcr. ofVen, i. 2 

sh.all gain what many men — ii. 7 

mocked at my gains, scorned my .... — iii. 1 
I, his brother, gain nothiug under.. .4s you Like it, i. I 

if both gain all, the gift doth All's Well, ii. 1 

we drown our gain in tearsi — iv. J 

till your deeds gain them — y. E 

gain, or perish on the seas (rep,).. Taming of Sh. ii. 1 
the loss, the gain, the ordering .. Winter sTalc, ii. 1 

think he gains by death Comedy of Errors, iii. 5 

and gain a husband by his liberty .. — _y. 1 

whom we, to gain our place Macbeth, iii. S 

to gain the timely inn — iii. J 

every one shall share i' the gains — iv. 1 

that for thine own gain shoiildst .... King John, i, 1 

fain, be mv lord; for I will worship — ii. : 

ut what snail I gain by young — iii.'? 

your care is— gain of care Richard II. iv. 1 

wi 11 add right worthy gains — y. ( 

for the gain proposed choked IHenryiV, i. 1 

by no suit gain our audience — iv. 1 

wherein, to gain the language.. — iv. ' 

my gain of it l)y their assistances .... — iv. ' 

Eartakers of a little gain \ Henry VI. ii. ; 
y me they nothing gain — iv. i 

if" they can gain your liberty — v.! 

shall tlie Frenchman gain thereby .. — v.- 

my mind presageth happy gain ZHenry VI, v, 

labours thou Shalt reap the gain — v.' 

then must I count my gains Richard III, i. 

and weep, tlieir gain and loss — ii. 

for the gain thereof — iii. 

lowly factor for another's gain — iii. 

uncertain way of gain! — iv. 

ten times double gain of liappiness .. — iv. 

the gain of my attempt the least — v. 

bid him strive to gain the love Henry fill, i. 

indeed, to gain the iiopedom — iii. 



GAL 



GAtN — yon more honour gain Henry VIII. v. 2 

anil death, their gain ! Timon of.4thens, v. 2 

anything, wc hope to gain by you ..Coriiilnnns, ii. 3 
nuik(.'s choice of loss, than giun. . Antotii/^l-ciro. iii. I 
gains, or loses, your sword, or imnii. ,i:ymbrline, ii. 4 
such gain [A'n(. -gains] the cap (if him — iii. 3 

to gain his colour, I'd let a parish — iv. 2 

not gain so great a happiness.. Tilus .ludronicus, ii. 5 

glory, which desert must gain Pericles, i. 1 

losing a mite, a mountain gain — ij. (Gower) 

he gams the name of goofl — ii. 1 

a deed might gain her love — ii. 5 

where you have most gain — iv. 3 

thy master would gain aught by me — iv. 6 
her gain she gives the cursed bawd .... v. (Gower) 

which serves and seeks for gain Lear, ii. 4 

we go to gain a little patch of ground. . Hamlet, iv. 4 

I will gain nothing but my shame — v. 2 

an attempt of ease, and gam, to wake . . Othello, i. 3 

every way makes my gain [Co(. -game] .. — v. 1 

GAINED— grace being gained. Love's L. L, iv. 3 (vers.) 

yes, I have gained my experience. .4s you Like it, iv. 1 

I gained my freedom Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

boisterously maintained as gained. . king John, iii. 4 
wherein such preparation was gained. Henry/', iv. 1 

hath gained thy daughter 1 Henry VI, v. 3 

for I nave gained by it Antony ^ Cleopatra, ii. (i 

so gained the sur-addition, Leonatus. C,vm(/e(rne, i. 1 
wlib hath gained of education all. Pericles, iv. (Gow.) 
own gained Icnowledge should profane . . Othello, i. 3 

GAINER lie now a gainer? Merry Wives, ii. 2 

GAIN-GIVING— a kind of gain-giving.. Hmn/e/, v. 2 
GAINSAID-to be by me gainsaid. . . .-iHenrylV. i. 1 
GAINSAY-impudence to gainsay. Winter'sTale, iii. 2 

gainsays king Edward's right ZHenryVI, iv. 7 

rriy tears gainsay; for every word .... — v. 4 

that I gainsay ray deed Henry VIII, i\, 4 

but the i list gods gainsay .... Troilus fy Cressida, iv. 5 
GAIN-SAYlNG-l'U no gain-saying. »ri)i/ef's7'aip,i.2 

GAIT— I know her by her gait Tempest, iv. I 

and strut in his gait? Merry Wives, i. 4 

give an excellent motion to thy gait — iii. 3 

addi'ess thy gait unto her Twelfth Night, i. 4 

tlie manner of his gait — ii- 3 

I will answer you with gait and — iii. 1 

pretty and with swimming gait.. ^Virf.A'.Djeam, ii. 2 
well beguiled the heavy gait of night — v. 1 

every fairy take his gait ! — y.i 

a gait, a state, a brow Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 

his gait niajestical, and his general . . — v. 1 

there do muster true gait, eat All's Well, ii. 1 

voice, gait, and action .... Taming of Sh, 1 (indue.) 
this chamber with her princely gait? — ii. 1 

in gait and countenance surely — iv. 2 

hatli not my gait in it Winter'sTale, iv. 3 

the forced gait of a shuffling \HenrylV. iii. 1 

no legs, than practised not his gait..2He;i7i/ IV, ii. 3 

in speech, ill gait, in diet — ii. 3 

should with ills lion gait walk HennjV. ii. 2 

in face, in gait, in speech he doth ,,2HenryVI. iii, 1 

springs out into liist gait Henry VIII. iii. 2 

her cheek, her gait, her voice.. Troilus ^ Cressida, i, ] 

I ken the manner of his gait — iv. .'> 

stay not here thy gait . . Timon of Athens, v. 5 (epit. ) 

I do know him by his gait JuliusC(esar,'\, 3 

what majestj' is in her gait?. .4n(ony SfCleopalra,\M,'i 

good gentleman, go your gait Lear, iv. G 

thy very gait did prophecy a royal — v. 3 

to suppress his further gait herein //a)n(e(, i. 2 

nor the gait of christians — iii. 2 

Iknowhisgait,'tishe: villain,thoudiest. Othello, v, 1 

GALATHE— he fights on Galathe. rjoiijis <5- Cress, v. 5 

GALE— calm seas, auspicious gales .... Tempest, v. 1 

what happy gale blows yon to Padua.. Tom. o/S/i.i. 2 

a little gale will soon disperse ZHenry VI, v. 3 

with every gale and vary of their masters, y^ear, ii. 2 

GALEN-my Galen? my heart of elder?.^Mec)!/ W, ii. 3 

knowledge in Hibocrates and Galen — iii. 1 

both of Galen and Paracelsus All's Well, ii. 3 

the cause of his efi'ects in Galen i Henry I V, i. 2 

most sovereign prescription in Galen. Con'otajiusjii. I 
GALL— let there be gall enough.. r«-e(/?/i Nigid, iii. 2 
to strike, and gall tliem. . . . Measure Jor Measure, \, 4 
a dismissed oftence would after gall. . — ii. 2 
can tie the gall up in the slanderous — iii. 2 
tliou grievest my gall. Gall? bitter. Love's L. Losi,v.'2 

and take my milk for gall Macbeth, i . .'i 

gall of goat, and slips of yew — i v. 1 

shall gall yon, Faulconbridge (J-ep.) . . — iv. 3 

save how to gall and pinch 1 Henry IV. i, 3 

well, I am loath to gall a new-healed.2He)!);/i;'. i.2 

with the bitterness of our galls — ;■ 2 

for the gout galls the one — .i- 2 

have steeped their galls in honey Henry V, ii. 2 

in fretting spend his gall 1 Henry VI, i, 2 

gall, worse tlian gall, the daintiest..2He».ry VI, iii. 2 

from the flow of gall I name not Henry VIII, i. 1 

wliose gall coins slanders like . Troilus % Cressida, j. 3 

they have galls, good arms — i. 3 

the honey still, but these the gall — .ii. 2 

O deadly gall, and tiieme of all — iv. 5 

out, gall! Finch egg! — v. I 

though ink be made of gall Cymbeline, i. 2 

a iiestilent gall to me! Lear,;. 4 

alUove, and added to the gall — i. 4 

choking gall, and a preserving sweet.flomeo fyJul,}, 1 

sweet, convert to bitter gall — i. 5 

the canker galls the infants of the spring. Hamlet,], 3 
and lack gall to make oppression bitter — ii. 2 
if I gall hira slightly, it may be death . . — iv. 7 
heel of the courtier, he galls his kibe — — y. I 

many gall liim with some cheek Othello, i. 1 

to sugar, or to gall, being strong on both — _i. 3 
let it not gall your patience, good lago . . — ii. I 
why, we have galls; and though we have — iv. 3 
GALIjANT— gallant which thou see'st. . Tempest, i, 2 
our royal, good, and gallant ship .... — y. 1 
to show liimselfayoung gallant. .jl/erry Wives, \\, 1 
iiav, Iteep your way, little gallant.... — iii. 1 
gallants, 1 am not as I have beeii....^/«cA<J''o, iii. 2 



GALLANT— tlicsiiUnnls of the towi\. MuchAdo, iii. 4 

u Kwtot pullnnt. sviivly I — iv. I 

rCf-M kills liiiiisuirniost Kiillaut ..MiJ. X.'tlh. i. ii 
nivir ilid I liriir slid' ^'iiUiiiit chiiliii)? — iv. I 

II pilhint lailvl M.iiisi.iir Lare',l..l.oil,i\. 1 

1111(1 tills iMosi (.'iilliiiit, illustrate — V. 1 

nivM-ir, 111- tliis ;.'iilhint Kfiitlemivii .... — V.I 

tlu••-■ll!hlnts^ll:^ll III- tusked — v. •.' 

tlueiilhiiitsnicMit hima — v. 2 

this Liiilliint pins tile wtiiLhes on liirt.. — v. 2 

tiiiii's ;;ulliiiils, lull oreoiirtsliip — v- i 

ecniie. where is tills vouni,' f{allunt..'l>i/oi( l.ikeil, i. i 

tlioii iirt u eulhiiit voutli — i- 2 

11 L'lillant i-uitle-uxe iiponmy tliiKh — '• 3 

ft tell Hint aiil hint hither — ii. 2 

'tis 11 niostfriilhiiil felh.w /TW'sirW/, iii. .^ 

nil ni'.'ht. P"..r inilhint Uiiiive — iv. 3 

nnmsleiir I'lirnlle^, the ^'ulliiiit iiiilitiirist — iv. 3 
e.Miie, wlieiT he the.-e Lfulliints? . . •/■./.iiiHi'u/ Sh. iii. i 
this L-alhint will e.iiniiniiMl the snn .. — iv. 3 
i- :i -nlluntihil'l; .me thut, iiuleed. »l'i'ii/fr's 7a/c,i.l 

drew tills trulhint IkimI of wiir King Julm, V. 2 

Uiiciw. the uiilliint iiu'imreh is In ttnns — v. 2 

iin.l what saiil llie eallalit? Kichurdll. v. 3 

tlie.^Mllttiit lloi-iuir there \HfmylV.\. 1 

u L'allant piizei' lia, cuiisin, is it not? — i. I 

pilluiits, lads. boys, hearts of fold ,. — ii. 4 
this gallant Ilotsiiur, this nll-piaised — iii. 2 

and a licud of L-ailant warriors — iv. 4 

a i-'allunt knight lie was, liis name — v. 3 

liv licaven.and a most sal hint leiulcr.2//e»n/"'. iii. 2 
sweat drops of i;ullant youth in our ..llciinji'. iii. 5 
is gallant and most pr.ive passa;;es .. — iii. IS 
of iny lady, he's a gallant priiiee .... — iii. 7 

to horse, you gallant princes! — iv. 2 

our French gallants shall to-dav draw — iv. 2 

'tis a gallant kingi Ay. he was .. — iv. 7 

es<iuircs, and gallant gentlemen — iv. 8 

goiHl-niorrow, pal hints! want ye 1 Umryl'l. iii. 2 

like a gallant in the hiow of youth.. 2//p)ir.v;7. v. 3 
L'ulhiiit Warwiclv.doliut an/wer....3/lcn>!/r/. v. 1 
iirii.;: forth the i;allMnl. let ns near .. — v..') 
rcrnrmutior, of our travelled L;anunts.f/eniT/r///.i. 3 
she is a gallant creature, and complete — iii. i 

Hector's a u'allant man Troilus SfCiessida, i. 2 

is't not a gallant man too, is't not'^ .. — i. 2 

this ehallein;e, that the gallant Hector — i. 3 
like tt gaUant horse fallen in first rank — iii. 3 

1 liavc, thou gallant Trojan, seen thee oft — iv. 5 
gallant show and |lromi^e of thcir../H/i«sCrt"jar, iv. 2 
the enemy comes on in gallant show — v. 1 
goodly, and gallant, shall he false . . Ci/mhel'ne, iii. 1 
gi\e.vou joy, sir, of your gallant bride. TilmAiid. i. 2 

near, and you are gallant'grooms — iv. 2 

sure he's a u'allant gentleman I'erietes,u. 3 

Alitvicne isfullof L'allants — iv. 3 

a ga'liant ladv. S!ic'- such — v. 1 

that gallant siMrit hath aspired .Womco^/wdW, iii. 1 
gallant, vouiiu' and iioiile gentleman — iii..') 
but this "gallant had witchcraft \nt....lI'imM. iv. 7 
braceofCypriis calhints. that would fain. 0//ieto,ii. 3 
the gallants desire it. Where are thev? .. — ii. 3 

GALLANTLY-kills himself most gallantly 

[ Co/.-gallant] for love .ViiZ. N.'s Dream, i. 2 

on his thighs, gal lantly armed 1 Uennj 1 1', iv. I 

very gallantly maintained the pridge.Hejir;/ ''• iii. B 
he L'ocs forth "gal liintlv intony ^ Cleopalra, iv. 1 

GAl.LANTR'i'-sallantry of Troy. TroiV. * C'rm. iii. 1 

GALLANT-SPftlNGIXG- 
gallant-springin!*, hrave Plantagcnct..7?ic/i.///. i. 1 

G.VLLANT'ST'— millant'st dames . . TilusAiidroj,. i. 2 

GALLED— my state being called ..Men, HVi-cv, iii, 1 
that are most galled witli my fiilly. As i/mi Like 11, ii. 7 
'a has a little galled me, I confess. Tmnini; ofSh. v. 2 

how I am galled irm,t.r'« Tale, i. 2 

have you Iwcn ^'alled by the king?..2//f;ir!/ //'. iv. 1 

as doth a gulled rock o erlian" Henry V. iii. 1 

in galled eyes of weeping souls li'tekard III. iv. -I 

huntsman that hasgalled liim.... f/<!nr!/ VIII. \\\. 2 
dome galled goose of Winchester, rroi/iu^rrcj. v. 11 
would have galled his surly nature.. C'or/o/aHuy, ii. 3 
the bull being galled, gave Aries. TilusAmlrori. iv. 3 

lelt the flush 111'.' in her galled eyes llamtel, i. 2 

let the nailed jade wince, our withers — iii. 2 

G.Vl.LKKY-gallery have wciiasscd.»r,;i/er'»7'ai<?, v. 3 
in niv gallery thy picture hangs .... 1 //cnri/ /'/. ii.3 
avoiil the gallery: ha! I have sai<X.. Henry nil. v. I 
we'll w ithdraw into the gallery I'ericlet, ii. 2 

G.VLLKY-tlie count his galleys.. Tiretflh Xighl, iii. 3 

and twelve tight galleys Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 

abfiard my galley I invite yn\i txW.Antonyij- Cien. ii. 6 
liest force is forth to mail his galleys — iv. 10 

the galleys have sent a dozen Ollullo, i. 2 

say, a hundred and seven galleys — i. 3 

a messenger from thegallevs — i. 3 

G.\LLIA— shall make all Gallia sliake-Henrj/Ci. 2 

the pride of Gallia rescued thee \ Henry VI. iv. 6 

England's glor.v, Gallia's wonder .... — iv. 7 
the queen hath raised in Gullia ....ZHenryVI. v. 3 

from Gallia \ crossed the seas Cymbeline,'\. 7 

tlic legions now in Gallia — ii. 4 

that he already liath in Gallia — iii. 5 

the kuions now in (iallia arc full weak — iii. 7 

remaining now ill (iailia? — iii. 7 

the legions garrisoiieil in Gallia — iv. 2 

legions, all from Gallia drawn — iv. 3 

G/Vl,LIAN— the (;allian territories ..\HemyVl. v. I 
much loves a Gall ian girl at home ..Ci/mheline, i. 7 

GA LLIAKU-e.xeelleiice iu a galliard , IweW'' A. i. 3 
dust thou not go to church ill a golliard — i. 3 
was fonned under the star of a givtliard — i. 3 
can lie with a nimble galliartl won ,.,, Henry K i. 2 

GALLIA.-iSi;,S_two galliasses.YVrrai,ii»o/ Slueie, ii. 1 

GALLING— galliiij^tlie gleaned land ..Henryf. i. 2 
glccking and gulling atthisgeutleman — v. 1 
gallinghis kiiiglv hands with hauling. /Vri'r//'f, tv. 1 

G A LL( )NS— sack," two gallona, it. 6<l. i Henry tV. ii. i 

GALLOP— not a false gallop MurhAdo, iii. 4 

or a thief, that gallops so? Love'i I.. I.nii, iv. 3 

tWia IB the very false gallop of versee . .4> you l.ikr, iii. 2 



OALLOI'-who time gallops withal. /4« you Likeil, iii. 2 

wliodolh he itallop withttlir — iii. 2 

and gallop o'er the Held Henry V.iv.l 

she'll gallop fast, ■,i..iigh -iHenryl't. i. 3 

galloi>stlic /^ndiac ill his glistering.. 7'>Yii' And. ii. I 

111 this state she L'allops Homeo (, Juliet, i. 4 

she gallops o'er a courtier's nose .... — i. 4 

gallop iipacp, you licrv-footeil steeds — iii. 2 

GALLOPING— the gall.iuiiig of horse.. J>/nrf«-M, iv. 1 

GALI.O\V-is perfect gallows Tempetl,]. I 

if a gallows were on land — v. 1 

what with tile gallows Measure for Measure, i. 2 

and a shiewd unhappy pillows . . l.ove't I.. l.n»l,y, 2 
lUcr, of Venice, iv. 1 



even from tlic gallows did his 

to bring thee to the gallows 

with a thief to tlie gallows 

silly cheat: gallows, and knock, 
flow as the ridge of the gallows . 
shall there be gallows standing , 
I'll make a fat pair of gallows . 
the gallows shall have wn 



V. I 

Ah you Like it, iii. 2 
. Ifinler'tTale, iv. 2 

MIenrylV. i. 2 

— i. 2 

— . ii. 1 

.ilhiiry IV. ii. 2 



ther break some gallows' back 

let giillows ■_'a|pe for doi: Henry V. iii. G 

sluill he straiiL'ledon the gallows.... 2Hcnr(/F/. ii. 3 

marked for the gallows — iv. 2 

belong to the gallows, and lie haivx']. llnuii VI II. v. 3 
unless a man would marry a gal lows. f>////'/Wiiif. v. 1 
wrathful skiesgallow the very wanderers, y.c.ji, iii. 2 

in good faith; the gallows does well Hamlii,v. I 

the gallows is built stronger than (rp.) — v. 1 

GALLOWAY— not galloway nags'/.. 2lif;iry;r. ii. 4 

G ALT ,OWGL ASSES— 
Kernes and Gallowglasscs is supplied.. Jl/uf6p/^i, i. 2 
of (iallowgla-sses, and stout Kerncs..2/Je»r|/)'/, iv. 9 

G .VLL( tWSES— gaolers, and gallowses! Ci/nibetine, v. 4 

G ALL( )WS-M AKEK-the gallows-maker. llamlet,v.\ 

GAJjLUS— Gallus. go yon along ..Antony ffClen. v. 1 

GALLY-MAWl' KY-thygally-mawfry.il/m;/)f'.ii 1 
is a gally-mawfry of gambols .. Winter^ Tale, iv. 3 

GAM— Daw Gam, esijuire; none else ..Il/'niyV. iv. 8 

GA.MBUl--and gambol in his eyes.. .V,(/..V.nr. iii. I 
make such wantMii gambols . ..Vtvrft. ofV.nire, iii. 2 

aLhristnias i;aiiiljol T.iming of Shrrir,i (indue.) 

is a gallv-nia-wfry of gambols . . IVinlrr's Tale, iv. 3 

and niicfi other gambol faculties 'IHenrylV. ii. 4 

which inadiiess would gambol from . . Hamlet, iii. 4 
your gambols? your son''8'i' your flashes — v. I 

GA.ME— cried game, said 1 well? ..Merry Wives, ii. 3 

lost at a game of tick-tack Meas. for Mens. i. 3 

as woggisli boys in game themselves. .A/id.A'.Dr.i. 1 

ay, that way goes the game — iii. 2 

are at their giime, and we will lo.Love'sL.Lost, iv. 2 

mocking intended game — v. 2 

pastmie here, and pleasant game .... — v. 2 
that see'st a game jilayed home .. Winter's Tale, i. 2 

60 thrive it in vour game! King Joint, iv. 2 

the best cards for the game, to win . . — v. 2 

before the game's afoot MIenrylV. \.i 

the game's afoot; follow Henry F. iii. 1 

wear at the Olympian games Zilenry VI. ii. 3 

he knows the game — iii. 2 

the colour of his usual game — iv. .5 

for this w.ay lies the game — iv. 5 

nor play at subtle games Troilus Sf Cressida, iv. 4 

and daughters of the game — iv. .'i 

the bull has the game: 'ware horns, ho! — v. 8 
if our betters play at that game. Timon of.ithens^ i. 2 
followed the sugared game bcfor thee — iv. 3 
the games are done, and C:csar is. . Julius CfF~snr,\. 2 
dost play with him at anjy game..W»'ony (,- Cleo. ii. 3 

hark ! the game is rouseil! Cyndiellne, iii. 3 

for natural father. The game is up . . — iii. 3 
follow where the game makes way., r/'us And. ii. 2 

the game was ne'er so fair Honieo ^Juliet, 1.4 

and, I'll warrant her, full of game Othello, ii. 3 

[Co(.] everv way makes mv game — v. 1 

GAJIESOllE-pleasant, gamesome. Taming qf Sh. ii. 1 

I am not gamesome: Ido lack Julius Cresar, i. 2 

so merry, and so gamesome Ct/mheline, i. 7 

GAMES'rER-keepagamesterfrom.iVcrryWii'M, iii. I 
you are a gentlemen, and a gamester. Lord's t.i. i. 2 

uow will I stir this gamester As you Like it, i. I 

was a common gamester to the camp...4H'sir(>H, v. 3 
young gamester, your father .... Taming o/SA. ii. 1 
the gentler gamester is the soonest . . Henry V. iii. 6 

you are a inerry gamester Henry Vlll. i. 4 

were you a gamester at five Pericles, iv. 6 

GAAILNG- as gaming, my lord Hamlet, ii. 1 

there was he gaming; there o'ertook in.. — ii. 1 
.at gaiiiiii!.', swearing; or about some act — iii. 3 

GAM M()M-1 have a gammon of bacon. 1 IhnrylV. ii.l 

GA.Mi; T— to teach you gamut. 7'awi/n^o/.S/ir(W, iii. 1 

past my gamut long ago (rep.) — iii. I 

gamut"! am, the ground of all .. — iii. 1 (gamut) 
call you this, gamut? tut! I like — — iii. 1 

'GAN— 'gan passage find.. Love'sL.Lost, iv. 3 (verses) 
the thane of Cawdor, 'gan a dismal .... Maebetli, i. 2 
of the king, 'gan vail his stomach ..'iHenrylV.i. 1 

the din of war 'gan pierce his Coriotanus, ii. 2 

'gan to look the way that they did . . Cymbeline, v. 3 

mine Italian brain 'gan in your — v. 5 

every one with claps 'gan sotind./'fricfc*, iii. (Gow.) 

G.VNGUENED— being once gangrened. .C'ori'o/. iii. 1 

GAN YMEDE— call me, Ganymede.. )« you Like it, i. 3 
here comes young master Ganymede — iii. "2 
how now, Ganymede! sweet Ganymede! — iv. 3 
there is more in it: cinisin! Ganymede! — iv. 3 
ami I for (ianyinede. Aiul I for (rep.) — v. i 

GAOL— pen and inkhorn to the gaoL.jVucA .Ida, iii. b 

and meet me at the gaol — iii. 5 

carry this mail knave to the gaol.rnmi«4'o/i'/i. v. 1 

carry me to the gaol I — v. I 

that" would have sent me to the gaol.. — v. 1 
break open the gaols, and let out ..'IHenryVl. iv. 3 
my retentive enemy, my gaol'i'. Timon of.lthent, iii. 4 
prisoner, and his bed my gaol Lrnr, iv. ( letter) 

GAOLEK-gaoler is the friend ..Meas. far Mens. iv. 2 
gaoler, look to him, tell not me.Mrr.of Venice, iii. 3 
lent out money gratis; gaoler, look.. — '!!•'' 
I do wiiudcr, llioii iiaiiglily gaoler .. — iii. 3 



OAIJLER— gaoler, on; iiray (;o<l..iW(r.o/ Venice, iii. 3 

not your giuilcr then, tint your H'inier'sTale, i. 2 

gaoler, take him to thy custody. .Conu'i/yo/'firr. i. 1 
thou, gaoler, thou, I am thy prisoner — iv. 4 

come, gaoler, bring me where — iv. 4 

is made my gaoler to attend liiehmd It. i. 3 

his injury the gaoler to his i>ity Coriolannt, v. 1 

but yet is a gaoler to bring forth. /1h/o«v ^ Cleo. ii. ii 

but your gaoler shall deliver you Cymbeline, i. 2 

thou slialt be then freer than a gaoler — v. 4 

there were desolation of gaolers. ... — v. 4 
GAP-of that wide gap .. .. »'iii(fr'»/'a<(!, iv. (chnnis) 

and hieitk afoul ga^l into — iv. 3 

[lerformed in this wide gap of time .. — v. 3 
It had been as a gap in our great .... Mnrlietli, iii. l 
and stoj) this gap of breath with — Kim^John, iii. j 

stands in the gap and trade of llenrnVlll. v. 1 

may enter 'twixt the gap of both . . Conolunut, iii. 1 
sleep out this great gap of time ..Antony /jrCleo. i. 

and made a gap iu nature — ii. !8 

for the gap tliat we should make . . Cymlicline, iii. 2 
who stand i' the gaps to teach.. /'mW':<, iv. 4 (Gow.) 
make a great gap iu your own honour .... Lear, i. 2 

GAPE— and gape at wid'st to glut him. . Tempest, i. 1 

tliat made gape the pine — i. 2 

wlicncc they gape and jioint at King Jolin, ii. 2 

which gape, and rub the elbow IHenrylV. v. I 

the grave doth gape for thee thrice. .2;;.-n/y/;'. v. :, 

the grave (hith gape, and doting HmryV. ii. 1 

let gallows gape for dog — iii. ij 

may that ground gape, and swallow.3J/f»;y VI. i. I 

or, earth, gape open wide Itickard III, i. 2 

earth gapes, hell burns — iv. 4 

young anection gapes to be. Romeo ^Juliet, i. b (elio.) 

though hell itself should gape Hamlet, i. 2 

the supervisor, grossly gape on? Ollielln, iii. 3 

GAPING— graves, all gaping wide...V/i<i.A.'« Ur. v. 1 
every word in it a gaping wotind. . M«t. ofVtn. iii. 2 

love not a gaping jiig • — iv. 1 

why he caiinot abide a gaping pig .. — iv. 1 
grievous, ghastly, gaping wounds ..ill-nrylV. ii. i 
mouths gapingon girded IlarflcunWeiiry;'. iii.dho.) 
ye rude slaves, leave your gaping.. //c»/y ;/;/. v. 3 
mto this gaping hollow of the earth?. I'iins.lnd. ii. 4 
who never leave gaping, till they've . . I'ei lules, ii. 1 

GARAtiANTUA— 
borrow me Garagantua's mouth.. .4j you Like it, iii. 2 

GAKB— English in the native garb HenryV.v. 1 

the same austerity and garb as he. . CorioUmus, iv. 7 

and constrains the garb, <iuite from Lear, ii. 2 

let me comjily with you in this garb . . Hamlet, ii. 2 
abuse him to the Moor in the rank garb.O/AW(o, ii. 1 

GAKBAtiE-after for the garbage Cymbeline, i. 7 

in a celestial bed, and prey on garbage. . Hamlet, i. a 

GAKBOILS— the "arboils sue awaked./l/i/.^- C/eo. i. 3 
so much uncurhable, her garboils — ii. 2 

GARCON— I ha' marrieil un gar?on..V<Tiy Ifiiw, v. 5 

GARDE— Dieu vous garde, monsieur. 7'uW/?/i S. iii. 1 

GARDEN-letthegarden door be shut — iii. 1 
he hath a garden circnmmured . il/f aji./or Meas. iv. 1 
from the vineyard to the garden leads — iv. 1 

when he was fi id in the garden Much Ado, v. 1 

thy curious-knotted garden.. /,oi-e'.!L.Loj(,i. 1 (let.) 
the pleasant garden of great Italy.. 7aini»^ o/SA. i. 1 
as she went to the garden for parsley — iy. 4 

we are yours i' the ganleii ti'inter's Tale, i. 2 

of tliat kind, our rustic garden's barren — iv. 3 
make your garden rich ill gillyflowers — iv. 3 

devise here m this garden Richard II. iii. 4 

when our sea-walled garden — iii. 4 

dressed his land, as we this garden!.. — iii. I 

set to dress this garden — iii. 4 

in a garden where leeks did grow .... Henry V. iv. 7 

in this best garden of the world — v. 2 

the world's best garden he achieved — v. 2 (cho.) 
promises are like' Adonis' ganlens ..\UenryVI.\. 6 
tlie garden here is more convenient.. — ii. 4 

and they'll o'ergrow the garden iUenryVl. i'li. 1 

climbed into this garden — iv. 10 

to break into my garden — iv. 10 

wither garden; and be henceforth .. — iv. 10 
good strawberries in your garden ..Richard III. iii. 4 

he's walkine in the garden Antony^ Cleo. iii. 5 

I'll fetch a turn about the gai-den — Cymbeline, i. 'i 

to use his eyes for garden waterpots Lear, iv. 6 

'tis an unweedcd garden Hamlet, i. 2 

he poisons him i' the garden for his estate — iii. "2 
our bodies are our gardens Olhello, i. 3 

GARDENEli— come the gardeners.. /(I'cAarii II. iii. 4 
gardener, for telling me this news.... — iii. 4 

as gardeners do witli ordure hide Henry V. ii. 4 

and Adam was a gardener iHenryVI. iv. 2 

no ancient "entlemcii but gardeners Hamlet, v. I 

to thi- wliicfi our wills are gardeners Othello,i. 3 

GAKDEN-llorsF.- 
supply thecal tlw L-arden-housc. jUcoi. /or j>/co». v. 1 
in his'L'anleii-housc, he knew me — v. 1 

G.VRl)i:Z-L'!inlcz ma vie Henry V. iv. 4 

GARDIiNEU— Where's Gardiner? ..Henry VIII. ii. 2 

lir'ytlu-c. call Gunlinertonie — ii. 2 

coiiie hither, Gardiner — .ii- '2 

Stokcsly and Gardiner — iv. 1 

G ARDON— [^■Il^] gardon,— O sweet gardoni 

1 Knt.i gardon! I will do it (lep.): Lore's L. Lost, iii. 1 
G.\R(JKAVE— sir Thomas Gargravc.. 1 Hc«ry/7. i. 4 

sir Thomas (iurgrave, hast thou any life? — i. 4 

GARISll-carisb flog, to be the a'im..Richard III. iv. 4 

pay no w'orsliip to the garish sun..;fo«ifo ^Jut. iii. 2 

GAftL.VND-garlands bring. /'//-o den.ofV. iv.2(Bong) 

fa-sliioii will you wear the garland of ?.)/iicA/4i/o, ,i. 1 

cither to make him tt garland — ii.l 

and the garland too; tor the garland — ii. I 
I lack, to make vou garlands of. . H'inier'sTale, iv. 3 

to make a garlaiid for my head lHriiry/r.v.4 

the garland wear'st successively 2Hcnryi V. iv. 4 

weariuu' now the irarland, to have a son — v. 2 
garland for his sake (r. p. iv. 1) ... .^HmryVl. iii. 3 

the garland of the realm (rc/i.) llirhard III. iii. 2 

with triumphant garlands will r ejiinc — iv. 4 
ttud brouiilit mc garUinds,Gr!lliili. . :ir,i, yVllI, iv. 2 



.2 
. 1 
. 1 
. 1 
. 1 
. 1 
— iv. 1 



GAHL AND— that was your garland . . Cariolanus,!. 

Mareius wears this war's garland — i. 

third time home with the oaken garland — li. 

he lurched all swords o' the garland. . — ii. 

take tliis garland on thy brow .... JuliusCrPsary v. 

change his horns with garlands! ...Intonij ^Cieo. i. 

and put garlands on thy liead — iii. 

withered is the garland of the war .. — iv. I 

fantastic garlands did she make Hamlet, iv. 

ehould still her wheaten garland wear.. — v. 

green willow must be my garland. Othello, i v. 3 ^song 
GARLICK— bread and garlick ..Mms.forMeas. iii. 

eat no onions, nor garlick Mid. N.'s Dream, iv. 

gai-lick, to mend her kissing H'inter's Tale, iv. 

rather live with clieese and garlick. 1 Hfdryi V. iii. 
GARLIC-EATER— of garlic-eaters!. CoWo/aniis.iv. 
GAKiMENT— pluck my magic garment.. 3'tmpesi,i. 

with rich garments, linens — i. 

on their sustaining garments not 

hang not on my garments 

that our garments, being as they were . 

our garments are now as fresh as wlien . 

that our garments seem now as fresh. . . 

how well my garments sit upon me 

here's a garment for't 

there's another garment for't 

if the garment had been made . Two Gen, of Ver. iv, 

my daughter by her garments .... Merry Wives, T. 

hath my maid's garments TwelfUi Night, v. 

court Margaret in Hero's garments . . Much Ado, y. 

by the Athenian garments Mid. iV.'s Dream, ii. 

the man by the Athenian garments — ii. 

what notes and garments he doth..i1/?r. of Cen. iii. 

such garments, and such years . . .is you Like it, iv. 

are mere fathers of their garments All's Well, i. 

I would the cutting of my garments — iv. 

be proud, our garments ixior.. Taming of Shrew, iv. 

be a footman, by the garments. . iVinter^s Tale, iv. 

change garmentswith this gentleman — iv. 

his garments are rich, but he wears. . — iv. 

known by garment, not by favour .. — _y. 

if your garments were thin . . Comedy of Errors, iii. 

in everlastii'-g garment hatir him ... . — iv. 

like our strange garments Macbeth, i. 

stuffs out his vacant garments KitigJolin, iii. 

immask ournoted outward garments. lH(^7i?'y/K. i. 

and tlien to beslubber our garments — ii. 

when I will wear a garment all of . . — iii. 

to face the garment of rebellion with — v. 

this nev? and gorgeous garment 2HenryIV. v. 

if men my garments wear Henry V. iv. 

your garments, your lowliness — iv. 

thy trarments are not spotted Richard III. i. 

did Tap me even in his garments .... — ii. 

dashing the garment of tliis peace . . Henry VIII. i. 

may I then change these garments?. CorwianMs, ii. 

shake tliy bones out of thy garments — iii. 

his meanest garment, that ever hath. Cymbeline, ii, 

his garment? nou', the devil (j'cp.) .. — ii. 

his meanest garment? ay, I said (i-cp.) — ii. 

a garment out of fasliion — iii. 

master's garments in thy possession? — iii. 

I would, these garments were come. . — iii. 

she lield the very garment of Posthumus — iii. 

those the garments? ay, my noble lord — iii. 

how fit his garments serve me ! — i v. 

thy garments cut to pieces before thy face — iv. 

the garments of Posthumus! — iv. 

a garment nobler than tliat it covers — v. 

in ray master's garments — v. 

made up tliis garment through the .... Pericles, ii. 

I like the manner of your garments well — iv. 

give me fresh garments — v. 

do not like the fashion of your garments. Lear, iii. 

am I changed, but in my garments — iv. 

we put fresh garments on nim — iv. 

remembers not these garments — iv. 

till tliat her garments, heavy with .... Hamlet, iv. 
GARNER— barns, and garners. . Tempest, iv. 1 (sonj 

rats thither, to gnaw their garners . . Coriolanus, i. 
GAIXN Ell ED— garnered up my heart ..Olliello, iv. 
GARNISH— gariusli of a boy . . Merch. nf Venice, ii. 

beauteous eve of lieaven to garnish. . King John, iv. 
GARNISHED— garnislied with such.Loi'c's L.L. u. 

better place, garnished like him.iUe;-. of Venice, \\\. 

garnished and decked in modest Henry V. ii. 

GARRET— in the garret one niglit ..-'Henry VI. i. 
G.\RRlSON-of our towns of g.arrison.l Hi-nryVI. v. 

have I dispursed to the garrisons ..'1 Henry VI. iii. 
GA.RRISONED-garrisoned in GaiWa-Cymbeline, iv. 

yes, 'tis already garrisoned Hamlet, iv. 

G.A.RTER— to garter his \\os&.TuioGen.of Vvrona, ii. 

mine host of tlie Garter Merry Wives, i. 

mine liost of tlie Garter — i. 

his liorses to mine liost of tlie Garter — ii. 

does he not lie at the Garter? — ii. 

my ranting host of the Garter conies — ii. 

good mine nost o' tlie Garter — ii. 

be judgment by mine host of the Garter — iii. 

hear mine host of the Garter — iii. 

companion, tlie liost of the Garter. ... — iii. 

like to the Garter's compass — v. 

hanged himself in Thisbe's garter. .iV/j'i.JV.'sDr. v. 

wliy'dost thou garter up tiiy arms AlCs Well, ii. 

garters of an inditferent \i.\\\i..Tamnig of Shrew, iv. 

in tliy own heir-apparent garters! . .\HenrylV. ii. 

unloose, familiar as his garter Henry V. i. 

to tear the garter t'rom thy I Henry VI. iv. 

knightsoftlic garter were of noble .. — iv. 

George, my garter, and my crown. ./i/cAarrf ///. iv. 

tliy garter, blemished, pawned his . . — iv. 

look ! he wears cruel garters! Lear, ii. 

lend me a garter: so;— O for a chair Oihcllo, v. 

GARTERED-gartered with a red. Taming of Sh. iii. 
GASH — each new day a gash is added... 3/ac'&e/A, iv. 

perilous gasli, avery limb lopped otf. I Henry /r. iv. 

m every "ash that love hath.. Troilus ^Cressida,i. 

every gash was an enemy's grave . - Coriolanus, ii. 

give me a gash, put me to Pericles, v. 

GASHED — his gashed Etabs looked ]ike. Macbeth, ii. 



[ 294 ] 

GASHES— my gashes cry for help Macbeth, i. 

with twenty trenclied gashes on — iii. 

the gaslies do better upon them — v. 

kisses the gaslies, that bloodily Henry V.'w. 

kiss tlie lionoured gaslies whole... iniont/ ^-Clto. iv. 
GASKIN— your gaskins will fall . . Twelfth Mglil, i. 
GASP-foUow thee, to the last gasp., ,4s !/u« /./At' iV, ii. 

nor gasp out my eloquence Henry ('. v. 

light till the last gasp \ Henry VI. i. 

in his bosom spend my latter gasp — ii. 

makes him gasp, and stare iHenry VI. iii. 

father breathed his latest gasp ZHenry VI. ii. 

and to the latest gasp, cried out — v. 

and his name is at last gasp Cymbeline, i. 

GASPING— and gasping to begin.. Winter' s'Tate, iii. 

a "asping new-delivered mother. . . . liicltard II. ii. 

a bleeding land, gasping for life . . . .iHenrylV. i. 
GAT — whom nature gat for men to see . . Pericles, ii. 
GATE-Antonio open the gates of Milan.. Tcmijcst, i. 

thee through the city gate.. Two Gen. of Verona, iii. 

and meet me at the north gate — iii. 

stays for thee at the north gate — iii. 

madam, there is at the gate Twelfth Night, i. 

what is he at the gate, cousin? — i. 

there's one at the gate — i. 

you were saucy at my gates — i. 

make me a willow cabin at your gate — i. 

to the gates of Tartar — ii. 

men shut their gate — v. 1 (sonj 

that vineyard is aijlanchedgate. A/eo*. /or il/eas. iv. 

prepare to meet him at the gates — iv. 

and why meet him at the gates — iv. 

bid them bring the trumpets to the gate — iv. 

have lient the gates — iv. 

no; but to the gate: and there Much Ado, ii. 

I'll lock up all the gates of love — iv. 

took up a beggar's issue at my gates.. — iv. 

through Athens' gates have we . . Mid. N. Dream, i. 

shall break the locks of prison gates — _ i. 

even till the eastern gate, all fiery-red — iii. 

o'er the house to unlock the little gate. Love's L. L. i. 

as tliou did'st me in carrying gates . . — _i. 

before we enter his forbidden gates . . — ii. 

not come, fair princess, in my gates.. — ii. 

shut the gate upon one i\ooer..il/e7x*A. of Venice, i. 

there is alighted at yom- gate — ii. 

which stays for us at the park gate . . — iii. 

their coward gates on atomies AsyouLikeit, iii. 

for the house with the narrow gate . . All's IVell, iv. 

that leads to the broad gate — iv. 

I say, knock me at this gate .. Taming of Slirew, i. 

the rascal knock upon your gate .... — i. 

knock at the gate ?— O heavens ! . , — i. 

with— knocking at the gate? — i. 

as he would beat down the gate? — v. 

have gates; and those gatesopened. Winter's Tale,i. 

Dromio, keep the gate ; husband. . Comedy of Err. ii. 

shall I be porter at the gate? — ii. 

who are those at the gate? — iii. 

I'll break ope the gate — iii. 

the abbess shuts the gates on us — y. 

without the palace gate Macbeth, iii. 

from hence to the palace gate — iii. 

there's knocking at the gate — y. 

welcome before the gates of Anglers.. Kmg/oAn, ii. 

3'our city's eyes, your winking gates — ii. 

a countercheck before your gates .... — ii. 

rammed up our gates against — ii. 

open wide your gates, and let young — ii. 

open your gates; and give the victors way — ii. 

scruple in our strong-barred gates . . — ii. 

to our fast-closed gates — ii. 

ope your gates, let in that amity .... — ii. 

who keens the gate here, ho! 2 Henry IV. i. 

knock but at the gate, and he himself — i. 

break Skogan's head at the court gate — iii. 

by his gates of breath there lies — iv. 

heavy burdens at his narrow gate Henry V. i. 

the gates of mercy shall be all shut up — iii. 

enter our gates; dispose of us — iii. 

open your gates; come, uncle Exeter — iii. 

open the gates; it is Gloster that caMs.l Henry VI. i. 

break up the gates — i. 

I think, at the north gate — ..i. 

are the city gates, the gates of Kouen — iii . 

go to the gates of Bourdeaux — iv. 

open your city gates, be humble — iv. 

for vengeance at the gates of heaven — v. 

broke through London gates 2Henry VI. iv. 

set ope thy everlasting gates — iv. 

the poor well pleased from my gate . . — iv. 

tlirough the citj; to the palace gates.. 3 Hen r.v('/. i. 

open thy gate of mercy — j. 

and set it on York gates — i. 

the morning opes her golden gates .. — ii. 

and on the gates of York they set. . . . — ii. 

thy brazen gates of heaven may ope — ii. 

from oif the gates of York fetch — ii ■ 

prisoner to your palace gate — iii. 

before the gates of York — iv. 

the gates made fast! — iv. 

and shut the gates for safety 

open the gates, we are king Henry's 

the gates shall then be opened — iv. 

these gates must not be shut — iv. 

wilt thou ope the city gates — v. 

the gates are open, let us enter too .. — y. 

let's shut our gates, and sleep. Troilus 4' Cressida, ii 

or like a gate of steel fronting — iii. 

he shall Unbolt the gates — iv. 

O instance! stron,^ as Pluto's gates . . — v, 

I'll bring you to the gates — y, 

no porter at his gate Timon of Athens, ii. 

triumphers in their applauding gates — v. 

against our rampired gates — v. 

our gates, which yet seem shut Coriolanus, i. 

60, now the gates are ope — i. 

upon tlie sudden, clapped to their gates — i. 

hence, and shut your gates upon us . . — i, 

Morcius did fight within Conoli's gates — ii. 



— IV. 7 



GATE— the mortal gate o' the city 
they would not thread the gates .... 
never more to enter our Rome gates.. 

go, see him out at gates 

let us see him out at gates 

bring me but out at gate 

to knock against the gates of Rome .. 
the porter of Rome gates by the ears 
when you have pushed out your gates 
been blown out of your gates witii sighs 
than your gates against rny force . . 



iii. 3 
iv. 1 
iv. 5 
iv. 5 
V. 2 



— V. 2 

— V. 4 

— y.- * 

Ctesar, ii. 1 



as the recomforted through the gates 

even to the gates of Rome 

CO to the gate; somebody knocks... 'h/i' - - 
like madmen through the gates of Rome — iii. 2 
lark at heaven's gate sings . . Cymbeline, ii. 3 (song) 
this gate instructs you how to adore — iii. 3 
the gates of monarchs are arched .... — iii. 3 
and on the gates of Lud's town set . . — iy . 2 
open the gates, and let me in. . Titus Andronicus, i. 1 

beg at the gates, like Tarquin — iii. 1 

before the palace gate to brave — iv. 2 

the gates shut on me, and turned .... ~- y. 3 

sin within, will touch the gate Pericles, i. 1 

beat at this gate, that let thy folly in Lear, i. 4 

at thy gate howled that stern time — iii. 7 

go, thrust him out at gates — ^11*7 

Peter, stay at the gate Romeo ff Juliet, ii. 5 

the natural gates and alleys of the hoiy. Hamlet, i. b 
and keep the gate of hell; you! Otiielln, iv. 2 

GATHER— my project gather to a head. Tempcst,v. 1 
and I of him will gather patience. . . . Much Ado, v. 1 

will lead thee on to "ather from All's Well, iv. 1 

to gather in some debts, my son.. Taming of Sh. iy. 4 
by this we gather, you have tripped. Winter' sTale, i. 2 
gather the sequel by that went. Comerfj/ o/ Brrors, i. 1 

that I gather lie is mad — iv. 3 

thus may we gat'ner honey from Henry V. iy. 1 

to gather our soldiers, scattered 1 Heriry VI. ii. 1 

the rest, I wish thee, gather — Ji. 5 

that come to gather money — !!!■ ' 

but gather we our forces out of hand — iii. 2 
then gatlier strength, and march unto — iv. 1 

the people gather up a tenth — v. 5 

to Smithfleld, and gather head iHenry VI. i\. 5 

or gatlier wealth, 1 care not — iv. 10 

thereby he may gather the ground. .Richard III. i. 3 
dew's on ground, gather those flowers. Ci/mije/mci. 6 
by them gather their several virtues — i. 6 
you may gather more: if you do find .... Lear, iv. 5 

hangs one that gathers samphire — iy. 6 

to gather, so much as from occasion. . . . Hamlet, ii. 2 

now gather, and surmise — .j^* -^ 

and gather by him, as he is behaved .... — iii. I 

GATHERED— Medea gathered . . Mer. of Venice, v. 1 

the French have gathered head \ Henry VI. i . 4 

than may be gathered by thy shape . . — .ii. 3 
there's an army gathered together.. 2 Henri/ r/. iv. 6 

my soldiers, gathered flocks of ZHenry VI. ii. 1 

they had gathered a wise council . . Henry VIII. ii. 4 

of him I gathered honour Cymbeline, iii. 1 

upon a gathered lily almostwithered. '/'i7us,4nd. iii. 1 
the Goths have gathered head — iv. 4 

GATHERING— sin, gathering head. . Richard II. v. 1 
that foul sin, gathering head i Henry IV. iii. I 

GAUDEO— video, et gaudeo Love's L. Lost, v. 1 

GAUDY — nip not the gaudy blossoms — v. 2 
therefore thou gaudy gold . . Mercha nt of Venice, iii. 2 
the gaudy, babbling, and remorseful. 2Hei!ry VI. iv. 1 
have one other gaudy night . . Antony Sf Clen. iii. U 
rich, not gaudy; for the apparel oft Hamlet, i. 3 

GAUL — I say, Guallia and Gaul!..il/e7r!/ Wives, iii. 1 

GAUNT— old John of Gaunt Richard II.i.\ 

All, Gaunt! his blood was thine .... — i. 2 

call it not patience. Gaunt — i. 2 

farewell, old Gaunt; tliou goest 

knew the name of John of Gaunt..,, 
old John of Gaunt is grievous sick . . 

how is 't with aged Gaunt? 

old Gaunt, indeed; and gaunt (rep.) 

my liege, old Gaunt commends him 

whereof our uncle Gaunt did stand . . 

nor Gaunt's rebukes, nor England's 

is not Gaunt dead? and doth not (rep.) 

as when brave Gaunt, thy father .... — ii. 3 

in you, I see old Gaunt alive — ii. 3 

he should have found his uncle Gaunt — ii. 3 
by tlie buried hand of warlike Gaunt — iii. 3 

I am not John of Gaunt \ Henry IV. ii. 2 

theseatof Gaunt, dukedom of Lancaster — v. 1 
John of Gaunt loved him well ....iHenrylV. iii. 2 
talks as familiarly of John of Gaunt — iii. 2 
told John of Gaunt, he beat his own — iii. 2 

from John of Gaunt doth bring 1 Henry VI. ii. b 

Johnof Gaimt, the duke of Lancaster 2 Henry VI. ii. 2 

son and heir of John of Gaunt — ii. 2 

claim the crown from John of Gaunt — ii. 2 

all the line of John of Gaunt ZHenry VI. i. I 

disannuls great John of Gaunt .... — iii. 3 
after John of Gaunt, Henry the fourth — iii. 3 

GAUNTLET— into armed gauntlets. . King John, v. £ 

a scaly gauntlet now, with joints iHenry IV. i. 1 

by Mars his gauntlet, thanks!.. Troilus <§- Cress, iv. 5 
there's my gauntlet; I'll prove it Lear, iv. 6 

GAVE— as you gave in charge Tempest, v. 1 

we gave out split — y. 1 

gave )'0ur letter to her Two Gen. of Verona, i. I 

gave me, a lost mutton — i. 1 

who gave it thee? 

she gave me none 

for you gave the fire 

you gave me bitter pills 

which gave me first 

I gave him gentle looks 

this ring I gave him 

his Julia gave it him at his departure 

the ring I gave to Julia 

at my depart, I gave this unto Julia — 
that gave aim to all thy oaths 



— i. 3 



u. 1 

ii. 1 

ii. I 

ii. 1 
ii. ! 



— ii. 1 



li. S 
iii. I 
iv. 4 



— V. 4 



1 j who even now gave me good Merry Wives, i. 3 



V. I 
V. 1 
V. 1 
V. 1 



i. 2 



GAVE— and gave 8Ucli orderly Merry iyivfi,ii. 1 

this wiirl d!ie giive me Twelfth Kighl, iv. 3 

his life I gttve liim — v. 1 

mid I giive liiui use for it Much Ado, ii. I 

which strfti){lit slic gave me ..Mid. N.'i Dreiim, iv. 1 
i)i-o<lii;nllv utive tlium all to you.. Love'iL.LoMl, ii. 1 

who f!iivc"thoe this letter? - iv. I 

that Kino th>v<c lokins tons — v. 2 

vmipivemi; this: hut tukeit — v. 2 

thenlmii!htv.nuve Iki-torapift .... — v. 2 
1 grt\e it to'tho jiuk'e'sclerk..i;<TcAuii(ar»>ni«,v. 1 

gave it V judge's clerk ! — v. 1 

I gave it Co a yoiitli. a kind nt hoy . . 
1 cave mv love a ring, and niadc .... 

mv lord Bassanio gave his ring 

■wfiat ring gave yon. my lord 

I gave the ring, if you did know (n-p.) 

conceive for what I gave tlie ring ... . 

her worthiness that gave tiie ring. . . . — v. i 

it is the same I gave the doctor! — v. j 

something that nature gave me . . .J« you Like >l, i. I 

who gave mc fix-sh array — iv. 3 

and gave this senleiuo t^ien.... JH» irell, i. 3 (song) 

many receiiUs he fjave nie — ji. 1 

that gave him out iiunrahle — ".3 

and, when I gave it Helen, I Imde her — v. 3 
'twos Helen's, whoever gave it you . — v. 3 
unless she gave it to ynur>elf in bod — v. 3 

for all that, he gave it to a eomiiioncr — v. 3 

and this was it I gave him — v. 3 

buv it? or who gave it you? — v. 3 

I never gave it him — v. 3 

I gave it his first wife — X- 3 

gave me mv being, and my father. 7'«ini'H^(;/SA. 1. 1 
gave order how it should be done (rep.) — iv. 3 

tlie charge my father gave me (Cinder's Tale, V. 1 

the oracle gave hope thou wast in being — v. 3 
deep gave any tragic instance of.. Comedy of Err. 1. 1 

gave helpful welcome to their — ' ' 

left the money that I gave you? . 
wlicre is the gold I gave in cliarge 
the thousand marks I gave thee — — ii. ' 

tlie gold I gave to Dromio — n. 2 

the Centaur, with the gold you gave me — ii. 2 

eoinethiiig that you gave mc for — u. 'i 

and the blows you gave were ink — — in. 1 
1 gave it you half an hour since (rep.) — iv. 1 

why, sir, I gave the money for — iv. i 

driiik gave thee the lie last night Macbeth, n. 3 

mv father gave me honour (rep.) King John, i. 1 

that gave the sound of words — lii. 1 

your chambers gave you chastisement? — y. 2 

thv tongue a party verdict gave liicliurd II. i. 3 

but vou gave leave to my iiuwilling — i. 3 

bv Him that gave me life 

at Venice, gave his body to that., 
no joyful tongue gave him his . . 
ever and anon he gave his nose . . 
to what end he gave me the sugar . 
that gave Amaimon the bastinado . 

and gave the tongue a helpful 

and gave his countenance 

my father jjave him welcome 

cave him tlieir heirs 

fie gave you all the duties of 

I gave him this wound in the thigh. 

he gave his able horse the liead 

the prince gave you— he gave it like 

and the boy that I gave Falstati' — — 11.2 

of Richard, gave him defiance — iii. 1 

proportion tliat we gave them out . . — iv. 1 

give that, which gave thee life — iv. 4 

wore it, kept it, gave it me — iv. 1 

I gave bolcl way to my authority — y. 2 

gave thee no instance why thou Henri/ )'. ii. 2 

and gave me up to tears — iv. B 

that 1 gave it to in change — iy. 8 

remember what I gave in charge. . . . I Henry I'l.M. 3 

1 gave thee life, and rescued thee — iv. B 

'tis true, I gave a noble — V. 4 

the milk thy mother gave thee — v. 4 

gift that ever marquess ^ave iHenryVI. i. 1 

till SniTolk gave two dukedoms for .. — i. 3 
I never gave them condign punii^hnient — iii. 1 

occordin'g as I gave directions? — iii. 2 

the ruthless ijueen gave him ^Henry VI. ii. 1 

my careless father fondly gave away! — ii. 2 

gentleman gave up the ghost — ii. 3 

thv father gave thee life too soon — ii. 5 

Listed, gave king Henry light — ii. B 

time of death he gave our father .... — ij. 6 
marriage was the charge he gave inc — iii. 3 

doing what you gave in charge — iv. 1 

that gave the kingdom to thy brother — v. 1 

who gave his blood to lime tne — v. 1 

the thing you gave in charge Richanl III. iv. 3 

all indirectly, gave direction — iv. I 

order gave each thing view Henry fill. i. 1 

nav, gave notice he was from thence — ii. 4 
that gave to me many a groaning throe — ii. 4 
Cromwell, gave it you the king? — — iii. 2 

with his own hand gave me — iii. 2 

tlie king, that gave It. It must — iii. 2 

pain villi suffered, gave no ear tu't .. — iv. 2 

to wlioin he gave these words — iv. 2 

he gave his honours to the world .... — iv. 2 
and gave the clergy an 'ill example .. — iv. 2 

my mind gave me, in seeking — v. 2 

that gave US such a prince — v. 2 

I gave ye power as he w as — v. 2 

that gave t surmiRed shajie . . Troihu ^ Crenida,\. 3 

she that gave thee suck — ii. 3 

neither gave to me good wonl — iii. 3 

I gave it frcciv ever; and there's.. 7'imoii 0/ .llh. i. 2 
you gave gtMvl words the other day . . — ^i.'i 

he gave me a jewel the other day — iii. 6 

'tis said, he gave unto his stewanl ,. — v. 1 
nobleness gave life and influence .... — y. I 

Bill gave him grai-rful imstiire Cnrlnlaniii, ii. I 

« hi<cver gave that counsel — iii. I 



OAVIO— they gave us our demands. . Conalanut, iii. 1 
and yet my mind gave me, his clothes — iv. S 

gave'wav to your el listers — iv. 6 

gave hiiii way in all his own desires — y. 4 

gave sign for me to leave you liiUusCwta' " ' 

the men that gave our country liiierty — 

tlint gave me |)ulilic leave to — 

rash humour, which my mother gave me — 

Briitiia gave the word too early — 

hardly gave aiiiHcncc Antony 4- Clenpati 

unto her he gave the 'stidilishnient . . — 
and .Xrinenia, he gave to Ale.vander — 

and ol't lii'r.iie giiveiindieuee — 

to whom I '.'live llieir wL^^hes — 

your luvviiiL'; gave vmi smnc ground.. ri/mtc/i 
Igavc[C(i/! K,i^-givel liiiii satisraelion? — 
turned down, where I'hilomel gave up — 
she gave it me, ami said, slic prized.. — 
and it gave me present hunger to feed — 

the iimii tliut ^'ave llH-ni thee — 

the LToiuid tliat gave lliem first - 

madded Ueeuba gave the Greeks .... — 
the drug he gave mc, w liicli, he said — 

gave advantage to an ancient soldier — 

that gave the affront with tliem — ..- 

if that box I gave you was not — v. 5 

confection which I gave him for cordial — v. 5 
controlled in that he frankly gave. V'i7u«.4>idron._i. 2 
gave you a dancing-rapier by your side — Ji. 1 
my father's sake, that gave thee life — .u. 3 

my mother gave 't me. For love — iv. 1 

that first gave life to you 



— iv. 1 

— v. 2 
.\ Henry ir. i. 3 

— ii. 4 

— ii. 4 
_ iii. 1 

— lii. 2 



— V. 2 

— V. 4 
2Hennjir.\. 1 



iii. I 
iii. 2 
iv. 3 



iv. 10 

ie,i.3 

ii. I 



V. 3 



gave 



eh a knock 



— iv. 3 

— V. 1 
1 



GA/.K-gaze upon the^e tecrets Ilich.ird lll.l.i 

all gaze and bent of. 



Troilm ^ Creitida, iv. i 

Coriolanut, i. 3 

..JulimCrmr.i.S 
/Inony/iaen.li.-i 



ii. 2 



ii.4 
iii. 2 
iii. 4 



„;i 11 , - 1 '.to glad her Pericles, 

nil,,,, .._,. I nrir creatures .... — 

i,n 'i,':i.' _,';\, -i-iM ■ iieli a ring — 

if I gave tliein all niy living, I'd keep ....Lear. 

you gave me nothing for 't 

what was the offence you gave him .' . . . 

ICol. Knt.'\ I never gave him any 

gave me cold looks: and meeting 

I gave you all— and in good time (irp.) 
I never gave you kingdom, called you . 

whose frank heart gave all 

gave her dear rights to his — ;». •> 

she gave strange eyelia<ls, and most — ly. b 

I gave thee mine before thou . . llomeo SfJuUel, 11. 2 
you gave us the counterfeit fairly .. — .11. 4 
gave nim what becomed love I might — iv. 2 
rlicn gave I her, so tutored by my art — v. 3 

then I precepts gave her, that she Hu»i(e(, n. 'i 

I never gave you aught — !!;■ j 

the death I gave him — !"• J 

gave us not that capability — iv. 4 

warlike appointment gave us chase — iv. 6 (.letter) 
and gave you such a masterly report — — iv. 7 

the tame the Frenchman gave you — iv. 7 

subscribed it; gave 't the impression — — v. 2 
he never gave commandment for their .. — v. '- 
being done, she gave me for my pains . . Othello, i. 3 
that the Moor first gave to Desdemona . . — in. 3 
cursed fatel that gave thee to the Aloor' — in. 3 

I gave her such a one; 'twas my — id. 3 

gave away my heart. A liberal (rep.) — — 111. 4 
that which I, gave you. I have it not . . ■■ ' 

she, dying, gave it me; and bid me 

alas, the day I I never gave him cause .. — 111. 4 
same handkerchief, you gave me even .. — iv. j 
she gave it him, and he hath given it — — iv. 1 

which I so loved, and gave thee — v. 2 

I never gave him token — v. 2 

pledge of love which I first gave her ... . — v. 2 
antique token mv father gave my mother — v. 2 
dear general, I never gave you cause .... — y. 2 
GAVEST— gavest thou my letter. TwoGen. of Ver. 1. 1 
she whom thou gavest to me . . Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

sugar thou gavest me \HenrylV.n. 4 

fellow, gavest thyself away 2 Henry I V. iv. 3 

the life thou gavest me first I Henry II. iv. 6 

time thou gavest new date — ly. 6 

dry them, gavest the duke a clout . . Kichnrd tll.i. 3 
mercy on tiie fault thou gavest . . Henry I'll I. iii. 2 
gavest thine ears, like tapsters. 'Amori of Alhens, iv. 3 

thou gavest me poison Cymbrline, v. b 

and gavest away both parts Lear, 1. 4 

when thou gavest thy golden one away . . — 1. 4 

for when thou gavest them the rod — i. 4 

that late thou aavest me llomeo^ Juliet, iii. 1 

and gave thee, thou gavest to Cassio Othello, y. 2 

GAWD— rings, gawds, conceits Mid. N. Dream, i. 1 

an idle gawd, which in my childhood — iv. 1 
these other gawds [Co/, goods!. Aiming- o/.s/ireic, ii. 1 
and too full of gawds, to give me ..King John, iii. 3 

praise new-born gawds Troilus ^ Cressida, lii. 3 

GAW.sIEY— sir Nicholas Oawsey 1 Henry If. V. 4 

to Clifton, I'll to sir Nicholas Gawsey ■ — y. 4 

G.V'i'-gay vestments his ufl'ections.Comedy 0/ Err. li. 1 

my gay apparel, for an alms-man's. /(<f'i«rrf //. iii. 3 

that he is entered into for goy apparel — v. 2 

they will pluck the gay new coats Henry V. iv. ;t 

deck mv body in gay ornaments.. 3//enri/>'/. hi. 2 

to lay his gay comparisons. .4n((inyi5r'eopn/rn. in. II 

lacked gold, and yet went never gay — ot}tetlo,y\. 1 

GAYNKS.S— our gayness, and our gilt.. Henry y. iv. 3 



plucked all gaze I 

you look pale, and gaze 

jiad gone to gaze on Cleopatra 

make the ghosts gaze: Dido... 

fountain sliall we gaze so long . . Tilui Andron. 111. 1 

togaze upon a rninoiismonastery.... — v. I 

cast their giizes on Alarina's face Pericles, ly. 4 

that fall back to gaze on him . . llomeo Sr Juliet, \i. i 
gaze on us. Men's eyes were made (rrp.) — iii. I 
a pageant, to keep us in falfc gaze Othello, i. 3 

GAZKD— never gazed the moon . . Il'inler't Tale, iy. 3 
rightly gazed upon, show nothing ..llichani II. ii. 2 

GAZKK-kill the innocent gnzerwith.SHenr!//'/. jii. 2 
Slav more gazers than the basilisk. .SHenrJ/''/. iii. !f 
sluill make the gazer joy to see him — l'ericlei,ii. I 

GAZING-by my gazing on her..riroOen.ofrer. ii. I 
gazing fed; and fancy die9.A/er.o//>ni«, iii.2 (song) 

still gazing, in a doubt whether — iii.2 

and only live liy gazing Winter'sTale, iy. 3 

at lengtli the sun, gazing upon .. Comedy of Err. \. 1 

for gazing on your iieams — iii.2 

their eyes the lilierty of gazing — v. 1 

and, gazing in my eyes, feeling — v. 1 

unto the gazing moon so many ..Henry I', iv. (I'lio.) 
gazing on that which seems iHenryVl.}. 2 

Scople, gazing on thy face — ii. ♦ 
escent by gazing 'gainst the sun SHenryl'l.t't. 1 

and leave his navy gazing. /4n/onyi5-C'/eo7!a(rn, iii. H 
like Patience, gazing on Kings' graves. . Pericles, v. 1 

GIOAR-Museovites, in shapeless gear. Loce'i L. L. v. 2 
I'll grow a talker for this gear ..Merch. of Venice, i. 1 

a good wench for this gear — ij. 2 

to this gear; the sooner the lietter — 2Henryri.\. 1 

I will remedy th is gear, ere long — iii. 1 

will this gear ne'er be mended?. . Troilus S/ Cress. \. I 
chamber, Pandar to provide this gear? — iii. 2 

come, to this gear TitusAndronieus, ly . 3 

here's goodly gear! A sail, a sail. /tomeo ,5" •'"'"'■ '■• * 
such soon-speeding gear as will disperse — v. I 

GECK— the most notorious geek Tvelfth Night, v. 1 

to become the geek and scorn o' the . Cymheline, v. 4 

GEESE-for geese he bath killed. Two Gen. ofl'er.iy. 4 

how my father stole two geese Merry Wives, iii. 4 

since I plucked geese — .▼• 1 

as wild geese that the creeping.. ;1/ii/. A'. Oream, 111. 2 
when green geese are a breeding . . Lore's L. Lost, 1. 1 
tliere is ten thousand— Geese, villain?.. Afocde/A, v. 3 

like a flock of wild geese 1 Henry I V. li. 4 

where foxes, geese; you are no surer. Conoionui, i. I 
vou souls of geese, that hear — i- 4 

GkFFREY— brother Geffrey's son KingJohn,i. \ 

" ~ ii. 1 

ii. I 
ii. I 



G.\ZE— she that you gaze on .TiroGen.oT \ erona.n. 1 
his eyes enchanted M ith gazes — LoresL.LosI, 11. 1 

will gaze an eagle blind — ly. 3 

to gaze on christian fools with . . Mer. of Venice, 11. it 

turned to a modest gaze — y. ' 

mum! and gaze your fill Taming of Shreie,\. 1 

and wherefore gaze this goodly company — m. 2 
more worth siieli gazes than what. tVinler's Tale,v. I_ 
no longer shall you gaze on't 



upon thy brother Geffrey's face 

contain that large, which died in Geffrey — 

that Geffrey was thy elder brother (rep.) — 

liker in feature to his father, Geffrey — u. 1 

I was Geffrey's wife; young Arthur — ni. 4 

mv fault that I was Geffrey's son? .. — iv. I 

Li GELD— mean to geld and spay ...Veas./or Afeot. 11. 1 

:i 1 by mine honour, I'll geld them all. IVinter'sTatcu. 1 

3 'twas nothing, to geld a cod-piece of — iv. 3 

3 I GELDED-than Aquitain so gelded. iore'iL.I.oj/, 11. 1 

3 I bereft and gelded of his patrimony.. Kie/inrd //. ii. 1 

4 I Say hath gelded the commonwealth .2/Jenr!/^;. IV. 2 

4 ] let me be'geldcd like a spaniel Pericles, iv. 6 

4 GELDING— walk my amblinjgelding..Verr!(l»'. II. 2 

4 to see ray gelding to the stable 1 Henry IV. n. 1 

1 to bring'my gelding out of the stable — .ij. I 

1 1 gelding the opposedcontinent — iii- 1 

2 GELID.V-precorgelidaquandopecus.tore'i/.. L. iv.2 
2 1 GELIDUS— gelidus timor occupat ..'iHenryVl.'iv. I 
2 ! GELT— wouUlhe were gelt .. Merchant of Venice, y. 1 

GEM— miracle, and queen of gems. rice(rr/iA'iV;i/, 11. 4 
never so rich a gem was set .Merchant of Venice, ii. 7 
that gem conferred by testament — All's Hell, v. 3 

reflecting gems, that wooed Richard III.]. 4 

may proceed a gem, to lighten all.. Hem i/C; J/. 11. 3 
and bv a gem of 'women ..Antony Sr Cleopatra, I'n. II 
indeed, and gem of all the nation Hamli-i, ly. 7 

GEMINY-like a geminv of baboons. .Verri/ll/eej, ii. 2 

GENDER— the numbers of the genders! — iv. 1 

love the general gender bear him Hamlet, iy. 7 

supplv it with one gender of herbs Othello, i. 3 

for foul toads to knot and gender in! — — iv. 2 

GENERA!,— to be our general?. 7'iro Gen. of Ver. ly. 1 
and even so the general ..Measure for Measure,}}. 4 

it is too general a vice — iii.2 

to your heart, and general honour .. — »y. 3 
diet starve the general world beside. Loue'i L. L. 11. 1 
and gieat general of trotting paritors — 111. I 

and his general behaviour vain — .v. I 

half conies to the general state..tferoA.<>rreni(-p, ly. 1 

he is the general elmllengcr Asyou Likeii.x. i 

disgorge into the general world — i;- 7 

had colleeted for general sovereignity. All s ll'cH, 1. 3 

thou art a general ottcnee — .!|. 3 

the general of our horse thou art — — iii- 3 
tlie general is content to spare thee yet — iv. I 
you are a merciful general: our general — iv. 3 
I perceive, sir, by the general's looks 

I'll whisper with the general 

the general says, you, that have so .. 

dollars to our general use 

as broad, and general, as the casing.. 
I drink to the general joy of the same — 111. 4 
the general cause? or is it a fee-grief — iv. 3 
mudi more eencral than these lines.K>nj,'/o/in, ly. 3 
and the L-eiieral course of the action..! HenrylV. 11. 3 
our general forces at Briduiiorth . . — 111. i 

should go so general current through — iv. 1 
are the horses of the enemy in general — iv. 3 
to grille the general sway into your . . — v. 1 
greeting from our general 



— iv. 3 

— iv. 3 
.V-jcftiM, i. 2 

— iii. 4 



no longer shall vou gaze on't — v. 3 greeting from our general 

erShe m.^^^^^^^^ the .Comedy ofErr,}. 2 % h",ther PJ-"7"Vi'o";,e™"l vo 

gaze where you should, and that will - iii.2 ?''''''' ™"Yf^' '"?,?„, ^..kP, 

fhe show an^ ga.,e o' the time Mac,,e'h,s. 7 ■T^r.'ln' r^Tn' a' ' ' a^e' 



afford no extraordinary gaze. . 
if so, gaze on. and grovel on 
look, how they gaze! see .. 



mv bnither general, the commonwealth 
' oicc.... 
general 
intended in the general's 1 
contains of general grievances. . . 
this will I khow our general 



.." 2H'nry/r. iv k 

iv. 1 
iv. \ 
iv. 1 



OBNERAL— here comes our general. a/JcHry ''/. Jv. 3 
did, as heir general, Ijcintr descemled . . Henry r.\. 2 

and what a beard of tlie LronLTal's cut — iii. 6 

ceremony, save general cereinuiiN? .. — iv. 1 
were now the general ot'mu- giaeinns — v. (eliorus) 

tlian a general petition of inpnarchs. . — y. 2 

von are disputing of your generals .AHciui/ I'L i. 1 

lienee grew tlie general wreck — i. 1 

summon their general unto the wall — iv. 2 

all our general force might — iv. 4 

success imto oiu- valiant general .... — v. 2 

implored a general peace hetwixt .... — v. 4 

wliere's ourgeneral? Here I am iHennjVlAv. 2 

parley with Jack Cade their general — iv. 4 

now let the general trmnpet blow.... — v. 2 
a woman's general ; wliat should ....ZJJenryVlA.i 
woes are parcelled, mine are general. «/c/m/((//7. ii. 2 

cell til the general all-ending day .. — iii. 1 

this general applantiC, and elieerfut shout — iii. 7 

less importing than our general good — iii. 7 

followed with the general throng. //c'»n/r///. Unol.) 

broke into a general prophecy — i. 1 

a general w^elcome from his grace — i. 4 

hath sent one general tongue unto us — ii. i 

offered sorrow; tills, general joy. ..... — iv. 1 

witli a general taint of the whole state — v. 2 
when that the general is not like. Troihis ^- Cress, i. 3 

tlie general's disdained by him — i. 3 

several 3 and generals of grace exact.. — i. 3 

call Agamemnon head and general .. — i. 3 

it is sjiread in general name — i. 3 

good or bad unto the general — i. 3 

(lid not tlie general run then? — ii. 1 

their great general slept — ii. 2 

our niible general do not do so — ii. 3 

please it our great general to call — ii. 3 

jilease it our general to pass strangely — iii. 3 

what, comes the general to speak — iii. 3 

my lord, aught with the general? — iii. 3 

that takes luo for the general? — iii. 3 

lionoured captain general of the Grecian — iii 3 

by Priam, and the general state — iv. 2 

our general doth salute you with a kiss — iv. b 

better, she were kissed in general — iv. .*) 

after the general, I beseech you next — iv. 5 

the general state, I fear, can scarce . . — iv. 5 

and good-night to the Greeks' general — v. 1 

to square the general sex by Cressid's — v. 2 

were I tlie general, thou shouldst liave — t. 6 
I knew it the most general way. Timnn of Athens, ii. 2 

to general filths convert o' the instant — iv. 1 

and tlieir crop be general leprosy ! . . — i v. 1 

smells from the general weal — iv. 3 

phmged thyself in general riot — iv. 3 

stolen from general excrement • — iv. 3 

my general and exceptless rashness.. — iv. 3 

forgetfulness too general, gross — v. 2 

though in general part we were opposed — v. 3 

my noble general, Timon is dead .... — v. 5 

I receive the general food at first Coriolnnus, i. 1 

miscarries siiall be the general's fault — i. 1 

Cominius the general is gone — i. 3 

say, has our general met the enemy? — i, 4 

hark, what noise the general makes ! — i. .5 

gener.al, here is the steed — i. 9 

1 tliank you, general — i. D 

am bound to beg of my lord general — i. 9 

the senate has letters from the general — ii. 1 

welcome home, and welcome general — ii. 1 

and last general in our well found — ii. 2 

by the yea and no of general ignorance — iii. I 

rather sliow om- general lowts how you — iii. 2 

my sometime general I have seen — iv. 1 

defence ofa town, our general is excellent — iv. 5 

our general, Gains Marci us (rep.) — iv. .5 

general himself makes a mistressof him — iv. .0 

which was sometime his general .... — v. 1 

our general will no more tiear from thence — v. 2 

heardyour general speak of Eome .. — v. 2 

tlie general is my lover — v. 2 

factionary on the part of youi' general — v. 2 

1 am as thy general is _ v. 2 

our general has sworn you out of reprieve — v. 2 

I mean thy general. JNly general cares — v. 2 

for the world, nor your general — v. 2 

let your general do his worst — v. 2 

the worthy fellow is our general .... — v. 2 

against the general suit of Koine .... — v. 3 

how is it with our general? — v. .5 

be aught toward the general good.. JuKusCtrsuj-, i. 2 

another general shout 1 I do believe.. — i. 2 

to spurn at him, but for the general . . — ii. 1 

are to the world in general, as to Ca!sar — ii. 2 

and pity to the "cneral wrong of Rome — in. 1 

whose ransoms did the general coffers fill — iii. 2 

the horse in general, are come with . . — iv. 2 

let me go in to see the generals — iv. 3 

shame, you generals: wliat do you mean? — iv. 3 

prepare you, generals: the enemy comes — v. 1 

tilt generals would have some words — v. 1 

what says my general? Messala, this is — v. 1 

here co.^ies the general: Brutus is ta'en — v. 4 

ill a genei jl honest thought — v. 5 

but this dotajte of our general's . . Antony /^ Cleo. i. 1 

mince not the general tongue — i. 2 

and whose general graces, speak that — ii. 2 

pr.ay you, hasten ycur generals after — ii. 4 

had our general been .rhat he knew — iii. 8 

general. Good-morrow, ;jeneral!.... — iv. 4 

IS Lucius general of the forees? Cymbelive, iii. 7 

alike conversant in general services.. — iv. I 
to see the general hunting in this. 'fttusAndron. ii. 3 

blot and enemy to our general .lame! — ii. 3 

is warlike Lucius general of the Ooths? — iv. 4 

what says our general? . — v. 1 

go tell their general, we attend Pcrirles, i. 4 

and place of general wontler .... — Iv. (Gower.) 

ex))ress a general praise to her — iv. 4 

most mse in general : tell me — v. 1 

OS well ill the general dependants Lcu': i. i 



[ 296 ] 

GENERAT^-left behind him general! .... Leur, iv. 3 

general , take thou my soldiers — v. 3 

our iiresent business is general woe — v. 3 

sound tlio general doom I Ilnmeo ^Juliet, iii. 2 

then will 1 be general of your woes .. — y. 3 

shall in the general censure take Hamtet, i. 4 

unreclaimed blood, of general assault. ... — ii. 1 

'twas caviare to the general — ii. 2 

in general synod, take away her power . . — ii. 2 
cleave the general ear with horrid speech — ii. 2 
the king sigh, but with a general groan.. — iii. 3 
great love the general gender bear him . . — iy. 7 

the duke does greet you, general otlipllo, i. 2 

general, be advised; he comes to bad intent — i. 2 
to incur a general mock, run from her . . — i. 2 

against the general enemy Ottoman — i. 3 

nor doth the general care take hold on me — i. 3 
good lieutenant, is your general mved?.. — ii. 1 

tis one Iag<', anciriit tu tlie general — ii. 1 

our iiolile aii<l valiant general — ii. 2 

of Cyiirns, and our noble general, Othello! — ii. 2 

our general cast us thus early — ii. 3 

to the health of our general — ii. 3 

no offence to the general, nor any man .. — ii. 3 

the general were put in mind of it — ii. 3 

Iiokt, hold! the general speaks to you — ii. 3 

thus it is, general. Montano and myself — ii. 3 
there are ways to reeoi-er the general again — ii. 3 
our general's wife is now the general .... — ii. 3 

andliid— good-morrow, general — iii. 1 

and the general so likes your music — iii. I 

the general does not greatly care — iii. 1 

gentlewoman thatattendsthegeneral'swife — iii. 1 
the general, and his wife, are talking of it — iii. 1 
general will forget my love and service.. — iii. 3 
whv, liow now, general? no more of that — iii. 3 
if the general eamp, pioneers and all ... . — iii. 3 

1 do attend here on tlie general — iii. 4 

how is it, general? have you not hurt — iv. 1 

save you, worthy general ! — iv. 1 

from hence ; I'll fetch the general's surgeon — v. 1 
with such general warranty of heaven . . — v. 2 

how now, general? O, are you come — v. 2 

dear general, I never gave yoii cause .... — v. 2 

GENERALLY— generally alloved.Mern/ Wives, ii. 2 
best call them generally, man hj man. Mid. A'. J)r. i.2 
hath generally taxed their whole. As you Lil<e it, iii. 2 
that so generally is at all times good. .All'styell, i. 1 

as to be— generally thankful — ii. 3 

we all rest generally \xholAen.Taming of Shreiit, i. 2 
king stands generally condemned . . Richard II. ii. 2 
are generally fools and cowards. . ..2Henry If. iy. 3 
and, generally, to the crown and seat.. Henry V. i. 1 
genenally whoever the king favours. Henry VIII. ii. 1 

full, all over, generally? Troilus 4" Cressida, ii, 1 

and, generally, in all shapes .. Timon of Athens, ii. 2 

GENERATION— human generation .. Tempest, iii. 3 
greeting to the under generation.. Men./oril/cn. iv. 3 
work of generation was between . . Mer. of Venice, i. 3 

to bring false generations Winter\ Tale, ii. I 

but the second generation removed.. -K/ng' John, ii. 1 
beget a generation of still-breeding.. ft'c/iard H. v. 5 

England shall have generation 2HenrylV. iv. 2 

is this the generation of love?. Troitus^ Cressida, iii. 1 

is love a generation of vipers? — iii. 1 

thy mother's of my generation.. Timon of Athens, i. 1 

to the end of feneration ! I believe I'ericles, iii. 3 

and undo a wliole generation — iv. 6 

or he that makes Ins generation messes . . Lear, i. 1 

GENEROSITY-theheartofgeuerosity.Coriolarm.t,i.I 

GENEROUS— to be generous Twelfth Night, i. 5 

the generous, and gravest citizens.il/ea. /or Mea. iv. 
of the day, most generous sir .... Love'sL. Lost, v. 1 

this is not generous, not gentle — v. 2 

footing in your generous bosoms?7Vo2<Ms<S-C7-es.'!. ii. 2 

my mmd as generous, and my shape Lear, i. 2 

most select and generous, chief in that. . Hamlet, i. 3 
most generous, and free from ol 1 contriving — iv. 7 
so far in your most generous thoughts . . — v. 2 
the generous islanders by yon invited.. W/ie(/o, iii. 3 

GENiTIVE-yourgeiiitiveease()<7).)J/e)T!//riDes,iv.l 
genitive.— horum, harum, horum — iv. 1 

GI'2NITIV0— you mark; genitivo hujiis — iv. 1 

GENIUS— our worser genius can Tempest, iv. 1 

his very genius hath taken Twelfth Night, iii. 4 

one of these men is Genius to. . Comedy of Errors^ v. 1 

under him, my genius is rebuked Macbeth, iii. 1 

he was the very genius of famine ..iHenrylV. iii. 2 
some say, the Genius so cries . . Troilus fy Cress, iy. 4 
the genius, and the mortal Julius Ccesar, ii. 1 

GENNET— and gennets for germans OthellOj i. 1 

GENOA — what news from Genoa. Mer. of Venice, iii. 1 

Antonio, as I heard in Genoa — iii. 1 

where, in Genoa? Your daughter ^rep.^ — iii. 1 
in Genoa, where we were lodgers. Taming ofSh. iv. 4 

GENOUX— sur mes genoux, je vous . . Henry V. iv. 4 

GENS— pauvres gens de France \ Henry VI. iii. 2 

'tis bona terra, mala gens 2Henry VI. iv. 7 

GENTILE-a G ntile, and no Jevr.Mer. of Venice, ii. 6 

GENTILHOMME- 

le gentilhomme de bonne qualite Henry V. iv. 4 

ie suis gentilhomme de bonne maison — iv. 4 

GENTILITY— law against gentility !.Z.o!)e',5/..L. i. 1 
my gentility with my education . . As you Like it,i. 1 

GENTLE— for he's gentle, and not Tempest, i. 2 

slie is ten time ' more gentle — iii. 1 

gentle breath of yours — (epil.) 

thou of the gentle Proteus?.. Two Gen. of Verona, i. 1 

I thank you, gentle servant — ii. 1 

have patience, gentle Julia — ii. 2 

gentle Proteus, love's — ii. 4 

gentle girl, assist ine! — ii. 7 

with gentle murmur glides — ii. 7 

giving a gentle kiss to every sedge . . — ii. 7 

as patient as a gentle stream — ii. 7 

gentle Lucetta, fit me with — ii. 7 

whom your gentle daughter hates .. — iii. 1 

1 gave him gentle looks — iii. 1 

ay, gentle Thin io — iv. 2 

sir Proteus, gentle lady, and your . . — iv. 2 



GENTLE— gentle lady .... Two Gen. of Verona, i v. 3 

she is beholden to thee, gentle youth — iv. 4 

thou gentle nymph, cherish — v. 4 

nay, if the gentle spirit of moving — v. 4 

come, gentle master Slender, come. .Wcj-ry HVre.!, i. 1 

she is pretty, and honest, and gentle — i. 4 

will you go, gentles? — iii. 2 

gentle master Eenton, yet seek — iii. 4 

farewell, gentle mistress — iii. 4 

food gentle one, give me modest.. Twelfth Night, i. 5 

come to whet your gentle thoughts — iii. 1 

I pr'ythee, gentle friend, let thy .... — iv. 1 

I am one of those gentle ones — iv. 2 

by whose gentle helii I was preserved — v. 1 
gentle Isabella, turn you the key..iVeas.forMeas. i. 5 

gentle and fair, your brother ' — i. .5 

gentle my lord, turn back — ii. 2 

gentle my lord, let me entreat joii .. — ii. 4 

nor, gentle daughter, fear you hot .. — iv. 1 

or reprieve, for the most gentle Claiiilio — iv. £ 

this IS a gentle provost — iv. 2 

greet lis here anon, my gentle Varrius — iv. .j 

let me bail these gentle three — v. 1 

gentle, my liege — v. I 

the gentle dav, before the wheels li/nch Ado, v. 3 

there, gentle llermia, may I marry. Mid.N.^sDr. i. 1 

my gentle Puck, come hither — ii. 2 

but, gentle friend, for love and courtesy — ii. 3 

I pray thee, gentle mortal, sin^ again — iii. 1 

you would not use a gentle lady SD .. — iii. 2 

stay, gentle Helena; hear my — iii. 2 

answers from my gentle tongue? — iii. 2 

come, thou gentle day — iii. 2 

I'll apply, to your eye, gentle lover.. — iii. 2 

thy fair large ears, my gentle joy — iv. 1 

gentle Puck, take this transformed . . — iv. I 

how comes this gentle concord in ... . — iv. 1 

joy, gentle friends! joy, and fresh — v. 1 

why, gentle sweet, you shall see no . . — v. 1 

gentles, ijerehanee, you wonder — v. 1 

whose gentle hearts do fear the smallest — v. I 

a very gentle beast, and of a good — v. 1 

gentles, do not reprehend ; if you — (epil.) 

to meet you, gentle lady, before . . Love\L. Lost, ii. 1 

no. so, gentle beast; my lips are no.. — ii. 1 

but, gentles, agree: the civil war of. . — ii. 1 

in her train there is a gentle lady .. — iii. I 

away, the gentles are at their game . . — iv. 2 

and gentle'Longaville, wliere lies thy — iv. 3 

lend me the flemish of all gentle tongues — iv. 3 

and gentle visitation (re^.) — v. 2 

fair gentle sweet, your wit makes — v. 2 

this is not generous, not gentle — v. 2 

I thank you, gentle wife? — v. 2 

touching but my gentle vessel's side. Mer. of Ven. i. 1 

hie thee, gentle Jew — i. 3 

to steal your thoughts my gentle queen — ii. 1 

tell gentle Jessica, I will not — ii. 4 

for his gentle daughter's sake — ii. 4 

a gentle riddance — ii.7 

a gentle scroll; fair lady — iii. 2 

that her gentle spirit commits itself. . — iii. 2 

my lord Bassanio, and my gentle lady ^ iii. 2 

gentle lady, when I did first impart — iii. 2 

we all expect a gentle answer, Jew .. — iv. I 

as the gentle rain from heaven upon — iv. 1 

and pardon me, my gentle Gratiano — v. I 
in the gentle condition of blood . .As you Like it, i. 1 

yet he's gentle; never schooled — i. 1 

your fair eyes, and gentle wishes — i. 2 

gentle cousin, let us go thank him . . — i. 2 

displeasure 'gainst his gentle niece .. — i. 2 

O my gentle master! O my sweet.... — ii. 3 

and wherefore are you gentle — ii . 3 

your virtues, gentle master, are sanctified — ii. 3 

and to you, gentle sir, and to you all — ii. 4 

most gentle Jupiter ! — iii. 2 

1 am sorry for thee, gentle Silvius .. — iii. 5 
my gentle Phosbe bid me give you . . — iv. 3 
woman's gentle brain could not chop — iv. 3 

he led me to the gentle duke — iv. 3 

patience, gentle Audrey — v. 1 

good even, gentle friend ._ — v. 1 

this matron, and this gentle maid ..AlVsJVell, iii. Ct 

gentle madam, you never had — iv. 4 

to wear your gentle limbs in my .... — v. 1 

your gentle hands lend us — (epil.) 

do it kindly, gently sirs . . Taming of Sh. 1 (indue.) 

but, gentle sir, methinks, you walk.. — ii. I 

I find you passing gentle — ii. 1 

with gentle conference, soft and affable — ii. 1 

fentles, methinks, you frown — iii. 2 

have ta'en you napping, gentle love — iv. 2 

good do it unto thy gentle heart! .... — iv. 3 

when you are gentle, you shall — iv. 3 

food-morrow, gentle mistress — iv. ,0 

iUcentio, gentle sir. Happily met . . — iv. ."i 

in whose success we are gentle Winter^ s Tale, i. 2 

gentle ray lord, you scarce can right — ii. 1 

from the access of gentle visitors?.... — ii. 2 
imagine me, gentle spectators .... — iv. (chorus) 

be merry, gentle; strangle such — iv. 3 

wherefore, gentle maiden, do you neglect — iv. 3 

for we must be gentle — v. 2 

wild, and yet too, gentle Comedy of Errors, iii. 1 

then, gentle brother, get you in — iii. 2 

possessed with such a gentle sovereign — iii. 2 

I did not, gentle husband (rep.) — iv. 4 

they are such a gentle nation — iv. 4 

I, gentle mistress. And are not you. . — v. t 

itself unto oxir gentle senses Macbeth, i. B 

O, gentle lady, tis not for you — ii. 3 

come on; gentle my lord, sleek o'er.. — iii. 2 

statute purged the gentle weal — iii. 4 

my ever gentle cousin, welcome — iv. 3 

but gentle heaven, cut short all — iv. 3 

say l3riefly, gentle lord, we coldly . . King John, ii. 1 

trumpet c.alled you to this gentle parle — ii. I 

make a riot on the gentle brow — iii. 1 

impose some gentle order — iii. 1 



GEN 



OENTLE— farewell, my gentle cousin. Kiii^/«;iri, Hi. 3 

O my Bcntlo lliilHjvt, we owe tlicc... — iii- 3 

coniforl. jii'iitk' C'lUistmu'c — iii. I 

n Klvrii liMk, Ipiit u ;;i'iilk' lii'iirt — iv. 1 

mv Lviilli' niiisiii. IkiuM thou .... — iv. 2 

gi'nllf kiii-iiiiui. !,M, mill lliru.-it — iv. 2 

wo iiiii>t i-niiiniii.' Ihis f-Tiitlf iillVr — iv. 3 

Bniirlotli ill tin- ui'iitk' I'.vi's i.t'jiiiu:i' .. — iv. 3 

sincr v.ni uir a iii-iilli- i-oiivortito — v. 1 

nmri'li iiinui luT i;i'iitlc l«iMiiM — v. 'i 

uml till ir wiilU'lii'aits to tierce — v. 2 

(Uijlflitle. iin.l lis jorillicl Ititliurd II. i. 3 

theswwt iiiliuit luvatli iilVentlu .... — i. 3 

wiui m'\i'i" ^'fiitlu Iamb mine niilil.. .. — ii. 1 

Itlmiili tliw, -L-iitlolViTV — ii.3 

thanks. L;entlo iiiu-le; n.iiic. lorils.... _ iii. 1 

my ).'eiitlceai til, nor Willi tliv — iii.-.' 

8|iciik to his i.vntlu lu-ariiiL' kind _ iii.:! 

let's fi-lit Willi i.'i'iillt> Miink — iii. 3 

geiitli' .\ortliiiiiilinlaii(l, il'tliy oliciices — iv. 1 

wllirli with siirli LTeiitU' scirow Uc — v.-.! 

lieiinnL', LViith' lu-e. lUseup _ v. 3 

tell iiu-, ■.'Votk- frii'iiil. how went — v. :> 

we thaiii; thee, mantle IVriv — v. fi 

mv eeiitleeoiisiii Wesliiu.nhuul ...AlUnn,! r. \. I 

wfleli .111 the i-'eiitl.- Severn's — i. 3 

Centlellarr\ I'erex'. ami kind cousin — i. 3 

k-ave \oii. ■-•eiille Kate — ii.3 

trust thee. L-entle Kate. How! so Caiy — ii.3 

rest yniir';eiith- heail upon her lap .. — iii. 1 

to^'entle exerri-e anil i.rni.r i.f anus. . — V. 2 
the -entle anhliishop ,,|- V..rk is u[,. .illninjir. i. 1 

loviiii; wile. ami, u-eiitleaali-hter .... — ii.3 

Bleep, ijentle sleep, nature's siit't niu'sc — iii. 1 

fai-c vnii well j-'entle u-entlenien — iii. 2 

poiKl-dav to von, u'entle lord arehhishop — iv. 1 

Iiealth to niv lord, and L'entle eonsin — iv. 2 

no noise made, inv f:elitle triemla .... — iv. 1 

with kindlv tears his L'eiitle cheeks .. — iv. 1 

his Uiiil'e w'itli u'entle eye-drops — iv. t 

and you, my ijeii tie creditors — (epil.) 

your panlon, gentles all Henry r.\. (ehoiiisl 

IB now transported, j^entlcs — ii. (ciiorns) 

to Kive you gentle pass — ii. icliorns) 

and you, my ;,'entle knight, give me — ii. '-' 

bIic wad old and gi-iitU'; and \'nu rode — iii. 7 
then mean and gentle all, beliold — iv. (clionis) 

gored the gentle liosoin of peace — iv. 1 

this day shall gentle his <-oiulilioi, .. — iv. 3 

no more for random, gentle herald ,, — iv. 3 

why gentle peace should ni it expel .. — v. 2 

plead his love-suit to her gentle heart':' — v. 2 

the rather, gentle princess — v. 2 

my lord, despise her gentle siut .... 1 Ucmy I'l. ii. 2 

tlmnks, gentle sir; come, let us four.. — ii. -1 

thanks, gentle duke. But where is . . — iii. 2 

presume to boast of gentle Mood .... — iv. 1 

gentle princess, woiild you not siiiiposc — v. 3 

uo, gentle madam; I imworthy am .. — v. 3 

1 prythee, gentle Joan — v. 1 

be patient, gentle Nell iHennjl'I. ii. 4 

thy greatest help is quiet, gentle Nell — ii. 4 

but cursed the gentle gusts — iii. 2 

for gentle Suffolk ! ungentle queen (rep.') — iii. 2 

cease, gentle queen, these execrations — iii. 2 

mild and gentle as the cradlc-babc .. — iii. 2 

look with a genile eye upon this .... — iii. 3 

seeing gentle words will not prevail .. — iv. 2 
thanks, gentle Norfolk, stay by nie..3Hcjirj/F/. i. 1 

be patient, gentle earl of ■Westmoreland — i. 1 

be patient, gentle queen, and I will stay — i. 1 

Btay, gentle .Margaret, and hear me speak — i. I 

gentle son Kiluard, til. Ml wilt stay — i. 1 

uke of ISIorl'olk, gentle VVarwicK'if .. — ii. 1 

do lions ca«t their gentle looks'/ — ii. 2 

in pity of the gentle king — ii. 2 

deny'st the gentle ki ng to speak — ii. 2 

smile, gentle heaven! or strike (rc/^.) — ii.3 

gentle Warwick, let me embriuie — ii.3 

i>ity, pity, gentle heaven, pity! — ii. :> 

cherish weeds, but gentle air! — ii. (i 

then, gentle Clarence, welcome — iv. 2 

Biieak gentle words, and humbly bend — v. I 

tiianks, gentle Somerset — v. 4 

see our gentle queen how well she fares — v. 5 
he was gentle, mild, and virtuous . . liidmnl ill. i. 2 

but, gentle lady Anne, to leave this. . — 1-2 

there^s many a gentle persim — i. 3 

ah, gentle villain, do not turn — i. 3 

scorn me for my gentle counsel? .... — i. 3 

1 pray thee, gentle keeper, stay — i. 4 

that the gentle duke is dead? — ii. 1 

should steal such gentle shapcfl — ii. 2 

iiow hath seized tfie gentle hind .... — ii. 4 

I thank you, ._'eutle nmle! O my lord — iii. 1 

ay, gentle eoiisin, were it light enough — iii. 1 

come hither, 'jeiitle C'utesby — iii. i 

go, gentle Catesby, and, as it were far off— iii. 1 

mistress Shore one gentle kiss the more — iii. I 

I presume, he'll take in gentle part .. — iii. 4 

thanks gentle citizens, and friends .. — iii. 7 

and gentle, kind, etfeiniiiatt remorse — iii. 7 

giKxl coufin; farewell, u'entle friends — iii. 7 

ujgratidatc the gmtle princes there.. — iv. I 

lay the gentle babes; thus, thus _ iv. 3 

aiid buried, gentle Tym I? — iv. 3 

if yet yourgcntle souls Hy in the air.. — iv. 4 

flyt'rom such gentle lambs — iv. 4 

and lap their gentle blood — iv. 4 

where is the gentle Kivers, Vaughan — iv. 4 

I will be mild and gentle in my words — iv. 4 

of .vour children, gentle lady — iv. 4 

with the lark to morrow, gentle Norfolk — v. 3 

for, gentle hearers, know llrnry f 1 1 1 . (prol.) 

it was a gentle bu.sincss, and becoming — ii.3 

you hear a gentle mind — ii.3 

displiiywl the elfccls of ilisposition gentle — ii. 4 

you have a gentle, n.ible t*:inper .... — iii. 1 

carry gentle iKiue, 1.1 .silenie envious — iii. '2 

tciir we wake her; softly, gentle I'atiencc — iv. i 



[^] 

GKNTl.K-that gentlo physic, given. Hc«i!/ *';//. iv. 2 
and with gentle travail, to the glaihliug — v. I 
in their hands t.i Illlike lliem gentle — v. 2 
onee elirau'e the I'eul le 'I'licl is . rrnilut if Cmtidn, i. 3 
mneli more L'eiille, mill all... _'rtlier .. — ii.3 
() gentle ran.hiriis, rnilii Cupid's.... — iii. 2 

all qiiesti.. 11 iif the gentle triiee — iv. 1 

thi.s is Ihem.ist .li-pilelul u'entle greeting — iv. 1 
go, gentle kniu'ht, Stan. 1 liv our .Vjav — iv. 5 

thoii art too gentle, and ti.'o free a man _ iv. .'i 
mosi u'eiitl... and iii.ist valiant Hector — iv. fi 
ourgelille tlame pnivukes itself. 7'/ot,i„ .i/M//,c/i«, i. 1 
geiiile .\peiiKiiilus. 1 ill 1 he gentle.. '— i. 1 

wilt seiiil thy g.'iitle heart belbre .... — v. & 

condileted to u gentle bath Coriiilnnui,'!. b 

mv gentle iMareiiis, worthy CaiUB.... — ii. 1 
'tis a eonditi.>n tlie\ aeei.imt gentle.. — ii.3 
to take in a town Milli gentle words — iii. 2 

being u-entlewounde.l — iv. 1 

he not jealous of me, gentle Hriitus.7i<//»,vrf'wr, i. 2 
tell US the manner ol' It, gentle Ca.sea — i. 2 

and, U'entle liieuds, let's kill him boldly — ii. 1 

kneel not, gentle r.irtia (IV/).) — ii. 1 

that I am meek and gentle with these — iii. 1 
yon genile lv.anans,--l"eiiee, hoi .... — iii. 2 

luivi' patience. 'jeiitie friends — iii. 2 

L'cntle kiuiie. g..u,l-iiiu'ht — iv. 3 

his life was geutle; and the elements — v.!) 
to soft ant 1 ueu.lespeeeh ..Antomf ^ Cktijialra^W. i 

gentle hir.ls.K'l's part '.... — ii. 7 

gentle III ia\aa, ht vour best love — iii. 4 

nav, u'entk- ma.laio, to hiin — iii, '.i 

gentle a.lieus, and greetings — iv. .■; 

nay. weep not, geiifle ICros — iv, 12 

gciitlc, hear nie: none about Ciesar .. — iv. 13 
liow eahv. and gentle I pruceeiled still — v. 1 

in Ku'vpt be gentle u'ravc to me! — v. 2 

be geiitle to her: to' t'.esar I will speak — v. 2 

gentle madam, no. Yim lie — v. 2 

(which towards yon are most gentle) — V. 2 

as soft as air, as gentle — v. 2 

gentle lady, big of this gentleman . . Ci/mhilitu; I. 1 

you gentle gods, give me but this — i. 2 

my gentle queen, where is our daughter';" — iii. ^ 

he was genile, hut unfortunate — iv. 2 

they are as gentle as zephyrs — iv. 2 

these u'l'utle princes (for such ■ — v. .'i 

my '-'eiitle brothers, have me thus met — v. .^i 
tluu'iks, gentle trihnne, noble . . Tilm.iinlmiiiciis, i. 2 
nor with SI air 1. inks attliet liis gentle heart — i. 2 

liuder yinir patieliee. gentle euqiress — ii. 3 

O Tainora, be called a gentle queen.. — ii.3 
speak, gentle niece, what stern ungentle — ii. 5 

tribunes! gentle aged men! — iii. 1 

speak, gentle sister, who hath martyred — iii. 1 
gentle Lavinia, let me kiss thy lips.. — iii. 1 
O gentle Aaron! did ever i-aven sing — iii. 1 
and, gentle girl, cat this; here is no.. — iii. 2 

calm thee, gentle lord! — iv. I 

O, gentle Aaron, we are all undone! — iv. 2 
go, gentle Marcus, to thy nephew i.ueiiis — v. 2 

bind them, gentle Pulilius — v. 2 

thanks, gentle llomans, may I govern so — v. 3 
but, gentle people, give me aim awhile — v. 3 

gentle to those that cry by night Pericles, iii. 1 

quiet and gentle thy conditioiiB! — iii. 1 

tliithcr, gentle mariner, alter thy cotirse — iii. I 
gentle neighbours; lend me your hands — iii. 2 
[^Coi. A■;l^] ray gentle babe Marina ..1... — iii. 3 

foreshow you h'ave a gentle heart — iv. 1 

assured she came of gentle kind — v. 1 

hail, gentle sir. Sir, speed you Leiir, iv. 6 

leave, gentle wax ; and manners — iv. B 

her voice was ever soft, gentle, and low .. — v. 3 
that Love, so gentle in fiis view.. Wo/aco. /yJidiet, i. 1 
woo her, gentle I'aris, get her heart .. — i. 2 
gentle Romeo, we must have you dance — i. 4 
content thee, gentle eoz, let him alone — i. h 

the U'entle fine is this,— niv lips — i. 5 

() U'entle itouieo, if th.ai ik.st love ., — ii. 2 
I'll warrant him. as gentle as a lamb — ii. 5 
gentle -Mereutio, put thy rapier up .. — iii. I 
uttered with gentle breath, calm look — iii. 1 
eome, gentle night: come, loving .... — iii. 2 
but, gentle nurse, I pray thee, leave.. — iv. 3 
good u'entle voutli, tempt not a desperate — v. 3 
gentle :iiid ii'iiHiifed accord of Hamlet. . U;iiilcl. i. 2 
and gentle (.Inildenstern. Thanks (<i7(.) -- ii. 2 
(.) gentle son, upon the heat and tlame — iii. 4 
Fouie gentle entertainment to I^aertes — v. 2 
but that 1 love the gentle Uesdemona . . Uilwlln, i. 2 
welcome, gentle signior; wc lacked your — i. 3 

eome hither, gentle mistress — i. 3 

() gentle lady, do not put mc to't — ii. 1 

loiJK, if my gentle love be not raised up.. — ii.3 
of so gentle a condition! Ay, too gentle.. — iv. I 
do it with gentle means, and easy tasks — iv. 2 

1 erv von gentle pardon; these bloody .. — v. 1 
GEN'ri J':M ll.K-are UKi.le gentlefolk. «ic/inr</ ///. i. 1 
GENfl.K-IIK.Mi'l'Kn— 

to ri..'ht our gentle-hearted king! ....Mh-nrylV.X.i 

V, I.; .\"'i' 1 ,1 :- K I .\ i )-are more gentle-kind. Tempest, iii. 3 

GK.N'll.liMAN- 

I kn.iw the gentleman to be of. Two (hn. nfl'er. ii. 4 

all '....il u'laie t.. I'raee agcntlemau.. — ii. 4 

till- i , i '. IN. I i' .-..nie to me — ii. 4 

till ' '■ man I toldyoiu- .... — ii. 4 

liLi. ;i iiii _i nlleman — ii. 4 

the gniLkniaii 1.^ lull of virtue — iii. I 

a youtlilul gentleman of worth — iii. 1 

as thou art a gentleman of blood — iii. I 

an ill office for a gentleman — iii. 2 

ami Bee the geutlemiin that yon asked — iv. 2 
O Kglamonr, thou art a gentleman .. — iv. 3 

from a gentleman to a fool — v. 2 

where is the gentleman that was with — v. 3 

tliou art a geiitlcninn, and well — v. 4 

a gentleman born, master parson, . Men tj Wives, i. 1 
the genllenmn hml drunk himself .. - i. I 

yet 1 live like a poor gentleman boru — i. I 



GEN 



GENTI>1.;M AN-an honest gentleman Wt'rry Wivetji.K 

bullv-rook':' thou'rt a gentleinau .... — li. I 

sir, t :ilii a I'entlemaii thai have spent — ii. 2 

ure 11 geiitlenian ofexeelhoit lire, .lin.' — ii, 2 

and last, iis I am a gentleman. Mill shall — ii. 2 

ami :in..ti»r L'.ntleinan from I ■r..gin.irc — iii. I 

\ .■! .. i I reverend geutkiuan — iii. 1 

th. 1 1 i.i: ,M II i- .if n.. having — iii. 2 

t.. I in I r. I Ilenian. that — iii. 3 

111. IV i :i I iiii, mail, my dear friend — iii. 3 

and, as 1 am a gentleman, I'll give .. — iv. 11 
is at the gate a young gentleman.. ruW/f/i Kighl, \. '■> 

a gentleiiiaii. .\ geiitlemau':' Urp.) ., — i. 5 

my state is well: I am a gentlen.an — i. *'» 

I am a genttemau. I'll be sworn .... — i. ■'> 

save you, gentleman — iii. I 

youncr gentleman of the count Orsino's — iii. 4 

the behaviour .if the young gentleman — iii. 4 

uiiil .Irive the gentleiiian (as I know — iii. 4 

gentleman, (ii.d save thee — iii. 4 

sta'i voii bv this gendeman till niv.. — iii- ' 

111. -Ml' v.lll liir his honour's sake— iii. 4 

all ; :i . iiin an an.l a .soldier .. — iii. 4 

ii fill ileuiaii bavedone.. — iii. 4 

a- I -;ii I ■ r.. I. Kill, I will live to .. — iv. 2 

thi.i.-iHiiii I iH. 1 , iM. ,iiic feeario.. — v. 1 

niv geiill I , I. : I . I 111.' — V. I 

h.ov ii.iv., I , . I I li..wis'twithv..n? — v. I 

a g.'iillrin III. .■iii.l ii :!lH^erof my lai'ly's — v. 1 

p...ii u. i.lli i,i;.ii. h.i's 'b ilist'raet.. — v. 1 

thi L. nil. iiiiiii, «li..ni I w..iild...Vra.»./lj)-il/ea«. ii. 1 

II, i I nil. 1.1 III to her? 1 heseeeh ()•<■;;.) — ii. 1 

iKie '.- a u' nil. man, and a friend of mine — iii. 2 

a ■'entkiiKiii olall temperance — iii. 2 

I have lalinuitd f.ir the poor gentleman — iii. 2 

this geutkiuan ti.ld s.imewhat of my — v. 1 

as he's rep. irted liv this u'entlemaii .. — v. 1 
the gentleman is iiot in vour books ... Much Ado, i. I 

HO some gentleman or oilier shall 'scape — i. I 

how tartly that u'entleinan looks!.... — ii. 1 

\vlien I kii.iw tlie u'eiitleinan — ii. 1 

the gentleman, that. laneed with her — ii. 1 

d.ith not ihe u'entleinan deser\e as lull — iii. 1 

the '-'.ntkman ^h. ml. 1 lie her sister .. — iii. I 

s.i iiM-ea '.-■nlleinan as^iu•ninr llnieiliek — iii. I 

he : np iin.i .l.iwn like a u'enllelnan — iii. 3 

I -in, a J. nll.niiMi.Hr. ami iii\- name is — iv, 2 

Ml ill- .l..>.. n. master eeiitleiiian Cmradc — iv. 2 

)iav. as ( ainau'enlkinan.I will .... — V.I 

the U'entleinan IS wise I re//. I — v. I 

I aiu sure ynu love the gentleman .. — v. 4 
Demetrius is a worthy .'entleman .Mid. A'.'s Dr. i. I 

yom- name, honest gentleman? — iii. 1 

many a gentleman of your house.... — iii. 1 

and, as lam a gentleman.. I,oi'f'jL./.oj(, i. 1 (letter) 

you are a gentleman, and a gamester — i. 2 

sir, the king is a noble gentleman .. — v. 1 

illustrate, and learned gentleman .. — v. I 

myself, or this gallant gentleman .. — v. I 

th'riee-w.irthy u'eiitlemaii! — V. 1 

nia.ster young gelitUnian . . Merchant n/ reiii'oc, ii. '2 

fur the young u'entleinan (according — ii. 2 

the f.'ill.iwer .if S.I poor a "cntleman.. — ii. 2 

a kinder gentleman treads not the earth — ii. 8 

ran in my veins, I was a gentleman — iii. 2 

how true a gentleman you send relief — iii. 4 

unto the gentleman that lately stole his — iv. 1 

Antonio, gratify this gentleman — iv. I 

most worthy gentleman, I and my friend — iy. 1 

for a gentleman of my birth Asi/ou Likeir,'i. 1 

exercises as may become a gentleman — i. 1 

young .-'entleman, your spirits are too — i. 2 

geiitlenian, wear this for me — i- 2 

av: fare villi well, fair gentleman.... — i. 2 

for all the old gentleman's saying .. — V. 1 

1 know vdu are a gentleman of good — v. 2 

well met, h.aiest U'entleinan — V. 3 

this is the motlev-minded gentleman — v. 4 
a gentleman which I have some tinie..l/r., inil, iii. 2 

solicited hy a ..'entleman his eoinpanioii — iii. 5 

is a gentleinau that serves the e.iunt — iii. S 

is 't not a handsiime gentleman? — iii. .^ 

hath been an honourable gentleman — v. 3 

as a gentleman loves a woman — v. 3 

belike, some noble gentleman. Tomin^o/A'/i. 1 (iud.) 

an affable and courteous gentleman — i. 2 

I have met a .gentleman, liath promised — i. 2 

here is a gentleman, whom by chance — i. 2 

this gentleman is happily arrived .. — |. 2 

Baptista is a noble geutleniiin — i. 2 

this gentleman will out-talk us all .. — i. 2 

gratify this gentleman, to whom we — >. 2 

was ever gentleman thus grieved as I? — ii. 1 

I an\ a gentleman of Verona, sir .. .. — ii. I 

good Kate, I am a gentleman — ji. 1 

you are no gentleman (re/).) — ii. I 

fnotboy, or a gentleman's lackey — iii. 2 

one as'lcaves a gentleman, and makes — iv. 2 

sir, tins is the gentleman 1 t.ild you of — iv. 4 

thesp.aiseof any n.ihle U'entleinan .. — iv. a 

whv.hnw now, aeiilleinan! — v. 1 

asi'.l.eraneient ■-'eiitleliian — v. 1 

gentleman ..f the u'reatest pr..mis-C..H'i'n/fr'» Tair i. 1 

this kernel, this s.piasli. this L'cntlemau — i. 2 

as you areeertainlv au'entleman .... — 1.2 

nno howthe poor gentleman roared.. — in. 3 

the bear half dined mi the gentleman — iii. 3 

if the iHiir be gone from the gentleman — id. 3 

a very simple gcntleimin! — id. 3 

ehanu'e garments with this gentleman — iv. 3 

the gentleman is half Hayed already — iv. 3 

when I shall see this gentleman — v. 1 

my brother (good gentleman!) — v. 1 

a graceful gentleman — v. 1 

heiv comes a gentleman, that, happily — v. 2 

becausi' I « as no gentleman born (r";;.) — v. 2 

not swear it. now 1 am a gentleman? — v. 2 

a true gentleman may swear it — V. 2 

stand cfebted t.i thisgentleinan.. . O.wfi/p/../ Kri. iv. I 

and tide slaj s for this gentleman — iv. 1 



GENTLEMAN— that gentleman. Comedy of Err. V. 
valiant cousin 1 wortliy gentleman I . . ..ItlucbM, i. 1 

lives, a prosperous gentleman — i. '• 

he was a gentleman on whom I built — i. - 
your faithful subject, I, a gentleman.. A'lnf/o/tn.i. 
when this same lusty gentleman was got — i. 

that smooth-faced jrentleman — U. ; 

like aspriteful noble gentleman • — iv. ; 

a loyal gentleman even in the Richard II. i. 

loyal, just, and upright gentleman .. — i. ; 
that yoimg and princely gentleman — ii. 
to show the world I am a gentleman — iii. : 
a gentleman of mine I ha\'e desi)atched — iii. ' 
and, as I am a gentleman, I credit him — iii.! 
in faith he is a worthy gentleman. . I Henry IT. iii. '■ 

given, as a gentleman need to be — iii. i 

a braver gentleman, more active-valiant — v. '■ 
bears not alive so stout a gentleman., — v.' 

agentlcnian well-bred iHenrtjll^.i. 1 

a geiitlcui;:!! almost forspent with speed — i. 1 
■why shdulil tlie irentlenian, that rode by — i. 1 

to hear a gentleman in hand — i. : 

as I am a gentleman (.rfp.) — ii. ! 

I am a gentleman, thou art a drawer — ii. < 

a tall gentleman, by heaven — iii.! 

in England tlie most valiant gentleman — iv. 1 
honest gentleman, I know not your.. — v. * 

a very valiant gentleman Henry V. iii. i 

19 a marvellous falorous gentleman.. — iii. S 
the most active gentleman of France — iii. 5 
a valiant and most expert gentleman — iii. / 

I am a gentleman of a comi>any — iv. 1 

as good a gentleman as the emperor.. — iv. 1 

and a most kind gentleman — iv. 1 

art thou a gentleman? what is thy .. — iv. ■) 
signieur Dew should be a gentleman — iv. 4 

he is a gentleman of a good house — iv. 4 

his enemy is a gentleman of great.... — iv. 7 
as goot a gentleman as the tevil is .. — iv. 7 
and galling at this gentleman twice or — v. 1 
him, that is a true born gentleman..! Hciijy VI. ii, i 
poor gentleman! his wrong doth equal — ii. 
so should we save a valiant gentleman — iv. 3 

renowned noble gentleman — iv. 4 

bear him like a noble gentleman . . ..iHemy VI. i. 1 
I am a gentleman; rate me at what.. — iv. 1 

not leave one lord, one gentleman — i v. 2 

noble gentleman gave up the ghost. .SHenj-y VI. ii. 3 
the worthy gentleman did lose his life — iii. 2 
a sweeter and a lovelier gentleman. . Richardlll. i. 'i 
since every Jack became a gentleman — i. 3 

slew to-day a riotous gentleman — ii. 1 

and finds the testy gentleman so hot — iii. 4 

I know a discontented gentleman — iv. 2 

me out some mean-born gentleman. . — iv, 2 

called before us that gentleman Henry Vlll. i. 2 

the gentleman is learned — i. 2 

(this was his gentleman in trust) — i. 2 

that noble lady, or gentleman — i. 4 

a bold brave gentleman — iv. 1 

a gentleman, sent fi'om the king — iv. 2 

you are a gentleman o£ mine own — v. 1 

and yet the gentleman, that was sent — v. 1 
depend upon a noble gentleman. Troilus '^ Cress, iii. 1 

Soor gentleman! a plague upon Antenor — iv. 2 
do know him a {lentleman Timrm of Athens, i. 1 

this gentleman ot mine hath served.. — i. 1 
honourable gentleman, lord LucuUus — i. 1 
♦■ree-hearted gentleman of Athens .. — iii. 1 
a noble gentleman 'tis, if he would not — iii. 1 
thy lord's a bountiful gentleman .... — iii. 1 

and an honourable gentleman — iii. 2 

pleasure such an honourable gentleman — iii. 2 
gentleman, prosperity be thy page! . . Coriolanus, i. 5 
a gentleman. A marvellous poor (rep.) — iv. 5 

a poor, but worthy gentleman Cymheline, i. 1 

besides this gentleman in question .. — i. 1 
lady, big of this gentleman, our theme — i. 1 
here comes tlie gentleman, the queen — i. 1 
be better known to this gentleman . . — i. 5 
this gentleman at that time vouching — i. £ 
or this gentleman's opinion, by this — i. c 

a noble gentleman of Rome — i. 7 

thou wrong'st a gentleman — i.7 

when a gentleman is disposed to swear — ii. 1 
who's there, that knocks? A gentleman — ii. 2 

that this gentleman may render — v.t 

this gentleman, my Cadwal, Arviragus — v. £ 
noble gentleman, lord Titus here.. Tiius Andron. i. S 
where with't I may appear a gentleman. Pericles, ii. 1 
sure he's a gallant gentleman (rep.) .. — ii. 2 
gentleman of Tyre— my name, Pericles — ii. 3 

a gentleman of Tyre; who only — ii. 3 

a stranger and distressed gentleman . . — ii. £ 

do you Know this noble gentleman Lear, i. 1 

my gentleman for chiding of his fool? .. — i. 3 

to have her gentleman abused — ii. 'i 

I am a gentleman of blood and breeding — iii. 1 
the prince of darkness is a fine gentleman — iii. 4 

whether a madman he a gentleman — iii.f 

a gentleman to his son (rf/>.) — iii. C 

alack, poor gentleman! Of Albany's — iv. s 

good gentleman, go your gait '. — iv. t 

can you love the gentleman? Romeo f,- Jidiel, i. ! 

he bears him like a portly gentleman — i. ; 
hither, nurse; what is yon gentleman? — i. ; 

but, trust me, gentleman — ii. i 

a gentleman of the very first house .. — ii. <l 
a gentleman, nurse, that loves to hear — ii. ^ 
says like an honest gentleman (rep.) — ii. J 
this gentleman, the prince's near ally — iii. 1 
honest gentleman! that ever I should — iii. i 

young, and noble gentleman — iii.; 

a gentleman to be her bridegroom?.. — iii.; 
a gentleman of princely parentage .. — iii.; 

he s a lovely gentleman! — iii.! 

or gentleman,— according to the phrase. Ham/e(, ii. 1 

Iknow the gentleman; I saw him — ii. 1 

receive you well? Most like a gentleman — iii. I 
like a good child, and a true gentleman — iv. ; 



gentleman. Ho?jj(e(, iv. 7 
— V. 1 



GENTLEMAN-here w 
was he a gentleman? . 

of what part a gentleman would see 

why do we wrap the gentleman in our .. — v. 

the nomination of this gentleman? — v. 

the gentleman willing, and the king hold — v. 
but pardon me, as you are a gentleman.. — v. 

why, thou sil ly gentleman ! OlhelU., i. 

sir, this gentleman step in to Cassio — ii. 

alas, what does this gentleman conceive? — iv. 
alas, good gentleman; alas, good Cassio! — v, 

GENTLEMAN-LIKE-three or four gentle- 
man-like dogs Tiro Gen of Verona, iv. 

a most lovely, gentleman-like man.M/d. A'. Dr. i. 

all gentleman-like qualities isyouLiheil,\. 

was the fii-st gentleman-like tears. fVi'nter'sTa/e, v. 
is a gentleman-like offer Romeo ff Juliet, ii. 

GENTLEMEN_to these gentlemen . . Tempest, ii. 
you are gentlemen of brave mettle . . — ii. 
the fair resort of gentlemen.. TieoGen.of Verona, i. 
censure thus on lovely gentlemen .. — i. 

other gentlemen of good esteem — i. 

a fine volley of words, gentlemen , . . . — ii. 

no more, gentlemen, no more — ii. 

to sort some gentlemen well skill'd. . — iii. 

about it, gentlemen — iii. 

some of us are gentlemen — iv. 

now gentlemen, let's tune — Iv. 

I thank you for your music, gentlemen — iv. 

despatch, sweet gentlemen — v. 

these matters denied, gentlemen . . Merry Wives, i. 

bid these gentlemen welcome — i. 

come, gentlemen, I hope we — i. 

for swearing to gentlemen my friends — ii. 2 
and gentlemen with their coaches .... — ii. 2 
de lords, de gentlemen, my patients.. — ii. 3 

follow, gentlemen, follow — iii. 1 

gentlemen, I have dreamed to night — iii. 3 
gentlemen ; you shall see sport anon (rep.") — ii i . 3 

nay, follow him, gentlemen — iii. 3 

let's go in, gentlemen — iii. 3 

good gentlemen, let him not strike .. — iv. 2 

will you follow, gentlemen ? — iv. 2 

a little further: come, gentlemen .... — iv. 2 
let me speak with the gentlemen .... — iv. 3 

fare you well, gentlemen Twelfth Night, i. 3 

take away the fool, gentlemen — i. 5 

bore many gentlemen Measure for Measure, i. 5 

how many gentlemen have you lost. . Much Ado, i. 1 
gentlemen both, we will not wake your — v. 1 

you mock me, gentlemen Mid. N. Dream, iii. 2 

gentlemen, and soldiers, pardon me. Love's L. L. v. 2 
gentlemen, will you prepare for .Mer. of Venice, ii. 4 
on, gentlemen, away: our masking — ii, 6 

gentlemen, m.y master Antonio is at — iii. 1 
many young gentlemen flock to ..As youLike it, i. 1 

truly, young gentlemen — v. 3 

yet, for our gentlemen, that mean to . . AlVs Well, i. 2 

gentlemen, heaven hath, through me — ii. 3 

pray you, gentlemen ; I have felt so many — iii. 2 

brought you tliis letter, gentlemen — iii. 2 

you are welcome, gentlemen — iii. 2 

hath had in him, such as gentlemen have — v. 3 
gentlemen, importune me no further. Tam. ofSh. i. 1 
gentlemen, that I may soon make good — i. i 
gentlemen, content ye; I am resolved.. — i. 1 

gentlemen, God save you! — i. 2 

if you be gentlemen, do me this right.. — i. 2 
God save you, gentlemen ! And you . 
lead these gentlemen to my daughters 

be patient, gentlemen; Icnooseher — ii. 1 

and wife, and gentlemen, adieu — ii. 1 

faith, gentlemen, now I play — ii. 1 

content 3'ou, gentlemen, I'll compound — ii. 1 
well, gentlemen, I am thus resolved .. — ii. 1 
why, gentlemen, you do me double wrong — iii. I 
gentlemen and friends, I thank you . . — ii i . 2 

come, gentlemen, let's go — iii. 2 

father and the gentlemen are in sad talk — iv. 3 

will be all gentlemen born — v. 2 

we must be gentle, now we are gentlemen — v. 2 

when gentlemen are tired Comedy of Errors, iv. 3 

1 thanK you, gentlemen Mucbetli, i. 3 

kind gentlemen, your pains are — i. 3 

gentlemen, rise: his highness is not well — iii. 4 

where are these gentlemen? come — iv. i 

young gentlemen would be as sad as. King-John, \v. 1 
wrath-kindled gentlemen, be ruled ..liidmrd ll.i. 1 
come, gentlemen, let's all go visit him — i. 4 

and well met, gentlemen : I hope — ii. 2 

gentlemen, "wiU you go muster men? — ■ ii.2 
all yoursouthern gentlemen in arms. . — iii. 2 

foresters, gentlemen of the shade MlenryU'. i. 2 

we'll call up the gentlemen — ii. 1 

there are two gentlemen liave in — ii. 4 

friends, and neighbouring gentlemen — iii. 1 
lieutenants, gentlemen oi companies — iv. 2 
gallant warriors, noble gentlemen . . — iv. 4 

arm, gentlemen, to arms! — v. 2 

O gentlemen, the time of life is short — v. 2 
good-morrow, honest gentlemen. ...27Je»»!/JF. iii. 2 
gentlemen, have you provided me here — iii. 2 

fare you well, gentle gentlemen — iii. 2 

the worst of these three gentlemen! . . — v. 2 

if the gentlemen will not (j-ep.) — (epil.) 

why. how now, gentlemen? Henry V. ii. 2 

gentlemen both, yon will mistake each — iii. 2 
and gentlemen in England, now a-bed — iv. 3 
esquires, and gallant gentlemen, eight — iv. 8 
and gentlemen of blood and quality.. — iv. 8 

great lords and gentlemen \ Henry VI. ii. 4 

stay, lords and gentlemen — ii. <1 

dare not take up arms like gentlemen — iii 2 

and divers gentlemen beside — iv. 1 

say, gentlemen, what makes you thus — iv. 1 

captains, gentlemen, and soldiers — v. 4 

the name and port of gentlemen? ..iHenryVI. iv. 1 
in England, since gentlemen came up — iv. 2 
lawyers, courtiers, gentlemen, tliey call — iv. 4 
knights and gentlemen to come with.3He)i)-yl'/.iv. 8 



— ii. 1 

— ii. 1 



GENTLEMEN-knights, and gen tlemen.3 Hen. VI.vA 

fentlemen, see, see! dead ilnvty's .. Richard III. i. -2 
ukes, earls, lords, gentlemen; indeed — ii. 1 
come, noble gentlemen, let us survey — v. 3 
come, gentlemen, let us consult upon — v. 3 
good-nijrht, kind lords and gentlemen — v. 3 
watchful gentlemen, that you have ta'en — v. 3 
truly, gentlemen, a bloody tyrant — v. 3 

gentlemen, every man unto his charge — v. 3 
ght, gentlemen of England, fight, bold — v. 3 
gentlemen, the penance lies on you. Henry VIII. i. i 

gentlemen, whose fault is this? — i. 4 

by all your good leaves, gentlemen . . — i. 4 
a health, gentlemen, let it go round — i. 4 

will scarce be gentlemen — iii. 2 

come, gentlemen, ye shall go my way — iv. 1 

wel 1 fare you, gentlemen Timon of. Athens, i . I 

please 3'OU, gentlemen, the time is — ii.2 

these gentlemen can witness — iii. 2 

with all my heart, gentlemen both .. — iii. 6 

gentlemen, our dinner will not — iii. 6 

tor our gentlemen, the common f\\t..Coriolani(s.i. 6 

fentlemen, look fresh and meviWy. Julius Ctesar, ii. 1 
know not, gentlemen, what you intend — iii. 1 
gentlemen all, alas! what shall I say? — iii. 1 
were parted by gentlemen at hand ..Cymbeline, i. 2 
suits, with gentlemen of your knowing — i. :> 

let us leave here, gentlemen — \. :> 

gentlemen, enough of this — i. 5 

the confiners, and gentlem.en of Italy — i^'. 2 
witli a supply of Roman gentlemen . . — iv. 3 
in Ca.mbria are we born, and gentlemen — v. 5 

O gentlemen, help, help mine — v. .'j 

these two young gentlemen, that call — v. 5 
for we are gentlemen, that neither ....Pericles, ii. 3 

come, gentlemen, we sit too long — ii. 3 

thanks, gentlemen, to all — ii. 3 

gentlemen, why do you stir so early? .. .. — iii. 2 

gentlemen, this queen will live — iii. 2 

and taste gentlemen of all fashions — iv. 3 

we'll have no more gentlemen driven away — iv. 6 
call up some gentlemen. Ho gentlemen! — v. I 
gentlemen, there is some of worth would — v. 1 
on, lusty gentlemen. Strike, drum. i?oraeo<S-/u((ef, i. 4 
gentlemen, welcome I ladies, that have — i. .5 
you are welcome, gentleman! (rep.).. — i. 5 
nay, gentlemen, prepare not to be gone — i. 5 
thank you, honest gentlemen, goodnight — i. h 
God ye good-morrow% gentlemen .... — ii. 4 
gentlemen, can any of j'ou tell me where — ii. 4 
gentlemen, good-den: a word with one — iii. 1 
gentlemen, forshame forbear this outrage — iii. i 

upon the witness of these gentlemen Hamlet, i. 2 

these gentlemen, Marcellus and Bernardo — i. 2 
unhand me, gentlemen; by heaven .. — i. 4 
come hither, gentlemen, and lay your — i. 5 

gentlemen, with all my love I do — i. 5 

gentlemen, he hath much talked of you — ii.2 
Bring these gentlemen where Hamlet is — ii. 2 
gentlemen, you are welcome to Elsinore — ii. 2 

well be with you, gentlemen! — ii. 2 

good gentlemen, give him a further edge — iii. 1 
no ancient gentlemen but gardeners — v. 1 

gentlemen,— good my lord, be quiet.. — v. 1 

gentlemen, let's look to our (rep.) Othello, ii. 3 

alas, gentlemen, help, ho! lieutenant .... — ii. 3 
sir, Montano, — gentlemen, — have you .. — ii. 3 

this fortification, gentlemen — iii. 2 

light.gentlemen; I'll bind it with my shirt — v. 1 

gentlemen all, I do suspect this trash — v. 1 

stay you, good gentlemen; look you pale — v. 1 
do you see, gentlemen? nay, guiltiness will — v. 1 
good gentlemen, let me haveleave to speak — v. 2 
do not, gentlemen :0 murderous coxcomb! — v. 2 

GENTLENESS— so of his gentleness . . Tempest, i. 2 
truth you speak doth lack some gentleness — ii. 1 
the gentleness of all the gods go . . Twvlfth Night, ii. 1 
noway but gentleness; gently, gently — iii. 4 
you lord of more true gentleness. il//(/.A'.Dre<i»n, ii, 3 
your gentleness was guilty of it . . Love's L. Lost, v. 2 
with human gentleness and love. Mer. of Venice, iv. 1 
your gentleness shall force (rep.). As you Like it, ii. 7 
let gentleness my strong enforcement be — ii. 7 
therefore sit you down m gentleness . . — ii. 7 

sweet gentleness, thy meekness HenryVIIl. ii. 4 

learning, gentleness, virtue ..Troilus ^Cressida,i. 's 
in humane gentleness, welcome to Troy! — iii. 3 
not from your eyes that gewtlenGss.JuliusCfPsar, i. 2 
with deeds requite thy gentleness.. r/Vzjs.^ndron. i. 2 
this milkv gentleness, and course of vours. i-'-ar, i. 4 

GENTLER-unless you were of gentler. Tnm.ofSh. i. 1 
we marry a gentler scion to the. . Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

the gentfer gamester is the soonest Henry V. iii. 6 

by a slave, no gentler than my dog . . — iv. 5 
agentler heart did never sway .... 1 Henry VI. iii. 2 

descended of a gentler blood — v. 4 

are out of, with a gentler spirit Coriolanus, iii. I 

every time "en tier than other Julius Cresar. i. 2 

agentler judgment vanished Romeo ^Juliet,ui. 3 

he' looks gentler than he did Othello, iv. 3 

GENTLE-SLEEPlNG- 
awake God's gentle sleeping peace. ./(/c/io«i///.i. 3 

GENTLEST— gentlest winds of heaven. Peri'des, iii. 3 

GENTLEWOMAN— 
resort unto this gentlewoman?. T";™ Gen. ofVer, iv. 2 
against a gentlewoman's farthingale? — iv. 4 

gentlewoman, good day! — iv. 4 

poor gentlewoman! my master — iv. 4 

a virtuous gentlewoman, mild — iv. 4 

X know the young gentlewoman . . Merry Wives, i. 1 
to desire this honest gentlewoman . . — i. 4 
there is a gentlewoman in this town — ii. 2 

will m.nintain you like a gentlewoman — iii. 4 

call in my gentlewoman (rep.) Tn-elfih \ighl. i. h 

a gentlewoman of mine Measure for Measure, ii. 3 

this befel to the poor gentlewoman .. — iii. 1 
here's a gentlewoman denies all that you — v. 1 
must your daughter and her gentlewoman 

[Coi.-gentlewomen] carry Much Ado. ii 3 

the lady Hero's gentlewoman — iii. 3 



GEN 



OENTLEWOMAN- 

princess' gentlewoman, confesses. .■(« you Likeil, ii. "i 
tliis young gcntlewoniiiii hud a fntlier .AlVilf'etl, i. 1 
gentlewoniau tlie diiuphtcr ot'Cienird — i. I 
wluit »av vou ot'this geiitlewonmn?.. — i. 3 

tell my "geiitlewonmn, 1 would speiik — i. 3 

vou love your gentlewomim entirely — i. 3 

ne hiitli perverted a youna gentlewoman — iv. 3 
of till" most virtuous geutlewomnn .. — iv. 5 

■ wiio'd the gentlewoman so well Tamingo/SliA (ind.) 

giiit, and iietion of a gentlewoman — 1 iind.) 

Iiii-it thou heheld u fresher gentlewoman? — iv. ;> 
gentlewoman, thy son by this huth .. — iv. .'j 

gentlewoman, how fares our Wiuter^sTale^ ii. 2 

sir, with thisgentlcwoman?. .. Comti/i/o/i'rrors, ii. a 
this fair gentlewoman, her sister here — v. I 
gentlewoman, sir, and a kinswoman. 2He»rt///^ ii. 2 
honest, virtuous, civil gentlewoman? — ii. 4 
virtuous gentlewoman to elose with ns? — ii. 4 
gentlewoman, — what says your graee? — ii. 4 
question this pentlewon'ian about tne.. Henry V. v. 2 
the late queen^s gentlewoman ....Uenrt/Flll. iii. 2 

yes, and a gentlewoman's son Cj/mbWme, ii. 3 

your name, fair gentlewoman? Lear, i. 4 

good-den, fair gentlewoman .... lionieo ^ Jutiety ii. 4 
one, gentlewoman, that God hath made — ii. 4 

for the gentlewoman is young — ii. 4 

to be ottered to any gentlewoman.. . — ii. 4 
if this had not been a gentlewoman .... Hamlet, v. 1 
gentlewoman that attends the general's. .O/AcHo, iii. 1 

GKXTl.EWOMEN- 
[C'ol.] daughter and her gentlewomen. il/iicA/(d<i, ii. 3 
und you gentlewomen all, withdraw — v. 4 
and gentlewomen wear such caps. Tamingo/Sh. iv. 3 
the gentlewomen here have (rep.) 'iHenrylV. (epil.) 
a dozen or fourteen gentlewomen .... Henry /'. ii. I 

dubbed them gentlewomen liichard III. i. 1 

her gentljwomen, like the Nereides. .4h/. ffCteo. ii. 2 

GEN'lfLY— and do my spiriting gently.. Tempest,\. 2 
we must deal gently with him .. Tu'eljth SigM, iii. 4 
no way but gentleness: gently, gently — iii. 4 

as gently as any sucking dove Mid. N.'s. Dr. i. 2 

the sweet honeysuckle gently entwist — iv. 1 
the sweet wind did gently kiss . . Mer. o/renice, v. 1 
speak you so gently i* pardon mc...4syouLilieit, ii. 7 
carry him gently to my fairest . Taming ofUh. ) (ind. J 
take him up gently, and to bed with — 1 (ind. J 
something gently considered .... Ifinler's Tale, iv. 3 

the castle B gently rendered Macbeth, v. 7 

may lie gently at the foot of iieace . . King John, v. 2 
which gently laid my knighthood ..Hichardll. i. 1 
who gently would dissolve the bauds — ii. 2 
tohi him gently of our grievances . . 1 HenrylV. v. 2 
as gently as a puppy greyhound ....iHcnryll\\\. 4 
gently to hear, kmclly to judge.. Henrys. 1 (chorus) 
lay them "ently on thy tender side. . 1 Henry Vl. v. 3 
looked fuQ gently on his warlike ..SHenryfl. ii. I 
fell gently down, as if they struck . . — U. 1 

let him be gently used — ii. 6 

must gently be preserved Richard HI. ii. 2 

his faults lie gently on hhnl Henry y III. iv. 2 

I were gently put out of office. . Timon of.ilhens, i. 2 

march gently on to meet him Julius Caisar, iv. 2 

what's amiss, may it be gently heard. .^«(.(§-Cfeo.ii. 2 
thou and nature can so gently part .. — v. 2 
bring ouremperor gently in tiiy Uand.TilusAnd.y. 3 

fently [Co/. -duly] quench thy nimble. /Vric'«, iii. I 
ut use all gently: for in the very Hamlet, iii. 2 

GEXTRY— the article of thy gentry.A/erry mves, ii. 1 

serve a nursery to our gentry All's Well, i. 2 

no less adorns our gentry Ifinler's Tate, i. 2 

I have a file of all the gentry Macbeth, v. 2 

to grace the gentry of a land King John, v. 2 

and exempt Troin ancient gentry? ..XHenryl'I. ii. 4 
makes up the file of all the gci\try.. Henry nil. i. 1 
but by the suit o' the gentry to him.Coriolarius, ii. 1 
where gentry, title, wisdom, cannot.. — iii. 1 
incite tlie gentry to this biuiness . . Cymbeline, iii. 7 
brought hither among the Italian gentry — v. 1 
if that thy gentrj', Britain, go before — v. 2 

to show us so much gentry Hamlet, ii. 2 

he is the card or calendar of "entry — v. 2 

GEORGE— to master George Page... Uerry Wivei, i. I 

whither go you, George? — ii. 1 

you'll come to dinner, George? — ii. I 

good George, be not angry — v. 5 

Hugh Oatcake, sir, or George Seacoal.A7«cA/l<^, iii. 3 

saint George's half cheek Lore's L. Lost, v. 2 

by saint George, I am too young.. Tamiiig^o/S/i. ii. I 
and if his name be George, I'll call ..KingJohn, i. 1 
8aint George, that swinged the dragon — ii. 1 

ond saint George to thrive I Richard II.i.3 

block George Bare, and Francis iHenr^IV. iii. 2 

in the windmill in saint George's fields — iii. 2 
Harry! England! and saint George! HenryV.'iii. \ 
between saint Dennis and saint George — v. 2 
to keep our great saint George's feast.l Henry yi. i. 1 
God and saint George I Talbot, and.. — iv. 2 
eaint George and victory; fight, soldiers — iv. 6 

of the noble order of saint George — iv. 7 

look on my gcorge, I am a gentleman. 2Hen. fl. iv. I 
to-morrow in saint George s field .... — v. 1 

Edward, and the lusty George? SHenry VI. i. 4 

lord George vour brother, Norfolk .. — ii. 1 
when came George from Burgundy.. — ii. 1 

God and saint George for us! — ii. 1 

good father; cry, saint George! — ii. 2 

and George, of Clarence — ii. 6 

of Clarence; George of Glostcr — ii. 6 

and his friends. God and saint George I — iv. 2 

and lo, where George of Clarence — v. 1 

to the field; saint George and victory — v. 1 

and thou, perjured George — v. 5 

because my name is George Richard III, i, I 

for my name of George begins with.. — i. I 
till George be packed with posthorse — i. I 
my george, my garter, and my crown — iv. 4 

th.v george, prolaned, hath lost — iv. 4 

leave behind your son, George Stanley — iv. 4 
my Hon George Stanley ie fr«;).) .... — iv. 4 



[ 299 ] 

GEOKGE— lest his son George fall . . Richard III. v. 3 
thy brother tender George be executed — v. 3 
saint George! Uichinond, and victory — v. 3 

this, and saint George to boot! — v. 3 

with his son George 8 head! v. 3 

after the battle let George Stanley die — v. 3 
wordof courage, fair saint George.... — v. 3 
is voung George Stanlev living? .... — v. 4 

GEKAUD— to bo .•so: Gerard de Narbon./lH'i»KeH,i. 1 
the daughter of Gerard do Narbon?.. — i. 1 
Gerard ue Narboii was my father.... — ii. 1 

GKKM.VN— the Germans desire to. Merry irives, iv. 3 

like three German devils — iv. 5 

Germans are honest men — iv. 5 

there is three cousin Germans — iv. & 

a German from the waist downward. iV/ucA.4(/o, iii. 2 

that is like a German clock Love's L. Lost, iii. I 

how like you the young German. WcrcA. of Venice, i. 2 
if there be here Gernnin, or Dane. . . . All's Weil, iv. 1 
but those that are german to him. Winter's Tale, iv. 3 
the German hunting in water-work.2Hfnr!//f. ii. 1 
holding in disdain the German women. Henry r. i. 2 

with hasty Germans, and blunt ZHenryf'l. iv. 8 

thou wert german to the lion .. Timon of Athens, iv. 3 
a fuU-acoriied boar, a German oiie..Cymbeliiie, ii. b 

be more german to the matter Hamlet, v. 2 

for cousins, and geunets for Germans. . . . Othello^ i. I 
your Dane, your German — li. 3 

GERM.VNY-round hose in Germany. .Wcr. of Fen. i. 2 

an embassy to Germany, there KingJohn, i. 1 

the land salique lies in Germany Henry V. i. i 

is at this day in Germany called, Meiseii — i. 2 

the upper Germany, can dearly Henry V III. v. 2 

with the earl of Kent in Germany Lear, iv. 7 

GEllMIN — of nature's germius tumble. Macde/Zi, iv. 1 
all germins spill at once Lear, iii. 2 

GERTIlUDE-tellsme,mydearGertrude.iiamW,ii.2 

sweet Gertrude, leave us too — iii. 1 

what, Gertrude? how does Hamlet? — iv. I 

Gertrude, coine away! the sun no sooner — iv. 1 
come, Gertrude, we'll call up our wisest — iv. 1 
O Gertrude, Gertrude, when sorrows come — iv. 5 

my dear Gertrude, this, like to — iv. 5 

let him go, Gertrude; do not fear (rep.').. — iv. 5 
Ic't's f'>l low, Gertrude: how much I had.. — iv. 7 

gijLid Ci(.-itnide, set some watch over — v. 1 

GirtniJe, do not drink. I will, my lord — v. 2 

GEST— lieliind the gest prefixed .. .. Winier'sTale, i. 2 
GESTURE— sueli shapes, such gesture, rempesi, iii. 3 
near the lieart:is your gesture cries, ^s you Likeil, v. 2 
language in their very gesture.... Winier'sTale, v. 2 
and their gesture sad, investing. Henry F. iv. (chorus) 
the gesture one might interpret. Timon of Athens, i. 1 

and nods, and gestures yield them Hamlet, iv. h 

and say, hut mark his gesture Othello, iv. 1 

poor Cassio's smiles, gestures — iv. 1 

as it were, his gesture imports it — iv. 1 

GET— and get to Naples with him Tempest, ii. 2 

and get theelwood enough — ii. 2 

and sometimes I'll get thee — ii. 2 

has a new master, get a new man. ... — ii. 2 (song) 
shalt never get such a secret. Two Gen. of rerona,ii. 5 

'tis well that I get it so — ' ii. 5 

I'll get you such a ladder — iii. 1 

I'll get me one of such — iii. 1 

fo, get thee hence, and find — iv. 4 
'11 get me such a coloured periivig . . — iv. 4 

and what he gets more of her Merry Wives, ii. 1 

they could never get an eye-wink of her — ii. 2 
they could never get her so much — ii. 2 

1 cannot get thy lather's love — iii. 4 

go, get you some properties — iv. 4 

and I'll do what I can to get you — v. 1 

get you to your lord Twelfth A'iglU, i. 5 

once more, Cesario, get thee to yon . . — ii. 4 
get ye all three into the box-tree .... — ii. 5 

I'll get 'em all three ready _ iii. 1 

get him to say his prayers (rep.) — iii. 4 

therefore, get you on, and give — iii. 4 

get themselves a good rejjort after — iv. 1 

get him to bed, and let his hurt — v. I 

still thou strivest to get . . Measure for Measure, iii. 1 

alas, he gets nothing by that Much Ado, I. 1 

than I will get again with drinking.. — i. 1 

get her good will. By my troth (rep.) — ii. 1 
get you to heaven, Beatrice, get you — ii. 1 
lady Beatrice, I will get you one .... — ii. 1 
I pray thee, get us some excellent.... — ii. 3 

I will go get her picture — ii. 3 

that are drunk, get them to bed — iii. 3 

get you some of this distilled — iii. 4 

go, get you to Francis Seacoal — iii. 5 

only get the learned writer to — iii. 5 

thou art sad ; get thee a wife, get thee — v. 4 
but if I had wit enough to get out.Mid. A'.'s Dr. iii. 1 
if I could, what should I get therefore? — iii. 2 

food monsieur, get your weapons in — iv. 1 

will get Peter Quince to write — iv. 1 

get your apparel together — iv. 2 

then will she get the upshot by. . Love's L. Lost, iv. 1 

that you get the sun of them — iv. 3 

pity you should get your living by .. — v. 2 

if you my favour mean to get — v. 2 

how to get clear of all the aeiits. Merch. ofFemce, i. 1 

I cannot get a service, no — ii. 2 

play the knave, and get thee — ii. 3 

shall get as much as he deserves .... — ii. 7 

so thou can'st get a wife — iii. 2 

if you thus get my wife into — iii. 5 

I'll see if I can get my husband's — iv. 2 

well, sir, get you in: I will not....AsyouLil<eit, i. I 

get you with him, you old dog — i. 1 

and get you from our court — i. 3 

let's away, and get our jewels — i. 3 

and pleased with what he gets — ii. .'i (song) 

that I eat, get that I wear — iii. 2 

to offer to get your living by the .... — iii. 2 

get yon to church, and have — iii. 3 

commendations, madum, get from ber. All's H'eU, i. I 
get thee a good husband — i. I 



GET 



GET— tJiou canst get the TiDe..AU'iWeU, iii. 2 (letter) 

pr'ythee, get thee further — v. 2 

Bianea.getyou in; and let it not. Tomiiif o/ SA. i. 1 

to get a husband for her sister — i. 1 

runs fastest, gets the ring _ i. I 

to get her euiiiiing schoolmasters — i. I 

and could not get him for my heart.. — i. 2 

you will get you hence — i. 2 

Bianea, get thee in — ii. I 

if I get your daughter's love — ii. I 

liUcentio must get a father — ii. I 

fathers, cominonly, do get their children — ii. I 

a child shall get a sire, if I — ii. 1 

disguised thus to get your love — iii. I 

1 am to get a man,— whatc'er — iii. '2 

sirrah, get you hence, and bid my . . — iv. I 

and get me some repast — iv. 3 

or else you get no beef of Grumio.... — iv. 3 
not uneasy to get the cause of . . Winter's Tale, iv. 1 
and I care not to get slips of thcra .. — iv. 3 

get you hence, for I must go — iv. 3 (song) 

to shipboard get undescried — iv. 3 

stiflTand weary; get thee away ..Comedy of Err. i. 2 
commends me to the thing I cannot get -^ i. 2 
I must get a sconce for my head .... — ii. 2 

either get thee from the door — iii. I 

go, get you from the door — iii. 1 

that we cannot get in — iii. I 

where it once gets possession — iii. 1 

gentle brother, get you in again — iii. 2 

my sister, to get her good-will — iii. 2 

tiierefore away, to get our stiitf — iv. 4 

some get within him, take his — v. 1 

once did I get liim bound — v. 1 

go, get him surgeons Macbeth, i. 2 

thou shalt get kings, though thou — i. 3 

get thee tohed; is this a dagger — ii. I 

go, get some water, and wash — ii.2 

more knocking; get on your nightgown — ii.2 

with what I get, I mean — iv. 2 

but get thee Back, my soul — v. 7 

why, except to get the land KingJohn, i. I 

by tliis you cannot get the land — i. 1 

took pains to get this son — i. I 

son did get your father's heir — i. I 

than was his will to get me — i. 1 

could he get me? Sir Robert — i. 1 

now by this light, were I to get again — i. 1 
if I get down, and do not break (rep.) — iv. 3 

sirruli, get thee to Plasby Richard II. ii. 2 

the strongest and surest way to get .. — iii. S 

and get before him to the king -, v. 2 

get thee before to Coventry 1 Henry If. iv. 2 

to fall in, than to get o'er 'i Henry IF. i. I 

get posts, and letters, and make friends — i. 1 
than he shall get one on his cheek .. — i. 2 

an' I could get me but a wife in — i. 2 

I can get no remedy against — i. 2 

any vantage of ground to get up .... — ii. I ' 

to get a pottlepot's maidenhead — ii.2 

if they get ground and vantage — ii. 3 

come, get you dovin stairs — ii. 4 

when tliey marry, they get wenches — iv. 3 

get on thy boots, we'll ride all — v. 3 

so, get you hence in peace Henry F. i. 2 

think'st thou my spouse to get? — ii. I 

get you therefore hence, poor — ii.2 

vacant mind, gets him to rest — iv. 1 

patches will I get unto these scars . . — v. 1 

I get thee with scambling — v. 2 

with desire to get a grave 1 Henry VI. ii. 5 

should ever get the privilege of me .. — iii. I 

let's get us from the walls — iii. 2 

either to get the town again — iii. 2 

we kKse, they daily get — iv. 3 

that France may "ct the field — v. 3 

go, get you to my house iHenryVI. iii. 2 

this get I by his death; ah me — iii. 2 

now, get thee hence: the king — iii. 2 

come, and get thee a sword — iv. 2 

but get you to Sraithfield — iv. 5 

and get what you have lost — iv. 8 

and get a thousand crowns of the .... — iv. 10 

we shall to Ix)ndon get — v. 2 

then get your husband's lands ZHenry FI. iii. 2 

think St thou, I sue so much to get?.. — iii. 2 

know not how to get the croivn — iii. 2 

can I do this, and cannot get a crown? — iii. 2 
two years ere I could get a tooth . . Richard III. ii. 4 

lost lus life to get the crown — ii. 4 

and look you get a prayer-book — iii. 7 

'tis too weak ever to get a boy Henry Fill. ii. 3 

go, get thee from me, Cromwell — iii. 2 

now gets the tide in — v. 3 

you i the camlet, get up o' the rail.. — v. 3 
this happy child, did I get anything — y. 4 

I'll go get a fire Troilus Sf Cressida, iii. 2 

if my lord get a boy of you — iii. 2 

unless the fiddler Apollo get his .... — iii. 3 
pr'ythee. get thee in; 'would thou .. — iv. 2 

get you in: by all the everlasting — v. 3 

upon the love yon bear me, get you in — v. 3 
get on your cloak, and haste you.. Timon ofAlh. ii. I 
but I could never get him from it. . . . — iii. I 
get thee away, and take thy beagles — iv. 3 

reserve it, how shall's get it? — iv. 3 

or wrath, or craft, may get him .... Coriolonw, i. 1 

to help to get thee a wife — ii. 3 

get you hence instantly; and tell.... — ii. 3 

go, get you to your house — iii. 1 

pray, get )'ou out. Away! Away? Get — iv. 5 
I cannot get him out o' the house .... — iv. & 

to get myself into more work Julius Cfesar,i. 1 

so get the start of the mojestic world — i. 2 

get me a taiier in my study — ii.l 

get you to lied again, it is not — ii.l 

yea, get the iK'tter of them — ii.l 

I'll get me to a place more void — ii. 4 

get thee apart and weep — iii. I 

get you hence, sirrah; saucy fellow .. — iv. 3 



GET 

GET — go, Pindarus, get higher on ..JuliuxCremr, v. 3 

and get her love to part Anton tj ^Cleopatra, i. i 

away, get mc ink and paper — i. 5 

Ciesarl'ets nimuv, where he — ii. I 

go, 2et tlice lience: iKidst tliou — ii. 5 

get tlu'C lience the nierelianilizc — ii. .'i 

get tliee l.aelc to Ca-sar, telMiim — iii. 1 1 

and ean pet goal for goal of, voutli .. — iv. 8 

get thee iience ; farewell — v. 2 

Did yon do, get tliem despatehed Cymbellne, i. 4 



[ 300 ] 



get thee f)oni mv siglit 

go,' get thee tV.ini my sight . . Titus Andr 
or get some little knife between 

1 will go get a leaf of hrass 

get me a ladder. Luenis, save — ' 

my lord, if 1 ean get him onee Pericles, 



ii. 3 

V. 5 
iii. 1 
iii, 2 
iv. 1 



— u. 1 



ire Avitli begging, than w 
and what a man (;annot get, he may .. 

hy no means ean I get {repealed) .." 

witlr what liastc you ean, get yon to bed 
get tire and meat for these poor men . . 

get linen; now this matter must 

ISTarina gets all praises 

is it a shame to get when we arc old?. . 

get tins done as I eonmiand you 

we must either get her ravished 

dinner; go, get it ready 

uiiy, get thee in; I'll pray 

that it doth hate what gets it 

get horses for yoru" mistress 

and get the Bedlam to lead liim , 

get thee glass eyes 

nay, an' you get it, you shall get _ _ 

get her heart, my will to her Romeo ^ Julie/, i. 2 

go, get thee to thy love, as was deereed — "" " 

get thee to ehiu-eh o' Thiu-sday — 

good-night! get thee to bed, aiid rest 

you eot-quean, go, get vou to bed .. — 
buy foi id, and get thyself in flesh .... _ 
nor get a messenger to bring it thee. . — 

gel me an iron erow, and bring it — 

go, gel thee hence, for I will not away — 
tis now struck twelve; get thee to hed.. Hamlet. 



II. h 
iii. 2 

— iii. 2 
iv. (Gower) 

— iv. 3 

— iv. 3 

— iv. 6 



— iii. 7 



IV. (J 



in. 5 



V. 3 



by no drift of conference get from him — iii. 1 

get thee to a nunnery (j-ep.) iii. 1 

I must be idle; get you a place _ iii. 2 

how the murderer gets the love of .... — iii. 2 
get me a fellowship in aery of players — iii. 2 

my lord, we cannot get from hira — iv. 3 

go. get thee to Yau»nan, and fetch me — v. 1 
now get you to my lady's chamber .. .. — v. 1 
get more tapers; raise all my kiudi-ed . . Olhello, i. 1 

if you please to get good guard _ i. i 

get weapons, ho! and raise some special — i, 1 

I had rather to adopt a cMId, than get it i. 3 

let me see now; to get his place i. 3 

get me some poison, lago; this night . . iv. I 

commanded home: getyouaway iv. 1 

to get some office, have not devised .... . iv. 2 

get yow to bed on tlie instant — iv. 3 

but every puny whipster gets my sword v. 2 

(;i\TTER— a getter of more bastard . Cor/o(a)iHs, iv. 5 
U KTTING-gettiug madam Julietta.A/fo../())-A/ea.i. 2 

for the getting a hundred bastards .. ' iii. 2 

for getting a wench with child — iv. 3 

have one of .your father's getting MuchAdo ii. 1 

getting upof the negro's belly.jl/crcA.q/'f't'nice, iii. 5 

'tis n(.ne of his own getting Asyou Lilceit, iii. 3 

though it be the gettingof children. ..Itt's/rc//, iii. 2 

getting the sheritf's fool with child — iv. 3 

the between but getting wenches. Il'inler's'/'ale, iii. 3 

unsatisfied in getting Hetni/ I'll I. iv. 2 

getting of a lawful race ..Antony (yCleopnlra, Wi. II 
GET'ST — thouget'st not my sword . .1 Henry ;y. v. 3 

if thou get'st any leave of me iHenryll'. i. 2 

GIIASTED— ghasted by the noise I made .. Lear, ii. I 

GHASTLY— this ghastly looking? Tempest, ii. I 

grievous, ghastly, gaping wounds . .2HenryIV. ii. 4 
tuU ghastly, like a strangled mai\..'iHenry VI. Iii. 2 
ghastly looks are at my service . . Hichard III. iii. 5 

a liniidvi'd ghastly women lulinsCiesnr i. 3 

<; IIASTXKSS— theghastness of her eye?. <ti/iello,v. 1 
Gllos'l'-her brotlier's ghost.. Measiue/orMeasure.v. 1 

ghosts, wandering hei'C iJid. A'. Drenm, iii. 2 

were I the ghost that walked . . 
walked your first <|ueen's ghost 
art thou not? or else his ghost? 
his design moA es like a i-diost . 
my wife and children's Lrliosts « 
he will look as ht.llow as a ulios 
some haunted by the ghosts the 
never do his ghost the wrong . 

so many liorfid ghosts ...Hmiryf. i v. (chorus) 

Henry the fifth! thyghost I invocatc.l Ht,o i/ ;7. i. 1 

cause him once more vield the ghost i. I 

like pale ghosts, faintly besiege. i" •> 

this ujistart is old Talbot's gliiMt .... — iv" 7 
I trust, the ghost of Talbot is not.... _ v! 2 

and ghosts break up their graves 2Henry VI. i. 4 

oft have I seen a timely-parted ghost — iii. 2 
some service to duke livunphrey's ghost — iii. 2 
as if didie Humphre.y's ghost w'ere .. — iii. 2 
noble gentleman gave up the ghost..3He)i;-i/r/. ii. 3 
lawful that I invoeate thv trliost . . liicliar'd III. i. 2 

did I strive to yield the ghost — i. 1 

my uncle Clarence' angry ghost — 

poor mortal living ghost' 

why all these gliding ghosts Julius Cccs. 

and ghosts did shriek, and squeal about — 

ready to give U|i the ghost — v. 1 

the ghost of CiBsar hath appeared to me — v. 5 
snritely [lortmake the ghosts gaze. .-l7i<.,5-CTra. iv. 12 
ghost mdaid forbear thee! . . Cymbeline, iv. 2 (song) 

or we poor ghosts will cry to tlie — v. 4 

liow dare vou ghosts, accuse tlie — v. 4 

vex not his ghost: O let him pass! Lear.v.3 

niefhinks, I see my cousin's ghost. /JomwS-,'"/. iv. 3 
I'll make a ghost of hira that lets me . . Hamlet, i. ! 



■ Tale, 



-dii nf Krr. 
.iiJ.a-belh, i 



Uh-nr 



iii. I 
iv. 4 
•, i. 3 



GHOST— alas, poor ghost ! Pit.y me not . . Hamlet, i. .5 

thou poor ghost, wliile memory — i. 5 

there needs no irhrist, mv hn-d — i. .'i 

it is an honest gdiost, llu'it let me — i. .'J 

it is a damned ghost Unit we liaveseen.. — iii. 2 

good Horatio, I'll take the ghost's word — iii. 2 

GHOSTED— good Brutus ghosted. /l)i/o;/!/<Sr/eo. ii. 6 

GHOSTI,Y— your ghostly i-Ai)\a. Mens, for i^leas. iv. 3 

a crhostly father, belike — v. 1 

the sliosdv father now hath done. .SHcjo j/ VI. iii. 2 
I to mv gliostlv father's cell . . . . Itomeo ^Juliet, ii. 2 
with Ibisaline. ni.v ghostly father? no — ii. 3 
good e\'eii to njy gln.stly confessor .. — ii. 6 

a divine, a Ldiostlv confessor — iii. 3 

GIANT-nioUilieation foryour giant. TwtlflliNigld.i. 5 
a giant's strength { rep.) . . Measure for Measure, ii. 2 
a p;rng as great as when a giant dies — iii. 1 

he is then a giant to an ape Much Ado, v. 1 

like a giant's robe upon a dwarfish. , .. .Itifheih, v. 2 
Colbrand the giant, that same ndglity. ;',(/(-./"/oi,i. 1 
that never saw the giant world enragetl — v. 2 

sirrah, you giant, what says •iUeniylV. i. 2 

whole streuLTtli into one giant arm .. — iv. 4 

adaut traitor! Now, madam Henri/ I'lII.i. 2 

figm-e of the giant mass Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 3 

before a sleeping giant — ii. 3 

that giants may jet through Cymbeline, iii. 3 

I'll prove it on a triant Lear, iv. 6 

GIANT-DWABE- Dan Cupid ..Lore's L. Lost,m. 1 
GIANTESS— rather he a giantess ..Merry Wives, ii. 1 
GIANT-EIKK— giant-like, ox-beef. /V/i/.' A. fir. iii. 1 
that thv jvbellion looks so giant-like?. Huwi/tV, iv, 5 
GIANT-RUDE— 

fortli such giant-rude invention.. /Is i/oiLAt !/,iv. 3 
GIB— I am as melancholy as a gib cat.lHenryl V. i. 2 

a gib, such dear concernings hide? Hanilel, iii. 4 

GIBBER — gibber in the Koman streets — i. 1 

GIBBET— I am no gibbet for you. . Merry Wives, ii. 2 

sweaten from the murderer's gibbet . . Machet/i, iv. 1 

I had unloaded all the gibbets I Henry IV. iv. 2 

swifter than he that gibbets ^HenrylV. iii. 2 

high pyramids be my gibbet Antony ^.f Cleo. v. 2 

a callows, and beget yoimg gibbets. . Cymbeline, v. 4 
GIBBET- MAKER-the gibbet-maker? tilusAnd. iv. 3 

GIBE— to have his gibes, and Merry Wives, iii. 3 

and full of gibes and vlouting-stogs — iv. 5 

and with taunts did gibe . . .inlony ^ Cleopatra, ii. 2 
ready in gibes, quick answered .-. . . Cymbeline, iii. 4 

where be your gibes now? Hamlet, v. 1 

the gibes, and notable scorns Othello, iv. 1 

GIBER— understood to be a perfect giber . Cor/o(. ii. I 
GIBING— to choke a gibing spirit ./.m't's L.Losl, v. 2 

to laugh at gibing boys 1 Henri/I V. iii. 2 

GIBINCJLY— which gibingly Coriolanus, ii. 3 

GIDDILY— as giddily as tbrtune.. 2'«f;/?/i A'/g/l^ii. 4 

criddilv he turns about all the hot . . Much Ado, iii. 3 

GIDDIiSTESS-eall the giddiness of it..4.s!/oi<L/(i«,v. 2 

GIDDY-areniore gidd.y andmifirm. Tireljlh Nigh/, ii.i 

but art not thou thyself giddy with..il/wc/i.4do, iii. 3 

for man is a gidd.y thing — v. 4 

giddy in spirit, still gazing. il/eic/iaji^o./Ten/cc, iii, 2 
many giddy offences as he ]\a.th.. As yau Like it, iii. 2 

more giddy in my desires than — iv. 1 

for meat, giddy tor lack of sleep.. Taming ofSh. iv. 3 

he that is giddy, thinks the world — y. 2 

against these giddy loose suggestions. A'mg- JoA7i,iii. 1 

tliou hast made me gidd.y with — iv. 2 

go, ye giddy goose. Now I perceive. I Henry I r. iii. I 

a habitation giddy and unsure 2Hetiry IV. i. 3 

upon the high aud giddy mast — iii. 1 

my sight fails, and my brain is giddy — iv. 4 
to busy giddy minds with foreign . . — iv. 4 

still a gidd.y neighbour to us Henry V.i. 2 

by a vain, giddy, shallow, humorous — ii. 4 
and giddy fortune's furious fickle .... — iii. 6 
have their giddy brains knocked . . 1 Henry VI. iii. 1 

see, how tlie giddy multitude 'iHeniy VI. ii. 4 

many gitld,y people flock to him ZHenryVI. iv. 8 

the giddy iboting of the hatches Richard III. i. 4 

I fear, 'twill prove a giddy \\yv\(i — ii. 3 

I am gidd.y: expectation whiv)^. Troilus t^- Cress. iii. 2 
and giddy' censure will then cry m\i. Coriolanus, i. I 
may'st tliou the giddy men of Koine. Ti/us And. iv. 4 

and disperse the gidd.y Goths — v. 2 

turn giddy, and be holp b,y Rumen (,- Julie/, i. 2 

GIDDY-PACED— giddy^iiaeed times.. TwelflhN. ii. 4 



GIL 

GIFT— they have the gift to know .AsyouLike it, ii. 7 



that she these gifts should have 

on the gift of any man 

wbieli make fair gifts fairer 

the gift doth stretch itself as 'tis ... 
my dear father's gift stands chief. . . 
a eonfirmatiou of my promised gift . 

unworthy this good gift 

his present gift shall furnish mc . . . 
boy have not a woman's gift,. Tamini 
your gifts are so good, iiere is none . 

this is a gift very grateful — i 

interchange of gifts, letters Winier's Tale, 

the gifts, slie looks from me — i' 

he meets such golden gifts Comedy of Errors, i i 

according to the gift wddeh bounteous. il/ucic/A, ii 
he hath a heavenly gift of pro|)l'.eey.. — i- 
of nature's gifts thou may'st with . . KingJoini, ii 

laid gifts before hini [Henryl V.\\ 

have not well the gift of tongue — i 

all the other gifts aiipertiiieiit to man,2//i'jo ;/'/'• 

that, b.y gift of heav,n, by law Henry V. i 

because he hath not the gift to woo .. — ' ^ 
liking ofthe lady's viitiioiis gifts ..) Henry VI. i 

graced with external girts — \ 

tlie haiiplest gift that e\'er niaroiutss .2Henry VI. 
tears liaA'e mo\'ed mc, i^ifts could never — i\ 
large gifts have I bcsbiwed on. 
a diikedoin, sir, a goodly gift? 

service for so good a gift 

if but by Warwick's gift 

"Warwick takes liis gift again . 
a greater gift than that {rep.) 

.ytju'U part but with light gifts — iii. 1 

my lord, I claim the gift, my due — iv. 2 

a gift tliat lieaven gives for him Henry VI II. i. I 

wiiicli gifts (saxdng your mincing) .. '— ii. 3 
vows, gifts, tears, and hive's full. Troilus ^- Cress, i. 2 

all our abilities, gifts, natures — i. 3 

have not more gift in taciturnity . . 
with gifts ICol. A'?i^-gift] of nature 
no gift to liim, but breeds the . . '/'on 
to their graves of their friend's gill? 

I am so far already in your .gifts 

to provide, and give great gifts 

a gift, I warrant: why, this hits right 

4.1. .".I- .^^n.. ,.r..,f,:,.«rl ,.ip1^ t'l.^rr. l,;.,i 



(verses) 

— iii. 3 
..All's Well, i. 1 

— ii. 1 

— ii. I 

— ii. 3 

— ii. 3 

— ii. 3 
'ofSh. 1 (ind.l 

— i. 1 



...S Henry VI. v. I 



.Richard II I. iii. 1 



1 of A/he 



IV. 2 
iv. 4 
, i. 1 



— i.2 



that e'er received gift from hii 



— iii. 3 



GIFT— I ratify this my rich tift 

then as inv gift, and thine own — iv. 1 

win her with gifts Two Gen. of Verona, iii. 1 

by my worthless gifts — iv, 2 

therefore the gift the greater — iv. 4 

the gift hath made me happy — v. 4 

she has good gifts Merry Wives, i. 1 

and possibilities, is good gifts — i. 1 

letter after letter, gift after gift — ii. 2 

to a dog for a new-vear's gift — iii. 5 

hath all tlie .good gifts of nature ..Ta-clflhiSighi, i. 3 
but that he liath the gift of a coivard — i. 3 

quickly have the gift of a grave. ..... — i. 3 

wherefore liave these gifts a curtain.. — i. 3 

a.y, with such gifts, tliat heaven. .:V/fas../b;i/cas. ii. 2 

but hv gift of liiy chaste body — v. 1 

only bis gift is in devising impossible. -l/wc/i .4c/o,ii. 1 

mail is the gift of fortune — iii. 3 

gifts, that God gives — iii. 5 

this rich and precious gift? — iv. 1 

no ffift at all in shrewishness ../!/»(. A'. '.fDrcam, iii, 2 

this is a gift that I have Love's L. Los/, iv. 2 

hut the Loft is good in those — iv. 2 

gave Hector a gift — v. 2 



breath, gifts of rich value . . Merehnnl of Veni 

that he do record a gift — 

clerk, draw a deed of gift — 

serves many men to save their gifts. . — 
so sligUtl.v with your wife's first gift — 

asiieeial deed of gift — 

tiiat her gifts may henceforth is you Like 

most mistake in her gilts to — 

fortune reigns in gifts of the world . . — 



1.9 



for your own gifts, make youi-selves — iii. 6 (grace) 

and as rich men deal gifts — iv, 3 

in the great shower of your gifts — v. 1 

that now refused most princely gifts. Cnr7o(a)iM.s, i. !) 

the purchase, or merit for the gift Cymbeline, i. 5 

and only the gift of the gods .... — i. ."i 

her pretty action did outsell her gift — ii. 4 
laying by t'oat nothing gift of differing — iii. 6 
to ma'ke ray gift the more delayed . . — v. 4 
proud I am of thee, and of thy gifts. . Tilus And. i. 2 

a goodly gift in horning — ii. 3 

and with his gifts iiresent your lordships — iv. 2 

insinuate, anil send us gifts — iv. 2 

I have here my father's .gift by will ..Pericles, ii. 1 
take women's gifts for impudence .... — ii. 3 

make us love. yom' goodly gifts — iii.) 

great, though the gift small — iii. 4 

revoke thy gift: or, whilst I can vent I.ear, i. 1 

traitorous gifts (O wicked '\vit, and gifts..H(MHk'M. 5 

wdiose natural gifts were poor — i. 5 

rich gifts wax poor, when givers — iii. 1 

Buchaone; 'twas my first gift Olhello, iii. 3 

as gifts to Desdemoiia — v. 1 

GIG — jxreat Hercules whipping a gig.. Love's L. L. iv. 3 

,go, wliip thy gig — v. 1 

a gig of a cuckold's horn ! — v. 1 

GIGLfJ'l'— awa.y with those iiiglots..Mea.forMea. v. 1 

the pillage of a giglot wench 1 Henri/ VI. iv. 7 

(Ogiglot fortune!) to master Cijm/ieline. iii. I 

GILfii;ilT— sir Gilbert Talbot , . , , Richard lH.iv.i 

one Gilbert Peck, his chancellor Henry VIII. i. I 

sir Gilbert Peek, his chancellor — ii, 1 

GILD— the sun begins to gild, Tu-oGen. of Verona, v, 1 

fild myself with some more. .l/erc/iaTii of Venice, ii. 6 
'11 gild the faces of the sleepy Macbeth, ii. 2 

shall gild her bridal bed King John, ii. 2 

to gild refined gold, to paint the lily — iv. 2 
on me, and gild my banishment .... Richard //. i. 3 

I'll gild it with the hapjiiest \ Henry I v. v. 4 

shall double gild his treble 'iHenrylV. iv. 4 

the sun dotli gild our ai'inour Hi nry V. iv. 2 

or gild again the nolde troops Henry ill I. iii. 2 

with cunning gild their copper. . Troilus ii Cress, iv. 4 

our heads, to gild his horns — iv. .'> 

gild [Col. Knt.-]mil(Pj his statue. /'ciic/es, ii. (Gower) 

GILDEU— that hath gilded them? Tempest, v. I 

her view gilded my foot Merry Wires, i. 3 

gilded tombs do worms infold. jl/e/c/i. of I 'enice, ii. 7 

a green and gilded snake had As you Like it, iv. 3 

men are but gilded loam Richard II. i. 1 

hath a little gilded over your iHenrylV. i. 2 

the gilded newt, and eyeless . . Timon of.i/hens, iv. 3 
saw nim run after a gilded butterfly. Corio/awws, i. 3 
the gilded puddle which beasts . . An/ony <>- Cleo. i. 4 

wit'n his tinct gilded thee — i. 5 

gilded pale lool^s, part, shame, part. .Cymbeline, v. 3 

whose rags shamed gilded arms — v. 5 

hang his slender gilded wings . , Tilu^ Andron. iii , 2 

and the small gililed fly does lecher Lear, iv. 6 

and laugh at gUded butterflies — v. 3 

and, in thine arrest, this gilded serpent .. — v. 3 

offence's gilded hand may shove by . . Hamlet, iii. 3 

GILDER— gilders to redeem. . . . Comedy of Errors, i. 1 

and want gilders for my vovage — iv. 1 

Gl LLIAMS"— is Gilliams with tlie. . . . 1 HenrylV. ii. 3 
GILLIAN-Cieely, Gillian, ^eW'.Comedii nflirr. iii. 1 
GILLYFLOWeIRS [A-n(.-GILLY'VOKS]— 

streaked gillyflowers 

garden rich in gillyflowers . 
GILT— the double gilt of this 

a gilt [ro;.-gift] nutmeg Lore's L. I.ns/, v. 2 

return all gilt with Frenchmen's KinaJnhn, ii. 2 

all show like gilt twopenees to me.. i Henry IV. iv. 3 



. Winter sTale, iv. 3 
— iv. 3 

..TireWh Kighl. iii. 2 



I! 



GIL 

OlLT-loi the (lilt 111' I'nini'c... Hcurt//'. ii. (chorus) 
our ({iiyiuss, ami oiir(;ilt, iu« all .... — iv. S 
of Nui.Iis. lii.l with i;iii;lisli t!ilt ....Xllrnnjyi. ii. 2 

wiriMls.lnTuliinis, nllililt llennjllll. i. 1 

if I r.niM l\:ivo r.'im'inlKTcil ii j;ilt. Trnil. .5 Crest, ii. ;i 
tlitit is a little (Tilt, iii,.ro limatliuiipilt — iii. ."! 

when tliiMi » list in tli.v uilt Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

becoiiaa a man, than :;iU llis troiil\y.tV)i7o/n<ii«, i. 3 

anil Inn inn ijilt the ocean Titus Amtronictu, ii. 1 

GIM.M.M.-thcginmial hit lies foul ..lleiinjl'. iv. 2 

cimniuls [A.»/.-f!ininiersl nr deviee ..\ Henryt'I. i. 2 

GIN— the woodeoek near the gin.. 7'in-//(/i M^'hl, ii. .'> 

nor lime, the pit-tall, nor the gin . . . ^Muclnili, iv. 2 

be it hv cins, hv snares iHfnryVl. iii. 1 

strives the woode.u'k, with the gin ..iHeiirijVl. i. I 

'G I.N— now 'jiins to hite the .spirits Tempest, iii. 3 

us whence the snn '.;iii> his Macbeth, i. 2 

1 V'iii tohcawearv i.rthesiin — v. .'1 

iiiul I'licihus 'i;iiis aiise Iiimlietiue, ii. 3 (song) 

sec, liuw >!ic V'i"^ '" iilow into lil'e's ..I'erirles, iii. 2 
1111(1 'L'iiis 1,1 pale his iincirectual lire .. ..Hainlel, i. .I 

01 Mi- there's a Uii,.t, a '.'iii^' Merry 'C/r.'s, iv. 2 

U IN'tiKK—an.l iiiiiMer shall lie hot. Twelfth Mk'hl, ii. 3 

hrown paper and old uiiiirer Mrat.Jbr Meas. iv. 3 

nirtrr.v, then ginger was not much .. — i\-. 3 
a^ ever knapped ginger, or made.. Ucr. n/rV/i/cc, iii. 1 

a race, or two. of ginger ll'iiiter't'l'ule, iv. 2 

and two ni7.es of ginger Mlenti/II'. ii. I 

and of the heat of the ginger Ilenrul'. iii. 7 

GI.N'CKKP.KEM)- 

h,ive it to l)ii\ Liingcrhread Lore's L. Lost, v. I 

G I N(i 1-: K 1 .\- took tip so gin/;erly ?. Two Gen.ofr. i. ■• 
G I N(i I. l.Nli- -howling, giuglmg chains. 7'('m;)«<, v. I 
•(ilN'MNHJ-'ginningin tlie miadle.7'ioi(.*f;r.(prnl.) 

GIFKS— toll ol iests, and gilics He/irt/l'. iv. 7 

liir.'slKS— two itipsieson ahorse ..As you l.'keil, v. 2 
GIl'SV- to eool a gilisv's iust./lil/nnf/ ^iClenpjIni, i. I 

like a right gijisy, Inrth - iv. In 

Cleopatra, a L'ipsv; Helen, and ..llanirn ^Juliet, ii. 1 
GIKU-I thank thee for that gird..7;oii/HK- ,<r Sh. v. 2 

take a iiri.le to gird at me IHeiirylK i. 2 

the hishop hath a kiiidlv gird IHeiinj'lI. iii. 1 

he will not spare to Siui the gods.... C'orm/nHMs, i. I 
GlHI)KI)-on girded Uurlleur. . Hr;.ry >'. iii. ^^lloncs) 
(;iRI)l.\G—giidiiiL' with grievous siege — i. -' 

GIHlJI.IO-how to turn his girdle MuchA'h, v. 1 

I'll put a girdle round aliout ..Miil.N.\nream, ii. 2 
one of these maiils' girdles for voiir. Lathe's L. L. iv. I 
tluit as u waist do glnlle you about. . Khis John, ii. 1 

I pray God, my girdle hieakl \ Henry II'. iii. 3 

bunches of keys at their girdles iilenryW. i. 2 

the bcachyginllc of the ocean — iii. I 

within the girdle of these walls . . Henry I', i. (clio. 1 

cleave me to the girdle Timon of Athens, iii. 1 

flml us in our salt-water girdle .... Cymbrtine, iii. I 

but to the girdle do the go<ls inherit .... Lear, iv. 1; 

as girdle, Kimgers, and so: three of .... Ihimiei, v. 2 

GIKDLKD-are all girdled with maiden. Henry i: v. 2 

who now is girdled with a waist I Henry I' I. iv. 3 

G IRDl^EST— that girdlest in those. Timon o'r.ith. iv. I 
(; fKDLING— girdling one another.. i(iV/i(o</ ///. iv. 3 

G IKL— both, both, my girl Tempest, i. 2 

gentle girl, assist me! TwoGen.of Verona, ii. 7 

no girl; I'll knit it up — ii. 7 

make the girl forget the love — iii. 2 

this it is to be a peevish girl — v. 2 

for a girl that loves him not — v. 4 

Anne is a "ood girl Merry Wives, i. -1 

when I took a boy for a girl — v. .t 

thou art in the right. girl .. JfcasKif./'m- Measure, ii. 2 
and .laiiuenetta is a true girl .... Love's L. Lost, i. 1 

I do love that country girl — i. 2 

have with thee, ray girl — iv. 2 

to woo these girls of France — iv. 3 

we are wise girls, to mock our — v. 2 

Jessica, my girl, look to my. Merclmnt of Vtniee, ii. .i 

find the girl: she hath the — ii. 8 

is an unlessoued girl, unschooled .... — iii. 2 

ehall we jiart, sweet girl? is you Like it , i. 3 

there a girl .goes before the priest .... — iv. 1 

those girls of Italy, take heed All's IVell, ii. 1 

love thee ne'er the less, m.v girl. 7'amiHj,'o/.s'/ocH', i. 1 
achieve not this young modest girl . . — i . I 
poorprl! she weeps : go fly thy .... — ii. 1 
go, girl; I cannot blame thee now ., — iii. 2 

and that the girl shall find — iii. 2 

unfledged davs was my wife a girl. iVinter'sTale, i. 2 
too green and idle for girls of nine .. — iii. 2 
follow me, girls. .\nd you shall pay.. — iv. 3 

protest me the baby of a girl Mnroeth, iii. 1 

no dancing, girl; some otlier sport.. /fWiort//;. iii. 4 

between two girls, which hath 1 Henry VL ii. 1 

and take ray blessiiig.goixl ray girl .. — v. 4 

why, here's a girl ! Ithink — v. 1 

'tis a girl, promises boys hereafter. . Henry I'HL v. I 
said 1 for this the girl is like to him? — v. 1 
all the (Jreekish girls shall.. Tmilm^Cressida, iii. 3 
BU|K!rstitioii8 girl makes all these .... — v. 3 
here's a letter from yon poor girl .... — v. 3 
and the foolish fortune of this girl .. — v. 3 
gome drink, Titinius, as a sick girl../«/i'«ir.'fMnr, i. 2 
wluit, girl? though grey ^\o. Antony ^Uleoimlra, iv. R 

young hoys, and girls, are level — iv. 13 

my noble girls! .\h, women — iv. 13 

he wonis mc, girls, he words me — v. 2 

much loves a Gallian girl at home ..Cymbeline, i. 7 

golden huls and i^irls all must — iv. 2 (song) 

on the trutli of girls and boys — v. .'1 

sighing, girl, kill it with groans.. 7'i/u»/(ri</ron. iii. 2 

and, gentle girl, cat this — iii. 2 

wlucfi isit.girl, of these? — iv. | 

thus surprised, sweet girl, ravished .. — iv. 1 
give signs, sweet girl, for here arc... — iv. | 
[iccausc the girl should not survive .. — v. 3 

and I have sntfered like a girl Perirltt, v. i 

O heavens bless my girl! — v. 1 

Where's this girl? what, Juliet!.. ffom>^o ^Juliet, i. 3 

go, girl, seek happy nights — i. 3 

give room, and foot it, girls — i. .5 

well, girl, thou woep'iit not w> much — ilu .', 



[ 301 ] 



GIV 



OIKL— thee joyful tidings, girl ..UnmeofjJullel, iii. 5 
how now, a conduit gill? what, still — iii. .'1 
Biiiee this same way ward girl is so .. — iv. 1 
you speak like a giieii girl Hamlet, i. 3 

unhappy girl! with tlic Moor Othello, i. 1 

cold, iiiv girl? even like tliv elia.stity .. — v. a 

GlUT—oiie girt si.\ times pieced.. . 7'amin«-o/.S/i. iii. 2 

1 girt llicc witli tlie valiant XHeniyf'l. iii. 1 

and girt tine wilh the sword iHemyVL i. 1 

like to his island, girt in iHenryfl.w. 8 

GIS-hyGis, and hy saint Chai'ity.Ham/c(, iv. 5 (song) 
G I VJO— give thanks you have lived Tempest, i. ' 

shall we give o'er — i. 

now would I give a tliousand furlongs . . — i. 



an 

\t 
th 

wl 


d give it wa.v 

ce thou dost give mc |iuins 

111. 1st give me water with licrries iu't.. 
1 will some good instruclioii give .... 

•visitor will not give him o'er so 

1 give it his son t'.a- an apple 

t u holiday tool there but would give. . 
en thcv will not u'ive adoit 


I'v 
lu 


mot make Www give ground 

vill give him some relief 

c is that which will give language 


wl 


at 1 desire to give 



as voii like this, give nic the lie — iii. 

I d'id not give the lie _ iii. 

that give delight, and hurt not — iii. 

give us kind keepers, heavens! — iii. 

o'er whom I give tine iiower — iv. 

do not give dalliance too much — iv. 

good my lord, give mc thy favour still .. — iv. 

give us particulars of thy preservation .. — v. 
nay, give ine not the boots . . Two Gen. of Verona, i. 

give her no token but stones — i. 

to a tunc, give me a note — i. 

ay, give it me, it's mine — ii. 

he should give her interest (rep.) .. .. — ii. 

to give your followers — ii. 

I'll give her father notice — ii. 

never give her o'er — iii. 

will give thee time to leave — iii. 

to give the onset to thy — iii, 

to give some evening music — iv. 

1 give consent to go along — iv. 

well, give her that ring — iv. 

go, gi\e your master this — iv. 

1 give thee this for thy — iv. 

I am sure you cannot give — v. 

that was niine in Silvia, I give thee.. — v. 

and Julia herself did give it me — v. 

Tluiri.i give back or else — v. 

they may give the dozen white .... Merry Wires, i. 

give, when she is able to " — i. 

give ear to his motions — i. 

give her this letter — i. 

Sie gives the leer of invitation — i. 

give-adis letter to sir Hugh — i. 

give me some counsell — ii. 

give him a show of comfort — ii. 

would give eternal food to his jealoiKy — ii. 

I'll give you a pottle of burnt sack (rep.) — ii. 

and she gives ^ou to notify — ii. 

give lire ; she is my prize — ii. ^ 

if you will give me the hearing — ii. 2 

niggardly give me sight of her — ii. 2 

many presents to give her — ii. 2 

only give me so much of — ii. 2 

give you good -morrow, sir — ii . 3 

pray you, .give me my gown — iii. 1 

he gives me the potions — iii. I 

he gives me the proverbs — iii. 1 

he gives her folly motion — iii. 2 

the clock gives me my cue — iii. 2 

give .your men the charge — iii. 3 

would give an excellent motion — iii. 3 

to give him such cause of suspicion! — iii. 3 

and give him another hope — iii. 3 

I give heaven praise — iii. 1 

give my sw-cet Nan this ring — iii. 4 

and give them to a tlog for — iii. 6 

fives intelligence of I'ord's approat'h — ill. 

will give over all — iv. 

I'll give thee a hundred pound — i v. 

to give our hearts united — iv. 

and when I give the watch-'ords .... — v. 

seese is not good to give putter — v. 

heaven give thee joy! — v. 

heaven gi ve you many, many merry clays — v. 

give me excess of it Twelfth Night, i. 

well Go<l give them wisdom — i. 

for give the dry fool drink — i. 

give me faith, say I — i. 

give me my veil — i. 

good gentle one, give me modest .... — i. 

five us the place alone — i. 

will give out divers schedules — i. 

do give thee fivefold blazon — i. 

I'll give hiin reasons tor 't — i. 

if one knight give — ii. 

you would not give means for — ii. 

give mc some music — ii. 

it gives a very echo to the seat — ii. 

let all the rest give place — ii. 

OS love doth (?ive my heart — ii. 

give her this jewel; say (riyj.) — ii. 

five me this prerogative ot speech .. — ii. 

will not give my part of this — ii. 

thy reason, dear venom, give thy reason — iii. 

but read. Give me — iii. 

his legs cannot: I'll give 't him .... — iii. 

gives manhood more approbation .. — iii. 

of the young gentleman gives him .. — iii. 

give them way, till he take leave .... — iii. 

uuy upon unking give? — iii. 



QI V^E— mine honour may I \^\ve..Tu-elfihNiKhi, iii. 4 

hob nob. Is his word, give 'tor take 't — iii. 4 

and jiive him his disire — iii. 4 

and lie gives mc the stiick-iii — iii. 4 

and I'll give him myhor.se — iii. 4 

five ground, if you tee hiin — iii. 4 

shall give worse payment — iv. I 

that give fools money — iv. I 

take, and give back, affaire — iv. 3 

that is, to give a dog — v. 1 

O, you give me ill counsel — v. 1 

shake off these names you give mc .. — v. 1 

Ijcrjienil, my princess, and give eor .. — v. I 
advice mv strength can giveyou.A/cm./nr Meas. i. I 

the heavens give safety to your — i. I 

to give me secret harbour — i. 4 

to give the iieo|ilesco|ic — i. 4 

he, to gi^■e fear to use, and liberty .. — i. :» 

men give like gods — i. .'1 

hut to give the inolhcr notice — i. .'. 

I eoul.lnolgivc yon threepence .... — ii. 1 

you'll he glad to give out a commission — ii. I 

or give up your place — ii. 2 

heaven give thee moving graces! .. .. — ii. 2 

give 't not o'er so; to him again — ii. 2 

that gives this sentence — ii. 2 

or to redeem hiin, give up your — ii. 4 

I had rather give my body — ii. 4 

Isabel, if you give me love — ii. 4 

and now I give my sensual race — ii. 4 

why give you me this shame? — iii. 1 

.yes, he would give it thee — iii. 1 

the image of it gives me content .... — iii. 1 

give Win promise of satisfaction .... — iii. I 

give him a better proclamation — iii. 2 

iieaven gi\'e your spirits comfort!.... — iv. 2 

give him liberty to escape hence .... — iv. 2 

1 will give him a present slirift — iv. 2 

ftive your eau.se to heaven — iv. 3 

lis confc'ssor, gives me this instance — iv. 3 

there to give up their imwer — iv. 3 

this letter then to friar Peter give — iv. 3 

give notice to such men of sort — iv. 4 

give the like notice, to Valentinus .. — iv. fi 

here is lord Angelo shall give you justice — v. 1 

give us some seats — v. 1 

give me the scope of iu.stice — v. 1 

O, give me pardon, that I — v. 1 

give up your keys — v. I 

give her most humble thanks Mueh Ado, i. 1 

and I can give .vou intelligence — i. 3 

liaving obtained her, givelier to count — i. 3 

and so gives me out — ii. 1 

and God give thee joy 1 — ii. 1 

I give awa.v myself for you — ii. 1 

cousins, (iod gi\e yon joy — ii. I 

as I shall L-'ive Mu direction — ii. 1 

God give iiic iiatlcuce! — ii. 3 

rather die thaugiveany sign of her.. — ii. 3 

and never gives to trutn and virtue. . — iii. 1 

well, .give tliem their charge — iii 3 

w^hy give God thanks — iii. 3 

(Sod give me joy to wear it — iii. 4 

gifts that God gives — iii. 5 

to give your daughter to her husband — iii. 5 

giveme this maiu, your daughter? .. — iv. 1 

as God did give her me l^rep.) — iv. 1 

give not this rotten orange — iv. 1 

which may season give to her foul .. — iv. 1 

give not mc counsel — v. 1 

hci'orc wool<l give preccptial medicine — v. 1 

tlicictoic give mc no counsel — v. 1 

if it siii'iilil give your age such cause — v. I 

nay, then, give him another staft' .... — V. 1 

five her the right j'ou should — v. 1 

give thee the bucklei's. Give us ... . — v. 2 

gives her fame which never dies — v. 3 (scroll ) 

and give her to young C'laudio — v. 4 

and I do give you her — v. 4 

consents not to give sovereignty... W<i. A'. Dream, i. I 

the rest I'll give to be to you — i. I 

I give him curses, yet he gives mc love — i. I 

if it be, give it mc, for I am slow .... — i. 2 

to give tlieir bed joy and prosperity — ii. 2 

five me that boy, alid I will go — ii. 2 

pray thee, give it me — ii. 2 

sleep give thee allhis rest! — ii. 3 

who would give a bird the lie — iii. I 

I'll give thee I'aiiies to attend upon thee — iii. 1 

wilt thou give him nicy I had (rep.) — iii. 2 

are Ilermia's; wiil you L'i\e her o er? — iii. 2 

in iny mind, now yon give her o'er .. — iii. 2 

give me your neif, monsieur .Mustai-dsccd — iv. 1 

that Hermia should j.'i\e answer of her — iv. 1 

and gives to airy notiiiiig a local .... — v. 1 

to give them thanks hir nothing — v. I 

through this hou.sc give glimmering — v. 2 
and give him light that was it ....Lore'sL.Lost, i. t 

that give a name to every fixed star — i. 1 

and every gwlfather can give a name — i. 1 
give me the paper, let mc read the same — i. 1 

as the style sna(l give us cause — i. I 

fair, I give you back again — ii. I 

we will give upoiir riglit in Aquitain — ii. I 

I'll give vou .\iiiiitain, and all (rep.) — ii. I 

give eiilar^'cmint to the swain — iii. I 

valonr gives tliLV place — iii. I 

I give thee thy liberty, set thee — iii. 1 

no, I'll give you a reiiiuneration .... — iii. 1 

and every one give ear — iv. 1 

to whom shouldst thou give it? — iv. I 

God give you goo<l-inorrow, master . . — iv. 2 

Gcxl give liim grace to groan! — iv. 3 

the golden sun gives not to those — iv. 3 (verses) 
through tears of mine give light — iv. 3 (verses) 

and gives the crutch the cradle's .... — iv. 3 

O who can give an oath? _ iv. 3 

and gives to every |H)wer a double .. — iv. 3 

my sweet, ami give me thine — v. 2 

viU yuu (five horns, chaste lady? .... — v. 2 



GIVE— pretty mistresses, give ear. . Lnve'sL. Lost, v. '2 

in courtesy, gives undeserving praise — v. 2 

I cannot give you less — v. 2 

God give thee joy of him! — v. 2 

and tliis, the princess I did give — v. 2 

for the ass to the Jude; give It Mm . . — v. 2 

I must ratlier give it tlie rein — v. 2 

much love, I'll give you some — v. 2 

laiighing hearers give to tools — v, 2 

give him direction for this merry. iMer. of I'enice.i. 3 

the fiend gives the more friendly .... — ii. 2 

give me your blessing (I fB.) — ii. 2 

give him a present! give nim a halter — ii. 2 

give me your present to one (r^p.) .. — ii. 2 

give him a livery more jniarded .... — ii. 2 

give him this letter; do it secretly .. — ii. 3 

must give and hazard all he hath. . . . — ii. 7 

must give — for what? for lead? — ii. 7 

I'll then nor give, nor hazard, aught — ii. 7 

look fairer ere I give, or hazard — ii. 9 

I will assume desert; give me a key — ii. 9 

I come by note, to give, and to receive — iii. 2 

I give them with this ring — iii. 2 

lose, or give away, let it presage — iii. 2 

notes and garments he doth give thee — iii. 4 

to give ten thousand ducats to — iv. 1 

so can I give no reason, nor I will not — iv. 1 

go give him courteous conduct to ... . — iv. 1 

it btesseth him that gives, and him ., — iv. 1 

mnst needs give sentence 'gainst the — iv. 1 

beseech the court to give the judgment — iv. 1 

your wife would give you but little . . — iv. 1 

awards it, and the law doth give it .. — iv. 1 

this bond doth give thee here no jot of — iv. 1 

give me my principal, and let me go — iv. 1 

why then the devil give him good of it! — iv. 1 

give me your gloves, I'll wear them.. — iv. 1 

not shame my self to give you this .. — iv. I 

dearest ring in Venice will I give you — iv. 1 

nor give, nor lose it — iv. 1 

overtake him, give him the ring .... — iv. 1 

bouse out, give him this deed — iv. 2 

that they did give the rings away .... — iv. 2 

Nerissa, give order to my servants ., — v. 1 

let me give light, but let me — v. I 

I thank you madam, give welcome .. — v. 1 

a paltry ring that she did give me — v. 1 

when 1 did give it you, that you — v. 1 

you give your wife too unkind — v. 1 

of me to give the worthy doctor — v. 1 

five him this, and bid him keep it . . — v. 1 

'11 give them liim without a fee (?-<?p.) — v. 1 

that he so plentifully gives me AsyouLike il, i. 1 

in his will to give me good education — i. 1 

or "ive me the poor allottery my father — i. 1 

and j^et give no thousand crowns neither ~ i. 1 

ru give him his payment — i. 1 

and give over this attempt — i. 2 

that could give more, but that her . . — i. 2 

I will give thee mine: I charge thee — i. 3 

all this I give you: let me be your ., — ii. 3 

if he for gold will give us any food .. — ii. 4 

but I give heaven thanks, and make — ii. 5 

I'll give you a verse to this note .... — ii. 5 

to find my fawn, and give it food .... — ii. 7 

give us some music, and good — ii. 7 

five me audience, good madam — iii. 2 

would give him some good counsel — iii. 2 

still give the lie to their consciences — iii. 2 

well, the gods give us joy! — iii. 3 

none here to give the woman? — iii. 3 

Proceed, proceed, I'll give her — iii. 3- 

hcebe bid me rive you this — iv. 3 

made him give hattle to the — iv. 3 

and to give this napkin, dyed in ... . — iv. 3 

had I kingdoms to give with her .... — v. 4 

you'll give yourself to this most faithful — v. 4 

O duke, to give your daughter — v. 4 

nor he durst not give me . — v. 4 

to you I give myself, for I am (rep.).. — v. 4 

the fated sky gives us free scope Jll'sWeU,j, 1 

to give some labourers room — i. 2 

then give pity to her, whose state.. — i. 3 

but lend and give where she is — i. 3 

nay, to give great Charlemain a pen — ii. 1 

1 cannot give tliee less to be called . . — ii. 1 
and such thanks I give, as one near. . — ii. 1 

to my endeavours, give consent — ii. 1 

then shalt thou give me with thy . . . . — ii. 1 

give me some help here, ho! — ii. 1 

give Helen this, and urge her — ii. 2 

should, indeed, give us a further use — ii. 3 

I'd give bay Curtal, and his furniture — ii. 3 

but I give me, and my service — ii. 3 

Tou give me most egregious — ii. 3 

birth and virtue gives you commission — ii. 3 

common speech gives him a worthy.. — ii. ."j 

if you give him not John Drum's — iii. 6 

first, give me trust, the count — iii. 7 

I must give myself some hurts — iv. I 

and great ones I dare not give — iv. 1 

but give thyself unto my sick — iv. 2 

forsake ourselves; give me that ring — iv. 2 

DO power to give it from me — iv. 2 

will you give me a copy — iv. 3 

and I would give his wife my bauble — iv. 5 

I give thee not this to suggest thee . . — iv. .■> 

to give this poor petition to the — v. 1 

monsieur Lavatcn, give my lord .... — v. 2 

to give to a nobleman! loo"k — v. 2 

distracted clouds give way — v. 3 

digested, give a favour from you .... — v. 3 

you give away this hand (rep.) — v. 3 

and give me mine again — v. 3 

howcould vougive it him? — v. 3 

give them friendly welcome. Taming of Sh. 1 (indue.) 
anon, I'll give thee more instructions — I (indue.) 
if you give me any conserves, give me — 2 (indue.) 

why, give him gold enough, and marry — i. 2 

to give you over at this first — i. 2 



GIVE— that gives not half so great.. Taming nfSh. i. 2 

sir, give him head; I know — i. 2 

I freely give unto you this young. ... — ii. 1 

I'll give ner tlianks, as though — ii. 1 

your father were a fool to give thee all — i i . I 

beheld me give away myself — iii. 2 

will you give thanks, sw'eet Kate? — iv. 1 

Godgive liira joy! — iv. 2 

and give assurance to Baptista Minola — iv. 2 

the Dill, give me thy mete-j;ard — iv. 3 

give me Bianca for my patrimony . . — iv. 4 

nay, I will give thee a kiss — v. 1 

we will give you sleepy drinks Winter's Tale, i. 1 

I'll give nim my commission to let . . — i. 2 

perceive not how I give line — i. 2 

to give mine enemy a lasting — i. 2 

five scaudal to the blood o' the — i. 2 

'11 give no blemish to her honour . . — i. 2 

and give 't me in mine ear — ii. 1 

I know't too well; give me the boy .. — ii. 1 

that vnlgars give bold titles — ii. 1 

yet shall the oracle give rest — ii. 1 

five her the bastard : thou, dotard .. — ii. 3 

say; give't to thy crone — ii. 3 

beseech your highness, give us better — ii.3 

your favour, I do give lost — iii. 2 

and give my scene such growing.. — iv. (chorus) 

then my account I well may give — iv. i (song) 

to each part of you do give a life .... — iv. 3 

give me those flowers there, Dorcas . . — iv. 3 

so give alms; pray so — iv. 3 

do plainly give you out — iv. 3 

for mv lads to give their dears — iv. 3 (song) 

will sliame you to give liim again .... — iv. 3 

I give my daughter to him — iv. 3 

to greet him, and to give him comforts — iv. 3 

omit nothing, may give us aid — iv. 3 

and they often give us soldiers the lie — iv. 3 

close with him, give him gold — iv. 3 

well, give me the moiety — iv. 3 

I will give you as much as this old man — iv. 3 

give me the office to choose you a (jueen — v. 1 

that gives out himself prince Florizel — v. I 

thy grave give way to what's seen . . — v. 1 

from him give you all greetings — v. 1 

give me the lie, do — v. 2 

and to give me your good report .... — v. 2 
therefore, give out, 3'ou are. . . . Comedy of Errors, i. 2 

what bargain do you give it me? .... — ii. 2 

to give you nothing for something .. — ii. 2 

I pray you, sir, give me the chain — iv. 1 

why, give it to my mfe — iv. 1 

till I give thee bail — iv. 1 

hie thee straight; give her this key . . — iv. I 

some other give me thanks for — iv. 3 

and gives 'em suits of durance — iv. 3 

and says, God give you good rest!.... — iv. 3 

give me the ring of mine — iv. 3 

an' if you give it her — iv. 3 

I'll give thee, ere 1 leave thee — iv. 4 

who give their eyes the liberty — v. 1 

whom I beseech to give me ample — v. 1 

and munched; give me, quothi Macbeth, i. 3 

I'll give thee a wind — i. 3 

togive tliee, from our royal master .. — i. 3 

give me your favour — j. 3 

give him tending, he brings — i. 5 

and days to come give solely sovereign — _i. 5 

that nature gives way to in repose! give — ii. 1 

of deeds too cold breath gives — ii. 1 

which gives the sternest good-night — ii. 2 

give me the daggers — ii. 2 

give us a liglit there, ho! — iii. 3 

you do not give the cheer — iii. 4 

give me some wine, fill full — iii. 4 

all causes shall give way — iii. 4 

we may again give to our — iii. 6 

charm the air to give a sound — iv. 1 

seize upon Fife; give to the edge .... — iv. 1 

none that Christendom gives out .... — iv. 3 

your brows; give sorrow words — iv. 3 

to give obedience where 'tis — v. 2 

give me my armour — v. 3 

mine armour on : give me my staff . . — v. 3 

make all our trumpets speak; give them — v. U 

than terms can give thee out! — v. 7 

on my knee I give heaven thanks . . King John, i. 1 

I'd give it every foot to have — i. 1 

our country manners give our — i. 1 

by the mother's side, give me your . . — i. 1 

love him, give him welcome — ii. 1 

that you give his offspring life — ii. 1 

shall help to give him strength — ii. 1 

I'll give thee more than e'er — ii. 1 

give grandam kingdom (7-ep.) — ii. 1 

or shall we give the signal to our — ii. 1 

open your gates, and give the victors — ii. 2 

in favour she shall give the day .... — ii. 2 

wide ope, and give you entrance — ii. 2 

he gives the bastinado with his tongue — ii. 2 

then do I give Volquessen, Touraine — ii- 2 

will give her sadness very little cure — ii- 2 

that give you cause to prove — iii. 1 

law cannot give my child his — iii. 1 

of gawds, to give me audience — iii- 3 

I could give better comfort — iii. 4 

give me the iron, I say — iv. I 

may give life to yours — iv. I 

although my will to give is living . . — iv. 2 

and can give audience to any — iv. 2 

shall give a holiness, a purity — iv. 3 

my crown I should give off? — v. 1 

to give us warrant from the hand — v. 2 

shall I now give o'er the yielded set? — v. 2 

my arm shall give thee help — v. 4 

kind soul, that would give you thanks — v. 7 
must be withstood; give me his gage. iJic/iard//. i. 1 

king, that thou canst give — i. 3 

gives but tlie greater feeling — i. 3 

yet my letters patent give ine — ji. 3 



— IV. 



— 11. 



— 11. 



— 11. 



GIVE— sworn to give him aid Richard II. ii. 3 

strength,gives, in your weakness.... — iii. 2 

I'll give thee scope to beat — iii. 3 

I'll give my jewels, for a set of — iii. 3 

will liis majesty give Richard leave — iii. 3 

you will have, I'll give, and willing — iii. 3 
give some supportance to the bending 

terms to give him chastisement? 

what subject can give sentence on his 
give me tlie crown; here, cousin .... 
cares you give me with your crown.. 

the cares I give, I have 

own hands I give awav my crown . , 

give me that glass, and therein 

divide the realm, and give thee half. . 

thus give I mine (rep.) 

give me my boots, I say ; saddle — v. 2 

till thou give joy; until thou — v. 3 

blessing on his heart that gives it me — v. 5 

fellow, give place; here is no longer — v. 5 

the rest, and give them burial here . . — v. .^ 

no; I'll give thee thy due iHenrylV.i. 2 

I must give over this life (rep.) — i. 2 

he will give the devil his due — i. 2 

good cousin, give me audience — i. 3 

and give it him, to keej) his anger .. — i. 3 
next way to give poor jades the hots 

clerks, I'll give thee this neck 

five me my horse, you rogues, give me 
give thee this pennyworth of sugar 
I will give thee for it a thousand .... 
give my roan horse a drench, says he 

five me a cup of sack, boy 
ut I would give a thousandpound.. 
give me them that will face me: give 
egan to give me ground 

give you a reason on compulsion! . . 

give him as much as will make 

shall I give him his answer? 

five me a cup of sack, to make 
'11 give thrice so much land 

yet doth he give us bold advertisement 

will you give me money, captain? .. — iv. 2 

you give him then advantage? — iv. 3 

did give him that same royalty — iv- 3 

give me life; which if I can save .... — v. 3 
a silken point I'll give mj- barony ..IHenrylV. i. 1 

give then such instances of loss? .... — i. 1 

if you give o'er tn stormy pasision .... — i. 1 

an old man, you should give me rest — i. 2 

hope gives not so much warrant .... — i. 3 

who, half through, gives o'er — i. 3 

O earth, give us that king again .... — i. 3 

and gentle daughter, give even way — ii.3 

is that all the comfort you give me? — ii. 4 

give crowns like pins — ii. 4 

Calipolis; come, give's some sack.... — ii. 4 

no, let the fiend give fire — ii. 4 

give me my rapier, boy — ij. 4 

tliou dost give me flattering — ii. 4 

thy father is to give me thanks for it — ii. 4 

give me my sword, and cloak — ii. 4 

I partial sleep ! give thy repose .... — iii. I 

give me the spirit, master Shallow .. — iii. 2 

shadow,— give me this man — iii. 2 

O give me the spare men, and spare — iii. 2 

give me always a little, lean — iii. 2 

Bardolph, give the soldiers coats .. .. ^ iii- 2 

that he will give you audience — iv. 1 

to give admittance to a thought ■ — iv. 1 

as a beacon, gives warning to all — iv. 3 

if heaven doth give successful end .. — iv. 4 

being moody, give him line and scope — iv. 4 

she either gives a stomach, and no food — i\". 4 

stand from him, give him air — iv. 4 

five that, which gave thee life — iv. 4 

Ingland shall give him office — iv. 4 

give, entertainment to the — iV. 4 

give you a health for that anon. Give — v. 3 

give me pardon, sir; if sir, you come — v. 3 

tlie countenance that he will give me — v. S 

and qualities, give you advancement — v. 5 

unless you give me your doublet .... — v. 5 

to give a greater sum than ever Henry /'. i. 1 

is come, to give him heai'ing — i. I 

whose wrongs give edge unto — i. 2 

did give ourselt to barbarous — i. 2 

that mny give furtherance to — J. 2 

to give you gentle pass — ii. (chorus) 

five me thy fist, thy forefoot to me give — ii. 1 

iquor likewise will I give to thee — ii. I 

give me your thoughts — ii. 2 

if you give him life, after the — ii. 2 

of his mercy, give you patience to — — ii. 2 

my love, give me thy lips — ii.3 

we'll give them present audience .... ^ — ii. 4 

doth order give to sounds confused — iii. (chorus) 

1 would give all my fame for — iii. 2 

the work ish give over — iii. 2 

to our best mercy give yourselves — iii. 3 

and give our vineyards to a barbarous — iii. 6 

and they will give their bodies to.... — iii- 5 

what willing ransom he will give — — iii. 5 

and we give express charge, that .... — iii. 6 

give the devil his due — iii. 7 

and then give them great meals — iii. 7 

give dreadful note of preparation — iv. (chorus) 

liberal eye doth give to every one — iv. (chorus) 

give me any gage of thine — iv. 1 

here's my glovel give me.another.... — iv. 1 

and bid thy eeremonv give thee cure ! — i v. I 

will it give place to flexure and low.. — iv. 1 

to give each naked curtle-axe — iv. 2 

give their fasting horses provender .. — iv. 2 

do give to me egregious ransom — iv. 4 

unless thou give me crowns — iv. 4 

he will give you two hundred crowns — iv. 4 

he gives you upon his knees — iv. 4 

prisoners; give the word tlu'ough .... — iv. 6 

I will give his treason payment — iv. 8 



GrVE-clvc mc,iii voiirconscleuceCrra.WHrn.yf. iv. 8 



and civc it to this fi-llow 
give liim the cniwns 



GIVE— gives toltuii of a goodly day..yticAuri< ///. v. 3 
give mo m»ne ink uiid paper (rep.) . 



wliose want gives growth to — v. '.' 

give nie your nnswor — v. 2 

utid tliereuix)!!, give mc your dauglitcr — v. 3 

give me my steeled coat 1 llemy I'l. i. 1 

shall we give liver Orleans or no? .... — i. 2 

straightway give thy soul to him — i. .') 

give sleep in lions' stead — i. 

to give their etnsurc ol'thesc rare .... — ji. 3 

kindly give one fainting kiss — i|. 5 

onl.v, give order for my funeral — ii. 5 

vouchsafe to give me hearing — iij. 1 

pud hand for hand I give — iii. 1 

all the whole inheritance I give — iii. 1 

I'll hy a sign give notice to our friends — iii. 2 

and give him chastisement — iv. 1 

and give it out, that he is marched . . — iv. 3 

give me tlicir Imdies — iv. 7 

ond means to give you battle — v. 2 

a mcnilicr otf, and give it you — v. 3 

that Knglaud give the French — v. 3 

(and for thy honour, give consent) .. — v. 3 

to give thee answer ot thy just demand — v. 3 

five thee her hand, for sign — v. 3 

give thee kingly thanks — v. 3 

king Henry gives consent — v. 4 

my lord protector, give consent — \. b 

so should I give consent to flatter sin — v. .^ 

sooner will receive, than give — v. 5 

onr king Henry gives away his own..2Henryr/. i. 1 

'tis thine they give away — i. 1 

friends, and give to courtezans — i. 1 

and give no words but — mum! — i. 2 

dame Eleanor gives gold — i. 2 

give his censure: these arc no women's — i. 3 

give me my fan: what, minion! — i. 3 

believing souls gives light in darkness — ii. 1 

give her as a prey, to law, and shame — ii. 1 

ere thou go, give up thy staff — ii. 3 

give up your staff, sir, and the king.. — ii. 3 

I 2ive thee my apron — ii. 3 

when every one will give — iii. 1 

what counsel give you in this — iii. I 

and you will give them me — iii. 1 

what instance gives lord Warwick for — iii. 2 

five thee thy hire, and send thy soul — iii. 2 

'11 give thee England's treasure .... — iii. 3 

I'll give a thousand pound to look .. — iii. 3 

give me some drink; and bid the .... — iii. 3 

this prisoner freely give I thee — iv. 1 

and so much shall you give, or otf goes — iv. 1 

I'll give it, sir; and thefefore spare .. — iv. 1 

give him a box o' the ear — iv. 7 

and give me but the ten meals — iv. 10 

I cannot give due action to my — v. 1 

wc give thee for reward a thousand . . — v. 1 

give place; by heaven, thou — v. 1 

shall give their words for him — v. 1 

to give the enemy way — v. 2 

and them our fortune give — v. 2 

peace thou! and give king Henry ..ZHeiirijt'I. i. I 

charge! and give no foot of ground! . . '" — i. 4 

1 give thee this to dry thy cneeks.... — i. 4 

to pierce it, or to give thee mine — ii. 1 

lords, give signal to the fight — ii. 2 

I prv'tbee, give no limits to my tongue — ii. 2 

what counsel give you? whether — ii. 3 

give sweet passage to my sinful soul! — ii. 3 

gives not the hawthorn bush — ii. .5 

give me thy gold, if thou hast — ii. 5 

Warwick, to give: she, on his left — iii. 1 

he'll rather give her two — iii. 2 

service wilt thou do me, if I give them? — iii. 2 

lands I freely give thee — iii. 2 

and give my tongue-tied sorrows — iii. 3 

let me give humble thanks — iii. 3 

delay not, give thy hand to Warwick — iii. 3 

my vow, Igivc myhand — iii. 3 

give the heir and daughter of lord Scales — iv. 1 

give me assurance with some — iv. 1 

ov, but give me worship, ond quietness — iv. 3 

Warwick, and Clarence, give me both — iv. fi 

for a poor earl to give — v. 1 

and give more strength to that which — v. 4 

give signal to the fight (rsp.) — v. 4 

the loving kiss I give the frait — v. 7 

to give them thanks, that were Richnrd III. i. 1 

to lake is not to give — i.2 

why, then give way, dull clouds — i. 3 

that now give evidence against — i. 4 

God give your grace good rest! — i. 4 

opens his purse, to give us our reward — i. 4 

keeper? give me a cnp of wine — i. 4 

the duke give order for his burial.... — i. 4 

and shall that tongue give pardon .. — ii. 1 

and did give himself, all thin — ii. 1 

give me no help in lamentation — ii. 2 

to give your censures in this — ii. 2 

give you good-morrow, sir — ii. 3 

then.give me this dagger — iii. l 

will give; and, being but o toy (rffp.) — iii. 1 

than that I'll give niy cousin — iii. 1 

the scorn he gives his uncle — iii. 1 

and give us notice of his inclination — iii. I 

for joy of this good news, give mistress — iii. 1 

but, that I'll give my voice on — iii. 2 

we give thee up our guiltless blood .. — iii. 3 

in the duke's hehalt 'I'll give my voice — iii. 4 

lose his head, ere give consent — iii. 4 

and, to give notice, that no manner. . — iii. 5 

I give a sparing limit to my tongue — iii. 7 

God give your grai.-cs iKith a happy . . — iv. 1 

five me some breath, some little — iv. 2 

say apain, give nut. that .-^nne — iv. 2 

give mine the benefit of seniory — iv. 4 

after-hours give leisure to repent .... — iv. 4 

I'll give it to your daughter — iv, 4 

we must both give and take — v. 3 



God give vou iiulct rfst to-night .... — v. 3 

give nic a'wutc-h: sudcilc white — v. 3 

give mc a howl of wine; I have not . . — v. 3 

tJod give us leisure for these — v. 3 

give mc uiinthi'i- horse, bind up — v. 3 

tinu' tn itrin. ;uiil give direction — v. 3 

tell tlic chx'k tlicre; give me a calendar — v. 3 
as give their money out of hoiic. Henry VI II. (piol.) 

he gives us note, the force of his own — i. 1 

tt gift that heaven gives for him — i. I 

pray, give me favour, sir; this cunning — i. 1 

as give a crutch to the dead — i. 1 

and civc thanks to you that choked it — i.2 

would give it quick consideration. . . . — i. 2 

'tis time to give them physic — i. 3 

but few now give so great ones — i. 3 

go, give them welcome, you can speak — i. 4 

then give my charge up to sir Nicholas — ii. 1 

and give your hearts to, when they once — ii. I 

yet I can give you inkling of — ii. 1 

j'our grace would give us but an hour — ii. 2 

to give her the avaunt! — ii. 3 

and so give mc up to the sharpest kind — ii. 4 

thus it came; give heed to't — ii. 4 

we shall give you the full cause — iii. 1 

Englishman dare give me counsel? .. — iii. 1 

to give up w illingly that noble — iii. 1 

that may give me remembrance of my — iii. 2 

(though now the time gives way to us) — iii. 2 

must give my tendance to — iii. 2 

give him a little earth for charity! .. — iv. 2 

than man could give him, he died.... — iv. 2 

beseeching him to give her virtuous. . — iv. 2 

give your friend some touch of your — v. 1 

no more prevail, than we give way to — v. 1 

give her a hundred marks — v. 1 

and give it to a most noble judge .... — v. 2 

into whose hand I give thy life — v. 4 

pluck it out, and give it him.. Troilus'.^-Crrssida, i. 2 

will he give j'ou the nod? — i.2 

to change, would give an eye to boot — ;. 2 

or give me ribs of steel! — i. 3 

shall give a scantling of good — i. 3 



GIVE— give out conjectural marriages. Cor iotenut, i. I 

give me excuse, good madam — i. 3 

no, I'll not sell, nor give him — i. 4 

may give .you tliaiikfu' 



give pardon to my speech. 

give him allowance for the — i. 3 

and I will give a taste of it — i. 3 

we do allowance give before — ii. 3 

and give him half — .jj* ^ 

come, give me an instrument — iii. 1 

gives us more palm in beauty — iii. 1 

and give me swift transportance .... — iii. 2 

no debts, give her deeds — iii. i 

a boy of you, you'll give him me — iii. 2 

nay, I'll give my word for — iii. 2 

to give me now a little benefit — iii. 3 

and they will almost give us — !)!• ^ 

if you give way, or hedge aside — iii. 3 

arid give to dust, that is a little — '!!• ^ 

can give expressure to — iii. 3 

that men do give themselves — iii. 3 

and give him note of onr approach . . — iv. 1 

and give as soft attachment — iv. 2 

we must give up to Diomedes' hand — iv. 2 

allayment could I give my grief — iv. 4 

to give tliee nightly visitation — iv. 4 

lord, I'll give her to thy hand — iv. 4 

five with thy trumpet a loud note . . — iv. S 

oth take and give — iv. 5 

you take is better than you give — iv. 5 

I'll give you boot; I'll give you (rep.) — iv. 5 

for Venus' sake, give me a kiss — iv. 5 

that give a coasting welcome — iv. -^ 

he gives, what thinks, he shows (rep.) — iv. 5 

that I may give the local wound — iv. 5 

but gives all gaze and bent of — iv. 5 

g've me some token for the — v. 2 

false wench! give't me again — v. 2 

and fjives memorial dainty kisses. . . . — v. 2 

I'll give you something else — v. 2 

do not give advantage to — v. 2 

Patroclus will give me anything .... — v. 2 

for we would give much, to use — v. 3 

yet give some groans, though — ^'-.^^ 

give him thy aaughter Timnn of Alliens, i. 1 

even such as they give out — i. 1 

as those, which sell, would give — i. 1 

give them guide to us — i. 1 

for I mean to give thee none — i. I 

he gives, if he receives — j. S 

I give thee warning on't — j. 5 

too proud to give thanks to the gods — i.'i 

to provide, and give great gifts — i. S 

to heart, 'tis not enough to give — ]■'' 

thim wilt give awa.v thyself — i. S 

not to give regard to you — i. S 

a beggar's dog, and give it Timon.... — ii. I 

why, give my horse to Timon (rep.) — ii. I 

give me breath ; I do beseech you — ii. i 

give it these fellows to whom — ii. i 

give thee thy due, and one that — iii. I 

like physicians, thrive, give him over — iii.; 

but reserve still to give, lest your.. — iii. 6 (grace! 

more than the man that gives it . . — iii. 6 (grace 

one day he gives us diamonds — iii. f 

give them title, knee, and aiiprnbation — iv. ; 

by wanting light to give — iv. ! 

give them diseases, leaving with thee — iv. ! 

give us some gold, good Timon — iv. ; 

give it the beasts, to he rid of — iv. ! 

fear to catch it, and give way — iv. ; 

steal not less, for this I give you — iv. 3 

and give over my trade — iv. 3 

whose eyes do never give — iv. 3 

give to dogs what thou deny'st to men — iv. 3 

I'll give you gold (r?p.) — v. 1 

to give thy rages balm — v.* 

could be content to give him good ..Coriolanui, i. 1 

he that ivill give good words to thee — i. 1 



flee! .... 
you truly .... 



ii 


9 


ii 




11 




ij 




ii 


2 


ii 


2 


ii 


2 


ii 


3 




3 



— iii. 1 

— iii. I 

— iii. 1 



— iii. 1 



v. 1 



ii. I 
ii. 1 
ii. I 



fratelul to us that gi 
give him, with all Ins trim 

I request you to give my poor 

give your disposition the reins 

if the drink you give me 

gives me an estate of seven years' health 
wherein he gives my sou the whole .. 

give way there, and go on 

which that he'll give them 

than the rebuke you give it 

than misery itself would give........ 

for my wounds' sake, to give their . . 

should be in them to give 

you all resolved to give your voices? 

if we give you anything 

an 'twere, to give again 

and give it bountifully to the dcsircrs 
therefore give you our voices heartily 
the gods give you joy, sir, heartily . . 
the gods give him joj, and make him 
Tribunes, give wa3'; he shall to the.. 

to give forth the corn o'the 

why shall the people give one 

I'll give my reasons, more worthier, 
and give way the while to unstable . 

give to my noble heart a lie 

when we shall hap to give't them — 

check my courage for what they can give — 

all despite: give him deserved vexation — 

if he give me way, I'll do his — 

that he gives entrance to such — 

are unapt to give or to forgive — 

in either side give the all-hail — 

yet tjive us our despatch — 

they'll give him death by inches — 

wc have all great cause to give — 

and give away the benefit of our levies — 

must give this cur the lie — 

which give some soil, perhaps Julius Cc 

alas! it cried, give me some drink — 

which gives men stomach to digest . . — 

give guess how near to day — 

in the air give so much light — 

for I can give his humour the true . . — 

to give, this day, a crown to mighty — ii. 2 

give me my robe, for I will go — ii. 2 

security gives way to conspiracy. . — ii. 3 (paper) 

as a suitor will I give him this — ii. 3 

sirrah, give place. What, urge you .. — iii. 1 

that you shall give me reasons — iii. 1 

then "follow me, and give me audience — iii. 2 

give him a statue with his ancestors — iii. 2 

to every Roman citizen he gives .... — iii. 2 

in this mood will give us anything . . — iii. 2 

give the word, ho! and stand — iv. 2 

and I will give you audience — iv. 2 

I that denied thee gold, will give — — iv. 3 

if yon give place to accidental evils . . — jv. 3 

give me a bowl of wine — iv. 3 

must.of force, give place to better.... — iv. 3 

give me the gown — iv. 3 

your lordship did not give it me — iv. :i 

Mark Anton v, shall we give sign — v. 1 

bad strokes, iJrutus, you give good words 

readv to give up the ghost 

the death which he did give himself 
and give these bills unto the legions 
sudden push gives them the overthrow 
and nid me give't thee? didst thou .. 

thy Brutus bid me give it thee — v. 3 

give him all kindness: I had rather.. — v. 4 
good sir, give me s^oi)d ^ortunii. Aniontj ^-Cleopatra,!- 2 

but how? but how? give me particulars — i. 2 

and /live him a worse — i.2 

w^hy, sir, give the gods a thankful.... — i.2 

in each thing give him way — i. 3 

I am sorry to give breathing — i. 3 

from folly could not give me freedom — i. 3 

OS you shall give the advice — i. 3 

and give true evidence to his love — — i. 3 

to give a kingdom for a mirth — i. 4 

reports give him much wronged — — i. 4 

ha, ha! give mc todrink mahdragora — i. S 

by Isis, I will give thee bloody teeth — i. ."> 

lesser enmities may give way to u'rcater — ii 1 

small to greater matters must give way — ii. 2 

give mc some music; music, moody .. — );..'• 

give me mine angle — ii. ^ 

the gold I give thee, will I melt — ii. 5 

with the health that Pompey gives him 

the man will give thee all the world 

let vou go, and give you to the gods. . 

of tlie stars give light to thy fair way ! 

and gives his potent regiment to — — ;::• - 

and give up yourself merely to chance — iii. 7 

give me a kiss; even this repays me.. — .jii. 9 

partly begs to lie desired to give — iii. II 

give niin no breath, but now — iv. 1 

to give them this discomfort? — iv. 2 

let's see how it will give off — iv. 3 

come, give me that: this way — iv. 4 

I give it you. Mock me not — iv.fi 

I'll give thee, friend, an armom- — iv. 8 

fortunes give him hope — iv. 10 

vanish, or I shall give thee thy ...... — iv. 10 

and give me sufficing strokes for death — iv. 12 

give me some wine, and let me — iv. 13 

will give lis some faults to — v. 1 

give ncr what comforts the quality .. — v.! 

to give me eonqiicred Egj'pt for my son — v. 2 

asyourself shall give US counsel — v. 'i 

very good: give it nothing, I pray . vou — v. 2 

give me mv robe, put on iny — v. 2 

which the go<ls give men to excuse . . — v. 2 

my other elements I give to baser life — V. 2 

lest I give cause to be suspected Cymbrlinr, i. » 



V. 1 
V. 1 
V. 2 
V. 2 

T. 3 



ii. 7 
ii. 7 
iii. 2 



GIV 

GIVE— give me Imt tliis I liiive Cymbrline i. 2 

fie! yoH must give way — i. 2 

ere I eould ,ci^'e liini tliut porting Itiss — i. -1 

and give me dii et'tly tn inidcrftnnd . . — i. 5 

I was going, sir, tn give him wtloMiic — i- 7 

give me your pardon. I have simkc .. — i. 7 

\_Cnl. A'»?.] d{i;,'! t sive him satisfaction? — ii. I 

tliat yon vive olVence — ii. I 

I am advised to give Iter music — ii- ^ 

biU I'll iK'vcr give o'er — ii. a 

the thanks I give, is telling you — ii. 3 

shall give thee opiwrtunity — iii. t-' (letter) 

I shall give thee opportunities.. — ill. 4 (letter) 

all that good time will give us — iii. 4 

such a welcome as I'd give to Iiim .. — iii. t> 

Cadwal now to give it motion — iv. 2 

give eoloru' to my pale elieek — iv. 2 

Ijeacel I'll give 110 wound to thee .... — v. 1 

and will give you that like beasts — v. 3 

give me tlie penitent instrument .... — v. 4 

and tliy state, I'll give it — v. 5 

if you ]ilcase to give me hearing .... — v. 5 

give answer to this boy, and do it ... . — v. 5 

O. gi\e rno cord, or knife — v. 5 

give us the proudest prisorier...7'(7«s.-I>u;;(nii'cus, i. 2 

I give him you; the noblest — i. 2 

five me a staif of honour for — i. 2 

give thee thanks ill part of — i. 2 

go give that changing piece — i. 2 

give liim burial, as becomes; "ive Mutius — i. 2 

five you joy, sir, of your galmnt bride — i. 2 

give your grace to know — i. 2 

we'll give your grace bon-jour — i. 2 

and give the king this fatal plotted . . — ii. 3 

give me thy poniard; you shall know — ii. 3 

thereby may give a likely guess — ii. 4 

give me a sAvoixl, I'll chop off my — iii. 1 

which gives my soul the greatest spurn — iii. 1 

tliat gives sweet tidings of the sun s — iii. 1 

and 1 will give thee mine — iii. 1 

good Aaron, "ive his majesty my hand — iii. 1 

give me thy knife, I will insult — iii. 2 

give signs, sweet girl, for here — iv. 1 

well, God give her good restl — i v. 2 

nurse, ghe it me; my sword — iv. 2 

and give the mother gold — iv. 2 

in Virgo's lap, give it Pallas — iv. 3 

but give them to his master for ^rep.^ — iv. 3 

but give j'our [ligeons to the emperor — iv 3 

give me a pen and ink — iv. 3 

let tlie emperor give his pledges — v. 1 

wanting a liand to give it action? .... — v. 2 

now give some 'surance that — v. 2 

that gives our Troy, our Rome — v. 3 

gentle people, give me aim awhile . . — v. 3 

give sentence on this execrable >VTeteh — v. 3 

and give him burial in his father's .. — v. 3 
to the judgment of your eye I give. Pericles, i. (Gow.) 

every virtue gives renown to men! .. — 1.1 

that give heaven countless eyes — i. 1 

then give my tongue like leave — j. 1 

my lords, and give experience tongue — i. 2 

that breath gives heat and stronger . . — i. 2 

I'll give some light unto you — i. 3 

gtrehgth left to give them burial — 1.4 

give them life, who are hunger-starved — i. 4 

"(to whom I give my benisonl — ii. (Gower) 

threw him ashore, to give him glad — ii. (Gower) 

to give my tongue that heat — ii. 1 

though calmetL, they give't again — ii. 1 

and the ^ods give thee good on't ! . . . . — ii. 1 

wliom tins wreath of victory I give . . — ii. 3 

and gives them what he will — ii. 3 

who freely give to every one — ii. 3 

their hand should give them burial.. — ii. 4 

or dead, gives cause to mourn — ii. 4 

God give you joy ! what, are you 'ooth — ii. 5 

we, liere below, recall not what we give — iii. 1 

to give thee hallowed to thy grave . . — iii. 1 

give this to the 'pothecary, and tell me — Iii. 2 

which gives me a more content in . . — iii. 2 

here I give to understand — iii. 2 (scroll) 

who finds her, give her burying. . — iii. 2 (scroll) 

I pray you, give her air: gentlemen — iii. 2 

to give lier princely training — iii. 2 

then give you up to the masked Neptune — iii. 3 

come, come, give me your wreath. . . . — iv. 1 

and so give over. Why to give over.. — iv. 3 

he tliat will give most, shall have. . . . — iv. 3 

I'd give it tO'Undo the deed — iv. 4 

would but give way to customers .... — iv. 6 

no less thaii it gives a good report. ... — iv. 6 
her gain she gives the cursed bawd — v. (Gower) 

the more she gives them speech — v. 1 

'twere best I did give o'er — v. 1 

give me a gash, put me to — v. 1 

give me fresh garments — v. 1 

give me my robes — v. 1 

not good to cross liim; give him way — v. 1 

and give them rejietition to the life . . — v. 2 

and give you gold for such provision — v. 2 

as my last boon, give me — v. 2 (Gower) 

give me the map there: know, that Lear, i. 1 

as here I give her father's heart — i. 1 

royal Lear, give but that portion — i. 1 

give me the letter, sir. I shall offend (rep.') — i. 2 

to give away thy land — i. 4 

five me an egg, nuncle, and I'll give thee — i. 4 

hat scope that dotage gives it — i. 4 

not to give it away to nis daughters .... — _i. 5 

seeking to give losses their remedies .... — ii. 2 

the country gives me proof — ii. 3 

gives thee better counsel, give me mine. . — ii. 4 

follow it, since a fool gives it — ii. 4 

give me my servant forth — ii. 4 

shall not give thee o'er to harshness .... — ii. 4 

give ear, sir, to my sister — ii. 4 

to no more will I give place — ii. 4 

you heavens, give me tnat patience — ii. 4 

[ Knt.'\ didst thou give all to thy daughters? — iii. 4 



[ 304 ] 



GIVE— who gives anything to poor Tom?., Len?-, iii. 4 

didst thou give them all? — iii. 4 

he gives the web and the pin — iii. 4 

thus gives way to loyalty — iii..') 

to some iivovision give thee quick condiu't — iii. (i 

give me some help: O cruel! — iii. 7 

give mc thy sword: a peasant — iii. 7 

this hurt: give me your arm — iii. 7 

and give the distaff into my hiisband'.s .. — iv. 2 

lind him, pray you, give him this — iv. .'i 

give me your arm: up: so; how is't? — iv. 6 

hewgli! give the word. Sweet Marjoram . — iv. fi 

give me an oimce of civet — iv. 6 

and give the letters, which tbou find'st .. — iv. 6 

sliall give them instant way — v. 3 

take my sword, give it the captain — v. 3 

give me my long sword, ho! Home,) <$■ .liUiel, i. 1 

would as willingly give cure, as knosv — i. 1 
tlian yom" consent gives strength to.. — i. 3 

give me a torch; I am not for — i. 4 

give me a ease to put my visage in . . — i. 4 

give room, and foot it, girls — j. 3 

give me my sin again — i. ,'» 

yet I would it were to give again — ii. 2 

frank, and give it thee again — ii. 2 

the more I give to thee, the more .... — ii. 2 

some special good doth give — ii. 3 

what counterfeit did I give you? .... — ii. 4 
one short minute gives me in her sight — ii. 6 

if you will give me occasion — i i i. 1 

wliich thou, prince, must give — iii. 1 

night, give me my Romeo — iii. 2 

give me some aqua vitse — iii. 2 

five this ring to ray true knight — iii. 2 
'11 give thee armour to keep off ... . — iii. 3 

a ring she bid me give you, sir — iii. 3 

[Coi. Jfjii.] shall give him such an.... — iii. 5 
she will none, she gives you thanks. . — iii. !> 

doth she not give us thanks? — iii. ."i 

I'll give you ^o my friend — iii. 3 

that she doth give her sorrow so .... — iv. I 
in thy wisdom canst give no help .... — iv. 1 

give me some present counsel? — iv. \ 

if thou darest, I'll give thee remedy — iv. 1 
be merry, give consent to marry Paris — iv. 1 
give me, O give me! tell me not of fear — iv. 1 
love, give me strength! and strength — iv. I 
doth it give me sucn a sight as this? — iv. S 
give it you soundl.y. What will you give — iv. b 
give you the minstrel. Tlien will I give — iv. 5 

mind be writ, give me his letter — v. 2 

give me thy torch, boy; hence — v. 3 

give me those flowers : do as I bid .... — v. 3 
tlie boy gives warning, something.... — v. 3 

give me that mattock, and the — v. 3 

give me the light: upon thy life — v. 3 

he early hid me give his father — v. 3 

give me the letter, I will look on it . . — v. 3 
but I can give thee more; for I will raise — v. 3 

give these mourning duties to Hamlet, i. 2 

give it an understanding, but no — i. 2 

as the winds give benefit, and convoy. . . . — i. 3 

may give his saying deed — i. 3 

give tliy thoughts no tongue, nor any. ... — i. 3 

give every man thine ear, but few — i. 3 

between you; give me up tlie truth — 1.3 

[A'7^^] the soul gives the tongue vows.... — i. 3 

as to give words or talk with — i. 3 

give me one poor request — i. 5 

as a stranger give it welcome — i. 5 

give him this money, and these notes ... . — ii. 1 
here give up ourselves, in the full bent . . — ii. 2 
give first admittance to the embassadors — ii. 2 

to give tlie assay of arms against — ii. 2 

gives him tlu-ee thousand crowns — ii. 2 

please you to give qiiiet pass through — ii. 2 

give tw'enty, forty, fifty, a hundred — ii. 2 

come, give us a taste of your quality .... — ii. 2 
gives me the lie i' the tliroat, as deep ... . — ii. 2 

good gentlemen, give liim a further — ii. 2 

that speech doth give my conscience! .... — iii. 1 
must give us pause: there's the respect .. — iii. 1 

but now the tune gives it proof — iii. 1 

imagination to give them shape — iii. 1 

I'll give thee this plague for thy dowry. . — iii. 1 
a temperance, that may give it smoothness — iii. 2 
give me that man that is not passion's .. — iii. 2 
give liimlieedful note: for I mine eyes .. — iii. 2 

nor earth to me give food — iii. 2 

give o'er the play. Give me some light .. — iii. 2 

give it breath with your mouth — iii. 2 

give them seals, never, my soul, consent! — iii. 2 

of our faults, to give in evidence — iii. 3 

to give the world assurance of a man ... . — iii. 4 
the compulsive ardour gives the charge.. — iii. 4 

he lilcewise gives a frocK — iii. 4 

power thereof may give thee sense — iv. 3 

give her good watch, I pray you — iv. 5 

many places gives me superfluous death! — iv. 5 

O, thou vile king, give me my father — iv. 5 

both the worlds I give to negligence .... — iv. b 

I would give you some violets — iv. 5 

we will our kingdom give — iv. .5 

your soul to give it due content — iv. .3 

give these fellows some means. . — iv. ti (letter) 

come, I will give you way for these — iv. 6 

shepherds give a grosser name — iv. 7 

this will give it start again — iv. 7 

give me your pardon, sir — v. 2 

give us the foils; come on — v. 2 

give them the foils, yoimg Osrick — v. 2 

if Hamlet give the first or second hit .... — v. 2 
give me the cups; and let the kettle .... — v. 2 

stay, give me drink — v. 2 

th.v healtli : give him the cup — v. 2 

give me the cup; let go: by heaven — v. 2 

to the embassadors of England gives — v. 2 

senseless, tha.t should give us hearing .... — v. 2 

give order, that these bodies, liigh on ^ v. 2 

give me a taper; call up all my people . . utUelto, i. I 



GIV 

GIVE— enforce it on), will give him ciMe.OVieUo, i. 2 

ill these news, that gives them credit — i. 3 

there do give tb.ee that with all my heart — i. 3 
give him dt'tence against the eienients .. — ii. 1 

give u.! truth who 'tis that is arrived — ii. 1 

give renewed fire to our extinct spirits .. — ii. 1 
they give their greeting to the citadel .. — ii. 1 
that gives me this bold show of courtesy — ii. 1 
would she give you so much of her li|is.. — ii. 1 
it gives me wonder great as my content — ii. I 

and to give satiety a fresh appietite — ii. 1 

he gives j'our Hollander a vomit — ii. 3 

fit to stand b.y Cscsar and give direction — ii. 3 
a night brawler? give me answer to it . . — ii. 3 
give me to know how this foul rout began — ii. 3 

to give place to the devil, wrath — ii. 3 

when this advice is fi-ee, I give, and — ii. 3 

give me advantage of some brief discourse — iii. 1 

these letters give, lago, to the pilot — iii. 2 

I give tliee waiTant of thy place — iii. 3 

rather die, than give thy cause away — iii. 3 

and give tliy worst of thoughts the worst — iii. 3 

could give out such a seeming — iii. 3 

the work ta'en out, and give it lago — iii. 3 

what will you give me now for that same — iii. 3 
a frood wench, give it me. What will. . . . — iii. 3 

of import, give it me again — iii. 3 

be sure of it; give me the ocular proof .. — iii. 3 

five you satisfaction, you may have (rep.) — iii. 3 
ago doth give nji the exceutiun — iii, 3 

fate would have me wive, to give it her — iii. 4 
to lose or give't away H^ere such iierdition — iii. 4 

but if I give my wife a haudkercliief — iv. 1 

of her honour too! may she give that? .. — iv. 1 

that you give me the addition — iv. 1 

she gives it out, that you shall marry her — iv. I 

there, give it your hobby-horse — iv. I 

lier iniquity, give her patent to ottend . . — iv. 1 
I will give over my suit, and rejient my — iv. 2 
give me my nightly wearing, and adieu — iv. 3 

five me some help. O me, lieutenant ! (rep.) — v. 1 
cannot give it vital growth again — v. 2 

found by fortune, and did give my husband — v. 2 

she give it Cassio! uo, alas (rep.) — v. 2 

GIVEN— what a blow was there gi veil !.7Vm;)e.<Mi. 1 

like poison gi^'en to work — iii. 3 

for I have given you here a thread. ... — iv. 1 
rattling thunder have I given fii-e .... — v. 1 

since j'ou have given me again — v. 1 

he would have given it you., TwoGen.of Verona, i. 2 

she hath given you a letter — ii. 1 

that he is given to prayer MemjlVivex, i. 4 

she is given too much to allichoUy . . — i. 4 
I had mj'self twenty angels given me — ii. 2 

fiven largely to many (rtp.) — ii. 2 
he maid hath given consent — iv. 6 

and have given ourselves without. ... — v. 5 

and given to fornications — v. 5 

but given unsought, is better Tieel/lhNight, iii. I 

have given us bloody argument — iii. 3 

that which I have given to you? .... — iii. 4 

and has given sir Toby — v. 1 

have given it you to-day morning .. — v. 1 
and given your drunken cousin .. — v. 1 (letter) 
why you have given me such clear . , — v. 1 
giveii liis deimtation all the .... Meas.forMeas. i. 1 

a woman cardinally given — ii. 1 

if the devil have given thee proofs . . — iii. 2 

he has given him warning — iii. 2 

what pleasure was he given to? — iii. 2 

the better, given me by so holy — i v. 3 

and given me justice, justice — v.! 

given way unto this coiu-se of fortime.il/ivcA .J(io,iv. 1 
right you should have given her cousin — v. 1 
thou hast giveii her rhyme8....i>//rf.A'.'4- Dream, i. I 

hast given me cause to curse — iii. 2 

an the dul^e had not given him — iv. 2 

it was given me by Costard Love' sL. Lost, iv. 2 

will be giveii to Ajax — v. 2 

false; we have given thee faces — v. 2 

duke was given to understand. A/erc/t. of Veiiiee, ii. 8 

I would not have given it for — iii. I 

this ri ng was given me by my wife . . — iv. 1 
von have given me life, and living .. — v. 1 

I am given, sir, secretly to AsyouLiUeii, i. 1 

hath given ns wit to flout at — i. 2 

I should have given him tears unto.. — i. 2 
methinks, I have given him a penny — ii. 5 

and lovers are given to poetry — iii. 3 

truly, she must be given ...., — iii. 3 

but, thanks be given, she's very AlVs Well, ii. 4 

my treasure, given order for our — ii. 5 

if I had given you this at over-night — iii. 4 

vou have not givenihim his — iv. 3 

he hath given lier his monumental . . — iv. 3 

it was not given me — v 3 

had given him the best horse.. Taming of Shrew, i. 1 
too dear, for what's given freely . . Winler'a Tale, i. 1 

gone, given to the fire, a moiety — ii. 3 

they are given to men of middle age — iv. 3 

which I have given already — i v. 3 

had like to have given us one — iv. 3 

he hath given them in wit. . . . Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

hath it given me earnest of success Macbeth, i. 3 

I have given suck; and know how .. ■ - i. 7 
quenched them, hath given me fire . . — ii. 2 
and mine eternal jewel given to the. . — iii. 1 
a making, 'tis given with welcome. ... — iii. 4 

hath heaven given his hand — iv. 3 

where there is advantage to be given — v. 4 

have given him time to land KingJohtifii. 1 

as they have given these hairs their. . — iii. 4 

fiven away to upstart imtlirifts? . . Ricltard II. ii. 3 
have, though given away — iv. 1 

for I have given here my soul's — iv. 1 

not that name was given me at — iv. 1 

if the rascal have not given me I Henry IV. ii. 2 

and giveii my treasures, and my rights — ii. 3 
if that man should be lewdly given. . — ii. 4 
was as virtuously given as a gentleman — iii. 3 



GIV 



OTVEN— any wny given to virtue. ...lH<rnr|//r.iil. 

lint thou urt ftltii^'ctliiTKivi'n over .. — 111. 
J liuveKiMii liuniiittiiv t.ilmkiT'a.. — ill. 
us 1 uin truly Kiviii ti> uiul.rstiiud .. — iv. 
Il„w tl.iswurklisKivou tolyinj;! .... — V. 
I liinc niwu ovir, 1 will ^ivuk no.. illrnri/l I'. 11. 
by tistunuiil Imvt (,'ivfii to tlw) church. Hriif!/'''. i. 
to H lioin llif. iirikr of the 8ii'i;e U given — iii. 

huve tlieiii..mfr,sL:ivcnoVrJ — iii. 

but K-\.-l.rlmlhf;rv.i, thiMl.ioni — iii. 

wliii'h I liuM- j;ivun liim for ii fiivour.. — iv. 
thou lui...t i:iw II Mio Miost liitiir terms — iv. 

the jov thiit lioil Imlli jrivcii us IHenry I'l. 1. 

tliv.seff hiUh piveu her Moefulbreuat! — Hi. 
I finve a while given truee unto .... — iii. 

or tluit a stroke was given — iv. 

for thou httst t;ivcii liie.in this 'Uleniyl'I. i. 

httth (liven the duchies of Anjou .... — i. 

both given uut'i tlie 1' rendu — .i. 

so iini I (liven in eluir^'e — ii. 

nnil tiK> well K'ven, to ilreara on evil — iii. 
ouil (riven me notice of their \ill;inie3 — iii. 
hiith civen them heait iuiil eiiurii(,'e.. — iv. 
winihl ne\'er hiive (:i\eu out these arms — iv. 

tluit 1 have (liven <io iinswer all — v. 

thus war luith i-'iven thee peace — v. 

giien unto theliouse uf York such ..Slleiiryl'l. i. 
or fortune L'iven me measure of revenge — ii. 

lnHl^t thou never 1,'iven consent — ii. 

lie haili ;.'iveu for fence impregnable — iv. 

hath strui-htly (jiveii in charge UiclmrJ III. 1. 

i;rc:it iiromoiioiis are ilaily given — i. 

riave{.'iven their verdict .IP unto .... — i. 

1 could have ^•i^■en mv uncle's (.-raee — ii. 

and tlivcu in eaiuest \Mi;it 1 iHr-ed.. — v. 
what heaven halh utiveu him ...... II, nrijllll. i. 

or has given all lieforc, and be begins — i. 

ere you ask, la given — ]. 

your grace has given a precedent .... — ii. 
iiiy beliaviour given to your displeasure — _ii. 
there's order gi\ en for her coronation — iii. 

that gentle iihvsie, given ill time — iv. 

pleased to have given me longer life — iv. 

who luith so far given ear to — v. 

1 lo.dved you would have given me your — v. 
t.'ush that love hath given nie.TroiVus ^Cressida.i. 
in-holding as they have often giveu .. — iii. 
she hath not given so many good .... — iv. 

[ ( w.l faith are given to Diomed — v. 

worth the sums that are given.. J'imon o//I(A(?ns, |. 

not ignobly, have I given — ii. 

first; 1 have given you earnest — iv. 

■»liat hast thou given? — iv. 

given to Lartius and to Marcius battle . . Coriol.u 

when corn was given them gratis — iii. 

which they have given to beggars . 

have you thus given Hydra 

as now at last given hostile strokes — in. 

au' he had been cannibally given — iv. 

fiven your enemy your shield — v. 
'il not liavc given a doit — v. 

and given up, for certain drops of salt .. — v. 

is a noble Roman, and well given ..Julius Ciesar, i. 

for he is given to sports, to wildncss — ii. 

and I have given him reasons — ii. 

hath given me some worthy cause . . — iv. 

Porapeius hath given the dare to. ..intojiy^-Cleo. i. 

would, she had never given you leave — i. 

I could have given less matter — ii. 

when the best hint was given him .. — iii. 

he hath given his empire up — iii. 

(> he has given example for our .... — iii. 

order for sea is ^iven — iv. I 

honest woman, but something given — v. 

the one may be sold, or given Cymlcline, i. 

which the gods have given yonV .... — i. 

I have given him that, which, if he take — i. 

hath nature given them eyes — i. 

when you have given good-morning — ii. 

praise be given to your remembrance — ii. 

that we have given him cause — iii. 

will be given to the loudest of noise — iii. 

would have given their honours .... — v. 

if Pisanio have, said she, given his .. — v. 

us good as I have given out him .... — v. 

here Goths have given me leave ..TilusAnUron. i. 

the gods have given lis o'er — iv. 

that I have given her physic — iv. 

thou hast given it to the emperor .... — iv. 

since you have given me leave to Bi>eak.rt'r/e^e», i. 

we have given order to be next — ii. 

paid as debts and not as given — iv. (Gow 

authorities, that he hath given away! Lear, i. 

all thy other titles thou hast given away — i. 

and i^iven him notice, that the duke .... — 11. 

intelligence is given where you are hid . . — ii. 

hast [A<i(.-didstj thou riven [Kiif.-giveJ — iii. 

hast given way to his impatience — iii. 

given private time to you Hamlet, i. 

and hath given countenance to hit Bpccch — 

than may be given you 

now, Hamlet, hear: 'tis (?ivcn out . 

liavc you given him any Iiard words 

mark, hatli given nie this 

and place, all given to mine ear 

or given my heart a working — _n. 

Gfxl hath given j'ou one face — ill. 

they were given me by Claudio — iv. 

if you ha\e not given her leave Ollutlo, i. 

'fore heaviii, they have given me a rouse — ii. 

lie hath devoted and given uphiinsclf. . .. — 

and he hath given it to his whore 

given to captivity me anil my utmost hoi>C8 

and vet he has g'iven me Fatipf\"iiig — v 

GlVK"K-we thank the giver. 7'i/uf.Vn.o/Oroiia, ti 

till thou the lie giver, and timt lie. . Hiclmrd II. iv 

heat again to the first giver.. Troilui t- Crru'dn, iii 

but breeds the giver a return . . Tiinon nf Alhcuij i 

wax poor, when givers prove unkind. . llnmM, iii 
IjlVKTlI— givcth many wounds ....Mltnryl'l. ii 



1 

— iii. 1 

— iii. 1 



— i. 3 

— i. & 

— ii. 1 

— ii. 2 



— iv. 1 



— . 11. () 



[ 305 ] 

GIVING— giving a gentle kiss . . TiroO'en, of Ver. 11. 

us I am from giving hiin cause. . . . Merry Wines, ii. 

stealing, and giving odour Twtl/lh \ighl, i. 

his givings out were of Meat, for Meat. i. 

a giving hand, though foul Luee'iL. Lost, Iv. 

nor by givin- of cvf.ss Merchant of Venice, 1. 

forevii, loi i\ii iiiome — Iv. 

asworlohii (I .. i< iiig thy 8um..4iryou Li'/ie l'^ ii. 

and giMii ; Im ; III loMv.ain — ii. 

bv givini; love, \ .MO ,-orrow and my — iii. 

and, giving liim Ihe lie, Ulivcs him Macbeth, l\. 

honour givili(j: hand ol'(.'ooir-de-lioii./Ci;i^' Jo/im, i. 

by giving it tile wiirsliipof revenge .. — iv. 

from giving reins and spurs to my . . Itichard II. i. 

his life; giviiii; him liieatli, the traitor — v. 

giving diieetion doth iVoin haioiiring.l llcnnjir. ii, 

wit wasted in giving reckon iiigs .. . .'Ulan 'jW. i. 

giving full trojihy, signal Henry I', v. (chorus 

giving my verdict on the white ....i Henry I'l. ii. 

for giving up of Normandy unto ,,'illenryl'l. iv. 

about the giving up of some more .. — iv. 

by giving the house of Lancaster ....3i/e/oj/f/. 

did, giving no ground unto the 

released from gi\ iiig aid, which late 

am not in the giving vein to-day ..llichard III. iv. 

about the giving back the great .. Henry I' 1 1 1, iii. 

in giving him his right Tiinon of Athens, ii. 

giving our holy virgins to the — y. 

that, giving itself the lie Coriolanns, ii. 

in giving him our own voices with .. — ii. 

throats tear, with giving him glory .. — V. 

giving my self a \ohiiilary wound. Jm'.s'"s Cnrsar, ii. 

will lie stroiii; with us for giving ovcr../'«'ric(t".!, iv. 

as my giving out her beauty stir .... — iv. 

by giving rihcrty to thine eyes ..Romeo ^-Juliet. 1. 

take some occasion without giving?., — iii. 

giving to vou no further licisomU Ilamlcl, i. 

daugliler.'giviiig more li^'lit than heat — i. 

or such ;iml)iLriious giviiiu out, to note — i. 

this is the monkey's own giving out ..Olhelto.'w. 
GIV'8T— thou for truth giv'st out . . A'ljig John, iv. 

that not only giv'st me cause Richnril II. iv. 

and give such sarcenet surety for ..\ Henry W. iii. 

thou that giv'st whores indulgences .1 //('«;)/>'/. i. 

thou giv'st so long, Ximon .... Titnon of Athens,^ i. 

I'll take the gold thou giv'st me .... — iv. 

thou giv'st me somewhat to repair .... Pericles, ii. 

thy words before thou giv'st them .... Othello, iii. 
GI/AD— to weci) at what I am glad of. , Tempest, iii. 

so glad of this as they — iii. 

1 am right glad that he's so — iii. 

all the blessings of a glad father .... — v. 

will he glad of you TwoGen.of I'^rona, iii. 

held nie ^1 ad of such a doom — i v. 

and will he glad to do my Merry H'ires, i. 

I am glad to see your worship's well — i. 

1 am glad to see you — i. 

I am glad to see you, good — i. 

I am glad I am so acquit of this .... — i. 

I am glad he went not in himself — i. 

I am glad he is so quiet — i. 

I shall be glad to he your servant — ii. 

I shall be glad, if he have — iii. 

why, I am glad of it — iii. 

truly, I am so glad you have — iv. 

I am glad, the fat knight is — iv. 

but I am glad the knight is not here — iv. 

I shall make my master glad with .. — iv. 

I am glad, though you have ta'en.... — v. 

wouldst thou not be glad to have. Tuelflh Night, ii. 

glad to give out a commission . . Meas.for Meas. ii. 

they are glad tochoose me for them.. — ii. 

yvhich he is most glad to receive .... — iii. 

be glad to receive some instruction . . — iv. 

we are glad to see you — v. 

will he very much glad of it Much.-ido, i. 

I am ghul to hear it — iii. 

yvell, I am glad that all tilings sort .. — v. 

so far am I glad it so did sort . . Mid. jV. Dream, iii. 

I would he glad to see it Lore's L. Lost, ii. 

I am glad this parcel of wooers. Merch of I'enice, 1. 

I should be glad of his approach .... — i. 

father, I am glad you are come — ii. 

I am glad 'tis night, you do not — ii. 

T am glad on't; 1 desire no — ii. 

I am glad of it. I'll idaguehim (JV/).) — iii. 

I know, he will be glad of our success — iii. 

I am heartily glad I came hither. . As you Like il. i. 

flad of other men's good — iii. 
am glad of your departure .'. — iii. 

I am very glad to see you — iii. 

1 am gla»l j lest the rest go All's ll'ell, 11. 

sorry, that he'll be glad of this — iv. 

glad that you thus continue your. Taminf^ ofSh. 1. 

I am glad he is come, howsoe'er — iii. 

I'll make him glad to seem Vincentio — iv. 
1 am ghul, you did not nurse him. Winter iTale, ii. 

I am glad at heart to be so rid — iii. 

1 am glad to see you in this. . Comedy i.f Errors, ii. 
heartily as he is glad he hath him.."A'i»^' John, iii. 
I am not clad that such a sore of ... . — v. 
glad am I, that your highness ....Richard II. iii. 
and would be (ilad he met with soinc.l Henry W. i. 

1 am glad you nave the money — ii. 

marry, ana I'm glad of it with — iii. 

am glad to see your lordship abroad. .2/fr«)i//;'. i. 

1 am glad to see you well — Hi. 

I am glad to sec you, in good troth .. — iii. 
I do not doubt ymi. I am glad of it.. — iv. 

1 am glad to sec your worship — v. 

we are glad, the llauphin i- >o [i!easaiit.//p/ir(//M. 
as we are now ghul to laliold .. .;.... — v. 
I will he glad to hear you confess .... — v. 
1 am ghul thou canst s|>eak no better — v. 

and (ilad we 'seaped so well I Henry I'l. ii. 

are glad and fain by (light to — iii. 

were glad to he employed i Henry I'l. iii. 

health, and glad tidings, to your — iv. 

did glad my heart, witll lioiic allrnryri. iv. 

1 am glad to see your honour . ... Richard III. iii. 



GLA 



GLAD— glad, 'tis there; now I would. Hfiirj/ /'///. i. 

I am glad, they're going — i. 

I am glad, your grace is grown so .... — i, 

glad, or sorry, as I saw it inclined .. — ii 

sir, I should be glad to hear such news — iii. 

and am glad to have you therein .... — iii. 

I am glad, your grace has made .... — iii. 

and am right glail to catch this — v. 

I am glad, I came this way so — v. 

I am glail to clasp thee I'roilus fi Crrssida, iv. 

1 am glad you are wel 1 Tiinoii of Alliens, i. 

I am right glad that his health — iii. 

1 am glad on't; then we shall Coriolanus, i. 

I am glad to see your ladyship — i. 

that is not glad to sec thee! — ii. 

glad of your company (re/).) — iv. 

that would he glad to have this true — iv. 

I am glad, thou hast set thy — v. 

I am glad, that my weak words ..Julius Cwsar, i. 

the loimnon herd was glad he refused — i. 

I am (,'lad on't: what a fearful night — i. 

I shall he glad to learn of noble — iv. 

we have cause to be glad . . Antony ^ Cleopatra, ii. 

a heart that is not glad at tlie thing. .Cy»i6r(i'fic, i. 

1 am very glad on't. Your son's my — i. 

I was glad I did atone — i. 

I am glad, I was up so late — ii. 

1 am most glad you think of other .. — iii. 

I am glad to be constrained to utter.. — v. 

and am right glad, he is not standing — v. 

cordial of mine iigeto glad my heart!. TilusAnd. i. 

to glad your em, and i. lease I'crides, i. tGowei 

toglad her pi' i o r, il nate house — i. 

stored full, to,i ,,i li i,i _ i. 

would now Ir _ ImI , , t, , .1 _ i. 

threw him u-li I. . II. M I him glad — ii. (Gowei 

your presuice glails our days — ii. 

olfenee at that would make me glad ? — ii. 

I am glad of it with all my heart .... — ii. 

I am ghul to see your honour — iv. 

that 1 am glad Iliave not Leur, i. 

I am glad to see your hi;/hnes3 — ii. 

if thou shouldst not be glad — ii. 

ri"ht glad I am, he was not Romeo 4' Juliet, i. 

why, 1 am glad on't; this is well .... — iv. 

I am glad to see you well : Iloratio .... Hamlet, i. 

I am very glad to see you; good even, sir — i. 

1 am glad to see thee well — ii. 

I am glad of it; a knavish speech — iv. 

I am glad at soul I have no other child.. 0/Ac»o, i. 

I um gl.ad on't; 'tis a worthy governor .. — ii. 

I am glad of this; for row I shall have .. — iii. 

I am glatl, I have tomid this napkin .... — iii. 

I am very ghul to see you, signior — iv. 

by my troth, I'm glad on't Of/J.) — iv. 

1 am glad to see you. How do vou, Cassio? — v. 

Desdemonal I am glad thy fatlier's dead — v. 
GLADDlCD-bt ^dadded in't by >w. .Henry nil. \i. 
GLADUING-gladdiiij; of your highness - v. 
GLADLY— gladly, my lord. . Measure for Measure, i. 

I'll gladly learn — ii, 

I would gladly have him see his All's Well, iv. 

would most gladly know the issue. Winter'sTnte, v. 

would gladly have embraced. . Comedy of Enors, i. 

very gladly. Till then, enough Macbeih, i. 

his weary joints would gladly rise .. Richard II. v. 

but gladly would be better satisfied.. 2 Hen i-y/r. i. 

not the man that he would gladly Henry I', iii 

and, gladly (luaked, hear more Coriolanus, i. 

would gladly look him i'tlie i'ace. Antony SfCleo. v. 

receive iiim gladly, but not one follower.. /.e<ir, ii. 

fladly shunned w"ho gladly fled. . Romeo ^Juliet, i. 
would most gladly have forgot it Othello, iv. 

GLADNESS — tliine own gladiiess...4i»/owi-i7.-<'(/, iii. 

is couched ill seeming gladness . . Troilusf,- Cress, i. 

with most gladness Antony if Cleopatra, ii. 

GLAjMIS— hail to thee, thane of Glami3!.iiyar(.eM,i. 

I know, I am thane of Glamis — i. 

Glamis, and thane of Cawdor — i. 

Glamis thou art, and Cawdor — 1. 

thoud'st have, greatGlamis — i. 

great Glamis! wortli.v Cawdor! — i. 
rlamis hath murdered sleep — ii. 

King, Cawdor, Glamis, all — iii. 

GLANCE— to the sweet glances.. Tiro Gen. of Ver. i. 

then to glance from him io.Measurefhr Measure, v. 

glance at my credit with Ilippolyta.A/iii. A'. Dr. ii. 

doth glance from heaven to eurtli .... — v. 

varied object in his glance Lore's L. Lost, v. 

squandering glances of the fool . . As you Like il, ii. 

as the jest diu glance away.. .. Taming o.t'Shrctr, v. 

vouchsafe one glance unto the ground. 2f/eHry fl. i. 

did but glance a far-otf look — iii. 

the first glance that ever.... Troilus^Cressidn, iii. 

yet glance full waiideringly on us Pericles, iii, 

thev vet glance by, and scarcely bruise . . Lear, v. 
GLAN CE U— arrow hath glanced . . Merry Wives, v. 

in company, I often glanced M. Comedy of Errors, v. 

Ciesar's ambition shall be glanced at. Jii/iM<C/p«ur,i. 
GLANCING— glancing an \:ye..Merch.ofVrnice. iv. 
GI<AND1-;US— with the glanders.. /uminyn/'SA. iii. 
GLANSUALE-William Glansdalc ..\Uenryyi. i. 
GL.VUE- eyes which thou dost glare ..Macbeth, iii. 

look, how lie stands ond glares: Lear, iii. 

look you, how pale he glares! Hamlet, iii. 

GLARED- whoglarcd upon me tnliusCmnr, i. 

GLASS-save, from my gloss, mine own. Teinpesl, iii. 

her eves arc grey as glass. . 7'iro 6Vii. of I'nona, iv. 

yet Ifving in my glass Tirrlflh Sight, iii. 

OS yet the glass seems true — v. 

looKs in a glass, that Aiovti. Measure for Measure, ii. 

her silver visaee in the watery elass...Uii/,A'. yJi. i. 

what wicked and dissembUng gloss .. — ii. 

here good my glass Lure's L. Lost, iv. 

set tt deep glass of Rhcnisli yiine..Mer.of ymiee, i. 

'tis not her glass, but you AtyouLikeil,i\\. 

being |M-)ured out of a cup into a glass — v. 

the pilot's glass both told All's »VH, ii. 

hail 1 aghi.ss, { would Taming nfshreii;'\'\. 

not live U»e running uf one glass.. Winter's Tale, i. 



GLA 

GLASS— I turn my glass .. IVinler'sTale, iv. (chorus) 

to show myself a glass — i v. 3 

not a ribband, glass, pomander — iv. 3 

methinks, you are my glass . .Comedi/ of Errors, y. 1 
who bears a glass, which shows me . . Macbeth, iv. 1 
this paper, wnile the glass doth .... Richurd 11. iv. 1 
give me that glass, and thereiix will.. — iv. 1 
<> flattering glass, like to my followers — iv. I 
he was indeed, the glass wherein.... 2 Hem-j^/r. ii. 3 

he was tile mark and glass — ii. 3 

that never looks in his glass for love .. Henry f, v. 2 

for ere the glass, that now 1 Henry VI. iv. 2 

like the sun 'gainst glass 'IHenry VI. ill. 2 

look in a glass, and call thy image so — v. 1 

till I have bought a glass liichard III. i. 2 

have but one false glass — ii. 2 

my kingdom stands on brittle glass.. — iv. 2 
like a glass did break i'the riusmg. . Henry Vlll. i. 1 
tlian in tiie glass of Pondar's.. Troilus ijr Cressida,i. 2 

pride is his own glass — ii. 3 

pride hath no other glass to show.... — iii. 3 
I, yom' glass, will modestly idscovar. JuliusCtpsar, i. 2 

a glass that feated them Cymbeline, 1. 1 

for a man and his glass to confer .... — ir. I 

fair glass of light, I loved you Pericles, i. 1 

like one another's glass to trim — _i. 4 

seems like diamond to glass — ii. 3 

crack the glass of her virginity^ — iv. 6 

woman, but she made months in a glass.. Lear, iii. 2 

get tliee glass eyes — iv. 6 

the glass of fashion, and the mould.... Hamlet, iii. 1 

von go not, till I set you up a glass.... — iii. 4 

GLASbED— where they were glassed. Loue's L.L. ii. I 

GLASSES— at least two glasses Tempest, i. 2 

which, but three glasses since — v. I 

ay, as the glasses where they view.Mea.for Mea. ii. 4 

my tears for glasses Love'sL.Los', iv. 3 (verses) 

not pay for the glasses. . Taming of Shrew, 1 (indue.) 

even in the glasses of thine eyes Richard II. i. 3 

glasses, glasses, is the only drinking. 2Henri//A'. ii. 1 
take up the glasses of my sight I .... Coriolanus, iii. 2 

and hears with glasses JuliusCcesar, ii. 1 

(tLASS-FACED-glass-faced flatterer. Km. o/^^A. i. 1 

GLASS-GAZING, superserviceable Lear,\i. 2 

GLASSY — his glassy essence. il//;as!irc/')r^/easi/re,ii. 2 

the sun upon the glassy streams I Henry VI. v. 3 

his hoar leaves in the glassy stream . . Hamlet, iv. 7 

GLAZED— eye, glazed withblinding.nicAord//. ii. 2 

GLEAN-to glean the broken ears.^s you Like it, iii. 5 

wonder, how his grace should glean it .Henry V. i. I 

couspectuities glean out of this Coriolanus, ii. 1 

as from occasion you raav glean Hamlet, ii. 2 

GLEANED— would then be gleaned. ire/-, of Ven. ii. 9 

that may be thereat gleaned Winter's Talc,'vi. 3 

galling the gleaned land with hot Henry V.\. 2 

when he needs what you have gleaned. Hamlet, iv. 2 
GLEANING— goodness of gleamng. Hcm-i/ K///. iii. 2 
(iLEEFUL-make a gleeful hoa&fi.Titus Andron. ii. 3 
GLEEK— nay, lean gleek ....Mid. N.'sBream, iii. 1 

and Charles his glceTcs? IHenryVI. iii. 2 

on niv faith; but the gleek .... Romeo ^Juliet, iv. 5 
GLE EKING-gleeking and galling. . . . Henry V. v. 1 
GLENDOWER-fight with Glendower../f>cA. //. iii. 1 
the irregular and wild Glendower . . 1 Henry IV. i. 1 
the great magician, damned Glendower — i. 3 
liardimeut with great Glendower ... , — i. 3 
never did encounter with Glendower — i. 3 
as Owen Glendower for an enemy . . — i. 3 
steal to Glendower, and lord Mortimer — i. 3 
my lord of York, and Owen Glendoweri — ii. 3 
O Glendower. Owen, Owen, the same — ii. 4 
spirit Percy, and that devil Glendower? — ii. 4 
cousin Glendower, will you sit do^vn? — iii. 1 
as he hears Owen Glendower spoke of — iii. 1 
within that bound to Owen Glendower — iii. 1 
my father Glendower is not ready yet — iii. 1 

O that Glendower were come I — iv. 1 

father and Glendower being both away — iv.'l 
what mth Owen Glendower's absence — iv. 4 
to fight with Glendower, and the earl — v. 5 
X^ench, and one against Glendower.. 2 rreni-j/Zf. i. 3 
certain instance, that Glendower is dead — iii. 1 

but for Owen Glendower tHenryVI. ii. 2 

GLIB— I had rather glib myself . . Winder's Tate, ii. 1 
enconnterers, so glib of tongue.. Troihts <§- Cress, iv- 5 
of glib and slippery creatures .. Timonof Athens, i. 1 

for I want that glib and oily art Lear, i. 1 

GLIDE— gentle murmur glides.. TiooGen.ofVer. ii. 7 

in the church- way paths to glide. . Mid. N.'s Dr. v. 2 

with indented glides did slip away..'lsyo« Like, iv. 3 

may not I glide tluther in a day? . . Cymbeline, Iii. 2 

ten times flister glide than the . . Romeo ^r Juliet, ii. 5 

GLIDED— that slily glided toward3..2He)iryFi. iii. 2 

GLIDETH-more water gVideth.TilusAndronicus, ii. 1 

GLIDING— all these gliding ghosts.. yii(/Ks Casar,i. 3 

GLIMMEB-some fading glimmer. Comerfi/o/iVc v. 1 

the west yet glimmers with some .... Macfielh, iii. 3 

that it will glimmer thro' a blind . . 1 Henry VI. ii. 4 

GLIJIMERING- glimmering night. jUiJ. A". Dr. ii. 2 

yonder Venus in her glimmering sphere — iii. 2 

through this house give glimmering — v. '2 

GLIiMFSE— the fault and glimpse. Wens./orMras. i. 3 

that he hath not a glimpse Troilus S[ Cressida, i. 2 

revi.-it'st thus the glimpses of the moon. Hamlet, i. 4 

GLlSTER-all that glisters.. W«-. of Ven. ii. 7 (scroll) 

how he glisters thorough my rust!, ffinter's Tale, iii. 2 

and glister like the god of war King .John, v. 1 

GLISTERING- the glistering.. IVinter's T. iv. (cho.) 

like glistering Phaeton liichard II. iii. 3 

from glistering semblances of piety . . Henry V. ii. 2 

perked up in a glistering grief^ .... Henry VIII. ii. 3 

the zodiac in his glistering coach. , TitusAndron. ii. 1 

GLITTEKING-glittering 6trearas..Wrf. A'.'s Dr.j. 1 

cloddy earth to glittering gold King John, iii. 1 

glittering arms he will commend . . Richard II. iii. 3 
over the glittering helmet of my foe! — iv. 1 
reformation, glittering o'er my fa\>lt.\ Henry IV. i. 2 
glittering in golden coats, like images — iv. I 

gold? yellow, glittering Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

in glittering golden characters express. Pericles, iv. 4 



[ 300 ] 



GLOIiE— tlie great globe itself Tempest, iv. 1 

we the "lobe can compass soon.WW. N.'s Dream, iv. I 
she is spherical, like a gloXts.. Comedy of Errors, iii. 2 

is hid behind the globe Richard II. iii. 2 

why, thou globe of sinfid 'J Henry I v. ii. 4 

thou art in this world's globe ^2Henry VI. iii. 2 

make a sop of all this solid globe. Troilus fi Cress, i. 3 
along with thee about the globes. . TitusAndron. v. 2 

thou beacon to this under globe Leur, ii. 2 

holds a seat in this distracted globe Hamlet, i. 5 

that the aftVighted globe should yawn . . Othello, v. 2 

GLOOMING— a glooming peace.. /fowieo <lj- Juliet, v. 3 

GLOOMY— and the gloomy eh.aiie....\ Henry VI. v. 4 
ruthless, vast, aiidg^oomywoods?. TitusAndron. iv. I 

GLORIES — my glories and my state. /<('c/iari( //. iv. I 

lay apart the borrowed glories Henry V. ii. 4 

dispersed are the glories it included. . 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

'tis love I bear thy glories SHcnry VI. ii. 1 

his image, and renew his glories! — v. 4 

but their titles for their glories Richard III. i. 4 

wear these glories for a day? — iv. 2 

all my glories in that one woman.. Henry VIII. iii. 2 
feasts, pomps, and vain glories?. Timon of Athens, i. 2 

are all thy conquests, glories Juliusdesar, iii. 1 

his speech tending to Cajsar's glories — iii. 2 
to part the glories of this happy day — v. 5 

GLORIFIED— so much be glorified . . King John, v. 2 

GLORIFY— do glorify the banks — ii. 2 

with our stately presence glorify .... 1 Henry VI. i. 1 
we for thee may glorify the Lord iHenry VI. ii. 1 

GLORIOUS— is the glorious sun. . Twelfth Night, iv. 3 
lives in death with^glorious ..Much Ado, v. 3 (scroll) 
like the heaven's glorious sun ....Love'sL.Lost, 1. 1 

in the arts, glorious in arms — ii. 1 

in that glorious supposition Comedy of Err. iii. 2 

and kiss liim with a glorious victory . /vnig- John, ii. 2 
tlie glorious sun stays in his course . . — iii. 1 
by the glorious worth of my descent. /2ic/ia»d 11. i. 1 
the most glorious \Col. A'n<.-graeious] — ii. 3 
hath in heavenly pay a glorious angel — iii. 2 
in glorious christian field streaming — iv. 1 
in the closing of some glorious &a.y..\HenrylV,'\\\. 2 
his glorious deeds for my indignities — iii. 2 

to engross up glorious deeds — iii. 2 

to yon, as us, like glorious Henry V.W.i 

in this glorious and well-foughten field — iv. 6 
a far more glorious star thy soul .... 1 Henry VI. i. 1 
triumph in thy glorious prophetess! — i. 6 

may never glorious sun reflex , — v. 4 

altho' in glorious titles he excel — v. .') 

reach at the glorious gold... 2 Henry VI. i. 2 

or sell my title for a glorious grave . . — iii. 1 
like to the glorious sun's transparent — iii. I 
faith, lords, 'twas a glorious day .... — v. 3 
a cro\vn, or else a glorious tomb! . . ..ZHenryVI. i. 4 

her farewell of the glorious sun ! — ii. 1 

three glorious suns, each one a perfect — ii. 1 

impaled with a glorious crown — iii. 2 

encounter with our glorious sun .... — v. 2 
made glorious summer by this sun..fi/c/i(Trrf III. i. I 
therefore is the glorious planet . . Troilus Sf Cress, i. 3 
whose glorious deeds, but in these . . — iii. 3 
stained name, and they'll seem glorious — v. 2 
by the flame of yonder glorious heaven — v. 6 
glorious gods sit in hourly synod . . Coriolanus, v. 2 
miserable is the desire that'sglorious. Ci/indritne, i. 7 
a better head her glorious body fits. Titus Audi on. i. 2 
purpose to make men glorious . . Pericles, i. (Gower) 
were not this glorious casket stored.. — i. 1 

in the day's glorious walk — i. 2 

sought the purchase of a glorious beauty — i. 2 

gild his statue glorious — ii. (Gower) 

tliou art as glorious to this night. Eomeo Sf Juliet, ii. 2 
in action glorious I had lost these legs. . Othelln.n. 3 

Eomp, and circumstance of glorious war! — .iii. 3 
ORIOUSLY-shine as gloriously . ji//rf. .V. Dr. iii. 2 
GLORY-the uucertain glory of an. 7>o Gen. of V. i. 3 
herself the glory of acreditor.... itfeas./o!' Mots. i. 1 
hath all the glory of my overthrow . . Much.ido, i. 3 
his glory shall be ours, for we are.... — ii. 1 

no glory lives behind the back of — iii. 1 

in glory of my kinsman Hercules.. Mid. iV.'sDr. v. 1 
but his glory is, to subdue men .... Love's L. Lost, i. 2 

flory grows guilty of detested crimes — iv. 1 
hey thy glory through my grief — iv. 3 (verses) 
sodioth the greater glory dim... l/ercA.o/Fpju'ce.y. 1 

or show the glory of our art? Macbeth, iii. 5 

how high thy glory towers King John, ii. 2 

all days of glory, joy, and happiness — iii. 4 
till I have set a "lory to tliis hand . . — iv. 3 
into your hand tlie circle of my glory — v. 1 

state and glory of the land! — v. 7 

I see thy glory, like Richard //. ii. 4 

strikes at thy great glory — iii. 2 

to dim his glory, and to stain the ... . — iii. 3 
and threat the glory of my precious.. — iii. 3 
make glory base; and sovereignty .. — iv. 1 
a brittle glory shineth in this face (rep.') — iv. 1 

shall render every glory up \ Henry IV. iii. 2 

to share with me in glory any more . . — v. 4 

may heavenly glory iirighten it! IHenrylV. ii. 3 

rise there so full a glory, that I Henry V. i. 2 

praise and glory on his head! — iv. (chorus) 

plotted thus our glory's overthrow ..IHenryVI. i, 1 

in complete glory she revealed — i. 2 

glory is like a circle in the water . 

whose glory fills the world 

before whose glory I was great . . . 

have glory for this victory ! — m. 2 

ascribes the glory of his conquest. . . . — iii. 4 

this is the latest glory of tliy — iv. 2 

by all the glory you have won — iv. G 

whose life was England's glory — iv. 7 

obtained the glory of the day ? — iv. 7 

tends to God^ glory, and my — v. 1 

thy glory droopetli to the dust — v. 3 

pale your head in Henry's glory . . . .SHenry VI. i. 4 

kept that glory to tliis dav — ii. 2 

lo, now my glory smeared in dust .. — v. 2 
outlive thy glory, like my wretched. Ric/iarJ ///. i. 3 



— ii. 2 



GLO 

GLORY— glory of your royal house. A'/c/iard ///. iii. 
in the vapour of my glory smothered — iii. 
I envy not thy glory; to feed my .... — iv. 

thou woful welcomer of glory ! — iv. 

imperial type of this earth's glory.. .. — iv. 

disgraced his kingly glory — iv. 

when those suns of glory, those two. Henry Vlll. i. 

lost the view of earthly glory — i. 

look they glory not in mischief — ii. 

from that full meridian of my glory — iii. 2 

many summers in a sea of glory — iii. 2 

vain pomp, and glory of this world .. — iii. 2 

once trod the ways of glory — iii. 2 

may glory in such an honour — v. 2 

what glory our Achilles shares.. Troilus ^- Cress, i. 3 

■were it not glory, that we — ii. 2 

advantage of a promised glory — ii. 2 

if to my sword his fate be not the glory — iv. 1 

the glory of our Troy doth this — iv. 4 

stains the glory in that happy. . Timon of Athens, i. 1 
like madness is tlie glory of this life — i. 2 
wretchedness that glory brings us! .. — iv. 2 
who'd be so mocked with glory? .... — iv. 2 

for no less spoil, than glory Coriolanus, v. 5 

throats tear, with giving him glory . . — .v. .■> 

his glory not extenuated #. . Julius Co'sar, iii. 2 

I shall have glory by this losing day — v. 5 

partake in the glory of the action. .^?i<. ff Cleo. iii. 5 
played my glory unto an enemy's .. — iv. 12 

no less in pity, "than his glory — v. 2 

whom he served with glory Cymbeline, i. 1 

let it be your glorj', to see her tears. . Titus Ami. ii. 3 

emboldened with the glory of her Pericles, \. 1 

a countless glory, which desert must gain — i. 1 



ii. I 



iv. 1 



as jewels lose their glory, if neglected.. — ii. 2 

in that glory once he was — ii. 3 

height and pride of all his glory — ii. 4 

many's ej'es doth share the gXorj. Romeo ^Juliet, i. 3 

GLOSS — new gloss of your marriage ..Much Ado, iii. 2 

fair virtue's gloss (if virtue's gloss.. Love's L. I. ii. 1 

a commodity will lose the gloss with..^H'.! lydl, i. 1 

be worn now in their newest gloss Macbeth^ i. 7 

to set a gloss upon his bold 1 Henry VI. iv. I 

hath sullied all his gloss — iv. 4 

for all this flattering gloss iHenry VI. i. 1 

your painted gloss discovers Henry VIII. v. 2 

begin to lose their gloss Troilus ^- Cressida, ii. 3 

to set a gloss on faint deeds .... Timon of Athens, i. 2 

content to slubber the gloss of your new. Othello, i. 3 

GLOSSES— their freshness and glosses.. Tempest, ii. 1 

GLOSTER-in the county of Glostec . Merry IVives, i. 1 

plot the duke of Gloster's death Richard 11. i. 1 

for Gloster's death; I slew him not .. — i. 1 
the part I had in Gloster's blood .... — i. 2 
my dear lord, my life, my Gloster .. — i. 2 

to 'venge my Gloster's death — i. 2 

my brother Gloster, plain well-meaning 
not Gloster's death, nor Hereford's . . 

to Plash3', to rav sister Gloster 

dost know of noole Gloster's death . , 
when Grloster's death was plotted .... — iv. 1 
wert cause of noble Gloster's death . . — iv. 1 
Humphrey, my son of Gloster . . . .2Henry IV. iv. 4 

Warwick! Gloster! Clarence! — iv. 4 

duke of Gloster would speak with you. Hen7y V. iii. 2 
the duke of Gloster, to whom the order — iii. 2 
Gloster, 'tis true, that we are in great — iv. 1 

my brother Gloster's voice? — iv. 1 

my dear lord Gloster, and my good lord — iv. 3 

Talbot, Salisbury and Gloster — iv. 3 

and my brother Gloster, follow Fluellen — iv. 7 

Gloster, whate'er we like, thou IHenryVI. i. 1 

Gloster, why doubt'st thou of ray — i. 1 

it is Gloster that calls. Who is it ... . — i. 3 

it is the noble duke of Gloster — i. 3 

here's (lloster that would enter — i. 3 

Gloster, thou'lt answer tliis before . . — i. 3 
here's (jloster too, a foe to citizens .. — i. 3 
Gloster, we'll meet; to thy dear cost — i. 3 
abominable Gloster ! guard thy head — i. 3 

for the truce of Winchester and Gloster — ii. 
studiously devised Humphrey of Gloster — iii. 

Gloster, I do defy thee; lords — iii. 

unreverent Gloster! thou art reverent — iii. 
uncles of Gloster, and of Winchester — iii. 
bishop and the duke of Gloster's men — iii. 

prav, uncle of Gloster, mitigate — iii. 

wel'I.dukeof Gloster, I will yield — iii. 

kind duke of Gloster, how joyful am I — iii. 
when Gloster says the word, king Henry — iii. 
is this the lord Talbot, uncle Gloster — iii. 
Humphrey ot Gloster, thou shalt well — v. 

Gloster, York, and Buckingham IHenryVI. 1. 

my lord of Gloster, now you grow .. — i. 

Humphrey the good duke of Gloster — i. 

if Gloster be displaced, he'll be — i. 

duke of Gloster did bear him — i. 

breaks a stick of Gloster's grove — i. 

while Gloster bears this base — i. 

believe me, cousin Gloster, had not . . — ii. 

why, how now, uncle Gloster? — ii. 

Gloster, see here the tainture of — ii. 

dishonoured Gloster's honest name . . — ii. 
duke of Gloster, William of Windsor — ii. 2 

Eleanor Cobham, Gloster's wife — ii. 3 

stay, Humphrey duke of Gloster — — ii. 3 

and Humphrey duke of Gloster — ii. 3 

ah, Gloster, hide thee from their — ii. 4 

ah, (gloster, teach me to forget — 

my lord of Gloster is not come — 

Gloster is a man unsounded yet .... — 
our kinsman Gloster is as innocent.. — 

nay, Gloster, know, that thou — 

my lord of Gloster, 'tis my special hope — 
so myi^elf bewails good Gloster's case — 
who's a traitor, Gloster he is none ! . . — 
and Gloster's show beguiles him .... — 
this Gloster should be quickly rid . . — 
no straighter 'gainst our uncle Gloster — 



OJA)9TER— my lord: Qloster is dcad.S Henri/*'/, iii. 2 

double ileuth, now (ilostei'adciid.... — ill- 2 

nil, wooisimlorliloflir — ilj. 2 

oil thy coniluit sliiit ill (ilostci's tomli? — iii. 2 
1 will ereut.- Iliio ilul<o ot'Liloslur ..aifcHii/J'/. ji. 6 

Ueoigcof'lilo^nr; rnrCiloster'sdukeuom — ii. 

Kichiird .>i'chike..rGl.wtLT — .ii. u 

brutliorot'lilo-tcr. lit .Siiint Alban's.. — m. 2 

brother of (!lo.-lcr, loid Hustings — jv. 5 

by Iticliard duke of Gloster — iv. 6 

giKXl 01o.-tor, iind pood devil — v. 6 

Olarenee. luid Gloster, love my lovely — v. 7 
xmto tile trutit of Richard Glostcr ..Richard III. i. 3 

the duke of Gloster and your brothers — i. 3 

brother of Gloster, you niistnkc — j- 3 

we know your meaning, brother GloHtcr — i- 3 

my loi-d of Gloster, I have too long borne — i- 3 

my lord of Gloster, in those busy days — |. 3 

in my company, my brother Gloster — \- i 

methonght, that Gloster stumbled .. — ;• < 

I'll back to tlie duke of Gloster — i- I 

in the duke of Gloster's purse — \- i 

I will scud you to my brother Gloster — 1.4 

deceived, your brother Gloster hates you — i. l 

bid Gloster thnik on this — i- -1 

Wanteth now our brother Gloster here 



ii. 




ii 




iii 




111 




111 




111 




111 




IV 


•2 


IV 


i 


iv 


■i 


IV 


2 



OLDW— glow with ahnmeofyour Kiii'f.loliii, iv. 1 

Bpoldotli glow on Virmr'abtow .. ..JitliiitCirsar, i. 2 
to glow till- (Uliciite vht^vkH.. Anlony^Clmpalrn, ii. 2 
is Boinetliin^' t:linvH iipou mj' clieck .... Pciiclet, v. I 
heaven's hire il.itli l'Iow Itnmlrl, iii. 4 

GLOWlOD-glowed like jihiteil Mars.. ■Iiilnnt/^- ch-o. i. 1 



itcil; 
! lieat and stronger gin 
entygh 



tCol. Kut.} Gloster, we have done deeds — 
for mv good uncle Gloster told me . . — 
full of diinger is the duke of Gloster — 

ay, quoth my uncle Glostcr — 

miglity dukes, Gloster and Buckingham — 
uncle Gloster, if our brotlier come .. — 
[C'oi.K/i/.] my lord the duke of Gloster? — 
murder me, and my good lord of Gloster? — 
the hand of her kiiul aunt of Gloster? — 
lords of France and Burgundy, Gloster .. Lfur 

go you before to Gloster with these — 

occasions, noble Gloster, of some poise .. — 
whv, Gloster, Gloster, I'd speak witli — — 
where is my lord of Gloster? Followed. . — 
or false, it hath mode thee earl of Gloster — 

seek out the villain Gloster — 

farewell, my lord of Gloster — 

my lord of Gloster hatli conveyed — 

go, seek the traitor Gloster, pinion — 

of Gloster's treachery, and of the loyal .. — 
my most dear Gloster! O tlie differenee — 
the other eye of Gloster. Gloster's eyes! — 
but. O poor Gloster; lost he his otlier eye? — 
being -widow, and my Gloster with Iier .. — iv. i 
Gloster, I live to thank thee for tlie love — iv. 2 
great ignorance, Gloster's eyes being out — iv. 5 

for Gloster's bastard son was kinder — iv. 6 

thy name is Gloster: thou must be patient — iv. 6 

to Kdraund earl of Gloster — i v. 6 

as 'tis said, the has tai d son of Glostcr — i v. 7 

thou art armed, Gloster — v. 3 

supposed earl of Gloster — v. 3 (.herald) 

that speaks for Edmund earl of Gloster? — v. 3 

this is mere practice, Gloster — v. 3 

GI.OSTEKSIIIKE— 
love any woman in Glostershire.. A/err;/ IC/rps, lit. 4 
I'll make the best in Glosteishire — — v. i 
am a stranger here in Glostershue.. /(/cAuf/ II. ii. 2 

our town of Cieester in Glostershire — v. 6 

it is in Glostershire; 'twas where. . . . 1 Henry I >'. i. 3 
you shall inarch tlirough Glostershire — iii. 2 
me leave to go through Glostershire. i/Zenry/r. iv. 3 

I'll through Glostershire — iv. 3 

GLOVE— sir, your glove Tu-o Gen. of I'erona, ii. 1 

not mine, my gloves are on — ii. 1 

ay, by these gloves did he Merry IKieeJ, i. 1 

of Yead Mil ler, by these gloves — i. I 

by these gloves, then 'twas he — i. 1 

is but a cheveril glove Ttcelflh Ni'glil, iii. 1 

these gloves the count sent me Uluch Ado, iii. 4 

madam, this glove Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

bv this white glove — v. 2 

give me your gloves Merchant of Venice, iv. 1 

that her ohl gloves were on As you Like il, i v. 3 

this woman's an easy glove, my lord... •)(('.< »feH, v. 3 
so tit his custoinei'S with 'doves.. IVinler'sTale, iv. 3 
gloves, as sweet as damask roses . . — iv. 3 (.song) 
iMindage of certain ribands and gloves — iv. 3 

lace, and a pair of sweet gloves — i v. 3 

tape, glove, shoe-tve, bracelet — iv. 3 

o glove, and wear it as a favoiu- .... Richard 11. v. 3 
of steel, must glove this hand 2UenrylV.\. 1 

00 their gloves or their handkerchiefs. Henry V. iii. 2 

liere's my glove, give me another — iv. 1 

this is iny glove, I)y this hand — iv. 1 

why weur'st thou that glove in thy cap — iv. 7 

ever dare to challenge this glove — iv. 7 

can see my glove in his cap — iv. 7 

1 plucke<l this glove from his helm .. — iv. 7 
find himself oggricfed at this "love .. — iv. 7 
the glove, which I have givennim .. — iv. 7 
this glove? Know the giove? inp.') .. — iv. 8 
has strucli the glove wliich your majesty — iv. 8 

my liege, this was my glove — iv. 8 

this man with my glove in his cup .. — iv. 8 

that this is the glove of Alen'jou — iv. 8 

give me thy glove, soldier — iv. 8 

nil this glove with crowns — iv. 8 

you fur your gloves with reowii. 7'roi7uf ^ Crets. ii. 2 

I will throw my glove to death — iv. 4 

and you this glove. When shall I.... — iv. 4 

•wcar'st still by Venus' glove — iv. ."i 

and sigh-, and takes my glove — v. 2 

throw thy glove, or any token.. Tiinon of Athens, v. 5 

then tlier'e^ my glove: descend — v. D 

the matrons flung their gloves Coriolanut, ii. I 

with glove, or luit, or handkerchief . . Cymlteline,i. 4 

wore gloves in my cap Lear, iii. 4 

I were a glove uimju that hand. . Romeo ^Juiiet, ii. 2 
shoiihl entreat you wear your gloves . . Olhelio, iii. 3 
to fetch her fun, her gloves, her mask. . . . — iv. 2 

GLOVEll-a glover's paring-knife?. -Uprr|/I»'irci, i. 1 

GUJW-wa.-ted brands do glow ...Mid..\.l)ren„i,v. 2 

the red glow of scorn und proud .As you Like it, iii. 4 



GI.OWING-Coolcd. i.'lu,viM^- U«t..M.-r,!,n;, 
this lies glowing, 1 
gives ho. 
Gl.<)W\VOUM-t 
ut tlio liciv glowworm's eves ..Mid. ,V. Di 
hiH soil's li glowworm in thenight ....IVncli-s, ii. 3 
glou worm allows the matin to be ncar...;/<iMi(i'/, i. !, 

Gl.dZIO-liiv Ihetc glozes by Lord's L.l.osi, iv. 3 

youth luiclVuse have taught to gloze./(ii/"o'' II. ii. 1 

the Frciu'h unjustly gloze Il.nryr. i. 2 

hiijh-witteil Tumora to gloze. Tilus Andronirwi, iv. 4 

biit r willgloze with him Pericles, i. 1 

GLOZED— in hand have gloied.. '/roiViis .J- frfus. ii. 2 
GLUE— glue themselves in sociable.. fvi»i' John, iii. 4 

blood, that glues my lips Zllenry II. v. 2 

GLUED— glued many friends — n. 6 

have your lath glued within youT.TitiisAridron. ii. 1 

GliUT— gape at widest to glut him Temjiesl. i. 1 

GLlITTONO'US-gluttonousmaw8.riinono//l//i. iii. 4 

G LUTTEU-with his presence glutted. I HtHjy/ C. iii 2 

GLUTTON— where the glutton's dogs — iv. 2 

let him he damned like the glutton!. 2 Wcnry/r. i. 2 

didst thou disgorge thy glutton bosom — i. 3 

GLUTTONY— gluttony and diseases.. — ii. 4 

if the cook liclp to make the gluttony — ii. 4 

ONARIdOD— and gnarled oak. . .. /Uf<:j-../b>jVras. ii. 2 

GNARLING— for gnarling sorrow Richard II. i. 3 

and wolves arc gnarling 2Henryl'l. iii. 1 

GNAT— tionsfornied to a gnat! ..Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 
faster than gnats in cobwebs. .iV^-c/i-n/reiiii-e, iii. 2 
let foolish gnats make sport ..Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

a dust, a gnat, a wandering hair KingJolm, iv. 1 

and whither fly the gnats Xllenry I'l. ii. C 

till the flics and gnats of Nile../ln/o/i!/ .^-tV™. iii. 11 

the smallness of a gnat to air Ciiinhrlnn; i. 1 

is the sun dimmed, that gnats do fly. 1 iinsAirl. iv. 4 
are like to gnats, which make a sound. /'.■/'>/<•<, ii. 3 

a small grey-coated gnat llonifr, z^- Jnlii-I, i. 4 

GNAW_tlmt gnaws the bowels \ Henry 11. iii. 1 

who shall gnaw thee first 2//e;iry /7. iii. 1 

that he could gnaw a crnst at two. . Richard III. ii. 4 
see, he gnaws Tiis lip. I will converse — iv. 2 

the canker gnaw thy heart Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

rats tliither, to gnaw their garners . . Coriolanns,]. 1 
poisonous mineral, gnaw my inwards. . Olliello, ii. 1 
pardon him! and hell gnaw his bones! .. — iv. 2 
alas, whv gnaw vou so your nether lip?. . — v. 2 
GNAWED— that "fishes gnawed upon.Hic/inri/ ///. i. 4 
GNAAVING-gnawing with my teeth Coiiiti/y of Er. v.l 

I thank him, gnawing in two — v.l 

hand gnawing with thy teeth .... TitusAndron. iii. 1 

to ease the gnawing vulture — v. 2 

GNAWN— my reputation guawn aX.MerryfVives,\'\. i 

GO— go make'tliyself like 'I'emj)esi,'\. ■> 

and then go a bat-fowling — ii. 1 

go sleep, and hear us — ii. I 

60, king, go safely on to seek _ — ii. 1 

would cry to a sailor, go hail" (rep.) — ii. 2 (song) 

it will go near to remove his fit — \\. !■ 

wilt thou go with me? — ii. 2 

nor go neither — iii. 2 

I'll go furtlier off — iii- 2 

by'r lakiu, I can go no further — ii;- 3 

well, let him go — iii. 3 

before you can say, come and go — i v. I 

fo with me to bless this twain — iv. 1 
go, I go — iv. I 

wit shall not go unrewarded — iv. 1 

go to, carry this — iv. I 

go to — away! — v. I 

shall make it go quick away — v.l 

it shall go hard, but I'll.. .. Tu'o Gen.of rerona,\. 1 

I must go send some better — i. 1 

well, let us go — i. 2 

wiirt please you go — i. 2 

with tlicin shall Proteus go — i. 3 

to-morrow be in readiness to go .... — i. 3 
to-morrow thou must go 



therefore, I pray you, go 
go to, sir; tell me . 



— i. 3 

— ii. I 



■wilt thou go? 

well. I will go — 

come, sir Thurio, go with me — 

good Proteus, go with me — 

go on before; I shall — 

if thou wilt go with me — 

as to go to the ale — 

wilt thou go? — 

as soon go kindle fire — 

then let me go, and hinder — 

stayathome; and go not — 

never dream on infamy, but go — 

fresently go with me to — 

will go to her alone — 

come and go as lightly — 

him we go to find — 

must I go to him? — 

come, go with us — 

where it cannot go — 

f;o to thy lady's grave — 

lost, will you go? — 

and go with me , . . . — 

when will you go? — 

go presently, and take — 

go on; good Eglamour — 

f;o thou with her to — 
ct go that rude uncivil touch — 

conic, let lis go — 

I may not go in without Merry Ti'i 

yourself shall go first — 

truly, I will not go first — 

fo your ways, and ask of — 
nray thee, go to the casement — 

I'll go watch. Go — 



ii. 5 

ii. 5 

ii. 7 

ii. 7 



, go enfinirc for ... 

pray you, go and vetch me 

but for you,_wcll,go to 

go to, then, there's sympathy — 

if 1 would but go to hell 

or go thou, like sir Actteon 

whither go you, George? 

will you go, mistress Tagc? 

go in with us, and sec 

will you go with us? 

will you go with us to beheld it? . . . . 

will you goon, hearts 

go to bed when she list 

may come and go between j'ou both 



...Mtrry llirt 



— I. 1 



ve I encompassed you? go to; via! 

if money go before 

3'ou go against the hair of 

you must go with me 

go you through the town 

go about the fields with 

go before you like a man 

well met, mistress Page; whither go you 

that FalstafJ' is there. I will go 

and I pray you, all go with me .. 

some of you go home with me to dinne 

master doctor, you shall go 

go home, John Kugby 

will you go, gentles? 

I'll go hide mc 

go tell thy master, I am alone 

go to them ; we'll use this 

he's too big to go in there 

go take up these clothes 

let's go in, gentlemen 

pray you go master Pajje 

they can tell you how things go 

she must needs go in 

go fetch me a quart of sack 



go brew me a pottle ol' sack . 
let till 



— iv. 2 



IV. 2 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 
iv. 1 



:hc proverb go with me 

g ~t your ways and play, go 

winch way should he go 

may I not go out ere he come? . 
I'll go out then. If you go out . 

unless you go out disguised 

let's go dress him like the 

go nil; I'll bring linen for him . 

you are not to go loose any 

but let our plot go forward 

I'll go buy them vizards — iv. -i 

that silk will I go buy — iv. 4 

seeing her go through the streets ... . — iv. .^ 

you snail hear how things go — jv. .'i 

and bid her go, she shall go with — — iv. t> 

given consent to go with him — iv. (• 

go before into the park; we two must go — v. 3 

go you, and where you find — v. .'j 

let that go to make amends — v. .'> 

let us e\ery one go home — v. :j 

will you go hunt, my lord? Tu-elflh \ishl, i. 1 

marry, now I let go your hand — i- 3 

why dost thou not go to church in . . — i. 3 

weil, go thy way — i- ■'' 

go to, you're a dry fool — i- •"' 

go you, Malvolio — i- '• 

go thou and seek the coroner — i. J 

will you not, that I go with you? — ii. I 

of all the gods go with thee! — ii. I 

shall seem sport, and I will go — ii. I 

and to go to bed then, is early — ii. 3 

togotobedaftermidnight, istogotobed — ii. -i 

bitl him go? What an' if you do (re;i.) — ii. 3 

go shake your ears — ii. 3 

I'll go hum some sack, 'tis too late to go — 

fo to ; thou art made — ii. 

mean, to go, sir, to enter — 

shall we go sec the rcliqnes of this . . — 

best, first go see your lodging — 

go call him hither — 

wilt thou go to bed, Malvolio? — 

go to: thou art miuie — 

go off; I discard you; let me enjoy ^rep.) — 

go to, go to; iieace, peace — 

go on my master's griefs — 

that woiild rather go with sir priest — 

come, sir. I pray you, go — 

go to, go to, thou art a foolish — 

go another way to work with him .. - 

Vet go thy hand. Come, sir (rep.) .... — 

go with me to my house - 

thou shall not choose but go - 

go to my lady - 

now go with mc, and with ..... 



(letter 



iii. 4 


iii. 4 
iii. 4 


iii. 1 
iii. 4 



— IV. . 



ii. 




il. 




ii. 




I'-- 


2 


IV 


2 


IV. 


3 


IV 


3 


iT 




v 




V 




V 

'. i 




I 
i 

1 




1 





I go sir; but I would not — v- ' 

did not go forth of us .Measure for Measure, i. I 

let's go leain the truth of it — i. 2 

away, sir; you must go — ;• 3 

go to lord Angelo — j- .^ 

goto: what quality are they of? — ■' ' 

go to, go to; no matter for 

and go through with all 

go to; let that be mine 

and let go by the actor 

go to your bosom 

go to; it is well; away 

grace go with you I 

and go we know not where 

go to your knees, and make reatly .. 

go yon to Angelo; answer hij 

your apiiointment, go in your place. . 

he were as goml go a mile on 

farewell; go, say I sent thee 

go to kennel, Pompey, go 

go to, no more words 

grace to stand, and virtue go 

come, let us go; our corn's 

go to, sir; you weigh equally 



ii. I 
ii. I 

li. 2 



iii. I 
iii. I 
iii. I 



GO 



[ 308 ] 



you go not uiit; way lo e.xarmue 

I v'iU go before and sliow liim their 
go to; and a rich fellow enough, go t 
if you go on thus, you ■will kill 



GO— Twill go further than I meant.;>/ra./orilffa. iv. 2 

go in to hnn, and fetehhim out — iv. 3 

loolc forwiinl on the journey you shall go — iv. 3 

that I would wish it ?o — iv. 3 

by my troth, I'll go with thee to the — iv. 3 

thus wronged, heiiee unbelieved gol — v. 1 

I will go darkly to work with her — v. I 

go take her hence, and marry — v. 1 

go wilh him, provost — v. 1 

\\Q will go together Much AdOy i. 1 

take you, to go in the song? — i. 1 

CO to, i' faith: an' thou wut needs .. — i. I 

for the which I may go the finer — i. 1 

go you, and tell her of it — i. 2 

go you with me, and I will use — i. 2 

sluill we go prove what's to be done? — i. 3 

well then, go you into hell? — ii. 1 

go to, mum", you are he — ii. 1 

come, will you "o with me? — ii. 1 

ha! it may be, I go under that title — ii. I 

because they woiud go thither — ii. 1 

I will go on the slightest errand — ii. 1 

wlien mean you to go to church? — ii. 1 

the time shall not go dully by us ... . — ii. 1 

go in with me, and I will tell — ii. 1 

go you to the prince 3'our brother — ii. 2 

to then, find me a meet hour to — ii. 2 

will in-esently go learn their day . . — ii. 2 

but let them go, and be you blithe — ii. 3 (song) 

shall we go seek Benedick — ii. 3 

I will go get her pictm-e — ii. 3 

then go we near her, that her ear — iii. 1 

no, rather I will "o to Benedick — iii. 1 

come, go in; I'll sltow thee some .... — iii 1 

and then go I toward Arragon — i i i. 2 

go but with me to-nijjht — iii. 2 

take no note of him, but let him go.. — iii. 3 

let us go sit here upon the church-bench — iii. 3 

let us obey you to go with us — iii. 3 

drink some wine ere yoti go — iii. 5 

come let us go: these things, come thus — iv. i 

let me go. Beatrice,— in faith, I will go — iv. 1 

l)ut God should go before such villains! — iv. 2 

and it will go near to be thought so. . — iv. 2 

but I will go about with him — iv. 2 

you go not the way to examine — iv. 2 

■ iv. 2 

iv. 2 

. ^ . . v. 1 

let me go no further to mine — v.! 

and yet ere I go, let me go with — v. 2 

will you go hear this news, signior?. . — v. 2 

I wifl go with thee to thy uncle's — v. 2 

round ahout her tomb they go — v. 3 fsong) 

and then to Leonato's we will go — ' v. 3 

you shall go with me Mid.N.'sDreani,i. 1 

Demetrius, and Egeus, go along — i. 1 

fair Hermia, ere I go — i. 1 

I will go tell him of fair Hermia's .. — i. 1 

I must go seek some dew-drops — ii. 1 

moonligiit revels, go with us — ii. 2 

and I will go with thee — ii. 2 

well, go thy way: thou shalt not — ii. 2 

let me go: or, if thou follow — ii. 2 

I alone will go -- ii. 3 

out of this wood do not desire to go . . — iii. 1 

therefore, go with me; I'll give thee — iii. 1 

thou shalt like an airy spirit go — iii. 1 

where shall we go? — iii. 1 

about the wood go swifter than — iii. 2 

I go, I go, look how I go — iii. 2 

•whom love doth press to go? — iii. 2 

you are a tame man, go! — iii. 2 

so you will let me quiet go — iii. 2 

let me go: you see now simple — iii. 2 

iiiiy, I'fl go with thee, cheek by jole — iii. 2 

nay, go not back — iii. 2 

now, go thy way — iii. 2 

110 further crawl, no further go — iii. 2 

nought shall go ill — iii. 2 

if he go about to expound this — i 

thus wall away doth go — 

would go near to make a man look sad — 
well, sit you out: go home, Biron.. Loue'sL. Lost, 

and go we, lords, to put in — 

proudof employment, willingly I go — 

and go well satisfied to France again — 

but 1 go, the way is but short — i 

watched that it may still go right? .. — i 

to pray for her! go to: it is a plague — i 

trip and go, my sweet — iv. 2 

good Costard, go with me — iv. 2 

this same shall go — iv. 3 

good lover, let me go — iv. 3 

and you, go in peace away together . . — iv. 3 

fo to; thou hast it ad dunghiU — v. 1 

'U torture ere I go — v. 2 

as he is an ass, let hira go — v. 2 

I go woolward for penance — v. 2 

but go with Siijeed to some forlorn — — v. 2 

Bhoiild I go to church Merchant of l'e\i!ce, i, 1 

therefore go forth, try what — i. 1 

fo, presently enquire — i. 1 

shall make shift to go without — i. 2 

sirrah, go before;— whiles we — i. 2 

you need my help; go to them — i. 3 

will I show: go with me to a notary — i. 3 

and I will go and purse the ducats . . — i. 3 

go, father, with thy son — ii. 2 

go to, here's a simple line of — ii. 2 

best-esteemed acquaintance; hie thee, go — ii. 2 

I must go with you to Belmont — ii. 2 

misconstrued in the place I go to — ii. 2 

speak it privately, go — ii. 4 

come, go with me; peruse this — iL 4 

but wherefore should I go? I am not bid — ii. 5 

but yet I'll go in haste — ii. •') 

I am right loath to go — ii. 5 

I beseech you, sir, go; my young — ii- 5 

but I will go. Go you before me — ii. 5 



GO— I will go before, sir Merchantof Fenice, ii. 5 

well, Jessica, go in — ii. ."i 

Bassanio presently will go aboard .. — ii. B 

for who shall go about to cozen — ii. 9 

but I go away with two — ii. 9 

let fortune go to hell for it — iii. 2 

your good leave to go away — iii. 2 

madam, I go with aU convenient .... — iii. 4 

go in, sirrah; bid them — iii. .5 

go to thy fellows; bid them — iii..") 

first, let us go to dinner .— iii. 5 

go one, and call the Jew into the court — iv. 1 

and let the Christian go — iv. 1 

my principal, and let me go — iv. 1 

give me leave to go from hence — iv. 1 

but go we in, I pray thee, Jessica — v. 1 

why should we go m? my friend .... — v. 1 

go in, Nerissa, give order to mj' — v. 1 

and suffered him to go displeased away — v. 1 

let us go in ; and charge us there .... — v. 1 

let me go, I say AsyouLikeif, i. 1 

which now I'll go about — i. 1 

and gentle wishes, go with me — i. 2 

shall we go, coz? jiy: fare you — i. 2 

will yougo, coz? Ufave witliyou .. .. — i. 2 

whither wilt thou go? — i. 3 

whither to go, and wliat to bear — 1.3 

now go we in content, to liberty .... — i. 3 

Adam, wouldst thou have me go?.... — ii. 3 

have me go and beg my food? — ii. 3 

let me go with you — ii. 3 

master, go on; and I will follow thee — ii. 3 

I cannot go uo further — ii. 4 

is to be sold; go with me; if you like — ii. 4 

I can go no further — ii. C 

I go to find my fawn, and give — ii. 7 

go to my cave and tell me — ii. 7 

go off a little: go with him — iii. 2 

for though he go as softly as foot .... ■ — iii. 2 

go with me to it, and I'll show — iii. 2 

will you go? — iii. 2 

shaU we go with you to your chapel? — iii. 3 

go thou with me — iii. 3 

so he laughed, and let me go — iii. 4 

go hence a little, and I shall — iii. 4 

without a candle may go dark — iii. 5 

will you go, sister? — iii. 5 

go with me, Silvius — iii. .5 

go to: will you, Orlando — iii. 5 

good sir, go with us — iv. 3 

counterfeiting to him; will yougo?.. — iv. 3 

go with me and prepare Aliena — v. 2 

from hence I go to make — v. 4 

I durst go no further — v. 4 

there commendations go with pity .... All's Well, i. 1 

of this, Helena, go to, no more — i. 1 

good will to go to the world — i. 3 

and he must needs go, that the devil — i. 3 

go not about; my love hath iu't .... — 1.3 

speak truly, to go to Paris? — i. 3 

by what it is sliould go — ii. 3 

I am glad ; let the rest go — ii. 3 

go to, sir; you were beaten — ii. 3 

go with me to ray chamber — ii. 3 

and leave her bravely ; go — ii. 3 

go to, thou art a witty fool — ii. 4 

my lord will go away to-night — ii. 4 

let that go: my haste is very — ii. 5 

are not the things they go under .... — iii. 5 

let it go; 'tis but a drum — iii. 6 

magnanimous in the enterijrize, and go — iii. 6 

let death and honesty go with your . . — iv. 4 

you shall eat; go to, follow — v. 2 

I did go between them — v. 3 

go you to Bartholomew Taming of Sh. 1 (indue.') 

fo by, says Jeronimy ; go to thy — 1 (indue; 

am resolved : go in, Bianca — i. 1 

I may go too, may I not? — i. 1 

you may go to the devil's dam — i. 1 

Tranio, let's go; one thing — i. 1 

let him go while the humour — i. 2 

Fetruehio, I must go with thee — i. 2 

than perfume itself, to whom they go — i. 2 

sir, a word ere you go — i. 2 

let her go by. Yea, leave — .i. 2 

too blunt, go to it orderly — ii. 1 

go with me, and be not so discomfited — ii. 1 

will you go with us; or shall I — ii. 1 

let me go. No, not a whit — .ii. 1 

you may go walk, and give me leai'e — iii. I 

go to my chamber — iii. 2 

better ere he go to church — iii. 2 

entreat me rather go than stay — ?!!■'* 

nay, let them go, a couple — iii- 2 

come, gentlemen, let's go — iii. 2 

then go with me, to make — iv. 2 

go with me, sir, to clothe you — iv. 2 

ere I go to horse : look — iv.3 

I will not go to day; and ere I do — iv.3 

appointed me to go to saint Luke's . . — iv. 4 

as he says, or we shall never go — iv. 5 

choose but drink before you go — v. 1 

not go to prison. Talk not (jej!.) .... — v. 1 

we will content you, go to — v. 1 

Grumio, go to your mistress — v. 2 

for perpetuity, go hence in debt . . IVi7iler's Tale, i. 2 

thousands more that go before it .... — i. 2 

say so then, and let him go — i. 2 

not go; a lady's verily is as potent (rep.) — i. 2 

perceive not how I give line: go to, go to! — i. 2 

my lord, go then — _i. 2 

this action I now go on — ii- 1 

I'll go in couples with her — .ii. 1 

prevail not, go and see — iii. 2 

goon, goon; thou canst not — }']}' ^ 

and go not too far i' the land — }]]• ^ 

go tliou away ; I'll follow — iii. 3 

let my sheep go — iii. 3 

fo you the next way (rep.) — iii. 3 

then do go most right — iv. 2 (song) 



GO 



GO— I have known to go about .. IVinler's Tale, iv. 2 

then fare thee well ; I must go — iv. 2 

good brother, or go about to tliink . . — iv. 3 

get .you hence, for I must go — iv. 3 (song) 

me too, let me go thither — iv. 3 (song) 

you liave let hira go, and nothing — iv. 3 

a place, whereto you'll go? — iv.3 

go to then. She being none of your flesh — iv. 3 

to go about to make me the king's . . — iv. 3 

the sea-side go on the right hand .. — iv.3 

tipon which errand I now go toward — v. 1 

which lets go by some sixteen years.. — v. 3 

go together, you precious winners all — v. 3 
and go indeed, having so good. Comedy of Errors, i. 2 

and then go to my inn, and dine — i. 2 

they'll go, or come — ii. 1 

in this mist at all adventures go ... . — ii. 2 

this knave would go sore — iii. 1 

a man may go over shoes in — iii. 2 

while I go to the goldsmith's house, go — iv. 1 

will you go with me?. — iv.3 

come, Dromio, let us go — iv.3 

when I go from home — iv. 4 

masters, let him go — iv. 4 

if I let him go, the debt — iv. 4 

ere I go from thee — i v. 4 

come, go; I will fall — v. 1 

to go in person with me — v. 1 

take the pains to go with us — v. 1 

go to a gossip's feast, and go with. ... — v. 1 

come, go with us, we'll look — v. 1 

and now let's go hand in hand — v. 1 

thus do go about, about; tlii'ice Macbeth, i. 3 

I go, and it is done — ii. 1 

I'll go no more: I am afraid — ii. 2 

that go the primrose way to — ii. 3 

God's benison go with you — ii. 4 

go not my horse the better — iii. 1 

[Co/. Kn?.j go to the door, and stay there — iii. 1 

that you cau let this go? — iii. 1 

in the catalogue ye go for men — iii. 1 

so, pr'ythee, go with me — iii. 2 

his horses go about — iii. 3 

of your going, but go at once — iii. 4 

were as tedious as go o'er — iii. 4 

round about the cauldron go — iv. 1 

unless the deed go with it — iv. I 

co*ie, go we to tne king — iv.3 

go to; go to; you have known — v. 1 

some must go off ; and yet — v.? 

or else it must go wrong with King John, i. 1 

I would have you go before me — i. 1 

do child, go to it. grandam — ii. 1 

should go in quest of beauty — ii. 2 

love should go in search of virtue.... — ii. 2 

go we, as well as haste will — ii. 2 

1 maj' not go without you — iij. 1 

let go the hand of that — iii. I 

I beg, go not to arms against — iii. 1 

the side that I must go withal? — iii.l 

but let it go; the sun is in — iii. 3 

my blessings go with thee! — iii. 3 

ail shall yet go well. What can go well — iii. 4 

I pr'ythee, lady, go away with me . . — iii. 4 

noble Dauphin, gb with me — iii. 4 

your promise? go to, hold your — iv. 1 

fo closely in with me — iv. 1 

he colour of the king doth come and go — iv. 2 

I'll go with thee, and find the — iv. 2 

go after him ; for he, perhaps — iv. 2 

as good to die, and go, as die, and stay — iv. 3 

go 1 to make the French lay — v. 1 

by me, which way yougo.... — v. 3 

wliither dost thou go? what's — v. 6 

stay with thee, as go with me? Richard II. i. 2 

do not so quickly go — i. 2 

as to jest, go I to fight — i. 3 

since thou iiast far to go — i. 3 

banish him, and he shall go — i. 3 

and with him go these thoughts .... — i. 4 

and be secret, and myself will go ... . — ii. 1 

why, so! go all which way it will! .. — ii. 2 

fair for news to go to Ireland — ii. 2 

to go with lis to Bristol castle — ii. 3 

it may be, I will go with you — ii. 3 

and let them go to ear the land — iii. 2 

noble lord, go to the rude ribs — iii. 3 

o' God's name, let it go — iii. 3 

go thou, and like an executioner .... — iii. 4 

then give me leave to go — iv. 1 

he goes, thither let me go — v. 1 

come let's go; I am the king's friend — v. 4 

fo thou, and fill another room in hell — v. 5 
ootless 'tis to tell you, we will go . . 1 Henry IV. i. 1 

that take purses, go by the moon ... . — i. 2 

if you will go, I will stuff. — i. 2 

if I tarry at home, and go not — i. 2 

this adventui'e, that he shall go — i. 2 

no further go in this — i. 3 

go to; homo is a common — ii. 1 

and go merrily to London — ii. 2 

divide myself, and go to buffets — ii. 3 

but if you go— so far afoot — ii. 3 

whither I go, nor reason whereabout — ii. 3 

whither I go, thither shall you go too — ii. 3 

as hot lord Percy is on fire to go — iii.l 

should go so general current through — iv. 1 

go to the king; and let there be — iv. 3 

lord Douglas, go you and tell — v. 2 

a fool go with thy soul — v. 3 

lord John of Lancaster, go you — v. 4 

go to the Douglas, and deliver hira . . — v. 5 

fo in with me; and counsel every ..2Henryiy. i. 1 

cannot go, I cannot tell — 1.2 

willllive? Go,withher — ii. 1 

to take soldiers up in counties as you go — ii. 1 

go to; I stand the push of — ii. 2 

for God's sake, go not to these wars! — ii. 3 

but I must go, and meet with danger — ii. 3 

come, come, go in with me — ii. 3 



GO 



GO-I would not have you go off . 

urny thee, po down, good uiiciont .... — 

whiclv cannot go but tlurty nulos .... — 

I will see you ugain ere 1 go — 

to go out than T. Uo to; iKnce (.it;).) — 

mcndhini, iinil make hirn lit logo .. — 

coioi', th.Hi .-Imit go to the wars in . . — 
go in with me to iliniier. Come, I will go — 
Ihail a-liffl.ehan.i:eil 



•illeitryiy. ii. 4 I 
ii. 4 I 
ii. 4 



ii. 4 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 



— iv. 1 
_ iv. 1 
_ iv. 2 

— iv. 1 

— iv. 5 

— iv. 5 

— V. 4 
2Heinijri.i.2 



a^^ liil'I'e hanued, sir, asgo — iii- ^ 

>t it i^.i wliicll wav it will — ill. 2 

aiul away iigain wmiM a' go, andogain — i". "- 

will not Wotf until I lu'V hear — \v. i 

our news" shall go K lore us to. . . . .... . — iv. 3 

let them go; I'll through Glostcrshire — iv. 3 
the grcat^)odv of our state may go in — v. 2 

an' tlie child "I now go with — v. 1 

I cliarge you both go with me — v. 4 

fear no colours; go with me to — y- ;■ 

then we go in. to know his embassy . . Ihitnj I . i. 1 
go, my dread lord, to your great .... — .!• ^ 
no; to the siiital go; and from the .. — .ii- ' 
knocks go and coinc; G«l's vassals.. — in. - 

av, or go to death ; and aile pay — iii- 2 

go you and enter llarlkur — ]',]■ ■^ 

go down upon him — !!!■•; 

let man go free, and let not — V.\-° 

who will go to hazard with me — in. 7 

go with my brothers to my lords of . . — iv. 1 
von may as well go about to turn — — iv. 1 
"think'st thou, the ttery fever will go out — iv. 
I know thv errand, I will go with thee — iv. 1 

and good fuck go with thee! — fV. 3 

Crispin Crispian shall ne'er goby — iv. 3 

let liini go hence, and with his cap in — iv. 5 

our heralds go with him — iv. 7 

go you with me, uncle of Exeter — iv. 7 

come, go we in procession to — , '^- 8 

at their heels, go forth^ and fetch. . — v. (chorus) 
and Huntington, go with the king .. — v. 2 

fair sister, go with the princes — v. 2 

I will -o with them ; haply — v. 2 

that shall w to Constantinople — v. 2 

to go aljout luv preparation \ Henry I'l. i. 1 

I go to certify her, Tal bot's here — . j i . 3 

enter, go in; the market-bell — ii.l- 2 

ere we go, regard this dying prince . . — ij;. '' 

before we go, let's not forget •'■ " 

I go, mv lord; in heart desiring stiU 

go clieerfuUy togetlier 

g.) to the gates of Bourdeaux 

come, go; I will despatch 

blessing I command thee go 

stav, go, do what yon will 

well, go to; we will have no 

I go: come, Nell, thou wilt ride — 

I cannot go before 

I pray you, go in God's name 

thither go these news, as fast as.. — 
you go about to torture me in vain . . 

gi\-e nie leave to go 

ere thou go, gi ve up thy staff 

and go ill peace, Humphrey 

lords, let him go; please it 

all comfort go with theel 

come, Stanley, shall we go? 

and go we to attire you for our 

run, go, help, help! O Henry 

yet do not go away ; come 

presence thou darest go with me 

come, good Warwick, go with me . . 

O, go not vet', even thus two 

I go. And take my heart 

I go of message from the queen 

come vou with us, and let him go. . . 
thiukscorn to go in leather aprons . 

shall my palfrey go to grass 

go to, sirrah, tell the king from me . . — iv. 2 
and fain to go with a staff — iv. 2 

goto then, I ask but this — iv. 2 
ut such as go in clouted shoon — iv. 2 

now go some and pull down the — iv. 7 

than tliou go in their hose and doublets — iv. 7 
my lord, when shall wego to Cheapside — iv. 7 

you'll go with him? — iv. 8 

go some, and follow him — iv. 8 

we twain will go into his highness' .. — v. 1 

ere they will have me go to ward — v. 1 

nav, go not from me ZHeniyl'I. i. 1 

brother, I go; I'll win them — i. 2 

thine image ne'er shall go — W.b 

love to go whither the queen — ii. 5 

go where yon will, the king shall . . . 

to go with us unto the officers 

and go we, brothers, to the man 

vet, ere thou go, but answer 

lint, ere I go, Hastings 

let them go, here's the duke 

go, trinnpet, to the walls 

leave to go away bctinics 

go you iK'fore, and I will follow yon. /jic/mrii ///. i. 1 

ma"kc. betiire I let thee go — i. 3 

lords, will v.m go with me? — i. 3 

let it go; there's few, or none — i. I 

go vou to liiin from me — i. t 

ami yet go current from snspieioni ., — ii. I 

will you go, to comfort Kdward — ii. I 

anil go we to determine — ii. 2 

will you go to give your — ii. 2 

will go bv thy direction — ii. 2 

a parlou.t boy: go to, vou are too tlircwd — ii. 4 

Btav, I will g.iwithyoii — ii. 4 

lord HastiML^>. g') with hiin — 

will vou go with me? I go, my loril.. — 
what, win you go unto the Tower . . — 
thinking of them, go I unto the Tower — 
I'll go, my lord, and tell him what .. — 

the boar, and go .«o unprovided? — 

g.x.ii Ijcfore, ril talk with - 

what, go vou toward the Tower? 

'ome, will you go? I'll wait — 



iii. 2 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 



— iv. 2 



iii 
iii 


1 
1 

2 


iii 


3 


IV 


1 


IV 


3 


V. 


1 


V 


4 



— iii. 1 
iii. I 



[ 3f^9 ] 

GO— awhile, I'll go with you Richard III. iji. 

I go; and, towards three or four .... — in. 

go thou to friar Pen ker — ill. 

fCu/. K7i(.] now will I go — i"- 

and I with all unwillingness will go — iv. 

gothonto Hichmoii(l(,c/..> — iv. 

tohergo l.ajoUy tiiriviiigwowr.... — jv. 

go with me, ami in tlu- breatli ol bitter — iv. 

go tlien, inv motlwr, t.i tliy daughter go — iv. 

would'sttllmidotluM-e, beloie Igo?.. — xv. 

Igo, mv loiil. Stir with the lark .... — v. 

come, go witli nie; under our tents .. — v. 

what 'tis von ,a.. about Hcnrtj I' J II. I. 

that virtue must go through — i- 

a health, gentlemen, let It go round.. — i. 

go with me, like good angels — ii- 

you are too bohl; go to; I'll moke .. — ;■• 

weaic busy; go — ;!• 

tlierefore, goon: for no dislike — .n. 

that had not half a week to go — iv. 

that celestial harmony I go to — iv. 

so rude behaviour: go to, kneel ...... — iv. 

go to, go to; you take a precipice for — v. 

might go one way, and safely — v. 

must I go like a traitor thither? — y. 

than Helen's, (well, go to,) . . Troilus ^Ciessida, i. 

come, go we then together — i- 

why, go to then; but to prove — !• 

gothy way,Tioilns, go thy way .... — ;■ 

shall feast with us beibre you go — J- 

yet go we under our opinion still — — i- 

go we to him straight — .!• 

well, go to, go to. 1 serve here — n. 

let Helen go; since the first — ]>.■ 

for you all cried— go, go — i; 

Troy burns, or else let Helen go — — ii. 

go and tell him, we come to — !!• 

this cannot go to war — }\- 

let Aja.-? go to him; dear lord, go — J'- 

when they go from Achilles — iJ- 

go to him I Jupiter forbid ()c;7.) — n. 

if I go to him, with my armed — ii- 

O no, you shall not go — }}• 

his pride: let me go to him — in 

go we to council: let Achilles — _]]■ 

go to, sweet queen, go to — ]]]• 

i' the river: go to, go to — in- 

our head shall go bare — !'!• 

let me go and try — !!!■ 

go to. a bargain made — i|!- 

it will go one way or other — in. 

how go maidenheads? here — iv. 

go hang yourself, you naughty — iv. 

good uncle, go and see — iv. 

vou immortal godsl I will not go. . — iv. 
I'll go in, and weep — iv. 

1 will not go from Troy — Jv. 

true, that 1 must go from Troy? — iv. 

peers of Greece, go to my tent — iv. 

honour, or go, or stay — v. 

we go wrong, we go wrong. No — v. 

to those that go, or tarry — v, 

now, my good lord, go off — v. 

at something; will you go? — v, 

you shall not go: one cannot — v 

by all the everlasting gods, I'll go — v, 

unarm thee, go; and doubt thou not.. — v, 

come. Hector" come, go back — v 

but tliou Shalt not go — v, 

go in, and cheer the town — v 

1 go, my lord. Kenew, renew — v, 

go in to Troy, and say there — v. 

with comfort go: hope of revenge — v. 

from me anon : go, not away Timnn of Alliens, i 

and let the health go round — _i 

I go, sir. I go, sir: take the bonds — ii 

no account how things go from him.. — ii 

go to my steward. Please it — i; 

fool, I will go with you to — u 

go away merry ; but they enter ()<■;>.) — ii. 

go to; perchance, some single — ij 

go you, sir; to the senators — ii 

go to Ventidius: pr'ythee, be not sad — ii, 

as I understand how all things go.... - ni 

what, dost thou go? soft — in- 

thou'ltgo.stroni' thief, when gouty.. — iv. 

go on, here's gold, go on — iv. 

go great with tigers, dragons — iv. 

let it go naked, men may sce't — v, 

let sour words go by, and language . . — y. 
where go vou with bats and clubs? . . Corialanus, i. 

besides, if things go well, opinion .... — i. 

he let It go again; and after it again — i. 

you must go visit the good lady — i. 

my prayers, but I cannot go thither — i. 

conic, you shall go with us — i. 

in truth, la, go with me — i. 

go we to our tent: the blood — i. 

go von to the eitv; learn — i. 

will not you go? I am attended — i. 

for the love of Juno, let's go — ii. 

good ladies, let's go; yes, yes, yes — ii. 

five way there, and go on - n. 

ow yoii shallgo by liira — ii. 

and the honour go to one that would — ii. 

and cannot go without any honest .. — ii. 

let them goon; this mutiny — .ii- 

it \yill be dangerous to go on — lii. 

give me leave, I'll go to him — lii. 

let go. You might have iK'cn — iii. 

come, go with us; speak fair — iii. 

I pr'vthee, now, my son, go to them.. — iii. 

and go oboiit it. Jfnst I go — iii. 

liray you. let lis go: let them — iii. 

go about it. Put him to — iii. 

^vhither wilt thou go? — iv. 

pray let us go. Now, pray, sir — iv. 

crc you go, hear this — iv. 

come, let's go: leave this — iv. 

well, let UB go together — iv. 



GO 



GO— pray, go to the door Coriolanut, iv. ft 

follow your function, go — iv. 5 

O eoinc, go ill, and take our -- iv. •'< 

he'll go, he says, and sowle the — iv. 5 

buy this for a lie! Pray, let us go — iv. 6 

no, I'll not go; yon hear, what he — v. 1 

pray you, go to him. What should I do? — V. I 

nay, go not from lis thuH — v. 3 

come, let us go; this fellow had - v. 3 

fo you down that way towards .. ..JuliuiCmar, i. I 
would I might go to hell among — j. 2 

did I go through a tempe:it dropping — i. 3 

let us go, for it is after midnight — — J- 3 

go to the gate; somebody knocks — ii. 1 

Portia, go in a while; and by-and-by — i;. 1 
Deeiu.s, go tell them, Ca!sar will not. . — ii- 2 
give ine my robe, for I will go — ;|. 2 

fo in, and taste some wine with mc (.rep) — ii. 2 
must go in: ah me'. — ■'. 4 

let him go, and presently prefer his. . — in- 1 

go to the pulpit, Brutus — iii.- ' 

Cassins, go yon into the other street — ii|. 'i 
will follow Cassius, go with him .... — iii. 2 
let him go up into the public chair (ifi.'.) — ij). 2 
they would go and kiss dead Cajsar's — in. 2 

why friends, you go to do j'on — 111.2 

but, LepiduB.go you to C'aisar's house — iv. 1 

go to; you're not, Cassius — iv. 3 

then, with vour will go on — iv. 3 

that ever Brutus will go bound — v. I 

■who will go with mc? I will proclaim — v. 4 
goon, and see whe'r Brutus be alive — y. 4 
still should go with Antony ./f/ifoni/ ^Cleopatra, i. 1 
let him marry a woman that cannot go — i. 2 
we will not look upon him: go with usi — 1. 2 

you may go; 'would, she had never.. — 1. 3 

but bid farewell, and go — 1-3 

I go from hence, thy soldier — '■ 3 

and all the gods go with you! — i- ? 

let us go; come: our separation — .13 

men might go to wars — ij. 2 

go to then; your considerate stone .. — ii- 2 

let us go: good Enobarbus — ii. 2 

well, go to. I will — 11.5 

go to the fellow, good Alexas — n- .■> 

let him for ever go: let him not — in S 

that it might go on wheels! — n. 7 

till the world go round (rrp.) — ii. 7 (song) 

say,— Ca;sar; go no furtlier — in- 2 

thus I let you go, and give you to — iii- 2 

half afeard to come. Go to, go to .... — }!!• 3 

yourself shall go between us — iJ!. 4 

and the Phcemcians, go a ducking .. — iii. 7 

go to him, madam — ..'.''•" 

Cajsar, I go. Observe how — !!!•") 

go on : right royal — iii. 11 

go we to Tiini. Awake, awake, sir — iv. 'J 

word straight, how 'tis like to go — iv. 10 

bruised pieces go; you have been — iv. 12 

U Charmian, 1 will never go from hence — iv. l;i 

tliey do not go together — iv. 13 

go tohim, Dolabella, bid himyield.. — v. 1 

go with me to my tent — v. 1 

go with me, and see what I can — v. 1 

pr'ythee, go hence: or I shall show , . — y. 3 
beauty and her brain go not together. Ci/mMine, ;. 3 
you'll go with us? rilattend (!«•/>.).. — i. 3 

rather shunned to go even — j. j 

since doubting things go ill — .■• " 

and I must go up and down — ii. 1 

who lets go by no vantages — n. 3 

I will go there, and do't — .ij. 4 

could never go so slow — in. 2 

to JNlilford go, and find not her whom — ijj. A 

we'll go dress our hunt — iii. G 

go you to hunting, I'll abide — jv. 2 

for this time; go m, and rest — iv. 2 

go with me. I'll follow, sir — iv. 2 

by heavens, I'll go: if you w ill — '. . — iv. 4 
go before this lout, as he exceeds — — v. 2 
you know not which way you shall go — v. 4 

does the world go round? — v. b 

Komans, let us go: ransoniless. 7'>/usWiic/<onic«s, i. 2 
go to; have your lath glued within.. — ii. 1 

fond woman, let me go — jj- 3 

come, let us go, and make — »■ ■• 

mv hand shall go. By heaven (rep.) — in. 1 
go'with me; I'll to thy closet and go — iii- 2 

come, boy, and go with me — iii. 2 

would she have thee go with her — — iv. I 

if my uncle Marcus go — iv. ' 

come, go with me into mine armoury — iv. I 

come, let us go; and pray to all — j-v- 2 

go to the empress, tell her — iv. 2 

come, Marcus, let's go — iv- 3 

go thou betbre, lie ourembassador — iv. I 

then go succcssfullv, and plead for him — iv. 4 
go thou with him; 'and, when it is .. — v. 2 
go thou with them; and in the emperor s — v. 2 

I go, mv lord. Wch'oiue is peace Pericles, 1. 4 

ahnigtogo; (omit we all their dole — iii. (Gowcr) 

let her go; tb.ere's no hope — jv. 2 

which is her woy to go w ith warrant — — iv. 3 

prav vou, will vou go with us? — iv. 3 

Ogb to: well, well, of all the faults — iv. 4 

did you go to it so young? ,••.••;■ ~ !^'- ^ 

will you not go the way of women-kind? — iv. « 

go to the wars, would you? — iv. 6 

go not till he speak — v. I 

first go with mc to my house — v. 3 

go; there's my key; if you do stir (rc/j.) . . I.ear, 1. 2 

and go the fixils among — 1. 4 (song) 

go yon before to Gloster with these — 1. 5 

thv wit si. iill not go slipshod — .1.5 

to "go out otiny dialect — n. 2 

let go thv hold, when agreat wheel — 11. 4 

I'llgowlth thee: thy fifty — ii. 4 

if only toco warm were gorgeous — ii. 4 

O fool, I shall go mad! — ii. 1 

I'll speak ft prophecy crc I go — iii-i 



ao 



GO— go in thyself; seek thine own Lear, iii. 4 

but I'll go in; in, boy; go in first — iii. 4 

go in witli me; my duty cannot — iii. 4 

ttike his offer; go into tlie house — iii. 4 

importune him once more to go, my lord — iii. 4 

go with me to the duchess — iii. 5 

we'll goto supper i' the morning (rep.) .. — iii. 6 

tlien sliall you go no further — iv. 2 

it is thy business that I go about — iv. 4 

let go my liand: here, friend — iv. 6 

CO tliou further off; bid me — iv. 6 

let go his arm. Ch'ill not let go, zir — iv. 6 

let go, slave, or thou dicst {repealed) — iv. 6 

all my reports go with the modest — iv. 7 

desire him to go in — iv. 7 

sister, you'll go with us? — v. 1 

go with us. O ho, I know the riddle (rfp.) — v. 1 
grace go with you, sir 1 — v. 2 

fo after her ; she's desperate — v. 3 
have a journey, sir, shortly to go — v. 3 

hold me not, let me go Romeo ff Juliet, i. 1 

come, "0 witli me; go, sirrah, trudge — i. 2 
go thither; and, with unattainted eye — i. 2 

this mask; but 'tis no wit to go — i. 4 

go to; am I the master here, or you? go — i. 5 

you are a princox, go — i. 5 

come, shall we go? go, then; for 'tis — ii. 1 

come, go with me; in one respect — ii. 3 

not a penny. Go to; I say, you shall — ii. 4 

take my fan, and go before — ii. 4 

have you got leave to go to shrift ... . — il. .t 

marry, go before to field — iii. 1 

or both, must w with him — iii. 1 

lip, sir, go with me; I charge thee .. — ill. 1 

and to't they go like lightning — ill. 1 

will you go to them? I will bring..., — iii. 2 

go before, nurse; commend rae — ill. 3 

more care to stay, than win to go.... — iii. 5 
to go with Paris to saint Peter^s church — ill. 5 
go in; and tell my lady I am gone . . — ill. 5 
or bid me go into a new-made grave — iv. 1 
nurse, will vou go with me — iv. 2 

fo tliou to tfuliet, help to deck — iv. 2 
ride ready to go to church? Keady to go — iv. 5 

sir, go you in, and, madam (rep.) — iv. 5 

go with me to Juliet's grave — v. 1 

Friar John, go hence ; get me — v. 2 

brother, I'll go and bring't thee .... — v. 2 

obey, and go with me — v. 3 

go with me to the vault — v. 3 

stay then, I'll go alone — v. 3 

too desperate, would not go with me — v. 3 

fo hence, to have more talk — v. 3 
do beseech you, give liim leave to go..Hamlel, i. 2 

stay with us, go not to Wittenberg — i. 2 

fashion you may call it, go to, go to — i. 3 

it beckons you to go away with it — i. 4 

removed ground: out do not go with it.. — 1.4 

go on, I'll follow thee (lep.) — i. 4 

sjjeak, I'll go no further. Mark mc — i. .^ 

look you, I will go pray — i. 5 

let us go in together (rep.) — i. 5 

you may go so far. My lord, that would — ii. I 

that done, he lets me go — ii. 1 

go with me, I will go seek the king — ii. 1 

come, go we to the king — ii. 1 

go to your rest; at night we'll feast — il. 2 

but let that go. More matter — il. 2 

in great ones must not unwatched go — ill. 1 

why do you go about to recover — III. 2 

without thoughts, never to heaven go. . . . — Iii. 3 

you go not, till 1 set you up a glass — iii. 4 

lets go \>y_ the important acting — iii. 4 

and go with us to the king — iv. 2 

how a king may go a progress — iv. 3 

as you go up the stairs into the lobby. Go — iv. 3 
go softly on. Good sir, whose powers .... — iv. 4 

We go to gain a little patch — iv. 4 

go, my lord? I wlUbe wlthyou(rcp.).... — iv. 4 

go to tlielr graves like beds — iv. 4 

which bewejit to the grave did go. . — I v. 5 (song) 
let him go, Gertrude: do not fear [rep.)., — iv. a 
they shall go far with little — iv. 5 

fo to thy de;ith-bed, he never — iv. 5 (song) 
pray you go with me — iv. 5 

to a public count I might not go — iv. 7 

if the man go to this water — v. 1 

not to the purpose, confess thyself— go to — v. 1 
60 Gulldenstern and Rosencrantz go to't — v. 2 

let go: by heaven, I'll liave it — v. 2 

and Ills friends: you were best go In .... Othello, i. 2 

here in the liouse, andgo wltli you — i. 2 

come, captain, will you go? Have with .. — i. 2 

dear absence; let rae go with him — i. 3 

than to be drowned, and go wltliout her ■ — i. 3 

go to; farewell: put money enougli — i. 3 

letting go safely by the divine Desdemona — ii. I 
good lago, go to the bay, and disembark — il. 1 
let rae go, sir, or I'll knock you o'er .... — ii. 3 
away, I say I go out, and cry — a mutiny — ii. 3 
does 't not go well? Cassio hath beaten . . — il. 3 

go where thou art billeted — Ii. 3 

why, go to, then; she that, so young — Hi. 3 

come, I'll go la with you — Hi. 3 

honesty and love, I will go on — iii. 3 

is stabbing. Go to; where lodges he? — iii. 4 

woman, go tol throw your vile guesses.. — III. 4 
to tell It o'er: go to, well said, well said — Iv. 1 

will you? go to; say no more — iv. 1 

Bhe can turn, and turn, and yet go on ... . — iv. 1 

do but go after, and mark how lie — Iv. 1 

none, but what should go bj' water — iv. 2 

you are a fool ; go to — i v. 2 

good friend, go to him — iv. 2 

go in, and weep not — iv. 2 

goto; very well. Very well! goto! (rep.) — iv. 2 

and thither will I go to hini — iv. 2 

song to-night will not go from ray mind — iv. 3 
O did be so? I charge you, go with me . . — v. 1 
will you go on, I pray? — v. 1 



V. 2 



.11.2 



[ aio ] 

GO— with Cassio, mistress? go to Othello, v. 2 

outlive honesty? let it go all — v. 2 

where should Othello go! — v. 2 

forsake this room, and go with us — 

a word or two, before you go — 

GOAD — doth goad us on to sin . . Meas.forMeai 
is goads, thorns, nettles fVin/er's Tale, I. 2 

GOADED— goaded with most sharp . . Alfs iVell, v. 1 
wlilch we have goaded onward .... Coriolanus, II, 3 

GOAL— but to the goal Winln's Tale, i. 2 

can get goal for goal of youth . . Anlony 6 Cleo. iv. 8 
then honour be but a goal Pericles, ii. 1 

GOAT— ridden with a Welcli goat. . Merry Wives, v. 5 
of muttons, beefs, or goats . . Merchant of Venice, i. 3 
I will fetch up your goats, Audrey.^s you LiUe,\\\. 3 

with thee and tny goats — iii. 3 

gall of goat, and slips of yew Macbeth, iv. I 

the goats ran from the mountains.. IHejiri/Zr. lil. 1 

wanton as youthful goats — iv. 1 

and luxurious mountain goat Henry V. Iv. 4 

all Ills goats. There is one goat for you — v. I 
hence, old goat. We'll surety h.\m..Coriolanvs, III. 1 

hares, hot goats, and venison? Cymbelinc, iv. 4 

and suck tlie goat Titus AnJronicus, Iv. 2 

exchange me for a goat Othello, iii. 3 

were they as prime as goats — iii. 3 

goats and monkeys! — iv. 1 

GOATISH— to lay his goatish disposition . . Lenr, i. 2 

GOBBET— gobbets of thy mother's.. 2Henryri. Iv. 1 
into as many golibets win I cut it — v. 2 

GOBBO— Gobbo, Launcelot (rep.).Mcr. of Venice, il. 2 
honest Gobbo, or, as aforesaid (rep.) — il. 2 

GO-BETWEEN— or go-between . . Merry Wives, il. 2 

GOBLET— as a covered goblet As youLikc il. Hi. 4 

figured goblets, for a dish of\fOO(!L..Kichard II. iii. 3 
to me upon a parcel-gilt goblet ....lUcnrylV.ii. 1 

GOBLIN— go, charge my goblins Tempest, iv. ! 

foblln, lead them up and down. Mi'rf. A'. Dream, Hi. 2 
have one of sprites and goblins. Wiiiter's Tale, ii. 1 
we talk with goblins, owls . . Comedy of Errors, H. 2 
that mouldeth goblins sviiit.Troitus ^ Cressida, v. 11 

spirit of health, or goblin damned Hamlet, i. 4 

such bugs and goblins in my life — v. 2 

GOD— [In the various editions, heaven Is frequently 

substituted for this word, more especially iu the 

historical plays.] 

had I been any god of power Tempest, i. 2 

would controul my dam's god Setebos — i. 2 
it waits upon some god of the Island — i. 2 

that's a bravegod — ii. 2 

look down, you gods — v. 1 

to take this drunkard for a god — v. 1 

love were not a blinded god . . Two Gen. ofFer. iv. 4 
those that have the fear otQoi.... Merry Wives, i. I 
an old abusing of God's patience .... — i. 4 
now, the hot-blooded gods assist me.. — v. 5 

how near the god drew to the — v. 5 

when gods have hot backs — v. 5 

well, God give them wisdom Twelfth Night, i. 5 

God bless thee, lady — i. 5 

God send you, sir, a speedy infirmity — i. 5 

excellently done, if God did all — i. 5 

gentleness of all the gods go with thee! — ii. 1 

for the love o' God, peace — ii. 3 

the melancholy god protect thee 

God comfort tliee ! 

pray God, he be not bewitched 1 . 

and God have mercy upon. . — iii. 4 (challenge 

gentleman, God save thee — ill. 

pray God, defend me! — Hi. 

E ray God he keep his oath! — iii. 
ow vile an Idol proves this god! .... — lil. 

God b' wi' you, good sir Topas — iv. 

for the love of God, a surgeon — v. 

for the love of God, your help — v. 

men give like gods Measure for Measure, i. 

God help the noble Claudiol MuchAdo, i. 

I thank God, and my cold blood .... — i. 

God keep your ladyship still In — i. 

but keep your way, o' God's name .. — i. 

God forbid it should be so (rep.) — i. 

to the tuition of God: from my house — i- 

God's sending that way (rep.) — il. 

being too curst, God will send you no — ii. 
not till God malte men of some other — ii. 
for God defend, the lute should be like — ii. 
God match me with a good dancer! . . — il. 
and God keep him out of my sight .. — H. 
I would to God, some scholar would — ii. 

God, sir, here's a dish I love not . . — ii. 

and God give thee joy! — ii. 

cousins, God give you joy! — ii. 

shall be of what colour it please God — il. 

1 pray God, his bad voice bode no. . . . 
O God! counterfeit! there never was 
sweet Benedick! God give me patience! 
'fore God, and In my mind very wise 
if he do fear God, he must necessarily 

for the man dotli fear God 

O God of love! I know, he doth 

my lord and brother, God save you .. 

God hath blessed you with 

give God thanks, and make no 

and thank God you are rid of a knave 

sometime, like god Bel's priests 

Go<l give me joy to wear it 

but God send every one their heart's 

O, God help me! God help me! 

as, God help, I would desire they .... 
yes, I thank God, I ara as honest .... 
God help us! it is a world to see! .... 

well, God's a good man 

but God Is to be worshipped 

gifts that God gives 

as God did give her rae 

true, O God! 

O God defend me! how am I beset! . . 

why then, God forgive me ! 

O <jo(l , that I were a man I 

masters, do you serve God? 



— H. 3 

— il. 3 

— ii. 3 

— ii. 3 

— 11.3 

— ii. 3 

— Hi. 1 

— III. 2 

— III. 3 



— Hi. 4 



GOD 

GOD— serve God: and write God (rep.).Much.ido,\\. 2 

'fore God, they are both in a tale .... — iv. 2 

God's my life, where's the sexton? . . — iv. 2 

have writ the style of gods — v. 1 

contentyonrselt: God knows I loved — v. 1 

God bless me from a challenge! — v. 1 

and moreover God saw him when he — v. 1 

which, God be thanked, hurt not .... — v. 1 

and borrows money in God's name . . — v. I 

and will lend nothing for God's sake — v. I 

and I praise God for you — v. 1 

God save the foundation ! — v. 1 

God keep your worship — v. 1 

God restore you to health — v. 1 

may be wished, God prohibit It — v. I 

the god of love, that sits above.... — v. 2 (song) 

serve God, love me, and mend — v.i 

your father should be as a god . . Mid. N. Dream., i. 1 

God speed fair Helena! — i. I 

to bring In, God shield us! a lion .... — iii. 1 

like two artificial gods, have with.... — HI. 2 

the gods forbid! m earnest — iii. 2 

God's my life! stolen hence — iv. 1 

a paramour Is, God bless us! — iv. 2 

rcoi.] for a man, God warrant us (rep.) — v. 1 

1 hope in God for high words .... Lave'sL. Lost, i. 1 

God grant us patience ! — i. 1 

and God defend the right! — i. 1 

my soul's earth's god, and body's.. — i. 1 (letter) 

I thank God, I have as little patience — i. 2 

assist me, some extemporal god of rhyme — i. 2 

God bless my ladies ! are they all ... . — ii . I 

now, God save thy life! — ii. 1 

God s blessing on your beard! — ii. I 

I thank your worship. God be with you! — Hi. 1 

God dlg-you-den all! Pray you — iv. 1 

God give you good-morrow, master . . — iv. 2 

sir, (Jod save your life ! — i v. 2 

sir, you have done this In the fear of God — iv. 2 

God give Iilm grace to groan ! — iv.3 

tJod amend us, God amend 1 — iv.3 

Clod bless the king! — iv.3 

the voice of all the gods makes — iv.3 

I praise God for you, sir — v. I 

they will, they will, God knows .... — v. 2 

fair sir, God save you ! — v. 2 

utters it again when God doth please — v. 2 

nor God, nor L delight In perjured .. — v. 2 

(how white the hand, God knows!) . . — v. 2 

so God help me, la! my love — v. 2 

God give thee joy of him! — v. 2 

doth this man serve God? — v. 2 

not like a man of God's making .... — v. 2 

he's a god, or a painter — v. 2 

Grod save you, madam! — v. 2 

God defend me from these tV!0'..Merch. of Venice, I. 2 

God raade him, and therefore let .... — i. 2 

and I pray God grant them a fair . , — i. 2 

who, (God save the mark!) is — ii. 2 

by God's sonties, 'twill be — H. 2 

and, God be tlianked, well to live. . . . — II. 2 

marry, God forbid! the boy was the — ii. 2 

is my boy (God rest his soul!) aUve — H.2 

as far as God has any ground — 11.2 

God bless yoiu' worsliip ! — ii. 2 

you have the grace of God, sir — ii. 2 

some god direct ray judgraent! — ii. 7 

I thank God, I thank God: is it true? — iii. 1 

pray God, Bassanio come to — ill. 3 

why, if two gods should play some .. — iii. 5 

to God himself; and eartlily (rep.) .. — iv. 1 

nothing else, for God's sake — iv. I 

but God sort all! you are welcome . . — v. 1 

[Co/.] no, God's my judge, the clerk. . — v. I 
to mar that which God made ....Asyou Likeit,i. 1 

God be with ray old master! — i. 1 

and so, God keep your worship! — i. 1 

God help thee, shallow man! God make — ill. 2 

is he of God's making? — Hi. 2 

why, God will seiHl more — iii. 2 

God be with you ; let's meet — ill. 2 

and I thank tJod I am not a woman — iii. 2 

I would the gods had raade thee — ill. 3 

that the gods had made me poetical? — iii. 3 

I pray the gods make rae honest ! — iii. 3 

the gods I am foul! AVell, praised (rep.) — ill. 3 

well, the gods give us joy! — iii. .T 

God 'lid you for your last company.. — iii. 3 

nay then, God be wi' you, an' you .. — iv. 1 

and almost chide God for making you — iv. 1 

and so God mend rae, and by all pretty — iv. 1 

art thou god to shepherd turned? — iv. 3 (letter) 

God ye good even, William — v. 1 

ay sir, I thank God. Thank God — v. 1 

God rest you merry, sir — v. 1 

God save you, brotlier — v. 2 

God be with you ; God mend your . . — v. 3 

God 'lid you, sir; I desire you — v. 4 

to Hymen, god of every town — v. 4 (song) 

God send him well! the court's dll'sWeU,i. I 

I shall never have the blessing of God — i. 3 

'would God would serve the world so all — i. 3 

love, no god, that would not extend — i. 3 

God's mercy, maiden, does it curd . . — i. 3 

God shield, you mean It not! — i. 3 

and pray God's blessing into thy — i. 3 

if God have lent a man any — ii. S 

'fore God, I think so — ii. 3 

imperial Love, that god most high . . — ii. 3 

who, God? Ay, sir. The devil It is . . — ii. 3 

whither God send her quickly! (rep.) — il. 4 

thrice beaten: God save you, captain — it. 5 

God save you pilgrim! wiither — Hi..') 

the gods forbid else! So, now — Hi. .'5 

now God delay our rebellion — iv. 3 

God bless you, captain Parolles. God — iv. 3 

but I thank my God, it holds yet — iv. 5 

God save you, sir. And you — v. 1 

the office of God and the devil? — v. 2 

I praise God for you — t. 2 



GOD— forCiod'ssakc.opot of .. Taming <ifSh. 2(in(l.) 

would to Gud, I had well knocked .. — i. 2 

God save yon, sigiiior Oremiol — i. 2 

a stomacli, to t, o' Ciod's niinic — i. 2 

gentlemen, Go<I save you! — i. 2 

neighbour Gremio: God save you .. — ii. 1 

Oo<l send you joy, Petruchio — ii. 1 

and nittke!< a t^ixi of such acullion .. — iv. 3 

God give him jo;i! — iv. 2 

God save von, sfr! luidvon. sirl .... — iv. 2 

to Tripoli; if G<h1 lonil nie life — iv. ! 

marry, (»o<l foi-bi)!'. iiiul cnnu' to Padua — iv. 2 

O mercy God! wlmt niiisliiu',' stuft' .. — iv. 3 

the gods she mnv, with 111! my (rpp.) — iv. 4 

come on, o" (iixl's luune, once more . . — iv: 5 

then, Go<l be blessed, it is the — iv. .^ 

Godsend 'em good shiii|iinc'. — v. I 

O immortal gods! (,> line villain! — v. 1 

no, sir: God forbid J but ashamed .. .. — v. I 

pray God, sir, your wife scud you — v. 2 

« winner, God give you good-night! — v. 2 

the pods themselves, wotting H'inier^a 'Ai/e, iii. 2 

serve you as I would do the gods .... — iii. 2 

could not move the gods to look .... — iii. 2 

a meeting of the petty gods, and you — iv. 3 

the go<ls themselves, numhling tlicir — iv. 3 

and the ftrc-robed god, golden Apollo — iv. 3 

as ther were gods or goddesses — iv. 3 

sure the gods do this year connive at <is — iv. 3 

besides, the gods will have fullilled . . — v. i 

the blessed gods purge all infection .. — v. 1 

you gods, look down, and from — v. 3 

O had the gods done so Caineily of F.nois, i. 1 

for Go<rs sake, hold your hands — i. 2 

for God's sake, send some otlier — ii. 1 

hold sir, for God's sake: now your jest — ii. 2 

pray God, our cheer may answer — iii. i 

are yon a god? would you create — iii. 2 

and'says, God give you good rest! .. — iv. 3 

say, God damn me, that s as much (rep.) — iv. 3 

husband, God doth know — iv. 4 

God and the ro|ic-makcr, bear me .. — iv. 4 

God help, poor soids, how idly — iv, 4 

God, for thy mercy! — iv. 4 

hold, hurt him not, for God's sake . . — v. i 

for God's sake, take a house — v. 1 

which, God he knows, I saw not .... — v. 1 

God save the king! Macbeth, i. 2 

bid God yield us for jour — i. 6 

one cried, God bless \i3, and, amen (rep.) — ii. 2 

in the great hand of God I stand — ii. 3 

God's benison go with vou — ii. .| 

while then, God be wit1i you — iii. I 

now, God help thee, poor monkey I .... — iv. 2 

to appease an angry God — iv. 3 

but God above deal between — iv. 3 

good God, beti mes remove the — iv. 3 

pray God, it be, sir — v. 1 

God, God, forgive us all! — v. 1 

why then, God's soldier be he! — v. 7 

so, tiod l>e with liirn! here comes — v. 7 

God shall forgive you Coeur-de-lion's. K/Ho-/o/iH,ii.i 

whiles we, God's wrathful agent .... — ii. 1 

in the name of God, how comes — ii. 1 

then God forgive the sin of all — ii. 1 

to stand: God and our right! — ii. 1 

which we, God knows, have turned. . — ii. 2 

to the field, as God's own soldier .... — ii. 2 

and glister like the god of war v. 1 

how God, and good men, hate so ....Richard II. i. 1 

O, God defend my soul from — i. 1 

in God's name, and the king's — 1.3 

to God, m.v king, and my succeeding — i. 3 

by the grjice of God, and this mine arm — i. 3 

a traitor to my Godjmv king, and me! — i. 3 

to God of heaven, kmg Richard .... — i. 3 

thy lance; and God defend the right! — i. 3 

stands here for God, his sovereign (lep.) — i. 3 

bid God speed him well — i. 4 

pray God, we may make haste i. 4 

now, afore God, (God forbid, I say true!) ii! 1 

but what, o' God s name, doth — ii. 1 

God save your majesty! and well.... ii. 2 

now God m heaven forbid! — ii. o 

God for his mercy! what a tide — ii. 

1 would to God, (so my untruth .... — ii. 2 

God for his Kichard hath in iii. 2 

if he serve God, we'll serve him .... iii. 2 

they break their faith to God iii. 2 

show us the hand of God that iii. 3 

m.v master, God omnipotent iii. 3 

(Jod! O God! that e'er this — iii. 3 

o' God's name, let it go iii. 3 

in God's name, I'll ascend the (.rep.) — iv. 1 

would Gixl, that any in this iv. 1 

shall the figure of God's maiest.v _ iv. 1 

Oforliid it, Ood.that in aehris'tian.. — iv. 1 

God save the king! will no man (rep.) iv. 1 

Go<l pardon all oaths, that are (rep.) iv. 1 

God save king Henry unkinged .... iv. 1 

cried— God save tliee, Bolingbrokcl.. v. 2 

no man cried, Go<l save him! v. 2 

tliat had not God, for some strong .. — v. 2 

God knows, I had as lief be none .... — v. 2 

if G'kI prevent it not. I purpose so .. — v. 2 

God fur bis mercy! What treachery — v. 2 

1 would to God, my lords, he might v. 3 

God save your grace, I do beseech.... v. 3 

for God's sake, let me in v. 3 

I pardon him, as God shall pardon nic — v. 3 

a g<xl on earth thou art v. 3 

I pray (iixl make thee new v. 3 

as, (Jod save thy grace, (majesty I Henry IF.i.2 

I woidd to God, thou and I Knew..,. — i. 2 

GckI forgive thee for iti — i. 2 

and wounds, (God save the mark!) .. — i. a 

(whose wrongs in us (Jod parflon!) .. — i. 3 

OS Imth of you, God panlon it! — i. 3 

such cozeners! God forgive me! — i, 3 

of charge too, God knows what — ii. I 



. ii 


3 


ii 




11 




|! 




in 
iii 




111 




iii 


2 


iii 


2 


111 


2 


ill 


2 


III. 


3 


111. 

iii 


3 
1 



■ilhurijiy.i.2 

— i. 2 

— i. 2 



— iii. 1 



iii. 2 
iv. 1 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 
iv. 4 
iv. 4 
iv. 4 



GOD— gods me, mv horse! What ....111 

Godhelj) the while! a bad world .... 
prav (iod, vou liavc not murdered .. 

for God's saki', binls, cunvxv 

ofault,(ioa li.'lp llie wickf.l! 

and on voiir evilids i-nm n the goil of 
now, Gnil lielp tliee! To tlic Welsh.. 

and, as »ii»l sluill iiu-nd me 

1 know not whetliLr (Joil will 

God pardon tlieu! yet let lue 

and God forgive them 

this, in the name of God, I promise. . 

[C'o(.] fire that's God's angel 

[Col.1 (defy thee: God'slight! 

to thank God on. I am no tiling (rep.) 

I pray God, my girdle break 

well, God be thanked for tliesc rebels 

pray God, my news be worth 

for God's sake, cousin, stay till 

to God, you were of our determination 

and God defend, but still 

ond vow to God, he came but 

and God befriend lis, as our cause. . . . 

why, thou owest God a death 

did you beg any? God forbid! 

God keep lead out of mei 

nay, before God, Hal, if Percy 

for God's sake, come. By heaven 

and would to (iod, thy name in arms 
he that rewards me, God reward him! 

God may finish it when he will 

God give your lordship good 

I would to God, my name were not. . 

and God bless your expedition 

wilt thou kill God's officers 

and God knows, whether those that. . 

from a god to a bull? a heavy 

O vet, for God's sake, go not to these 
to "look uijon the hideous god of war 
for God's sake, be quiet 

thou dull god. wliy liest thou 

'fore God, a likely fellow! come 

we owe God a death; I'll ne'er bear 

God keep you, master Silence 

your grace of York, in God's name . . 
you were within the books of God? . . 
tlie imagined voice of God himself . . 
under the counterfeited zeal of God., 
let God for ever keep it from ray head! 

by the crown, O God, forgive ! 

laud be to God! even there my 

but vet, God forbid, sir, but a knave 
(God consigning to my good intents) 
'fore (Jod, you have here a goodly . . 

God save you, sir John! 

but 1 pray God, the fruit of her 

God bless thy lungs, good knight .... 

God save thy grace, king Hal! 

God save thee, m.v sweet boy ! 

God and his angels, guard your 

and God forbid, my dear and faithful 

for God doth know, how many 

in the name of God take heed 

and, by God's help; and yours 

in France, by God's grace, play a set 

lies all witliin the will of (jod 

save those to God, that run 

for, God before, we'll chide this 

'fore God, his grace is bold 

and God acquit them of their practices 
our purposes God justly hath discovered — 
but God be thanked for prevention . . — 
beseeching God, and you, to pardon me — 

God quit you in his mercy ! — 

the taste whereof, God of his mercy — 

since God so graciousl.y hath — 

our puissance into the hand of God . . — 

BO a' cried out, God, God, God! — 

should not think of God; I hoped .. — 
that by God and b.v French fathers. . — 

in the name of God Almiphty — 

cry, God for Harry! England! — 

God's vassals drop and die; and sword — 

60 God sa' me, 'tis shame — 

yet, forgive me, God, that I do brag . — 
yet, God before, tell him we will come — 

we are in God's hand, brother — 

God Almighty! there is some — 

1 thank you: God be with you! — 

no wings to fly from God — 

that making God so free an offer .... — 

what kind of God art thou — 

O God of battles ! steel my 

God's arm strike with us (rep.) 

God's will! I pray thee wish not 

Ciod's peace! I would not lose so great — iv. 3 
God's will, mv liege, would .vou and I — iv. 3 
your places: God be witli you all .... — iv. 3 
good God! why should thev mock .. — iv. 3 

(as, if God please, they shall) — iv. 3 

how thou pleasest, God, dispose the da.v! — iv. 3 
Alexander, (God knows, and you know) — iv. 7 
praised be God, and not our strength — iv. 7 
praised be God, so long as vour majesty — iv. 7 

God keep me sol our heralds go — iv. 7 

O God, thy arm was here — iv. 8 

take it, God, for it is only thine! .... — iv. 8 

or take that praise from God — iv. 8 

acknowledgment, that Go<l fought for us — iv. 8 

quite from himself, to God — v. (chorus) 

God be wi' .vou, and keep you — v. 1 

but, before (Jod, I cannot look greenly — v. 2 
God save your majesty! my royol .. — v. 2 
God, the best maker of all marriages — v. 2 
each other! God speak this amen! .. — v. 2 
than God, or religious ihurchmen ..MlenrijFI.i. 1 



?'!/ y. i. 



— ii. 2 



iii. 1 



iii. 6 
iii. 6 
iii. 6 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 



— iv. 3 



rt no friend to God. 
that regards nor God nor king 



GOD— ogainst God's peace \ Henry VI, i. 3 Qirocl.) 

good God! that nobles should such .. — i. 3 

the joy that God liatli given us — i. ti 

prav God, slie prove not masculine .. — ii. 1 

God is our fortress; in whose conquering — ii. 1 

now by (»(fd's will, tlioii wrong'st him — ii. 4 

Go<l, as I dissemble not! bo help me God — iii. I 

God speed the parliuincnt! — iii. 2 

God be wi' you, my lord! we came.. — iii 2 

first to my God, and next unto — iii. 4 

God save king Henry — iv. ! 

60 help you righteous GodI — iv. 1 

(Jod and St. George! Talbot — iv. 2 

(Jod comfort him m this necessity! .. — iv. 3 

God! tliat Somerset— who ill — \v.^.^ 

tlien God take mercy on brave — iv. 3 

for God's Bake, let him have 'em .... — iv. 7 

tends to God's glory — v, I 

God knows, thou art a collon — v. 1 

witli — God preserve the good duke . .iUenrii VI. i. 1 

80 Gt»d help Warwick, as he loves.. .. — i. I 

what it doth bode, God knows — i. 2 

by the grace of (Jod, and Hume's — i. 2 

but God in mercy so deal with mv soul — i. .1 

prav (Jod, the duke of York excuse. . — i. 3 

Goil is my witness, I am i'alsely .... — i. 3 

for God's sake, pity my case! — i. 3 

go in God's name, and leave us — i. 4 

y tlie eternal God, whose name ... . — i. 4 

to see how flod in all his creatures .. — ij. 1 

now by God's motlicr, priest, I'll shave 11. 1 

now, (jod be praised! tliat to believing — ii. 1 

God's goodness hatli been great to thee — ii. 1 

God knows of pure devotion — ii. I 

ay, God Almighty help me! — ii. 1 

1 thank God, and saint Allian — ii. I 

O God, seest thou this, and bear'st .. — ii. I 

Gtod, what mischiefs work — ii. 1 

in sight of God, and us, your guilt .. — ii. 3 

such as liy God's book are adjudged. . — ii. 3 

and God shall be my hope — ii. 3 

God and king Henry govern England's — ii. 3 

o' God's name, see the lists (rep.) .... — ii. 3 

1 pray God! for I am never — ii. 3 

fellow, thank God, and the good wine — ii. 3 

and God, injustice, hathrevealed — ii. 3 

but God's will be done! — iii. 1 

so help me God, as I have watched . . — iii. 1 

more than truth, so help me GodI . . — iii. 1 

God forbid any malice should prevail — iii. 2 

pray God, he may acquit — iii. 2 

marry, God forfend! God's secret.... — iii. 2 

O heavenly God! How fares — iii. 2 

but how he died, God knows — iii. 2 

forgive me, God; for judgment — iii. 2 

blasiiheming God, and cursing men.. — iii. 2 

if God's good iileasure be 1 — iii. 3 

makes no sign: O Gmlforgive him!.. — iii. 3 

that I were a god, to shoot — iv. I 

save to the God of heaven — iv. I 

(Jod save your majesty ! — iv. 2 

sir, I thank God, I have been so well — iv. 2 

for, God forbid, so many simple souls — iv. » 

come, Jlarjjiiret; God our liope — iv. 4 

ignorance 13 the curse of God — iv. 7 

he speaks not o' God's name — iv. 7 

God should be so obdurate — iv. 7 

(Jod save his majesty! — iv. 8 

God save the king! (.iod save (lep. iv. 9) — iv. 9 

Gml's curse light upon you all; — iv. 8 

God on our side doubt not — \y.i\ 

1 pray God, I may never eat — iv. 10 

1 beseecli God [Co(. K»'.-Jove] on my — iv. 10 

feat God, how just art tlioii! — v. 1 

thank von Richard, God knows.. .. — v. .1 
no, God forbid, your grace should.... 3Henri//7. i. 2 

my sons, God knows, what hath .... — i. 4 

but, God he knows, thy share — i. 4 

open thy gate of mercv, gracious God! — i. 4 

fail'st (as (iod forbid the liour!) — ii. 1 

God and St. George for us! — ii. 1 

withhold revencie, dear God! — ii. 2 

for God's sake, lords, give signal .... — ii. 'i 

I vow to God above, I'll never — ii. 3 

to whom God will, there be the victory! — ii. .') 

if (Joil's good will were so — ii. •'> 

O God! methinks it were tt happy .. — ii. .'1 

O God! it is my father's face — ii. 5 

pardon me. G')d, 1 knew not — ii. .'• 

Opit3', God, tliis miserable age! — ii. 5 

we cliurgc you, in God's name — iii. 1 

in Gods name, lead (rpn.) — iii. 1 

Godforbid that! for he'll take — iii. 2 

and, bv God's mother, I, being — iii. -' 

God forbid, that I should wish (rrp.) — iv. 1 

let US be backed with God — iv. I 

BO God help Montague — iv. 1 

his friends, God and saint Cieorge I .. — iv. 2 

now that God and friends have — iv. r> 

after God, thou set'st ine free (rfp.) .. — iv. t! 

till God please to send the rest — iv. 7 

bv the grace of CJod, king of I';ngland — iv.r(procl.) 

if any such Iw here, as Godforbid.... — v. 4 

then, in God's name, lords — v. 4 

for God's sake, take away — v. 4 

O (Jod! forgive my sins, and pardon — v. U 
which done, Go<l take king Edward.BicAord III. j. 1 

foul devil, for God's sake, hence .... — i. 2 

(Jod, which this blood mailest — i. 2 

know'st no law of (Jod nor man — i 2 

then, God grant me too — i. 2 

witli (jod, her conscience, and these — i. 2 

therefore, for God's sake, entertain . . — i. 3 

God make your miiiesty joyful — i. 3 

GiHlgraiit him health! — i. 3 

whom God preserve belter — i. 3 

Goil grant we never may have (rrp.) — i. 3 

be that small, (i<Hl, 1 beseech thee .. — i. .'! 

which GikI revenge! — i. 3 

1 would to God, iny heart were flint — i. 3 



GOD 



[312] 



GOD— God, not we, hath plagued (,rep.) Richardlll. 1. 

God, I pray him, that none of you .. — i. 

God, that eee'st it, do not sutt'er it — i. 
and tliere awalce God's gentle-sleeping — i. 
he to yonrs, and all of you to God's . . — i. 

hy God's holy mother — i. 

(rod pardon tlieni tliat are the — i. 

that God bids us do good for — i 

God give your grace good resti — i. 

in God's name, what art thou? — i. 

like a traitor to the name of God — i. 

liow canst thou urge God's dreadful — i. 

if God will be avenged for the — i. 

make peace witli God, for you — i. 

to make my peace with God — i. 

war witli (xod by murdering me? ... . — i. 

God punish me "with hate ^ — ii. 

1 thank my God for my liiunility.. ., — ii. 
I would to God, all strifes were well — ii. 
God grant, that some, less noble .... — ii. 

OGodI I fe.ar thy justice — ii. 

God will revenge it; whom I will.... — ii. 

God is much displeased — ii. 

God bless tliee ; and put meekness .. — ii. 

for God's sake, let not us two — ii. 

nciglihours, God speed! Give you — ii. 

too true: God help, tlie while! — ii. 

no, no; by God's good grace — ii. 

no, no, good friends, God wot — ii. 

aU too near, if God prevent not — ii. 

b't well ; if God sort it so — ii. 

storm, but leave it all to God — ii. 

whicli God he knows, seldom, or never — iii. 

God keep you from them {rep.) — iii. 

God bless your grace with health — iii. 

on what occasion, God he knows .... — iii. 

God in lieaven forbid we should — iii. 

God knows, I will not do it {rep.). ... — iii, 

pray God, I say, I prove a needless . . — iii. 

Gofl hold it, to your lionoiir's good .. — iii. 

Gild keep the prince from all — iii. 

(J remeiuher, God, to hear her — iii. 

be satisfied, dear God, with our — iii. 

in God's name, speak, wlien is — iii. 

we more hunt for than grace of God! — iii. 

God and our innocence defend and guard — iii. 

cry, God save Richard, England's (.rep.) — iii. 

cried, God save king Richard — iii. 

marrj', God defend his grace should say — iii. 

earnest in the service ot my God — iii. 

I hope, which pleaseth God above.... — iii. 

but, God be thanked, there is no .... — iii. 

wliich God defend, that I should .... — iii. 

for God he knows, and you may .... — iii 

God bless your grace ! we see it — iii. 

God give j'our graces both a happy . . — iv. 

O, would to God, that the inclusive .. — iv. 

ere men can say, God save the queen ! — iv. 

wilt thou, O God, fly from such — iv. 

that foul defacer of God's handy work — iv. 

upright, just, and true-disposing God — iv. 
God witness witli me, I have wept . . — iv. 
dear God, I pray, tliat I may live to say — iv. 
and savs, God save tiie queen — iv. 

1 thank God, my father, aud yourself — iv. 
t-taid for tliee, God knows, in torment - iv. 
by God's just ordinance, ere from. . . . — iv. 

that God, the law, my honour — iv. 

why then, by God. God's wrong is . . — iv. 

in God's name, clieerl}'' on, courageous — v. 

then, in God's name, marela — v. 

kings it makes gods, and meaner .... — v. 

God give you (jiuet rest to-night I .... — v. 

God give us leisure for these — v. 

God aud his good angels, tight — v. 

yet remember this, God, and our good — v. 

ever been God's enemy (rr-p.) — v. 

then, in the name of God, and all these — v. 

God, and saint George! Richmond .. — T. 

God, and your arms, be praised — v. 

great God of heaven, say, amen — v. 

hj' God's fair ordinance conjoin (7cp.) — v. 

live here, God say, amen! — v. 

like lieatlien gods, shone down lienryVllI. i. 

ask God for temperance — i. 

God mend all! There's something . . — i. 

(Jod save you ! even to the hall. . — ii. 

lead on, o' God's name — ii. 

God's peace be with him? — ii. 

1 have done; and God forgive me! .. — ii. 
pray God, he do! he'll never know .. — ii. 
pray God, he be not angry. Who's there — ii. 
hiiri that does best; God forbid else! — ii. 

God's will! much better, she ne'er — ii. 

in God's name, turn me away — ii. 

i' tlie na me of God, your pleasure .... — ii. 

nay, before, or God will punish me .. — ii. 

wliich God's dew quench! — ii. 

but with thanks to God for — ii. 

(pray God, ye prove so!) — iii. 

full little, (iod knows, looking — iii. 

now, God incense him, aud let him cry — iii. 

ever God bless j^oiir highness! — iii. 

with the king. God bless him! — iii. 

tliy God's, and trutli's; then if — iii. 

lia'd I but served my God with — iii. 

God save you, sir! where have — iv. 

could give him, he died, fearing God — iv. 

God safely quit her of her burtlen — v. 

God, and your m.ajesty, protect mine — v. 

(iod's blest mother! I swear — v. 

the God of heaven both now aud ever — v. 

God turn their heart! I never — v. 

1 would not for a cow, God save her. . — v. 

(3od protect thee! into whose — v. 

God shall be truly known — v. 

O gods, how do you plague me. Troilus % Cifssida, i. 

well, the gods are above — i. 

by god's lid, it does one's hear! — i. 

[ fW. An/.] yet god Achilles still cries — i. 



jj 


2 


11 


3 


1H 


■i 


in 


2 


111 


■A 


111 


■i 


111. 


■A 


IV 


•I 


IV 


'I 


IV. 


2 


IV 


4 


iv. 


4 


IV. 


.■) 


IV. 


.■) 


V. 


2 


V. 


■I 



i. 1 
_ i. 2 

— 1. 2 

— i. 2 
i. 2 (grace) 



iii. 1 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 
iii, 3 
iii. 4 



iii. 6 (J 



GOD— which is that god in ofiBce . . Trmlus % Citss. 

make the service greater tliau the god — ; 

but I attest the gods, your full 

that thou art Jove, king of gods 

the gods grant! O ray lord! 

tliat dwells with gods above 

missions 'mongst the gods themselves 

and almost, like the gods 

God be wi' you, with all my lieart . . 

O the gods! ' what's the matter? 

O you immortal gods! I will not go . , 
O you gods divine! makeCressids .. 

that the blest gods, as angry 

have tlie gods envy? 

but the just gods gainsay 

it would discredit the blessed gods .. 

all ye gods! O pretty pretty pledge! 

if sanctimony he the gods' delight 

by all the everlasting gods, I'll go — v. 

the "ods have heard me swear. Tlie gods — v. 

for the love of all the gods — v. 

farewell: the gods witn safety — v. 

the gods have us befriended — v. 1 

Hector? the gods forbid! — v. 1 

sit, gods upon your thrones — v. 1 

all hnminence, that gods and men .. — v. 1 

1 call the gods to witness Timon of Athens, j. 

the gods preserve j'ou ! — i. 

if the gods will not! If trafflo do it {rep.) — 

PI utus, the god of gold — 

't hath pleased the gods remember — 

Oj'ougods! what a number — 

too proud to give thanks to the gods 

immortal gods, I crave no pelf .... 

tlie gods themselves have provided . 

O you gods, think I, what need we . . — 

so the gods bless me, when all — 

you gods, reward them I — 

'O you gods, I feel my master's passion ! — 
now, before the gods, I am ashamed on't — 
Servilius, now before the gods, I am not — 

now all are fled, save the gods ouly . . — 

the gods can witness: I know — 

a clear way to the gods. Good gods! — 

and the gods fall on you! — 

now the gods keep you old enough . . — 

should brook as little wrongs, as gods — 

the gods require our thanks — 

men would forsake the gods (rep.) 

religion to the gods, peace, justice .... — 

gods confound, (hear me, you good gods — 

let me be recorded by the righteous gods — iv. 2 

for bounty, that makes gods — iv. 2 

no, gods, 1 am no idle votarist — iv. 3 

ha; you gods! why this? what this (rep.) — iv. 3 

the gods plaf^ue tliee — iv. 3 

the gods confound them all i' thy .... — iv. 3 

the immortal gods that hear you — iv. 3 

which the gods grant thee to attain to — iv. 3 

thou visible god, that solder'st — iv. 3 

O you gods ! is yon despised — iv. 3 

the gods are witness — iv. 3 

perpetual sober gods! — iv. 3 

the gods out of my misery — iv. 3 

what a god's gold, that he is — v. 1 

protection of tlie prosperous gods .... — y. 2 

for the gods know, 1 speak Coriolanus, i. 1 

for tlie dearth, the gods, not the — i. 1 

who, under the gods, keep you in awe — i. 1 

that the gods sent not corn for — 

he will not spare to gird the gods .... — 

the gods assist you! And keep — 

the Roman gods, lead their successes — 

Ogodsl he has the stamp of JNIarcius — 

and the gods doom him after — 

we thank the gods, our Rome hath . . — 

the gods begin to mock me — 

is wounded, I thank the gods for't . . — 

the gods grant them true ! True?.... — 

God save your good worships — 

petitioned all the gods for ray prosperity — 

now the gods crown thee! — 

such a potlier, as if that whatsoever god — 

rae, the gods! you ravist not — 

the gods give you joy, sir, heartily .. — 

the gods give him joy, and make nim — 

God save thee, noble consul ! — 

we pray the gods, he may deserve ... . — 

as if you were a god to punish — 

the gods forbid! I pr'ythee, noble . . — 

now the good gods forbid — 

1 cannot do it to the gods — 

the honoured gods keep Rome in ... . — 

as free as I do pray the gods — 

the gods preserve our noble tribunes I — 

the gods! I'll follow thee — 

by the good gods, I'd with thee — 

the hoarded plague o' the fjods requite — 

1 would the gods had nothing else to do — 

you bless me, gods! — 

the gods preserve you both ! — 

now the gods keep you — 

the gods have well prevented it — 

if! he is their god; he leads — 

the gods he good to us! — 

the glorious gods sit in hourly — 

the good gods assuage thy wrath .... — 

which can make gods forsworn? — 

you gods! I prate, and the most noble — 

the god of soldiers, with the consent — 

thou barr'st us our prayers to the gods — 

to imitate the graces of" the gods .... — 

and the gods will plague tliee — 

the gods look down, and this unnatural — 

he wants nothing of a god, but eternity — 

the gods be good unto iis! (rep.) — 

first, the gods bless you — 

praise the gods, and maltc triumphant — 

name not the god, thou boy of tears. . — 
to tlie gods to intermit the plague. .Jzidus Ca 



111. .5 
iii. ti 

race) 
iv. 1 



i. 1 



ii.3 
ii. 3 
ii. 3 
iii. 1 
iii. 1 
iii. 1 
iii. 2 
iii. 3 
iii. 3 



GOD 



GOD— the gods so speed me, a.s\\oye.JulmsC(B>ar,i.2 

this man is now become a god — i. 2 

'tis true, this god did shake — i. 2 

ye gods, it dotli amaze me — i. 2 

now in the names of all the gods at once — i. 2 

too saucy with the gods — i. 3 

when the most mighty gods, by tokens — i. 3 

ye gods, you make tlie weak (rep.) .. — i. 3 

as a dish lit for the gods — ii. 1 

O ye gods, render me worthy of this — ii. 1 

by all the gods that Romans — ii. 1 

the gods do this in shame of cowardice — ii. 2 

the mighty gods defend thee! — ii. 3 draper) 

judge, O you gods, how dearly — iii. 2 

judge me, you gods! wrong I miue .. — iv. 2 

or. By the gods, this speech were .... — iv. 3 

O ye gods! ye gods! must I endure.. — iv. 3 

by the gods, you shall digest the venom — iv. 3 

ready, gods, with all your thunderbolts — iv. 3 

O ye Immortal gods! Speak no more — iv. 3 

art thou some god, some angel — iv. 3 

the gods to-day stand friendly — v. 1 

by your leave, gods — v. 3 

the gods defend him from so great . . — v. 4 
give the gods a thaukful sacn&cu. Antony i^Cleo. i. 2 

the gods best know — i. 3 

in swearing shake the throned gods — i. 3 

and all the gods go with you! — i. 3 

if the great gods be just — ii. I 

be it as our gods will have it ! — ii. I 

before the gods my knee shall bow . . — ii. 3 

tlie gods confound thee! — ii 5 

chief factors for the gods — ii. 6 

what's Antony? the god of Jupiter .. — iii. 2 

so, the gods keep you — iii. 2 

and give you to the gods — iii. 2 

and the good gods will mock me — iii. 4 

and the high gods, to do you justice.. — iii. 6 

gods, and goddesses, all the whole synod — iii. 8 

from the bidding of the gods command — iii. 9 

lie is a god, and knows what is iii. 1 1 

now gods and devils! authority — iii^ll 

the wise gods seel our eyes — iii. IJ 

and saj', God quityoul be familiar.. — iii. II 

the gods forbid! Well, my good — iv. 2 

and the gods yield you fo'r't — iv. 2 

'tis the god Hercules,, whom — iv. 3 

the gods make this a happy day .... — iv. 5 

as if a god, in hate of mankind — iv. & 

that the gods detest my baseness .... — iv, 12 

the gods withhold me! shall I do that — iv. 13 

my sceptre at the injurious gods .... — iv. 13 

the gods rebuke me, but it is — v. I 

but you, gods, will give us some -. — v. I 

so the gods preserve thee!, , — v, 1 

up to the hearing of tlie gods — v, 2 

sir, the gods will have it thus — v. 2 

the gods! it smites me beneath — v, 2 

the gods forbid! Nay, 'tis most — v. 2 

O the good gods! Nay, that is ceitain — v. 2 

a woman is a dish for the gods — v. 2 

same whoreson devils do trie gods great — v. 2 

which the gods give men to excuse . . — v. 3 

the gods themselves do weep ! — v. 2 

you gentle gods, give me but Cymbeline, i- 2 

O the gods, when shall we see again ? — ' i. 2 

the gods protect you ! and bless ,. — i. 2 

of the gods. Which the gods have given — i. 5 

by the gods, it is one: if I bring — " i. & 

it is an office of the gods to venge it. , — i. 7 

sits 'mongst men, like a descended god — i. 7 

but the gods made you, unlike — i. 7 

protection I commend me, gods! .... — ii. 2 ■ 

you good gods, let what is here — iii, 2 

good news, gods! — iii. 2 

the gods will diet me with — iii. 4 

may the gods direct you to the best! — iii. 4 

but of those who worship dirty gods — iii. & 

what pain it cost, what danger! Gods! — iii. 6 

pardon me, gods! I'd change my sex — iii. (> 

gods, what lies I have heard! — iv. 2 

where, thank the gods! they grow .. — iv, 2 

let ordinance come as the gods forsay it — iv. 2 

O gods and goddesses! these flowers — iv. 2 

feared gods, apart of it! — iv. 2 

last night the very gods showed — iv. 2 

thougli the gods hear, I hoiie — iv. 2 

but hrst, an t please the gods — iv. 2 

gods! if yon sliould have ta'en vengeance — v. 1 

gods, put tlie strength o' the Leonati — v. 1 

scarce are men, and you are gods .... — v. 3 

you good gods, give me the penitent — v. 4 

gods are more full of mercy — v. 4 

then, Jupiter, thou king oi' gods .... — v. 4 

as when his god is ijleased — v. 4 

whom the gods have made — v. ."> 

but since the gods will have it thus., ■ — v. 5 

the gods do mean to strike rae — v. .i 

lady, the gods tlirow stones of suljphur — v. i> 

gods! I left but one thing which. . — v, .5 
marry, the gods forfendl I would not — v. 5 
laud we the gods: and let our crooked — v. 5 
draw near the nature of the goii'i. Titus Andron. i. 2 
the self-same gods, tluit armed — i. 2 

1 swear by all the Roman gods — i. 2 

God give you joy, sir, of your gallant — i. 2 

the gods of Rome forfend, I should be — i. 2 

by the gods that warlike Goths adore -.- li. 1 

unless tlie gods delight in tragedies! — iv. 1 

what God will have discovered — iv. i 

and pray the Roman gods, confound — iv. 2 

and pray to all the gods for our — iv. 2 

the gods have given us o'er — iv. 2 

well, God give her "ood rest! — iv. 2 

Alcides, nor the god of war — i v. 2 

and move the gods, to send down — iv. 3 

there's not a god left unsolicited .... — iv. 3 

God give yoiu- lordship joy — iv. 3 

Ciod forbid, I should be so bold — iv. 3 

Giod be with you, sir; I will — iv. 3 



GOD 



UOD— as do the miglitfiil gods Uiehard 111. iv. 4 

to Apolloj this to the god of war — Iv. 4 

Ood midMiiul Sti|)hen. give you gooddcu— iv. 4 

thou holicvist no lioil; tliut granted — v. 1 

for a giHl, imd koeii.- tlu' outh ytcp.) .. — v. 1 

that suuie god, « hut goU siiu'er — v. 1 

jc kihIs thut nuule uie uum Pericles, i. I 

and nil thegiKls to liiiirkeii — i. 1 

kings iiic earth's g<Kl»: in vice — i. 1 

tlie gods ortiriecc pnitoi't yonl — _i. 4 

now gods I'oitiicI! 1 Imvu n gown — ii. 1 

whieh giHls im.uct tine I'rcmil — ii. 1 

tlie gods give tluvgnuilon'tl — ii. 1 

hiilestheg.i,ls;di.)\o — ii. 3 

ehoiiUl live liUo j;.>.lsnliove — ii. 3 

now liv the ^'oiK, lie ooiild not plense .. — ii. 3 

now hy the gods. 1 pity his misfortune — ii. 3 

the most liigh gods not minding — ii. 4 

by tlie gixls, I fmve not, sir — ii. .5 

now, liy tlie gtxls, I do appliiud — ii. 5 

further grief, (iod give you joy'. — ii. 5 

thou God of this great vast — iii. 1 

O you gods! why do you make us .... — iii. 1 

now the good gods throw their hest .... — iii. 1 

what courage, sir? God save you — iii. 1 

the former, nuiking a man a god — ]"■ ^ 

O vou most potent gods'. — iii. 2 

the gods retjuite ills charity — iii. 2 (scroll) 

tlio gods make up the rest — iii. 3 

the gods revenge it upon me and mine — iii. 3 

by the holy gods, I cannot rightly say — iii. 4 

the titter then tlie goils should luive her — iv. 1 

for the gods arc (luiclc of ear — iv. I 

sore terms we stand upon with tlic god3 — iv. 3 

come, tlie gods liave done their part — iv. 3 

the gods defend me! If it please the gods — iv. 3 

the gods do like this the worst — iv. 4 

Uoth swear to the gods — iv. 4 

ehe is able to freeze the god Priapus . . — iv. 6 

now, the goils to bless your honourl.... — iv. 6 

O that the good gods would set me .... — iv. 6 

the gods strengthen thcel The gods — iv. 6 

to stink afore the face of the gods — iv. 6 

hark, hark, vou gixls! She conjures.. .. — iv. 6 

O that tlie gods would safely trom — iv. 6 

Btrived god Neptune's annual feast — v. {Gower 

the gods preserve you! (r'p.) — v. 

the most j ust God for every — v. 

and the gixls make her prosnerousi — v. 

thank the holy gods, as louu — v. 

this, this: no more, you godsl yoijr — v. 3 

besides the gods, for this great — v. 3 

• through whom the gods have shown .. — v. 3 

the gixls can have no mortal officer {rep.) — v. 3 
tile gods for murder seera so content — v. 3 (Gow.) 

thou swear'st thy gods in vain Lear, i. 1 

the gods to their dear shelter take thee . . — i. 1 

gods, gods, 'tis straiHje that from — i. 1 

now gods, stand up tor bastardsl — i. 2 

now, gods, that we adore, whereof — i. 4 

O the blest gods', so will you wishmo.... — ii. 4 

here, 5'ou gods, a poor old man — ii. 4 

let the great gods, that keep tills — iii. 2 

the gods reward your kindness! — iii. 6 

by the kind gods, 'tis most ignobly — iii. 7 

O cruel! O ye gods! — iii. 7 

kind grxls.torgive me that — iii. 7 

O gods! who is't can say — ir. 1 

aa flies to wanton Ixiys, are we to the gods — iv. 1 

fairies, and gods, m-osper it with thee — iv. 6 

O j'ou mighty gods! tnis world — iv. 6 

thuik that the clearest gods — Iv. 6 

but to the girdle do the gods inherit .... — iv. 6 

yon ever-gentle gods, taKC ray lireath.... — iv. 6 

O you kind gods, cure this great — iv. 7 

OS if we were God's spies — v. 3 

the gods themselves throw incense — v. 3 

false to thy gods, thy brother, and tliy , . — v. 3 

the gods are just, and of our pleasant vices — v. 3 

the gods defend herl bear him hence .... — v. 3 

God gi' gix)d e'en: I pray, sir Uomco ^Juliet, i. 2 

God forliid! Where's this girl? — i. 3 

Gixl rest all christian soiils! {rep.) .. — i. 3 

Goil be with his soul! a' was a merry — i. 3 

God mark thee to his grace! — i. 3 

Gixl shall mend my^ soul — you'll .... — i. 5 

. which is the God of my idolatry .... — ii. 2 

(ioil pardon sin! wast thou with — ii. 3 

God ye gix«l-morrow. gentlemen. God — ii. 4 

that God hath n\ade nunself to mar — ii. 4 

now, afore God, I am so vexed — ii. 4 

now, God in heaven bless thee! — ii. 4 

O God, she comes I O honey nurse .. — ii. 5 

go thy way, wench, serve God — ii. .5 

OGoil's lady dear! are you so hot?.. — ii. S 

God send me no need ot thcel — iii. I 

God save the mark ! here on his .... — iii. 2 

O Godl did Komeo'fl hand shed .... — iii. 2 

God's will! what wilfulness is this? — iii. 3 

O Goill I have an ill-divining soul.. — iii..') 

G<xl panlon him! I do, with all .... — iii..') 

that G(xl had sent us hilt this — iii. 5 

God in heaven bless herl joii arc.... — iii. :> 

O Go<l ye good-den! May not — iii. 5 

God's bread! it makes me mad — iii. 5 

O Go<U <> nurse! how shall — iii. .'j 

God shield, I should disturb devotion! — iv. 1 

Gixl joined my heart and Komeo's . . — iv. 1 

now, ofore God, this rcverenii holy friar — iv. 2 

farewell! God knows, when we shall — iv. 3 

God forgive me (inarrv, and aineni) — iv. ft 

iKfore my GihI, I miglit not this Hamlel, i. I 

throat awake the gixl of dav — i. I 

O God! O God! how weary, stale, flat .. — i. 2 

for God's love, let me hear. Two nighta — i. 2 

Goil willing, shall not lack — i. .'> 

God be wi* you; fare you well — ii. 1 

both to my Go<l, and to my gracious kin^ — ii. 2 

a gf)d (.Co/. K'Mf.-goo<l] kissing carrion .. — ii. 2 

God aave you, eirl My honoured lord I . . — ii. 2 



[ 313 ] 

GOD— O Godl I could he bounded in....f/a>n/e/, ii. 2 

in apprehension, how like u god! — 11.2 

as by lot, God wot. and then, yon know — > ii. 2 

nrav God, your voice like a pine — ii. 2 

ToreGod,iny lord, well spoken — ii. 2 

all you gods, in geiuTiil sviiod — ii. 2 

butif the gods themselves (lid sec — ii. 2 

cyesof heaven, and piis!-ion ill the gods.. — ii. 2 
(t'oJ.D God's bodikin, man, miieh better.. — ii. 2 

God he wi' rCii(.-gooil-live] yoii — ii. 2 

God hath given you one fuee _ iii. I 

and nicknainetjiod's creatiires, and make — iii. I 
God bless yuii, sill My lord, the (lueeii.. _ iii. 2 

every god did seem to set his seal — iii. 4 

God be wi' you, sir. Will't please you .. — iv. 4 
well, God 'ield you! they say, the owl .. — iv. 5 

God be at your table — iv. & 

Ood a' mercy on his soul I — iv. .') (song) 

I praj' God. God be wi' you! (rep.) — iv. 5 

God bless yo\i, sir. Let him bless thee .. — iv. 6 

one that would circumvent God — v. I 

for love of Ood, forbear him — v. 1 

OUoill lloruiio, what a wounded name — v. 2 

and I iCind liless the mark!) Olliello,i. 1 

will not serve God, if the devil — i. 1 

God be with you! 1 have done — i. 3 

God's will, lieutenant! hold; you will .. — ii. 3 
as her apiietite shall play the god with . . — ii. 3 

God be wi' you: take mine ofhce — iii. 3 

men are not gods; nor of them look for.. — iii. 4 

GOD-A-MERCY, Grumio! . . Taming of Slireir. iv. 3 

good den, sir Richard. God-a- mercy.. K/nff./o/in,i. 1 
ro<l-a-nierey! so should I be sure..l Hfnri/ ly. iii. 3 

God-a-mercy, old heart ! Henri/ V. iv. 1 

God-a-mercy , that thou wilt. Troilus S^ Cressida, v. 4 
well, god-a-mercy. Do you know me . . Hamlet, ii. 2 

GOD-DAUGHTER, Ellen? iHenryli: iii. 2 

GODDED— nay, godded me, indeed.. Corio(anKs, v. 3 

GODDESS— the goddess on whom these . Tempest, i. 2 
is she the goddess that hath scver'd us. . — y. 1 
but, like a thrifty goddess.. i>/easi/re/o)- Measure.i. 1 
pardon, goddess ot the night.. il/uc/i .lilo, v. 3 (song) 
O Helen, goddess, nymph irep.) ...Mid. N. Dr. iii. 2 

thou being a goddess Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 (verses) 

a green goose, a goddess; pure pure. . — iv. 3 
the fairest goddess on the ground .... — v. 2 
a guide, a goddess, and a sovereign . . All's ll'ell, i. 1 
was no goddess, that had put sucli .. — i. 3 

titled goddess; and worth it — iv. 2 

and thou, good goddess nature . . Winter's Tale, ii. 3 

and your tair princess, goddess! — v.\ 

that goddess blind, that stands Henry V. iii. 6 

what goddess e'er she be Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 1 

• or a daughter a goddess, he should take — i. 2 
the fair goddess, fortune, fall deep . . Coriolanus, i. 5 
dear goddess, hear that prayer . . Aniony ff Cleo. i. 2 
in the habiliments of the goddess Isis — iii. 6 
O thou goddesSj thou divine nature. Cj/7n6e//nc, iv. 2 
this goddess, this Semirarais. . Titus Andronicus, ii. 1 

celestial Dian, goddess argentine I'erir.les, v. 2 

who, O goddess, wears yet tliy silver . . — y. 3 

thou, nature, art my goddess Lear, i. 2 

dear goddess, hear! suspend thy purpose — i. 4 

GOD-DEN— god-den to your worship. .Htnn/ 1', iii. 2 

GODDESSES— of such goddesses . . .-Is i/ou Like il, i . 2 
as they were gods and goddesses.. Wititcr'sTnle. iv. 3 
gods and goddesses, all ihe.Anlontj f,- Cleopatra, iii. 8 
O gods and goddesses! these flowers. ri/mtf/i»c', iv. 2 

GODDESS-LIKE-most goddess-like. I'inler'sT. iv. 3 
more goddess-like than wile-like . . Cymheline, iii. 2 
and she dances as goddess-like .. Periclis, v. (Gower) 

GOD-EYLD— [A'7i(.J bid god-cyldus ibr.il/ae(/c(/i,i. 6 

GODFATHER— earthly .godfathers. LDtie'sL.Los(,i. 1 
and every godfather can give a name — i. 1 
thoushalt have two godfathers, ^/crc/i. of Venice, iv. 1 
for that, commit your godfathers . . Uiehard Ill.i. I 
you must be godfather, and answer. Henry Vlll. v. 2 
here will be father, godfather, and all — v. 3 

GOD-HEiVD-make his god-head wax. Love's L. L. v. 2 
thy god-head laid apart. ./Is you Like it, iv. 3 (letter) 
your god-heads to borrow. Timnn ofAlh. iii. 6 (grace) 
low-laid son our "od-head will uplift. Ci/mbeline, v. 4 

GOD-LIKE— god-like recompense.. Love's L. Lost, i. I 
a true conceit of god-like amit}'. .Wcr. of Venice, iii. 4 
observance of thy god-like seat.. Troilus^ Cress, i. 3 
as in the rest thou hast been god-like. . Pericles, v. 1 
capability and god-like reason to fust../;nm/t'(, iv. 4 

GODLINESS— not hear of godliness.. rK'c//7/iA'. iii. 4 
with tlie little godliness I have ui hello, i. 2 

GODLY— civil, godly company Merry Wives, i. 1 

to have a godl v peace concluded of. . 1 Henry VI. v. 1 

fie, for godly shame I Troilus ff Cressida, ii. 2 

a kind of irodly jealousy — iv. 4 

GODSON— father's godson seek your life?.. Lcnr, ii. 1 

G01;K— tluni now but goers backward.. /!«'»• IfcH, i. 2 
tlint I iiiiL'lit prick the goer back ....Cymbeline, i. 2 

GOEI!S-lii;P\VEEN— 
pitiful goers-hetween be called.. rroiVi/siS-CrfiJ. iii. 2 

GOES— it goes on as mv soul prompts it. Tempest, i. 2 

Silver! there it goes, Silvcrl — iv. 1 

and time goes upright with — v. 1 

lieing ignorant to whom itgoes. 7'«o (!en.o.r I'cr.'ii. 1 

look you, it goes hard — iv. 4 

and goes me to the fellow — iv. 4 

Eglamour that goes with her — v. 2 

now, the report goes Merry lyices, i. 3 

and my eoirent goes not that way .. — iii. 2 

her hiisliiiiid goes this morning — iii. 5 

and goes to them by his note — iv. 2 

there is an old tale goes — iv. 4 

the time goes by ; away Tnelfth Night, iii. I 

goes as fairly, as to say — iv. 2 

where goes Cesario? — v. 1 

aa the rest goes even — v. 1 

how it giK's with us Measure for Measure, i. 1 

that goes not out to prey — i. 4 

quite athwart goes all decorum — i. 4 

see how he goes about to abuse me .. — iii. 2 

nothing goes right — iv. 4 

thus goes every one to the world ....,UHcA.4<io, ii. 1 



GOE 



GOES— time goes on crutches, till love. AfucAi4(<«,ii. I 

goes foremost in report thiough — ill. 1 

tlien loving goes by haps — iii. 1 

he goes up and down like a gentleman — iii. 3 

that goes without a burden — iii. 4 

your wit ambles well; it goes easily — v. 1 
when he goes in his doublet and hose — v. 1 
be goes but to see a noise tiiat./l/id.A'.'t Dream, iii. I 

ay, that way goes the game — iii. 2 

he goes before me, and still dares me — iii. 2 

it goes not forwnrd.iioth it? — iv. 2 

mercy goes to kill, and shooting. Loue't L. Lost, iv. 1 

my lady goes to kill horns — iv. 1 

Ovilel then as she goes — iv. 3 

ond cried, all goes well — v. 2 

and wiving goes by destiny. .il/ercAa«(o//'tnic<', ii. 9 
now he goes, with no less presence .. — iii. S! 

thus itgoes As you Like it, ii. 5 

it goes much against my stomach.... — iii. 2 
there a girl goes before the priest .... — iv. I 

one that goes with him All's If'ell, i. I 

then my dial goes not true — ii. 6 

the reiiort that goes uiion your — v. 1 

the story then goes false, you threw .. — v. 3 

she goes off and on at pleasure — v. 3 

who goes there? ha! Taming of Shrew, i. 2 

yet oftentimes he goes but mean .... — iii. 2 
now goes the world? A cold world .. — iv. I 

how I pravf tor that goes hard — iv. 2 

who is t that goes with me? Winter's Tale, ii. 1 

as this world goes, to pass for honest — ii. 3 

howe'er the business goes — iii. 2 

a merry heart goes all the day ..., — iv. 2 (song) 
marigold, that goes to bed with the sun — iv. 3 
and goes to the tune of two maids wooing — iv. 3 

how goes it now, sir? this news — v. 2 

he that goes in the calfs-skin. Come^/i/o/^rror*, iv. 3 
and when goes hence? To-morrow .... Macbeth, i. 5 

how goes tlie night, boy? — ii. I 

and blie goes down at twelve — ii, I 

goes the King from hence to-day?.... — ii. 3 

now goes the world, sir, now? — ii. 4 

goes I'leance with youif — iii. 1 

now goes it? ^Vhen Icame — iv. 3 

this tunc goes manly — iv. 3 

look « here three farthings goes! .... Ki';i^ John, i. 1 
the hare of whom the proverb goes . . — iL 1 

how grxis all in France? — iv. 2 

how goes the daj' with us? — v. 3 

oif goes his bonnet to an Richard Il.'i. 4 

crossly to thy good all fortune goes . . — ii. 4 

all goes worse than I have power — iii. 2 

then whither he goes, thither let — v. 1 

yet all goes well, yet all our joints. . 1 HenrylV. iv. 1 

with thy soul, whither it goes! — v. 3 

how goes the field? The noble Scot .. — v. 5 

■what s he that goes there? 2 Henry /)'. i. 2 

I hope your lordship goes abroad .... — i. 2 
the soil of the achievement goes with me — iv. 4 
and down goes all before them.Heii7f/r. ill, (chorus) 

their villany goes against my '.. — iii. 2 

now and theu goes to the wars — iii. 6 

for forth he goes, and visits all.. — iv. (chorus) 
who goes there? A friend — iv. 1 



sk him, whither he goes 1 Henry J'l. 

ays the word, king Henry goei 
there goes the Talbot, with nis 



ii. 3 

— iii. 1 

— iii. 3 



says the word, king Henry goes, 
there goes the Talbot, with r ' 
and tlius he goes, as did the . 

BO, there goes our i>rotector 'illcnryVJ.i, \ 

whither goes Vau.x so fast? — iii. 2 

shall you give, or oft' goes yours — iv. 1 

then the world goes hard SUenryl'l. ii. 6 

all hitherto goes well; the common .. — iv. 2 
who goes there? stay, or thou dicst . . — iv. 3 

how goes the world with thee? Itichard III. iii. 2 

oflT goes young George's head — iv. 5 

then, out it goes. Wliat though I. . Henry fill. iii. 2 
dowager? how goes her business? .... — iv. 1 

well, the voice goes, madam — iv. '.i 

the fruit she goes with, I pray for ... . — v. 1 

and to the fleld goes he Troilus ff Cressiia, i. 3 

the noise goes, this — i. '2 

how he looks, and how he goes! — i. 2 

by a pace goes backward — i. 3 

ay. sir, when he goes Iwforc me — iii. 1 

where one but goes abreast — iii. 3 

and farewell goes out sighing — iii. 3 

Ajax goes up and down the field — iii. 3 

he goes to Culchas' tent — v. 1 

dainty bit. thus goes to bed — v. 9 

how goes the world? It wears .. Timnn of AtUens.i. 1 
how gix;s the world, that 1 am thus .. — ii. 2 

in ail sliii|ie9, tluit man goes up — ii. "J 

how goes our reekoningV — jj* - 

he goes away in a cloud — iii. 4 

report that goes of his having — y. 1 

lie goes upon this present action ....Coriolanus, i. 1 
forth he goes, like to a harve- t-man — i. 3 

bring me word tliithcr how the world goes — i. 10 

but when goes this forward? — iv. & 

blush, that the world gcKs well — iv. 

as far, as who gws farthest -. . . . Julius Cirsar, i. 3 

think you that the sword goes up again? — v. I 
the world, Volumnins, how it goes .. — y. 5 
goes to, and hack, lackeying. .4ii(o;i!/.SC/<'opn(ra, i. 4 
how goes it with my brave Mark Antony — i. 5 

ten times o'er, goes to the feast — ii. 2 

he goes forth gallantly — iv. 4 

how goes it here? All deotl — v. 2 

he goes hence frowning Cymbeline, iii. h 

to the eni|ieior how it goes here — iii. 5 

Alarbns go to rest: and we survive. TOiu/liidron. i. i 

whv, there it goes: Gixl give — iv. 3 

Ilelicauiis goes along lx;hind../Vric/«, iv. 4 (Gower) 

but goes this with thy heart? Lear, i. 1 

till the Sliced of his riige giK's slower — i. 2 

but the great one that goes up the hill .. — ii. 4 

the wren goes to't. and the small — iv.fi 

go to't with o more riotous appetite — iv. il 

yet you sec how tliis world goes — iv. 6 



GOE 



[314 ] 

GOING— men must endure their going .... Lear, v. 2 

in goins to tliis mask Romeo ^ Juliet, i. 4 

what's he, that now is going out of door? — i. ^ 
going to find a barefoot brotlier out . . — v. 2 

with death, going in the vault — v. 3 

your intent m gomg baclc to school Hamlet, i. 2 

my lord, he's going to liis mother's closet — iii. 3 

eitlier for lier stay, or going Olhcllo, i. 3 

and I was going to your lodging, Cassio — iii. 4 

if you will watcli his going thence — iv. 2 

GOING-OUT-this French going-out. Hen; y r// J. i. 1 

GOLD— set it down with gold Tempest, v. 1 

and the rocks of pure gold ..Tu'oGen.o/FcroKa, ii. 4 
of monies, and gold, and silver .... Merry Wives, i. I 

all gold and bounty — i. 3 

his gold will hold — i. 3 

I warrant you, in silk and gold .— ii. 2 

than stamps in gold — iii. 4 

a hundred pound in gold — iv. G 

for saying so, there's gold Twelfili Night, i. 2 

there's gold — v. 1 

fond shekels of the tested gold ..Meas.forMeas. ii. 2 
cloth of gold, and cuts, and laced . . Mucli Ado, iii. 4 

we'll tip thy horns with gold — v. 4 

in tlieir gold coats spots you see.Mid.N. Dream, ii. 1 
turns into yellow gold his salt-green — iii. 2 

one, her hairs were gold Love'sL. Lost, i v. 3 

chests, of gold, silver, and lead.. M«c/i.o//'«i/ce, i. 2 
yoiu' gold and silver, ewes and rams? — i. 3 
what gold; and jewels, she is furnished — ii. 4 
the fiist, of gold, who this inscription — ii. 7 

this saymg graved in gold — ii. 7 

undervalued to tried gold — ii. 7 

was set in worse than gold — ii. 7 

the figure of an angel stamped in gold — ii. 7 
all that glisters is not gold — ii. 7 (scroll) 

fold, silver, and base lead — ii.9 
shall never see my gold again — iii. 1 

therefore, thou gaudy gold, hard food — iii. 2 

you shall have gold to pay — iii. 2 

with patines of nright gold — v. I 

about a hoop of gold, a paltry ring . . — v. 1 

Erovoketh thieves sooner than gold. .Js you Like, i. 3 
ere is the gold; all this I give you. . — ii. 3 

if he for gold will give us any — ii. 4 

if that love, or gold, can in this — ii. 4 

buy it with your gold right suddenly — ii. 4 

take this purse of gold, and let All's Well, iii. 7 

with well-weighing sums of gold — iv. 3 (note) 
the count's a fool, and full ofgold — iv. 3 (letter) 

bid him drop gold, and take it — iv. 3 (letter) 

if gold will corrupt him to a revolt .. — iv. 3 
studded all with gold and pearl. Taming ofSh. 2 (ind.) 
give him gold enough, and marry .. — i. 2 

of gold. Hortensio, peace {rep.) — i. 2 

richly furnished with plate and gold — ii. 1 
valance of Venice gold in needlework — ii. 1 

if I wear pearl and gold? — v. 1 

goldl all gold! This is fairy gold. Winter's Tale, iii. 3 

close with him, give him gold — iv. 3 

oft led by the nose with gold — iv. 3 

here is that gold I have — iv. 3 

gold, and a means to do the prince . . — iv. 3 
where is the gold I gave in charge. Comedy of Er. i. 2 

a thousand marks in gold — ii. 1 

my gold quoth he; your meat (rep.) — ii. 1 

the gold, I gave to Dromio — ii. 2 

you received no gold? your mistress — ii. 2 
tlie gold you gave me. Villain (rep.) — ii. 2 

with a thousand marks in gold — iii. 1 

the fineness of the gold, the chargeful — iv. 1 

here's the gold you sent me for — iv. 3 

what gold 13 this? "What Adam — iv. 3 

deny tlie bag of gold? — iv. 4 

I received no gold ; but I confess .... — iv. 4 

give us gold; methinks, they are — iv. 4 

cloddy earth to glittering gold .... King John, iii. 1 

by the meri t of vile gold, dross — iii. 1 

when gold and silver becks me — iii. 3 

to gild refined gold, to paint — iv. 2 

them for large siims of gold Richard II. i. 4 

sons their scraping fathers' gold — v. 3 

a purse of gold most resolutely MIennjir. i. 2 

three hundred marks with him in gold — ii. 1 
gallants, lads, boys, hearts of gold .. — ii- 4 

never call a true piece of gold — ii- 4 

neither in gold nor silver 2HenryIV. i. 2 

a good heart's worth gold — ii. 4 

a mere hoard of gold kept by — iv. 3 

a hoop of gold, to bind — iv. 4 

when gold becomes her object! — iv. 4 

cankered heaps of strange achieved gold — iv. 4 
thou, best of gold, art worst of gold. . — iv. 4 

masons building roofs of gold Henry V. i. 2 

might'st have coined me into gold .. — ii. 2 
for me, the gold of France did not . . — ii. 2 
and a heart of gold, a lad of life .... — iv. 1 

robe of gold and pearl — iv. 1 

I am not covetous for gold — iv. 3 

instead of gold, we'll offer up 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

doth deserve a coronet of gold — iii. 3 

large sums of gold, and dowries 2 Henry I' I. i. 1 

reach at the glorious gold — i. 2 

make merry with the duchess' gold.. — i. 2 

dame Eleanor gives gold (jep.) — i. 2 

yet have I gold, flies from — i . 2 

it will, I shall have gold for all — i. 2 

my chests filled up with extorted gold? — iv. 7 
was made to handle naught but gold — v. 1 

that gold must round engirt — v. 1 

thy gold, if tliou hast any gold ZHenry I'l. W.h 

wedges of gold, great anchors Hic/ntrd Ul.i. 4 

it made me once restore a purse of gold — i. 4 

to try if thou be current gold — iv. 2 

whom con-upting gold would tempt — iv. i 

gold were as good as twenty — iv. 2 

all in gold, like heathen gods Henry l'lll.\.\ 

and paved with gold, the emperor .. — i. 1 

hath showed him gold — i. 1 

my silvei- beard in a gold beaver. Troilus ^ Cr ess. i. 3 



GOL 



G()ES— how this world goes, with no eyes . . Lear, iv. 6 
for the weakest goes to the wall. . Romeo Sf Juliet, 1. 1 
love goes toward love, as schoolboys.. — ii. 2 
cannot lick his fingers, goes not with me — iv. 2 

at least the whisper goes so Hamlet, i. I 

goes slow and stately by them — i. 2 

tlie main voice of Denmark goes withal . . — i . 3 
then goes he to the length ot all his arm — ii. 1 

as this world goes, is to be one man — ii. 2 

it goes so heavily with niv disposition . . — ii. 2 

which now goes too free-footed — iii. 3 

and so he goes to heaven : and so am I . . — iii. 3 

as hell, whereto it goes — iii. 3 

look, where he goes, even now — iii. 4 

that this man goes loose? — iv. 3 

goes it against the main of Poland — iv. 4 

It is, will he, nill he, he goes — v. 1 

preferment goes by letter, and affection. .0(/ieKo,i. 1 
the cry goes, that you shall marry her . . — iv. 1 

no; he goes into Mauritania — iv. 2 

how goes it now? he looks gentler — iv. 3 

GOEST— goest about to apply a moral. M«cA Ado, i. 3 
whither goest thou? Txii\YYy..Merchantof Venice, ii.4 

peruse this as thou goest — ii.4 

naj', now thou goest from fortune's. /4.s youLiUe it, i. 2 
thou goest to the grange, . Winter'sTale, iv. 3 (song) 

thou goest to Coventry Richard II. i. 2 

the year to church thou goest \ Henry VI. i. \ 

here, and goest. not to the duke? . . Richard III. iv. 4 
thou goest foremost: thou rascal .... Coriolanus, i. 1 
what, goest thou back? .... Antony fy Cleopatra, v. 2 

still in that clear way thou goest Pericles, iv. 6 

ride more than thou goest Lear, i. 4 

fellow, where goest? Is it a beggar-man? — iv. 1 
GOGS-WOUNS— by gogs-wouna.. Taming of Sh. iii. 2 
GOING— the sound is going away .... Tempest, iii. 2 

for going uugartered! TwoGen.of Verona, ii. 1 

and am going with sir Proteus — ii. 3 

and I am going to deliver them — iii. 1 

that going will scarce serve — iii. 1 

takes his going grievously — iii. 2 

1 was going to yoiU' house Merry Wives, ii. ) 

and now she's going to my wife .... — iii. 2 

as if it were going to bucking — iii. 3 

and they are going to meet him — iv. 3 

waylay thee going home. Tieeflh Night, iii. 4 (chall.) 
for I am that way going to. Measure forMeasure, ii. 2 
and I am going with instruction .... — ii. 3 

I am now going to resolve him — iii. 1 

art going to prison, Pompey ? — iii. 2 

I am going to visit the prisoner — iii. 2 

and never going aright Love's L.Lost, iii. 1 

is bad, going o'er it erewhile — iv. 1 

expediently, and turn him going. As you Like it, iii. 1 
your wife's wit going to your neighbour's — iv. 1 
and I in going, madam, weep o'er .... All's Well, i. 1 
lam going, forsooth; the business .. — i. 3 

to Rousillon; whither I am going.... — v. 1 
that I knew of their going to bed .... — v. 3 
trow you whither I am going?. Taming of Shrew, i. 2 

should yet say, sir, no going Winter's Tale, i. 2 

unto whom I was going — iv. 2 

when you are going to bed — iv. 3 

if his going I could frame — iv. 3 

are gom" to see the queen's picture . . — v. 2 
a man always going to bed . . . Comedy of Errors, iv. 3 

me the way that I was going Macbeth, ii. 1 

stand not upon the order of your going — iii. 4 

and others more, going to seek — iv. 2 

are pilgrims going to Canterbury \ Henry IF. i. 2 

and go not. III hang you for going . . — i. 2 

'tis going to the king's exchequer — ii. 2 

is now going witli some charge illenrylV. i. 2 

I hear, you are going with lord — i. 2 

1 am undone by his going — ii. I 

and, but my going, nothing — ii. 3 

thou art going to the wars — ii.4 

are you now going to despatch Ricliard III. i. 3 

then was I going prisoner to the Tower — iii. 2 

I am glad they're going HenryVIII. i.Z 

whither were you going? — i. 3 

'tis not well: she's going away — ii.4 

as his queen, going to chapel — iii. 2 

ehe is going, wench ! pray, pray — iv. 2 

a great while going by Troilus fy Cressida, i. 2 

by going to Achilles ii. 3 

beholds itself, not going from itself. . — iii. 3 
whither art going? To knock ..Timon of Athens,!. 1 
thou art going to lord Tiraon's feast — i. 1 
I am going to the market-place . . Coriolanus, iii. 2 
look, I am going; commend me to .. — iii. 2 
going about their functions friendly .- iv. 6 

are going all to the senate-house .... iv. 6 

going to whom it must be done JuliusCiesar, ii. 1 

same pulpit whereto I am going — iii. 1 

whither are you going? Where do . . iii. 3 

am I goim;? where do I dwell? iii. 3 

directly, lam going to Caesar's funeral — iii. 3 
out of his heart, and turn him going — iii. 3 

whose quality, going on Antony <§■ Cleopatra, i. 2 

seeic no colour tor 3'our going — i. a 

no going then; eternity was in — i. 3 

most with you should safe my going — i. 3 
provideyour going; choose your own — iii. 4 
m parting, than greatness going oS .. — iv. 1 1 
now, my spirit is going; I can no more — iv. 13 
I was going, sir, to give him welcome. Cymbeline, i. 7 
to whom being going, almost spent. . — iii. 6 
to the king's party there's no going — iv. 4 

still going? this is a lord! — v. 3 

to direct them the way I am going . . — v. 4 
going with thy honey hTtM\..TitusAndronicus, ii. 5 
why, I am going with my pigeons .. — iv. 3 
for going on death's net, whom none . . Pericles, i . 1 
there's no going but by their consent. . — iv. 6 
since my youn^ lady's going into France.. Lear, i. 4 

that gomg shall be used with feet — iii. 2 

where you are going, to a most festinate — iii. 7 
gom" to put out the other eye of Gloster — iv. 2 
and let me hear thee going — iv. G 



GOLD-every grain of Plutus' goldi. Trail. fy Cress, iii. 3 
Plutus, the god of gold, is but. . Timon of Athens, i. I 
if I want gold, steal but a beggar's (rep.) — ii. I 

bawds between gold and wanti — ii. 2 

whilst I have gold, I'll be his steward — iv. 2 

fold? yellow, glittering, precious gold? — iv. 3 
have but little gold of late — iv. 3 

here's some goldlbr thee — iv. 3 

put up thy gold; go on, here's gold .. — iv. 3 

there s gold to pay thy soldiers — iv. 3 

hast thou gold yet? Ill take the gold — iv. 3 

give us some gold, good Timon — iv. 3 

well, more gold; what then? (rep.) .. — iv. 3 
there's more gold; do you damn others — iv. 3 
have gold : look, so I have (rep.) .... — iv. 3 
I'll say, thou hast gold: thou wilt .. — iv. 3 
where should he have this gold? .... — iv. 3 

the mere want of gold, and — i v. 3 

rascal thieves, here's gold — iv. 3 

therc'smore gold; cut throats — iv. 3 

and gold confound you howsoevert ., — iv. 

true^that he issofull of gold? — v. 

and Tymandra had gold of him — v. 

do 60; I have gold for thee — v. 

what a god's gold, that he is — v. 

you have heard that I have gold .... — v. 
I'll give you gold, rid me these villains — v. 

I'll give you gold enougK — v. 

there's gold, j'e came for gold, ye slaves — v. 
an alchemist, make gold of that .... — v. 

and the gold that's in them Coriolanus, ii. 

I tell you, he does sit in gold — v. 

as the ass bears gold, to groan Julius Ccesar, i v. 

mart your offices for gold, to undeservers — iv. 3 

for certain sums of gold — iv. 3 

for gold to pay mj' legions — iv. 3 

than Plutus' mine, richer than gold — iv. 3 
denied thee gold, will give my heart — iv. 3 

the poop was beaten gold . . Antony ^ Cleopatra, ii. 2 
(clothof gold, of tissue,), o'er-picturing — ii. 2 
there is gold, and here my bluest veins — ii. .5 
why, there's more gold! but, sirrah. . — ii. 5 

the gold I give thee, will I melt — ij. 5 

I'll set thee in a shower of gold — ii. 5 

there is gold for thee — iii. 3 

in chairs of gold were publicly — iii. 6 

I have a ship laden with gold — iii. 9 

turpitude thou dost so crown with gold! — iv. 6 

an armour all of gold — iv. 8 

wage against your gold, gold to it . . Cymbeline^ i. 5 
this your jewel, and my gold are yours — i. 5 
I will fetch my gold, and have our two — i. 5 
play with all infirmities for gold which — i. 7 

I should have gold enough; it's almost — ii. 3 

'tis gold which buys admittance — Ji-3 

and 'tis gold which makes the true . . — ii. 3 

there's gold for you ! sell me — ii. 3 

lost the worth of it in gold — ii. 4 

though I had found gold strewed .... — iii. 6 
all gold and silver rather -turn to dirt! — iii. 6 

wagered with him pieces of gold — y. 5 

shine in pearl and gold, to wait. . Titus Andron, ii. 1 
I would not for a million of gold .... — ii. 1 
to bury so much gold under a tree . . — ii- 3 
that this gold must coin a stratagem — ii. 3 
and so repose, sweet gold, for their . . — ii. 3 
my gracious lord, here is the bag ofgold — ii. 4 

give the mother gold — iv. 2 

and hid the gold within the letter . . — v. 1 
behold, here 8 poison, and here's gold . . Pericles, i. I 
holding out gold, that's by the touchstone — ii. 2 
sea's stomach be o'ercharged with gold — iii. 2 
to part their fringes of bright gold .... — iii. 2 

he will line your apron with gold — iv. 6 

hold, here's gold for thee: persevere (rep.) — iv. 6 
that for our gold we may provision have — v. 1 
and give you gold for such provision . . — v. 2 

usurers tell their gold i' the field Lear, iii. 2 

plate sin with gold, and the strong lance — iv. 6 

that in gold clasps locks in Romeo ffJuliet^ i. 3 

as you have seldom gold for sounding — iv. 5 
there is thy gold; worse poison to men's — v. 1 
I will raise her statue in pure gold .. — v. 3 

like a piece of uncurrent gold Hamlet, ii. 2 

never lacked gold, and yet went never.. 0(A«/to, ii. 1 

there's a poor piece ofgold for thee — iii. 1 

ofgold and iewels, that I bobbed from him — v. 1 

GOLD-BOUND- gold-bound brow.. .. WacdeW, iv. 1 

GOLDEN— to excel the golden age .... Tempest, ii. 1 

whose golden touch could.. Two Gen. of Verona, iii. 2 

to these golden shores Merry Wives, i. 3 

when the rich golden shaft Twelfth Night, i. 1 

now might do me golden service .... — iv. 3 

and golden time convents — y . 1 

cut with her golden oars Much Ado, iii. 1 

best arrow with the golden head. .Mid. N. Dream, i. I 
for bj' thy gracious, golden, glittering — v. 1 
and golden cadence of poesy .... Love's L. Lost, iv, 2 
the golden sun gives not to those — iv. 3 (verses) 
my red dominical, my golden letter.. — y. 2 
her temples like a golden fleece .Merch. of Venice, i. 1 
a golden mind stoops not to shows . . — ii. 7 

an angel in a golden bed lies — ii. 7 

what says the golden chest? — ii.9 

those crisped snaky golden locks .... — iii. 2 

and hath woven a golden mesh — iii. 2 

as they did in the golden world . . As you Like i7j i. 1 
and caps, and golden rings . . Taming ofS/irew, iv. 3 
the fire-robed god, golden Apollo. Winter sTale, iv. 3 
golden quoifs, and stomachers .... — iv. 3 (song) 
silver waves thy golden hairs. Comedy o/£no?s, iii, 2 

meets such golden gifts — iii. 2 

impedes thee from the golden round . . Macbeth, i. 5 
I have bought golden opinions from — i. 7 

laced with his golden blood — ii. 3 

hanging a golden stamp about — iy. 3 

with her golden liand hath plucked.. iCiMgJoAn, iii. I 
that it in golden letters should he set — iii. 1 
and embrace his golden nncontrolled. i??cftard II, i, 3 
and those his golden beams, to you .. — i. H 



GOL 



(iOI.DEN— agninstour golden crova. Richard II. Mi. 2 
now i» this ^oltk-ii crown like a deep — iv. 1 

plcnsinv, und tl\.v gulden sli'ipV 1 UenrylV. ii. 3 

thy golden st'cptrt! for II loudoii ihi^per — ii. 4 
l>oj;ins liis gohleii progress in tlie iiist — iii. 1 
glittering in Jioldon <M»:its, like inmges — iv. I 
ftt the hcola, HI golden iiiiiltitudes.... — iv. .1 

uerturliutiun] golden cure! 'lUenrylV.'w. \ 

iVoin this golden rigol hath divorced — iv. 4 

f olden times, and liiiiiiiv news of price — v. 3 
S|ieiik of Africa, and golden joys. ... — v. 3 
received the golden eiiriiest ot our .... Henry V. ii. 2 

crowne<l with the golden sun — ii. ■! 

after tins golden dav of victory 1 Henry VI. i. 6 

Michael, and the golden fleece — iv. 7 

to put a golden sceptre in thy hand . . — v. 3 
sale in golden palaces ■• " 



[ 315 ] 



v. 3 



for that 8 the golden mark I seek .... iHenry ft. i. I 
until the golden circuit on my head — iii. 1 

morning ojies her golden gates SHenryl'l. ii. I 

sparkling III a golden Clip — ii. .5 

to cross me from the golden time — iii-' 

toaecomplish twenty golden crowns! — iii. 2 

queen in former goluen days — iii. 3 

tliat crop|)cd the golden prime of . . Richard tll.i. 2 
as if the golden fee, for which I plcafl — iii. 5 
to Iwar tlie golden yoke of sovereignty — iii. 7 
the inclusive verge of golden metal .. — iv. 1 
did I enjoy the golden dew of sleep .. — iv. 1 
that forehead with a golden crown .. — iv. -1 
aspiring llame of golden sovereignty — iv. 4 
the weary sun hath made a golden set — v. 3 

and wear a golden sorrow llenri/I'lll. ii. 3 

as lief, lielcu'a golden tow^ue .Troilus ^ Cressida. i. 2 
pate ducks to the golden fool .. TimonnfAlhms. iv. 3 

? olden rhirhus never be beheld ..AnlonyflCleo. v. 2 
ope their golden eyes Cymleline. ii. 3 (songj 

with golden cherubims is fretted .... — ii. 4 
put his brows within a golden crown — iii. 1 
golden lads and girls all must .... — iv. 2 (song) 
so am I, that have this golden chance — v. 4 
a« when the golden sim salutes . . Tilut.tndron. ii. 1 

Sastimes done, possess ft golden sinmber — ii. 3 
II his o"ed ear with golden promises — iv. 4 

with golden fruit, but dangerous I'ericlfs, i. 1 

shake oft' the goUlen slumber of repose — iii. 2 

in glittering golden characters — iv. 4 

when thou gavest thy golden one away ..Lear^ i. 4 
the golden window of the cast. ... Itomeo ^'JuHel, i. 1 

locks in the gi'ldeii story — i. 3 

tliere golden sleep doth reign — ii. 3 

cut'st my head oil with a golden axe — iii. 3 
majestieat roof fretted with golden fire .Uamlel^ ii. 2 
that her golden couplets are disclosed — v. 1 

al I his golden words are spent — v. 2 

GOLDKNLY— goldenly of his profit./ls»o«Litei/,i. 1 
GOLDS.MITII— 
acquainted with goldsmiths' wives. .4svn" Life, iii. 2 
I go to the goldsmith's house.. Comet/;/ of Errors, iv. 1 

but soft, I see the goldsmith — iv. 1 

neither chain, nor goldsmith, came .. — iv. 1 
you have found the goldsmith now . . — iv. 3 
suborned the goldsmith to arrest me — iv. 4 

one Angelo. a goldsmith — iv. 4 

bring me where the goldsmith is — iv. 4 

that goldsmith there, were he not. ... — v. 1 
there did this perjured goldsmith swear — v. 1 
the goldsmith here denies that saying — v. I 

GOLGOTHA— another Golgotha Macbeth, i. 2 

field of Golgotha and deaa men's ..UicharU 11. iv. 1 
GOLIASSES-Sainpsons, and Goliasses.l Henry f /. i. 2 
GOLIATH— I fear not Goliath .... Merry Wires, v. 1 
GOXUOIjA— a gondola were seen ..Mer. of Venice, ii. 8 

you have swam in a gondola As yon Like it, iv. I 

GOXDOLIER-common hire, a gondolier.. 0(/ic»o, i. 1 

GONE- but 'tis gone Tempest, i. 2 

and your aflfection not gone forth .. .. — i. 2 

no, no, he's gone (r<?p.) — ii. 1 

when that's gone, he shall — iii. 2 

with a heaWness that's gone — v. 1 

particular accidents, gone by — v. 1 

wilt thou be gone?" TtroGen. of Verona, i. 1 

be gone to save your ship — i. 1 

will you be gone? — i. 2 

go, get you gone — i. 2 

what! Gone without a word! — ii. 2 

is gone with her along — ii. 4 

Valentine being gone — ii. G 

when you are gone — ii. 7 

the youthful lover now is gone — iii. 1 

tis not to have you gone — iii. 1 

for get you gone — iii. I 

be gone, I will not hear — iii. 1 

according to our proclamation, gone? — iii. 2 

gone, my gootl lord — iii. Ii 

gone to seek his dog — iv. 2 

that is gone for love — v. 2 

therefore, be gone, solicit me no more v. 4 

his successors, gone before him .... Merry Wives, i. 1 

I pray you, be gone — i. 2 

you may be gone i. 4 

would have gone to the truth — ii. 1 

be gone, and come when you — iii. 3 

well. lie gone: I will not miss her — iii. 5 

hust>and is this morning gone a birdiiig — iii. 5 

a fat woman, gone up into his — iv. 5 

even now with me: but she's gone .. — iv. 5 
they are gone but to meet tiie duke . . — iv. 5 

if you be iiot miu!, be gone Twe{flh Night, i. 5 

since I must needs Ix: gone —. it. 3 

Kudesby , be gone ! I pr'y thee — iv. 1 

1 pr'ytlice be gone — iv, 2 

I am gone sir, aiul anon, sir — i v. 2 (song) 

they had gone down too Measure for Measure, i. 2 

that nineteen zodiacks have gone round — i. 3 

very strangely gone from hence — i. .'> 

all hope is gone, unless you have .... — i. 5 

get you gone, and let rae hear — ii. 1 

pray you, be gone — ii. 2 

now you are come, you will begone.. — iii. I 



GONE-I know you'd fain bo eone.Meai, for Meat. v. 1 

but Tncsdiiy iiight lust gone — v. 1 

conipMii wiih her that's gonel — v. 1 

diikr i^niH y Hull is your cause guuc too — v. 1 

for lioulik- huinggone Much Ado, i. 1 

thiit have- LToiK' about to link — iv. I 

I am L'oni-. th,.iigli 1 am here — iv. 1 

thv shuuh-r liHth gone through — v. 1 

who is tied and gone — v. 2 

thou loh of siiirits, I'll he gone . . jWd. A'. Dream, ii. 1 

would that he were gone! — ii. 1 

get thee gone, and follow me no more — ii. 2 

tiirough the forest have I gone — i i . 3 

80 awake, when I am gone — ii. 3 

what, out of hearing? gone? no sound — ii. 3 

all that love is gone — iii. 2 

why, get you gone: who is't that .... — iii. 2 

get you gone, you dwarf — iii. 2 

to their wormy bod are gone — iii. 2 

where he calls, then he IS gone — iii. 2 

fairies, he gone, and be all ways away — iv. 1 

was, to be gone from Athens — i v. 1 

if our sport had gone forward — iv. 2 

how chance moonshine is gone — v. 1 

yellow cowslip cheeks, are gone, are gone — v. I 

nay, then will I be gone Love^L.Lost, ii. I 

ay, our way to be gone — ii. 1 

will these turtles be gone — iv. 3 

your perliri IK^^ In L'liiie, you rogue — v. 2 

so be gont. . . . ^ui Iiave it (rep.) — v. 2 

gone to li' . ! 'it your — v. 2 

party is ;:> In . iri Im /. I lector, she is gone — v. 2 
in plain ttrni^, ^laie to Uenvcn.Merch.of Venice, ii. 2 

I'll lie gone about it straight — ii. 4 

under sail, und gone to-night — ii. 6 

with him is Gratiano gone along .... — ii. 8 

must be gone from hence immediately — ii. 9 

to leave you and be gone — ii.9 

so be gone, sir, you are sped — ii. 9 (scroll) 

a diamond gone, cost me two thousand — iii. 1 

the thief gone with 60 much — iii. 1 

despatch all business, and be gone .. — iii. 2 

but get thee gone; I shall be there ,. — iii. 4 

well, you are gone both ways — iii. 5 

get thee gone, but do it — iv. I 

not the ring upon it, it is gone — v. I 

more virtuous, when she is gone . . As youLikc it. i. 3 

wherever they are gone, that youth is — ii. 2 

he is but even now gone hence — ii. 7 

would have gone near to fall in love — iii. 5 

and is gone forth. — to sleep — iv. 3 

but now he's gone, and my \Ao\Viirous.. AWsWetl, i. 1 

get you gone, sirrah; the complaints — i. 3 

get yon gone, sir; I'll talk witli — i. 3 

you'll be gone, sir knave, and do as I — i. 3 

be gone to-morrow; and be sure of this — i. 3 

is she gone to the king? She is — ii. 5 

my lord is gone, for ever gone — ii i. 2 

madam, he 8 gone to serve the duke — iii. 2 

I will be gone; my being here it is .. — iii. 2 

I will be gone; that pitiful rumour. . — iii. 2 
thitlier gone: ambitious love .... — iii. 4 (letter) 

he shall hear that she is gone — iii. 4 

they have gone a contrary way — . iii. 5 

his grace, you are gone about it? .... — iii. 6 

my lord, that's gone, made himself.. — iv. 5 

whither is he gone? — v. 1 

crying, that's good that's gone — v. 3 

sirrah, be gone, or talk not .... Taming of Shrew, i. 2 

fellows, let^s be gone — i. 2 

I must be gone. Faith, mistress — iii. 1 

I'll not be gone, till I please myself — iii. 2 

go, get thee gone thou false deluding — iv. 3 

be gone; and say no more — iv. 3 

the gods, but get thee ^one — iv. 4 

gone already; inch-thick Winter's Tale,\.'^ 

tis far gone, when I shall gust — i. 2 

saj', that she were gone, given to the — ii. 3 

do not push, me; I'll be gone — ii. 3 

farewell; we are gone. Thou, traitor — ii. 3 

for I do feel it gone, but know not .. — iii. 2 

the queen's Sliced, is gone. Howl gone? — iii, 2 

what's gone, and what's past help .. — iii. 2 

the ehaeej I am gone for ever — iii. 3 

and see if the bear be gone . — iii. 3 

is it not too far gone? tis time to part — iv. 3 

wilt please you, sir, be gone? — iv. 3 

he is gone aboard a new ship to purge — iv. 3 

nor my sister; we are gone else — iv. 3 

respecting her that's gone — v. 1 

boast itself above a better, gone — v. 1 

of affection, are they gone — v. 2 

I will be gone the sooner Comedy of Errors, i. 2 

he's somewhere gone to dinner — ii. 1 

go, get thee gone, fetch me an iron .. — iii. 1 

to trialge, pack and be gone — iii. 2 

got thee gone; buy thou a rope — iv. 1 

gone; on, officer, to prison — iv. 1 

lost is wailed when it is gone — iv. 2 

'tis time that I were gone — iv. 2 

forth to-night? may we be gone? — iv. 3 

to leave me, and be gone — iv. 3 

and I'll be gone, sir, and not trouble — iv. 3 

fly , be gone. Come, stand by me .... — v. 1 

have I hut gone in travail of you .... — v. 1 

her husband's to Aleiyio gone Macbeth, i. 3 

whose care is gone before to bid us . . — i. 4 

he is already imnieil; and gone to Scone — ii. 4 

is Baiiquu gone from court? — iii. 2 

f;et thee gone; to-morrow we'll — iii. 4 

leing gone, I am a man again — iii. 4 

get you gone; and at the pit — fii. 5 

thither fliacdutf is gone to pray .... — iii. 

where are they? gone? — iv. 1 

legitimation, name, and all is gone ..KingJohn, i. 1 

gone to lie married! gone to swear .. — iii. 1 

fellow, lie gone; I cannot brook .... — iii. I 

or get thee gone, and leave those .... — iii. 1 

England into England gone — iii. 4 

Arthur be not gone already — iii. 4 



GON 

GONE— which yaw demand is gone ..King John, iv. 2 

thou hateful villain, get tliee gone!.. — Iv. 3 

hut are gone to offer service to — v. t 

art thou gone so? I do hut stay — v. 7 

six winters? they are uniekly gone../iicAnrrf II. i. 3 

well, he is gone; and with him go.... — i. 4 

York is too far gone with grief — ii. I 

your husband he is gone to save .... — ii. 2 

your son was gone before I came .... — ii. 2 

no, my lord, is gone to Havenspurg.. — ii. 3 

our countrymen are gone and fled .. — ii. 1 

are gone to Bolingbroke, dispersed .. — iii. 2 

Salisbury is gone to meet the king .. — iii.:; 

then be gone, and trouble you no more — iv. I 

mine own again, be gone, that I may — v. I 

pardoned thee: away, be gone — v. ■-' 

Worcester, get thee gone, for I see ..\ Henry IV. i . :'. 

this heat up, after 1 was gone? — 1.3 

is Gilliams with the packet gone? — ii. 3 

shall we be gone? The moon — iii. I 

still? nay, pr'y thee, be gone — iii. 3 

so, be gone; we will not now be — v I 

he's gone into Smithfield to buy 'iHeurylV. i. z 

time s subjects, and time bids be gone — i. 3 

when she was gone down stairs — ii. I 

be gone, good ancient — ii. 4 

be quiet; the rascal is gone — ii. 1 

thou'lt forget me, when I am gone .. — ii. I 

'tis not ten years gone, since Kielmrd — iii. I 

1 would Wart might have gone, sir .. — iii. 2 

do anything about her, when I am gone — iii. 2 

of the days but newly gone — iv. i 

the army is discharged all, and gone — iv. 3 

I think, he's gone to hunt, my lord . . — iv. i 

this door is open: he is goue this way — iv. 4 

then get thee gone, and dig — iv. 4 

my father is gone wild — v. 2 

well, the fuel is gone Henry V. ii. 3 

the king will be gone from Southampton — ii. 3 

the French is gone off, look you — iii. 6 

when I am dead and gone I Henry VI. i. 4 

often welcomed v\ hen the}' are gone — ii. 2 

not to be gone from hence — iii. 2 

come, dally not, be gone — iv. ."> 

my other life? mine own is gone .... — iv. 7 

now he is gone, my lord — v. 2 

be gone, I say; for till you do — v. .^ 

say, when I am "one, 1 prophesied ..iHinryVI. i. i 

like lords, till all be gone — i. 1 

old Joan had not gone out — ii. I 

when I am dead and gone — ii. :t 

■what, gone, my lord — ii. 4 

art thou gone too? all comfort — ii. 4 

away, begone! Go call our uncle .. — iii. 2 

60, get thee gone; that I may know.. — iii. 2 

speak not to me; even now be gone .. — iii. 2 

therefore get ye gone — iv. ■_' 

my hope is gone, now Siiftblk — iv 4 

too much already; get thee gone SHenry VI. i. I 

now thou art gone, we have no staff — ii. 1 

to London all the crew are gone .... — ii. 1 

are gone to France for aid — iii. I 

thither gone to crave the French .... — iii. I 

there's tliy reward, be gone — iii. 3 

both gone to Warwick — i v. I 

and be gone to keep them back — iv. 7 

Where's Ilichard gone? To London.. — v..'. 

and the prince his son, are gone — v. ti 

when they are gone, then must I ..Ilichard lit. i. i 

therefore be gone, sweet saint — i. 2 

comforter, when he is gone — i. .\ 

the branches, when the rout is gone? — ii. 2 

but Edward, and he's gone (?c/).).... — ii. -i 

but they, and they are gone — ii. 2 

but what, is Catesbv gone? — iii..'; 

get thee gone; death and destruction — iv. I 

and be gone to Brecknock — \y.'i 

hence both are gone with conscience — iv. 3 

thou wouldst be gone to join with. ... — iv. 4 
he's gone to the king; I'll follow.. .. Henry VI II. i. I 

I have no farther gone in this — i. •_' 

Lovell's heads should have gone oft". . — i. 2 

gone slightly o'er low steps — ii. 4 

have micontemned gone by him .... — iii. 2 

the king has gone beyond me — iii. 2 

are ye ail cone? and leave me here .. — iv. j 

begone. What! I am fearful — v. i 

get you gone, and do as I have bid you — v. i 
gone between and between.... 7'roiVus .5- CrcMidn. i. I 

was Hector armed, and gone — i. 2 

Hector was gone; but }relen — i. 2 

'condition, 1 had gone barefoot — i. 2 

the eagles are gone; crows and daws — i. 2 

every action that hath gone before .. — i. 3 

what, are you gone again? — iii. 2 

I would be gone: where is my wit?.. — iii. 2 

Where's my lord gone? tell me — iv. 2 

thou must be gone, wench (.rep.) — i v . 2 

and he gone from 'Troilus — iv, 2 

he gone, I say; the gods have — v. 3 

Hector is gone! who shall tell — v. 1 1 

he is goneliappy, and has left .. Timon of Athens, i. 2 

get you gone; put on a most — ii. 1 

now apnojuix; get you gone — ii. 1 

answer not. I am gone — ii. 2 

some forfeited andgonc — ii. 2 

how quickly were it gone? — ii. 2 

arc gone thiit buy this praise (.rep.) .. — ii. 2 

get you gone, sirrah, draw nearer .... — iii. 1 

all goiier and not one friend, to take — iv. 2 

beat thy drum, and get thee gone — iv. 3 

speak iiot, lie gone — iv. 3 

hence! lie gonel if thou hadst — iv. 3 

get thee gone: that the whole life — iv. 3 

till now yon have gone on — v. 5 

hence 1 to your homes, be gone Coriotanut, i. 1 

'tis not foiir days gone, since I — 1.8 

C'oniinius the general is gone — i. .S 

Ik' gone, away; all will Ixj naught (re p.) — iii. 1 

the (leopic's enemy is gone (irp.) .... — iii. 3 



GON 

GONE— will you be goni;? You shall. Conotonus, iv. 2 

get 3'ou gone: you nave done a brave — iv. 2 

if he had gone forth consul — iv. 6 

therefore, ue gone : mine ears — v. 2 

are dislodged, and Mavcius gone .... — v. 4 

my rage is gone, and I am struck — v. 5 

have gone upon mj' handywork ..Julius C<ssar, i. 1 

be gone; run to your houses — i. 1 

he's gone to seek you at your house .. — i. 3 

not to answer me, but get thee gone. . — ii. 4 

is Ccusar yet gone to the Capitol? — .!'•** 

ay. Cxsar; but not yet goue — iii. 1 

away, away, be gone — iv. 3 

Portia! art thou g.ine? — iv. 3 

are they fled away, and gone — v. 1 

our day is gone; clouds, dew — v. 3 

there's a great spirit qq\^&\ .. Antony 6f Cleopatra., i. 2 

she's good, being gone — i. 2 

I must be gone. Under a compelling — i. 2 

had gone to gaze on Cleopatra — ii. 2 

get tneegone: say to Ventidius .... — ii. 3 

he is gone; the other three are sealing — iii. 2 

when Antony is gone through whom — iii. 3 

done already, and the messenger gone — iii. U 

he knew himself, it had gone well .. — iii. 8 

friends, be gone ; I have myself resolved — iii. 9 

be gone; my treasure's in the harbour — iii. 9 

be gone; you sliall liave letters — iii. 9 

not many moons gone by — iii. 10 

who's gone this morning? Who? .... — iv. 5 

is he gone? most certain — iv. 5 

bid them all fly; be gone — iv. 10 

'tis well tliou'rt gone, if it be well .. — iv. 10 

quick, or I am gone. Here's sport — iv. 13 
our strengtli is all gone into heaviness! — iv. 13 
the odds is gone, and tiiere is nothing — iv. 13 

well, get tliee gone; farewell — v. 2 

you must be gone; and I shall here. . CymbeUne,i. 2 

1 am gone, liiere cannot be a pineh — i. 2 
so, get you gone; if this penetrate .. — ii. 3 
I hope it be not gone, to tell my lord — ii. 3 

why hast thou gone so far — iii. 4 

but for her, where is she gone? — iii. 5 

gone she is to death, or to dishonour — iii. 5 

now I think on thee, my hunger's gone — iii. 6 

if he be gone, he'll make his grave a bed — iv. 2 

home art gone, and ta'en tliy wages — iv. 2 (song) 

I have gone all night: 'faith — iv. 2 

'tis gone. Pisanio, all curses madded — iv. 2 

the great part of my comfort, gone . . — i v. 3 

her son gone, so needful for this .... — iv. 3 

why gone, nor wlien slie purposes . . — iv. 3 

but (ii scorn!) gone! they went hence — v. 4 

h.ad it gone with us, we should not .. — v. 5 

but her son is gone, we know not how — v. .5 

discovered not which way she was gone — v. 5 
groaning shadows that are gone . . TilusAndron. i. 2 

trouble me no more, but get you gone — i, 2 

Aaron is gone; and my compassionate — ii. 4 

to death my wretched sons are gone — iii. 1 

get thee gone; I see, thou art — iii. 2 

for love of her that's gone, perhaps . . — iv. 1 

Marcus, she's gone, she's fled — iv. 3 

go, get you gone; and pray be careful — iv. 3 
the hreatli is gone, and the sore eyes . . Pericles, i. 1 

sufficiently, he's gone to travel ()ep.) .. — i. 3 

but since he's gone, tile king — i. 3 

I must needs be gone: my twelve — iii. 3 

master, I have gone thorough for — iv. 3 

none can know. Leonine being gone . . — iv. 4 
his daughter home, who first is gone — iv. 4 (Gow.) 

place as tills, she being once gone — iv. 5 

leaps to be gone into my motlier's bosom — v. 3 

therefore be gone, without our grace Lear, i. 1 

and the king gone to-niglitl — i. 2 

why, the night gone by — i. 2 

get you gone, and hasten your return. . . . — i. 4 

thy asses are gone about 'em — 1.5 

winter's not gone yet, if the wild-geese.. — ii. 4 

ask for me, I am ill, and gone to bed .... — iii. 3 

but trouble liim not, his wits are gone .. — iii. 6 

are gone with him towards Dover — iii. 7 

good friend, be gone; tliy comforts (rep.) — iv. I 

king of France IS so suddenly gone back — iv. 3 

Edmund, I tliink, is gone, in pity ".. — iv. .5 

gone, sir? farewell And yet I know not — iv. 6 

she is gone for ever (rep.) — v. 3 

them a nieasure, and be gone Romeo ^ Juliet, i. 4 

would please 'tis gone, 'tis gone, tis gone — i. .5 

away, be gone: tlie sport is at the best — i. 5 

prepare not to be gone — i.5 

let's awa}^ ; the strangers all are gone — i. 5 

almost morning, I would have thee gone — ii. 2 

is he gone, and liatli nothing? — iii. I 

Romeo, away, be gone ! (.rep.) — iii. 1 

he's gone, he's killed, he's dead! .... — iii. 2 

if those two are gone? Tybalt is gone — iii. 2 

either be gone before the watcli be set — iii. 3 

well, get you gone: o' Thursday be it — iii. 4 

wilt thou be gone? it is not yet — iii. 6 

1 must be gone and live, or stay and die — iii. 5 
stay yet, tnou need'st not to be gone — iii. 5 

now be gone; more light and light — iii. s 
art thou gone so? my love! my lord! — iii. 5 

and tell my lady I am gone — iii.,") 

get you gone, be strong and prosperous — iv. 1 

be gone: we shall be mueli unfurnished — iv. 2 

is my daughter gone to Friar Laurence? — iv. 2 

we may put up our pipes, and he gone — iv. 5 

no matter: get thee gone, and hire .. — v. 1 

tlierefore, hence, be gone ; but if thou — v. 3 

1 will be gone, sir, and not trouble you — v. 3 

think upon these gone — v. 3 

O be gone! by heaven, I love tliee .. — v. 3 

stay not, be gone; live, and hereafter say — v. 3 

knows not,- but I am gone hence .... — v. 3 

'tis gone, and will not answer Hamlet, i. 1 

with martial stalk hath he gone by — i. 1 

'tis here! 'tis here! 'tis gone! we do it .. — i. 1 

wliicli have freely gone with this aSair . . — i. 2 



[ 316] 



GONE— he is far gone, far gone; and, Hamlet, ii. 2 

hath Phoebus' cart gone round Neptune's — iii. 2 

where is he gone? To draw apart — iv. 1 

he is dead and gone, lady {rep.) .... — iv. 5 (song) 
next, your son gone; and he most violent — iv. .^ 

wlien these are gone, tire woman — iv. 7 

it is too true an evil : gone she is Othello, i. 1 

a mischief that is past and gone — i. 3 

tliere's one gone to tile harbour? — ii. 1 

you see tliis fellow, tliat is gone before . . — ii. 3 
nay, get thee gone: two things are to be — ii. 3 
she is gone; I am abused; and my relief — iii. 3 
avaunt! begone! thou hast set me on . . — iii. 3 
farewell! Otliello's occupation's gone! .. — iii. 3 

_'tis gone: arise, black vengeance — iii. 3 

is't gone? speak, is it out of the way? .... — iii. 4 
is gone, I would on great occasion speak — iv. 1 
so, get thee gone; good-night. Mine eyes — iv. 3 
'tis but a man gone ; forth my sword .... — v. I 
she's like a liar, gone to burning hell .... — v. 2 
he's gone, but his wife's killed — v. 2 

GONERIIj— Goneril, our eldest-born Lear, i. 1 

tlian that confirmed on Goneril — i. 1 

I cannot be so partial, Goneril, to the .. — i. 4 
panting forth from Goneril his mistress — ii. 4 
O Regan, Goneril! your old kind father — iii. 4 

arraign her first, 'tis Goneril — iii. 6 

hither, mistress, is your name Goneril? — iii. 6 
O Goneril ! you are not wortli the dust . . — iv. 2 

ha! Goneril! with a white beard ! — iv 6 

;^our affectionate servant, Goneril — iv. B (letter) 
makes mad her sister Goneril — v. 1 

GONGABIAN— O base Gongariau [/Cn«- 

Hungarian] wight! Merry Wives, i. 3 

GONZAGO— the murder of Gonzago. . . . Hamlet, ii. 2 

Gonzago is the duke's name (r^p.j — iii. 2 

murderer gets the love of Gonzago's wife — iii. 2 

GONZALO-a noble Neapolitan, Gonzalo. Tempest, i.2 

long live Gonzalo! — ii. 1 

as unnecessarily, as tliis Gonzalo .... — ii. 1 

to fall it on Gonzalo — ii. 1 

heard you this, Gonzalo? — ii. I 

the good old lord Gonzalo — v. 1 

holy Gonzalo, honourable man — v. 1 

my good Gonzalo, my true preserver — v. 1 

1 say amen, Gonzalo — v. 1 

GOOD— good boatswain, have care — i . 1 

cheerly good hearts — i. 1 

stand fast, good fate — 1.1 

sliould the good ship so have swallowed — i. 2 

good sir, I do — i.2 

like a good parent — i.2 

good wombs have borne bad sons — i.2 

tis a good dulness — i.2 

that in't which good natures could not — i. 2 
you will some good instruction give . . — i. 2 

a word, good sir — 1.2 

good things will strive to dwell with't ' — i.2 
then wisely, good sir, weigh our sorrow — ii. 1 

for a good wager, first begins — ii. 1 

good lord, how you take it! — ii. 1 

why, in good time — ii. 1 

and oar'd himself with his good arms. . — ii. 1 
content tender your own good fortune? — ii. 1 
now, good angels, preserve the king! .. — ii. I 

thy good friend Trinculo — ii. 2 

by this good light, this is — ii. 2 

well drawn, monster, in good sooth .. — ii. 2 

than you, good friend — iii. 1 

if thou beest a good moon-calf — iii. 2 

keep a good tongue in your head {rep.) — iii. 2 

my good friends, hark ! — iii. 3 

Will bring us good warrant of — ' iii. 3 

you did supplant good Prospero — iii. 3 

so with good life, and observation strange — iii. 3 

good my lord, give me thj; — iv. 1 

do that good mischief, which — iv. 1 

the goocTold lord Gonzalo — v. 1 

1 wul requite you with as good a thing — v. 1 

our royal, good, and gallant ship — v. I 

with the help of your good hands — (epil.) 

when thou dost meet good hap.. TicoGen. of Ver. i. 1 

war with good counsel — i. 1 

of many good I think him best — i.2 

be calm, good wind, blow not — i.2 

'twere good, I think, your — i. 3 

other gentlemen of good esteem — 

good company; with them — 

and in good time — 

'twere good you knock'd hira — 

your father's in good health — 

of much good news? ,. — 

with all good grace to grace — 

but, if he make this good — 

tell me some good mean — 

my goods, my lands — 

no worldly good should draw from me — 

and cannot near good news — 

the nurse and breeder of all good — 

she brews good ale (rep.) — 

if her liquor be good — 

for good tilings should be praised. . . . — 

the good conceit I hold of thee — 

some sign of good desert — 

where your good word cannot — 

ravel, and be good to none — 

the onset to thy good advice — 

and so, good rest — 

I wish all good befortime you — 

currish thanks is good enough — 

witness good bringing up — 

reformed, civil, full of good — 

she has good gifts Merry fVives. 

and possibilities, is good gifts — 

mucli good do it your good heart! . . — 

'tis a good dog (rep.) — 

he is good, and fair — 

do a good office between you — 

good worts. Good worts? good cabbage — 
and pass good humours — 



i 


3 


1 


3 


1 


3 


11 


4 


ii 


4 


ii 


4 


ii 


4 


11 


4 


]i 


7 


11 


7 


111 


1 


111. 




iii 


1 


iii 


1 


iii 


2 


iii 


2 


111 


2 


iii 


*f, 


111 


2 


iv. 


2 


iv. 


3 


IV. 


4 


IV. 


4 


V. 


4 



GOO 



GOOD — will you, upon good dowry. . Merry Wives, i. 1 

his meaning is gnod — i. 1 

a tapster is a good trade — i. 3 

the good humour is, to steal — i. 3 

he is of substance good — i. 3 

the humour rises; it is good — i. 3 

gave me good eyes too — i. 3 

Anne is a good girl — i. 4 

run in here, good young man — i. 4 

to speak a good word to — i. 4 

I'll do your master what good I can — i. 4 

it is not good you tarry here — i. 4 

it pleases your good worship to ask . . — i. 4 

shall I do any good, thinkest thou? . . — j. 4 

good faitli, it is siieh another Nan..., — i. 4 

and my good man too — ii, 1 

'twas a good sensible fellow — ii. 1 

how does good mistress Anne? — ii. I 

hath good skill in his rapier — ii. 1 

grated upon my good friends — ii. 2 

you were good soldiers — ii. 2 

why, sir, slie's a good creature — ii. 2 

the attraction of my good parts aside — ii. 2 

for 'tis not good that childi'en — ii. 2 

goodbody, I thank thee — ii. 2 

money is a good soldier, sir — ji. 2 

tliough I had never so good means . . — ii. 2 

I shall procure-a you de good guest.. — ii.3 

by gar, tis good; veil said — ii.3 

when I have good opportunities .... — iii 1 

and a good student from his book — iii. 1 

we are come to you, to do a good oflSce — iii. 1 

use your patience: in good time — iii. 1 

ay, dat is very good! excellent! — iii. I 

such a league between my good man — iii. 2 

good plots! they are laid — iii. 2 

a good knot: I nave good cheer — iii. 2 

thou'rt a good boy; this secrecy — iii. 3 

or bid farewell to your good life — iii. 3 

dat is good : by gar, vit all — iii. 3 

my uncle can tell you good jests .... — iii. 4 

I thank you for that good comfort .. iii. 4 

now heaven send thee good fortune . . — iii. 4 

and I'll be as good as my word — iii. 4 

as good luck would have it — iii. .S 

to bring this woman to evil for your good — iii. 5 

to be compassed like a good bilbo ... . — iii. 5 

in good sadness, sir, I am sorry — iii. 5 

that is good, William — jv. 1 

and that's a good root — iv. 1 

he is a good sprag memory iv. 1 

ay, in good sadness, is he — iv. 2 

the witness of a good conscience — i v. 2 

I tell you for good vill iv. 5 

I hope, good luck lies in odd numbers — v. 1 

that s good too ; but what needs — v. 2 

strew good luck, ouphes, on every,... — y. 5 

alile to woo her in good English — v. 5 

seese is not good to give putter v. 5 

clothes are good enough todrink in. Twelfth Nighl, i. 3 

and hath all the good gifts of nature — j. 3 

art thou good at these Jcick-shaws. . . . — i. 3 

make that good — i. 6 

a good leiiten answer — i. 5 

as good as a hanging to you ()-ep.)..., — i. 5 

apt, in good faith: very apt! — i. 5 

put me into good fooling! — i. 5 

that drink and good counsel will ... . i. 5 

she made good view of me ii. 2 

'twas ver.y good, i' faith — ii.3 

or a song of good life? — ii.3 

I care not for good life — ii.3 

excellent good, i' faith! Good, good.. — ii.3 

'twere as good a deed, as to di-ink .... — ii. 3 

but I have reason good enough — ii.3 

before me, she's a good wench — ii.3 

that always makes a good voyage — i i . 4 

this, and mv good wislies — ii. 5 

a cheveril glove to a good wit — iii. 1 

grace, and good disposition 'tend .... — iii. 1 

love sought is good, but given — iii. 1 

often good turns are shuffled off. — iii. 3 

a good note: that keeps j'ou — iii. 4 

very brief, and exceedjng good senseless — iii. 4 

to be of good capacity and breeding .. — iii. 4 

stand here, make a good show on't . . — iii. 4 

I'll be as good as my word — iii. 4 

done good feature shame — iii. 4 

get themselves a good report — iv. 1 

to be thought a good student — iv. 2 

an honest man, and a good housekeeper — iv. 2 

counterfeits well ; a good knave — iv. 2 

I'll follow this good man — iv. 3 

primo, secundo, tertio, is a good play — t. 1 

is a good tripping measure — v. I 

as to your soul seems good..Measure for Measure, i. 1 

thou art good velvet — i.2 

good eounsellors lack no clients — i. 2 

if they'll do you any good _ i. 3 

you do bl aspheme the good — i.o 

m me to do him good? — i. 5 

make us lose the good we oft — i. 5 

if these be good iieople — ii. 1 

before j'our good honour two — ii. 1 

that good christians ought to have . . — ii. 1 

but very good dishes — ii. 1 

unless tliey kept very good diet _ ii. 1 

an open room, and good for winter . . — ii. I 

you'll find good cause to whip _ ii. 1 

'tis for a good purpose — ii. ) 

worst thing about hira ; good then — ii. 1 

thank your worship for your good counsel — ii. I 

under your good correction — ii. 2 

with one half so good a grace — ii. 2 

for those tilings that malte her good? — ii. 2 

is like a good thing, being often — ii.4 

let's write good angel on the devil's.. — ii.4 

it were as good to pardon him — ii. 4 

or seem so, craftily; and that's not good — ii.4 

and in nothing good, but graciously.. — ii.4 



GOO 

GOOD— grace and good company I Mem. forMeat. lii 

a9 nil coinlurts arc; most good in deed — ii'i 

in good time — iii 

miulc yon I'ttir, liutli made you good. . — iii 

how much in the goiid tliiUc deceived in — iii 

to the love 1 lime ill (Idiii^'Kood — iii 

and good words went wild licr imnie — iii 

he were ftp g^MKl i:o u mile oil — iii 

why, 'tis giHid; it is llie li^lit nl'it .. — iii 

yoii will turn gocKl hii-liiuul now — iii 

I ho()e sir, vonr good woisliiii will lie — iii 

yes, in goo<l sootli, the v lee ia — iii 

good mv lonl, lie ^'<M»d t<» ine — iii 

wliich i bv niv couil leisure — iii 

'tis good : tlwiigh iiuisie lift hath — iv 

make bad, gooil, mill good provoke to harm — iv 

what is the news t'roiii this good deputy? — iv 

she comes to do you good — iv 

your good favour (for siux'ly sir, a good — iv 

I owe you a good turn — iv 

who ean do good on him — iv 

more than thanks and good fortune — iv 

1 will keep her ignorant of her good — iv 

in that gooil path that I would wish — iv 

thou hast made good haste — iv 

and gooil supporters you are — v 

this a good triar, belike! — v 

in \er>' >;ood time: siwak not you.... — v 

and elioke your good to come — v 

a motion much imports your good .. — v 

he hath done good service, lady il/iic/i.Jiio, i 

and a good soldier too, lady (/-cp.) .... — i 

ond so good a eoiitiiuier — i 

to tell us Cniiid is a good hare-tinder.. — i 

lierc is good horse to liiie — i 

vonr highness now may do me good .. — i 

hard lessiui that may do thee good.... — i 

are they goo<l? (rep.) — i 

a good sharp fellow; I will send for .. — i 

with a good leg, ami a good foot, uncle — ii 

if vou be not wooed in good time — ii 

I have a good eye, micie; I can see .. — ii 

brother, make good room — ii 

God match me with a good dancer! .. — ii 

that 1 had my good wit out of the .... — ii 

in every good thing — ii 

the infernal Ate in good apparel — ii 

none, but to desire your good company — ii 

and his goodwill obtained — ii 

to help my cousin to a good husband. . — ii 

ten mile afoot, to see a good armour . . — ii 

of good discourse, an excellent — ii 

by my troth, a good son" — ii 

it were good, that Beneclick knew .... — ii 

were it good, think you? — ii 

he hath indeed, a good outward hap|)in€ss — ii 

let her wear it out with good counsel — ii 

how much he is nnwortliy so good a lady — ii 

it were not good she knew his love — iii 

he hath an excellent good name — iii 

the word is too good to paint out her. . — 

are you good men and trne? .... 

a punishment too good for them 

God hath blessed you with a good name — iii. 

Ijy my troth, it's not 60 good — iii. 

for 1 hear as good exclamation on ... . — iii. 

a good old man, sir — iii. 

well, God's a good man — iii. 

that is some good : but not for that. . . . — iv. 

be i)roved uiiou thee by good witness.. — iv. 

I will make it good how you dare .... — v. 

60 I may have good cheer — v. 

nay, said I, a good wit — v. 

to satisfy this good old man — V. 

Leaiider the good swimmer — v. 

good part to intermingle with them (7r/7.) — v. 

suffer love; a good epithet! — v. 

that lived in the time of good neighbours — v. 

a good iiersuasion Mid. A'.'s Dreamt i* 

goad luck grant thee thy Demetrius! — i. 

a very good piece of work — i. 

will do any man's heart good to hear me — i. 

and they shall have good luck _ ii. 

if you think it good, and tarry — ii. 

food troth, you do me wrong, good sooth — ii. 

have a reasonable good eor in music — iv. 

I could munch your goo<l dry oats . . — iv. 

a bottle of hay; good hay, sweet hay — iv. 

good strings to your beards, new — iv. 

a good moral, my lord: it is not — v. 

gentle lieast. and of a good conscience — v. 

the moon shines with a good grace .. — v. 

thy mantle good, what, stained with — v. 

to stop all goo<l proceeding! Lope'«i../.os(, L 

I'll lay my head to any good man's.. — i. 

let them l>e men of good rejiu te — i. 

he was a man of good carriage — i. 

and he had a very goiMl wit — i. 

wit to make an ill sliaiiegood — Ii. 

too little of that good I saw 

your own good thoughts excuse inc. . 

would that do it goody — 

Katharine, by good hap — 

goiwl wits will be jang'ing — 

a good Tenvoy, ending in the goose .. — 

sir, your iieniiy worth is good — 

here, gofKl m v glass, take this — 

agfxxl friend of mine: stand aside* good — 

a go<3d master of mine, to a lady .... — 

thou can'st not bit it, my good man.. — 

in the testimony of a good conscience — 

but the gift is goorl in those in whom — 

ago'rfl member of the commonwealth — 

Ofioo<l lustre of conceit in a turf .... — 

an, goo<l old Mantuan ! — 

is not that a grK>d word? — 

'twere good, yours did — 

I do assure you, very good friend .... — 

are go<xl ttt snrh eruptions — 

beauteous a3 ink; a good conclusiou — 



— iii. 3 



tj3172 

GOOD— wecping-ripo for a good word.Loi<e't/..L. v. 2 

yes, in pood faith — v.!! 

here is like to he a good preseiiee .... — v. 'i 
ho is u marvellous good neighhiuir (rrp.) — y. 2 
OS your good (nrtimes are. . . . .yfrchimt of f'euicey i. 2 



GOO 



— ii. 1 

— ii. 1 

— ii. 1 



Vllllt 



Auto 
eayi 



II pronounced 

.■ L'ood to do 

Hull follows 

uoo.l (.,!„■ (lone 

olr..od i-oim>el the cripple 
i(h, h^ue ^ooil iiispiiations 
loll lo lli^ own f;oii(l parts 
«1 heiiitas i can bid 



Ill nutn, 



(to. 



to niiike interest good; or is yon 

'tis a good roiiiul sum: llu'ee months — i. 3 

food fortune then! — ii. 1 

shall have good fortune — ii.'i 

slie's a good wench for this — ii. ii 

we have not made good ineparation . . — ii. 1 

'tis good we do so — ii. 4 

let good Antonio look he keep — ii. 8 

tluit the good Antonio, the honest — iii. I 

a title good enough to keep his — iii. I 

not take his tlesh; what's that good for? — iii. 1 

good news, gixjd news — iii. 1 

tocry, good joy; good joy, my lord .. — iii. 'J 

and ilo Von, Gnitiaiio, mean i.'ood faith? — iii. 2 

tell me'linw lov gooiUVieiidilotli.... — iii. i; 

that vovul iiieirhaiit, good Antonio? — iii. 2 

since riiuve your good leave to — iii. 2 

I never did reiient lor doing good.... — iii. 4 

therefore, lie ol good elicer — iii. S 

liope in it tliat eau dii you any good — iii..') 

yoxi arc no good inemlier of tile — !'.!•■'* 

an army of good words — iii. S 

and now, good sweet, sav thy opinion — iii. 5 

good cheer, Antoniol what man? — iv. 1 

twere good, you do so much for charity — iv. 1 

thy lands and gooiN ;irr, hy th.- laws of — iv. 1 

and all thy goods arc roiiii-caic — iv. 1 

why then the devil -ivc him ,::..od of it! — iv. 1 

shall seize one hall liis goods — iv. 1 

fine for one half of Ids goods — iv. 1 

with his horn full of good news — v. 1 

so shines a good deed in a naughty . . — v. 1 

nothing is good, I sec, without respect — v. 1 

hath some good comforts too for you — y. 1 

to give me good education As you Like il, i. 1 

than becomes me for my good — i. 1 

'twill be a good wa}*; and to-morrow — i. 1 

good monsieur Charles! what's the news — i. 1 

therefore he gives them good leave to — i. 1 

emulator of every man's good parts.. — i. 1 

but love no man in good earnest — i. 2 

let us sit and moek the good housewife — i. 2 

by his honour they were good pancakes — i. 2 

and the mustard was good; and yet. . — i. 2 

you have lost much good sport — i. 2 

I would have told you of good wrestling — i. 2 

pity her for her good father's sake . . — i. 2 

O, a good wish upon you! you will try — i. 3 

let us talk in good earnest — i. 3 

in stones, and good in every thing .. — ii. 1 

good old man ; how well in thee . . — ii. 3 
in good terms, in good set terms .... — ii. 7 
for a counter, woiud I do, but good? — ii. 7 
a rude despiser of good manners .... — ii. 7 
if ever sat at any good man's feast .. — ii. 7 

and eat at good men's feasts — ii. 7 

and be blessed for your good comfort? — ii. 7 

round belly, with good capon lined.. — ii. 7 

if that you were the good sir Rowland's — ii. 7 

good old man, thou art right — ii. 7 

of itself, it is a good life — iii. S 

is without three good triends — iii. 2 

that good pasture makes fat sheep . . — iii. 2 

may complain of good breeding — iii. 2 

saw'st good manners; if thou (re/).)., — iii. 2 

that are good manners at the court . . — iii. 2 

in respect of a good piece of flesh — iii. 2 

glad of other men's good — iii. 2 

good my complexion! dost thou — iii. 2 

relish it with a good observance — iii. 2 

1 would give him some good counsel — iii. 2 

nor a man's good wit seconded — iii. 3 

were to put good meat into an — iii. 3 

of his goods: rijrht; many a man (rrp.) — iii. 3 

and have a good priest that can — iii. 3 

it would be a good excuse to leave . . — iij. 3 

as good cause as one would desire.. .. — iii. 4 

his hair is of a good colour — iii. 4 

I told him, of as good as he — iii. 4 

fasting, for a good man's love — in. :> 

'tie good to be sad and say nothing (;■<■;;.) — iv. 1 

very good orators, when they are out — iv. I 

for, good youth, he went but — iv. 1 

not good? I hope so. Why then (re/).) — iv. 1 

and in good earnest, and so God mend — iv. I 

he of good cheer, youth — iv. 3 

take a good heart, and counterfeit .. — iv. 3 

faith, tlie priest was good enough — v. 1 

we that have good wUs. have much — v. 1 

a good answer: art rich? (rep.) — v. 1 

it shall be to your good ; for my — v. 2 

of good conceit: I speak not this (icp.) — v. 2 

touoyourself good, and not to — v. 2 

as you have books for gocxl manners — t. 4 

he s as good at anything, and yet a fool — v. 4 

shall share the good of our — v. 4 

good wine needs no bush (rc/i.) — (epil.) 

to good wine they do use good (rtp.) — (epil.) 

by the hell) of goodeiiilognes — (epil.) 

a good epilogue, nor cannot (r<?p.)..,. — (epil.) 

08 have good beariis, or good faces.. .. — (epil.) 
that is so generally at all times go<xl../IH'» If'ell, i. 1 

I have those hoiK's of her good, that her — i. 1 

is a virtue of a goixl wing, and I like — i. 1 

get thee a good husband — i. I 



GOOD-to talk of your good father Atl'i H'ell, i . 2 

his good reinemfirance, sir, lies — i. 2 

thus his good mchinchnly oft - i. 2 

good, among nine had if one lie good — i. 3 (song) 

good ill ten. \V luit, one good in ten? — i. 3 i.soiig! 

one goixl woman ill ten, madam .... — i. 3 

might have a good woman born .... — i. 3 

that his good receipt shall — i.3 

good sparks and lustniiis, a word, good — ii. 1 

too hapiiv, and too goorl, to moke — ii. 3 

goi<<t alone is good, without a name .. — ii. 3 

uiiucirtliv thi-- good gift — ii. 3 

our will uhich travails in thy good .. — ii. 3 

good fortune, and tlie favour'ot the king — ii. 3 

yet art thou good for nothing' hut .... — ii. 3 

so, my good uindow of lattice — ii. 3 

he is my good lord: whom I — ii. 3 

good very good; it is so then (rep.) .. — ii. 3 

to have mine own good fortunes — ii. 4 

a good knave, i'faith, and well fed . . — ii. 4 

this haste as your own good proceeding — ii. 4 

is a good workman, a very good tailor — ii. 4 

good traveller is something at — ii. 5 

hut we must do good against evil .... — ii. 5 

the favours of so good a king — iii. 2 

that good convenience claims — iii. 2 

nothing here, that is too good for him — iii. 2 
he is too good and fair for death. . — iii. i (letter) 

a right good creature — iii. 6 

the owner of no one good (luality .... — iii. 6 

hy the good aid that 1 of you — iii- 7 

gabble enough, and good enough .... — iv. 1 

shaking off so good a wife — iv. 3 

mingled yarn, good and ill together.. — iv. 3 

in good sadness, I do not know — iv. 3 

the lea\'e of my gooil lord the king .. — iv. 4 

'twas a good lady, 'twas a good lady — iv. 5 

ever keeps a i/ood fire — iv. .s 

since I heard of the good lady's death — iv. 5 

is a good li\ery of honour — iv. 5 

with what good speed our means .... — v. 1 

whoof herself is a good lady — v. 2 

crying that's good that's gone — v. 3 

he's a good drum, my lord — v. 3 

how Silver made it good . . Turning nf Shrew, 1 (iud.) 

Belmau is as good as he, my lord — 1 (ind.) 

lyord be thanked for my good amends — 2 (ind.) 

thought it good you hear a play — 2 (ind.) 

and thy good company — i. 1 

here is some good pastime toward.... — i. 1 

soon make good what I have said .... — i. 1 

not displease thee, good Bianca — i. 1 

childi'en in good bringing up — i. 1 

your gifts are so goodj here is none .. — i. 1 

there he good fellows in the world .. — i. I 

my reasons are both good and weighty — i. 1 
a good matter, surely ; comes there.. — i. 1 (ind.) 

and my good friend Petruchio! — i. 2 

and goods at home, and so am come . . — i. 2 

scolding would do little good upon him — i. 2 

and by good fortune, I have lighted.. — i. 2 

other books, good ones, I warrant you — i 2 

news indifferent good for either — i. 2 

1 do hope good days, and long, to see — i. 2 
presumes, for his own good, and yours — i. 2 

I were as sure of a good dinner — i. 2 

the motions good indeed, and be it so — i. 2 

[Co(.] for these, other goods — ii. I 

and he, for your good sake — ii. 1 

heir to all his lands and goods — ii. 1 

prove a good musician? I think — ii. 1 

and thankful for good turns — ii. 1 

three or four as good, within — ii.. 1 

in my head to do my master good.... — ii. 1 

'twere good, methinks, to steal — iii. 2 

she is my goods, my chattels — iii. 2 

go with me, to make the matter good — iv. 2 

tis passin" good; I pr'ythee let — iv. 3 

much good do it unto tiiy gentle .... — iv. 3 

'twere good, he were schooled — iv. 4 

stand good father to me now — iv. 4 

for the good report I hear of you .... — i v. 4 

content, in a good father's care — iv, 4 

she is of good esteem, her dowry — iv. 5 

GoOl sent! 'em good shipping! — v. 1 

while I [day the good husband — v. I 

I thank my good father I am able . . — v. 1 

after our great good cheer — v. 2 

a good swift simile, but something .. — v. 2 

now, in good sadness, son Petruchio — r. 2 

'tis a g<ic;d hearing, when children .. — v. 2 
one good deed, dying tongueless . . WinterUTale, i. 2 

my last good deed w as, to entreat. . . . — i. 2 

no, in good earnest: how sometimes, , — i. 2 

at the good queen's entreaty (rep.) .. — i. 2 

thine eyes at once see good and evil . . — i. 2 

I must be the poisoner of good Polixenes — i. 2 

good expedition be ray friend — i. 2 

good time encounter her! — ii- 1 

so have we thought it good — ii. 1 

if the good truth were known — ii. 1 

no court in Europe is too good — ii. 2 

not he doubted I shall do good — ii. 2 

he took good rest to-night — ii. 3 

your good queen. Good queen? (rrp.) — ii. 3 

and would by combat make her good — ii. 3 

the good queen, for she is good — ii. 3 

I am none, by this good light — , ii. 3 

and, thou, good goddess nature — ii. 3 

will never do him good — ii. 3 

word 'tis done (and hy good testimony) — ii. 3 

'tis good Sliced; foretells, the great .. — ii. 3 

recall the good Camillo — iii. 2 

but tliHt the good mind of Camillo .. — iii. 2 

have poisoned good Camillo's honour — iii. 2 

good luck, an't be thy will — iii. J 

tliat's a gcKxl deed — iii. a 

and we'll do good deeds on 't — iii. 'i 

and terror, of goo<l and bad — iv. (clio. I 

and very good ones; but tlicy arc most — iv. 2 



GOO 



[ 318 ] 

GOOD — manhood, nor good fellowship.! Henry II'. i. 2 

you have good leave to leave lis — i. 3 

which many a good tall fellow — i. 3 

circumstance considered, good my lord — i. 3 

into the good thoughts of the world. . — i. 3 

an 'twere not as good a deed as drink — ii. 1 

and a good jest for ever — ii. 2 

a good plot, good friends, and full . . — ii. 3 

a good boy; by the lord, bo they call me — ii. 4 

shall command all the good lads .... — ii. 4 

till I am so good a proficient — ii. 4 

if manhood, good manhood — ii. 4 

there live not three good men unhanged — ii. 4 

all the titles of good fellowship come — ii. 4 

well, that rascal hath good mettle — ii. 4 

it is like, we shall have good trading — ii. 4 

a good [Coi. goodly] portly man .... — ii. 4 

wherein is he good, but to taste — ii. 4 

for a true face, and good conscience. . — ii. 4 

well, I am schooled; good manners.. — iii. 1 

no persuasion can do good upon .... — iii. 1 

a good mouth-filling oath — iii. 1 

your majesty's good thotiglits — iii. 2 

lived well, and in good compass .... — ?!!••' 

I make as good use of it as many ... . — j'l* ^ 

would have bought me lights as good — iii. 3 

darest thou be as good as thy word now? — iii. 3 

I must still be good angel to thee .... — iii. 3 

I am good friends with my father .. — iii. 3 

were it good, to set the exact — iv. 1 

I press me none but good housekeepers — iv. 2 

tut, tut, good enough to toss — iv. 2 

your great deservings, and good name ^ iv. 3 

any way vour good deserts forgot — iv. 3 

good, an' neaven will! As good 2HenryIV. i. 1 

well-bred, and of good name — i . 1 

what good tidings come with you? .. — i. 1 

we will all put forth; body, and goods — i. 1 

itself was a good healthy water — i. 2 

done good service at Shrewsbury .... — i. 2 

to the hearing of anj'thing good .... — i. 2 

give your lordship good time of day — i. 2 

if they have a good thing — i. 2 

a good wit will make use of — i. 2 

good my lord, be good to me ! I beseech — ii. 1 

he! what man of good temper — ii. 1 

she had a good dish of prawns — ii. 1 

she hath been in good case — ii. 1 

to pawn my plate, in good earnest .. — ii. 1 

upon my good lord heve — ii. 1 

how many good young princes — ii. 2 

let it be an excellent good thing .... — ii. 2 

a crown's worth of good interpretation — ii. 2 

that this good blossom could be .... — ii. 2 

delivered witli good respect — ii. 2 

in an excellent good temperality — ii. 4 

that's well said: a good heart's worth — ii. 4 

sick of a ealm| yea, good sootli — ii, 4 

you are both, iri good troth — ii. 4 

1 am in good name and fame with . . — ii. 4 
drink no more than will do me good — ii. 4 
which was an excellent good word .. — ii. 4 

these be good humours, indeed I — ii. 4 

a good shallow young fellow (rep.) .. — ii. 4 

Poins has a good wit. He a good wit? — ii. 4 

and swears with a good grace — ii. 4 

O the Lord preserve thy good grace ! — ii. 4 

blessing o' your good heatt! — ii. 4 

there is a good angel about him — ii. 4 

good speed. How many of my thousand — iii. 1 

with good advice, and little medicine — iii. I 

William is become a good scholar — iii. 2 

how a good yoke of bullocks at Stamford — iii. 2 

he drew a good bow; and dead! — iii. 2 

done a man's lieart good to see — iii. 2 

a score of good ewes may be worth .. — iii. 2 

what is your good pleasure with me? — iii. 2 

knew him a good backsword man (rep.) — iii. 2 

is good; yea, indeed, is it; good plirases — iii. 2 

by this good day, I know not the — iii. 2 

a word of exceeding good command.. — iii. 2 

look, here comes good sir John (rep.') — iii. 2 

good limbed fellow; young, strong (rep.) — iii. 2 

very singular good! m faith, well said — iii. 2 

no man's too good to serve his prince — iii. 2 

well said ; thou'rt a good fellow — iii. 2 

go to; very good; exceeding good.... — iii. 2 

thou'it a good scab; hold — iii. 2 

whose learning and good letters peace — iv. I 

our hearts should be as good — i v. I 

and good from bad find no partition — iv. 1 

heaviness foreruns the good event. . . . — iv. 2 

some {rood thing comes to-morrow . . — iv. 2 

good tidings, my lord Hastings — iv. 2 

as good a man as he; sir, whoe'er I am — iv. 3 

that may do me good — iv. 3 

in your good report — iv. 3 

a good sherris-sack hath a twofold .. — iv. 3 

drmkinggood, and good store of fertile — iv 3 

nor lose the good advantage of — i v. 4 

and wherefore should these good news — iv. 4 

heard he the good news yet? — iv. 4 

marry, good air; spread, Davy — v. 3 

serves you for good uses — v. 3 

a good varlet, a good varlet, a very good — v. 3 

but eat, and make good cheer — v. 3 (song) 

wind which blows no man to good . . — v. 3 

and shall good news be baffled? — v. 3 

what! I do bring good news? — v. 3 

devise something to do thyself good.. — v. 3 

sir, I will be as good as my word — v. 5 

if you look for a good speeeli now .... — (epi 1 .) 

but a good conscience will make .... — (epil.) 

and two hundred good esqviires HenryV. i. 1 

mth good acceptance of his majesty .. — i. 1 

advised by good intelligence of — ii. (chorus) 

a little, in good terms, as I may — ii. 1 

the king is a good king — ii. 1 

wlmt, man! be of good cheer — ii.3 

these be good humours — iii. 2 



GOO 



iv. 3 



— iv. 3 

— iv. 3 

— iv. 3 



V. 1 



iii. 1 



GOOD — ^ray good falcon made her.. IVinler'sTale, iv. 3 

as your good flock shall prosper — iv. 3 

since these good men are pleased .... — iv. 3 

but as good reason, the father 

cast your good counsels upon 

to my good use, I remembered 

a good nose is requisite also 

comfort, good comfort: we must to 
to do the prince my master good . . 

took something good, to mate — 

and for future good, to bless the bed — 

my brother, (good geutlem an ! ) — 

by your good father's speed — 

I have done good to against my will — 

and to give me your good report .... — 

ay, an' it like your good worship .... — 

we'll be tliy good masters — 

so much to my good comfort — 

his goods confiscate to the duke's. Comedy of Er 

great care of goods at random left. ... — 

lest that youi' goods too soon be — 

go indeed, having so good a mean . . — 

m good timej sir, what's that? — 

ieaiTi to jest m good time — 

good will, and your good welcome . . — 

good meat, sir, is common — 

take tliem in good part — in. i 

as good to wink, sweet love — iii- 2 

and says, God give jjou good rest .... — iv. 3 

is't good to soothe Km in these — iv. 4 

to do liim all tlie grace and good I could — v. 1 

I shall have leisure to make good. ... — v. 1 

your goods, that lay at host, sir — v. 1 

who like a good and hardy soldier .... Macbeth, i. 2 

cannot be good; if ill, why — i. 3 

if good, why do I yield to that — i.3 

this have I thought good to — i. 5 (letter) 

food repose the whilel — ii. 1 

ere comes the good Macduff — ii. 4 

what good could t'ney pretend? — ii. 4 

that would make good of bad — ii. 4 

by the verities on thee made good .... — iii. 1 

have else desired your good advice .... — iii. 1 

this I made good to you in our — iii. 1 

to pi'ay for this good man — iii. 1 

good things of day begin to 

yet he's good, that did tlie like 

now, good digestion wait on appetite . 
broke the good meeting, with most . . . 

for mine own good, all causes 

then the charm is firm and good 

for tliy good caution, thanks 

it were a good sign tliat I 

to do good, sometime, accounted 

and like good men, bestride our 

a good and virtuous nature may 

against the good, and loyal 

to thy good truth and honour 

miraculous work in this good king . . . 
and good men's lives expire before . . . 
JEngland hath lent us good Siward . . . 
and the good Macduff: revenges burn . 

a good blunt fellow: why, being j 

Pliilip, good old sir Robert's wife's . . 

adieu; good fortune come to thee I .. — 

good leave, good Pliilip — 

that stirs good thoughts in any breast — 

there's a good mother, boy, that blots — 

there's a good grandam. Good my .. — 

to say what good respect I have .... — 

shall come, for me to do thee good . . — 

fortune means to men most good .... — 

what good love may I perform — 

the rich advantage of good exercise . . — 

which for our goods we do no further — 

good ground, be pitiful, and hurt — 

as good to die, and go, as die — 

whate'er you think, good words, I think — 

here's a good world ! knew you — 

away then , with good courage — 

be of good comfort ; for the great .... — 

will not let me welcome this good news — v 

food quarter, and good care to-night — v 

e of good comfort, prince — v 

here to make good the boisterous. . . . Richard II. i 

wortliily, as a good subject should . . — i 

envying earth's good hap — i 

my body shall make good upon — i 

too good to be so, and too bad to live — i 

will I maite good against thee — i 

to make all tliis good — i 

God, and good men, hate so foul .... — i 

as much good stay with thee — i 

and what shall good oUl York — i 

heaven in thy good cause make — i 

is banished upon good advice — i 

the apprehension of the good — i 

a precedent and witness good — ii 

his plate, his goods, his money — ii 

tlieir events can never fall out good — ii 

to hear of good towards him (rep.) .. — ii 
his haste good hope ; then wherefore 

than your good words 

a soul remembering my good friends 

keeps good old York there 

my fatlier's goods are all distrained. . 
arid crossly to thy good all fortune . . 

the news is very fair and good 

do you good. And I could weep (rep.) 
dear friend of the good duke of 'V ork 
to the bosom of good old Abraham ! . . 
great king (and j'et not greatly good) 
sit by the fire with good old folks .... 

'twere no good part, to take on 

thy overflow of good converts to bad — v. 3 

would tlie deed were good! — v. 5 

but neither my good word, nor princely — v. 6 

be men of good government 1 Henry IV. i. 2 

a. commodity of good names were — i. 2 

1 see a good amendment of life in thee — i. 2 



iii. 2 



— iv. 1 



iv. 2 



'John 



iii. 3 
iii. 4 
iv. 1 



iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 
V. 1 



ii.3 
ii.3 
ii. 3 
ii.3 
ii. 4 



iii. 7 



iv. I 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 4 



v. 2 



GOOD matched with as few good deeds. HcHri/)'. iii. 2 
it is not so good to come to the mines — iii. 2 
I do not know vou so good a man . . . . — iii. 2 

in good truth, the poet is make — iii. H 

the fig of Spain ! Very good — iii. S 

we thought not good to bruise — iii. 6 

of a good and particular mistress ... . — iii. 7 
have good judgment in horsemanship — 
he will keep that good name still .... — 
both healthful and good husbandr3^ . . — 
a good soft pillow for that good white — 
'tis good for men to love their present — 
as good a gentleman as the emperor . . — 
of parents good, of fist most valiant .. — 
a good old commander, and a most . . — 

but if the cause be not good — 

this story shall the good man teach . . — 
(good argument, I hope, we shall not fly) — 
he is a gentleman of a good house .... — 

might liave a good prey of us — 

I am Welsh, you know, good countryman — 
and is good knowledge and literature — 
and I have been as good as my word . . — 
what prisoners of good sort are taken — 

as ill good time he may — v. (( 

that is all. Good. Ay, leeks isgoot.... — 
teach you a good English condition . . — 
joy and good wishes to our most fair. . — 
of this good day, and of this gracious . . — 

may do some good, when articles — 

she hath good leave. Fair Katharine.. — 
a good leg will fall ; a straight back . . — 

but a good heart, Kate, is the sun — 

must needs prove a good soldier-breeder — 

find the best king of good fellows .... — v. z 

I love her, and tliat is good English . . — v. 2 

had your watch been good 1 Henry VI. ii. I 

except thou sorrow for my good — ii. 5 

make my ill the advantage of my good — ii- 5 
I am as good, — As good? thou bastard — iii. 1 

sweet virgin, for our good — V'i- * 

and for these good deserts, we here . . — iii. 4 

as good a man as York — iii. 4 

your purpose is both good and — v. 1 

good wislies, praise, and prayers .... — v. 3 

burn her; hanging is too good — v. 4 

Humphrey the good duke of Gloster.2Hc»/)!/ VI. i. 1 

God preserve the good duke — j. 1 

excepting none but good duke Humphrey — i- 1 

together, for the public good — i- 1 

silly owner of the goods weeps — i. 1 

for he's a good man! Jesu bless him! — i. 3 

I have good witness of this — i.3 

well guerdoned for these good deserts — _i. 4 
were it not good, your grace could fly — ii. j 
so good a quarrel, and so bad a peer 
in my sleep by good saint Alban .... 
and if thy claim be good, the Nevils 
that idrtuous prince, the good duke . . 

here's a pot of good double beer 

thank God and the good wine in thy 

in studying good for England I 

for good king Henry, thy decay 

bewails good Gloster's case 

after him, and cannot do him good . . 

I judge mine own wit good 

for that is good deceit which 

'tis my good lord. Away, be gone! .. 

true evidence, of good esteem 

that good duke Humphrey traitorously — 

had the good duke to keep 

by him the good duke Humphrey died 

if God's good pleasure be ! 

that srailedst at good duke Humplirey's 
king's eomieil are no good workmen 
an honest man, and a good bricklayer 

with a man as good asliimself 

and good reason ; for thereby is 

of an enemy, be a good counsellor, or no? 

if we mean to thrive and do good 

for watching for your good 

continue still in this so good a mind 

shall redound unto your good 

sallet was born to do me good 

lands, goods, horse, armour 

created knight for liis good service .. 
I'll warrant, they'll make it good . . 
the heavens? good Margaret, stay .. 

my title's goon, and lietter far 2 Henry VI 

what good IS this to England 

thou art as opjiosite to every good. . . . 
the happy tidings of his good escape 
what hope of good? our nap is loss .. 

if (Jod's good will were so 

good fortune bids us pause 

fight closer, or good faith 

ay, good leave have you 

to do them good, I would sustain .... 
husband's lands, to do them good . . 
and yet too good to be your concubine 
appear by Edward's good success. . . . 

he hath good usage and great 

lands and goods be confiscate 

the good old man would fain 

service for so good a gift — ■ v. i 

stand we in good array — v. I 

as good to chide the waves — v. 4 

good was little better: good Gloster (rep.) — v. K 
preposterous: therefore, not good lord — v. C 

and that good man of worship Richard HI. i. 1 

good time of day unto my gracious lord — i. 1 

swallow lip this good king's blood .. — i. 2 

which renders good for bad, blessings 
entertain good comfort, and cheer . . 

good time of day unto your 

to your good prayer will scarcely 

madam, good hope; his grace 

good counsel, marry; learn it 

too hot to do somebody good 

that God bids us do good for evil 



ii. 1 



iii. 2 



— iii. 2 

— iii. 2 

— iii. 3 



iv. 10 



V. 2 



_ iv. 7 



— 1. 2 



GOO 

GOOD— talkers are no good doers .... Itichanl HI. i. 3 

God give your "race good rest! — _i. ■! 

why, so; now I have done a good day's — ii. 1 

in good time, here comes the noble duke — ii. I 

and desire all good men's love — ii. I 

for ray good uncle Goster told me .. — ij. 2 

make "me die a good old man ! — ii. 2 

me seemeth good, that, with some .. — ii. 2 

no, no; by God's good grace, his son — ii. 3 

young cousin! it is good to grow .... — ii. 4 

"H)ear your treasure and your goods .. — ii. 4 

and in good time, here comes (lep.).. — iii. 1 

for joy of this good news — iii. 1 

at the other, is my good friend Catesby — iii. 2 

he sends you this'good news, that. . . . — iii. 2 

I'll talk with this good fellow — iii. 2 

hold it, to your honour's good content — iii- 2 

I saw good strawberries in your — iii. 4 

ICol.Knt.'] hope in air of your good looks — iii. i 

murder me, and my good lord of Gloster? — iii. ."i 

and your good graces both have well — iii. h 

the indictment of the good lord Hastings— iii. 6 

here's a good world the while ! — !!!•'' 

that did love their country's good .. — jjl- ' 

less importing tlian onr general good — iii. 7 

my lord, you mean no good to him . . — iii. 7 

all good men of this xmgoverned isle — iii. 7 

we waken to our country's good .... — iii. 7 

be of good cheer: Mother, how fares — iv. 1 

Richmond, and good fortune guide thee? — iv. 1 

good angels tend thee! Go thou (rep.) — iv. 1 

gold were as good as twenty — iv. 2 

but think how I may do thee good . . — jv. 3 

good news or bad, that thou comest. . — iv. 3 

and brief, good mother; for I am — iv. 4 

births good stars were opposite — iv. 4 

as I intend more good to you and yours — iv. 4 

what good is covered with the face (.rep.) — iv. 4 

qiiick conveyance with her good aimt — iv. 4 

allplanetsdf goodluck tomy — iv. 4 

tempt thee to do good — iv. 4 

neither good nor bad! what need'st.. — iv. 4 

but this good comfort bring I — iv. 4 

make some good means to speak ... . — v. 3 

prays continually for Richmond's good — v. 3 

goo<l angels guard (rep.l — v. 3 

God and his good angels, fight on — — v. 3 

for any good, that I myselt — v. 3 

God, and our good cause, fight upon — v. 3 

a good direction, warlike sovereign. . — v. 3 

by a good discourser lose some IJenryl'lIlA. 1 

ordered by the good discretion of ... . — i. 1 

our merchants' goods at Bourdeaux — i. 1 

take good heed, you charge not — i. 2 

all tlie good our English have got — — i . 3 

good companv, good wine, good (rep.) — i. 4 

and to you all good health — i. 4 

a good digestion to you all — i. 4 

by all your good leaves, gentlemen . . — _i. 4 

go with me, like good angels ~ ii. 1 

all good people, pray for me! — ii. 1 

good angels keep it from us! — ii. 1 

out of malice to the good queen — ii. 1 

that angels love good men with — ii. 2 

this good man, this just and learned — ii. 2 

that goodfellow, if I command him.. — ii. 2 

and she so good a lady — ii. 3 

nay, good troth, — yes, troth — ii. 3 

commends his good opinion to you . . — ii. 3 

and take your good grace from me?.. — ii. 4 

or touch of her good person? — ii. 4 

against the person of the good queen — ii. 4 

they siiould be good men — iii . I 

that honour every good tongue blesses — iii. 1 

like a good man, your late censure .. — iii. 1 

both for your good wills, ye speak .. — iii. 1 

Tou turn the good we oifer into envy — iii. 1 

you wander from the good we aim at — iii. I 

'tis a kind of good deed, to say well.. — iii. 2 

to the good of your most sacred — iii. 2 

do profess, that for your highness' good — iii. 2 

as you respect the common good .... — iii. 2 

to forfeit all yom- goods, lauds — iii. 2 

my little good lord cardinal (rep.) .. — iii. 2 

when he thinks, good easy man .... — iii. 2 

must I needs forego so good, so noble — iii. 2 

is held no great good lover — iv. 1 

hear me speak his good now? yes, good — iv. 2 

scholar, and a ripe, and a good one . . — iv. 2 

to outlive the good that did it — iv. 2 

such good dreams possess your fancy — iv. 2 

take good comfort — iv. 2 

his highness? Madam, in good health — iv. 2 

a right good husband — iv. 2 

good hour of night, sir Thomas! .... — v. 1 

that it may find good time — v. 1 

my conscience says she's a good creature — v. 1 

and my good mistress will — v- 1 

glad to catch this good occasion — v. 1 

the good I stand on is my truth — v. 1 

be of good cheer — v. 1 

look, the good man weeps! — v. 1 

now, good angels fly o'er thy royal . . — v. 1 

among them (at least good manners) — v. 2 

you are always my good friend — v. 2 

by your good favour, too sharp — v. 2 

not only good and wise, but most.. .. — v. 2 

you were ever good at sudden — v. 2 

this good man, few of you deserve . . — v. 2 

I made good my place — v. 3 

and the good queen, my noble — v. 4 

all the virtues that attend the good. . — v. 4 

good grows with her — v. 4 

all the expected good we are like ... . — (epil.) 

merciful construction of good women — (epil.) 
now good, or bad, 'tis hut ..Troilus ^- Crf^ssida^ (prol.) 

hark, what good sport is out of town — .f i. 1 

flaming a praise for a good complexion — i. 2 

and he's a man good enough — i. 2 

is a' not? It does a man's heart good — i. 2 



[ 319 ] 



GOO 



GOOD— it docs one's heart good . . Troilus ^- Cress, i. 2 
this will do Helen's heart good now — i. 2 

beauty, good shape, discourse — i. 2 

sans check, to good and bad — i. 3 

good rCo(. K«<. -god] Achilles still cries — i. 3 

they have galls, good arms — i. 3 

ascantlingof good or bad — j. 3 

good words, Tnersites — ii. 1 

a' were as good crack a fusty nut — ii. i 

a good riddance. Marry, this, sir. . . . 

a good quarrel, to draw 

here is good broken m\isic 

good now, love, love, nothing but (rep.) 

It may do good; pride hath no 

ay, and good next day too 

neither gave to me good word, nor look 

those scraps are good deeds past 

had I so good occasion to lie long .... 

not given so many good words 

you'll ne'er be good, nor suffer others 



ii. 3 

iii. 1 
iii. 1 



— iv. 2 



food, good, my lord; the secrets of .. 

had good argument for kissing once — iv. 5 

he was a soldier good — iv. .5 

embrace thee, good old chronicle .... — iv. 5 

work done; I'll take good breath .... — v. 9 

Hector was as good a man as he — v. 1 

good traders in the flesli — v. 1 1 

sings thegood! 'Tisagoodform. 7'('mojio//il//i<'«s, i. 1 

'tis a good piece. So 'tis — i. 1 

here is a touch; is't good? — i. 1 

upon his good and gracious nature . . — i. 1 

good for their meat, and safer for.... — i. 2 

much good dich thv good heart — i. 2 

no power to make fiis wishes good . . — i. 2 

you gave good words the other day . . — i. 2 

wert not sullen, I'd be good to thee.. — i. 2 

as good a trick as ever hangman — ii. 2 

a fool in good clothes — ii. 2 

some good necessity toiiches his — ii. 2 

very bountiful "ood lord and master? — iii. 1 

if he would not Keep so good a house — iii. 1 

well; good parts in thee — iii. I 

he is my very good friend — iii. 2 

see, by good hap, yonder's my lord . . — iii. 2 

disfurnish myself against such a good — iii. 2 

bountifully to his good lordship .... — iii. 2 

I will look you out a good turn — iii. 2 

such a courage to do him good — iii. 3 

as you are great, be pitifully good .. — iii. 5 

my honour to you upon his good return — iii. 5 

the good time of day to you, sir — iii. 6 

hear me, you good gods all — i v. I 

good fellows all — iv. 2 

sin is, he does too much good ! — iv.2 

and wonder of good deeds evilly .... — iv. 3 

good as the best. Promising is — v. 1 

good honest men : thou draw'st — v. 1 

and thy good name liA'e with authority — v. 2 
poor citizens; the patricians, good ..'Coriolanus, i. I 

to give him good report for't — i. I 

the senators of Rome are this good belly — i. 1 

good word. He tliat will give good words — i. I 

such a nature, tickled with good success — 

then his good report should have been — 

dear th.an thine and my good Marcins — 

a fine spot, in good faith — 

you must go visit the good lady — 

so, the good horse is mine — 

now prove good seconds — 

numbers to make good the city — 

make good this ostentation — 

we have ta'en good, and good store . . — 

more cruel to your good report — 

to undercrest your good addition .... — 

for their own good, and ours — 

delivered back on good condition .... — 

what good condition can a treaty .... — 

news to-night? good, or bad — 

an interior survey of your good selves! — 
lie deadly, that tell, you have good faces — 

wear out a good wholesome forenoon — 

the good patricians must be visited . . — 
it shall be to him then, as our good wills — 

doing them neither good; nor harm — ii. z 

that's thousand to one good one — ii. 2 

your good voice, sir; what say you? — ii. 3 

laake him good friend to the people! — ii. 3 

shall! O good, but most unwise — iii. 1 

the power to do the good it would. ... — iii. 1 

our good city cleave in the midst — iii. 2 

a good demand. If it be honour — iii. 2 

in asking their good loves — iii. 2 

I do love my country's good — iii. 3 

take good Cominius with thee — iv. 1 

and for Rome's good: I'll tell thee what — iv. 2 

his good sword in his hand — iv. ? 

good man, the wounds that he — i v. 2 

all tending to the good of their — iv. 3 

a good memory, and witness of the . . — iv. 5 

but he was always good enough for him — iv. 5 

we stood to't in good time — iv. 6 

may wish good Blarcius home again — iv. 6 

O you have made good work! (rep.) — iv. 6 

if they should say, be good to Rome — iv. 6 

the gods be good to us! — iv. 6 

shows good husbandry for the Volscian — iv. 7 

good work; a pair of tribunes that.. .. — v. 1 

good tongue, more than the instant . . — v. 1 

and hum at good Cominius — v. I 

the book of his good acts — v. 2 

the good gods assuage thy wrath — v. 2 

good unto us! No, in such a case (rep.) — v. 4 

good news, good news: the ladies (rep.) — v. 4 

strike at him admits a good construction — y. 5 
therefore my good friends be grieved. /w/i«s- Cfpsar, i.2 

aught toward the general good — i. 2 

is a sauce to his good wit — i. 2 

your ear is good: Cassius, what — i. 3 

will purchase us a good opinion — ii. 1 

but iu the suburbs of your good pleasure? — ii. 1 



i. 1 



ii. 1 

ii. 1 
ii. 1 



GOOD— take good note, what Csisar. Julius Caesar, ii. 

to lie so good to Ca:sar — ii. 

Publius, good cheer; there is no harm — iii. 

kind love, good thoughts, and reverence — iii. 

our reasons are so full of good regard — iii. 

but speak all good you can devise.... — iii. 

my best lover for the good of Rome.. — iii. 

the good is oft interred with — iii. 

'tis good you know not that you — iii. 

I do not think it good. Your reason? — iv. 

good reasons must, of force, give .... — iv. 

if I do live, I will be good to thee .. .. — iv. 

good words are better than had (rep.) — v. 

and, witli this good sword that ran .. — v. 

mistrust of good success hath done .. — v. 

thou art a fellow of a good respect — v. 

killed not thee witli half so good a will — v. 

and common good to all, made one . . — v. 
take but good note, and you shalLAnlony f(Cleo. i. 

give me good fortune — i. 

good now, some excellent fortune ! .. — i. 

slie's good, being gone — i. 

by that same eye, there's some good news — i. 

good now, play one scene of excellent — i. 

wise powers deny us for our good .... — ii. 

be it so, to make this good? — ii. 

may I never to this good purpose .... — ii. 

sir, good success 1 Farewell — ii. 

to trumpet such good tidings? — ii. 

does allay the good precedence — ii. 

the good and bad together — ii. 

for what good turn? For the best — ii. 

at Philipjii the good Brutus ghosti d — ii. 

in thee, it had been good service .... — ii. 

I could do more to do Antonius good — iii. 

good fortune, worthy soldier — iii. 

tliat's not so good: he cannot like .. — iii. 

the fellow has good judgment — iii. 

and the good gods will mock me — iii. 

will their good thoughts call from him — iii. 

a good rebuke, which might have well — iii. 

when my good stars, that were — iii. 1 

never anger made good guard — i v. 

so good as you have done — iv. 

married to your good service ■ — iv. 

and tenfold for thy good valour — iv. 

wiiat, what? good cheer! why, how now — iv. I 

bid her have good heart — v. 

be of good cheer; you have fallen — v. 

bereave yourself of my good purposes — v. 

truly, she makes a very good report . . — v. 

very good: give it nothing — v. 

and 'twere good, you leaned unto hSs.Cymheluie, i. 

bless the good remainders of the court ! — i. 

she's a good sign, but I have seen small — i. 

as fair, and as good — i. 

and too good, for any lady in Britany — i. 

an earnest of a further good that I . . — i. 

but when to rny good lord I prove .... — i . 

good report. How! my goodname? (rep.)— ii. 

their tenor good, I trust — ii. 

or is't not too dull for your good wearing — ii. 

be our good deed, though Rome — iii. 

if it be so to do good service — iii. 

good gods, let what is here contained — iii. 

good wax, thy leave: blest be — iii. 

good news, gods! — iii. 

methinks, thy favour's good enough — iii. 

all good seeming, by thy revolt — i'i. 

all that good time will give us — iii. 

can make good use of either — iii. 

such a foe, good heavens! — iii. 

good troth, 1 have stolen naught .... — iii. 

nor measure our good minds by — iii- 

I yoke me in my good brother s fault — \\. 

he hath had good ancestors — iv. 

my brother make good time with him — iv. 

then on good ground we fear — iv. 

by good Euriphile, our motlier — iv. 

'Xhersites' body is as good as Ajax .. — iv. 

hath altered that good picture? — iv. 

a very valiant Briton, and a good.... — iv. 

many, all good, serve truly — iv. 

OPisanio! every good servant does not — v. 

made good the passage — v. 

since, Jupiter, our son is good — v. 

unlike our courtiers, as good as promise — v. 

so, if I prove a good repast — v- 

thou bring'st good news; T am called — v- 

of one mind, and one mind good — v- 

that their good souls may be appeased — v. 

let the time run on, to good or bad . . — v. 

the good Posthnmus, what should (rep.) — v. 

of all amongst the rarest of good ones — v. 

I would not thy good deeds should . . — v. 

how of descent as good as we? — v. 

two of us are as good as I have given — v. 

and our good is his. Have at it then — v. 
good andgreat deserts to Rome . . Tilus Andron. i. 

returns the good Andronicus to Rome — i. 

the good Andronicus, patron of virtue — i. 

of the good that noble-minded — i. 

to gratify the good Andronicus — i. 

for this I'ligh good turn so far? — i. 

'tis good, sir: you are very short — i. 

for good lord Titus' innocence — i. 

take up this good old man, and cheer — i. 

must advise the emperor for his good — i. 

ay, and as good as Saturninus may . . — ii. 

niadam, to you as many and as good ! — ii. 

good king! to be so mightily abused! — ii. 

strength to do thee so much good .... — ii. 

shall thy good uncle, and thy brotlicr — iii. 

let fools do good, and fair men call.. — iii. 

for that good hand thou sent'st — iii. 

by good advice, mortal revenge — iv . 

can you hear a good man groan — iv. 

it did me good, before the palace-gate — iv. 

but me more good to see so great — iv. 

well, (iod give her good rest! — iv. 



HOOD— you are a good archer .... TilusAiulron. iv. 3 

you vTGTe as good to shoot against. ... — iv. S 

i-ohhed Audronicus of his good hand — v. 1 

too like tlie sire for ever heing good . . — v. 1 

good >Iurder, stab him ; he's a murderer — v. 2 

good Rapine, stab him — v. 2 

tlie emperor means no good to us .. .. — v. 3 

for league, and good to Rome — v. 3 

if one gocid deediu all my life — v. 3 

and all good men, as evciy priiiee Fericles, \. I 

good sooth, I care not for you — i. 1 

which is good in nothing but — i. 1 

who seemed my good protector — i. 2 

care I had and have of subjects' good.. __ — i. 2 

t lie good in conversation — ii. (Gower) 

good Ilelicane hath staid at home .. — ii. (Gower) 

to kilieu b;Hl, keep good alive — ii. (Gower) 

nod he, iiood prince, having all lost — ii. (Gower) 

but it tlie ijood king Simonides were .. — ii. 1 

tlie ^'Ood .Simonidus. The good king .. — ii. 1 

ncucealile reign, and good government — ii. 1 

lie gains the iiame of good — ii. 1 

the gods give thee good on't! — ii- 1 

to mal-c some good, hut others — ii. 3 

li.inourcd much bv good Simonides.... — ii. 3 

goitd-niorrow to the gootl Simonides .. — ii. 5 

all fortune to the good SimonidesI .... — ii. 5 

now the good gods throw their best .... — iii. 1 

po thy ways, good mariner — iii. 1 

It is a good constraint of fortune — U!* '^ 

by gocKi appliance was recovered — iii. 2 

does prepare for good Marina .— iv. (Gower) 

come, come, I know 'tis good for you .. — iv. 1 

are even as good as rotten — iy. 3 

she has a good face, speaks well (rep.).. — iv. 3 

pity begets you a good opinion — iv. 3 

she meant thee a good turn — iv. 3 

glad to see your honour in good healtli — iv. G 

gives a good report to a number — iv. 6 

make the judgement good that — iv. 6 

O that the good gods wordd set me .... — iv. 6 

hear'st from me, it shall be for thj' good — iv. 6 

parentage— good parentage— to equal.. — v. 1 

thou caiiiest from good descending?.... — t. 1 

as my good nurse Lychorida liath oft . . — v. 1 

if good king Pericles be — v. 1 

not good to cross him, give him way . . — v. 1 

letters of good credit, sir — v. 3 

tiiere was good sport at his making Lear, i. 1 

our potency made good — i. 1 

that good effects may spring — i. 1 

if the matter were good, my lord — i. 2 

and moon portend no good to us — i. 2 

parted j'ou in good terms.. — i. 2 

if there'be any good meaning — i. 2 

niv good intent may carry — i. 4 

make use of tliat good wisdom whereof. . — i. 4 

this man hath had good counsel — i. 4 

thou wouldst make a good fool — i. 5 

you have now the good advantage — ii. 1 

our good old friend, lay comforts — ii. t 

good dawning to thee, friend — ii. 2 

wotildst be a bawd in way of good service — ii. 2 

and the good king his master will check — ii. 3 

a good man's fortune may grow out .... — ii. 2 

good king, that must approve — ii. 2 

Regan, I nave good liope thou — ii. 4 

and in good time you gave it — ii. 4 

head in, has a good head-piece — iii. 2 

ah, that good Kent! he said it would .... — iii. 4 

wdio is too good to pity thee — iii. 7 

if this man come to good — iii. 7 

could my good brother suifer you — iv. 2 

in the good man's distress! — iv. 4 

ay and no too was no good divinity — iv. 6 

this a "food block? it were a delicate .... — iv. 6 

sorrows, am pregnant to good pity — iv. 6 

O thou good Kent, how shall I live — iv. 7 

the shadow of this tree for your good host — v. 2 

good guard until their greater — v. 3 

tlnju hoping, of this good success — v. 3 

and shall, perchance, do good — v. 3 

some good I mean to do — v. 3 

my good master! Pr'ythee, away , — v. 3 

with" my good biting faulchion — v. 3 

he's a good fellow, 1 can tell you that. ... — v. 3 

1 serve as good a man as you .... Romeo ff Juliet, i. 1 
unless good counsel may the cause . . — i. 1 
good heart, at what? At thy good heart's — i. 1 

a riglit good marksman — i. 1 

I most to the learned: in good time — i. 2 

she was too good for me — i. 3 

take our good meaning — i. 4 

making them women of good carriage — i. 4 

when good manners shall lie all in . . — i. i 

a good lady, and a wise, and virtuous — i. h 

some epecial good doth give {rep.'). ... ■ — ii. 3 

that's my good son: but where hast — ii. 3 

a very good blade! a very tall (rep.) — ii. 4 

is very good meat in Lent — ii. 4 (song) 

if I see occasion in a good quarrel . . — ii. 4 

good heart! and i'faith, I will tell her — ii. 4 

but she, good soul, had as lief see a toad — ii. 4 

that it would do you good to hear it — ii. 4 

if good, thou shamest the music .... — ii. 5 

good, good nurse, speak — ii. ."i 

is thy news good or bad? answer (rep.) — ii. !> 

all the night, to hear good counsel .. — iii. 3 

from time to time every good hap to you — iij. 3 

shall never do thee good: trust to't.. — iii..*) 

or 'twere as good he were — iii. 

chance to do some good on her — iv. 2 

letter doth make good the friar's words — v. 3 

good now, git down, and tell me Hamlet, i. 1 

if there be any good thing to be done — i. 1 

nor it cannot come to gocW — i. 2 

sir. my good friend; I'll change — i. 2 

each word made true and good — i. 2 

this good lesson keep as watchman (rep.) — i. 3 

goodsir, or so; or friends, or gentleman — ii. 1 



GOOD— very good, my lord. And then ..Hamlet, ii. 1 
still hast been the father of good news .. — ii. 2 

how does my good lord Hamlet? — ii. 2 

[Co;. Kn^] being a good kissing earriou.. — ii. 2 

my excellent good friends! how — ii. 2 

good lads, how do ye both? — ii. 2 

for there is nothing either good or bad .. — ii. 2 
the good king and queen have sent lor you — ii. 2 
with good accent, and good discretion .. — ii. 2 

that's good ; mobled queen is good — ii. 2 

that your good beauties be the luippy — iii. 1 

no revenue hast, but thy good spirits .... — iii. 2 

and was accounted a good actor — iii. 2 

you are as good as a chorus, my lord ... . — iii. 2 

and woo, for leave to do him good — iii. 4 

use of actions fair and good he likewise.. — iii. 4 

'twere good, you let him know — iii. 4 

kills the unseen good old man — , iv. 1 

for England? Ay, Hamlet. Good. So is it — iv. 3 

if his chief good, and market of his — iv. 4 

'twere good, she were spoken with — iv. 5 

and so X thank you for your good counsel — iv. & 

give her good watch, I pray you — iv. 5 

and whispers, for good Polonius* death . . — iv. 5 
to his good friends thus wide I'll ope .... — iv. 6 

now you speak like a good child — iv. 5 

they say, he made a good end — iv. b 

I am to do a good turn for them . . — iv. 6 (letter) 
those good fellows will bring thee — iv. G (letter) 

the water, good: here stands (rep.) — v. 1 

no medicine in the world can do thee good — v. 2 
he, in good time, must his lieutenant be. Othello, i. 1 

if you please to get good guard — i. 1 

my very noble and approved good masters — i. 3 
and found good means to draw from her — i. 3 

and heaven defend your good souls — i. 3 

else needful your good grace shall tliink — i. 3 
very good; well kissed! an excellent . ... — ii. 1 
he is a good one, and his worthiness does — ii. 1 
or Ills good nature prizes the virtue that — ii. 3 
than to deceive so good a eommauder.... — ii. 3 

mend it for j'our own good — ii. 3 

good wine is a good familiar creature.... — ii. 3 
parallel course, directly to his good? ... . — ii. 3 
by how much she strives to do him good — ii. 3 

not for your quiet, nor your good — iii. 3 

good name, in man, and woman — ii i. 3 

he that filches from me my good name . . — iii. 3 

a good wench; give it me — iii. 3 

'tis a good hand, a frank one — iii. 4 

founded his good fortune on your love . . — iii. 4 
no, in good troth, Bianca. Why, whose.. — iii. 4 
'tis very good; I must be circumstanced — iii. 4 
that's not so good, now. What, if I had. . — iv. 1 
and laid good' 'sense upon your ecstasy . . — iv. I 
good, good; the justice of it pleases (rep.) — iv. 1 

more b.v midnight. Excellent good — iv. 1 

O pardon me; 'twill do me good to walk — iv. 3 
good father! how foolish are our mindsl — iv. 3 
good troth, I think thou wouldst not .... — iv. 3 
wear thy good rapier bare, and put it ... . — v. 1 
are j'ou of good, or evil? As yon shall .. — - v. 1 

some good man bear him carefully — v. 1 

alas, good gentleman! alas, good Cassio! — v. 1 

were't good? I tliink, she stirs again — v. 2 

such a tool do with so good a wife? — v. 2 

O thou Othello, that wast once so good . . — v. 2 

GOOD-BYE— [Co/.] so, good-bye you. . . . Hamlet, ii. 2 

GOOD-CONCEITED- 
excellentgood-coneeited thing Cymheline.W. 3 

GOOD-DAY— good-day ! I pray. Taw Gch.o/ Ver. iv. 4 
good-day to both of you. Hear you. . Much Ado, v. 1 
good-day, my lord. "Welcome, signior — v. I 

good-day and happiness, dear As you Like it, iv. 1 

once more good-day to thee. . Taming of Shrew, iv. 6 
not speak? good-day, Camillo .... Winter'sTale, i. 2 
good-day to you, gentle lord 2Hemy I V. iv. 2 

good-day, my lord! What, at your..3H«ir!/ yi. v. 6 
rother, good-day: what means.... if ic/ioj-rf ///. i. 1 

good-day to both your graces Henry I'lll. ii. 2 

good-day, good-day. How do yoa^ Trail. ^- C7-ess. iii. 3 
good-day sir. I am glad you are.. Timon of Ath. i. 1 
good-day. at once. Welcome, good . . — iii. 4 

ray ladies both, good-day to you Coriolanus, i. 3 

GOOD-DEED— good-deed, Leontes. Winter's Tale, i. 2 

GOOD DEN— good den, brother Much Alio, iii. 2 

good den, good den — v. 1 

good den, sir Richard. God-a-inercy.K("j/^./o/j«, i. 1 
saint Stephen, give you good den. Titus Andron. iv. 4 

God ye good den (rep.) Romeo fy Juliet, _i\. 4 

gentlemen, good den; a word with one — iii. 1 

God ye good den! May not one speak? — iii. .^i 

GOOD-E'EIS", ourneishbours (rep.).. Coriolanus, iv. (i 

GOOD-EVEN— you good-even! .Two Geti.ofVer. ii. 1 

madam, good-eveu to your ladyship — iv. 3 

good-even, and twenty Merry Wires, ii. 1 

good-even, good father. . . . Measure for i^Ieasure, iii. 2 
good-even! Friar, where is the provost? — iv. 3 

good-even to you friend As youLike it, ii. 4 

good-even, good master what ye call't — iii. 3 

good-even, Audrey (rep.) — v. 1 

good-even to ray ghostly confessor, flomeo ,^Jid. ii. 6 

good-even, sir; "but what, in faith Hamlet, i. 2 
OD-FACED-no, good-faced sir. Winter's Tale, iv. 2 

GOOD-FELLOW-Robin Good-kliow. Mid.N.Dr.ii. 1 

GOOD-FELLOWSHIP— 
soul of sound good-fellowship . . Troilus fr Cress, iv. 1 

GOOD-FRIDAY— upon Good-Friday. Kij/j' John, i. 1 
sold'st him on Good-Friday last XHrnrtflt'. i. 2 

GOO D-.TER— what, the good-jer .... Mern/llires, i. 4 

GOODLIER-to see a goodlier man .... Tempest, i. 2 
honester, he were much goodlier -ill's Welt, iii. 5 

GOODLIEST— the goodliest woman. Heiir;/;'///. iv. 1 
goodliest weapons of his armoury. TitusAndron. iv. 2 
who should express her goodliest Lear, iv. 3 

GO()DLY — call him a gowUy person .... Tempest, i. 2 

with goodly burden bowing — iv. 1 (song) 

how many goodly creatures are — v. 1 

here's a goodly sight — v. 1 

by ray modesty, a goodly broker! TwoGen.of Ver. i. 2 



GOODLY— with goodly shape . . TwoGen.of Ver. iv. 1 
he will do it: 'tis a goodly credit ..Merry Wives, iv. 2 
likf c» prove a goodly commoditj' ..M«c/i.4rfo, iii. 3 

there's goodly catching of cold — iii. 4 

a goodly count-eonfeet — iv. 1 

a goodly apple rotten (rep.) . Merc/iant of Venice,]. 3 
goodly "lord, what a wit-snapper .... — iii. 5 

which is a goodly increase All's Well, i. 1 

you have wound a goodl}' cine — i.3 

sold a goodly manor for a song — iii. 2 

but 'tis a goodly patch of velvet — iv. !> 

by my fa V, a ^oodiy nap. Taming of Shreiv, i (indue.) 
you lay here m this goodly chamber — 2 (indue.) 
did you study all this goodly speech? — ii. 1 
wherefore gaze this goodly company — iii. 2 
howbright and goodly shines the moon! — iv. 5 
you have some goodly jest in hand . . — y. 2 
spread of late into a goodly bulk.. Winter'sTate, ii. 1 
about to say, she is a goodly lady .... — ii. I 
have said, she's goodly, come between — ii. 1 
a goodly babe, lusty, and like to live — ii. 2 

such goodlv things as you? — v. 1 

joyful motlier of two goodly sons.Comedy of Err. i. 1 

oti'er of goodly thousands Maefieih,iv.3 

shall show more goodly, and attract.. lifeiiryir. i. 2 

[Co/.] a goodly portly man — ii. 4 

threw'st dust upon his goodly head . .IHenrylV. i. 3 

here's goodly stuft' toward ! — ii. 4 

here's a goodly tumult! I'll forswear — ii. 4 
in goodly form comes on the enemy.. — iv. 1 
you have here a goodly dwelling .... — v. 3 
a goodly prize, lit for t"lie devil's .... 1 Henry VT. v. 3 

blessed with a goodly son ZHenry VI. ii. 2 

pity, that this goodly boy should lose — ii. 2 

a dukedom, sir, a goodly gift? — v. 1 

and Somerset another goodly mast?., — v. 4 

the fruit of such a goodly tree — v. 6 

blessed you with a goodly son Hicliard IIL i. 3 

we have m.any goodly days to see ... . — iv. 4 
token of a goodly day to-morrow .... - — v. 3 
nor goodly Ilion stand Troilus fyCressidA,'\i. 2 

heart, as the goodly saying is — iv. 4 

goodly transformation of Jupiter there — v. 1 

thou art a goodly mark; No? — v. 6 

thy goodly armour thus hath cost. . . . — v. 9 

a goodly medicine for my aching — v. 1 1 

your lordship's a goodly villain.. Timon of Ath. iii. 3 

and take our goodly aged men — v. 2 

goodly work! I would they were a-bed. Corio/. iii. I 

agoodly city is this Antium — iv. 4 

a goodly house : the feast smells — iv. 5 

you are goodly things, you voices! — iv. 6 

those his goodly eyes Antony ^ Cleopatra, i. 1 

pyramises are very goodly things — ii. 7 

a goodly day not to keep house Cymheline, iii. 3 

goodly, and gallant, shall be false — iii. 4 

a goodly lady, trust me Titus Andronicus, i. 2 

you have a goodly gift in horning . . — ii. 3 

your snow-white goodly steed — ii. 3 

a goodly humour, is it not, my lord? — iv. 4 

this goodly summer with your — v. 2 

like goodly buildings left without Pericles, ii. 4 

make us love your goodly gifts — iii. I 

but yet she is a goodly creature — iv.l 

seeing this goodly vessel ride — v. 1 

this was a goodly person, till the disaster — v. 1 

is't not agoodly presence? — v. 1 

here's goodly gear! A sail,asail./?omeO(§-V»//e/,ii. 4 

1 saw him once, he was a goodly king. . Hamlet, i. 2 
a goodly one; iu which there are many. . — ii. 2 

this goodly frame, the earth — ii. 2 

here s a goodly watch, indeed ! Othello, ii. 3 

this fair paper, this most goodly book. . — iv. 2 

GOODMAN— goodman driveL.TuielfthN. iv. 2 (song) 
come hither, goodman baldpate ..Meas.forMeas. v. 1 

foodman Verges, sir, speaks a MlWe.. Much Ado, iii. .5 
)ictynna, goodman Dull (rep'). . Love's L. Lost, iv. 2 

via, goodman Dull! thou hast — v. 1 

lord, I am your goodman .. Taming of Sh. 2 (indue.) 
the old days of goodman Adam .... 1 Henry IV. ii. 4 

but goodman Puff of Barson iHenrylV. v. 3 

goodman death! goodman bones! .... — v. 4 

against John Goodman, my lord iHenryVI.i. 3 

with you, goodman hoy, if you please. . . . Lear, ii. 2 

what, goodman boy 1 I say Romeo ^-Juliet, i. 5 

nav, but hear you, goodman delver .... Hamlet, v. 1 

GOfjD-MORNING, to you, fair.. Meas.forMeas. iv 3 
when you have given good-morning. Cymit/i'iie, ii. 3 

GOOD-MORROW— 
a thousand good-morrows!. Tjt'o Gen. of Verona, ii. 1 

and so good-morrow, servant — ii. 1 

a thousand times good-morrow — iv. :i 

good-morrow, gentle lady — iv. 3 

good-morrow. Kind sir lilglamour. ... — iv. 3 
give your worship good-morrow . . Merry Wires, ii. 2 

good-morrow, good wife — ii. 2 

give you good-morrow, sir — ii. 3 

good-morrow, good sir Hugh — iii. 1 

give your worship good-morrow — iii. 5 

now, good-morrow, friends Twelfth Night, ii. 4 

good-morrow to your lordship . . Meas.for Meas. ii. 1 

good-morrow; for as I take it — iv. 2 

good-morrow, coz. Good-morrow . . Much Ado, iii. 4 
good-morrow, masters; put your torches — v. 3 
good-morrow, masters; each his several — v. 3 
good-morrow to this fair assembly (rep.) — v. 4 

good-morrow, Benedick — v. 4 

good-morrow, friends Mid. N.'s Dream, iv. 1 

God give you good-morrow Love's L. Lost, iv. 2 

good-morrow, my good lords. Merclumt of Venice,]. \ 

good-morrow to your worship As you Like it, i. 1 

good-morrow, fool, quoth I — ii. 7 

good-morrow, fair ones: pray you .. — iv. 3 

good-morrow, noble captain All's IVell, iv. 3 

good-morrow, neighbour (»ep.) ..Taming of Sh. ii. 1 
good-morrow, Kate; for that's your — ii. 1 

should bid good-morrow to my bride — iii. 2 

good-morrow, gentle mistress — iv. 5 

good-morrow, noble sir! (rep.) Macbeth, ii. 3 

good-morrow, Hubert (rep.) King John, iv. 1 



aOOI)-MORRO\V- 
Kiiiiil-inorrow, Nctl. Ooort-morrow ..) Ilrnri/ir.i. 2 
j.'ootl-inorro\v,i'arrior«: wlmt'« o'clock? — ii. I 

f(XHl-morr«w, muster (irtdnhill — il. 1 
think, it Ih K™«l-mi)rro«; is it not? — li. 4 
nml so, p.mil-monow, I'nilis (rr;>.) .. — il. 4 

(j.xxl-nimroMs to voiii- nmjcstyl (rrp.) — ili. I 
wliv tliL'ii, pHiil-niorrow to you all .. — ill. I 
poiil-inorrow, lioni ^t ir.'otlcnmi ..iHennjlV. iii. !i 
giKMl-iiiorrow.i'oosiii Wiirwiik (117).) — v. 2 
piHxl-niorrow; unit lic:i\"fn Mi\t' ^'our — v. 2 
pHxl-inorr >w, liiiitcnnnt Hiuilolpli ..Itmnjl'. ii. 1 

bills tliem (,'oo<l-inorro\v — iv. (chorus) 

g(KMl-morrc.\v lir.ithir lii.h'ord — Iv. 1 

B«HMl-niorr.nv,olilsirTliomiusEri)ingliom— iv. 1 
3o my giKul-mornnv to them; mid, nnoii — iv. 1 

good-morrow, gulluntsl Mlinri/I'l. iii. 2 

good-morrow to my sovereign king. H/Wi<i/(////. ii. I 
gixxl-morrow, iKMi^Iihour: wliither iiwiiy — ii. ^ 

give vou gciod-nionow, sir — ii. :i 

many foml-mnrrows to my noble (if/J.) — iii. 2 

iny Ic nl. .f.'iNlinoiTOW (ri-/!.) — iii. 2 

mid fonr-in,--, nil. t-'ood-tuorrow ...... — !!!.'* 

when he duth bid go.>d-niorrow with — iii. 4 
good-morrow, Uithmond. Cry mercy — v. 3 

goiKl-morrow, iind well met HenryVIlI. i. I 

giHHl-morrow, Indies. Wluvt wcrc't . . — ii. :i 
good-morrow, uncle (/r;).). . . . Troilus /jOcisic/n, i. 2 
goiKl-morrow, .\jax. lla? good-morrow — iii. 3 

I said, good-morrow, Ajax — iji. I! 

gotxl-morrow, lord iEneas — iv. 1 

we'll follow you. Good-morrow, all ,. — jv. 1 
good-morrow then. Pr'ytheonow, tolled — iv. 2 
good-morrow, bird, good-morrow .... — iy. 2 

goixl-m.irrow to thee trep.) Timon of Athens,} 1 

well met, cood-morrow — iii. 4 

to liave't with snyiiig,good-morrow.Cij»/otaiii/s, iii. 3 

go^iil-morrow, Brutus JuUusCfi'sar/n. \ 

goixl-morrow to you every one — ii. 1 

vouehsaf'e good-morrow from a feeble — ii. 1 

goml-inorrow, worthy ("iu>ar — ii. 2 

good-morrow, Ca-sjir. ■\Velcomc, Publius — ii. 2 
good-morow, Cascn: Caius I.igurius — ii. 2 

good-morruw, .Vntony. So to most noble — ii. 2 
go<Kl-oioriow to vnii: here tlie street — ii. 4 

good-niorr.iw to thee; w.-b'ome.. .111(0111/ .5-C;to. iv. 4 
go<Kl-mnrniw, general. Ciood-morrow — iv. 4 

good-morrow to your majesty Cj/mfce/i'iie, ii. 3 

go.xl-morrow, fairest sister — ii. 3 

without good-morrow to the sun — iii. 3 

good-morrows to yi>iir majesty. Ttlus An-lronicus, ii. 1 
good-inorrow, lords; f) tell me, did you — iv. 2 
good-morrow to the good Simonides . . Pericles, ii. .'j 
gooil-morrow, sir. Good-morrow .... — iii. 2 

give you good-morrow! Lear, ii. 2 

good-morrow to J'ou both — ii. 4 

good-morrow, cousin. Is the i\(i,y . Romeo ^ Juliet, i. 1 
good-morrow, father! Bcnedicite! .. — ii. 3 
so soon to bid good-raorrow to thy bed — ii. 3 

good-morrow to you both — ii. 4 

God ye goofl-morrow, gentlemen .... — ii. 4 

good-morrow, 'tis saint Hamlet, iv. f> (song) 

which could say, good-morrow — v. 1 

and bid good-raorrow, general Othello, iii. 1 

§ood-morrow, good lieutenant — iii. 1 
ODNESS— any print of goodness Tempest, i. 2 

goo<lness that is cheap in (rep.).Meas./or Mcas. iii. 1 

and goodness never fearful — iii. I 

bliss and goodness on you! — iii. 2 

there is so great a fever on goodness . . — iii. 2 
we hear such goodness of your justice — v. 1 
friend Escalus, for thy much goodness — v. 1 
her honesty, and achieves hergoodness../lH's lVell,\. 1 
thy goodness share with thy birth-right! — i. 4 

60 great as the first in goodness — iv. 3 

the report that goes upon your goodness — v. 1 
our natural goodness imparts this. IVintcr^s Tale, \\, 1 

and your goodness, is so evident — ii. 2 

thine own goodness hath made — iv. ! 

with you, worthy his goodness — v, I 

for goodness dares not check thee! Maciielh, iv. 3 

and the chance, of gooflness, be like — iv. 3 

thy abundant goodness shall excuse, fii'c/mrrf II. y. 3 

there is some soul of goodness in Ueury r. iv. 1 

for Talbot means no goodness 1 Henry fl. iii. 2 

God's gixxliiess hath been grei\t '2JIennjI^I. ii. I 

goodness [ f 'of. to hnve redemption].. HiV'ioii/ ///. i. 4 

tlierefore, for goodness sake Henry I' 1 1 1, (iirol.) 

gofidncss and he fill up one monument! — ii. I 

if they have any goodness — ii. 2 

for gooiliiess' sake, consider what you do — iii. 1 

to confirm his goodness, tied it — iii. 2 

whilst your great goodness, out of holy — iii. 2 
goodness is poison to thy stomach (''71.) — iii. 2 
the goodness of your intercepted piukets — iii. 2 
j'our goodness, since you provoke me — iii. 2 
commended to his gooilness the model — iv. 2 

from thy eudlei's goodness — v. 4 

now living can behold that goodness — v. 4 

the goodness of a iiuarrel .... Tnilut ff Cressirla, ii. 2 
untirablcand continuate goodness. yoMorio/zJ/A. i. 1 
recanting goodness, sorry ere 'tis shown — i. 2 

undone by goodne».s! strange — iv. 2 

enough to darken all his gixxlness./lnlon!/ ^ Cleo. i. 4 
but there's no goodness in thy face .. — ii. 5 
there is no gixxliiess in the worm .... — v. 2 
my mistress exceeds in gooilness the..C(/m6Wine, i. 5 
thy most perfect goodness her assured — i. 7 
his goodness forespent on us we must — ii. 3 
your very goodness, and your company — ii. 4 
honour and your goixlness teach ine . . Pericles, iii. 3 

that robs thee of thy g'KxlnesBl — iv. 6 

wisdom and goixlness to the vile seem vWe.Lear, iv. 2 

and work, to match thy goodness? — iv. 7 

you know the goodness I intend u|>on you — V. 1 
at a. like goodness still ; for goodness . . Humlel, iv. 7 
goodness of the nij^ht u|K>n you, friends!. OMrt/o,;. 2 

she holds it a vice 111 her goixlness — ii. 3 

and out of her own gixklnrss make the net — ii. 3 
GOOD-NIGHT— good-iiight, your vow! J'fmi;m'W, iv. 1 



GOOD-NIGHT : this deed uushapcB .Vra./oi-A/pa.iv.3 

gmxl-night to your redress — v. 1 

well, masters, ginid-niglit Much Ado, ili. 3 

and your own, and good-night — iii. 3 

bid..^ me a thousand limes, goml-night — iii. 3 

now. mil.. Iliv hones, roMd-nightl — V. 3 

goml-night, with lullnl.v ..A/.i/.jV.Dreom, ii. 3(song) 

and gc.iKl-nii;l\t, sweet iVicnd — ii. 3 

DO, good-night unto vou all — (enil.) 

good -night, my good owl Lofe't L. Lost, iv. 1 

Goil give you goud-night! ....Tnminifnf Shrew, v. 2 

cry, lost, and so go.xl-night H'inter'slale, i. 2 

which gives till' sti'inest good-night . . Macbeth, ii. 2 
at once, gnixl-ni^'hl; ^t»n(l nut upon — iii. 4 

good-niglit. unci better hinllh (/c/i.l.. — 111.4 
BO, good-ni;.'lit: niv iiiiiul she has mated — v. 1 

gixid-iiiLdit, -u,,,! doetor — V. 1 

bloudv toil, we hid f.'o.nl-night King John, v. h 

ere tlioM bid |.'ooll-lli^'llt llichnrd II. V. 1 

it- he thil in. ^'..ocl-iii-ht 1 HenrylV. i. 3 

g<.,.d-id-ht,mv noble lord — ii. 4 

and cloak: l-nM:ilf. u'<nid-night 



till 



I will hid v. 
id tin 






.•iUemylV.u.A 
his good-nights — iii. 2 

t — (epil.) 

■night ....«i'c/i(0(i///. IV. 3 



hnth 

bear niv i.'oo,l-ni-ht to l.ini — v. ;i 

good-ni'L'ht.L'ood .■nptniii Hluiit — v. 3 

good-iii-lit, kind lord* and gentlemen — v. 3 

good-iiiL;ht, sir Thi.nuis [rep.) lleuryrill. v. 1 

Chnrles,L'oo.l-ni-ht. Well, sir — V. 1 

prince of Tn.y, X hid good-night. Vro/dn ,5- Cress, v. 1 
good-night, to the (ireek's general (it/;.) — V. 1 
good-night, and welcome both (rep.) — r. 1 

good-niglit, great Hector — v. 1 

you honour me. And so good-night — v. 1 
but that, sweet Greek. Good-night.. — v. 2 

Dioined— no, no, good-night — v. 2 

and BO, good-night. Nay but you part — v. 2 

good-night. I pr'ythee, come — v. 2 

good-ninht tlien, Casca JitJiusCresar,i. 2 

no more: good-iiijjht; early to-morrow ^" " 

gond-ni-dit, Titiiuus: noble (rep.) .. 

good-niglit, my lord (rep.) 

gentle knave, good-night 

and, good hoy, good-night 

good-night, sir; my Oetavia Antony ^ Cleo. \ 

food-night, dear lady {rep.) — j 
'onipey, good-night — ; 

what needs more words? good-night — i 

why then, good-night, indeed — ii 

goo'd-nighti tomorrow is the day — in 

good-night to yon. Well sir (ic/i.) .. — i\ 
lortune, good-night; smile onee more .... Lear, i 
to bid my king and master aye good-night — i_ 
honest gentlemen, good-night ..llomeo <> Juliet,]. 



_ iv. 3 



— iv. 3 



— ii. 1 

— ii. 2 



_ iv. 3 



good-night; I'll to my truckle-hed . 
sweet, good-night! this hud of love . 

good-night, good-night! (»cp.) — ii. 2 

dear Komeo, and good-night — ij. 2 

a thousand times good-night! — ii. 2 

shall say good-night, till it be morrow — ii. 2 
good-night; and iiere stands all your — iii. 3 

tis late; farewell, good-night — iii. 3 

madam, good-night, commend me . . — iii. 4 
call it early by-and-by: good-night — iii. 4 

good-night! get thee to bed, and rest — iv. 3 
well, good-night: if you do meet (rep.). . Hamlet, i. 1 
good-night; but go not to m,y uncle b bed — iii. 4 
once more, good-night: and, when you.. — iii. 4 
so. again, good-night! I must he cruel .. — iii. 4 

mothir, 4 1-night. Indeed ()cp.) — iii. 4 

goo(l-i,i-lii. l:oliL-s; good-night, sweet (rep.)— iv. .I 

gooil-hijlit, -weet prince — V. 2 

let it \n ,1; j.iod-night to every one Othello,!. 3 

iMii:luii.l. Lfood-iiiL'lit: to-morrow — ii. 3 

tocome 'twixt me and vou: good-niijht.. — ii. 3 
gor«l-nii,'lit, lieutciuuit; Imust (ir/).T .... — .ii. 3 
madam, good-night; I humbly thank... ■"■ " 

so, 2et thee gone ; good-night 

gootl-night, good-night; heaven — iv.o 

GOODRIG-lord Talbot of Goodiig. . I Henry VI. iv. 7 
GOODVILL— tell you for a goodvill.il/erry }yive!,\v. b 
GOODWIFE-did not goodwife Keech.2//c'n?j/"'. ". I 
GDODWlLTj— goodwill I bear.. Two Oen. ofVer. iv. 3 

to remember my goodwill — iv. 4 

for my goodwill is to it Tempest, iii. I 

carry your gooflwiU to the maid?. .A/erri/ /Fires, i. 1 

1 hope, I have your goodwill — iii. 2 

let me have your goodwill — iii. I 

he hath my goodwill 

if he could get her goodwill 

had got the goodwill of this young 

and his goodwill obtained 

your goodwill may stand with ours 
and here, with all goodwill — .WW. 
with our goodwill. That you (ic/i.) 
may have your ladyship's froodwill 

do beg your goodwill ill this case — ;. o 

I have your goodwill to have mine own — ii. 4 
with his goodwill, and thy good ..Tamingnf Sh. i. 1 
our gooilwiU eft'ects Bianeas grief .. * — i. 1 

without asking my goodwill — v. 1 

cheer may answer my goodwill.. t'oinC('yo//irr. iii. 1 

my sister, to get her goodwill — iii. 2 

heart and gn<KUvi II you might — iv. 4 

tliat oftii-c, of thine own goodwill ..Diehard II. iv. 1 

1 will do my goixlwill, sir ■'HenrylV. iii. 2 

pretend sonie alteration in goodwill?.! IlinryVI. iv. 1 

has hut efleeted his gocxlwill Coriolanut, i. U 

your goiKlwill must nave tliat thanks — v. 1 
and when goodwill is showed.... /ln(on.v fyCleo. ii. 6 

yet my goodwill is great Pericles, iii. 4 

the let-alone lies not in your goodwill. . . . Lenr, v. 3 

eo much gentry, and goodwill Hamlet, ii. 2 

GOODWIN— goixlwins, I think. . Mer. of Venice, iii. 1 
three nights ago on Goodwin sands.. Ki'ii«',/o/in, v. 3 
and sunk, on the Goodwin sands .... — v. .'> 
GOOD-YEAK-[ro(.] the good-year! Merry Wives, i. 4 
[Co/. KnI.'i what the good-year, my lord! .l/iirA Ado.i. 3 
what the goixl-yearl one must Xn.at.iUenry IV. ii. 4 



..Much .Wo, ii. I 



. 1 (prol.) 
Well, i. 3 



•lu 



GOOD-YEAR— what the gofKl-ycnrl.SHcnri/ If. ii. 4 
[ h/i/.l the i;ood-years shall devour /.cur, v. M 

GDI iSK-urt londe like a goose Vempesi, ii. 2 

drew to the complexion oi' a goiyae] . Merrn ll'ivet, v. .'> 
thou writ.' with a L'o.ise pen .... Tireirih .\i^'ht, iii. 2 
an. I a L'o . . loi 1.1 .li^.Tction. ..!//</. li'.'shream, v. I 

an.l til.' I--. . : tin' i^oose — V. 1 

f.ir th.- ^' .nih irtthetox — y. \ 

until the ;;oo..u iiLiiie .jut of door, lore's L.Lost, iii. 1 
ending in the goose: would you .... — iii. 1 

o bargain, a goose, that's flat — ih. I 

is good, an' your goose he fat (rep.) .. — iii. 1 

the goose that you bought — iii. I 

some I'cnvoy, some goose, in this.,.. — ill. 1 

a green goose, a goddess; jnire — iv. 3 

wlien every goose i«eackliiig.iV/erc/i»in(o/remi.e, v. 1 

like a wilil goose flies As you Like it, ii. 7 

breaks liis staff like a noble goose — iii. 4 

here you niav roast vour goose Macbeth, ii, 3 

wlicn: g.it'st'th.m tliat goose look? — v. 3 

g. ., M •.;! M.. N.iw I i;;ran//r. iii. I 

\', : I i '.-.:, 1 . TV— a rope! MIenntVl.i.S 

:. n I;. I _ o-c..f\Vlneliester.7'roi7us4-<';rM«.v.ll 

;_'..., 1 1 I lijil y.iu upon Sarum plain Lear, ii. 2 

y.m there lor the goose! (rep.). .ltomeo«r Juliet, ii. 1 

iia.v, good g.f.ise, bite not — ii. I 

well served in to a sweet goose! ..,, — ii. I 
t.i tlie giK.se, iJroves thee far (rep.) .. — ii. 4 
i\\\: III. Ili. I ..I L-.nise unills, and dare ....Hamlet, ii. 2 
1 11 IS 1: Iii: II 1; Y— wortli a gooseberry. 2 //eiiry //-'. i. 2 

( H II' — priiiL' ■ ^;oot discretions Merry Hives, i. I 

it wrie :i t;. "it motion — i. 1 

fery goot: I will make — j. I 

to ^our worship, goot captain Henry V. iii. 2 

bcini' OS goot a man as yourself — iii.-' 

the iluke to use his goot pleasure — — iii. w 
in his right wits and his goot judgments — iv. 7 
there is goot men iiorn at Monmouth — iv. 7 
the Welshmen did goot service in .. — iv. 7 
though he be as goot a gentleman — — iv. 7 

Gower is a goot captain — iv. 7 

there is more goot towards you — iv. 8 

it is with a goot will; I can tell J'ou — iv. 8 
I'onr shoes is not so goot; 'tis a goot. . — iv. 8 

le did us great goot — iv. 8 

will you be so goot, scald knave — v. 1 

it is goot for your green wound — v. 1 

much goot do you, scald knave — v. 1 

the skin is goot for your prokcn — v. 1 

av, leeks is goot; liold you — v. 1 

GORBKI/LIED— gorhellied knaves ..MIenrylV. ii. 2 
GORBl )DUC-nieie of king Gorboduc. Tuelflh A', iv. 2 
GORDIAN— thcGordianknotofit ....HenrtjV.i. 1 

as the Gordian knot was hard! Cymbeline, ii. 2 

GORE— my heart doth gore Twelfth iXinht, ii. .'> 

lav tliem in gore, since you ..Mid. N.'s Dream, v. I 

iiiiniaiiiierlv breeched witli gore Macbeth,}]. 3 

where in g.Jre lie lay insteeped Henry V. iv. 6 

fret i'etloek deep in gore — j v. 7 

more than streams of foreign gorc.l Henry VI. n\. 3 
the war receivc't in valiant gore.. T//noM n/Ath. jit. .0 

in blood, all in gore blood llomeo^ Juliet, iii. 2 

and thus o'ersized with coagulate gura.. Hamlet, ii. 2 
G(-)R1CD— round haunches gored . . As yon Like il, ii. 1 
if I be gored with Mowbray's spear. . Richard II. i. 3 
have before gored the gentle bosom .. Henry V. iv. 1 
is gored with Menelaus' horn.7';oi;«s^-Cressi'ia, i. 1 

my fame is shrewdl y gored — iii. 3 

this realm, and the gored state sustain Lear, v. 3 

GORGE— he cracks his gorge ll'inter'sTale, ii. 1 

coupe le gorge, that's the word! Henry r. ii. 1 

de couper vostre gorge. Guy, couper gorge — i\. 4 
sores would cast the gorge at.. Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

messes to gorge his appetite Lear, i. 1 

mv gorge rises at it : here hun" Hamlet, v. 1 

be'gi n to heave the gorge, disrelish Othello, ii. 1 

GOKG ED-must not be full gorged. Tamingof Sh. iv. 1 
with his presence Lrluttcd, gorged ..IHenrylV. iii. 2 
gorged v.ith tli. .I.;.i. -1 m . -.-l . . Hoineo .5-./ii;/>/, v. 3 

Gi lll^i I> )i > — 1 1 hires Tempest, iv.l 

lirst oi'Ciiiii^ "i I , . - i:ist.. Loi-e's /« i. iv. 3 

my gor^'.i.iiis ).:ii: . ■■, i". a :. I initage./'iWiard 1 1. iii. 3 
gorgeous as tlie sun at Mid<ummer.l//fiii-.v//'. iv. 1 

this new and gorgeous garment 'illenrylV. y. i 

all these, thrice gorgeous ceremony . . Htnry V. iv. 1 
this gorgeous beauty to mine eyes ..i Henry VI. v. 3 

only to go warm were gorgeous (rep.) Lear, ii. 4 

dwell in siichagorgeous palace!. Hora>'o<5-yiifiV(, iii. 2 
GORGKT-fumblingon his gorget. Tvoi/iis .?• Cress, i. 3 
GORGING— gorging ond feeding ..JuliusCa-sar, v. 1 
GORGON— sight with a new Gorgon . . Macbeth, ii. 3 
painted one way like a Gorgon . . An'omj ^ deo. ii. a 
GORMANDI/E-not gormandize. W.r.o/Temee, ii. .'. 
G()R.MANDlZING-leavegormandizing.2HeH./r.v..'i 

GORY— never shake thy gory locks Macbeth, iii. 1 

a gorv emulation 'twixt us twain. Troilusff Cress, w .h 

these masterless and gory swords. Romeo .^Juliet, v. 3 

GOSLING— never be such a gosling. . i:oriotanus,\. 3 

mnrrv, whip tliee, gosling: I think,,.. iVnWcj, iv. 3 

(iOSI'EL— epistles are no gospels. . Twetrih Mght, v. 1 

GOSl'ELED— are you so gospeled .... Maclieth, Iii. I 

(JOSS— pricking goss, and thorns Tempest, iv. I 

GOSSIR— slie hath hod gossips.. rieoCVii. o/i'er. iii. I 
wha t hoa. gossip Ford ! what boa ! . Merru Hires, ir. 2 

the babbling gossiii of the air Twelfth Mghl,}. :> 

sometime lurk 1 in a gossip's howd.ilfiV/. A'.'s/Jr. ii. I 
if my gossip report lie an honest Mer. of Venice, iii. I 
as Iving a gossiii in that, ascvor .... — iii. 1 

that blinking (jupid gossips All's Well, i. 1 

some gostijis for your highness . . Winter sTale, ii. 3 
go too gossip's feast, and go with.Comei/i/o/f.'rr. v. 1 
all my heart, I'll gossip at this feast.. — v. 1 

and call me u-.issip (Jiiickly? •IHenrylV. ii. 1 

aremiL'l.p -■'. i|' m thismonarcliy.Kic/mrW //f i. 1 

inynolii Ir.ivebevn Henry VIII. v. A 

along-1 i I M.g gossip?.. 7''(i/i.J/ii/ron. iv. 2 

siieak to ;.u r- U' ^ ..-nus one fair./fomeo .5".^"'. n- 1 

Biniittcr with your go.^sips, go — iii. 5 

utter vour gravity o'er u gossip s bowl — iii. :> 
GOSSIPED— often hath she gossiped. Mid. N. Dr. ii. 2 



GOSSIPIN"G-to see their gossiping. Comedy of Err. v. 1 
of blood, of niii-tli, of gossiping KingJufui^ v. 2 

GOSSIP-LIKE— gossip-lil<e luimour..M«c/i /Ido, v. 1 

GOSSO.MER — been auglit but gossomer . . Lear, iv. 6 
may bestride t!ie Rossomers ....liomcoSr JiMel< ii. 6 

GOT— got by the d«\'il liimself Tempest, i. 2 

who hath got, as I tiike it — ii. 3 

by sorcery lie got tliis isle — ■ iii. 2 

from me he got it — iii. 2 

that dusky Sis my daughter got .... — iv. 1 

Bince I have my dukedom got — (epil.) 

the treasure we have "ot . . Tu^o Gen. of Verona, iv. 1 

our youth got me to play — iv. 4 

no fear of Got iu a riot Merry Wives, i. 1 

desire to hear the fear of Got — i. 1 

Got deliver to a joyful resun-eetiousl — i. 1 

Got ijless your house here I — i. 1 

here is Got's plessing — i. 1 

BO Got 'udge me, that is — i. 1 

nay, Got's lords and his ladies — i. 1 

Got's will, and his passion — iii. 1 

serve Got, and leave your desires ... . — v. 5 

who hath got the right Anne? — v. r> 

Igot possession of Julietta'shcd.. Meas.forMeas. i. 3 

he hath got his friend with child — i. 5 

and he that got it, sentenced — ii. 3 

for the prince hath got your Hero . . Muck Ado, ii. 1 
had got the good will ot this young lady — ii. 1 
your father got excellent husbands .. — ii. 1 

and got a calf in that same noble — v. 4 

what a beard hast thou got! {rep.)..Mer. of Fen. ii. 2 

you have got me one — iii. 2 

I got a promise of this fair one — ii'. 2 

that your father got you not — iii. 5 

since he hath got the jewel — v. 1 

there was never virgin got All's Well, i. 1 

the French ne'er got them — ii. 3 

and say, I got them in exploit — iv. 1 

when your sweet self was got — iv. 2 

a scar nobly got, on a noble scar .... — iv. 5 
by what rough enforcement you got it — v. 3 
she got the ring; and I had that .... — v. 3 

he got his wife with child _ v. 3 

till Katharine the curst have got.. Taming of Sh. i. 2 

but he hath got a quiet catch — ii. 1 

so like to him that got it Winter'sTale,\\. 3 

before I have got strength of limit .. — iii. 2 

they were warmer that got this iii. 3 

the one ne'er got me credit . . Comedy of Errors, iii. 1 

what have you got the picture — iv. 3 

wiiere our desire is got without Macbeth, iii. 2 

sweltered venom sleeping got — iv. 1 

this same lusty gentleman was got . . King John, i. 1 

your face hath got five hundred — i. t 

when I was got, sir Robert was — i. 1 

for thou wast got i' the way of — i. I 

didst not well when I was got — i. 1 

got with swearing, lay by IHenryll . i. 2 

fot with much ease — ii. 2 
ouour hath he got against — iii. 2 

I have got, in exchange for — iv. 2 

my appetite was not princely got ..iHenrylV. ii. 2 

hath got the voice in hell Henry F. ii. 2 

all the riches I got in his service .... — ii. 3 

Got's plood ! up to the preaches — iii. 2 

av, I praise Got; and I have merited — iii. 6 

Got pless your majesty I — iii. 6 

Got pless it and preserve it iv. 7 

trod upon Got's ground and his — iv. 7 

an' please Got of his grace — iv. 7 

Got s will and his pleasure, captain.. — iv. 8 

here is (praised be Got for it!) — iv. 8 

I pray you to serve Got, and keep you — iv. 8 
Got bless you, ancient Pistol! (rep.).. — v.: 

when G it's will is: I will desire .... v. 1 

and swear, I got them in the gallia . . — v. 1 
thinking of civil wars when he got me — v. 2 

glory ot his conquest got \ Henry VT. iii. 4 

By policy what Henry got? 2Henry yi. i. 1 

cities, that I got with wounds — i. 1 

had lienry got an empire — i. 1 

thusgot the liouse of Jjuncaster — ii. 2 

the honour that thy master got — iv, 10 

we have not got that which we have — v. 3 

by conquest got the crown SHenry VI. i. 1 

the army of the queen hath got the field — i. 4 

and grandsire got, ray careless — ii. 2 

whoever got thee, there tliy mother.. — ii. 2 

the air hath got into my deadly — ii. 6 

how these lands are to be cot — iii. 2 

the fox hath once got in his nose — iv. 7 

my meed hatli got me fame — iv. 8 

got my lord chamberlain his Richard III. i. 1 

as being got, your father then in — iii. 7 

he got this Edward, whom our — iii. 7 

seen possible enough, got credit Henry FIJI. i. 1 

our English have got by the late — i. 3 

tliat they got in France, with all ... . — i. 3 

have got a speeding trick to lay — i. 3 

and got your leave to make this — ii. 4 

by wiiat means got, I leave to your. . — iii. 2 

how got they in, and be hanged? — v. 3 

love got so sweet Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 2 

praise him tliat got thee — ii. 3 

no sooner got. but lost? — iv. 2 

has got that same scurvy — v. 4 

I may confer what I have got . . Tiinon of Athens, i. 1 

vou have got a humour there — i. 2 

have sooner got another service — iv. 3 

you were got in fear Coriolanus, i. 3 

together, but Aufldius got ofi' — ii. 1 

than liear say, how I got them — ii. 2 

1 got them in my country's service .. — ii. 3 

the spoil, CTot on the Antiatea — iii. 3 

plebeians liave got your fellow-tribune — v. 4 

got upon me a nobleness Antony <§- Cleo. iv. 12 

I send him the greatness he has got . . — v. 2 

what got he by that? Cymheline, ii. I 

our Voices luive got the mannish crack — iv- 2 
only afi'ected greatnese got by you — v. 5 



GOT— by villanv I got this ring Cymheline, v. ."■) 

her bracelet lO cunning, how I got it I J — v. .'i 

I have got two worlds by't — v. 

60 brightly when this boy was got. Titus Andron. iv. 2 

no glory's got to overcome Pericles i. 4 

iiere's nothing to be got now-a-days — ii. 1 

fot 'tween asleep and waicel I.eti/ , t. 2 
never got him: hark, the duke's li. 1 

cot praises of tlie king for him -^ ii. 2 

daughters got 'tween the lawful sheets.. — iv. 6 

vicious place where thee he got — v. 3 

liave you got leave to goto shrift. /iomco<5-./u;ie',ii. 5 
hatli got his mortal hurt in my behalf — iii. 1 
the tears have got small victory by tliat — iv. 1 

they got clear of our ship Hamtet, iv. 6 (letter) 

only got the tune of the time — v. 2 

Ilea veil! how got she out? Othello, i. \ 

oft got without merit, and lost without — ii. 3 

GOTH— Ovid, was among the Got\vB.Asyou Like. iii. 3 
here Goths have given me leave ., Titus Andron. i. 2 
tlie proudest prisoner of the Goths .. — i. 2 

wlioin you Goths beheld alive — i. 2 

queen of Goths, when Goths were Goths — i. 2 

freater than the queen of Goths (rep.) — i. 2 

y the gods, that warlike Goths adore — ii. 1 
lascivious Goth, and all the bitterest — ii. 3 
hie to the Goths, and raise an army — iii. 1 

now^ will I to the Goths, and raise .. — iii. 1 
revenge upon these traitrous Goths , , — iv, 1 

now to the Goths, as swift as — iv. 2 

join with the Goths; and with — iv. 3 

the Gotlis have gatliered head — iv. 4 

is wa.rlike Lucius general of the Goths? — iv. 4 
proud Lucius from the warlike Goths — iv. 4 
led by a lusty Goth? — v. 1 

1 must bear thee to a trusty Goth .. — v. 1 
O worthy Goth? this is the incarnate — v. 1 

and you princes of the Goths — v. 1 

and disperse the giddy Goths — v. 2 

a band of warlike Goths — v. 2 

enquire him out among the Goths .. — v. 2 
tlie chiefest princes of the Goths .... — v. 2 
welcome, ye warlike Goths — v. 3 

GOT'ST— as thou got'st Milan Tempest, ii. 1 

where got'st thou that goose look? Maclieth, v. 3 

by what means got'st thou to be .... 1 Henry Fl.\, 4 

GOTTEN— he was gotten in drink. . Merry Wives, i. 3 

at length have gotten leave Richard II. v. b 

Cade hath gotten London-bridge ..2HenryFl. iv. 4 
which Henry the fifth had gotten?. .3 Henry F I. iii. 3 
once gotten, doubt not of large pay.. — iv. 7 

GOUGH— send you Matthew Gough.2 Henry FI. iv. 5 

GOUJERE— what the goujere [Co(.A'ii<.-good-year] 

my lord! Much Ado, i. 3 

goujeres IKnt.-good years] shall devour . . Lear, v. 3 

GOURD— gourd and fuUam holds . . Merry Wive.':, i. 3 

(JOUT-do curse the gout, serpigo. Afeas. /or jUeas. iii. I 
rich man that hath not the gout... As you Lilte it, iii. 2 

and dudgeon, gouts of blood Macbeth, ii. 1 

but the gout galls the one 2 Henry IF. i. 2 

a pox on this gout! or a gout on .... — i. 2 

than one that s sick o' the gout Cymheline, v. 4 

GOUTY-he is a gouty Briareus . . Troilus <5- Cress, i. 2 
when gouty keepers of thee Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

GOVERN-with such perfection govern . Tempest, ii. 1 
did govern Proteus' birth . . TwoGen. of Verona, ii. 7 

who governs here? TuelfihNigia, i. 2 

governs lord Angelo Measure for Measure, i. 6 

and conceits shall govern . . MerciiantofFenice, iii. 6 
if such a one be fit to govern, speak . . Macbeth, iv. 3 
govern the motion of a kingly eye . . Kinff John, v. 1 
and for mine, sir; I will govern it . .2 Hejiry IF. i'l. 2 

of age to govern of himself? •^HenryVI. i. 1 

king Henry govern England's helm — ii. 3 

and learn to govern better — iv. 9 

not fit to govern and rule multitudes — v. 1 

can tyrants safely govern home SHenry FI. iii. 3 

how should you govern any kingdom — iv. 3 
then, and till then, govern well. . . . Richard III. ii. 3 
the duke shall govern England .... Henry Fill. i. 2 
high powers, that govern us below. Julius Ceesar, v. 1 
brothers govern in our \o-ves. Antony ^CIeopatra,\\.2 
is all afraid to govern thee near liim — ii. 3 

Venus govern your desires . . Ti'us Andronicus, ii. 3 
but yet let reason govern thy lament — iii. I 
thyself should govern Rome and me — iv. 4 
may I govern so, to heal Rome's harms — v. 3 

he lives to govern us, or dead Pericles, ii. 4 

high estate, is left to govern — iv. 4 (Gower) 

if he govern the country ._ — iv. 6 

above us, govern our conditions Lear, iv. 3 

she's desperate : govern her — v. 3 

govern these ventages with vour Hamlet, iii. 2 

GO VERNED-ever governed frenzy. Merry Wives, v. 1 
due sincerity governed his deeds. Meas.for Meas. v. 1 
and now is the whole man governed. .Afuc/i^t/o, i. 1 

and now governed by stops — iii. 2 

currish spirit governed a wolf. . Mer. of Venice, iv. 1 

being governed as the seals \ Henry IF. i. 2 

are altogether governed by humours — iii. 1 

Hotspur, governed by a spleen — v. 2 

rank with the best governed nation..2HenryIV. v. 2 
I, being governed by the watery . . Hicliard III. ii. 2 
that land, that's governed by a childl — ii. 3 
carries, that ever governed man. Timon of Athens, i, 1 
governed with our mothers' spirits. JuliusCcesar, i. 3 

his corporal motion governed by — iv. 1 

a father by thy step-dame go\er\iei. Cymheline, ii. 1 
governed our determined jest?. 7"(7u5.4nrfronicw.5, v. 2 
begoverned by your knowledge Lear, i v. 7 

GOVERNKSS-governess of floods. Mid.N. Dream, ii. 2 

GOVERNMENT— government I cast . . Tempest, i. 2 
of government the properties to.. il/eas./oriUeax. i. 1 

or discover his government — iii. 1 

now in the government of lord Angelo — iv. 2 
a sound, but not in government. iWid.A^. Dream, v. 1 
must be even in our government ...Ricliardll. iii. 4 

be men of good government 1 Henry IV. i. 2 

want of government, pride, haughtiness — iii. 1 
under whose government come they — iv. 1 



GOVERNMENT-yoke of governnient.2 Hen. 7 r. iv. 4 
for government, though high, and low. Henry F. i. 2 
the sweet shade of your government — ii. 2 

whereof I had the government I Henry FI. ii. } 

'tis government, that makes them ..ZHenryFI. i. 4 

resign my government to thee — iv. 6 

that no dissension hinder government — iv. 6 

in bearing weight of government — iv. 6 

there is a hope of government Richard III. ii. 3 

kingly government of this your land — iii. 7 

wife-like government, obeying Henry Fill. ii. 4 

besides the government of patiencel. Cymheline, ii. 4 
Tharsus, o'er which I have government.Peric/esji. 4 
peaceable reign, and good government — li. I 
tlie name of good, by his government. . — ii. I 
deprived of supple government.. iiomeo ^Juliet, iv. 1 
fear not my government. I once more..O(/ic»o, iii. 3 
deputing Cassio in his government — iv. 1 

GOVERNOR— governor doth tiAe.Meas.forMeas. i. 3 
but this new governor awakes me .. — i. 3 

from her lord, her governor . . Merch. of Fenice, iii. 2 
thy lord, thy king, thy governor . 7'ain/j7f of Sh. v. 2 
York lord governor ot England .... Richard II. ii. ) 

how yet resolves the governor Henry F. iii. 3 

being ordained his special governor..! Henry >'/. i. " 
thou shalt find me at the governor's — i. 

now, governor of Paris, take your oath — iv. 
Picardy hath slain their governors. .2 Henry F/. iv. 

Rome's gracious governor! TitusAjidronicus, v. 

Where's the lord governor? Here Pericles, i. 

lord governor, for so we hear you are , . — i. 
next, he's the governor of this country — iv. 

and are the governor of this place — iv. 

and in it is Lysimachus the governor. . — v. 
I am governor of this place you lie before — v. 

sir, 'tis the governor Mitylene — v. 

I am glad on't; 'tis a worthy governor .O/AeHo, ii. 
my hopes do shape him for the governor — ii. 
to you, lord governor, remains tlie censure — v. 

GOWEli — master Gower, what new6?.2Henry/F. ii. 
go along with me, good master Gower — ii. 
master Gower, shall I entreat you .. — ii. 
will you sup with me, master Gower? — ii. 
master Gower, if they become me not — ii. 

I tell you what, captain Gower — iii. 

was porn at Monmouth, captain Gower. Henry r. iv. 
under captain Gower, my liege (rep.) — iv. 
know'st thou Gower? He is my dear — iv. 

stand away, captain Gower — iv. 

as my friend, captain Gower — v. 

from ashes ancient Gower is come. Pericles, i (Gow 
pardon old Gower; this 'loiigs the text — ii. tGow. 

GOWN— put off that gown, Trinculo ..Tempest, iv. 

I'll have tliat gown — iv. 

in madam Julia's gown .... Two Gen. of Ferona, i v. 

pray you, give me my gown Merry Wives, iii. 

there is no woman's gown big enough — iv. 2 

of Brentford, has a gown above — iv. 2 

put on the gown the while — iv. 2 

in my branched velvet gown Twelfth NiglU, ii. 5 

put on this gown, and this beard .... — iv. 2 
tliat ever dissembled iu such a gown — iv, 2 

without thy beard and gown — iv. 2 

hang upon his gown Measure for Measure, i i. 2 

a furred gown to keep him warm .... — iii. 2 
and your gown's a most rare fashioa.M^lchAdo, iii. 4 

the duchess of Milan's gown — iii. 4 

and one that hath two gowns — iv. 2 

I'll change my black gown Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

over the black gown of a big heart ....All's Well, i. 3 
lay forth the gown: what news. . Taming of Sh. iv. 3 
thy gown? why, ay; come, tailor .... — iv. 3 
like to have neither cap nor gown t^rep.") — iv. 3 
apparel, for an almsman's gown ..Richard II. iii. 3 

like an old lady's loose gown \ Henry IF. iii. 3 

shall liave it, though Tpuwn my gown.2Henry/r.ii. 1 
thou shalt go to the wars in a gown . . — iii. 2 
train of lier worst wearing gown . . ..2Henry FI. i. 3 

what colour is my gown of? — ii. 1 

but cloaks, and gowns; before this day — ii. 1 
our bodies in black mourning gowns. .3Hen7-yr/. ii. 1 

I have lost my gown Timon of Athens, iii. 6 

here lies my gown — iii. 6 

for I cannot put on the gown Coriolanus, ii. 2 

he comes, and in the gown of humility — ii. 3 

I have here the customary gown — ii. 3 

wolvish gown [Coi. -toge] should I stand — ii. 3 
Lucius, my gown: farewell, sooOL.,JuliusCa;sar, iv. 3 

five me the gown: where is thy — iv. 3 
put it in the pocket of my gown — iv. 3 

I have a gown here ; come, put it on . . Pericles, ii. 1 
tliou shalt have my best gown to make — ii. 1 

robes, and furred gowns, liide all Lear, iv. 6 

for shame, put on your gown Othello, i. 1 

nor gowns, petticoats, nor caps, nor any — iv. 3 
GRACE— the noblest grace she owed . . Tempest, iii. 1 

heavens rain grace on that — iii. 1 

save our graces! — iii. 2 

a grace it had, devouring — iii. 3 

and with her sovereign grace — iv. I 

thy grace shall have it — iv. 1 

and't like your grace — iv. 1 

I will pay thy graces home — v. 1 

of whose soft grace — v. 1 

that swear'st grace o'erboard — v. 1 

and seek for grace — v. 1 

than words to grace it Two Gen.of Ferona, i. 2 

with all good grace to grace a gentleman — ii. 4 

cannot your grace win her — iii. 1 

what would your grace have me .... — iii. 1 

commend, extol their graces — iii. 1 

the grace that with such grace hath — 

than I prove loyal to your grace .... — 
not live to look upon yom- grace .... — 

we'll wait upon your grace till — 

the heavens such grace did lend her — i 

your grace is welcome to 

X thank your grace 

to make your grace to smile 

the boy hath grace in him 



iii. 1 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 
2 (song) 

— V. 4 

— V. 4 

— V. 4 

— V. 4 



Gil A 



[323 ] 



ORA 



I will not be iiWnco ot the pncQ .. Merry » "•". • • 

thev Imvc not so little grace, I liope . . - > ■ - 
if vou will lead these graces to. . . . 1vfl/rh ^•gl>l,l. o 

he" does it with a hotter ijraee — • -J 

grace, and gowl disposition tend .... — '';• ' 

put voiir grace in your pocket. . ...... - \- 

Jihcrfient to your grace's will .... Afmi./o' M<-a,. . I 

Ihou never wast where gnice was said - • ^ 

whv not? grace is grace, despite of all - >• f 

art a wicked villain, desi.ite of all groce - • ^ 

n\av vour grace speak of it?. — • 

it rested in vour grace to unloose .... — !• ' 

unless you have tlie grace by your . . — j- ;] 

heaven give thee moving pracesl .... — ■ ' 

with one half so pood a grace . - • ^ 

gracego with voul Benedicitel — . •» 

grace and gooilcoiupanv! — | ■ 

but grace being the soul of your .... — -^ 

grace to stand, and virtue go — 'i'- - 

graceof the duke, revenges to........ — ^. o 

when once our grace we haTC forgot.. — n. » 

happv return be to your royal grace 1 — > • 

thafs I, an't like your grace — ^ • 

heaven shield your grace from woe . . — ^ ■ 

against vour grace in your retirement — ^ • 

blessed lie vour royal grace I — ^ ■ 

as he vouches, misreport your grace. . — ^; 

when I perceive, vour grace, like .... — ^ • 

is all Uie grace I beg — , . V i 

in the likenees of your grace «<"■'' •'"'. '■ ' 

idense it your grace lead on? ...... .. — 

your grace would constrain me to tell — j- 

"now that is your grace's i>art — '• ' 

lie hath ta'eii you newly into his grace — !• ^ 

than arose in his grace...... — .!■ f 

graces will apiicar. and there s an end — i • 

that your grace had got the good will — >■ ' 

will vour grace command me any .. — !!• 

therefore vour grace may well say .. — i'. 

his grace liatli made the match O^r-i — !!• 

hath vour grace ne'er a brother .... — !!• 

your grace is too costly to wear (irp.) — !;• ' 

bv vour grace's pardon ■■. — !!• ' 

tilfall graces come in one woman (rep.) — ]'■ ^ 

as hushed on purpose to grace harmony . — .11. « 

if half thv outward graces had been — !'• 1 

that all the grace she hath left •.■..•• , — 'V ' 
before vour grace consent to. . . . Mid.N. sVream, 1. 1 

I do entreat your grace to pardon me — !• ' 

but I beseech your grace, that I . . . . — j- 

O, then, what graces in my love do.. - }■ ' 

more mv prayer, the lesser is my grace — • J 

what though I Ik not so in grace as you — . ^ 

if vou have anv pity, grace, or manners — "i- ^ 

came here in grace of our solemnity — 1^. | 

so please vour "race, the pro ogue is — ^.1 

I am thv lover^s grace; and like .... - y- 

truly tlie moon shines with a good grace - y. 1 

hand in hand, with fairy grace, will we, - v. i 
then grace us in the disgrace ot.. .. /.oi'i? sL.los , 1. 

to study with j-our grace, and stay here — 1. 

a maid'of grace, and complete majesty — i- 

by might mastered but bv special grace — i- 

by for I am his grace's tharljorough — 1. 1 

bv thy sweet grace's officer — i. 1 (letter 

otall'dear grace, as nature was (lep.) — !!• | 

personal conference with his grace . . 

to win grace though he hod no wit . . 

I hear, your grace hath sworn-out . . 

80 please your grace, the packet is not 

and fair desires consort youi- grace! 

voluble and free of grace ! 

to gratify the table with a grace 

God give him grace to groan I 

thv grace being gained, cures all — 

good heart, what grace hast thou .... — ; ■ . - 

I beseech vour grace, let this letter . . — iv. ^ 

vour grace needs not fear it. — ly. f 

it will please his grace (by the world) — v. 

though few have the grace to do it . . — v. 1 

wit's own grace to grace a learned tool — v. ^ 

Where's her grace? Thy news, Boyet? — v. ^ 

shall have tlie grace, despite of suit.. — v. ^ 

render we no grace; but, while 'tis . . — v. . 

have not the grace to grace it with such — v. j 

I do odore thy sweet grace's slipper.. — v. J 

purifies itselt and turns to grace — v. - 

your grace is perjured much — y. J 

of that loose grace, which shallow .. — v- j 
you have the grace of God sir.. A/ercA. 0/ fcmce, 11. 2 

while grace is saying, hood mine ... . — ]]■ I 

in graces, and in qualities of breeding — 11 / 

wear my dagger with the braver grace — iii- 4 

the best grace of wit will shortly — iii- 5 

ready, so please your grace — — jv. 1 

I have heard, your grace hath ta en . . — iv. 1 

I have possessed your grace of what I — iv. 1 

Bellariogrcetsvourgrace. ........... — , 'y- | 

your grace slmll understond, that.. — iv. 1 (let.) 
to fill up vour grace's request in my — iv. 1 (let.) 

humbly tfo desire your grace of pardon — iv. 

mightily grace himself on thee Ai you Like <l, 1. 1 

no, I warrant your grace; I am not — 1. 2 

vea. I t>«»ecch your grace; I am not yet — 1. ^ 

t do beseech your grace, let me — ]-^ 

they arc oa innocent as grace Itself — i- 3 
happy is your grace, that can translate — 

your grace was wont to laugh . . — 

the parts and graces of the wrestler that — 
their graces serve them but as enemies? — 
the enemy of all your graces lives .. 
with all graces wide enlarged .. — 
but yet have the grace to consider . . 
in »HCli a poverty of grace, that I — 
yourself good, ami not to grace me .. 
tears grm^c his remenilirance more . . 
by grace itself, I swear: you know ., 

life of mine on his grace s cure 

and find your grace in hcolth 



GRACE— greatest grace lending grace. .1H » lyell.u. 1 

the quarrel upon your grace's part .. — !!!■ | 

vour own grace will keep you — j"). J 

twill grace the attempt for.; — h.'.- <« 

mav I bf hold to acquaint hisgracc — in- ^ 

am'iiifnrnKil, his grace is at MarBCillcB — iv. i 

or, rather the hcrh of grace — 'y- ^ 

to bring me in some groce — \- ^ 

one brings thee in grace.... — y- f 

bv the fair grace and speech — ^-^ 

coming with her modern grace „, T,- a ^ <, 

well usurp the grace, voice. /'ainiH;,' »./*/!. 1 (inauc.i 

shall my friend Petruchio do me grace — i- ^ 
bless you with such grace as longetli — 
grace to hoot! of this make no ... . iVinler s 1 

O would her name were Groce! — !• J 

it is Grace, indeed: why, lo you now — 1. ^ 

but, beseech your grace, he plainer . . — .!• ^ 

is for my better grace; adieu — .!!• ' 

how I was in your grace ir^chm' isl 

Perdita, now grown in grace .":. '^' (cnoiiis; 

grace and remembrance, be to you both — }\» 

to hove his daughter come into gracel — ly. f 

some new grace will be born — ^ • ;? 

it is a surplus of your grace — >• ? 

as tender, as infancy, and grace 



ii. 1 

ii. 1 

ii. 1 

ii. 1 

iii. 1 



iv. 3 (verses) 



sTale.i.'i 



_ iii. 5 

_ iii. 6 

_ iv. 1 

_ iv. 3 

_ iv. 3 



pour yourgraces upon my daughter 3 — v. 3 
must do his minions grace. . . . Cnmeily r,fhrrors,u. 1 

and your grace you show not — !j!- ^ 

with such a gentle sovereign grace . . — m- ^ 

have won his grace to comb . . .... — *■ [ 

mav it please vour grace, Antiphulus — v. 1 
to do him all the grtice and good .... — v. 
immediately ran hither to youi- grace — v. 

as I do see your grace — ,, \ }. 

you greet with present grace Mnclwlh, 1. J 

shalfcoutinue our graces towards .. — ,\-° 

renown, and grace 18 dead — .!!■ ^ 

to grace us with your royal — '"• ' 

'hove wisdom, grace, and fear 

with such grace, that the malevolence 

what's your grace's will? 

wear the brows of grace, yet grace .. 

with other Hiaces weighed 

that speak him full of grace ....■••■ — " • ;! 
by the grace of Grace, we will perfoitn — >. 7 
outof your grace, devise, ordain ..Kins' Johii,m. 1 
60 shal'l it be; your grace shall stay . . — !"■ ^ 
to gi-oce occasions, let it be our suit . . — iv. ^ 
to grace the gentry of a land remote — v. ^ 

vour grace shall pardon me , ~" , , , ^' , 

exactly begged your grace s 'purdon.. Iliduir,! 11. 1. 1 

and, by the grace of God — .. ._ — !■ 3 

by heaven's grace, and my body 9 — — !• ^ 
(lid grace our hollow parting with .. — .!• ^ 
here comes his grace in person — "■ -^ 

frace me no grace, nor uncle me — 
beseech your grace, look on my — 

it stands your grace upon 

but we must win your grace _ 

how brooks your grace the air 

why looks your grace so pale? 

yoiir grace mistakes me 

at traitors' calls, and do them grace 
should grace the triumph of great .. 

of rue, sour herb of grace 

I do beseech your grace to pardon me 
save your grace: I do beseech (rep.) 
thrive, if thou grant any gracel . ... . 
grace my mournings here, in weeping 
save thy grace, majesty {rep.) 



.ll,nrvi:l. 



ii. 3 



.iHenri/ir.i.i 



— ii.4 



ii. I 
ii. 2 
ii.2 
ii.3 
ii.3 
iii. 'i (verses) 
iii. 4 

— iii. 6 
_ V. 2 

/fU'ilfeU, i. I 
. _ i. 3 

— 1.3 I 



content to do the profession some grace 

well, an' the fire of grace be not 

violentlv carried away from grace .. 

your grace would take me with (rep.) — n. 

'that's the nearest grace it renders yon — iii. 

the archbishop's grace of York, Douglas — in. 

I heard your grace say so — '.n- 

I would, you would accept of grace . . — i\ • 

to grace this latter age with noble . . — i'. 

win they take the offer of our grace — v, 

chid his truant youth with such a grace — v, 

how fares your grace? sir Nicholas .. — v, 

if a lie iniiy do thee grace — v 

did we not send grace, pardon — v 

I beseech your grace, I may dispose — v 
and did grace the sliame of those. . ..iHenrtjIJ . 1 

he may keep his own grace — .} 

please your grace, I am a poor widow — 11 

this is the right fencing grace, my lord — 1; 

save your gracel Andyours — )! 

beheardof your grace 8 coming .... — V. 

and swears with a good grace — !! 

the Lord preserve thy good gracel — i] 
what says your grace? Hisgracc says — .11 
please it your grace, to go to bed — — i" 

an't shall please your grace — P' 

then, my lord, unto your grace do . . — iv 

that bears such grace, into the harsh — iv 

to tell you from nis grace, that he .. — iv 

to meet his grace iust distance ..•••• — !^' 

before, and greet hisgracc; my lord — iv 

the grace, and sanctities of heaven .. — iv 

the countenance and grace of heaven — iv 

1 sent your grace the parcels — >* 

pleaseth vour griicc, to answer — iv 

thereupoii I drink unto your grace .. — n 

I pledge your grace; and, if you knew — l^ 

I beseech vour grace, let it be hooked — 11 

nor lose Hie good advantage of his grace — n 

by which his grace must mete — p 

your son, doth kiss your grace's bond — 11 

will't please your grace to go along . . — i' 

how fares your grace? Why did you — n 

lie assured what grace to find — ' 

I will make the king do you grace .. — 1 

God save thy grace, Iting Hall — ' 

less thv hod v. hence, and more thy grace — ' 

the king is full of grace, ami fair Henry r. 

how his grace should gleau it — 



— ii. (chorus) 
- ii.2 
_ ii.2 



V. 3 
v. 3 
V. 3 
V. 4 



GRACE— opened to his grace at largo 

his grace would fain have done 

your grace hath cnnse, and means . 

unto whose grace our passion is 

by God's grace, play a set 

this grace of kingH must die 

'fore God his grace is bold, to trust . 
to do your grace incessant services . 

question your grace the late .;; - 

the cool and temperate wind of grace — \i\- » 

par la grace de Dieu — j!j- J 

saving, our grace is only in our heels — 111. o 

goes to the wars, to groce himself ... . — '"■ 6 

shall 1 attend your grace? No — "v- ' 

as long aa it pleases his grace — !v. 7 

look your grace, that he keen his vow — "v. / 

your grace diwfl me as great honours — iv. 7 

an' please Got of his grace, tluit I . . . . — iv. 7 

that, look your grace, has struck — iv. 8 

pleaseth your grace, to appoint — v. ^ 

(sanfvostre grace,) ainsi dit-il — \- f 

to win the Dauphin's grace I Hcuri/ '/■!■• 

to look to heaven lor grace? — .]■ * 

met not with the Dauphin's grace .. — ]\- ' 

we grace the yeoman, by conversing — .11. 4 

is not his grace protector to — JJi. J 

my lord, we know your grace to be.. — 1.1.1.. I 

yolir grace may starve, perhaps — i.n. 2 

to my God, and next unto your grace — in- 4 

writ to your grace from the duke — iv. 

what means Ills grace, that he — }''■ > 

we institute your grace to be — '.^'- 1 

as fast upon your grace exclaims — — iv 4 

how dotn your grace oti'ect — v. 

to your grace in marriage — ^'. ' 

prize, fit for t'ne devil's grace 1 

what answer mokes your grace 

your grace shall well ond quietly enjoy 
mad, natural gioccs that extinguish 

because you want the grace ^ 

but whom his grace affects — \- •? 

princess Margaret for your grace iHewyl l. 1. 

but her grace in speech — ! • J 

so it please your grace, here are — 1 ■ 

we hero discharge your grace from . . — i- 
but grace. But by the grace of God (rep.) — 11 

as by your grace shall be propounded — ]■ '- 

an't please your grace, agoinst John — 1.3 

work your grace's full content — !■ 3 

whether your grace be worthy, yea, or no — 1. ^ 

what needs your grace to he protector — !■ 3 

we make your grace lord regent o'er — 1. 3 

your grace shall give me leave — .;• J 

your grace could fly to heaven ? — i). 1 

born blind, an't please your grace .. — 11. j 

in the north, an't like your grace.. .. — !!• 

yes, my lord, if it please your grace . . — 1 1 ■ j 

at large your grace shall understand — 11. I 

60 please your grace, we'll take her.. — 11. 4 

I siimmon your grace to his — ;;.'' 

an't please your grace, here my — !!• 

in charge, may 'tpleate your grace .. — .i|. 

I should have told yoiu- grace s tale — ni. 

cool in zeal unto your groce — !;'• ' 

we intend to try his grace to-day .... — ui- ' 

what answer makes yoiir grace ...... — iv. ': 

and calls your grace, usurper, openly — iv. ■ 

somight your grace's person be.. .... — iv. ■ 

please it your grace to he advertised — iv. ; 

seditious to his grace, and to the state — v. 

I present your grace a traitor's heod — v. 

and not to grace an awful princely ■ . , „ — v. 
kneel for grace. "Wouldst have me kneel? — v. 

do repute his grace the rightful...... — \- 

what, is your groce dead, my lord . .3Hc.o y ; /. 1. 

and kneel for grace and mercy — '• 

I'll see your grace; till then — !■ 

about that which concerns your grace — 1. 

forbid, vour groce should be forsworn — i- 

what would your grace have done .. — .■■ 

wilt thou kneel for grace — ';• 

ask mercy, and obtain no grace — . . — .;!■ 

I will do what your grace commands — iii. 

'twill grieve 3'our grace, my sons — '.»• 

Tour grace hath not d<me well — •^'■ 

your grace hath still been famed . . 
one thing let me blame your grace 
bv the groce of God, king of . . 

w"hat will vour grace have done - 

that waits upon your grace? ntclmrrl 111. 

I beseech your graces both — 

I beseech your grace to pardon me . . — 

and cheer his grace with quick — 

of day unto our royal^roce! — 

hisgracc speaks cheertuU.v — 

they love his grace but lightly ...... — 

speaks your grace? To thee (r«p.) .. — 

his royal graie, whom God preserve . . — 
and for your grace; and you my noble — 

we will ttcnd upon your grace ... . . . — 

why looks your grace so heavily to-day/ — 

God give your grace good rest! — 

turn his hate upon your grace — 

take our brother Clarence to your grace — 

had so much grace to put it — 

we wait upon your grace 

I did not see your grace — 

that her grace did leave it out — 

no, no; bv God's good groce — 

virtuous uncles to protect his groce.. — 

small herbs have grace •••••• — 

1 could have given my uncle s grace — 
I'll resign unto your grace the seal .. 

grace attended to their sugorcd words — 

God bless your grace with health — 

come with me to meet your grace.... — 

will your grace persuade theiiiieen . . — 

too weighty for your grace to wear . . - 
your grace knows how to liear with him — 
claim that promise at your grace's hand — 



iv. fi 
7 (procl.) 



GRA 

lillACE— grace, we think, should ..lUchnrd III. iii. i 

1 thiiiik hig grace, he loves me well. . — iii. 1 

Ilia arnce looks cheerfully and smooth — iii. 1 

tender love I liear your grace, my lord — iii. 4 

myself secure in grace and favour.... — iii. 4 

momentary grace of mortal men (ifp.) — iii. 4 

at any time, to grace my stratagems — iii. li 

good graces liotn liave well proceeded — iii. 5 

your grace's word shall serve — iii. 5 

dotl\ entreat yo\ir grace, my noble lord — iii. 7 

to have sonic coniL-rence witii his grace — iii. 7 

[I'nl. Kill.} grace tlie sovereignty thereof — iii. 7 

(fi'il defend liis grace slionid say uonay I — iii. 7 

wliat says Ids grace? lie wonders.,,, — iii. 7 

his grace not being warned thereof .. — iii. 7 

once more return, and tell his grace — iii. 7 

see where his grace stands 'tween.... — iii. 7 

[Co(.Kn(.] your grace to pardon me.. — iii. 7 

what is your "race's pleasure? — iii. 7 

would it might please 3^our gi-a.ce .. .. — iii. 7 

this argues conscience in your grace — iii. 7 

(Jod bless your gracel we see it — iii. 7 

then we will attend your grace — iii. 7 

(iod give your graces both a liappy .. — iv. 1 

ni >tber, how fares your grace! — iv. 1 

your grace may do your pleasure .... — iv. 2 
resolve your grace immediately ICol. Knt. 

—j'ou herein presently] — iv. 2 

to put your grace in mind of what you — iv. 2 

tluit called your grace to breakfast once — iv. 4 

true, when a\'oide(-l grace makes destiny — iv. 4 

if grace had blessed tliee with — iv. 4 

what Irom yoiu- grace I shall — iv. 4 

and meed your gracCj where and what — Iv. 4 

to grace thy brows withal — v. 4 

I tliank your grace, healthful Henry VIIl. 1. 1 

whose grace chalks successors their way ^— i. 1 

like it your grace, the state — i. 1 

ay, please your grace. Well, we shall — i. I 

of the king's grace and pardon — i. 2 

put the graces that once were his .... — i. 2 

welcome from his grace salutes you all — i. 1 

his grace is entering: nay — i. 4 

your grace is noble — i. 4 

I told your grace, tliey would talk anon — i. 4 

thus they prayed to tell your grace .. — i. 4 

tliey have done my poor house grace — i. 4 

my lord,— your grace I Pray, tell them — i. 4 

they would have your grace find out — i. 4 

yoiir grace is grown so pleasant — i. 4 

an't please your grace, sir Thomas . . — i. 4 

your grace, I fear, with dancing .... — i. 4 

I do beseech your grace, for charity — ii . 1 

commend me to Ids grace — ii. 1 

water side I must conduct your grace — ii. 1 

food-day to both yoiU' graces — ii. 2 

would, your grace would give us but — ii. 2 

your grace has given a precedent .... — ii 2 

your grace must needs deserve all.... — ii. 2 

for ever by your grace, whose hand.. — ii. 2 

out of his grace he adds — ii. 3 

and take your good grace from me?. . — ii. 4 

his grace nath spoken well, and justly — ii 4 

an't please j'our grace, the two — iii. 1 

pray their graces to come near — i i i. 1 

your graces find me liere part of ... . — iii. 1 

obedience he still bore your grace — iii. 1 

good your graces, let me have time .. — iii. 1 

your grace wtndd leave your griefs . . — iii. 1 

your grace could but be hroughtto know — iii. 1 

of your best graces in your mmd — iii. 2 

your royal gi'aces, showered on me dally — iii. 2 

fur vour great graces heaped upon me — iii. 2 

let his grace go forward : .... — iii. 2 

how does yoiu" grace? Why, well .... — iii. 2 

cured me, I humbly thank his grace — iii. 2 

I am glad, your grace has made — iii. 2 

wliilc her grace sat down — iv. 1 

at length her grace rose, and with.... — iv. 1 

how does your grace? O Griffith .... — iv. 2 

but, I think, your grace, out of the pain — iv. 2 

you note how much her grace is altered — iv. 2 

mine own service to youi- grace — iv. 2 

that Ills noble grace would have some — iv. 2 

of his great grace and princely care . . — v. I 

your grace must wait, till you — v. 2 

I'll show your grace the straiigest sight — v. 2 

your jjrace may enter now — v. 2 

may it please your grace, — no, sir.... — v. 2 

may it like your grace to let my .... — v. 2 

and to your royalgrace, and the good — v. 4 

all princely graces, that mould up . . — v. 4 
had I a sister were a graee .... Troilus ^- Crcssida, i. 2 

and generals of grace exact — 1.3 

you are in the state of grace. Gracel — iii. 1 

that in each grace of these — iv. 4 

grace speaks his own standing ! . . Timon of Athens, i. 1 

whose present grace to present slaves — i. 1 

our pleasures much grace, fair ladies — i. 2 

even so thou outrun st grace — ii. 2 

and be denied such common grace .. — iii. 5 
use him as the grace 'fore meat .... Coj-iolanus, iv. 7 

to grace him only, that thought he .. — v. 3 

to show a noble grace to both parts . . — v. 3 

to imitate the graces of the gods .... — v. 3 

dost tliou think I'll grace thee with.. — v. 5 

to graee in captive bonds his JulhisCaisar.i. I 

we will grace his heels with the most — iii. 1 

do "race to Caesar's corse, and graee his — iii. 2 
and whose general graces ..Antony Sf Cleopatra, n. 2 

further this act of grace — ...^'- -^ 

now liazarded to thy grace — iii. 10 

give me grace to lay my duty — iii. 11 

grace grow where those drops fall I . . — iv. 2 

to grace it with your sorrows — iv. 1 2 

wlio is so full of' grace — v. 2 

where he for grace is kneeled to — v. 2 

in her strong toil of "race — v. 2 

past grace? jiast obedience? (rep.) . . Cymbeline, i. 2 

which, by their graces, I will keep . . — i. 5 



[ 324 1 



GRACE— but I beseech your grace Cymbeline, i. (1 

but 'tis your graces that, from my . . — i. 7 

to entreat your grace lint in a small — i. 7 

and on promise to see yimr grace — i. 7 

all joy befal your grace, and you I .. — iii..') 
meal, and bran; contempt and grace — iv. 2 

the graces for his merits due — v. 4 

if our grace can make him so — v. .*> 

thou huKt looked thyself into my grace — v. .^) 
by our greatness, and the grace ofit — v. 5 

highly honoured of your grace. Titus Andronicus, i. 2 
thus much I give your grace to know — i. 2 
and beg for grace in vain : come, come — 1. 2 
and his nephews kneel for grace .... — i. 2 

we'll give your grace bon-jour — i. 2 

and to deserve my mistress' grace.. . . — ii. 1 
I liromised yom- grace a hunter's peal — ii. 2 
no grace? no womanhood? Ah, beastly — ii. 3 

and fair men call for grace — iii. 1 

with a grace? Nay, triily, sir ()■('/).) .. — iv. 3 
with a grace deliver a supplication?. . — iv. 3 

how can I grace m.y talk , — v. 2 

vou could not beg for grace — v. 2 

lieaven had lent her oil his graee. Pericles, i. (Gower) 
graces her subjects, and her thoughts — i. l 

your grace is welcome to our town . . — i. 4 

rest as they deserve tlieir grace — ii. 3 

we thank your grace. Yet pause .... — ii. 3 
he thanks your grace; names himself — ii. 3 

1 am at your grace's pleasure — ii. 3 

it is your grace's pleasure to commend — ii. 5 
your grace, that fed my country .... — iii. 3 
we'll bring your graee even to the .. — iii. 3 
mistress, on whose grace you may .. — iii. 3 
gained of education all tlie grace — iv. (Gower) 
to grace tliy marriage-day, I'll beautify — v. 3 

wi til grace, health, beauty, iionour Lear, i. 1 

may iitlv like yom' graee, she's there .. — i. 1 
depriveci me of your grace and favour. . — i. 1 
without our grace, our love, our benison — i. I 
stood I within his grace, I would prefer — i. 1 
fools had ne'er less grace in a year — i. 4 (song) 

for him I thank your grace — ii. I 

yom' graces arc right welcome — ii. 1 

against the grace and person of my master ^: ii. 2 
let me beseech your grace not to do so — ii. 2 

hail to your gracel 1 am glad to — ii. 4 

dwells in the fickle grace of her — ii. 4 

what means your grace? Who stocked — ii. 4 
marry, here's grace, and a cod-piece .. — iii 2 
and cry these dreadful summoners grace — iii. 2 
how fares your grace? What's he? .... — iii. 4 
hath your grace no better company? . . — iii. 4 
I do beseech your grace,— O cry you .... — iii. 4 

what mean your graces? — iii. 7 

if e'er your grace nad speech with — v. 1 

grace go with you, sir 1 — v. 2 

that's as we list to grace him — v. 3 

in his own grace he doth exalt himself . . — v. 3 
God mark tlice to his grace I .... liomeo S^ Juliet, i. 3 

O mickle is the powerful graee — ii. 3 

as well as herbs, grace, and rude will! — ii. 3 
doth gro.ce for grace, and love for love — ii. 3 

to thee do ease, and graee to me Hamlet, i. 1 

time be thine, and thy best graces — i. 2 

in grace whereof, no jocund nealth — i. 2 

a double blessing is a double grace — i. 3 

(be they as pure as grace, as infinite .... — i. 4 
angels and ministers of graee defend us! — i. 4 
so grace and mercy at your most need .. — i. 5 
thyself do grace to them, and bring them — ii. 2 
that your graee hath screened and stood — iii. 4 
blurs the graee and blush of modesty. . . . — iii. 4 
what a grace was seated on this brow . . — iii. 4 
mother, tor love of grace, lay not that .. — iii. 4 
conscience, and grace to the profoundest — iv. 5 
we may call it, herb of grace o' Sundays — iv. 5 

convert his gyves to graces — iv. 7 

yomr grace hath laid the odds o' the .... — v. 2 
good your graee, pardon me; neither. . . . Othello, i. 3 
numbly I thank your giace; here is the — i. 3 
little shall I grace my cause, in speaking — i. 3 
please it your grace, on to the state affairs — i. 3 
please your grace, my ancient; a man — i. 3 
your good grace shall think to be sent .. — i. 3 
the grace of heaven, before, behind thee — ii. 1 
and denotement of her parts and graces — ii. 3 
if I have any grace, or power to move you — iii. 3 

O grace! O heaven defend me! — iii. 3 

unpin me, — have grace and favour in them — iv. 3 
some grace, yet have we some revenge — iv. 3 
unreconciled as yet to heaven and grace — v. 2 

GRACJED— was never graced before .... Tempest, ii. 1 
daily graced by the emperor. Two Gen. of Verona, i. 3 
and graced your kindness better.. Winter's Tale, v. 1 

were the graced person of our Macbeth, iii. 4 

and blessed, and graced indeed . . . .iHenrylV. iv. 1 
cloyed and graced with princely favours \_Col. 
A'nf. -dulled and cloyed with graciotis] Hf n; i/ V. ii. 2 
her virtues, graced with external . . 1 Henry fl. v. 5 
and graced thy poor sire with his . .ZHenryVl. ii. 2 

and we are graced with wreaths — v. 3 

ever graced me in thy company?. .TJicAard III. iv. 4 

had graced the tender temples of — iv. 4 

in whom already he is well graced . . Coriolanus, i. 1 
and graced the thankings of a king. . Cymbeline, v. .'i 
to intrude where I am grace(l..Tittis Andronicus, ii. 1 
or a brothel , than a graced palace Lear,i.i 

GRACEFUL-gracefnl, and excellent. A/ucA .4</o, iii. 4 
a holy father, a graceful gentleman. Winter's T. v. 1 

and gave him graceful posture Coriolanus, ii. 1 

not with graceful eyes attend. . . . Antony <§■ Cleo. ii. 2 
such a graceful courtesy delivered .... Pericles, ii. 2 
in Philoten all graceful marks .. — iv. (Gower) 

GRACEIiESS— not so graceless hcTamingofSh. i. 2 
and graceless traitor to lier loving lord? — v. 2 
the graceless action of a heavy hand. King John, iv. 3 

SacelessI wilt thou deny 1 Henry I'l. v. 4 
gi-aceless men! they know not ..iHenryl'l.'w.^ 
GRACING— gracing the scroll King Jolin, ii. 2 



GRA 

GRACIOljS-howfares my gracious sir?. 7'CTnpt's(, v. 
my gracious lord, that which.. TwoGen.of Ver. iii. 
when I call to mind your gracious favours — iii. 
that word makes the faults gracious .... — iii. 
shape of nature, a gracious person. TwetfthNight, i. 
thou wast in very gracious fooling .. — ii. 

gracious Olivia — v. 

made him that gracious denial. A/eas./ni' Meaa. iii. 
do no stain to your own gracious person — iii. 
I am a brother of gracious order .... — iii. 
to you, fair and gracious daughter . , — iv. 
O gracious duke, harp not on that . . — v. 
to try her gracious fortune with .... — v. 

my most gracious lord, I hope you — v. 
and never shall it more be gracious. .il/KcA.-i'/o, iv. 
and, my gracious duke, this hath.. A/it/. iV. 'a- Dr. i. 

and, m,y gracious duke, be it so — i. 

to make it the more gracious, I shall — iv. 
for, by thy gracious, golden, glittering — v. 
in such apt and gracious words ..Love'BL.Lost,\\. 
her mistress is a gracious moon...... — iv. 

the way to make an offence gracious — v. 

1 thank you, gracious lords, for all . . — v. 
seasoned with a gracious voice. A/erc/i.o/ Venice, iii. 
leave him to your gracious acceptance — iv. 1 (let. 
sliamed that was never gracious . . As you Like it, i. 

pardon, my gracious lord AU'sWcll, ii. 

the paper to his gracious hand.. _ — v. 

my gracious sovereign, howe'er it ... . — v. 
gracious sovereign, whether I have . . — v. 
of our most gracious mistress .... Winter's Tate, i. 
my gracious lord, I may be negligent — i. 

and comfort the gracious queen — i. 

come, my gracious lord; shall I be .. — ii. 
how fares our gracious lady? As well — ii. 
a gracious innocent soul; more free.. — ii. 

and gracious be the issue! — iii. 

blemished his gracious dam — iii. 

their issue not being gracious, tlian. . — iv. 
sir, my gracious lord, to chide at ... . — iv. 

tlie gracious mark o' the land — iv. 

gracious my lord, you know your .. — iv. 
nearest to him, wdiich is your gracious — iv. 

as you, gracious couple, do! — v. 

therefore, most gracious duke.. Comedy of Errors, v. 
justice, most gracious duke, oh, grant ' — v. 
from Corinth, my most gracious lord — v. 
for them the jjracious Duncan have I. Macbeth, iii. 

the gracious Duncan was pitied of — iii. 

to kill their gracious father? — iii. 

and here, from gracious England — iv. 

gracious England hath lent us good.... — iv. 

what is your gracious pleasure? — v. 

gracious my lord, I should report — v. 

my gracious liege, when that my. . . . King Jolin, i. 
there was not such a gracious creature — iii. 
remembers me of all his gracious parts — iii. 
my gracious sovereign, my most .... Richard II. i. 
then, thrice gracious queen, more. ... — ii. 

but conceit, my gracious lady — ii. 

my gracious lord, I tender you my . . — ii. 
ICol. Knl.'] the most gracious regent — ii. 

my gracious uncle! Tut! tut! graee — ii. 
my gracious uncle, let me know .... — ii. 
nor further off, my gracious lord .... — iii. 
springs from one most gracious head — iii. 

witli all the gracious utterance — iii. 

my gracious lord, — Fair cousin — iii. 

my gracious lord, I come but for mine — iii. 
my gracious lord; for more uneven..! Henry IV. i. 
is well known, my gracious lord .... — ii. 
shall hereafter, my thrice gracious lord — iii. 

I come with gracious offers from — iv. 

for he is gracious, if he be observed .2Wc'»)7//A'. iv. 
my gracious lord, j'OU look beyond . . — iv. 

my gracious lord i my father ! — iv. 

my gracioiis liege, you won it — iv. 

my gracious lord of Canterbury? Henry V. i. 

then hear me, gracious sovereign .... — i. 
gracious lord, stand for j'Our own.. .. — i. 

of those marches, gracious sovereign — i . 

ICol. Knt.} cloyed witli gracious favours — ii. 
the general of our gracious empress — v. (clioru.' 

and of this gracious meeting — v. 

our gracious brother, I will go with . . — v. 

my gracicus lords, to add to \ Henry V I. i. 

heaven, and our lady gracious — i. 

look gracious on thy prostrate — i. 

be thou gracious to none alive — i. 

my gracious prince, and honourable — iii. 
my gracious sovereign, as I rode from — iv. 
grant me the combat, gracious sovereign 1 — iv. 
as deputy unto that gracious king.... — v. 

to your most gracious hands iHenry VI. i. 

of England, and my gracious lord. . . . — i. 

pardon me, gracious lord — i. 

all health unto my gracious sovereign! — iii. 

gracious lord, these days are dangerous! — iii. 
ow fares my gracious lord? (rep.) .. — iii. 

come hither, gracious sovereign — iii. 

my gracious lord, entreat him — iv. 

my gracious lord, retire to Kenelworth — i v. 
gracious lord, here in the parliament. 3He7(rt/ri. i. 

farewell, my gracious lord — i. 

open tliy gate of mercy, gracious God! — _i. 

who crowned the gracious duke — ii. 

my gracious liege, this too much lenity — ii. 
my gracious father, by your kingly leave — ii. 
right gracious lord, 1 cannot brook .. — iii. 

three, my most gracious lord — iii. 

no, gracious lord, except I cannot do it — iii. 
better said than done, my gracious lord — iii. 
gracious lord, Henry your foo is taken — iii. 

those gracious words revive my — iii. 

gracious madam, in our king's behalf — iii. 
but is he gracious in the people's eve? — iii. 
gracious sovereign; they are so linked — iv. 

yet, gracious madam, bear it as — iv. 

time of day unto my gracious lord. . liichard 111. i. 
beg one favour at thy gi acious hand. . — i. 



GRA 

nilACroUS-resiicct, my griieinus Inrd-MicA. ///. 1. 3 
be ffrociouB. And so, no iloiil>t (rc/i.) — ii, 4 

unknown to nio, my gracious Inily .. — Ii. 4 
my ffrftuious liuly fio: uml tliitluT bear — ii. -1 
bc'ilid, my cnu-ious lonl, lnuin tlmt plea — iii. 1 

upon rocoVil, my 1,'nifittiis Ii>ril — iii. t 

wbiit. my (iriuMous lunl? Am' il' I live — iii. I 
my gnii'ionH lunl, will't plrase ycin .. — iii. 1 
yonr lonlsliip in tliiit griiciiiiis iniiiill — iii. 2 
a vilo tiling to ilii;, my ^laLimia Kiiil — iii. 2 

his L'lmioiis pU'iisuri- iiiiv wiiv tluroin — iii. -1 
g.HMTl.'iiii-sl.v, t.i tlu'LMii.'ioiisdnUe .. — iii. 7 
fumous ri!iiilii4i'iiit, iiicvsl irrucious prince— iii. 7 
solicit ymir firiH-iuiis ^elf t.i tiilic on you — iii. 7 
grncions sovcri'inn. (iivc mo tliy huiid — iv. 2 

prove me, mv grucions lord — iv. 2 

virtuous and lair, royal and gmcious — iv. 4 
gracious sovereign, liow in Devonsliiro — iv. 4 
nore, most graeiuns lit'L'e. Norlolls .. — v. 3 
liMik on my forces witli a irracitnis eye — v. 3 
traitors, gracious I.onl, that wmiM reduce — v. t 
a gracious king, that panlons all ..lleiinj I'lll. ii. •-' 
O do beseech you, graciivus madam .. — ii. 4 
most gracious sir, m luinililcst manner — ii. 4 

'he's loving, and most L'racinus — iii. I 

mvKOiHl and gracious lord of Canterbury — v. 1 

jov, in tills most gracious lady — y. t 

all engaged to maVe it gracious. Troihis ^Ciess. ii. 2 
good and gracious nature hanging . Timnn nfAlh. i. 1 

my gracious silence, hail! Corlolanus, ii. 1 

so his grncious nature would think upon — ii. 3 

either bis gracious promise — ii. 3 

these are grneinus drops Julius Crrmr, iii. 2 

bvyourmo^l _'i.ii i mi n:iu]un..'l,itoiit/ If Cieopulra,]. b 

givctoagra.i ihustuf.. — ii. ."i 

mostgniei"" I! l-t tlnui.... — iii. 3 

majestv, and i in ii h.us mother. Cyinbrfmc, ii. 3 
graciiMis ladv. ^imi- 1 reixived command — iii. 4 
gracious sir. hero are your sons again — v. 5 

to sec this i-'iacious season — v. .'> 

grncious in the eyes of royal Rome. 7'i7«s Andron. i. 1 
gnicioiis Laviniii, Home's rich ornament — i. I 

iw as just and gracious unto me — i. I 

stand gracious to thelites that we ., — i. 2 
gnicious eoncpieror, victorious Titus — i. 2 

gracious triumpher in tlie eyes of Komel — i. 2 
if ever Tamora were gracious in those. . — i. 2 
makes me less gracious, thee more .. — ii. I 
dear sovereign, and our grncious mother — ii. 3 
my gracious lord, here is the bag of gold — ii. 4 
my gracious lord, no tribune hears .. — jii. 1 
O'graeious emperor! O gentle Aaron! — iii. I 
my gracious lord, my lovely Saturnine — iv. 4 

welcome, my gracious lord — v. 3 

Rome's gracious governor! — v. 3 

seek not to entrap, my pi'acious lord . . Pericles, ii. 5 
calls my gracious lord? Thou art a grave — v. 1 

alack, barchcadedl gracious my lord Lear, iii. 2 

and a gracious aged man, whose rcvcreiue — iv. 2 

Bwear by thy graeions self linmco ^-Junet, ii. 2 

so hallowed "and so gracious is the time. . Hamlel, i. 1 

to your gracious leave and pardon — i. 2 

to my God, and to my gracious king .... — ii. 2 
gracious, so please you, we will bestow . . — iii. 1 

what would vour gracious figure? — iii. 4 

thy state is tlie more gracious — v. 2 

the Ottomans, reverend and grncious. . . . Othello, i. 3 
yet, by your gracious patience, I will .. .. — i. 3 

gracious duke, to my unfolding lend — i. 3 

a gracious [Cnl. Kiit.-yonr prosperous] ear — i. 3 

GK.\CIOUSLY-graciously to know. Wea./br.Mca. ii. 4 
since God so graciously hath brought.. HtHij/;'. ii. 2 
did graciously plead for his funerals. TilusAndron. i.2 

look graciouslv on him — i.2 

what lie will do graciously Pericles, iv, 6 

GRAI).\TION'-by cold gradation. Afeaj. /or i>/ea». iv. 3 
not hv the old gradation Othello, i. 1 

GRAhl' — ^raff would send a caterpillar.. /VriWcs, v. 1 

(i K AFKr.'vG-pipilin of myown graffing.2Hcnrt//r. v.3 

GRAKT-ril graft it with you (rep.).Asyou I.ilse, iii. 2 
stock was graft with craljtree slip ..iHcnry VI. iii. 2 
stock L'raft with ignoble plants llichard III. iii. 7 

GRAFTKU— in ears, but grafted them ..All\ Ifell, i. 2 

grafted in my serious trust Winter^ s TalCj i. 2 

vice so grafted, that, when they tlacheih, iv. 3 

matehed withal, and grafted to \HemylV. iii. 2 

will not be grafted to vour relish . . Coriulmuu, ii. 1 

f;RAFTi:R— overlook their grafters? . . Henry r. iii. 5 

Gl{ A?'T'ST— the plants thou graft'st.BiWian///. iii. 4 

G R.V TN— 'tis in grain, sir Tirelf.h Nighl, i. 5 

many a thousand grains that ..Mens, for Mens. iii. 1 
08 two grains of wheat hid. . . . Merchant ofl'enice, i. I 

there's not a grain of it WlnleT'sTalp,\\. I 

no, sir, 'tis in grain Comedy of Errors, iii. 2 

and say, which grain will grow Macbeth, i. 3 

u grain, a dust, a gnat Kin^John, iv. I 

time, even to the utmost grain Henry I', ii. 4 

we sec each grain of gravel He/tri/nil. i. 1 

divert his grain tortive and errant. Trail. ^Cress. i. 3 
knows almost every grain of I'lutus' — iii. 3 
storehouses crammed with grain ....Coriotanus,\. 1 

they say. there's grain enough i. i 

against the grain to voice bim — ii. 3 

to linger but with a grain a day — iii. 3 

groin or two, to leave imhurnt (rrp.) — v. 1 
arc the grains; you are the musty chaflf — v. 1 
slime and o«j7C scatters his praiu.. .intony ^ Cleo. ii, 7 
IK'riiii'ioos soul rot half a grain a davI..O(Af«o, v. 2 

GllAIN'KD-graincd face of mine .Com.(/j/o/-Err. v. 1 
iny grained ash a hundred times .,Coriotanus,iv. a 
I se<- sncli bliu'k anil grained spots Hnmlrt^ iii. 4 

GKA.MKRC'IKS-gramereies, I'ronio. Tam.ofSh. \. 1 

granicrcies, lad. go forward — i. 1 

gramercies. good fool Timon of Athens, il. 2 

GRAMKRCV-gramercy, wouldst./Wcr. of Venice, ii, 2 
gramercy, fellow; there, drink.. .. /drAar'/ III. iii. 2 

ffocKl! Grnmcrcy. I^xik you.,.. Timnn or Athens, ii. 2 
ic it so, Titus, and graiiiercv too . . Titus. indron. I. 2 
t-minercy, lovely r.ueins: wliat's the — Iv. 2 
GIlAMjMAK-rcad it in the grammar.. 7'i(u«J«</. iv. 2 



[ 325 ] 



ORAMMAR-SCUOOI.,- 
in erecting a grammar-school iHenryVI. iv, 7 

GHAND-rcfusiiig her grand 'bests .... Tempest, i. 2 
where should thev llnd this grand liipior — v. I 
dat von make maiul |ircparation...i;cMV /Cirri, iv. .', 
thev liavr Ihtii L-raml I iirynien'.. 7Vr;///i Mght, iii. S 

to 'niiit .In III. I,. i;,aiiil /IH'i (IVH, iii. .') 

pil Mill I Milt .laiioes le grand — iv. 3 

th. Ill, n piialor, ahhotof Richard II. v. 6 

Biii\. Mill. I :iiul capitainc Henry V. iv. 4 

tlmt cx.elUni ■rand tyrant Richard III. iv. 4 

produce tile .jiniul sum of his Bias.. Heni^i VIII. iii. 2 

grand eaptiiio Antony shall Antony ^ Cleo. Hi. 1 

the my rile leal' to his grand sea — iii. 10 

of your grand [ Knt. great] aspect l.ear, ii. 2 

to "unseal their grand commission Hamlet, v. 2 

QRANDAM-buricd her grandam. Y'lfo Gen. of V. ii. 1 
why, my grnudam having no eyes. . . . — ii. 3 
that the soul of our graodam.. .. 7'wc;///i M^'/if, iv. 2 
dispossess the sold ol'lliy grandam .. — iv. 2 
mii.dit ha\c been a ^'raiulani ere . .Lovers L. Lost, v. 2 

to please his graiulam Merchant or Venice, ii. 2 

authoi-ized by her grandam Macbeth, iii. 4 

I am thy grandam, Richard Kin^John, i. I 

there's a good grandam, boy — ii. I 

thy grandam, child. Do, child (rr/i.) — ii. I 

his graudam's wrongs — ii. 1 

will; a cankered grandnm's will! .... — ii. 1 

grandam, I will not wish thy — iii. 1 

thy grandam loves thee; and thy uncle — iii. 3 
graudnui, I will pniy (it'ever I remember — iii. 3 
at your birth, our iiraiidam enrtli ..\ Henry IV. iii. I 

yourgranilain had a worser Richardlll. i. 3 

good grandam, tell us, is our father .. — ii. 2 
then, grandam, you conclude that he — ii. 2 
grandam, we can; for my good uncle — ii. 2 
my uncle did dissemble, grandam? .. — ii. 2 

grandam, one night as we did sit — ii. 4 

grandam, this would have been a biting — ii. 4 

grandam, his nurse — ii. 4 

my grandam told me, he was murdered — iii. 1 
ladv was fairer than his grandam. 7'?-of7ws<5- Cress, i. 3 

GR.Vxni '1 1 1 1,r)-!.'raiidcliild to her blood. .Cor/oi. v. 3 

GHAN'DK-la uraiide alfaire Merry Ifitws, i. 4 

GRANDETTR—vostic grandeur HenryV. v. 2 

GRANDFATHER- 
thc son of my grandfather. 7'mjo Gen. of Verona, iii, 1 

he is Cupid's grandfather Love's L.l.ost, ii. 1 

called so from nis giandfather. Taming of Shrew, iii. 1 
John of Gaunt, your grandfather ..\ Henry IV. ii. 2 

a scal-riug of my grandfather's — iii. 3 

from Edward, Ins great grandfather . . Henry V. i. 1 
my great graiulfather, nc^'er went .. — i.2 

your grandfather of famous memory — iv. 7 
his grandfather was Lionel duke.. . .1 Hfiir;//'/. ii. 4 
Henry the fourth, grandfather to.... _ ii. .'j 
thou bastard of my grandfather! .... — iii. I 
thy grandfather, Roger Mortimer ..SHenryVI. i. 1 
my father, and my grandfather, were — iii. 1 
thy famous grandfather doth live.... — v. 4 

rascal, who is thy grandfather Cymheline, iv. 2 

message from his mad grandfather.. Titus And. iv. 2 

GRAND-.JUROR_arc grand-jurors..! Henri/lV. ii. 2 

GliAND.iMOTIIER-of mv grandmother. JVm;)«^ i. 2 
the sou of thv grandmother .. Tu-o Gen. offer, iii. 1 
childof our Grandmother Eve. Lore's i. L. i. 1 (let.) 
fair i|ueen Isabel, his grandmother Henry V. i. 2 

GRAN Dl'RE- Beaumont, Grandpie..Hc/irj/ V.iii. 5 

niy lord Grandpre. A valiant — iii. 7 

of lusty earls, Grandpr^, and Roussi — iv. 8 

GRANDSIRE— is her grandsire Merry Wives, i . 1 

her grandsire leave her seven Imndred — i. 1 
like lier grandsire cut in alabaster?. .,1/cr. ofVen. i. 1 

do, good old grandsire Taming of Shrew, iv, b 

my grandsu'C was an Englishman . . King John, v. 4 
had thy grandsire, with a prophet's. BicAard //. ii. 1 
stands upon thy royal grandsire's bones — iii. 3 
that our gi-eat grandsire, Edward . .ZHenrylV. iv. 4 

to your great grandsire's tomb HenryV. i. 2 

guarded with grundsircs, babies — iii. (chorus) 

wherein m\- L'randsire, and my fathcr.3//e«ry/'/. i. 1 
great-graniltsitluT and LTandsire cot — ii. 2 
when Ileetor's grauilsire sucked, troilus ^ Cress, i. 3 
was mouldy ere your grandsires had — ii. 1 
I knew thy grandsire, and once fought — iv. Ii 

8leep,*hou hast been a grandsire Cymheline, v. 4 

good grandsire, leave these bitter. Titus.4ndron. iii. 2 

to see his grandsire's heaviness — iii. 2 

help, grandsire, helpl my aunt Lavinia — iv. 1 
heard my grandsire say full oft — iv. I 

§randsire,tis Ovid's Metamorphosis — iv. 1 
agger in their bosoms, grandsire.... — iv. 1 

my grandsire, well-advised — i\'. 2 

thy grandsire loved thee well — v. 3 

grandsire. grandsire! even with all — v.3 
proverbed with a grandsire phrase.. /(omro ^-Jul. i. 4 
IS not this a lamentable thing, grandsire — ii. 4 
old grandsire Priam seeks— so proceed.. /7<on/c/, ii. 2 
the devil will make a grandsire of you. . Othello, i. 1 

GR.VNGE-at the moated grange. .Vpns. /or .Meat. iii. 1 
thou goest to the grange .. frinler'sTale,iv. 3 (song) 
my house is not a grange ..Othello, i. 1 

GRANT— how to grant suits Tempest, i. 2 

will you grant, with me that — ii. I 

1 grant, sweet love TtroGen. of Verona, iv. 2 

to grant one boon that I — v. 4 

I grant it, for thine own — v. 4 

grant me another request Twelfth \ight, v, 1 

well, grant it then — v. 1 

heaven grant us its peace . . Measure for Measure, i. 2 

I grant; as there may between — i.2 

the fairest grant is the necessity Murh.ido, i. I 

and good luck ^rant thee Mid. N.'s Dream, i. 1 

I grant you, friends, if that you — i.2 

GirI grant us patience ! Love'sL.Losi, i. 1 

so you grant pasture for me — ii. 1 

of the hour, grant us your loves — v, 2 

my faint means would grant. .VrrrAfHi/ of Venice, i. I 
liray God grant them n fairdeparturo — i.2 

the duke snail grant me justice — iii. 3 



GRA 



GRANT— will never grant this.Merch. of Venice, iii. 3 
grant inc two things, I pray you .... — iv. 1 

what yon will, I will grant As you Like it, iv. I 

and, wooing, slie sbould grant? — v. 2 

hear my suit? And grant it All's IVell, ii. 3 

wish receive, which great I..ove grant! — ii. 3 
and loves to grant, reprieve him from — iii. 4 

grant it me, O king — v. 3 (petition) 

may, I grant: but to be jiaddling.. Winter' sTale, i. 2 

a dealh, to grant this — iv. 1 

will grant precious things — y. 1 

the heavens did grant did h\i\,.Comedy of Errors, i. 1 

duke, oh, grant ine justice — v, 1 

if .von would grant the time Macbeth, ii. I 

I grant him bloody, luxurious — iv. 3 

it thou grant my need King John, iii. I 

both hear and grant you your requests — iv. 2 
we grant, thou canst outscold us .... — v. 2 

to giant the commons' Biut? Richard II. iv. 1 

thrive, if Ihoii grant any grace — v.3 

1 giant yc, upon instinct \ Henry IV. ii. 4 

I grant yon, 1 was down — v. 4 

in some respects, I grant, I cannot go.2//('?iri//r. i.2 

grant, that our holies, yet likely — i. 3 

grant that, my poor virtue, grant that — ii. 4 

with grant ot our most just — iv. 2 

and giant it may with thee — iv. 4 

I grant your worship, that be is — v. 1 

in urant of all demands at large HenryV. ii. 4 

Calais; grant him there — v. (chorus) 

to write for matter of grant — v. 2 

gniiit me llie combat (rep.) illenryVl. iv. I 

if yon will ^'raiit my suit — v.3 

shall do well, to grant her suit XHenryVI. iii. 2 

the lady hath a thing to grant (rep.) — iii- 2 

dread lord, and grant it then — iii. 2 

which virtue begs, and virtue grants — iii. 2 
will never grant what I i)erceive .. .. — iii. 2 
if thou vouchsafe to grant that virtuous — iii. 3 
heavens grant that Warwick's words — iii. 3 

your grant, or your denial — iii. 3 

it was my will, and grant — iv. 1 

I grant ye. Dost grant me (rep.) ..Richard III. i. i 

I beseech yon, grant me this boon . . — i. 2 

God grant him health! — i. ?. 

God grant we never may have (rep.) — i 3 
God grant, that some, less noble .... — ii. 1 

unjustly too, must grant it j-ou — ii. 1 

them joyful, grant their lawful suit.. — iii. 7 
the gods grnntl Oniy lord! (rep.) 7'roi7iii.5'Cr«. iii. 2 
and Cupid grant all tongue-tied .... — iii. 2 
grant I may never prove . . Timon of.4lh. i. 2 (grace) 
to kill, I grant, is sin's extremest gust — iii. i> 
and grant, as Timon grows, his hate — iv. I 
which the gods grant thee to attain to! — iv. 3 
grant, f may ever love, and rather woo — iv. i 

tin ^ id^- Mriiiit them true! Corlolanus, ii. I 

;jM .' ill '. Il I 1. 11 me, in peace .... — iii. 2 

II lant of the whole table — iv. S 

I iin.i 11 .'lull to grant — v.3 

\on \\ ill not !_'rant us anything — v. i 

\ grant, we juit astinginliim JuliusCiesar,\\, I 

I grant, I am a woman (;<?/).) — ii. 1 

that Cicsar will not grant — ii. 4 

grant Ihnt, and then is death — iii. 1 

let us grant, it is not amiss. . Antony ifj- Cleopatra, i. 4 
1 grievinggrant, did you too much ,, — ii. 2 
and his sword, grants scarce distinction — iii. 1 

conquered, I grant him part — iii. B 

thou meanest to have him grant thee — v. 2 

he'll grant the tribute Cymlelinc, ii. 4 

I grant we were to question further. . — ii. 4 

grant, heavens, that, which I fear — iii. .j 

thy words, 1 grant, are bigger — iv. 2 

by whom, I grant, she lives — v. .^ 

alittle space for iira^'er, I grant it .... Pericles, iv. 1 

the dwUe must grant me tliot Lear. ii. I 

grant thou, lest faith turn Romeo fr Juliet, i. 5 

mad let us grant him then Hamlet, ii. 2 

before your ladyship, I grant, she puts.. 0//ie//o, ii. I 

I do beseech thee, grant me this — iii. 3 

I grant, indeed, it hnth not appeared — iv. 2 

G7!ANTl',lJ-l)einggrautcdincourse./Vf,7./)r.Vra.iii.l 
is there no i|inck recreation granted?LoiJe's L. L. i. 1 

come on, tiiou art granted space AlVslVell, iv. 1 

it must lie granted. I am duke of.... Richard II. ii. 3 
restored again, be freel.v granted .... — iii. 3 
on thy royal part.v granted once .... — iii. 3 

he assured, will easily be granted \ Henry IV. i. 3 

needs be iiranted to be much at one ..HenryV. v. 2 
the king hath Kianted every article .. — v. 2 
the otfcnder gi anted scope of speecli.2//enrj//'/. iii. 1 
I would have granted t" that act . . . .ZHenry VI. i, I 
her suit is graiitcil for her liiisliand's — iii. 2 
is always granted to those wlio.se. . Richard III. iii. 1 

whereby his suit was granted Henry VIII. i. 1 

which if granted, as he made semblance — i.2 

let this be granted, and .\chilles'. Troilus ^- Cress, i. 3 
petition granted them, a strange one.C'orio//j/ii«, i. I 
what is granted them? Five tribunes — i. 1 

when we granted that, here w-as — ii 3 

less? or granted less, Aufldius? — y, 3 

which soon he granted Aniony \ Cleopatra, iii. t» 

not granted, he lessens his requests .. — Hi. 10 

yon area fool •.■runted Cymbeline,ii. I 

h't it lie granted, yon have seen — ii. 4 

granted Rome a tribute, yearly three — iii. 1 
captives, which onr self have granted — v. ,S 
granted, how canst thou lielieve .. TitusAndron. v. I 
iiiis granted (as it is a most pregnant ..Othello, ii. I 
ditlicultv, and fearful to Ik' granted — iii. S 

G R.VNTl .\G-granting thy request. Two Gen. of V. iv.2 
von granting of mv suit . . Mrasure for Measure, ii, 4 

(JRAXT'ST— grant'st thou'rt man. 7Vwioh<!/'.4//i. iv. .t 

GI!.\l'E-in the bunch of grains .. .Vcas. It,r Meas. ii. 1 
with purple craws, given figs...Vii/..V.'« Dream, iii. 1 
when he had n desire to cat n grape. .4< you /.I'fcr i7, v. 1 

tlmt graiH-'s were made to cat — v. I 

no grapes, my royal fox? (rep.) All's IVrll, ii. I 

there's one grape yet, I am sure — ii, 3 



GRA 



[ 32G ] 

GRAVE— the graves, all gaping wiilc../l//((. /V. Dr. v. 2 
cerecloth in the obscure grave . . Mer. o/f'enice, ii. 7 
Bhovild lie with you in your grave.... — v. 1 

and measure out my grave As yon Like iV, ii. 6 

on every grave, a lying trophy All's Well, ii. 3 

'tis dead, and I am the grave of it. . . . — iv. 3 

until we know their grave — v. 3 

renowned for grave >;itizen8 . . Taming of Shrew, i. 1 
tlion return unexperienced to tliy grave — iv. 1 

Pisa, renowned for grave citizens — iv. 2 

issue will hiss me to my grave .... Winter'sTale, i. 2 

M e need no grave to bury honesty — ii. 1 

and the reverence of the grave v/earerB — iii. 1 

cry, fie upon my grave! — iii. 2 

one grave shall be for both — iii. 2 

for some other reasons, my grave sir — iv. 3 
thought to fill his grave in quiet .... — iv. 3 
break his grave, and come again to me — v. 1 
BO must thy grave give way to what's — v. 1 

grave and good Paulina — v. 3 

come; I'll fill your grave up — v. 3 

many a prayer upon her grave — v. 3 

and dwell upon your grave.. Comcrf;/ of Errors, iii. 1 

as from your graves rise up Macbeth, i i . 3 

hath been lioth grave and prosperous — iii. 1 

hatli bowed you to the grave — iii. 1 

Duncan is in his grave — iii. 2 

and our graves, must send those .... — iii. 4 

but our grave; where noticing — iv. 3 

he cannot come out of his grave — v. 1 

brave duke came early to his qt&\q.. King John, ii. 1 
that I were low laid in my crave .... — ii. 1 
my lord? A grave. He shall not live — iii. 3 

a grave unto a soul — iii. 4 

little kingdom of a forced grave — iv. 2 

going to seek the grave of Arthur.... — iv. 2 
to a grave, found it too precious (?ep.) — iv. 3 

death, thpit lives upomny grave Richard II. i. 1 

seemed buried in ray sorrow's grave — i. 4 
to help him to his grave immediately! — i. 4 

gaunt am I for the grave i^rep.) — ii. 1 

to my bed, then to my grave — ii. 1 

and both become the grave — ii. I 

let's talk of graves, of worms — iii. 2 

a little grave, a little little grave (rep.) — iii. 3 

a pair of graves within the earth — iii. 3 

digged their graves with weeping eyes? — iii. 3 

yielded up his body to the grave — v. 6 

sleep with thee in the grave \HenryIF. v. 4 

become enamoured on his grave . . . .iHennjl F. i. 3 
have talked of Monmouth's grave .. — ii. 3 

turning your books to graves — iv. 1 

and dig my grave thyself — iv. 4 

my father is gone wild into his grave — v. 2 
the grave doth gape for thee thrice . . — v. 5 
or else our grave, like Turkish mute . . Henry V. i. 2 
the grave doth gape, and doting .... — ii. 1 

seem they grave and learned? — ii. 2 

break up their drowsy grave — iv. 1 

labours, to his grave — iv. 1 

shall, no doubt, find native graves . . — iv. 3 
■Talbot mount, or make his grave . . 1 Henry VI. ii. 1 

wither with me to the grave — !'■ ■• 

with desire to get a grave — ii. .'i 

thy grave admonishments prevail . . — ii. 5 

young son welcome to the grave? — iv. 3 

clothing me in these grave ornaments — v. 1 

and ghosts break up their graves IHenry VI. i. 4 

Bell my title for a glorious grave .... — 'ii. 1 
to see now deep my grave is made . ■ — iii. 2 
clip dead men's graves, and from .... — iv. 1 

thy grave is digged already — iv. 10 

a dunghill, whicli shall be thy grave — iv. 10 

go dig a grave to find out war — v. 1 

that bows unto the grave with — y. 1 

either victory, or else a grave ZHenry VI, ii. 2 

Whitehall's into a quiet grave — ii. 6 

Richard marked him for the grave . . — ii. 6 

but I could dig his grave? — v. 2 

wet his grave with my repentant . . Richard III. i. 2 

turn yon fellow in his "rave — _i. 2 

sorrow in dead Edward's grave — ii. 2 

with politic gi-ave counsel — .ii. 3 

sage, grave men, since you will buckle — iii. 7 

1 to ray grave, where peace and rest lie — iv. 1 

grave's due by life usurped — , i v. 4 

would'st as soon afford a grave — iv. 4 

to chase us to our graves — iv. 4 

smothered in their dusky graves — iv. 4 

dead, poor infants, in their graves.- .. — iv. 4 

on the graves of great men Henry I' III. ii. 1 

envy shall make my grave — ii. 1 

than the grave does to the dead — ii. 4 

almost, no grave allowed me — iii. 1 

I was a chaste wife to my grave — iv. 2 

and she, sleep in their graves — y. 1 

as of grave and austere quality.. Tiinon ofAlhens, i. 1 
bears not one spurn to their graves . . — i. 2 

pluck the grave wrinkled senate — iv. 1 

robbers your grave masters are — iv. 1 

companion, thrown into his grave . . — iv. 2 

and ditches grave you all I — iv. 3 

presently prepare thy grave — iv. 3 

t raves only be men's works — v. 2 
ead, sure; and this his grave — v. 4 

on thy low grave, our faults forgiven — v. 5 
your most grave belly was deliberate. Con'o;'/n«s,i. I 
you shall not be the grave of yoiu- . . — _i. 9 
that say, you are reverend grave meu — ii. 1 
deserve not so honourable a grave . . — ii. 1 
every gash was an enemy's grave.... — ii. 1 

most reverend and grave elders — ii. 2 

you grave, but reckless senators .... — iii. 1 
whicli show like graves i' the holy . . — iii- 3 
your judgments, my grave lords .... — v. 5 
must liear my benting to his grave .. — V; ,^ 
find ourselves dishonourable graves.. ^«//«.9 Ccrsar.u'i 
opens graves, and roars as doth the lion — _j. 3 
and graves have yawned, and yielded — ii. 2 
follow him laughing to his grave. .4nfo»(/ ^Cleo. i. 2 



GRA 



GRAPE— subtle blood of the grape . Timon ofAth.'w. 3 
tartness of his face sours ripe grapes .Coriolanus, v. 4 
grapes our hairs be crowned ...■tnl.SrCleo. ii. 7 (song) 

the juice of Egypt's grape shall — v. 2 

the wine she drinks is made of grapes . . Othello, ii. I 
GRAPPLE— grapple did lie make.. Tirelf'hNigUt, v. 1 

I was as willing to grapple Lore'sL. tost.u. 1 

grapples you to the neart and love Macbeth, iii. 1 

and grapple with him, ere he come ..KingJohn, v. 1 
and grapple tliee unto a pagan shore — ' v. 2 

to south, and let tliera grapple \ Henry IV. i. 3 

grapple your minds to stQTnage.. Henry V. iii. (chor.) 

to grapple with the house of 'illenry VI. i. 1 

grapple them to thy soul with hooks of. .Hamlel, i. 3 
and in the grapple I boarded them — iv. 6 (letter! 
GRAPPLImjr— grappling vigour.... Kiji? John, iii. 1 
GRASP— that's in the tyrant s grasp . . Macbeth, iv. 3 
is raade to grasp a palmer's staff .. ..'iHenryVI. v. 1 
would fly, grasps in the comer. . Troilus ^ Cress, iii. 3 

but flies the grasps of love — iv. 2 

GRASPED-grasped and tugged forlife.'JHe/iryF/.iii.2 
steel grasped in their ireful hands ..AHenryVI.iX. 5 
trash, as may be grasped thus? ..Julius Caesar, iv. 3 
tliat grasped the heaviest club.. y4/i(oni/<5C(eo. iv. 10 
GRASS— lush and lusty the grass looks.. Tempest, ii. 1 
liquid pearl the bladed grass . . ..Mi-l.N.'sDream, i. 1 
a measure with her on tills grass. . Love's L. Lost, v. 2 
tread a measure with you on this grass — v. 2 
plucking the grass. to'K.now ..Merchant of Venice, i. 1 

I nave not much skill in grass Alt's Well, iv. 5 

and I long for grass: 'tis so . . Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

the grass whereon thou tread'st liicliard II. i. 3 

and bedew her pastures' grass with . . — iii. 3 
mowing like grass your fresh fair .... Henry V. iii. 3 

lies foul with chewed grass — iv. 2 

cold would never let grass grow 2 Henry VI. iii. 2 

Cheapside shall my palfrey go to grass — iv. 2 

to see if I can eat grass — iv. 10 

I may never eat grass more — iv. 10 

we cannot live on grass, on berries. Timon ofAlh. iv. 3 
grass beat down with storms.. 7'/7us Andronicus, iv. 4 
while the grass grows, — the proverb \s.. Hamlet, iii. 2 
GRASS-GREEN— a grass-green turf — iv. 5 (song) 
GRASSHOPPERS— of grasshoppers.. «omco^/ii;. i. 4 
GRASS-PLOT— hereon this grass-plot. Tempes*, iv. 1 
GRASSY— upon the grassy carpet . . Richard II. iii. 3 
GRATE— looked through the grate .Mcny Wines, ii. 2 

or a dry wheel grate on the 1 Henry IV. iii. 1 

been suborned to grate on you? ,...'i Henry IV. iy. 1 

a secret grate of iron bars 1 Henry VI. i. 4 

here, through this grate, I can — i. 4 

grates me: the sum Antony fy Cleopatra, i. 1 

GRATED— grated upon my good . . Merry Wives, ii. 2 

grated to dusty nothing Troilus Sf Cressida, iii. 2 

GRATEFUL- less to be called grateful. ^(('s Well, ii. 1 

this is a gift very grateful Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 

grateful virtue I am bound Timon of Athens, i. 2 

grateful to us that give you truly. . . . Coriolanus, i. 9 

GRA'TIANO— kinsman, Gratiano. Afcr. of Venice, i. 1 

but as the world, Gratiano; a stage . . — i. 1 

for Gratiano never lets me speak — i. 1 

Gratiano speaks an infinite deal .... — i. 1 

and desire Gratiano to come anon — ii. 2 

Gratiano! I have a suit to you — ii. 2 

but hear thee Gratiano: thou art too — ii. 2 
meet me, and Gratiano, at Gratiano's — ii. 4 
fie, lie, (iratiano 1 where are all the .. — ii. 6 

with him is Gratiano gone along — ii. 8 

and do you, Gratiano, mean good faith? — iii. 2 
go, Gratiano, run and overtake him . . — iv. 1 
now in faith, Gratiano, you give your — v. 1 
and pardon me, my gentle Gratiano — v. 1 

Gratiano? Icryyougeutlepardon Othello, w. 1 

Gratiano, keep the house, and seize upon — v. 2 

GRATIFY-gratify the table with. Looe's L. Lost, iv. 2 

Antonio, gratify this gentleman. Mer. of Venice, iv. I 

as we do, gratify this gentleman. . Tamingof Sh. i. 2 

to gratify tiis noble service Coriolanus, ii. 2 

I barely gratify your love Cymbeline, ii. 4 

to gratify the good Andronicus. . . . Titus Andron. i. 2 

to gratify your honourable youth — iv. 2 

the which when any shall not gratify . . Pericles, i. 4 
and she did gratify iiis amorous works. . Othello, v. 2 

GRATII— Lodowick, and Gratii All's Well. iv. 3 

GRATILLITY— thy gratillity . . Twelfth Night, ii. 3 

GRATING— and grating shock Richard Il.i.i 

grating so harshly all his days of quiet. f/amZe/, iii. 1 

GRATIS-endanger my soul gratis? .Merry Wives, ii. 2 

he lends out money gratis . . Merchant of Venice, i. 3 

that lent out money gratis — iii. 3 

a halter gratis; nothing else — iv. 1 

[Co(.] gavest thyself away gratis.... 2 Henri/ /F. iv. 3 
when corn was given them gratis . . Coriolanus, iii. 1 

the corn o'tlie storehouse gratis — iii. 1 

service did not deserve corn gratis .. — iii. 1 

the lover shall not sigh gratis Hamlet, ii. 2 

GRATITUDE— which gratitude All's Weli,iv. 4 

gratitude towards her deserved .... Coriolanus, iii. 1 
canst not in the course of gratitude. Cymije/ine, iii. f> 

of courtesy, dues of gratitude Lear, ii. 4 

GRATULATE— more gratulate. . Meas.for Meas. v. 1 
gratulate the gentle princes there.. f('c/iard ///. iy. 1 
to gratulate thy plenteous bosom. Timon ofAlhens, i. 2 
gratulate his safe return to Rome.. Titus Andron. i. 2 

GRAVE— grave sir, hail ! Tempest, i. 2 

graves at my command have — v. 1 

every third thought shall be my grave — v. 1 
in his grave, assure thyself. Two Gen. of Verona, iv. 2 

go to thy lady's grave — iv. 2 

upon whose grave thou — iv. 3 

quickly have the gift of a grave ..Twelfth Night, i. 3 

a nuncio of more grave aspect — i. 4 

if vou will lead these graces to the grave — i. 6 

ne^r find my grave — ii. 4 (sonj 

toward my grave I have travelled . . — y. 
purpose more grave and wrinkled.. Mea.forMea.i. 
there my father's grave did utter forth — iii- 
may seem as shy, as grave, as just .. — y. 

till he sink into his grave MuchAdo,ii. 

graves, yawn, and yield your dead. . — v. 3 (song 



GRAVE— this grave charm. /Infoni/ ^Cleopatra, iv. 10 
in Egypt be gentle grave to me! .... — v. 2 
no grave upon the earth shall clip .. — v. 2 
every day do honour to her grave . . Cymbeline, iii. 3 
nay, the secrets of the grave this .... — iii. 4 

he 11 make his grave abed — iv. 2 

Fidele, I'll sweeten thy sad grave .. — iv. 2 

now due debt: to the grave — iv. iS 

and renowned be thy gravel — iv. 2 (song) 

are strewings fittest for graves — i v. 2 

w^eeds I have strewed his grave — iv. 2 

with our pikes and partizans a grave — iy. 2 
shall she carry this unto her grave?.. Titus .ind. ii. 3 

deep pit, poor Bassianus' grave — ii. 4 

so much as dig the grave for him — ii. 4 (letter) 
hear me, grave fathersl noble tribunes — iii. 1 
grave tribunes, once more I entreat. . — iii. 1 
were they but attired in grave weeds — iii. I 
grave witnesses of true experience ... — v. 3 
sent her enemies unto the grave .... — v. 3 

commit him to the grave — v. 3 

give him burial in his fjither's grave — v, 3 
thrown him from your watery grave ..Pericles^ ii. I 
their i^arent, and lie is their grave .... — U. 3 

if in his grave he rest — ii. 4 

to give thee hallowed to thy grave .... — iii. ' 
[Co/.] strew thy grave with flowers .... — iv. ' 

a chaplet, hang upon thy grave — iv ' 

like Patience, gazing on kings' graves — v. ' 

thou art a grave and noble counsellor.. — v.' 

BO be my grave my jieace Lear, i. 1 

follow us disquietly to our graves! — i. 2 

why, thou were better in thy grave — iii. i 

wrong, to take me out o' the grave — ^\- "^ 

their grave beseeming ornaments. 7?om''o ^ Juliet, i. 1 
ray grave is like to be my wedding bed — i. .■> 
what is her burying grave, that is .. — ii. 3 

not in a grave, to lay one in , — ii. 3 

and you shall find me a grave man.. — iii. 1 
the measure of an unmade grave ... . — iii. 3 
wash him from his grave with tears? — iii. 5 
the fool were married to her grave ! . . — iii. 5 
or bid me go into a new-made grave — iv. 1 
ICol. Kjj.'.j burial in thy kindred's grave — iv, I 
to follow this fair corse unto her grave — iv. 5 
go with ine to Juliet's grave, for there — v. 1 

with digging up of graves — v. 3 

^Col. Knt.^ to strew thy grave and weep — v. 3 
in a triumphant grave, a grave? .... — v. 3 
my old feet stumbled at graves? .... — v. 3 
to press before thy father to a grave? — v. 3 
to take her from her borrowed grave — v. 3 

to strew his lady's grave — v. 3 

the graves stood tenantless Hamlel, i. I 

come from the grave, to tell us this — _i. 5 

into my grave? indeed, that is out — .!!• ^ 

most secret, and most grave — iii. 4 

go to their graves like beds — iv. 4 

which bewept to the grave did go . . — i v. .1 (song) 
and in his grave rained many a tear — iv. 5 (song) 

therefore, make her grave straight — v. 1 

whose grave's this, sirrah? mine, sir — v. 1 

and not have strewed thy grave — v. I 

to outface me with leaping in her grave? — v. 1 
this grave shall have a living monument — y. 1 

grave Brabantio, in simple and pure Othello, i. I 

most potent, grave, and reverend signiors — i. 3 
so justly to your grave ears I'll present.. — i. 3 
the tyrant custom, most grave senators,. — i. 3 

no more moving? still as the grave — v. 2 

GRAVED— graved in gold Merchant of Venice, ii. 7 

graved in the hollow ground Richard II. iii. 2 

GRAVEL— O gravel heart! .Measure for Measure, iv. 3 

we see each grain of gravel Henry VIII. \. 1 

loads o' gravel i' the Back .... Troilus * Cressida, v. 1 
GRAVEL-BLIND- 

sand-blind, high gravel-blind.. Merc/i.o/renice, ii. 2 

GRAVE LESS-fiegraveless. .4 II /ony*C(copa'ra, iii. 11 

GRAVELLED-gravelled for lock of. As youLike it, iv.l 

GRAVELY— dost it lialf so gravely..! Henry //'. ii. 4 

GRAVE-MAKER- 

gardeners, ditchers, and grave-makers. . Hamlet, v. 1 

tills question next, say, a grave-maker . . — v. 1 

how long hast thou been a grave-maker? — v. 1 

GRAVE-MAKING— 

this business, he sings at grave-making. Ham/e^ v. 1 

GRAVENESS— health and graveness — iv. 7 

GRAVER— to your graver steps. . . . Winter's Tale, i. 2 
let some graver eye pierce into that. Henry r///._i. 1 
against a graver bench than ever. . . . Criolanus, iii. 1 
our graver business frowns at thi8..4n(ony ^Cleo. ii. 7 
and to the graver, a child that guided. Cym6ei<ne,i. 1 
vou bear a graver purpose, I hope — — i. 5 
GRAVEST—and gravest citizens. j»/eas./or Meas. iv. 6 
GRAVESTONE— 
may beat thy gravestone daily. Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

let my gravestone be your oracle — v. 2 

on his gravestone, this in sculpture .. — v. 5 
GRAVITIES-our oaths and gravities. Loue's 1. 1. v. 2 
GRAVITY— gravity and patience. .1/errv Wives, iii. 1 
amanof his place, gravity, and learning — iii. 1 
for gravity to play at cherry-pit . Ticeyy/i Nighl, iii. 4 
my gravity, wlierein let no man. Meas. for Mens. ii. 4 
as gravity's revolt to wantonness.. Love's L. Lost, y. 2 
wisdom, "gravity, profound conceit. .Mer. of Venice, i. 1 
your gravity, to counterfeit . . Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

what dotli gravity out of his bed 1 Henry IV. ii. 4 

should have his effect of "ravity 2Henry VI.i.2 

such men of gravity and learning.. Henry F//Z. iii. 1 

but all be buried in his gravity . . Julius Ca-sar, ii. I 

your gravity o'er a gossip's bowl. 72omeo SfJidiel, iii. 5 

the gravity and stillness of your youth.. 0(/ie«o, ii. 2 

GRAVY-efiect of gravy, gravy, gravy.2He7iry/F. i. 2 

GRAYMALKIN— I come, Graymalkin.Mar'ie/A, i. 1 

GRAY'S-INN— behind Gray's-inn..2Heni!/;r. iii. 2 

GRAZE— beasts most graze . . Love's L. Lost, i. 1 (letter) 

not sheer the fleeces that I graze.. .Jji/ou L>7tei(,_ii. 4 

to see my ewes graze — iii. 2 

his ears, and graze in commons ..JuUus Crrsar, iv. 1 
so graze, as you find pasture Cymbeline, v. 4 



GRA 



OUAZE— prazo where you will . . liomeoii-Juliel, lii. i 
omild ncitluT graze, nor pierce? OlheUo, iv. 1 

OHAZKD-wliiii Jacol)grii/.ed...U<-rc/i.o//V/iiCf, i.3 

OKAZIN(;-I ^h.nikl leave (?riiziiig. iriii/rr'iVa/«, iv. 3 
like t.i til.- 1.11 iUfs aruziiifc' Henry f. iv. 3 

GKKASi; liiin in liia own grease. . ,U<Ti|/(f'iiiM, ii. 1 

tlmt frelliil in llieirowii greiise — iii. .') 

nn<l i:< not tli<- ^'roil-tC ofil inuttun..4(|/r)U Likeil^\\\,'l 
kitoluMi-ui-iu'li, untl nil grease.. t'omcjj/ nf En: iii. 'i 

grease, tinit's swciKeu from Macbelh, iv. 1 

L'lX'uses liis pure mind Timoii a/ Alliens, iv. 3 

GKK.VSIl.Y-you talk greasily.... Lnvc'tL.LosI, iv. 1 

H K.iSY— this greasy kniglit ilcrry lyives, ii. 1 

foul stoekings, and greiisy napkins .. — iii. ,^ 
grtnsT Joan dotli keel .... Loot's L. LnsI, v. S (song) 

you mt and greasy citizens As you Like il, ii. 1 

their fells, you know, are greasy .. .. — ^jl' 2 

obst'ene, greasy tallow-keech \Henryiy, ii. 4 

tlie bits, and greasy reliques.. 7'ioi7i« <^Cr«j«i<i, v. 2 
you east your stinking, greasy caps. CoWo/an us, iv. 6 
nu-clninie slaves witl\ groacy aprons. .^ri/. ^Cteo,\. 2 

G HE AT— I liave great conilbrt Tempest,). 1 

in its contrary as great as — i. 2 

all hail, great mastcrl — i. 2 

and his great person perisli — i. 2 

thank yourself for tins great loss . ... — ii. 1 

what great hope have you! — ii. I 

their great guilt like poison — iii. 3 

given to work a great time after — iii. 3 

great Juno eomes — iv. 1 

the great globe itself — iv. 1 

my nose is in great indignation — iv. 1 

OS great to me, as late — v, 1 

'tis an office of great worth.. TuoUi'n.o/l'eiona, i. 2 

would be great impeacliment — i.3 

in a great |)erplexity — ii. 3 

commendation from great potentates — ii. 4 
of so great a favour growing proud .. — ii. 4 

some great matter she'd employ — iv. 3 

and fit for great emplo.vmcnt — v. 4 

with as great discreetly as wec&n. .Mernj li'ives, i. 1 

mine own great chamber again — i. 1 

if there be no great love in — i. 1 

does he not wear a great round beard — i. 4 

'tis a great charge, to come — i. 4 

you shall find it a great charge — i. 4 

1 am in great haste now — i. 4 

to thy great comfort in this — ii. 1 

of great admittance, authentic — ii. 2 

you have yourself been a great fighter — ii. 3 

I have a great dispositions to cry — iii. 1 

he doth object, I am too great of birth — iii. 4 
when a 'oman has a great peard {rep.) — iv. 2 

with great ragged horns — iv. 4 

we two in great aniazedness wili fly . . — iv. 4 

fat Falstaff hath a great scene — iv. 6 

than a great deal of heartbreak — v. 3 

and she s a great lubberly boy — v. 5 

what great ones do, the less TwHlflh A'i^hl, i. il 

takes great exceptions to vour ill hours — i.3 

a fool, lie's a great quarrefler — i.3 

but I am a great eater of beef — i.3 

I have taken great pains to con it — i.3 

I took great pains to study it — i. .'j 

of great estate, of fresh and — i. G 

to snd mine eye too great a flatterer — i. h 

and utters it bv great swarths — ii. 3 

hath for your love as great a pang . . — ii. 4 
and thus makes she her great P's .... — ii. 5 

some are born great — ii. 5 (letter) 

the matter, I hope, is not great, sir . . — iii. 1 

this was a great argument of love — iii. 2 

in his visage no great presage of cruelty — iii. 2 

and take 't for a great favour — iii. 2 

you slew great number of his people — iii. 3 

some are born great — iii. 4 

that word of some great man — iv. 1 

I am afraid this great lubber — iv. 1 

a careful man, and a great scholar .. — iv. 2 
and then thou art as great as that. . . . — v. 1 

at sir Toby's great importance — v. I 

why, some are born great — v. 1 

a great wliilc ago the world — v. 1 (song > 

nolile and so great a igare. . Measure for Measure, i. I 

1 have great hope in that — i.3 

air, she came in great with child — ii. 1 

and being great t>elly'd — ii. I 

alas! it hath teen great pains to you! — ii. 1 

that to great ones 'longs — ii. 2 

could great men thunder as .Jove — ii. 2 

great men may jest with saints — ii. 2 

or own great place, could fetch — ii. 4 

a pang as great as when a giant dies — iii. I 

of Frederick, the great soldier — iii. I 

the vice is of a great kindred — iii. 2 

none, but that tiiere is so great a fever — iii. 2 
the stroke and line of his great justice — iv. 2 

death's a great disguiser — iv. 2 

brave master Shoe-tye the great traveller — iv. 3 

all great doers in our trade — iv. 3 

and that, by great injunctions, I am.. — iv. 3 

respect to your great place! — v. I 

in great measure Much Ado, i. 1 

and too little for a great praise — i. I 

and in sucli great letters as they write — i. 1 

he hatli made great preparation — i. I 

1 came yonder from a great supper . . — i.3 
let us to the great supper; their cheer — i.3 
that I was duller than a great thaw — ii. i 
a hair from the great Cham's beard.. — ii. I 
he avoids them with great discretion — ii. 3 
nor no great argument of her folly .. — ii. 3 
nav, that would Ix; as great a soil in — iii. 2 

there is a great coil to-night — iii. 3 

[ am now in great haste — iii. 5 

frcat wit; right, says she, a great gross — v. I 
yield upon great jiersuasion — V. 4 

a dowager of great revenue Mid. N. Dream, i. I 

easement of the great chamber-window — iii. I 
intenJod for great Theseua' nuptial-day — iii. 2 



[ 3-27 ] 

OKE.VT— I have a great desire to . . Mid.N.'s Dr, jv. 

M'c'lt hold a feast in great solemnity — iv. 

grows to something of great constancy — v. 

where I have come, great clerks have — v. 

great deputy, the welkin's. /-'»l'(-'*L./.o<^ i. 1 (iettei 

when a man of great spirits grows — i. 

a great sign sir, that he will look sad — i. 

what great men have licen in love? .. — i. 

of good carriage, of great carriage .. — i. 

and that's great marvel, loving a light — i. 

which is a great arL'iimeiit of ialsehood — i. 

my report, to Ills gri'iit wcirthiiiess .. — ii. 

and great geni'nil of trotting paritors — iii. 

to see great lleienles whipping — jv. 

they have been at a great feast — v. 

ana of great import indeed, too — v. 

his great limb or joint (rpp.) — v. 

great reason ; for, past cure is still ... . — v. 

my favour were as great; be witness — v. 

Pompion the great, sir (rc/>.) — v. 

when great thnigs labouring perish . . — v. 

the swain, I'ompcy the great — v. 

the great. It is great, sir (re/;.) — v. 

freat thanks, great Pompey — v. 

made a little fault in, great — v. 

Pom|iey the great,— your servant — v. 

great IXereules is presented by this .. — v. 

greater than great, great, great, Pompey I — v. 
a wind too great might do at 8ea...Ue;'. of reuicc, i. 

from the great debts, wherein — i. 

body is aweary of this great world .. — i. 

and he makes it a fireat ap^)rop^iatioa — i. 

he hath a great infection, sir — ii. 

your grace hath ta'en great pains.. .. — iv. 

to do a great right, do a little wrong — iv. 
the great heap of your knowledge?. As tjou Like it, i. 

that wise men have, makes a great show — ^ i. 

and that a great cause of the night .. — iii. 

'tis a word too great for any mouth. . — iii. 

you have great reason to be sad — iv. 

there is too great testimony in your. . — iv. 

though there was no great rnatter in — v. 

he re^)orts to be a great magician .... — v. 

wedding is great .Jiino's crown — V. 4 (song 

men of great worth resorted to this.. — v. 

and love, and great allies — v. 

almost as great as liis honesty All's If'ell, i. 

it was his great right to be so — i. 

these great tears grace his remembrance — i- 

think liim a great wav fool — i. 

great friends ; for the Knaves come .... All's iVett, i. 

to give great Charlemain a pen — ii. 

dissever so our great self and our credit — jj. 

great floods have flown from (rep.) .. — ii. 

great power, great transcendence — ii. 

wish receive, wJiich great love grant! — ii. 

where great additions swell, and virtue — ii. 

when I consider, what great creation — ii. 

a vessel of too great a burden — ii. 

is to be a great part of your title — ii. 

the great prerogative and rite of love — ii. 

he is very great in knowledge — ii. 

my great fortune. Let that go (rep.) — ii. 

whose great decision hath much blood — iii. 

that the great figure of a council .... — iii. 

and we, great in our hope, lay our , , — iii. 

this very day, great Mars — iii. 

the worth of the great count himself — iii. 

four or five, to great saint Jaques. . . . — iii. 

at some great and trusty business . . — iii. 

escape a great deal of discoveries — iii. 

well approves you are great in fortune — iii. 

and great ones I dare not give — iv. 

three great oaths would scarce make — iv. 

should swear by Jove's great attributes — iv. 

so should I be a great deal of his act — iv. 

the great dignity, that his valour .... — iv. 

so great as tlie first in goodness (rep.) — iv. 

if my heart wene great, 'twould — iv. 

I ani no great Nebuchadnezzar, sir . . — iv. 

I can serve as great a prince — iv. 

that always loved a great fire — iv. 

the broad gate, and the great fire .... — iv. 

the nature of his great oflfence is dead — v. 

some scores away from the great coinpt — v. 

to the great sender turns a sour offence — v. 

or sent it us upon her great disaster.. — v. 

great king, I am no strumpet — v. 

for the great desire I had .... Taming of Shrew, i. 

garden of great Italy — i. 

a merchant of great traflio — i. 

their love is not so great, Ilortensio. , — i. 

that made great Jove to humble .... — i. 

have I not lieard great ordnance .... — i. 

not half so great a blow to the ear — i. 

leave that labour to great Hercules , . — i. 

accept them, then tlieir worth is great — ii. 

though little fire grows great — ii. 

no less than three great argosies .... — ii. 

prepared great store of wedding cheer — iii- 

after our great good cheer — v. 

too little payment for so great a debt — v. 

my heart as great; mv reason — v. 

as I have said, great difference. . . . it'inler'sTale, i. 

you pay a great deal too dear — i. 

this great sir will yet stay longer .... — i. 

as she's rare, must it be great — i. 

by his great authority; which often — ii. 

in the which three great ones suffer — ii. 

as well OS one so great, and so forlorn — ii. 

so meet for this great errand — ii. 

by law and process of great nature .. — ii. 

foretels the great Apollo suddenly will — ii. 

great A|>ollo, turn all to the best! .. — iii. 

(thus by Apollo's great divine scaled up) — iii. 

(to our great grief, we pronounce) .. — iii. 

a great King's daughter, the mother — iii. 

deliveredof great Apollo's priest .... — iii. 

now blessed DC the great Apollo! .... — iii. 

my great profaneuew 'gainst thine . . — iii. 



ORE 



GREAT— come to a great matter.. >rinler'sTale, iv. 2 

shares with great creating nature.... — iv. 3 

this cannot be but a great courtier .. — iv. 3 

a great man, I'll warrant — iv. 3 

though it be great pity, yet it is — iv, 3 

he seems to be of great authority .... — iv. 3 

great Alexander left his to — v. 1 

please you, great sir, Bohemia greets — v. 1 

she liatl some great matter there in hand — v. 2 

great comfort tliat I have had of thee! — v. 3 
L'reat care of gootls at random. . Comedy o/ Errors, i. 1 

liiit to our honour's great dispariigeinent — i. I 

L'leat a charge from thine own custody? — 1.2 

lie bath great care to please his wife — ii. 1 

and great welcome, makes a merry fcxst — iii. i 

the great wart on my left arm — iii. 2 

they threw on him great pails of .... — v. 1 

this day, great duke, she shut — v. 1 

deep shames and great indignities.... — v. 1 

from Fife, great king, where Macbeth, 1. 2 

victory fell on us;— great happiness .. — i. 2 

and gi-eat prediction of noble having — i.3 

praisesin his kingdom's greatdefencc — i. 3 

thuu wouldst be great — i. 5 

thou'dst have, great Glamia — i. 5 

great (ilainis, worthy Cawdor! — i. i 

this night's great business into — i.h 

and his great love, sharp as his spur.. — i. B 

BO clear in his great office — i. 7 

bear the guilt of our great quell? .... — i. 7 

sent forth great largess to j'our offices — ii. 1 

hurt minds, great Nature's second .. — ii. 2 

will all great Nature's ocean wash .. — ii. 2 

's a great provoker of three things .. — ii. 3 

and see the great doom's imo.ge — ii. 3 

in the great hand of God I stand — ii. 3 

as a gap i n our great feast — iii. 1 

that great bond which keeps me palel — iii. 2 

his person, at our great bidding? .... — iii. 4 

great business must be wroiipht ere . . — iii. 5 

imtil great Birnam wood to high .... — iv. 1 

that this great king may kindly .... — iv. 1 

great tyrrany, lay thou thy basis .... — iv. 3 

the great assay of art — iv. 3 

medicines of our great revenge — iv. 3 

a great perturbation in nature? — v. 1 

greut Dunsinane he strongly — v. 2 

By this great clatter, one of — v. 7 

so great n day as this is cheaply — v. 7 

mi ' iih ,.■ ji^.U; arise sir Kicfmrd ..Kin^ John,i. 1 

t!i ' ; I runner of thy blood .. — ii. 1 

\\ i I I ai this great commission — ii. 1 

;^^ jii;ir -\ iri.i(_^' shoes upon an ass .. — ii. 1 

in us, that are our own great deputy — ii. 2 

hear us, great kings — ii. 2 

nor thou Dccome thy great birtli — iii. I 

joined to make thee great — iii. 1 

my great grief, let kings assemble l^ep.) — iii. 1 

thou little valiant, grciit in villany! — iii. 1 

that great supremacy, where we do .. — iii. 1 

(having so great a title to be more — iv. 1 

be great in act, as you have — v. I 

from the great, grow great by your . . — v. 1 

and great aftiictions, wrestling in thy — v. 2 

and with a great heart heave awaj' . . — v. 2 

the great metropolis and see of Rome — v. 2 

for the great supply that was — 

to our great king John — 

it must be great, that can inherit . . Iliclmrd II. 

with too great a court, and litiernl .. — 

I mock my name, L'leat killer, to flatter — 

not brother to great Kdward's son .... — i 

for these great aflairs do ask some .. — 

my heart is great; but it must — i 

by ills endowments are made great .. — j 

grows strong and great, in substance — ij 

strikes at thy great glory — ii 

Bolingbroke tobe as great as we? .... — ii 

that I were as great as in my — ii 

done so to great and growing men — i 

in the balance of great Bolingbroke.. — ii 

gr.ace the triumph of great Bolingbroke? — ii 

great duke of Lancaster, I come — i 

good king, great king, (and yet not .. — i 

for thy great bounty, that uot only . . — i 

being so great, I have no need to beg — i 

the duke, great Bolingi)roke, mounted — 

and thine aunt, great king; 'tis I — V, a 

great king, within this coffin I — v. 6 

and that it was great jnty ] Henry IV. i. 3 

against the great magician damned . . — i.3 

liardiment with great Glendower .... — i.3 

imagination of some great exploit.... — i.3 

for they have great charge — ij- 1 

burgomasters, and great onej'ers — — ii. 1 

counterpoise of SI great an opposition — |i. 3 

on some great sudden haste — ij. 3 

instinct is a great matter — .!!•** 

had his great name profaned — iii. 3 

incursions, ami great name in arms. . — Iji* 2 

discomfited great Douglas — iii. 2 

more great opinion, a larger dare (>r;i.) — jv. 1 

Cowers of us may serve so great a day — iv. 1 

eing men of such gi-eat leading .... — iv. 3 

some envy your great dcscrvings — iv. 3 

feeding to so great a bulk — v. I 

the odds of his great name — v. 1 

in arms were now o? great as mine! . . — V. 4 

fare thee well, great heart I — v. 4 

[Kiir.] not make so great a show of zeal — v. i 

if I do grow great, I'll grow less — v. 4 

ore too great to be by me gainsaid ..iHenrylf. i. 1 

for life under grcot Bolingbroke .... — i. I 

you live in great infamy — 1.2 

very slender, anil vmir waste is great — 1. 2 

1 am the fellow with the great belly — i. 2 
plavs the rogue with my great toe .. — i. 2 
in the hope of great Northunil)erlanil — i. 3 
and so, with jjreot imagination, proper — i.3 
much more, m this great work — i.3 



GRE 



r 328 ] 

GREAT— the great commanding ^tlcnryVI. iii. 1 

was, I must confess, great Albion's queen — iii. 3 

abroad tliey purchase great alliance? — iii. 3 

disannuls great John of Gaunt — iii. 3 

good usage, and great liberty — iv. 5 

oppressed them witli great subsidies.. — iv. 8 

no Atlas for so great a weight — v. 1 

to meet tlie queen's great power! .... — v. 2 

great lords, wise men ne'er sit — v. 4 

wliile great promotions are daily ..Richard III. i. 3 

than a great queen, with this — 1.3 

a packhorse in his great affairs — i. 3 

wedges of gold, great anchors — i.4 

was my great father-in-law — i. 4 

until tlie great judgment-day — i. 4 

the great King of Itings hath — i. 4 

wlieu great leaves fall, then winter .. — ii. 3 

great weeds do grow apace — ii. 4 

[Co/. A'n/.] I be guilty of so gi-eat a sin! — iii. 1 

my aljsence dotli neglect no great design — iii. 4 

were't not, that Ijy great preservation — iii. 5 

in matter of great moment — iii. 7 

to liigh promotions and great dignity — iv. 4 

peevish found in great designs — iv. 4 

England's icing, but great York's heir? — iv. 4 

my lord, the army ot great Buckingham — iv. 4 

and many other of great fame — iv. 5 

wliat, from myself? great reason: why? — v. 3 

a thousand hearts are great within .. — v. 3 

great God of heaven, say, amen to all! — v. 4 

tliink , you see tliem great Henry VIII. (prol.) 

of tliis great si)ort together — i. i 

whom as great a charge as little .... — i. 1 

manors on them for this great journey — i. 1 

thanks you for this great care — i. 2 

your sulijeets are in great grievance. , — i. 2 

furnisli and instruct great teachers , . — i. 2 

a supper, and a great one, to many lords — i. 3 

but few now give so gi'eat ones — i. 3 

become of the great duke of Buckingham — ii. 1 

the great duke came to tlie bar — ii. 1 

evils on the graves of great men — ii. 1 

tlie queen's great neimew, he dives into — ii. 2 

have great care I be not found — ii. 2 

tlie two great cardinals wait in — iii. 1 

add an honour, — a great patience — iii. 1 

for your great graves lieaped upon me — iii. 2 

to render up the great seal presently — iii . 2 

whilst your great goodness — iii. 2 

to carry into Flanders, the great seal — iii. 2 

so little of his great self — iii. 2 

giving back the great seal to us — iii. 2 

wonder, a great man should decline? — iii. 2 

is held no great good lover — iv. 1 

howeyer, yet there's no great breach — iv. 1 

great child of honour, cardinal Wolsey — iv. 2 

there be no great offence belongs to 't — v. 1 

they say, in great extremity — v. 1 

of his great grace and princely care . . — v. 1 

with a malice of as great size — v. 1 

prayed me to make great haste — v. 2 

betwixt her and this great offender . . — v. 2 

and one as great as you are — v. 2 

witli the great tool come to court .... — v. 3 

we sliall nave great store of room .... — v. 3 

you great fellow, stand close up — v. 3 

as great in admiration as herself .... — v. 4 

as great in fame as she was — v. 4 

has been a great while going by.. Troilustf Cress, i. 2 

the protractive trials of great ,Tove . . — i. 3 

godlike seat, great Agamemnon (rep.) — i. 3 

Agamemnon, thou great commander — i. 3 

thou great,— and mse, — to hear Ulysses — i. 3 

and the great Hector's sword had — i. 3 

the great Achilles, whom opinion .... — i. 3 

for tlie great swing and rudeness .... — i. 3 

will physic the great Myrmidon — i. 3 

Hector shall have a great catch — ii. 1 

so great as our dread father. . ._ — ii. 2 

bear the great sway of his affairs .... — ii. 2 

disgrace to your great worths — ii. 2 

and that great minds, of partial .... — ii. 2 

valiant offspring of great Priamus .. — ii. 2 

their great general slept — ii. 2 

O thou great thunder-darter of — i i. 3 

be thine in great revenue! — ii. 3 

with entertaining great Hyperion .. — ii. 3 

please it our great general to call — ii. 3 

the island kings, disarm great Hector — iii. 1 

my Cressid in right great exchange.. — iii. 3 

let him be sent, great princes — iii. 3 

now, great 'Thetis' son? — }!!•■* 

and great Troy shrinking — iii. 3 

thou great and complete man — ! j ' ■ 3 

and drave great Mars to faction — !!'■ *^ 

great Hector's sister did Achilles (7Tp.) — !!'• -^ 

and your great love to me, restrains — iii. 3 

to see great Hector in his weeds .... — iii. 3 

Jove bless great Ajax. Humph! .... — iii. 3 

it is great mornini'; and the hour . . — iv. 3 

for great opinion, I with great truth — iv. 4 

though the great bulk Achilles — iv. 4 

the head of the great combatant .... — iv. ."j 

and great deal misprizing — iv. .i 

the extremity of great and little .... — iv. .5 

did in great Ilion thus translate .... — iv. .'j 

great lord, my father's sister's son (rep.) — iv. .'> 

a great addition earned in — iv. .5 

and great Achilles doth long to see . . — iv. b 

great Agamemnon comes to — iv. .'j 

of very heart, great Hector, welcome — iv. 5 

but, by great jiars, the captain — iv. 5 

wliereout Hector's great spirit flew . . — iv. .'j 

that this great soldier may Ills — iv. 5 

from my great puri)Ose in to-morrow's — v. 1 

good-night, great Hector. Give me — v. I 

you flow to great destruction — v. 2 

great Achilles is arming, weeping — v. 5 

Hector tlie great must die — v. 7 

great Hector was as good a man as he — v. lo 



GRE 



GREAT— thou art a great fool! iHennjIV. ii. 1 

as thou ha^t not done a great while. . — ii. 2 

in tlic perfumed cliambors of tile great — iii. 1 

aud Northumlwrlaml, u'l-ciit friends — iii. 1 

tliat great NortiuunlKThuul — iii. 1 

may with as great aim level at — iii. 2 

and spare inethe great ones — iii. 2 

and bretliren in these great affairs .. — iv. 1 

wlio, great, and puffed up with this.. — iv. 3 

with a great power of English — iv. 4 

that our great grandsire, Edward .... — iv. 4 

a deep demeanour in great sorrow., . . — iv. 4 

a prince of my great hopes forget so great — v. 2 

that the great body of om- state — v. 2 

that shall make you great — v..'. 

forth so great an object Heiiry V. i. (choi'us) 

cyphers to this great account — i. (chorus) 

from Edward, his great grandfather — i. I 

where Charles the great, liaving subdued — i. 2 

true stock and line of Charles the great — i. 2 

Lewis the son of Charles the gi'cat .. — i. 2 

the line of Charles the great was reunited — i. 2 

to your great grandsire s tomb — i. 2 

and your great uncle's, Edward — i. 2 

that my great grandfather, never — i. 2 

of your great predecessor, king Edward — i. 2 

we therefore have great cause — ii . 2 

sir, you show great mercy, if you — ii. 2 

with what great state he heard — ii. 4 

be merciful, great duke, to men .... — iii. 2 

abate thy rage, great duke! — iii. 2 

and of great expedition, and knowledge — iii. 2 

not yet ready to raise so great a siege — iii. 3 

great princes, barons, lords, and (7X'p.) — iii. .'» 

tiiis becomes the great; sorry am I .. — . iii. 5 

perfect in great commanders' names — iii. Ii 

very great, very reasonable great — iii. 6 

tlien give them great meals of beef . . — iii. 7 

'tis true, tliat we are in great danger — iv. 1 

examine the wars of Pompey the great — iv. 1 

but we have no great cause to desire — iv. 1 

be sick, great greatness, and bid . . — iv. 1 

1 would not lose so great an honom'.. — iv. 3 
Alexander the great. Why, 1 pray (rep.) — iv. 7 

with the great i)elly-donbiet — iv. 7 

no, great king; I come to thee for. ... — iv. 7 

give us leave, great king, to view. . — iv. 7 
and your great uncle Edward the plack — iv. 7 

is a gentleman of great sort — iv. 7 

your grace does me as great honours — iv. 7 

ever known 80 great and little loss .. — iv. 8 

conscience, he did us great goot — iv. 8 

by whom this great assembly is — v. 2 

great kings of France and England! — v. 2 

nice customs court'sy to great Kings.. — v. 2 

or the loss of those great towns \Hcnry n. i. 1 

to keep our great saint George's feast — i. 1 

the motlier of ^^reat Constantuie .... . — i. 2 

so great fear ot my name 'mongst.... — i. 4 

is come with a great power to raise . . — _i. 4 

b3' me entreats, great lord, tliou — ii. 2 

return great tlianlts; and iu submission — ii. 2 

great is the rumour of tills dreadful. . — ii. 3 

to feast so great a warrior in my house — ii. 3 

great lords, and gentlemen, what means — ii. 4 

(before whose glory I was great in arms) — ii. 5 

sweet stem from York's great stock.. — ii. .i 

in this haughty great attempt — ii. 5 

malice was a great and grievous sin — }]\- ^ 

you have great reason to do — iii. i 

gre.at Coeur-Je-Liou's heart 4vas buried — iii. 2 

then judge, great lords, if I have — iv. 1 

in the bosom of such great commanders — iv. 3 

great York might bear the name .... — iv. 4 

your loss is great, so your regard .... — i v. 5 

fury, and great rage of heart — iv. 7 

where is the great Alcides of the field — iv. 7 

great earl of Washford, Waterford . . — iv. 7 

great mareshal to Henry — iv. 7 

a man of great authority in France . . — v. 1 

our great progenitors had conquered? — v. 4 

and of such great authority in France — v. 5 
of tliat great shadow I did represent.. 2Hen)-i//7. i. 1 

great king of England, and my gracious — i. 1 

all for this great favour done — i. 1 

and no great friend, I fear me — i. 1 

why doth the great duke Humphrey — i. 2 

from the great and new-made duke. . — i. 2 

as the suspect is great, would make thee — i. 3 

great is his comfort in this eartlily .. — ii. I 

God's goodness hath been great to thee — ii. 1 

think that cunning to be great — ii. 1 

and us, your guilt IS great — ii. 3 

but great men tremble — iii. I 

levy great sums of money through the — iii. 1 

that tliese great lords, and Alargaret — iii. 1 

my lord is cold in great affairs — iii. 1 

great lords, from Ireland am I — iii. 1 

there is great hope of help — iii. 1 

as, 'tis great like he will — iii. 1 

1 have great matters to impart — iii. 2 

pol icy art thou grown great — iv. 1 

great men oft die by vile bezonians . . — iv. I 

savage islanders, Pompcy the great . . — iv. 1 

great men have reaching hands — iv. 7 

seek not to wax great by others 'waning ■ — iv. 10 

swallow my sword like a great pin . . — iv. 10 

to entertain great England's lawful king — v. 1 

shouUlst raise so great a power without — v. 1 

my choler is so great — v. 1 

great God, how just art thou! — v. 1 

It is great sin, to swear unto a sin — v. 1 

the great lord of Northumberland ..'iHenry VI. i. I 

to our heart's great sorrow — i. I 

though the odds be great, I doubt not — i. 2 

that great Plantagenet is crowned .. — i. 4 

unload my heart's great biudeii — ii. 1 

great lord of Warwick, if we should. . — ii. 1 

promise of high pay, and great rewards — ii. 1 

mcthinks, I hear great Warwick speak — ii. 1 



GRE AT— great Troy is ours. . Troilus ^ CressHa, v. 10 

some dedication to the great lord. Timon of Athens, i.l 

this great flood of visitors — i. 1 

so they come by great bellies — i.l 

great men should drink with harness — i. 2 

to provide, and give great gifts, and all — i. 2 

master is awaked by great occasion. . — ii. 2 

and your great flow of debts — ii. 2 

fjreat Timon, noble, worthy, royal .. — ii. 2 

le's stepped into a great estate — ii- 2 

who, having great and instant occasion — iii. 1 

and undo a great deal of honour? — iii. 2 

such may rail against great buildings — iii. 4 

as you are great, be pitifully good . . — iii. 6 

you great benefactors, sprinkle . . — iii. 6 (grace) 

thy great fortunes are made thy chief — iv. 2 

can bear great fortune — iv. 3 

forgetting thy great deeds — iv. 3 

go great with tigers, dragons, wolves — iv. 3 

and with his great attraction robs . . — iv. 3 

soldiers with great quantity — v. 1 

wiiich argues a great sickness in Ms — v. 1 

in the great shower of your gifts .... — v. 1 

like great triumphers in their applauding — v. 2 

pant in your great chairs of ease .... — v. 5 

that these great towers, trophies .... — v. ,'j 
the great toe of this assembly ?(rep.)..Corio(ani(.?, i. 1 

dearth is great; the people mutinous — i. 2 (letter) 

to keep your great pretences veiled . . — i. 2 

great charms misguide thy opposer's — i. 5 

able to bear against the great Aufidius — i. 5 

where great patricians shall attend .. — i. 9 

why, 'tis no great matter ()■«).) — ii. 1 

many great men that have flattered — ii. 2 

who, after great Hostilius, here was.. — ii.3 

censor twice, was his great ancestor.. — ii.3 

and sack great Rome with Romans. . — iii. 1 

those whose great power must try him — iii. 3 

say, their great enemy is gone — iv. 2 

his great opposer Corjolanus being . . — iv. 3 

all the Yolsces, great hurt and mischief — iv. 5 

but peace is a great maker of cuckolds — i v. 5 

the nobles, in great earnestness — iv. B 

which great nature cries, deny not . . — v. 3 

like a great sea-mark — v. 3 

thou know'st, great son — v. 3 

have all great cause to give great thanks — v. 4 

we'll deliver you of your great danger — v. ft 

and labour of our great action — v. 5 

subsisting under your great command — v. 5 

made my heart too gi-eat for what . . — v. 5 

the great danger which this man's life — v. 5 

from Aufidius a great part of blame — v. 5 

when they are in great danger J^diusCa'sar, i. 1 

to see great Pompey pass the streets — i. 1 

thoughts of great value — i.2 

as .(Eneas, om- great ancestor — i.2 

that he is grown BO great? — i.2 

an age, since the great flood — i.2 

he is a great observer — i.2 

all tending to the great opinion — i.2 

and our great need of Iiim — i. 3 

is a great way. growing on the south — ii. 1 

that'gre.at vow which did incorporate • — ii. 1 

from you gi'eat Rome shall suck irep.) — ii. 2 

speak to great Csesar as he comes — ii. 4 

read it, great Csesar — iii. I 

more sweetly in great Cfesar's ear .. — iii. 1 

gi-eat Ca;sar,— Doth not Brutus — iii. 1 

CsBsar has had great wrong — iii. 2 

ran blood, great Cassar fell — iii. 2 

and now, Octavius, listen great things — iv. 1 

did not great Julius bleed — iv. 3 

so great men great losses should endm-e — iv. 3 

he bears too great a mind — v. 1 

defend him from so great a shame! .. — v. 4 

they did in env^ of great Caesar — v. 5 

in the scufHes of great fights ....Antony^ Cleo. i. 1 

comes too short of that great property — i. 1 

there's a great spirit gone! — i.2 

between them and a great cause .... — i.2 

begin to throw Pompey the great. ... — i. 2 

to hate one great com.petitor — i. 4 

so great weight in his lightness — i. 4 

sleep out this great gap of time — * i. .'i 

and great Pompey would stand — i. 5 

thatgreat medicine hath with — i. .I 

the firm Roman to great Egypt — i. 5 

if the great gods be just — ii. 1 

that which combined us was most great — ii. 2 

great Mark Antony is now a widower — ii. 2 

now seem great, and all great fears.. — ii. 2 

and sway our great designs — ii. 2 

power by land? great, and increasing — ii. 2 

royal wench! She made great Coesar — ii. 2 

the world, and my great office — ii.3 

the senators alone of this great world — ii. 6 

you have been a great thief by land.. — ii. 6 

have a name in great men's fellowship — ii. 7 

a loud farewell to these great fellows — ii. 7 

may make too great an act — iii. 1 

take from me a great part of myself — iii. 2 

our great navy's rigged — iii,.') 

great Media, Parthia., and Armenia — iii. 6 

fled from that great face of war — iii. II 

say to great Ccesar this — iii. II 

when one so great begins to rage — iv. 1 

determine this great war — iv. 4 

did persuade great Herod to incline — iv. 6 

to this great fairy I commend thy acts — iv. 8 

the world's great snare uneanght? . . — iv. S 

had our great palace tlie capacity.. .. — iv. 8 

be windowed in great Rome — iv. 1 2 

farewell, great chief: shall I strike now? — iv. 12 

must be as great as that which makes it — iv. 13 

burn the great spliere thou movest in! — iv. 13 

great .Juno's power, the strong-winged — iv. 13 

the breaking of so great a thing should — v.! 

and it is great to do that thing that ends — v. 2 

3 our loss is as yourself, great — v. 2 



GUKAT— <lo the gcKls great \iaTm..Aiilony 4-C/co. v. 2 

ciill great Cwsnr, asa unpoliciedl — v. a 

liiiili onler in this prent solemnity .. — y- i 
eat ili'iil tVimi tlie matter Cymbeline, i. 9 



— IV. : 



— 1. , 



viiu arc II (in-at ilral abnsoil 

vea, so, tl\nt our priat lung Iiimsclf — 

}liou lilt tluii ii-i K'>'"' '»■< i" "'y master — 

ri-foil fiom voiirgrvutsloflt — 

.voiir 1,'roiit jiiilt;iia'ii( iu tin- election — 

tliiir vuliio :;ivat; unil I i\m sometliiiiB — 
tliv Imnisluil lord, ami iliis preat lamU — 
oiiV I.I' voiir ^•rl■ttt knowing stiould learn — 

llHlli lu-anl ofv-reiit Aii-ustus — 

anil iicrjurol, iVom tliy ^rcat fail — 

in a fifiit iBH'l, a swan's nest — 

younia.le>;ivut .lunouM-i-y ■.•••••• — 

l>ut our (.Teat lourl luiidu nic to blamo — 
LTiMit nn'ii, lluit luiil 11 c.iiirt no bigger 
It is^Mi'.it uioniiim': c'oir.e. away .... 

great griefs, I see, uic.lieiue the less 
fear no uinre the Irowii o' the great — 
the ureat part of uiy eoinfort gone . . 

greiU the slaughter is here miido 

great tlic answer be Britons 

great .Inpiter lie praisedl Lucius 

and so, great powers, if you will take 

great nature, like his ancestry 

o'tlie worlil, as great Sieilius' neir 

with care iwrform his great behest . . 

hail, great king! to soui- your 

thou hailst, great king, a subieet 

great Jupiter ui>on his eagle backed 

in tlie templeof great Jupiter 

for niauv sood and great deserts . . Tilus 
tlion great defender of this Capitol .. 
lord Suturninus, Home's greiyt emperor 
no more, great enipress, IJassianus .. 

great reason that uiy uuble lord 

might not gain so gnat ii lui|ipiness. . 

in Home's great quarrel sU||l 

to see so L'reat a lord linselWusiuuate 
nor great Aleides, nor the god of war 
wreteh, tliat hol|:'st to iiiakc mc great 
received letters iroin great Rome .... 
therefore, great lords, he as your titles 
sprung from the CTCat Anilronieus .. — 

Antioeh the great built up Pericles, i. (G 

that would be son to great Antioehus 

great king, few love to hear — 

the great Antioehus 'gainst whom . . — 
since he's so great, can make ........ — 

ami pride so great, the name of help — 
the great ones eat up the little ones. . — 
to express my commendations great — 
envy the great, nor do the low despise — 

though this king were great — 

mav be as great in blood as I — 

thou God of this great vast — 

my poo<lwill i» great, though the gift — 

the breadth of his great voyage — 

serve the great pirate Valdes — 

in time to great and high estate — 

I am great with woe — 

lest tins great sea of joys rushing — 

great sir, they shall be brought — 

tlie gixis, for this great miracle ^ — 

great rivals in our youngest daughter's . . Lci 

as itiv great patron thought on — 

for you, great king, I would not from — 

make a great gap in your own honour . . — 
there's a great abatement of kindness . . — 

lords and great men will not let me — 

to the great love I bear you — 

iKnt.l the allowance of your great aspect — 
when a great wlieel runs down a hill .... — 

but the great one that goes up — 

s|>eak 'gainst so great a number — 

let the great gods, that keep this — 

Albion shall come to great confusion — 

his sword to his great master — 

it was great ignorance, Gloster's eyes .... — 
shake ijatiently my great affliction off .. — 
(inarrel with vour great opposelcss wills — 
great world shall so wear out to naught. . — 

beliohl the great image of authority — 

we are come to this great stage of fools . . — 

cure this great breach in his abused — 

the great rage, you see, is cured — 

parks and sects of great ones — 

great employment will not bear question — 

great thing of us forgot! — 

comfort to this great decay may come .. — 
master is the great rich Capulet ..Itoineo ^Juliet. 
too great oppression for a tender thing .. — 
and sought tor. in the great chamber — 



GREAT— such like as's of great charge. . Iliwdrt, v. i 
lie has laid a great wager ou your head .. — v. 2 
of very soft society, ami great showing ., — v. a 

to be a soul of great article — v. 2 

three great ones of the city Ollielto, i. I 

forsootli, a great arithinetioian .... 
and little of this L-nnt world can I ( 
your serious and itimI lMt,>nir s seal 
our great eiii'tuin', iMiii:i m, i- 
great Jove. Ollul I. 
the great eoiileoti. 
will I 



iii. 


2 


IV 


2 


IV. 


5 


IV 


b 


IV 


« 


IV 


(5 


IV 


Ii 


IV 


6 


IV 


7 


IV 


7 


V 


:i 


V 


:i 


V 


3 



— i. 3 

— i. 3 
_ ii. 1 



loves him, 'tis apt 



and 'ti 
and yij 



,. I -well his 

,1 ihe :iu and skies — ii. 1 

IS giviit u fly as C'assio — ii- I 

it gi\'es ine wonder great as my content.. — ii. 1 
I have found gieiit love amongst them .. — ii. 1 

of creat credit — ii. 1 

great n sin - ii. 1 

eat pitv, that the iiohlc Moor.. — ii. 3 
mil',, isijreat inmonlhsof .... - 1; 3 

, J in C\ iiriis, and great aftinity — iii. 1 

he tills it up «iih great ability — iii- 3 

yet. 'ti.^ the plague of L-rcatoncs — !|i. 3 

thoiedi grviit ..luv- ;ne their object — ni- ■! 

I wniild .ni I- ,H . , , ,1 ;.,ii speak with you — iv. 1 

audtlK'L'n - rs of Venice stay — ;v. 2 

'tis 11 '_'ri ; I [II' I mall vice — iv. 3 

I li,m. II,, 1 1, ,,.[!,, n to the deed — v. 1 

great reveuue iKid stomach for them all.. — v. 2 

no wen poll; lor he was great of heart — v. 2 

GUKA f-Hi:Ll.li:D women Henry fill. iv. I 

GHI'ATKl! — thv no greater father Tempest, \. 2 

of greater timetluui I Tu'uGeH.of rerona,l\. 7 

the rieuter hides the less — i". 1 

theielore the gilt the meater — iv. < 

I will do a greater thing than that . Wpit!/ '♦''iw, I. I 
greater lile of the suhjeet. . Measure for Measure, iii. 2 

is no greater forfeit to the law — iv. 2 

vou make my bonds still greater — — y. 1 
their cheer is tlie greater, that I am ..MnehAdo. i. 3 
on this travail look for greater birth — _i,v. 1 

can you do me greater harm Mid. S'. Dream, in. 2 

beg a greater matter Lure's L.LosI, v. 2 

"renter than irreat, great, great — v. 2 

the -leater tlir.ov iiiav turn hy..Mer.of Venice, u. 1 
so doth the "renter glory dim the less — v. 1 

no greater heart in tlieey AsyouUkeit,n. (i 

ay, and greater wonders tlian that .. — v. 2 
neither do I labour for a greater esteem _— v.'i 
a need, greater than shows itself ....All slf'eU,u. o 

but greater a great deal in evil — n;. 3 

of greater sums than 1 have. . Taming of Shrew, in. 2 
witli no greater a run but my head . . — ly. 1 
yet, for a greater contirniation . . Winter slalc, i|. 1 
never tender lady luith borne greater — _ii. 2 

of something greater than herself — 'X- 3 

lesser than Macbeth, and greater Macbeth, i. 3 

an earnest of a greater honour — i- 3 

g-rent.-r thnii hnth.liy theall-liail.... — i. .■) 

„ ,.,, ,1,, ,„,,,,,, than we, denies Klni-.lohn.w.i 

.,\.,.. :,,,i Hi I, ater feeling llichard II. i. 3 

[,.,,,,,,„:,, I,e shall nol'bo — m- 2 

wl,v. 1 uiji -leiiler than a king .... 

I'll make it greater, ere 1 part 

I would my means were greater .. 

grow to a g'reater falseness 

revives two greater in the heirs — 

to give a greater sum than ever 

greater tlierefore should our courage be — 

the greater share of honour — ;.'.••■ 

but to make my sorrow greater? . .iHenry ( /. in. 2 

but greater sin, to keep a sinfid — v. 

resolved to bear a greater storm — „ , . \'- 

eoniinandcd always by the greater .?.Uen,yyi. in. 
the harder niatehed. the greater victory — _y. 1 
a-reater gift than that (rep.) ....Uichard '/'• in- ! 

f i t fall . grea ter than this Henry / ///., 

more miseries, and greater far — 



the only son of your great enemy . . . 
giHid Mercutio, my business was greai 
nrivcling love is like a great natural 



— II. l 

— iii. 4 

— iv. 3 

— y. 3 
niion to the clouds shall llamtel,i. 2 



we'll keep no great ado 

with some great kinsman's bone ... 
a great suspicions stay the friar too. 
the great cannon to the clouds shall. 

shall be the fruit to that great feast — ii. 

tliBt great baby, you see there — ii. 

enterprises of great pith and moment — iii. 

in great ones niuht not nnwatelied go.... — jji. 

a great man's memory may outlive — in. 

great, the littler.t iloubts are fear (rep.) .. — in. 

the great man down, yon mark — in. 

in most great atilietion of spirit — in. 

as my great power thereof may give — iv. 

to tie great, is, not to stir without great . . — iv. 

iccms prologue to siime great amiss — iv. 

where the oHViiee is. let the great axe fall — iv. 

the great love the general gender bear him — iv. 

that great folks should have countenance — v. 

in's time a great buyer of land — v. 

if he do not. 'tis no great matter there .. — v. 

that he will keep out water a great while — v. 

but that great command o'ersways — v. 



'.I Henry IV. 
..-IHcnrylV. 



... Henry V. 



more miseries, and greater far 

never greater, nor, I'll assure 

to add' greater honours to his age — 

the service greater than the god. 'Ao/(ms ^ Cress, ii. 

in sc'H-assnnintioii L'rcatcr — !!• 

th,,„ J,., ■,.„!, .,-linlks,l,-aw deep,.... - .H. 

th,' "i',ati'r -,','ins ii,,; li sm r .. I imonof Alhens, }V. 
and ilii',,v.' I,,, til -.-.'aicv lliiinrs lor ..Corinlanus,i. 
seeks their hate h itli greater devotion — ji- 

tlie greater part carries it — .';• 

than stay, past doubt, for greater — — .v.- 

we are the greater jioU — !||- 

ohcdienec fails to the greater bench.. — in- 

liid a ^'renter soldier than he — iv, 

I take him t" he the greater soldier .. — iv. 
heliold a greater than tlicmselves . .JuhusCrrsar,^. 
the greater part, the liorse in general — iv. 
makes mine greater than they arc "' 



GKKA'I'IOST-the greatest (;racc /(/( .I^W^ n, 

from the wrath of greatest iUHtice .. — in- ■ 
mv greatest grief, though little he do — in. 1 
he has taken their KieateBteommander — iii. t 

the greatest ol.loi|nv i' the world — iv. 2 

the hist was the greiiti'St, but that.... — iv. r. 
one oflhe L'reiite-I ill the christian .. — . iv. ■! 

toliiioseirilu-.",,,il, 1 V. ■..fall.. - V. 3 

assiireinvdan I i ' \i\\i:r.'l'aminf! of Sh.li.\ 

aL'eiitleiiiiio..i II • i| ise. doi/er'f 7'u(c', i. 1 

worse than th, -t 1 ,,l, - I i.,n that - j. 2 

the great e.-t is l.ili iiiil : thanks for Macbeth, i. 3 

one of fieatesi iioti' .seems bruited — v. 7 

one lrin>t |.r..ve greatest King John, W. 2 

mightii.-t of thy greatest enemies . . llichard II. v. B 

flies with greatest speed iHenrylV. i. 1 

now one of the greatest men in the realm — v. 3 

it is the greatest admiration in the Henry V. iv. 1 

empty vessel makes the greatest sound — iv. 4 
reiir ach be Talbot's gieatest fame!.l Henry VI. in. 2 

the greatest miracle that e'er ye — y- 4 

the greatest favmir of the commons.. 2Hewi|/r/. i. 1 

for he hath greatest cause — .■■ 1 

the greatest iinin ill Mngland — ii- 2 

thy greatest help i-.iniet, gentle Nell — .n. 1 

Kdward's ,'ieatest ivleiid ?,HenryVI. in. 3 

did snhiliie tlu- u'leatest part of Spain — in. 3 
tlie "leiitest strength and power ..llichard III. IV. 4 
when tile , -realist stroke of fortuncHenryr///. ii. 2 
hi r tllank^ ill the greatest huliibleliess — v. 1 

the -Mat, -t iM.inareh now alive — v. 2 

the I, ;,n 1 oC Mnir having locks., ri'mon of Alii.}}. 2 
) ,,,111, t ii ,,iie .^Cniy greatest afllictions — iii- 2 
v-iiir . !■( at. -t want is you want .... — iy. 3 

onr "ivatesl liieiids attend us Coriolanus, i. 1 

the greatest taste most palates theirs — iii. 1 
greatest soldier of the wi.rlil ( rrp.). Antony ^Cleo. i. 3 
wcrc't twenty of the greatest tributaries — in. U 
like the greatest spot of all thy sex . . — iv. ID 

the greatest pri nee o' the world — i v. 1 .■» 

that we, the greatest, are misthought — y. 2 

make the greatest king double CymbeUne,). 7 

gives my soul the greatest spurn. 7'(VujyIn(/ron. in. I 
am the greotcst, able to do least.. /iomeo ^Juliet, v. 3 
and this the greatest discords be.. ...... 0'/if«o,ii. ' 

my greatest a I. o 

GREAT-GRAN! 
what mv grcat- 

niiF,AT-GRO^\ 

GKEATI.Y-pru 
well, we cannot 
reatlv fei 



they are greater storms, 
may give wa.\' to gr 
hut small to jjr.at < 
Cicsarand he an 
hut it raises tie 
the greater eai, 1 1, • 
shollhlloakea er. :i 



.Antony^- Cleopatra 



> lost 



lies all lie Cyinbellnc,}. ti 

yet 'tis L'leatir .Kill in a true hate .. — n- S 
'wlii.h attends in place of greater state — in- 3 

can make yon greater than Titus Andron.u 2 

were endowments greater than Pericles, iii. 2 

where the greater malady is fixed Lear, in. 4 

guard until liieir greater pleasures-. — v. 3 

a greater Pow cr ttian we can .... Itonuo /iJnhet, v. 3 
todanination add, greater than that ..Ulhello, in. 3 
which I have greater reason to believe .. — iv. 2 

GHK.VTIOST— as greatest does least Tempest, iii. 2 

is the greatest thing about you. . Mens. fnr.Meas.u. 1 

the greatest note of it is his Much .Ida, iii. 2 

is thegreatesterror of all the rest...Vii/..V. sDr.w 1 

which is the greatest Indy Love's L. Lost, ly. 1 

the inagnitleoes of greatest port. .Wirr. o/ Venice, in. . 
and tlie greatest ol mv pride is ..Asyuul.ike it, iii. i 

was the greatest of his profession All s It til,}. 3 

he that of greatest works is flnisher.. — ji- [ 
have by the greatest been denied .... — H- ' 



east misuse] — iv. 2 
■.Ti : i. r — 
I Hid ....3HenryyLu.2 

- I, ,1 _,,,«ii traitor — iv. 8 
iti\ (iwutly ..Lore'sL.Losl.iwi 
eatlv condemn ..All's IVelt, iii. f> 

^^ ^„,, oiiej' isnot safe.romc(/!/o//srr. i. 2 

great kiin,'. ami vet not greatly good. Kic/iu>d/i. iv. 1 
nor 1 greatlv e. Ve not: God knows .. _ v. 2 
most .'reatlv li\e<l this star .. Henri/ V. v. 2 (chorus) 
it skills II. ,t meaflv who im).uglis. .a/fenrl/;'/. iii. I 
they cannot preatly sting to hurt ..iHenrrjVI. u. 6 
do not greatlv care to be deceived. /■I;i/on!/*t'/fo. y. 2 
wonder greatly that man's face.. I'iltts .indron.u. 4 
but greatly tofind quarrel in a straw. .Hamlet, iv. 4 

the general does not greatly care Ulhello, iii. 1 

GRKAT-iM ASTER of France Henry V.)V.S 

G 1! K ATN 1>S— greatness will revenge. Tempest, lii. 2 

I do lieseeeh thy greatness — iii- 2 

be not afraid ot' greatness. 7'(rc;/rAA'iff/i(, ii. 5 (letter) 
some achieve greatness, and (rep.) — ii. 5 (letter) 

be not afraid of greatness ;. — 111.4 

some have greatness thrust (lep.v. I) — in- 4 

nor greatness in mortality Meas. forMeas. in- - 

O place and greatness — iv- 1 

pleaseth his greatness to impart ..Love s L. Lost, v. 1 

but, most esteemed greatness _ — J- "^ 

greatness whereof I cannot. Wn. o/Tct. iv. 1 (letter) 

L'reatncss of mv word, you die As yoti Like it, i. 3 

liee..ines his greatness, even to the ..All's Well, iii. G 

L'liuliiess hath not been used IVinler's'Tale, iv. 3 

e,, II, IS II, ,t like to his father's greatness — y. I 

1,, ,1 an <t pvtiier of greatness Macbeth, i. i 

i I,, ,1, lit .1 what greatness is promised — i. '> 

as "ill to ^.reatness dedicate themselves — iy. 3 
lierinred too, and sooth'st up greatness ..JoAn, iii. 1 
that greatness should so grossly oftcr it . . — iv. 2 
your worth, your greatness, and nohility — iv. 3 
vour soverei; '' —*'-"'•■ 



ofiireatli 
Foineti 



I to hi 



eatncss and authority.. — 



esit sli 



,/>.) ..\llcnrylV.}.3 



which oft tl 
as grea I 



ati,.-~ , I tiiy blood — iii. •■; 
il L'natiu>-s iieeds — iii- 2 

s itself — iv-3 

....a such a Hood of greatness fell ou you — y. 1 
the complexion ..f my greatness .. ..'ZHenrylV. i 
makes mc out of love with my greatness — 
that I and greatness were compelled — 

in shadow and such greatness! — 

his greatness ond thy other brethren — 
tlioii siX'k'st the greatness that will .. — 

deliver up his greatness 

and show my sail of greatness 

model to thy inward greatness 

outlive that day to see his greatness 
twin-horn witli greatness, subjected 
O be sick, great greatne 



11. 2 

iii. I 

— iv. 2 
_ iv. 4 

— iv. 4 

— v. 2 
. Henry V. i. 2 

ii (chorus) 
_ iv. 1 
_ iv. 1 

— iv. 1 



greatness of his place he grief to us . .iHcnry VI. i. II 

whose greatness answers words .. T,,,'-- - 

rather hide me from my greatness. /(ic/inrrf;;/. iii. / 
than in mv greatness covet to he hid — in- 7 
OS suits the greatness of his person. i/f"ry ; "'-.n- 

the last fit of my greatness — !'.'.• )^ 

point of all my greatues* — !!!■ - 

along farewell to all my greatness! — \\\- - 

full surely his greatness is a ripeiiing — in- 2 
she will not lose her wonted greatness — iv- i 
claim their greatness, not by bl««l . . — v. 4 
and the greatness of his name shall be -- v- 4 
even now co-rivalled greatness?.. Troi/uj .J Crwi. i. 3 
seeming he acts thy greatness in .... — .!■ 3 

osfullofenvy at his greatness ...... — ii. I 

did move voni greatness, and this noble — "■ 3 

possessed lie is with grctttncss. — .|!- -^ 

'tis certain, greatness once fallen ... . — «"- a 



/ 



GREATNESS-wlio deserves greatness. Coriolamis, i. 1 

for keeping your greatness back? — v. 2 

the abuse of greatness is Julius Cipsar^ ii. 1 

shall not make poor my greatness/fn/oni/i^C/eo. ii. 2 
Cleopatra does confess tliy greatness — iii. 10 
more in parting, than greatness going off — iv. 11 
lest, in her greatness, by some mortal — v. 1 
I send him the greatness he has got. . — v. 2 
my greatness i'the posture of a whore — v. 2 
breed of greatness! cowards father.. Cj/mte/me, iv. 2 
tlrat depend on greatness' favour .... — v. 4 
only affected greatness got by you . . — v. 5 
by our greatness, and the grace of it. . — v. 5 
suffice tire greatness of your powers. . . . Pericles^ ii. 1 

his greatness was no guard to bar — ii. 4 

his greatness weighed, his will is not ..Hamlet, i. 3 
as by your safety, greatness, wisdom — iv. 7 

GKEAT-SIZED-great-sized monster. Troil.^Ci: iii. 3 
and thou, great-sized coward! — v. H 

GREClAN-toward the Grecian tents. Mer.of Fen. v. 1 
dashed out with a Grecian club . . As ynu Like it, iv. 1 
wliy the Grecians sacked Troy ?.^;rs Well, i. 3 (song) 
how many Grecian tents do stand. jTroiV. iSf Cress, i. 3 

to rouse a Grecian that is true — i. 3 

the Grecian dames are sun-burned., — i. 3 
not in our Grecian host one noble .. — i. 3 

beholds a Grecian and his sword — ii. 2 

he brought a Grecian queen — ii. 2 

the Grecians keep our aunt — ii. 2 

to see these Grecian lords ! — . iii. 3 

captain general of the Grecian army — iii. 3 

a Grecian's life hath sunk — iv. 1 

tlie Grecian Diomed, and our An tenor — iv. 2 
I'll bring her to the Grecian presently — iv. 3 

I must then to tlie Grecians? — iv. 4 

I will corrupt the Grecian sentinels — iv. 4 

the Grecian youths are full of quality — iv. 4 
to which the Grecians are most prompt — iv. 4 
bring .lEneas, and the Grecian, witli you — iv. 4 

Grecian, thou dost not use nie — iv. 4 

this hand is Grecian all — iv. 5 

my famous cousin to ouj' Grecian tents — iv. 5 

cost a drop of Grecian blood — iv. .5 

you wisest Grecians, pardon me .... — iv. .0 
since you refused the Grecians' cause — iv. 5 
many times the captive Grecians fall — v. 3 

tlie Grecians begin to proclaim — v. 4 

hold thy whore, Grecian! — v. 4 

a retreat upon our Grecian part — v. 9 

blood at Grecian swords' contending. Cor/oZa?i«s, i. 3 

'GREE— how 'gree you now. . Merchant nf Venice, ii. 2 

GREECE— Hector of Greece MerryWives, ii. 3 

old Jolin Naps of Greece . . Taming ofShre(i\ 2 (ind.) 
have I spent in furthest Greece. Comedi/ of Errors,!. \ 
tlie youthful Paris once to Greece . . 1 Henry VI. v. 5 

Helen of Greece was fairer far SHenryl'I. ii. 2 

from isles of Greece the princes. Troil. ^ Cress, (prul .) 
than Agamemnon and all Greece .... — i. 2 
and the hand of Greece should hold.. — i. 3 

among the fairest of Greece — i. 3 

the plague of Greece upon thee — ii. I 

make thee the loathsomest scab in Greece — ii. 1 

rather Troy were borne to Greece — iv. 1 

I tell thee, "lord of Greece, she is — iv. 4 

hail, all the state of Greece! — iv. 5 

all you peers of Greece, go to my tent — iv. 5 

than ever frowned in Greece! Coriolanus, Mi. 1 

as 'twas used sometime in Greece .... — iii. 1 

the gods of Greece protect you ! Pericles, i. 4 

herePs them in our country of Greece — ii. 1 

'GREED-'greed on for my happiness. Two Gen.of F. ii. 1 
other tokens between you ' greed. Meas. for Meas. iv. 1 
your dowry 'greed on, and will you. Taming of Sh. ii. I 

we have 'greed so well together — ii. 1 

this 'greed upon, to part with.... AnionySr Cleo. ii. 6 

GREEDILY- 
greedily devour the treacherous bait.itfuc/i Ado, iii. I 

GrtEEDINESS-greediness of affection, ffme/'sr. v. 2 
insatiate greediness of his desires. . Richard III. iii. 7 
thy greedmess would afflict thee.. Timon of Ath. iv. 3 
wolf in^reediness. dog in madness Lear, iii. 4 

GREEDY— a greedy intention Merry Hives, i. 3 

so keen and greedy to confound . Mer. of Venice, iii. 2 
many greedy looks of youn^ and old.Uichard I J. v. 2 
stopping ray greedy ear with their ..'IHi-nrylV. i. 1 
greedy touch of common-kissing ..Cymbeliiie, iii. 4 
a greedy ear devour up my discourse O'hello. i, 3 

GREEK-I pr'ythee, foolish Greek. Tnelflli Night, iv. 1 

'tis a Greek invocation, to call As you Like it, ii. 5 

as cunning in Greek, Eatin ..Taming of aiirew, ii. 1 
email packet of Greek and Latin books — ii. 1 
cannibals, and Trojan Greeks? ....iHenry IV. ii. 4 

against the Greeks, that would 'iHenry VI. ii. 1 

unbruised Greeks do pitch . . Troilus cj- Cress, (prol.) 
Trojan and Greek, sets all on hazard — (prol.) 

the Greeks are strong, and skilful — i. 1 

let her to the Greeks; and so I'll tell — i. 1 

there is among the Greeks a lord .... — i. 2 

then she's a merry Greek — i. 2 

there is among the Greeks, Achilles.. — i. 2 

[Xn(.] knit all Greeks ears to his .... — i. 3 

ay, Greek, that is my name — i. 3 

and every Greek of mettle — i. 3 

in view of Trojans and of Greeks .... — i. 3 

than ever Greek did compass — i. 3 

again says Nestor from the Greeks . . — ii. 2 
no man lesser fears the Greeks than I — ii, 2 
should do some vengeance on the Greeks — ii. 2 

whom the Greeks held captive — ii. 2 

factious nobles of the Greeks — ii. 2 

that all the Greeks begin to — iii. 3 

a valiant Greek, -Eneas: take his hand — iv. I 
to bring this Greek to Calchas' house — iv. 1 
as for her Greeks and Trojans suffered — iv. 1 
delivery to this valiant Greek comes fast — iv. 3 
Cressid 'mongst the merry Greeks! .. — iv. 4 

- by my soul, fair Greek, if e'er thou .. — iv. 4 
most dearly welcome to the Greeks .. — iv. .5 

half Trojan, and half Greek — iv. 5 

thy comraixioD Greek and Trojan so — iv. b 



GREEK— of this leg all Greek ..Troilus <5 Cress, iv. 5 
when that a ring of Greeks have hemmed — iv. 5 
there's many a Greelc and Trojan dead — iv. 5 

fall, Greeks; fail, iaine; honour — v. I 

and good-niglit to tlie Greeks' general — v. 1 
sweet hr)ney Greek, tempt me no more — v. 2 

any thing but that, sweet Greek — v. 2 

guardian! wliy Greek! iiho, pho! — v. 2 

ay, Greek; and that shall he divulged — v. 2 
hark, Greek; as much as I do Cressid — v. 2 

stand engaged to many Greeks — v. 3 

what art thou, Greek? art thon for .. — v. 4 
and there the strawy Greeks, ripe for his — v. 5 

come both, you cogging Greeks — v. 6 

stand, stand, thou Greek — v. 6 

forego this vantage, Greek — v. 9 

ay, he spoke Greeli. To whateffect?.7uWu.%Ccrsa;-, i. 2 
it was Greek to me: I could tell .... — i. 2 

madded Hecuba gave the Greeks . . Cymbeline, iv. 2 
Greeks, ujion advice, did bury . Titus. indronicus. i. 2 
when subtle Greeks surprised king . . — v. 3 
striking too short at Greeks Hamlet, ii. 2 

GREEKISH— 
Greekish [Kn!. Greek's] ears to his. Troilus^ Cress, i.3 

'fore all the Greekish heads — _ i. 3 

or force of Greekish sinews — iii. 1 

all the Greekish girls shall tripping sing — iii. 3 
not bear from me a Greekish member — iv. 5 

through ranks of Greekish youth — iv. i 

in Ilion, on your Greekish embassy.. — iv. 5 

with Greekish wine to-uight — v. 1 

send that Greekislr whoremasterly .. — v, 4 

GREEN— how ^reen ! Tempest, ii. 1 

with an eye of green in't — ii. I 

to this short-grass'd green? — iv. 1 

and on this green laud — iv. 1 

'twixt the green sea and the azure vault — v. 1 
green-a box! do intend vat I (^rep.). Merry Wives, i. 4 

to the tune of Green Sleeves — ii. 1 

and fairies, green and white — iv. 4 

that quaint, in green, she — iv. 6 

my daughter is in green — v. 3 

thunder to the tune of Green Sleeves — v. 5 

black, grey, green, and white — v. 6 

that it bears, green let it be — v. 5 

turned my daughter into green — v. 5 

did you take her in green? — v. a 

a green and yellow melancholy.. Twelfth Night, ii. 4 

but with one green leaf on it Much Ado, ii. 1 

when wheat is green Mid. N. Dream, i. 1 

to dew her orbs upon the green — ii. 1 

in grove or green, by fountain — ii. 1 

and the green corn ha th rutted — ii. 2 

tlie quaint mazes in the wanton green — ii. 2 

this green plot shall be our stage — iii. 1 

purple grapes, green fi^s, and mulberries — iii. 1 

his eyes were green as leeks. — v. 1 

when green geese are a-breeding. . Lovers L.Losi, i. I 

of the sea- water green, sir — i. 2 

green, indeed, is the colour of lovers — i. 2 
it was so sir; for she had a green wit — i. 2 

a green goose, a goddess — iv. 3 

ho! unto the green holly. . As youLiUe it, ii. 7 (song ) 

and like green timber, warp — iii. 3 

about his neck a green and gilded snake — iv. 3 
o'er the green corn-field did pass . . — v. 3 (song) 
while your boots are green . . Taming ofSlirew, iii. 2 

thing i look on seemeth gi'een — iv. 6 

in my green velvet coat IVinter^sTale, i. 2 

too green and idle for girls of mine! — iii. 2 

the green Neptune a ram — iv. 3 

to look so green and pale Macbeth, i. 7 

making the green, one red — ii. 2 

tread with warlike march these greens ..John, ii. 1 

that yon green boy shall have no — ii. 2 

how green you are — iii. 4 

Bagot here, and Green, observed Richard II. i. i 

so Green, thou art the midwife — ii. 2 

Bushy, Green, I will not vex — iii. 1 

where is Green? that they have let .. — iii. 2 

is Bushy, Green, and the earl — iii. 2 

the fresfi green laj) of fair king — iii. 3 

the earl of Wiltshire, Bushy, Green — iii. 4 
strew the green lap of the new-come — v. 2 

knaves, in Kendal green 1 Henry IF. ii. 4 

know these men in Kendal green — — ii. 4 

they were ill for a green wound? iHenrylV. ii. 1 

Peter Bull-calf of the green — iii. 2 

I remember at Mile-end green — iii. 2 

since griefs are green — iv. 4 

and a babbled of green fields Henry F. ii. 3 

it is goot for your green wound — v. 1 

burnet, and green clover — v. 2 

being green, there is great hope 2 Hei\ry VI. iii. 1 

how ninch the estate is green Richard 111. ii. 2 

yet, since it is but green, it sliould . . — ii. 2 
an't had been a green hair . .Troilus Sr Cressida,i. 2 

were your days as green as Aj ax — ii. 3 

thou green sarcenet flap for a sore eye ..— v. 1 
o' the instant, green virginity! 7Vmo/i nf Athens, iv. 1 
when I was green in judgment .. Antony Sr Cleo. i. 5 

and o'er green Neptune's back — iv. 12 

fragrant, and the woods are gveen.Titus Andron.ii.t 

the green leaves quiver — ii. 3 

branch, that's only green at top Pericles, ii. 2 

strew tliy green [Coi. -grave] with flowers — iv. 1 

drinks the green mantle Lear, iii. 4 

livery is but sick and green_ Romeo ^- Juliet, \i. 2 

not so green, so quick, so fair an eye — iii. 5 
bloody Tyl)alt, yet but green in earth — iv. 3 

freen earthen pots, bladders — v. 1 
rother'a death the memory be green . . Hamlet, i. 2 

you speak like a green girl — i.3 

that folly, and green minds look after. . Othello, ii. 1 

sing all a green willow {rep.) .... — iv. 3 (song") 

GREENER-promiseof his greener days. He(ijy/'.ii. 4 

GREEN-EYED jealousy ..Merdiant ofVenice,\i\. 2 

it is the green-eyed monster Othello, iii. 3 

GREENLY— I cannot look greenly . . Henry V. v. 2 
and we have done but greenly Hamlet, iv. a 



GREEN-SICKNESS— 
into a kind of male green-sickness.. 2 iJcnry/r. iv. 2 
troubled with the green-sickness. .Jnfo/jy.-^-C/eo. iii. 2 
pox upon her green-sickness for me! . . Pericles, iv. 6 

you green-sickness carrion! Romeo ^Juliet, iii. 5 

GUEEN-SOUR— green-sour ringlets ..Tempest, v. 1 
GKEEN-SWARD-the green-sward. Winter's T. iv. 3 
GIlEENWIGH-beingatGreenwich..H«iJv'^'«A i. 2 

GHEENWUOD tree Asyou Like /(,ii. 5(song') 

GKEET-greet my poor corpse.. '/'we(///i N. ii. 4 (song) 
your brother kindly greets you... Meas. for Meas. i 5 

will greet us here anon — iv. 5 

have purposed to greet me Mid. N. Dream, v. 1 

to talk, and greet Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

when we greet with eyes best seeing — v. 2 
Bel lario greets j'our grace .. Merchant of Venice, iv. 1 

and never stays to greet him As youLike it, ii. 1 

my mother greets me kindly All's Well, ii, 4 

greet him, and to give him comforts. Winler'sT. iv. 3 
to greet a man, not wortii her pains — v. 1 
Bohemia greets you from himself. ... — v. \ 
with his former title greet iNlacbeth ..Macbeth, i. 2 

you greet with present grace — i.3 

this diamond he greets your wife withal — ii. 1 

in all duty greets your highness Jiichard //. i. 3 

smiling, greet I theCj my earth — iii. 2 

greets me well, sir; Iknewhim 2HenrylF. iii. 2 

before, and greet his grace ; my lord — iv. 1 

and thus he greets your majesty Henry K ii. 4 

let him greet England with our — iii. 5 

for there the sun shall greet them . . — iv. 3 
friends greet in the hour of death ..\ Henry FI. iv. 3 

I do greet your excellence — v. 4 

meanest well, I greet thee well IHenry FI. v. 1 

to greet mine own land vvith ZHeuryFI. iii. 1 

there did greet my stranger soul. . . . liicliard III. i. i 

of London conies to greet you — iii. 1 

to greet the tender prince — Iv. 1 

go you and greet him in his tent. Ti oilus ($■ Cress, ii. 3 
to Priam's hall, to grq^t the warriors — iii. 1 
and either greet him not, or else .... — iii. 3 

greet him from me Timon of .-ithens, ii. 2 

reverend senate, greet thee — v. 2 

of Athens, greet tliee, Timon — v. 2 

day did never j'et greet Rome Coriolanus, v. 4 

he greets me well: your master ..Julius Ciesar, iv. 2 
Antony shall well greet together. .4>i(o/ii/ ^-Cleo.ii. 1 
such dignity as we greet modern friends — v. 2 

and greets your highness dearly Cymbeline, i. 7 

if you please to greet .your lord" — i. 7 

why so sadl,y greet you our victory? — v. 5 

there greet in silence, as the dead. Titus Andron. i. 2 
I greet your honours from Andronicus — iv. 2 
and secretly to greet the empress .... — iv. 2 
the Roman emperor greets you all .. — v. 1 

it greets me, as an enterprize of Pericles, iv. 4 

I pray you to greet them fairly — v. 1 

in Mitylene, to greet the king.. -^ v. 2 (Gower) 

we will greet the time Lear, v. I 

from me greet the Danish king Hamlet, iv. 4 

the duke does greet you, general Othello, i. 2 

I greet thy love, not with vain thanks .. — iii. 3 

and senators of Venice, greet you — iv. 1 

GREETED— world I should be greeted.. Ham(e/, iv. 6 
GREETlNG-hiB journal greeting. Afras./oc Meas.iv. 3 
salutation and greeting to you all ! . /Is you Like it,v.i 
my loving greetings to those of miue. .,.4/^4- IVell, i. 3 
captain, what greeting will you to iny — iv. 3 
and thus much for greeting . . Taming of .Shrew, iv. 1 
from him give you all greetings. . Winter's Tale, v. 1 

with such prophetic greeting? Mnclielh, i. 3 

thus, after greeting, spealcs tlie king .King John, i. 1 

and mark my greeting well Richard II. i. 1 

return'st no greeting to thy friends? — i. 3 

care my greetings be delivered — iii. 1 

prince of Wales, greeting . .i Henry I F. ii. 2 (letter) 
health and fair greeting from our.... — iv. I 

your greeting is from him Henry V. i . 2 

expressly I bring greeting too — ii. 4 

Buckingham, I accept tliy greeting. .'iHennj VI. v. 1 
to do greetings to thy royal jjerson..3Hfn)!//'/. iii. 3 
most despiteful gentle greeting . Troilus^ Cress, iv. 1 
confirm my princely brother's greeting — iv. 5 

I pray you, do my greeting Timon of Athens, v. 2 

I have received not only greetings. . Coriolanus, ii. I 

my greeting to the senators Julius Cresar, ii . 2 

every day a several greeting Antony SfCleo. i. 5 

every stage with an augmented greeting — iii. 6 

gentle adieus, and greetings — iv. 5 

sends greeting to the queen of Egypt — v. 2 
tremble in their different greeting.. /?omco f/- Jul. i. 5 
the appertaining rage to such a greeting — iii. I 
may convey my greetings, love, to thee — iii. 5 
bearersof this greeting to old Norway.. HamW, i. 2 

most fair return of greetings — ii, 2 

the,y give their greeting to the citadel . . Othello, ii. 1 

GREGORY-saint Gregory's well . Tu-oGen.of Ver.iv.i 

Nathaniel, Gregory, Philip?.. Tammg-ij/'S/ircu', iv. 1 

but Adam, Ralph, and Gregory — iv. 1 

■Turk Gregory never did such 1 Henry IF. v. 3 

commission toGregory de Cassalis. H<'/i7!/r//i.iii. 2 

Gregory, o' my word Romeo <§■ Juliet, i. 1 

Gregory, remember thy swashing blow — i. 1 

GREiVlIO— or signior Gremio. . Taming of Shrew, i. 1 

so win I signior Gremio; but a word — i. 1 

tush, Gremio! though it pass your .. — i. 1 

how say you, signior Gremio? — i. 1 

God save you, Siguier Gremio! — i. 2 

Gremio, 'tis now no time to vent .... — i. 2 

the chosen love of signior Gremio — i. 2 

you will have Gremio to keep you fair — ii. I 
neighbour Gremio: God save you .. — ii. 1 

signior Gremio; give me leave — ii. 1 

O pardon me, signior Gremio — ii. 1 

a thousand thanks, signior Gremio — ii. I 

say, signior Gremio, what can you .. — ii. I 
old signior Gremio has in Padua .... — ii. 1 
have I pinched yon, signior Ciremio? — ii. 1 
Gremio, 'tis known, m,y father hath — ii, 1 
firm promise; Gremio is outvied — ii. I 



GRE 

CJKEMTO-ifnot, tosipiior Oreinio.T'arniMg'n/'S/i.H. I 
we'll overrcBch the greyhoaril, Gi-cinio — 111.2 
Greniii), cnnie vou from the cliiirrli.. — iii. a 
hosides. old (;finiio is heiirkening still — iv. I 

talk not, 8ignii>r (ireiiiii>; I say — v. 1 

hrt« likes (.reilro these quiek-witted — V. 1' 

GUF.W— to niv elate prew strnnRer ....TemprtI, 1. 2 

crow a twenty yeara removed thing.. Tiiet/iliN. v. 1 

how her ncciniiintance grew witli Much Adn, v. 1 

that the rude sea grew civil at ..Mid.S.Dreivn,\\. 2 

BO we grew together — ]]]•- 

beard grew thin and hnngcrly ..Taming qfSh. in. 2 
all men's cars grew to his tunes. . H'inler's'l'ale, iv. 3 
reasoniihle man grew so in love with — \y- 3 
grew a companion to the common. . 1 UenrylV. 111. 2 

grew by our feeding to so great — v. 1 

which daily grew tonnarrel SHciiri/Zr. iv. 4 

no doubt, grew like the summer-grass. //e/i 11/ ( . 1. 1 

henec grew the general wreck 1 llenrxj I'l. i. 1 

Bome words there grew 'twixt Somerset — }i. ^ 
they sav,-my uncle grew so fast . . Uichard III._\\- ' 
■when niy oratory grew to an end — — in. 7 
grossly grew captive to his honey words — iv. 1 
embracement, as they grew together. Hp/in/ ;'///. 1. 1 

eiek suddenly, and grew so ill — i.v. 2 

Julius Ctsar grew fat v'Mx.Anlomj ^Cleopatra, 11. 6 

that grew the more bv reaping — v. 2 

absence, grew shameless desperate . . — v. .'> 
■which fear so grew in me, 1 hither fled. Pericles, i. 2 
the name of help grew odious to repeat — |. 4 

whereupon she grew roimd-womhed Lear,\. 1 

Bpeak, yet, how grew your (lunrrel? — ii. 2 

his grief grew puissant, and the strings . . — v. 3 

he grew unto his seat llamlel, iv. 7 

bv the roots, that grew upon my lips. . Olhrlln, 111. 3 
GR'tWST— grew'st unto the shores ..Cymbeline, 1. 4 

as when thou grew'st thyself — iv. 2 

G RE Y— eves are grey as glass . . Two Gen. of Ver. iv. 4 

black, grey, green, and white Merry Wives, v. 5 

two grey eyes, with lids to them.. T'lpeZ/J/i Niglii.X. 5 

my horse, grey Capilet — iii. 4 

with grey hairs, and bruise of many. iVtic/i Ado, v. I 
the drow"sy east with spots of grey . . — v. 3 
ploin-song cuckoo grey. .A/'d.A'.Drra»i, iii. 1 (song) 
if but once thou show me thy grey light — iii. 2 
■wasafriar of orders grey. Vamint' of AV.. iv. 1 (song) 

so sure OS this beard's grey Winter s Tale, 11. 3 

red spirits, and grey; mingle.. iv/ac6e"i, iv. 1 (song) 

that grey iniquity, that father \Uenryll'. ii. i 

in the grey vault of heaven 2 Henry I y. ii. 3 

sir Thomas Grev, knight of . . Henry V. ii. (chorus) 
Scroop, and Grey, in their dear care — ii. 2 
sir knight, Grev of Nortlnimberland — ii. 2 
by the name of Thomas Grey, knight — ii. 2 
these "rev locks, the pursuivants . . 1 Henry VI. ii, 5 
sir John &rey, was slain, his \<m([s.iHeuryVl. iii. 2 
your king married the lady Grey? .. — iii. 3 
Ibis new marriage with the ladv Grey? — iv. 1 
why the lady Grey should not become — iv. 1 
my lady Grey, his wife, Clarence . . Uichard III. i. 1 

you, and your husband Grey — i. 3 

revenged "on Rivers, Vaughan, Grey — i. 3 

and lord Grey, of j'ou, that all without — ii. 1 
and lord Grev, are sent to Pomfret. . — ii. 4 
falls it out with Rivers, Vaughan, Grey — iii. 2 
come, (Jrev, come, Vaughan, let us — iii. 3 

Vaughan, Grey, untimely smothered — iv. 4 
is the gentle Rivers, Vaunhan, Grey? — iv. 4 

Rivers, Grey, holy king Henry — v. 1 

upon Grev, ond let thy soxil despair! — y. 3 
yon grev lines, that fret the clouds. Juiiiis C<Bsar,'u. 1 

grey do" something mingle Antony SfCleo. iv. 8 

the morn is bright and grey. . Titus Andronicus, ii. 2 

at suit of his grey beard Lear, ij. 2 

spare my grey beard, you wagtail? — ii. 2 

pur! the cat 18 grey — iii. 6 

Thisbe, a grey eye or so, hut not. Romeo ^Juliet, Vi. 4 

yon grev is not the morning's — iii. 5 

that old" men have grey beards Hatnlei, ii. 2 

GREY-BEARD! thy love doth freeze. Tam.o/Sh. ii. 1 
we'll overreach the grey-lieard, Gremio — iii. 2 
what will you do, gowl grey-beard?. 1 Henry VI. iii. 2 
love, which grey-beards call divine. .3/f("nr!/''/. v. 6 

to tell grev-bcards the truth? lulius Ca-anr, ii. 2 

GREY-COATED gnat Romeo 4- Juliet, i. 4 

GREY-EYED— the grey-eved mom.. — ii. 3 

GREYHOUND— fallow greyhound.iVcrryJr/wi, i. 1 

asquick as the greyhound e mouth.. A/iic/i/ldo, v. 2 

ay, and Hector's a greyhound Lore's L. Lost. v. 2 

thy greyhoundsare as swift. 7'aini'ng-o/S/i. 2 (indue.) 

slipped" me like his greyhound — y. 2 

as noiinds. and greyhounds Macbeth, iii. 1 

this fawning greyh"ound then did IHenrylV. i. 3 

OS gently as a puppy greyhound iHenryiy. ii. 4 

stand like grevhounds in the slips . . Hi'nryV. iii. 1 
like a brace of greyhounds liaving. .ZlleiiryVI. ii. 5 
honour two brace of greyhounds. Timon of Athens, i.2 
a fawning greyhound in the leash ..Coriolnnus, i. fi 

mastiff, greyhound, mongrel grim Lear, iii. 6 

GRIEF— something stain'd with grief ..Tempest, i. 2 

when every grief is entertained — ii. I 

who hath cause to wet the grief on't.. — ii. 1 
let grief and sorrow still embrace .... — v. 1 

will kill that grief Tu-oGen. of Verona, iii. 2 

no grief did ever come so — iv. 3 

my grief, a lady's grief — iv. 3 

forget all former griefs — v. 4 

on a monument, smiling at gnef.Twelflh Sight, ii. 4 

go on mv master's griefs — iii. 4 

now hcgm with grief and shame. Mi!a«./<ir.V<?n». v. 1 

that know love's grief by his Much Ado, i. I 

every one can master grief — iii. 2 

being that I flow in grief — iv. I 

and uijon the grief of this, suddenly — iv. •^ 
thus to second grief against yourself — v. 1 
and such a grief for such, in every .. — v. 1 

natch grief with proverbs — v. 1 

to that grief which they themselves.. — v. 1 
mv griefs cry louder than advertisement — v. 1 
tliy glory through my grief. iorc'i /.. /,■«', iv. 3(ver.) 



[331 ] 



GRIEF— shall she know my griefs?.. Loi'<'» L.L. iv. 3 

that in love's grief desirest society ., — iv. 3 

where lies thy grief, O tell mo — iv. 3 

my griefs are double — v. 2 

best pierce the ear of grief — y. 2 

go: tliesc griefs and losses , , Merchant of Venice, iii. 3 

yonr wife too unkind a cause of grief — v. I 

to bear your griefs yourself As you Like it, i. 3 

mv sorrow aiid your grief were — iii. 6 

grief the enemy to the living {rep.) ..All's Ift-H, i. 1 

so iiiauv (inirks of iuv. nnd j:riel — iii. 2 

if thou eiii;nissvst ii'llllie griel'-^ are thine — iii. 2 

mv gl■^■ut^■^t grief, thuii^h little — iii. 4 

grief woulil have tears, and sorrow ., — iii. 1 

her nature became as a prey to her grief — iv. 3 
good-will effects Bianca's grief . . Tamingof Sh. i. 1 

not for your turn, the more my grief — ii. 1 
have that hunouralile itrief lodged. Wmto-'j Tad', ii. 1 

on her frights, mill ^niefs — ii. 2 

(to our^reat grief, we iironounce) .. — iii. 2 

as I weigh grief, which I would spare — iii. 2 

past help should he (last grief — iii. 2 

the king is full of grief — iv. 3 

to take off so muclT grief from you . . — y . 3 
to speak my griefs unspeakable . . Comedy ofF.rr. i. 1 

oh, grief hath changed me — v. 1 

after so long grief, such nativity ! — y. 1 

as we shall make our griefs Mnclje'h, i. 7 

what is the newest grief — iv. 3 

the grief, that does not speak — iv. 3 

to cure this deadly grief — iv. 3 

let grief convert to anger — .'.Y- ^ 

for grief is proud Ki'nffJohn, iii. 1 

grief, let kiiii^'s asscmljle; for my grief's — iii. 1 

will make my mother die with grief — iii. 3 

whatgrief sliould I ibrgetl — iii. 4 

but sensible of grief, nij' reasonable.. — iii. 4 

do glue tiiemselves in sociable grief. . — jji- ^ 

too lieinous a respect of grief — iii. 4 

of grief, as of your child. Grief fills., — iii. 4 

where lies your grief? — iv. 1 

the fire is dead with grief — iv. 1 

our griefs, and not our manners — iv. 3 

little reason in your grief — iv. 3 

hath been beforehand with our griefs — v. 7 
word more; grief boundeth where . . Richard 12. i. 2 

thy grief is but thy absence (!■<•/).) — i. 3 

but grief makes one hour ten — i. 3 

that I was a journeyman to grief? .. — i. 3 

counterfeit oppression of sucn grief .. — i. 4 

within me grief hath kept a tedious fast — ii. ' 

York is too far gone with grief — ii. 1 

■welcome such a guest as grief — ii. 2 

a grief hath twenty shadows ^rep.) .. — ii. 2 

finds shapes of grief, more than — ii. 2 

forefather grief; mine is not (,rep.) .. — ii. 2 

nothing lives, but crosses, care, and grief— ii. 2 

feel want, taste grief, need friends . . — iii- 2 

as great as is my grief, or lesser — iii. 3 

sorrow and grief of heart makes him — iii. 3 

no measure Keeps in grief — iii. 4 

or if of grief, being altogether had .. — iii. 4 

drinking my grieft, whilst you mount — iv. 1 

but still my griefs are mine — iv. 1 

very true, my grief lies all within .. — iv. 1 

merely shadows to the unseen grief. . — iv. I 

should hard-favoured grief be lodged — v. 1 

join not with grief, fair woman — v. 1 

quit their grief, tell thou the lamentable — v. 1 

there is such length in grief — v. 1 

the badges of his grief and patience . . — v. 2 
out of my grief and my impatience. .IHfii ?■!///■. i. 3 

a plagiie of all sighing and griefl — ii. 4 

to know the nature of your griefs. . . . — iv. 3 

he bids you name your griefs — iv. 3 

or take awaj' the grief of a wound? . . — v. 1 

swoln with some other ^rief IHenrylV. (indue.) 

weakened with grief, being now (rep.) — i. 1 

this present grief had wiped it — i. 1 

it hath its original from much grief. . — _ i. 2 

find our griefs heavier than our offences — iv. 1 

the summary of all our griefs — iv. I 

are wronged and would unfold our griefs — iv. 1 

to build agrief on: were you not .. .. — iv. 1 

to know your griefs; to tell you — iv. I 

parcels and particulars of our grief — iv. 2 

these griefs shall he with speed — w.i 

therefore my grief stretches itself — iv. 4 

ere you with grief had spnke — iv. 1 

firrn enough, since griefs are green . . — iv. 4 
that sits in heart grief and uneasiness. HcHn/T.ii. 2 

suffer'st more of mortal griefs — iv. 1 

shall change all griefs, and quarrels.. — v. 2 

overborne with burdening grief 1 Henry VI. ii. 5 

Kouen hanj;s her head for grief — iii. 2 

I foresee with grief the utter — v. 4 

and ruminate my grief. Ay, grief — — y. 5 

unload his grief, your grief (rep.) 2 Henry VI. i. 1 

for grief that they ai e past recovery — i. 1 

greatness of his place be grief to us .. — i. 1 

sorrow and grief have vanquished all — ii 1 

full of tears, my heart of grief — ii. 3 

gentle Nell ; forget this grief — ii. 4 

my heart is drowned with grief — iii. 1 

gone, that I may know my grief .,,. — iii. 2 

oft have I heard, that grief softens ,, — iv, 4 

I reuiemhcr it to my grief 2 Henry VI. i, 1 

and I, with f^rief and sorrow — i. 1 

and, when with grief he wept — ii. 1 

is to make less the depth of grief .... — ii. 1 

in this world, hut grief and woe?.. .. — ii. .'t 

and break o'erchargcd with grief — ii. .'> 

?Tief more than corhmon grief! — ii. .'1 

or grief can speak no more — iii. I 

queen Margaret, and tell thy grief .. — iii. 3 

I must confess, are full of grief — iv. 4 

hath allayed tlicirswellinggriefs.... — iv 8 

manv lengthened hours 01 grief ftichatd 111. i. 3 

a moiety of my grief [fo/. Kn/.-moon] — ii. 2 

I am the mother of these griefs — ii. * 



GRI 



GRIEF— to ourgriuf, us it is youn .Itichard III. iii. i 

a toy, which is 110 fj;riut' to give — iii. 1 

and let mv K'ii:*^ In^wn (in the upper — iv. 4 
or I with (inef aiKl extreme nf.'e bliiiU — iv. 4 

ofj-'riof iiiiikeH wild f^'rief tunie — iv. 4 

tlie Hiibjet-t's ^'rief cnnu-B through .. Hem y fill. i. 2 

nerked up in tt j^lifterinp grief — ii. 3 

Killing care, iind gricf'of heart.. ,. — iii. I (song) 
yoiirgriH'f wtnild leave your griefs .. — iii. 1 
what grief Iiiitli K't tlie jaundiec. '/Vm7Kf.5-Cre«. i. 3 

the grief is tine. full, perfect — iv. 4 

olhiynient could I give my grief — iv. 4 

no more my grief, in such — I v. 4 

I am eick of that grief ton Timon of Aihenty iii. 6 

present my honest grief unto Iiim.. .. — jv. 3 

poor steward wear a. truer grief — iv. 3 

to accej)t my griefj and. whilst this poor — iv. 3 
'twas time, and gnefn. that framed him — v. 2 
that, to case tlieih nf their griefs .... — v. 2 

when thy first griefs were but — v. 5 

you have received your griefs — v. 5 

thou althorredst in us our human griefs — v. 5 

griefl where hast thou led me?. . J«/miC<i'«ar, i. 3 

for redress of all tliesc griefs — i. 3 

acquainted witli your cause of grief. . — ii. 1 

what private griefs they have — iii. 2 

speak your griefs softly — iv. 2 

enlarge your griefs, and I will give.. — iv. 2 
when ^rief, and l>lood ill-tempered.. — iv. 3 

1 am sick of many griefs — iv. 3 

and grief, that young Octavius with — iv. 3 

iiohle vessel full of grief, that it — y. .'i 

grief is crowned witli consolation ../i7i/ony ^ Cleo. \. 2 
no further the griefs between ye .... — ii. 2 
being dried with grief, will break..., — iv. 9 
a grief tliat shoots my very heart .... — v. 2 

my supieme crown of griefl Cymbeline^ i. 7 

remembrance is^yet fresh in their griei — ii. 4 
let that grieve him, (some griefs are — iii. 2 
from proof as strong as my grief — iii. 4 (letter) 

I do note, that grief and patience — iv. 2 

let the stinking elder, grief, xmtwine — iv. 2 
jollity for apes, and grief for hoys .. — iv. 2 
great griefs, I see, medicine the less — iv. 2 

to mv grief, I am the heir of his — y. h 

not dissembled, s])eaks his griefs. . THusAndron. i. 2 
dissemble all your griefs and discontents — i. 2 

though grieved with killing grief. . .. — ii. 4 

my grief was at the height — iii. \ 

for, at^yonr grief, see, how my wretched, — jj'* ' 
thy griefs their snorts, thy resolution — iii. 1 
now no more will I control thy griefs — iii. 1 

in oblivion, and hateful griefs — jjj- * 

cannot passionate our tenfold grief.. — iji. 2 

grief has so wrought on him — iii. 2 

extremity of griefs woidd make — iv, 1 

trenches,' mode by grief and care .... — v. 2 
utter all our bitter grief, but floods . . — v. 3 
should associate friends in grief and woe — v. 3 

(the tomb where grief should sleep) Verkles, i. 2 

bear such griefs as you do lay — i.2 

relating tales of otlier's grieis — i. 4 

lord, even such our griefs — i. 4 

know, that our grieis are risen — ii. 4 

your griefs, for what? wrong not — ii. 4 

for a further grief, God give you joy!.. — ii. 5 
sustenance but to prorogue his grief . . — v. 1 
hut the main grief of air springs from — v. 1 

hath endured a grief might equal yours — v. 1 

thy gi-iefs might equal mine — v. I 

as full of grief as age Lrar, ii. 1 

the grief iiath crazed my wits — iii. 4 

■when grief hath mates — iii. 6 

the queen to any demonstration of grief? — iv. 3 

started to deal with grief alone — iv. 3 

m}' thoughts be severed from mv griefs.. — iv. 6 

{»assion, joy and grief, burst smilinglj' .. — v. 3 
lis grief grew puissant — v. 3 

grieis of mine own lie heavy linmeo Sr Juh'et, i. 1 

doth add more grief to too much — i. I 

one desperate grief cures witli onother's — i. 2 
already^ sick and pale with grief .... — ii. 2 
thy suit, and leave me to my grief .. — ii. 2 
these griefs, these woes, these sorrows — iii. 2 

it were a grief, so brief to part — iii. 3 

some grief shows much of love (rep.) — iii- 5 
that sees into the bottom of my grief ? — iii. 5 
griping grief tb.e heart doth wound — iv, 5 (song) 

with which grief, it is supposed — v. 3 

grief of my son's exile hath stopped — v. 3 

to remove that siege of grief fmni her — v. 3 
it us befitted to hear our hearts in grief. //am/e/, i. 2 
shows of grief that can denote nic truly.. — i. 2 
impious stubbornness, "tis unmanly grief — i, 2 
more grief to hide, than hnte to utter love — ii. I 
commencement of his grief sprung from — iii. 1 

entreat him to show his grief — iii. 1 

the violence of either grief or joy — iii. 2 

grief doth most lament; grief joys — iii. 2 

if you deny your griefs to your friend .. — iii. 2 

O! tlii^ is the poison of deep grief — iv. 5 

am most sensinly in grief for it — iv. 6 

I..acrtes, I muj-t commune with your grief — iv. 5 

whot is he. whose grief Ijeurs such — v. I 

the bravery of this grief doth put me into — v. 2 
my porticular grief is of so flood-gate .. Othello, i. 3 
remedies arc past, the griefs are ended .. — i. 3 
himself, thiit spend.-^ a bootless grief .... — i. 3 
to piiv griff, must nf poor patience borrow — 1. 3 
he hath left pnrt of lus grief withnic.... — iii. 3 

erewhilc nin<l with vour grief — iv, 3 

I'll kill my.elf for grief — v. 2 

pure grief shore his old thread in twain.. — v, 2 

GKIEF-SIIOT— friend, grief-shot ..ConVi//i»iM, v. I 

G!<IEVANCE-thv f^ncvance.Two Gen.qf I'eronn, i. 1 

such sweet complaining grievance .. — iii. 2 

I pity much your grievances — iv. 3 

I told him gently of our grievances, Wfrnrt/ ly. v. 2 

contains of general grievances 2Hen/i/!f\ iv. I 

of dainty and such picking gricvancCB — iv. \ 



GRI 



[ 332 ] 



GRO 



GivIK VANCK-tliese same gnevanceB.2 Ueni y I y. iv.2 

subjects are in great grievance Henry Fill. i. 2 

I'll know liis grievance Komeo ^ Jtdiel, i. 1 

or reason coldly of your grievances. . — iii. 1 
what restraint and grievance the law . . Othello, i. 2 

GRIEVE-he grieves my very. TwoGen.ofl'eTmm, iv. 2 

it grieves me m\icli more Twelfih Mg/il, iii. 4 

grieves me for the dcathofClaudio.il/ra. for ilea. ii. 1 

nor man, grieve at the mercy ' — ii. 2 

would it not grieve a woman Much Ado, ii. 1 

not suddenly, for it may grieve Kim.iler.ori'en. ii. 8 
grieve not that I am fallen to this .. — iv. 1 
sir, grieve not you; you are welcome — v. 1 
this IS it, Adam, that grieves me ..JsyouLike it, i. 1 
the melancholy Jaques grieves at that — ii. 1 
a moonish youth, grieve, be effeminate — iii. 2 
how it grieves me to see tliee wear . . — v. 2 
most cause to grieve it should be. . IVinter'sTale, ii. 1 

how will this grieve you ii. 1 

he shall not need to grieve at knowing — iv. 3 
no unkind mate to grieve thee. C(mierf!/o/Ej)-or,'!,ii. 1 

how it did grieve aiacbeth ! Macbeth, iii. 6 

show his eyes, and grieve his heart — iv. 1 

it grieves my soul King John, v. 2 

at something it grieves, more than. . li'ichard 11. ii. 2 

hath the notliing that I grieve ii. 2 

but I shall grieve you to report — ii. 2 

wlio, Douglas, grieves at heart 1 Hoin/IV. v. 4 

do not you grieve at this iHem'tjlV. v. 5 

1 grieve to hear what torments 1 Henri/ VI. i. 4 

nor grieve that Rouen is so recovered iii. 3 

should grieve thee more than streams — iii. 3 

it grieves his highness _ iv. 1 

wherefore grieve I at an hour's 'iHenryVI. iii. 2 

)t grieves my soul to leave thee — v. 2 

pr ythee grieve, to make me merry ..ZHenryVI. i- 4 

how it doth grieve me that thy ii. 2 

'twill grieve your grace, my sons _ iii.' 2 

content, to that which grieves my heart — iii. 2 

that grieves me when I see Richard III. ii. 2 

such news, my lord, as grieves me .. — ii. 4 

it grieves many: the gentleman HenryVIII. i. 2 

the cause he may a little grieve at .. — ii. 1 

would it not grieve an able man _ ii. 2 

who grieves much for your weakness — iv. 2 
I grieve at what I speak, and am right — v. 1 
It must grieve young Pyrrhus. . Troilus^ Cress, iii. 3 
doth that grieve thee? O withered .. — v. 2 
and grieve his spirit that dares not . . _ v. 2 
it grieves me, to see so many dip. Timon of Athens, i. 2 
wlien she does praise me, grieves m^.Coriolanus, i. 9 

we have. And grieve to hear it _ v 5 

shall it not grieve thee, dearer . . JuliusCresar, iii! 1 

let that grieve him, some griefs Cymtieline, iii. 2 

and I grieve myself, to thmk _ iii 4 

but we grieve at chances here — iv 3 

which more may grieve thee, as it doth — v' 5 
unless thou wouldst grieve quickly . . _ v 5 
and nothing grieves me heartily . . Titus Andron v 1 

princely chanty to grieve them Pericles i 2 

It shall no longer gneve, without reproof — 'ii! 4 
like he doth grieve my heart ..Romeo SfJuliet, iii. 5 
cannot but make the judicious grieve.. Hamie/ iii 2 

joy grieves, on slender accident _ iii 2 

as we deariy grieve for that which thou" _ iv' 3 

r R Y^vVn S"<=^,'=f 'Py husband Othello, iii! 3 

UKlJi VED— and tins grjeved count. . Much Ado, iv 1 

grieved I, I had but one? _ iv 1 

I have too grieved a heart .. Merchant of Venice ii" 7 
be not thou more grieved than I am. .4.; you hike \ 3 
ever gentleman thus grieved as I?. TamingofSh ii 1 
nor be not grieved; she is of good _ iv 5 

are not ^ou grieved, that Arthur . . King John, iii' 4 

my grieved friends! that we _ v2 

that doth vex my grieved soul Richard II. ( \ 

1 see thy grieved heart _ \ ^ 

notliing have, with nothing grieved!". — iv"l 
king, so grieved for subjects' woe? . .ZHenru VI. ii" 6 
grieved commons hardly conceive.. Henn/F/;/ i 2 
which so grieved him, that he ran mad — "ii " 2 
1 have heard, and grieved, how cursed _ iv" 3 
acquainted ray grfeved ear withal.^ni. * cieo. iii" 6 
though grieved with killing grief. Titus Andron. i 4 
alas, poor souls, it grieved my heart . . Pericles ii 1 

V R TP V rVS';'^'""^'""""'' '? ?'" sickness. . Hamlet, ii! 2 
UKl jL VING-a woman with grieving. Much Ado. iv 1 

and die with grieving Merchant of Venice ii 1 

so grieving, that he shuts.. IVinter'sTale, iv (chor ) 

IZ'T'l^fTh'^"^!"'^ pO-^"lony^Cleopalra, ii.'2 

rRrirvrMPr v'"^ ^■- S"«™?' sPeak. . Othello ii. 3 

rTSU;X™^r^I'Y-f;nevingly I tliink.HenryVl II. i. I 

GKIEVOUS.— a grievous labour.. 7V'oGen.o/Ter i 1 

stand under grievous im position. /l/eas./or'^l/eas' i 3 

acquitted of grievous penalties.. Mo-, of Venice iv 1 

a grievous faidt; say, woman. Comctiy '„/ £■„•„,.; v" 1 

old John of Gaunt is grievous sick ..Richard II i" 4 

the commons hath he pilled with grievous — ii 1 

and these grievous crimes, committed _ iv" ! 

my lord, he's grievous sick 1 Henr,/IV. iv" 1 

let grievous, ghastly, gaping wounds.2He„;v//;' ii 4 
girding with grievous siege, castles. . . . Hem:, V i" 2 
malice was a great and grievous sin.lHenry VI iii' 1 
torture hi.n with grievous lingeriii-.2H«.,-y VI. iii! 2 
suddenly a grievous sickness took Fiim — iii 2 
very grievous to be thouglit upon . . Iticliard III. i 1 
11 heaven have any grievous plague.. — ;' s 
I lay un to the grievous charge of . . . _ i 3 

blood shed for our grievous sins _ i' 4 

this most grievous guilty murder done! — i' 4 
Anne my wife is very grievous sick _ iv" •> 

a grievous burden was thy birth to me _ iv" 4 
LOo/. A)i(.j my most grievous curse — iv 4 

many grievous, I do say (rep.) .... Henn, VIII. v! I 

it ivas a grievous fault JuliusC^sar iii 2 

r R f rvAiV^c?!^' ""'■^'^'^ ""P'! sufferance . . O'hed. ii! 1 
l^KlEVOUbLY-goinggrievou6ly.7'«-£.Gfi!.r,rr iii •> 
and has been grievously peaten . . Merry Wives, iv." 4 
he beat me grievously, in the shape . _ v 1 
1 do suspect thee very grievously . . Kins John iv" ■? 
grievously hath Cajsar answered 'it./K(/KsC<rsar, iii •' 



H5ifeJrJ-JJ;l''^^~'''^'^' ■^'■y ^° grievously i'.CK/if Ho, v. I 
GBIE V bT— thou griev'st my galL.Loi'c'sL. Lost, v. 2 
GRIFFIN— dove pursues the griffin. W/(/.A'.'si)r. ii. 2 
a clip-winged griffin, andamoulten.lHe«rj//r. iii. I 
GRIFFITH-Griffith, sick to death. Henry VI 11. iv. 2 

didst thou not tell me, Griffith _ iv. 2 

pr'ythee, good Griffith, tell me how. . — iv. 2 
yet thus far, Griffith, give me leave. . — iv. 2 
yes, good Griffith; I were malicious else — iv. 2 
such an honest chronicler as Griffith — iv. 2 

good Griffith, cause the musicians .. iv.2 

and brought me garlands, Griffith .. — iv.2 

Griffith, farewell; nay. Patience — iv.2 

GRIM— look, so dead, so grim.. J/id. A'. 's Dream, iii. 2 

for her father is but grim Loire's L. Lost, ii. 1 

grim death, how foul and. . Taming of Sh. 1 (indue.) 
kinsman to grim and comfortless. Comedy o/Err. v. 1 

and the grim alarm, excite the Macbeth, v. 2 

wert grim, iigly, and slanderous KingJohn, iii. 1 

brother, sweet, to grim necessity .... Iliclianl II. v. I 

for his grim aspect, and large 1 Henry VI. ii. 3 

hemmed about with grim destruction — iv. 3 

sits, in grim majesty, to fright illenryVI. iii. 2 

that grim ICol. Xn(.-sourj ferryman. Richard III. i. 4 
but, with thy grim looks, and the . . Coriolanus, i. 4 

thou hast a gi'im appearance — iv. .'i 

as yon grimlooks do testify Pericles, i. (Gower) 

mongrel grim, hound, or spaniel JLenr, iii. 6 

ay, there, look grim as hell I Othello, iv. 2 

this act shows horrible and grim v. 2 

GRIfllE— in the grime of it . . Comedy of Errors, iii. 2 

my face I'll grime with filth Lear, ii. 3 

GRIM-LOOKED- 

grim-looked night! O night..Mid.N.'sDream, v. 1 
GRIMLY— the skies look grimly.. IVinter'sTale, iii. 3 

look grimly, and dare not speak.. 4H'oni/*C/eo. iv. 10 
GRIM-VISAGED— grim-visaged war..'ff/cA. ///. i. 1 

GRIN— come, grin on me KingJohn, iii. 4 

not regarded when they grin iHenryVI. iii. 1 

pangs of death do make him grin — iii. 3 

the senseless winds shalt grin in vain — iv. 1 

when a our doth grin, for one Z Henry VI. i. 4 

to grin like lions upon the pikes Cymbeline, v. 3 

GRIND— that they grind their joints . . Tempest, iv. I 

they to dust should grind it Coriolanus, iii. 2 

they'll grind the one the other..^n(oni/<5-aeo. Iii. 5 

1 will grind your bones to dust . . Titus Andron. v. 2 
let me go grind their bones to powder — v. 2 

GRINDING— the grinding {rcp.).Troilns ^ Cress, i. 1 

not to stay the grinding of the axe Hamlet, v. 2 

GRINDSTONE-Susan Grindstone. Komeo ^Jul. i. b 
SKINNING— grinning at his ^omp.Ridmrd 11. iii. 2 

I like not such grinning honour I Henry IV. v. 3 

r^K'JJ"T.''Y"Srinmng? [Kn^.-jeering] .... Hamlet, v. i 
GRli E-let vultures gripe thy guts. . Merry Wives, i. 3 

a barren sceptre in my gripe Macbeth, iii. 1 

doth gripe the hearer s wrist King John, iv. 2 

and gripe into your hands' Richard II. ii. 1 

can gripe the sacred handle — iii. 3 

to gripe the general sway into 1 Henn/IV. v. 1 

with a feeble gripe, says Henry V. iv. 6 

how inly sorrow gripes his soul iHenryVI. i. 4 

out of the gripes of cruel men Henry VIII. v. 2 

join gripes with hands made Cymbeliire, i. 7 

can gripe as hard as Cassibelan — iii. 1 

gripe not at earthly joys Pericles, i. 1 

,,5'ould he gripe, and wring my hand . . Othello, iii. 3 
GRIPED— to be griped by meaner . . Henry VIII. ii. 2 
*^gIPlNG-wheu griping grief./iom. <§- Jul. iv. .5 (song) 

GRIbE— no not a grise Tieetfth Night, iii. 1 

every grise of fortune Timon 'of Alliens, iv. 3 

,^ ^ri'i-''^.''^ ^ g"^*^' °^ s'^P '■ • • Otiiello, i. 3 

GRISLY— this grisly beast Mid. N.'sDream, v. 1 

giy grisly countenance made IHenryVI. i. 4 

GRISbEL— prove a second Grissel. Taming of i/i. ii. 1 

J^ IZZLE— hath sowed a srizzie.. Twelfth Night, v. 1 

GRIZZLED-send this grizzled head..4n(.<5-C/eo. iii. 11 

the grizzled north disgorgessuch.PeriWes,iii. (Gow.) 

o S'A ^,"4!^^ was grizzled ? Hamlet, i. 2 

GKUAN— thou didst vent thy groans . . Tempest, i ■> 
thy groans did make wolves howl . . _ i 2 
scorn is bought with groans. Two Gen. of Verona, i. 1 

with penitential groans _ i, 4 

sad sighs, deep groans _ iii! 1 

with groans that thunder love .... Twelfth Night i 6 
and hem, when he should groan ....il/«c/i Ado'v'. 1 

help us to sigh and groan _ v 3 (song) 

I would, you heard it groan ioi'e's L. Los;, ii 1 

sovereign of sighs and groans iii \ 

write,_sigh, pray, sue, and groan .... — iii! 1 

God give him grace to groan! _ iv. 3 

of sighs, of groans, of sorrow iv" 3 

or groan for Joan ? _ iv! 3 

the clamours of their own dear groans v" 2 

heart cool with mortifying groans. ;i/er.o/ fen I'ce i' 1 

heaved forth such groans As you Like it, ii" 1 

oiipressed me with a mother's groan . . All's Well i. 3 

made a groan of her last breath _ iv 3 

and cost me the dearest groans of _ iv" 5 

wliere sighs, and groans, and shrieks.. i>/ac6e(;,, iv! 3 
there tor welcome, but mv groans? . . Ricliar i.I.i 2 
tutiire ages groan for this foul act .. _ iv. 1 

I mine with groans. So longest way v 1 

twice for one step I'll groan _ v" I 

strive to kill it with a groan _ y' 1 

are clamorous groans, that strike upon — v! 5 

tears, and groans, show minutes, times v" 5 

blows, and groans applaud our sport. 1 Henrv7F. i! 3 

the pimng maidens' groans Henry V. ii. 4 

how dying Salisbury doth groan! IHenryVI. i 4 

and hear my deep-fet groans iHenruVI ii 4 

and, twixt each groan, say, who's .. — iii. 1 

or heart-offending groans _ \\\ •> 

sick with groans, look pale as primrose - iii! 2 
kill, as doth the mandrake's groan .. — iii 9 
groan like life and death's departing.SHenrur/. ii". 6 
might hear delivered with agroau _ v2 

save for a night of groansen(hired.K/V/„irrf ///. iv" 4 
make them one da\ groan fur't ..Henn/ VIII ii'i 
oh! groans out for ha!.. Tioilus fyCrcss. iii 1 (sou'") 



GROANS— yet give some groans. 7roiV«s<5-Cresj. v. 1) 

religion groans at it 7'mion of Alliens, iii. 2 

have I heard groan, and drop Coriolanus, iv 4 

%vith the easy groans of old women .. — v2 

I did hear hira groan JuliusCwsar, i. 2 

and dying men did groan — ii •> 

to groan and sweat under the business — iv" i" 
tearing groan did break the name. Ant. A-Cleo. iv.'l2 

where I did hear him groan Cymbeline v 3 

rather groan so in perpetuity — \' i 

girl, kill it with groans Titus Andronicus. iii! 2 

can you hear a good man groan iv 1 

but he made a groan at it _ iv 3 

such groans of roaring wind and rain. . . . Lear, iii! 2 
shall I groan, and tell thee? Groan?/<omeo*/i/;. i 1 

thy old groans ring yet _ jj 3 

unless the breath of heart-sick groans — iii' 3 

have not art to reckon my groans. Hamlet, ii. 2 (let.) 

the king sigh, but with a general groan — iii 3 

two or tliree groans [Coi. Kn^-groall] ..Othello, v." 1 

n ^;,°;'?r?,°J!;'=^P';°°' '""' ^ ''o Sr°^r\ wi thai — v. 2 

GROANED-under my burden gi-oaned.. Tempes/, i. 2 

had St thou groaned for him, as I . . Iticliard II v 2 

r ro'a^™V11'^ groaned for .Borneo ^Jut. i. 5 (cho.) 

GROANING-the groaning. Juliet, il/eas. /or il/eas. ii.2 

converse with groaning wretches.. loDe'st.ios( v 2 

and groaning every hour As youLike it, iii. 2 

gave tome many a groaning throe. Henry F/// ii 4 
groaning underneath this age's yoke. Jirf.Cffisar i 2 
carrion men, groaning for burial .... _ iii 1 
to appease their groaning shadows. Titus Andron i 2 
better now than gi-oaning for low&IRomeoSiJtiliet, ii" 4 

, • !5 A^'?i!J'^ '^°^' y°." * §roaniiig Hamlet, iii. 2 

(jKU A i —groats in miU-sixpences. . . Merry Wives i 1 

as fit as ten groats Ali'sWell 'ii' 2 

a half faced groat five hundred '. 'King John i 1 

IS ten groats too dear Richard II V h 

seven groats and twopence illenryiv i 2 

a groat to heal yqui- pate (rep.) HenryV.V. I 

I take thy groat, m earnest of revenge — v 1 
or any groat I hoarded to my use ..'IHenryVI. iii" 1 

n ^nM ""'^ sell with groats Coriolanus, iii. 2 

MsRJ^-^ry.?-" "°* ^"^' 1 *he groin?.. .2Henr)//;'. ii. 4 
GROOM- tis a groom, indeed {rep.). Tarn. ofSh iii •> 
vou 11 prove a jolly suriy groom .... _ iii ' ■; 
loggerheaded and unpolished grooms! — iv' 1 
and the surfeited grooms do mock .... Macbeth, ii' 2 
x?,'^"V,'"e sleepy grooms with blood _ ii 2 
1 11 gild the faces of the grooms withal — ii 2 

a poor groom of thy stable RiclmrdlL v! 5 

flouted thus by dunghill grooms? . . 1 Henry VI. i 3 
to thee, or to the meanest groom. . . .2Henri/ VI. ii 1 
not be shed by such a jaded groom . . -- iv 1 
uncovered to the vulgar groom ... _ iv' 1 

forsake this groom, the king is merciful _ iv' 2 

groom is for such payment Henry VIII v' 1 

among boys, grooms, and lackeys.... _ v' 2 

counsellor to try him, not as a groom — v' 2 

thou wert too base to be his groom. . Cymbeline, ii' 3 

1 should woo hard, but be your groom _ iii 6 

and you are gallant grooms . . TitusAndronicus, iv! 2 

prostitute me to the basest groom .. ..Pericles iv 6 

slave and sunipter to this detested groom. Lear, ii' 4 

r n^fiiS'i^^ and groom devesting them ..Othello, ii. 3 

J^SRSSSt"™ t'le daA groped I to find. . Hamlet, v. 2 

r §R?Hi9~^''°*'"'3 ^'^'' '™"*s . . Meas.for Meas. i. 2 

GRObb-this gross watery pumpion. Merru Wiues iii 3 

never saw him so gross in his jealousy — jii' 3 

to prevent sogross o'er-reaching _ v' 5 

I will waslLoff gross acquaintance. Twelfth Night, ii" 5 
with character too gross . . Measure for Measure, i 3 
than we do minister to our gross sel'ves? — ii 2 
1 11 speak more gross: yourhrotlier.. — ii' 4 

right, says she, a great gross one Much Ado. v! 1 

palpable gross play hath well. Mid. N 's Dream v 1 

upon this gross world's baser Love'sL.Los't i 1 

3'ou know how much the gross sum _ 'i'2 

provesdainty Bacchus gross in taste — iv' 3 
wits they have; ^ross, gross; fat, fat — v' 2 



wits they have; gross, gross; fat, fat — 

and we that sell by gross, the Lord doth — v 2 
raise up the gross of full three.. .UercA. of Venice i' 3 
It were too gross to rib her cerecloth — 'ii' 7 
which to term in gross, is an unlessoned — iii' 2 
he see, gross fools as he ... . .4s you Like it, ii. 5 (son'gl 
chosen out of the gross band of the . . — iv j 
now to all sense 'tis gross, you love ..All's Well, i 3 

pronounce thee a gross lout IVinter'sTale i ■' 

which was as gross as ever touched . . — 'ii' T 
a gross hag! and, lozel, thou art .... _ ii' •: 
a gross and foolish sire, blemished .. _ iii' 2 
tliough they come to him by the gross — iv' 3 
to my earthy gross conceit . . Comedy of Errors iii' 2 
gross rebellion, and detested treason. /i'/c/mri//. ii' 3 
whilst my gross flesh sinks downward _ v 5 
gross as amomitain, open, palpablcliTenrv/F. ii' 4 

a gross fat man. As fat as _ \\ a 

what IS the gi-oss sum that I iHenrnlV ii' 1 

so, like gross terms, the prince will . . _ 'iv' 4 

stands off as gross as black from Henrii F ii" 2 

free from gross passion, or of mirth. . — ' ii' 2 

but in gross brain little wots _ iv f 

Ogross and miserable ignorance! ..iHenryVI iv' 2 
of those gross taunts I often have . . Richard III i 3 
who IS so gross that cannot see . . _ i'i i ' k 

cannot make gross sins look ..Timon of Athens iii' ^ 
know his gross patchery, love him . . _ ' y' V 
forgetfulness, too general, gross. . . -_ v' ' 

breaths, rank of gross diet .. .4n(ony ,?■ C/eopa/ra, v! 2 

he flashes into one gross crime Lear i "! 

sliow scarce so gross as beetles " _ iv' « 

very gross kind of behaviour ..Ro'me'o'i-' Juliet, ii' 4 
m the gross and scope of mine opinion.. Haw w, i 1 
tnings rank, and gross in nature — i o 

examplesgrossasearth, exhort me.! _ iv' 4 
I say again, hath made a gross revolt . . Othello, i! 1 
If tis not gross in sense, that thou .... — i i 
tools as gross as Ignorance made drimk — iii' 3 
abuse their husbands in such gross kind? — iv' 3 
most heathenish, and most gross!.. _ v •' 

r' V;',S5i';7:"<'""P"''''^; S'-."ssc. Henry V. iii! I 

GKObbLD-giossed, the instruments. ..;)/ac6e/A. iii 1 



G IK) 

GROSSER— the grosser mimncrof..l.pi'<''«l..l.o»/, i. I 

now tomi'ii ofKrossi'r blixHl Hrnriil'. iii. 1 

lUoft.liUliti!,' 11 LTosser quality .... Ili'iirj//'///. i. i 

slu'phcnls i:\\\-:t -nisscr name llntnM, iv. 7 

to.'^tniMi iiiv t-inLili M grosser issues .. W/iW(o, iii. :t 

UHOSSl.V 'miv 'tis firosalv done ..Mernj II im, ii. i 
in tluit (liniiMision i;iossl.v oliid .. Tneljlh Ai(fA(, v. I 
yet gn>,»sly I'eurVt tliv lU iitli . . Meas.fov Meat. in. 1 
ehoiildslii)si.!;ros.ilv,botliintlie.... — v. I 

dotl\ grossly i''"*^' '' '"' Mfrchant o/l'enice, v. 1 

speak not .so tiryssl y ; von arc ftll .... — v- I 

see it sogrosslv shown in thy AW, «W(, i. 3 

connterleit thus grossly " itit ..ComrdynrRrrois.u.i 
ore leil so i^rosslv liv this im'(lilliiig..Ki)iB-Jo/m, ni. 1 

uml nil the rest.' s„Vr.. -sly U'll — iii- I 

greatness shmiM so t.r..sslv otter it .. — iv. a 
unil lleshiiukMs thee inu>t grossly .. I Hmri/Zr. iii. 3 
worlting so grossly in ii nntiinil cause. /!.■»> !/»'.u. •-' 
grossly grew captive to his lioney .Ilii-luiiU III. iv. 1 
most grossly, In- liis own . . .Iiilntnj^-Cleopa'ra, lii. H 

now east her oil', aiipears too grossly Lear. i. I 

took my fatlier gn>ssly, toll of hrcail . . //..'"/<", iii. ;t 
vou, the suiwrvisor, grossly gape on? . . ()//iW/.i, ui. :i 

tJ ROSSNESS-grossness of the loppeiy. Merry II 'rr.i.y.^i 
iniiKissible passages of crossness. ■/'"•<■//;/■ A'/i'/i/, iii. i 
I will purge thv niortrtl gn.ssncss . . .Ui.(..V. /Jr. in. I 
grossncss with fair ornauienf; ..Mer. n/ feiiia; |ii. '2 
with tlie grtissness of this age .... H,d,nr,l UI. in. 1 
whose grossncss little cliaiaoters .r™.'/H,t.SC,«s. i. 3 

G imUND— an acre of barren ground TcinpesI, i. 1 

the ground, indeed, is tawny — ii- j 

leiul oft' this ground — !]- ' 

cannot make him give ground — n- •- 

beat the ground for kissing — iv- 1 

if the ground heovereharged. 7VoGf)i.o/re)-on(i,i- I 

nloft, far from tlie ground — "i- ' 

built upon another man's ground.. A/crrylF/jici, n. 2 
tliat it is his ground of faith .... Twel/lh Night, ii- 3 

hit the ground you step on — in. I 

give ground, if yon see him furious . . — in- ■' 

on base and ground enough — v. 1 

know the grounds and autliors of it.. — v. 1 

to the ground, mistress Measure forMeamre,\. 2 

baring waste ground enough — ii. '- 

the wiekedest caitiff on the ground .. — v. 1 

runs close to the ground Mudi Ado, in. 1 

on the dank and dirty ground... »/i'd. iV. Dream, ii. 3 

on the ground', dead? or asleep? — ii. 3 

follow me then to plainer ground — — in. ^ 

on the ground sleep sound — m. '-' 

rock the ground whereon these sleepers — iv. 1 
with these mortals on the ground — — iv. 1 
between her father's ground and mine _— v. 1 
now for the ground which. /.one's L.Lost, i. 1 (letter) 

I do affect the very ground — . i- a 

kisses the base ground with obedient — iv- 3 

have found the ground of study's — iv- 3 

they are the ground, the books — iv. 3 

the "fairest goddess on the "round — v- 2 

tumble on the ground, witli such — y- 2 

till 1 have run some ground ..Merch. of Tenice, ii- '-' 

as farivs God lias any ground — }\.'i 

drops earliest to the ground, andso let me — )y_. 1 

it well becomes the ground As youLike it, iii. 2 

head on ground, witii cat-like watch — iv. 3 
in mv uncertain grounds to fail .... All's It'elJ, in. 1 

plod "I the cold ground upon — iii. 4 (.letter) 

I shall lose the grounds I work upon — iii. 7 
we will bestrew the ground. Taming of Shrew, 'i (iiid-) 

the ground of all accord — iii. 1 (gamut) 

mv ground to do 't is the obedience. ITinier's Tale, 1.2 
than I, mr lord, upon this ground .. — ii. 1 
shall lielp' to put him i' the ground .. — in. 3 
her flight across thy father's ground — iv. 3 

the groimd of mv defeatures .. Comedy of Errors, n. 1 

catch it ere it come to ground Macbeth, iii. -^ 

kiss the ground before young Malcolm's — y. 7 

scattereil on the bleeding ground King John, ii. 2 

lay this .Vngiers even w ith the ground — ii. 2 

dashed them to the ground — 11-2 

to run even, upon even ground — ii- -' 

tlie bosom of the ground, rush forth — iv. I 

good ground, be pitiful, and hurt me not — iv. 3 
measured backward their own ground — v. 5 
on some known ground of treacliery . Itichard II.i. 1 
or any other ground inhabitable .... — j. I 

then,"Englttnd's ground, farewell — _i. 3 

to touch a dust of England's ground? — ii. 3 
look not to the ground, ye favourites — iji. 2 

graved in the hollow ground — iii. 2 

save our deposed bodies to the ground? — iii. 2 

let lis sit upon the ground — iii- 2 

of English shall manure the ground — iv. 1 

will I rise up from the ground — v. 2 

till to the ground they grow — v. 3 

as if he disdained the ground — v. r> 

bright metal on a sullen ground \HenryIV. i. 2 

futiiom line coiilil never touch the ground — i. 3 

eight yards of uneven ground — ii. 2 

lay thine car close to the ground .... — ii. 2 

l)egan to give me ground — ii. -l 

breathes upon the ground — iv. 1 

rise from the ground like feathered.. — iv. 1 

and bleeding uiion the ground — v. 4 

any vantage of ground to get up iHenrylV. li. 1 

by this heavenly ground I tread on.. — ii. I 
get ground and vantage of the king — ii. 3 

not And a ground to r(;ot upon — iii. 1 

touch ground, and dash themselves.. — iv. 1 
ond, by the ground they hide, I judge — jv. 1 

an inch of any ground to build — iv. 1 

like a whale on ground — iv. 1 

who on the French ground played Henry I', i. 2 

we shall your tawny ground with .. — iii. li 
who hath measured tlie ground? ... — lii. 7 
trod upon Got's ground and his earth — iv. 7 

S itched in the ground cjmfiisedly Henry y I. i. 1 
iggcd stones out of the ground — i. -1 

on o«y plot of ground in Christendom — ii. 4 
his BaplcuB branches to the ground — ii. .') 



[ 3;3:J 



GROUND-bulwarks to the ground.. i//'ii>'|/ I'l. iii.ii 

one glance unto the ground •'Henry f I. i. 2 

raised from depth of under ground .. — i- 2 

spirits fi-om under groiiiKl.ilciniinding — ii. I 

thv hcn.l with s,,now totlii- ^Tniiiid! — ii. 3 

oiianv gniuiiil llmt I luii nilcr of.... — iii. 2 
bv the ground that 1 uni hanished from — iii. 2 

sfiull sweep the grounil — iv. 1 

to come to mil my gnmiuls, climbing — iv. 10 
may that ground g;ipc, and swallow. .Si/eiiri/r/. i. I 



i;ht i 



1 Ihc 



id> 
,-lnscd np. 



•d... 



ii. I 



giving' no L'ronnd nnto the house of. . — ii. « 
dishonour laid iiiu on the ground.... — iii- 3 
root was fixed in virtue's ground .. .. — iii. 3 
blond of Lancaster sink in the ground? — v. 6 
gather the ground of your ill-will . . liichard III. i. 3 
for on that ground I'll make a holy — iii. 7 

let us survey the vantage of the ground — v. 3 
these dewy U'ars were from the ground — v. 3 
looks upon the ground, then, lays. //en ry *'///. iii. 2 
lily shall she ]iass to the ground .... — v. 4 
blood paint the L;ninn,l, gnlcs.. Timon of Athens, iv. 3 
they hate upon no hctttr a '-'loniid.. Con'ofniius, ii. 2 
oni'airground, Icouldlicat forty.... — iii. I 

while 1 remain above the ''round — iv. 1 

like to a howl upon a subtle ground. . — V. 2 
the ground shrinks before his treading — v. 4 
stands on such slippery ground ..JuliusCresar, iii. 1 

off a little from this ground — iv- 2 

'twixt Philippi and this ground — iv. 3 

he, that lies upon the ground ? — v. 3 

thou wast here above tlie ground. .4n/onj/ /yCleo. i. b 

?ave you some ground Crjinbeline, i. 3 
ong a fool you were upon the ground — i. 3 
should get ground of your fair mistress — i- -^ 

wliiles yet the dew's on ground — i. 6 

on the ground, my s|K'Cc1i of insultment — iii- 5 

havcniiKk- the ground mv bed — iii- 6 

then on -o.»l -nmnd we fear — Iv. 2 

sing hiin. to the ground, as once our. . — iv. 2 

the ground th-at gave them first — iv. 2 

we have the advantage of the ground ~ v. 2 

what fairies haunt this ground? — v. 4 

ne'erlived 'twixt sky and ground.... — v 5 
tinit this ground, and smoke the temple — v. 5 
full well I wot the ground of all-.r/du Andron. ii. 1 
know this discord's ground, tl\e music — ii. I 
hope to pluck a dainty doe to ground — ii. 2 
make a chequered shadow on tiie ground — ii. 3 

I have ground the axe myself Pericles, i. 2 

the ground's the lowest, and we are.... — i. 4 
or know what ground's made happy .. — ii. 4 
a thornier piece of ground than she is — iv. 6 

upon what ground is his distemperature? — y. 1 

methinks, the ground is even Lear, iv. 6 

raistempered weapons to the ground. Romeo SfJul. i. 1 
stakes me to the ground, I cannot move — _ i. 4 
and fall upon the ground, as I do now — iii. 3 
there on the ground, with his own tears — iii. 3 
lifts me above the ground with cheerful — v. 1 
thine ear close to the hollow ground — v. 3 
the ground is bloody: search about.. — v. 3 
tlie ground whereon these woes (re/).) — v. 3 
friends to this ground- And liegemen ..Hamlet, i. 1 
it waves you to a more removed ground — i. 4 
hie et ubiiiue? then we'll shift our ground — i. 5 
I'll have grounds more relative than this — ii. 2 

salt wash, and TcUus' orbed ground — iii. 2 

we go to gain a little patch ot ground.... — iv. 4 
they should lay him i'the cold ground .. — iv. .'i 

how the knave jowls it to the ground — v. I 

what ground? 'Why, here in Denmark .. — v. 1 
she should in ground unsanctifled have.. — v. 1 

till our ground, singeing his pate — v. 1 

on other grounds^Christian and heathen. Oi/ielio.i. 1 
but that I did proceed upon just grounds — v. 2 
GROUNDKD upon no other argument.. As youLike,i. 2 
sickness, and no grounded malice . . liichard III. i. 3 
speak on: how grounded he his title. Henry Till. i. 2 
GHOUNDLING-ears of the groundlings. HamW, iii. 2 

GRCVE— thy broom groves Tempest, iv. 1 

brooks, standing lakes, and groves — y. 1 

never meet in gi'ove, or green .. .l/i't/. N.'s Dream, n. 1 

thou shalt not from this grove — ii. 2 

ere he do leave this grove — ii. 2 

and seek throufrh this grove — .ii. 2 

now about this haunted grove? — iii. 2 

like a forester, the groves may tread — ill. 2 
for, besides the groves, the skies .... — iv. I 
ever Dian so become a grove. . Taming ofSlirew, ii. 1 
see it coming; I say, a moving grove. . Macbeth, v. b 
amongst a grove, the very straigutest.l Henry ly. i. 1 

breaks a stick of G losters grove 2Henryyi.i. 2 

on the east siilc of the grove (rep.) .. — .ii. 1 

a grove ot^■^ |)rr - 1 1 ■ I ! — iii. 2 

lamatttiMl lii press gi'ovc..Con'o(anMs,i. 10 

abandoned li : h i incs .. Tiius /lndrn»i'ci«, ii. 3 

but like to -i"M.-, I nil,- topped I'erictrs,i. 4 

underneath the grove of svcamore. . Romeo SfJnl. i. 1 

GUOVEI.— and grovel on thy face. . . .iHenry yi. i. 2 

prostrate, and grovel on the earth. . . . — i. 4 

GKO'VELING-hnsbaud groveling lies./vi'n^./oA)i,ii. 2 

GROW— bring thee where crabs grow .. Tempest, \\. 2 

to make this contract grow — iv. 1 

his boily uglier grows — iv. 1 

more it grows, and fawneth. TiroGen. of yerona, iv. 2 
if matters grow to your likings. . . . Merry lyioes, i. I 

will grow more contempt — i. I 

there thy fixed foot shall grow ..Twelfth Night, j. 4 

besides, you grow dishonest — i. -'> 

how your fooling grows old — i. 5 

even when they to iwrfection grow .. — ii. 4 
1 would not hiive it grow on my chin — iii. I 

the man grows mad; away — iii. 4 

BO quickly grow, that thine own .... — y. 1 
aa tlios© tliat feed grow fnll.iWertieure/or Measure,], h 
and, I trust, it will grow to a most .. — iii. I 
to weed my vice, and let his growl .. — ''.*.- '^ 
grow this to what adverse issue it cun.MuchAdo, ii. 2 



GRO 



G1U)W— now men grow liard-luaited. i/io-i .Ido, v. 1 
tlie virgin thorn, grows, iivcs. .Mi'l. A'.'« Dream, i. I 
so will I grow, so live, so die, my lord — i. 1 

and so grow to anoint — i. 2 

and grow hig-lu-llied, with the wanton — ii. 2 

and the nodding violet grows — ii- 2 

lieavier grow for debt that bankrupt — iii- 2 
those kissing cherries, tempting grow! — iii. 2 

grows to something (if great — v. 1 

your light grows dark by losing.. /,ow'» L. Lost, i. 1 

and still lets grow the weeding — i. I 

each thing, that in season grows .... — i. I 

a man of great spiritsgrows melancholy? — i. 2 

my spirit grows heavy in love — i. 2 

wits do witlu.'r as they grow — ii- I 

glory grows guilty ot detested crimes — iv. 1 

your lijis grow foul — iv. 1 

(and if yougrow so nice) mcthcglin — v. 2 

before your liorus do grow — v. 2 

it grows dark, he may stumble — y. 2 

you grow exceeding strange. A/erc/irtH^ of yenice, i. 1 

I'll grow a talker for this .gear — i. I 

l>hiloso])hcr when he grows old — i. 2 

will turn chiihtian; he grows kind .. — i. :i 

Kdinctliing smack, something grow to — ii. 2 
that Uolibin's tail grows backward .. — ii. 2 

my creditors grow cruel — iii. 2 (letter I 

if we grow all to he pork -caters — iii. -'> 

I shall grow jealous of you shortly .. — iii..') 
and discourse grow commendable in — iii. .'i 
of my father grows strong in me . . As you Like it, i. 1 

begin you to grow upon me? — i. I 

thus men may grow wiser every day! — i. 2 
and mine; but it grows something stale — ii. 4 
if he, compact of jars, grow musical.. — ii. 7 
opinion that grows rank in them .... — ii. 7 

to grow there, and to bear AlVtlVell, i. 2 

I grow to you, and our parting is ... . — ii. I 

we please to have it grow — ii. 3 

you do so grow in my rc(|uital — v. I 

he grows impatient Taming of Shrew, 1 (indue.) 

otherwise would grow into extremes — I (indue.) 
no profit grows, wdiere no pleasure is — i. I 
home, w here small experience grows — i. 2 
whence grows this insolence? Bianca — ii. I 
though little fire grows great with little — ii. 1 

you grow too forward, sir — iii. I 

now should this grow? lyinler^sTale, i. 2 

bids the other grow, faster than thought — iv. 3 
that grows bald by nature .... Comerfi/"/ /Jnorj, ii. 2 
shall love, in building, grow so ruinate? — iii. 2 
knowing how the debt grows, I will — iv. 4 

say, how grows it due? — iv. 4 

grain willgrow, and which will not ..Macbeth, i. 3 

there if I grow, the harvest is — i. 4 

he grows worse and worse — iii. 4 

with this, there grows, in my most — iv. 3 

sticks deeper; grows withjnore pernicious — iv. 3 
indirection thereby grows ilirect. . . . KingJohn, iii. 1 

this day grows wondrous hot — iii. 2 

grow gieat by your example — v. 1 

my life ; both grow in one Richard II. i. I 

our security, grows strong and gi-eat — iii. 2 

that hath some hope to grow — iii. 2 

where kings grow base, to come — iii. 3 

the plants thou graft'st, may never grow — iii I ' 

my knees grow to the earth — v. 3 

tin to the ground they gro*' — v. 3 

sprinkle me, to make me grow — v. 6 

oneoftliem is fat, and grows old ..\Henry W. ii. 4 

the faster it grows, yet youth — ii. 4 

they grow like Hydra's heads — v. 4 

if [do grow great, I'll grow less .... — v. 4 

1 will sooner nave a beard grow iHenryiy. i. 2 

I laj' aside that that grows to me! . . — i. 2 

our present musters grow upon the file — i. 3 
that it may grow and sproxit as high — ii. 3 

this will grow to a brawl aiion — ii. 4 

it grows late, we'll to bed — ii. 1 

what rank diseases grow, and with what — iii. I 
of that seed, grow to a greater falseness — iii. I 

grow till you come unto it — iii. 2 

grow stronger for the breaking — iv. 1 

tlie strawberry grows underneath Htnryl'. i- I 

if you grow foul with me, Pistol .... — ii. I 
that grows not in a fair consent .... — ii. 2 
in a garden where leeks did grow ... . — iv. 7 
in their natures, grow to wildness . . — v. 2 
but grow, like savages, as soldiers. ... — v. 2 

a curled pate will grow bald — v. 2 

the matter grows to compromise .... 1 Henry I'l. v. 4 

now you grow too hot iHenry yi. i. I 

the winds grow hi"h — ii. I 

betbre the wound do grow incurable -- iii. 1 

would never let grass grow — iii. 2 

the stronger grows our foe SHenryl'I. iii. 3 

when wc grow stronper, then we'll .. — iv. 7 
wh.\' grow the hranelies, when the. .Richard III. it. 2 
young consin'i' it is good to grow .... — ii. 4 
now I did grow more than my brother — ii. 4 
grow apace; and since, methinks (rep.) — ii. 4 

Buckingham grows circumspect — iv. 2 

and their power grows strong — iv. 4 

for it grows again fresher than e'cr.Heiiry/'///. ii. 1 
mv soul grows sad with troubles .... — iii. I 
tliev that my trust must grow to ... . — iii. I 
felt the flatteries that grow upon iti — iii. 1 

grow from the king's acquaintance.. — iii. 1 

and grow as terrible as storms — iii. I 

mine e.ves grow dim; farewell — iv. 2 

so I grow stronger, you more — v. 2 

they grow still too, from all parts.... — v. 3 

good grows with her — v. 4 

ond like a vine grow to him — v. 4 

disasters grow In the veins .. Troilusfy Cressida, i. 3 

grows to an envious fever — i. 3 

grows dainty of his worth — i 3 

how doth pride ^row? I know not .. — ii. 3 
and I'll grow friend with danger .... — iv. I 
let grow thy sinews till their — v. J 



GROW— grows into an iUopinion.r»oyVusL5Ci«s. v. 4 

it wears, sir, as it grows Timon of Athens^ i. 1 

as it grows again toward eartli — ii. 2 

as Tiinon grows, liis liate may grow — iv. 1 

wiiich grows liere ill my close — v. 2 

when steel grows soft Coriolanus, i. 9 

actions wonM grow wondroxis sinjzlc ■ — ii. I 
a purposed thing, and grows by plot — iii. 1 

i' the war do grow together — iii. 2 

shall grow dear friends — iv. 4 

as his kind, grow mischievous JuliusCfPsnr^W. 1 

O, I grow faint: nin, Lucius — ii. 4 

■when Marcus Brutus grows so covetmis — iv. .1 
make his eyes grow in my hrow .. Antony ^-Cteo. i. 5 
nor curstness grow to the matter .. ., — ii. 2 
•wash my brain, and it grows fouler — ii. 7 

but his whole action grows not — iii. 7 

■when we in our viciousness grow hard — iii. 1 1 
grace grow where those drops fall ! . . — i v. 2 
the loathness to depart would grow. . Cyutbeline^ i. 2 
grow patience! and let the stinking — iv. 2 

where (thank the gods!) they "row .. — iv. 2 
valour, that wildly grows in them .. — iv. 2 
stock, and freshly grow (?pp. v. 5) — v. 4 (scroll) 
here grow no damned grudges.. TilusAndronicus, i. 2 

ay, boy, grow; ye so brave? — ii. 1 

the waxing tide grow wave by wave — iii. 1 
what being more known grows worse.. . Pericles, i. 1 
grows elder now, and cares it be not — i. 2 

which fence the roots they grow by . . — i. 2 

but grow faster than their years — i. 2 

shall your thoughts grow on.... — iv. 4 (Gower) 
here comes that which grows to the stalk — iv. 6 

I grow; I prosper; now, gods X.ca?-, i. 2 

his knights grow riotous — i. 3 

what grows of it, no matter — i. 3 

but now grow fearful, by what yourself — i. 4 

fortxme may grow out at heels — ii. 2 

the king grows mad; I'll tell thee — iii. 4 

all the idle weeds that grow in our — iv. 4 

your other senses grow imperfect — iv. 6 

this sickness grows upon me — v. 3 

from whence nis sorrows grow ..Romeo ^- Juliet, i. 1 
nay, bigger; women gi-ow by men . . — i. 3 
make haste, for it grows very late . . — iii. 3 

more light and light it grows — iii. 5 

imweeded garden, that grows to seed . . Hamlet, i. 2 
does not gi-ow alone in thews, and bulk — i. 3 
of the mind and soul grows wide withal — i. 3 

my sinews, grow not instant old — i.5 

how comes it, do they grow rusty? — ii. 2 

they should grow themselves to common — Ii. 2 
fears gi*ow great, great love grows there — iii. 2 
spiritsgrowdull,andfainIwouldbeguile — iii. 2 

ay, sir, but, while the grass grows — iii. 2 

as doth hourly grow out of his lunes — iii. 3 

there is a willow grows ascaunt the brook — iv. 7 

does by their own insinuation grow — v. 2 

heads do grow beneath their shoulders . . Othello, i. 3 

even as our days do gi'ow! — ii. 1 

shall grow stronger than it was l^efore .. — ii. 3 
other things grow fair against the sun . . — ii. 3 
and the ni»ht grows to waste: about it . . — iv. 2 
almost to the sense, and he grows angry — v. I 
and sweet revenge grows harsh — v. 2 

GROWETH-fine musician groweth. Tain, of Sh. iii. ) 

GROWING— his ambition growing Tempest, i. 2 

with clustering bunchft growing — iv. 1 (song) 
great a favour growing proud ..TvoGen.of Ver. ii. 4 
growing ruinous, the building fall .. — v. 4 
things growing are not ripe until . . Mid. N. Dr. ii. 3 
my scene such growing . . H'inters Tale, iv. (chorus) 

yet your maidenheads growing — iv. 3 

growing to me by Antipholus . . Comedy of Err. iv. 1 
labour to make thee full of growing . . Macbetli, i. 4 
done so to great and growing va&M.. Richard II. iii. 4 

to ripe his growing fortimes iHenrylV. iv. 1 

siLkness growing upon our soldiers . . Henry V. iii. 3 

were growing time once ripened 1 Henry Vr. ii. 4 

bathed thy growing with our hetxted.S Henry VI. ii. 2 

contend witn growing light — ii. 5 

long a growing, and so lei.surely ..Richard III. ii. 4 

the mind growing once corrupt Henry Fill. i. 2 

still growing in a majesty and pomp — ii. 3 
and ever shall be growing, till death — iii. 2 
growingfeatlierspluckedfromCa3sar's.J«<. C«sar,i.l 
a great way growing on the south .. _ ii. 1 
shakes all our buds from growing . . Cymbeline, i. 4 
now is growing upon thy shoulders. . — iv. 1 
convey this growing image . . Titus .indronicus, v. 1 
for goodness, growing to a plurisy Hamlet, iv. 7 

GROWN— was grown into a hoop? Tempest, i. 2 

and words are grown so false Twelfth Night, iii. 1 

grown feared and tedious., ^luasure. for Measure, ii. 4 
why are you grown so rude?..il/iVi.iv.'s Dj-fom, iii. 2 

and are you groH-n so high in his — iii. 2 

master is grown quarrelsome .. Taming of Shrew, i. 2 
'tis safer to avoid what's grown .. Winter'sTale, i. 2 
of Perdita,, now grown in grace .. — iv. (chorus) 
grown into an unspeakable estate . . — iv. 1 
is not your father grown incapable . . — iv. 3 

there the grown serpent lies Macbeth, iii. 4 

are grown somewhat light Richard II. i. 4 

the king's grown bankrupt — ii. 1 

eleven buckram men grown out of. .1 Finny IK ii. 4 

army is grown weak and faint 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

this brawl to-day gi-own to this faction — ii. 4 
dissension, grown betwixt the peers — iii. 1 

such as were grown to credit by ... . — iv. 1 
your priesthood grown peremptory?.2Henr!/ VI. ii. 1 
ny devilish policy art thou grown great — iv. 1 

is the man grown mad? — v. 1 

the world is grown so bad Richard III. i. 3 

I hope, he is much grown since — ii. 4 

their diseases are grown so ca.tchhTg. Henry VIII. i. 3 
glad, your grace is grown so pleasant — i. 4 

though he be grown so desperate — iii. 1 

Ajax is grown self-willed Troitus S Cressida, i. 3 

truce is rusty grown ' — i. 3 

cliildren, grown too headstrong for . . — iii. 2 



GROWN— and man nish grown . . Troilus <§■ Cress . i i ! . 3 

he is grown a very laud-fish — iii. 3 

is grown too proud to be so valiant . . Coriolanus, i. 1 
O.he is grown most kind of late .... — iv. 6 
this Marcius is grown from man .... — v. 4 

that he is grown so great? Julius Ccesar, i. 2 

what a blunt fellow is this grown to be? — i. 2 

yet prodigious grown, and tearful — i. 3 

for he is superstitious grown of late.. — ii. 1 
grown to strength, are newly gro^vn .Ant.ffCleo. \. 3 
and quietness, grown sick of rest .... — i. 3 

Lepidus was grown too cruel — iii. 6 

grown the mortal bugs o' the field . . Cymbeline, v. 3 
are you so desperate grown . . Titus Andronicus, ii. 1 

and a wench full grown Pericles, iv. (Gower) 

for wise men are grow^n foppish .... Lear, i. 4 (song) 

blood, my lord, is grown so vile — iii. 4 

the room is grown too hot Romeo ^Juliet, i. 5 

my true love is grown to such excess — ii. 6 

till strange love, grown bold — iii. 2 

had grown by what it fed on Hamlet, i. 2 

but tnat the world's grown honest — ii. 2 

diseases, desperate grown, by desperate.. — iv. 3 
the age is grown so picked, that the toe.. — v. 1 
GROWTH -more of their growth. . Merry Wives, iv. 4 
gain nothing under him but growth. .4s j/owLi7,-ej7,i. 1 
of excellent growth and presence .... — i. 2 

let me stay the growth of his — iii. 2 

leave the growth untried .. tviiiter's Tale, iv. (chor.) 
my growth would approve the truth..2HrnrylF. i. 2 

whose want gives growth to Henry V. v. 2 

overta'en liim in his growth Richard III. ii. 4 

to touch his growth, nearer than .... — ii. 4 
that idle weeds are fast in growth. ... — iii. 1 

whose growth may damage me — iv. 2 

errant from his course of growth. Troilus ^ Cress, i. 3 

I cannot give it vital growth again Ot/iello, v. 2 

GRUB— a grub, and a butterfly Coriolanus, v. 4 

the joiner squirrel, or old svub.. . Romeo 4' Juliet, i. 4 

to grubs and eyeless sculls? — v. 3 

GRTJBBED-wish it grubbed up now. Hertry VIII. v. ! 

GRUDGE — served without or grudge . . Tempest, i. 2 

cancel all grudge, repeal . . Two Gen. of Verona, v. 4 

feed fat tlie ancient grudge . . Merclianl of Venice, i. 3 

that grudge one thought against . . 1 Henry VI. iii. 1 

your private grudge, my lord — iv. 1 

let former grudges pass 3 Henry VI. iii. 3 

if ever any grud^re were lodged Ridiard III. ii. 1 

there is some gi'udge between them.Jw^ CfPsar, iv, 3 
here grow no damned grnd^QS. Titus Andronicus, i. 2 
I wot the ground of all tliis grudge . . — ii. 1 

to grudge my pleasures, to cut off Lear, ii. 4 

from ancient grudge break to. /Borneo Sf Juliet, (prol.) 

GRUDGED-grudged us contribution. /Mi.Cw.sai', iv. 3 

GRUDCJING-meat without grudging.il/McA.J';o,iii. 4 

how will their grudging stomachs. . 1 Henry VI. iv. 1 

soul is purged from grudging Xvi.'K... Richard III. ii. 1 

GRUEL-make the gruel thick and slab, Macbeth, i v. I 

GRUMBLE— do you grumble? T'ammg- of Shrew, iv. 1 

that dost grumble there i' the straw? .... Lear, iii. 4 

GRUMBLEST— thou grumblest.. Troilus 4- Cress, ii. 1 

GRUMBLING— or grumblings Tempest, i. 2 

a grumbling groom, and that .... Taming ofSh. iii. 2 
Buckingham, and grumbling Yot]^.. .2Henry VI. i. 3 

that, with his grumbling voice SHemyVI. i. 4 

GRUMIO— here, sirrah Grumio. Taming of Shrew, i. 2 
my old friend Grumio! and my good — i. 2 

rise, Grumio, rise; we will compound — i. 2 
then had not Grumio come bv the . . — i. 2 

patience; I am Grumio's pledge • — i. 2 

pleasant servant Grumio: and tell me — i. 2 

peace Grumio, 'tis the rival — i. 2 

peace, sirrah. Grumio, mum ! — i. 2 

Grumio, my horses. Ay, sir, they. ... — iii. 2 

Grumio, draw forth thy weapon — iii. 2 

master and his wife coming, Grumio? — iv. 
I pr'ythee, good Grumio, tell me, liow — iv. 
and therefore, good Grumio, the news? — iv. 
let's ha't, good Grumio. Lend thine ear — iv. 
Grumio. How now, Grumio? (rep.') — iv. 

good Grumio, fetch it me — iv. 3 

or else you get no beef of Grumio — iv. 3 

Grumio gave order how it should be done — iv. 3 

God-a-mercy, Grumio! then he shall — iv. 3 

sirrah, Grumio, go to your mistress .. — v. 2 

GRUND— aile ligge i' the grund for It.. Henry V. iii. 2 

GRUNT— and grunt, and tout. .Mid. N. Dream, iii. 1 

to grunt and sweat under a weary life. Hamlet, iii. 1 

GUALLIA-I say Guallia and Gaul. Merry Wives, iii. 1 

GUviLTIER-narae is, Gualtier (rep.).2HenryVl. iv.l 

GUALTREE— 'tis Gualtree forest ..2He7wyIV. iv. 1 

GUARD— will guard your person Tempest, ii. 1 

best stand upon our guard — ii. 1 

whose wraths to guard you from — iii. 3 

he's out of his guard already .... Twelfth Night, i. 5 

best have guard about you — iii. 4 

betake you to your guard — iii. 4 

stands at a guard with envy .... Meas.for Meas. i. 4 

and cover in princely guards I — iii. 1 

the guards are but slightly basted. . , . Much Ado, i. 1 
were her eunuch and her guard. . Love^sL. Lost, iii. 1 
O rhymes are guards on wanton .... — iv. 3 

left in the fearful guard of Merch. of Venice, i, 3 

and keeps her guard in honestest AlVs Well, iii. 5 

from those that had the guard of. Comedy of Err. v. 1 
fear notliing ; guard with halberds . . — v. I 
heaven guard my mother's honour . . King John, i. 1 
to guard a title that was rich before . . — iv. 2 
pluck a flower, guard it, I pray .... Richard II. iii. 2 
for heaven still guards the right .... — iii. 2 

to velvet guards, and Sunday I Henry IV. iii. 1 

thou art a guard to wanton for 2HenryIV. i. 1 

some guard these traitors to — iv. 2 

and see you guard him sxire — iv. 3 

here it sits, which heaven shall guard — iv. 4 
immortally, long guard it yours! .... — iv. 4 
that guards the peace and safety .... — v. 2 
the heavens thee guard and keep .... — v. 5 

guard your sacred throne , Henry V. i. 2 

but a weak and sickly guard — iii. 6 



GUARD— I stay but for my guard .... Henry V. iv. 2 

for there is none to guard it — iv. 4 

I will be your guard. What she says.l Henry VI. i. 2 

Gloster! guard thy head — i. 3 

wherefore a guard of chosen shot I had — i. 4 
knowledge at the court of guard .... — ii. I 

Joan was his defensive guard — ii. 1 

the duke, and guard him sure 2 Henry VI. iii. 1 

to guard the chicken from a hungi-y — iii. 1 

that they will guard you, whe'r you — iii. 2 

wounds where it should guard — v. 2 

attended by a simple guard iHennj VI. iv. 2 

may beat down Edward's guard — iv. 2 

wherefore else guard we his royal — iv. 3 

and see, where stand his guarcl — iv. 3 

betrayed by falsehood of his guard . . — iv. 4 

but attended with weak guard — iv. 6 

what means this armed guard Richard III. i. 1 

and our innocence defend and guard xis — iii. 5 

bid my guard watch; leave me — v. 3 

good angels guard thy battle! — v. 3 

good angels guard thee from the boar's — v. 3 

let some o' the guard be ready Henry VIII. v. 2 

to guard a thing not ours TroilusSf Cressida, ii. 2 

AcTiilles be thy guard, I'll cut — iv. 4 

henceforth guard thee well — iv. 5 

commands the guard to tend on you — v. 1 
and all offences, a guard of patience.. — v. 2 
Ajax, your guard, stays to conduct . . — v. 2 
now to guarcl sure their master. Timon of Athens, iii. 3 

let us alone to guard Corioli Coriolanus, i. 2 

upon my brother's guard, even there — i. 10 
let a guard attend us through the city — iii. 3 

you guard like men; 'tis well — v. 2 

and Titinixis guard our door Julius Ccrsar, iv. 2 

anger made good guard for li^olf. Antony ^Cleo. iv. \ 

the messenger came on my guard — iv. 6 

we must return to the court of guard — iv. y 

the guard! ho! O despatch me — iv. 12 

call my guard, I pr'ythee (rep.) — iv. 12 

his guard have brought him thither.. — iv. 13 

fuard her till Csesar come — v. 2 
'11 take her to my guard — v. 2 

destruction which I 11 guard them from — v. 2 
of the night, guard me, beseech ye\..Cymbelirie, ii. 2 
and she should from encounter guard — ii. 5 

where is the emperor's guard? Tilus Andron. i. 2 

his greatness was no guard to bar Pericles, ii. 4 

hath set guard to take my brother hear, ii. 1 

no place, that guard, and most unusual — ii. 3 
good guard until their greater pleasures — v. 3 
to some i-etention and appointed guard. . — v. 3 

have you had quiet guard? Hamlet, i. 1 

with your wings, you heavenly guards! — iii. 4 

let them guard the door; what is — iv. 5 

had neither motion, guard, nor eye — iv. 7 

xrith no worse nor better gxiard Othello, i. 1 

if you please to get good guard — i. 1 

qxxench the guards of the ever-fixed pole — ii. 1 
great Jove, Othello guard, and swell his — ii. 1 

watches on the court of guard — ii. 1 

look you to the guard to-night — ii. 3 

and on the court and gxiard of safety! .. — ii. 3 

come, guard the door withoxit — T. 2 

GUARDACJE— run from her guardage .. — i. 2 

GUARD ANT-angry guardant stood. I Henry VI. i v. 7 

shall perceive, that a Jack guardant. Coriolanus, v. 2 

GUARDED— guarded with fragments. A/»(c/i.4Jo, i. 1 

a livery more guarded than hie. . Mer.of Venice, ii. 2 

so strongly guarded: cousin King John, ill. 3 

by bloody youth, gxiarded with Ta%e.2Henry I V. iv. 1 
still, guarded with grandsires .. Henry V. iii. (cho.) 
weakly guarded where the breach . . 1 Henry VI. ii. 1 
see them guarded, and safely brought — v. 1 
motley coat, guarded with yellow He?iji/ VIII. (prol.) 

60, let the ports be guarded Coriolanus, i. 7 

so slackly guarded!^ and the search. . Cymbeline, i. I 
the lane is guarded; nothing roots us — v. 2 

guarded, to know your pleasure Hamlel, iv. 3 

GUARDIAN-uncle and her guardian. Jl/i(cA.4(/o, ii. 3 

the guardian of their bones Macbeth, ii. 4 

hath made me guardian to this boj. .KingJohn, ii. 1 

niy sweet guardian ! Hark ! . . Troilus ^'Cressida, v. 2 

guardian! why Greek! Pho,phoI.... _ — v. 2 

made you my guardians, my depositaries. Lear, ii. 4 

GUD-it'sall be very gud,gud'feith ()fp.)Hs?iryr. iii. 2 

aile do gxid service, or aile ligge i'the — iii. 2 

GUD-DAY— gud-day, captain Fluellen — iii. 2 

GUDGEON— this fool's gudgeon. jVerc/i. of Venice, i. 1 

GUERDON-death in guerdon. il/ucA/ldo, v. 3 (scroll.) 

guerdon [iv7i^.-gardon] (rf'p.) Love^sL. Lost, iii. 1 

sweet guerdon! [ftii.-gardon] (it;>.) — iii. I 

GUERDONED— you well guerdoned..2Henn//'/. i. 4 

guerdoned at the last with shamed. .3 Henry VI. iii. 3 

GUERRA-to fortuna della guerra. Love's L. Lost, v, 2 

GrUESS- 1 guess the sequel. . TuoGen. of Verona,ii. 1 

I guess not Measure for Measure, iv. 4 

we may guess by this what you Much Ado, i. 1 

I guess, their purpose is, to parte.. iotie'sL.ios?, v. 2 
the near guess of my memory. il/e/-c/ian/ of Vcnice,\. 3 
partly guess: for I have loved (rep,). .4s you Lil<e,i\. 4 
but, as I guess, by the stern brow .... — iv. 3 

that square our gxiess by shows All's Well, ii. I 

for I can guess, tlxat, by thy honest aid — v. 3 
or your thoughts can guess . . Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 
inc'idency thou dost guess of harm. Winter's Tale, i. 2 
which I do guess, you do not purpose — _iv. 3 
I guess, it stood in her clxin . . Comedy of Errors, iii. 2 

humph ! I guess at it Macbeth, iv. 3 

of Berkley, as I guess Richard II. ii. 3 

my good lord, I guess their tenor . . 1 Henry IV. iv. 4 

might create a perfect guess iHenrylV. iii. 1 

witli a ready guess, declare Henry V. i. 1 

better far, I guess, that we do 1 Henry VI. ii. 1 

I am ignorant, and cannot guess .... — ii. .'> 
as near as thou canst guess them . .ZHenry VI. iv. 1 
guess thou the rest; king Edward's.. — iv. 4 
and, by thy guess, hoxv nigh is Clarence — v. 1 
and, as I guess, to make a bloody. ... — v. 8 
you cannot guess who caused yo\a. Richard III. ii. 2 



GUE 

GUKfiS— guess tlmt he doth nlm ..llichnrd III. til. 2 
and, as Inness, npoii the like devotion — iv. 1 
but by guess. Well, as you Riiess? .. _ iv. 4 
cuunot guess. Unless tor that (rr/i.).. — iv. 4 
great sport together, as you uucss?. . Uriiry rill. i. 1 

you may guess quiekly nhiit ij. 1 

now, by tliy looks I guess thy message — v. 1 

we might guess, they relieved ue Coriolnnut, 1. 1 

as I guess, Mareius, their bunds i' the i. 6 

guess, hut by my entertainment with — v. 2 
give guess how near to day Jitliiu CiPiar, u. I 

fuess at her years, I pr'ytliee. Aniony^- Cleopiilra,i\i. 3 
hough you can guess what temiwrance — iii. 1 1 
no guess in knowledge whieh way ..Cymhelinr.i. 1 
thereby may give a likely guess.". TilusAndron. ii. 4 
canst thou not guess wherefore she . . — iv. 1 

nor can I guess, unless some tit iv. 1 

liere is the guess of their true strength . . Lrnr, v. I 
how many, as you guess? Of thirty 8ail..O/Af/(o, i. 3 

lercnaiue.ani vieious in mv guess 

B.rrrr.w.2 
...AU'tWeU,\n. 1 

^,,„ „ . - - SHfnrijVI.'w.b 

G IT Esbhh— guesses in the devil's teeth. . O'hello, iii. 4 
GlIESStNGLY-letterguessingly set down. i,c«r, iii. 7 
G V i:ST— now, my young guest 1 . Two Gen. nf Ver. i v. S 

pardon guest justice Merry H'ives, ii. 3 

but first, master guest _ ii. 3 

I shall procure-a you de good guest. . — ii. 3 
I have turned away ray other guests — iv. 3 
not yield to be your house's guest. . Love's L. Lost, v. 2 
who is thy new master's guest...l/er<-A.o/r™icf, ii. 3 
a fi>rward guest within your house. Taming 0/ iVi. i. 2 



[ 335 ] 



GYV 



GirrOIN(«— into your guiding power.. /(«'»»'(.«. ii. 3 
BCiid her_a better guiding spirit!.. Ifinler'' Tale, ii. 3 



to fail us ot'ti'ii u^ I guessed.. 
I guessed, beli. 



and bid the guests; I will be sure 

or my guest? by your dread verily. ii'inter'sTale, i. 2 

my kingly guest unclasped ray |)raetice — iii. 2 

your guests are coming: lift up your iv. 3 

see. your guests approach _ iv. 3 

tittle-tultliii-' bof.ire all our guests?.. — iv. 3 
a guest tlial ho^t becomes the table .. — iv. 3 
weleoMK' tu their sliipsvrecked guests .Com. of Err. i. 1 

host, iind ninre sparing guest — iii. 1 

guct of summer, the temple haunting. Jl/actrt^i, i. 6 

we are your guest to-night _ i s 

hcrc'sour chief guest. If he had — iii. 1 

jovial 'moiig your guests to-night .. _ iii. 2 

such a guest as grief (rrp.) liichard II. ii. 2 

triumph is become an alehouse guest? — v. 1 

look to the guests witliin \ Henry I r. ii. 4 

to thy servants, cherish thy guests . . _ iii. 3 

(its a dull tighter, and a keen guest .. iv. 2 

take heed what"guests you receive ..2HenryIK ii. 4 

in ilarfleur will we be vour guest We/n 1/ r. iii. 3 

unbidden guests are often welcome. . 1 Heyir'i/ VI. ii. 2 

your lordship is a guest too Henry VIII. i. 3 

and there ye shall De my guests .... iv 1 

his parting guest by the'hand.. rroiVi/s^CrMS. iii. 3 

but I appear not like a guest Corhlanus, iv. 5 

what a strange guest he has here — iv. 5 

better, he became her guest. .Iji/oni/cj-acopaira.ii 2 

make yourself my guest ii. 2 

and let the qiieen know of our guests — iv. 8 

you are my guest, Laviuia Tilus.lndronims, i. 2 

by me so used a guest is, not an hour . . Pericles, i. 2 

you aremy gue-ts (;ep.) _ ];. 3 

consider you are my guests Lear, iii. 7 

what guests were in lier eyes iv. 3 

I have invited many a guest Romeo &■ Juliet, i. 2 

madam, the guests are come i. 3 

it fits, when such a villain is a guest — i. 6 
make a mutiny among my guests 1 .. _ 1.5 
so many guests invite as here are writ iv 2 

G r EST-cYvALIE^' '•""''' ' ' "'""^"' ""' ' ^'°"'^^ 
„ "}• 'MJ'S'itj '".V guest-caralier? . . Mern/ Wives, ii. 1 
li 1 h> 1 - VVIbE-guest-wise, sojourned. MiiZ.jV. Dr. iii.2 

f^rrii ,"^ " region, in Guiana Merry Wives, I. 3 

G L I IJU,— some heavenly power guide us. Tempest, v 1 
aspire to guide the heavenlv car. r,™ Gen.o/Ter.iii.l 

lest the devil that guides him Merry Wives iii 5 

guide him to thy husband's cudgel . . — iv! 2 

and the devil guide his cudgel — iv 2 

to guide our measure round. y 5 

heavens themselves to guide the state — v 5 
alrection that now guides me most. Meas.jorMeas. ii.4 
if my instructions mav be vour guide — iv 2 
youth mounts, and fofly guides. . At you Like it, iii'. 4 
a guiile, a goddess, and a sovereign .... All's Well, i I 

that doth guide his valour to act Macbeth, iii' 1 

discomfort guides my tongue liichard II. Mi 

your wisdom be your guide 'IHenryir.u 3 

my stny my guide, and lantern . . . .2 Henry VI. ii 3 

ondgood fortune guide theel Richard III. \v 1 

who did guide, I mean, who set ... . Henry VI I L i 1 
by reason guide his execution. Troilus f^ Cressida, i. 3 
in all fair measure, fairly guide them! — iii 1 

till judgement guide his bounty _ iv* .5 

here comes himself to guide you! .... v 1 

if souls guide vows v'^ 

give them guide to us Timon orA'heni. \. 1 

g.iide thou the sword JuliiitCmsar v. 3 

stirs, that were my former guides..4/i/. .^-C/eo. iii 1 1 
guide, if thou canst, this after me.TitusAndron. iv 1 

heaven guide thy pen to print _ iv'i 

you'd guide me to your sovereign's .... Pericles, ii'. 1 

come; and ./Esculapius guide us].,.. iii •* 

became his guide, led him I ear v' 3 

come, unsavoury guide ! Romeo 4- Juliei', v' 3 

n IVwW.'i?' l*!;',''' my safer guides to rule.O(/i?Ho, ii. 3 

QUIDKD— guided by her foot .... Lore' • L. Lost i 2 

have been guided by thee hiUiertcl Hfnryr/. iii 3 

as guided by your own true Corintanui, ii' 3 

a child that guided dotords Cymbeline, i I 

^^ to be guided by others' ex|ierieneC8.. — i' .', 

jUII)ER_our guider, come Corintanui i 7 

jUIDEKIUS— father called Ouidcrius ..Cumd. iii' 3 

as yours, is true Ouiderius v 5 

Guiderius had upon his neck a mole — v' h 



II offl.'e, guiding men? .. Troilus ^f- Cressida, i. 3 
GtriEN'NMO-diiienne. ('li,inip,n-ne..W/r,,ry;7!i. 1 



god i 

iriE 
guii.1)i:xntici;,\-,i 



(illilde 



.Instth. 



Till 



iiks, (iiiihk-nster 



:l, (iuilde 



il.lonste 
ster 



— ii. 2 



sternl friends bnth 
ensterul bring in niv 
iitz and (niildonstern 



so (i 



"utoo.... — ii.2 

— iv.l 

lord _ iv. 3 

h.dd — iv. U (let.) 
tz go to't — V. 2 
Hi>seniManl/, and (; iiildensH-i-ri nredead — v. 2 

GUlLl)llALI.-li,«ardsGuil(lliull.H,c/iari////. iii..i 
for the news that the (iuildiniM .affords _ iii. s 

GUll.E— false dissembling guile?.... I ;/^7ir(/r/. iv. 1 

treacherous, and full of guile Richard III. ii. 1 

bv thv guile betrayed to death I y. 3 

GUIIvEl)— isbut the gulled shore. Mer. ofVrnire, iii. 2 

GUILEl'UL— by guileful fair words..! V/e»r!//7. i. 1 
thv brethren to that guileful hole. 7V(u.</(m/(o;i. v. 1 

GUlI..I'"ORD-Guilfords are in arm3.«;c/iarrf ///. iv. 4 

with sir Ilcnry Guilford Henry VIII. i. 3 

you are young, sir Harry Guilford . . — i. 4 

GlTII/r— IS so possessed with guilt Tempest, i. 2 

their great guilt like poison — iii. 3 

shame and guilt confounds me. Two Gen. nf Ver. v. 4 

a murderous guilt shows not Tirelfih Kii;hl, iii. 1 

to the guilt, or the ])urgation. . . . Winter's Tale, iii. 2 
who bear the guilt of our CTeat quell?.. ;i/arirt/i, i. 7 

for it must seem their guilt ii.2 

althou^'h apparent guilt be seen .... Richard II. 
my guilt be on my head 



I'. 1 



OUII/rY-unlesB I find hin „ ,„ „ 

entreaty shall not make you guifty.3//enryr;. iii. 1 

ofi' with his guilty head v. 5 

always haunts the i.-uilty mind _ vie 

most grievous guilty iiinrciir done!.«iWiard ///. i. 4 
how that the guilty kincliud of tliequcen _ ii. | 

wtuild I be guilty of so deep a sin — iii. 1 

within the guilty closure ol thy walls — iii 3 
that ever yet this land was guilty of — iv. 3 

[CW.] this guilty homicide v 2 

and, with guilty fear, let fall thv lanecl — v. 3 
bloody and guilty, guiltily awake! .. — « •> 
crying all, guilty! guilty! 1 shall despair - 



...HenryVIll. ii. I 



the guilt of conscience take thou — v. 6 

double gild his treble guilt ■IHenrt/ IV. iv. 4 

guilt indeed! confirmed //<!<oi/;'. ii. (chorus) 

the guilt of premeditated and contrived — iv.l 

your guilt is great 2HenryVI. ii. 3 

death, we do perceive his guilt — ii. 3 

store of treasons to augment my guilt — iii. 1 

his guilt should be but idly posted over iii. 1 

that the guilt of murder bucklers thee iii. 2 

that laid their guilt upon Richard III. i. 2 

his apparent ojieii guilt omitted ..,. iii. .i 

lieaviness and gui It within ray bosom. Cymlieline, v. 2 
sneak a word, the guilt is plain . . TilusAndron. ii. 4 
the old man hath found their guilt .. — iv. 2 

to betray this guilt of ours? — iv. 2 

close i)ent-up guilts, rive your Lear, iii. 2 

oceultedguiltdonot itself unkennel ..Hamlet, iii. 2 
m.v stronger guilt defeats my strong .... — iii. 3 
so full of artless iealousy is guilt — iv. .^ 

GUILTIAN— Guiltian, Cosmo All's Welt, iv. 3 

GXJILTrER— guiltier than liim..Areas. ftir Meas. ii. I 

1 should be guiltier than my guiltiness — v. I 
GUILTILY— guilty, guiltily awake. liichard III. v. 3 
GUILTINESS— guiltiness of my mind..)/crr.v W. v. h 

if it confess a natural guiltiness. /Uras. /or Meas. ii.2 
I should be guiltier than my guiltiness — v. 1 
her blush is guiltiness, not modesty.. AfKfA.lc/o, iv. I 

full of dear guiltiness Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

die in terror of thy guiltiness! Richard III. v. 3 

guiltiness will speak, though tongues ..Otliello,v. 1 

fear, since guiltiness I know not — v. 2 

GUILTr,ESS— generous, guiltless. . Twelfth \iglit, i. .'j 
as guiltless labour when it Vies.. Meas. for Meas. iv. 2 
lie not guiltless here under some . . . . /i/itc/i .-(do, iv. 1 
I am but as a guiltless messenger. /Is you Like it, iv. 3 
guiltless drops are every one a woe .... Henni F. i. 2 
all to make away my guiltless \it'e..2Henryl'l. iii. I 
by shameful murder of a guiltless king — iv.l 
are free from guiltless blood-slieddiug — iv. 7 
guilt upon my guiltless shoulders . . Richard III. i. 2 

spare my guiltless wife, and my poor — i. 4 
because I \vill be guiltess of the meaning — i. 4 

our guiltless blood to drink — iii. 3 

then my guiltless blood must cry ..HenryVIll. ii. I 

if the duke be guiltless, 'tis full — ii. 1 

my lord, I am guiltless, as I am ignorant.. Lror, i. 4 

1 am guiltless of your father's death ..Hamlet, iv. ."i 

ensteeped to clog the guiltless keel Othello, ii. 1 

even thus all guiltless meet reproach .... — iv. 1 
a guiltless death I die. O, who hath done — . v. 2 

GUILTY— most guilty diligence, .l/ras. for Meas. iv. 1 
not guilty of Lysander's YAooi. Mid. N. Dream, 'ii. 2 
world wasguilty of such a ballad, tone's L. Losl.i. 2 

flory grows guiltyofdetestedcrimes — iv.l 
heard your guilty rhymes iv. 3 

guilty, my lord, guilty I I confess — iv. 3 

your gentleness wasguilty of it v. 2 

no bed shall e'er be guilty. . Merchant of Venice, iii. 2 
wherein I confess me much guilty. .4ji/ouLi*ei7,i. 2 
e'er thine own tongue was guilty of. . All's Well, iv. 1 
because he's guilty, and he is not guilty — v. 3 
boldly, not guilty; the imposition. Winter's Tale, i. 2 

speak for her, is afar off guilty — ii. 1 

nor guilty of, if any be, the trespass — ii.2 

he is not guilty of her coining hither — ii. 3 
to say, not guilty; mine integrity .. — iii.2 
accident is guilty to wlmt we wildly do — iv. 3 
myself be guilty toself-wrong.Coinciii/o/firrors.iii. 2 

whilst upon me the guilt.y doors .... iv. 4 

be guilty of the stealing that sweet. . King John, iv. 3 

if guilty dread hath left thee so Richard II. i. 1 

the clogging burden of a guilty soul i. 3 

his hands were guitly of no ii. 1 

through every jfuilty'liole; then murder — iii.2 
Aumerle is guilty of my true apiieal — iv. 1 

this blood off from my guilty hand .. v. 6 

or misprision, is guilty of tliis fault..! Henry IV. i. 3 

I'll be no longer guilty of this ii.4 

or, guilty in defence Henry V. iii. 3 

king guilty of their damnation (ri'p.) — iv.l 

yet lives guilty in thy blood? \ Henry VI. ii. 4 

and shall my youth be guilty of such — iv. 5 
occuse me? wherein am I iiuWiyh.'i Henry VI. iii. I 

if he he guilty, as 'tis published iii.2 

OS guilty of auke Humphrey's timeless — iii. 2 



is he found guilty? yes, truly. 

he pleaded still, not guilty ... . 

have I'liiiiid liim guilty of high treason — ii. 1 

dare not make inysell so guilty — ii. | 

bliisli, and cry guilty, cardinal — iii.2 

IS guilty ofa several bastardy Julius Cmsar, ii. 1 

murderers in their guilty caves ..TilusAndron. v. 2 

that receives your guilty blood _ v. 2 

we make guilty of our disasters, the sun . . Lear. i. 2 
damned guilty deeds to sinners' Romeo i^J\Uiet,i\\. 2 
hour is guilty of this lamentable chance! — v. 3 

like a guilty thing u|)on a fearful Hamlet, \. 1 

birth, wherein they are not guilty — i. 4 

you breathe of, guilty, be assured — ii. 1 

make mad the guilty, and appal the free — ii.2 

that guilty creatures, sitting at a play .. ii. 2 

he, that is not guilty of his own death .. v.! 

Gtril.TY-LIKh— away so guilty-like.. 0(/ieHo, iii. 3 
GUlNEA-HKN-the love Ola guinea-hen — i. 3 
GUI.XEVi'.K-wlien (jueen Guinevcr./.ore'.L./,. iv. 1 
GCIISC'lIAUD-sir Guischard iiauiihiu. Henry V. iv. 8 

GUISE— this is her very guise Macbeth, v. 1 

meet with this time's guise Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

to shame the guise o' the world .... Cymbeline, v. I 

GULES— the ground, gules, gules.. Titnon ofAlh. iv. 3 

IS he total gules; horridly tricked .... Hnm(f(, ii. 2 

GULF- water in the breaking guW.Comedy of lirr. ii. 2 

and gulf, of the ravined salt sea Macbeth, iv. 1 

as waters to the sucking of a gulf Henry V. ii. 4 

thou art so near the gulf iv. 3 

whose envious gulf ifid swallow iHenryVI. v. G 

shouldered in the swallowing gulf.«ie/iord/;/. iii. 7 
that only like a gulf it did remain . . Coriolanus, i. I 
follow thine enemy in a fierv gulf .. — iii. 2 
like a gulf, doth draw whaf's near it . . Handel, iii. 3 
me in steep-down gulfs of liquid fire . . Olltello, v. 2 
GULL— gull him into a nay-word. Twelfth Night, ii. 3 
yon gull Malvolio is turned heathen — iii. 2 

a thin-faced knave, a gull? y. 1 

most notonous geek, and gull y. 1 

I should think this a gull Much Ado,'n. 3 

ungentle gull, the cuckoo's bird I Henry I V. v. I 

why, 'tis a gull, a fool, a rogue Henry V. iii. 6 

I do beweep to many simple gulls ..Richard III. i. 3 
Timon will be left a naked gull.. Timon of Alh. ii. 1 

O gull! O dolt! as ignorant as dirt! (iihello, v. 2 

GULL-CATCHEK-noblegull-eatclier.7Ke//(AAMi.5 
GULLED— that hath gulled thee thus.. H.«r;/r. ii. 2 

G (JM- from his boneless gums Macbeth, i. 7 

the gum down-roping from their Henn/ V. iv. 2 

our poesy is as a gum Timon of Athens, i. I 

thick amber, and jilum-tree gum Hamlet, ii. 2 

Arabian trees their medicinal gum Othello, v. 2 

GUMMED— like a gummed velvet ..\HennilV. ii. 2 
GUN-knife, gun, or need of tiny engine. Tempest, ii. 1 

cawing at a gun's report .Mid.N.'s Dream, iii. 2 

slow w-liich is fired from a gun?. . Love'sL. Lost, iii. 1 

of guns, and drums, and wounds \HenryIV. i. 3 

and, but for these vile guns 1.3 

perilous shot out of an elder-gun Henry V. iv. 1 

or like an overchaiged gun, TeK0i\.:2Henry VI. iii. 2 
fiom the deadly level ol agun..ftom(;o<5-./(((ic<, iii. 3 
GUNNER gunner, and his mate. Tempest, ii. 2 (song) 
nimble gunner with linstock.. Hcjuv''. iii. (chorus) 
GUNPOVVDER-gunpowder Percy. . 1 Henry I r. v. 4 
as aconitum, or rush gunpowder ..'IHenrylV. iv. 4 

with choler,hotas giinjiowder Henry V. iv. 7 

GUNSTONE-his balls to cunstones .. — \2 

GURNET— I am a soutLd gurnet . . I Henry IV. iv. 2 

GURNEY— James (itiniev. wilt thou.A'in^ /o/in, i. 1 

GUST— allay the gust he luUh in.. Twelfth Kighl, i. 3 

fretted with the gusts of heaven. <U.r. of Vtnice, iv. I 

extreme gusts will blow out.. Taming of Shrew, ii. I 

far gone, when I shall gust it last. /rin(er'j7a/c, i. 2 

as rigour of temiiestuous gusts .... 1 Henry VI. v. 5 

cursed the gentle gusts 2 Henry VI. iii. 2 

filled with a fretting gust SHenryVI. ii. 5 

alwoys by the greater gust — iii. i 

grant, is sin's extremest gust . . rimon of Athens, iii. 5 
y interims, and conveying gusts . . C'omo/<i;iu«, i. 6 
winds and high temiiestuous gusts. 7'i/in,4n,(ro7i. v. 3 
GUSTY-upou a raw and gustv day.Julius Ca-sar, i. 2 
GUT— let vultures gri|ie thy guts! . . Merry Wives, i. 3 

as sure as his guts are made ii. 1 

that sheep's guts should hale souls ..Much Ado, ii. 3 

why, thou clay-brained gutsi \HenryIV. ii. 4 

you carried your guts away — ii.4 

that stuffed cloak nag of guts — ii.4 

how would thy guts fall about — iii. 3 

all filled up with guts, and midriff.. — iii. 3 

I would prick your guts a little Henry V.W. 1 

and his guts in his head Troilus ^Cressida, ii. I 

lug the guts into the neighbour room.. Hamlet, iii. 4 

a progress through the giits of o beggar — iv. 3 

GUTS-GRIPINli, ruptures .. Troilus & Cressida, v. 1 

GUTTERED-the guttered rocks Othello, ii. 1 

GUY— Sampson, nor sir Guy, nor ..Henry VIII. v. 3 
GU YNES— 'twixt Giiyncs and Arde 



iUYSORS-Pttris, Guysors, Poictiers..! Henry VI. i. 1 
i YVE— you from your gyves . . Meas. for Meat. iv. 2 

as if they had gyves on 1 Henry I V. iv. 2 

cannot do it better than in gyves.. ..Cymlielme, v. 4 

prisoner in his twisted gyves Romro 6 Juliet, ii.2 

convert his gyves to graces Hamlet, iv. 7 

will gyve thee iu thine own courtship ..Othello, ii. I 



HAB 



[ :j:J6 ] 



H 

HABERDASHER'S wife of small ..Henry Fill. v. 3 
HABILIMENT-p«ir liabiliniciits.7'«'oCV)i.o/F. iv. 1 
these honest mean h;ihiliaients . . Taming' o/S7i. iv. 3 
tlius plated in tlie liubilinients ufKor.Ricl,ar.l II. i.3 
hahilinients of the g.xUless Isis.. .■(«(-)»// ^Vleo. iii. ti 
this strange and sail hahiliment . . 'I'iiiis Amlrmi.v. '2 
HABIT— in what habit will you.TwoGcn.of rer. ii. 7 
use doth breed a habit in a man .... — v. 4 

let this habit make thee hliish! — v. 4 

and in tliat habit, wlien Slender. . Merry Wives, iv. (i 

to these habits of her liking TtcetfiliNigM,]'}. 5 

in the habit of some sir of note — lii. 1 

one habit, and two persons — T. 1 

when in otlier habits you are seen — V. 1 

supply me with the habit. . Mensme for Measure, i. 4 
often "dost thou with thy cfis'e, thy habit — ii. 4 
my mind promises witli my habit .. — iii. 1 

not changing heart with habit — _v. 1 

appareled in mure preeious habit ..Much Ado, iv. I 
were witli four in Russian habit .. Loi't-'sL.Losf, v. 2 
never more in Russian lialiit wait.... — v. 2 

these four will ehanire h:il)its — v. a 

of habits, and of forms, varying — v. 2 

a better had habit of fro\\ ning..jU«cA. oj Venice,!, i 

if I do not put on a sober habit — ii. '2 

but in such a habit — iii. 4 

imder that habit play the knave./ls you Likeil, iii. 2 
fie 1 dolf this habit, shame to.. Taming of H/irew, iii. 2 
BO honour peereth in the meanest habit — iv. 3 
sober ancient gentleman by your habit — v. 1 

the celestial habits IVinln'sTale,in. 1 

in tlie habit of a light -wench. Comedy of Errors, iv. 3 

and not alone in habit and device King John, i. 1 

by our habits, and by every otlier . . 1 HenrylV.\. 2 

you know me by my habit Henry V. iii. 6 

hath into monstrous habits put Henry VIII. i. 2 

anv thing but churchmen's habits .. — iii. 1 
it i's her habit only that is honest. TiinonofAlh. iv. 3 

this slave-like habit? — iv. 3 

if thou didst put th is sour-cold habit on — iv. 3 
valour in me than my habits show . . Cymbeline, v. 1 

a fourth man, in a silly habit — v. 3 

makes us scan the outward habit Pericles, ii. 2 

and in this habit met I my father Lear, v. 3 

costly thy habit as thy piu-se can buy . . Hamlet, i. 3 

or by some habit, that too much — _ i. 4 

my father, in his habit as he lived! — iii. 4 

all sense doth eat of habit's devil — iii. 4 

and outward habit of encounter — v. 2 

these thin habits, and poor likelihoods . . Othello, i. 3 
HABITATION— this h.ah\ttition. Meas. for Meas.in. 1 
a local habitation, and a name.. Mid. N.'sDream, v. 1 
habitation which your prophet . . Mer. of Venice, i. 3 
habitation giddy and unsure hath he. SHciuy i/'. i.3 
IIABITKD— she shall be habHeA.. Winter' sTale, iv. 3 
or is it Dian, habited like her. Titus Audronicus, ii. 3 

HACK— these knights will hack Merry Wives, ii. 1 

limbs whole, and hack our English . . — iii. 1 
he teaches him to hick and to hack . . — iv. 1 

to hack thy sword as thou \ Henry IV. ii. 4 

to pieces, hack their bones 1 Henry VI. iv. 7 

look you what hacks are on . . Troilusfj Cressida, i. 2 
mere be hacks! Be those with swords? — 1.3 

and then hack the limbs JidiusCcesar, ii. 1 

HACKED— bones ray flesh be Iiacked . . Macbeth, v. 3 

is hacked down ; arid his summer Richard ll.'i.i 

my sword hacked like a hand-saw. . 1 Henry IV. ii. 4 
sword so hacked? "Why, he hacked it — ii. 4 

here was hacked to death Richard III. iii. 3 

hacked, the air will drink tlie sap.. Henry VIII. i. 2 
helm more hacked than Hector's. Troilus Sf Cress, i. 2 

handless, hacked and chipped — v. .'j 

when your vile daggers hacked one.Jidiiis Ceesar, v. 1 

bear our hacked tdrgets like Antony S-Cleo. iv. 8 

HACKET-ask Marian Haeket . Taming ofSh. 2 (ind.) 
vou would call out for Cicely Hacket — 2 (ind.) 
HACKNEY— perhaps, a hackney.. /.oi'(?'.'< L.Los/, iii. 1 
HACKNEYEU-hackneyedintheeyes.lHen.yr. iii. 2 
H/EC— nominativo, hie, hoic, hoc. . Merry Wives, iv. 1 
HjEKES-rex Anglia3, et hieres Trancise.HenryV.v. 2 

HAG— this blue-eyed hag was hither Tempest, i. 2 

nominati vo, hig, hag, hog Merry Wives, iv. 1 

you witch, you hag you — iv. 2 

a gross hag! and, lozel, thou .. ..Winter's Tale, n.S 
you secret, black, and midnight hags?.iV/ac6e//i, iv.l 

filthy hags! why do you show — iv.l 

and liag of all despite 1 Henry VI. iii. 2 

fell, banning hag! "enchantress — v. 3 

wedded be thou to the hags ofhell..'iHen7-yVI. iv. 1 

thou hateful withered hag Richard Ill.i. 3 

no, you unnatural hags, I will have Lear, ii. 4 

this is the hag, when maids lie . . Homeo ^-.Juliet, i. 4 

H AGAR— of liagar's offspring. Merc/i. of Venice, ii. .5 

H.VG-BORN— freckled whelp, hag-born. Tempes;, i. 2 

HAGGARD-aud, like the haggard. r«e<///i Night, iii.X 

and wild as haggards of the rock . . Much Ado, iii. 1 

1 iiavc to man my haggard . . Taming of Shrew, iv.l 

loved this proud disdainful haggard — iv. 2 

if I do prove her haggard, thougli that. Olhello, iii. 3 

UAGGISH-on us both did haggish age. Alt's Well, i. 2 

HAGGLED— York, all haggled over .. Henry V. iv. 6 

HAG-SEED— hag-seed, hencel Tempest,i. 2 

HAIL— all hail, great master! (rep.) — i. 2 

hail, many-coloured messenger — iv.l 

hail kissing-comfits, and snow MerryWives, v. b 

hail, virgin, if you be Measurefor Measure, i. h 

hail to you, provost! — ii. 3 

when this liail some heat from . . Mid. N. Dream, i. 1 

hail, mortal! Hail! Hail! Hail! — iii. 1 

all liail, tlie richest beauties on. . Love's L. Lost, v. 2 
hail, sweet madam, and fair time (?-ep.) — v. 2 

a sunshine and a hail in me All's Well, v. 3 

hail, most royal sir! Winter's Tate, i. 2 

liail, brave friend! say to the Macbeth, i. 1 

all hail, Macbeth! hail to thee (rep.) .. — i. 3 

with, hail, king that shalt be! — i. 5 (letter) 

hail, king! for so thou art — v. 7 

hail, king of Scotland ! (rep.) — y. 7 

hail, you anointed deimties of King John, iii. 1 



HAIL— sometime cry, all hail ! Richard II. iv. 1 

hail, royal prince! Thanks — v..') 

all hail, my lords! which of this 1 Henry VI. ii. 2 

cried all hail! when as he meant ..^iHnnyVI. v. 7 
hail, all the state of Greece ! . Troilus ^- Cressida, iv. ."i 

liail to thee, worthy Tiraon Timon of Athens, i. 2 

hail, wortliyTimon! our late — v I 

hail, noble JIarcius! Thanks Coriolanus,i. 1 

my gracious silence, hail! wouldst thou — ii. 1 

hail, sir! Hail to you both! — iv. 6 

hail, lords! I am returned your soldier — v. 5 

Caisar, all hail! good-morrow JuUus Ceesar, ii. 2 

hail, Ca-sar; read this schedule — iii- 1 

crying, lung live! hail, Ccesar? — v. 1 

sovereign o'f Egypt, hail ! Antony S) Cleopatra,}. 5 

and hail rich pearls upon thee — .;;•■''> 

hail, Ca;sar, and my lord! hail — ..'."• ^ 

let heaven engender hail — ".'.-.'' 

hail, thou fair heaven! we house . . Cymbeline, lu. 3 

hail, heaven! Hail, heaven! — m. 3 

hail, great king! to sour — v. 5 

hail, Rome, victorious in thy. .Titus Andronicus, i. 2 
Lucius, all hail; Rome's royal (rep.) — v. 3 
hail, reverend sir! the gods preserve ..Pericles, v. 1 
all hail! the sods preserve you! (rep.) — v. I 

hail, sir! my lord, lend ear — v. 1 

hail, Dian! to perform thy just — v. 3 

hail, madam, and my queen! — v. 3 

Jiail to thee, noble master! Lear, u. 4 

hail to your grace! lam glad — _u. 4 

hail, gentle sir. Sir, speed you — iv. 6 

hail to your lordsliip! I am glad to bee..Hf7,»i(e(, i. 2 
hail to 'thee, lady! and the grace Oi/iello, n.l 

HAILED— he hailed dowu oaths.. 3/(V. N. Dream, i. 1 
they hailed him father to a line Macbeth, iii. 1 

HAILSTONE— vanish like hailstones ..Merry W. i. 3 
tlie ice, or hailstone in the sun Conolanus, i. I 

HAIR— not so niucli perdition as a hair.. Tempest, i. 2 

with hair up-stariii" — i. - 

then like reeds, not hair — 1.2 

not a hair perished — , ^' '^ 

you are like to lose your hair — i y- 1 

ladyship must cut your hair. Two Gen. of Verona,}}. 7 

there's not a hair on's head — iii. 1 

she hath more hair than wit {rep.') . . — lu. 1 

and more faults than hairs (rep.) — iii. I 

the hair that covers the wit — m. \ 

her hair is auburn — iv. 4 

she has brown hair . . _. Merry Wives,_i. 1 

you go against the hair — .n. 3 

and 1 profess requital to a hair's breadth — iv. 2 

an excellent head of hair Twelfth Kight, i. 3 

would that have mended my hair? . . — _,i. 3 

in his next commodity of hair — m. 1 

fetch vou a hair of the great Cham's. ilfucA Ado, ii. 1 
and h'er hair shall be of what colour — li. 3 

tears her hair, prays, curses — .jj. 3 

if the hair were a thought browner . . — in. 4 

and, witli grey hairs, and bruise — v. I 

with bracelets of thy hair, rings.Mid. N.'s Dream,}. 1 
French crowns have no hair at all .. — _i. 2 

pard, or boar with bristled hair — ii. 3 

if my hair do but tickle me — iv.l 

desire lime and hair to speak better? — v. 1 
with lime and hair knit up in thee . . — v. 1 
amber hairs for foul have amber.. Love' sL.Lost, iv. 3 

one, her hairs were gold — iv. 3 

that painting, and usurping hair .... — iv. 3 

strung with liis hair — iv. 3 

cutting a smaller hair tlian may — y. 2 

comes sooner by white hairs. ..Werc/iani of Venice,}. 2 
more hair on thy chin, than Dobbin — ii. 2 

he had more hair on his tail — ii- 2 

here in her hairs the painter plays .. — lij- - 
shall lose a hair through Bassanio's — iii. 2 

do turn but in the estimation of a hair — iv. V 

will ne'er wear hair on his face — .v. 1 

his very hair is of the dissembling.x4s you Like, in. 4 

his hair is of a good colour — in. ^ 

your black silk hail-, your bugle — — in. 6 
and my hair black; and, now I am. . — in. ^ 

man, o'crgrown with hair — iv. 3 

old beard, and every hair that's on 't.. All's Well,_v. 3 
not presume to touch a hair.. Taming of Shrew, iv. 1 
so that tlicre be not too much hair. Winter sTale,n. 1 
liiive made themselves all men of hair — i y. 3 
his hair that grows bald {rep.^.Comedy of Errors,}}. 2 
thy golden hairs, and as a bed ...... — in. 2 

war against her hair [Co/. K?!(.-heir] — in. ^ 

a rush, a hair, a drop of blood — iv. 3 

mire to quench the hair — , ^' 1 

image doth unfix my hair Macbeth, i. 3 

and thy hair, thou gold-bound brow — iv. 1 
and my fell of hair would at a dismal — v. 5 
had I as many sons as I have hairs . . — v. 7 

this hair I tear, is mine King John, in. i 

multitude of those her hairs! — }]]• ^ 

bind up your hairs. Yes, that I wiU — in. 4 
as they have given these hairs their. . — in. 4 

a wandering hair, any annoyance — iv.l 

one little hair: my heart — , V.-' 

never wear hair on my face more ..\ Henry IV. ii. 4 

his white hairs do witness it — ,}}• * 

cavil on the ninth part of a hair — ni. ' 

the tithe of a hair was never lost — in. 3 

was shaved and lost many a hair .... — in. 3 

quality and hair [A'»r.-air] of our — ly. 1 

is not a hair amiss yet iHenrylV. i. 2 

there is not a white hair on your face — i. 2 

the first white hair on my chin — .1. '^ 

a hair will turn the scales between .. — ".4 

how ill white hairs become a fool — v. 5 

with one appearing hair Henry V. in . (chorus) 

as if his entrails were hairs ...; — ;!!• ' 

my mistress wears her own hair .... — iii. 7 

wildly overgrown with hair — .X- 2 

his hair upreared, his nostrils IHenryVI. iii. 2 

his hair, you see, is sticking — \}V'^ 

my hair be fixed on end — ]]]''^ 

comb down liis hair; look! — iii. 3 



HAL 

HAIR— shame to thy silver hair 2HenryVI.v. 1 

would bring whiteliairs unto illenry VI. ii. i) 

wound about thy coal-black hair — v. 1 

my hair doth stand on end Richardlll. i. 3 

with bright hair dabbled in — . .i. ^ 

weighed not a hair of his Henry VIII. iii. 2 

herliair were not somewhat . . Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 1 

her hair, her cheek, her gait — i. 1 

and merry against the hair — 1.2 

three or four hairs on his chin — J. 2 

to spy a white hair on his chin — 1.2 

liair that Helen spied on Troilus' (rep.) — i. 2 
at the hair, as at his pretty answer . . — J. 2 
but one and fifty hairs on your chin — >. 2 
hairs, quoth he, and one white O'ep.) — i- 2 

which of those hairs is Paris — ..i. 2 

your brother's excuse? To a hair — iii. 1 

or swerve a hair from truth — iii- 2 

tear my bright hair, and scratch — iv. 2 

pluck Aufidius down by the hair Coriolantis, i. 3 

not a hair upon a soldier's head — iv. 6 

his silver hairs will purchase us — JuliusCtPsar,}]. 1 
yea, beg a hair of him for memory .. — iii. 2 
my blood cold, and my hair to stare? — iv. 3 

like the courser's hair Antony <S- Cleopatra,}. 2 

not leave out the colour of her hair. . — ii. f> 
with thy grapes our hairs be crowned — ii. 7 (song) 
her hair, what colour? Brown, madam — iii. 3 

my very hairs do mutiny — iii. 9 

than all the hairs above thee Cymbeline, ii. 3 

my fleece of woolly hair Titus Andronicus, \\. 3 

rent off thy silver "liair — iii. 1 

drag the villain liither by the hair .. — ly. 4 

shall this liai r of mine remain Pericles, iii. 3 

the colour of her hair, complexion .. — iv. 3 
almost to the number of her hairs . . — iv. 3 
to wash his face, nor cut his hairs — iv. 4 (Govyer) 

elf all my hair in knots Lear, ii. 3 

tears his white hair — iii. 1 

that curled iny hair; wore gloves — iii. 4 

these hairs, which thou dost ravish — iii. 7 

told nie, I had white hairs in my beard — iv. 6 
elf-locks in foul sluttish hairs . . liomeo ^Juliet, i. 4 
to stop in my tale against the hair . . — _ij. 4 
a hair more, or a hair less in )iis beard — iii. I 

then might'st thou tear thy hair — iii. 3 

each particular hair to stand on end Hamlet, i. .'> 

your bedded hair, like life in excrements — iii. 4 
had all his hairs been lives — v. 2 

HAIR-BRAINED-hair-brained slaves.! Hen. VI. i. 2 

HAIR-BREADTH— hair-breadth 'scapes. 0(/ieHn, i. 3 

HAIRLESS-thin and hairless scalps. K/f/iaiii //. iii. 2 

HAIRY— I am marvellous hairy. Mid. A. Dream, iv. 1 
for she his liairy temples then had . . — iv.l 
thus the hairy fool, much marked../!.! you Like, ii. I 

you are rough and hairy Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

conclude hairy men plain dealers. Comedy of Er. ii. 2 

HAL— now, Hal, what time of day 1 Henry IV. i. 2 

indeed, you come near me now, Hal — i. 2 
well, Hal, well; and in somesort it.. — i. 2 
but, Hal. I pr'ythee, trouble me — — i. 2 
Hal, God forgive thee for it! (rep.) . . — i. 2 

good-morrow, sweet Hal — i. 2 

Where's Poins, Hal? He is walked .. — ii. 2 
Poins! Hal! a plague upon you both ! — ' ii. 2 
good prince Hal, help me to my horse — ii. 2 

but yet no coward, Hal. "Well — ii. 2 

wherehastbeen, Hal? "With three .. — ii- 4 
tell thee what, Hal, if I tell thee a lie — ii. 4 

four, Hal, I told thee four — ii. 4 

dost thou hear me, Hal? — ii. 4 

for it was so dark, Hal — ii. 4 

ah, no more 01' that, Hal — ii. 4 

when I was about thy years, Hal — ii. 4 

but, tell me, Hal, art thou not horribly — ii. 4 

dost thou hear, Hal? never call — ii. 4 

wilt thou believe me, Hal? — iii. 3 

a thousand pound, Hal? a million .. — iii. 3 
wliy, Hal, tlioii know'st, as thou . . . . — iii. 3 
dost thou hear, Hal? thou know'st. . — iii. 3 

now, Hal, to the news at court — iii. 3 

what, Hal? how now, mad wag? — iv. 2 

mine , Hal, mine. I did never see — iv. 2 

Hal , if thou see me down in the — — v. 1 

I would it were bed-time, Hal — v. 1 

nay, before God, Hal, if Percy be alive — v. 3 

ay, Hal; 'tis hot, 'tis hot — v. 3 

well said, Hal! To it, Hal! nay .... — v. 4 

no abuse, Hal, on mine honour 2HenryIV. u. 4 

king Hal! my royal Hal I — v. 5 

HALBERD-guard with halberds.. Corned)/ orErr. v. 1 

unless our halberds did shut up iHenryVi. iv. 3 

advance thy halberd higher than . . Richard III. i. 2 

HALCYON-summer halcyon days.. I HeJiri/TL i. 2 
their halcyon beaks with every gale Lenr, 1 1 . 2 

HALE-cannot hale them together. TK'e(/7/iA'ig-/i(,iii. 2 
sheep's guts should hale souls out ..Much Ado, ii. 3 

I'll hale the Dauphin headlong 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

altlio' ye hale me to a violent — v. 4 

hale Mm aw ay and let him 2 Henry 1 1, iv. 1 

the name of Henry the fifth hales them — >v. 8 

and hale liim hither Troilus ^ Cressida, iv. 5 

and hale him up and down Coriolanus, v. 4 

to hale thy vengeful waggon . . Titus Andronicus, v. 2 
and hither hale that misbelieving Moor — v. 3 
so hales iKnt. shakes] and pulls me. . . . Othello, iv. 1 

HALED-strangers may be haled.. 7'a»ii»«-o/S/i. v. I 

mouth, haled out to murder Winler'sTale, in. 2 

a man new haled from the rack 1 Henry VI. i\. 6 

HALF- farewell, 'till half an hour ....Tempest, iii. 1 
but half a fish, and half a monster . . — iii. 2 
within this half hour will he be asleep — ii;- 2 

take all, or half, for easing Merry Wives, i\. 2 

with half Windsor at his heels — in. 3 

I am half afraid he will — ii!- 3 

when I was more than half — in. 5 

by mine honour, half drunk Twelfth Night, \. 5 

to his own shadow, this half hour — ]'■!> 

ibr the half of my dowry — }<.]■ ^ 

hold, tlicre half my cofl'er .. — "i-* 



IIALF— I matelied one half out . . TtrelflhNighl, iii. 4 

not half nn liotir before — v. 1 

seven year and a lialf, sir. . MeanireforMeaturt, ii. I 

and alialf, sir — jj- • 

Iwcoine theni with one half so good.. — ii. 2 
then li.ilf sifinior Henertick's tongue. . Much AiIo, ii. I 
iinil Imlf oiiniit .liihn'a nieUmclioly .. — ii- I 

and iniicle lier hull' nivsoir — ii. 3 

and hiilt'tliv niitwurci i;riiees liad .... — iv. 1 
and speak off Inilf .i d../.en dangerous - v. I 
half lliiit wish the wisher's. . . . Mid. N.'i Piram. w. 3 

and liall liisfuee iuu-the»een — iii. 1 

1 shall reply iiinii/^iaiv iKilf •sleep half — le. I 
a dark niulit too .ithiilfthe Hay.. Uvf's L. toil, i. I 

theone hiillol ;in iiitire sum — ii. 1 

but that one liairwliieh is inK-^atisfled — n. 1 
one halfsohrii;ht llvr..n'.:lilhe .. — iv. 3 (verses) 
he'eleiK'th acHlf. liuif: luill, hauf .. — v. 1 

is too Ion- l.y Ir.ilfii mile — v. 2 

clo.'iC mine eyes some Inill' an lionr .. — v. 2 
to your vi/.or, and hall" unee to you . . — v. '.1 

there's Imlf a dozen sweets — v. 2 

affijrd my speeehless visor half — v. 'J 

no, I'll not De your half — v. •.! 

naint George's half elieek in a hrooeh — v. '2 
I am half afeard, thou wilt ..Mnchnnlqfremce.ii. 9 
and hindered me of half a nnllion .. — in. 1 
half of me is yours, the other luilf yours — in. 2 
lam half yourself, and I must I. r<'p. J — in. '.i 
bear half the keenness of thy sharij . . — i v. 1 
one half his goods; the other half eomcs — iv. 1 
for half thy wealth, it is Antonio's (rc/<.) — iv. 1 
the fine for one halt of Ids goods — — iv. 1 

the oilier half in use to render it — iv- 1 

or half her worthinesi that gave 
ho rotten ere you be half ripe — 
halfof the which dare not sliake 
half won, is match well made . , 

a cheek of two pile and a half 

not half way to her heart . . . . 7'ai 

call liiin half a score knaves 

that gi\T;s not half so great a blow . . — 
one half of my lands: and, in jmssesslon — 
to wish me wed to one half lunatic 
three ([uarters, half yard, quarter 

eon, I will be voiir half, Kianea — v. 2 

hast the one half of my heart .... /ri/i(<;)'s7Vi;c. 1. 2 

nor the bear half dined on — iii- 3 

there is not half a kiss to choose .... — iv. 3 
twelve foot and a half by thesqnire.. — iv. 3 
the gentleman is half flayed already — iv. 3 

not half an hour since Comedy of Errors, u. i 

gave it vou half an hour since — iv. I 

now o'er the one half world JI/aciie/A, ii. 1 

to half a soul, and to a notion crazed — iii- 1 

we have lost best half of our — iii- 3 

he is the half part of a blessed man.. King- Joint, i i . 2 
the sea enraged is not half so deaf .. — ii- 2 
in mortal fury half so peremptory .. — ii. 2 

half my power this night — v. 6 

• who half an hour since came — v. 7 

divide the realm, and give thee Iialf./?i'c/inrd II. v. 1 
old sir Jolin, with halt a dozen more. 1 Henry//', ii. 4 

if thou dost it half so gravely — ii- 1 

or death's hand for this one naif year — iv- 1 
ehirtand a half in all my company (rep-) — iv- 2 
not a horse is half the half himself .. — iv. 3 

halfhis Troy was burned 2HenryII'.i. 1 

who, half through, gives o'er 

Harry had but half their 

a fourteen and fourteen and a half 

provided me here half a dozen sufficient — 

not so sound, and half so deeply sweet — 

to stab at half an hour of my life — — iv. 4 



Ailjoul.ilcril. ill. 2 

..AlCsiycIl, iv. 3 

— iv. 3 (.letter) 

— iv. .■) 

ling o/Shrew, i. 1 



_ iv. 3 



_ Ii. a 



Ihnryy.u 1 



we lose the better half of our 

with half their forces the full . 

abov, half French, half English .... — v. J 

one lialf is cut away \IIcnryVI.\. \ 

run not half so timorous from — i. 5 

taunt with cowardice a man half dead? — iii. 2 
with more than half the Gallian — — v. 4 

lords do vex me half so much Illfiiryl'l. i. 3 

not half so bad as thine to England's — i. 4 

within this half hour, hath received — ii. 1 

loved hiin half so well as I 3 Henry I' I. i. 1 

stand pensive, as half malcontent? .. — iv. 1 
my joy of liberty is half eclipsed .... — iv. 6 

and half our sailors swallowed — y. 4 

scarce half made un, and that so . .Richard III. i. 1 

bears half my buraened yoke — iv. 4 

lies half a mile at least south — v. 3 

half your suit never name to us (rep.) //fiirj/ /'///. i. 2 

but half my lav-thoughts in him — i. 4 

1 have halt a dozen healths to drink — i. 4 

you met him half in heaven — ii. 1 

I will not wish ye half my miseries.* — iii. I 
with half the zeal I served my king — iii. 2 

Bome half hour, or so, in a rich — iv. 1 

that had not half a week to go — iT. 1 

and has done half an hinir, to know — v. 2 

'would you were half so honest! — v. 2 

an 'twould, you'd carry half..rroi7m^-CVe«ida, ii. 3 

In twain, anil give him half — ii. 3 

I would not for half Trov have j'ou.. — iv. 2 

this Aiax is half made or(ri-p.) — iv. b 

being kin, half stints their strife — iv. .'> 

my prophecy is but half his journey yet — Iv. .^ 
may worthy Troilus be half attached — v. 2 

your eyes, lialf out. weep out at — v. 11 

which wan not half so Ixiaut'ifn]. Tiinniin/ Alhens^i. 2 
lacks a half to pay your prc-tentdilits — li. 2 
I should not ur/e it half so faithfully — iii. 2 
and the best half should have returned — iii. 2 

who then dares to lie half so kind — iv. 2 

half to hal f the world by the ears . . Coriolaniii, i . I 

half all Cominius' honours — i. 1 

o' Wednesday half an hour together — i. 3 

I will, for half a hundred years — i. 4 

within this mile and half — i. 4 

<tl*e Inal I, rir, hair an hoar since .... — i. 6 



HALF— I am half through Corialanui, ii. 3 

anil waked half dead with nothing .. — iv. .'> 
take the line half nf my i-unimission — iv. 

one lialf i.f what he win ye-lenlay (rep.) — iv. i 
\Miiilil hn'.f my wealth Would huv .. — iv. 
le^t I let f.iith your half pint iif blood — v. 2 
half tliiil- fiires'lmiic-il in tlliir cloaks.yH/.CiPjrrr, ii. 1 
til me, yinirself, y.nir half, whv you-. — ii- I 
no inst'rnmelU oV hall Ihat wurth .... — iii. I 
1 killed not thee with half sn good a will — v. .'> 
where now half tales be truths ..Anlony fy Cleo. ii. 2 

half the heart of Ca:sar — ii. 2 

so half my Egypt were submerged .. — ii. .'i 
where is the fellow? Half afeard to come — iii- 3 
who with half the bulk o' the world — iii. « 

when half to half the world opposed — iii- 11 

vou were half blasted ere 1 knew — iii. 1 1 

"never be saved by half that they do. . — v. 2 

about some half lionr hence Cymbeline, i. 2 

half all men's hearts are his — j. 7 

for one not half so old as that — i\. !> 

wears thee not the one luilf so well . . — iv- 2 
halfofthe number that kiii^' Priam. TOi(3.-l;i'/rmi.i.:; 
wos everScythia half so Imrliarous?.. — i- 2 

Titus, more than half my soul — i. '-^ 

as half thy love? — .ii- ■'' 

ere half an hour can pass — iii. 1 

half me, and half thy dam! — v. 1 

lowest, and we are halfway there I'nlcles. "1. 1 

who arc hunger-starved, half dead — i. I 

they say, they are half fish, half flesh — ji. 1 

marry, sir, half a day's journey — i'- 1 

half the flood hath their keel cut — iii. (Gower.) 

walk half an hour, l.eonine — iV' 1 

shall carry half my love with him, half ..l.enr,i. 1 
should enjoy halfhis revenue (rep.) — i. 2 (letter) 

stewed ill Ills haste, half breathless — ii- 4 

abated me of half my train — i|- 4 

thy half o' the kingdom hast — >i- 4 

dismissing half your train — ii. 4 

and half, fathom and half! Poor Tom!.. — in- 4 

If thou sliouldst dally half an hour — in. G 

half way down hangs one that — iv. 

until soine half hour past — "v. 3 

not half so big as a round little . . Ilomeo 4 Julie/,]. 4 
in lialf an hour she promised to return — ii. -^ 

I cannot sum up half mv sum — .!'•'' 

we'll have some half a dozen friends — iii. 4 

full lialf an hour. Go with me — v- -I 

memory mayoutlive his lifehalf ayear. HawW, iii. 2 

half asliare. A whole one, I — iii. 2 

the purer with the other half — iii- 4 

that carry but half sense — iv. 5 

there is not half an hour's life — v. 2 

you hftve lost half your soul; even now .Othello, i. 1 
If she confess, that she was half the wooer — _ i. 3 

faith, half asleep. Good madam — iv. 2 

would half have corrupted a votarist .. .. — iv. 2 

but half an hour. Beingdone — v. 2 

rot iKilfagrniii aihiy! — v. 2 

thou lul^t lint half till' power to do — v. 2 

7I.\M■"-AC1I^•;^'1CI) Ilaifleur Henry V. iii. 3 

II ALF-P.LiHiDKD-li.ilf-liln.ided fellow .. hear, v. 3 

HALF-BLOWN— half-blown rose.. Ki'Jig- yoAii, iii. 1 

HALF-CAN-and wild Half-can. ..WMs.for;l/«is. iv. 3 

HALF-CAP— certain half-caps.. 'Amon o//((/ira», ii. 2 

H;VLF-CHECKED bit. and a. .Taming of Shrew, iii. 2 

HALF-CONQUEKED, must I back..ii:i"»^Jo/i", v. 2 

HALF-FACE, like my father (rep.).. — i. 1 

HALF-FACED-a half-faced groat.. — i. 1 

out upon this h.alf-faced fellowshipl.l Henryll'. \. 3 

s.ame half-faced fellow, Shadow ..•'Henry IV. iii. 2 

advance \yith our half-faced sun ..'lllenryll. iv. 1 

HALF-KIHTLES-forswearhalf-kirtles.2/;e».n-.T.4 

HALF-MOON made \vith a pen .. lI'mler'sTah; ii. 1 

a pint of bastard in the half-moon. .1 Henry "'. ii. 4 

a Iinge half-rnoon, a monstrous cantle — iii. 1 

HALF- PART— half-part, mates (rep.).. Pericles, iv. 1 

HALFPENCE-a thousand halfpence .,yuch.ldn,\\. 3 

like one another, as halfpence are. ..-Is you Like, jii. 2 

and sold it for three hahjicnco Henry I', iii. 2 

HALFPENN'i'-a halfpenny purscWerri/K/rM, iii. h 
marry, sir, halfiiennv farlhiiig.. Lore's L. Lost, iii. 1 

tlionlialfpenny purse of wit — v. 1 

my hat to a halfpenny, Pompev proves — v. 2 
item, hre.ad, a halfiicniiy [C'o/.-ob.]..l //I'n'i/fr. ii. 4 
halfpenny loaves sold for a penny ..Sf/eioi/'"/. iv. 2 
iny thaiilis are too dear, a halfpenny .. Hanilel, ii. 2 
HALFPICNNYWOHTH of bread. . .". 1 Henry I r. ii. 4 
HALF-SUPPED-half-supped6Word.7Vo/;..5 frra.v.g 

ILVLF-SWORD with adozen \ Henry IV. ii. 4 

HALF-WORKEKS-be half-workers. Ci/mddme, ii. ft 

HALL- logs into the hall . . Lot'e's /,. /-«(, v. 2 (song) 

"ng in my hall .,., ..Merchant of Venice, v. \ 



Kate of Kate I lall TaminB of Shreir, 11. 1 

and meet i' the hall together Macbeth, ii. 3 

merrj in hall, when beards ..Ullenryl V. v. 3 (song) 
lower end o' the hall, hurled up . . Kichnrd III. iii. 7 

to the hall, to hear what shall Henry VIII.w. I 

let us to Priam's hall, to greet. Troilus ^ Cress, iii. 1 

creep in skittish fortune's hall — iii. 3 

as many as be bare of Pander's hall — v. 1 1 

a hall, "a hall! give room Romeo <$■ Juliet, i. 5 

sir, 1 will walk here in the hall Hamlet, v. 2 

that vou attend him in the hall — v. :i 

H ALLIDi ).M— bv my hallidom. Tuo Gen. of Ver. iv. 2 

H.VLLnlNG-halloing.and what stir — v. 4 

HALLOO-halloo me tike a hare ....Cnriolanus, i. 8 

ILVLLOW-I will hallow thee ....2 Henri//'/- iv. 10 

HALL(JWED-theeiidi.'elliallowed,AfmyH'n'e», iv. 2 

shall disturb this hallowed house. ..WiV/.JV.'j Ur. v. i 

my trinkets had been luUluwed.. Ifinler'tTale, iv. 3 

make fast within a hallowed verge ..iHenryl'l. i. 4 

are not words duly hallowed Henry VIII. ii.3 

to give thee hallowed to thy grave IWielct, iii. 1 

so hallowed and so gracious is the time.. Hamlet, i. 1 
worms were hallowed, that did breed .. Of/ieUo. Hi. 4 
HALLOWMAS— 
like a beggar at haIlowmas..7'»ro^en.o//Vronn, ii. I 
at Hallowmas. Was'tnot ttt(>ep.)..tffa./oriMeff. ii. • 



HALLOWMAS-hack like Hallowmas. /(ic/iorrfZ/.T. 1 

H.\LT— and make it halt behind her ..Tempest, iv. I 

ree thee walk; tin. 11 ihnt not halt.7"umintfo/ .S/i. ii. 1 

and yet yon halt iH.I- Not so well .. — iii. 2 

it is no liiattiT. if I do halt -i Henry IV. i. 2 

dogs bark at me, as I halt by tUem. Ilichard III. i. 1 
on me, that halt, and am mis-shapen — i. 2 

mv free drift halts not [larticularly. y'imoii ofAth. i. 1 

that their limbs may halt — iv. 1 

come thee on. I'll halt alter Anlony ^Clenpalra.iv.r 

or the blank verse shall halt for't llnmUi, it. 2 

that their desi^-nment halts Othello, W. 1 

HALTi:R-give him a haltcr..Werc/mn/i)/;'enicc, ii. 2 

a halter gratis; nothing else — iv. 1 

no, if rightly taken, a halter \ Henry IV. ii. 4 

as soon ne strangled with a halter .. — ii. 4 

thus with halters on their necks 'i Henry VI. iv. U 

a halter, soldiers; hang him on .. TilutAndron. y. 1 

if my cap would buy a halter Lear, j. 4 

and halters in his pew — iii- 4 

a halter pardon hinil and hell gnaw ..Othello, iv. 2 

IIALTERED-like a haltered mvk..tnl.^Cleo. iii. 1 1 

11 ALTING-conies sir Toby halting. 7-«-e(M.V/VA(, v. 1 

four of his five wits went halting oIL .il/ucA/Ido, 1. 1 

a halting sonnet of his own pure — v. 4 

not trnsting to this halting legate ..Kin: John, v. 2 

is to come halting off, you know....2//enn///'. ii. 4 

nofnrther halting: satisfy me home. Ci/ml/c/ine, iii. & 

HALVES- I'll have no halves . Tamim; of Shrew, v. 2 

HAM- knight that cowers i' the lianis?./'eiiWi"», iy. 3 

a man to bow in the hams Homea ^Juliet, ii. 4 

together with most weak hams Hamlet, ii. 2 

H.\MLET— our valiant Hamlet — i. 1 

has fell to Hamlet: now, sir, young — i. 1 

have seen to-night unto young Hamlet.. — i. I 
yet of Hamlet our dear brother's death.. — i. 2 
but now, mv cousin Hamlet, and my son — i. 2 
good Hamlet, east thy nighted colour oft" — i. 2 
commendable in your nature, Hamlet .. — i. 2 
not thy mother lose her prayers, Hamlet — i. 2 
gentle and unforced accord of Hamlet sits — 1.2 
lor Hamlet, and the trifling of his lavour — i. 3 

something touching the lord Hamlet — i. 3 

for lord Hamlet, believe so much in him — i. 3 
words or talk with the lord Hamlet .... — i. 3 

I'll call thee, Hamlet, king, father — i. 4 

[Kn(.]li6t, Hamlet, O list! — i. S 

now, Hamlet, hear; 'tis given out — i. S 

Hamlet, what a falliug-off was therel — i. 5 

rC'o(. /vnf.] adieu, adieu, Hamlet! — i. .*• 

lord Hamlet,— heaven secure him! — i. 5 

what so poor a mail as Hamlet is may do — i. 5 
lord Hamlet with his doublet all unbraced — ii. 1 
something have you heard of Hamlet's. . — ii. 2 
bring these gentlemen where Hamlet is — ii. 2 

the very cause of Hamlet's lunacy — ii. 2 

came tliis from Hamlet to her — ii. 2 

whilst this machine is to him, Hamlet — ii. 2 (let.) 
lord Hamlet is a prince out of thy sphere — ii- 2 
how does my good lord Hamlet? "Well .. — ii. 2 

you go to seek the lord Hamlet — ii. 2 

closely sent for Hamlet hither — iii. 1 

be the happy cause of Hamlet's wildncss — iii. 1 
need not tell us what lord Hamlet said . . — iii. I 
howfarcsour cousin Hamlet? Excellent — iii. 2 

1 have nothing ivitli this answer, Hamlet — iii. 2 
come hither, my dear llanilet, sit by me — iii. 2 

Hamlet, thou hast thy father much — iii. 4 

how now, Hamlet? What's the matter.. — iii. 4 
O Hamlet, speak no more: thou tnrn'st — iii. 4 

no more, sweet llamlet. A murderer — iii. 4 

speak to her, Hamlet. How is it with you — iii. « 
Hamlet ! thou hast cleft my heart — — iii. 4 

how docs Hamlet? Mad as the sea — ii.\ 

Hamlet in madness hath Polonius slain — ir. 1 
wdio calls on Hamlet? O here they come — iv. 2 
Hamlet, Where's Polonius? At supper .. — iv. 3 
Hamlet, this deed, for thine especial safety — iv. 3 

for England? Ay, Hamlet. Good — iv. 3 

thy I'lving father, Hamh-t — iv.S 

the present death of Hamlet — iv- 3 

be greeted, if not from lord Hamlet — iv, 6 

he that thou knowest thine, Hamlet — iv. G(let.) 

letters, my lord, from llamlet — iv. 7 

from Hamlet? who brought them? — iv. 7 

and more strange return. Hamlet — iv. 7 (letter) 

'tis Hamlet's eharacter — iv. 7 

and that in Hamlet's heariii" — iv. 7 

dill llamlet so envenom with his envy .. — iv. 7 
Hamlet comes back: what would you .. — iv. 7 
Hainlet, returned, shall know you are .. — iv. 7 
our last king Hamlet overcame Fortiiibras — v. 1 
that very day young llamlet was born .. — v. I 
sliouldst have been mv Hamlet's wife .. — v. 1 

this is I, Hamlet the Dane — v. I 

Hamlet, Hamlet! Gentlemen — v. 1 

come, Hamlet, come, and take this band — v. 2 
was't Hamlet wronged Laertes? (rep.) .. — v. 2 

Hamlet does it not, Hamlet denies it — T. 2 

Hamlet is of the tiii-tion that is (rep-).... — V. 2 
cousin llamlet. vou know the wager?.... — v. 2 
if Hamlet give the first or second hit .... — v. 2 

shall drink to Hamlet's better breath — v. 2 

now the king drinks to Huinlet — v- 2 

Hamlet, this pearl is thine — v. 2 

here, llamlet. take my napkin — v. 2 

carouse^ to thy I'-rtime, Uamlct — v. 2 

O my dear Hamht! the drink, the drink — v. 2 
it isluru llaiiilii: Hamlet, thou art slain — v. 2 

forgiveness with me iiolile Hamlet — v. 2 

let four eiiptainslK-.ir lliiinlet — v. 2 

HA.M.MKK -stand with his hammer.. /viii#yo/in, iv. 2 
yet I'll hammer it out: my brain ..Ilichard II. v. 5 
the motion of a pewterer's hainincr.2//e>ir|f//'. iii. 2 
with busy hammors closing ri vets. //enry/'. iv. (cho.) 

thou shnlt have my hammer 2HenryVI. ii. 3 

aprons, rules, and luunmers . ...Antony ^Cteo. v. 2 
never did the Cyclops' hammers fall ..Hamlei, ii. 2 

H VM .M KRED-fiamnicrcd of this. IVinirr'i Tate. ii. i 
ulubliorn hard than Iraminercd irom? KingJohn, hr. % 



ill. 2 
iii. 2 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
V. 1 
(epil.) 



11. i 
ii. 3 
iii. 1 
iii. 1 
iii. 1 





1 




1 






ii 


2 


ii. 


2 




t 




2 




3 




.■) 


iv 


2 



— iv. 6 



i. 3 



HAM 



H AMMERING-been hammering. Ta-o Gi-n.of Ver. _i. 3 

still be hammering treachery 2 Henry I'l-i. 2 

revenge are hammering in my head.. TiitisAnd. ii. 3 

HAMilES— to Hammes' castle iUeniiiVI. v. 5 

HAMPIvR— she'll hamper tliee •ilU-nnjVI. i. 3 

HAMPTON— kill us here in Hampton. Hennj V. n. 2 

at Hampton pier embnrk his royalty — in. (cho.) 

HAMSTlilNG— in his hamstring. rroi(«s<S-Ci(?ss. i. 3 

HAND— we will not hand a rope w\qvq.. Tempest, i. 1 

lendthvhand .— ^ ■•2 

and then take hands — i. 2 (song) 

and when 1 rear my hand — ;;■ J 

vi'ith mine own hands — .'!■ 2 

here's my hand — in.\ 

by this hand, I will supplant 

and, by this liand, I'll tnrn my 

give nie thy hand; I aiin 

whom once again I tender to thy hand 

give me thy hand: I do begin 

by this liaiul, I'll have that gown .... 

give me your hands 

with the help of your good hands 

O hateful handsl to tear . . Tuo Gen. of f 

here is her hand 

here is my hand for 

our eat wringing her hands 

wringing lier hands, whose 

pure haiids held up 

a maid witli clean hands 

when one's right hand is — v. 4 

a liand from either — v. 4 

as tall a man of his hands Merry IVives, i. 4 

to come under one body's hand — j. 4 

all is in his hands above — i. ■' 

the very hand, the very words — 

we have sport in hand — 

my hand, bully — 

the fear of heaven on the left hand . . — 
no promise of satisfaction at her hands? — 

■with any detection in my hand — 

next, give me your hand — 

thy hand, terrestrial; so;— Give {rep.) — 

your husband's here at liand — 

he should be a cuckold, held his hand — 

come, give me your hand — 

with rattles in their hands — 

to take her by the hand — 

to pinch her by the hand 

his wife into your haud (rep.) — v. 

take her by the hand — v, 

pray you, lock hand in hand .... .... — v 

well here s my hand, all's forgiven . . — v 
by this hand, they are scoundrels. Tnelflh Night, i, 
do you think j'ou have fools in hand? — i 

sir, I have not you by the hand — i 

and here's my liand — i 

I pray you bring your hand to . 
but I can keep my hand dry ... 

now I let go your hand, I am — j. 3 

I hold the olive in my hand — i. 5 

Nature's own sweet and cunning hand — i- 5 

my lady has a white hand — ii. 3 

she shall know of it, by this hand .. — ii. 3 
hardly make distinction of our hands — ii. 3 

I extend my hand to hira thus — ii. 5 

by my life this is my lady's hand — ii. & 

it is, in contempt of question, her hand — ii. 5 
if this fall into thy hand, revolve — ii. 5 (letter) 

thy fates open their hands — ii. 5 (letter) 

give me your hand, sir — M?* ' 

this was looked for at your hand — iii- 2 

go, write it in a martial hand — !!!■ " 

it did come to his liands — ^\- ^ 

we do know the sweet Roman hand — iii. 4 

and kiss thy hand so oft? — iii. 4 

thou hast an open hand — iv. 1 

let go thy hand — iv. 1 

ever thou wilt deserve well at my hand — iv. 2 

by this hand, I am — iv. 2 

liy mutual joinder of your hands .... — v. 1 

give me thy hand; and let me — v. I 

here is my Iiand; you siiall from .... — v. 1 
it is your hand, write from it {rep.) . . — v. 1 
but, out of question, 'tis Maria's hand — v. 1 

give me your hand Measure J'or Measure, i. 1 

m hand, and hope of action — \.^ 

by this hand, sir, his wife is 

the hand that hath made you fair . . 
for putting the hand in the pocket . . 
this your companion by the hand . . 
here is the hand and seal of the duke 

give me your hand, and let 

must walk by us on our other hand . . 
this is the hand, which, with a vowed 

hold up your hands, say nothing 

I leave Kim to your hand 

for your lovely sake give me your hand 

your hand, Leonato; we will go Much Ado, i. 1 

but had a rougher task in hand than — i. 1 
maiTy, it is your brother's right hand — 
the prince and Claudio, hand in hand 

here's his dry hand up and down 

taming my wild heart to thy loving hand — 

shall we not lay hands on him? 

take not away thy heavy hand 1 — 

with charitable hand, took up 

these hands shall tear her 

in hand until they come to take hands 

by this hand, I love thee 

1 will kiss your hand {rep.) 

never lay thy hand upon thy sword 

marry, beshrew my hand 

in faith, my hand meant nothing. . . . 
a third is fled, that had a hand in it 
deserve well at my hands, by helping 
till you take her hand before this — 
give me your hand before this holy. . 

a paper, written in his hand 

vrrit in my cousin's hand, stolen — 

here's our own hands against our hearts! — 



[ 338 ] 



HAND— the hands of one that loves.. jU/W. A. 

to die upon the hand I love - 

when, at your hands, did I deserve . . 

Helena is here at hand - 

when thou holdst up thy hand - 

as if our hands, our sides, voices .... 
your hands, than mine, are quicker. . - 

get your weafions in your hand 

take hands with me, and rock 

man's hand is not able to taste 

what revels are in hand? 

the actors are at hand 

with hands as pale as milk 

hand in hand, with fairy grace 

and the blots of nature's liand shall not — 



iii. 1 
iii. 2 
iv. 1 
iv. 2 



— V. 1 



V. 1 



i. 3 



3 

— ii. 1 



- V. 1 

— V. 1 (prol.) 

— V. 1 (prol.) 



(epil.) 
I'e's L. Lost, i. 1 



give me your hands, if we be friends 

tliat his own hand may strike his. ' 

receive such welcome at my hand .. — ii. i 

or vour hands in your pocket — iii. 1 

to her white hand see thou do — iii. 1 

a giving hand, though foul — iv. 1 

the bow hand! I'faith your hand is.. — iv. 1 

mj' hand be out, then, belike your hand — iv. 1 

to see him kiss his hand! — iv. 1 

to the snow-white hand of the most — iv. 3 

into the royal hand of the king — iv. 2 

but alack, iriy hand is sworn — iv. 3 (verses) 

that I will praise a hand, afoot, a face — iv. 3 

of all hands must we be forsworn — iv. 3 

attach the hand of his fair mistress . . — iv. 3 

or I would these hands might never part — v. 2 

take hands; we will not dance {rep.) — v. 2 

the "allants are at hand — v. 2 

that Kissed away his hand in courtesy — '■ v. 2 

how white the hand, God knows! .... — v. 2 

let our hands part — v. 2 

the sudden hand of death close — v. 2 

fashioned, by the hand of heaven. Mt-r.o/ Fenice,i.3 

- - ' ■ ... jj I 



ii. 2 
ii. 4 
ii. 4 

— ii. 7 

— ii. 8 

— ii. 8 

— ii.9 

— iii. 1 



iii. 4 
iv. 1 
iv. I 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
V. 1 



by fortune from the weaker hand. . . . 

turn up of your right hand 

turn of no hand, but turn down 

I know the hand: in faith, 'tis a fair hand 

is the fair hand tliat writ 

weigh thy value with an even hand 

he put his hand behind him 

he wrung Bassanio's hand 

costly summer was at hand 

hath not a Jew hands, organs 

your hand, Salerio; what's the news 

I commit into your hands 

render this into my cousin's hands. . 

I have work in hand, that you 

give me your hand: came you from . . 

on forfeit of my hands, my head 

give me your hand, Bassanio 

do not draw back your hand 

with a willow in her hand upon — 

your mistress is at hand 

your husband is at hand 

now, by this hand, I gave it to — v. 1 

to cut my left hand off, and swear. ... — v. 1 
thou lay hands on me, villain?.... .4s i/ouLz'/cert, j. 1 
1 would not take this hand from thy — i. 1 

but that her hand lacks means — i. 2 

a boar-spear in my hand — ^i. 3 

that her pretty chopped hands had . . — ii. 4 

five me your "hand, and let me — .;;• 7 
o we seize into our hands — iii. 1 

but you kiss your hands — iii. 2 

do not your courtiers' hands sweat? 

besides, our hands are hard 

the courtiers' hands are perfumed . . 

by the white hand of Rosalind 

even a toy in hand, here, sir 

to have rich eyes and poor hands .... 
by this hand, it will not kill a fly.. .. 

give me your hand, Orlando 

her hand; she has a leathern hand {rep.) 
her hands; she has a housewife's hand 

a man's invention, and his hand 

left on your right liand, brings 

give me your hand: art thou 

they shook liands, and swore brothers 



V. 1 



iii. 2 



iv. 3 



V. 4 

— v. 4 (verse) 

— V. i 

All's Well, i. 2 



— V. 4 



might'st join her jiand with h 

here's eiglit that must take hands... 

when his tongue obeyed his hand . . . 

a pen in his hand, and write to her . . — n. i 

give me with thy kiugly hand — ii. 1 

here is my hand; the premises — ii. 1 

kiss his hand, and say nothing {rep.) — ii. 2 

as ten groats is for tlie hand of — ii. 2 

very liand of heaven. Ay, so I saj' .. — ii. 3 

and with this healthful hand, whose — ii. 3 

that I your hand should take — ;;• 3 

here, take her hand, proud scornful — ii. 3 

take her by the hand, and tell her . . — ii. 3 

1 take her hand. Good fortune — ii. 3 

give me thy hand. My lord — ii. 3 

you have or will deserve at my hand — ii. 5 

after some despatch in hand at court — iii. 2 

'tis but the boldness of his hand, haply — iii. 2 

o,nd that with his own hand he slew — iii. .') 

let him fetch off his drum in any hand — iii. 6 

by the hand of a soldier, I will — iii. 6 

hold your hands; though I know. ... — iv. 3 

the paper to his gracious hand — v. 1 

give me your hand; how does — v. 2 

you give away your hand — y. 3 

your gentle hands lend us — (epil.) 

lordship cool your hands?.. raming-o/S/i. ) (indue.) 
I have some sport in hand, wherein — 1 (indue.) 
your mightiness to wash your hands? — 2 (indue.) 

Jove to humble himself to her hand — i. 1 

till the father rid his hands of her .. — i. 1 

master, for my hand, both our — i. 1 

see that at any hand; and see you .. — i. 2 

at any hand, I pray — i. 2 

unbind my hands, I'll pull — ii. 1 

sister Kate, untie my hands — ii- 1 

may be kept on either hand — ii. 1 



iv. 1 

iv. 1 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 
v. 1 
V. 2 
V. 2 
V. 2 
_ V. 2 



— ii.3 



HAN 



Dr. ii. 2 I HAND— bowed her hand to teach. Taming of Sh. ii. 1 

ii. 2 give me thy hand, Kate, I will — ii. 1 

ii. 3 I but give me your hands; God send.. — ii. 1 

to lave her dainty hands — ii. 1 

to give my hand, opposed against . . — iii. 2 
whose hand (she being now at hand) 

till they kiss their hands 

e'en at hand, alighted by this 

she bears me fair in hand 

here is my hand, and here I firmly., 
lay hands on the villain; I believe .. 
you have some goodly jest in hand . . 
no other tribute at thy hands, but love 
and place your hands below your. . . . 
my hand is ready, may it do hira. . . . 

shook hands, as over a vast Winter's Tale, i. 1 

make thee open thy white hand .... — i. 2 

give me thy liand;'be pilot to me.... — i. 2 

trifles of his ej'cs, first hand me — ii.3 

for ever imvenerable be thy hands . . 

and frame of hand, nail, finger 

what need these hands! you, that are 

with these my proper hands shall I. . — 

by the liand delivered of great Apollo's — 

heavens with what we have in hand — 

thy hand, I'll help thee; come {rep.) — 

your hiind, my Perdita: so turtles .. — 

live justices' hands at it; and witnesses — 
I take thy hand, this liand, as soft as 
to wash the hand, was fair before. . . . 
take hands, a bargain; and friends .. 

come, your hand ; and daughter, yours — 

kisses the hands of your fresh princess — 
and a nimble hand, is necessary .... 

to the outside of his hand — 

on the right hand; 1 will but look upon — 

of eyes, holding up of hands — 

some great matter there in hand .... — 

toolt me by the hand, and called me — 

give me thy hand; I will swear .... — 

a tall fellow of thy hands {rep.) — 

or hand of man hath done — ■ 

give me that hand of yours, to kiss . . — 

take you by the hand — 

nay, present your hand — 

hold your hands ; nay Comech/ of Errors, i. •! 

now at hand? Nay, he is at two hands '■ ' 
beshrew his hand, I scarce could .... 
never touch well-welcome to thy hand 

from my false hand cut the 

I have your hand to show 

if by strong hand you offer 

give me thy hand. O, soft, sir 

hard, in the palm of the hand 

rather persuade him to hold his hands 

and have nothing at his hands 

hand, and let me feel your pulse (rep.) 
shall privilege him from your hands 
with Time's deformed hand have. . . . 
now let's go hand in hand, not one .. 

and ne'er shook hands, nor bade Macbeth, i. 2 

the weird sisters hand in hand — i. 3 

the eye wink at the hand! ....:.... — i. 4 

in your eye, your hand, your tongue — 

give me your hand; conduct me .... — 

the handle toward my hand? — 

wash this filthy witness from j'our hand — 

what hands are here? — 

my hand? No; this my hand will rather — 

my hands are of your colour — 

their hands and faces were all badged — 

in the great hand of God I stand .... — 

wrenched with an unlineal hand .... — 

how you were borne in hand — 

whose heavy hand hath bowed — 

bloody and invisible hand, cancel . . — 

I have in head, that will to hand. ... — 

country under a hand accursed! .... — 

shall tie the firstlings of my hand. ... — 

there would be hands uplifted — 

hath heaven given his hand — 

look how she rubs her hands — 

to seem thus washing her hands .... — 

what, will these hands ne'er be — v. 1 

Ai-abia will not sweeten this little hand — v. 1 

wash your hands, put on your — v. 1 

come, come, give me your hand — v. 1 

sticking on his hands — v 2 

the days are near at hand — v. 4 

by self and violent hands took off. ... — v. 7 
the same into young Arthur's hand. . KingJohn, i. I 

the honour giving liand of Coeur-de-lion — i. 1 

give me your Iiand; my father gave — i. 1 

princely heart from Richard's hand — i. 1 
give you welcome with a powerless hand — ii. 1 

till your strong hand shall help .... — ii. I 

they are at hand, to parley — ii. 1 

and the liand of time shall draw — 

than e'er the coward hand of France — 

lo, in this right hand, whose — 

who, by the liand of France, this day — 

who are at hand triumpliantly — 

in those same hands that did — 

all with purpled hands, dyed in .... — 

and by this hand I swear — 

liolds liand with any princess 

thy son and daughter to join hands — 

the power to clutch my hand — 

but for my hand, as unattempted .. — 

what means that hand upon — 

and with her golden hand hath — 

assistance of a mortal lia.nd — 

meritorious shall that hand be called — 
let go the hand of that arch-heretic {rep.) — 

by disjoining hands, hell lose a soul — 

royal liand and mine are newly knit — 

than we well could wash our hands — 
and shall these hands, so lately purged — 

that hand which thou dost hold {rep.) — 

each army hath a hand »— 



ii.3 



_ iv. 3 



V. 2 
V. 2 
V. 2 
V. 2 
V. 2 
V. 3 
V. 3 
V. 3 



ii. I 
ii. I 
ii. 2 



IV. 4 

iv. 4 
iv. 4 
V. 1 
V. 1 



i. 6 
ii. 1 
ii. 2 
ii. 2 



ill. I 
iii. I 
iii. I 
iii. 2 
iii. 4 
iii. f) 
iv. 1 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 
V. 1 
v. I 



ii. 1 
ii. 1 
ii. 1 
ii. 2 
ii. 2 



ii.2 
ii. 2 
ii.2 



iii. 1 
iii. 1 
iii. ) 
iii. 1 



HAN 



[ 3:39 J 



HAND— I kiss your hand. Farewell. Kiii/fJoAn, iii. 3 

give me thv Imnd; 1 lind n thiiiK .... — iii. 3 

Olhiit thoii' luiiKli^c-oul.l s,. roiU-cm — iii. ■! 

snalfhi',! with .in umulv luuiil — iii. -I 

ami wilh my Imn.lat inianif;lit — iv. I 

wo cimnnt hold m.iii;iiitv's strong hand — iv. 2 

shouis and MunsiMc ill lus hand — iv. 2 

thv l\iiiid hallinnirdcivdlum — iv. 2 

lie'iv is v..iir hand and siMll — iv. 2 

n Iclhnv hv thv' liand ..r nature — iv. i 

thv riaiv liauil t..ai-t IhocU'i-d — iv. 'i 

this hand ntiniur is \rt a luaidiMi (,n-p.l — iv. 'J 

nhvavv hand, il that it ho ir,-j'-' ■••. — 'V. :i 

tlie >llanKtul w.irk iillhdait's ham! — iv. :i 

till I luivvsita sh.r.v totldshan.l .. — iv. 3 

a tho\i>and InisiucssLS aiv hriidin hand — iv. 3 

yichlcd ui) into vmir hand the oin-le — v. 1 

by some tluuiuctl hand was robbed .. — v. I 

but with tlie vcrv hand of stern — v. 2 

ehftlt tlirust thv Uttud as deep — V- 2 

warrant from the hand of lieavcn.. .. — v. 2 

like a lion fostered up at hand — v. 2 

that hand, wliich hud the strength .. — v. 2 

shall tliat victorious hand be feebled — V. 2 

and even at hand a drum is ready .. — v. 2 

for at luwul not trnstini; — V. 2 

lieth ill those hands, whieh made . . Hiclmrd II. i. 2 

hy envv's hand, and iuxu"tler's — i. 2 

let me Viss my sovereign's hand .... — i. 3 

deserved at your highness' hand ... . — i. 3 

put into his hands tliat knows — i. 3 

our roval sword your banished hands — i. 3 

<> will! can hold u fire in his hand . . - i. 3 

furnish ^l^ for our aftijirs in hand — i. 4 

iiitVeti.m,iiua thehand of war — ii. I 

hisn.ihlehamldid win what — ii. 1 

his triumphant father's hand (/r/).).. — ii. 1 

grii)0 into your hands, the royalties.. — . ii. 1 

we seize iiito our liands, his plate.... — ii. 1 

thrust disorderly into my hands .... — ii. 2 

makes, m3* hand thus seals it — ii. 3 

to wash your blood from off my lianda — iii. I 

to execution and tire hand of death.. — iii. 1 

Barklonghlj- castle eall you this at hand? — iii. 2 

I do salute thee with my hand {rep.) — iii. 2 

witli heads, and not witn hands .... — iii. 2 

doth kiss king Richard's hand — iii. 3 

show us the haud of God — iii. 3 

no hand of bloo<l and bone — iii. 3 

lift your vassal hands against — iii. 3 

doth humbly kiss thy hand — iii. 3 

and by the IJuried hand of warlike .. — iii. 3 

unek\ give me your hand — iii. 3 

may my liands rot off, and never — iv. 1 

the possession of thy royal hand — iv. 1 

looked for at your hclpmg hands .... — iv. I 

here, on this side, my haud — iv. 1 

nnwieldy sceptre from my hand — iv. 1 

with mine own hands I give away .. — iv. 1 

wash your hands showing — iv. 1 

ay, hand from hand my love — v. 1 

where rude misgoverned hands — v. 2 

but heaven hath a hand in these — v. 2 

interchangeably set down their hands — v. 2 

Btav thy revengeful hand — v. 3 

witn my hand. 'Twas, villain (ifp.) — v. 3 

is all the suit I have in hand > — v. 3 

eat bread from my royal haud (rep.) — v. 5 

villain, tliy own hand yields thy — v. 5 

hand shall burn in never-quenching fire — v. b 

thy fierce hand hath with the king's — v. 5 

with thy fatal hand, \ipon my — v. 6 

wash this blood off from my guilty Irand — v. 6 
the rude hands of that Welshman .A Henry IV. i. 1 

which our own hands have liolp to .. — i. 3 

in single opposition, hand to hand .. — i. 3 

I'll keep them, by this hand — i. 3 

at hand, quoth pick-purse — ii. 1 

give me thy hand, thou shalt have .. — ii. 1 

business hath my lord in hand — ii. 3 

lend me thy haiid to laugh a little .. — ii. 4 

clapped even now into my hand .... — ii. 4 

washes his hands, and says to his wife — ii. I 

in foot and hand; and, with a thought — ii. 4 

Hal, that thou coiildstnot scethy hand — ii. 4 

but be near at hand, for we — iii. 2 

promises be kept on every hand .... — iii. 2 

our hands are lull of business — iii. 2 

and do it with unwashed hands too. , — iii. 3 

or death's hand, for this one half year — iv. 1 

and kiss your hand, when yet you . . — v. 1 

the general sway into your hand .... — V. 1 

the insulting hand of Douglas over .. — V. 4 

the earthy and cold hand of death . . — v. 4 

killed by the hand of Douglas illeiiryW. i. 1 

must glove this hand; ond hence.... — i. 1 

let not nature's hand keep — i. 1 

grow in the palm of my hand — i. 2 

tu bear a geiitleuiau in hand — i. 2 

a dry hand? a yellow cheek? — i. 2 

I cannfit rid my hands of him — i. 2 

till we had his assistance by the hand — 1.3 

ore near at hand; the rest — ii. 1 

by tliis hand, thou think'st me — ii. 2 

that I am a proper fellow of mv hamis — ii. 2 

these inward wars once out of hand — iii. 1 

come on; give me your hand {rrp.) ., — iii. •.: 

your goo>d hand, give me your (rp/i.) — iii. 2 

put me a ealiver into AVart's hand . . — iii. 2 

the silver hand of iicacc hath touched — iv. 1 

and unequal hand uiion our honours? — iv. I 

the prince is here at hand — iv. 1 

and a hand open as dav — iv. 1 

doth kiss yuur grace's hand — iv. 4 

never come with both hands full — iv. 4 

and favourable hand will whisper music — iv. 4 

[Co/.] friend sickness' hands determined — iv. 4 

unatohed Willi boisterous hand — iv. 4 

give me your hand, master Bardolph — v. 1 

BO into the hand* of justice — v. 2 



mv hand; you sha. 
father shall have to 



illenrylF. v. 2 



sthaiid 



by th. 



Ill and dirty In 



id.. 



— V. 2 

— V. ."i 
Jhaud llcnryV. \. 1 

nied Innid doth light — i. 2 

:;htt'ul hand in a well-hallowed 
ii- Ininds this grace of kings — 
. hy this hand 1 swear, I scorn .. 
nrolits will iii'enie; ^;ive nic thy hand 

forget the ulliee of onr hand 

1 put my hand into the bed. 



. (chorus) 



by the h; 
in lihert 
fall inln 
with |-..n 
api'i; ■ 



nu 



iled , 



It black name 

• (irhl.iody hand, shall range 
the hand of hot and forcing 

de Inn 



lit his 111 



nds. 



— ii.4 

— iii. 3 

— iii. 3 
iii. 3 
iii. 4 



we are in Cod's hand, brother — iii. G 

by the white hand olinv lady — iii. 7 

b'v this hand, 1 will take thee a box.. — iv. 1 

their withered hands hdd up — iv. 1 

not work enough for all onr hands .. — iv. 2 

with torch-staves in their hand — iv. 2 

into the hands of (as he thinks) — iv. 4 

with his cap in hand — iv. 5 

raiiiilit me his Imnd — iv. 6 

something lean-to cutpurse of quick hand — V. 1 

cnseheduU'd briefly, in your hands .. — V. 2 

and so clap liands,* and a bargain .... — v. 2 

take me by the hand, and say — v. 2 

upon that I will kiss your hand — v. 2 

■ ■ lilt up his hand \Henryl'I. i. 1 



foi 
stay 



' th- 



is at hand. 
lids 



— i. 4 

— i. 4 



iii. I 
iii. 1 
iii. I 
iii. 2 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 2 



V. 3 



— i. 3 



— iii. 1 



and hands thou hast at once subdued 

accursed fatal hand, that hath 

wants mercy at thy hands! 

he beckons with his hand 

by this maiden blossom in ray hand 
to hold your slaughtering hands .... 
I offer thee mv hand. Fie, uncle .... 

and hand for hand I give 

gather we our forces out of hand .... 

delivered to my hands writ to 

when sceptres are in children's hands 

on eitlier hand thee there are 

by bloody hands, in sleeping 

touch thee but with reverent hands.. 

my hand would free her 

to init a golden sceptre in thy hand.. 

give thee her hand, for sign.". — v. 3 

and here at hand the Daujihiii — v. 4 

to your most gracious hands illenryVI. i. 1 

clapping their hands, and crying .. .. — i. 1 

and wrings his hapless hands — i. 1 

init forth thy hand, reach at the .... — i. 2 
the matter that we have in hand .... — i. 3 

be won into the Dauphin's hands, 
fits the work we have in hand . . . 

lay hands upon these traitors 

best fits to be in Henry's hand ... 
chased hence by rancour's hand . 

here is my lian'd; the deed is — 

take thou this task in hand — 

sharp weapons in a madman's hands — 
and all the peers are here at hand . . — 

lay not thy liands on me — 

some violent hands were laid.. — 

my fingers feel his hand unfeeling , , — 

that violent hands were laid — 

his hands abroad displayed — 

give me thy hand, that I may dew . . — 
could this 'kiss be printed in thy hand — 

hold up thy hand ; make signal — 

hast thou not kissed thy hand — 

this hand of mine hath writ in — 

Brutus' bastard hand stabbed — 

brave mind than a hard haud — 

burnt i' the hand for stealing of sheep — 

aught exacted at your hands — 

great men have reaching hands — 

these hands arc free from guiltless . . — 
thy hand is but a finger tc my fist . . — 
hand was made to handle nought but gold — 
thy hand is made to grasp a palmer's — 
here is a hand to hold a sceptre up . . — 
fco(. A.'"/.] hand, lords, 'twas aglorious day — 

now the king escaped our hands ZHi^nry VI, i. 1 

whither shall I fly to 'scape their hands? 
to thrust his hand between his teeth 
pai-ted but the shadow with his hand 

hold vou his hands, whilst I do 

king Ilenry had shook hands with .. 

1 reap at thy too cruel hand ! 

by many hands your father 

for, liand to hand, he would have.. . . 
this strong ri^ht hand of mine . 
whose hand is that, the forest . 
darraign your battle for they are at hand — 

better service than your hands — 

and throw my hantla, mine eyes .... — 

give me thy hand; and, gentle — 

the hand, that stabbed tliy father (rep.) — 

and cheers these hands, that slew — 

this man, whom hand to hand I slew — 
who at his bonds received my life {rep.) — 
bloody steel grasped in their ireful hands — 
for, at their hands, I have deserved no — 

if this right hand, would buy two — 

this hand should chop it oil' — 

let us lay hands upon him — 

unless my haud and strength could equal — 

humbly to kiss your hand — 

shall you ha;e all kindness at my hand — 
give tny hand to Warwick (rep.) .... — 
to pledge my vow, I give my hand .. — 

eeeV for hatred at my hands — 

an open hand in sign of love — 

at whose honds he hath good usage.. — 



ill. 3 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 2 



iv. 10 
V. 1 
V. 1 
V. 1 
V. 3 



ii. I 



— 11. 2 



II AN 

HAND— your hands; now join (rep.).3UrnTyl'l. iv. r, 

his hand to wield a sceptre — iv. d 

we will proclaim you out of hand.... — iv. 7 

truth, I kiss your highness' baud.... — iv. s 

then Clarence is at hand, I hear .... — v. 1 

there are ot hand, and you Bliall quickly — v. 1 

and at his hands beg racrey — v. 1 

I had rather chop this hand off — v. I 

this hand, fast wound about thy .... — v. I 

to deserve well at my brother's hands — v. 1 

take my hand, and with thy lips .... — v. 2 

for Edward is at hand — v. 4 

will take the present at our hands.. Wic/mrd///. i. I 

by the self-same hand that made .... — i. 2 

be the hand that made these — i. 2 

and slain by Edward's hand — i. 2 

this hand, whieh, for thy love, did kill — i. 2 

one favour at thy gracious hand — i. 2 

deny her aiding hand therein — i. 3 

I kiss thy liand, in sign of league .. — i. 3 

we go to use our haiKls, and not our — i. 3 

noble duke of Clarence to your iianda — i. 4 

and lay no hands on me — i. I 

he holds vengeance in his hand — i. 4 

like Pilate, would 1 wash my hands — i. I 

and Hastings, take each other's hand — ii. 1 

with my h:uid I seal my true heart's — ii. I 

let him kiss your hand — ii. 1 

two crntclics from mv feeble hands.. — ii. 2 

witli a huiiiikoiis hand was kindly.. — ii. 2 

leaves fall, tl. en winter is at hand .. — 11.3 

that iiromise at your grace's hand .. — iii. 1 

hath no shriving work in hand — iii. 2 

never looked for better ot his hands — iii. ri 

which in a set haud fairly is engrossed — iii. ii 

the mayor is here at hand — iii. 7 

get a prayer-book in your hand .... — iii. 7 

a hook of prayer in his hand — iii. 7 

led in the hand of her kind aunt .... — iv. 1 

blood was well washed from Iiis hands — iv. I 

give me thv hand: thus high — iv. 2 

my griefs frown on the upper hand.. — iv. 4 

but at hand, at hand, ensues his .... — iv. 4 

whose hands soever lanced — iv. 4 

at her hands, which the king's King — iv. 4 

put in their hands thy bniising — v. 3 

then hand in hand to liell — v. 3 

with one hand on his dagger Henry I'lII. i. 2 

a hand as fruitful as theland — i. 3 

the fairest hand I ever touched! .... — i. 1 

to 3'onr highness' hand I tender .... — ii. 2 

give me your hand; much joy — ii. 2 

your grace, whose hand has raised me — ii. 2 

tinder your hands and seals — ii.4 

cause into his hands that hates me? — iii. 1 

to his own hand, in his bedelianiber — iii. 2 

as my hand has opened bounty — iii. 2 

so your hand, and heart, your brain — iii. 2 

the great seal presently into our hands — iii. 2 

with his own hand gave me — iii. 2 

into your own hands. Cardinal — iii. 2 

my lord, are in the king's hand .... — iii. 2 

still in thy right hand carry gentle.. — iii. 2 

contains, that paper in your liand?.. — iv. 1 

her two hands, and she, sleep in .... — v. I 

is the king's hand, and tongue — v. I 

give me your hand; ah, my good lord — v. I 

give me thy haud, stand up — v. I 

jiaee tliera not ill their hands — v. 2 

ye have made a fine hand, fellows .. — v. 3 

into whose hand I give thy life — v. 4 

O, that her hand, in whose .. Trailug^ Cressida, i. 1 

she has the mends in her own hands — i. 1 

many hands, and no use — i. 2 

her white hand to his cloven chin .. — i. 2 

she has a marvellous white baud — i. 2 

and the hand of Greece should hold — i. 3 

of hand: the still andnientol parts (rep.) — i. 3 

they place before his hand that made — i. 3 

let me touch your haud — i. 3 

for you all clapped your hands — ii. 2 

question now in hand have glozed .. — ii. 2 

what exploit's in hand? where — iii. 1 

I hold your hand; here, my cousin's — iii. 2 

shakes his parting guest by the hand — iii. 3 

take his hand; witness the — iv. 1 

by Venus' hand I swear — iv. 1 

there is at hand Paris your brother.. — iv. 2 

give up to Diomedes' hand — iv. 2 

they are at hand and ready — iv. 2 

and to this baud when I deliver her — iv. 3 

I'll give her to thy hand — iv. 4 

lady, give me your hand — iv. 4 

half hand, half Hector comes to .... — iv. 5 

his heart and hand both open — iv. 5 

this hand is Grecian all, and this.... — jv. 5 

give me thv hand, my cousin — iv. 5 

so long walked hand in hand witli time — iv. ^ 

thy hand upon that match — iv. 5 

give me vour hand. Follow his torch — v. I 

nor the hand of JIars iK-i-koniug — v. 3 

lier ivory hand wafts to her .... Jimon o/Alltens, i. I 

even ujion knees and hands — i. 1 

my hand to thee; uiine honour — j. 1 

give me vour hand; we must — i. 1 

the cap plavs in the right hand, thus — ii. 1 

to hold your hand more close — ii. 2 

nav, put all your hands — iv, 2 

but I should infect my honds — iv. 3 

with his fairer band, offering — v. 2 

were not erected by their hands .... — v. i 
work's, my oountrymeu, in hand? . . Coriolanus^ i. 1 

with his u'lttiled hand then wiping .. — i. 3 

wash my fierce hand in his heart. ... — i. 10 

your hand, and yours; ere in our own — ii. 1 

aged sir, hands off. Hence, rotten thing — iii. I 

lay hands ujMin Itim. and bear (rrp.) — iii. 1 

tlie Tarpeian rock with rigorous hands — iii. 1 

people's mouths, and we their hand — iii. 1 

to them, witli this bonnet in thy hand — iii. 2 



HAN 



HAjSTD-thy hands clutched aa many. Cork 

give me thy hand: come 

his good sword in liis hand 

take our friendly senators by the liands 

your hand ! most welcome ! 

sanctifies liimself with's hand 

you liave made fair hands 

thu5, witli his speechless liand 

and in her hand tlie grandchild 

liolds up hands for fellowship 

too strange a hand over your Juliii: 

come on my right hand, for this ear 
he put it by with the back of his hand 
and clappe'd their chopped hands . 



[ ;-3-iO ] 



— IV. 1 



i. 2 



in several hands, in at his windows . . — 

his left hav.d, which did flame (rep.) — 

in his own hand bears tlie power — 

hold my hand : be factious for redress — 

like the work we have in hand — 

tliy full petition at the hand of Brutus I — 

five me your hands all over — 

is judgment ruled our hands — 

with an angry wafture of your hand — 

if Brutus have in hand any exploit. . — 

such an exploit have I in hand — 

and did bathe their hands in it — 

the first that rears your hand — 

I kiss thj' hand, but not in flattery . . — 

speak, hands, for me. Et tu. Brute? — 

let us bathe our hands in Caesar's blood — 

whilst your purple hands do reek . . — 
by our hands, and this our present (rep.) — 

each man render me liis bloody hand — 
next, CaiusCassius, do I take your baud — 

tlierefore, I took your hands; but was — 

else shall you not have any hand at all — 

woe to the hand that shed this — 

quartered with the hands of war — 

the state of things. Lend me your hand — 

though he had no hand in his deatli — 

he is at hand; and Pindarus is come — iv. 2 

if he be at hand, I shall be satisfitM . . — iv. 2 

like horses hot at hand, make — iv. 2 

from the hard hands of peasants — iv. 3 

give me your hand. And my heart too — iv. 3 

their battles are at hand — 

left hand of the even field (rep.) .... — 

canst not die by traitors' hands — 

give me thy hand, Messala: be thou — 

and feeding from our soldiers' hands — 

give me your hand first — v. 5 

sliow him vour hand A-ntony ^- Cleopatray i. 2 

lo, now! if it lay in their hands .... — i. 2 

the hand could pluck her back — i. 2 

let me have thy hand: further this. . — ii. 2 

tliei'e is my hand: a sister I bequeath — ii. 2 

the touches of those flower-soft hands — ii. 2 

a hand, that kings have lipped — ii. 5 

tliese hands do lack nobility — ii. S 

lie they upon thy hand, and be — ii. 5 

let me have your hand: I did not.... — ii. 6 

let me shake thy hand; I never — ii. 6 

but give me your hand, Menas — ii. 6 

whatsoe'er their hands are — ii. 6 

come, let us all take hands — ii. 7 

all take hands: make battery to our — ii. 7 

your hand. I'll try you o' the shore — ii- 7 

and shall, sir: give's yom- hand .... — ii. 7 

I kiss his conquering hand — iii. 11 

to lay my duty on your hand — iii. 1 1 

so saucy with the hand of she here . . — iii. U 

with my playfellow, your hand .... — iii. 11 

the white hand of a lady fever thee.. — iii. 11 

give me th}' hand, thou hast — iv. 2 

give me thy hand; to this great fairy — iv. 8 

unto his lips thy favoru-ing hand — iv. 8 

give me thy hand; through Alexandria — iv. 8 

the hand of death hath raujht him.. — Iv. 9 

even here do we shake hands — i v. 1 

and with those hands, that grasped. . — iv. 10 

is done unto thy hand — iv. 12 

on flowers, we'll hand in hand — iv. 12 

my resolution, and ray hands I'll trust — iv. 13 

that self hand, which writ his honour — v. 1 

you have fallen into a princely hand — v. 2 

quick, quick, good hands! ..'. — v. 2 

died with their swords in hand Cipnbeline^ i. 1 

they were parted by gentlemen at hand — i. 2 

your hand, a covenant — i. 5 

to hold the hand fast to her lord .... — i. 6 

this hand, whose toucli, whose every — i. 7 

join gripes with hands made hard .. — i. 7 

what, if I do line one of their hands? — ii. 3 

your sweet hand. Good-morrow, sir — ii. 3 

not say, I am one; but I have a hand — iii. 1 

the place was near at hand — iii. 4 

my husband's hand! that drug-damned — iii. 4 

let thine own hands take away — iii. 4 (letter) 

thou shalt not damn my hand — iii. 4 

if I do not by thy hand — iii. 4 

that cravens my weak hand — iii. 4 

your hand, my lord. Receive it friendly — iii. 5 

it is Posthumus' hand; I know't.. .. — iii. 5 

give me thy hand, here's my purse . . — iii. 5 

fortune, put them into my hand!.... — iv. 1 

slain thee with my proper hand — iv. 2 

with his own single hand he'd take.. — iv. 2 

tills is his hand; his foot Mercurial.. — iv. 2 

lay hands on him; a dog! — v. 3 

whom she bore in hand to love — v. 5 

there's other work in hand — V. 5 

by the hand of his queen mother .... — v. 5 

have laid most heavy hand — v. 5 

ere bloody hands were washed — v. 5 

here witli thy victorious hand. . . . Titus Andron. i. 2 

I begged the empire at thy hands. ... — i. 2 

with his own hand did slay his — i. 2 

a solemn hunting is iu hand — ii. 1 

death in my hand, blood and revenge — ii. 3 

wash their hands in Bassianus' — ii. 3 



HAND— mother's baud shall right. TitusAndron. ii. 

with thine own hands kill me — ii. 

help me with thy fainting liand — ii. 

reach me thy hand, that I may — ii. 

thy hand once more; I will not loose — ii. 
wash thy hands. She hath no (rep.) — ii. 

if thou hadst hands to help thee .... — ii. 

what stern ungentle hands have — ii. 

seen those lily iiands tremble — ii- 

what accursed hand hath made .... — iii. 

I'll chop off my hands too — iii. 

that thou hast no hands; for hands.. — iii. 
thou hast no hands, to wipe away .. — iii. 

or shall we cut away our hands — iii. 

I'll send the emperor my hand — iii. 

for that noble hand of thine — iii. 

my hand will serve the turn — iii. 

which of yoixr hands hath not defended — iii. 

my hand natli been but idle — iii. 

whose hand shall go along — iii. 

my hand shall go. By heaven — iii. 

I will spare my hand — iii. 

lend me tliy hand, and I will give ,. — iii. 
give his majesty my hand (rep.') .... — iii. 
and for thy hand, look by and by .. — iii. 
I lift this one hand up to heaven .... — iii. 

for that good hand thou sent'st — iii. 

and here s thy hand, in scorn to thee — iii. 
warlike hand; thy mangled daughter — iii. 
thy other hand gnawing with thy .... — iii. 
arid in this hand the other will I bear — iii. 

bear thou my hand, sweet wench — iii. 

want our hands and cannot passionate — iii. 

this poor right hand of mine is — iii. 

violent hands upon her tender life! . . — iii. 
hands can she lay on her life? (rep.) — iii. 
handle not the theme, to talk of hands — iii. 
no hands, if Marcus did not (r?p.) .. — iii. 
without the lielp of any hand at all — iv. 

this prey out of his father's hands .. — iv. 

shalt have justice at his hands — iv. 

I'll be at hand, sir — iv. 

robbed Andronicus of his good hand — v. 

ravished her, and cut her hands — v. 

played the cheater for thy father's liand — v. 
for his hand, he had his two sons' hands — v. 
wanting a hand to give it action?.... — v. 

thy coming for my other hand? — v. 

some cunning practice out of hand . . — v. 
and Valentine, lay hands on them . . — v. 
my hand cut off, and made a merry — v. 

her sweet hands, her tongue (rep.) .. — v. 

this one hand yet is left to cut — v. 

trumpets show, the emperor is at hand 

daughter with his own right hand — v. 

that true hand, that fought Konie's . . — v. 
bring our emperor gently in thy hand — v. 

and treason are tlie hands of sin Pericles, i. 

on whom plenty held full hand — i. 

the fifth, a hand environed with clouds — ii. 
scorn now their hand should give .. — ii. 
and we'll clasp hands; when peers . . — ii. 

or my hand subscribe to any — ii. 

your hands and lips must seal it too — ii. 

lend me your hands — iii. 

his kingly hands with hauling — iv. 

you are lit into my hands — iv. 

his hands, where 1 was like to die . . — iv. 

whose hand must take my plight Lear, i. 

I take Cordelia by the hand, duchess .... — i. 

had he a hand to write this? 

it is his hand, my lord 

wilt thou take her by the hand? (rep.) 

give me your hand 

hide thee, thou bloody hand 

tear this hand, for lifting food to't?. . . 

give me thy hand: who's there? 

light of ear, bloody of hand 

tliy hand out of plackets 

you have mighty business in hand 

with robbers hands, my hospitable favours 

to whose hands have you sent 

hold your hand; my lord; I have served 

distaff into my husband's hands 

to let these hands obey my blood 

more convenient is he for my hand 

give me your hand; you are now 

let go my hand: here, friend, is anotlier 

O let ir.e kiss that hand ! 

hold thy bloody hand ; why dost 

O here he is, lay hand upon him 

give me your hand; I'll lead you to some 
now let thy friendly hand put 

five me your hand; far off, methinks. . . . 
will not swear these are my Iiands .... 

and hold your hands in benediction 

give me thy hand; away (rep.) — v. 

makes civil hands unclean . . Romeo ^-Juliet, (prol 

from those bloody hands throw — i. 

old partizans, in hands as old — i. 

all in one or two men's hands — i. 

dnth enrich the hand of yonder knight? — i. 

make happy my rude hand — i. 

if I profane with my unworthy hand — i. 

you do wrong your hand too much . . — i. 

saints have hands that pilgrims' hands — 

let lips do what hands do — 

upon her hand! O, tliat I were (rep.) — 
it is nor hand, nor foot, nor arm .... — 

hop a little from her hand — 

for the bawdy hand of the dial — 

and for a hand, and a foot, and a body — 
but close our hands with holy words — 

whom Romeo's hand did slay — 

with one hand beats cold death aside — 

why dost thou wring thy hands? — 

did Romeo's hand shed Tybalt's blood? — 
craves acquaintance at my hand .... — 
the white wonder of dear Juliet's hand — 
as that name's cursed hand murdered — 



. 3 



1 
1 

— i. 2 

— i. 2 

— ii. 4 

— iii. 1 

— iii. 1 



— ill. 7 

— iii. 7 

— iv. 2 



— IV. 5 



— iv. 6 



— iv. fi 



— iv. 7 



. 5 



II AN 



HAND— thy desperate hand liomeo^- JuUtt, iii. 3 

give nie thy hand; 'tis late: farewell — }\\-'^ 
from the reach of these my hands . . — iii. ."i 
see how he will take it at your hands — iii. 5 

lay hand on heart, advise — iii. .5 

thou our hands; and ere this hand .. — iv. 1 

you have your hands full all — iv. 3 

presage some joyful news at hand .. — v. 1 
at my hands [Co/. K»i(. J thee will keep — v. 3 

give me thy hand, one writ with me — v. 3 

that hand tliat cut thy youth — v. 3 

a cup, closed iu my true love's hand? — v. 3 
give me thy hand; this is my daughter's — v. 3 
hand more instrumental to the mouth.. Hamie/, i. 2 

these hands are not more like — i. 2 

hold off your hands. Be ruled — 1.4 

by a brother's hand, of life, of crown .... — 1.5 
hold it fit, that we shake hands and part — i. 5 
lay your hands again upon my sword.... — \.b 
with his other hand thus o'er his brow .. — ii. 1 

was falsely borne in hand — ii. 2 

deserved at the hands of fortune — ii- 2 

your hands: come then, the appurtenance — ii. 2 
not saw the air too much with your hand — iii. 2 

and Hymen did our hands unite — j'j' ^ 

thoughts black, hands apt, drugs fit .... — iii. 2 
what if this cursed hand were tliicker .. — iii. 3 
offence's gilded hand may shove by justice — iii. 3 

leave wringing of your hands — iii. 4 

ears without hands or eyes — iii. 4 

caps, hands, and tongues, applaud it .. .. — iv. 5 
by collateral hand they find us touched. . — iv. 5 

know you the hand? 'Tis Hamlet's — iv. 7 

there are tongues, are hands, are accidents — iv. 7 
the hand of bttle employment hath .... — v. 1 
with desperate hand fordo its own life .. — v. 1 
hold off thy hand. Pluck them asunder.. — v. 1 

and take this hand from me — v. 2 

no, by this hand. Give them the foils.... — v. 2 
the treacherous instrument is in thy hand — v. 2 

hold your hands, both you Olhello, i. 2 

ratlier use, than their bare hands — i. 3 

and on every hand, enwheel thee round! — ii. I 

paddle with the palm of his hand? — ii. 1 

lechery, by this hand; an index — ii. 1 

hard at hand comes the master — ii. 1 

is my right hand, and this is my left hand — ii. 3 

1 pray you, sir, hold your hand — .!!■ * 

if my heart were in your hand — iii. 3 

"Wring my hand, cry — O sweet creature.. — iii. 3 
the execution of his wit, hands, heart .. — iii. 3 
give me j'our hand: this hand is (rep.) .. — iii. 4 
this hand of yours requires a sequester. . — iii. 4 

'tis a good hand, a frank one — iii. 4 

that hand that gave away my heart (rep.) — iii. 4 
gave hands: but our new heraldry (rep.) — iii. 4 
by this hand, she falls thus about my neck — iv. 1 
by this hand; and to see how he prizes .. — iv. 1 

I strike it, and it hurts my hand — iv. 1 

and put in every honest hand a whip. ... — iv. 2 
by this hand, I say [Kni.-nay, I think] . . — iv. 2 
give me thy hand, Roderigo; thou hast. . — iv. 2 
her hand on her bosom, her head on — iv. 3 (song) 
at hand; I may miscarry in't (rep.) .... — v. 1 

Isawmy handkerchief m his hand — v. 2 

indeed, these hands have newly stopped — v. 2 
saw it in his hand; it was a handkercliief — v. 2 
of one, whose hand, like the base Judean — v. 2 

HANDED— and handed love .... iriuier's Tale, i v. 3 
as poisonous tongued, as handed Cymhuline, iii. 2 

HAND-FAST-he not in hand-fast. Il'inler's Tale, i v. 3 

HANDFUL-rather have a handful.MW. iV.'sDr. iv. 1 
o' t'other side, that haudful of wit I.Lowe's L.L. iv. 1 

HAND-IN-HAND comparison Cymbeline, i. 5 

will, hand-in-hand, all headlong. Tilus Andron. v. 3 
lo, hand-in-hand, Lucius and I will fall .— v. 3 
that it went hand-in-hand even with . . Havdel, i. 5 

HAND-KERCHER [KnO about your .... John, iv. 1 

HANDKERCHIEF was stained. . As you Like il, iv. 3 
when he showed me your handkerchief? — v. 2 
lend me a handkerclrief; so, I thank. ^/Z'jf JVell, v. 3 

but a handkerchief, and rings Winter sTate, v. 2 

my handkerchief rA'7i/.-haiid-kercher] ..John, iv. 1 
as their gloves or tneir handkerchiefs. Henry r. iii. 2 
in Rutland's blood, a handkerchief. Rjc/ia?!/ ///. iv. 4 

their scarfs and handkerchiefs Coriolanus, ii. 1 

then waved his handkerchief? Cyinbeline, i. 4 

with glove, or hat, or handkerchief .. — i. 4 

for that same handkerchief? (rep.) Olhello, iii. 3 

you not sometimes seen a handkerchief — iii. 3 
but such a handherchief, (I am sure .... — iii. 3 
where should I lose that handkerchief . . — iii. 4 
offends me; lend me thy handkercliief . , — iii. 4 

that handkerchief did an Egyptian — iii. 4 

fetch me that handkerchief (rep.) — iii. 4 

there's some wonder in this handkerchief — iii. 4 
but if I give my wife a handkerchief .... — iv. 1 
but, for the handkerchief,— By heaven . . — iv. 1 
he had my handkerchief. Ay, what of . . — iv. 1 
handkerchief,— confessions, — handkerchief — iv. 1 
is it possible? confess? Handkerchief r .. — iv. 1 
did you mean by that same handkerchief — iv. 1 

that should be my handkerchief I — iv. 1 

and did you see the handkerchief? — iv. 1 

that handkerchief, which I so loved .... — v. 2 

I saw my handkerchief in his hand — v. 2 

I saw the handkercliief. He foimd it then — v. 2 
it was a handkerchief, an antique token — v. 2 

that handkerchief thou speak'st of — v. 2 

by that handkerchief that was my wife's? — v, 2 

HANDLE— t)ie handle of lier fan . . Merry VTives, ii. 2 

shall see how I'll handle her Meas.JbrMeas. v. 1 

in Bohemia can learnedly handle. Winter^ Tale, iv. 3 

the handle toward my hand? Macbeth, ii. 1 

tlie sacred handle of our sceptre Richard II. iii. 3 

then I know how to handle you 2Henrjjiy. ii. 4 

in some sort, indeed, handle women . . Henry 1^. ii. ?, 
could not therefore handle an English — v. 1 
not to wear, handle, or use . . 1 Henry VI. i. 3 (procl.) 
liand was made to handle nought ..'iHenryri.\. 1 



HAN 

HANDLIC— how to Imiuilc it ... nVui^ndroiu'rui, ii. 1 
U Imiidle not the tlicmo, to tnlk .... — iii. 2 
thiit follow hiiiiclk'sliis how liki! tear, iv. 6 

IlANDLED-ifyou li.uulU.l Iwr . Meat, fbr Mea.^,. v. 1 

how wert thou ImiuUeil. hiins; IHenny yi. i. 4 

chiimpioii iK'vei' ImiulKil awunl iii. 4 

or »lii!litly Immllol in ilis,',.ur-,i; ..Richard III. iii. 7 

IIANl)l,KSS^,„wloss. h,iMdUs^i..7Vo./i,.c5-Cr«,. v. 5 
mu.lo thff hiiiulUMS in Ihv \M\wr's..Titm.ind. iii. 1 

IlA^'l)L^:^<T-hulull^■^l ii.tln ..TrnilmACres,. i. 1 

IIANDLING-han.Mini; our .■wl's..I« ,/".< LiU,- ,l. iii. ■> 
a n>tten ctisc ahiilv^i no Imniilin',- ..•21lrtiifil I', iv. 1 
ttiul then thev will omlniv liMnillini; lU-mn r v •' 
that will nol"h..lcl the lumdlin-. .,(■,.;•,.,/„,;„< iii' 2 

lIA.N'n.MAin-tVoni In r Inindniui,!. 7»v/M M-Al i. 1 
k't thy lunnblrlnuulnuu,ls|.i',ik . .\ ll,;u,i f I. iii. :i 
n.s lioni ,1 hln.iun- Inujilnuiid . . . . Il,;i,i,r 1 1 1, ii. 3 

tlie luinihnnicis of nil Women Ci/m'heliiie, iii. 4 

a hiMulnuiid Ik to his desires ..TilusAiidronicm, i. 2 

HAND-SAW — like a hand-saw Miennill'. ii. 4 

I know 11 Iniwk from ii Imnd-snw Ha'mlel, ii. 2 

H.VN'DSOME— looks hiind.<ome in.Meinjirires, iii. 4 

let liim be a handsome fellow Much Ado, ii. I 

and every tiling' liiiiulsonie ulioiit hira — iv. 2 

lie shall wear nothing handsome about v. 4 

is't not a handsome t'entlemani' All's Well, iii. & 

myself handsome till thy return 2llenryiy. ii. i 

baehelor, a handsome stripling too.. Kidmrd III. i. 3 
were young, and handsome . . Ilenni fill. ii. 2 (let.) 
see a handsome man loose-wived./i;iMnv iiCleo. i. 2 

now, afore me, a handsome fellow I i'ericles, ii. 1 

and a kind, and a handsome . . liomvo Sf Juliet, ii. b 
very nuieh more handsome than line .. llamlel, ii. 2 
hcMde.-i, the knave is handsome, young.. 0(/iW/o, ii. I 
a proper man. A very handsome man — iv. 3 

IIAXDSO.MJCKY— trim it handsomely . Tcm/jes;, v. 1 
he wears tliem not handsomely. . Wiiiter'sTale, iv. 3 
to nuet him handsomely. 7'i(ia.lH((i-onicui, ii.4 (let.) 

Iv.it tlioe into liandsomeness. rroiVKs^CrfssWa, ii. 1 
1 1 .\ X DW I ; I T I .\G would tell. Cum<?rfi/ or Errors, iii . 1 
II.VXIIVCK.VFT man in Athens ..Mid. N.Dr. iv. 2 
If AXDV-l) AXDY-places, handy-dandy.. Lear, iv. 6 
HAXUVCKAFTSiMEN- 

is not regarded in handycraftsmen .iHenryVI. iv. 2 
HAXDYWOKK-hishandywork ....KingJohnA. 1 

detacer of God's handywork Richard III. iv. 4 

have gone upon rav handywork ..JuliusCmsar, i. 1 

H.VNG— hang, cur, iiangi Tempest i. 1 

han;; not on my garments _ ' i.' 2 

would ery to a sailor, go hang (rep.) — ii. 2 (song) 

men hang and drown theirproper selves iii.°3 

eome. hang them on this line iv. 1 

that hangs on the bough _ v. I (soni') 

hang him up, says the duke .. Two Gen. offer, iv.^l 

well, thereby hangs a tale Merry Ifives, i. 4 

hang the trifle, woman 'ji, 1 

hang 'em, slaves! I do not iii 1 

hang no more about me l\.2 

hang him, poor euckoldlv knave! .. — ii'a 
hang him, mechanical sa'lt-butter rogue — ii! 2 

it shall hang like a meteor o'er ii. 2 

and as idle as she may hang together iii. 2 

hang him, dishonest rascal i iii. 3 

hang, hog. Hang hog is latin for bacon — iv 1 

hang him, dishonest varlet! _ iv. 2 

hang her, witch! iv. 2 

let them hang themselves in Tiretfth Night, ( 3 

it hangs like flax on a distaff — i. 3 

will hang thee for thy absence (,rep.) — is 

marry, hang thee, brock! _ ii. 5 

where you will hang like an icicle .. _ iii '2 

hang him, foul collier! _ iii. 4 

go, hang yourselves all! _ iii 4 

and you will hang them . . Measure for Measure, ii'. 1 

if you head and hang all that — ii. 1 

hang upon his gown ii.' 2 

if you will hang me for it v" 1 

lord! he will hang upon him MuchAdo, i. 1 

or hang my bugle in an invisible baldrick _ i. 1 
hang me up at the door of a brothel-house — i I 

il I do, hang nic in a bottle like — i. 1 

he should, it were an alms to hang him — ii' 3 

hang him, truant; there's no true — iii! 2 

liangit! You must hang it first — iii 2 

truly, I would not hang a dog bv _ iii' 3 

on my eyelids shall conjecture fiang — iv! 1 

family s old monument hang mournful — iv. 1 

hang her an epitaph upon her tomb _ v I 

hang thou there upon the tomb . . — v. 3 (scroll) 
hang us all. That would hang us...Wrd. A' 'sDr i 2 
no more discretion but to hang us . . _ i ' 2 

and hang a iwarl in every cowslip's _ ii 1 

liang oft. thou cat, thou burr iii •> 

for they shall hang out for the iv 2 

thou marry, hang me by the neck.tooe'i L. L. iv! 1 
it I do, hang me; 1' faith, I will not — iv 3 

that hangs up simplicity iv' 3 

think you, hang themselves tonight? — v' 2 

to make J iidas hang himself v 2 

when icicles hang by the wall ' _ v. 2 (son'g) 

locks hang on her temples . . Merchant or fenice i 1 
may 'at have leave to hang thyself .. ' — iy' 1 
what passion hangs these weights. ,ljuou Like it, i! 2 

and thereby hangs o tale _ ji t 

hang there, my verse, in witness of.. _ iii' 2 
tongues I'll hang on every tree — iii. 2 (vcrsiis) 

liangs odes U|Min hawthorns iji 2 

are you he that hangs tlie verses _ jij' 2 

he that hangs himself is a virgin .. ..AWtlVelLx'. 1 

1 know that knave; hung him! iii 5 

marry, hang };ou! And your !!!! _ iii! 5 

we shall be fain to hung vou iv* 3 

hang it round with all inv. Taming 0/ Sh. I (indue ) 

woo her? Ay, or I'll hang her _ i 2 

anil merry,_or go hang yourselves.. — iii!2- 
nnd tlierehy hangs a tale. lx;t'» ha't — iv 1 
mankind would hang themselves . Winter' iTnle, i. 2 
hang all the hiifhunds that eaniint.. _ ij. 3 
hang hun, he'll lie made an example — iv. 3 



[341 ] 



HAN 



HANG— she hongs about his neck.. Winier'iTaU, v. 3 

hang up thy mistress Comedy 0/ Errors, W. 1 

night nor day, hang upon his Macbeth, i. 3 

there hangs a vaporous drop profound — iii. !> 

who must hang them jv. 2 

nnd hang lip tlicni iy] 2 

blessings hung iihoiit his throne — iv' 3 

now iloes he led his title hang loose — y 2 

hang those that talk of fear _ v. 3 

hang out our banners on the v! .^ 

iil>cm the next tree shalt thou hang alive — v 5 
now, by the sky that Imiigs above . . King John, ii! 2 
hang a calf's skin on those recreant (re/j.J— iii. I 
teaihes me to kill or hang myself .. — iii. 4 

a beam to hang thee on _ iy. 3 

pestilenee hangs in our air Richard II. i. 3 

that hangs witnout thy bosom? v. 2 

any plague hang over us, 'tis he — v 3 

when thou art king, hang athief \HenryIf. i. 2 

and go not. I'll hang .you for going. . _ i. 2 

if I hang I'll make a fat pair — ii 1 

hang ye, gorbellied knaves _ ii 2 

hang him! let hira tell the king — ii. 3 

and matter, hang me up by the heels — ii. 1 

play to you, hang in the air — iii. 1 

my skin hangs ahout me like — iii. 3 

get'stany leave of me, hang me ....'IHenrylf. i. 2 
hang yourself, you muddy conger, liang — ii. 4 
iiang him, swaggering rascal! ....:'. — ii.4 

hang him, rogue! he lives upon .... ii.4 

he a good wit.' hang him, baboon! . . — ii. 4 
and hangs resolved correction in the — iv. 1 

let us not hang like roping icicles Henry V. iii. ii 

will hani' upon my tongue like — v. 2 

in my gallery thy picture hangs... .IHc/iry;'/. ii. 3 

signior, hang! base muleteers iii. 2 

Rouen hangs her head for grief iii. 2 

break your necks, or hang yourselves! — v. 4 

hang up .your ensigns v. 4 

alas, nw lord, ban" me, if ever IHenryfl. i. 3 

this lofty pine, and hangs his sprays — ii. 3 

axe of death hang over tliee ii.4 

no, it will hang upon my richest robes — ii. 4 
welfare of us all hangs on the cutting — iii. I 

hail" him with his pen and inkhom iv. 2 

and liang thee o'er my tomb _ iv. 10 

excuse current, but to hang thyself.fiiWiarJ //;. i. 2 
how well the sequel hangs together — iii.fi 

I'll hang my head, and perish Henry fill. iii. I 

that hangs on princes' favours! iii. 2 

and hang their heads with sorrow . . v. 4 

that hangs upon our quarrel. Troilus ^- Cressida, ii. 3 

he hangs the lip at something iii. 1 

is to hang quite out of fashion iii. 3 

go hang yourself, you naughty' _ iv. 2 

hang thyself. No Timon or.lihens, i. 1 

hang him, he'll abuse us ' ii. 2 

there's the fool hangs on your back. . ii. 2 

hang thee, monster! Pardon hira — iv. 3 

city hang his poison in the sick — iv. 3 

I'd give thee leave to hang it — iv. 3 

hang tliem, or stab them, drown .... v. 1 

felt the axe, and hang himself — v. 2 

hang ye! Trust ye? with every Coriolunus,\. \ 

hang em! they say? they'll sit — i. 1 

they are dissolved : hang 'em ! — i. 1 

as tliey would hang them — i. 1 

than pictiu-e-like to hang by the wall — i. 3 
think upon me'Miang 'eml I would — ii. 3 

let them hang. Ay, and burn too — iii. 2 

and hangs on Dian's temple v. 3 

blame may hang upon your hardness v. 3 

night hangs upon mine ej'es v. ^ 

your diver did hang a salt-flsh ../f/i/o'ii/ &Cleo. ii. b 
go, hang, sir, hang! tell me of that? — ii. 7 

whip, or hang, or torture iii. 11 

may hang no longer on me iv. 9 

and hang me up m chains! v. 2 

shall hang in what place you please v. 2 

hangshoth thief and tnie man Cijmbetine, ii. 3 

richer than to hang by the walls — iii. 4 

hang there like fruit, my soul _ v. .") 

my case, I should go hang myself. TilusAndron. ii. 5 
how would he hang his slender gilded — iii. 2 

away, and hang him presently — iv. 4 

and 1 hang the head as flowers iv. 4 

hang him on this tree _ v. 1 

first hang the child _ v. 1 

here's a fish hangs in the net Pericles, ii! 1 

as a chaplet hang upon thy grave — iv. 1 

marry, hang her up for ever! _ iv. 6 

marry, hang you! she's born to undo us — iv. 6 

thick slumber hangs on mine eyelids v. 1 

hang fated o'er men's faults Lear, iii. 4 

hang him instantly iii. 7 

half way down hangs one that gathers . . — iv!() 

the usurer hangs the cozener iv. 6 

restoration, hang thy medicine on iv! 7 

to hang Cordelia in the prison _ v. 3 

beauty hangs upon the cheek... . Romeo if Juliet, i. 5 



et banished? hang up philosophy! 

Jiang thee, young baggage iii..', 

an' you be not, hang, beg, starve — iii. ,') 

hang him. Jack! come, we'll in here iv. .', 

hangs ragged rc'o(.Kri(.-hang upon].. — v. i 

poison yet doth hang on them _ v. 3 

that the clouds still hang on vou? Hamlet, i. 2 

she would hang on him as if increase — i. 2 

her coronet weeds clambering to hong . . — iv. 7 

ill this world to drown or hang tliemselves — v. 1 

tyranny, to ban" clogs on them Othello, i. 3 

hangsa tail. Whereby hangs a tale, sir? — iii. 1 
nor loop, to hang a doubt on 
BO hangs, and lolls, and 



.eps uixm me. 



iii. 3 



hang her! I do but say what she is — iv. 1 

but to go hang my head all at one side.. — iv. 3 
^1^ nPi'^"""'"' ""^ '""'° 'o l"* hanged . . Tempest, i. 1 

he II Ix; hanged .vet i. i 

till he be hongeil TuoGen.ofl'erona, ii. 4 

he hud been hanged for't — iv. 4 



HANGED— I might be hanged Merry lyives, i. 1 

would .1 were hanged, la, else — v. .'1 

he that is well hanged in this world. Tueljlh Night, i. ,') 

yet vou will be hanged, for being — i. .", 

ere he would have han.ged ma.n.Meai.for Meas. iii. 2 

I'll be hanged tir.'it: IhiMi art _ iii. 2 

if I should be hunted I cannot imogino — iv! 2 
you must rise iiiid he hanged, montcr — iv. 3 
and is hanged betimes ill the morning — iv. 3 

and be hanged an hour! _ v. I 

whipjied lh>t. sir, and hanged after .. — v. I 

let him be whipiied and hanged v I 

thus, the\' would have hanged Much Ado. ii. 3 

pluving I'yrannis, I'll be luuigcd.fl/i</. N.'s Dr. iv. :! 
and hanged hiniH If ill Thislie's garter — v. 1 

Jiidus was liaiigcil on an elder Lore's L.l.osi, v. 2 

and hangeil, for I'onipey that is dead — v. 2 
hanged for human slaughter.. ;ii«f/i.o/;V«irc, iv. 1 
therefore, thou must be hanged at the — iv. 1 
name should be hanged and carved. J.«|/oii;.i7,d7, iii. 2 
hanged on Sunday first {rep.).T(im,ng nr Shrew, ii. 1 

thou art worthy to he hanged ll'inl'i-r's Tnl,-, ii. 3 

here's a farmer, that hanged himself. .iUnctcM, ii. 3 
hanged. And must they all he hanged — iv. 2 

hanged in the frowning wrinkle King John, ii. •> 

that hanged, drawn, and quartered.. ii. 2 

my crown, let him be hanged _ iv. 2 

tarry at home, and be hanged \ Henry IV. i. 2 

be not four by the day, I'll be hanged — ii. 1 

come away, and he hanged, come away ii. 1 

marry, I'll see thee hanged first _ ii. 1 

I'oinsl Poins, and be hanged! Poins! _ ii. 2 
to make me love him, I'll be hanged — ii. 2 

give me my horse, and be hanged — ji. 2 

to make us all. To be hanged ii. 2 

strike him, if I should be hanged — ii. 2 

leave, thou wert better be hanged •IHenrylF. i. 2 

do not make him be hanged among you — ii. 2 

I had as lief be hanfred, sir, as go .... iii. 2 

tliat I might have tliee hanged v. 4 

stolen a pix, and hanged must a' be ..Henry f. iii. 6 

thou darest as well be hanged iv. 1 

and they ore both hanged iv. 4 

must fight, or else be hanged iHenry fl. i. 3 

be hanged up for example at their doors — iv. 2 

could not read, thou hast hanged them iv. 7 

will you needs be hanged with your. . _ iv. 8 
better do so, than tarry to be honged.SHfrin/;'/. iv.f, 
poor rats, had hanged themselves . . Richard III. v. 3 
belong to the gallows, and be hanged. Henry Fill. v. 3 

how got they in, and be hanged? — v. 3 

see .you hanged, like clotpoles..7'roi7u« ,5-CV«,«iVa,ii.l 

hanged it, have you not? Timon of Athens, i. 2 

that day thou art hanged ii. 2 

some that were hanged, no matter . . iv. 3 

siicak, and be hanged x.i 

would I were hanged, but I thought. Coriolanus, iv. 5 

I can as well be hanged JuliusCcesar, i. i 

sound, and be hanged, sound o\xt.Antony. tj-Cleo. ii. 7 

pains, Cajsar hath hanged him — iv. 6 

It was hanged with tapestry of silk.. Cymlcdne, ii. 4 

I'll be hanged then. Thou "sholt — v. 4 

not be hanged till the next week.riVi/s/fnrfron. iv. 3 
sirrah, you must be hanged. Hanged! — iv. 4 

I am sure to be hanged at home Pericles, i. 3 

I perceive I shall not be bunged now — i. 3 

and my poor fool is hanged ! Lenr, v. 3 

I'll behanged, sir, if hewear Romeo ^Julicl, iii. 1 

rather to be hanged in compassing n'hello, i. 3 

baiiTOd for his luhour. First, to be hanged — iv. I 
I will be hanged, if some eternal villoiu — iv. 2 
de\ised this slander; I'll be hanged else — iv. 2 

HANGER— OS girdle, hangers, and so ..llamlel, v. 2 

the carriages, sir, are the nangers — v. 2 

I would, it might be hangers till then — v. 2 

HANGE'I'H— haugeth like a jewel. Lore's/,. Los(,iv. 2 
a dissolution, haugeth over him.... Richard It. ii. 1 

HANGIKG—to his hanging! Tempest, i. I 

had hanging at them wallets of flesh?.... — iii. 3 

ragged, fearful, hanging rock. 7'iro Gen. offer, i. 2 
that IS hanging in your chamber .... — iv. 2 

as good as d hanging to you? Twelfth Sight, i. ."> 

many a good bunging prevents ' — i. 5 

it is but heudiiig and hanging . . Meas. forMeai. ii. I 
but that you have a hanging look .. ' — iv. 2 
mystery there should be in hanging — iv. 2 
this may prove worse than hanging.. — v. 1 
pressingtodeatli,whipping,anahanging— v. 1 
a key in his ear, and a lock lianging.^UucA Ado, v. 1 
my conscience, hanging abo\xt..Merch.nf fenice, ii. 2 
hanging and wiving goes by destiny — ii. 9 
hangings all of Tynan tapestry.. 7'amin^n^S/i. ii. 1 
like tier niedul, hanging about.... ll'inler'sTale. i. 2 
beating, and hanging, are terrors to me — iv. 2 
by hanging thee, I eon but shorten .. — iv. 3 
overheard me now,— why hanging . . — iv. 3 
church, session, hanging, yieUIs a careful — iv. 3 

hanging a golden stamp about Macbeth, iv. 3 

shalt have the hanging of the thieves. Wfciiii///'. i. 2 

if I 'scape hanging for killing — ii. 2 

and a foolish hanging of thy nether lip — ii.4 
might I, hangins on llotspur's neck.2Wenrj(/r. ii. 3 
hanging them with deafening clamours — iii. 1 
hanging the head at Ceres' plentcous.2i/friiy ('/. i. 2 
like ri(*li hangings in u homely house — v. 3 

story bunging oil thy tongue? 3IlenryfI. ii. 1 

hanging at his brother's leg. . Troilus <S- Cresiida, v. I 
good and grr>cioiis nature hanging. 7'ii/ioii o//(//i.i. 1 

to froth, and_ so 'scope hanging — iv. 3 

stand'st not i' the state of hniiging,.C'(}rio/artu«, v. 2 
we rount not worth the hanging .... Cymbeline, i. 6 

shook down my mellow hangings .. iii. 3 

hanging is the word, sir; if youbc ready — v. 4 

1 am sure, hanging's the way of winking v. 4 

a death, an hanging preecnt(v.7'i/ui y4iii/>oniou<, v. I 
I killed the slave that wosaliunging thee. /.ear, v. 3 
yet hanging in the stars Romeo ff Juliet, i. ^ 

HANtJMAN- hnngman's bo.V8..7'«'of;eii.o/';Vr. iv. 1 
content to he a lawful hangmanWrm./orjVeaj. iv. 2 
. your hangniun is a more penitent trade — iv. 2 



HAN 



[342 ] 



HANGMAN— sir; the hangman.il/eas. /or A/eas. ly. 3 
the little hangman dare not shoot ..Much Ado, iii. 2 
no, not the hangman's n^e.. Merchant of Venice, iv. 1 
but now some hangman must . . M'iiUei's Tale, iv. 3 



but now some hangman - . 

shall all come under the hangman . . — iv. 3 

and so become a rare hangman IHenryll . i. 2 

the Imngman hath no lean wardrobe — i- 2 
the ladder, or the hangman either? . . — .i- 3 

keep that for the hangman — >>.• ' 

as ever hangman served thief. . Tunon of Athens, u. i. 

wliich does the hangman thank-.-lnfuni/ Is Cleo. iii. 1 1 

a\id a hangman to help him to bed. . Cymlehne,y. 4 

the common hangman shall execute it.ftriciss, ;v. 6 

liy indenture to the common hangman — iv. ti 

1 rather would have been his hangman. . OlhcUo,\. 1 

II ANGMEN— hangmen would bury. . CorMlanus,\. 5 

best of them were hereditary hangmen — lu 1 

HANG'ST— hang'st thou on him?. . . .'IHennilV. u. 1 

HANNIBAL— wicked Hannibal!. Meas./or3/eas. ii. 1 

prove this, thou wicked Hannibal . . — n- 1 

Hector far surmounted Hannibal.Lot'e s L. Lost, v. 2 

by fear, not force, like Hannibal .... 1 Henry Vl.i.b 

HAP— if it so hap Tempest, i. 1 

when thou dost meet good hap. . Two Gen. of / er. 1. 1 

what else may hap, to time Twelfth Night, i. 2 

then loving goes by haps Much Ado, n_i. 1 

Katharine, by good hap Love sL. Los', ii. 1 

whose hap sliall be to have her. Taming of Shrew, i. 2 

hap what hap maj', I'll roundly — iv- 4 

had not our hap been bad .... Comedy of Errors, i. 
knowing whom it was their hap to save — }• { 

envying earth's good hap Richard II. i. 1 

more blessed hap did ne'er XHenryVI.}. 6 

or how haps it, 1 seek not — !}!• j 

try your hap against the Irishmen! iHenryVI. iii. 1 
whathap? what hope of good? irep.).3Heiiryl l.n. 3 
Oxford, how haps it, in this smooth.. — iii. 3 

more direful hap betide that Diehard III. i. i 

from that contented bap which ~,, !; ? 

for 'tis ill hap, if they hold Henry VIII. (epil.) 

see, by good hap, yonder's my. Timon ol Athens, ni. '. 
when we shall hap to give't them. . Conolanus, in. 3 
be it art or hap, he hath spoUen-Antony SfCleo. u. 3 
and when it is thy hap, to find. TitasAiidronicus, v. 2 
by whom our heavy haps had their. . .— „ '• ■? 
word of all that haps in Tyre ..fericles, u. (Gower) 

what will hap more to night Lear, ni. 6 

to crave, and my dear hap totea.Romeo^Juliet,u.2 
from time to time every good hap to you — lU- 3 

whatsoever else shall hap to-night Hamlet, i. i 

howe'er my liaps, my joys will ne'er begin — iv. 3 
HAPLESS-perhaps a hapless gain. 7'uioGen. n/r.!. 
O my dear Silvia! hapless Valentine! — ni. 1 
hapless .^geon, whom tlie fates.. Comedy of Err. i. 1 
may finish ere that hapless time . . 1 Henry VI. n]. 1 

and wrings his hapless hands iHcnry VI. i. 1 

a hapless father's tears ZHenry VI. i. 4 

I, the hapless male to one sweet — — X- b 
HAPLY-wheu thou, haply, seest. Two Gen. ofVer. J. 1 

if haply won, perhaps — .*■ ' 

haply,Ido — .?!• f 

haply, when they have judged — . "!• ' 

such disguise, as hapl v, shall Twelfth^igM,}. i 

haply, your eye shall light upon — — >"• 3 

might haply inliabit a bird 

thoughts, liaply, been absent then ., 
but the boldness of his hand, haply. . 

when, haply, he shall hear that 

haply tliou raay'st inform something 
to counsel them: haply. Taming of Shrew, 
ICal.'] haply institute a course of learning 

into this maze, haply to wive — 

my reason, haply, more, to bandy .... — 

haply, in private Comedy of Error 

sijeak a word; haply, I see a friend . . — y. i 

more than he haply may retail 2Henryn .\. I 

may, haply, purchase lum Henry I . iv 



HAPPIEK-the happier for thy son. Taming ofSh. iv. 5 
wliat his happier affairs may be.. Winter sTate, iv. 1 

not so happy, yet much hajipier Macbeth,\. 3 

the envy of less happier lands liichaid II. ii. 1 

makes me a little happier than Henry VIII. ii. 1 

happier is he that has no friend . . Timon of Ath. i. 2 
this is a happier and more comely. . Coriolanus, iv. 6 

happier therein than I! Cymbeline, i. 4 

are means the happier to arise — iv.'i 

happier mucli by his affliction made — .v. 4 
I am wretched, makes thee the happier. . Lear, iv. 1 

HAPPIEST— happiest of all, is. .Mer. of Venice, in. 2 

with the happiest terms I have \HenrylV.y. 4 

the happiest youth, viewing 2 Henry IV. iii. 1 

the happiest gift that ever 2Henry VI. i. 1 

the first and happiest hearers. . . . Henry VIII. (Ytrol.) 

HAPPILY— how happily he IWes.TwoGen.ofVer. i. 3 
happily, you something know ..Meas.forMeas. iv. 2 
parts, that become thee happily.Mo-. of Venice, u. 2 

and I -tvish it happily effected Alls Well, iv. 5 

and happily r.Coi.-haplj;] institute. Taming of Sh. j. 1 
if wealthily, then happily in Padua — i. 2 

this gentleman is happily arrived — . i. 2 

signor Baptista, you are happily met — iv. 4 

happily, we might be interrupted — iv. 4 

happily met; the happier for thy son — iv. .) 
and happily I have arrived at last . . — v. 1 

that liappily, knows more Winter s Tate, v. 2 

the king hath happily received Macbeth, i. 6 

consummate this business happily ..KingJohn, v. 7 
and happily may your sweet self put — , ,, '^■l 
elder days may happily bring forth.. Bic/mjvZ /;. v. i 
fashion it,) shall happily meet 1 Henry IV.\.3 



2 Henry VI. 
Henry VIII. iv. 2 



.All's We 



- iv. 1 
1 (indue.) 



,v. 1 



I wiil go witk them; haply, a woman s — 

the commons haply rise to save 2 Henry VI. 

but if we haply 'scape "" „, -" "^ 

and I, that liaply take them from . .3 Henry VI. ii. 5 
which, haply, i)y much company.. iSic/imd III-_]'.- 2 
haplv, may misconstrue us in him . . — in- 5 
you might haply think, tongue-tied — in. 7 

then, haply, will she weep — iv. 4 

fame unparalleled, haply, amplified. Cor/o/amis, v. 2 
haply are tliey friends to Antony. Ant. 4- Cleo. 111. 1 1 
haply, you shall not see me more — — ly- 2 

haply this life is best, if quiet Cymbeline, u\. 3 

yea, liaply, near the residence — \\\- ^ 

haply, despair hath seized her — in- 5 

who may, haply, be a little angry . . — iv. 1 

though haply well for you — y. 5 

haiily when I shall wed, that lord Lear, 1. 1 

haply, some poison yet doth hang.. i?omeo SfJul. y. 3 

haply, he's the second time come Hamlet,\i. 2 

haply, the seas, and countries different . . — iii. 1 

and, haply, one as kind for husband — in. 2 

so, haply, slander, whose whisper o'er . . — ly. 1 
haply, with his truncheon may strike . . Othello, 11. 1 

haply, for I am black ; and have not — ui ■ 3 

if, haply, you ray father do suspect — iv. 2 

HAPPED-lord and lady what has happed — y. 1 
H.-VPPEN- if this should ever happen .Much Ado, 1. 1 

in the loss that may happen All s Well, 1 . 3 

whatever I shall happen to devise . . Richardll. iv. 1 

agaiust the worst can happen SHenry VI. ly. 1 

all, against the worst may happen. Hen;)/ '/-f-f-j;.!- 

what can happen to me, above — m- 1 

on plots, and errors, happen Hamlet, v. i 

HAPPENED-these happened accidents. Tempesl^y. 1 
liappened all as I would have had it. All's Well,in. 2 

tell what hath happened Taming of Shrew, ly. 4 

what ruin happened in revenge 1 Henry VI. n. 2 

pray, speak, what has happened? .. Henry VIII. u. 1 

how unluckily it happened Timon ofAthens,m. 2 

HAPPIER— the happier woman . . Merry Wives, n. 1 
rCol.Knt.} happier is the rose distilled. Mid. N. Dr. 1. 1 
happier thau this, she is not bred. .Mer.ofVen. 111. 2 
happier the man, whom favom-able.7'am.o/S/i. iv. 5 



happily have proved far worse 

stepped before me, happily 

I am happily come hither — 

I am glad I came this way so happily — y. 2 
happily, amen! I did not think. . /fn/ony <5-CTeo. 11. 2 
a Roman now adopted happily . . Titus Andron. 1. 2 
happily you may find her in the sea — ly. 3 

our ships you happily may think Peiiclcs,u 4 

shall happily make thee there.. Borneo i- Juliet, 111. 5 
happily met, my lady, and my wife! — ly- J 
which, happily, foreknowing may avoid. Hoi;i((?i, 1. 1 
her country forhis, and happily, repent. 0(/iri;o, 111. 8 
HAPPINESS— in thy happiness.. Two Gen. o/;er. 1. 1 

all happiness bechance to thee — 1. 1 

seal our happiness with their consents — \. 3 

'greed on for my happiness ._ — "• 4 

one house, one mutual happiness .... — y. 4 

bring you back in happiness! Meas.for Meas. 1. 1 

and happiness takes his leave Much Ado, 1. 1 

a dear happiness to women — .}• ' 

hath, indeed, a good outward happiness — 11. 3 
(saith the text) is the happiness of..Lot>e s L.L. ly. 2 
it is no mean happiness thereforcMer. of Vemce,}. 2 

envy no man's happiness As you Like it, 111. 2 

good-day, and happiness, dear Rosalind! — iv. 1 
into happiness through another man s — .X- f 

that happiness and prime can All sW ell,i\. 1 

tuned his bounty to sing happiness . . — ly. 3 
treats of happiness by virtue . . Taming of Shrew, 1. 1 

great happiness! that now, Sweno Macbelh.i. 2 

of glory, joy, and happiness KingJohn, 111. 4 

still better others' happiness Richard II. \. 1 

more health and happiness betide .. — m- 2 

wish I all happiness —,„.^-° 

sick of happiness; and purge 'iHenrylV. iv. 1 

and new happiness added to that — iv. 4 

and happiness, to my royal father ! (rep.) — iv. 4 
by number, into hours of happiness. . — 'y- 2 

envy of each other's happiness Henry V. v. 2 

and happiness to his accomplices ! . . \Hcnry VI. v. 2 
queen Margaret, England's happiness! 2 Henry J l.i.i 
happiness unto mv lord the king! (,rep.v.\) — "!• ' 

tliou dost confirm his happiness Richard III. 1. 2 

our happiness is at the height 



iv. 2 

— V. 4 

of Athens, i. 1 

" — i. 1 

_ i.2 

i. 2 



beget your happiness, be happy then 

compare dead happiness with living woe 

ten times double gain of happiness .. 

consists my happiness and thine .... ,,,,.. ., 

heaped happiness upon him ...... Henry Vlll. iv. i 

tiiey promised me eternal happiness 

to the happiness of England 

to climb his happiness Tim 

all happiness to your honour! 

might we but have that happiness . 
of happiness, honour, and fortunes . - .. 

Cffisar wil 1 unstate his happiness. /ffn(oni/ ± o(eo. 111. 1 1 
wislies you all happiness . . Cymbeline, ui. 2 (letter) 
happiness! he goes hence frowning .. — in. 5 
to sour your happiness, I must report — y. 5 
hath aspired to Solon's happiness.. r((MS/4«d;on..i. i 

not gain so great a happiness .... , — ., ".• ^ 

to compass such a boundless happiness!. i'ericies, 1. 1 
save that, I wish thee happiness !...... — . ;• I 

crown you king of this day's happiness — 11. 3 
unfold the imagined happiness. . Romeo Sf Juliet, \\. b 
happiness courts thee in her best array — in. 3 
a happiness that often madness hits oa.Hamlel, 11. 2 

well, happiness to their sheets! ..Othello,\\. 6 

lo, the happiness! go, and importune her — 111. 4 

in mv sense, 'tis happiness to die — y- 2 

HAPPY— any happy messenger. Two Gen. of Ver.w. 4 

and happy being at your court — i"- ' 

therein made me happy — i^- [ 

lady, a happy evening! — ^' ' 

I have made you happy — ^- ^ 

to make this happy close — '"■• * 

the gift hath made me happy — .y.- \ 

if not, happy man be his dole ! . . Merry Wives, 111 . 4 
shall yet belie thy happy years . . TwelfthNight,i. 4 

I thank my stars, I am happy — "-5 

to make us happy both — '''• j 

share in this most happy wreck — . y- } 

happy tliou art not Measure for Measure, 111. 1 

happy return be to your royal grace! — v- { 

so happy is your brother „ "T . , '^, 

be happy,ladv! for you are like i\/!tc/i,4'Jo,i. 

I were but little happy, if I could say — u- 1 



iii. 2 
iii. 4 
v. 1 



HAP 

HAPPY— happy are they that hear . . Much Ado,'\u 3 
you have staid me in a happy hour . . — ly. ' 
happy days bring in another moon ..1/irf.A. sDr. 1. [ 
happy be Theseus, our renowned duke! — ;• ' 
happy [Co!. Knf.-happier] is the rose — !• j 
Ohappy fair! your eyes are ........ — '• 

liappy some, o'er other some, can be! — .;■ ' 
happy is Hermia, whcresoe'er she .. — ."• 3 
courageous day! O most happy hour! _ — iv. 2 
not bless us with one happy word. Love s L. Lost,y. 2 
happy torment, when my torturer.il/er. 0/ Fen. 111. 2 
happy in this, she is not yet so old . 

fair thoughts, and happy hours 

and prays for happy wedlock hours , , . ■ , 

your mistress shall be happy --Is you Like il,\. 2 

not change it: happy is your grace .. — "• I 
I shall think my brother happy .... — v. 2 

every of this hapiiy number -- y. 4 

happiness and prime can happy caM..All s Well, 11. I 
are too young, too happy, and too good — 11. 3 

in happy time, this man may , ^ , ,- ^i \ 

are come to me in happy time. Taming of Sh. 1 'inil.; 
and be happy rivals in Bianca's love — 1. 
sweet Bianca! Happy man be his dole! — i- ' 
what happy gale blows you to Padua — .i- 2 

woo, and happy be thy speed ! — .»• } 

happy the parents of so fair a child . . — iv. .■> 
short, what not, that's sweet and happy — y. 2 

why happy man be his dole! Winter s Tale, 1.2 

happy star, reign now! here comes .. — . 1. 2 
a care of happy holding her.......... — iv. 3 

were I happy, if his going I could . . — iv. 3 
happy be you! all, that you speak .. — ly. 3 
a woman, happy but for me . . Comedy of Errors, 1. 1 
and happy were I in my timely death — 1. 1 

not so happy, yet much happier Macbeth, 1. 3 

are told as happy prologues to the . . — . i- •! 

emptying of the happy tlu-one — i.y- ^ 

out of one side her happy minion . . A'liig- John,n. 2 

this labour to a happy end — i"- ' 

happy he, whose cloak and cincture — iv. 3 

and 1 have made a happy peace with — v. 1 
when we were happy, we had other. . — v. 4 

and happy newness, that intends — /V- J 

many years of happy days befal Richard //. ;■ 1 

my mouth the wish of happy years . . 
to a wise man ports and happy havens 

this happy breed of men _. 

how happy then were my ensuing . . 

in heaven 'mongst happy souls! 

count in myself nothing else bo happy 

a happy gentleman in blood 

clouded all thy happy days on earth 

our former state a happy dream 

been still a happy kin" of men 

rob me ofa happy mothers name 

never see day that the happy sees.... — v. 3 
O happy vantage of a kneeling knee! — y. 3 
now my masters, happy man be ....\HenryIV.}\. - 
disgraeedmeinmy happy victories — ly. J 

thenhappy low, lie down! 2HenrylV.\\i. 1 

wish me health m very happy season '" -" 

should rejoice now at this happy news 
be happy, he will trouble you no more 

happy am I that have a man so. 

shorten Harry's happy life one day . . 
times, and news of happy price .■■-.•• 
happy are they who have been my friends — 
divide your happy England into "— 

omit no happy liour, that may — .- - 

thou art less happy being feared .... — iv. 1 

we few, we happy few, we band — iv. ^ 

and he esteems himself happy that . . — iv. 4 
from France arrived more happy men — iv. 8 

so happy be the issue, brother — y. - 

this happy night the Prenchmen . . 1 Henry VI. \\. 1 
St. Dennis bless this happy stratagem! — in. 2 

this is the happy wedding torch — ui. 2 

your bondage happy, to be made — v. 3 

if happy England's royal ............. — v.i 

Keignier, happy for so sweet a child - v. S 

yourself shall steer the happy helm..2He)!r!/>'/..i. 3 
count them happy, that enjoy the sun? — .11. 4 
might make this island happy ...... — in- J 

and thought thee happy when I shook — iv. 1 

this happy day is not itself — ,,,^.„ 

to Sandal in a happy hour . . . . . ._. . . .ZHemy I /. 1. ^ 

should have heard the happy tidings — 11. J 
and happy always was it for that son — n- - 

methinks, it were a happy life — .!!• -^ 

why, 'tis a happy thing to be — "'• '^ 

once more a happy farewell. ... 
my mind presageth happ: 
hast made the happy eart , 

long die thy happy days belore — 

to buy a world of happy days — 

and make me happy in your unity . . — 
a happy time of day ! Happy, indeed — 
your grace with health and happy days ! — 
to-morrow then I judge a happy day — 
in happy time, here comes the duke — 

no doubt we'll bring it to a happy issue — 
happy were England, would tins .... — 
make, no doubt, us happy by his reign — 
and fortune of his happy stars 



_ i. 3 

i. 3 
ii. 1 



v. 2 



iv. 2 
iv. 4 
iv. 4 
V. 2 



V. 3 

Henry V. i. 2 



1 happy gain. . 

jy earth thy heM.Richardlll. 1. 2 



a happy and a joyful time of day". .. — ; 

am I happy in thy news? — ! 

be happy then, for it is done ........ — ! 

for happy wife, a most distressed .... — \ 

and fortune, bar me happy hours I . . — i 

and be a happy mother by the deed . . — 1 

live, and beget a happy race of kings! — 

dream of success and happy victory .. — 

and all that made me happy .Henry I ni. 

BO much I am happy above a number — ; 

may you be happy, in your wish — ' 

never bo truly happy, my good ...... — ! 

tliose men are happy; and so are all — ' 

those men are happy that shall have — ' 

long, and ever happy, to the high — — 



— 111. 4 



HAP 

HAPPY— to make parents liaiMiy .. Henry f 111. v. 

uevcr, before tliis linppy cliilil — v. 

be liiipiiy. tliut my nnns ure . . Tinilut <J Cremtla, v. 
tbul liiipp\' ^'iTso whii'Ii ii|)tlv.. VVhioh ufAlhens^i. 
«clmt.>rsciV Allunsi li!Mii)y iiuMi! .... — i. 

lie is «oiH' liiippy. uikI 1ms let! me rich — i. 

now loiil 'rimon's hnppy lunir.'i arc done — iii. 
rieh mill lui|ip> : l>"t tluiseonditioned ~ iv. 

ever taints the ImppNiniin — iv. 

you have w on a happy \ ietory CnrMauui, v. 

you are come in very haiipy tinicJu/insCVrjar, ii. 

never comest vinto a happy birth — v. 

to part tlie glories of this happy day — y. 
deeds to-morrow : rest you happy!. /Im/omj/.^'^''^*'* !• 
O happy horse, to bear the \vei:;lit .. — i. 

adieu, be happy ! l.et nil tlie luimbcr — iii. 
gods make tins a happy day to Antony I — iv. 

as my two brothers, happy I Cymletine, i. 

O happy Lconntus! I may say — i. 

tell me liow Wales was made so happy 

tell liim wherein you are happy .... 

lie shall be happv that can find him 

happy he you! "The forloru soldier .. — y. 

■when with a happy storm 7'iV«s Andronicus, ii. 

happy man! they have befriended — iii. 
how happy art thoH tlien, from these — iii. 

was't nut a hapiiy star led us — iv. 

so I heiiueath a happy peace to you . . . . rerlcles, i. 

he is a happy kiiii,', since from ins — ii. 

and wck'ome: happy day, my lords — ii. 

ninile happy by his Dreath — ii. 

happy wiiat follows; thou hast as chiding — iii. 

all as happy as of all the fairest — v. 

(lo't, and he happy, by my silver bow. . — v. 

and, by the happy hollow of a tree Lear, ii. 

leaving fVee things, and happy shows — iii. 

those happy smiles, that played on her .. — iv. 

therefore, tliou happy father, think — iv. 

most happy! that eveless head — iv. 

about it, and write liappy, when thou hast — y. 
thou wert sii happy bv thy stay. . itoiitco Sf Juliet, i. 
these happy masks, tiiat kiss fair ladies' — i. 
younger tlian she are happy mothers — i. 
seek happy nights to happy days .. .. — i. 

make happy [Co(. K)i(. -blessed] my rude — i. 
tills alliance may so happy prove .... — ii. 
happy: Tybalt would kill thee Cr<7).) — iii. 
madam, in happy time, what day .. — iii. 

1 think you are happy in this second — iii. 

happy dagger! this is thy sheath . . — v. 
happy, in that we are not over happy. . Hamlet, ii. 

g»x>d beauties be the happy cause — iii. 

all are coming down. In happy time — v. 

a maid — so tender, fair, and happy Oltiello, i. 

Iiad most favourable and happy speed . . — ii. 
'twere now to be most happy; for, I fear — ii. 
in happy time, lago. You nave not been — iii. 

1 liad been happy, if the general camp .. — iii. 
chaste, and true, there's no man ha[)py . . — iv. 

HAKUINGER— Aurora's harbinger.^/id. N. Dr. in. 

vice like virtue's harbinger. . Comedy of Errors, iii. 

I'll be myself the harbinger Macbeth, i. 

those clamorous harbingers of blood — v. 

as harbingers preceding still the fates . . Hamlet, i. 
HARBOUK-in harbour is the king's ship. Tempest, i. 

to harbour wanton lines? TuoGen. of Verona, i. 

my thoughts do harbour with my .. — iii. 

tliat they should harbour where .... — iii. 

she harbours you as lier kinsman. TwelflhNight, ii. 

to give me secret harbour. . Measure for Measure, i. 

though so denied fair harbour Love's L. Lost, ii. 

come to harbour suddenly . . Merchant of Venice, v. 

any place that harbours men ..Comedy of Errors, i. 

I will not harbour in this town — iii. 

where shame doth harbour Richard II. i. 

simple show he harbours treason ..2HeuryVl. iii. 

and find no harbour in a roj'al — iii. 

where shall it find aharbour in — v. 

to harbour such a thought ! SHenrij VI. iii. 

let's harbour here in York — iv. 

either to harbour fled Troilus fyCressida, i. 

make their harbour in our ....Timon of Athens, v. 

treasure's in tlie harbour, take it. Anlony^Cleo. iii. 

crare might easiliest harbour in? ..Cymbeline,\v. 

in this plainness harbour more craft .... Lear, ii. 

there's one gone to the harbour? Othello, ii. 

meet me presently at the harbour .. . — ii. 
IIARB(>UliAGP:-crave harbourage..Kin«-yoAn, ii. 

and harbourage for ourself, our ships . . Pericles, i. 
HAItBOirHIClJ— were harboured in. .KingJohn, ii. 
IIAliUDUHrXd— harbouring foul ..2HcHri/r/. iv. 
HAKD— in this hard rock Tempest, i. 

pray you, work not so hard — iii, 

my fallier is bard at study — iii. 

Fteril. and ritckv hard — iv. 

it filiall go bard", but I '11 ... . Tiro Ovn. of Verona, i. 

and being so hard to mc — i. 

she'll prove as hard to you — i. 

for she's as hard as steel — i. 

you are hard beset _. — ii. 

to bear a hard opinion — ii. 

look you it goes bard — iv. 

be ready here hard hy in the .... Merry IVives, iii. 

hord by; at street end — iv. 

your master is hard at door _ iv. 

in a pit hard hy Ilerne'eoak — v. 

tliat were hard to compass Ttnelflh Sight, i. 

the count himself, here, hard by ... . — i. 

it is too hard a knot for me to untie — ii. 

under your hanl construction — iii. 

been drinking hard all niLdit ..Meas. for Mens. iv. 

that I bad not a hard heart Much Ado, i. 

any hard lessun that may do thee good — i. 

for scorn horn, a hard rlivine — v. 

but there is two hard things. ..Ui,;. ,V.'i Drram, iii. 

ore barren tasks, too hard to keep.torc'i L. Lost, i. 

butt-shaft is too hard for Hercules' club i. 

you ore too hard forme — ii. 

spurred his horse so hard against — iv, 

she's too hard for you at pricks, sir. . — iv, 



L J34:3 ] 



II AUD— hard lodging, and thin . . L,...,. Lost, v. a 

is it not hard, N erissa Merchant ttf Venice, i, 2 

whose own hard dealings teaches,.., — i. 3 

is but a kind ofhitrd eonseieiiee .... — ii. '2 

'twill he a hard wav to hit — ii. '2 

and it shall go hard, but I will better — iii. 1 
thou gaudy gold, hard food for Midas — iii. 2 
it will go hard with poor Antonio .. — iii. 2 

as well do any thing most hard — iv. 1 

lie standeth here hard by, to know . . — iv. 1 
so stoekish, hard, and full of rage .. — v. I 
there is fortune' too hard for As you Like it, i. 2 

ininisli me not with your hard thoughts — i. 2 
L have by hard adventure found .. .. — ii. 4 

besides, our hands are hard — iii. 2 

it is a hard matter for friends to .... — iii. 2 
many, he trots hard with a young .. — \\\-'^ 

time's pace is so hard that it — iii. 2 

aceustonied sight of death makes hard — iii. :> 
here hard by: will you go, sister? («/).■) — iii. 5 
this is hard and undeserved measure. .-l/^s Well, ii. 3 
'tis hard; a young man, married.... — ii. 3 
'tis a hard bondage, to become the .. — iii. 5 
something hard of hearing . . Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 

how I pray? for that goes hard — iv. 2 

it shall go hard, if Camhio go — iv. 4 

you'll kiss me hard; and speak .. Winler'sTale, ii. 1 
against tlie hard hearts of maids .... — iv. 3 

ay, or else 'twere hard luck — v. 2 

more than marble hard Comedy of Errors, ii. 1 

master, knock the door hard — iii. I 

by the barrenness; hard, in the — iii. 2 

one, whose hard heart is buttoned .. — iv. 2 

shall his day's hard journey Machclh, i. 7 

initiate fear, that wants hard use .... — iii. 4 

at once, 'tis hard to reconcile — iv. 3 

made hard with kneeling KingJohn, iii. 1 

are you more stubborn hard than.. .. — iv. 1 

making the hard way sweet Richard II. ii. 3 

with hard bright steel, and hearts .. — iii. 2 

it is as hard to come, as for — v. 5 

flinty ribs of this hard world — v. 5 

they will be too hard for us \HenryIV. i. 2 

who bears hard his brother's — i. 3 

here, hard by ; stand close — ii . 2 

hark how hard he fetches — ii. 4 

their courage with hard labour — iv. 3 

came, spurring hard, a gentleman ..2HenryIV. i. 1 

after you have laboured so hard — ii. 2 

he be killed with your hard opinions — (cpil.) 

hold hard the breath Henry V. iii. 1 

rough and hard of heart, in liberty .. — iii. 3 

hard condition! twin-born — iv. I 

castle called, that stands hard by? .. — iv. 7 

a hard condition for a maid — v. 2 

in pity of my hard distress 1 Henry VI. ii. 5 

flinty "heart, more hard than they ..'i Henry VI. iii. 2 
of a "lirave mind, than a hard hand .. — iv. 2 
'twill go hard with you. Let me .... — iv. 2 

and his brother are hard by — iv. 2 

and cannot brook hard language .... — iv. 9 
she is hard by with twenty thousand.3//f Hry VI. i. 2 

were thy heart as hard as steel — ii. 1 

the world goes hard, when Clifford . . — ii. 6 
he plies her hard; and much rain .. — iii. 2 

what at your book so hard? — v. 6 

hard iCol. iv;i(.-much] to draw. . . . Diehard III. iii. 7 

spur your proud horses hard — v. 3 

suffer too hard an exclamation Henry VIII. i. 2 

hearts of most hard temper melt .... — ii. 3 
strikes his breast hard: and anon .. — iii. 2 

not on't, you are too hard for me — v. 1 

hard as the palm of ploughman!. T'roiVus fyCress. i. 1 
the hard and soft, seem all affined .. — i. 2 

blunt wedges rive hard kuots — i. 3 

my Cressid then so hard to win? Hard — iii. 2 
looks, and these hard fractions. Timon of Athens, i\. 2 

hard fate! he might have died — iii. 5 

time hath made thee hard in't — iv. 3 

a shield as hard as his Coriolanus^ i. 6 

too hard for him, I have heard ()t;i.) — iv. 5 
Oyou hard hearts, you cruel men ...luliusC,<esar, i. 1 
hug them hard, and after scandal them — i. 2 

under these hard conditions as this time — i. 2 

Ca3sar doth hear me hard — i. 2 

Cains I/i"arius doth bear Cajsar hard — ii. I 

how hard it is for women — ii. 4 

if you bear me hard, now, whilst .... — iii. I 
from the hard hands of peasants .... — .iV-^ 
in our viciousness grow liard .. Antony ^Clco.iM. 11 

take to j'ou no hard thoughts — v. 2 

but make hard your heart Cymbeline, i. 6 

hands made hard with hourly falsehood — i. 7 

as the Gordian knot was hard! — ii. 2 

the stone's too hard to come by — ii. 4 

can gripe as hard as Cassibelan — iii. 1 

tts hard to leave, as keep — iii. 3 

how hard it is, to hide the sparks.. ., — iii. 3 

and he's at some hard point — iii. 4 

finds the down pillow hard — iii. 6 

1 should woo hard, but be your groom — iii. 6 

the certainty of this hard life — iv. 4 

like fragments in hard voyages — v. 3 

from my lips pluck a hard sentence — v. ,5 

though thy hard heart say \m. Titus Andronicus, ii.3 

tribunes more hard than .stnnes — iii. t 

dragons here allViL'lit ilue liaid rericlis,\. I 

I have watched nnd tra\tlhs[ hard Lvar, ii. '2 

they have travelled luird to-night? — ii. 4 

'tis hard; almost impossible — ii. 4 

or the hard rein which both of them .... — iii. 1 

hard by here is a hovel — iii. 2 

while I to this hard house, (more hard .. — iii. 2 
in all your daughters hard commands ,, — iii. 4 

nature, that maKCs these hard hearts — iii. 6 

stand in hard cure — iii. G 

hard, hard: O filthy traitor! — iii. 7 

ond 'tis not hard, I think, for men, i?ow«ro^yti/(>/^i. 2 

high, and hard to climb — li. 2 

who knocks so hard? whence come you? — iii. 3 



IIAR 



HARD— I sealed my hard consent Hamlet, i. 2 

indeed, my lord, it followeil hard upon .. — i, 2 

bv the wrist, and hehl me hard — ii. 1 

given him ttiiv hard wcinls of late? — ii. I 

and it shall go hard, hilt I will delve.... — iii. 4 

I did full hard forbear liini Oltiello, i. 2 

be not too hard for inv wits — i. 3 

liard at hand comes tfic master and main — ii. 1 
let me but bind it hard, within this hour — iii. 3 
then kiss ine hard, OS if he plucked up ,. — iii, 3 

IIAHD-A-KKICPINGoath Lore's L. Lost. i. I 

II AHilF.XIOI) be the hearts of all. .»V„(,T'»ra/c, iii. 2 

II.\i;i)i:.\lXG— hardening of mv brows — i. 2 

llAliUKU-which what's han\t:rt. Mer. of Vcnice.iv. 1 

itself a pastime to harder bosoms! Winler'sTale, ii. I 

and hearts harder than steel Uichnrd II. iii. 2 

the harder matched, the greater ^MlenryVI. v. 1 

thinking it harder for our mistress. Trail. ti Cres. ifi. 2 

but, O, the harder heart! alack Cymbetinc, iii, 4 

pull off my hoots: harder, harder Lear, iv. (i 

your costard, or my bat lie the harder.... — iv. 6 
HARIMIST— and the hardest voice.. >/<Tra»Vr<-,, i. 3 

HARDEST-TIMBKKEUoak ZHenryVl. ii. 1 

IIARD-FAVOURED- 
isslie not hard-favoured, f^W . . .TvoGen. of Ver. ii. 1 
unless thou wert hard-lavoiired../<J!/'>« /■*<" '', iii. 3 

hard-favoured grief be lodged Uichnrd II. v. 1 

fair nature with hard-favoured rage. . Ilmry V. iii. 1 

become hard-favoured death I Henry VI. iv. 7 

hard-favoured Richard? '.Mlrnx/VI. v. 5 

II ARD-HANDED men, that work.. . . Mid. A. Dr. v. 1 
UARD-HEARTED— so hard-hearted, ■/■"■(■//'/i N. i. 5 
tliat now men grow hard-hearted . . Much Ado, v. 1 
you hard-hearted adamant .... Mid.N.'sDream, ii. 2 
believe not this hard-hearted man../i/Ma)<i II. v. 3 
sour husband, my hard-hearted lord — v. 3 
hard-hearted Clifford, take me fmm.ZHenryVI. i. 4 
same pale hard-hearted wench. ./tomco ^Juliet, ii. 4 

HARDIEST warriors did retire -illenry VI. i. 4 

HARDILY rCof.-hardly] attained ....2He7iryVI.i. 4 

IIARDIiMENT— changing hardiment. I i/f>ir!///'.i. 3 

popped Paris in his hardiment.. Troilus 4' Cress, iv. 5 

like hardiment Posthumus hath Cymbeline, v. 4 

HARDINESS— the name of hardiness .. Henry V. i. 2 

hardness ever ofhardiness iBmother.Cvm6r///if,iii.6 

HARDLY-you'U hardly win heT.TwoGen.o/Vcr. i. 1 

I can hardly think you my master . . — ii. 1 

it earae hardly off — ii. 1 

we can hardly make distinction.. TuelflhNlght^ii. 3 
hardly forbear hurling tilings at him — iii. 2 

I could hardly entreat him back — iii. 4 

I can hardly believe that.Mensure for Measure, iii. 2 

that I shall hardly spare Merchant of Venice, iii. 3 

which I can hardly remember . . As you Like if, iii. 2 

say I was stripped. Hardly serve Alt's tf'ell, iv. 1 

tliat I may hardly tarry so. Tamini; ofSh. 2 (indue.) 
ears might hardly endure the din? .. — i. 1 
leave yourself hardly one subject. Ii' inter' sTale, ii. 3 
as hardly will he endure your sight — iv. 3 

again should hardly draw me here Macbeth, v. 3 

well-mounted, hardly have escaped.. King- /o/iii, v. K 
and hardly kept our countrymen . . Ricliard //. ii. 4 

I hardly yet have learned to — iv. I 

very hardly, upon such a subject ..iHenrylV. ii. 2 
pistol-proof, sir; you shall hardly ofi'end — ii. 4 

that can hardly be, master Shallow — v..*) 

husband's neck, hardly to be shook off. Henry V. v. 2 

and hardly keeps his men 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

that hardly we escaped the pride — iii. 2 

for more I hardly can endure illenry VI. i. I 

rcoi.] hardlj' attained, and hardlj' .. — i. 4 
knowing how hardly I can brook abuse? — v. 1 

that hardly can I check my eyes SHenryVI. i. 4 

committed that is hardly borne Richard III. ii. 1 

grieved commons hardly conceive.. Hfjiry /'///. i. 2 
will hardly stop the mouth of.. Timon of.ithens, ii. 2 
once denie"d will hardly speed . . — iii. 2 

shall hardly in our ages see their . . Coriolanus, iii. 1 
I was hardly moved to come to thee — y. 2 

hardly gave audience Antony «5 Cleopatra, i. 4 

how Hardly I was drawn into — v. 1 

use thee not so hardly as prouder .. Cymbeline, iii. 3 
in the law; 'twill hardly come out . . ..rericles, ii. 1 
and hardly shall I carrj' out my side .... Lear, v. 1 
of his lands will hardly lie in this box. .Hamlet, v. 1 
HARDNESS— upon your hardness . . Coriolanus. v. 3 
flint and hardness of my fault .. Antony ^Cleo. iv. 9 
hardness ever of hardiness is mother. Cymbeline, iii. G 
is so from sense in hardness, that I cau — v. h 

alacrity, I find in hardness Othello, i. 3 

O hardness to dissemblel how do you .. — iii. 4 
HARD-RULED-hard-ruled king. Henry VI I L iii. 2 
ll.\RDY— never so hardy to come.. J'ic<!'.rtAA'iV'i'. ii. 2 

like a good and hardy soldier Macbeth, i. 2 

Iiohl, or daring hardy, as to touch ..Richard II. i. 3 
for hardy and undoubted champions. 3//€?«ri/r/. v. 7 
how now, my hardy, stout, resolved. /(icAai-cl///. i. 3 
backed with the hardy ■\Velclinicn .. — iv. 3 
as liard v as the Neinean lion's nerve ..Hamlet, i. 4 
II.VRE— ;if a cow ard than a hare.. Vuelflh Mght, iii. 4 
such a hare is madness the youth. .Ver. of Venice, i. 2 

her love is not the hare that AtyouLikeit, iy. 3 

eagles; or the hare, the lion Macbeth, i. 2 

yon arc the hare of whom Kim; John, ii. 1 

what sav'st thou to a hare MlenrylV. i. 2 

rouse a li'oi, than to start a hare — i. 3 

for a rabhit-siieUer. or a poulter'sharo — ii. 4 

havinir the fearful living hare illenry VI. ii. 5 

should ha\ e bare hearts Troilus f, Crestida, ii. 2 

and the ait of hares, arc they not..., — iii. 2 

lions, finds you hares Corio/uriuj, i. 1 

if I fiv, .Marcius, halloo me like a hare — i. 8 

OS we take hares, behind . . Antony^- Cleopa'ra, iv. 7 
but that of coward hares, hot ROatf.. Cymbeline, iy. 4 
no hare, sir; unless a hare, sir . . Itomeo^ Juliet, ii. 4 
old hare hoar, and on old hure hoor — ii. 4 (song) 
but a hare that is hoor, is too much — ii. 4 (song) 

II AKE-Hia.l the aznred hare-bell. Cj/mt«/iiic. iv. 2 

1 1 A l{ i;-HI{ A INED Hotspur 1 llturylV. v. 2 

li.VKE-I INDER-fl good harc-<lndcr..il/ucA./l<l«,i. i 



HAR 



IIAKE-LIP-never mole, hare-lip. Mitf. tf. Dream, v. 2 

squints the eye, and makes the hare-lip., tear, iii. 1 j 
HARFLEUR— course to Harfleur. Heury V. iii. (cho.) 

gaping on Kirded Harfleur — ill. (cho.) j 

not leave the half-achieved Harfleur — iii. 3 

tlierefore, vou men of Harfleur — iii. 3 

go you and enter Harfleur — iii. 3 

to night in Hai^leur will we be — iii. 3 

painted in the blood of Harfleur — iii. 5 

we could have rebuked him. at Harfleur — iii. 6 

HA'RFORD-WEST-atHa'rford-west.W/c/i. //J.iv. ,^ 

HARLOCK— harlocks rCo(. -hoar-docks] ..tear, iv. 4 

HARLOT— for tlie harlot king .... Winter sTAe, ii. 3 

skin off my harlot's brow .... Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

dissembling harlot, thou art false — iv. 4 

wliile she with harlots feasted — v. 1 

consorted with that harlot Richard III. iii. 4 

or a harlot for her weeping. Timon n/Alh. i. 2 (.grace) 

held with a brace of harlots. — .'.Y- ^ 

possess me some harlot's spirit! Coriolnmis, iii. 2 

Portia is Brutus' harlot, not his wife. ./»(.C<?sar, ii. 1 
aud Hero, hildlngs and harlots. . Romeo ^Juliel, ii. 4 
liarlot'scheek,beautiedvvithplasteriug, Hamfci, iii, 1 
brands the harlot even here, between — — iv. fy 

with a harlot [Co/. A'?i(.-harlotry] Othello, iv. 2 

HARLOTRY— these harlotry players.! Henri/ //'.ii. 4 

a peevish self-willed harlotry — iii. 1 

peevish self-willed harlotry it is. lioineo ^-Juliet, iv. 2 
[Co;. Kn^] sups to-night with a harlotrj'.0(Ae//o, iv. 2 

HARM— there's no harm done (,rep.) Tempest, i. 2 

that does harm to my wit Tu-ctflh Nigl,t,\. 3 

see any harm in his tace?. . Measure/or iV/eas«re, ii, i 
do the constable's wife any harm? .. — ii. 1 

would do no harm in him — iii. 2 

but, indeed, I can do you little harm — iii. 2 

and good provoke to harm — i v. 1 

is there any harm in, the heavier . . Much Ado, iii. 4 
turn all beauty into thoughts of harm — iv. 1 

yet bend not all the harm upon — v. 1 

laughing at their harm? Ulid.N.'sDream, ii. 1 

never harm, nor spell nor charm — ii. 3 (song) 

we will do no harm with our swords — iii. 1 

I'll not harm her so (rep.) — iii. 2 

she shall not harm thee, Helena .... — iii. 2 

I was wont to think no harm Love^sL.Lost, i. 1 

most power to do most harm — ii. 1 

what harm a wind too great..Merc/m7i;o/"re7i/ce, i. 1 

content witli my harm As you Like it, iii. 2 

it shall do you no harm to learn Alt's Well, ii. 2 

in his sleep he does little harm — iv. 3 

bars a thousand "imrms.. Taming of Shrew, 2 (indue.) 

all, masters, I hear no harm — i. 2 

thou dost guess of harm is creeping.. — i. 2 
whoop, do nie no harm, <50odman. Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

here's no harm intendecTto thee — iv. 3 

any tragic instance of our harm . . Comedy of Err. i . 1 

they will surely do us no harm — iv. 4 

to win us to our harm, the instruments. Mac&e//i, 1. 3 

the close contriver of all harms — iii. 5 

none of woman born shall harm Macbeth -~ iv. I 
I have done no harm. But I remember — iv. 2 
where, to do harm, is often laudable — iv. 2 
compared with my confineless harms — iv. 3 
harm have I, good ladj', done (i-ep.). Kiiig John, iii. 1 

practises more harm to me — iv. 1 

containing fire to harm mine eye — iv. 1 

is cold, and would iiot harm me — iv. 1 

thy words again, to do thee harm 1 . . Richard U.ii. 1 
that any harm should stain so fair . . — iii. 3 
thou hast done much harm upon me.Mienrijir. i. 2 
to say, I know more harni of him .... — ii. 4 

my face does you no harm — iii. 3 

no harm: what more? — iv. 1 

he never did harm, that I heard of . . Henry F. iii. 7 
see there be no harm between them . . — iv. 7 
sweet prince, he thought no harm..lHc7?ri/ri. iv. 1 

can no longer bear these harms . . — iv. 7 

most bloody nurser of his harms — iv. 7 

intend no harm to us iHenryf^I. v. 1 

I never did tliee harm ZHenry VI, i. 3 

good, 1 would sustain some harm.... — iii. 2 

to his harm, and ours — iv. 6 

seek how to redress tl>eir harms — v. 4 

when as he meant all harm — v. 7 

no other harm, but loss of (?ep.) . . Richard III. i. 3 

aud think no harm — i. 3 

lest, to thy harni, thou move — 1.3 

none can cure their harms by wailing — ji. 2 
the fear of harm, as harm apparent .. — ii. 2 

wish thyself no harm — iv. 1 

peeped harms that menaced him . . Henry VIII. i. 1 
an enemy intends you \'iii\'\n.,TroilusSfCressida, ii. 2 
reason flies the object of all harm. ... — ii. 2 

naming of him does him harm — ii. 3 

harm. Yes, thou spokest (rep.),. TimonofAth. iv. 3 
it sleeps, and does no hired l\arm .... — iv. 3 
one that means his proper harm . . . . Coriolanus, i. 9 
harm can your bisson eonspectuities — . ii. 1 
doing them neither good, nor harm. . — ii. 2 
no furtlier harm^ than so much loss. . — iii. 1 

the harm of unscauned swiftness — iii. 1 

know'st thou any harm's intended. ./ui. Caesar, ii. 4 

no harm intended to your person — iii. 1 

speak no liarm of Brutus here — iii. 2 

ten thousand harms Antony ^- Cleopatra, i. 2 

beg often our own harms — ii. 1 

do the gods great harm — y. 2 

harmnot yourself with your vexation.Ci/m6e/me, i. 2 

ha! no harm, I trust, is done? — i. 2 

but you shall do no harm — j. 6 

good masters, harm me not ^ — iii. 6 

no exerciser liarm thee! . — iv. 2 (song) 

do no liarm by it, though the gods .. — iv. 2 

he hath done no Briton harm — V. .^ 

was all the harm I did — v. 5 

too well to do thee harm Titus Andronicus, iv. 1 

to heal Rome's harms, and v.ipe away — v. 3 

nature is so far from doing harms Lear, i. 2 

take away the harms I fear — i. 4 

never more be feared of doing harm — ii. 1 



[ 344 j 



HARM— sheep shall take no harm .tear, iii. 6 (song) 
let this kiss repair those violent harms . . — iv. 7 

of my thought; no further harm Othello, iii. 3 

any harm? Naked abed, lago (rep.) .... — iv. 1 

but then I saw no harm — iv. 2 

hast not halt the power to do me harm . . — v. 2 
HARM-DOING -knew harm-doing. Henri/ F///.ii. 3 

HARMED— yet he never harmed Alt's Welt, v. 3 

more feared than harmed, my liege Henry V. i. 2 

you or yours by me were harmed 1. /i/c/iarti ///. iv. 4 

it harmed not me Othello, iii. 3 

HARMFUL— it makes harmful a.\\,. King John, iii. I 

and harmful sound of words — iii. 3 

no further harmful than in show — v. 2 

suffered in that harmful slumber ..2HenryVI. iii. 2 
too much lenity and harmful pity . .Zlleiiry VI. ii. 2 

mild, but yet more harmful Richard III, iv. 4 

than praised for harmful mildness Lear, i. 4 

but not without that harmful stroke — iv. 2 

HARMLESS— ever harmless looks Tempest, iv. I 

which you say, is a harmless fairy . . — iv. 1 
yet this is your harmless fairy, monster — iv. 1 
why he, a harmless necessary cat.Mer. ofVenice,\v, I 

the bowels of the harmless eai-th 1 Henry IV, i. 3 

harmless Richard was miu'dered 2 Henry VI, ii. 2 

is the sucking lamb, or harmless dove .— iii. 1 

subversion of thy harmless life? — iii. 1 

looking the way her harmless young one — iii. 1 

steeped in the harmless blood of ZHenry VI, ii. 1 

poor harmless lambs al)ide their .... — ii. 5 

so first the harmless sheep doth — v. 6 

and she, like harmless lightning Cymbetine, v. 5 

poor liarmless fly! that with his, Titus Androii. iii. 2 
IIAR.AILESS'T-harmless't creature. «/c*nrd///. iii. 5 

HARMONIOUS charmingly Tempest, \v. 1 

dulcet and harmonious breath., il/i't/. N, Dream, ii. 2 
HARMONY-harmony of their tongues. 7'ewpcs;, iii. 1 

what harmony is this? — iii. 3 

hushed on purpose to gmceharmony '. Much Ado, W, 3 
ravish, like enchanting harmony.. tni't'st. Los', i. 1 
makes heaven drowsy with the harmony — iv. 3 
the touches of sweet harmony . . Mer, of Venice, v. 1 
such harmony is in immortal souls . . — y. 1 
patroness of heavenly harmony.. Taming of Sh, iii. 1 
while I pause, serve in your harmony — iii. 1 

no touclr to time the harmony Richard II, i. 3 

like deep harmony; where words — ii. 1 

jar, what hope of narmony? 2Henry VI, ii, 1 

by notes of household harmony ZHenry VI. iv. 6 

that celestial harmony I go to Henry VIII, i v. 2 

Nell, he is full of harmony Troilus &- Cress, iii. 1 

tune the harmony of this peace .... Cymbetine, y, a 
heard the heavenly harmony. Titus Andronicus, ii- 3 

sucli delightful pleasing harmony Pericles, ii. 5 

with her sweet harmony and other choice — y. 1 
command to anv utterance of harmony . HamZe/, iii. 2 
HARNESS— we'll die with harness on,. Macbeth, v. 5 
their hiirness studded all with. Taming of Sh. 2 (ind.) 
fill fields with harness in the realm. 1 Hemi/ZF. iii. 2 

doff thy harness, youth Troilus ff Cressidc, y. 3 

should drink with harness on . . Timon nf Athens, i. 1 

throuKh proof of harness to nij. Antony ff Cleo. iy. 8 

HARNESSED— this harnessed mask .King John, v. 2 

he was harnessed light Troilus cj- Cressida, i. 2 

HARP— more than the miraculous harp. Tempest, ii. 1 
gracious duke, harp not on that. . Meas.forMeas. v. 1 
by an Athenian eunuch to the harp. Mid, N, Dr. y. I 

an unstringed viol, or a harp Richard II. \. 3 

I framed to the harp many 1 Hen ri/ / F. iii. 1 

harp not on that string {rep.) .... Richard III, iv. 4 

yon ne'er had done't, (harp on that. Cor/oian us, ii. 3 

HARPED- hastharped my fear a.r'ig'nt.Macbeth, iv. 1 

HARPER— a blind harper's song. . Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

Harper cries: 'tis time, 'tis time Macbeth, iv. 1 

HARPING— harping on what I.Antony ^-Cteo. iii. 11 

still harping on my daughter Hamlet, ii. 2 

HARPY— the figure of this harpy Tempest, iii. 3 

words' conference with this harpy . . Much Ado, ii. 1 

art like the harpy, which, to betray . . Pericles, iv. 4 

HARRIED— so 1 harried him ..Antony f Cleo, iii. 3 

HARROW— and harrow Italy Coriolanus, y. 3 

it harrows me with fear, and wonder ..Hamlet, i. 1 
lightest word would liarrow up thy soul — i. b 

HARRY— when, Harry? when? Richard II. j. 1 

is Harry Hereford arnied? Yea .... — i. 3 
Harry of Hereford, Lancaster (rep.) — i. 3 
holds you dear as Harry duke of ... . — ii. 1 

just? and is not Harry true? — ii. 1 

intelligence, that Harry Hereford . , — ii. 1 
my son, young Harry Percy, sent from — ii. 3 
well, Harry; what, will not this castle — iii. 3 
Harry Bolingbroke on both his knees — iii. 3 
thrice noble cousin, Harry Bolingbroke — iii. 3 
Harry Percy, and brave Archibald ..\HenryIV. i. I 

brow of my young Harry — \. \ 

have his Harry, and he mine — i. 1 

Harry Percy here at Holmedon tooH — i. 3 

whatever Harry Percy tlien had said — i. 3 

fentle Harry Percy, and kind cousin — i. 3 
anished woman from my Harry's bed? — ii. 3 

I'll break thy little finger, Harry — ii. 3 

no furtherwise, than Harry Percy's — ii. 3 

my sweet Harry, says she — ii. 4 

Harry, I do not only marvel — ii. 4 

there is a thing, Harry, which thou — ii. 4 

for Harry, now I do not speak to thee — ii. 4 
for Harry, I see virtue in his looks . . — ii. 4 

now, Harry? Whence come you? — ii. 4 

thy Harry's company (rep.) — ii. 4 

yet let me wonder, Ilarry, at thy .... — iii. 2 
in that very line, Harry, stand'st thou — iii. 2 

why, Harry, do I tell thee of my — iii. 2 

and vour unthouglit"Of Harry — iii. 2 

on Wednesday next, Harry — iii. 2 

and, Harry, vou shall march — iii. 2 

1 saw young Harry, with his beaver on — iv. 1 
Harry to Harry shall, hot horse to horse — iv. 1 
meets with lord Harry; and I fear . . — iv. 4 
lord Harry Percy, and there's my lord — iv. 4 
let not Harry know, in any case .... — v. 2 



HAH 

HARRY— I, and Harry Monmouth!. .IHenri///'. v. 2 

for, instead of thee, king Harry — v. 3 

I pr'ythee Harry, withdraw thyself. . — v. 4 
mistake not, thou art Harry Monmouth — v. 4 

my name is Harry Percy — v. 4 

Harry Percy, and the prince of (rep.) — v. 4 

O Harry, thou hast robbed — v. 1 

and you, son Harry, will towards — v. A 

run before king Harry's victory. 2HeJir!//r.(indue.) 
to noise abroad that Harry Monmouth — (indue.) 

prince Harry slain outright — i. 1 

and Harry Slonmouth's brawn — i. 1 

young Harry Percy's spur was cold — i. 1 

and out-breath'd to Harry Monmouth — i. 1 
hatli severed you and prince Harry. . — i. 2 
Welsli, himself, and Harry Monmouth — i. 3 
my lord, and Harry prince of Wales — ii; 1 
Harry prince of Wales, greeting. . — ii. 2 (letter) 

when my heart's dear Harry — ii. 3 

had my sweet Harry had but half . . — ii. 3 
and here is four Harry ten shillings in — iii. 3 
when Harry Bolingbroke, and he. . .. ^ iv. 1 

that prince Harry IS valiant — iv. 3 

come hither to me, Harry: depart .. — iv. 4 
thy wish was father, Harry, to that.. — iv. 4 

Harry the fifth is crowned — iv. 4 

for the fifth Harry from curbed — i v. 4 

come hither, Harry, sit thou by — iv. i 

therefore, my Harry, be it thy course — iv. 4 
in that Jerusalem s-liall Harry die . . — iv. 4 
dead Harry; O that the living Ilarry — v. 2 

but Harry, Harry : yet be sad — v. 2 

that Harry's dead; and so will I (rep.) — v. 2 
shorten Harry's happy life one day. . — v. 2 
king Harry. Harry the fourth (rep.) — v. 3 

Harry the fifth's the man — v. 3 

then should the warlike Harry. Henry r. i. (chorus) 

to Harry, and his followers — ii. 4<;hoiMsi 

think we king Harry strong — ii. 4 

tells Harry that the king — iii. (i-liorus) 

cry God for Harry ! England! — iii. 1 

bar Harry England, that sweeps — iii. 5 

say thou to Harry of England — iii. Ii 

alas, poor Harry of England! — iii. 7 

little touch of Harry in the night — iv. (chorus) 
Lord in heaven bless thee, noble Harry I — iv. 1 
what's thy name? Harry le Roy .... — iv. 1 
household words, Harry the king.... — iv. 3 

to know of thee king Harry — iv. 3 

king Harry: and so fare thee well .. — iv. 3 
Harry of Monmouth's life is come . . — iv. 7 
Harry Monmouth, being in his right — iv. 7 
more cause, did they this Harry. . — v, (chorus) 

till Harry's back-return again — v. (chorus) 

and say, Harry of England, I am thine — v. 2 
sooner persuade Harry of England .. — v. 2 

servant in arms to Harry king 1 Henry VI. iv. 3 

Harry, Harry,'tis no land of tliine.SHenri/r/. iii. 1 
holy Harry died, and my sweet son. Richard III. iv. 4 

O flarry's wife, triumph not — iv. 4 

Harry the sixth bids thee despair — v. 3 

Harry, that prophesied thou shouldst — v. 3 
you are young, sir Harry Guilford . . Henry VIII. i. 4 

sir Harry, place you tliat side — i. 4 

HARSH— too harsh a descant. Two. Gen. o/Terono, i. 2 

for they are harsh, untunable — iii. 1 

they will digest thisharshindignity. Love's L. L. v. 2 
are'harsh after the songs of Apollo .. — v. 2 
but on thy soul, harsh Jew.. Aferc/ian'o/Ten/ce, iv. 1 
harsh one; and not to be understood. ./4/i's)''e/(, ii. 3 

to tell, and harsh to hear Taming of .Shrew, iii. 2 

but a harsh hearing, when women . . — y. 2 
how dares thy harsh rude tongue . . Richard II, iii. 4 

it doth present harsh rage \ Henry IV, iii. 1 

the harsh and boisterous tongue 2 Henry I P\ i v. 1 

as harsh, and horrible to hear 2Henry VI. iii. 2 

that Clarence, is so harsh, so blunt ..ZHenry VI. y. I 
[Co^l him to this harsh extremity. . Richard III. i. 1 

not honest, is too harsh a style , — iv. 4 

they are harsh and heavy to me . . Henry VIII. iv. 2 
the cygnet's down is harsh .. Troilus^- Cressida, i. 1 

and harsh in sound to thine Coriolanus, iv. 5 

the time with conference harsh ..Antony SfCleo.i. 1 

what counts harsh fortune casts — .j^- 6 

no more ado with that harsh Cymbetine, iii. 4 

thy harsh and potent injuries — y. 4 

only danceth at so harsh a chime Pericles, i. 1 

too harsh for ladies' heads — ii. 3 

straining harsh discords Romeo ^Juliet, iii. 5 

bells jangled, out of tune and harsh . . Hamlet, iii. I 
and in tliis harsh world draw thy breath — v. 2 

and sweet revenge grows harsh Othello, v. 2 

HARSHLY— harshly in her ears..Coinet/i/o/£<r. iv. 4 
if they will fare so harshly on. 7Vi;iono//J'/iens, iii. 6 

grating so harshly all his daj's Hamlet, iii. 1 

HARSHNESS-composed of harshness. 7■el>lpes^ iii. 1 
due to me, to stubborn harshness. Mid. N.'s Dream, i. 1 

shall not give thee o'er to harshness Lear, ii. 4 

HARSH-RESOUNDING trumpets' .. Rie/mrd II, i. 3 

HARSH-SOUNDING rhymes Kim- John, iv. 2 

HART— what Curio? The hart .... Twelfth Mght, i. 1 
that instant was I turned into a hart — i. 1 

if a hart do lack ahind...4,t!/ou Like it, iii. 2 (verses) 

leave me at the White Hart iHenry VI. iv. 8 

the hart Achilles keeps thicket. . rro/ius <?• Cres.% ii. 3 
he^e wast thou bayed, brave hart. Jii/ms Ctpsar, iii. 1 
thou wast the forest to this hart .... — M!- i 

the swiftest harts have posted Cymbetine, ii. 4 

our Britain's harts die flying — v. 3 

to hunt tlie panther and the hart . . Titus Andron,\. 2 

go weep, the hart ungalled play Hamlet, iii. 2 

HARUM— horum, harum, horum . . Merry Wires, iv. 1 
HARVEST- very end of harvest'. Tempest, iv. 1 (song) 
yi\t aud youth is come to harvest. Twelfth Night, ii i . 1 
frame tlie season for your own harvest. Mwc/i /h/o, i. 3 
scarce show a harvest of their heavy. toi'e'sL.L.iv. 3 
man that the main harvest reaps. Js youLike it, iii. Tt 
if I grow, tlie harvest is your own .... Macbeth, i. 4 

curse the harvest of that corn \Hcnry VI. iii. 2 

reap the harvest which that rascal.. 2 Hem t//'/. iii. 1 



HAR 



HAKVEST-I'U blast liis liarvcut . . . .31Irnry fl.v.l 

right, lis snow In hnrvcst UichatJ lll.i. 4 

our linrvcst of this king irif/i.) — il. 2 

to renp the hiirvest ol' pfrpe tual pence — y. 2 
nnd sliortiv conicsi tolla^vcst..^M(olly <lj-r/i-o/)a/ru, il, 7 

In hW spiiii,' hi'iaini' a harvest CymOetiiie^ i. I 

thi- l\iirM>t out ..t'lhiiic own report ..I'ericirt, iv. 3 

HAKVl.S T-IloMK-niv liuive-.t-home..W<W!/»»'. ii. 2 

like II >t;ililile ImiuI iit li;ir\est-hiinio . 1 Heuryll'. i. 3 

HAKVKSl'-.M.VN that's tasked Corio/nmii, i. 3 

HASli;— lie i> in haste TieoUen.qfleroiia, i. 3 

will von nmkc Imste y — ii- l 

bill liini in:ike Ini-ste — iij- 1 

I am in fjieat Imste now Mfrry ll'iven, i. -t 

triulae Willi it in nil huste — iii- 3 

I iini in hiiste; go nloni; with mo .... — v. 1 
to her in lni~le. give her this .... Tutinh MglU, ii. 4 

bhinie not this Imste ol'niinc — iv. 3 

our imste Ironi lienee \s of..Measure/br Meature,i.\ 

my h;i,-te nniv not admit it — i. 1 

hoste you srieedilj^ to Angelo — in. 1 

Biul haste tlicc iiuick oway — iv. 1 

but make haste; the vaporous — iv. 1 

that spirit's possessed with haste .... — iv. ^ 

thou hast made good haste -r iv. 5 

haste still pays haste, and leisnre — — v. 1 
and with like hastes away with him — y. I 

I am now in great haste MiuhAdo, iii. 5 

soinc haste, L.eonato. Some haste — — v. I 

for here comes one in haste — v. 2 

figure unlieedy haste Mul. y.Dream,\. 1 

this must he done with hoste — iii. 2 

but notwithstanding, haste — iii. 2 

haste, signify so mueli Loce't L. Lost, ii. 1 

did stumble "with haste in his — ii. 1 

return in haste, for I do feast. . Merch. of Venice, ii. 2 

I will make haste — iii. 2 

and therefore haste away — iii. 4 

soft! no haste i he shall have nothing — iv. 1 
nwnv, make haste: come, you and I — iv. I 
awaV, muke hiiste; thou know'st .... — iv. 2 
dcsiiiiteh \'iMi with vour safest hastens yor^ L//.-ei/, i.3 

nitherenMousthnnin haste AlVslVelt,}. '> 

this haste liaili wings indeed — ii. 1 

haste you again — ii. 2 

and make this haste as your own good — li. 4 

my haste is very great — ii- .^ 

stav not, but in haste to horse — ii. a 

it requires haste of j our lordship — iv. 3 

and with more haste than Is his use . . — v. 1 
with all the haste thou canst. '/■uming-o/S/i. 1 (ind.) 
business asketh haste, and every day — ii. I 
who wooed in haste, and means to .. — iii. 2 

my haste dutli call me heuce — iii- 2 

that will not be in haste — iv. 3 

make your best haste H'inln's Tale, iii. 3 

that in such haste I sent to ecek.Comedy o/ Hrr. ii. 1 

good sir, make haste; since mine — iii. 1 

sweet now, make haste — iv. 2 

who came in haste for it — iv. 4 

wliat a haste looks through his eyes! ..Macbeth, i. 2 

come, let's make haste — iii. 5 

plucks me from over-credulous liaste — iv, 3 

but w'lio comes in such haste King John, i. 1 

that hot rash haste so indirectly .... — ii. 1 

as well as haste will suffer us — ii. 2 

away for England; haste before .... — iii. 3 

nay, but make haste — iv. 2 

wliieli his nimble haste had falsely . . — iv. 2 

O, haste thee to the peers — iv. 2 

with all exiiedient haste — iv. 2 

lorils, I am hot with haste in seeking — iv. 3 

in haste whereof, most heartily Richard II. i. 1 

and liath sent post haste, to entreat.. — i . 4 

jirav God, we may make haste — _i. 4 

for his designs crave haste — ii. 2 

fiery-red with haste — ii. 3 

liege, this haste was hot in question..! HeiinjIF.i. I 
on some great sudden haste [t'o(.-hest] — ii. 3 
I'll haste the writer, and, withal .... — iii. i 

but sirraii, make haste — iv. 2 

with winged haste, to the lord — iv. 4 

import, you would make haste — iv. 4 

lord constable, haste on Montjoy .... llenryF. iii. .■) 

and use it for my haste — iv. 2 

with all tlie haste I can \llemyVI. 1. I 

therefore haste I to the parliament .. — ii. .5 
sir John Fastolfe, in such liastey .... — iii. l' 

to haste unto your coronation — iv. 1 

then let's make haste away 2 Henry VI. i. I 

whv coinest thou in such haste?.. .. — iv. 4 

ill haste, post haste, are come 'illenryVI. ii. 1 

and haste is needful in this desperate — iv. 1 

tlie time and case requireth haste — iv. .5 

to haste tluis fast, to find us — v. 4 

tliink ye, to make haste — v. fi 

are slow, and weeds make haste ..Richard 111. ii. 4 
make all the speed^v haste you may.. — iii. I 
the loving haste ot these our friends — iii. 5 

come; I in all liaste was sent — iv. 1 

brief, g'KXl mother; for I am in haste — iv. 4 
will, my lonl, witli all convenient haste — iv. 4 

in haste too, lest he should help Henry fill. \\. 1 

I lia-ste now to my setting — iii. 2 

my haste made me unmannerly .... — iv. 2 

it seems, you are in haste — v. 1 

praved me to make great haste — v. 2 

in all swift haste Troilut^Cretiida.i. 1 

If yon please, haste there before us .. — iv. 1 

and haste her to the purpose — iv. 3 

with a rubber's haste, crams his — iv. 4 

haste we, Dioined, to reinforcement — V. 5 

and Imste you to lord Timoii ,. rrinon(>/^W<ii»,ii. 1 

let him take his haste, come — v. 2 

will liaste to help Cnminins Coriolnnus, i. 5 

with onr fair entreaties haste them on — v. 1 
those that with haste will make ..Jiiliut Cirtar, i. 3 

IVir here comes one in haste — 1.3 

Ci una, where haste you so? — 1.3 

leave me with liaste. Lucius, who's that — ii. I 



[ 345 ] 

HASTIi— with haste from hence ...-inlonySfClto, i. 2 

haste we for it: vet, ere we put — ii. 2 

.iliitlier willi wiml Imste the weiglit — iii. 1 

make vonr soonest Imste; so vonr' — iii. 4 

CO, pni it to the Imsti'. .Maduin, I will — v. 2 

iuake haste; wlio 1ms tlie note ('ymhtline.'i. 6 

must not in Imste almsc — i. 7 

cool yoiirseir, telling ycnir baste I'lricimi, i. 1 

sorrows whieli tlioii Ining'st in haste .. — i. 4 

then, with what Imste yon can — ii. .') 

the iiintiiiv lliere !i.' Imstes Tapjiease — iii. (Gow.) 

tod.i mv woik with .jiueU havte — iv. 1 

i' the luiste, and Itegu'i witli liim Lnr, ii. 1 

resolve me, with all modest liaste — ii. 4 

a lecUing po.st, stewed in his liaste — ii. 4 

lint vour Imste is now lu-ged on you — v. 1 

haste thee, for thy life — v. 3 

lienee; 1 st:ind on sudden haste. /^o'neo ^ Juliet, ii. 3 
Jesii, winit luiste? can you not stay.. — ii. .') 
iniike Imsle. lest mine be about your cars — iii. I 

let Komeo tuiiee in haste — iii. 1 

nmke luiste, tor it grows very late .. — iii. 3 
do you like this haste? we'll keep no — iii. 1 
I w'oiider at Ihis haste; that I must — iii. .'i 

notliiiig slow, to slack his haste — iv. I 

in Ills wisdom, hastes our marriage . . — iv. 1 
do you know the reason of this haste — iv. I 
maKC haste, make haste; sirrali (rep.) — iv. 4 

of my watch, bid them make haste Hamlet, i. I 

this sweaty haste doth make the night . . — i. 1 
and let your haste commend your duty . . — i. 2 
it shrunk in haste away, and vanished . . — i. 2 
while one with moderate haste might tell — i. 2 

haste me to know it; that I, with — i. .i 

bid the players make haste — iii. 2 

too free-footed. We will haste us — iii. 3 

I pray you, haste in this — iv. 1 

pray you, make haste. And, England .. — iv. 3 

the flats with more impetuous h,aste — iv. .1 

to me with as much haste as thou. . — iv. 6 (letter) 

let us haste to hear it, and call — v. 2 

and he requires your haste post-haste . . Olhidln, i. 2 

ever as she coulfl with haste despatch.... — i.3 

tlie aftiiir cries— haste, and speed must . . — i.3 

HASTED— let it be so hasted. /VcrcAan/ or Venice, ii. 2 

HASTEN— employed to hasten., '/"wo Ge«. or Ver. i. 3 

lest thou luisten thy trial All's Well, ii. 3 

hasten your generals after. . Antony ^Cleopatra, ii. 4 

f:et you gone, and hasten your return .... iear, i. 4 
lasten his musters, and conduct his — iv. 2 

hasten all tlie house to bed Homeo ^Juliet, iii. 3 

will you two lielp to hasten them? ....Hamlet, iii. 2 

HASTICNING-he was hastening.. Winler'sTale,\'. ! 

H.\STILY— hearing how hastily. /Vms./oj- Meas. iv. 3 
comes the prince and Claudio hastily. .Much Ado, v. 1 

dissevered; hastily leadaway Winter's Tale, v. 3 

brings you here to court so hastily?. . King Jolm, i. 1 

HASTING— hastin" to the mmt.. Winter's Talc, ii. 3 

the question then lord Hastings 2 Henry IV. i. 3 

and so to you, lord Hastings, and to all — iv, 2 

you are too shallow, Hastings — iv. 2 

go, good lord Hastings, and ere they — iv. 2 

good tidings, my lord Hastings — iv. 2 

the bishopScroop, Hastings, and all — iv. 4 
lord Hastings well deserves to havc.SHenrj/ VI. iv. 1 
but, ere I go, Hastings, and Montague — iv. 1 
Hastings, as he favours Edward's cause! — iv. I 

'tis the lord Hastings, the king's — iv. 3 

Richard and Hastings; let them go .. — iv. 3 
lord Hastings, and sir 'William Stanley — iv. 5 
of Gloster, lord Hastings, and the rest — iv. 5 
the lord Hastings who attended liim — iv. 6 

lord Hastings, and the rest — iv. 7 

send lord Hastings to the Tower . . Richard III. i. 1 
lord Hastings was to her for his .... — i. 1 

the new-delivered Hastings? — i. 1 

of my lord Hastings' late imprisonment — i. 3 

and so wast thou, lord Hastings — i.3 

to Stanley, Hastings, Buckingham .. — i.3 
Rivers and Hastings, take each other's — ii. 1 
as I love Hastings with my heart! .. — ii. 1 
wife, love lord Hastings, let him .... — ii. 1 
there, Hastings; I will never more .. — ii. 1 

embrace him; Hastings — ii. 1 

come, Hastings, help me to my — ii. 1 

fie, what a slug is Hastings! — iii. 1 

lord Hastings, go with him — iii. 1 

lord Hastings; will you go with me? — iii. 1 
■William lord Hastings of your mind — iii. I 
he will do all in all as Hastings doth — iii. 1 
sound thou lord Hastings, how he doth — iii. 1 
if we perceive lord Hastings will not — iii. 1 

then cursed she Hastings — iii. 3 

Hustings, >'oii and he are near in love — iii. 4 
Williuiu liiiil Hastings had proiiounoed — iii. 4 
tluin my lord Hastings, no man might — iii. 4 
Cateshy hath soundea Hastings in our — iii. 4 
lighted on poor Hastings' wietehed head — iii. 4 
dangerous and uiisiispected Hastings — iii. 5 
indictment of the goo. I I.. ill Hastings — iii. « 
within these five hours Hustings lived — iii. U 

O, let me think on Hastings — iv. 2 

the adulterate Hastings, Kiveis — iv. 4 

where is kind Hastings? — iv. 4 

Hiustings and Edward's children .... — v. 1 
think on lord Hastings; and despair — v. 3 

n.VSTY— first suit is hot and hasty . . Much Ado, ii. 1 
are you so luisty^ now? well, all is one — v. I 
nnkindncss of his hasty words. Taming ofShreir, iv.3 
or teach thy hasty spleen to do ....king John, iv. 3 

as the sea, nasty as lire Itlchard II. \. I 

being upon hasty employment 'iHemylV.u. 1 

is he so hasty, that he doth — iv. 4 

yet hasty marriage sehlom dHenryVI. iv. I 

with hasty Germans, and blunt — iv. fl 

art thou so hasty? I have staid.... RicAard///. iv. 4 

be not so hasty to confound ray — iv. 4 

in choler, ill, and hasty Henry VI II. ii. 1 

liostj', and tinder-like, upon too Cnrinlanut, ii. 1 

as hasty to expel liim thence — i v. 7 



HAT 



HASTY— shows a hasty siiark .... Julius Cirtnr, iv. 3 
I'll stay till hasty Pulydorc return. t'ym(/Winc, iv. 2 

to bandy hasty; words, to scant my I ear, ii. 4 

hasty jiowder lired doth hurry ..Romeo fif Juliet, v. 1 

did provoke onr hasty sending llamtet, ii. 2 

H ASTY-roOTEU time Mid. N. Dream, iii. 2 

1 1. AST V-WITTED body would. 7'amms;(V>/'rfi/',v. 2 
11 AT-- \oiir rve straw hats jiut on .... Tempest, iv. I 

fetch iiie the hat and rapier — v. 1 

this hat is Nan, our maid . . TuoGen, of Verona, 11. 3 

by this hat, then he in Merry Ifireir, i. 1 

he might put on a hat — iv. 2 

nnd there 8 her thrummed hat — iv. 2 

but as the fashion of his hat Much Ado, i. I 

he brushes his hat o' mornings — iii. 2 

the fashion of a doublet, or a hat .... — iii. 3 

some, sleeves; some hats Mid.N.'s Dream, iii. 2 

my lienil to any good man's hat. . Love's L. Lost, i. 1 
with your bat penthouse-like, o'er .. — iii. I 

my hat to a halfpenny, Pompey — v. 2 

wTth my bat, and sigh Merchant of Venice, ii. 2 

is his head worth a hat As you Like it, iii. 2 

with delicate fine hats All's Welt.iv. h 

my coloured hat and cloak Taming of tihreWj i. I 

in a new hat, and an old jerkin — iii. 2 

an old hat, and the humour of — iii. 2 

no link to colour Peter's hat — iv. I 

ucopatain hatl 0, 1 am undone! — v. 1 

take your sweetheart's hat Winter'sTale, iv.3 

nay, you shall have no hat — iv.3 

lie er pull your hat upon your brows.. .Vorlft/i, iv. 3 
and putting off his hat, said, I ■wi\i..'illenrylV. ii. 4 

in thy broad cardinal's hat \ Henry VI. i. 3 

my feet I stamp thy cardinal's hat . . — i.3 
accused them, wear their hats..../(/<;/iarrf///. iii. 2 

your holy hat to be stamped Henry VIII. iii. 2 

liats, cloaks, (doublets, I think,) — iv. 1 

he has beat it out of my hat .. Timon of Athens, iii. fi 
to have my hat than my heart .... Coriotanus, ii. 3 

and with Ills hnt thus waving it — ii. 3 

hats are plucked about their ears. .Ji//i'i(j Ctesur, ii. I 
with glove, or hat, or handkerchief. .C'ywi6e,'inc,i. 4 
doublet, bat, hose, all that answer .. — ijj- * 
no hat upon his head; his stockings .. Hamlet, V\. 1 

by Ills enekle hat and stair — iv. 5 (song) 

H-VTCH-sit down at the hatch. Comerfy-j/^rrorvii. 1 

window, or else o'er the hatch King John. i. 1 

and make you fake the hatch — v. 2 

become the' hatch and brood of time. 2 Henry IV.Wi. I 

my idleness doth hatch Antony 4- Cleopatra, i. 2 

raven doth not hatch a lark. . Titus Andronicus, ii. 3 

dogs leap the hatch, and all are fled Lear,S\\. 6 

I do doubt, the hatch, and the disclose. Hamlet, iii. 1 
HATCHED-be hatched and hovn. Meas.forMras. ii. 2 

folly, in wisdom hatched Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

'tis hatched, and shall be so . .Taming of Shrew, \. 1 

new hatched to the woeful time Macbeth, ii. 3 

a cockatrice hast thou hatched ..Richard III. iv. 1 

Nestor, hatched in silver Troilns .^- CressiJa, !. 3 

hatched, would, as his kind, ^row../u(i'«st'^rsar, ii. 1 

evils she hatched were not efl'ectert . . Cymheiine.y. 5 

not amiss to keep our door hatched . . Pericles, iv. 3 

H.VTCHES— all under hatches stow'd . . Tempest, i. 2 

asleep under the hatches — v. 1 

all clapp'd under hatches — v. 1 

if he come under my hatches .... Merry Wives, ii. 1 
stood upon the hatches in the storm.2 Henry VI. iii. 2 

to walk upon the hatches Richard III. i. 4 

the giddy footingofthehatches — i. 4 

we lia\ e a chest beneath the hatches . . Pericles, iii. 1 
HATCHET- thepapofahatchet ..iHcnryVI. iv. 7 

HATCHING, it seemed, appeared Coriolnnus, i. 2 

H.VTCIIJIENT— sword, nor hatchment.Ham/.7,iv. 5 
HATE— chide thee, if not hate thee .... Tempest, i. 2 

they all do hate him, as rootedly — iii. 2 

but barren hate, sour-eyed disdain — iv. 1 

that you shall hate it both — iv. 1 

deserves more fee than hate. Tno Gen. of Verona, i. 2 
whom your gentle daughter hates .. — iii. 1 

not hate unto my friend — iii. I 

'tis not in hate of you — iii. 1 

that women highly hold in hate — iii. 2 

that it is spoke in liate — iii. 2 

to hate young Valentine — iii. 2 

than hate of Eglamour — v. 2 

than hate for Silvia — v. 2 

onr radiant queen hates sluts ....Merry Wires. \.b 

1 linte it as an unfilled can Tvelflh Sight, ii. 3 

for policy I hate — iii, 2 

I hate ingiatitudemore — iii. 4 

I hate a drunken rogue — v. 1 

do excuse the thing I \\&iQ..Measure for Measure, ii. 4 

hate me, torture me to death Much Ado, iv. 1 

an' if she did not hate him deadly .. — v. 1 
never love that w hich my friend liates — v. 2 
the more I hate, the more he . . Mid. N.'s Dream, i. 1 
can you not hate me, as T know .... — iii. 2 

von hate me with your hearts — iii. 2 

the hate I bear thee made me — iii. 2 

wherefore speaks he this to her he hates? — iii. 2 

although I hate her, I'll not — iii. 2 

greater harm, than hate? Hate me! — iii. 2 

that I do hate thee and love — iii. 2 

to sleep hv hate, and fear no eninity? — iv. 1 
so much i hate a breaking cause.. /.nrc't /,. Lost. v. 2 
I hate him lor he is a eliristiuii..Vnc/i. of Venice, 1. 3 

he hates onr faered nation — i.3 

but vet I'll go in hate, to feeil — ii. i 

you Know vonrself, hate counsels not — iii. 2 
moan to mc ; therefore he hates me . . — iii. 3 

more than a lodged hate — iv. 1 

hates niiv man the thing he — iv. 1 

every offence is not u bate at first — iv, 1 

know not why. hates nothing morcAyoii Like, i. 1 

1 should hate him, for my lather — i.3 

yet I hate not Orlando. No, 'faith (.tep.) — !. 3 

owe no man hate, envy no man's .... — iii. 2 
linte him not; and yet I have (rrp.).. — iii. .t 
simrering, none of you hate them.... — (cpil.) 
let not your hole encounter with All's Well, i. 3 



HAT 



HATE— both my revenge and hate All's Well, ii. 3 

acquaint my mother with my hate . . — ii. 3 
Eucli swet^t use malce of what they hate — iv. 4 

while shameful hate sleeps out — v. 3 

thou didst liate lier deadly — v. 3 

thou liest Camillo, and I hate thee. Ifinter's Tale, i. 2 

shall, Antipholus, hate Comedy of Errors, iii. 2 

your favours, nor your liate Macbeth, i. 3 

others, that lesser hate hira — v. 2 

find should merit any hate King John, ii. 2 

thou hate and terror to posterity .... — iii. 4 
free from otlier misbegotten hate .... Richard I/, i. 1 
how God, and good men, hate so fold — i. 1 

difference of your settled hate — i. 1 

our eyes do hate the dire — 1.3 

tempest of your home-bred hate — i. 3 

merely in hate, 'gainst any — ii. 1 

is near the hate of tliose love not .... — ii. 2 
fills their hearts with deadl}' hate.... — ii. 2 
to the sourest and most deadlj' hate — iii. 2 

I'll hate him everlastingly, that bids — iii. 2 
that fear, to liate : and hate tui'ns. ... — v. 1 

I hate the murderer — v. 6 

and afoot too — I hate it 1 HennjIV, ii. 2 

they hate us youth — ii. 2 

voice, cried hate upon him iHenrylV. iv. 1 

no just cause to hate me — v. 2 

of my blood-drinking hate 1 Henry VI, ii. 4 

hateth thee, and hates us all iHenry VI. ii. 4 

cloudy brow his stormy hate — iii. 1 

as many signs of deadly hate — iii. 2 

lord Say, the traitors Irate tliee — iv. 4 

but that I hate thee deadly SHemy VI. i. 4 

have tux'ned my liate to love — iii. 3 

never hadst deserved our hate — v. 1 

and hate the idle pleasures of these. i?ic/iard III. i. 1 

in deadly hate the one against — i. 1 

in her heart's extremest hate — i.2 

I hate not you for her proud — 1. 3 

live eacli of you the subjects to his hate — i. 3 
do love my brother, hate not rae .... — i. 4 
deceived, your brother Gloster hates you — i. 4 
tills deed, will hate you for the deed — i. 4 
my soul is purged from grudging hate — ii. 1 
doth turn his hate upon your grace . . — ii. 1 
God punish me with hate in tliose .. — ii. 1 

fair love of hate, between these — ii. I 

I hate it, and desire all good men's . . — ii. 1 
[CoL K)!(.] your high-swoln hates .. — Ii. 2 
wlio brought me in my master's hate — iii. 2 

can lesser hide his love, or hate — iii. 4 

lie hates rae for m.y father Warwick — iv. 1 
[ Coi. A';i (,] caanot choose but hate thee' — iv. 4 

alas, I rather hate myself — v. 3 

commons hate him perniciously ..Henry VIII. ii. 1 

into his hands that nates me? — iii. 1 

and glory of this world, I hate ye . . — iii. 2 
cherish those hearts that hate thee . . — iii. 2 
of piu-pose laid, by some that hate me — v. 2 
do hate a proud man, as I hate . Troilus ^ Cress, ii. 3 

by weight hate I her Diomed v. 2 

of earth shall sunder our two hates . . — v. 1 1 

hate a lord with my heart Timon of Athens, i. 1 

I hate not to be banished — iii. 5 

his hate may grow to the whole — iv. 1 

I am misanthropos, and hate mankind — iv. 3 
■who all thy human sons doth liate . . — iv. 3 

I hate thee worse. Why? — iv. 3 

why should'st tliou hate men? — iv. 3 

on what 1 hate, I feed not. Dost hate — iv. 3 

from men; hate all, curse all — iv. 3 

■wlio, alive, all living men did hate — v. 5 (epit.) 
deserves greatness, deserves your \\a,te. Coriolanus, i.l 
call him noble, tliat was now your hate — i.l 
is the man of my soul's hate, Aufidius — i. 5 
for I do hate thee worse than (rep.) .. — i. 8 
tlie fusty plebeians, hate thine honours — i. 9 

'gainst my hate to Marcius — i. 10 

they hate upon no better a ground .. — ii. 2 
care whether they love or hate him.. — ii. 2 

but he seeks their hate with ii. 2 

and liis old hate unto you — ii. 3 

after the inveterate hate he bears you — ii. 3 

whose breatli I hate as reek o' the . . iii. 3 

my birth-place hate I, and my love's — iv. 4 

ever followed thee witli hate — iv. 5 

ay, and it makes men hate one another — iv. h 
should do that had deserved his Iiate — iv. 6 

tlien you should hate Rome as he does v. 2 

■when I tell him, he hates flatterers. J»(iMsC«sa)-, ii. 1 

when thou didst hate liim worst — iv. 3 

we hate that ■ndiich we often fear .Antony^ Cleo. i. 3 

to hate one great competitor i. 4 

I cannot hate thee worser than I do. . ii. .'i 

OS if a god, in hate of mankind — iv. 8 

(to accuse myself ) Ihateyou Cymbeline,u. 3 

yet 'tis greater skill in a true hate .. — ii. 5 

I love, and hate her: for she's fair . . iii. 5 

I will conclude to iiate her — iii. 5 

hate tliey bear tlieir emperor . . Titus Andr aniens, v. I 

■we.hate the prince of Tj're Pericles, i. 1 

■who hates honour, hates tlie gods above — ii. 3 

new-adopted to our hate Lear^ i. 1 

to match you where I hate — i.l 

that it doth hate wliat gets it — iii. 4 

thou call'st on him that hates thee — iii. 7 

strange mutations malce us hate thee — iv. 1 

if ever I did hate thee v. 3 

he hates him, tliat would upon the v. 3 

I hate the word, as I hate liell . . Romeo ^-Juliet, i. 1 

to part your cankered hate — i. I 

with hate, but more with love {rep.) — i. 1 

my only love sprung from ray only hate — i. 6 
my life were better ended by their hate — ii. 2 
Romeo, the hate \_Knt. love] I bear thee — iii. 1 
an interest in your liate's proceeding — iii. I 
by doing damned hate upon thyself? — iii. 3 
you know I hate, rather than Paris.. — iii. .5 
what 1 hate, but thankful even for liate — iii. b 
what a scourge is laid upon your hate — v. 3 



[ 346 J 

H ATE— tlian hate to utter love Hamlet, ii. 

thou did'st hold him in thy hate Othello, i. 

thougli I do liate him as I do hell-pains — i. 

again and again, I hate the Moor (?(•;).).. — i. 

and hearted tlirone, to tyrannous hatel.. — iii. 

naught I did in hate, but all in honour . . — v. 
HxiTED— hated most of those . . Mid. N.'s Dream, ii. 

and my lieresy, of allbehated — ii. 

and from thy liated presence part 1 so — iii. 

loatlied raedicinel hated potion, hence! — iii. 

my father liated Ills father dearly ./Is i/oiiL<7:ci7, i. 

time was, that I liated tliee — iii. 

hated too, worse than the greatest. Winder's Taip, i. 

sir, I shall be hated to report it! . . . — iii. 

if to be fat be to be hated IHenry IV. ii. 

but to be known, and hated 2 Henry IV. iv. 

lest thou be hated botli of God SHemy VI. i. 

of their hated [CoZ. heated] spleen — ii. 

betide that hated wretch Richard III. i. 

whom I most Imted living Henry VIII. iv. 

hencefortli hated be of Timon. Timon of Athens, iii. 
an' thou hadst hated meddlers sooner — iv. 
fain would 1 have hated all mankind — iv. 
Rome ■worse hated than of you. Coriolanus, i. 2 {let. 

he hated your person most — iii. 

him feared, so hated, and so banished — iv. 

hated by one he loves Julins Cresar, iv. 

the liated, grown to stiength. Anto^iy ^ Cleopatra, i. 

1 never hated thee; I have seen — ii. 

hated for being preferred so well .... Cymbeline, ii. 
pitied, or liated, to the face of peril .. — v. 
turn thy hated back upon our kingdom . . Lear, i. 

brag of two she loved and hated — v. 

hated, martyred, killed! Romeo ^-Juliet, iv. 

HATEFUL-0 hateful hands! Two Gen.of Verona, i. 

which is as hateful to me as Merry Wives, iii. 

and sliamed life a \ia,ieta\. Measure for Measure, iii. 
against his honour, in hateful practice — v. 
her full of liateful fantasies .... Mid. N.'s Dream, ii. 
sweet savours for this hateful fool .. — iv. 
I will undo this hateful imperfection — iv. 
not be perjured, 'tis a hateful thing — iv. 

a little more hateful to mine Macbeth, v. 

any secret course thy liateful life . . King Jolm, iii. 
a passion hateful to my purposes ... . — iii. 

avaunt, thou liateful villain — iv. 

tlie hateful commons will perform. . Richard II. ii. 

arms this hateful name in us 1 Henry I V. v. 

wliere hateful death put on his 2HenryIV. i. 

and in thy hateful lungs, yea Henry V. ii. 

notliing teems, but hateful docks .... — v. 
hide tliee from their hateful looks ..2 Henry VI. ii. 

disposed as the hateful raven — iii. 

but left that liateful office unto — iii. 

may she be on that hateful duke . . . .SHenry VI. i. 
cliarm, thou hateful withered hni^.. Richard III. i. 
urge liis hateful luxury, and bestial — iii. 
for hateful deeds committed by myself — v. 

the noblest hateful love Troilus <§- Cressida, iv. 

a hateful truth. What, and from .... — iv. 

is man so hateful to thee Timon of Athens, iv. 

hateful error, melancholy's child! ../ui<«s Casar,-v. 
record bear hateful memory. Jre/oH?/iS-Cteopa(ra, iv. 
a wooer, more hateful than the {ou\. Cymbeti^ie, ii. 
hateful as Cocytus' misty mouth .Titus Andron. ii. 
the remainder ofour hateful days? .. — iii. 

in oblivion, and hateful griefs — iii. 

with this hateful liquor temper it.... — v. 

pluck upon my liateful life Lear, iv, 

dear saint, is hateful to myself... Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 
that I may sack the hateful mansion — iii. 
unhappy, wretched, hateful day! .... — iv. 

hateful day ! never was seen so black — iv. 
HATER— of thy drum, hater of love. . All's Well, iii. 

to spend upon his haters Antony ^Cleopatra, v. 

HATETH— the more he hateth me.Mid.N.Dream, i. 

that hateth thee, and hates us all ..2HenryVI. ii. 

who hatetli him, and honours not.... — iv. 
HATFIELD- William of Hatfield.... — ii. 

but William of Hatfield died without — ii. 
HATING — as hating what himself . . King John, iv. 

brooch in this all hating world Richard II. v. 

as hating tliee, are rising up in arms.2Hen/-i/ VI. iv. 
HATRED- the hatred of ray spidt.Mid.N.Dream, ii. 

that hatred is so far from jealousy . . — iv. 

immodest hatred, the child-bed.. Winler'sTale, iii. 

may cease their hatred; and this ([ea.r..HenryV. v. 

seek for hatred at my hands SHenry VI. iv. 

to urge his liatred more to Clarence. Richard III. i. 

witness of her hatred by — i. 

at your interior hatred, that in your — i. 

turn you all your hatred now on me — i. 

dissemble not yom" hatred, swear .... — ii. 

never more remember our former hatred — ii. 

more harmful, kind in hatred , — iv. 

■vvliat his high Iiatred would effect . . Henry VIII. i. 

in what hatred he still hath held. . . . Coriolanus, ii. 

to oijpose his hatred fully: welcome — iii. 

1 bear no hatred, blessed man . . Romeo Sf Juliet, ii. 
HAT'ST— if thou hat'st curses . . Timon of Athens, iv. 
HAUD-haud credo. 'Twas not (rep.'}. Love's L.L. iv. 

niv hand credo for a deer (rep.) — iv. 

HAUGHTINESS-pride, haughtiness.l Henry! V. iii. 
HAUGHT— of thine, tliou, hoMght .. Richard II. iv. 

beside the haught protector 2HenryVU i. 

and the haught Northumberland . . 3 Henry VI. ii. 

and brothers, hausht and proud....ri!'cAord7//. ii. 
HAUGHTY— with haughty arms 1 Henry IV, v. 

[Knt.'] born to yield, tliou hauglity Scot — v. 

Winchester, that haughty prelate . . 1 Henry VI. i. 

is more hauglity than the devil — i. 

in tills haughty great attempt — ii. 

haughty words of hers have battered — iii. 

virtuous, full of haughty courage ... . — iv. 

let us watch the haughty cardiiial . .2Henry VI. i. 

oft have I seen tlie haughty cardinal — i. 

haughty spirit, winged with desire ..SHenryVI. i. 

means match not his haughty mind. Uichardlll. iv. 

the haughty prelate, bishop of Exeter — iv. 

thy traitorous haughty sons TitusAndronicus, i. 



HAZ 



HAUGHTY— haughty Montague, ffomeo l^- Juliet, v. 3 

HAULED— hauled thither by most . .2 Henry I V. v. 5 

HAULING- ■«'ith hauling of the ropes.. Pericles, iv. 1 

HAUNCH—bribe-buck, each a ha.unc)-i. Merry W. v. S 

ever in the haunch of winter sings.. 2 Hrary/F. iv. 4 

HAUNCHES-round haunches gored. /Is wow LilccU. 1 

HAUNT— still to haunt my house.. Men'y Wives, iii. 4 

in idle price to haunt assembl.es. .ilZ/'ni. rnrMeas. i. 4 

and I will spare your haunts. . Mid. N.'s Dream, ii. 2 

hence, and do not haunt me thus ii. 3 

exerapt from public haunt As you Like it, ii. 1 

there IS a man haunts the forest — iii. 2 

haunts wakes, fairs, andbear-baitingsW'/H/ej's T. iv.2 

one that haunts mc Comedy of Errors, iii. 2 

where they most breed and haunt Macbeth, i. 6 

and children's ghosts will haunt me still — v. 7 

there is a devil haunts the 1 Henry IV. ii. 4 

and I do haunt thee in the battle thus — v. 3 

his open haunts and popularity Henry V. i. I 

suspicion always haunts the guilty. .3 He;!)i/ VI. v. 6 

which did haunt me in my sleep Richard III. i. 2 

let sorrow haunt thy bed iv. 1 

did haunt you in the field . . Troitns ^ Cressida, iv. 1 
I'll haunt thee like a wicked conscience — v. 11 
and all the haunt be ours.. Antony fy Cleopatra, iv. 12 
what fairies haunt this ground? .... Cymbeline, v. 4 

the foul fiend haunts poor Tom Lear, iii. 6 

in the public haunt of men Romeo ^-Juliet, iii. 1 

and out of haunt, this mad young man. Hamlet, iv. 1 
charged thee, not to haunt about my doors. Othello, i. 1 

she haunts me in every place iv. 1 

let the devil and his dam haunt you! .... — iv. I 
HAUNTED-strange! we are haunted. M/ii.A'. Dr. iii. 1 

now about this haunted grove? — iii. 2 

is haunted with a refined traveller. Z-oiie's /.. Lost, i.l 
some haunted by the ghosts they . . Richard II. iii. 2 

that haunted us in our familiar Henry V. ii. 4 

fairies will his tomb be haunted Cymbeline, iv. 2 

HAUNTING— temple hauntiug mavttet. Macbeth, i. 6 

loastof which, haunting a nobleman. lH(;?jr!/i^. iii. 1 

do you mean by this haunting of me? . . Othello, iv. \ 

HAVEN-wished haven of my bliss. Taming of Sh. v. 1 

to a wise man ports and happy havens. /iic/iard //, i. 3 

from Ravenspurg haven before SHemy VI. iv. 7 

they have put forth the haven . . Antony^ Cleo. iv. 1 

to bring him to the haven Cymbeline, i. 2 

unto the shores o' the haven — i.4 

in Cambria, at Milford Haven . . — iii. 2 (letter) 

he is at Milford Haven — iii. 2 

as to inherit such a haven — iii. 2 

opportunities at Milford Ha\'en — iii. 4 (letter) 
comes to Milford Haven to-morrow., — iii. 4 

over land, to Milford Haven iii. 5 

jneet thee at Milford Haven — iii. & 

long is't since she went to Milford Haven — iii. 5 
Milford Haven, sir. What is your name? — iii. 6 

yes sir, to Milford Haven — iv. 2 

attending you here at Milford Haven — iv.2 

what lading's in our haven Pericles, i. 2 

'HAVIOUR— 'haviour of reputation. A/erry Wives, i. 3 
with the same 'haviour that your. Twelfth Night, iii. 4 

in the lusty 'haviour of his son Richard II. i. 3 

put thyself into a 'haviour of less . . Cymbeline, iii. 4 
may'st think my 'haviour light.. Ro?neo ^Juliet, ii. 2 
nor the dejected 'haviour of the visage . . Hamlet, i. 2 

HAVOCK— havock with them? TwelfthNight, v. 1 

made such havock of my means Much Ado, iv. 1 

■wide havock made for bloody po-wer.. King John, ii. 1 
cry, havock, kings! back to the stained — ii. 2 
of pell-mell havock and confusion ..\HenryIV. v. 1 

to spoil and havock more than she Henry V. i. 2 

do not cry, havock, where you should. Corioianus, iii. 1 
havock, and let slip the dogs ofwar.Julius Cassar, iii. 1 

this quarry cries on havock I Hamlet, v. 2 

HAWK— a fine hawk for the bush.. Mori/ Wives, iii. 3 
for a ha^ft'k, ahorse, or a husband?.. 3/«cA Ado, iii. 4 
thou hast hawks will soar.. Taming of Shrew, 2 (ind.) 
I'll venture so much on my hawk . . — v. 2 

I soar, I am a hawk Henry V. iii. 7 

between two hawks, which flies 1 Henry VI. ii. 4 

and queen do mean to hawk 'IHenry IV. i. 2 

my lord protector's hawks do tower.. — ii. 1 

I know a hawk from a handsaw Hamlet, ii. 2 

HAWKED— hawked at, and killed Macbeth, ii. 4 

HAWKING— hawking or spitting..>4s!/0M irte it, v. 3 

his hawking eye, his curls All's Well, i. 1 

dost thou love hawking. Taming' of Shrew, 2 (indue.) 
talking of hawking; nothing else ..2HenryVI. ii. I 
HAWTHORN-lisping hawthorn hu&s.Merry W. iii. 3 
when hawthorn buds appear . . Mid. N.'s Dream, i. 1 
this hawthorn brake our tyriug-house — iii. 1 

hangs odes upon hawthorns AsyouLikcit, iii. 2 

the hawthorn bush a sweeter SHenryVI.ii. 5 

through the sharp hawthorn blows (rep.).. Lear, iii. 4 
HAY— Dottle of hay, good hay (rep.)..Mid.N.Dr. iv. 1 

and let them dance the hay Lore'sL. Lost, v. 1 

we lie tumbling in the hay. Winter' sTale,\\. 2 (song) 

I will drain him dry as hay Macbeth, i. 3 

■winter mars our hoped-for hay SHenry VJ. iv. 8 

kindness to his horse, buttered his hay . . Lear, ii. 4 

the punto reverso! the hay ! Romro ^-Juliet, ii. 4 

HAY-STACKS in the night. . . . TitusAndronicus, v. 1 
HAZARD-hazard of his life.. Two Gen.of Verona, iii, 1 

to hazard life, and rescue __ v. 4 

I will myself in hazard . . Measure for Measure, iv. 2 
your latter hazard back again . . Me'rch. of Venice, i. 1 

your hazard shall be made — ii. i 

must give and hazard all he hath. . . . ii. 7 

hazard for lead? this casket (rep.) .. — ii. 7 

nor give, nor hazard, aught for lead. . ii. 7 

comes to hazard for my ■worthless self ii. 9 

look fairer, ere 1 gave, or hazard ii. 9 

pause a day or two beibre you hazard — iii. 2 

thou this to hazard, needs must All's Well, i i. 1 

to the extreme edge of hazard — iii. 3 

certain hazard of all incertainties. »'m^er'sra/e,iii.2 
lies on the hazards of all husbands ..King John, i. 1 

to make a Jiazard of new fortunes — ii. 1 

I will, ujpon all hazards, well believe v. 6 

be with hazard of my head \HennjIV. i, 3 



HAZ 



[ 347 ] 



HAZARD— oil the iiiei; hazard of onc.l Henry W. iv. I 

may overlive the huztuti 'ilienrylV, iv. ! 

Iii»'father'9 crmvu into the hazard . . . . //rni-y )'. i. i 
who will g<i to hii/iiiil with mo lor .. — iii. 7 

to hnznrd all our lives in one MlenryVI. iv, 6 

wc hnzivid In- lliv Slav — iv. 6 

I will ftuiiil the liazafdof thcdicKicAarrf ;//. v. 4 

Bets all on lui/anl Troilut ^ Crcssida, (prol.) 

to liiizunl life (or ill? 7i«ioh o'/I//i«i», iii. 5 

BiKl oil ihou >lioiil.lst liuzanl tliv life — iv. 3 
wostancl njiii-h liazunl, iftliev liriiig not — v. 3 
mill li.v the hu/uvil of the spotted die — v. 5 

nilltiiiv were hetter luil in hazard ..Coriolanut, ii. 3 

and tile hazard of nnirh hlood — iii. 

niv hazards still ha\e heen voiir solace — iv. 

break his iieek, or hazanl niine — iv. 

the hazards oi' this nntrod flute . .Julius Ccemr, iii. 

and all is on the hazard — v. 

nierelv to chaiu'e and hazard .. Antony ^Cleo, iii. 
wouki hazard the winniiii,' both of ..Cymhtline, i. 
d, in this Pericles, i. 



idurehi 



. Il„ml,: 



i.lile Moor shonld hazard sueh a place. O/A,*,, ii. 

IIAZAUDEJ)-! hazarded the loss. Come./;/ ../An-, i. 
now hazarded to thv graee..l;i(oi.;/i*lCit'op(i(»a, iii. 1 

U AZr.L— thon hast liazel eyes ..Uomeo ^Juliel, iii. 

lIAZKL-NVT-iii hue as hiuel-nuts. Jaw. o/'SA. ii. 
chariot is an etnpty )iazel-nut linmeo S,-Ju{iet.\. 

IIAZlOl.-T'WKi, IS straight.... T«miHg-o/S/,reM., li. 

Hl-:.\l)l.ohl liead 'hove tlie contentions. 7'cmpfj/, ii. 
sees a erowii ihopping upon tliy head — ii. 
I know not where to hide ray head .. — ii. 'J 
thy eyes are almost set in thy head . . — iii. 2 
Iteep a good tongue in your head ... . — iii. 2 
niay'st knoeli a nail into liis head .. — iii. 2 

keep a goiKl tongue in thy head — iii. 2 

whose heads stood in their breasts? . . — iii. 3 

else falls upon your heads — iii. 3 

now di>es my project gatlierto a head — v. I 

which I wear III my liead — v. 1 

his head un mellowed Two Gen. of Verona^ ii. 4 

Iieap i^n your Itead a pack — iii. 1 

there's not a hair on's head — iii. 1 

Slender, I broke your head Merry It'ives, i. 1 

I have matter inmy licad against .. — i. 1 

I liave operations in ray head — i. 3 

as any is lietween this and his liead.. — i. 4 

does he not hold up his head — i. 4 

shall turn your head out of my door — i. 4 

some crotchets in thy head now — ii. 1 

let it lie on my head — ii. 1 

I would have nothing lie on my head — ii. 1 

hilt to point, heel to head — iii. 5 

hold up your liead (;e^.) — iv. 1 

will look some linen tor your head .. — iv. 2 

with Iiiige horns on his head — iv. 4 

of waxen tapers on their heads — iv. 4 

flaring 'bout her head — iv. 6 

hold up your head, and mince — v. 1 

by the head and shoulders — v. 5 

had an excellent head of hair .... Tu'elfthJfigkt, i. 3 

no sea-cap on 3'our head — iii. 4 

he has broke my head across — v. 1 

you broke my head for nothing — v. 1 

still had drunken head — v. 1 (song) 

his head's to be chopped off. Measure for Measure ^ i. 2 

and thy head stands so tickle — i. 3 

if you iicad and hang all — ii. 1 

{[ive out a commission for more heads — ii. ! 
lad he twenty lieads to tender — ii. 4 

to save a lieatt, to cleave a heart .... — iii. 1 

nips youth i'the head — iii. 1 

can yt.u cut off a man's head? — iv. 2 

his wife's head, and lean never (rep.) — iv. 2 
have Claudio's head sent me by five — iv. 2 (note) 
to deliver his head in the view of ... . — iv. 2 

and his head borne to Angelo — iv. 2 

shave the head, and tie the heard .... — iv. 2 

and off with Barnardine's head — iv. 2 

his beard, and head, just of his colour — iv. 3 

and send the head to Angelo — iv. 3 

here is the head; I'll carry it — iv 3 

his head is off, and sent to Angelo . . — iv. 3 
to the head of Angelo accuse him ... . — iv. 3 

1 dare not for my head till — iv. 3 

to lose his head — v. 

a wan-ant for my poor brother's head — v. 

died when Claudio lost his head — v. 

the head of Ragozine for Claudio's .. — v. 
slie would not have his head on her . . Much Ado, i. 

with horns on his head — ii. 

know you by the waggling of your head — ii. 
shake the head at so long a breathing — ii. 
from the crown of his head to the sole — iii. 

know, Claudio, to thy head — v. 

bid me to a calTs licad and a capon. . — v. 
on the sensible Benedick's head? .... — v. 

I'll avoucli it to his head Mid. N. Dream, i. 

his best arrow with the golden head — i. 
I upon this bank will re^t my heod.. — ii. 
3'ou see an ass' head of your own .... — iii. 
an ass's nowl I fixed on his head .... — iii. 

where dost thou hide thy head? — iii. 

in thy sleek smooth head — iv. 

scrateh my head. Pens-blossom — iv. 

from off the head of this Athenian .. — iv. 

Kohin, take off this licad — iv. 

and their heads are hung with cars . . — iv. 
I beg the law, the law, upon his head — iv. 
should have worn the horns on his head — v, 
lay my head to any good man's . . LovtU L. Lostj i. 
nray you, which is the head lady? .. — iv. 

ny the rest that have no heads — iv. 

it was a buck of the first head — iv. 2 

bows not his vassal head — iv. 3 

as slie walked over head — iv. 3 

when the suspicious head of theft. ... — iv. 3 
f.tr thou art not so long by the Iiead.. — v. 1 

with a horn on his head — v. 1 

I do beseech thee appurd thy head .. — v. 1 



HEAD— hide. voiir heads like cowards. j:.ot>e'>L.t., v. U 

with libbard's head on knee — V. 2 

a cittern liead. The head of a bodkin — v. 2 

hide thv head, Achilles — v. 2 

married to a death's head with ..Mer. of Te nice, i. 2 

I ha^■e ne'er a tongue in my liead.. . . — ii. 2 

nor thnisi vonr head into the public — ii. .') 

whose aniliili..ns head spits ill — ii. 7 

no more than a fool's head? — ii. SI 

I will ever he your head — ii. 9 (scroll.) 

with one fool's head I eame to woo .. — ii. 9 

dare scarce show his head on the Rialto — iii. 1 

or in the heart, or in the head? — iii. 2 (song) 

the dowry of a second liead — iii. 2 

to shake 'the head, relent, and sigh .. — iii. 3 

so young a li.dy wiili .so old a head — iv. 1 (let.) 

my deeds upon mv head I — iv. 1 

of my hands, my head, my heart — iv. 1 

a precious jewel in his head AsyouLiliei{,u. I 

-with forked heads have their — ii. I 

is his head worth a hat — iii. 2 

the matter's in my head — iii. 5 

carries his house on his liead — iv. 1 

and hose plucked over your head.... — iv. 1 

to set the deer's horns upon his head — iv. 2 

lay couching, head on ground — iv. 3 

cover thy head, cover thy head — v. 1 

fall on thy head ! farewell, my lord ..AU'sU'ell,'!. 1 

their heads are both one — i. 3 

and find your salt tears' head — i. 3 

whilst I liave a tooth in my head .... — ii. 3 

to pluck his indignation on thy head — iii. 2 

come, headsman, off with his head ., — iv. 3 

which how the head, and nod — iv. ii 

balm his foul head with.7'ai)iiiig-o/S/irea>, 1 (indue.) 

and with declining head — 1 (indue.) 

-vvitli ne'er a tooth in her head — i. 2 

young folks lay their heads together! — i. 2 

sir, give him head — i. 2 

she struck me on the head — ii. 1 

'tis in my head to do my master good — ii. I 

a run but my head and my neck .... — iv. 1 

let their heads be sleekly combed .... — iv. I 

head and butt: aliasty-witted hody — v. 2 

your head and butt were head and horn — v. 2 

. thy keeper, thy head, thy sovereign . . — v. 2 
o'er head and ears a forked one . . IVinter^s Tale, i. 2 

sometimes her head on one side — iii. 3 

what maids lack from head to heel — iv. 3 (song) 

how she longed to eat adders' lieads.. — iv. 3 

any toys for your head, of the newest — iv. 3 (song) 

set on the head of a wasp's nest — iv. 3 

preferment drop on my head — v. 2 

upon mv daughter's head! tell me . . — v. 3 

I sh all nave a holy head Coined y of Errors, i i . 1 

I had rather have it a head — ii. 2 

a sconce for my head, and ensconce. . — ii. 2 

no longer from head to foot — iii. 2 

comes it, that his head is light — v. 1 

fixed his head upon our battlements . . Macbeth, i. 2 

the spring, the head, the fountain — ii. 3 

upon my head they placed — iii. 1 

gashes on his head; the least — !}'•'* 

strange things I have in head — iii. 4 

topple on their warders' heads — iv. 1 

do slope their heads to their foundations — iv. 1 

rebellious head, rise never — iv. 1 

tread upon the tyrant's head — iv. 3 

the usurper's cursed head — v. 7 

still I lay upon my mother's head . . King John, i. 1 

by the sky that hangs above our heads — ii. 2 

take liea'I from all indifferency — ii. 2 

mean by shaking of thy head? — iii. 1 

under heaven are supreme head .... — iii. 1 

the jiower of France upon his head . . — iii. 1 

I will denounce a curse upon his head — iii. 1 

Austria's head lie there — iii. 2 

keep this form upon my head — iii. 4 

■when your head did but aeh — iv. I 

at midnight held your head — iv. 1 

repentant ashes on his head — iv. 1 

to stuff my head with more — iv. 2 

unheard, fall on your head — iv. 2 

hadst thou but shook thy head — i e. 2 

drew this gallant head of war — v. 2 

by cutti ng oft" your heads — v. 4 

their first head and spring Richard II. i. I 

hot vengeance on oft'enders' heads .. — i. 2 

reach at victory above my head — i. 3 

compass is no bigger than thy head. . — ii. 1 

runs so roundly m thy head [rep.) .. — ii. 1 

a thousand dangers oil your head.. .. — ii. 1 

had cut oft" my head with my — ii. 2 

their heads shall pay for it — iii. 2 

with heads, and not with hands — iii. 2 

at Bristol lost their heads — iii 2 

cover your heads, and mo.'k not .... — iii. 2 

from hence, hath hid his head — iii. 3 

sacred king shonl.l hide his Ilea. 1! .. — iii. 3 

taking so the l;ea.l,yom- \i h..le Iliad's — iii. 3 

tlie heavens are o'er your head — iii. 3 

hands against my head, and threat.. — iii. 3 

spring from one most gracious head.. — iii. 3 

trample on their sovereign's head .. — iii. 3 

buried once, why not upon my head? — iii. 3 

cut oft" the heads of too fast-growing — iii. t 

as Calais, to my uncle's head? — iv. 1 

heavy weight trora off my liead — iv. 1 

ere foul sin, gathering head — v. I 

my guilt l)e on my head, and there .. — v. 1 

dust and rubbish on king Richard's head — v. 2 

dust was thrown upon his sai'red head — v. 2 

to London sent till' heads of .Salisbury — V. 6 

upon my head, and all this famous .. — v. (> 

and never show thy heiiil hy day .... — v. G 

cut this head fr.ini mv shoulder's ] Henry 1 1', i. 2 

hid his crisp hea.l in the I1..II0W — i. 3 

be with hazard of my head — i. 3 

upon the hea<l of this forgetful man.. — i. 3 

save oiu' heads by raising of a head . . — i. 3 



HEA 



HEAD— never an eye in thy head? ..I Henry ly. ii. 1 

Bolingbrokc made head against — iii. I 

and rest your gentle head ujion her lap — iii. 1 

that I may lay my head in thy lap.. — iii. I 

wouldst thou have thy heaii broken? — iii. 1 

turns liead against the lion's — iii. 2 

redeem all this on I'crcy's head — iii. 2 

and on my head my shames redoubled! — iii. 2 

a mighty and a fearful head — iii.".' 

many a man doth of a death's head.. — iii. 3 

can make a head to push against .. .. — iv. I 

no bigger than pins* heads — iv. 2 

cut me off the heads of all — iv. :i 

to seek out this head of safetj' — iv. .t 

and a hca.l I. Cgalhint warriors — iv. 4 

the special hea.l ..fall the land — iv. 1 

fortune sh.>weriiig .111 vonr head — v. 1 

and raise this present liead — v. I 

enterprise set olf his head — v. I 

his on'ences live ujion my head — v. 2 

quarrel lay unon our hea.ls — v. 2 

honour dost tlion seek upon my head? — v. 3 

hold nji thy heu.l, \ilc .Scot — v. 4 

to make a garlaiiil f..r my head — v. 1 

bear the sin upon thcirown heads — v. I 

monster with uncounted heads..2//eiiri//r. (indue.) 

stooped his anointed head as low .... — (indue. 1 

he gave liis able horse the head — i. I 

thou shakest thy head; and liold'st.. — i. I 

too wanton f.ir the head — i. I 

before you said, — let us make head .. — i. I 

with a wliite head, and something .. — i. 2 

action can peep out his head — i. 2 

hold up head without Northumberland — i. 3 

are in tliree heads; one power — i. 3 

dust upon his goodlv head — i. 3 

to the Liibhar's head in Lumbert Street — ii. 1 

cut me off the villain's head — ii. I 

when the prince hr.ikc thy head — ii. 1 

do not speak like a death's head — ii. 4 

drop upon our bare unarmed heads., — ii. 4 

curling their monstrous heads — iii. 1 

uneasy lies the head that wears — iii. 1 

I saw'him break Skogan's head — iii. 2 

and betted much money on his head — iii. 2 

which show like pins' heads toiler .. — iv. 3 

of balm, to sanctify thy head — iv. 4 

I put it on my head; to try with it . . — iv. 4 

let God for ever keep it from my head! — iv. 4 

troublesome it sat upon my liead .. .. — iv. 4 

lay thy head in Tunes' lap — v. 3 

the sin upon my head Henry K i. 2 

the advised head defends — i. 2 

for which we have in head assembled — ii. 2 

turn head, and stop pursuit — ii. 4 

of what a monarchy you are the head — ii. 4 

and on your head turns he — ii. 4 

through the portage of the head .... — iii. 1 

any man's head but his own — iii. 2 

reverend heads dashed to the w-alls . . — iii. 3 

for if their heads had any intellectual — iii. 7 

and have their heads crushed like .. — iii. 7 
praise and glory on his head I .... — iv. (chorus) 

pillow for tliat good white head — iv. 1 

and arms, and heads, chopped off — iv. I 

the ill upon his own head — iv. 1 

lob down theii- heads, dropping — iv. 2 

o'er the French soldiers' heads — iv. 3 

abominable Gloster! guard thyhaxd.) Henry)' I. i. 3 

the French have gathered head — i. 4 

will make me hide my head — i. .i 

earl of Cambridge, lost his head — ii. .''i 

Rouen hangs her head for grief — i i i . 2 

set the crown upon his head — iv. 1 

hounds with heads of steel — iv. 2 

and let her head fall into England's — v. 3 

set a precious crown upon thy head.. — v. 3 
and shakes his head, and trembling.. SHe/u-y/V. i. 1 

wear the diadem upon his head — i. 1 

hanging the head at Ceres' — i. 2 

until thy head be circled with — i. 2 

lift our heads to heaven — i. 2 

were idaccd the heads of — i. 2 

shall lose his head i"or his — i. 2 

and on ray head did set — i. 2 

the triple crown njion his head — i. ."t 

thee quickly hop without thy head.. — i. 3 

I'll have thy head for this — i. 3 

the ringleader and head of all this rout — ii. I 

on their own heads thereby I — ii. I 

will bring thy liead with sorrow .... — ii. 3 

no<l their heads, and throw their eyes — ii. t 

have laid disgraces on my head — iii. I 

all of you have laid your heads together — iii. I 

the golden circuit on my head — iii. I 

or else lay down your head — iv. 1 

happy when I shook my head? — iv. 1 

long-boat's side strike off his head .. — iv. 1 

mi, rather let my head stoop to — iv. 1 

there let his head and lifeless body lie — iv. I 

we'll have the lord Say's head — iv. 2 

no; and tlicrefore we'll have his head — iv. 2 

iiere may his head lie on my — iv. 1 

hath sworn to have thy head — iv. 1 

fet you to Smithfield, and gather head — iv. ;. 

'11 sec if his head will stand — iv. 7 

and strike off" his head presently (rep.) — iv. 7 

shall not wear a head on his — iv. 7 

take your houses over your heads — iv. « 

I see them lay their licacLs together .. — iv. 8 

that brings his head unto the king .. — iv. h 

for carrving my head to him — iv. in 

cut off thy most ungracious head .. .. — iv. Ifi 

from feeble Henry's liead — v. 1 

your grace a traitor's head, the head — v. I 

the hcail of Cade? Great God — v. I 

he shall not hi. Ic his head, but boldly — v. I 

that head .if thine doth not become .. — v. 1 

banished from the frosty head — v. 1 

hope to shake king Ueury's head itlenryl I. i. 1 



HE A 



HEAD— the usurper's head (rep.) iUenry VI. i. 1 

unto the house of York such head . . — i. 1 

will you pale your head in Henry's — i. 4 

and, witli the crown, his head — i. 4 

my blood upon your heads 1 — i. 4 

with his head, and set it on York gates — i. 4 

they took his liead, and on the gates — ii. 1 

making another liead, to fight again — ji. 1 

the diadem from faint Henrv's head — ii. 1 

the fault malce forfeit of liis head .... — ii. 1 

yonder's the head of that arch-enemy — ii. 2 

"doth grieve me tliat thy head is here! — ii. i 

tliy diadem upon my head — ii. 2 

tlieir blood upon tliy head — ii. 2 

the head, your fatlier's head — ii. 6 

off with the traitor's head — _ii.fi 

in my heart, not on my head — iii. 1 

trunk that bears this head — iii. 2 

once more on Henry's head — iv. 4 

altho' my head still wear tlie crown — iv. 6 

his liead by nature framed — Iv. 6 

the body, when the head is oif? — v. 1 

shall, whiles the head is warm — v. 1 

off with his guilty head — v. .^ 

if a thing comes in his head — v. 5 

teeth hadst thou in thy head — v. 6 

if your head were laid — y. 7 

tlieir heads that break his law Richard III. i. 4 

and shake your head, and call us ... . — ii. 2 

chop off his head, mau — iii. 1 

for they account liis liead upon the . , — iii. 2 

might better wear their heads — !!!■ 2 

curse is fallen upon our heads — iii. 3 

that he will lose his head — iii. 4 

off with his head: now, by saint Paul — iii. 4 

oil poor Hastings' wretched head .... — ill. 4 

short shrift, he longs to see your head — iii. 4 

to the block ; bear Tiim my head .... — iii. 4 

here is the head of that ignoble — iii. ,5 

Brecknock, while my fearful head is on — iv. 2 

even here I slip my wearied head — iv. 4 

thy head, all indirectly, gave — iv. 4 

scaffold, there to lose their heads? .. — iv. 4 

circling now thy head, had graced .. — iv. 4 

or else nis head's assurance is but. ... — i v. 4 

off goes young George's head — iv. 5 

turned my feigned prayer on my head — v. 1 

vengeance on the head of Richard . . — v. 3 

that ever entered in a drowsy head . . — v. 3 

draw your arrows to the head ! — v. 3 

off instantly with his son George's head! — v. 3 
Thomas Lovell's lieads should have. Henry m/. i. 2 

who first raised head against — ii. 1 

too many curses on their heads — ii. 1 

hun» their heads, and tlien lay by — iii. 1 (song) 

I'll hang my head, and perish — iii. 1 

the heads of all thy brother cardinals — iii. 2 

I'd rather want those, than my head — iii. 2 

fly o'er thy royal head, and shade. . . . — v. 1 

I'll scratch j'our heads — v. 3 

spared any, that had a head to hit, .. — v. 3 

hit three times on the head — v. 3 

her pinked porringer fell off her head — v. 3 

and on your heads clap round fines . . — v. 3 

close up, or I'll make 5'our head ache — v. 3 

and hang their heads with sorrow. ... — v. 4 
well as you love an idle head . TroHus ^ Cressida, i. 2 

and bears his head in such a rein ... . — i. 3 

'fore all the Greekish heads (re^?.).... — i. 3 

didst itch from head to foot — ii. 1 

and his guts in his head — ii. 1 

but, by my head, 'tis pride — ii. 3 

our melancholy upon your head! .. — iii. I 

our head shall go bare — iii. 2 

there were wit in this head — iii. 3 

would he were knocked o' the head; — iv. 2 

oft make thee to hide thy head — iv. 4 

may pierce the head of the great .... — iv. 5 

■^br wHich we lose our heads — iv. 5 

you fillip me o' the head — iv. 5 

and wear a castle on thy liead! — v. 2 

oowardTroilus, show thy head! .... — v. 6 
bowing his head against the steepy. Timon n/Ath. i. ] 

have seen the foot above the head .. — i. 1 

I liave shook my head, and wept .... — ii. 2 

what heart, head, sword, force — ii. 2 

but they do shake their heads — ii. 2 

he that has no house to put his head in — iii. 4 

set quarreling upon the head of valour — iii. 5 

let's shake onr heads, and say — iv. 2 

pillows from below their heads — iv. 3 

what! the kingly-crowned head CorManus, i. 1 

he'll beat Aufidius' head below — i. 3 

in our own house I do shade my head — ii. 1 

one scratch mj head i' the sun — ii. 2 

made a head tor Rome, he fought... . — ii. 2 

not that our heads are some brown .. — ii. 3 

Aufidius then had made new head? — iii. 1 

to show bare heads in congregations — iii. 2 

waving tliy head, which often, thus.. — iii. 2 

the beast with many heads butts .... — iv. 1 

has tlie porter his eyes in his head .. — iv. 5 

not a hair upon a soldier's head — iv. 6 

you lords and heads of the state — v. 5 

one anotlier and shook their heads. Jwims Ccesary i. 2 

to cut the head off, and then hack .. — ii. 1 

when Caesar's head is off — ii. 1 

then you scratched your head ii. 1 

waving our red weapons o'er our heads — iii. 1 

we must straight make head — iv. 1 

doth therefore hide his head — iv. 3 

fly o'er our heads, and downward look — v. 3 

O yet hold up your heads! — v. 4 

Antony look over Caesar's head. . Antony ^ Cleo. ii. 2 

I'll unhair thy head — ii. .'i 

and put garlands on thy head — iii. 1 

that Herod's head I'll have — iii. 3 

from the head of Actium beat — iii. 7 

ner head's declined, and death will.. — iii. 9 

send this grizzled head — iii. 11 



[348 ] 



HKAD— that head, ray lord?^n(on!/<§-C;copo(ra, iii. 11 

let our best heads know, that — iv. I 

with clouts about their heads — iv. 7 

now from head to foot I am — v. 2 

audacity, from head to foot! Cymbeline, i. 7 

if that his head have ear in music .. — iii. 4 

will soon be drawn to head — iii. 6 

thy head, which now is growing .... — iv. 1 

gates of Lud's town set your heads .... — iv. 2 

the fool had borne my head, as I do his — iv. 2 

cut off one Cloten's head (rep.) — iv. 2 

may make some stronger head - iv. 2 

more perilous than the head — iv. 2 

I have ta'en his head from him — iv. 2 

violet, not wagging his sweet head . . — iv. 2 

we must lay his head to the east .... — iv. 2 

alas, wliere is thy head? Where's that! — iv. 2 

at the heart, and left this head on. . . . — iv. 2 

your death has eyes in's head then . . — v. 4 

those whicli I heaved to head! — v. 5 

I cut olTs head; and am right glad . . — v. 5 

fall on their heads like dew! — \..h 

a head on headless Rome (rejp.) . . TUu.<! .indron. i. 2 

and revenge are hammering in ray head — ii. 3 

with tliee: their heads, I mean — iii. i 

here are the heads of thy two noble sons — iii. 1 

see, thy two sous' heads — ?!}• 1 

for tliese two heads do seem to speak — iii. 1 

come, brother, take a head — iii. 1 

the Goths have gatliered head — iv. 4 

and I hang the head as flowers — iv. 4 

as true a dog as ever fought at head — v. 1 

he had his two sons' heads — v. 1 

thy car is laden with their heads .... — v. 2 

two pasties of your shameful heads .. — v. 2 

let their vile heads be baked — v. 2 

to love my head. Heaven, that (jep.') . . Pericles, i. 1 

for the whicli we mean to have his head — i. 1 

heart can lend no succour to my head . . — i. 1 

whose towers bore heads so high — i, 4 

too harsh for ladies' heads — ii. 3 

if without ahead, (like goodly — ii. 4 

on the head of Helicanus would .. — iii. (Gower) 

a pillow for his head — v. 1 

that it had its head bit off by its young .... Lear, i. 4 

why, to put his head in — i. 5 

horses are tied by the heads — ii. 4 

thunderbolts, singe my white head! .... — iii. 2 

'gainst a head so old and white as this . . — iii. 2 

he that has a house to put his head in . . — iii. 2 

the head and he shall louse — iii. 2 (song) 

keep this dreadful pother o'er our heads — iii. 2 

your houseless heads, and unfed sides . . — iii. 4 

Tom will throw his head at them — !!!•*> 

for, with throwing thus my head — iii. 6 

such a storm as his bare head in — iii. 7 

whose high and bending head looks — iv. 1 

decline your head: this kiss — iv. 2 

a cheek for blows, a head for wrongs .... — iv. 2 

he seems no bigger tlian his head — iv. 6 

does shake the head to hear of — iv. 6 

no eyes in your head — iv. 6 

that eyeless head of thine was first — iv. 6 

from the extremest upward of thy head.. — v. 3 

toss these treasons to thy head — v. 3 

their heads. The heads of(rep.').,liomeo ff Juliet, i. 1 

he swung about his liead — i. 1 

their eyes were there, they in her head? — ii. 2 

being o'er my head, as is a winged . . — ii. 2 

it argues a distempered head — ii. 3 

my head aches! wnat a head have I — ii. 5 

thy head is as full of quarrels as ... . — iii. 1 

yet thy head hath been beaten — iii. 1 

but my head, here come the Capulets — iii. 1 

but a little way above our heads — iii. 1 

thou cut'st off my head with a golden axe — iii. 3 

vaulty heaven so high above our heads — iii. 5 

a head sir, that will find out logs .... — iv. 4 

heap not another sin upon my head.. — v. 3 

their spring, their head, their true descent — v. 3 

for sorrow, will not show his head — v. 3 

and the chief head of this post-haste Hamlet, i. 1 

tlie head is not more native to the heart — i. 2 

it lifted uji its head, and did addi-ess .... — i. 2 

my lord, trom head to foot — i. 2 

that body, whereof he is the head — i. 3 

with all my imperfections on my head . . — i. 5 

110 hat upon his head; his stockings — ii. 1 

thrice his head thus waving up and down — ii. 1 

and, with his head over his shoulder .... — ii. 1 

the head and source of all your son's ... . — ii. 2 

head to foot now is he total gules — ii. 2 

declining on the milky head of reverend — ii. 2 

a clout upon that head — ,!!• ^ 

I mean, my head upon your lap? — iii. 2 

at his head a grass-green turf .... — iv. 5 (song) 

riotous head, o'erbears your officers! .... — iv. .'j 

and wager o'er your heads — iv. 7 

a flagon of Rhenish on my head once — v. 1 

fall ten times treble on that cursed head — v. 1 

or the skyish head of blue Olympus — v. 1 

my head should be struck off — v. 2 

'tis for the head. I thank your lordship.. — v. 2 

he has laid a great wager on your head . . — v. 2 

runs away with the shell on his head .... — v. 2 

fallen on the inventors' heads — v. 2 

the very head and front of my offending. Othello, i. 3 

and hills whose heads touch heaven .... — i. 3 

and men whose heads do grow beneath . . — is 

destruction on ray head, if my bad blame — i. 3 

make head against my estimation! — i. 3 

change the cod's head for the salmon's tail — ii. 1 

on horror's head horrors accumulate .... — iii. 3 

have you not hurt your head? — iv. 1 

if any wretcli hath put this in your head — iv. 2 

kinds of sores, and shames, on my bare head — i v. 2 

but to go hang my head all at one side . . — iv. 3 
on her bosom, her head on her knee — iv. 3 (song) 

HEADBOROUGH— 
{Col.'] go fetch the headborough.. Tom. o/Sh.\ (ind.) 



HEA 



HEADED-hoary headed frosts fall in.Mid.N.Dr. ii 
embossed sores, and headed evils.. .4syni/ Like it, ii 
HEADIER— witli my more headier will ..Lear, ii 
HEADING— it is but heading . . Meas.for Meas. ii, 
HEADLAND— we sow the headland.2 Henry/T. v. 
HEADLESS— a hog, a headless hear. Mid. N. Dr. iii. 
my way upon their headless necks.. 2Henrj/ ri. i. 2 
a headless man! the garments of ..Cymlieline,iv.2 
that headless man I thought had been — v. 5 
to set a head on headless Rome .. TilusAndron. i. 2 
HEADLONG- throwtlieriderheadlong../iic/i. i/.i. 2 

to pluck him headlong from — v. 1 

I'll hale the dauphin headlong from.) Henry TJ. i. 1 
drag thee headlong by the heels ..'iHenryVL iv. 10 

all headlong cast us down TilusAndronicns, v. 3 

the deficient sight topple down headlong. Lear, iv. 6 
HEAD-LUGGED-the head-lugged bear — iv. 1 
IlEADLY— [/Cnf.lof headly murther..ifenry V. iii. 3 
HEAD-PIECE— such heavy head-pieces — iii. 7 

of head-piece extraordinary? IVinler's Tale, i. 2 

to put his head in, has a good head-piece, i-ear, iii. 2 
HEAD-SHAKE— or this head -shake .... Hamlet, i. 5 

HEADSMAN, off with his head All's WM, iv. 3 

HEAD-STALL of sheep's leMier. Taming of Sh. iii. 2 

HEADSTRONG-headstrong steeds. A/eo./or.l/eo.i. 4 

her mad and headstrong humour.. Taming of Sh. iv. 1 

tell these headstrong women — v. 2 

headstrong liberty is lashed.. Crinie</!/o/&-rors,ii. 1 
for when his headstrong riot hath.. 'i Henry IV. iv. 4 

peace, headstrong Warwick! iHoiryVI. i. 3 

seduced a headstrong Kentishman .. — iii. 1 
too headstrong for their mother. 7'ro/(MS<S- Cress, iii. 2 

how now, my headstrong? Romeo fy Juliet, iv. 2 

HEADY— currents of a heady fight .,\HenrylV. ii. 3 

■with such a heady current Henry V.\.\ 

("Co/.] clouds of heady murder . — iii. 3 

HEADY-RASH— nor heady-rash. Comerfyo/ Err. v. 1 

HEAL— I seek to heal it only by . . Merry Wives, iii. 4 

rupture that you may easily lieal.A/ea./oril/ea. iii. 1 

his eye did heal it up As you Like it, iii. 5 

we will heal up all: for we'll create. Km;,' Jolin, ii. 2 

and heal the inveterate canker — v. 2 

a groat to heal your pate Henry V. v. I 

and keep you, and heal your pate. ... — v. 1 

balm to heal their wounds ZHenryVI. iv. 8 

those wounds heal ill Troilus 4 Cressida, iii. 3 

break my back, to heal his finger.. 7'/?noi! ofAlh. ii. 1 

to heal Rome's harms Titus Andronicus, v. 3 

what wound did ever heal, but by degrees?0//ie/(o,ii.3 

HEALED-thoroughly healed. Tu-o Gen. of Verona, i. 2 

healed by the same means. . Merchant of Venice, iii. 1 

HEALING— the healing benediction . . Macbeth, iv. 3 

murder in healing wounds. . Antony f; Cleopatra, ii. 2 

HEALTH— in good health .. Tu'o den. of Verona, ii. 4 

I left them all in health — ii. 4 

doth but signify my health — iii. 1 

with drinking healths to my niece. Twelfth Night, i. 3 
learn to begin thy health .. Measure for Measure, i. 2 

God restore you to health Mucli Ado, v. 1 

but, as in health, come to mj.. Mid. A'.'s Dream, iv. 1 
sweet heal th and fair desires .... Love's L. Lost, ii. I 
a beard, fair health, and honesty .... — v. 2 

and find your grace in health ! All's IVell, ii. 1 

health, at your bidding, serve your .. — ii. 1 
health, shall live free, and sickness . . — ii. 1 
through me, restored the king to health — ii. 3 

but yet she has her health — ii. 4 

noble lord restored to health ..Taming ofSh. 1 (ind.) 
quaff carouses to our mistress' health — i. 2 

a health, quoth he, as if he had — iii. 2 

drink a health to me — iii. 2 

therefore, a health to all that shot . . — v. 1 
his health, and ampler strength.. Winter' sTale, iv. 3 

who wear our health but sickly Macbeth, iii. 1 

on appetite, and health on both! — iii. 4 

come, love and health to all . — iii. 4 

and better health attend his majesty! — iii. 4 
purge it to a sound and pristine health — v. 3 
ill the instant of repair and health, .King John, iii. 4 

that for the health and physic — v. 2 

I am in health, I breathe, and see . . Richard II. ii. I 
to have learned his health of you .... — ii. 3 

more health and happiness betide — iii. 2 

his health was never better worth . . 1 Henry IV. iv. 1 

lean on your health i Henry IV. i. 1 

to have a reverend care of your health — i. 2 

in bodily health, sir — ii. 2 

health and fair greeting from our general — iv. i 
health to my lord, and gentle (.rep.) .. — iv. 2 

health to my sovereign ! — iv. 4 

such are the poor, in health — iv. 4 

health, peace, and happiness — iv. 4 

but health, alack, with youthful — iv. 4 

I'll give you a healtli for that anon . . — v. 3 
health and long life to you, master . . — v. 3 
how many, now in health, shall drop. . Henry V. i. 2 
when they were in health, I tell thee — iii. 6 
beggar's knee, command the health of it? — iv. 1 
to our sister, health and fair time of day — v. 2 

and peers, health to you all ! — v. 2 

honourable lords, health to you all !..! Henry rr. i. 1 
health unto my gracious sovereign!.2Henry W. iii. 1 

health, and glad tidings, to 3'our — iv. 9 

health, and all happiness to my lord — v. I 
soon recover his accustomed health. Richard III. i. 2 

God grant him health! — i. 3 

well, madam, and in healtli — ii. 4 

your grace with health and happy days! — iii. 1 
for your best health and recreation.. — iii. I 

all health, my sovereign lord ! — iv. 3 

and to you all good health Henry VIII. i. 4 

ahealth.aentlemen, let it go round.. — i. 4 
I have half a dozen healths to drink — i. 4 
disturb him; health to your lordsliips — ii. 2 
whose health, and royalty, I pray for — ii. 3 

madam, in good health — iv. 2 

your health and your digestion . . Troilus fy Cress, ii. 3 

health to you, valiant sir — iv. 1 

in calm : and so long, health — i v. 1 

and let the health go round .... Timon of Athens, i. ? 



— ii. 



— 111. 4 
iii. !i 

— V. 2 



HE ALTU-tliose healths will iimUc. nil 

even to the state's best health 

his health is well sir {np. ) 

he is much out of health 

if it be so far beyoiiil his health 

honour, health, iiiiil eoiiipivision .... 

my long siekness of health, uixl living 

an estate of seven years' health .... CoiioKinun, ii. i 

it is not for vour health JiiJfux Ca-jar, ii. \ 

nut well in neulth, and that is all (rep.) — ii. I 

hove mind upon voiir health — iv. 3 

Cleopatra's healtli to drink., /IrUoiiy ^Cleopatra, i. 2 

in sUite of health, thmi say'st — " " 

will you aboard? I have ahealthforyou — 
and some wine: a health to Lejiidus — 
with the health that Pompey gives him — 

this health to Lepidus. Bear him — 

his health, beseech youV Cymbelitu 

of my lord's health, of his content .. — 

I wish vc sport. Yon health — 

justice lives in Saturninus' health.. Tilus Mud. 

we drink this health to you l'cricles,i\, J 

glad to see your honour'iu Bood health — iv. 6 

with grace, health, beauty, honour Lear, i. 1 

whereto our health is bijuud — ii. i 

a horse's health, a boy's love — iii. 6 

sick health! still-waking sleep . . Uoineo ^ Juliet, i 

of healths five fathom deep — i 

no jocund health, that Denmark drinks. //amM, i. 2 

and the health of the whole state — i. 3 

aspiritof health, or goblin damned — i. 4 

his weeds, importing health and graveness — iv. 7 

importing Denmark s health — v. 2 

here's to thy hcalthj give him the cup . . — v. 2 

to the health of the bhick Othello Othello, ii. 3 

to the health of our general — ii, 3 

HEALTIII'UI.- 
[Co/.A.'m(.] healthful veXcome . .Comedy o/ En on, i. I 

and with this healthful hand .4U's Well, ii. 3 

is both healthful, aud g(XKl husbandry. Henry F. iv. 1 

I thank your grace, healthful Henry VIII. i. 1 

a healthful ear to hear of it JuliusCiemr, ii. 1 

Antony be free, and healthful ..Antony fi Cleo. ii. 5 

and makes as healthful music Hamlet, iii. 4 

it indues our other healthful members.. O'/icZ/o, iii. 4 

HEALTH-GIVING air.. .. Love's L. Lost, i. 1 (letter) 

H E ALTHSO.MK air breathes . . Uomeo fy Juliet, iv. 3 

HEALTHY— would say, healthy.. Mras./.r.l/caj. i. 2 
was a good healthy water 2 Henry I V. i. 2 

HEAP-heai) on your head apack.TwoGen. of T. iii. 1 
the great heap of your knowledge ..AsyouLike it, i. 2 

the cankered heaps of strange 2Henryiy. iv. 4 

let us, in heaps, go oifer up Henry V. iv. 5 

husbandry doth lie on heaps — v. 2 

heapof wrath, tbul indigested iHenryVI.v, 1 

great anchors, heaps of jwarl liichard III. i. 4 

among this princely heap, if any .... — ii. 1 
alas, why would you heap those cares — iii. 7 
charge on heaps the enemy .rroi7us ^ Cressida, iii. 2 

fevers heap on Athens Timon of Athens, iv. I 

I have laid proud Athens on a heap — iv. 3 
even such heaps and sums of love .... — v. 2 

in heaps and piles of ruin Coriolanus, iii. 1 

drawn upon a heap a huudi-ed fulius Ccesar, i. 3 

all on a heap, like to Tilns Aiidronicus, ii. 4 

all thy whole heap must die Pericles, i. 1 

heap [Co/. fiHf.-put] not another sin.KoHifo^-yii/. v.3 

HEAPED— measure heaped in joy.. is you Like it, v. 4 
the late dignities heaped up to tliem ..Micbeih, i. 6 

heaped sedition on his crown 3IIenri/l'I. ii. 2 

your great graces heaped upon me. Henry VIII. Iii. 2 
his overthrow heaped happiness upon — iv. 2 

too liighly heaped for truth Coriolanus, ii. 3 

honours that are heaped on Cajsar .Julius Ccesar, i. 2 
thy jOT be heaped like mine .... Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 6 

HEAPKST-heapestayear'sage onmel.C!/m(.f;ine,i. 2 

HEAPING— heaping friendships.. tyinier'sTale, iv. 1 
heaping confusion on their own . . . .illenry I' I, ii. 1 

H EAR— do you not hear him? Tempest, i. 1 

dost hear? i, 2 

hear a little further i. 2 

sit still, and hear the last — i. 2 

I hear the strain of strutting — i, 2 (song) 

hark! now I hear them — i. 2 (soug) 

I hear it now above me i. 2 

to hear thee sjieak of Naples — i. 2 

he does hear me 

§0 sleep, and hear us — 
oyounot hear me speok? 

his spirits hear me 

I hear it sing i' the wind 

hear my soul speak 

till thou dost hear me call 

the blind mole may not hear a foot fall — 
80 is mine. Do you hear, monster? . . — 

to hear the solemn curfew 

1 long to hear the story of your life .. — 

hear from thee by letters Tiro Gen. of Vet 

but dost thou hear? 

hear sweet discourse, converse 

oft have wish'd to hear from 

we look to hear from you 

I will not hear thy vain excuse. 

and cannot hear good news iii. 1 

peace, we'll hear him iv. i 

where you shall hear music iv. 2 

but shall I hear him speak? iv. 2 

ayj but j>eace, let's hear 'cm iv. 2 

1 likewise hear that Valentine iv. 2 

where, I hear, he makes abode iv. 3 

to hear mo 8[>eak the message iv, .j 

is this a dream, I see and liearl v. 4 

but to hear the story of v. 4 

the counci I shall hear it Merry H'icei, i. 1 

it i* not meet the council hear a riot i. i 

shall desire to hear the fear of Got .. — i. l 

we three to hear it, and end it — i. i 

he hears with cars (rep.) 

you hear all these matters denied (rep.) — 
h<ar the truth of it _ 



1. 2 
ii. I 
ii. 1 
ii. 2 
ii. 2 
iii. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. I 
iv. 1 
V. 1 
V. I 
na, i. 1 



— iii. 1 



— i. 1 I 



[ 349 ] 

HEAR— did you ever hear the like? Merry It'ivei, ii. I 

for believe me, I hear the parson , . . . — ii. I 

I had rather hear them scold ii. I 

I warrant thee, nobody hears — ii. 2 

sir, I heor you are a scliolur — ii. 2 

OS you hear them unfolded — ii. 2 

hear mine host of the Garter — iii. 1 

a man may hear this shower — iii. 2 

sir, will you hear me? — iii. 4 

I marvel, I hear not of master — iii..') 

you shall hear. As good luck — iii. a 

nay, you shall hear, master Brook . . — iii. .'> 

I hear not of him ill the court — iv. 3 

you shall hear how things go — iv. .'j 

yet hear me ejieak — iv. G 

I will hear you, master Fenton — iv. 6 

hear the truth of it — v..') 

do you not hear, fellows? Tuel/lh Night, i. & 

weUI once more hear Orsino's embassy — i. S 

rather to wonder at you than to heai- — i. 5 

we will hear this divinity — i. 5 

stay and hear — ii. 3 (song) 

to hear by the nose, it is dulcet — ii. 3 

1 had rather hear you to solicit — iii. I 

so let mc hear you speak — iii. I 

he will not hear of godliness — iii. 4 

and hear thou there how many — iv. 1 

but hear me this; since you — v. 1 

yon shall hear more — v. I 

good madam, hear me speak — v. 1 

and, as I hear, the provost .^l/cavHre/oc Measure, i. .0 

do you hear how he misplaces? — ii. I 

and let me hear no more of you .... — ii. I 

please but your honour hear me .... — ii. 2 

that I desire to hear her speak again — ii. 2 

your partner, as I hear, must die .... — ii. 3 

wherein (let no man hear me,) I take — ii. 4 

nay, but liear mc; your sense — ii. 4 

I may be concealed, yet hear them .. — iii. I 

nay, hear me, Isabel (jcp.) — iii. I 

let me hear you speak further — iii. 1 

you shall hear more ere morning .... — iv. 2 

pray you, let's hear — iv. 2 

whatsoever you may hear — iv. 2 (note) 

he will hear none — iv. 2 

1 hear his straw rustle — iv. 3 

but hear you — iv. 3 

hear me yourself; for that which 1 . . — v. I 

hear me, O, hear mc, here — v. 1 

her shall you hear disproved — v. 1 

good friar, let's hear it — v. 1 

whom it concerns to hear this matter — v. 1 

should hear me speak (;cp.) , — v. 1 

I had rather hear my dog bark at .... Much Ado, i. 1 

you hear, count Claudio — i. 1 

you should hear reasou — i. 3 

for hear me. Hero, wooing, wedding — ii. 1 

but hear tliese ill news with the ears — ii. I 

she cannot endure to hear tell of — ii. 1 

hear me call Margaret, Hero; hear .. ii. 2 

and had he rather hear the tabor — ii. 3 

come, shall we hear this music? ii. 3 

we'll hear that song again — ii. 3 

dost thou hear, Balthazar? — ii. 3 

and hear what he will say ii. 3 

well, we'll hear further of it — ii. 3 

1 hear how I am censured ii. 3 

are they that hear their detractions — ii. 3 

to hear our conference — iii. 1 

tell her of it, hear what she will say.. — iii. 1 

Ihear what they say of him — iii. 2 

these hobby-horses here must not hear — iii. 2 

yet count Claudio may hear — iii. 2 

if you hear a child cry in the night . . — iii. 3 

be asleep, and will not hear us? — iii. 3 

for the ewe that will not hear her lamb — iii. 3 

well, masters, we hear our charge. . . . iii. 3 

didst thou not hear something iii. 3 

for I hear as good exclamation — iii. 5 

I am glad to near it — iii. 6 

I am sorry you must hear — iv. 1 

did see her, hear her, at that hour.... — iv. 1 

hear me a little; for I have only .... iv. 1 

the proudest of them shall well hear of it — iv. 1 

he shall hear she died upon his words — iv. 1 

hear me, Beatrice iv. I 

OS you hear of me, so think of me — iv. 1 

hear von, my lords — v. I 

I will not hear you — v. i 

let me hear from you v. 1 

do vou hear me, and let this count .. v. 1 

and either I must shortly hear from him — v. 2 

will you go hear this news, signior?. . — v. 2 

ever hear by tale or history Mid.N.'s Dream, i. 1 

tlierefore hear mc, Ilermia i. 1 

any man's heart good to hear me .... i. 2 

to near the sea-maid's music — ii. 2 

speak, an' if you hear, siicak — ii. 3 

that they shall hear I am not afroid.. iii. 1 

stay, gentle Helena, hear my excuse — iii. 2 

liear some music, my sweet love? — iv. 1 

I do hear the morning lark iv. 1 

my love shall hear the music of m v.. — iv. 1 

never did I hear such gallant chiding — iv. 1 

jiidae when you hear: but, soft — iv. 1 

of this discourse we more will hear anon — i\-. 1 

let us hear, sweet Bottom — iv2 

I do not doubt but to hear them say — iv. 2 

and we will hear it v. 1 

1 will hear that play v. i 

to spy an' I can hear my Thisby's face — v. 1 

BO wilful to hear without warning .. — v. 1 

or to hear a bergoniask dance — v. 1 

I protest, I love to hear him lie . . Love's L. Lost, i. I 

to hear, or f<irbcar hearing? To hear — i. 1 

you hear this letter with attention (rep.) — i. I 

did you hear the proclamation? — i. 1 

I am less proud to hear you tell — ii. 1 

hear me, deor lady; I have sworn — ii. I 

I hear, your grace bath outsworn.... — ii. I 



HE^Ut— do youhcar.my mad wenches, f.ocr'aL.L. ii. I 

thus dost thou hear the Nemean lion — iv. 1 

did you ever hear better? — iv. 1 

Nathaniel, will you hear an extemporal — iv. 2 

let me hear a staff, a stanza — iv. 2 

when that he shall hear a faith — iv. 3 

when shall yon hear that I will — iv. 3 

and therefore let's hear it — iv. 3 

will hear the lowest sound — iv. 3 

you hear his learning — v. 1 

she hears herself — v. 2 

the butcher hears you cry — v. 2 

but will you hear? the king is — v. 2 

in the ear of him that hears it — v. 2 

will hear your idle scoriiB — v. 2 

will you hear the dialogue — v. 2 

hears merry tales, and smiles not.. Mer. of Venice, i. 2 

Shylock, do you hear? — i. 3 

but, hear you, methought, you said.. — i. 3 

and you'll not hear me: tins is kind — i. 3 

but hear thee, Gratiano — ii. 2 

signior Bassanio, hear me — ii. 2 

hear you me, Jessica (rep.) — ii. fi 

to tell Antonio what you hear — ii. 8 

do you hear, whether Antonio have.. — iii. 1 

often came where I did hear of her .. — iii. 1 

but let me hear the letter — iii. 2 

hear mc yet, good Shylock — iii. 3 

hear me speak. I'll have my bond (rep.) — iii. 3 

therefore no more of it; hear other things — iii. 4 

the court shall hear Bellario's letter.. — iv. I 

you hear the learned Bellario — iv. I 

to hear you make the otter — iv. I 

1 hear the footing of a man — v. 1 

close it in, we cannot hear it — v. 1 

never merry, wheni hearsweetniiisic — v. 1 

if they but hear perchance a trumpet — v. 1 

at hand; I hear his trumpet — v I 

for, as I hear, he was much bound . . — v. I 

nay but hear me: pardon this fault . . — v. 1 
thou slialt hear how he vill shake.. As you Like it, i. I 

you shall hear me: my father — i. 1 

dear sovereign, hear me speak — i. 3 

I cannot hear of any that did see her — ii. 2 

when I did hear the motley fool .... — ii. 7 

didst thou hear these verses? — Iii. 2 

didst thou hear, without wondering — iii. 2 

do you hear, forester? — iii. 2 

I had rather hear vou chide — iii. 6 

pleases those that hear — iii. .■> 

will you hear the letter? — iv. 3 

did you ever hear such railing? — iv. 3 

nor doth not hear — v. 2 

but time lost to hear such — v. 3 

raethinks, I hear him now All's Well, i. 2 

I will now hear; what say you — i. 3 

I must not hear thee; fare thee well — ii. 1 

sir, will you Iiear my suit? — ii. 3 

do you hear, monsieur? — ii. 3 

my sword, or hear the drum — ii. 5 

you shall hear, I am run away — iii. 2 (letter) 

run away, as I hear he does — iii. 2 

for my part, I only hear, your son . . — iii. 2 

heaven delights to hear, and loves . . — iii. 4 

when, haply, he shall hear that she is — iii. 4 

by the ear that hears most nobly — iii..') 

which you hear him so confidently .. — iii. G 

look to hear further from me — iii. G 

you shall hear one anon — iv. I 

till we do hear from them — iv. 1 

my mother shall not liear — iv. 2 

what hear you of these wars? I hear — iv. 3 

as fearing to hear of it hereafter — iv. 3 

you must have the patience to hear it — iv. 3 

we shall hear of your lordship anon — iv. 3 

to hear me one single word — v. 2 

a lord will hear you play Taming of Sh, 1 (ind.; 

I long to hear him call — 1 (ind.) 

I see, I hear, I speak; Israeli — 2 (ind.) 

thought it good you hear a play .... — 2(ind.) 

thou mayst hear Minerva speak .... — i. I 

masters, I hear no harm — i. 2 

[Co/. Kn(.] so great a blow to hear.... — i. i 

do me this right, hear me — i. 2 

no, sir: but hear I do, that he — i. 2 

for that's your name, I hear — ii. 1 

nay, hear you, Kate — ii. I 

let shear: G fiel the treble jars — iii. 1 

take heed he hear us not — iii. 1 

yet we hear not of our son-in-law . . — iii. 3 

to hear of Petruchio's coming? — iii. 2 

to tell, and harsh to hear — iii. 2 

hark! I hear the minstrels play — iii. 2 

feel a tale, not hear a tale — iv. 1 

do you hear, ho? you must meet .... — iv. 1 

silence! I hear my master — iv, I 

for the eood report I hear of you .... — iv. * 

signior Baptista, of whom I hear so well — iv. 4 

do you hear, sir? to leave frivolous (rep.) — v. 1 
to hear my sovereign mistress .... Winter sTale, i. 2 

dost thou hear, Camillo — i. 2 

yon crickets shall not hear it — ii. I 

lo yon now ; you hear ! — ii. 3 

and, I beseech you, hear me — ii. 3 

who please to come and hear — iii. 2 

the hearts of al 1 that hear me — iii. 2 

hut yet hear this; mistake me not .. — iii. 2 

if you did but hear the pedlar — iv. 3 

thou Shalt heari 'tis in three parts .. — iv. 3 

hear me breathe my life before .... — iv. 3 

let me hear what you profess — iv. 3 

can he speak? hear? — iv. 3 

I'll hear you by-and-by — iv. 3 

1 understand the business, I hear it.. — iv. 3 
nay, but hear me. Nay, but hear me — iv. 3 

do you hear, an't like you, sir? — iv. J 

your ears should rift to hear me — v. I 

which you hear, j'ou'U swear you see — v. 2 

I am content to hear — v. S 

08, you hear, my spell is lawf\U — v. 3 



HEA 



[ 350 ] 

HEAR— to hear with reverence ilJenryW. iv. 2 

until they hear you speak — iv. 2 

I hear the king my father is sore side — iv. 3 

I never thought to hear you spealc . . — iv. 4 

and liear, I think, the very latest — iv. 4 

hear your own dignity so ranch profaned — v. 2 

wlien thou dost hear 1 am as I have been — v. 5 

as we liear you do reform — v. 5 

I will hear you soon ; take them away — v. !> 
gently to hear, kindly to judge.. Henry I', i. (chorus) 

near him but reason in divinity — i. 1 

hear liim debate of commonwealth .. — i. I 

and you shall hear a fearful battle . . — i . 1 

tliere was not time enough to hear . , — i. i 

I'll wait upon you; and I long to liear it — 1. 1 

before we liear him, of some tilings .. — i. 2 

and we will hear, note, and believe . . — i- 3 

then liear me, gracious sovereign .... — i. 2 

for hear her but exampled — i. 2 

for, we hear, your greeting — i. 2 

that you claim, hear no more of you — i. 2 

hear me, hear me what I say — ii. 1 

liear your sentence: you have consjiired — ii. 2 
hear the shrill whistle, which doth — iii. (chorus) 

Oie duke will hear thy voice — iii. 6 

never shalt hear herald any more. . . . — iv. 3 

your majesty hear now — iv. 8 

I will be glad to hear you confess it. . — v. 2 

is it you whose voice 1 hear? 1 Henry VI. i. 3 

I grieve to hear what torments — i. 4 

hear, hear, how dying Salisbury doth — i. 4 

shall hear how we have played — i. 6 

hear him, noble prince! — Iv. 1 

to leave him, for he will not hear — v. 3 

hear ye, captain ? Are you not — v. 3 

from me, and let me hear no more . . 2 Henry VJ. i . 2 

behold and hear our exorcisms? — i. 4 

sorry I am to hear what — ii. 1 

my lord, I long to hear it at full — ii. 2 

and Iiear my deep-fet groans — ii. 4 

didst ever hear a man so penitent? . . — iii. 2 

until they hear the order — iii. 2 

harsh, and horrible to hear — iii. 2 

let me hear from thee ; for wheresoe'er — iii. 2 

hear me but speak, and bear me .... — iv. 7 

for, as I hear, the king is fled — v. 3 

Plantagenet shall speak first: hear ..ZHenryVI. i. 1 

of Warwick, hear but one word — i. I 

I cannot stay to hear these articles .. — i. 1 

I shame to hear thee speak — i. 1 

gentle Margaret, and hear me speak — i. I 

contrary, if you'll hear me speak — i. 2 

hear me speak before I die — i.3 

nay, stay; let's hear the orisons — i. 4 

sa;y how he died, for I will hear it all — ii. 1 

Richard, dost thou hear — ii. 1 

I hear great Warwick speak — ii. I 

didst thou never hear, tfiat things.... — ii. 2 

for as I hear, you, that are king — ii. 2 

my lords, and hear me speak — ii. 2 

nor hears us what we say — ii. 6 

we'll hear a little more — iii. 1 

and, as I hear, the great commanding — iii. 1 

to hear, and see, her plaints — iii. 1 

shall I not hear my task? — iii. 2 

and lady Bona, hear me speak — iii. 3 

let us hear your firm resolve — iii. 3 

I hear, yet say not much — iv. 1 

fled, as he hears since — iv. 6 

to hear what thou command 'st — iv. 8 

Clarence is at hand, I hear his drum — v. 1 

the drum your honour hears — v. 1 

that we could hear no news — v. 1 

I well might hear delivered with .... — v. 2 

as we hear, march on to fight — v. 3 

I will not hear them speak — v. 5 

let us hear him speak: WhatI — y. b 

be sure to hear some news — v. 5 

didst thou not hear me swe^r — v. 5 

I'll hear no more: die, prophet — v. 6 

to hear the lamentations of Richard III. i. 2 

if you will hear me name it — i. 2 

to hear the piteous moan — i. 2 

hear me, you wrangling pirates — i. 3 

stay, dog, for thou shalt near me .... — i.3 

stand on end to hear her curses — i.3 

do not hear him plead — i. 3 

methiuks, to hear you tell it — i. 4 

unless vour highness hear me — ii. 1 

when they did hear of Clarence' death — ii. 1 

hear you the news abroad — ii. 3 

but I hear, no; they say, my son .... — ii. 4 

I pr'ythee let me hear it — ii. 4 

shall we hear from you, Catesby .... — iii. 1 

to hear her prayers for them — iii. 3 

yet witness what you hear we did .. — iii. 6 

as I hear, is fled to Richmond — iv. 2 

I hear the news, my lord — iv. 2 

and hear your mother's lamentation I — i v. 4 

hear his drum [Co/. Kni. -trumpet sounds] — iv. 4 

let not the heavens hear these — iv. 4 

then patiently hear my impatience . . — iv. 4 

do then; but I'll not hear — iv. 4 

hear me speak. You speak (rep.) .... — iv. 4 

her ears to hear a wooer's tale — iv. 4 

but, hear you, leave behind your son — iv. 4 

to hear, if any mean to shrink — v. 3 

hark, I hear their drum. Fight — v. 3 

what traitor liears me, and says not.. — v. 4 

that come to liear a merry Henry VI II. (prol.) 

I am sorry to hear this of him — i. 1 

in person I'll hear him his confessions — i. 2 

you shall hear (this was his gentleman — i.2 

feel too little, hear too much — i.2 

to hear from him a matter of some .. — i.2 

Ihearof none, but the new proclamation — i.3 

to liear what shall become of the .... — ii. 1 

to hear his knell rung out — ii. 1 

hear what I say, and then go home . . — ii. 1 

yet, you that hear me — ii. 1 



HEA 



HEAR— for thou shalt hear, that . . Winler'sTale, V. 3 
be (juiet, when we hear it cry . . Comedy of Err. ii. 1 

let's hear it. There's no time — ii. 2 

thou but hear I were licentious? — ii. 2 

and think I hear all this? — ii. 2 

do you hear, you minion? — iii. 1 

you hear, how he importunes — iv. 1 

arrest you, sir; you hear the suit .... — iv. 1 

do you not hear it ring? — iv. 2 

that did I never hear — iv. 2 

thou knowest, did hear thee — v. 1 

hark, Iiark, I hear liim, mistress .... — v. 1 

a little use to hear — v. I 

if this be not a dream, I see, and hear — v. 1 

and hear at large discoursed — v. 1 

hear not my steps, which way Machelh, ii. I 

hear it not, Duncan ; for it is — ii. 1 

didst tliou not hear a noise? — ii. 2 

I hear a knocking at the — ii. 2 

'tis not for you to hear what I — ii.3 

we hear, our bloody cousins — iii. 1 

hark! I hear horses — iii. 3 

to-morrow, we'll hear, ourselves again — iii. 4 

I hear it by the way — iii. 4 

to hear the men deny it — iii. 6 

at the tyrant's feast, I hear — iii. 6 

say, if tiiou'dst rather hear it — i v. 1 

hear his speecli, but say thou — iv. 1 

had I three ears I'd hear tliee — iv. 1 

I did hear the galloping of horse — iv. 1 

preparation makes us hear something — v. 3 

cooled to hear a night-shriek — v. 5 

thou'lt be afraid to hear it — v. 7 

good mother ; hear the embassy KtngJohn, i. 1 

but heaven, and you, and I, shall hear — i. 1 

peace! Hear tlie crier — ii. I 

let us hear them speak, whose title . . — ii. 1 

therefore, hear us first — ii. 1 

tremljle; for you hear the lion — ii. 1 

hear us, great kings — ii. 2 

not, but hear me, mighty kings — ii. 2 

liear me, O, hear me! Lady Constance — iii. 1 

O husband, hear me 1 — iii. 1 

hear me without thine ears — iii. 3 

which cannot hear a lady's feeble .. — iii. 4 

now hear me speak, with a prophetic — iii. 4 

sir, when he shall hear 01 your.. .. — iii. 4 

nay, hear me, Hubert! — iv. 1 

both hear and grant you your — iv. 2 

in France, and she not hear of i t? . . . . — iv. 2 

and, as I hear, my lord, the lady .... — iv. 2 

if you he afeard to hear the worst.... — iv. 2 

whilst he, that hears, makes — iv. 2 

do but hear me, sir — iv. 3 

your nobles will not hear you — v. 1 

now hear our English king — v. 2 

leisure would not let us hear Richard II. i. 1 

ourselves will hear the accuser — i. 1 

[^Col.] what hear there for welcome .. — i. 2 

my life's counsel would not hear .... — ii. I 

to hear of good towards him — ii. 1 

but, lords, we hear this fearful — ii. 1 

and yet we hear no tidings from .... — ii. 4 

but they are by to hear — iv. 1 

be patient; hear me, gentle liege .... — v. 3 

1 never longed to hear a word till now — v. 3 
music do I hear? ha, ha! keep time — v. 5 

to hear my true time broke — v. 5 

the latest news we liear, is — v. fi 

be ta'en, or slain, we hear not — v. 6 

then let me hear of you, my gentle.. IfiTenryfr. i. 1 

liear me, Yedward; if I tarry at home — i.2 

and what he hears may be believed. . — i.2 

as we hear, the earl of Blarch hatli . . — i.3 

let me not hear you speak — i.3 

or you shall hear in such a kind .... — i.3 

he did; myself did hear it — i.3 

hear you cousin: a word — i.3 

when I hear of tills vile politician .. — i.3 

eve in thy head? canst not hear? .... — ii. 1 

if thou canst hear the tread — ii.2 

stand close, I hear them coming .... — ii.2 

but hear you, my lord — ii.3 

dost thou not hear them call? — ii. 4 

dost thou hear me, Hal? — ii. 4 

comparisons, hear me speak but this — ii. 4 

come, let's hear. Jack — ii. 4 

wh y, hear ye, my masters — ii. 4 

I blushed to hear his monstrous devices — ii. 4 

complaints I hear of thee are grievous — ii. 4 

dost thou hear, Hal? — ii. 4 

as often as he hears Owen — iii. 1 

I had rather hear a brazen — iii. 1 

I'll sit, and hear her sing — iii. 1 

and hear the lady sing in Welsh (rep.) — iii. 1 

ear of greatness needs must hear .... — iii. 2 

my lord, I pray you, hear me — iii. 3 

dost thou hear, Hal? thou know'st.. — iii. 3 

to hear this rich reprisal is so nigh . . — iv. 1 

that's the worst tidings that I hear of — iv. 1 

as lief hear the devil as a drum — iv. 2 

tut, I came not to hear this — iv. 3 

hear me, my liege; for mine own part — v. 1 

and so, I hear, he doth account me too — v. 1 

doth he hear it? No. Is it insensible — v. 1 

never did I hear of any prince — v. 2 

who, as we hear, are busily in arms. . — v. 5 

I hear for certain, and do speak 2HenryIK i. 1 

and, as I hear, is now going with some — i.2 

1 hear, his majesty is returned — i.2 

I hear moreover, nis highness is fallen — i.2 

for you hear not what I say to you . . — i.2 

I hear, you are going with lord John — i.2 

I can hear it with my own ears — ii. " 

would fain hear some music — ii. 

dost thou hear, hostess? — ii. 

you would bless you to hear what . . -^ ii. 

didst thou hear me? Yes — ii. 

hear me more plainly; I have in equal — iv. 

to hear, and absolutely to determine — iv. 



HEAR — of late days hear a buzzing. Henry f///. ii. 1 

pray, hear me. 'Would I had never.. — iii. 1 

glad to hear such news as this once . . — iii. 2 

so I hear. 'Tisso. The cardinal — iii. 2 

I wish to hear from Rome — iii. 2 

may be, he hears the king does — iii. 2 

hear the king's pleasure, cardinal. . . . — iii. 2 

till you hear further from his liighness — iii. 2 

can ye endure to hear this arrogance I — iii. 2 

and thus far hear me, Cromwell .... — iii. 2 

to hear me speak his good now? — iv. 2 

but, sir, sir, near me, sir Thomas ... . — v. 1 

close : we shall hear more anon — v. 2 

comes to hear the cause betwixt — v. 2 

I come not to hear such flattery — v. 2 

do you hear, master Porter? — v. 3 

others, to hear the city abused extremely — (epil.) 

good we are like to hear for this — (ei'il.) 

do you not hear the people cry. Troihis •?- Cressida, i. 2 

hear what Ulysses speaks — i.3 

and wise, to hear Ulysses speak — i.3 

we shall hear music, wit — i.3 

think it rich to hear the wooden .... — i.3 

he hears nought privately — i.3 

canst thou not Iiear? feel then — ii. 1 

thought unfit to hear moral philosophy — ii. 2 

ay; the heavens hear me! — ii.3 

hear you, Patroclus; we are too .... — ii.3 

we'll hear you sing, certainly — iii. 1 

come, come, I'll hear no more of this — iii. 1 

I long to hear how they sped to-day — iii. 1 

hear me, Paris, for every false drop . , — iv. 1 

hear me, my love : be thou but — i v. 4 

hear wliy I speak it, love — iv. 4 

do you hear, my lord? do you hear? 

anon shalt hear of me again 

fate, hear me what I say ! 

but near you, hear youl Hence . 



— i.2 
_ i. 2 

— ii.2 



iii. G 



— i. 1 



— v. fi 

— V. 6 

nay, sir, but hear me on Timon of Athens, i. 1 

lord Timon, hear me speak — i. 1 

you sliall hear from me anon — i. 1 

till you hear further from me 

another time I'll hear thee 

so; thou'lt not hear me now 

he will not hear, till feel 

you would not hear me 

though you hear now, (too late !) 

which I hear from common rumours 
do you hear, sir? By your leave .... 

but he would not hear my excuse 

Alcibiades is banished: hear you of it 

(hear me, you good gods all) — iv. i 

hear you, nia=:ter steward, Where's .. — iv. 2 

the immortal gods that hear you .... — iv. 3 

ay, and you hear him cog — v. 1 

proceed any further, hear me speak ..Coriolanus, i. 1 

well, I'll hear it, sir — i. 1 

did see, and hear, devise, instruct..,. 

you'll hear the belly's answer 

and hear how the despatch is made . . 

hear me profess sincerely — 

methinks, I hear hither your husband's — 

see the swords, and hear a drum .... — 

then shall we hear their 'larum — 

and, gladly quaked, hear more — 

before our army, hear me — 

smart to hear themselves remembered — 

and the blind to hear hira speak? .... — 

please you to hear Cominius speak?. . — 

never shame to hear what you have — 

than hear say how I got them — 

to hear my nothings monstered — 

than one of his ears to hear it? — 

hear me, people; peace. Let's hear .. — 

hear me one word. Beseech you (rep. — 

hear me speak: as I do know the . . — 

we'll hear no more : piu-sue him — 

accusations, as I hear, more strong,.. — 

first, hear me speak. Well — 

hear me, my masters, and my — 

that thou may St hear of us — 

you shall hear from me still — 

■worthily as any ear can hear — 

hear,— nay, and you shall hear some — 

ere you go, hear this: as far as doth. . — 

joyful to hear of their readiness — 

we hear not of him, neither need we — 

hear you? Nay, I hear nothing (?-ep.) — 

'faith, we hear faithful news — 

you hear, what he hath said — 

nay, if he coyed to hear Cominius speak — 

do you hear? Yet one time he did call — 
I tliink, he'll hear me; yet to bite his lip — 

he'll never hear him. Not? — 

who, as I hear, mean to solicit — 

our general will no more hear from. . . — 

I will not hear thee speak — 

do you hear how we are slient — 

your hardness; therefore, hear us ... . — 

we'll hear naught from Rome — v. a 

and grieve to hear it: what faults.... — v. 5 

he approaches, you shall hear him . . — v. 5 

peace, both, and hear me speak — v. 5 

my noble masters, hear me speak .... — v. 5 
hear the replication of your sounds. JiiZ/HsC<csar, i. 1 

I hear a tongue, shriller than all ... . — i.2 

Cfesar is turned to hear — i.2 

be prepared to hear: and, since you. . 
hear him groan ; ay, and that tongue 
patience hear: and find a time (.rep.) 
lie hears no music: seldom he smiles 
had you a healthful ear to hear of it 

I hear none, madam. Pr'ythee 

sooth, madam, I hear nothing 

to Caesar, as to hear me 

those that will hear me speak 

hear Brutus speak. I will hear (rep.) 
hear me for my cause; and be (rep.) 

and let us hear Mark Antony 

hear what Antony can say (lep.) 



iii. 1 
iii. 1 
iii. 1 



iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 
iv. 3 



V. 2 



i.2 



i.2 
ii. 1 
ii. 4 
ii. 4 
ii. 4 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 



HEA 



HEAR— the commons licar tliis ..Juliui Cirtar, iii. 2 

we'll hear the will: rend it (ir/i.) .... — iii. 2 

we will lu-nr it, .Aiit.viw; y"ii slmll .. — iii. 2 

hcor the nnbU' AntiMi.v. We'll l\iurhlm — iii. 2 

yet hear mo,c'om\lrviinii; vi.t liiur (rc/i.) — iii. 2 

let's stay, niul lieur the will — iii. 2 

hear mo with paliomv. rtiuc, l>u! .. — iii. 2 

hear me, for I will spcuk — iv. 3 

hear you auu'lit of licr ill jours? .... — iv. 3 

hear iue, t;oo<l brother — iv. 3 

(liilst thou not hear tluir shouts? — v. 3 

hear them Antony: FiiIvia..y|H'on!/.5 C'''"/"''''"i !• ' 

thercl'oro, hear it, Antony — i. 1 

hear the embassadors. I'je — i- 1 

nay, hear him. tioo<l now — i. 2 

BotVi Isis, hear me this prayer — i. 2 

dear Roildess, hear that prayer — i. 2 

I hear him OS he flattered — i. 2 

hear me, queen: the strong neeessity — i. 3 

not now to hear thee sing — i. .') 

vou hear no more wonis of Pompey — ii. 2 

let me hear Airrinpa further speak .. — ii. 2 

not till he hears now Antony is ... . — ii. 2 

gooil madam, hear me. Well, go to .. — ii. 5 

will't please you, hear me? — ii. 5 

and hear me sneak a word — ii. 7 

sake of merit tliou wilt hear me — ii.7 

let Neptime hear we bid a loud farewell — ii. 7 

sweet Octavia, vou shall hear from me — iii. 2 

hear her sneak? is she shrill-tongued — iii. 3 

who's his lieutenant, hear yonV — iii. 7 

hear it apart. None but friends — iii. II 

to hear from me that you had left .. — iii. 11 

I hear the doom of Egypt — iii. U 

dost thou hear, lady? — iii. II 

watelimcn dohear what wedo — iv. 3 

hear this? Ay, is't not strsmge? (np.) — iv. 3 

for our repose, shall hear a storm .... — iv. 4 

he shall not hear thee — iv. .') 

let's hear him, for the tliinj^s he — iv. 9 

hear you, sir? The hand ot <Ieath. . . . — iv. 9 

gentle, hear me: noi\c about Cic^ar — iv. 13 

hear me, good friend.;; but I will — v. I 

will hear him what he says — v. 1 

hear me, good madam; your loss — v. 2 

methinks, I hear Antony call — v. 2 

I hear him mock the luck of CiBsar.. — v. 2 

that I mijht hear thee call great — v. 2 

when shall we hear from him? Cyinbeline, i. 4 

and hear him mock the Frenchman — i. 7 

let me hear no more — i. 7 

did you hear of a stranger, that's come — ii. 1 

and'you shall hear the legions — ii. 1 

will you hear more? Spare your — ii. 1 

when we shall hear the rain and wind — iii. 3 

good madam, hear me — iii. 4 

food lady, hear me with patience. ... — iii. 4 

ear butmy name, and tremble — iv. 2 

though the gods hear, I hope — iv. 2 

no less than what you hear of — i v. 3 

nor hear I from my mistress — iv. 3 

when they hear the Koman horses neigh — iv. 4 

heavens, hear patiently ray purpose — v. 1 

to wonder at the things you near .... — v. 3 

where I did hear him groan — v. 3 

wilt thou hear more, my lord? — v..') 

than die ere I hear more — v. a 

peace, my lord; hear, hear — v. .5 

when shall I hear all through? — v. 5 

liear me S|)eak indifferently . . Titus Andnnicus, i. 2 

that ever car did hear to siich effect.. — ii. 3 

entreat her hear me but a word — ii. 3 

hear me, grave fathers! noble tribunes — iii. 1 

the tribunes hear you not — iii. I 

no tribune hears you speak — iii. 1 

if they did hear, tiiey would not mark — iii. I 

for heaven shall hear our prayers,. .. — iii. 1 

can you hear a good man groan — iv. 1 

that highly may advantage thee to hear — v. 1 

vex thy soul to hear what I — v. I 

villaniesruthful to hear — v. 1 

which thou shall hear of me anon — v. 1 

but let them hear what fearful — v. 2 

and weep to hear him speak — v. 3 

to hear an old man sing Pericles^ i. (Gower) 

few love to hear the sins they love . . — i. 1 

let their ears hear their faults hid! .. — i. 2 

where I'll hear from thee — i. 2 

Fuperfluous riots, hear these tears! .. — i. 4 

for so we hear you are — i. 4 

to hear what pitiful cries they — ii. 1 

hear, therefore, mistress; frame (ifp.) — ii. h 

and make us weep to hear your fate — iii. 2 

did vou ever hear the like? — iv. 5 

shall w'e go hear the vestals sing? .. .. — iv. 5 

I hear say, you are of honourable — iv. B 

I'll hear vou more, to the bottom — v. 1 

music? Mv lord, I hear none — v. 1 

do ye not hear? Music? My lord, I hear — v. I 

I long to hear how you w ere found . . — v. 3 

to hear the rest untold — v. 3 

hear me, recreant! on thine J>ar, i. 1 

where you shall hear us confer — i. 2 

bring you to hear my lord speak — i. 2 

ehaill hear from you anon? — i. 2 

he's coming, madam, I hear him — i. 3 

heat, nature, hear; dear go<ldes9, hear! .. — i. 4 

when she shall hear this of thee — i. 1 

I hear my father coining — ii. 1 

lOdmund', I hear that yi'U have shown .. — ii. I 

bid thein come forth and hear me — ii. 4 

hear nie, my lord: wliat need you — ii. 4 

ere long you are like to hear — iv. .' 

soon may I hear, aud sec him — iv. 4 

ond when vour mistress hears thus — iv. .'> 

if vou do dianee to hear of that blind. . . . — iv. r> 

hark, do you hear the sea? — iv. c; 

and let me hear thee going — iv. (i 

hear you, sir? speak I — iv. 6 

to hear of pleasure's name — iv. G 



[ 351 ] 



HEAIt— every one hears that 

methinks I hear the beaten drum, 
sir, this r hear. The king is come 



Uar, iv. 6 
— iv. « 

king is come — v. 1 

80 poor, hear me one word — v. 1 

and hear poor roguestalk of court news.. — v. 3 

stay yet ; near rea.son — v. 3 

will they not hear? what \\o\.... Romeo ^Juliet, i. I 
hear tile sentence of your moved prince — 1.1 

to hear line flirift — i. 1 

hear all, nil see, and like her most .. — i. 2 

thou ^hnlt lieiir our counsel — i. 3 

if lie hear tliee, thou wilt anger him — ii. 1 
shall 1 hear iimie, or shall I speak .. — ii. 2 

I henr some noise witliin — ii. 2 

that loves to hear himself talk — ii. 1 

did you ne'er hear say— two may — ii. 4 

it would do you good to hear it — ii. 4 

look to hear nothing but discords..,, — iii. 1 
fond man, hear me but speak a word — iii. 3 
all the night, to hear good counsel .. — iii. 3 
I must hear from thee every day .... — iii. .'> 
to hear him named, and cannot come — iii..') 
hear me with patience but to speak — iii. ."i 

I hear thou must, and nothing may — iv. 1 

things that, to hear them told, ha\'e.. — iv. 1 

I hear him near; nurse! wife! — iv. 4 

but thou shalt hear it — v. 3 

I hear some noise — v. 3 

I think, I hear them: stand, ho! Hamlet, \. 1 

and let us hear Bernardo speak of this . . — i. I 
scarcely hears of this his nephew's purpose — i. 2 
I would not hear your enemy say so ... . — i. 2 

for God's love, let me hear — i. 2 

but let me hear from you — i. 3 

and hears it roar beneath — i. 4 

I am bound to hear. So art thou (rf p.) — i. .'i 

now, Hamlet, hear: 'tis given out — i. 5 

you hear this fellow in the cellarage .... — i. 5 
O s])eak of that, that do I long to liear . . — ii. 2 

but you shall hear,— thus — ii. 2 

do you bear, let them be well used — ji. 2 

hear a play to-morrow,— dost thou hear — ii. 2 



a kind of joy to hear of it. 

to hear and see the matter 

to hear him so inclined 

I hear him coming; let's withdraw., 
to hear [ A'li/.-see] a robustious periwi 



iii. 1 

— iii. 1 

— iii. 1 

— iii. 1 

— iii. 2 



will the King hear this piece of work? 

dost thou hear? since my dear soul — iii. 2 

I'll convey myself, to hear the process .. — iii. 3 

withdraw, I hear him coming — iii. 4 

did you nothiu" hear? No nothing — iii. 4 

she hears, there s tricks i' the world .... — iv. 5 
and they shall hear and judge 'twixt .... — iv. .5 

you shortly shall hear more — iv. 7 

Laertes, you shall hear them — iv. 7 

nay, but near you, goodman delver — v. 1 

hear you, sir; what is the reason — v. 1 

wilt thou hear now how I did proceed? .. — v. 2 
cannot live to hear the news from England — v. 2 

so shall you hear of carnal, bloody — v, 2 

let us haste to hear it — v. 2 

s'blood, but you will not hear me Othello, i. 1 

these things to hear, would Desdemona.. — i. 3 

I pray you, hear her speak — i. 3 

free comfort which from thence he hears — i. 3 
I never yet did hear, that the bruised.... — i. 3 
do you hear, Roderigo? What say you?.. — i. 3 

no more of drowning, do you hear — i. 3 

what shall we hear of this? — ii. 1 

will you hear it again? No; for I hold . . — ii. 3 

as they say, to hear music — iii. 1 

liear, my honest friend? No, I hear (np.) — iii. 1 

why, stay, and hear mc speak — iii, 3 

I am sorry to hear this — iii. 3 

within these three days, let me hear thee — iii. 3 
dost thou hear, lago? I will be found.... — iv. 1 

but (dost thou hear?) most bloody — iv. 1 

when he hears of her, cannot refrain .... — iv. 1 
do you hoar, Cassio? Now he importunes — iv. 1 

you shall hear more by midnight — iv. 1 

mine of earth, and will not hear it — iv. 2 

will you hear me, Roderigo? — iv. 2 

I will hear further reason for tliis — iv. 2 

but, so, I hear him coming — v. 1 

did you not hear a cry? — v. 1 

if .vou stare, we shall hear more anon. , . . — v. 1 

hark, canst thou hear me? — v. 2 

HEARD— I arrived, and heard thee .... Tempest, i. 2 
if the king of Naples heard tliee? .... — i. 2 

we heard a hollow burst — ii. I 

I heard nothing — ii. I 

heard you this, Gonzalo? — ii. I 

I heard a humming : — ii. 1 

BO often I have heard renown — v. 1 

was there ever heaid a better?.. T'KoRcn.ct/Tfr. ii. I 

he heard not that — iv, 2 

and I have heard thee say — iv. 3 

I have heard him say — iv. 4 

I heard say, he » as Mernj IVives, i. 1 

I heard them talked of — i. 1 

you should have heard him so loud.. — i. 4 

I never heard such a drawling — ii. 1 

you heard \vliat tills knave — ii. ! 

yes; and you heard what — ii. I 

I have heard, the Frenchman — ii. 1 

I never heard a man of his place .... — iii. 1 

heard you that? — iii. 3 

you have heard of such a spirit — iv. 4 

1 lia\e heard my father name him. Tircl/thiS'tghl, i. 2 
I heard my lady talk of it yesterday — i, 3 

1 have heard her swear it — i. 3 

1 heard you were saucy — i.5 

whom I know you have heard of ... . — ii. I 
antique song we heard last night .... — ii. 4 

and 1 have licard herself come — ii. .'> 

I have heard of some kind of men .. — iii. 4 

than you have heard him brog — iii. 4 

he has heard that word of some — iv. I 

never heard any soldier dislike it. Mrai. fur. ^feas. i. 2 



HEA 



HEARD— you have not heard of.. \f eat. for Meat. i. 2 

have you not heard speak of Mariano. — iii. t 

1 have heard of the liuly — iii. i 

I never heard the absent duke much — iii. 2 

Fainting, sir, I have heard say — iv. 2 

have heard it was ever his manner — iv. 2 

til! ytm have heard ine my true — v. I 

as e er I heard in madness — t. I 

anil I have heunl vcnir royal ear .... — v. 1 

saw her, nor heard from her — v. 1 

rely upon it till my tale he heard .... — T. 1 

as I have heard him swear himself .. — v. 1 

and when I have heard it MuchAdo,i.3 

niirl tliere lieard it nu'ieed 11111111 — i. 3 

1 lie.irdhiin sweiirliisiiire.-lion _ ii. 1 

for I li.ive lieaid iiiv (luii.,'!it(T say .. - ii. 1 

I had as lielliave liennl the iiigli't-raven — ii. 3 

you lieuril my ilun.'hter tell you how — ii. 3 

seen more, and hiiud more, proceed.. — iii. 2 

what heard you liim say else? iv. 2 

brother, away, I will he heard v. 1 

watch heard them talk of one Deformed v. 1 

npon the error tliat you heard deboted — v. 4 

that I have heard so much ,\Iiil. N.'i Dream, i. 1 

and heard a mermaid, on a dolphin's — ii. 2 

he goes but to .see a noise that he heard — iii. 1 

I never heard so miiBical a discord .. — iv. 1 

the eye of man hath not heard — iv. 1 

he cannot he heard of. Out of doubt — iv. 2 

I have heard it over, and it is nothing — v. I 

thiit ever I heard discourse, my lord v. I 

full often hast thou hearil mv mnang — v. 1 

tire silliest stuff' that ever I heard — v. 1 

but the best that ever I heard .... Love'i L. Loil, i. I 

so I heard you say — i. 2 

if I have heard a truth, Biron ii. 1 

I do protest, I never heard of it — ii. 1 

I would you heard it groan ii. 1 

her mother's, I have heard ii. 1 

I heard your guilty rhymes — iv. 3 

oft have I heard of you, mj' lord Biron — v, 2 
ha\e you heard any imputation. .VciT/i.q/Tcni'rf, i. 3 

oft have you heard that told — ii. 7 fscroll) 

I never heard a passion so confused.. — ii. 8 

Antonio, as Iheard in Genoa iii. I 

as I heard, one night, fourscore ducats — iii. I 

was with him, I have heard him swear — iii. 2 

I have heard, your grace hath ta'en — iv. 1 

nor we have not heard from him — v. I 

first time that ever I heard As you Like it, i. 2 

hath heard your praises — ii. ,? 

yes, I heard them all — iii. 2 

1 have heard him read many — iii. 2 

.vou have heard him swear downright — iii. 4 

for I never heard it yet; yet heard too — iv. 3 

1 have heard him speak of that — iv. 3 

if I heard you rightly, the duke v. 4 

much matter to be heard and learned — v. 4 

I heard not of it before All's Well, i . 1 

the complaints I have heard of you.. — i. 3 

that e'er I heard virgin exclaim" in .. — i. 3 

should be once heard, and thrice beaten — ii. 5 

now have vou heard the fundamental — iii. 1 

and that I have not heard examined — iii. .I 

since I heard of the good lady's death — iv. .i 

never heard a play Taming of Slirete. 1 (indue.) 

time heard lions roar? have I not heard — i. 2 

have I not heard great ordnance — i. 2 

in a pitched battle heard loud — i. 2 

report which I so oft have lieard .... — ii. I 

well have you heard, but something — ii. 1 

such news as you never heard of! — iii. 2 

shouldst have heard how her horse fell — iv. 1 

have heard, in how mir.v a place — iv. 1 

I ha\e often heard of your entire — iv. 2 

you might have heard it else proclaimed — iv. 2 

but I have heard of him; a merchant — iv. 2 
heard, for, to a vision so apparent. H'inler'$ Tale, i. 2 

that e'er was heard, or read — i. 2 

shall I be heard? who is't — ii. 1 

I ne'er heard yet, that anv of — iii. 2 

I have heard, (^but not believed) — iii. 3 

I have heard, sir, of such a man — iv. I 

for I have heard it said, there is an art — iv. 3 

you have heard of my poor services. . — iv. 3 

heard the old shepherd deliver — v. 2 

I heard the shepherd say, he found .. — v. 2 

as they had heard of a world ransomed — v. 2 

I never heard of such another encounter — v. 2 

told him, I heard them talk of a fardel — v. 2 
have you heard me severed .... Comedy of Krrors, i. I 

liave you not heard men say — iv. 2 

who heard me to deny it — v. 1 

these ears of mine heard you confess — v. 1 

I have not heard thectoclt Macbeth, ii. 1 

I heard the owl scream — ii. 2 

lamentings heard i' the air — ii. 3 

sound, that ever jet they heard — iv. 3 

have you heard her say 't — v. 1 

and then is heard no more — v. i 

of mv cannon shall be heard KingJohix, i. 1 

judged hj' j'ou, that e'er I heard .... — i. I 

as I have heard my father speak .... — i. I 

who hath read, or heard, of any — iii. 4 

I have lieard you saj', that we — iii. 4 

indeed, we heard how near — iv. 2 

tongue I idlj' heard ; if true — iv. 2 

or have jou read, or heard? — iv. 3 

after Uicy heard joung Artiiur was .. — v. I 

ha>'e I not heard the.sc islanders — v. 2 

too late comes counsel to be heard . . Richard II. ii. 1 

thiTC hundred men, as T have hcai*d — ii. 3 

wtvs plotted. I hoard vou say — \\.\ 

besides, I heaul the haiiislied - iv. I 

he was; I heiinl tlic pnielanuition ..Mleuryl I', i. 3 

I heard biin tell it to one — ii. 1 

and hear thee murmur tales of — ii. 3 

as ever I heard bull-calf — ii. 1 

which thou host oflen heanl of — ii 4 

O Jesul I have heard the prince tell — iii. 3 



HEA 



HEARD— I lieard your grace say so. A Henry I f. iii. 3 j 

and, when he heard him swear — iv. 3 

for he hath heard of our confederacy — iv. 4 

the strangest tale that e'er I heard . . — t. 4 
I heard say, your lordship was sick. .'iUenrylV. i. 2 

thus have you heard our cause — i. 3 

I have heard better news — ii. 1 

he heard of your grace's coming — ii. 2 

pardon me, sir; I have heard the word — iii. 2 

■we have heard the chimes at midniglit — iii. 2 

■wlio liatli not heard it spoken — iv. 2 

heard he tlie good news yet? — iv. 4 

and I liad heard the course — iv. 4 

this that you heard, was but — v. 5 

as France; I heard a bird so sing .... — v. 5 

than if we heard that England Henry f. ii. 4 

great state he heard their embassy . . — ii. 4 

he hath heard, that men of few — iii. 2 

I have heard a sonnet, begin so — iii. 7 

never did harm, that I heard of — iii. 7 

you heard him all night — iv. 1 

myself heard the kinj» saj', he would not — iv. 1 

tlie king hath heard tlvem — y. 2 

ne'er heard I of a warlike enterprise.! Henz-j/r/.ii. 1 

and I have heard it said— unbidden . . — ii. 2 

I have heard j'ou preach that malice — iii. 1 

when they heard he was tlrine enemy — iii. 3 

iest, and never heard before iHenryVI. i. 1 

have heard her reported to be a woman — i. 4 

myself liave heard a voice to call him — ii. 1 

to hear what I have heard — ii. 1 

for offenders, never heard of — iii. 1 

oft have I heard, tliat grief softens . . — iv. 4 

champion that ever I heard — iv. 10 

who since I heard to be discomfited . . — v. 1 
heard the news; or, had he (rep.) ....SHenryVI. ii. 1 

the like yet never lieard of — ii. 1 

for I have heard too much — ii. 1 

in the Marches here, we heard, you were — ii. 1 

oft have I heard his praises in — il. 1 

dismal clangour heard from far — ii. 3 

have often heard him say, and swear — iii. 3 

when I have heard your king's desert — iii.'S 

for I have heard, that she was there.. — iv. 1 

even now we heard the news — v. 2 

if a coward heard her speak — v. 4 

rest be true which I have heard — v. 6 

often lieard my mother say — v. 6 

heard you not what a humble Richard III. i. I 

merciless, that e'er was heard of — i. 3 

last nigiit, I heardj they lay at ...... — ii. 3 

oft have I heard of sanctuary men .. — iii. 1 

we would have had you heard the traitor — iii. 5 

had seen, and heard him speak — iii. 5 

heard him utter to his son-in-law . . Henry VIII. i. 2 
this point hast thou heard him at any — i. 2 

having heard by fame of this — i. 4 

for, when the king once heard it .... — ii. 1 

you heard it? Come, you are pleasant — ii. 3 

what here you have heard, to her .... — ii. 3 

be now produced, and heard — ii-. 4 

every tiling that heard him play.. — iii. 1 (song) 

no mention of me more must be heard — iii. 2 

of late heard many grievous, I do say — v. 1 

to have heard you without endurance — v. 1 
somebody had heard her talk.. Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 1 

hateful love, tliat e'er I heard of .... — iv. 1 

the gods have heard me swear — v. 3 

have heard in some sort of thy.. Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

I have heard, and grieved, how cursed — iv. 3 

you have heard that T have gold .... — v. 1 

the enemies' drum is heard — v. 3 

it may be, you have heard it Coriolamts, i. 1 

four days gone, since I heard thence — i. 2 

I heard a senator speak it — i. 3 

we have heard the charges of our friends — i. 6 

briefly we heard their drums — i. 6 

I heard him swear, were he to — ii. 1 

rebuke from every ear that heard it.. — ii.2 

I have seen and heard of — ii. 3 

that ever he heard the name of death — iii. 1 

I may be heard, I'd crave a word or two — iii. 1 

I have heard you say, honour and policy — iii. 2 

seen him do, and heard him speak .. — iii. 3 

I have heard it said, the fittest — iv. 3 

have I heard groan, and drop — iv. 4 

I have heard him say so himself .... — iv. 5 

punish him, where he heard this .... — iv. 6 
if you have heard your general talk.. — v. 2 
would you have heard a mother less.. — v. 3 
have heard, where many of thebest../uKusCa;sai-,i,2 
you and I have heard our father say — i. 2 
the things that we have heard and seen — ii. 2 

of all the wonders that I yet have heard — ii.2 
wlien you have heard what I can say — ii, 2 

I heard a bustling rumour — ii. 4 

sure, the boy heard me — ii. 4 

I heard him say, Brutus and Cassius — iii. 2 

may it be gently heard Antony /^Cleopatra, ii. 2 

if Cleopatra heard you, your reproof — ii.2 
ne'er the word of no woman heard speak — ii. 2 

I have heard it, Pompey (rep.) — ii. 6 

I have lieard, that Julius Ctesar (rep.) — ii. 6 
then so much I have heard (rep.) .... — ii. 6 
certainly, 1 liave heard, the Ptolemies — ii. 7 

I have heard that too — ii. 7 

madam, I heard her speak — iii, 3 

you have heard on't, sweet? — iii. 7 

heard you of nothing strange about . . — iv. 3 
noble empress, you have heard of me? — v. 2 

what I have heard, or known — v, 2 

I heard of one of them no longer .... — v. 2 
shunned togoeven withwhatIheard.Cym6e^ne,i.5 

hath heard of great Augustus — ii. 4 

this you might have heard of here .. — ii. 4 

I have heard of riding wagers — iii. 2 

true honest men being heard — iii. 4 

I have heard, I am a strumpet — iii. 4 

1 have heard you say, Tuove's reason's — iv. 2 

gods, what lies I have heard! ., — iv, 2 



[ 352 ] 



HEARD— I have heard of such Cymbtline, iv. 2 

perhaps, it may be heard at court .... — iv. 2 
I heard no letter from my master.... — iv. 3 

heard you all this, her women? — v. 5 

mine ears, that heard her flattery .... — v. 5 
as if a double liunt were heard. Titus Andronicxis, ii. 3 
I have heard (O could I find it now !) — ii. 3 

was ever heard the like? — ii. 4 

some never heard of torturing pain .. — ii. 4 
had he heard the heavenly harmony — ii. 5 
I heard a child cry underneath (rep.) — v. 1 
oft have you lieard me wish for sucii — v. 2 

now you Iiave heard the truth — v. 3 

we have heard your miseries as far I'ej ides, i. 4 

such whales I have heard on a' the laud — ii. 1 
and I have often heard, you kniglits . . — ii. 3 
1 have heard of an Egyptian — iii. 2 

J'OU have heard soraetliing — iv. G 

you have heard me say, when I did fly — v. 3 
his daughter you have heard of. . — v. 3 fGower) 

but I have often heard hira maintain Lear, i. 2 

have told you what I have seen and heard — i. 2 
you have heard of the news abroad .... — ii. 1 
have you heard of no likely wars toward — ii. 1 

1 have heard strange news — ii. 1 

I heard myself proclaimed — ii. 3 

I never remember to have heard — iii. 2 

I have heard more since — iv. 1 

and Cornwall's powers you heard not? — iv. 3 

cannot be heard 60 high — iv. 6 

cannot be seen or heard — ' iv. 6 

tell me not, for I have hearS it all.iJo?neo ^Juliet,i. 1 
that which thou hast heard me speak — ii.2 
heard, the cock, that is the trumpet ....Hamlet, i. 1 
so have I heard, and do in part believe it — i. 1 
indeed? I heard it not; it then draws.. — i. 4 
never to speak of this that you have heard — i, 5 
something have you heard of Hamlet's — ii.2 
I heard tliee speak me a speech once . . — ii 2 
I have heard, that guilty creatures .... — ii.2 

I have heard of your paintings too — iii. 1 

what lord Hamlet said; we heard it all — iii. 1 
and heard others praise, and that highly — iii. 2 

have you heard the argiunent? — iii. 2 

cry to be heard, as 'twere from heaven — iv. 5 
you have heard, and with a knowing ear — iv. 7 

and you must needs have heard — v. 2 

thou hast heard me say, my daugliter . . Othello, i. 1 

nor aught I heard of business — i. 3 

by parcels she had something heard.... — i. 3 

she wished she had not heard it — i. 3 

that I heard tlie clink and fall of swords — ii. 3 
have any music that may not be heard — iii- 1 
I heard thee say but now, thou likedst not — iii. 3 

in sleep I heard him say, — sweet — iii. 3 

heard him say, — as knaves be such abroad — iv. 1 
nor ever heard; nor ever did suspect .. — iv. 2 

and then I heard each syllable — iv. 2 

I have heard too much: for your words — iv. 2 
I have heard it said so. O tliese men . . — iv. 3 
you heard her say herself, it was not I — v. 2 

HEARD'ST— which thou heard'st cry . . Tempest, i, 2 

news that ever thou heard'st. . Tuo Gen. of I'er. iii. ' 
HEARER-tire the hearer with a book..il/uc7i Ado, i. 

the better; the hearers may cry, amen — ii. 

pitied and excused, of every hearer , . — iv. 

shallow laughing hearers give Love's L. Lost, y. 

wearying tliv hearer in As you Like it, ii. 

filling their liearers with strange .... Macbeth, iii. 

doth gripe the hearer's wi-ist KingJo/m, iv. 

and send the hearers weeping Richard II. v. 

the hearers will shed tears S Henry I' I. i. 

gentle hearers, know, to rank . . Henry fill. (prol. 

first and happiest hearers of the town.. — (i)rol. 

who play they to? To the hearers. Troil. <§- Cress, iii. 

at each ear a hearer: that great baby . . Hamlet, ii. 

doth move the hearers to collection . . — iv. 

stand like wonder-wounded hearers? — v. 

HEARETH— he heareth not Romeo 8; Juliet, ii. 

HEARING — to enter human hearing . . Tempest, i. 

out o' your wits, and hearing too?.. .. — iii. 

she is not within hearing, sir. TwoGen.of Verona, ii. 

I'll vouelisafe thee the hearing Merry Wives, ii. 

if you will give me the hearing — ii. 

and leave me to my hearing .... Twelfth l^'igitt, iii. 

you to the hearing of the cause. . Meas.forMeas. ii. 

he's hearing of a cause — ii. 

my invention, hearing not my tongue — ii. 

to have hearing of this business — iii. 

hearing how hastily you are to depart — iv. 

and take her hearing prisoner Much Ado,\. 

what, out of hearing? gone? . . Mid. A'.'s Dream, ii. 

it pays the hearing double recompence — iii. 

and hearing our intent Came here — iv. 

to hear? or forbear hearing? Love's L.Lost, i. 

I do confess much of the hearing it .. — _i. 

and younger hearings are quite ravished — ii. 

make passionate my sense of hearing — iii. 

bestow on me the sense of hearing — — v. 

which hearing them, would call. . Mer. of Venice, i. 

hearing applause, and universal shout — iii. 

in the hearing of these many friends — v. 

merry, liearingof a song AsyouLikeit, ii, 

duke Frederick, hearing how that every — v. 

and, hearing your high majesty is AlCs iVclt, ii. 

that she, hearing so much, will — iii. 

honour's players, hearing . . Taming ofSh. 2 (indue 

that, hearing of her beauty — ii. 

but something hard of hearing ...... — ii. 

liearing thy mildness praised — ii. 

a good liearing, when children are (rep.) — v. 
no hearin", no feeling Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

no: the princess hearing of her mother's — v. 2 

make joyful the hearing of my wife Macbeth, i. 4 

where hearing should not latch them — iv. 3 

all theWelslunen, hearing thou Richard II. iii. 2 

his gentle hearing kind commends . . — iii. 3 
hearing how our iilaints and prajers — v. 3 

vouchsafe me hearin", and respect. . \ HenrylV. iv. 3 
will stop the vent of hearing. . . .iHenryW. (indue.) 



HEA 



HEARING^liearing of anything good.2Wen?y/r. i. 2 
did not think tliou wast within hearing — ii. 4 
he altered much upon the hearing it — iv. 4 

is come, to give him hearing Henry V. i. 1 

for, hearing, this, I must perforce — i v. 6 

hearing alarums at our chamber 1 Henry VI. ii. 1 

to give me hearing what I shall — iii. I 

hearing of your arrival — iii. 4 

give me hearing in a cause — v. 3 

to please you with the hearing .... Richard III, iv. 4 

most pestilent to the hearing Henry VIII. i. 2 

in liearing of all these ears — ii. 4 

fall asleep, or, hearing, die — iii. 1 (song) 

I have deserved this hearing . . Timon of Athens, ii.2 

hearing well of your lordships — iii. 6 

hearing the surges threat — iv. 2 

hearing you were retired — v. 1 

at first hearing he was a man-ehild. . Coriolanus, i. 3 

in hearing a cause between — ii. I 

when you are hearing a matter — ii. 1 

the more entangled by your hearing — ii. 1 

he's sentenced; no more hearing — iii. 3 

Aufi<li us, who hearing of our Marcius' — iv. 6 

shall have judicious hearing — v. 5 

hearing the will of Cifisar Julius Cwsar, iii. 2 

Mark Antony, hearing that yow. Antony SfCteo. iii. 6 
you lie, up to the hearing of the gods — y. 2 

if this be worth your hearing Hymbeline, i. 1 

tlian story him in his own hearing . . — i. 5 

be theme, and hearing ever — iii. I 

prevailed on thy too ready hearing? — iii. 2 

should fill the liores of hearing — iii. 2 

which, he hearing, (as it is like him,) — iv. 2 
of region low, ofteiid our hearing .. .. — v. 4 
if you please to give me hearing .... — v. 5 
hearing us praise our loves of Italy . . — v. 5 
any mortal body, hearing it . . Tilvs Andronicus, ii. 3 
brave the tribune in hisbrother's hearing — iv. 2 
who, hearing of your melancholy state . J'eri'f/es, v. 1 

ready to dissolve, hearing of this Lear, v. 3 

living mortals, hearing them . . Romeo ^-Juliet, iv. 3 
am I mad, hearing him talk of Juliet — v. 3 

but lend thy serious hearing Hamlet, i. 6 

we be" your hearing patiently .. — iii. 2 (prol.) 
beliind the arras hearing something stir — iv. 1 

and that in Hamlet's hearing — iv, 7 

that should give us hearing, to tell him.. — v. 2 

HEARKEN—hearkens my brother's suit. Tempest, i. 2 

be pleased to hearken once again — iii. 2 

ay, but hearken, sir TwoGen. of Verona, ii. 1 

hearken after their offence, my lordI.il/wcA.4do, y. 1 

simplicity of man to liearken Love's L. Lost, i. 1 

daughter, whom you hearken for.. Taming ofSh. i. 2 

well, hearken the end iHenrylV. ii. 4 

he hearkens after prophecies Richard III. i. I 

and all the gods to hearken Pericles, i. 1 

HEARKENED for your death IHenrylV. v. 4 

hearkened to their father's testament.. Pericte.t, iv. 3 

HE ARKBNING-is hearkening still . Tarn. ofSh.iv.3 

HEARSAY — only wounds by hearsay.il/wc/iyJdo, iii. 1 

HEARSE— should bedew my hearse .'iHenrylV. iv. 4 

bedew king Henry's hearse 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

honour may be shrouded in a hearse. Richard III. i. 2 
stand from the hearse, stand .. ..Julius Ca-snr, iii. 2 
we wept after her hearse Pericles, i v. 4 

HEARSED— hearsed at my foot..il/er. of Venire, iii. 1 
thy canonized bones, hearsed in deatli.. Hamlet, i. 4 

HEAR'ST-hear'sttiiou, Biondello?rom/»g-o/S/i. iv. 4 
English hence? hear'st tliou of them?..A/ac6e(A, v. 3 

hear'st thou the news abroad King Joim, iv. 2 

still, and hear'st such a calling? \ Henry IV. ii. 4 

thou hear'st tliy doom \ Henry VL iv. 1 

hear'st thou, ftlars? Name not Coriolanus, v. 5 

hear'st thou, Pisanio? Cymbeline, iii. 2 

if thou hear'st from me, it shall Pericles, iv. G 

that thou hear'st of this Romeo ^Juliet, iv. I 

as signal that thou hear'st something — v. 3 
whate'er thou hear'st or seest — v. 3 

HE ART— heigh, my hearts Tempest, i. 1 

clieerly, good hearts — i. 1 

against my very heart! — i. 2 

tell your piteous heart..... — i. 2 

my heart bleeds to think — i. 2 

set all hearts to what tune — i. 2 

awake, dear heart, awake ! — i.2 

1 could find in my heart to beat him. ... — ii. 2 

did my heart fiy to your service — iii. 1 

ay, with a heart as willing — iii. 1 

and mine, with my heart in 't — iii. 1 

is notliin», but heart's sorrow — iii. 3 

white cold vimin snow upon my heart — iv. 1 

still embrace nis heart, that doth — y. 1 

heart siek with thought Two Gen. of Verona, i. 1 

enforced my heart to smile! — i.2 

the agent of her heart — i. 3 

my heart accords tliereto — j. 3 

of mine own heart's sorrow — ii. 4 

sent from his heart — ii. 7 

Ills heart as far from fraud — il. 7 

blessing of your heart — iii. 1 

your sighs, your heart — iii. 2 

I stabbed unto the heart — iv. i 

makes me have a slow heart — iv. 2 

if you knew his pure heart's truth .. — iv. 2 
madam, if your heart be so obdurate — iv. '1 
did ever come so near your heart .... — iv. 3 

a heart as full of sorrows — iv. 3 

with his very heart despiseth me? — — iv 

read over Julia's heart — v, 

entertained them deeply in her heart — v 
much good do it your good heart ! . . Merry Wives, i 
love you always with ray heart (rep.) — i 
goon, hearts? [Coi.-An-heires, X^i.-heers] — ii 

tis the heart, master Page — ii 

have won any woman's heart — ii 

frampold life with him, good heart . . — ii 

blessing on your heart for't! — ii 

here is the heart of my purpose — ii 

my heart is ready to crack — ii 

in their hearts they may effect (rep.) -^ ii 



HE A 



[ 353 



HE A 



_ iii. 1 



HEART— inv heart of I'lilci? A 

nnil his piissinn of my licnrtl 

voiir hearts nrv miaUty 

liy liar, vit nil niv heart {rep. ill. 3) . 

fiirewell. my hearts — .";••" 

« kin.l heart he hath - <!!• 

Arc ana water for siieh a kind heart — !!!■ } 

good heart, that was not her fault .. — >)!••' 

It would yeuni \ our heart to see it .. — in- ^ 

ble.-winniifliish.avt! — i^'- • 

coml hciirls, device soiuethiiiR — >v. - 

follDW the ima'-Muutioiis of y(Mir own heart— iv. i 

ifthey ean tiii.l in Ilirirliearls — iv- ; 

mistress Kord, .!,'""d lieart — \'^'- -J 

cmMl heart.s, what ado here is — iv. •) 

to iiive our hearts united eereinony .. — iv. t> 

it 19 the flesh of a eorrii|>te I heart .... — , , ^- i 

fed in heart : whose llanies - v.h (sonp) 

thrnst virtue out of onr hearts by — v..) 

O, I am vexed at lieart — v. j 

my heart inis.'ives me — X- * 

she that luith a heart of that fine.. JVirf/JA .V;VA(, i. 1 

when liver. I.min , and heart - |- 1 

Taiiru-iV tliMts silk's and heart — !■ •> 

no. luy pr..i;.un<nu-art — >• '^ 

show vou the hi-.irt of my message . . — !• ■_' 

in the"first ofhis lienrt — !• ■? 

love make his heart of flint — ,}■ ■' 

in women's waxen hearts to set their — u. '- 

how now, my hearts? — !!■ ^ 

farewell, dear heart, since I must — — i;. J 

sways she level in her husband's lieart — ii- i 

n-s great a pans of heart as you . ■ • ■ • ■ — !!• * 

doth give mv heart: no woman s he.irt — )|. i 

thcv are as true of heart as we — n- < 

witK bloodless stroke, my heart dotli gore — 

that tyrannous heart can think? — — 

hides "my poor heart — 

1 have one heart, one bosom — 

niay'st move that heart, which now. . 

to put fire in your heart 

how he takes it at heart! 

said too much unto a heart of stone.. 
lie started one poor heart of mine — 

had I the heart to do It 

tn spite a raven's heart witliin. 
live in thy tongue and heart .. 
tongue far from heart 



IlKART-siek at the heart Lore'a L. i.p»', u. 1 

by the heart's still rlietoric, disclosed — n. 1 

his heart, like an agate — .!•■ 1 

by lieait. I3v heart, ami in heart (rrp.) — in. I 

bV hiarl vi.ii love lier, liei'ause (rr/i.) — in.. 1 

in heiirt vou love her, heeause your heart — in. 1 | 

■ : her ()c;i.).. — i" ' 



iii. I 
_ iii. 1 
_ iii. 1 

— iii. 1 

— iii. i 

— iii. 4 

— iii. 4 

— iv. 1 
..... - V. 1 

— V. 1 

. Meas. for Meas. i. 1 

1. 5 



tiie'vaiiant hearts not whipt out — jj. ' 

if so vour heart were touched — !!• J 

and ask your heart, what it........... — n. 2 

and in my heart the strong and swelling — ii. 4 

whv does mv blood so muster to my heart — .ij. 4 

to cleave a lieart in twain — in- 1 

gravel heart! After him fellows .. — iv. 3 
revenges to your heart, and general.. — iv. 3 
from your eyes with a light heart .... — iv- 3 

1 am pale at mine heart — i^'- 3 

ov, with mine heart; and punish .... — v. 1 

not changing heart -vith habit — v. 1 

I know, sits at yoiu heart — v. 

so deep sticks it in my penitent heart — y. 1 
my heart that I had not a hardheai-t ..Much.Uo, i. 1 

biit pravs from his heart — }• J 

in her bosom I'll unclasp my heart . . — .i. 1 

therefore, all hearts in love use their — ii. 1 

have lost the heart of signior Benedick — n. 1 

a double heart for his siugle one — ii. I 

in faith, lady, yon have a merry heart — n. 1 

that he is in"her heart — ;!• ' 

beats her heart, tears her hair — ij- 3 

she may wear her heart out first — — .u- 3 

fr ined a woman's heart of prouder stuff — in. 1 

tamingmy wild heart to thy loving hand— iii. 1 

for what his heart thinks, his tongue — -.u. 'i 

and in dearness of heart hath holp .. — iii. 2 

for my heart is exceeding heavy — lii. 4 

send every one their heart's desire . . — nt. 4 

anil lav it to vour heart — li)- 4 

I wonld think my heart out of thinking — iii. 4 

in despite of his heart, he eats his — iii. 4 

I could find in my heart to bestow . . — in. 5 

and counsels of thy heart! — iv. 1 

with all thv heart. I love you (rep.) — iv. 1 

I would cat his heart in the market-place— iv. 1 

cone through and through her heart — v. 1 

mv heart is sorry for your daughter's — v. 1 

pluck up, mv heart, and be sad! — v. 1 

111 aiiite of ^ our heart (rro.) — v. 2 

I will live in thv heart, die in thy lap — v. 2 

mv heart is with your liking — v. 4 

here's our own hands against our hearts! — v. 4 

that we mav lighten our own heart.s. . _ v. 4 
hast thou filched inv daughter's heart Mid. S.Dr. i.l 

sway the motion of IX'metriiis' heart — i.l 

anyman's heart gofnl to hear me .... — .i. 2 

set your heart at rest — ii. 2 

pierce a hundred thousand hearts — li. 2 

for mv heart is true as steel — ii- 2 

the wildest hath not such a heart.... — li. 2 

one heart, one l>ed, two bosoms — ii. 3 

my heart unto yoiir's is knit (rep.) .. — ii. 3 

thy bosom makes me sec thy heart . . — ii.3 

a serpent eat mv heart awttv — ii 3 

pierced throiigti the heart with your — iii. i 

yon hate me with your hearts — iii. 2 

with all my heart, in Hei-mia's love — iii. 2 

mv heart with her — iii. 2 

two seeming bodies, hilt one heart .. — in. 2 

stolen mv love's heart from him?.... — iii. 2 

a foolishlieart. that I leave here — iii. 2 

the virtue of my heart, the object — iv. I 

nor his heart to report — iv. I 

are these lads? where arc these hearts? — iv. 2 

daysof love, lu'compniiy your hearts — v. 1 

wKosc gentle hearts do fear the smallest — v. 1 

hcshrew my heart, but I pity the man — v. 1 

where heart doth hop; thus die I — — v. 1 
deem yourself lo<lgc(l in my heart. /-'.p*'«L./,o»r. ii. 1 

I will commend you t<i my own heart — ii. 1 



C) 1 



to tlKlt th 

that I 
and 1 
Iiersu 



• litlie lioiirl! 



to I 



ug of his heart . 

-art mi-aiis no ill 

art on tliy every part 

ly lioait to this false .. .. 



lli^i ll. 



,irt 



it, wliul u'race hast thou - 

tnit swci-t litarl, let tluit pass 

but. sweet heart, I do iiniilore secrecy 

sweet hearts, we shall he rich 

for a lii;lU heart lives liiiig 

dost thou not wish in heart 

that well by heart hath conned his . . 

will kill the speaker's heart 

conrfsy, sweet hearts 

said, I "came o'er his heart 

with my heart, that put Annado's .. 

in their liearts it lies 

that a' wears next his heart 

a heavv heart hoars not a humble.... 
luither inlitled in the other's heart .. 

mv lu'.irl is ill thy breast 

the window of iny heart, mine e.ye . . 

than my heart co'ol with Merchant of I 

with so good heart as I can 

a goodly apple rotten at the heart 



— iv. 1 

— iv. 1 
_ iv. 1 (letter) 
— iv. 3 (verses) 

_ iv. 3 

— iv. 3 



V. 2 
v. 2 
V. 2 



i. 3 
ii. 1 
ii. 2 
ii. 7 



hanging about the neck of iny 
I have too grieved a heart to tal 

fortune now to ni.v heart's hoiicl — .jj. W 

will have the heart of him, if lie forfeit . — in. 1 
or in the heart, or in the head' 

whose hearts are all as false 

to entrap the hearts of men 

with all my heart, so thou canst .... 

madam, with all my heart 

wish your ladyship all heart's content 

and rough hearts of flint 

his Jewish heart: therefore — jv- ' 

with all my heart: some three — iv- j 

it is enthroned in the hearts of kings — iv. 

of my hands, my head, my heart — ;v. • 

cut off nearest the merchant's heart. . — ;v. 1 

nearest his heart, those are the very.. — ;v. j 

I'll pay it instantly with all my heart — iv. 1 

take it love, so much at heart — v. 1 

I could not for my heart deny it him — v. 1 

so void is your false heart of truth .. — y. I 
60 much in the heart of the world... (s you Like it,i. 1 

your heart's desires be with you! .... — i. 2 

envious disposition sticks me at heart — ;■ '^ 

these burs are in my heart — 1.3 

and, in my heart lie there what — .1.3 

I could find in my heart to disgrace — ii. 4 

no greater heart in thee! — .li. B 

that your highness knew my heart .. — in. 1 
Helen's cheek, but not her heart . . — in. i (verses) 
faces, eyes, and hearts, to have — — iii. 2 (verses) 

the wrestler's heels, and your heart.. — i;i. 2 

he comes to kill my heart — iij- 2 

just as high as my heart — in. 2 

as clean as a sound sheep's heart .... — in. 2 

with all mv heart, good youth — in- 2 

if he were of a feartul heart, stagger — lii. 3 

atliwart the heart of his lover — iii. 4 

wliose lieart, the accustomed sight .. — !!!•■'' 

frown on thee with all my heart — iii. ^ 

Phir'.-'C, with all my heart — jij. 5 

in iny head, and in my heart — iii. ■') 

that a maiden's heart hath burned? — iv. 3 (letter; 

warr'st thou with a woman's heart? — iv. 3 (letter) 

— iv. 3 



iv. 3 



— V. 3 

— V. 4 (verses) 



being strong at heart, he sent me 

yon lack a man's heart 

take a good heart, and counterfeit 

thy heart in a scarf (irp.) 

be at the heiglit of heart heaviness 
BO near the heart as your gesture . 
I do desire it with all my lieart . . . 
whose heart within her bosom is . 

you and you are heart in heart — 

never approaches her heart AU's ll'cll, 

in our heart's table; heart, too capable — 

howsoe'er their hearts are severed in — 

a man mav draw his heart out — 

over the black gown of a big heart .. — 

and .vet my heart will not confess — — i 

our hearts receive J^nr warnings .... — i 

ay, with all my heart; and thoii art. . — j 

cannot yet find in my heart to repent — .j 

which his heart was uot consenting to — ii 

my heart is heavy, and mine ago — i 

she is, her heart weighs sadly — i 

with all my heart, my lord — i 

but my heart hath the fear of Mars .. — i 

as if she sat in liis heart — j 

if my heart were great. 'twould burst — i 

whose dear perfection hearts that. ... — 

ere niv heart durst make too — 

and tiike our hearts — (ei 

with all my heart Taming of Slireir, 1 (iud 

is it not haJf way to her heart — 

afVectinn is not rated from the heart — 

not get him for my heart to do it ... . — 

my liand, opposcdagainst my heart — i 

my heart in my lx;lly — j 

prove mistress of my heart — i 

much good do it unto thy gentle hcarti — i 

the anger of my heart 1 or else my heart — j 

she mav, with "all my hearti — j 

this hath put ine in heart — i 

and our hearts should well agree . . . 

as one of yours, mv heart as great. . . . — 

makes old hearts fresh Winter's Tale. 



tilaiwes, hot not.ll'iii'.»'«7W<', i. 2 

nt I.l mv heart — i. 2 

- i. 2 



IIEAKT-iny hei 

rover, he's apparent to my Heart ... 
all the nearest thing- to my heart . 
'shrew inv heart, you never spoke... 
thou hast the one half of my heart . 

I saw his lieart in his face 

and the jiisliie of .vour hearts will . 



i. 2 
i. 2 
ii. I 



nv heart will be a burden to 
alshfs 'gainst our hea ' 
.■dlielliehearl 



n in but. 



elelt tl 



rack! 
:irt that <■ 
■A to the 1 

I am glati at heart t. 

weep 1 cannot, b 

I pra.v 



i of all that.... 

urged 

L' it, break tool 
old conceive .. 

>ble heart 

lie so rid 

v heart bleeds.. 






_., that kills 111 

I am fiilsc of heart that way 

a merry heart goes all the da; 

against the hard liLarts of mains .... — 

your heart is full of Foiiietliiiig — 

are jiacked and locked n|i in my heart — 

my hearti I'll have thy beauty — 

bosom there, and speak his very neart — 
and whose heart together affliction . . — 
the hack of man, the heart of moiif ter — 
as if slic would pin her to her heart . . — 

1 am sure, my heart wept blood — 

but not with better heart Comedijnf lUr 

though your heart be tainted — 

my dear heart's dearer heart — 

and my heart of steel — 

of his fteart's meteors tiltinfj — 

though not my heart, shall have — — 

my heart prays for him — 

whose hard heart is buttoned up — — 
money bv me? heart and good-will.. — 

I eonfd find in my heart to stay — 

with all my heart, I'll gossip - 

and make my seated heart knock Ma, 

our free hearts each to other — 

and hold thee to my heart — 

• lay it to thy heart, and farewell — - 

what false heart doth know - 

to wear a heart so white — 

tongue, nor heart, cannot conceive . . — 
hada heart to love, nn.l in that heart 
grajiples you to the laarl and love .. — 
vizards to our hearts, disguising — — 

for my heart speaks, they are — 

encounter thee with their hearts' thanks — 
'twould have angered any heart alive — 
yet my heart throbs to know one .... - 
show his eyes and grieve his heart . . - 
the very firstlings of my heart shall be - 

whispers tlie o'er-fraugiit heart - 

tilunt not the heart, enrage it — 

ihe heart is sorely charged {rep.) 

iud the heart I bear shall never sagg 

[ am sick at heart when I behold 

which the poor heart would fain deny 

which weighs upon the heart? 

whose hearts are absent too 

you lay your heart at his dispose .... King 
nor keep his princely heart from .... 

with all my heart I thank thee 

that robbed the lion of his heart — 
hut with a heart full of unstained .... 
thousand hearts of England's breed.. 

and quartered in her heart! 

shall cool the hearts of all 

and then the hearts of all his people 

have yon the heart? 

a stern look, but a gentle heart 

the purposes of all their hearts 

with all my heart, mj' liege 

didst let thy heart consent 

my heart h'ath melted at a lady's 

aiid w itii a great heart heave awa.y . . 
thrust this enterprise into my heart. . 
and their gen tie liearts to fierce 

my heart is sick ! My lord - 

bcshrew thy very heart! - 

the tackle of my heart is cracked .... — 

my heart hath one poor string - 

as low as to thy heart Richa 

1 see thy grieved heart — 

tlie abondant dolour of the heart .... - 
my heart will sii-h, when I inisc.iU .. 

aiid tor m.v heart disdained — 

did seem to dive into their hearts — 

lose a thousand well-disposed hearts - 

my heart is great; but it must — 

grievous taxes, and lost their hearts.. — 
rills their hearts with deadly hate — - 

if heart's presages be uot vain - 

my heart this covenant inalies - 

show me thy humble heart — 

is open, and mv heart prepared — 

and hearls hanlcr than steel - 

warmed, thai sting my heart 

and true faith of heart ■ 

and his heart to faithful service 

swcU'st thou, proud heart? 

for on my heart thcv tirad 

sorrow aiid ^rief of heart makes him 

my heart might feel your love 

your heart is ui), I know 

"when mv |)nor heart no measure 

turn thy falsehood to thy heart 

of kingl.v BWiiv from out my heart .. 
vour hearts of sorrow, and your eyes 

hath he been in tli.v heart? 

hand, my love, and heart from heart 
piece the way out with a heavy heart 

and thus I take thy heart 

lo keen, and kill thy heart 

eteclol the hearts of men 

my heart ia not confederate 

A A 



, 2 (song) 
iv. 3 
iv.3 
iv. 3 
iv. ;> 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 
V. 2 
v. 2 

■■■rs. iii. I 

iii. •-' 



— II. 2 



_ V. j 



V. 3 
V. .■) 
V. 7 
V. 7 



— III. 2 

— iii. 3 

— iii. 3 

— iii. 3 

— iii. 3 



HE A 



[354 ] 

HEART— hath struck me atthelieart.aHenr)//'/. i. 

have torn and rent my very heai't .... — i. 

words bewitch j'our hearts — i. 

exploits done in the heart of France — i. 

unto tlie prince's heart of Calydon .. — i. 

in her lieart slie scorns our poverty — i. 

Lord, my heart! Sirrah, or you. ... — i. 

the treasure of thy heart — ii- 

liow irlisome is tliis music to my hearti — ii. 

such as mv heart doth tremble — ii. 

leave to afflict my heart! — ii. 

my heart assures me, that the earl . , — ii. 

full of tears, my heart of grief — ii. 

sort thy heart to patience — ii- 

hath he won the commons' hearts .. — iii. 

a heart unspotted is not easily — iii. 

eyes blab his heart's malice — iii. 

envious load that lies upon his heart — iii. 

my lieart is drowned with grief — iii- 

my heart accordeth with my tongue — iii. 

find no harbour in a royal heart — iii. 

in 3'our breasts, will sting your hearts — iii. 

because thy flinty lieart, more liaid — iii. 

a heart it was, bound in with — iii. 

1 wished, thy body might my heart.. — iii. 
mine eyes be packing with my lieart — iii. 
all descended to the labouring heart — iii. 
with which the heart there cools .... — iii. 
shall be scoured in his rancorous heart — iii. 
breastplate than a heart untainted ! — iii. 
heart's discontent, and sour afflictions — iii. 

my burdened heart would break — iii. 

and take my heart with tliee — iii. 

of thy mother's bleeding heart — iv. 

hath given tliem heart and courage. . — iv. 

as free as heart can wish — iv. 

conduct you through the heart of France — iv. 

tongue be equal with thy heart — v. 

my lieart is turned to stone — v. 

heart, be wrathful still — v. 

but that my heart's on future — f. 

reigns in the hearts of all — y. 

my heart for anger burns ^HenryVI. i. 

thought of this from Henry's heart . . — i. 

to our hearts' great sorrow — i. 

how thy words revive my lieart! .... — i. 

those three lords torment my heart — i. 

the lukewarm blood of Henry's heart — i. 

slake mine ire, nor ease my heart.. .. — i. 

finger, though to wound his heart .... — i . 

thy iiery heart so parched thine .... — i. 

tiger's heart, wrapped in — i. 

my furnace-burning heart (rep.) .. .. — ii. 

they had no heart to fight — ii. 

were thy heart as hard as steel — ii. 

object cheer your heart, my lord? — ii. 

steel thy melting heart, to hold — ii. 

the execution of my big-swoln heart — ii. 

detect thy base-born heart? — ii. 

revelled m the heart of France — ii. 

mine eyes, my heart to thee — ii. 

and here's the heart, that triumphs . . — ii. 

and let our hearts, and eyes, like — ii. 

tempest of my heart, upon thy (rep.) — ii. 

my heart, sweet boy, shall be thy (rep.) — ii. 
will pierce into a marble heart . 

my crown is in my heart 

my heart o'erweans too much . 

content, to that which grieves ray heart — iii. 

■while heart is drowned in cares — iii. 

passion of my sovereign's heart — iii. 

my heart with unhoped joys irep.) . . — iii. 

where a noble heart hath pawned — iv. 

and with your hands your hearts .... — iv. 

glad my heart, with hope of tliis (lep.) — iv. 

my sick heart shows — v. 

this cheers my heart — v. 

my heart will burst (rep.) — V. 

be the heart, that had the heart .... Richard III. i. 

fouler than heart can think thee .... — i. 

my proud heart sues, and prompts . . — i- 

if thy revengeful heart cannot — i. 

1 would, I knew thy heart — i. 

thy breast encloseth my poor heart , . — i . 

with all my heai't; and much it joys — i. 

in her heart's extremest hate — i. 

my heart were flint, like Edward's .. — i. 

far be it from my heart — i. 

split thy very heart with sorrow .... — i. 
may move your hearts to pity. . . 
the hearts to tell me so [rep.) ... 

I seal my true heart's love — 

as I love Hastings with my heart! .. — 

thy vow unto m.y sickly heart — 

high-swoln hearts [Coi. iCn^. -hates] .. — 

truly, the hearts of men are full .... — 

I long with all my heart to see — 

or never, jumpeth with the heart .... — 

looked not on the poison of their hearts — 

with all my heart. A beggar — 

and, witli a heavy heart, thinking .. — 

good sir John, with all my heart — 

our hearts, he knows no more of mine — 

and will, my lord, with all my heart — 

shall you know his heart (rep.) — 

his ragin g eye, or savage heart — 

on pure heart's love, to greet — 

that my pent heart may have — 

my woman's heart grossly grew — 

poor heart, adieu; I pity thy — 

yet do they ease the heart — 

soever lanced their tender hearts .... — 

whetted on thy stone-liard heart .... — 

and from my heart's love, I do thank — 

madam, wi th all my heart — 

a pair of bleeding hearts — 

put in her tender heartthe aspiring.. — 

wit!i pure heart's love, immaculate . . — 

look your heart be firm, or else — 

shall split thy heart with sorrow — 



HEA 



HEART— will sting thee to the heart. Kic/iurii ;/. v 3 

pray with heart and soul and all beside — v. 3 

or, m thy heart plant thou thine — v. 3 

with all my heart, I pardon him — v. 3 

would divorce tliis terror from my heart — v. 4 

groans, that strike upon my heart. ... — v. 5 

blessing on his heart that gives — v. 5 

how it yearned mj' heart — v. 5 

dares not, that mj' heart shall say .. — v. 5 

for I will ease my heart \HenryJV. i. 3 

fear and cold heart, will he to tlie — ii. 3 

1 could find in my heart— Francis! . . — ii. 4 

lads, boys, hearts of gold — ii. 4 

I'm glad of 't with all my heart — iii. 1 

loseth men's hearts; and leaves — iii. 1 

with all my heart, I'll sit — iii. I 

'heart, you swear like a comfit-maker's — iii. 1 

immediately. With all my heart — iii. 1 

tlieir level with thy princely heart? — iii. 2 

an alien to the hearts of all — iii. 2 

pluck allegiance from all men's hearts — iii. 2 

tear the reckoning from his heart — iii. 2 

I shall be out of heart shortly — iii. 3 

but a braver place in my heart's love — iv. 1 

are whole. As heart can tliink — iv. 1 

with hearts in their bellies no bigger — iv. 2 

speak it out of fear, and cold heart .. — iv. 3 

in kind heart, and pity moved — iv. 3 

did he win tlie hearts of all — iv. 3 

grieves at heart, so many of his — v. 4 

fare thee well, great heart! — v. 4 

with all my heart. Then, brother John — v. 5 

as good as heart can wish 2HenryIV. i. I 

each heart being set on bloody — i. 1 

that buildeth on tlie vulgar heart.... — i. 3 

but I tell thee, my heart bleeds — ii. 2 

my lieart's dear [Coi.-lieart-dear] Harry — ii. 3 

beshrew your heart, fair daughter! .. — ii. 3 

it angered hira to the heart — ii. 4 

as extraordinarily as heart would desire — ii. 4 

a good heart's worth gold — ii. 4 

do if thou darest for thy heart — ii. 4 

I kiss thee witli a most constant heart — ii. 4 

blessing o' your good heart! — ii. 4 

if my heart be not ready to burst .... — ii. 4 

danger, near the heart of it — iii. 1 

it would have done a man's heart good — iii. 2 

our hearts should be as good — iii. 2 

to their captain, the heart — iv. 3 

the blood weeps from my heart — iv. 4 

whetted on thy stony heart, to stab.. — iv. 4 

how cold it struck my heart! — iv. 4 

I thank thee with all my heart — v. 1 

fashion on, and wear it in my heart. . — v. 2 

there's a merry heart! good master .. — v. 3 

but you must bear; the heart's all .. — v. 3 

and a merry heart lives long-a .... — v. 3 (song) 

and wilt not call, beshrew thy heart — v. 3 

my Jove! I speak to thee my heart! — v. 5 

note, and believe in heart...' Henry V. i. 2 

whose hearts have left their bodies . . — i. 2 

little body witli a mighty heart . . — ii. (chorus) 

the king hath killed his heart — ii. 1 

ah, poor heart! he^is so sliaked — ii. ) 

we carry not a heart with us — ii. 2 

that sits in heart grief and uneasiness — ii. 2 

with hearts create of duty and of zeal — ii. 2 

no; for my manly heart doth yearn.. — ii. 3 

hide the crown even in your hearts . . — ii. 4 

rou^li and hard of heart, in liberty . . — iii. 3 

he'll drop his lieart into the sink .... — iii. 6 

and my heart, and my duty, and my life — iii. 6 

firm and sound of heart, of buxom .. — iii. 6 

God-a-mercy, old heart! thou speak'st — iv. 1 

a bawcock, and a heart of gold — iv. 1 

steel my soldiers' hearts! — iv. 1 

numbers pluck their hearts from them! — iv. 1 

our hearts are in the trim — iv. 3 

issue from so empty a heart — iv. 4 

desired in the hearts of his subjects.. — iv. 7 

from the heart; never came any — iv. 3 

the vine, the merry cheerer of the heart — v. 2 

plead his love-suit to her gentle heart? — v. 2 

love me soundly with your French heart — v. 2 

but a good heart, Kate, is the sun .... — v, 2 

that you love with your heart — v. 2 

avouch the thoughts of your heart with — v. 2 

neitlier the voice nor the heart of fiattery — v. 2 

combine your hearts in one — v. 2 

heart and hands thou hast at once . . 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

treacherous Fastolfe wounds my heart ! — i. 4 

to shoot me to the heart — i. 4 

it irks his heart, he cannot be — i. 4 

your hearts I'll stamp out with — i. 4 

with all my heart; and think me.... — ii. 3 

for his craven heart, say thus — ii. 4 

malice of thy swelling heart — iii. I 

to join your hearts in love and amity — iii. 1 

I would see his heart out, ere the priest ^ iii. 1 

I fear me, with a hollow heart — iii. 1 

Coeur-de-lion's heart was buried — iii. 2 

I sliould revive tlie soldiers' hearts .. — iii. 2 

Burgundy enshrines thee in his heart — iii. 2 

a gentler heart did never sway — iii. 2 

with submissive loyalty of heart .... — iii. 4 

in heart desiring still, you may — iv. 1 

the taintness of my master's heart .. — iv. 1 

passions of thy heart burst out — iv. 1 

who in proud heart doth stop — iv. 3 

thy father's heart with proud desire — iv. 6 

draw life-blood from my heart — iv. 6 

fury, and great rage of heart — iv. 7 

but my heart says — no — v. 3 

a pure unspotted heart, never yet.... — v. 3 

kills thy father's heart outright! .... — v. 4 

turn your unrelenting hearts? — v. 4 

love's settled passions in my lieart . . — v. ."j 

lend me a heart replete with 2Henry VI. i. 1 

and over-joj' of heart doth minister.. -^ i. 1 

the fulness of my heart's content .... — i. 1 



— iii. 1 



— i. 4 



HE ART— my heart is ten times Richard HI- v. 3 

but cheer thy heart, and be thou not — v. 3 

my heart is very jocund — t. 3 

a thousand hearts are great within . . — v. 3 
and take it from a heart that wishes. Henry ^i//. i. 1 

and the best heart of it, thanks you.. — i. 2 

the heart of all their loy.alties — i. 2 

and cold hearts freeze allegiance .... — _i. 2 

ever any malice in j'our heart were. . — ii. 1 

make friends, and give your hearts too — ii. I 

and every true heart weeps for't .... — ii. 2 

so dear in heart, not to deny — ii. 2 

hearts of most hard temper melt .... — ii. 3 

have too a woman's heart; which ever — ii. 3 

but your heart is crammed with .... — ■ ii. 4 

killing care, and grief of heart — iii. 1 (song) 

and hollow hearts, I fear ye — iii. 1 

but heaven knows your hearts — iii. 1 

the hearts of princes kiss obedience.. — iii. 1 

he has my heart yet; and shall have — iii. I 

the string, the master-cord of his heart! — iii. 2 

I have kept you next my heart — iii. 2 

my heart dropped love, my power. ... — iii. 2 

so your hand and heart, your brain.. ~- iii. 2 

my heart weeps, to see him BO — iii. 2 

I feel my heart new opened — \\\- ^ 

all that have not hearts of iron — V.]- - 

cherish those hearts that hate — iii. 2 

God turn their heart! I never — v. 2 

I speak it with a single heart — v. 2 

may never find a heart with less .... — v. 2 

with a true heart, and brother-love . . — V. 2 

joyful tears show thy true heait .... — v. 2 

that is master of his heart .... Troilus <?- Cressida, i. 1 

when my heart, as wedged with .... — j. 1 

the open ulcer of my heart her ej^es. . — i. I 

I would my heart were in her body! — i. 2 

it does a man's heart good — i. 2 

this will do Helen's heart good now — i. 2 

then though my heart's content .... — i. 2 

heart of our numbers, soul and only — i. 3 

nothing so full of heart — i. 3 

what heart receives from hence — i. 3 

should have hare hearts — ii- 2 

without a heart to dare — ii. 2 

my heart beats thicker than — iii. 2 

nay, you shall fight your hearts out — iii. 2 

comes to me now, and brings me heart — iii. 2 

to stick the heart of falsehood — iii. 2 

God be wi' you, with all my heart .. — iii. 3 

fare you well, with all my heart .... — iii. 3 

as heart can think, or courage — iv. 1 

come, come, beshrew your heart! — iv. 2 

break my heart with sounding Troilus — iv. 2 

there offering to it his own heart .... — iv. 3 

heart, as the goodly saying is (rep.) — iv. 4 

or my heart will be blown up — iv. 4 

be thou but true of heart — iv. 4 

no maculation in thy heart — iv. 4 

half heart, half hand — iv.6 

his heart and hand both open — iv.5 

from heart of very heart, great Hector — iv.5 

must take ray heart withal {rep.) .... — v. 2 

but with my heart the other eye .... — v. 2 

there is a credence in my heart — v. 2 

as Mars his heart inflamed with Venus — v. 2 

mere words; no matter from the heart — v. 3 

here lies thy heart, thy sinews — v. 9 

and tendance all sorts of hearts. Timnn of Athens, i. 1 

hate a lord with ray heart — i. 1 

out goes the very heart of kindness . . — i. 1 

1 am bound to your free heart — i. 2 

my lord, in heart; and let the health — i. 2 

thy good heart, Apemantus! (rep.).. — i. 2 

that you would once use our hearts.. — i. 2 

chiefly belong to my heart ! — i.2 

show him what a beggar his heart is — i.2 

your several visitations so kind to heart — i. 2 

false hearts should never have sound — i. 2 

what heart, head, sword, force, means — ii. 2 

bounty hath yet passed my heart .... — ii. 2 

secure thy heart; if I would broach.. — ii. 2 

try the argument of hearts by — .^^* ^ 

such a faint and milky heart — iii. 1 

so much I love his heart — iii. 2 

it is against my heart — ;!!•'' 

show rae an iron heart? — iJ!* ^ 

cut my heart ill sums — ?^i* "* 

ne'er prefer his injuries to his heart — iii. 5 

troops, and lay for hearts — iii. 5 

with all my heart, gentlemen both . . — iii. 6 

yet do our 'hearts wear Timon's livery — iv. 2 

brought low by his own heart — iv. 2 

the canker gnaw thy heart — iv. 3 

the eyes, and hearts of men at duty — iv. 3 

thou touch of hearts! think — iv. 3 

lend me a fool's heart, and a woman's — v. 2 

in excess hath broke their hearts .... — v. 5 

wilt send thy gentle heart before .... — v. 6 

the counsellor heart, the arm Coriolanus, i. 1 

even to the court, the heart — i. I 

to break the heart of generosity — i. ) 

shields before your hearts; and irep.) — i. 4 

in heart as merry, as when our — i. 6 

their very heart of hope — 1^6 

shall say, against their hearts — i. 9 

but cannot make my heart consent . . — i. 9 

wash my fierce hand in his heart .... — i. 10 

it does offend my heart: pray now .. — ii. 1 

begin at very root of his heart — ii. 1 

for the time, but hearts for the event — ii. 1 

and his actions in their hearts — ii. 2 

and have hearts inclinable to honour — ii. 2 

rather to have my hat than my heart — ii. 3 

methinks, 'tis warm at his heart (rep.) — ii. 3 

had your bodies no heart among you? ^- ii. 3 

his heart's his mouth: what his breast — ■ iii. 1 

1 have a heart as little apt as yours — iii. 2 
which your heart prompts you to. . . . — iii. 2 
correcting thy stout heart — iii. 2 



HEA 

IlK.ART-all their hearts were yours. Corio/anm, ill. 2 

give to mv iiolile lictivt a lie — ■'■ - 

witli »•> liit! lienit us tl\ou 

roa tlu-ir lu'urti t'riim Ihoin 

tlien ho siwiik* whiit's in liis licurt .. 
fwble ni.noiir sl.uki- voiir hearts! .. 
invim-ililo llic luMirt timt iv)mu><l tliem 
it wonlil .incl. V my Ik'.iiI <.f whnt . . 
roeeivc s.i to hciirt tlu' liiiiMshincnt .. 

wcrtl to wciir niK' lu'urt ■.:,•••• 

a lioiirt ofwri'uk in thci', tliut wiU .. 

wcc<U-il t'loni ni V liciivl a root 

nmrodani'fs my rai't luait 

wliom villi a craiKi-il hrurt I have .. 



iii 
iii 


5 


ill 
iii 


3 


iv 


5 


IV 


1 



hearts ila 
nnd nun 
tluni Ini.-t 



ith 



i>kecl woildoring.. 

luart loo sreat .. 
O vou lianl luMrts. \ on I'lnel mcn...'u/<iM 
stemminir it witli luurts nt'i-ontroversy 
siieli nu-n as iu' hv ni-\i'r at iicart's ease 

t'orgavo liim witli all lluir liearts 

sits hi^li in all llio |n-oiile's hearts .. 
nnd let onr luarls, as subtle masters do 
the riiiUlv droi's tlial visit iny sad heart 
shall partake the seerets otniy luart 
nnil with a heint new-fiieil, I follow you 
thev eonld not lind a heart within .. 
Ciciar sli.M.1.1 he a beast without a heart 
heart of Unitus veanis to think uponi 

mv heart laments, that virtue 

mbimtain 'tween my Iieart and touRue! 
weak u thin!.' the heart of woman is! 

liefore thv si-at a liunililc heart 

boldest and liest hearts of Home .... 

our iiearts vi>u see not. tliey are 

and our hearts, of brothers' temper .. 
indeed, O world, tlie heart of thee.... 

tliv heart is biL'; i;et thee apart 

heart is in the oolKii there witli Ca!sar 
to stir your hearts and minds to mutiny 

then hiirst liis miglity lieart 

to steal ttwav your Iiearts 

iduck Init his nnnie out of his heart.. 

liave in their Iiearts, I fear 

fret, till voiir proud lieurt break 



_ V. 3 

— V. h 

— y. 5 
Civsar^ i. 1 



_ iv. 1 
_ iv. 3 



iv. 3 



V. 3 



i. 3 



ii. 1 
ii. 2 
ii. 2 



I had rather eoiii my heart, and drop — 

Brutus hatli rived my heart — 

within, a heart dearer tlian Plutus' nunc — 

denied thee gold, will give my heart — 

Tourhand. And my heart, too — 

mv heart is thirsty for that noble — 

now I liave taken heart, thou vanishcst — 

the hole vou made in Ocsar's heart.. — 

<) mv lieart! Is not that he? — 

Casslus' sword, and find Titinius' heart — 

countrymen, my heart doth joy — v. J 

his captain's heart, which in Aniojiy ^Ctfo. i. 1 

tliere were a heart in Ejypt — !■ 3 

but my full lieart remains in use — 

into tlie hearts of such as have not . . — 

so near the heart as Cleopatra this . . — 

his speech sticks in my heart — 

Caesar gets money, where he loses hearts — 

to knit your hearts mth an unslipping — 

from this hour, the heart of brothers — 

our kingdoms, and our hearts — 

half the heart of Caesar — 

she pursed up liis heart, upon the river — 

pays his heart, for wliat his eyes — 

can settle the heart of Antony — 

to make my heart her vassal — 

no slander; they steal hearts — 

ho! hearts, tongues, figures, scribes . . — 

and make the Iiearts of Romans serve — 

not obey her heart, nor can her heart — 

w hat cost vour lieart has mind to . . — 

that have iny heart parted betwixt . . — 

cheer your heart: lie you not troubled — 

each heart in Koine does love — 

take from his heart, take from — 

my heart was to thy rudder tied — 

and plighter of high hearts! — 

from my cold lieart let heaven — 

where liust thon been, my heart? .... — 

in our captain's hrain restores his heart — 

know, my hearts, I hope well of .. .. — 

thou art the armourer of my heart .. — 

this blows mv heart; if swift — 

through proof of harness to mv heart — 

throvi- niy heart aeainst tiie flint — 

and my heart makes only wars — 

the hearts that spanieled me at heels — 

beguiled me to tlie very heart of loss — 

whose heart, I thought, I had — 

divided between, her heart and lips.. — 

cannot keep the battery from my heart — 

heart, once lie stronger than thy — 

good sirs, take heart; we'll hiiir him — 
courage which the Iieart did lenil it (re/).) — 

as sovereign as tlie hloixl of hearts . . — 

and the heort where mine his thoughts — 

bid her have goo<l heart — 

that shoots mv very heart at root .... — v. 2 
the king be touched at very heart . . Cijinhelinf, i. 1 

hath a heart that is not glad — i. 1 

take it. heart; but keep It till you .. — i. 2 

sir, with all my heart — i. •'> 

this practise but make hard your heart — i- fi 

the very middle of my heart IS warmed — i. 7 

doth strike my heart with pity — i. 7 

an I have such a heart, that both .... — i. " 

half all men's hearts arc his — i. 7 

two from twenty for his heart — ii. 1 

which know my heart, do here pronounce — ii. 3 

to allure false hearts, ond be false .. — ii. 4 

against himself With all my heart — ii. * 

Itiansion of my love, my heart 

Come, here's my heart; something .. 
no more l>e stomachers to my heart! 
but, O the harder heartl 



iii. II 
iii. 11 
iii. 11 



iv. 12 

iv. 12 

iv. 12 

iv. 12 

iv. 13 

v. I 

V. 1 

V. 1 

v. 1 



iii. 4 
iii. 4 
iii. 4 



— iv. i 

— v. 1 



£355] 

IIKAKT— secret from thv heart (irp.).Ci/mMltie, iii 

1 now liileli IVom mv luurt — iii 

a heart as bi-V thv wonls, 1 grant .. — iv, 
might have killed tliee at Ibe heart.. — IV 
haeli-door oiien of the llll^•llardvd hearts — v, 
to taint his nobler heart and bniin .. — V 

woe is mv heart, that the poor soldier — v 
the live.; bvart, and brain ofliritaiii - v 

nor mv heart, tlial tlu.ught her like — v 

with a Uoiiian's heart can siitll-r .... — V 
ttv, with all mv heart; and lend my - v 

for wlioin my lieart drops blood — v 

of mine aic to glad my iieartl./V(i(»/lHrfroHicuir, i 
than rob me ol the people's hearts .. — i 
restore to thee the people's hearts.... — i 
mistress of my heart, and in tlie sacred — i 

arc razors to my wounded heart — i 

with sour look.-, ulliict his gentle heart — i 

and cheer the heart that dies in tempest — i 

sweet heart, l.wk back — i 

arm thv heart, and tit thy thoughts — li 

ven^'> aiiee is in my heart — ii 

but be voiir heart to them — \\ 

though' thv hard heart sa.v uo — li 

ne'er let n'lv heart know merry cheer — ii 

with sii;lit,niade heart lament — ii 

hast a true-divining heart — ii 

my ei)ni|iassionate heart will not — n 

O'that 1 knew thy heart — j] 

doth burn the heart to cinders — .ii 

my heart's deep languor — iii 

thv noble heart to break — iij 

with all my heart, I'll send — i\] 

do then, dear heart; for heaven — in 

and be my heart an ever-burning bell ! — iii 
alas, poor heart, that kiss is comfortless — in 
when my heart, all inad with misery — in 

when thy poor heart beats with — ii; 

just against thy heart make — ijj 

thou kill'st my heart; mine eyes — — iii 
cursed be that heart, that forced .... — i^• 
more scars of sorrow in his heart ... — iv 

enacts and counsels of the heartl — iv 

pierced him deeii, and scarred his heart 
tliat were his heart almost impregnable 
both ear and heart obey my tongue.. 
almost lii-i^lic my Iieart with extreme 

shall iIhiii 111-.' Iliy angry heart — v. 

malic f nn- >\M_lling heart — v. 

an' ii \ In L'liness knew my heart — v. 

my heart is not compact of — v. 

your hearts will throb and weep — — v. 
with all my heart would I were dead — v. 
my heart eau lend no succour to my . . . . Pericles,]. 

it grieved ray heart to hear what — ii. 

that neither'in our hearts — ii. 

I am glad of it with all my heart — .n- 

tliouhastaheart that even cracks — m. 

take from my heart all thankfulness! 

the heart and place of general wonder — iv. (Gow 

with more than foreign heart 

foreshow you have a gentle heart — 

with all my heart, sir; and when you. . — 

my heart leaps to be gone 

in my true heart I find, she names I- 

I cannot lieave my heart into my mouth - 

but goes this with thy heart? - 

a stranger to my heart and me - 

give her father's heart from her! - 

invade the region of my heart - 

a heart and brain to breed it in? - 

I hope, his heart is not in the contents .. - 

in pieces the heart of his obedience - 

drew from my heart of love - 

I know his heart; what he hath 

O madam, my old heart is cracked . . . 
swells np toward my heart! hysterica . . — 

me, my heart, my rising heart! — 

serpent-like, upon the very heart — 

that stir these daughters' hearts against — 

but this heart shall break into ._ — 

what he his heart should make — iii. 2 (i 

1 have one part in my heart — 

will break my heart? I'd rather — 

made him proud of heart, to ride ." 

set not thv sweet Iieart on proud array . . 

proud in heart and mind 

served the lust of my mistress's heart 

false of heart, 1 ight of ear 

betray thy poor heart to women 

were like'an old lecher's heart 

that in the fury of his heart 

proclaim what store her heart is made of 

see what breeds about her heart 

in nature, that makes these hard hearts? — ii; 

one that's of a neutral heart — iii 

yet, poor old heart, he holp the — iii 

nantmgly forth, as if it pressed her heart — iv 

lie moves all hearts against us — iv 

with all my heart. Why I do trifle — iv 

it is, and niy heart breaks at it — jv 

we'd rip their hearts; their papers — iv 

I'll prove it on thy heart — v 

if my speech offend a noble heart — v 

tliy valour, and thy heart — v 

to prove upon thy lieart, whereto 1 speak — v 

lie o'crwhelm thy heart — v 

let sorrow split my heart — v 

O that my heart would burst! — v 

but his flawed heart, (alack, too weak .. — v 

it came even from the heart of — v 

break, heart; I pr'ythee, break — v 

goiKl heart, at what? (>/•;..) Ilnnm ^Juliet, i 

get her heart: my will to her consent — i 

let wantons, light of heart, tickle — j 

did my heart love till now? — i 

well said, mv hearts; you are a prinrox — i 

what', checrly, my hearts. Patience — j 

forward, when my heart is here? .... — jj 
if my heart's dear love — >' 



HEA 



— iii. 3 
) 

— iv. I 



— V. 3 
. I 
. I 

'. I 
. 1 
. 1 



— i. 4 

— ii. 1 



— iii. 4 



— 111. fi 



HEART- rest come to thy )\cart..llomeoitJiiliei, il. 2 

Bliiys all senses with the heart — li. 3 

mv heart's dear love is set on -• ii. 3 

not truly in their hearts — li. 3 

the very pin of bis Iieart cleft wilh .. — 11.4 
besbrew yoni- heart, Ic.r M-ndiiig me.. — ii. 5 
O break, 1M\- lieait: |«".r bankrupt .. — iii. 2 
O serpent heart, bid with a lloweiing — lii. i 
howhastthou the lieart, laiiig a liivine — i;i.3 
with all my heart; and yet no man in-ii.) — i;i. 5 
my poor heart so for a itinsman vexed — in- o 
Oliowmv heart abhors to hear him — iii. .'. 

one'shcart could [r,,/. -thought would] — ill. 5 

lay hand on heart, advise — 111- f) 

beshrew my very heart, I think you — i;i. J 

sneakest thou tiiini thy heart — in. 5 

God joined my heart and Romeo's .. — iv. I 
or my true heart with treacherous .. — iv. I 

my heart is wondrous light — JV. S 

my heart itself plays— my heart is full — iv. 5 
priiiinggrief the heart doth wound — iv.5(8ong) 

bitter cold, and I am sick at heart Hainlel,\. 1 

to bear our hearts in grief — !• 2 

the liead is not more native to the heart — 1.2 
a heart unfortifled, or mind impatient .. — 1.2 
iu onr peevish opposition take it to heart? — i. 2 

of Hamlet sits smiling to my heart — j. 2 

but break, my heart; for I must hold — i. 2 

or lose vour heart, or your chaste treasure — i- 3 

as watc^iman to my heart — j- 3 

hold, hold, my heart; and you — 1.5 

■would heart of man once think it? — i- •"* 

or given my heart a working — j;. 2 

unpack my heart witli words — ".2 

■with all mv heart; and it doth much — ii;. 1 

this sometliing-settled matter in his heart — iii. I 
my heart's core, ay, in my heart of heart — iii. 2 
since love our hearts, and Hymen did .. — iii. 2 
would pluck out the heart of my mystery — iii. 2 

O heart, lose not thy nature — ii;. 2 

and, heart, with strings of steel — >;i- 3 

and let me wring your heart — m. 4 

thou hast cleft my heart in twain — ni- 4 

put me in your heart for friend — ;v. 7 

■warms the very sickness in my heart — iv. 7 

of a sorrow, a face without a heart? — iv. 7 

in my heart there was a kind of fighting — v. 2 

how ill all's here about my heart — v. 2 

if thou didst ever hold me in thy heart .. — v. 2 
now cracks a noble heart: good-night .. — v. 2 
yet their hearts attending on themselves. OfAcHo,!. 1 
figure of my lieart in comnliment extern — i. 1 

Tft'Car my heart upon my Sleeve — j. 1 

your heart is burst, you have lost half .. — i. 1 
to draw from her a irayer of earnest heart — 1.3 

with all my heart IK-;/.) — j. 3 

the bruised" heart was pierced through .. — 1.3 

my heart's subdued even to the very — ;• 3 

what say'st thou, noble heart? — i- 3 

slie puts" her tongue a little in her heart — ii. 1 

be, that e'er our nearts shall make! — ii. 1 

let not thy discreet heart think it — ji. 1 

the people's hearts brimful of fear — ;;• 3 

working from the heart ■ — ;;;• 3 

cannot, if m.v heart were in your hand . . — !!!• 3 
wit, hands, lieart, to wronged Othello's . . — iii- 3 

fruitfulness, and liberal heart — ;;;. 4 

that hand that gave away my heart — i;i. 4 

the hearts of old gave hands (rep.) — j';;. 4 

the skilful conserved of maidens' hearts — iii. 4 

with all the duty of my heart — in- 4 

no, my heart is turned to stone — iv. i 

with all my heart, sir — j^'. 1 

where I have garnered up ray heart -- iv. 2 

upon her, as true hearts cannot bear .... — iv. 2 

amen, with all my heart! — v. 2 

thou dost stone my heart — v. 2 

lie lies to the heart ; she was too fond — — v. 2 

speak, for my heart is full — v. 2 

no weapon ; for he was great of hea rt . . . . — v. 2 

this heavy act with heavy heart relate .. — v. 2 

HE \I:T- veil— we end the heart-ach ... Ham W, iii. 1 

II p; A i; r-P,l.i n >n which breathed this. likUard I [A. 1 

in m\ heal t-hlt!od warmed — iii. 2 

in tU^- hcait-blood, though bein^ all — iv. 1 

withm a monarch's hcart-blooa ..2He7iry IV. iv. 2 
thy heart-blood I will have for tliis. . 1 llenry yi.\. 3 

be stained with heart-blood 2 Uijivy II. ii. 2 

left thv dearest heart-blood there 3 Hcjiry I'l. i. 1 

■S'enus", the heart-blood of beauty. TroiV. .fj-CrM. iii. I 
HE.VRT-BREAK— deal of heart-break., Werrj/IC. v.3 
HEART-BREAKING to see .A}i(ouy 4- Clenpaira. i. 2 
HEART-BURNED an hour after. ... il/iieA yjdo.ii. 1 
should I be sure to be heart-burned.! Henry II'. iii. 3 
HEART-BURNING heat..Lorc'»£../.o.;, i. 1 (letter) 
HEART-DEAR- 

^Co^] when mv heart-dear Harry ..iHennjIV. ii. 3 

HEARTED— hearted, breathed ..4nlonyJ^CIen. iii. II 

my cause is hearted; thine hath no less..O//ic;to, i. 3 

love, thv crown, and hearted throne .. — iii. 3 

HEARTEiSr those that fight in Sllenryl'l- "■ 2 

HEARTH-and hearths unswept .. Merry Wires, v. h 

1 will not hurt your heorth Coriolanus, iv. 4 

hath brought me to th.\' hearth — iv. 5 

he came unto my hearth — . y. .J 

IIK.VRTILY— forsooth, heartily.... jVfrr|/irifM,|. 1 

I beseech vou, heartily — !■!■ ^ 

pray heartily, pardon me .,~.., "'■' ? 

ne heartily prays, some occa.sion MuehAflo, i. i 

for the which she wept heartily — .>'■ 1 

cry your worship's mercy, heartily. jVi'/. A. Or in. 1 

but I love her heartily Merehnnt of Venice, y. 6 

most heartily I do beseech the court — ly. I 

I am heartily glad I came hither. ./4fyoiii#*ci/, ;. 1 

didst then never love so heartily — ij. 4 

when a man thanks me heartily — ii. 5 

I am heartily sorrv, that he'll All iH'ell, iv. 3 

ami wash, and welcome heartily. Taming o/S/i. iv. 1 

pray hcarti ly he bo at palace Winter 'i Tale, iy. 3 

as heariily, its he is glad he hath — King John, iii. 4 



HEARTILY— shulies) heartily request ..John. iv. 2 
most heartily I pray your liighness. . Richard II. i. 1 

in suiFeraiice heartily will rejoice Henry V. ii. 2 

peseech you heartily, scurvy lousy knave — v. 1 
much gootflo you, scald ku'ave, lieartily — y. 1 
heartily solicit your {gracious self, /?''cAarrf III, iii. 7 
the queen hath heartily consented .. — iv. 5 

Ves, heartily beseech you Henry VIII. i. 2 

I heartily forgive them — ii. 1 

pray, and heartily, for our deliverance — ii. 2 

and heartily entreats you take — iv. 2 

fruit, she goes with, I pray for heartily — v. 1 
your highness most heartily to pray — v, 1 

1 thank ye heartily: and so shall .... — v. 4 

give you our voices heartily Coriolanxts, ii. 3 

the gods give you joy, sir, heartily .. — ii. 3 

so, sir, heartilywell met — iv. 3 

two creatures, heartily. Am I one . . Cymbelive, i. 7 
his tears, and laughed so heartily. r//us Andron. v. 1 
nothiu" grieves me heartily indeed . . — v. 1 
wc doul)t it nothing; heartily farewell. . Hamlet, 1. 2 
offend you, heartily; yes, 'faith heartily — i. 5 

I could heartily wish this had not Olhelln, ii. 3 

HEARTINESS— from heartiness .. mnler'sTaU, i. 2 
HEARTLESS— these heartless hinds?/^!!?^!?;) •S-Ju'.i. 1 
HEARTLINGS— od's heartlings . . iV/« n/ '^'n-e-s iii. 4 

HEART-OFFENDING groans 2Henrv I'l. iii. 2 

UEART'S-EASE must kings neglect. . Henry V. iv. 1 

heart's-ease. heart's-ease {rep.). .Borneo Sr Juliet, iv. 5 

HEART-HARDENING spectacles., Co;/oiarii/s, iv. 1 

HEART-SICK— sick still; heart-sick, Cj/mfceZ/nc, i v. 2 

the breath of heart-sick groans, Romeo ^Jiiiief, iii, 3 

HEART-SORE sighs {rep. ii. i) .Tiro Gen.ofVer. i. 1 

H E ART-SORROWING peers .... Richurd III. ii. 2 

HEART-STRINGS- 

grieves my very heart-strings. Two Gen. of Ver. iv. 2 

and from my heart-strings I love .... Henry V. iv. 1 

shall I, till heart-strings break Richard III. iv. 4 

her jesses were ray dear heart-strings. . OtficUo, iii. 3 
HEART-STRUCK-heart-struck injuries. Leiu', iii, 1 
HEART-WHOLE-him heart-whole. /(s you /.//«?, iv. 1 

HEARTY — I bid a hearty welcome Tempest, v, 1 

if hearty sorrow be Two. Gen.of Verona, v. 4 

hatli her liearty commendations .. Merry Wivex, ii. 2 
and hearty thankings to yo\\hot\\..Meas}or Meax.v . 1 

and last, the hearty welcome Macbeth, iii. 4 

and concludes in hearty prayers,, ..2Henr!/IV. iv. 1 

accept this hearty kind embrace 1 Henry VI. iii, 3 

my hearty friends Antony ^ Cleopiira, iv, 2 

hearty thanks: the bounty Lear, iv. 6 

HEAT — even as one heat (rep.]. . Two Gen. of Ver. ii. 1 

with an hour's heat dissolves — iii. 2 

as subject to lieat, as butter Merry Wives, iii. 5 

till seven years heat TwelfthKiglit,i. I 

one draught above heat makes him, . — i. b 
thou hast neither heat. . . . Measure for Measure, iii. 1 

both in the heat of blood — v. 1 

knows the heat of a lujsurious bed . . Much Ado, iv. 1 
some heat from Hermia t's\\,....Mid,N.'sDream, i. 1 
heart-burning heat of duty, i-oue's L.Lost,i. 1 (letter) 

olfsr made in neat of blood — v. 2 

rather heat with wine Mercliant of Venice, i. 1 

tlien, farewell, heat; and, welcome .. — ii. 7 
of colour, weight, and heat, poured , , All's Well, ii. 3 
ere with spur we heat an acre , , . . Winter's Tale, i. 2 
her eye, heat outwardly, or breath . . — iii. 2 
when 1 am cold, he lieats m&.. Comedy of Errors, iv. 4 

from the heat-oppressed brain? Macbeth, ii. 1 

words to the lieat of deeds — ii. 1 

whose heat hatli this condition .... King John, iii. 1 

Iieat me these irons hot — iv. I 

though heat red-hot, approaching . . — iv. 1 

I can heat it, boy. No, in good — iv. 1 

thinking on fantastic summer's he&fi.Richardll. i. 3 

in the very heat and pride of \ Henry IV. i. 1 

who struck this heat up after — i. 3 

excuse of youth, and heat of blood .. — v. 2 

took fire and heat away from 2HenryIV. i. 1 

treasure the heat of our livers — i. 2 

rherriraent, if you take not the heat,. — ii. 4 

the heat is past, follow no — iv. 3 

worn in heat of day, that scalds — iv. 4 

eold blood to such valiant heat? Henry F. iii. 5 

and of the heat of the ginger — iii. 7 

parcliing heat displayed my cheeks. . 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

and summer's parching heat 2Henry VI. i. 1 

shall heat you thorousrlily anon (>-e/).) — v. 1 
afoot in summer's scalding beat ....SHenryVI. v. 7 

be advised ; heat not a furnace Henry VIII. i. i 

heat them, and they retort (reji.'). Troilus^ Cress, iii. 3 
renders back his figure and his heat — iii. 3 

but he, in heat of action — iv. 5 

I'll heat his blood with Greekish — v. 1 

knaves, and wine heat fools Timon of Athens, i. 1 

not in this heat, sir, now Coriolanus, iii. 1 

upon them in tlie heat of their division — iv. 3 
I had rather heat my liver . , Antony (f Cleopatra, i. 2 

you'll heat my blood; no more — i. 3 

no more the heat o' the sun, . Cymbeline, iv. 2 (soiig) 
to cool this heat, a charm to calm. Titus Andron. i\. 1 

gives heat and stronger glowing Pericles, i. 2 

to give my tongue that heat — ii, 1 

softly, do not heat your blood — iv. 1 

we must do something, and i' the heat .... Lear, i, 1 

qualified the heat of his displeasure — i. 2 

m the heat, are cursed by those that feel — v. 3 
almost freezes up the heat of life. /Jooto ^Juliet.'w. 3 

gi ving more light than heat Hamlet, i. 3 

stood between much heat and him — iii. 4 

upon the heat and flame of thy distemper — iii. 4 

heat, dry up my brains! — iv. 5 

it is a business of some heat Othello, 1, 2 

nor to comply with heat, the young .... — i. 3 

1 know Hot where is that Promethean heat — v. 2 
HEATED mine enemies Merchant of Venice, iii. 1 

[Co(.] soldiers of their heated spleen .SHenryf/. ii. I 

growing with our heated bloods — ii. 2 

with dancing is a little heated HenriiVJJl. i, 4 

HEATH-lonL' lieath Tempi's', i, 1 

upon the heath. There to meet Macbeth, i. 1 



[ 3o6 ] 



TIE A 



HEATH- upon this blasted heath Marhdh. i. 3 

HEATHEN— is turned heathen .. r(ce;/y/uV(>A/, iii. 2 

the heathen philosopher Asyou Like it, v. 1 

all in gold, like heathen gods Henry VJU. i. 1 

what, art a heathen? how dost thou, , . . Hamlet, v. 1 
on other grounds cliristian and heathen, O/AeZZo, i. 1 

most heathen, and most gi'oss I — v. 2 

HEATING— heating of the oven.. Troilus^Cress. i. 1 
HE AT'ST — thou heat'st my blood, . Loi'e's L. Lost, i. 2 
HE AVE— see me heave up. . Two Gen. of Verona, iv. 4 

with a great heart heave away King John, v. 2 

there seen, heave him away . . Heiiry V. v. (chorus) 
to heave tiie traitor Somerset from, .•iHenry VI. v. 1 

so thick, to heave; and heave SHenryVI. v. 7 

one heave ICol. Knt.-htive] at h'lm.. Henry V I [ f. ii. 2 

to heave them at all into their Coriolanus, ii. 2 

as a partizan I could not heave ..^n'o«7/^-C/*'o.Ji, 7 
she heaves them for revenge,, Titits Andronicus, iv. 1 
I cannot heave ray heart into my mouth. . Lear, i. 1 
these profound heaves; you must . , , . Hamlei, iv. 1 

begin to heave the gorge, disrelish Ofheth, ii. 1 

HEAVED— were we heaved thence Tempest, i. 2 

which the sailors heaved overboard — ii. 2 

the wretclied an imal heaved forth. /J.« yoxi Like it, ii. 1 

both togetlier heaved it up iHenry VI. i. 2 

if mine arm be heaved in the air .... — iv. 10 
one heaved a high, to be hurled . . Richard III. iv. 4 

those which I heaved to head I Cymbeline, v. 6 

she heaved the name of father pantingly.I-ea?-, iv. 3 

HEAVEN— O the heavens! ()(?p,) Tempest,!. 2 

infused with a fortitude from heaven.. — i. 2 

heavens thank you for't ! — i. 2 

my language! Heavens! — _i. 

heavens keep him from these beasts! .. — ii. 
hast thou not dropp'd from heaven? .. — ii. 

O heaven, O earth, bear witness — iii. 

heavens rain grace on that c — iii. 

give us kind keepers, heavens! — iii. 

here, :ifore heaven, I ratify this — iv, 

shall the heavens let fall to make this — iv. 

a daughter? O heavens! that they — v. 

witness lieaven, that made h^r. .TwoOen.of Ver. ii, 

as heaven from earth — ii. 

pray heaven he prove so — ii. ! 

by heaven, my wrath — ill. 

the heavens such grace did — iv, 2 (song 

■which heaven and fortune still — iv. I 

as lieaven, it knows — iv. 

O heaven be judge, how I — v. 

is nor of heaven, nor earth — v. 

O heaven! were man but constant .. — v. 
bear witness, heaven, I have — v. 

heaven ! this is mistress Anne . . Merry Wives, i. 
yet heaven may decrease it upon .... — i. 

well, heaven send Anne Page — i, 

than I do with her, I thank heaven . . — i. 

1 praise heaven for it — ■ i. 

hea ven forgive me ! — ii. 

leaving the fear of heaven on the left — ii. 

are they so? heaven bless them — ii. 

well, heaven forgive you — ii. 

heaven be praised for my jealousy!.. — ii, 

heaven prosper the right! — 41 i, 

well, heaven knows how I love you 

pray heaven it be not so 

heaven make you better than your , 
heaven forgive my sins at the day 

no, heaven so speed me in 

ne er made my will yet, I thank heaven 
a sickly creature, I give heaven praise 
now hea\'en send thee good fortune! 
heaven guide him to thy husband's . . 

pray heaven it be not full of 

hc.aVen be my witness, you do if .... 

does not serve heaven well 

heaven prosper our sport! 

heaven forgive our sins! 

heavens defend me from that 

the heavens themselves do guide 

Fen ton, heaven give tliee joy! 

heaven gi ve you many, many merry . _ 

I know his soul is in heaven, fool. Twelfth A7g-ft(, i, 5 
your brother's soul being in heaven.. — i. 5 

'if the heavens had been pleased — ii. 1 

too old, by heaven; let still — ii. 4 

the neavens rain odours on you! .... — iii. 1 
heaven restore thee ! — iii. 4 

heavens themselves! — iii. 4 

thy wits the heavens restore! — iv. 2 

and heavens so shine, that they — iv. 3 

now lieaven walks on earth — v. 1 

and whom, by heaven I swear I tender — v. 1 
heaven doth with us, as we with. .Meas.forMeas. i. 1 
heavens give safety to your purposes! — i. 1 

heaven grant us its peace — i. 2 

the words of heaven ;— on whom it will — i. 3 

well, heaven forgive him! — ii. 1 

1 detest before heaven and your honour — ii. 1 

whom, I thank heaven, is — ii. 1 

heaven give thee moving graces! — ii, 2 

heaven keep your honour! — ii, 2 

and neither heaven, nor man — ii. 2 

I would to heaven I had your potency — ii. 2 

shall we serve heaven with less — ii. 2 

use his heaven for tliiinder (rep.') .... — ii. 2 
fantastic tricks before high heaven , . — ii, 2 

pray heaven she win him! — ii. 2 

that . heaven sliall share with you.... — ii. 2 

that shall be up at heaven — ii, 2 

heaven keep your hon^iur safe! — ii, 2 

not heaven; showing, we'd not (?ep,) — ii, 3 

heaven hath my empty words — ii. 4 

heaven in my mouth, "as if I did but — ii. 4 

O heavens! whj' does ray blood — ii. 4 

heaven keep your honour! — ii, 4 

tiiat do coin heaven's image — ii, 4 

'tis set down so in heaven, but not .. — ii, i 

heaven, let me bear it! — ii. 4 

women! help heaven! men their — ii, 4 

having aff:iirs to heaven, intends .. ,. — iii, 1 



— iii, 3 

— iii, 3 

— iii. 3 



— V. 5 



V. 5 



HEAVEN— heaven! it cannot he.Meas.forMeas. iii. 1 

what should I think? heaven shield — iii. 1 

O heavens! what stufi' is here? — iii. 2 

have paid the heavens your function — iii. 2 

he who the sword of heaven will bear — iii. 2 

heaven give your spirits comfort I . . . . — i v. 2 

'tis an accident that heaven provides! — iv. 3 

give your eau?e to heaven — iv. 3 

pray heaven, his wisdom be not — iv. 4 

jjray heaven, you then be perfect .... — v. 1 

by heaven, fond wretch, thou know'st — v. 1 

heaven shield your grace from woe , . — v. I 

O heaven! the vanity of wretched foolsl — v. 1 

as there comes light from heaven . , , . — y. 1 
to heaven, Beatrice, get you to heaven. Afwc/i ,4do, ii. 1 

away to St. Peter for the heavens — ii. 1 

a sih'er bow new bent in heaven, . ..il/iVZ.A'.'s Dr. i. I 

unfolds both heaven and earth — i. I 

turned a heaven unto a hell ! — i. 1 

and make a heaven of hell — ii. 2 

heavens shield Lysander — iii. 2 

glance from heaven to earth (rep.) .. — v. 1 
IS like the heaven's glorious sun , . Love's L. Lost, i. 1 

earthly godfathers of heaven's lights — i. 1 

ay, and by heaven, one that will .... — iii , 1 
by heaven, that thou art fair, , . . — iv. 1 (letter) 

ah heavens, it is a most pathetieal hiti — iv. 1 

the welkin, the heaven — iv. 2 

that sings heaven 's praise — iv. 2 

by heaven, I do love — iv, 3 

shot, by heaven ! proceed, sweet — iv, 3 

O heavens, I have my wish — i v, 3 

by heaven, the wonder of a mortal ., — iv. 3 

w'ishedhimself the heaven's breath — iv. 3Cyer.) 

heaven show his face — iv. 3 

look upon the heaven of her brow.... — iv. 3 

by heaven, thy love is black as — iv. 3 

crest becomes the heavens well — iv. 3 

makes heaven drowsy — iv. 3 

an' the heavens were so pleased — v. 1 

by heaven, all dry-beaten with pure — v. 2 

but seeing heaven's fiery eye — v.? 

by heaveu, you did, and tn confirm . . — y. 2 
fashioned, by the hand of heaven. Afer.o/ Venice, \. 3 

for the heavens; rouse up a brave — ii, 2 

heavens; this is my true begotten — ii. 2 

in plain terms, gone to heaven — ii. 2 

iier father come to heaven — ii, 4 

heaven, and tliy thoughts, are witness — ii. 6 

spits in the face of heaven — ii. 7 

toward heaven breathed a secret — iii, 4 

there is no mercy for me in heaven . . — iii. 5 

he finds the joys of heaven here — • iii. 5 

he should never come to heaven — iii. 5 

fretted with the gusts of heaven .... — iv. 1 

from heaven upon the place beneath — iv. 1 

1 have an oath in heaven — iv. 1 

I would she were in heaven — iv. 1 

look, how the floor of heaven is thick — v. I 

by heaven, I will ne'er come in — v. I 

by heaven, it is the same I gave — v. I 

pray heaven, I be deceived in yowl As you Like it, i. 2 

for, by this heaven, now at our sorrows — i. 3 

to finil the way to heaven by doing . . — ii. 4 

I give heaven thanks — ii. 5 

till heaven hath sent me fortune .... — ii. 7 

heaven would in little show (rep.) — iii. 2 (ver.) 

heaven would that she these gifts. . — iii, 2 (ver.) 

and thawk heaven, fasting — iii. 5 

then is there mirth in heaven — v. 4 (ver.) 

Hymen from heaven brought her.. — v. 4 (ver.) 

wiiat heaven more will All's Well, i. 1 

heaven bless him I farewell Bertram — i. 1 

rf'hich we ascribe to heaven — i. I 

•.han I do for heaveu, so I were not . . — i. 3 

as heaven shall work in me — i.3 

high heaven and you, that before (rep.) — i. 3 

by the luckiest stars in heaven — i.3 

by heaven, I'll steal away — ii. 1 

tlie help of heaven we count the act — ii. 1 

of heaven, not me, make an — ii. 1 

by my sceptre, and ray hopes. of heaven — ii. 1 

ver3' hand of heaven. Ay, so I say — ii. 3 

gentlemen, heaven hath, through me — ii. 3 

and thank heaven for you — ii. 3 

one, that she's not in heaven — ii. 4 

whom heaven delights to hear — iii. 4 

a heaven on earth I have won — iv. 2 

to thank both heaven and me! — iv. 2 

and now she sin{;s in heaven — iv. 3 

where, heaven aiding, and by the leave — iv. 4 

doubt not. but heaven hath brought , . — iv. 4 

than the first, O dear heaven, bless!.. — v. 3 

the heavens have thought well on — v. 3 

you give away heaven s vows.. : .... — v. 3 
lieaven cease this idlehumonr.rnm/jio-o/S/i. 2 (ind.) 

heavens! spake you not these words — i. 2 

and heaven's artillery thunder — i, 2 

do spangle heaven with such beauty — iv, 5 
the lieavens continue their loves! . Winter's Tale, i. 1 

we should have answered heaven boldly — i. 2 

as heaven sees earth, and earth (rep.) — i. 2 

b.y each particular star in heaven. ... - i. 2 

till the heavens look vrith an aspect — ii. 1 

i' the eyes of heaven, and to you .... - ji. I 

and the heavens themselves do strike — iii. 2 

the heavens with that we have in hand — iii. 3 

1 never saw the heavens so dira by. day — iii. 3 

the earth the heavens, and all — iv, 3 

as heavens forefend! your ruin — iv. 3 

do, as the heavens have done — iv. 3 

should to the heavens be contrary,, .. — v, 1 

that 'twixt heaven and earth — v. 1 

which the heavens, taking angry note — v. 1 

blessed (as he from heaveu raerits it) — v. 1 

the heaven sets spies upon us , ._. — v. 1 

the king (whom heavens directing),. — y. 3 
light tlie heavens did grant ..Comedy of Errors, \. 1 

nothing, situate under heaven's eye — ii. 1 

in c.Trtli. in Heaven, or in hell? — ii. 2 



HKAVKN—eiiith's heaven (icii.\.ComrJyq/lin.lii. i 

iiinjiirc tliee bv nil thesttints iuheiiveii — iv. 4 

the cluiin, so lii'ln me heiivonl — v. 1 

nor hiiiveii iv.-p thrminh the hUuiket.. .Wuc6<-(A, 1. 5 

thut tlu' heiiwii's hreiith siikUs — i. 6 

or hiuvin's .•hcnihiin — i- 7 

hiisliiimlr\ in heiiven — '!• 1 

sunnn. Ills tlue 1 1 heaven, or to hell .. — i]. 1 

vet coiiM not eqnivoi'ute to heaven .. — ji. 3 

thou si-e'st the heavens, as troubled.. — n. 1 

it' il ftml heaven, must tiiul it — iji- 1 

as, an't please l\eaven, lie shall not .. — in. 6 

lieaven preserve you! I tlare abide .. — iv. ]i 

strike heaven on (he (iu'e — jv. 3 

eueli sanctity hiith heaven f-'iven — iv. 3 

how he solicits heaven. hinl^eU' — iv. 3 

merciful hea veil ;-»lmt,iiiiui! — iv. 3 

did lieaven l.iok on. and would not .. — iv. 3 

heaven rest them now: — iv. 3 

hilt, ^'vntle heaven, eiit short — iv. 3 

if he 'scape, heaven foi-ive - iv. 3 

heaven knou s « hut she has known . . — y. 1 
none, but heaven, and you, and l....Kiiii; John, i. 1 

I put you o'er to heaven, and to my — i. I 

heaven guard niv mother's honour ., — i. 1 

ilive heaven thanks, I was not tic;i.) — i. 1 

heaven lay not my transgression to . . — _i. 1 

the peace of heaven is theirs — ii. 1 

and peace ascend to heaven — ii. I 

that neat his peace to heaven — ii. 1 

crystal heads heaven shall he bribed — li. 1 

th'e invuhierahle clouds of heaven .. — ii. 1 

by lieaven, these scroyles of Anglers — ii. "2 

work upon ourselves, for heaven, or hell — ]]• t 

by heaven, ladv, you shall have .... — iii. 1 

arm, arm, you 1iea\ens, against — lii. I 

hail, you anointed deputies of heaven! — iii. 1 

as we under lieaven are supreme head — iii. 1 

heaven knows, they were besmeared — iii. I 

so jest with heaven, make such — iii. 1 

made to heaven, first be to heaven . . — iii. I 

the doom forethought by heaven .... — id. 1 

by heaven, Hubert, I am almost .... — !!'.•? 

the sun is in heaven — \\\- '^ 

to my act, bv heaven, I'd do't — iii. 3 

I would to heaven, 1 were! — iJi. 4 

and know our friends in heaven — iii. 4 

meet him in the court of heaven — iii* 4 

tongues of heaven, plainly denouncing — iii. 4 

and X would to heaven, I were } our sou — iv. 1 

if heaven be pleased that you must .. — iv. I 

for heaven's sake, Hubert, let uie .. .. — iv. 1 

() heaven, that there were but — iv. I 

the breath of heaven hath blown .... — iv. 1 

O heaven! I thank you, Hubert — iv. I 

to seek the beauteous eye of heaven — i v. 2 

the last account 'twixt heaven and earth — iv. i 

heaven take my soul, and England.. — iv. 3 

by heaven, I think, my sword s as .. — iv. 3 

isfled to heaven; and 'England now is — iv. 3 

heaven itself-duth frown ujiou the laud — iv. 3 

but, heaven bo thanked, it is — v. I 

seen the vaulty top of heaven figured — V. 2 

warrant from the hand of heaven — v. 2 

6Un of heaven, methought, was loth — v. .'i 

intlignation, mighty heaven, and tempt — v. u 

where heaven he knows, how we — v. 7 

my soul shall wait on thee to hea\eii — v. 7 

until the heavens, envying earth's . . liklmid II. i. I 

first, heaven be the record to my .... — i. I 

soul answer it in heaven — i. 1 

quarrel to the will of heaven — i- 2 

lieaven's is the quarrel, for heaven's — i. 2 

let heaven re\engc: for I may never — i. 2 

CJinplain myself? To heaven — i. 2 

80 defend thee hea\cn, and thy valonri — i. 3 

which, heaven defend, a knight should — i. 3 

as I truly fight, defend me heavenl . . — i. 3 

by heaven's grace, and my body's .. — i. 3 

neaven in tliy good cause make — i. 3 

however heaven, or fortune cast — i. 3 

the duty that you owe to heaven .... — i.- 3 

80 help .vou truth and heaven! — i. 3 

and I from heaven banished — i. 3 

all places that the eye of heaven visits — i. 3 

now, put it. heaven, in his physician's — _i. 4 

whom fair befal in heaven 'mongst . . — ii. 1 

now, afore heaven, 'tis shame — ii. 1 

now God in heaven forbid ^- ii. 2 

for heaven's sake, speak comfortable — ii. 2 

fright the fixed stars of heaven — ii. 1 

my comfort is, that heaven will take — iii. 1 

for heaven's sake, fairly let her — iii. I 

heaven yields must lie embraced (re/>.) — iii. 2 

when the searching eye of heaven is hid — iii. 2 

for heaven still guards the right .... — iii. 2 

for heaven's sake, let us sit upon .... — iii. 2 

by heaven, I'll hate him everlastingly — iii. 2 

the lieavena are o'er your head — iii. 3 

the cloudy checks of heaven — iii. 3 

the king of heaven forbid, our lord .. — iii. 3 

by heaven, I'll throw at all — iv. I 

as false, by luaven, a'< heaven itself.. — iv. 1 

stirred up by hea\ en tlius boldly for — iv, 1 

if heaven do tliiiik him mc — iv. 1 

damned in the liook of heaven — iv. 1 

but heaven hath a hand in tliese — v. 2 

like the metcorsof a troubled heaven. I UeurylV. i. 1 

by heaven, metliinks, it were an .... — i. 3 

by heaven, he shall not have a .Scot.. — i. 3 

shall the ble-ssed sun of heaven prove — ii. 4 

he wisheth you in heaven — iii. I 

the front of heaven «a.s full — iii. I 

the heavens were all on fire, the earth — iii. 1 

down from these suclling heavens .. — iii. 1 

vengeance and the rcKl of heaven .... — iii. 2 

I stoic all courtesy from heaven .... — iii. 2 

thirty years; heaven reward me for iti — iii. 3 

by heaven. I cannot fiatter! I defy .. — iv. I 

pray heaven, you do! — iv. 3 



IIEAVEX I.M. lu uMii t.i earth illeiinjll'.v. 2 

and litiiv.n Imi I, nl, M ^hiillow scratch — v. 4 

bv heiiMu. Ihoii !ki~1 .lieeivedme — v. 4 

take thv praise willi tliee to heavenl — v. 4 

good, all' heuv^-ii will! Asgoml •iHenrylV. \. 1 

whicl- 1 would to lieuven Iliad not 6een — i. 1 

lei livavvn kls.^unth! - i. 1 

derives fioniheuvonliisquaiTel - i. 1 I 

well, lieaven nu-na liiln! I pray .... — i. 2 

well, heaven send the prince a better — i. 2 

didst th,. 11 bent lu-aveii witli blessing — i. 3 

as the sun in the grev vault of heaven — ii. 3 

gro« and sprout us hi^'il as heaven .. — ii. 3 

to patch lip thine old body for heaven? — ii. 4 

bv heaven, I'oins, 1 feel me much.... — ii. 4 

(I heaven! tliat one ini^ht read' — iii. 1 

thou'-di tlieij, luaven knows, I had no — iii. I 

a tiill geullenuin, bv heaven, and a most — iii. 2 

in peii'ee. whic'ri lieaven so frame! — iv. 1 

the sanctities of heaven, and our dull — iv. 2 

the einiiitenuiRV and grace of heaven — iv. 2 

a-iiiiist tile pence of heaven and him — iv. 2 

heiiven, and lint «e, hath safelv — iv, ■-' 

now, lords, if ileal en doth give successful — iv. 4 

fioiii enemies lieiiveii keeii lour majesty — iv. 4 

here it sits, wliicli lic.nen shall guard — iv. 4 

heaven witness with me, when 1 — iv. 1 

O my son! heaven put it in thy mind — iv. 4 

heaven knows, my son, li.\' what by-iiaths — iv. 4 

and heaven save your majesty 1 — v. a 

by heaven, I bid you 1 le assured — v. 2 

heaven shorten liuny's hajipy life .. — v. 2 
praise heaven for the merry year . . — v. 3 (song) 

the heavens thee L'uard and keep .... — v. A 

for heaven dotli know, so shall the . . — v. :> 
brightest lu'aieii of invention! ..lleiiiijV. i. (chorus) 

true: therefore dotli heaven divide .. — j. 2 

he is, eitlier in heaven, or in hell!..., — ;;■ 3 

by gift of heaven, by law of nature .. — ii- 4 

the I.ord in heaven ulcss thee — iv. 1 

withered hands hold up toward heaven — iv. 1 

till we meet hi heaven, then, joyfully — iv. 3 

their honours reeking U|i to heaven .. — iv. 3 

thine keep coinpanv to heaven — iv. 6 

hung be the heax ens with black \liciinjri.\. 1 

witli adverse planets in the heavens! — j. 1 

eveu as in the heavens, so in the .... — i. 2 

a vision sent to her from heaven — i. 2 

heaven, and our lady gracious, hath it — i- 2 

to look to heaven for grace? — i. 4 

heaven, be thou gracious to none .... — i. 4 

what tumult's in the heavens? — i. 4 

heavens, can you Buffer hell so to.... — i. 

the heavens, sure, favour htm — ii. 1 

hea\ens keep old Bedford safe I — iii. 2 

depart when heaven please — iii- 2 

heavens have glory fortius victory!.. — iTi. 2 

with soul from France to heaven fly — iv. S 

at the gates of heaven — v. t 

now heaven forefend: the holy — \'. 4 

together lift our heads to heaven . . . .'IHemu VI. i. 2 

your grace could fl.y to heaven? — ii. I 

thy heaven is on earth; thine eyes .. — ii. 1 

tolieaven I do appeal, how I — ii. I 

blow ten thousand souls to heaveu .. — iii. 1 

nor let the rain of heaven wet this place — iii. 2 

thou eternal mover of the heavens — iii. 3 
if thou think'st on heaven's bliss .... — iii. 3 

save to the God of heaven — iv. 1 

wing wherewith we fly to heaven .. .. — iv. 7 

and iieavens and honour be witness.. — iv. 8 

then, heaven, set ope thy evei lasting — iv. 'J 

wrong'st me.heaven be myjudge — iv. lu 

by heaven, thou shalt rule no (rep.).. — v. I 

dis[)ense with heaven for such an oath — v. 1 

if not in heaven, you'll siu'ely sup in hell — v. 1 

peace with his soul, heaven — v. 2 

whom angry heavens do make — v. 2 

knit earth and heaven together! .... — v. 2 

can we outrun the heavens? — y . 2 

1 vfiw by heaven, these eyes shall.. ..ZlleuryVI. i. 1 
if I be not. heavens, be revenged on me! — i. 1 
I throw mine eyes to heaven, scorning — i. 4 
my soul to heaven, my blood upon .. — i. 4 
ill this the heaven figures some event — ii- 1 

which peril heaven forfeiul! — ii. 1 

smile, gentle heaven! or strike — ii. 3 

thy brazen gates of heaven may ope — ii. 3 

where'er it be, in heaven, or on earth — ii. 3 

fity, gentle heaven, pity! — ii. .'> 

'11 make iny heaven in a lady's lap — iii. 2 

I'll make my heaveu to dream upon — iii. 2 

yet heavens are just, and time — iii. 3 

heavens grant that Warwick's words — iii. 3 

in si'dit of heaven, and by the hope. . — iii. 3 

to wliom the heavens^ in thy nativity — iv. (i 

farewell, to meet again in heaven.... — v. 2 

which, by the heavens' assistance .... — v. 4 

by heaven, brat, I'll plague you .... — v. 5 

heaven. I will not do thee so much ease — v. 5 

since the hea\ens have shaped my body — v. 6 
by heaven, I think, there is noman.rt/c/irtM/ ///. i. 1 

thy sonl toheuv.n. iflieaveu will take — i. I 

lie iiacki:d with p'l-thorM' lip to heaven — i. I 

cither, lu:aven. witli lightning strike — i. 2 

kingof luaven that hath liini (rfH.) — i. 2 

theheavensluLvehlessed von with .. — i. 3 

by heaven. I will arouaint his majesty — i. 3 

curse prevail so miiili witli laaveii .. — i. 3 

|)ierce the clouds, and enter heaven ! — i. 3 

if heaveu have any grievous plague.. — i. 3 

thrahloin to the joys of heaven — i. 4 

by heaven, the duke shall know .... — i. 4 

in peace my soul shall part to heaven — ii. 1 

by heaven, my soul is purged from . . — ii. 1 

tills do I beg of heaven — il. 1 

all-seeing heaven, what a world .... — li. I 

t<i be thiiH opposite with heaven — ii. 2 

God in heaven forbid we shoulil infringe — iii. I 

until we meet again in heaven — iii. 3 



II EA'VKN— heaven, we come to Hichard III. iii. 

let not the heavens liear these — iv. 

covered with the face ol' heaven — iv. 

n» long as heaven, and iiatiiie — iv. 

heaven, and fortune, bur me happy.. — iv. 

for the H-lf-sanie luaven, that frowns — v.; 

if not to heuven, then liniid in hand — v.; 

great God of heaven, say amen to all I — v. 

smile hea\ en upon this fair conjunction — v. 

a gift that heaven gives for him lirnryVIII. i. 

I cannot tell what heaven hath given — i. 

the will of heaven be done (rep.) .... — i. 

whose honour heaven shield from soil ! — i. 

where this heaven of beauty shall shine — i- 

by heaven, she is a dainty one — i. 

yet, heaven bear witness — ii. 

and lift my soul to heaven — ii. 

vou meet him half in heaven — ii. 

heaven has an end in all — ji. 

heaven keep me from such counsel! — ii. 

heaven will one day oi/en the king's eyes — ii. 

heaven's peace be with him! — ii. 

no, not for all the riches under heaven — ii. 

lieaven witness. I have been to you.. — ii. 

I stood not in ilie smile of heaven .. — ii. 

heaven ir; above ali yet — iii. 

take heed, for heaven's sake, take heed — iii. 

loved him next heaven? obeyed him? — iji. 

but heaven knows your hearts — jii. 

it's heaven's will; some spirit put .. — iii. 

heaven forgive me! ever God bless .. — iii. 

my pru vers to heaven for yon — iii. 

heavy for a man that hoix;s for heaven — iii. 

and my integrity to heaven, is all . . — iii. 

my hopes in neaven do dwell — iii. 

heaven bless thee! thou hast — iv. 

cast her fair eyes to heaven — iv. 

his blessed pait to heaven, and slept — iv. 

prav, pray. Heaven comfort her .... — iv. 

the"dewsof heaven fall thick — iv. 

loved him, heaven knows how dearly t — iv. 

if heaven had pleased to have — jv. 

by heaven, I will; or let me lose — iv. 

the God of heaven both now and ever — v. 

pray heaven, he sound not my disgrace! — v. 

pray heaven, the king may never.... — v. 

tis the right ring, by heaven — v. 

how much are we bound to heaveu . . — v. 

and let heaven witness, how dear — — v. 

lieaven, from thy endless goodness . . — v. 

heaven ever laid up to make parents — v. 

let me speak, sir, for heaven now bids — v. 

this royal infant, (heaven still move — v. 

when heaven shall call her from — v. 

wherever the bright sun of heaven .. — v. 

children shall see this, and bless heaven — v. 

when I am in heaven, I shall desire. . — v. 

axlctrec on whicli heaven rides .. V'loiYus ffCiea. i. 

the heavens themselves, the plonets — i. 

now lieai'ens forbid such scarcity — \. 

heaven bless thee from a tutor — ii- 

av; the heavens hear me! — ii. 

thank the heavens, lord, thou art — Jj. 

O heavens! what have I done? — iii. 

heavens, what a man is there! — i;i. 

(^ heavens, what some men do — iii. 

farewells as be stars in heaven — iv. 

Oheavens! be true, again? (rep.).... — iv. 

heaven in your cheek, pleads — iv. 

tell me, you heavens, in which part of — iv. 

answer me, heavens! It would discredit — iv. 

who neither looks upon the heaven .. — iv. 

of heaven: Instance, O instance! {rep.^ — v. 

for the heavens, sweet brother — v. 

fool's play, by heaven. Hector — v. 

the flame of yonder glorious heaven — v. 

frown on, yoti heavens, effect your . . — v. 1 

heavens, that I were a lord! Timon ojjrheni, i. 

I'll lock thy heaven from thee — _i. 

heavens, have X said, the bounty — ii. 

roots, you clear heavens! — iv. 

or dost thou not, heaven's curse upon — iv. 

the abhorred births below crisp heaven — iv. 

in all the spite of wrcakful heaven . . — iv. 

X show, heaven knows, is merel.v love — iv. 

not all the whips of heaven are large — v. 
may as well strike at the heaven . . . Coriolanus. i. 

heavens bless mv lordfroni fell Anfidius! — i. 

by the fires of heaven, I'll leave the fi-c — i. 

Oheavens! (J heavens! Nay, I pr'ythee — iv. 

O blessed heavens! More noble blows — iv. 

heaveu will not have earth to know — iv. 

by the jealous queen of heaven — v. 

behoM, the heavens do ope — v, 

and a heaven to throne in — v. 

there is a civil strife in heaven JuliutCo'tor, i. 

who ever knew the heavens menace so? — i. 

to open the breast of heaven, I did .. — i. 

did you so much tempt the heavens? — j. 

the strange impatience of the heavens — i. 

that heaven hath infused them with — j. 

nor heaven, nor earth, have been — ii. 

the heavens themselves blaze forth .. — ji. 

(> Brutus! the heavens speed thee .. — u. 

by heaven, I had rather coin my heart — iy, 
needs find out new heaven . . Autoiiy ff Clcupatra^ i. 

our worser thoughts heavens mendl — i, 

init wius a race of heaven — i. 

seem as the snots of heaven — i. 

ascended to the roof of heaven — ill. 

breathe between the heavens and eiu-th — iii. 1 

heait let heaven engender hail — lit.: 

that heaven and earth may strike .. — iv. 

his face was as the heavens — v. 

that kiss, which is my heaven to have — v. 

no more obey the heavens Cymbeline, i. 

almost, sir: lieaven restore me! — i. 

tor then I am in heaven for him — i. 

but, heavens know, some men ari' .. — i. 

but yet, heaven's bounty towards him — i. 



HEA 



[ 358 



, ii. 1 



i. 2 



iv. 1 



iv. 3 



_ iv. 3 

— iv. 3 

— iv. 4 
icles,i. (Gow.) 



— i. 1 



HE AVEN— the heavens hold firm . . Cymbel. 

with blue of heaven's own tinct — "• ^ 

the lark at heaven's gate sings — ii. 3 (song) 

instructs vou how to adore the licavons — -_\i- S 
hail, thou fair heaven, we house i' the — in- 3 

hail, heaven! Hail, l>eii von! — '!!• 3 

paid more pious debts to heaven — — in- 3 
Cymbeline! heaven, and my conscience — ii;- 3 
grant, heavens, that which I fear .. — }!!■■? 

Bueh afoe, good heaveus! — V'- [j 

yet left in heaven as small a drop. ... — iv. ^ 
murder in heaven? how? 'tis gone .. — ;v. '. 
heavens, how deeply you at once do — iv. 3 

the heaveus still must work — iv. 3 

by heavens, I'll go: if you will bless me — iv. 4 
therefore, good heavens, hear patiently — v. 1 
all was lost, but that the lieavens fought — v. 3 

heavens, how they wound! — v. 3 

opened, in despite of lieaven and men — v. o 

iu tliy feeling. Heaven mend all! — v. 5 

these covering heavens fall on — v. .^ 

to inlay heaven witli stars — v. 5 

whom lieavens, in justice — , \- "J 

in sight of heaven, to Rome I swear. . 7 dusAud. i. a 
sent by the heavens for prince Saturnine — 
by device, or no, tlie heavens can tell — 
and the righteous heavens be my .iudge — 
and vow to heaven, and to his higliiiess — 
your lust, shadowed from heaven's eye — 
never hopes more heaven tlian I'ests — 

by heaven, it shall not go — 

I lift this one hand up to lieaven — — 
for heaven shall hear our prayers . . — 
when heaven doth weep, dotli not . . — 
nor hold thy stumps to heaven ...... — 

till the heavens reveal the damned . . — 
or else to heaven she heaves them . . — 
heaven guide thy pen to print thy . . — 
O heavens, can you hear a good man — 
revenge tiie heavens for old Andronicus! — 
which I would hide from heaven's eye — 
with Jove in heaven, or somewhere . . — 

we will solicit heaven — 

news, news from heaven ! Marcus . . — 
come from heaven? From heaven . . — 
to press heaven in my yoiuig days . . — 
he writes to heaven for his redress . 
heaven had lent her all his grace., i'l 

her face, like heaven, enticeth thee 

see heaven, but feeling woe 

that give heaven countless eyes to — 
draw heaven down, and all the gods . . 
casts copped liills towards lieaven — 

heaven that I had thy headl 

how dare the plants look up to heaveu 

and high heaven forbid, that kings 

if heaveu slumber, wliile their creatures 

but see what heaven can do ! 

the curse of heaven and men succeed. . 

ye angry stars of heaven ! 

wliich heaven makes like to itself 

a fire from heaven came, and shriveled 

to bar heaven's shaft, but sin had 

which wash both lieaven and hell — 

water, earth, and heaven can make 

tlie heavens, sir, tln-ough you, increase 

and the gentlest winds of heaven 

of aU the faults beneath the heavens . . — iv. 4 
heavens forgive it ! and as for Pericles — „i^'- ■* 
birthchild on the heavens bestowed — iv. 4 (Gow.) 

O heavens bless my girl! — v. 1 

heavens make a star of him ! — v. 3 

led on by heaven, and crowned — — v. 3 (Gow. ) 
heaven and earth! Edmund, seek liim out. Lear, i. 2 

notmad, sweet heaven I keep me in 

thou out of heaven's benediction comest 

stored vengeances of heaven fall 

O heavens, if you do love old men 

you heavens, give me that patience 

and sliow the heavens more j ust 

broke them in the sweet face of heaven . . 
O heavens! that this treason were not ., 

he holp the heavens to rain 

now, heaven lielp him ! 

thou whom the heaven's plagues 

heavens, deal so still ! 

if that tlie heavens do not their visible . 
tlie bounty and the benison of heaven. . . 

shall bring a brand from heaven 

and bellowed out as he'd burst heaveu . 

thisjudgment of the heavens — v. 3 

I'd use thera so that heaven's vault — v. 3 

tliat make dark heaven light Romeo ^Juliet, i. 2 

fairest stars in all tlie heaven — ii. 2 

her eye in heaven would through — ii. 2 

a winged messenger of lieaven — ii. 2 

not yet thy sighs from heaven — ii . 3 

now, God in heaven bless thee ! — 

smile tlie heavens upon this holy act — 
away to heaven respective lenity — — 
he will make the face of heaven so fine — 
can heaveu be so envious? (rep.) .... — 
heaven is here, where Juliet lives . . — 
live here in heaven, and may look on — 
the heaven, and earth? since birth (rep.) — 
whose notes do beat the vanity heaven — 

God in heaven bless her! — 

on earth, my faith in heaven — 

Bend it me from heaven by leaving earth — 
alack, that heaven should practise . . 
to move the Ireavens to smile upon . . 
heaven and yourself had part (rep.) — 

but heaven keeps his part — 

'twas your heaven, she should be ... . — 

as high as heaven itself — 

the heavens do lower upon you — 

by heaven, I will tear tliee joint by joint — 

by heaven, I love thee better — 

O heavens! Owifel look how our .. — 
bear this work of heaveu with patience — 



— iii. 3 



— ii. 3 



HEAVEN— heaven finds means. . Romeo Sr Juliet, v. 3 

to illume that part of heaven Huvilel, i. I 

by heaven I charge thee, speak — i- ) 

have heaven and earth together — !• ' 

a will most incorrect to lieaven — }•'- 

fie, 'tis a fault to heaven — !• 2 

the heaven sliall bruit again, re-speaking — i. i 

the winds of heaven visit her (rep.) — i- ' 

O heaven! a beast, that wants discourse — i. 2 

in heaven or ever I had seen that day . . — i. 2 

tlie steep and thorny way to heaven — ;• 3 

almost all the holy vows of heaven — ;■ 3 

bring with thee airs from heaven — ;• 1 

bv lieaven, I'll make a ghost of him. . — i. 4 

heaven will direct it. Nay, let's follow.. — i. 4 

O heaven! Kevenge his foul and most.. — i. -J 

lewdness court it in a shape of heaven . . — i. 5 

leave her to heaven, and to those thorns — \- !> 

O all you host of heaven! Dearth! — i. 5 

with baser matter: yes, by heaven — i- 5 

heaven secure him I Sobeit — }■ ^ 

not I, my lord, by heaven — i- & 

av, by heaven, my lord — ;• 5 

more things in heaven and earth — i. 5 

witli what in the name of lieaven? — >;• j 

as oft as any passion under heaven — — i;. [ 

rco;.] heaven, it is as proper to our age — n- ' 

heavens make our presence, and our .. — i;- 2 

your ladyship is nearer to heaven — ii- 2 

a silence in tlie heavens, the rack — n- 2 

round nave down the hill of heaven — i; ■ '- 

made milch the burning eyes of heaven — ii. 2 

to my revenge by heaven and hel 1 — — ,i | • ^ 

do crawling between earth and heaven? — iii- 1 

O, help him,;you sweet heavens! — in- J 

O heavens! die two months ago — ]]]■' 

to me give food, nor heaven light! — — n\-'^ 

ray offence is rank, it smells to heaven — in. 3 

rain enougli in tlie sweet heavens — in- 3 

he goes to lieaven : and so am I revenged — iii- 3 

do tliis same villain send to heaven — — in- 3 

audit stands, who knows, save heaveu? — 111-3 

that his heels may kick at heaven — — in- 3 

without thoughts, never to heaven go — in- 3 
heaven's face doth glow; yea, this solidity — in- 4 

confess yourself to heaven ; repent — in- 4 

but heaveu hath pleased it so — m- 4 

in heaven; send thither to see .... — iv. 3 

by heaven, thy madness shall be paid _ — iv. 5 
O heavens! is't possible, a young maid's — iv. 5 

as 'twere from heaven to earth — iv- 5 

even in that was heaven ordinant — v. 2 

the cannons to the heavens, the heaven — v. 2 

heaven make thee free of it ! — v. 2 

let go; by heaven, I'll have it — X- ^ 

by heaven, I rather would have been his. Othello, i. 1 
heaven is my judge, not I for love — i- J 

heaven! how sot slie out? — ;• 1 

heaven I do confess the vices of my blood — i. 3 
and hills whose heads touch heaven . . — i. 3 
yet she wished that heaven had made — i- 3 

vouch with me, heaven — 1-3 

and heaven defend your good souls — .1-3 

1 cannot, 'twixt the heaven and the mam — ii. 1 
pray heaven, he be, for I have served liim — ii. 1 
O let the heavens give him defence .... — n- 
the grace of heaven, before, behind thee — ii. ! 
duck again as low as hell's from heaven ! — ii. 1 
the heavens forbid, but that our loves — n. 1 

heaven bless the isle of Cyprus — n- 2 

'fore heaven, tliey have given me a rouse — ii- "■ 

'fore heaven, an excellent song — )!• ' 

heaven's above all; and there De souls — u. S 
which heaven hath forbid the Ottoniites? — n- i 
by heaven, my blood begins my safer . . — ii- ; 
past all surgei-y. Marry, heaven forbid! " • 

3y heaven, ne [Kn(.-alas! thou] 



V. 3 



ii. 4 
ii. 6 
iii. 1 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 



— iv. 3 



V. 3 



_ iii. 3 



by heaven, I'll know thy thoughts — in- 3 

good heaven, the souls of all my tribe — in- 3 

in Venice they do let heaven see — \»- 3 

false, O then heaven mocks itself ! — nj- 3 

heaven knows, not I; I nothing — in. 3 

do deeds to make heaven weep — "!- 3 

O grace ! O heaven defend me ! — nj- 3 

fond love thus do I blow to heaven — in- 3 

now, bv yond' marble heaven — ni. 3 

would to heaven, tliat I had never seen it — in- 4 
heaven bless us! Say you? It is not lost — 111-4 

pray heaven, it be state matters — in- 4 

heaven keep that monster from Othello s — in. 4 
virtue tempts, and they tempt heaven — iv. 1 
by heaven, I would most gladly have torgot — iv. 1 
Imock you! no, by heaven........--.-. — iv- j 

lieaven.that should be my haudkercluef? — iv. 1 
he is not: I would to heaven he were . . — iv. 1 
let heaven requite it with the serpent s — iv. i 
lest, being like one of heaven, the devils — iv. J 
heaven doth truly know it. Heaven truly — iv. 2 
pleased heaven to try me with affliction — iv. 2 
heaven stops the nose at it, and the moon — iv. i 
by heaveu, yon do me wrong. Ai-e not you — iv. 2 
O heaven forgive us! I cry you mercy — iv- 2 

nay, heaven doth know- I will be hanged — iv. J 
If any such there be, heaven pardon lum ! — iv. 2 

O heaven, that such companions — iv. 2 

for, by this light of heaven, I know not — iv. 2 
heaven me such usage send, not to pick — iv. 3 
here, here, for heaven's sake, help me . . — v. 1 
leg is cut in two. Marry, heaven forbid! — v. 1 

yes, sure: O heaven! Roderigo — v. 1 

unreconciled as yet to heaven and grace — v. 2 
heaven forefend ! I would not kill thy soul! — v. 2 

then heaven have mercy on me ! — v. - 

warranty of lieaven as I might love — v. 2 

by heaven. I saw my handkerchief — v. 2 

deed of thine is no more worthy heaven — v. 2 
O lieavens forefend! And your reports — v. 2 

O heaven! O heavenly powers! - v.. 

heaven, and men, and devils, let tliem all — v. z 
by heaven, I do not; I do not, gentlemen — v. 2 



HEA 

HEAVEN— are there no stones in heaven. Othello, v. 2 

of thine will hurl my soul from heaven — v. 2 

HEAVEN-BRED poesy. . . . TwoGen. of Verona, iii. 2 

HEAVEN-KISSING liill Hamlet, iii. 4 

HEAVENLY— tell me, heavenly how. .Tempest, iv. 1 

required some heavenly music — v. 1 

some heavenly power guide ns ■ — v. 1 

heavenly Julia! Tuw Gen. of Verona,\. 3 

is she not a lieavenly saint? — ii- 4 

aspire to guide tlie heavenly car — — iii- 1 
the promise for her heavenl.y picture — iv. 4 

1 caught thee, my heavenly jewel?/!/*)-)!/ I^ives, iii. 3 
to make her lieaveiil.y comtovts.. Meas.fm- Metis, iv. 3 
[Kn(.] uttered heavenly (rep.). Much .-ida, v. 3 (song) 
not the heavenly rhetoric . . Love'sL.L. iv. 3 (verses) 
was earthly, thou a heavenly love — iv. 3 (verses) 
wlio sees the heavenly Rosaline — — iv. 3 
out of your favours, heavenly spirits — v. 2 
breaking cause to be of lieavenly oaths — v. 2 

if, in your heavenly eyes — v. 2 

those heavenly eyes, that look into . . — v. 2 
contains her heavenly picture. A/erc/i. of Venice, ii. 7 
should play some heavenly match .. — iii. 5 

but lieavenly Rosalind! As yoiiL'l(e it, i. 2 

by heavenly synod was devised — iii. 2 (verses) 

a showing of a heavenly effect Mi's Well, ij. 3 

patroness of heavenly harmony.. J'ainmi'o/S/i. iii. 1 
eyes become that heavenly face? — — iv. 5 
he hath a heavenly gift of prophecy . . Macbeth, iv. 3 
in hea\'enly pay a glorious angel . . Richard II. iii. 2 
bv this lieavenly ground I tread on..'iHe>ir!/I V. ii. I 
nfiay heavenly glory brighten it! — — ii. 3 
O heavenlv God! How fares my — iUenryVI. iii. 2 
so Sutfolk'had thy heavenly company — iii. 2 
Dy thehopelhave of heavenly bliss.S H?nn/r/. iii. 3 
but 'twas thy heavenly face that set. R/c/iaid ///.. i.2 

mind, and heavenly Iilessings Henry VIIJ. ii. 3 

you are full of heavenly stuff — iii. 2 

and heavenly thoughts still counsel her — v. 4 
nothing but heavenly business. yroZ/us <5- Cress, iv. 1 
shudders, and to heavenly agues . Timon of Ath. iv. 3 
O heavenly mingle! be'st thou ..Antony SrCtea.i.b 

though this a heavenly angel Cymleline,\\. 2 

flow! you heavenly blessings, on her! — iii. 5 
heard the heavenly harmony.. 7'!7«s^ndron!cws,ii. h 

cases to those heavenly jewels J'ericles, iii. 2 

most heavenly music; it nips me — v. 1 

fools, by heavenly compulsion Lear, i. 2 

the holv water from her heavenly eyes . . — iv. 3 
name, speaks heavenly eloquence. Womeo ^Jul. iii. 2 

heavenly powers restore him! Hamlet, ui. 1 

with your wings, you heavenly guards! — iii. 4 
do suggest at first with heavenly shows. Othello, ii. 3 

heavenly light! nor I neither (reij.) — iv. 3 

this sorrow s heavenly;) it strikes — v. 2 

O she was heavenly true ! — v. 2 

O heaven ! O heavenly powers ! — v. 2 

from the possession of this heavenly sight! — v. 2 

HEAVENLY-HARNESSED team.l Henry IV. iii. 1 

HEAVEN-MOVING pearls King John, ii. 1 

HEAVIER— sin of lieavier kind.. ilfeos./oril/ras. ii. 3 

'twill be heavier soon Much Ado, iii. 4 

the heavier for a husband? — iii. 4 

doth heavier grow for debt . . Mid. N.'s Dream, iii. 2 

are heavier than all thy woes Winter's Tale, iii . 2 

heavier task could not have heea.Comedy of Err. i. 1 

for thee remains a heavier doom Richard J I. i. 3 

woe doth tlie heavier sit — i. 3 

tongue hath but a heavier tale — iii. 2 

griefs heavier than our offences — iHenrylV. iv. 1 
peace be with us, lest we be heavier! — v. 2 

fightlv, were it heavier Richard HI. iii. 1 

tlie heavier for a wliore Troilus Sr Cressida, iv. 1 

brain the heavier for being too light. Cymbeline, v. 4 

HEAVIEST— the most heaviest. TuoGen.of Ver. iv. 2 

possess them with the heaviest soiwi. Macbeth, iv. 3 

the heaviest, and the worst Henry VIII. iii. 2 

laws, at heaviest answer Timon of Athens, v. 5 

or endure your heaviest censure Coriolanus, v. 5 

that grasped the heaviest (ivLh..Antony Sr Cleo. iv. 10 
HEAVILY-how heavily this befel.Mea.forMea. iii. 1 
sigh and groan, heavily, heavily.3/uc/iJdo,v. 3 (song) 
heavily, heavily [A'n/.-heavenly (rep.)'] — v. 3 (song) 
thou siialt be heavily punished . . Love's L. Lost,_ i. 2 
tidings, which I have heavily borne ..Macbeth, iv. 3 
looks your gi-ace so heavily to day?.nic/iarc(/i/. i. 4 
with a man that looks not heavily . . — ii- 3 
it goes so heavily with my disposition. .JJum^cJ.ii. 2 

HEAVINESS— put heaviness in me Tempest, i. 2 

with a heaviness that's gone — y. 1 

sorrow's heaviness doth heavier grow. Mid. N. Dr. in. 2 
quicken his embraced heaviness.. Mer. of Venice, ii. 8 
at the height of heart lieaviness . . As you Like it, v. 2 
to lay aside life-harming heaviness .KicAard //. ii. 2 
your blood with pleasin" heaviness.! Henry IV. iii. 1 
but heaviness foreruns the good — 2HenrylV. iv. 2 
1 am here, brother, full of heaviness — iv. 4 
Btrengtli is all gone into heaviness./ln<. ^-CTeo. iv. 13 
heaviness and guilt within my bosom. Cymbeline, v. 2 
toolight, being drawn of heaviness .. — .y. 4 
weep to see his grandsire's heaviness. 7'«7t(s.4nd. in. 2 

in the heaviness of his sleep Lear, iy. 7 

she'sinewednp to I.er heaviness.. /fomeo<S-Ju(. in. 4 

to put thee fipim thy heaviness — 111.5 

HEAVING— heaving of my lungs. Z-oue sL.Lost, in. 1 

sigh at each his needless heavings. Wmter sTale, n. 3 

performance of our heaving spleens. Troil. Sr Cres. 11 . 2 

HEAVY— asleep, for I am very htavyl.. Tempest, 11. 1 

donotomittheheavy offer ofit — n. 1 

thank you : wondrous heavy — .11. 1 

my mean task would be as heavy to me — 111. 1 
is it too heavy for so light a time. Two Gen. of Ver. i. 2 

heavy ? belike it hath some — ..1.2 

lumpish, lieavy, melancholy — ni. 2 

my mind is heavy Merry Wives, ly. 6 

under whose heavy sense . . Measure for Measure, 1. 5 

thou bear'st thy heaiT riches — in. 1 

upon the heavy middle of the night. . — iv. 1 
of dumps so dull and heavy . . Much Ado, 11. 3 (song) 
indeed that tells a lieavy tale for him — iii. 2 



IIKAVY— heart i« excccdine \\eii\y'...MucliAJu, Hi. 4 
ollicrwisc 'tis lixUt, and not liciivv . . — iii. 4 
O futc, (nko not iiwny tliy licavy Imndl — iv. I 

licr lUiith slmll tiiU honvv on you — v. 1 

iimlurunv lu;ivv \Mit;lit"tlmt he'll .. — v. I 
heauil.il til.' hiiivv K^'it otiii-ht. .>/.</. N. Dieam,v. 1 
whilst Uii- lii'uvv |iliiui:hnmn snurcs.. — v. 2 
my spirit k'lows hiuvv in love .. ..Uoe'tL.Lost^x. i 

isnotlemi u metal l\i:ivv,iliiU — iii. 1 

o hurvest nftlicii- lu:ivv i,iil _ iv. 3 

eiul, uiullu'.ivv: .imUusluMlicil — v. 2 

lu-ws I liriii.', is liviivv in my tongue — V. 2 

nliriivviuMrl I.Lnrsnnt.iluimhlc... — v. 2 
nnikcs'it li:;lit, ..r hravv . . Mndmnl o/lnnice, iv. I 

doth miiki' 11 hc;ivv liu-liiu\il — v. I 

bnrdcn ot'luavv tcilimis \Kuniy. .AsyouLikril, iii. 2 
not in niattiT ol'lii'nvy i-oiisiqiicncc...J«'» MVH, ii. 6 

yonder i(* heavy news ^\ ithin — iii. 2 

a clmrge tmi heavy tor my strength. . — iii. 3 
cvcrv word weigh heavy of lier worth — iii. I 
my fieiirt is heavy, and mine age.... — iii. 1 

she ceased, in lieavy satislUetioii — v. 3 

heavy chani'C 'twixt l\ini and yi>n. Tiimini; ii/Sli.\. 2 
Yet as heavy as my weight siu>nld be — _ii. I 
licavy matters! heavy matters! . . IVintei'sTaie, iii. 3 

sntl'er what wit ean nnike heavy — iv. 3 

this week lie hatli been hcavy.CoHict/i/o/ii'/Tors, v. 1 
mv heavy biirileiis arc delivered .... — v. I 
biit iiiuler lieuvv jiaU'inent bears that.. -UncicW, i. 3 



as li> 



a lieavv snmiiiDns lies like lead — ii. 1 

wli.i>elieavy li;iiid luilli bowed — ni. 1 

a liea\'\' curse JVoiii liome tiiuis John, iii. 1 

60 heavy as thon Shalt not — iii. 1 

mid made it heavy, tliiek — iii. 3 

anon cheered up the heavy time .... — iv. 1 
the graceless action of a heavy hand — iv. 3 

60 long, lies heavy on me — y. 3 

sins so heavy in his bosom Richard II, i, 2 

n heavy sentence, my most sovereign — i. 3 
80 heavy sad, as, though in thinking — ii. 2 
makes me with heavy nothing faint — ii. 2 

with the eves of heavy mind — ii. 4 

bv my dull and heavy eye — iii. 2 

alack the heavy day, when such .... — iii. 3 

drive away the heavy thought — iii. 4 

sliall lie so heavy on my sword — iv. 1 

I give this heavy weight from off — — iv. 1 
alack, the heavy day, that I have.... — iv. 1 

the heavy accent of thy moving — v. 1 

the wav out with a heavy heart — v. 1 

from \Vales, loaden with heavy news .1 llenrylV. i. 1 
some heavy business hath my lord . , — ii. 3 
lie too heavy on the commonwealth — iv. 3 
and as heavy too: God keep lead .... — v. 3 
O, I should have a heavy miss of thee — v. 4 

like dull and lieavy lead (jep.) 2Heuii/ir. i. 1 

did our men, heavy with Hotspur's loss — i. 1 

agod to a bull? afieavy descension! — ii. 2 
to lay a heavy and unequal hand upon — iv. 1 

thi lie's too heavy to mount — iv. 3 

and heavy sorrows of the blood — iv. 4 

here come the heavy issue of dead . . — v. 2 
is all too heavy to admit much talk — v. 2 

with him that hath made us heavy! — v. 2 

their heavy burdens at his narrow .... lltnnj V. i. 2 
are heavy orisons 'gainst this poor .. — \\.'l 
never wear such heavy head-pieces.. — iii. 7 
king himself hath a heavy reckoning — iv. 1 
sings heavy music to thy timorous..! UenryVi. iv, 2 
let thv SuflTolk takehis heavy leave.2HenryF/.iii.2 

go tell this heavy mes.sage — iii. 2 

nothing so heavy as these woes — v. 2 

tell'st tlie heavy story right 3Henryyi. i. 4 

but what art thou, whose heavy looks — ii. 1 

O heavy times, begetting such — ii. 5 

is that which takes her heavy leave? — ii. 6 
as thou see'st, ourselves in heavy plight — iii. 3 

of thy mother's heavy womb! iUchard III. i. 3 

cited" up a thousand heavy times .... — i. 4 

my soul is heavy, and I fdin would sleep — i. 4 
bear this mutual heavy load of moan — ii. 2 
made it tedious, wearisome, and heavy — iii. ! 
with a heavy heart, thinking on them — iii. 1 
now thy heavy curse is lighted on poor — iii. 4 
most heavy iCol. A'ji (.-grievous] curse — iv. 4 

falls heavy on my neck — v. I 

be sound, and not too heavy: RatcliiF — v. 3 

crush down with a heavy fall — v. 3 

let me sit heavy on thy soul (;ep.) .. — v. 3 
too heavy for a man that hopes.. . . Henry I'll I, iii. 2 

they are harsh and heavy to mc — iv. 2 

but makes it much more heavy. TroiVus <5-Crc.M. ii. 2 

heart, O heavy heart, why sigh'st — iv. 4 

that .same that looks so heavy? — iv. 5 

for the journey, dull and heavy ..Timon of Alh. ii. 2 
to lie heavy upon a friend of mine .. — iii. .^ 

1 am light and heavy: welcome Cnriolanuz,\\. 1 

unclog my heart of what lies heavy to't — iv. 2 

weigh them, it is as lieavy JulhnCrpsar, i. 2 

enjoy the honey heavy dew of slumber — ii. 1 

your half, why you are heavy — ii. 1 

canst tliou bear up thy lieavy eyes .. — iv. 3 
ships are yarc; yours, heavy ,4n(ony*C/eo/ia/ra, iii. 7 
most heavy day! Nay, good my fellows — iv. 12 

how heavy weighs my lord I — iv. 13 

a heavy sight! I am dying, Egypt .. — iv. 13 

discourse is heavy, fasting. Cymbetine, iii. 6 

a heavy reckoning for you, sir — v. 4 

but now my heavy conscience — v. 5 

have laid most heavy hand — v. 5 

yon heavy people, circle me ul)Out. TUui/lttdron. iii.l 
() I'ublins, is not this a heavy case .. — iv. 3 
the tiring day, and heavy night .... — v. 2 
day by day I'll do tills heavy task .. — v. 2 

nature puts me to a heavy ta-sk — v. 3 

by whom onr heavy haps had their ,. — y. 3 
to relieve them of tJieir heavy load .... rerides,\. 4 
'tis wondrous heavy; wrench it open — iii. 2 
woe and heavy wefl-a-day — iv. 4 (Gowcr) 



HE.\"VY— of heavy Pericles . . . . Periclis, v. (Gowcr) 
take vantage, heavy eyes, not to behold. . Lear, ii. 2 

liiust heavy substance; blced'st not — iv. 6 

your eyes are in a heavy case — iv. 6 

must jiist ami heavy causes make — v. 1 

steals home my heavy son Hoiiieoti- Juliet, i. 1 

U heavy liL;litiu'ss! serious vanity!.. — i. 1 

griefs of mine own lie heavy ill my.. — i. 1 

being but heavv, 1 will hear tlic light — i. 4 

miller hive's heavy hurileii do 1 sink — i. 4 

towanl school with heavy looks .... — ii. 2 
lieavy iuhI pale lis lead — ii. 5 



and 
whieli I 



lakes lliem aiit 
V ilav! O iiiel t) me! my child 

eaiiiiut he loo heav.v 

>' hiinUii! 1 hear Iiini coming... 
v with him . 



O heavy ilceci: it hail In 
her garments, luuvv witli tin 
this is too heavy, let i 



ith us. 



(Iriuk .. — iv. 7 



iiother 



v. -2 



. Olhello. i 



— V. 2 

— V. 2 
'd II. iii 



and I a heavy interim shall 

O heavy ignorance! tliou in 

alas, the heavy day! why do you weep? 

such despite and hca\'y terms uptiii her. 

it is a heavy night: these iniiy be 

heavy hour! nietliiuks, it sliould be , 
this heavy aet with heavy heart relate . 

HE.W Y-G AITEO toads Hich, 

HEAVY-IIlOAUED-lieavv-headed rcvel.HnwW,!. 4 

IIEBENON— with juice of cniseil hehenon — i. 5 

UE13REW— art an Hebrew. . Tu-nCeii. of Verona, ii. 5 

a wealthy Hebrew of my tribe..Vcir/m»i( of Venice, i. 3 

this Hebrew will turn Christian .... — i. 3 

HECATE— triple Hecate's t(jam..Mid.K.Dreain,v. 2 

celebrates pale Hecate's odeiiiigs ., ..Macbeth, ii. 1 

ere, to black Hecate's suinmons — iii. 2 

why, how now, lleeate? von look .... — iii. 5 

1 speak ii"t to that railing; Hecate.. 1 Htviri//'/. iii. 2 
tlie iinsteries nf lleeale, ami tlie night. ... irar, i. I 
with Hecate's liau tliriee 1. lasted Hamlet, iii. 2 

HECTIC— like the hectic in my blood . . — iv. 3 
HECTOR-said I well, bully Hectory,A/criy(fVties.i. 3 

Hector of Greece, my boy ! — ii. 3 

as Hector, I assure yon Much.ido, ii. 3 

he presents Hector of Troy Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

here comes Hector in arms 

Hector was but a Trojan in 

but is this Hector? I think Hector was 

his leg is too big for Hector 

this cannot be Hector 

gave Hector a gift 

runs against Hector. Ay, and Hector's 
speak,T)rave Hector; we are much .. 
Hector far surinounl;ed Hannibal O'cp.) 

then shall Hector be whipped 

Hector trembles 

Hector will challenge him 

was not that Hector? 

thou art as valorous as Hector 2 He 

a second Hector, for his grim 1 Henry V I. ii. 3 

farewell, my Hector, and my Trny's.SHenry VI. iv. 8 
lest Hector or my father should. TroHus <5 Cress, i. 1 
Hector, whose patience is, as a virtue — i. 2 
weep what it foresaw in Hector's wrath — i. 2 

of Trojan blood; nephew to Heetor.. — i. 2 

makes me smile, make Heetor angry? — i. 2 

yesterday coped Hector in the battle — i. 2 
kept Hector fasting and waking .... — i. 2 

Hector's a gallant man — i. 2 

was Hector armed, and gone — i. 2 

Hector was gone; but Helen (rep.) .. — i. 2 

what? not between Troilus and Hector? — i. 2 

he is not Hector. No, nor Hector is not — i. 2 

Hector shall not have his wit this year — i. 2 
lift as much as his brother Hector .. — i. 2 
and Hector laughed. At what was all — i. 2 
that's Hector, that, that, look you . . — i. 2 

Hector; there's a brave man (rep.) .. — i. 2 

his helm more hacked than Hector's — i. 2 

and the great Hector's sword had 



V. 2 
V. 2 
V. 2 
V. 2 
V. 2 
V. 2 
V. 2 
V. 2 
V. 2 
V. 2 



rylV. 



a prince called Hectorj (Priam 
Hector in view of Trojans .... 



— i. 3 



if any coine, Hector shall honour. . . . 

that one meets Hector 

when Hector's grandsire sucked .... 
this challenge that the gallant Hector 
finds Hector's purpose pointing on him 
from Hector bring those honours off 

he, that meets Hector, issues 

'tis meet, Achilles meet not Hector., 
that ever Heetor and Achilles meet 

should he 'scape Hector fair 

the sort to fight with Hector 

Heetor shall have a great catch 

that Hector, by the first hour 

Heetor, what say you to't? 

knows what follows? than Hector is 
why, brother Hector, we may not. . . . 
Hector's opinion is this, in way .... 
hut, worthy Hector, she is a theme.. 

brave Heetor would not lose so 

Heetor, Deipholnis, Helenus, Antenor 

to help iiiiann our Hector 

islanil king.;, disarm great Hector .. 
if Heetor will to-inorrow be answered 
foot were on brave Hector's breast . . 
great Hector's si.Uer did Achilles win 
to see great Hector in his weeds of .. 
fight singly to-morrow with Hector., 
forif Heetor break not his neck .... 
to invite till 



i 


3 


1 


3 


i 


3 


i 


3 


i 


3 


i 
ii 


3 

1 


ii 
ii 


1 


11 


2 


ii 


2 


ii 


2 


11 


2 


il! 


2 

1 



ite Heetor to his tent . 



lis knocked out 

hark! Hiet.ir's tniiiipet 

address to tend "U Hector's heels .... 
spout blood; thou hlow'st for Hector 
llector bade ask. Which way (np,) 
'tis done like Hector; but securely .. 
and pride excel themselves in Hector 



H ECTOI{-of Hector's blond (rep.) Troitui ^ Crcii. iv. .'j 

lialf Hector comes to seek this — iv. 5 

manly as Hector, but more (re;).).. .. — iv. 5 

as fairly built as Hector — iy. ."i 

Heetor, thou elcep'st; awake thee! .. — iv. 5 
as Hector pleases. Why then, will I — iv. 5 

Heetor would have them tail — iv. 5 

I thank thee. Hector: thou art too .. — iv. 5 

added honour torn from Heetor — iv. .'J 

to see iiiiarnied tlie viiliaiil Jlector .. — iv. .I 
of very heart, great Heetor, welcome — iv. 5 
and most valiiint Heetor, welcome .. — iv. 5 
now. Hector, 1 hml led mine e.^'cs (rep.) — iv. 
whereout great Hector's spirit flew .. — iv. 5 

ever.v day enough of Jlector — iv. .^ 

dost thou entreat me. Hector? — iv. 5 

as Hector's leisure and your bounties — iv. b 
welcome, brave Hector; welcome.... — v. 1 
keep llector company an hour — v. I 

5 ooil-night, great Hector — v. 1 
\yill rather leave to see Heetor — v. 1 

Hector by this is arming him in Troy — v. 2 
where is my brother Hector? Here .. — v. 3 
unarm, sweet Heetor. Hold you still — v. 3 

fool's play, by heaven. Hector — v, 3 

fie! Hector, then 'tis wars — v. 3 

come, Hector, come, go back — v. 3 

farewell, dear Hector — v. 3 

all cry— Hector! Hector's dead ! («,i.) — v. 3 
yet, soft: Hector, 1 take my leave .. — v. 3 

art thou for Hector's match? — v. 4 

there is a thousand Hectors in the field - v. 5 

come to hiin, crying on Heetor — v. h 

where is this Heetor? come, come . . — v. 5 
Hector! Where's Heetor! I will {rep.) — v. 5 

lia! have at thee Hector — \ 6 

when I have the bloody Hector found — v. ,' 
decreed— Heetor the great must die.. — v. 7 
look. Hector, how the sun begins . . , , — v. 9 

day uu. Hector's life is done — t. 9 

Achilles hath the mighty Heetor slain — v, 9 

Hector's slain! Achilles! (rep.) — v. 10 

great Hector was as good a man — v. 1 

Ilcetor is slain. Hector! the gods forbid ! — v. II 
llector is gone! who shall tell Priam — v. II 

and say there— Hector's dead — v. 1 1 

Hector is dead, there is no more — v. II 

suckled Hector, looked not (7-ep.) ....Coriotanus, i. 3 
wert thou the Hector, that was the whip — i. 8 

have shown all Hectors .. ...^/i/o»T/^C/eopa^ra, iv. 8 
the Roman Hector's hope Titus Androuicus, iv. 1 

HECUB A-Heeuba, and Helen. Troilus «f Cresiida, i. 2 
queen Hecuba laughed, that her eyes — i. 2 
here is a letter from queen Hecuba .. — v. 1 
not Priamus, and Hecuba on knees . . — v. 3 
how Troy roars! how Hecuba cries out! — v. 3 

tell Priam so, or Hecuba? — v. 11 

the breasts of Hecuba, when she .. .Coriolanut^ i. 3 

all curses iiiailileil Hecuba gave Cymbetine, iv. 2 

that Ileeuba of Troy ran mad.7'i(t/sJndn)iiicus, iv. 1 

say on: eoiiie to Hecuba Hamlet,n. 2 

for Heeuha! what's Hecuba tohim (rep.) — ii. 2 

IlEDCiE — to hedge, and to lurch Merry irivcs, ii. 2 

1 liad rather be a canker in a hedge ..MuehAdo, i. 3 
other way but by this hedge' corner.. ,4ii'j Welt, iv. 1 
good at the hedge' corner .. Taming of sh. 1 (indue.) 
bleaeliing on the hedge . . Winter's Tale, iv. 2 (song) 

I will but look upon the hedge — iy- 3 

her hedges ruined, her knots Uichard 11. iii. 4 

thy horse stands behind the hedge ..1 Henry tV. ii. 2 
they'll find linen enough on every hedge — iv, 2 

her hedges eveu-iileachcd Henry V. v. 2 

fallows, meads, and hedges, defective — v. 2 
plucked out of hedges, they pitched. . 1 Henry VI. i. 1 
there was he born, under a hedge ..iHenri/Vl.iv. 1 

and hedges, his own way Henry VIII. iii. 2 

this shall not hedge us out . . Troilus <5- Cressida, iii.l 
hedge ^Col. edge] aside from the direct — iii. 3 

forget yourself to hedge me in Julius Ctesar, iy. 3 

berry on the rudest hedge .. Antony ^- Cleopatr n, i. 4 
the hedge sparrow fed the cuckoo so long. . Lear, i. 4 
such divinity doth hedge a king Hamlet, iv. 5 

HEDGE-BOfiN-a hedge-born swain. lHe>i-v»'/. iv. I 

HEDGED mc by his wit il/ercAan/o/iVnice, ii. 1 

l^ni-'laiul, hedged in with the main.. Kir g John, ii. 1 

lIEUGElUKi- then like hedgehogs.... TempeW, iii. 2 

tlioriiv hedgehogs benot seen..il/id.A'.r>r. ii. 3(song) 

dost grant me, bedgeliog? Richard III. i. 2 

HElXiE-l'lli-lbe hedge-pig whined.. A/ncbe'A, iv. 1 
HKnGE-riilEST-the hedge-priest.. Loi-e'ii-.L. v. 2 
U E E D— \ou must lie so too, if heed me . Tempest, ii. 1 

therefore, take heed, as Hymen's — iy. I 

take heed; have open eye Merry tVires, ii. 1 

take heed; ere summer comes — ii. 1 

for yourself; take heed to it.. 1/enmre /or iVcdtiirc, v. I 
take heed, the queen come not..Wirf.A'.'5 Dream, ii. I 

that eye shall be his heed Love's L. Lost,}. 1 

take heed, honest Lanncelot (jep.).Mer.of Venice, ii. 2 

take heed of them ; they say All's Hell, ii. 1 

take heed of this French carl — iii. 5 

to take heed of the oUuremcnt — j.y. 3 

take heed he hear us not .... Tawing of Shrew, in. 1 

take heed, signior Baptista — v, 1 

to listen with more heed Comedy of Errors, iv. I 

alasthedayl take heed of him ■illemylV.'ii. \ 

therefore take heed what guests — ii. 4 

therefore, let men take heed of — y . 1 

take heed how you impawn Henry V.i.i 

with better heed to re-survey them . . — v. 2 
take heed, be warv how you place. . 1 Henry VI. iii. 2 

if you take not heed 'illeni y VI. i. 2 

take heed, mv lord: the welfare — iii.l 

toke heed, lest by your heat — v. 1 

rcni. K'li.'.] take heed of yonder dog.,/(ic/mi<i ///. 1. 3 

take heed, for he holds — i. 4 

take heed, you dallv not before — ii. I 

with all the heed I can — iii.l 

take good heed, you charge not .... Henry Vlll. i. 2 

1 sov, take heed; yes, heartily — i. 2 

thus it came; give heed to't — ii. 4 



HEED-takelieed, forheaven's(rep.) Henry I'll I. in. 1 

a heed was in his counteiianoe — iii. 2 

let tiiem talte heed of Troilus.7Vi;iVi<s <S-Cre5si'i/u, i. 2 
take heed, the quarrel's most ominous — v. S 

I take no heed of thee Tiinonof A'hens, i. 2 

without heed, do plunge into it — iii. S 

have you with heed perused Cotiolnnus, v. 5 

but tliere's no heed to be taken ....JulinsCrrsur, i. 2 

take lieed ofCassius — ii. 3 (pajier) 

take heed Tou fall not .... ..Aiilony6r Cleopatra, ii. 7 

take heed, sirrah; the whip LearA. i 

take lieed o' tlie foul fiend — iii. 4 

take heed, take heed, for such.. Romeo Sr Juliet, iii. 3 
take heed of tliat; but, sir, such wanton. Haiiilei,\i. 1 

with better heed, and judgement — ii. 1 

1 did SO; and take heed ot 't Othello, iii. 4 

sweet soul, take heed, take heed of perjury — v. 2 

HEEDED— it shall be heeded. .JH^ony SCIeopalra, v. 2 

HEEDFUL-heedful of the other. Co«im/;/ of Errors, i. 1 

and the heedful slave is wandered foith — ii. 2 

be heedful : hence, and watch King John, _iv. 1 

late entering at his heedful ears . .'SHeury I'l. iii. 3 

five him heedful note llamlci, 'ni.i 
CEDFULLEST reservation AifslVell, i. 3 

HEEDFUI-LY— su% most heedfuUy .... Tempest, i. 2 

may heedfuUy be broken ..TwoGen. of Verona, ii. 6 

fools' secrets heedfuUj' o'ev-eye. . Love's L.Lost, iv. 3 

HEEDLESS— heedless joltheads.. 2'amiHg-o/SA. Iv. 1 

negligent and heedless discipline! ..\Henryyi. iv. 2 

HEEL— heels of her virtues.. TwoGen. of I'erona, iii. 1 

I am almost out at heels Meri-y Wives, i. 3 

come after ray heel to de court — i. 4 

follow my heels, Rugby — i. 4 

with Riugwood at thy heels — ii. 1 

come at ray heels. Jack Kugby — i i. 3 

or eye your master's heels? — iii. 2 

with half Windsor at his heels . — iii. 3 

and at his heels a rabble — iii. .5 

hilt to point, heel to head — iii. 5 

see more detraction at your heels. Twelfth Night, ii. 5 

as if a Ijear were at his heels — iii. 4 

heels [ Co/. Kn<.- wheels] of Csesar? Mea.forMea. ill. 2 
yea, light o' love, with your heels! . . Mach.ido, iii. 4 

1 scorn that with ray heels — iii. 4 

our own hearts, and our wives' heels — v. 4 
scorn running with thy heels.. Merch. of Venice, ii. 2 
ray heels ai-e-at your commandment ^ ii. 2 
tripped up the wrestler's heels . . As you Lilie it, iii. 2 
I think it was made of Atalanta's heels — iii. 2 

on the catastrophe and heel Airs Well, i. 2 

dog the heels of worth — iii. 4 (letter) 

no matter; his heels have deserved it — iv. 3 
from my shoulder to my heel. Taming of Shrew, iv. 1 
lack from head to heel ... . Winter's Tale, iv. 3 (song) 

with liis clog at his heels — iv. 3 

sir, I'll take my heels Comedy of Errors, \. 2 

keep from my heels, and beware — iii. 1 

and at her heels, a huge infectious .. — v. 1 
skipping Kemes to trust their heels . .M'lchelh, i. 2 

we coursed him at the heels — i.6 

hundreds treading on his heels .... King John, iv. 2 

set feathers to thy heels — iv. 2 

the Dauphin rages at our very heels — v. 7 

straight shall dog them at the heels. Richard //. v. 3 

show it a fair pair of heels 1 HenrylV. ii. 4 

hang rae up by the heels — ii. 4 

to doghis heels, andcourt'sy at his.. — Iii. 2 

even at the heels, in golden — iv. 3 

struck his armed heels against 2 Henry I J', i. 1 

than to wait at my heels — i. 2 

to punish you by tlie heels — i. 2 

baying him at the heels — i. 3 

after the admired heels of Bolingbroke — i. 3 

at his heels, leashed in like Henry V. i. (chorus) 

w ith winged heels, as English .... — ii. {chorus) 

Dur grace is only in our heels — iii. 5 

yerk out tlieir armed heels — iv. 7 

follow Fluellen closely at the heels . . — iv. 7 
plebeians swarming at their heels — v. (chorus) 
I'll stamp out with my horse's lieels .1 Henry VI. i. 4 
shall be dragged at my horse' heels.2Heii)i/ VI. iv. 3 
makes me betake me to my heels .... — iv. 8 

by the heels unto a dunghill — iv. 10 

destruction dog thee at tlie heels . . Richard III. iv. 1 

I'll lay ye .all by the heels Henry VIII. v. 3 

I will begin at tliy heel Troilus 4Cressida, ii. 1 

winsjs of reason to his heels — ii. 2 

nor lieel the high lavolt — iv. 4 

to tend on Hector's heels — iv. 4 

comes breathing at his heels — v. 9 

the heels of my presentment .... Timon of Athens, i, I 

like a dog, the heels of the ass — i. 1 

page thy heels, and skip when thou.. — iv. 3 
following the fliers at the ve-ry heels .Coriolanus, i. 4 

or at wild horses' heels — iii. 2 

tliat follows Ceesar at the heels . . Julins Ctesar, ii. 4 

we will grace his heels with — iii. 1 

thy heel did famine follow . . Antony Sj Cleopatra, i. 4 

at heel of that, defy him — ii. 2 

would have still followed thy heels . . — iv. 5 

hearts that spanieled me at heels — iv. 10 

ne'er wore rowel nor iron on his heel?C?/mbe/i7(e,iv.4 
took heel to do 't, and vet died too? . . — v. 3 
out of Acheron by the neels . . TiiusAndronicus, i v. 3 

if a man's brains were in his heels Lear, i. 5 

einoe I tripped up thy heels — ii. 2 

good man's fortune may grow out at heels — ii. 2 
the heel of limping winter treads. Romeo ^ Juliet, i. 2 
the senseless rushes with their heels — i. 4 

by nij' heel, I care not — iii. 1 

but is there no sequel at the heels Hamlet, iii. 2 

that his heels may kick at heaven . . — iii. 3 

at his heels a stone — iv. 5 (song) 

one woe doth tread upon another's heel — iv. 7 

this very night, at one another's heels . . Qtiiello, i. 2 

HEER-rA'ii/.Iwillyougo on, heers'i.. Vern/ Wives, ii. 1 

HEFT-his sides, with violent hefts. Winter'sTale, ii. 1 

HEIFER-the heifer, and the calf .... — i. 2 

. as the parish heifers are 'lHenrylv.'.\.-l 

who fiudii the heifer dead 2Henry Vl. ui. 2 



HEIFER— as wolf to heifer's calf. 7")oi7iis ,§- Cress, iii. 2 
HEIGHT- is about my hcijfht..TwoCen. nf Ver. iv. 4 

and in the height of this bath .... Merry Wives, iii. 5 

imto your height of pleasure Meas.for Mens. v. 

not approved in the height a vUltun,.MnchAdo, iv. 

she hath urged her height ....Mid.N.'s Dream, iii. 

her height, forsooth, she hath prevailed — iii. 

main flood bate his usual height. Mir. of I'enice.iv. 

at the height of heart heaviness . . As yon Like it, v. 

now put you to the height of your . . All's Well, ii. 

strength and height of mjury! ..Comedy of Err. v. 

the height, the crest King John, iv. 

impeach my height before this Richai-d II. i. 

swelled up imto its height i Henry IV. ii. 

to his full height! Henry V. iii. 

flourish to the height of my degree.. 1 Henry I'l. ii. 

fear, our happiness is at the height. Richard III. i. 

raised me to this careful height — i. 

pitch and height of all his thoughts — iii. 

the dignity and height of fortime — iv. 

falls in height of all his pride — v. 

he's ti-aitor to the height Henry VIII. i. 

whose heit;ht commauds as svih]ect. Trail. ^-Crcss. i. 

let us feast him to the height — v. 

on height of our displeasure .. Timon of Athens, iii. 

we, at the height, are ready Julins Ccesar, i v. 

they know, bj' the height .. Antony 4- Cleopatra, \}. 

leaving the fight in height, flies — iii. 

wishes height advance you both . Titus Andron. ii. 

my grief was at the height — iii. 

to be advanced to this height? — . iv. 

even in the height and pride of Pericles, ii. 

complexion, height, age — iv. 

look up a height .....Lear, iv. 

thougli performed at height Hamlet, i. 

HEIGHTENED-beiug so heightened. Coriolanus. v. 
HEINOUS— what heinous sin. MCT-c/ia«(o/r«!/ce,ii. 

w ithiu itself so heinous is King Jolin, iii. 

you hold too heinous a respect — iii. 

the image of a wiekedheinousfault.. — iv. 

exainpled by this heinous spectacle . . — iv. 

so heinous, black, obscene a deed! . . Richard II. iv. 

shouldst thou find one heinous article — iv. 

if but the first, liow heinous ere it be — v. 3 

O heinous, strong, and bold conspiracy! — y. 3 

to view thy heinous deeds Richard III. i. 2 

Rome reputes to be a heinous sin. . TilusAndron. i. 2 

remit these young men's heinous faults — i. 2 

performers of this heinous, bloody deed? — iv. 1 

sorry for these heinous deeds? — v. 1 

and right his heinous wrongs — v. 2 

as for that heinous tiger, Tamora .... — v. 3 

due to this heinous capital oflfence Pericles, ii. 4 

thy heinous, manifest, and mauj' treasons. Lc<ii-, v. 3 

HEINOUSLY unprovided IHenrylV. iii. 3 

HEIR— and his only heir a princess Tempest,!. 2 

thou mine heir of Naples — ii. 1 

who's the next heir of Naples? — ii. 1 

so is she heir of Naples — ii. 1 

am heir, and near allied ..TwoGen. of Verona, iv. 1 

she's Ms only heir Much Ado, i. 1 

the daughter and heir of Leonato — — i. 3 
and she alone is heir to both of us . . — y. 1 
and make us heirs of all eternity.. Lone's L. Lost, i. 1 

the beauteous heir of Jaques — ii. 1 

the hear of Aleneon, Rosaline — ii- 1 

she is an heir of Faulconbridge ...... — ii. 1 

gave Hector a gift, tlie heir of Ilion.. — v. 2 
marry them to your heirs?. . Merchant of Venice, iy. 1 

thou Shalt be his heir As you Like it, i. 2 

to be adopted heir to Frederic — i. 2 

let my father seek another heir — i. 3 

to nature she's immediate heir All's Well, ii. 3 

left solely heir to all Ills lands. Taming of Shrew,)}. 1 

1 am my father's heir, and only son — ii. 1 
and heir to the lands of rae, signior . . — v. 1 
shall live without au heir. Winter's Tale, iii. 2 (oracle) 

thou a sceptre's heir — iv. 3 

I am heir to my atfection — iv. 3 

Leontes shall not have an heir — v. 1 

the crown will find an lieir — v. 1 

has the king found his heir? — v. 2 

your contracted heirs of j'our kingdoms — y. 3 
iCol. Km.'] war against her heir . Comedy of Err. iii. 2 

tlie son and heir to that same Kin^ John, i. 1 

get your father's heir; your father's heir — i. 1 

were heir to all this land — i. 1 

nay, my kingdom's heir Richard II.]. 1 

to have an heir? is not his heir — ii. 1 

lives, our children, and our heirs .... — ii. 1 

Bolingbroke my sorrow's heir — .jl* - 

old enough to be my heir — iii. 3 

adopts thee heir ; and his high — iv. I 

apparent that thou art heir apparent.! Hciiry/r. i. 2 
my brother Edmund JMortimer heir to — i. 3 

gave him their heirs; as pages — iv. 3 

two greater in the heirs of life 2HenryIV. iv. 1 

and heir from heir shall hold this ... . — i v. 2 
unfathered heirs, and loathly births — iv. 4 

the immediate heir of England — y. 2 

did, as heir general, being descended . . Henry V. i. 2 

sole heir male of the true line — j. 2 

as heir to the lady Lingare — j. 2 

sole heir to the usurper Capet — 1.2 

you are their heir, j'ou sit upon — .1.2 

to him, and to his heirs; namely — ii- 4 

and the lawful heir of Edward Idng.l Henry VI. ii. 5 
leaving no heir begotten of his body — 'n- 

laboured to plant tlie rightful heir . . — ii. 5 

thou art iiiv heir, the rest — i'. ^ 

rightful lie'ir unto the English cvown,2HenryVI.}. 3 

son and heir of John of Gaunt — ji. 2 

the first son's heir, being dead — ii. 2 

AVilliam of Hatfield died without an heir — ii. 2 
my mother, being heir unto the crown — ii. 2 
she was heir to Roger, earl of March — n. 2 
as next the king, he was successive heir — iii. 1 

rightful heir unto the crown — iv. 2 

the rightful heir to England's royal — y. I 

and not king Henry's hens ZHenry VI. i. 1 



HEIR— may not a king adopt an heir?3Heii/i/;7. i. I 

whose heir my father was — i. i 

but that the next heir should succeed — i. 1 

to me, and to mine heirs — i. 1 

that savage duke thine heir — i. I 

and his heirs unto the crown — i. 1 

now you are heir, therefore enjoy — i 2 

this is he was his adopted heir — i. 4 

I was adopted heir by his consent .. — ii. 2 

prince Edward, Henry's heir — iii. 3 

to have the heir of the lord Hungerford — iv. 1 
give the heir and daughter of lord Scales — iv. 1 
bestowed the heir of the lord Bonville ^— iv. 1 

true heir to the English crown — iv. 4 

at least the heir of Edward's right .. — iv. 4 

of Edward's heirs the murderer Richard III. i. 1 

and that be heir to his unhaiipiness! — i. 2 

to bar my master's heirs in true — iii. 2 

he would make his sou heir to the crown — iii. b 
what heir of York is there alive (rep.') — iv. 4 
the wronged heirs of York do pray .. — v. 3 

left them the heirs of shame — v. 3 

and let their heirs (God, if they will be — v. 4 

neither the king, nor his heirs Henry VIII. i. 2 

well worthy the best heir o' the world — ii. 4 
gladding of your highness with an heir! — v. 1 
new create another heir, as great .... — v. 4 
deserves au heir more raised . . Timon of Athens, i. I 
I will choose mine heir from forth .. — i. 1 

many an heir of these fair Coriolanus, iv. 4 

as if he were son and heir to Mars . . .~ iv. 5 

makes the survivor heir of all — v. 5 

know not that you are his heirs. . Julius Cc/jsar, iii. 2 

you and to your heirs for ever — iii. 2 

of the Ptolemies for her heirs., ^nfony ffCleo. iii. 10 

and the heir of his kingdom Cymbeline.'i. 1 

this Polydore, the heir of Cymbeline -~ iii. 3 
sore-shaming those rich-left heirs . . — iv. 2 
0' the world, as great Sicilius' heir .. — v. 4 

I am the heir of Ills reward — v. 5 

this my first-born son f^\\(ll\eii'\. . Titus .indron. iv. 2 
he received for the emperor's heir.... — iv. 2 

died and left a female heir Pericles, i. (Gower) 

never comes, but brings an heir . — i. 4 

careless heirs may the two latter — iii. 2 

the heir of kin"doms, and another — v. 1 

and the son ana heir of a mongrel bitch. . Lear, ii. 2 
the son and heir of old Tiberio . . Romeo ifJvlirl, i. 5 
young aft'ection gapes to be his heir — i. 5 (cho.) 
nickname for her purblind son andheir — ii. 1 
death is ra3' heir; my daughter he . . — iv. 5 
to see thy son and heir more early down — v. 3 

natural shocks that flesh is heir to Hamlet, iii. 1 

each second stood heir to the first Othello, i. 1 

even her folly heliied her to an heir .... — ii". I 

HEIR- APPARENT garters! 1 HenrylV. ii. 2 

for me, to kill the heir-apparent? — ii. 4 

thou being heir-apparent, could .... — ii. 4 
heir-apparent to the English crown. .2Henry VI. i. 1 
our heir- apparent is a king Pericles, iii. (Gower) 

HEIRLESS— heirless it hath made. H'inier'sTule, v. 1 

HELD— I fear, a madness held rae Tempest, v. 1 

mj' brother held you in Two Gen. of Verona,'i. 3 

pure hands held up — iii. 1 

and held me glad of such — iv. 1 

be a cuckold, held his hand ...... Merry Wives, iii. 5 

there was no proportion held in love — v. 5 

well held out.i'faith! TiieiphNighi,'\v. 1 

and held in idle price Measure for Measure, i 4 

held the duke to be wise — iii. 2 

w^liat secret hath held you here Much Ado, i. 1 

the other must be held the worthier.. A/jV.A'. Dr. \. 1 
held precious in the world's .... Lure's L. losi, ii. ! 
the tiling held as a ceremony ?.,Verc/i. of Venice, v. 1 
even he tliat had held up the ver.v.... — v. 1 

which I held my duty, speedily to All's Well, i. 3 

of men very nobly held — iv. 3 

I have held familiarity with — v. 2 

to have held my iieace, until Winter'sTale, \. 2 

make possible, things not so held .... — i. 2 
you look, as if .you held a brow of .. — i. 2 
have held him here too long..C</)«frfi/ ofEirors, iv. 1 
hath this possession held the man? .. — y. 1 

which held you so under fortune Macbeth, iii. 1 

at midnight lield your head KingJohn, iv. I 

our tongues held vile to narae — iv. 2 

they sav, is held by Bushy Richard II. ii. 3 

these triumphs held at Oxford — v. 3 

hath held his current, and defiled — y. J 

his thumb he held a pouneet-box . . I Hetiry I V. i. 3 

he held me, but last night — iii. 1 

that held the king so Ion" — v. 1 

of dignity is held from falling 2 Henry IV. iv. 4 

indirectlv held from him Henry J', ii. 4 

I think lie held the right 1 Henry VI. ii. 4 

the argument j'ou held, was wrong .. — ii. 4 

thy hand, and held my stirrup? iHenryVI. iv. 1 

the queen, that living held hira dear — iv. 1 
Plantagenet, which held thee dearly.3Hcnj]/;'i. ii. 1 

all the rest is held at such, a rate — ii. 2 

I must be held a rancorous enemy . . Richard 111. i . 3 
and the uobilit.y held in contempt .. — i. 3 
two councils held [Coi. K'K.-kept] .. — iii. 2 
ever since hath held mine eyes from — iv. 1 

hath he so long held out with rae — iv. 2 

bv'r lady, held current music too . . Henry VIII. i. 3 

yes, but it held not? for when — ii. 1 

and held for certain, the king will . . — ii. 1 
was he not held a learned man? .... — i\.2 

held a late court at Dunstable — iv. 1 

to York -place, where the feast is held — iv. 1 
whom the Greeks held captive. Troilus ^ Cressida, ii.2 

I might still have held off — iv. 2 

is now, held with a brace of . . Timon of Athens, iv. 3 
cannot better be held, nor more .... Coriolanus, i. 1 
spies of the Volsces held me in chase — i.6 
learn, how 'tis held; and what they are — i. 10 
in what hatred he still hath held thera — ii. 1 

it is held, that valour is the — ii.2 

called you up, have held him to ... . — ii. 3 



! . 



HEL 



[ 301 ] 



H ELU— in»y never be held by yoii . . Conol'inuy, v. 3 
hcUl up his left litiiul, which did ..JuliutCtrsar, i. 3 
lie liclil onoe offuntnsv, oi'di-eams .. — ii. 1 

timt I lul.l lOiiiiuiiis strong! — v. 1 

I hiM the s«iinl, iiml he did run on it — v. 5 
I huve ever heiil mv ia\i off. Aniony ^ Cleopalra, ii. 7 

tho li.vallv. well held to fools — iii. 11 

I'V huul Imth iiolilv held — iii. II 

1 hiiil il»Mii:hi, to fiave held it lioor .. — iii. 11 
thut ^lu■ lu'Kl the very giinueut .. ..Cymtf/i'nt*, iii. 6 

weiire lirl>i..8..utlnws: heiiee — iv. i' 

U|)li-lll lie held il.l.uds, tluit held. VV(iis.);/i/y..ii. i. 2 

lliitli |Mis,iiRT iKl.l.l'elteiea ill _ ii. 1 

liniver liuve thev lii.n luia lip — iii. I 

on wh..in ].lentv lu-ia liill hund rciicles, i. 4 

1 held it ever, viitiie iMid eiuiniiig — iii. i 

ami luld II inulk ill. not worth — iv. 4 

my life I never held hut us Lear, i. 1 

beiiit! held ii foe Itomeo ^JiUiel, i. S lehoriis) 

thought we held him earclessly .... — iii. 4 

wherein the spirit held his wont Hamlet, i. 4 

bv the wrist, mid lieM me hard — ii. 1 

h'eld tluiii six|.enee uU too denr..O//.. /K ii. 3 (song) 

Hi:i,t;N-lk-hn, to von our milld». .);;./. .V.Dreom.i. 1 
to honour Helen, ii'nd to he her luiiKhtl — ii. 3 

Helen, iioddess, nymph — iii. 2 

and now to Helen, it is liome (re/).).. — iii. 2 
Helen, 1 love thee; by my life, I do — iii. 2 

my lord, I'liir Helen told mc — iv. 1 

sees I Uku's lieautv in a brow of ... . — v. 1 

and I liki' Helen, till the fates _.— v. 1 

di'-lilkd Helen's elioek,..4« youLi'/ce i7, iii. 2 (verses) 

little Helen, farewell .-l/i's "V«, i. 1 

that he biii Helen eome to you — i. 3 

would speak with her; Helen, I mean — i. 3 

the business is for Helen to eome hither — i. 3 

vou know, Helen, I uin a mother to you — i. 3 

llelen. you might be my daughter-in-law — i. 3 

but think yon, Helen, if you should — i. 3 

why, Helen, tliou shalt have my leave — i. 3 
give Helen this, and urge her to ... . — ii. i 
mort du vinuigre! is not this Helen? — ii. 3 

you must not marvel, Helen — ii. ,5 

De this sweet Helen's knell — v. 3 

Helen that's dead, was a sweet — v. 3 

and, when I gave it Helen, I bade . . — v. 3 
'twas mine, 'twas Helen's — v. 3 

1 am afeard ll\e life of Helen — v. 3 

thv Doll, and Helen of thy noble ..2Henry IV. v. 5 

Helen, the mother of preat \ Henry I'l. i. 2 

Ilelen of CIreece was tairer far 3Heiiry I'l. ii. 2 

the ravished Helen Troilus ^ Cressida, (prol.) 

Bomewdmt darker than Helen's — i. 1 

as Helen: an' she were not kin (rep.') — i. 1 

Helen must needs be fair — i. 1 

?ueen Hecuba, and Helen — i. 2 
lelen was not up, was she? (rpn.) .. — i. 2 

Helen herself swore the other day .. — i. 2 

I had as lief, Helen's golden tongue — i. 2 

1 think, Helen loves him better tlian — i. 2 
to prove to j'ou that Helen loves {.rep.) — i. 2 

white hair that Helen spied — i. 2 

and Helen so blushed — i. 2 

this will do Helen's heart "ood now — i. 2 

and, I warrant, Helen, to change .. .. — i. 2 

will stop the ej-e of Helen's needle .. — ii. 1 
deliver Helen, and all damage else .. — ii. 2 

let Helen go; since the first — ii. 2 

hath been as dear as Helen — ii. 2 

a Helen, and a woe; cry, cry (rep.) .. — ii. 2 

when Helen is defended — ii. 2 

where Helen is the subject — ii. 2 

if Helen then be wife to — ii. 2 

in resolution to keep Helen still .... — ii. 2 
no, sir, Helen; could you not find .. — iii. 1 

sweet Helen, I must woo you — iii. 1 

merits fair Helen best — i\'. 1 

when Helen is a maid again — iv. .'i 

who's there? my woman Helen? Cymheline, ii. 2 

Helen and Hero, hildimis Rotneo A Juliet, ii. 4 

UIOLENA— daughter Helena ..MiJ.N.'sUream, i. 1 
I did meet thee once witli Helena .. — i. 1 
comes Helena. God speed, fair Helenal — i. 1 

his folly, Helena, is no fault of mine — i. I 

I will, my Hermia. Helena, adieu ., — i. 1 

transparent Helenal nature — ii. 3 

not Hermia, hut Helena I love — ii. 3 

Helena of Athens look thou find .... — iii. 2 

Helena is here at hand — iii. 2 

both rivals, to mock Helena — iii. 2 

and yours o* Helena to me bequeath — iii. 2 
would not let him bide, fair Helena.. — iii. 2 

feutle Helena, hear my excuse irep.) — iii. 2 
do hate thee, and love Helena — iii. 2 

she shall not harm thee, Helena .... — iii. 2 

sjicak not of Helena — iii. 2 

tliine, or mine, is most in Helena — iii. 2 

this Helena, old Nedar's Helena .... — iv. 1 
fair Helena in fancy following me .. — iv. 1 
pleasure of mine eve, is only Helena — iv. I 

no more of this. iTelcna, go to All's Well, i. 1 

and the lively Helena Hamen ft Juliet, i. 2 (note) 

HEr,ENIJS-tliat's Helcnus (r'p.\.Troilui ^ Crest, i. 2 
Helcnus. Can Heleniis fight, uncle (lep.) — i. 2 

Helcnus is a priest — i. 2 

when Ifclcnus beholds a Grecian .... — ii. 2 
Deiphobns, Helenus. .Vntcnor, and all — iii. 1 

HELlCANE-good Helicane. . . . Periele; ii. (Gowcr) 

lonl Helicane. a word. With me? — ii. 4 

wrong not yourself then, noble Helicane — ii. 4 
live, noble Helicane! Try honour's.. — ii. 4 
since lord Helicane enjoineth us .... — ii. 4 

HELICANlT.S.thou hastmovedus.... — i. 2 

a|ieak'st like a physician, Helieaiiiis — i. 2 

on the head of Helicanus woiilii set — iii. (Gower) 
whom Helieanus'late advance<i in — iv. 4 (Gowcr) 
old Helicanus goes along behind — iv. 4 (Glower) 

Where's the lord Helicanus? — v. 1 

ho, Helicanus! Calls my gracious lord? — v. I 
O Ilelicauus, strike mc, honoured sir — v. I 



HELICANUS, down on thy knees I'ericlei, v. 1 

own, Helieanus, nut dead ut Tharsus — v. 1 
tell Helicanus, my Marina, tell him — v. I 

Helicanus I Sir. My purpose was — v. 2 

'twas Helicanus then. Still confirmation — v. 3 

in Helieanus may von well descry — v. 3 (Gowcr) 

HELICON'-confront the Ilelicuns? ..2//eii<i/;r. v. 3 

HELL-eriecl, hell is empty 7c,i/,.-../, i. 2 

if 1 wonl.l but go lo hell Merry ll'ivei,\\. 1 

I am damned in lull, for swearing .. — ii. 2 
see the hell of ha\ lug a false woman — ii. 2 

if the hottoni Ki.ie us deep as hell — iii..') 

should hct lull on lire — v. i 

given onrsclws without scruple to hell — v. b 

1 think hi> soul is in hell Tuel/tli Kiglit.i. h 

if all the devils in hell he — iii. 4 

might hear my soul to hell — iii. 4 

as hell, sir Topas .— iv. 2 

though ignorance were as dark as hell — iv. 2 
a iiond as deep as hell .... Measure for Measure, iii. 1 

'tis the cunning livery of hell — iii. 1 

lead his apes into hell (rep.) Much. Ida, ii. I 

a man may live as quiet ni hell — ii. I 

O hell ! to choose love by Mid. N. Dream, i. I 

that he hath turned a heaven into a hell — i. 1 

and make a heaven of hell, to die — ii. 2 

O spite! O hell! I see you all — iii. 2 

more devils than vast hell can hold.. — v. 1 

black is the badge of hell /.ore's /,. l.osl, iv. 3 

our hotise is hell Merchant of l^enice, ii. 3 

O hell! what have we here? — ii. 7 

let fortune go to hell for it — iii. 2 

for this fienfl of hell Taming of Shrew, i. 1 

BO very a fool to be married to hell?. . — i. I 

love to her, lead apes in hell — ii. 1 

the one he chides to hell Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

in heaven, or in hell? Comedy of lurors, ii. 2 

Tartar limbo, worse than hell " — iv. 2 

canies iioor souls to hell — iv. 2 

pall thee in the duuuest smoke of hell \. Macbeth, i. b 
summons thee to heaven, or to hell! .. — ii. 1 

this place is too cold for hell — ii. 2 

not in the legions of horrid hell — iv. 3 

sweet milk of concord into hell — iv. 3 

time to do't; hell is murky! — v. 1 

a hotter name than any is in hell — v. 7 

I'll send his soul to hell King John, i. I 

work upon ourselves, for heaven, or hell — ii. 2 
disjoining hands, hell lose a soul .... — iii. I 

clamours of hell, be measures to — iii. I 

shall think the devil is come from hell — iv. 3 

not yet so ugly a fiend of hell — iv. 3 

let hell want pains enough to .. .■ — iv. 3 

within me is a hell — v. 7 

injustice with the pains of hell ....Richard U.Vn. 1 

terrible hell make W'ar upon _ iii. 2 

that marks thee out for hell — iv. 1 

thou art damned to hell for this .... — iv. 1 
torment'st me ere I come tohell .... — iv. I 

and fill another room in hell — v. 5 

that this deed is chronicled in hell .. — v. 5 

what hole in hell were hot \ Henry IV. i. 2 

and you in hell, as often — iii. 1 

she is in hell already, and burns •IHenrylV. ii. 4 

if hell and treason hold Henry V. ii. (chorus) 

voice in hell for excellence — ii. 2 

heif\'en, or in hell! Nay, sure (re/j.).. — ii. 3 

with conscience wide as hell — iii. 3 

horrid night, the child of hell — iv. 1 

all hell shall stir for this — v. 1 

hundreds he sent to hell MlenryVl. \. 1 

heavens, can vou sntt'er hell so to — 1.5 

with witi'hes.uiid the helpnf hell.... — ii. 1 

a fiend of hell. If not of hell — iii 

hell our prison is — iv. 7 

and hell too strong for me — v. 3 

thou foul accursed minister of helll .. — v. 4 

but a hell, an age of discord — v. 5 

\ny pomp, shall DC mj' hell 'iHenryVI. ii. 4 

ten thousand souls to heaven or to hell — iii. 1 
thy hire, and send thy soul to hell .. — iii. 2 
the foul terrors in dark-seated hell .. — iii. 2 
wedded be tlion to the hags of hell .. — iv. 1 

in despite of the devils and hell — iv. 8 

thrust thy soul to hell! — iv. 10 

you'll surely sup in hell — v. 1 

war, thou son of hell — v. 2 

not one alive, I live in hell ZHemyVI. i. 3 

for his hoarding went tohell? — ii. 2 

to account this world but hell — iii. 2 

down to hell; and say, I sent — v. G 

let hell make crooked mv mind — v. fi 

thou dreadful minister of hell! .... Uichard III, i. 2 

made the happy earth thy hell — i. 2 

unfit for any place, but hell — i. 2 

hie thee to nell for shame — i. 3 

aftrights thee with a hell of ugly .... — i. 3 

slave of nature, and the son of hell . . — i. 3 

sin, death, and hell, have set their .. — i. 3 

believe hut that I was in hell — i. 4 

with Itieliniond, from the reach of hell — iv. 1 
yet lives, hell's black intelligencer .. — iv. 4 

earth gapes, hell burns — iv. 4 

to make the earth mv hell — iv. 4 

as long as hell, and Kichard — iv. 4 

not heaven, then hand in hand to hell — v. 3 

if not from hell, the devil is HenryVIlI.'i. 1 

begins a new hell in himself — i. I 

as lilaek as if besmeared in hell — i. 2 

with such a hell of pain .... Troilus i^Cressida, iv. 1 

she stays, as tediously as hell — iv. 2 

bv hell, ond all hell's torments — v. 2 

I'luto and hell! all hurt behind ....Coriolanns,\. A 
the tires i' the lowest hell fold — iii. 3 

1 would I might go to hell a.moxi% ..JuliusCtrsar, i. 2 

eome hot from hell, shall in — iii. 1 

into the uhysm of hell tntnny ^Cleopatra, iii. II 

that all the' plagues of hell should ,,Cymbclin>-, i. 7 

a heavenly angel, hell is here — ii- 2 

and all the fiends of hell divide — ii. 4 



II EL 

HELL— stain, as big as hell can \mU\-.Cymbeline, ii. 4 
may be named, nay, that hell knows — ii. i 

thou wert shipjied to hell Titus AnJrunicui, i. 2 

my heart an ever-burning hell! — iii. I 

if you will have revenge from hell .. — iv. 3 

justice in earth nor hell — iv. 3 

might have your company in hell.... — v. I 

coulil not all lull alliird you such — v. 2 

hell only daiicith at so harsh. Pericles, i. 1 

which wa-h both heaven and hell — iii. I 

the pain, d'st lieiid of hell would not — iv. G 

there's hell, thi'ic's chirk ness Lear, iv. e 

as I hate hell, all .Montaijucs .... Itomeo ^Juliet, i. I 

should he rnured ill dismal hell - iii, 2 

what hadbt thon toilo in hell — iii. 2 

purgatory, torture, hell itsein — . iii. 3 

the damned iihc that word in hell — iii. 3 

though hell its-elf should gape Hamlel, i. 2 

or blasts from hell, lie thy intents — i. 4 

ond shall I couple hell? Oflel hold .... — i. 4 
as if he had been loosed out of hell — ii. 1 



_ _ tagion.... — ill. 2 

as hell, whereto it goes — iii. 3 

rebellious hell, if thou canst mutine — iii. 4 

to hell, allegiance! vows, to the blackest — iv. S 
affliction, passion, hell itself, she turns .. — iv. !> 

to find out practices of cunning hell Othello, i. 3 

for my wits, and all the tribe of hell — i. 3 

hell and night must bring this monstrous — i. 3 

as low as hell's from heaven 1 — ii. I 

divinity of hell! wdien devils will their.. — ii. 3 
r Aji(.] vcugeauec, from the hollow hell ! — iii. 3 

'tis the spite of liell, the fiend's — iv. I 

truly knows, that thou art false as hell . . — iv. 2 

ay, there, look grim as hell! — iv. 2 

and keep the gate of hell; you! — iv. 2 

Ii.ardonhim! and hell gnaw his bonesi .. — iv. 2 
she's like a liar, gone to burning hell — v. 2 

HELL-BLACK-hell-black night endured. Lrar, iii. 7 

HELL-BllOTII boil and bubble Macbeth, iv. I 

HELLESPONT-thc Hellespont. 7'»o6'en.o/;'fr. i. 1 

yet you never swam the Hellespont.. — i. I 

to wash him in the Hellespont . . AsyouLikeit,\v. I 

to the Propontick and the Hellespont.. 0«ri/o, iii. 3 

HELL-FIKE— I think on hell-firc ..\ Henry IV. iii. 3 

a black soul burning in hell-fire? Henry V. ii. 3 

HELL-GATE— porter of hell-gate ....Macbeth, ii. 3 
H ELL-GOVERNED arm hath .... Richard III. i. 2 
HELL-HATED-with the hell-hated lie . . Lenr. v. 3 
HELL-HOUND-turn, hell-hound .... Macbeth, v. 7 

hath crept a hell-hound Itiehaid HI. iv. 4 

a pair of cursed hell-hounds .. ri/ws /1hJ>o>iici(», v. 2 
HELLISH— of hellish cruelty? . . . Mer. of Venice, iii. 4 

only sin and hellish obstinacy tie All's Welt, i. 3 

hath wrought this hellish mischief..! Henry VI. iii. 2 
bodv with their hellish charms? ..Hiehard III. iii. 4 
had tlu-y told this hellish ta.\e.TitusAndronicus, ii. 3 

and therein, hellish dog — iv. 2 

seeks the hellish Pyrrhus Hamlet, ii. 2 

the censure of this hellish villain Oihelln, v. 2 

HELL-KITE— Ohell-kite! all? Macbe'li,\v.3 

HELL-PAINS-hell-painsfor thy sake./IH'»»W/, ii.3 

though I hate him as I do hell-pains.... OMri/o, i. 1 

HKL Jl— upon thy prosperous helm . . Alt's Well, iii. 3 

every honour sitting on his helm . . I Henry IV. iii. 2 

1 plucked this glove from his helm .. Henry V. iv. 7 
j'ourself shall steer the happy helm..2Htnrs(A7. i. 3 
govern England's helm [Co(. -realm] — ii. 3 

we will not from the helm 3Henry VI. v. 4 

the boar had rased oflFhis helm ..Richard III. iii. 3 
dream, the boar did rase his helm.. .. — iii. 4 

and victory sit on thy helm! — v. 3 

upon them! victorj' sits on our helms — v. 3 
helm more hacked than Hector's. Troilus ^ Cress, i. 2 

that stithy'd Mars his helm — iv. .S 

will I wear it on my helm — v. 2 

mine, that he'll bear on his helm .... — v. 2 

of Troy there, in bis helm — v. 4 

you slander the helms o' the state . . Coriolarus^ i. 1 

unbuckling helms, fisting each — iv. .5 

would have donned his helm .....intony^Clea.'ii. 1 
at the helm a seeming mermaid .... — ii. 2 

with plumed helm thy slayer Lear, iv. 2 

(poor perdu!) with this thin helm? — iv. 7 

make a skillet of my helm Othello, i. 3 

HELMED-busincsshe hath helmed. 3fe<i rorMea. iii. 2 
HELMET— and helmets all unbruiscd.Kn.s^JpAii.ii. 1 

let them lay bv their helmets Richard II. i. 3 

the glittering helmet of my foel — iv. 1 

from helmet to the spur, all blood. . . . Henry V, iv, 6 

out of the helmet of Aleneon — iv. 8 

his bruised helmet, and his bended — v. (chorus) 
shall we on the helmets of our foes..3Hdir!//;. ii. 1 
usurping helmets of our adversaries. /ii'r/ioi*////. v. 3 
what hacks arc on his helmet! .. Tmitusfy Cress, i. 2 

put ofl" my helmet Antonyif Cleopatra, \v. 13 

HELP— by help of her more jxitent Tempest, i. 2 

I will help his ague — ii. 2 

and helll to celelirate a contract — iv. I 

help to bear this away — iv. 1 

you have not sought her help — v. I 

with the Iieln of \-our gixxl hands — (epil.) 

I will belli thee to prefer . ,Ttco Gen,iifVerona,\\. 4 

for that thou .an'st not help — iii. I 

and study help for that — iii. 1 

and that I cannot help — iii. 1 

to help him of his blindness — iv. 2 (sum.') 

if vou will help me to bear it MerryWites, ii. 2 

help me away: let me — iii. 3 

help lo cover your master — iii. 3 

help to search my house — iv. 2 

help me to a candle Tuetfth Night, iv. 2 

food fool, help me to some light .... — iv. 2 
will help yon to't — iv. 2 

for the love of (Jod, your help — v. 1 

I'll help vou, sir Tobv — v. 1 

will vou help on ass-hcad — v. 1 

by w"liose gentle help I was prcservo<I — v. I 
come all to help him, and so stop, .Ur(i>./'>r.Ur'ii. ii. I 



HEL 



[ 362] 

HELP— thy help to this distressed ..ZHenryl'I. iii. 3 

witli tlieir lielps only defend ourselves — iv. 1 

so God help Montague, as he — iv. 1 

must helj> yuu more than you — iv. G 

Burgundy will yield him help — iv. 6 

desired help from Burguiidy — iv. 7 

to help king Edward in histime .... — iv. 7 

for we want thy help — v. 1 

depart, before we need his help — v. 4 

did it to help tliee to a better Hichard III. i. i 

she may help you to many fair — i. 3 

to help thee curse this poisonous — i. 3 

come, Hastings, help me to — ii. 1 

give me no help in lamentation — ii. 2 

{Col. Kilt..'] none can help our harms — ii. 2 

God help the while! — ii. 3 

no, so God help me, they spake not . . — iii. 7 

and much I need to help you — iii. 7 

for thee to help me curse that — iv. 4 

do impart help nothing else — iv. 4 

and help to arm me; leave me, I say — v. 3 

that were the means to help hira — v. 3 

my lord, I'll iielp .you to a horse .... — v. 4 
it win help me nothing, to plead ..UisnryVIII. i. 1 

lest he should help his father — ii. I 

now the Lord help, tliey vex me .... — ii. 4 

but yet I cannot help you. Why? .. — v. 2 
to help unarm our Hector . . Troilus 4- Cressida, iii. 1 

there is no help; the bitter — iv. 1 

as I shall pity, I could help! — iv. 3 

Thersites, help to trim my tent — v. 1 

that well deserves a help Timoii of Alliens, i. 1 

'tis not enough to help the feeble up — i. 1 

from whose help I derived liberty .. — i. 2 

that I shall have much help from you — i. 2 

ServiliusI help! my lord! my lord! — Iii. 4 
what he cannot help in his nature . . CorioUmus, 1. 1 

not arms, must help — i. 1 

other muniments and petty helps . . — i. 1 

to help our fielded friends! — i. 4 

will haste to help Cominius ..■ — i. 6 

for your helps are many — ii. 1 

a little help will serve; for once .... — ii. 3 

to help to get thee a wife — ii. 3 

help, ye citizens. On both sides .... — iii. 1 

that seem like prudent helps — iii,] 

help, help, Marcius! help, you irep.) — iii. 1 

as was never so incapable of lielp .. .. — iv. 6 

I cannot help it now — iv. 7 

in tills so never-heeded help — v. I 

we will meet them, and help the joy — v. 4 

take him up: help — v. 5 

CiEsar cried, help me, Cassius .... Julius Ctcsar, i. 2 

help,hoI they miirder C£Esar — ii.2 

help me away, dear Charmian . . Antony ^- Cleo. i. 3 

but sav, I could not help it — ii.2 

nay, I'll help too; what's this for? .. — iv. 4 

sooth, la, I'll help; thus it must be .. — iv. 4 

help me, ray women ! — iv.ll 

help, help, Iras; help, friends below — iv. 13 

come, Antony; help me, my women — iv. 13 

and had no help of an^er CymbeUne, i. 2 

without the help of admiration — i. 5 

but that my resolution helps me .... — iii. B 

help! or we poor ghosts will cry .... — v. 4 

help, Jupiter: or we appeal — v. 4 

a hangman to help him to bed — « v. 4 

help, help mine, and your mistress .. — v. 5 

help! help! mine honoured lady! .. — v. 5 
help to set a head on headless Rome. 7'i7Ms,(4«rf7-o7i. i.2 

brothers, help to convey her hence . . — i. 2 

help, Lucius, help! — i.2 

help me out from this unhallowed .. — ii. 4 

O brother, help me with — ii. 4 

that I may help thee out — ii. 4 

no strength to climb without thy help — ii. 4 

hands to help thee knit the cord .... — ii. 5 

the one will help to cut the other. . . . — iii. I 

wilt thou help to chop it off? — iii. 1 

help, grandsire, help! — iv. 1 

help her: what would she find? — iv. I 

without the help of any hand at all.. — iv. 1 

now help, or woe betide thee — iv. 2 

help our uncle to convey him in — v. 3 

be my helps as I am soil and servant . . Pericles, i. ! 

awake their helps [Kn(. -helpers] — i. 4 

help me with tears — i. 4 

the name of help grew odious — i. 4 

to help them, when, well-a-day (rep.).. — ii. 1 

that heat, to ask your help — ii. 1 

help, master, help; here's a fish hangs — ii. I 

she dies! help, gentlemen! — v. 3 

father! father! stop, stop! no help? Lear, ii. 1 

help, ho! murder, help! (7'e/>.) — ii.2 

here's a spirit; help me, help me ! — iii. 4 

come, help to bear thy master — iii. 6 

give me some help — iii. 7 

now, heaven help him ! — iii. 7 

he, that helps him, take all my — iv. 4 

help! help! O help! What kind of help! — v. 3 
Where's Potpan, that he helps not. /ify^Heo ^Juliet, i. 5 

his help to crave, and my dear hap . . — ii.2 

within thy help and holy ph.vsio lies — ii. 3 

help me into some house, Benvolio .. — iii. 1 

it helps not, it prevails not — iii. 3 

past hope, past cure, past help! — iv. 1 

thou canst give no help — iv. I 

with tills knife I'll help it presently — iv. 1 

and strength shall help afford — iv. 1 

to help me sort such needful — iv. 2 

to Juliet, help to deck up her — iv. 2 

do you need my help! No, madam.. — iv. 3 

alas! help! help! my lady's dead! .. — iv. 5 

help! help! call help — iv. 5 

with speedy help doth lend redress — iv. 6 (song) 

no friendly drop, to help me after? . . — v. 3 

to help to take her from her borrowed — v. 3 

never, so help you mercy! Hamlet, i. 5 

mercy at your most need help you ! . . . . — i. .') 

he went without their helps — ii. 1 



HEN 



HELP— help heaven! men their. . Mens, for Mcas. ii, 
will Iielp you to-morrow in your .... — iv. 
what! resists he? help him, Lucio .. — v. 

God help the noble Claudio! Muf.li.iJoi. 

to help lily cousin to a good husband — ij. 

and I, with your two helps — ii- 

OGodhelpnie! God help me! — iii. 

help to dress nie, good CO/, — iii. 

as God help, I would desire — iii. 

God help us! it i.-s a world to sec! — iii. 

dead I think: help uncle — iv. 

help us to sigli and uroiin — V. 3 (.son 

I shall desire your lielp (J. 7'-) — v. 

help me, Lysaiuler, lielp iiie! , , Mid. M.'s Dream, ii. 
pray, masters! Hy, masters, help! .. — jii. 

and help from Athens calls — iii. 

but to help cavalero Cobweb to scratch — iv. 
with the help of a surgeon, he might — v. 

our lady l)eli> my lord! Loi-e^^ L.Lost, ii. 

wisdoni's warrant, and the help of school — v. 2 

help, hold his brows! he'll swoon! — v. 2 

so Gotl help me, la! my love to — v. 2 

it now appears, you need my help. Mer. of Venice, i . 3 

I would have him help to waste — ii. 5 

upon command what help we have. ^si/o«I,i/iei7,ii. 7 

God help thee, shallow man! — iii. 2 

I will lielp yon, if I can — v. 2 

by the help of good epilogues — (epil.) 

they cannot help him (rep.) ..: AU\s Well, i. 3 

what I can help thee to, thou — i. 3 

a senseless help, wlieii help past sense — ii. 1 

thou thought'st to help me — ii. I 

when the help of heaven we count .. — ii. 1 

but, if I help, what do you — ii. 1 

give nie some help here, ho! — ii. 1 

the help of mine o^^'n eyes — ii, 3 

let me buy j'our fiieiuuy help tlius far — iii. 7 

we cannot licli> it; but, since — v. 1 

this man may help me to his — v. 1 

ever stood necessiticd to help, that .. — v. 3 
help, masters, help! my master . .Taming of Sh. i.2 
I can, Petrucliio, help thee to a wife — ; i. 2 
promised me to help me to another .. — i, 2 
help to dress your sister's chamber up — iii. 1 
help, help, help! here's a madman . . — v. 1 
help, son! heli^ signior Baptista! .... — • v. 1 

Camillo was his help in tiiis Winter^s Tale, ii. 1 

what's past help, should be past grief — iii. 2 
how he cried to me for helPj and said — iii. 3 
and you shall help to put him i' the — iii. 3 

help me, help me! pluck but off . . — iv. 2 
no hoiie to help you ; but, as you shake — iv- -^ 
to seek thy help by beneficial help. Comedy of Err. 
so, come, help; well struck — iii 

if a crow help us in, sirrah — iii 

God help, poor souls, how idly — iv 

let's call more help, to have — iv 

and borne hence for help — v 

unless you send some present help . . — v 

never saw the chain, so help me — v 

am faint, my gashes cry for help Macbeth, i. 2 

with hidden help and vantage — i. 3 

lielp me hence, ho! — ii. 3 

by the help of these (with Him — iii. 6 

now, God help thee, poor — iv. 2 

now is the time of help — iv. 3 

hand shall help to give him King John, ii. 1 

and, by whose help, I mean to — ii. 1 

shall give thee help to bear thee .... — v. 4 

when it first did help to wound — v. 7 

so help you truth and heaven! Richard IJ. i. 3 

thou canst help time to furrow — i. 3 

to help him to his grave immediately! — i. 4 
good uncle, help to order several .... — v. 3 

weary of it. Help, help, help! — v. 5 

prince Hal, help me to my horse 1 henry TV. ii. 2 

God help the while! a bad — ii. 4 

God help the wicked! — ii. 4 

nor shall w^e need his help these .... — iii, 1 
now God help thee! To the Welsh. .. — iii. 1 

that did help me to the crown — iii. 2 

if we, without his help, can make . . — iv. 1 
what with our help; wliat with — v. 1 

1 do not need yoin- help — v. 4 

X confess, I cannot help iHenrylV. ii. 2 

the cook help to make the gluttony (rep.) — ii. 4 
and slie is old, and cannot help herself — iii. 2 

and lielps toend me: see; sons — iv. 4 

and by God's help, and yours Henry V. i. 2 

rise, and help Hyperion to his horse — iv. 1 
wish more help from England, cousin? — iv. 3 
without more help, might fight this — iv. 3 

Christ's mother helps me i Henry VI. i. 2 

whoe'er helps thee, 'tis thou that {rep.) — i. 2 

I will help to bury it — i. 4 

help Salisbury to make his testament — i. 5 

witches, and the help of hell — ii. 1 

so help me God, as I dissemble i^rep.) — iii. 1 

and hurt not those that help! — iii. 3 

so help you righteous God! — iv. 1 

and cannot help the noble — iv. 3 

the help of one stands me — iv. 6 

now help, ye charming spells — v. 3 

help me tli'is once, that France — v. 3 

condescend to help me now — v. 3 

wonders, but by help of devils — v. 4 

60 God help Warwick, as he loves ..iHenryVI. i. 1 
at rny shrine, and I will help thee .. — ii. 1 

ay, God Almighty help me! — ii. I 

thy greatest help is quiet — ii. 4 

so help me God, as I have watched, . — iii. 1 
no more tlian truth, so help me God! — iii. 1 

there is great hope of help — iii. 1 

my lord? help, lords! the king — iii. 2 

run, go, help, help! O Henry — iii. 2 

[Coi.Jand the help of hatchet — iv. 7 

so let it help me now against — v. 2 

if the help of Norfolk, and myself ..SHenry VI. ii. 1 
how can I help them, and not myself? — iii. 1 
Scotland hath will to help (rep.) — iii. 3 



I HELP— ugly to the thing that helps it.. Hamlet, iii. I 

help him, you sweet heavens! — iii. 1 

I will you two help to hasten them — iii. 2 

help, angels, make assay! — iii. 3 

help, help, ho! What, ho! help! — iii. 4 

is ready, and the wind at help — iv. 3 

we lacked your counsel and your help . . Othello, i. 3 
may help these lovers into your favour — i. 3 

help, ho! lieutenant, — sir,— (rep.) — ii. 3 

a fellow, crying out for help — ii. 3 

she'll help to put you in your place again — ii. 3 
this may help to thicken other proofs . . — iii. 3 

so help me every spirit sanetiflcd — iii. 4 

help! [Coi, -liglit] ho! murder! (rep.) .. — v. 1 
to come into the cry, without more help — v. 1 

help! help! ho, help! O lady, speak — v. 2 

help! help, ho! help! the Sloor has killed — v. 2 

HELPED— bein" helped. Two Gen. o/Fer. iv. 2 (song) 

not to be helped,— right All's Well, ii. 3 

to have helped the old man! Winler'sTale, iii. 3 

by the ship s side, to have helped her — iii. 3 

that helped thee to the crown Hichard III. v. 3 

even her folly helped her to an heir Othello, ii. 1 

HELPER— lacks a helper .. Measure.for Measure, iv. 2 

and helper to a husband All's Well, iv. 4 

you speedy helpers, that are 1 Hennj VI. v. 3 

\_Knt.\ awake their helpers to comfort . . Pericles, i. 4 

HELPFUL— [Coi, A'7i/.-healthful].Comerf!/ o/iirr. i. 1 

and friends their helpful swords Richaid II. iii. 3 

gave the tongue a helpful ornament. 1 Henry IV. iii. 1 
practices, pleasant and helpful to hinil.Wdm/e/, ii. 2 

HELPING— helping me to the speech.. A/uc/i.-li/o, v. ) 

1 am helping you to mar that ....AsyouLike il, i. 1 

not helping, death's my fee All's IVrll, ii, 1 

till by helping Baptista's eldest. 7'a»mii,'o/'.>>7;rt'«',i, 1 
looked for at your helping hands . . Richard It. iv. 1 
too little, helping him to all — v. 1 

HELPLESS— hopeless, and helpless..Com. o,/"i?r?-. i. 1 
with urging helpless patience would'st — ii. 1 

1 pour the helpless balm Richard III. i. 2 

HELP'S!'- that thouhelp'st me not? — i. 4 

HELTER-SKELTER have I rode . .illenry IV. v. 3 

HEM— and hem, when he should groa.n. Much Ado, v. 1 

hem them away. I would (rep.) . . .4s you Lil;e it, i. 3 

upon the very hem of the sea . . Tlmon of .4ihens, v. 5 

and liems, and beats her heart? Hamlei, iv. 5 

and cry hem, if anybody come Olhello, iv. 2 

HEMLOCK— root of hemlock, digged. . Macheih, iv. 1 
darnel, hemlock, and rank fumitory . . Henry V. v. 2 

with harlocks, hemlock; nettles Le(ir,\v. 4 

HEMJVIED-hemmed about with grim. 1 Henry//, iv. 3 

Greeks have hemmed thee in. Troilus^-Cresslda, iv. 5 

HEjMP — let not hemp his wind-pipe . . Henry V. iii. 6 

HEMPEN— hempen home-spuns. il/i'd. N. Dream, iii. 1 

upon the hempen tackle Henry V. iii. (chorus) 

ye shall have a hempen caudle then.2Herj?-j/ J'l. iv. 7 

HEMP-SEED— do, thou hemp-seed! .iHenr'yir. ii. 1 

HEN — cock-pigeon over his hen ..As you Likeii, iv. 1 

Lord have mercy on thee for a hen ..All's Well, ii. 3 

so Kate will be my hen Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 

I have no pheasant, cock nor hen. Winter's Tale, iv. 3 
how now, dame Partlet the hen? ..\ Henry IV. iii. 3 
not swagger with a Barbary hen.. ..2 Henry IV. ii. 4 

a couple of short-legged hens — v. 1 

(poor hen!) fond of no second brood.. Cori'o/ajm.s, v. 3 
HENCEFORTH carry your letters. TwoGen. of V. i. 1 

shall not henceforth trouble me — i. 2 

meaning henceforth to trouble you . . — ii. 1 

henceforth, do what thou wilt Merry Wives, iv. 4 

and I henceforth may never meet. TwelflhlVight, v. 1 
dispose for henceforth of poor Claudio. /VucA Ado, v. 1 
henceforth be never numbered. .U/d. K.'sDream, iii, 2 
henceforth niy wooing mind shall. Loi'e'.\/.,/,o.f/, v. 2 

from henceforth, I will, coz As youLike it, i. 2 

that her gifts may henceforth be ... . — i.2 

I will henceforth eat no fish but of . . All's Well, v. 2 
henceforth I vow it shall be . . Taming of Shrew, iv. 5 
ever, henceforth, thou these rvsivl.Winter'sTale, iv. 3 
and kinsmen, henceforth be earls .... Macheih, v. 7 

from henceforth bear his name King John, i. 1 

from henceforth rather be myself. . ..MIenry IV. i. 3 
but, sirrah, henceforth let me not hear — i'. 3 
must not have you henceforth question — ii. 3 
ungracious boy? henceforth ne er look — ii. 4 
flow henceforth in formal majesty . .2HenryTV. v. 2 
and henceforth, let a Welsh correction. Henri/ V.v. I 
henceforth we banish thee, on ]iain . 1 Henry VI. i v. 1 
henceforth, I charge you, as you love — iv. 1 

henceforth, he shall trouble us 2Henjyr/. iii. 1 

and be henceforth a burying-place to all — iv. 10 
that thou henceforth attend on us . . — v. 1 
henceforth, I will not have to do \\ath — v. 2 
never henceforth shall I joy again , . ZHenry VI. ii. I 
and henceforth 1 am thy true servitor — iii. 3 
will henceforth be no more unconstant — v. 1 
henceforth guard thee well.. Troilus <§• Cressida, iv. 5 

henceforth be no feast Timon of Athens, iii, 6 

henceforth hated be of Timon — iii. 6 

yes, Cassius; and henceforth Julius Ctesar, iv. 3 

and henceforth know AntonySf Cleopatra, i. 4 

henceforth, the white hand of — iii. 1 1 

and read, be henceforth treacherous! Cymtrfine, iv. 2 
not henceforth called my children. raHs.lnrfron. ii. 3 

henceforth I'll bear affliction Lear, i v, 6 

henceforth I never will be Romeo . Romeo ^-Jul. ii. 2 
my bosom henceforth shall be twain — iii. a 
HENCEFORWARD, upon pain.l Hen. VI. i. 3 (procl.) 
henceforward, it shall be treason ..iHenryVI. iv. 6 
and henceforward all things shall be — iv. 7 

henceforward will I bear upon ZHenryVI. ii. 1 

henceforward do your messages. /?o7Heo <$- Juliet, ii. 5 
henceforward I am ever rided by you — i v. 2 
HENCE-GOING— our hence-going.. Cv»'6e//np, iii. 2 
HENCHMAN— to be my henchman. jU/i?. N. Dr. ii. 2 
HENRICUS— Alius noster Henricus. . . . Henni /'. v. 2 
HENRY- Henry Pimpeniell. Taming of Sh. 2 (indue,) 

prince Henry in their company KingJohn, v. 6 

hither Henry Hereford thy bold son.Ricliard II, i. 1 

his young sou Henry Percy — ii.2 

and long live Henry, of that name . . — iv. 1 



HEN 



[ 3G3 ] 



Iir.NKY— to Hciiry Bolincbroke Richard II. iv. 1 

li.id save king Ilenrv, unkinged Richard — iv. 1 

llu'iU'vil tukf lli-iuViif l.iiiii-Mistcr .. — V. 5 
Il.ivr tiiiHsluilh lK'nrvll..linij;liroke.l//fnitfi»'. iii.l 
tliu wi.rld ill pniiM- <il lloMiy I'ercy .. — V. 1 

dcliaiuv ill kill- lU-nrv'H tfcth — V. 2 

tlK- »«Miul. lU-iiiv liird Si'ron|i.;/f,iry/'. ii. (cliorus) 
In tlu' luilTiL' cif llV-iirv liiid Sc-rooi) .. — ii. 2 

iMiili.issuiU.rs I'rniu lli-niv kill,- — ii. -1 

mid Ilciiiv I'liiiit.i^'uia-t is tliiiie .... — v. 2 
ti-.-^c-licrl'll/. lliMuv n.vd'Aii-letcrre — v. 2 
}l<'lirv tllu sixlll. ill infinit li:illd9 — V. 2 (cliorliu) 
f'lili-d iiut.i lliiiiv'sdiiitli! i^rep.^A Henry n. i. I 



III' 



is duml. 



■sliull 



i. 1 
— i. I 



il'llo 



— V. 3 



lit !!• iiiy's dciid 

rv till' lilili! iliv ;,'liost I iuvocate — 

.lii'lnrc dcud llcnrv's corse? — 

cnllid to life again. . — 

biiUw \.u\i ll.'iii-y's liearse — 

your ontlis to Henry sworn — 

"tlieii I will inoclnim young Henry king — 

ilciirv'.s diiiili, the Kiiglisn circle ends — 

wlioiii lleiirv, our Inte Mivereign ne'er — 

lleiirv llie ti't'tli lie lirst trained — 

for th'e riijlit of En-lisli Henry — 

fiiiee lleiuy ^lounioutli first — 

lleiirv the t'oiutli, griindfatlier — 

when lleiirv the tifth, succeeding. . .. — 

and virtnoii's Henrv, iiitv the city .. — 

fuvs the word, kin J irenVv f-'tics _ 

iirtlu-tiineotIlenr\',n.inie.l the flftll — 

tli.it Ilenrv, born ut MoninoutU (rep.) — 

assnreiisl-^iiglish Henry lives — 

young Henry, with his nobles, lies .. — 

were no place for Henry's warriors .. — 

English Henry, will be lord — 

God save king Henry, of that name — 

princely Henry, and tlie rest — 

sweet Henrv, favour hiin! — 

king Henry^ peers, and chief — 

niiin of memory, Henry the fifth .... — 

great maresehal to Henry the sixth.. — 

lleiiry the fifth did sonietime prophecy — 

let Henry fret, and all the world repine — 

Henry is youthful, and will quickly — 

to iiuike tliee Henry's queen — 

I am unworthy to be Henry's wife .. — 

shiill he Henry's, if he please 

in Henry's royal name, as deputy . 

king Henry, were he here — v. 3 

solicit Henry with her wondrous .... — v. 3 

comest to kneel at Henry's feet — v. 3 

in regaid king Hen'ry gives consent.. — v. 4 

honour Henry as her lord (rep.) .... — v. .^ 

Henry is able to enrich his queen — v. 5 

with Henry, being a king — v. .^ 

king Henry's faithful and anointed — v. 5 
Henry kin'g of England (rep. )..i Henry VI. i. 1 (art.) 

did niv brotlicr Henry spend his — i. 1 

by iioliey what Henry got? — i. 1 

shall Henry's conquest, Bedford's .. — i. 1 

and our king Henry gives away .... — i. 1 

liad Henry got an empire by — i. 1 

and Henry was well pleased, to change — i. 1 

till Henry, surfeiting in joys — i. I 

king Henry's diadem, enchased .... — i. 2 

my T<i 11" and nephew, virtuous Henry — i. 2 

where Henry, and dame Margaret . . — i. 2 

yet lives, t'nat Henry shall depose (re/j.) — i. -1 

demanding of kin" Henry's life and — ii. 1 

till Henry Bolinguroke, duke of — ii. 2 

by the name of Henry tlie fourth.... — ii. 2 

Ilenrv dotlielaiin the crown 

Henry will tohiniself protector be . . — 

(iod and king Henry govern England's — 

here, noble Henry, is thy statf — 

as e'er thy father Henry made — 

why, now is Henry King, and Margaret — 

beat fits to be, in Henry's hand — 

ah, thus king Henry throws his crutch — 

for, good king Henry, thy decay i. leai' — 

Henry my lord is cold in great — 

and Henry put apart, the next for me — 

O Henry, ope thine eyes! — 

my sovereign! gracious Henry, comfort! — 

for Henry weeps, that thou dost live — 

Go<l knows, not Henry — 

O Henry, let me plead for gentle — 

king Henry's bhxid. the lionourable — 

for his father's sake, Henry the llfth — 

his father, Henry the fifth — 

is Cade the son of Henry the fifth .. 
Henry hath money, yon are strong ,. 
the name of Henry the fifth hales. . . . 
and Henry, though he be infortunate 
the crown trom feeble Henry's head 
a messenger from Henry, our dread.. 

till Henry be more weatc 

my sovereign, virtuous Henry 

hope to shake king Henry's head 

and not king Henry's heirs — i. i 

and bashful Henrv de|M>Bed — i. 1 

thought of this from Henry's heart.. — i. 1 

the war that Henry means to use .... — i. 1 

in following this usuriiing Henry — i. 1 

I am the sini of Henry the fifth — i. 1 

and give king Henry leave to speak — i. 1 

Henry, and thou shalt be king. Henry — i. I 

resigned the crown to Henry the fourth — i. 1 

that Henry shall l)e so deiKised — i. 1 

king Henrv, lie thy title right — i. I 

Henry of fyaneaster, resign thy crown — i. I 

hose, fearful, and despairing Henry! — i. I 

turn this way, Henry, and regard them — i. 1 
long live king Henry! Plantagcnet — i. 1 

from thv table, Henry, and thy bed — 1. I 

not till Icing Henry be dead — i. : 

Henry had none, but did usurp — .i. ; 

lukewarm blood of Henry's heart.. .. — i. ! 
and trust not BimpJe Henry — i. : 



— II. 2 



ii. .3 



— iv. 8 



.ZUenryyi. i. 1 



HENRY— took king Henry's chair ..iHmry Vt. I. 4 
till our king Henry liiul sliook hands — I. 4 
pale yonr head in Henry's glory .... — i, 4 

toiieriing king Henry's oath, and your — ii. 1 

from liiMit Henry's head — ii. 1 

what say'st thnii, Henry; wilt thou — \\. i 

SUV, Ilenrv, slnill I have my right .. — ii. !! 
j^'ii've king Henry liglit. O I.ancastcrl — ii. 
iiiipairiiie Henry, strengthening .... — ii. (i 
sllines nine, hut Henry's enemies? .. — il. G 

and, Ilenrv, hiidst thou swayed — ii. 

that led eiiliii Henrv, tho"lc — ii. G 

craving aid lor lleriry — iii.l 

and savs, hei Henry Is deposed — jii. 1 

so would v"U he again to Henry .... — iii.l 

Jleiiiy your toe is taken — iii. 2 

is Chireuee, Ilenrv, and his son — iii. 2 

that Ilenrv. sole iiossesKor of my love — iii. 3 

prinee Ivdward, Henry's heir — iii. 3 

go forwanl. Ilenrv's hope is ilonc — iii. 3 

Ilenrv liveth still': lint were he (rep.) — iii. 3 
heeausetliv lather Henry dill usurp — iii. 3 

,)ohn ofCannt, Henrv the fourth.... — iii. 3 
that wise prinee. lleiirv the fifth.... — iii. 3 
from tliese our Ilenrv lineally descends — iii. 3 
how Henry the sixth" liatli lost all (rep.) — iii. 3 
leave Heu'rv, anil call Edward king — iii. 3 

the luore, that Henrv was uiifortiuuite? — iii. 3 
eoining, Lewis was Henry's friend . . — iii. 3 

Henry now lives in Scotland — iii. 3 

renounce him, and return to Henry — iii. 3 
anil replant J lenry in his former state — iii. 3 

heeoinest king lle'nry's friend — iii. 3 

how sluiU poor Henry live, unless .. — iii. 3 

nut that I pity Henry's misery — iii. 3 

belike, he tliinksnie Henry — iv. I 

hut wliat said Henry's queen? — iv. 1 

applaud the name of Henry — iv. 2 

but Henry now shall wear the — iv. 3 

to free king Henry from imprisomneiit — iv. 3 

once more on Henrv's head — iv. 4 

to Henrx's lii'.U , iind supply his place — iv. 6 
my lie.L'e il i~ > ■•'\r -• Henry, earl of.. — iv. G 
as Heinn > iate |.i\-Li-'ing prophecy.. — iv. 6 
waned stale liir Henry's regal crown — iv. 7 

allegiance imto Henry (rep.) — '\v.7 

we are king Henry's friends — iv. 7 

and Henry but usurps the diadem .. — iv. 7 

that Henry is no soldier — iv. 7 

to flatter Henry, and forsake thy — iv. 7 

seize on the shame-faced Henry — iv. 8 

and Henry is my king, Warwick .... — v. 1 

you left poor Henry at the — v. 1 

Henry, your sovereign, is prisoner .. — v. 4 

'tis true, that Henry told me of — v. 6 

king Henrv, and the prince his son . . — v. fi 

triumph J Henry, in thy day of — v. 6 

wliiles I lament king Henry's corse. Ilkhnrd III. i. 2 
see, see! dead Henry's wounds open — 1.2 
these riantagcnets. Henry, and Edward — i. 2 

for I did kill king Henrv — i. 2 

kill'ilst mv hu-linnd Henry in the .. — i. 3 

that Henry's death, my lovely — i. 3 

when Heiiry the sixth'was crowned — _ii. 3 

as I followed Henry's corse — jv. 1 

I do remember me, Henry the sixth — iv. 2 

holy king Henry, and thy fair son .. — v. 1 
king Henry's issue, Richmond, comforts — v. 3 
spoke to, w'ith sir Henry Guilford.. Henryl'lII. \. 3 
my noble father, Henry of Buckingham — ii. 1 

Henry the seventh succeeding — ii. 1 

now his son, Henry the eighth — ii- 1 

say, Henry king of England, come .. — ii. 4 

HENT— have hent the gates. Measure. for. \reasnre,\v. 6 
merrily hent the style-a.. Il'inter's Tale, iv. 2 (song) 
and know thou a more horrid hent. . . . Hamlet, iii. 3 

HERALD— my henild thoughts. TwoGeii. of I'er. iii. 1 
silence is the perfcctest herald of joy. i'/'"''!.-!!'!!.;'!. 1 

my herald is returned Love'sL. Lost, iii. 1 

their herald is a pretty knavish — v. 2 

too bold a herald of niy tongue /Ill's Hell, v. 3 

a herald, Kate? O put me in. . Taming of Shrem, ii. 1 

to herald thee into his sight Mavhelh.i. 3 

heralds, from oft' our towers we might. K(;ig.'o/iH,ii. 2 
like heralds 'twi.xt two dreadful .... — iv. 2 
like a herald's coat without sleeves..! UennjIV. iv. 2 

where is Monntioy, the herald? Henry V. iii. 5 

I tell thee, herald, I thought — iii. G 

herald, save thou thy labour (rep.) . . — iv. 3 
never shalt hear ber'ald any more — — iv. 3 

take a trumpet, herald — iv. 7 

here comes the herald of the French — iv. 7 

wdiat means this, herald? — iv. 7 

I tell thee truly, herald, I know not — iv. 7 
our heralds go with him; bring me .. — iv. 7 
now, herald; are the dead nnmhered? — jv. 8 
heralds, wait on.us; instead of irold, .1 Henry T/. i. 1 
herald, conduct me to the Dauphin's — iv. 7 
herald, away: and, throughout ....tHenryVI.'w. 2 

ehalt wear i't as a herald's coat — iv. 10 

night-walking heralds that trudge.. fficAard III. i. I 
Jove's Mercury, and herald for a king! — iv. 3 

by their heralds challenged Henry V til. i. 1 

I wish no iitlier herald, no other .... — iv. 2 

mav one, that is a lierald Troittis ffCrentidn, i. 3 

that ever herald did follow Corintaum, v. 5 

such drcaiirul liera Ids to astonish us. Jw(/iiJ(7fl'»iir.i. 3 

to herald thee IVoni the wniiih I'ericles, iii. 1 

but the herald erv and I'll a|ii)ear again. . teur, v. 1 
a herald, ho! .\ lierald, ho. a herald! .... — V. 3 
come Iiilhcr, herald; let the trumpet .... — v. 3 
love's hcra Ills slicnld he thoughts. «umeo^yi//i'e/,ii.& 

itwas the lark, the herald — iii. .'j 

n statiiin like the herald .Mercury Hamlel, iii. 4 

IIEliAI.DKV-two coats in heraldry . A/ii/. N.Dr. iii. 2 
the heralilrv [Cut. fc„/.-eiinimis8i6n]../IH'« Well, ii. 3 

ratilied bv law. and heraldry Hamlel- i. 1 

with heraldry more dismal; head to foot — ii. 2 

our new henildrv is— hands, not heorts.O'W/o, iii. 4 

UERB-thc herb 1 showed thee . . Mi<l. \. Dream, ii. 2 



HER 



HERB— fetch me this herb .... .VW. N.'t Dream, ii. 'i 
us I can take it with another herb.... — ii. 2 
then criish tliis herb into Lysandcr's eye — iii. 2 
gathered the enchanted her'l)9..A/crcA.o/fem'ee, v. I 

light on Bueh another herb /<H'.»Cc«, iv. 5 

or, rather the herb ofgraee — iv. S 

luid her w holcsome hcrbsswarmlng./d'c/iarJ /'.id. 4 

sour herb of grace: rue — iii. 4 

and choke the herbs for want iHenryFl. iii. I 

small herbs have grace lliehard III. ii. 4 

the lierbs, that have on them Cymbeline, i v. 2 

such withered herbs as these.. 7*i7Hi/l/ii/ro;i/cu*, iii. I 
that lies in herbs, plants, stones, /^o7/ieo<^ Juliet, ii. 3 

in man OS well as herbs, grace — ii. 3 

we may call it herb of grace o' Sundays. WamW,iv. 5 

supply it with om- gender of herbs OIkello.i. 3 

HERBERT-Fir Walter Herbert ..lliehard III. iv. 5 

sir Walter Herbert, stav with me.... — v. 3 

HICHBI,i;T-tliese herlilets ^hall .. . .O/wbetine, iv. 2 

I1F.HI!-\V(|-\IA.\— yuiir herb-woman .. /'eiic/e., iv. (i 

JIKKCl LE.V.V Ki.inaii du^ri ...Inlany ^Ctenpalra, i. 3 

HEKCU l.ES-diseard, bully Hercules. ;>/c)r!/ II (PC..;. 3 

she woidd have made Hercules have.A/uc/i .-Ida, ii. 1 

undertake one of Hercules' labours.. — ii. I 

sometime, like the shaven Hercules — iii. 3 

he is now as valiant as Hercules .... — iv. i 

was with Hercules, and Cadmus. Hid. N. Di earn, iv. I 

in glory of my kinsman Hercules .. .. — v. I 

Hercules, master. Most sweet (rep.)..Love'iL.L. i. 2 

is too hard for Hercules' club — i. 2 

to see great Hercules whipping a gig — iv. 3 
is not love a Hercules, still ehmbing — iv. 3 
Pompey the great; the page, Hercules — v. I 
he shall present Hercules in minority — v. I 

well done, Hercules! now thou — v. 1 

Armado's page, Hercules; the pedant — v. 2 

freat Hercules is presented by this imp — v. 2 
lercules, and Liehas, play at diccil/cr. (i/>'en. ii. I 

go, Hercules: Live thou, I live — iii. '^ 

the beards of Hercules, and frowning — iii. 2 
Hercules by thy S]jeed,3'oungman!..-l5f/ou I.ibe it,\.2 

he is as strong as Hcrculei Alt'n H'elt, iv. 3 

leave that labour to great Hercules. Tmnin'^ tifSti. i. 2 

I am as valiant as Hercules i Henry 1 1', ii. 4 

I should have seen some Hercules. . . . Henry I' I. ii. 3 
but Hercules himself must yield .. ..'iHenryVI. ii. I 
if you had been the wife of Hercules. Coii'o/<i;ius,i v. 1 
asllercules did shake down mellow — iv. tj 
by Hercules, I think, I am. Antony ^Cleopatra, iii. 7 
'tis the god Hercules, whom Antony — iv. 3 
not Hcri^ulcs could have knocked . . Cymbeline, iv. 2 

the brawns of Hercules — iv. 2 

no more like my father than I to Hercules. Ilanife/, 1.2 

my lord; Hercules and his load too — ii. 2 

let Hercules himself do what he may .... — v. 1 
HERD-the roar of a whole herd of lions. Tempejf.ii. 1 

a wild and wanton herd Merchant of Venice, v. I 

anon, a careless herd, full of As you Like it, ii. I 

like any deer i' the herd /JH'jICeH, i. 3 

drew the rest of the herd to me . . Winter's Tale, iv, 3 
the herds were strangely clamorous. I Henry /C. iii. 1 

a little herd of England's 1 Henry I I. iv. 2 

as doth a lion in a lierd of neat ZHenryVI. ii. I 

will scare the herd, and so my shoot — iii. 1 
the herd hath more annoyance. . Troilus <5 Cress, i. 3 

you herd of— boils and plagues Coriolanxts.i, 4 

are these your herd? — iii.l 

before he should thus stoop to the herd — iii. 2 

w hen he perceived the common heid..'«/i«sC'<i'ji7r, i. 2 

to ontwar thehoniedherd!.JM^o7i!/it^''eopa/r«,iii.ll 

H EKDSM AN-enough a herdsman. Winter'sTale, iv. 3 

HERDSMEN— four threes of herdsmen — iv. 3 

herdsmen of the beastly plebeians . . Coriolanus, ii. 1 

HEREABOUT-other shelter hereabout. 7'empe»(, ii. 2 

apothecary, and hereabouts he d wel Is. ifom .(5"./w'. v.l 

I'll hide me hereabout — v. 3 

Cassio walk hereabout Othello, iii. 4 

IIEKE.VETER— I'll be wise hereafter ..Tempest, v. I 
will hereafter make known to you.. Merry Hives, iii. 3 
what is love? 'tis not liercafter.7'i«;/;A A'. ii.3(song) 

you shall knnw more hereafter — iii. 4 

acknowled^'e itself lieieaiter Meas.for.tleas. iii. 1 

to deliver us from devices hereafter .. — iv. 4 

let that appear hereafter Much Ado, iii. 2 

more of this hereafter Merchant of Venice, ii. G 

sir, fare you well ; hereafter As you Like i/, i. 2 

sluttishness may come hereafter — iii. 3 

for me hereafter to le.ive niv wife.... — iii. 3 
as fearing to hear of it hereafter .... All's IVell, iv. 3 
but more of this hereafter; vou, Diana — iv. 4 

know more of that liereafter » inter's Tale, iv. 3 

whom we name hereafter, the prince ..Macbeth, i. 4 
than both, by the all-hail hereafter! — i. 5 

she should have died hereafter — y. 5 

words hereafter thy tomienters bii\.. Hichard II. ii. I 
shall hereafter, my thrice gracious..! HenrylV. iii. 2 
show itself more ojienly hereafter ..iHenrylV. iv. 2 

occasion to see leeks hereafter Henry V. v. I 

no; 'tis liereafter to know, but now .. — v. 2 

that hereafter ases may behold \ Henry VI. ii. 2 

long hereafter siiy unto Ids child SllenryVI. ii. 2 

that shall you kiiow hereafter lliehard lll.i.t 

sliall cry woe for this hereafter — iii. .1 

many tears to wash hereafter time .. — iv. 4 

hereafter, the kneading Troilus * Crestida, i. 1 

whose memory hereafter more.. 7'iinonn/.4'AeMi,v, 5 
obey vou in every tiling hereoftcr ..Coriolanus, i. 3 

thvself, forsooth, hereafter theirs — iii. 2 

hereafter will I lend cjir to — v. 3 

times I shall recount hereafter .... Julius Ctrsar, i. 2 

live, and lauLdi at this hereafter — ii. I 

might have told hereafter. . /IrifoHy .5CTenpfi/rn, iii. fi 

I will leave to appear hereafter Cymbeline. i. .1 

we'll talk of that hereafter — iii. 2 

shalt liereafter find it is no act — iii. 4 

yet said, hereafter, I might know more — iv. 2 
O never saj' hereafter, but I om truest — v. 5 

priuje you may ilepcnd hereafter Pericles, iii. 3 

remcnilier hiiii hereafter as my honourable. /..e<ir,i. ! 
as you shall use mc hereafter . . Romeo ^Juliet, iii. I 



HER 

II EKE AFTER say— a madman's. Romeo 6r Juliet, v. 3 
liereafter shall think meet to put an .... Hamlet, i. 5 
thou shalt know more liereafter O:hello, ii. 3 

HKREDITARY slotli instructs me .. .Tempesl, ii. 1 
iniposition cleared, hereditary ours. irinie>'sTale,i. 2 
ingratitude in tliem liereditary. 7'<mo!iq/'/J(/ieHs, ii. 2 
senator shall hear contempt liereditary 



[ 364 ] 



compounded thee poor rogue hereditary — 
of tliera were hereditary hangnion . . Coiiolanii 



V. 3 
, ii. 1 



hereditary, rather than purchased. ,J;i/o«!/<5P'fo. '} i 

to thee, and thine, hereditary ever Lear, i. 1 

HEREFORD-hither Henry Hereford. ieit/iarii //. i. 1 
cousin of Hereford, what dost thou .. — i. 1 

our eousiu Hereford and fell Mowbray — i. 2 

recreant to my cousin Hereford — j. 2 

is Harry Hereford armed? — i- 3 

against the duke ot Hereford — i. 3 

Harry of Hereford, Lancaster (le/j.) — i. 3 

Hereford, as thy cause is right — i. 3 

you, cousin Hereford, upon pain of . . — 1. 3 

brought you high Hereford on his way? — i. 4 
as Harry duke of Hereford, were he here — 
death, nor Hereford's banishment . . — 
Hereford? is not Gaunt dead? (;ep.) — 

wrongfully seize on Hereford's rights — 

speak to the duke of Hereford? — 

Harry Hereford, Reignold lord Cobliara — 
I fear, revolt on Hereford's side — — ii. 2 
to offer service to the duke of Hereford — ii. 3 
forgot the duke of Hereford, boy?.... — ii. 3 
my lord of Hereford, my message is.. — ii. 3 
I was banished Hereford; but as I come — ii. 3 
Hereford here, whom you call king (jc/;.) — iv 
the earl of Hereford was reputed ..'IHennjlV. iv, 

and love, were set on Hereford — iv 

the earldom of I-Iereford, and aW .. Richard III. iii 

the earldom of Hereford, and the — iv 

and earl of Hereford, Stafford Henry J' 111. i 

HEREFORDSHIRE to fight \Heiinjir. i 

HERESIES— or, as the heresies.. M/i/.A'.'sDrcam, ii. 3 

are heresies, and, not reformed .... Henry VIII. v. 2 

HERESY-have read it; it is heresy. Va.e/rt'i Nigl't, i. 5 

my surfeit, and mv heresy - . .. :. Mid. N. Dream, ii. 3 

heresy in fair, fit for these days! . Love's L. Lost, iv. 1 

and strange without heresy — v. I 

ancient saying is no heresy .Merchant nf Venice, ii. 9 

all turned to heresy? Away Cymbeline, iii. 4 

HERETIC— was of late a heretic . . Merry Wives, iv. 4 
thou wast ever an obstinate heretic . . MuehAdo, i. 1 
it is a lieretic, that makes the fire . Winter sTde, ii. 3 
from his allegiance to a heretic .... King John, iii. I 
a heretic, an arch one, Cranmer . . Henry VIII. iii. 2 
a most arch heretic, a pestilence that — v. 1 
no heretics burned, but wenches' suitors. Lot)-, iii. 2 
transparent heretics, be burnt. . . . Romeo Sr Julie/, i. 2 

HERETIER— heretier de France Henry V. v. 2 

HERETOFORE— heretofore sounded you. . Lear, i. 2 

HEREirX— iem' estime hereux Heart/ 1', iv. 4 

HERITAGE— service is noheritage....^tt'.! Well. i. 3 

gorgeous palace, for a heritage Richard 11. iii. 3 

mine heritage, which my dead father. . Pericles, ii. 1 
HERMES— than the pipe of Hermes ..Henn/V. iii. 7 
HERMIA-my daughter B.ermia. . Mid.lV's. Dream, i. 1 
what say you, Hermia? be advised.. — i. 1 

therefore, fair Hermia, question your — i. 1 

relent, sweet Hermia; aud, Lysander — i. 1 

let me have Hermia's; do you marry — i. 1 

I am beloved of beauteous Hermia . . — i. 1 
for you, fair Hermia, look you arm.. — i. 1 

therefore hear me, Hermia — i. 1 

there, gentle Hermia, may I marry.. — i. 1 

fair Hermia, ere I go — i. 1 

I will, my Hermia — i. 1 

doting on Hermia's eyes, so I — i. 1 

ere Demetrius looked on Hermia's eyne — i. 1 
this liail some heat from Hermia felt — i- 1 
I will go tell him of fair Hermia's flight — i. 1 

where IS Ijysander, and fair Hermia? — ii. 2 
because I cannot meet with Hermia — ii. 2 

we'll rest us, Hermia, if you think .. — ii. 3 

for lying so, Hermia, I do not lie — ii. 3 

if Herraia meant to say, Lysander lied — ii. 3 
happy is Hermia, wheresoe'er she lies — ii. 3 
compare with Hermia's sphery eyne? — ii. 3 
your Hermia? lord, what though? (7-ep.) — . ii. 3 

content with Hermia? no — ii. 3 

not Hermia, but Helena I love — ii. 3 

she sees not Hermia: Hermia, sleep thou — ii. 3 
have stolen away from sleeping Hermia? — iii. 2 

these vows are Hermia's — iii. 2 

you both are rivals, and love Hermia — iii. 2 
for you love Hermia; tiiis you know — iii. '2 
in Hermia's love I yield you up my — iii. 2 

Lysander, keep thy Hermia — iii. 2 

inJTirious Hermial most ungrateful.. — iii. 2 
we, Hermia, like two artificial gods.. — iii. 2 
not I Hermia? are not you Lysander? — iii. 2 

Hermia, do not be so bitter (7-ep.) — iii. 2 

that Hermia should give answer .... — iv. 1 

I came with Hermia hither — iv. 1 

my love to Hermia, melted as doth.. — iv. 1 

betrothed ere I saw Hermia — iv. 1 

HERMIONE— well said, Hermione. Winter sTale, i. 2 
Hermione, ray dearest; thou never .. — i. 2 

Hermione, how thou lovest us — i, 2 

so forcing faults upon Hermione .... ___ — iii. 1 
Hermione. queen to the worthy — iii. 2 (indict.") 
tliou, Hermione, contrary to the — iii. 2 (indue.) 
Hermione is chaste, Polixenes .. — iii. 2 (oi-in-le1 

Hermione hath suffered death — iii. 3 

the memory of Hermione, I know .. — v. 1 
as like Hermione as is lier picture .. — v. 1 
O Hermione, as every present time dotli — v. I 

the mantle of queen Hermione — v. 2 

near to Hermione hath done Hermione — v. 2 
ever since the death of Hermione .... — v. 2 

say, indeed, thou art Hermione — v. 3 

but vet, Paulina, Hermione was not so — v. 3 

HERMIT-theoldhermitof Prague 7VW///IAV!,'-/;/, iv. 2 

a vithered hermit, fivescore winters. Love's L. L. iv. 3 



HERMIT— but a holy \\&rm\t. Merchant of Venice,v. 1 

we rest your hermits Machelh, i. 8 

such bearded hermits' staves. 2 Henry IV. v. 1 

and like a hermit overpassed thy 1 Henri/ VI. ii. 5 

let's leave tlie hermit pity with . . Troilus Sf Cress, v. 3 
begging hermits in tlieir holy prayers. Tiius.-lnd. iii. 2 

H E RM ITAGE-and naked hermitage. Z.oiie'.< L. L. v. 2 

HERNE— that Heme the hniiter . . Merry Wives, iv. 4 

tills tale of Heme the hunter — iv. 4 

to walk by this Heme's oak — iv. 4 

disguised like Heme, with huge — iv. 4 

to-night at Heme's oak — iv. U 

about midnight, at Heme's oak — v. I 

in a pit hard by Heme's oak — v. 3 

speak I like Heme the hunter? — v. .5 

round about the oak of Heme the hunter — v. 5 
will none but Heme the hunter. , — v. .■> 

HERO-scale another Hero's tower. TwoGen. nf V. iii. 1 

if Hero would be my wife Much Ado, i. I 

with Hero, Leonato's short daughter — i. 1 
no child but Hero, she's his only heir — i. 1 
prompting me how fair young Hero is — i. 1 

if thou dost love fair Hero — i. 1 

and tell fair Hero I am Claudio — 1.1 

marry on Hero, the daughter aud heir — i. 3 
tlie prince should woo Elero for iiimself — _i. 3 
for hear me, Hero; wooing, wedding — ii. 1 

siu-e, my brother is amorous on Hero — ii. 1 

he is enamoured on Hero — ii. 1 

farewell, therefore. Hero! — ii. 1 

for the prince hath got your Hero — ii. 1 

and fair Hero is won; I have broke.. — ii. 1 
the waiting-gentlewoman to Hero .. — ii. 2 
acontamiuatedstale.suchaoneasHero — ii. 2 

to undo Hero, and kill Leonato — ii. 2 

that you know that Hero loves me . . — ii. 2 

hear me call Margaret, Hero — ii. 2 

that Hero shall be absent — ii. 2 

such seeming truth in Hero's disloyalty — ii. 2 
at the lady Hero's chamber-window — ii. 3 

Hero thinks surely, she will die — ii. 3 

they have the truth of this from Hero — ii. 3 
'tis even so: Hero and Margaret have — iii. 2 
Hero? Even she. Leonato's Hero (.rep.) — iii. 2 

the lady Hero's gentlewoman — iii. 3 

and tliought they, Margaret was Hero? — iii. 3 

good-iuorrow, sweet Hero — iii. 4 

know you of any. Hero? — iv. 1 

is this face Hero's? are our eyes our own? — iv. 1 

is it not Hero? who can blot that — iv. 1 

can Hero; Hero itself can blot out Hero's — iv. 1 

Hero! what a Herohadst thou been — iv. 1 
Hero! why Hero! Uncle! signior..., — iv. 1 

how now, cousin Hero! — iv. 1 

do not live Hero; do not ope thine eyes — iv. 1 

sweet Hero ! she is wronged — iv. 1 

the count Claudio hath wronged Hero? — iv. 1 
for accusing the lady Hero wrongfully — iv. 2 
to disgrace Hero before the vvlrole. ... — iv. 2 
Hero was in this manner accused .... — iv. 2 
my soul doth tell me, Hero is belied — v. 1 

incensed me to slander tlie lady Hero — v. 1 
court Margaret in Hero's garments . . — v. I 

sweet Hero! now thy image doth — v. I 

to-night I'll mourn with Hero — v. 1 

it is proved, my lad}' Hero hath been — v. 2 

was the Hero that here lies — v. 3 (scroll) 

Hero? Nothing eertainer: one Hero .. — v. 4 
the former Hero! Hero that is dead! — v. 4 

I'll tell you largely of fair Hero's death — v. 4 

though Hero had turned nun As you Like it, iv. I 

found it was— Hero of Sestos — iv. 1 

Helen and Hero, hildings and harlots. Bom..5-/M;. ii. 4 

HERuD-what a Herod of Jewry is this?. Wctti/W. ii. 1 
Herod's bloody-hunting slaughtermen. Hcii)-!/ V. iii. 3 

to whom Herod of Jewry may Antony ^ Cleo. i. 2 

good majesty, Herod of Jewry dare not — iii. 3 

that Herod's head I'll have — iii. 3 

king of Pont; Herod of Jewry — iii. 6 

there did persuade great Herod to .. — iv. 6 
it out-herods Herod: pray you, avoid it. HamiW, iii. 2 

HEROES-heroes, my s\i-ord and yours.^(r,( Well, ii. 1 
our monarehs, and outstretched heroes. Hamte/, ii. 2 

HEROIC— his mind is not lieroic. . . . Merry Wives, i. 3 
being hut fourth of that lieroic line ..1 Henry VI. ii. .■> 

HEROICAI^thy heroical vassal \.Love'sL. L. iv.l (let.) 
saw his heroical seed, and smiled to . .Henry V.ii. 4 

are more potent and heroical Troilus 4" Cress, iii. 3 

proud of a heroical cudgeling — iii. 3 

HERRING- de herring is no dead. . Merry Wives, ii. 3 

as pilchards are to herrings TwelfihNiglit, iii. 1 

then am I a shotteii lierring \HeurylV. ii. 4 

of stealing a cuile of herrings iHenryVI. iv. 1 

or a herring without a roe Troilus^ Cressida, v. 1 

in Tom's belly for two white herring Lear, iii. 6 

without his roe, likeadried herring. Womeo c^ Jul. ii.i 

HESPERIA, the princess' Ai, you Like i', ii. 2 

HESPERIDES-in the Hesperides?. Low's L.Lost,\v. 3 
before thee stands this fair Hesperides. . Pericles, i. 1 

HESPERUS-Hesperus hath quenched.^H's Well,ii. I 

'HEST— refusing her grand 'bests Tempesl, i. 2 

1 have broke your 'best to say sol — iii. 1 

spongy April at thy 'hest betrims — iv.l 

[Col.) some great sudden 'hest \ Henry IV. ii. 3 

HEURE— acette heure de couper Henry r. iv. 4 

HEW — let every soldier hew him doy.'n. Macbeth, v. 4 

hew them to iiicces, hack their 1 Henry VI. iv. 7 

O I could hew up rocks, and fight ..'iHenryVI. v. 1 

hew down and fell the hardest 3 Henry VI. ii. 1 

or hew my way out with a bloody axe — iii. 2 
than hew to't with thy sword. . Thnn/i of Athens, v. 5 
and hews down oaks with rushes. . . . Coriolanus, i. I 
once more to hew thy target from. ... — iv. n 

not hew him as a carcase hdius Cfpsar, ii. 1 

that we may hew his limbs . . Titus Andronicus, i. 2 
let's hew his limbs, till they be clean — i. 2 

HEWED— have lopped, and hewed — ii. .'J 

HEWING-in hewing Rutland ZHenry VI. ii. 1; 

HEWN— till we have hewn thee down — ii. 2 
be hewn up yet ere night — v. 1 



HID 



HEY-DAY-hey-day,ariddlel....R/c/m)'i ///. iv. 4 

hey-day! spirits aiid fires Troilus 4 Cressida, y. 1 

hey-day I what a sweep of vanity.. Timon ofAth.i, 2 

the hev-day in the blood is tame Hamlet, iii. 4 

IIIBOCkATES- in Hiboorates....Me»T!/WVi'c,s-, iii. 1 

HTC— nomiiuiti\'o, hie, haBC, hoe — iv, 1 

that drum or another, or hie jacet ..AU'sWell, iii. Ii 

HICK— he teaches him to Irick Merry Wivin, iv. I 

HID— which had hid my Tempesl, l 2 

there she's hid — i. 2 

I hid me under the dead — ii. 2 

where my wine is hid — ii. 2 

wherefore are these thiiu-'s hid? . . Twelfth ^'iglil, i. 3 

than love that would seem hid — iii. 1 

lie hid more thousand deaths ..Meas.forMeas. iii. 1 

appear, where it seems hid — v. I 

where IJenedick hath hid himself? ..Much.ido, ii. 3 

when he was hid in the garden — v. 1 

things hid and barred, you mean.Lot'c's L. Lost, i. 1 
mistresses from common sense are hid — i. I 
all hid, all hid, an old infant play . . — iv. 3 

that hid the worse, aud showed — v. 2 

two grains of wheat hid in two . . Mer, of Venice, i. 1 

murder cannot be hid long — ii. 2 

the daj' is when the sun is hid — v. I 

Cytherea all in sedges hid. Taming of Shrew, 2 (ind.) 
be hid in sap-consuming winter's. Comedy of Err. v. 1 
our fate, hid within an auger-hole. . . . Macbeth, ii. 3 

we have our naked frailties hid — ii. 3 

eye of heaven is hid behind Richard II. iii. 2 

fioin hence, hath hid his head — iii. 3 

and hid his crisp head in the \ Henry IV. i. 3 

there's nothing nid from me 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

have I hid me in these woods 2HenryVI.iv. 10 

iron of Naples, hid with English ..SHenry VI. ii. 2 
in my greatness covet to be hid ..Richard III. iii. 7 
in your heart were hid against me. Henry VIII. ii. 1 
bears it not about him, 'tis hid . . Timon of .-Uh. iv. 3 

fill, till the cup be hid Antony ^-Cleopatra, ii. 7 

and hid the gold within the letter. Titus Andrnn. v. 1 

let their ears hear their faults hid! Pericles, i. 2 

and hid intent to murder him .... — ii. (Gower) 
is given where you are hid Lear, ii. 1 

lady, lady, shame would have it hid! — ii. I 

where have you hid yourself? — v. 3 

he hath hid "Iiimself among Romeo ^ Juliet, ii. 1 

heart, hid with a flowering face! .... — iii. 2 
he is hid at Laurence' cell — '!!■ ^ 

1 will find where truth is hid (rt'/j.). . . . Hamlet, ir. 2 
poisons sight; let it be hid Otliello, v. 2 

HIDDEN— of my hidden power ..Meas.forMeas. v. 1 

what hidden woman's fear As you Like it, i. 3 

with hidden help and vantage' Macbeth, i. 3 

it is no hidden virtue in him Henry V. iii. 7 

confound your hidden falsehood ..Richard III. ii. 1 
will turn your hidden worthiness. ./«i/'«s Ccesar, i. 2 
his salt and most hidden loose affection. OMe/^o, ii. 1 

HIDE— where to hide my head Tempesl, ii. 2 

the more it seeks to hide itself — iii. I 

of the salt hides the salt . . TwoGen, of Verona, iii. 1 

for tlie greater hides the less — iii. 1 

to hide what I have said to thee .... — iv. 3 

I'll go hide me Merry Wives, iii. 3 

come, thou canst not hide it — iii. 3 

in the house you cannot hide him . . — iii. 3 
is it a world to hide virtues in? . . Twelfth Nigltt, i. 3 
not a hosom, hides my poor heart.... — iii. I 

nor reason, can my passion hide — iii. 1 

thought it meet to hide our lovfe.il/eas. /or Meas. i. 3 
what may man within him hide .. .. — iii. 2 

and hide the false, seems true — v. 1 

I cannot hide what I am Much.4do, i. 3 

can virtue hide itself? — ii. ! 

I will hide me in the arbour — ii. 3 

knavery, cannot, sure, hide himself — ii. 3 

there will she hide her, to listen — iii. 1 

an' I may hide my face, let me Mid.N.'s Dr. i. 2 

into acorn cups, and hide them there — ii. 1 
and hide me in the brakes, and leave — ii. 2 

where dost thou hide thy head? — iii. 2 

or hide your heads like cowards.. Lowe's L. Lost, v. 2 
hide thy head, Achilles; here comes.. — v. 2 

to excuse, or hide, the liberal -^ v. 2 

safest way to hide us As you Like it, i. 3 

I blush, and hide my sword — ii. 7 

ere they can hide their levity All's Well^ i. 2 

do not hide mine eyes — iv.l 

his court, hides not his visage . . Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

or the profound seas hide in — iv. 3 

when he hides his beams Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

seek to hide themselves in drops of Macbeth, i. 4 

stars, hide 3'our fires! — i. 4 

false face must hide what false — i. 7 

let the earth hide thee! — iii. 4 

an' a' may catch your hide King John, ii. I 

can hide you from our messengers .. — ii. I 

an ox-head to your lion's hide — ii. 1 

thou wear a lion's hide! — iii. 1 

had not a hole to hide this deed — iv. 3 

wipe off the dust that hides Richard II. ii. 1 

sacred king should hide his head! .. — iii. 3 

wilt thou not hide the trespass — ^■. 2 

to hide thee from this open \HeiiryIV. ii. 4 

go, hide thee behind the aiTas — ii. 4 

and therefore I'll hide me — ii. 4 

hut let my favours hide tliy mangled — v. 4 
by the ground they hide, I judge ..iHenrylV. iv. 1 

rather choose to hide them in Henry V. i. 2 

and hides a sword, from hilts — ii. (chorus) 

with ordure hide those roots — ii.4 

for if you hide the crown ■ — ii.4 

make incision in their hides — iv. 2 

dro|i|)ing the hides and hips — iv 2 

good uncle, hide such malice iHenryVI. ii. I 

ah, Gloster, hide thee from their — ii.4 

hide not thy poison with such — iii. 2 

turn away.and hide thy face? — iii. 2 

hide her hide him quickly from (vey?.) — v, I 
and if thou (lost not hide thee from .. — v. 2 
wriiinieu 111 a woman's hide 3IIcury VI. i. 4 



HID 



[ 305 ] 



HIDE— if thou pleiiae to liide in HicAarrf ///. i. 2 

I'll (?o hi'le the Imly in «ome — i. 4 

Willi n viitinnis visor liule deep — .ii. '- 

can lesser ln<lc his love, or Iiate — ifl. 4 

» ouM rutlKT lii.li- ine tViini my greatness — iii. 7 

then will, 111 1 liiil^; n\y 1)01108 — iv. ■( 

Btreani. tliiit must lor ever hide mc.Uenryl'III. iii. 2 

too tliiii iioiUwse to hide offences — v. a 

I'll iii.lo ir.v silver heard Troitm /j- CrrsMa, i. 3 

wiU liidooHrj..vsiio loiiser — iv. 2 

slmllol't iiuike llieeto hide — iv. ■! 

I'll hunt thee for thv hide — V. f. 

h.i|ieotievenf;eshiiri hide : - v. 11 

mm. hi.le tin lie:inis Tinwu //.IMcni, v. 2 

n tr:iiliRvmviit, to hide vour doiii ;s. . Ciiiiolanus, i. 9 
the onuehini.' sears wliieh 1 should hide — ii. 2 

hide it ill smiles, iiiid utVahility ..Julius C<rinr, ii. 1 

to hide thee I'rom prevention — ii. 1 

who did hide tlieirfaees even from .. — ii. 1 
if l_';e>ar liidi' himself, shall thev not — ii. 2 

tills soher form of voiiis liides wioii-s — iv. 2 
ehasti-ementdoth"thereforehidehisliend— iv. :! 

uml liide tin spurs ill liim — V. I! 

to hide me iVoin the radiant sun Ci/nm-liup, i. 7 

irC;e-areau hide the sun from lis.... — iii. 1 
iiow hard it is to hide the sparks .... — iii. 3 
I'll hide uiv master from the Hies.... — iv. 2 

he hideOiiiii iu fresh eups - v. 3 

hole where .Varou hid us hide hiin.r./»s.I/H(™K.ii. 3 
in the park, seel;ill- to hide herself.. — iii. 1 
luv howelseaimot hide her uc.es .... — iii. 1 
wh'cli I would hide from heaven's eye — iv. 2 

nil f .Id what plaited eunniuf,' hides Lenr,i. 1 

hath not sueh need to hide Itself — i. 2 

hide thee, tliiui bloody hand — iii. 2 

the heast no liide, the sheep no wool — iii. 4 

rohes. mid furred gowns, hide all — iv. 6 

hut us ill mind thev hide the fair.«.u/,ra .5 ./«/iW,i. 1 

without tliL- fair within to hide — i. 3 

1 have ui^dit's eloak to hide me from — ii. 2 

to hide his hauhle in ahole — ii. 4 

to hide her faee; for her fan's — ii. 4 

flood Romeo, hide thvself. Not I .... — iii. 3 

and hide me with a dead mail — iv. 1 

I'll hide me hereabout; his looks I fear — v. 3 

more Krief to hide, than hate to Hamlet, ii. 1 

siieli dear eonccrniiigs hide'i! — iii. 4 

bring nic to him: hide fox, and after all — iv. 2 

and eontiiient, to hiile the slain? — iv, 4 

v.hv, sir, Ids hide is so tanned — v. I 

ware, let us hide our loves! Olhello, iii, 3 

IIlDKOrS— in a most hideous Mcrn/H'.res, iv. 4 

som- hideous matter to deliver . . Tu'elflh Nighl, i. 5 
into a most hideous opinion of his rage — iii. 4 
liave laid me here in hideous darkness — iv. 2 
run liy the hideous law .... Measure .ror Measure, i. 5 

to a most liideous object Alt's H'Hl, y, 3 

that sueh a hideous trumpet calls il/rtc6^//i, ii. 3 

ni'ire hideous titan thou art King John, iv, 2 

liave r not hideous death within — v, 4 

to look ipon the hideous god of war.2f/enn/f r.ii. 3 
hideous tempests shook down trees. .SHenryf'/. v. (J 
ill mine ears such hideous cries ....Riclinrd HI. i. 4 
every man, after the hideous storm, f/enri/ I'lll. i. 1 
tt pbanLisma, or a hideous dream, ,Jii/m.« Ciesar, ii. i 

cheek tiiis liideous rashness Lear, i. 1 

more hideous, when thou show'st thee — _ i. 4 

with all these hideous fears? Romeo ^-Julief, iv. 3 

making night hideous; and we fools Hamtel, i. 4 

and with a hideous crash takes prisoner — ii. 2 

ill his thought too hideous to be shown. Othello, iii. 3 

niDKOrSL'^— look more hideously. . 2 H-ncy/r. v. 2 

111 Did it'SXESS-outward hideousness.iViic/i/irfo, v. 1 

UIUl.XG— and hiding mine honour.<>/crry <*'i'fc«,_ii. 2 

there is no hiding you in tlie house .. — iv. 2 

hiding the grossness with fair . . Mer. of Venice, iii. 2 

obscuring and hiding from me all. .4.5 yon Like it, i. 1 

frantic fool, hiding his bitter. T'nmin^o/S/irsi/', iii. 2 

more in hiding of the fault King John, iv. 2 

unless it swell past hiding Troilus fif Cressida, i. 2 

what hope have we in hiding us? . . Cymbeline, iv. 4 
niD'ST— hid'st thou that forehea<!../?icAor<i/;;. iv. 4 

Hi K— you hie you home Two fien.of Verona, iv. 2 

hie home unto my chamber — iv. 4 

hie thee, Malvolio Twelph Night, i. h 

liie therefore, Robin» overcast, jW»'(/, N.'sDream, iii, 2 
hie thee, gentle .Jew: this Hebrew, A/«'.o/^ejiice,i, 3 

acquaintance; hie thee, go — ii. 2 

28 very great: farewell, hie home .,.,AlCslVell, ii. 5 

your dear son may trie — iii. 4 (letter) 

my husband hies him home — iv. 4 

Camhio, hie you home, and hid. .Tnmir\g of f:h. iv, 4 
you will hie you home to dinner. Comtdi/ of Err. i. 2 

go, hie thee presently, post to — iii, 2 

viHain, hie thee straight — iv. 1 

to hie home to his house — iv. 3 

did I bid thee hie thee homo? — iv. 4 

thy state of darkness hie thee straight — iv. 4 

hie thee hither, that I may Macbeth, i. 5 

hie you to horse : adieu — iii, 1 

to arms let's hie! King John, iii, I 

hie thee to France, and cloister ....liicliard I/, v. 1 
hie, cootl sir Alicliael; Iiear this . .,,\ Henry tV, iv. 4 
hie thee, captain. To you, nolde....2H(nri//r. iv. 2 
but thither would I hie. As duly . ...Henry V, iii, 2 
than your swords, hie to the field,,., — iii. 5 

hie thee to hell tor shame Hlchardltl. i, 3 

towards Guildhall hies him in nil post — iii. 5 
go, hie thee, hie thee from this ,.,.,, — iv, I 

well, hie thee to thy lord — iv, 5 

(riKKl Norfolk, hie thee to thy charge — v, 3 

Iiie you t^i your hands; let us Coriolanu», i, 2 

I wfll hie, and so bestow these JtUius Catiar, i. 3 

for Oetavius yet; hie hence, and tell him — iii, I 
hie you, .Messola, and I will seek for,. — v. 3 
but yet hie .vou a|/ain to Egypt. . Antony ^Cleo. ii. 3 

hie thee again; I have spoke — v, 2 

to Dorothy my woman nie thee ,, ..('ymheline, ii. 3 

hie to the Gotlis, and raise Titiis Andrnn. iii. I 

hie thee, whiles I say I'eiiclrs, iii. I 



HIE— in his barge with fervour hios,/'«ic/M, v, (Oow.) 

hie thee thither, and do upon — v, 2 

hie vmi hence to friar I,aiireiice'./f..ra'-f) A- Juliet, ii. .'. 
hie von toihun-li: 1 iiinsl another way — Ii. S 

hieyou to thei-ell. llie to hi-li fortunel — ii. S 
hie to your ehumher: I'll find Komeo — iii. 2 
hie you, make haste, for it grows very — iii. 3 
it is, it is, hie henee, bo gone, away,. — iii. 5 
and erring sjiirit hies to his eontiuo .... Hamlet, i. 1 

lies (lead, and your fate hies apace O'hcllo, v. 1 

IlllOJlS-tliia side is Ilienis, winter.. Loiw's /,. L. v. 2 
IlIti— iiominativo, hig, hag, hog ..Merry IVivei, iv. 1 
lllilll— is another way so nigh a hope.. Temiiesl, ii. I 

mv high eharins work, and these — iii. 3 

th'oiuh with their high wrongs — v. 1 

a most high miraclel — v. 1 

I caniiol reach so high Ttfo den. of Verona, i. 2 

for so hi-h a servant — ii. 4 

wluisc lii^'Ii imperious thoughts — ii. 4 

diu'iiilicd with this high honour .... — ii. 4 

and mine's as high — iv. 4 

and liii,'li and low beguile McrrylVives, i. 3 

both hlgli and low, hoth rich — ii. 1 

heisoftoohiuha re-ion — iii. 2 

that it alone is lii-li fantastical .. VwelflhNlght, i. 1 
tliat Clin siii^' holli liigh and low .. — ii. 3 (song) 
tricks belore lii,L,'h liea\'eii . . Measure forMeasure, ii. 2 
wdien it is home ill hif,'li authority .. — iv. 2 

too low fur ji liigli praise Much Ado, i. I 

with your high and worthy deeds — v. 1 

in 60 nigh a style, Margaret — v. 2 

too high to be enthralled Mid. N.'s Dream,i. 1 

and yet a place of high respect with me — ii. 2 
congealed white, liigh Taurus' snow — iii. 2 
are you grown so high in liis esteem — iii, 2 

in God for high words. A hi'di Love's L. Lost, i. 1 

humljle-visaged suitors, his high will — ii, 1 
roof of this court is too high to be yours — ii. 1 

high gravel-blind Merchant of Venice, ii. 2 

to stand high in your account — iii. 2 

to wag their high tops, and to make — iv, 1 

have deserved high commeiidatioii, .-Is you Lil<e it,\. 2 

just as high as my heart — iii, 2 

and high top bald with dry antitiuity — iv, 3 
higli wedlock then be honoured (rep,) — v. 4 (song) 

which mounts my love so high? All's Welt, i. 1 

before high heaven and you (rep.) — i. 3 

hearing your high majesty is touched.... — ii. 1 

if thou proceed as high as word — ii. 1 

imperial Love, that god most high — ii. 3 

the bound and high eurvet of Mars's .... — ii. 3 

though my revenges were high bent — v. 3 

that set him in high fame ._. — v. 3 

whose high respect, and rich validity .. .. — v. 3 
high esteem, should be infused. Tarn. ofSh. 2 (indue " 
on my faith, deserves high speech, Winter'sTate, ii. 
and arraigned of high treason .. — iii. 2 (indict.! 

thoughts high for one so tender — iii. 

your high self, the gracious mark . , , . — iv, 
desires access to your high presence — v, 

for high and low 8 alike — y, 

therefore 'tis high time Comedy of Errors, iii, 

nothing takes from his high respect , , Macbeth, iii, 

come high, or low; thyself — iv. 

wood to higli Dunsinane hill — iv. 

to treat of high affairs touching King John, i. 

how high thy glory towers — ii. 

among the high tides — iii. 

and that high royalty was ne'er — iv. 

the wall is high; anel yet will I leap — iv. 

appeal each other of high treason Rictiard //. i. 

setting aside his high blood's rovaltv — i. 

liow hiL:h a pitch his resolution soars! — i. 

bleeding, in liishi-hdisgr.ice - i, 

high Hereford on Ids way? (If;;.) .... — i. 

and make higli majesty look — ii. 

these high wild hills, and rough ,,.. — ii. 3 
are we not high? high be our thoughts? — iii. 2 

so high above his limits swells — iii. 2 

thus Tiigh at least, although — iii, 3 

and his high sceptre yields — iv, 1 

whilst .vou mount up on high — iv. 1 

to whose high will we bound our — v. 2 

thy seat is up on high — v. ii 

ever been, high sparks of honour — v. e 

by and by, in as higli a flow 1 Henry IF i.2 

my love and your high majesty — i. 3 

as high i' the air as this — i. 3 

he tliat rides at higli speed — ii. 4 

lie holds your temper in a hi^h respect — iii. 1 
wliose high deeds, whose hoi incursions — iii. 2 
Percy stands on high: and either they — iii. 3 
taught us how to cherish such high deeds — v. 5 

like a horse full of high feeding iHenrylV. i. I 

wear nothing Imt high shoes — i.2 

attached one of so hii^h blood — ii. 2 

grow and sprout as high as heaven . . — ii. 3 

upon the high and giddy mast — iii. 1 

when he was a crack not thus high . . — iii. 2 
arrest thoc, traitor, of high treason .. — iv. 2 
call we our high court of parliament — v. 2 
high uprearcd and abutting.... //cjiry/'. i. (chorus) 

though high, and low, and lower — - i.2 

I arrest tlieo of high treason (jpp.) .. — ii. 2 

my lord high constable — ii. 4 

and teach lavoltas hi^h, and swift .. — iii. .^ 
Charles De-la-bret, high constable .. — iii. .^ 

and my lord high constable (rr/).) ' — iii. 7 

in high and boastful neighs — iv. (chorus) 

boats U|)on the high shore — iv. I 

the sun is high, and wo outwear ■. . — iv. 2 

Charles Dc-la-bret, high constable of — iv. 8 
astonished me with tliy high terms ..\HenryVt. i. 2 

at high festivals before the — i. « 

welcome, liii,'li iirincc, the mighty ,. — iii. 1 

installeil in that hiudi degree — iv. 1 

proud, miijestieal, high scorn — iy. 7 

as by your high imperial '2Henry VI. i. 1 

accuse his master of high treason .... — i. 3 

the wind was very high; and, ten to one — ii. I 



HIG 

HIGH— are fainof climbing high ....'IHenry VI. ii. 1 
the winds grow high; BO do your .... — ii, 1 

by reputiut,' of his high descent — iii, I 

and such high vaunts of his nobility — iii, I 

arrest thee of liif^li treason here — iii. I 

a prcuchmr'iit ot your high descent?.. S/Zcnri/Cy. i. 4 
the grucious iliike, in high despite., — ii. 1 

with promiHc of high pay — ii. 1 

lord liourhon, our high admiral .,,. — iii, 3 
and children of so high a courage! ,, — v. 4 

shall have a high reward — v..') 

those lionoiirH on your high desert.. /(I'c/iur J ///. i. 3 

they that stand high, have many — i. 3 

but I wiis bom NO high — i3 

both make high account of you — iii. 2 

unnicritable, shuns your high request — iii. 7 

thus high, bv thy advice — iv. 2 

match not the high perfection — iv. 4 

one heaved a high, to be hurled — iv. 4 

the high i:iiperial type of this — iv. 4 

call home to high promotions — iv. 4 

sa,v, she shall be a high and mighty. . — iv. 4 
tliat high All-seer which I dallied with — v. I 
high, and working, full of atalc .Henry VIIL (prul.) 
for high feats done to the crown ... . — i . I 

what his high hatred would efl'ect.... — i. I 

I arrest thee of high treason — i. I 

to your high person his will is mo.st. . — i.2 
have found him guilty of high treason — ii. I 

I was lord high constable — ii. I 

and high note's ta'en of your many.. — ii.3 
than your high profession spiritual.. — ii. 4 
employed you where high profits..., — iii. 2 

and claims to be high steward — iv. 1 

'tis the same; high steward — iv. I 

there, my lord : tne high promotion , . — v, 2 
to the high and mighty princess , , . , — v, 4 
tlieir high blood chafed .. Troilus ^ Creuida, (prol.) 

should iiold up hif^h in brass — i.3 

the ladder of all high designs — i.3 

is the high and mighty Agamemnon — i.3 

do not these high strains — ii. 2 

beauty, wit, high birth, vigour of bone — iii. 3 

nor heel the high lavolt — iv. 4 

have upon a high and pleasant.. Timon of Athens, i. I 

race of manki:iil, hifjh, and lowl — iv. 1 

the other, at high wish — iv. 3 

till the high fe\er scetli your — iv. .J 

from high to low throughout — v. 2 

as high as I could pick my lance . . . . Coriotanus, i. 1 
lot the high office and the honour .. — ii.3 

to be set high in place — ii.3 

and answer, such high things .... Jtttius Co'sar, i. 2 
he sits liigh in ail the people's hearts — i.3 

and the high east stands, as the Capitol — ii. 1 
most high, most mighty, and most . . — iii. 1 
appear as huge as high Olympus?.... — iv. 3 
the providence of some high powers.. — v. I 

higli in name and power Antony^ Cleopatra, i. 2 

who neighed so liigii, that what I would — .i, .'i 
noble, courageous, high, unmatchable — ii.3 

it is just so high as it is — ii. 7 

acquire too high a fame — iii. 1 

he Ills high authority abused — iii. 6 

and the high gods, to do you justice — iii. 6 

and pi ighter of high hearts! — iii. II 

and let me rail so nigh — iv. 13 

after the high Roman fashion — iv. 13 

my country s high pyramids — v. 2 

liigh events as these strike those — v. 2 

see high order in this great solemnity — v. 2 
gates of monarchs are arched soliigh.Ci/m6<'//»i^,iii.3 
distinction of place 'tween high and low — iv. 2 
for this lii.gh good turn so far?.. Titus Andronicus,i. 2 
high emperor, upon my feeble knee.. — ii. 4 

both but are of high desert — iii. I 

whose high exploits, and honourable — v, 1 
by winds and high tempestuous gusts — v, 3 
his fal 1 my honour must keep high . , . . Pericles, i, 1 

and higli heaven forbid, that kings — i.2 

towers bore heads so high — i. 4 

the most high gods not minding — ii. 4 

never aimed so high, to love your — ii. 5 

horse, and sail, and high expence — iii. (Gower) 
the sea works high, the wind is loud — iii. ! 
in time to great and high estate — iv, 4 (Gower) 

the king is in high ra^e Lear, ii. 4 

[Kn/.] and the high winds do sorely ruffle — ii. 4 
their great stars tlironod and set high? .. — iii. 1 

Tom, away: mark the high noises — iii, 6 

whose higli and bending head — iv, 1 

cannot he heard so high — iv, 6 

'gainst this high illustrious prince — v. 3 

her high forcliead.andherscnrlet, ftomfo ^yii/iW.ji,! 

the orchard walls are High — 11, 2 

to the high top-gallant of my joy .... — ii. 4 

hie to hi^h fortune! honest nurse — ii. 5 

urged withal your high displeasure . . — iii. 1 

60 high above our heads — iii. .•» 

as liigh as heaven itself? — iv. .") 

by crossing their high will — iv. .5 

ill the most high and palmy state Hamlet, i. 1 

the dew of von high eastern hill — i, I 

high and mighty you shall know — iv, 7 (letter! 

that these bodies high on a stage be — v, 2 

surge, with high and monstrous main ..Ulhello, ii, 1 

tempests themselves, high seas — ii, i 

he was a wight of high renown — ii, 3 (song) 

and Cassio high in oath — ii, 3 

of so high and plenteous wit and invention ! — iv, 1 

it is now high supper-time — iv. 2 

the noise was liigii; ha! no more nio\ing — v, 2 
H!(;ri-H.\'r'TI,EbCa!sar../(n/ony<5-C(M/wj/r<7, iii, II 
HKill-lil.oWN pride at length,,,, Hriirt/ ('///, iii, 2 
lIlCIl-liiinN' — ill high-born wonls.. Lore's L. L. i. 1 
1 iini too hiL'hliorn to be propertied. .Aiii^yoAii, v. 2 
IlKJll (.(il.tUfKKD- 

l.cpicluB is high-coloured .. Antony \ Cleopatra, ii. 7 
HKJH-CROSS every morning .. Taming of stiren; i. I 
Hl(;il-I).\Y-8uch high-day wH.Mer.o/ Venice, ii. !) 



HIG 



HIGH-ENGENDERED battles J.ear. iii. 2 

HIGHER— higher and \\is:hev.iJerr!/ Wives, v. a (song) 

hold np the jest no hiylier — v. .O 

ha! Higher: ha! ha! Excellentl.. ricp/AZ/i .\ig-r,i. i. 3 

no higlier than thvself Merchant of I'cnici', V. 1 

let higher Italv (.tHose liated All's ll'cll, ii. 1 

will he travel higher, or return — iv. 3 

ne'er been higher reared Winler'sTale.i. 2 

the higher powers forbid! — iii. 2 

higher to the plain; where we'll set..King.Mi7i, ii. 1 

steps me a little higlier than 1 HeurylV. iv. 3 

wits of no higlicr breeding than iHciinjlV.\\. 2 

lead on to higher fields — iv. 4 

his affections are higher mounted Henri/ V. iv. I 

which flies the higher pitch 1 Henry II. ii. 4 

no higher than a liird can soar iHennjI'I. ii. 1 

so much tlie higher bv their ebb — iv. 8 

advance thy halberd higher Richard III. i. 2 

hislier tlian his; he (rep.') .... Troilus <5- Cressida, i. 2 

lit't their bosoms hij^her than — i. 3 

holds his honour higher than his — i. 3 

up higlier toward tlie north JuliusCrrsar, ii. 1 

get higher on that hill — v. 3 

higher than both in blood ..Antnmj^Clenpalra.X. 2 

biit let us rear the higher — ii. 1 

whose fortunes shall rise higher .... — ii. 3 
the higher Nilus swells, the more.... — ii. 7 

then afterward up higher Cijmbeline,^ i. 6 

sons, we'll higher to the mountains.. — iv. 4 

one mountain, to oast up a higher PeriHrs, i. 4 

being topped, they higher rise — i. 4 

set your entreatments at a higher rate. . Hmnlel, i. 3 

HIGHEST— highest queen of state Tempest, iv. 1 

misprision in the liighest degree! . Twelflh Night, i. 5 
I'll requite it in the highest degree .. — iv. 2 
is the greatest lady, the highest? Love's L. Lnsi, iv. 1 
the highest compulsion of base fear .. All' s Well, iii. 6 

but take the Highest to witness — iv. 2 

eubstanee valued at the highest. Comedy of Errors, i. I 

let's to the highest of the field 1 Henry 1 1', v. 4 

perjury in the liighest degree Richard 111. v. 3 

touched the highest point of all . . Henri/ nil. iii. 2 
veins of actions highest reared. Troilus <§- Ciessida, i. 3 
and flourish with the highest . . Tiuion of Athens, v. 1 

than those she placeth liighest! Cariolanus, i. 5 

wrench up thy power to the highest — i. 8 

in the highest degree he hath abused — y. i 

climb the highest promontory. TilusAndronicus, ii. 2 

on the summit of the highest mount . . Hamlet, iii. 3 

HIGHEST-PEERING hills ..Titus Andronicus, i'l. 1 

HIGH-GROWN— in the high-grown field.Lear, iv. 4 

HIGH-JUDGING-to high-judging Jove — ii. 4 

HIGHLY— liighly hold in hate. r^oGcn.o/ Ver. iii. 2 

her wit values itself so highly Much.ido, iii. 1 

I will show myself highly fed All's Well, ii. 2 

credit infinite, highly heloveH.Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

what thou wouldst highly Macbeth, i . :> 

we love him highly, and shall continue — i. 6 
as sweet as ditties highly penned ..\ Henry If. iii. j 
thyself shalt highly be employed.. fli'c/iard ///. iii. I 

error be too highly heaped Coriolanus, ii. 3 

I hold me highly honoured. . ., Titus Andronicus, i. 2 

and higlily moved to wrath — i. 2 

and hers, are highly bound to thee .. — iv. 2 
it highly us concerns, by day and night — iv. 3 
highly may advantage thee to hear .. — v. I 
heard others praise, and that highly .. Hamlet, iii. 2 

HIGH-MINDED strumpet 1 Henrv VI. i. 5 

HIGHMOST— thehighmost '\\\\\..Iiomeo <$- Juliet, ii. 5 

HIGHNESS-well believe your highness. Tempest, ii. 1 

pluck his highness' frown upon you .... — v. 1 

sir, I invite your highness — v. 1 

I beseech your highness . . Measure for Measure, v. 1 

your liighness said even now — v. I 

my liege, your highness now may Much Ado, i. 1 

your highness will see first Alid. N.'s Dream, v. I 

why looks your highness sad? Loire's L. Lost, v. 2 

did I offend your highness As youLike it, i. 3 

your highness took his dukedom irep.) — i. 3 

that your higliness knew my heart — iii. 1 

1 shall beseech your highness All's Well, ii. 3 

his highness hath promised me to do it — iv. 5 

his highness comes post from — iv. 5 

hath reference to your highness — v. 3 

it did concern your highness — v. 3 

let your highness lay a more — v. 3 

to satisfy your highness Winter' sTale, i. 2 

your highness will take again — i. 2 

please your highness to take — i.2 

beseech your highness, my women . . — ii. 1 

beseech your highness, call the — ii. I 

about some gossips for your highness — ii. 3 
beseech your highness, give us better — ii. 3 
please your higliness, posts, from those — ii.3 

It is his highness' pleasure — iii. 2 

till tlie fury of his highness settle.... — iv. 3 

as shall become your highness — iv. 3 

by his highness' fail of issue — v. 1 

for visiting your highness — v. 1 

j'our highness simple truth . . Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

implored your highness' pardon Macbel/i, i. 4 

highness' part is to receive our duties" — i. 4 

audit at your highness' pleasure .... — i. 6 

let your liighness command upon — iii. I 

it was, so jilease your highness — iii. 1 

may it please your highness sit? .... — iii. 4 
please it your highness to grace us .. — iii. 4 
what is't that moves yourhighness? — iii. 4 

rise; his highness is not well — iii. 4 

passionate at your highness' tent King John, ii. 2 

ner highness is in safety, fear you not — iii. 2 
I leave your highness: grandam .. .. — iii. 3 

but that your highness pleased — iv. 2 

but it pleased your highness to — iv. 2 

a stand at what your highness will . . — iv. 2 
your highness should deliver up .... — iv. 2 

his highness yet doth speak — v. 7 

aimed at your highness Richard //. i. I 

reverence of your highness curbs me — i. ! 
lendings for your highness' soldiers — i. 1 



[ 306 



HIGHNESS— to his highness' soldiers. niV/in/rf//. i. 1 

yoiu' highness to assign our trial-day — i. 1 

in ail duty greets your highness — i. 3 

unlooked for iVoni your highness' mouth — i. 3 

deserved at your higliness hand — i. 3 

their advantar?e, and yourhighness' loss — i. 4 

that your highness is so armed — iii. 2 

in your highness' name demanded ..\HevryIV. i. 2 

his highness is fallen into this IHenry II'. i. 2 

j'Our highness knows, comes to no ,. — iv. 4 

at more leisure, may your highness read — iv. 4 

are witii his highness very ordinary — iv. 4 

your highness pleased to forget my place — v. 2 
against your highness' claim to France. //'''i/yK, i. 2 

to bar your higliness elaimiiig frum. . — i. 2 

80 hath your highness: nei'cr king .. — i. 2 

will raise your highness such — i. 2 

your highness, latelj' sending into . . — i. 2 

may your highness, and yet punish too — ii. 2 

your highness bade me ask for it — ii. 2 

submit me to your highness' mercy — ii. 2 

which I beseech yourhighness to forgive — ii. 2 

and, if your fatlier's highness do not — ii. 4 

thanks to your highness. I hope .... — iii. 6 

and what your highness suffered under — iv. 8 

I beseech your highness, ijardon me — iv. 8 

njime your highness in this form — v. 2 

in his highness' name .1 Henry FI. i. 3 (procl.) 

his sword before your highness' feet — iii. 4 

and then your highness sliall command — iv. 1 

it grieves Ills highness; good my lords — iv. 1 

informed his highness so at large .... — v. 1 

your highness is betrothed unto — v. 5 

and hath his highness in his infaney.2flpji/!/r/. i. 1 

'tis his highness' pleasure — i. 2 

to show your higliness a spirit — i. 2 

cause your highness came to England — i. 3 

to present your highness with the man — ii. 1 

his highness' pleasure is to talk with — ii. 1 

other of your highness' privy council — ii. 1 

so please your highness to behold — ii. 3 

be admitted to your highness' council — iii. 1 

well hath your highness seen into . . — iii. 1 

his highness hathlost France — iii. 1 

I do arrest you in his highness' name — iii. 1 

e.xi led your highness' land — iii. 1 

win your highness leave the parliament? — iii. 1 

in him they fear your highness' death — iii. 2 

if your highness should intend to sleei) — iii. 2 

biit I hope, your highness shall have his — iv. 4 

expect your highness' doom, of life . . — iv. 9 

■we twain will go into his highness' tent — v. I 

present himself unto your highness.. — y. 1 
your highness would depart the field. 3He«iT/JX ii. 2 

your highness shall do well, to grant — iii. 2 

may it please your liighness to resolve — !!!■ - 

bind me to your highness' service .. — iii. 2 

wdiat I perceive your highness aims at — !!!■ ^ 

your highness wrongs both them and me — iii. 2 

of truth, 1 kiss your highness' hand — iy. 8 
have moved his highness to commit. i?/c/tnrrf ///. i. 1 

I do beseech 3rour highness to — ii. 1 

unless your highness hear me — ii. 1 

your highness shall repose you at the — iii. 1 

what says your highness to my just — iv. 2 

tell me your highness' pleasure — iv. 4 

your highness told me, I should post — iv. 4 

good comfort bring I to your highness — iy. 4 

tis his highness' pleasure Henry I'll J. i . 1 

your highness would give it (juick . . — i. 2 

please your highness, note this dangerous— i. 2 

before your highness sped to France — i. 2 

after your highness had reproved — — i. 2 

now, madam, may his highness live in — i. 2 

Rochford, one of her highness' women — _i. 4 

once more, I present unto your highness — ii. 3 

to your highness' hand I tender my — ii.3 

his highness having lived so long — ii.3 

a blushing handmaid, to his highness — ii.3 

which before his highness shall speak — ii. 4 

and his highness' favours, gone slightly — ii. 4 

I require your highness that it shall — ii. 4 

did broach this business to your highness — ii. 4 

so please your highness, the question — ii. 4 

did entreat your highness to this course — ii. 4 

so please your highness, the queen . . — ii. 4 

peace to your higliness ! your graces find — iii. 1 

gainst his highness' pleasure — iii. 1 

ever God bless your highness! — iii. 2 

ever may your highness yoke together — iii. 2 

for your highness good 1 ever laboured — iii. 2 

hear further from his highness — iii. 2 

a league between his highness and . . — iii. 2 

long in his highness' favour, and do — iii. 2 

may it please your highness to hear me — iv. 2 

do entreat your highness' pardon.... — iv. 2 

how does his highness? Madam — iv. 2 

in all humility unto his highness — iv. 2 

desired your liighness most heartily.. — v. 1 

gladding of your highness with an heir — v. I 

I wish your liighness a quiet night . . — v. 1 

he attends your highness' pleasure . . — v. 1 

to attend your highness' pleasure — v. 1 

I humbly thank your highness — v. 1 

your highness saw this many a day — v. 2 

tis his highness' pleasure, and our . . — v. 2 
what's your highness' pleasnTel.. Antony ^Cteo. i. 5 

I crave your highness' pardon — ii. 5 

good your highness, patience — ii. 5 

will not be denied your highness' . . — v. 2 
please your highness, I will from. . . . Cymbeline, i. 2 

I humbly thank your highness — i. 2 

desires your higliness' company — i. 4 

pleaseth your highness, ay: here they — i. 6 

your liighness shall from this practise — i. 6 

and greets your highness dearly — i. 7 

beseech your highness, hold we your — iv. 3 

we did, so please your highness — v. 5 

I'll make bold, your highness cannot — v. :> 

I liumbly thank your highness — v. 5 



HIN 



HIGHNESS— than I to your highness. Cymdefine, v. 5 

sir, as your highness knows — v. 5 

to heaven, and to his highness Titus Andron. 1. 2 

why doth your highness look so pale — ii. 3 
shall be ready at your highness' will — ii. 4 
to entertain your liighness, and j^our — v. 3 
an' if your highness knew my heart — v. 3 
wiirt please your highness feed? .... — v. 3 

doth your highness call? Pericles, \. 1 

so farewell to your highness — i. 1 

in your dear highness love Lear, i. \ 

more than hath your highness offered . . — i. 1 
your highness is not entertained with . . — i. 4 
when I think your highness is wronged — i. 4 
I did eonimend your highness' letters .. — ii. 4 
displayed so saucily against j'our highness — ii. 4 

I am glad to see your highness — ii. 4 

will't please your highness walk? — iv. 7 

found it WHS against your highness Hamlet, ii. 2 

HIGH-PLACED Macbeth shall live . . Macbeth, iv. 1 

HIGH-PROOF melancholy Much Ado, v. 1 

HIGH-REACHING Buckingham. /?/cAa.d III. iv. 2 
HIGHREARED-high-reared bulwarks — v. 3 

HIGH-REPENTED blames All's Well, v. 3 

HIGH-RESOLVED men TilusAndronicus, iv. 4 

HIGH-SIGHTED tyranny range on. Jul. Cesar, ii. 1 
HIGH-SOARING oVr thy praises. Trail. * Cress, iv. 4 
HIGH-STOMACHED are they both. . Richard II. i. 1 

HIGH-SWOLLEN hearts Richard III. ii. 2 

HIGHT— by name lion bight . . Mid. N.'s Dream, v. 1 
child of fancy, that Armado hight.. Love's L. L. i. 1 
as I rememjier, higlit Costard .... — i. 1 (letter) 

this maid hight Philoten Pericles, iv. (Gower) 

HIGH-TOP— her high-top lowev.Merch.ofrenice, i. 1 
HIGH-VICED-high-viced city. Timon nf Athens, iv. 3 
HIGHWAY— highway ol talk..A/ercA. of f'enice,m. I 

like the mending of highways — v. I 

and should be buried in higViways.. ..All'sWell, i. 1 
are too powerful ou the highwaj'.. Winter's Tale, i v. 2 
but to the next highway, and there.. Richard II. i. 4 
I'll be buried in the king's highway — iii. 3 

for a highway to my bed Homeo ^- Juliet, iii. 2 

HIGH-WITTED Tamora togloze. Titus Andron. iv. 4 

HIGH-WROUGHT flood Othello, ii. 1 

HILDING— find him not a hilding .. All'sWell, i'li. 6 
thou hilding of a devilish spirit.. Taming of Sh. ii. 1 

he was some hilding fellow iHenrylV. i. 1 

this field of such a hilding foe Henry V. iv. 2 

a hilding for a livery Cymbeline, ii. 3 

Helen, and Hero, hildings Romeo Sf Juliet, ii. 4 

out on her, hilding! God in heaven.. — iii. 5 

HILL— ye elves of hills, brooks Tempest, v. 1 

your name to the reverberate \i\\\s.TirelflhNight,i. 5 

over hill, over dale Mid. N.'s Dream, ii. I 

met we on hill, in dale, forest — ii. 2 

against the steep uprising of the hill?. Love's L. L. iv. 1 

or, mens, the hill — v. 1 

we came down a foul hill Taming of Shrew, iv. 1 

coming down the hill — iv. 2 

to high Dunsinane hill shall Macbeth, iv. 1 

my watch upon the hill — v. 5 

and at the other hill command King John, ii. 1 

these liigh wild hills, and rough Richard //. ii. 3 

he is walked up to the top of the hill. 1 Henri// J'.ii. 2 
money of the king's coming down the hill — ii. 2 
sliall lead our liorses down the hill .. — ii. 2 

this huge hill of flesh — ii. 4 

o' horseback up a hill perpendicular — ii. 4 

begins to peer above yon busky hill! — v. 1 

and, falling from a hill, he was — v. 5 

against Clement Perkes of the hill ..2HenryIV. v. 1 

on a hill stood smiling, to behold He/iry f.X.i 

when down the hill he holds — iii. 3 

unto the horsemen, on yon hill — iv. 7 

to sit upon a hill, as I do now iHenryyj.ii. 5 

I'll stay above the hill — iii. 1 

climb steep hills, requires slow pace. Henry nil. i. I 
upon a high and pleasant hill . . Timon of Athens, i. I 
and this hiU, methinks, with one .... — ..i. 1 
ten hills on the Tarpeian rock .... Coriolanus, iii. 2 

but keep the hills and upi)er Julius Ccesar, v. I 

this hill is far enough — v. 3 

get higher on that hill — v. 3 

his bondman, on this hill — v. 3 

squadrons on yon side o' the hill. .4n(on!/ ^- Cleo.m. 8 

upon the hill of Basan — iii. 11 

upon the hills adjoining to the city.. — iv. 10 
up to yon hill, your legs are youvg.. Cymbeline, m. 3 
overlooks the highest-peering hills. Titus Andron. ii.l 

casts copped hills towards heaven Pericles, i. 1 

for who dig hills because they — .i. 4 

wlien a great wheel runs down a hill Lear, ii. 4 

\ip the hill [A'jK.-upward], let him draw — ii. 4 

Pillicock sat on pillieoek's hill — iii. 4 

to the top of that same hill? — iy. 6 

back shadows over lowering hills. Komeo fy Juliet, u. 5 
upon the highmost hill of tliis day's — ii. .'i 

the dew of yon liigh eastern hill Hamlet,\. 1 

round nave down the hill of heaven — .! j* ^ 

new-lighted on a heaven-kissing hill — — iii. 4 

and hills whose heads touch heaven Olhello,'\. 3 

let the labouring bark climb hills of seas — ii. 1 

HIL'T- hilt to point, heel to tiead. . Merry Wires, iii. 5 

with a broken hilt, and chapeless. Taming ofSh. iii. 2 

seven, by these hilts, or I am \HenryII'. ii. 4 

hides a sword, from hilts unto the. Henry V. ii. (oho.) 

I'll run him up to the hilts — ii.l 

painted to the hilt in blood iHenryVI. i. 4 

with the hilts of thy sword Ricliard 111. i. 4 

here, take thon the hilts JuliusCasar, v. 3 

very responsive to the hilts Hamlet, V. 2 

HINC— accusativo, hinc Merry Wives, iv. 1 

HINCKLEY— other day at Hinckley ? .2 Henry/ V. v. 1 
HIND— Ford's knaves, his hinds . . Merry Wives, iii. 5 

the mild hind makes speed Mid. N. Dream, ii. 2 

with the rational hind Costard .... Love'sL.Lost, i. 2 

he lets me feed with his hinds As you Like it, i. 1 

ifa hart do lack a hind — iii. 2 (verses) 

the hind, that would be mated by All's Well, i. 1 

out uuon thee, hind! Comedy of Errors, 'i\\. 1 



HIN 



C 367 ] 



. Othello, iii. 3 
, . Tempest, i. 2 
ii. I 



HIND-nshnllow cowardly hind ....\Hrnnjll'.\\. 3 

rude nn])olishcd hiiuU iUenriii'L iii. 2 

rebcllioTiHhindu, llwlilth — iv. 1! 

riiUL'ed imiltilnilc otliiiicl>i mid pensonts — iv. 4 

luitU sci/.i'cl llw I,-, nllc liiiid Itichar.t III. ii. 4 

piml to tlif liiml. or ^tcp-duinf. . Trnilut /)■ Cri-ts. iii 2 
no lion, were not K.>iniins hinds . .Jiilm, r,v,nr. i. 3 
hot vifld tw to the viTU'st liiml .. ..fiimhrl.,,^. v, :! 
dniu n union;; tlu-^o heurtU^s hinds. lt„,i,fi .\ .'i</.V-/, i. 1 
IllNDKK-hind.r them iVoni »hut.... 7V;,i;j, .>7, iii. 3 
nnd hinder nol n\v eoiu w. . 7V,.. li,n.nnt,i,im, ii. 7 

who is't Unit hinders vonV l/i./.iV.'» Dream, \\\. a 

tin- stops tliiit liiniler stnilv qnitc.Loiif'j L. Lott, i. 1 

llie loveot l:ln^hter, hinder not All'tWell, iii. 6 

to hiiuler. were, in your love .... Winter^ t Talc, i. 2 

whoshiiM hinder me? I will liiclianl II. ii. 2 

to hinder our IiOKiunings, we doubt ..Hi an/ 1', ii. 2 

most hinder lile «deoav aHennjri. iv. 4 

tlmt no dissension hinder government — iv. 6 
who shall hin.kT nie to \Miil und .. Uirhard III. ii. 2 
from vonr nlV.urs I hiniler von . . . . Ihinu I'lll. v. 1 
opposed to liiiider nic. sliould stop. 7VmV.*Ci-««. v. 3 

let nie not liinder. Ciissins JuliusCiriar, i. 2 

thou 8o soniiht'.st t>> liindcr,..4;i/ony fy Cltopatra, v, 2 
niXDKRKD— is III. I hindered., rico Gen.ofrer. ii. 7 
hindered me ot' lialt'rt million. it/z-rcA. of Venice, \\\, 1 
you liindere.l hy the sergeant ..Cnmedyo/ Err. iv. 3 
sorr\'. sir. tiiiif i have hindered you .. — v. 1 
his slec'ps were hindered by thy niilins — v. I 
his sports were Idndered by thy brawls — v. 1 

if we he hiiiilereil. We shall yoiir Henry V. iii. G 

but ..fr have hindered Uenryi'lll. ii. 4 

IlIM)i:ni.\(i luiot-grnsfl madc.Mirf. N. Dream, i\\. 2 
IIlND.MO.-sr—the hindmost man ..iHenryVI. iii. I 
rnsli hv, and leave von hinilinost.TVniV.* f.VMj. iii. 3 
HIN<;~aeensativo. Iiin;.'. haiiL'. hog.^Vcrrv WiMs, iv. 1 
UI.N'C;]',— like strenL'thless hinses ... .iHcnrylV. i. 1 
hinse thv knee, and let his vtry..7'i7non nrAlh. iv. 3 

the pregnant hinscs of the knee Hnmlil, iii. 2 

that the probation bear no hinge 
HIXT-it IS a hint, that wrings .. 

our hint of woe is common 

something' hints [rv.-in't] more All's Well, i. 3 

strong', and ready for this hint .... Coriolnnus, iii. 3 
when tlie best bint was given .. Antony ^Cleo. iii. 4 

take Ilie hint which my despair — iii. 9 

t.>..l; his liiiit: and, not dis[iraising..Ci/mWi'nc v. 
l..iicii heaieii. it was my hint to speak.. O^Arito, i. 3 
upon this hint, 1 spake: slie loved mo .. — i. 3 

HIP— whieb of your hips has Mean. forMeas. i. 2 

from the hip lipward, no doublet ..Hiicli Ado, iii. 2 

hold tlieir hips, nnd loffe Mid. N.'s Dream, ii. 1 

catch him once upon the liip..Ve7r/ia?// of i'enice, i. 3 
now, inlidel, T have thee on the hip.. — iv. I 
measure her from hip to hip. . Comedy of Errors, iii. 2 
from heuil to foot, than from hip to liip — iii. 2 

too wide for Neptmie's hips 2 Henry IF. iii. 1 

dropping the hides and hips Henry I', iv. 2 

the briers scarlet hips Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

I'll have our Miehuel Cassio on the hip. OMtZ/o, ii. I 

niPP.\ KCII US-has lTipparcliU3./l/i(miy,5afo. iii. 11 

IllPPl'.D— his horse hipped \y\l\\ ..TaminnorSh. iii. 2 

II IPP( >I,VTA— now, fuir Uipnolyta. . »Iid. N.Dr. i. I 

Ilippolyto, I wooed tliee with my sword — i. I 

come, my Ilippolyta; what cheer — i. 1 

glance at my credit with Hi ppolyta — ii. 2 

come, lli|)polyta. These tilings seem — iv. 1 

yea; and my father. And Ilijjpolytu — iv. 1 

HIKE— here is good horse to hire ...... Much Ado, i. I 

should full as Jacob's hire ..Merchant ori'cnice, i. 3 

the thrifty hire I saved under As you Like it, ii. 3 

you sent me to, to hire waf'tage.. Comedy of Err. iv.l 

that foreign hire could out of thee henry I', ii. 2 

give thee thy hire, and send thy ..ilienry i'l. iii. 2 

shall pay your pains the hire Kichard III. v. 3 

threepence bowed would hire me ..Hcnryl'IlI. ii. 3 

or all, or lose his hire Coriolanus, i. 3 

received them for the hire of their .. — ii. 2 
than crave the hire which first we .. — ii. 3 

there, take thy hire; and all Cymheline, ii. 4 

let me hire him too Lear, i. 4 

po hire me twenty cunning cooks. Wnm^o <5 Jul. iv. 2 
ink and pajier, and hire iiost-horses .. — v. 1 
and hire those horses; I'll be with thee — v. 1 

this is hire and salary, not revenge Hamlet, iii. 3 

niRKD— hired to it by your brother.. Mmc/i Ado, v. 1 

to that end riders dearly hired As you Like it, i. 1 

whose arms are hired to hear their Machelh, v. 7 

have hired me to undermine 'ZHcnryl'I. i. 2 

if you are hired for meed Richard III. i. 4 

it sleeps, and does no hired harm. Timon ofAth. iv. 3 
of justice, nor hy a hired knife ..Antony ^Cleo. v. I 
no more trust than love that's hired! — v. 2 

hired with that self exhibition Cymbetine, i. 7 

IIIREN— not Hircn here? {rep.') illenryll'. ii. 4 

IIIUTIUS— IlirtiusandPansa ....Antony ^Cleo. i. 4 

HISS— do hiss me into madness Tempest, ii. 2 

if I do not act it, hiss me Merry tVires. iii. 3 

so if any of the audience hiss .. ..Love's L. Lost, v. 1 
roasted crabs hiss in the bowl .... — v. 2 (song) 
whose issue will hiss me to my.. .. Winler'sTale, i. 2 
of an hour's age doth hiss the S|)caker.jV/acli!(A, iv. 3 

frightful as the serpent's hies 'iHenry FI. iii. 2 

shall hiss at thee again _ iv.l 

goose of Wi nehester would hiss. Troilm ^- Crest, v. 1 1 
elai) him, and hiss him, according. .yM/i»iCrf'«ar, i. 2 

HISSED— hissed him in scorn lionwoi^- Juliet, i. 1 

IHSSES—whcn he hisses TToilusiCressida,v. 1 

lil.S.sING-think of that, hissing hot. A/cdj/ICipm, iii. 5 

a thousand hissing snakes TituiAndronicut, ii. 3 

\K-tl.'] spits come hissing in upon them . . /,por, iii. 6 

IIlsTofilC'AI^postoral (rep.) Hamlet, ii. 2 

11 l.vruHY— what's her historv? ..TieelfihNiahl, ii. 4 
doth thy history fully tinfolcl . . Meat, for Meat. i. 1 

ever hear by tale or history .Mid. N.'t Dream, i. 1 

this strange eventful history ....At you Like it, ii. 7 

it is a kind of history Taming of Sh. 2 (indue.) 

more than history can pattern .. Winter t Tale, id. 2 
there is a history in all men's l\ves.-J Henry 1 1\ iii. I 
repeat, and history liis loss to new . . — iv.l 



HISTORV—ehorusto this history.. //fnri^r. !. (cho.) 

cither our history sholl, with full — i. 2 

my cars that tragic history SHenry I'l. v. fi 

the history of all her secret Itielmrd 111. iii. i 

almost ended his life's history ....JuliutCietnr, v. 5 

who knows by history, report Cymbetine, i. 7 

the history or my knowledge touching — iii. S 
slionhl I tell my history, 'twould seem. /Viic/ci, v. I 

often leaves the history unspoke Lear,\. 1 

coineily, history, pastoral Hamlet, ii. 2 

anil portance in my travel's history .... Othello, i. 3 

to the history of lust and foul thoughts .. — ii. 1 

HIT — I can never hit on'a name ..Merry IVives, iii. *2 

to bit him in thceyel Twelfth Nii;hi, ii. !} 

ns siiielv as voiir feet hit the ground — iii. 4 

nnd he that hits me, let him be MuehAdo, i. 1 

whieh hit, hut hurt not — v. 2 

hit with Cniiid's archery Mid. N.'sDream, iii. 2 

is hit lower; have I hit'her now?. Lore's i..;,o,i7,iv. 1 
a little boy, as touching the hit it? .. — iv.l 
the hit it. Thou eaii'st not hit it Oep.) — iv. I 

for they both did hit it — iv.l 

or he'll ne'er hit the clout! — iv.l 

'twill be a hard vay to hit. . Merchant of Venice, ii. 2 
what, not one hit? from Tripolis.... — iii. 2 
that a fool doth very wisely liit . . As you Like it, ii. 7 

oft it hits, where hope is coldest Alt'slVell, ii. 1 

thou httst hit it, come, sit on me. .TamingofSh. ii. 1 
aimed at, though you hit her not .... — v. 2 
l-*etrucbio, Traiiio hits you now .... — v. 2 
confess; hath he not hit you here? .. — v. 2 
the wager, though you hit the white — v. 2 

father 8 image is so hit in you IVinler'sTale^ v. 1 

hy what wonder yon do hit on. .Comedy of Err. iii. 2 

have but hit your thoughts Machelh, iii. 6 

you have hit it. So did be never ..\HenryI I'.W. i 
fleshed with conquest, aim to hit ....'2llvnryll'. i. i 

the :.'..Iden mark Iseek tohit — i. 1 

til. .11 Iiast liit it: for there is illenryVl. iv. 1 

luilh s.inietliiiig hit ourselves illenryVI. ii. 2 

level not to hit their lives Richard III. iv. 4 

I tliink, you have hit the mark Henry VIII. ii. 1 

spared any, that had a head to hit .. — v. 3 

tiiat (ire-urake did I hit — v. 3 

once, and hit that woman — v. 3 

what I would not have hit . . Troilus ^-Cressida, i. 2 

but, hit or miss, our project's — i. 3 

where thou wilt hit me dead? — iv. 5 

why, this hits right Timon of Athens, iii. 1 

thou mightst have hit upon it here .. — iv. 3 
invisible perfume hits the sense.. /tn^ony ^Cleo. ii. 2 
upon an up-cast, to be hit away ! . . . . Cymheline, ii . 1 

their thoughts do hit — iii. 3 

and hit the innocent mansion — iii. 4 

Aaron, thou hast hit it {rep.). .Titus Andronicvs, ii. 1 

hits the mark his eye doth level Pericles, i. 1 

too short to bit me here — i. 2 

delicate odour. As ever hit my nostril — iii. 2 

pray you, let ns bit [Kn/. -sit] togctlier Lear, i. 1 

soonest hit. Well in that (,rep.) . . Itomeo ^Juliet, i. 1 

love cannot hit the mark — ii. I 

then here I hit it right — ii. 2 

thou liiist most kindly hit it — ii. 4 

Tybalt hit the life of'stout Mercutio — iii. 1 

that often madness bits on Hamlet, ii. 2 

and hit the woundless air — iv.l 

he shall not exceed 3'ou three hits — v. 2 

nothing but my shame, and the odd hits — v. 2 

give the first or second Iiit — v. 2 

a hit, a very palpable hit — v. 2 

another hit; what saj' you? — v. 2 

mv lord, I'll hit him now — v. 2 

UITIIERTO— and Severn hitIierto..l//cnry 7r. iii. 1 
which hitherto have borne in them . . Henry V. v. 2 
have been guided by thee hitherto..! Henry VI. iii. 3 

all hitherto goes well 3 Henry VI. iv. 2 

ICol.Knl.'^ hitherto hath held mine./iiV/iard 7/7. iv. 1 

my good lords, hitherto, in all Henry VIII. v. 2 

if you have hitherto concealed this Hamlet, i. 2 

and hitherto doth love on fortune tend — iii. 2 

I am hitherto your daughter Othello, i. 3 

niTIIERWARI)-is preparing hitherwnrd.. ./o/m, v. 7 

is marching hithcrwards i Henry IV.iv. 1 

or hitlierwards intended speedily .... — iv.l 
marching hithcrwards in proud.. . .'2 Henry VI. iv. 9 
at Dunsmore, marching hitherwnrd.37;<?nr!//'/. v. 1 
forth already, and only hitberward.. Cono/nnii.!, i. 2 

sail of ships 'make hitherward Pericles,^ i. 4 

British powers are marcliing hitherward. T./'^r, iv. 4 
HITTING- hitting a grosser quality. ;;eiir.vr7/7. i. 2 

hitting each object with a joy Cymheline, v. 5 

HIVE— drones hive not with me..JI/cr.o/T<"/ircc, ii. 5 

were dissolved froom my hive Ul'sWelt. i. 2 

we bring it to the hive 2 Henry IV. iv. 4 

from their hives, and hotises 1 Henry VI. i. 5 

like an angry hive of bees illent-yVl. iii. 2 

general is not like the hive . . Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 3 
niZZIiSTG [C'o;.-whiZ7,ing, /iTn/.-hissiiig] in. tear, fii. H 
IH)AR— the hoar leprosy adored. 7'i'moii of Athens, iv. 3 

hoar the flamen, that scolds — iv. 3 

stale and hoar ere it be spent Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 4 

hoar, and an old hare hoar (rep.) — ii. 4 (song) 

that shows bis hoar leaves Hamlet, iv. 7 

H().\RD— seek the squirrel's hoard. ..17iV/. A'. Dr. iv. I 
to what purpose dost thou hoard .... Uichard II. i. 3 

a mere lioartl of gold kejit by 'IHenryl V. Lv. 3 

H(),\I!DF.n--uiiv groat I hoarded ..•illenryVI. iii. 1 

tlie li..Hr(le.l plaL'ue o'the gods Cortolanus.iv. 2 

H( )A If 1)1 i\( ; ^i.f boarding abbots. ... KinnJnlm, iii. 3 

f..r bis lii.ar.ling went to hell? n/7e;i>i,/'/. ii. 2 

HOAIi-DOCKS— [CW.] with hoar-docks ..Lear, iv. 4 
HO.'VRSE— saying we are hoarse ..At yon Like it, v. 3 

the raven himself is hoarse Macbeth, i. b 

Warwick is hoarse with calling 'IllenryVI. v. 2 

bondage is hoarse, and may not. Romeo ^-Juliet, ii. 2 

tongue more hoarse than mine — ii. 2 

HOARY— hoarv headed frosts . ...Mid. N. Dream, ii. 2 

HOB-to beg ot' Hob and Dick Coriolanus, ii. 3 

HOBBrDIDANCE, prince of dumbness ..Lear, iv. 1 
HOBBY- noKSE-thcsc \\ohhy-\\OTM». Much Ado, iii. 2 



HOL 

HOBBY-HORSE is forgot Lore's L. Lott, iii. 1 

my love, bobby-horeci' (rrp.) — iii. 1 

then say, my wife's a hobbv-horse. M'in/rr'ir.i/c, i. 2 
the liolibv-llorse; wliose eii'itapli (rrp.).llinnlel, iii. 2 

there, give it your liohhv-liorw.- Ollnllo. iv. 1 

IlllIi(;()l)I.Ti\-Crier ll.'.b-ohlin . . Mrrn, li;rc,, v. .'. 

those that Hobg.iblin call \ ..Mid. N.'sDream, ii. I 

IKIIi-NAII.-aKtbev biiv \nA<--\m\\»..\ Henry I V. ii. 4 

Ihon inny'st he turned to lioh-nails.i/loo-i/ 1'7. iv. 10 

IlnBNoli-liobnobishis wmti.. ..Tuelf1hN,Kl,i,yn. \ 

H( )C— noniinativo, hie, b.i'e, hoc Merry IVivet,iv. 1 

HODGE-PUDDING-ahodgc-piiddiiig? — v..', 

]|()(i— nominativo, hig,hog, hog — iv.l 

accusutivo, bing, hang, hog — iv.l 

hang hog is Latin for bacoi — iv.l 

a hog, a headless bear Mid. A'.'j Drram.iii. I 

hound, hog, bear, fire, at every iii. I 

will raise the price of hogs..il/c)<;/ian/o/ Venice, iii. .') 

Ehttll I kec]) your hogs, and eat As you Like it, i. 1 

abortive, rooting hog! Richard 111. i. 3 

hog in sloth, fox in stealth 7,rar, iii. 4 

IKJGSIIEAD— my hogshead of wine ...Tempest, iv. 1 

likest to a hogshead irep.) Lore's I.. Lost, iv. 2 

thrust a cork into a hogshead H'inter'sTale, iii. 3 

three or four score hogsheads \ Henry IV. ii. 4 

bear such a huge-full hogshead? •illenrylV. ii. 4 

noiSE— hoise diike Humidirey 'lllennj VI. i. I 

IlOISED-mistrusting them, hoised fail. Rich. III. iv. 4 

HOIST— there they hoist us Tempest, i. 2 

will you hoist sail, sir? Tnetfth Might, i. b 

June, hoists sails, and flies. Antony ^Cleopatra, iii. 8 

and hoist thee up to the shouting .... iv. 10 

sliall they hoist me up, and show — v. 2 

tlie engineer hoist with his own jietnr.. Hamlet, iii. 4 
HtJlSTED— had hoisted sail .. Comedy of Err.yrs. v. 1 
HOLIiOKN— I was last in noll)orn.7i,cAarrf 777. iii. 4 

IIOI/D— hold, notwithstanding Tempest, ii. 1 

hold it no longer - ii. 2 

did hold his eyes locked TiroCen.of Verona, ii. 4 

she holds them prisoners still — ii. 4 

Valentine I'll hold an enemy — ii. B 

the good conceit I hold of t!iee — iii. 2 

timt women highly hold in hate — iii. 2 

that they may hold excused — iv.l 

tliere, hold — iv. 4 

when .vou hold your peace — v. 2 

{Cot.] Verona shall not hold thee .... — v. 4 

1 hold him but a fool — v. 4 

for divers pliilosoiihers liold Merry IVires, i, 1 

liold, sirrah, bear vou — i. 3 

for gourd, and fullam holds — i. 3 

Ills gold will hold — i. 3 

does he not hold up his head — i. 4 

hold, there's money for thee — i. 4 

hold up 3'our head; come (rrp.) — iv.l 

pr'ythee, hold thy peace — iv.l 

well said, brazen-face; hold it out — iv. 2 

go, I'll liold: this is the third time .. — v. 1 

liold up .your bend, and mince — v. 1 

hold up the jest no higher — v 5 

you yet shall hold your word — v. S 

I saw him bold acquaintance Tirelfth A'i>/i7, i. 2 

if one break, theother will hold — i. 5 

wlio of my people hold him in delay? — j. 5 

I hold the olive in my hand — i. .1 

nor hold him up with hopes — i. 5 

hold thy peace, thou knave — ii. 3 

it begins, hold thy peace — ii. 3 

never be.'in, if I hold my iience — ii. 3 

or thy nneetion cannot hold the bent — ii. 4 

I hold as giddily as fortune — ii. 4 

so big, to hold so much! — ii. 4 

hold, there's expences for thee — iii. I 

hold, sir, here's my purse — iii. 3 

pr'ythee, hold thy peace! — iii. 4 

therefore, if you hold your life — iii. 4 

I'abian can scarce hold him yonder.. — iii. 4 

good sir Toby, hold — iii. 4 

hold, there is half my coffer — iii. 4 

hold, sir, or I'll throw j'our dagger .. — iv. 1 

come on, sir; hold — iv.l 

hold, Toby; 011 thy life, I charge (np.) — lv. 1 

thou shult hold the opinion — iv. 2 

hold, little faith, though thou — v. I 

he holds Bclzebub at tie stave's end — v. 1 

hold therefore, Angelo Measure for Measure, i. ) 

1 hold you as a thingensky'd — i. s 

if this law hold out in Vienna — ii. I 

hold you there: farewell — iii. I 

put them in secret holds — iv.3 

and hold you ever to our special .... — iv. .'i 

nor wished to hold ray jieaee — v. 1 

layholdofhim — v. I 

and hold no longer out — v. 1 

no longer session hold upon my shame — v. I 

hold up your bands, say nothing .... — v. 1 
I will hold friends with you, lady ....MuehAdo, i. I 

no, no; we will hold it as a dream.... — i. 2 

and truly, I bold it a sin to match .. — ii. 1 

rather than hold three words' conference — ii. I 

estimation do you mightily hold up — ii. 2 

or if Ihoii wilt"lioId longer argument — ii. 3 

he hath ta'en the infection; hold it up — ii. 3 

when tliev hold one an opinion — ii. 3 

1 think he holds you well — iii. 2 

tliat these princes hold against her .. — iv. 1 

hold vi.n eonteiit: what, man! — v. I 

I'll hi. hi mv mill. I, were she — v. 4 

eiioiii;h: lu. 111.. .rent liow-string8..A/ii/./V.DiMm, i. 2 

the wh. lie quire bold their hips — ii. I 

and Daphne holds the ehofc — ii. 2 

or let liiiii b.. Id his fingers thus — iii. I 

h.ild the sweet jest Uli — iii. 2 

I perceive, a weak bond holds you .. — iii. 2 

now she holds iiie not — iii. 2 

three and three, we'll hold a fenst.... — iv.l 

more devils than vast hell can hold.. — v. 1 

a fortnight hold we this solemnity .. — v. 1 

and hold fair friendship with his.. /.nrc'.. ', Lott, ii. ) 

curst wives hold that eclf-sovereignty — iv. i 



— iv. 3 

_ V. I 

_ V. 2 

— V. -2 

— V. 2 
_ V. 2 



V. 2 



iii. 3 

iii. 4 
iv. 1 
iv, 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
V. 1 



II. f> 



— V. 4 



— iii. 6 



HOLD— holds in the exchange frcp.^.Love'sL. L. iv. 2 

ah, never faith coulil hold — iv. 2 

the world cannot hold areuraent — iv. 3 (verses) 

I, that hold it sin to break the vow . . — iv. 3 
I never knew man hold vile stuff .... 
hold there is the very remuneration.. 

hold, Rosaline, this favour thou 

hold, take thou tliis, and give me ... . 

let's hold more chat 

this field sliall hold me, and so hold. . 

help, hold his brows! he'll swoon: 

face of brass hold longer out? 

that he did hold me dear 

your lion, that liolds his poU-ax 

to hold the plough for her 

I hold tlie world but as the world. Afpi-.o/ Venice, i. 1 

to hold a rival place with one — i. I 

hold here, take this: tell gentle — ii. 4 

that ever holds: who riscth from — ii. 6 

what! must I hold a candle — ii- 6 

and hold vour fortune for your bliss — iii. 2 (scroll) 

never grant this forfeiture to hold .. — 

I'll hold thee any wager — 

to hold opinion with Pythagoras — 

that holds this present question — 

the law hath yet another hold on you — 

she would not hold out enemy for ever — 

we should hold day with the Antipodes — 
if with myself I hold intelligence. ./Js you Lik 

you that will not, hold your tongues — 

)>old death awhile at the arm's end .. — 

be flouting; wc cannot hold 

if truth holds true contents 

must of necessity hold hisvirtueto jovi. AW sWell,i. 1 

you must hold the credit of your — — i. 1 

I have a desire to hold my acquaintance — ii. 3 

■will this oapricio hold in thee — ii. 3 

which holds not colour with the time — _ii. -5 

[ KnI.'] hold a goodly manor for a song — iii. 2 

I will hold a long distance — iii. 2 (letter) 

which holds him much to have — iii. 2 

the caitiff, that do hold him to it — iii. 2 

it is, that holds thee hence 

not a hilding, hold me no more . 

this ring he iiolds in most rich choice — 

by your leave, hold your hands — iv. 3 

hold thee, there's my purse — iv. 5 

I thank my God, it holds yet — iv. 5 

your doctors hold it very meet. Taming of Sh. 2 (ind.) 

here is none to hold you — i. 1 

of a sudden take such hold? — i. 1 

hath the jewel of my life in hold — i. 2 

iron may hold with her — ii. 1 

bv sai nt'Jamy, I hold you a penny. Taming of S/i. iii.2 

to hold my stirrup, nor to take — iv. 1 

and hold your own, in any case — iv. 4 

a tall fellow; hold thee that — iv. 4 

lav hold on him, I charge you — v. 1 

your deer does hold you at a bay .... — v. 2 

how she holds wp the neb Winter' sTale, i. 2 

while I speak this, holds his wife — — i. 2 

much ado to make his anchor hold . . — _i. 2 

hold your peaces — |i- I 

and so forlorn, may hold together.... — ii. 2 

if tlie springe hold, the cock's — iv. 2 

your resolution cannot hold — iv. 3 

more than my pack will hold — iv. 3 

should hold some counsel in such 

not hold thee of our blood 

whom here I cannot hold on shore .. 

wl\at course I mean to hold 

visitation shall I hold up before him? 

fet hold thee, there's some boot 
hold it the more knavery to 

for God's sake, hold your hands. . Comedy ofB; 
hold, take thou that, and that. Hold, sir — i 

I hold your dainties cheap, sir — ii 

O, soft, sir, hold you still — ii 

nor I will not hold me still — i 

hold thy tongue (rep.) — i 

hold, hurt him not, for God's sake! .. — 

enter, and lay hold on him — 

and hold thee to my heart Mncbeth, 

to cry, hold, hold! great Glamis! .... 

hold, take my sword 

why do we hold our tongues 

to-night we hold a solemn supper. . . . 

but hold thee still — ni. 2 

from whom this tyrant holds — iii. 6 

to hold what distance his — iii. 6 

when we hold rumour from — iv. 2 

let us hold fast the mortal — iv. 3 

that first cries, hold, enough! — v. 7 

tliat holds in chase mine honour King John, i. 1 

of him it holds, stands young — ii. 1 

in his right, we hold this town — ii. 1 

for tlie worthiest, hold the right — ii. 1 

we hold our town for neither — ii. 2 

that here hold up his right — ii. 2 

blood, holds hand with any princess — ii. 2 

why holds thine eye that lamentable — iii. 1 

but the huge firm earth can hold it up — iii. 1 

for he, that holds the kingdom, holds — iii. 1 

thou may'st hold a serpent by — iii. 1 

that hand which thou dost hold — iii. 1 

I having hold of both — iii. 1 

you hold too heinous a respect — iii. 4 

no vile hold to stay him up — iii. 4 

but hold himself safe in his — iii. 4 

go to, hold your tongue — iv. 1 

let me not hold my tongue — iv. 1 

in right you hold, why then — iv. S 

we cannot hold mortality's strong .. 

three foot of it doth hold 

can holdout this tempest 

nothing there holds out but Dover .. 

we hold our time too precious 

and holds belief that, being brought 
and press to that last hold, confound 
which holds but till thy news 



i. 3 



ii. 1 



v. 2 



— IV. 3 



— iv. 3 



ii. 1 



iii. 1 



iv. 2 



— ii. 1 



ii. 3 



— iv. 1 



HOLD— what thy soul holds dear .... liichaf 
O who can hold a fire in his hand .... — 

and holds you dear as Harry — 

hold out my horse — 

hold, take my ring. My lord — 

hold thy neace; he that hath suffered — 

in eating liim, to hold him up — 

he is in the mighty hold of Bolingbroke — 
Oxford? hold tliose justs and triumphs? — 
our council we will hold at Windsor. 1 UenrylV. i. 1 

and it holds well too; for the fortune — i- -' 

never hold that man my friend — i. 3 

which now we hold at ranch micertainty — _i. 3 

it holds current, that I told — ii. 1 

such as can hold in : such as — ii. I 

will she hold out water in foul — ii. 1 

and this civil buffeting hold — ii. 4 

the father, how he holds his — ii. 4 

or hold me pace in deep experiments — iii. 1 

he holds j^our temper in a high — iii. 1 

and hold their level with thy princely — iii.2 

which do hold a wing quite from .... — !'!• ^ 

in arms, holds from all soldiers — iii. 2 

1 hold as little counsel with weak fear — iv. 3 

I saw him hold lord Percy — v. 4 

hold up thy head, vile Scot {rep.) — v. 4 

this worm-eaten holdof ragged.SHt jin/ IV. (indue.) 

hold up head without Northumberland — i. 3 
good master Fang, hold him sure ... 

and he holds his place 

to hold your honour more 

thousand reasons hold me back 

a hulk better stuffed in the hold . . . 

hold hook and line, say I 

doth she hold her own well? 

hold. Wart, traverse; thus 

as might hold sortance with his 

as he IS striking, holds his infant up — iv. 1 

may offer, but not hold — iv. 1 

to hold our safety up — iv. 2 

from heir shall hold this quarrel up — iv. 2 

he cannot long hold out these pangs — iv. 4 

nobles then should hold their places — v. 2 
can this cockpit hold the vasty .Henn/r. i. (chorus) 

to hold in right and title of the female — ;• 2 

howbeit they would hold up this Salique — i. 2 
hell and treason hold their promises — ii. (chorus) 

and hold out mine iron — ii. 1 

I have, I will hold, the quondam.. .. — ii. 1 

hold hard the breath — jij. 1 

can hold licentious wickedness (re;).) — iii. 3 

twice a day their withered hands hold up — i v. 1 

and hold their manhoods cheap — iv. 3 

pander, hold the chamber-door — iv. 5 

hold, there is twelvepenee for you . . — iv. 8 

hold you, there is a groat to heal .... — v. 1 

else ne'er could they hold out so 1 Henry VI. \. 2 

I see, must hold his tongue — iii- 1 

to hold yoiu- slaughtering hands — — iii. 1 

yet, Pueelle, hold thy peace — iii.2 

O hold me not with silence — v. 3 

enchantress, hold thy tongue — y. 3 

nor hold the sceptre in his childish ..iHenryVI. i. 1 

why should I hold my peace? — _i. 3 

which now they hold by force — ii- 2 

hold, Peter, hold! I confess — ii. 3 

and hold lis here all day — iii. I 

in the conflict that it holds with death — iii. 2 

on heaven's bliss, hold up thy hand — iii. 3 

but that my puissance holds it up .. — iv. 2 

men shall hold of me in capite — iv. 7 

here is a hand to hold a sceptre up . . — v. 1 

hold, Warwick, seek thee out some. . — v. 2 

sword, hold thy temper — y. 2 

here holds her parliament ZHenryVI. i. 1 

he that holds up Lancaster — i. 1 

and therefore fortify your hold, my lord — i. 2 

hold, valiant Clifford — i. 4 

hold you his hands, whilst I — i. 4 

to hold thine own, and leave — ii. 2 

Northumberland, I hold thee reverently — ii. 2 

or else, hold close thy lips — ii. 2 

death doth hold us in pursuit — ii. Ti 

nor strength to hold out flight — .ii. 6 

to hold 3'our true obedience — iv. 1 

I hold it cowardice, to rest — iv. 2 

tlie third, if this sword hold — v. 1 

that they do hold their course — v. 3 

hold Richard, hold, for we have .... — v. 5 

I can no longer hold me patient Richard HI. i. 3 

it was wont to hold me but while — — i. 4 

for he holds vengeance in his hand . . — i. 4 

and he holds me dear — j. 4 

or wrong surmise, hold me a foe .... — ii. 1 

will take hold on me ; and you — ii • I 

doth the news hold of good king — ii. 3 

the saying did not hold in him — ii. 4 

to-morrow hold divided councils .... — ii i. 1 

my lord, I hold my life as dear as yours — iii. 2 

God hold it, to your honour's good . . — iii. 2 

no cause to hold my friendship — iv. 4 

franked up in hold; if I revolt — iv. 5 

[Col. KnL} that holds off my present aid — iv. fj 

for when they hold them Henry VIII. i. 3 

such a bowl may hold my thanks. . . . — i. '• 

you hold a fair assembly — ,i. 4 

I hold my most malicious foe — .;;• i 

all the fellowship 1 hold now with . . — iii. 1 

wlio holds his state at door — v. 2 

how dear I hold this confirmation .. — v. 2 

shall hold you play these two months — y. 3 

if they hold, when their ladies bid .. — (epil.) 
yet hold I off: women are angels. 7')-o/7us <5- Cress, i. 2 

should hold up high in brass — i. 3 

that holds his honour higher — _i. 3 

nay. I must hold you — ii. 1 

I will hold my peace when — ii. 1 

it holds his estimate and dignity .... — ii. 2 

worth holds in his blood — ii. 3 

'tis said, he holds you well — ii. 2 



HOLD— of that we hold an idol . . Troihu <5 Cr 

sweet, bid me hold my tongue 

here I hold your hand; here, my cousin 

Troy holds him very dear 

we in silence hold tlriis virtue well .. 

now, Ajax, hold thine own! 

I pr'ythee, do not hold me to mine .. 

good-night. Hold, patience I 

nothing else holds fashion 

must not hold: unarm (rep.) — 

life every man holds dear (rep.) — 

lay hold upon him, Priam, hold him — 
hold thy whore, Grecian! now for . . — 

in the course I hold Timon o/Ath 

than one which holds a trencher .... — 
mine eyes cannot hold out water .... — 
and would not hold taking, I doubt me — 
it cannot hold; it will not (rep.) .... — 

to hold your hand more close — 

will't hold? will't hold? It does .... — 
bankrupts, hold fast; rather than ... . — 



Cress, ii 


3 


111 


2 




3 

1 


- "' 


2 


_ V 


2 


— V 


2 



iii. 6 
iv. I 
'V. 3 

does the rumour hold for true 

than liave him hold that purpose . . Coriotanus., ii. I 

peace, peace, peace; stay, hold, peace! — iii. 1 

therefore lay hold of him — iii. 1 

that it shall hold companionship — iii.2 

that will not hold the handling — iii.2 

and holds up hands, for fellowship . . — v. 3 

if you do hold the same intent — v. 5 

hold, hold, hold, hold. My noble masters — v. !> 
the rout, then hold me dangerous. . Julius Crrsar, i. 2 
wherefore do you hold me here so long? — i. 2 
and your mind hold, and your dinner — i. 2 

that Rome holds of his name — i. 2 

hold my hand; be factious for redress — i. 3 
may hold him from the Capitol to-day — ii. 1 
but one in all doth hold his place.... — iii. 1 

unassailable holds on his rank — iii. I 

I will not hold thee long — iv. 3 

1 would hold more talk with thee. . . . — iv. 3 
but hold thee, take this garland — v. 3 

yet hold up your heads ! — v. 4 

1 pray thee, hold thou my sword-hilts — v. h 
hold then my sword, and* turn away — v. o 
you do not hold the method. .4 »(o7ii/ <5- Cleopatra,}. 3 
what hoop should hold us staunch .. — ii. 2 

to hold you in perpetual amity — ii. 2 

dost thou hold there still? — ii. 5 

to destiny hold unbewailed their way — iii. 6 

legions thou Shalt hold by land — iii. 7 

and hold our best advantage — iv. 10 

yet cannot hold this visible shape — iv. 12 

hold, worthy lady, hold ; do not yourself — v. 2 

she holds her virtue still Cymbeline, i. .'j 

my ring I hold dear as my finger .... — i. ■'» 

will this hold, think you? — i. o 

to hold the hand fast to her lord .... — i. 6 

O! can my sides hold, to think — i. 7 

the heavens hold firm the walls — ii. 1 

another stain, as big as hell can hold — ii. 4 
by the power we hold, be our good deed — iii. 1 

the sliarded beetle in a safer hold — iii. 3 

'tis some sava^je hold; I were best .. — iii.G 
highness, hold me your loyal servant — iv 3 

so we'll hold thee ever — y. 5 

I hold me highly honoured . . Titus Andronicus, i. 2 

nor hold thy stumps to heaven — iii.2 

hold, hold; meanwhile, here's money — iv. 3 
will hold thee dearly for thy mother s — v. I 
an idiot holds his bauble for a god .. — v. 1 

at a banquet hold him sure — v. 2 

'tween her stumps doth hold the bason — v. 2 
this jewel holds his biding on my arm.. Teric'es, ii. 1 

that holds his life of you — ii. 2 

in your imagination hold this stage — iii. (Gower) 
for the babe cannot hold out to Tyrus ~- iii. 1 

hold, villain! A prize, a prize I — iv. 1 

hold, here's gold for thee (rep.) .... — iv. B 

the jewel yoxi hold so dear — iv. 6 

hold thee, from this, for ever Lear, i. 1 

dear to us, we did hold her so — i- I 

to hold my very course — i.3 

yes, forsooth, I will hold my tongue .... — j. 4 

and hold our lives in mercy — i. 4 

no contraries hold more antipathy — ii. 2 

let go thy hold, when a great wheel — ii . 4 

too tough! will you yet nold? — ii. 4 

under two command's, hold amity? — ii. 4 

this tyrannous night take hold upon you — iii. 4 

fellows, hold the chair — 'n\.7 

hold your hand, my lord — iii. 7 

than now to bid you hold — iii. 7 

beadle, hold thy oloody hand — iv. 6 

take like hold on thee — iv.6 

and hold your hands in benediction .... — iv. 7 

holds it true, sir, that the duke — iv. 7 

if Ills last purpose hold — v. I 

appear where you shall hold your session — v. 3 

I holdyou but a stibject of this war — v. 3 

hold, sir; thou worse than any name — v. 3 

more woeful, hold it in — v. 3 

hold me not, let me go Romeo Sr Juliet, i. 1 

this night I hold an old accustomed — i. 2 

I pray thee, hold thy peace — i.3 

dead I hold it not a sin — i. 5 

he, that can lay hold of her — i. 5 

limits cannot hold love out — ii. 2 

hold Tybalt;— good Mercutio — iii. 1 

hold friends! friends part! and, swifter — iii. 1 

hold thy desperate hand — '.!!■ 3 

hold your tongue, good prudence ... . — iii. 5 
hold, daughter; I do spy a kind of hope — iv. 1 

hold, then; go home, he merry — iv. 1 

hold ; get you gone, be strong — iv. 1 

hold, take these keys, and fetch more — iv. 4 

hold, there is forty ducats — v. 1 

hold, take this letter; early in the — v. 3 

hold him in safety, till the prince — v. 3 

will not let belief take hold of him Hamlet, i. 1 



— iv. (letter) 



- iv. 7 I 



HOL 



IIOI/D— my heorti for I must hold niy ..Hamte(, i, i 

holil you tlu'wiitrli tiinislit? Wodo .... — i. i 

and l.id MR- liuM inv iH'uec — i. i 

luild it 11 I'iislnoii.iiiid a tov in bUH)d .... — i. 3 

holdoll'v.imlmiids. He luled — i. l 

■whose elVi'c-t luihl suoli uti enmity with .. — i. 5 
hold, hold, niv lieui t; luul von, my sinews — i. S 

while niemorv holilsu sent in tlii8 — i. ."> 

I hold it nt, ihut we slnike liuuds — i. 5 

1 hold inv dulv, lis I hold mv sold — ii. 2 

vet 1 hold il not hoMLstv to fmve it — ii. 2 

irnlv, iniil I hold iiiiihition ufsuairy .... — ii. 2 

if vou loven.e, hoM nototr — ii. 2 

dotlu-v hold Ihi' siuiieestinmtioll — ii. 2 

ond the imlioii holds il no ^in — il. 2 

bnt, ir von hold it li(, ullci the play — iii. 1 

to hold, n» 'l» err, the inirr.ir np til nature — iii. 2 

women's tear iind love hold ((imntity — iii. 2 

with the incorpoiid nir do hold discourse? — 

hold tlieir eourse lor i:r.!;lu 

might hold, if this slumUl blast in proof 

our purpose niav hold there 

nature her enstoiii holds .. 

thev hold up -Vduin's profession — v. 1 

will searoe hold the laving in — V. 1 

hold oir Die earth a while — v. I 

hold otr[/v)i/.-oway] thy hand — v. 1 

1 once did hold it, as oiir statists do — v. 2 

nnd the kinu hold his purpose — v. 2 

if vour plriiMuc hold to |.lav with Laertes — v. 2 
if thou didst ever hold lue ill thy heart .. — v. 2 

thou iliilst hold him in tliy luitc OlheUo,i. 1 

vet do I hohl it verv stiiftd' the conscience — i. 2 

lav hold upon him;' if he do resist — i. 2 

hold vonr hands, hnth von of my — i. 2 

the .general eare take liold on nic — i. .1 

the olfiee 1 do h.ddof vou, not onlv take — i. 3 
heholdsme well, the better shall inv.... - i. -1 
melt on them, enn hold the mortise? .... — ii. I 
that hold their honours in a warv distance — ii. 3 

no; for 1 hold him to be imwoithy — ii. .) 

Ipravvon, sir, liold vonrhai.d — ii. 3 

Go<rs will, lieiiteiiunt! hold; von will he — ii. 3 
hold, for your lives. Hold, hold, lieutemint — ii. 3 
hold, hold! the general speaks toyon (tep.) — ii. 3 

for his own raf;e, holds his soul lialit — ii. 3 

that she holds it a vice in her goodness.. — ii. 3 
if you iilease to hold him oft'a while .... — iii. 3 

and hold her free, I do beseech your — iii. 3 

hold your peace. 'Twill out (r<"/).) — v. 2 

torment him much, and hold him long .. — \.'i 
HOI,l>-DOOR-hold-door trade.. Troilus f,Crets. v. 1 1 
HOLDKN-parlinment, holden at Bury.'-'/)f»/ry*'/.ii.l 
UOI-DETlI-she holdeth thee in asweMUnryVl. i. 1 
UOl/DF AST— holdfast is the only dog . . Hem y F. ii. 3 
HOIjDING — in vour hokling up. Mtfa*. for Menit. iii. 1 
base and vile, holding no ouanMy. Mid.N.'s Dr. i. 1 
that, one man holding trotn ........ — iii. 2 

holding a trencher, jesting merrily .Lor^'« A. L. v. 2 
this has no holding, to swear by hiin./t//'sire//, iv. 2 
inake a cjire of happy holding her. If'iiiler's Tale,'iv. 3 

of eves, holding up of hands — v. 2 

holding the eternal spirit KingJolm, iii. 1 

as holding of the pope, your sovereign — v. 1 
who holding in disdain the German . . Henri/ f. i. 2 
holding line course to Harfleur .. — iii. (chorus) 

the holding anchor lost ^Henri/I'l. v. 4 

what she doth cost the holding.. Troilun ^ Ciew. ii. 2 
holding Corioli in the name of Rome.C'ono/a;ius, i. G 

will serve for a short holding — i. 7 

holding them in human action — ii. I 

holding every man shall bear ....AnlonyfjCleo. ii. 7 

if, in the lioldiii'* or loss of that Ct/mhrlijif, i. .'» 

holding out gold Prriclrs, ii. 2 

whij)|)ed for holding my peace Lenr, i. 4 

hohling thine ear close Uomeo (( Juliet, v. 3 



[ 3(59 ] 



HOL 



iii. 2 



and hold'st it fear, or sin, to speak ..'iUenryll 

thou hold'st a place, for which Pericles, iv. fi 

if mv love thou hold'st at aught llnmlet, iv. 3 

HO I, IC— with the hole in it ..TwoGen. of I'eronti, ii. 3 

there's a hole made in your Merry ll'iret, iii. 5 

o crammed hole, or chink .... Mid. N.'xDream, v. I 

the hole of this vile wall (r«p.) — v. I 

the little hole of discretion Love's L. Los', v. -i 

as the noil to his hole, the cuckold ..All'sfVrtl, ii. 'j 
spit in the hole, man, and tune. . Taming of Sh. iii. 1 

had not a hole to hide this deed King John, iv. 3 

through every guilty hole ttinhnrd II. iii. 2 

what hole in hell were hot 1 lleiinjll'. i. 2 

he had made two holes in the illenryU'. ii. 'i 

wilt thou make as many holes in.... — iii. 2 

if I fniil a hole in his coat Henry V. iii. fi 

the hand that made these holes! , . Richard lll.i, 2 
and, in thost' holes where eyes did .. — i. 1 
I'll go hide the b.uly in some hole .. — i. 4 

by thee was punched full of deadly holes — v. .1 
elephants with holes, lions with.. Julius Ctusar, ii. I 
witness the hole you made in Ciesar's — v. I 
the holes where eyes should be ..Antony ft Cleo, ii. 7 
her husband to some secret hoIe..7'i/u# Andron. ii. 3 

this is the hole where Aaron bid — ii. 3 

what subtle hole is this, whose mouth — ii. \ 
this unhallowed and bloo<l-stained hole? — ii. 1 

ring, that lightens all the hole — ii. 4 

I'll see what hole is here, and what. . — ii. 4 

make thou a hole, that all _ i;i. 2 

thy brethren to that guileful hole .. — v. 1 
couches 'fore the mouse's hole ..I'cricles, iii. (Gow.) 

to hide his bauble in a hole Itomeo Ji- Juliet, ii. 4 

might stop a hole to keep the wind .... Hamlet, v. 1 

IIOLIDA>I t; -by my holiilnnie. Taming of .''hrew. v. 2 

HOLIDAY— not a holiday fool there . . Tempest, ii. 2 

make holiday: your rye straw hats .. — iv. 1 

in the holiday time of my beauty.. Werrj/ H'ives, ii. 1 

he speaks holiday, he smells — iji. 2 

upon thee in holiday foolery Ai you Like il, i. 3 

for now I am in a holiday humour . . — iv. I 
never see It but a holiday irep.) King John, iii. 1 | 



HOLIDAY— and, after, holiday . , . Ilichnrd II. iii. 1 
all the year were playing holidays.. H/fnr|/ IV. I. 2 
with maiiv liolidav and lady terms.. — i. 3 

aholidav shall this be kept Richard III. ii. 1 

this little one shall make it holiday. f/cnrr/r/;/. v. 4 

is this a holida> y What! JuliusCiesar, i. 1 

we make holiday, to see Caisar — i. 1 

and do you now cull out a holiday? — i. 1 

and we'll have flesh for holidays Pericles, ii. 1 

being holidav, the beggar's shop./fomco ^Juliet, v. 1 

IIOlJKIi-wliat iKdier, than HV;i(f r'l 7'n;<-, v. I 

work not in holier shapes Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

Il()LII,Y-tliat wouldst thou holily ....Macbeth, \. 'j 
who have died holily in their beds .... — v. I 

how holily he works in all his Henry VIII. ii. 2 

Ht^I^lNESS— from his holiness.. Mens. for Meas. iii. 2 
it doth beseem your holiness.. Comet/// qf Krtors, v. I 

shall give a holmess, a purity king John, iv. 3 

and from his holiness use all j'our power — ^ . I 
delivered to his holiness for clothing.! Henry II. v. I 

all his mind is bent to holiness 2 Henry f'l, i. 3 

a state fit for his holiness — i. 3 

with such holiness can yon do it? .. — ii. I 
my whole cause 'fore Ins hoVmcss.. Henry y 1 1 1, ii. 4 

she intends unto his holiness — ii. 4 

did entreat his holiness to stay — iii. 2 

all the business I writ to his holiness — iii. 2 
mil thee into wit and holiness. 3'>oiVuji$-Cifs»Wa,ii. I 

HOLLA— holla vour name Twelfth Kighl, i. .5 

cry, holla! to tliy tongue As you Like it, iii. 2 

presently: holla, within! Taming of Shrew, ii. I 

in his ear I'll holla, Mortimer! Mlenryll'. i. 3 

that first lights on him, holla the other.. Lear, iii. I 

holla, holla! that eye, that told j'ou so .. — v. 3 

JI01>LAED— was never hollaed to. Mid.N.'sDr. iv. 1 

he lioUaed but even now lyinter's Tale, iii. 3 

as may be hollaed in thy Richard II. iv. 1 

II(">l*rjAlNG — leave hollaing mnw. Mer. of Venice, v. 1 

I have lost it with hollaing ihlenryir. i. 2 

HOLLAND of eight shillings Mlemy'u: iii. 3 

made shift to eat up thy holland ..2Henryll'. ii. 2 
HOLLANDEK-blunt ilollanders..3He»)y T/. iv. 8 

and your swag-bcllied Hollander Othello, ii. 3 

he gives vour Hollander a vomit — ii. 3 

H(JLI-OW— heard a hollow burst of. . . . Tempest, ii. 1 
searched a hollow walnut for his. .Merrylt''ire8, iv. 2 

lo, how hoi low the fiend Tn-elfth Mglit, iii. 4 

as things that are hollow t^rep.).. Meas. for Meas, i. 2 
to view with hollow eye. ... Merchant of Venice, iv. I 

and the most hollow lover As you Like it, iv. 1 

echoes from the hollow earth- T'ami'ji'^o/SA. 2 (ind.) 

to hollow falsehood change! King John, iii. 1 

he will look as hollow as a ghost — iii. 4 

did grace our hollow parting Richard II. i. 4 

whose hollow womb inherits naught — ii. 1 
even through the liollow eyes of .... — ii. I 

graved in tlic hollow ground — iii. 2 

for within the hollow crown — iii. 2 

his crisp head in the hollow bank ..I Henry IP', i. 3 

by his lioUow whistling in the — v. 1 

with hollow poverty and emptiness. .2//enry/F. i. 3 
and hollow pampered jades of Asia. . — ii. 4 
his eye is hollow, and he changes much — iv. 4 

a nest of hollow Ijosoms Henry !■'. ii. fchorus) 

a full eye will wax hollow — v. 2 

I fear me, with a hollow heart 1 Henry VI. iii. I 

the hollow passage of my poisoned .. — v. 4 i 

comfort from a hollow breost 2IIenry VI. iii. 2 \ 

we were bnt hollow friends — iii. 2 

foes, than hollow friends ZHenryVI.iv. \ 

deep, hollow, treacherous Richard III. ii. I 

and hollow hearts, I fear ye Henry VIII. iii. I 

hollow upon this plain (rep.).. Troilus ^Cressida, i. 3 
purely from all hollow bias-drawing — iv. .■) 
on faint deeds, hollow welcomes. 7V7non of Athens, i. 2 

in hollow bones of man — iv. 3 

but hollow men, like horses Julius Cepsar, iv. 2 

this gaping hollow of the earth?. . Titus. indron. ii. 4 

tliat pretty hollow cage — iii. I 

heats in this hollow prison of mj' flesh — iii. 2 | 

there's not a hollow cave — v. 2 

our cheeks and hollow eyes do witness.. Peric/c», i. 4 ' 

hath stuffed these hollow vessels — i. 4 

by the happy hollow of a tree Lear, ii. 3 | 

sworn, but hollow perjury .... Romeo <§- Juliet, iii. 3 

pierced the fearful hollow of thine ear — iii. .') 

thine ear close to the hollow ground — v. 3 

who in want a hollow friend doth try.. Hnm(f/, iii. 2 

black vengeance, from thy hollow cell!0(/ici(o,iii. .1 

hushed within the hollow mine of earth — iv. 2 , 

HOLLOW-EYED, sharp-looking.Comerfi/ (iZ-iirr. v. 1 

HOLLOW-HEARTED friends.. ../(.c/inrU ///. iv. 4 ; 

HOLLOWLY— if hollowly, invert .... 7'f mpcsf, iii. I 

if it be sound, or hollowly ytutan.Meas.for Meas. ii. 3 I 

IIOLLOWNESS— emptv hollownes3..WicAoni //. i. 2 ; 

whose low sound reverbs no hollowness .. Lear, i. 1 

machinations, hollowness, treachery — i. 2 

HOI .LY-imto the green holl y./fs nou Like it, ii. 7 (sing) 

th.-ii hri-Ii-li.), the holly! this life.. — ii. 7 songl i 

Hul,.\li:i)ii,\-at Ilolmedon met .. ..\HenryIV.i. \ i 

bc-t\vixt that Holmedon and this seat — i. 1 

did sir Walter see on Holmedon's plains — i. 1 i 

Percy here at Holmedon took — i. 3 

hadst thou fought at Holmedon thus — v. 3 1 

HOI.OFERNES-maBterHolofernes./.ore'lL.iojf.iv.S 
Perge, good master Holofernes, perge — iv. 2 

IIOLP— hut blessedly liolp hither T';mpest,i. 2 

and he hath holp to eat it Much Ado, i. I i 

hath holp to eiTect your ensuing — iii. 2 

a man is well holn up Comedy of Errors, \v. I ] 

hath holp him to iiis home Macbeth, i. « 

sir Robert never holp to make KingJohji,i.l | 

though it have holp madmen Richard I!, v. 5 

hands have holji to make so portly ..\llenryIV.i.'.\ 

to dav I li'ilp luni to his horse 'lllenry Vl.\. '^ \ 

that holp to send him thither Richard lll.i. 2 

that yim have holp to make Corio/niiiii. iii. I I 

you hove holp to ravish your — iv. fi 1 

art my warrior; I holp to frame tiiec — v. 3 * 
holp to reap the fame — v. .S | 



IfOL 

HOLP— you holp us, sir, as you did . , Cymbeline, v. ft 

he holp the heavens to rain Lear, iii. 7 

and he holp by backward Uirniuu. ItomeoS-Juliet.i. 2 

HOLP'ST^th.iii holp'st to kill hiin.«icAnr<i ;/;. iv. 4 

that holp'st to make me great. •/•/V«i,4,irfronic«», iv. 4 

HOLY— plain and hcdy innoeeiice! .. .. 7'toipm/, iii. I 

i' the name of something holy iii.j 

may with full and holy rite — Iv. 1 

holy Gonzalo, honourable man — v. i 

thy grievance to my holy prayers. ynoCen.o/fVr. i. 1 
seal the bargain with a holy kiss .... — ii. 2 

too fair, too true, too holy iv. H 

holy, fair, and wise is she — iv. 2 (song) 

where I intend holy confession iv. ."i 

the oftlnci- is liol \- 'that she hath . . Merry iVires, v. h 

and with this li.,ly man Twelfth NighLiv. 3 

call forth the holy father — v. 1 

by the holy close of lips v. 1 

no,holvfather; throw away. jl/ra«ure/or Meature,\. 4 

my holy sir. none better knows i. 4 

most holy sir, I thank you iii. I 

should be as holy as severe iii. 2 

he doth with holy abstinence subdue iv. 2 

given me by so holy a man — iv. 3 

trust not my holy order — iv. :i 

I know him for a man divine and holy — v. 1 
advertising, and holj; to your business — v. I 
to bind our loves up in a holy l)and..Jl/i«:/i/4do, iii. I 
after that the hidv rites are ended. ... — v. 4 

a holy parcel oftlie fairest Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

the holy suit which fain it — v. 2 

and see the holy edifice of stone. WfrcA.o/F«iice,i. 1 
and holy men, at their death have good — i. 2 

from our holy Abraham was — i. 3 

producing holy witness, is like — i. 3 

and by our holy Sabbath have I — iv. 1 

she doth stroy about by holy crosses — v. 1 

none, but a holy hermit, and her maid v. 1 

sanctified and holy traitors to you..4>you Likeil,\i.a 
have with holy bell been knolled to — ii. 7 

as the touch of holy bread — iii. 4 

so holy, and so perfect is my love.... — iii. 5 

madam, I desire your holy wishes All's Well, i. 1 

I have other hoi V reasons — i. 3 

so Holy Writ in Dalies hath judgment — ii. 1 
holy seems the quarrel upon your .. — iii. 1 

if you will tarry, holy pilgrim — iii. .1 

what is not holy, that we swear not.. — iv. 2 
love is holy; and my integrity ne'er.. — iv. 2 

which holy undertaking — iv. 3 

not dared to break the holy seal . . Winter'sTale, iii. 2 
what were more holy than to rejoice — \. 1 

you have a holy father, a graceful — v. I 

lier actions shall be holy ...■ — v. 3 

between your holy looks my ill — v. 3 

between you I shall have a holy head. Com.of Err. ii. 1 

the carriage of a holy saint — iii. 2 

'tis holy sport to be a little vain .... — iii. 2 
yield possession to my hoi J' prayers.. — iv. 4 

drugs, nnd holy prayers — v. 1 

isgoiie to pray the holy king Macbeth, iii. 6 

some holy angel fly to the court — iii. 6 

put on with holy prayers — iv. 3 

fought the holy wars in Palestine . . King John, ii. 1 
here comes the holy legate of the pope — iii. 1 
to thee, king John,mylioly errand (rep.) — iii. 1 

O holy sir, my reverend father — iii. I 

if ever I remember to be holy — iii. 3 

thou ort not holy to belie me so — iii. 4 

the incense of a vow, a holy vow — iv. 3 

now keep your holy word — v. I 

look, where the holy legate comes apace — v. 2 
set the name of right, with holy breath — v. 2 
so stood out against the holy eliureli — v, 2 

my holy lord of Alilan — v. 2 

a clergyman of holy reverence .... Richard II. iii. 3 

you holy clergymen — iv. 1 

our holy lives must win a new — v. I 

I'll make a vu> N_'> t I liii il.,ly Land — v. i^ 
these pagar.s, ill ; , lipids ....I Wenri/Zf. i. I 

our Imsincss r-ii i ) I i l.md — i. 1 

our holy purpf-r 111 .1. irni — i. J 

sincere and holy in his tlmiights .. ..illeniyl I', i. I 

dear lords, unto the Holy Land — iii,) 

your exposition on the holy text .... — iv. 2 
to lead out many to the Holy Land. . — iv. 4 
vainly I supposed the Holy Land.... — iv, 4 
and a true lover of the holy church .... Henry V. i. ' 

do we all liolv rites — ' iv. 6 

a holy maid hither with me 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

a lioly prophetess, new risen up — i. 4 

tut! holy Joan was his — ii. 1 

his holy state is touched so near (rep.) — iii. I 

if holy churchmen take delight — iii. I 

thy statue in some holy ploee — iii. 3 

virtuous: and holy; chosen from .... — v. 4 

the holy maid with child? — v. 4 

his weapons, hoi}* saws of sacred 2HenryVI. i. 3 

faith, holy uncle, would 'twere como — ii. 1 

of devotion, to this holy shrine? — ii. 1 

I'll send some holy hisliop to entreat — iv. 4 
his life, against your holy oath? ....SHenryVI. i. 4 
forthwith in hoi)' wedlock bands .... — iii. .1 

thou wilt object my holy oath — v. I 

poor key-cold figure of a holy kingl.ni'diard///. i.2 
toward Cliertscv with your holy load — i. 2 

bv holy Paul, lluy love his grace .... — i. 3 

cannot blame hii . liv God's holy mother — i. 3 

stolen forth of Holy 'Writ — 1.3 

this holy [f'lW. ;Cii/. -passionate] humour — i. 4 

hast thou that holy feeling in — 1.4 

infringe the holy privilege of blessed — iii. 1 

but by the holy rood, I do not — iii. 2 

when I met this holy man — iii. 2 

now by tho holy mother of our I^ord — iii. 7 
on that ground I'll make a holy descant — iii. 7 
to draw him from his holy exercise. . — iii. 7 
when holy and devout religious men — iii. 7 

true ornaments to know a holy man iii. 7 

come, let's to our holy work again .. — iii. J 
I) Ii 



HOL 

HOLY— when holy Harry died ....IHchard 111. iv. 4 
no, by the holy rood, thoir know'et . . — iv. 4 
lost his holy [Co/. Kn^-lordly] honour — iv. 4 
immaculate devotion, holy thoughts! — iv. 4 
virtuous and holy, be thou conqueror — v. 3 

the prayers of holy saints — v. 3 

this holy fox, or wolf, or both Ileririj Fill. i. 1 

certain words spolte by a holy monk — i. 2 
and thank the holy conclave for ... . — ii. "2 
holy men I thouglit ye, upon my soul — iii. I 
sir, for holy ofifices I have a time .... — iii. 2 

out of holy pity, absolved him — iii. 'i 

caueed your holy hat to be stamped — iii. 2 

as holy oil, Edward Confessor's — iv. 1 

by liuiy Mary, Butts, there's knavery — v. 2 
and to streuHthen that holy duty.... — v. 2 

by all that's holy, he had better — v. 2 

holy and lieaveiily tlioughts still — v. 4 

disguise the holy strengtii of . . Troilus ^- Cress, ii. 3 
as tliey used to creep to l\oly altars. . — iii. 3 

do not count it holy to hurt by — v. 3 

priests in holy vestments bleeding. JVmono/ /I. iv. 3 

giving our lioly virgins to the — v. 2 

like graves i' the l>oly churchy ard..Cor/o(an«s, iii. 3 

more iioly, and pro/dund — iii. 3 

touched in this holy cliase JulinsCcesar, i. 2 

burn his body in the holy place .... — iii. 2 
th.at tlie holy priests bless her. . . . Antony SrCleo. ii. 2 

Octavia is ot a holy, cold — ii. (j 

carbuncled like lioly Phoebus' car .. — iv. 8 

always reserved my holy duty Cymheline^ i. 2 

such a lioly witcli,'tliat he enchants — i. 7 

and bows you to morning's holy olfice — iii. 3 

did scandal many a holy tear — iii. 4 

and, doubling that, most holy — iii. 4 

to look upon tlie holy sun — iv. 4 

the holy eagle stooped, as to foot us. . — v. 4 
prove holy water on thee ! — v. 5 

Eriest and holy water are so near.. Titus And) on. i. 2 
ath abandoned lier holy groves .... — ii. 3 

hermits in tlieir lioly prayers — iii. 2 

hy tlie holy gods, I cannot rightly Pericles^ iii. 4 

spoken holy words to the lord Lysimachus — iv. 6 

thank the holy gods, as loud as — v. 1 

oft bite the holy cords in twain Lear, ii. 2 

there she shook the lioly water — iv. 3 

do profane this holy shrine Romeo Sf Juliet, i. 5 

is holy palmer's kiss (rep.) — i. 5 

within thy help and holy physic lies — ii. 3 
must combine by holy marriage .... — ii. 3 
holy saint Francis. What a change — ii. 3 

so smile the lieavens upon this holj' act — ii. 6 
but close our hands with holy words — ii. 6 
till holy church incorporate two .... — ii. 6 

holy friar, O tell me, holy friar . . — iii. 3 
by my holy order, I thought thy ... . — iii. 3 
are you at leisure, holy father, now.. — iv. I 

adieu! and keep this holy kiss — iv. 1 

am enjoined by holy Laurence — iv. 2 

afore uod, this reverend holy friar ., — iv. 2 
he hath still been tried a holy man.. — iv. 3 
holy Franciscan friar! brother, ho !. . — v. 2 
it doth so, holy sir; and there's my.. — v. 3 

among a sisterhood of holy nuns — v. 3 

we still Iiave known thee tor a holy man — v. 3 
almost all the holy vows of heaven .. ..Hamlet, i. 3 

most holy and rerigious fear it is — iii. 3 

strong as proofs of Holy Writ Ottiello, iii. 3 

HOLY- ALE— and holy-ales Pericles, i. (Gower) 

HOLY-CRUEL-be not so holy-cruel. /IH's Well, iv. 2 
HOLY-DAME— by my holy-dame.. Henry Fi/ 7. v. 1 

bv my holv-dame, the pretty Romeo ^-Juliet, i. 3 

HOLYROOO— on holyrood day \Henry ir. i. 1 

lIOLY-THISTLE-plain holy-thistle. iVuc/i^((o, iii. 4 
HOLY- WATE R— holy-water in a dry . . Lear, iii. 2 

HOMAGE— do him homage Tempest, i. 2 

of homage, and I know not — _i. 2 

we'll do thee homage TwoGen. of Verona, iv. 1 

no taxation of homage TwelflhNigtit, i. 5 

when they do homage to this. Taming of Sli. 1 (ind. ) 

1 know his eye dotli homage.. Come(/i/ of Errors, ii. 1 

no homage do I owe '. — iii. 2 

do faithful homage, and receive Macbeth, iii. 6 

and deny 15is oifered homage Richard II. ii. 1 

and his countenance enforces homage. H^nry r. iii. 7 
instead of homage sweet, but poisoned — iv. 1 

and do him homage as obedient 1 Henry VI. iv. 2 

after all this fearful homage done..2He»i!7/ VI. iii. 2 
Plerod of .Jewry may do homage. . ^n^ony ^C/eo. i. 2 

thy free awe pays homage to us Hamlet, iv. 3 

lined their coats, do themselves homage. 0(/ieHo, i. I 

HOMAGER— is CiEsar's homager.. /di/ont/ SfCtco. i. 1 

HOME— bound sadly home for Naples. . Tempest, i. 2 

will carry this island home in his pocket — ii. 1 

I'll bring my wood home faster — ii. 2 

thougli fools at home condemn them . . — iii. 3 

I will pay tliy graces home — v. 1 

dully slnggardized at \\oraQ.. TwoGen. of Verona, i. 1 

as much to you at home! — i. 1 

to spend his j'outh at home — i. 3 

spend his time no more at home — i. 3 

to confer of home affairs — ii. 4 

tlien stay at home — ii. 7 

presently you Iiie you home to bed . . — iv. 2 

hie home unto my chamber — iv. 4 

repeal thee home again — v. 4 

get you home, go Merry Wives, ii. 1 

her "husband, will be from home — ii. 2 

that her husband is seldom from home — ii. 2 

I am come to fetch you home — ii. 3 

to see your wife: is she at home? .... — iii. 2 

is your wife at home, indeed ? — iii. 2 

I nave good cheer at home — }!!• ^ 

some of you go liome with me — Wv^ 

go home, John Rugby — iii. 2 

get you home, boy — iv. 1 

who's at home besides yourself? — iv. 2 

and mock him home to Windsor .... — iv. 4 

let us every one go home — v. i 

I'll ride liome to-morrow Twelfth Night, i. 3 



[ 370 J 



HOM 



HOME— I'll home to-morrow TteelfthNight, i. 3 

and come liome in acoranto? — i. 3 

I am sick, or not at home — i. ,^ 

I will waylay thee goinsr home .. — iii. 4 (chal.) 
rather than forty pound, I were at liome — v. 1 
ambush of my name, strike Yiome.Meas.forMeas. i. 4 
I pray you home to dinner with me " — ii. 1 
shall witness to him, I am near at home — iv. 3 
the duke comes home to-morrow .... — iv. 3 

accuse him home, and home — iv. 3 

had been at home, he had lived — iv. 3 

that brought you home the head .... — v. 1 
achiever brings home full numbers . . Mvch Ado, i. 1 
send her home again without a liiisband — iii. 3 

yonder's old coil at home — v. 2 

to Helen it is home returned . .Mid. N.'s Dream, iii. 2 

troop home to churchyards — i i i . 2 

is he come home yet? — iv. 2 

go home, Biron; adieu! Love's L. Lost, i. 1 

snip, snap, quick and liome; it rejoiceth — v. 1 
though my mocks come home by me — v. 2 

comes frozen home in pail — v. 2 (song) 

to return to their home Merchant of Venice, i . 2 

my ships come home a month before — i. 3 
sir, I entreat you home with me .... — iv. 1 
a day before our husbands home .... — iv. 2 

and draw her home with music — v. 1 

dear lady, welcome home — v. 1 

you are welcome home, my lord .... — v. 1 
lie not a night from home; watch me — v. 1 
he keeps me rustically at home . . As you Like it, i. 1 

stays me here at home unkept — i. 1 

is come too swiftly home before jyou , — ii. 3 
when I was at home, I was in a better — ii. 4 

then sing him home — iv. 2 (song) 

I would, I were at home. We'll lead — iv. 3 
nor wax, nor honey, can bring home. . AWs Well, i. 2 
stay at home, and pray God's blessing — i. 3 
here at home, spending his manly 

you take your way for home 

farewell, iiie home. Pray, sir 

go thou toward home, wliere I willi 
no, come thou home, Rousillon 

bless him at home in peace 

'twill be time enough to go home .. 
sliall at home be encountered with 

my husband hies liini home — iv. 4 

and 3'our sou, here at home — iv. 5 

your son was ui)on his return home. . — iv. ."i 
the sense to know her estimation home — v. 3 

I will return it home — v. 3 

wait on me home, I'll make — v. 3 

home thy ancient thoughts. Taming ofSh. 2 f indue.) 
your love must live a maid at home — i- 1 

fortunes further than at home — i. 2 

and ,^oods at home, and so am come. 



11. 5 



— iii. 4 (letter) 
iv. 1 
iv. 3 



i. 2 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 
iv. I 



who 13 at home? you are welcome, sir 
the bride and bridegroom coming home? - 

shall find, when he comes home 

welcome home, Grumio — iv. 1 

hop me over every kennel home .... — iv. 3 

hie you home, and bid Bianca — iv. 4 

to need thee at home, therefore leave — v. 1 

while I play the good husband at home — v. 1 

why, then , let's home again — v. 1 

wliile thou liest warm at home — v. 2 

no sneaping winds at home Winter's Tale, i. 2 

if at home, sir, he's all mj' exercise . . — i. 2 

cast out, it still came home — i. 2 

see'st a game played home — i. 2 

keep it close; home, home, the next way — iii. 3 

come, good boy, the next way home — iii. 3 

let my prophecy come home to you ! — iii. 3 

all my services you have paid home.. — v. 3 
(leparted'st from thy native home. Comerfyo/iirr.i. 1 

motions for our home return — i. 1 

not home ; you come not home — i. 2 

strike you home without a messenger — i. 2 

from the mart home to your house . . — i. 2 

come home to dinner, and prays ijep.') — i. 2 

till he come home again, I would. . . . — ii. 1 

I pr'ythee, is he coming home? — ii. 1 

him to come home to dinner (rep.) .. — ii. 1 

whilst I at home starve for a merry.. — ii. 1 

and feeds from home ; poor I am .... — ii. 1 

sent to have me iiome to dinner? .. .. — ii. 2 

sent me hence, home to the Centaur — ii. 2 

to-mo'TOW you will bring it home .. — iii. 1 

get you home, and fetch tlie cliaiu .. — iii. 1 

go home with it, and please your.. ., — iii. 2 

and bring it home to me — iv. 1 

brin/; thy master home immediately — iv. 2 

to hie home to his house — iv. 3 

did I bid thee hie thee home? — iv. 4 

when I go from home ; welcomed home — iv. 4 

doth know, you dined at home — iv. 4 

I dined at home! thou villain — iv. 4 

see him safe conveyed home — iv. 4 

andbear him home for his recovery.. — v. 1 

that drew him oft from home — v. 1 

let me have him home with me — v. 1 

bound, and sent him home — v. 1 

and sent my peasant home — v. 1 

and dankish vault at liome there .... — v. 1 

dined not at home, but was locked . . — v. I 
that, trusted home, might yet enkindle. Mac6e//(, i. 3 

hath holp him to his home before — i. 6 

to feed, were best at liome — iii. 4 

and beat them b.ackward home — v. 5 

as calling home our exiled friends — v. 7 

that to. my home I will no more .... King John, ii. 1 

not think of home, but follow arms.. — ii. 1 

sold their fortunes at their native homes — ii. 1 

we will bear home that lusty — ii. I 

sirrah, were I at home, at your den.. — ii. 1 

from home, and discontents at home — iv. 3 

and welcome home again discarded. . — v. 4 

these her princes are come home again — v. 7 
ready to direct these home alarms . . Itichnrd II. i. 1 

witli welcome home from banishment — i. 3 



HOME— jewel of thy home return Richard //. i. 3 

wlien time shall call him home — i. 4 

our substitutes at home shall have . . — i. 4 

for their deeds as far from home .... — ii. 1 

come to make him lose at home .... — ii. 2 

get thee home, provide some carts . . — ii. 2 

come home witn me to supper — iv. 1 

tongue gave liim his welcome home.. — v. 2 

at home, and be hanged (rep.) 1 Henry IV. i. 2 

to redeem a traitor home? — 1.3 

to ransom home revolted Mortimer.. — i. 3 

found a time to pay us home — i. 3 

bootless home, and weather-beaten (rep.) — iii. 1 

a rendezvous, a home to fly unto .... — iv. 1 

unminded outlaw, sneaking home .. — iv. 3 

brought you home, and boldly did . . — v. 1 
that kiss my lady peace at home ....iHenrylV. i. 2 

eaten me out of house and home .... — ii. 1 

Sersuacled you to stay at home? .... — ii. 3 

louldy, stay at home still — iii. 2 

may bear those tokens home — iv. 2 

eacli hurries toward his home — iv. 2 

to let me have home with me — v. 5 

come unluckily home, I break, and you — (epil.) 

the cat must stay at home Henry V.i.2 

head defends itself at home — i. 2 

like magistrates, correct at home .... — i. 2 

bring home to the tent-royal — i. 2 

thrice that power left at home — i. 2 

merriest when they are from home . . — i. 2 

good husband, come home presently — ii. 1 

as manhood shall compound; push home — ii. I 

and comes safe home, will stand .... — iv. 3 
the king of England's stay at home — v. (chorus) 
bring a burden of dishonour home..2HenryF/. iii. 1 

and write home for it straight ^ . — iv. 1 

sent the ragged soldiers wounded home — iv. 1 

she washes bucks here at home — iv. 2 

home to your cottages, forsake this .. — iv. 2 

and go home in peace. What say ye — iv. 8 

alas, he hath no home, no place — iv. 8 

sedition on his crown at home ZHenry VI. ii. 2 

stand between me and home — iii. 2 

can tyrants safely govern home .... — iii. 3 

go home to bed, and, like the owl . . — v. 4 

so bad abroad, as this at home Richard III. i. 1 

let not us two stay at home — ii. 2 

shall call home to high promotions . . — iv. 4 

beat down these rebels here at home — iv. 4 

shall welcome home tlie conquerors.. — v. 3 

France as liere at home Henry VIII. i. 1 

and then go home and lose me — ii. I 

where higli profits might come home — iii. 2 
that Paris is returned home . . Troilus ^ Cressida, i . I 

better at home, if would I might — i. 1 

who said he came hurt home to-day? — i. 2 

we left them all at home — i. 3 

he brought home noble prize — i i . 2 

grieve young Pyrrhus now at home — iii. 3 

half Hector stays at home — iv. .'> 

desire them home: give me thy hand — iv. 5 

stays to conduct you home — v. 2 

never go home ; here starve we — v. 1 1 

if Timon stay at home Timon of Athens,i\. 2 

are more valiant, that stay at home — iii. 5 
go, get you home, you fragments! . . Coriolanus, i. 1 

hence! to your homes be gone — i. 1 

mend, and charge home, or by the fires — i- 4 

it at home, upon my brother's guard — i- 10 

ha! Marcius coming home (rep.) .... — ii. 1 

I think, there's one at home for you — ii. I 

he was wont to come home wounded — ii. 1 

he conies the third time home with . . — ii. 1 

had I come coffined home, that weep'st — ii. 1 

welcome home; and welcome general — ii 1 
have some old crab-trees here at home — ii. 1 
let me sav, I cannot speak him home — ii. 2 
welcome home: behold: these are.... — iii. 1 
noble friend, home to thy house .... — iii. 1 
go not home. Meet on the market-place — iii. 1 

and come home beloved of all — iii. 2 

in this point charge him home — iii. 3 

when most struck home — iv. 1 

bid them all home; he's gone — iv. 2 

bid them home: say, their great enemy — iv. 2 

dismiss them home: here comes — iv. 2 

you have told them home — i v. 2 

1 will merrily accompany you home — iv. 3 
may wish good Marcius home again — iv. 6 

go, masters, get you home — iv. 6 

go home, and show no sign of fear . . — iv. 6 

come, masters, let's home — iv. 6 

hear Cominius speak, I'll keep at home — v. 1 

you know the way home again — v. 2 

to the wars, and safely home, loaden — v. 3 

so we will home to Rome — v. 3 

ladies bring not comfort home — v. 4 

and had no welcomes home — v. 5 

you are most welcome home — v.5 

our spoils we have brought home — — v. .•> 

home you idle creatures {rep.) Julius Ctpsar, i. 1 

what conquest brings he home? — i. 1 

I will come home to you (rep.') — i. 2 

brought you Ciesar home? why are . . — .i. 3 

if he should stay at home to-day ... . — ij. 2 

for thy humour, I will stay at home — ii. 2 

my wife, stays me at home — ii. 2 

begged, that I will stay at home to-day — ii. 2 

him with triumph home unto his house — iii. 2 

brought many captives home to Rome — iii. 2 

speak to me home Antony ^ Cleopatra, i. 2 

in Rome petition us at home — . i. 2 

we had driven them home with clouts — iv. 7 

my wars, and called them home .... — iv. 10 
much loves a Gallian girl at home ..Cy)nbeline,_i.7 

the knowledge of your mistress home — ii. 4 

say, she'll home to her father — !!!• ^ 

nor know notwhat air's from home.. — iii. 3 

satisfy me hopie, what is become of her? — iii. 5 

knock her back, foot her home again — iii. S 



II OM 



HOME-spurn her home toiler fiither.Cymlirfini', W. 1 
18 he at home? He went hence even now — iv. 2 
home ftrt i;om'. nml tn'eii Ihv wnttes — iv. i (uoiig) 
tllilt eohllniis it lloiiie: tliis is I'isiHlio's — V. U 

he In llie seiiale is nieite^l Iwiine .. 7'i/i«/)iirfrim. i. 1 
timt 1 1)1 in- until their latent liomc .. — i. V 

Btrike lier liume hy force — ii. I 

8triiek liniiie to sliow my strength — ii. 3 

L'o liiinie. cull lor sweet water — Ji. S 

liKik >e lira u- home eiiontih — iy. 3 

1 am sure to he hanu'etl at home Vcriclnt^ i. 3 

(JoikI lleliciine lunli stniil at home — ii. (.Gower) 
come, tliou slialt ^'o home, and we'll have — ii. 1 
come not, in twice six moons, home — iii. (Uower) 
I can ^'o lioiiie alone — iv. 1 

take lier home, mistress, take her homo — iv. 3 

ni lirini; li.inie some to-night — iv. I! 

to leteh his ilan^'liter home — iv. 1 (Gosver) 

take im- liome ii^'ain — iv. 6 

he i'luuj,vs lioiiii' niv unprovided body.. .. tear, ii. 1 

fit to answer IVoin our home — ii. I 

drive veea.-klin^ home to Camelot — ii. -J 

that they slioulil so deimrl from !iome .. — ii. 4 

1 am now from lionie — ii. t 

kin:; uo\v hears will he revenged home .. — iii. 3 
hut I will lumisli home; no, I will weep — iii i 

I must change arms at liome — iv. 2 

spake imt with your lord at home? — iv. 5 

awa\ from lijilit steals home .... Romeo 4 Juliet, i. I 

hatli stolen him home to bed — ii. 1 

I'orL-ilting any other home but this.. — ii. 2 

came lie not home to-uighl? — ii. -1 

wliat, liave you dined at home? — ii.a 

nt home, abroad [Co(./iii(. -time, work] — iii. 5 
go home, he merry, give consent .... — iv. 1 

most welcome home! Hamtel, ii. 2 

at home, my lord. Let the doors be ... . — iii. 1 

I'll warrant she'll tax him home — iii. 3 

look yon lay home to him — iii. 4 

shairknow you are come home — iv. 7 

lie ajwaks home, madam Olhello, ii. 1 

1 sliall not dine at home — iii. 3 

what make you from home? — iii. 4 

tliey do command him home — iv. 1 

I am eoinraanded home; get you away — iv. 1 
tliy good raiiier bare, and put it home .. — v. 1 

I charge you, get yon home — v. 2 

iierchancc, logo, I will ne'er go home .. — v. 2 
Im; wise, and get you home — v. 2 

XIO.ME-BUED— your home-bred hate, n/c/inrd //. i. 3 

than any home-bred marriage ZHenry n. iv. 1 

HD.ME-KEEPING youths have. 7-«io Gen. of Fer. i. 1 
HD.MELY— have ever homely wits.... — i. 1 
upon a homely object love can wink — ii. 4 
you can eat mine of this homely meat. All's IVelt, ii. 2 
my homely stars have failed to equal — ii. H 
house of araost homely shepherd, (♦'m/er'a Tale, iv. 1 
has been too much homely foolery .. — iv. 3 
made more homely than thy state .. — iv. 3 
hath homely age the alluring . . Comedy of Err. ii. 1 

will take a liomely man's artvice Macbeth, iv. 2 

brow, with homely biggin bound ..'lUenryll'. iv. 4 
rich hangings in a homely house ..liieuryl't. v. 3 

no better than a homely swain ZHenry VI. ii. .0 

the sliepherd's homely curds — ii. 5 

will make what's homelj', savoury. Tj/mfte^'ne, iii. 6 

and homelv in thy drift I'tomeo fyJuUel, ii. 3 

HOME-SPlfN— hempen home-spuns.jW'y. A'.Dr.iii.l 
HOMEWARD, every man attach.. ioijt'«t. Low, iv. 3 

pray you, draw homewards -ts you Like it, iv. 3 

aftiiirs do even drag me homeward. H'inler's Tale, i. 2 
homeward did they bend their course. Com. of Err. i. 1 
coasting homeward, came to Epliesus — i. 1 

wrecked, as homeward he did come Macbeth, i. 3 

m).\UCIDE— a desperate homicide ..) Henry FI. i. 2 

witli child, ye blowly homicides — v. 4 

homicide, these nails should Richardlll, i. 2 

to fight against that bloody homicide — v. 2 

a bliMidv tyrant, and a homicide .... — V. 3 

HtJ.MIL'?— tedious homily of luve./tsyow Likeil, iii. 2 

HO.MINEM-hominem tanquam tG.Looe't L.Loit, v. 1 

HO.MMES— les langues des homines Henry I', v. 2 

IIO.MO—homo is a common name.. ..1 Henry IT. ii. 1 

IIIJ.VEST lord, thou hast said well TempesI, iii. 3 

thank thee for thine honest care. Two Gen.nf Ver. iii. 1 
onee again I do receive tliee honest .. — v. 4 

let us see honest master Page Merry fVivcs, i. 1 

hut in honest, civil, godly company.. — i. I 

iny honest lade, I will tell you — i. 3 

an honest, willing, kind fellow — i. 4 

the young man is an honest man .... — i. 4 

vat shall de honest man do — i. 4 

dere is no honest man dat — i. 1 

to desire tills honest gentlewoman .. — i. 4 
and she is pretty, and honest, and gentle — i. 4 

ai honest a maid as ever — i. 4 

truly, an honest gentleman — i. 4 

if I find her honest, I lose not — ii. 1 

master Page is an honest man — ii. 2 

though slie apiiear honest to me — ii. 2 

I will to my holiest knight Falstaff. . — iii. 2 
having an honest man to your husband — iii. 3 

your wife is as honest a 'omans — iii. 3 

by gar. I see 'tis an honest woinnni . . — iii. 3 
wives may be merry, and yet honest too — iv. 2 

behold what honest clothes you — iv. 2 

mistress t'ord, the honest woman .... — iv. 2 

ond fery hiinu t knaveries — iv. 4 

Germans are honest men — iv. .'j 

an honest man, and gooil Tu-elph \tnht, iv. 2 

thank heaveii,i8an honest woman. .Veat-fot Meat ii.l 

if it tic honest you have spoke — iii. 2 

sir, your coniiiany is fairer thon honest — iv. 3 
honest in nothing, but in his clothes — v. I 

as an honest man should do MuchAdo^ i. I 

to lie a fluttering honest man — i. 3 

may do the part of an honest man in it — ii.l 
why, that's 9|ioken like an lioi!i'.-t drover — ii.l 

like an honest man, and a soldier — ii.3 

I'll dcviec 30me honest slanders to stain — iii. I 



[371 ] 



HONEST— honest neighbours Much Ado, iii. 3 

would you with me, nonest neighbour? — ill. S 
but, in faith, honest, as the skin .... — iii. .'> 
I am as honest as any man living.... — ill. tt 

an honest soul, i' faith, sir — iii. .'1 

as 1 am an honest man, he looks pale — v. 1 
thank thee for thy care and honest pains — v. 1 

some honest neiglibours will not Mid. N. Dr. iii. 1 

your name, honest gentleman? — iii. 1 

and as I'm an honest Puck — (epil.) 

miuime, honest master l.ore'th.Loit, iii. I 

I, that am honest; I, that hold — iv. 3 

most dull, honest Dull — v. 1 

and honest kersey noes — v. 2 

an honest man, look you — v. 2 

unless you play tlie honest Trojan .. — v. 2 

honest plain words best pierce — ■ v. 2 

honest hauncelot {,rep.^ . ... Merchant nf Venice, ii. 2 
honest friend Launcelot, being an honest — ii. 2 

or rather an honest woman's son — ii. 2 

is an honest cxcecdin;^ poor man .. .. — ii. 2 
sliall know by this honest old man ,. — ii. 2 

be an iioiicst woiiKui oflur word .... _ iii. 1 

tlie good, the h..iust Antonio _ iii. 1 

as 1 liavc ei'cr found thee honest .. .. — iii. 4 
if she be less than ail honest woman — iii. 5 
ehe scarce makes honest (rep.") ....As you Like it. i. 2 

capricious poet, honest Ovid — iii. 3 

is It honest in deed, and word? — iii. 3 

swear'st to me, thou art honest? .... — iii. 3 
would you not have me honest? .... — iii. 3 

pray the gods make me honesti — iii. 3 

well met, honest gentleman — v. 3 

I thank you for your h jnest care .... All's Well, i. 3 

my friends were poor, but lionest — i. 3 

'tis pity, he is not honest — iii. 5 

but, you say, she's honest — iii. 6 

she tlieu was honest — iv. 2 

was very honest in the behalf of .... — iv. 3 
an honest man should not have (lep.) — iv. 3 
can serve the world for no honest use — iv. 3 

by thy honest aid, thuu kept'st — v. 3 

yet witlml he's honest Taminuof Shreto, iii. 2 

and honest company, I tliank you ail — iii. 2 
even in these honest mean lialnlinieiits — iv. 3 
and some suthcicnt honest witnesses — iv. 4 
and wander we to sec tli\' lioncst son — iv. 5 

not obedient to his lioneit will — v. 2 

mine honest friend, will you take.. fVinlersTale,i. 2 
play, MamiUius; tliou'rt an honest man — i. 2 

thou art nut honest: or, if thou inelinest — i. 2 
'tis pity she's not honest, honourable — ii. I 

ere you can say she's honest — ii.l 

as true; honest, as either — ii.3 

and no less honest than you are mod — ii. 3 
as this world goes, to pass for honest — ii.3 
that Camillo was an honest man .... — iii. 2 
five or six honest wives that were present — iv. 3 

to lie close by his honest hones — iv. 3 

is no honest man neither to Ills hither — iv. 3 
though I am not initur;illy honest .. — iv. 3 
for you seem to he honest pliiin men — iv. 3 
if I had a mind to be honest. I see .. — iv. 3 

thou art as honest a true fellow — v. 2 

an honest suit miglit move .. Comedti of Errors, iv. 2 
done wrong to this my honest frieucl — v. 1 

where any lionest men resort — v. I 

win us with honest trifles, to betray ..Macbeth^ i. 3 

why, the honest men — iv. 2 

enough to beat the honest men — iv. 2 

was once thought honest — iv. 3 

no mind, that's honest — iv. 3 

some honest christian trust me .... liichard II. iv. 1 

well, he is an honest man \ Henry If', iii. 3 

I am an honest man's wife — iii, 3 

charge an honest woman with picking — iii. 3 

tractable to any honest reason — iii. 3 

with them in honest taking up iHenryl r. i. 2 

did I say you were an honest man .. — i. 2 
be honest, be honest; and God bless — i. 2 

marry, if tliou wert an honest man .. — ii. 1 
you are an honest woman, and well — ii. 4 
I will bar no honest man my house.. — ii. 4 
honest, virtuous, civil gentlewoman? — ii. 4 

in the world; honest Ned, none — ii. 4 

or honest Bardolph, wdiose zeal burns — ii. 4 

good-morrow, honest gentleman — iii. 2 

an honest man, sir, is able to speak .. — v. I 
bear out a knave against an honest mau — v. I 
the knave is mine honest friend, sir.. — v. I 

honest Bardolph, welcome — v. 3 

honest gentlemen, I know not — v. 3 

as your majesty is an honest man Henry r. iv. 7 

cast away an honest man ^ZHenryyi. i. 3 

dishonoured Gloster's honest name.. — ii.l 

and myself an honest man — ii. 3 

he was an honest man, and a good .. — iv. 2 
like an honest plain-dealing man? .. — iv. 2 

for they arc thrifty honest men — iv. 2 

Edward's well-meant honest love. .^Henryfl. iii. 3 
hence is thy lord, mine honest fellow? — v. I 

an honest talc speeds best liichard III. iv. 4 

plain and not honest, is too harsh — iv. 4 

understand again like honest men ..HenryfUl. i. 3 
now an honest country lord, as I am — i. 3 
like free and honest men, our just .. — iii. 1 
ye sjieak like honest men, (pray God — iii. I 
desiierate to be honest,1 and live a subject — iii. 1 

our ends are honest, you'd feel — iii. 1 

of thy honest truth to play the woman — iii. 2 
but such an honest chrnnii-ler as Grillith — iv. 2 

I thank you, honest lord — iv. 2 

he's honest, on mine honour — v. 1 

would yon were half so houcsti — v. 2 

this honest man, wait like — v. 2 

an honest fellow enough .... Troihis^Crrssida, v. 1 

the man is honest Timon of Athens, i. 1 

dog, and these knaves honest — i. 1 

toknoek out an honest Athenian's .. — i. 1 
time to be honest — i. 1 



HON 

HONEST— honest ■Ventidins ....Timonof Athens, I. 2 
too weak to be a sinner, honest water — i. 2 

thus honest fools lay out their wriilth — i. 2 

mine honest friend, "I pr'ytln-i-, hut reiiair — ii. 2 
thou art true, and honest; ingeniously — ii 2 

Klamiiiius, honest I'laniinius — iTi. I 

draw nearer, honest I'MiLiiiniiis — iii. I 

floor honest loid, broiielit low by hisown — iv. 2 
ler habit only that is honest — iv. 3 

I will present my honest grief unto him — iv. 3 
an honest poor servant of yours (ir//.) — iv. 3 

I do proclaim one honest man — iv. 3 

thou art more honest now, than wise — iv. 3 
thou singly honest man, here, take .. — iv. 3 
lived onee to see two honest men? .. — v. I 

you, that are honest, by being — v. 1 

uy, you are honest men — v. 1 

more honest men: why how shall I.. — v. 1 
honest men: you have heard that (/f/j.) — v. I 

he's one honest enough Corlnlamts, i. 1 

mine honest neighbours, will you.... — i. I 

without any honest man's voice .... — ii.3 
if it be not so, thou art not honest . . — v. 3 
mine honest neighbours shouted ...futinsCfrsar, i. 2 
honestCasca, we have the falling-sickness — i. 2 
a very pleasing night to honest men — i. 3 

noble, wise, viiliant, and honest — iii. I 

in a general honest thought — v. .^ 

in deed is honest to be done./fii'oTi)/^ Cleopatra, i. b 

thou'rt an honest man — ii. .0 

though it be honest, it is never good — ii. S 

all-honoured, honest, Roman Brutus — ii. G 
hast been rightly honestj so hast thou — iv. 2 
thou art honest too. I wish I could be — iv. 2 
honest friends, T turn you not away — iv. 2 

my fortunes have corrupted honest men — iv. 5 

draw that thy honest sword — iv. 12 

a very honest woman, but something — v. 2 

that have their honest wills Cyvileline, i. 7 

where I have lived at honest freedom — iii. 3 

true honest men being heard — iii. 4 

come, fellow, be thou nonest — iii. 4 

but if I were as wise as honest — iii. 4 

I would think thee an honest man .. — iii. S 
dishonestly afflicted, but yet honest — iv. 2 

and cook to honest creatures — iv. 2 

wherein I am false, I am lionest .... — iv. 3 
soldier, an honest one, I warrant.... — v. 3 

unless I add, we are honest .~ v. 5 

which must approve thee honest .... — v. 5 
I will be honest, and never .. Titus Andmnicus, iii. I 
at your labour, honest tishemien (rip.).l'eric!es, ii. 1 
how well this honest mirth becomes .. — ii.l 
an honest woman, or not a woman — — iv. 3 
aiul for an honest attribute, cry out .. — iv. 4 

but amongst honest women? — iv. G 

and chances into an honest house — v. (Gower) 

as true as honest madam's issue? I.c^jr, i. 2 

I am no honest man, if there be — i. 2 

to love him that is honest — i. 1 

I can keep honest counsel, ride — i. 4 

an honest mind aiirl plain — ii. 2 

where I could not be honest, I never yet — v. 1 
I thank you, honest gentlemen . . Romeo ^Juliet, i. 5 
my invocation is fair and honest .... — ii. 1 
says like an honest gentleman t77-/j.l — ii. 5 
to high fortime! honest nurse, farewell — ii. 5 
courteous Tybalt! honest gentlenian! — iii. 2 
honest good'fellows, all. put up. init up — iv. 5 

farewell, honest soldier; who lintli .. Hamlet, i.\ 
it is an honest ghost, tliat let me tell you — i. ."> 
so honest a man. Honest, my lord? {rep.) — ii. 2 

but that the world's grown lionest — ii. 2 

to speak to j'ou like an honest man — ii. 2 

but called it, an honest method -- ii. 2 

ha, ha! are you honest? IMvIord? — iii. 1 

that if you be honest, and fair — iii. I 

1 am myself indifferent honest — iii. I 

whip ree such honest knaves Othello, i. 1 

in honest plainness thou hast heard .... — i. 1 
lionest lago, my Desdemona must I leave — i. 3 
that thinks men honest, that but seem to — i. 3 

make this music, as honest as I am — ii.l 

lago is most honest. Michocl, good-night — ii. 3 

it were an honest action, to say so — ii.3 

honest logo, that look'st dead with — ii.3 

as I am nn honest man. I thought you .. — ii. 3 
the siiireritv of love. Mild honest kindness — i=. 3 
good-niL'ht. honest lau'o. .\nd what's. . .. — ii.3 

and honest, proli.Tl to thinking — ii.3 

to subdue ill any honest suit — ii, 3 

while tills honest fool plies Desdemona.. — ii.3 
my honest friend? No, I hear not (rep.) — iii. 1 
knew a Florentine more kind and lionest — iii. I 

that's an honest fellow; do not doubt — iii. 3 

1 have no judgment in an honest face .. — iii. 3 
honest? Honest my lord [C. K.-honcst] (rep.) — iii. 3 
be sworn, I think that he is honest .... — iii. 3 
T think that Cassio is an honest man..,. — iii. 3 
I do not think hut Desdemona's honest — iii. 3 
this honest creature, doubtless, sees .... — iii. 3 

to be direct and honest, is not safe — iii. 3 

nay, stay: thou shouldst be honest — iii. 3 

I tliink my wife he honest, and think .. — iii. .1 
nothing dime; she may be honest yet .. — iii. 3 
to wager she is honest,' lay down my soul — iv. 2 
for, il she be not lionest, chaste and true — iv. 2 
double damned, swear— thou art honest — iv. 2 
I hope, my noble lord esteems me honest — iv. 2 

and put in every honest hand a whip — iv. 2 

O brave lago, honest, nnd just — v. 1 

but of life as honest, as you that Ihns.... — v. I 

lionest lago hnth ta'cn order for't — v. 2 

thv hushimd, honest, honest lago — v. 2 

HONE.-iTICK- nohonester thon I Much Ado, iii. !> 

if he were honestcr, he were much . . All's Well, iii. 5 
an honester, and truer-lieartcd nian.2H»»ii!//r. ii. t 
when honestcr men than thou go ..iHrnryl'I. iv. 7 
av; 'tis nn honester .service Coriolanus, iv. .S 

n((.'^ESTEST— in hoiicstcst defence... 4H'i Well, iii. :, 



HONEST-HEARTED fellow, and as poor. /,rar, i. 4 

HONESTLY— very honestly Meas.fiji- Meas. ii. 1 

by my faith, you say honestly Much Ado, ii. 1 

not honestly, my lord; but so convertly — ii. 2 
3'ou have discharged this honestly .... AlVs Well, i. 3 
that live honestly by the prick of .... Henry I', ii, 1 

it will show honestly in us Thnon of Alliens, v. 1 

ye say hoijestly; rest you merry ! /?o?neo <5- Jutiel, i. 2 
HONEST-NATURED friends. . Timon of Alliens, v. I 
HONESTY— by mine honesty ..TwoGen. offer, ii. 5 

out of honesty into English Merry IVives, i. 3 

to wrangle with mine own honesty.. — ii. 1 
not sull.\" the chai'iness of ourhonesty — ii. 1 

but in the way of honesty — ii. 2 

eiege to the honesty of this Ford's wife — ii. 2 

no wit, manners, nor honesty Twelfth Nighl, ii. 3 

in your brow, Provost, \\ovie^tj .Meas. forMeas. iv. 2 

bj' mine honesty, if she te mad — v. 1 

valour, and confirmed honesty Much Ado, ii. 1 

why, the more for your lionesty .... — iii. 3 
a man who hath any honesty in him — iii. 3 
a beard, fair health, and honesty.. ioi'e'st. Los/, v. 2 

if it stand with honesty, buy As i/ou Likeit, ii. 4 

for honesty coupled to beauty, is to.. — iii. 3 
and to cast awa^' honesty upon a foul — iii. 3 
I should think my honesty ranlier than — iv. 1 
ricli honesty dwells like a miser, sir — v. 4 
was almost as great as his honesty.... /lU's fFell, i. 1 
she derives her honesty, and achieves — i. 1 
though honesty be no puritan, yet it — i. 3 

no legacy is so rich as honesty — iii. 6 

a reserved honesty, and that I have — iii. 5 
his valour, lionesty, and expertness — iv. 3 (note) 
what'is Ills houestyy He will steal .. — iv. 3 
little more to say, sir, of his honesty — iv. 3 
for this deserintion of thine honesty? — iv. 3 
let death and honesty go with your.. — iv. 4 
mine honesty puts it to utterance.. Winter^ sTale,i. 1 
which boxes honestj' behind, restraining — i. 2 

infirmities, that honesty is ne\'er free ot — i. 2 

^a note infallible of breaking honesty) — i. 2 

if therefore yon dare trust my honesty — i. 2 

we need no gi-ave to burj' honesty . . — ii. 1 
to lock up honestj- and Jionour from — ii. 2 

I needs must think it honesty — iv. 3 

ha, ha! what a fool honesty is! — iv. 3 

not a piece of lionesty to acquaint .. — iv. 3 
and whose honesty, till now, endured all — v. 1 
whose worth, and honesty, is richly. . — v. 3 
mine honour and mine \\o\\Q5iy ..Comedy of Err. v. 2 
thou wast "ot i' the way of honesty,. .AVn^Jo/m, i. 1 
there's neitlier honesty, manhood . . 1 Henry 1 V.\.2 
truth, nor lionesty, in this bosom of — iii. 3 

is no honesty in sueh dealing 'IHenryJl''. ii. 1 

why, then mine honesty shall be . .SHeiuyf'l. iii. 2 
Edward's love, and Warwick's honesty — iii. 3 
that hast nor lionesty, nor grace. . . . liichard III. i. 3 

and affect in honour honesty Henry FIJI. i. 1 

j'ou have as little honesty as honour — iii. 2 

you'll show a little honesty — iii. 2 

corruption wins not more than honesty — iii. 2 
for honesty, and decent carriage .... — iv. 2 
stand on is my truth, and honesty .. — v. 1 
parted so much honesty among them — v. 2 
whose honesty the devil and liis disciples — v. 2 

to defend mine honesty Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 2 

Ills honesty rewards him in itself .. Timon ofAlh. i. 1 
you found them in mine honesty.... — ii.2 
every man has his fault, and honesty is — iii. 1 
than honesty to honesty engaged.. Ju(msC<jsai-, ii. 1 
I am armed so strong in honesty .... — iv. 3 

mine honesty shall not make Antony ^Cleo. ii. 2 

mine honesty, and I, begin to square — iii. 11 
should not do, but in the way of honesty — v. 2 
in honesty, I bid for you, asl'dbuy.Ci/OTirii'ne, iii. 6 
that nice-preserved honesty of yours. TitusAnd. ii. 3 
his offence, honesty! strange! strange !.... Lea?-, i. 2 
on whose foolish honesty my practices .. — i. 2 
wear a sword, who wears no honesty .... — ii.2 

no faith, no honesty in men Romeo St-J}iUet, iii. 2 

yet I hold it not lionesty to have it Hamlet, ii. 2 

rCo^ iCn/.] your honesty should admit no — iii. 1 
better commerce than with honesty? .... — iii. 1 
honesty from what it is to a bawd (,rep.) — iii. 1 

a man he is of honesty, and trust Othello, i. 3 

lago, thy honesty and love doth mince . . — ii. 3 
I know thou art full of love and honesty — iii. 3 

my manhood, honesty, or wisdom — iii. 3 

tliisfellow'sof exceeding honesty — iii. 3 

Ii vest to make thine honesty a vice! — iii. 3 

honesty's a fool, and loses that it works for — iii. 3 
pricked to it by foolish lionesty and love — iii. 3 

alas, alas! it is not honesty in me — iv. 1 

but why should honour outlive honesty? — v. 2 
HONEY-on such sweet honey. Two Gen. <)/T(?!ono,i. 2 

honey, aud milk, aud sugar Love' sL. Lost, v. 2 

my fair, sweet, honey monarch — v. 2 

is to have honey a sauce to sugar.^s you Like if, iii. 3 

since I nor wax, nor honey All's H'ell, i. 2 

and now, my honey love Taming of .Shreiv, iv. 3 

then 'nointed over ^vith honey . . H'iitter'n Tale, iv. 3 

as the honey of Hybla, my old 1 Henry 11^. i. 2 

now my good sweet honey lord — i. 2 

they surfeited with honey — iii. 2 

wax, our mouths, with honey 2HenryIf'. iv. 4 

for so work the honey bees Henry F. i. 2 

citizens kneading up the honey — i. 2 

have steeped their galls in honey .... — ii. 2 
thus may we gather honey from .... — iv. I 
grew captive to his honey words . . Richard III. iv. 1 
mars the honey of his language . . Henry Fill. iii. 2 

what iioney is expected? Troilus rj- Cressida, i. 3 

you have the honey still — ii.2 

sweet honey Greek, tempt me — v. 2 

till he hatli lost his honey — v. 11 

sweet honey and sweet notes together — v. U 
the honey heavy dew of slumher .. JzdiusCresar, ii. 1 
you liave the honey you desire .. TitMs Androji. ii. 3 
coming and goingwith thy honey breath — ii. 5 
as doth tlie honey dew upon a gathered — iii. 1 



HONEY— honey like a drone .... Pericles, ii. (Gower) 

that rob the bee of her honey — ii. 1 

O honey nurse, what news? Ro7neo ^Juliet, ii. 6 

the sweetest honey is loathsome .... — ii. 6 
death that hath sucked the honey .. — v. 3 
sucked the honey of his music vows ..Hamlel, iii. 1 

honey, j'Ou shall be well desired Otlwtlo, ii. 1 

HONEY-BAG— honey-bags steal. il/id.Af. D/ cam, iii. 1 

good monsieur, bring me the honey-bag — iv. 1 

nave a care the honey-bag break not — iv. 1 

have von overflown with a honey-bag — iv. 1 

HONEYCOIVIB— thick as honeycombs.. . Tempest,i. 2 

HONEY'D— and honey'd sentences Henry V. i. 1 

HONEY-DROP-diffusest honey-drops. 7fmr«7, iv. 1 
HONEYING, and making love over ..Hamlet, iii. 4 
HONEYLESS— le 've them honeyless.Ju/. Casar.v. 1 
HONEY-MOUTHED- 

if I prove honey-moutlied Winter's Tale, ii. 2 

HONEY-SEED rogue! (rep.) iHenryll'. ii. 1 

HONEY-STALKS to sheep . . Titus Andronicus, iv. 4 

HONEYSUCKLES, ripened by the ..Much Ado,iii. 1 

the sweet honeysuckle Mid. N.'s Dream, iv. 1 

thou honeysuckle villain! 2 Henry IF. ii. 1 

HONEY-SWEET husband Hejiry F. ii. 3 

Pandarus; honey-sweet lord .. Troilus^ Cress, iii. i 

not I, honev-sweet queen — iii. 1 

HONEY-TO'NGUED Boyet Love's L. Lost, v. i 

HONI-SOIT-QUI-MAL-Y-PENSE. Merry W. v. 5 

HONNEUR— sauf vostre honneur Henry r. iii. 4 

saufvostre honneur, de elbow — iii. 4 

dames d'honneur d'user — iii. 4 

sauf vostre honneur, me understand well — v. 2 

sauf vostre honneur, le Fran9ois que — v. 2 

HONORATO signiormio Petruchio. Tainirig of Sh. i.2 

HONOKIFICABILITUDINITATIBUS- 

tlie head as honor ifieabilitudinitatibus. Love'sL.L.v. 1 

HONOUR— with all the honours Tempest, i. 2 

seek to violate the honour of my child — i.2 

upon mine honour, sir, I heard — ii. 1 

do love, prize, honour yovi — iii. 1 

how does thy honour? — iii. 2 

ay, on mine honour — iii. 2 

shall never melt mine honour into lust — iv. I i 
honour, riches, marriage blessing.. — iv. 1 (song) 
whose honour cannot be measured . . — v. 1 

he after honour hunts 'I'u-oGen.ofl'erona,i. 1 

her oath for love, her honour's pawn — i. 3 

the honour aud regard of — ii. 4 

dignified with this high honour — ii. 4 

how, with my honour — ii. 7 

upon mine honour, he shall — iii. 1 

upon whose faith and honour I repose — iv. 3 
that would have forced your honour — v. 4 

by the honour of my ancestry — v. 4 

[Kn/.] Falstaff will learn the tioaour. Merry Wives, i.3 

1 could come to such honour! — ii. 1 

take th« honour: what is it? — ii. 1 

I took 't upon mine honour... — ii.2 

you stand upon your honour? — ii.2 

to keep the terins of ray honour precise — ii.2 
hiding mine honour in my necessity — ii. 2 
under the slieltiji- of j'our honour! .... — ii. 2 
on the excellency of her honour .... — ii.2 

now doth thy honour stand — iv. 4 

by mine honour, half druuk Twelfth Night, i. !> 

have you not set mine honour at .. ., — iii. I 

by maidliood, honour, truth — iii. 1 

and laid mine honour too unchary out — iii. 4 
honour, saved, may upon asking give? — iii. 4 
how with mine honour may I give . . — iii. 4 
the gentleman will for his lionour's sake — iii. 4 

cried fame aud honour on him — v. 1 

in the modesty of honour — v. 1 

such ample grace aud honour Meas. for Meas. i. 1 

therefore take your honours — i. 1 

nor need you, on mine honour! — i. 1 

I'll wait upon your iionour — i. I 

let but your honour know — ii. 1 

here, if it like your honour — ii. 1 

if it please your honour, I am — ii. 1 

before your good honour two notorious — ii. 1 
if it please your honour, I know not — ii. 1 

before heaven and your honour — ii. 1 

if it please your honour, this is not so — ii. I 

saving your honour's reverence — ii. I 

your honours have seen such dishes.. — ii. 1 
your honour cannot come to that yet — ii. 1 
come to it by your honour's leave.... — ii. 1 

I beseech your honour, ask me — ii. 1 

look upon his honour — ii. 1 

doth your honour mark his face? — ii. 1 

doth your honour see any harm — ii. 1 

I would know that your iionour — ii. I 

I crave your honour's pardon — ii.2 

save j'Our honour! (rep.) — ii.2 

to your honour, please but your honour — ii. 2 
heaven keep your honour! (rep.) .... — ii. 2 

believe me on mine honour — ii. 4 

little honour to be much believed.... — ii. 4 

in him such a mind of honour — ii. 4 

would bark your honour from that trunk — iii. 1 
more respect than a perpetual honour — iii. I 
she, having the truth of honour in her — iii. 1 

your honour untainted — iii. 1 

your honour is accounted a merciful man — iii. 2 
continuance, may it please your honour — iii. 2 

and general honoiu- — iv. 3 

I warrant your honour — v. 1 

remorse confutes mine honour — v. I 

suborned against his honour v. 1 

upon my faith and honour — v 1 

wronged your well defended honour — v. 1 

to the safeguard of your honour — v. 1 

upon mine honour, thou shalt — v. 1 

much honour on a young Florentiue. . Much Ado, i. 1 
that he hath wronged his honour .... — ii.2 
as in love of your brother's honour .. — ii.2 
would better fit your honour to change — iii. 2 

the sign and semblance of her honour iv. 1 

upon mine honour, myself, my brother iv. 1 



HONOUR— the very bent of honour. . Much Ado, iv. 1 

if they wrong her honour — iv. 1 

by mine honour, I will deal in this.. — iv. 1 
on my honour, she was charged with — v. I 
honour Helen, and to be her Knight ! . Mid. N. Dr. ii. 3 
present breath may buy that honour. Love's L.L.i. 1 
own hand may strike his honour down — i. 1 
as liouour, without breach of honour — ii. 1 
for the best ward of mine honour .... — iii. 1 
some certain special lionours it pleaseth — v. 1 

now, by my maiden honour — v. 2 

upon mine honour, no — v. 2 

within the eye of honour, be assured..1/er.o/Fen.i. 1 
aud that clear honour were purchased — ii. 9 

the true seed of Iionour? (rep.) — ii. 9 

when your honours mean to solemnize — iii. 2 
I thank your honour; for my part .. — iii. 2 

the ancient Roman honour more — iii. 2 

to M'hom you show this honour — iii. 4 

wise young judge, how do I honourtheel — iv. 1 

or your own honour to contain — v. 1 

no, by mine honour, madam — v. 1 

my honour would not let ingratitude — v. 1 
now, by mine honour, which is yet my — v. 1 

as I must, for my own honour As you Like it, i. 1 

by mine honour, I will — i.2 

thou may 'st in honour come oft' again — i.2 

no by mine honour — i.2 

that swore by his honour (rep.) — i.2 

swearing by his honour — i.2 

my father's love isenough to honour him — i. 2 
upon mine honour, and in tlie greatness — i. 3 

5ealous in honour, sudden and quick — ii. 7 
jionour, high honour and renown,. — v. 4 (song) 

you to your former honour — v. 4 

hide their levity in honour All's Well, i 2 

and his honour, clock to itself — i.2 

aged honour cites a virtuous youth . . — i. 3 

would your honour but give me leave — i. 3 
not to woo honour, but to wed it ... . — ii. 1 

till honour be bought up — ii. 1 

there's honour in the theft — ii. 1 

now by my faith and honour — ii. 1 

wherein the honour of my dear — ii. 1 

the honour, sir, that flames in your. . — ii. 3 

it is a dropsied honour — ii. 3 

iionour: that is honour's scorn (^ep.) — ii. 3 
honours best thrive when rather from — ii. 3 
her own dower; honour, and wealth — ii. 3 

my honour's at the stake — ii. 3 

to plant thine honour, where we please — ii. 3 

and what dole of honour — ii. 3 

by miue honour, if I were but two .. — ii. 3 
he wears his honour in a box unseeu — ii. 3 
all the honours, that can fly from us — iii. 1 
will lay upon him all the honour.. .. — iii. 2 
can never win the honour that he. . . . — iii. 2 
whence honour but of danger wins .. — iii. 2 
the honour of a maid is her name._. . . — iii. b 
corru[)t the tender honour of a maid — iii. 5 
[Co/.] not the honour of ills design .. — iii. 6 
bring this instrument of honour again — iii. 6 
It is an honoru- 'longing to our house — iv. 2 

mine honour's such a ring — iv. 2 

the champion honour on my part.... — iv. 2 

mine house, mine honour, yea — iv. 2 

in the spoil of her honour — iv. 3 

he had the honour to be the officer at — iv. 3 

do the man what honour I can — iv. 3 

is a good livery of honour: so belike — iv. 5 

I beseech your honour, to hear me . . — y. 2 
in that course of honour as she had.. — v. 3 

as I love mine honour — v. 3 

and my honour's paid to him — v. 3 diet.) 

whose age and honour both suffer. . . . — v. 3 
noble thought upon mine honour. ... — v. 3 

fairer prove your honour, than in — v. 3 

your honour will oommaud. Taming ofSh.l (indue.) 
an' it please your honour, players.. — I (indue) 

we thank your honour — 1 (indue.) 

'twas Soto that your honour means — i (indue. ) 
for yet his houour never heard .... — 1 (indue.) 
what is 't your honour will command — I (indue.) 
will 't please your houour taste .... — 2 (indue.) 

your honoirr wear to-day (?e;).) — 2(induc.) 

this idle humour in your honour).. — 2 (indue ) 
your honour's players, hearing your — 2 (indue. ) 
so honour peereth in the meanest habit — iv. 3 
to see alike mine honour as their.. Winter's Tale, i. 2 
I'll give no blemish to her honour, none — i. 2 
which honour does acknowledge .... — i.2 

since I am charged in honour — i.2 

by the honour of my parents — i.2 

by mine honour, I'll geld them all . . — ii. 1 

to have her honour true — ii. 1 

and one whom much I honour — ii.2 

lock up honesty and houour from — ii.2 

your honour, and your goodness .... — ii.2 
durst not tempt a minister of honour — ii.2 

upon mine honour, I will stand — ii.2 

commit me, for committing honour — ii. 3 

the sacred honour of hiinself, his.queen's — ii. 3 
for life, and iionour, 'fore who please — iii. 2 

for honour, 'tis a derivative from — iii. 2 

beyondthe bound ofhonour;or,inact — iii. 2 

as in honour, he required — iii. 2 

for mine honour, (which I would free) — iii. 2 
your honours all, Apollo be my Judge — iii. 2 
and filled with houour, to my Kingly — iii. 2 
commended, no richer than his honour — iii. 2 
liave poisoned good Camillo's honour — iii. 2 

run not before mine honour — iv. 3 

for our houour therein unworthy thee — iv. 3 

do him love and honour — iv. 3 

on mine iionour, I'll pomt you where — iv. 3 

I know, in iionour, O, that ever I — v. I 

whose honour, and whose honesty . . — v. 1 
yinir honour not o'erthrow by your.. — v. 1 

we honour vou with trouble — v. 3 

our honour^s great disparagement. Comedy of Err. i. 1 



HON 



HONOUR— honour of your wife. Comedy qfErr. lii. 

I'll prove mine honour niul mine ... . — v. 

they smack of honour both Macbeth, i. 

for an earnest of n pretitor lionour .. — i. 

new honours come upon liini like.. .. — i. 

safe toward your Io\'e and honi)nr .. — |. 

which honour must ni>(. uuiuH-ompanied — i. 

against tliosc hnuiuirs dct'|> ""d hroad — i. 

wlieu 'tis, it shall niakf honour f.ir you — ii. 

lave our honours ill tlicsf Ihilttriug — iii. 

had we our eoiiiitrv's lioiiuur nuifed — iii. 

oud receive free honours, nil whiirh.. — iii. 

though in vonr state of lioiiour I om — iv. 

to thv rikkI truth nil. 1 lioiioiir — iv. 

113 honour, love, ohedieiioe, tnuips _ V. 

Scotland in sucli nil hoiHiiir named .. — v. 
a Boldier, l>v tiu' honour f;ivinu' Inind./vini' John, i. 

wound her honour with iliis difKik'iH'C — i. 

my mother's honour, ami my laiuU.. — i. 

my father gave me honour — i. 

a toot of honour better than I wufl .. — i. 

new-made honour doth forget men's — i. 

in chase mine honour up and down? — i. 

own gain shouldst defend mine honour? — i. 

in titles, honours, and promotions .. — ii. 

tlint she i-; bound in honour still .... — ii. 

his honour: O thine honour, Lewis (rep.) — iii. 

bestained cloak with our pure honours — iv. 

by the honour of my marriage-bed . . — v. 

as we with honour and respect — v. 

take up mine honour's pawn Itkhard II. i. 

mine honour is my life (re/).) — i. 

mine honour let me try — i. 

shall wound mine honour with — i. 

I sent thee forth to purchase honour — i. 

that love and honour have — ii- 

honour and allegiance cannot think — ii. 

raze one title of your honour out .. .. — ii. 

the worth and honour of himself .... — iii. 

or have mine honour soiled with .... — iv. 

his honour is as true, in this — iv. 

there is mine honour's pawn — iv. 

raay be repealed to try nis honour .. — iv. 

map of honour; thou king Richard's — v. 

whose state and honour i for ave allow — v. z 

now by mine honour, by mj' life .... — v. 2 

takes on the point of honour, to support — v. 3 

spend mine honour with his shame . . — v. 3 

mine honour lives when his dishonour — v. 3 

high sparks of honour in tl'.ee have I — v. 6 

who is tlie theme of honour's tongue. 1 Henry IF.i. 1 

your banished honours, and restore.. — i. 3 

so honour cross it from the north .... — i. 3 

to pluck bright honour from — i. 3 

pluck up drowned honour by the locks — i. 3 

thou hast lost much honour — i\. A 

what never-d,\'iug honour hath — iii. 2 

this saiUe child of honour and renown — iii. 'i 

for every honour sitting on his helm — iii. 2 

thou art the king of honour — iv. 1 

I thought your honour had already been — iv. 2 

if well-respected honour bid me on .. — iv. 3 

no matter, honour pricks me on (rep.) — v. 1 

what honour dost thou seek — v. 3 

there'shonourforyou: here'snovauity — v. 3 

I like not such grinning honour — v. 3 

if not, honour comes unlooked for .. — v. 3 

all the budding honours on thy crest — v. 4 

will do me any honour, so; if not .. .. — v. 4 
please it your honour, knock but at..2Htpri/ /r. i. 1 

upon mine honour, for a silken point — i. I 

divorce not wisdom from your honour — i. 1 

my honour is at pawn — ii. 3 

there were two honours lost — ii. 3 

to hold your honour more precise.... — ii. 3 

on mine honour, no abuse — ii. 4 

insurrection with j'our fair honours.. — iv. 1 

hand upon our honours? O my good — iv. 1 

what thing, in honour, had my father — iv. 1 

upon mine honour, all too confident — iv. ] 

by the lionom- of my blood, my father's — iv. 2 

which, by mine honour, I will perform — iv. 2 

not force this lineal honour from me — iv. 4 

invest thee with mine honours before — iv. 4 

give him office, honour, might — iv. 4 

as your honour; and as your renown — iv. 4 

but as an honour snatched with' — iv. 4 

what I did, I did in honour — v. 2 

wish your honours mav increase .... — v. 2 
to the king's honour, full fifteen earls.. //en; i/J'. i. I 

and honour's thought reigns solijy — ii. (chorus) 

that honour would thee do — ii. (chorus) 

appertinents belonging to his honour — ii. 2 

and all wide-stretched honours — ii. 4 

your honour wins bad humours .... — iii. 2 

for honour of our land, let us not.. — iii. 6 
by faith and honour, our madams mock — iii. 5 

and, with spirit of honour edged — iii. ,i 

that I love and honour with my soul — iii. 6 

'twere more honour, some were away — iii. 7 

but that our honours must not — iv. 2 

the grcoter shore of honour — iv. 3 

if it ne a sin to covet honour — iv. 3 

1 would not lose so great an honour. . — iv. 3 
and draw their honours reeking up . . — iv. 3 

iKn(.] let's die in honour — iv. .^ 

wear it fur a memorable honour.. .. — iv. 7 

your grace does me as great honours — iv. 7 

wear It for an honour in thy cap — iv. 8 

from my weary limbs honour is cudgeled — v. I 

by mine honour, ill true English .... — v. 2 

sloth dim your hnnoiirs, new-hcgnt.. 1 //rHnyl'/. i, 1 

for the honour of the forlorn French — i. 2 

what thou canst to save our honou 

how shall I hnnoiir thee for this success? — 

will not vour honours bear mecompany? — 

u|)on the hoimiir of his birth — 

deprived nf honour and inheritance — 

in honour of u true I'lantageuot — 

my lord, your honour U the lost .... — 



- 1.2 



— iv. 4 



[ 37:3 ] 

HONOUR— with honour to redress .Alienryyi. W. 

bv honoxtr of thv house — iii. 

Uiis is 11 dniible nouour, Burcundy .. — iii. 

your honours shall perceive Tuiw .... — iii, 

in honour of my noble lord of York.. — iii, 

sirnih, tliy lord I honour ns lie is . . . , — iii, 

Talbot, J*rnnce( niul ICii^^huid's honour — iv, 

lives, hononrn, lnn<l?^, and nil, hurry — iv, 

all his gloss of fornuT honour — iv. 

the trn!<t of Kngland's houour . 
Btiiin the honour you have won . 

pay, that I may honour thee — v 

and for thy lionour, give consent .... — v 

in Anjou what your honour pleases.. — v 

to i<»t'f and honour Henry as her .... — v 

deface your houour with — v 

and these honours, die? "illeuryyi. i 

dims the honour of tliis warlike .... — i 

with all the honours of the world? . . — i 

from top of honour to disgrace's — i 

but if she have forgot houour. and virtue — ii 

honour of his birtlu-itiht to the crown — ii 

despoiled of your honour in your life — ii. 

this staff of honour rau^'ht — ii 

the map of honour, trutli, and lovalty — iii 

but all the honour Salisburjy iiatli .. — iii, 

we should honour such as these — iv. 

a proper man, on mine honour — iv. 

craves aid of your honour from — iv, 

have I afftctcd wealth or honour .... — iv, 

and honours not his father — iv, 

and heavens and honour be witness.. — iv. 

to emblaze the honour that thy — iv. 

upon thine honour, is he prisoner? (rpp.) — v, 

no spark of honour bides ^ilvnryl'I. t, 

to honour me as thy king and sovereign — i, 

thy life before thine honour — i. 

do not honour him so much, to prick — i. 

to see these honours in possession .. — \\. 

pawn my credit and mine houour .. — iii. 

my desert is honour (rep.) — iii. 

more for wanton lust than honour .. — iii. 

as this title honours me and mine .. — iv. 

'tis the more honour, because more. . — iv. 

like it better than a dan;ierous honour — iv. 

honour now, or never! but follow me — iv. 

while he enjoys the honour, and his ease — iv, 

the drum your honour hears, marehclh — v. 

if honour may be shrouded Hichard III. j, 

lay those honours on your high desert — i. 

thy honour, state, and' seat, is due .. — i. 

thou rag of honour! thou detested .. — i. 

stamp of honour is scarce current..., — i. 

an outward honour for an inward .. — i. 

his honour, and myself, are at the one — iii. 

Iiold it, to your honour's good content! — iii. 

your honour. Well met, my lord (/t/j.) — iii. 

your honour hath no shriving work — ill. 

tor which your honour and your faith is — iv. 

[Col.'] the dignity and heit;ht of honour — iv. 

what dignity, what honour, canst thou — iv. 

the law, my honour, and her love.... — iv. 

hath lost his holy honour — iv. 

in honour honer^ty, the tract of Henry fill, i, 

as little honour he meant to lay upon — i. 

towards you honour and plenteous . . — i. 

and from a mouth of honour quite ery — i. 

and sell his houour as he pleases .... — i. 

not unconsidered leave your honour — i, 

whose honour heaven shield from soil — i. 

things to strike honour sad — i. 

restored me to my honours — ii. 

life, honour, name, and all that — ii. 

all men's honours lie in one lump .. — ii. 

and does purpose honour to you no less — ii. 

beauty and honour in her are so .... — ii. 

honour's train is longer than his — ii. 

against mine honoiu" aiight — ii. 

you tender more your person's honour — ii. 

yea,'upon mine honour, r free you .. — ii. 

on my honour, I speak my good .... — ii, 

to taint tliat honour every good tongue — iii. 

80 near mine honour (more near my life — iii. 

both for vour honour better, and yoiu* — iii. 

yet will I add an honour,— a great .. — jii. 

the honour of it does pay the act — iii. 

my power rained honour, more on you — iij. 

with the place and honours, during. . — iii. 

you have as little honesty as honour — iii. 

and bears his blushing honours thick — iii. 

ton much honour: O tis a burden .. — iii. 

usher forth mine honours, or gild.. .. — iii. 

all the depths and shoals of houour. . — iii. 

shows, pageants, and sights of honour — iv. 

that bear the cloth of honour oyer her — iv. 

the great child of honour, cardinal .. — iv. 

he gave his honours to the world agaiu — iv. 

was fashioned to much bonoiu- — iv. 

to add greater honours to Ids age .... — iv. 

to keep mine honour from corruption — iv. 

now in his ashes honour — iv. 

let me be used with honour — iv. 

he's honest, on mine honour — v. 

to oncnch mine honour — v. 

is this the honour they do one another? — v. 

please your honours, the chief cause — v. 

pity to one man's honour — v. 

I cry >;onr honour mercy — v. 

the chief aim of his honour — v. 

may glory in such an honour — v, 

stronger, you more honour gain — v. 

fain to draw mine honour in — v. 

please your honour, we are but men.. — v. 

shall rL'a<l the perfect ways of honour — v, 

from the sacred ashes of her honour.. — v. 

hirt honour/uud the greatness of — v. 

T have re<*eivi(l mueli honour — v, 

holds hi;, honour higher than. Troj/u*^ Cir«iV/i», i 

liectorshall lionour him — i. 

bring those honours off — i. 



HON 



IIONOUR-our honour and our shame. Trnil.^Cr. i. 3 

as honour. loHH of time, travel — ii. 2 

tlK! worlli iiiiil hcmcnir of a king .... — ii. 2 

manhiiiiil nil, I liDiioiir should have .. — ii. 2 

and to stmul linn liy honour — ii. 2 

wliieli liulli our se\'eral honours uU.. — ii. 2 

a theme of honour and renown — ii. 2 

I shall know your honour hotter .. .. — iii. 1 

honour and lordship arc my titles .. =— iii. I 

any honour; but hipiionr for (rf/i.) .. — iii. 3 

dear my lord, keeps honour bright .. — iii. 3 

for honour travels in a straight -^ iii. 3 

rccei\'e inii(;h lionour by him — iii. 3 

in mine ciiiiildiis honour — iv. 1 

in niy siHiit mill limiinir,— no — iv. 4 

cousin, lilt li'inniir to thee! — iv. .S 

a th.iiiglit of added honour torn -- iv. 6 

of what honour was this C'lessida .... — iv. S 

honour, or go, or stay; mj' major vow — v. I 

sweet sir, you honour nie ^ v. I 

mine honour keeps the weather of my — v. 3 

holds honour far more precious — v. 3 

art thou of blood, and honour? — v. 4 

all happiness to your honour! . . Thimu o/Atheni, i. 1 

pawn me to this your honour (rep.).. — i. 1 

I must entreat von, honour me so — i. 2 

I beseech your honour, vouchsafe me — i. 2 

may it please your honour — i. 2 

has sent your lionour two brace of . . — i. 2 

of liap]iiiiess, honour, anil fortunes .. — i. 2 

I love, nnd honour him. but must not — ii. I 

due debt^, against my honour? — ii. 2 

I hunted with his houour to-day — ii. 2 

I come to entreat your honour to. . .. — iii. I 

this slave unto his honour — iii.] 

was very little honour showed in't .. — iii. 2 

I have sweat to sec his honour — iii. 2 

please your honour, my lord hath .. — lii. 2 

and undo a great deal'of honour? — iii. 2 

I hope, his Honour will conceive — iii. 2 

who bates mine honour, shall not .. — iii..'* 

honour, health, and compassion to .. — lii. 5 

an honour in him, which buys — iii. 5 

all my honour to yon — iii. 5 

'tis honour, witli most lands — iii. 9 

the beggar native honour — iv. 3 

what an alteration of honour — iv. 3 

beseech your honour, to make it .... — v. I 

anv token of thine honour else — v. 5 

lialf all Cominius' honotirs are to.... Coriolanus, i. I 

to Marcus shall be honours — i. 1 

I lea\eyourlioii,uirs — i. 2 

and koc], y,tiir ]i"iioiirs safel — i. 2 

tliat alift'iH'L' wliiiviu he won honour — i. 3 

how Iioiioiir would become such — i. 3 

this is true, on mine honour — i. 3 

hate thine honours — i. 9 

hath not that honour in't — i. 10 

these in honour follows, Coriolanus.. — ii. I 

by deed-achieving honour newly named — ii. 1 

but with them change of honours — ii. 1 

transport his honours from where — ii. I 

these his new honours — ii. 1 

so jilanted Ijis honours in their eyes — ii. 2 

to remember with honours like himself — ii. 2 

hearts inclinable to honour — ii. 2 

yotir honours' pardon — ii. 2 

venture all his limbs for honour .... — ii. 2 

fit the honours which we devise him — ii. 2 

j'Our honour with your form — ii. 2 

joy and honour. To Coriolanus (rep.) — ii. 2 

everv one of us has a single honour.. — ii. 3 

let the high office and the honour go — ii. 3 

heard you say, houour and policy.. .. — .'.'!• * 

if it be' honour, in your wars ...'. — '.'.!• ^ 

in peace with honour, as in war — J!!-^ 

I should do so in honour — iii. 2 

to honour mine own truth — iii. 2 

I will answer in mine honour — iii. 2 

could not carry his honours even .... — iv. 7 

as poisonous of yoxir honoiu* — v.S 

atfected the tine strains of honour.... — v. 3 

safelj' home, loaden with honour. ... — v. 3 

thy mercy and thy houour at dilferouce — v. 3 

I pawned mine honour for his truth — v. ."1 

with no less hono\ir to the Autiates. . — v. 5 

please it your honours to call me — v. .^ 

set honour in one ej'e, and death . .JulivsCcPiur, i. 2 

love the name of honour more than.. — i. 2 

well, honour is the snbieet of my story — i. 2 

for some new honours that are — i. 2 

oud no man here but honours yon .. — ii. i 

any exploit worthy the name of honour — ii. 1 

I love Brutus, and I honour him .. .. — iii. I 

by my honour, depart Tintonched ... . — !ij* ' 

for mine honour; and lla^•e (rep.) .... — iii. 2 

for his fortune; honour, for his valour — iii. 2 

we lay these honours on this man — iv. 1 

full of regard, and honour — iv. 2 

the name of f'assius honours this .... — iv. 3 

mightv space of our large honoui-s .. — iv. 3 

worthless of such honour — v. 1 

hath had some snatch of honour in it — v. 5 

no man else hath honour by his death — v. 5 
rich in his father's honour . . Antony tjClenpalra, 1. 3 

let it look like perfect honour — i. 3 

vour honour calls you hence — i. 3 

it wounds thine honour — _i. * 

mav prorogue his honour, even till.. — il. 1 

the honour's sacred which he talks on — ii. 2 

as befits mine honour lo sloop — fi. 2 

profit that does lead mine honour (rr;i.) — ii. 7 

but iiav me terms of honour — iii. 4 

if I lose mine honour, [ bise myself. . — iii. 4 

manhood, honour, ne'er before did .. — iii. 8 

the scars upon your honour — iii. II 

mine honour was not yielded — iii. U 

bathe my living honour in the blood — iv. 2 

victorious life, than death and honour — iv. 2 

shall Bcciuire no honour dtfmuring .. — iv 13 



HON 



IIONOUR-CiBsar seek your honouT.Atil.^Cleo. iv. 13 
whicli writ his honour in the acts.... — v. I 
his taints oncl lionours waged equal.. — v. I 
doing the honour of thy lordliness . . — v. 2 

who did join his honour Cymbcline, i. I 

I honour him even out of your report — i. 1 
I dare lay mine honour, he will remain — i. 2 

mine interest, and his honour — i. 4 

to eonviuue the honour of my mistress — i. 5 
brinjj from thence that honour of hera — i. 5 
and leave her in such honour as you — i. 5 
from tliy report, as thou from honour — i. 7 
he hath a kmd of honour sets him off — 1. 7 
and pawn mine honour for their safety — i. 7 
Arm the walls of thy dear honour .. — ii. 1 
and ta'en the treasiu-e of her honour — ix.'i 
according to the honour of his sender — ii. 3 

her honour will remain hers — ^i. 1 

opinion you had of lier pure honour — ii. 4 

or do your honour injury — ii. 4 

this is" her honour! let it be granted — ii. 4 
let there be no honour, where there is — ii. 4 

of him I gathered honour — iij- 1 

i' the name of fame, and honour — — iii. 3 
prevailed before my perfect honour — iii. 3 

and every day do honour to her grave — jji. 3 
the due of honour in no point omit .. — iii. 5 
but it lionours us, that we have given — iii. 5 
honour untaught; civility not seen .. — iv. 2 
knightlioods and honours, borne as I — v. 2 
have "iven their honours to have saved — v. 3 

with honour to maintain — v. 4 

the grace of it, which is our honour. . — v. 5 
no lesser of her honour confident — — v. 5 

to violate my lady's honour — v. 5 

let my father's honours live in me.Tiliis Andron. i. 1 

laden' with honour's spoils — i. 1 

by honour of his name, whom, worthily — i. 1 
w'hom you pretend to honour and adore — j. 1 
BO I love and honour tliee and thine — i. 1 

with honour and witli fortune — i. 2 

in pence and honour, rest you here (rep.)— i. 2 
in peace and honour live lord Titus — i. 2 

over eliance, in honour's bed — j. 2 

give me a staff of honour for mine age — i. 2 
mine honour's ensigns humbled at . . — i. 2 

for your honour and your state — i. 2 

proclaim our honours, lords — i. 2 

mine lionour tliou hast wounded .... — i. 2 

died in honour and Lavinia's cause.. — i. 2 

in opinion, and in honour, wronged — i. 2 

but, on mine honour, dare I uiidertake — i. 2 
and let it be mine honour, good my lord — i. 2 
our sister's honour, and our own (icp.) — i. 2 

upon her wit doth earthly honour wait — ii. 1 
make yoTir honour of his body's hue .. — Ji. 3 
because they died in honour's lofty bed — iii. 1 
I greet your honours froni Andronicus — iv. 2 
nor honour shall shape privilege ... . — iv. 4 

as doth beSt our honour Pericles^ i, 1 

by his fall my honour must keep high — i. 1 

boots me to say, I honour him — i. 2 

then honour be but a goal to my will.. — ii. 1 
in honour of whose birth these triumphs — ii. 2 

'tis now your honour, daughter — ii. 2 

to preserve mine lionour, I'll perform — ii. 2 

honour we love, for who hates honour — ii. 3 
every one tliat comes to honour them — ii. 3 

try honour's cause; forbear your — ii. 4 

on lier virgin honour will not break it — ii. .5 

bent all offices to honour her — ii. 5 

unto your court, for honour's cause .. — ii. 5 

sliall prove, he's honoxir's enemy — ii. 5 

therein may vie honour with yourselves — iii. 1 

to be tlursty after totterin" honour — iii. 2 

your honour has through Ephesus .... — iij- 2 
1 believe you; your honour and your.. — iii. 3 
by bright Diana, whom we honour all — iii. 3 
bless your honourl I am glad (rf p.) .. — iv. 6 
your honour knows what 'tis to say.... — iv. 6 
"I beseech your honour, give me leave — iv. G 

leave his honour and her together .... — iv. 6 

if you were born to honour — iv. C 

I beseech your honour, one piece — iv.fi 

with grace, health, beauty, honour Lrar, i. 1 

love you and most honour you — i. I 

to plainness honour's bound — i. I 

maKe a great gap in your own honour . . — i. 2 

to feel my affection to your honour — i. 2 

if your honour judge it meet — i. 2 

never spring a babe to honour her! — i. 4 

as I've life and honour, there shall he sit — ii. 2 

thine honour from thy suffering — iv. 2 

who make them honours of men's — iv. 6 

no, by mine honour, madam — v. 1 

maintain my truth and honour firmly .. — v. 3 

it is tlie privilege of mine honours — v. 3 

such additions as your honours have — v, 3 

an honour that I dream not of (jep.').Ilom.SrJul. i. 3 
by the stock ^nd honour of my kin .. — i. 5 
where honour may be crowned sole. . — iii. 3 

to no issue of true honour bring — iv. 1 

our duty to your honour. Your loves . . Hamlet^ i. 2 

what loss youi honour may sustain — i. 3 

behoves my daughter, and your honour. . — i. 3 

upon my honour, then came each — ii. 2 

after your own honour and dignity — .!!• 2 

way again, to both your honours — iii. 1 

your honour for this many a day? — iii. 1 

I warrant your honour. Be not too tame — iii. 2 

when honour's at the stake — iv. 4 

your nature, honour, and exception — v. 2 

'but in my terms of honour, I stand aloof — v. 2 
some elder masters, of known honour — — v. 2 
provoking terms against your honour . . Ofhello^ i. 2 
when I know that boasting is an honour — * i. 2 
and to his honours, and his valiant parts — i. 3 
that hold their honours in a wary distance — it. 3 
would I miglitentreat your honour to scan — iii. 3 
hold her free, I do beseech your honour.. — iii. 3 



[ 374 1 

HOlSrOUR-of my heart, entirely honour. Otheilo, iii. 4 
her honour too, may she give that? (lep.) — iv. 1 

your honour is most welcome — i v. 3 

but why should honour outlive honesty? — v. 2 
naught I did in hate, but all in honour . . — v. 2 

HONOURABLE— honourable man Tempest, v. 1 

match were rich and honourable. TiroGoi.o/f. iii. 1 
it is an honourable kind of thievery.. — iv. I 

he bears an honourable mind — v. 3 

my chambers are honourable Merry Wives, iv. 5 

the honourable lady of the house.. Twef/VA Kighi, i. 5 
thou honourable man, prove \t..Meas./'jrIHeas. ii. 1 
stufted with all honourable virtues .. Much Ado, i. 1 
for you are like an honourable fatlier — i. 1 
marriage honourable in a beggar? (rep.) — iii. 4 
here stand a pair of honourable men — v. 1 
in the state of honourable marriage.. — v. 4 
chides the dice in honourable terms. Love's L. L. y. 2 
be honourable without the stamp. Mer. ofyenict,]}. 9 
how honourable ladies sought my love — iii. 4 
commend me to your honourable wife — iv. I 
esteemed thy father honourable . . As you Like V/, i, 2 
let us make q.n honourable retreat .. — iii. 2 
more honourable than the bare brow — iij. 3 

mine honourable mistress AWs Well, i. 3 

witlr lords, and honourable personages — ii. 3 
count has done most honourable service — iii. '< 
need but plead your honourable privilege — iv. h 
hath been an honourable gentleman — v. 3 
himself with honourable action. V'om. 0/ SA. 1 (ind.) 
so sovereignly being honourable.. Winter's Tale, i. 2 
and by liim that I think honourable — i. 2 
'tis pity, she's not honest, honourable — ii. 1 
have that honourable grief lodged here — ii. 1 
honourable thoughts (thoughts high — iii. 2 
to find thee an honourable husband.. — v. 3 
an honourable couduct let him have..iCm^/o/m, i. 1 
from a resolved and honourable war — ii. 2 
where honourable rescue, and dofence — v. 2 
let me wipe off this honourable dew.. — v. 2 

the honourable father to my foe Richard III. 1 

and by the honourable tomb he swears — iii. 3 

that honourable day shall ne'er — iv. 1 

and is not this an honourable spoil?. .1 Henry./ r. i. I 
milk with so honourable an action ! . . — ii. 3 
and thy place shall be lionourable ,. — ii. 4 
to you this honourable bounty shall — v. 5 

you call honourable boldness iHenrylV. ii. 1 

imitate the honourable Roman . . — ii. 2 (letter) 
is this proceeding just and honourable? — iv. 2 

just, and his quarrel honourable Henry V,\v. 1 

an honourable padge of the service . . — iv. 7 
begun upon an Ironourable respect .. — v. 1 
honourable lords, health to you all! . . 1 Henry FL i. 1 
prince, and honourable peers, hearing — iii. 4 
profaning this most honourable order — iv. 1 
confirm it so, mine honourable lord. . — iv. 1 
and whiles the honourable captain there — iv. 4 
dishonour not her honourable name — iv. 5 

honourable peace attend thy throne!. 2Hejii!/F/. ii. 3 
the honourable blood of Lancaster .. — iv. I 
am I of an honourable house (rep.) .. — iv. 2 
shame thine honourable age with blood? — v. 1 
use her honourable [Co/. honourably]. 3 Henry VI, iii. 2 

set down your honourable load Richard ill. i. 2 

the honourable board of council .... — i. 1 
[Co/. ifi!(.] honourable lords, may name — iii. 4 

witli all their honourable points Henry l'lll.\. 3 

in honourable keeping her . . Troilvs <§- C? esrida, ii. 2 
your honourable letter he desires, rimon ofAUiens,i. 1 
honourable gentleman, lord Lucullus — i. 2 
you are honourable, but yet they coidd — ii. 2 
and how does that honourable, complete — iii. 1 
friend, and an honourable gentleman — iii. 2 

denied that honourable man! — iii. 2 

me to thy honourable virtuous lord — iii. 2 

I might 'have shown myself honourable? — iii. 2 
pleasure such an honourable gentleman — iii. 2 

virtue, and honourable carriage — iii. 2 

this honourable lord did but try us.. — iii. 6 
my most honourable lord, 1 am e'en sick — iii. 6 
deserve not so honouraI)le a grave . . Corialanus, ii. 1 
honourable Menenius, my boy Marcius — ii. 1. 
think'st thou it honourable for a noble — y. 3 
honourable metal may be wrought. Julius desar, i. 2 
of honourable dangerous consequence — _i. 3 
you are my true and honourable wife — ii. 1 

derived from honourable ioins! — \\. \ 

Brutus is an honourable man (rep.').. — iii. 2 
who, you all know, are honourable men — iii. 2 
than I will wrong such honourable men — iii. 2 
honourable men, whose daggers (rep.) — iii. 2 
that have done this deed, are honourable — iii. 2 

wise, and honourable, and will — iii. 2 

thou couldst not die more honourable — v. 1 
which stands an honourable tnaX. Antony (^Cleo. i. 3 

but no honourable trust — iv. 6 

tliough lie be honourable — v. 2 

if thou wert honourable, thou Cymleline, i. 7 

attendants are all sworn, and honourable — ii. 4 
for he's honourable, and doubling that — iii. 4 
of noble minds is honourable meed. Titus Andron, i. 2 
thy name, and honourable family.... — _ i. 2 
to grati fy your honourable youth .... — iv. 2 
and honourable deeds ingrateful Rome — v. 1 
hath ordained to an honomable end — v. 3 
did not flow from honourable courses. . Pericles, jv. 4 

note, this is an honourable man — iv. 6 

but how honourable he is in that — iv. 6 

I hear say, you are of honourable parts — iv. 6 

him hereafter as luy honourable friend Lear, i. 1 

my oath before this honourable assembly — iii. 6 
of honourable reckoning are you. /Borneo Sf Juliet, i. 2 

thy bent of love be honourable — ii. 2 

a uamncd saint, an honourable villain! — ill* ^ 
more honourable state, more courtship — iii. 3 
(as they say), with honourable parts — iii. 6 

with love, in honourable fashion Hamlet, i. 3 

as of a man faithful and honourable .... — ii. 2 
my honourable lord. I will most humbly — ii. 2 



HOP 



HONOURABLE- that honourable stop.,0(/i<'Ho, ii. 5 

knows not yet of his honourable fortune — iv. 2 

an honourable murderer, if you will .... — v. 2 

HONOURABLY-speakinghonourably?M«c/i/frfo,iii.4 

honourably doth uphold his viord. Love's L.Lost,v. 2 

[Col.'] lords, use her honourably 3 Henry yi. iii. 2 

Edward will use women honourably — iii. 2 
convent, honourably received tiim. Henry I'lll. iv. 2 
like a soldier, ordered honourably. ./k//«s Crrsar, v. 5 
how honourably and how kmdXy. Antony ^- Cleo. v. I 
do this message honourably., l^itus Andronicus, iv. 4 

HONOURED with a human shape Tempest, i. 2 

and honoured in their issue ... • — iv. 1 

glances of thy lionoured love . . Tuo Gen. of Ver. i. I 
the devil be sometime honoured.il/eas. ./or Afea«. v. 1 
shall be much honoured in. .Merchant of Venice, iii. 2 
wedlock then be honoured. ./Isyou Lilteil, v. i (song) 
from humble, he from honoured name. All's Well,}. 3 
the tomb of honoured bones indeed . . — ii. 3 
my honoured lady, I have forgiven .. — v. 3 
been my father's lionoured friend. Winter'sTate, iv. 3 
assisted with your honoured friends — v. 1 

noble honoured lord, is feared and loved? — v. 1 

see, see! our honoured hostess! Macbeth, i.6 

he hath honoured me of late — i. 7 

I honoured him, I loved him King John, iv. 3 

most fine, most honoured iHenryll'. iy. 4 

and think me honoured to feast go...I Henry y I. ii. 3 
feared, and honoured of the people ..2HenryVI. i. 1 
my honoured lord. Why, this it is. Henry V III. \\. 3 
most honoured madam, my lord of York — iii. 1 
six or seven times honoured. T)o//us<5-C(ess/t/a, iii. 3 

most honoured Timon Timon cf Athens, i. 2 

my honoured lord,— Servilius! — iii. 2 

pity not honoured age for Ills wdiite.. — iv. 3 
my most honoured lord, for any benefit — iv. 3 
with us, the honoured number .... Coriolanus, iii. 1 

he did love his country, it honoured him — iii. I 
the honoured gods keep Rome ...... — iii. 3 

then the honoured mould wherein .. — .'y.-^ 

I feared Csesar, honoured him Julius Ccesar, iii. 1 

mayst be honoured being Cato's son — v. 4 

kill Brutus, and behonoured in hisdeath — v, 4 
kiss the honoured gashes whole. ./iH/ony ^Cleo. iv. 8 

hath honoured with confirmation Cymbeline, i. 7 

he wore uiion his honoured finger. ... — v. 5 
help, help ! mine honoured lady ! . . . . — v. 5 

highly honoured of your grace Tiliis Andron. i. 2 

for he comes to an honoured triumph.. Pericles, ii. 2 
we are honoured much by good Siinonides — ii. 3 
honoured Cleon, I must needs be gone .. — iii. 3 

strike me, honoured sir — v. 1 

andhonoured name of Pericles.... — v. 3 (Gower) 

ever honoured as my king Lear, i. 1 

my sister? In honoured love — v. I 

honoured thee [Co/. A?i/.-nightly].flojneo (fJuliel,v. 3 

as I do live, my honoured lord Hamlet, i. 2 

is a custom more honoured in the breach — i. 4 
my hoiioiu'ed lord! my most dear lord . . — ii. 2 
my honoured lord, you know right well — iii. 1 
live in this fair world behind, honoured — iii. 2 
HONOUR-FLAWED,— I have throe. Winter'sT. ii. 1 
HONOURING of Neptune's triumphs ..Pericles, v. 1 

HONOUR-OWING wounds Henry V. iv. 6 

HONOUR'ST-lovest and honour'st ..SHenryyi. i. I 
HOOD— Robin Hood's fat friar. Two Gen. of Vei . iv. 1 
grace is saying, hood mine eyes ..Mer. of Venice, ii. 2 
now, by my hood, a Gentile, and no Jew — ii. 6 
the old Robin Hood of Engl and . . As you Like it,\. 1 
Robin Hood, Scarlet, and John.2Hen;y/r. v. 3(B0ng) 

but all hoods make not monks Henry P'lll. iii. 1 

hood my unmanned blood Romeo Sf Juliet, iii. 2 

HOODED— you must be hooded ..Meas.forMcas. v. 1 

'tis a hooded valour Henry V. iii. 7 

HOODM AN— Hoodman comes ! All's Well, i v. 3 

HOODM AN-BLIND-at hoodinan-blind ? //am(e/,iii.4 

HOOD-WINK this mischance Tempest, iv. 1 

we will bind and hood-wink him so.. All'sll'ell, iii. B 

the time you may so hood-wink Macbe'h, iv. 3 

HOOD-WINKED as thou art All's Well, iv. 1 

such as war were hood-winked Cymbeline, v. 2 

no Cupid hood-winked with a scarf.. /?omeo i5- .Jul. i. 4 

HOOF- trudge, plod, away o' the hoof. Merry Wives, i. 3 

wound thee with their horses'hoofs. /((cAa?<i //. iii. 2 

with the armed hoofs of hostile 1 Henry ly. i. 1 

under the hoofs of vaunting enemies — v. 3 

printing their proud hoofs Henry V. i. (chorus) 

the basest horn of his hoof is — iii. 7 

HOOK— pair of anchoring hooks.. /""'oGen.o/ r. iii. 1 
with saints dost bait thy hook ! . . Meas.for Meas. ii. 2 
bait the hook well ; this fish will .... Much Ado, ii. 3 

but she I can hook to me Winter's Tale, ii. 3 

upon the cross ot^a Welsh hook ....\Henry IV. ii. 4 

with her; hook on, hook on iHenry ly.'ii. I 

hold hook and line, say I — ii. 4 

bended hook shall pierce ..Antony ^Cleopatra, ii. i 

did hang a salt-fish on his hook — ii. 5 

besides, that hook of wiving, fairness. Cy7?!6e/i7?e, v. ."i 

bait from fearful hooks. . Romeo ff Juliet, i. 5 (chorus) 

with hooks [Col. /fn/. -hoops] of steel . ... Hamlet, i. 3 

HOOKING both right and wrong. Meas.for Meas. ii. 4 

HOOK-NOSED fellow of Rome iHenrylV. iv. 3 

HOOP — was grown into a hoop Tempest^ \. 2 

colours like a tumbler's hoop! .. Love' sL. Lost, iii. 1 

about a hoop of gold Merchant of Venice, v. 1 

or Iioop his body more Winler'sTale, iv. 3 

a hoop of gold, to bind iHenryfV. iv. 4 

pot shall have ten hoops 2 Henry VI. iv. 2 

hoop Bhouldholdusstaunch..4n<ony4'C/eopa<ra, ii. 2 

[Col.Knt^ to thy soul with hoops of steel. Ha?n/e/, i.3 

HOOPED— the three hooped pot ....IHenryVI. iv. 2 

HOOT— nightly hoots, and wonders.. A/id. N.Dr. ii. 3 

who did hoot him out o' the city . . Coriolanus, iv. 6 

HOOTED— hooted at like an old tale. Winter's Tale,v. 3 

rabblement hooted, and clapped . . Julius Ceesar, i. 2 

HOOTING- fall a hooting. Love's L. Lost, iv. 2 cepit. ) 

in hooting at Coriolanus* exile .... Coriolnnus, iy. (i 

hooting, and shrieking JuliusCfesar, i. 3 

HOP— hop in his walks, and . . Mid. N.'s Dream, iii. 1 
where heart doth hop — v. 1 



HOP 

IlOP—hop, as light as bird fVom brier. Mid. (V. Or. v. 2 

hop nio over every kcmicl Taming of Shrew, Iv. .1 

for you slmll hoi) witliout — iv. 3 

quickly hop without tliy licad SHcrii (/ /'/. i. 3 

eaw her oni-c liop forty paces. Antony .S rienpulra, ii. •-' 
who lets it luip n little from ....llommSf JuUcI, ii. 'i 

H()I'I).VN(.'I<: cries in Tom's l)elly /.car, iii. fi 

HOl'I-; — no lio|'c that lie's uiulrowned .. Tempest, ii. 1 
ont of that no hope whftt Kreftt hope .. — ii. I 
no lioiio, that wiiy, is nnothcr wuy (,rep.) — ii, I 

I liope now thou art not drowned — ii. "2 

even liore I will i)iit ort'iny hope — iii. 3 

I inn ri);ht pliid that he's 80 out of hope — iii. 3 

as I liope for fiuict days — iv. I 

where I have hoiie to see — v. 1 

the fair clfocts of future hopes .. riroGen.o/ rei-.i. 1 

hoiie is a lover's staff — iii. I 

would niiell a lover's Iiope — iv. 2 

oy, but I hope sir — iv. 'i 

1 hoiHj thou wilt — iv. 4 

I hoiK> my master's suit will — iv. 4 

thou Imst bc(;uiled my hopes — v. 1 

I hope we shall drink Merry iVires, i. 1 

I liope, sir, — I will do — i. 1 

I hoiw, upon familiarity will — i. 1 

to entertain him with hope — ii. 1 

I hoiic, is an unmeasurnble distance — ii. 1 

I ho|)e it be not so. Hope is — ii. 1 

but. she hopes, there will come — ii. 'i 

they have not so little grace, I hope. . — ii. 2 

I hope, I have your goodwill — iii. 2 

'tis not so, I hope — iii. 3 

and give him another hope — iii. 3 

I hoife not; Ihad as lief — iv. 2 

I hoiie good luck lies in odd — v. I 

courageand hope botli teaeliing.. rioe(fllA Kighl, i. 2 

escape unfoldetn to mj; hope — i. 2 

I hone to see a housewife take — i. 3 

nor hold him up with hopes — i. 5 

and I) shall end, I hope — ii. 5 

the matter, I hope, is not great — iii. 1 

1 hope, sir, you are; and I am yours — iii. 1 
and the full prospect of my hopes.... — iii. 4 
but niv hope is better, and so look — iii. 4 (chall.) 

wreck past hope he was — v. I 

acting this in an obedient hope — v. 1 

in hope it shall not — v. 1 

1 have great hope in that . . Measure/or Measure, i. 3 

in hand, and hoiie of action — i. 5 

all hope is gone, unless you have .... — i. ."i 

1 hope here be truths — ii. 1 

very well then; I hoiie here be — ii. 1 

80, "then you hope of pardon — i i i . 1 

but only hope: I have hope to live .. — iii- 1 

with hopes that are fallible — iii. 1 

1 hope, sir, your good worship — iii. 2 

3'ou lioiKi the duke will return no more — iii. 2 
and I hope, if you have occasion .... — iv. 2 

I hope it is some pardon — iv. 2 

there's some in hope — iv. 2 

I hope you will not mock me - v. 1 

but I lioije, you have no intent MuchAdo, i. I 

well niece, I hope to see you one day — ii. 1 

I hope, he is in love — iii. 2 

we hope. Write down, that they hope — iv. 2 
and I hope, here is a play fitted. . Mid.N. Dream, i. 2 
therefore, be ont of hope, of question — iii. 2 

I hope, she will be brief — v. 1 

I hope well, is not enrolled irep.').. Love^sL.Losf^ i. 1 
I hope in (Jod for high words (rep.).. — i. 1 

well, sir, I hope, when I do it — i. 2 

in love, I hope; sweet fellowship .... — iv. 3 

I hope it is not so — v. 2 

I hope sir, three times thrice — v. 2 

but, I hoiK, I was perfect — v. 2 

be with mv hopes abroad . .Merchant of i^enice, i. 1 

I hope, I shall make shift to — i.2 

bein" I hope, an old man — ii. 2 

the inace I go to, and lose my hopes., — ii. 2 

do it ill hope of fair advantages — ii. 7 

fortune now to my heart's hopel .... — ii. 9 
how much unlike my hopes, and my — ii. 9 

there is but one hoiie in it that — iii. 5 

bastard hope neither. And what hope is — iii. 5 

vou may partly hope that your — iii. ."i 

Ihat were a kind of bastard hope .... — iii. 

how shalt thou ho|)e for mercy — iv. 

which speed, we ho|ie, the better for — v. 
not that. I hope, which you received — v. 

I lioi)e, I eholl see an end of him. . As you Likr it, i. 

that there is little hope of life in him — i. 

in the which hope, I blush, and hide — ii. 

nay, I hoix;.— Truly thou art damned — iii. 

hoiw not after it; 'tis not your — iii. 

are you not good? I hope so — iv. 

and I lio|>e it is no dishonest desire . . — v. 

those that feor they hope, and know — v. 
what hope is there of his majesty's.. ..i4i/'»(IVH, i. 

he hatli persecuted time with hope .. — i. 

the losing of hope by time — i. 

I have those hopes of her good — i. 

I hope to have friends for mv wife's — i. 

strive against hope, vet, in tliia — i. 

it is our ho|>e, sir, ofter well-entered — ii. 

or corrupt our hope, to prostitute.. .. — ii. 

oft it hits, where hope is coldest — ii, 

by my sceptre, and my hoiK-'s of heaven — ii. 

but never liopc to know whv I — ii. 

I hoiie sir, I nave your pood-will.... — ii. 

but 1 hope, your lordship thinks not — ii. 

and we. great in our hope, lay our best — iii. 

and ho|ie I may, that she, hearing .. — iii. 

I hope, I need not to advise you (rep.) — iii. 

I hoiie SO; look, here comes — iii. 

irien make hopes f'^o/. A'n/. -ropes] ,, — iv. 

lliough there mvnojie be d<me — iv. 

and truly, as I how to live (rfp.).... — iv. 

that I hope I slialf see him ere I die — iv. '. 
I hojie, this reason stands.. Taming of Sh. 2 (indue, 

to serve all ho()C8 conceived — i. 



[ 375] 



HOPE— and I do hope good days ..Taming of Sh. i. 2 

Paris came, in hope to speed alone .. — i.2 

quietly enjoy your hope, and marry — iii. 2 

and 'tis my nope to end sueeessfully — iv. 1 

I hope, thou art not mad — iv. 5 

I hope, 1 may fho()se, sir — v. 1 

out of lio|>c of all,~hvit mv share .... — v. 1 

I hope.lu'ttcr. Sinuli, liic.iKkllo .... — v. 2 
agree with you in (lie hopes of him. ll'iiiler'iTale, i. I 

I hope BO, sir; for 1 have aliout me .. — iv. 3 

no hope to help you; but, as you .... — iv. 3 

wherein, my hope is, T shall so prevail — iv. 3 

I hope I shall not he flayed out of it — iv. 3 

that e'er man bred liis liopes out of .. — v. 1 

from his liojies, and with a shepherd's — v. 1 

and stand in hope of answer — v. 2 

the Oracle gave hope thou wast in.... — v. 3 

not retain much hope Comedy nf Errors, i. 1 

of whom I bo]ie to make much benefit — i.2 

for which, I lioiie, thou felt'st I was — ii. 2 

you'll let us in, I hope? — iii. I 

and my sweet hope's aim — iii. 2 

I hope you have; or else — iv. 1 

she is too big, I hope, for me — iv. 1 

I hope, you do not mean to — iv. 3 

I hope, I shall have leisure to — v. 1 

and of royal hope, that lie seems Macbeth, i. 3 

do you not hope j'our children shall .. — i. 3 

was the hope drunk, wherein you .... — i. 7 

and set me up in hope? but, hush .... — iii. 1 

and bear his holies 'bove wisdom — iii. 5 

I hope, in no place so unsanetifled .... — iv. 2 

I have lost my hopes — iv.3 

my breast, thy hojie ends liere I — iv.3 

cimsins, I hojie, the days are near — v. 4 

'tishis main hope; for where — v. 4 

their unsure hopes relate — v. 4 

and break i t to our hope : I'll not — v. 7 

some nroper man, I hope King John, i. 1 

that tiieir hopes prodigiously be crossed — iii. 1 

I hone, your warrant will hear — iv. 1 

and loofced upon, I hope, with cheerful — iv. 2 

as to my ample lioiie was promised .. — v. 2 

of the world, what hope, what stay . . — v. 7 
by al I my hopes, most falsely doth . . Richard II. i. 1 

grace's pardon, and I hoiie, i had it. . — i. 1 

strong as a tower in hope, I cry — i. 3 

our subjects' next degree in hope ... . i. 4 

1 hope, the king is not yet — ii. 2 

'tis better hope, he is (n»p.) — ii. 2 

and be at enmity with cozening hoiie — ii. 2 

sweetened with "the hope to have — ii. 3 

hope to joy, is little less than joy (jfp.) — ii. 3 

that hath some hope to grow — iii. 2 

I see some sparkles of a uctter hope — v. 3 

shall I falsify men's hopes 1 Henry IT. i. 2 

I hope, I shall as soon be strangled .. — ii. 4 

induction full of prosperous hope.. .. — iii. 1 

the hope and expectation of thy time — iii. 2 

bottom, and the very soul of hope. ... — iv. 1 

spend upon the hope of what is to.... — iv. 1 

I hope no less, yet needful 'tis — iv. 4 

by my hopes, this present enterprize — v. 1 

never owe so sweet a hope, so much.. — v. 2 
I hope your lordship goes abroad.. ..iHenrytV. i. 2 

but I hope, he that looks upon me ,. — i.2 

plainly j'our opinions of our hopes .. — i. 3 

in the hope of great Northumberland — i. 3 

who lined himself with hope — i. 3 

likelihoods, and forms of hone — i. 3 

lives so in hope, as in an eany spring — i. 3 

hope gives not so much warrant .... — i. 3 

our hopes, (yet likely of fair birth) .. — i. 3 

I hope, you 11 come to Slipper — ii. 1 

I hope, my lord, all's well — ii. 1 

thus do the hopes we have in him .. — iv. I 

1 hope, not dead. He's walked the . . — v. 2 

we hope no other from your majesty — v. 2 

a prince of my great hopes forget .... — v. 2 

I hope to see London once ere 1 die.. — v. 3 
we hope to make the sender blush .... Henry I', i. 2 

shall refresh itself with hope — ii. 2 

I hope, tliey will not come — iii. 6 

some of tliem will fall to-morrow, Ihope — iii. 7 

share from me, for the best hope .... — iv. 3 

food argument, I hope, we shall not — iv, 3 

hope, your majesty is pear me — iv. 8 

we fairly hope, have lost their — v. 2 

and fair be all thy hopes! \ Henry y I. ii. 5 

entrance, fas I hope, we shall) — iii. 2 

undoubted hope of France! iii. 3 

where I hope ere long, to he — iv. 1 

his false hopes, the trust of — iv. 4 

in you all liopes are lost — iv. !> 

there is no hope that ever I — iv. 5 

shall all thy mother's hopes lie — iv. 5 

no lio])e to have redress? — v. 3 

will answer our hope in issue v. 5 

were there hope to conquer them iHenryVI. i. 1 

for I had hope of France i. I 

post, in hope of his reward i. 4 

what hope of harmony? ii. 1 

and God shall he my hope, mv stay — ii. 3 

for I bad hojic of France (rfp."^ — iii. 1 

'tis my special hope, that you will clear — iii. 1 

there is great hojie of help — iii. 1 

and wc, I hope, sir, are no murderers — iii. 2 

make signal of thy hoiie — iii. 3 

in time to come, I hope to reign — iv. 2 

ay, but I hope, your highness shall.. — iv. 4 

God, our hope, will succour us. My hope — iv. 4 

makes me hope you are not void .... iv. 7 

such hope have all the line of (i(>;).)..3H«irr,r;. i. 1 

the hope thereof makes Clifford mourn — i. 1 

and 1,1 hope, shall reconcile them all — i. 1 

and in that hope, I throw mine eyes — i. 4 

against them as the hope of Troy — ii. 1 

no hoiic to win the day ii. i 

what hope of good? Our ban is (fc/i.) — ii 3 

for yet is hope of life, and victory - ii. 3 



HOP 



HOPK— that hopes to rise again ZHenryl'l. ii. 6 

all our hone is done: Scotlund hath — iii. 3 

go forward. Henry's hope is done — Iii. 3 

1 hope oil's for tht best _ iii. 3 

by the hope I have of heavenly bliss — iii. 3 

in lioiie he'll prove a widower (rep. iv. 1) — iii. 3 

till then, fair hope must liinder — iv. 4 

my fear to lir)iH*. my sorrows unto .. — i\-. 4 

cohii- liillur. luighmd'shope — iv. (1 

with liupc "f this younK — iv. (, 

Hector, anil my Troy's true hope.... — iv. R 

not light liir sni-li a liolic v. 4 

by thi>, I lio|ie. she hath a sou for me — v. 6 

less than a iriother's hope — v. fi 

for here, 1 hope, 1/cgins our lasting .. — v. 7 

he cannot live, I hojic Itichard Ill.i. I 

I lioiie so. I know so; but gentle .... i.2 

Bball I live in hope? All men, 1 liopc — i. 2 

madam, good hope; his grace i. 3 

by you my hopes arc bntehered — i. 3 

1 hope, this holy humour of mine — i. 4 

as you hope for any goodness — i. 4 

I hope, the king made peace with — ii. 2 

in him there's a liojie of government — ii. 3 

1 hope, Jk: Is much grown since ii. 4 

I hope, he is; but yet let mothers — ii. 4 

live, I hope. An' if they live, I hope — iii. 1 

and hones to find you forward upon.. — iii. 2 

builds his hope in air of your fair.. .. — iii. 4 

even that. I hope, which pleasctli God — iii. 7 

to stop all hopes, whose growth — iv. 2 

true hope is swift, and flies with — v. 2 

I died for hope, ere I could lend thee — v. 3 

out of hojie, they may believe . . Henry fill, (prol.) 

no more, I hope. A monk o' the — i. 1 

here, he hopes, in all this noble bevy — i. 4 

in this world 1 ne'er hope ii. 1 

there is hope, all will be well — ii. 3 

your hopes and friends are infinite .. — iii.) 

no friends, no hope; no kindred .... iii. 1 

the tender leaves of hope iii. 2 

falls like Lneifcr, never to hope again — iii. 2 

for a mall that hopes for heaven .... — iii. 2 

1 hope, I have: I am able now iii. 2 

image of his Maker, hope to win by 't? iii. 2 

farewell, the hopes of court! my hopes — iii. 2 

I hope, she will deserve well — iv. 2 

I hope, 1 am not too late v. 2 

let me never hope to see v. 3 

which were the hope of the Strand .. — v. 3 
there my hopes lie drowned . . Troilus ^- Cressida, i. I 

our doubtful hope, our convoy — i. I 

that hope makes in all designs — i. 3 

he hopes, it is no other, but — ii. 3 

I hope, I shall know your honour better — iii. 1 

on him elect a second hoiie — iv. .') 

hope olHviiL-f ^liall hide our — v. 1| 

1 ho|ic, his liniiniM- will conceivc. . 2'imon o//«A. iii. 2 

this wa> Tuy loi.l's liest hope — iii. 3 

I hope, it is not so low with him — iii. f, 

I hope, it remains not unkindly — iii. G 

if I hope well, I'll never see — i\'. 3 

either m hoiie, or present iv.3 

our hope in hira is dead — v. 2 

Aufidius, their very heart of hope . . Coriolanus, i. fi 

sir, Ihope, my words dis-benehed .. — ii. 2 

we hope to gain by 3-011 ii. 3 

we hope to find .vo"u our friend — ii. 3 

and hope to come upon them in ... . — iv.3 

not out of hone, mistake me not .... — iv. .'1 

I hope to see Itomans as cheap iv. .0 

so, that all hope is vain v. 1 

there is some hojie the ladies of Rome — v. 4 

but, I say, tliere is no hope iii't — v. 4 

a trade, sir, that I hojie, I mav use. Julius Ctrsar. i. I 

upon this hope, that you shall give .. — iii. 1 

now, Antony, our hones are answered — v. 1 

so I hope; I was not born to die on .. — v. 1 
I will hope of better deeds. . Aninny ^ Cleopatra, i. 1 

and my auguring hope says, it will.. - ii. 1 

I hope so, J^pidus: thus we are ii. 6 

there is hope in it yet iii. 11 

I hope well of to-morrow i v. 2 

1 have an absolute hojic our landmen — iv. 3 

fortunes give him hope, aud fear .... iv. in 

past hope, and in despair Cymbeline, i. 2 

you bear a graver iiurposc, 1 hope.... i. .'j 

to mirth? I hope, he is i. 7 

much to blame. Not he, I hope i. 7 

I hope, it be not gone, to tell my ii. 3 

I hoiie so; go, and search — ii. 3 

conceive, I hope, but the worst of me — ii. 3 

in these feared hopes, I barely ii. 4 

I hope, the briefness of your answer — ii. 4 

I hope, you know that we must uot — ii. 4 

and so I hope, he came b.v 't — ii. 4 

I hope, I dream; for so I'thought .. — iv. 2 

this forwardness makes our hopes fair iv. 2 

I hope they'll jiardou it — iv. 2 

it strikes me, past hope of comfort .. iv. ;! 

thus quenched of hope, not longing .. — v. .s 
hope withal, the self-same pods ..TiluiAndron. i. 2 

whose virtues will, I hope, reflect .... i.2 

discontent daunt ail your hiipes _ i.2 

liOvinia is thine elder lirolhcr's lioiH! — ii. 1 

or not at all, sland yon ill hope ii. 1 

but hope to pluck a'dainty d.)e ii. 2 

never hopes more hcaveuthan ij. 3 

with that painteil hone braves — ii. 3 

the Roman Hector's hoiie iv. 1 

youth, the hope of Rome jy, •> 

in hojie thyself should govern Rome iv! 4 

yet hope, succeeding from so fair Periclet,\. I 

to blow at lire, ill ho|>c to quench it j. 1 

the which, I hope, shall ne'er be seen i 1 

1 hope, sir, if you thrive, you'll remember — ii! 1 

his ho|)es by you his fortunes ii. 2 

and here, I lioiic, is none that envies it .. ii 3 

I'll thus your lioiivs destroy _ i, -, 

not do 'I for all the world, I hoiic - iv 1 



HOP 

HOPE— there's no hope she'll return . . Pericles, iv. 2 

I hope, for my brother's j ustification Lear,i. i 

but, I nope, his heart is not in the — i. '-i 

T have liope you less know how — ii. 4 

I have good hope thou didst not — ii. 4 

swallowed all my hopes but she. .Romeo ^Julicl, i. 2 
for tlien, I hope, thou wilt not keep. . — iii. 5 
and tlien, I hope, thou wilt he satisfied — iii. 5 

fast hope, past cure, past liel pi — iv. 1 
do sp3' a kind of ho]>e, which craves — iv. 1 

the supply and profit of our liope Hamlet, ii. 2 

so sliall I'hope, 3'our virtues will bring . . — iii. 1 
I hope, we have reformed that indifferently — iii. 2 
what advancement may I liope from thee — iii. 2 
then there's hope a great man's memory — iii. 2 
to desperation turn my trust and hope!.. — iii. 2 
1 hope, all will be well ; we must be .... — iv. 5 
that, I hope, will teach you to imagine . . — iv. 7 

which late on hopes depended Othello, i. 3 

wilt thou be. fast to my hopes, if I — i. 3 

therefore mj' hopes, not surfeited to death — ii. 1 
my hopes do shape him for the governor — ii. 1 

I hope to be saved. And so do I too — ii. 3 

I hope, you will consider, what is spoke — iii. 3 
in his behalf, and hope all will be well.. — iii. 4 

to captivity me and my utmost liopes — iv. 2 

T hope, my noble lord esteems me honest — iv. 2 

with the least advantage of hope — iv. 2 

i f you say so, I hope you will not kill me — v. 2 
but yet, i hope, I hope, they do not point, — v. 2 

HOPED— hoped, thou wouldst have ..Much Ado, v. 4 
lioped, his sickness is discharged.. (finffz-'sTaie, ii. 3 

X hoped, there was no need to Henry V. ii. 3 

1 hoped, thou shouldst have been my ..Hamlet, v. 1 

HOPIOD-FOR-our hoped-for hay ..^HenryVI. iv. 8 
that there's no hoped-for mercy — v. 4 

HOPEFITl— hopeful execution Ao.Meas.for Meas. i. 1 

his hopeful son's, his babe's lVinter''sTale,\\. 3 

the mother to a hopeful prince — iii. 2 

whose hopeful colours advance ....iHenryVI. iv. 1 
no hopeful branch may spring . . . .SHeiiry VI. iii. 2 
maj' fright the hopeful mother .... Richard III. i. 2 
thy hopeful service perish too .... Henry Fill. iii. 2 
a parcel of our hopeful booty.. Titus Andromcus,ii. 3 
is the hopeful tady of my earth .. iJomeo S,- Juliet, i. 2 

HOPELESS-hopeless to !ind .. Comedy of Errors, i. 1 
iiopeless, and helpless, doth iEgeon.. — i. I 
the hopeless word of, never to return. Richard II. i. 3 

all hopeless of their lives ZHenryVI. i. 4 

I am a woman, friendless, hopeless. Henri/ f/ J"/, iii. 1 
his fortunes to hopeless restitution. Co/vo/aims, iii. 1 
ave hopeless to have the courtesy . . Cymbeline, iv. 4 

HOPING -boiling, you'll find....Mcos./or Meas. ii. 1 
hoping to be the wiser by youranswer.^//'sfre/;,ii. 2 
hoping the consequence will prove. iJic/mrrf/i/. iv. 4 
hojiing to pur^e himself with words. Co?-/o/a7iws, v. ^ 

hoping it was out an effect Julius Ceesar, ii. 1 

though hoping, of this good success Lear, v. 3 

HOPKINS-O Nicholas Hopkins? . . Henry nil. i. 1 
prophecy of Nicholas Hopkins O'sp.) — i. 2 

with that de\'il-monk, Hopkins — ii. I 

HOP'ST— space hop'st thou my eure? ..AW s Well, ii. 1 

why hop'st thou so? 'tis better Richard II. ii. 2 

be that thou hop'st to be iHony VI. iii. 1 

HORACE— as Horace says in his. . Love'sL.Lost, iv. 2 

'tis a verse in Horace TitusAndronicus, iv. 2 

in Horace; right, you have it — iv. 2 

HORATIO— if you do meet Horatio Hamlet, i. 1 

is Horatio there? A piece of him i^rep.) .. — i. 1 

Horatio says, 'tis but our fantasy — i. 1 

speak to it, Horatio. Looks it not (rep.) — i. 1 

how now, Horatio? you tremble — i. 1 

Horatio, or I do forget myself — i. 2 

make you from Wittenberg, Horatio? . . — i. 2 
thrift, thrift, Horatio! the funeral baked — i. 2 

or ever I had seen that day, Horatio! — i. 2 

in my mind's ej'e, Horatio — i. 2 

but there is, Horatio, and much offence. . — i. 5 
more thiiigs in heaven and earth, Horatio — i. 5 
ivhat ho, Horatio! Here sweet lord (rep.) — iii. 2 
if your name be Horatio, as I am let ... . — iv. 6 

Horatio, when thou shalt have — iv. 6 (letter) 

by the lord, Horatio, these three yeai-a . . — v. 1 

1 knew him, Horatio; a fellow ot infinite — v. 1 

pr'y thee, Horatio, tell me one thing — v. 1 

to what base uses we may return, Horatio! — v. 1 
T pray tliee, good Horatio, wait upon him — v. 1 
where I found, Ploratio, a royal knavery — v. 2 

but I am very sorry, good Horatio — v. 2 

I am dead, Horatio: wretched queen .... — v. 2 

Horatio, I am dead ; thou livest — v. 2 

Horatio, what a wounded name — v. 2 

O, I die, Horatio; the potent poison — v. 2 

HORIZON— border of this horizon . .SHenry VI. iv. 7 
HORN— my horns are his horns. . TwoGen.of Ver. i. I 

the horn I say; farewell Merry fVives,i\. 1 

o'er the cuckold's horns — ii. 2 

if I have horns to maise one mad. ... — iii. .0 

with great ragged horns — iv. 4 

with huge horns on his head — iv. 4 

what I can to get you a pair of liorna — v. 1 
and we shall know him b.y his horns — v. 2 

love set on thy horns — v. .'i 

and ray horns I bequeath your husbands — v. .i 
here are his horns, master Brook .... — v. 6 
good angel oh thg devil's horn. . Meas. for Meas. ii. 4 

pluck off the bull's horns MuchAdo,i. 1 

God sends a curst cow short liorns . . — ii. 1 

God will send yon no horns — ii. 1 

with horns on his head, and say — ii. 1 

well, a horn for my money — ii. 3 

the savage bull's horns — v. 1 

for scorn, horn, a hard rliyme — v. 2 

we'll tip tliy horns with gold . 
more reverend than one tipped 

lioUaed to, nor cheered with h_ 

huntsmen wake them witli their horns — 

the horns on his head Qrep.) — v. 1 

my lady goes to kill horns Love's L. Los', iv. 1 

if horns that year miscarry — iv. 1 



[376] 



HORN— if we choose by the horns. Lowe'sL. Lost, iv. 1 

are the tender horns of cockled — iv. 3 

spelt backward with a horn on his head — v. 1 
with a horn added. Ba, most silly (rep) — v. I 

what is the figure? Horns — v. 1 

lend me your horn to make one — v. I 

a gig of a cuckold's horn — v. 1 

will you give horns, chaste lady? .... — v. 2 

before your horns do grow — v. 2 

with his horn full of good news.. Mer.o/' Jen lee, v. 1 

as horns are odious As youLike it, iii. 3 

has good horns, and knows no end . . — iii. 3 

horns? even SO; poor men alone? — iii. 3 

bj' so much is a horn more — iii. 3 

why, horns; which such as you are . . — iv. 1 
to set the deer's horns upon his head — iv. 2 

leather skin, and horns to wear — iv. 2 (song) 

no scorn, to wear the horn — iv. 2 (song) 

the horn, the horn, the lusty horn — iv. 2 (song) 

they may joU horns together All's Well, i. 3 

the cuckold to his horn, as a scolding . . — ii. 2 

why, thy horn is a foot Taming of Shrew, iv. 1 

your head and butt were head and horn — v. 2 

thicker than a cuckold's horn Winter's Tale, i. 2 

that will take pains to blow a horn . . King John, i. 1 
for he hath the horn of abundance ..iHenrylV. i. 2 

the basest horn of his hoof Henry V. iii. 7 

is gored with Menelaus' horn TroiivsSf Cress, i. 1 

our heads, to gild his horns — iv. 5 

your nail against his horn — iv. 5 

and wor'st it on thj' horn — v. 2 

the bull has the game: 'ware horns, ho! — v. 8 
hang them on the horns o' the moon. Coriolanus, i. 1 

being but the horn and noise — iii. 1 

thrusts forth his horns again — iv. 6 

change his horns with garlands .. Antony ^Cleo. i. 2 

on the horns o' the moon — iv. 1 

with horn and hound, we'll give.. TitusAndron. i. 2 

shrilly to the well-tuned horns — ii. 3 

wiiiles hounds, and horns, and sweet — ii. 3 

planted presently with horns — ii. 3 

hast shot off one of Taurus'liorns.... — iv. 3 

fell both the ram's horns in — iv. 3 

and leave his horns without a case Lear, i. 5 

poor Tom, thy horn is dry — iii. 6 

a thousand noses, horns whelked — iv. 6 

HORN-BEAST— but horn-beasts. .4s yoM Likeit, iii. 3 

HORN- BOOK- boys the horn-book .Lotie's L. L. v. 1 

HORNED-horned moon present {lep.^Mid.N.Dr. v. 1 

outroar the horned herd! ■ .Antony ^ Cleopatra, iii. U 

a horned man's a monster, and a beast. 0//ie//o, iv. 1 

HORNER— here, neighbour Horner.. 2Hen)</r/. ii. 3 

HORNING;goodly gift in hormng.ntusAn'hon. ii. 3 

HORN-MAD— have been "horn-m&A.Merry Wives, i. 4 

proverb go with me, I'll be horn-mad — iii. 5 

happen, thou wouldst be horn-mad ..Much Ado, i. 1 

is horn-mad. Horn-mad, thou. Ci/medy o/&ro;s, ii. 1 

HORN-MAKER— no liorn-maker.^si/ouLiTtef^, iv. 1 

HORNPIPE— psalms to hornpipes. Winier'sTale. iv. 2 

HORN-RlNG-bracelet, horu-ring .... — iv. 3 

HOROLOGE-he'U watch the horologe . . Othello, ii. 3 

HORRIBLE— of sounds, all horrible . . Tempest, v. 1 

as thou draw'st, swear horrible. . Twelfth Night, iii. 4 

'tis too horrible! the weariest ..ileas.forMeas.'m. I 

which being so horrible, so hloody. Winter's Tale, ii. 3 

are less than horrible imaginings Macbeth, i. 3 

hence, horrible shadow! unreal — iii. 4 

horrible sight! ay, now, I see — iv. 1 

intent must needs seem horrible .. ..King John, iv. 1 
fearful, comfortless, and horrible .... — v. 6 

as harsh, and horrible to hgar IHenry VI. iii. 2 

he did discliarge a horrible oath Henry VIII. i. 2 

set them dowu horribletraitors. r/mono/^/Mens, iv. 3 
hence, horrible villain! or I'll spurn. ^n(. fyCleo. ii. 5 
with this horrible object, from low farirjs .iear, ii. 2 
why then let fall your horrible pleasvire — iii. 2 
horrible steep: hark, do j'ou hear the sea? — • iv. 6 
horrible conceit of death andnigM.Ho»!eo,<r/i('. iv. 3 
there assume some other horrible form. . Hamlet, i. 4 
O horrible! O horrible! most horrible I . . — i. 6 

in thy brain some horrible conceit Othello, iii. 3 

what horrible fancy's this? — iv. 2 

shows horrible [Co(.-terrible] and grim.. — v. 2 

HORRIBLY conceited of him . . Twelfth Night, iii. 4 

for I will be horribly in love withher.il/wcA^('o,ii. 3 

Hal, art thou not horribly afeard? . .IHenrylV. ii. 4 

well, thou wilt be horribly chid — ii. 4 

leek, I will most horribly revenge Henry V. v. 1 

my niece is horribly in love Troilus fyCress. iii. 1 

horribly stuffed with epithets of war Othello, i. 1 

HORRID message for a challenge. TweJ/yA Night, iii. 4 

whose horrid image doth unfix Macbeth, i. 3 

shall blow the horrid deed — i. 7 

not in the legions of horrid hell — iv. 3 

and a horrid suit of the camp Henry V. iii. G 

so many horrid ghosts — iv. (chorus) 

never sees horrid night — iv. I 

appear in forms more horrid Henry VIII. iii. 2 

with fear, and horrid flight .... Timon of Athens, v. .'i 
recounts most horrid sights seen. .JuliuaCtesar, ii. 2 
than that horrid act of the divorce.. Cymiedne, ii. 1 

such bursts of horrid thunder Lear, iii. 2 

to quit this horrid act — iii. 7 

not in the fiend so horrid, as in woman . . — iv. 2 

the general ear with horrid speech Hamlel, i. 2 

and know thou a more horrid bent .. — iii. 3 
HOBKIDER-the horrider may seem. Cymbeline, iv. 2 

HORRIDI-Y— so horridly to shake Hamlet, i. 4 

horridly tricked with blood of fathers .. — ii. 2 
HORROR— is still a dying horror! Meas. /or A/ear. ii. 3 

and take her hence in lienor — v. I 

all disquiet, horror, and perturbation. i*fMc/(^f/o, ii. 1 
take the present horror from the time.Macbeih, ii. 1 

horror! horror! horror! — ii. 3 

to countenance this horror! — ii, 3 ; 

1 liave supped full with horrors — v. .5 I 

outface the brow of bragging horror. . King John, v. 1 i 
disorder, horror, fear, and niutinv.. /?/c/(a)v/ //. iv. 1 j 
changes, horrors, divert and crack. Trnilusff Cress, i.3 | 
prosecution of disgrace and horror. .•l;i<.i§-Cieo.iv. 12 i 



HOFl 

HORROR— these thoughts of horror.^n^ <?■ Clea. v. 2 

with horror, madly dying Cymbeline, v. 5 

nothing like the image and horror of it . . Lear, i. 2 

or image of that horror? _ v. 3 

loosed out of hell, to speak of horrors.. Hmn/eMi. I 

on horror's head horrors accumulate . . Othello, iii. 3 

HORSE-ateamof horse shall.. 7'm'o Gen. o/Zer. iii. 1 

a horse can do no more; nay, a horse — iii. 1 

till he hath pawned his horses Merry Wives, ii. 1 

desire to have three of your horses .. iv. 3 

they shall have my horses iv. 3 

where be my horses? iv. ,'j 

of horses and money iv. 5 

his horses are arrested for it v. 5 

a horse of that colour (rep.) Twelfth Night, ii. 3 

and I'll give him my horse — iii. 4 

marry. Til ride your horse as well .. — iii. 4 

I Iiave his horse to take up — iii. 4 

a horse whereon the governor. . . . Meas. for Meas. i. 3 

between himself and his horse Much.-ldo,i. 1 

I would ray horse had the speed of your — i. 1 
as they write, here is good liorse to hire — i. I 
for a hawk, a horse, or a husband? . . — iii. 4 

an' two men ride of a horse iii. 5 

a fat and bean-fed horse beguile . . Mid.N.'s Dr. ii. 1 

as true as truest horse (rep.) — iii. 1 

sometime a horse I'll be — iii. 1 

like horse, hound, hog, bear — iii. 1 

the dancing horse will tell you ..Love's L. Lost, i 2 
a horse to be embassador for an ass! — iii. I 

send the ass upon the horse — iii. 1 

that spurred his horse so hard against — iv. I 

the tired horse his rider iv. 2 

nothing but talk of his horse . . Merch. of Venice, i. 2 

he hatli a horse better than i. 2 

where is the horse, tliat doth untread — ii. 6 

his horses are bred better AsyotiLikeii,i. 1 

the horse his curb, and the falcon — iii. 3 

that spurs his horse but on one side — iii. 4 

like two gipsies on a horse — v. 3 

ere twice the horses of the sun shall.. ^(('s Well, ii. 1 
given order for our horses; and to-night — ii. A 

stay not, but in haste to horse ii. .5 

the general of our liorse thou art — iii. 3 

with our horse upon our own wings — iii. 6 

how many horse the dnke is strong — iv. 3 (note) 
five or six thousand horse, I said .... — iv. 3 

and his captain of the horse — iv. 3 

let mj horses be well looked to — iv. 5 

we must to horse again ; go, go — v. 1 

of his hounds and horse, faming of Shrew, 1 (indue.) 

thy horses shall be trapped ' — 2 (indue.) 

given him the best horse in Padua .. — i. 1 
as many diseases as two and fifty horses — i. 2 
his horse hipped with an old mothy — iii, 2 

caparisoned like the horse ii i . 2 

his horse comes with him on his back — iii. 2 

a horse and a man is more than — iii. 2 

my horse. Ay, sir, they be ready (rep.) — iii. 2 

my barn, my horse, my ox — iii, 2 

first, know, my horse is tired iv. 1 

one horse! what's that to thee? (rep.) — iv. 1 
her horse fell, and she under her horse — iv. 1 
the horse upon her; how he beat (rep.) — iv. 1 

how the horses ran away — iv. 1 

my stirrup, nor to take my horse ! . . — iv. 1 
bring our horses into long lane end. . — iv. 3 

seven, ere I go to horse — iv. 3 

and fetch our horses back again — iv. .'i 

go; fresh horses; and gracious ..Winier'sTale, iii. I 
as you would lay to your horse.. Comerfy ofFrr. iii. 2 

therefore, to horse; and let us not Macbeth, ii. 3 

and Duncan's horses (a thing most — ii. 4 

go not my horse the better — iii. l 

nie you to horse; adieu, till you — iii. 1 

I wish your horses swift, and sure .... — iii. 1 

hark ! 1 hear horses — iii. 3 

his horses go about iii. 3 

I did hear the galloping of horse — iv. I 

send out more noises, skirr the — v. 3 

to horse, to horse! urge doubts (rep.). AcAard //. ii. I 
wound thee with their horses' hoofs — iii. 2 
fondly dost thou spur a forward horse — iv. I 
saddle my horse. God for his mercy! — v. 2 

mount thee upon his horse v. 2 

that horse, that thou so often (rep.).. — v. 5 
forgiveness, horse! why do I rail .... — v. 5 
I was not made a horse; and yet I bear — v. 5 

did take horse, uncertain of the \HenryIV. i. I 

new 'lighted from his horse — i. 1 

you have horses for yourselves — i, 2 

by our horses, by our habits i. 2 

tut I our horses they shall not see.... — i. 2 

and yet our horse not packed — ii. 1 

I have removed FalataflTs horse — ii. 2 

give me my horse, you rogues (rep.) — ii. 2 

prince Hal, help me to my horse — ii. 2 

siiTah Jack, thy horse stands behind — ii. 2 
the boy shall lead our horses dowu . . — ii. 2 

and then to horse before day — ii. 2 

now merrily to horse; the thieves .. ii. 2 

those horses from the sheriff? (rep.) . . — ii. 3 
my horse, my love, my horse ........ — ii . 3 

gods me, my horse! What say'st . . . . — ii. 3 

give my roan horse a drench, says he — ii. 4 

spit in my face, call me horse — ii. 4 

and snorting like ahorse — ii. 4 

as tedious as is a tired horse — iii. I 

and then to horse immediately — iii. 1 

I am a peppercorn, a brewer's horse — iii. 3 

in the night to catch my horse — iii. 3 

I would it had been of horse — iii. 3 

go, Poins, to hor.se, to horse; for thou — iii. 3 

come, let me take my horse — iv. 1 

hot horfe to horse pieet, and ne'er ]iart — iv. 1 
certain horse of mv cousin Vernon's — iv. 3 
not a horse is half the half himself (rpp.) — iv. 3 

like a horse full of high feeding iHenrylV. i. 1 

by nie to breathe his bloodied horse.. — i. 1 
he gave his able horse the head — i. ( 



HOR 



[ 377] 



HOUSE-»tolen the horse he rtxle on.. i Henry I f^. 1. 1 
ft horse. I boiiRht him in Pniil's [rep.) — i.i 

five hiiiulrcd horso, arr inuiclictl up — li. 1 

Bardolph. Ioi>k tci our hciiwa — v. 1 

Bwiiv, Hiii'(lcil|ili, fiidillo my horse .. — v. 3 

let u's tukc iiuv iiiHii's liorsi-a — v. 3 

when we t:ilk ofliorsos, lluit voii..Hfiiii/ »'. i. (cho.) 
soil till' imstiiiL' n.ni-. t.> liiiv llio horso — ii.fuho ) 
k't mv horse luivelii<,liu' (,,•;..) .... _ iii. 7 

you tulk orhov.-e uiul iiniioiir — iii. 7 

iiot cluinge my liorsu with any tluit — iii. 7 

he is imleed a horse niul all otiier — iii. 7 

a most ttl)solute and excellent iu>rse — iii. 7 

»nd my horse is argument for tliem all — iii. 7 

for my horse is my mistress — iii. 7 

1 lm<l rather have my horse to — iii. 7 

yet do I not use my horse for — !'!• 7 

even as .vour liorse bears your praises — iii. 7 

and help Ilv|ierion t<' Ids horse — iv. I 

my horse! Valet! laeone}'! ha! — iv. -' 

weep our horses' i)loody — iv. 2 

to horse, you Kallant princes! (rep,).. — iv. 2 
give their fasting horses provender .. — iv. 2 
or b.mnd my horse for her favours . . — v. 2 
stamp out with my Iiorse's heels ....IHemyl'I. i. 4 

or horse, or nxen, t'roni tlic — i. i 

between two liorses, wli loll doth bear — ii. 1 
he might luive sent, und had the horse — iv. i 

mount on my swiftest horse — iv. o 

coward liorse tiiat bears me, fall and die! — iv. 6 

for oxen, siieep, or liorse — v. 6 

as fast as horse can carry them 'llleuiyl'I. i. 4 

shall be dragged at my horse' lieels.. — iv. 3 
away, take liorse. Come, Margaret . . — iv. 4 
not to let tliy horse wear a cloak .... — iv. 7 

lands, goods, hoi-se, armour — v. 1 

I liolp him to his horse — v. 3 

moinited. run their horse to death ..ZUeinijVl. i. 4 

I'lUill my horse, lieeausel — ii. 3 

find liis friends with horse and men.. — iv. 5 

your liorse stands ready at the ; — iv. 5 

run before mv horse to market .... Richard III. i. 1 
where every horse bears hiscommanding — ii. 2 
presently yon will take horse with him — iii. 2 

my footcloth Itorse did stumble — iii. 4 

give me another horse; bind up my . . — v. 3 
caparison my liorse; call up lord Stanley — v. 3 
consisting equally of horse and foot. . — v. 3 

the leading of this foot and horse — v. 3 

well winged with our chiefest horse. . — v. 3 

spur your proud horses hard — v. 3 

his horse is slain, and all on foot .... — v. 4 
a horse! a horse! my kingdom {rep.') — v. 4 

I'll help you to a horse ...• — v. 4 

anger is like a full-hot horse Henry nil. i. 1 

the horses your lordship sent for — ii. 2 (letter) 
those, that tame wild liorses, pace .... — v. 2 

like Perseus' horse Trnilus <§- Cressida, i. 3 

and Achilles' horse makes many — i. 3 

thy horse will sooner con an oration — ii. I 
what a man is tlierel a very horse .. — iii. 3 

like a gallant horse fallen in — iii. 3 

let me Dear another to his horse — iii. 3 

take thou Troilus' horse; present the — v. i 

he flqhts on Galathe his horse — v. 5 

life thou owest me for my horse! — v. 6 

tie his body to my horse's tail — v. 9 

and at the murderer's horse's tail .... — ^t. * ^ 
and some twenty iiorse, all of . . Timon of Athens^ i. 1 

our horses. O my friends, I have — i. 2 

presented to von four milk-white horses — i. 2 
if I would sell my horse, and buy {rep.) — ii. 1 
it foals me, straight, and able horses — ii- I 

paint till a horse ma.v mire — iv. 3 

killed by the liorse; wert thou a horse — iv. 3 

my horse to yours, no Coriolanus, i. 4 

so, the good horse is mine — i. 4 

of all the horses (whereof we have ta'en — i. 9 

or at wild horses' heels — iii. 2 

than an eight year old horse — v. 4 

horses did neigh, and dying men .. JuliusCmar, ii. 2 

so is my horse, Octavius — iv. 1 

like horses hot at hand — iv. 2 

tlie greater part, the horse in general — iv. 2 
mount thou my hor.se, and hide thy — v. 3 

drink the stale of horses .4nlony ^ Cleopatra, i. 4 

or is lie on his horse? O happ.v horse! — i. 5 

do bravely, horse! for Hot'st thou — i. .i 

that ne'er yet beaten horse of Parthia — iii. 1 
80, this is to horse: adieu, noble .... — iii. 2 

worse for that, were he a horse — iii. 2 

neighs of horse to tell of her approach — iii. 6 
with horse and mares together (rep.) — iii. 7 
would bear a soldier, and his liorse . . — iii. 7 

and our twelve thousand horse — iii. 7 

the legions and the horse whole — iii. 7 

my legions, and my horse — iii. 8 

thot, which is now a horse, even with — iv. 12 

O for a horse with wings! Cymbeline, iii. 2 

where horses have been nimbler .... — iii. 2 

when we came from horse — iii. 4 

our horses' labour? — iii. 4 

my horse is tied up safe — iv. 1 

when they hear the Roman horses neigh — iv. 4 

never bestride a horse, save one — iv. 4 

come on then, horse and chariots . TOut/lHi/ion. ii. 2 

and I iiave horse will follow — ii. 2 

we hunt not, we, with horse nor hound — ii. 2 

like the Trojan horse, war-stnffed /VnV/w, i. 4 

horse, and sail, and high expellee — iii. (Gower) 
know when tlie cart draws tno horse? ,. ,, /.ear, i. 4 

saddle my horses; call my train — i. 4 

prepare my horses,— Ingratitude! — 1.4 

some company, and awaj' to horse — i. 4 

be my horses ready? Tliy osses (rep.) .... — i. a 

where may we set our liorses? — ii. 2 

horses are tied by the beads — ii. 4 

straight took horse; commanded me .... — ii. 4 
in pure kindness to his horse, buttered . . — ii. 4 
he calls to horse; but I know not — ii. 4 



HORSE— ona bay trotting horse Lear, iii. 4 

horse to ride, and weapon to wear — iii. 4 

a horse's health, a boy 8 love — iii, 6 

get horses for your mistress — iii. 7 

nor the soiled liorse, goes to 't witli — iv. 6 

to shoe a troop of horse with felt — iv.fi 

a liorse, a rat, have life, and thou — v. 3 

plats llie manes of horses Ilnmeo^ Juliet, \. 4 

anil liire those horses; I'll be with thee — v. 1 
lie lav eouc-hed in the ominous horse ..llnmtel, ii. 2 
to siicli wondrous doiiiu liruiight his horse — iv. 7 
that iiriiised iiiv lord siirh-ii-oMe's horso — V. 1 
wnLiend with liiiii six r,:iilmi-y horses. .. . — v. 2 
Harhiirv horses nL'aiiist six Irencll swords — v. 2 
(hiiitfbter eovered with a Biirbory horse. O/AW/o, i. I 
IIOHSKli.VCK-sits on his horseback.. AmffJo/iii, ii. 3 

and when 1 am o' horseback IHenrylK il. I 

that runs o' horseback up a hill — ii. 4 

o' horseback, ye cuckoo! but, afoot .. — ii. 4 

saw them salute on horseback Henry Vlll. i, I 

French, and they can well on horseback. Hamlet, iv. 7 

HORSE-B.VCK-BREAKER.this huge. IHf ».■!///■.». 4 

HORSED— horsed upon the sightless-. ... Wai(;e//i, i. 7 

and being better horsed, outrode mc.i Henry If. i. 1 

I were manned, horsed, and wived .. — i. 2 

hnrsLMl with viirinble complexions .. Coriolanus, u. 1 

IIOKSIMJKKNCII— a horse-drench.. — ii. 1 

IK IliSi;- II A 1 1!.'^. and cats-guts Cymlieline. ii. 3 

IU)HSIO-l,KI.;CIIKS, my bovs Henryl'. ii. 3 

H( )H.SKiMAN, or a foot-maii? .... Winter's Tale, iv. 2 

if this be a horseman's coat — iv. 2 

HORSEMANSHIP-noble horsemanship.l H. II'. iv. I 

have good judgment in horsemanship. /foirvr. iii. 7 

IIORSE.MEN sit like fixed candlesticks. Ueniy I', iv. 2 

ride thou unto the horsemen — iv. 7 

for yet a many of your horsemen peer — iv. 7 
the horsemen ott'iVom breakingin ..Mlenryl'l. i. 1 
your troops of horsemen with liis .... — iv. I 
out, some light horsemen and peruse — iv. 2 
my promised supply of horsemen .. .. — iv. 3 
I will despatch the liorsemen straiglit — iv. 4 
pursued the horsemen of the north ..Sllenryl't. i. 1 

round about with horsemen JuliusCcesm^y. 3 

and our horsemen be in readiness . . Cymbeline, iii. 5 

HORSE-PISS-I do smell all horse-piss. 7'«i/pM(, iv. 1 

IIORSE-SHOE-like a horse-shoe.. Merry «'!>«, iii. .5 

HORSE-STEALER-ahorse-stealer..-l»yoiiL//rei7,iii,4 

HORSE-TAIL— master's horse-tail.. rom.o/"A'/i. iv. 1 

H()RSE"W AY— horseway, and footpath.. ..tear, iv. 1 

HORSING— horsing foot on foot? . . mailer' sTale, i. 2 

HORTENSIO— there Hortensio.rami'ng-o/SA)eto,i. 1 

if you, Hortensio, or signior Gremio — i. 1 

their love is not so great, Hortensio — i. 1 

tliink'st thou, Hortensio, though her — i. 1 

and approved friend, Hortensio — 1.2 

signior Hortensio, come you to part. . — i. 2 
good Hortensio, I bade the rascal knock — i. 2 
signior Hortensio, thus it stands with me — i. 2 

si"iiior Hortensio, 'twixt such friends — i. 2 

Ilortensio, peace; thou know'st not.. — i. 2 
I will not sleep, Hortensio, till I see her — i. 2 
and you're well met, signior Hortensio — i- 2 

Hortensio, have you told him all her — i. 2 

Hortensio, harlil this gentletnan — i. 2 

the chosen of signior Hortensio — i. 2 

Hortensio, to what end are all these — i. 2 
is't not Hortensio? If thou aifect'st.. — ii. 1 

yet read the gamut of Hortensio — iii. 1 

to plead Hortensio's passion — iii. 1 (gamut) 

ranging, Hortensio will be quit with _ — iii. 1 
am called Hortensio. Signior Hortensio — iv. 2 
have forsworn you, with Hortensio . . — iv. 2 
eat it up all, Hortensio, if thou lovest — iv. 3 

Hortensio, say thou wilt see — iv. 3 

then hast thou taught Hortensio .... — iv. 5 
thou, Hortensio, with thy loving widow — v. 2 
for my life, Hortensio, fears his widow — v. 2 
I mean, Hortensio is afeard of you .. — v. 2 
how likes Hortensio that? My widow — v. 2 
where is your sister and Hortensio's wife? — v. 2 
HORTENSIUS— and Hortensius.. Timon o/Ath. iii. 4 
HORUM— liorum, harum, horum. . Merry Wives, iv. 1 

and to call horum: fie upon yon! — iv. 1 

HOSE— see to garter his hose. Tu:o Gen. of Verona, ii. 1 

see to put on your liose — ii. 1 

a round hose, madam — .?!•'' 

in your doublet and hose Merry Wives, iii. 1 

shall make thee a new doublet and hose — iii. 3 
when he goes in liis doublet and hose. -Vwr/i --If/o, v. 1 
guards on wanton Cupid's hose-. Lnve'sL.Lost, iv. 3 

his round hose in France Merchant of Venice, i. 2 

as doublet and hose ought toshow./-l«youLr*;ei(, ii.4 

his youthful hose well saved — ii. 7 

I have a doublet and hose — iii. 2 

shall I do with my doublet and hose? — iii- 2 
then your hose should be uiigartered — iii. 2 
have your doublet and hose plucked — iy. 1 

dost make hose of tliv sleeves? AWs Well, ii. 3 

avelvethosc! a scarlet cloak!. raiai/it'o/S/irew, v. 1 

for stealing out of a French hose Macbeth, ii. 3 

four, through the hose \Ht:nrytV. ii. 4 

down fell their hose — ii. 4 

your Freneli hose off Henry V. iii. 7 

thoM ^'o ill their hose and douhlet3.2;/cnr(/ *'/. iv. 7 
doiihlet, hat, hose, all that answer.. C'j/iii'/W/iu-, iii. 4 
HOSPITAUI.E— of hospitable zeal ..King John, ii. 1 
there against tlie hospitable canon. . Coriolanus, i. 10 
m v hospitable favours vou should not . . Lear, iii. 7 

HOS4PITAL— in a hospital Lore's L. Los', v. 2 

HOSPITAMTY-deedsofli08pitalitv./lsiyoi(/.i*f,ii.4 
HOST— many, mine liost .... TwoGen.ofVeiona, iv. 2 

but, host, dotli this sir Proteus — iv. 2 

hon, will v.nigo? - iv. 2 

mine host of the flartcr (rep. i. S).. Merry ll'ives, i. 1 

trulv mine host, I must — i. 3 

doso, gonil iiiim-li..st — i,3 

appointed mine host of de Jartcrrc .. — i. I 

jiawncd his horses to mine host — ii- I 

my rantinghostof the Garter comes-. — ii. I 
how now, mine host? — ii. 1 



HOT 



IIOST-I follow, mine host, I follow, /l/«rrv'»'ii'e», ii. I 

good mine host o' the Garter — Ii. 1 

my merry host hath had — li. I 

have witn .you, mine host — i*. I 

mine host lie .larterrc — Iii. 1 

be jndgnient by mine host of the Garter — !ii. 1 

hear mine host of the Garter! — iii. 1 

trust me, a mini host — iii. 1 

com|)aiiioii, tlic host of the Garter .. — iii. 1 

on tlic lousy knave, mine host — iii- 3 

it is thine liost, thine Ephesian — iv, 5 

how now, mine host — Iv. 6 

there was, mine host, an old fat — Iv. .5 

ay that there was, mine host — iv. 5 

where is mine host? — iv. a 

that lias cozened all the hosts — \v. t> 

vere is mine host de Jarterre? — iv. S 

hark, good mine host — iv. 6 

both, my gooil host — iv. 6 

where you shall host: of enjoined ..AlVs Well, iii. 6 
to tlie Centaur, where we host. Comerf;/ </ .Errorj, i- 2 

and mine host's report — ii. 3 

to a niggardly host, and more sparing — iii. 1 

your goods, tliat lay at host, sir — v. I 

conduct mo to mine host Macbeth, i. 6 

then, as his host, who should against — 1.7 

anil plav tlic- humble host — iii. 4 

the iiiiMihers ofiiur host — v. 4 

to march a bloody host KingJohn, iii. I 

like a kind host, the Dauphin — v. I 

then many an old host \ Henry IV. ii. 4 

stolen from my host at St- Albans .. — iv. 2 

host Pistol? Base tike (ren.) Henry V. ii. 1 

rush on his host, as doth the melted — iii. 5 

forth he goes, and visits all his host — iv. (clior.) 

bankrupt in their beggared host — iv. 2 

liroclaim it, Westmoreland, thro' my host — iv. 3 
not a piece of feather in our host .... — iv. 3 

proclaimed through our host — iv. 8 

of the Lord of Hosts he fought \HenryVI. i. 1 

that you withold his leviedTiost .... — iv. 4 
send me packing witli ahost of men. 2 Henri/ r/. iii. 1 
queen iscomingwitli a puissant host. 3//c'.ify/'/. ii. 1 
and the forehand of our host. . Troilus Sr Cressida, i. 3 
Grecian host rKH<.-moiildJ one noble man — i. 3 
proclaimed through all our host .... — ii. I 

like a fashionable host — iii. 3 

you do discomfort all the host — v. II 

applause and clamour of the host. . . Coriolanus, i. 9 

to give my poor host freedom — i. 9 

to-morrow set down our host — v. 3 

message a liost of tongues . . Antony Sf Cleopatra, ii. 5 

safed the hringer out of the host — iv.fi 

the capacity to camp this host — iv. 8 

success to the Roman host Cymbeline, iy. 2 

I am your host; with robbers' hands .... Lear, iii. 7 
of this tree for your good host — v. 2 

all you host of heaven! O earth ! Hamlel, i. 5 

HOSTAGE— now your hostages.. 7'roi(w.^CreH. iii. 2 

that must be hostages for Rome .... Coriolanus, i. 10 
your hostages I have, so have yo\x. Antony ffCleo. ii. 6 

his body's hostage for liis return Cymbeline, iv. 2 

stand on hostage for his safety . . Titus Andron. iv. 4 

willing vou to demand vour hostages — v. 1 

HOSTESS-hostess say, welcome. Tuo Gen. of Ver. ii. 5 

1 know your hostess as ample as All's Well. iii. 5 

rail upon the hostess of the house. rnmo/SA. 2(ind-) 

but your kind hostess Winter's Tale. i. 2 

and not the hostess of the meeting . . — iv. 3 
upon mine hostess there ....Comedy of Errors, iii. I 

see, see! our honoured hostess I Macbeth, '\.6 

fair and noble hostess, we are your .. — i- 6 
towards him : by yotir leave, hostess — i- 6 
by tlie name of most kind hostess.... — ii- I 

our hostess keeps her state — iii. 4 

on his horseback at mine hostess' door.ifiH^'/oAn, ii. I 
and is not my hostess of the tavern . . 1 Henry IV. i. 2 
to do with my hostess of the tavern? — i. 2 

hostess, clap to the doors — ii. 4 

how how, my lady the hostess? — ii. 4 

you lie, hostess; fiardolph was — iii. 3 

thou say'st true, hostess — iii. 3 

hostess, I forgive thee — iii. 3 

hostess, my breakfast; come — iii. 'J 

come hither, hostess iHenrylV. ii. I 

dost thou hear, hostess? — ii. 4 

he's no swaggerer, hostess — ii. 4 

so you do, hostess. Do I? yea? — ii. 4 

do "vou discharge upon mine hostess — ii. 4 

is thine liostcss here of the wicked? .. — i|. 4 

farewell, hostess; farewell, Doll — ii. 4 

come to my master, and you, hostess. . Henry V. ii. 1 

farewell, hostess. I cannot kiss — ii. 3 

ruminates, like a hostess Troilus ^ Cressida, iii. 3 

noSTi:ssSinP-hostessshipo'theday.(fi»/.r'j'r. iv.3 

HOSTILE— hoofs of hostile paces IHennjIV. i. 1 

attempt of hostile arms! Richard lll.iv. 4 

their fears of hostile strokes Timon of.^fhens.v. 2 

given hostile strokes Coriolanus. iii. 3 

with hostile forces he'll o'ersnread Vernls. i. 2 

IIO.STILITY— such bold hostility . . 1 Henry I r. iv. 3 

by our prneeeding in hostility I Henry VI. v. 4 

ii'or hostility, to seek to put mc down.illenryVI. i. 1 

IIOSTILU'S-oliservetliis, IIostilins?.7'iiii.o/.J(/i.iii.2 
lifter great Hostilius, here was king.Corio/ii;iiM, ii. 3 

HOT— Slais's hot minion is returned .. Tempest, iy. 1 

is become a hot lover TwoGen. of Verona, ii. 5 

your love's hot fire — ii. 7 

u hot venison paoty to dinner ..Merry Wires, i. 1 

the smell of hot meat — i. I 

with liver liurninL: hot — ii. 1 

and cooled, glowing hot — iii. 5 

hissing hot, tliiiik of that — iii. 5 

when gods have hot backs — v. ."i 

ginger Bhall be hot i' tlic mouth . . Ttrelflh Night, ii. 3 

be not so hot Measure for Measure, v. I 

no, not till a lint January Much Ado, i. I 

the first suit is hot and hasty — ii. 1 

he turns about all the hot bloods — iii. 3 

hot ice, and wondrous strange. . Mid, S.'sDreanu V. 1 



HOT— your wit's too liot, it speeds. lotie's L. Lost, ii. 

two hot sheeps, marryl _ ii i 

but a liot temper leaps over. . Merchant of I'enice i 2 
whichis the hot condition of their .. — v. I 
apply hot and rebellious V\(i\iOTS..AsyouLikeit, ii. 3 

for a hot midsummer night iv. 1 

she is not hot, but temperate. . Taming of Shreu\ u. I 
soon hot, ray very lips might freeze.. — iv. 1 

is she so hot a shrew as she's iv. i 

for being slow in thy hot office — iv. I 

the mustard is too hot a little — iv. 3 

too hot, too hot; to mingle Winter's Tale, i. 2 

not so hot, good sir ii, 3 

it hath seen very hot service iv. 2 

your purse is not hot enough _ iv! 2 

flowers for you; hot lavender, mints iv. 3 

here is more matter for a hot brain . . iv. 3 

or some other hot infusion iv. 3 

she is so hot, because the meaX.Comedy of Errors, i! 2 

but I felt it, hot in her breath ' i'ii. 2 

to the liot breath of Spain iii.'i 

that hot rash haste so indirectly King John, ii.' 1 

commander of thi s hot malicious day I — i 1 . 2 

in this hot trial, more than ii. 2 

this day grows wondrous hot _ iii.' 2 

so hot a speed with such advice iii. 4 

heat me these irons hot _ iv. 1 

must you with hot irons burn — i.f' i 

and with !rot irons must I burn 

lords, I am hot witli haste 

there is so hot a simiraer 

the salt in them is hot 

the blood is hot, that must be cooled. iJj'cAairf //. i! 1 

will rain hot vengeance 

for young hot colts, being raged — 

now the lord of such Iiot youth — 

mounted upon a hot and "fiery steed — 

this haste was hot in question 1 Henry If 

a fair hot wencli in flame-coloured . . — 
what hole in hell were hot enough . . — 

hot livers, and cold purses 

if there come a hot June 

as hot lord Percy is on fire to go ... . 

for the hot vengeance and the rod .. 

whose hot incursions, and great name 

all hot, and bleeding, will we offer .. 

Harry to Harry, hot horse to horse . . — 
I am as hot as molten lead 
ay, Hal; 'tis liot, 'tis hot . 

or tliat hot termagant Scot v. i 

.iolunot in a hot day 2HenryIF.\. 2 

if it be a hot day, an' I brandish — i. 2 

where they supped, is too hot ii. 4 

fie! this is hot weather; gentlemen.. — iii. 2 

become very hot, and valiant — iv. 3 

when rage and liot blood are _ iv 4 

with hot essays; girding with Henry V. i. 2 

to so hot an answer for it _ ii. 4 

the knocks are too hot; and, for mine — iii! 2 
the humour of it is too hot, that is .. — iii. 2 
hand of hot and forcing violation . . — 

that their hot blood may spin — 

touched with choler, hot as gunpowder — 

ties me over to time and a hot smnmer — ... 

and cease our hot pursuit 1 Henry VI. ii. 2 

are you so hot, sir? Yet, Pucelle .... — iii. 2 

that were so hot at sea iii. 4 

my sword should shed hot blood 2Henry Vl. i! 1 

now you grow too hot; it was _ ; 1 

churchmen so hot? good uncle . 
melts with the sun's hot beams. 

Btomaeli this hot weather 

seen a hot o'er-weening cur run 
our part hot coals of vengeance 

tli£i i7,.,, cl,;.^^^ 1 — *- J rz- .- 



iv. 1 
iv. 3 
v. 7 
v. 7 



ii. 1 
ii. 3 
V. 2 



V. 3 
V. 3 
V. 4 



HI. 3 
iv. 2 
iv. 7 



ii. 1 

iii. 1 
iv. 10 



the sun shmes hot, and, if we use ..3Hen;iyF/. iv. 8 
I was too hot to do somebody good.. Hichard llj. i. 3 

finds the testy gentleman so hot — iii. 4 

so hot that it do singe yourself Henry I'm. i. 1 

and now while it is hot, I'll put it . . — v. 1 
hot di,gestion of this cormorant.. Troilusfy Cress, ii. 2 

or is your blood so madly hot _ ii. 2 

to the hot passion of distempered — ii 2 

such swoln and hot discourse _ ii. 3 

hot blood, and hot blood begets {rep.) — iii 1 
hot blood, hot thoughts, aud hot deeds? — iii. 1 

OB hot as Perseus, spur thy iv. 5 

the gods are deaf to hot and peevish -_ v! 3 

under hot ardent zeal Timon of Athens, iii. 3 

who, in !iot blood, hath stepped _ iii. 5 

one that loves a cup of hot wine Coriolanus, ii! 1 

by his side, come hot from hell . . Julius Ciesur, iii. 1 
thou hast described a hot friend cooling — iv 2 

like horses hot at hand _ iv! 2 

many hot inroads tliey make Antony ACleo. i! 4 

between the extremes of hot and cold — i. ;, 

.you are most hot, and furious CymbHine, ii. 3 

but to be still hot summer's tanlings iv. 4 

but that of coward hares, hot goats .. iv! 4 

as Dian had hot dreams, and she alone — v! 5 

not too hot; first pay me for v. 5 

now let hot JEtna cool in Sicily. Titus Amlron. iii! 1 

if fires be hot, knives sharp Pericles, iv! 3 

that these hot tears, which break Lear i 4 

tell the hot duke, that 'ji! 4 

hot questrists after him, met _ iii! 7 

not so hot: in his own grace v! 3 

'tis hot, it smokes;— it came even v 3 

the room is grown too hot Romeo 4- Juliet, i! ."b 

are .vou BO hot? marry, come up .... ii. 5 

the day is hot, the Capulet's abroad — iii! 1 

these hot days, is the mad blood iii' 1 

thou art as hot a, Jack in thv mood.. — iii' 1 
who, all as hot, turns deadly point. . — iii 1 
you are too hot. God's bread! it makes — iii' 5 

of unimproved mettle hot and full Hamlet, i 1 

when I had seen this hot love on _ ii 2 

now could I drink liot blood, and do _ iii' 2 

in your motion you are hot and dry .... — iv.' 7 
tis very hot. No, believe me, 'tis very . . _ v. 2 
it is very sultry and hot _ y " 



. Lost, iv. 2 

zv, 1 (ind.) 

1 (ind.) 



I HOT— as hot as monkeys, as sal t as Otiiello, iii 3 

bot.bot, and moist: this hand of yours — iii. 4 
H0T-BI.001)ED gods assist me! ..Merry Wives, v. b 

why< the hot-blooded France Lear, ii. 4 

l7R!i!Pl'^^®^"'^™*^^^^^''''^""'ouse.A/(;as. forMeas. iii 
HOTLY— this chase is hotly followed. . Henry I', ii. 4 

contest as hotly and as nobly Coriolanus, iv. 5 

tliou hotly lust'st to use her in Lear iv 6 

Tj?.?^yiVT!,''^''",!'""^f ''"'='1 ^°^ Othello, i! 2 

llUlfePUK— gallant Hotspur there ..\Henryiy i 1 
of prisoners. Hotspur took Mordake - - i ' 1 

Percy's mind, the Hotspur of the north — ii' 4 

sit, good cousin Hotspur _ jii 1 

thrice hath this Hotspur Mars _ iii! 2 

this gallant Hotspur, this all-praised — iii' 2 
the Douglas and the Hotspur both . . — v 1 

a harebrained Hotspur, governed — v! 2 

beaten down youn» Hotspur iHenryiy. (indue.) 

the WTath of noble Hotspur's sword. . (indue ) 

Hotspur's father, old Northumberland _ (indue.) 
of Hotspur, cold spur? that rebellion — i. 1 

heavy in Hotspur's loss, lend to _ i! 1 

.youn» Hotspur's case at Shrewsbury i! 3 

but the sound of Hotspur's name.... ii. 3 

hanging on Hotspur's neck, have talked — ii! 3 

HOTTER— is hotter in France All's Well, iv. .'j 

lusts burn hotter than my faith. . Winler'sTale, iv. 3 
a hotter name than any is in hell .... Macbeth, v. 7 

may his tongue be hotter! iHenrylV. i. 2 

besides what hotter 'homs.Antony &-Cleopatra, iii. 11 

HOTTEST-in the hottest d,ay ..Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

bees in hottest summer's day.. Titus Andronicns, v. 1 

HOUND— fell and cruel hounds . . Twelfth Night \ 1 

sometime a hound, a hog Mid. N.'s Dream, iii. 1 

like horse, hound, hog, bear iii. 1 

rather give his carcase to m.y hounds — iii! 2 

shall hear the music of my hounds.. iv. 1 

of hounds and echo in conjunction .. >v' 1 

bayed the bear with hounds of Sparta 

my hounds are bred out of 

so doth the hound his master . . Love's 1 
tender well my hounds . . Taming of Shr 

tell him of his hounds and horse .... . ^,„^., 

thy hounds shall make the welkin . . — 2 (ind) 
on my hawk, or hound, but twenty. . _ v. 2 
a hound that runs counter . . Comedy of Errors, iv. 2 
as hounds, and greyhounds, mongrels. Mac6e(A, iii'. 1 

leashed in like hounds Henry F. i. (chorus) 

O hound of Crete, think'st thou _ ii. ) 

turn on the bloody hounds 1 Henry VI. iv' 2 

like Brabler the hound Troilus <$■ Cressida, v ' ! 

boy! false hound! if you have Coriolanus, v. 5 

as a carcase fit for hounds Julius Ccesar,'ii. 1 

like asses, and fawned like hounds .. _ v. 1 
with horn and hound, we'll give. . Titus Andron. i. 2 
hunt not, we, witli horse nor hound — ii. 2 

the babbling echo mocks the hounds — ii. 3 
wliiles hounds, and horns, and sweet — ii! 3 

and the hounds should diive upon thy ii! 3 

your husband from his hounds to day ! _ ii! 3 

hound or spaniel, braeh, or lym Lear, iii. 6 

not like a hound that hunts, but one . . Othello, ii' 3 
HOUR— for the mischance of the \\om: ..Tempesl,i'. 1 

the hour's now come j. 2 

did they not that hour destroy us? .... i! 2 

more time for vainer liours i! 2 

taught thee each hour ; ' ■> 

any business that wc say befits the hour 

he s safe for these three hours 

farewell, till half an hour hence 

within this half hour will he be asleep — 

one phcBuix at this hour reigning there Hi. 3 

at this hour lie at my mercy iv! 1 

on the sixth hour v! I 

who three hours since were v! 1 

cannot be three hours v! 1 

when that hour o'erslips me . . Two Gen. of Ver. ii! 2 

the next ensuing hour some ii. 2 

'twill be this hour ere I _ ii! 3 

spent our hours together ji. 4 

our marriage hour, with all ii! 4 

which with an hour's lieat ijj. 2 

this is the hour that madam Silvia . . iv! 3 

it is about the very hour that v. 1 

for lovers break not hours v! 1 

we had au hour's talk of that wart. Werry Wives, i! 4 

we have an hour's talk with you _ ii. 1 

tlie first hour I was born ij. 2 

the hour is fixed, the match ii! 2 

eleven o'clock the hour ji! 2 

lietter three hours too soon ji! 2 

'tis past the hour, sir _ ii! 3 

two tree liours for him ji! 3 

this blessed hour! iii! 3 

1 was at her house the hour she iii! 5 

'twixt eight and nine is the hour _ iii! 5 

within a quarter of an hour iv. 4 

why, that hour of fairy revel iv! 4 

the hour draws on y! 3 

a thousand irreligious cursed hours.. v! 5 

not three hours travel from Twelfth Night, i. 2 

great exceptions to your ill hours i. 3 

and a sister, both born in an hour. ... ii! 1 

some hour before you took me ji! 1 

doth fall that very hour ii' 4 

to his own sliadow, this half hour — ii! 5 

and leave you for an hour 

not half an hour before 

I have travelled but two liours . . . 
drunk, sir Toby, an hour agone. . . 

how have the hours racked 

the condition of this present hour 

tomeet me two hours smce. Measure for Measure'i. 2 

within ;v?o hours i z 

si-.e's very near her hour — ;;' o 

at what liour to-morrow shall I 

having the hour limited 

the hour draws on prefixed by An'gel'o — 

an hour before his entering .'. — 

and be hanged au hour! ! ! _ 



ii. I 

iii. 1 

iii. I 

iii. 2 



— 111. 3 

— v. I 

— V. : 



V. 1 



— u. 2 



HOUR— at an unusual hour? Meas. for Meas v 1 

you will temporize with the hours Much Ado i! 1 

but I am heart-burned an hour after — ii 1 

you were born in a merry hour _ ii 1 

find me a meet hour to draw _ ii" 2 

I talked with no man at that hour !. _ iv' 1 

atthathourlastnig.it 

with me conversed at hours unmeet ' 
you have stayed me in a happy liour 

thus did she, an hour together 

why, an hour in clamour 

promised by tliis hour to visit me 

our nuptial hour diaws on apace. jV id. A'. D, 

a merrier hour was never wasted .... - 

in her dull and sleeping hour _ 

the hours that we have spent ! ! _ 

abate thy liours: shine, comforts .... — 

most liappy hour! _ 

this long age of three hours !!.!!! _ 

ease the anguish of a torturing hour? — v 
sleep but three hours in the night ..Love's L. L i , 

about the sixth hour; wlien beasts — i. 1 (letter) 

you may do it in an hour, sir _ i 2 

1 never spent an hour's talk withal.. _ ii' 1 

the hour that fools should ask _ ij' j 

dances, masks, and merry hours _ iv 3 

close mine eyes some half an hour .. — y" 2 

the.y stayed an hour and talked (ren.) _ v' 2 

at the latest minute of the hour _ v" 2 

and return all in an hour . . Merchant of Venice i i ' 4 

we have two hours to furnish us _ ' ii 4 

Gratiano's lodging some hour hence — ii'4 

his hour is almost past 

outdwells his hour, for lovers 
and happy hours, attend you! 
to the last hour of act 



iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 



iv. 2 
V. 1 
V. 1 



— ii. 6 






11.7 
ii. 7 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. I 



IV. 2 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 5 



and prays for happy wedlock hours. . 

would wear it till your hour of death 

to bed now, being two hours to day. . _ v 1 

hour ago, since it was nine (»f;).1..^si/otiLr7tei( ii' 7 

from hour to hour, we ripe and ripe (rfp.) — ii 7 

an hour by his dial '.... — 

and neglect the creeping hours of time — 

Bleeping hours excepted 

and groaning every liour ! ! ! _ 

an hour of my pro'mise. Break an hour's — 
two hours Rosalind, I will leave irep.) — 

two o'clock is your hour? — 

one minute behind your hour..!!!!!! _ 
at this hour the house doth keep itself — 

to return again within an hour — iv 3 

this carol they began that houi-. ... _ v. 3 (son'g) 

should I die the hour after _ v4 

to see him every hour AlCsWell i 1 

Ixy such a day, and hour _ 'i'3 

if I were but two hours 3'ounger .... ji' 3 

to make the coming hour o'erflow. ... — ii' 4 

to beguile two hours in a sleep _ iy' i 

within these three liours 'twill be .. — iv' 1 

remain there but an hour 

I have delivered it an hour since . . 

for lie is dieted to his hour 

if I were to live this present hour .. 

had been alive at tiiis hour 

thou diest witliin this hour , „ 

shall I be appointed hours Taming of Shrew i' 1 

spent an hour, your lecture shall .... _ iii 1 

I U not be tied to hours _ jij" 1 

is at your command at all hours ..." — iv' 4 
clocks more swift? hours, minutes?. Winter's Tale, i 2 

to take the urgent hour j. 2 

within this hour bring me word..!... ii! 3 

are come an hour since _ ij' 3 

in one self-born hour to plant. . . . _ iv. (chorus) 

if I might die within this hour — iv 3 

shall know within this hour iv' 3 

seen this hour, he had paired well with — v' 1 

broken out within this hour _ v ■' 

any time these four hours ."." _ v"2 

very hour, and in the self-same. Comerfj/ o/Errors, i. 1 

within this hour it will be dinner time — i. 2 

till a merrier hour than this _ 12 

even here, not half an hour since - ii! 2 

a common of my serious hours — ii 2 

in Epiiesus, I am but two hours old — ii! 2 

when I keep not hours _ jij. 1 

at that place, some hour lienee — iii" 1 

the hour steals on jy' j 

gave it you half an hour since iv' 1 

the hours come back I jy! 2 

to turn back an hour in the day iv! 2 

brought me word an hour since iv! 3 

from the hour of my nativity i v." 4 

within this hour I was his bondman y. 1 

and careful hours, with Time's — y 1 

till this preseut hour _ y! i 

time and the hour runs through Macbeth, i! 3 

can entreat an hour to serve — ii 1 

I have almost slipped the hour — ii ' 3 

had I but died an hour before — ii. 3 

I have seen liours dreadful _ ii. 4 

for a dark hour, or twain _ iii' 1 

within this hour, at most, I will advise — iii! I 

the fate of that dark hour iii. 1 

let this pernicious hour stand i v! I 

that of an hour's age doth hiss — iv! 3 

continue in this a quarter of an hour — v! t 

frets his hour upon the stage — y 5 

now blessed be the hour, by night or.. King John, i! 1 

let not the hours of this ungodly _ iii. 1 

Shalt rue this hour within tliis hour iii. 1 

entertain an hour, one minute — Hi. 4 

watchful minutes to the hour — iv 1 

'tis not an hour since I left — iv! 3 

to see so sad an hour as this y! 2 

an hour or tivo before the stumbling — t! 4 

who half an hour since came y. 7 

when he sees the hours ripe on Hichard ILi.i 

the fly-slow hours shall not — j. 3 

but grief makes one hour ten _ 1.3 



HOUK— farewell linvc lengthened hours. AicA. /;. i. 4 

with tlic nunil)cr of thy hoiira — li. I 

now conies the sick hour that his .... — ii. 2 

nn lioiir i)etnre I i-anic — .!!• -^ 

with your ftinfiilliourn, made — I!!'* 

wliicli waste of idle lionrs liatli — iii. 4 

I would it were this liniir — iv. 1 

wMcli our pnifiine Imurs Iktc imvo . . — v. I 

thiili not be tnuny liours of age — v. I 

tluit tilU what l\our it is — v. ft 

uluiw minutes, times, and hours — v. .') 

did siienil tt sad and hloody liour .. . Mhnnjli: i. 1 

unless luiurs were cups of suol< — i. -' 

() let the hours bo short, till fields .. — .i. ;! 

leave you within these two hours .... — ii. .1 

he is, my lonl, ttu hour ago — ii. 3 

in itne qmirler of an hour — ii. -1 

somo fonvt^'Cu, uu hour after — ii. i 

II dozen of tlicni two hours tOKCther.. — ii. I 

ut hust mine hours, in reckoning — iii, 1 

the hour lielorc the luavenlv-hoi'nesscd — iii. I 

I'll awav within these two lumrs.... — iii. 1 

as tiiou art to this hour, was Kiehnrd — iii. 2 

not lUiove once in a quarter— of iiu hour — iii. ^ 

on the nice hazard ol one doubtful hour? — iv. 1 

with quiet hours; lor, I do protest .. — v. I 

ending at the ariival of au hoiu- — v. 2 

for the luiur is coniu toend the one .. — v. t 

fouKhtalonghourhy Shrewsbury clock — v. 4 

luiil been alfvc tills hour — v. .'i 

and approach the raggcrt'st hour illcniylV. i. 1 

are at this hour asleep! sleep — iii. 1 

in un hour 80 rude — iii. 1 

and these unseasoned hours, perforce — iii- 1 

ami wantim hours, have brought .... — iv. I 

beyond the hour of death — iv. 4 

before thv hour be ripe? — iv. 4 

after some few ho\ir9. were thine — iv. 4 

an hour of my life. What! (re/).) .... — iv. 4 

hv munlier, iiito liours of happiness.. — v. 2 

his b.iurs tilled up with riots Henryf. i. I 

and the hour, I think, is come — i. 1 

omit no huppv hour, that mav give .. — i. 2 

I (hi nt this hour o'erjoy myself. — ii. 2 

the third hour of drowsy morning — iv. (chorus) 

whose hours the i eosant best advantages — iv, I 

flv o'er thcni all, impatient of their hour — iv. 2 

thrice, within this liour, I saw — iv. 6 

to this hour is an honourable padge.. — iv. 7 

more than three hours the tight 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

bf sicRe us one hour in a month — i. 2 

farewell; thy hour is not yet come .. — i- •') 

finish the process of his sandy hour.. — iv. 2 

whom, t'.vo hours since, I met — iv, 3 

g?'eet in the hour of death — iv. 3 

witliiu six hours they will — iv. 4 

if, the first hour, I shrink — iv. 5 

you will not keep your hour 'itlenryl'l. ii. 1 

ten is the hour that was appointed me — ii. 4 

is the hour to come, that e'er I — iii. 1 

grieve I at an hoxir's poor loss — Iii. 2 

to Sandal in a happy hour ZHeiiryVl. i. 2 

as (>od forbid the hour! — ii. 1 

the hour full, complete, howmany hours — ii. ."> 

hours must I tend my flock (re;?.) .. — ii. 5 

hours must I contemplate (I fp.) — ii. 5 

minutes, hours, days, weeks, months — ii. .5 

would buy two hours' life, that I.... — ii. 6 

and lose no hour, till we meet — iv. 1 

about this hour, he make his way .. — iv. 5 

here, some two hours hence — v. 1 

shall rue the hour that ever — v. 6 

live one hour in your sweet bosom.. /(/cAani ///. i. 2 

after many lengthened hours of grief — . i. 3 

breaks seasons, and reposing hours , . — i. 4 

a crust at two hours old — ii. 4 

the lumr of death is expiate — iii. 3 

within this hour, at Baynard's castle — iii. 5 

eleven hours I have spent — iii.fi 

within these five hours Hastings — iii. K 

mellowed by the stealing hours of time — iii. 7 

one hour hence, and I'll salute — iv. 1 

all the swift advantages of the hours — iv. I 

never yet one hour in his bed did I. . — iv. 1 

and each hour's joy wrecked — iv. i 

what comfortable hour canst thou .. — iv. 4 

but llumpbrey Hour [Kii/.-Hower].. — iv. 4 

silent hours ot marriage joys — iv. 4 

bar nie happy hours! — ir. 4 

and every nour more comiietitors — iv. 4 

thro' the clouds behold this present hour — v. I 

by the secnul hour in the morning ,, — v. 3 

the silent hours steal on, and flaky .. — v. 3 

never slept a quiet hour with thee .. — v. 3 

should have braved the east an hour ago — v. 3 

richly in two short hours Henry VI It. (prol.) 

his hour of «i>eech a minute — i. 2 

a choice hour to hear from him — i. 2 

and have an hour of hearing — i. 3 

entreat an hour of revels with them — i. 4 

the hvHt hour of n;y long weary — ii. I 

is this an hour for temporal affairs? — ii. 2 

hut an hour of private conference .. — ii. 2 

when was the hour, I ever contradicted — ii. 4 

such news as this once evcrv hour — iii. 2 

by the Iniur seems to flow from hiral — iii. 2 

wilhin these forty hours Surrey .... — iii. 2 

some half hour, or so: in a rich — iv. 1 

about the hour of eight, (which he .. — iv. 2 

these should be hours for necessities — v. 1 

good hour of night, sir Thomas! .... — v. 1 

anil has done half an hour, to know — v. 2 

not .Vgumemnon's sleeping hour. Troitiu ^-Crett. i. 3 

railest every hoiiron .Vehilles — ii. 1 

by the first hour of the sun — ii. 1 

after so many hours, lives, speeches.. — ii. 2 

and the hour prefixed of her delivery — iv. 3 

keep Fk-ctor coniiiau v an hour or two — v. 1 

what, shall I come? The hour — v. 2 

been seeking you this hour, my lord — v. 2 



[ 371) ] 

HOI! it— hut prolong his hour I . . Timon nf Alliens, Hi. I 

lord Timon 9 hapny hours are done.. — iii. 2 

what do you think the hour? — Iii. 4 

to repair some other hour, I should,. — iii. 4 

if you had sent but two hours before — iii. fi 

make use of thy salt hours — iv. 3 

shouhl iK)t seirhim an hour from Coriotanua, i. 3 

o' Wednesday half an hour together — i. 3 

that do prize their hotirs at a cracked — i. I> 

above an hour, my lord — i. 6 

couldst thou in a mile eonfoiuid an hour — i. (i 

half an hour since brought my report — i. I> 

we prove this \'cry hour — i. (i 

within tliese three hours, Tullns .... — i. 8 

in a better hour let what is meet .... — iii. 1 

the very hour you take it off ajjain? — iii. 3 

to be on foot at an luuir's warnnig .. ^ iv. 3 

whose hoiM's, whose bed, whose meal — iv. 4 

shall within this hoiu-, on adissension — iv. 4 

whicb to this hour bewail the injury — v. ft 

I have been up this hour Julius Ctcsar^ ii. I 

by the ei.L'hth hour — ii. 1 

which soilietime liath his hour — ii. I 

I have an hour's talk in store — ii. 2 

about the ninth hour, Indv — ii. 4 

tlierc is no hour so fit as C.xsur's (rc/i.) — iii. 1 

I know, niv hour iseorne. Not so.... — V. 5 

have but Utlionred to nttnin this hour — v. 5 
love of Love, null her soft Injurs.. .lii/on;/ .Ij- Cko. i. 1 

and ei'crv hoxir, most noble Ciesar .. — i. 4 

is every nour in Rome expected — ii. 1 

when poisoned hours had bound nie up — ii. 2 

from this hour, the heart of brothers — ii. 2 

ere the ninth hour, I drunk him .... — ii. 5 
besides whnt hotter hours, unregistered — iii. II 
when mine hours were nice and lucky — iii. II 

tend nie to-night two hours — iv. 2 

if we be not relieved within this hour — iv. 9 

hy the second hour i' the morn — iv. 9 

our hour is fully out — iv. 9 

and to this hour, no guess Cymhetiney i. 1 

about some half hour hence — i. 2 

at certain hours, sucll thoughts — i. 4 

at tile sixtli hour of morn, at noon .. — i. 4 

will his free hours languish — j. 7 

what hour is it? Almost midnight .. — ii. 2 

I have read three hours then — ii. 2 

in an hour, was't not?— or less — ii. 5 

ride 'twi.xt hour and hour? — iii. 2 

discourse the freezing hours away?.. — iii. 3 

shall witliiu this hour be off — iv. 1 

'tis the ninth hour o' the morn — iv. 2 

the clock that struck the hour! — v. 5 

broad awake two hours and more. Titus Aitdron. ii. 2 

brought hither in a most unlucky hour — ii. 4 

'tis not an hour since I left him — ii. 4 

one hour's storm will drown — ii. 5 

ere half an hour can pass — iii. 1 

laugh! it fits not with this hour .... — iii. 1 

heard me wish for such an hour .... — v. 2 

not an hour, in the day's glorious Pericles, i. 2 

should at these early hours shake off., — iij. 2 

may usurps on nature many hours.. .. — ?!!- '^ 

had nine flours lien dead — iii. 2 

not been entranced above five hours .. — iii. 2 

walk half an hour. Leonine — iv. I 

we have this hour a constant will Lear, i. 1 

ay, two hours together — i. 2 

every hour he flashes into one gross — i. 3 

but two hours at the trade — ii. 2 

if thou shouldst dally half an hour — iii. 6 

weeds s re memories of those worser hours — iv. 7 

[Co/. /^.'?(^] not an hour more nor less .... — iv. 7 

until some half hour past — v. 3 

is now the two hours' trafKc. ftmni-o i!^ Juliet, (prol.) 

an hour before the worshiiiped sun .. — i. 1 

ah, me! sad hours seem long — i. 1 

what sadness lengthens iiomeo's hours? — i. 1 

I can tell her age unto an hour — j. 3 

at the Iionr of nine. I will not fail .. — ii. 2 

within this hour my man shall be .. — ii. 4 

in half an hour she promised to return — ii. 5 

till twelve is three long hours — ii. ft 

my life for an hour and a quarter.... — iii. I 

that an hour hath been my kinsman — iii. I 

found, that hour is his last — iii. I 

when I, thy three hours wife — iii. 2 

Juliet thy love, an hour but married — iii. 3 

I would have been a-bed an hour ago — iii. 4 

hear from thee every day i' the hour — iii. ft 

[Co/. /iH^Mav,ni!!lif,honr, tide, time — iii. ft 

Shalt romnin'fui: two and forty hours — iv. 1 

at some hours in tlie iiiL'ht sjiirits — iv. 3 

most niisenilile hour, that e'er time.. — iv. 5 

within this three hours will fair Juliet — v. 2 

full half an hour. (Jo with me — v. 3 

all, what iin unkind hour is guilty .. — v. 3 

at the prefixed liour of her waking .. — v. 3 

stinie hour before his time — v. 3 

come most carefully upon your hour ..Hamlet, i. I 

and jump at this dead hour with martial — i. 1 

take thy fair hour, Laertes; time he thine — i. 2 

what hour now? I think, it lacks of twelve — i. 4 

my hour is almost come — i. ft 

upon my secure hour thy uncle stole .. .. — i. 5 

sometimes he walks four hours together — ii. 2 

and my father died within these two hours — iii. 2 

an hour of quiet shortly; shall wc see — v. 1 

in thee there is not half an hour's life — y.2 

took once a pliant iionr; and found good, 0//if //<>, i. 3 

I have hut an hour of love, of worldly .. — i. 3 

from this present hour of five, till the bell — ii. 2 

not this hour, lieutenant; 'tis not yet — ii. 3 

make the hours seem short — ii. 3 

within this hour it will be well — iii. 3 

sense had I of her stolen hours of lust? .. — iii. 3 

and lovers' absent hours, more tedious .. — iii. 4 

on hour, or more, not meaning any harm — iv. I 

but half an hour. Being done — v. 2 

() heavy hour! mcthiiiks, it should be .. — v. 2 



llOUR-OLASS— hour-glass tun.Mereh.^f Venice, i. I 
many years into an hour-glass . .Henry V. i. (chor.) 

H<)UkI,Y— hourly ring his Knell.7'c™p/.«(-, i. 2 (song) 

hourly jovs be still upon you — iv. 1 (song) 

thou teep'st, hourly afflict !t/eas./nr Mens. iii. I 

this is an accident of hourly proof ..Much Ado, ii. I 

and call her hourly, mistress All's Hell, iii. 2 

an lioiirlv promise-breaker — iii. fi 

she adulterates hourly with thine.. Kiuif John, iii. 1 
hourly trumiilc on their sovereign's HiWiurrf //. ill. 3 

forsworn his company hourly MlenrylV. ii. 2 

my tbouglils do hourly propnesy ..'i Henry VI. iii. 2 

may Injur iy fall upon ye! Henry VIII. v. 4 

sit in hourly synod about Curiolunus, v. 2 

I hourly learn a doctrine ..Antony ^Cleopatra, v. 2 
abide the hourly shot of angry c.ves. . Cymhcline, i. 2 
hands made hard with hourly falsehood — i. 7 

a mother hourly coining plots — ii. 1 

should render him hourly to your car — iii. 4 
she lave them hourly in the Aouil. Titus Andron. iv. 2 

Where's hourly trouble I'ericles, ii. 4 

do hourly carp and quarrel /.car, i. 4 

main descry stands on the hourl.y thought — iv. 

with the pain of death we'd hourly die — v. 3 

as doth hourly grow out of his luncs ..Hamlet, iii. 3 

IlOU SE— by any other house Tempest, i. 2 

if the ill spirit have so fair a house — i. 2 

he hath raised the wall, and houses too — ii. 1 
which, when he has a house — iii. 2 



: trumpery in my house 

and all our house in great.. Two Gcn.ofVt 



— iv. 1 
rona, ii.3 



marry, at my house 

one house, one mutual happiness — v. 4 

Got pless your house here Merry Wives, i. I 

ask of doctor Cains' house — i. 2 

and find anybody in the house — i. 4 

shall come in house withal — i. 4 

for I keep his house — i. 4 

come near the house, I pray you — i. 1 

I was going to your house — ii. I 

was in his company at Page's house — li. 1 

husband will be absent from his house — ii. 2 

like a fair house, built upon — ii. 2 

is here now in tlie house — iii. 3 

lie were out of the house — iii. 3 

in the house, yon cannot hide him .. — iii. 3 

if tliere be anypody in the house .... — iii. 3 

to my house to breakfast — iii. 3 

thus still to haunt my house — iii. 4 

was at her house theliour she appointed — iii. 5 

to search his house for his wife's love — iii. 5 

he is at my house — iii. 5 

there is no hiding you in the house .. — iv. 2 

forhtide her iny house — iv. 2 

conve.ycd out of my house yesterday 



in my house I am sure he is 



— iv. 2 

— iv. 2 

— iv. 2 

— iv. 3 

— iv. 5 
v. 5 



ii. 3 
ii.3 
ii.3 



— IV. 2 



have I not forbid her my house? .... 
tliey have had m.y house a week .... 
his chamber, his house, his castle .,.. 

eat a posset to-night at my house 

lady of the house {rep.) . . TreeifhSighl, i. 5 

call iqion my soul within tlie house., 
myrmidons are no bottle-ale houses 
make an alehouse of my lady's house 

you are welcome to the house 

he is about the house 

the daughters of my father's house .. 
at ni.y house, and my house doth stand 

will you eucouutcrthe house? 

the house will be the quieter 

I will return again into the house .. 

back you shall not to the house 

I'll throw your dagger o'er the house 

go with me to my house 

say'st thou, that house is dark? (rep.) 
this bouse is as dark as ignorance.. .. 

she could not sway her house 

here at my house , 

kept in a "dork house 

houses in tlie suburbs of Vienna. .^/caj./or.Vtai. i. 2 

shall all our houses of resort — i. 2 

use their abuses in common houses .. — ii. I 
whose house, sir, was as they say . . . . — 

I think, is a very ill house too — 

this house, if it be not a bawd's house — 

for it is a naughty house — 

sir, we had but two in the house .... — 

tiic house is a respected house — 

I'll rent tlic fairest house in it — 

your worship's house, sir? To my house — 
and free pardon, are of two houses .. — 

yuu will keeji the house — 

must not build in his house eaves. ... — 
as I was in our house of profession . . — 
it were mistress Overdone's own house — 

at jNlariana's house to-night — 

I'll call you at your house — 

go, call at Flavins' house 

never came trouble to ni.v house Much Ado, \. \ 

fr<jm my house (if I had it) — i. 1 

within the house is Jove — ii. 1 

no: 'twas the vttuc on the house .... — iii. 3 

come you to my house — v. I 

from Athens is her house remote. . Mid. A'.'j Dr. I. 1 
steal forth thy fiithcr's house to-morrow — i. 1 
many a gentleman of your house.... — iii. 1 

dance in duke Theseus' house — iv, I 

have you sent to Bottom's house?... 
shall disturb this hallowed house. . . 
through this house give glimmering 
thrcjugh this house each fairy stray, 
climb o'er tile house to unlock . . /.o 
I was seen with her in the manor house — 
to let you enter his unpeopled h<juse — 
so den"ied fair harbour in my house.. — 
not yield to be your house's guest.... — 

up in a mourning house — 

sec to my house Merehanl of Ven 

indirectly to the Jew's house — 



V. 1 



ii. I 
ii. I 

ii. I 



ii. I 



iv. 3 



— iv. .") 



iv. 2 
V. 2 
V. 2 
V. 2 
. Lost, i. I 



HOU 



HOUSE-our house is hell, and. . Merck, of Venice, ii. 3 

take her from her father's house .... — ii. 4 

look to my house ; I am right loath . . — ii. 5 

but stop my house's ears, 1 mean .... — ii.' 5 

Bhallow foppery enter my sober house — ii. 5 

my master Antonio is at his house . . — iii. 1 

this house, these servants, and this same — iii. 2 

tlie liusbandry and manage of my house — iii. 4 

what if mv house be troubled with .. — iv. 1 

would make else an unquiet house .. — i\'. I 

you take my house, « hen (rep.) — iv. 1 

if thou can'st unto Antonio's house. . — iv. 1 

enquire the Jew's house out — iv. 2 

show my youth old Shylock's house — iv. 1 

will you show me to this house — iv. 2 

welcome for the mistress of the house — v. 1 

within the house, your mistress is at — v. 1 

the music, madam, of the house — v. I 

you are very welcome to our house . . — v. 1 

doctor e'er come near my house — v. 1 

I have not yet entered my liouse .... — v. 1 

descended trom another house As you Like it, i. 2 

this house is but a butchery — ii. 3 

make an extent upon his house and lands — . iii. 1 

deserves as well a dark house and a whip — iii. 2 

worse than Jove in a thatched house! — iii. 3 

if you will know my house — iii. 5 

carries his house on his head — iv. 1 

at this hour the house doth keep .... — iv. 3 

the owner of the house I <lid enquire for? — iv. 3 

my father's house, and all the revenue — v. 2 

dwells like a miser, sir, in a poor house — v. 4 

I'll send her to my house All's Well, ii. 3 

to the dark house, and the detested wife — ii. 3 

of paradise did fan tlie house — iii. 2 

I know she will lie at my house .... — iii.ts 

Jacques bound; already at my house — iii. 5 

now will I lead you to the house .... — iii. 6 

hath succeeded in his house — iii. 7 

an lionour, 'longing to our house .... — iv. 2 

my chastity's the jewel of our house — jv. 2 

mine house, mine honour — iv. 2 

fled from his house — iv. 3 

I am for the house with the narrow. . — iv. 5 

in whom my house's name must .... — v. 3 
nothing that my house affords. Taming of Sh.\ (ind.) 

your kindred shun your house — 2 (ind.) 

and rail upon the hostess of the house — 2 (ind.) 
the house. Why, sir, you know no house — 2 (ind.) 

will I keep within my house — 1.1 

and rid the house of her — i. I 

keep house, and ply his book — i. 1 

yet been seen in any house — 1.1 

keep house, and iioi't, and servants . . — i. 1 

and, I trow, this is liis house — 1. 2 

to the house of signior Baptista Minola? — i. 2 

within your house, to make mine eye — ii. 1 

my house within the city is richly . . — ii. 1 

that belong to house, or housekeeping — ji. 1 

I'll leave her houses three or four — ii. 1 

she is my house, my household stuff — iii. 2 

the house trimmed, rushes strewed . . — iv. 1 

and in my house you shall be friendly — iv. 2 

we return unto thy father's house .... — iv. 3 

braved in mine own house — iv. 3 

and sport us in thy father's house — iv. 3 

sir, this is the house; please it you .. — iv. 4 

not in my house, Lucentio — iv. 4 

or ere I journey to yom- father's liouse — iv. 5 

this is Lucentio's house — v. 1 

with the best, and welcome to my house — v. 2 
from the house of a most homel.y . Winter's Tale, iv. i 

at your father's house, these seven years — iv. 3 

the medicine of our house'. — iv. 3 

visited that removed house — v. 2 

my poor house to visit ._ — v. 3 

to your house, thePhcenix, eit. Comedy of Errors, i. 2 

no house, no wife, no mistress — ii. 1 

my house was at the Phoenix? — ii. 2 

denied my house for his, me for his wife — ii. 2 

did deny my wife and house — iii. 1 

keep'st me out from the house I owe? — iii. 1 

for there's the house; that chain — iii. 1 

walk with me dowu to his house .... — iv. 1 

to the goldsmith's house — iv. 1 

take the stranger to my house — iv. 1 

to hie home to his house — iv. 3 

he rushed into my house — iv. 3 

and feast it at my house to-day — iv. 4 

denied to enter in my house? — iv. 4 

conveyed home to my house — iv. 4 

came to my house, and took away. ... — iv. 4 

and bear them to my house — v. 1 

for God's sake, take a house — v. 1 

not a creature enters in my house. . . . — v. 1 

by rushing in their houses — v. 1 

with harlots feasted in my house .... — v. 1 

in person with me to my house — V. 1 

if here you house him — v. 1 

a fat friend at your master's house . . — v. 1 

your majesty loads our house Macbeth, i. 6 

sleep no more ! to all the house — ii. 2 

the sleepers of the house? — ii. 3 

woe, alas! what in our house? — ii. 3 

but in his house I keep — iii. 4 

jewels, and this other's house — iv. 3 

within the bloody house of life King John, iv. 2 

as a moat defensive to a house Richard 11. ii. 1 

the queen is at your house — iii. 1 

rear this house against this house — iv. 1 

cloister thee in some religious house — v. I 

our house, my sovereign liege MlenrylV.i.i 

this house is turned upside down — ii. 1 

the most villanous house in all — ii. 1 

respect of the love I bear your house — ii. 3 (letter) 

better than he loves our house — ii. 3 

and can show it you here in the house — ii. 1 

they are come to search the liouse .. — ii. 4 

followed certain men to this house .. — ii. 4 

kt me entreat you leave the house .. — ii. 4 



1 
1 
1 

— i. 1 

— i. 1 

— i. 1 

— i. 1 

— i. 1 



[ 380 ] 

HOUSE— worse than a smoky house. 1 Henry IV.Vn 

keep thieves in my house? — iii 

never lost in my house before — iii 

never called so in mine own house .. — iii 

this house is turned bawdy-house . . — iii 

from myself, and all our house — v 

we see the figuie of the house iHenrylV. i 

draws the model of a house beyond .. — i 

he stabbed me in mine own house . . — ii 

he hath eaten me out of house and home — ii 

I will bar no honest man my house., — ii 

I'll forswear keeping house — ii 

suffering flesh to be eaten in thy house — ii 

upon our houses' thatch Henry V. iii 

he is a gentleman of a good house .. — iv 

even so our houses, and ourselves .... — v 

from their hives, and houses I Henry VI. i 

I trained thee to my house — ii 

so great a warrior in my house — ii 

that they object against your house. . — ii 

strong-fixed is the house of Lancaster — ii 

Somerset hath offered to my house .. — ii, 

belong unto the house of York — iii 

by honour of thy house, pricked on.. — ill 
grapple with the house of Lancaster.2He)irs(r/. i 

got the house of Lancaster the crown — ii 

heart-blood of the house of Lancaster — ii 

affect the house and claim of York . . — iii 

go, get you to my house — iii 

and now the house of York — iv 

therefore am I of an honourable house — iv 

had never a house but the cage — iv 

a chimney in my father's house — iv 

from the duke of Clarence' house .... — iv, 

the citizens fly and forsake their houses — iv, 

break into his son-in-law's house. ... — iv, 

take your houses over your heads . . — iv, 

to all that do dwell in this house .... — iv. 

meet I an infant'of the house of York — v 

thou new ruin of old Clifford's house — v, 

like rich hangings in a homely house — v. 
now the house ot Lancaster usurps ..SHemyVl. i, 

let's stay within this house — i, 

a shambles of the parliament house! — i. 

thou and thy house shall rue it 

fill the house with armed men 

a prey unto the house of York 

unto the house of York such head . . 

utter ruin of the house of York 

by giving the house of Lancaster 

nor any of the house of Lancaster? . . 
the sight of any of the house of York 
make against the house of Lancaster 

colours of our striving houses 

no ground unto the house of York . . 
that fatal scritch-owl to our house .. 

in quarrel of the house of York 

the house of Lancaster (rep.') 

that by the house of York my fatlier 
sold tlieir lives unto the house of York 
I will not ruinate my father's house 
that wish the downfal of our house! 

that lowered uiion our house Richard III. i 

pale ashes of the house of Lancaster I — i. 

factious for the house of Lancaster .. — i. 

befal thee, and thv noble house ! . . . . — i. 

in quarrel of the fiouse of Lancaster — i. 

I see the ruin of my house! — ii. 

meaning, indeed, his house, which .. — iii. 

f;lory ot your royal house — iii. 

he disgrace and downfal of your house — iii. 

thou offspring of the house of Lancaster — v. 

succeeders of each royal house — v. 

they have done my poor house grace. Henry fill. i. 

to make your house our Tower — v. 

he has business at his house — v. 

at your own house; there he. . Troilus fyCressida, i. 

to bring this Greek to Calchas' house — iv. 

walk into her house; I'll bring — iv. 

by night frequents my house . .Timon of Athens,}. 

enter my mistress' house merrily ~- ii. 

if he would not keep so ^ood a house — iii. 

his wealth, must keep his house — iii. 

no house to put his head in — iii. 

and must my house be my retentive — iii. 

burn, house; sink, Athens! — iii. 

such a house broke ! so noble — iv. 

all broken implements of a ruined house — iv. 

in Corioli, at a poor man's house Coriolanus, i. 

I will make my very house reel to-night — ii. 

ere in our own house I do shade — i i. 

the noble house o' the Marcians .... — ii. 

of the same house Publius and Quiutus — ii. 

go. get you to your house; be gone . . — iii. 

noble friend, home to thy house — iii. 

pursue him to his house, and pluck him — iii. 

the Capitol exceed the meanest house — iv. 

at his house this night (re;).) — iv. 

a goodly house : the feast smells well — i'V. 

I cannot get him out o' the house — iv. 

praj- you, avoid the house — iv. 

he were putting to my house the brand — iv. 

save your life, fly to your house — v. 

run to your houses, tall upon youT.JuliusCcesar, i. 

to seek you at your house — i. 

ere day, see Brutus at his house — J. 

shall not stir out of your house to-day — ii. 

my fear, that keeps you in the house — ii. 

at mine own house, good lady — ii. 

fled to his house amazed — iii. 

with triumph home unto his house . . — iii- 

we'll bring him to his house — iii. 

we'll burn the house of Brutus — iii. 

with the brands fire the traitors' liouses — iii. 

he and Lepidus are at CiEsar's house — iii. 

to Decius' house, and some to Casca's — iii. 

go you to C.'csar's house — iv. 

o'ercount me of my father's house... -In/. fyCleo. ii. 

you have my father's house — ii. 

look well to my husband's house .... — iii. 



HOU 



1 
1 

— V. 6 

1 



HOUSE— the secret house of death. .^n(. .J- a^o. iv. !3 
this mortal house I'll ruin, do Caesar — v. 2 

a goodly day not to keep house Cymbeline, iii. 3 

we house i' the rock, yet use — iii. 3 

poor house, that keep st thyself! — iii. 6 

court is like the house of fame. Titus Andronicus, ii. I 

Marcus, look to my house — iv. 1 

craves a parley at your father's house — v. 1 

dread fury, to my woeful house — v. 2 

come and banquet at thy house — v. 2 

and th.e empress too feasts at my house — v. 2 
the villain is alive in Titus' liouse .. — v. 3 
make a mutual closure of our house — v. 3 
go into old Titus' sorrowful house . . — v. 3 
as houses are defiled for want of use. . . . Pericles, i. 4 
should house him safe, is wrecked — ii. (Gower) 
no din but snores, the house about — iii. (Ciower) 

made me to quit the house — iii. 2 

why, the house you dwell in — iv. 6 

do you know this house to be — iv. 6 

your house, but for this virgin — iv. 6 

groom that doth frequent your house.. — iv. 6 
and chances into an honest house — v. (Gower) 

shall be brought you to my house — v. 3 

first go with me to my house — v. 3 

why a snail has a house Lear, i. 5 

if they come to sojourn at my house .... — ii. 1 
art of the house? Ay. Where may we .. — ii. 2 
raised the house with loud and careless — ii. 4 

mark how this becomes the house — ii. 4 

how, in one house, should many people — ii. 4 

to follow in a house, where twice — ii. 4 

this house is little; the old man — ii.4 

court holy-water in a dry house is better — iii. 2 
he that has a house to put )iis head in .. — iii. 2 

the cod-piece that will house — iii. 2 (song) 

while I to this hard house, (more hard . . — iii. 2 
took from me the use of mine own house — iii. 3 

go into the house. I'll talk a word — iii. 4 

revenge, ere I depart his house — iii. .5 

aud quit the house on purpose — iv. 2 

a dog of the house of Montague . . Romeo ff Juliet, i. 1 
a dog of tliat house shall move me to — i. I 

here comes two of the house of — i. 1 

at my poor house, look to behold ... . — i. 2 

this night inherit at my house — i. 2 

my house and welcome on their pleasure — i. 2 

to our house. Whose house? — i. 2 

if you be not of the house of Montagues — i. 2 

in my house, do him disparagement — i. 5 

her mother is the lady of the house.. — i. 5 
hath sent a letter to his father's house — ii.4 
a gentleman of the very first house. . — ii.4 
a plague o' both the houses! (rep.) .. — iii. 1 
help me into some house, Benvolio.. — iii. 1 
bidner hasten all the house to bed.. — iii. 3 

you shall not house with me — iii. 5 

Venus smiles not in a house of tears — iv. 1 
remember, this should be the house.. — v. 1 
both were in a liou,se wliere the infectious — v. 2 

for lo his house is empty — v. 3 

I saw him enter such a house of sale . . Hamlet, ii. I 
play the fool nowhere but in's own house — iii. 1 

unpeg the basket on the house's top — iii. 4 

tlie houses that he makes, last till — v. 1 

shot my arrow o'er the house, and hurt — y. 2 

here is her father's house; I'll call Othello, i. 1 

look to your house, your daughter — i. 1 

my house is not a grange — i. I 

in her chamber, or your house, let loose — i. 1 
at every house I'll call; I may command — i. 1 
I will but spend a word here in the house — i. 2 
but still the house affairs would draw her — i. 3 
sweet love, I was coming to your house — iii. 4 
as doth the raven o'er the infected house — iv. 1 
he supped at' my house; but I therefore — v. 1 
Gratiano, keep the house, and seize upon — v. 2 

HOUSED— ever housed, where it. Comfrfi/n/£rr. iii. ' 
I charge thee, Satan, housed within . . — iv. 4 
even now we housed him in the abbey — v. 1 

HOUSE HOLD-household stuff? Taming ofSh. 2 (ind. i 
conformable, as other household Kates — ii. \ 
she is my house, "my household stuff — iii. 2 
fingers with thy household worms. . King John, iii. 4 

all the household servants fied Richard II. ii. 2 

dispersed the household of the king — ji. 3 

windows torn my household coat — iii. 1 

under his household roof did keep ten — iv. I 
anatomize among my household?. 2H('?iiy/r. (ind.) 
born an household cruelty, I make my — iv. 1 
in their mouths as household words. . Henry V. iv. 3 

you of my household, leave this \Heniyyi. iii. 1 

our household's name, my death's . . — iv. 6 
know thee by thy household badge. .2Hcjiryf/. v. 1 

by notes of household harmony 'AHenryVI. iv. 6 

and ornaments of his household.. Henry V 111. iii. 2 
call forth my household servants. .47i/o«yci?C/t'o. iv. 2 
closed in our household's monument. 7^i(iis.4nd. v. 3 

shall undo a whole household Pericles, iv. 6 

two households, both alike . . Romeo i^^Juiiel, (prol.) 
to turn your households' rancour — ii. 3 

HOUSEHOLDER— a householder. . . . Much Ado, iv. 2 
none but good householders I Henry IV. iv. 2 

HOUSEKEEPER-good housekeepeT .Tu■el_^h^■. iv. 2 

the subtle, the housekeeper Macbeth, iii. 1 

you are manifest housekeepers Coriolauus, i. 3 

HOUSEKEEPING: 'tis deadly sin.. Love's L. L.il 1 
belong to house, or housekeeping. Taming of Sh. ii. 1 
thv plainness, and thy housekeeping. 2iJenr.v''y. i. I 

HOUSELESS— you houseless poverty Lear, iii. 4 

how shall your houseless heads, and unfed — iii. 4 

HOUSEWIt'E— a housewife take.-T-j/'W/r/i Kght, i. 3 

the breathless housewife churn Mid.N.'s Dr. ii. 1 

mock the good housewife, Fortune.^s you Like it, i. 2 

she has a housewife's hand — iv. 3 

I plav the noble housewife with All's Well, ii. 2 

doth fortune play the housewife Henry V. v. 1 

find me here part of a housewife . . Henry VI II. iii. I 
the bounteous housewife, nature. Timon of Aih. iv. 3 
have you play the idle housewife. . . . Coriolanus, i. 3 



A 



UOUSKWU'E-false housewife.. ^ii(oMv<tf''<'i>. iV; 13 
wouUt lit ti frunkUiiV huii-sewito. . . . Cymbelinet iii. 'i 

fur von imi-l 111' i>m- lioiisi'wile — iv. 2 

piny tiK' li..iiM-« iff lov tliis (•nce./ioiH.'o.^- ./«//>/, iv. a 

a liimsi.wiri-, tliut li.v silliiii; liiT fWiW/n, iv. 1 

UOUSL:\VU''l£UY-liousi.wii'i;ry ttpiiear-.i/cHr,/;'. ii. 3 

plttvern in vo\ir liouBtwil'cry Olhello, ii. I 

IIOlfSKWiVES-liousewives make a sliillct — i. 3 

and luiusewives in your lieds — ii. 1 

UOVKL— liard by lierc is a liovel Lear, iii. 2 

come, vour liovel, poor fool and linave .. — iii. 2 

come, bring us to tliis hovel — iii. 2 

in. fellow, there to the hovel — iii. 4 

to hovel thee with Bwine — iv. 7 

IIOVEL-riiST-ii hovel-post, a stuff. .W,i.nf»VH. ii. 2 
lIOVEK-hovcr throiiL'li lo^: iiml tillliy lin.Mmbeili.i. 1 

some airy tlevil hovers in the Ki»^' Johii^ iii. 2 

hover about me with your iiiry wings. /Iic/i. 111. iv. 4 

hover about her; say. that ri^'iit — iv. 4 

hover on the ilreiulfiil shore orstyx?.7'iVn8.(Md. i. 2 

save ine, nml hover o'er ine with your. . Ihiinlel, iii. 4 

I10Vi:KINli-;ihoveriim temporizer. 'r,„/fi'»7a(!-, i. 2 

IIUWISICI T— howbeit lliey would hold. . Hf;i»y /". i. 2 

howl.eit I lluuik vou Corwlaiiut, i. 9 

the Moor, how lieit that I endure him not. OWcHo, ii. 1 
HO\VKli-[(i-i^;i Humphrey Uowcr. Zdc/iard ///. iv. 4 
IlOW 1,-thv grottusdid umlie wolves howl. Tempesl. i. 2 

whose howl 's his wuteh Slacbe/li,u. 1 

new widows liowl, new orphans — iv. 3 

hear Ladv, mv brach howl in Irlsh.lHfiir!/;;'. iii. 1 
forthewhiuh,"! tliink, thou wilt howl. iHtiirv/Cii. t 

and fiends for food howl <m ! Henri/ /'. ii. I 

with their howls confused do breal< . . — iii. 3 
and haudoi^s howl, and spirits \va\k..iHe»njyi. i. 4 
howl, howl, howl, howU O you are men . . Lear, v. 3 
HOWLED- howled away twelve winters, yv-mpesf, i. 2 
a don, tluit should have howled thus.;»/Kc'A Ado, ii. 3 
that wiiuUl he howled out iu the desert.. Vaci)p//i, iv. 3 
dojis luiwled. iiud hideous tempests.. SHeiiri/C/. v. 6 

and howled in nune cars stieh Itichai-d III. i. 4 

at thy gate howled that stern time Lear, iii. 7 

HOWLlNti-a plague ou this howling !..7>mpM(,i. 1 

a howling monster — ii. 2 

of roaring, shrieking, howling — y. 1 

our maid howling, our eat. . Two Gen. of Verona, ii. 3 

as howling after music Twelfth Niglu,y. 1 

thoughts imagineho\vling!.i*/eajf"re./f)r Measure, iii.) 
tribute paid by howling Troy. ilercli. of Venice, iii. 2 
like the howling of Irish wolves. . .4s you Like it, v. 2 
howlings attend it: how hast.... Knineo^ Juliet, iii. 3 
mj' sister be, wlien thou liest howling, . Hamlet, v. 1 

high seas, and howling winds Olhello, ii. I 

HOWL'ST— and howl'stto find it ... .MleiirijlV. i. 3 
HOXES-which boxes honesty bcliind.n7)i(«r's7'a;e,i.2 
HOY— to tarry for tlie hoy .... Comedy of Errors, iv. 3 
HUBBUB— eome in with a hubbub ICot.Kul.- 

whoobub] against his ll'iiUer's Tale, iv. 3 

HUl!ERT-iIul)ert, keep this boy ..KingJohn, iii. 2 
hitlier, Hubert. O my gentle Hubert — iii. 3 

bv heaven, Hubert, 1 am almost — iii. 3 

Hubert, Hubert, Hubert, throw thiue — iii. 3 

Hubert, I love thee — iii. 3 

for England, cousin; Hubert shall be — iii. 3 
good-morrow, Hubert. Good-morrow — iv. 1 

so you would love me, Hubert — iv. 1 

are you sick, Hubert? you look pale — iv. I 
too fairly Hubert, for so foul effect .. — iv. I 
Hubert should put out mine eyes irep.) — iv. i 

O, save me, Hubert, save me! — iv. 1 

Hubert, let me not be bound! (if^.).. — iv. I 
Hubert, the utterance of a brace of . . — iv. 1 
letmenot, Hubert! or, Hubert, if you will — iv. 1 
with shame of your proceedings, Hubert — iv. 1 

O now you look like Hubert! — iv. 1 

that Hubert, for the wealth of all — iv. 1 

O heaven! I tiiank you Hubert — iv. I 

Hubert, what news with you? — iv. 2 

Hubert, away with him — iv. 2 

the shameful work of Hubert's hand — iv. 3 
deed of death, art thou damned, Hubert — iv. 3 
that villain Hubert told me he did live — v. 1 
O tell me, Hubert. Badly, I fear .... — v. 3 

commend me to one Hubert — v. 4 

of mine? Hubert, I think — v. 6 

I'll tell thee, Hubert; half ray power — v. C 

HUDDLED on his back MercUanI of Venice, iv. I 

HUDDLIXG-huddling jest upon jest-.V/ucA Ado, ii. 1 

HUE— most lilv-whltc of hue...>/ni. A'.'j Dream, iii. 1 

the ousel-cock, so black of h\ie .. — iii. I (song) 

night with hue 90 black! — v. 1 

the hue of dungeons Love^sL.Lost, iv. 3 

cuck(K>-buds of yellow hue — v. 2 (song) 

1 woiild not change this liue. Merchant o/ Venice, ii. I 

the silver, with her virgin hue? — ii. 7 

brown in hue a« hazel nuts .. Tamina of Shrew, ii. 1 

another hue unto the rainbow King John, iv. 2 

of white and spotless hue .... Titus Androuicut, i. 2 

of the hue that I would choose — i. 2 

make Tour honour of his iMxly'e hue — ii. 3 

is blocK 80 base a hue? — iv. 2 

another hue, in that it scorns (>■?/?.).. — iv. 2 

fle, treacherous hue! that will — iv. 2 

did not thy hue bewniy whose brat .. — v. I 
thus the native hue ol resolution Hnmlet, iii. I 

HUE AND CKY villain, go (rep. ).. Merry irivri, iv. 5 
a hue and cry hath followed certain. I //eiiri///'. ii. 4 

HUG— and hug it in mine arms. . Meat. for Mini. iii. 1 
that hugs his kicksy-wicksy here ....AU'ilI'M, ii. 3 

to hug with swine; to seek sweet Kinx John, v. 2 

embrace and hug with amplest . Tiiaon of Athens, i. I 

hi:g tlieir diseased i>ert'umes — iv. 3 

hug them hard, and afKr scandal.. yii/iiu C.cvsar, i. 2 
Then tliey do hug him in Titus Andronicus, iii. I 

HUGE— yond' huge one, looks like ....Tenijicst, ii. 2 
his possessions are so huge. . Tu-oGen, of Verona, ii. 4 

and huge leviathans forsake — iii. 2 

with huge horns on his head Merry IVivrs, iv. 4 

and the iiuge army of the world's. Love s L. Lost, i. I 

a huge translation of hypoerisjr — v. 2 

that to yuur huge store wise things .. — v.i 



HUGE— Pompeyl I'omjiey the \mee\. Lore's L.L.t. 2 
but u huge feeder, snail-sIow . . ,Ufic/i. of Venice, ji. .'• 
hatli tlieni as huge as the rascal.. /l«t/uu Like it, iii. 3 
at her heels, a huge infectious. C'omcdi/iiAi'rroij.v. I 
shiill draw this lirief into as huge ..King Joftn, ii. 1 
no supporter but tlie huge firm earth — iii. I 

far loo huj'e to be blown out — v. 2 

this liu-e hill ollle-h MleurylV. ii. 4 

that lui:.:e bombaid of suck — ii. 4 

IVol.-Uiit ] bii:;e foundation of the earth — iii. 1 

a huge balt-hioon, a monstrous — iii. 1 

hear sueh a huge full hogshead? .. ..illeuri/lV. ii. 4 
draw the huge bottoms tlirough. Hc;,i!, >'. iii. (cho.) 
or the huge, or the niagnunimuus. ... — iv. 7 

in their huge and proper life — v. (chorus) 

were a huge man. 1 should fear. Timou of Alliens, i. 2 

walk under his huge legs Julius Ccesar, i. 2 

set a huge mountain 'tween my heart — ii. 4 

appear as huge as liijh Olymims — iv. 3 

called into a huge sphere ...iniony ^Cleopatra, ii. 7 
this case of that luige spirit ni>w is cold — iv. 13 

will look so huire. miia/eineut Pericles, i. 2 

I never saw si> liuL'i- a l)illow — iii. 2 

ingenious feeling of my IniL'C sorrows! . . Lear, iv. 6 
in that sparing makes liu^'e waste. /^o;/ieo<S-J«/ic/,i. 1 
to whose huge spokes ten thousand.... //«m/e^ iii. 3 

the world is a huge thing Othello, iv. 3 

a huge eclipse of sun and moon — v. 2 

HUCilOLY- flowas hugely as the sua.Asyon Like,ii. 7 
IHKiKNESS— in goodness the hugeness i>i'.Cyiiih. i. 5 
HUGCiElJ-luuiged and embraced. .Wf/-. .,y ;-f//(V-.', ii. 6 
Inmged mc in his arms, and swore. . Ilichard III. i. i 
HUCtiEK- .MUGGER to inter him .... Hamlei, iv. !> 
HUGH— sir Hugh, |iersuadu nie not. Merry Wives, i. 1 

made afar off' by sir Hugh here — i. 1 

an errand to me from parson Hugh. . — i. 4 

sir Hugh send-a you? — i. 4 

§ive-a dis letter to sir Hugh — i. 4 
etween sir Hugh tlie Welsh priest . . — ii. 1 

parson Hugh, tlie Welshman — ii. 2 

that sir Hugh promised to meet .... — ii. 3 
and sir Hugh hath sliowu himself .. — ii. 3 

sir Hugh is there, is he? — ii. 3 

he is coming, this way, sir Hugh — iii 

good-morrow, good sir Hugh — iii 

save you, good sir Hugh ! — iii 

my priest? my sir Hugh? — iii 

and you, sir Hugh — iii 

how now, sir Hugh? no school to-da3'? — iv, 

sir Hugh, my husband says — iv, 

adieu, good sir Hugh — iv 

and the Welch devil, Hugh? — v. 3 

well said, fairy Hugh — v. 5 

Hugh Oatcake, sir, and George .... Much Ado, iii. 3 

Hugh Capet also, tha-t usurped Henry V. i. 2 

title, and Hugh Capet's claim — i. 2 

sir John, and sir Hugh Jlortiraer 'iHenry VI. i. 2 

what say you, Hugh Rebeck?.. Borneo (^ Juliet, iv. 3 

HUJUS- mark; genitivo, hujus ..MerrijIVives.iv. 1 

HULK— the hulk sir John is pvisoner.'i Henryl V. i. 1 
you have not seen a hulk better .... — ii. 4 

provokes tlie mightiest hulk IHenry VI. v. .'i 

greater hulks draw deep Troilus ^- Cressida, ii. 3 

HULL— hull here a little longer . . TuelflhNighi, i. 5 
there they hull, expecting Iticlund Hi. iv. 4 

HULLING— hulling in the wild sea.Heiiri/ »'//;. ii. 4 

HUM— will hum about mine ears Tempest, iii. 2 

the shrug, the hum, or ha (rep.^.. Winter's Tale, ii. 1 
with his drowsy hums, hath rung . ... Macbeth, iii. 2 

turns me his back, and hums — iii. 6 

with his surly hum, delivering Henry )'. i. 2 

the hum of either army — iv. (chorus) 

to bite his lip, and hum at good .... Coriolanus, v. I 
and his hum is a battery — v. 1 

HUMAN — to enter human hearing .... Tempest, i. 2 
not honoured with a human shape .... — i. 2 
with human care; and lodged thee .. .. — i. 2 

than of our human generation — iii. 3 

mine would, sir, were I human — v. 1 

the human mortals want .... Mid. N.'s Dream, ii. 2 
in human modesty such separation.. — ii. 3 
touching now the point of human skill — ii. 3 
touched with human gentleness. iWer. of Venice, iv. 1 

hanged for human slaughter — iv. 1 

before your eyes, human as slie is. As youLike it, v. 2 

behold our human actions Winter's Tale, iii. 2 

as monstrous to our human reason .. — v. 1 
past thought of human reason. Co/«edy of Errors, v. 1 

lull o' the milk of human kindness Macbeth, 1. 5 

ere human statute purged the gentle . . — iii. 4 

the first human principle 'iHenry IV. iv. 3 

his senses have but liuinan conditions. //enri/T. iv. 1 

Talbot, above human thought \ Henry VI. i. 1 

that's the end of human misery .... — iii. 2 
all thy human sons doth hate..7'imonn//l(/icnj, iv. 3 
thou abhorr'dst in our human griefs — y. U 

crept into his human powers. . . Coriolanus, ii. I 

holding them in human action — ii. 1 

sworn by, both divine and human .. — iii. 1 

the hanging (but none human) Cymlieline, i. 6 

with a learned spirit, of human dealings. Olhello, iii. 3 

HUMANE— he, most humane .... Winler'sTitc, iii. 2 

in humane gentleness Troilus Sf Cressidn, iv. 1 

is the humane wav; tlieother course. C'orio/anMs.iii. 1 
mere form of civil and humane seeming. 0/Af//o, ii. 1 

HU.MANELY— pains humanely taken. /Vmpi'j/, iv. 1 
they relieved us humanely Coriolanus, i. I 

HU.M AN ITY-proiKirtion of humanity i Henry VI. ii. 3 
nearer debt in all humanity Tro lusf/Cressida, ii. 2 

he'sopposite to humanity TimonofAtliens^i. I 

man, and all liumaiiity! — iii. 6 

middle of humaniiy thou never knewest — iv. 3 

neverdid steer humunit}' Antony 6t Cleo. v. \ 

I should seem to lack humanity . .Cymbeline, iii. 2 
humanity must jierforce prey on itself ..I.ear, Iv. 2 
imitated humanity so abominably.... Hamic/, iii. 2 
change my humanity with a baboon .... Othello, i. 3 

IHI.MBLE-are then most humble Tempest, i. 2 

and I thus humble ever — iii. 1 

her humble self Two Gen. itf Verona, iii. I 



HUMBLE— thy humble slough.. rai«(/>A AT. il. 6 (let.) 

and most humble service — iii. | 

east thy humble slough, says she .... — iii. 4 
willingly humbles himself to . . Mras.for Meas. iii. 3 
likewise give her most humble thanks, jl/uc/i /Irft,, i.l 
not generous, not gentle, not humble. /.off'iL.X.. v. 2 

bears not a humble tongue — v. 2 

what humble suit attends thy — v. 2 

his humble ambition, proud humilitv./(H'< Well, i. I 
I am from humble, he from honoured — i. 3 

iny low and humble name to proiiagatc — ii. 1 
her that so wishes, and her humble lovel — ii. 3 
some, that humble themselves, may.. — jv. 5 
lady and your humble wife. Taming ofSh. 1 (indue.) 
made great Jove humble himself to her — i. 1 

if thy thoughts, Bianca, be to liumble — iii. I 
humble swain, as I seem now .. Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

and play the humble host Macbeth, iii. 4 

with humble and familiar courtesy. ./ViWiard II. i. 4 

show me thy humble heart — ii. 3 

my humble duty remembered 2HenrylV.ii. 1 

these humble considerations make . . — ii. 2 
I will stoop and humble my intents.. — v. 2 

our humble author will continue — (epil.) 

your humble patience inay .... Henry V. i. (chorus) 
humble servant vows obedience (rep.) I Hem ;//'/. iii. I 
let thy humble handmaid s|ieak .... — iii. 3 
be humble to us, call my sovereign .. — iv. 2 

but with as humble lov.liness — v. 5 

bears this base and humble mind ....^HejiryVI. i. 2 

such as these with humble suit — iv. I 

no humble suitors press to speak ..iHenry VI. iii. I 
the king will grant her humble suit — iii. 2 

my humble thanks, my prayers — iii. 2 

and to my humble seat conform myself — iii. 3 
let me give humble thanks for all . . — iii. 3 
but, if a humble praver may prevail — iv. 6 
a humble suppliant lord Hustings.. /dWinid 7/7. 1. 1 

did scorn a humble tear — i. 2 

thunder, but thy looks arc humble .. — i. 4 
whose humble means match not his — iv. 2 

with humble livers in content .. ..Henry VIII. ii. 3 

to you a true and humble wife — ii. 4 

1 will, when you are humble — ii. 4 

cardinal, though from a humble stock — iv. 2 
a poor and humble subject to you? .. — v. 2 
Ills addition shall be humble. Troiius^-CrfMic/o, iii. 2 
I am a humble suitor to your .7'i'7non of Athens, iii. !> 
by humble message, and by promised — v, 5 

heart he wore his humble weeds Coriolnnus, ii. 3 

coutempt he wore the humble weed — ii.3 

now humble, as the ripest mulberry — iii. 2 

best leisure, this his humble suit ..JuliusCrrsnr, iii. 1 

before thy seat a humble heart — iii. 1 

youngman send humble treaties. j47i/o«i/ ^Cleo. iii. 9 

my humble thanks; I had almost Cymbeline, i. 7 

made it like a humble suppliant. 7'i(«».liii/ion. iv. 3 
humble, and waits upon the judgment. Hnwi/e/, iii. 4 
ne'er ebb to humble love Othello, iii. 3 

HUMBT-E-BEE-thehuinble-bees..ViJ. A.'j/Jr. iii. 1 
and kill me a red-hipped humble-bee — iv. 1 

the ape, and the humble-bee Love's L. Lost, iii. I 

red-tailed humble-bee I speak of Att's Well, 1 \'. 5 

the humble-bee doth sing. . . . Troilus^ Crrssida, v. 1 1 

HUJlBLED-all humbled . . Two Gen. of Verona, i. 2 

and hath so humbled me — ii. 4 

upon the humbled neck AsyouLikeit, iii. .'> 

in their poor praise he humbled All's Hrll, i. 2 

my thoughts are humbled all. . Tilus, Andronicus, i. I 
honour's ensigns humbled at thy feet — i. 2 

humbled on your knees, you shall ask — i. 2 

plagues have humbled to all strokes .... Lear, iv. I 
av, sooth; so humbled 0Wp//o,iii.3 

IlU.MBI.E- .MOUTHED; you sign.. Hrarj/ ('///. ii. 4 

HU.MBLENESS-whispering humbleness. jUer.o/Ki. 3 
which humbleness may drive uuto a fine — iv. I 

all humbleness, all patience As you Like it, v. 2 

witli all bound humbleness All's Well, ii. I 

thanks in the greatest humbleness. HfiirT/Cy/y. v. i 

in peace and humbleness 7'i7ui ^7i../ronicu*. i. I 

with all the humbleness I may — iv. 2 

HUMBLER— humbler than they used .Hen rj/T. iv. 7 

his lordship should be humbler 1 Henry VI. iii. I 

let us seem humbler after it is done.('oMo((iMnj, iv. 2 

HU.AIBLKST suit cannot attain it .Merry Wires, iii. 4 
in humblest manner I require your.Heunii'lll. ii. 4 

HU.MBLI.-VISAGEU suitors .. ..Love's L.l.osi,ii. I 

HUMBLING their deities to love. M'infcr'i 7<i;f, iv. 3 

HCMlil.Y-I humbly thank yo\i..Meas.for.\teas. i. 5 

I humbly thank you — ii. 1 

I humbly thank you — iii. I 

I humbly give you leave to depart ..Much Ado, v. 1 
I humbly do desire your grace.. >/er.o/*Vnicr, iv. 1 
humbly entreating from your royal .. /4W'» »'<?//, ii. I 

I humbly thank you — iii. A 

I humbly thank you, sir — iv. 3 

to Fer\e, humbly called mistress .... — v. 3 

f'our pleasm'e, humbly I subscribe. Tamitigoffih. i. I 
nimbly beseech you, sir, to paidon. Winter's Tale, v. 2 

so, liumblv take mv leave Macbeth, i. 4 

doth humbly kiss tliy hand Itichaid II. iii. 3 

most humbly beseech your lord6hip.2//>'Mr!//''. i. 2 
my lord, most humbly ou my kuce . .Henry V. Iv. 3 
I humbly pray them to admit .... — v. (chorus) 
humbly sue unto your excellence ..MtennjVl.x. 1 
liumlily now upon my bended knee..2/)f/iri/r/. i. 1 
I liumbh' thutik your royal majesty — i. 3 

ami hunihl\ tluis with halters on — iv. 9 

thus most humbly I do take my 3 Henry VI. i. 2 

and w hat he will," I humbly yield unto — iii. I 
and favour. Iiumlilv to kiss your hand — iii. 3 

and huml.lv Uiid thv knee? — v. 1 

humblv eninplainiiig to her deity ..Ilichard III. i. I 
liiimbrv beg the death uimn my knee — i. 2 

IiumblV on mv knee I crave — ii. 2 

I humbly take my leave — iv. 3 

being sued to, one that humbly sues — iv. 4 
wherefore I humbly beseech you ..Henry VIH. ii. 4 
cured mc, I humbly thank his grace — iii. 2 
I humbly do eutreat your higluiess' — iv. 2 



HUM 



HUMBLY— most humblj; pray you. Hcnnj I'll I. iv. 2 

1 humbly thank your highness — v. 1 

come as humbly, as they used . . Troilus ff Cress, iii. 3 
I humbly desire the valiant Ajax . . — iii. 3 

who most humbly desires you — iii. 3 

humbly I thank your lordship ..rimono/^Wicns,! 1 
and humbly prays you, that with . . — ii. 2 
he humbly prays your sijeedy payment — ii. 2 
humbly, sir, I thank you .. Antony f,- Cleopatra, ii. 2 

I'll humbly signify what in his — iii. 1 

I humbly thank your highness Cyinbelini; i. 2 

I humbly take my leave — i. 6 

I humbly set it at your will — iv. 3 

I humbly thank your highness — v. 5 

tliey iiumbly at my feet receive, r/ius Atidron. iii. 1 

1 humbly thank him — v- 1 

kuees liumbly bowed, could not. Itomeo ^Juliet,uu 1 

most humbly do I take my leave Hamlet, i. 3 

I will must humbly take my leave — ii. 2 

1 humbly tluuik you; well — iii. 1 

I humbly tliank you. sir — iv. 4 

back to Denmark. 1 humbly thank you — v. 2 

humbly I thank your grace Oltu-llo, i. 3 

I humbly beseech you, proceed — j. 3 

most liumbly therefore bending — ..i. 3 

I humbly thank you for't — iii. 1 

I humbly do beseech you of j'our pardon — iii. 3 

I humbly thank your "ladysliip — iii. 4 

humbly thank your ladyship — iv. 3 

lIUiME— of God, and Hume's advice.. 2 Hcmi/FZ. i. 2 

here, Hume, take this reward — i. 2 

Hume must make merry with — i. 2 

but, how now, sir John Hume ! — i. 2 

Hume, if you take not heed — i. 2 

at last, Hume's knavery — i. 2 

master Hume, we are therefore provided— i. 4 
convenient, master Hume, that you be — . i. 4 

HUMIDITy-unwholesonie humidity. Mcr)!/)f. iii. 3 
from the earth rotten humidity. Thnon of .Miens, iv.3 

HUMILITY— mild humility .... Lore's L.Los', iv. 3 
what is his humility? revenge. i>/«cA. of Venice, iii. 1 
proud humility, his jarring concord ..AU'sWell, i. 1 
proud of his humility, in their poor . . — i. 2 
it will wear the surplice of liumility — i. 3 

fawn on rase with base humility Uichantll. v. 1 

the very bal;e string of humility ....\Henryiy. ii. 4 
dressedniyselt'iu such humility .... — iii. 2 

modest stillness and humility Henry V. iii. 1 

in all submission and humility ....2HenryVI.y. 1 
I thank my God for my IvaToAity.. Richard III. ii. 1 
your bounty, virtue, fair humility . . — iii. 7 

with meekness and humility Henry VIII. ii. 4 

remember me in all humility unto his — iv. 2 

the napless vesture of liumility Coriolanus, ii. 1 

he comes, and in the gown of humility — ii. 3 

HUMMING— I heard a humming Tempest, ii. 1 

and liuniniing water must o'erwhelm. PejvWes, iii. 1 

IIUMOROUS-to a humorous sigh,. Lome's L.L. iii. 1 
the duke is humorous; what he is.^s you Like itji. 2 
the bony priser of the humorous duke? — _ii. 3 

is a most linmorous sadness — iv. 1 

but when her humorous ladyship .. King John, iii. 1 

no marvel, he's so liumorous 1 Henry IV. iii. 1 

humorous as winter, and as sudden.2Hen)i//r. iv. 4 

giddj', shallow, humorous youth Henry V. ii. 4 

his humorous predominance.. TroilusSr Cressida, ii, 3 
known to be a humorous plebeian. . Coriolanus, ii. 1 

witli the humorous night Romeo Sr Juliet, ii. 1 

the humorous man sliall end his part..Homie^ ii. 2 

IIUMOUR-slice! that's my humour !it/en!/(rji)e5, j. 1 

and pass good humours — i. 1 

if you run the nuthook's humour on me — i. 1 

is not the humour conceited? — i. 3 

and there's tlie humour of it — j. 3 

the 20od humour is, to steal — i. 3 

wiirthat humour pass? — i. 3 

the humour rises; it is good; humour — i. 3 

I tliank thee for that humour — i. 3 

run no base Iiumour: here, take (rep.) — i. 3 
the humour [««(. -honour] of this age — i. 3 

wliich be humours of revenge — i. 3 

with both the humours, I: I will (yep.) — i, 3 

my humour shall not cool — i. 3 

that is my true humour — i. 3 

I like not the humour of lying — ii. 1 

he hatli wronged me in some humours — ii. 1 
the humour ot bread and cheese {rep.) — ii. 1 

the humour of it quoth'al — ii. 1 

friglits Inimour [Co/. -English] out of his — ii, 1 

see wliat humour he is in — ii, 3 

laughing-stogs to other men's humours — iii. 1 

this is fery fantastical humours — iii. 3 

let's obey his humour a little further — iv. 2 

you either fear his humour TwelfthNight, i. 4 

and then to have the humour of state — ii. 5 
and the spirit of humours intimate .. — ii. 5 

I am of j'our humour for that Much Ado, i. 1 

and claw no man in his humour — i. 3 

teach you how to humour your cousin — ii. 1 
a man from the career of his humour? — ii. 3 
■where is but a humour, or a worm?. . — iii. 2 

your gossip-like humour — v. 1 

cannot flout me out of my humour. . — v. 4 
my chief humour is for a tyrant . . Mid. iV.'s Dr. i. 2 
the black-oppressing humour. .Loue'sL.L. i. I (let.) 

against the humour of aifection — i. 2 

tluit most his iiumours know — ii. 1 

humour it with turning up your .... — iii. 1 
these are luimours; these betray .... — iii. 1 
and to humour the ignorant, I have — iv. 2 

his humour is lofty. Ills discourse — v. 1 

fashioning our humours even to tlie — v. 2 
let it be as humours and conceits. Mer.of Venice,in. 5 

but, say, it is my humour — iv. 1 

it tits my humour well As youLike it, iii. 2 

from his mad irumour of love (rep.).. — iii. 2 
for now I am in a holiday humour .. — iv. 1 
a poor humour of mine, sir, to take.. — v. 4 
humour [Co/. -honour]oflii3desiBn../(H's Well, iii. 6 
idle humour in your honour! Turning of Sh. 2 (ind.) 



[ 382 J 

HUMOUR— while the humour lasts. Taming ofSh. i, 
a shrew of thy impatient humour .. — iii. 
the humour of forty fancies pricked — iii. 
'tis some odd humour pricks him.... — iii. 

he kills her in her own humour — iv. 

curb her mad and headstrong humour — iv. 
to imrge him of that humour .... Winter'sTale, ii. 
iigliLens my humour with \\H. Comedy of Errors, i. 
I am not in a sportive humour now.. — i. 

is your merry humour altered? — ii. 

saving your merry humour, here's the — iv. 
now you run this humour out of breath — iv. 

to him, humours well his frenzy — — iv. 
tlie unsettled humours of the land . . King John, ii. 
that take their humours for a warrant — iv. 
more upon humour than advised respect — iv. 

this inundation of mistempered humour — v. 
in humours, 1 ike the people of Ricliard II. v, 

it jumps witli my luimour MienrylV, i, 

the vinyoked liumour of your idleness — i, 

of all liuinours, that have showed (rep.) — ii, 
with that trunk of humours — ii. 

■wl\en you do cross his humour — iii. 

are altogether governed by humours — iii. 

an' it were not'for thy humours . . ..iHenrylV. ii. 

must not be in this humour with me — ii. 

military rules, humours of blood.... — ii. 

these be good humom-s, indeed — ii. 

sirr.ah, what humour is the prince of? — ii. 

humour his men with the imputation — v. 

the humour of it [Co/. X)i/.-an end] ..HenryV.M. 

I have a humour to knock you — ii. 

as I mav; and that's the humour of it — ii. 

that is the humour of it (rep.) — ii. 

the king hath run bad humours — ii. 

he passes some humours, and careers — ii. 

I cannot kiss, that's the humour of it — ii. 

the humour of it is too hot — iii. 

for humours do abound — iii. 

these be good humours ! (rep.) — iii. 

whose church-like humours fit not ..2HenryVI. i. 

dame Eleanor's aspiring humour. ... — i. 

and ambitious humour makes him , , — v. 

in this humom- wooed? {rep.) Richard III. i, 

this holy humour of mine will change — i. 

feed my humour, wish thy self no harm — iv. 

being best acquainted with her humour - iv. 

nature hath so crowded humours. Troilus fy Cress, i. 

I will let his humours blood — ii. 

you have got a humour tliere . . Timon of Athens, i. 

there is no crossing him in his humour — _ i. 

and naught but humour sways him — iii. 

Cassius, ne should not humour me.JuliusCcpsar, i, 

I can give his humour the true bent — ii, 

hoping it was but an etfect of humour — ii, 

and suck up the humom's of the dank — ii, 

for thy humour, I will stay at home — H- 

and crouch under your testy humour? — iv. 

dishonour shall be hrmiour — iv. 

when that rash humour, my motlier — iv. 

I'll know his humour, wlieu he knows — iv. 

except she bend her humour CymbeUne, i. 

though his humour was nothing but — iv. 

and teed his humour kindly Titus Andron. iv. 

a goodly humour, is it not, my lords? — iv. 

yield to his humour, smooth and speak — y. 

pui-sued my humour Romeo fy Juliet, i. 

portentous must this humour prove — _i. 

Romeo', humours', madman! passion! — ii. 

a cold and drowsy humour — iv. 

neighboured to his youth and hiunour,. Hain/e/, ii, 

drew all such humours from him Otlwllo, iii. 

in favour, as in humour, altered — iii. 

'tis but his humour; the businessof — iv. 

HUMOURED- tlie humoured letter. AfCT-ri/ Wives,n. 

liumonred thus, comes at the last. . Ricliard II. iii. 
HUMTHREY, my son of Gloster. . . .'lllenrylV. iv. 

how now, ambitious Humphrey? \ Henry Vl.i. 

devised, Humphrey of Gloster? — m- 

Humplirey of Gloster, thou shalt well — v, 

duke Humphrey must unload 2Henry VI. i. 

Humphrey the good duke of Gloster — i, 

preserve tliegood duke Humphrey ! — i, 

noise duke Humphrey from his seat — i. 

Humphrey's pride and greatness — i. 

despite duke Humphrey, or the cardinal — i. 

saw but Humplirey duke of Gloster — i. 

none but good duke Humphrey — i. 

cherish duke Humphrey's deeds — i. 

of love to proud duke Humphrey — i. 

Hnmphrev with the peers be fallen.. — i. 

duke Humphrey Unit his brows — i. 

to me my Hnmphrev, my sweet duke — i. 

attainture will be Humphrey's fall.. — i. 

empress, than duke Humphrey's wife — i. 

brought duke Humphrey in disgrace — i. 

and tisten after Humphrey — !• 

and this duke Humphrey's doom — i. 

Humphrey has done a miracle to-day — ii. 

prince, the good duke Humphrey ,. — ii. 

ah, Humphrey, this dishonour — li. 

stay, Humphrey, duke of Gloster. . 

and go in peace, Humphrey 

Humphrey, duke of Gloster, scarce. . — 

ah, Humphrey, can I bear this — 

I am duke Humphrey's wife — 

and duke Humplirey s lady — 

Humphrey is no little man — 

in smooth" duke Humph rey — 

ah, uncle Humphrey! in thy face I see — 

and yet, good Ptumphrey, is the hour — 

as place duke Humphrey — 

as Humphrey, proved by reasons — 

return we to the false duke Ilumphi'ey — 

for, Humphrey being dead — 

good duke Humjihrey traitorously is — 

hands were laid on Humphrey's life — 

duke Humplirev's timeless death? .. — 

faulty in duke Humphrey's death .. — 

service to duke Humphrey's ghost .. — 



HUN 



— ii, 3 



HUMPHREY-dukeHumphreydied.aWenry;'/. iii. 2 
as if duke Humphrey's ghost were .. — iii. 2 
at good duke Humplirey's death .... — iv. 1 
fly! sir Humphrey Stafford and his.. — iv. 2 
sir Humphrey Stafford and his brother's — iv. 4 
Humphrey of Buckingham, I accept — v. 1 

HUNCHBACKED toad Richard III. i. 3 

tliat foul hunchbacked toad — iv. 4 

HUNDRED several times. . Tu-o Gen. of Verona, iv. 4 

these tliree hundred years Meriy Wives, i. 1 

and seven hundred pounds {rep.) .... — i. I 

and five hundred too — iii. 3 

in three hundred pounds a year! .... — iii. 4 
will make you a hundred and fifty . . — iii. 4 

a hundred pound in gold — iv. 6 

a hundred, if they'll do you any. Meas.far Mea$. i. 3 
for the getting a nundred bastards . . — iii. 2 
wit out of tlie hundred merry tales. . Much Ado, ii. I 
pierce a hundred thousand hearts.. iv//rf. A'. I>r. ii. 2 
a hundred thousand crowns {rep.).. Lovers L. L. ii. I 
remains unpaid a hundred thousand — ii. 1 
of one sore I a hundred make — iv. 2 (epit.) 

I have five hundred crowns Asyoti Like it, ii. 3 

will kill thee a hundred and fifty ways — v. 1 

more, more, a hundred of them AlVs Well, ii. 2 

Spurio a hundred and fifty, Sebastian — iv.3 
and Gratii, two hundred and fifty each — iv. 3 
I have a hundred milch Vmn. Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 
bring him a hundred poimd or two . . — v. 1 
keep your hundred pounds to yourself — v. 1 
a hundred marks, my Kate does put — v. 2 
a hundred then. Content. A match.. — v. 2 

hath cost me a hundred crowns — v. 2 

fifteen hundred shorn Winter^s Tale, iv. 2 

amount unto a hundred marks. Come<£y of Errors, \.\ 
five hundred ducats, villain (,rep.) .. — iv. 4 

two hundred ducats. Say, how — iv. 4 

from fair five hundred pound a year. . King John, i. 1 
a half-faced groat five hundred pound — i. 1 

hath got five hundred pounds a year — 1. 1 
with many hundreds treading on his — iv. 2 
manned with three hundred men . . Richard //. ii. 3 
the offer of a hundred thousand crowns — iv. 1 

cracked in a hundred shivers — iv.l 

wliich, fourteen hundred years ago..l Henry IV. i. 1 
hath brought three hundred marks.. — ii. 1 
a hundred upon poor four of us (rep.) — ii. 4 
as they buy hobnails, by the hundreds — ii. 4 

lost three hundred marks — ii. 4 

I will die a hundred thousand deaths — iii. 2 
a hundred and fifty soldiers (rep.) .. — iv. 2 
a hundred and fifty tattered ijrodigals — iv. 2 
there's but threeofmyhundredandflfty — y. 3 

a hundred mark is a long loan 2jf/e»77/ /r. ii. I 

fifteen hundred foot, five hundred horse — ii. 1 
me have five hundred of my thousand — v. 5 

fifteen hundred knights (rep.) Henry V. i. 1 

ahundred almshouses, right well.... — i. 1 
four hundred one and twenty years.. — i. 2 
four hundred twenty-six: and Charles — i. 2 
tire year eiglit hundred five. Besides — i. 2 
fifteen hundred paces of your tent . . — iii. 7 
shall have each a hundred Englishmen — iii. 7 
five iiundred poor I have in yearlj' pay — iv. 1 
he will give you two hundred crowns — iv. 4 
full fifteen hundred, besides common — iv. 8 
one hundred twenty-six; added .... — iv. 8 
eight thousand and four hundred (rep.) — iv. 8 
are but sixteen hundred mercenaries — iv. 8 

hundreds lie sent to hell 1 Henry 1 1.\. I 

beside five hundred prisoners — iii, 4 

assault we lost twelve hundred men — iv.l 

called a hundred times, and ottener.iHenry VI. ii. I 
leather a hundred times to part than — iii. 2 
licence to kill for a hundred lacking one — iv. 3 
hales them to a hundred mischiefs .. — iv. 8 

ay, with five hundred, father 'MIenryVl. i. 2 

bought it with a hundred blows — ii. 5 

a hundred marks {rep.) .., Henrji I'll I. v. I 

break forth a hundred Bpr'nigs. Timon of .iihens, iv. 3 

I will, for ha,lf a hundred years Coriolanus, i. 4 

a hundred thousand welcomes — ii. 1 

five hundred voices of that sound (rep.) — ii. 3 

a hundred times hath broke — iv. ."j 

a hundred ghastly women Julius Ca-sar, i . 3 

like a fountain, with a iiundred spouts — ii. 2 
have put to death a hundred senators — iv. 3 

I had a hundred pound ou't Cymletine, ii . 1 

five hundred years hath stood. . TitusAndrouicus. i. 2 
hundreds call themselves your creatures. i*eri'c/es, iii. 2 

reservation of a hundred knights Lear, i. 1 

a hundred knights! 'tis politic (rep.) — i. 4 

sustain him and his hundred knights — i. 4 

with Regan, I, and my hundred knights — ii. 4 
break into a hundred thousand flaws .... — ii. 4 
entertain you for one of my hundred.... — iii. 6 
not yet drunk a hundred words .Komeo ^Juliet, ii. 2 
with twenty hundred thousand times — iii. 3 
where, for these many iiundred years — iv. 3 
moderate haste might tell a hundred . . Hamlet, i. 2 
forty, fifty, a hundred ducats apiece.. — ii 2 

a hundred and seven galleys {rep.) Othello, i. 3 

ahundred times wooed me to steal it — iii. 3 
the sun to make two hundred compasses — iii. 4 

HUNDRED-POUND, filthy worsted Lear, ii. 2, 

HUNDRETH-the hundreth TsaXm. Merry Wives, ii. 1 
HUNG— and hung o'er the altar ...... . — iv. 2; 

hung on our driving boat TwelfthNight, 'i.i 

hung by the wall so long . . Measure for Measure, i. 3 

so hung upon with love Mid. N. Dream, iii. 2 

their heads are hung with ears that. . — iv. I 

hung so tottering in tlie balance AWs ll'etl,i. 3 

she hung about my neck Taming ofShreir, ii. 1 

filed keys off, that hung in chains. Wiuter'sTnle, iv.3 

and hung their eyelids down \ Henry IV iii. 2" 

his own life hung upon the — iv.l 

hung be the heavens with black 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

and hung their rotten cnffins SlienryVI. i. 3 

our bruised arms hung up for Richard 111. i. I 

never hung poison on a fouler toad . . — i. 2 



HUN 

HUNG— hung twenty years about ..llenrul'lll. ii. i 
hunn their hciiils, iiml tlicii lay by — iii. 1 {song^ 
hiiiij! tliy iwlviuuTil swiirj .. Troilus^Cretiida, iv. i 
instriiMi.iKs liuim 111) ill cttees . . Vimon qf Atlient, i. 2 
Iw hum; wilh l:isar's trnpUios ....Juliut Cietar, i. 1 

niijn .ifl)utllcis liunu.iiit — V. 1 

ill his iR-cily sli.iii .1 tortoise liiiim'.H..w.'o,S-Jii'iW,v.l 
hi-i\- liuni: tlio^f liiis, th-.a I h.ivu kis^M./MiiiW, V. 1 

nUN'GAlil.VN -I) Ikisl- lliiii--uri:iii.. U.-ot/llircj, i. 3 

JlUNllAllY-tlic kiii^' of l[uii-ary..)/.-u.i./o.-.W<.-a«. i. 'i 
Imt not tlic kiiie of lluiisary'el — i. 2 

IIUNGEK— or witli hiinijcr, my lord ..Much Ado, i. 1 
two weak evils, iii-'e ami liuiiKer ..Asi/ouLikeil, ii. 7 

with slinrp eoiialraiiit of hunger AU't n'ell, iii. 2 

to make me hiini;er more Macbeth, iv. 3 

8(1 hiuit;er lor inv empty eliair illmryiy. iv. 4 

anil luiiiiier will euloree tliem to be..l //f)ic.v/7. i. 2 
by hunk'eraiul laek ot other means.. Hfiirr/ ;'/;/. i. 2 
if thy reveiiBCs hunger lor that.. 7Vmofi o/ -K/nf/is, y. .1 
I siK'ak this in hunger for bread .... Coriotanut, i. 1 

that lumber broke stone walls — i. 1 

it gave me iircseut hunger to feed . . Cymbcllne, ii. 1 
now I think on thee, my hunger's gone — '.!!•'' 

almost si>eut with hunger — iii. 6 

or can conecal his hunger, till he famish?. rcri'cfcs, i. 4 
[Krif.] not used to hunger's savour .. — i. 4 

so sharp are hunger's teeth — i. 4 

than anguish, hunger, or the sea! Othello, v. 2 

Jl UNG IC RFdKD-aiid lord Ilungetford. 1 Hennj VI. i. I 
have the heir of the lord Iiungerford.3 Hivin/ /'/. iv. 1 

HU.VGERLY— thin and hungerly.riimiHj'o/Wi. iii. 2 
thev eat us liungerlv Othrllr, iii. 4 

HUNG KR-STARVtD men 1 Henry n. i. 5 

pursued by hunger-starved wolves ..iHenryVI. i. 4 
give them life, wlio are hunger-starved.. PcWcte, i. 4 

HUNGRILY-feed most hungrily ...T'miono/'.JM. i. 1 

HUNGRY-by a hungry lion .. 7'«o Gen. of Vet: v. 4 

is all as hungry as the sea Twelfth NIghl, ii. 4 

now the hungry lion roars .... Mid. i\.'t Dreum, v. 2 
to the sucked and hungry lioness?. As you Like it, i v. 3 

but wlien they are hungry ll'inler's Tale, iii. 3 

a hungry leaii-faced viflain . . Coini-dy of Errors, v. 1 

must Rythe hungry, now he fed King; John, iii. 3 

or cloy the hungry edge of appetite. . Richard II. i. 3 

for wlioin this hungry war opens Henry V. ii. 4 

rush iiiiiin us as their hungry iirey ..\ Henry I' I. i. 2 
and, like a hungry lion, did commence — iv. 7 
the ohiirken from a huugry kite . ...'iHem-yl' I. iW. 1 

and now am I so hungry — iv. 10 

that lace of his the hungry cannibals.3 Henry VI. i. 4 

I am hungry for revenge lliclmrd III. iv. 4 

unkindness should yet he hungry 1. 7'im. ofAlh. iv. 3 
hungry plebeians would the noble ..Coriolanus, ii, 1 
let the pebbles on the hungry beach . . — v. 3 
Cassius has a lean and hungry look. Jul!usCtvsrtr,i. 2 
she makes hungry, wiiere. . Antony ^ Cleopatra, ii. 2 
makes tliem hungry, the more she gives. Per/c/es, v. 1 
strew this hungry churchyard. . Romeo «§- Juliet, v. 3 

HUNT-hc after lionour hunts. Tu-o Gen.ofVerona, i. 1 

will you go hunt, my lord? Twelftli'.Night, i. 1 

that all hunt after in their lives ..Love'sL.Losi, i. 1 

comes to hunt here in the park — iii. 1 

not the hare that I do hunt As you Like it, iv. 3 

to-morrow I intend to hunt . . Taming o/Sh. 1 (iud.) 
or wilt thou hunt? thy hounds .... — 2 (ind.) 
two and twenty, hunt this weather?. JVinler'sT. iii. 3 

he's gone to hunt, my lord 2Heitryl V. iv. 4 

myself must hunt this deer to death. 2 Henry /'/. v. 2 

will h lint this wolf to death ZHenry Vl.ii.i 

we more hunt for than the grace.. K/cAari/ ///. iii. 4 

that doth hunt us all to death — iv. 4 

and thou shalt hunt a lion .. Troilus^ Cressida, iv. 1 

I'll hunt thee for thy hide — v. 6 

to-morrow to hunt with him . . Timon of Athens, i. 2 

I'll hunt with him — i. 2 

a lion that I am proud to hunt Coriolanus, i. 1 

where you should but hunt with .... — iii. 1 

boys, we'll go dress our hunt Cymbeline, iii. 6 

cave here, hunt here, are outlaws .... — iy. 2 

I had no mind to hunt this day — iv. 2 

we'll hunt no more to-day — iv. 2 

to hunt the panther and "the hart. . TitusAndron. i. 2 
the hunt is up, the morn is bright.... — ii. 2 
Chiron, we hunt not, we, with horse — ii. 2 

as if ailnuhle hunt were beard — ii. 3 

where he did hunt, O had we never . . — iv. 1 

hollow of a tree, escaped the hunt hear, ii. 3 

brain of mine hunts not the trail Hamlel, ii. 2 

not like a liound that hunts Othello, ii. 3 

his spirits should hunt after new fancies — iii. 4 

HUN"r-COUXTKR-youhunt-connter.2Henry/»'.i.2 

HUNTED-lct them be hunted soundly. rempe»(, iv. 1 
well, sir. that you hunted .... Taming of Shrew, v. 2 
I hunted with his honour to-day.. Timoii of Ath. ii. 2 
he's hunted even to falling. .-In^ont/ ^Cleopatra, iv. 1 
we never, never, hunted tliere! . . Titus Andron. iv. 1 

HUN'TF.R— that llerne the hunter. Merry IVicet, iv. 4 

this tale of Heme the hunter — iv. 4 

speak I like Heme the hunter? — v..*) 

round about the oak <if Heme the hunter — v. Tj 
none but /lerne the hunter serve .... — v. h 
bloody 05 the hunter, attends .. Twelfth .Wi^hl, iii. 4 
from the hunters' aim had ta'en.. At you Like it, ii. 1 

he was furnished like a hunter — iii. 2 

the housekeeper, the hunter Macbeth, iii. I 

I'll play the hunter for thy life. TroiVui ^ Crew. iv. 1 

and licre thy hunters stand Julius Cmsar, iii. 1 

this is not hunters' language Cymbeline, iii. 3 

like lions u|)on the pikes o' the hunters — v. 3 

ami rin.; a hunter's peal Titus Andronicus, ii. 2 

I proiiri-ccl vour grace a hunter's peal — ii. 2 

HU.XTi; Tir-ttiiiigithunteth mnst.l.otie'sL.l.ost.i. 1 

HUXl"I.\(;-iiiir|iosed hunting.Wirf. A'.'i Dream, iv. I 
the king be is hunting the deer.. looe'iL. /.o»(, iv. 3 
the German hunting in water-work. 2/f(^iry/r. ii. I 

waskille<l with hunting him HenryV. iv. 3 

comes hunting this way to desport..3//enry /'/. iv. .'i 
for hunting was his daily exercise ., ' — iv.fi 
now he comes fnmi hunting .. 7'imon of Athens, ii. 2 
we'll come to you after hunting Cymbeline, Iv. 2 



[ 383 ] 



II US 



HUNTING— go you to hunting .... Cymbeline, iv. 
a solemn hunting is in hand.. Titus Andronicus, ii. 

now shall ye see our Hoiimii hunting — ii. 

see the genenil hunting in tl.is Ion ^t? — ii. 

when he ivtnnis fn.iii liuntiiiL', I will not..7.eor, i. 

hunting thee lu-iice with \imiU-n\'. limn, z^- Jul. iii. , 

whom I triisli lor his i|iiiek hunting. ... 0//iW/n, ii. 
IlUNTINdTON -an. I IIiii. I inud.in, g<i. //.•„,„;•. v. 
Ill'\l'l!i:ss- thv huntiK-'iKinie. .).<./'..<;.//,.■,/, iii. 
HU.VTS.MA.M. w1.;it suv'Htthouy .. ..■Ml,nn,n. iv. 

upon the a-.uing huntsman that .. Henry VI II. iii. 

sweet huntsman, lid^s'mnu^ . I itusAndron. ii. 4 (let. 

if you eau linil the liimtsiiiaii out.... — ii. 

you're a young liuntsmaii, .Marcus .. — iv. 
HUNTSMlON-bid the huntsmen.. A/irf. N.'sDr. iv. 

huntsmen, I charge thee .. Taming of Sh. 1 (indue. 

like ajoll>' troop of luuitsinen King John, ii. 

see, where the huntsmen stand ....3Henry VI. iv. 

from the bishop's huntsmen rescued — iv. 

HUXT.'^-Ul'-luiiits-iiiitotlieday.«omfo*./u;/W,iii. 
HUKDLE-ilragtheeonahunlle .... — iii. 
HURl.-hurl the name of husband. Compdyo/ Tier. ii. 

interchangeably hurl down my Ilichardll. i. 

to hurl at the beholders \HenryVI.i. 

then hurl down their indignation ..Ricliard 111. i. 

to hurl upon their lieiids (lep.) — i. 

defiance, traitors, hurl we in your. Julius Ctrsar, v. 

do often hurl from us tninny (,- Cleopatra, i. 

of thine will hurl my soul from heaven. O/Aci/o, v. 
HURLED— hurled up tliuir eiips ..Richard III. iii. 

high, to he hurled do«ni lielow — iv. 

IIURLINC-hiirliiiL' tliinu's at him.TwclflhNlghl , iii. 

[A'li/.j are hut wild and luirling words'. .H«m(e/, i. 
riURLY— and amid tliis liurly.T'aHim^o/.SArew, iv. 

I see this hurly all on foot King John, iii. 

that, with the liurlv, death itself ..illenrylV. iii. 
HURLY-BirRLY— hurly-burly's done. A/ac(>e«., i. 

the news of luirlv-burlv innovation .1 Henry IV. v. 
HURRICAXO-tlfe hurrieano call. 7'roi( us <5-CVm.v. 
HURRIC.WOES-aiid hurricanoes, spout. Lear, iii. 
HURRIED— liurried thence me Tempest, i. 

they hurried us aboard a l)ark — i. 

lastly, hurried here to tliis lAiice. fVinter^sTale, iii. 

desi)erately he hurried through.. Comeji/o/ Bit. v. 

an nreh so lun-ried the blown tide ..Coriolanus, v. 
HURRIES— hurries up and down .... KingJnhn, v. 

eacli hurries toward his home illenrylV. iv. 

HURRY-Iunds, and all, hurry to loss.l Henry VI. iv. 

which before were in wild hurry ..Coriolanus, iv. 

doth hurry from the fatal cannon's./fomco ■^■Jul. v. 
HURT- dost me yet but little hurt .... Tempest, ii. 

that give delight, and hurt not — iii. 

if you could hurt your swords — iii. 

hurt him in eleven places Twelfth Night, iii. 

he protests he will not hurt you .... — iii. 

and a soldier, he will not hurt you .. — iii. 

I never hurt you — v. 

and hurt you not — v. 

be a hurt, you have hurt me — v. 

he has hurt me. and there's — v. 

and let his hurt be looked to — v. 

sorry, madam, I have hurt your .... — v. 

nor hurts him, nor profits you. . Meas.fur Meas. iv. 

alas, poor hurt fowl I Much Ado, ii. 

how they might hurt their enemies. . — v. 

just, said she, it hurts nobody — v. 

which, God be thanked, hurt not.... — v. 

wdiich hit, hut hurt not — v. 

it will not hurt a woman — v. 

what, should I hurt her, strilce her. Mid. A^. Dr. iii. 

let her not hurt me — iii. 

hurt with the same weapons. . Merck, of Venice, iii. 

the hunters' aim had ta'en a hurt. As you Like it, ii. 

no force in eyes that can do hurt .. .. — iii. 

no hurt done! (rep.) AlVsiVell, i. 

for it hurts not him — i. 

can do no hurt to try — ii. 

perchance, he's hurt i' the battle .... — iii. 

I must give myself some hurts — iv. 

htirt him not, for God's sake. . Comedy of Errors, v. 

balm of hurt minds Macbeth, ii. 

had he his Iiurts before? — v. 

be pitiful and hurt me not King John, iv. 

'tis true; to hurt his master — iv. 

a struck fowl, or a hurt wild-duck. .1 Hfnry IV. iv. 

it never yet ilid hurt, to lay i Henry IV.i. 

are you not hurt i' the groin? — ii. 

have hurt him, sir, in the shoulder .. — ii. 

any hurt in the 'orld Henry V. iii. 

opinion shall be surgeon to my liiirt.l/ie»ryry, ii. 

strike those that hurt, and hurt not — iii. 

cannot greatly sting to hurt 3 Henry VI. ii. 

where tortune cannot hurt me — iv. 

more than 3'ou are hurt by me — iv. 

how yon may hurt yourself Henry Vin. iii. 

Paris is returned home, and hurt. Troilus^- Cress, i. 

came hurt home to-day? he's not hurt — i. 

I doubt he be hurt — i. 

to hurt by being just — v. 

and Thoas, deadly hurt — v. 

Palamedcs sore hurt and bruised .... — v. 

rich only in large hurts Timon of A'hens, iii. 

all hurt behind;" backs red Coriolanus, i. 

seven hurts i' the bixly — ii. 

you soothed not, therefore hurt not.. — ii. 

I will not hurt your hearth — iv. 

all the Volsces. great hurt and mischief — iv. 

I will not hurt him Antony ^Cleoptdra, ii. 

which hurts and is desired — v. 

have I hurt him? No faith (re/j.) Cymbeline, I. 

not hurt: it is a thoroughfare for (rep.) — i. 

lest the redeetion should hurt her .. — i. 

some hurt <hinel I wish not so (rep.) — i. 

often hurts more than to be sure .... — i. 

dead men, hurt behind, and cow.ards — v. 

hast thou hurt thee with the fall?7'.V«»/lnrfron. ii. 

^Co/.K>l^j with the dismal'st object hurt — ii. 

liath hurt me more, than had be killed — iii. 

but if you hurt these bear-whelps .. — iv. 

to stop the air would hurt them Vericles, i. 



UUHT— they hurt you mortally Pericles, iii. 3 

I never (lid her hurt in all my life .... — iv. 1 

luoiise, nor hurt a fly — iv. 1 

received this hurt you see, striving /.ear, ii. I 

to ponder on things would hurt me more — iii. 4 

and hurts the poor creature of earth .... — iii. 4 

1 have received a hurt; follow me iii. 7 

untimely comes this hurt; give me — iii. 7 

thee they may hurt. .Mack, sir — iv. 1 

who, nothing hint withal Itomto^ Juliet, i. 1 

I am hurt; a plague o' both the — Iii. 1 

ort thou hurt? Ay, ay, a scratch — Iii. 1 

courage, man; the hurt cannot be much — iii. I 

I was hurt under your arm — iii. 1 

hath got hismortttl hurt in my liehalf — iii. I 
snentltbrift sigh, that hurts by casing.. HamW, iv. 7 

er the house, and hurt my brother .... — v. 2 
defend me, friends, I am but hurt — y. 2 

1 bleed still, I am hurt to the death Othello, ii. 3 

worthy Othelhj, I am hurt to danger — ii. 3 

sir, for your hurts, myself will tie — ii. 3 

what, are you hurt, lieutenant? — ii. 3 

by that small hurt, hast cashiered Cassio — Ii. 3 

he, you hurt, is of great fame in Cyprus — iii. 1 

have you not hurt your head? — iv. 1 

1 strike it, and it hurts my hand — iv. I 

to do me harm, as I have to be hurt — v. 2 

Ingo hurt him, lago set him on — v. 2 

HURTINfJ— by hurting it I'rricles, iv. (Gower) 

IIURTLED-hurtled in tlie air .. ..Julius Ciesar, ii. 2 
ntlRTEESS-nf justice hurtless breaks ..Lcnr, iv. 6 
IITTRTIJNG- in whieli hurtling.. .4«*.u Likeit. iv. 3 

HU.SRAND-my husband then? Tempest, iii. I 

did Claribel her husband ilnd at Tunis — v. I 

the rule of her husband's purse Merry Wives, i. 3 

that ray husband saw this letter!.. — ii. I 
that her husband will be absence from — ii. 2 
master Ford, her husband, will be .. — ii. 2 
that her husband is seldom from liome — ii. 2 
her husband has a marvellous infection — ii. 2 

her husband's name is Ford — ii. 2 

jealous rascally knave, her husband — ii. 2 

1 think if your husbands were dead — iii. 2 

tiyo other husbands — iii. 2 

his name is my husband had him of — iii. 2 

I would thy husband were dead — iii. 3 

having an honest man to your husband — iii. 3 

your husband's eoiniu" hither — iii. 3 

husband's coining with half Windsor — iii. 3 

your husband's here at hand — iii. 3 

that my husband is deceived — iii. 3 

when your husband asked who wag — iii. 3 

I think, my husband has some — iii. 3 

I seek you "a better husband — iii. 4 

her husband goes this morning a bir(ling — iii. i 

but the peaking eoruuto, her husband — iii. 5 

her husband is this morning gone .. -.- iii. 5 

sir JIugh, my husband says, my son — iv. 1 

but are you sure of your husband now? — iv. 2 

your husband is in his old lunes again — iv. 2 

he so takes on yonder with my husband — iv. 2 

Protests to my husband, he is now here — iv. 2 

would my husband would meet him — iv. 2 

guide him to thy husband's cudgel .. — iv. 2 

but is my husband coming? .... — iv. 2 

hath the jealous fool to her husband! — iv. 2 

my husband will come into the chamber — iv. 

nay, good sweet husband — iv. 

shall we tell our husbands how we . . — iv. 

the figures out of your husiiand's brains — iv. 

and he my husband best of all affects — iv. 

well, husband your deviee — iv. 

that same knave, For(i, her husband — v. 

ray husband will not rejoice so much — v. 

my horns I bequeath your husbands — v. 

see you these, husband? — v. 

nay, husband, let that go to make .. — v. 

good husband, let us every one go..., — v. 
she level in her husband's heart.. Twelfth Night, ii. 

as like husbands, as pilchards (j-»p.) — iii. 

Ccsario, husband, stay. Husband? (rep,") — V. 

her husband, sirrah?' — v. 

had any more than one husband?A/enj./oril/e<M. ii. 

combinate husband, this well-seeming — iii. 

you will turn good husband now — iii. 

he is your husband on a pre-contracrt — iv. 

until my husband bid me — v. 

known my husband; yet my husband — v. 

doth accuse my husband; aiid charges — v. 

no? you say vonr husband — v. 

my husband liids me; now I will — v. 

aiiusband! It is your liusband (rep.) — v. 

to buy you a better husband — v. 

so may my husband. O Isabel! — v. 

no intent to turn husband MuchAdo, i. 

thou wilt never get thee a husband.. — ii. 

just, if he send ine no husband — ii. 

lord! X could not endure a husband — ii. 

may light upon a hnsbaml that hath — ii. 

to see you one day fitted with a husband — ii. 

and cry heigh-ho! for a husband — ii. 

your father got excellent husbands.. — ii. 

cannot endure to hear tell of a husband — ii. 

to help my cousin to a good husband — ii. 

unhojicfulest husband that I know .. — ii. 

send lier home again without a husband — iii. 

saving your reverence, a husband .. — iii. 

the heavier for a husband? — iii. 

an' it be the right husband — iii. 

then if your husband have stables .. — iii. 

for a haVk, a horse, or a husband? .. — iii. 

to give your daughter to her husband — iii. 

she did embrace me as a husband.... — iv. 

I am your husband, if von like — v. 

j*on were niv other hus^iaud — v. 

fashion to choose me a husband. . Mer. of Venice, i. 

I should marrv twenty husbands.... — i. 

for the death of a third husband .... — iii. 

of my lord your husband, I know .. — iii. 

until her husband and my lord's return — iii. 



HUS 



[ 384 ] 

HUSBAND— for her husband's lanHs.iHenry Fl.in. 2 

wives for their liusbauds' fate SHenry 11. v. G 

her husband, l<uave: wouldst thou. Richard HI. i. 1 

what tho' I killed lier liusband — i. 1 

to become her husband, and lier father? — i. 1 

I did not kill yoiir husband — i. ^ 

my husband. He that bereft thee (.rep.) — i. 2 

that killed her husband, and his father — i. 2 

thou killedst my husband Henry in the — i. 3 
queen, ay, or your husband king .... — i. 3 
you, and your husband Grey, were .. — i. 3 
was not your husband in Margaret's — i. 3 
a husband, and a son, thou owest to me — i. 3 

in thy noble husband ! (rep.) — ii.2 

snatched my liusband from mine arms — ii. 2 
ah, for my husband, for my dear lord — ii. 2 

my husband lost his life to get — ii. 4 

wiien he, that is my husband now .. — iv. 1 
issued from my otlier angel husband — iv. 1 
I had a husband, till a Kichard killed him — iv. 4 

where is thy husband now ? — iv. 4 

ICol. Kill.} the king my husband made — iv. 4 
a constant woman to lier husband.. Hem i/ nil. iii. 1 

I deem you an ill husband — iii. 2 

a right good husband — iv. 2 

these hairs is Paris, ray husband?. Troilus fy Cress, i. 2 

than wife is to the husband? — ii.2 

mated with an equal husband?.. 7'/);iono/^//ien5, i. 1 

if my son were my husband Coriolanus, i. 3 

I hear hither your husband's drum .. — i- 3 
tell you excellent news of your husband — i. ."i 
and saved your husband so much sweat — iv. 1 

power to say so to my husband — iv. 2 

lady's husband here, this, do you see — iv. 2 
when she's fallen out with her husband — iv. 3 
my lord and liusband ! These eyes are not — v. 3 
the son. the husband, and the father — v. 3 

and not my husband's secrets? lulins Ciesar, ii. 1 

O that I knew this husband.. Anlony^Cleopalra, i. 2 

not in my husband's nose — i. 2 

no worse a husband than the best of men — ii. 2 
sir, look well to my husband's house — iii. 2 

bless my lord and husband! — iii. 4 

husband win, win brotber, i)ra3's .... — iii. 4 
husband, I come: now to that name — v. 2 

she's wedded: her liusband banis!ied..Cymbe/iMe, i. 1 
my dearest husband, I something fear — i. 2 

1 will remain the loyalest husband .. — i. 2 
her husband banished; O that husband! — i- 7 

expulsion is of thy dear husband — ii. 1 

my husband's hand ! that drug-damned — iii. 4 
by thy revolt, O liusband, shall be . . — iii. 4 
w'heni am dead to my husband? .... — iii. 4 
Jove shield your husband from his. Titus Andron. ii. 3 
drag hence her husband to some secret — ii. 3 

bring thou her husband — ii. 3 

where is your husband? — ii. 5 

thy husband he is dead — iii. 1 

weeps because they killed her husband — iii. 1 

if they did kill thy husband — iii. 1 

you killed her husband — v. 2 

1 sought a husband Pericles, i. 1 (riddle) 

he's father, son, and husband mild — i. 1 (riddle) 

pleasure fits a husband, not a father — i. 1 

ere she had a husband for her bed Lear, i. 1 

why have my sisters husbands — i. 1 

that you must lose a husband — i. 1 

post speedily to my lord j'our husband . . — iii. 7 
I marvel, our mild husband not met us.. — iv. 2 

distaff into my husband's hands — iv. 2 

your lady does not love her husband — iv. 4 

a plot upon her virtuous husband's life. . — iv. 

she, and the duke her husband — v. 1 

her husband being alive — v. 1 

if he should husband you — v. 3 

and I, her husband, contradict your bans — v. 3 
my husband, God be with his soull. Ko?neo ^Juliet,\. 3 
yea, quoth my husband, fall'st upon — i. 3 

there stay s a husband to make you a wife — ii. 5 
[t'o/. Kn/.]0 prince, O cousin, husband — iii. 1 
cousin would have killed my liusband — iii. 2 
my husband lives, that Tybalt would — iii. 2 

would have slain my husband — iii. 2 

[Co(. /fn(.] lord! ay, husband, friendl — iii. 5 
ere he, that should be husband, comes — iii. 6 

my husband is on earth — iii. o 

unless that husband send it me from — iii. 5 
thy husband in thy bosom there lies dead — v. 3 
there dead, was husband to that Juliet — v. 3 
with his sword her husband's limbs .... Hamlet, ii.2 

one as kind for husband slialt thou — iii. 2 

in second husband let me be accurst! — — iii- 2 
my husband dead, wlien second husband — iii. 2 

thou wilt no second husband wed — iii. 2 

so you mistake your husbands — iii. 2 

the queen, your husband's brother's wife — iii. 4 

this was your husband (rep.) — iii. 4 

I'll husband them so well, they shall go — iv. 5 
but here's my husband ; and so much . . Othello, i. 3 
of him, Emilia, tho' he be thy husband.. — ii. 1 
prove to Desdemona a most dear husband — ii. 1 

between yon and her husband — }}• ^ 

I know it grieves my husband _ — iii. 3 

pranks they dare uot show their husbands — iii. 3 
wayward husband hath a hundred times — iii. 3 

look you! Cassio, and my husband — iii. 4 

remember; and call thy husband hither — iv. 2 
abuse their husbands in such gross kind? — iv. 3 
would not make her husband a cueltold — iv. 3 
it is their husbands' faults, if wives do fall — iv. 3 
let husbands know, their wives have sense — iv. 3 

for sweet and sour, as husbands have — iv. 3 

what's the matter, husband? Cassio hath — v. 1 

ask thy husband else — v. 2 

thy husband knew it all (jrp.) — v. 2 

my husband say, that she was false? — v. 2 

my friend, thy husband, honest, honest.. — v. 2 
by fortune, and did give my husband .... — v. i 
I found it, and I did give't my husband — v. 2 

HUSBANDED— I husbanded her bed../lH's Wdl, v. 3 



TAG 



HUSBAND— see our husbands ..Mer. of Venice, iii. 4 

I shall be saved by my husbajid .... — iii. 5 

I'll tell my husband, Launcelot .... — iii. i 

even such a husband hast thou of me — iii. 5 

these be the christian husbands — iv. 1 

had been her husband, rather than .. — iv. 1 

a day before our husbands home — iv. 2 

I'll see if I can get my husband's ring — iv. 2 

been praying for our husbands' welfare — v. 1 

yom" husband is at band — v. 1 

doth make a heavy husband — v. 1 

not my body, nor my husband's bed — v. 1 

for him that had your husband's ring — v. 1 
thee, Orlando, for my husband ..As you Like !(, iv. 1 

make her fault her husband's occasion — iv. 1 

I'll have no husband, if you be — v. 4 

I hury a second husband AlCs iVell, i . 1 

you shall tind of the king a husband — i. 1 

get thee a good husband, and use him — i. 1 

wiiat husband in thy power I will . . — ii. 1 

then call me husband — iii. 2 letter) 

shall bless tills unworthy husband?.. — iii. 4 

to this unworthy husband of his wife — iii. 4 

the count he is my husband — iii. 7 

my husband hies him home — iv. 4 

and helper to a husband; but, O strange — iv. 4 

you are no husband for her — v. 3 

1 will lose a husband, send for your ring — v. 3 

choose tliou thy husband, and I'll pay — v. 3 
call the drunkard husband.. 7'a»)mg'o/S/i. 1 (indue.) 

and will uot call me— husband? — 2 (indue.) 

my husband and my lord (rep.) — 2 (indue. ) 

before I have a husband for the elder — i. 1 

a husband for her sister tr^p.) — i. 1 

to a husband, we set his youngest {rep.) — i. 1 

Katharine the curst have got a husband — i. 2 

she must liave a husband — ii. 1 

I am a husband for your turn .;..... — .ii- ' 

I pray you, husband, be not so disquiet — iv. 1 

while I play the good husband at home — v. 1 

husband, let's follow, to see the end — v. 1 

your liusband, being troubled (rep.).. — v. 2 

them soundly forth unto their husbands — v. 2 

tliey do osve their lords and husbands — v. 2 

thy husband is thy lord, thy life .... — v. 2 

a woman owetb to her husband — v. 2 

your hands below your husband's foot — v. 2 
for ever earned a royal husband .. IVinter^sTale, i. 2 

to her allowing husband! gone already — i. 2 

who late hath beat her husband — ii. a 

her children not her husband's! .... — ii. 3 

han^ all the husbands, that cannot. . — ii. 3 

the king, thy royal husband — iii. 2 (indict.) 

for the loss of her husband? — v. 2 

shouldst a husband take by my consent — v. 3 

to find thee an honourable husband.. — v. 3 

neither my husband Comedy of Errors, ii. 1 

how if your husband start some — ii. 1 

now is your husband nigh — ii. 1 

how conies it now, my husband — ii- 2 

hurl the name of husband in my face — ii- 2 

an elm, my husband, I a vine — ii.2 

husband, I'll dine above with you .. — ii- 2 

quite forgot a husband's office? — iii. 2 

thou hast no husband yet — iii. 2 

she that doth call me husband — iii. 2 

Dowsabel did claim me for her husband — iv. 1 

is not your husband mad? — iv- 4 

husband, God doth know — iv. 4 

1 did not, gentle husband, lock thee — iv. 4 
for a chain, your husband had of him — iv- 4 
when as your husband, ail in rage .. — iv. 4 
fetcli my poor distracted husband hence — v. 1 

have scared thy husband from — v- 1 

let your servants bring my husband- . — v. 1 

I will attend my husband, be his nurse — v. 1 

I will not hence, and leave my husband — v. I 

to separate the husband and the wife — v. 1 

and take perforce my husband — v. 1 

An tipholus, my husband — v. I 

long siuce, thy husband served me . . — v. 1 

ah me, it is my liusband! _ — v. 1 

I see two husbands, or mine eyes deceive — v. \ 

and gain a husband by his liberty . . — v. 1 

are not you my husband? No — v. 1 

tlie duke, mv husband, and my children — v. 1 

her husband's to Aleppo gone Macbeth, i- 3 

my husband? I have done the deed., — ii.2 

for your husband, he is noble, wise . . — iv. 2 

nay, how will you do for a husband? — iv. 2 

where is your husband? I hope — iv. 2 

lies on the hazards of all husbands . . King John, i. 1 

hath she no husband that will take.. — i. 1 

make room for him in my husband's bed — i. 1 

as thine was to thy husband — ii. 1 

many a widow's husband groveling lies — ii. 2 

be busbaud to me, heavens! — iii. 1 

O husband, hear me! ah, alack (rep.) — iii. 1 

husband, I cannot pray that thou . . — iii. 1 

my husband's wrongs on Hereford's-/?icAard //. i. 2 

your husband he is gone to save far off — ii. 2 

sweet husband, be not of that mind .. — v. 2 

ah, my sour husband, my hard-hearted — v. 3 
60 has my husband, man by man . . I Henry IV. iii. 3 

how does thy husband? I love him well — iii. 3 

love thy husband, look to thy servants — iii. 3 
recordation to my noble husband ..'IHenrylV. ii. 3 

mock out of their dear husbands Hiiiryl'.i. 2 

good husband, come home jiresently — ii- 1 

fir'ythec, jioney-sweet husband .... — ii. 3 

lusbands, fathers, and betrothed lovers — ii- 1 

wife about her husband's neck — v- 2 

our sons and husbands captivate ..1 Henry VI. ii. 3 

to tumble down thy husband 2Heniyyi. i. '^ 

the husband of this lovely lady — i. 4 

although thy husband may be Menelaus — ii. 2 

this lady's husband, sir John Grey.. — iii. 2 

then get your husband's lands — iii. 2 

why then, thy husband's lands I freely — iii. 2 

ehalt uot have thy husband's lands.. — iii. 2 



HUSBANDED with modesty ..TamingofSh. 1 (ind.) 

manured, husbanded, and tilled. . . .iHenrylV. iv. 3 

so fathered, and so husbanded? ..Julius Caisar, ii. 1 

HUSBAJSTDLESS, subject to fears ..King John, iii. 1 

HIISBANDMAN-yourbusbandman..2Hen)-v/r.v. 3 

HUSBANDKY— tilth and husbandry Mea.forMea.i.b 

the husbandry and manage of. . Mer. of Venice, iii. i 

of all thy pains and husbandry . .As you Like it, i\. 3 

there's husbandry in heaven Macbeth, ii. 1 

for one to do her husbandry 'IHenrylV. iii. 2 

and all her husbandry doth lie Henry V. v. 2 

the herbs for want of husbandry iHenry VI. iii. I 

there were husbandry in war. , . . Troilus ^ Cress, i. 2 
if you suspect my husbandry. . Timon of Athens, ii. 2 
good husbandry for the Volscian . . Coriolanus, iv. 7 

tis not our husbandry Pericles, iii. 2 

dulls the edge of husbandry Hamlet, i. 3 

HUSH— advocate for an impostor? hUBh\ Tempest, i. 2 

hush and be mute — iv. 1 

done you wrong; but hush ! All's Well, ii. 3 

can say nothing of me; hush! hush! — iv. 3 
hush, master! here is some good.. Taming of Sh. i. 1 

set me up in hope? but, hush Macbeth, iii. 1 

my tongue shall hush again King John, v. 1 

hush! you shall be more \ie\o^ir\g, Antony fyCleo, i. 2 

hush I nere comes Antony — i. 2 

hush, here come the lords of 'Tyre Pericles, i. 3 

hush, gentle neighbours — iii, 2 

the orb below as hush as death Hamlet, ii. 2 

HUSHED— all's hushed, as midnight. . Tempest, iv. 1 
hushed on purpose to grace harmony !il/i(cA^t/o, ii. 3 

Eatieiice boast, as to be hushed Ilictuird II. i. 1 
usiied with buzzing night-flies. ...2Henri///'. iii. 1 

I am hushed until our city be Coriolanus, v. 3 

is hushed within the hollow mine Oihello, iv. 2 

HUSHES- my duty hushes me ... . Twelfth Night, v. 1 

HUSK— husks wherein the acorn cradled. Ttrnpest, i. 2 

your hogs, and eat husks with tliem?/l.< you Like il,i.\ 

from eating draff and husks 1 Henry IV. iv. 2 

but the shales a nd husks of men Henry V. iv. 2 

strewed with husks and formless. Troilus ^ Cress.iv. 5 

HYBLA— as the honey of Hybla I Henry IV. i. 2 

they rob the Hybla bees Julius Ca-sar, v. 1 

HYDRA- grow like Hydra's heads . . 1 Henry 1 V. v. 4 
whereon this Hydra son of war ....'iHenrylV. iv. 2 

given Hydra here to choose Coriolanus, iii. 1 

had I as many mouths as Hydra Othello, i i. 3 

HYDRA-HEADED wilfulness HetiryV. i. 1 

HYEM- on oldllyem's chin, and icy. Mid.N. Dr. ii. 2 
HYEN— I will laugh like a liyen . . As youLike il, iv. 1 
HYMEN— Hymeirs lamps shall light.. 7'em;)es/, iv. 1 

till Hymen s torch be lighted — iv. 1 

Hymen, now with luckier issue Much Ado, v. 3 

Hymen from heaven brought. .45 i/(/u Like, v. 4 (ver.) 
to join in Hymen's bands, of truth .. — v. 4 
'tis Hj'men peoples every town.. — v. 4 (song) 
to Hymen, god of every town! .. — v. 4 (song) 
defiler of Hymen's purest htd.. Timon of Athens, iv. 3 
Hymen hath brought the hxide.. Pericles, iii. ((Sow.) 

and Hvmen did om- hands unite Hamlet, iii. 2 

I-IYanONEUS— for Hymeneus stand. Titus Andron. i. 2 

HYMN— sing your solemn hymn Much Ado, v. 3 

chanting faint hymns Mid. N.'sDream, i. 1 

no night is now with hymn or carol — ii.2 
wake Diana with a hymn . . Merchant of Venice, v. I 

who chants a doleful hymn King John, v. 7 

solemn hymns to sullen dirges.. Romeo ^Juliet, iv. 5 
HYPERBOLES, spruce affectation. . Love's L. L. v. 2 

would seem hyperboles Troilus 4 Cressida, i. 3 

HYPERBOLICAIy fiend ! Twelfth Night, iv. 2 

in acclamations hyperbolical Coriolanus, i. 9 

HYPERION- help Hyperion to his . . Henry V. iv. 1 
with entertaining great Hyperion. Trail. 4' C ess. ii. 3 

Hyperion's quickening fire Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

even from Hyperion's rising. . Titus Andronicus, v. 2 

that was, to tliis, Hyperion to a satyr . . Hamlet, i. 2 

seated on this brow; Hyperion's ciuds.. — iii. 4 

HYPOCRISY— to whip hypoeiisy . . Love's L. L. iv. 3 

a huge translation of hypocrisy — v. 2 

prayers are full of false hypocrisy . . Richard II. v. 3 

all this spice of 3'our hypocrisy HenryVllI. ii. 3 

it is hypocrisy against the devil Othello, iv. 1 

HYPOCRITE, a virgin-violater.Afeas. for Meas. v. 1 

I dare swear he is no hypocrite Much Ado, i. 1 

an' you be a cursing hypocrite — v. I 

a most princely hypocrite iHenrylV. ii. 2 

would think me ahypocrite indeed. . — ii. 2 

out, scarlet hypocrite! 1 Henry VI. i. 3 

what is done like a hypocrite Pericles, i. 1 

tongue and soul in this be hypocrites. . Hamlet, iii. 2 

calls virtue, hypocrite — iii. 4 

HYRC AN— or the Hyrcan tiger Macbeth, iii. 4 

HYRCANIA— tigers of Hyrcania ....SHenryVI. i. 4 
HYRCANIAN-Hyrcanian ieserts.Mer.of Venice, ii. 7 
Pyrrhus, like the Hyrcanian beast ....Hamlet, ii. 2 
HYSSOP— set hyssop, and weed up tliyme.Othello, i. S 
HYSTERICA- hystcricaiiassio! down ..Lear, ii. 4 

1 

I.\CHIMO— lachimo will not from it..Cymbeline, i. 5 

see! lachimo! The swiftest harts — ii. 4 

this yellow lachimo, in an hour — ii. 5 

lachimo, thou didst accuse him .... — iii. 4 

the conduct of bold lachimo — iv. 2 

suffer lachimo slight thing of Italy. . — v. 4 

that I was he, speak, lachimo — v. 5 

lAGO— much unkindly, that thou, lago- . Othello, i. 1 

were I the Moor, I would not be lago' — i. 1 

know, lago, but that I love the gentle . . — i. 2 

honest Tago, mj- Desilemona must I leave — i. 3 

lago. What say'st thou, noble heart? — i. 3 

'tis one lago, ancient to the general .... — ii. 1 

left in the conduct of the bold lago — ii. I 

let it not gall your patience, good lago . . — ii. 1 

food lago, go to the bay, and disembark — ii. 1 

ago hath direction what to do — ii. 3 

lago is most honest — ii. 3 

welcome, lago: we must to the watch .. — ii 3 

not to-night, good lago; I have very poor — ii. 3 



t 



lAGO— honest Ingo, that look 'st dead.... 0(Af«o, il. 3 

your offlccr, lago. cHii inform you — ii. 3 

Ingo, who began it? — li. 3 

I know, iBgo, thy lioncsty nnd love doth — li. 3 

logo, look with eaie about the town — li. 3 

my reputation, Ingo, my leputJition .... — Ij.3 

food-night, honest Iftgo — ii. 3 
hnvc mnile bold, Ingo, to Bcnd in — 111. 1 

these letters give, Ingo, to the pilot — iii. 2 

wlint dost thou sny, Ingo? — iii. 3 

dost conspire against tliv friend, Ingo — iii. 3 

no, Ingo; nisee, bef.ie I ihuibt — iii. 3 

lenve nie, Ingo. -My lord, I take my leave — iii. 3 

the work ttt'en out, and give it Ingo — iii. 3 

look here, Ingo; nil mv (ond love thus do — iii. 3 

O bloml, Ingo, blood! I'ntienre, I ^ay — iii. 3 

never Ingo: like to the Pontiek sen — ill- ** 

thnt hero Ingo doth give up — iii. 3 

think so, Ingo? Whnt, to kiss in nrivnte? — 
naked abed, Ingo, nnd not mean liaim?. . — 

dost thou hear, lugo? — 

Ingo Iwekons mc:'now he begins the story — 

how shall I murder him, Ingo? — 

laughed nt his vice? O lagol — 

Ingol O lago, the pity of It. Ia:;o! — 

get me some poison, Inpo, this night .... — 

my mind again: this night, Ingo — 

alas, lago, iny lord hath so bewhored her — iv. 2 

am I that name, Tago? What name — iv. 2 

O, good lago, what shall I do to win — — iv. 2 
thou dofTst me with some device, lago . . — iv. 2 

Ingo keeps his word — v. I 

O brave lago, honest, and just — v. 1 

lago? O, I am spoiled, im(lone by villains! — v. 1 

Odamned Ingol O inliumando"! — v. 1 

honest lago hath ta'en order lor t — v. 2 

friend, thy husband, honest, honest lago — v. 2 

O, are you come, lago? — v. 2 

percliance. lago, 1 will ne'er go home.... — v. 2 

tis iMtiful : but yet lago knows — v. 2 

beliKC, Ingo in the interim came in — v, 2 

how he uphrnids lago, tlint he made — v. 2 

lago hurt him, Ingo set him on — v. 2 

IB.VT— hue ibat (rep.) Taming of Sltreii<, \u. 1 

ICARUS— thou Icarus; thy life '.ilenryVI. iv. 6 

there died my Icarus, my blossom .. — iv. 7 
mv poor boy, Icarus ZHenrt/l'I, v. G 

ICI'1— as a figure trench'd in ice. TwoGen. nfVer. iii. 2 
[Co(. A'n(.] from brakes [Coi. -breaks] of ice — ii. 1 
regions of thick-ribbed \ce*Measure/orMeasure^ iii. 1 

his urine is congealed ice — iii. 2 

that is hot ice, and wondrous ..Mid.N.^sDream, v. 1 

tile very ice of cbastitj; As you Like il, iii. 4 

these boys are boys ofice All's If <■((, ii. 3 

an' if you break the ice Taming of Shrew, i. 2 

apiece of ice: if thou doubt it — iv. 1 

to smooth the ice, or add another . . King John, iv. 2 
to turn the sun to ice, with fanning . . Hi-nrtj V. iv. 1 

tut, tut. thou art all ice Richurd III. iv. 2 

the cold brook candied with ice ..Timono/Alh. iv. 3 

the coal of fire upon the ice Coiiofanuti, i. 1 

smote the sledded Polack on the ice ... . Hamlel.i. 1 
be thou chaste as ice, as pure as — iii. 1 

ICE-BROOK— the ice-brook's temper .... Olhello, v. 2 

ICELAND— Iceland dog! thou (rep.).. Henri/ r. ii, 1 

lCICl>E-an icicle on a Dutchman's. TirelfthKighl, iii. 2 
icicles hang by the wall . . Love's L. LosI, v. 2 (song) 
scarce thaws tlie icicles .... Merchant of Venice, ii. i 
not hang like roping icicles upon .... Henry r. iii. .i 
chaste ns the icicle, that's curded . . Coriolanus, v. 3 

ICY— Hvem's chin, and icy crown. .Afid. N.'s Dr. ii. i 
the icy fanp, and churlish chiding.. yJsi/"" Like, ii. 1 
to thrust his icy fingers in my maw.. KingJohn, v. 7 

if he be leaden, icy, cold Riclmrd III. iii. I 

never'lenrned the icy precepts. Timon of Athens, iv. 3 
the Pontick sea, whose icy current Othello, iii. 3 

IDEA— the idea of her life shall Much Ado. iv. 1 

object-?, ideas, apprehensions.. .. L/ire's L. Lost, iv. 2 
the right idea of your father liichnrd III. iii. 7 

IDEM— 'tis semper idem, for absque. .2Htf«i;//r. v. .*) 

IDEN— Alexander Iden, an esquirc.2He;iri/f/. iv. 10 
Iden, farewell; and be proud of thy.. — iv. 10 
Alexander Iden, that's my name.... — v. 1 
Iden, kneel down; rise up a knight.. — v. 1 
may Iden live to merit such — v. I 

IDES— beware the ides of March {rep.').Jul.Ca>sar, i. 2 
is not to-morrow, boy, the ides of March? — ii. 1 

the ides of March are come — iii. 1 

remember March, tlie ides of March — iv. 3 

IDIOT— though well landed, is an idiot. .Weni/)f. iv. 4 
will make a contemplative idiot.. TwelphSighl, ii. 5 
the portrait ofa blinking idiot ..Mer.o/Venite, ii. 9 
caiion, coxcomb, idiot, patch 1 Comedy of Krrors, iii. 1 

told by an idiot, full ot sound .Macbeth, v. 5 

making that idiot, laughter, keep . . /f iti^ JoAn, iii. 3 
Mars his idiot: do. rudeness.... Trnilus^ Crest, ii. I 

play the idiots in her eyes! — iii. 3 

for idiots, in this ea.-,e of favour Cymbetine, i. 7 

an idiot holds his bauble Tiliu Androniciii, v. 1 

IDIOT- \VOK-iHIPPEI!S— 
an I idol of ;diot-worshipperf.7"roi/t« 4'C''et»i(fa, v. I 

IDLE-uU men idle, all (lep.) 7>/npe»/, ii. 1 

or else ftjr want of idle time .. Two Gen. of Ver. ii. ) 

my?elf have l>een an idle truant — ii. 4 

as idle as she may hang together.. Merry Wives, iii. 2 

is not for idle maVkets TvselfthNiuhl, iii. 3 

you are idle shallow things — iii. 4 

and held in idle price to Imunt.. Afe«./or Meas. i. 4 

change for an idle plume — ii. 4 

draw with idle spider's strings — ill. 2 

the father of their idle dream — iv. 1 

mockers waste more idle hreaih. Mid. N. Dream, i\i. 2 
as the remembrance of an idle gawd — iv. 1 

nnd this weak and idle theme — (epll.) 

will prove an idle scorn Love's L. Lost, i. 1 

critic Timon laugh at idle toysl .... — Iv. 3 

will henr your idle scorns — v. 2 

no longer with idle tnlking Asynu Likril, v. i 

proud, idle, nia<Ie of self-love All'sH'eU.i. 1 

an idle lord, I swear — il. & 



^585] 

IDLE- vet, in his idle tire, to buy ....Alt's Hell, iii. 7 
n foolish idle boy, but, lor all that .. — iv. 3 
lienven cense this idle humour. Taming ofSli. 2 (ind.) 

but very idle words — 2 (ind) 

green and icUc for girls of ninel.. M'inter'sTale, iii. 2 

lirior, or idle moss Comedy of lirrors, ii. 2 

a thousand idle iiranks — ii. 2 

strain their cheeks to idle merriment. /tiiii^yo/in, iii. 3 

full of idle dreams — iv. 2 

thou idle dreamer, wherefore — iv. 2 

doth, by the idle comments — v. 7 

which waste of idle hours hath llichard II. iii. 4 

sland'st tlioii idle here? \ Henry 1 1', v. 3 

repent at idle limes 'iUenrylV. ii. 2 (letter) 

yea, every idle, nice, and wanton .... — iv. 1 

took stand for idle speculation Henry V. iv. 2 

every idle rnseal follower 'iHenryl'I. ii. 4 

the idle pleasures of these days . . . . liicliard III. i. 1 
you snil, that idle weeds are fast.... — iii. 1 

nnd therefore is he idle? — iii. 1 

to engross his idle body — iii. 7 

ns well as you love an idle head.. Troilus i§- Cress, i. 2 

thon idle immaterial skein of — v. 1 

ladies, there is an idle banquet.. 7'i'mono/i4//ien*j i. 2 

no, gods, I am no idle votarist — iv. 3 

midst o' the body, idle and inactive. .Corio(ajii/j, i. 1 
have you play the idle housewife.... — i. 3 

home, you id le creatures Julius Ca'sar, i . 1 

every man hence to his idle bed .... — ii. 1 
ther pass by me as the idle wind .... — iv. 3 

if idle talk will once be Antony ^Clenpntra, v. 2 

and idle [Co/. Kn(. -servile] thoughts! TitnsAnd. ii. I 

my hand hath been but idle — iii. I 

to find an idle and fond bondage ..Lenr, i. 2 (letter) 
idle old man, that still would manage .. — 1.3 

and all the idle weeds that grow — iv. 4 

on the unnumbered idle pebbles — iv. 6 

the children of an idle brain . ...Romeo 4 Juliet, i. 4 
that idle in the wanton summer air — ii. 6 
looked upon this love with idle sight . . Hamlet, ii. 2 

I must be idle; get you a place — iii. 2 

you answer with an idle tongue — iii. 4 

[K/i(,] you question with an idle tongue — iii. 4 

mine's not an idle cause Othello, i. 2 

of antres vast, and desarts idle^ — i. 3 

is an idle and most false imposition — ii. 3 

IDLE-HEADED eld received .... Merry H'ives, iv. 4 
IDLENESS— shapeless idleness. .7'i™G«'>i.o/-;'er. i. 1 

for want of other idleness Twelfth Night, i. 5 

brother of yours, witli idleness . ...As you Like it, i. 1 
found the effect of love in idleness. TamiJi^o/SA. i. 1 
nor conversant with ease and idlenesa. King John, iv.3 
unyoked humour of your idleness ..\HenryIV. i. 2 

every region, apes of idleness! iHcnrylV. iv. 4 

rank, conceives bi^ idleness Henry V. v. 2 

my idleness doth hatch .... Antony S^ Cleopatra, i. 2 

holds idleness your subject (rep.) — i. 3 

bear such idleness so near the heart — i. 3 

Pompey thrives in our idleness — i. 4 

either to have it steril with idleness .. ..Othello, i. 3 

IDLY-idly I stood idly looking on.'TamingofSh. i. 1 

poor souls, how idly do they talk 1 Comerfi/ of Err. iv. 4 

tongue I idly heard KingJohn. iv. 2 

the air with colours idly spread — v. 1 

I talk but idly, and you moek ....Richard II. iii. 3 
arc idly bent on him that enters .... — v. 2 
so hard, you should talk so idly? ..2Henry IV. ii. 2 

so idly to profane the precious — ii. 4 

kin^ Pharamond, idly supposed Henry V. i. 2 

she is so idly kinged, her sceptre .... — ii. 4 

slay myself for living idly here IHenry ri. i. 1 

why live we idly here? — i. 2 

should be but idly posted over iHenryVI. iii. 1 

when we sit idly in the sun . Troilus fyCressida, iii. 3 
a thing slipped idly from me . . Timon of Athens, i. 1 
than idly sit to hear my nothings ..Coriolanus, ii. 2 
IDOL-idol that you worship so?. VmioGch. of Ver. ii. 1 
I am very loth to be your idol, sir. ... — iv. 2 
but, O how vile an idol proves . . Twelfth Night, iii. 4 
what art thou, thou idol ceremony ? . . Henrii V. iv. I 
we hold an idol more than he?.. Troilus fi Cress, ii. 3 

and idol of idiot-worshippers — v. I 

the celestial, and mv soul's idol . . Hamlet, ii. 2 (let.) 
IDOLATROUS fancv must sanctify ..Alt's Ifell, i. 1 
IDOLATRY-in hisidolntry .. Tiro Gen. offer, iv. 4 
dotes in idolatr.v, upon this spotted . . Mid. N. Dr. i. 1 
pure idolatrv. God amend us . . Lore's I . Lost, iv. 3 
tis mad idolatry, to make . . Troilus «§- Cressida, ii. 2 
which is the god of my idolatry . liomco Sir Juliet, ii. 2 

TELD— well, God 'ield you! Hamlet, iv. b 

I'FECKS-mvgood lord. I'fecks? .. Winter' sTale, i. 2 

HiNIS-FATUUS, oraball \Henryiy. iii. 3 

IGNOBLE— to most ignoble stooping ..Tempest, i. 2 

and will ignoble make you Wijtter'sTnic, ii. 3 

perish, base prince, ignoble duke ..IHenryVI. iii. I 

iniserl base Ignoble wretch! — v. 4 

a base ignoble mind that mounts no.2He>ir!/r7.ii. 1 
hlunt-witted lord, ignoble in demeanour! — i*ii. 2 
that I was not ignoble of descent ..ZHenyyf'I. iv. 1 
is the head of that ignoble tvnitOT .liictiard III. iii. 5 

graft with ignoble plants — iii. 7 

IGNOBLY— thus ignobly used iHenryfl. ii. 6 

but that 'tis shown ignobly 2Hi-nry yi. v. 2 

unwisely, not ignobly, have J.. Timonof Athens, ii. 2 

'tis most ignobly done to pluck me Leor, iii. 7 

IGNO.MINIOUS-ignominious terms.l Henry I' I. iv. I 

with ignominious words 2Henryri. iii. 1 

base and ignominious treasons — iv. 8 

IGNO.MTNY-[Kn<.] this ignominy. 7-|(uj/(n'(ron. i v. 2 
IGNO.MY— ignomy in ransom.... A/e<i». /or jl/rai-. ii. 4 

thy ignomy sleep with thee in \ Henry IV. v. 4 

ignomy and shame pursue thy life. Troil.i Cress, v.l 1 
upon this ignomy [Kn(. -ignominy]. .7'i7ii</(?i</. iv. 2 
IGNORANCE— the ignorance isl ..MerryWives, i. 1 
ignorance itself is o plummet o'er me — v. .^ 
is no darkness but ignorance. . . . Tir^lfth Night, iv. 2 
as dark ns ignorance, though ignorance — iv. 2 

his ignorance were wise (rep.) Love'sL. Lost, ii. 1 

O thon monster iunoranec — iv. 2 

sharii wit quite through my ignorance — v. 2 



IGNOltANCE-ignornnce makes i\\i:e..All's»ell, i. 1 
careless lape of yoiitli und ignorance — ii. 3 
his days with barbarous ignorance.. A'l'n^yo/m, iv. 'i 
barren ignorance is made my gaoler. «/r7io«i 11. 1.3 

O I am ignorance itself in this i Henry I v. iii. 1 

O gross nnd miserable ignornnecl ..'iHenryVI. iv. t 
seeing ignorance is the curse of God — iv. 7 

come to reprehend my ignorance. . Ilirhard III. iii. 7 

points of ignorance pertaining Henry VIII. i. 3 

londerthan ignorance; less valiant. Vroii. ^ Cress, i.l 
short-armed Ignorance itself knows — ii. 3 

folly and ignorance, be thine in great — ii. 3 
in ushee|>, than such a valiant ignorance — Iii. 3 

interprets for mv ignorance Timon of Athens, v. 5 

power, then vail your ignorance ..Conolanus, iii. 1 
by the yea and no of general ignorance — iii. 1 

your ignorance, (which finds not — iii. S 

only mocked for valiant ignorance .. — Iv. 6 

in a violent popular ignorance — v. 2 

is lost with very ignorance . ...Antony ^Cteo. iii. 9 

it is a cell of ignorance Cymbiliue, iii. 3 

it was (jieat ignorance, Gloster's eyes l.ear,iv, 5 

set on fire by thine own ignorance, ttomeo ^Jui. iii. 3 

let me not burst in ignorance! Hamlet, i. i 

make your wantonness your ignorance.. — iii. 1 
in mine ij;iionince your skill .'<liall like.. — v. 2 

heavy ignorance! thou piaitest Othello, ii. 1 

that errs in ignorance, and not in cunning — iii. 3 
as gross ns ignorance made drunk — iii. 3 

IGNORANT— art ignorant of what .... Tempest, i. 2 
thon liest, most ignorant monster .... — iii. 2 

the ignorant fumes that mantle — v.l 

ignorant how his companion .. 7'iro Gen. of Ver. i. 3 
for being ignorant to whom it goes . . — ii. I 

thou art not ignorant how she — iii. 2 

thou art not ignorant, what dear — iv. 3 

being so excellently ignorant .. Tvetflh Niiihl, iii. 4 
most ignorant of what he's mnfX.Meas.forMeat. ii. '2 
either you are ignorant, or seem so . . — ii. 4 
let me be ignorant, nnd in nothing good — ii. 4 
a very superficial, ignorant, \inHeighing — iii. i 
but I will keep her ignorunt of her good — iv.3 
you are not ignorant, all-telling.iore'j L. Lost, ii. 1 
your ladyship is ignorant what it is — ii. I 
to humour the ignorant, I have called — iv. 2 

all ignorant that soul, that sees — iv. 2 

is the wide world ignorant nt' her. Mer. of Venice, i. 1 
not ignorant of the impossibility All's Well, iv. 1 

1 know, she is not ignorant .. Turning of Shreie, ii. 1 

not in ignorant concealment H'inier'sTale, i. 2 

cither thou art most ignorant by age — ii. 1 
whose ignorant credulity will not come — ii. 1 
I am as ignorant in that, as you .... — ii. 3 

no more than I, are ignorant — iii. 2 

for fashion, ignorant what to. . Comedy of Errors, i. 1 
being ignorant of what greatness. MacMA, i. 6 (let.) 

transported me bes'ond the ignorant — i. S 

shows the ignorant a kind of fear ..\ Henry IV. iv. 1 
wise bearing, or ignorant carriage ..illcnrylV. v. 1 
I am ignoraiit, and cannot guess ..1 Henry VI. ii. 5 
ignorant of his birth and parentage.i'Hci/ri/ J7. iv. 2 
ICol. Knt.1 by ignorant tongues ., ..Henry VIII. i. 2 
either, were you ignorant to see't?..Co)ii>Vaiii<s,ii. 3 

nil revoke j'our ignorant election — ii. 3 

the eyes of the ignorant more learned — iii. 2 
we, ignorant of ourselves, beg often. /Jn?. A Cleo. ii. 1 
myself, the ignorant motive, do so far '— ii. 2 

?oor ignorant baubles! C;/m!ie/ine, iii. I 
am ignorant in what I am commanded — iii. 2 
dost seem so ignorant, we'll enforce .. — iv.3 
as I am ignorant of what hath moved you. tear, i. 4 
for I am mainly ignorant what place.... — iv. 7 

confound the ignorant; nnd amaze Hamlet, ii. 2 

I know, you are not ignorant— I would.. — v. 2 
ynxi are not ignorant of whnt excellence — v. 2 
what ignorant sin have I committed?. . Othello, iv. S 

gull ! Odolt! as ignorant as dirt! .... — v.l 
ILBOW— de nails, de nrme, dc ilbow . . Henry V. iii. 4 
'ILD— God 'ild you for your last. . As you l.ikeit, iii. ;i 

God 'ild vou. sir; I desire you of — v. 4 

ILTAS-arid Tvmbria, Tlias . . Troilus A- rres<. frrol > 

ILTON-the heir of Ilion Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

nor goodly Ilion stand Troilus fi- Cressida, ii. 2 

as sale, as Priam is in Ilion — iv. 4 

did in great Ilion thus — iv. 5 

1 saw yourself and Diomed in Ilion — iv. 4 
so. Ilion, fall thou next! — v. 9 

n.IlT.M— between our Ilium, and where — i.l 

when were yon nt Ilium? — i. 2 

ere ye came to Ilium? — i. 2 

see them, as they pass toward Ilium? — i. 2 
then senseless Ilium, seeming to feel . . Hamlet, ii. 3 

ILL— being cnpable of all ill ! Tempest, k 2 

there's nothing ill can dwell — f. 2 

if the ill spirit have so fnir a house — i. 2 

'tis an ill office for a gentleman. TiroGeti. of V. iii. 2 

ill, when you talk of war — v. 2 

thou friend of an ill fashion! -.- v, 4 

it was ill killed Merry fVives, i. I 

you look very ill — ii. 1 

in this mystery of ill opinions — ii. I 

leads an ill life with him — ii. 3 

to take an ill advantage of — iii. 3 

you do il! to teach the child — iv. I 

"sir John, we have had ill luck — v. 5 

when 'tis upon ill employment — v, 5 

great exceptions to your ill iiours. TuelftL .\ighl,i.3 

of very ill manner; he'll speak — i. i 

la you, nn' you sneak ill of the devil — iii. 4 

you give "me ill counsel — v.l 

1 think, is a very ill house too.. Meas. for Meas. ii. I 

for I have manv ill qnalitiev? Much Ado, ii. 1 

nay, if thov lend to any ill. I will.... — ii. 1 

bill henr these ill news with the — ii. 1 

and an ill singer, my lord — ii. 3 

how much an ill word may impoison — Iii. 1 
and his ill conditions; and in despite — iii. 2 
suit ill spent, and labour ill bestowcdl — iii, 2 

by mv troth, I am exceeding ill — Iii. I 

very ill. And how tlo you? Very ill too — v. 2 

CC 



IV. 2 
iv. 3 
V. 3 
V. 3 



ILL 

ILL— ill met by moonlight Mid. N.'sDream, ii. 2 

and the ill counsel of a desert plaee. . — ii. 2 
nonglit shall go ill; the man shall .. — iii. 2 

I am ill at reckoning, itfitteth Lane's L.Lost,\. 2 

nothing becomes him ill — ii. 1 

knowing ill: for he liath wit Oep-) ■• — ii. 1 
to teach a teacher ill beseemetli me . . — ii. 1 

sliooting well is then accounted ill . . iv. 1 

tliat my lieart means no ill — iv. 1 

for as it would ill become me to be vain — iv. 2 
ill, to example ill, would from my .. — iv. 3 
there is some ill a-brewiug. . .Merchant of Venice, ii. 5 

nor no ill luck stirring _ iii. 1 

yes, other men have ill luck too — iii. 1 

■what, what, what? ill luck? ill luck? — iii. 1 

OJtnowledge ill inhabited! Asyou Lil<eit, iii. 3 

for no ill will I bear you iii. 5 

marry, ill, to like him that ne'er AWs Well, i. 1 

it looks ill, it eatsdryly i. 1 

when I did love you ill? 

mingled yarn, good and ill together — 

you nave them ill to friend 

would derive me ill will to speak of. , 

there's some ill planet reigns .... Wintei-'sTale, ii. 1 

fear we have landed in ill time iii. 3 

■ if to either thou dost ill — iv. 3 (song) 

your holy looks my ill suspicion .... — v. 3 
serve him so, he takes it ill . . Comedy of Errors, ii. 1 

how ill agrees it with your ii. 2 

ill deeds are doubled with — iii. 2 

ill faced, worse-bodied, shapeless .... — iv. 2 
unquiet meals make ill digestions .. — v. 1 

. and ill it doth beseem your — v. 1 

this ill day a most outrageous — v. 1 

cannot be ill; cannot be good, if ill ....Macbeth, i. 3 

make strong themselves by ill iii. 2 

all things begun come to ill end .... KingJolm, iii. 1 

where doing tends to ill — iii. 1 

when we have run so ill? iii. 4 

that you must use me ill, why . 

giddy with these ill tidings 

my head with more ill news 

ill deeds, makes deeds ill \_Knt.-i\\ deeds] — 
even this ill night, your breathing . . — 
show me the very wound of this ill news — 

as of a thought of ill in him Richard II. i. 1 

or complot any ill 'gainst us i. 3 

I see thee ill; I in myself to see {rep.) — ii. i 

is weak, and all ill left 

thou tell'st a tale so ill 

shall ill become the flower 

would not this ill do well? 

earnest thou by these ill tidings iii. 

ill may 'st thou thrive, if thou — v, 

[Kn(.] had ill luck, and that young. . iHenrylV. i. 

that rebellion had met ill luck? — i. 

up and down, like his ill [Kii/.-evil] angel — i. 

your ill angel is light ; 

they were ill for a green wound? .... — 

how ill it follows, after you — 

saith he, you are in an ill name — 

good word before it was ill sorted — 

your majesty hath been this fortnight ill — 
wherefore do you so ill translate yourself — 
on the sudden, something ill. Against ill — 

come near me, now I am much ill. . . . 

exceeding ill. Heard he the good — iv. 4 

like a wet cloak ill laid up v. 1 

if the deed were ill, be you contented — v. 2 
not the ill wind which blows no man — v. 3 
how ill white hairs become a fool.... — v. 5 

like an ill venture, it come (epii.) 

and tremliled at the ill neighbourhood. Hctov V. i. 2 



[ 386 ] 



IMA 



, IV. 3 



. iii. 1 



ii. 1 



— iv. 1 



— Iv. 2 



— V. 1 



— ii. 3 

— iii. 2 

— iii. 3 



11. 1 



111. 1 



iv. 4 



faith, he's very ill. Away 

by Chrish, la, tish ill done — iii. 2 

ill will never said well iii. 7 

right ill disposed, in brawl — iv. (chorus) 

love him not so ill Iv. 1 

every man that dies ill, the ill upon. . — iv. 1 

old age, that ill layer up of v. 2 

that never may ill office v. 2 

or make my ill the advantage 1 Henry F/. ii. 5 

cowardly knight! ill fortune — iii. 2 

fashioned thee that instrument of ill iii. 3 

how ill we brook his treason iv. 1 

doth presage some ill event iv. I 

when I imagine ill against my 2Henry VI. i. 2 

if York have ill demeaned himself . . — i. 3 

never meant him any ill ii. 3 

sweet Nell, ill can thy noble mind .. — ii. 4 

ill blows the wind, that profits SHenry VI. ii. .5 

with us; it ill befits thy state — iii. 3 

ill rest betide the chamber Richard III. i. 2 

in that you brook it ill i. 3 

alas! for whose sake did I that ill deed? — i. 4 

ill news bv'r lady ii. 3 

[Cu/. Knij when such ill dealing must — iii. 6 
show a worse sin than ill doctrine.. HeHt-yF///. i. 3 

in choler, ill and hasty ii. 1 

believe me, there's an ill opinion .... ii. 2 

I deem you an iii husband — iii. 2 

and grew so ill, he could not sit his mule — iv. 2 
ill, and gave the clergy ill example . . — iv. 2 

fgr 'tis iU hap, if they hold — (epil.) 

corrects the ill aspects of Trollus i Cressida, i. 3 

whose life were ill bestowed ii. 2 

those wounds heal ill — iii. 3 

policy grows into an ill opinion — v. 4 

and how ill requitedl v. 11 

make thee, and thv state, look ill.. Tim. of Athens, i. 2 

to hazard life for ill? _ iii. 5 

ha! banishment? it comes not ill — iii. 5 

you'll take it ill. Most thankfully . . — v. 1 
fear lesser his person than an HI report. Coriolanus. i. 6 

let me.deserve so ill as you — iii. 1 

for the ill which doth control — iii. I 

and is ill schooled in bolted language — iii. I 
his own change, or by ill officers . . Julius Ccesar, iv. 2 
this was an ill beginning of the night — iv. 3 
"■"*" iv. 3 



ILL— ill spirit, I would hold more.. 

what ill request did Brutus . . „ 

our ills, told us, is as our easing. . Anloiiy ^Cleo. i. 2 

more than the ills I know i. 2 

lam quickly ill, and well _ i. 3 

I learn, you take things ill _ ii. 2 

lest my remembrance suffiir ill report — ii. 2 

but let ill tidings tell _ ii. 5 

thy plainness; it nothingill becomes thee — ii. 6 
must not take my former sharpness ill — iii. 3 
I have done ill; of which I do accuse — iv. 6 

I have done my work ill, friends — iv. 12 

for your ill opinion, and the assaM\t.,Cymbeliue, i 5 

since doubting things go ill — i. 7 

doth ill deserve by doing well — iii. 3 

I am ill; but your being by me — iv. 2 

well or ill, I am bound to you iv. 2 

nothing ill come near thee! — iv. 2 (song) 

to second ills with ills, each elder — v. 1 

too good, to be where ill men were . . — v. ."i 
Andronicus, ill art thou repaid .. Titus Andron 

wherein I did not some notorious ill 

this glorious casket stored with ill Pericl 

who dares say, Jove doth ill? _ 

m.y shipwreck's now no ill 

this day I'll rise, or else add ill to ill — 

nor did ill turn to any 

that I came with no ill intent 

no marvel then, though he were ill affected. Lear, 

could not have made him so ill 

the king must take it ill 

to blame in this; 'twill be ill taken 

if he ask for me, I am ill and gone 

or well, or ill, as this day's battle's fought 

what, in ill thoughts again? 

word ill urged toone that is so ill!. Romeo (^Juliet, i.l 

it were an ill thing to be offered " ' 

shall I speak ill of him that is 

yon shall leave none ill, sir 

marry, sir, 'tis an ill cook that 

you love your child so ill 

do lower upon you, for some ill 

can be ill, if she be well (.rep.) 

O pardon me, for bringing these ill news . . . 

much I fear some ill unluek.y thing — v. 3 
[Col.Knt.3 ill doth all the noble substance. Hamlet, i. 4 
that's an ill phrase, a vile phrase — ii. 2 

1 am ill at these numbers — ii. 2 (letter) 

than their ill report while you live — ii. 2 

makes us rather bear those ills we have — iii. 1 
well to those that do ill; now thou dost ill — v. I 

how ill all's here about my heart — v. 2 

I am very ill at ease 0/hello, iii. 3 

it were enough to put him to ill thinking — iii. 4 
the ills we do, their ills instruct us to — iv. 3 

ILL-BESEEMING arms 2HenryIV.iv. 1 

ill-beseeming any common man. ... I Henry VI. iv. I 
how iU-beseeming is it in thy sex. . . .iHenry VI. i. 4 
ill-beseeming semblance for a teasi.Romeo 4 Jul. i. 5 



— i.3 



— iv. I 



— IV. 6 



11. 2 
iii. 3 
iv. 7 

V. 2 



V. 1 



low ill this taperlaurns! 



11-beseeming beast, in seeming both! 

ILL-BODING-and ill-boding stars!.! Henry VI. iv. 5 

and his ill-boding tongue no more. .3Hen; v VI. ii. 6 

ILL-BREEDING— ill-breeding min&s.Hamtet, iv. 5 

ILL-COMPOSED affection Macbeth, i v. 3 

ILL-DISPERSED wind of misery!. iJicAord III. iv. 1 
ILL-DISPOSED, my lord .... Troilus fyCressida, ii. 3 
ILL-DIVINING-ill-divining sovl.Rnmeo^Jul.iti. 5 
ILL-DOING- doctrine of ill-doing, yr/nfer'sru/e, i. 2 

ILLEGITIMATE construction! Much Ado, iii. 4 

in every thill* illegitimate .. Troilus ^-Cressida, v. 8 
ILL-ERE(:;TED— ill-erected tower . . Richard II. v. 1 
ILL-FARE— poisoned; ill-fare; dead. Kin!;Jiihn, v. 7 

ILL-FAVOURED children AsyouUI<eit,iii, 5 

an ill-favoured thing, sir, but mine.. — v. 4 
that will be ill-favoured . . Tieo Gen. of Verona, ii. 7 
are very ill-favoured rough things .Merry IVives, i. 1 
a world of vile ill-favoured faults looks — iii. 4 
to a shrewd ill-favoured wife?. Taming of Shrew, i. 2 
'twas a black ill-favoured fly. Titus.indronicus, iii. 2 
ILL-FAVOUREDLY, master Brook..Mm!/»'. iii. .1 

she makes very ill-favouredly Asyou Like it, i. 2 

with reading them ill-favouredly .. — iii. 2 

of their bones, ill-favouredly become .Henry V. iv. 2 

ILL-GOT— things ill-got had ever ..SHenry VI. ii. 2 

ILL-HEADED— a lance ill-Yieaded .. Mzich Ado, iii. 1 

ILLITERATE-illiterate loiterer!. Tm-o Gen. ofV. iii.l 

ILLNESS— but without the illness Macbeth, i. a 

ILL-NURTURED Eleanor! iHenryVI. i. 2 

ILL-ROASTED— ill-roasted est^-AsyouLilie it, iii. 2 
ILL-ROOTED-ill-rooted already..4»(oni/ <§aeo.ii. 7 
ILL-SEEMING-muddy, ill-seeming. Tarn. ofSh. v. 2 
ILL-SHAPED— ill-shaiied fishes. «omeo ^Juliet, v. I 
ILL-SHEATHED-ill-sheathed \mfe.\ Henry IV. i. 1 
ILL-SPIRITED— ill-spirited Worcester! — v. 5 
ILL-STARRED— O ill-starred wench !.. 0(/ieHo, v. 2 
ILL-TA'EN— ill-ta'en suspicion! .. Winter\Tale,i. 2 
ILL-TEMPERED, vexeth him (rep.).rut.Caisar,iv. 3 
ILL-THOUGHT on of her (rep.) . Troilus^ Cress, i. 1 
ILL-TUNED— ill-tuned repetitions.. A77ig-./oA;i, ii. I 
ILLUME— to illume that p.nrt of heaven. Hamlet, i. I 
ILLUMINATE so vile a thing .. ..JulinsCmnr.i. 3 
ILLUMINED, cherished . . TwoGen. nfVeronn, iii. 1 

ILLUMINETH the face lilenry iv.iv.^ 

ILL-USED— by times ill-used Richard III. iv. 4 

ILLUSION— by some illusion ..Mid. N.Dream, iii. 2 
here we wander in illusions. Comedy of Errors, iv. 3 

by the strength of their illusion Macbeth, iii. 5 

by the devil's illusions this monk.. Henry V III. i. 2 
ILLUSTRATE-illustrateking.ioTC'sL.L. iv. 1 (let.) 

and this most gallant, illustrate — v. 1 

ILLUSTR ATED-therein illustrated. Hen. VIII. iii. 2 

ILLUSTRIOUS— illustrious wight. Lom'.? L.Lost, i. 1 

most illustrious, six or seven. . . Troilus fy Cress, iii. 3 

noble mind, illustrious virtue. Timon of.Ithens, iii. 2 

'gainst this higli illustrious prince Lear, v. 3 

ILLUSTROUS-C CoJ.] and illustrou3..C!/m6e;ine, i. 7 
ILL-UTTERING-ill-uttering throat. /l«;.<j-aeo.ii.5 
ILL-WEAVED-ill-weaved ambition. 1 Henry I v. v. 4 
ILL-WELL— never do him so i\l-\ven.MuchAdo, ii. 1 
ILL-WILL— ground cf your ill-will. n(c/ia)(Z III. i. 3 



ILLYRI A— Ulyria, lady (rep.) .... Twelfth Night, i. 2 

as tall a man as any's m Illyria — i.3 

in my throat, and drink in Illyria . , 
as any man in Illyria, whatsoever .. 

as strong as any man in Illyria 

a piece of Eve's flesh as any in Illyria 

found in any pai-t of Illy ria 

if there be any law in illyria 

in my wits, as any man in Illyria .. _ iv. 2 
ILLYRIAN— strong lllyrian iniate..-2HenryVI. iv. ! 
IMAGE— any thing the image tell me .. Tempest, i. 2 
a waxen image 'gainst a fire. TwoGen. of Verona, ii. 4 
image of the jest I'll show you . . Merry Wives, i v. 6 
constant image of the creature . . TwelfthNighl, ii. 4 
that when the image of it leaves him — ii. 5 

from any image of offence done iii. 4 

and to his image, which, methought iii. 4 

that do coin lieavcn's image Meus.forMeas. ii. 4 

image of it gives me content already ' iii.l 

none of Pygmalion's images — iii. 2 

the one is too like an image, andsays.il/«cA.4(/o,ii'. 1 

now doth thy image apiiear in _ v. 1 

more witnesseth than fancy's images.Mid.N, Dr. v. 1 

with any branch or image of thy AWs Well, ii. 1 

loathsome is thine imafje. . TmniiigufStirew, 1 (iiid.) 

fatlier's image is so liit in you Winter'sTale, v. 1 

the sight of my poor image would thus — v. 3 
did'st make, strange images of death ..Macbeth, i. 3 

whose horrid image doth unfix i.3 

and see the gre't doom's image! .... ii. 3 

image of a wicked heinous fault KingJohn, iv. 2 

in golilen coats, like images 1 Henry IV. iv. 1 

but the true and perfect image of life — v. 4 

the noble image of iny youth iHenrylV. iv. 4 

the image of his power lay then — v. 2 

the image of the king whom I v. 2 

to spurn at your most royal image . . — v. 2 

are brazen images of canonized illenryVI. i. 3 

image of pride, why should I hold my — i.3 

make my image but an alehouse iii. 2 

to survey his dead and earthy image iii. 2 

in a glass, and call thy image so — v. 1 

my heart thine image ne'er shall go.SHenryVI. ii. .5 

thy beauty's image, and thy virtue.. iii. 3 

to bear his image, and renew his v. 4 

the precious image of our dear Richard III. ii. 1 

by looking on his images ii. 2 

the image of his Maker Henry VI 1 1, iii. 2 

w i thout soine image of Troilus e^ Cressida, i i . 2 

disrobe the images, if .you do find .. Julius Ca-sar, i. 1 
let no images be hung with Cassar's i. 1 



for pulling scarfs off Cesar's images 

even like a stony Image TitusAndronicus, iii. 1 

this growing image of thy fiend-like — v. 1 

like the image and horror of it Lear, i. 2 

the images of revolt and flying off! ii. 4 

behold the great image of authority iv. 6 

or image of that horror? _ v. 3 

whose image even but now appeared ..Hamlet, i. 1 
scorn her own image, and the very age .. — iii. 2 
this play is the image of a murder done — iii. 2 

for by the image of my cause, I see — v. 2 

IMAGERY— with painted imagery . . Richard II. v. 2 
IMAGINARY-imaginary wiles. .Comerf;/o/' £■)■>■. iv. 3 
and foul imaginary eyes of blood ..King Jolm, iv. 2 
tilings true, weeps tilings imaginnrv./dWia;;//;. ii. 2 
in forms imaginary, the unguided."2Heii;)/ W. iv. 4 
on your imaginary forces work ..Henry V. i. (cho.l 

and make imaginary puissance — i. (clio.) 

imaginary relish is so sweet .Troilus ^Cressida, iii, 2 

IMAGINATION sees a crown Tempest, ii. I 

nor can imagination form a shape iii.l 

devil sugge.=;ts this imagination? . . Merry Wives, iii. 3 

and not follow the ima.ginations of your iv. 2 

look, how imagination blows him. 7'>e;///iA'ig-/i/,ii. 5 

to let imagination jade me ii. 5 

prove true, imagination, O prove true — . iii. 4 
imagination yet hath wronged ..Meas.forMeas. v. 1 

into his study of imagination Much Ado, i v. 1 

of imagination all compact Mid A'.'s Dream, v. 1 

as imagination bodies forth the forms — v. 1 
such tricks hath strong imagination — v. 1 

if imagination amend them (7ep.) v. I 

my imagination carries no favour in it.. 411' s Well, i. 1 
imagination of his neighbours .. Winter'sTale, iv. I 
beyond imagination is the wrong. Comedy of Err. v.l 

b.y bare imagination of a feast? Richard II. i.3 

imagination of some great exploit . .i Henry I V. i. 3 
great imagination, proper to madmen. 2 He/iri/Zr. i.3 

and, for unfelt imaginations Richard III. i, 4 

imagination moves in this lip! .. Timou of Athens, i. 1 
your imagination hold this stage. Pericles, iii. (Gow.) 

(to take your imagination) — iv. 4 (Gow.) 

apothecary, to sweeten my imagination.. ieni-, iv. 6 
and woes, by wrong imaginations, lose .. — iv. 6 
he waxes desperate with imagination . . Hamlet, i. 4 
imagination to give them shape, or time — iii. I 
my imaginations are as foul as Vulcan's — iii. 2 
how abhorred in my imagination it is! .. — v.l 
may not imagination trace the noble dust — v. 1 
IMAGINE — imagine howling . . Mens. forMeas. iii. 1 
or you imagine me too unhurtful an — iii. 2 
if I should be hanged, I cannot imagine — iv. 2 
imagine no worse for them .... Mid. N.'s Dream, v. 1 
he was to imagine me his love . . As youLike it, iii. 2 
imagine 'twere the right Vincentio.. Tam.ofSh. iv. 4 
imagine me, gentle spectators.. Winter's T. iv. (cho.) 

thy soul holds dear, imagine it Richard II. i. 3 

then imagine me takingyour part ..2Henii/tV. v. 2 
imagine him upon Blackheath . Henry V. v. (chorus) 

what I do imagine let that rest ! Heriry VI. ii. .■) 

imagine him a Frenchman and thy foe — iv. 7 
I did imagine what would be her refuge — v. 4 
when I imagine ill against my king..2Hen>-yF/. i. 2 
but may imagine how the bird was . . — iii. 2 

deeper than you can imagine Richard III. i. 1 

imagine I have said farewell already — i. 2 
would you imagine, or almost believe — iii. 5 

as any man I can imagine Coriolanus, iv. 5 

yet, to imagine an Antony. .Jn/ony ^Cleopatra, v. 2 



IMAGINK-ymi initi^iinc so reserved. . Cymbeline, i. 5 

iinn^iiic l'eru-lc» ut Tyre frricUt, iv. ((iowcr) 

I lioiic. will tiucli von to imn.'riiic Hamlel, iv. 7 

IMACil.N'lCD-lKl- iiliau'ilUil i.o..M.n..l/--i..../i., .l/..i».v.l 
iiim-incil hi'tr.l init.. tla- lr:MiLi-t . . Mrr. of I'm. iii. 4 

till' Miiui;ima \oiic ..tt;..ii iiiiiiMir. .'.'id'/iM/fr. iv. ■.' 

with iiii:i-iiuil wiUL' our ^\\ ill. (J,/u v ;'. iii. (rlioriis) 
vet Clin lie iniii^iia-.l .,r supim-rd. . . . 1 (/.vii -//y. iv. 1 
iimisinf.l woilli liol.ls in hi's hi.. .■.,!. VVmV.^ <>,■,«. ii. 3 
as willliil iw. Mot im:i^iiu.il, lilt ..ryniMiiip/lv. 2 
lliifoM tho imiii,'iiieil ]\:\i'it'u\Uhi. . Komen ^- Jiilii-I, ii. 6 

I.M.VlilNlNCi somr fVui- Mitl.\.'s t)iiuin,v. 1 

nrf less than lionililc inuiKillillgn Machelh, i. 3 

I.MU.VI!-r Kn.'.] iiiilMir thtircrookeatitles./iwiyr. i.2 
IMU.VIU! iiniilv to inilmrcrKn/.-inibar] — i.2 
I.MniX'll,rrV-K>i(l olimliecility.yVoi/iK ^Crest. i. 3 
l.MniUMC-lihiili.inv hR■ll^t iiiibrue.il/iii. A'.Wifuin, v. 1 

incision? sliiill wc'iiiilirnc? i Henry IK ii. 4 

TMITAlil-iinitiui is nutliing .... Love'sL.Losl,\v. 2 

IMITATIC-I.ir him I imitiite ....Tiivinii Nil'hl,in. 4 

iniitiito: lui.l sail upon the liind..Mirf.A". Dream, ii. 2 

bhick, to iinitiitc her hrow Love's L. Lust. iv. 3 

heicin will 1 imiliitc the sun Mlenryir. i. -i 

1 will iinitiite the li..ii.,unihlo.'J(/i-»r!/y I', ii. 2 (letter) 
then inul:ile the uelioii ollhe ti:,'cr ..Ileuiyi: iii. 1 
dill thev iinit;ile tluit which I coiiiiiosed — iii. 7 
me limit not liarc to iniiliile theni.7Vmo;i ofAlh. i. 2 

ado^' wlioiii 1 wniihl iniitiitu — iv. 3 

to iniitiUe the unices of the jiods ....Coriotamts, v. 3 
I^IITATKD-tlicy imitiited lummiiity .. HiiwiW, iii. 2 
l.MITATION— in base imitation .... Kidmnl II. ii. 1 
lie iinitntion calls) he pageants us. Troilus ^- Cress, i. 3 
and in the imitation of these twain .. — i. 3 
on ohjeets, arts, and imitations .. J«/i'iisC<Ps<ir, iv. 1 
with \\'h:it imitation you can borrow. Ci/m(*t?/»Tie, iii. 4 

IMMAi'l'l.ATi; white and red Love's L. Losl.i.i 

his tlioiiiihis imnmciilate .. TiroGen. of Verona, ii. 7 

immaculate, and silver fountain IticlKirdtl. v. 3 

in my pure luid immaculate valour. 2 Henry /r. iv. 3 

chaste and imniacnlatc in very \ Henry i' I. v. 4 

heart's love, immaculate devotion. iiic/n/d //i. iv. 4 

JNlM.\SIv-immask our noted outward. I Uenryiy. i. 2 

1 >rM ATi; I! I .\ 1. skein of sleave. . . T'roiViis &-Cress. v. 1 

J.MMKDl.VC V-iniinediacy may well stand. Leur, v. 3 

I.^l.^II■:r)I.\TIO-ilnlnediatc sentence. .W™.. /"or Mea. v. 1 

in these to nature she's immediate \\Q\Y.AU'sM'eH, ii. 3 

varrant of ininicdiute death ..Come'iynf Errors. \. 1 

bci; enfranchisement immediate.. ..tttchard 11. iii. 3 

which, as immediate from thy place. 2H(.')ir!//r.iv. 4 

the immediate heir of England'/ — v. 2 

immediate are mv needs Timonof Alhens.'n. 1 

in words, but find supply immediate — ii. 1 
an immediate freedom" of repeal ..JuUusCrrsar, iii. 1 
assemble we immediate council ..Antony iyCleo. i. 4 
shall prove the immediate author of — ii. 6 
this immediate levy, he commands.. Cymtfi/iie, iii. 7 
arc the most immediate to our throne ..Hamlet, i. 2 
and it would come to immediate trial — v. 2 
is the immediate jewel of their souls . . Othello, iii. 3 

1MMEDI.\TE1.Y to marry Merry mves,\\. 6 

immediately provided in that case. .Wii/. A'. Dr earn, i. 1 
death, or y ovi, I'll find immediately . . — ii. 3 
immediately they will again be here, tore's L.L.v.2 
I will return immediately .. Merchant of Venice, ii. 5 
must be gone from hence immediately — ii. 9 
immediately to leave you and be gone — ii. ft 
tliv master home immediately .. Comedy of Err. iv. 2 
immediately ran hither to your grace — v. 1 
lielp him to his grave immediately I.. f(/c/iarci//. i. 4 

and then to horse immediately 1 HenrylV. iii. 1 

immediately he was upon his knee. 2 Henry VI. iii. 1 
resolve your grace immediately \_CoL Knt.- 

you herein presently] Richard III. i v. 2 

apprehended here immediately. Tro'lus.Sf Cress, iii. 3 
Alcssala with you immediately ..JutinsCtcsar, iv. 3 
and soniothing to be done immediately — v. 1 
shall be immediately delivered. TllnsAndronicus, v. 1 

immediately we do exile Romeo ^Juliet, iii. 1 

bring in cloudv night immediately .. — iii. 2 
on wliolcsimieiife usurp immediately.. Ham/e/, iii. 2 
I .M .M I N ENC E-darc all imminence. TroU. tf Cress, v. 1 1 
I.M.MINE.N'T decay of wrcstjd ')oinp..f.';i4' JoAn, iv. 3 
ilef'tnded mc from imminent (feath...2Hcjiry;'/. v. 3 
danger as infinite as inmiinent.. Troilus ^Cress. iv. 4 

portents, and evils Imminent JuUusCrrsar, ii. 2 

blastments are most imminent Hamlel, i. 3 

I see the imminent death of twenty — iv. 4 

'scapes i' tlie imminent deadly breach ..OtheUo, i. 3 

IMMOlM-ni.VTK use turns to Meat, for .Veus.i. 3 

IMMDUI'.liATKLV ^he weeps for. ffomco ^- Juliet, iv.l 

IM.Mi )UESl"-nii immodest raiment. Tuo Gen. of V. v.4 

she should be so immodest to write ..Much Ado, ii. 3 

immodest hatred, the cliild-lied.. Winter'sTale, iii. 2 

that the mist iinmodcst word be 2 Henry IV. iv. 4 

with this iimnoilest clamorous Mlenrn VI. iv. I 

I.V.MO.MENT-immoment tuy^. ... Antony ^Cleo. V. 2 

IM.MtJKTAE— by immortal providenecVempM/, v. 1 

reuounccnicnt, an immortal A\nT\t. Mens, for Meas.i. Ct 

to-morrow tliou must lie niMle immortal — iv. 2 

Bueh harmony is in immortal nonU.. Mer.of Venice, v.] 

would liavc made nature immortal All's tt'ett, i. 1 

O immortal gods! t^) fine villain:.. Y'.jimiijfo/.sVi, v. 1 
add an immortal title to yourerownl.rticAuri///. i. I 
marry, the immortal part needs ....2HenrylV. ii. 2 

doth win immortal fame Henry V. iii. 2 

Oyou immortal gods! Troilus ^ Cressida, iv. 2 

iramortttl gods, leravcno (iclf. 7'i>n.o/.-l(A. i. 2(graee) 

the immortal gcnls that hear you — iv. 3 

except immortal t';csar Julius Ctvsar, \. 2 

if thou bc'sl not inmiortal — ii. 3 (pajwr) 

ye immortal t:o<ls! — iv. 3 

for his biting is immortal . . Antony'] Cleopatra, v. 2 

1 have immortal longings in me .... — v. 2 

pnines the immortal wing Cymheline, v. 4 

»he sinBS like inic immortal I'ciides, v. (Guwcr) 

immortal iJian'. now I know yon — v. 3 

ah, the immortal passa'lo! Ri,m.-o^Jutiet,ii. 4 

steal immortal blessing from her lip — iii. 3 

and her immortal part with angelslivos — V. I 
beinf a thing hnmortal an itself'/ Hamlel, i, 4 



IMMOHTAI.-lost the immortal part ..Othello, i). 3 

the immortal. love's dread clamorous — iii. 3 

IM.MdlCl'At.lTV atlenils the former. . /"eriWci, iii. 2 

IiM,Ml>Kl'.\I,l/,i;l)-l.ei lorliilized. I /;.-ii, !//■/. i.2 

IiM.Molfl'AI.I.V— crown immortal l\. ■>'//,•«/!/( /'.iv. 4 
IM.M r KIO stion;; iiniiunes .. /V.,i/i,s x, (>«». (prol.) 
JiM.Mi:Ki;l)-tliiiu wert immured. ;.„■■, 'jL. /.o>(, iii. 1 

not ah. lie immured in the brain — iv. 3 

in silver she's immured .... Merchant of Venice, ii. 7 
hath immured williin your wall8l./(ii.7i.i;i/ ///. iv. 1 

IM( Ki EIS'— when Iniugen is dead Cymbeline, i. 2 

divine Imogen, what thou endur'stl — ii. I 
if I could get this foolish Imogen .... — ii 3 
O Imogen, safe mayst thou wander — iii. 

Imogen, the great part of my comfort — iv. 3 
since 1 wrote iiini, Imogen was sluiii — iv. 3 

saved the iiolile Imogen to repent — v. 1 

but Imogen is your own; do your best — v. 1 
for thee, (J Imogen, even for whom .. — v. I 

end it by some means for Imogen — v. 3 

for Imogen's dear life, take mine — v.4 

O Imogen! I'll speak to thee in silence — v.4 
fruitful object be in eye of Imogen .. — v.4 
from her his dearest one, sweet Imogen? — v. 4 

he shall he lord of lady Imogen — v.4 

U Imogen: m\- i|ueen, mv life (rf/i.) _ v. b 

you ne'er killed Imogen till now — v. S 

the tuiicof Imo-eii! Ladv — v. 6 

Imngen.tliv mother's dead — v. 5 

O linogen. thou hast lost by this .... — v. 5 
IMP— self-same thing, dear imp. ...Voce's L.Lost, I. 2 

is presented by this imp — v. 2 

slavish yoke, imp out our drooping.. ///c/mrrf //. ii. 1 
and keep, most royal imp of famel..2Weii>y//'. v. 5 

a lad of life, and imp of fame Henry V. iv. 1 

IMl'AINT-water-eolours, to impaint.lHejui///'. v. I 
IMPAIR-whereiu it doth impair.Mid. N. Dream, iii. 2 
nor dignifies an impair tiiought. Troilus <§■ Cress, iv. 5 
IMI'AIKED-nothing iiiiiuiired ./l/ii/.A'.'sIJrram, v. 1 
IMPAlRING-iiniiairiuL' lienrv . . . .3H<?»ry /'J. ii. 6 
IMPALE— did 1 impale liim with the regal - iii. 3 
impale him with your weapons.. 7'/oi7«s ^-Cress. v. 7 

IJlPALED-be round impaled SHenryVJ. iii. 2 

IMPART— to impart to Armado ..Love's L.Lost, v. 1 
when I did first impart my lovcVo. o//'ejiici', iii.2 
our natural goodness imparts this. iri;i'er's7'<i/e,ii. 1 
great matters to intpart to thee .. ..'i Henry VI. iii. 2 

to eoneeal what we impart U'tchnrd III. iii. I 

though what they do impart help nothing — iv. 4 
is it that you would impart to mti'tJulius Ccesar, i. 2 

let us impart what we have seen Hamlel, i. 1 

his son, do I impart toward j'ou — i.2 

in dreadful secrecy impart they did .... — i.2 

of this mother's admiration? impart .. .. — iii. 2 

impart a thing to you from his majesty.. — v. 2 • 

IMPARTED- 1 before imparted.. Taming of Sh. iii. 2 

IMPARTIAL— I'll be impartial... l/ms./;.r.1/ra.v. v. I 

Mowbray, impartial are our eyes Richard ll.i. 1 

led by the impartial conduct 2HenrylV. v. 2 

bold, just, and impartial spirit — v. 2 

IMPARTMENT— if itsomeimpartment.Hu7n;e/,i.4 

IMPASTED— baked and impasted — ii. 2 

IMPATIENCE— with impatience.. il/crry/Ciics, ii. 2 

but first, sheath thy impatieuee — ii. 3 

all patience, and impatience ....As you Like it, v. 2 
impatience lowreth in your face ! .. Comedyof Err. ii. 1 
sir, impatience hath his privilege ..King John. iv. 3 
out ofmy grief and my impatience ..\ Henry IV. i. 3 
deeds of rage, and stem impatience. I Henry VI. iv. 7 
impatience waiteth on true sorrow. .SHewrj/ A'/, iii. 3 
this scene of rude impatience? ....Richard HI. ii. 2 
then patiently hear my impatience .. — iv. 4 
own impatience takes from Aufldius.Cori'o?iin)(s,v. 5 
strange impatience of the heavens. JiWms Cwsar, i. 3 
fearing to strengthen that impatience — ii. 1 
made out of her impxtXi&wce.Aiiiotiy J)- Cleopatra, ii. 2 
Antony put me to some impatience.. — ii. 6 
impatience does become a dog that's mad — iv. 1 3 
express impatience, lest you stir up. .Cymbeline, v. 4 
his wits has given way to his impatience, f-cf//-, iii. fi 
IMPATIENT— I am impatient. '/■»', />h. oA Icr. ii. 7 
master Page, be not impatient . . Merry Wires, iii. 4 
will you tear impatientanswers..V/i/..V.Z)/Tfim,iii. 2 
all impatient to speak and not sec. Lore'si,. t™/, ii. 1 

he gi'ows imjiatient Taming of Shrew, 1 (indue.) 

when, with a most impatient devilish — ii. i 
more a shrew of thj" impatient humour — iii. 2 

im]iatielit of your just demands King John, ii. 1 

wasp-stum; and imiiaticnt fo(d art ..I HenrylV. i. 3 
ini|iatieiil of his lit, breaks like nirc.'lHenry IV.i. I 
you are too impatient to hear crosses — i.2 

o'er tliciii all. imiiaticnt of their luiur.;;eiin/ C. iv.2 
Charles iiii|iaticnt wiih his friend?. . I Hc,i,i/ ry. ii. i 

impatient ofmvabfence Julius Casar.iv. 3 

how furious and impatient tbcv.. '/Vu. Andron. ii. 1 

imperious, ami impatient of your wrongs — v. 1 

festival to an impatient child ..JInmco ^Juliet, ill. 2 

a heart unfortified, or mind imiiaticnt.. l/nmto, i. 2 

to put mv father in impatient tlioughts .0//i</(o, i. 3 

IJIP.VTnliN'TI.V doth rage.. TuoCen. of Verona, ii. 7 

impulientiv slampcd with your foot../«/. desar, ii. 1 

IMl'.V \V.\-liow von impawii our person. //fiiri//'. i. 2 

lAlPAWNED— bear along impawned . Ilinlei'sT. i. 2 

let there be impawned some surety .1 Ilmn/IV. iv. 3 

lie has impawned [Co/.K/i/.-impoiied I ..Hamlel, v. 2 

whv is this inipawncil (/■.•'. K/if.-iin|ioncd] — v. 2 

IMI'EACII-impeach your modestv. . .V/rf.A'.Dr. ii. 2 

impea.-li tile IVccdnm of the slnte..l/"<T. o/rcili'«,iii.2 

will much impeach the justice of..., _ iii. 3 

a villain, til iinpeachme thus. Omci/i/ 0/ JErrori, V. 1 

what an intricate impeach istbisi .. — v. 1 

whose warrant. I imiicneh thy wrong. A'i'n;^JoAn,ii. 1 

with jialc beggar fear impeach my .. HichartI II. i. 1 

WTong, or any way inuie-aeh \ Henry IV. i. 3 

to one is no iiiliieach of vulour SllrnryVI. i. 4 

bolh to imp! aeli and purge myself. /foi/ifo >^./i</. V. 3 

I M r\;.\C 1 1 10 1 ) 11 ml baflled Ilicharil ll.i. I 

IMPEACIIMENTto his age..7'«o6Vn.f./r<ro/m. j. 3 
on to Calais without impeachment . . Henry V. iii. 6 
iiniKarhments to imprison jiim....//irAar'( III. ii, 2 



IMTlODE-all that impedes thee from ..Macbeth, 1. i 

IMI'EDliSllONT in tiic current ..Meas.furMeas. iii. 1 

any inipeiliment will be niedieinable.MucA/li(o, ii. 2 

if there lie iiiiy impediment, I pray you — Iii. 2 

know anv Miuaid ini|iedimcnt _ iv.l 

find no impeilinieiit to (he contrary.. _ v. 2 
years be no impeilimcnt. . .Vrjc/i.o/Cc/iirc iv. 1 (Ipt.) 
us all impediiueiits in fancy's course. . /<«'s)f(-//, v. 3 
what impeiliiueiit this complaint. »V,i(p;'«yVi/c,iv. 3 
continent imiieilimcnts would o'crbear. iW'ii'iic//i, iv.3 

vexed with thy impediment KingJohn,ii. 2 

forcnee not wliat iHipcdimcntB drag. 1 //r;ir|///'. iv. 3 
nioibl impeilimeiil.. unto my speech. 2//<-i;,i,//'. iv. 4 
the impediment that broke this nlf ....IhntyV. i. 1 
what nib, or what impediment, there is — v. 2 
marched on witlmut imped imei.t...//ic/iarrf 111. v. 2 
can ever appeal in your imped iinent.Cojio/a.iMj, i. 1 
we laboured, no inipeiliment between — ii. 3 

shows, dream of ini|icdinicnt Antony 4 Cleo. ii. 2 

impediment most profitably removed . .Othello, ii. 1 

throiiLdi more impeiliments than twenty — v. 2 

IM l'E2\' ETH A JiLK cur .... Merdiant of Venice, iii. 3 

IiMPKRAToK, and great general.. /.oic'j;,./,o»/, iii. i 

IMPERFECT— you imiierfeet epeiikcre.. Macbeth, i. 3 

said to be someiliiiig im|ierfect Coriolauus, ii. 1 

something he left iiiiiierfect in the state.. /.car, iv. 3 

your other neiises grow imperfect by — iv. 6 

iiiaimeil, and most impel Uet Othello, i. 3 

IMri-.Kli;CTI(IM-owii imperfection. We/rj/W'. ii. 2 
hateful imperfection of her eyes. Mid. N.Uream, iv. 1 

piece out our imperfections Henry V. i. (cho.) 

gives growth to the imperfections. . . . v. 2 

the impert'ections of long-engrafted l.rar, i. 1 

w ith all my imperfections on my head. . Hamlel, i. 4 

IJIl'ERI' ECTLY conjeets OiheUv, iii. 3 

IMPERIAL— the imperial's court. TuoGen. of V. ii. 3 
the imperial votaress passed on ..Mid. M.'sDr. ii. 2 
to imperial Love, that god most liigi\. All's ll'cll, ii. 3 

the most imperial monarch Winter's Tote, iv. 3 

swelling act of the imperial theme ....Macbeth, i. 3 

may recoil, to an imperial charge — iv.3 

from thee, is this imperial crown .,2 HenrylV. iv. 4 
and services, to this imix'rial throne . . Henry V. i. 2 

with crowns imperial, crowns — ii.tcho.) 

our cue, and our voice is imperial.. .. — iii. 6 
the sword, the mace, the crown imperial — iv. 1 
to bring your most imperial majesties — v. 2 
and of it left his son imperial lord .. — v. 2 (cho.) 

by your high imperial majesty 2Henry VI. i. 1 

Suffolk's imperial tongue is stern.. .. — iv. i 

the high imperial type of this Richard 111. iv. 4 

the imperial metal, circling now .... — iv. 4 
crowns with an imperial voice.. Troilus ^Ciess. i. 3 

to those most imperial looks — i. 3 

the imperial Ca;sar, should again . . Cymbeline, v. i 

that wore the imperial diadem TitusAndron. i. 1 

to approach the imperial scat — i. i 

well worthy Rome s imperial lord .. — i.2 

mount aloft with thv imiierial mistresa — ii. 1 

au'yourmistership "be imperial — iv. 4 

tlie imperial jointress of this warlike . . Hamlel, i. 2 

[Co/. A'n/.] imperial Cffisar, dead — v. 1 

IMPERIOUS-imperious thoughts Tu-o Geii.o/ Cci-. ii. 4 

the imperious flood hath left iHcmylV. i. I 

cradle of the rude imperious surge .. — iii. I 
imperious in another s throne? ....\HenryVl. iii. I 
Beaufort, the imperious churchman. .2Hdi>j///. i. ;) 
or this imperious man will work . . Henry VIII. ii. 2 
most imperious Agamemnon. Troilus ^ Cressida, iv. .'> 
not the imperious show of the .. Antony ^ Cleo. iv. 13 
the imperious seas breed monsters.. Cywi6e//»ie, iv. 2 
thy thoughts imperious, like.. TitusAndronicus, iv. 4 

as your titles witness, imperious — v. 1 

imperious (^ Co/. A'li/.-iraiierial] Ctcsiir ..Hamlrt, v. I 

dog, to alFright an imperious lion Othello, ii. 3 

iMPERIOUSL'i'— so imperiously?.. ..UifiiryC/. i. 3 
IMPERSEVERANT thing loves.. ..C'l/mdc/oie, iv. I 
IMPERTINENCY— impertineney mixcd!i,rar, iv.fi 
IJIPERTINENT— most impertinent .. Tempest, i. 2 
the suit is imiicrtincut to my self . /1/cr. of Venice,\\.2 
IMPETICI >S-I did impeticos thy. Tirelfth Night, ii. 3 
I-AtPETUiiSITY—tury, and impetuosity — iii. 4 
IMPETCUirS— the imjietuous blasts ....Leo.-, iii. 1 
more impetuous [ivii/.-impitious] haste. Ham/e/, iv.5 
IMPIETIES— guilty of those impieties. Hewn/ r. iv. I 

IJIPIETY has made a feast i»/ea«. forMeas. i.2 

farewell, thou pure impiety Much Ado, iv. 1 

more impiety tlian Jephthah's ZHenryVl. v. 1 

to be iu anger, is impiety .... Timnn of Athens, iii. 5 
my lord, this is impiety in you ,. Tilus .Indron. i. 2 

IMPIOUS— and impious purity! MuchAdo, iv. 1 

if impious war, arrayed in fiames Henry V. iii. 3 

it was both impious and unnatural. 1 Henry VI. v. I 
and York, and impious lieunfort ..2HenryVl. ii. \ 

keep their impious turbands on Cymbeime, iii. 3 

play the imiiions [Co/. -pious] innocent. /Vr/r/r«, iv.4 

a course of impious stubbornness Hamlet, i. 2 

IMlTJlOlS—r/in/.] more impitioiis haste — iv. i 
IJ\|]'LACAliLE-i9 so implacable. •/•i/'r//;iA'.'i,'/i/, iii. 4 
I.MPLEAl K.N'J'S ofa ruined hoiise'/'iwioli q/^.J/Zi. iv. 2 

foreiL'ii mart for implelnents of war Hamlel, i. 1 

IMPLlES-tlnit her seureli implies . . .. AU'slVell, i. 3 
I.Ml'L(iUAT(IU-hnl mere iniplorators.. H«m/f/, i. 3 

I.Ml'l.OKK her, in mv voice .Weu»./o. .l/<o». i. 3 

if you'll implore it. that will free... — iii. I 
I do implore seen cy, that the king.lore'j L. L. v. 1 
anointed. I implore so much exi>ence — v. 2 

nnd then implore her blessing II inter's Tale, v. 3 

whose coiiumI 1 will implore Henry VIII. ii. i 

IMl'LOliEl) implored your highness'.. ,l/(/W.e//i, i. 4 

carlle^tly im|iloreil a general peace.. I Henri//'/, v., 4 

IMl'HiUI.Nti-implorliiL' pardon ....HenryV. iv. 1 

IMl'LV— mv life imply iier danger?.. .. /'er.Wci, iv. I 

IMPOl.'^dX- miiv inipoi>on liking ..MuchAdo. iii. I 

1MP(.)NE1)— [lot. Kni.] he liai.impor>ed./liini/r/, v. 2 

[Col. Kni.} is this iinpoucd. as you call it? — v. 2 

IMP! IRT-of much impoit?'/ico O, n. o//>,o»o, iii 1 

next, it imiKirts no rcawi\. Mer. jure /or Mcature,v. 1 

I have a motion much ininorta jour good — v. I 

and of great import indeed, too . . l^oee'i L. Lost, v. I 



IMP 

UrPORT— what the import is AWsWelK ii- 3 

what occasion of import liath all.Tamirii'o/SA. iii.2 

should import offending Winter's Tale, i. 2 

more general than these lines import. Aing-Jo/in, iv.3 

thus it did import [K"(. -report] \HenrylV. i. 1 

if you knew how much they do import — iv. 4 

some petty towns of no import 1 Henry VI. i. I 

dotli import him much, to speak. rrn»7usi3-CrMs. iv.2 
wliich now import their dangers. /l»(on!/<5-C'teo.ii. 2 
thousands more of semblable import — iii. 1 
being Leonatus, doth import so much. Ci/mbc/i'ne. v. 5 
whicli imports to the kingdom so much. .Lfo;-, iv. 3 

what might import my sister's — iv. 5 

do import some misadventure ..Romeo ^-Julicly-v. 1 

full olcliarge, of dear import — v. 2 

this sliow imports tlie argument Hamlel, iii. 2 

whicli imports at full, by letters conjuring — iv. 3 
alap, sweet lady, what imports this song? — iv.ft 
what imiiorts the nomination of this .... — v. 2 
quality and respect, as doth import you.OlheHo. i. 3 
if it be not for some purpose of import .. — iii. 3 

as it were; his gesture imports it — iv. 1 

what doth your speech import? — iv. 2 

one of them imports tlie death of Cassio — v. 2 
IMPORTANCE-great importance. Twelfth Kif;lii, v. 1 

in an act of this importance IVinlei'sTale, ii. 1 

if the importance were joy, or sorrow — v. 2 
at our importance hitlier is he come.K'no- John, ii. I 

upon importance of so slisht and Cymbeline, i. 5 

IMPORTANCY— importancy of Cyprus. .OMe»<i, i. 3 
IMPORT -■VNT— is important \n\..Tu-elph Nighl, i. 5 

if the prince be too important Much Ado, ii. 1 

now his important blood will nought. /)/rs>feH, iii. 7 

at your im' ortant letters Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

sake only, he makes important. Troilus SfCress. ii. 3 
cannot, lord; I have important business — v. I 

my mourning, and important tears Lear, iv. 4 

hv the important acting of your dread, ffamte/, iii. 4 

IMPORTANT^Y-importantlyasnowCvm6p/me,iv.4 

irvIPORTED his fellowsliip ....Timon of Athens, v. 3 

IMPORTETH-importeth none here.. Lods'sL.L. iv. 1 

more serious impbrteth thee toVnovi.Anl.ffClPO. i. 2 

IMPJR.TIN'G— an importing visage ..AU'sWell, v. 3 

importing change of times and states.! Henii/C/. i. 1 

no less importing tlmn our general. fiicAord ///.iii. 7 

importing,— the several parcels ..Henry Fill. iii. 2 

importing the surrender of those lands. .HamW, i. 2 

weeds, im|)orting health and graveness .. — iv. " 

reasons, importing Denmark's health . . — v. 2 

Im !orting the mere perdition of Olhello, ii. 2 

IMPORTLESS— importless burAen. TroU. ^ Cress, i.3 
IMPORTUNACY-importunacy?.7'woG<;n. of i: iv.2 

your importnnacy cease Timonof Athens, ii. 2 

IlilPORTUNATE-other importunate. Lot-e'si i. v.l 

be no more importunate Winter's Tale, i v. 1 

put on a most importunate aspect. Timon of Ath. ii. 1 
in debt to my importunate business — iii. 6 
she is importunate; indeed, distract .. Hamlel, iv.h 
having, hv tlieir own importunate fnit.Othelln. iv. I 
IMPORTUNE-to importune you. 7'woG(;n.o/<'e)-. i. 3 
much iiniKirtnne you me to that .... — i.3 

that thither tliem importrme — iii. 1 

our concernings shall importune. Afeas. /or Meas. i. 1 
against all sense you do importune her — v. I 
quick despatch, importunes personal. Lome's t. L. ii. 1 

and importunes access to you As you Like it, i. 1 

importune me no further Taming of Shrew, i. 1 

von hear, how he importunes me. Comedy of Err. iv. 1 

1 will importune with earnest Richard III. ii. 2 

importune him for my monies. ri'mono/.4(Aens, ii. I 
I here importune death aviinie. Antony ^ Cleo. iv. 13 

importune him once more to go Lear, iii. 4 

imiiortune her; she'll help to put you. . Othello, ii. 3 
lo, the happiness! go, and importune her — iii. 4 
now he importunes him to tell it o'er.. .. — iv. 1 
IMPORTUNED otherwise by all of us. Tempest, ii. 1 
have you importuned her to snch Merry Wives, ii. 2 
importuned me, that his attendant. Comedy of Err. i.l 
since I have not much importuned you — iv. 1 
very oft importuned me to temper. . Cymbeline, v. 5 
importuned him by any means?.. /Jornco &Juliel,i. ] 

he hatli importuned me with love Hamlel. i. 3 

IMPORTUNITY, to fill up.. Mer.ofFenice, iv.l (let.) 

to his unmastered importunity Hamlet, i. 3 

any strong or vehement importunity.. Othello, iii. 3 
IltfPOSE— ladyship's impose .... Two Gen. of fer. iv. 3 

impose me to what [lenance your Much Ado, v. 1 

impose on thee nothing but this.. Love'sL.Lost, iii. ! 
a plague tiiat Cupid will inrpose for — iii. 1 

impose some service on me for — v. 2 

undergo, and nobleness impose . . Winter's Tale, ii. 3 
ordain, impose some gentle order ..KingJohn, iii. 1 
what fates impose, that men must..3Hc!!ri/r/. iv. 3 

j'ou would here impose on me Ricliard ///.iii. 7 

or they impose, this usage, coming from.. i[-ear, ii. 4 

IMPOSED— imposed the office Meas for Meas. i. 4 

task could not have been imposed. Comedy of Err. i. 1 
slionld be imposed upon his father . . Henry I', iv. \ 
undergo any difficulty imposed. Troilus SfCress. iii. 2 
IMPOSITION-grievous imposition. A/ras./orMras. i.3 
than your father's imposition . . Merch. of Venice ^ i. 2 

not to deny this imixjsition — iii. 4 

honesty go with your impositions All's Well, iv, 4 

the imposition cleared Winter's Tale, i. 2 

the sequel of your imposition .... Richard TIL iii. 7 
to devise imposition enough. Troilus ^Cressida, iii. 2 

an idle and most false imposition Othello, ii. 3 

IMPOSSIBILITIES-men's impossibilities. Lear, iv. 
flattering me with impossibilities ..SHenryTI. iii. 2 
solder'st close impossiblities. . T/mon of A'hens, iv. 3 

IMPOSSIBILITY would slay in All's Well, ii. 1 

not ignorant of the impossibility — iv. 1 

proof is called impossibility .... Troilus <S- Cress, v. h 
murdering impos.sibility, to make . . Coriolanus, v. 3 

IMPOSSIBLE— impossible matter Tempest, ii. 1 

'tis as impossible that he's undrowned — ii. 1 
as nothing is impossible . . Two Gen. ofFerona, iii. 1 
tells me, 'tis a thing impossible . .Merry Wives, iii. 4 
he cannot 'scape me: 'tis impossible — iii. .') 
I will search impossible places — iii. .5 



[ 388 1 



INC 



IMPOSSIBLE- impossiblepassages ..TirelfihN.ii'i.2 i 
impossible toextirp it quite. iVeayure/or/>/fasi^?-e, iii. 2 
make not impossible, that which (rc/j.) — ^' ' 
where it is impossible you should ....Much Ado, i. 3 
gift is in devising impossible slanders ij. 1 1 

with such impossible convej'ance ■ ii. 1 

nay, that's impossible; she may wear — i). 3 
that were impossible; but I pray you - v. 1 

in an hour, sir. Impossible Love' sL. List, i.i 

it cannot be; it is impossible — v. 2 

it is impossible I should live. . Merch. of Fenice, iii. 2 
and it is not impossible to me .. . .As you Like it, v. 2 

impossible be strange attempts All's Well, i. 1 

supposing it a thing impossible Taming o/AVireui,;. 2 
it were impossible I should speed amiss — U. I 
why, 'tis impossible. Why, he's a devil — iii. 2 

to the enemy, is all impossible Richard II. ii. 2 

est 11 impossible d'eschapper Henry V. iv. 4 

straight a thing impossible 1 Henry FI. v. 4 

but noy it is impossible we should ..iHenryVl.i. 1 
to nominate tliem all's impossible .. — _ii. 1 
it is impossible, that I should die by — iv. 1 
thou canst not, son; it is impossiblcSHeHri/r/. i. 2 
no, 'tis impossible he should escape.. — ii. 6 
'tis as much impossible (unless we.. Henry Fill. v. 3 
will strive with things impossible. J«//«sC<?sa)-, ii. 1 

it is impossible, that ever Rome — v. 3 

like her? O Isis! 'tis impossible.^n(OJi!/<5-C/eo. iii. 3 
'tis impossible; strange, that his power — iii. 7 

chamber, that it is impossible Pericles, ii. b 

to points that seem impossible — y. 1 

amity? 'tis hard; almost impossible .... Lear, ii. 4 

it is impossible they bear it out Olhello, ii. 1 

it is impossible, you should see this .... — iii. 3 
there is no such man; it is impossible .. — iv.2 

IMPOSTHUME— full of imposthume. Troil.ffCr. v. 1 
tills is the imposthume of much wealth. //amW, iv. 4 

IMPOSTOR— advocate for an impostor.. 7'cmpfs/,i. 2 

I am not an impostor All's Well, ii. 1 

and starts (impostors to true fear).. ..il/act?(/i, iii. 4 
you think me an impostor Pericles, v. 1 

IMPOTENCE— age, and impotence .... Hamlet, ii. 2 

IMPOTENT— impotent to smile.. Iojjc's L. Lost,y. 2 
impotent and snail-paced beggary. /JicAajrf ///. iv.3 

who impotent and bed-rid Hamlet, i. 2 

O most lame and impotent conclusion !.0(AeHo, ii. 1 

IMPOUNDED— impounded as a stray . . Henry V. i. 2 

IMPREGNABLE— lirags impregnable. /f/c/i. //. iii. 2 
hath given for fence impregnable ..3 Henry FI. iv. 1 
were his heart almost impregnable.. Titus And. iv. 4 

IMPRESS-weak impress of love. Two Gen. of Fer. iii.2 

who can impress the forest Macbeth, iv. 1 

air with thy keen sword impress — y. 7 

razed out my impress, leaving me. . Richardll. iii. 1 
and you as under an impress. Troilus Sf Cressida, ii. 1 
people ingrossed by swift impress.^n/oni/^- Cleo. iii. 7 
why such impress of shipwrights Hamlet, i. ] 

IMPiRESSED— print impressed ..Love'sL.Losl.ii. 1 
strong passion is impressed in yo\xX\\.. . AW sWell, i. 3 
are impressed and engaged to flght. . 1 Henry IV. i. 1 
wears my stripes impressed on him. .Cor/o/aniw, v. 5 
turn our impressed lances in our eyes — Lear, v. 3 

IMPRESSION— no impression . . Two Gen. of Fer. ii. 4 
the impression of keen whips ..Meas. .for Meas. ii. 4 
and stolen the impression of her..jUid.A'. Dream, i. 1 

where the impression of mine eye All's Well, y. 3 

that carries no impression like ....ZHenryFI. iii. 2 

such terrible impression made Richard III. i. 4 

whose soft impression interprets.. Timon of Ath. v. 6 

more impression show tlian that Coriolanus, v. 3 

gave't the inipression; placed it safely .//owdei, v. 2 

IMPRESSURE— tlie impressure.. JVe'/'A ."iight, ii. b 
and capable impressure thy palm./4s!/o«i.iVtc !7,iii.5 
had not imnressure made .. Troilus 4r Cressida, iv. 5 

IMPRIMENDUM solum .... Taming of Shrew, iv. 4 

IMPRIMIS, she can fetch (rep.).Two Gen. ofVer. iii. 1 
now I begin; imprimis, we came . Taming of Sh. iv. 1 

imprimis, a loose-bodied gown — iv. 3 (note) 

imprimis, it is agreed between .iHenryVI. i. 1 (art.) 

IMPRINTED-by him imprinted.iW/d. N. Dream, i. I 

IMPRISON-then imprison him. . Meas. .forMeas. iii. 2 
to be informed, imprison it not in.. Winter's Tale, i. 2 

away with him; imprison him KingJohn, iv. 2 

impeachments to imprison him Fic'nard III. ii. 2 

IJIPRISONED— which rift imprisoned.. r«m;)ps/, i. 2 

suffered me to be imprisoned Twelfth Night, v. 1 

imprisoned in the viewless winds. iVras./brjUfos.iii.l 
imprisoned angels set thou at liberty. King JoAn,iii.3 
fair nephew, that imprisoned me . . I Henry FI. ii. 5 

our brother is imprisoned by Richard Hi. i. 3 

imprisoned is he, say you? Timon of Athens,}. 1 

when he was poor, imprisoned — ii. 2 

imprisoned; all is outward sorrow ..Cymbeline, i. 1 
where you imprisoned were .. TilusAndronicus, iv. 2 
and stocked, punished, and imprisoned. . Irar, iii. 4 

IMPRISONING of unruly wind ....) HenrylF. iii. 1 
IMPRISONMENT shall not be long. /i/c/iord ///. i. 1 
your lordship brooked imprisonment? — i. 1 

my lord Hastings' late imprisonment — i.3 

as' the mortality of iraprisonment.il/cas./orWeas. i. 3 
and imprisonment can lay on nature — iii. 1 
if imprisonment be the due of a bawd — iii.2 
have your full time of imprisonment — iv.2 
proclaimed a year's imprisonment. /-owf'sL.tosf, i. 1 

the shame, imprisonment Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

minister the potion of imprisonment .'IHenrylV. i. 2 
my limbs with long imprisonment. . 1 Henry VI. ii. 5 
this her easy-held imprisonment hath — v. 3 

king Henry from imprisonment SHenry FI. iv. 3 

made my impnsonment a pleasure . . — iv. 6 

concerning his imprisonment Henry Fill. v. 2 

IMPROBABLE fiction Twelfth Night, iii. 4 

I IMPROP ER-service improper for a slave. . Lear, v. 3 
IMPROVE— if he improve them ..Julius C/rsar, ii. 1 

IMPROVIDENT jealousy ? Merry Wires, ii. 2 

improvident soldiers! \ Henry F I. ii. 1 

IMPUDENCE-wit, or impudenoe.Mraj./oj- Mfns. v. 1 
of impudence, a strumpet's boldness.. .4/i's»'f/(, ii. I 

less impudence to gainsay Winter's Tale, iii. 2 

take women's gifts for impudence Pericles, ii. 3 



IMPUDENCY— without impudency. Love's L. L. v. I 
IMPUDENT— an imjiudent nation.... All' sWell, iv. 3 

she's impudent, my lord — y. 3 

why thou whoreson, impudent .. ..1 Henry IV. iii. 3 

more than impudent sauciness IHenrylV. ii. 1 

impudent with use of evil deeds ZHenryFI. i. 4 

impudent and shameless Warwick .. — iii. 3 
impudent and mannish grovin. . Troilus ^Cress. iii. 3 
what committed! Impudent strumpet!. 0//j(?//o, iv. 2 

IMPUDENTLY negative Winler'sTale. i. 2 

IMPUDIQUE— grosse, et impudique. .i/enn/f. iii. 4 

IMPUGN-cannot impugn yon.. Merch. of Venice, iv. I 

greatly who impugns our doom . . .. IHenryVI. iii. 1 

IMPURE— impure blots and stains. /(/c/iard ///. iii. 7 

IMPUTATION, for that he knew.il/ros. for Meas.v. \ 

any imputation to the contrar3'?..iVfr. of Fenice, i. 3 

with the imputation of being near..2Hfnry IV. y. 1 

the imputation of his wickedness Henry V. iv. 1 

imputation shall be oddly poised. 7'roi7Ms^- Cress, i. 3 

but in the imputation laid on him Hamlet, v. 2 

yet, I say, if imputation, and strong ..Othello, iii. 3 

iSlPUTE— impute it notacrime. Winter'sT. iv. (cho.) 

your majesty, impute his words .... Richard Il.ii. \ 

and not impiite this yielding Romeo Sc Juliet, ii. 2 

INACCESSIBLE— almost iuaccessible.. 7empM;, ii. 1 

in tills desert inaccessible AsyouLilieit, ii. 7 

INAIDABLE— herinaidable estate .... .4«'5 We/i, ii. 1 
INAUDIBLE and noiseless foot of time — v. 3 

INAUSPICIOUS stars Romeo ^Juliel,v. 3 

INCAGEDin so small a verge Richard //. ii. 1 

to be incaged [Co(.Kii(. -engaged] ..1 HenrylF. iv. 3 

such a ideasure as incaged birds. . . .SHenry FI. iv. 6 

INCANTATIONS are too weak ....\ Henry FI. v. 3 

INCAPABLE-thinksme now incapable. Tempest, i. 2 

incapable of reasonable affairs?.. Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

incapable and shallow innocents ../(/cAord ///. ii. 2 

as Was never so incapable of help ..Coriolanus, iv. 6 

as one incapable of her own distress . . Hamlet, iv, 7 

INCARDINATE— devil incardinate.. 7>(e//'A/v. v. 1 

INCARNARDINE— seas incarnardine./l/ac6e/A, ii. 2 

INCARNATE— were devils incarnate. . Henry V. ii. 3 

this is the incarnate devil .... Tilus Andronicus,v. I 

INCARNATION-devil incarnation. A/er. «/■ fen. ii. 2 

INCENSE— I will incense Page .... Merry Wires, i. 3 

and would incense me to murder. Winler'sTale, y. 1 

the incense of a vow, a holy vow ..King John, iv. 3 

I never did incense his majesty Richard //L,i. 3 

were to incense the boar to follow us — iii. 2 
God incense him, and let him cry. Henry Fill. iii. 2 
the gods, incenses them to send . . Julius Ctesar, i. 3 
like incense, doth perfume the sky. TitusAndron. i. 2 

and what they may incense nim to Lear, ii. 4 

the gods themselves throw incense — v. 3 

incense her kinsmen, and though he....O/Ae//o, i. 1 
INCENSED— have incensed the seas .. Tempest, iii. 3 
knight is incensed against you . . Tu-elflhl^ight, iii. 4 
your brother incensed me to slander. fl/i/rA Ado, v. 1 
room for the incensed worthies ..Love's L. Lost, v. 2 
have 60 incensed, that I am reckless. .A/ac6e/A, iii. 1 

difference of incensed kings King JoA>i,iii. 1 

report on their incensed rage — iv.2 

with an incensed fire of injuries 2HenrylV. i. 3 

being incensed, he's flint — iv. 4 

that both incensed the duke ^ Henry FI. iii. 1 

more incensed against your maiesty.Sf/enji/f/.iv. 1 
not incensed by his subtle mother. A/oAajd ///. iii. 1 

a slave to each incensed will Henry Fill. i. 2 

I have incensed the lords o' the council — v. 1 
if 'gainst yourself you be incensed ..Coriolanus, i. 9 
the people are incensed against him — iii. 1 

'twas you incensed the rabble — iv.2 

by some incensed god sent hither Pericles, v. I 

Laertes, why thou art thus incensed . . Hamlel, i v. 5 

and fell incensed points of mighty — v. 2 

part them; tliev are incensed — v. 2 

INCENSEMENT at this moment .. Twelfth N. iii. 4 

INCENSING— incensing relics of it . . All's Well, v. 3 

INCERTAIN— incertain thoughts. Mea.for Mea. iii. 1 

and devour incertain lookers-on.. Winler'sTale, v. 1 

fCoi. Knt.J of aids incertain should ..iHenrylF. i. 3 

outlives incertain pomp Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

INCERTAINTIES himself Winter's Tale, iii. 2 

INCESSANT-yet the incessant. Coniedi/o/^mrs, i. I 

the incessant care and labour 2 Henry IV. iv. 4 

to do your grace incessant services . . Henry F. ii. 2 
plague thee with incessant wars....] Henri/ FI. v. 4 

wind blows up incessant showers SHenryVI. i. 4 

INCESSANTLY upon these jades.... /finjr./oAxi, ii. 2 

INCEST—not a kind of incest ..i1/eas./or Meas. iii. 1 

and her to incest did provoke . . Pericles, i. (Gower) 

with foul incest to abuse your soul . . — i. I 

black as incest; which by my knowledge — i. 2 

his child, I wis, to incest bring ii. (Gower) 

Antiochusfrom incest lived not free — ii. 4 

a couch for luxury and damned incest.. Hawi/ef, i. 5 

INCESTUOUS-virtue that art incestuous. lear, iii.2 

such dexterity to incestuous sheetsi Hamlel, i. 2 

ay, that incestuous, that adulterate beast — i. 5 
or in the incestuous pleasures of his bed — iii. 3 

here, thou incestuous, murderous — v. 2 

INCH— every fertile inch o' the island. . Tempest, ii. 2 

from the farthest inch of Asia MurhAdo, ii. 1 

one inch of delay more is As you Like il, iii. 2 

I'll not budge an inch,boy.Tamingof Sh. 1 (indue.) 

for every inch of woman Winler'sTale, ii. 1 

I'll queen it no inch further — iv.3 

at saint Colmes inch, ten thousand Macbeth, i. 2 

my inch of taper will be burnt Richard ll.i. 3 

not an inch further 1 HenrylF. ii. 3 

an inch of any ground 2HenryIV. iv. 1 

with ihe very extremest inch — iv.3 

we watched you at an inch 2 Henry VI. i. 4 

an inch of fortune better (rep.) .. Antony Sf Cleo. i. 2 
her stature to an inch; as wand-like ..Pericles, v. 1 

ay, every inch a king Lear, iv. 6 

stretches from an inch narrow . . Romeo Sf Juliet, ii. 4 

let her paint an inch thick Hamlet, v. 1 

INCHARITABLE— incharitahle dog ..Tempest, i. 1 

INCHES— steel, three inches of it — ii. 1 

I how many inches is in one mile . . Love's L. Lost, v. 2 



INC 

INCHES— how many inches do flll-.tori-'i h. /,. v. 2 

am I but three inulit'S? 7Viiiiiii/f orSAr«f, Iv. 1 

tell whnt thoii nrt by inches . . Tmiliit ^ CreiiiJa, ii. 1 
with 8|)nn-a ami indios so diminutive — ii. 2 
l<now8 ll\e yiiutli evin t<> liiH inches.. — iv. S 
tliey'll Kive him death hy inelies. . ..ConoJaniu, v. 4 
I wouid I hud thy inciies .. Aniony ncimpalra, i. 3 
as niuny inclies an you liavc oceaus..C!/»i6Win«, i. 3 

lincerinc. Iiy inches waste you _ v. 5 

INCU-Ml?Al.adiseoseI Tempe,l,\\.i 

INCII-TIIUK. knee-deep irmiertlalt.i.-i 

I\<.IlJi;\CV thou dost (Tuess of luirm — i. « 

IN'Cl DlCNT-niDst incident to maids.. _ iv. 3 

lilniliies, iiiiiiKnt to men fimono/jtlhens,iv. 1 

«ith oiluT ini'icU'nt throes tliat — v2 

INCISION w.nihi let her out ....Lore'i I.. LotI, iv. 3 
multe incision f-<T \ijut lnve.Mrrchatil qf Itnice, ii. 1 

Goil make iiKisi.>ii in tliee! At ynuLikeil, iii. 2 

malice malccs too ikcp iucision Mclmrd II. i. 1 

shall we have incision •iHrnrvlV. ii. i 

nnd make inci~ion in their hides Ihmiji: U. 2 

INCITE— incite tlicni to quick motion. leinpeil,i\: I 

for she incites me to tliat Tu-elflh iMg/it, iii. 4 

kindness shall incite thee to bind ...Much.ltlo. iii. 1 

your reverence shall incite ns to Hfriryl'. i. 2 

do incite the t'cntry to this business.Q/mdWme, iii. r 
no blown aniiiition doth our arms incite.. /.^ir, iv. 4 
INCIVILITY conflnns no les».Comf</yo/£r70)«, iv. 4 
INCLINABLE-rco/. Kri(.]the will dotes that is 

inclinable to what Troiliu ^ CrtiiiJa, ii. 2 

have hearts inclinable to honour Con'oluuus ii. 2 

INCLINATIOX-wife's inclination. .W^rry W.cm, iii. 2 
his inclination.— after hisundres5ed./.or<r'«;,.;,. iv. 2 
to fierce and bloody inclination ....King John, v. i 
the state and inclination of theday.nirtrtrd //. iii. 2 
inclination, and the start of spleen..! H<-rir.v/K iii. 2 
this merry inclination accords nut.. iHenri/F I. iii. 2 
give us notice of his inclination ..Ilicliard III. iii. 1 
nis spirit, and tried his inclination. .Coiio/an««, ii. 3 
her years, her inclination ...-tnionyi Cleopatra, ii. 5 
thou find the inclination of the people. /'ci iWpi, iv.3 

observe his inclination in vourself HamlK, ii. 1 

though inclination be as sharp as will .. iii. .•) 

INCLINE— a willing eiir incline.. .Vra>. forMmi. v. 1 
from forage will incline to play .. Lore'i L. Lot', iv. 1 
doth his majesty incline to it, or no? ..Henryy. i. 1 

I more incline to Somerset Itienryyi.iv. I 

if he would incline to the people Coriolamis, ii. 3 

and neither way inclines .. Antony fy Cleopatra, iu. 2 

to incline himself to Caesar iv. 6 

he did incline to sadness Cymbeline, i. 7 

we must incline to the king Lear, iii. 3 

would Desdemona seriously incline (Ji/itllo, i. 3 

INCLINED— tliou art inclined to sleep.. 7>m/;cs(, i. 2 

move my father to be inclined my way I i. 2 

I find they are inclined to do so ii. 1 

he was not inclined that way . . IHea>.for Mem. iii. 2 

till he were well inclined iv.3 

when thou art inclined to sleep ..At you Like it, iv. I 

themselves, finding it so inclined Macbeih, iv. 3 

his blood inclined to mirth 2Henryiy. iv. 4 

he's inclined as are the ravenous ..2Heurijl'l. iii. 1 

wrathful, and inclined to blood iv. 2 

or sorry, as I saw it inclined Henry VIIL ii. 4 

have been inclined tf> thrift .... Timon of Alhens, i. I 

which men are best inclined Coriolanus, i. 6 

not I, inclined to this intellisence Cywbeline.i. 7 

content me to hear him so inclined Hamlet, iii. I 

INCLI.N'ING— your inclining cannot..v4«'»)(W/, iii. 6 I 

inclining to them both tVinter'tTale, i. 2 

that way inclining iii. 2 

by'r lady, inclining to threescore \ Henry IV. ii. 4 

is it your own inclining? Hmnlel, ii. i 

both vou of my inclining, and the rest .. OMW/o, i. 2 

for 'tis most easy the inclining Desdemona — ii. 3 

INCLINEST— inclinest that way.. Win'er'iTale, i. 2 

INCLIP-ocean pales, or skv inclip.,4;i//)/iV(5 Cleo.ii.7 

INCLUDE— wifl include all jars.. TiroGeu.o/f'er. v. 4 

lossof suchalord includes all imrme.lliclmnllll. i.3 

everv thing includes itself in power. Troil. ^Crett. i. 3 

INCLlTDED-the glories it included...! Henry*'/, i. 2 

INCLUSIVE— faculties Inclusive were.All't lyell, i. 3 

that the inclusive verge of golden. .Wir/iord ///. iv. ! 

INCOMPAK.VBLE v.kM\\ .... Taming of shrew, iv. 2 

do show her wit incomparable '.Mletiryl'l. iii. 2 

this mask was cried incomparable.. Henry A'///, i. I 

a most incomparable man Timon of Aihent. i. 1 

INCOMPKEHi;.N'SIBLEliesthat....!HfHru/^. i. 2 

INCUNSIDEKATE take salve (or. Lore' tL.Uti, iii. ! 

rash, inconsiderate, ficrv voluntaries.KuiWoAn, ii. I 

INCON.ST ANCY falls otf . . Tiro Gen. of Verona, v. 4 

villanous inconstancy of man's .. Merry Wive\,\v. h 

men, of strange inconstancy Love't L. Loti, iv. 3 

Ofoul revolt of French inconstancy !.Kmt'./o/in,iii.l 
the aient of thy foul inconstancy ..'IHenryl'I. iii. '2 
INCONSTAN T-ishe incon8tant,sir.ri/W/l'/iAVi'/i(,i.4 
this spotted, and inconstant man..1/i</. N.Dieam, 1. 1 
shallow, incinstant, full of tears. /<» youLikeii, iii. 2 ! 
inconstant, anri damnable ungrateful. 'Finfrr'i '/'.iii. 2 I 
a city on the inconstant billows.i/cnry V. iii.(chor.) : 

bIic is turnin;^, unrl inconstant iii. 6 

more inconstant than the wind .. Romeo ^JtUiel, i. 4 
not bv the miion. the inconstant moon — ii. 2 I 
INCONTINENCY-her incontinency.CytnMin;, ii. 4 
thnu didst accuse him of incontinency — iii. 4 j 

that he is open Ui incontinency Hamtei, ii. ! I 

INCONTINE.NT varltts! ....Troilut^ Crettida,v.\ • 

will climb incontinent (tep.) At ynuLikeil, v. i ' 

put on sullen block incontinent ....ItichardJl. v. C 
matrons, turn incontinent .. ..Timon of All>eni,iv. I ' 

he savs. he will return incontinent OtheUo,iv. 3 

INCO.VTINE.NTLY drown myself — i.3 

INCONVE.VIE.N'CE-thesc inconvcnicnccs./f. f. v. 2 ' 

to intercept this inconvenience IHenniVI. i. 4 ' 

INCONVEN I E.NT to you .Uyou Like it, v. 2 

INCONY— flesh! my incony jewl../.ort-'» L.toi/, iii. I ' 

most inconv vulgar wit! — iv. I 

INCORPORAL air do hold discourse?.. Himfef, iii. 4 

INCORPiiRATE -been incor|K>rate.,Virf..V./)r. iii. J 

that, undividablc, incor(iorate.ri>nr</yi^A'rrorf, ii. 2 



[ 389 ] 



INE 



INCOHPORA-TE-ineorporate leoguo.. Hmryf. V. 2 I INDIFFERENT— Indifferent. .. Timon of Alhetu M 
true IS it, my incorporate friends Coriolanui, I. I and dangers arc to me indifferent.. /u/iui Cnar'i. 3 



one incopoornte to our attempts . . JuUiu Catiar, i. 3 

which did incorporate and make us one — ii. I 

Titus. I am incoriioratc in Rome. '/'iVuiy4n</ron. i. 2 

holy cliurch incorporate two in ouv.flom./^Jul. li. B 

(vercisc ilic inror|>orate conclusion Dilielln.ii. 1 

IN't:ilHI'-sl.:i)_us he had been incorp8cd.//ani/r(, iv. 7 
I.VCORKIX'l'-ninst incorrect to heaven — i. 2 
INCRKASE— earth's increase .. Tempetl, iv. I (song) 

to increase your bondage Meat. forMeai. iii. -1 I.N'DKiK.N'T 

by their increase, now knows not...»/i(/. A'.'»/3r. ii. 2 INDKiKSf- upon timt indigestT King John v 7 

lossof virginiiv is rational increase ..AU'tHell, i. I I an iuiliv-c-t [Co/.-indigested] 3 Henry Vl'. v. d 

LNDKiKSTED lump, OS crooked 2l/</i.y//. v. I 

li^jcsted aud deformed lum|).3(/f«r//;/. v. 6 



OS the indifferent children of the earth. //a>n/e(, II. i 

I am myself indifferent honest _ in. i 

it is inditl'erent cold, niv lord, indeed .. — v 2 
INDIFFEKE.\'n,y-indtllcreiitlywell./;fnii,»'. ii.l 
he waved inditt'crcntly 'Iwixt doing. Cor/o/'inui, il. 2 
I will look on both indillerently ..Vu/.u. Cffiar, i. i 
hear me s|)eak indifferently for all .. TiiutAnd. I. t 
reformed that indifferently with us ..Hamlet, iii. 3 
'" of indigent faint souls ..HenryV.i.\ 



which is a gocx^Iy increusc 

pleosurc, and the increase of laughter — ii. 4 

whereniion the world increases . . . .'iHenrylV. ii. 2 

vour honours may increase, till you v. 2 

but add increiise unto my wrath ..'iHenryVI. iii. 2 

theirs for the earth's increase, mine iii. 2 

summer bred us no increase illenryVI. ii. 2 

lest thon increase the number Richardlll. iv. 1 

to quicken your incrense, I will — iv. 4 

live to taste this land's increase .... v. 4 

the Lord increase this business! ..HenryVtU. iii. 2 
that which would incrense his evil ..Coriotanut, i. 1 

her woinli's increase, and treasure .. iii. 3 

increases tailors, and breed ballad-makers— iv. b 
drink thou; increase the reels ..Aniony/iCleo. ii. 7 

denials increase your services Cyinbeline, ii. 3 

the earth, swallow her own increase.. TiiutAnd. v. 2 

throiigli j'oti, increase our wonder Penclet, iii. 2 

drv up in her tlie organs of increase Lenr, i. 4 

ns if increase of appetite had grown by. .Hamlet, i. i 

onr loves nnd comforts should incrense. 0!Af Ho, ii. 1 

TNCRE.VSED— wealth increased.. Comfrf!/'-/A')). i. I 

INCRE.VSETH— power incrensi-th.n/c/inr'/ ///. iv. 3 

the encmv incrcaseth every ilay. .JnliutCmar, iv. 3 

INCREASING— and incrensing.T'empwf, iv. I fsong) 

the better incrensin" your folly ! . . Twelfih Nighi, i. 5 

an increasing belly.' is not your iHenrylV. i. 2 

great, and increasing; but by sea. Antony ^Cleo. ii.2 

and your, increasing in love. . Ci/mljeline, iii. 2 (let.) 

perishing root, with the increasing vine! — iv. 2 

TNlREDIBLE-'tis incredible ..Taming of Sh. ii. 1 

INCREDULOUS-no incredulous. 7'«-e(/7/i tiight. iii. 4 

to show the incredulous world iHenru IV. iv. 4 

INCUR— to incur .vour former. Taming ofSh. 2 ' ind.) 
I know not what I shall incur .. IVinier't Tale, ii. '.* 



INr)!(;.\— nil indign and base adversities. WAtHo, i. 3 
INIJKiX.V'riON— great indignation .. Tempnl, iv. 1 
indignution to him by wordof inouth.7'u-?yjAA'. ii.3 
his indignation derives itsell'out of.. — iii. 4 
to pluck his indignation on thy iMMi.AWtWeU, iii. 2 
their iron indignation 'gainst \i>\xr . . KingJohn.ii. I 

and quench his fiery indignation — Iv. I 

they l)urn in indignation _ jv. 8 

thine indignation, mighty heoveu .. v, 9 

peace to scarlet indignation Richard 77. iii. 3 

his displeasures, and his indignotions. H«irv»'. iv. 7 
hurl down their indignation on tliec./?icAard///.i..1 

.your indignation against my brother Lear, i. a 

IXDIGNE- vostre indigne servitcure ..Henry V. v. 2 
LNDIGNITIES-great indignities. Com«/)/o/t'rr. v. I 

unapt to stir at these indignities \HenrylV. i. 3 

his glorious deeds for my indignities iii, 2 

great indignities you laid upon meJ.-2H-nruir. v. 3 
INDIGNITY-not suffer indignity.... Tempett, iii. 2 
will digest this harsh indignity .. Lone'tL.Lnti, v. i 
5'ou give me most cgre^'ious indignitv./U/'iJf-H, ii.3 
unto the duke of this indignitv-.t'oiwdy o/A'rr. v. I 
mine age with this indignity. '7'i7n»Ji4</ro)/icu», i, 1 

some strange indignity O'hrlto, ii. 3 

INDIKECT-or indirect attempts. >l/fr. o/'/'cn/ce, iv. I 
thy lite by some indirect means ..At vat l.ikeil,i. 1 

though indirect, yet indirection king John, iii. 1 

the which, we find too indirect ....IHenfi/IV. iv. 3 
by-paths.and indirect crooked ways.'i Heniy I V. iv. 4 

lie needs no indirect nor lawless Richard III. i. 4 

what an indirect and peevish course iii. I 

by indiri'Ct nnd forced courses sulKlue . . Othello, i. 3 

,, . ..„„ ... , , INDIRECTION thereby grows direct. ...J0/.11, iii. I 

n speaking, not to incur the last./JicAard ///.'iii. 7 i J''''^. 'rash, by any indirection. . ..Juliut Ca-tar, iv. 3 



I shall incur I know not how Cymbeli 

to incur a general mock, run from her. . Othello, i. 2 
to incur a private check: when shall — iii. 3 

INCUR ABLE-gave him out incurable. /(H'jWeH, ii.3 

or overthrow incurable ensues KingJohn,v. 1 

but the disease is incurable 2 Henry I v. i. 2 

i'the palm, incurable bone-ach. rroi7u.« .^Crew. v. I 

INCURRED-thou hast incurred.. 1/cr. of Venice, iv. ! 

he hath incurred the everlasting All'slVrU, iv. 3 

incurred a traitor's name .. TroHus ^ Cre>tida,\ 
best meaning, have incurred the worst. . . . Lear, 

INCURSION— whose hot incursions.! Henr?///'. 



by indirections find directions out Hamlel.ii. I 

INDIRECTLY. I am loth . .l/cai«r-?/or Menmre, iv. 6 
indirectly to the Jew's house... >/«c/i.o/>'«ii'«, ii. i 

tliat, indirectly, and directly too — iv. I 

hot rosh haste so indirectly shed King John. ii. ! 

I answered indirectly, as I said [Henry if. i. 3 

crown and kingdom, indirectly held. . Henri, V. ii. 4 

all indirectly, gave direction liichard ill. iv. 4 

INDISCREET, or a fool Lnre't L. Lo.t, iv. 2 

so drunken, and so indiscreet an officer .CI'AfHo, ii. 3 

lenr,ii.K 

nnetimes serves us well . . Hnmtet, v. 2 
F.U and sickly fit 




the coward with thy indenture 1 HeiirylV.ii. 4 

our indentures tripartite are drawn — iii. 1 

are the indentures drawn? shall we — iii. 1 

is bound hy the indentiu-e of his oath.. Periclet, i. 3 

serve hy indenture to the common .... \v. 6 

and breadth of a imir of indentures? ..Hamlet, v. 1 
INDEX— as index to the story Richard III. 



the witness, and he's indited falsely . . Othello, iii. 4 

INDHENCHED-lie iudienclied..7'.o.yu.,<-t,«.. i. 1 

INDUBITATE beggar.... iore'jL./.oW, iv. 1 (letter) 

INDUCE 3'ou to tlie ([uestiou on' fi.. HenryVtU. ii.4 

to induce their meditation.. /(ii/07iy<J-C'/«'7)i(ra, v. i 

must first induce you to believe Cymbelinr, ii. 4 

not induce you to attend ..TilutAndronicut, v. 3 




her bed is India: there she lies ..Troilut^ Crest. 

I Imd gone barefoot to India 

INDI.\N— ten to see a dead Indian Tempett, 

stolen from an Indian king .. Mid.N.'tDrcam, ii. 1 
and, in the spiced Indian air, by niglit — ii. 2 

and beg her Indian iKiy iji. 2 

scarf veiling an Indian beauty. .. Vei. o/»'fHice, iii. 2 

diamonds, and Indian stones IHenryVI. iii. | 

some strange Indian with Henri/Vlll. v. 3 

rC'./. /^>iM like the base Indian iithillo >■ •> 

INDIAN-LIKE-thus, Indian-like ..All't IVeli 

INDICT.M EXT-rcnd the indictment. Winter'tT. ii 

tlicre is another indictment upon ..iHenrylV. ii 

that, hy indictment, and hy dint of — iv 

here is the indictment of the nood. Richard III. 



gerous. 
noire induction am I witness to — iv. 4 

INDI;E— inline thee with \casing. . TirelfhKignl, i. & 
1 shall indue you with: meantime. A'mj,' John, iv. 2 
and the tribunes indue you with . . Coriolanut, ii. 3 
it indues our other healthful members .OWr//<i, iii. 4 

INDUED— are men indued v/ith.TiroCien.or I'er. v. 4 

he is best indued in the small Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

indued with intellectual fcn<K.. Comedy of Krr. ii. 1 

and best indued, with some suspicion. //rnti/''. ii. 2 

.<,.• urn • » „''l<e a creature notive and indued .... H.i».i/f/. iv. 7 

■:*'! ' ,"i"!.l' » INTHI LGENCE set ine free Tempe.l. (cpil.) 

givest whores indulgences to sin I Henry I I. i.3 

of partial indulgence to their. /'ro'7u».^trrit«.i//i, ii.2 

INDUl.GENT-are too indulgent.. .4«/o..y.< fV^o. I. , 

INIJl'ltAVCE— without indiiranecZ/rnn/f ///. v. 



INDIES-my East ancl West In<iiC8..Vrrrj/ ir,>„. i. 3 INDl S-Tlilors servant Ariel! 



the augmentation of the Indies. 7'i/-W/I/i A'l^A', iii. 2 

another to the Indies Merchant of Venicr. i. 3 

where .-VuicriiMi. the Indies?. .C*ome//yo//i'rrf>rjr, Iii. 2 
has all the Indiis in his arms llmiy VIII. iv I 

INDIFFEltE.\CV-all indiffercncy./iVn^yoAji, ii. 2 
but a billv of imv inditferencv 'IHenn/IV. iv. 3 

INDIFFERENT-is indillereiit.T'tco Gen.of'Ver. iii. 2 

and it does inililfeient well Ticelflh Nighl, i. 3 

item, two ri|)9 indifferent red — i. s 

I'll tell .von news indifferent good. 7'omiii^o/.S'A. i. 2 
their garters of an inditlerent knit .. — iv. I 
my wrongs with an inditfcrent eyc../?icAnri/ //. ii. 3 

he seems mdid'erent; or. rather HenryV. i. 1 

lite is come alter it indifferent well. 



. , — Tempetl, iv. I 

and |>ut we oil industrious soldierBbip..>/nW.?'A, v. 4 
and point at your industrious scenes.. /ii>ig./nAii, ii. J 
is a dear and true industrious friend. 1 Henn, 1 1, i. \ 
INDI'STRIorsi.Y.I pluyedthefool. <»'.iifrr'.7'. i.2 
INDUSTRY- in.llistry odiieved.. TiroCien. of Vrr. i. 3 
the dearest design of indii5trv.Lor('»/..2.. iv. I (let.) 

his industry is_u|i-stoir8 ..". IHenrylV. ii.4 

their Imnes with industry 'i Henry IV. iv 4 

which industry ond couroge might. .3//riiryf/. v 4 
with aseriinis industry, that is ....Cymbeline, iii. .1 

the sweat of indnstrv would dry .... iii g 

Biidwitlindropiiing' industry Perlclei.iv. 1 

iT^rni'' a^i'tV i""'.""''^'' « )'h indnstry.O/A.lto. i. 8 
ISSStiw i ~ • '".«<luality..,WMj./or Meat. v. 1 



m.judBcindiffert-nt, nornomore../<pniyr///. ii. ( INEStl.M ABLE-inesliinahle itnne../(.rA..,rf /// i 4 
yes, he II fight indifferent well .. ri.,i;t,.,tOr... i. 2 hands, and cried, inestimable!.. ri».(i/.,j rr«,.ii: 2 



TNE 



C 390 ] 



ING 



INESTIMABLE-of inestimable ™l"f^';";(^'7-=ii 4 
TNPVITABLl!:— it is inevitable. . TwelflhlSigM, 111. i 
^^feW to Btfch inevitable slnuneW^m^^ 

^tis fond to wail i■«"'■^'\l'^^V;;l'^f "l^riX iv!V2 
inevitable prosecution ol Ji'-S""'e-..J«(.*c co. iv. 1- 

INEXORABLE [K.K.-iiiexecrable] ''"|' - ,..'Y 
n^re inexorable, O, ten times niorc...Ulf-i/. i- ' 
more ierce, and more inexorable. Ro,n.o*Ji/ <■';%• 3 

)■!/ r/. i. 2 

.'}iHenryl'l. ii. 2 
. . Lore's L. Lost, iv 



?o°r U>^y are ?«-tPPr,'?i&f '"''' ' :'""'"".' 
my title, wlueli is iirfallible . 
INlliLLIBI.Yconcudes.t. 



nobler Vhin my '■^™! ^l^;'f "rj;^"„Vt-<^^r,; i Y. ? 
INFAMY— dream on intamy.7»-oO<;n 0/ heromi.u. 1 
and mired with iuiamy, I might.. . . Much Ado, n. 
wi 1 onench the wonder ot' her mtamy - iv. 
I wilt whip about your infamy . . Lo-.s Ltol v. 1 

what infamy will there ai-ise IHennjyi.i^- 1 

life preserved with infamy .......... — ' V ■; 

q neen, and crowned with ■"^'^"'y !..2/r.»,/ {. in. i 

i throw my infamy at thee ■ .3He« ill-y. 1 

defaced with scars of iniamy '"'•■'''" d Hi- \\\- 7 

throw over her the veil of .infamy . . - . iv- * 
live to trumpet forth my infamy ..... • P'-"^'"- ■ > 

TNF VNCY-are in their infancy again. . Tempest, i. 2 
for froVn our infancy, we ha.ye.Tu'o nen. ofVer. u. 4 
is ^ound as careless mfancy. ...... 'V''"!' "^"•5'-.;- % 

ghTs the crutch the cradle's nifancj- Lo j s t L , y. 3 
Is tender as infancy, and grace . . M '" " ,.^ "!j' V \ 

from her tender mfancy o„Jlyi ( 1 

in his infancy been crowned w:!'" fil iv ■ 

and wayward was thy infancy . . -i/^'f l'^''':;\ 
skill-less as unpractised infancy.. TroilU!,^Cnss.i. 1 
'soft infancy, thatnothing canst .... - 1 — 
simpler than the infancy, of truth.... — "'• 3 
and aRreeing with thine '"fency.. T.i. s .4m(.™. v. 3 
INF 4.^T-infants of the spring . . . . Love s L. Lost, . i^ 
define, define, well-educated infant. . - 1 ■ - 
all hid, all hid, an old infant play . . . . — i^ • J 

thou disputest like an infant -- v. 

at first, the infant, mewling -As i/ou Li;,e <(, . / 

from a^ infant, freely, mnterslale 11 . 



did perish with the mtant. . ,„i„ 

oiitraeed infant state, and done a rape. htngJoh „ 



..Biclmrdll. 



plays in that infant's veins ._ 
draws the sweet infant breath 
and my infant fortune comes ..... ... — '|- ^ 

when hia infant fortune came to age.l He«» y I^.i- 3 
this infant warrior in his e^'erprizes - in. 2 

holds his infant np.. ...-•■• aHmny/c. iv. 1 

and yonr flowering infants — " • 

vour naked infants spitted upon .... 7 . " • -^ 

5„ infant bands crowned. "^""-'/hZ;,; r i f 

as very infants prattle of ........ ..1 H™'!/' '■"'■ ' 

meet I an infant of the house of Tork.2He,i,-,,r/.y. 

more than the infant that is born.. B-c/ia,d ///.... 

hath dimmed yonr infant morn - ". . 

poor infants, in their graves •;V„„,.,T.r r , y 4 

thi ^ royal infant theaNCn still .. ..Hewiil lU. v. i 

servants to this chosen infant .... .. — .^- % 

as infants empty of all thoughtl.T™, us*C;«s. iv. z 

your infants in your arms •'"''"■■' i^mnr.i. 1 

when theybehold their infants qnartered- ii. 

minds of Infants to exclaim . ■/''"'••''"■';° 'X' ii' 

f(,r the love of this poor infant ■» « ":ies, . 1 

and leave her the infant of your care ••••-, ' ' i 

St rind of this small flower. .Jfom.o ^■■''" '■ "• 3 
palls the infants of the sp.ring . ..... ■•■•."''"','';• f 

I^F \NT-LIKE-are too infant-like.Co, oiinxs, 1 . 1 
TNFECT-would not infect his reason?. . tempest, 1. 2 

"would even infect my mouth ; ; ' " i. 7j„ ,Y 

she would infect to the north star. . . . Much Ado 11. 1 

do you nfectyourself with tliem?.^« !/»« L'ke. .1..2 
a fear which oft infects the wisest., nmter slale, . 2 
who does infect her? wliy he ...... ■ - - • - 

with intrusion infect thy sa.p..Comedynf E"-"'.'-"- ^ 
doth infect the very life-blood '2«"'.v iv 

}?^^i;fj^fl^,^cra?^°°^:-::::H^i^li 

^;^^^'Jl^^^ingl^iis;pe^ehS»l 

-1 nestilence that does infect — . "• ' 

i^iFect the sound pine ...., .TroUusS,-Cress,da,u 3 

imnerial voice.) many are infect . ... — >• ^ 

no level malice infects one comma. 7'imon o/Ath. i. 1 
breath infect breath ........ .... • • • . ■ • - Vy 3 

below thy s ster's orb infect the an I - iv. j 

beat thee, but I should infect niy hands . - iv. 3 
conversa ion would infect my brain.Cono/n» ,s^ 1 . 1 
nature of bad news infects •■•t'''°7,^"eop. r<,, . 2 
infect her beauty, yo" fen-sucked lugs.. ..L^«',. 4 

minin» all within, infects unseen .... Hamlet, 111. 4 

w.ints not buzzers to infect his ear . . ... . — .i.y. o 

with the lampass, mfected with.. inra'^i'V*"- 11.1- ^ 
my wife's liver infected as her.life. »rm(er'» rale,i 2 
best blood turn to an infected jelly .. - j^" \ 
infected be the air whereon . ....... . . Machetn, iv. 

infected minds to their deaf pillows.. -- v. i 
never to be infecte/ with delight. . . f'-fjf;^,- ^ 
Richard, being infected, died . . . . ■■^"""Vj,: '.V ' 

with jealousy infected the sweetness ■■f"''i';'\- i 
ZllJuiy !4ve ioftcted nniie. ^- ■ • ^^J - ^ ''l^; 5 



rr-o'-Kn'Oanaturebut infected. Ti 

and cnll the infected forth - 

infected with mv country s love .. • . <^"rti 
hath been belched on by infected lunss. / 1 



!./.<?/icii.siv.3 



INFECTED-infccted with their manners.. /.TOr,.i. 4 
thrice infected, thy natural niagic . . . ■ ^l'""';''. "'• ^ 
o'er the infected r Kn/.-mfectious] housc.O(/iWto, iv. 
INFECTING— infecting one anothcr.Henr!// III.i. 1 
INFECTION-infections that the sun.. Tempest 11. 2 
marvellous infection to the little paBcWc.)!/ '•...ii-2 
hath Uikon the into^Honof the..r,.W.M A... in. 4 

he luith ta'en tlie infection Mucli.ldo, ii. J 

he hiltli a !.'rcilt infection Merchant of I eiia-e, 11. . 

that to the infection of my brains . » inter s I ale, 1. 2 
the greatest infection that eer was .. — i- ^ 

purge all infection from our air ...";„,,„ • o 

sucli is the infection of the time. . . . . • A>"^/"' "• ,X- ^ 
asainst infection r K;!(.-iniestion] . .IMu„ '' "• • .1^ 

b?eathe infection in this air 2H<'»n,) /. 11 . - 

diffused infection ot a man ....•;.■ ''" '."" ; ;• '• .- 

plague and infection mend . . . .Tnnon oj i" >• V ; 

inflction, being of catching nature. Gomo/uiu.<, . 1 
what a strange°infectiou s fa len . Cymbet,,e, iii. 2 
lest that the infection of his tortune . . . . ^™-J\- % 

some new infection to thy ey.e . . Homeo .5- JuUet,i. i 
so fearful were they of infection ...... , — , . X- - 

INFECTIOtTS-like one infections. » irrte, slnle, 111..2 
a huge infections troop, of pale. Comedy oj ^-rrors-^. 
yonr potent and "'ftctious fevers. T,moo/.J(A.iv 1 
the most infectious pestilence ..Antony «■/.<;»•'• 5 
will be both noisome and infectious.. Cymte-..e,i. b 
where the infections pestilence.. Komeo^- {««?',. v. 2 
Tk ".! raven o'er the Vnfections house . Othello. ,v. 1 
INFECTIOUSLY itself attects •,■ ' '■"''"'tl;,' "•; ' \ 
INFER-must inter this principle ••^;",: /"'"•.■''■ ! 
this doth infer the zeal I had to , . . .2ii«, n ■ v. n 
I this infer, that many things .••••:■• "'"'■';•;■ : 

infer the bastardy of Edward's . . R'chard ^' ^- • 5 

I did infer your lineaments — "'■ ^ 

infer fair England's peace by... — Y; , 

INFERENCE-matching thy.inference..O/,. (o 1.1 3 

INFERIOR-which any inferior might..- // s'lf.'.N. . 

vet she is inferior to none..Tam,niiotsh. 2 (mducl 

so shall inferior eyes, that borrow . • '^'"ff •'"';'''.;; 

by subject and inferior breath .. ..A'' """"'■ "V 

inferior to none, but his majesty . . 1 Henry I I. 111. 
or be inferior to the proudest peer. . . . — v. 

may not prove inferior to yourself..3H«.ry f I. iv. 
and small inferior veins, from me ■■^'"''"'"'"''■■\- 
commit offence to my inferiors .... Cyn>Mj'< , . 1 

wrangle with inferior things . . . . . . ., ■■(>"''"■ 'V f 

INTE^NAL-find her the infernal Ate. Much Ado. . 1 

to the infernal deep, with Erebus ■■l»^';2'.!,; I ' i 

sent from the infernal k'Jgdof •• ^ !" '. ''/f^iiY I 

INFERRED— the duke inferred ..hichaidiu. 111. 7 

say more than I have inferred? . ..... - y.- 3 

'tis inferred to us, his days are •■/""'"' V^'j!: '/.V * 

INFERRETH arguments of mighty.SHem-i/ F2. 111. \ 

INFERRING-iuferring arguments.. — "• - 

INFEST-do not infest your mind . . ■■J<'>"r'f Y: 

INFESTION-[Kn«.] against ;n£ef!0"; ""'';'/•'' "^I'-l 

INFIDEL-Lorenzo, and his inftdel.?..U<?r.n./' eii. 111. i 

now, infidel, I have thee on the hip - iv. 1 

go sleep with Turks and nrfldels . . Rn-hu, d 1 1. iv. 1 

pagan fascal is this? an "^f}^:.;)^"''^ il; • \ 

thfnk yon we are Turks or infidels? /f«-A'n</ "'• m-S 

INFINITE— but an infinite loss ...... lemiesi,-iy_. 

hut her favour infinite TwoGen. oJ I erona, . 1^ 

instances as infinite of love ....... ... — ii- < 

have purchased at an infinite rate.Afc«!/ " '' '. ' ^ 
were of an infinite distance imm.Meas.Jor i^/t«.^. . h 
it is past the infinite of thought . . . . Much Ado ii. 3 

our duty is so rich, so infinite .... Love s t..i.os:, \. - 

speaks an infinite deal of nothing. «e>-.o/-.|,..c.,. 
skill infinite, or monstrous desperate.^» sWeU,n. 1 
an infinite and endless liar . . . . . . . .... . r7,„, ' = „ 

amongst the infinite doings of the. «'.n(er ^/ac^- ' 
of creSit infinite, highly beloved. C«..<>.d!"./-J' • v- 1 
beyond the infinite and boundless. . h>ug John iv. 3 

considerations infinite do 1 «f " J // ■.;'■ 

what infinite heart's ease must H«»yf. i\. 1 

for these fellows of infinite .tongue.... — y- . 

your hopes and friends are ^f^Z%r7«^Iorissii I 
the past proportion of his mfi.nite. Jroites ^ C, ess.n.2 
to danger as infinite as imminent! .. — |v. 4 

the one almost as infinite as all. - iv- » 

the infinite malady crust you.7m.on ofAthen,, ii. 6 
womb unmeasureable, and infinite breast - iv. 3 
discovery of the infinite flatteries .... - Y- ' 
in nature's infinite look of secrecy .. .4 n^ ^Clvo.i. 2 
nor custom stale her infinite variety - ii- 2 

infinite virtue! comest thou smiling - Jv. 8 
conclusions infinite of easv ways to die - y- 2 

for you. to your so infinite loss Cymbetme,^. i 

what an infinite mock is this .•■•••■• . 77„„„ l' \ 
countless and infinite, yet would.T,to.4. on. v. 3 

1 have, for both are infinite . . . . Romeo &■''' f ".2 

as infinite as man may undergo :;■•••••""" '^'i-' i 

and count myself a king o.f infinite space - . 2 
how infinite in faculties I in form ...... — "• ^ 

a fellow of infinite jest, .of most excellent - v. 

INFINITELY-so infinitely bound.vV^-. 0/ J en. v. 1 
I will swear I love thee infinitely .. \ Henry 1. 11. 3 
debtors do, promise you {"^^^^^^y-^^ZZZ'lTii 
BO infinitely endeared-Allto you .7, mo; "/■■"'■'• ^ 
1 am most infinitely tied ....CymM/fle, 1. 7 ( ettei) 

INriNITIVE-an infinitive thing.. 2He»>-.v;f. . 1 

INFIRM- is infirm from your 80und...4« .« " en, 11. 1 
infirm of purpose! give me the . . . . ,. Macbeth ,1 2 
waywardness that infirm and choleric. . . . Lear.). 1 
noor. inirm. weak, and jlesp.sed old man - 111. 2 

iNFIRMITIES-allowed infirmities. 7fin«-rsT«te,i.2 
should bear his friend^ infirmities. J«^i«C«'»o';, iv.3 
Dlav with all infirmities for gold .... CymbeUne, i. 7 
Sstuming man's infirmities. . . . . Perieles, 1. (Goi^-er 
these fishers tell the infirmities of men — 1 - 

with those infirmities she owes .../.rm,i. 1 

INFIRMITY— with my infirmity .... Tempest, ly. 1 
iiffirmity\hatdecays\lie wise ..T^relflh *VA(, 1. , 

' a speedy infirmity, for the better ... . - i- ft 
this in the infirmity of sense . . •. J-f-^'-^.'-^.f," • .y- 

1 will you be cured <;f your inflrmity?...l'( ..< '' ■ ». "• 
hut infirmity, (which wmts nn . " n.ier -To'-.v 1 

I 1 have a stranRC infirmity, which k.. Muri.rih, m. 1 



INFIRMITY-discover thine infirmity I Henry »"/.y. 4 

not a man of their infirmity Coriolamis, 111. 1 

to think it was his infirmity Julms Cwsar,}. i 

constrained by her infirmity ...... Cymbelmr, in. 5 



„,^ ,.,„ ity of his age; yet he 

infirmity doth still neglect all office 



'tis the infill 



. . Lear, i. 1 
. — ii. 4 
0(/ie«o, ii. 3 



. iii. 1 



iii. 1 
iii. 3 
v. 3 



I am unfortunate in the infirmity 

on some odd time of his infirmity — ;:• - 

with one of an ingraft infirmity -- '!• •' 

INFIXED I beheld myself, drawn . . Ain? John 11. 2 

INFIXING— of mine eye infixing AUslVeli., v. 3 

INTLAiME— will inflame thy noble.. 2HeniyZ;'..v. 5 

it will iiiHame von, it will .Julius Cccsar, 111. t 

can as well infiamc as it can kill /'em-ie.«,.ii. 2 

inflame [Col. Kn(.-inflnmiiig] love i.'fP-) „- »^- ) 
there should bc-agam to uiflanic it . . 0//.e«o, 11. 1 
INFLAMED— 'fore we arc inflamed.. K/n^' Jol'n, v. 1 
his heat inflamed with Venus . . Trodus (>■ tress, y. . 
that liave inflamed desire in my breast. 7 ericles, 1. 1 
should kindle to inflamed.respect .. ... . . -Lenr.u 

INFL \MING-witli inflaming wrath. /v/ng-Jo/m, in. 1 
any passion of inflaming love ...... 1 Henry I I. v. :. 

rCoV Kilt ] inflaniiiv,' love 1 thy bosom. i'endes. ly. 1 
INFl. \ M M ATK IN -for inflamniation2 Henryll . iy.3 
INFLICT— con inflict upon him... .2/7enryr/. 111. 1 

and so inflict our province .. .. . . . ... . . . Pen'-les, v. 1 

INFI-ICTION— dead to infliction. Mnis. /or Mens. 1. 4 
INFLUENCE-whose influence if now ..Temp 
by her fair influence fostered.. Two Gen. of I e 
to all the skiey influences...... i>7ra.«../i)/-.We".. 

whose influence is begot ot that .. tore s L. Im^i, v. - 

under the influence of the most All s » in, 11. 1 

by all their influences, you may.. Hin/e.- .« 7«(e, 1. •- 
gave life and influence to their. . /.mono/.l'/;e«s, y. 1 

6bedience of planetary iiiHunKC . . , Lear, 1. 2 

whose influence, like t)\e wrcatli of...... — "■ f 

star upon whose influence Nc|itnne 9 . .Hnmtcl, i. I 
INFOLD-do worms infold. jUer.o/ ; enice, 11. 7 (scroll) 

let me infold thee, and hold thee .Mact,eh,u 4 

infold me from the search ..... -Romeo ^Juhet, 111. ,! 

INTORM— I should inform thee further. rempest,_\. I 

that let me inform you . . j;/easHre.ror ^{ensure, in. 2 

thou mayst inform something Allsn eu, iv. 

unto ourselves; inform 'era that — iv. .' 

and inform him, so 'tis our will. . .... — X- 3 

inform yourselves, we need no. . . . yi'mler s rale, 11. 1 

which informs thus to mine eyes. . . .Macbeth ii. 

what they will inform, merely hate.iwc/mjd H- 11. 

at Windsor, so inform the lords 1 Henry 1 '.1.1 

I must inform you of a dismal -- !• ' 

he did inform the truth Coriolanus, i. t 

come, we'll inform them of our — 

how ! I inform them ! — 

I shall inform them .... •■ — 

inform thy thoughts with nobleness — . ;, 

to inform you rightly both . . Atttony <§- Cleopatra,]. 4 
nor can her heart inform her tongue — "i- a 

your wisdom may inform you Cym!>e/ine. i. - 

1 will inform your father ........... — "-3 

young one, inform us of thy fortunes — ly. « 
inform her full of my particular fear. . .... Lear, 1. 4 

who is't, that can inform me? ........... f/a«i/e(, i. 1 

how all occasions do inform against me — iv. 1 
your officer, logo, can inform you . . . . . •Othello, 11 . 3 

INTOKMAL-informalwomen are.Mea,5./or;iicas.y. I 

INTORMATION against me • -,,"'• ; 

seeking tales, and informations. ...Hen>-yr/7f. v. 2 
chance to whip your information . . Cor/otanu,s iv. b 
INFORMED thoroughly of the cause.. Vei-.o.^ ' en-iy- > 
many likelihoods informed me ot this. All s" ell, 1. i 
I duly am informed his grace is at . . — iv- * 
informed her fully I could not answer — y- 3 

thereof to he informed "'"'"; ■' ' "'f • • - 

would have informed for preparation ..i>7ac(.e//., 1. 5 

espials have informed me 1 Henry IJ.ui 

I have informed his highness so — v. 1 

we come to be informed by — y- 4 

I am informed that he comes JHenrij-^/. ly. 4 

for so we are informed ............. Henry I II I. v. 2 

have you informed them since?. . . . tonolami.^, 111. 1 

let Rome he thus informed. .. . . . Antony 4Cleo. 111. b 

from my sister been well inforined Lear, 11. 1 

most fortunately been informed .... ... . . ■ — 1 • j 

I have informed them so. Informed thenil - u. 4 

are they informed of this? - n • 4 

when I informed hnn, then he called .... — }^-f 

'twas he informed against hini ............. ,— Y; , 

INFORTUNATE n nothing but m./v/nff Jo'm,u. 1 

Henry' though he be infortu.nate •• '^"7 '!/'/. ly, ? 

INFRlNGE-did the edict infringe. Meas.forMeas. n. 2 

for your love.would infringe an oath, /-one ^L-L-'J-^ 

not partial to infringe.our laws.Co"i«/;/o./'f..To,,.i. 

infringe the holy prTvilege ''''/'"'■''.L'L^i- \ 

he tenTpted to infringe my. vow . . . . Co. "''«"''/• y- 3 
INFRlNGED-a faith infringed. . Lore s L. Lost, ly. 6 

roAvittingly have I infringed RHenr.// /..n. '2 

INFIJSE-infuse themselves ■■M^;-c''-X'""7)Z- \ 

infuse his breast with •"."/°''>"'I^' y;^"l"2' i i' 2 

these looks infuse new hfe .. ... TitusAnd onicus,i. i 

INFUSED-infused with a fortitude.. .. Iempe.^1,1. 2 

infused itself in thee . ... ,. . Merchant "..A ' -"'c;. JJ- 

infused with so foula spirit!. r«.ning-t>./S/.. 2(induc.) 

clear nivs which she in'fused on me . 1 He.,r,, FI. ,. 2 

heaven hath infused them wi h . . ■'''""« C"-;"'':- » 

INKUSING-infusing him with .. .Hieliatdll. 111. i 

INFITSION-other hot infusion ..»,nlerslale, ly. 3 

blest infusions that dwell in vegetives.Per.W^ m. 2 

infusion of such dearth and rareness ■.»»'"'< y- ^ 

INGAGED-thought I stood ingaged../fn s "c«,y- 3 

INGENER-rKn/!!l does tire the ingener.O/fte»o i . 1 

INGENIOUS-an eel is ingenious?.Lot'e s L. Lost.u 2 

thy meaning, pretty ingenious... — "i- 1 

mehercle, it'^their sons be ingenious.. —.,„"■ , 
a i.oor, decayed, ingenious, feoUsU.. . . .4" sllell, y. 2 
Icn rning, and ingenious studies . . 7"n.n".ff ".'>".•.!• j 
hol.l, quirk, ingenious, forward ..Rieliard III. 111. 1 

my inpc-uious instrument! CymlH-l,ne, iv. 2 

send out for torturers ingenious...... — y- ^ 

and have ingenious feeling of my huge ■ ■ '•™'; 'y- » 
most ingenious sense deprived thee of !../)o'.i(e«. y. ' 



ING 



[ 391 ] 



INN 



111. 4 



iii. 2 



;.\(iKMi)irSl,Y I»pflik Ti,nono/Alhrnt,\l.i 

' X(;i,l)UI(H'S-() iii^'lDrimm leatnw], King John, v. I 
I \i;()|'._l„i,k with lii«<>t» biiw«..,»/(M«.rt,r Mnis. iii. 1 
' V';i; \i r .me Dtnii iiiKmrt innrmllv..OWicH(i, il. 3 

im;i: \: I i;ii-iii!;niai(ii,.vLiifiKur»Ji/;.c<f»<ii-,ii. i 

I NCItA li: iiiu'inli'iinil iiimiiBiiicioiis.ncW/7/1 \. v. I 
a.. -ni.vl,'.., Ii,>, t.> III' illf.'rate .. luminnnr Shrrw,\. 2 
yi.ii iiiKri.lv iuv..lls,yi.u l.l...i.Iy . . .. Kin^' John. v. -1 

lis this iiinnit<> luiil .■MiikiTccl \II,;iru 11'. i. 3 

iimnitc lor-;cttuliH'>.s shall |)..is(m ..rminlnuun, v. 2 
l.\'lillA-|'i:Kri.-ini.-nitt(ul hoy there. ■/•«•<•' /7/,.Y. v. 1 

tlii.iirrncl. iM..rnt.l'iil, s.iviiu'o llrn,,,y. ii. 2 

in. in- hrin^'niil inurnlil'nl inilli !.. 7Vmnu,i/- .f//.. iv. 3 
w.Ti' 11 liind .. fill:; nil, Ciil iiijiirv.,..f<)MV./,iHii,., ii. 2 
lor tlieliilllliln(h' In he iil-rukful.... _ ii. 3 

.l.-ods, in;;nil. fill Koiiu- r.-.|iiil,s « itli. ■/•iVHj,-/Hd. v. I 
oflioiivcu lull Oil Ikt iiiLTiil.riil top! ....Lear. ii. 4 
spill lit once, that iiiakf iiiL-nituriil iniin — iii. 2 
iiiL'raloluI lovl 'tis lu'. liiiul last his .... — iii. 7 
l.\i;i!.VL'l'rri)IO-iln- iii-iatitii(lo..7V<.f;c>i.o/>'. i. 2 
hair iiif,'ialiliMK- iiioiv in n man . Tirrinh \iuht, iii. 4 
not ht iiimalitilik' so liilu-h...U,,r/,„„i'o/ r,-nm;v. 1 
unkind, us man's in(,'nllitiiclc../j i/..,/ /,>/,,■, ii. 7(soim) 
(liRohodicmv and in,i,'rtttiliick', to von. HV;,/,r'» 7'. iii.a 
till' sin of niv in^Talitiidi; even now. . . M.iriirlh, i. 4 

monster of iiii;rati tildes 'ri,.,l,fs\Cicss\(l<i, iii. 3 

ingratitude in them hereditary, rm,,,,, nf Athens, ii. i 
now iligratiliide makes its worse than — 
Inilk ot this iimralitiide with niiv size — 

to wipe oiil our iiiLTntitlldu with' — 

niifrht they fester Vaiiist ingratitude. Conciinii 

iniiratitiule is monstrous — 

needs must li^;lit on this ingratitude ../«<. Osi 

insiHtitiiile. more slroni,' than traitor's — 

to seoiirile the ingratitude . . .Inlomj ^Cleonalia, ii. 6 

the iiiiiratitudeoI'lliisSeleiiens _ V. 2 

so supplant us for iin;ralitiide. . Titus. 4mlroniciis, i. 2 

on Home for this iii'^ratitude — iv. 2 

ingratitude! thou niarble-hcartcd fiend ..Lear, i. 4 

monster incratitiido! — i. 5 

filial ingratitude! is it not as this mouth — iii. 4 

I .\"( ; I! IC m !■; NT to his eye Ifinter's Talr, ii. 1 

the iii'-'redieiits of our poisoned .Mudieth. i. 7 

for the ingredients of our cauldron — iv. I 

uiildesscil. and tlie ingredient is a devil. OWicWo, ii. 3 

1 VCKOSSKI) hv swift impress ...Inlomj fiClca. iii. 7 

INlI.\BIT~imin doth not inhahit ...'.Tempest, in. 3 

wonder, anil amazement inhahits here — v. 1 

loveinhal.its in tlie tiuest v:\U..Tun Gen.^f I'er. i. 1 

hiiiiu' help'd, inhabits there — iv. 2 (soug) 

that dost inhabit in my breast — v. 4 

eorniption inhabits our frail blood . . Tiielflh \. iii. 4 

ini-ht haply inhahit a bird _ iv. 2 

none hut witi-lies do inhabit liere.Comcrfvo/Eo-. iii. 2 

I.apland sorcerers iiihahitlierc _ iv. 3 

[f„l.-K>ii.l if trembling I inhahit then jl/iicM/i, iii. 4 

tliat [ have seen inhaliit in tliose King John, iv. 2 

shall here inhabit, and this laud he.ltiitianl II. iv. 1 

where eves (lid onee inhabit Ilnli.ml lll.i. 4 

IN'TI ABITABl.E, wherever Ilicii.u'l II. i 1 

INHABlTANT-inhttbitantso' theeartli.,l/«W,w/i,i. 3 

Willi wohes, thy old inhabitants! ..iHi>ni/l I', iv. 4 

IMI Ar,ITi;i) -ill inhabitedl ....^.vv"" I.ikeif, iii. 3 

I N 1 1 1: H F. .N'T baseness Coriolnnus, iii. 2 

INUICRIT— we will inherit here Tempest, ii. 2 

all whieli it inherit, shall dissolve.... — iv. I 
else nothing, will inherit her ..TwoGen. ofVer. iii. 2 

but let tliine inherit first Merni It'ives, ii. 1 

pain purehased, dotli inherit pain .Lot!e'.?t. I,os^ i. 1 

nothing but fair is that whieh you inherit iv. 1 

her dispositions she inherits .ill's fell,!. 1 

moral parts may'st thou inheiit tool — i. 2 

those 'bated, that inherit but tlie full — ii. 1 

tluit ran inherit us so much as Richard II. i. I 

womb inherits naught but bones .... — ii. 1 
thy linen, shall inherit his kingdom. 2Jfenr!/ff. ii.2 

naturally inherit of his father — iv. 3 

to iiilierit siieh a haven Ci/mlipline, iii. 2 

and never after to inherit it ..Titus.lndroninis, ii. 3 

but to till' i-'irdle do the gods inherit Lear, iv. 6 

this iiiglil inherit at my house ..linmeo/i- Juliet, i. 2 

IXIir.lUTANX'l-; ofit All's irell,\v. 3 

he lav elaiiii to thine inheritance? ..KingJohn, i. 1 
anri Hiid the inheritance of this poor — iv. 2 

to mv inherit:! nee oflVee descent . . Ilirlinrtl II. ii 3 
inheritiiiiee deseen.l unto the dailglitcr. Henri/ /'. i. 2 
deprived of leaioiir an. I inheritance.: //cHri//'/. ii. 5 
' • all the wlM.leinheritan.'e Igive - iii. 1 



INIQUITY— justice or iniquity y.Wmij. /or Mens. ii. I 

Is about a iilece of iiiif)nitv Il'inler'i Tale, iv. 3 

that grey ini(|iiitv, that father I Ihnn/ir. ii. 4 

ond liii.iuity's Ihroiit cnl liken nilf.'.'l/e,,;., ;/. iv. 2 

like the formal vi.e. Ini.inilv ll„li,ir.l'l 1 1, iii. 1 

how now, wholes.ilne ilii.;liitvy riiieirt, iv. » 

seeds anil r.iols of shame and iniquity — iv. Ii 

I lack iniquity sometimes Othello, i.i 

if yon are so I'oiiil over her iniquity — iv. 1 

INlriATK islhe initiate fear j1/,ic()c//i, iii. 4 

IN.IOlN-nOD-huvetheie iiii"!nted lliem. (»/„■«„. i. 3 

INMUNCTKIN-iiiion a sore iojiin.'li..ii. 7-,„,„,/, iii. 1 

and, with a kind of injiiiietioii .. liiiliU: .\i"hi, ii. .'> 

and that, l>y great iniuiietions. . l/e .,<. 'i,/ .Uci... iv. 3 

to these iiijiinetioiis every one. ,Ue,,/,. \,f Venice, ii. !l 

llieir injiiiielii.n he to bar mv do.irs. ...".. /.mr, iii. 4 

IN.IirmO-I woul.l not ininie thee.. /» -/oh Like it, iii,.', 

IN.iiri{KJ)-_whom have'l i.iiiired ..-nicnn/ll. iv. 7 

how hast thou injiiriii h..lli tbyielf.. .■)//<■«/./ ;/. i. 1 

when have I illjlircl thee? Ilnhnnl 1 1 1. \. :\ 

do protest. I never iiijiired i\\ce..lionn'n f, Jnl.et, iii. I 
IN,JURIOIl of heiueii and earth 1 .... K/,,.- ./.,/,„, ii. 1 
lN.rUHnOS he justly weighed ....Tu-eljlh Mghl.v. 1 
your injuries as seems you best . . .l/.v,,-. r.r.Mias. v. 1 
eyes, toneucs, minils, and injuries . . .W»c/i .Ulo, iv. I 
won thy love, doing thee iiijuries..V/V. A'. Dream, i. I 
stooped my neck under your injurics./^Wi. //. iii. 1 
enriched with any otlier injuries ..1 //cii,!/ ;;'. iii. 3 
with the injuries of a wanton time .. — v. 1 

with an incensed fire of injuries illenryir. i. 3 

, that diith you injuries — iv. 1 



e, hi 
nail iiihi 



for till 
t...lh. 



.■ iiilieritance? "iUenryyi. i. 1 

itaiieeniv father left me — iv. in 
, as the earldom was..3//e;iry;7. i. I 
nee of their loves ..Connlantts. iii. 2 

ee of l-ortinbras Ilamlrt, i. 1 

ly bird Astiou l.ikeil, i. 3 

■ lieritcd . . Timon 0/ AHw 



IMII'.IUrKl) 

lived to sie inherited my very wishes ..Conof.'ii! 1 
I,VHi;inT.)H..fall perfections ...I.oi-e\L.Lost. ii. 1 

the(iuarr. I of a true inheritor iUenruW. iv. 4 

anil be inheritor of thy desire llicharil III. iv. 3 

pleas4'd to breed out your inheritors 7Vo//. ^Crex.'tv. 1 

thai may succeed as his inheritor I'erielcf. i. 1 

the inheritor himself have no more? ..Hamlet, v. 1 

I.\-IIKUITKI.\' in .Salique land Ilennii: i. 2 

IMIERSr.I) in the arms tllenri/ll. iy. 7 

IXriIBIT thee [ro(.K-iNinhibit lhen]...tlarl,rih. iii. i 

INIIIHITED Bin in thecanon .lU'sWell, \. \ 

a priietiser of arts inhibited and out of . . Othello, i. 2 
IXmniTIOX- their inhibition comef. .Uamlet. ii. 2 

IMIOOPKl), at ikMs Anlonyf^ Cleopatra, ii. 3 

INin iSI'IT AIU.F. (Ii on /Vr.W«. v. 2 

INIUMAN wretch iineapablc of..V<-r.or»Vn.V-. iv. I 

that thou art so inhuman All'slfell, v. 3 

savage, and inhuman creature! llrnryV. ii, 2 

hilt you are more inhuman 3flenritt'I. i. 4 

Ihvdee.l, inhuman, and unnatural. WiV/i.?iy/ ///. i. 2 
inliiiinan traitors, you constmiue<I.7'/i(i.l«(/roii. v. 2 
auav. iuhuinan dogi unhallowed slavel — v. 3 

O damned lagol O iiihinnan dog! Olhrlh, v. I 

INHiriTIF.S-irrrconciled iniquities. ;f<-nr(/ 1', iv. I 
INIQUITY— lecheries and iniqiii ty. .!/<•, ryUirM, v.. ^ 



not tl 

left me op 

those bitte 

said ■\Varwii-k' (.. 11 

prefer his 

record 



, will 



but he docs 1 



['h Somerset. 1 llenryl'I. ii. 5 

ijnries? SHenn/ri. iv. 1 

iijiines to his heart. ri'moii 0/ Athens, iii. S 
luit injuries you did us..Anl.^Cteo. v. 2 



iiy injur 



thy harsh and poi 

Osir, to wilful men, the iiiiuries Lear, ii. 4 

to outjest his heartsU-ciek iniiiries — iii, I 

these iiij lilies the kin- now liears — iii. 3 

Bliall iiote.xciise the injuries lloa:eo ^Juliet,]]]. 1 

saints in your injuries, devils being Othello, ii. 1 

IN.;UKI(>t;S-injiiiioMs wasps!.. 7VoG™.o/-(>,'. i. 2 
U injurious love, that respites . . Meas. ror Aleas. ii. 3 
wretched Isabel I injurious world! .. — iv. 3 
injurious Hermia! most ungrateful. i)/iV/, A'. Oj-. iii. 2 
a false traitor, and injurhnia villain. /(iV/iiiri; //. i. 1 

injurious duke; that threat'st '2Henn/ I'l. i. i 

injurious Margaret! And why not .SHenryl' I. iii. 3 

by whose injurious doom my — iii. 3 

injurious time now Troilus^Cressida, iv. 4 

thou injurious trilninci Coriolnnus. iii. 3 

mv secptrcnt Die iiiiiiriousgod8.jH(oii!/.Sr'fo.iv. 13 

till the iiijiuioiis Komansdid Cymbtline, iii. 1 

thou injiiri. HIS thief, hear but my — iv. 2 

INJUllY— very competent injury. Twelfth Sight, iii. 4 

and speak out of my injury — v. I 'letter) 

tin I torment thee tor this injiiry.;V/rf.A'.DrMi/i,ii.2 
you would not do me thus much injury — iii. 2 

though I alone do feel the injury — iii. 2 

the world no injury, for in it As yon Like it, i. 2 

for such an injury would \ex.Tumiiig of Shrew, iii.'l 

sealing the injury of tongues Winter' sTule, i. 2 

my comfort, and my injury. . Comedy of Errors, iv. 2 

strength and height of iiijnrv I — v. 1 

his injury her injury, the beadle ....AVng-.Ao/in, ii. 1 

they did me too much injury IHcnryir. v. 4 

thought not good to bruise an injury. Hewryr. iii. 6 
and quiekly will return an injury .. — iv. 7 

you do me shameful injury Richard III. i. 3 

you do him injury, to scorn his corse — ii. 1 
where injury of chance puts. Troilus frCressidn, iv. 4 

were a kind of ingrateful injury Coriolanus, ii. 2 

and his injury the gaoler to his pity — v. 1 

to this hour Iiewail the injury — v. 5 

or do your honour injury Cymbeline. ii. 4 

hath done you both this cursed injury — iii. 4 

tossed from wrong to inj ury Pericles, v. 1 

patience her injury a mockery makes . . Othello, i. 3 

distinguish a benefit and an injury — i. 3 

to be a party in this injur.v — v. 1 

INJUSTICE— redress of inj"ustice.A/<?as./oi-.Vpn». iv. 4 

to tax him with injustice? — v. 1 

do strike at my iujustice Winter' sTnle, iii. 2 

stern injustiec and confused wrong. .Ki«j,'./o/iii, v. 2 
plague injuatice with the pains of.. Richard II. iii. 1 

with injustice is eorrupted illenryll. iii. 2 

underhand corrupted foul injustice, liichard III. v. 1 

nor injustice for yon, or any Henryliii. ii. 1 

blazoning our injustice everywhere? Titiis.lnd. iv. 4 
INK— why, as black as iiik..7'«'o Gen. of Verona, iii. 1 

write, till your ink be dry — iii. 2 

taunt him with the licence of ink. TieelfthNighl, iii. 2 
let there he gall enough in thy ink . . — iii. 2 

that never saw pen and ink — iv. 2 

and pen, ink, and paper — iv. 2 

some ink. jiaper, and light (re/).) .... — iv. 2 

slie is fallen into a pit of ink Much Ado, iv. I 

the ebon -colon red ink Love's L. Lost, i. 1 (letter) 

he hath not drunk ink — iv. 2 

until his ink were tempered with.... — iv. 3 
beauteous as ink; a good conclusion — v. 2 

the blows yon gave were ink ..Comedy of Err. iii. I 

to graves, your ink to blood iUenrylV.iv. I 

111 call for pen and ink \ Henry VI. v. 3 

pive me some ink and paper (rep.).. Richard III. v. 3 

IS ink and paper ready? — v. 3 

comparison all n biles arc ink ..Troiius^ Cress, i. I 
ink and paper. Channian (rep.) ..Aniony ^Clco. i. b 

thoiurh ink he made of gall Cymbeline. i. 2 

black as the ink that 'son tlicci .... — iii. 2 

cive mc a pen and ink TilusAndronirus, iv. 3 

bring me spiees, ink, and paper Pericles, iii, 1 

get mc ink and paper Rojueo^- Juliet, v, 1 

TNKHO|[N-niiil inkhorn to the Eaol.,Viir/i Ado. iii. .', 

disgrnccd by an inkhorn mate Wfciin//'/. iii. 1 

his pen and iiikhnrn about his neck.2;/riirv/''. iv. 2 
INKI,K-the;.riceof thiBinkIc?..l.nrr'« /,. Uti, 



INKLE-her inkle, silk, twin wilh./VriWei, v. (Gnw ) 
INKI,INO-caii give you inkling ot.//.'«r„;';;;. ii. 1 
' had Inkling, tins fortnight ' 



iiUy brows.. /(.t/<,»/,,7,e 

id rotten Richard II. ii. I 

iiky cloak ;;,ii«/c(, i. 2 

id with patiiies.A/cr.o//'c;iicc v. 1 
in inland brook .. — v. 1 
■d, and kiiow..,liij/oMi,it(;i(, ii. 7 



inkles, caddi.sscs, cambric 



. Winter's Talc, iv. 3 



INKV-'ti: 

Willi iiikv blots, a 
'tis not alone mv 
INI^AIIJ-thick inhi 
INI.AN'D-asdoth 
.vet am I iiilan.l h 
was in his youth an inland inuu 

ond inland i.ctty spirits illenryiy. iv. 3. 

onr inland from the pilfering llrnryV. i. 2 

INL.W -to inlay heaven witli stars.. Cymlieline, v. & 

INI.Y— I have inly wept Tempest, v. I 

the inly touch ot love 7'ko fjen.of Verona, ii. 7 

inly ruminate the morning's. f/eiirj/ /'. iv. (chorus) 

to see how inly sorrow gripes SHenryVI. i. 4 

INiVt.VNITY and bloody strife illenryVI. v. 1 

INMOST-picrce the inmost centre. 7'iVuiWni/, on. iv. 2 

may see the inmost jiart of you Hamlet, iii. 4 

INN— gives me leave to inn the crop . . All's Well, i. 3 
in the self-same inn, a poor mean. Comedy of Err. i. I 

and sleep within mine inn i. 2 

and then go to my inn, and dine — i. 2 

to gain the timely iiiu Maeljelh.iii.Z 

thou most heaoteoiis inn Richard II. v. 1 

not take mine eioc in mine inn 1 Henry IV. iii. 3 

he must llieii to the inns of court ..•illcnnjlV. iii. 2 

in all the inns of court again — iii. 2 

others t.i Ihc inns of court •illenryVI. iv. 7 

shows like a riotous inn Lear, i. 4 

INNKIOKI'EK of Daintry iUenrylV. iv. 2 

INNOC'KNC'K—and liol.v innocence!.. 7'fm;)<'i', iii. 1 
dallies with the innocence of love. 7'«(-//M .Vi>,'/i(, ii.4 

by innocence I Bwcar, and by — iii. I 

the sense, sweet, of my innocence ..Mid. N.Dr. ii. 3 

friendship, childhood innocence? — iii. 3 

w hat follows is pure innocence. /l/e>rA. of Venice, i. 1 

was innocence for innocence Winter's Tale, i. 2 

the silence often of jnire innocence ., — ii.2 

but innocence shall make false — iii. 2 

not only his innocence, (which seems — v. 2 
in the matter of mine innocence . . King John, iv. I 

[Co/.] mine innocence, and Richard II. i. 3 

white investments figure innocence.. 2 H/nn//r.iv. 1 
the troth iiii.l iiiii,,i'enee of Ibis p.i.)r.2//PHri/;'7. ii. 3 
the trust I liave is ill mine iiinoecnee — iv. 4 
our innocence [Cnl. K,it. -inwicQucy]. Ilich. III. iii. 5 
to plead mine innocence; for that.. //cii>!//'77;. i. 1 

shall mine innocence arise, when the iii. 2 

your majesty, protest mine innocence — v. 1 

the best, for the inuocenec 7V»ioii of.iihens, i. 1 

for good lord Titus' innocence Titus Andron. i. 2 

war s blow, who spares not innocence. . Pericles, i. 2 

INNOCENCY— than innoceiiey..,W«M./or.1A«s. iii. 2 

like rivers of remorse and inuocency.A'oigyo/in, iv.3 

mine innoeeney [(o/.-innocencc] liichard II. i. 3 

in the state of innoeeney 1 Henry IV. iii. 3 

\v\ til tears of innoeeney, and terms . . — iv. 3 

and npriorht innoeeney fail me 2 Henry IV. v. 3 

[Col.Knl.j nod and our innocencv./iiWiurrf '/7;. iii. 5 
INNOCKNT— but innocent and pure ..Tempest, ii. I 

to feed my innocent people — ii. 1 

him and his innocent child — iii. 3 

a thousaiiil innocent shames Much Ado, iv. 1 

so wroiiL'c. I loiiie innocent child and me — v. 1 
thou liasl belie. 1 mine innocent child — V. 1 

killed a sweet and inn. .cent la.lv .... — V. 1 
in Messina liere h.iw innocent slie died — v. 1 
to lady but habv, an innocent rhyme — v. 2 
did I not tell you she was innocent? — v. 4 

they are as innocent as grace As you Like it, i. 3 

one another down his innocent nose — ii. 1 

a dumb innocent, that could not All's Well, iv. 3 

I am innocent as you Winter'sTale, ii. 2 

a gracious innocent soul; more free — ii. 3 

left, to save the innocent ii. 3 

the innocent milk, in its most innocent — iii. 2 
his innocent balie truly begotten — iii. 2 (Oracle; 

looT< like the innocent flower Mucltlh, i. 8 

doth murder sleep, the innocent sleep — ii. 3 
had been our innocent self; this I made — iii. I 
be innoecnt of the knowledge, dearest — iii.! 

a weak, poor, innocent lamn — iv.3 

from pope Innocent the legate here. KingJohn, iii. I 
pope Innocent, I do demand of thee — iii. I 

with his innocent prate he will iv. I 

is yet a null. leu an.l an innocent hand — iv. 2 
than to he biileher of an innocent child — iv. 2 
dare .lefeii.l mv innocent life ogainst — iv. 3 

sluice.! .lilt his innocent soul Richard II. i. 1 

flesh his lo.ith ill every innocent... .2//. nry/;'. iv. 4 
the guiltless bl.i.id of innocents ....\ Henry VI. V. 4 
as innocent from meaning treason..'.! //(Miry VI. iii. 1 
conscience tells me, vou are innocent — iii. 1 
kill the innocent gazer with thy 8ii.dit — iii. 2 
the skin of an innocent lamb should lie — iv. 2 

murder not this innocent child illenryVI. i. 3 

if murdering innocents be executing — v. 6 

just is fiod, to right the innocent ..Richard III. i. 3 
a world of men. to slay the innocent? — i. 4 

incapable and shallow iiiuocenta ii.2 

upon the innocent and iiwloss throne — ii. 4 
within their alabaster innoi-cnt arms — iv. 3 

made drunk with innocent blood — iv. 4 

innocent I was from any private. . Henry VIII. iii. 3 
the man is innocent. Some inni>ccnls.4,i/.rt' c/ro. ii. 5 
and hit the innocent mansion of . . Cyuiheline, iii. 4 
because she knows them innocent. Tilus.indron. iii. I 
done on the innocent, becomes not .. — iii. 2 
nceiise some innocent, and forswear — v. 1 

unless you play the impious innocent. rrri'r/c«, Iv. 4 
pray. innocent, and beware the foul .... /.car. iii. 6 
the fair forehead .if an inmvent hwn.. Hamlet, iii. 4 
thou hast kille.l the sweetest innocent.. 0//ir7/o, v. 2 
INNOVArio.\-h,iriyl.inlyiunovatiiml/lrnrv/»'.v.l 
by the means nf the late innovation ..Hamlet, ii. 2 
behold, what iiiuovalioii it makes here Dthrlti , ii. 3 
INNOVATOK-lraitorous innovator. r'orni/..iiui. iii. | 
INNUMKKABLE Buhstnnce Henry VIII. iii. U 



INOCULATE— inoculate our old stock. Hamlet, iii. 1 
INORDINATE, nnd low desires .... 1 Henry IV. iii. 1 

every inordinate cup is unblessed Olhello, ii. 3 

INQlf rSITION— a bootless inquisition. . Tempesl, i. 2 

let not search and inquisition quail.. Is t/owiifce /V,ii.2 

INQUISITIVE-becanie inquisitive. Comedy o/Err.i. 1 

unseen, inquisitive, conlouiuls himself — i. 2 

iNROAD-hot im-oads they n\e.'ke. Antony ^- Cleo. i. 4 

INS ANE— eateu of the insane root Mavbeih, i. 3 

INSANllC-insinuatetl) nie of insanie. Love's L. L. v. I 

INSATIATE— insatiate cormorant ..Itichard II. li. 1 

that insatiate Edward, noble York./iiWiard 111-}}}- 5 

the insatiate greediness of his desires — iii. 7 

most insatiate, luxurious \voma.n\. TiltisAndron- v. 1 

INSCRIBED— was still inscribed ..Ucnrijflll. iii. 2 

INSCRIPTION-this inscription bears. Mer.o/ren.ii.? 

survey the inscriptions back again .. — ii. 7 

INSCROLED— not been inscroled — li. 7 (scroll) 

INSCRUTABLE, invisible.. TuoGen- offernna, ii. 1 

INSCULPED-that's insuulped upon..Wer.o/KeH. ii. 7 

INSCULPTURE-this insculpture. 'A/non o/ Alh. v- 5 

INSENSIBLE of mortality Meas.forMeas. iv. 2 

them insensible iCol. .'i:!i(.-invisible]..A'iHo-Jo;i/i, v. 7 
is it insensible then? Yea, to the dead. 1 HetuyW. v. 1 

mulled, deaf, sleepy, insensible Coriotanus, iv. h 

INSEPARABLE— and inseparable..4iJ)/Dii Like ii,i. 3 
like.true, inseparable, faithful loves .Wng'./oAn, iii. 4 
INSEPARATE-a thing inseparate. Troiivs S- Cress, v. 2 
INSERT-to insert agaui my hn\id. Love's L. Lost, iv. 2 
set down, and insert in't? could you not ?.HamW,ii. 2 
INSERTED to make interest good.iVer. of Fenice, i. 3 
lN-SET-[Coi. J In-set you neither in gold.2 Henry /K.i.2 
INSHELLED-whicli were inshelled.ConoiciJiu.!, iv. 6 
INSHIPPED-inshipped, commit them.l Henry I'i. v. 1 
INSIDE— kissing with inside lip? .. Winter sTcde, i. 2 

show the inside of your purse — iv. 3 

outside or inside, I will not return .. — v. 2 
forgotten what the inside ofachurch.l Henn/T. iii. 3 
looked lie o' the inside of the paper?. Hennj I' III. ii i. 2 

INSINEWED to this action 'iHeiuylV.'w- 1 

INSINUATE with you iu Asyou Likeit,(^e\n\.) 

that I insinuate, or toze from thee. Winter's Tale,iv, 3 
learned to insinuate, flatter, bow ..Hichard 11. iv. I 

he would insinuate with tliee Richard III- i. 4 

basel V in8inuate,and send us gifts. THus Andron. iv. 2 
I'JrSlNUATETH me of insanie ..Love's L- Lost. v. 1 
INSINUATING-insinuatingflattery.l HoiryF/. ii.4 

silken, sly, insinuating jacks? Ridtard III. i. 3 

I will practise the insinuating rod.. Co; /otonus, ii. 3 

some busy and insinuating rogue Othello, iv. 2 

INSINUATION, as it were Love's L- Lost, iv. 2 

compromise, insinuation, parley King John, v. 1 

does by their own insinuation grow Hamlet, v. 2 

INSISTED— yet I insisted Julius C,rsar,\i. 1 

INSISTING on the old prerogative .Corioiam/s, iii. 3 
INSISTlJRE-and place, insisture. Troilus '': Cress, i. 3 
INSOCIABLE and point-de-vice.. /.ofe'sL.Losi, v. 1 
if this austere insociable life change — v. 2 
INSOLE NCE-grows this insolence?. Tarn, of Sh. ii. 1 

proceed in this thy insolence 1 Henry II. i. 3 

his insolence is more intolerable 2Henry I'l.i. 1 

resign it then, and leave thine insolence — i- 3 

England knows thine insolence — ii. 1 

wiirk at the duke of Suffolk's insolence — ii. 2 

this Ipswich fellow's insolence HenriiVIll._\. \ 

his insolence draws folly Troilus Sf Crcssida, iv. h 

and pursv insolence shall break. Tiinott of Athens, y. 6 

wonder, his insolence can brook Coriolanus, \. 1 

when ins soa.'-ing insolence shall teach — ii. 1 

the cockle of rebellion, insolence — iii. 1 

queasy with his insolence already. ..■!«(. frCleo. iii. 6 
tlie insolence of offlce, and the spurns.. //ai<iie(, iii. 1 

INSOLENT— insolent noise-maker Tempest, \. 1 

out, insolent! thy bastard shall King John, ii. 1 

how insolent of late he is become -.illenryVl. iii. 1 
but he already is too insolent . . Troilus 4'Cress. i. 3 

a paltry, insolent fellow — ii. 3 

but insolent, o'ercome witli pride . . Coriolanus, iv. 6 
my lawful sword! insolent villain!.. — v. 5 

but other of your insolent retinue Lenr, i. 4 

of being taken by the insolent foe Oihelto, i. 3 

INSO.MUCH— insomuch, I say Asyou I.iUeit. v. 2 

INSPIRATION-good inspirations. lUer.o/Fen/ce,;. 2 
ujiless it be by inspiration? .. Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

by inspiration of celestial grace I Henry VI. v. 4 

INSPIRE-inspire us with the spleen. «/c/iardi//. v. 3 

or Mercury, inspire me Titus Andronicas. iv. 1 

INSPIRED— inspired thee now?.. Low's L- Lost, iv. 3 
inspired merit so by breath is barred.. ///rs/Ce/Z, ii. 1 

I am a prophet new inspired Rictiard II. ii. 1 

was Mahomet inspired {rep-) 1 Henry VI- \. 2 

before ns. inspired with tlie spirit . .'IHenry VI. iv. 2 
that followed, was a thing inspired. Henri/ F;//. i. 1 
as if you were inspired to do tliose ..Cymbeline,\\. 3 
dav new comfort hath inspired. 7'//MSjrln(/ro;i/cHs,ii. 2 
INSTALLED— and have installed ..\HenryVI. ii. 5 
thou wast installed iu that high .... — iv. I 
my lord of Winchester installed .... — v. 1 
and says, his Edward is installed.. 3Henri/ VI- iii. 1 

installed lord archbishop of Henri/VIII- iii. 2 

INSTALMENT-each fair instalment. .l/e/ry/r. v. S 

the instalment of this noble duhti. Hichard 111- iii. 1 

INSTANCE-and instances as.. Two Gen. ofVer. ii. 7 

desires had instance and argument. .Merry Wives, ii. 2 

so far exceed all instance Tirelftti Night, \_v. 3 

gives me this instance Meas.for Mens- iv. 3 

offer them instances: which shall Much Ado, ii. 2 

an old, an old instance, Beatrice — v. 2 

[Co;.] till that instance Lore's L. Loj', v. 2 

wise saws and modern instances. . As you Like it,\\- 7 
iiutance, briefly; come instance .... — jj^- -^ 

a better instance, I say, come — jjj* -^ 

mend the instance, sheplierd — iji. 2 

wherefore? what's the instance? All'sWett, iv. 1 

for instance, sir, that you may . . Winter'sTnle, iv. 3 
any tragic instance of our harm. . Comedy i/£rr. i. 1 
besides this present instance of his rage — iv. 3 

five then such instance' of loss? .,..'i Henry IV- i. 1 
have received a certain instance .. — iii i 
examples of every minute's instance — iv. I 



INSTANCE— gave thee no instance. . . . Henry V. ii. 2 
what instance gives lord Warwick .iHenry i'l. iii. 2 
fears are shallow, wanting instance. /?j'Wia?-d///. iii. 2 

but for these instances Troilus S^ Cressida, i. 3 

instance, O instance I strong as (rep.) — v. 2 

what instance for it? let me see — y. U 

not with such familiar instances. . JuliusCrrsm , iv. 2 

■ instances, that second marriage move-. Hamlet, iii. 2 
some precious instance of itself — iv. 5 

INSTANT— very instant that I saw you. 7'empp.t/, iii. 1 
in the instant of our encounter . .Merry Wives, iii. 5 

botli these letters at an instant? — iv. 4 

which ut the very instant of Falstaff's — v. 3 

that instant was I turned into Tirelflh Night, i. 1 

but at this instant he is sick . ...Mens, for Mens. y. \ 

at any unseasonable instant Much Ado, ii. 2 

upon the instant that she was accused — iy. 1 
and without, upon the instant . .Love's L- Lost, i'li. I 
till that instant [Coi. -instance] shut.. — v. 2 
wealth of thy wit in an instant?Mer. of Venice, iii. 5 

but in tlie instant that your — iv. 1 (letter) 

rose at an instant, learned, played. -•Is you Like il,i. 3 
and your heart, both in an instant . . — iii. 2 
that ;you will take your instant lea-ve. All's Well, ii. 4 
to this very instant disaster of his.... — iv. 3 

let's take the instant bj; — v. 3 

the same instant of their master's. Winter'sTale.v. 2 
the instant that I met with you.Comedy of Err. iv. I 

of my nativity to this instant — iv. 4 

I feel now the future in the instant . , . . Macbeth, i. 5 
for from this instant, there's notliing. . — ii. 3 

even in the instant of repair King John, iii. 4 

to wage an instant trial with 1 Henry IV.iv. 4 

but we rose both at an instant — v. 4 

indeed tlie instant action 2Henry IV.i.i 

upon that instant, craved audience Henry V, i. 1 

let us die instant [Co'.-in! Kn(.-in honour] — iv. b 
came to France, until this instant .... — iv. 7 

at this instant he bores me Henry VIII. i. I 

even this instant cloud puts on — i. 1 

take the instant way Troilus Sr Cressida iii. 3 

at that instant, like a babe Vimon of Athens, i. 2 

bid 'em send o' the instant a thousand — ii. 2 

to whom 'tis instant due — .ii. 2 

having great and instant occasion.... — iii. 1 

to supply his instant use with — iii. 2 

convert o' the instant green virginity — iy. I 

even from this instant, banish Coriolanus, iii. 3 

more than the instant array — v. I 

another's lovefortlie instant..^lii;ony <S-C/eo;)a«ra, ii. 2 

I'll tell thee, on the instant Cymbeline,]. 6 

or thy silence on the instant — iii. 5 

it was my instant death — v. 5 

at this instant is full accomplished .. — v. 5 
which at this instant so rageth in him. . . . Lear, i. 2 

doth speak for instant remedy — .1.4 

this instant so much commend itself .... — ii. I 

which craves the instant use — ii. 1 

that I see before me at this instant — ii. 2 

shall give them instant way — v. 3 

all three now marry in an instant — v. 3 

in the instantcame the fiery Tybalt. A'omeo ^Jul. i. 1 

a most instant tetter barked about Hamlet, i. 5 

grow not instant old, but bear me — _i. 5 

the instant burst of clamour — ii. 2 

on the instant, they got clear — iv. 6 (letter) 

appearance, even on the instant Othello, i. 2 

and will upon the instant put thee to't .. — iii. 3 
and even, from this instant, do build on — iv. 2 
get you to bed on the instant — iv. 3 

INSTANTLY— go, do it instantly. Afeas./orikfeas. v. I 
take her hence, and marry her instantly — v. 1 
and instantly break with you of it ..MuchAdo, i. 2 
cannot instantly raise up the gross. ilLer.o/ Venice, i. 3 
and instantly unlock my fortunes .. — ii. 9 
pay it instantly with all my lieart .. — iv. 1 
led me instantl.y unto his cave . . As you Ltke it, iv. 3 
and see it instantly consumed .. Wiuter'sTale, ii. 3 

I'll follow instantly. I am glad — iii. 3 

disease thee instantly — iv. 3 

instantly return with me again King John, v. 

and of learning instantly \ Henry IV. v. 

address thee instantly 2 Henry VI. v. 

off instantly with his son George's. K'cAiird ///. v. 
instantly w'ill find employment . . Henry VIII. ii. 
would instantly speak with you. Troilui Jj- Cress, i. 

to liim tliat instantly must die — iy. 

I'll wait on you instantly Timon of Athens, ii. 

get you hence instantly Coriolanus, ii. 

delay not, Caesar: read it instantly../uiiusCn?.rar, iii. 
least noise of this dies instantly ..Antony", Cleo. i. 
therefore instantly this prince must die. Pericles, i. 

shall the duke instantly know Lear, iii. 

hang him instantly — iii. 

mark, I say, instantly; and carry it so . . — v. 
I beseech you instantly to visit my Hamlet, ii. 

INSTATE and widow you withal. A/ea.«. /or A/i as. v. 

INSTEAD of her Asyou Like it, ii. 

and now, instead of bullets wrapped. K/n|r.'o/in, ii. 

for, instead of thee, king Harry \HenryIV. v. 

the names of men instead of men iHenrylV. i. 

thou oft, instead of homage sweet Hem y V. i v. 

instead of gold, we'll offer up our \ Henry VI. i. 

archers; instead whereof, sharp stakes — i. 

the regent there instead of me iHenryVI. iii. 

borne before us, instead of maces — iv. 

lest that, instead of words SllenryVI. i, 

instead whereof, let this supply the room — ii. 
instead of mounting barbed steeds.. «ic/ia«i Li/, i. 
five have I slain to-day, instead of him — v. 
thus, instead of oil and balm. . Troilus ^Cressida, i. 

INSTEEPED-in gore he lay insteeped. Henry f. iv. 

INSTIGATE the bedlam brainsick..2Henry FL iii. 

INSTIGATED by his distemper . . Merry Wives, iii. 

INSTIG ATION-foreeful instigation?. Winter's!', ii. 

upon mv man's instigation iHenryVI. ii. 

and bv their vehement instigation, ft/e/ioni III. iii. 
instigations have been often dropped. J«'. Crrsar, ii. 

INSTINCT— but beware instinct ... .1 HenrylV. ii. 
instinct is % great matter (>-e;)) — ii. 



INSTINCT— ran away upon instinct.l Henry/K ii. 4 

what instinct had'st thou for it? — ii.4 

upon instinct. I grant ye, upon instinct — ii. 4 

I lack some of thy instinct — ii.4 

thou a natural coward, without instinct — ii. 4 
hath, by instinct, knowledge from --iHenrylV. i. 1 
and mere instinct of love, and loyalty — iii. 2 
by a divine instinct, men's minds.. y(/c/ia)d! ///. ii- 3 
be such a gosling to obey instinct . . Coriolanus, v. 3 ; 
that an invisible instinct should frame.. C'yoid. iv. 2 I 

rare instinct! when shall I hear .. — v. 5 i 

INSTINCTIVELY had quit it rempest,-\. 1 I 

INSTITUTE a course of learning., ramii.i'o/'.v/i. i. I I 

we institute your grace to be 1 llrnryl'l. iv. 1 i 

JNSTITUTION-city's institutions.. iUca. /or Mea. i. I 

INSTRUCT— sloth instructs me Tempest, ii. 1 

and instruct thee how to snare — ii. 2 

instruct me how I may formally. Meos./o;' Mcas- i. 4 

1 will instruct thee in m.y trade — iv. 2 

have yielded; instructmy daughter. .^H'sffeW, iii. 7 
to instruct for the doubling of hies .. — iv. 3 

iit to instruct lier youth Taming of Shrew, i- I 

cunning schoolmasters to instruct her? — i. I 

well seen in music, to instruct Bianca — i. 2 

a fine musician to instruct our mistress — i. 2 

to instruct her fully in those — ii. 1 

all these circumstances I'll instruct you — iv. 2 
as my understanding instructs me. Wiuter'sTale, i. 1 
as your charities shall best instruct you — ii. I 
some powerful spirit instruct tile kites — ii. 3 
will instruct my sorrows to be proud. King-yo/in, iii. 1 
instruct ns, boy; what dream, hoy't-.illenrylV. ii. 2 

shall a child instruct you what \ Henry VI. iii. 1 

able to instruct or teach — iv. I 

and instruct great teachers Henry Fill. i. 2 

the occasion shall instruct you — v. 1 

instruct uswliat levity'sinyouth.. TimonofAth. i. 1 

devise, instruct, walk, feel Coriolanus, i. 1 

this gate instructs you how Cymbeline, iii. 3 

he'll then instruct us of this body.... — iv. 2 
their tutor to instruct them . . TitusAndrovicus, v. I 
instruct her in what she has to do ... . Pericles, iv. 3 

if thou dost as this instructs thee Lear, v. 3 

she well instructs me. You will lose . . Hamlet, v. 2 

very nature will instruct her in it Otiiello, ii. 1 

the ills we do, their ills instruct us to . . — iv. 3 

INSTRUCTED-not yet instructed.Meai./oriWeos.i. 1 
and that instructed him to mercy .. — iii. 2 
instructed by the antiquary. .7'»oi7us<5-Crc.ssi'rfa,ii. 3 
bastard instructed, bastard in mind.. — v. 8 
have instructed cowards to run .. Antony^- Cleo. iii. 9 
let thv soul be instructed: mark me . . O hello, ii. 1 

INSTRUGTION-good instruction give.7em;)e.«(,i. 2 
of my instruction liast thou nothing bated — iii. 3 
am going w^itli instruction to him. Meus./orMeas- ii.3 
correction and instruction must both — iii. 2 

by the instruction of his frailty — iii. 3 

receive some instruction from my fellow — iv. 2 
if my instructions may be your guide — iv. 2 
keep your instruction, and hold you — iv. 5 
tiiey shall want no instruction . Love'sL.Lost, iv. 2 
tliat follows his own instructions, il/er. of Venice, i. 2 
go hard, but I will better the instruction — iii. 1 
instruction shall serve to naturalize ..AU'sWell, i. 1 
under my poor instructions yet must — iv. 4 
give tliee more instructions. 7'a)Ki)in-o/'S/i. 1 (indue.) 
tis pit.y she lacks instructions .. Wiuter'sTale, iv. 3 

we but teach bloody instructions Macbfth, i. 7 

and neighbourhood, instruction.. Timon of Alh. iv. I 

their noise be our instruction Coriolanus, i. 4 

not by your own instruction — iii. 2 

by their brave instruction. /(n/oiiy ^- Cleopatra, 'w . 12 

of thy intents desires instruction — v. 1 

let instructions enter where folly. . . . Cymbeline, i. 6 
passion, without some instruction Othello, iv. I 

INSTRUMENTS— instruments will ..Tempest, iii. 2 
hath to instrument this lower world .. — iii. .^ 
to their instruments t\ine--TwoGen- of Verona, iii. 2 

partl.y know the instrument Tioelfth Night, v. 1 

are no more but instruments of. . Meas. frrUeas. v. 1 
to make thee an instrument .. ..As yoitLike it, \v. 3 
can bring this instrument of honoin'..^/rs/re//, iii. 6 
so bad an instrument; his name's.... — v. 3 
my books, and instruments . . Taming of Shrew, i. 1 
in music, instruments, and poetry .. — i. I 

I here bestow a simple instrument .. — ii. ' 
through the instrument my pate made — ii. I 

take you your instrument, play — iii. 1 

madam, my instrument's in tune.... — iii. 1 

before you "touch the instrnment — iii. I 

an instrument to vice you to't Wittter^sTale, i. 2 

see withal the instruments that feel — ii. 1 
we'll make an instrument of this.... — iv. 3 
so that all the instruments which ended — v. 2 

the instruments of darkness tell Macbeth, i. 3 

and such an instrument I was to use.. — ii. 1 
the instruments; who wrought with .. — iii. I 
powers above put on their instruments — iv. 3 
the instrnment is cold, and would. . King John, iv. 1 

and instrument, to any sovereign . — v. 2 

like a cunning instrument ca°ea up.. Vicharclll. i. 3 
tongue is now a stringless instrument — ii. 1 

hand yields, thy death's instrument — v. 5 

ail the lofty instruments of war 1 HenrylV. v. 2 

very instruments of chastisement..- Hen^y IV. iv, 1 
cursed instrnment of his disease.. ..1 Henry VI. ii. .5 
fashioned thee that instrnment of ill — iii. 3 
tlie author, thou the instrument ..iHenryVI. iv. 6 
the fatal instrument of war against .. — v. 1 
i the ministers and instruments. 7') oi7us (J- Cress. (prol.) 
limbs are his instruments, in no less — i. 3 

come, give me an instalment — iii. I 

instruments hung up in cases, . Timon of .ithens, i. 2 
where the other instruments did see.Coi/o/anws, i, \ 
may these same instruments, which you — i. 9 
to make tliem instruments of fear../n/nts Ccesar, i. 3 
the genius, and the mortal instruments — ii. 1 
nor no instrument of half that worth — iii. 1 

where is thy instrument? — iv. 3 

touch thy instrument a strain or two? — iv. 3 



INS 



[ 3U3 J 



INT 



INSTKTTME.NT- 

thou hrcak'Bt tliiiie Instrument . . Julfut C<nar, iv. 

lie think?*, he still U itt his iiibtrument — iv. 

hi)w poor itn instniiiu'iU may do. Antony ^ Clfo. v. 

lience, vile insli uiiioni! Cymbeline, iii. 

my in^ieiiious in>tiiijiioiUl hark .... — iv. 

give itie the iieiiiteiit iiistriinient, to pick — v. 

Iiretjimnt iii^truineiit ol wnitli. . /Vf i<(p», iv. (Gow 

vieei luuUe iiK-tniinents tu M'uiirne us Lear, v. 

our iiiftiiinient-. tonRlmieliol.v.Homc-o <j Jiiliel, Iv. 

with iiisiniiii.nt^ upim tlieiu 111 to open — v. 

cull me «li:il in^tl■unR■llt >ou uili Hainlel,\\\. 

the trencheious ill^ll■umeut is in thy homl — v. 

and ttetive iii»tiiiiiieiits Olliello, i. 

luive your iiistrument-i heen nt Nuples .. — iii. 

I pniy you, ciilleil v\ihil iiistnimi'iits? .. — iii. 

by miiuv a wiiul instriiinent tluit 1 know — 111. 

Ikiss the instruiMeut ul'tlieii- Pleiisurcs — iv. 

nil ni^tiiiiiient of this your eulling Imek — iv. 

how tlu-e in^ii'Utneiits summon to eupper! — iv. 

IXSTKIMICNL'.V!;^ to the mouth HamM, 1. 

l.\sri;srA.NTI.VI< pugeum faded.... Tempesl, iv. 
I.\s;i l-l U IKNCK-our insumeieiieo. (IV,,/,-/ 's T. i. 
IXSri 1 ICIKNCY-niv hisumeieiievM//,/..V. ;)r.ii. 
INSl'IT-her insuit ei'.iniii^ «ith liei-...l//'.( mil, v. 
INSl'LT-llKit vou iiisull. exult. . /Is imi, UUrii.in. 

mouiireh tuiiglit thee to insult? Sllenryyi. i. 

the other insult without till Cojiotanus, iii. 

tliv knife, I will insult on him. TilusAiidiamcun, iii. 

I.Ns'Ul.TlCD-being down, insulted Lear, ii. 

INSULTINa-insultini'nmn Richard 11. iv. 

the in-iulting luiiid of Doualas \Hcnryty. v. 

like tlint (uoud insulting ship \HeurijVI. i. 

from thy insulting tyranny — iv. 

insulting CharlesI hast tliou — v. 

80 he walks, insulting o'er his prey.. 3Henryr/. i. 

the proud insulting queen — ii. 

tliv minions, jiroud insulting boyi .. — ii. 

•n'sultiuL' Ivnuinv begins tojut ..Kichard III. ii. 

I\ sr r, I'M l-'.Xr ended on his Ci/inheliiie, iii. 

I.\Sl,:i'I'OKr.Vlil,IC ve.xntion All's IVM, ii. 

iiisiiliportiible and toiichini' loss!..yK//i«C>-«'"-, iv. 

() in-ii|pp utnble! O liciivy hour I Oihelta, v. 

INSI'l'HHESSIVK mettle of our ..Julius Cipsnr, ii. 
IXSURREC riON want such \Hemi/U: v. 

turns insurrection to religion 'iHennjlV. i. 

of base and bloody insurrection with — iv. 

themes for insurrections arguing .... Coriolanus, i. 

hatli been in Rome strange insurrection — iv. 

then the nature of an insurrection. y«;iu.!C<p.!ar, ii. 
IX'l'Kti KH vita), scelerisquc purus . I'itus.indron. iv, 

IXTEGKIT.-VS, reglna Henry fill. Iii. 

INTKGRITY-such integrity . . Tico Gen. of rer. iii. 

tlmt neither my coat, integrity ..Mim.forMeas. iv. 

his integrity stands without blemish — v. 

oaths, vowed with integrity Love's L. Lost, v. 

my integrity ne'er knew the crafts .. All's tyelt, iv. 

have been deceived in thy integrity. . Winter's T. i. 

mine integrity, being counted falsehood — iii. 

child of integrity, hath from my soul .Macbeth, iv. 

of true zeal and'deep integrity Itichard II. v. 

of singular integrity and learning., f/e/iiyrj//. ii. 

my integrity should breed — ill. 

my robe, arid my integrity to heaven — iii. 

thy integrity is rooted in us, thy friend — v. 

more out of malice than integrity — v. 

my integrity and truth to you.. Tmilus <5 Cress, iii. 

with most divine integrity — iv. 

bereaves the state of that integrity. Corio/n»ui, iii. 

in baud to love with such integrity.. CV'Hfcc/(/ic, v. 

iiffv in thv uprightness and integrity .V'lVus.-lHd. i. 
LNTELLECT-train our intellects.. Louc'j L. Lost. i. 

his intellect is not replenished — iv. 

look ogain on the intellect of the letter — iv. 

it rejoiceth my intellect: true wit — v. 

Bolingbroke (leposed thine intellect!'. Kic/inni 11. v. 
INTELI/ECT UAL sense and souls. . Com. ofErr. ii. 

heads had anv intellectual armour .. Hfury t^. iii. 
INTELl/IGEJICE of Ford's approach.il/enyW. iii. 

howsoever lie hath had intelligence . . — iv. 

my intelligence is true — iv. 

give vou intelligence of an intended.. Muc'i Ado, i. 

this tntelligeuce if I have thanks. Mid. N.'s Dr. i. 

if with myself I hold intelligence...-l.*i/oii l./lceii,]. 

and deliver all the intelligence in his All'slVell, iii. 

hath the count all this intelligence? — iv. 

in such intelligence hath seldom failed — iv. 

from whom I have this intelligence. 'Cin(f)'» 7". iv. 

likewise part of my intelligence .... — iv. 

you owe this strange intelligence? Mnrheth, i. 

where hath our intelligence been.... KingJoUn, iv. 

Intelligence, that Harry Hereford . . Riclmrl II. ii. 

BO that by this intelligence we learn — iii. 

Bought to entrap me by intelligence.! HcnrylV. iv. 

bctuixt our armies true intelligence — v. 

advised by goo<l intelligence ..HenryV. ii. (chorus 

by false intelligence, or wrong itichard III. ii. 

whereof I shnUnot have intelligence — iii. 

bv intelligence, and proofs as cifttiv.. Henry I'l 1 1, i, 

the intelligence of this whore ..Tioilus/f Crrsi,. v. 

be welcome with thisiiitclliLrence ..Con'olanus, iv. 

not I, inclined to this intelligence . . Cymtieli?ie, i. 

fast, and prayed, fir their intelligence — iv. 

intellircnce is given where you arc hid . . Lear, ii. 
INTErXIGEXCKR between the grace2//'-iirv/ Civ. 

hell's black intelligencer Uiehatdlll. iv. 

1>"TELLT<;ENCIXG Imwdl Winter'tTale,i\. 

INTELLIGKNT-iutelligeiit tome? — i. 

and sjieeubitions iutilligeiit of our Btate..£.rar, iii. 

approves him an iiitrlligent party — iii. 

nhiill l« swift anil intelligent between us _ iii. 
IVTEr,r,IGr.S-neintelligi,domine?./.ore'iL.L<„(,v 
IVTKM.IGO-lau-deo, boneiiitelligo — v. 
INTE MPEU ANUE in nature is Mnclteth, iv. 

wo'i id" of niv intemperance \ Hrnrijll'. iii. 

INTE^^'ERATE-illlelnperotc lu9l..WTO./(ir.WM. v. 

more intomperaie in vour blofxl Much4dn,'i\. 

INTEN'D-he intends, shall wed. Tiz-o Gen. of »>,. ii. 

this night infnds to steal — ii). 

by ana by intend to chide myself ... . — iv. 



INTE>,'U- intend holy confession. 7'u'oG<fn.(ir»'<'r. Iv. 3 

she did intend cunfesbiuii — v. 2 

do intend vat 1 siieak Merry lyicet, i. 4 

if he should iiiteuil Ibis voyage — ii. 1 

intends you for liis swift Meai.JbrMeat. iii. 1 

intend u kind of zeal both to the ....MucliAdo, ii. i 
within tlii?. »o,.d intend you 6tay?..iU(d. A'.ilr. ii. 2 
for if tlioii dost inleud never so little — iii. 2 
nor sliiilt not. if I ilo as 1 intend .. Love's L. Lost, v. i 
I inteml to hunt iiguin.. Tnuiing qfShreiv, I (indue.) 

do yon intend to stav with me — 1 (indue.) 

amid this linrlv, I intend, Ihat all .. — iv. 1 

and there they intend to sup ll'inler'sTalc, v. 2 

not say what I intind lor thee KingJohn, iii. 3 

newness, that intends olil right — v, 4 

as I intend to tbiive in this new Itichnrd II. iv. 1 

whose temper 1 intend to stain llleuryW. v. 2 

hath note of all that they intend Henri/ 1', ii. 2 

king from Kltluiui I intend tu sQnd ..i Henry n. i. 1 

for I intend to have it, ere long — i. s 

so help me God. as I intend it notl .. — iii. 1 
he (h>th intend she shall be ICugiand's — v. 1 
himfirst, tlmt first inteudsdrecit ..'iHenryyi. iii. 1 
say, we intend to try his grace to-ilny — iii..' 
as my soul intends to live with that — iii. 2 

your higliness should intend to sleep — iii. 2 
cnterpillars, and intend their death.. — iv. 4 
doth Yiu-k intend no harm to us .... — v. 1 

then what intend Ihese forces — v. 1 

as I intend, Clill'ord, to thrive to-day — v. 2 
intend here to besiege you in your ..SHenry VI. i. 2 
to go whither the queen intends .... — W.b 
no more than wlial my soul intends — iii. 2 

for I intend but oulv to surprise — iv. 2 

deeply to effect wlia't we intend ..Itichard III. iii. I 
witness what }'ou hear we did intend — iii. 5 
iiUciul some fear; be not you spoke . . — iii. 7 
I intend more good to you ancl yours — iv. 4 
intend to make her queen of England — iv. 4 

as I intend to prosiier — iv. 4 

that only true we now intend .. Henry 11 II. (prol.) 
ajipeal she intends unto his holiness — ii. 4 

an enemy intends you harm. . Troilus ^ Cressida, ii. 2 

commend what we intend to sell — iv. 1 

this fortnight, what we intend to do. Coriolanus, i. I 
you see how he intends to use the people — ii. 2 
intends to appear before the people .. — v. 5 

gentlemen, what you intend JuliusCrr'sur.'in. 1 

now intend yon, practised?. ./In^oiiy ^■CUopalra,n. 2 

for ive intend so to dispose you — v. 2 

thruigh Syria intends his journey — v. 2 

giaeious to the rites that we intend! ..TitusAnd. i. 2 

aetjuaint with all that we intend — ii. 1 

that I intend to send tliem both .... — iv. 1 

and to Tharsus intend my travel Pericles, i. 2 

since what I well intend, I'll do't before ..Lear, i. 1 

unspoke, that it intends to do? — i. 1 

if thou didst intend to make this — i. 4 

you know the goodness I intend upon you — v. 1 
as for the mercy which he intends to Lear — v. 1 
what I further sliall intend to do.Womeo ^Juliet, v. 3 

my lord, I did intend it Hnmltt, ii. ) 

you shall marry her: do yon intend \t..{Jlhello, iv. 1 

will you sup there? Faith I intend so — iv. 1 

call, what I intend to do. a murder — v. 2 

INTENDED-in bisintended drift. T-raGen. o/r. iii, i 

her mother hath intended Merryllires.'w. B 

though lately we intended to keep. Tuelfk \iglil, v. 1 

intended 'gainst lord Angelo Mens, for Meas. v. 1 

intelligence of an intended marriage.. ii/ucA Ado,i. 3 
very night before the intended wedding — ii. 2 

intended for great Tlieseus' Mid. A'. Dieam, iii. 2 

we stay, mocking intended game.. Lnve'sL.Lnst, v. 2 
here's no harm intended to thee. . Winter sTale, iv. 3 
intended, or committed, was this fault. 7iic/i. //.v. 3 
or hitherwards intended speedily , ,\ Henry 11^. \v. 1 
is intended in the general s name . .•iHent'yl I', iv. 1 
the sooner to eSeet what I intended . . Henry V. ii. 2 
the measure as you intended well ..Coriolanus, v. 1 
blow out the intended fire of j'our city — v. 2 
any harm's intended towards \\\m. Julius Ceesar, ii. 4 
no harm intended to your person.... — iii. 1 

so took effect as I intended Itotnro ^Juliet, v. 3 

INTENDETH to become the field .... KmrfJohn, v. I 

INTENDING deep suspicion Richard III. iii. 5 

intending other serious matters . . Tiinon nr.i'h. ii. 2 

INTENDSi ENT, or brook As you Like it, i. 1 

but fear the main intendment of Henry I', i. 2 

but what I protest intendment of doing. 0//ie/lo,iv. 2 

INTEND'ST to lay unto my IHenn/ri. iii. I 

I NT EN I B L E sieve All's Well, i. 3 

INTENT towards our wives Mert y Wives, ii. 1 

become the form of my intent .... Twelfih^ight, i. 2 

and their intent every where — ii. 4 

knew of vour intent, and coming..V/ea. /!»• Mea. v. 1 

did not oVrtake his bad intent — v. I 

buried but as an intent that perished — v. I 

intents but merely thoughts — v. 1 

I hope, you have no intent to tnr-n .... Much Ado, i 1 
hearing our intent, came here..W((/,A'.'* Il/-t'am,iv. 1 

our intent was, to be gone from — iv. 1 

find sports in their intents — v. 1 

to enntcnt yon, our true intent is — (prtd.) 

wdiiit is your intent? {rep.) Lore's L. Lost, v. 2 

and mock for moek is only my intent — v. 2 

told our intents before — v. 2 

even to the opposed end of our intents — v. 2 
for the intent and purpose.. jl/frc/mn(o/ (>«i'cc, iv. 1 

but my intents are fixed All's Well, i. 1 

had you not lately an intent — i. 3 

I Could have well diverted her inttnts — iii. 4 
trumpeters to our unlawful intents? .. — iv. 3 ' 

ere 1 can perfect mine intents — iv. 4 | 

hither, but to that intent? Taming of shrew, \. 2 

to priek the sides of my intent Macbeth, i. 7 

purpose, course, intent KingJohn, ii. 2 

vile intent must needs seem Iiorrible — iv. 1 , 
to bury mine intents, but to effect. .fli'cAnri/ II. iv. I | 
the arms arc fair, when the intent . . I He- -ylV. v. 2 
heaven knows, I hod no such intent. SHmry/r. iii. 1 . 



INTENT-intent, tenor and substance iHtmvll'. iv. I 

my intents to your well-practised _ y J 

(God consigning to my good intents) _ via 
he bath intent, liis wonted followers — v.'i 
our full intent buck to our brother.. .. H^nrvf. ii' 4 
set a gloss upon his hold intent . . ..\ Henn/'yi. iv. 1 

and their intent is this _ y 1 

of virtuous eharte intents _ v' .'i 

for a minister of my intent •illenryFI. Hi'. I 

from a Htnbhorn ohstinalc intent .... — iii 2 

""•'llcll li Tivily of. mr intent.... 3;;<rnr«f/. i. 2 

with a lull intent lodu-h our _ |i| 

his miij.hty halh some intent Itichard III. \. \ 

fail not in my deep intent _ i. 1 

another secret cloic intent i. 1 

you came too late of our intent _ iii' 6 

shall have word of this intent. Troiliu « Creisida, i'. 3 

armed, and bloody ill intent — v. 3 

him ofun intent that's coming. 7Vmon ofA'hent, v'. 1 

inav they pereeive's intent: Coriolanut, ii. 2 

hold the same intent wherein you .. — v. !> 

toiaiteh at mine intent Antony S, Cleopatra, ii. 2 

of thy intents desires instruction .. .. v. 1 

if yon apply yourself to our intents .. — v. 2 
to conquer their most absurd intents — v 2 
known to you my full intent .... V.Viii ^n'/ron. iv. 2 
and hid intent, to murder liim..i'<Ticie», ii. (Gower) 

that 1 came with no ilj intent _ iv g 

provision as our intents will need? .. — v. 2 
and 'tis our fast intent to shake all cares ..Lear, i. 1 

my good intent may carrv through — i. 4 

when I dissuaded him from his intent .. — ii. I 

shortens my made intent _ iv. 7 

and noble friends, know our intent — v. 3 

and my intents are savage-wild,. /(omeo*Juiie/, v. .1 

1 tear, and bis intents I doubt _ v. 3 

stay to look on his intents _ v. 3 

contradict hath thwarted our intents — v3 
for your intent in going back to school. . Hamlel, i. i 

be thy intents wicked, or charitable — i. 4 

my stronger guilt defeats my strong intent— iii. 3 

be advised: he comes to bud intent Othello,). 2 

IN ILNTION— greedy an intention. iVfjiy ;»/f<-j, i. 3 

thy intention stabs the centre Wintet'sTaIr, i. 2 

INTENTlVELY-but not intentively ..Othello, i. 3 

INTER their bodies as becomes ItichniJ III. v. 4 

and daughter to a king, inter me. . //<-iii 1/ fill. iv. 2 

but to infer our brethren Titus .intirunnut, \. 3 

to inter liis noble nephew i] 2 

TA '^','",;rP.':'.-';?,",SSer to inter him Hamlet, iv.' S 

IJNTEUtl'.Fl him TtroGen.of Verona,\i\. I 

to inieree^it this inconvenience \ HenryV I. i. 4 

St. Albaii s to intercept the queen ..'iHenryVI. ii. 1 

intercepts me in my expedition? ..Itichard III. iv. 4 

they will not inteieeiJt my tale.. 7V;u«/i,i,;roii. iii. 1 

INTERCEPTED-he, interceided.did.l //r,„i//»'. i. 3 

that might have intercepted t\\ee.. Itichard ill. iv. 4 

goodness of your intercepted packets. Hen. 11 II. iii. 2 

bein" intereepfed in your sport ..T.lusAndrou. ii. 3 

INTERCKPThK, full of despite.. 7-,rf/;(AA,W,/, iii. 4 

INTERCEPTION which tliev dream.. Henry K ii. 2 

INTERCESSION chafed him so. TuoGen.afVtr. iii. 1 

used intereession to obtain 1 llenii/ VI. v. 4 

through our intercession Henri/ I'll I. i. i 

or with tlie palsied intercession Coriolatiut, v. 2 

young boy bath an aspect of intercession — v. 3 

my intercession likewise steads.. /(ojn»-o ^Juliet, ii. 3 

INTEllCESSOR-christian intercessors.,Wci.o/'r. iii. 3 

INTERCHAINED with an oath ..Mid. N.'s Dr. ii. 3 

INTERCHANGE of gilts, letters.. Hinter'sTalt, i. 1 

once more I shall interchange X Henry VI. iv. 7 

interchange of love, 1 here protest. Itichard III. ii. 1 

ampleintercha11geof5weetdibcour.se V. 3 

you fairly for this interchange . Troilus S Crest, iii. 3 
INTERCHANGEABLY hurl down..«,<;/,a,d /;. i. 1 

and interchangeably set down v. 2 

which being sealed intercliangeably.l Htiiry/f. iii. 1 

the parties interchangeublv.. I'roilnsA Cretsida. iii. 3 

INTERCHANGED love-to'kens.,V/,i. A. 'j/Jream i 1 

INTERCHANG EjAl ENT of your., Twelfih A.f/i/, v. I 

INTERCHANGING blows ...... ..W/„„!,//.iv. 6 

while we were interchanging ItomeoS,- Juliet, i. 1 

INTERDICTION stands uecnrsed .. ..Macbeth,\\ 3 
INTERESSED-strive tobeinteressed ....lear i \ 
I.N'TEREST— give her interest.. Tu-o f,Vn. 0/ »r.ii. I 

if ever love bad interest in his .tluch Ado, iv. 1 

thr ft, which he calls interest ^1 rr.of Venire, i. 3 

did he take interest? No, not (rep.) .. _ i. 3 

inserted to make interest good — i. 3 

the youth of my new interest here .. — iii! 2 

he hath no interest in me .4s you Like it, V. 1 

shall deceive our bosom interest Mncieih, i. i 

unowed interest of prond-swelling.. A'ln^JcAn, iv. 3 

with interest to this land — v. 2 

plead for our interest, and our being here — v. 2 
more worthy interest to the state . . 1 Henry IK iii. 2 
shall have your desires, with interest — iv. 3 

you claim no interest in ony \ Henry VI. v. 4 

all your interest in those territories.'.' Hciin/''/. iii. 1 
mncli interest lune I in thy sorrow. /dcAard/;/. ii. 2 

with inteie,-t oiteiitimes double — iv. 4 

he now |iays interest for't ....Timon 0/ Alhrnt 1. 2 

takedown til' intciest into their .... iii. 4 

let out their coin upon large interest — iii. 5 
should not belray mine interest ....Cymbeline, i. 4 

my lord bath interest in them — i. 7 

what's thy interest in this sad wreck? — Iv. 2 
no more interest but to breathe.. TiiuiAndrnn. iii. I 

interest of territory, cares of state L<ar, i. I 

I bar it in the interest of my wife v. 3 

I hove an interest in your hates' llomro ijui, iii. I 

TNTERGATORIES- ^ 

to the parlicnlttr of the intcrgotorics../)H'iII'r/;, iv. 3 

charge 11s theic upon intergalories..Vrr.o/'*VFi. v. 1 

INTinUiATORY-the first intcrgatory — v. I 

INTERI.M- no interim, not a rutlflhSigM,v. 1 

I will, in the interim, iindeitake Much Ado, ii. 1 

for interim to our studies, shall ..Lore'i '..Lo>t, i. 1 
if the interim be but a se'nniKht...4it/ou/.i7iri7, iii 2 
the interim having weighed it Macbeth, i. 3 



I \TE RIM— played the interim IIcnri/l'.\. (clio.) 

wliiit sliall dutl-iid the interim? Thiion nfAlhcm, ii. 2 
li.v interims, and conveying gusts . . CoriuJnnua, i. 6 
tlie interim is like a pliantasma.../n'i«j Casar, ii. 1 
interim. i>ray you, all confound. /"eiictes, v. 2 (Gow.) 
it will bo short; the interim is mine ..HamlPl, v. 2 

and I a heavj' interim shall support Othcthi, i. 3 

in the interim eainc in and satisfied him — v. 2 
lNT10KIOK-n.it to the interior ..Mcr.o/ ^fnirc, ii, 9 

heiike, at yonr interior hatred llichar't III. i. 3 

mid make hnt an interior survey ,.CortoIattji.i, ii. 1 
IXTIOIMECTFONS? why, then 8ome.,i/»fA.-l((o, iv. 1 

liN'l'KH.roiN their issues Coriolan,<s, iv, 1 

I-\TKKLIIUE— in this interlude.. WcOTiAVf,'/,;, v. I 
t" |dav in our interlude hefore ....Mid. N.'s Dr. 1. 2 
ill this same interlude, it duth het'all — v. 1 
ail iiiterludi'! Thou art armed, GIoBter ..Lear, v. 3 

lATIOKMIAMiLE with them Much .Ido. v. 2 

intermingle everv thing he does with .Hlfullo, iii. 3 

INTEHiNltsSH IN no more pertains. jVcr-i./lVn. iii. 2 

J did lau;i.'h, sans interinission.....'tA- j/o7(/./A-(' /V, ii. 7 

cut short all intermission Macbeth, iv. 3 

delivered letters, spite of iutennission .... Lcnr, ii. 4 

IX'1'EIM\11SSIVE miseries 1 Hennjll. j. I 

INTEliMIT— intermit the plague .Julius Cesnr, i. I 

I^TEKlMlXED with scruples Klchnnl ll.y. 5 

INTERPOSE, fair madam Ilhiler's Tale, v. 3 

do interpose themselves betwixt . .Julius Cir^iar, ii. 1 
INTEKPOSER 'twixt us . . Merc/iantor li'iiice, iii. 2 
INTERPRET— interpret to her. 7Vro6e». of fey. ii, 1 
forbid me to interpret that you are , . . . Macbeth, i. 3 
thouirhts, which can interpret further — iii. 6 
gesture one might interpret ..Timon of Athens, i, 1 

interprets for mine ignorance — v. 5 

interpret all her martyred signs.. 7't7wjr^nrfron. iii. 2 

i f i t be true that I interpret false Pericles, i. 1 

iiiteriiret between you and your love.. Hamlet, iii. 2 

fear interprets then, — what, is he dead? Othello, v. 2 

I NT E KPRETATION should abuse. Winter's 7", iv, 3 

interpretation will misquote MienrylV. v. 2 

crown's worth of good intepretation.2Hp7!ry/A'. ii. 2 
b\' the inter|iretation of full time ..Coriolnnus,-v, 3 
INTERPRETED a thing perplexed. Ci/mirf/ne, iii. 4 
dream is all amiss interpreted.... ^'"^^'iMsC'iesor, ii. 2 
INTEKPRETER- 
it have a false interpreter.. Two Gen. of Verona, i. 2 
wert near a lewd interpreter. .MercA. of Venice, iii. 4 
an interpreter. Good captain (rep.) . . All's Well, iv. 1 
as for you, interpreter, you must seem — iv. 1 

our interpreter does it well — iv. 3 

interpreters of my behind-hand.. Winter's Tale, v. 1 

my interpreter, what says she? Henry V. v. 2 

by siclt interpreters, once weak Henry I'lII. i. 2 

an aged interpreter Timon of Athens, v. 4 

INTERRED-his body be interred . . King John, v. 7 
Richard's body have interred new . . Henry V. iv. 1 
wherein his corse shall be interred..! Henry VI. ii. 2 
taken from Paul's to be interred. . ..Richardlll. i. 2 

solemnly interred, at Chertsey — i. 2 

is oft interred with their bones ..Jnlins Ccesar, iii. 2 
he shall be interred, as soldiers am.tJymbeline, iv. 2 

bv a dead man interred Romeo ^-Juliet, v. 3 

INTERROGATORIES, can task ..King John, iii. 1 
will serve our long interrogatories.. Cy»nfiefi«(?, v. 6 
INTERRUPT the monster one word. . Tempest, iii. 2 
to interrujit my purposed rest. . . . Love's L. Lost, v. 2 
for he, that interrupts him, shall x\oi.ZHenryVI. i. 1 
I'll interrupt his reading . . Troilus ^Cressida, iii. 3 
your story, and never interrupt you . . PericU's, v. I 
do not interrupt me in my course. .i?oineo fy Jul. v. 3 

INTERRUPTED waters Coriolanus, iii. 1 

hajipi l.v, we might be inteiTUpted. Taming of Sh. iv. 3 

presence would have interrupted ..King John, ii. 2 

INTERRUPTER of the good ....Titns Andron. i. 2 

INTERRUPTION of theirchurlish./u>s-Jo/(?;, ii. 1 

o'erbearing interruption, spite of France — iii. 4 

and pardon us the interruption ..Richard III. iii. 7 

INTERRUPT'ST our merriment. tone's i./.os«, v. 2 

INTEKVALLUMS— 

hi iigh without intervallums iHenrylV.v 1 

IN'l'iCKVIEW-at which interview. Lope's L.Los.', ii, 1 

tills bar .Tud royal interview HenryV. v. 2 

till' iiitervieu-. that swallowed HenryVlll. i. 1 

that the interview, betwixt England.. — i. 1 

si^'iiitV tills hiving interview. 7'io/7»s ^Cressidn, iv.5 

r\TESTATE—of intestate joys.... i?/c/iord HI. iv. 4 

IXTESTINE.iars "twixt thy ..Comedy of Errors, i. I 

meet in the intestine shock and MhnrnlV. i. 1 

INTHIATE— intimate reading ..Tn-elflhNighl, ii. 6 
here doth intimate the payment .Love's L. Lnxf, ii. 1 

needs must intimate skiU'inflnite AlVsWell, ii. 1 

INTIMATION-barbarousiiitimation!Loi;e'sL.L.iv.2 
INTITLE-that which we lovers intitle — ii. 1 
INTITI.ED-neither intitled in the other's— v. 2 

I\'TITULED-who is intituled — v. 1 

INTOLERABLE fright, to be ... . Merry Wives, iii. b 
withered, and of intolerable entrails'? — v. 5 
intolerable, not to be endured! . . TnmingnrSh. v. 2 
t" this int.ilerable deal of sack! ....1 HeurnlV. ii. 4 

that's most intolerable I Henry VL v. 4 

his insolence is more intolerable iHenry I'l. i. 1 

my liege, his railing is intolerable .. — iii. I 
despiteful and intolerable wrongs'. TiltisAndron. iv. 4 
I MTOLERABLY-is intolerably curst. Vom. ofSh. i. 2 
1 .N'TOMB— the face of earth intomb .... Mucheih, ii. 4 
I.VTOXICATE— a little intoxicates ..HenryV. iv. r 
INTREASURED— lie intrcasured.,L'H.'»)v/ //•. iii. 1 
I.VTRENCHANT-theintrenchant i\AT..Mnrheih.v. 7 
rXTRENCHED-close intrenched ..MlmrnVI. i. 4 
INTRICATE impeach is this!.Com«;;/q/'£rro«, v. 1 
INTiilNSE— are too intrinse t' unloose .. Lear, ii. 2 
INTRINSICATE of life at onm..Anlnny ^Cleo. v. 2 
INTRTIDE-to intrude where I am. Ti/usAndron. ii. 1 

fonl thimrs sometimes intrude not? Olhelln, iii. 3 

INTRUDfiR-go base intruder! Two r;.~n. of I'n: iii. I 

unniannerlv mtruder as thou art!. Tilns.-inflron. ii. 3 

INTRUDING— rash, intruding fool. . . . Hnmlel, iii. 4 

INTHUSION—imseasoncd intrusion .. .l/rj-ri/ 'F. ii. 2 

with intrusion infect thy sap ..Comedy of Err. ii. 2 

that may with foul intrusion enter in — iii. I , 



INTRUSION-this intrusion shall..«om™ <S-Jk;. i. 5 

INUNDATION of niistempered King John, v. 1 

being an ordinary inundation — v. 2 

to stop the inmidation of her tears. /Borneo .^-/iW.iv. 1 
INURE— to inure thyself. . . , Twelfth Mghi, ii. & (let.) 
IN-URNED— saw thee quietly in-urned. Ilamlei, i. 4 
INVADE— arm to invade theFreneh ..HenryV. i. 2 

though the fork invade the region Lear; i. 1 

contentious storm invades us to the skin — ill. 4 

as France invades our land — v. I 

INVASION— pomp of stout invasion I A'lng-Jo/m, iv, 2 

INA\VSIVE— to anus invasive? — v, 1 

INVECTn'E— invectives 'gainst tiie.XHenryVI. i. 4 
INVEC'Tn'ELV hepiercetli . . . . As t/ou Lil<e it, ii. 1 
INVEIGLED-inveigled his fool.. y/<,;/„s ^ Cnss. ii. 3 
INVENT— (lid invent this letter... ).^ ;/,.,, Like ,1, iv.3 
to invent an.v thing that tends irep.).lUenrij IV. i. 2 
invent as hitter-searching terms ..'A lien 11/ VI. iii. 2 

would invent some other custom O'lhelln, ii.3 

INVENTED— or is invented on me ..'IHenrylV. i. 2 

he lies, for 1 invented it myself . . ..•iHenni VI. iv, 2 

INVENTION-by her invention.. .Vctii/OViy's, iii, 5 

eloquent, and full ot invention.. 7'«('(/UiA7g-/i(, iii. 2 

not your seal, nor 3'onr invention .... — v. 1 

that e'er invention played on? — v. 1 

wdiilst my invention, hearing ..Meas.for Mras. ii. 4 
nor age so eat up my invention . , . , Much Ado, i v, 1 
what iienanee ,yonr invention can lay — v. 1 
can labour aught in sad invention .... — v. 1 
of fancy, the jerks of invention?.. Lo!>c'sL.Los<, iv. 2 
savouring of poetry, wit, nor invention — iv. 2 

in despite of my invention As you Like it, ii. 5 

this is a man's invention, and his hand — iv. 3 
such giant-rude invention, such Ethiop — iv, 3 
love my son; invention is ashamed ..All'sWell,i.'i 

but return with an invention — iii. 6 

it must be a very plausive invention — iv. 1 
otir inventions meet and jump in owe.Tam.ofSh. i. 1 
cliange true rules for odd inventions — iii. I 

retm'n to plague the invention Macbeth , i , 7 

their hearers with strange invention.. — iii, 1 
the brightest heaven of invention! Henri/ F, i. (eho.) 
do it without invention suddenly, . 1 Henry VI. iii, 1 
such invention as I can devise?.,.. 3Henr!/''-f' i'^- 1 
let them accuse me by invention ..Coriolamis, iii. 2 
add more, from thine invention. ^7i(ort7/c§- Ceo. iii. 10 
must liave inventions to delight the.. . . Pericles, i. 4 
this letter speed, and my invention thrive. Lear, i. 2 

my invention comes from my pate Othello, ii. I 

so'high and plenteous wit and invention! — iv. I 
INVENTOR— on the inventors' heads . . Hamlet, v. 2 
INVENTORIALLY— him inventorially — v. 2 
INVENTORIED— be inventoried. Twelfth Night, i. 5 
INVENTORY— the inventory ofUiy.'UIetirylV. ii. 2 

forsooth an inventory Hejiry VI 11. iii. 2 

bear the inventory of your best graces — iii. 2 
there take an inventory of all I have — iii. 2 
is as an inventory to particularize ..Coriolanus, i. 1 
to enrich mine inventory: O sleep.. Cymbeline, ii. 2 
IN^'ERNESS- from hence to Inverness. Macte(/i,i. 4 
INVERT— invert what best is boded.. Tempest, iii. 1 
that doth invert the attest of . . Troilus <$■ Cress, v. 2 

INVEST— you more invest it! Tempest, ii, 1 

to invest and cover in princely, ,ilfi?as,/o7'il/eas. iii. 1 

invest me in my motley As you Like it, ii. 7 

unaccompanied, invest him only Macbeth, i. 4 

to invest their sons with arts iHenrylV. iv. 4 

wilt needs invest thee with — iv. 4 

I do invest you jointl.y with my power . . Lear, i. 1 

would not invest herself in such Othello, iv. 1 

INVESTED-to Scone, to be invested ..Macbeth, ii. 4 

in absence well invested IHenrylV. iv. 4 

in the ofReial marks invested Coriolanus, ii.3 

by me invested, he compeers the best Lem; v. 3 

INVESTING lank-lean cheeks, Henri/ V. iv. (chorus) 

INVESTMENT— white investments.2Hf)irj//r. iv. 1 

that dve which their investments ehovr.. Hamlet, i. 3 

INVE'fERATE— to me inveterate Tempest, i, 2 

heal the inveterate canker of one ....King John, v. 2 

your highness, no inveterate malice. ./fic/ia>(/ II. i. 1 

fashion after the inveterate hate he .Coriolanus, ii. 3 

IN VINCIBLE-been invincible against. ilft(c/i/I(/o, ii.3 

[CoJ.K?!/.] sight were invincible iHenrylV. iii. 2 

of an invincible nnconqiiered fpirit.X Henry IT. iy.2 

to be a woman of an invincible spirit.2He?//-//r/. i. 4 

would m.ake invincible the heart . . Cmiolanus, iv. 1 

INVIOLABLE-firm and inviolable., K/»g./o/i», v. 2 

vowed some league inviolable ^HenryVI. ii. 1 

vtpon my part, shall be inviolable. . Richard 111. ii. 1 
INVISTBLE-invisible to every eye-ball., rempe.?/, i. 2 
thy shape invisible retain thmi still.. — iv. 1 
to the king's ship, invisible as thou art — v. 1 
inscrutable, invisible, as a nose, TiroGcn. of Ver. ii. 1 

it would make .you invisible Tnelfth Night, \\\. 1 

hang my bugle in an invisible baldrick.. Vkc/i .li^o, i, 1 
I am invi.-^ible; and I will over-hear, ^l/tii. N. Dr. ii. 2 

and Ills horns are invisible within — v, 1 

keen as is the razor's edge invisible, Loi'e'jL. Lo.s/, v,2 
I would I were invisible, to catch ...■IsyouLikeit, i. 2 
shall you know the wounds invisible — iii. 5 
that he is borne about invisible. ComeJy of Errors, v. 1 
with thy bloody and invisible hand ..Macbeth, Hi. 2 
ICol. Kilt.'] parts', leaves them invisible. A'/ji^'Jo/m, v. 7 
receipt of fern-seed, we walk invisible. 1 Heurj///''. ii. 1 
fern-seed, for your walking invisible — ii. 1 
were invisible: [Col. Knt. invineible].2Heiin//;'.iii.2 
the inxnsihle and creeping v^ind. Henry V. iii. (chor.) 

love's invisible soul Troilus ^Cressiiln, iii. 1 

a strange invisible perfume. ..-l/i/ony ^-Cleopnlra, ii. 2 
■wonderful that an in'\isible \\\%i\nci.Cymheli ne. iv. 2 
makes mouths at the invisible event ..Hamlei, iv. 4 

t>, thon invisible spirit of wine Othello, ii. 3 

TNVITATION-the leer of invitation. A/errv »V,.es. i. 3 

INVITE — I invite your highness Tempest, v. 1 

do 1 imite >'ou to-niorrowmorning.jl/rrry Wires, iii, 3 
cnnninL' of tirr passion invites me. 7'"c;/'/i ,V/<,'///, ii. 2 

sir, I do invite vmi too I.cve'sL.Losl. iv, 2 

thither will T invite tlie duke As 1,011 Like it, v. 2 

friends, invite, 3'es, and proclaim, TamingofSh. iii, 2 
some invite me; some other givcCoinerfi/ of Err. iv, 3 



INVITE— journey soundly invite h.ira.. Macbeth, i, 7 

the bell invites me; bear it not — ii. 1 

whom we invite to see us crowned ,. — v. 7 
invites the king of England's . . Henry V. v. (chorus) 

invite my lords of Salisbury and iHenryVI. i. 4 

blessed troop invite me to a banquet. //en. v'lll. iv. 2 
to invite the Trojan lords after. Troilus 6; Cress, iii. 3 
invite the most valorous Hector to come — iii, 3 

to invite Hector to his tent — iii, 3 

invite them without knives . , , , Timon of Athens, i, 2 
and still invites all that pass by ,.,. — ii, 1 

I charge thee, invite them all — iii, 4 

that mine own use invites me — V, 2 

invite you to my sister's view ..Anlony ^-Cleo. ii, 2 
aboard mj' gallc.v I invite you all,,.. — ii. 6 

to my house, « hither I invite you Pericles, v. 3 

guests invite as here are writ , , Romeo ^Juliet, iv, 2 
the time invites you ; go, your servants. . Hamlet i. 3 
to claim my vantage diith invite me .... — V, 2 

INVITED— hath invited you all Much Ado,\. 1 

invited, sir, to certain merchants. (7ome(/|/o/L'»j. i. 2 
some merchant hath invited him.... — ii. 1 

invited by your noble self HenryVlll. ii. 2 

sent to her, invited her to sui)per..4n/onj/ ij-Cleo. ii. 2 

that ne'er before invited eyes Terictes, v. 1 

I have invited many a guest Romeo <S- Juliet, i, 2 

oft invited me; still questioned me Othello, i. 3 

tlie generous islanders by you invited — iii. 3 
INVlTING-an earnest ihviting.7'imon o/,-JMens,iii.6 

the time inviting thee? Cymhetiiie, iii. 4 

an inviting ej'e Othello, ii. 3 

INVITIS— is-writ, invitis mibibns ..-•Henry V t. iv. 1 

INVOCATE— I invoeatc thv ghost . . Richard Ill.i. 2 

INVOCATION-invoeation of a child.. Lofe's L.L. i. 2 

'tisa Greek invocation to call fools. ^si/ou Likeit, ii.5 

which scorns a modem invocation . . King John, iii. 4 

my invocation is fair and honest. Borneo ^Juliet, ii. I 

INVOKE— invoke his warlike spirit HenryV. i. 2 

INVULNERABLE-like invulnerable . Tempest, iii. 3 

the invulnerable clouds of heaven . . King John, ii. 1 

air, invulnerable, and our vain blows . . Hamlet, i. 1 

INWARD — inward pinches therefore .. Tempest, \. \ 

inward joy enforced my heart .. TnoGen. of Ver. i. 2 

sir, I was an inward or liis Meas.for Meas, iii, 2 

know any inward impediment Much Adjo, iv, 1 

for what is inward between us . , , , Love'sL. Lost, v. 1 
who, inward searched, have livers, Mer. of Venice, iii. 2 

but from the inward motion iLingJolin, i. 1 

conjunction of our inward souls — iii. 1 

and my inward soul with nothing ..Richard II. ii. 2 
yet my inward soul persuades me.... — ii. 2 

spermaceti, for an inward bruise 1 HenrylV. i. 3 

he writes me here, that inward sickness — iv. 1 
were these inward wars once out ..iHenry IV. iii. 1 

makes it course from the inwards — iv. 3 

most true and inward duteous spirit — iv. 4 
with an inward wish you would desire. Hen?-?//', i. 1 
model to thy inward greatness .... — ii. (chorus) 

honour for an inward toil Richard III. i. 4 

most inward with the noble duke.. .. — iii. 4 
shall hide om- inward woe . . Troilus ^ Cressida, v. 1 1 
draw the inward quality ..Antony^- Cleopatra, iii. 11 
that sigh from the inward of thee?. . Cymbeline, iii. 4 
the outward habit by the inward msi-n,. Pericles, ii. 2 
the inward service of the mind and soul.Ha);iie/, i. 3 
exterior nor the inward man resembles . . — ii. 2 
that inward breaks, and shows no cause — iv. 4 
poisonous mineral, gnaw my inwards . . Othello, ii. 1 
INWARDLY- sighs, waste inwardly .ii;?(c/i Ado, iii. 1 

my heart bleeds inw.ardly that •iHenry IV. ii. 2 

I bleed inwardly for mv lord . . Timon of Athens, i. 2 
INWARDNESS— mv inwardness .... Much Ado, iv. 1 

10— we'll show thee lo Taming of Shrew, ■:>. (ind.) 

IONIA— to Lydia, and to Ionia hiloiiy t^Cleo. i. 2 

IONIAN— cn't the Ionian sea Anlony^-Cleo. iii. 7 

IPSE-eonsent, that ipse is he (rep.). As youLike it, v. 1 
IPSWICH-Ipswich fellow's insoknee.'HenryVIIl. i. 1 
he raised in you, Ipswich and Oxford! — iv. 2 
IRA— that ira" furor brevis est ... . Timon of Athens, 1. 2 
IRjE-tautaane animis coelestibua irx? .'iHenry IT. ii. 1 
IRAS — come, tell Iras hers ..Antony ^ Cleopatra, i. 2 

O Iras, Charmian, 'tis no — ii.5 

help, Iras; help, friends below — iv. 13 

peace, peace, Iras. No more — iv. 1-3 

nay, 'tis most certain, Iras — v. 2 

sirrah, Iras, go; now, noble Charmian — v. 2 

vare, yare, good Iras — v. 2 

IRE— provoked with raging iie. Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

and toll of ire, in rage deaf as Richard II. i. 1 

mad ire, and wrathful fury I Heniy VI. iv. 3 

it could not slake mine ire SHenry VI. i. 3 

yet cease your ire, ye angry stars Pericles, ii. I 

IREFUL-eaeh one with ireif'ul passion. Co?n.o/£(r.v.l 

the ireful bastard, Orleans I Henry VI. iv. 6 

slaughtered by the ireful arm '.^HenryVI.ii. I 

grasped in their ireful hands — ii.5 

IRELAND-body stands Ireland . Corned?/ r/ £■?■?■. iii, 2 

to Ireland, our separated Macbeth, ii, 3 

in England, and m Ireland — iii. 1 

Ireland, Poicticrs, Anjou, Touraine. . KingJohn, i. 1 
England, and Ireland, Anjou, Touraine — ii. I 

winch stand out in Ireland Richard II. i. 4 

we will make for Irehind presently.. — i. 4 

we will for Ireland; and 'tis time — ii. 1 

departing of the king f(j]- Ireland — ii. 1 

is not yet shipped for Ireland — ii. 2 

are there posts despatched for Ireland? — ii, 2 
sits lair for news to go to Ireland .. .. — ii. 2 

no; I'll to Ireland to liis majest.v — ii. 2 

like a kerne of Ireland, your French.. Hen?-7/r. iii. 7 

from Ireland coming, bringing — v. (chorus) 

Encland is thine, Ireland IS thine.... — v. ST 

tby'acts in Ireland, in bringing iHcnryVI. i. 1 

realms of England, France, .and Ireland — i. 1 

from Ireland am I come amain — iii. 1 

uncivil kernes of Ireland are in arms — iii. 1 
to Ireland will von lead a band of men — iii. 1 

I'll ship them all for Ireland — iii. 1 

whiles f in Ireland nourish a mighty — iii. 1 
in Ireland have I seen this stubborn — iii. 1 



IRE 



[ 39o ] 



ITA 



IRKI.ANO— from Irclona come I ..iHem-y VI. Hi. 1 
York is newly conic from Ireland.... — iv. 9 

fniin Iri'Iaml thus comes York — v. I 

anil L.rilof Inliinil SHciuyl'l. iv. 7 (proc.) 

abiircl nflroliinil tnl.l nie once . . . . Ilirhant III. iv. a 
ulliiiniUr, tluii .lipiitv ol IrvUnd. . Ueiirv fill. V 



litis- 

I'll In 
tlult I 



iK'l.my lor In-lM 



.Mhiiiccye ...■(«'» irrH, i. 3 

ivi' 1111 Iris tliiit sIkiU liiul ....iUenryVI. iii. 3 
r.nukr tluin liliie Iris bends. '/VniViij .«(,■>■(•». i. 3 

tliat 1 was 1111 Irislirat AtijmiLiki; il,i\\.i 

iwliii^' of lri--h wolves asainet .. — v. 2 

liliirs tor tliisf Irish wars Kichard It. i. 4 

ir onr Irisli wins — ii. 1 



fi.rdv. 



Irish 



i. 1 



•ilition ..lHf;i)i( //'. i. 3 
hear la.lv, inv lira, li liowl ill Irish .. _ iii. 1 
wIh-m ho was inMsoiiul ill tlio Irish war — iv. 3 
S.I l.iiii; in his iMiliu'kv Irish wars.... — v. 1 
IlilSllAlAM-aii Irisluuiin with. . .. W.';/-;/ (riivs, ii. 2 
allii^'etlu-r ilinitcil liv an Irisliinan .. Ilt-iiry I', iii. i 
II(lSll.ML;N'-uKainsttlielrishraeu'i'.2l/«iri|i II. iii. 1 

lliK— and yet it irks mc Asyou l.ikcii, ii. I 

it irks his heart, he cannot i lleiiru I'l.i. 4 

it irks inv very sonl 3 Henry I' I. ii. 2 

1 11 K.Si ).M l5— was irksome to me . . .I* ym l-il<r ii, iii. a 
is an irksome brawling scold ..Tutnin^ofShri'tr^i. 2 
irksome is this music to my heart!.. i/Zeiii;/'/. ii. 1 
UlO.V-to wear iron about you.. .. 7'HW/7/i.Vi-/i/, iii. 4 
niv voiiii^' s.ililier, put up your ir.ni.. — iv. I 
lu'lo'ro l.urrod up with ribs ofiroul ..Miich.ldo, iv. 1 
riui^ n.it tliis s|ii.ci-h like iron tlir.in^'li — V. 1 

bill vet you ilraw not iron Mfl. W'sDrmm, ii. 2 

the iron t.iiu'ue of miduight hath — v. 1 

ir..n ui-iv li.it.l with her Tamhifrnf Slirrii; ii. 1 

f.tcli nil' iin iron crow Coiiwly uf Krron, iii. 1 

tlK'ir iniii in.lii;nation 'gainst your.. Ki'iij' Jo/i», ii. I 
with his iron touf-'ue and brazen mouth — iii. 3 

beat mc tliL-.-e irons hot — iv. 1 

must vou Willi b.it ir.jus burn (rep.).. — iv. 1 

none, but in this iron age — iv. 1 

stubborn hard than hammered iron? — iv. 1 

give me the iron, I say — iv. 1 

nor look upon the iron angerly — iv. I 

tieree fire, and iron, extends — iv. 1 

with this same very iron to burn .... — iv. i 

the wliilst his iron did — iv. 2 

sliock of wrathful iron arms Itichnrdll. i. 3 

thee murmur tales of inni wars 1 th-nrylt'. ii. 3 

now bind my brows with iron •illntiyiy.i. I 

to see you here an iron man — iv. 2 

hold out mine iron; it is a simple one. Henry T. ii. 1 
and iron and steel, tliey will eat like — iii- 7 

with an aspect of iron — v. 2 

out of a great deal of old iron I chose. 1 Henry I'l. i. 2 

a secret grate of iron bars — i. 4 

in iron walls they deemed — . i. 4 

girdleil with a waist of iron — iv. 3 

make thee eat iron like an ostrich. ..2He)ir!/r/. iv. 10 
iron of Naples, hid with ICnglish gilt.3Hc»i!/'7. ii. 2 
strike now, or else the iron cools .... — v. 1 

thy bruising irons of wrath Richard III. v. 3 

all that have not hearts of iron.... Henry ;7/f. iii. 2 
drawing their massy irons ..Troilu!iSfCressida..ii. 3 

as iron to adamant, as earth to — iii. 2 

show me an iron-lieart I Timon of Alliens, iii. 4 

loaden with irons, wiser than — iii. .^ 

irons of a doit, doublets tliat Coriolanusj i. 5 

to rust iron, increase tailors — iv. 5 

dungeon, nor strong links of iron ..Julius Cersar, i. 3 
fellow, put thine iron on . . Anfony^ Cleopafra, iv. 4 
wore rowel nor iron on liis heel? ..Cymheline, iv. 4 
iron wit, and put up my iron ..Itomeo^ Juliet, iv. 5 
get me an iron crow^ ond bring it.... — V. 2 
that mattock, and the wrenching iron — v. 3 

IRON- VVITTED fools liichard III. iv. 2 

IKRKCOXCILKI) iniquities Henry T. iv. 1 

IKRECOVERABLE- 
prickeddown Bardolph irrecoverable.2/fcn.rr. ii. 4 

I RKElj UL.'VR— irregular course Kin^'Jo/ui, v. 4 

the irregular and wild (llendower ..\ Henry If. i. 1 

hath faulty wandered and irregular — iii. 2 

IKRKt.Urr.DUS— irregulousdevil ..Cyinheline, iv. 2 

IRHEl.Kilors cursed hours Mernj liyves, v. 5 

O cruel, irrelii^ious piety 1 .. .. 7'i7w*/lni/ronicH*, i. 2 

the is*iie of an irreligious Moor — v. 3 

rRRE.MOVAULE— he's irremovable. tVinler'sT. iv. 3 

IKK El'A K ABl-K is the loss Tewpesl, v. 1 

IRRESDMITE— irresolute purpose.. Henri/ /'/;/. i. 2 
lUREVOCABLE is my doomwhich. Jji/ouLiAci/.i. 3 

when I swear, it is irrevocable illenryl'l. iii. 2 

thv Iiand, thy faith irrevocable 'illenryl'l. iii. 3 

ISAlBEL— and you were Isabel. . .Meas. for Meas. ii. 2 
anchors on Isabel: heaven in my.. .. — ii. 4 
one Isabel, a sister, desires occees.... — ii. 4 
he shall not, Isabel, if you give me.. — ii. 4 

who will believe thee, Isaliel? — ii. 4 

then Isalwl. live chaste, and, brotherdie — ii. 4 

thanks, dear Isaliel — iii. 1 

O Isatiel ! what says my brother? — iii. 1 

nav, bear me, Isabel — iii. 1 

not Isiibel? No — iv. 2 

the tongue of Isabel; she's come .... — iv. 3 

he hath releaseil him, Isabel — iv. 3 

wretched Isabel ! Injurious world! . . — iv. 3 
by my troth, iKiliel, I loved thy brother — iv. 3 
he thinks, that he knows Isabel's.. .. — v. 1 
that took away the match from Isaliel — v. 1 
call that same Isalnl here onee again — v. 1 

come hither, IsalK'l; your friar — v. I 

you are pardoned, Isabel — v. 1 

sweet IsalK'l, take my part — v. 1 

Isftliel, sweet Isabel, do yet but kneel — v. 1 

Isabel! will vou not lend a knee? — v. I 

dear IsalKd, I Have a motion — v. 1 

fair queen Isabel, his grandmother,. ., Henry V, I, 2 

I.SABELLA-Rentic IsnMla Mr«,./oriWe,i,. i. :, 

ns bring me to the sight of Isaliella., — \. ft 

1 am that Isaliclln, and his sister.... — i. .'i 
O hear me, Isabella — iii. I 



ISA BELLA— O r'Ctty Isabella. , Meat, fvr Mens. iv. 
ISBEL-tothc world, IsIk'1 the woman. /((CiH'e*;, i. 

in Isbel's case, and mine own — i. 

1 have no mind to Islirl (ir;i,) — iii. 

I.SC.VltlOT-n.it lseiiri..tsir l.nre'sl..l.ott,v. 

ISIDOUIO-an.l to Isiilore lie owes. VVmon o//(//i. ii. 



and 

fr. 



Isi.l.i 



Isi.l.. 



iil.lv 



Hi 



ii. 2 



— ii. 1 

— ii. I 



— iv. 1 

— V. 1 

) 



ys your — ii. 2 
ISIS-swiit Isis, 1 Ik'socc'Ii thee! ..Antony ^ Cleo. i. 2 
good Isis, hear mo lliis priiycr (re/).) _ i. 2 

tiiereloro, ilear Ms, i<ri'|i ilivoruni ., — i. 2 

bv Isis, 1 will 'Am- tli.e lilo..clv teeth — i. .'> 

like liorMi l.-is: lis iiii|i..s.~ilile .... — iii. 3 
lultli be soon iiKii.'stvy Isis else defend — iii. 3 
in the baliiliiiicnts of the goddess Isis — iii. 6 
ISLAND— here in this island we arrived. 7Vmpejr,i. 2 
tbi'ii was tliis islan.l, save for tlic son .... — i. 2 

t!iis isliinii's niiiie, bv Svcorax — i. 2 

keep from nie the ivit of the island _ i. 2 

it waits ii|ioii some L'oil of tlic island .... — i. 2 

if you remain upon this island — i. 2 

hast put thyself u|iiin this island as a s|i.v — i. 2 

though this' island seem to be desert — ii. 1 

will cany this island home in his pocket — ii. I 

bring forth more islands 

for he is, sure, i'the island 

every fertile inch o'the island — 

the folly of this island! — 

hath cheated me of this island — 

for, certes. these are people of the ishiiiil — 
this island wlicre man doth not in 
make this island thine own ior ev. 
if this prove a vision of the island 

dwell in this bare island — (epil 

to discover islands far away.7'«-o Gen.nfVemna, i. 3 

hnvful I'luim to this fair island KivgJnUn.i. I 

that island of England breeds Henry y. iii. 7 

yon island carrions, desperate — iv. 2 

might make this island nappy 2/(e)iryA7. iii. I 

enough to purchase such another island — iii. 3 

like to his island, girt in with ZHenryVl. iv. 8 

than all the islanakings TroilusffVressida, iii. I 

realms and islands were as plates..ln((;ny<5tVeo. v. 2 

allots against the island's side I'irieles, v. 1 

of Ids iiilirmit.v, will shake this island.. OWie»o, ii. 3 

not I, for this fair island: I do love — ii. 3 

ISLANDER— no fish, but an islander., rtmpes/, ii. 2 

I saw such islanders — iii. 3 

coops from other lands her islanders. A'/nj' John, ii. 1 
not beard these islanders shout out . . — v. 2 
savage islanders, Tompey the grcat.illenryl'r. iv. 1 
the generous islanders, by you invited. oz/.e/M, iii. 3 
ISLE— dispersed them 'bont the isle . . . . 7V;npes^ i. 2 

in an odd angle of the isle — i. 2 

shewed thee all the qualities o' the isle — i. 2 
had peopled else this isle with Calibans — i. 2 
had I plantation of this isle, my lord — ii. I 

this is some monster of the isle — ii. 2 

there's hut five upon this isle — iii. 2 

by sorcery he got this isle — !!!■ ^ 

this isle is full of noises — iii. 2 

in this most desolate isle — iii. 3 

some subtilties o' the isle — v. 1 

his dukedom in a poor isle — v. 1 

you'd be king of the isle, sirrah? .... — v. 1 

since I came to this isle — v. 1 

fertile the isle; the temple IVinler'sTale, iii. I 

from the western isles of fllnrhelh^ i. 2 

owed the breadth of all this isle .... KingJohn, iv. 2 
the sons and children of this isle .... — v. 2 

this sceptred isle, this earth Uiehnrd II. ii. 1 

in that nook-shotten isle of Albion .. Henry r. iii. ."i 

our isle be made a nourish 1 He/.ryr/._i, 1 

sir John Stanley, in the isle of Man..'.i//eMri/ I'l. ii. 3 

with him to the isle of Man — ii. 4 

that is to the isle of Man — .''•"* 

civilest place of all this isle — ^X- ' 

the seat royal of lliis famous isle?.. /^V/innl ///, iii. I 

good men ofthis nngoverned isle — iii. 7 

the noble isle doth want her proper. . — iii. 7 

even in tlic centre of this isle — v. 2 

agein, to lighten all this isle? ;/enrvr//7. ii. 3 

from isles of Greece the princes, 7'r()i7, ,S Cre.w. (prol.) 

his part o' the isle /inlnny -S (^'leopnim, iii. 6 

tlie natural bravery of vour isle. . . . <'yntl>einie, iii. 1 

due course toward the isle of Rhodes OtlwUo, i. 3 

thanks to the valiant of this warlike isle — ii. 1 
how do our old acquaintance of this isle? — ii. 1 

heaven bless the isle of Cyprus — ii. 2 

the very elements of this warlike isle — ii.3 

some action thnt may otfend the isle — ii.3 

it frights the isle froiii hiT propriety — ii.3 

ISR.\EL-0 Jcphtlm, jii.l w .if Israel.. . . Hmnlei, ii. 2 

ISSUE— fair issue, nil. 1 loiig life rempesl,iv. 1 

and honoured in their issue — iv. 1 

that his issue should liccome kings .. — v. 1 
and let burnt sack he tlie issue ..Merry Wives, iii. I 

see the issue of his search — iii. 3 

that none shall issue out — iv. 2 

see hut the issue of mj' jealousy — iv. 2 

finely touched, hut to tine issues. ..l/erij.y»ir,VM.<.i. I 

look vou for any other issue? MurU Ado, ii. 2 

grow'this to what adverse issue it can — ii. 2 

aii.l l.-t th.> is"ue show itself — iii. 2 

to.'U nil a beggar's issue at my gates — iv. 1 
Hymen, now with luckier issue speeds — v, 3 

and the issue, there create Mid. N.'s Dream, v. 2 

shall not in their issue stand — v. 2 

she is issue to a faithless .lew . . Merch. nfl'euiee, ii. 4 

to view the issue of the exploit — iii. 2 

till I have issue of mv body AlVs H'rit, i. 3 

OS the ilearest issue of his practice.... — ii. 1 
by testament to tlic sequent issue. ... — v. 3 
whose issue will hiss me to my .... ii'iutcr'sTale, \. 2 

where I the iwiue doubted — }.- 

than they should not pniducc fair issue — ii. I 

cannot miss a thriving issue — ii. 2 

it is the issue of Polixcnes -^ ii.3 

lead on to some foul issue — ii.3 

HO, I'll not rear another's issue — ii.3 



ISSUE— gracious be the Issue I irinler's Tale, iii. I 

this being indeed the issue of king .. — iii. 3 

their issue not being gracious — iv. I 

by his highness' fail of issue — v. 1 

care not for issue v. I 

I wonl.l most gladly know the issue of it— v. 2 
nres.-n.-.l o.', -ell lo .see the issue .... — v. 3 

for i:..t .11. li live I filed AfacM/i,iii. 1 

and i.i. lo I til , V. I lose heavy hand — iii. I 
that r. . hi... ilf issueofttking.... _ iv. 1 

shall i;iin.|iio's i^.ue ever reign — iv. 1 

the triHst rsiiiM.f thy throne — iv. 3 

but ci'iliiiii issiio strokes must — v. 4 

with fciirliil bl.M.ily issue Kini; Jnhn,i. 1 

thou art the issue of my dear — i. I 

on this rcniove.l issue, plagued for .. — ii. 1 

see the issue of your jieacc! — iii. I 

I fear, will issue thence — iv, 2 

it issues from the rancour of llichmd ll.i. I 

niy king, and my succeeding issue.... — i.j 

well, I see the issue of these — ii.3 

uncertain of the issue any way I Henry IF. i. I 

come, what's the issue? — ii. 4 

here come the heavy issue of dead ..'illenrylV. v. 2 
BO full a voice issue from so empty. . . . Henry f. iv. 4 
niistful cj'es, or they will issue too .. — iv. B 
happy he the iss\ie, lirotlier England — v. 2 

raise uj) issue to me — v. 2 

thou seest that I no issue have 1 Henry I'l. ii. h 

strong enough to issue out ond fight — iv. 2 

our hope in issue of a king — v. 5 

the issue of the next son should •lllenryl'l. ii. 2 

had issue— Philippe a daughter — ii. 2 

had issue— Kogci, earl of;\fiirch (rrp.) — li. 2 

so, if the issue of tlio ilil.'r s.in — ii. 2 

till Lionel's issue fui If, lii.s should not — ii. 2 

issue forth, and bi.l tliem huttlc illenryl'l. i. 2 

issue from the bosom of the bo}' — i. 4 

and raise his issue, like a loving sire — ii. 2 

all the unlooked for issue of their bodies — iii. 2 

no doubt, will issue out again — v. 1 

his issue disinherited should be liichard III. i. I 

loathed issue of thy father's loins! .. — i. 3 

that tlie issue was not his begot — iii. 5 

we'll bring it to a happy issue — iii. 7 

preys on the issue of Ills mother's body — iv. 4 

the issue of your womb (rpp.) — iv. 4 

llting Henry s issue, Richmond — v, 3 

communication of a most poor issue. Heart/ /7y/. i. I 

in their issue are to he feared — i. 2 

if the king should without issuedie.. — i. 2 

for her male issue or died where .... — ii. 4 

.stood in this my issue's fail — ii. 4 

our issues, w liu. if he live, will scarce — iii. 2 
while it is hot, I'll put it to the issue — v. 1 

issues from our choice Troilus 4 Cressida, i. 3 

the issue of your j.ropcr wisdoms .... — ii. i 

some issue of my spiteful — ii.3 

albeit sweet music issues thence .... — iii. 2 

we'll answer it; the issue is — iv. j 

thou issue of a mangy dog! .. 7'iino« ofAihem, iv. 3 
I therein would have found issue.... Con'o/on«», i. 3 

hut issue forth their city — i. 4 

if all our ■wits were to issue out of one — ii.3 

and interjoin their issues — iv. 4 

the people take the cruel issue ..Julius Ctpsar, iii 
as a rich legacy, unto their issue .... — iii. 
whose better issue in the war ....Antony &Cleo. i 

all thi' nMlnwfnl issue — iii. 

then ol.l i.inl iMH.l ..f issue Cyvibeliue, i. 

theref.io V'or is-iies being foolish .. — ii. 

the,y are the issue of your loins — v. 

how! my issue? As sure as you — v. 

whose issue promises Britain peace . . — v. 
a Joyful issue. A joyless (rep.) .. TiiusAndron. iv 

the issue of an irreligiotis Moor — v, 

whence an issue I might propagate .... Perictrs, i. 

the issue of it being so proper Lenr, i. 

as tnie, as honest madam's issue? — i. 

that full issue for wdiich I razed — i. 

could not beget such difTereut issues — iv. 

to no issue of true honour lionieo ^ Juhet, iv, 

to what issue will this come? Hamlei, i. 

what is the issue of the business there .. — v. 
to my hones, if I depend on the issue? ..Othello, i. 
I think, tlie is,sne will lie-I shall have .. — ii. 
not to strain my speech to grosser issues — iii. 

ISSUED— no worse issued Tempest, i. 

ne'er issued from his blood ....Meas. for Meas. iii. 

from it issued drops of fort^ed Henrtf I', iv. 

but issued from the progeny I Henyni I'l. v. 

which issiieil from mv other angel. /dW.-iirf;/;. iv. 
the cili/iMis of (.'..rioll have issued . . ('nriV.(-nin.<, i. 

ISSUELESS- have left me issueless. Il.n/er'.t'/',i/e, v. 

ISSlUNG-issuing lifc-liloiHl..jMercA<i»/'i//'eMiee, iii. 

and with the issuing IiIikkI stifle SHenry^l. ii. 

conduit with three issuing siJOUts. 7*i/i/i/liu/rn». ii. 
fountains issuing from vour veins, ffome/i ^-Juliet, i. 

ITALIAN— French, nor'ltalian ..Merch. nri'enice, i. 
furnish me to those Italian fields .... All's irell. ii. 

low Dutch, Italian, or French — iv. 

old Italian fox is not so kind., raining n/".>>'Arnr,ii. 
no Italian priest shall tithe or toll.. King JnAti, iii. 

there's an Italian come Cymbetine, i 

Come, I'll go see this Italian — ii. i 

false Italian (as poisonous tongucd) — iii. r 

brought hither iim.im,' the Italian gentry — v. 1 
I'll disr.ilic me of tllc^e Italian weeds — v. 1 
iiiiiic Itiiliiin brain "iran in vourdnller — v. i 

ay. so thou .l.ist, Itulinnlieiid! — v. .^ 

and written in very clmii'C Italian Hnmlrl, iii. 2 

IT.'VLY— is W1 t'ar from Italy removed.. TemjesI, ii. I 

he is the only ninn of Ital.v MnehA'lo, iii. 1 

goes foremost in report through Italy — iii. I 
tlioii w.nst the pro] crest man m Italy — v. I 
Ixiught his (lonlilit in Italy .. ,Wrrr/inn<(i/ I'enire, i. 2 
if any i.i:;n ill Italy have a fairer .... — ii. 2 

any that draws hriath in Italy — iii. 2 

let higlier Italy, those 'bntcd All'sll'rll.'i':. I 

those girls of Italy, take heed — ii 1 



. I 



. 1 



. 1 



ITALY— you were beaten in Italy AU'sWell, ii. 3 

the pleasant garden of great Italy. Taming of Sh. i. 1 
a man well known thronghout all Italy — ii. 1 

of fasliiona in proud Italy Richard II. ii. 1 

retired himself to Italy — iv. 1 

Volsces plough Rome, and harrow Italy. Coji'oi. v. I) 

all tlie swords in Italy, and her — v. 3 

in every place, save here in Italy . . Julius Cwsar, i. 3 
shall eiimber all the parts of Italy . . — iii. 1 
•ssue in tlie war, from Italy ..J'l'oiii/ ^Cleopatra, i. 2 

i.ur Italy shines o'er with civil — i. 3 

many hot inroads tliey make in Italy — i. 4 

OI from Italy; ram thou thy — ii. 6 

for Italv, ancl Ctcsar; more, Domitius — iii. 5 
the slies of Italy should not betray . . Cymbeline, i. 4 
not so far prefer her 'fore ours of Italy — i. 5 

Italy contains none so accomplished — _i. 5 

that drug-damned Italy hatli — iii. 4 

some jay of Italy, whose niotlier — iii. 4 

a kinsman, who is hound for Italy .. — iii. B 
the confiners, and gentlemen of Italy — iv. 2 
fear not wliat can from Italy annoy U3 — iv. 3 

slight thing of Italy, to taint — v. 4 

hearing us praise our loves of Italy . . — v. 5 
in tl>y mood as any in Italy.... /iomeo fy Juliet, iii. 1 

ITCH— where'er slie did itch Tempest, ii. 2 (song) 

my fingers itch. I would (rep.').. TroilusSr Cress, ii. I 
rubbing the poor itch of your opinion. Cor/Vj/a>ins,i.l 

the itch of his affection Antony SrClenpalra, iii. 11 

not answer me; my lingers itch.. Komeo^ JiiJiW, iii. 5 

ITCHED— and my elbow itched Mucli Ado, iii. 3 

ITCHES-my finger itches to make one..Uf)r;/ >f. ii. 3 
itches, Wains, sow all Athenian. Timon of Athens, iv.l 

ITCHING— an itching palm {rep.).Jutius Ccvsar, iv. 3 

ITEM— item, she can milk.. 7'h'o Gen.of I'erona, iii. 1 

item, she brews good ale (rep.) — iii. 1 

as, item, two lips indifferent red (rep.).TirelflhX. i. 5 
item, that no woiuan shall come . . Love^sL. Lost, i. 1 

item, if any man be seen to talk — i. 1 

item, a capon, 23. 2d. (rep.) 1 HenrylV. ii. 4 

item, that the duchy of Anjou..2Henri/F/. i. 1 (art.) 

item, it is further agreed between — i. 1 (art.) 

item, 3'ou sent a large commission. Hen?;/ F///. iii. 2 
and I to peruse him by items Cymbeline, i. 6 

ITERANCE rCoi.-iteration] woman? Othello, v. 2 

ITERATION— damnable iteration ..\ Henry IV. i. 2 
truth tired witli iteration . . Troilus Sr Cressida, iii. 2 
rco/.j what needs this iteration, woman ?.0(/ie»o, v.2 

I'THACA-speak.prince of Ithaca.. 7"roi7us ^C?fs.v. i. 3 
did but fill Itliaca full of moths Coriolanus,U 3 

IVORY-between jet and ivory. .i^erch. of Venice, iii. 1 
ivory coffers I have stuffed .. Taming- of Shrew, ii. I 
her ivory hand wafts to her .... Timon of Athens, i. I 

rVY— he was the ivy, wliich had Tempest, \. 2 

the female iv.y so enrings Mid. K. Dream, iv. 1 

by the sea-side, browsing on ivy . ll'inler'sTale, iii. 3 
usurping ivy, brier, or idle moss. Comedy 0/ Err. ii. 2 

J 

J.-^CET- or another, or hie jacet All's Well, iii. 6 

JACK— [For Jack Rugby, Jack Falstaff, Jack Cade, 
see Rugby, Falstaff, and Cade.] 
little better than played the Jack .... Tempest, iv. 1 

I vill kill de Jack Priest Merry Wives, i. 4 

say'st thou so, old Jack? — ii. 2 

vat is de clock. Jack? — ii. 3 

take your rapier, Jack — ii.3 

he is de coward Jack priest.. — ii.3 

or do you pla.y the flouting Jack Much Ado, i. 1 

braggarts. Jacks, milksops! — v. 1 

Jack shall have Jill, nougat. .Mid N.'s Dream,iii. 2 
an old play; Jack hath not Jill.. Lore's L. Lost, v. 2 
raw tricks of these bragging Jacks. Mer. of Ven iii. 4 
and twangling Jack; with twenty. romjVig-o/S/i.ii.l 
and a swearing Jacl<, that thinks .. — ii. 1 
why. Jack boy! ho boy I and as .... — iv.l 

be the jacks fair within, and the — iv.l 

fooling here, his Jack 0' the clock . . Richard II. v. 5 

take a purse to-morrow, Jack? 1 Henry I K i. 2 

Jack, how agrees the devil — .!• ^ 

sirrah Jack, thy horse stands — ii. 2 

I am no proud Jack, like Falstaff — — ii. 4 
welcome. Jack. Where hast thou been? — ii. 4 
go thy ways, old Jack; die when .... — ii. 4 

where is it, jack? Where is it? — ii. 4 

three and fifty upon poor old Jack ,. — W' ^ 

ay, and mark thee too. Jack — ii. 4 

come, your reason. Jack, your reason — ii. 4 
mark. Jack. We two saw you four.. — ii. 4 
come, let's hear. Jack; what trick .. — ii. 4 
pr'ytliee do. Jack. Faith, and I'll send — ii. 4 

hear comes lean Jack, here comes — ii. 4 

how long is't ago. Jack, since thou . . — ii, 4 
yes, Jack, upon instinct. I grant ye — ii. 4 

howl the prince is a Jack, a sneak-cup — ii. 4 

what didst thou lose. Jack? — iii. 3 

he called you Jack, and said he would — iii. 3 
I have procured thee. Jack, a charge — iii. 3 
Jack, meet me to-morrow i' the .... — iii. 3 
how now, blown Jack? how now .... — iv. 2 

but, tell me, Jack; whose fellows — iv. 2 

then am I a Jack — v. 4 

I'll be friends with thee, Jack iHenrylV. ii. 4 

I pray thee, .lack, I pray thee — ii. 4 

I pray thee. Jack, be quiet; the rascal — ii. 4 
well, sweet Jack, have a care of thyself — ii. 4 
by silken, sly, insinuating Jacks?. . Richard III. i. 3 
every Jack became a gentleman (rep.) — i. 3 

because that, like a Jack, thou keep'st — iv. 2 
sluiU perceive that a Jack guardant.Cojv'o/nniM, v. 2 
take hence this Jack, and whip..4n(onj/ ,§-C'/fo. iii. 11 

thi.s Jack of CaBsar's shall — iii. U 

I kissed the jack upon an up-east .. Cymbeline, ii, 1 

he is, and twenty such Jacks Romeo Sf Juliet, ii. 4 

thou art as hot a Jack In thy mood — iii. 1 

hang him, Jackl come, we'll in here — iv. 5 

JACK-A-LENT-Iittle Jack-a-lent.jVerry JVives. iii. 3 
how wit maybe made a Jack-a-leut — v. 5 

JACK-A-NAPE— a scurvy jack-a-nape — i. 4 



JACK- A- NAPE to Anne Merry Wives, ii.3 

and I will be like a jack-a-uapes also — iv. 4 

that jack-a-napes with scarfs All's Well, iii. 5 

and sit like a jack-a-napes, never off.. Henry r. v. 2 

a whoreson jack-a-napes must Cymbeline, ii. 1 

JACK-DOG-scurvy jack-dog priest 1 jWc/t!/ Wives, ii. 3 

you are de coward, de jack-dog — iii. I 

JACK'NAPE— you jack'nape — i. 4 

JACK-OUT-OI^-Oi'FICE; the king.. 1 Henri/ FI. i. I 
JACK-SAUCE— and a jack-sauce ....Henn/r. iv. 7 

J.\CK-SLAVE— every jack-slave Cymbeline, ii. 1 

JAt^OB— come Philip and Jacob.. ^/ens./oiil/eas. iii. 2 
when Jacob grazed his (rep.) . . Mereh.of Tenice, i. 3 

mark what Jacob did — i. 3 

should fall as Jacob's hire — i. 3 

and those were Jacob's; this was .... — i. 3 
a venture, sir, that Jacob served for.. — i. 3 

by Jacob's staff, I swear I have — ii. 5 

J ACULIS— non eget Mauri jaculis. Titus Andron. iv. 2 
JADE— better than a jade . . Two Gen. of ferona, iii. 1 

to let imagination jade rae Tirelfih Night, ii. 5 

let carman whip his jade. .Measure for Measure, ii. 1 
you always end with a jade's trick . . Much Ado, i. 1 

we that dwell in't, jades All's Well, ii. 3 

they shall be jades' tricks — iv. 5 

I know, he'll prove a jade .... Taming of Shrew, i. 2 

no such jade, sir, as you — ii. 1 

fie, fie on all tired jades 1 — iv.l 

incessantly upon these jades King John, ii. 2 

the manage of unruly jades Kichurd 11. iii. 3 

that jade hath eat bread from — y. 5 

the poor jade is wrung in the 1 Henrylf^. ii. 1 

to give poor jades the Dots — ii. 1 

the jianting sides of his poor jade...-2HCT'ry7i'. i. 1 
and hollow pampered jades of Asia . — .'i- ** 

a drench for sur-reined jades Henry V. iii. 5 

all other jades you may call beasts. . — iii. 7 
I had as lief have my mistress a jade — iii. 7 
their poor jades lob down their lieads — iv. 2 

arouse the jades that drag the 2HenryVI. iv. i 

red murrain o' thy jade's tricks! Troilus ^ Cress, ii. 1 
and, like deceitful jades, sink in. .Julius Ccpsar, iv. 2 
let the galled jade wince, our withers.. Hani^e^, iii. 2 

JADED— by such a jaded groom 'IHenryVI.iv. 1 

be thus jaded by a piece of scarlet. He«?-i/ Vlll. iii. 2 
we have jaded out 0' the field . . Antony ^-Cleo. iii. 1 

JAKES— the wall of a jakes with him Lear, ii. 2 

JAMES-James, wilt thou give us leave.KingJolm, i. 1 
sparrow! James, there's toys abroad — i. 1 

sir James Cromer, and strike off 2 Henry VI. iv, 7 

James "Tyrrel, and your most liicliardlll. iv. 2 

sir James Blunt, and Rice ap Thomas — iv. 5 

what say j'ou, James Soundpo?t?./»'o/neo Sr Jul. iv. .■) 

JAMY— nay, by saint Jamy .. Tamingoj Shrew, iii. 2 

captain Jamy with him (re/).) Henry V. iii. 2 

to your worship, goot captain Jamy — iii. 2 

JANE— anight to Jane Smile As you Like it, ii. 4 

and is Jane Nightwork alive? 2HenrylV. iii. 2 

JANGLED— like sweet bells jangled ..Hamlet, iii. 1 
JANGLING I esteem a sport.... Mid. A'. Cream, iii. 2 

food wits will be jangling Love's L. Lost, ii. 1 
ept such a jangling of the bells Pericles, ii. I 

JANUARY— no, not till a hot January. Wi<c/i.4do, i. 1 
that blasts of January would .... Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

JANUS-by two-headed 3 anus. Merchant of Venice, i. 1 
by Janus, I think no Othello, i. 2 

JAPHET— fetch it from Japhet iHenrylV. ii. 2 

JAQUENETTA, the manner of it.. Loue'sL.Lo.?/, i. 1 
for Jaqueiietta, so is the weaker .... — i. I (letter) 
I was taken with Jaquenetta (;ep.). . — i. 1 

come, Jacquenetta, away — i. 2 

to the country maid Jaquenetta .... — ill. 1 

it is writ to .laqnenetta — iv.l 

for Jaquenetta tliat is quick by him — v. 2 
none, but a dish-clout of Jaquenetta's — v.2 
I have vowed to Jaquenetta to hold — v. 2 

JAQUES— heir of Jaques Faulconbridge — ii. 1 
brother Jaques he keeps at school. ..^s youLike it, i. 1 
the melancholy .laques grieves at that — ii. 1 
much marked of the melancholy Jaquea — ii. 1 
but what said Jaques? did he not .. — ii. 1 

ay, quoth Jaques, sweep on — ii. 1 

make you melancholy, monsieur Jaques — ii. 5 

what you will, monsieur Jaques — ii. 5 

stay, Jaques, stay. To see no pastime — v. 4 
I am saint Jaques' pilgrim.. All's Well, iii. 4 (letter) 

to saint Jaques le grand — }]]• ^ 

to great saint Jaques bound — iii. 5 

a pilgrimage to saint Jaques le grand — iv. 3 
Corambus so many, Jaques so many — iv. 3 

Jaques Chatillon, Rambures HenryV iii. 5 

Jaques of Chatillon, admiral of France — iv. 8 

JAR— when it jars so TwoGen. of Verona, iv. 

we will inclucle all jars — y. 

he, compact of jars, grow musical. .4s you Likeit, ii. 

fie! the treble jars Taming of Slirew, iii. 

'tis the base knave that jars — iii. 

1 love thee not a jar o' the clock . . Winter's Tale, i. 
intestine jars 'twixt thy seditious. Cwnedyo/firr. i. 
jar their watches on to mine eyes .... Richard II, v. 

cease, cease these jars, and rest 1 Henry VI. i. 

two such noble peers as ye, should jarl — iii. 

with the peers be fallen at jars iHenry VI. i. 

when such stringsjar, what hope.... — ii. 
whilst you live at jar, the fearful .... — iv. 
whose endless jar justice resides. Troilus S^ Cress, i. 
and join for that you jar Titus Andron icus, ii. 

JAK>IANY— duke de Jarmauv.. ..Merry Wires, iv. 
JAKRING-his jarring concord All's Well,i. 

tliough long, our jarring notes agree. Tarn. nfSh. v. 

this jarring discord of nobility 1 Henry I'l. iv. 

the untuned and jarring senses ....._ Lear, iv. 

rK7?/.J opposed against the jarring winds? — iv. 
jARTERRE— host of de Jarterre ..Merry Wives, i. 

mine host de Jarterre, have I not.. .. — iii. 

vere is mine host de Jarterre? — iv. 

JASON— and many Jasons Merchant of Venice, i. 

we are the Jasons, we have won — iii. 

JAUNCING-iauni-ing Bolingbroke , /JicAord JI. v. 
J.\UNDICE— into the jaundice.. Mprc/i. r^f Venice, i. 



JAUNDICE on your cheeks? Troilus ^-Cress. i. 3 

JAUNT— a jaunt have I had! Romeo fy Juliet, ii. 5 

JAUNTING— jaunting up and down! — ii. 5 

JAW— out of the jaws of death TwelflhNight, iii. 4 

tlie jaws of darkness do devour. Jt7/d. A'.'s Uream,i. i 

even in tlie jaws of danger and of KingJohn, v. 2 

head against the lion's armed jaws.l HenrylV. Hi. 2 

hungry war opens liis vasty jaws HenryV. ii. 4 

and from their misty jaws breathe. .2He»ry Vf. iv. 1 
Thersites opes his mastiff jaws . . Troilus ^ Cress, i. 3 

shall pierce their slimy jaws Antony ^- Cleo. ii. 5 

enforce thy rotten jaws to open. . Romeo ^Juliet, v. 3 

and marble jaws, to cast thee up again l.Ham/e/, i. 4 

in the corner of his jaw; first mouthed .. — iv. 2 

JAW-BONE— if it were Cain's jaw-bone. HnniW, v. 1 

JAY— show thee a jay's nest Tempest, ii. 2 

to know turtles from jays Merry Wires, iii. 3 

what, isthe jay more precious. Taming ofSlirey>, iv. 3 

the thrush and the jay . . Winter's Tale, iv. 2 (song) 

some jay of Italy, whose mother . . Cymbeline, iii. 4 

JEALOtfS-lest my jealous aim..Ti/o6V».o//Vr. iii. 1 

the jealous rascally knave Merry Wives, ii. 2 

the jealous wittolly knave hath — ii. 2 

trust his wife, he will not be jealous — ii. 2 

it is not jealous in France — iii. 3 

met the jealous knave their master.. — iii. 5 
to be detected with a jealous, rotten — iii. 5 

hath the jealous fool to her husband! — iv. 2 

as jealous as Ford, that searched — iv 2 

my most jealous and too doubtful. TwelflhNight, iv. 3 
something of that jealouscomplexion.A/ucA/fdo,ii. 1 
and jealous Oberon would have. Mid. N. Bream, ii. 1 

what, jealous Oberon? fairy — ii. 2 

1 shall grow jealous of you shortly. Mer.o/reTi. iii. 5 
jealous in honour, sudden and ..Asyou Likeit, ii. 7 

I will be more jealous of thee — iv.l 

merriment hath made theejealous. Toming'o/S/i.iv.S 

more free, than he is jealous Winler'sTale, ii. 3 

Leontes a jealous tyrant — iii. 2 (oracle) 

"who would be jealous, then.. Comedy of Errors, iv. 2 

clamours of a jealous woman — v. 1 

thy jealous fits have scared — v. 1 

your nobles, jealous of your absence .. Henry F. iv. 1 

the jealous er-worn widow Richard 111. i. 1 

fair, and not jealous: we say, that .. — i. 1 
and from her jealous arms, pluck him — iii. 1 
more vindicative than jealous love. Troil.^Cres. iv.5 
now by the jealous queen of heaven.CoriofnTiijs, v. 3 

and be not jealous of i"»"e JuliusCtPsar, i. 2 

you do love me, lam nothing jealous — i. 2 
blamed as mine own jealous curiosity ....Lear, i. 4 
each jealous of the otlier, as the stung.. .. — v. 1 
so loving jealous of his liberty.. Romeo Sf Juliet, ii. 2 

hut if thou, jealous, dost return — v. 3 

'tis not to make me jealous, to say ....Othello, iii. 3 

thus, not jealous, nor secure — iii. 3 

no such baseness as jealous creatures are — iii. 4 

is he not jealous? Who, he? — iii. 4 

is not this man jealous? I ne'er saw .... — iii. 4 

nor no jealous toy, concerning 3'ou — iii. 4 

but jealous souls will not be answered so — iii. 4 
jealous for the cause, but jealous (lep.) . . — !.'}•* 
3'ou are jealous now, that this is from .. — iii. 4 
of one, not easily jealous, but, being .... — v.2 
JEALOUSHOOD-ajealoushood(rep.).i?om.^/ui.iv,4 

JEALOUSIES— and jealousies Merry Wives, iii. 3 

this is jealousies — iv. 2 

and leave you your jealousies too.. .. — v. 5 
but what your jealousies awake.. Winler'sTale, iii. 2 
being transported by my jealousies.. — iii. 2 
working with thy jealousies, fancies too — iii. 2 
the effects of his "fond jealousies.. — iv. (chorus) 

my jealousies be your dishonours Maebeih, iv. 3 

by surmises, jealousies 'IHenrylV. (indue.) 

all little jealousies, whicli novr .. Antony SfCleo. ii. 2 

or else break out in peevish jealousies. .0(/iri/o, iv. 3 

JEALOUSY— is full of jealou.sy.T'w^oGen. of Ver. ii. 4 

give eternal food to his jealousy. . Merry Wives, ii. 1 

he's as far from jealousy, as I — ii. 1 

lie's a very jealousy man — ii. 2 

who says, this is improvident jealousy? — ii. 2 
heaven be praised for my jealousy!.. — ii. 2 
so gross in his jealousy till now .... — !!!• ^ 
in a continual 'larum of jealousy.. .. — iii. 5 

my jealousy is reasonable — iv. 2 

see but the issue of my jealousy .... — iv. 2 
the finest mad devil of jealousy in him — v. 1 
but jealousy what might befal . . TwelflhNight, iii. 3 
a savage jealousy that sometimes .... — v. 1 
jealousy sliall be called assurance . . Much Ado, ii. 2 
these are the forgeries of jealousy . . Mid.N.'sDr. ii. 2 
hatred is so far from jealousy, to sleep — iv, 1 
fear and green-eyed Jealousy. .Me/c/i. of Venice, iii. 2 

this jealousy is for a precious Winter's Tale, i. 2 

self-harming jealousy! &e,heat.. Comedy of Err. ii. 1 

fond fools serve mad jealousy! — ii. 1 

hast thou with jealousy infected Henry V. ii. 2 

or fell jealousy, which troubles oft .. — v.2 
a kind of godly jealousy .... Troilus ^- Cressida, i v. 4 
but our jealousy does yet depend . . Cymbeline, iv. 3 
heart and brain with needless jealousy — v. 4 

but, beshrew my jealousy! it seems Hamlet, ii. 1 

so full of artless jealousy is guilt — iv.5 

at least into a jealousy so strong Othello, ii. 1 

my jealousy shapes faults that are not . . — iii. 3 

O'bewaro, my lord, of jealousy — iii. 3 

souls of all niy tribe defend from jealousy! — iii. 3 
I'd make a life of jealousy, to follow still — !!!• 3 
away at once with love, or jealousy .... ■ — iii. 3 
his unbookish jealousy must construe .. — iv.l 

JE i:!!- vea, dost thou jeer Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

JEERING— revenge the jeering [llenryiv. i. 3 

[ Knt.^ to mock your own jeering? Hnmlei, v. 1 

JEI.LY-tnrn to'an infected jelly . . llintcr'sTale, i. 2 
out, vile jelly! where is thy lustre now?. Lenr, iii. 7 

almost to jeliy with the act of fear Hnmlel, i. 2 

JEN'— Cicely, Gillian, Jen'! ..Comedynf Errors, iii. 1 
JENNY-vengeance of Jenny's case! A/crrj/ Wires, iv. 1 
JEOPA R.DY— thou art in jeopardy .. Kmg/oftn, iii. I 
JErHTH.VH-thaH Jei.hthah's SHenryVI. v. 1 



JEPflTH All-Jephthali, judge of Isrnel. Hamin, ii. 

old Jonhthnh? if voii cull ine Jeplitlnili.. — ii. 
JEIlK-thcjcrks of invention? ..Lore; l..Lotl,\\: 
JF.KKIN— is not tlii< my jcrkinV Tetnpe)!, iv. 

now is tlie jirkin under the line — iv. 

now, jerkin. >ou lire like to lose — iv. 

and prove a baUl jerkin — iv. 

1 quote it in your jerkin . . Two Gen. o/f'erona, ii. 

my jerkin is n doublet — ii. 

an old clonk makes ft new jerkin . . Merry H'ines, i. 

in n new lm(, nnd nn old jerkin. .ramiii^o/.SA. iii. 

Bud is not ft iMirt'jcrkin ft most MIeiinjI I', i. 

have I to do witli a buff jerkin? — i. 

jiut on two lentber jerkins 'iHenrylV. ii. 

put on two of our jerkins — ii. 

rioth sides, like ft leutl'.er jerkin. rroi'/m^Crfjs. iii. 
JEKONI.MY-snvs Jernuimv.'/Viimng-o/S/i. 1 (indne. 
JERUSAI-KM-nuitines of .lerusalem. Kins- yo/.», ii. 

onrhidv purpose to Jerusiilcm \ Henry 1 1'. \. 

\\-< caUe.l .KMUsMUni, niv iiolile ....iHenrylK iv. 

I slioiil'l not die lint in .lerusalem ., — iv. 

in thut.lernsakni slmll llnrry die .. — iv. 

kin,' of Xiiples. and Jernsalem \HenryVI. v. 

iSieilin, and .hrusftlem ....•iHenry ri.i. 1 (ftrtielci 

of botli tlie >ii'ils and Jerusalem ....SHenryl'l. i. 

meet with j vv in sweet .Jerusalem — v. 

pawned the Sieils and Jerusalem — v. 

JE-sIUT-Je.-^lin! master Slender.. ..Afeiri/ (fiVm, v. 

JKSSKS were niy dear heart-strings Olhetlo, iii. 

JKSSIC-V— tell gentle Jessica ..Merch. of Venice, ii. 

was not thftt letter from fair Jessica? — ii. 

fftir jejsica shall be my torch-bearer — ii. 

JessieftI thou shftlt not gormandize.. — ii. 

what Jessica?— and sleep and snore.. — ii. 

whv, Jessica, I say I why, Je.ssical .. — ii. 

I ftin bid forth to supper, Jessica ... . — i i . 

Jessica, my girl, look to my house .. — ii. 

hear you me, Jessica, lock up — ii. 

well, Jessica, go in — ii. 

Lorenzo and his amorous Jessica .... — ii. 

will acknowledge you and Jessica .. — iii. 

fare you well, Jessica — iii. 

liowcheer'st thou, Jessica? — iii. 

did Jessica steal from the wealthy Jew — v. 

pretty Jessica, like a little shrew — — v. 

I pray thee, Jessica, and — v. 

sit, Jessica: look, how the floor — v. 

nor you, l..<)ren7.o; Jessica, nor you .. — v. 

give to you, and Jessica, from the rich — v. 
JiiST— I thank thee for that jest Tempest, iv. 

jest unseen, inscrutable. . Two Gen. of Verona, ii. 

do you not perceive the jest? — ii. 

parted very fairly in jest — ii. 

my name is Brook; only for a jesi. Merry Wives, ii. 

that were a jest, indeedl — ii. 

then let me he vour jest — iii. 

can tell von good jests of him — iii. 

tell mistress Anne the jest — iii. 

that's 1. prettv iest.indcedl — iii. 

that often jest and l:ingh — Iv. 

there would be no period to the jest.. — iv. 

theimaae of the jest I'll show — iv. 

while other jests are something — iv. 

hold up the jest no higher — v. 

what's vour jest? A dry jest Twelfth Night, i. 

but sucU onother jest — ii. 

observe their mood on whom he jests — iii. 
with some excellent jest, fire-new .. — iii. 
and to jest, tongue far from Meas.forMeas.i. 

great inen may jest with saints — ii. 
we jest now, think you? — iv. 

smile at no man's jests MuchAdo,^\. 

huddling jest upon jest — li. 

1 remeuilier ft pretty jest — ii. 

by some large jests ne will make .... — ii. 

never fleer ftnd iest at me — v. 

I je'st not: I will make it good — v. 

you break jests as braggarts do their — v. 
I jest to Oberoii, and make \\im..Alid.S. Dream, ii. 

hold the sweet jest up — iii. 

do you notjest? — iii. 

'tis nojest, that I do hate thee — iii. 

then I swore in jest Lore'sL.Lost, i. 

turns to a mirth-moving jest — ii. 

but a jest. And every jest but a word — ii. 

ahall that finish the jest? — ii. 

o' my troth, most sweet jestsl — iv. 

too bitter is thy jest — iv. 

apex of that jest! and beshrew all .. — v. 

to make me proud that jests! — v. 

this jest is dry to me — v. 

confess, and turn it to a jest — v. 

pleasant jest, and courtesy — v. 

Bhowed much more than jest — v. 

a jest's prosperity lies iu the ear .... — v. 

I'll jest a twelvemonth — v. 

■wear the jest lie laughable. . . . Merch. of Venice, i. 
turning these jests out of service . . At you Like ii , i. 

but they may jest, till their own All'tiyell, i. 

and manoge well the jest .. TnmingofSh. I (indue 

'tis no time to jest, and therefore — i. 

continue that I broached in jest — — i. 
then you jest; and HOW I well perceive — ii. 

if that be jest, then all the rest — ii. 

hiding his bitter jests in blunt behaviour — iii. 
Tronio, you jest; but have yoti both — iv. 

to break a jest upon — jv. 

lor a bitter jest or two — v. 

and, as the jest did glance nway .... — v. 
you have some goodly jest in hand .. — v. 

and takest it all for jest IVinlrr'tTale, i. 

my humour with his merry imU.C'tmcttyvf Hrr. i. 

I pray you, jest, sir, a« yoii sit — i. 

these jests are out of season — i. 

BO jest with me again — ii. 

what means this jest? I pray you.. .. — ii. 

tliink'st thou. I jest? — ii. 

now your jest is earnest — ii. 

vour sancmess will jest upon my love — li. 
If you will jest with me — ii. 



c_3vy7 ] 

JKST— learn tojest in good time. . Comedy n/Kir.il. i 
this jest shall cost me bome expence — iii. 1 

thou didst but jest with my King John, iii. 1 

so jest with hea\'en — iU. I 

prove a deadly bloodshed but a jest. . — iv. 3 

as to jest, go 1 to fight Ilirhard II. i. 3 

no tears, his pniyera ftre in jest — v. 3 

I have a jest to execute \ Henry IV. i. 2 

the virtue of this jest will be — i. 2 

reproof of this lies the jest — i. 2 

when a jest is so forward — ii. 2 

for a mouth, and a good jest for ever — ii. 2 

if you speak in jest, or no? — ii. 3 

made with this jcfit of the drawer? .. — ii. ■! 

is't a time to jest and dally now? — v. 3 

and a jest with a sftd l>row 2IhnryIV.\. I 

not tome with u fool-born jest — y. .'» 

his jest will savour but of shallow Uenry V. i. 2 

he was full of jests, and gipes — iv. 7 

a proper jest, and never heard illenryVl.i. 1 

were but to die in jest — iii. 2 

played in iest by counterfeiting ....SllenryVI. u. 3 

a subject f^t to jest withal — iii. 2 

well, iest on, brothers — iii. 2 

none but I shall turn his jest to sorrow — iii. 3 

make the jest against his will? — v, 1 

this would hftve been a biting jest.. Ri'cAard ///. ii. 4 
you may jest on, but by the noly rood — iii. 2 

in earnest what I begged in jest — v. I 

breaking scurril jests Troilus Sr Cressida, i. 3 

verily, I do not jest with you Coriolanus, i. 3 

ransom lives of me forjests..4n<'mi/^Cteopa(ra, iii. 1 1 

I know, thou dost but jest Tilus Andronicus, ii. 4 

here's no sound jest! — iv. 2 

1 have governed our determined jests — v. 2 
my handout off, and made a merry jest — y. 2 
how a jest shall come about! . ...liomeo^ Juliet, \. 3 

lie jests at sears that never felt — ii. 2 

follow me this jest now, till thou .... — ii. 4 

the Jest may remain, after (r^p.) — ii. 4 

I will bite tliee by the ear for that jest — ii. 4 

think on't, I do not use to jest — !!'■ * 

no, they do hut jest, poison in jest .... Hamlet, iii. 2 

he was a fellowof inhnite jest — v. I 

JESTED— jested with me all .. Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 
JESTER— the parson is no jester . . Merry Wives, ii. 1 

Feste, the jester, my lord TwclfthNight, ii. 4 

why, he is the i-rince's jester MuchAdo,\\. 1 

that I was the jirince's jester — ii. 1 

up and down with shallow jesters ..1 HenrylV. iii. 2 

become a fool, and jester 1 2HeiiryIV. v. 6 

jesters do oft prove prophets Lear, v. 3 

was Yorick's scull, the king's jester .. .. Hamlet, v. 1 
JESTING— liest thou jesting monkey.. Tempest, iii. 2 

close, in the name of jesting! Twelfih.Mghi, ii. ."i 

nay, but his jesting spirit iliitrhA-lo, iii. 2 

a trencher, jesting merrily? Love'sL. LosI, v. 2 

no iesti ng; there's laying on . . Troilus ^- Cressida, i. 2 

JEStJ-fought for Jesu Christ Richard II. iv. 1 

said at once, Jesu preserve thee! .... — v. 2 

stand. Jesu bless us! I Henry IV. ii. 2 

O Jesu, my lord, my lord! — ii. 4 

Clesu! I nave heard the prince .... — iii. 3 
O Jesu, are you comefrom Wales?.. 2Hfiiii//r. ii. 4 
Jesu maintain your royal excellence!. 2HeHryr/.i. 1 
Jesu preserve your royal majesty! .. — i. 2 
for he's a good man! Jesu bless him! — i. 3 
you shall sup with Jesu Christ to-night — v. 1 
forswore himself, which Jesu pardon I. iJicA. ///. i. 3 
have mercy, Jesu I Soft; I did but.... — v. 3 
Jesu Maria! what a deal of brine .. llomeo ^- Jid. ii. 3 

by Jesu, a very good blade! — ii. 4 

Jesu, what haste? can you not stay.. — ii. 5 

JESUS— O Jesus bless us, he is born ..SHenryVl. v. 6 

JET — how he jets under his advanced.. 'r«'/?Z/i:/t A', ii. 6 

than between jet and ivory .Merchant of Venice, iii. 1 

as jet. Why then. thou know'st (rep. ).2f/e>i)!/r/.ii. I 

that giants may jet through Cymbeline, iii. 3 

[Col.-Knt.'] to jet upon a prince's right? — ii. 1 

proper palfries, black as jet. . . . TitusAndronicus, v. 2 

JETTED— dames so jetted and adorned.. /Vr'Wfs, i. 4 

JEW — a Jew would have wept. . Two Gen. of Ver. ii. 3 

thou art a Hebrew, a Jew — ii. ."i 

if I do not love her, I am a Jew Much Ado, ii. 3 

and eke most lovely Jew Mid. N. Dream, iii. 1 

of man's flesh! my incony .Jew!. .Lout's L.LosI, iii. 1 
there is n)ueh kindness in the Jew..i>/er. ofVen. i. 3 

hie thee, gentle Jew — i. 3 

to run from this Jew my master — ii. 2 

should stay with the Jew my master — ii. 2 

to run away from the .lew — ii. 2 

certainly, the Jew is the very devil .. — ii. 2 
to counsel me to stay with the Jew . . — ii. 2 
which is the way to ma.slier Jew's? .. — ii. 2 
down indirectly to the Jew's house . . — ii. 2 
but I am Launcelot, the Jew's man. . — ii. 2 

my master's a very Jew — ii. 2 

for I am a Jew, if I serve the Jew. . . . — ii. 2 

hut the rich Jew's man — ii. 2 

that the Jew having done me wrong — ii. 2 

to leave a rich Jew s service — ii. 2 

I'll take my leave of the Jew — ii. 2 

most sweet Jew! if a Christian do .. — ii. 3 

my old master the Jew to suji — ii. 4 

if e'er the Jew her father come to — ii. 4 

that she is issue to ft faithless Jew .. — ii. 4 
here dwells my fftther Jew: hoi .... — ii.fi 
by mv hood, ft" Gentile, nnd no Jew . . — ii. 6 
the villain Jew with outcries rftised.. — ii. S 

as the dog Jew did utter in the — ii. K 

and for tlie Jew's bond, which he liuth — ii. 8 
here he comes in the likeness of a Jew — iii. I 
a Jew. Hath not a Jew eyes? (rep.^ .. — iii. 1 

if a Jew wrong a Christian — iii. 1 

wronga Jew, what should his sufferance — iii. 1 
unless the devil himself turn Jew.. .. — iii. 1 

money to discharge the Jew — iii. 2 

what sum owes he the .Tew? — iii. 2 

that you are not the Jew's daughter — ill. & 
because I urn a Jew's daughter — iii. i 



JEW— converting Jews to Christians. il/er.o/f^n. ill. 6 

and call the Jew into the court — Iv. 1 

we all expect a gentle answer, Jew .. — iv. 1 

think you question with the Jew — iv. 1 

liftve judgment, ftnd the Jew Ilia will — iv. I 

the .lew shall hftve my flesh — iv. 1 

but on thy soul, hnrsli Jew — iv. 1 

between the Jew and Antonio .. — iv. 1 (letter) 
the merchant here, and which the Jew? — iv. I 

then must the Jew he merciful — iv. 1 

Jew, though justice he thy plea — iv. I 

by tills the Jew may claim a pound. . — iv. 1 
if the Jew do cut but deep enough .. — iv. 1 
some power toehangethiscurrish Jew — iv. 1 
murk. Jew; O learned judge! (rep.) .. — iv. 1 

the Jew shall hftve all justice — iv. I 

OJew! an upright judge — iv. 1 

aOanicl.Jew! how, inndel — iv. 1 

why doth the Jew pause? — iv. 1 

1 tl'mnk thee, Jew, for teaching — iv. 1 

to he so taken at thy peril, Jew — iv. 1 

tarry, Jew; the law hnth yet — iv. 1 

art thou contented, Jew? — iv. 1 

due unto the Jew, we freely — iv. 1 

enquire the .lew's house out — iv. 2 

steal from the wealthy Jew — v. 1 

from the rich Jew, a special deed .... — v. 1 

liver of blaspheming Jew Macbeth, iv. I 

a Jew else, an Ebrew Jew ] Henry IV. ii. i 

JEWEL— the jewel in my dower Tempest, iii. 1 

in having such ajewel TwoGen.ofVerona,ii.i 

dumb jewels often — iii. 1 

what says she to my little jewel? .. .. — iv. 4 

unless experience be a jewel Merry Wires, ii. 2 

have I caught thee, my heavenly jewel? — iii. 3 

give her this jewel Twelfth K'ghl, ii. 4 

or play with some rich jewel — _ii. 5 

here, wear this jewel for me — iii. 4 

the jewel that we find .... Measure for Measure, ii. I 

can the world buy such a jewel? MuehAdoj i. I 

they sliall fetch tliee jewels Mid. N. Dream, iii. 1 

I have found Demetrius like ajewel — iy. 1 

as jewels in crystal for some Love's L.Lott, ii. 1 

who now hangeth like a jewel — iv. 2 

this jewel on her sleeve (rep.) — v. 2 

what gold, and jewels, she is . . Merch. of Venice, ii. 4 

and jewels; two stones — ii. 8 

and other precious, precious jewels .. — iii. 1 
at my foot, and the jewels in her ear — iii. 1 
since he hath got the jewel that I.. .. — v. 1 
our jewels and our wealth together. .^si/ouLifcei/.i. 3 
wears yet ft precious jewel in his head — ii. 1 

no jewel is like Rosalind — iii. 2 (verses) 

my chastity's the jewel of our hauss. All's Well, iv. 2 

we lost a jewel of ner — v. 3 

the jewel of my life in hold . . Taming of Shrew, i. 2 

otir prince, (jewel of children) Winter's 7'ale, v. 1 

her jewel nbout the neck of it — y. 2 

see, the jewel, best enamelled. Comedi/ of Errors, ii. 1 

rings, jewels, anything his rage — v. I 

and mine eternftl jewel given Macbeth, iii. 1 

desire his jewels, and this other's house — iv. 3 

where the jewel of life by some KingJohn, v. 1 

a jewel in a ten times barred-up Itichard 11. i. X 

the precious jewel of thy home return — i. 3 
I wander from the jewels that I love — i. 3 

I'll give my jewels, for a set of — iii. 3 

to your master, for a jewel iHenry IV. i. 2 

ay marry: our chains, and our jewels — ii. 4 
bear her this jewel, pledge of my . . 1 Henry VI. v. 1 
I took a costly jewel from my neck.2Hfn>!/ /'/. iii. 2 
a jewel locked into the woefullest .. — iii. 2 
unvalued jewels, all scattered in . . Diehard III. i. 4 

like ajewel, has hung twenty Henry VIII. ii. 2 

I have a jewel here. O pray Timon of Athens, i. 1 

sir, your jewel hath suffered — i. I 

you mend the jewel by wearing it .. — i. I 

how dost thou like this jewel — i. 1 

more jewels yet 1 there is no crossing — i. 2 
advance this jewel; accept, and wear — 'i. 2 
plate, jewels, and such like trifles .. — ?!.'• ^ 
and he wears jewels now of Timon 's — iii. 4 
as if jour lortl should wear rich jewels — iii. 4 
a jewel the other day, and now {.rep.) — iii. 6 
as thou art, were not so rich a jewel .Coriolanus, i. 4 
till they had stolen our jewel ..v4n(ony .J- C/t-o. iv. 13 

of money, plate and jewels — v. 2 

there is this jewel in the world Cymbeline, i. 2 

she your jewel, this your jewel — j. 5 

and jewels of rich and exquisite form — i. 7 
bid my woman search for n jewel.... — ij. 3 

I beg hut leave to air this jewel — ii. 4 

'twas Leonatns' jewel: whom thou .. — v. ,"> 
as jewels purchased at an ensy price. TiVi«/4nd. iii. I 
this jewel holds his biding on my arm. .Pericles, ii. 1 
as jewels lose their glory, if neglected — ii. 2 

my casket and my jewels; and bid .... — iii. 1 
to those lieavenly jewels which Pericles — iii. 2 
and some certain jewels, lay with you — ill. 4 
to take from you the jewel you hold .. — iv. 6 
and found there rich jewels; recovered — v. 3 

the jewels of our father; with washed Lear. i. 1 

in it, a jewel well worth a poor man's . . — iv. 6 
like a rich jewel in on Etliiop's../(omfo .?•.'"''>', i. S 
for your sake, jewel, I am glad at soul.. 0/AfHo. i. 3 

the immediate jewel of their souls — iii. 3 

the jewels you nave had from me — iv. 2 

if she will return me my jewels — iv. 2 

restitution Inige of gold, and jewels — v. 1 

JEWEl.-IIOUbl^-o' the jewel-house. HCTi.r/l/. iv. I 
beside that of the jewel-house — v. 1 

JEWELLER-tbe jeweller, that owes..4«'> Well, v. 3 
t' other's a jewel ler Timo.i of Athens, i. I 

JEWKL-UKE— her eves as jewel-like.. /'frir/M, v. 1 

JEWK.'sS-he worth a Jewess cye..iVrr.o/;'«'nicf, ii. S 

JKWISII— spit upon my Jewish guberdinc — i. 3 
wimt's harder?! his Jewish henrt — iv. 1 

JEWRY- whata Ileiod of Jewry ..Mcrrii »»'i'r«, ii. 1 
as tlic sepulchre in stnblKirn Jewry. . Ilichard II, ii. I 
as did tlie wives of Jewry at Uetdd'e.Hrnry V, iii. 3 



JEW 

JEWRY— lleroil of Jewry may ao.Auloiiy ^Cleo. i. 2 

Herod iif Jewry dare not look — !!.'• ^ 

Herod of Jewry; Mitliridates, king of — iii. G 

and went to Jewry, on affairs of Antony — iv. li 

JEZEBEIi— fie on him, Jezebel . . Tu-clflh Ni^ht, ii. 5 

JIG— my very walk should be a jig — .;. 3 

is as a Scoteli jig, a measure (_rep.) . . Much y^rfo, ii. 1 

but to jig ott' a tune at the Love's L. Losl, iii. 1 

profound Solomon to tune a jig — ^\-S 

he's for a jig, or a tale of bawdry Hamlel,h. 2 

you jig, you amble, and you lisp — iii. 1 

JIGGING-with sucli jigging fools?i«;'»s Cn-.mr, iv. .3 

JIG- MAKER— your only ilg-makcr . . Hamlel, iii. 2 

JILL— Jack shall have Jill .... Mid.N.'s Uieam, iii. 2 

Jack hath not Jill: these ladies'. Lout's L. Lost, v. 2 

Jacks fair within, and tlie Jills. . Taming ofSh. iv. 1 

JOAN-love my ladv. and some Joan.lot'e'sL.L. iii. 1 

or groan for JoanV QCn'-'love] or spend — iv. 3 

while greasy Joan doth keel the pot — v. 2 (song) 

Alice madam, or Joan madam? Tamiiij; ofSh. 2(ind.) 

can I make any Joan a lady King John,i. 1 

witli one Joan la Pucelle joined .... 1 Henry VI. i. 4 
thus Joan la Pucelle hath performed — i. 6 

'tis Joan, not we, by whom — 1.6 

but Joan la Pucelle shall be France's — _i. 6 
holy Joan was his defensive guard ., — ii. 1 
cliampion, virtuous Joan of Arc .. .. — ^ii. 2 

thus dotli Joan devise: by fair — Iii. 3 

ah Joan! tliis kills thy father's .... — v. 4 

ah, Joan! sweet daughter Joan — v. 4 

fie, Joan ! that thou wilt be so — v. 4 

deny me not, I m'ythee, gentle Joan — v. 4 

Joan of Arc hatli been a virgin — v. 4 

tlien, Joan, discover thine infirmity — v. 4 
ten to one, old Joan had not gone..2H<');>i/r7. ii. 1 

JOB— and as poor as Job? jVent/ ll'ives, v. b 

I am as poor as Job, my lord 2 Uenn/I r. i . 2 

jnCKY— Jocky of Norfolk ..KiWiard UI.v. 3 (scroll) 

JOCUND-let us be jocund Tempest, iii. 2 

and I most jocund, apt Twelfth Night, v. 1 

tlieu be thou jocund: ere the bat ....Macbeth, iii. 2 

and as jocund, as to jest Itic/iard //. i. 3 

were jocund, and supposed their. . Hichard HI. iii. 2 

my heart is very jocund — iii. 2 

and jocund day stands tip-toe. . Romeo ^Juliet, iii. !> 
no jocund health, that Denmark drhAs. Hamlet, i. 2 

JOG— jog on, jog on Winter's Tale, iv. 2 (song) 

JOGGING— you may be jogging.. Taming nf Sh. iii. 2 
JOHN— [for John as a prefix to Falstatf, Rugby, of 
Gaunt, and of Lancaster, see those respective 
headings.] 

the knight, sir John, is there Merry Wives, i. 1 

here coines sir Jolm — i- 1 

Panca verba, sir John, goodworts — i. I 

sir John, and master rmne — i. 1 

what say you. Scarlet and John ? — i. 1 

Jolm, what, .John I say! — i. 4 

go, John, go enquire for — i. 4 

sir John affects thy wife — ii. 1 

sir John, there's one master Brook . . — ii. 2 

good sii- John, I sue for your's — ii. 2 

if you will help me to bear it, sir .lohn — ii. 2 

but, good sir John, as you — ii. 2 

now, sir John, here is the heart — ii. 2 

what say you to't, sir John? — ii. 2 

want no money, sir John — ii. 2 

what John, what Robert! — iii. 3 

as I told you before, John — iii. 3 

my master, sir John, is come in — iii. 3 

sweet sir John! — iii. 3 

1 your lady, sir John! — iii. 3 

a plain kerchief, sir tjohn — iii. 3 

what, John, Robert, John! — ijj' ^ 

my husband is deceived, or sir ,Tohn — iii. 3 
that indeed, sir John, is ray business — iii. 5 

he's a birding, sweet sir John — iv. 2 

.your own semblance, you die, sir .John — iv. 2 
run up sir John. Go, go, sweet sir John — iv. 2 

send quickly to sir John — iv. 4 

bully knight! Bully sir John! — iv. .5 

thou art clerkly, sir John — i v. .5 

sir John? Art thou there — v. .5 

now, good sir John, how like you. ... — v. 5 

sir John, we have had ill luck — v. 5 

why, sir John, do you think — v.b 

country fire; sir John and all — v. .5 

sir John, to master Brook you — y. 5 

was not count John here at supper? .Mttch Ado, ii. \ 
in count John's mouth, and half (?fp.) — ii. 1 
you the length of Prester John's foot — ii. 1 

I have earned of don John — iii. 3 

possessed by my master don John . . — iii. 3 
anj' slander that don John had made — iii. 3 

signior Benedick, don John — iii. 4 

lives in John tlie Bastard — iv. 1 

don John, the prince's brother {rep.) — iv. 2 
a thousand ducats from don John . . — iv. 2 
prince John is this moraing secretly — iv. 2 
now don John your brother incensed — v. 1 
and don .John is the author of all ... . — v. 2 
my lord, your brother John is ta'en . . — v. 4 

if you give him not John Drum's All's Well, iii. fi 

and old John Naps of Greece. ram/Hgo/ Sh. 2 (ind.) 

minatural uncle, English John KingJohn, ii. 1 

than thou and John in manners — ii. I 

king .John, this is the very sum of all — ii. 1 
title they admit, Arthur's or John's — ii. 1 

king John, yoru" king and England's — ii. 2 

hourly with thine uncle John — iii. 1 

and kin" John; that strumpet (re/).) — iii. 1 
to thee, king John, my holy errand is — iii. 1 

mark, .John hath seized Arthur — ?!]• '^ 

the misplaced John should entertain — ■ iii. 4 
that John may stand, then Arthur. . — iii. 4 

John laj^s you plots — !!!•'' 

denouncing vengeance upon John .. — V}' ^ 
the bloody fingers' ends of .John .... — iii. 4 
king John hath reconciled himself .. — v. 2 
to tell me, John hath made his peace — v. 2 
because that Jolm hath made his peace — v. 2 



[ 3<)8 J 



JOHN— is warlike John, and in his . . King John, v. 2 

king John, sore sick, hath left the field — v. 4 

seek out king John, and fall before .. — v. 4 

to our great king John — v. 4 

John Kumston, sir John Norbery . . liiehard If. ii. 1 
what says sir John Sack-and-Sugar.l Henry W. i. 2 

sir John stands to his word — i. 2 

sir.John, I pr'ythee, leave the prince — i. 2 

if I hang, old sir John hangs with mo — ii. 1 

what, a coward, sir John Paunch? .. — ii. 2 

my lord, old sir John, with half — ii. 4 

here was sir Jolm Eracy — ii. 4 

sir John, you are so fretful — iii. 3 

why, you are so fat, sir John — iii. 3 

■whj', sir John, my face does you no — iii. 3 

why sir John! what do you (rep.) .. — iii. 3 

no, sir John; you do not know (rep.) — iii. 3 

you owe monev here besides, sir John — iii. 3 

an otter, sir Jonn ! why an otter .... — iii. 3 

indeed, sir John, you said so — iii. 3 

hitherwards; with him, prince John — iv. 1 

faith, sir John, 'tis more than time. . — iv. 2 

ay, but, sir John, methinks — iv. 2 

sir John, I fear we shall stay too long — iv. 2 

I loved thee as a brother, John — v. 4 

come, brother John, full bravely hast — v. 4 

the strangest fellow, brother John . . — v. 4 

you son John, and my cousin — y. 5 

prince John, and Westmoreland ....2HenryII\ i. I 

the hulk sir John is prisoner — i. 1 

my lord, sir John LTmfrevile turned — i. I 

well, the truth is, sir John, you live — i. 2 

young? fie, fie, fie, sir John! — i. 2 

sir Jolin, I arrest .you at the suit of.. — ii. 1 

how now, sir John ! what, are you . . — ii. 1 

how comes this, sir John? — ii. 1 

sir John, sir John, I am well acquainted — ii. 1 

pray thee, sir John, let it be but — — ii. 1 

good sir John. Sir John, you loiter . . — ii. 1 

taught you these manners, sir John? — ii. 1 

.John, with my brothel's (rep.) — ii. 2 (letter) 

thou know'st, sir John cannot endure — ii. 4 

tliere were five more sir Johns — ii. 4 

and sir Jolm must not know of it — ii. 4 

pray you, pacify yoru-self, sir John . . — ii. 4 

tilly-'fally, sir John, never tell me .. — ii. 4 

save you, sir John ! Welcome — ii. 4 

and little John Doit of Staffordshire — iii. 2 

now sir John, a boy; and page — iii. 2 

this sir John, cousin, that comes {rep.) — iii. 2 

look, here comes good sir John — iii. 2 

no, sir John, it is my cousin Silence — iii. 2 

what think you, sir John? — iii- 2 

in faith, well said, sir John — iii. 2 

for the other, sir John,— let me see,— — iii. 2 

do you like him, sir John? — iii. 2 

shall I prick him, sir John? — iii. 2 

sir John, do you remember since we lay — iii. 2 

ha, sir John, said I well? — !!'• ^ 

in faith, sir John, we have — iii. 2 

sir John, which four will you have? — iii. 2 

sir John, sir John, do not yourself wrong — iii. 2 

sir John, heaven bless you, and prosper — iii. 2 

hath the prince John a full commission — iv. 1 

taken sir John Colevile of the dale . . — iv. 3 

prince John, your son, doth kiss — iv. 4 

happiness and peace, sir John — iv. 4 

sir John, you shall not be excused .. — v. I 

where are you, sir John? come — v. 1 

sir John! I come, master Shallow .. — v. 1 

beggars all, sir John; marry, good air — v. 3 

a very good varlet, sir John — v. 3 

CJod save you, sir John ! — v. 3 

sir John, I am thy Pistol and thy friend — v. 3 
Robin Hood, Scarlet, and John — v. S (song) 

sir John, thy tender lambkin now is — v. 3 

the Lord, that sir John were come! — v. 4 
ay, marry, sir John; which I beseech — v. 5 
good sir John, let me have five hundred — v. 5 

that you will die in, sir John — y. 5 

the story, with sir John in it, and make — (epil.) 

come in quickly to sir John Henry V. ii. 1 

how now, sir John, quoth I — .ii. 3 

brother John Bates, is not that — iv. 1 

John dnke of Bourbon, and lord — iv. 8 

John duke of Alention; Antony dnke of — iv. 8 
if sir John Fastolfe had not ^\a.yeA.. \ Henry Vl.i. 1 

whither away sir .John Fastolfe .... — iii. 2 

English John Talbot, captains — iv. 2 

and on his son young John — iv. 3 

young John TiilbotI I did send fiir thee — iv. ,■> 

where is John Talbot? pause, and take — iv. 6 

art not thou weary, John? — iv. 6 

where is valiant John? — iv. 7 

young John Talbot's grave — iv. 7 

sir John! nay, fear not, man iHenryVl.i. 2 

how now, sir John Hume? — 1.2 

against John Goodman, my lord — i. 3 

John Southwell, read you — _i. 4 

with sir John Stanley, in the isle ... — ii- 3 

and sir John Stanley is appointed . . — ii. 4 

must you, sir John, protect — ii. 4 

and so, sir John, farewell — ii. 4 

Kentishraan, John Cade of Ashford — iii. 1 

under the title of John Mortimer.... — Hi. 1 

for that John Mortimer, which now — iii. 1 

we, John Cade, so termed — iv. 2 

nay, John, it will be stinking law .. — iv. 7 

sir' John, and sir Hugh Mortimer ZHeni-yVI.\. 2 

sir John Grey, was slain, his lands . . — iii. 2 

this is sir John Montgomery — iv. 7 

welcome, sir John ! but why come . . — iv. 7 

nay, stay, sir John, awhile — iv. 7 

1 tliank'thee, good sir John Richard III. Iii. 2 

John duke of Norfolk , Thomas — v. 3 

John duke of Norfolk, Walter lord. . — V. 4 

confessor, John de la Court Henry VIII. i. I 

to permit John de la Court — i- 2 

and John Court, confessor to him — — ii. 1 

thou hadst been poor John Romeo ff Juliet, i. 1 



JOI 



JOHN— the voice of friar .John .... /?o»?to f^ Juliet, y. 2 

friar John, go hence; get me an iron crow — V. "" 

bore mv letter, friar John, was staid — T. 

JOHN-A-DREAMS-like .fohn-a-dreams. IIamlel,n. 

JOHN- APE-de jack-dog, john-ape..»/<')jj/ Wires, iii 

JOIN— then meet, and join Tempest, i. 

I will join with thee to disgrace her. Much AJo, iii. 
but you must join, in souls. ... Mid. N.'sDream, iii. 

to join with men in scorning — iii. 

join you together as they join ..AsyouLike it, iii. '. 
might'st join her hand with his .. — v. 4 (verse 

to, join in Hymen's bands — v. 

to join like likes, and kiss All's Well, i. 

who did bid thee join with us Macbeth, iii. 

when they join, do glorify the King John, ii. 

thy son and daughter to join hands.. — ii. 

join with the present sickness Richard II. ii. 

join not with grief, fair woman — v. 

if I do not join with him IHenry IV. i. 

of York, to join with Mortimer, ha? — i. 

if once they join in trial — v. 

of Wales doth join with all — y. 

our armies join not in a hot day 'IHenrylV. i. 

then join you with them — ii. 

shall join together at the latter Henry V. i v. 

to join with witches, and the help ..\HenryVI.'i\. 
to join your hearts in love and amity — iii. 
but join in friendship, as your lords — iii. 

on, iny lords, and join our powers — iii. 

Somerset, join you with me 2HenryVl. i. 

join we together, for the puhl ic — i. 

we join with him, and with the lords — i. 

join with the traitor — iv. 

the.v join, embrace and seem to kXss.. IHenry VI. ii 
notwithstanding, join our lights together — ii. 
post-haste, are come to join with you — ii. 

fair lady Bona, joins with yours — iii. 3 

I'll join mine eldest daughter — iii. 3 

now join your hands, and with — iv. 6 

before his forces join, and take the . . — iv. 8 

I'll join with black despair Richard III. ii. 2 

wouldst be gone to join with Richmond — iv. 4 
march on, join bravely, let us to 't . . — v. 3 
noble lord, join with me to forbid. Tivion of Athens, i. 1 
with tlieir faint reply this answer join — iii. 3 
my deserts to his, and,)oin them both — iii. 5 

shall join to thrust the lie Coriolanns, v. 5 

let witchcraft join with beauty . . Antony^ Geo. ii. 1 
to join our kingdoms, and our hearts — ii. 2 
who did join his honour, against .... Cymbeline, i. 1 

join gripes with hands made — i. 7 

•let his virtue join with my request . . — y. !> 

and join for that .you jar Titus Andronicus, ii. I 

when we all join "in league — jv. 2 

join with the Goths — iv. 3 

to join with him, and right his — v. 2 

revenge is come to join with him — v. 2 

whicli the world together joins. . Pericles, iii. (Gow.) 
l^Col.Knt.'] two pernicious daughters join . teor, iii. 2 
we will both our judgments join in.... Hamlet, iii. 2 

go join you with .some further aid — iv. 1 

J(5INDEl?,-joinder of your hand?... Twelfth Night, v. 1 

JOINED— with a charm joined to their.. Tempest, i. 2 

false blood to false blood joined! ..King Jolm, iii. 1 

nature and fortune joined to make .. — .'.''• 1 

so newly joined in love — ^IV * 

woe to woe, sorrow to sorrow joined .Richard II. ii. 2 
our uncle "York hath joined with .... — iii. 2 

joined with no foot land-rakers I Henry IV. ii. 1 

our royal person, joined with an Henry V. ii. 2 

of Orleans with h!m is joined 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

with one Joan la Pucelle joined, a holy — i. 4 

and joined with Charles — iv. 1 (letter) 

which joined with him, and made — iv. 3 

feature, joined with her birth — v. .5 

encountered as the battles joined — SHenryVl. i. 1 
our battles joined, and both sides fiercely — ii. I 

whom God hath joined together — iv. I 

yet to have joined with France in.... — iv. 1 
splinted, knit, and joined together.. fl/cAm-rf III. ii. 2 
are joined with me their servant . . Henry VIII. ii. 2 

Mai'cius, joined with Aufidius Coriolanus, iv. 6 

Marcius should be joined with Volscians — iv. 6 
you had not joined in commission .. — iv. 7 

burn like twenty torches joined JuliusCirsar, i. 3 

joined with a masker and a reveller. . — . v- ' 

yet they're not joined Antony ^ Cleopatra, iv. 10 

revived, to the majestic cedar joineH.Cymheline, v. 5 
and being joined, I'll thus your hopes. . Pericles, ii. 5 
pernicious'daughters joined [Co/. Knt. join]. LTOr,iii.2 
God joined my heart and Romeo's. 7?nmeo ^-Jul. iv.l 

JOINER— Snug, the joiner Mid. N. Dream, i. a 

tell them plainly, he is Snug the joiner — iii'. 1 
one Snug the joiner, am a lion fell . . — y. 1 

made bv the joiner squirrel Romeo ^Juliet, i. 4 

JOINETU-torch thatfoineth Rouen. I Henry VI. iii. 2 
JOINING their force 'gainst Cxsta. Antony %Cleo.\. 2 

JOIN'ST— who ioin'st thou with i Henry VI. iii. 3 

and join'st witn them will be thy.... — iii. 3 
JOINT— you that are of suppler joints. Tempes/, iii. 3 

that they grind their joints — iv.l 

we'll touze you joint by joint Meas. forMeas. v. 1 

because of liis great liiinb or joint. Lora'.? L. Lost, v. 1 

clap their female joints in stiff Richard II. iii. 2 

how dare thy joints forget to — iii- 3 

this festered joint cut off — v. 3 

my true joints bended be — v. 3 

his weary joints would gladly rise .. — v. 3 

yet all our joints are whole I Henry IV. iv. 

whose fever- weakened joints illenrylV. i. 

gauntlet now with joints o4' steel .i. 

what's a joint of imittf'U or two ii. 

a joint of mutton; and any pretty .. V. 

than a joint burden laid upon — v. z 

drawn my shoulder out of joint — v. 4 

I swear, but these my joints Henry V. iv. 3 

every Joint should seem to curse ..2HenryVI. iii. 2 
the joints of every thing ( rep.) . . Troitns <§• Cress, i . 2 

good arms, strong joints, true — i. 3 

upon our joint and several dignities — ii. 2 



JOI 



[ 3U9 ] 



JOY 



JOINT— tlieclcpliftnt hnth joints. Tro./iu 4- rr«».ii. a 

with every joint a woiiml....... - JJ- ' 

at every 10 nt and motive ol her ... . — iv. 

".otcdVi-t by joint I- th K A. ,.11C8? - .V. i 
und starve your supiile joints! . . / n.io.i 0/ Miieiit.i. 1 
inajointandcorporiitevniec ........ — "■ - 

8H-ooto'er-niiismy liTiiililMigjointa — ii- ^ 

if I have biiru'uino.l lor tlie joint ' ',''^("' .'.V- ? 

Settle your tine joints 'ginnut .. Komco ^Juliet, in. •> 
miidlv play » itli my fuiefutliera joints? - jv. 3 
issettlu.I.iMul luTJ.uuH are stiff .... - iv. S 

I will lull- tlii'e joint bv joint — \' •' 

dotli nuiUo tlie nit;ht joint labourer H.iinW, 1. I 

this liroktn ioiiit, I'ttwit 11 von and her.Ollielln. 11. 3 
JOl.X ri;i) tothe old.c,/."V/.,.f, v. 4 tscroll, i-.7>. v. .'.) 

JOI.N"l'l.V-enivin- iis jointly iMachelii, \l\. 1 

anil thev jointly swear, to spoil ....■Hhnryl'l. iv. i 

invest vonj.>intly will my power ........'.<■<..■, 1. 1 

wesli:ill joMitlv tiihoiir with ymir 6onl./f'o"W, iv. j 
JOlNTlnfsS- llu- i1np.ri.1l jointress ot ••''""'''■'.•'• 'i 

.UMiNT-lUNO-lorajoiiit-nng Oihrlln. iv. 3 

JOINT-SKKV ANT with mc ........ CmW.mK.s v- ■> 

JUl.NT-Sl t)01.-u joiut-stnol.. 7aim»^'„rs/o,v,;, . 1 

thv state is taken tor a joint-stool ..\ll,;„!ill. 11. 1 

■ and jumps upon ioint-stools......'2f/.-"r!//»... 4 

you meiev, ( toA you tor a joint-stool. J. •..' , •> • ? 

awav with th.' joint-stools llomeo^Juliel,]. o 

JOI VT I ■ 1! 1;- lit IV pounds jointure. Memj tf'u'es, in. 4 
alKtteiioiiit.iro, 1 think, than ../fji/oii/.iAc iM.v. I 
all wliicli shnll he her jointure ..Tmiii/iK orsii.i]. 1 

toiH-hiii" till' jointure that vour ZlhuryVl. 111. J 

this is iiiv ih.uL'hter's jointure ..Komeo^Julicl.y. 3 
JOl.K-wi'th tlue, cheek by jole .. Mid. N.s n,:ni. i 
.lOLL— thev mav joll horns together ..AllsHell^ 1. i 
JOLMTV-all in jollity ......Mid. N.'s Dream, iv. 

in nii!litlv revels.and new;ollity .... — .v. 1 

apprehend nothinp but jollity .. IVmler sTale, iv. 3 

he loseth it in a kfiul ot'jol ity . CmnedyoJ En:». 2 

is iollitv for apes, and griet for boys.Ci/mfcfi/iie, iv.2 

JOLt" Y-hey Robin, jolly Robin. 7>W.fl/, SigM. iv. 2 

this life is most jolly ■■i^you Likeil, 11. | (song) 

you'll prove a jolly surly groom.2nmmffo/S/i. 111. i 

likeaj'olly trooo of huntsmen .KtngJnhn n 2 

to her 2o I, a jolly, thriving wooer. /('c/iani ///. ly. i 
what's else t.i sav? Be jolly, lords. Jn(o«y <5-aTO..ii. 7 
through Aloxniidria make a jolly marcli - iv. 8 
whiles the jollv Hiiton (your lord ..Cymbeline.\.7 
or wak'st tliou; jolly shepherd? . . l.<-jir, 111 & (sonp 
JOI/r-llKAU-on thee lolt-head. TwoGen. 0/ ; er. iii.l 
von heedless jolt-heads ...... Taming "/*'"■"';, iv. 1 

JOKDEN— allow us ne'er a jorden ..IHt-my/r. 11. 

empty the iorden; and was iHeuryll .\i. i 

JOSEPH— Nathaniel, Joseph.. Taming- qrWim/'. iv. 

JOSHUA, yoiii-self Love s L. Lost.y. 1 

JOT— I'll uot stay a jot longer . . Twel/lh Night, n\. 2 
no sir, no jot; I know your .......... — i.u. 4 

has my pity, not a jot the other. Wens. /or Meat. iv. 2 

nor profits you ajot.... .......... -- ;v. 3 

doth give thee here no jot ot blood. jWtT. 0/ fen. iv. 1 
break one jot of your promise . . As you Like tl, ly. 1 
not a jot of Tranio in your mouth. Taming of Sh.i. 1 
if one jot hevond the bound .... iVinler slule, 111. 2 

Sower no jot hath she, to change...... — v. 1 
cdicate one jot of colour unto .. Henry V.w. (cho.) 
In possession any jot of pleasure. . . .iHenryyi. 11. 2 
whom my soul is anv jot at odds . . Richard III. 11. 1 

if this salute my blood ajot Hennjrill.n. 3 

bleeding, shall pierce a jot ... . 7imo;i nj .■likens, iv. 3 

bate one jot of ceremony Cnriulanus, 11. i 

detain no jot, I charge thee .... Aniony e,- Clco. \v. 5 

let me not stay a jot for dinner Lear, i. 4 

not a jot more, my lord. Is not Hamlet, v. 1 

no, faith, not a jotj but to follow him . . — .v. I 
not a jot, not a jot. Trust me. .... . ....OlheUo, lu. 3 

JOUR— O seigneur! le jour est perdu. . Henry V.w. o 

JOURDAIX— Margery Jourdain 2Henryyi. 1. 2 

mother Jonrchiin, be vou prostrate — .1:4 

JOUI'.NAL— his journal greeting..1/e«j./')r.Vi'a».iv. 3 

Btiek to vour journal course Cymbclme, ly. 2 

JOURNEY— a journey to my . . Tu-oGcn. o/Ter. 11. 7 
for undertaking so unstaid a journey? — 11.7 

if Proteus like your journey — ;!• 7 

uponmylongingjourney ............ .— , "• ? 

journevsend \n\avex3' ....TwelflhNighl,u. 3 (song) 

thy heavy riches hut a journey. A/ras. for ilffoj.ni. 1 
look forward on the journey you shall go — iv. 3 
travelling some journey. Taim'nfrQ^.S/uei/', I (indue.) 
or ere X journev to vour father's house _ — }y. 5 
if tlie event o' the journey prove. )»'in/fr sTofciii. 1 
day's liard journev soundly invite him..l/iici«;/i, 1. 7 

two long davs' joiirney, lords King John, iv. 3 

go we U) attJre you for our journey .2 Henri/ »7. 11. i 

whoever journeys to the prince Hiihard III. 11. 2 

on them for this great journey .... Henry VIU. i. 1 

concerning the French journey ...... — .1.2 

is but hall' his journey yet ..Trollus^■Crettllla,^y. 5 
is fashioned for the journey ..7Vinon of Alliens, i\. 'I 

I may spur on mv journey Cono/onuj, 1. 10 

have well saved ine a day s journey — ly. 3 

we shall, as I conceive the jonrney. 4n'on|/«i Cleo. ii.4 
Cicsar through Svria intends liis journey — v. 2 

I'll make a journey twice as far Cymbeline, 11. 4 

Sliced in your journey's end, I think — v. 4 

marry, sir, half a day's journey Pericles,u. 1 

1 liave a journev, sir, shortly to go Lear, y. 3 

highmnst hill of thisday's journey.Womeo ^JuI.m.j 
BO many journeys may the sun and .. J/nm/c'. 111. 2 
a shorter journey to your desires ...... <)iliello,i\. 1 

here is mv journey's end here is ray butt -- v. 2 
JOFRNEY-IiATED, and brought.. W/enrt/l r. ly. 3 
JoritN'KYI.V; to salute ..TtruGen.nf Vernna,\.3 

JOIIR.VF.VM \.V to grief? nihanl H._\. 3 

Ji If RS'EY.ME.N'-Natiire's journeymen. '/■'in'e, 111.2 

JOVK-Jove's lightnings, the precursors.. r«n;«i(, 1. 2 

and rifled Jove's stout oak .......... — v- 1 

or clue, by Jove 1 vow ^,"''',("'''; "^ '^'l',?""' ^Z' , 

remember, Jove, thou wast a buU-.-Wfrry ICipm. v. ;, 

O Jove, a beiiBtly fault — '"■ f 

think on't, .(ove, afoul fault — v. .. 

send me a cool rut-lime, Jove — ^- •> 



JOVE— whose scull Jove cram with. TireifihNighl,}. 

Jove knows I love ■• 

Jove, and my stars be praisedl 

Jove, I thank theel — 

now Jove, in his next commodity .. — 
but it is Jove's doing,Bnd Jove make — 

well, Ji>ve not I, isdocr of this — 

Jove bless tlice, master parson 

Jove liiiiis.lldoes, Jove would ..Met 

witliio Hie house is Jove 

as i;iiro|iaoiu-e did at lusty Jove — "■> 

bull .Io\e, sir, luid an amiable low .. — v. 4 
Jove shield thee well lor tllisl.Afirf. A'.'s Dream, V. 1 
thv eve Jove's li;4htning bears .. Love's L. Lost, iv. 2 
for wlioni even Jove would swear — iv. 3 (verses) 



- ii 



.for /Ileus, ii. 
.Much Ado, ii. 



i,y li 



■If for Jove 

_• other cries 

iir love, would infring* 
ilways took three tl 



— iv. 3 (verses) 



V. 2 






V. 


2 


__ 


■V, 


2 


. ofAlh 


iv 


3 


ioliinu^ 


1 ^' 




— 


in. 




- 







and il 
O.lov 
Jove, for y 

by Jove, I ., - , ,- , , ., ., . , 

no worse a name than Jove s own...').vyoi<i.i/ieii, 1. .5 
Jove! Jove! this sheiiherd's passion — .11.4 

it may well be ealleil Jove's tree .... — iii. '2 
worse than Jove in a thatched house _— i.ii. 3 

swear by Jove's great attributes Alls Hell, iv. 2 

by Jove, if ever 1 knew man .~,„,^.. 

made great Jove to humble hiin . . 7a»ii;i^o/-S/i. 1. 1 
Jove send her a better guiding R|iirit! II inter s T.u. 3 
kin to Jove's thunder, so surprised . . — ui. 1 

now Jove afford you cause! — '.X- f, 

it was Jove's case: from a prince.... aHciiryf / . 11. 2 
my king! my Jovel I speak totliee.. — y. j 

and in earthquake, like a Jove Henri/ r.n. 4 

by Jove, I am not covetous for ...... — iv. 3 

Jove sometime went disguised (rep).-iHenry 1 1, iv. 1 

[Co!.] I beseech Jove on my knees — iv. 1() 

overpeered Jove's spreading tree . . . .3Henrt/ I'l.v. 2 

Jove's Mercury, and herald Uictiard III. ly. i 

protractive trials of great Jove . . 7roi/«s ^- Cress. 1. 3 
and, Jove's accord, nothing so full .. — .1.3 
fly like chidden Mercury trom Jove — ii- { 
and Jove forbid there should be done — 11. 2 
forget that thou art Jove the king .. — .11.3 
Jove r Kn(.-love] I have abandoned lioy — 111. 3 

Jove bless great Aj ax — '"• f 

by Jove, I'll play the hunter . . . ... . . — iv. 1 

we sympathise: Jove, letiEueaslive — iv. 1 

by Jove mnltipotent, thou — iv. o 

by Jove, I will be patient — v, 2 

nay, stay; by Jove, 1 will not speak 
O Jove, do come: 1 shall be plagued 
Jove will o'er some high-viced city. Tim 
nobles bended as to Jove's statue . . Cur 

by Jove, 'twould be my mind 

Jove himself, it makes the consuls base 

or Jove for his power to tluinder 

is enrolled in Jove's own book 

with the consent of supreme Jove .. — y. 3 
a shower of rain as well as Jo\e . . Antamjf) Cho. 1. 2 
ifthoudar'st be, the earthly Jove .. — .ii- 7 

the Jove of power make me — .1.11. 4 

favours, by Jove that thunders! .... — 11.1. 11 

your emperor continues still a Jove — .iv. 6 

andsettheeby Jove's side .......... — iy..l3 

Jove! once more let mc behold It ..Cijmheline,u. i 
Jovel when on mvtbiec-loot stool.. — ;ii. 3 

Jove! I think, touiulations fly .... — ii'- ° 
Jove knows what man thou might st — JV. 2 

1 saw Jove's bird, the Roman eagle.. — i.y- 2 
Jove shield your husband from . . 7'i'(us .4ii(/ro«. 11. 3 
Pallas, Jove, or Mercury, inspire me — iv. 1 

he thinks, with Jove in heaven — iv. 3 

see, here's to Jove, and this to — . Jy- « 

the emhracements even of Jove himseli.iVricies, i. 1 
and if Jove stray, who dares say, Jove — .;.l 

by Jove, I wonder, that is king — i.i-S 

tell tales of thee to high-judging Jove . . Lear, 11. 4 
perjuries, they say, Jove laughs, nompo ^Jidiei.u. 2 
realm dismantled was of Jove himseli. Hum(rt, 11;. 2 

the front of Jove himself ,v-;, C, '"' ? 

great Jove, Othello guard, and swell ..Othello, i|. 1 

and she is sport for Jove — .!!• 3 

Jove's drenci clanioors counterfeit — i.u. 3 

.TOVEM— ad Joveio, that's for you.7'i(i«/fni/r(in..i.v. 3 

JOVIAl— be bright and jovial Macbeth, 111. 2 

his Jovial face— murder in heaven?. Ci/miie(me, iv. 2 
our Jovial star reigned at his birth . . — .v. 4 

what' I will he jovial; come, come Lear, iv. b 

JOWL— knave jowls it to the ground . . . . Hamlet, y. 1 

JOY— have cause (so have we all) ot joy. Icmpesi.u. 1 

hourlvjovs be still upon you! — iv. 1 (song) 

rej oice 'lieyond a common joy — v. 1 

that doth not wish you joy I ............. . — y. 1 

inward joy enforced my heart . . 7 iroOen.of I cr.i. I 

you jov not in a love-discnurse — !!• 4 

no sue'h Joy on earth! — .!!• ^ 

what joy is joy, if. Silvia -.„„'"• ' 

Feiiton, heaven give thee joy I .... Merry Wirei, y. ft 
and take the shame with joy ..Meas.for Mens. 11. 3 

joy to you Mariana! love her. .,-;,, ^• 

apiiears much joy in lum (rep.) ...... Much Ado, 1. 1 

to weep at joy, than to joy at weeping? — .1. 

1 wish him joy of her — »• 

and Go<l give thee joy! ..........:-. . - >'• 

silence is the perfectest herald ot joy — >!. ' 

cousins, God give you joy! — ,?!• ' 

Godgivemeioy to wear it .. ........ — "'• ' 

whosejoy of lier is overwhelmed — .y. 1 

and makes him all her joy Mid. S. Dream, 11. 1 

to give their bed joy and jirosiierity — .". 2 

thy fair large ears, my gentle joy .... — iv. 2 

some joy, it comprehends some (rr/».) 
full of joy and mirth (re;).) ■•.•■•••••• 

should I joy in an abortive birth t. Lo 

and leap for joy, though they arc lame — 

Godgive theejoy of him! — . ... 

chooRcI; joy be thecon8cqucnec.A/er.o/>fni«,.i.i.i.2 

in measure rain thy joy — •'.!■ J 

of joy, expressed, and not exprc8s<^ — Jii. 2 
tocry,Bood joy; good joy, my lord.. — u). 2 
I wisliynu all tlie joy that you — »"• •« 



JOY-dnds thejoys of heaven hcrc.A/er.i)/»Vnire,iii. 5 

well, tlietJvKis give us joy I At you Like it, n\. 3 

I take some joy to say you arc — iv. I 

with measnie heaiied in joy — v. 4 

was this king Priam's joy /lU'tfffU, 1. 3 (song) 

the eoioiiig hour o'erilow with joy .. — .11.4 

SIP niaiiy niiirks of joy, and grief — .111.2 

O how we joy to see your w it. Taming of Sh. 2 (iiid.J 
God send you joy, P'etruchiol ...... — .ii. I 

God give him joy I Ay, and he'll .... — ly. 2 

Imt not for joy, not joy Winter slate, \. 2 

mv second joy, the first fruits — in- "2 

both ioy, and terror, of good and bad — iv. (ehor.) 
all whose joy is nothing else but fair — iv. 3 
should take joy to sec her in your arms — v. I 

importance were joy or sorrow — v. 2 

one jov crown another — v. 2 

for their joy wa*led in tears — v. 2 

'twixt joy and sorrow, was fought .. — v. 2 
searcc any joy did ever so long live.. — v. .1 

to trouble your joys with like — v. 3 

with her I lived in joy Comedy of I: 



V. 1 

'sL.Lott,\. 1 



my plenteous joys, wanton in Macbeth, \. 4 

by destruction, dwell in doubtful joy — iii. 2 

I drink to the general joy — iii. 4 

my life, my joy, my food KingJohn,\\i. 4 

nothing in this world can make me joy — 111. 1 
all days of glory, joy, and happiness — 111. 4 

joy absent, grief is present Kichard II. 1. .'i 

to men in joy; but grief — .!• 3 

tojoy, is little less n joy, than hope — ii. 3 

and let him ne'er see joy — .j! •' 

I weep for joy, to stand upon — iii- 2 

o'ertlirows thy joys, friends, fortune — 1.1.1.2 

of sorrow, or of joy? of either — iij- • 

for if of joy, being altogether — iii- < 

more sorrow to my want of joy — >','_■* 

littlejoy have I, to breathe.. — m- 4 

thougive joy; until thou bid me joy — v. 3 

in Bolingbroke's proud joy — v. .^ 

with it joy thy life ... " '■ 



[Col.'] yea, joy ; our chains 

if he lie sick with joy 

infect my blood with joy 

do I bring, and lucky joys 

I speak of Africa, and golden joys 

at this hour joy oer myself 

joy and good wishes to our most 



.2 Henry IV.} 



— IV. 4 



. Henry V. ii. 2 



my life, my joy, again returned?. ...lHe;ir,i//'7. 1. 4 

to celebrate the joy that God — ;• fi 

will be replete with mirth and joy . . — . 1. •■ 

alas, what joy shall noble — iv. 3 

from wondering, fall to weeping joys.2He"r!/;7.i. 1 

surfeiting in joys of love — .1.1 

the treasury of everlasting joy! — ii- 1 

cares and joys abound, as seasons fleet — 11.4 

my joy is— death; death — 11.4 

of death I shall find joy — iii- 2 

then dame Margaret was ne'er thy joy — 111. 2 

livcthoutojoy thy life; myself no joy — 111.2 

poets feign of bliss and joy ■illenryl I. 1. 2 

I cannot joy, until I be resolved — 11. 1 

never hencetorth shall I joy again (rep.) — 11. I 

tliat throws not up his cap for joy . . — .)). • 

earth affords no joy to me — 111.1 

flU my heart with unhoped joys — 111. 3 

and joy that thou becomcst king — 111. 3 

mineeldestdaughter, and myjoy .. — in. 3 

do cloud my joys with danger — n. 1 

to hope, my sorrows unto joys — iv. <■ 

my joy of liberty is half eclipsed — — iv. !> 

to meet with joy in sweet Jerusalem — v..% 

for here, I hope, begins our lasting joy — y. 7 
and much it joys me too, to see — uichunt III. 1. 2 

small joy have I in being England's — 1. 3 

as little joy, my lord, as you (rep.) . . — [• 3 

thraldom to the joys of heaven — .1.4 

and plant your joys in living Edward s — 11.2 

me to jov and weep, their gain and loss — .11.1 

for joy o"f this good news — in- 1 

each hour's joy wrecked with — 1 v . I 

wherein dost thou joy? who sues — — i\. i 

sncceeders of intestate joys — Jv. 4 

sweet silent hours of marriage joys 

sleep in peace, and wake in joy 

much joy and favour to you Henry I IIL_\_ 

ne'er dreamed a joy beyond his — ii.i. 1 

now all my joy trace the conjunction! '•■ " 

offered sorrow ; this, general joy 

with the mere rankness of their joy . . 

such joy I never saw before 

all comfort, joy, in this most gracious 
joy's soul lies in the doing . . •••-—■'— 

some joy too fine, too subtle — 

shall lose distinction in my joys .... — 

will hide our joys no longer — 

O joy, e'en made away ere it — 7'iinon ofAih 



V. 3 



iv. I 



. }'roi(Hj,S^Cre.«i</a,i. 3 



i.2 



joy liad the like conception in — ;• - 

1 sprang not more in joy at first Conolanus, 1. 3 

all joy and honour. To Coriolanus (rep.) — n. 2 



the gods give you joy, sir. heartily . . 
gods givehim joy, and make him good — 
should make our eyes flow with joy.. — 
hark, how they joy! First, the gods.. — 
we will meet thein, and help the joy — 

for his love: joy, for his f.irtune ..JuliusCiesar, 

and hark! they shout for joy — 

countrymen, my heart doth joy — 

lay in iJgvpt with his joy . . Antony ^Cleupalr, 
so" sorely tliat I will joy no more .... — 
I wish you all jov of the worm (rep.) — 
joy whereof, the famed Casi>il)elan..Ci/HilWi«e. 

with joy he will embrace you — 

madam, all joy Infal your grare .... 
thou hast flnislied joy and moan . . — 
briefly die their joys, that place tliem 
strike" me to death with mortal joy . . — 

hitting each object with a joy — y ,'• 

tears of true joy for his return.. TilutAndronuut, 1. 2 
O Bocrcd receptacle of my joyB — Li 



. I..' 



iv. * (song* 



i. 2 

i. 2 

i. 2 

ii. I 

_ii. 5 

iii. 4 

V. 1 



JOY 

JOY— tears of joy shed on tlie earth. Tilus Atidron. i. 2 

that was thy joy, be barred — i. 2 

God give you joy. sir, of your gallant — i. 2 

bclike.for joy the emperor hatli .... — iv. 2 

God give your lordsliip joy — iv. 3 

grii)e net at eartlily joys Pericles, i. 1 

shows, we'll joy in such (V son — 

pleasure's art can joy my spirits — 

joy and all comfort in j'our sacred breast! — 
arms to princes, and to subjects joys — 
make the gazer joy to see him tread — 

further grief,— God give J'ou joy ! ... . — 
and never more ha^'e joy. Madam . . — 

great sea of ioys rushing upon me — 

and crowned with joy at last — r. 3 (Gowerl 

joy wait on you! here our play . . — v. 3 (Gower) 
profess myself an enemy to ail other joj's. . Lear, i. 1 
now, our joy, although the last, not least — 1.1 
then they for sudden joy did weep — i. 4 (song) 

two extremes of passion, joy and grief — v. 3 

although I joy in tliee (rrp.) .... iioineo ^-Juliet, ii. 2 
to tlie high top-gallant of my joy must — ii. 4 
tile exchange of joy tliat one snort .. — ii. 6 
measure of tliy joy be heaped like mine — ii. 6 
whicli you, mistaking, offer up to joy — iii. 2 
stained the childhood of our joy with — iii. 3 

tliousand times more joy than — iii. 3 

but that a joy past joj' calls out — iii. 3 

and joy comes well in sncli a needful — iii. 6 

sorted out a sudden day of joy — iii. ,5 

hast thou not a word of joy? — iii. 5 

with my cliild, my joys are buried . . — iv. 6 
but love's shadows are so rich in joy? — v. 1 
finds means to kill your joys with love — v. 3 

as 'twere witli a defeated joy Hamlet, i. 2 

old Norway, overcome with joy — ii. 2 

did seem in him a kind of joy to hear of it — iii. 1 

the violence of either grief or joy — iii. 2 

joy most revels, grief dotli most ti-e/).) .. — iii. 2 

that blanks the face of joy — iii. 2 

howe'er ray haps, my joys will ne'er begin — iv. 3 
for bonnv sweet Robin is all my joy — iv. 5 (song) 
thongh that liis joy he joy, yet throw . . Othello, i. 1 
rather to be hanged in compassing thy joy — i. 3 

my soul's joy! if after every tempest.. — ii. I 
it stops me here; it is too much of joy .. — ii. 1 
witli loy, revel, pleasure, and applause.. — ii. 3 

'JOY— her 'joy her raven-coloured . TitvsAvdron. ii. 3 

JOYED— never joyed since the price. I Henry /f. ii. 1 

ever king that joyed an earthly ....^2 Henry VI, iv. 9 

joyed are we, that you are Cymbellne, v. 5 

JOYFUL— Got deliver to a joyful ..Merry Wives, i. 1 

what a joyful father wouldst Lovers L. Lost, -v. 1 

riglit joyful of your reformation — v. 2 

to-morrow is the joyful day As you Like if, v. 3 

sliall be joyful of thy company. . Taming ofS/i. iv. 5 
a joyful mother of two good\y.Comedyof Krrors,i, 1 
make joyful tlie hearing of my wife ..Macbetlt, i. 4 

1 know, this is a joyful trouble to you.. — ii. 3 

no joyful tongue gave him his Richard 11. v. 2 

me back with joj'ful tidings i Henry IV. i. 1 

O joyful day! I would not take — v. 3 

of arts, plenties, and joyful births HenryV.Y.2 

how jojful am I madeby this ....1 Henry VI. iii. 1 
your majesty joyful as you have . . Richard III. i. 3 

make them joyful, grant tlieir — iii. 7 

a happy and a joyful time of day! .. — iv. 1 
for joyful motlier, one that waUs .... — iv. 4 

1 am joyful to meet the least HenryVIII, iii. 2 

I am most joyful, madam, such good — iv. 2 
good man, those joyful tears show .. — v. 2 

I am joyful of your sights Timon of Athens, i. 1 

am joyful to hear of their readiness. Conolanus, i v. 3 

whilst they with joyful tears Antony <?- Cleo. iv. 8 

let them be joyful too, for they Cymb&line, v. 5 

then be joyful, because the law hath. TilusAnd. iii. 1 

tlie devil's dam; a joyful issue — iv. 2 

she will be a joyful woman .. ..Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 4 
but now I'll tell thee joyful tidings — iii. 6 

happily make thee there a joyful bride — iii. 5 
shall not make me there a joyful bride — iii. 5 
presage some jovful news at hand . . — v. 1 

JOYFULLY— joyfully, my noble lord.. Henry V. iv. 3 
most joyfully, we take our leave. . liictiard III. iii. 7 
my good lorcl, are joyfully returned Hnmlet, ii. 2 

JO YLESS— and altoeether joyless . . Richard III. i. 3 
a jovless, dismal, black, and .... Titus Andron. iv. 2 

JOYOUS — arrival be full joyous.. Tamin^o/S/i. iv. 5 
ri^ht joyous are we to behold Henry V. v. 2 

.TUD AS— Judas MaccaboauB Love's L, Lost, v. 1 

the pedant, Judas Maccabasus — v. 2 

Judas I am, — A Judas! — v. 2 

Judas I am, ycleped Maccabseus (rep.) — v. 2 
proved Judas? Judas I am (rep.) .... — v. 2 

tn make Judas hang himself — v. 2 

Jndas was hanged on an elder — v. 2 

give it him:— Judas, away — v. 2 

a light for monsieur Judas — v. 2 

than Judas's: marry his (rep.) ..As you Lil<eit, iii. 4 
each one thrice worse than Judiisl.. Richard II. iii. 2 

so Judas did to Christ: but he — iv. 1 

so Judas kissed his master ZHenryVl. v. 7 

JU DASES— three Judases Richard II. iii. 2 

JUDE— and so adieu, sweet Jude!.. Lowe's L.Lost, v. 2 
for the ass to the Jude — v. 2 

JUDEAN-base Jndean [Col.Knt.-Indiar\'].Olhetlo,v. 2 

JUDGE— you judge I wink.. Two Gen. of Verona, i. 2 
you shall judge — iv. 4 

heaven be judge, how I — y. 4 

and then judge of my merit Merry Wives, iii. 5 

and the judge of thine own cause. TwelfthNight, v. I 

to what. I pray? Judge Measure for Measure, i. 2 

which if myself might be his judge .. — i. .■) 

nor the judge's robe, become — ii. 2 

1 would tell what 'twere to be a judge — ii. 2 
should but judge you as you are?. ... — ii. 2 

when judges steal themselves — ii. 2 

whose credit with the judge, or own — ii. 4 

tliere is a devilish mercy in the judge — iii. 1 

no sinister measure from liis judge . . — iii. 2 



[ 4;)0 ] 



— iv. 1 



JUDGE— judge of your own cause. Mens. /or A/ens. v. 1 
thy ej'es shall be thy judge... We>eAa7i/o/;Vnice, ii. 5 
she is wise, if I can judge of her .... — ii. 6 
to oifend, and judge, are distinct .... — ii. 9 

if the devil may be her judge — iii. 1 

O wise young judge! how do I honour — iv. 1 
it dotli appear you are a worthy judge! — i\'. 1 
O noble judge! O excellent young man ! — iv. I 

wise and upright judge! now mucli — iv. 1 

doth it not, noble judge? — iv. 1 

bid her be judge, whether Bassanio.. — iv. 1 
most rightful judge! And you must — iv. 1 
most learned judge! a sentence (rep.) 
had I been judge, thou shouldst have 

1 gave it to the judge's clerk — v. 1 

gave it a judge's clerk! — v. 1 

[Co/.] no, God's my judge — v. 1 

tiian thyself, the judge's clerk — v. 1 

unto the judge that begged it — v. 1 

if we judge by manners As you tike it, i. 2 

or no, let theforest judge — iii. 2 

let him be judge, how deep I am — iv. 1 

when judges have been baoes A'Vs Well, ii. 1 

Apollo be 'my judge. This your.. 'f'm/er's Tale,\u, 2 

our taces, and be judge yourself KingJohn, i. 1 

from that supernal judge, that stirs .. — ii. 1 
that jiulge hath made me guardian .. — ii. I 
themselves should be your judge .... — ii. 2 

you urged me as a judge Richard II. i. 3 

men judge by the complexion — iii. 2 

noble to be upright judge of noble .. — iv. 1 
I'll be a brave judge. Thou judgest..lHenry/r. i. 2 
and here I stand; judge, my masters — ii. 4 

I judge their number upon, or near.2l/e7ir7/7r.iv. 1 

kindly to j udge, our play Henry V. i. (chorus) 

we judge no less — ii. 2 

(as I judge by his blurt bearing .... — iv. 7 
judge you, my lord of Warwick . ...I Henry VI. ii. 4 
then judge, great lords, if I have .... — iv. 1 

(if I were worthy to be judge) — iv. 1 

you judge it straight a thing — v. 4 

if Imayjudge. Let Somerset be ....2HemyVI. i. 3 

I judge mine own wit good — iii. 1 

forbear to judge, for we are sinners all — iii. 3 
wrong'st me. heaven be my judge .. — iv. 10 
I cannot judge: bat, to conclude ..SHenryVl.ii. 1 
your young nobility could judge ..liicliard III. i. 3 

unto the frowningjudge? — 1.4 

to-morrow then I judge a happy day — iii. 4 
learned approbation of the judges ..HenryVIII. i. 2 

I should judge now unhappily — i. 4 

having here no judge indifferent — ii. 4 

you shall not be my judge; for it is you — ii. 4 
my soul refuse you for my judge (rep.) — ii. 4 
there sits a judge, that no king can — iii. 1 

find your lordship judge and juror.. — v. 2 

to a most noble judge, the king — v. 2 

wiser than the judge, if wisdom. Timon of Athens, iii. 5 
which way, do you judge, my wit . . Coi iolanus, ii. 3 

cats, that can judge as fitly of — iv. 2 

that you may the better judge ..JuliusCatsar, iii. 2 

judge, O you gods, how dearly — iii. 2 

judge me, you gods! wrong I — iv. 2 

play judge, and executioner Cymheline, iv. 2 

the righteous heavens be my judge. TitusAndronA. 2 

the judge have pronounced my — iii.. 1 

now judge, what cause had Titus to — v. 3 

if your honour judge it meet I^ear, i. 2 

O Jephthfl, judge of Israel, what . ._ Ham^e^, ii. 2 

we may of their encounter frankly judge — iii. 1 
they shall hear and judge 'twixt you and — iv. 5 
and you, the judges, bear a wary eye .... — v. 2 
now, sir, be judge yourself, whether I . . Othello, i. 1 
heaven is my judge, not I for love and .. — i. 1 

judge me the world, if 'tis not gross in .. — i. 2 
JUDGED me fast asleep .... TwoGen. of Verona, iii. I 

it could not be judged, sir Merry Wives, i. 1 

from thecountry to be judged by yoxi.KingJohn,i. I 
thieves are not judged, but they.. ..Richard 11. iv. 1 
be judged by subject and inferior .... — iv. 1 

thou see'st liath judged thee 2Henry FI. ii. 3 

it may be judged, I liiade the duke . . — iii. 2 
holiness, and to be judged by him. . Henry VIII. ii. 4 

at least he judged so Pericles, i. 3 

JUDGEST— thou judgest false \HenryIV. i. 2 

thou that judgest all things 2HenryVI. iii. 2 

JUDGTNG-impartial judging of this.. Hen. VIII. ii. 2 
JUDGMENT-his judgment ripe. Two Gen. ofVer. ii. 4 

she, in my judgment, was as — iv. 4 

by all men's judgment — iv. 4 

judgment by mine liost of the Garter. Merry W. iii. 1 
forgive my sins at the day of judgment — iii. 3 
the oaths of judgment and reason . . TirelfhN. iii. 2 
let mine own judgment pattern .Meas.for Meas. ii. 1 
execution, judgment hath repented.. — ii. 2 
if he, which is the top of judgment .. — ii. 2 
his judgment with the disposition .. — iii. I 
lack of tempered judgment afterward — v. 1 

for my simple true judgment? Much Ado, i, 1 

speak in soner judgment — i. 1 

so much without true judgment .... — iii. 1 
eyes must with his judgment look . . Mid. N. Dr. i. 1 
love's mind of any judgment taste .. — i. 1 

1 had no judgment, when to her I swore — iii. 2 
beauty is bought by judgment of.. Love'sL. Lost, ii. 1 
some god direct my judgment! . . Mer. of Venice, ii. 7 
young in limbs, in judgment old — ii. 7 (scroll) 
seven times tried that judgment is — ii. 9 (scroll) 
me have judgment, and the Jew his will — iv. 1 
what judgment shall I dread, doing no — iv. I 

I stand for judgment; answer — iv. 1 

a Daniel come tojudgment! — iv, 1 

proceed to judgment: by my soul I.. — iv. 1 

the court to give the judgment — iv. 1 

yourself with yourownjudgment..y4J!/owLi4ei(, i.2 
your better judgments of all opinion — ii. 7 

he disabled my judgment — v. 4 

whose judgments are mere fathers ....AtVsWell,i. 2 
stain our jiidgment, or corrupt our hope — ii. 1 
in babes hath judgment shown — ii. ! 



ii. 2 



— iv. 5 



— iii. 5 



JUL 

JUDGMENT— trust my judgment ..All's Well. iii. 6 
take a measure of his own judgments — iv. S 
in your silent judgment tried it. . Winter's Tale, li. i 
one that, before tlTe judgment. . Comedy of Err. iv. i 
under heavy judgment bears that \Ue.. Macbeth, i. 3 

we still have judgment here — i. 7 

why then I have no judgment iHenrylV. i. 2 

only old in judgmentand understanding — i. 2 

my judgment is, we should not step — i. 3 

in my very seat of judgment — v. 2 

but in purged judgment, trusting Henry F.ii.i 

have good judgment in horsemanship — iii. 7 
right wits and hisgoot judgments.... — iv. 7 
some shallow spirit of judgment .... I Henry VI. ii. 4 

God's secret judgment 2 Henry VI. iii. 3 

for judgment only doth belong to thee! — ' iii. 3 
hath tempted judgment to desire ..SHenryVI. iii. 3 
60 weak of courage, and in judgment — iv. 1 

you showed your judgment — iv. 1 

the urging of that word, judgment.. iJicAard///. i. 4 
to-morrow, in my judgment, is too .. — iii. 4 
-udgment, he was stirred witli such. Henry ;'/J/.ii. 1 

received a traitor's judgment — ii. 1 

Rome, the nurse of^judgment — ii. 1 

unmatched wit and judgment — ii. 2 

this was a judgment on me — ii. 4 

to stay the judgment o' the divorce . . — iii. 2 
in judgment comes to hear the cause — v. 2 

you have no judgment, niece Trollus fy Crett, i. 2 

one o' the soundest judgments in Troy — i.2 
will with great speed of judgment .. — i. 3 
dangerous shores of will and judgment — 

than in the note of judgment — 

till judgment guide his bounty 

for a wliore, he tempts judgment .... 

but little love or judgment. . . . Timon of Athens, 

attend our weiglitier judgment . 

in his judgment that makes it — v. 1 

against the rectorship of judgment? Coriolanus, ii. 3 

on a safer judgment, oil revoke — ii. 3 

dishonour mangles true judgment .. — iii. 1 
whether defect of judgment, to fail .. — iv. 7 
your judgments, my grave lords .... — v. 5 
his judgment ruled our ha-itds.... Julius Ccesar, ii. 1 
O judgment, thou art fled to brutish — iii. 2 

and so rebel tojudgment Antony %■ Cleopatra, i. 4 

when I was green in judgment — i. ii 

by laying defects of judgment to me — ii. 2 

the fellow has good judgment — iii. .1 

men's judgments are a parcel of ... . — 
Caesar, thou hast subdued his judgment — 

drop our clear j udgments — 

be it but to fortify her judgment .... Cymbeh 

but u pon my mended judgment — 

amplify my judgment in other — 

nor i'the judgment; for idiots, in this — i. 7 

your great judgment in the election — i. 7 

slanders so her judgment — iii. 5 

the effect of judgment is oft the cause — iv. 2 
are sometimes like our judgments, blind — iv. 2 
to the judgment of your eye .... Pericles, i. (Gower) 
make the judgment good that thought — iv. 6 

answer my life my judgment ieor, i. 1 

and with what poor judgment he hath ,. — i. 1 

to fear judgment; to fight when I — i. 4 

but, to ray judgment, your highness is .. — i. 4 
thy folly in, and thy dear judgmentout! — i. 4 
this judgment of the heavens, that makes — v. 3 
a gentler judgment vanished ..Romen 4r Juliet, iii. 3 

but reserve thy judgment Hamlet, i. 3 

with better iieed, and judgment, I had not — ii. 1 

whose judgments, in such matters 

and judgment are so well co-mingled. . . . 

we will both our judgments join 

upon the judgment; and what judgment 

who like not in their judgment 

from herself, and lier fair judgment .... 

it shall as level to your judgment 'pear. . — iv. 5 ■ 

one. No. Judgment. A hit — v. 2 

accidental judgments, casual slaughters — v. 2 
nay, it is possible enough to judgment . . Othello, i. 3 



iii. U 
iii. 11 
iii. 11 
te, i. 5 



— ii. 2 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 
iii. 4 
iv. 3 



a judgment maimed, and most imperfect 
so strong that judgment cannot cure .... 

having my best judgment collied 

I have no judgment in an honest face . . 



i. 3 



— IV. 2 



. --, gment 

JUDGMENT-D AY so cTreadful 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

until the great judgment-day Richard III. 1. 4 

JUDGMENT-PLACE- 
our common judgment-place. . . . Romeo ^Juliet, i. 1 

JUDICIOUS ey liads Merry Wives, i. 3 

he is noble,_wise, judicious, and best. ..War6e//i, iv. 2 

shall have judicious hearing Coriolavvs, v. 5 

judicious punishment! 'twas this flesh ..Lear, iii. 4 

cannot but make the judicious grieve.. Hom/ef, iii. 2 

JUG— brought stone jugs . . Taming of Shrew, 2 (ind.) 

whoop, jug! I love tliee Lear, i. 4 

JUGGLE— juggle men into such Henry VIII. i. 3 

JUGGLED— I'll not be juggled with ..Hamlet, iv. 5 

JUGGLER— O me! you juggler! ..Mid.N.'sDr.ui.2 

as nimble jugglers, that deceive. . Comedy of Err. i. 2 

a thread-bare juggler, and a fortune-teller — v. 1 

yon basket-hilt stale juggler, you! . .2HenryIV. ii. 4 

JUGGLING — be these j uggling fiends . . Macbeth, v. 7 

jugglingwitchcraft with revenue . .King John, \\\. 1 

and the Dauphin have been juggling.! Henry VI. v. 4 

such juggling, and such knavery! rro!(us ^ Crew. ii. 3 

a juggling trick, to be— secretly open — v. 2 

JUICE— scour with juice of balm . . Merry Wives, v. b 

the juice of it, on sleeping eye-lids.. il/id. N.Dr. ii. 2 

having once this juice, I'll watch .... — il. 2 

and with the juice of this I'll streak — ii. 2 

no more the juice of Egypt's grape.. /#n(.i5-C;eo. v. 2 

with juice of cursed hebenon in SLvisd.. Hamlet, i, 5 

.lULE— wilt thou not, Jule? (rep.). Romeo <^ Juliet, i. 3 

JULIA— thou Julia, thou hast .. Turo Gen.ofVer. i. 1 

favest thou my letter to Julia? — i. 1 

fear, mj' Julm would not deign — 1.1 

to Julia— say from whom? — i.2 



JUL 

JULIA-kiiKt Julia! unkinilJiiUul. /'irar.Vn. (/T. i. 2 

passloimte Hrotuiis, to tlin awt'ct Juliii — i. S 

Oliiavciilv JiiliiU — i.3 

to show niv father Julia's letter — i. :i 

Imvr imli<i\oo, gentle Julia — ii. .! 

for thy Jiilia'««alie — ii. 2 

wherein I siiih not, Julia, for tli^ sake — ii. 2 

Julia, farewell: What! tiouu without — ii. - 

and sola Julia, that 1 love — ii. t 

mrt with mailuMi .luliii? — ii. 5 

to eaveiny Jlllia, shall I ho — ii.li 

Julia I l.>se,aml A'aleiitinc — ii.li 

for , I ulia, Silvia - ii.li 

shows Julia hut a swnrtliy — ii. H 

I will forget that Julia is alive — ii. <> 

breakiuj! faith with Julia whom I loved — iv. -• 

one Julia, that his changing thoughts — iv. 1 

his Julia gave it to him — iv. I 

shall not do his Julia 80 much wrong .- iv. I 

trimincd in madam Julia's gown — iv. 4 

read o\-cr Julia's heart — v. I 

the ring I gave to Julia — v. I 

at niv aepart, I gave this unto Julia — v. t 

and Julia herself did give it mc — v. 4 

and Julia herself hatti brought — v. 4 

ho»',Julia? — V. 4 

JPLIET— there's madam Juliet . . Meas. /<ir Mias. i. 2 

too gross, is writ on Juliet — i.3 

mv cousin Juliet? — i.3 

done, sir, with tlie groaning Juliet?.. — ii. 2 

rav brother did love Juliet — ii. 4 

Where's this girl? what, jHUetI..«om«'o fi- Juhei, i. 3 

tell me, daughter Juliet, how stands — i. 3 

we follow tiree: Juliet, the County stays — i.3 

with tender Juliet matched — i. 5 (chorus) 

it is the east, and Juliet is the sun .. — ii. i 

ah Julietj if the measure of thy joy be — ii.C 

sweet Juliet, thy beauty hath made — iii. 1 

Tybalt, Romeo. Juliet, all slain — iii. 2 

heaven is here, where Juliet lives — — iii. ;t 

the white wonder of dear Juliet's hand — iii. 3 

unless philosophy can make a Juliet — iii. 3 

»8 young as I, Juliet thy love — iii. 3 

1 come from lady Juliet. Welcome. . — iii. 3 
for Juliet's sake, for her sake, rise .. — iii. 3 
Bpakest thou of Juliet? how is it with — iii. 3 
tny Juliet is alive, for whose dear . . — iii. 3 
death, and welcome! Juliet wills it so — iii. & 
how now, Juliet? Madam, I am not well — iii. 5 
Juliet, on Thursday early will I rouse — iv. 1 
ah Juliet, I alreadv know thy grief. . — iv. I 
go thou to Juliet, help to deck up her — iv. 2 
go, waken Juliet, go, and trim her up — iv. 4 
what, mistress! Juliet! fast, I warrant — iv. .'i 
for shame, bring Juliet forth: her lord — iv. :') 
how fares mv Juliet? that I ask again — v. L 
well, Juliet, I will lie with thee to-night — v. 1 

go with me to Juliet's grave — v. I 

tliis three hours will fair Juliet wake — v. i 

Juliet, that [Co;. Kii'. -or wanting that] — v. 3 

the tomb, lay me with Juliet — v. .'. 

Paris should have married Juliet — v. 3 

hearing him talk of Juliet, to think it — v. 3 

for here lies Juliet, and her beauty . . — v. 3 

ah, dear Juliet, why art thou yet so fair? — v. 3 

there dead, was husband to that Juliet — v. 3 

and not for Tybalt, Juliet pined — \. ?• 

mv master news of .Juliet's death. . .. — v. 3 

to die, and lie with Juliet — v. .1 

■ as that of true and faithful .fnliet — v. 3 

than this of Juliet and her Romeo .. — v. 3 
.fUI-lETTA— Julietta with child.. A/eas. /or jWias. i. 2 

t got possession of Julietta's bed — i. 3 

JULIO— master, Julio Romano fVinler'sTale, v, 2 

JUI-IUS— CFor Julius Ciesar, see Cassar.] 

pardon me, Julius! here wast lulixtsCtPsarn iii. 1 

aid not great Julius bleed for justice' sake? — iv. 3 

Cujsars, ere such another Jidius CtjmhHine, iii, 1 

the mightiest Julius fell, the graves HninlH.i. I 

JULY— the sixth of July: your \oviag. Much AHn, i. 1 
he makes a July's day short as.. .. Winltr'sTnle, i. 2 

as clear as founts in July Henry VIII. i. 1 

J UMP— do cohere, and jump TirHflh \i\'lil, v. I 

sorel jumf)s from thicket Lovers L.L. iv. 2 (epitujih) 
I will not jump with common.. l/crcA. n/ Venice^ li. 9 
fidl of the pasture, jumps along. . /!» you Like il, ii. 1 

meet and jump in one Taming of Shrew, i. 1 

jump her and thump her Winter' aTale, iv. 3 

out lumps twelve foot andahalf .... — iv. 3 

we'll jump the life to come Macbeth, i. 7 

in some sort it jumps with my 1 llrnryll'. i. 2 

and jumps upon jomt-stools 'ItlfitryW. ii. 4 

to jump a body with a dangerous. . Carii,la>iu.<, iii. I 
our fortune lies upon this jump. /(ii/oni/ ^Cten. iii. H 

or jump the after-enquiry on Cymbellne, v. 4 

and jump [fC/l^-just] at this dead ^owr. .tlamlet, i. ! 

so jump upon this blomly question — v. 2 

but, though they jump not on a just Olbcllo, i. 3 

bring him jump when he may Cassio find — ii. 3 

JU.MPKTII with the heart H-Wi,i,(/ ///. iii. 1 

JUMPING— jumping o'er times ..lleini/r. i. (cho.) 

JUNE— if there come a hot June MtemylV. ii. 4 

09 the cuckoo is in June, heard — iii. 2 

like a cow in June, hoists sMs.. Antony ffCleo. iii. 8 

JUNIUS Brutus, Sicinius Vclutus rono(anuf, i. 1 

Junius Brutus sware for l/ucrccc'. TiluiAndron. iv. 1 
JUNKET— wants nojunkets.. Taming of Shreir. iii. 2 

JITNO— great Juno comes Tetnpeit, iv. 1 

Juno sings her blessings on you .. — iv. 1 («mg) 

Juno ond Ceres wliis|)er seriously — iv. 1 

your summons; Juno does command — iv. 1 
Bucar, Juno but an Kth'iup. Lore's L. LotI, iy. 3fvcr.) 
like Juno's flwons, still we went ,. At yon Like it, '\. 3 
wedding is great Juno's crown .... — v. 4 (song) 
I, his despiteful Junn, sent ..AU'iWeH, iii. 4 ilctter) 

than the lids of Juno's eyes H'inter'iTatr, iv. 3 

Juno have mercy ! how came. Troitut ^ Creiti'la, i. 2 

for the love of Jiino, let's go Conotanut, il. 1 

let me sit down: O Juno].. Antony ^Cleopatra, iii. ft 
hod I great Juuo's power — iv. 13 



[ 401 ] 



JUNO— yon made great .liino angry.. ('j/ffibe/iiK', iii. 4 
Juno Imd been siek, and he her dieter — iv. 2 
with Mars fall out, with ,luno chide — v. 4 
by Juno, that is riuecn of marriage . . . . Perielei, ii. 3 

in pace amithcr Juno — v. I 

Jujiiter, I swear no. By Ju»o, I aweur av.Lear, ii. 4 
JUiVO-l.llvK-iii anger, Juuo-likc. . fon'olanin, iv. 2 
JIU'ITKK— ilisohcy the wife of Jupiter. 7'(>iiifc»(,iv. 1 
you were ulso,.lnpiter, aswan .. ...Unr|/ TirM, v. 5 
Jupiter! how \vearv are inv spirits. /Ui/o« Like, ii. 4 
Omost geiule .luiii'ter! wli'at tecliuus — iii. 2 

Jupiter liieamo a hull.aii.l helluwed. /IV,./,.r'j7'. iv. 3 
<) Jupitel-! there't. no e.Miipurisuli. 7,..)V».iO.C')fM. i. 2 
Jupiter! i|u. .Ill si, e, which of tlu•^e hairs — i. 2 

Jupiter I'oihi.l; and sav ill tliuiuler .. — ii. 3 
lo, .hiiiiteris vomler. .lealiii;.' lilel .. — iv. 5 

trausti.rnuiticni III' Jupiter there — V.I 

bUniilv Imow! (I Jupiter, no hluod! . . Criolanuf, i. 3 

his name? By Jupiter, liir^iit — i. 9 

take my cap, Jupiter, and 1 thank thee — ii. 1 
if Jupiter should from yon eluuil speak — iv. 3 
by Jupiter, were 1 the wearer ut:.Anlony ^a<.,'. ii. 2 

he's the Jupiter (if men (/>■/).) — iii. 2 

wert tluiu tile son of .1 upiter Cymbeline, ii. 3 

by .lupiter. 1 hinl it (rum her arm (,rep.) — ii. 4 
or, by Juiiiter, 1 will nut ask again ., — iii..") 

by J upiter, an angel ! or, if not — ii i . H 

Jupiter he praised! Lucius is taken.. — v. 3 

since, Jupiter, our son is good — v. 4 

belli, Jupiter; or we appeal, and from — v. 4 
thanks, .Jupiter! The marble pavement — v. 4 
pieat Jupiter upon his eagle backed — v..") 

m the temple ot great Jupiter our peace — v. 5 

what says Jupiter? TilusAmlronicus, iv. 3 

Jupiter, I ask thee? Alas, sir {rev.) .. — iv. 3 

by J upiter, this shall not be revoked L-flr, i. 1 

Jupiter, I swear no. By Juno, I swear, ay — ii. 4 

JURE- we'll jure ye 1 Henry I r. ii. 2 

JUREMENT— contresonjureraent....//e»ri//'. iv. 4 
JURISDICTION— jurisdiction regal. 2//eiir!,r/. iv. 7 
the jurisilietion of all bishops .. ..Henry yjll. iii. 2 
JUROR— your lordship judge and juror — v. 2 
kindred were jurors on thy life. Tiinon of A/hens, iv.3 
JUKY-jury;,passiiigon the prisoners. A/fo. /or /lira. ii. I 

his noble jury and foul cause Henry V I II. iii. 2 

JURY-MEN— grand jury-men . . Ticetflh Ni^'M, iii. 2 

JUST — have just our theme of woe Tempest, ii. 1 

just as you left them, sir — v. 1 

as just as you will desire Merry Wives, i. 1 

just 'twixt twelve and one — iv. 6 

just the contrary; the better Twel.nh night, v. 1 

yet still 'tis just Measure/or Mermire, i. 3 

just, but severe law! — ii. 2 

that the most just law now took — ii. 4 

ay, just, perpetual durance — iii. 1 

but this being so, he's just — iv. 2 

and head, just of his colour — iv.3 

as grave, as just, as absolute — v. 1 

why, just, my lord, and that is — v. I 

that were made Justin the mUl-vay.. Much. Idn, ii. 1 

just, if he send me no husband — ii, I 

which is hence a just sevennight .... — ii. I 
just so many strange dishes — ii . 3 

1 am sorry for her, as I have just cause — ii. 3 

yea, just so much as you may — ii. 3 

plot that name with any just reproach — iv. 1 

just, said she, it hurts nobody — v. I 

but always hath been just and virtuous — v. I 

for you have just his bleat — v. 4 

butpust a pound of flesh (rfp.).A/crc/i. o/Venice, iv. 1 

'tis just the fashion As youLilie il, ii. 1 

yes, just. I do not like her name .... — iii. 2 
just as high as my heart — iii. 2 

twas just the dift'erenee betwixt — iii. 5 

nature, stronger than his just occasion — iv.3 
but unsuitable; just like the brooch ..All's Well, i. 1 
would, in so just a business, shut his — iii. I 
mv mother told me just how he would — iv. 2 

whichj on your just proceeding — v. 3 

gown 18 made just as my master . Taming nfSh. iv. 3 
blessed am Tin my just censure? .. Winter'sTuie, i. 2 

have a. just and open trial — ii. 3 

your request is altogether just — iii. 2 

such power, she had just cause — v. 1 

even just the sum, that I do ovfu. Comedy of Err. iv.l 

and thou shalt find me just — v. I 

to do, to the direction just Macbeth, iii. :i 

you may be rightly just, whatever .. — iv. .i 

let our just censures attend the — v. 4 

in such a just and charitable war . . King John, ii. I 
England, impatientof your just demands — ii.l 
permit our just and lineal entrance.. — ii.l 
a loyal, just, and upright gentleman, nic'iard //. i. 3 

for he is just, and always loved — ii.l 

as he is a prince, is just — iii. 3 

hold those jii.^ts and triumphs? — v. 2 

befriend us, as our cause is just \Henryiy.\. 1 

when the intent of hraring them is just — v. 2 
is very just; look, here comes good. .2 Henrj///'. iii. 2 
tlie just proportion that we gave .... — iv. I 
appear that .vour demands are just .. — iv.l 

to meet his grace just distance — iv.l 

prant of our most just and right desires — iv. 2 
18 this proceeding just and honourable? — iv. 2 

your maiestv hath no just cause — v. 2 

the like fxild. just, and impartial .... — v. 2 
nor peer, shall have just cause to say — v. 2 

the things I siwak, arc just — v. 3 

is not this just? for I shall sutler he ..H«irvr. ii. I 
even just between twelve and one.... — ..'.'• 3 

the plain-song is most just — iii. 2 

just, just; and the meii do sympathize — iii. 7 
nis cause being just, and his quarrel — iv.l 
bring me just notice of the niiiiihers.. — iv. 7 
with full accord to nil our just demands — v. 2 
orbitrator of despairs, just i\eai\\.. ..Mlenryt'l. il. !> 

to be a man just and upright — iii. I 

answer of tbv just demand — v. 3 

why, this is just, Aio te, /Eaeida illrnryl'l. i. 4 

armed, that hath his quarrel just .... — iii. 2 



JUS 



JUST— great (jod, how just art thou 1.2 l/fnrt//Y. v. I 
Bith God is just, he be as miserably ..iHcntyt'l. i. .) 

thy just and lawful aid — iii. 3 

yet heavens are iust, and time — Iii. 3 

if king Edward ue as true and 'iu«t..ltieharit III. i. I 
it is a quarrel just and reasunaule. ... — i. 2 

Bojust IS (Jod toright the ~ i.3 

with all your just I'roceedings — iii. .'i 

by just [To/. K/i/. true computation.. — iii. .'# 

in this just suit eiinie I to move — iii. 7 

savs v.inr highness to iny jnst request? — iv. 2 

iMiriMlit, jnst, and tnie-ilisposing (iod — iv.l 
usurp the just proportion orniy soVrow? — iv. 4 
will dicj ti.>' (Old's just ordiiuiiiee .... — iv.l 
part in lust pro|iortion our small .... — v. 3 
just as 1 do now, he would kiss you. Henry >'///. i i 

the trial just and noble — ii. 'j 

this just and learned priest — ii. y 

our just opinions, and comforts to your — iii. 1 
be just, and fear not: let all the ends — iii. '^ 

'tis just to each of them Troilut ^ Creasida, i. -j 

'tis Agamemnon just [Co(. right] .... — I. 3 

but the just gods gainsay, that any .. — iv. :, 

to hurt by being just — v. 3 

iust of the same piece is every. Timonor.Hhent, iii. a 

ny mercy, 'tis most just — iii. i 

't'is most just, Unit thou turn rascal — iv. :i 

so true, so just, and now so — iv.3 

if it he a just and true report — v. 1 

Just: and it is very much lamented. ./udmCu'iar, i. ;i 
my friend, faithful and just to me .. — iii. 2 
it" the great gfids be just .... Antony ^- Cleopatra, ii. i 

it is just so hiuh as it is — ii. 7 

no bond, hut to do just ones Cyniheline,v. I 

be as just and gracious unto vne.Titus.-indrontcus, i.l 
upon a just survey, take Titus' part — i. 2 

tvili preserve just so much strength.. — iii. ;> 
and just against thy heart make .... — iii. 2 

but yet so just, that he will not — iv. i 

ay, just! a verse in Horace — iv, 2 

that my report is just, and full of ... . — v. 3 

to just and tourney for her love I'eyiclci, ii.l 

can any way speak in his just commend — ii. 2 

and yet but just: for though — ii. 4 

the most just God for ever graft' — v. 1 

if this but answer to my just belief .. — v. 1 

to perform thy just command — v. :i 

making just report of how unnatural.... Lear, iii. 1 

and show the heavens more just — iii. 4 

that I must repent to be just! — iii. ."i 

in thy just proof, repeals — iii. u 

more just and heavj* causes make — v. 1 

the gods are just, and of our pleasant vices — v. 3 
just opposite to what thou justly .Wodim ^ Jut. iii, 2 

my mistress' case. Just her ease! — iii. 3 

^^'||/.] before, and just at this dead hour. Hamlet, i. 1 

Horatio, tlioii art e'en as just a man — iii. •_• 

violent autlmr of his own just remove — iv. r, 

whether I in any just term arn affined ..Othello, i. 1 
though they juiiip not on a just account — i.3 

'tis tfi his virtue a just equinox — ii. 3 

but in a man that's just, they are — iii. .1 

1 think that thou art just, and think ttiuu — iii. 3 
taken against nie a most just exception .. — iv. 2 

brave lago, honest, and just — v. I 

but that I did proceed upon just grounds — v. 2 

JU.'^T- BORNE— our inst-borne arms.AVni'./oAn, ii. 2 

JUSTEIUS— Marcus Justeius Antony iiClro. iii. 7 

JUSTEST— the deeds of justest men . . — ii.l 
JUSTICE— the justice of iny .. Tiro Gen. o/rer. iv. 3 

justice of peace, and coram Merry Wires, i. I 

your friend, and justice Shallow — i 1 

iie'sa justice of peace in his country — i.l 

a justice of peace sometime may — i. I 

tlioiigh we are justices, and doctors.. — il. 3 

pardon, guest justice: a word — ii. 3 

the terms for common justice Meas.fm .Mens. i. 1 

liberty plucks justice by the nose — i.l 

to unloose this tied-up justice — i. 4 

what's open made to justice (icp) — ii.l 

1 do lean uiion justice, sir — ii.l 

the wiser here? justice or iui<|uity?.. — ii. I 

snould meet the blow of justice — ii. 2 

when I show justice — ii. 2 

to the determination of jn.stice — iii. 2 

but my brother justice have I found — iii. 2 

to tell him, he is indeed, justice — iii. 2 

sith that the justice of your title — iv.l 

the stroke and line of his ^reat justice — iv. 2 

upon the very siege of justice — iv. 2 

if the duke avouch the justice of your — iv. 2 
we hear such goodness of your justice — v. 1 
justice, O royal dnke! vail your regard — v. I 
and given nie justice, justice (rc/>.) .. — v. I 
lord Angelo shall give you justice .. — v. 1 
cut off by course of jiistii'e (rep.) .... — v. I 

give me the scope of justice — v. 1 

my brother had but justice, in that.. — v. I 

if justice cannot tanie you Much itdo, \. 1 

justice always whirls in equal ..Love' si.. Lost, iv. 3 
justice! thc'law! mv ducats.. il/frcA.o//>«i'ci*, ii. S 

justicel find the girl! she hath ~ ii. 8 

the state, if they deny him justice .. — iii. 2 
of forfeiture, of justice, and his bond — iii. 2 

the duke shall grant me justice — iii. 3 

much impeach the justice of the slate — iii. 3 

for thy life let justice be accused — iv.l 

seasons justice. Therefore. Jew (rfji.) — iv.l 
in the course of tustice, none of us .. — iv. 1 
to mitigate the justice of thy plea .. _ iv.l 

urgest justice, be assured Irrp.i — iv. I 

the Jew shall have all justice; soft! — iv. I 

he shall have merely justice, and his — iv.l 
then, the justice, in fair round ..At you Like it. ii. 7 
time is the old justire that examines — iv.l 
I knew when seven justices could not — v. 4 
in the name of justice, without all .. .lift Well, ii. 3 
from the wrath of greatest justice .. — iii. 4 
let the iustii-cs make yon and fortune — v. a 
follow lihn to his country for justice — v. 3 (pet.) 

U D 



JUS 



JUSTICE— now, justice on the doers'... All' sIVell, v. 3 
and the justice of your hearts. . . . H'inlei\ Tale, ii. 1 

lest your justice prove violence — ii. 1 

I do injustice charge thee, on thy .. — ii. 3 
proceed in justice; which shall have — iii. 2 

so thou Shalt feel our justice — !!!■ "^ 

swear upon this sword of justice .... — iii. ^ 
five justices' hands at it; and witnesses — iv. 3 
justice, most sacred duke (j-ep.') . .Comedy of Err.v. 1 

no sooner justice had, with valour Macbeth, i. 2 

thjj even-handed justice commends .. — i. 7 
as justice, verity, temperance, stableness — iv. 3 
to do hira justice, and revenge on ..KingJohn, ii. 1 
for justice, and rougli chastisement. . Ilidwrd II. i. I 

we shall see justice design the — i. 1 

in the justice of his cause — i. :j 

why at our justice seera'st thou then — i. 3 

if justice had her right — ii. 1 

she will; justice hath liquored her.. 1 Henry /r, ii. 1 

this seemni" brow of justice — iv. 3 

and one of tlie king's justices •zHenrylV. iii. 2 

I will fetch off these justices — iii. 2 

this same starved justice hath — iii. 2 

bear themselves like foolish justices — v. 1 
how now, my lord chief justice? .... — v. 2 

and power of law and justice — v. 2 

to pluck down justice from your awfid — v. 2 
you are right, justice, and you weigh — v. 2 
dares do justice on my proper sou .. — v. 2 

so into tlic hands of justice — v. 2 

and woe to my lord cliief justice!.... — v. 3 
you rogue, come. Briug me to a justice — v. ■) 
my lord chief justice, sjpeak to that vain — v. 5 
the sad-eyed justice, with his surly.. ..HenryV. i. 2 
the cause injustice' equal scales.... 2 Henri/ (•'/. ii, 1 
thou hast appointed justices of peace — iv. 7 
justice with favour have I always .. — iv. 7 

as I in justice and true right — v. 2 

in justice puts his armour on 3Henry VI. ii. 2 

which we in justice cannot well deny — iii. 2 
you flglit in justice: then, in God's .. — v. 4 
"O Godl I fear thy justice will take. Richard III. ii. 1 
marry, we were sent for to the justices — ii. 3 
thus liath the course of justice wheeled — iv. 4 
God will, in justice, ward you as his — v. 3 
upon the premises, but justice .... Henry VIII. ii. 1 

you dome right and justice — ii. 4 

me up to the sharpest kind of justice — ii.4 
stuljborn to justice, apt to accuse it.. — ii.4 
if you have any justice, any pity.... — iii. 1 
sharp enough. Lord, for thy justice! — iii. 2 

and do justice for truth's sake — iii. 2 

and not ever the justice and the truth — v. 1 
in this ease of justice, my accusers . . — v. 2 
justice resides,) should lose (rep.). Troilus^ Cress. z.Z 
peace, justice, truth, domestic awe. 7Vjnono/.4/A. iv.l 
making your wills the scope of justice — v. 5 
the stream of regular justice in your — v. Ij 

and curse that justice did it Coriolanus, i. 1 

and the chairs of justice supplied with — iii. 3 
not in tlie presence of dreaded justice — iii. 3 
if lie slay me, he does fair justice .. .. — iv. 4 

.Tulius bleed for justice' sake? JuliusCwsar, iv. 3 

that did stab, and not for justice? .. — iv. 3 
to do you justice, make them ..Antony Sf Cleo. iii. 6 
not by a public minister of justice.... _ — v. 1 
justice, and your father's . . Cymbellne, iii. 2 (letter) 
or we appeal, and from thy justice fly — v. 4 

in justice (both on her, and hers) — v. 5 

defend the justice of my cause,. Titus Andronious, i. 1 
friend in justice tlion hast ever been — i. 2 
ripen justice in this common weal .. — i. 2 
eutiracuique is our Roman justice (re;).) — i. 2 

without controlment, justice, or .... — ii. 1 
there's as little justice as at land .... — iv. 3 

tell him, it is for justice — iv. 3 

marry, for Justice she is so employed — iv. 3 

sith there is no justice in earth — iv. 3 

to send down justice for to wreak — iv. 3 

shall I have justice? What says Jupiter? — iv. 3 
thou shalt have justice at his hands — iv. 3 

the extent of egal justice, used in. . . . — iv. 4 
who would say, in Rome no justice were — iv. 4 
that justice lives in Saturninus' health — iv. 4 
see justice done to Aaron, that damned — v. 3 

i' the j ustice of compare I Pericles, iv. 4 

thoulook'st modest as justice — v. 1 

undivulged crimes, unwhipped of justice. Lear, iii. 2 
[Kni.] keep thy word's justice; swear not — iii. 4 
thou robed man of justice, talte thy place — iii. 6 

life without the form of justice — iii. 7 

see how yon justice rails on yon simple — iv. 6 

handy-dandy, which is tlie justice — iv. 6 

the stron" lance of justice hurtless breaks — iv. fi 

thy arm do thee justice: here is mine — v. 3 

I bes for justice, which thou, prince. iiom.<5-yu(. iii. 1 
gilded hand may shove byjustice ....Hamlel, iii. 3 
let loose on me the justice of tlie state . . Otiiello, i. 1 
ior it, lieutenant; and I'll do you justice — ii. 3 

good, good; the justice of it pleases — iv.l 

persuade justice to break her sword! .... — v. 2 

JTJSTIOE-LIKE serving-man 2HenrylV. v. 1 

JUSTfCER— some upright iusticer ..Cymheline, v. 5 

sit thou here, most learned justicer Lear, iii. H 

false iusticer, why hast thou let her 'scape? — iii. (i 
this shows vou are above, vou justicers.. — iv. 2 

JUSTIFICATION-brother'siustific:ition — i. 2 

JUSTIFIED-how is this justified? ..AlVs Well, iv. 3 
we will be justified in our loves . . VVinter'sTale, i. 1 
here justified by lis, a pair of kings .. — v. 3 
will you be more justified? Henry VII t, ii. 4 

JUSTIFY— and justify you traitors. . . . Tempest, v. 1 
to justify this worthy nobleman. Meris. forMeas. v. 1 
troth-plight: say it, and justify it. Winter's Tale, i. 2 
I cannot justify whom the law . . . .2Henr;/ VI. ii. 3 
hear him his confessions justify.. ..HenryF///. i. 2 

more particulars must justify Cymbetine, ii. 4 

my cause wlio best can justify. .Per/c^es, i. (Gower) 
shalt kneel, and justify in knowledge — v. 1 

JUSTLE— to justle a constable Tempest, iii. 2 



[ 402 ] 

JUSTLE— justle it from what it . . Love'sL. Lost, v. 2 
justles roughly by all time of.. Troilus^ Cress, iv. 4 

JUSTIjED— been justled from your Tempest, v. I 

,JUSTLING-in such a justling time?.l Henri//;', iv. 1 

JUSTLY— be justly weighed TvclfttiNiglU, v. 1 

look you speak justly Measure/or Measure, v. 1 

and justly, as your soul should Much Ado, iv. 1 

but justly, as you have exceeded.. j4s!/om Like it, i. 2 

so noble wife, may justly diet me All's Well, v. 3 

which he justly owes him Winler'sTale,!. 1 

the madmau justly chargetli them. Comedy of Err. v. 1 
in equal balance justly weighed.... 2Henr!//r. iv. 1 

that I may justly say with — iv. 3 

and j ustly and religiously unfold Henry V.\. 2 

in cash most justly paid — ii. 1 

God justly hath discovered — ii. 2 

hatli spoken well, and justly Henry VIII. ii. 4 

no man can justly praise Tiinon of .Miens, i. 2 

as dear as yours, can justly boast of. Cymbcline, ii. 3 
by him that justly may bear his. . TitusAndron. i. 2 
Antiochus you fear, and justly too .... Pericles, i. 2 

if both were justly weighed — v. 1 

that justly think^st, and hast most Lear, i. 1 

keep thy word justly [Kn(. -word's justice] — iii. 4 

let us deal justly , — iii. 6 

to what thou justly seem'st..../?omeo,5-yu(;><, iii. 2 

come, come, deal justly with me Hamlet, ii. 2 

am justly killed with mine own treachery — v. 2 

he is justly served; it is a poison — v. 2 

so justly to your grave ears I'll present . Othello, i. 3 
did justly put on the vouch of very .... — ii. I 

that thou deal'st justly with me — iv. 2 

JUSTNESS-thejustness of each.. 2'70u«s .J- Cress, ii. 2 

,JUT— begins to jut upon the Richard III. ii. 4 

to jut [Col. A'n(.-jet] upon a prince's. 7'i/us And. ii. 1 
JUTTING-and jutting out of bums! Timon ofAih. i. 2 

JUTTY— no jutty, frieze, buttress Macbeth, i. 6 

o'er-hang and jutty his confounded. . Henry V. iii. 1 
JUVENAL— most brisky Juvenal. .M/d.iV.'sDr. iii. 1 

my tender juvenal? (rep.) Love's L. Lost, i. 2 

a p^ost acute juvenal; voluble and free — iii, 1 
the juvenal the prince your master. .2Henr!/IF. i. 2 



K.3i!— it iski, kse, kod, MerryWives,\-v. 1 

j'our kajs, and your cods — iv.l 

KA:M— this is clean kam Coriolanus, iii. 1 

KATE-none of ns cared for Kate. Tempest, ii. 2 (song) 

mistress Kate Keep-down w^s..Meas.for Meas. iii. 2 

most divine Kate ! Love'sL. Lost, iv. 3 

1 pr'ythee, sister Kate, untie.. Tamingof Shrew, ii. 1 
send my daughter Kate to you? .... — ii. 1 

good-morrow, Kate; for that's — Ii. 1 

called plain Kate, and bonny Kate (rep.) — ii. l 

alas, good Kate! I will not — ii. 1 

a herald Kate? O put me in — ii. 1 

so Kate will be my hen (rep.) — ii. 1 

[ Co/, j from a wild Kate to a Kate .... — ii. 1 

but where is Kate? (rep.) — iii. 2 

'twere well for Kate, and better .... — iii. 2 

Kate, content tliee — iii. 2 

they shall go forward, Kate, at thy . , — iii. 2 

but for my bonny Kate, she — iii. 2 

sit down, Kate, and welcome — iv, 

nay, good sweet Kate, be merry .... — iv, 

one, Kate, that you must kiss — iv, 

come, Kate, and wash, and welcome — iv 

wilt you give thanks, sweet Kate? .. — iv 

1 tell you, Kate, 'twas burnt — iv 

how fares my Kate? — iv. 3 

I am svu'e, sweet Kate, this kindness — iv. 3 

come, mistress Kate, I'll bear j'ou .. — iv. 3 

gentle heart! Kate eat apace — iv. 3 

well, come, my Kate; we will unto .. — iv. 3 

no, good Kate; neither art thou .. — iv. 3 

tell me, sweet Kate — iv. 5 

sweet Kate, embrace her for her .... — iv. 5 

why, how now, Kate! — iv. 5 

pr'j'thee, Kate, let's stand aside .... — v. 1 

first, kiss me, Kate, and we will — v. i 

come, my sweet Kate, better — v. 1 

to her, Kate! To her, widow! (rep.) .. — v. 2 

come on, and kiss me, Kate — v. 2 

come, Kate, we'll to bed — v. 2 

how now, Kate? Imust leave lllenrylV. ii. 3 

1 care not for thee, Kate — ii. 3 

what say'st thou, Kate? — ii. 3 

but hark you, Kate; I must not .... — ii. 3 

leave you, gentle Kate; I know — ii. 3 

so far will I trust thee, gentle Kate. . — ii. 3 

will this content you, Kate? — ii. 3 

come Kate, thou art perfect in — iii. i 

come Kate, I'll have your song too .. — iii. 1 

swear me, Kate, like a lady — iii. 1 

English tongue: do you iikeme, Kate?. Henj-yT. v. 2 

an angel, is like you, Kate — v. 2 

i' faith, Kate, my wooing is fit — v. 2 

or to dance for your sake, Kate — v. 2 

canst love a i\illow of this temper, Kate — v. 2 

while thou livest, dear Kate, take — v. 2 

but a good heart, Kate, is the sim .... — v. 2 

the enemy of France, Kate — v. 2 

and, Kate, when France is mine .... — v. 2 

no, Kate? I will tell thee in French. . — v. 2 

it is a.s easy for me. Kate, to conquer — v. 2 

no, 'faith, is't not, Kate — v. 2 

but, Kate, dost thou understand — v. 2 

can any of your neighbours tell, Kate? — v. 2 

and I know, Kate, you will, to her . . — v. 2 

hilt, good Kate, mock me mercifully — v. 2 

if ever thou be St mine, Kate — v. 2 

do but now promise, Kate — v. 2 

in true English, I love thee, Kate — v. 2 

but, in faith, Kate, the elder I wax.. — v. 2 

w>ell, Kate; it sliall please liim, Kate — v. 2 

then I will kiss your lips, Kate — v. 2 

O Kate, nice customs courtsey (rep.) — v. 2 

we are the makers of manners, Kate — v. 2 

you have witchcraft in your lips, Kate — v. 2 



KEE 



KATE— shall Kate he my wife? Hejiry r. V. 2 

now welcome, Kate; and bear me .. — v. 2 

then shall I swear to Kate — v. 2 

go thy ways, Kate; that man Henry VIII. ii. 4 

KATED— Petnichio is Ka.ted..TamingofSlireu; iii. 2 
KATHARINA-botli love Kutharina _ i. 1 

Katharina, you may stay — i. 1 

that ever Katharina will be wooed . . — i.2 
Katharina, fair and virtuous? {rep.S — ii. 1 
sister Katharina, and thou, Hortensio — v. 2 
here comes Katharina! what is your — v. 2 

KATHARINE, by good hap Love'sL. Lost, ii. 1 

till Katharine the curst have.. Taming of Shrew, i. 2 
undertake to woo curst Katharine .. — i.2 

but for my daughter Katharine — ii. 1 

they call me Katharine — ii. 1 

I mean, sweet Katharine, in thy bed — ii. 1 
and will have Katharine to my wife — ii. I 

how now, daughter Katharine? — ii. 1 

my Katharine shall be fine — ii. 1 

my daughter Katharine is to be ... . — ii. 1 
her sister Katharine welcomed you.. — iii. 1 
that Katharine and Petruchio should — iii. 2 
point at poor Katharine, and say .... — iii, 2 

patience, good Katharine — iii. 2 

would Katharine had never seen him — iii. 2 

if Katharine should be his wife — iii. 2 

and so it shall be so, for Katharine .. — iv. 5 
Katharine, that cap of j'ours becomes — v. 2 
Katliarine, I charge thee, tell these. . — v. 2 
with fair Katharine of France. . . .iHenrylV. (epil.) 

doth offer him Katharine HenryV. iii. (chorus) 

fair and princely cousin Katharine.. — v. 2 

yet leave our cousin Katharine — v. 2 

fair Katharine, and most fair! (rep.) — v. 2 

I said so, dear Katharine — v. 2 

la plus belle Katharine du monde . . — v. 2 
fair Katharine, will you have me? . . . — v. 2 
therefore, queen of all, Katharine. ... — v. 2 

in St. Katharine's churchyard \ Henry VI. i. 2 

between the king and Katharine ..Henry VIII. ii. 1 
Katharine queen of England (rep.).. — ii.4 

with her, Katharine our queen — ii.4 

Katharine no more shall be called queen — iii. 2 

what's become of Katharine — iv.l 

KECKSIES— thistles, kecksies, burs . . Henry V. v. 2 

KEECH— goodwife Keech 2HenryIV. ii. i 

that such a keech can with Henry VIII. i. 1 

KEEL— doth keel the pot . . Love's L. Lost, v. 2 (song) 

with keels of every kind Antony ^ Cleo. i. 4 

half the flood hath their keel cut. i'ericfcs, iii. (Gow.) 

to dog the guiltless keel Othello, ii. 1 

KEEN— let us be keen, and rather.jVeus./orjWeos. ii. 1 

the impression of keen whips — ii.4 

to this keen mockery born? Mid. N. Dream, ii. 3 

when she's angry, slie'skeen and shrewd — iii. 2 

some satire, keen, and critical — v. 1 

shall bate his scythe's keen edge-.iotjc's L. Lost, i. 1 

are as keen as is the razor's edge — v. 2 

to pieces with thy keen conceit — v. 2 

with that keen appeti te .... Merchant of Venice, ii. 6 
so keen and greedy to confound a man — iii. 2 

thou makest thy knife keen — iv.l 

thy tooth is not so keen ..AsyouLikeit, ii. 7 (song) 

that love's keen arrows make — iii. 5 

that my keen knife see not Macbeth, i. 5 

air with thy keen sword impress — v. 7 

cry thoxi, amen, to my keen curses ., King John, iii.. 1 
fits a dull fighter, and a keen guest .IHenry/K iv. 2 

to leave this keen encounter Richard III. i. 2 

witli fortune fierce and keen . . Pericles, v. 3 (Gower) 
you are keen, my lord, you are keen . . Hamlel, iii. 2 

KEEN-EDGED sword, decked \HenryVI.i. 2 

KEENNESS— half the keenness. Mer. of Venice, iv. 1 

KEEP— I pray now, keep below Tempest, i. 1 

keep J ovu- cabins — i. 1 

whom now I keep in service — i.2 

whiles you do keep from me the rest — i. 2 

keep in Tunis, and let — ii. 1 

to keep them living — ii. 1 

if of life you keep a care — ii. 1 (song) 

heavens keep him from these beasts! — ii. 1 

and keep him tame j^j-ep.) — ii. 2 

keep a good tongue in your head — iii. 2 

while tiiou livest, keep a good — iii. 2 

and keep it no longer for my flatterer — iii. 3 
thatch'd with stover, them to keep .. — iv.l 

keep tune there still Two Gen. of Verona, i. 2 

keep this remembrance — ii. 2 

if I keep them, I needs must — ii.6 

for that I'll keep shut — iii. 1 

to keep me from a most — iv. 3 

when a cur cannot keep himself — iv. 

yet I have much to do to keep them . . — v. 

1 keep but three men and Merry Wires, i. 

not I, sir; pray you, keep on .— i. 

I will keep the haviour of reputation — 1. 

for I keep his liouse — i. 

and keep place together — ii. 

I'll be sure to keep him above deck.. — ii. 
as much as I can do, to keep the terms — ii. 

or else keep it in your arms — iii. 

licep a gamester from the dice — iii. 

keep them asunder — iii, 

keep in your wea|3on — iii. 

let them keep their limbs whole — iii. 

nay, keep your way, little gallant . . — iii. 2 

keep in that mind: I'll deserve it — iii. 3 

will, at the least, keep your counsel.. — iv. 6 

I'll keep my sides to myself — v. 5 

wliich she would keep fresh TwelflhSight, i. I 

but I can keep my hand dry — i. 3 

I pray you, keep it in — i. 6 

Iceep your purse — i. 5 

what I am willing to keep in — ii. 1 

what a catterwauling do you keep up — ii. 3 

we did keep time, sir. incur — ii. 3 

she will keep no fool, sir, till she .... — iii. 1 
like a pedant that keeps a school .... — iii. 2 
that keeps you from the blow — iii. 4 



KEE 



KEEP-you keep o' the vindy fide. Tirtt/lh Night, iii. 

nrny God, lie ket'p liis otttlil — Hi. 

keep 1110 in liiirkncss — iv. 

our eoK'liMition keep iicrDKliiiK to — iv. 

and niglil ilid wc keep fonipuny — v. 

you do not keep promise Willi me.... — v. 

we intended to keep in darkness — v. 

those swearings keep ns true in soul. ■ — v. 

and witness bravery keeps Meas.Jbr Meat, i. 

and let it keep one shape — li. 

heaven keep your hononrl (rep.) — ii. 

even so? lieiiven keep your honour! — ii. 

that none liut tools would keep — iii. 

should keep the liodv of it ever fair. . — iii. 

but keeps yon from dishonour — iii. 

a furred l-owu to keep him warm — iii. 'i 

?rou will keep the house — iii. '.i 

)ut I will keep her ignorant of — iv. 3 

the matter being afoot, keep your — iv. .'j 

favours that keep within — v. 1 

keep me in patience — v. 1 

wit enough to keen liimsclf warm Much .Ulo. i. 1 

God keep yonr ladyship still in — i. I 

but keen your way o' God's name .. — i. 1 

and God keep him out of my siglit .. — ii. 1 

it keeps on the windv side or care.... — ii. 1 

he must necessarily "keep peace — ii. 3 

keep voiir fellows' counsels and your own — iii. 3 

whatpace is this that thy tongue keeps? — iii. 4 

God keep your worship — v. 1 

shall I always keep below stairs?.... — v. 2 
keep promise, love: look, here. . Mid.N.'s Dream, i. 1 

keep word, Lysander: we must — i. I 

tlic King doth keep his revels — ii. I 

some, keep back the clamorous owl.. — ii. 3 

reason and love keep little company — iii. 1 

Lysander, keep thy Ilermia — iii. 2 

Demetrius, I will keep my word — iii. 2 

did ever keep your counsels — iii. 2 

my legs can keep no pace with — iii. 2 

keep those statutes that are recorded. /.oue'sZ,. I. i. 1 

to your deep oath, and keep it too . . — i. I 

barren tasks, too hard to keep — i. I 

confident I'll keep what I have swore — i. 1 

I am the last that will last keep his oath — i. I 

I keep her as a vessel of thy — i. 1 (letter) 

thot you keen Costard safe — i. 2 

I must keep Iier at the park — i. 2 

deadly sin to keep that oath, ray lord — ii. 1 

and keep not too long in one tune . . — iii. 1 

tliat keeps here in court — iv. 1 

then thou wilt keep ray tears for — iv. 3 (verses) 

to keep down his heart — iv. 3 

entirely keep the brain — iv. 3 

■we lose ourselves to keep our oaths . . — iv. 3 

I will; and therefore keep it — v. 2 

keep some state in thy exit — v. 2 

well, keep me eorapany Merchant of Venice, i. I 

if thou keep promise, 1 shall end — ii. 3 

to keep obliged faith unforfeited! — ii. 6 

let good Antonio look he keep his day — ii. 8 

I'll Keep mv oath, patiently to bear. . — ii. 9 

good enougli to keep his name company — iii. 1 

which I did make him swear to keep — iv. 2 

that which you did swearto keep for me — v. 

and bid him keep it better than — v. 

swear to keep this ring — v. 

Jaques he keeps at school As you, Like it, i. 

he keeps me rustically at home — i. 

shall I keep your hogs, and eat husks — i. 

and so, God keep your worship! .... — i. 

nay, if I keep not my rank — i. 2 

if you do keep your promises in ... . — i. 2 

to "keep his daughter company — i. 2 

thy palm some moment keeps — iii. 5 

nav. you might keep that check for it — iv. 

my censiire, and keep your promise. . — iv. 

the house doth keep itself, there's none — iv. 

keep you your word, O dnke {rfp.) .. — v. 
and keep thy friend under thy own ..AlVs Well, i. 

ogainst nim? Keep him out — i. 

sin in the canon: keep it not — i. 

this honestly; keep it to yourself — i. 

ond to keep them on, have them still — ii. 

your own grace will keep you where — iii. 

and will keep him muffled — iv. 

till then, I'll keep him dark — iv. 

ever keeps a good tire — iv. 

on 3*our just proceeding, I'll keep off — v. 
schoolmasters will I keep within. 7'aming-o/SA. i. 

keep house, and ply his book — i. 

in my stead, keep house, and port .. — i. 

charm him first to keep his tongue .. — i. 

for in Baptista's keep my treasure .. — i. 

her father keeps from all access of . . — i. 

Greinio to keep you fair — ii. 

yes; keep you warm. .Marry, so I .. — ii. 

to keep him from stumbling, hath .. — iii. 

I am come to keep my word — iii. 

with the clamour keep her still awake — iv. 

thot I may surely keep mine oath . . — iv. 

keep your hundred pounds to yourself — v. 
force me to keep you as a prisoner. iVinter'tTate, i. 

at feasts, kce|) with Bohemia 

I'll keep my stables where I lodge .. 
creatures of prey, that keep upon't .. 
up with it; keep it close; home, home 
these keep scemiiig, and savour, all the 



— il. 



therefore I keep it lonely, apart — v. 3 

your money that I had to keep. . Comedy nf Err. i. 2 

makes you to keep unwed — ii. I 

BO he w'oiild keep fair quarter — ii. 1 

keep then fair league and truro with — ii. 2 

Dromio, keep the gate; husband — ii. 2 

Bhrewisb, when I keep not hours .... — iii. 1 

Tou wouNl keep from mv heels — iii. 1 

that keeps all this noise? — Iii. 1 

that Adam, that keeps the — iv. J 

£0, keep us company, and we — v. I 



_ iii. 1 
1 
I 
1 



[ J03 ] 

KEEP-nor keep peace between the effect. WaciicM,! 

hut still keep mv hosnm franehised.... — il 

shall keep lis boih the safer _ ii, 

we will keeiioin-M-lf till Mipper-timc.. — iii. 

bi^ son, tliul keeps liiiu coniimiiy — iii. 

wli.\' do you keeii ulone — iii. 

that gieiit bond which keeps me palel — iii. 

our hostess keeps her state — iii. 

pniv you, keep seat; the fit is — iii. 

and keep ttie natural ruby of your — iii. 

in his house 1 keep a servant fee'd .... — iii. 

if it be mine, keep it not from me — iv. 

and still keeii ej'es upon her — v. 

that keep her from her rest — v. 

tvraiit keeps still in Dunsinanc — v. 

t1iat keep the word of promise — v. 

nor keeii his princely heart from KingJohn, \. 

unless thou let his silver water keep — ii. 

so piieinptoi\ , as we to keep this city — ii. 

keep Stephen Langton, chosen 

and faith mounts up: keep my need up — 

than keep in peace that hand — in. 

to keep what thou dost swear — iii. 

Hubert, keep this boy; Philip — iii. 

and I'll keep him so. that he — iii. 

I will not keep this form — iii. 

so I may keep mine eyes — i v. 

my soul, and England keep my bones! — iv. 

keep the peace, I say — iv. 

now keep your holy word — v. 

and keep it safe for our remembrance — v. 

and keep our faiths firm — v. 

well; keep good quarter, and good care — y. 
to keep the oath tliat we administer. /^iWmrti //. i. 

and I, to keep all this. Norfolk — i. 

what stir keeps good old York there — ii. 

hath power to keep you king — iii. 

of a king, keeps death his court — iii. 

my legs can keep no measure — iii. 

of a pale, keep law, and form, and due — iii. 

that I niav longest keep thy sorrow — iii. 

to keep him sately till his day — iv. 

did keep ten thoiisiiiul men? — iv. 

will keep a league till death — v. 

to take on me to keep, and kill — v. 

we'll keep him here; then what — v. 

ha, ha! keep time; how sour sweet.. — v. 

to his own use he keens 1 llemyll'. i. 

I'll keep them all by heaven — i 

I'll keep them, by tills hand — i. 

those prisoners you shall keep — i. 

to keep his anger still in motion — i. 

what a brawling dost thou keep? ... . — ii. 

him keep with, the rest banish — )i. 

what there is else, keep close — i i . 

thus did I keep my person fresh .... — iii. 

do you think I keep thieves in my .. — iii. 

tell me, doth he keep his bed? — iv. 

must keep aloof from strict arbitremcnt — iv. 

should keep his word in loving us .. — v. 

God keep lend out of me! — v. 

two stars keep not their motion in .. — v. 

all this flesh keep in a little life? .... — v. 

who keeps the gate here, ho! iUeinyli: i. 

let not nature's hand keep the — i. 

he may keep it still as a face-royal.. — i. 

since all is well, keep it so — _i. 

keep them off, Bardolph — ii. 

what's the matter? keep the peace . . — ii. 

in the world keeps the road- way ... . — ii. 

God keep you. master Silence — iii. 

and keep no tell-tale to his memory — iv. 

from enemies heaven keep your .... — iv. 

let God for ever keep it from my — iv. 

to keep prince Harry in continual . . — v. 

the heavens thee guard and keep — — v. 
could not keep quiet in his conscience.. Hfni;/''. i. 

doth keep in one concent — i. 

I will l<eep my state; be like a king — i. 

nor shall my Nell keep lodgers — ii. 

will be thought we keep a bawdy-house — ii. 

we keep knives to cut one another's — ii. 

let housewifery appear, keep close . . — ii. 

breaks words, and keeps whole weapons — iii. 

but keeps the pridge most valiantly — iii. 

he will keep that good name still — iii. 

keep thy word: fare thee well — iv. 

what watch the king keeps to maintain — iv. 

yet keep the French the lield — iv. 

my soul shall thine keep company . . — iv. 

God keep me so! our heralds — iv. 

is it fit this soldier keep his oath? . . — iv. 

that he keep his vow and his oath . . — iv. 

then keep thy vow, sirroh, when — iv. 

blunt bearing, he will keep his word — iv. 

keep it, fellow; and wear it for — iv. 

and keep you out of prawls — iv. 

God be wi' you, and keep you — v. 

never changes, but keeps his eoiuse truly — v. 

keep it from civil broils! I Henry ft. 1. 

to keep the horsemen off from — i. 

to keep our great St George's fea-st . . — i. 

harillv keeps his men from — i. 

since ^le keeps no mean — _i. 

and keep me on the side where — ii. 

but keep my wonted calling? — iii. 

08 an outlaw in a castle keeps — iii. 

Bloughtering hands, and keep the peace — iii. 

peasant footboys do they keep the walls — iii. 
neavens keep old Bedford safe! 
keep off aloof with worthless .... 

discord keep away the levied — iv 

to keeji them here, they would but . . — iv 

and keen not back your powers — v 

thou didst keep my lambs — v 

I'll rather keep that which I have .. — v 

and keep the Frenchmen in — v 

to keep liy policy what Henry got7..iItriiryl'I. i 

and we will keep it still (rpp.) — i 

I'll keep my dreoms unto myself — i 



KEE 



1-. -1 



KEEP— Somerset will keei) me here . .'iUenry y 1. 1. 3 

you will not keep your hour — II. 1 

wliate'er occasion Keeps him from .. — 111. I 

to keep, until your further time of trial — ill. I 

thot care to keep your royal person — ill. 1 

fear keep with the ineaii-horn inun.. — iii. 1 

forsooth, had tlie good duke to keep — Iii. 2 

be plav-lillows to keep you eomjianyl — iii. 2 

to keep u sinliil oath — V. 1 

tokeeji thee fVoiii the teiiipcstof.... — v. I 

that keeps liis leaves ill s|.ite — v. 1 

and I'll keep I...111I011 with my SHenryri. 1. 1 

keep thou the napkin, and go boost.. — _i. 4 

a thousand-fold more care to keep .. — ii. 2 

how true he keeps the wind! — iii. 2 

chide the iiieauH that keep me — iii. 2 

yet will I keep thee safe — iv. 1 

[Co;.] keeps in the cold field — iv. 3 

to keep them back that come to .... — iv. T 

to keep that oath, were more — v. I 

bones may keep thine company — v. 2 

ond with thv lips keep in mv soul .. — v. 2 

our fortune Keeps an upward course — v. 3 

but keep our course, though tlie .... — v. 4 

if we will keep in favour with Richiad 111. i. 1 

but I will not keep her long — i. 2 

Olet them keep it, till thy sins — i. 3 

it beggars any man that keeps it — i. 4 

unto your grace the seol I keep — ii. 4 

keep you from them, and such (rep.') — iii. I 

God keep your lordship in that .... — iii. 2 

now, I tell thee, (keep it to thyself) — iii.! 

God keep rCo/.-bless] the prince from all — iii. 3 

the earl of^Pembrokc keeps his regiment — v. 3 

devised at first to keep tlie strong . . — v. 3 

and keep it from the earth Henry I'll I. i. 1 

or Clotharius, they keep state so .... — i. 2 

you are one will keep them waking — i. 4 

good angels keep it from us! — ii. I 

heaven keep me from such counsel! — ii. 2 

pray you, keep your way — ii. 4 

to keep your earthly audit — iii. 2 

to keep mine honour from corruption — iv. 2 

keep comfort to j'ou; and this morning — v. 1 

keep the door close, sirrah — v. 3 

that keeps Troy on foot Troilus^Cretsida, i. 3 

keeps his tent like him — i. 3 

I will keep where there is wit — ii. i 

why keep we her? the Grecians keep — ii. 2 

stolen what we do fear to keep? — ii. 2 

in resolution to keeji Helen still .... — ii. 2 

the hart Achilles keeps thicket — ii. 3 

to keep her constancy in plight — iii. 2 

dear my lord, keens honour bright . . — iii. 3 

keep then tlie path; for emulation .. — iii. 3 

keeps place with thought — iii. 3 

and 3'ou as well to keep her — iv. I 

place of the field doth Calchas keep? — iv. a 

who keeps the tent now? The surgeon's — v. 1 

and gaining rae to keep an oath that — v. I 

keei) Pleetor company an hour or two ^ ■\". 1 

to Calchas' tent; I'll keep you company — v. I 

of the moon, when Dionied keeps his " — v. I 

they say, he keeps a Trojan drab.. .. — v. 1 

here, Dionied, keep this sleeve — v. 2 

yet it is not; I will not keep my word — v. 2 

mine honour keeps the weather — v. 3 

but keep yourselves in breath — v. 7 

shall we in ? I'll keep you company. Timon qfAth. i.l 

he keeps his tides well — i. 2 

that keep their sounds to themselves — i. 2 

fortunes, keep with you, lord Timon! — i. 2 

good my lords, keep on; I'll wait .. — ii. 2 

if he would not keep so good a house — iii. I 

who cannot keep his wealth, must keep — iii. 3 

and keeps his chamber. JIaiiy do keep — iii. 4 

now the gods keep you old enough .. — iii. 5 

keep't, I cannot eat it — iv. 3 

because thou dost not keep a dog — iv. 3 

thou hadst some means to keep a dog — iv. 3 

feed him, keep in your bosora — v. 1 

yet an arch villain keeps him company — v. I 

descend, and keep your words — v. 5 

under the gods, keep yon in awe .... Coriolanut, i. 1 

to keep your great pretences veiled . . — i. 2 

and keep your honours safe! — i. 2 

keep your duties, as I have set — 1.7 

the field, we cannot keep the town .. — i. 7 

nay, keep your place — ii. 2 

their faces", and keep their teeth clean — ii. 3 

I'll keep you company — ii. 3 

to keep linn here, our certain death.. — iii. 1 

honoured gods keep Rome in safety — Iii. 3 

note of us: keep on your way — iv. 2 

now the gods keep you .....". — iv. 6 

speak, I'll keep at home — v. 1 

you keep a constant temper — v. 2 

to keep your name living to time .... — v. 3 
keep us'all in servile fearfnlness ..Jul\tuCtr$ar, i. 1 

to keep his state in Itonie, as easily . . — i. 2 

that noble minds keep ever with .... — i. 2 

to keep with you at meals — ii. 1 

call it my fear, that keeps you — ii. 2 

hard it is for women to keep counsel! — ii. 4 

constant do remain to keep him so .. — iij. | 

but keep the hills and npiier regions — v. 1 

the right hand I. keep thou the left.. — v. 1 

come now, keep thine oath! — v. 3 

therefore, dear Isis, keep decorum. /ln(ony ^cleo. i. 2 

not soy, 'tis 1 thot keep you here .... — i. 3 

to sit and keep the turn of tippling .. — i. 4 

keep his brain fuming — ij. 1 

thy spirit which keeps thee, is noble — ii. 3 

powl madam, keep yourself within .. — ii. 5 

keep otV them, for you sink — ii. 7 

to keep it buildcd, he the rom iii. 2 

so, tlie gods keep you, and make .... — ' iii. 2 

von keep bv land the h--'ions — ii'.. 7 

hut we keep wbide by land _ iii. 7 

strike not by land, keep whole -- iii.* 



KEE 

KEEP— cannot keep the battery.^»/ojii/^aeo. iv. 12 
to keep (leconim, must no less beg . . — v. 2 

but keep it tiil you woo anotlier Cymhelinf, i. 2 

wliile sense can keep it on — j. 2 

he did keei) the deek, with glove .... — i. ■! 
which, l)y their graces, I will keep . . — i. S 
I will keep them in my bccl-chnniher — i. 7 
is she ready? Ay, to keep her chamber — ii. 3 
good sir, we must, if you keep cuvemint — ii. 1 
married to thnt your diamond; I'll keep — ii. i 

nay, keep the ring— 'tis true — ii. 4 

behoves ine keep at utterance — ii;- 1 

a goodly da\- not to keep house — iii. 3 

may jet tliriiutrli and keep tlieir impious — iii. 3 

yetkeeps his hook uncrossed — !!.'• ^ 

as hard to leave, as keep — iii. 3 

need'st but keep tliat countenance still — iii. 4 

yea, bloodv cloth, I'll keep thee — v. 1 

breath; which neither here I'll keep — v. 3 
wliicli I'll keep, if but for sympathy — v. 4 
keen tiien tliis passage to the Cap\tol.TilusAnil. i. 1 
with ray sword I'll keep this door safe — i.2 
these lovers will not keep the peace.. — ii. 1 
O, keep me from their worse tlian . . — .!'■'' 
keep eternal spring-time on thy face — iii. 1 
wh.at a c.atterwauling dost tlioukeep? — iv. 2 

I am of age to keep mine own — iv. 2 

will I keep safe, or some of you — iv. 2 

keep there: now talk at pleasure .... — iv. 2 

two may keep counsel when — iv. 2 

and keeps the oatli, which by that god — v. 1 

where, they say, he keeps — v. 2 

to keei) liei- still, and men in awe. Pericles, i. (Gow.") 

he's more secure to keep it shut — i. 1 

no course to keep them from tlie liglit — i. 1 

life be ei-opped to keep you clear — i. 1 

by his fall my Iionour must keep high — i. 1 
and keep your mind, till you return .. — i.2 

to killen bad, keep good alive — ii. (Gower) 

come, put it on, keep thee warm .... — ii. 1 
keep it, m3' Pericles, it hath been.... — ii. 1 

for that it saved me, keep it — ii. 1 

why do you keep [Co/.-weep] alone? — iv. 1 
not amiss to keep our door hatched .. — iv. 3 
tmtied I still my virgin knot will keep — iv. 3 
virtues, which I'll keep from boast . . — iv. 6 
god Neptune's annual feast to keep — v. (Gower) 

keeps our fortunes from us Lear, i. 2 (.letter) 

I can keep honest counsel — i. 4 

I'd keep my coxcombs myself — i. 4 

keep in-a-door, and thou Shalt have .... — i. 4 
pr'ytliee, nnncle, keep a schoolmaster .. — i. 4 

he that keeps nor crust nor crum — i. 4 

here do you keep a hundred kniglits .... — 1.4 
let him keep at point, a hundred knights — i. 4 

why, to keep his eyes on either side — i. !> 

keep me in temper; I would not be mad! — i. 5 

keep peace, upon your lives — ii. 2 

to keep base life afoot — ii. 4 

which scarcely keeps thee warm — .]}• ^ 

keep tlieir fur dry, unbonneted — iii. 1 

and make them keep their caves — iii. 2 

that keep tliis dreadful pother o'er — iii. 2 

keep thy foot out of brothels — iii. 4 

fellow, there, to tlie hovel; keep thee warm— iii. 4 
I will keep still with my philosopher .... — iii. 4 
Edmund, keep yon our sister company.. — iii. 7 

keep out, che vor j'e, or ise try — iv. 6 

I do but keep the peace Komeo if Juliet, i. 1 

for men so old as we to keep the peace — i.2 
care keeps his watch in every old.... — ii. 3 
keeps time, distance, and proportion — ii. 4 
she bade me say I will keep to myself — ii. 4 
two may keep counsel, pxxtting one .. — ii. 4 
staying for thine to keep him company — iii. 1 
did ever dragon keep so fair a cave? .. — iii. 2 
give thee armour to keep off that word — iii. 3 

we'll keep no great ado — iii. 4 

I hope, thou wilt not keep him long — iii. 5 
he shall soon keep Tybalt company — iii. 5 

and keep this holy kiss — iv. 1 

for no pulse shall keep his natural .. — iv. 1 
you could not keep from death (?fp.) — iv. 5 
knep her at mv cell till Romeo come — V. 2 
ICoi. Kiil.1 that I for thee will keep .. — v. 3 
monster keens thee here in dark .... — v. 3 
meaning to keep her closely at my cell — v. 3 
keep you in the rear of your affection ,,Hamletji. 3 
lesson keep as watcliman to my heart — i. 3 
and you yourself shall keep the key of it — i. 3 
keeps wassail, and the swaggering .. — i. 4 
and wliere they keep, what company — ii. 1 

but keep a farm, and carters — ii. 2 

tbeir endeavour keeps in the wonted — ii. 2 
with a crafty madness, keeps aloof .. — iii. 1 

the rest shftil keep as they are — iii. 1 

the plavers cannot keep counsel .... — iii. 2 

O, hut she'll keep her word — iii. 2 

to keep those many many bodies safe — iii. 3 

to keep itself from 'noyance — ;'!• •* 

doth temperatclv keeji time — iii. 4 

to keep it from divulging, let it feed — iv. 1 

that I can keep your counsel — iv. 2 

he keeps them, like an ape — iv. 2 

his wonder, keeps himself in clouds.. — iv. .'> 

I thank you : keep the door — iv. .'i 

would you do this, keep close within — iv. 7 
he will keep out water a great while — v. 1 
stop a hole to keep the wmd away .. — v. 1 

to keep my name ungored — v. 2 

keep yet their hearts attending on Othello, i. I 

keep up your bright swords, for the dew — i.2 

a pageant, to keep us in false gaze — i. 3 

with all mv heart I would keep from thee — i. 3 

pr'ythee, keep up thy quillets — iii. 1 

on nourishing dishes, or keep yon warm — }}!• ^ 
apjirehensions keep leets, and law-days.. — jij" -^ 
not to leave imdone, but keep unknown — iii. 3 
than keep a corner in the thing I love . . — iii. 3 
be conjured lier she should ever keep it. . — iii. 3 



[ 404 ] 



KEEP— rKii(.] ne'er keeps retiring ebb. . OthMo, iii. 3 
but keeps due on to the Propontick .... — iii. 3 
keep that monster from Othello's mind! — iii. 4 

what, keep a week away? — iii. 4 

not amiss; but yet keep time in all — iv. 1 

or keep it as a cistern, for foul toads .... — iv, 2 

and keep the gate of hell — i v. 2 

turn the key, and keep our counsel — iv. 2 

who keeps her comiianj'? — iv. 2 

Gratiano, keep the house, and seize upon — v. 2 
KEEP-DOWN— Kate Keep-down. jWeas.ftr^l/ras-.iii. 2 

KEEPER— give us kind keepers Tempest, iii. 3 

not kissed your keeper's daughter? . . Merry H'. i. 1 

a keeper here in "Windsor forest — iv. 4 

don Armado shall be your keeper . . Lovers L. L. i. I 

the ape his keeper, the tired horse — iv. 2 

and know her keeper's call Taming ofSh. iv. 1 

thy keeper, thy head, thy sovereign . . — y. 2 

tlxe keeper of the prison Winter's Tale, i i . 2 

thou art his keeper KingJolm, iii. 3 

a parasite, a keeper back of death . . liiclimd II. ii. 2 

iire out of his keeper's arms iHenryiy. i. 1 

the tennis-court keeper knows — ii. 2 

keepers of my weak decaying \ Henry f^I. ii. 5 

but tell me, keeper, will my — ii. 5 

keepers, convey him hence — i i . 6 

then in London, keeper of the king..3Hfniy J'/._ii. 1 

whose skin's a keeper's fee — iii. 1 

I pray thee, gentle keeper, stay Itichard 111. i. 4 

where art thou, keeper? — i. 4 

a keeper with my freedom.. Timono/Ath. i. 2 (grace) 
when gouty keepers of thee cannot . . — iv. 3 

as thieves to keepers — y. 2 

cleanly by the keeper's nose? Titus An'Jron. ii. 1 

their keepers call a lightning ..Romeo 4-Juttel, v. 3 

KEEPETII [Co;.-keeps] in the SHeunjn. iv. 3 

KEEPING company with moon-like. Love's L.L. iv. 3 
or keeping what is sworn, you will .. — iv. 3 

keeping safe Nerissa's ring Mer. of Venice, y. 1 

keeping for a gentleman As you IJlie it, i. 1 

for keeping his sword clean Alt'slVcll, iv. 3 

he professes not keeping of oaths — iv. 3 

is in the keeping of Paulina Winter's Tale, v. 2 

damned for keeping thy word \ Henry IK i. 2 

and keeping such vile company . . . .iHenrylV. ii. 2 

I'll forswear keeping house — ii. 4 

keening them prisoners underneath. I Henry VI. v. 3 

for keeping my house, and lands illenry VI. i. 3 

take order for her keeping close . . Richard III. iv. 2 

is she worth keeping? Troilus if Cress, ji. 2 

in honour.able keeping her — ii.2 

fortune fiill into my keeping . . Timon of Alliens, i. 1 
for keeping your greatness back? . . Coriolanus, v. 2 

in the keeping of wise people Antony % Cleo. v. 1 

to excuse her keeping close Cynibeline, iii. 5 

KEEP'ST— where thou keep'st..Jl/ras./orWTOs. iii. 1 
whom thou keep'st command. raniing-o/S/ii'CW, ii. 1 
keep'st me out from the house. . Comedy of Err. iii. 1 
so doth the company thou keep'st..! Henri/ IV. ii. 4 

when thou keep St not racket 2UenryI V.ii. 2 

that keep'st the ports of slumber .... — iv. 4 

thou keep'st me from the light ZHenry VI. v. 6 

thou keep'st the stroke betwixt . . Richard III. iv. 2 
poor house, that keep'st thyself ! . . Cymbeline, iii. 6 

keep'st froih me all conveniency Othello, iv. 2 

KEIS AR— Keisar, and Pheezar Merry Wives, i. 3 

KEN-I ken the wight — . i. 3 

within a ken, our army lies iHenrylV. iv. I 

and far as I could ken thy chalky.. 2 Henry;-'/, iii. 2 

for losing ken of Albion's wished — iii. 2 

'tis he, I ken the manxiei ... .Troilus SrCressida, iv. 5 

thou wast within a ken Cymbeline, iii. (i 

KENDAL— in Kendal green (rep.) ..MtenrylV. ii. 4 
KENELWORTH [Kn^.-KILLINGWORTH]- 
retire to Kenel worth, until a power.2 Henry VI. iv. 4 
therefore away with us to Kenehvorth — iv. 4 

KENNEL— go to kennel Meas.for Meas. iii. 2 

hop me over every kennel \\ou\e.Tamrng of Sh. iv. 3 

yelping kennel of French eurs! \ Henry VI. iv. 2 

ay, kennel, puddle, sink 2HenryVI. iv. I 

forth the kennel of thy womb Richard III. iv. 4 

truth's a dog that mxist to kennel Lear, i. 4 

KENT— and ranked in Kent King John, iv. 2 

all Kent hath yielded — v. 1 

Spencer, Blunt, and Kent Richard II. v. 6 

franklin in the wild of Kent IHenrylV.i'u 1 

the commons here in Kent iHenry VI. iv. 1 

the til th and scum of Kent — iv. 2 

you men of Kent (rep.) — iv. 7 

Kent in the Commentaries — iv. 7 

Kent to maintain, the king — iv. 7 

Alexander Iden, an esquire of Kent — iv. 10 
tell If cut from me she hath lost .... — iv. 10 
a poor esquire of Kent, that loves.... — v. 1 

Norfolk, Suffolk, nor of Kent ZHenry VI. i. 1 

in Suffolk, Norfolk, and in Kent .... — iv. 8 
in Kent, my liege, the Guilfords. . Richard III. iv. 4 

my lord of Kent: remember him Lear, i. 1 

peace, Kent! come not between — i. 1 

be Kent inimannerly, when Lear is mad — i. 1 

Kent, on thy life, no more — i. 1 

thus Kent, O princes, bids you all adieu — i. I 

Kent biinished thus! — i.2 

noble and true-hearted Kent banished!.. — i.2 
now, banished Kent, if thou canst serve — i. 4 
ah, that good Kent! he said it would..., — iii. 4 
sisters! Kent! father! sisters! what?.... — iv. 3 

O thou good Kent, how shall I live — iv. 7 

is with tlie earl of Kent in Germany .... — iv. 7 

Kent, sir, the banished Kent — v. 3 

here comes Kent, sir. O it is he — v. 3 

seest thou this object, Kent? — v. 3 

'tis noble Kent, your friend — v. 3 

are von not Kent? The same (rep.) — v. 3 

KENTlSH-these Kentish rebels (rep.) 2Henry VI. iv. 4 

KENl'lSHMAN, John Cade — iii. 1 

KENTISHMEN will willingly rlse..3Henry VI. i. 3 

KEPT — kept with thy remembrance.... tempest, i. 2 

'bove tire contentious waves he kept .. — ii. I 

or night kept chained below — iv. 1 



KEY 



KEPT— fire that is closest kept. . Tuo Gen.ofVer. i. 

myself have ever kept — iii. 

and kept severely from — iii. 

and keys kept safe — iii. 

illumined, cherished, kept alive .... — ill. 

that I have kept withal — v. 

he kept not time Merry Wives, i . 3 

he kept comiiany with the wild — iii. 2 

yes, being kept together Twelfth Night, iii. 

kept in a dark house — v. 

unless they kept very good diet. A/eas. /or Meas. ii. 
I have kept it myself and see how .. — iii. 

let her awhile be secretly kept in MuchAdo, \\. 

cur, that ever kept with men . . Mer. of Venice, iii. 
have been rcspectivcj and have kept it — v. 
no face be kept in mmd.^s you Lilte it, iii. 2 (versei 

we kept time, we lost not — v. 

by being ever kept, it is ever lost .. ..AlVsWell, i. 

the longer kept, the less worth — i. 

the wars have so kept you under — i. 

commanded here, and kept a coil with — ii. 
I have kept of them tame, and know — ii. 5 
may be kept on either hand. . Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 
with oaths kept waking, and with .. — iv. 3 
the saddler had it, sir, I kept it. .Comedy of Err. i. 2 j 

nothing like so clean kept — iii. 2 ] 

not that Adam, that kept the paradise — iv. 3 j 
father might have kept this_ calf .... King John, 

in France shall be kept festival — ii 

that doth make vows kept — ii 

shall our feast be kept with — ii 

out of prison, and kept sheep, I should — ii 

grief hath kept a tedious fast Richard II. j 

and hardly kept our countrymen.. .. — i 
but stately pace, kept on his course — i 

is broke, an<l no proportion kept! — v. 5 

mad-capduke his uncle kept \HenryIV. i. 3 

had still kept loyal to possession — iii. 2 

if promises be kept on every hand .. — iii. 2 
proceedings, kept the earl from hence — iv. 

could be kept from cankers! illenrylV. ii. 

a mere hoard of gold kept by a devil — iv. 
won it, wore it, kept it, gave it me .. — iv. 

those that kept me company — v. 

ever kept together, as two Henry V.ii. 

and laws of the wars is not kept — iv. 

maids, well-summered, and warm kept — v. 
our oaths well kept and [prosperous be! — v. 
your quarters been as safel.y kept . . 1 Henry VI. ii. 
Frenchmen might be kept m awe? ..^HenryVl. i. 
and would have kept, so long as breath — i. 
clapped up close, and kept asunder . . — i. 

who kept him in captivity — ii. 

I would have kept my word — iii. 

he might have kept that glory SHenryVl. ii. 

hadst kept thy chair in peace — ii. 

and kept low shrubs from winter's.. — v. 

he hath kept an evil diet long Richard III. i. 

envious flood kept [Col. Kn(. -stopped] — i. 
a holiday shall this be kept hereafter — ii. 

preserved, cherished, and kept — ii.2 

that might have kept that title — iii. 1 

[Col. Knt.'] there are two councils kept — iii. 2 

long kept in Brctagne at our — v. 3 

kept him a foreign man still Henry Vtll. ii.2 

1 have kept you next my heart — iii. 2 

as if we kept a fair here — y. 3 

ever since kept Hector fasting .. Troilus if Cress, i. 2 
shouldst have kept one to thyself .7'<7no?i of Alh.i. I 
and kept his credit with his purse .. — iii. 2 
I have kept back their foes, while . . — iii. 5 

all that I Kept were knaves — iy. 3 

barking, as therefore kept to do so. . Coriolanus, ii. 3 
to the tune of flutes kept stroke. . AntonySf Cleo. ii. i 

I have not kept my square — ii. 3 

I have kept me from the cup — ii. 7 

he, at Philippi, kept his sword even — iii. 9 
which kept their course, and lighted — v. 2 
what have I kept back? Enough to — v. 2 

I have kept apart for Livia — v. 2 

it shall safe be kept, and truly Cymbeline, i. 7 

have I kept it to a worthy end . . Titus Andron. iii. 1 
I would have kept such a jangling of. . Pericles, ii. 1 

it kept where I kept, I so dearly — ii. 1 

kept without my food, whipped. .i?omeo 4' Juliet, i. 2 

the third night, kept the watch Hamlet, i. 2 

being kept close might move more — ii. I 

whose providence should have kept short — iv. I 
that earth, which kept the world in awe — v. I 
she told her, while she kept it Othello, iii. 4 

KEPT'ST— thou kept'st a wife herself. ^H's^TeH, v. 3 
KERCHIEF— a plain kerchief .... Merry Wives, iii. 3 

a hat, a muffler, and a kerchief — iv. 2 

brave Cains, to wear a kerchief? . . JuliusCiPsar, ii. 1 

KERNE— of kernes and Gallowglasses..il/acte'A, j. 2 

compelled these skipping kernes to trust — 1. 2 

I cannot strike at wretched kernes — v. 7 

those rough rug-headed kernes Richard II. ii. 1 

you rode, like a kerne of Ireland .... Henry V. iii. 7 
the uncivil kernes of Ireland are in.2HenryVI. iii. I 
himself against a troop of kernes.... — iii. I 

like a shag-haired crafty kerne — iii. 1 

of Gallowglasses, and stout kernes .. — iv. 9 
KERNEL— sowing the kernels of it.... Tempesf, ii. 1 

a kernel out of a pomegranate AU'sWell,'n. 3 

there can be no kernel in this — ii. a 

and sweeter than the kernels.. Taming o/SArew, ii. 1 

I then was to this kernel Winler'sTale, i. 2 

0. fustv nut with no kernel ..Troilus ^Cressida, ii. \ 

KERSEY— of an English kersey ..Meas.forMeas.i. 2 

russet yeas, and honest kersey noeB../.rt'('.sL.X.. y. 2 

a kerse V boot-hose on the other.. Taming ofSh. iii. 2 

KETLEV— sir Richard Ketley Henry V. iv. 8 

KETTLE— let the kettle to the trumpet. Hainief, v. 2 
KETTLE-DRUM and trumpet thus bray — i. 4 

KEY— having both the key of Tempest, i. 2 

the key Avhereof m.yself ....TwoGen.of Verona, i\i. 1 

and keys kept safe — iii. I 

as the key of the enckoldy rogue's. A/err^ Wives, ii. 2 
here, Iiere, here be my keys — iii. 3 



KEY 

KET-turn yon tlio key. and knovr.Meds.for Meat. i. & 
his opening with this bigger key .... — iv. I 

give up vonr i^ovs — V.I 

eoiiR., in" wliiit U'ev slinll ii inim MucliAdo,i. 1 

tlK'V snv hi' weara ii kev in liis ear . . - V. 1 
l)ut' t will woil tlu'O ill iiiu.tlier key. .Mid. N.Dr. i. 1 

oiiesc.n-, lioth irn.ne licy — iii. 2 

tukf this kiv, uivi' enitti'gement. /.ouc't /.. Lost, iii. I 

iiiulin II iM.irainim's key .Mer.o/renlce, i. 3 

tlu're nre my keys:— tint wliereforc .. — ii. 5 

il.liver me tile key; liere do I — ii. 7 

eive me u key for tl\is,aiid instantly — ii. 9 

nii.h-r Ihv own life's key AlVaWclt, i. 1 

to e.m-.niiuid llie kevsofiill irinler'sTale, i. 2 

I would have tiled keys oft", tlmt hung — iv. 3 

five licr this key. mui tell her. . Comedly (]f Err. iv. 1 
nows not my feeble key ot' — v. 1 

he should have old tuiiiin;,' the key ..Macbeth, ii. 3 

Duncan's sous under his key — iii. 

leave tliat I may turn the key Richard Il.v.^i 

and bunches of Keys at tlieir girdles. '^He/iri//;'. i. 2 
did'st bear tl>c key of all my counsels. Heriryr. ii. 2 

done so, bring the keys to me 1 liennj I'l. ii. 3 

were the keys of Normandy iHcnnjVl. i. I 

but yield me up the keys iUenryl'I. iv. 7 

here arc the keys; there sits Richard III. i. 4 

an accent tuned in self-same key.Troilus^Crrss. i.3 
tlic keys that lock up your restraint. CymdedVie, 1. 2 
wlio is the key to >mbar these locks , . — v. 4 

there's my key: if you do stir abroad Lear,\.i 

ne'er turns the key to the poor — ii. 1 

said, good porter turn the key — iii. 7 

hold, take these keys Rmnco Sf Juliet, iv. 4 

vou yourself shall keep the key of it — Hamlel, i. .■) 

lock and key of villanous secrets Othello, iv. 2 

I pray vou, turn the key, and keep our. . — iv. 2 
K K Y-C(ihD— poor kev-cold figure . . Richard III. i. 2 
KEY-HOI,E— out at the key-hole. .-Is i/ok Like it, iv. I 
KI— it is ki, ka;, kod: if you forget. ;Vf?7!/ Il'ivcs, iv. 1 
KIBE— if it were a kibe, 'twould put . . Tempest, ii. 1 

why then, let kibes ensue .Merry ll'ires, i. 3 

were't not in danger of kibes? Lear, i. 5 

of the courtier, he galls his kibe llamlel, v. 1 

KICK— she feels her young one kick ..AlVslVcll, v. 3 
I should kick, being kicked.. Com»-dy(i//Jr)o)s,iii. 1 

that his heels may kick at heaven Hamlet, iii. 3 

KICKED— kick, being kicked. Comedi/ o/ Errors, iii. 1 

oin- spoils he kicked at Coriolanus, ii. 2 

she kicked the poor king her father Lear, iii. 6 

KICK-SHAW— these kiek-shaws.. 7'ir,(//AMff/i<, i. 3 

pretty little tiny kick-shaws 'iUenrylV. v. 1 

KICKSY-WICKSY [Coi.-kicky-wicky 

A'n'.-kickie-wickiej here at AlVsWell, ii. 3 

KID- FOX— we'll Ht the kid-fox Much Ado, ii. 3 

KIDNEY- a man of my kidney ..Merry Wives, iii. 5 
KIES— if you forget your kies, your kaes — iv. 1 
K ri.DARE-Kildare's nttai ndcr. . . . Henry VIII. ii. 1 
Iv ILL— monster, I will kill this man . . Tempest, iii. 2 

kill the still-closing waters — iii. 3 

you might kill your stomach . . TuoGen. ofl'er. i. 2 

and kill the l)ees. that yield it — i. 2 

will kill that grief — iii. 2 

I vill kill de Jack Priest Mcrni Wives, i. 4 

he knew your worship would kill hira — ii. 3 
herring is no dead, so as I vill kill him — ii. 3 
I vill tell you how I vill kill him.... — ii. 3 

by gar, me vill kill de priest — ii. 3 

have I not stay for him, to kill him? — iii. I 

that is, kill him whom you Twelfth Night, ii. 1 

if it be thy chance to kill me — iii. 4 (challenge) 

that they will kill one another — iii. 4 

and fear to kill a woodcock — iv. 2 

at point of death, kill what I love .. — y. I 
we kill the fowl of season. . Measure for Measure, ii. 2 

kills for faults of his OHTi liking — iii. 2 

to undo Hero, and kill I^onato Much Ado, ii. 2 

fome Cupid kills with arrows — iii. 1 

killClaudio — iv. 1 

you kill me to deny it — iv. 1 

vou go on thus, you will kill yourself — v. I 
thou -shalt kill a man. He shall kill two — v. 1 

let him kill one first — v. 1 

hast mettle enough in thee to kill care — v. 1 

and let this count kill me — v. 1 

a lover, that kills himself most. jViV/. A'. 's Dream,i.2 
some, to kill cankers in the musk-rose — ii. 3 

stay, though thou kill me, sweet — ii. 3 

must draw a sword to kill himself .. — iii. 1 
plunge in the deep, and kill me too.. — iii. 2 
when truth kills truth, O devilish-holy — iii. 2 

strike her, kill her dead? — iii. 2 

spurn me, nay, to kill me too — iii. 2 

ond kill me a red-hipped bumblebee — iv. 1 
for Pvramus therein doth kill himself — v. 1 

like I'iclen, till the fates me kill _ v. 1 

now mercy goes to kill .. ._. Lovers L. Lost,iv. 1 

than purpose, meant to kill — iv. 1 

mv laily goes to kill horns — iv. I 

it kills sheep, it kills me — iv. 3 

will kill the speaker's heart — v. 2 

do all men kill the things Mer. of Venice, iv. 1 

the thing he would not kill? _ iv. 1 

shall we go and kill us vcnxfion?.. At you Lihe it, ii. 1 
the animals, and to kill them up .... — ii. I 

he comes to kill my heart — iii. 2 

now let them kill thee — iii. S 

might kill me. By this hand frep.) — iv. 1 

that did so oft contrive to kill nim? — iv. 3 

to wit. I kill thee — v. 1 

I will kill thee a hundred and fifty.. — v. 1 

tlioiii;li I kill him not. I am All's Well, in. 2 

the first vii-w shall kill all repetition _ v. 3 
he kills her in her own humour.. Taming,' o/SA. iv. 1 

this is a wav to kill a wife — Iv, 1 

to have hiu'i kill u king Winter's Tale, iii. 2 

I pray you; that kills my heart — iv. 2 

for then you kill her double — v. 3 

away, they'll kill us Comedy of Errors, iv. 4 

between them they will kill the conjuror — v. 1 
my fury, that I did kill them Macbeth, ii. 3 



[ 405 ] 



KILL— to kill their gracious fVther? ..Macbeth, iii. C 

find what 'twere to kill a father _ iii. 6 

teaches me to kill or hang King John, iii. 4 

but thou liadst none to kill him .... — iv. 2 

if thou didst kill this child — iv. 3 

dost seek to kill my name Richard II. i'l. I 

be feared, and kill with looks — iii. 2 

to keep, and kill thy heart — v. I 

strive to kill it with a groan — v. I 

to kill the king at Oxford — v. 2 

he that kills me some six or seven ..1 Henry IF. ii. 4 
was it for me to kill the lieir apparent? — ii. 4 
with his pistol kills a sparrow flying — ii. 4 

I will kill all his coats — v. 3 

he is indeed; and living to kill thee — v. 3 
let him kill the next Percy himself. . — v. 4 

wilt thou kill God's officers illenrylV. ii. 1 

first thrust, I'll kill him llcnry y.i\. 1 

to kill us here in Hampton — ii. 2' 

I think, he will eat all he kills — iii. 7 

then every soldier kill his prisoners — iv. G 

kill the poys and the luggage — iv. 7 

kill his pest fl'iend, Clytus — iv. 7 

03 Alexander is kill his friend — iv. 7 

many wounds, when one will kill . . 1 llcnry II. ii. .'> 

ah Joan! this kills thy father's — v. 4 

and kill the innocent gazer with ..iHenryVI. iii. 2 

and kill thy forlorn queen — iii. 2 

would curses kill, as doth — iii. 2 

let's kill all the lawyers — iv. 2 

licence to kill for a hundred — iv. 3 

kill and knock down I throw them.. — iv. 8 

when I command them kill? — iv. 8 

wi til the change to kill and cure .... — v. 1 

for enemies, but priuces kill — v. 2 

Clifford, kill me with thy sword ....ZHenryVI. i.3 
as thou didst kill our tender brother — ii. 2 

I'll kill my horse, because — ii.3 

that kill mine eye and heart! — ii.5 

murdered where I should not kill .. — ii.5 

kill me too! Marry, and shall ... . — v. .^ 

ah, kill me with thy weapon — v. 6 

not lived to kill a son of mine — v. (i 

1 did not kill your husband Richard III. i. 2 

didst thou not kill this king? — i. 2 

for now they kill mc with a living ., — i. 2 

for I did kill king Henry — i. 2 

then bid me kill myself, and I will .. — i. 2 
did kill thy love, shall for thy Oep.) — i. 2 
thou whet'st a knife to kill tri3'self . . — i.3 

not to kill him, having — i. 4 

persuading me not to kill the duke.. — i. 4 

to kill a friend of mine? ''■(•;).) — iv. 2 

I bein^ by, that I should kill him? .. — iv. 2 
thou didst kill him ; I had (rep.) .... — iv. 4 

but thou didst kill my children — iv. 4 

till death, that winter, kill it ....Henry fill. iii. 2 
seems the wound to kill.. Troifusi^-Cress. iii. 1 (song) 

the thing he means to kill — iv. 1 

sleep kill those pretty eyes — iv. 2 

I came to kill thee, cousin — iv. 

for I'll not kill thee there, nor there — iv. 5 

I'll kill thee everj'where — iv. b 

is the readiest man to kill him.. Timan of Athens, i. 2 

that then thou might'st kill 'em — i. 2 

to kill, I grant, is sin's extremest.... — iii. 5 
eholer does kill me, that thou art alive — iv. 3 

if Alcibiades killmy — v. 2 

but kill not all together — t. 5 

let <is kill him, ond we'll have coin. . Coriolanus, i. 1 

kill, kill, kill, kill, kill him — v. 5 

and kill him in the shell Julius Ccasar, ii. 1 

let's kill him boldly, but not wrathfully — ii. 1 

burn, fire, kill, slay! — iii. 2 

wilt kill me straight; kill Brutus .. — v. 4 

I'll rather kill myself — v. 5 

to kill him, Clitus — v. 5 

we kill all our women Antony ^ Cleopatra, i. 2 

since my becomings kill me — i.3 

thou then wouldst kill me — iv. I:i 

tliat kills nnd painsnot? — v. 2 

kills me to look on't Cymbehne. ii. 4 

and I will kill thee, if thou dost ' — ii. 4 

to kill the marvel, shall be soever .. — iii. 1 

bringing me here to kill me — iii. 4 

villain Postliumns, will I kill thee .. — iii. 5 

first, kill him, and in her eyes — iii. a 

if you kill me for my fault — iii. ti 

for friends kill friends — v. 2 

with thine own hands kill me. Titus Androtiicus, ii. 3 

ah me! this objeet kills me! — iii. I 

if they did kill thy husband — iii. 1 

girl, kill it with groans — iii. 2 

we can kill a fly, that comes in — iii. 2 

will vou kill 3'our brother? — iv. 2 

as kill a man, or else devise — v. 1 

willingly as one would kill a fly — v. I 

firince of Tyre, and thou must kill him.Pericles, i. 1 
lere must I kill king Pericles — i.3 

can as well inflame as it can kill — ii. 2 

why will yo\i kill me? To satisfy — iv. 1 

that winter kills the flies — iv. 4 

do, kill thy physician, and the fee Lear, i. 1 

prevent the fiend, and to kill vermin — iii. 4 

they kill lis for their sport — iv. 1 

these sons-in-law, then, kill, kill (rep.) . — iv. (> 

and kill the envious moon Ilom-o^ Juliet, \\. 2 

I should kill thee with much cherishing — ii. 2 



for one would kill the other 

twenty could but kill one life — iii. 

but murders, pardoning those that kill — iii. 

villain, ilidst thou kill my cousin? .. — iii. 

bnt—haiiishcd— to kill me: banished? — iii. 

Tybalt would kill thee — iii. 

in my cell there would she kill her.sclf — v. 

finds means to kill your joys with love! — v. 

to kill BO capital a calf there llamlel, iii. 

a second time I kill my husband dead .. — iii. 

a villain kills my father — iii. 

ae kill a king, and marry with his (rep.) — iii. 



KTL 



KILT/— kills the unseen good old man . . Hamlel, Iv. 1 
the addition, whose want even kills mc.Olhetlo, iv. I 

kill Cnssio, or Cassio him (rf;).) — v. 1 

kill men i' the dark I _ v. 1 

and I will kill thee, and love tliee after.. — v. 2 
not kill thy unprepared spirit (r>'p.) .... — v. 2 
if you say BO, I hojie you will not kill mc — v. 2 

unnatural, thot kills for loving — v. 2 

but kill me not. Down, strumpetl (rep.) — v. 2 

I'll kill myself for grief — v. 2 

let him not pass, hut kill him rather — v. 2 

ifthiit thou iR.'st a devil.I cannot kill thee— v. 2 

KILL-(ni:KrKSY— 
this lack-love, kill-courtesv Mid. IV. Dream, ii. 3 

KILL'D.ST my hushaiid Ilciirv Richard 1 1 1, i. 3 

KILLED- 1 took him to he killed Tempest, ii. 3 

would here have killed your king.... — v. 1 
I killed a man, whose death . . Tuo Ccn.ofl'er. iv. 1 

for geese he hath killed — iv. 4 

it was ill killed Merry Wircs,\. 1 

killed my deer, and broke — i. 1 

I think vou have killed the — iv. a 

hath k i 1 led t he flock of Tndflh Night, i. 1 

that killed lusty rudding.Measure for Measure, iv. 3 
killed and catch in these wars? (rep.).MuchAdo,i. I 

thou hast killed my child — v. 1 

what tlioiK^h core killed a cet — v. 1 

you have killed a sweet Inily (rep.) .. — v. I 
thy breath hast killed niiiie'innocent — v. 1 
that Pyramus is not killed indeed.. A//rf.A'./)r. iii. 1 
and hast thou killed him sleeping?.. — iii. 2 
a pricket that the princess killcil.7.f.?-c's/.. /.os/, iv. 2 
the deer the prhicess killed, a pricket — iv. 2 

he killed your sister v. 2 

whose club killed Cerberus — v. 2 

that I had not killed them .Merchant of Venice, iii. 4 

if killed, but one dead that is As you Like it, i. 2 

which is he that killed the deer? — iv. 2 

he have that killed the deer? — iv. 2 (sr)ng) 

be killed so soon as I thought (rrp.). Alt's Well, iii. 2 
I killed a man. and fear I was. Taming nf shreu\ i. 1 
by my regard, but killed none so. . Winler'sTale, i. 2 
she you killed, would be unjiaralleled — v. 1 

killedl she I killed? I did so — v. 1 

but killed itself much sooner — v. 3 

that was killed for the prodigal .Comedy of Err. iv. 3 
a mousing owl, hawked at. and killed. jl/ofi/c//i, i'. 4 

scotched the snake, not killed it — iii. 2 

rieaneekilled, for Fleance fled — iii. 6 

he has killed me, mother — iv. 2 

my wife killed too? I have said — iv. 3 

killed to-night on your suggestion. King John, iv. 2 

who killed tliis prince? — iv. 3 

some sleeping killed; all murdered. Wr/inn/ /;. iii. 2 
how many hast thou killed to-day?.l Henry I r. ii. 4 

and I'll .swear I killed him — v. i 

why, Percy I killed myself — v. i 

both the Blunts killed'l.y the liand..2I/fn/!///'. i I 
a man or two hitelv killed about her v. •; 

unless already he be killed with your.. — (ci.H.) 

the king hath killed his heart Henry I', ii. 1 

own counsel is suppressed and killed — " ii. S 
beast lived, was killed hunting him — iv. 3 

he never killed any of his friends — iv. r 

to tell how many is killed? — iv. i* 

you that killed young Rutland ....iHcnn/Il.ii. 2 

conflict I unawares have killed — ii. ;i 

was limed, was caught, and killed .. — v. n 
I killed for his presumption (rep.) .. — \. b 
what though I killed her husliaiid../fiWiro,/ //;. i. i 
revenged on him that killed my husband— i. 2 

what! I, that killed her husband — i. 2 

my brother killed no man, his fault — ii. I 

till a Richard killed him (rf'p.) — iv. 4 

he is dead, that killed my Edward .. — iv. 4 
if I have killed the issue'of your womb — iv. 4 
wouldst be killed by the horse. Timon orAihens,iY. 3 
killed my son; my daughter (rep.) ..Ciii/o/.vHiiv, v. 5 
even with the sword that killed thee.Jul.Casar. v. 3 
I killed not thee with half so good .. — v. 5 
which makes the true man killed ..Cymbcline, ii. 3 
whilst what we have killed be cooked — iii. 6 

Pisanio might have killed thee — iv. 2 

1 have killed thy mistress; peace! .. — v. I 
am Posthumus, that killed thy daughter— v .•. 

jYiu ne'er killed Imogen till now — v.b 

than had he killed me dead.. 7V/iis.'liidronict(.s iii. 1 

because they killed her husband — iii. 1 

at that that I have killed, my lord .. — iii. 2 
alas, my lord, I have but killed a fly — iii. 2 

merry; and thou hast killed him — iii. 2 

empress' Moor; therefore I killed him — iii. 2 

you killed her husband — v. 2 

killed her, for whom mv tears — v. 3 

but killed are wondered at Pericles, ii.3 

why would she have me killed? — iv. 1 

I never killed a mouse — 

IKnt.'] the great rage you see, is killed . . Lea: 
1 killed the slave that was a hanging thee — 
way ran he, that killed Jlercutio?/foin« 4^ Jul. iii. I 

he's gone, he's killed, he's dead! — iii. 2 

Ronico, that killed him, he is banished — iii. 2 
well of him tli:it killed your cousin? — iii. 2 

would hine killed my husband — iii. 2 

distressed. h:ite.l, martyred, killed!.. — iv. 5 
dead before, warm and new killed .. — v. 3 

I was killed i' the Capitol o.;..) Hamlet, iii. 2 

wed the second, hut who killed the first — iii. 2 
to draw apart the body he hath killed .. — iv. 1 

thathaveafatlier killed, a mother — iv. 4 

he that hath killed iiiv king _ v. 2 

I am justly krileil with mine own v. 2 

my lord, has killeil a young Venetian.. O/AfHo, v. 2 

killed! and Cassio killed? (rep.) _ v, 2 

burning hell; 'twos I that killed her .... — v. 2 

the Moor has killed my mistress — v. 2 

for thou host killed the sweetest innocent — >. 2 

sure, he has killed his wife _ v. 2 

he's gone; but his wife's killed — v. 2 

I bleed, sir; but not killed _ v. 2 



. I 



I-. 3 



KIS 



[ 406 ] 



KISSED— I kissed thee, crc I killed thee.. Othello, v. 2 
KrLLEN— strive to killen bad ..Pe, ides, ii. (Gower) 
KILLEST— thou killeet me .. Tu'el/Hi X. iii. 4 (chal.) 

if thou killest nio, bov, thou shalt Much Ado, v. 1 

thou killest me in liis lite Bichard II. v. 3 

villain, thou killest thy nnstvess. Anion;/ ^ Cleo. ii. 5 

Kn>l.ETli-that kiUeth me 1 Henri/ ''>■ i- '■! 

K [LLING-to eat all of his killins .... MuchAdo,}. 1 
ive must leave tlie killing out. . Mid. N. Dream, lii. 1 

killing swine. Sister, where thou? Macbelh,i. 3 

hanging for killing that rogue \Henrylf'. ii. 2 

he hatli a killin" tongue Henry V. iii. 2 

killing their t'ruit witli frowns? — iii. 5 

killing in relapse of mortality — iv. 3 

at tiieir masters, killing them twice — iv. 7 
killing all those that withstand ....2Henj!/r/. iv. 5 
but to be damned for killing him ..liichnrd III. i. 4 
killing care, and grief of .. Hennj y III. III. 1 (song) 

I'oraes a frost, a killing frost — fii. 2 

that, by killiug villains Timon nf Athens, iv. 3 

killing'our enemies? the blood \ie..Coriolanus, iii. 1 

or butehers killing flies — iv. 6 

how 'scaped I killing, when Julius Ctesar, iv. 3 

only in killing creatures vile Cymbeline, v. 5 

from their worse than killing lust. J'ilusAndron. ii. 3 

though grieved with killing grief — ii. 4 

killing that love wliich thou ..Romeo fy Juliet, iii. 3 
I would have liim nine years a killing. 0(/ifi/o, iv. 1 

talk you of killing? Ay, I do — v. 2 

killing myself, to die upon a kiss — v. 2 

KILL'ST— thou kill'st my \\eiiVt..TitusAndron. iii. 2 
KILN-HOLE— into the Y\\\\-\\o\e.. Merry Wives, iv. 2 

foing to bed, or kiln-hole Winter' stale, iv. 3 
MBOLTON— to Kimbolton Henry I'm. iv. 1 

KIN— he comes, one of thy kin TwelfihNight, i. ft 

what kin are you to me? — v. 1 

he is some kin to thee Merchant ef I'enice, ii. 9 

my sword and yours are kin All's Well, ii. 1 

the oracle, kin to .love's thunder. Winter'sTaU, iii. 1 
niid my nearest of kin, cry, fie upon — iii. 2 

no notour kin, far than — iv. 3 

I will sliow thee to my kin King John, i. 1 

with tlie enemies of his kin Richardll.n. 1 

wars shall kin witli kin, and kind . . — iv. 1 
or any of my kin, and yet I love him — r. 2 

those that are kin to the king IHer.rylV. ii. 2 

•nay, they will be kin to us — ii. 2 

even such kin as the parish heifers . . — ii. 2 

60 little kin to the purpose Henry r. iii. 7 

slaughterman to all my kin ZHenry VI. i. 4 

kin to me, therefore she's {rep."). . Troilus S, Cress, i. 1 

seem all affin'd and kin — __i. 3 

makes the whole world kin — iii. 3 

no kin, no love, no blood — iv. 2 

the combatants being kin, half — iv. 5 

daushter have I, no kin else I'imon of Athens, i. 1 

aiurthose kin, wl-.ich, in the bluster.. — v. 5 
of himself, and knew no other kin. . Coriolanus, v. 3 

is he thy kin? thy friend? {rep.) Cymbeline, v. b 

what kin thou and thy daughters heur, i. 4 

the stock and honour of ray kin., flomeo Sr Juliet, i. 6 

more than kin and less than kind Hamlet, i. 2 

compounded it with dust, whereto 'tis kin — iv. 2 
words and performances, are no kin . . Othello, iv. 2 

KIND— never yields us kind answer Tempest, i. 2 

for no kind of traffic would I admit .. — ii. 1 

of its own kin'i, all foison — ii. 1 

who, in this kind of merry fooling — — ii. 1 

a kind of, not of the newest — ii. 2 

Bome kinds of ba'^eness are nobly — iii, 1 

crown what I profess with kind event — iii. 1 

give us kind keepers, lieavens! — iii. 3 

a kind of excellent dumb discourse — iii. 3 

their several kinds Imve done — iii. 3 

one of their kind, that relish — v. 1 

and here is writ— kind :jul\a.Tu-oGen.of I'erona, i. 2 

all the kind of the Launces — ii. 3 

he isakind of cameleon — ii. 4 

even in kind love, I do — ii. 7 

often, in their silent kind — iii. 1 

my master is a kind of knave — iii. 1 

we dare trust you in this kind — iii. 2 

an honourable kind of thievery — iv. I 

is she kind, as slie is fair? — iv. 2 (song; 

good-morrow, kind sir Eglamour. ... — iv. 3 

a tender, a kind of tender Merry Wives, i. 1 

an honest, willing, kind fellow — i. 4 

or any kind of light — il. 1 (letter) 

if there be a kind woman in — ii. 2 

not liave your distemper in this kind — iii. 3 

a kind heart he hath — iii. 4 

fire and water for such a kind heart — iii. 4 
I have a kind of alacrity in sinking — iii. 6 

filie will admit no kind of siut Twelfth Nigh!, i. 2 

at these set kind of fools — i. 5 

what kind of man is he? (re/).) — i. 6 

sometimes he is a kind of puritan .. — il. 3 

what kind of woman is't? — ii. 4 

and, with a kind of injimction — ii. .5 

craves a kind of wit — iii. 1 

my kind Antonio, I can no other — — ill. 3 
I have heard of some kind of men .. — iii. 4 
tempests are kind, and salt waves .. — iii. 4 

there is a kind of character Meas.forMeas. i. 1 

do me this kind service — .i. 3 

hath yet a kind of medicine — ii. 2 

your sin of heavier kind than his — ii. 3 

is't not a kind of incest, to take life.. — iii. 1 

ever most kind and natural — iii. 1 

and still forfeit in the same kind? .. — iii. 2 
to be ased in ony kind of course .... — iii. 2 

nay friar, I am a kind of burr — iv. 3 

leiid him your kind pains to find out — v. \ 

dmost kind maid, it was the — v. 1 

a kind overflow of kindness Much.ido, i. 1 

there is a kind of merry war betwixt — _i. 1 
do solicit 3'ou in that kind, you know — ii. 1 

intend a kind of zeal both to the — ii. 2 

and for such kind of men, the less .. — iii. 3 
wliat kind of catechizing call you this? — iv. 1 



KIND— awaked in such a kind, both . . Much Ado, iv. 
but, in this kind, wanting your. . Mid. N. Drcam^ i. 
be kind and courteous to tliis gentleman — ill. 
two of both kinds makes up four ,,.. — iii. 
are bred out of the Spartan kind .... — iv. 
they can do nothing in this kind .... — v. 
the best in this kind are but shadows — v. 
a kind of insinuation, as it were.. Love' sL. Lost, iv. 2 
in the doing of the deed of kind.. A/e?-.o/'''f»'ce, i. 3 

this is kind I offer — i. 3 

will turn Christian; he grows kind.. — i. 3 

he had a kind of taste — ii. 2 

is a kind of devil — ii. 2 

the patch is kind enough; but a huge — ii. 5 

a kind of bastard hope ^ri'p.) — iii. 5 

the weakest kind of fruit drops earliest — iv. 1 

more kind than is lier custom — iv. I 

to a youth, a kind of boy — v. 1 

by tills kind of chase, 1 should ....As you Like it, i. 3 
and with a kind of umber smirch. . . . — 1. 3 
and iu that kind, swears you do more — ii. 1 
to some kind of men their graces .... — ii. 3 

the profit, and this kind of life — ii. 4 

farewell, kind master — ii. 6 

of what kind should this cock come of — ii. 7 

if the cat will after kind — iii. 2 (vei-ses) 

tliy youth and kind will the .... — iv. 3 (letter) 
will, for my kind oiler, when I .. — (epilogue) 

your cuckoo sings by kind All's Well,i. 3 (song) 

that in their kind they speak it — i. 3 

fare thee well, kind maid; thy pains — ii. 1 

I found you wondrous kind — v. 3 

with kind embracements.. Taming of Shrew. I (ind.) 

it is a kind of history — 2 (ind.) 

I will be very kind, and liberal — i. 1 

discreetly in all kind of companies .. — _i. 1 

is not so kind, my boy — ii. 1 

affords nothing but what is kind — v. 2 

ay, and a kind one too; pray God, sir — v. 2 
gaoler then, but your kind hostess. W inter' sTale.i. 2 
with such a kind of love, as might .. — iii. 2 
of that kind our rustic garden's barren — iv. 3 
lilies of all kinds, the flower-de-luce — iv. 3 
so rarely kind, are as interpreters.... — v. 1 
drew me from kind embracements. Come(f?/o/£n-. i.l 

loseth it in a kind of Jollity — ii. 2 

tliou art kind. And I another Macbeth, i. 3 

kind gentlemen, your pains — _i. 3 

by the name of most kind hostess — ii. 1 

a kind good-night to all! — iii, 4 

trust ac~cordingly, kind citizens .. ..A'!7ig-Jo/i;i, ii. 1 
this seizure, and this kind regreet? .. — iii. 1 
we had a kind of light, what would.. — iv. 3 

like a kind host, the Dauphiu — v. 1 

I have a kind soul, that wovild give.. — v. 7 

but in thiB kind to come Richard II. ii. 3 

do abet him in this kind — ii. 3 

I send to her my kind commends — iii. 1 

to his gentle hearing kind commends — iii. 3 

and kind with kind confound — iv. 1 

they find a kind of ease, bearing .... — v. 5 
kind uncle York, the latest news .... — v. 6 
shall hear in such a kind from me ..IHenry IV. i. 3 
and, kind cousin,— O the devil take.. — i. 3 

a kind of auditor; one that hath — ii. 1 

but for sweet Jack Falstaff, kind Jack — ii. 4 

is with a kind of cholic pinched — iii. 1 

breed a kind of question in our cause — iv. 1 
shows the ignorant a kind of fear.. .. — iv. 1 
the king is kind; and well we know — iv. 3 
my father, in kind heart and pity .. — iv. 3 

the liberal kind offer of the king — v. 2 

as Itakeit, a kind of lethargy iUenrylV.i. 2 

a kind of sleeping in tlie blood — i. 2 

it is a kind of deafness. I think .... — i. 2 

but thou, like a kind fellow — iv. 3 

they form into a kind of male — iv. 3 

sins the newest kind of ways? — iv. 4 

all my heart, kind master Bardolph — v. 1 

dreamed of such a kind of man — v. 5 

were all thy children kind Henry V. ii. (chorus) 

the lazar kite of Cressid's kind — ii. 1 

and ray kind lord of Mashani, and you — ii. 2 
by his sufferance, more of such a kind — ii. 2 
hath left a kind of blot, to mark .... — ii. 2 

still be kind, and eke out our — iii. (chorus) 

and a most kind gentleman: I pray you — iv. 1 

what land of god art Ihou — iv. 1 

lord Exeter, and my kind kinsman.. — iv. 3 
farewell, kind lord; fight valiantly.. — iv. 3 

untrained in any kind of art \Henry Tl. i.2 

kind keepers of ray weak — ii. 5 

just death, kind umpire of men's — ii. S 

so kind a father of the commonweal — iii. 1 

loving uncle, kind duke of Gloster — iii. 1 

accept this hearty kind embrace — iii. 3 

this argues what her kind of life — v. 4 

than this kind kiss. O lord, that iHenryTl. i. 1 

1 commend this kind submission — v. 1 

from your kind aunt, duchess of ZHenry VI. ii. 1 

hath bred a kind of remorse in me.. Richard ill. i. 4 
O do not slander him, for he is kind — 1.4 
of my kind uncle, that I know will give — iii. 1 

Bcntie, kind, effeminate remorse — iii. 7 

but penetrable to your kind entreaties — iii. 7 
led in the hand of her kind aunt .... — iv. 1 
kind sister, tlianks; we'll enter all .. — iv. 1 

kind TyrreUam Ihappy in thy ,. — iv. 3 

where is kind Hastings? — iv. 4 

more harmful, kind in hatred — iv. 4 

good night, kind lords and srentlemen — v. 3 

IS a kind of puppy to the old Henry VIII. i. 1 

in wliat kind, let's know — i.2 

kind of my obedience I should tender — ii. 3 

to the sharpest kind of justice — ii. 4 

and, 'tis akind of good deed, tosay.. — iii. 2 

have soul in such a kind Troilus ^- Cressida, i. 3 

in an observing kind his humorous .. — ii. 3 
Ihave a kind of self resides withyou — iii. 2 
alas, a kind of godly jealousy — iv.4 



KIN 

KIND— that dog of as bad a kind . Troilus ^ Cress, v. 4 
all kind of natures, that \abour. 'I'imonof Athens, i. I 

let them have kind admittance — i.2 

was not half so beautiful and kind . . — i.2 

and wear it, kind my lord — i.2 

he is so kind, that he now pays — i.2 

several visitations so kind to neart .. — i.2 

60 unwise to be so kind — ii. 2 

they are not kind — ii. 2 

because 1 have no power to be kind. . — iii. 2 

the nice to you, kind Varro — iii. 4 

dares to be half so kind again? — iv. 2 

alas, kind lord I he's flun^' in — iv. 2 

the plainer and simpler kind of people — v. I 

performance is a kind of will — v. 1 

with a kind of smile, wliich ne'er ....Coriolanus, i. 1 

were akind of ingrateful injury .... — ii. 2 

no; 'tis his kind of speech, he did not — ii. 3 

this kind of service did not deserve. . — iii. I 

and iu such capital kind, deserves .. — iii. 3 

he had, sir, akind of face — iv. 5 

he is grown most kind of late — iv. 6 

farewell, kind neighbours — iv. 6 

he was a kind of nothing, titleless — v. 1 

and beasts, from quality and k'mtl,.JiiUusCee5aT,i. 3 

would, as his kind, grow mischievous — it. 1 

with all kind love, good thoughts.... — iii. 1 

kind souls, what, weep you — iii. 2 

with keels of every kind ....Antony i^ Cleopatra, i. 4 

the elements be kind to thee — iii. 2 

most kind messenger, say to — iii. U 

that the worm will do his kind — v. 2 

farewell, kind Charmian — v. 2 

what kind of man he is Cymbeline, i. 1 

a kind of haud-in-hand comparison — i. 5 

he hath a kind of honour sets him .. — i. 7 

a kind of conquest Cffisar made here — iii. 1 

yet long'st but in a fainter kind .... — iii. 2 

tliese are kind creatures — iv. 2 

a page so kind, so duteous, diligent .. — v. 5 
as I am confident and kind touiee. Titus Andron.\. I 

kind Rome that hast thus lovingly . . — i.2 

fitted by kind for rape and villany.. — ii. 1 

nothing so kind, but something pitiful . — ii. 3 

fell curs of bloody kind, have — ii. 4 

take vengeance of suchkind of men.. — v. 2 

lending your kind commiseration .... ■ — v. 3 

because kind nature doth require .... — v. 3 

to beg of you, kind friends Pericles, ii. 1 

and in this kind hath our Cleon one — iv. (Gower) 

well assured she came ot gentle kind . . — v. 1 

thy name, my most kind virgin? — v. 1 

to set my rest on her kind nursery hear, i. 1 

I had rather be any kind of tiling — i. 4 

I am sure is kind and comfortable — i. 4 

so kind a father! be my horses ready? .. — i. .'i 

these kind of knaves I know — ii 3 

shall see their cliildren kind — ii. 4 

borne against the old kind king — iii. 1 

your old kind father, whose frank heart — iii. 4 

by the kind gods, 'tis most ignobly done — iii. 7 

kind gods, forgive me that — iii. 7 

to use her in that kind for which — iv. 6 

you kind gods, cure this great — iv. 7 

kind and dear princess! — iv. 7 

what Icind of help? Speak, man — v. 3 

were that kind of fruit Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 1 

from her womb children of divers kind — ii. 3 

a very gross kind of behaviour — ii. 4 

and a courteous, and a kind — ii. 5 

the kind prince, taking thy part — iii. 3 

1 do spy a kind of hope, which craves — iy. I 

more than kin and less than kind Hamlet, i. 2 

and there is a kind of confession in your — ii. 2 

in him akind of joy to liear of it — iii. 1 

one as kind for husband shalt thou .... — iii. 2 

shall lend a kind of easiness to the next — iii. 4 

I must be cruel, only to be kind — iii. 4 

like the kind life-rendering pelican .... — iv. 5 

dear maid, kind sister, sweet Ophelia .. — iv. .5 

a kind of wick, or snuff — iv. 7 

akind of fighting, that would not let .. — v. 2 

a kind of yesty collection, which carries — v. 2 

but it is such a kind of gain-giving — v. 2 

for mere suspicion in that kind Othello, i. 3 

she is of so free, so kind, so apt, so blessed — ii. 3 

I never knew a Florentine more kind .. — iii. 1 

there are tt kind of men so loose — iii. 3 

one of thiskind is Cassio — iii. 3 

if ray offence be of such mortal kind.... — iii. 4 

had he rained all kinds of sores — iv. 2 

abuse their husbands in such gross kind? — iv. 3 

kind gentlemen, let's go see poor Cassio — v. 1 

commend me to my kind lord — v. 2 

KINDER— the kinder we, to give. Mid. A. Dream, v. 1 
a kinder gentleman treads not . . Mer. of Venice, ii. 8 

no kinder sign of love 2 Henry VI. i. 1 

more kinder than mankind . . Timon of Athens, iv. 1 
if he remember a kinder value .... Coriolanus, ii. 2 
Gloster's bastard son was kinder to Lear, iv. 6 

KINDEST— the kindest m&-a..Merch.r/f Venice, iii. 2 

O the kindest Kate '. Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 

at j'our kindest leisure. If you shall. . .Macbeth, ii. 1 
we do request your kindest ears Coriolaiius, ii. 2 

KINDLE fire with snow TuoGen. nf Verona, ii. 7 

but that I kindle the boy thither. . As you Like it. i. I 

in fear to kindle your dislike Henry VIII. ii. i 

fire to kindle their dry stubble Coriolanus, ii. 1 

this is the way to kindle, not to quench — iii. I 

fire enough to kindle cowards . lulius Ccesar, ii. 1 

mine his thoughts did kindle Antony tf Cleo. v. 1 

and yet the fire of life kindle again . . Pericles, iii. 2 
my love should kindle to inflamed Lear, i. 1 

KIlS'DLED with unchaste ..Merry Wives, v. 5 (song) 

dwell where she is kindled As you Like it, iii. 2 

till she had kindled France King John, i. 1 

you equal potents, fiery kindled spirits! — ii. 2 
your breath first kindled the dead . . — y. 2 
snnn kindled, and soon burned \ Henry IV. iii. 2 

KINDLESS— lecherous, kindless villain ! Ham(e(, ii. 2 



KIN 



K INDLIKH niovid limn thou art? .... Tampni, v. 1 

KlNDLlNO-iskiiuUing coals Sllcnry VI. ii. 1 

for kiinJlin!» such a combustion HennjVlII. v. 3 

KIN'DIA' in Viiiir lompany.. ricoGfn.q/Tcrona, ii. 4 

Iu.se thee l<imllv for thy — iv. I 

she uses thee kindly .... Ttrelfth Sight, iii. \ (chall.) 
your brother kiniUy greets you. . Meat, for Mens. i. 5 
by that fatherly and kindly power. .iViie/i .irio, Iv. 1 

I'wlU most kindly requile Asyou Likcil.i. 1 

frosty, but kindly; let nie Ro with vou — ii. 3 
rcconntments had most kindly bathed — i,v. 3 

mv mother gi-eets me kindly All's Well, ii. 4 

we'll take your offer kindly — iii. 5 

let him come and kindly . . Tamins ofSh. 1 (mduc.) 

and do it kindly, gentle sirs — 1 (indue.) 

that have been'more kindly beliolden — ii. 1 

this great king mav kindly say Macbeth, iv. 1 

washing with kindly tears iHenrylV. iv. 4 

fentlv to hear, kindly to judge .. Henry V, i. (chor.) 
hat I mav kindly give one \HemyVl. ii. 5 

the bishop hath a kindly gird — iii. 1 

I take it kindly iHennj VI. iii. 1 

end kindly kissed my cheek Richard III. ii. 2 

bounteous l\and was kindly lent — — ii. 2 
ehall see, the hoar will use us kindly — iii. 2 

why, this is kindly done Troilus ^Cressida, iii. 1 

must use expostulation kindly — iv. 4 

'tis lack of kindly warmth Timoti ofAthetis,\\. 2 

Servilius! you are kindly met, sir . . — iii. 2 
he used me kindlv; he cried to me . . Coriolanus, i. 9 

to ask it kindly. Kindly? — ii. 3 

kindly creatures turn all ..Antony ^Cleopatra, ii. 5 
how honourably and how kindly — — v. 1 

good sir, you are kindly welcome Cymbeline, i. 7 

feed his humour kindly Tilits.indro7ticus, iv. 3 

will vou use him kindly? Pericles, iv. 6 

thy other daughter will use thee kindly ..Lear, i. 5 
thou hast most kindly hit it Romeo Sr Juliet, ii. 4 

KINDNESS— may move, not kindness . . Tempest, i. 2 
beauty lives with kindness. TuoGen. o/r. iv. 2 (song) 

mv bosom is full of kindness TwelfthNight,\\. 1 

for the fair kindness you have — iii. 4 

he did me kindness, sir — v. 1 

sir, for your kindness, I oweyou.il/fos./or.Vra.i. iy. 2 

a kind overflow of kindness Much.ido. i. 1 

If thou dost love, my kindness shall — iii. 1 
this were kindness. This kindness ..Mer. of Ten. i. 3 
sav, there is much kindness in the Jew — i. 3 
kindness, nobler ever than revenge. /(« youLike, iv. 3 
express the like kindness myself.. i'omi'njo/S/i. ii. 1 
a way to kill a wife with kindness . . — iv. 1 

kindness in women, not their — iv. 2 

Kate, this kindness merits thanks . . — iv. 3 
I with self-same kindness welcome .. — v. 2 

Padua affords this kindness — v. 2 

his unkindne33, and his kindness. Winter'sTate,iv. 3 
and graced your kindness better .... — v. 1 
use her witli more kindness . . Comedy of Errors, iii. 2 
too full o' the milk of human kindness. .Woc6fM, i. h 

as full of valour, as of kindness Henry I', iv. 3 

hath a woman's kindness overruled .\Henry I'l. ii. 2 
and I may live to do you kindness.. 2 Henry r/. ii. 4 

in kindness, and unfeigned love 2Henf\i Vl. iii. 3 

all kindness at my hand, that your.. — iii. 3 

I'll well requite thy kindness — iv. 6 

serve me, HI requite this kindness .. — iv. 7 
to have it yielded withallkindnes3.ffic/ia;(i//i. iii. 1 

thy kindness freezes — iv. 2 

the process of thy kindness last {rep.") — iv. 4 
therefore accept such kindness as I can — iv. 4 
yet is the kindness but particular. Trail. % Cress, iv. & 
outgoes the very heart of kindness .Timonof.ilh. i. I 

thy kindness subtle, covetous — iv. 3 

I will some kindness to them — v. 2 

the very road into his kindness Coriolanus, v. I 

give him all kindness luUitsCresnr,\. 4 

will pray in aid for kindness Antony &■ Cleo. v. 2 

sir, you o'errate ray poor kindness . . Cymbelinc, i. 5 
equal discourtesy to your best kindness — ii. 3 

do him that kindness Titus Andronicus, v. 3 

found that kindness in a father. Pericles, i. 1 (riddle 

it had been a kindness becoming — 

as an enterprize of kindness, pei-forraed — 

do me the kindness of our profession — 

since your kindness we have stretched — 

for such kindness must relieve me — v. 2 (Gower 

your present kindness makes ray past — v. : 

a great abatement of kindness appears .... Lear, i. 

in pure kindness to his horse, buttered . . — ii. 

the gods reward your kindness! — iii. 

sinceritv of love, aud honest kindness . . Othello, ii. 

KINDNESSES— those kindnesses. r«f(/(AAVg'/i<, iii. 
give me thanks for kindnesses . . Comedy of Err. iv. 
some small kinduesses from Ivim.Timonqf Alh. iii. 
to whose kindnesses I am moit. Cymbeline, i. 7 (let. 

KINDKED-is of a great kindred.il/eaj. /or Meas. iii. 

a sin to match in my kindred Much Ado, ii. 

kindred hath made my eyes water.. Mid. y. Dr. iii. 
comes of a very dull kindred .....4t you Like if, iii. 
comes it that your kindred shun. T'am. o/SA. 2 (ind. 

the stirrups of no kindrcfl — iii. 

kings, and princes, our kindred .. Winler'sTale, v. 
of any kindred action like to this? ..KingJohn, iii. 

disclaiming here the kindred of Richard It. i. 

wade even in our kindred's bloo<l.... — i. 
were giiilty of no kindred's blood.... — ii. 

and my kindred bids to right — ii. 

acquaintance, kindred, and allies.. ..I Henry/f. i. 

and kindred arc mightily 'iUenrylf. ii. 

the kindred of him hath been Henry V. ii. 

the queen's kindretl (rep.) li'chard lll.'i. 

how timt the guilty kindred of the queen — ii. 

aid you with our kindred tears? — ii. 

quPcn'H protid kiiitlred from the prince — ii. 
yoiu'enemies, the kindred of the queen — iii. 
we have ni)teil in you to your kindred — iii. 

kingdom, kiniired, freedom, life — iv. 

no kindreil weep for mc, almost . .Henry I'll 1. iii. 
our kindred, though they 1)C huig. I'roil. ^i Crrts iii. 
spots of thy kindrol were jurors. . Timon nf.Wi. iv. 3 



[ 407 ] 



KINDRKD— of mine own kindred,. .. Cymbetine, v. 

[Col. K/i/.l in thy kindre<l's grave . «oinco .^-./uf. iv. 

where nil the kindred of the t'apulets lie — iv. 

laid low in her kindred's vaiilt — v. 

to take her from her kindred's vault — v. 

raise all my kindred: are tliey married.. O^/ie/M, i. 
KINE — Pharaoh's lean kine arc ....Mlenry IV. ii. 
KING— roarers for the name of king .... Tempest, i. 

the king and prince at prayers? — i. 

let's all sink with the king — i. 

I boarded the king's ship — i. 

the king's son, Ferdinand (rep.) — i. 

of the kmg's ship, the mariners — i. 

safely in harbour is the king's ship.. .. — i. 

that they saw the king's ship wrecked — i. 

which first was mine own kmg — i. 

the king my father's wreck — i. 

the king my father wrecked — i. 

the marriage of the king's fair daughter — ii. 

and were the king of it — ii. 

and yet he would be king on't — ii. 

the Uing, his son's alive — ii. 

and I the king shall love thee — ii. 

now good angels preserve the king!.... — ii. 

so, king, go safel}' oil — ii. 

the king and all our company — ii. 

I do think, a king; I would not so! . . — iii. 

daughter and I will be king and queen — iii. 

pr'y thee, my king, be quiet — iv. 

king Stephauo! O i)eer! (rpp.) — iv, 

while I am king of this country — iv. 

king and his? [Col. Knt.-'s followers] . . — v. 

the king, his brotlier, and yours — v. 

would here have killed your king — v. 

to the king's ship, invisible — v. 

beliold, sir king, the wronged duke — t. 

the king and queen there I — v. 

issue should become kings of Naples?. . — v. 

we have safely found our king — v. 

you'd be king of the isle, sirrah? — r. 

while I, their king Two Gen. of Verona, iii. 

were a king for our wild faction .... — iv. 

as our commander, and our king .... — iv. 
you'll complain of me to the king? Merry fVives, 'i. 

and the king's English — _i. 

thou art a (JastiUan king — ii. 

with one self king! Twelfth Night, \. 

the king lies by a beggar — iii. 

said to anieeeof king Gorboduc — iv. 

ali the dukes fall upon the king.il/eas./or Meas.i. 

not the king's crown — ii. 

subject to a well-wished king — ii. 

what king so strong, can tie the gall — iii. 

if I were as tedious as a king Much Ado, iii. 

the king doth keep liis revels . . Mid. N.'s Dream, ii. 

lovely boy, stolen from an Indian king — ii. 

believe me, king of shadows — iii. 

fairy king, attend, and mark — iv. 

the French kind's daughter Love's L. Lost, i. 

ballad, boy, of the king and the beggar? — _i. 

who the king your father sends — ii. 

if then the king your father will — ii. 

you do the king my father too ranch — ii. 

prince of plackets, king of cod-pieces — iii. 

was that the king that spurred his . . — iv. 

who came? the king? (icp.) — iv. 1 (letter) 

is one of the votaries with the king.. — iv. 2 

into the royal hand of the king — iv. 2 

the kinj; he is hunting the deer — iv. 3 

would the king, Biron, and Liongaville — iv. 3 

the king your mote did sec — iv. 3 

to see a iting transformed — iv. 3 

God bless the king! — iv. 3 

a companion of the king's — v. 1 

sir, it is the king's most sweet — v. 1 

sir, the king is a noble gentleman . . — v. 1 

that the king would have me present — v. 1 

the king's command — v. 1 

what I have from the loving king — v. 2 

addrest tlie king and his companions — v. 2 

for, quoth the king, an angel shalt .. — v. 2 

and then the king will court thee. . .. — v. 2 

the king was weeping-ripe — v. 2 

the king is ray love sworn — v. 2 

than the king's and his company — v. 2 

the king your father — Dead — v. 2 

by these badges understand the king — y. 2 

come when the king doth to my — v. 2 

her lord, her governor, her kiiig.,l/(v. of Venice, iii. 2 

the dread and fear of kinj^s — ■ iv. 1 

enthroned in the hearts ot kings — iv. 1 

brightly as a king, until a king be by — v. 1 

were I of all kingdoms kin^ As you Like it, v. 4 

ehall find of the king a husband All's Hell, i. 1 

would for the king's sake (.rep.) — i. 1 

the king very lately spoke of him — i. I 

good lord, the king languishes of ? .. — i. 1 

the king's disease— my project — i. 1 

whereof the king is rendered lost — i. 3 

the king, had, from the conversation — i. 3 

stay; the king,— Use a more — ii. 1 

than alone the recovery of tlie king.. — ii. 3 

here comes the king — ii. 3 

restored the king to health — ii. 3 

is now the praised of the king — ii. 3 

and the favour of the king, smile... — ii. 3 

the king has done yon wrong — ii. 3 

your instant leave o' the king — ii. I 

IS she gone to the king? She 19 — ii. .'> 

spoke with the king, and have procured — ii. .') 
she hath recovered the king .... — iii. 2 (letter) 

the favours of so good a king — iii. 2 

for the king had married — iii. 5 

everlasting displeasure of the king .. — iv. 3 

letters of commendation to the king — iv. 3 

be too sweet for the king's tartness .. — iv. 3 

of my good lord the king — iv. 4 

more advanced by the king, than. . . . — iv. S 

1 moved the king my master — iv.4 

give this poor petition to the king .. — v. 1 



KIN 

KING— the king's not here All'itVeU,r.\ 

like to see the King belbre me — v. I 

the king's coming, I know by — v. 2 

grant it rac, (J king; in you.... — v. 3 (petition) 

great king, I am no strumpet — v. 3 

the king's a beggar, now — fepil.) 

thy kin^, thy governor: it blots.. Taming of Sh. v. 2 
if the king had no son, they would. 'Km(ei'j7'a(e, i. I 

had struck anointed kings — i.'i 

the king hath on him such — i. 2 

by ihe king. For what? He thinks .. — i. 2 

condemned by the king's own month — i. 2 

and so the king's will be performed! — ii. 1 

these dangerous unsafe lunes o'thc king! — ii. 2 

I'll show't the king, and undertake. — ii. 2 

not a party to the anger of the king — :i. 2 

for the harlot king is quite beyond.. — ii. 3 

the daughter of a king: our wifi; — iii. 2 

our sovereign lord the king ... . — iii. 2 (indict.) 

a great king's daughter, the mother — iii. 2 
aud the king shall live without — iii. 2 (oracle) 

my lord theTting, the king! ; — iii. S 

to have him kill a king — iii. 2 

I mentioned a son o' the king's . . — iv. (chorus) 

besides, the penitent king, my master — iv. 1 

and reconciled king, my brother — iv. 1 

of ale is a dish for a king — iv. 2 (song) 

bj' the power o' the king: one of ... . — iv. 3 

hath danced before the king — iv. 3 

that unhappy kin", my master — iv. 3 

please to think I love the king — iv. 3 

sent by the king your father — iv. 3 

against his daughter and the king's son — iv. 3 

to tell the king of this escape — iv. 3 

to acquaint the king withal — iv. 3 

but to tell the king she's a changeling — iv. 3 

and blood has not oflended the king — iv. 3 

to make me the king's brother-in-law — iv. ? 

my business, sir, is to the king — iv. 3 

which none must know but the king — iv. 3 

the king is not at the palace — iv. 3 

the king is full of grief — iv. 3 

in man, besides the king, to effect — iv. 8 

we must to the king, and show our . . — iv. 3 

the complaint they have to the king — iv. 3 

that a king, a friend, can scud — v. 1 

he's with the king your father — v. I 

is this the daughter of a king? — v. I 

I perceived iu the king, and Camillo — v. 2 

the king's daughter is found — v. 2 

has the king found his heir? — v. 2 

the king's daughter (rep.) — v. 2 

our king, being ready to leap out of. . — v. 2 

conduit of raauy kings' reigns — v. •.; 

worth the audience of kings and princes — v. 2 

and lamented by the king — v. 2 

and then the two kings called — v. 2 

hark ! the kings and princes — v. 2 

by us, a pair of kings; let's from .... — v. 3 

and son unto the king (whom heavens — v. 3 

say to the king the knowledge of Macbeth, i. 2 

God save the king! Whence earnest .. — i.2 

from Fife, great king, where — i. * 

Sweno. the Norway's king, craves .... — i.2 

that shalt be king hereafter — i. 3 

thou shalt get kings, though thou .... — i. 3 

to be king, stands not within — i. 3 

your children shall be kings (rf;;.) — i. 3 

the king hath happily received — i. 3 

if chance will have me king, why — i. 3 

let us toward the kin" — i. 3 

came missives from the king — i. 5 (letter) 

with, hail king that shalt be! — i. 5 (letter) 

the king comes here to-night — .1.5 

the king's a-bed: he liathueen — ii. I 

is the king stirring, worthy thane? — ii. 3 

goes the king from hence to-day? — ii. :i 

and Donalbain, the king's two sons .. — ii. < 

thou hast it now; king, Cawdor — iii. I 

and father of many kings — iii. 1 

first they put the name of king upon.. — iii. I 

hailed him father to a line of kinijs .. — iii. I 

them kings, the seed of Banquo kmgsl — iii. 1 

say to the king, I would attend — iii. 2 

to pray the holy king his aid — !!'.•* 

hath so exasperate the king — iii. B 

like the i.'isuc of a king — iv. 1 

that this great king moy kindly say . . — iv. 1 

the fall of many kiuffs — iv. 3 

were I king, I should cut off — iv. 3 

the sword of our slain kings — iv. 3 

father, was a most sainted king — iv. 3 

comes the king forth — iv. 3 

work in this good king; which often .. — iv. 3 

come, go we to the king — iv. -i 

hail, king! for so thou art — v. 7 

then take my king's defiance from ..King John, i. I 

of one mother, mighty king, that is — i. 1 

advantage of his absence took the kii.g — i- 1 

salute thee for her king — ii. I 

a bastard of the king deceased — ii. 1 

his lawful king, cut off the sequence — ii- I 

thy bastard shall be king — ii. 1 

[/ln^l king,_I..ewis, determine what we — ii. 1 

us, your lawful king, who jminiully — ii. 1 

and king o'er him, and all that he .. — ii. I 

acknowledge then the king, and let.. — ii. I 

the crown of England prove the king? — ii. 1 

dreadful trial of our kingdom's king! — ii. 1 

England's king, and yours — ii. 2 

coupled to the name of kings — ii. 2 

blood of kings is set on Are! — ii. J 

in undetermined differences of kings — Ii. 2 

cry, havock, kings! back to — ii. S 

who's your king? The king of (rep.) — Ii. 2 

[Co/. Kiir.] gales, kings, of onr fear .. — ii. a 

certain king purged and deposed {rep.) — ii. 2 

who shall be king of it? (rep.) — ii. 2 

hear us, great kings: vouchsafe n wliilc — ii. 2 

mad kings! mad composition! — ii. > 



KIN 



KING— of kings, of beggars, old raen..KinffJohn, ii. 

since kings break faitlx upon — ii. 

I have a king's oatli to the contrary — iij. 

not so witl\out you to the king's .... — iii. 

great grief, let liiugs assemble — iij. 

bid kings come bow to it — iii. 

discord twixt tliesc perjured kings! — iii. 

the free breath of a sacred king? .... — iii. 

and all tlie kings of Christendom — iii. 

the king is moved, and answers not — iii. 

ditference of incensed kings — iii. 

go witli me to tlie king — iii. 

t will whet on the king — iii- 

ay, the king will not siiy, no — iii. 

the ciilour of the king doth come .... — iv. 2 

it is the curse of kinjjs, to be — iv. 2 

to be endeared to a king — iv. 2 

the king, by me, requests ()•?».■) — iv. 3 

priictice and the purpose of tlie king — iv. 3 

the king hath sent for you — iv. 3 

tl»ere, tell the king, he may enquire — iv. 3 

I'll to the king: a thousand businesses — iv. 3 

from the king 1 come, to learn — v. 2 

now hear our English king — v. 2 

boyish troops, the king doth smile at — v. 2 

I did not tliink the king so stored .. — v. 4 

to one Hubert, with your king — v. 4 

the king, I fear, is poisoned by — v. 6 

the king yet speaks, and pcradventure — v. 6 

at wliose request the kin" hath — v. 6 

conduct me to the king; I dovibt .... — v. 6 

but now a king, — now thus — v. 7 

was now a king, and now is clay I . . — v. 7 

liere tlie kindred of the king Richard II. i. 1 

and tlie king's, say who thou art — i. 3 

to God, my king, and my succeeding — i. 3 

to ids Gnd", his king, and him — i. 3 

the king hatli thrown his — i. 3 

hod the king permitted us — i. 3 

I fear, the king shall rue — i. 3 

such is tlie breath of kings — i. 3 

but not a minute, king, tliat — i. 3 

the king did banish thee (rep.) — i. 3 

and not, the king exiled thee — i. 3 

will the king come? that I may — ii. 1 

this roj'al throne of kings, this sceptred — ii. 1 

- this teeming womb of roya.l kings ,. — ii. 1 

the king is come; deal mildly — ii. 1 

great king to flatter thee — ii. 1 

art thou now, not king: thy state.... — ii. 1 

for how art thou a king — ii. 1 

the king is not himself — ii. 1 

will the king severely prosecute .... — ii. 1 

the king's grown bankrupt — ii. 1 

most degenerate king; but, lords-. ... — ii- 1 

first departing of the king for — ii. 1 

when you parted with the king — ii. 2 

to please tlie king, I did — ii. 2 

I hope, the king is not yet shipped .. — ii. 2 

the king had cut oft' my head — ii. 2 

whonr t^ie king hatii wronged — ii- 2 

to the king in love, is near (7-(?p.) .... — ii-2 

wherein the king stands generally .. — ii. 2 

dispersed the household of the kiiig.. — ii. 3 

the anointed king is hence? (rep.) .. — ii. 3 

if that my cousin king be king of . . . . — ii. 3 

the sovereign mercy of the king .... — ii. 3 

hear no tidings from the kin" — ii. 4 

the king repoteth all his confluence (rep.) — ii. 4 

forerun the death or fall of kings.... — ii. 4 

a royal king, a happy gentleman.... — iii. 1 

near to the king in blood — iii. 1 

ere her native king shall falter — iii. 2 

hath power to keep you king — i i i . 2 

wash the balm from an anointed king — iii. 2 

am I not king? awake, sluggard .... — iii. 2 

is not the king's name forty — iii. 2 

ye favourites of a king; are we not.. — iii. 2 

rounds the mortal temples of a king — iii. 2 

and — farewell kingi cover your iieads — iii. 2 

how can you say tome— I am a king? — iii. 2 

a king, woe's slave, shall kingly woe ■ — iii. 2 

is gone to meet the king — ii"'. 3 

a sacred king should hide his headi — iii- 3 

contains no king? Yes, my good (j-ff.) — iii. 3 

yet looks he like a king; behold — iii. 3 

we thought onrseU" thy lawful king — iii. 3 

the king of heaven forbid (7f/j.) .... — iii. 3 

sav, thus the kin^ returns — iii- 3 

what must the king do now? (rep.).. — iii. 

base court, wliere kin"s grow base .. — iii- 

hath seized the wasteful king — iii. 

the king shall be deposed? — iii- 

meet at London, London's king .... — iii. 

can give sentence on his king? — iv. 

his king. jMy lord of Hereford (rep.) — iv. 

why am I sent for to a king — i\'. 

God save the king ! will no man say — iv. 

my griefs; still am I king of those .. — iv. 

containing the deposing of a king .. — iv. 

undeck the pompons body of a king — iv. 

that I were a mockery king of snow — iv. 

good king, great king, (and yet not.. — iv. 

mark, silent king, the moral of — iv. 

and I thank thee, king, for thy great -^ iv. 

freater than a king; for when (,iep.') — iv. 

have a king here to my flatterer .. — iv. 

rise thus nimbly by a true king's fall — iv. 

this way the king will come ^- v. 

any resting for lier triie king's queen — v. 

and a king of beasts? A kin^ of Deasts — v. 

for the dejiosinir of a rightful king .. — v. 

to plant unrightful kings, wilt — v. 

and send the kin;; with me — v. 

lasting fealtv to the ncw-mode king — v. 

mv boots; Twill unto the king — v. 

to kill the king at Oxford _ v. 

and gel before hiin to the king — . v. 

where is the king? What means — v. 

from the traitor's bosom, king — v. 



[ 408 ] 

KING— and thine aunt, great king ..liichard II. v. 3 

changed to the beggar and the king — v. 3 

king, believe not this hard-hearted — v. 3 
say, pardon, king; let pity teach thee — v. 3 
pardon, for kings' mouths so meet . . — v. 3 

didst thou not mark the king — v. 4 

the king at Pomfret. Come, let's (tep.) — v. 4 

sometimes am I king; then treason.. — v. •> 

groom of thy stable, king (7ep.) — v. 5 

who lately came from the king — v. 5 

with the king's blood stained the king's — v. 5 

this dead king to the living king I'll — v..') 

great king, within this coffin — v. li 

when thou art king, as God save MlenrylV. i. 2 

in England when thou art king? — i. 2 

wdien thou art king, hang a thief — i. 2 

for never a king's son in Christendom — i. 2 

air as this unthankful king — i. 3 

brother, the king hath made your .. — i. 3 

when the unhappy king (whose — i. 3 

cannot blame his cousin king — i. 3 

range under this subtle king — i. 3 

contempt, of this proud king — i. 3 

unto this king of smiles — i. 3 

the king will always think him .... — i. 3 

ne'er a king in Christendom could .. — ii. 1 

help me to my horse; good king's son — ii. 2 

money of the king's coming down (rep.) — ii. 2 

will he to the king, and lay open — ii. 3 

let him tell the king; we are prepared — ii. 3 

yet I am the king of courtesy — ii. 4 

a kind's son! If I do not beat thee . . — ii. 4 

dost thou speak like a king? — ii. 4 

even in the presence of the crowned king — iii. 2 

the skipping king, he ambled — iii. 2 

the king himself is to be feared as .. — iii. 3 

thou art the king of honour — iv. 1 

because the king is certainly possessed — iv. 1 

1 have learned, the king himself in.. — iv. 1 
what may the king's whole battle .. — iv. 1 
have misused the king's press damnably — iv. 2 
the king, I can tell you, looks for.... — iv. 2 
what is the kin" encamped? He is .. — iv. 2 
the number of tlie king exceedeth ours — iv. 3 
with gracious offers from the king . . — iv. 3 
the king hath sent to know the nature — iv'. 3 

if that the king have any way — iv. 3 

the king is kind; and well we irep.') — iv. 3 

that the absent king in deputation .. — iv. 3 

he deposed the king; soon after that — iv. 3 

were well placed, indeed his king — iv. 3 

shall I return this answer to the king? — iv. 3 

to wage an instant trial with the king — iv. 4 

but yet the king hath drawn — iv. 4 

ere tiie king dismiss his power — iv. 4 

what with the absent king — v. 1 

that held the king so long in his .... — v. 1 

the liberal kind offer of the king — v. 2 

it cannot lie, the king should keep his — v. 2 

in any case, the offer of tlie king .... — v. 2 

the king will bid you battle — v. 2 

there is no seeming mercy in the king — v. 2 

stepiied forth before the king — v. 2 

we live to trend on kings — v. 2 

the king coincs on apace — v. 2 

some tell me tliat thou art a king .. — v. 3 

and thnu Shalt find a king that will.. — v. 3 

here breathless lies the king — v. 3 

furnished like the king himself — v. 3 

wert a. king? The iiing hath many .. — v. 3 

piece by piece, until I meet the king — v. 3 

another king! they grow like — v, 4 

person of a king? The king himself — v. 4 

met, and not the very king — v. 4 

thou bcnr'st thee like a king — v. 4 

the king before the Douglas' . .iHenrylV. (indue.) 

the king is almost wounded — i. 1 

slain the appearance of the king .... — i. I 

is,— that the king hath won — i. 1 

doth not the king lack subjects? — i- 2 

well, the king hath severed you — i. 2 

power and puissance of the king — i. 3 

with the king. What! is the king but — i. 3 

so is the unflrm king in three — i. 3 

sire us that king again, and take.... — i- 3 

kill God's officers, and the king's? .. — ii. 1 

hasty employment in the king's affairs — ii. I 

the icing, my lord, and Harry prince of — ii. I 

where lay the king last niglit? — ii. 1 

comes the king back from Wales. ... .— ii. 1 

like those that are kin to the king .. — ii. 2 

there is some of the king's blood spilt — ii. 2 

I am the king's poor cousin, sir — ii. 2 

knight to the son of the king — ii. 2 (letter) 

ground and vantage of the king — ii. 3 

and was a worthy king;— how now.. — ii. 4 

r.ather damn them with king Cerberus — ii. 4 

ha! a bastard son of the king's? — ii. 4 

the king your father is at "Westminster — ii. 4 

and means to boot, deny it to a king? — iii. 1 

one of the king's justices of the peace — iii. 2 

with ringing in the king's affairs — iii. 2 

our late king, Richard, being infected — iv. 1 

ere this, we offered to the king — iv. 1 

have you been galled by the king? .. — iv. 1 

and not the king, that doth you injuries — iv. 1 

either from the king, or in the present — iv. I 

the king, that loved him as the — iv. 1 

when the king did throw his — iv. 1 

graced indeed, more than the king .. — iv. i 

shall, to the king, taste of this action — iv. 1 

note this, the king is weary of — iv. 1 

besides the king hath wasted all — iv. i 

the countenance of the king, alack . . — iv. 2 

1 hear, the king my father is sore sick — iv. 3 
lower, jirinces; for the king recovers — iv. 4 
how doth the king? Exceeding ill .. — iv. 4 
the king your father is disposed to sleep — iv. 4 
will sit aiid watch here by the king.. — iv. i 
divorced 60 many English kings — iv. 4 



KIN 



KING— doth the king call? •iHtnnjII'. iv. 4 

how doth the king? Exceeding well — v. 2 

the young king loves you not — v. 2 

I'll to the king my master — v. >; 

image of the king whom I presented — v. 2 

and, as you are a king, speak — v. 2 

why, tliere spoke a king — v. 3 

uncier the king, in some {rep.') — v. 3 

thy tender lambkin now IS king .... — v. 3 

•what! is tlie old king dead? — v. 3 

the young king is sick for me — v. 3 

I will make the king do you grace . . — v. 5 

my king! my Jove! I speak to thee — v. 5 

this fair proceeding of the king's .... — %'. i 

the king hath called his parliament — v. b 

to my thinking, pleased the king — v. o 

that now must deck our kings . . Henry V. i. (chcr. I 

year o' the last king's reign — i. 1 

to the king's hon(mr, full fifteen .... — i. I 

and to the coti'crs of the king — i. ! 

thekingisfnllofgrace....; — i. I 

and all at once, as 111 this king — i. I 

the king were made a prelate — i. I 

:Four brother kings and monarchs of — i. 2 

lame with prisoner kings — i. 2 

they have a king and officers — i. 2 

from him, not from the king — i. 2 

no tyrant, but a Christian king — i. 2 

be like a kill", and show my sail .... — i. 2 

the mirror of all Christian kings — ii. (chorus) 

this grace of kingsroust die.... — ii. (chorus) 

the king is set from London..., — ii. (chorus) 

till the iiing come forth — ii. (chorus) 

the king hath killed his heart — ii. I 

the king hath run bad humours on .. — ii- 1 

the king is a good king — ii. I 

the king hath note of all that — ii. 2 

would have sold your king to slaughter — ii. 2 

sliog off? the king will be gone — ii. 3 

much mistaken ill this king — ii. 4 

thus says my king; and, if j'Oiir father's — ii. 4 

lest that our king come here himself — ii.4 

the well-appointed king — iii. (chorus) 

that the king doth offer him .. — iii. (chorus) 

the wars, and the king, and the dukes — iii. 2 

hark you, the king is coming — iii.fi 

thus says my king: say thou — iii tl 

BO far my king and master — iii, (i 

and tell thy king, I do not seek — iii.fi 

now lie I like a king — iv. 1 

abetter than the king. The king's.. — iv. I 

hath not told his thought to the king? — iv. I 

the king is but a man, as I am .. — }v. 1 

I will speak my conscience of the king — iv. I 

as in the king's company — iv. I 

if we know we are the king's subjects — iv. 1 

the king himself hath a iieavy — ii'. 1 

for the king that led them to it — iv. I 

the king is not bound to answer — iv. 1 

besides, there is no king, be his cause — iv. I 

breach of the king's laws (7ep.) — iv. I 

no more is the king guilty of their .. — iv. 1 

every subject's duty is tlie king's — iv. 1 

I myself, heard the king say — iv. 1 

I take thee in the king's company .. — iv. 1 

the king himself will be (rep^ — iv. 1 

heart's-ease must kings neglect — iv. I 

with a king's repose: I am a king.... — iv. 1 

the fore-hand and vantage of a king — iv. 1 

what watch the king keeps to maintain — iv. 1 

where is the king? The king himself — iv. 3 

Harry the king, Bedford, and Exeter — iv. 3 

is this the king we sent to — iv. .^ 

the king's tent: wherefore the king.. — iv. 7 

O 'tis a gallant king! — iv. 7 

our king is not like him in that — iv. 7 

no, great king, I come to thee for — iv. 7 

great king, to view the field in safety — iv. 7 

soldier, you must come to the king.. — iv. 7 

come apace to the king — iv. 8 

of Orleans, nephew to the king — iv. 8 

now we bear the king toward.. — v. (chorus) 

a mighty whifHer 'fore the king — v. (chorus) 

great kings of France and England! — v. 2 

the king hath beard them — v. 2 

go with the king; and take with you — v. 2 

thou wouldst find me such a plain king — v. 2 

take a soldier, take a king — v. 2 

the word of a king and a bachelor .. — V. 2 

king, thou shalt find the best king of — v. 2 

nice customs curt'sy to great kin"s.. — v. 2 

the king hath granted every article. . — v. 2 

did this king succeed — v. 2 (chorus) 

a king of so much worth (rep.) \HertryVI. i. I 

a king blessed of the King of kings .. — i. I 

Charles is crowned king ill Rheims! — i. I 

the Dauphin crowned king! — i. 1 

young Henry king. To Eltbam (rep.') — i. 1 

the king from El tbam I intend — i. I 

no friend to God, or to the king — i. 3 

not protector of the king or realm .. — i. 3 

thot regards nor God nor king — i. 3 

to crown himself king, and suppress — i. 3 

against God's peace and the king's — i. 3 (prod.) 

in our late king's days? — ii.4 

of Edward king, the third — ii- .'J 

the king, thy sovereign, is not quite — iii- 1 

but he should be aboiit the king .... — iii. 1 

his grace protector to the king? — iii. I 

compassion on the kin" commands.. — iii. 1 

sweet king! the bishop iiath — iii. I 

the presence of a king engenders love — iii.) 

to Paris, to the kinsr; for there young — iii. 2 

but kings, and mightiest potentates — iii. 2 

elect no other king but him — iv. 1 

ti) the king? hath be forsrot — iv. 1 

Charles, the right'ul king — iv. 1 (letter) 

disturb the king and us? — iv. I 

the king prettily, methought, did — iv. 1 

and daughter to a king, the king of.. — v. 3 



KIN 



[ 409 ] 



KINO— for whom? why, for my king. 1 Henri/ I't. v. 3 

England's royal king be free — v. 3 

Bhall be wedded to my king — \..\ 

to l>e made companion with a king .. — v. 3 

dejnitv unto that gracious king — v. 3 

thisiaiu trntflcof a king — v. 3 

no urinocly commemlations to my king? — v. 3 

witii love, I send tlic king — v. 3 

Buch ncevifli tokens to a King — v. 3 

issued from the progeny of kings .... — v. 4 

letters of connnission from the King — v. 4 

iiriH'ci'diM; from cmr king — v. 4 

luM- fiitlior is 11 lung, tlie king of Naples — v. .'i 

disgiiKV not so your king — v..'. 

Iving a king, hut Margaret (rep.).... — v. & 

tit for none, hut for a king — v. S 

our hoiH! in issue of a king — v..') 

ruie the king; but I will rule (irp.).. — v. .'> 

<|\uen tlrnt ever king received •iUeurij VI. \. 1 

to Miliil,' niv king with luder — i. 1 

di'livLU'.l t" ll\c king Iver lather — i. 1 (.articles) 

F.iighuurs kings have had large — i. 1 

the pleasure ot my lord tile king .... — j- 1 

against my kins and nephew — '\-i 

v.-l>ere kin'gs and queens are crowned — j. - 

whereas the king and queen — i. 2 

do more in t^ngland than the king . . — i. 3 

Because the king, forsooth (rep.) — — i. 3 

wcrt king (and who is king, but thouV) — i. 3 

f:ood kiiM, look to"t in time? — i. 3 

ove mv king and country! — i. 3 

first, of the kins; what shall — i. 1 (paper) 

the king and commonweal are deeply — i- 4 

so bad as thine to England's king .. — i. 4 

the king is now in progress towards — i. 4 

so with King and eomnionweall .... — ii- I 

ennie to the king, and tell him what — ;;• 1 

bring liim near ttic king, his highness' — ij. 1 

how I have loved my king — ii. 1 

death, reigned asking — ii. 2 

deposed the rightful king — \}-'i 

but for Owen Glendowcr, had been king — ii- i 

succeed before the vounger, I am king — ii. 'i 

England's kingl ^V■e thank you (icn.) — ii. 2 

one day make the duke of York a king — ii."2 

greatest man in England, but tlie king — jj. 2 

to thy king. I see no reason, why a king — ii. 3 

statf,"sir, and the king his realm — ii. 3 

why, now is Henry king, and Margaret — ii. 3 

nor the king, nor tlie queen — ii. 3 

her penance e.xceed the king's — ii. 4 

as next the king, he was successive. . — iii. 1 

happiness unto mv lord the king! .. — iii. 1 

that e'er I wrested from the king — iii- I 

duke Humphrey for the king's protector — iii. 1 

the king and all the peers are here . . — iii- 2 

help, lords! the king is dead — iii. 2 

with that dread King, that took .... — iii. 2 

the king shall know your raind .... — '!!• 2 

an answer from the king, or we'll .. — iji- 2 

once by the king, and three times ,. — •!'•'- 

sometime, he calls the king — jjl* - 

this heavy message to the king — iii. 2 

the king," thou know'st, is coming .. — iii. 2 

the daugnter of a worthless king .... — iv. 1 

shameful murder of a guiltless king — iv. 1 

crept into the palace of our king .... — iv. I 

Ood of heaven, and to my king — iv. I 

the king's council are no good — iv. 2 

of putting down kings and princes . . — iv. 2 

and when I am king, (as king I will be — iv. 2 

are hard by, with the king's forces . . — iv. 2 

the king is merciful, if you revolt .. — iv. 2 

true; therefore he shall be king .... — iv. 2 

tell the king from me, that — iv. 2 

fellow kings, I tell you, that that — iv. 2 

assail them with the army of the king — iv. 2 

you, that be the king's friends — iv. 2 

nght for your king, your country.... — iv. 5 

and, contrary to the king, his crown — iv. 7 

the king, the realm, and you? — iv. 7 

my bfmk preferred me to the king .. — iv. 7 

parleyed unto foreign kings — iv. 7 

from the king unto the commons — iv. 8 

who loves the king, and will embrace — iv. 8 

God save the king! God save irep. iv. 9) ^ iv. 8 

we'll follow the king, and Clitt'ord .. — iv. 8 

he, that brings his head unto tlie king — iv. 8 

to reconcile you all unto the king.... — iv. 8 

was ever king that Joyed an earthly — iv. 9 

but I was made a king at nine — iv. 9 

never subject longed to be a king.... — iv. 9 

get a thousand crowns of the king .. — iv. 10 

bear in triumph to the king _ iv. 10 

entertain England's lawful king .... — v. I 

the king bath sent him, sure — v. 1 

better born than is the king (rfp.) .. — v. I 

remove proud Somerset from the king — v. 1 

the king hath yielded unto thy demand — v. I 

into the presence of a king, lo — v. 1 

esquire of Kent, that loves his king.. — v. 1 

false king! why hast thou broken . . — v. 1 

king did t call thee? no, thou art (rep.) — v. 1 

treason 'gainst the king and crr)wn.. — v. 1 

and all happiness to my lord the kingi — v. 1 

this is mv King, York, I do not — v. I 

oppose himseli against his king — v. I 

I am thy king, and thou a false-heart — v. 1 

as I hear, the king is flerl to I.,ondon — v. 3 

I wonder, how the king escaped 3/Jenrv I'l. \. I 

the palace of the fearful king, and this — i. I 

and, when the king comes, offer him — i. 1 

Plantagenet. duke of York, lie king.. — i. 1 

neither the king, luir he that iovcs .. — i. 1 

the crown, and reign as king — i. I 

follow, but his natural king? — i. I 

let him tie king. He is both king ~ i. l 

and trumnets, and the king willfly — i. I 

prove it. Henry, and thou shaltbe king — i. I 

Dy rebellion against his king — i. 1 



KING— may not akingadopt an heir? SHenry/'i. I. 1 

then am I lawtXil king — i. 1 

tells mo, he is lawful king — 1.1 

for this my lifetime, rcigu as king .. — i. I 

fainthearted and degenerate king .. — i. 1 

honour me as thy king and sovereign — i. 1 

if you l>e king, why should not I .... — i. I 

art thou king, and wilt be forced? .. — i. 1 

I will he king or die — i. 2 

and yet the king not privy to ray drift — i. 2 

left protectors oftho king — i. 2 

that would be England's king? — i. 4 

now looks he like a king! — i. 4 

you should not be king, till our king — i. 4 

Keeper of the king, mustered my.... — ii. 1 

hearing the kin" m ray behalf along — ii. 1 

whether 'twas the coldness of the king — ii. I 

the king, unto the queen — ii. 1 

wrought the easy-melting king — ii. 1 

would have his son a king — ii. 2 

thou, being a king, blessed with .... — ii. 2 

proclaims him king, and many fly .. — ii. 2 

and thy lawful king. I am his king — ii. 2 

you— that are king, tho' he do wear — ii. 4 

1 am a king, and privileged to speak — ii. 2 

hears the title of a king, (as if — ii. 2 

false woman, as this kmc by thee.... — ii. 2 

and tamed the king, and made the. . — ii. 2 

in pity of the gentle king — ii. 2 

deny'st the gentle king to speak — ii. 2 

and plucker down of kings! — ii. 3 

to kiiigs, that fear their subjects' .... — ii. 5 

from London by the king was I — ii. •'J 

mis-think the king, and not be satisfied — ii. .'i 

was ever king so nied for subjects' woe? — ii. .') 

here sits a king more woeful than .. — ii. 

ewayed as kings should do — ii. C 

tho' he were a King, as doth a sail .. — ii. u 

he crowned England's royal king. ... — ii. ti 

this is the quondam king; let's seize — iii. 1 

to crave the French king's sister .... — iii. 1 

wins the king from her — iii. 1 

that talkest of kings and queens?.... — iii. 1 

of kings, and why not I? (Ji'p.) — iii. 1 

but, it thou be a king, where — iii- I 

kings enjoy. Well, ii you be a king — iii. 1 

you are the king, king Edward hath — iii. 1 

King at nine months old (>ep.) — iii. I 

subjects, but while you were a king — iii. 1 

you kings; command, and I'll (rep.) — iii. 1 

and in the king's, to go with us — iii. I 

your king's name be obeyed (lep.) .. — iii- I 

before the king will grant her humble — iii. 2 

'tis but to love a king — iii. 2 

one way or other, she is for a king .. — iii 2 

where kings command — !!!••' 

is of a king, become a banished man — iii. 3 

true-anointed lawful king — iii. 3 

to England's king in lawful marriage — iii. 3 

madam, in our king's behalf — iii. 3 

call Edward king. Call him my king? — iii. 3 

is Edward your true king? — iW-^ 

heard your king's desert recounted.. — !!!•■' 

jointure that your king must make — !!'•'* 

wife to the English king (rff.) — iii. 3 

setter up and puller down of kings! — iii. 3 

these from our king unto your majesty — jji- 3 

what, has your kin" married — iii- 3 

no more my king, tor he dishonours me — iii. 3 

Edward, thy supposed king (rep. iv. I) — iii. 3 

go fear thy king withal — iii- 3 

forbear this talk ; here comes the king — iv. 1 

I am Edward, your king and Warwicli's — i v. 1 

your will, because our king — iv. I 

Edward will be king, and not be tied — iv. 1 

brother king, farewell, and sit you fast — jv. 1 

the king, by this, is set him — iv. 3 

that with the king here restcth (rep.) — iv. 3 

why commands the king, that his .. — iv. 3 

last, thou called'st me king? — iv. 3 

degraded you from being king — iv. 3 

always bear himself as king — iv. 3 

mind, be Edward England s king ,. — iv. 3 

and be true king indeed: thou but .. — iv. 3 

yon know, our king, my brother .... — iv. s 

if Henry be your king, yet Edward. . — iv. 7 

I came to serve a king, and not a duke — !^'- 7 

here proclaim yourself our king — iv. 7 

call Edward king, and at his — v. 1 

at least, he would have said, the king — v. 1 

and Henry is my king (rfp. ) — v. 1 

the king was slily fingered from — — v. 1 

against his brother, and his lawful king?— v. 1 

for who lived king, but I could — V. 2 

excuse me to the king my brother .. — v. 6 

weeps for the poor king's death! .... — v. (i 

and the kin", in deadly hate Richard III. i. 1 

'tis not the King tliat sends — i. 1 

betwixt the king and mistress Shore — i. 1 

if we will keep in favour with theking — i. 1 

we say, the king is wise, and virtuous — i. 1 

I will untotlie king, and whatsoe'er — i. 1 

the king is sickly, weak, and melancholy — i- I 

poor key-cold figure of a holy king! — i- 2 

swallow up this good king's Wood .. — i. 2 

didst thou not kfll this king? — i. 2 

fitti'r for the King of heaven — i. 2 

at Chertsey monastery thisnobleking — i. 2 

so if must he, if the king miscarry .. — i. 3 

saw you the king to-day, my lord .. — i. 3 

thatVoniplain unto the king, that I — i. a 

the king, of his own royal disiwsition — i..1 

ntorrv with a king, a bachelor — i. :: 

threat you me with tell in" of the king? — i. S 

avouch in prrscnce of theking — i. 3 

or your hushand king, I was — j. 3 

lawful king, so should we you (r^p.) — i. 3 

were vou this country's king — i- 3 

your king, as ours by murder (rrp.) — i. ■'' 

that stir the king against the duke .. — i. 3 





2 
2 
2 
2 




3 




3 




1 
1 




4 
7 




7 




7 


IV 


1 



KIN 

KING— I'll to the kingj ond signify.. i?ic/iarii ///. i-. 1 

my voice is now the king's — i. 4 

otlended us jou have not, but the king — i. 4 

is our king. JCrroneous vassal! (rrp.) — i. 4 

your king: hit be, that is (icp.) .... — ii. I 

to my sovereign king, and queen — ii. I 

dear Brother, live, and be a king! — ii. 1 

did urge it still unto the king — ii. I 

1 do lament the sickness of the king — ii. 2 

the king my uncle is to blame — ii. 2 

the king doth love you well — ii. 2 

the king, [irovoked to't by the queen — ii. 2 

thy son, our king, is dead — ii. 2 

souls may catch the king's — 

spent our harvest of this king — 

to lie crowned our king — 

I hope, the king made peace — 

yes, the king's dead. Ill news — 

then the king bad virtuous uncles .. — 

die a soldier, as I lived a king — 

when I am king, claim thou of me .. — 

the king my brother was possessed .. — 

for crowning of the king — 

Richard, England's royal king! .... — 

son shall never reign our king — 

Richard, England s worthy king!.. .. — 

the king hatii strictly charged (rep.) — 

I would be king. Why, so you arc (rep.) — 

the king is angry, see, he gnaws his lip — iv. i 

should be king, when Richmond (rep.) — iv. 2 

made I him king for this? — iv. 2 

bear this tidings to the bloody king.. — iv. 3 

Mercury, and herald for a king I — iv. 3 

who dost thou mean shall be her king? — iv. 4 

a son being king, and, by that loss .. — iv. 4 

the king, that calls your beauteous .. — iv. 4 

again shall you be mother to a king — iv. 4 

king that may command, entreats (rep.) — i^'. 4 

the King thy brother made — iv. 4 

is the king dead? — iv. 4 

and who is England's king, but — iv. 4 

not been commanded, migiity king . . — iv. 4 

kings it makes gods (iv'p. I — v. 2 

besides, the king's name is a tower .. — v. 3 

from the mighty power of the king .. — v. 3 

that prophesied thou shouldst be king — v. 3 

live, and beget a liapp.v race of kings! — v. 3 

the king enacts more wonders than - - — v. 4 

the two kings, equal in lustre Henry I' III. i. 1 

a place next to the king — i. I 

without the privity o' the king — i. I 

he's gone to the king; I'll follow .... — i. I 

I'll to the king; and from a mouth.. — i. 1 

to the king I'll say't — i. 1 

suggests the king our master — i. 1 

please to alter the king's course — j. 1 

let the king know — i. 1 

the name of our most sovereign king — i. I 

king is pleased, you shall to the Tower — i- 1 

and the king's pleasure by me obeyed — i. 1 

here is a warrant from the king — i. 1 

yet the king our master, whose honour — i. 2 

of the king 8 grace and pardon — i. 2 

that if the King should without issue — i. 2 

prove perfidious to the king's danger — i. 2 

neither the king, nor his heirs — i. 2 

had the king in his last sickness — i. 2 

the king's attorney — ii. 1 

generally whoever the king favours — ii. 1 

although the king have mercies — ii. 1 

my vows and prayers yet are the king's — ii. 1 

the king and Katharine? Yes (rep.) — ii. I 

certain, the king will venture at it .. — ii. 1 

if not before the king — ii. 2 (letter) 

how is the king employed? — ii. 2 

theking will know him one day .... — ii. 2 

he dives into the king's soul — ii. 2 

out of all these to restore the king .. — ii. 2 

of fortune falls, will bless theking .. — ii. 2 

the French king's sister (rep.) — ii. 2 

so I'll stand, if the king please — ii. 2 

put the king from these sad thoughts — ii. 2 

the king hath sent me otherwhere ,. — ii. 2 

a gracious king, that pardons — ii- 2 

thou art a cure fit for a king — ii. 2 

favour to you; you are the King's now — ii. 2 

the king's majesty commends his good — ii.3 

the fair conceit the king hath of you — ii.3 

that they have caught the king — ii.3 

I'll to the king, and say, I spoke — ii.3 

please j'ou, sir, the king, your father — ii. 4 

what is unsettled in the king — ii. 4 

certain, the daughter of a king — ii. 4 

the king is present: if it be 

he might the king his lord 

difference between the king and you 
madam, you wTong the king's love .. 

cause into the king's protection 

a judge, that no king can corrupt.... 

still met the king? 

grow from the king's acquaintance.. 

the king loves you 

if von eininot bur his ni'ocss to theking — iii. 2 

wi'tcluTiill over llic kiriL.' with his tongue— iii. 'i 

the king liiilli (..uiiil iiiiilter against him — iii. 2 

and iiuiie to tlu'i ye o' the king — iii. 2 

my king istaiu-'Ud in atl'ection — iii. 2 

has the king tills? Believe it — iii. 2 

the king in this iierceives him — iii. 2 

the king already both married the .. — iii. a 

but, will the king digest this letter .. — iii. 2 

left the cause o' the kinf! unbundled — iii. 2 

the king cried, ha! at this — iii. 2 

have satisfied theking — iii. 2 

ta'en much pain in the king s business — iii. 2 

Cromwell, gave it you the king? ..,, — iii. 'J 

of AlenCon, the French king's sister — iii. '.J 

be hears the king doth whet ~ iii. 2 

i' tlir bosom of our hard-ruled king — iii. 2 

crawled into the favour of the king.. — iii. 2 



11. 




in 




III 
iii 




iii 




iii 





KING-the king, the kin" Henry VIII. iii. 

in the packet I sent the kingj' — ;;;. 

hear the king's pleasure, carainal.... — iii. 

bearing the king's will from his — iii. 

the king, (mine, and vour master,) . . — iii. 

■who'll take it? The king, that gave it — iii. 

from the king, from all that might .. — ui. 

toward tlie king, my ever royal master — in. 

you writ to the pope, against the king — iii. 

are in the king's hand — iii. 

without tlie king's assent, or knowledge — iii. 

in which you brought tlie king to be — iii. 

either of king or council — iii. 

without tlie king's will — m. 

hat to be stamped on the king's coin — iii. 

the king's further pleasure is — iii. 

out of tlie king's protection — iii. 

the king shall know it — iii. 

the king has cured me — iii. 

your displeasure with the king — iii. 

the lady Anne, whom the king hath — iii. 

the king has gone beyond me — iii. 

eeek the king; that sun, I pray — iii. 

the king shall have my service — iii. 

serve the king; and— pr'ythee, lead — iii. 

'tis the king's; my robe — iii. 

half the zeal I served my king — , iii. 

and the king's late scruple — iv. 

our king has all the Indies — iv. 

the king's, and called— Whitehall .. — iv. 

preferred from the king's secretary . . — iv. 

with the king, and truly (7ep.) — iv. 

sent from the king, to see you — iv. 

the next, the king's request — iv. 

to deliver this to my lord the king .. — iv. 

and urge the king to do me this last — iv. 

and daughter to a king — iv. 

eame you from the king, my lord? . . — v. 

and the king's secretary — v. 

the archbishop is the king's hand.... — v. 

have broken with the king — v. 

the king shall understand: it (rfp.) .. — V. 

toward the king flrst, then his laws. . — v. 

the king may never hnd a heart .... — v. 

till the king s further pleasure — v. 

the king my master. 'This is the king's — v. 

the king will suffer but the little — v. 

as I live, if the king blame me — v. 

like the commandment oi a.'kins.Troilus ^ Cress, i. 

kings, princes, lords! — i. 

tlie worth and honour of a king — ii. 

turned crowned kings to merchants — ii. 

be wife to Sparta's king — ii. 

art Jove the king of gods — ii. 

fresh kings are come to Troy — ii. 

if the king call for him at supper. ... — iii. 

than all the island kings — iii. 

I was sent for to the king — iv. 

for a day of kings' entreaties Coriolanus, i. 

after great Ilostilius, here was king — ii. 

choose Csesar for their king Julius Ccusar^ i. 

his state in Rome, as easily as a king — i. 

mean to establish Csesar as a king . . — i. 

drive, when he was called a king .... — ii. 
be married to three kings . . Antony ^ Cleopah-cit i. 

three kings I had newly feasted — ii. 

that kings have lipped, and trembled — ii. 

bear the king's son's body before .... — iii. 

there proclaimed, the kings of kings — iii. 

levying the kings o' the earth for war — iii. 

the kings of Mede and Lycaonia .... — iii. 

six kings already show me the way — iii. 

superfluous kings for messengers .... — iii. 

kings would start forth, and cry ... . — iii. 

and kings have been your fellows. . . . — iv. 

the kings that have revolted — iv. 

armour all of gold; it was a king's .. — iv. 

to wash the eyes of kings — v. 

descended of so many royal kings .. — v. 
as does tlie king's [Co/. Knt.-kmg] ..Cymbettne^i. 

the king be touched at very heart (rep.) — i. 

to the bent of the king's looks — i. 

the king, he takes the babe — i. 

is she sole child to the king? — i. 

king's children should be so conveyed! — i. 

soon as I can win the offended king — i. 

though the king hath charged you . . — i. 

if the king come, I shall incur — i. 

alack, the king'. Thou basest thing.. — i. 

marrying his king's daiurhter — i. 

our great king himself doth woo — i. 

whicli hath the king five times redeemed — i. 

I'll move the king to any shape — i. 

would make the greatest king double! — i. 

kingmyfatlier shall bemadeacquainted — i. 

here comes the king — ii. 

you are most bound to the king .... — ii. 

revenue of any king's in Europe — ii. 

BO sure to win the king, as I am bold — ii. 

by this, your king hath heard of great — ii. 

remember, sir, mv liege, the kings .. — iii. 

and called himself a king — iii. 

that hath more kings his servants .. — iii. 

they are sons to the king — iii. 

whom tile king his father called .... — iii. 

kings, queens, and states, maids .... — iii. 

'gainst the king my father — iii. 

son, I say, follow the king — iii. 

go in, and cheer the king — iii. 

falsehood isworse in kings, than beggars — iii. 

even to the note o' the king — iv. 

to the king's party, there's no going — iv. 

besides., the king hath not deserved.. — iv. 

the kiiig himself of his wings destitute — v. 

bring him to the king — v. 

then, Jupiter, thou king of gods .... — v. 

bring your prisoner to the king — v. 

hail, great king! to sour your happiness — v. 

thou, king, send out for torturers. . . . — v. 

stay, sir king: this man is better .... — v. 



KING -hadst, great king, a subject . . Cymbeline, v. 5 

graced the thank ings of a king — v. 5 

if to fight for king and commonweal.. Ti'dis And. i. 2 

to Saturnine, king and commander of — _i. 2 

give the king this fatal plotted scroll — ii. 3 

the king, my brother, shall have note — ii. 3 

now will I fetch the king to find — ii. 

where is my lord the king? — ii. 

Andronicus, I will entreat tlie king — ii. 

whose circling sliadows kings have .. — ii. 

and send it to the king; he for the same — iii. 

king, be thy thoughts imperious .... — iv. 
this king unto him took a pheerc. Pc/-!cics, i. (Gow 

her thoughts the king of every virtue — i- 

treat king, few love to hear the sins . . — i. 

ings are earth's gods — i. 

they do abuse the king, that flatter — i. 2 

fits kings, as they are men — i. 2 

that kings should let their ears — i. 2 

to ask what he would of tlie king — i. 3 

for if a king bid a man be a villain — i. 3 

to question of your king's departure .. — i. 3 

how! the king gone? If further — i. 3 

the king it sure must please 

a mighty king, his child, I wis — ii. (Gower 

and our king, the good Simonides .... " ' 
he is a happy king, since from his .... 

sometime target to a king 

crown you king of this day's happiness — ii. 3 

I wonder, that is the king of thoughts — ii. 3 

yon king's to me, like to my father's . . — ii. 3 

I see that Time's the king of men — ii. 3 

the king, my father, sir, has drunk.... — ii. 3 

for though this king were great — ii. 4 

choice i' the absence of your king .... — ii. •! 

'tis the king's subtilty to have — ii. 5 

(unless it be the king,) that calls — ii. 5 

our heir-apparent is a king — iii. (Gower) 

she was the daughter of a king . . — iii. 2 (scroll) 

I love the king your father, and yourself — iv. 1 

have brought this king to Tharsus — iv. 4 

of Tyrus, tlie king's daughter — iv. 4 (Gower) 

inittheking; aman,whofor — v. 1 

sir, king, all hail! the gods preserve .. — v. 1 

the cause of your king's sorrow — v. 1 

like Patience, gazing on kings' graves — v. 1 

and a king. How! a king's ofauehter? — v. 1 

my mother was the daugnter of a king — v. 1 

the king, my father, did in Tharsus .. — v. 1 
in Mitj'lene, to greet the king .. — v. 2 (Gower) 
our king, and all his company .. — v. 2 (Gower) 

the king, my father, gave you such — v. 3 

I thought, the king had more affected .... Lear, i. 1 

the king is coming — i. 1 

name, and all the additions to a king .. — i. 1 

whom I have ever honoured as my king — i. 1 

now, by Apollo, king, thou swear'st .... — i. 1 

fare thee well, king; since thus — i. 1 

who with this king hath rivalled — i. 1 

for you, great king, 1 would not from .. — i. 1 

TKnt.'] royal king, give but that portion — i. 1 

thy dowerless dau^ter, king, thrown .. — i. 1 

and the king gone to-night! — i. 2 

the king falls from his bias of nature — i. 2 

maledictions, against king and nobles . . — i. 2 

poor as the king. If thou be as poor irep.') — i. 4 
that such a king should i^lay bo-peep — i. 4 (song) 

and beat thee, before the King? — ii. 2 

you come with letters against the king.. — ii. 2 

messengers from our sister and the king — ii. 2 

it pleased the king his master — ii. 2 

praises of the king, for him attempting. . — ii. 2 

I serve the king; on whose employment — ii. 2 

and the good king his master will — ii. 2 

the king must take it ill — ii. 2 

good king, that must approve — ii. 2 

now chance the king conies with so small — ii. 4 

the king would speak with Cornwall.... — ii. 4 

the king is in high rage — ii. 4 

I know you; Where's the king? — iii. 1 

borne against the old kind king — iii. 1 

sorrow tlie king hath cause to 'plain .... — iii. 1 

1 will go seek the king — iii. 1 

when we have found the king — iii. 1 

these injuries the king now bears will . . — iii. 3 

we must incline to the king — iii. 3 

the king my old master must be relieved — iii. 3 

thou sayest the king grows mad — iii. 4 

if I find him comforting the king — !.''•■'' 

or a yeoman? A king, a king! — iii. 6 

she kicked the poor king her father .... 
where is the king mv master? Here, sir 

more to-night, safe 'scape the king! 

how now, Where's the king? My lord of 
hands have you sent the lunatic king? . . 

where hast thou sent the king? 

for the love thou showedst the king 

rebel-like, sought to be king o'er her 

was this before the king returned? 

for coining; I am the king himself 

is't not the king? Ay, every inch a king 
I am a king, my masters, know you that? 

past speaking of in a king! — 

the king is mad; how stiff is my — 

how does the king? Madam, sleeps still.. — 

that we may wake the king? — 

the king is come to his daughter — 

our land, not holds the king — 

for thee, oppressed king, am I cast down — 
to send the old and miserable king to . . — 
followed his enemy king, and did him . . — 

to bid my king and master aye — 

speak, Edmund, where's the king? — 

iCol. KnI.'] two such opposed kings. /?om«o 4- Jul. 

good king of cats, nothing, but one of — i 

long live the king! Bernardo? He Hamlet 

like the king tliat's dead — 

looks it not Tike the king? (rep.) — 

our last king, whose image even but now — 
moiety competent was gaged by our king — 



111. 6 
iii. 6 
iii. 6 
iii. 7 



IV. 3 
iv. 6 
iv. 6 
iv. 6 



KING— like tlie king that was, and is . . Hamlet, i. 1 

power to business with the king — i. 2 

the king's rouse the heaven shall bruit.. — i. 2 
so excellent a king; that was, to this.... — i. 2 
I saw him once, he was a goodly king .. — i. 2 
the king your father. The kingmy father? — i. 2 
the king doth wake to-night, and takes — i. 4 
call thee, Hamlet, king, father, royal Dane — i. 4 
I will go seek the king: this is the very — ii. I 

come, go we to the king: this must — ii. I 

as fits a king's remembrance — ii. 2 

to my God, and to my gracious king .... — ii. 2 
count myself a king of infinite space.... — ii. 2 
the good king and queen have sent for .. — ii. 2 
and your secrecy to the king and queen — ii. 2 
he that plays the kin^ shall be welcome — ii. 2 
no, not for a king, upon whose property — ii. 2 
I'll catch the conscience of the king .... — ii. 2 
will the king hear this piece of work? .. — iii. 2 
there is a play to-night before the king — iii. 2 
this is one Lucianus, nephew to the king — iii. 2 
the king rises. What! frighted with .... — iii. 2 

for if the king like not the comedy — iii. 2 

the king, sir, — Ay, sir, what of him? .... — iii. 2 
the voice of the king himself for your .. — iii. 2 

never alone did the Icing sigh — iii. 3 

nay, I know not; is it the king? — iii. 4 

as kill a king and marry with his (rep.) — iii. 4 
a vice of kings: a cutpurse of the empire — iii. 4 
a king of shreds and patches: save me .. — iii. 4 

let the bloat king tempt you again — iii. 4 

should be made by the son of aking?.... — iv. 2 
that soaks up the king's countenance? ,. — iv. 2 

but such officers do the king best — iv. 2 

to the king. The body is with (.rep.) .... — iv. 2 
the king is a thing, — A tiling, my lord?.. — iv. 2 
your fat king; and your lean beggar .... — iv. 3 
with the worm that hath eat of a king . . — iv. 3 
how a king may go a progress through . . — iv. 3 
from me greet the Danish king; tell him — iv. 4 
choose we; Laertes shall be king (rep.) .. — iv. 5 

where is this king? sirs, stand you — iv. 5 

O thou vile king, give me iny father — iv. 5 

there's such divinity doth hedge aking.. — iv. 5 
these fellows some means to the king — iv. 6 (let.) 

let the king have the letters — iv. 6 (let.) 

was Yorick's scull, the king's jester .... — v. 1 

here comes the king, the queen — v. 1 

an earnest conjuration from the king.... — v. 2 

why, what aking is this! — v. 2 

he that hath killed my king, and whored — v. 2 
his crib shall stand at the king's mess .. — v. 2 

the king, sir, hath wagered with him — v. 2 

the king, sir, hath laid, that in a dozen. . — v. 2 

and the king hold his jiurpose — v. 2 

they follow the king's pleasure — v. 2 

the king, and queen, and all are coming — v. 2 
the king shall drink to Hamlet's (rep.) .. — v. 2 

four successive kings in Denmark's — v. 2 

no more; the king, the king's to blame.. — v. 2 

KING-BECOMING graces, as justice..3/aci>eM, iv. 3 

KING-CARDINAL, that blind . ...Henry nil. \\.i 

KIN(3D0M— a brave kingdom to me .. Tempest, iii. 2 

I'll turn you out of my kingdom .... — iv. 1 

yes, for a score of kingdoms — v. I 

to measure kingdoms with hts..3'w'o(?en.o/ Ver. ii. 7 
not for thy kingdom; fairies, away .. Jl/irf. A". /Jr. ii. 2 
watery kingdom, whose ambitious.il/er. of /'en. ii. 7 
had I kingcToms to give with her. . As you Like it, v. 4 

were I of all kingdoms king — v. 4 

in courts and kingdoms known . . Winter'sTale, i. 2 
heirless it hath made mj' kingdom .. — v. I 
may drop upon his kingdom, and devour — v. I 
heirs of your kingdoms, my poor house — v. 3 

in his kingdom's great defence Macbeth, i. 3 

ever reign in this Kingdom? — iv. 1 

thee compassed with thy kingdom's pearl — v. 7 
the manage of two kingdom's must ..King John, i. I 
give grandam kingdom, and it' grandam — ii. 1 
dreadful trial of our kingdom's king! — ii. 1 
his kingdom here, for he, that holds (7-ep.) — iii. 1 
our kingdoms, and our royal selves — iii. 1 
his little kingdom of a forced grave.. — iv. 2 
this kingdom, this confine of blood . . — iv. 2 
this chastised kingdom and myself . . — v. 2 

nor let my kingdom's rivers take — v. 7 

nay, my kingdom's heir Richard II. i. 1 

our kingdom's earth should not be .. — i. 3 
thy kingdom cannot buy my breath — i. 3 
to stand upon my kingdom once again — iii. 2 

say, is my kingdom lost? — iii. 2 

and my large kingdom for a little grave — iii. 3 
do not beat thee out of thy kingdom.! Henry/r. ii. * 
all the kingdoms that acknowledge — iii. 2 

to push against the kingdom — iv. 1 

a kingdom for it was too small a bound — v. 4 
to iiluck a kingdom down, and set ..'iHenrylV. i. 3 
of thy linen, shall inherit his kingdom — ii. 2 
the body of oiu' kingdom, how foul it is — iii. I 
to all the rest of this little kingdom . . — iv. 3 
O my poor kingdom, sick with civil — iv. 4 

a kingdom for a stage Henry V. i. (chorus) 

never two sucli kingdoms did contend — i. 2 
on his unfurnished kingdom came .. — i. 2 

of order to a peopled kingdom — i. 2 

and this whole kingdom unto desolation — ii. 2 
but we our kingdom's safety must . . — ii. 2 
peace itself should not sodullakingdom — ii. 4 
then resign your crown and kingdom — ii. 4 
lenity and cruelty play for a kingdom — iii. 6 
of his kingdom too faint a number . . — iii. 6 
to conquer tlie kingdom, as to speak — v. 2 
that the contending kingdoms of France — v. 2 
'twixt your kingdoms such a spousal — v. 2 
between the paction of these kingdoms — v. 2 
that two and fifty kingdoms hath . . 1 Henri/ I'l. iv. 7 
your kingdom's terror and black.... — iv. 7 
all the wealthy kingdoms of thewest.2Hcnr!/J^i. i.l 

by her I claim the kingdom — ij. 3 

enjoy the kingdom after my decease.3H£«ryrX. i. 1 



KINGDOM-but for u kingdom 3 Henry ^'/..j. i 

throne and kingdom say ............ — .'!• J 

tlicrc 19 no kingdom then lov Kicnard — lu. ' 
ijrosciiptiun for a kingdom'8 worth.. — i"- ■! 
tho' I want a kimidoni, yet in marrmgo — iv. 1 
how should vou govern any kingdom — iv. i 
gave tlic kingdom to thy brotlier ..... — , „ \- .'. 

cacodainioni there tliy kingdom ia.«.c/i<ii(/ III. i. J 

and tho\i, a kingdom; all ot yon — >■ ^ 

their kingdom's loss, my woefnl — >■ •> 

\mto lhekir.j;dom of I'erpetmil night — ,]■ \ 
to hi'i new kiiiiidoni of iierpetiial rest — "• ^ 
or el-e mv kini'dom stands en lirittle — iv. 2 
eonifort, l;ini;d..ni, kindled, freedom — iv. 4 
if I <lid luke Ilie kiiwilom from your 



'■(iflhis 



iiirdo 



in Chris 


tiiin ki 


that mv 


kiuiid, 


ehip-.vre 


ked ui 



to thi 



iii. 1 



_ V. I 



a horse! (icp.) — v. 4 

,gl,mi Heuryyin.1.3 

r kingdonr — "• 2 

ns, lone tlieir free — ii- ' 
ell worehy the best — 

kingdom — 

of nil the kingdom — 
power iegatiue witllin this kingdom — 
all the clioieest music of the kingdom — 
by suggestion tied all the kingdom . . — 
my poor name banished the kingdom — 
the most remarked i' tlie kin"<lom .. 
and a soul none better in my kingdom . 

I could deal kingdoms to my . . 7ii;ion of Athens,}. 2 
like to a little kingdom, sutlers ..Julius Cmsar, ii. 1 

take ill that kingdom JnlntiyA Cleopatra, i. 1 

here is mv space; kingdoms are of clay — ;. l 

to give a kingdom for a mirth — i. 4 

piece her oi)ulcnt throne with kingdoms — .i- a 
to join our kingdoms, and our hearts — ]i. \ 
and otherofhis conquered kingdoms — ni. 

as the president of my kingdom — ui. 7 

we have kissed away ki"Sao"i3 — .V'-° 

hath mused oftaking kingdoms in.. — m. 11 
must no less beg than a kingdom.... — \.i 

heir of his kingdom, whom he Cyniledne, i. 1 

the under-hangman of his kingdom — .ii- ^ 
our kingdom is stronger than it was — i". j 
to fight against my lady's kingdom. . — v. I 
thou liast lost bv this a kingdom. ... — v. 5 
sent from the infernal kingdom.. 7i(i(.>/lni;ron. v. 1 
whom mighty kingdoms court sy to.. — y. 3 

and knowing this kingdom Pericles, ii. 4 

thus knit, a kingdom ever stands — n. 4 

thou art the heir of kingdoms — v. 1 

will in that kingdom spend our — y- f 

in the division of the kingdom Lear. i. I 

we have divided in three, our kingdom. . — i. 1 
this ample third of our fair kingdom .... — i. j 
turn thv hated back upon our kingdom — .]- 1 

that alftlie kingdom may have due — ii. 1 

thy half o' the Itingdom hast thou not .. — n- * 

a power into this scattered kingdom — in. 1 

I never gave vou kingilom, called you .. — in. 2 

late footed in' the kingdom? — i'l. 7 

imports to the kingdom so much fear .. — iv. 3 
in your own kingdom, sir. Do not abuse — iv. 7 
the powers o' the kingdom approach .... — ly. 7 

our wliole kingdom to be contracted Hamlel. i. i 

a promised march over his kingdom — iv. 4 

we will our kingdom give, our crown — iv. 5 

some rights of memory iu this kingdom — y. 2 

KINODOMED Acliilles Troilus ^ Cressida, ii. 3 

KINGED [Co/. Kn(.-kings] of our fears. Kinff/i/m, 11. 2 

akin", then am I kinged again Richard II. v. 5 

she is so idly kinged, her sceptre Henri/ V.n. 4 

KING-KILLER, and dear .... Timon of Athens, iv. 3 
KINGLY-'gainst the kingly state. ioue si. Lost, ly. 3 

give me with thy kingly liand .Ms lVell,u. I 

to my kingly guest unclasped . . Winter sTale, in. 2 
govern the motion ofa kingly eye ..KingJnhn,\. 1 
woe's slave, shall kingly woe obcy-flicAard //. in. 2 
the pride of kingly sway from out .. — iv. 1 
thv kingly 



to abide thy kingly doom 

and leavest the kingly couch -iHenryiy. in. 1 

and all her almost kingly dukedoms.. Hran/^. i. 2 

I give thee kingly thanks 1 Henry I'l. v. 3 

more kingly in my thoughts. 2 Hoirv ('/ y. 1 

that I will leave my kingly throne. .3Hcnii/r/.i. 1 
bvvourkingly leave, I'll draw it .. — n. 2 
likened oft to kingly sepulchres .... — v. 2 
their chains fettered the kingly lion — y. 7 
kingly government of this your ..Richard III. in. 7 
protect him from that kingly title'... — iv. 1 

disgraced his kingly glory — „ i.Y' j 

by mv life, and kingly dignity .... Henry i III. n. 4 
a fair message to his kingly ears? Trodus * Cress, i. 3 
presented him a kingly crown.... Ju/iii«C<»sar, lu. 2 
this kingly seal, and p\\g\\\.CT.. Antony fyCleo. in. 11 

galling his kingly hands with I'ericles, iv. 1 

where IS a kingly patient .— v. 1 

beg leave to see vour kingly eyes. Hamlel, iv. 7 (let.) 

KINOI/Y-CROWN ED head Cnrinlanus, i. 1 

K INf} LY-POOR-kinglv-poor flout ! /.oiie'i /,. /.o.v(. v.2 

KINSMAN— kinsman shall speak.. Ifcrri/ IVivps, iii. 4 

sir Toby, madam, your kinsman.. 7'ue(/7AiVi4'/i(,i. It 

she harbours you as her kinsman . . — ii. 3 

to ask for my kinsman Toby ..._ ..— n.5 

opiHisitc with a kinsman irep. iii. 4) — n. 5 (letter) 
madam, I have hurt vour kinsman.. — v. I 
were he mv kinsman, brother . . Meas.fnr Jlleas. ii. 2 

thou art like to be my kinsman Much Ado, v. 4 

in glorv of rav kinsman Hercules. /UiVi. N.'s Dr. y. 1 
your most noble kinsman . . Merchant nf Venice. \. 1 
peace, fool; he's not thy kinsmon../lii/oK/.iAv <t.\\. 4 

to9|)C:ikofhim as my kinsman AllsileU, 111.6 

I have a kinsman nnt past three. H'mler t Tulc, iv. -i 
kinsman to grim and comfoitless.Comfrfi/n/Eir. y. I 

it is a peerless kinsman .Machclh, i. 4 

as I am his kinsman and his subject .. — 1. 7 

come hither, little kinsmon King John, m. 3 

gentle kinsman, go, and thrust thyself — iv. 2 
your valiant kinsman, Faulconbridge — y. 3 
let him be no kinsman to my liege. . HirJiarJ II. 1. I 
whether our kinsman come to see — — i. 4 



KINSM.VN— his noble kinsman: ....Richard II. ii. I 
is my kinsman, whom the king hath — Ii. 2 

Aumerle, mv noble kinsman — ii. 3 

furiwcll.kiMsmaiil I will talk \HenryIK i. 3 

siill'.Tcil his kinsman March — iv. 3 

tliv t.-niT 111' thy kinsman's trust? — v. & 

his fiitiid? And his kinsman too ....HfiiryV. iv. I 
and mv Kind kinsman, warriors all.. — iv. 3 

he is mar kiiisniiin unto Charles MIeiiryVI. v. 5 

our kinsmuii ( ihislcr is as iimocent.2//e«>(//'/. iii. I 
power in iiic, as in a kinsman ....Richard 111. iii. 1 
1 have a kinsman, who is bound ..Cymbcline, iii. 6 

why, how now, kinsman Ilnmeo ^Juliet, i. b 

Tybalt, the kinsman of old Capulet — ii. 4 
been my kinsman [Col. A'li^-cousin] — iii. 1 
slew thy kinsman, urave Mercutio . . — iii. 1 

is spilled of my dear kinsman! — iii. 1 

he IS a kinsman to tlie Montague. ... — iii- I 
cursed hand murdered her kinsman — iii. 3 
she loved her kinsman Tybalt dearly — iii. 4 
being our kinsman, if we revel much — III- '^ 
mv poor heart so for a kinsman vexed — iii. 5 

with some great kinsman's bone — iv. 3 

Mercntio's Kinsman, noble county Paris — v. 3 

KINSMEN— me to my kinsmen All'sll'cU,u. 2 

sons, kinsmen, thanes, and you Machclh, i. 4 

my thanes and kinsmen, lienceforth . . — y. 7 

both are my kinsmen Richard //..ii. 2 

there lies two kinsmen, digged — iii. 3 

both are my kinsmen, and I love . . I Henry VI. iv. I 

thy kinsmen, and thy friends ^illeriryl'I. i. I 

I do know kinsmen of mine Henry rill. i. 1 

whose kinsmen have made suit .... Cymijeline, v. 5 

kinsmen, this is the way TitusAiidronicus, iv. 3 

and, kinsmen, then we may go pipe. . — iv. 3 
kinsmen, his sorrows are past remedy — iv. 3 
kinsmen, shoot all your shafts into .. — iy. 3 

one of my master's kinsmen HomeoSf Juliet, \. 1 

if any of my kinsmen find thee here — ii. 2 
therefore thy kinsmen are no let to me — ii- 2 

have lost a brace of kinsmen — y- 3 

incense her kinsmen, and. though he....O(/ie//o, i. 1 

KINSWOMAN of my master's iHsniy IV. u. 2 

ilishonoured my kinswoman? Much Ado, iy. 1 

she is my kinswoman Troilus SrCressida,\. 1 

KtRTLE— wilthaveakirtleof? ....2Henryl V. ii. 4 

KISS— here, kiss the book (.rep.) Tempest, ii. 2 

I'll kiss. thy foot — ii- 2 

come, kiss — n. 2 

all humbled, kiss the rod I . . Two Gen. of Verona, 1. 2 

I'll kiss each several paper — i. 2 

I search it with a sovereign kiss — ;■ 2 

now kiss, embrace, contend — i. 2 

seal the bargain with a holy kiss — ii. 2 

now sliould I kiss my father — ii. 3 

well I kiss her — li- 3 

chance to steal a kiss — n- 4 

giving a gentle kiss to ever.y — ii- 7 

then come kiss me sweet . . Twelfth Night, ii. 3 (song) 

and kiss thy hand so oft? — iii. 4 

stop his mouth with a kiss 3/uc/i.ldo, ii. 1 

I will kiss your hand — iv. I 

and thereupon I will kiss thee — .y. 2 

let me kiss this princess Mid. N.'s Dream, 111. 2 

and kiss thy fair large ears — iv. 1 

kiss me through the hole of (irp.) — — y- 1 
for my sake but one loving kiss - - Koce\ L.Lost.W. 1 

to see him kiss his hand! — iv. 1 

so sweet a kiss the golden sun — iv- 3 (verses) 
as lie treads on thom, kiss his feet — — v- 2 

1 will kiss thy royal finger — y. 2 

than her ribs, to kiss her burial. . Mer. of Venice, \. 1 

to kiss this shrine, this mortal — ii. 7 

some there be, that shadows kiss — ii. 9 (scroll) 
and claim her with a loving kiss — iii. 2 (scroll) 

did gently kiss the trees — .y. 1 

but you kiss your hands As you Like it, iii. 2 

and would you have us kiss tar? — iii- 2 

you might take occasion to kiss — iv. 1 

shift is to kiss. How if the kiss — iv. 1 

I would kiss as many of J'ou as had.. — (epil.) 

and kiss like native things All'sll'ctl.i. 1 

put oft"s cap, kiss his hand — ii. 2 

and foes, do sunder, and not kiss — — ii. 5 

boys are but to kiss — iv. 3 (letter) 

and kiss on kiss she vied Taming ofShreio, ii. 1 

and kiss me Kate, we will be married — ii. I 

seal the title with a lovely kiss? — iii. 2 

till they kiss their hands — iv. 1 

one, Kate, that you must kiss. . . 
see, how they kiss and court! . . . 
first kiss me, Kate, and we will 

but ashamed to kiss — v. 1 

nay, I will give thee a kiss — v. 1 

kiashimfor that, good widow — v. 2 

come on, and kiss me, Kate — v. 2 

with one soft kiss, a thousand .... Winter's Tale,\. 2 
.you'll kiss me hard; and speak to rae 
there is not half a kiss to choose — 

they kneel, they kiss the earth 

thestars, I see, will kiss the valleys first 
give nie that hand of yours, to kiss . . 

mock me, for I will kiss her 

you'll mar it, if you kiss it — v. 3 

living light should kiss it Macbeth, ii. 4 

to kiss the ground before young — y. 7 

lay I this zealous kiss, as seal King John, ii. 1 

and kiss him with a glorious — ii. 2 

BO I kiss vour hand. Farewell — iii. 3 

and I will kiss th.v detestable — iii. 4 

and kiss the lips of unacquainted .. — iii. 4 

to make his bleak winds kiss my — v. 7 

let me kiss my sovereign's hand .... liichard II. i. 3 

and craves to'kiss your hand — i. 3 

doth kiss king Rieliard's hand — iii. 3 

doth humbly kiss thy hand — iii. 3 

thy correction mildly? kiss the rod.. — v. 1 

for with a kiss 'twas made — v. I 

one kiss shall stop our months — v. 1 

6CC Titan kiss a dish of butter? ....ll/f«rj^ /»'. ii. I 



— IV. :; 



— iv. 3 



v. 1 
V. 3 
v. 3 



KISS— and kiss your hand, when yet..l Henry IV. v. 1 

let heaven kiss earth! 'illeiirylV. i. I 

all you that kiss my ludy peace .... — i. 2 
and didst thou not Kiss me, and bid — ii. I 

sweet knight. I kiss thy neif — ii. 4 

kiss me, Doll. Saturn and Venus.... — ii. 4 
I kiss thee with a most constant heart — ii. 4 
I and greatness were compelled to kiss — iii, I 
your son, doth kiss your grace's hand — iv. 4 
I cannot kiss, that's the humour oCit. HenryV. ii. 3 

I kiss his dirty shoe — iv. I 

upon that I win kiss your hand — v- 2 

then I will kiss your lips, Kate — v. 2 

baiser, en Knglisli. To kiss .— v. 2 

in France to kiss iK'forc they are .... — v. 2 

in denying me a kiss; therefore — v. 2 

here I kiss her as my sovereign queen — v. 2 
may kindly give one fainting kiss . . 1 Henry VI. ii. 5 

I kiss these fingers for eternal — v. 3 

of love, than this kind kiss '2 Henry VJ.\. 1 

could this kiss be jirinted in thy hand — iii. 2 
and kiss, and take ten thousand .... — iii. 2 

let them kiss one another — iv. 7 

at every corner, have them kiss; away! — iv. 7 

join, embrace, and seem to kiss iHenryVI.iS. 1 

numbly to kiss your hand, and with — iii. 3 
in sign of truth, I kiss your highness' — iv. s 

and let me kiss my boy — v. 7 

and kiss your princel.y nephew — v. 7 

witness the loving kiss I give — v. 7 

I kiss thy hand, in sign of Richard III. i. 3 

let him kiss your hand; and what .. — ii. 1 

one gentle kiss the more _. — iii. 1 

bear her m.y true love's kiss — iv. 4 

he would kiss you twenty with Henry Vlll. i. 4 

to take you out, and not to kiss you — i. 4 
the hearts of princes kiss obedience.. — iii. 1 

with this kiss take my blessing — v. 4 

and kiss the mistress (rep.).. Troilus ^ Cressida, iii. 2 

m.v purpose, thus to beg a kiss — iii. '2 

scants us with a single famished kisB — iv. 4 

come, kiss, and let us part — iv. 4 

doth salute you with a kiss — iv. .'» 

the first was Menelaus' kiss — iv. ."> 

kiss evermore for him. I'll have my kiss — iv. .^» 
the kiss you take is better than (rep.} — iv. 5 

sweet lady, beg a kiss of yon? — iv. 5 

for Venus' sake, give me a kiss — iv. 5 

never's my day, and then a kiss of you — iv. 5 

must kiss their own feet — iv. 5 

kisses to it, as I kiss thee — v. 2 

I will not kiss thee; then Timon nf Athens, iv. 3 

impossibilities, and makest them kissl — iv. 3 

O, a kiss, long as m.v exile Coriolanus, v. 3 

that kiss I carried from thee, dear. . . . — v. 3 
stream do kiss the most exalted ..Julius Ccesar, i. I 
I kiss thy hand, but not in flattery.. — iii. 1 
would go and kiss dead Ccesar's wounds — iii. 2 
will e'en but kiss Octavia. . Antony ^ Cleopatra, ii. 4 
here my bluest veins to kiss — ii. .■> 

f"ve me a kiss; even this repays me — iii. 9 
kiss his conquering hand — iii. II 

return once more to Kiss these lips .. — iii. 11 

this is a soldier's kiss; rebnkable — iv. 4 

and kiss the honoured gashes whole — iv. 8 
thy favourinij hand; kiss it, my warrior — iv. 8 
that kiss, which is my heaven to have — v. 2 
I could give him that parting kiss . . Cymbeline, i. 4 
might touchl but kiss; one kiss! .... — ii. 2 

my lord that I kiss aught but he — ii. 3 

the silken strings delightto kiss them. 7"i7usyfni/.ii. 5 

let me kiss th.v lips — iii. 1 

that kiss is comfortless, as frozen. . . . — iii. I 

let's kiss and part, for we — iii. 1 

O take this warm kiss on thy — v. 3 

and loving kiss for kiss, thy brother — v. 3 

when tyrants seem to kiss Pericles, i. 2 

cloudy billow kiss the moon, I care not — iii. 1 

if he should cheapen a kiss of her — iv. 6 

this kiss, if it durst speak, would Lear, iv. 2 

let me kiss that hand! — iv. 6 

and let this kiss repair those — iv. 7 

masks, that kiss fair ladies* .... Romeo ^-Juliet, i. 1 

rough touch with a tender kiss — i. .I 

palm to palm is holy palmer's kiss .. — i. 5 

you kiss by the book — i. a 

which, as they kiss, consume — ii. 6 

one kiss, and I'll descend — iii. 5 

and keen this holy kiss — iv. 1 

seal with a righteous kiss a dateless. . — y. 3 
are quick ; thus with a kiss I die — v. 3 

1 will kiss thy lips; haply, some — v. 3 

about her, tokiss, and talk Othello, iii. 3 

sweet creature! and then kiss me hard.. — iii. 3 
to kiss in private? An unauthorized kiss — iv. 1 
I kiss the instrument of their pleasures.. — iv. 1 
killing myself, to die upon a kiss — v. 2 

KISSED— you have, and kissed.. Tempest, i. 2 (song) 
she is not to be kissed fasting. . TuoGen. offer, iii. I 
thou slialt be worshipped, kissed .... — iv- 4 

but not kissed your keeper's Merry Wires, i. 1 

after we had embraced, kissed — iii. 5 

lips have often kissed thv stones.Mid- S. Dream, v. I 

that kissed away his hand Lore'sL. Lost, v. 2 

when with his knees he kissed-. .. Taming of Sh. i. 1 

and kissed her liiis with such — iii. 2 

and kissed his lips: and so HevryV.'w. 6 

hast thou not ki«sc'd tliv band iHenryVI. iv. 1 

thv lips, that kissed Iho c|ueen — iv. I 

sojudas kissed bis master 3 Henry VI. v. 7 

kindly kissed my cheek Richard III. ii. 2 

their summer beauty, kissed coch other — iv. 3 
Iwtter, she were kissed in general- 7"roi(. ^ Crest, iv. 5 
he kissed, the last of many doubled. ..4h/.<5C(m. i. 5 

we have kissed away kingdoms — iii. 8 

his handkerchief. And kissed it Cymbeline, j. 4 

when I kissed the jock upon an up-cast — ii. 1 

I kissed it: I ho|ie, it be not pone — ii. 3 

winds of all the corners kissed your sails — ii. 4 
by my life, 1 kissed it — ii 1 



KIS 

KTSSED— sohigh, tliev kissed the clouds. Pi-nWcj, i. 4 
that I have kissed I "know not Itow oft.. Hamlel, v. I 
better you had not kissed your three . . Othello, ii. 1 

well kissed I an excellent coiurtesy I — _ii. 1 

and sighed, and kissed; and then cried.. — lii. 3 

I kissed thee, ere I killed thee — v. u 

KISSES— conclusions, to he as kisses . . TweifthN. v. 1 
but my kisses bring agam. Meas.forMeas.iy, 1 (song) 
Btrucken blind, kisses the base . . Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 
marry his kisses are Judas'sown./IsyoKii'leff, iii. 4 
sisterhood kisses not more religiously — iii. 4 
lie that kisses my wife, is my friend . . jilt's HVl, i. 3 
kisses, and with declining, raining- c/Shretr, 1 (ind.) 

kisses the hands of /our fresh ll'inler's Tate, iv. 3 

I understand thy kisses 1 HenrylV. iii. 1 

by the beard; kisses the gashes Henry f. i v. 6 

with twenty tliousand kisses 2Henry VI. iii. 2 

and consigned kisses to them. Troitus Sr Cressida, iv. 4 
this, mine: Patroclus kisses you .... — iv. 4 

gives memorial dainty kisses to it — v. 2 

spoil of Phoebus' burning kisses Coriotanus, i1. 1 

the last of many doubled kisses . . Antony Sr Cleo. i. 5 
unworthy place, as it rained kisses . . — iii. II 
of many thousand kisses the poor Last — iv. 13 

gave me twenty kisses Tilus.4ndronicus, v. 1 

who straight on kisses dream ....Romeo ^Juliet,]. 4 

as thinking their own kisses sin — iii. 3 

breathed such life with kisses in my lips — v. 1 
when second husband kisses me in bed.Ham(e;,iii. 2 

forapair of reechy kisses — iii. 4 

I found not Cassio's kisses on her lips. . Othello, iii. 3 
as if lie plucked up kisses by the roots . . — iii. 3 
wind, that kisses all it meets, is hushed.. — iv. 2 

KISSING— for kissing of their feet Tempest, iv. 1 

thy lips, those kissing cherries. ..Wd. N. Dream, iii. 2 
a kissing traitor:— how art thou . . Love'sL. Lost, v. 2 

virgin palm, now kissing thine — y. 2 

I remember the kissing of herbatlet./ls!/o«Lil.e,ii. 4 
and his kissing is as full of sanctity.. — iii. 4 

noses? kissing with inside lip? Winter'sTale,\. 2 

marry, garlick, to mend her kissing with — iv. 3 
make" the base earth proud kissing it. Richard 11. iii. 3 

Colevile kissing my foot iHenrylV. iv. 3 

it was made for kissing, lady Richard III. i. 2 

lay kissing in your arms Henry Vlll. iii. 2 

for kissing once (rep.) Troitus <5- Cressida, i v. 5 

in kissing, do you render — iv. 5 

like bondmen, kissing Caesar's feet..fuliusCeesar, v. I 
have lipped, and trembled kissing.yJnfony Sr Cleo. ii. 5 

might take two thieves kissing — ii. 6 

quicken with kissing — iv. 13 

kissing, to overcome you with her . . Cymheline, v. 5 

being a god kissing carrion Hamlel, ii. 2 

K ISSING-COMFITS, and snow eringoes.M?rry W.v.b 

KITCHEN-for our kitchens we kill.Afra./orMea. ii. 2 

his face is Lucifer's privy kitchen . .tHenrylV. ii. 4 

the kitchen malkin pins her richest. Coriotanus, ii. 1 

bra^swere cracked of kitchen txu\\s..Cymbeline, v. 5 

wild catsin your kitchens Olhello, ii. 1 

KITCHENEU me for you to-CaiJ.. Comedy of Err. v. 1 

KITCHEN-MAID rail — iv. 4 

KITCHEN-VESTALscornedyou.... — iv. 4 

KITCHEN- WENCH, and all grease — iii. 2 

to his lady, was but a kitchen- wench. Rom. SfJul. i i. 4 

KITE— as wo watch these kites ..Taming ofSh. iv. 1 

instruct the kites and ravens Winter's Tale, ii. 3 

when the kite builds, look to lesser . . — iy. 2 

shall be the maws of kites Macbeth, iii. 4 

tlie lazar kite of Cressid's kind Henry V. ii. 1 

the chicken from a liungry kite . . . .2Henry I'l. iii. 1 

although the kite soar with — iii. 2 

is Beaufort termed a kite? — iii. 2 

a prey for carrion kites and crows .. — v. 2 
wnile kites and buzzards prey .... Richard III. i. 1 
i' the city of kites and crows irep.) .Coriotanus, iv. 6 
ravens, crows, and kites, ^y o'er ...JuliusCtesar, v. 1 
you kite! now gods and devilsUAnlony ^Clen, in. 1] 

detested kite! thou liest Lear,i. 4 

fatted all the region kites with this HatnletjU.2 

KITTEN— be a kitten, and cry Tnevf.\ Henry IV. iii. 1 
KITTENED— cat had but kittened .. — iii. I 
KNACK— conceits, knacks, trifles. Mid. N. Dream, i. 1 

a knack, a toy, a trick Taming ofSlirew, iv. 3 

to load my she with knacks .... Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

no more shalt see this knack — iv. 3 

KNAPPED-ever knapped ginger. iV/o-. of Venice, iii. 1 

KNAVE— all idle; whores, and knaves. 7'empes(, ii. 1 

this rais-shapen knave, his mother . . — v. 1 

my master is a kind of knave .Two Gen.ofVer. iii. 1 

if he be but one knave — iii. 1 

and not with drunken knaves Merry Wives, i. 1 

vere is dat knave Rupby? — i. 4 

you heard what this knave told me. . — ii. 1 
"the jealous rascally knave, her husband — ii. 2 
hang him, poor cuckoldly knave I . . . . — i i. 2 

the jealous wittoUy knave hath — ii. 2 

Ford's a knave, and I will — ii. 2 

shalt know him for a knave and cuckold — ii. 2 
knog his urinals about his knave costard— iii. 1 
he is aknave l)esides; a cowardly knave— iii. 1 

about your knave's cogscomb — iii. 1 

mav be the knave bragged of — iii. 3 

on the lousy knave, mine host — iii. 3 

a lousy knave; to have his gibes .... — iii. 3 
a couple of Ford's knaves, his hinds — iii. 5 
met tlie jealous knave their master. . — iii. 5 

lest the lunatic knave would — iii. 5 

the knave constable had set me — iv. 5 

that same knave. Ford, her husband — v. 1 
strange things of this knave. Ford ,. — V.I 
Falstaffs a knave, a cuckoldly knave'. — v. 5 
let our catch be, thou knave .... Twelfth Night, ii. 3 

thou knave, knight! (rep.) — ii. 3 

T have constrained one to call me knave — ii. 3 
knave counterfeits well; a good knave — iv. 2 
a knave? A thin-faced knave, a gull? — v. 1 
'gainst knave and thief men shut .. — v. 1 (song) 
order for the drabs and the knaves.Mea. forMea. ii. 1 

show your knave's visage — v. 1 

thou art tlie first knave, that e'er .... — v. 1 



[ 412 ] 



KNAVE— you arc rid of a knave ....MuchAdo,i\\. 3 
a couple of as arrant knaves as any . . — iii. .'J 

little better than false knaves — iv. 2 

it is thought you are false knaves.... — iv. 2 
and to conclude they are unjust knaves — v. 1 
an arrant knave with your worship.. — v. 1 

O my good knave Costard! Love'sL. Lost, iii. I 

good my knave, do one thing for me — iii. 1 

guard of an unthrifty knave ..Merch. of Venice, i. 3 
o not play the knave, and get thee . . — ii. 3 
by your beards that I am a knavclsi/ouL/AeiV, i. 2 

play the knave with him — iii. 2 

ne'er a fantastical knave of them all — iii. 3 

what does this knave here? All's Well, i. 3 

for the knaves come to do that for me — i. 3 
a foul-mouthed and calumnious knave? — i. 3 
you'll be gone, sir knave, and do as I — i. 3 
a scolding quean to a WTangling knave — ii. 2 
else I'd ealfyou knave: I leave you — ii. 3 

my knave! how does my old lady? — ii. 4 
a knave. You should have said (rep.) — ii. 4 
a good knave, i'faith, and well fed .. — ii. 4 

1 know that knave; hang him! — iii. 5 

all night, poor gallant knave — iv. 3 

you knave, they are nose-herbs (rep.) — iv. 5 
a shrewd knave, and an unhappy . . — iv. 5 
ingenious, foolish, rascally knave.... — v. 2 

played the knave with fortune — v. 2 

not have knaves thrive long under her? — v. 2 

out upon thee, knave! dost thou — v. 2 

a fool and a knave, you shall eat .... — v. 2 
as thou art a knave, and no knave . . — v. 3 
lyingest knave in Christendom. Taming ofSh.2 (ind.) 

or I'll knock your knave's pate — i. 2 

call him half a score knaves, or so . . — i. 2 

tis the base knave that jars — iii. 1 

the knave doth court my love — iii. 1 

where be these knaves? what — iv. 1 

where is the foolish knave I sent .... — iv. 1 

bring along these rascal knaves — iv. 1 

beetle-headed, flap-eared knave ! . . . . — iv. 1 
carry this mad knave to the gaol .... — v. 1 
come on, sir knave, have done . . Comedy of Err. i. 2 
take you that, sir knave. What mean — i. 2 
sir knave! go, get you from (lep.) .. — iii. I 
and I'll break yoxir knave's pate .... — iii. 1 
what is it, knave? An hour before. . Richard II. ii. 2 

untaught knaves, unmannerly 1 HenrylV. i. 3 

farewell, you muddy knave — ii. 1 

bacon-fed knaves! they hate ub .... — ii. 2 

hang ye, gorbellied knaves — ii. 2 

what, ye knaves? young men — ii. 2 

three misbegotten knaves, in Kendal — ii. 4 

thou art a knave to call me so — iii. 3 

say, what beast, thou knave thou? .. — iii. 3 

a rascally yea-forsooth knave! 2Henri/IV. i. 2 

what! a young knave, and beg! .... — i. 2 

to bear every knave's wrong — ii. 1 

that arrant Malmsey-nose knave.... — ii. 1 
an arrant knave, on my knowledge — v. 1 

is a knave, sir; but yet, God forbid (rep) — v. I 
the knave will stick by thee, I can . . — v. 3 
no, thou arrant knave; 1 would I might — v. 4 

and a bastard, and aknave Henry V. iii. 2 

beggarly, lousy knave it is; I hope.. — iv. 8 

lousy pragging knave. Pistol — v. I 

you scurvy lousy knave (re^.) — v. 1 

so goot, scald knave, as eat it? (rep.) — v. 1 

a counterfeit cowardly knave — v. 1 

a crafty knave does need no broker.. 2 Henry/'/, i. 2 

both— a pair of crafty knaves — i. 2 

a subtle knave! but yet it shall not — ii. 1 

the lyingest knave in Christendom. . — ii. 1 
follow tlie knave; and take this drab — ii. I 
to prove him aknave, and myself an — ii. 3 
this knave's tongue begins to double — ii. 3 

her husband, knave, wouldst Richard Ill.i. \ 

procui'e knaves as corrupt to Henry VIII. v. 1 

these porters, these lazy knaves? .... — v. 3 

you are lazy knaves; and here — v. 3 

a most unjust knave; I will no..Troilus fyCrcss. v. 1 
young knave's sleeve of Troy there . . — v. 4 

a scurvy railing knave, a very — y. 4 

and these knaves honest {rep.)..Timon of Athens, i. 1 
small love 'mongst these sweet knaves — i. 1 
a.y, to see meat nil knaves, and wine — i. 1 

thee a whoremaster, and a knave — ii. 2 

so base as yon, for you serve knaves — iii. 4 
let ill the tide of knaves once more .. — iii. 4 

to knaves, and all approachers — iv. 3 

what! aknave too? If thou — iv. 3 

thou liadst been a knave, and flatterer — iv. 3 

all that I kept were knaves — iv. 3 

trust a knave, that mightily — v. 1 

for poor knaves' caps and legs Coriotanus, ii. I 

calling both the parties knaves — ii. 1 

the smiles of knaves tent in my cheeks — iii. 2 
will bear the knave by the volume .. — iii. 3 
thou knave? thou naughty knave.. Junius Caesar, i. I 
poor knave, I blame thee not; thou art — iv. 3 
gentle knave, good-night; I will not — iv. 3 
a foul knave uncuckolded .. Antony Sf Cleopatra, i. 2 

with knaves that smell of sweat — i. 4 

his fault should make a knave of thee — ii. 5 
my good knave, Eros, now thy captain — iv. 12 
cannot hold this visible shape, my knave — iv. 12 
he's but fortune's knave, a minister. . — v. 2 

a sly and constant knave Cymbeline, i. G 

there are verier knaves desire to live.. — v. 4 

what a drunken knave was the sea Pericles, ii. 1 

though this knave came somewhat saucily. Lear, i. 1 

knaves, thieves, and treachers — i. 2 

Where's my knave? my fool? — i. 4 

my lord's knave: you whoreson dog!.... — i. 4 
now, my friendly knave, I thank thee .. — i. 4 
how now, my pretty knave? how dost .. — i. 4 

you sir, more knave than fool — i. 4 

a knave; a. rascal, an eater of broken,. .. — ii. 2 

a lily-livered action-taking knave — ii. 'J 

nothing but the composition of a knave — ii. S 



KNE 



KNAVE., knave, know you no reverence? Lear, ii. 2 
and such a knave. Why dost thou (rep.) — ii. 2 

these kind of knaves I know — ii. 2 

in a plain accent, was a plain knave .... — ii. 2 

.you stubborn ancient knave — ii. 2 

sir, being his knave, I will — ii. 2 

poor fool and knave, I have one part — iii. 2 

more light, ye knaves; and turn. Romeo (^Juliet, i. 5 
scurvy knave! I am none of his (?ep.) — ii. 4 
and suffer every knave to use me .... — ii. 4 
wliat a pestilent knave is this same? — iv. 5 

but he's an arrant knave Hamlet, i. b 

we are arrant knaves, all; believe — iii. 1 

in life a foolish prating knave — iii. 4 

how the knave jowls it to the ground — v. 1 

suffer this rude knave now to knock .... — v. 1 

how absolute the knave is! — v. 1 

a duteous and knee-crooking knave .... Othello, i. 1 

whip me such honest knaves — i. 1 

with a knave of common hire — i. 1 

a knave very voluble; no further — ii. I 

a slippery and subtle knave — ii. 1 

a devilish knave! besides the knave is .. — ii. 1 

a pestilent complete knave — ii. 1 

aknave! teach me my duty ! (rep.) — ii. 3 

such things, in a false disloyal knave . . — iii. 3 
as knaves be such abroad, who having ., — iv. 1 
villanouB knave, some base (rep.) — iv. 2 

KNAVERIES— honest knaveries. . Merry Wives, iv. 4 
commit'st thy knaveries wilfully. .Mid.iv.'s Dr. iii. 2 

to make such knaveries yours All's Well, i. 3 

gipes, and knaveries, and mocks . . . Henry V. iv. 7 

KNAVERY— rid of this knavery. Twelfth Night, iv. 2 
knavery cannot, sure, hide himself. .A/i/c/i^</o, ii. 3 
this is a knavery of them ....Mid. N.'sDream, iii. I 
I see their knavery: this is to make — iii. 1 

by my knavery, if I had it As youLil<e it, i. 2 

here's no knavery I see Taming of Shrew, i. 2 

and all this knavery — iv. 3 

why, this is flat knavery, to take — v. 1 

to sound the depth of this knavery . . — v. 1 
the more knavery to conceal it. . Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

'tis as arrant a piece of knavery Henry f. iv. 7 

Hume's knavery will be 2Henry VI. i. 2 

lioly Mary, Butts, there's knavery.. Henii/ VIII. v. 2 
juggling, and such knavery I Troitus ^ Cressida, ii. 3 
m.y way, and marshal me to knavery. Hamlei, iii. 4 

I found. Horatio, a royal knavery — v. 2 

iKnt.'] upon malicious "knavery Othello, i. I 

a double knavery— how? how? — i. 3 

knavery's plain face is never seen .... — ii. 1 

KNAVISH— and knavish sprite Mid. N. Dr. ii. 1 

Cupid is a knavish lad — iii. 2 

lierald is a pretty knavish page. . Love's L. Lost, v. 2 
over many knavish professions.. Winter's Tate, iv. 2 
the knavish crows fly o'er them all . . Henry V. iv. 2 

'tis a knavish piece of work Hamlet, ii i. 2 

a, knavish speech sleeps in a foolish ear — iv. 2 

KNEAD— I'll knead him Troitus ^Cressida, ii. 3 

KNEADED— a kneaded clod. . . . Meas.for Meas. iii. 1 

KNEADING— kneading up the honey. . Henry V. i. 2 
the kneading, the making of Troitus 4' Cress, i. 1 

KNEE— upon her knees (rep.)..Tu-o Gen. ofVer. ivi. 1 
fair knighthood's bendin" knee ..Merry Wives, v. 5 
go to your knees, and make. . . . Meas.forMeas. iii. 1 
in safety raise me from my knees. ... — v. 1 

lend me" your knees (rep.) — v. 1 

I am at him upon my knees every ..Much Ado, ii. I 
then down upon her knees she falls — ii. 3 

with libbard s head on knee Love'sL. Lost, v. 2 

down on your knees, and thank .Asyou Likeii, iii. 5 

here on my knee, before high Alt's Well, i. 3 

when with his knees he kissed. . . . Taming ofSh. i. 1 

and on our knees we beg Winter's Tale, ii. 3 

a thousand knees ten thousand — iii. 2 

oftener upon her knees than Macbeth, iv. 3 

on my knee I give heaven thanks ..King John, i. 1 

mj^ knee, made hard with (rep.) — iii. I 

witli all submission, on my liuee .... — v. 7 
bow my knee before his majesty .... Richard Il.i.Z 
had the tribute of his supple knee .. — i. 4 
and not thy knee, whose duty is ... . — ii. 3 

on both his knees, doth kiss — iii. 3 

.the fearful bending of thy knee .... — iii. 3 

you debase your princely knee — iii. 3 

although your knee be low — iii. 3 

and bend my knee [Co(.-limbsJ — iv. 1 

for ever ma.v ray knees grow to — v. 3 

for ever will I kneel upon my knees — v. 3 
mother's prayers, I bend my knee . . — v. 3 
our knees shall kneel till — v. 3 

happy vantage of a kneeling knee! — y. 3 
where I first bowed my knee unto . . 1 HenrylV. i. 3 
saw'st thine own knee? My own knee? — ii. 4 

thy guts fall about thy knees! — iii. 3 

came in with cap and knee — iv. S 

sit on my knee, Doll 2HenryIV. ii. 4 

1 felt to nis knees, and so upward .... Henry F. ii. 3 
command'st the beggar's knee — iv. I 

- most humbly on my knee I beg .... — iv. 3 
upon his knees, a thousand thanks . . — iv. 4 
and set your knee against my foot.lHenrj^/'/. iii. I 

almost yield upon my knees — iii. 3 

here on my knee, I beg mortality. . . . — iv. 5 
and on my knee, his bloody sword .. — iv. 7 

and bend thy knee, or sack this — v. 1 

now upon my bended knee 2Henry VI. i. 1 

he did vow upon his knees — i. 3 

immediately he was upon his knee. . — iii. I 

with stiff unbowed knee — iii.) 

on thy knee make thee beg pardon .. .— iii. 2 

than "these knees how to any -.- iv. 1 

1 beseech God on my knees — iv. 10 

brook I bow a knee to any man — v. 1 

hath thy knee forgot to bow? — v. 1 

in dutybend thy knee to me — v. 1 

and he shall bow his knee SHtnryVI. ii. 2 

here on my knee I vow to God — ii. 4 

I do bend my knee with thine — ii.3 

ere my knee rise from the earth's.... — ii.3 



KNE 

KNEE— no bending knee will call ..SHciiry fl. iii. 1 

and humbly In-Murthy knee? — v. \ 

beg the ilciit'i uixm my knee Richaril III. i. 2 

you 6trnij?ht ivrc on your knoea . 

but 

the knee; 
for suppl 
I besoei-h 



[ 413 ] 



(1 uiikd TroUttt^Cre 

«1 arrogance — 

\y knees — 



drops do 



ins, and Ilecuhi 



itli. 



1 tlic kii 



■ licr.i 



id lumds 



1 . . 7V 



lar Alh. i. 1 



cup and kiu'o slii\'cs, vapours — iii. (5 

pivc tlieni title, kiico. and approbation — iv. 3 
hinije tlw knee, and let his very breath — iv. 3 

and vour knees lo tlain Coiiotanus, i. 1 

Anrtilins' liead below his knee — i. 3 

and stniek liini on his knee — i>. 5! 

thv knee bussing' the atones — jji. 2 

and niv armed knees, who bowed. ... — iii. 2 
nnil eliildren, on our knees, arc bound — iv. 6 
[( w. Kii'.i knee the way into his mercy — v. 1 

sink, mv knee, i' the earth — v. 3 

wliat istliis? your knees to rae? — v. 3 

Tour knee, sirrah. That's my bnive boy — v. 3 

let us shame him with our knees — v. 3 

fall upon your knees, pray Julius Crpsar,i. 1 

and, upon my knees, Icharm you.... — ii. 1 

let me, upon my kuee, prevail — ii. 2 

on her knee hath begged, that 1 — ij. 2 

my knee shall bow my prayers . . Antouij f,- Cleo. ii. 3 

apart upon our knees Cymhelinp, iv. 2 

bow your knees; arise, my knights .. — v. 5 

here'smy kuee; ere I arise — v.!) 

my heavy conscience sinks my knee — v. 5 

all humbled on your knees. . . . Ti(us Andronicus, i. 2 
upon my feeble knee I beg this boon — ii. 4 
many a time he danced thee on his knee — v. 3 
cannot be nuieh lower than m.v knees. . Pericles^ i. 2 
master-reasons, her prayers, her knees — iv. 6 
down on thy knees, thank the holy gods — v. 1 

on my knees I beg, that you'll Lear, ii. 4 

be brought to knee his throne — ii. 4 

on courtiers' knees, that dream ..Romeo^Jutie/, i. 4 
calm Innk, knees humbly bowed .... — iii. 1 
I bcseeeh vou on my knees, hear .... — iii. 5 

his knees knocking each other Hamlel, ii. 1 

crook the pregnant hinges of the knee .. — iii. 2 
bow, stubborn kneesi and heart, with .. — iii. 3 
let her have your knees: hail to thee ..Ollwllo, ii. 1 
upon my knees, what doth your speech.. — iv. 2 
on her bosom, her head on her knee — iv. 3 (song) 

KNEE-CROOKING knave, that — i. 1 

KNEE-DEEP— inch-thick, knee-deep. (Cm/f/'sr.i. 2 

KNEEL— I will kneel to him Tempesl,}}. 2 

kneel, and repeat it — iii. 2 

but when they weep and kneel. . Meas. for Meas.i. 5 

kneel down before him — ii. 2 

speak loud, and kneel before him. ... — v. 1 
should she kneel down. In mercy of this — v. 1 

do yet but kneel by me — v. 1 

where she kneels and prays for. . Mer. of I'enice, v. 1 
can perfect mine intents, to kneel . . AlVs Well, iv. 4 
they should kneel for peace ..Taming of Shrew, v. 2 
we all kueel. I am a feather .... H'inter'sTale, ii. 3 
to see this bastard kneel and call. . . . — ii. 3 

they kneel, they kiss the earth — v. 1 

that I kneel, and then implore her. . — v. 3 
fair madam; kneel, and pray your . . — v. 3 
kneel to the duke, before he pass. Comcrfy ofJ!rr. v. 1 

kneel thou down Philip King John, i. 1 

will I kneel [Co(. Kn/.-walk] upon.. Richard 11. v. 3 

our knees shoU kneel till — v. 3 

with awe and terror kneel to it! tHennjiy. iv. 4 

and so kneel down before you — (epil.) 

when thou eomest to kneel at 1 Henry I'l. v. 3 

kneel down and take my blessing — v. 4 

lord Marq^uess, kneel down ilienry I'l. i. 1 

father Salisbury, kneel we both — ii. 2 

Iden, kneel down; rise up a knight.. — v. 1 
kneel for grace. Wouldsthave me kneel? — v. 1 
thy sovereign, Clifford, kneel again.. — v. 1 

and kneel for grace and mercy ZHenryVI.i, 1 

where I shall kneel to him that — i. 1 

kneel down. Edward Plantogenet . . — ii. 2 
wilt thou kneel for grace, and set thy — ii. 2 
take tlie time, kneel down, kneel down — v. 1 
where I stand, kneel thou, whilst I — \'. 5 

who sues, and kneels, and says. ...Richard III. iv. 4 

nay, we must longer kneel Henry fill. i. 2 

rude liehaviour; go to, kneel — iv. 2 

and kneel [Cj/.K"<.-knee] the va.y..Coriolanus, v. 1 

than the flint, I kneel before thee — v. 3 

but kneels, and holds up hands — v. 3 

kneel not, gentle Portia Julius C<etar,i']. 1 

doth not Brutus bootless kneel? .... — iii. l 

did my master bid me kneel — iii. 1 

kneel down, kneel down .. Antony fy Cleopatra, iii. 2 

and there to kneel: tell him — iii. II 

as I will kneel to him with thanks.. — v. 2 
vou shall not kneel: I pray you, rise — v. 2 

kneel nit tome; the power Cymbeline,v. 5 

and at thy feet I kneel, with tvara. TilutAndron. i. 2 
to let aqueen kneel in the streets.... — i. 2 
and his nephews kneel for grace .... — i. 2 

what, wilt thou kneel with mc? .... — iii. I 
no n(xl, nor kneel, nor make a sign.. — iii. 2 
kneel down with mc; I.avinia (rep.) — iv. 1 

flrst approiyh von must kneel — iv. 3 

at thy mercy snail they stoop and kneel — v. 2 
when thou shalt kneel, and justify ...,PerirJet,v. I 
look, who kneels here! flesh of thy flesh — v. 3 

no. sir, you must not kneel Lear, iv. 7 

I'll kneel down, and ask of thee — v. 3 

and yet she'll kneel, and pray Othello, iv. 2 

here I kneel: if e'er iny will did trespass — iv. 2 

KNEELED— you were kneeled to Tempetl, ii. 1 

how I prayed, and kneeled .... Meat, for Mea$. v. I 
you had kneeled my lord, to ask me-AU'tWeU, ii. 1 



KNEELEDdown at the board iHenryl'l. iv. I 

who kneeled at my feet, and l)adc..«lc/iai</ ///. ii. 1 
w here she kneeled, and saint-liko.//cii;!/ /'///. iv. I 
1 kneeled heriire him: 'twas very ..Voriolanux, v. 1 
that kneeled unto the buds. /(ji^oiiy .Jcfai/M^ru, iii. 11 
where lie for grace is kneeled to — v. 2 

KNEELINCi— hard with kneeling ..K.ngJuhn, iii. 1 
kneeling before this ruin ofsweet life — iv. 3 
happy vantage of a kneeling k nee :../i'/(/eir<( II. v. 3 
his own person, kneeling at our feet.. Henry I', iii. ti 
that showed my duty kneeling, camo Lear, ii. 4 

KN'IOLI,— hoiirlv ring liis knell. . 7'empM/, i. 2 (song) 
let usall riiii: (iiiiev's knell. W<t. o/ /'e/i. iii. 2 (song) 

be this sweet Helen's knell All'i IVcll, v. 3 

and clamour will be my knell .... IVinler'sTate, i. 2 

for it is a knell, that summons Macbeth, ii. 1 

the dead man's knell, is there — iv. 3 

andso his knell is knoUed — v. 7 

to hear his knell rung out Henry I' 111. ii. 1 

that sad note I named ray knell .... — iv. 2 
as 'twere a knell unto our .... Timon of Athens, iv. 2 
talks like a knell, and his hum is ..Coriolanus, v. 4 

KNEW— if you but knew, how you .... Tempest, ii. 1 
I would I Knew his mind .. Two Gen.of I'erona, i. 2 

I knew him, as myself — ii. 4 

I never knew him otherwise — ii. 5 

if you knew his pure heart's truth .. — iv. 2 

knew it was Crab — iv. 4 

him he knew well — v. 2 

I never knew a woman so dote.... Merry ll'ivcs, ii. 2 

[ would you knew Ford, sir — ii. 2 

he knew your worship would kill.... — ii. 3 

I knew not what it was to be — v. I 

I knew of your purpose — v..') 

I knew 'twas 1; for many TwelflhNighl, ii. 5 

which you knew noue of yours — iii. 1 

he knew the service, and that. . Meas. for Meas. iii. 2 
who knew of your intent, and coming — v. 1 

that ever he knew me — v. 1 

that he ne'er knew my body — v. 1 

in his garden-house, he knew me .... — v. 1 
you knew that friar Lodowick to;be.. — v. I 
else imputation, for that he knew you — v. 1 
I thonglit it was a fault, but knew it not — v. 1 
you sirrah, that knew me for a fool . . — v. 1 
one that she knew would flout her . . Much Ado, ii. 3 

good that Benedick knew of it — ii. 3 

it were not good she knew his love . . — iii. 1 
I knew it would be your answer .... — iii. 3 

my master knew she was Margaret. . iii. 3 

nor knew not what she did, when she — v. 1 
were civil, and knew courtesy. >//'/. A. 'sDream, iii. 2 
I never knew man hold vile stuff. Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 
I would, you knew; an' if my face .. — v. 2 

that I knew he were but in — v. 2 

1 knew her by this jewel on her — v. 2 

you knew, none so well, none so. Mer. of Venice,\i\. I 

for my part, knew the tailor that — iii. I 

own part, knew the bird was fledged — iii. 1 
but, if you knew to whom you show — iii, 4 
I never knew so young a body . . — iv. 1 (letter) 
the doctor, and I knew you not? .... — v. I 
knew yourselfwith your judgment. .LsyoiiXiteiV,]. 2 

that your highness knew my ueart — iii. 1 
one that knew courtship too well.... — iii. 2 

1 knew what you would prove iv. 1 

no sooner knew the reason — v. 2 

I knew when seven justices could not — v. 4 

to itself, knew the true minute All's Well, i. 2 

1 knew him. The rather will I spare ii. 1 

it were fit you knew him — iii. 6 

I would, I knew in what particular — iii. 6 

ne'er knew the crafts, that you — iv. 2 

tor I knew the young count to be iv. 3 

she knew her distance, and did angle — v. 3 
that I knew of their going to bed .... — v. 3 

if ever I knew man, Hwas you — v. 3 

once more you knew \iut.^TamingofShreu\2 (ind.) 

in the eye,— and she knew why — i. i 

as though, belike, I knew not what. . i. 1 

and he knew my deceased father well i. 2 

an' she knew him as well as I do ... . — i. 2 

you knew my father well; and in him ii. I 

if you knew my business, you would iii. 2 

I who never knew how to entreat .. — iv. 3 

I knew a woneh married in — iv. 4 

as if I knew not his name v. 1 

knew not the doctrine of ill-doing. Winlcr'sTale, i. 2 

would I knew the villain, I would .. ii. i 

not come about me; I knew, she would — ii. 3 

you knew of his departure, as you .. iii. 2 

nis fbrtunes here, which you knew gieat— iii. 2 
I knew him once a servant of the priuce — iv. 2 

and that he knew, I warrant him. ... iv. 2 

that knew no more but seeing v. 2 

knew, 'twould be a bald conclusion. Com. <tfF.rr. ii. 2 

1 knew, he was not in his perfect wits v. 1 

knew you of this fair work? King John, iv. 3 

he did, for aught he knew — v. 1 

I would to ttod, thou and I knew 1 HenrylV. i. 2 

before I knew tlice, Ilal, I knew nothing— i. 2 

by the Lord, I knew ye as well ii, 4 

if you knew how much they do import — iv. 4 

knew that we ventured on such 'illenryiy. i. I 

1 knew of this before i. 1 

more diseases than he knew for i. 2 

you knew me, as yon did when (rr/).) _ ii. 4 
we knew where the bona-robas were — iii. 2 
I knew him a good backsword man — iii. 2 

and if you knew wliot pains I iv. 2 

1 never knew yet, but rebuke — iv. 3 

I knew there was but one way Henry V. ii. 3 

I knew, by that piece of service .... iii. 2 

he eared not who knew it — iii. 7 

a good prey of us, if he knew of it — iv. 4 

I knew her well, she was a midwife.2f7cnri/r/. iv. 2 

I knew not what I did! (>•<•/).) iHenri'Vl. ii. i 

if Warwick knew iu what estate .... iv. 3 

I would, I knew thy heart! Richard III. i. 2 

I would he knew, that I had saved his — i, 4 



KNl 

KNEW— till now I never knew ttiie.HenryVlll. I. 4 

to whom, if I but knew him _ 1.4 

that never knew what truth meant.. ii. I 

I knew him, and f know him ii. 2 

she never knew harin-doiiig — ij] 3 

although I knew he were mine enemy? — ii. 4 

since first you knew mc iv. 2 

saw him before, and knew \\'\m..Troilut ^Creu. i. 2 
that ever knew love got so sweet .... — i. 2 

otherwise, he knew his man — ii. 1 

by my troth, I knew you not — iv. 2 

I knew, thou wouldst he his death .. — iv. 2 

I knew thy grandsire, and once iv. .'1 

that I knew it the most general. 7V7nonn/.4;Aen>. ii. 2 

the devil knew not what he did .... iii. 3 

that never knew but better iv. 3 

were obedient, and knew my mind .. iv. 3 

nay, I knew by his face Coriolanus, iv. .'j 

sirrah, if thy captain knew I were here — v. 2 
author of himself, and knew no other kin — v. 3 
of Rome, knew you not Pompey? ..JuliutCa:tar,i. 1 
who ever knew the heavens meuoce BO? — i. 3 

because I knew the man — iv. 3 

C) that I knew this husband .Antony fy Cleopatra, i. 2 

I knew it for my bond — i. 4 

yet, if I knew what hoop should hold — ii. 2 

been what he knew himself — iii. 8 

you were half blasted ere I knew you — iii. II 
what I am, not what he knew I was — iii. 1 1 
the angurers say, they knew not .... — iv. 10 
loath to tell you what I would you knew — v. 2 
that astronomer that knew the stare. Cj/mi/<?iine, iii. 2 

she alone knew this v. i 

knew she and all the world .. Titus Andronicus, ii. 1 
O that I knew thy heart; and knew — ii. 5 
sure enough, an' you knew how .... — iv. 1 

an' if your highness knew my heart v. 3 

O that she knew she were! Romeo ij Juliet, ii. 2 

she knew well, thy love did read . . — ii. 3 

1 knew not why it should be slowed — iv. 1 

I knew your father Hamlet, i. 2 

yet he knew me not at first ii. 3 

but they knew what they did — iv. 6 (letter) 

I knew him, Horatio _ v. 1 

I knew, you must be edified by the . . — v. 2 
never found a man that knew how to love. OMf Wo, i.3 
I never knew a Florentine more kind — iii. 1 

I never knew a woman love man so — iv. 1 

I knew, that stroke would prove the worst — iv. 1 
this extremity, thy husband knew it all — v. 2 

KNEW'ST how I do love her? ....AstjouLikeit,i\. 4 
wretchl that knew'st this was .. Winter'sTale, iv. 3 

that knew'st the very bottom of Henry V. ii. 2 

of humanity thou never knew'st . Timon of Alh. iv. 3 
Egypt, thou knew'st too well . .Antony ^ Cleo. iii. 9 

thy full supremacy thou knew'st — iii. 9 

and knew'st the royal occupation I .. iv. 4 

so is it, If thou knew'st our purposes .. Hamlet, iv. 3 

KNIFE— sword, pike, knife, gun Tempest, ii. 1 

or cut his weazand with thy knife .. — iii. 2 

a short knife and a throng Merry Wives,\i. 2 

silence, like a Luerece knife Twelfth Kighi, ii. 5 

ns you may take upon a knife's point!j>/K'./i/l(/o,ii.3 

say, my knife's naught v.' I 

uo point, with my knife Love's L. Lo.'!, ii. 1 

whet thy knife 8oeaTnestlv?.i/'frc/ia7i<o/Te>iic»',iv. 1 

thou makest thy knife keen — iv. 1 

must prepare your bosom for his knife iv. 1 

like cutler's poetry upon a knife — v. I 

table-book, ballad, knife, tape ..Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

that my keen knife see not Macbeth, i. ,1 

not bear the knife myself — 1.7 

like an ill-sheathed knife 1 HenrylV. i. I 

I'll thrust my knife in your •iHenryll'. ii. 4 

carved upon it with a knife _ iii 2 

have washed his knife with gentle .. — iv. 4 

from treason's secret knife 'iHenryri.Vu. I 

Where's your knife? iii. 2 

I wear no knife, to slaughter iii. 2 

set his murdering knife to the root..3Hi'>nj/;7. ii. r. 
next his throat unto the linteher's knife — v. ti 
thou whet'st a knife to kill thyself.. WiWiarrf ///. i. 3 
no doubt the murderous knile was... — iv. 4 
would have put his knife into \\\m..Henryl'lll. i. 2 

with the knife, he stretched him .... i. 2 

to sheath his knife in us i. « 

given me the knife that made \t..TroUus^- Cress, i. 1 

jiresented to my knife his throat Coriolanus, v. .'> 

if knife, drugs, serpents . . Antony f^Cteopalra, iv. 13 

nor by a hired knife v. 1 

Where's thy knife? thou art too slow.C!/m!.e(.nc,iii.4 

U give me cord, or knife, or poison . . v.b 

he would have dropped his knife.. TOnj.-fndion. ii. 5 
get some little knife between thv teeth — iii. 2 
strike at, Marcus, with thy knif'eV .. — iii 2 

give me thy knife, I will insult — iii. 2 

sirrah, hast thou a knife? iv. 3 

have with my knife eaiTcd in — v. \ 

witness my knife's sharp point v. 3 

to take off by treason's knife ..Pericles, iv. (Cower) 

what means that bloody knife? l.cnr, v. 3 

would fain lay knife aboard Romeo A Juliet, ii. 4 

and with this knife I'll help it presently — iv. 1 

this hloodv knife shall play — iv. 1 

but din a knife in it Hamlet, iv. 7 

KNIGIlT-a knight well spoken. TicoGen-o/- I'er. i. 2 

the knight, sir .lolin, is there MerryWires, i I 

knight, you have beaten my men,.., — i I 

thine own true knight _ ii. I (letter) 

these knights will hock _ ji. 1 

against this greasy knight ii. 1 

our messenger to this iioltry knight — ii] i 
I do not think the knight wonlil offer it — ii. 1 
hast thou no suit agtiinst my knight? — ii. 1 

it is a merry knight \\ \ 

yet there has been knights, and lords — ii 2 

de earl, de knight, de lords — jj 3 

what do you call your knight's name — iii! 2 
I will to my honest knight Falstair.. — iii. 2 
are these your letters, knight? _ iii 3 



KNIGHT— dissembling knightl ..Mmy /nVcj, in. 3 

flad tlie fat kniglit is not here irep.) — ;v. 2 
amiuuloiiel The knislit is lierel — iv. 2 

it be not I'uU of the knight ivgain — iv. 2 

the poor uuvirtuous fat kniglxt — iv. 2 

to pinch the unclean knislit — ;v. I 

to burn the knight witli my taber ... — iv. I 

the kniKht may be robbed — iv. 6 

Bully Wnight! BuUv sir JohnI .... — iv. 5 
assist me, knij»hti I am undone .... — JV- * 

yet bo cheerful, knight -.i" ,„, "T. .,'*■• S 

and of a foolish knight, that you.Tu-elflh Ntghl, i. 3 

vou mistake, knight : accost, is — 1-3 

D knight, thou lack'st a Clip — >• 3 

pourquov, my dear kniglit? ,•■;••• ~ '■ 

good at these kick-shaws, kniglit? .. 
thy excellence in a gailiard, knightf 

if one knight give a — .•••.••,v 

mellifluous voice, as I am true kuight 

tliou knave, knight! 

to call thee knave, kni'«ht 

the knight's in admirable fooling 

knight : I'll write thee a challenge 
thy exquisite reason, dear knight? .. 

let's to bed, knight _. 

send for iuoikm', knight 

to bed now ; come knight, come knight 

vour time with a foolish knight 

kniilit, dubbed with unbacked rapier 
as to know of the knight wlmt ray . . 

1 know, the knight is incensed 

go with sir Priest, than sir Kuight .. 

come hither, knight 

those that slew thy virgin knight 



i. 3 



ii.3 



_ ii.3 

— ii.3 

— ii.3 



— iii. 4 



V. 3 (song) 



KNIGHT— nn armed knight 

which the knii.'ht hiinscUwith such... 

but stay the kniglits are coming 

knights, to say you arc welcome 

but you, my kiii:il\t and jiiicst 

yon are right conilconv kni|-;lits 

no more than .nlur kui-lil , liave done . 



what, a 


■e yon 


lin-rrv. 1 


in 


jiii>y 


von ku 


ght,ii 


cthillks 


lo 


Ii sit too .. 


unto a 




1- kiiiL'ht ti 


be so bold . 


yon kii 


-hts 1 


■Tvica 


"C 


xcellent.... 


coniluc 


these 


kuiglits 


nil 


:o their sevc 


knight. 


, from 


niv dan, 


IK 


er this 1 let. 


she'll « 


ed tiK 


stranger 


k 


light 


the l''ri 


iich ki 


ight tlia 


t c 




bv 1.1.11 


V a lo 


d and k 


",*- 


lit .. — 



of a 111 



lied Unh;hts 

id h 



ii. 3 

ii. 3 

ii. 3 

ii. 3 



. 1 ((Jowcr) 
. . . Letrr, i. 1 



L'lf .. — 



what isThisbv? a waniJering knight?.Wrf.iV.i)r. i. 2 
would have tlie child knight of his train — ii. 1 
to honour Helen, and to be her knight! — ii. 3 
poor kniglit, what dreadful dole is here? — y. 1 

the wortK of many a knight Lori-'s L.Lost,\. 1 

of flre-new words, fashion's own knight — i. 1 
in this, most tender-smelling knight — v. 2 

the worthy knight of Troy — . v. 2 

of a certain knight, that swore by.,'ls you Like i(, j. 2 
and yet was not the knight forsworn — i. 2 
no more was this knight, swearing .. — ..i. 2 
strctclied along like a wounded knight — m. 2 
suffer her poor knight to be surprised.. /^(» s 'Veil, i. 3 

a landless knight makes thee Kmg- John, i. 1 

kniiiht. knight, good mother — i- 1 

heaven defend, a kniglit should .... lliclturd II. i. 3 

ask vonder knight in arms — i- ^ 

spea'k like a true knight, so defend . . — i. 3 
two-aud-twenty knights, balked .. MleiinjIF. i. I 

he.that wandering kniglit so fair — ..i. 2 

this all-praised knight, and your — ni. 2 

art the knight of the burning lamp. . — iii. 3 
a gallant knight he was, his name. . — v. 3 
three knights upon our party slain . . — v. 5 
as I am a true knight, and lie send3..2 Weiiry/r. i. 2 
Jolin Falstaff, knight : every man . . — ii. 2 
six dry, round, old, withered knights — ii. 4 

sweet 'knight, I kiss thy neif — .li. 4 

liow doth the good knight? may I ask — in. 2 
hadst seen that that this knight and I — iii. 2 
I am a knight, sir ; and my name is — iv. 3 
a knight is vour degree ; and your . . — iv. 3 
ainost furious knignt, and valorous — iv. 3 

and dub me knight, Samingo! — v. 3 (song) 

sweet knight, thou art now one — v. 3 

() base Assyrian knight, what is — — v. 3 

God bless tliy lungs, good knight — v. 5 

my knight, t will inflame thy — v. 5 

and fifteen hundred knights lleniijV. i. 1 

hath run bad humours on the knight — ii. 1 

let us condole the knight — ii. 1 

and you, my gent'e kni<;ht, give me.. — ii. 2 
sir knight. Grey of Northumberland — u. 2 
this knight, no'less for bounty bound — ii. 2 
Thomas Grey knightof Northumberland — li. 2 
barons, lords, and knights for your great iii. b 

accomplishing the knights, with busy — iv. (cho.) 

no, my good Knight ; go with — iv. 1 

good old knight, collect them all — iv. 1 

turn away the fat knight with — iv. 7 

and barons, kniglits, and squires, full — iv. 8 
were but yesterday dubbed Knights.. — iv. 8 
the rumour of this dreadful knight..) Hoiry VI. ii. 3 
cowardly knightl ill-fortune follow — iii. 2 
I vowed, base knight, when Idid.... — iv. 1 

much more a knight, a captain — iv. 1 

knights of the garter were of noble. . . — iv. 1 

usurp the sacred name of knight — iv. 1 

thou wast a knight; henceforth we .. — iv. 1 
would have made a noble knight — — iv. 7 

knight of the noble order of — iv. 7 

seems a knight, and will not any way. — v. 3 
as thou art knight never to disobey.. — v. 4 

he is but a knight is 'a? (.rep.') 2 Henry VI. iv. 2 

were created kuight for Ills good service — v. 1 

rise up a knight; we give tliee — v. 1 

Edward Plantagenet, arise a knight.3jrcn)S(r/. ii. 2 
the knights and gentlemen to come. . — iv. 8 
lords, knights, and gentlemen, what I — v. 4 
a knight's daughter, to be her .... Henry r/f r. in. 2 

call some knights to arms Troilus .§• Cresmla, u. I 

come knights from east to west — .n. 3 

the knights shall to the edge 



his kuiyhlsgrow riol 
and Icthis knights have coUlcr looks .. ., — 1.3 
you keep a hnndivd kniglits and squires — 1.4 
a hundred kiiiglitsl 'tis iiolitic («■/;.).... — .1.4 

the riotous kiiii^hls that tend upon — ii. 1 

with Kcgan. 1,' and my luindred knights — .n. 4 

nor no poor knight — !!)• ^ 

some five or six and thirty ol his knights — in. 7 
enrich the hand of yonder knight? tiomeo ^Jut.i. 5 

give this ring to mv true knight — u.i. 2 

adventurous knight shall use his foil.. I/fimW, u. 2 

KNRiirri'.l) in the held King John, i. 1 

I could U- kni^'htcd (,i''P.) Merry lf'ives,u. 1 

thv C;es:ir kni-htcd me Cymbeline, in. 1 

sons, knighted in field, slain. . . TilusAnxIranicus, i. 2 

KNIGUT-EKllANT; como iHenry Il'.v.i 

KNIGHTHOOD'S bending knee . . Merry IVives, y. & 
and all the rites of knighthood clsc.Jiir/Kirrf II. i. 1 
laid my knighthood on my shoulder — i. 1 
on the knighthood, and tliy oath ... . — ..i- 3 
and setting thy kiiightluHHl aside . . 1 Henry I V. in. 3 
iny knighthood and my Bohliei-ship..2HcH)i/i; . i. 2 
not take a knighthood for my fortune — .v. 3 

this ornament of knighthood 1 Henry I 1. iv. 1 

knighthood to our forward son ■iHenryl I. ii. 2 

knighthoods and hononrs, borne Cymhelme, v. 2 

I mi"lit well delav bv rule of knighthood. i.fiJ', v. 3 

KNUiHTLY— mv'kniL'htIv stomach.. Ki'H,if.'o/i», i. I 
chivalrous design of knightly trial ..liichard II. i. 1 

thus knightlv clad in arms — .1.3 

the temper of my knightly sword 



pawned his knightly virtue 



liichard III. iv. 4 



KNOCK— lest he knock that about. . . . Hejiry /'. iv. 1 

who is tluic that knocks so \ Henry I I. i. 3 

over HoiKiii tlurcfoie we'll knock .. — iii. 2 

knock hlni down there iHenryri. iv. « 

kill and kiioi'k down! throw them into — iv. I> 
I'll kiiui'k once more, to siiiniuon.. .3/lciir!/(-'/. iv. 7 
who Unoi-ksV One fioiii lord Sianlcv.WcA. III. Iii. 3 
tlie lord iMavor knocks; wclcoine.... — iii, 7 

Norfolk, wc'iiiust luivc knocks — v. 3 

let the music' knock it llenrynil. i. 4 

knock thciii down by the dozen*'? .. — v. 3 
knock out cither of your brains. '/'/oidu cJCrcw..!!. 1 



iii. 1 



this blended knight, half Trojan — i 

go gentle knight, stand by our Ajax.. — i 
youngest son of Priam, a true knight — i 
cat with thee, and see your knights . . — i 

and am her knight by proof — .. 

he is very often like a knight. . Timon of Athens, ii. 2 

arise, my knights o' the battle Cymbeline, v. 5 

he, true knight, no lesser of her honour — y. 5 

princes and knights come from all Pericles, ii. I 

are the knights ready to begin — ii. 2 

to explain tlie labour of each knight... — n- 2 
a kniglit of Sparta, ray renowned father — ii. 2 



to kno 



stiv thcv knock!. 



to till 

answ 
kiiocl 



knock at I 



St Athenian's. Timon qfAlh. i. 1 

cm — iii.* 

.-,.lill^t the gates. CorioianiM, iy. 5 

soinchoih- knocks.. Jif/i'i(i>'Carxai-, ii. I 

- ii. I 

- li. I 

L, that knocks? Cj/Hl!)f(inp, ii. 3 

t I'll knock her back .... — Iii. 5 
a slave without a knock.. — iv. 2 



go to the gate: sonicliod.N 
hark, hark, one knocks. 



— V. 4 



. parlo 



ick that down fell 7'i(us .^jnicon. iv. 3 

mv door, and tell me — iv. 3 

Iv, wlicic, they say. 



1 kii 



id it ciicd. 



pawncii nis KUigniiy viriue iiuvmwu m. ■,. -. 

KNIT— knit up in their distractions .. Tempest, in. 3 
I'll knit it up in silkeci strings. rHoGen. o/Ver.u. 7 

she can knit — }!!• ' 

when she cat. knit him a stock — iii. l 

he shall not a knit a knot in hi9..il/cn-,v'^'»i'cs, in. 2 

not knit my sonl to an ap|)roved Much Ado, ly. 1 

that my heart unto yours is knit . . Mid. A'. Dr. n. 3 
these couples shall eternally be knit — iv. 1 
with lime and hair knit up in thee . . — .v. 1 
garters of an indift'erent knit.'/'amiiiffn/ Shrew, ly. 1 
sleep, thatknits up the ravelled sleeve. jU«c(ic</i,ii. 2 

tie for ever knit ••. — '!!• ' 

France, shall we knit our powers KinsJohn,ii. 2 

hand and mine arc newly knit — in. 

I knit my handkerchief about — iv. 1 

and knit our powers to the arm — iHemylV. iv. 1 

Armagnac— near knit to Cliarles 1 Henry ri. y. 1 

duke Humphrey knit his brows iHenry ri.\ 

he knits his brow, and shows an angry 

the last dav knit earth and heaven . . — .v. .; 

while he knit his angry brows sHcnry F/. ii. 2 

likes him not, she knits her brows . . — iii.'-- 
lately splinted, knit, and joined.... «'c/m«»/7. ii. 2 
knit all the Greekish ears to his.. Tjoiiu.s<5- Oris. i. 3 
the amity, that wisdom knits not. . . . — n- 3 
this yellow slave will knit. . . . Timon of A'hens, ly. 3 
to knit your hearts with. . . . Anlony ^- Cleopaha, ii. 2 

and he, for ever knit together — ...".b 

our severed navy too have knit again — m. 1 1 

to knit their souls (on whom Cymbeline, ii. 3 

hands to lielp thee knit tlie cord. . TilusAndron. n. & 

teach you how to knit again J~ . , Y' ? 

to knit in her their best perfections Pericles,]. 1 

wlicn peers thus knit, a kingdom — n. 4 

this knot knit up to-morrow . . Romeo S-.Tuliel, ly. 2 

I confess me knit to thy deserving Othello, \. 3 

KNITTER— spinsters and knitters. TteclfltiNij;M, n. 4 
KNITTETH— which knittcth souls.. «id. N. Dr. i. 1 
KNIVES— banqiiets bloody knives.... Mac(<c(/i, in. 6 

and some say, knives have edges ...... Henry I'.i. 2 

we keep knives to cut one another e — ii.. 1 
should invite them withontknives. Timon ofAih. i. 2 

out with your knives, and eut — iv. 1 

for their knives care not — v.. 

we that draw his knives i' the war. . Cymbeline, y. 3 

if fires be hot, knives sharp Pericles, ly. 3 

hath laid knives under his pillow Lear, in. 4 

if there be cords, or knives, poison ....Othello, iii. 3 
KNOB— and knobs, and flames offlrcHcjirf/r. iii. li 

KNOCK— the cry did knock against 'I empcsl,u 2 

where thou mayst knock a nail — iii. 2 

go, knock and call (jep.) Merry ll'ives, ly. 5 

go to your bosom; knock there. . Meas. for Meas. ii. 2 

another knocks at the door Mer. of Venice^ i. 2 

when midnight comes, knock Alls Well, iv. 2 

knock, I say (rep.) Taminnof Shrew, i. 2 

whom should I knock? (rfp.) — .1.2 

this cuff was but to knock at your . . — iv. I 

you were best knock louder Ijep.) — v. 1 

gallows, and knock, arc too Winter sTale,iv. 2 

knock the door hard (rep.) . . Comedy of Errors, in. 1 

go some of yon, knock — y. 1 

my seated heart knock at my ribs Macbeth, i. 3 

knock, knock, knock, who's there — — .ii.3 

open, locks, whoever knocks — ly. 1 

honour, knock but at the gate •iHemyiy.i. 1 

who knocks BO loud at door? — n. 4 

hoi who knocks? Why now — y. 3 

to knock you indifferently well Henry F. n. 1 

the knocks are too hot (rcu.) — >."• 2 

I'll knock his leek about his pate. . . . — iv. 1 



come, knock, and enter 

arise, one knocks (rt'p.) — iii. 3 

suffer tills rude knave now to knock . . Hamlet, y. 1 
or I'll knock you o'er the mazsiard — Othello, ii. 3 
liark! who islt that knocks? — iv. 3 

KNOt'lvl'.D-vou knocked liiin..7'H'i)6'cii.f)r /'<■>■. ii. 4 
brains of in.v Cupid's knocked out ..All's Well, iii. 2 
of late knocked too ol'Icn at my door — iv. 1 

1 luul well knocked at first Taming of Shrew, i. 2 

their giiidv hiaiiis knocked out MlenryVI. iii. 1 

has knocked out his brains. . 'i'coidis.S-fn-sji'da, iii. 3 
would lie were knocked o' the head! — iv. 2 

if Brutus so uiikindlv knocked . .JiillHsCirsnr,\\\. 2 
could have knocked out his In .uns..('.v/H(iW/„f, iv. 2 
and knocked about the iiuiz/.ard with. . IhiniM, v. 1 

KNOCKING-kni.ckinii at (\\v -aiv. Taming of sh. 1.2 
tvhence is that knocking? 1 low is't . . Macbeth, ii. 2 
I hear a knocking at the soulli entry.. — ij. 2 
wake Duncan with thy knocking! .... — n. 2 
here's a knocking, indeed! if a man .. — 11.3 

our knocking has awaked liim — i'. 3 

there's knocking at the gate — .X- ' 

sweating, knocking at the taverns. .illenrylV. ii. 4 
more knocking at llie door? how now? " * 



it. 4 



s 4- Cress, iii. 3 
. . Hamlet, ii. 1 
. . Othello, iv. 2 
■ry Wives, iii. 1 
— iii. 1 
, ,4s|/0K Like it, ii. 7 

Macbeth, v. 7 

....iHemylf.i. 1 
Tempest^ i. 2 



loGen.ofyer.u. 7 
.Merry Wives, iii. 2 
.. .. — iii. 2 
— iv.2 
.Twelfth Sight, il. 2 
AU'sWell,\v.i 



will nut show without knocking. T 

liis knees knocking each other 

Othello's place; knocking out his — 
KNOG— knog his urinals (rep.) ....Me 

and let us knog our prains 

KNOLLED to church (rep.) 

and so his knell is knolled 

KNOLLING a departing friend .. 

KNOT— his arms in this sad knot 

break her virgin knot before ... 

odd-eonceitea true-love knots.. T 

trust me, a good knot 

he shall not knit a knot in 

there's a knot, a ging, a pack . . . 

it is too hard a knot lor me 

of war in the knot of hie scarf. . . 

that has a knot ou't yet — .ly. a 

and now repaired witli knots Taming of Sh. lu. 2 

motives, those strong knots of love . . Macbeth, iy. 3 
by this knot thou shalt so surely — King.lntin.u. 2 

her knots disordered, and her liichard //.iii. 4 

this churlish knot of all abhorred ..\Henn.ill'. y. 1 

the Gordian knot of it he will Heiuy I', i. 1 

this knot of amity, the carl \Henryl'l.\. 1 

that amity with nimtial knot 3 Henry 11. in. 3 

his ancient knot of aangerous liichard III. in. 1 

knot you are of damned bloodsuckers — in. 3 
and, by that knot, looks proudly .... — ly- 3 
as knots, by the conflux of . . 'Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 3 
with anotlier knot, flve-Ungercd-tied — v. 2 

till their knots be strong — .v. 3 

you knot of mouth-friends I . . Timon of Athens, in. 6 
himself the noble knot he made . . Coriolanm, ly. 2 
so often shall tlie knot of us be ..Julius Cirsar, ill. I 
hearts with an unslipping knot ..^n/onj/.'j C/co. ii. 2 

this knot intrinsicate of life — .y- 2 

as the Gordian knot was hard! Cymbeline, u. 2 

brats and beggary) in self-flgured knot -- .n. 3 
unknit that sorrow-wreathen knot..7'i/».i And. in. 2 

I still m.y virgin knot will keep Pericles, iv. 3 

elf all my hair in knots Lear,il. 3 

I'll have this knot knit up .... liomeo ^Juliet, iv. 2 
for foul toads to knot and gender in 1 . . Othello, iv. 2 

KNOT-GRASS-knot-giass made. Mid. A'. I'rtowi, ni. 3 

KNOTTED— knees of knotted oaks. '/'roii.* Crew. i. 3 
thy knotted and comliined locks Hainlel,i. 5 

KNOTTED-!' ATED fool, thou t Henry IV. li. 4 

KNOTTY- thee in his knotty entrails.. 7'c)npw<, i. 2 
winds have rived the knotty oa.]i.i..JuliusCasar, i. 3 

KNOW— more to know Tempet; I. 2 

thou must now know further — ;• 2 

and I know not how mueli — }■ f 

know thus far forth — !• j 

I know thou canst not choose — i- ^ 

savage, know thine own meaning — — !• 2 
I know how to curse ~ ' 



vouchsafe, my prayer may know, iI you 
my lord shall know what I have done 

1 know not where to hide my head 

I know it by thy trembling 

I shoidd know that voice 

I do not know one of my sex 

for I know thou darest 

as thou dost know, do now 

I know her by her gait 

we know what belongs to a frippery? .. 

looks on me. or would know me 

as late I have been, I not know 

know for certain, that I 



ii. I 
ii. 2 
ii. 2 
ii. 2 
iii. 1 
iii. 2 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. I 
V. 1 
v.l 



KNOW— how we know not Ttmpnl,v. 1 

vnii inimt know, anil own — v. I 

K't men know tlioir tuvo ..,. Two Oeti, ttf FeronOt i. 'Z 

tliut known I am a maid — 1.2 

IktMiwitwell — I. :i 

do J on know mnilnm Silvio? (.rep.) .. — il. I 

how know von tliiit I am in luvc'r — il. I 

whvuir, I know liir not (>■/•/).) _ il. I 

•ir, I know thut Mill enough (rc/j.).. — il. I 

I know it well, hir (r.-/).) — ii. 4 

kofjw you don Antonio (rep.) — il. 4 

I know, yon joy not in a lovc-discourso — ii. 4 

didbt thon l)Ut know the Inly — ii. 7 

know, worthy prince (irp.) — iii. 1 

I know, you nave deti-rmincd — iii. I 

he bhall never know tliut — iii. I 

I know it well, mv lord.. — iii. 1 

ilotli Silvia know tinit I am — iii. I 

that known me to lie in love — iii. I 

know not their liitlir-rii — iii. I 

Keaiine we know, on Valcntinc'n report — iii. 1! 

then know, that I have — Iv. I 

know then, that pnme of u« — iv. I 

for you know, thut love will — iv. ii 

lenrn to know liim hy his voice — iv. 2 

ine to call, and know licr mind — iv. 3 

early eome to know what service ... . — iv. 3 

flncc I know they virtnoujly — iv. 3 

therefore know tliou, for this I — iv. 4 

ui heav(Mi, it knowfl — iv. 4 

know they are ntutfedwith protestations — iv. 4 

doht thou know her? (>fn.) — iv. 4 

I know filic is about my neifiht — iv. 4 

if e'er yoii know her — Iv. 4 

when lihe knows it cowardice — v. 2 

know then, I here forget — v. 4 

I kTiow the youoK gentlewoman ..Merry Ifleei, i. 1 

the council lihull know thin — i. I 

to know that of your mouth — i. I 

more o<■Ctt^ion to know one another. . — i. I 

wiiich of you know I'ord of this town? — 1.3 

I know Anne'ii mind (rrp.) — i. 4 

nay, I know not — ii. I 

unle»a he know some strain in me (rep.) — ii. I 

and I know not what — ii. 1 

what they made tliere, I know not .. — ii. 1 

may know one another's mind (rep.) — ii. 2 

sir, I know not how I may deserve . . — ii. 'i 

sith you yourself know — ii. 2 

to know what ehe would have given — ii. 2 

believe il, for you know it — ii. 2 

you sliall know how I speed — ii. 2 

do you know lM>rd, sir? (rep.) — ii. 2 

I think you know him — iii. I 

too high a region, and knows too much — iii. 2 

my master knows not of your — iii. 3 

we'll teach him to know turtles — iii. 3 

well, heaven knows, how I love you — iii. 3 

if you know yrnirself clear — iii. 3 

I know not which pleases me — iii. 3 

and you may know hy my size — iii..') 

you come to know wiiat passetl — iii..') 

and you shall know how I speed — iii..') 

olos the day, I know not — iv. 2 

we do not know what's brought — iv. 2 

we know nothing — iv. 2 

and well you know the superstitious — iv. 4 

to sir .John to know his mind — iv. 4 

to know, sir, whether one Nym — iv. .'> 

what arc they? let us know — iv. .0 

to know If jt were my master's fortune — iv. .'> 

dat de court is know to come — iv. 6 

liecause I know also, life is — v. I 

how to know one another (rep.) — v. 2 

and we shall know him by his horns — v. 2 

1 know vat I have to do — v. 3 

the Ijcfit in Gh)ce»ter8hiie know on't. . — v. .'» 

how you should know my duu^-hter.. — v. 5 
as, you know, wliat great ones do.. Twetflh Sights I. 2 

I know, thy constellation is right.... — i. 4 

I know not madam — i. .'» 

your lord docs know my mind — i. .'j 

I suppose him virtuous, know him. .. — i. .0 

I do I know not whot — 1..') 

let me yet know of you — il. 1 

von must know of me then — il. I 

whom I know you hove heard of..... — ii. I 

by my troth, I'know not: but I know — ii. 3 

every wise man's son doth know . . — ii. 3 (song) 

she shall know of it, by this hand — ii. 3 

I know, I can do it — ii. 3 

I know my physic will work — ii. 3 

uy, hut I know— what dost thou know? — ii. 4 

nnd yet I know not — il. 4 

you Know he brought me out of — ii. 5 

for I know this letter will moke — ii. .') 

telling them, I know my nlwc — ii. o 

Jove knows I love : but who? — ii. .') 

no mon must know (rep.) — ii. 6 

thou canst not ch'OTse but know — ii. 5 

I know my lady will strike him .... — iii. 2 

we do know the sweet Koman hand — iii. 4 

do you know what you say? — iii. 4 

you shall know more hereafter — iii. 4 

aa I know his youth will aptly — iii. 4 

thou hast done him, J know not — iii. 4 

«• to know of the knight what my .. — iii. 4 

know of this matter? I know — iii. 4 

I eare not who knows so much — iii. 4 

I know your favour well (rep.) — iii. 4 

I know of none ; nor know I you by — III. 4 

I my brother know yet living — iii. 4 

no, I do not know you — i'v. I 

I know thee well — V.I 

Ifyou will let your lady know — ▼. 1 

I know not what 'twos — v. 1 

and that I iiartly know — v. I 

whom I knojv you love — v. 1 

what thou dost know, hath newly... — v. I 

and the world shall know it — v. I (letter) 



[415 ] 

KNOW— we know the grounds Tmelfll, Nirhl, v. I 

tincc I am put to know Meat. /or Meat. i. I 

for you must know, we have — i. I 

I come to know your pleasure — i. I 

and do look to know what doth .... — 1.1 

nay, hut I know lis so — i. 2 

besides, you know, it draws — i.'i 

you know the lady — 1.3 

tliot it may know he can command.. — 1.3 

none better knows than you — 1.4 

and know his hiisineus of him — 1. .'> 

for I now must make you know .... — 1.4 

by tliose that know the very nerves.. — I..') 

and let him learn to know when .... — i. .0 

let hut your honour know — ii. I 

what know tlic laws, thut thievM.... — Ii. I 

I know no law. bring them — ii. I 

I know not well what they are — ii. 1 

how know you thut? (r<7).) — ii. I 

for as you know, muster Froth — ii. I 

I would know that your honour .... — ii. 1 

I'll know his pleasure — ii. 2 

then I pity those I do not know .... — ii. 2 

what it doth know that's like — ii. 2 

and to make me know the nature of — ii. 3 

to know your pleasure (rep.) — ii. 4 

but graciously to know I am no better — ii. 4 

I know, your virtue hath a licence . . — ii. 4 

let me know the point — iii. I 

and go we know not where — iii, I 

and I know this to be true — iii. I 

I know none; can you tell — iii. 2 

I know not where, but wheresoever.. — iii. 2 

that I know to be true — iii. 2 

and I believe I know the cause of .. — iii. 2 

sir, I know him, and I love him .... — iii. 2 

come, sir, I know wliat I know — iii. 2 

since you know not wliat you speak — iii. 2 

he shall know you better, sir — iii. 2 

to know liow you find Claudio prepared — iii. 2 

pattern in himself to know — iii. 2 

for I have made him know — iv. I 

good friar, I know you do — iv. 1 

you something know; yet I believe.. — iv. 2 

you know the course is common .... — iv. 2 

you know tlie character — iv. 2 

I know them both — iv. 2 

this is a tliint' that Angclo knows not — iv. 2 

she's come to know if yet her — iv.?, 

the provost knows our purpose — iv. .') 

to make them know that outword . . — v. 1 

wlio knows that I.odowick? (rep.) .. — v. 1 

I know him for a man divine — v. 1 

what he doth know is true, and false — v. 1 

yet my husband knows not — v. 1 

not that I know — v. I 

he knows, that hene'er knew (rep.).. — v. 1 

know you tliis woman? (rep.) — v. I 

your provost knows the place where — v. I 

now I know you where you are? .... — v. I 

but we will know tliis purpose — v. I 

goodman baldpate; doyou knowme? — v. 1 

urother'sdeath,! know,Bitsat yourheart— v. 1 

confessed her, and I know her virtue — v. I 

that's meet you all should know .... — v. 1 
I know none of that name, lady ....Much AJo, i. 1 

I know you of old — i. I 

that she is worthy, I know (ren.) .... — i. I 

know love's griei by his complexion! — i. 1 

I know, we shall have revelling to-night— i. I 

cousins, you know what you have to do — i. 2 

you know your answer — ii. 1 

I know you well enough (rep. ) — ii. I 

1 am sure you know him well enough — ii. I 

when I know the gentleman, I'll tell — ii. 1 

Claudio, I know him by his bearing — ii. 1 

you know me well: I am he — ii. I 

now know you he loves her? — ii. I 

should know me, ond not know mel — ii. I 

the nnhojicfulcst husband that I know — ii. I 

you know that Hero loves me — ii. 2 

Know that; but I would have thee hence— ii. 3 

for the man, as you know all — ii. 3 

I know, her spirits arc as coy — iii. I 

and never to let Beatrice know of it — iii. 1 

I know lie doth deserve as much .... — iii. 1 

one doth not know how much an ill — iii. 1 

nay, hut I know who loves him (rtp.) — iii. 2 

one that knows him not — ill. 2 

you know he docs. I know not (rep.) — iii. 2 

confess not that yon know — iii. 2 

if we know him to l)e a thief — iii. 3 

with any man that knows the statues — iii. 3 

therefore know, I hove earned — iii. 3 

I know that Deformed — iii. 3 

but know, tliat I have to-night wooed — iii. 3 

I know him, he ^^■ea^s a lock — iii. 3 

how you may be converted, I know not — iii. 4 

would fain know wliat you have tosay — iii. .^ 

if either '»f you know any inward — iv. 1 

know yon any. Hero? Niine (rep.) .. — iv. 1 

she knows tlie heut of a luxurious Iwd — iv. 1 

I know what you would 5ay — Iv. 1 

in wonder, I know not what to say .. — iv. I 

they know, thut do accuse me (rep.) — iv. 1 

I know not; if they speak — iv. 1 

though, you know, my inwardness .. — iv. I 

as strange as the thing I know not . . — iv. 1 

and one that knows tlie law, go to .. — iv. 2 

and thot shall Claudio know — v. 1 

know, Claudio; to thy head — v. 1 

(Jod knows. I loved my niece — v. 1 

Whatman! I know them, yea — v. 1 

if he be, he knows how to turn his girdle — v. 1 

fare you well, boy; you know my mind — v. I 

if you would know your wronger .... — v. 1 

I know not how to pray your patience — v. 1 

In anything that I do know by her .. — v. ! 

and knows inc, and knows me .... — v. 2 (song) 

you know your offlsc, brother — v. 4 



KNOW— I know not by what power. .MId.S.'iDr. 1. 1 

that I may know the worst tnat may — f. I 

your desires, know of your youth.. .. — 1.1 

will not know wliat all hut he do know — i. I 

but I know when thoii host stolen .. — 11.2 

knowing I know tliy love to Theseus? — ii. 2 

now knows not wliich is which — ii. 2 

I know u bank whereon the wild .... — 11. 2 

thou Shalt know the man — 11.2 

you know, i'yrornus and Thisby meet — iii. 1 

1 know your |)atienec well — iii. I 

can you not hate me, as I know you do — iii. 2 

thisyou know, I know — iii. 2 

the faith thr)U dost not know — iii. 2 

could not this make thee know, the hate- iii. 2 

I am amazed, and know not what t^i vMy — iii. 2 

should know the man by the Athenian — iii. 2 

I know, you two are rival enemies .. — iv. I 

you sliull know all (rep.) — v. 1 (prol.) 

lie knows not the stop — v. I 

would know; this beauteous (rep.) .. — v. I 

know, that I, one Snug the joiner .... — v. I 

let me know (rep.) l^ce'i L.Loii,i. I 

too much to know, is, to know nought — i. 1 

well you know, here comes in embassy — i. 1 

our courl, you know, is haunted — 1. I 

deliglit, my lords, I Know not — 1.1 

you know liow much the gross sum of — 1.2 

by this you shall not know — i. 2 

I know where it is situate — 1.2 

to know his jileasure ii. I 

know you tlie man? I know him, madam — ii. 1 

so most, tliat most his humours know — Ii. I 

I know, you did — ii. 1 

a tongue which I know will not lie.. — ii. 1 

I shall know, sir, when I have (rep.) — iii. 1 

I know not; but, I think, it was not he — iv. 1 

thou slialt know her, fellow, by the rest — iv. 1 

shall I teach you to know? — iv. 1 

the deer, was us you know, in sanguis — iv. 2 

tf) know thee shall suffice — iv. 2 

how shall she know my griefs? — iv. 3 

not by two, thut I know — Iv. 3 

but 1 should blush, I know, to be — iv. 3 

I would not have him know so much — iv, 3 

which they'll know by favours several — v. 2 

know what they would — v. 2 

I know the reason, ludy, why you.... — v. 2 

they will, they will, God knows — v. 2 

and so will hhe, I know, piy lord — v. 2 

my lord doth know, have not the.... — v. 2 

(how white the hand, (iod knows;.... — v. 2 

and knows the trick to make my — v. 2 

do not you know my lady's loot — v. 2 

they would know, whether the three — v. 2 

we know what we know — v. 2 

we know whereuntil it doth amount — v. 2 

I know not the degree of the worthy — v. 2 

that doth least know how — v. 2 

I know not why I am so sa.d.. Merchant (i^feniee, i. 1 

much ado to know myself — i. 1 

tf> know where sits the wind — i. I 

I know, Antonio is sad to — i. 1 

I do know of these, that therefore only — i. I 

thou shalt not know the sound — i. 1 

let me know it; and if it stund — i. 1 

you know me well; and herein — i. 1 

as to kn^iw what were gf>od to do ... . — i. 2 

in truth, I know it is a sin to be — i. 2 

you know, I say nothing to him — i. 2 

without, I know he will choose it .. — i. 2 

shall I know your answer? — i. 3 

high gravel-blind, knows me not .... — ii. 2 

do you know me, father? (rep.) — ii. 2 

it is a wise father that knows his own — ii. 2 

I know not wliat I shall think of. ... — ii. 2 

as your worphip shall know by — ii. 2 

I know thee well, thou hast obtained — ii. 2 

I know the hand: in fuith, 'tis — ii. 4 

that I do know j'our tongue — ii. G 

and now who knows, but you, Lioreiizo — ii. G 

how shall I know if I do choose — ii. 7 

and I know not what's spent in — iii. I 

you know yourself, hate counsels not — iii. 2 

I know he ivill he glad of our — iii. 2 

never did I know a creature — Iii. 2 

and I know, my lord, if law — iii. 2 

his reason well I know; I oft delivered — iii. 3 

I know you would Ix; prouder of .... — 111. 4 

do already know my mind — iii. 4 

that you yet know not of : we'll see — ill. 4 

I know my duty — (ii. 5 

Olid I do know a mony fools — Iii. .S 

to know your answer, whether you'll — iv. I 

you know the low, your exposition . . — iv. 1 

I pray you, know me, when we meet — iv. 1 

and know how well I have deserved — iv. 1 

lie knows me, as the blind man knows - v. I 

well I know [CV)(.-tiod'8 my judge].. — v. 1 

did know to whom I gave the ring (rep.) — v. 1 

know him I shall, I am well sure.... — v. 1 

you shall not know by what strange — v. I 
know you where you are, sir? (rrp. )AtyoutJkt it^ I.I 

3'et I know not wliy. hates nothing.. — i. I 

my own |>cf)ple, who best know him — i. 1 

ynii know my father hath no child.. — i. t 

nut now I know her; if she be — 1.3 

know vou not, master, to some kind — ii. 3 

must (to, or know not what to do.. .. — 11.3 

I know I cannot plea.se you — ii. ."i 

they have the gift to know it — Ii. 7 

inland bred, and know some nurture — il. 7 

and know what 'tis to pity, and be.. — il. 7 

hut that I know, the more one — iii. 2 

and their fells, you know, ore greasy — iii. 2 
to know the quintessence of every — ill, !i (verses) 

do you not know I am a woman?.. ,. — iii, 2 

against whom I know most faults .. — iii. 2 

he taught me how to know a man .. — Iii. 2 

I do not know what jioctlcal ia — Hi. 3 



KNO 



KJjOW— knows no end {rep.) AsyauLikeit, iii. 3 

then shall yon know the wounds. ... — '.!!• '^ 

bnt mistress, know yourself — !!'• •'• 

if you will know my house — iii. 5 

that thou didst know how many .... — jv. I 

I know not the contents (lep.') — 'w.'i 

little knows this love in me — iv. 3 (letter) 

pray you, if you know where — iv. 3 

tlien 1 shoulil know you by description — iv. H 

if you will know of me wliat — iv.3 

ay, I know who 'tis; he hath no — v. I 

the wise man knows himself to he a foul — v. 1 

I know wliere you are: nay, 'tis true — v. '-' 

know of me then, (for now I speak (rep.) — v. 2 

insomuch, I say, I know you are .... — v. 2 

I know into wliat straits of fortune . . — v. 2 

tliey hope, and know tliey fear — v. 4 

I'll'stay to know at your abandoned — v. 4 
and yet I know Iiim a notorious Uar. ./IH's Well, i. 1 

I know not what he shall: God send — i. 1 

Hill a place, I know 't: how long .. — i. 2 

for I know, you lack not folly — i. 3 

may the world know them? — i. 3 

I know, madam, you love your — i. 3 

concerns you something to know it. . — i. 3 

never know how tliat desert (;f p.) .. — i. 3 

but knows of him no more — i. 3 

you know, my father left me some .. — i. 3 

her demand) and know her business? — ii. 1 

but, what at full I know — ii. 1 

with him tliat all things knows — ii. 1 

but know I tliink, and think I know — ii. 1 

whom I know is free for me to ask . . — ii. 1 

though, more to know, coidd not be — ii. 1 

I know mv business is but to the ... . — ii. 2 

but never Wpe to know wliy I should — ii. 3 

I know her well ; she had her — ii. 3 

that wilt not know it is in us — ii. 3 

he is a man I know — ii. 3 

what the import is, I know not yet.. — ii. 3 

to do notliiug, to know nothing — ii. 4 

know him well: Ay sir; he, sir .... — ii. 5 

and know theirnatures; farewell .. — i\. h 

not know him? Yes, I do know him — ii. 5 

to you that know tliem not — ii. 5 

yoii know your places well — iii. I 

run away ; know it , before tlie report — iii. 2 (_let.) 

might you not know, she would ao as — iii. 4 

vou may kTiow by their trumpets ., — iii. 5 

I k now tliat knave ; liang him ! — \\\. !> 

I know slie will lie at my house — iii. 5 

I think, I know your hostess as ample — iii. 5 

the count Rousillon; know you such — iii. 5 

his face I know not — iii. 5 

mere the truth: I Icnow his lady .... — iii. .'j 

whom, I am sure, lie knows not from — ii i. 6 

I know not wliat the success will be — iii.G 

I know, thou art valiant; and to the — iii. 6 

which he knows is not to be done.... — iii. 6 

you do not know him, my lord — iii. G 

I know not how I shall assiu:e you . . — iii. 7 

knows he not thy voice? — iv. 1 

not to know what we speak — iv. 1 

seem to know, is to know straight. ... — iv. 1 

he should know what he is — iv. 1 

I know you are the Muskos' — iv. I 

I will confess what I know — iv.3 

what do you know of it? — iv.3 

do you know this captain (_rep.) .... — iv.3 

though I know. Ills brains are — iv.3 

the duke knows him for no other .... — iv. 3 

in good sadness, T do not know — iv. 3 

I do not know, if it be it. or no — iv.3 

the count's a fool, I know it.... — iv.3 (letter) 

but tliey know his conditions — iv. 3 

more of his soldiersliip I know not .. — iv.3 

the general, and know his pleasure . . — iv. 3 

look about you; know you any here? — iv. 3 

who knows himself a braggart — iv.3 

you must know, I am supposed dead — iv. 4 

"the velvet knows; but 'tis a goodly .. — iv. .5 

the king's coming, I know — v. 2 

lacked the sense to know her estimation — v. 3 

until we know their ":rave — v. 3 

Plutus iiimself, that knows — v. 3 

and yet I know not— thou didst hate — v. 3 

to blame, or no, I know not — v. 3 

who, by this, I know, is here — v. 3 

you know, and therefore know how.. — v. 3 

do you know these women? (lep.).... — v. 3 

know yon this ring? — v. 3 

this woman here, what know j'ou? .. — v. 3 

know he promised me marriage? (rep.) — v. 3 

of furies, and I know not what — v. 3 

will not speak what I know — v. 3 

or hers, for auglit I know — v. 3 

he knows, I am no maid (rpp.) — v. 3 

can make me know this clearly — v. 3 

to point this story know — v. 3 

I know my remedy, I must. Taming o/Sli. 1 (indue.) 

I know the boy will well usurp .. — 1 (indue.) 

if she know me not — 2 (indue.) 

vou know no house, nor no such — 2 (indue.) 

T know it well; what must I call — 2 (indue) 

I firmly am resolved you know — i. 1 

because I know you well — i. ] 

for I know, she taketh most deliglit — i. 1 

you, know any such, prefer — i. I 

know now, upon advice, it touehetli — i. 1 

for t know tlioii canst: assist me (i-ep.) — i. 1 

and then I know after who comes . . — i. 2 

1 know her father, though I know not — i. 2 

than a cat: you know him not, sir .. — i. 2 

I know, slie is an irksome brawling. . — i. 2 

if you'll know, that she's the choice.. — i. 2 

I know, he'll prove a jade — i. 2 

I know my duty to my elders — ii. I 

whereof, I know, she is not ignorant — ii. t 

this I know, she is not for j^our — ii. 1 

I ktiow him well; you are welcome.. — ii. I 



[ 416 ] 



KNOW— to know tlie cause Taming ofShmi', ii. I 

by report I know liim well — ii. 1 

who Ijnows not where a wasp doth .. ii. I 

I know not what to say — ii. 1 

first, as you know, my house — i i . 1 

so tiir to know the cause — iii. I 

I know you not; hicest Sigeia tellns — iii. 1 

you know, to-morrow is tlie wedding-day— iii. 1 

why sir, you know, this is — iii. 2 

after me, I know, the rout is — iii. 2 

I know, you think to dine with .... iii. 2 

you know, there wants no — iii. 2 

first, know, my horse is tired — iv. 1 

who knows not that? Thou — iv. 1 

I know you have a stomach — iv. 1 

she, poor soul, knows not which way — iv. 1 

and know her keeper's call — iv. 1 

he that knows better how — iv. 1 

know, sir, that I am called — iv. 1 

or a pedant, I know not what iv. 2 

to Padua? know you not the cause? — iv. 2 

know you one Vicentio? I know iv. 2 

in place where thou shouldst know it — iv. 3 

where then do you know best — iv. 4 

for you know, pitcliers have ears .... — iv. 4 

I know, it is the sun (>fp.) — iv. 5 

I know thee to be signior Lucentio . . — v. I 

and now you know my meaning .... — v. 2 

I know her answer v. 2 

I know not what to say H'inter's Tale, i. 1 

no barricado for a belly; know it.. .. — i. 2 

let me know my trespass i. 2 

I dare not know, my lord (rep.) — i. 2 

I know not: but, I am sure — i. 2 

I know't too well — ii. 1 

knows what she should shame to know — ii. 1 

when you shall know your mistress — ii. 1 

whom you know of stufted sufficiency — ii. I 

than what I know — ii. i 

you know me, do you not? — ii. 2 

we do not know how he may — ii. 2 

I know not what I shall incur — ii. 2 

if she did know me one — ii. 3 

you, my lord, best know, (who least — iii. 2 

for conspiracy, I Icnow not how it tastes — iii. 2 

as you know what you have underta'en — iii. 2 

feel it gone, but know not how it went — iii. 2 

when I shall come to know them.... — iii. 2 

I know this man well : he hath — iv. 2 

you must know, 'tis my occupation.. — iv.3 

wliere, it fits younot to know .... — iv. 3 (song) 

that know little but bowling,) it will — iv. 3 

I know, sir, we weary you — iv.3 

fatlier, you'll know more of — iv.3 

old sir, I know she prizes not — iv.3 

but what of him? Knows he of this? — iv.3 

not fit you know, I not acquaint (rep.) — iv. 3 

must know tlie royal fool tliou — iv.3 

nor dare to know that which I know — iv.3 

you know your father's temper — iv. 3 

besides, you know, prosperity's the very — iv. 3 

1 think, you know, my fortunes do. . — iv. 3 
that j'ou may know you shall not want — iv.3 

I know ye well enough — iv.3 

by'I know how much an ounce — iv.3 

I know not, what impediment this ., — iv.3 

I know, by the picking on's teeth.... — iv.3 

none must know but the king (jcp.) — iv.3 

thou must know, the king is full .... — iv.3 

he must know, 'tis none of your .... — iv.3 

who knows how that may turn back — iv. 3 

of Hermione, I know, in honour .... — v. 1 

gladly know the issue of it — v. 2 

which they know to be his character — v. 2 

rings, of his, that Paulina knows — v. 2 

a fardel, and I know not what — v. 2 

I know, you are now, sir, a gentleman — v. 2 

but I know, thou art no tall _ v. 2 

for him, I partly know his mind .... — v. 3 
we, that know wliat 'tis to fast . . Comedy of Err. i. 2 

know, he is the bridle of your will .. — ii. 1 

I know not thy mistress; out upon .. — ii. 1 

I know, quoth lie, no house, no wife — ii. 1 

I know Ins eye doth liomage — ii. 1 

sister, you know, he promised — ii. 1 

you know no Centaur? — ii. 2 

,iest with me, know my aspect ' — ii. 2 

for know, my love, as easy may 'st .. — ii. 2 

I know thon can'st; and therefore, see — ii. 2 

to me, fair dame? I know you not .. — ii. 2 

I know this sure uncertainty — ii. 2 

slion Id know her as well as she knows — ii. 2 

but I know what I know: that you beat — iii. I 

to know the reason of this strange .. — iii. 1 

I know a wench of excellent discourse — iii. 1 

the chain; by this, I know, 'tis made — iii. 1 

name iselse, I knownot,nor by .... — iii. 2 

then, well I know, your weeping .... — iii. 2 

hut mated; iiow, 1 do not know iii. 2 

doyou know me, sir? am IDromio? — iii. 2 

and I know not what use to iii. 2 

if every one know us, and we know — iii. 2 

I know it well, sir; lo. here is the chain iii. 2 

you know, since Pentecost the sum.. iv. i 

you know, I gave it (re/!.) — iv. 1 

I do not know the matter iv. 2 

the peacock; mistress, that you know — iv. 3 

God dotli know, you dined at iv. 4 

I know it, by their pale and deadly _ iv. 4 

do you know him? I know tlie man — iv. 4 

I long to know the trutli hereof - iv. 4 

God he knows, I saw not t. I 

strauM on me? you know me well . . — v. I 

dost thou know my voice? — v. i 

my only son knows not my feeble .. v. 1 

the duke, and all that know me in . . v. I 

T know not wliich is which — v. 1 

all the quarters that they know i' the...Varhei/i, i. 3 

by Siiiel's death, I know, I am thane.. — i. 3 

in his country's wreck, I know not ... — i. 3 



KNO 

KNOW— places are the nearest, know Macbeth i. 4 

asked for me? know you not, he hos?.. — j. 7 

and know how tender 'tis, to love i. 7 

hide what the false heart doth know .. _ i. 7 

to know my deed; 'twere best not know — ii. 2 

I know, this is a joyful trouble — ii. 3 

you are, and do not know it — ii. 3 

to know it further jj. 3 

know, that it was he, in the times ...'. iii. 1 

both of you know, Banquo was — iii. 1 

you know your own degrees _ iii. 4 

nothing, to those that know me iii. 4 

for now I am bent to know _ iii. 4 

will come to know his destiny iii. 5 

and you all know, security is iiii 5 

(howe'er you come to know it) iv! 1 

he knows thy tliought : hear his iv. 1 

my heart tlirobs to know one thing iv. 1 

seek to know no more iv. 1 

you know not, whether it was _ iv! 2 

and best knows the fits o' the iv. 2 

not know ourselves: when we hold (rep.) — iv! 2 

what know, believe: and, wliat I can .. iv. 3 

in whom I know all the iv.3 

he'solicits heaven, himself best knows iv.3 

countryman; but yet I know him not — iv.3 

almost afraid to know itself ! _ iv.3 

where nothing, but who knows nothing — iv. 3 

what need we rear wlio knows it — v. 1 

heaven knows what she has known — v. 1 

who knows, if Doualbain be v. 2 

the spirits that know all mortal _ v! 3 

make us know what we y! 4 

which I say I saw, but know not how. . v! 5 

I know not why, except to get the . . King John, i. 1 

ere answer knows what question .... i. 1 

we know his handy work j! 1 

let me know my father \\ \ 

when we know the king. Know him ii! 2 

I know, she is not; for this match .. _ ii 2 

which we, God knows, have turned.. _ ii! 2 

heaven knows, they were besmeared iii. 1 

but, if not, then know, the peril .... iii. 1 

donot I know, thou wouldst? iii! 3 

see and know our friends in iii. 4 

in the court of heaven 1 shall not know iii! 4 

your uncle must not know but iv. 1 

or false, I know not ,^ iv. 2 

to know the meaning of dangerous .. iv! 2 

few, or none, do know me iv.3 

and tell him so; we know the worst iv! 3 

yet, I know, our party may well .... v. 1 

may know wherefore we took v. 2 

you taught me how to know the face — v. 2 

I do know the scope and warrant .... v. 2 

no; know, the gallant monarch y 2 

why, know you not? the lords _ v! 6 

where, heaven he knows, how we shall v 7 

it seems, you know not then so v. 7 

and knows not how to do it v! 7 

that knows no touch to tune Richard Il.i.i 

heaven, thou, and I do know J. 3 

what presence must not know i. 3 

when they shall know what men .. .. ~^ i. 4 

made ine,"knows I see thee ill — ii! 1 

yet I know no cause why I ii. 2 

I know not what to do; I would to God ii. 2 

if I know, or which way, to order — ii. 2 

learn to know him now ij. 3 

to know, what pricks you on ij. 3 

let me know my fault ii. 3 

I know, my uncle York hath power — iii. 2 

I know it, uncle; and oppose not.... iii 3 

for well we know, no hand iii 3 

yet know, my master, God iii. 3 

your heart is up, I know iii. 3 

that know the strongest and surest . . iii 3 

more than every one doth know iii. 4 

and am I last that knows it? iii. 4 

what thou dost know of noble iv. 1 

ray lord Aumerle, I know your jv. 1 

wilt know again, being ne'er so little v. 1 

his aspiring rider seemed to know .. _ v. 2 

madam, I know not, nor I greatly . , v. 2 

aught I know, my lord, they do (rep.) v. 2 

but now I know thy mind — v. 2 

and thou shalt know the treason .... -_ v. 3 

I know, she's come to pray for — . v. 3 

have them, if I once know where.... v. 3 

which thou wouldst truly know ...AHennjII'. i. 2 

they will know us by our horses .... 1.2 

I know them to be as true-bred — i. 2 

answered iieglectingly, I know not what — i. 3 

but what I know is ruminated i. 3 

1 know a trick worth two of that .... _ ii. 1 

of charge too, God knows what ii. 1 

I know, thou worshippest St. Nicholas ii. 1 

and tied him I know not wliere ii. 2 

villains know it well enough ii. 2 

'tis our setter; I know his voice .... ii. 2 

and I must know it, else lie loves ii. 3 

I'll know yoiu- business, Harry ii. 3 

I know you wise ii. 3 

utter what thou dost not know — ii. 3 

all? I know not what ye call, all ... . — ii. 4 

how couldst thou know these men .. — ii. 4 

tli.v company, but I know not his name ii. 4 

my lord, the man I know. I know .. — ii.4 

and I know, his death will be — ii.4 

I know not whether God will — iii. 2 

I know you well enough (rep.) — iii. 3 

tell him, I know not how oft — iii. 3 

I would thou shouldst know it — iii. 3 

a .man knows not where to have her — iii. 3 

there shalt thou knoM' th.v charge .. — iii. 3 

by some that know not why he is away — iv. I 

for well .you know, we of the offering — iv. 1 

for pov«rt,y, I know not where — iv. 2 

hath sent to know the nature iv.3 

and well we know, the king knows .. — iv.3 



KNllW— 08 greatness knows itself . . 1 Henry 1 1', iv. 3 

my nephew must ni)t know, sir Uicliftrd — v. 2 

let not llfirrj' know, in any ciwe — v. 2 

know then niv ninnf is l)..ii!,'las — v. 3 

no. I know this Hue lull Wfll — _ v. .1 

fears the thioK lie would not know..ai/<>ii!/ /( . i. 1 

vou know where to find me — !• 2 

know our own estate — .!• ^ 

not know me? Come, come, I know.. — ii. 1 

or to know thy luce to-niorrow . ... . . — n. j 

the tcnuis-eonrt keeper knows hotter — ii- - 

God knows, whether those tlmt bttwl — '!■ 'J 

every innn must know that — !!• ^ 

ondeir John must not know of it — !'• ■• 

istoeonie luiltinf;otl', you know .... — ii. ■> 

Iknow vou.nii.lress non.thy - !!• 1 

knowwen..t(!.illow.iyn.iu'sy - i>. • 

nnd then 1 know lu.w to h.uidlc yon - lU ' 

l>reii<l-ihi|iiK'r, iinil I know not what — !)■ ■' 

(huniieil for Ihiit, 1 know not — .!!•'' 

tluni:;h then, licttven Uiunvs, I had.. — iii- ' 

I know not the phnise — l!'- "^ 

know you where , vou nreV — V'-; 

to know the nmnbers of oUr enemies — iv. 1 

lord Mowbray, now you know not what — iv. i 

who knows on whom fortune would — iv. 1 

fromour princely seneral, to know.. — iv. 1 

for full well he knows, ho cannot — iv. 1 

1 know it will well please them — iv. 2 

thev know their duties — jv- a 

I know not; here he is — jv. ;i 

I know not how they sold themselves — iv. 6 

and how accompanied? I do not know — iv. 4 

your highness knows, comes to no .. — iv. 4 

heaven knows, my son, by what bypaths — iv. 4 

I myself know well, how troublesome — iv. 4 

I know, he doth not — — v. S 

let king Cophetua know the truth .. — v. 3 

Gentleman, I know not your breeding — v. 3 

I know the young king is sick for me — v. 3 

1 know thee n.ot, old man — — v. 5 

leave gormandizing; know, the grave — v. 5 

for heaven doth know.. v;';':"i ~ , 'i ? 

where, for any thing I know, Falstaff — (epjl.) 
then we go in, to know his embassy . . Henry V.}. 1 

diith know, how many, now in health — i. 2 

they know, your grace hath cause . . — i. 2 

to know the pleasure of our fair — i. 2 

and know, I know yonr worthiness.. — ii. 2 

vouknow, how apt our love was .... — 11.2 

let them know of what a monarchy. . — 11. 4 

that you may know, 'tis no sinister.. — 11. 4 

to-morrow shall vou know our mind — u. 4 

I do not know you so good a man .. — 11;. 2 

we send to know '7hit willing ransom — 111. a 

I know him not. Do you not know.. — 111. 6 

but you must learn to know such — in. 6 

if yum- nmiestv know the man — in. 6 

vou know me by my habit (rep.) . . .. — 111. 6 

what i's thy name? I know thy quality — 111. fi 

I know him to be valiant (rep.) — in. 7 

that's more than we know — iv. 1 

know enouah, if we know we are ... . — iv. 1 

how shall I know tliee?gain? — iv. 1 

and I know 'tis not the halm — iv. 1 

I know thy erraiKl, I will go with thee — iv. 1 

vou know your places (n-p.) — iv. 3 

I do not know the French for fer — iv. 4 

I did never know so full a voice — iv. 4 

God knows, and you know — iv. 7 

I know not if the day be ours, or no — iv. 7 

which, vour majesty knows, to this.. — iv. 7 

for I arri Welch, you know — iv. 7 

I care not who know it — jv- 7 

for I do know Fluellen valiant — iv. 7 

sir. know vou this glove? trep.) — iv. 8 

all the 'orfd, know to be no petter — v. 1 

that I may know the let — v. 2 

I kno'w no ways to mince it — v. 2 

come, I know thou lovest me — v. 2 

and, I know, Eate, you will, to her .. — v. 2 

1 do not know dat (rfp.) — v. 2 

will teach her to know my meaning — ,, v- 2 

of old I know them \Ueiir{iVI. 1.2 

I know thee well, though never — 1.2 

more than we poor men do know — 1.2 

father. I know; and oft have shot .. — ;. 4 

I know not where I am — i. .'J 

my lady craves to know the cause . . — 11. 3 

and know us bv th<?se colours — ii. 4 

but he shall know, I am as good .... — in. 1 

know the office that belongs to such — 111 1 

ny lord, we know your grace — lii. 1 

let me know, and then 1 11 answer you — iv. 1 

yet know, my lordi I was provoked . . — iv. 1 

to know who hath obtained — iv. 7 

I come to know what prisoners — iv. 7 

fair Margaret knows, that — v. 3 

beget her, all the iiarish knows — v. 4 

Gml knows, thou art a coUop — v. 4 

I think, she knoMTS not well — v. 4 

for know, mv lords, the states — v. 4 

you know, rriv lord, your highness . . — v. s 

I know it wi(l excuse this — v. 5 

Winchester, I know your mind iHcnryVl. i. I 

wizards know their times — i. 4 

they know, their master loves — 11. 1 

England knows thine insolence — ii. I 

God knows, of iiure devotion — ii. 1 

nlas. master, I know not (rtp.) — ii. I 

1 know not how it stands — 11. 1 

where, OS all you know, harmless — 11.2 

we know vour mind at full — ii. 2 

We know the time, since he was — iii. 1 

nay, Gloater, know, that thou art — iii. I 

1 know, their comnlot is to have .... — iii. I 
I know, no pain, tney can inflict .... — iii. I 
let him know, we have despatched .. — iii. 2 
what know I, how the world may .. — iii. 2 
— iii. 2 



KNOW— the king shall know iHenryl'1. 111. 2 

that 1 may know my grief — in- ^ 

ransom, master? let me know — iv. 1 

that speaks he knows not what? .... — iv. 'J 

thev know not what they do — 1 v. 4 

nor knows he how to live, but by — iv. X 

I know thee not; why then should I — iv. 10 

let them obey, that know not how .. — v. 1 

to know the reason of these arras — — v. 1 

I know ere they will have me go — v. I 

might I but know thee — v. 1 

God knows how long it is I have — v. 3 

I know our safety is to follow them.. — v. 3 

ah, know yon not, the city favours . .SHmry VI. 1. 1 

I know not what to say — i- 1 

Goil knows, what hath bechanced (rep.) — .1.4 

but (;.h1 lir knows thy share — .;• 4 

lor tlum sh;iU know, this strong — n. 1 

I know it wull, lord Warwick — ii. 1 

would tliv lust I'liruds did know — ii. 2 

this sliiniK'li^S!, r;illLt know herself .. — >.■•''! 

vei know tluni, since wchavc — ii.2 

"dost thou know who speaks to thee .. — n. G 

I know by that, he's dead — J.i. 

you know not what you swear — 111. I 

lie knows the game; how true — iji. 2 

other time, to know oiu- mind — m '' 



God knows, not Henry 



and yet I know not how to get the .. — m. 2 
tliesefor you; from whom I know not — in 3 
alas you know, 'tis far from hence .. — iv. 1 



why, knows not Montague that of 

that know not how to use 

vou know, our king, my brother .. 

I know you for no less 

and you shall quickly know 

know you what this means?. 



— iv. 1 

— iv. 3 

— iv. :> 

— iv. 7 

— V. 1 

— V. I 

I know my dutv, you are all — v. .'j 

may 1 know? Yea, Richard (rep.). .Richard III. 1. 1 

I know, it pleaseth neither of us — 1. 1 

lady, you know no rules of charity .. — ;• 2 

but knows some touch of pity (rep.).. — 1.2 

I hope so. I know so: but gentle .... — i. 2 

that shall you know hereafter 

come, come, we know your meaning — J. 3 

lord Rivers; why, who knows not so — i. 3 

O, know you, that he doth it — 1.4 

I do not know that Englishman alive — 11. 1 

who knows not, that the "entle duke — ii. 1 

who knows not, he is dead! (rep.) — n- 1 

I promise you I scarcely know myself — ii. 3 

God he knows, seldom, or never — iij. I 

God he knows, not 1, the queen — 111. 1 

of my kind uncle, that I know will give — iii. I 

to know your lordship's pleasure — iii. 2 

God knows, I will not do it, to the death — iij. 2 

I know, they do; and I have well — iii. 2 

but that I know our state secure — iii. 2 

knows the lord protector's raind (rrp.) — 111. 4 

his lordshij) knows me well, and loves — iii. 4 

by his face straight sliall you know his — iji. 4 

my lord, you know my mother lives — iii. 5 

true ornaments to know a holy man — iii. 7 

know, then, it is your fault, that — in. 7 

as well we know your tenderness of — 111. 7 

yet know, whe'r you accept our suit — lii. 7 

for God he knows, and you may partly — 111. 7 

I know a discontented gentleman . . — iv. 2 

I partly know the man; go, call him — i-v. 2 

know, my loving lord, the Marquis.. — iv. 2 

to say the truth. I do not know — iv. 3 

for I'know the Bretagne Richmond. . — iv. 3 

God knows, in torment, and in agony — iv. 4 

then know that, from my soul, I love — iv. 4 

I know not, mighty sovereign, but by — iv. 4 

alone, no man knows whither — iv. 4 

Lord Stanley quartered, do you know — v. 3 

gentle hearers, know to rank Henry nil. (prol.) 

I do know kinsmen of mine — 1. 1 

you know his nature, that (rep.) — 1. I 

well, we shall then know more — i. 1 

know you not, the fire — j. 1 

I do kiiow, to be corrupt and treasonous — i. 1 

let the king know, as soon he shall.. — ;. 1 

Iknowbut of a single part — i- 2 

to those which would not know them — 1.2 

in what kind, let's know, is this — 1.2 

neither know my faculties, nor person — 1.2 

if I know you well, you were the — .1.2 

will know liini one day (rep.) — 11. 2 

I knew him, and I know him .. .. — 11. 'J 

I'll make you know .your times of. . — ii. 2 

I know your majesty has always — — 11.2 

what were 't worth to know the secret — 11.. ■< 

I do not know what kind of my ... . — n. 3 

who knows yet, hut from this lady . . — n. 3 

if he know that I am free of your (.rep.) — 11. 4 

that know not why they are so, hut. . — n. 4 

with thy approach, I know, comfort — n. 4 

I know mv life so even : if your " — 111. 1 

as not to know the language T have — in. 

but to know how you stand minded in — in. 1 

in truth, I know not ; 1 was set — ni- 1 

full little, God knows, looking — ni. [ 

but heaven knows your hearts — in- 1 

could but be brought to know — in. 1 

you know, I am a woman — in- 1 

what he deserves of you and me I know — in. 2 

what though I know her virtuous (rep.) — in- 2 

I know 'twill stir him strongly (rep.) — in. 2 

know officious lords, I dare — ;.■;■'■' 

the king shall know it, and, no doubt — in. 2 

1 know myself now; and I feel — in- 2 

(I know his noble nature) not to — 111.2 

these I know; who's that, that hears — iv. 1 

1 know it, but 'tis so lately altered . . — iv. 1 

all the land knows that v'>" ~ •'^'' i 

loved him, heaven knows how dearly — iv. i 

that all the world may know I was — iv. '2 

I know vou wise, religions — v. I 

(for so Iknow lie is they know he is) — v. I 



KNOW— you do desire to know Henryl'lll.v. 1 

know you not how your state stands — v. I 

sure yon know me? yes, my lord;.but — v. 2 

half an hour, to know your pleasures — v. 2 

you shall know ninny dure — v. 2 

do nut I know you for a favourer — v. 2 

but know, i I'oriie not to hear — V. 2 

ahm. I know not — v. 3 

I know, within a while all the best.. — <firi.l) 
true, he was so; I know the cause. TroiYut^-Crfifs.i. 2 

do yon know a man, if you pee him? — i. 2 

ond you know, he has not i)Ut three — i. 2 

why, you know, 'tis dim:,. led — J. 2 

do you know what a man is? — i. 2 

one knows not at what ward you lie — i. 2 

that she beloved knows niiiiglit (r'p.) — i, 2 

and know, by measure of their oli-irvunt — i. 3 

know them from eves of otlier mortals? — i. 3 

thou shalt know, "rrojan, he is awake — 1.3 

let him know, what 'rroy means — i. 3 

and knows not his fear — i- 3 

though, Apollo knows, 'tis dry — i. 3 

I know that, fool (rf/j.) — ii. 1 

I know not what; 'tis trash: farewell — ii. I 

I know not, it is put to lottery — ii. 1 

who knows what follows? — ii.2 

know.an enemy intends you harm (tep.) — ii. 2 

mad sister, I do know her voice — ii.2 

whom, we know well, the world's — ii.2 

itself knows it so abundant scarce .. — ii. 3 

or know not what we are — ii. 3 

I know not what pride is — ii. 3 

know the whole world — ii. 3 

you know me. do you not? (rep.) — — iii. 1 

I sliall know your honour better — iij. 1 

but partly know, sir; it is music (rep.) — iij. 1 

you must not know where he sups .. — jii. I 

you know all, lord Pandarus — iii. I 

you know now your hostages — iii. 2 

I know not w hat I speak. Well know — iji. 2 

I know is such a wrest in their — iii. 3 

you know my mind, I'll fight no .... — iii. 3 

these fellows? know they not Achilles? — jii. 3 

the bearer knows not, but commends — iji. 3 

himself know them for aught — iii. 3 

a very horse; that has he knows not — jjj- 3 

knows almost every grain of — i jj- 3 

he knows not me; 1 said • iii. 3 

knocked out his brains, I knownot.. — iii. 3 

We know each other well. We do (rep.) — iv. I 

to the king; but why, 1 know not .. — iv. I 

'tis more than 1 know, I'll be sworu — iv. 2 

do not yon know of him, yet go — iv. 2 

I know what 'tis to love; and would — jv. 3 

thievery up, he knows not how — jv. 4 

and know you, lord, I'll nothing do — iv. 4 

for, you know, 'tis true, that you — iv. 5 

but whate'er, know this: in the — iv. .^ 

one that knows the youth even — iv. .■> 

I know your favour, lord Ulysses — jv. s 

great soldier may his welcome know — iv. a 

you know me dutiful; therefore — v. 3 

know what it is to meet Achilles — y. i 

I know the merchant. I know..7'imon of.llliens, j. 1 

I do know him a gentleman — i. 1 

but you well know, things of like — j. i 

youknow me. Apcmantus — j. 1 

entertainment. I scarce know how .. — i. 2 

nor will he know his purse; or yield — j. 2 

I know, no man can justly praise — i. 2 

he will neither know how to maintain — ji. 2 

if you did know, my lord — ii- 2 

you are, and do not know yourselves — ii. 2 

I know not which is which. Can'st not — ii.2 

they know not,— hut something — ii.2 

one that knows what belongs to reason — iii- 1 

we know him for no less, though we — iii. 2 

1 know his lordship is but merry — iii- 2 

mine honour; shall not know my coin — iii. 3 

I know, ray lord hath spent of — iii. 4 

he knows, you are too diligent — iii. 4 

now we shall know some answer — iii. J 

and, for I know, your reverend ages — iji- ■> 

I do beseech vou. know me — iii- •') 

what does his lordship mean? I know — iii. •'. 

know yon the qnalitv of lord Timou's — iii. li 

I know thee widl |re;i.) — iv. 3 

ever know nnthrift. that was (rep.) .. — iv. 3 

when I know not what else to do — iv. 3 

he; I know him. Save thee, Timon.. — iv- :i 

then, I know thee not; I ne'er — iv.3 

I beg of you to know me, good my lord — j\.-l 

heaven knows, is merely love — iv 3 

know his gross patehery, love him .. — v. 1 
name them, my lord, let's know them — v. I 
let Alcihiades know this of Timon .. — v. ii 
then, let him know,— and, tell him .. — v- 2 
you know, Cains Marcius is (rcp.1 ..Coriolmiiit, i. I 
for, the gods know, I sjieak this in .. — i. 1 

they shall know, we have strong arms — j. I 

presume to know what's done i' the — i. 1 

SieiuiusVelutus, and Iknow not — j. 1 

where, I know, our greatest friends.. — j. I 

and know how we proceed — i . 2 

where they shall know our mind — i. :> 

knows not thunder from a tabor (rep.) — i. i\ 

know you on which side thev have.. — i- i> 

Romcnuist know thevnIneofluT .. — _i'-< 
teaches beasts to know their friends.. — 11. 1 
do you two know how yon nre censured — 11. 1 
I know, yon can do very little alone — ji. I 
we know vou well enough too (rep.) — ii. I 

there's nine that I know — ii. 1 

know. Home, that all alone Marcius — n- 1 
yon have, I know, petitioned all the — ii- I 

I know not where to turn — 11. 1 

know, good mother. I had rather — 11. I 

thev know not wherefore (rep.) — ii.2 

on Ihe market-place, I know, they do — ii 2 

you know the cause, sir, of my standing — ii- 3 

E E 



KNO 



[418 ] 



KNO 



iii. 2 



iv 


2 


iv 


:i 


iv. 


3 


IV 


4 


' IV. 


h 


iv. 


i) 


IV. 


« 


IV. 


6 


IV. 


7 



— V. 2 

— V. 2 

— V. 2 

— V. 2 

— V. 3 



— i. 2 



— i. 2 



i. 3 
i. 3 
i. 3 
ii. 1 
ii. 1 
ii. 1 
ii. 1 
ii. 1 
ii. 1 
ii. I 
ii. 1 
ii. 2 



KNOW— we let the people know 't . . Coriolanus, iii. 1 

my Boul aches, to know, when two .. — iii. 1 

they know, the corn was not our .... — iii. 1 

he shall well know, the noble iii. 1 

as I do know the consul's worthiness — iii. 1 

although, I know, thou hadst rather — 

1 talk of tliat, that know it — 

know, I pray you,— I'll know no further — 

we know your drift : speak what ? . . — 

heaven will not have earth to know — 
I know you well, sir, and you know me — 

know youme yet? Nicanor? — 

then know me not ; lest that thy .... — 

I know thee not: thy name? — 

know thou first, I loved 

tell not me: I know, this cannot be.. — 

(liow probable, I do not know) — 

I do not know what witchcraft's in him — 

he knows not what I can urge — 

he would not seem to know me — 

know the very road into his kindness — 
come, ray captain knows you not .... 
you shall know now, that I am in ... . 

wife, mother, child, I know not 

you know the way home again 

do you know this lady? The noble .. 
as certain, as I know the sun is iiie .. ... 

I know it; and my pretext to strike.. — v. 5 

you are to know, that prosperously . . — v. -^ 

my lords, when j'ou sliall know .... — v. 5 

whati know you not, being JuliusCcBsar^ i. 1 

you know, it is the feast of Lupercal 
since you know you cannot irep.)..., 
if you know that I do fawn (rep.S.... 
I know that virtue to be in you (rep.) 
I do not know the man I should avoid 
I know not what you mean by that.. 

you know him well by siglit 

I know where I will wear this dagger — 

if I know this, know all the world .. — 

I know he would not be a wolf 

now know you, Casca, I have moved — 

I do know by this, they stay for me. . 

'tis Ginna, I do know him by his gait 

I know no personal cause to spurn . . 

1 know not, sir. Look in the calendar 

do you know them? No, sir 

know I these men, that come — 

and, you know, liis means 

1 should not know you, Brutus 

I should know no secrets — 

then should I know this secret — 

danger knows full well, that Csesar . . 

let me know some cause 

because I love you, I will let you know 

what I can say; and know it now.... 

to know my errand, madam 

none tliat I know will be 

Trebon ills knows his time 

know, Cfcsar doth not wrong 

I do know but one that unassailable — 

we will know your pleasures (rep.) .. — 

I knew that we shall have him 

I know not, gentlemen, what youintend — 

you know not what you do — 

know you how much the people may — 

I know not what may fall 

to speak what I do know — 

who, you all know, are honourable.. — 

it is not meet you know how Caasar.. 

'tis good you know not that you .... — 

you all do know this mantle 

tor Brutus, as you know, was Cfesar's 

griefs they have, alas, I know not.. .. 

you know me all, a plain blunt (rep.) — 

deserved your loves? alas, you know not 

I do know you well 

you know, that you are Brutus 

for, I know, when thou didst hate .. — 

I'll know his humour, when he knows 

Iknow young bloods look for 

I do not know that I did cry 

I know not how, but I do find it 

whether we shall meet again, I know not 

that a man might know the end . . — 
know me for Brutus 

1 know, my hour is come 

who knows if the scarce-bearded.. ^«<oni/^6Veo. 

is't vou, sir, that know things? 

we'll know all our fortunes 

importeth thee to know 

more than the ills I know 

I know, by that same eye, there's some — 

the gods best know 

thou shouldst know there were a heart 

but tliere'snot it; that you know well 

and henceforth know, it is not Caesar's 

know, worthy Pompey, that what .. 

he dreams, I know, they are iu Rome 

I know not, Menas, how lesser 

fetty diiference, we yet not know 
do not know, Mecajnas; ask Agrippa 

not SO; I know you could not lack . . 

let US know if 'twill tie up thy 

I do not know, wherefore my father — 

know then, I came before you here . . 

you must know, when Caesar and your 

well, I know not what counts 

I know thee now; how far'st thou . . 

they know by the height, the lowness — 

thou must know, 'tis not my profit . . 

seen some majesty, and should know 



ii 


2 


11 




li 




ill 




111 




111 




111 




111 




lu 




111 




111 




iii 




111 




111. 


2 


Ill 


2 






111. 


2 


iii. 


2 


Ul. 


2 


iii. 


2 


iii. 


2 


IV. 


2 


IV. 


3 


IV. 


3 


IV. 


3 


IV. 


3 


IV. 


3 


V. 


1 


V. 


1 


V. 


1 


V. 


4 


V. 


5 



— i. 4 

— ii. 1 

— ii. 1 

— ii. 1 

— ii. 1 



the people know it 

one Taurus. Well I know the man.. 

you did know, how much you were . . 

Fortune knows, we scorn her most . . 

know you him? Csesar, 'tis his — 

let her know it: to the boy Cassar. ... 

for us, you know, whose he is, we are 

he knows, that you embrace not Antony — 



iii. 3 
iii. 6 
iii. 7 
iii. 9 
iii. 9 
ii. 10 
ii. U 



Antony ^tleo.iii. 11 
— iii. II 



KNOW— knows what is most 

not know me yet? __ 

let the old rufSan know, I have ...... 

know, my hearts, I hope well of 

like him that know a warlike charge — 

and let the queen know of our guests 

she soon shall know of us, by some .. 

for, I know, your pliglit is pitied — 

know, sir, that I will not wait pinioned — 

thy master Cffisar knows, and he hath — 

assuredly, you know me — 

know 3'ou what Csesar means to do . . — 
in triumph? Madam, he will; I know it — 

Cleopatra, know, we will extenuate. . 

know the devil himself will not eat (rep.) — 



you know the peril 

I shall incur I know not how . 



. CymbeliTie, i. 2 



but, you know, strange fowl light. . . . — 

I do know her spirit, and will not — 

I do not know what is more cordial.. — 

but, heavens know, some men 

you do seem to know something 

to know if your affiance were deeply 

wliich you know, cannot err 

no, I know that: but it is fit 

not know on'tl he's a strange (rep.).. — 

I know her women are about her 

that I, which know my heart 

I hoiie, you know that we must not. . — 

or who knows if one of -her women . . — 

I know not where when I was stamped 

nay, that hell knows, why hers _ 

fou must know, till the injurious. ... 

know your master's pleasure — 

nor know not what air's from home 

did you but know the city's usuries. . — 

these boys know little, they are sons — 

heaven, and my conscience, knows .. — 

it is Posthumus' hand, I know't — 

know, if you kill me for my fault — 

I know not why I love this youth — 

hereafter I might know more 

I partly know him (jcp.) _ 

thou shalt know I'm son to the queen — 

Jove knows what man thou mightst — 

I know the shape of his leg _ 

who needs must know of her departure — 

I nothing know where she remains . . — 
neither know I what is betid to Cloteu — 

to know from whence we are 

let me make men know more valour 

I know, he'll quickly fly my _ 

I know, you are more clement — 

whose bolt you know, sky-planted . . 

you know 'tis ours; whom best I love 

this golden chance, and know not why — 

fou know not which way (rep. ) 
know not why, nor wherefore 

and yet I know thou wilt 

is gone, we know not how, nor where 

became of him, I further know not. . — 

I know not how, a traitor 

sir, as your highness knows 

I know not how to wish a pair 

with I know not how much more .... 

know, that the people of Rome TilusAndr 

I know not, Marcus ; but I know it ie — 
thus much I give your grace to know 
and make them know what 'tis to let 
till you know better how to handle it 
should the empress know this discord' 
of a cut loaf to steal a shive, we know 
that knows to court it with words . . 

know that this gold must coin 

you shall know, my boy e 

I know not what it means 

ne'er let my heart know merry cheer — 

to fear I know not what 

how dost thou know 'tis he? — 

I know, thou dost but jest 

we know not where you left him .... 

learn to know thy meaning 

every where, I know not wny — 

I know not what you mean — 

my lord, I know not, I, nor can I guess — 

m.y lord, I know, my noble aunt .... 

that we may know the traitors — 

although, I know, there is enough .. — 

I know it well : I read it in _ 

my lords, you know, as do the 

but he and his shall know that justice — 

for know, thou emperor, I will enchant — . , . , 

when he knows thou art the empress' v. 1 

for I know thou art religious v. 1 

for that, I know, an idiot holds v. i 

if thou didst know me (rep.) v. S 

know thou, sad man, I am not Tamora — v! 2 

well mayst thou know her by thy own v. 2 

I know them all, though they suppose v. 2 

I know thou dost; and sweet Revenge v. 2 

what's your will? Know you these . . — v. 2 

you know your mother means v. 2 

alas I you know I amno vaunter .. v! 3 

for well I know the common — v. 3 

taught my frail mortality to know itself. Pericles, i. 1 

as sick men do, who know the world . . — i. i 

it is enough you know; and it is fit — i. i 

one sin, I know, another doth provoke i. 1 

desired he might know none of his secrets — i.' 3 

(on what cause I know not) j, 3 

I have forgot to know; but what I am — ii! 1 

hark you, sir, do you know where — ii! 1 

I know it by this mark ji. 1 

we desire to know of whence he is ... . ii". 3 

and further he desires to know of you ii. 3 

that's the mark I know you level at .. ii. 3 

no, no, my Escanes; know this of me — ii. 4 

know that our griefs are risen to ii. 4 

or know what grounds made happy .. ii. 4 

this Ilet you know, that for this _ ii. 5 

























3 




3 


ii 


4 



iii. 3 
iii. 3 
iii. 3 



— i. 2 

— i. 2 



— ii. 3 



111. 2 
iv. I 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 



IV. 1 

iv. 2 
iv. 4 

iv. 4 I 



iii. 4 
iv. 1 
iv 3 



jv. 4 
iv. 6 
iv. 6 
iv. 6 



— i. 4 
4 (song) 



KNOW—who, for aught I know Pericles, ii 5 

command. Know you the character? 
come, come, I know 'tis good for you .. 

mistress, do you know the French 

I know, he will come in our shadow .. 

none does know, but you (rep.) 

but yet I know you'll do as I advise . . 

your honour knows what 'tis to say 

honourable he is in that, I know not .. 

do you know this house to be 

I made to it, to know of whence you are 
entreat to know at large the cause .... 

if you did know my parentage 

I know not; but here is the Regent 

now 1 know you better: when we 

I know you not. You have heard 

do you know this noble gentleman 

and sue to know you better 

know, that we have divided 

I know no answer 

I know you what you are 

I know no news, my lord 

know the character to be your brother's.. 

I do not well know, my lord 

nuptial breaches, and t know not what.. 

and m i ne, I know, in that are one 

dost thou know me, fellow? No, sir 

my lord, I know not what the matter is.. 
dost thou know the difference, my boy .. 
and know not how their wits to wear — i 
wisdom whereof I know you are fraught — 
may not an ass know when the cart .... — i 

does any here know me? _ i. . 

all particulars of duty know .'..'. _ i' , 

never afilict yourself to know the cause.. — i' . 
I know his heart; what he hath uttered. . — i. . 

no further with anything you know — i. i 

nay, I know not: you have heard ii' " 

I know not why he comes _ ji' j 

Iknow not, madam: it is too bad _ ji! 1 

you know not why we came to visit you — ii! 1 
I know thee not. Fellow,! know (rep.) .. — iii 
neither known of thee, nor knows thee? — ii. i 
beastly knave, know you no reverence?.. — ii i 

these kind of knaves 1 know _ ii' ; 

I know, sir, I am no iiatt(;rer !. _ ji' 5 

all the world well knows, will not be _ ii. i 

I know, 'tis from Cordelia ii 2 

my dear lord, you know the fiery quality — ii! 4 
I know what reason I have to think so . . — ii 4 
you less know how to value her desert . . _ ii. 4 

I know't, my sisters ij 4 

I have good hope thou didst not know of't — ii! 4 

but she linows what she does _ ii 4 

what they are, yet I know not _ ii' 4 

to horse, but will Iknow not whither .. — ii. 4 

I know you.; Where's the king? _ iii! 1 

sir, I do know you; and dare _ jii' 1 

your fellow is that yet you do not know' — iii! 1 
forbid tliee, shall the duke instantly know — iii. 3 
be simple-answered, for we know the truth— iii! 7 

dost thou know Dover? Ay, master — iv 1 

knows he the wickedness? _ iv. 2 

suddenly gone back, know you the reason? - iv! 3 

seemed not to know what guests 

letters to him? I know not, lady _ 

something— I know not what— I'll love! ! — 
know.y our lady does not love her husband— 

I know you are of her bosom 

in understanding, you are, I know it !!!! 

and yet I know not how conceit may ' 

I know that voice. Hal Gonerill .... " _ 
dost thou know me? I remember thine . . — 
1 am a king, my masters, know you that? — 
I know thee well: a serviceable villain .. — 

to know our enemies' minds 

iny boon I make it, that you know'nie liot — 

sir, do you know me? (rep.) 

I know not what to say ! ! ! ! 

I should know you, and know this raanl' — 
nor I know not where I did lodge last . . — 

I know, you do not love me _ 

know of the duke, if his last purpose ! ! ! ! _ 
you know the goodness I intend upon'yo'u — 

ho, I know tTie riddle — 

know thou this, that men are ! ! ! — 

know, my name is lost; by treason's .'!' 

no tearing, lady; I perceive you know it' — 

ask me not what I know _ 

worthy prince, I know it well ! ! ! ! _ 

1 know when one is dead \\ 

he knows not what he says !!!.' _ 

know our intent: what comfort !!!! _ , 

you know not what you do Rr.me'o'&Juliel, I 

to know our further pleasure in .... 

do you know the cause? I neither kiiow — 

1 11 know his grievance, or be much. . 

aj', if I know the letters _ 

I know^ not, sir 

I know what: you must contrary mel 

that would not dance? I know not . . — 

a name I know not how to tell thee.. 

utterance, yet I know the sound _ 

plainly know, my heart's dear love. . — 
I know it begins with some other letter — 
you know not how to choose a man.. — 

but all this did I know before — 

till thou shalt know the reason _ 

at my hand, that I yet know not — 

you shaU know my errand 

and know her m.ind early to-morrow 



iv. 3 
iv. 5 
iv. 5 
iv. 5 
iv. b 
iv. 5 
iv. 6 
iv. 6 
iv. 6 



IV. 7 
iv. 7 
iv. 7 
iv. 7 
iv. 7 

V. 1 

V. 1 
V. 1 

V. 3 
V. 3 

V. 3 
V. 3 
V. 3 
V. 3 
V. 3 
V. 3 



yon light is not daylight, I know it. . 

Romeo, whom you know I hate 

I'll to the friar, to know his remedy 
you do not know the lady's mind.... 

you know the reason of tliis haste 

I already know thy grief 

by my letters know our drift 

God knows when we shall meet again 
for the cook, sir; but I know not what 



11 


2 


II 


2 


ii 


3 


11 


4 


11 


5 


li 


5 


iii 


1 


Hi. 


3 


iii. 


■i 


ill. 


4 



iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 

iv. 3 



KNO 

KNOW— well you know Komeo ^Jullel, Iv. 5 

I'uilli, I kiiiiw" nut what to any — iv. S 

mill one tliiit knows you well — v. 3 

my nirtater knows not, hut I am — v. 3 

eeareli, seek, and know how this foul — v. 3 

know their spring, their head — V. 3 

then SUV nt onee what thou dost know — v. 3 

thought to work, I know not Hnmlel,\. 1 

nnd tell me. he that knows, why this .. — i. 1 

wos, us you know, hy Fortinbras — i. 1 

and I tliis morninj^ know where — i. I 

that yo\i know, yiinng Fortinbras — i. 2 

nay, it is; I know not seems — i. 2 

Init yon must know, your father lout.... — i. 2 

for wlnit, we know, must be, and is .... — i. 2 

I know y<oi lire no truant — i. 2 

in onrdiitv, to let vou know of it ...... — i. 2 

I do know, wlien t"lie blood burns — i. 3 

haste me to know it — i. 5 

but know, t)i"u noble youth, the serpent — i. 5 
your ilesin- to know what is between us — i. 5 

that tliev do know my son — ii. 1 

thus, I know his father, and his friends — ii. 1 

ay, my loid, I would know that — ii. I 

Iknow the gentleman, I saw him — ii. 1 

my lord, I do not know — ii. 1 

(Id fain know that) that I have positively — ii. 2 

not that I know. Take this from this .. — ii. 2 

von know, sometimes he walks four — ii. 2 

GO you know me, my lord? tlxcellent well — ii. 2 

I know, the pood king and queen have — ii. 2 

I have of late (but, wherefore, I know not — ii. 2 

I know a hawk from a handsaw — ii. 2 

yoH know, it came to pass — ii. 2 

if he do blench, I kuow my course — ii. 2 

tliau fly to others that we know not of I — iii. 1 

you kiiow right well, vou did — iii. 1 

lor wise men Know well enough — iii. 1 

we shall know by this fellow — iii. 2 

ray love is, proof hath made you know — iii. 2 

I know no touch of it, ray lord — iii. 2 

you would seem to know my stops — iii. 2 

and tell you what I kuow — iii. 3 

who kno"ws, save heaven? — iii. 3 

up sword, and know thou a more horrid — iii. 3 

nay, I know not; is it the king? — iii. 4 

*tv.'ere good yon let him know — iii. 4 

I must to England; you know that?.... — iii. 4 

guarded, to know your pleasure — iv. 3 

till I know 'tis done, howe'er my haps . . — iv. 3 

you know the rendez- voua — iv. 4 

m his eye, aud let him know 80 — iv. 4 

1 do not know why yet 1 live to say — iv. 4 

we know what we are, but know not.... — iv. 5 

my brother shall know of it — iv. 5 

if you desire to know the certainty — iv. h 

will you know them then? — iv. 5 

I do not know from what part — iv. 6 

Horatio, as I am let to know it is — iv. 6 

high and mighty, you shall know — iv. 7 (let.) 

kuow you the hand? 'Tis Hamlet's .... — iv. 7 

I know him well, he i§ the brooch — iv. 7 

but that I know, love is begun by — iv. 7 

Hamlet, returned, shall know you are.. — iv. 7 

do you think it was? Nay, I know not.. — v. I 

that I have kissed I know not how oft.. — v. 1 

let us know, our indiscretion sometime — v. 2 

wilt thou know the effect of what I wrote? — v. 2 

[Col. Kh/.] and know of these contents., — v. 2 

aost know this water-fly? — v. 2 

for 'tis a vice to know him — t. 2 

I know, to divide him iuventorially.. .. — v. 2 

I know, you are not ignorant — v. 2 

but to know a man well, where to know — v. 2 

he sends to know, if your pleasure — v. 2 

since no man of aught he leaves, knows — v. 2 

this presence knows, and you must .... — v. S 

cousin Hamlet, you know the wager? . . — v. 2 

were thine— shouldst know of this Oihidlo, i. 1 

I know my price, I am worth — i. 1 

nor the division of a battle knows more — i. 1 
reverend eignior, do you know my voice? — i. 1 

I know thee, Roderigo — i. 1 

if you know not this, my manners — i. I 

for, I do know, the state, however — i, I 

how didst thou know'twas she? — i. 1 

do you know where we may apjirehend — i. I 
'tis yet to know (which, when I know . . — i. 2 
for know, lago, but that I love the gentle — i. 2 
conduct them; you best kuow the place — i. 3 

I know not, if 't be true — i. 3 

nor know I aught but that he's well .... — ii. 1 

the Moor,— I know his trumpet — ii. 1 

Caesio knows yon not — ii. 1 

I do not know; friends all but now — ii. 3 

of all that I do know; nor know I aught — ii. 3 

five me to know how this foul rout began — ii 3 

know, lago, thy honesty and love doth — ii. 3 

what had he done to you? I know not.. — ii. 3 

thou shalt know more hereafter — ii.3 

many a wind instrument that I know .. — iii. 1 

I know [Kn/. -warrant] it grieves my ,, — iii. 3 

[Kn/.] Ilciiow't,— I thank you — iii. 3 

nothing, mv lord; or if— I know not what — iii. 3 

wooed my fady, know of yonr love? .... — iii. 3 

my lord, for aught I know (rep.) — iii. 3 

mv lord, yon know I love yon — iii. 3 

I know thou art full of love and honesty — iii. 3 

to let you know my thoughts — iii. 3 

by heaven, I'll know thy thought — iii. 3 

I know our country disposition well.... — ill. 3 

if more thou dost perceive, let me know — iii. 3 

doubtless, sees and knows more — Iii. 3 

knows all qualities, with a learned .... — iii. 3 

what he'll do with it, heaven knows.... — iii. 3 

than but to know't a little — iii. 3 

let him not know it, and he's not robljcd — iii. 3 

I know not that; but such a handkerchief — iii. 3 

do you know, sirrah, where lieutenant.. — iii. 4 

I know not where he lodges — iii. 4 



419 ] 



KNOW— I know not, madam Othello, iii. 4 

but to know 8(» m;ist he my benefit .... — iii. 4 
nor shcMild I know him were he in favour — iii. 4 

I know not sweet; I foiM'd it — iii. 4 

fiiith, that he (11(1,-1 know not what .. — iv. 1 

let me know; and knowing ,-(-7).) _ iv. 1 

and not know who left it therel — iv. 1 

heiivcn doth trnlv know it OfJL/.) — iv. 2 

why (lid he so? I' do not know — iv. 2 

miv, heii\ en (loth know — iv. 2 

I know not how 1 l(5st him — iv. 2 

kn()ws not yet of his honourable fortune — iv. 2 
I know a ladv in Venice, who would . , — iv. 3 

let husbands know, their wives — iv. 3 

I know his gait, 'tis he — v. I 

we do not know. Did you not hear a cry? — v. 1 
know we this face, or no! alas, my friend — v. 1 
did you know him? Know him, ay .... — v. 1 

nor do I know the man — v. 1 

know of Cassio, where he supped to-night — v. 1 
I know not where is that Promethean . — v. 2 
I know not, since guiltiness I know not — v. 2 
she be murdered? Alas, who knows?.... — v. 2 

I know, thou didst not — v. 2 

scarce did know you, imele — v. 2 

I know, this act shows horrible — v. 2 

yet, lago knows, that she with Cassio . . — v. 2 

what J'mi know, you know — v. 2 

which, as I think, yoti know not — v. 2 

the state some service, and they know it — v. 2 

KNOWER— thy knower {rep.) . . Troilus ^ Cress, ii. 3 

KNOWING-nought knowing of whence. Tempest, i. 2 

knowing I loved my books — i. 2 

knowing that tender youth . . Two Gen. of Ver, iii. 1 
knowing my mind, vou wrong me. Merry Wh^es,\\\. i 

not knowing what tliey dol MuchAJo,\w. 1 

with knowing what hath passed — v. 2 

knowing I know thy \aye to . .Mid. y.'s Dream, ii. 2 

most harm, least knowing ill Loiie^sL. Lost, ii. 1 

knowing afurehand of oxn* merriment — v. 2 
might fail of the knowing me . . Mir. of Venice, ii. 2 
the other knowing noburtlen of.. As you Like il, iii. 2 
praises towards him; knowing him. .All's ll'etl, ii. 1 
I knowing all my peril, thou no art — ii. 1 
and knowmg I had no such purpose? — iv. 1 
not knowing them, until we Know . . — v. 3 
knowing thee to be but young. Taming ofShrev, ii. 1 
to grieve at knowing of thy choice. Winter' sTale, iv. 3 
that I, knowing by Paulina, that the — v. 3 
knowing whom it was their hup. .Comedy of Err. i. 1 
and, knowing how the debt grows .. — iv. 4 

hath trifled former knowings Macbeth, ii. 4 

not knowing what they fear King John, iv. 2 

knowing dame Eleanor's aspiring ..2Heitryf'L i. 2 
knowing, that thou wouldst have me — iii. 2 
broken faith with me, knowing how — v. 1 
shamest thou not, knowing whence.SHcnryr/. ii. 2 
not knowing how to find tiie open .... — ii. 2 
you are to blame, knowing she will.. Henry I'lll. iv.2 
in my knowin", Timon has been. Timon of Ath. iii. 2 

knowing myself again, repair to Corintiinus, ii. 3 

he's very knowing, I do perceive't../lH(. ^-Cleo. iii. 3 
should dream, knowing all measures — iii. 11 

gentlemen of your knowing Cymbeline, i. ."j 

and ofttimes not knowing why — i. 7 

timelv knowing, the remedy then born — _i. 7 
one of your great knowing should learn — ii.3 
knowing 'tis a punishment, or trial? — iii. 6 
knowing, that with the shadow. . Titus Andrnn. i v. 4 
that knowing sin within, will touch. ... Pericles. \. 1 
he knowing so, piit forth to seas . . — ii. (Gower) 
and knowing this kingdom, if without — ii. 4 

as knowing naught, like dogs Lear, ii. 2 

have heard, and with a knowing ear ..Hamlet, iv. 7 
and knowing [Co/. A'n«. -know] ot these.... — v. 2 
knowing what I am, I know what she. .Othello, iv. I 

KNOWINGLY— madam, knowingly.. .4H's U'ell, i. 3 
and felt them knowingly: the art. . Cymbeline, iii. 3 

KNOWLEDGE-rectify our knowledge . Temp?.!/, y. I 
he has no more knowledge in .... Merry tf'ives, iii. 1 
and feed your knowledge with . . TwelfthKight, iii. 3 
I profit in the knowledge of myself .. — v. 1 
or if your knowledge be more. . Meas. for Meas. iii. 2 
with better knowledge, and knowledge — iii. 2 
you on your knowledge find this way? — iv. I 
being come to knowledge that there was — v. I 
for that angel knowledge you can. Love's L.Losi, i. 1 
his knowledge must prove ignorance — ii. 1 
if knowledge be the mark, to know.. — iv.2 
your knowledge may by me be done. Mer. of Yen. i. I 
in the great heap of vour knowledge? — i. 2 
desire more love and knowledge of you — i. 2 
let me the knowledge of my fault. ./4.«i/ouLt7(eiV,i. 3 
delay me not the knowledge of his .. — iii. 2 
O knowledge ill inhabited! worse than — iii. 3 

a good opinion of ray knowledge — v. 2 

if knowledge could be set tip against.. <4(('« Well, i. 1 
ourselves into seeming knowledge .. — ii.3 
or rather, my knowledge; that I may — ii.3 

he is very great in knowledge.. — .!'• ^ 

in mine own direct knowledge, without — iii. 6 
upon my knowledge he is, and lousy — iv. 3 
upon knowledge of my parentage. 7Vimin?n/SA. ii. I 
in the freedom of my knowledge.. Winter'sTale, i. I 
does behove my knowledge thereof .. — i- 2 

alack, for lesser knowledge! — ii. I 

for his knowledge is not infected — ii. 1 

von shall come to clearer knowledge — ii. 1 
let him have knowledge who I am .. — ii. 2 
even then will rush to knowledge! .. — iii. 1 
had force, and knowledge, more than — iv. 3 

nothing benefit y(nir knowledge — iv. 3 

makes lis unthrifty to our knowledge — _y. 2 
in yonr knowledge, and your ..ComtdyofUrr. iii. 2 
say to the king the knowledge of the ..Macbeth, i. 2 
more in them than mortal knowledge — i. S Qet.) 
be innocent of the knowledge, dearest — iii. 2 
the certain knowledge of that truth. . KingJohn, i. I 
bear thee from the knowledge of thyself — v. 2 
to my knowledge, I ne'er in my. . . . Richard II. ii. 3 



KNO 

KNOWLEDGE— by instinct, knowlcdge.Siffn.;;'. i. 

an arrant knave, on my knowledge.. — v. 

of great expedition, and knowledge ..Uenryt'. iii. 

to mope so fur out of his knowledge! — iil^. 

knowledge and literature in the wars — iv*. 

than is in your knowledge to dream of — iv. i 

let us have knowledge at the court. . I Henry t'l. il. 

knowledge the wing wherewith we Ry.'ZIIctt. VL iv. 

never ditl her any to my knowledge . Richardlll. i. 

the king's assent or knowledge Henry nil. iii. 

the knowledge of either king or council — iii. 

has he had knowledge of it? — v. 

my thought a certain knowledge. Troilus ^ Crett. iv. 

manifests the true knowledge Coriolanui, ii. 

I will not seal your knowledge with — ii. 

I shall ere longhave knowledge of my — v. 

who being mature in knowled<;e ..Antony SfCleo. i. 

me up from mine own knowledge.. ., — ii. 

your own renowned knowledge — iii. 

and dare not speak their knowledge.. — iv. I 

no guess in knowledge which way . . Cymbeline, i. 

had I not brought the knowledge of — ii. 

particulars must justify my knowledge — ii. 

the history of my knowledge touching — iii. 

which by my knowledge found Pericles, \. 

and not your knowledj»c, personal pain — iii. 

and iustify in knowledge, she is thy . . — v. 

marks of sovereignty, knowledge, and .... Lear, i. 

from some knowledge and assurance .... — iii. 

lose the knowledge of themselves — iv. 

be governed by 3'our knowledge — iv. 

some distant knowledge of him Hamlet, ii. 

mine own gained know ledge should .... Othello, i. 
KNOWN- that made them known Tempest, i. 

letters should not be known — ii. 

in having known no travel TiroGen.ofVer. i. 

the execution of it shall make known — i. 

if it were known in eount^el Merry Wives, i. 

a man long known to me — ii. 

1 will hereafter make known to you — iii. 

the truth bein^ known, we'll all .... — iv. 

the matter will be known to night .. — v. 

hath known you but three days . . Twelfth Xight, i. 

nor no railing in a known discreet man — i. 

wlien that is knoiv'ii, and golden — v. 

well known to the duke Meas.forMeas. iii. 

I have not yet made known to Mariana — iv. 

are but easy when they are know n ., — iv. 

if he were known alive? — iv. 

I have known my husband — v. 

to be known a reasonable creature Mvch Ado, i. 

1 have known, when there was no.... — ii. 

I have known when he would — ii. 

hath she made her aftcction known . . — ii. 

ere she make her love known — ii. 

ever was known in the commonwealth — iii. 

if I have known her, you'll say — iv. 

and our devices known Mid. A'. Dr. i. 

and the country proverb known .... — iii. 

as brief as I have known a play — v. 

her faults will ne'er be known .... Love's L. Lost, i. 

as well known as disg\ii.sed — v. 

but where thou art not known . . Mer. of Venice, ii. 

often known to be the dowry of — iii. 

if you had known the virtue of — v. 

be it known unto all men by As youLihe it, i. 

had I before known this young man — i. 

I have known thee already .ill's Well, ii. 

ay, that would be known: to the wars — ii. 

and uses a known truth to pass — ii. 

which I have some time known — iii. 

no further danger known — iii. 

I would, I had not known liim — iv. 

been better known to you — v. 

which is known mine; for I by vow . — v. 

ond make known her love?. Taming of Sh. i. (indue. 

a man well known throughout all ... — ii. 

(Jremio 'tis known, my father hath.. — ii. 

make known which way thou travellest — iv. 

kingdoms known and allied to Wtnter'sTale, i. 

make known how he hath drank .... — ii. 

but be it known from him — ii. 

if the good truth were known — ii. 

let Time's news be known, when 'tie — iv. (chorus 

that I have known to go about with — iv. 

make us better friends, more known.. — iv. 

but till 'twere better known? — iv. 

fitting to be known, discover — iv. 

they were to be known by garment .. — v. 

or well-advised? Kno>vn to these. Cninecfy o/ Err. ii. 

nor must he known no less to have .... Macbeth, i. 

to make his love known? — ii. 

is't known who did this morethan bloody — ii. 

you made it known to us — iii. 

stones have been known to move — iii. 

I am not to you known, though in — iv. 

I have known her continue in this ... . — v. 

you have known what you should not — v. 

heaven knows what she has knowu . . — v. 

yet I have known those which — v. 

that is well known KingJohn, i. 

than if you had at leisure known of this — v. 

on some known ground of Ircaehery.KicAarJ /f. i. 

that is not yet known — ii. 

be it known to you, I do remain .... — ii. 

audit is known to many in our ....\HenryW. ii. 

if then the tree may be known by .. — ii. 

one of tliein is well known — ii. 

this oily rascal is known as — ii. 

our cause, and known our means ....iHenrylF.i. 

so openly known to the world — ii. 

I have known thee these twenty-nine — ii. 

but to be known and hated — iv. 

be it known to you, (as it is very well) — (ejiil 

though war,nor no known qiiarrel HenryV. ii. 

was ever known so great and little . . — iv. 

to this day is not kiiown 1 Henry VI. i. 

no loss is Known in me — iv, 

'tis known already that I am — v. 

'tis known to you he is mine enemy ..iHenryV,. i. 



KNO 

lCNOWN_if they were known •lUenry ri.i. 3 

as well have known our nnines — ii. I 

why, 'tis well known, that whiles I.. — iii. 1 
forlt is known we wore Init hollow .. — iii. 2 
be it known iinto thee hy these presence — iv. 7 
when this is known, then to divide. .SHenryC/.ii. 5 

be it known to noble lAWis — ni. 3 

for these knmvn evils, hut to give . . liii-limd III. i. a 
are known the tirsl :un\ \n\\>\neit.HeitryFlIl. un'ol.) 

things, thiit are known alike — .1-2 

better, she ne'er had known pomp .. — ii. 3 
if it he known to him, that 1 gainsay — ii. I 
be nknown friend, 'gainst liisliigUness' — in. 1 

hud I not known those eustonis — iv. 1 

fnrther pleasure be known unto us .. — V. "2 

God shall he trulv known — v. 1 

would I had known no morel — v. -1 

ns it is known she is Tioilus/i-Cresskl,t. ii. '2 

let it he known tohini, thatwe — li. 3 

known,.Veliilles,tliatvonareinlove(rcp.)— iii. 3 
purpose, a vietor shall he known?. . . . — iv. .'> 

iiv, that's well known Timuii of .-llheiis, i. 1 

tl'iiit might have known my phiee .. — i;i. 3 

he has been known to eonnnit — ui. 5 

make them best seen, and known — v. 1 

to make it known to us — v. 1 

but it is not known whether.. CuiiufaiiHs, i. 2 (letter) 
be it known, OS to us, to all the world — i S> 
mv noble steed, known to the camp, . — _i. 9 
Jfenenius, you are known well (jr;).) — ii. 1 
that 1 am known well enough too? .. — n. 1 

if I he known well enough too';' — ii. 1 

have vou not known the worthiest men — ii. 3 

whv, "this was kn.iwn before — iii. 1 

never kii.iwn liefore hut to be rongh — v. 5 

those, that have known the utarih. . JuliusCwsar, i. 3 
I have not known when Ins alfeetious — Jj. 1 
if tills he known, Cassius or Cicsar .. — iii. 1 
and I known wherefore tlicy do it .. — v. 1 

an(i then the end is known — v. 1 

Ishould hn.ve known no Xcss.Antotiy ^-Cleopnlra.i. 4 

yon and I liave known, sir — ii. 

pray yon, he ever known to patience — iii- 6 

makeit so known. Caasar — iv. 6 

what I have heard, or known — v. 2 

jnirehnse what yon ha\-e made known — v. 2 

he it known, that we, the greatest — v. 2 

I will be knoxra yonr advocate Cymbel'iic, i. 2 

to me known but hv letter — i. 2 

be better known to this gentleman .. — i. t> 

we have known together in Orleans — _ i. a 

that liave a sharper known — iii. 3 

she wished me to make known — iii- .'> 

wc being not known, not mustered .. — iv. 4 
I am known of many in the ai-my .. — iv. 4 

1 and my brother are not known — ^^'■ 4 

vision wliieh I niade known to Lucius — v. 5 

the cause were known to tliem TitusAndroii. n. 1 

he it known to von mv full intent — iv. 2 

be it known to you, that cursed Chiron — v. 3 
he it known to yon, that have preserved — v. 3 

being more known jirows worse Pericles, i. 1 

in bemg known, he 11 stop the course (rep.) — i. 2 

reason to herself is only known — .]]■ ^ 

'tis known, I ever have studied physio — iii. 2 
a blow, which never shall be known . . — iv. 1 

made known to you wlio I am? — iv. B 

made known herself my darighter .... — v. 3 
that you make known it is no vicious .... Lear, 1. 1 
hath ever but slenderly known himself. . — i. 1 
that is neither known of thee, nor knows — ii. 2 
better thus, and known to be contemned — iv. 1 
when I am known aright, you shall not — iv. 3 

'tis known before; our preparation — iv. 4 

by the art of known and feeling sorrows — iv. 6 
yet to be knomi, shortens my made .... — iv. 7 

Kleasnres first be known that are to. . , . — v. 3 
ow have you known the luiseries .... — v. 3 

and 'tia known, I am a pretty Romeo ^Juliet, i. 1 

Been unknown, and known too late I — i. 5 
still have known thee for a holy man — v. 3 
this side of our known world esteemed.. Hamlet, i. 1 
never make known what you have seen.. — i. 5 
and most known to youth and liberty .. — ii. 1 
this must be known; which, being kept.. — ii. 1 

custom not known, the ratitiers — i\. 5 

safely, the changeling never known — v. 2 

it must be shortly known to him — v. 2 

some elder masters, of known honour — v. 2 

if this be known to you, and your Olhello, i. 1 

should have known it witliout a prompter — i. 2 
fortitude of the place is best known to j'ou — i. 3 

if thou hast no name to be known by — ii. 3 

you have known him long; and be you.. — iii. 3 
known oft ICol. A'jj^.-acknownon'tJ .... — iii. 3 
her sweet body, so I had nothing known — iii. 3 

felt no age, nor known no sorrow — iii. 4 

to apeak what I have seen and known .. — iv. 1 
will make myself known to Desdemoua — iv. 2 
I'll make thee known, though I lost .... — v. 2 
of your fault be known to the Venetian.. — v. 3 
KNO W'ST— from Argier, thou know'st,. Tempest, i. 2 
thou best know'st what torment I did . . — i. '2 
and vet know'st her not? . . Two Gen. of Verona, ii. 1 
for love, thou know'st, is full of jealousy — ii. 4 

O know'st thou not, his looks — ii. 7 

thou know'st, being stopped — ii. 7 

thou know'st, how willingly — iii. 1 

as thou know'st their deserts — v. 4 

know'st thou this country? Tirelflh Night, i. 2 

thou know'st no less but all — i. 4 

and dilueulo snrgere, thou know'st. . — ii. 3 

thon know'st not me — iv. 1 

be that thou know'st tiiou art — _v. 1 

till thou know'st what they are. Meas. for Meat. ii. 1 
friar, then know'st not the duke .... — iv. 3 
tiiou know'st not what thou speak'st — v. 1 
thou know'st, that the fashion of ....Much. 4do, iii. 3 
o thon know'st not what it is.... Lnre^sL.Los/, iii. 1 
know'st, that all my fortunes, . Merc/i. of Venice, i. 1 



[ 420 ] 



LAC 



KNOW'ST— thou know'st ....Mcreh. of Venice, iv. 2 

know'st thou not; the duke As you Like it, i. 3 

know'st thou the youth that spoke .. — iii. S 
at full I know, thou know'st no part.. All's Well, ii. 1 

know'st thou not, Uertram — ii. 3 

thou know'st slie has raised inc — ii. 3 

not speak all thou know'st! — v. 3 

thou know'st not gold's eftect,.7'om>ng-(i/'SAi<>M', i. 2 

but thou know'st, winter tames — iv. 1 

thou know'st he dies to me again. IVinler's Tale, v. I 
with him? know'st thou his niiiuUCom. o/i'ii-. ii. 1 

thou know'st, did hear thee — v. 1 

in Syracusa, boy, thou know'st — v. 1 

thou know'st, that Baiuino, and h\s.. Macbeth, iii. •<! 
mv friend, that know'st my tongue. /Ci'/ig- John, v. 6 
di'scouiforttthlo cousin! know'st ....Hichard 11. iii. 2 

which know'st the wav to plant — v. I 

thon know'st, he's n.i starveling .. ..\ HenrijIV. ii. 1 
thou know'st my old ward; here I lay — ii. 4 
why, thou know'st, I am as valiant.. — ii. 4 
why, Hal, thou know'st, as thou art — iii. 3 

tlio'n know'st, sir John cannot •2HenrylV. ii. 4 

a "Welshman. Km>w'st thou Flnellen?HeHii/r. iv. 1 
what means this, hci aid? know'st thou — iv. 7 
know'st thou (i.Avtry lie is my dear — iv. 7 

thou know'st little of my wrongs \HenryVI. i. 3 

sirrah, tliou know'st how Orleans,... — i. 4 

villain, thou know'st, the law — iii. 4 

thou know'st what colour jet is oil ..iUenry VI. ii. 1 

the king, thou know'st, is coming — iii. 2 

villain, thou know'st no law of God.Bi'cAord///. i. 2 

thon know'st our reasons urged — iii. 1 

who, as thou know'st, are dear to.... — iii. 2 

although thou know'st it not — !!!• ^ 

as thou know'st, unjustly must be .. — iii. 3 
know'st thou not any, whom corrupting — iv. 2 
the holy rood, tliou know'st it well . . — iv. 4 

how know'st thou this? Henry VIII. i. 2 

thon may'st tell, that know'st.. 7'rD((i(,i<5C)fss. ii. 3 
kna\'es? Thon know'st them not? Ti'mon of Athens, i.l 
thon know'st, I do; I called thee by — i. 1 

and thou know'st well enough — iii. 1 

in thj' rags thou know'st none — iv. 3 

Tnllus, not yet thou know'st me . . Coriolanus, iv. 5 
to frown; know'st thou me yet? .... — iv. 5 
thou know'st thy country's strength — iv, 5 
thou know'st, great son, the end .... — V. 3 
why, know'st thou any harm's.... /iiimsCtPsai', ii. 4 

tho'u know'st, that we two went — y.b 

thou know'st, how much we do. . Antony ^Cleo. ii. 6 
thon takcst up thon know'st not .... Cymleline^ i. G 
thou villain base, know'st me not by my — iv. 2 

know'st hiin thou look'st on? — v. 5 

for aught thon know'st, affected be.. TitusAnd. ii. 1 

thou know'st our meaning — ii. 4 (letter) 

thou know'st I ha^■c power to take Pericles, \. 2 

where, as tliou know'st, against the face — i. 2 

that best know'st how to rule — ii. 4 

thou little know'st how thou dost startle — y, I 

speak less than thon know'st Lear, i. 4 

varlet art thon, to deny thou know'st me? — ii. 2 
thou better know'st the offices of nature — ii. 4 

know'st tliou the way to Dover? — iv, 1 

that not know'st, fools do those — iv. 2 

tell me what more thou know'st - iv. 2 

thou know'st, the first time that we — iv. 6 

know'st thou this paper? Ask me not .. — v. 3 
thou know'st my daughter's of. . Romeo ^Juliet, i. 3 
thou know'st, the mask of night is on — ii. 2 
farewell, I see, thou know'st me not — iii. 1 
which, well thou know'st, is cross .. — iv. 3 
thou know'st my lodging: get me ink — v. 1 

thou know'st 'tis common Hamlet, i. 2 

he that thou know'st thine — iv. 6 (letter) 

to this was sequent thou know'st already — v. 2 

thou know'st, we work by wit Othello, ii. 3 

ICol. Kni.'] is better than thou know'st — v. 1 

KOD— it is ki, kte, kod Merry H'ives, iv. 1 

LABAN— his uncle Laban's sheep.. ilfpr.q/Ton'ce.i. 3 
Ijaban and himself were compromised — i. 3 
LABEIy— label to another deed . . Rnm,',, ,^.i„hrt. iv. 1 
LABELED— labeled to my will . .. /V/vWA A--/,/, i. ,5 
LABEO— Labeo, and Flavius, set ...h,li„^ (',(■<„,, v. 3 

LABIENUS (this is stiff news) Inlony .fcleo. i. 2 

LABOUR— you mar our labour I'empesl, i. 1 

ioin'd to their sufl'ered labour — i.l 

but their labour delight in them sets off — iii. 1 

and makes my labours pleasures , — iii. 1 

do even refresh my labours — iii. I 

o'er ears for my labour — iv. 1 

shortly shall all my labours end — iv. 1 

tlien a grievous labour won.. Two Gen. of Verona, i. 1 

gave me nothing for my labour — i.l 

take it for your labour — ii. I 

1 lose not my labour (>rp.) Merry Wives, ii . 1 

full of labour as a wise man's . . Tirelflh Night, iii. 1 

as guiltless labour when it Meas.for Meas. iv. 2 

you do but lose your labour — v. 1 

undertake one of Hercules' Hhowrs. . Much Ado, ii. 1 

and labour ill bestowed! — iii. 2 

if yonr love can labour aught in sad — v. 1 
sometimes labour in tlie quern. .MidN.'sDream, ii. 1 
cold indeed, and labour ]ost.Merchant nf ri'ii;cf,ii. 7 

art amocker of my labour As you Like it, ii. B 

saves my labour by his own approach — ii. 7 
neither do I labour for a greater .... — v. 2 

his taken labours bid him All's Well, iii. 4 (letter) 

we have lost our labour — iii. 5 

more truly labour to recompense .... — iv. 4 
to labour and effect one thing .T'amnig-o/S/ire!/', i. 1 
leave that labour to great Hercules.. — i. 2 
to painful labour, both by sea and land — v. 2 

her face o* fire with labour Winter' sTale, iv. 3 

age, thou hast lost thy labour ■ — iv. 3 

pure truth why labour you .... Comedy of Err. iii. 2 

that labour may you save. — iv. 1 

or lose my labour in assaidng it — v. 1 



LA BOUK— labour to make thee iuW ....Macbeth, i. 4 
the rest is labour, which is not used.... — i. 4 

601C labour's bath, balm of ii. 2 

the labour we delight in — ii, 3 

thou i,,sost labour' _ v, 7 

bring this laliinir to a happy end ..King John, iii, 2 
yonr love and labour's recompense.. JiieAardii. ii. 3 
suniionnts our labiuir lo attain it.... — ii. 3 
ofconscieiioc take tliou Coi- til v labour — V. 6 
for a iiiaii to labour in his vorutioii. . 1 Henry7r. i. 2 
l>aving biiek, 'tis n iloublv labour,... — iii. 3 
an' if it do, take it lor th\ hil 
their courage with hard bibuu 
the Irc.uluTous hlbmirofyoui 
the incessant care and labour 
hibour sluill refresh itself with hope . 
thy labmir, Muntjoy 



with profitable hiboi 
herald, save tluni tli 
shall these labours, a' 



loiir .. — IV. 3 
r tamo — iv. 3 
■ stni .. — V. 4 
.2Henn/IV. iv. 4 
ryV.W.i 
iii. fi 



s, to Ills grave.. — iv. I 

labour _ iv.3 

d these lionours.2Henryr/.i. 1 
lalionr tor their own pivfenncnt (rep.) — i.l 

the king will labour still to save .... — iii. 1 
my thoughts, that labour to persuade — iii. 2 
it is said, labour in thy vocatiim .... — iv. 2 
with bootless hibinir swim against ..3HenryVI. i. 4 
and of our labours thou slialt reap .. — v. 7 
that he would labour my delivery. . Richard III. i. 4 
a blessed labour, my most sovereign — ii. I 
their \cry lalunir, was to thera ....HenryVIII. i. I 

I'll save you that labour, sir — ii. 1 

the queen's in labour (rep.) — v. 1 

I have had my labour Troilus 4 Cressida, i. 1 

but small thanks for my labour — i.l 

a labour saved! A wonder! — iii. 3 

labour on the bosom of this .... Timon of Athens, i. 1 
vouchsafe my labour, and long live,. — i. I 

take it for tliy labour — i.l 

and to pay thee for thy labour — i.l 

ne\cr btaiiu!:; like labour Coriolanus, i. 1 

'tis not to save labour — i. 3 

six of his labonrs you'd have done .. — iv. 1 
'tis sweating labour, to bear such..^nfon!/<S-Cfeo. ii.3 
it's moustious labour, when I wasli.. — ii. 7 
with news the time's with labour.,.. — iii. 7 

does pay thy labour richly — iv. 12 

all labour mars what it does — iv. 12 

but take it for thy labour Cymbelitie, i. 6 

falsehood, as with labour — i. 7 

our horses' labour? — iii. 4 

labour be his meed! — iii. 5 

in which labour, I found that.. /'wicifs.i. 1 (r'nalle) 
like a drone, fi(nn others' labours — ii. (Gower) 

(icacL- be at A'onr lahom-, honest — ii. \ 

honest mirth bccomi'S their labour .... — ii. 1 

shall liu.l thee full of labours Lrar, i. 4 

who hibcnirs to ontjest his heart- struck — iii. 1 
and snppiv the place for your labour — iv. 6 (let.) 

labour of Ins pilgrinnigc! Romeo fy Juliet, iy. 6 

thank you for your well-took labour ..Hamlet, ii. 2 
we shall jointly labour with your soul .. — iv. ii 
but my iniise labours, and thus she is.. 0//ieZ/o, ii. I 

and be hanged for his labour — iv. 1 

and having the world for your labour .. — iv. 3 
for yon, mistress, save you your labour — v. 1 

LiUJOURED— I have laboured.. Jl/cas. /or Wcas. iii. 2 
never laboured in their minds. jVid. N.'sDream,v. 1 

means laboured to dissuade As you Like it, i. I 

whilst I laboured of a love to see. Comedy of Err. i. 1 

he laboured in his country's wreck Macbeth, \. 3 

whose laboured spirits, forwearied ..KingJohn, ii. 1 
laboured all I could to do himriglit.7(ic/m)di/. ii. 3 
after you have laboured so hard ....2HenryIV. ii. 2 

that I have laboured with all my Hen?!/ V. v. 2 

they laboured to plant the rightful..! Henry f/. ii. 5 
I ever laboured more than mine . . HenryVIII. iii. 2 
I have laboured, and with no little . . — v. 2 
wliich laboured after him to the. Timon of Athens, i. 1 
if they laboured to bring manslaughter — iii. ,'> 
that we laboured, (no impediment. . Coriolanus, ii. 3 
but laboured to attain this hour.. Juit'us Cipsar, v. 5 

and von'rc her laboured scholar Pericles, ii. 3 

and laboured much how to forget Hamlel, v. 2 

LABOURER— a true labourer As youLike it, iii. 2 

to gi\'e some labourers room All's Well, i. 2 

the night ioint labourer with the day . . Hamlel, i. 

LABOinUNG to save his life Meas.for Meas. v. 

when great things labouring perish. Love's L. L. v. 
that labouring art can never rawsora.. All' sWell, ii. 

direction doth from labouring 1 HenryIV.\\. 

busy than the labouring spider 2HtnryVI. iii. 

all descended to the labom-ing heart — iii. 
let the magistrates be labouring men — iv. 
of our own labouring breath. Troilus f; Cressida, iv. 
labouring for destiny, make crnel .. — iv. 
the hourl Labouring fornine.7'imojio//f/Aen«, iii. 
not walk, upon a labouring day . . Julius Ciesar, i. 
there saw you labouring for liim./Jlii(ori!/(S-C/<?o. ii. 

there's no labouring in the winter Lear, ii. 

the labouring bark climb hills of seas . . Othello, ii. 

LABOURSOME and dainty Cymheline, iii. 

my slow leave, by laboursome petition.. Hamie/, i. 

LAROUR'ST by thy flight Meas.for Mens. iii. 

LABRAS-denial in thy labras here.Merry Wives, i. 

LAE"VRINTH— in that labyrinth. . . . I Henry VI. v. 3 
in the labyrinth of thy fury? . . Troilus <?■ Cress, ii. 3 

LACE — O cut my laee; lest my .. Winter's Tale, iii. 2 

yon promised rae a tawdry lace — iv.3 

or lace for your cape — iv. 3 (song) 

daughter, and sold many laces ....iHenryVI. iv. 2 

ah, cut my Ince asunder Rii^iard III. iv. 1 

cutmy lace, Charmian, come..4n(o;i!/ 1^- Cleopatra, i.3 
what envious streaks do lace . . Romeo ,§■ Juliet, iii r> 

LACED— a laced mutton (>ep.) . . TwoGen.ofVer. i. 1 
and cuts, and laeed with silver ....Much Ado, iii. 4 
one buckled, another laced.. Taming qf Shrew, iii. 2 

his silver skin laced with Macbeth, ii. 3 

white and azure, laced with blue . . Cymbeline, ii. 2 

LACED./X;MON-to Laceda^mon didl'imoncfAlh. ii.2 
his service done at Laccda;mon — iii. i 

LACIES— descended of the Lacies ..iHenryVl. iv.3 



LAC 



[421J 



LACK-tho truth you niicuk uf dutli lock TrmnnI, II. 1 

wlii'ii thiiii ahult lack Alrrrv irirei. i. 3 

thuy Inck iiiKlia-ctioii — ill. 3 

yiiii iiliail nut lurk II iiricnt — iv. i) 

uckI I, tliut mil mre I lock tlicc . . Twetflli Night, \. 5 
iiiuKtc'r, not iiiyH;!!'. lockH rc'CumiHiiiso — \. l> 

tliL-y luck rL'tciilii.ii — 11. •» 

lioH' much I lack of a man — ill. 4 

my (Uncrl* to you can lock jiornuoiiion? — iil. 4 
Kooil counsellors luck no cln.'nt8...V«(if./urJ/ra«. i. 2 

wc do the <lcnunciution luck — 1.3 

who in hiHotilcc lui'ks a liclpcr — iv. 2 

have i»urc more luck of rcuHon — V. I 

anil luck of U-ni|K;rc<l i ud;!mciit — v. 1 

you'll ecc he ahull luck no barua ....MuchAdn, ill, 1 

let all my Bins luck mercy I _ iv. 1 

lock of treud, are ntulntinguishuhlcA/iJ. N.Dt. ii. 2 
nor doth this wwkI luck worldnof.... — il. 2 
•tubborn lines luck power tomovc. /.otir'jt. toi', iv. 3 

beautv doth lieuHtv luck — iv. 3 

anil utiull I luck the thought . . Merch. of fenicr, i. 1 
nccompllahcd with what we lock .... — iii- 4 
let Ilia luck of year« he no {rep.) — iv. 1 (letter) 
but that h«.-r hund luckb meuni*.. .. /l«i/ou Li'/cc (V, i. 2 
Rosalind lark« then the love which.. — i. 3 

thou Khalt not diefur lock uf a dinner — ii. 6 

islack of the xuii — iii. 2 

if a hurt do la>'k a hind — iii. 2 (verBcs) 

w\(li a pricot that lackB TjUtin — iii. 2 

fruvele<l for luck of matter — iv. 1 
cannot lack thee for two hours .... — iv. 1 
I am not fair, that I luck manners .. — iv. 3 

you lack a man's heart — iv. 3 

Ehonld have play for luck of work ....AWiWett, i. I 

after my flame lucks oil — i. 2 

lenil it you, shall lack you flriit — i. 2 

I know, yon luck not hilly to commit — i. 3 

and luck not to lose still — i. 3 

our French lack language to deny .. — ii. 1 
you did never lack a<lvicc BO much.. — iii. 4 
rich validity did lack a iiarallel .... — v. 3 

Bince you lack virtue, I will lose — v. 3 

giddy for lack of sleep; with oaths yaini'n^o/S/i.i v. 3 

what! lack I credit? (n-p.) Winter'iTale,\\. 1 

rtost lack any money? I have — iv. 2 

these I lock, to make you — iv. 3 

what maids lack from head to heel — iv. 3(8ong) 

and call this your lock of love — iv. 3 

'tis pity she lacks instructions — iv. 3 

your nohle friends do lack you Macbeth, iii. 4 

you lack the season of all — iii. 1 

our lack is nothing hut our leave — iv. 3 

saying, what lack voii? King John, iv. 1 

onlv you do lack that mercy — iv. 1 

1 lai:k soraeof thv instinct I Henry I V. ii. 4 

doth not the king lack subjects? iUenrijll'. i. i 

things that are mouldy locK use .... — iii. 2 

he now doth lack the very — iv. 1 

lock nothinfi, he merry; look who's — v. 3 

that lack of means enforce you not .. — v. .5 

their swords for lock of argument Ucnry V. iii. 1 

that they lack; for if their heads .... — iii. 7 

ond sheathe for lack of sport — iv. 2 

'.Cot. Knl.'\ let's lack no discipline. . lltcharJ til. v. 3 
by hunger and lock of othermeans. //»nii/A'/;/. i. 2 
then will Ajax lack matter .. Troilut^Cret'ida, ii. 3 

ond there lacks work; onon — v. 5 

the greatest of your having locks. Timon of Alh. ii. 2 
canst thou the conscience lack (rep.) — ii. 2 

'tis lack of kindly warmth — ii. 2 

mend mine own, by the lack of thine — iv. 3 

a lack of Timon's aid — v. 2 

abundantly they lack discretion ....Coriolnnus, i. 1 

and motliers that lack sons — ii. I 

I shall lack voice: the deeds of — ii. 2 

who lack not virtue, no, nor power.. — iii. 1 
which he lost by lack of stooping.... — v.h 

I do lack some port of that Juliut Cwmr, i. 2 

never lacks power to dismiss itself. ... — i.3 
lack blood to think on't .. ..Antony /^ Cleopatra, i. 4 

I know you cotild not lack — ii. 2 

I/cpidus, not lack your company.... — ii. 2 

these hanils do lack nobility — ii. .'> 

to lack the conrut'c of a woman — iv. 12 

ond am so near the l.ick of charity. .Cymf/fd'ne, ii. .S 

smiled at their Im-k of skill — ii. 4 

that I should seem to lack humanity — iii. 2 

thou sholt not lack the flower — iv. 2 

here lacks hut your mother., TitutAndronicvs, iv, 2 

that pupils la<:ks she none I'erirla, v. ((iower) 

of nature is repose, the which he lacks ..Lear, iv. 4 
to't, luxury, [icll-mell, for I luck soldiers — iv. (1 
to beautify nim, only locks a cover, Romeo /f-Jiit. i. 3 

I think, it locks of twelve Hamlet, i. 4 

God willing, shall not lack — i. .•) 

for the youitger sort, to lack discretion . , — ii. I 
that they have a plentiful lock of wit .. — ii, 2 
and'Iock "gall to moke oppression hitter — ii. 2 
not needs, shall never lack a friend .... — iii. 2 

Bir, I lock orlvanccnient — iii, 2 

I lock iniquity somrctimcs, to do me .... Othello, i. 2 
but alto;rether lacks the abilities that .. — i.3 

if virtue no dclightcl beauty lack — i.x 

she'll run mad. when she shall lack it .. — iii. 3 

LACK-llF, AUI), there, he and I ;V/uM.Wo, v. 1 

LACK-nilAIN-o lack-brain is this?.l//r»Kri//r. ii.2 

LACKEU-but licing lacked and lost.. W.«-A/l</o, iv. I 

you three fools loi-kcd me riKi\.. .. l.ore'il..t.ntl. iv. 3 

as mud in folly, lucked the s<miso AlfMWell,y. 3 

tliot lai'ked sight only, naught for. irinler'iTale, ii. I 
your charity would have lo<'ke<l footing — Iii. 3 
iTien I liurked, and yrni will give.. ..'ittenryV!, iii, I 
Hector's sword had lucked n masUT. TroiLffCm: I. 3 
ere lliev lucked power to cross vou..C'oriVi/an«i, iii. 2 
I shall he loved when 1 am lacked .. — iv. 1 
conie-t ilenr. by ts-ing \ni-V.d..Antony^Cleopatra, i. 4 

supposing that I lucked it — ii.2 

though it lockcil form a little Ilnmlet. iii. I 

we luckcil yonr counsel and your help . . (tthello, i. 3 
never locked gold, and yet went never goy — ii. I 



LACKINO-Iockingduty ..Tiro f;en.of t^e,ona,\». I 
the one lacking the burden of lean .A»you /.ffr«',iii. 2 
and for lox'crs, lui^king (Goil worn usil — iv, 1 

kill for o hundred lucking one 'lUenryVI.W. 3 

om a woman, lucliing wit to makv.Henrynil. iii. 1 
I,ACK-I,IM:N— luek-Iiiien motel ..'illenrylf. ii. 4 
].,A('K-l,<)Vi;, kill-courtesy .... Mal..\.'ih,e,im, ii. 3 
I.ACK MSiKI^—a lack-lustre eye.. /fi!/«.i l.ike,i\. 7 
l-.\( K'.'-l'- luck'st acnpof canary .7'i/v;///i Aigl,i,\. 3 
'tis bicuth 111. .11 lack'st. and that.... y/ic/i«rj;/. ii. I 

so niiicll wit thou lack'st InnonofAlhem, ii.2 

LAC(H'I''Y— like a saucy lacquey../(f t/on/.i/ciV, iii. 2 
in a retreat he outruns any lacuney . . AII'm tyett, iv, 3 

sir, his laci)uey, for all Taming of ahrew, iii. 2 

fisitboy. or a gentleman's loajuey.... — iii. 2 

names, that were his lucqueys I Henry IV. iii. 1 

never anybiMly sow it, but Ins Vjjuiuzy. Henry V, iii. 7 
but, like u laciiuey, from the rise .... — iv. I 
our su|ierfluous lai-queys, ond our..,, — iv. 2 

1 must stay with the lacqueys — iv. 4 

and base locquey iieasantB, whom .. /?ic/mrrf ///. v. 3 
omong bovs, grooms, and lacqueys. i/enryr///. v. 2 

LACtiU EVING the varying tiile../lH(oHw fyCleo. i. 4 

LAU— some few odd lulls Tempeai, v. 1 

my honest lads, I will Merry Wivet, i. 3 

we will thrive, lads, we win thrive .. — i.3 

follow me, lad of jieaee — iii. I 

dear lad, believe it Twelfth Niglil, i. 4 

I have liccn dear to him, lad — iii. 2 

like a mad lad — iv. 2 (song) 

Cupid is a knavish lad Mid.N.^t Dream, iii. 2 

where are these lads? — iv. 2 

gramercies, lads, go forward .. Taming of Shrew, i. I 

how now, old lad ^ — iv. I 

to thee, lads. How likes Gremio .... — v. 2 

well, go thy ways, old lad — v. 2 

two luds, that thought there Ifinler'tTale, i. 2 

for niy la<ls to give their dears .... — iv. 3 (song) 
buy, lads, or else your losses cry ,. — iv. 3 (song) 

young lad, come forth KinnJolm, iv. 1 

lime of day is it, lad? I Henry If', i. 2 

by the Lord, thou say 'st true, lad .... — 1.2 
or' Hybia, my old lad of the castle .. — i. 2 

where thou wilt, lad; I'll make — i. 2 

but my lads, my lulls, to-morrow .... — i. 2 

lad of mettle, agisul l>oy — ii. 4 

all the good lulls in X'^ostcheap — ii, 4 

as merry as crickets, my lad — ii. 4 

but, by the Ijord, lails, 1 am glad ..,. — ii. 4 

gallants, lads, hoys, hearts of — ii. 4 

by the mass, lad, thou say'st true.... — ii. 4 

how now, lad? is the wind in — iii. 3 

for the robbery, lad, how is tliat .... — iii. 3 
lusty lads roam here and there. 2Hfnrv/f.v.3 (song) 

a lad of life, and imp of fame Henry V. iv. 4 

this pretty lad will prove our ZHenryfl. iv. 1 

and, like a fearful lad, with — v. 4 

untutored lad, thou art too malapert — v..') 
like you, lads; about your business. /(/'c/iar'<///. i. 3 

men and lads, if you have writ Coriolanun, v, 5 

well blown, lads: \,)\Kir\on\\n^. . Antony nCleo. iv. 4 
golden lads and girls all innst. Ci/mWint',iv. 2(6ong) 
that is iny bed too, lads, and there .. — iv. 4 
lads more like to run a country base — v. 3 
Ido not bid thee beg my life, good lad — v. 5 

that sweet rosy lad. who died — v. 5 

thy counsel, lad, smells of no.. TiVu* Andronicut,\\. I 

here's a young lad framed of — iv. 2 

old lail, I am thine own — iv. 2 

no, lad ; teach mc Lear, i. 4 

good lads, how do ye both? Hamlet, ii, 2 

[(■;«(. Kii(.] news lads] our wars are done. Othello, ii. I 
three lads r/Cri'. -else! of Cyprus, noble .. — ii. 3 

LADUICR-ludder maile otcoide.TwofSen.ofrer. ii.4 

with a corded ladder — ii. 

and with a corded ladder fetch — iii. I 

a ladder, quaintly made with cords.. — iii. 1 

such a ladder (rep.) — iii. 1 

shall I best convey the laildcr thither? — iii. I 
and here's the ladder for the purpose — iii. I 

Northumberland, thou latldcr Kichnrd II. v. I 

an ebb as the foot of the lailder 1 Henry IV. i. 2 

the cords, the ladder, or the hangman — i, 3 

ladder, by the which my cousin 'iHenrylV. iii. 1 

which is 'the ladder of all high.7"roi(«i.5 (><■»»«/«, i.3 
noise lie our instruction; ladders, ho!....f;orio/. i. 4 
lowliness is young ambition's la<lder.Ju/.Ca'»ar,ii. 1 
he then unto the ladder turns his back — ii. I 

get me a lailder Titus .indronicus, v. 1 

and from the ladder tackle washed off . Pericles, iv. 1 

to fetch a ladder, by the v;hK\\..liomeo^- Juliet, ii. h 

I.ADIO— he'll laile it dry to have ....3HenryVI. iii. 2 

LAUKN— a ship laden with gnld../4n/oiij/<S-C'/<fo. iii. 9 

1 have been laden with like frailties — v. 2 
at lust, ludcn with honour's spoils, Y'lVti^/l/i'/ron. i. 1 

LA 1) I r.S— beauteous lo/lies' cyei>..TwoCien.ofl'er. v. 2 
such jicarls OS put out lodies' eyes..,, — v, 2 

tint's lords, and his ladies Merry tf'ivex, i, I 

talkest thou nothing but of ladies . . Tuelfih N. iv. 2 
loved of all lailies, only you excepted.. /v/uc/i/4i/o, i. 1 
the lailies follow her. and but one .. — ii. I 
siph no more, ladies, sigh no more — ii. 3 (song) 
fright the duchess and the ladies. it/ii/.,V.Drfnm, i. 2 
shoiilil fright the lailies out of their wits — i. 2 

which the lollies connotohide — iii. I 

will not the ladies be ofearil of — iii. 1 

o lion among lollies, is most — iii. I 

ladies, or fair ladies. I would wish you — iii. 1 
orthrce lords and ladies more morried — iv. 2 

and take your places, Iiylies — v. 1 

you, lailies, you whose gentle hearts — v. 1 
not to sec Indies, study, fast, not sleep. /.ove'iL.L. i. 1 

Ciiyl blesc m^ ladies! — ii. I 

how the ladles and I have put him ., — iv. I 
when ourselves we see in lailies' eyes — iv. 3 

for, ladies, wc will every one be — v. 2 

fair lailies, masked, arc roses in their — v, 2 

ladies, withdraw: the gallants are at — v. 2 

the ladies call him, sweet — v. 2 

the ladies did change favours — v. 2 



LAD 



LADIES— your Ixouty, ladies Love'iL.Lo$l,v, 2 

therefore, ladies, our love being — v, 2 

inokc us Imth,— fair ladies, you v. 2 

these lollies' courtesy might well .... — v. 2 
how honourable luilits sought ..Mer. of Venice, iii. 4 

fair ladies, you drop manna in — v. 1 

never two luilies loved os they do.. Ai you Like it, i. I 
you omaze mc, ladies: I would have — i. 2 

that the ladies have liist? — i. 2 

B|>euk to him, ladies: i^cc if you — j. 2 

to deny so fair and excellent ladies .. — i. 2 

the lollies, herattciidaiitsof hereliamlier — ii. 2 

if lollies lie but young, and fair — ii. 7 

observed in noble ladies ..Taming of Sh. 1 (indnc.) 

HO lords call lollies — 2 (indue.) 

but youth, in ladies* eyes — ii. I 

with ladies' faces, and fierce drogons' KingJolm, ii. 1 
your own lailies. and pale-visaged maids — v. 2 
the flowers, fair ladles, ond thy steps. /dc/inri/ //. i. 3 
come, ladies, go to meet ot London .. — iiL 4 
in my conduct shall your lu/lies ..\ Henry! V. iii. 1 
rhyme themselves into loilics' fovours./Zciiryr. v. 2 
that when I come to woo ladies .... — v. 2 
de fashion jwur les lollies of France.. — v. 2 
when ladies crave to lie encountered. IHewry;'/. ii. 2 

stolest away the lollies' hearts •ItlenryVI. i. 3 

through the court with triwps of lailies — i.3 

and witch sweet lailies with my 'JHenryV/. iii. 2 

let mcbut meet you, ladies Hu:i,ard III. iv. 1 

whata loss our lailies will have IlenryVIII. i. 3 

a Bjiecding trick to lav down Indies.. — i. 3 

a great one, to many lords and lailies — i. 3 

lailies, a general welcoinc from Ills .. — i. 4 

eweet ladies, will it pleose you sit? .. — i. 4 

these tallies. By my faith (rep.) .... — i. 4 

these foir lailies poas awoy frowning — i. 4 

lollies, you are not merry — i. 4 

nay, ladies, fear not; by all the laws — i. 4 

crave leave to view these ladies — i. 4 

lead in your ladies, every one — i. 4 

to drink to tlicse fair luilies _ i. 4 

food-morrow, ladies. What were't worth — ii. 3 
lie rich stream of lords ond lailies .. — iv. I 

left for the lodies, when tlie.y poss back v. 3 

when their ladies bid them clop — (epil.) 

thou'dst onger ladies Timon 0/ Athens, i. 1 

ladies most desirous of admittance. Ladies? i. 2 

our pleasures much grace, fair ladies — i. 2 

ladies, there is an idle banquet — i. 2 

my ladies both, goud-day to you ....Coriolanui,i. 3 

where ladies shall he frighted — i. 9 

08 fair as noble ladies — ii. 1 

good ladies, let's go: yes, .ves, yes.... — ii. 1 

iudies and maids their scarfs — ii, 1 

down, ladies; let us shame him v. 3 

ladies, you deserve to have a temple v. 3 

there IS some hope the ladies of Rome — v. 4 

if the lloman ladies bring not v. 4 

the ladies have prevailed, the Volsces — v. 4 

I will go meet the ladies v. 4 

ladies, welcome! Welcome, lodies!.. v. 4 

the rarest of our ladies in France.... Cymfcriine, i. S 
if you buy ladies' flesh at a million.. — i. 5 

but worn, a bait for ladies — iii. 4 

more exquisite than lady, lailies — iii. 5 

the lovely Koman ladies troop .. Tilus Andron. ii. I 
too early for new-married lodies .... — ii.2 

then let the ladies tattle — iv. 2 

and lords and lodies of their lives./'mcfffx, i. (Gow.) 

is too harsh for lollies' heails — ii. 3 

excellent in making ladies trip — ii. 3 

part on't, and lailies [foi. -loads] too Lrar, i. 4 

shame of ladies! sisters! Kent! father!.. — iv. 3 

that kiss fair ladies' brows liumeo ^ Juliet, i. 1 

here iu Verono, lailies of esteem ,... — i, 3 
scaring the hulies like a crow-keeper — i. 4 

o'er ladies lips, who straight — i. 4 

ladies, that hove their toes nnplagned — i. 6 

1, of lailies most deject and wretched.. f/nmW, iii. 1 
RoiKl-night, Imlics; good-night, sweet lailies — iv. 5 

LADINCi— shipof riehlailing.Wcrc/iioid.rfcnire, iii.l 
returns with |)iceious lailing to ..Titus Andron. i. 2 
and what lading's in our haven I'erirles, i. 2 

LA T>Y— now, my dear lody, both Tempest, i. 2 

full mony o lolly have I eved — iii. I 

Ceres, most bounteous laify .— iv. 1 

this lady mokes him to me — v. I 

how docs your lolly? TwoGen.ofVerona,ii. 4 

to lieor my lady's train — ii. 4 

but I love this lady too, too much — ii. \ 

there is lady, sir, in Milan — iii. I 

by night your lody's chomlicr-window — iii. 2 

nractising to steof owiiy a lody _ iv. I 

lie must carry for a present to his lady — iv. 2 

that I did love a lady _ iv. 2 

go to thy lady's grave — iv. 2 

us when thy lody, and thy true — iv. 3 

think upon my grief, a lady's grief .. — iv. 3 

tell my ludy, I doim the — Iv 4 

olos, poor lady! desolate ond left! .. — iv 4 
yes py'r loily : if he has Merry ll'ires, i. I 

1 would moke thee my lady (rep.) .. — iii. 3 

that I served that ludv Tirelph Sight, i.i 

1 henrd niv hidv t:ilk of ityesterdoy — i.3 
111 do on lH.st to woo your lody .... - i. 4 

my hilly will hang thee for — i. .') 

here comes mv lody — i. ji 

take oway the ludy — \. ;, 

the lady bade take awoy the fool .... — i. a 

gentlewoman, my lady calls — i. .'1 

the honournble h'ldy of the house (rep.) _ i. 5 

lody, sir, though It wos said — ii, 1 

what meons this lady? — ij. 2 

poor hidy, she were better love — ii.2 

my lady has u white hand — ii. 3 

hy'r lady sir, and Some dogs will .... ii. 3 

il mv hilly hnve not called np — ii. s 

iiiv lady's o Cotoian, wc ore — ii 3 

Tilly-vullc.v.lodyl There dwelt (rep.) _ ii. .i 
make on alchoUHO of luy ludy's liouw — ii. 3 



LAD 



[ 422 ] 

LADY— I know hislady AU't Well, iii. 6 

alas, poor lady I 'tis a hard bondage. . — iii. fi 

were I liis lady, I'd poison — iii.,'* 

a wife, and 60 sweet a lady — iv. !1 

writ to my lady mother, I am — iv. ,1 

'twas a good lady, 'twas a good lady — iv. 5 

heard of tlie good lad3''s deatli — iv. 5 

who of herself is a good lady — v. 2 

my honoured lady, I have forgiven .. — v. 3 

his mother, and liis lady — v. 3 

that his ladv mourns ^ihi^.Tamtug of Sh. 1 finduc.) 

dressed in all suits like a lady — 1 (indue.) 

wherein your laiiy, and your humble — 1 (indue.) 

that makes yonr lady mourn — 2 (indue.) 

thou liast a lady far more — 2 (indue.) 

and have I Guch a lady? — 2 (indue.) 

bring our lady hither to our sight. . — 2 (iudue.) 

piece of work, madam lady — i. I 

behind what lady she her lord. . . . Winter's Tale, i. 2 
a lady's verily is as potent as a lord's — i. 2 
O my most sacred lady, temptations — i. 2 

miserable lady I but, for me — i. 2 

1 have seen a lady's nose that has .. — ii. 1 
Blie is a goodly lady, and tlie justice — ii. I 

good lady I no court in Europe — ii. 2 

for a worthy lady, and one wiiom .... — ii. 2 

how fares our gracious lady? — ii. 2 

never tender lady hath borne greater — ii. 2 

there is no lady liviug so meet — ii. 2 

away with that audacious lady — ii. 3 

arraign our most disloyal lady — ii. 3 

might become a lady like rae — iii. 2 

lady Fortune, stand you auspicious! — iv. 3 

perfume for a lady's chamber — iv. 3 (song) 

the father of this seeming lady — v. 1 

a virtuous and a reverend lady. . Comedy of Err. v. 1 

look to the lady Macbeth, ii. 3 

now can I make any Joan a lady ....King John, i. I 

look in the lady's face — ii. 2 

can yon love this lad3'? — ii.2 

how may we content this widow lady? — ii. 2 
which cannot hear a lady's feeble.... — iii. 3 

hath melted at a lady's tears — v. 2 

holiday and lady terms he \HenryIV. i. 3 

1 could brain him with his lady's fan — ii. 3 

and for secrecy, no lady closer — ii. 3 

five years! by r lady, a long . — ii. 4 

how now, my lady the hostess? — ii.4 

by 'r lady you fought fair (rfp.) — ii. 4 

the lady sing in Welsh (rep.) — iii. 1 

to the Welsh lady's bed — iii. 1 

like a lady, as thou art — iii. i 

like an old lady's loose gown — iii. 3 

all you that kiss my lady peace ....iHenrylV. i. 2 
and make rae ray lady thy wife .... — ii. 1 
ask, how my lady his wife doth? .... — iii. 2 

by'r lady, I thini a' be — v. 3 

by the white hand of my lady Henry f^, iii. 7 

such as will enter at a lady's ear .... — v. 2 

if I could win a lady at leap-frog — v. 2 

heaven, and our Lady gracious 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

the virtuous lady, countess of • — ii.2 

I mean to prove this lady's courtesy — ii. 2 

for my lady craves to know — ii. 3 

of the lady 8 virtuous gifts — v, 1 

unto another lady of esteem — v. a 

if with a lady of so high — v. 5 

the husband of this lovely lady i Henry FI. i. i 

your lady isfortlicoming yet at London — ii. 1 

his lady banislied, and a limb — ii. 3 

sir John, protect my lady here 1 .... -~ ii. 4 
duchess, and duke Humphrey's lady — ii. 4 
my sovereign lady, with the rest .... — iii. I 
hath he not twit our sovereign lady — iii. 1 

if ever lady wronged her lord so much — iii. 2 
this lady's husband, sir John Gny.iHenry VI. iii. 2 
I see, the lady hatli a thing to grant — iii. 2 
I'll make my heaven in a lady's lap — iii. 2 

capers nimbly in a lady's chamber. . Richard III. i. 1 

ill news, by 'r lady — ii. 3 

and, by'r lady, held current music. . Henry VIII. i. 3 

tliat noble lady, or gentleman — i. 4 

what fair lady's that? — i. 4 

crept too near another lady — ii.2 

she 80 good a lady, tliat no tongue .. — ii. 3 
alas, poor lady I she's a stranger .... — li. 3 
but from this lady may proceed .... — ii, 3 
there was a lady once ('tis an old story) — ii, 3 
thanks to God for such a royal lady — ii. ■! 
that ray lady's womb, if it conceived — ii. 4 

bring a wretched lady? (7rp.) _ iii. 1 

already hath married the fair lady.. — iii. 2 
richer, when he strains that lady.... — iv. 1 
old noble lady, duchess of Norfolk .. — iv. 1 
alas, good lady ! God safely quit ... . — v. 1 

in this most gracious lady — v. 4 

80 shall this lady, when she — v. 4 

hath a lady, wiser, fairer, truer.. Troilus ^ Cress, i. 3 

that my lady was fairer than — i. 3 

there is no lady of more softer — ii.2 

and to make a sweet lady sad — iii. i 

espies my sweet lady in — iii. 2 

O let my lady apprehend no fear .... — iii. 2 

tell you the lady what she is — iv. 3 

my lord, is the iady ready? — iv. 4 

here is the lady, which for Antenor. . — iv. 4 

on this sovereign lady fixed Timon of Athens, i, 1 

visit the good lady that lies in Coriotaniis, i. 3 

noble lady! come go with us — iii. 2 

this lady's husband here — iv. 2 

do yon know this lady? — v. 3 

he,'your wife, this lady, and myself , — v. 3 
you shall outlive the lady whoVn./ln/oTii/ ^Cleo. i. 2 

she's a most triumphant lady — ii.2 

a more unhappy lady, if this — iii. 4 

the white hand of a lady fever thee. . — iii. 1 1 
O thy vile lady! she has robbed .... — iii. 12 

some lady trifles liave reserved — v. 2 

gentle lady, big of this gentleman ..Cymhcline, i. I 
peace, dear lady daughter, peace — i. 2 



LAD 



LADY— my lady bade me tell you. Twelfth Night, ii. 3 

if you prized my lady 's favour — ii. 3 

was to-day witli my lady — ii. 3 

I can write very like my lady — ii, 3 

say that some ladv, as perhaps — ii. 4 

brought mo out of favour with my lady — ii. 5 

tile ladv of the strachy married — ii. 5 

bv my life, this is my lady's hand .. — ii. 5 

'tis niv liidy ; to whom should this bo — ii. 5 

I serve her", she is my lady — ii. 5 

that inv ladv loves mc — ii. 6 

mark his first approach before my lady — ii. 6 

is thv lady witliin? — iii. 1 

mv lady is within, sir — iii. 1 

most excellent accainplished lady .. — iii. 1 

into the north of my lady's opinion.. — iii. 2 

I know my lady will strike him .... — iii. 2 

boldness before ray lady? — iii. 4 

6ir Toby, my lady prays you to — iii. 4 

my lady would not lose him — iii. 4 

now in some commerce with my lady — iii. 4 

and desire some conduct of the lady — iii. 4 

nor I am not sent to you by my lady — iv. 1 

tell me what I shall vent to mv lady — iv. 1 

this will I tell my lady straight .... _ iv. 1 

good sir Topas, go to niy lady — iv. 2 

tell me how thy lady does — iv. 2 

my lady is unkind, perdy — iv. 2 

what I will set down to my lady .... — iv. 2 

or else the lady's mad — iv. 3 

but here comes the lady — iv. 3 

if you will let your lady know — ' v. 1 

you uncivil lady, to whose — v. 1 

between this lady and this lord — v, 1 

and follower of liiy lady's — v. 1 

you know the lady Measure forMeasure, i. 3 

do a poor wronged lady a merited .. — iii. I 

I have heard ot the lady, and good . . — iii. 1 

goud soldier too, lady (i<?p.) Much Ado, i. 1 

truly, the lady fathers herself (i«p.) — i. 1 

is she not a modest young lady? .... — i. 1 

she is the sweetest lady that ever I .. — i. 1 

for the lady is very well worthy — i. I 

too like my lady's eldest son — ii. 1 

had got the good will of this young lady — ii. 1 

bv my troth", a pleasant-spirited lady — ii. 1 

look out of her lady's chamber- window — ii.2 

never think that lady would have loved — ii. 3 

and torment tlie poor lady worse .... — ii. 3 

ehe's an excellent sweet lady — ii. 3 

much he is unworthy so good a lady — ii. 3 

they seem to pity the lady — ii. 3 

they sav the lady is fair — ii. 3 

by this day, she's a fair lady — ii. 3 

nay, by'r lady, that, I think, he cannot — iii. 3 

by'r lady, I think, it be so — iii. 3 

nay, by'r lady, I am not such — iii. 4 

my lord, to marry this lady? — iv. 1 

how doth the lady? — iv. 1 

bv noting of the lady — Iv. 1 

if this sweet lady lie not guiltless.... — iv. I 

the supposition of the lady's death .. — iv. 1 

you have killed a sweet lady (rep.) .. — v. 1 

thev have belied a lady — v. 1 

the lady is dead upon mine and my — v. 1 

can find out no rhyme to lady, but baby — v. 2 

which is the lady t must seize upon ? — v. 4 
she, sweet lady, dotes, devoutly dotca.Mid.N.Dr. i. I 

it is the lady that Pyramus must love — i. 2 

thy 'Thisby dear! and lady dear!.... — i. 2 

then I must be thy lady — ii.2 

a sweet Athenian lady is in love .... — ii.2 

next tiling he espies, may be the lady — ii.2 

come our lovely lady nigh — li. 3 (song) 

tliat a lady, of one man refused.... — ii. 3 
you would not use a gentle lady so .. — iii. 2 
m the sight of thy former lady s eye — iii, 2 
tliis beauteous lady Thisby is, certain — v. 1 
lady help my lord! he'll be foiav,'oin. Love' sL.L.ii. I 

what lady is that same? — ii. 1 

a gallant lady! Monsieur, fare — ii. 1 

she is a most sweet lady — ii. 1 

in her train there is a gentle lady.... — iii. I 

some men must love my lady ■ — iii. I 

to any lady that subdues a lady .... — iv. 1 

pray you, which is the head lady? (rep.) — iv. I 

to my lady. From which lord (t'ep.) — iv. 1 

my lady goes to kill horns — iv. 1 

to see him walk before a lady — iv. 1 

and the lady hath it (r^p.) — iv. 3 

if in black my lady's brows be — iv. 3 

first learned in a lady's eyes — iv. 3 

a lady wal led about withdiamonda I — v. 2 

to see a lady's face — v. 2 

tair lady,— Sav you so? (rep.) — v. 2 

my lady (to the manner of the days) — v. 2 

whisper in your lady's ear? ". ... — v. 2 

1 never swore this lady such an oath — v. 2 

to make ray lady laugh, when — v. 2 

do not you know my lady's foot by.. — v. 2 

the king doth to my lady come — v. 2 

studies my lady? mistress, look — v. 2 

whit lady is this same to whom . . .1/o-. of Venice, i. 1 

in Belmont is a lady richly left — i. 1 

my lady his mother played false .... — i. 2 

was the best deserving a fair lady .. — i. 2 

never to speak to lady afterward — ii. 1 

extend so fer as to the lady — ii. 7 

why, that's tha lady; I do in birth .. — ii. 7 

why, that's the lady; all the world.. — ii. 7 

where is my lady? Here — ii. 9 

turn you where your lady is — iii. 2 (scroll) 

having such a blessing in his lady .. — iii. 5 
'gainst the lady will suddenly. ...As you Like it, i. 2 

nor the lady's, which is nice — iv. 1 

but with the eyes of a lady — v. 3 

I have flattered a lady — v. 4 

not the fashion to see the lady — (epil.) 

how does my old lady? All's Well, ii. 4 

between two soldiers and my young lady — iii. S 



LADY— that lady ia not now living . . Cymbeline, S. 5 

tor any lady in Britani'' — i. 6 

diamond that is, nor you the lady .. — i. 5 

against any lady in the world — i. 5 

what lady would you choose to assail? — i. 5 

to the court where your lady is — i. ,") 

Buitor to a wedded lady — i. 7 

a lady so fair, and fastened to — i. 7 

and solicit'st here a lady, that disdains — i. 7 

that thy lady hath of thee — i. 7 

a lady to the worthiest sir, that ever — i. 7 

my lady sweet, arise — ii. 3 (song) 

your lady's person: is she ready?.... — ii. 3 
put me to forget a lady's manners . . — ii. .1 
she's my good lady; and will conceive — ii. 3 

your lady is one the fairest that I — ii. 4 

not a whit, your lady being so easy.. — ii. 4 
ehe's a lady so tender of rebukes .... — iii. A 
more exquisite than lady, ladies .... — iii. 5 
villain, where is thy lady! (rep.).... — iii. 5 

when he took leave of my lady — iii. 5 

to fight against m.v lady's kingdom.. — v. 1 
I have belied a laily, tlio princess.... — v. S 
help, heli>I mine honoured lady!.... — v. 6 
why did you throw your wedded lady — v. 5 
lord Cloten, upon my lady's missing — v. 5 

to violate my lady's honour — r. 6 

a goodly lady, trust me Titus Andronicus, i. 2 

he and his lady both arc at the lodge — ii. 4 
by'r lady then, I have brought up .. — iv. 4 
there stands a lord, and there a lady . . Pericles, i. 4 

wilt thou tourney for the lad.v? — ii. I 

knight, that's conquered by a lady — ii, 2 

here is a lady that wants breathing too — ii. 3 
the lady shrieks, and well-a-nearl — iii. (Gower) 
you and your lady, take from my .... — iii. 3 

to satisfy m.v lady — iv. 1 

your lady seeks my life — iv. 1 

here is the lady that I sent for — v. 1 

a gallant lady. She's such that were I — v. i 

look to the lady: O she's but irep.) — v. 3 

wide-skirted meads, we make thee lady . . Lear, i. I 

what say you to the lady V — i. J 

since my young lady's going into France — i. 4 
my lady's father. My lady's father 1 .... — i. 4 

when Lady, the brach, may stand — i. 4 

is your lady come? This is a slave — ii. 4 

thou art a lady; if only to go warm .... — ii. 4 

unmerciful lady as you are — iii. 7 

naughty lady, these hairs, which thou .. — iii. 7 

come with my lady hither — iv. 2 

my lady charged my duty in — iv. 5 

your lady does not love her husband .... — iv. 5 
for my hand than for your lady's — iv. 5 

1 think this lady to be" my child — iv. 7 

your love to me, my lady, is bespoke — v. 3 

your lad 3', sir, your lady, and her sister.. — v. 3 
IS the hopeful lady of ni.y earth . . Romeo Sr Juliet, i. I 
your lady's love against some other. . — i. 2 

my young ladj' asked for, the nurse — i. 3 

tale in a fair lady's ear, such as would — i. 5 
b.v'r lad.v, thirty years. AVhat, man! — i. 5 
what lady's that, who doth enrich .. _ i. 5 

as 3'onder lad.v o'er her fellows shows — i. 5 

the lady of the house, and a good lady — . i. i 

it is my lady: O it is my love — ii.2 

to his lady, was but a kitchen-wench — ii. 4 

farewell, ancient lady {lep.) — ii. 4 

my young lady bade me enquire .... — ii. 4 

commend me to thy lad.v (rep.) — ii. 4 

my mistress is the sweetest lady .... — ii. 4 

God's lady dear! are you so hot?.. — ii. 5 

here comes the lady — ii. 6 

where is my lady's lord, where's Romeo? — iii. 3 
my concealed lady to our cancelled. . — iii. 3 
slay thy lady too that lives in thee . . — iii, 3 
commend ine to thy lady and bid her — iii. 3 

I'll tell my lady you will come — iii. 3 

and why, my lady wisdom? — iii. 5 

and tell m.y lady I am gone — iii. .S 

you do not know the lady's mind.... — iv. 1 

the lady towards my cell (lep.) — iv. I 

my lady came and found me dead . . — v. 1 
how doth my lady? is my father well? — v. 1 

partly, to benold my lady's face — v. 3 

the lady stirs. O comfortable friar! — v. 3 
with flowers, to strew his lady's grave — v. 3 
as rich shall Romeo by his lad 3' lie.. — v. 3 
thine evermore, most dear lad3'. Hamlet, ii. 2 (letter) 
in.y young lady and mistress? hep.) — ii. 2 

bv'r lady, he must build churches .. — iii. 2 

tlie lady doth protest too much — iii. 2 

now get you to my lady's chomber. . — v. 1 

send for the lady to the Siigittary Othello, i. 3 

how I did thrive in this fair lady's love.. — i. 3 
here comes the lady, let her witness it .. — i. 3 

she's a most exquisite lady — ii. 3 

when you wooed my lady — iii. 3 

if your lady strain his entertainment ., — iii. 3 
poor lady ! she'll run mad, when she. ... — iii. 3 
trul.v, an obedient lady — iv. 1 

1 kiiow a lady in Venice, who would.... — iv. 3 
tell my lord and lady what has happed — v. 1 
and alas! that was mv lady's voice — v. 2 

LADY-BIRD— what liidv-bird! ..Romeo A Juliet, i. 3 
LADYSHIP— your ladyship? Two Gen. of Verona, i. 2 

your ladyship can set — i. 2 

but for my duty to your ladyship.... — ii. 1 

what means your ladyship? — ii. 1 

I'll write your lad3-ship another .... — ii. 1 

from your ladyship's looks — ii. 4 

I told your ladyship, had come — ii. 4 

my fellow-servant to your ladyship — ii. i 

we'll both attend upon your ladyship — ii. 4 

why then your ladyship must — ii. 7 

good even to .your ladyship — iv. 2 

tliat attends your ladyship's command — iv. 3 
according to your ladyship's impose — iv. 3 

I will not fai I your ladyship .... — iv. 3 

this is the letter to your ladyship. . . . — iv. 4 



I.ADYSHir-hulvsliin thisriim.riTO Gf.i. nrf-rr-iv. 4 
m.irvcl voiir liiilvsliip tiikes lU-liKht. . vW/rtA N. i. 5 
(•Odd iliap.Kitiim 'tonil vour Uidvshipl — iii. 1 

vour liulv:.lii|i win- iv-t have — iii. 4 

111.' ulluniK viMir IiuIv>Iuii'b pleasure — iii. 4 

nil' viHii- lml\>lii|i will linve it — v. 1 

senses us well as v,.iir lii.lvsl.ip. . _ v. 1 (letter) 
(.iml keep VDiir l.i.h ship siill i.i that.. Wur'i Ado. i. 1 
yiiur hul.vship Is iu'numiit <.!' wlmt.l.i)r/''sL.Loi(, ii. 1 

^vour liulyshin's in all ile^irecl — iv. 2 

if vour la(l\"ship «'i'uM say, thunka.. — v. 2 
I wish vonV lailvship all .. Meichaiil of feiiier, iii. 4 

if it ple'ilse vour la. I v ships As l/ou Like il, i. 2 

if I imiv h.iVe vc)\ir lalvohiy's Ri)odwill..1«'s)»'cH, i.3 

how d.)"es vour la(h>liip like it? — iv. 

please vour lailvship to visit II inter'sTale, ii. 2 

when her humorous lailvship is by.. King John, iii. 1 

OS your lailvship ileslreil llleiirijl^l. ii. 3 

8ii\ee vour la.hsliip is uot at leisure — ii. 3 

I lauKh lo see Vour lailvship so fimd — ii. 3 
will her lailvship hehold uud hear ..2Ue,irvFI. i. 4 

here's to vour hulyshin Hmnj''"l. i. i 

I am glad to see your ladyship Cariolanus. i. 3 

I thank your laityship — 1.3 

1 iKsceeli your ladyship liomeo A- Juliet, iii. h 

your ladvship is nearer to lieaven '.... Hamlet, ii. 2 
niarrv, hefore vour liulvship, I grant ..Othello, ii. 1 

I huiiihlv thank vour lailvship — iii. 4 

your lailvsliip. Vour houo\u- is most — iv. 3 

LADY-S.MOCKS all silver-white. Lofe'.<L.Z..v.2(song) 
LAERTES— wi.se Laertes' son did. . Ti/usAnilrou. i. 2 

nnd now, Laertes, what's the news Hamlet, i. 2 

what i.s't Laertes? you eannot speak . ... — i. 2 
^Kg. Laertes, that shall not be my oifer — i. 2 

what wouldst thou have, Laertes? — i. 2 

take thy fair hour, Laertes — i. 2 

3'et here, LnertesI aboard, aiioard — i.3 

than young l^aertes, in a riotous head . . — iv. 5 
ciioose we, Laertes shall be king! (rp/).) — iv. 5 
calmly, good Laertes. That drop of blood — iv. 5 
what is tiie cause, Laertes, that thy .... — iv. 5 
tell me, Laertes, why thou art thus .... — iv. .5 

food Laertes, if 3'ou desire to know .... — iv. 5 
iOertes, I must eonmiuue with your grief — iv. 5 

I.,aertes, you shall hear them — iv. 7 

if it Ik so, Laertes, as how shoxild it ... . — iv. 7 
Laertes, was your father dear to ,you? . . — iv. 7 

but, good I^aertes, will you do tlus — iv. 7 

your sister's drowned, Laertes — iv. 7 

O he is inad, Laertes. For love of God .. — v. 1 

that to Laertes I forgot myself — v. 2 

here is ncwlv come to court, Laertes. ... — v. 2 
of Laertes? his purse is empty already — v. 2 
not ignorant of what exeelienec Laertes is — v. 2 

to Laertes before you fall to play — v. 2 

was't Hamlet wronged Laertes? never.. — v. 2 
wrong Laertes, then Hamlet does it not — v. 2 

I'll be your foil, Laertes — v. 2 

come, lor the third. Laertes — v. 2 

how is't, Laertes? Whv, as a woodeoek — v. 2 

L.-VFEU— now, good Lafini, brin" in .. Alt's ll'ell.ii. 1 
was tirst smoked by the old lord Lafeu — iii. 6 
greeting will you to m^' lord I^afeu? — iv. 3 

give my lord Lafeu tins letter — v. 2 

have thought well on thee, Lafeu.... — v. 3 

IiAG — in favour, makes him lag ....\HenrtjVI. iii. 3 

that came too lag to sec him Richard III. ii. I 

tlie common lag of people. Timon ofAth. iii. B (grace) 
fourteen moonslunes lag of a brother? Lear, i. 2 

LAG- END— the lag-end of my life .. \ Henry IV. v. 1 
wear away the lag-end of their .. ..Hmryl'tll. i. 3 

LAGGIXG— four lagging winters ....Richard 11. i. 3 

LAID— good plots! they are laid ..Merry IVives, iii. 2 

have I laid my brain in the sim — v. 5 

own sweet and cunning hand laid on. Twel^fth N. i. 5 

in sad cypress let me be laid — ii. 4 (song) 

and laid mine honour too — iii. 4 

they have laid me here in hideous . . — iy. 2 

on sleeping evelids laid Mid. iV.'s Dream, ii. 2 

and laid tne love-juice on some — iii. 2 

are to \ie laid upon the children. A/er. of Venice, iii. 5 

that was laid on with a trowel As you Like it, i. 2 

then there were two cousins laid up — i. 3 

who laid him down and basked him — ii. 7 

that he laid to the charge of — iii. 2 

why, thy gwlhead laiil apart — iv. 3 (letter) 

much worthy blame laid upon him ..Alt's Well, iv. 3 
the carpets laid, and everything. T'ammjro/S/i. iv. I 
circumstances partly laid open. Win/cr'*'/". iii. 2 (ind. ) 

nor is't directly laid to thee — iii. 2 

this is not. no, laid to thy answer — iii. 2 

it should here be laid, either for life — iii.? 

your sorrow was too sore laid on ... . — v. 3 | 
18 laid up safe at the Centaur. Comirfi/ of Errors, ii. 2 

or iliv iuer, laid claim to me — iii. 2 

anrl laid in some dark room — iv. 4 

hark! I laid their daggers ready Macbeth, ii. 2 

the taints and Ijlarnes I laid upon.. .. — iv. 3 
that I were low laid in my grave. . . . King John, ii. 1 
the eanon of the law is lai<i on him.. — ii. I 
which ge.itly laid my knighthood ..Diehard It. i. I 

he would have laid thy shame — ii. 1 

that laid the sentence of dread — iii. 3 

and. therein laid,— there lies two .... — iii. 3 

a gf)od plot iw evcF wiui laid I Henry I V. ii. 3 

Btood in lanes, laid gifis iK'fore him.. — iv. 3 

and laid his love and life under 2UenrylV. iii. I 

like a wet cloak ill laid up — v. I 

burden laid upon us all — v. 2 

indiifnities you laid upon me? — v. 2 

for that I have laid by my majesty .... Henry V. i. 2 

hisceremonics laid bv, in his — iv. I 

not all these, laid in Md majestical.. — iv. I 

the plot is laid: if all things \ Henry VI. ii. 3 

as I have read, laid claim unto iHenryVt. ii. 2 

are laid unto your cliarge — iii, 1 

3uive laid disgraces on my head — iii. 1 

all of you have laid your heads together — iii. I 

have you laid fair the bed? — iii. 2 

bands were laid on Humphrey's lifel — iii. 2 



[ 423 ] 

LAID— violent hands were laid illeuryVl. iii. 2 

all the country is laiil for me — iv. 10 

pitv, must belaid aside iHenryVl.W. i 

dishonour laid me on the ground — iii. 3 

my niourniiii,' weeds are laid aside .. — iii. 3 

harvest, ilv ■ head were laiil — v. 7 

lilolshiive 1 hiiil. iuilui-tions RicharU III. i. 1 

that laid lluir guilt upon mv _ i. 2 

the curse my noble father laid on thee — i.3 

have laid [f.:/. A;;/ -l•a^t] in darkness — i.3 

laid oiieu all your virlmivs In Seothind — iii. 7 
and all mv armour laid into mv tent? — v. 3 
[^•Il^] let us he laid within thy bosom — V. 3 

or laid any scruple in your wn"y .. Henry VIII. ii. 4 
and all such emblems laid nobly on her — iv. 1 

our reasons laid before hijn — v. 1 

the trap is laid for me I — v. 1 

this is of purpose laid — v. 2 

heaven evvr laid up to make — v. 4 

had you iiotlully laid my . . . . 7Vmon(i/.-(//iens, ii. 2 
in my acfoiiufs, laid them hefore you — ii. 2 

wheii 1 have laid |)rond Athens — iv. 3 

laid falsely i' the iiluin way Coriotauus, iii. 1 

he hath laid strange courtesies.. /(»(oiy ^ Cleo. ii. 2 
nothing saves the wager you have laid . . Cymb. ii. 4 

have laid this woe here — iv. 2 

hath laid knives under bis pillow Lear, iii. 4 

then laid worniwoml lo mv i\ug.. Romeo ^Juliet, i. 3 

tliere stand till she had laid it — ii. 1 

how if, when I am laid into the tomb — iv. 3 
I saw her laid low in her kindred's.. — v. 1 
what a scourge is laid upon your hate — v. 3 
it will be laid to us, whose providence .Hamlet, iv. 1 
that he has laid a great wager on .... — v. 2 
but in the imputation laid on him .. — v. 2 

the king, sir, bath laid, that in — v. 2 

he hath laid, on twelvefor nine — V. 2 

your grace hath laid the odds o' the . . — v. 2 

then laid his leg over my thigh Othello, iii. 3 

and laid good 'sense upon your ecstasy .. — iv. 1 
could not have laid such terms upon .... — iv. 2 
I have laid those sheets you hade me — iv. 3 

LAID'ST-iii that thou laid'st a trap .\HfmvVI. iii. 1 

LAIN— son would have lain still .... Kin^'John. iv. 1 

dog that hath lain asleep Romeo 4- Juliet, iii. I 

hath death lain with thy bride — iv. 5 

here hath lain these two days buried — v. 3 
a sciUl now hath lain 3'ou i' the earth ..Hamlet, v. 1 

LAISSEZ-laiasez, mon seigneur («■/;.) .Hfiir.vT. v. 2 

LAKE— foul lake o'erstunk their feet ..Tempest, iv. I 
brooks, standing lakes, and groves .. — y. 1 

to Pluto's damned lake 'iHenrylV. ii. 4 

to darkness, and the burning lake ..IHenryVl. i. 4 
dive into the btirning lake below. 7'i7u.s-/in'/ron. iv. 3 
an angler in the lake of darkness Lear, iii. B 

LAKIN-by'r lakin, I can go no further. Tempest, iii. 3 
by'r lakin, a parlous fear Mid. N.'s Dream, iii. 1 

LAMB— shepherd of thy lambs. . TteoGen. nfVer. iv. 4 

I'll sacrifice the lamb that I Tuelfllt K'f,'ht, v. 1 

come you to seek the lamb here. . Meas. for Mens. v. 1 

doing, in the figure of a lamb MuchAdo.i. 1 

that will not hear her lamb when it baes — iii. 3 
no sheep, sweet lamb, unless we {•^ed. Love's L. L.u. 1 
'gainst thee, thou lamb, that standest — iv. I 

fell party-coloured lambs Merchant of Venice, i.3 

made the ewe bleat for the lamb .... — iv. 1 
ewes graze, and my lambs suck ..As you Like it, iii. 2 
tut! she's a lamb, a dove .... Taming 0/ Shrew, iii. 2 

we were as twinned lambs Winter' sTale. i. 2 

poor, innocent Iamb, to appease Macbeth, iv. 3 

esteem him as a lamb — iv. 3 

I will sit as quiet as a lamb King John, iy. 1 

was never gentle lamb more mild ..Richard II. ii. 1 

to the lodging of the lamb Henry V. iii. 7 

whilst I waited on my tender lambs..! Henry VI. i. 2 
when thou didst keep my lambs a-field — v. 4 
not, when he would steal the lamb..2Henri/F/. iii. 1 
as is the sucking Uiuib.or harmless.. — iii. 1 

is lie a lamb? his skin is surely — iii. I 

of the skin of an innocent lamb shntild — iy. 2 
finds tlie trembling lamb, environcd.SWeJirt/Fi. i. 1 
or lambs i)ursued by hunger-starved — i. 4 

poor harmless lambs, abide their .. ., — ii. 5 
fawns upon the lomb, the lamb will — iv. 8 

fly from such gentle Inmbs Richard III. iv. 4 

to worr.v lambs, and lap thcirgcntle — iv. 4 
to revel in the entrails of my lambs. . — iy. 4 
as fox to lamb, as wolf to . . Troilus S( Cressida, iii. 2 
how now lambs? Cressid, I love thee — iv. 4 
if tiiou wert the lamb, the fox. Timon of 4lhens, iv. 3 
who does the wolf love? The lamb..t'nrio(n»i«j, ii. 1 
a lamb indeed, that baes like a bear (rep.) — ii. I 
you are yoked with a lamb that . JuliusCasar.'w.Z 

ravening first the lamb Cymbeline.i. 7 

the lamb entreats the butcher — iii. 4 

like to a slaughtered lamb Titus Andronicui, h. 4 

I am a lamb , — iy. 2 

what lamb! what lady -bird I Romeo ^Juliet, i.3 

warrant him, as gentle as a lamb .. .. — }},.!> 

■wolvisb-ravening lumbl — i". 2 

why, lamb! whv, hulv! — >v. 5 

LA^(BERT-Sai'ut Lambert's day ... .R''c*arrf //. i. I 

LAMBKIN— lambkin now is king.... 2Hfw,w/»'. v. 3 

knight;for, lambkins, we will Uve.. ..Henry V. ii. 1 

LAMBSKIN-foxandlainbskin6.J>/™!..Ar.V.-.u. iii.2 

LAME— to relieve a lame beggar Tempest, ii. 2 

though they are lame with blows. Loi>f'» L. Lust, v. 2 

come, lame me with reasons .is you Like it, i. 3 

should in my old limbs lie lame — .ji- p 

ay, but the tVet were lame — iii. 2 

which lames report to follow it Winter'tTale^y. 2 

stains, laine. foolish, crooked KingJolin, lii. 1 

what, art thou lame? iHenryVI. ii. 1 

made the lame to leap — ".■ ' 

all new legs, and lame ones Henry VIII. 1. 3 

I lame the foot of our design Coriolanni.iv. 7 

on the lame fi el of mv rhyme. . I'ericles, iv. (Gowei ) 
O she is lume! love'B'heralds . . Romeo SfJuHel, 11. S 
not deficient, blind, or lame of sense — Olhello,;. 3 
O most lame and impotent conclusion!.. — ii- ' 



I.1AMED— the one should be lamed .Ai yon Likeil, i. R 

when he hath lamed me .... Comedy of tin ors, iv 4 

LAMEI/Y— not lamely writ? ..Two Gen.of Ver. ii. I 

and therefore stood lamely in.. ..Asynul.ikeii, iii. a 

that so lumely, and unfashionable. . /(/t7mr</ ;//. i. 1 

halt OS lamely iis their manners!. VVmoiit/'/lM. iv. I 

LAMENESS-taking airs, with lameness.. i.rar, ii. 4 

LAMENT— cease to lament .. Two Gen.of Ver. iii. I 

well, she loments, sir, for it Merry Wires, iii. 5 

ffir 1 have none to lament mc .. ..As you Like it, i. 2 
found again, lament till I am InntWiuler'sTale, v. 3 

lament we may, but not revenge Richard II. i.3 

of lament [Kh/. -laments] are merely — iv. I 
how to lament the cause. I'll beg one — iv. I 
mourn with me lor what I do lament — v. 6 

w by then, lament therefore 'illenry IV. v. 3 

to add to your laments, wherewith..! lUnryVl. i. \ 
christian-like, laments his death ..illeuryVl. iii. 2 
I should lament thy miserable iiatciHenry VJ. i. 4 

weakness to lament, or fear — v. 4 

obsequiously lament the \mMme\y. Richard III. i. 2 
whiles I lament king Henry's corse — i. 2 

I do lament the sickness of the king — ii. 2 

if you will live, lament; if ilic — ii. 2 

foi'th laments [Co/. A';;/. -complaints] — ii, 2 

melt and lament for her Henry VI 1 1, ii. 3 

and lament as I do, in an^'er Coriolanus, iv. 2 

my heart laments, that virtue JutiusCtesar, ii. 3 

my end, lament nor sorrow nt.. Antony ^Cieo. iv, 13 
to lament our most persisted deeds .. — v. I 
but yet let me lament, with tears .... — v. 1 
with sight, made heart lament .. TitusAndron. ii. 4 

father, you lament in vain — iii. I 

but yet let reason govern thy lament — iii. 1 

leave these bitter deep laments — iii. 2 

why lament you, pretty one? Pericles, iv. 3 

fond nature bids us all lament.. flo?ni»o ^Juliet, iv. 5 
jov most revels, grief doth most lament //am/e/, iii. 2 
LA.NlENTABLE-lamcntable part. TuoGen. ofV. iv.4 
the most lamentable comedy ..Mid.^^.'s Dream, i. 2 
they were all in lamentable cases! Lore's L. Lust, v. 2 
thine eve that lamentable rheum ..King John, iii. I 
tell thou the lamentable fall otmc. Hiclmd II. v. 1 
that it is most lamentable to behold .. Henry V. ii. 1 

is not this a lamentable thing 'iHenryVI. iv. 2 

that weep this lamentable divorce ..Cymbetine, i. 5 
lamentable! wliati to hide me from.. — i. 7 
the lamentable change is from the be9t..Ifar, iv. I 
is not this a lamentiiide thing . . Romeo fy Juliet, ii. 4 
O lamentoble day! What is the (re;;.) — iv. 5 
is guilty of this lamentable chance!.. — v. 3 
LAMEN'TABLY-suug lamentably'. Winler'sTale. iv.3 
and sinks most lamentably .. ..Antony KCteo. iii. 8 

LAMENTATION is the right All's Hell, i. I 

raining the tears of lamentation. Lore'.v L. Lost, v. 2 

on her own lamentation Meas.forMeas.'ui.l 

as yet the lameutatiim of the.. Henry /'. v. (chorus) 
bear the lamentations of jioor Anne./dcAard ///. i. 2 

give nie no hel|) ill lamentation — ii. 2 

and I will pamper it with lamentations — ii. 2 
and hear your mother's lamentation! — iv.4 
to all our lamentation, if he had . . Coriolanus, iv. 6 

modern lamentation might Romeo ^Juliet, 'ni. 2 

than thou wcnt'st forth in lanientution — iii. 3 

LAMENTED— shall be lamented.... iUwcA ^do, iv. 1 

even now to be afresh lamented. . Winter'sTale, iv. I 

and lamented by the king — -y. 2 

it is very much lamented, Brwtus. ..luliusCfrsar, i. 2 
and the case to he iamtnteii. Aniony ^Cleopatra, i. 2 
which brought them to be lamented.. — v. 2 

LAMENTING elegies TuoGen.of Verona, Hi. 2 

lamenting some enforced chastity. .;»/W.A'.Dr. iii. 1 
they say, lamentings lieard i' the air. . Maclieth, ii. 3 
new lamenting ancient oversights ..illcnrylV. ii. 3 
still lamenting, and mourning for.. iHenryVI. iv. i 
then return lamenting to my love.. Richard III. i. 2 
and lanientiuc tovs, is jollity for ..Cymbetine, iv. 2 
drown the lameiitiugfool in sea-salt. 7i(us/4nd. iii. 2 
and hnz lamenting doint's in the air? — iii. 2 
L.VMENT'ST— thou lanient'st. 7'iroGeii.o/" Ver. iii. 1 

LAAllXO the shrine of Venus Cymbetine, v. 5 

L.VMMAS-F.VE at night (rep.) .. Romeo ^Julicl,i. 3 
L.ViMjMAS-TIDE— now to Lammas-tide? — i.3 
LAMOKD— I.amord [Kii(.-Lamound] ..Hamlet, iv. 7 
L.\MP— as hymen's lamps shall light.. rempeW, iv. 1 

httth quenched his sleepy lamp Alt's Well, ii 1 

but to make a lamp of lier .. Comedy of Errors, in. 2 

my wasting lamps some fading — v. I 

strangles the travelling lamp Macbeth, 11. 4 

my oil-dried lamp, and time Richard II. 1. 3 

the knight of the burning lamp,... IHeiiry/r. 111. 3 

like lamns whose wasting 1 Henry VI. 11, 5 

but one lamp, one light, one sun.. ..3;/cnr!/ VI. 11. 1 
her lamp and flames of love.. 7'roi7Hj4-Cr«»ido,iii. 2 
and wastes the lamps of night.. ..yln'oiii/ <J-C(co. i. 4 

our lamp is spent, it's out — ly. 13 

and aye-remaining lamns rertcles.\i\. 1 

like lamps [Kn(. -lights, lights] . . HowifO ^ Juliet, \. 4 

asdavliglitdotbalamp; hercye .... — .11. '/ 

LAMFASS-with the lampass.. .. rr.in.ngo/SA. 111. 1 

LVNC\STE1<— honoured Loncastcr../i.cAurd //. 1. I 

my noble lord of Lancaster — i. 1 

HarrvorHirefonl,I.aniaster(r-';,) - 1. 3 

how fares our noble uiii'le. Lancaster? - ;.. 
life, mill all, old l.ania-ter litttb spent — 11. 1 
well lords, the duke of Lancaster is dead — 11. ) 

mv answer is-to l.aiu-astir .... — 11. 3 

btit as I come. I loiiie foi Lancaster - .1. ,1 

must be granted, I am duke ot Lancaster- 1;. 3 
the devil take Hi ni v ol Lancaster .. - v. 5 
asoftasLanras.crdothspeak ....lH«..i,/»'. i.j.l 
mv son lord .lobn of Lancaster .... — in. 2 

thisktt'er to. lohn of Lancaster — 111.3 

came but to be duke of Lancaster.... - iv. 3 
lord John of Lancaster, the noble .. — iv. 4 
dnkedoin of Lancaster! to this we swore — v. I 
lord .lohn of Lancaster, go you with Inni - v. 4 
tliou host deceivcrl mc, Lancaster, I did — T. 4 
then brother John of Lancaster — y. » 



LANCASTER- yonng I,ancft3ter....2HoiJv/r. i. 1 
ulmrge to the lord Jonn of Lancaster — i. 2 
bear this letter to my loril of Lancaster — i. 2 

duke of ]>ancastcr, and Westmoreland — i. 3 

are marched up to mj' lord of Lancaster — ii. 1 

lord John and duke of Lancaster — iv. 1 

good my lord of Lancaster, I am not — iv. 2 
here comes my John of Lancaster. ... — Iv. 4 
strong-flxed is the house of Lancaster.! Henry Fl.Xi.b 
proud Lancaster usurp my right ....'ilieiiryl^l. i. 1 
giTipple witii the liouse of Lancaster — i. 1 
of Gaunt, the duke of Lancaster .... — ii. 2 
duke of Lancaster, the eldest son .... — ii. 2 
f|ot the house of Lancaster the crown — ii. 2 
heart-blood of the house of Lancaster — ii. 2 
the honourable blood of Lancaster .. — iv. 1 

the house of Lancaster usurps SHenri/ FI. i. 1 

he that holds up Lancaster — i. I 

of Lancaster, let him be king (rep.').. — i. 1 

Henry of ]jancar.ter, resign thy crown — i. 1 

iu>\v York and Ijanoaster are reconciled — i. 1 

Iiouse of Lancaster leave to breathe — i. 2 

nor any of the house of Lancaster? .. — i. 2 
make against the house of Lancaster — ii. 1 

Lancaster! I fear thy overthrow.. — ii. 6 

upholds the house of Lancaster — iii. 3 

Oxford, Oxford, for Lancaster! (rep.) — v. 1 
the stones together, to set up Lancaster — v. 1 

stolen the breech from Lancaster — v. 5 

blood of Lancaster sink in the ground? — y. 6 

fall of virtuous Lancaster Richard III. i. 2 

liale ashes of the house of Lancaster! — i. 2 
tactions for the house of Lancaster .. — i. 3 
during the wars of Yoi'k and Lancaster — i. 4 

in fniarrel of the house of Lancaster — i. 4 

offspring of the house of Lancaster .. — v, .3 
tliis divided York and Lancaster .... — v. 4 

LANCE— if tall, a lance ill-headed ..Much Adn, iii. 1 
the armipotent Mars, of lances . . Lore's L. Lost, v. 2 

1 see our lances are but straws . . Taming of Sh. v. 2 
their neelds to lances, and their .... KiiigJohn, v. 2 

your swords and lances arbitrate Richard 11. i. 1 

thy blessings steel my lance's point .. — i. 3 
receive thy lance, anil God defend.... — i. 3 

go bear this lance to Thomas — i. 3 

to blood, yoiir pens to lances 2HevrylV.\v. 1 

Avonders with his sword and lance ..1 Henry VI. i. I 

break a lance, and run a tilt — iii. 2 

a braver soldier never couclied lance — iii. 2 
the steely point of Clifford's lance ..ZllcnryVI. ii. 3 
witli guilty fear, let fall thy lance!. fi/c/iard ///. v. 3 
not worth the splinter of a lance. Troilus tr Cress, i. 3 

as I could pick my lance Coriolanus, i. 1 

but we do lance diseases Antony ^ Cteopatra., v. 1 

turned a distaff to a lance Cymbeline, v. 3 

more the whipstock, than the lance . . Pericles, ii. 2 

and the strong lance of justice Lear, iv. 6 

turn our impressed lances in our eyes.. .. — v. 3 

LANCED-lanced their tender hearts. /J/cAoj-rf ///.iv. 4 

bodv, lanced [A'lif.-launched] mine arm.. Lmr, ii. 1 

LANCETH— but lanceth not tlie eore.Richard II. i. 3 

LAND— he came alive to land Tempest, ii. 1 

bound of land, tilth, vineyard, none .. — ii. 1 

our frustrate search on land — iii. 3 

and on this green land — iv. 1 

if a gallows were on land — v. 1 

hast thou no mouth by land? — v. 1 

my lands, my reputation .... Two Gen. of Ver. ii. 7 

money buys lands, and wives Merry Wives, v. 5 

Iiri/.esnot quantity of dirty lands. TwelflhNight, it. 4 
stolen away from fairy land . . Mid. N.'s Dream, ii. 2 
which falling in the land, have every — ii. 2 
the fairy land buys not the child .... — ii. 2 

and sail upon the land, to fetch — . ii. 2 

to my bower in fairy land — iv. 1 

the soil, the land, the earth Love's L. Lost, iv. 2 

as roes run over land — v2 

thy lands and goods are by the. . Mer. of Venice, iv. 1 
whose lands and revenues enricli..^.';yoit Lil<e it, i. 1 

thy lands, all things that thou — iii. 1 

an extent upon liis house and lands. . — iii. 1 

sold your own lands, to see — iv. 1 

all their lands restored to them — v. 4 

his lands withheld; and to the (rep.) — v. 4 

you, to your land, and love — v. 4 

he that ears my land, spares All's We'l, i . 3 

heir to all his lands and goods. Taniing ofSlirew, ii. 1 
in all my lands and leases whatsoever — ii. 1 
of fruitful land, all which shall be .. — ii. 1 
by the jear, of land! my land amounts — ii. 1 

and heir to the lands of me — v. 1 

and go not too far i' the land Winter's Tale, iii. 3 

by sea, and by land, but I am not — iii. 3 

and then for the land service, to see. , — iii. 3 

vliere my land and living lies — iv. 2 

the gracious mark o' the land — iv. 3 

the lands and waters 'twixt your throne — v. 1 

this is the fairy land Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

blows fair from land — iv. I 

creeks, and narrow lands — iv. 2 

posters of the sea and land, thus do ... . Muchcth. i. 3 

to make him fly the land — iv. 2 

cut off the nobles for their lands .... — iv. 3 

the water of my land, find her — v. 3 

my mother's honour, and my lund.. . .King John, i. 1 

why, except to get the land — i. 1 

to claim your brother's land? — i. 1 

by this you cannot get my land — i. 1 

by will "bequeathed his lands to me . . — i. 1 

iriy father's land (rep.) — i. 1 

like thy brother, to enjoy thy land . . — i. 1 

lord of thy presence, and no land beside? — i. 1 

were heir to all this land — i. 1 

bequeath thy land to him — i 1 

take you my land — i. 1 

gave me honour, yours gave land — i. 1 

many foot of land the worse — i . 1 

disclaimed sir Robert, and my laud.. — i. 1 

and coons from other lands her islanders — ii. 1 
to land nis legions all as soon — ii. 1 



LAND— humours of the land King Joh 

troubled not the land — 

was levied in the body of a land I . . . , — 

travelled hither throu(ih the land. . . . — 

in the body of this fleshly land — 

heaven itself doth fi-own upon the land — 

fair weather in your blustering land — 

upon the footing of our land — 

the gentry of a land remote — 

■with interest to this land, yes — 

claim this land for mine — 



iv. 3 
V. 1 
V. 1 



— V. 2 

— V. 2 
. — V.7 
Richard II. i. 



our state, our subjects, or our land ., 
our fiesh is banished from this land., 

as far as land will let me 

the envy of less happier lands 

this land of such dear souls (rep.).. . . 

no lesser than thy land 

to let this land by lease 

his money and his lands 

in this declining land 

strongly hath set footing in this land 
here am 1 left to underprop his land., 
rushing on this woeful land at once! 
the most glorious regent of this land. 

covering your fearful land with 

our lands, our lives, and all are 

to ear the land that hath some 

and lands restored again, be 

green lap of fair king Richard's land 
every stride he makes upon ray land 
make a dearth in this revolting land 

the whole land is full of weeds 

not so trimmed and dressed his land. 

how blest this land would be 

to all Ms land and signories 

and tliis land be called the field 

the state and profit of this land 

as 'tis current in our land 

stained the king's own land 

my head, and all this famous land... 
make a voyage to the Holy Land .... 

our business for the Holy Land \Henri/IV. i. 1 

like a stubble land at harvest home .. 

you may buy land now as cheap 

known to many in our land 

and all the fertile land within that.. 

from the best of all my land 

I'll give thrice so much land 

the land is burning; Percv stands.. .. 
teaching his duteous land audacious 

the special head of all the land 

rebellion in this land shall lose. 



/.I 

i 


1 
3 


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ii 




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iii. 




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iii. 




iii. 


1 



doth bestride a bleeding land iHenrylV. i. 1 

dear lords, unto the Holy Land, — iii. 1 

now has he land and beeves . 



cannot so precisely weed this land .. — iv. I 

so that this land, like an offensive.... — iv. 1 

steril, and bare land, manured — iv. 3 

to lead out many to the Holy Land. . — iv. 4 

vainly I supposed, the Holy Land .. — iv. 4 

•what office thou wilt in the laud — v. 3 

for all the temporal lands Henry V.i. \ 

Salique laud; which Salique land (rep.) — i. 2 

galling the gleaned land with hot . . — i. 2 

for he is footed in this land already. . — ii. 4 

for honour of our land, let — iii. 5 

sweeps through our land with pennons — iii. 5 

to let him land; and solemnly.. . . — v. (chorus) 

lives, honours, lands, and all 1 Henry VI. iv. 3 

common grief of all the land 2 Henry VI. i. 1 

all the princes in the land beside — i. 1 

tend the profit of the land — i. 1 

as he loves the land, and common .... — i. 1 

while his own lands are bargained for — i. 1 

and lands, and wife, and all, from me — i. 3 

worth than all my father's lands .... — i. 3 

did never traitor m the land commit — i. 3 

protector of this land, methinks 

a prince, and ruler of the land 

exiled your highness' land 

sight of thy land's view, I took 

and threw it towards thy land 

'tis not the land I care for — iii. 2 

lands, goods, horse, armour — v. 1 

sinew both these lands together SHenryVl. ii. 6 

mine own land witli my wishful (lep.) — iii. 1 

his lands then seized on by ()ep.) — iii. 2 

all your lands, an' if what pleases him 

lose their father's land 

then get your husband's lands (rep.) 

how these lands are to be got 

I'll undertake to land them — iii.3 

the people of this blessed land may not — iv. 6 

both ])rotectors of this land — iv. 6 

all his lands and goods be confiscate — iv. 6 

of all my lands, is nothing left me . . — v. 2 
woe to that land, that's governed.. i?/'c/m77/ ///. ii. 3 

for then this land was famously .... — ii. 3 

this sickly land might solace — ii. 3 

not for all this land would I he guilty — 

breathe I in a christian land ? — 

government of this your land — 

if not to bless us and the land withal — 

deny them, all the land will rue it .. — 

ever yet this land was guilty of — .... 

herself, the land, and many a christian — iv. 4 

into the bowels of the land — v. 2 

you having lands, and blessed with — y, 3 

have in their own land beaten — y. 3 

shall these enjoy our lands? y. 3 

this land's increase, that would (rep.) — y. 4 
as fruitful as the land that feeds ns. Henry Vll I. i. 3 

yea, the elect of the land — ii. 4 

the reverend fathers of the land .... — ii. 4 

will fall some blessing to this land .. — iii. 2 

robbed this bewailing land of no'ble — iii. 2 

gleaning all the land's wealth — iii. 2 

allyour goods, lands, tenements .... — iii. 2 



ii. 4 
ii. 4 
iii. 1 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 



iii. 2 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 



iii. 7 

iii. 7 

iii. 7 

iii. 7 



LAND- all the land knows that. . . . Henry VIII. iv. 1 
a pestilence that does infect the land — v. 1 
promises upon this land a thousand — v. 4 

richer than sea and land? . . Troilus f; Cressida, ii. 2 

his land's put out of office Timonof Athens, i. 2 

and all the lands thou hast lie in — i. 2 

ay, defiled land, my lord i. 2 

let all my land be sold ii. 2 

to Lacedaemon did my land extend. . — ii. 2 

with most lands to be at odds iii. 5 

crimes, like lands, are not inherited y. 5 

such as you, a sea and land full .... Coriolanus, v. 4 

by sea, and land, in every place JulmsCresar, i. 3 

by sea and land I can be able Aniuny fy Cleo. i. 4 

what's his strength by land? ii. 2 

at land, indeed, thou dost o'ercount — ii. 6 

by land. There I deny my land .... ii. B 

should have met you by sea, and land — iii. 

being prepared for land — iii. 7 

soldiership you have by land — iii. 7 

fail, we then can do't at land — iii. 7 

legions thou shalt hold by land (rep.) — iii. 7 

strike not by land; keep whole — iii. 8 

hark, the land bids me tread no .... — iii. 9 
our force by land hath nobly held . . — iii. 1 1 

by sea and land I'll fight — iv. 2 

to make me fight at land! — iv. 5 

we please them not by land iv. 10 

we will be still by land — iv. 10 

you have land enough of your own . . Cymbeline, i. 3 

the rich crop of sea and land — i. 7 

banished lord, and this great land! .. — ii. 1 

harts have posted yon by land — ii. 4 

as thou reft st me of my lands — iii.3 

or stonmch-qualmed at land — iii. 4 

conduct over land, to Slilford Haven — iii. 5 
as little justice as at land. . . . TiiusAndronicus, iv. 3 

forces he'll o'crspread the land Pericles, i. 2 

he'll fill this lan'd with arms i. 2 

he 'scaped the land, to perish on i. 3 

such whales have I heard on a' the land — ii. 1 
we would purge the land of these drones — ii. 1 

Edgar, I must have your land Lear, i. 2 

if not by birth, have lands by wit — i. 2 

so much the rent of his land comes to . . — i. 4 

to give away thy land — i. 4 

not in this land shall he remain — ii. 1 

and of my land, loyal and natural boy . . — ii. 1 
spreads his banners in our noiseless land — iv. 2 

as France invades our land — v.l 

nightly toils the subject of the land Hamlet, i. 1 

with his life, all those his lands i. 1 

those 'foresaid lands — 2. 1 

post-haste and romage in the land — i. 1 

the surrender of those lands lost by .... — i. 2 
hath shipped me into the land .. _ y. 1 (song) 

in's time a great buyer of land — v.l 

the very conveyances of his lands — v. 1 

he hatli much land, and fertile — v. 2 

to-night hath boarded a land carack.. .. 0/Ae«o, i. 2 

I'll sell all my land — i. 3 

the wind hath spoke aloud at land ~ ii. 1 

LAND-DAMN— land-damn him.. Winter'sTale, ii. 1 
LANDED— the king's son have I landed. Tempest, i. 2 

was landed, to be the lord ou't — v.l 

that Slender, though well landed. 3/erri/ Wives, iv. 4 

are both landed, hasting to Winter's Tale, ii. 3 

fear we have landed in ill time — iii. 3 

makes thee a landed squire King John, i. I 

givest out, are landed here? — iv. 2 

who lately landed, with some Richard II. iii. 3 

or quickly will be landed 3 Henry VI. iv. 1 

a mighty power landed at Milford./(ic/iur</ ///. iv. 4 

left tiieir barge, and landed Henry Vlll.i. 4 

landed in our not-fearing Britain . . Cymbeline, ii. 4 

are landed on your coast — iv. 3 

the army of France is landed Lear, iii. 7 

I told him of the army that was landed — iv. 2 
LAND-FISH— a very land-fish.. Tro/iMs^ Cress, iii. 3 
LANDING— upon her landing ..Antony ^ Cleo. ii. 2 

but, since my landing, as I have Pericles, i. 3 

LANDLESS-a landless knight makes .King- Jo/171, i. 1 

a list of landless [Coi. -lawless] resolutes. //am/c/, i.l 

LANDLORDof England art thou ..Richardll. ii. 1 

the universal landlord Antony ^Cleopatra, iii^ II 

LANDMEN— our landmen will stand up — iv. 3 
LANDRAKERS— no foot landrakers.l Hei!rj//r. ii. 1 
LAND-RAT— there be land-rats. . Mer. of Venice, i. 3 
LAND-SERVICE— this land-service .2//ejiri///'. i. 2 
LAND-THIEVES; I mean ..Merchant of Venice, i. 3 
LANE-with thee to thelane'send.il/eos./nr.Wcns. iv. 3 

our horses unto long lane end Tamin^n/Sh. iv. 3 

every lane's end, every shop, church. 11 i>i'i:i\'J'. i\-.3 
they say, as stand in narrow lanes. . Uiiinn,! 11. v, 3 

front them in the narrow lane MlenrylV. ii. 2 

stood in lanes, laid gifts — iv. 3 

did Richard make a lane to me SHenry VI. i. 1 

the lane is guarded; Hothingrootsus.C!/»i6e/iji(,', v. 2 
all flying through a straight lane.... — v. 3 

where was this lane? Close by — v. 3 

athwart the lane, he, with two striplings — v. 3 
narrow lane ! an old man, and two boys ! — v. 3 

twice a boy, a lane, preserved — v. 3 

LANGLEY-famous Edmund Langley .1 Hen. VI. ii. 5 
was Edmund Langley, duke of York. 2Hc>!jyF/.ii. 2 

son to Edmund Langley ... — ii. 2 

LANGTON— keep Stephen Langton.K/ng-.Wm, iii. 1 

LANGUAGE— you taught me language. Tempest, i. 2 

for learning me your language! .... — i. 2 

my language! Heavens! — i. 2 

and surely, it is a sleepy language .. — ii. 1 

should he learn our language? — ii. 2 

will give language to you, cat — ii. 2 

andspeaks three or four languages. Ttve!flhNight,i. 3 
proportion, or in any language ..Meas.for Meas. i. 2 

yon speak the former language — ii. 4 

not chastity enough in language Much Ado, iv. 1 

been at a great feast of l^vnguages. /.or'e's L.Lost, v. 1 
if they do speak our language. 'tis .. — v. 2 
our French lack language to deny. . . . Alt's Well, ii. I 



LAN 



[ 42-. ] 



LAS 



LANGUAGE— is it not a lanKUORe ....^H'jdVH, ii.3 
eiicak wlmt ti'iiiMi' laiis"n(;i' you will — iv. 1 
n smack of all iieii,'liboiiriii^' liiiiguages — iv. I 
cliuiiKli's languiigi;, ^iibbli; uiiuiigh . . — iv. 1 
forwttiit of luuguttgc: it'tlicre be here — iv. 1 
Lntin, mid other laiiguauos .. Taming qf Shrew, ii. I 
like Iniigiuij^e use to uU (logrces .. iV<nleyU'VuU; ii. 1 
vou siveak a luti^'uu^'u tluit I uiulerstiuid — iii. 2 

Iftiigiiiiae in tlieir vcrv posture — v. 2 

the liui'!.'ims;e 1 have I'enrncil these ..Kiclmrd II. i. 3 
in his »wii'lan(.'iia>;e iluiing uiy ....1 HmiryU'. ii. 4 

till I have leaineil thy liinguagc — iii. 1 

in every lnngua,i;e 1 pronounce . .'2 Henry 1 1', (ind.) 

wherein, to guiii Ihe language — iv. 4 

et tn paries hiiii le hi nun age Henry I', iii. 4 

or abused in ilisdainfiil lauLinnge .... — iii. 6 
and cannot hrook hard Uin,i.'iiavo ..iHenryVI. iv. i) 
escapes nnt hin;.'iiagc uninaiiiierly. . Henri/ »'///. i. 2 
not to know tlic language Jl have lived — iii. 1 

the lioiiev ol' his language — Iii. 2 

lia< slrao-'lcd liis language in his tears — v. 1 
I shall reiiKiiihcr this bold language — v. 2 
there's language in her eye.. Troiius ^ Cressida^iv. 6 
words go hv. and language end. Timon of Alhens, y. 2 
is ill scuooied in b<>Ued language . . Coriolanus, iii. 1 

this is not hunters' language Cymbeline, iii. 3 

he did provoke me with language that — v. 5 

to use one language, in each../'irr/L'(i-j, iv. 4 (Gower) 

know the letters, and the language. ffo/iico ^Jul. i. 2 

LANGUAGICLKSS, a monster.. 7Voi7us<S Cress, iii. 3 

LANCUKS— les langues des hommes .. Henry F. v. 2 

L.VNOUI.SII for his sake Mid. N.'s Dream, ii. 3 

did come to languish As you Like it, ii. 1 

that rids our dogs of languish? . . Antony * C/co. v. 2 
iiav. let her languish a drop of bloo<t.Ci/»/i6(?i/;ie, i. 2 
will his free hours languish for assured — i. 7 
and soul to languish, and punish that. . I'erieles, i. 2 
cures witli another's languish ..Romeo fr J 'diet, i. 2 

L.\.\i;riSIli:i). I.eaveme Winter'sTale,n.i 

L.VXl ;r IS I li;s-king languishes of? ..AtCsWell, i. 1 
that laii.'uishis in j'our displeasure.. .. 0(/iWlo, iii. 3 
L.VNG IJ ISl 1 1 N( '..S whereof the king . . All's Well, i. 3 
the movers of a languishing death . .Ci/mbetine, i. 6 
I,Ai\(a'I.Sll.Mi:NT must we pursue. 7'/(us .4n(/. ii. 1 
I-AN(;iH)R— my heart's deep languor — iii. I 
L.VNK— are lank and lean with thy ..iHenryVI. i. 3 

her lank and all o'er-teemed loins Hamlet, ii. 2 

L.VNKKD— so much as lanked not. /4;i'o?i!/. ^C/eo. i. 4 
b.\XK-IyEAN— lank-lean cheeks. Hcjirv^'. iv. teho.J 
1,.VNTKKN — shall our lanterns hn. Merry H'ives, v. .') 

therefore l)ear you the lantern Mucli Ado, iii. 3 

a hush of thorns and alantern..iWiV;. A'. Oream, iii. 1 
this man, with lantern, dog, and hnsh — v. 1 
tliis lantern doth the horned moon .. — v. 1 
the cirrumference. This lantern doth — v. I 
the man should he put into the lantern — v. I 

that the lantern is the moon — v. 1 

why all these shouhl be in the lantern — v. 1 

I pr'ythee, lend me thy lantern \HeurylV.\\. 1 

thou hearest the lantern in — iii. 3 

have his own lantern to light him ..iHenrylV. i. 2 
my guide, and lantern to my feet..2H(?nrv VI. ii. 3 
a lantern, slaughtered youth ....Romeo ^Juliet, v. 3 

r>.VP— a-s a cat laps milk Tempest, ii. 1 

die in thy lap, and be buried Afi/c/i .ido, v. 3 

fall in the fresh lap of Mid. K.'s Dream, ii. 2 

wife had chestnuts in her lap Macbeth, i. 3 

the fresh green lap of fair Ricltard II. iii. 3 

that strew the green lap of — v. 2 

vour gentle head upon her lap .... 1 Henry IV. iii. I 

lay my head in thy lap — iii. I 

lay thy head i n Furies' lap iHeniyW. v. 3 

her head fall into England's lap I Henry I'l. v. 3 

like a pleasant slnnilier in thy lap?.'2//('!/i:/;7. iii. 2 
make my heaven in a lady's laii . .Sllmryl'l. iii. 2 
how he di<l lap me even in his — Iticlund 111. ii. i 
to worry lambs, and lap their gentle — iv. 4 

uncover, dogs, and lap Timon of Afliens, iii. G 

that lies on Dian's lap! — iv. 3 

from the lap of Egypt's widow ..Antony A- Cleo. ii. I 
in Virgo's lap; give it Pa[la.s..TilusAnrlronieiis, iv. 3 
ope her lap to saint-seducing f^oid.. Romeo ^-Jul. i. 1 

lady, shall T lie in your lap? Humlel, iii. 2 

I mean, my head iijion your lap? — iii. 2 

pour our treasures into foreign laps. . . . otlfUo, iv. :i 
I,API,'5-what is lapis, William? ..Merry Wires, iv. I 

no, it is lapis; I pray you — iv. 1 

I>.\PI.ANI) sorcerers inhabit here... Com. of Rrr. iv. 3 
I,.VPPi:i)-he, sir. was lap|)Cd in ....Cymbrline. v. .'i 
li.VP.SK— the careless lapse of youth . . All's ll'elt, ii. 3 

to lapse in fulness is sorer Cymbeline, iii. c, 

L.VP.SKD— he lapsed in this pIoce..r«<'(fl'/.A'(>/./,iii. 3 

that, lapsed in time and passion Ihtmlet, iii. 4 

LAPSIXG— without lapsing sutfer ..Coriolanus. v. 2 

I>.VPT— P.ellona's bridegroom, lapt in ..Mnrlietli. i. 2 

L.VPWIXG— to seem the lapwing. A/cnj. /or .l/ra.«. i. :, 

where Beatrice, like a lapwing, runs. Wi;cA.4(/o, iii. 1 

from her nest the lapwing cries. Coimv/i/o^/irr. iv. 2 

tills lapwing runs awav with the shell.. H/inj/e/, v. 2 

I>ARD— and larda the lean earth \HenrylV. ii. 2 

pa-^ture lards the brother's sides. .7Timo7i o/Alh. iv. 3 

L.\Rr)EI>— lardeil with my matter.. A/<'rri/(r/r(>»,iv.6 

sliould wit larded with malice. VroZ/Mx ^Cresxida.v. I 

larded all with sweet flowers .. Hamtet, iv. h (song) 

an exact commission, larded with many — v. 2 

LARDER— I belong to the larder ..Henry I'l II. v. 3 

LARDING— he lie. larding the \>\a.in.. Henry f. iv. G 

LARGE — was dukedom large enough . . Tempest, i. 2 

confer at large of all that.. Tiro Gen. 0/ Verona, iii. 1 

may confer at large — iii. 2 

I'll show yon here at large Merry IViret, iv. fi 

arc not these large enough?. A/rff»Hr<*/or Measure, i,5 
by some large jests he will make ....Much Ado, ii. 3 
never tempted her with word too large — iv. 1 
and kiss thv fair large ears ..Mid. N.'tVream, iv. I 

at large disi'ourse. wliilc here — v. 1 

BO to the laws at large I write my.. l.ore'sL.Lnst, i. 1 
and the world's large tongue proclaims — v. 2 
as large a charter a.s the wind ....AsyouLikeit, ii. 7 
a land at large, a potent — v. 4 



LARGE-your praisesare too large. 'tVn/cr'j Tale, iv.3 
know the truth hereof at large.Comc'/i/i!/ firroii, iv. 4 

and hear at large discoursed all — v. 1 

be large in mirtlij anon Macbeth, iii. 4 

epenil a large exiMMisc of time — v. 7 

of my son in the large composition ..King John, i. I 
large lengths of seas and shores between — i. 1 

dutli contain that large, which died.. — ii. I 

here's a large mouth, indeed — ii. 2 

with our niece a dowry large enough — ii. 2 

in .some large measure to thy liic/iard II. i. 2 

snhscrilic Iheni for large sums of gold — i. 4 

of yiuir love ti> licr at large — iii. 1 

anil my lar^'o kiugduiM for a little.... — iii. 3 
ina>' appear at large discoursed in .. — v. 6 
our peace upon such large terms ..2IIenryIV. iv. 1 

please it you, contains at large — iv. 4 

I have opened to his grace at large . ...Henry V. i. I 
ruling, ill large and ample cmpery.,., — i. 2 

in grant of all demands at large -- ii, 4 

I'll tell you more at large \ Henry FI, i. I 

free purses with large fines — i. 3 

and break our minds at large — i. 3 

and large proportion of his strong-knit — ii. 3 

discover more at large what — ii. 5 

with a large and sumptuous dowry.. — v. I 
infoi-med his highness so at large.... — v. 1 

whose large style agrees not 2 Henry FI. i. 1 

have had large sums of gold — i. 1 

OS more at large your grace shall. . . . — ii. I 
large gifts have 1 bestowed on learned — iv. 7 
once gotten, doubt not of large vay.SHenryFI. iv. 7 
item, you sent a large commission. HpHri/ /';//. iii. 2 
large Achilles, on lus pressed bed. Troilus^- Cress, i.3 

fair leave, and large security — i.3 

of things to come at large — i.3 

the world's large spaces cannot — ii. 2 

so romidly to a large confession .... — iii. 2 

by his large and portly size — iv. 

his large fortune, upon his good. rimono/^KAeiis.i. I 
their coin upon large interest (>cp.)., — iii. 5 
make large confusion ; and, thy fury — iv. 3 
not all the whips of heaven are large — v. 1 
will be large cicatrices to show ....Coriolanus,]i. 1 

throng our large temples with — iii. 3 

mighty space of our large honoura. JuUnsCo'sar, iv. 3 
most large in his abominations... 4)i/oH!/<5-C/fo. iii. 6 
j'OH have at large received the danger. . I^ericles, i. 1 

to know at large the cause of — v. 1 

and all the large etlects that troop Lear, i. 1 

and youi large speeches may your deeds.. — i. 1 
else have made thy tale large ..Romeo ei- Juliet, ii. 4 
made us with siicli large discourse ....Hamlet, iv. 4 
a restitution large of gi>ld, and jewels ..Otfiello, v. 1 
LARGE-IIANDliD robbers .... r/«io/i o/-.lrt«i.^ iv. 1 
LARGELY— have given largely... il/mi/ Hires, ii. 2 
I'll tell you largely of fair Hero's. . . . ;i/»c/i Ado, v. 4 

live largely in the hope r>f great iUvnrylF. i. 3 

and her prosperities so largely taste .. . . Pericles, i. 4 
LARGENESS-promised largeness. Troilus 4- Cress, i. 3 
LARGER-a larger dare to our great. .1 Henry IF. iv. 1 

to try a larger fortune Antony ^ Cleopatra, ii. 6 

with a more larger list of sceptres.... — iii. 6 

with a larger tether may he walk Hamlet, i. 3 

nor to larger reach than to suspicion .. — iii. 3 

LARGESS-meiid it with a largess. . Taming of Sh. i. 2 

sent forth great largess to your offices. .i>/acbc//i, ii. 1 

and liberal largess, are grown Richard II. i. 4 

a largess universal like the sun.. Henry F. iv. (cho.) 

LARGEST— that we our largest bounty Lear, i. 1 

LARIC— more tuneable than lark Mid. N. Dr. i.l 

the finch, the sparrow, and the lark — iii. 1 (song) 

I do hear the morning lark — iv. 1 

merry larks are ploughmen's. Love's L. L. v. 2 (song) 
doth sing as sweetly as the lark..il/e?-. of Fenice, v.\ 

I took this lark for a hunting Alt's IVell, ii. h 

above the morning \a,v\i. .Taming of Sh. 2 (induction) 
is thejay more precious than the lark — iv.3 
the lark that tirra-lirra.. . Winter's Tale, iv. 2 (song) 
where mounting larks should sing. .W/cA«;d //. iii. 3 

from the rising of the lark to Henry F. iii. 7 

stir with the lark to-morrow liiehard III. v. 3 

T could o'ermount the lark Henry Fill. ii. 3 

dare us with his cap, like larks — iii. 2 

the bnsv day, waked by the lark. Troilus fr Cress.iv. 2 

the lark at heaven's gate Cymbeline, ii. 3 (song) 

and morn to the lark less welcome .. — iii. (i 
the raven doth not hatch a lark ...TilusAndron. ii. 3 

ever raven sing so like a lark — iii. 1 

the shrill-gorged lark so far cannot Lear, iv. 6 

nightingale, and not the lark ...Romeo ^Juliet, iii. .0 
it was tlie lark, the herald of the morn — iii. 
nor that is not the lark, whose notes — iii. 5 

it is the lark that sings so out of tunc — iii. ft 

some say, the lark makes sweet — iii. 5 

the lark" and loathed toad chaiiL'c eves — iii. 5 

L.\l!RON-clo-et? villanvl larron! ...1/crn/"'i>c.!, i. 4 

LARTIU.S— Titus Lartiu^. thou >-halt .Coriolanus,i. 1 

iir)ble T.artius; Hence! to \-our homes — i.l 

Titus l.artins, a most valiant — i. 2 (letter) 

your lord, and Titus Lartiu<, are set. . — i.3 

to l-artins, and to ^tarciil^ battle .... _ i. U 

how is't with Titus l.artiu'-? — i. 6 

Titus LartiuB, must to C'iuioli back .. — i. 9 

Titiis Lartius writes, they fought — ii. 1 

and to send for Titus l.iirtius, It remains — ii. 2 

'L.VRT'.M—'larum of jealou.sy 'ilfrry Wires, iii. Ii 

heard loud 'larnins, iicigliing steeds. Taming of Sh. i. 2 

or a common 'larum bell? i Henry IF. iii. 1 

then sliail we hear their 'lanim Coriolanus, i. 4 

with loud 'larums welcome them.. TiiusAndron. 1. 2 
LASCIVI(>;r,S-of lascivious men. ri/'oCfn.o//'cr. ii. 7 
find you twenty lascivious turtles.. A/erry Wives, ii. 1 
to be a dangerous and lascivious boy. .Atl'sWell, iv. 3 
that lascivi(nis young hoy the count. . — iv.3 
there are found lascivious metres. . . . Richard II. ii. 1 
lascivious, wanton, more than well.l Henry P'l. iii. 1 

lascivious Eilward, and tlion ZHenry VI. v. .'1 

to the limcivions pleasing of a lute ..Richard III. i. 1 
that's a lascivious apprehension. 7'i»i(iiti{/'/4.'A«u, i. I 



LASClVIUUti-la.sciviouH town.. 7',mo,. nr Athens, v. i 

leave thy lascivious wa-ssails Antony f, ctco. i. 4 

foul udultress, ;a«ci\ious (Joth TitnuAndron. ii. 3 

the gross clasps of a lascivious Moor Olkelln, i. I 

LASli hence these over-weening... ./dc/ian/ ;//. v. 3 

why dost thou lush that whore? hear, iv G 

the lash, of film Romeo ^Juliet, i. i 

how smart a lash that speech doth Hamlet, iii. I 

to lash the ra.scal naked through Otiiello, iv. -i 

LASIlED-libcrty is lushed with vtx .Com.oflirr. ii.l 

LA.S8— is it so brave a lass? Tempest, iii. 2 

of this sweet lass of Erancc Love's L. Lost. v. 2 

a lover, and his lass As you Lilit it, v. 3 (song) 

and show you the lass I spoke of Alls Well, iii. G 

the prettiest low-born lass that.. Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

if your la.ss interpretation _ iv.3 

in thy possession liesu lass Antony ACleo. v. 2 

LAS.SES— your lasses cry . . Winter's Tale. iv. 3 (song) 
LAS.S-l^ORN—loves, being lass-lorn .. Tempctt, iv. 1 
LAST— and hear the lust of our sea-sorrow — i. 2 

which I do last pri>nouiice i. u 

and feed, although my last iii. 3 

your lust service did worthily perform .— iv. I 

at lust I left them i' the iv. 1 

in this last tempest v, 1 

since I saw you lust y' i 

yet I was last elii.lden for .. r»o Gen. of Ferona, ii. 1 

lor last inoruiuL' \ iju could _ ii.l 

last niglit, slie eujuincd me to ii.l 

till the last sle|> liave brought ii. 7 

in that hist article iii! 1 

upon All-hallowmas lust Merry Wives, i. 1 

and last, us I am a gentleman ii. 2 

the last time he searched for him iv.2 

as they did last time iv.2 

all's forgiven at last v.' .■) 

in very gracious fooling last night. Twelfth Niglit, ii'. 3 

antique song we heard last night — ii. 4 

come, the song we had last night ii. 4 

after the last enchantment you iii. 1 

yet when I saw it last v. I 

this will last out a night in Meas. Tor .Meas. ii. 1 

Overdone by the last ' ii.l 

is't not drowned i' the last rain? .... iii. 2 

but Tuesday night lust gone _ v. 1 

in our last conflict, four of his five wits .Much Ado, i.l 
first of i\lay doth the last of December — i.l 

at that hour last night, talk with — iv. I 

were you her bedfellow last night? (rep.) _ iv. 1 

this last was broke across v. 1 

yet, at last, she concluded with a sigh v! I 

when I from Thebes came last ..Mid. A'. Dream, v. 1 
last that will last keep his oath ..Love's L. Last, i.l 

that last is Biron, the merry ii.l 

bear this trial, and last love v. 2 

was the last man in our mouths.. A/cr. of Venice, i. 3 
you spit on me on Wednesday last .. — i.3 

when I last saw liim ii. 2 

on black- Mnuihiy last, at six _ ii. 5 

at last, if promise last, I got iii. 2 

to the last iioiu" of act iv. 1 

in lieu of this, last night did lie -, v. 1 

follow thee to the last gasp .4s you Like it, ii. 3 

last scene of all, that ends ii. 7 

God 'ild you for yotir last company . . — iii. 3 

when last the young Orlando _ iv.3 

when from the first to last, betwixt.. — iv.3 

the fall of the last monarchy All's Hell, ii. 1 

.made a groan of her last breath — iv.3 

the last was the greatest iv, 3 

he hence removed last night — v. 1 

I hud talk of you last night v. 2 

the lust that e'er I took her leave v. 3 

go while the humour lasts . ... Taming of Shreic, i. 'j 
where left we last? Here, madam ,. " — iii. I 

last night she slept not — iv. 1 

but at last T spied an ancient — iv. 2 

I have arrived at last unto — v. I 

at last, though long, our jarring — v. 2 

m.v last good deed was. to tnircat.. Wiuiei'sTale, i. 2 
far gone, when I shall gust it last.... — i. 2 

but the lust, O lords, when I have.... — iii. 2 
thy mother appeared to mc last night — iii. 3 
my dignit.v would lust but till 'twere — iv. 3 
at' the last, do as the heavens have done — v. 1 
which never my life may last to answer — v. 3 
that I had o'Wedncsday last. . Comedy of K rrors, i. 2 

if I last in this service, you must ' — ii.l 

thought our love would last too long — iv. 1 
none of these, except it be tlie last .. — v. 1 

since you saw me last — v. 1 

I dreamt last night of the three veiTd. Macbeth, ii. 1 

gave thee the lie last night — ii. 3 

on Tuesday last, a falcon — i i . 4 

made good to you in our last conference — iii. 1 

and last, the hearty welcome — iii. 4 

when was it she last walked — iv.3 

to the last syllable of recorded time.. — v. .'> 

yet I will try the last — v. 7 

from first to last, the onset King John, ii. 2 

in the last rcpeatini.', troublesome.... — iv.2 

01 when the last nccount — iv.2 

last in the Held, and almost — v..'. 

throng and press to that last hold — v. 7 

since last I went to France Richard II. \. \ 

ere I last received the sacrament .... — i. I 

the last leave of thee takes — i. 2 

regreet the daintiest last — i.3 

breathe my last in wholesome — ii.l 

as the last taste of sweets (^rep.) — ii.l 

fierce bla/.e of riot cannot last — ii.l 

small showers last long — ii.l 

I am the last of noble Edward's — ii.l 

comes at the last, and with — iii. 2 

letters came lust night — iii. 4 

and am I lust that knows it? — iii. 4 

was at last outfaced by Bolingbroke — iv. 1 

as from niv death bed, my last living — v. I 

nince I did see him lout — v. 3 

nor shall not be the lost — v. 6 



LAS 



[ 426 ] 



LAT 



LAST— on Good- Friday last \ Henry If', i. 2 

one of his comjpaiiy, last night — ii. 1 

scarce wiped since thou drunk'st last — ii. 4 

he held me, but last night _ iii. i 

fallen away vilely since this last action? — iii. 3 
on Tuesday last to listen after ncvrs.iHenrylF. i. 1 

well, I cannot last ever i. 2 

where lay the kioK last night? — ii. 1 

at last, 1 spied his eves; and methought — ii. 2 
no longer a^'o ihan Wednesday last — ii. 4 

to try our fortunes to the last man .. — iv. 2 

we will eat a last year's piiipiu — v. 3 

my court'sy, last my speech — (epil.) 

eleventh year o' the last king's reign.. Henri/ F. i. 1 

that swaggered witli me last night . . iv. 7 

the ten th of August last 1 Henry Vl. i. 1 

flght till the last gasp i. 1 

my lord, your honour is the last .... — ii. 5 
will nt last break out into a flame .. — iii. 1 

shall we at last conclude — v. 4 

botli at first and last v. 5 

60 long as breath did last •iHenryVI. i. I 

be my last breathing in this _ i. 2 

and thus, I fear, at last, Hume's .... i. 2 

we'll weed them all at last _ i. 3 

last time, I danced attendance on .. i. 3 

shall be the last of the next month.. — i. 3 

was the seventh and last ii. 2 

I have taken my last draught — ii. 3 

to tlie pound, the last subsidy — iv. 7 

flames of the last day _ v. 2 

if for the last, say,— av, and to\t... .iHenryVI. ii. 1 

you and I met at St. Alban's last — ii. 2 

longer than a wonder lasts iii. 2 

guerdoned at the last with shame'i' .. — iii,; 

therefore, at last, I firmly am — iii.; 

at last, by notes of household harmony — iv. ( 

Montague hath breathed his last .... v. i 

but, at last, I well might hear v.! 

last night, I heard, they lay Richard III. ii. < 

since last I saw him ii. <; 

niet'st me last where now we meet . . iii. 5 

in your debt for your last exercise ,. — iii. i 

when I was last in Holborn iii. 4 

not to incur the last, definitively iii. 7 

last, and we rejoice in them? (cep.) . . — iv. 2 

when last I was at Exeter — iv. 2 

and came I not at last to comfort you? — iv. 4 
last longer telling than thy kindness' — iv. 4 

last? Sweetly in force unto her (rep.) iv. 4 

the last was I, that felt thy tyranny — v. 3 

since last we saw in France? HenryVIII.i. 1 

till the last made former wonders its — i. 1 

to this last costly treaty i. 1 

had the king in nis.Iast sickness failed i. 2 

the last hour of my long weary life.. ii. 1 

for I feel the last At of my greatness — iii. I 
last, that the lady Anne, whom the king — iii. 2 

lore thyself last: cherish those — iii. 2 

inventory of all I have to the last penny — iii. 2 

at our last encounter, the duke of iv. 1 

at last, with easy roads, he came .... — iv. 2 
he himself foretold, should be his last — iv. 2 

the last is, for my men iv. 2 

the king to do me this last right iv. 2 

and, last, eat up himself Troilus fy Cressida, i. 3 

your last service was sufferance .... ii. I 

I will come last _ iii. 3 

look in thy last work, where . . Timonof Athens, i. 1 
— ii. 2 



TitusAndroyiicus^ i. 2 



he last asked the question 

must I be his last refuge? _ iii. 3 

that I'll requite it last? _ iii! 3 

bear himself in the last conflict — iii. 5 

this is Timon's last; who stuck — iii. B 

whilst this poor wealth lasts — iv, 3 

and last so long enough I v. 2 

there came'news from him last night. Cm/o(an«s,i'. 3 

he had, before this last expedition . . — ii. 1 

and last general in our well-found .. ii. 2 

for this last, before and in Corioli — ii. 2 

as now at last given hostile iii. 3 

you had more beard, when I last saw you iv. .1 

this last Old man, whom with v 3 

but with his last attempt he — v. 3 

this is the last; so we wdl home v. 3 

till at the last, I seemed his _ v. 5 

what faults he made before the last . . — v. 5 

his last oflFence to us shall have — v. ,5 

what was the last cry for? Julius Ctesor, i. 2 

touches om-self, shall be last served. . — iii. 1 

though last not least in love iii. 1 

be patient till the last _ iii. 2 

this speech were else your last iv! 3 

then is this the very last time v. 1 

last of all the Romans, fare thee weUI — v. 3 

and, this last night, here in v, .-i 

come, my queen; last night you.. y4K(ony ,f-CZco. i, 1 

at the last, best; see, when, and where — i. 3 

last thing he did, dear queen (rfp.) .. — i. j 

since I saw you last, there is — ii. 6 

but, first, or last, your fine Egyptian — ii. 6 

to-;morrow the last of many battles!.. — iv. 1 

this last day was a shrewd one to us — iv. 9 

say, that the last I si)oke was, Antony iv. 1 1 

the last she spake was, Antony! .... iv. 12 

'tis the last service that 1 shall — iv. 12 

the poor last I lav upon thy lips .... iv. 13 

and take the last warmth of my lips — v. 2 

bravest at the last; she leveled — v. 2 

who was last with them? _ v. 2 

what was the last that he spake Cymbeline, i 4 

an argument that fell out last night — i 5 

winnmg both of first and last — j. 5 

and his name is at last gasp i! B 

omfldent I am, last night twas on . . — ii' 3 

my lord, when last I went to visit her — iii. .5 

whilst summer lasts, and I live here — iv. 2 

last night the very gods .shewed — iv. 2 

that was the last that wore Titus Andronicus, i. I 

and now at last, laden with honour's — i. I 



LAST-that held it last 

be won at last, dissemble all your _ ,. ^ 

the last true duties of thy noble son! — v. 3 

sharp physic is the last Pericles \'. 1 

and at last devours them all 'ii 1 

'tis come at hist, and 'tis turned ii' 1 

and what's the sixth and last _ ij' •) 

for your sweet music this last night. . — ii! 5 
at last, from TjTe, Fame answering — iii. (Gower) 

while summer days do last — iv. 1 

this, as my last bcion, give me .. — v. 2 (Gower) 

from first to last resolve you v. 3 

andcrowned with joy at last .... — v. 3 (Gower) 

although the last, not least Lear, i. 1 

at last shame them derides ' ' ;! 1 

this last surrender of his will ;' | 

when saw yon my father last? _ i! 2 

i' the last night's storm I such iv' 1 

know not where I did lodge last night . . — i v! 7 

if his last purpose hold y 1 

and from first to last told him my ..!!.. — v! 3 

and the tailor with his last llomeo ^-Juliet, i! 2 

since last yourself and I were in a mask?— i. 5 

that last is true, the sweeter rest ii 3 

gave us the counterfeit fairly last night — ii. 4 

he's found, that hour is his last _ iii 1 

bid him come to take his last farewell — iii! 2 
eyes, look your last! arms, take your last— v. 3 
last night of all, when yon same star . . Hamlel, i. 1 

our last king, whose image even but now i. 1 

and at last, upon his will I sealed i! 2 

at last a little shaking-of mine ii! ] 

and, to the last, bended their light on me — ii! I 

face is valanced since I saw thee last ii 2 

saw you last, by the altitude of _ ii. 2 

first mouthed, to be last swallowed iv 2 

last, and as much containing as all these — iv! 5 
houses that he makes, last tul doomsday — v. 1 

that our last king Hamlet overcame _ v. 1 

he will last you some eight year (rep.) .. -_ v 1 

have lodged till the last trumpet — v! 1 

patience m om- last night's speech v! 1 

that policy may either last so long Ollietlo, iii! 3 

I U perform it to the last article _ iii. 3 

he did, from fir.st to last jij! 3 

one more, and this the Last ..' v! 2 

LASTED— lasted long; but on us both..All'sWell, i'.2 

which while it lasted, gave king SHenry VI. ii. 6 

LASTING— with gold on lasting pillars. Tempest, v. 1 

keep fresh and lasting Twelfth M^ht i. 1 

to give mine enemy a lasting wink. . U'inter's T i 2 

from the couch of lasting night King Joftn, iii! 4 

and body to their lasting rest — v. 7 

and lasting fealty to the new-made .Richard 11. v! 2 
hope, begins our lasting joy ZHenry VI. v. 7 

Eurchase with still lasting war Richard III. iv. 4 
ad made a lasting spring ..Henry VIII. iii. 1 (song) 
us thy lasting friends .. Tiltis Andronicus, ii. 4 (letter) 
this world to me is like a lasting storm. Pericles, iv.I 
lasting labour of his pilgrimage!«omeo(5-J!///V(,'iv.'5 

sweet, not lasting, the perfume Hamlel, i. 3 

and hence, pursue me lasting strife .... iii 2 

LASTLY— and lastly and finally Merry Wives, i! I 

sixth and lastly, they have belied (rep.). Much Ado,v.l 
lastly, if I do fail in fortune of ..j»/fr.o/ Ten/ce ii 9 
lastly, hurried here to this place . tVinler'sTale, iii. 2 

and, lastly, to confirm that ZHenry 1 1, iii. 3 

lastly, he frets, that Lepidus .... Antony &aeo. iii. 6 
lastly, myself unkindly banished.. 7-j7us^n^,ow. v. 3 

LATCH— should not latch them Macbeth iv 3 

LATCIIED-hnst thou yet latched.. il/irf. K.Dr. iii! 2 
LATCHES— latches to his entrance .. Winler'sT. iv. 3 

LATE— be not too late Tempest, iv. 1 

as late I have been v. j 

as great to me, as late y. ] 

saw sir Eglamour of late?... TwoGen. nf Vei-ona, v.' 2 

to be up early, and down late Merry Wives, i. 4 

than a minute too late ii. 2 

in him that was of late a heretic iv. 4 

and so is now, or was so very late. Twelfth Night, i. 2 

to be up late, is to be tip late ii. 3 

'tis too late to go to bed now: Jj. 3 

commend my yellow stockings of late ii. 5 

I saw thee late at the count iii. 1 

we made each other but so late ago .. v. 1 

'tis too late. Youare toocold()cpr!)jVeas. fnrMeas.u.i 

you seemed of late to make ' ii. 4 

late come from the See iij! 2 

who called here of late? _ iv! 2 

you have of late stood out against Much Ado, i! 3 

for meeting her of late, behind Mid.N. Dr. iv. 1 

of learning, late deceased in begs;ary — v. i 
our late edict shall stronglv starid '. . Love'sL.L. i. 1 

to study now it is too late, climb — i. 1 

Russians left us but of late v. 2 

he came ton late, tlie ship was.Merc/i. of Venice, ii! 8 

that have of late so huddled _ iv.I 

the pardon, that I late pronounced . . — iv. 1 
that of late this duke hath ta'en ..AsynuLilie it, i. 2 

at fourscore, it is too late a week ii. 3 

I was very late more near her All's Well, i! 3 

which late was in my nobler thouglits ii. 3 

disgraces have of late knocked iv. 1 

'tis too late to pare her nails y! 2 

but love, that conies too late, like.... v! 3 

this ring was his of late — v! 3 

the life that late I led Tamingof Sh. iv. 1 (son") 

than never, for ne\"er too late v.°l 

spread of late into a goodly bulk.. Winter'sTale, ii! I 

and privy to this their late escape.... ' ii. 1 

who late hath beat her husband .... ii! 3 

he is of late much retired iv! 1 

but tliey come not too late now iv! 3 

discord which of late sprung from. Comedy of Err. i 1 

r.ather approached too late 1.2 

come, Antipholns, we dine too late .. ii! 2 

faith no; he comes too late iii! 1 

and the late dignities heaped up Macbeth, i! 6 

he hath honoured me of late i. 7 

60 late, friend, ere you went to bed (rep.) — ii! 3 



LATE— Banquo walked too late Macbeth, iii. 6 

men must not walk too late iii 6 

it is too late; the life of all King John, \! 7 

make good the boisterous late appeal. idcAuct/ II. i! I 

sentence, plaining comes too late — i. 3 

make haste, and come too latel i! 4 

then all too late comes counsel Ji! 1 

that late broke from the duke of ii! 5 

after late tossing on the breaking 

one day too late, I fear (rep.) _ 

bubbles in a late disturbed !.i Henrt/II- 



— iii. 2 
iii. 2 
ii. 3 



'iHenrylV. ii. 



it is very late, i' faith 

it grows late, we'll to bed „ .. 

of which disease, our late king, Richard — iv! 1 

all his rods on late offenders iv I 

where is the life that late I led _ v!3 

who are the late commissioners? Henry V. ii! 2 

that was quick in us but late — ii! 2 

out of late examples left by ij 4 

your grace the late embassadors — ii! 4 

late, did he shine upon the English..! Hen; j/f/. i. » 

hath the late overthrow wrought .... i. 2 

whom Henry, our late sovereign .... j! 3 

executed, in our late king's days? .. _ ii' 4 

your nephew, late desiiised Richard — ii. 5 

say, of late thou wert despised? _ ij. 5 

forbidden late to carry any weapon — iii! 1 

this late dissension, grown betwixt .. iii! 1 

as sure as in this late betrayed town _ iii! 2 

they that of late, were daring with .. iii 2 

noble duke of Bedford, late deceased — iii! 2 

it is too late; I cannot send them .... iv. 4 

too late comes rescue jv! 4 

early and late, debating to and fro ..2 Henry VI. i! 1 

thy late exploits done in :.... i. J 

how insolent of late he is become _ iii' 1 

but, now of late, not able to _ iv' 2 

whom you late vanquished jv' 8 

bereft thee of thy life too late ZHenry VI ii' 5 

where fame, late entering at — iii' 3 

aid, which late I promised _ iij' 3 

what late misfortune is befallen _ iv' 4 

as Henry's late presaging prophecy . . — iv! 6 
lord Hastings' late imprisonment ..Richard III. i. 3 

to the story we late talked of ii! 2 

too late he died that might have .... jii! ] 

came too late of our intent iii' 5 

the late demand that you did iv 2 

have got by the late voyage Henry VIII. i! 3 

we shall be late else ;o 

did you not of late days hear , 

betwixt too early and too late 

your late censure both of his truth .. 

the late queen's gentlewoman 

you have done of late by your power 

held a late court at Dunstable 

and the king's late scruple 

and the late marriage made of 

that comfort comes too late 

whither so late? Came you from .... 

some touch of your late business .... 

of late heard many grievous, I do say 

I hojie, I am not too late; and yet .. — 
as, of late day 

■oitus fy Cressida, 



— ii. 1 



iii. 2 
iii. 2 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 2 
V. 1 
— V. 1 



T. 2 



/s, our neighbours 
hat, am I poor of late? .... 7Vi 

but in these fields of late _ „,. „ 

for my own part, I came in late — iv 2 

were his fellows but of late Timon. nf Athens i! 1 

and late, five thousand to Varro 'ii 1 

though you hear now (too late!) _ j]' •> 

I have but little gold of late _ iv 3 

and suspect, alas, are placed too late iv! 3 

profit meet, and come too late y' 1 

our late noble master. Have I _ v' I 

and bring thy news so late Coriolujius, i! 6 

come I too late? ('Pp.) _ j. g 

and, of late, when corn was given.... iii' 1 

whom late you have named jji! 1 

will, too late, tie leaden pounds iii' 1 

he is grown most kind of late iv' « 

I do observe you now of late Julius Cwsar, i! 2 

vexed I am of late, with passions — i. a 

he is suiierstitious grown of late ii. 1 

and great, of late upon meilmust.. — ii!2 
I was of late as petty to hisends./lr?(o7iy*aeo. iii. 10 

of late, when I cried, ho! iii II 

those that served Mark Antonv but late — iv 1 
I dread, too late. Too late, goo'd Diomcd — iv. 12 

a widow, that late he married Cymbeline, i. 1 

she hath been reading late the tale . — ii. 2 

I am glad, I was u|) so late ii! 3 

not seen of late? grant, henvcns iii' .■; 

hast any of thy late niQfter's garments — iii! 5 

of late, of this war's purrjosc? i\' 2 

then all too late I bring'this fatal. 7>Vu,»/)nAon. ii! 4 
whom but of late, earth, sea, and air . . Pericles, i. 4 

princes, it is too late to talk of love — ii. 3 

whom Helicanus late advanced — iv. 4 (Gower) 

these late eclipses in the sun Lear, i. 2 

perceived a most faint neglect of late — i. 4 

too much of late i' the frown i. 4 

which of late transform you , i! 4 

woe. that too late repents i. 4 

very late, to strike at me ii. 2 

the very fellow that of late displaved — ii. 4 

my life, but lately, very late ." — . iii. 4 

what letters had yon late from France?, 
tlie traitors late footed in the kingdom . 

at her late being here 

done, and we shall come too late Romeo fy Juliet, 

by my fay, it waxes late — 

seen unknown, and known too late! 

back again, that late thou gavest me li 

make liaste, for it grows very late. . . . 

thy hand; 'tis late: farewell, good-night 

'tis very late, she'll not come down .. 

Tybalt being slain so late, it may.... 



iii. 7 
iii. 7 
iv. 5 



111.3 



afore me, it is so very late 

is she not down so late, or up so early? 

late, early i;Co(. X/i/.-hjur, tide] 



ill. 4 
iii. 4 



LAT 



LATE -whom late I noted Romeo i- Juliet, v. 1 1 

tlvit consorts, 8i> Kite, the (lend? — v. 3 

fv our hi!e clear brother's death llamlel, i. 'i 

hi' hulh verv ot't ot hite Kiveii private. . . . — i. S 

of lute iimde numv tciuk'vs ..nda — i. '.i 

pivcu hiiM iinv lini-.l wunis ..I lute? — ii. I 

1 have of lulc. O'lit. "hc-nf.ire. 1 know .. — ii. 2 
comes liv ilic iiKiiiis of the hue innovotion — ii. 2 

whore k'lto the aiud.MM stood — ii. 2 

Tou are so sh-k of hite, so fai from cheer — iii. 2 

it is tlie poisoned eup; it is too late — V. 2 

nll'idrs from l'.iij;Uui.l eonie too late — v. 2 

>vhieh hiteon liopes depended 0(/ie«o. i. 3 

one praver. It is loo late — v. 2 

l.ATll-mCLOVEl). all hi.< 7V.non of Alliens, i. 1 

L.VTEU— now spurs the lated travel lcr..War6c//i, jii. 3 

I ftin so lated in the \vi)r]il.. Aniony ^ Clenpalra. iii. 9 

LATK-ni-;CKASKD emperor's sons ..Tiius And. i. 2 

I..\TEI,Y-th!it linth hitelv snttercd. . . . Tempest, ii. 2 

it was to he heaten, till lately .....!/,■, ri, II /rcs,>. 1 

thougll lately «e intended t. T„;-lllh .V,-/,/, v. 1 

the gentleman that lately stole. .Vcre/c.n/ ;Vii<rs,iv. 1 
that did but lately foil the sinewy. Js yon i./.ei7, ii. 2 
the king very lately spoke othim .... All's Hell, i. I 

had you not lately an intent — i. 3 

vou were lately whipped, sir — ii. 2 

for lately we were bound Comedy of Error!-., v. 1 

these ha"nds, so lately purged of .... Kiiii;John, iii. 1 

who lately landed, with some Richard 11. iii. .S 

who lately came from the king — v. .5 

did lately meet in the intestine .. ..IHenrylt'. i. I 
the earl of JInrch hath lately married — i. 3 
bated like eaples having latel^V bathed — iv. 1 

lately come from swine-keepmg — iv. 2 

a man or two lately killed about \\ex.iHenrvlV. v. 4 
I was lately here in the end of .... — (epil.) 
highness, lately sending into France . . Henry I', i. 2 

he was lately sent from vour iUenryi'l. ii. 1 

gentleman, lately attendant on Richard lll.W.X 

but lately splinted, knit, and joined.. — ii. 2 
Campeius is arrived, and lately. ... HentyVJlI. ii. I 

but 'tis so lately altered, that — iv. 1 

Ventidius lately buried his father. JVmoii nf.-IWi. ii. 2 

true, that you have lately told us CorifdmuSf i. 1 

bv thee lately is left un tendered CymbcHne, iii. 1 

that lately didst descend iutn..TilusAiidroniins, ii. 4 

I saw you lately, when you caught Pericles, iv. I 

he sought my life, but lately, very late.. Lcnr, iii. 4 

thou wast hiit lately dead Romeo Sr Juliet, iii. 3 

I lav with Ciissio lately; and, being . . Othello, iii. 3 

lyATKR— I take't, 'tis later, sir Macbeth, ii. 1 

LATEST— at tlie lotest minute i)t..Love'sL.Losi,v. 2 

the latest breath, that gave King John, iii. 1 

the latest neA-s we hear, is, that .... Ricltard II. v. 6 

the very latest counsel that 2 Henry W. iv. 4 

this is the latest parle we will Henry I', iii. 3 

this is the latest glory 1 Henry I'l. iv. 2 

father breathed his latest gasp aUenryl'I. ii. 1 

and, to his latest gasp, cried out — v. 2 

shall apply thy latest words.. Troilus^ Cressida, i. 3 
the latest of my wealth I'll share. J'iiiioh ofAth. iv. 2 
their latest refuge was to send h\m..Coriolanus, v. 3 
the latest service to my master . . Julius Ctrsar, v. 5 
tliat I bring unto their latest home. Titus Andron. i. 2 

make this his latest farewell — i. 2 

latest favour rCo^ A*h/. -obsequies]. ./^om.^/M^/(?^ v. 3 
to leave that latest, which concerns . , . . Olhello, i. 3 
LATE-WALKING— 

decay of lust and late-walking .... Merry Wives, v. 5 

LATIl— with dagserof lath. TwelfthNiglit, iv. 2 (song) 

thy kingdom with a dagger of lath.. I Henry IV. ii. 4 

a sword, though made ot a lath 2Henry VI. iv. 2 

your lath glued within your sheath.. TiVhs .4nd. ii. 1 

a "Tartar's painted bow of lath . . Romeo ^Juliet, i. 4 

LATIN— you spake in Latin then .. Merry IViveSj i. I 

hang hog is Latin for bacon — iv. 1 

that s the Latin word for Love'sL.Lost, iii. 1 

I smell false Latin — v. 1 

he hath neither Latin, French ,.Mer. of Venice, i. 2 
with a priest that lacks Latin.. ../Is i/ou Like it, iii. 2 

what he leges in Latin Taming of Shrew, i. 2 

in CJreek, Latin, and other languages — ii. 1 
thus in Latin, Prceclarissimus filius ..Henry V. v. 2 
nwav with him! he speaks Latin ..2HenryVl.iv.7 

O mv pood lord, no Latin Henry VJ 1 1, iii. 1 

LATTE i^— of this latten bilbo Merry H'ines, i. I 

L.\TTEK end of his commonwealth . . Tempest, ii. 1 
at the latter end of a sea-coal fire. . Merry Wivcs^ i. 4 
sing it in the latter end of a play.W/rf.A^.i^rf am, iv. I 

for the latter end of his name Love's L. Lost, t. 2 

bring your latter hazard back ..Mer.of Venice,!. 1 
hath snot out in our latter times .... All's H'ell, ii. 3 
eomething at the latter end of a dinner — ii. 5 

therefore, thy latter vows King John, iii. 1 

farewell, thou latter spring! XHenrylV. i. 2 

well, to the latter end of a fray — iv. 2 

to'grace this letter age with — v. I 

join together at the latter day ..Henry V. iv. 1 

m the latter end, and she must — v. 2 

bosom s|)end my latter gasp \ Henry Vt. ii.«5 

in devotion sjiend my latter days ..ZHenryVI. iv. 6 
express thee in thy latter spirit's . . Timon ofAth. v. 5 
fits m^' latter part of life . . Antony ^- Cleopatra, iv. G 

bom in these latter times I'endes, i, (Gowcr) 

mav the two latter darken and expend — iii. 1 
LATTF-K-BORN, bail fastened. Comcrfy of Errors, i. 1 
LATTICE— good window of lattice. . . . All's Well, ii. 3 
LAUD— I laud them, I praise them.. I Henry IV. iii. 3 

laud be to God: even tnere iHenrylV.'iv. i 

more laud than gilt o'crdustcd.rroiVuj dCrwi. iii. 3 

[Co/.] chonted snatches of old lauds Hamlel.'iv. 7 

LAUUABLE-laudablc attempt.. rue//?* Mght. iii. 2 
where, to ill) barm, is r ftcn laudable. . Macbeth, iv. 2 

LAUniS-laudissummasit SHenryVI. I. 3 

LAUGH— UhC to laugh at nothing {rep.) Tempest, ii. I 

will you laugh me asleep — ii. 1 

I shall laugh my.jclf to death — ii. 2 

I shall never laugh but in Merry Wives, i. 4 

revenged on Falstaff, and laugh at Page — ii. 2 
that often jest and laugh — iv. 2 



[ 427 ] 

LAUGlI-to lough at my wife (rep.) Merry Wives, v. S 

and laugh this sport ocr — v. .1 

unless you laugh and minister .. Tuelfth Night, i. .') 
will laugh yourselves into stitches .. — iii. 2 

why 111 ii-h you at such — v. I 

all themsilves liiiiL'h mortal ....Mens, for Mens. ii. 2 

laugh when I am merry MuchAdo, i. 3 

did he never make you laugh? — ii. 1 

then lliev laiigli at him, and heat him — ii. 1 
she «oi.lcl liin-h meuutofmyself .. — iii. 1 
to liniL.'li luoileralelv; or to forbear. . ,Lore'.st. L. i. 1 

Iriumph, leap, andlaii'-'hat it? — ivT 3 

and ciilie Timon lauL-li at idle toysl — iv. 3 

tomake my lady liiu'gh — V. 2 

and laiiiih niioii the apple of her eve? — v. 2 
yon, to laugh, and leap, and say. .Mer.qf Venice, i. I 
and laugh, like parrots, at a bag-piper — i. 1 

when shall we luiighy say when?.... — i. 1 

do we not laugh? if you poison us .. — iii. I 
oft vour grace was wont io\aush. .AsyotiLike it, ii. 2 

I dfd laugh, sans intermission — ii. 7 

thev most must laugh; and why, sir — ii. 7 

I w'illlanghlikeahvcn — iv. 1 

is not a thing to laugh to scorn — iv. 2 (song) 

that done, laugh wdl at me All's Well, n. 1 

my master wink and laugh uponT'oinnig-n/.s/i. iv. 4 
CamilloniKl Pol ixenes laugh at..»inter'srale,ii. 3 
they should not laugh, if I could reach — ii. 3 

laugh niy woes to scorn Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

O Lord, 1 must laugh — iii. 1 

there's one did laugh in his sleep Maeljeth, ii. 2 

laugh to scorn the power of man — iv. 1 

willlangh a siege to scorn — v. 5 

weapons laugh to scorn, brandished.. .. — v. 7 

thv hand to laugh a little \ Henry IV. ii. 4 

to"laugh at giliing hoys, and stand .. — iii. 2 
nor a man cannot make him laugh. 2HeMrj/i>'. iv. 3 
he shall laugh without inttrvalluuis — v. I 

yon shall see him laugh, till — v. 1 

more than did laugh at it Henry V. i. 2 

unless it he to laugh at me — y. 2 

1 laugh to see your ladyship so 1 Henry VI. ii. 3 

it made mc laugh to see the villain.. 2Hc)i>j/fi. ii. 1 
the envious people laugh, and bid me — ii.4 

the world may laugh again — ii.4 

shall laugh at this a twelvemonth. /fic/mrrf III. iii. 2 

no more to make you laugh Henry VII I. (prol.) 

I cannot choose but laugh Troilus SfCressida, j. 2 

from his deep chest laughs out — i. 3 

I would laugh at that miracle — v. 4 

at others' lives may laugh.. .. rimon of Athens, iv. 3 

I could wce|), and I could laugh Coriolanus, ii. 1 

strokes, as 'tis to laugh at them — iv. I 

this unnatural scene they laugh at .. — v. 3 

I durst not laugh, for fear of Julius Cresar, i. 2 

and laugh at this hereafter — ii- 1 

to chide, to laugh, to weep . . Antony SrCteopatra,\. 1 
this day laugh away his fortune .... — ..."• 6 

laugh at us, while we strut — iii. 11 

meantime, laugh at his challenge.... — iv. 1 
you laugh, when hoys, or women .... — v. 2 

laughs from 's free lungs, cries Cymbeline, i. 7 

at tools I laugh, not fear them — iv. 2 

why dost thou laugh! it fits not. . TitusAndron. iii. I 

to make the world laugh at me Pericles, v. I 

and laughs at my departure Lear, i. 5 

do not laugh at me — iv. 7 

and laugh at gilded butterflies — v. 3 

dost thou not laugh! No,caz. . ..Romeo SrJuliet.i. 1 

yet I cannot choose but laugh — i. 3 

call medlars, when they laugh alone — ii. I 

at lovers' perjuries, they say, Jove laughs — ii. 2 
why did you laugh ther^ when I said . . Hamlet, ii. 2 

the clown shall make those laugh — ii. 2 

though it make the unskilful laugh .... — iii. 2 
themselves laugh, to set on some (rep.) .. — iii. 2 

make her laugh at that — v. 1 

to make fools laugh i' the alehouse Othello, ii. 1 

look, how he laugiis already — iv. 1 

denies it faintly, and laUj^hs it out — iv. 1 

so, so; they laugh, that win — iv. I 

LAUGHABI-E— jest be laughnble.A/er.o/renice, i. 1 

LAUGHED— 'twas you we laughed at. . Tempest, ii. 1 

when you laughed, to crow. Two Gen. of Verona, ii. 1 

you'll be langiied at Meri-y Wives, i. 1 

not marked, or not laughed at MuchAdo, ii. 1 

after he hath laughed at such — ii. 3 

when we have laughed to see Mid.N.Dream, ii. 2 

with that all laughed, and clapped.. Lore's L.L. v. 2 
million; laiighed"at my losses ..Mer. of Venice, iii. 1 
so he laughed, and let me go ....As you Like it, iii. 4 
whom sometime I have laughed with. /t/i's Well, v. 3 
laULdied in his face; and, when ....3HenryVl. ii. 1 
of their lewdness, and be laughed at. Hew?!//'///, i. 3 
lost among ye, lauglied at, scorned? — iii. 1 

laughed, that her eyes ran (rep.) Troilus ^ Cress, i. 2 

and Hector laughed. At what — i. 2 

I should have laughed too (rep.) .... — i. 2 
and all the rest so laughed, that it .. — i. 2 

wouldst thou have laughed, had I ..Coriohinus. ii. 1 

lest 1 be laughed at, when I Julius Casar, ii. 2 

I must lie laughed at Antony ^ Cleopatra, ii. 2 

more laughed at, that I shrmld once — ii. 2 
I laughed him out of patience (re;..) — ii. 5 

negligence may well lie langhed at .. Cymbeline, i. 1 
not as death's dart, lieinn laughed at — iv. 2 
Blie laughed, and told the iMoor .. TitusAndron. iv. 3 
oud lauched so heartily, that both .. — v. 1 

did you perceive how he laughed Othello, iv. 1 

LAUGIIKR.-n common laugher JuliusCtFsar.i. 2 

LAUG 1 1 EST thou, wretch? 1 H<->ii-|/ /'/. ii. 3 

thou antic rlcttth, which hinghcst us.. — iv. 7 
LADGniX<;-liei self with laughing.. A/uc/i/ldo, ii. 1 
some he ot laughing, as, ha! ha! he! — iv. 1 
mislead iiii;ht-wan<lcrers, laughin"./Wi'd. /V. Dr. ii. 1 
which shallow lan/diing hearers.. I.off'ir L.Lost, v. 2 
I do love it better ihan laughing. /<»yoii/.ikf it, iv. 1 

I should die with laughing '/'eming-o/S/i. iii. 2 

werc't not for laughing, I sliouM ..I HMiry IV. ii. 2 
another half stand laughing by Henry V. i. 2 



LAV 



LAUG IIING-Iooks still laughing ..illenryVI. il. 4 
there was such laughingl (rep.) ..Troilus^ Cress, i. 2 

at what was all this langhing? — i. 2 

times, that weep with laughing., rimon ofAth. iv. 3 

follow him hiughiiii; to his grave.. /lii'onyS CVco. i. 2 

LArCIII N'CsTdCS to other ....Mem/ Hive,, iii. 1 

LAlHJIlTEH-a laughter Tempest. ii. 1 

hulh prcMlit laughter . . . .TuelftliMght, ii. 3 (song) 
mav nilliei plm-k on hiuiihter than.. — v. 1 

of loud liuightir never slicd. . . . ,W.V/.A'.'<nrram, v. 1 
virtue, tliipii enl'on-cst laugliter .. Love'sL.Lost, iii. 1 

I am stalihed with laiigl'itei! — v. 2 

such a zeal. Ills luoghter, so profound — V. 2 

to move wild laughter in tlie throat.. — v. 2 
with mirth and laugliter let o\a..Mer.qf Venice, i. 1 

and the increase of laughter All'sWell.'u. 4 

for the love of laughter — iii. 6 

stay themselves from laughter. Tomiiis' o/SA. I (ind.) 
stopping the career of laughter. . . . Winter'sTale, i. 2 
to laughter, as I take it, if the good.. — ii. I 
making that idiot, laughter, keep..KiVi«' Jo/m, iii, 3 
for a week, laughter for a month.... \ Henry IV. ii. 2 

anything that tends to laughter iHvnrylV. i. 2 

prince Harry in continual laughter.. — v. I 
an argument of laughter to . . Timonof Athens, iii. 3 
but thorough lust, and laughter .. — iv. 3 

scars toinove langhler only Cori'oJn;iu«, iii. 3 

yea, fir my hmghter, when you. .JuliusCiesar, iv. 3 
hut mil til and Iniighter to his Brutus — iv. 3 

his eves in flood with laughter Cymbeline, i 

heart with extreme langhter.. TitusAndronicus, v 
and benefits to laughter and contempt. . . . Lear, i 

the worst returns to laughter — iv 

not refrain from the excess of laughter.OWie/(o, iv 

LAUNCE-kind of the Launces. Two Uen. ofVer. ii. 3 

Lannee, away, awai, aboard — ii. 3 

Launcel hy mine honesty _ ii. S 

but, Launce, how say'st thou — ii. 5 

1 pray thee, Lnnnce, an' if thou .... — iii. I 

how now, signior Launce? — iii. 1 

I tell you what, Launce, his man.... — iv. 2 
where is Launce? — iv. 2 

LAUNCELOT Gobbo (rep.) Merelianl(ir Venice,ii.-2 
honest Lanncelot, take heed (7rp.) .. — ii. 2 
my honest friend Launcelot, being .. — ii. 2 
conscience savs, Lauucelot, budge not — ii. 2 
whether one l.aiincelot, that dwells.. — ii. 2 
talk you of young master Launcelot? — ii. 2 
master Launcelot. Your worship's (rep.) — ii. 2 
of young master Launcelot? (»ep.) .. — ii. 2 
master Launcelot; talk not of (rep.) — ii. 2 

YOU are not Launcelot, my boy — ii. 2 

"I am Launcelot. your hoy that was.. — ii. 2 
but I am Launcelot. the Jew 's man — ii. 2 

if thou be Launcelot, thou art mine — ii. 2 
and Launcelot, soon at supper shall — ii.3 

farewell, good Launcelot — ii.3 

friend Launcelot, what's the news?.. — ii.4 
my husband, Launcelot, what you say — iii. 5 
of you shortly, Launcelot, if yon thus — iii. 5 
Launcelot and I are out; he tells me — iii. i 

with child by j'ou, Launcelot — iii. 5 

LAUNCHED"-liath launched above Troii. ^-Cress. ii.2 

[Kjif.] body, launched mine arm Lear, ii. 1 

LAilNP— for thro' this laund anon. .3Henry;V. iii. 1 
LAUNDRESS— to the laundress (rep.) Merry W. iii. 3 
LAirNDRY-or his cook, or his laundry — i. 2 

LAUR A— Laura, to his lady Romeo Sr Juliet, ii.4 

LAUREL— and laurel crown 3H my VI. iv. b 

crowns, sceptres, laurels Troilus SfCressida, i. 3 

bound with laurel houghs TitusAndronicus. i. 2 

LAURELED-sit laureled victor}-? Antony <5 Cleo. i. 3 

LAURENCE-friar Laurence met. Tiro Gen. ofVrr. v. 2 

at friar Laurence' cell be !ihn\Q<\.. Romeo ^Jul. ii. 4 

hie vou hence to friar Laurence' cell — ii. h 

he is hid at Laurence' cell — iii. 2 

displeased my father, to Laurence' cell — iii. 5 
is my daughter gone to friar Laurence? — iv. 2 
am enjoined by holv Laurence to fall — iv. 2 
met the vouthful lord at Laurence' cell — iv. 2 

LATTS— laus Deo. hone intelligo Lore'sL. Lost, v. 1 

I.AVATCH -good monsieur Lavatch. . AlVsWell, v. 2 
LAVE- to lave her dainty hands.. Vumiwi' o/.s/i. ii'. I 

must lave our honours in these Macbeth, iii. 2 

although she lave them hourly.. TitusAi.dion. iv. 2 

LAVlvE— ct la truie lave au bourbier./)r iiri//'. iii. / 

LAVENDER-hot lavender, mints. II int.-, 'j i\de, iv. 3 

LAVINIA— gracious Lavinia .. 7i/i».4iu(i'i»ici/j i. 1 

Lavinitt, live; outlive thy father's .. — i. 2 

Lavinia will I make my empress — i. 2 

Lavinia, vou are not displeased — i. » 

thanks, sweet Lavinia: Romans — i. 2 

treason, mv lord: Lavinia is surprised — i. 2 

restore Lavinia to the emperor — i. 2 

died in honour uiid I.avinia's cause.. — i. 2 

in the rescue of Lavinia, with his. ... — i. 2 

and fear not, lords, and you. l.uvinia — i, 2 

Lavinia, tho you left me like u churl — i. 2 

you are my guest, Lavinia. and your — i. 2 

plead my passions for LaMiiia s lo\c — ii. I 



18 Lavinia then become so loose. 

I love Lavinia more than all the world 

Lavinia is thine elder brother's hope 



— ii. 1 
, I 



, therefore must he loved 

not more ehnsti- than this Lavinia .. — 

and revel in I.avinia's treasury — 

Lavinia. how say you? 1 say, no — 

fpeak mv Lavinia, wliat accursed hand — 

'tis wclh'Laviuia. Ihul thou hast no — 

is dear l.avinin, dearer than my soul _ 

gentle Lavinia, let mc kiss thy lips.. — 

Sh, mv Lavinia. I will wipe thy cheeks _ 

Laviu'ia. thon shall he emiiloved in.. _ 

farewell, Lavinia, nivnolile sister .. _ 

nor Lucius, iior I.ayiiuu lives.. .. .... _ 

Lavinia, go with me: 111 to thy closet — 

my aunt Lavinia follows me every . . — 

my niece Lavinia hy these signs?. ... — 

how now, Lavinio? Marcus, whatmeana — 

Laviuia, ehall I read? this u — 



— ii. 1 



111. 2 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 



LAVINIA-Lavinia, wertthou.riVus.'^.ndionicas, iv. 1 
look here, Lavinia; till! sandy plot.. — iv. I 
Lavinia, kneel; aud kneel, sweet boy — iv. 1 
i/avinia, come: Marens, look to my.. — iv. 1 
come, come, Lavinia; look, tliy foes — v. 2 

whilst that Lavinia 'tween her stumps — v. 2 
Lavinia. come, receive the blood .... — v. 2 

die, die, Lavinia, and thy shame — v. 3 

mv father, and Lavinia, shall forthwith — v. 3 
liAVlSH— but not lavish, means.. jUras./orjVeas. li. 2 

curbing his lavish spirit Macbflli.i. 2 

had I so lavish of my presence \Hennjir. iii. 2 

when means and lavish manners ..i Henri/ IT. iv. 1 

he used his lavish tongue \Hetinj I' I. ii. 5 

TjAVISHLY— too lavishly wrested ..2Henryir. iv. 2 
LAVOLT— heel the high la.volt..T!-nilus4-C)ess. iv.i 
LAVOLTA— and teach lavoltas high. . Henry V. iii. 5 
LAW— the lawof friendship. J'K'oGen.o/rerona, iii. 1 

make their wills their law — v. 4 

from the blow of tlie law TwelfthSighl, iii. 4 

o' the windy side of the law — iii. 4 

if there be any law in Illyria — iv. 1 

to enforce or qualify the laws Mms.for Meas. i. 1 

and most biting laws — ' !• * 

run by the hideous law — .1.5 

make a scarecrow of the law — ii. I 

what know the laws, that thieves. ... — ii. 1 

I know no law; bring them — ii. 1 

if the law would allow it, sir (j(?p.) .. — ii. 1 
if this law hold out in Vienna — ii- ' 

just, but severe law! — ii. 2 

your brother is the forfeit of the law — ii. 2 

it is the law, not I, condemns — ii. 2 

the law hath not been dead though. . — ii. 2 
that the most just law now took .... — ii. 4 
now the -voice of the recorded law .. — ii. 4 
account to the law upon that point . . — ii. 4 
the manacles of the all-binding law — ii. 4 

to make the law a tyrant — ii- ■* 

bidding the law make com-t'sy to — _ii. 4 

bite the law by the nose — iii- 1 

had rather my brother die by the law — in. 1 

your brother from the angry law — iii. 1 

by order of law a furred gown to keep — iii. 2 

he hath oifended tlie law — iii. 2 

is no greater forfeit to the law than — iv. 2 

that enforced the law against itl . . . . — iv. 4 

laws for all faults, but faults so — v. 1 

the very mercy of the law cries out.. — v. 1 
and one that knows the law, go to ..MuchAdo, iv. 2 
according to our law, immcdiately.Mid.A'.'sDc. i. 1 

or else the law of Athens yields — i. 1 

the sharp Athenian law cannot — i. 1 

without the peril of the Athenian law — iv. 1 

1 beg the law, the law, upon -r- iv. 1 

adangerous law against gentility!. .Z.oiie'sL.i.. i. 1 

so to the laws at large I write my — i. 1 

a vessel of thy law's fury — i. 1 (letter) 

these oaths and laws will prove — i. 1 

charity itself fulfils the law — iv. 3 

may devise laws for the blood. . Merch. of Venice,). 2 

justice! the law! my ducats — ii. 8 

in law, what plea so tainted — iii. 2 

if law, authority, and power deny not — iii. 2 
the duke cannot deny tlie course of law — iii. 3 
if you deny me, fie upon your law ! . . — iv. 1 

I stand here for law — iv. 1 

that the Venetian law cannot — iv. 1 

I crave the law, the penalty — iv. 1 

wrest once the law to your authority — iv. 1 
you know the law, your exposition . . — i v. I 

I charge you by the law, wliereof — iv. 1 

purpose of the law hath full relation — iv. 1 
awards it, and the law doth give it .. — iv. 1 

the law allows it, and the court — iv. 1 

are, by the laws of Venice, confiscate — iv. 1 

is that tlie law? thyself shalt see — iv. I 

the law hath yet another hold (rep.) — iv. 1 

what law does vouch mine own All's U'cll,n. 6 

their own right by the law of nature — iv. b 
I'll answer him by la.vi..TamhigofShreir, 1 (indue.) 

since this bar in law makes — i. 1 

do as adversaries do in law — _i. 2 

now by law, as well as reverend age — iv. 5 

by law and process of great nature.. Win'.er'sT. ii. 2 
'tis rigour, and not law; your honours — iii. 2 

to o'erthrow law, and in one — iv. ehoius) 

let the law go whistle — iv. 3 

to infringe our laws; the enmity. Comer!;/ o/ Brr. i. 1 
therefore, by law thou art condemned — i. 1 

were it not against our laws — i. 1 

sir, I shall have law in Ephesus — iv. 1 

against the laws and statutes — v. 1 

the canon of the law is laid on King John, ii. 1 

law and warrant, lady (rep.) — iii. 1 

to understand a law; to know — iv. 2 

must I rob the law? your sword — iv. 3 

according to our law depose him in . . Richard i/. i. 3 
thy state of law is bond slave to the law — ii. 1 
I am a subject, and challenge law ... — ii. 3 
I am loath to break our country's laws — ii. 3 

keep law, and form, and due — ii'. 4 

curb of old father antiek the law? \ Henry IV. i. 2 

in the laws of this land-service 2Henry IV. i. 2 

in thy house, contrary to the low .... — ii. 4 
I see no reason, in the law of nature . — iii. 2 

to the correction of your law — iv. 4 

in the administration of his law — v. 2 

and power of law and justice — v. 2 

to trip the course of law, and blunt... — v. 2 

most dreadful laws so loosely — v. 2 

the laws of England are at my — v. 3 

why the law Saliaue, that they Henry V. i. 2 

the founder of this law and female bar — i. 2 

established there this law, to wit — i. 2 

the Salique law was not devised — i. 2 

idly supposed the founder of this law — i. 2 
they would hold up this Salique law — _i. 2 

to the answer of the law — ii- 2 

that to her laws we do deliver you . . — ii. 2 



LAW-by law of nature, and of nations.. WpniyT. ii. 4 
prerogatifes and laws of the wars .... — iv. 1 
nave defeated the law, and outrun .. — iv- I 
for before breacli of the king's laws .. — jv. 1 
'tis expressly against the law of arms — iv. 7 
there is any martial law in the 'orld — iv. 8 

I'll be no breaker of the law \ Henry VI. i. 3 

been a truant in the law — !;• 4 

frame the law unto my will — ii. 4 

nice sharp quillets of the law — ii. 4 

the law of arms is such — iii- 4 

a certain question in the iaw — iv- 1 

I crave the benefit of law of arms .... — iv. 1 

by law to be tliy privilege — v. 4 

exceeded law, and left thee O'ep.) ....iHenryVl. i. 3 

and I lie open to the law — J. 3 

let him have all the rigour of the law — i. 3 

what shall we saj' to this in law — i- 3 

this is the law, and this duke — i. 3 

as a prey, to law, and shame — ii. 1 

receive the sentence of the law — ii. 3 

the law thou see'st, hath judged (rep.) — ii. 3 

in danger for the breach of law — .ii. 4 

contrary to form of law — :H* ' 

be condemned by coiu'se of law — iii. 1 

the laws of England may come irep.) — iv. 7 

it will be a stinking law — iv. 7 

with the same to act controlling laws — y. 1 
should not deal in her soft laws ....SHenryVI. iii. 2 

my will shall stand for law — iv. 1 

know'st no law of God nor man Richard III. i. 2 

before I be convict by course of law. . — i . 4 
in the table of his law commanded . . — i. 4 
upon their heads that break his law. . — i. 4 

urge (Jod's dreadful law to us — ..i. 4 

against the form of law, proceed .... — iii. 5 

tlieir aunt I am in law, in love — iv. 1 

that God, the law, my honour — iv. 4 

our conscience, swords our law — ■ v. 3 

not rend our subjects from our lavfs.HenryVIII. i. 2 

find mercy in the law, 'tis his — i. 2 

by all the laws of war you are — i. 4 

sharp reasons to defeat the law — ii. 1 

the law I bear no malice for my .... — ii. 1 
of less place might ask by law, scholars — ii. 2 

trial of the law o'ertake you — iii. 1 

the duke by law found his deserts .. — jJ!- '^ 

his faults lie open to the laws — iii. 2 

his own opinion was his law — iv. 2 

then his laws, in filling the whole . . — y. 2 
if this law of nature be corrupted. Troilus .§- Cress, ii. 2 
there is a law in each well-ordered . . — ii. 2 

these moral laws of nature — ii. 2 

if doing nothing be death by the law. TimonofA.i. 1 
most true ; the law shall bruise him — iii. 5 

for pity is the virtue of tlie law — iii. 5 

hath stepped into the law — iii. 6 

he owes the law his life, why. — iii- 5 

law is strict, and war is nothing (jep.) — iii. 5 

masters are, and pill by law! — iv. 1 

observance, customs, and laws — iv. 1 

civil laws are cruel; then what — iv. 3 

the laws, your curb and whip — iv. 3 

to yoiu' public laws at heaviest — .v. a 

was l.aw, then were they chosen Cnriolanus, iii. 1 

he hatli resisted law, and theiefore law — iii. 1 
opposing laws with strokes, and here — iii. 3 

into the law of children Julius Cmsar, iii. 1 

which we will answer as alaw.//?i'oH^<S-C/(!i7.iii. 10 
stronger than ever law could make.. Ci/mbeline, ii. 2 
Midmntius, which ordained our laws — iii. 1 
[col. Kn(.] Mulmutius made our laws — iii. 1 

the law protects not us ..<« — iv. 2 

for we do fear the law ? — iv. 2 

he stayed, attending Nature's law . . — v. 4 

and must endure otir law — v. .5 

traitor, if Rome have law Tllus.indronicus, i. 2 

let the laws of Rome determine all .. — ..i. 2 
because the law hath ta'en revenge.. — iii. 1 

but even with law, against — iv. 4 

that died by law for murder — iv. 4 

he made a law, (to keep her still.. fences, i. (Gow.) 

within our law, as dangerous — i. 1 

in vice their law's their will — .j. 1 

like a poor man's right in the law — ii. 1 

a son by order of law Lear, i. 1 

to thy law my services are bound — i. 2 

by the law of arms, thou wast not — v. 3 

say if I do, the laws are mine, not thine — v. 3 
let us take the law of our sides . . llon:eo 4- Juliet, i. 1 
is the law on our side, if I say— ay ?. . — .i. 1 

and the law on my side — .ii- 4 

what the law should end — iii. 1 

thy fault our law calls death — !!i- 3 

hath rushed aside the law — iii. 3 

the law, that threatened death, becomes — iii. 3 
. at Mantua's law is death to any he — v. 1 

nor the world's law (rep. ) — v. 1 

unto the rigour of severest law — v. 3 

well ratified by iaw, and heraldry Hamlet,i. 1 

with all bands of law, to our most — i. 2 

for the law of writ, and the liberty — ii. 2 

the law's delay, the insolence of office.. — iii. 1 

buys out the law ; but 'tis not so — iii. 3 

put the strong law on him — iv. 3 

but is tills law? Marry is't (rep.) — v. 1 

the law, (with all his miglit, to enforce .. OWeHo, i. 2 
time of law, and course of direct session — i. 2 

the bloody book of law — i. 3 

LAW-BREAKER, a villain Cymbeline,iv. 2 

LAW-DAY— keep leets, and law-days . . Othello, iii. 3 
LAWFUL— lawful name of maiTying..Ve>ry >f. i.v. 6 

is it a lawful trade? Measure for Measure, ii. I 

lawful mercy is nothing akin — ii. 4 

I will be content to be a lawful hangman — iv. 2 
now prove our loving lawful .... Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 
and that no lawful means can. Merch. of Venice, iv. 1 
or the marriage is not lawful .. . . AsyouLike <t,\\\.3 

you sec it lawful then iU'sWell, iii. 7 

: with this deceit 60 lawful — iii. 7 



LAWFUL -a lawful deed (rep.') All's V/ell, iii. 7 

if this be not a lawful case for me.. Taming of Sh. i. 2 

is it lawful, pray you, to see Winter'sTale, ii. 2 

my si>ell is lawful; do not shun her,. — v. 3 

let it be an art lawful as eating — v. 3 

lays most lawful claim to King John, i. I 

his lawful king, cut off the sequence — ii. 1 
on the sight of us, your lawfuf king — ii. 1 

then by the lawful power that I .... — iii. I 

lawtul let it be, that I have room. . — iii. ! 
we thought ourself thy lawful king. Richard II. iii. 3 

is it not lawful, an' please your Henry V, iv. 8 

and the lawful heir of Edward kmg.\ Henry VI. ii- 5 
doubting thy birth and lawful progeny — iii. 3 
reverenced for their lawful king .... — v. 4 

great England's lawful king IHemyVI. v. 1 

then am 1 lawful king ZHenryVI.'i. 1 

conscience tells me, he is lawful king — i. 1 
before a true and lawful magistrate. . — i. 2 
thy sovereign, and thy lawful kiug? — ii. 2 

crave thy just and lawful aid — iii. 3 

king in lawful marriage — iii. 3 

him that were not lawful chosen .... — iii. 3 
against his brother, and his lawful king? — v. 1 
it lawful that I invocate thy g\\ost. .Richard III. i. 2 
our lawful [Coi. Kn(. -sovereign] king — i. 3 

what lawful quest have given tlieir .. — i. 4 

joyful, grant their lawful suit — iii. 7 

thy unrest on England's lawful earth — iv. 4 
who deemed cm- marriage lawful ..Henry VIII. ii. 4 

provebut our marriage lawful — ii. 4 

is as lawful, for we would give.. Troilus ^ Cress, v. 3 
shall answer by a lawful form .... Coriolanus, iii. 1 

to suffer lawful censure — iii. 3 

to use my lawful sword! — v. 5 

true rites, and lawful ceremonies. JuKms Cirsar, iii. I 
getting of a lawful race ..Antony fy Cleopatra, iii. 11 
tilings set down by lawful counsel ,,Cynibelinc,i. 5 

me of my lawful pleasure she — ii. 5 

is another's lawful promised lo\e.. Titus Andron. i. 2 

to make man his lawful music Pericles, i. 1 

be it lawful, I take up what's cast away . . Lear, i. 1 

got 'tween the lawful sheets — iv. 6 

their papers, is more lawful — iv. 6 

myself, (lawful espials,) will so bestow. Hom/e*, ii. 2 
it prove lawful priEC, he's made for eyer. Othello, i. 2 
in session sit with meditations lawful? . . — iii. 3 

LAWFULLY— lawfully by this . . Mcr.of Venice, iv. 1 

may lawfully make title to as much . . All's tfell, i. 3 

may lawfully deal for his wife's soul ..Pericles, ii. " 
LAWLESS— our lawless lives ..TwoGen.of Ver. iv. 

lawless aud incertain thoughts.. Meas. for Meas. iii. 

seal this lawless and bloody book ..2HenryIV. iv. 

needs no indirect nor lawless course. Ricfiard III. i. 

fit to bandy with thy lawless sons. Titus Andron. i. 

[Coi.] list oT lawless resolutes Hamlet, i. 

m his lawless fit, behind the arras hearing — iv. 
LAWLESSLY-a woman lawlessly. TwoGen. of V. v. 
LAWN— cambrics, lawns WhUer'sTale, iv. 

lawn as white as driven snow — iv. 3 (song' 

nor for measures of lawn ; nor gowns . . Otiiello, iv. ' 
LAWRENCE— Lawrence VowUuej.. Henry VIII. i. 
LAWYER-lawyere in the vacation. -Js youLike j7,iii.; 

nor the lawyer's, which is political . . — iv. ■ 

thai! all the lawyers in Boliemia. ir/«^er's7"a!e, iv. 

let's kill all the lawyers 2Heu7-y VI. iv. 

all scholars, lawyers, courtiers — i.v. 

sometime, like a lawyer Timon of Athens, ii. 

and crack the lawyer s voice — iv. 

one of her women lawyer to me Cymleline, ii. 

like the breath of an unfee'd lawyer Lear, i. 

lawyers' fingers, who straight dream . Romeo SrJul.i, 

may not that be the skull of a lawyer?. . Hamlet, v, 
ly AY— lay her a-liold Tempest, i. 

lay her off — i. 

a torment to lay upon the damned .. — .i. 

can lay to bed for ever — ii. 

they will lay out ten to see — ii. 

1 could see this taborer; he lays it on — iii. 

monster, lay to your fingers — i.v. 

see how I lay the dust Tu'o Gen. of Verona, ii. 3 

you must lay lime — ii. 3 

you should lay my countenance . . Merry Wives, ii. 2 

when the court lay at Windsor — ii . 2 

I must very much 1 ay open mine — 

as to lay an amiable siege — 

come, lay their swords to pawn — 

I will lay a plot to tr.y that — 

other bars he lays before me — 

and how long lay you there? — 

to lay any of them on you Tuelfth Night, 

lay me, (!) where sad — ii. 4 (song 

I Clare lay any money, 'twill be — iii. 

you must lay down the treasures. -l/eos./oril/eos.ii, 
lay by all nicety, and prolixious .... — .ii. 
and imprisonment can lay on nature — iii. 

1 will lay myself in hazard — iv. 

had he been lay, my lord — v. 

la}' bolts enough upon him — v, 

lay hold of him — v. 

the false sweet bait that we lay for it.il/«c/i Ado, iii 

shall we not lay hands on him? — iii. 

and lay it to your heart — iii. 

I can fay it down in likelihood — iv. 

nay, never lay thy hand upon thy . . — v. 
that I am forced to lay my reverence by — v. 

what you lay to their charge — v. 

your invention can lay upon my sin — y. 
or sickness did lay siege to it . . Mid. j\.'s Dream, i. 

lay breath so bi tter on your — iii- 

lay them in gore, since you — v. 

I'll lay my head to any good man's. . Love's L. L. i, 

nor never lav his wreathed arms — iv. 

lay these glozes by — iv. 

and lay my arms before the legs of , . — v. 
some necessity, now lays on you. Mer. of Venice, iii 

on the wager lay two earthly — iii. 

shall I lay perjury upon my soul? .. — iv 

thcrefoce In.v bare your bosom — iv, 

where Cress'id lay that night — v 



I,A Y— the (liwtor liiv with me. . . Mnrh. nf Vrnice, v. I 

wiltthoii lay Imnils on mc Atyou I.iktity i. 1 

lis he Inv ntoii;; niidor nn imk — ii. I 

there Iiiv ho, stril<'lH'cI nluMU — iii. 2 

o'eri;rm\-ii wilh luiir. hiv sleeping — iv. 3 

Willi nclilers nil iliiiwri dry. lay eouching — iv. 3 

a v<uith here hi Ihe fi'rest laysclaiin to — v. 1 

theiliike will hiy iipun him all AWsiretl, iii. 2 

Rieat in <mi hope, lay onr host — iii. 3 

wo-ies vour lian^hter, hiys down .... — iii. 7 

ns it'his lile lay nii't — iii. 7 

his conditions, and lay him in straw — iv. 3 

which lay nice manners by — v. 1 

let your highness lav a more noble . . — v. 3 
for tliout'h'vou lav here . . Taming of Sh. 2 (indno.l 

how the yniinf; folks lay their — i. 2 

'twas a eoiiiniiKlity lay fritting — ii. 1 

hiyfortli the sown; what news — iv. 3 

slianie. lav it on nie — iv. 3 

lay haiiils on the villain — v. 1 

lav lioM on liiiii, I eharge you — v. 1 

I dare inv life lay domi frinlei's Tute, ii. I 

and, miglit we liiv the old proverb .. — ii. 3 

your dreams, which I'll lay down .. — iii. 2 

my cabin where I lay; thrice bowed — iii. 3 

to lav my bones there — iv. 1 

and lay aside the thoughts of Sieilia — iv. 1 

of the feast, and she lays it on — iv. 2 

more rags to lay on thee — i v. 2 

eoine on, lay it by: and let's first see — iv. 3 

lay it by too; another — iv. 3 

and tayrme where no priest — iv.3 

lay't so, to his charge — v. I 

lav open to my earthy Comedy of Errors, \\\. 2 

what claim lays she to thee? — iii. 2 

entiT. anil lav hold on him — v. 1 

voiir goods, that lay at host — v. 1 

lav it to thy heart, and farewell... Vac6fWi, i. 5 (let.) 

where we lay, our chimneys — ii. 3 

here lay Duncan, his silver — ii. 3 

his absence, sir, lays blame upon .... — iii. 4 

great tyranny, lay thou — iv.3 

lay on, MaodiifF; and damned — v. 7 

la.vs most lawful claim to KingJohn, i. 1 

to lay aside the sword — i, 1 

dt^th he lay claim to thine — i. I 

that still I lay upon mjy — i. 1 

between my father and my mother lay — i. I 

heaven lay not my transgression — i. 1 

nee<ls must you lay your heart — i. 1 

upon thy cheek lay I this zealous kiss — ii. 1 

we'll lay before this town '. — ii. i 

or lay on that, shall make your .... — ii. 1 

resign them, and lay down thy arms? — ii. 1 

before we will lay down our just-home — ii. 2 

and lay this Anglers even with — ii. 2 

John lays you plots; the times — iii. 4 

doth lay it open, to urge on — iv.3 

to make the French lay down — v. 1 

he'll not lay down his arras — v. 2 

anil lav aside my high blood's Richard II. i. 1 

what doth our cousin lay to — i. 1 

once did I lay an ambush — i. 1 

let them lay by their helmets — i. 3 

lay on our royal sword — i. 3 

to lay aside life-harming heaviness.. — ii. 2 

Iiersonally I laymy claim — ii. 3 

to lav my arms and power — iii. 3 

and lay the summer s dust — iii. 3 

I will lav a plot, shall show — iv. I 

our children where they lay IHentyir. i. 1 

fot with swearing— lay by — i. 2 

will lay him down siich reasons .. — i. 2 

liedown; lay thine ear close — ii, 2 

and lay open all our proceedings .... — ii. 3 

here I lay, and thus I bore my point — ii. 4 

upon the wanton rushes lay you down — iii. 1 

that I may lay mv head in — iii. 1 

think it meet, to fay so dangerous.... — iv. 1 

money, captain? I>ay out, lav out — iv. 2 

rebellion lay in his way, and he found it — v. 1 

would the quarrel lay upon our heads — v. 2 

1 lay aside that which grows to me! ..2H(?njT//r. i. 2 
to lay down likelihoods, and forms .. — i. 3 

where lay the king last night? — ii. i 

since we lay all night in the windmill — iii. 2 

when I lay at Clement's inn — iii. 2 

to lay a heav v and unequal hand'. ... — iv. 1 

the image of his power lay then in me — v. 2 

then, Pistol, lay thy head in Furies' — v. 3 

I will lav odds, that, ere this year..,. — v. 5 

but lay down our proportions Henry I', i. 2 

or lay these hones in an unworthy .. — i. 2 

80, a bade me lay more clothes — ii. 3 

and lay apart the borrowed glories .. — ii. 4 

to lay apart their particular — iii. 7 

indeed, the French may lay twenty .. — iv. 1 

our sins, lay on the king — iv. 1 

where in giire he lay insteepcd iv.6 

I could lav on like a butcher — v. 2 

blame and lay the fault on me? ....IHenryVI. ii. 1 

and lav new platforms to endamage ii. 1 

intend'st to lay unto my charge — iii. 1 

shall lay yourstately iv. 2 

come, corne, and lay him in — iv. 7 

and lay them gently on thy tender .. — v. 3 

light to listen to the lays iHenryVI. i. 3 

lay hands upfjn these traitors — i. 4 

lay not thy hands on me — iii. 2 

that lavs strong siege unto this — iii. 3 

or else lay down your head — iv. 1 

lay your weapons down, home — iv. 2 

I see them lay their heads together .. — iv. 8 

a dreadful lay! address thee — v. 2 

1 lay mc down a little while SHenryfl. ii. 3 

let us lay hands unoii him — iii. 1 

I lay it naked to tlic deadlv Richard III. i.2 

lav those honours on your high desert — i. 3 

I lay untri the grievous charge — i. 3 

tome lay in dead men's skulls — i. 4 



I'AY— dead bones that lay scattered.. Wic/iairf ///. i. t 

depart, and lav no hands on mc — i. 1 

when we both hiv ill the Held — ii. 1 

thev lay at Slon>-StLMtlord _ ii. 4 

on liiiii 1 lav what vou would lay on mo — iii. 7 
qiintli l)i;_'litoM, lav the -eiitle babes -^ iv. 3 

a hook ol prayers on tluii pillow lay — iv.3 
little honour he meant to lav upon.. Wen™ >'///. i. 1 
a speeding trick to lav down' la.livB — i. 3 

hung their heads, and tin 11 lay by — iii. 1 (song) 
then, lays his finger on his temple .. — iii. ^ 
talking lord can lay upon my credit — iii. 2 
when the brown wench lay kissing .. — iii. 2 
Ampthill, where the princess lay .... — iv. 1 
poodlicst woman that ever lay by man — iv. 1 

IS come to lav his weary bones — iv. 2 

cmhnliii me, tlun lay me forth — iv. 2 

lay all the weight ye can upon — v. 2 

I'll lay ye all by tlic heels — v. 3 

he'll lay about him to-day ..Troilm ^Cresiida, i. 2 

lay thy finger on thy lips! — i. 3 

if she, that lays thee out, says — ii. 3 

and we lay bv our appertainments .. — ii. 3 

I'll lay my life, with my — iii. 1 

and, princes all, lay negligent — iii. 3 

rain, to lay this wind, or my — iv. 4 

lay hold upon him, Priam — v. 3 

thus honest fools lay out their. . Timon of Alhens, i. 2 

troops, and lay for hearts — iii. ,5 

to wnom all sores lay siege — iv. 3 

Apemantus, ifit lay in tliy power? .. — iv.3 

on each bush lays her full mess — iv.3 

the nobility lay aside their ruth .... Corinlamts, i. 1 

come, lay aside your stitelicry — i. 3 

I sometime lay, here in C'orioli — i. 9 

lay a fault on us, 3'our tribunes — ii. 3 

lay the fault on tis. Ay, spare us not — ii. 3 

the city, and to lay all flat — iii. 1 

that is the way to lay the city flat .. — iii. 1 

therefore lay liold of him — iii. 1 

lay hands upon him, and bear irep.) — iii. 1 
masters, lav down your weapons .... — iii. 1 

and took wliat lay hefore them — iv.6 

is like to lay upon us Julius Ctesar, i. 2 

he was very loath to lay his — i.2 

and look yon lay it in the praetor's chair — i. 3 
and though we lay these honours on — iv. I 
lo, now! ifit lay in their hands ..Anlony ^Cleo. i. 2 

his remembrance lay in Egypt — i. 6 

made great Cajsar lay his sword to bed — ii. 2 
to lay his gay comparisons apart .... — iii. 1! 

to lay my crown at his feet — iii. 11 

to lay my dutv on your hand — iii. 11 

the poor last 1 lay iipon thy lips .... — iv. 13 

in the name lay a moiety of — . v. 1 

on Nilus' mud lay me stark naked .. — v. 2 

I dare lay mine honour, he will Cymbelinc, i. 2 

else an easy battery might lay flat .. — i. 5 
I will lay you ten thousand ducats .. — i. 5 

I will have it no lay — i. .'i 

lay out too much pains for purchasing — ii. 3 

he'd lay the future open — iii. 2 

wilt lay the leaven on all — iii. 4 

say, where shall's lay him? — iv. 2 

we must lay his head to the east .... — iv. 2 
come lay him down. Here's a few.... — iv. 2 

lay hands on him; a dog! — v. 3 

this tablet lay upon his breast — v. 4 

make way to lay them by their . . Tilus Andron. i. 2 
by night lay bathed in maiden blood — ii. 4 
teach her not thus to lay such violent — iii. 2 

hands can she lay on her life? — iii. 2 

these words, and lay it by — iv. 1 

the dead corse of Bassianus lay — v. 1 

to lay a complot to betray thy foes .. — v. 2 
and Valentine, lay hands on them . . — v. 2 
such griefs as you do lay upon yourself. Pericles, i. 2 

on thee I lay, whose wisdom's — i.2 

lay the babe upon the pillow — iii. I 

jewels, lay with you in your coffer .... — iii. 4 

that lay with the little baggage — iv.3 

as goddess-like to her admired lays — v. (Gower) 

to lay his goatish disposition to Lear, i. 2 

friend, lav comforts to your bosom — ii. 1 

if thy fliglit laj' toward the raging sea.... — iii. 4 

I will lay trust upon thee — iii. 5 

lay him in't, and drive toward Dover.... — iii. 6 

here he is; lay hand upon him — iv.6 

and to lay the blame upon her own — v. 3 

Verona, where we lay our scene, Komeo ^Jut. (prol.) 

I'll lay fourteen of my teeth — i. 3 

he, that can lay hold of her — i. 5 

fortunes at thy foot I'll lay — ii. 2 

not in a grave, to lay one in — ii. 3 

that would fain lay knife aboard .... — ii. 4 
lay hand on heart, advise; an' yoii .. — uL,b 
then will I lay the serving-creature's — '1$ 
under von yew-trees lay tliee all .... — \^p 
open the tomb, lay me with . Juliet .. — v. 3 
here untimely lay the noble Paris.... — v. 3 
and lay your hands again upon my .... Hamlei, i. 5 

to lay our ser\'ice freely at your feet — ii. 2 

when he lay couched in the ominous .. .. — ii. 2 

look, you lay home to him; tell him — iii. 4 

lay not that flattering unction — iii. 4 

they should lay him r the cold ground .. — iv. .'> 
from her melodious lay to muddy death — iv. 7 
lay her i' the earth; and from her fair . . — v. 1 
methonght, I lay worse than the mutines — v. 2 

lay hold upon Inm; if he do resist Othello, \. 2 

lay a sentence, which, as a grise, or step.. — i. 3 
loy thy finger— thus, and let thy soul be — ii. 1 

for the command, I'll la}''t upon you — ii. 1 

fortunes against any lay worth naming.. — ii. 3 

1 lay with Cassio lately; and, l)eing .... — iii, 3 

if this suit lay in Bianca's power — iv. 1 

honest, lay down my soul at stake — iv. 2 

calling back, lav not your lilame on me.. — iv. 2 
pr'y thee, to-nig'ht lay on my bed my .... — iv. 2 
lay by these:— sing willow, willow — iv.3 



LAY— that men must lay their murders.. 0/Af««, v. 8 

nay, lay tlicc down, anil roar — v. 2 

ay. ay; O lay mc by my mistress' side! .. — v. 2 

LAYKK-UP— ill layer-up of beauty.. ..Hcnrt/F.v. 2 

I>AYING-for laying them down.7'tfo Gen. ofVer. i. 2 

fool you, for laying on my duty . . Taming ofSh. v. 2 

at once her chojipy finger laying upon..Macbeih, i. 3 

in laying the jirize aboard •illinryJ'l. iv. 1 

their backs with laying manors }lenryt'llt.\. 1 

there's laying on ; take^t ofl' . . Troilut /i Ireisiita, i. 2 
by laying defects of judgment . . Antony ^Cleo. ii. 2 
scaled them (laying by that nothing.. CymMme.iii. G 

ay, and for laying autumn's dust Lear, iv. 6 

you laying these slight sullies on Hamlet, i\. 1 

that will scarc-e hold the laying in — v. 1 

lyAY'ST-whilst thou lay'st in thy. Mer. of Venice, iv. 1 

thou lay 'st the plot how I Henry IV. ii. 1 

for all the claim thou lay'st 3Henry VI. i. 1 

thou lay'st in every gash thot. TroUui ff Vressida, i. I 
lay'st thou thy leaden mace uyion.JuliusCirsar, iv. 3 

LAV-THOUGIITS in him Henry VI 11. i. i 

LAZAR— to relief of lazars, and weak ..HenryV. i. 1 
fetch forth the lazar kite of Cressid's.. — ii. 1 
never shrouded any but lazars . . Troilus 4- Cresi. ii. 3 
for I care not to be the louse of a lazar — v. 1 

LAZAK-I.,IKE— most lazar-like Hamlei, i. 5 

IjAZARTJS— as ragged as Lazarus ..MIenrylV. iv. 2 

LAZY— while I sit lazy by Temiieit, iii. 1 

how shall we beguile the lazy time. Slid. \.'s Dr. v. 1 
would detect the lazy foot of^time./l»yoKZ.i7,e/(,iii.2 

pale the lazy yawning drone Henry V. i. 2 

night owl's lazy flight, or like a iazy.3 Henry VI. ii. 1 
are these porters, tliese lazy knaves?Henry;'//i. v. 3 
you are lazy knaves; and here ye lie.. — v. 3 
Fatroclus, upon a lazy bed .... Troilvs.fy Cressida, i. 3 

through all these lazy tents — i. 3 

from the lazy finger of a moid ..Itomeo iy Juliet, i. 4 
LAZY-PACING— the lazy-pacing clouds — ii. 2 

LEA— thy rich leas of wheat, rye Ternpetl, iv. I 

her fallow leas the darnel HenryV. v. 2 

vines, and plough-torn leas ..Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

LEAD— lead oft" this ground (rep.) Tempest, ii. 1 

nor lead me, like a firebrand — ii. 2 

I pr'y thee now, lead the way (rep.') .... — ii. 2 

lead, monster; we'll follow -.. iii. 2 

that leads towards JMantua. . TiroGen. of Verona, v. 2 

nay, pray you, lead the way Merry Wives, i. 1 

and lead him on with — ii. I 

the sweet woman leads an ill — ii. 2 

she leads a very fiampold life — ii. 2 

leads a better life than — ii. 2 

whether had j'ou rather, lead mine eye — iii. 2 

I had as lief bear so much lead — i v. 2 

I thank thee: lead me on TwelflhNighl, i. 2 

if you will lead these graces to — i. 5 

lead me on — iii. 4 

then lead the way, good father — iv. 3 

lead forth, and bring you back...Vea5. for Meas. i. I 
from the vineyard to the garden leads — iv. 1 

please it your grace lead on? MuchAdo, i. I 

and lead nis apes iuto hell — ii. I 

nay, if they lead to any ill, I will — ii. 1 

the smallest twine may lead me — iv. 1 

didst thou not lead him through. JV/iW.A'.Diram, ii. 2 

and leads me to your eyes — ii. 3 

I'll lead you about a round — iii. 1 

come, wait upon him, lead him to.... — iii. I 
and lead these testy rivals so astray.. — iii. 2 

look thou lead them thus — iii. 2 

lead them up and down (re;;.) — iii. 2 

as lead, sir. Thy meaning (rep.).. Love's L. Lost, i\i. 1 

I say, lead is slow — iii. 1 

is that lead slow which is fired from — iii. I 
purpose now to lead vou to our court — v. 2 

ay, in a brooch of lead — v. 2 

of gold, silver,and lead, whereof .Mer. of Venice, i. 2 
I pray you, lead me to the caskets.... — ii. I 
this tnird, dull lead, with warning .. — ii. 7 

for lead? hazard for lead? (rpp.) — ii. 7 

is't like that lead contains her? — ii. 7 

fold, silver, and base lead — ii. H 
nt thou, thou meagre lead — iii. 2 

we'll lead you thither .^.! you l.ii.e it. iv. 3 

though the devil lead the muasixre. ...All'sll'ell, ii. 1 

why, he's able to lead her — ii. 3 

my prayers to lead them on — ii. 4 

knave, that leads him to these places — iii. i 
now will I lead you to the house .... — iii. 6 

will lead thee on to gather — iv. I 

that leads to the broad gate — iv. r> 

for your love to her, lead apes ,. Taming of Sh. ii. I 
siirah. lead these gentlemen to my .. — ii. I 
shall I lead the way? "Welcome! .... — iv. 4 
must lead on to some foul issue.. }l'inler's Tale, ii. 3 

boiling, in leads or oils? — iii. 2 

come, and lead me to these sorrows. . — iii. 2 

good Paulina, lead us from hence — v. 3 

dissevered, hastily lead away — v. 3 

and with thee lead my life .. Comedy of Errors, iii. 2 

till then, lead thou first — v. I 

lies like lead njion me Macbeth, ii. I 

son, lead our first battle — . ^' *^ 

leail thy foot to Enjiland's King John, iii. 4 

lead me to the revolts of England.... — v. 4 
didst lead me forth of that sweet .. IHchnrd II. iii. 2 
that he did lead to fight against ....\HenrylV.i. 3 

the bov shall lead our horses — ii. 2 

bid I'.iitler lend him forth — ii. 3 

ere 1 lead lliis life long — ii. 4 

than tliou, leiiils ancient lords — iii. 2 

who leads his power? under whose .. — iv. 1 

I am as hot as molten lead — v. 3 

God keep lead out of me — v. 3 

lead him to his tent — v. 4 

likedulland heavy lead iHenrylV. i. 1 

should ieiul his forces hither? — i. 3 

what a life dciefthou lead? — ii. 4 

on, Bardoljihj lead the men oway .. — iii. 2 

Blunt, lead him hence — iv.3 

we will our youth lead on to higher — iv. 4 



LEA 



LEAD— lead out many to the Holy..2/f'ji)i//('. iv. 4 

will make him burst his lend MteiiryVl. i. 1 

then lead ine hence; with whom .... — v. I 

CO, lead the way; 1 lonj; to see 2HentyJ'l. ii. 4 

to Ireland will yon lead a band .... — iii. I 
let a rabble lead you to your deaths? — iv. 8 
in God's name, lead; your king's ..SHennjI'I. iii. 1 

I myself will lead tt private life — iv. 6 

Edward dares, and leads the way.... — v. I 

come, lead me to the block Richard III. iii. 4 

so, go, up to the leads — iii. 7 

delay leads impotent and snail-jmied — iv. 3 
leads discontented steps in foreign .. — iv. 4 
and lead thy daughter to a conqueror's — iv. 4 
[Col. Kill.] lead me, officers to tlie block — v. 1 
be lead [Kn/.-laid] within thy bosom — v. ."! 

I will lead forth ray soldiers to — v. 3 

who doth lead them, bnt a paltry — v. 3 

lead in your ladies, every one Henri/ Fill. i. 4 

to lead them once again — i. 4 

lend on, o' God's name — ii. 1 

old Time shall lead him to his end .. — ii. I 

pr'vthee.lead me in — iii. 2 

lead the way, lords — v. 4 

to our pavilion shall I lead you. . Troilus Sr Cress, i. 3 

that seeing reason leads, finds — iii. 2 

I will lead the way — iii. 3 

what error leads, must err — y. 2 

swims with fins of lead Coriolanusy i. 1 

lead you on : follow, Cominius — i. 1 

these three lead on this preparation — i. 2 (let.) 
tlie Roman gods, lead their successes — i. 6 
leads filled, and ridges horsed with .. — ii. 1 

whatsoever god, who leads liim — ii. 1 

that leads my use of anger — iii . 2 

with Aufldius, leads a power 'gainst — iv. H 
to melt the city leads upon your pates — iv. 6 
he leads them Uke a thing made by.. — iv. (i 

why dost thou lead these men JuliusCwsar, i. 1 

danijers would you lead me, Cassius — i. 3 

that Brutus leads me on — ii. 1 

every man away; Brutus shall lead — iii. I 

vet something leads me forth — iii. 3 

Viid our commanders lead their charges — iv. 2 
taken at the flood, leads on to fortune — iv. 3 
Octavius, lead your battle softly on.. — v. 1 

in peace, lead on our days to age 1 — v. 1 

whv then, lend on: O that a man — v. 1 

whither straight I will lead you Antony ^-Cleo. ii. 2 

lead me IVoni l\ence, I faint — ii. 5 

lend me to my chamber — ii. .'i 

will vou lead, lords? — ii. 6 

that does lead mine honour — ii. 7 

love, I am full of lead — iii. 9 

and will lead you, where rather .... — iv. 2 
retire to your chamber? -Lead me.... — iv. 4 

he'lllead me then in triumph? — v. 2 

and there I'll lie: lead, lead Cymbeline, iv. 4 

I lead espoused ray bride along . . Tilus Andron. i. 2 
who leads towards Rome a band .... — v. 2 

the rest nntidd: sir, lead the way Pericles, v. 3 

to give liim way; lie leads himself Lear, ii. 4 

to lead him where he would — iii. 7 

whom I'll entreat to lead rae — iv. 1 

plague, when madraen lead the blind .. ., — iv. I 

thy arm; poor Tom shall lead tliee — iv. 1 

that wants the means to lead it — iv. 4 

I'll lead you to some biding — iv. 6 

tears do scald like molten lead — iv. 7 

feather of lead, bright smoke .... Romeo SfJitliel, i. 1 
I have a sonl of lead, so stakes me . . — i. 4 
should lead her into a fool's paradise — ii. 4 

slow, heavy, and pale as lead — ii. 5 

lead, boy; which way? yea, noise! .. — v. 3 

and lead you even to death — v. 3 

whither wilt thou lead me? Hamlet, i. 5 

and leads the will to desperate — ii. 1 

if circumstances lead me — ii. 2 

■whether love lead fortune, or else — iii. 2 

and likelihood to lead it — v. 1 

they have not, to lead their business .... Othello, i. 1 
lead to the Sagittary the raised search. . — i 1 
pray you leaden; at every house I'll call — i. 1 
sport and revels his addiction leads him — ii. 2 

collied, assays to lead the way — ii. 3 

will be your surgeon: lead him off . .. — ii. 3 
which lead directly to the door of truth — iii. 3 

■LEADEN— with leaden legs Mid.N.'s Dream, iii. 2 

in leaden contemplation Love^sL, Lost, iv. 3 

wbunds like a leaden sword — v. 2 

what says this leaden casket? Merch. of Venice, iii. 7 
O you leaden messengers, that ridQ. .AlVs IVell, iii. 2 
golden sceptre for a leaden dagger ..1 HenrylV. ii, 4 

then leaden age, quickened with \ Henry FI. iv. 6 

if he be leaden, icy, cold Richard III. iii. 1 

is leaden servitor to didl delay — iv. 3 

lest leaden slumber peise me down.. — v. 3 
cushions, leaden spoons, irons of . ...Coriolanus, i. 5 

tie leaden pounds to his heels — iii. 1 

our swords have leaden points ..Julius Caesar, iii. I 

lay'st thou thy leaden mace upon .. — iv. 3 

have this while with leaden thoughts.. O'Ae/Zo, iii. 4 

LEADER— now you are a leader .. Merry iVives, iii. 2 

we must follow the leaders Much Ado, ii. 1 

every leader to his charge 1 HenrylV.^ v. I 

and a most go.llant leader 2HenryIF. iii. 2 

that is the leader of so many thousands — iii. 2 
well-appointed leader fronts us here? — iv. 1 
the leaders, having charge from you — iv. 2 
such a worthy leader wanting sda....\HenryFI. i. 1 
a knight, a captain, and a leader.... — iv. 1 
thou princely leader of our English, — iv. 3 

bees, that want their leader 2HenryVI. iii. 2 

Henry, with your leader ZHenry VI. iv. 2 

limit each leader to his several .. liichard\III.\.Z 

they have a leader, TuUus Coriolanus, i. I 

BO our leader's led Antony Sr Cleopatra, iii, 7 

LEADINO-blind fortune leading. A/er.o/ Venice, ii. 1 

Mortimer, leading the men of 1 HenrylV. i. 1 

t>e:ag men of such great leading .... — iv. 3 



[ 430 ] 



LEADING— I beg the leading Henry V. iv. 3 

shall have the Icoding of this foot . Richard HI. v. 3 
wilt have the leading of thine own .Coriolanus, iv. 5 
fj'om that place I shall no leading need.. Lear,iv. 1 

LEAD'ST— thou but lead'st this ..Mer.of Venice, iv. 1 

to run lead'st first, to win some Coriolanus, i. 1 

we'll follow where thou lead'st ..Tilus Andron. v. 1 

LEAF— but with one green leaf on it.. Much Ado, ii. 1 

writ on both sides the leaf Love'sL.Lost, v. '2 

I turn the leaf to read tliera Macbeth, i. 3 

fallen into the sear, the yellow leaf .... — v. 3 

met with tlie fall of leaf Richard U. iii. 4 

an' 'twi-ie an nsjien leaf 2Hi-nrylV. ii. 4 

not within the Itnf of pity \{]:\i.TimonofAihens,iv. 3 

is not the leaf turned down Julius Cfrsar^ iv. 3 

morn-dew on the myrtle leaf ..Antony fyClco. \ii. 10 
fold down the leaf where I have left.Cynibeline, ii. 2 

here the leaf's turned down — ii. 2 

no, nor the leaf of eglantine — iv. 2 

I will go get a leaf of brass .. TiiusAndronicus, iv. I 
your plantain leaf is excellent . . Romeo ^Juliet, i. 2 

LEAFY— now within the leafy shelter.. /■'iric/es, v. 1 

LEAGUE — bore us some lea.jues to sea.. Tempest, i. 2 

ten leagues beyond man's life — ii. I 

five and thirty leagues — iii. 2 

is not three leagues off Two Gen. of Verona, v. 1 

there is such a league between Merry Wives, iii. 2 

a league below the city . . Measnrefor Measrtre, iv. 3 
he was not three leagues off when I . . Much Ado, i. 1 
her house remote seven leagues.. Mid. iV.'sD^eam, i. 1 
and in the wood, a league without .. — i. I 
ere the leviathan can swim a league — ii. 2 
with leagues, whose date till deatli . . — iii. 2 
a league from Epidamnum .... Comedy of Errors, i. 1 

by twice five leagues, we were — i. 1 

keep then fair league and truce with — ii. 2 
you peace, and fair-faced league .. ..King John, ii. 2 

this league, that we have made — ii. 2 

oppression hath made up this league — iii. 1 
married in league, coupled and linked — iii. 1 
O make a league with me — iv. 2 

inglorious league! shall we — v. 1 

malice in a vein of league — v. 2 

will keep a league till death Richard II. v. 1 

in the air a thousand leagues from,.] Henry I V. iii. 1 
bore it twelve leagues, and sold it. ... Henry V. iii. 2 
divorce of their incorporate league. ... — v. 2 

for surety of our leagues — v. 2 

conditions of that league must be ..XHenryVI. v. 4 

intercession to obtain a league — v. 4 

shameful is this league! 2 Henry VI. i. 1 

would have yielded to this league — i. 1 

vowed some league inviolable SHenry VI. ii. 1 

to crave a league of amity — iii. 3 

by this league and marriage — iii- 3 

in sign of league and amity Richard III. i. 3 

continue this united league — ii. 1 

thou this league with thy embracements — ii. 1 
for France hath flawed the league . . Henry VIII. i. 1 

for from this league peeped — i. 1 

cracked the league between us and .. — ii. 2 
a league between his highness and . . — iii. 2 

within seven leagues of jlome Julius Ctrsar, iii. 1 

with the lion deeply still in league. . TitusAnd. iv. 1 

when we all join in league — iv. 2 

for league, and good to Rome _ — v. 3 

longest leagues make short . . Pericles, iv. 4 (Gower) 

LEAGUED— his arras thus leagued. . Cymbeline, iv. 2 

if partially affined, or leaguedin office.. 0//ie»o, ii. 3 

LEAGUER— carried into a leaguer ..All's Well, iii. 6 

LEAH— I had it of Leah, when L.Mer.ofVenice, iii. 1 

LEAK— we leak in your chimney I Henry IV.ii. 1 

shall never leak, tnough it do 2HenrylV. iv. 4 

her boat hath a leak ■ Lear, iii. 6 (song) 

LEAKED— leaked is our ba.T^i..Timon of Athens, iv. 2 

LEAKY— as leaky as an unstauclied .... Tempest, i. 1 

sir, thou'rt so leaky, that we ...intonySfCleo. iii. 1 1 

LEAN— I'll but lean, and my .. Two Gen. ofVer. ii. 5 

out of my lean and low ability.. TwelflhNight, iii. 4 

nor lean enough to be thought — iv. 2 

1 do lean upon justice, sir Meas.forMeas. ii. 1 

she leans me out at her mistress' Much Ado, iii. 3 

fat paunches have lean pates Love's L. Lost, i. 1 

sometime to lean upon my poor — v. 1 

and ragged sails, lean, rent, and. Afer. of Venice, ii. (i 
shifts into the lean and slippered.. A^j/oui^e //, ii. 7 
the burden of lean and wasteful .... — iii. 2 
a liian cheek; which you have not .. — !!!• ^ 

lean but upon a rush — U!* -^ 

howe'er you lean to the nayward . IVinter'sTale, ii. 1 

out, alas! you'd be so lean — iy. 3 

have but lean luck in tiie match. Comedy of Err. iii. 2 
another lean unwashed artificer . . . King John, iv. 2 
hangman hath no lean wardrobe ....^HenrylV. i. 2 

and lards the lean earth with — ii. 2 

here comes lean .lack, here — ii. 4 

then Pharaoh's lean kine are — ii. 4 

Northumberland did lean to him — iv. 3 

'complices lean on your health 2HenryIV. i. 1 

a little, lean, old, chapped, bald — iii. 2 

he hath like lean, steril, and bare.... — iv. 3 

and somctliing lean to cutpurse of Hemy V. v. 1 

lean raw-boned rascals! \Heury Vh i. 2 

first, lean thine aged back — ii. 5 

lean famine, quartering steel — iv. 2 

are lank and lean with thy 2HenryVI. i. 3 

of York, our prop to lean upon SHenry VI. ii. 1 

on thy .shoulder will I lean — ii. 1 

my lord leans wondrously to . . Timon of Athens, iii. 4 

the want that makes him lean — iv. 3 

I'll lean upon one crutch Coriolanus, i. 1 

Cassius has a lean and hungry ....JuliusC(Ssar,i. 2 

which hath made you lean — ii. 2 

I struck the lean and wrinkled .Antony SfCleo. iii. 9 

make a staft' to lean upon — iii. 11 

aepender on a thing that leans? Cymbeline, i. 6 

yet forlorn and lean, o'ercome .... Tins Andron. ii. 3 

see, how she leans her cheek Romeo Sf Juliet, ii. 2 

that the lean abhorred monster — v. 3 

your fat king, and your lean beggar . . Hamlet, iv. 3 



LEA 



LEAN— that else leans on the aftair Hamlet, v. 3 

LEANDER— how ycning l^<ia.m\e!TwoGen.ofVer. i. I 
so bold Leander would adventure it.. — iii. 1 

IjCander the good swinuiier Mtich Ado, v. 2 

Leander, he would have lived .. As you Lilte il, iv. 1 
LEANED— that leaned on them. Troilus ^ Cress, iii. 3 

you leaned unto his sentence Cymheliiie, i. 2 

LEANER— let not a leaner action. ./<ji/o7ij/<S-C/fo. ii. 2 

LEAN-FACED villain Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

as lean-faced Envy in her 2 Hemy VI. iii. 2 

LEANING cheek to cheek? tVinler's Tale, i. 2 

thus, leaning on mine elbow King John, i. 1 

and faint, leaning upon my sword I Henry IV. i. 3 

on him leaning, and all Tvoy... .Troilus^Cress. v. 3 

LEAN-LOOKED prophets liichard II. ii. 4 

LEANNESS of his purse -iHenryVI. i. 1 

leanness, leanness is all gaunt Richard II. ii. I 

the leanness that afflicts us Coriolanus, i, 1 

LEAN-WlTTED-lean-witted fool .Richard U. ii. 1 
LEAP— chimneys shalt thou leap .. Merry Wives, v. 5 

and leap all civil bounds Tueljih Night, i. 4 

triumph, lea]), and laugh Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 

and leap for joy, thoujjh they are. ... — v. 2 

to laugh, and leap, and say Merch. of Venice, i. 1 

but a not temper leansover a cold . .. — i. 2 

ready to leap out of himself Winter's Tale, v. 2 

and yet will I leap down King John, iv. 3 

and ruffians dance and leap Richard II. ii. 4 

it were an easy leai), to pluck 1 HinrylV. i. 3 

I should quickly leap into a wife Henry V. v. 2 

leap o'er the walls for refuge 1 Henry VI. ii. 2 

leap me over this Btoo\(rep,) iHenryVI. ii. 1 

and made the lame to leap — ii. 1 

a precipice for no leap of danger Henry VIII. v. 1 

our play leaps o'er the vaunt Troilus ^ Ct est. (prol.) 
leap in with me into this angry.... Julius Caisar,i. 2 

to leap in ourselves, than tarry — v. 5 

will leap to be his friend Antony ^ Cleo. iii. 11 

leap thou, attire and all — iv. 8 

I leap into the seas, where's Pericles, ii. 4 

my heart leaps to be gone into my .. — v. 3 
dogs leap the hatch, and all are fled .... Lear, iii. 6 

the moon would I not leap upright — iv. 6 

and Romeo leap to these arms. . Romeo Sf Juliet, iii. 2 

O bid me leap, rather than marry. ... — iv. 1 

LEAPED— the first man that leaped. . . . Tempest, i. 2 

such strange bull leaped your Much Ado, v. 4 

like him that leaped into the custard. ./IZCs Well, ii. 5 

though I swore I leaped from — iv. 1 

leaped into destruction 2HenryIV. i. 3 

months asleep, and leaped them over — iv. 4 
as if ruin leaped from his eyes .... Henry VIII. iii. 2 

that now is leaped into it Titus Andron. ii. 4 

and leaped this orchard wall Romeo ^' Juliet, ii. 1 

the lusty Moor liath leaped into Othello, ii. 1 

LEAP-FROG-win a lady at leap-frog. . Henry V. v. 2 
LEAPING— turned my leaping time.Cymbeline, iv. 2 
outface me with leaping in her grave?. . Hamlet, v. 1 
LEAPING-HOUSES— 

and dials the signs of leaping-houses. I Henry fr. i. 2 
LEAR— Lear, whom I have ever honoured.. Lear, j. 1 

unmannerly, when Lear is mad — i. 1 

see better Lear; and let me still — i. 1 

Lear, [A'n/. -king] give but that portion .. — 1.1 

not Lear: does Lear walk thus? — i. 4 

Lear's shadow? I would learn that — i. 4 

Lear, Lear, Lear! beat at this gate — i. 4 

nuncle Lear, nuncle Lear, tarry — i. 4 

the poor distressed Lear is i' the town .... — iv. 3 

I'll bring you to our master Lear — iv. 3 

as for the mercy which he intends to Lear — v. 1 
king Lear hath lost, he and his daughter — v. 2 
the most piteous tale of Lear and 01 him — v. 3 
my writ is on the life of Lear — v. 3 

LEARN— though thou didst learn . ., Tempest, i. 2 

should he learn our language? — ii. 2 

to learn his wit to exchange. TwoGen.of Verona, ii. 6 

you'd quicklv learn to know — iv. 2 

Falstaff will learn the humour Merry Wives, i. 3 

learn to begin thy health .. Measure for Measure, i. 2 

let's go learn the truth of it — i. 2 

but we do learn by those that — i. .^ 

and let liim learn to know — i. 5 

I'll gladly learn — .ii. 3 

1 do desire to learn, sir — iv. 2 

I learn in this letter that Don Pedro.. il/wcA Ado, i. 1 
how apt it is to learn any hard lesson — .i. 1 
I will presently go learn the day .... — ii. 2 

you learn me noble thankfulness — iv. 1 

and learns news of him Love's L. Lost, ii. \ 

negligent student! leorn her by heart — iii. 1 

if that she learn not of her eye — iv. 3 

I am to learn ; and such a want-wit. iV/cr. of Ven. i. 1 
not yet so old but she may learn .... — iii. 2 

so dull but she can learn — iii. 2 

must not Icani me how to remember. .4s you iifce,i.2 

learn of the wise, and perpend — iii. 2 

then learn this of me — v. 1 

shall do yoii no harm to learn Alt's Well, ii. 2 

she's aptto learn, and thankful . . Taming ofSh. ii. i 

but learn my lessons as I please — iii. 1 

to learn the order of my fingering .. — iii. 1 
ere I learn love, I'll practice to.. Comedy of Err. ii. 1 
well, sir, learn to jest in good time . . — ii. 2 

we learn no other Macbeth, v. 4 

to avoid deceit, I mean to learn King John, i. 1 

to learn how you have dealt for him — v. 2 

then learn to know him now Richardll. ii. 3 

thy very beadsmen learn to bend. ... — iii. 2 
and learn to make a body of a limb. . — iii. 2 
so that by this intelligence we lenrn — iii. 3 

reverence, who, I cannot learn — iii. 3 

would learn him forbearance from .. — iv. 1 

learn, good soul, to think our — v. 1 

must needs learn, lord, to amend ..\ Henry IV. iii. 1 
learn this, Thomas, and thou sha.lt..2 Henryl V. iv. 4 

and they will learn you by rote Henry V. iii. 6 

but you must leain to know such. . , . — iii. 6 

or do not learn, for want of — v. 2 

I would have her learn, my fair — v. 2 



LEA 

LEAKN— learn to govern Iwtter •iUrnrijI'l. iv. !) 

ienrii this lesson, draw thy sword ..Wllemijyi.n. 2 

nnil leiirn ivwUile toBiTve — iii. 3 

are vou yet to learn — i\'. ^ 

but, as 1 can learn, he heorkens ttichanl HI. i. 1 

these, as I learn, ond such like toyt.. — i. I 

my ton^'iie I'ould never learn sweet .. — i. 2 

niiuiv; learn it, learn it. Marquis — i. 3 

thai 1 would learn of vou, us one — iv. 4 

and wilt tliou learn oi' me? — iv. 4 

near to the town ol' l.eiecster as we learn — v. 2 
learn this, brother, we live not .... Ilritrt/ VIII. ii. 2 
than thou learn a prayer without. 7i oi7. <j- Creas. ii. 1 
Toad's-stool, learn nie the proclamation — ii. I 

I hade the vile owl go learn me — ii- 1 

I'll ^o learn more of it — n. 1 

I'll learn to conjure and raise — ii. 3 

nKMi must learn now with pity — in. 2 

to the eitv ; learn how 'tis held Coriolanm, i. 10 

I learn, yon take tliinas ill Anlony tIrCleo. \i. 2 

for learn this, Sili\is; better leave — — m. 1 
I hourly learn a iloetine of obedience — y_. 2 

learn, being taught, forbearance Cymbeline, ii. 3 

learn now, for all, that I, which know — ii. 3 
what he learns bv this, may prove .. — lii- 5 
younslin", learn thou to make .. TilusAndron. ii. 1 

"O do not Team her wrath — i". 3 

1 will learn thy thought — i)i. 2 

learn to know thy meaning — iii. 2 

and learn of us to melt in showers .. — v. 3 
to learn of me, who stand i' the gaps . . Pericles, iv. 4 

learn more than thou trowest Lear, i. i 

I would fain learn to lie — i. 4 

Lear's shadow? I would leoru that — _i. 4 

sir, 1 am too old to learn — ii. 2 

neither know it, nor can learn ..Romeo ^Juliet, i. 1 

could we but learn from whence — i. 1 

learn me how to lose a winning match — iii. 2 
both do learn me how to respect you — Othello, i. 3 
do not learn of him, Emilia — ii. 1 

LEARNED, like sir Proteus. riroGen. o/Fooria, li. 1 

have learned me how to brook — v. 3 

and learned preparations Merry Wives, u. 2 

than ever I learned before — iv. 5 

I learned from my entertainment. r«ie;/r/iMg-7i(, i. 6 

free, learned, and valiant — i. 6 

I am sorry, one so learned Meas.forMcas.y. I 

only get the learned writer to set . . Much Ado, lii. 5 
this learned constable is too cunning — v. 1 

av sir, and very learned Lovers L. Lost, iv. 2 

well learned is that tongue — iv. 2 

but love, first learned in a lady's — iv. 3 

learned without opinion, and strange — v. I 
illustrate, and learned gentleman — — V. 1 
wit's own grace to grace a learned fool — v. 2 
that the two learned men have compiled — v. 2 
Bellario, a learned doctor . . Merchant of Venice, iv. 1 

a young and learned doctor — iv. 1 

you hear the learned Bellario — iv. 1 

most learned judge 1 a sentence (rep.) — iv. 1 
never schooled, and yet learned . . .is you Like it, i. I 
where learned you that oath, fool? .. — i. 2 

rose at an instant, learned, played .. — i. 3 

that hath learned no wit by nature.. — iii. 2 

art thou learned? No, sir — V. 1 

much matter to be heard and learned — v. 4 
when our most learned doctors leave. .JH's Well, ii. 1 
if the learned shoidd speak truth — — ii. 2 
all the learned and authentic fellows — ii. 3 
I learned it out of women's faces? IVinier'sTale, ii. 1 
I have learned by the perfectest. .iV/ac6c(A, i. 5 (let.) 
of your speed is learned by them. . . . KingJohn, iv. 2 
I Have learned these forty years .... Richard I J. i. 3 

to have learned his health of you — ii. 3 

hardly yet have learned to insinuate — iv. 1 
till I have learned thy language ..1 Henry If. iii. I 
and further, I have learned, the king — iv. 1 
I am sure they never learned that ot me — iv. 2 
than they have learnet of me ..%HcnrylV. (indue.) 

advised by my learned counsel — . i. 2 

be looked upon and learned — iv. 4 

learned lord, we prav you to proceed .. Henry V.\. 2 

seem they grave and learned? — ii. 2 

with all the learned council IHenry VI. i. 1 

bestowed on learned clerks, because.. — iv. 7 
learned, that fearful commenting. /(/cAarrf//f. iv. 3 

but by learned approbation Henry VIII. i. 2 

the gentleman is learned — i. 2 

my Teamed lord cardinal, deliver all — i. 2 

most learned reverend sir — ii. 2 

clerks, I mean, the learned ones — ii. 2 

this just and learned priest — ii- 2 

was he not held a learned man? .... — ii. 2 
fathers of the land, and doctors learned — ji. 4 
my learned and well-beloved servant — .;;• 4 

sudden, but he's a learned man — iii. 2 

accompanied with other learned .... — iv. 1 

assent of all these learned men — iv. 1 

the learned pate ducks to Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

and never learncrl the icy precepts — iv. 3 

if yon are learned, be not as Coriotanui, iii. 1 

more learned than the ears — iii. 2 

set in a note-book, learned Julius Cnfsar, iv. 3 

to do thus I learned of thee Antony /^Cleo. iv. 12 

hast thou not learned me how Cymbeline,]. 6 

learned indeed were that astronomer — iii. 2 
they learned of me, as true a dog. Titus Andron. v. t 
the worth that learned charity. iVncfej, v. 3 (Gow.) 

as I learned, the night before Lear, ii. 4 

where learncfl you this, fool? — ii. 4 

word with this same learned Thcban — iii. 4 

sit thou here, most learned justicer — iii. 6 

I must to the learned Romeo Sf Juliet, i. 2 

a rhyme I learned even now — i. -^ 

where I have learned me to repent .. — iv. 2 

I learned it in England Othello, ii. 3 

all qualities, with a learned spirit — iii. 3 

LEARNEDLY delivered Tempest, ii. 1 

in Bohemia can Icarnedlj'handle. Win(^r'f 7*a/r, iv. 3 
much he spoke, and learnedly Henry VIII. ii. 1 



[431 ] 



LEA 



LEARNT NU me your hingnagot Teinpest, i. 

his place, gravity, and learning .. Merry Wipes, iii. 

Imt was paid for mv learning — iv. 

for the death of learning Mid. N.'sDreain, V. 

were there a patch set on learning.. Love'sL.L. iv. 
Icuniing is hid lui iiiljunct ()cp.) .... — iv. 
not likewise sec our learning there?.. — iv. 

yon hear his learuiiig — v. 

and such branches of learning . . Mer. of Venice, ii. 
not learning more than the fond .... — ii. 
bettered with his own learning — i v. I (^letter 

of lean and wasteful learning AsyotiLlkett, iii.' 

institute a course of learning. .Tdmin^'o/SArew, i. 

this learning! what a thing it isl — i. 

for learning, and behaviour — i. 

of teaching and of learning I llenrylV.y. 

whose learning and good letters.. ..2HenryIV. iv. 
and learning, a mere hoard of gold .. — iv. 

for such receipt of learning Henry VIII, ii. 

of singular integrity and learning .. — ii. 
such men of gravitj', and learning .. — iii. 
those twins of learning, that he raised — iv. 
manhood, learning, gentleness .. Troilus ^ Cress, i. 
there will little learning die . . Timon of Athens, ii. 
have my learning from some.. ..Antony ^Cleo. ii. 
puts to nim all the learnings that. . . . Cymbeline, i. 
the sceptre, learning, physic .... — iv. 2 (song; 

O what learning isl Romeo ^Juliet, \\\. ' 

how to forget that learning Hamlet, v. 

LEARNING-PLACE— 
the court's a learning-place All's Well, i. 

LEARNT— thus much I have learnt. . Love's L.L. ii. 
he hath learnt so much fence already. .2Hfnr!/r/. ii. 
have learnt it without book ItomeoSf Juliet, \. 

LEASE— they are out by lease. . . Two Gen. of Ver. v. 
in all my lands and leases. . . . Taming of Shrew, ii. 

shall live the lease of nature Macbeth, iv. 

to let this land by lease Richard I J. ii. 

a long lease for the clinking 1 Henry I V. ii. 

have a lease of my life for 2HenryVI.iv. \ 

LEAS KD— is now leased out Richard II. ii. 

LEAS II— not following my leash.. VVinter'sTale, iy. 
sworn brother to a leash of drawers .1 Henry IV. ii. 
a fawning greyhound in the leash ...Coriotenus,i. 

LKASllEU m like hounds Hetiry V.S. (chorus 

LEASING— indue thee with leasing. TwelfihNighl, i. 
have, almost, stamped the leasing .. Coriolanus, v. 

LEAS'!?— at least two glasses Tempest,\. 

where she, at least, is banished — ii. 

[Co/.] most busy, least when I do it — iii. 

as greatest does least — iii. 

at least bring forth a wonder — v. 

they love least, that let men TwoGen.ofVer. i. 

that is the least, Lucetta — ii. 

the least whereof would quell — iv. 

or at the least, in hers — iv. 

at the least, if the love of. . Merry Wives, ii. I (iettei 

and I will, at the least, keep — iv. 

am best, when least in company .. TwelfihNighl, i. 

even to the least sinister usage — i. 

that upon the least occasion move.... — ii. 

a dozen times at least Measure for Measure , i. 

[Co(.] but least j'ou do repent — ii. 

it is the least. Which is the least? ., — iii. 

when it is least expected — iv. 

boldly, at least; but, O poor souls.... — v. 

stay here at the least a month Much Ado, i. 

[Co(.] at least a patient sufferaut'e.... — i. 
in least, speak most, to my capacity. AZ/rf. N.Dr. v. 
that breaks thera in the least degree.. Loye'xL.i.. i. 
and shall, at the least of thy sweet — i. 1 (letter 

most harm, least knowing ill — _il. I 

like a scholar at the least — iv. 2 

that doth least know how — v. 2 

the outward shows be least. iV/erc/iani of Venice, iii. 2 

they, that least lend it you AU'sWell, i. 2 

at least, in my opinion — iv. 2 

or not removes, at least, affection's. Taming ofSh. i. 2 
at least, have leave and leisure to. . . . — i. 2 

and so long am I, at the least — iv. 1 

seeming to be most, which we least are — v. 2 
whereof the least is not this suit.. Winter's Tale, I. 2 

at least, thus much; I'll pawn — ii. 3 

who least will seem to do so — iii. 2 

for a reply, at least, if you make — iv. 3 

usage (at least, ungentld of the dreadful — y. 1 

the least a death to nature Macbelh. iii. 4 

at least we'll die with harness on — y. 5 

at least from fair five hundred KingJohn, i. I 

let it at least be said, they saw — v. 1 

thus high at least, although Richard II. iii. 3 

thirty, at least, he fouglit with 1 Henry I v. i. 2 

when men least think I will — J. 2 

sixteen, at least, my lord — .i'- '^ 

at least nine hours, in reckoning .... — iii. 1 
the least of which, haunting a nobleman — iii. 1 

or at least desist to build at all? iHenrylV. i. 3 

with the least affection of a welcome — iv. 4 

at least, if thou canst speak 1 Henry VI. i. 4 

at least five Frenchmen died to-night — ii. 2 
and least proportion of humanity.... — ii. 3 
and not the least of these, but can ..IHenryVI. i. 3 

the least of ail these si"ns were — iii. 2 

at least, for less I should not hQ....ZIIenryVI. iii. 1 

ten days' wonder, at the least — iii. 2 

to save at least the heir of — iv. 4 

at tlie least, is duke of York — iv. 7 

1 thought, at least, he would have .. — v. 1 
half a mile at least south from .... Richard III. v. 3 

the least of you shall share — v. 3 

three at the least, that have Henry VIII. i. 1 

the least ruh in your fortunes — ii. I 

spake one the least word — ii. 4 

to meet the least occasion, that may — iii. 2 

or at least strangely neglected? — iii. 2 

at least good manners — v. 2 

comes where an estate is least. Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

1 have spoke the leafit — v. 3 

at the least, if3'ou take itaa Coriolanus, ii. 1 

forget, with the least cause — ii. 1 



LEAST— last, not least in love Julius Crrtar, iii, I 

catching hut the least noise Antony ^Cleo. i. 2 

the least wind i' the world will — ii. 7 

the least cause for what you seem .. — iii. 2 
yon shall, at least, go sec my lord . . Cymbeline , i. 2 

so nigh, ut least, that though — iii. 4 

at least, those which I heaved to headi — v. 5 
the least of tlicse unspeakable deserts. 7'i7u»,4iid. i. 2 

or, at the least, make them — v. 2 

at least he j udgcd so Pericles, i. 3 

that's the least fear — 1.4 

half an hour, Leonine, at the least .... — iv. I 

although last, not least Lear, i. 1 

daughter does not love thee least — i. I 

what, in the least, will you require — i. 1 

jf thou deny'st the least syllable — ii. 2 

in the least would fail her obligation .. .. — ii. 4 
able to do least, yet most suspected. /Borneo SfJul. v. 3 

at least the whisper goes so Hamlet, i. 1 

least, I am sure, it may be so in Denmark — i. 5 

our friends, at least Othello, ii. 1 

put the Moor at least into a jealousy .... — ii. I 

or (at the least) so prove it — iii. 3 

[Co/. Kw/.] opinion on my least misuse .. — iv. 2 
supnliest me with the least advantage .. — iv. 2 

LEA'THER-ever trod on neat's leather. Tempest, ii. 2 
his leather skin, and horns. . /Is yo?/ Like, iv. 2 (song) 
a headstall of sheep's leather .. Taming of Sh. iii. 2 
yon must case me in leather . . Comedy of Errors, ii. 1 
like a base- viol, in a case of leather.. — iv. 3 

put on two leather jerkins 2HenryIV. ii. 2 

scorn to go in leather aprons iHenryVI. iv. 2 

enemies, to make dog's leather of. ... — iv. 2 

drink out of his kiither bottle ZHenryVI.W. 5 

both sides, like a leather '}er\A\.Troilus fy Cress, iii. 3 

where is thy leather ujiron JuliusCwsar,\. 1 

men as ever trnd upon neat's leather — i. I 

LEATHER-CtJATSfor vou 2HenrvIF. v. 3 

LEATHERN-JERKIN— 
wilt thou rob this leathern-jerkin ..\HenryIV. ii. 4 

LEATHERN— their leathern wings. .A/ii/.A-.flr. ii. 3 

did stretch his leathern coat As you Like it, ii. 1 

she has a leathern hand — iv. 3 

LEAVE— let's take leave of him Tempest, i. 1 

I will leave him — ii. 2 

in these fits I will leave them — iii. 3 

bids thee leave these — iv. 1 

leave your crisj) eliannels — iv, 1 

leave not a rack behind — iv. 1 

where didst thou leave these varlets? — iv. 1 
now let us take our leave. ...TwoGen. of Verona, i. I 

he leaves his friends (»rp.) — 1. I 

give him leave, madam — ii.4 

leave off discourse of disability — ii.4 

I'll leave you to confer of — ii.4 

to leave my Julia, shall I — ii. 6 

I cannot leave to love (rep.) — ii. 6 

I leave at thy dispose — ii. 7 

give us leave, I pray awhile — iii. 1 

to leave our royal court — iii. I 

and I leave to be — iii. 1 

took my leave of madam Silvia — iv. 4 

you loved her not, to leav6 her token — iv. 4 

leave not the mansion so — v. 4 

and leave no memory of what — v. 4 

and leave her on such slight conditions — v. 4 

if we leave our pribbles and Merry Wives, i. 1 

did her grandsire leave lier — j. I 

by your leave, good mistress — i. I 

for the varld I shall leave behind — i. 4 

w^e must give folks leave to prate ... . — i. 4 

five us leave, drawer — ii. 2 
y your leave, sir — iii. 2 

she calls you, coz; I'llleaveyou .... — iii. 4 
by your leave ; I cry y oiu- mercy .... — iii. 5 

ere I will leave her thus — iii. 5 

let the boys leave to play — iv. 1 

leave your prabbles, oman — iv. 1 

we'll leave a proof, by that — iv. 2 

serve Got, and leave your desires — v. .5 

and leave you your jealousies too.... — v. 5 
if sir Toby would leave drinking.. Twelfth Night, i. 5 
give me leave to prove you a fool .... — i. 5 

aiid leave the world no copy — i. 5 

I shall crave of you your leave — ii 

it would please you to take \eti\e of her — ii 
give me now leave to leave thee .... — ii 

by your leave, wax , — ii 

when the image of it leaves him .... — ii 
and leave me to my hearing — iii 

by your leave, I'pray you — iii 

give me leave, I beseech you — iii 

and leave you for an hoifr — iii 

till he take leave, and presently .... — iii 
and leave thy vain hibble babble .... — iv. 

1 leave my duty a little — v. 1 (letter' 

and leaves unquestioned matttirs. Meas./t>r M' as. i. 
execution do I leave you of your .... — i. 
yet pive leave, my lord, that we .... — i. 
to give me leave to have free — i. 

I take my leave of you — i. 

come to it, by your honour's leave . . — ii. 
I'll take my leave, and leave j'ou to — ii. 

and leave you naked — |ii. 

leave me a while with the maid .... — iii. 

did Angclo so leave her? — lii. 

but leave we him to his events — • Sii. 

come, sir, leave me your snatches.... — iv. 

ho, by your leave — iv. 

I for a while will leave you — v. 

give me leave to question — v. 

sir, by your leave — v. 

I leave him to your hand — v. 

and happiness takes his leave MuchAdo, i. 

and so I leave you — i. 

I will leave them atthc next turning — ii. 

I liray you, leave me — ii. 

if it will not be, I'll leave you — ii. 

and leave us alone — iii. 

I must leave you — iii. 



LE AVE-father, by your leave Much Ado, iv. 1 

1 will kiss your hand, and so leave you iv. I 

I n-ill leave you now to your v. I 

and leaves off his wit! _ y. 1 

to-night I take my leave — v. 1 

I leave an arrant knave with your .. — v. 1 
I humbly cive you leave to depart . . — v. I 
there will I leave you too, for here . . — v. a 
thanks to you all, and leave us ... . — v. 3 
in his power to leave tlie figure. il/W. A'.'s Dream, i. 1 

leave you jour power to draw — ii.2 

only give me leave, unworthy as I . . — ii. 2 

to leave the city, and commit yourself — ii. 2 

and leave thee to the mercy ii.2 

ere he do leave till s grove ii.2 

wilt thou darkling leave me? ii. 3 

that men do leave, are hated most . . — ii. 3 

1 believe we must leave the killing out — iii. 1 
why, then you may leave a casement — iii. 1 
why unkindly didst thou leave me so? — iii. 2 

made me leave thee so? iii. 2 

a foolish heart, tliat I leave here behind — iii! 2 

pray, you, leave your coiutesy _ iv. 1 

it is well; leave it to his discretion .. v. I 

not till it leave the rider in tlie . . Love's L. Lost, ii. 1 

etudy his bias leaves, and makes his — iv. 2 

sweet leaves, shade folly iv. 3 

through the velvet leaves the wind — iv. 3 (vers.) 

tlien leave this chat; and good Biron iv. 3 

I will give you leave _ y. 2 

I'll leave it by degi-ees v. 2 

and so I take my leave v! 2 

kiss thy royal fl'nger, and take leave — v.' 2 
we leave you now with better . . Merch. of renice, i. I 

we two will leave you i, 1 

well, we will leave you tlien till — i! 1 

to take their leave: and there is — i. 2 

to leave a rich Jew's service, to become — ii. 2 

take leave of thy old master _ ii.2 

I'll take my leave of tlie , lew in .... ii.2 

I am sorry, thou wilt leave my father so — ii'. 3 

by your leave, sir ii. 4 

to take a tedious leave ji[ 7 

immediately to leave you and be gone — ii! 9 

of them all to leave the dam iii. 1 

steal both his, and leave itself iii, 2 

fair lady, by your leave, I come — iii! 2 

by your leave, I bid my very friends — iii. 2 

with leave, Bassanio; I am half iii. 2 

since I have your good leave to go . . — iii. 2 
I leave him to your gracious .... _ iv. 1 (letter) 

may st have leave to hang thyself .. — iv. 1 

give me leave to go from hence iv. 1 

and so I take my leave iv. 1 

leave hollaing, man; here v! I 

love me, and leave me not v! 1 

he would not leave it, nor pluck it . . — v! 1 

how you do leave me to mnie own . . — v. I 
of your will : I pray you, leave me. As you Like it, i. 1 

he gives tliem good leave to wander i i 

and never leave thee till he hath ta'eu •— i. 1 

60 please you give us leave _ i.2 

counsel you to leave this place — i! 2 

your griefs yourself, and leave me out — i' 3 

leave me alone to woo liim i. 3 

did you leave him in this contemplation?— ii! i 

I'll give thee leave to die _ ii. e 

give me leave to speak my mind .... — ii' 7 

for me hereafter to leave my wife. . . . _ iii. 3 

O 'brave Oliver, leave me not behi' thee — iii! 3 

Rosalind, I will leave thee iv 1 

did lie leave him there, food to _ iv! 3 

which is in the vulgar, leave — v! I 

arc fixed, and will not leave me All's Well, i ' 1 

freely have they leave to stand on .. — i 2 

and gives me leave to inn the crops . . — i 3 

pray you, leave me: stall this in — 1.3 

but give me leave to try success .... _ 13 

thou Shalt have my leave, and love . . — i! 3 

tliat dare leave two together _ ji 1 

when our most learned doctors leave us — ii! i 

grant! and so I take my leave ! _ Ii 3 

give me leave to use the lielp of _ ii! 3 

in what motion age will give me leave ii 3 

else I'd call you knave; I leave you.. _ ii' 3 

and leave lier bravely, go; the king.. _ ii 3 

take your instant leave o' tlie king . . — ii' 4 

procured his leave for present parting — ii' 5 

so I leave you to vour wisdom ii' 5 

your lordship; I'll leave you _ jij' g 

you barely leave our tliorns to prick — iv 2 

of whom he liath taken a solemn leave — iv' 3 

nay, by your leave, hold vour _ iv' 3 

and take your leave of all your friends — iv' 3 

and by the leave of my good lord.... _ iv' 4 

briars shall have leaves as well _ iv 4 

and leave him to your lordship _ v' 2 

that e'er I took her leave at court _ y' 3 

talting no leave, and I follow him.... _ v' 3 
leave me and her alone. ... Taming of Shrew 2 find 1 
by my father's love and leave.. . .!.;. _ ^ " , 

as he that leaves a shallow plash _ i' 1 

leave shall vou have to court _ i' | 

to take, and what to leave? ha! _ i' 1 

for a while I take my leave, to see .. — i' 2 

ease for me to leave his service _ i' 2 

have leave and leisure to make love — i' o 

yea, leave that labour to great _ i' 2 

give me leave; lam a gentleman _ ii' 1 

1 11 leave her houses three or four _ ii' 1 

and so I take my leave, and thank . . _ ii' 1 

then give me leave to have prerogative — iii! 1 

then give me leave to read philosophy _ iii] 

you leave his lecture when I _ jij' 1 

and give me leave awhile iii' 1 

your father prays you leave your ... . iii' 1 

here I mean to take my leave _ iii' 2 

for such a one as leaves a gentleman — iv' •' 

and so I take my leave, in resolution — iv ■' 

1 trust I may have leave to speak.... _ iv' 3 



I.EAVE— sir, by your leave .. Tatninff or shrew, iv. 4 
to need thee at home, therefore leave lis — v 1 
and here I leave you, sir. You shall _ v 1 
by your leave, she will be tamed so. . — v 2 
and leave you to your graver steps. Winler'sTale, i. 2 
and so leaves me, to consider what is — i.2 
distingiushment leave out betwixt . . — ii 1 
my women come; you have leave .. — ii! 1 

languished; leave me solely: go _ ii. 3 

you 11 leave yourself hardly one subject — ii. 3 
and that tliere thcu leave it, without — ii. 3 
burden to me: leave me; and think — ii. 3 

there weep, and leave it crying — iii 3 

and leave the growth untried of ... . — iv. (cho.) 

if tinkers may have leave to live. . . iv. 2 (son") 

I will even take my leave of you _ iv.''2 

I should leave grazing, were I of your i v. 3 

leave your prating; since these _ iv! 3 

business, that I leave out ceremony. . iv! 3 

and leave tliis young man in pawn . . — iv. 3 

never to marry, but by my free leave? v. 1 

wept to take leave of tliem v. 2 

and give me leave; and do not say .. v! 3 

what my sorrow gives me \e&ve.Comedy of Errors, i.l 

yet loath to leave unsought i. 1 

so you would leave battering ii.'2 

if not, I'll leave him to the officer .. _ iv! 1 

1 con.iure thee to leave me _ iv. 3 

I'll give thee, ere I leave thee _ iv! 4 

and leave him here witli me (»rp.) .. _ v' 1 

of the broil as tliou didst leave it Macbeth, i! 2 

so, humbly take my leave j. 4 

leave all the rest to me _ i! 5 

towards him; by your leave, hostess .. — i" 6 

the lie, leaves him _ ji. 3 

to leave no rubs, nor botches — jii " 1 

you must leave this. O full of _ iii! 2 

to leave his wife, to leave liis babes.... — iv! 2 

I take my leave at once iv 2 

he leaves the healing benediction — iv' 3 

at peace, when I did leave them _ iv. 3 

our lack is nothing but our leave — iv 3 

wilt thou give us leave a while? (jep.) King John, ( 1 
leave your children, wives, and you — ii. i 

shall leave his native channel ii' 2 

desolation leave them as naked as .. ii! 2 

and leave those woes alone, which I iii 1 

I leave your highness; grandam — iii! 3 

evils, that take leave, on their 

my nobles leave me, and my 

that leaves the print of blood where'er 

give me leave to speak 

desires your majesty to leave the field 

who didst thou leave to tend 

outward parts, leaves them insensible 

presently to leave this war 

and his summer leaves all faded ....Richard ILi. 

] take my leave before I have 

the last leave of thee takes my 

then let us take a ceremonious leave 
kiss your hand, and take his leave .. 
but you gave leave to my unwilling 

my lord, no leave take I 

too few to take my leave of you .... 

my letters patent give me leave 

give Richard leave to live till 

that his broad-spreading leaves did 

give sorrow leave a while to tutor 

then give me leave to go 

from my deathbed, my last living leave 
take leave, and part: for you must part 

where did Heave? At that sad 

well-graced actor leaves the stage.... 

leave us here alone 

then give me leave that I may turn. . 

at length have gotten leave to look . . — v. 5 

leave the prince and me alone I Henry IK i.2 

after we leave them; and, sirrah .... i. 2 

you have good leave to leave us ... . i! 3 

and to leave these rogues, I am ii! 2 

well, we leave that to the pioof. ii! 2 

how now, Kate? I must leave you.. — ii. 3 

this evening must I leave you ii. 3 

do thou never leave calling ji! 4 

let me entreat you leave the house . . — ii! 4 
give me leave to tell you once again — iii. 1 

must steal, and take no leave iii. 1 

and leaves behind a stain upon iii! 1 

and let us take our leave iii. 1 

and leave in sooth, and such protest iii'. 1 

lords, give us leave iii. 2 

by his hollow whistling in the leaves v! 1 

give me leave to breathe a while — v. 3 

I'll give you leave to powder me .... v. 4 

for I'll purge, and leave sack y. 4 

let us not leave till all our own — v. .5 

and give me leave to tell you 2Henrt/IF. i. 2 

if thou get'st any leave of me i.2 

but, by your leave, it never yet i. 3 

and leaves his part-created cost i. 3 

he leaves his back unarmed j. 3 

I commend thee, and I leave thee — ii. 2 (letter) 

him you did leave, second to none .. ii. 3 

take my leave of these six dry _ ii! 4 

wlien wilt thou leave figlitingo' days ii. 4 

we must hence, and leave it unpicked — ii.4 
give me leave to go through Glostershire — iv. 3 

when the bee doth leave her comb .. iv. 4 

will I to mine leave, as 'tis left iv. 4 

why did you leave me here alone — iv. 4 

depart the chamber, leave us here alone — iv. 4 
leave gormandizing; know, the grave — v. 5 

to give us leave freely to render Henry V. i. 2 

nor leave not one behind _ ii.2 

and leave your England, as dead — iii. (chorus) 
I must leave them, and seek some better — " iii. 2 

I will not leave the half-achieved.... iii. 3 

and those that leave their valiant ,. iv. 3 

as I will leave 'em to them — iv. 3 

O give us leave, great king, to view . . — iv. 7 



iii 


4 


IV 


2 


IV 


3 




2 




3 




B 




7 




7 


/.I 


2 




2 




2 




3 




3 




3 




3 




3 


11. 


3 


111. 


3 


iv. 


1 


IV. 


1 


V. 


1 


V. 


1 


V. 


2 


V. 
V. 


2 
3 



lilSAyE— yet leave our cousin Hraji/F. v 2 

she hath good leave _ v2 

and here take leave to go about my'.AHenryVI. i! 1 

let's leave this town ■... _ j 2 

back, you lords, and give us leave awhile — i' 2 

to leave my base vocation _ j 2 

leave olldelays, and let us raise — i"2 

nis sword didne'er leave st'-ikinn- _ i'4 

and leave our beds, hearing alarums — ii! 1 

household, leave this peevish broil . . _ iii i 

will you fly, and leave lord Talbot? — iii" 2 

to leave the Talbot, and to follow us . . — iii 3 

and give them lea\e to speak _ iv' i 

the sanguine colour of the leaves — iv' 1 

and leave my followers here, to fight — iv' 5 

then here I take my leave of thee — iv 5 

wilt thou yet leave the battle — iv' 6 

I pr'ythee, give me leave to curse v' 3 

I were best to leave him _ v' 3 

give me leave, I have deluded you — v! 4 

with whom I leave my curse _ v 4 

it then, and leave thine insolence iHenryt'l. i 3 

give me leave to show some reason .. — is 

go in God's name, and leave us _ i'4 

your grace shall give me leave _ i'4 

y,e'. l^y your leave, the wind was _ ii' 1 

churchman, leave to aflflict my heart! — ii 1 

give me leave, in this close walk _ ii 2 

give me leave to go _ ji'3 

as willingly at thy feet I leave it!!!." — ii' 3 

come, leave your drinking, and fall. . — lis 

my Nell, I take my leave _ jj' 4 

and caterpillars eat my leaves away — iii' 1 

1 can give the loser leave to chide. ... — iii' 1 
such losers may have leave to speak — iii' i 

what, will your highness leave — iii 1 

let thy Suffolk take his heavy leave.. — iii' 2 

ban, and will you bid me leave? .... _ iii' 2 

and take ten thousaad leaves — iij' 2 

cause to fear, before I leave thee .... — iv 1 

we will not leave one lord _ iv' 2 

that you should leave me !.! _ iv' 8 

and makes them leave me desolate . . — iv' 8 

«"teV"lgWs fee-simple without leave — iv 'lO 

and if I do not leave you all as dead — iv 10 

so great a power without his leave .. — v 1 

tliat keeps his leaves in spite of any _ v 1 

my soul to leave thee unassailed _ v' 2 

tlien leave me not, my lords ZHenrvl'l i' 1 

and give king Henry leave to speak. . — ' i' 1 

that I will leave my kingly tliroue . . — i 1 

thus do I leave thee _ ;! 1 

though I be youngest, give me leave' — i 2 
Lancaster leave to breathe _ j' .- 
most humbly I do take my leave _ i' 2 

and leave not one alive _ j' 3 

by your leave I speak it !!!! _ ii' 1 

and leave thine own with him _ ii' 2 

1 11 leave my son my virtuous deeds — ii' 2 

by your kingly leave, I'll draw it.... _ ii 2 

and leave us to our fortune _ ii 2 

we'll never leave, till we have _ ii' 2 

take leave, until we meet again.. ' _ ii'3 

and give them leave to fly _ jj" 3 

which takes her heavy leave? ii 6 

when his leaves put forth ! _ i( ^ 

leave; I'll try this widow's wit (rep.) — iii' 2 

I take my leave, with many thousand — iii 2 

sorrows leave to speak _ jjj' 3 

with your leave and favour ! _ iii 3 

leave Henry, and call Edward king _ iii' 3 

the leaves and fruil; maintained _ iii 3 

and leave your brothers to so speed, . — i \' 1 

you shall give me leave to play _ iv! I 

mind to leave you. Leave me, or tarry — iv' I 

leave off to wonder why I drew you . . — i v ."i 

I'll leave you to your iortune _ iv 7 

fair lords, take leave, and stand not.. _ iv' 8 

and so I take my leave jv a 

at Southam did! leave him _ v I 

that he should leave the helm _ v 4 

he should have leave to go away v 4 

sirrah, leave us to ourselves ! ! _ v 6 

and leave the world for me to i.'hichard III i! 1 

to give me leave, by circumstance . . _ ' i ' ■> 

known evils, but to give me leave .. — j! 2 

to leave this keen encounter i ' 2 

may please you leave these sad — i' 2 

for shame, and leave this world _ i' 3 

and leave out thee? stay dog _ j' 3 

why wither not the leaves, that want — ii' •' 

that her grace did leave it out — ii' 2 

when great leaves fall, then winter.. _ ii' 3 

but leave it all to God _ ii! 3 

in this resolution, here we leave y'o'ii" — iii' 7 

most joyfull.y, we take our leave _ iii" 7 

pray you, by your leave, how doth . . _ iv ' 1 

no, I may not leave it so _ iv 1 

poor soul, that takest thy leave of it! _ iv' 1 

I humbly take my leave iv 3 

and leave the burden of it all on thee — iv 4 

to give me leave, I'll muster up _ iy 4 

but, hear you, leave behind your son — iv' 4 

leave me; about the mid of night (rep.) _ v 3 
leave us never an understanding. Henry VIII. (nroi ) 

not unconsidered leave vour honour _ i 2 

though we leave it with a root _ i' 2 

leave these remnants of fool and feather — i' 3 

by your leave, sweet ladies _ j" 1 

but leave their flocks (rep.) _ {"4 

by all your good leaves, gentlemen . . — i'4 

whom to leave is only bitter to him. . ii 1 

so I leave him to him, that made ...! ii ■> 

to leave so sweet a bedfellow? (if;;.).. _ \\ '> 

the wliich to leave is a thousand-fold — ii'3 

your particular fancy, and leave me out — ii' 3 

and got your leave to make this present — ii' 4 

if thou canst: leave working _ iii 1 

your glace would leave your griefs .. _ iii' ) 

hath ta'eu no leave; has left _ iii' 2 



LEA 

LEAVE me n while. It shivU he to.. Henry fill. iii. 2 

I leave to \our own conscience — iii. '.! 

and 80 we'll luiive vou to your — iii. 2 

puts fcirlli tlu- tiiidVr leaves ofhope.. — iii. 2 

must I ilu-u Kiivc yoii? must I — !.''• '^ 

Borrow Cronrvcll leaves liis lord .... — iii. 2 

williiii; to leave tlieir luirilen — iv. 2 

give nie leave to speak him — iv. 2 

niul leave me here in wretchcilness .. — iv. a 

hid tlie music leave, tliey arc Imrah.. — iv. 2 

Patience, von most not leiive me vet — iv. a 

bcl'ore hcgo to bell. I'll take my le:ive — v. 1 

leave me alone; fur I nnnt think ol'. . — v. 1 

you'll leave \inir noise anon — V. 3 

vc rn.le slaves, leave v.uir f,'.-iping .... — v. 3 

soslmll sheleiiveherhlesseilness .... — v. 4 
I will leave ull as I found it.. Troilus ^Cresskh/i. 1 

fair leave, and larj;« scenrity — i, 3 

and leave the faction of fools — ii. I 

mv leave, mv lord. Your leave (rep.) — iii. 2 

that itself will leave, to be — iii. 2 

while some men leave to do 1 — jii. 3 

and leave you hindmost — iii. 3 

if ever she leave TroilusI — iv. 2 

mv kiss, sir: lady, by your leave — iv. 5 

eo'to l\im we leave it — iv. 5 

I will rather leave to see Hector — v. 1 

let's leave the hermit pity with — v. 3 

bnt gi\e me leave to take that course — v. 3 

Hector, I take my leave; thou dost . . — v. 3 

that I shall leave vou one o' these days — v. 3 

and every where, tie leaves, and takes — v. 5 

Tfill you'leave me there? Timoiiof.-li/iens,\i. 2 

as I had leave of means? — ii. 2 

by your leave, sir,— What do you ask — iii. 4 

nor more willingly leaves winter .. .. — iii. 6 

leave their false vows with him — iv. 2 

as leaves do on the oak — iv. 3 

I'd irive thee leave to hang it — iv. 3 

BO 1 leave you to the protection — v. 2 

but leave without thy rage — v. 6 

and leave mc but the bran Coriolanus, i. 1 

I leave your honours: if we — i. 2 

beseech you, give me leave to retire.. — i. 3 

that you might leave pricking it for pity — i. 3 

I'll leave the foe, and make — i. 4 

I will be bold to take my leave of you — ii. 1 

and behind him lie leaves tears — ii. 1 

and leaves nothing undone, that may — ii. 2 

leave nothing out for length — ii. 2 

yoii'll mar all; I'll leave you — ii. 3 

leave us to cure this cause — iii. 1 

if by the tribunes' leave, and yours .. — iii. 1 

give me leave, I'll go to hirn — iii. 1 

come, leave your tears; a brief — iv. I 

well, well, w-e'U leave you — iv. 2 

leave this faint puling, and lament .. — iv. 2 

taking their leaves of me — iv. 5 

and leave his passage polled — iv. 5 

to leave xmburnt, and still to nose . . — v. 1 

but, by your leave, I am an officer.... — v. 2 

I must have leave to pass — v. 2 

mother of the world leave unsaluted — y. 3 
set on, and leave no ceremony owi. .JuUusCcesar, i. 2 

a dreamer; let us leave him — i. 2 

Cassi us, your desires; I'll leave you — i. 2 

for this time I will leave you " '' 

let us not leave hiin out 

then leave him out. Indeed, he is not 
we'll leave you, Brutus; and, friends 

gave sign for me to leave you 

my sad brows; leave me with haste.. 

Slid leave us, Fnhlius; lest that 

he speaks by leave and by permission 

here, underleave of Brutus — iii. 2 

and will you give me leave? — iij- 2 

you shall have leave. A ring — J!!* 2 

gave me public leave to speak of him — iii. 2 

four mother chides, and leave you so — iv. 3 

lybla bees, and lca\e them honeyless — v. 1 

where did you leave him? — v. 3 

by your leave, gods: this is a Roman's — y. 3 
never given you leave to come ! . . Antony ^- Cleo, 1. 3 

I'll leave you, lady. Courteous lord.. — 1. 3 

Antony, leave thy lascivious wassails — i. 4 

give me leave, Ciesar,— Speak, Agrippa — ii- 2 

now Antony must leave tier utterly. . — ii. 2 

let him not leave out the colour ot . . — ii. 5 

better leave undone, tlian by — iii. 1 

leave unexecuted your own renowned — iii. 7 

let that be left which leaves itself — iii. 9 

leave me, I pray, a little — .'.''• 9 

and leave Ins navy gazing — iii. 11 

that we must leave thee — iii. 11 

I will seek some way to leave him .. — iii. 11 

on you, as one that takes his leave .. — iv. 2 

whom Antony loved, now leaves hira — iv. 3 

I'll leave thee now, like a man — iv. 4 

and leave his master Antony — iv. (i 

give thee leave to play till doomsday — v. 2 

avoid, and leave him: hast thou — v. 2 

such as the aspick leaves upon the .. — v. 2 

should we be taking leave as long Cymbeline, i. 2 

»weef sovereign, leave us to ourselves — i. 2 

for this time, leave me — i. 2 

I did not take my leave of him — i. 4 

I will leave to appear hereafter — i. 5 

let us leave here, gentlemen — i, 5 

and leave her in such honour as you — i. 5 

I humbly take my leave — i. 6 

my man s abode where I did leave him — i. 7 

for his heart, and leave eighteen .... — ii. 1 

the taper, leave it burning — ii. 2 

by your leave, ho! I know her women — ii. 3 

by your leave. Who's there, that knocks? — ii. 3 

to leave you in your madness — ii. 3 

Bo I leave you, sir, to the worst — ii. 3 

or masterless leaves both to who — ii. 4 

vou'll give me leave to spare — ii. 4 

1 beg but leave to air tliis jewel — ii. 4 



[ 433 ] 



— ii. 1 

— ii. 1 

— ii. 1 

— ii. 1 

— ii. 1 

— iii. 1 

— iii. 1 



LEAVE— {food wax, thy leave Cymbeline, iii. 2 

aa hard to leave, as keep — iii..') 

nay, my leaves, and left me bare — iii. 3 

leave ni't the worthy Lucius — iii. 6 

that duty leave uiiimid to you — iii.,') 

when he look leave of my holy — iii. .0 

60 nlcusc you, leave me; stick to your — iv. 2 

we 11 leave you hir Ihia time — iv. '.i 

flivc ine lea\c, I'll take the better caro — iv. 4 

le leaves mc, seoi-iis mo: brielly — v. 5 

thou'lt torture mc to leave unspoken — v. .') 

give mc leave; I faint — v. 5 

have at it then: by leave; thou hadst — v. 5 
have given me leave to sheathe.. ,, Titus Andron. i. 2 

by your leave, this maid is mine .... — i. 2 

no less: and so I take my leave — i. 2 

prince Bassianus, leave to plead .... — i. 2 

the erccn leaves quiver — ii. 3 

and leave me to tills miserable — ii. 3 

well could I leave our sport to sleep.. — ii. 4 

upon whose leaves ure drops — ii. 4 

and so let's leave her to her silent. . . . — ii. 

tremble, like aspen leaves — ii. 5 

give me leave; for losers will have leave — iii. 1 

he leaves his pledges dearer than .... — iii. 1 

good grandsire, leave these bitter — iii. 2 

liow busily she turns the leaves! .... — iv. 1 

note, how she quotes the leaves — iv. 1 

and so I leave you both — iv. 1 

and leave you not a man of war — iv. 3 

depart at pleasure, leave ns here .... — v. 2 

that kindness, and take leave of him — y. 3 

give my tongue like leave to love Pericles, i. I 

all leave Us else — ;• 2 

since you have given me leave to speak — i. -' 

who never leave gaping, till they've . , — ii. 1 

and leaves us to our free election — ii. 4 

to bid farewell, we take our leaves .... — ii. 5 

there I'll leave it at careful nursing . . — iii. I 

and lea\e her the infant of your care .. — iii. 3 

so I take my leave; good madam — iii. 3 

his woeful queen leave at Eiihess — iv. (Gower) 

I'll leave you, my sweet lady — i v. I 

leaves Tharsus, and again embarks — iv. 4 (Gow.) 

there's for you; leave us (jrp.) — iv. li 

come, we will leave his honour — iv. u 

come, let us leave her, and the gods .... — v. 1 

yet give me leave: how came you — v. 1 

aid in Tharsus leave me — v. 1 

for his head; so leave him all — v. 1 

take her, or leave her? Leur, i. 1 

then leave her, sir; for, by the power — i. 1 

■which often leaves the history unspoke — i. 1 

with washed ei'es Cordelia leaves you. ... — i. 1 

leave thy drink and thy whore — i. 4 

and leave his horns "Without a case — i. 5 

my lord, if you will give me leave — ii. 2 

and leave thee in the storm — ii. 4 

when I desired their leave — iii. 3 

this tempest will not give me leave to — — iii. 4 

leave hira to my displeasure — iii. 7 

and leave you to attend him — iv. 3 

leave, gentle wax; and, manners — iv. 6 

ere he can spread his sweet leaves. Ilameo >S Juliet, i. 1 

an' if you leave me so, you do — i. 1 

nurse, give lca^■e awhile, we must talk — i. 3 

to think it should leave crying — i. 3 

■wilt thou leave me so unsatisfied? .. — ii. 2 

and leave rae to my grief — ii. 2 

I am aweary, give me leave awhile. . — ii. 5 

have you got leave to go to shrift to-day? — ii. 5 

by your leaves, you shall not stay alone — ii. 6 

I pray thee, leave me to myself to-uight — iv. 3 

I will die, and leave him all — iv. 5 

dream! that gives a dead man leave — v. 1 

since you did leave it for my office . . — v. 1 

not leave you rc«^. Krt/. sir, have patience] — v. I 

leave me, and do the thing I bid thee — v. 1 

fly hence, and leave me — v. 3 

drink all and leave no friendly drop — v. 3 

your leave and favour to return to Hamlet, i. 2 

gracious leave and pardon {lep.) — i. a 

wrung from me my slow leave — i. 'i 

beseech yoUj give him leave to go — i. 2 

occasion smiles upou a second leave . . — i. 3 

most humbly do 1 take my leave — i. 3 

leave her to heaven, and to those thorns — i. a 

■wliere did I leave? At closes — li. 1 

five me leave: how does my good...... — ii.2 

will leave him, and suddenly contrive — ii.2 

most humbly take my leave of you.... — ii.2 

I'll leave you till niglit — ii.2 

sweet Gertrude, leave us too — ii.2 

I must leave thee, love (rcB.) — iii. 2 

sweet, leave me here awhile — jji- 2 

leave thy damnable faces, and begin .. — iii. 2 

easily said; leave me, friends — iii. 2 

leave wringing of your hands: peace.. — iii. 4 

on this fair raomitain leave to feed .... — iii. 4 

as will not leave their tinet — iii. 4 

and woo, for leave to do him good .... — iii. 4 

I pray you, give me leave. We will. . . . — iv. !> 

you sliall hear them: leave us — iv. 7 

to-morrow shall I beg leave to see — iv. 7 tletter) 

his hoar leaves in the glassy stream . . — iv. 7 

give me leave: here lies the water — v. 1 

of aught he leaves, kuows what (re;;.).. — y. 2 

if you have not given her leave Othello, i. 1 

farewell; for I must leave you — i. 1 

leave tliat latest, which concerns him first — i. 3 

Othello, leave some officer beliind — i. 3 

myDesdemona must I leave to thcc .... — i. 3 

[Cni.] when I have leave to sleep — ii. i 

ay, but by your leave, not before mc .... — ii • 3 

madam, I'll take my leave — iii. 3 

to leave me but a little to myself — iii. 3 

not to leave undone, but keep unknown — iii. 3 

leave me, Iiigo. Sly lord, I take my leave — iii. 3 

leave it to time — iii. 3 

I once more take ray leave — iii. 3 



I.ED 



LEAVE— I hove use for it: ({o, leave me.Otlivllo, iii. 3 
I will not leave him now, till Cassio .... — iii. i 
nnd leave me fin' this time. Leave you! — iii. 4 

I must leave her company — iv. I 

leave jirocreants alone, and shut the door — iv. 2 

let me have leave to sijcak — v. 2 

LEAVEN— tliou unsalted leaven.Troilus f Cress, ii. 1 

lay tlic lca\eii uu all in-i>\nir Cymbeline, iii. 4 

LEAVENED ami |Me|)iiicd Meai.for.Mem. i. 1 

LEAVENING. Still 1 Imvti (rep.) .Troil. A- Cress, i. 1 
LEAVE-TAKING— of leave-taking.... il/octf (A, ii. 3 

without leave-taking? — iv. 3 

puts back leave-taking Troilut ^ Cressida, iv. 4 

It is not worth \titi.wv~in\C\n^ .Antony^ Cleopatra, v. 2 
of leave-taking between France and liim. . Lear, i. I 

LEAVING the fear of heaven Merry If ives, ii.2 

leaving her in the protection of . . 'I'weljlhyighl, i. 2 
in leaving his friend here in necessity — iii. 4 
leaving his wealth and ca^c. As you Lilieit,ii. 5 (song) 
I.eontes leaving the effects of. '>'i»i/er's'y'a/e,iv.(chu.) 
of thy services, by leaving me now .. — iv. i 

became him like the leaving it Macbeth, \.t 

leavingour rankness and irregular ..King John, v. 4 

my impress, leaving me no sign Hichard II. iii. 1 

out of niin; leaving his body as Henry V. i. 1 

leaving their wits with their wives . . — iii. 7 

leaving them but the shales — iv. 2 

leaving their earthly parts to choke.. — iv. 3 

leaving no heir begotten 1 Henry VJ. ii. 5 

leaving thy trunk for crows 2Henryl'I. iv. 10 

leaving this, what is your grace's.. /dc/iai-d ///. iii. 7 
forth on, leaving no tract behind.. Timono/Alh. i. 1 

give them diseases, leaving with — iv. 3 

leaving the fight in \icig\it. . Antony ^-Cleopatra, iii. 8 
leaving so his service, follow you . . Cymbeline, iv. 2 

leaving free things, and happy shows Lear, iii. 6 

from heaven by leaving^ eurtli .. liomeo ^Julivl, iii. i 

life leaving [CW. -living] all is death's — iv. 5 

LEAV'ST— leav'st the kingly couch. zHtoj-i//*'. iii. 1 

LEAV V-summer first was leavy.iV/uc/i^t/o, ii . 3 (song) 

your leavy screens throw down Macbeth, v. 6 

LECIlER-will now take the lecher. Affrr;/ Hives, ill. 5 

like a lecher, out of wliorish Troilus Sf Cress, i v. I 

were like an old lecher's heart hear, iii. 4 

fly does lecher in my sight — iv. 6 

the post unsanctified of murderous lechers — iv. 6 
LECIIERIES— lecheries and iniquity ..Merry \V. v. 5 
LECHEROUS— they are lecherous. Jl/ca. /or jVra. iii. 2 

yet lecherous as a monkey IHenrylV. iii. 2 

follows, I am rough and lecherous Lear, \. 'I 

treacherous, lecherous, kiiidless villain IHawic/, ii.2 
LECHERY— and their lechery .... Merry Wives, v. 3 

lechery! I defy lechery Tweljlli IS'ighi.i.b 

lechery? Call it so Measure for Measure, i. 3 

is lechery so looked after? — i. 3 

a little more lenity to lechery would — iii. 2 
the most dangerous piece of lechery MuchAdo, iii. 3 
lechery, sir, it provokes, and unprovokes.jUaf)/i';/i,ii. 3 
said to be an equivocator with lechery — li. 3 
can part young limbs and lechery . .2HenryIf-'. i. 2 
■war, and lechery, confound a.li\. .Troilus^Cress. ii. 3 
nothing but lechery! all incontinent — v. 1 
fry, leciiery, fry! But will you then? — v. 2 
lechery, lechery ! still, wars and lechery — v. 2 

yet, in a sort, lechery eats itself — v. 4 

lechery, by this hand; an index Othello, ii. 1 

LEVON — une autre fois ma le5on Henry f'. iii. 4 

LECTURE- read many lectures... ^si/ou Like ii, iii. 2 
you read no other lectures to her. . Taming o/Sh. i. 2 

your lecture shall have leisure — iii. 1 

Ills lecture will be done, ere you .... — iii. 1 

leave his lecture when I am — iii. 1 

a troop, to read a lecture of tliem?..J?!cAard 7/. iv. I 

say, we read lectures to you Coriolanus, ii. 3 

so by my former lecture and advice Hamiel, ii. 1 

LED— Claudio, led by the provost.il/eas.ytii' Meas. i. i 

art thou led in triumph? — iii. 2 

I led them on in this distracted. ;U/d. N. Dream, iii. 2 

I am not solely led by nice Merch. of Venice, ii. 1 

'who led me instantly unto his . . As you Like it, iv. 3 

foot again, led hither by pure AWs Well, iii. 4 

faith, sir, he has led the drum — iv. 3 

the life that late I led .... TamingofSh. iv. 1 (song) 

yet he is oft led by the nose H'inierWale, iv. 3 

you said, led you to Duncan Macbeth, iii. 4 

power is near, led on by Malcolm .... — v. 2 
are led so grossly by this meddliiig.. Kins' JoAii, iii, 1 
to dismiss the powers led by the Dauphin — v. 1 

but basely led by flatterers Hichard //. ii. I 

I have led my rag-a-muffins i Henry IV. v. S 

proper to madmen, led his powers . .'illenry IV. i. S 
abject routs, led on by bloody youth — iv. 1 

but as my betters are, that led "me — iv. 3 

in honour, led by the impartial — v. 2 

where is the life that late I led — v. 3 

for the king lcdi.them to it Henry V. iv. 1 

from the onicers that led me IHcnryVI.i 4 

troops than that the Dauphin led .... — iv. 3 

I should not thus be led along iHenryVl. ii. 4 

thrice I led him off — v. 3 

that led calm Henry, tlio' he ZHcnryVI. ii. 6 

my niece Plantagenet led in the ..Richard III. iv. 1 
armed in proof, and led by shallow . . — v. 3 
my election is led on in the .. Troilus Sf Cressida, ii. 2 

and will be led, at your request — ii. 3 

a fearful army, led by Caius Coriolanus, iv. 6 

we have led since thy exile — v. 3 

be led with manacles thorough — v. 3 

with bloody passage, led your wars .. — v. 6 
O ftricf! wlici'c hast thou" led me?.../u/i'u«Ca'<or, i. 3 

cither led or driven, as we — iv. 1 

you are contented to be led in triumph — v. 1 
saw her led between her brother.>4M(oii|/ ^C/«o. iii. 3 

both how vou were wrong led — iii. B 

BO our leader's led, and we — iii. 7 

O whither hast thou led mc Egypt?.. — iii. 9 

take me up; I have led you oft — iv. 12 

and led my country's strength .... TilutAndron. i. i 

a happy star led us to Rome — iv. 2 

led by their master to the — v. 1 

F F 



LED 

LED— led by a lusty Goth-? TilusAndronicus, v. 1 

led on by heaven, ntid crowned.. — v. 3 (Gower) 

their noses are led by their eyes... Leur, ii. 4 

and led by some discretion — ii. 4 

hath led through fire and tlirougli flame — iii. 4 

my fatlier, poorly led? world — Iv. 1 

he led rae to that place — iv. 6 

and fortune led you well — v. 3 

he led our powers; bore the — v. 3 

became his guide, led him, begged — v. 3 

led by a delicate and tender prince Hamlety iv. 4 

and will as tenderly be led by tlic nose. . Othello, i. 3 
but partly led to diet my revenge — ii. 1 

LEDA — a swan for tlie love of Leda, Mcri-y Wives^ v. 5 
fair Leda's daugliter had Taming of Shrew, i. 2 

LED'ST— Griffith, as thou led'st mQ.HenryVIIlAv. 2 

LEECH— as each otlier's leecli .. Timon of Athens, v. 5 

LEEK— his eyes were green as leeks ..Mid.N.Dr. v. 1 
I'll knock his leek aliout his pate ....HenryV.'w. 1 
where leeks did grow, wearing leeks — iv. 7 
to wear the leek upon Saint 'Davy's day — iv. 7 
but wliy wear you your leek to-clay? — v. 1 

and bid me eat my leek — v. 1 

I am qualmish at the smell of leek .. — v. 1 

to eat, look yoxi, this leek — v. 1 

mock a leek, you can eat a leek (rep.) — v. 1 

LEER— gives the leer of invitation . . Merry Wives, i. 3 

you leer upon me, do you? Love's L. Lost,y. 2 

a Rosalind of a better leer As you Like it, iv. 1 

I will leer upon him, as a' comes by.2 Henry IK v. 5 
no more trust liim u'lien he leers, Troilus ^ Cress, v. 1 
framed of another leer Titus Andronicus, iv. 2 

LEES— and the mere lees is left this Macbeth, ii. 3 

drink up tl\e lees and dregs of. . Troilus ^ Cress, iv. 1 

LEET— present her at the leet-.Taining of Sh. 2 (ind.) 
keep leets, and law-days Othello, iii. 3 

LEFT— but stopped, and left me Tempest, i. 2 

whom I left cooling of the air — i. 2 

I have left asleej) — i. 2 

and here was left by the sailors — i. 2 

and left thee there — i. 2 

they have left their viands behind .... — iii. 3 

at last I left them i' the — iv. 1 

just as you left them, sir — v. 1 

this left shoe is my father t^rep.). TwoGen. offer, ii. 3 

I left them all in health — ii. 4 

ifleftalone — iii. 1 

alas, poor lady ! desolate and left I . . — i v. 4 

thou hast no faith left now — v. 4 

the fear of heaven on the left hand. Merry Wives, ii. 2 

he left this ring behind him Twelfth Night, i. 5 

he left behind Iiira, myself — ii. 1 

I left no ring with her , — ii. 2 

where Ileft Olivia sleeping — ii. 5 

left her in her tears, and dried.. A/eas. /or Meas. iii. 1 
not three leagues off when I left Ixim . . Much Ado, i. 1 

it is all the wealth he hath left — i. 1 

war-thoughts have left their places .. — i. 1 
all that Adam had left liim before . . — ii. 1 

ever since you left it: doth not — iii. 4 

all the grace that she hath left — iv. 1 

your daughter here the princes left . . — iv. 1 

that none is left to protest — iv. I 

and left sweet Pyramus translated.Mi'd.JV.'sDr.iii. 2 
yet since night, you left me (rep.). . . , — iii. 2 

Btolen hence, and left me asleep! — iv. 1 

ay, that left pan, where heart doth .. — v. 1 

and lion are left to bury the dead — v. I 

thy bird-bolt under the left pap. . Love'sL. Lost. iv. 3 

of Russians left us but of late — v. 2 

hath left me gaged Merchant of Venice, i. 1 

is a lady richly left, and she — i. 1 

see to ray house, left iu the — i. 3 

next turning of all, on your left — ii. 2 

thou hast not left the value of — iv. 1 

I were best cut my left hand off — v. 1 

and how unwillingly I left the ring.. — v. 1 

if I be left alone, now, by mine — v. 1 

allottery my father left me by ....As you Like it, i. 1 
then, being alone, left and abandoned — ii. 1 
murmuring stream, left on your .... — iv. 3 
he left a promise to return again .... — iv. 3 

I have left you commands — v. 2 

my father left me some prescriptions. ./4;('s Well, i. 3 
have left off the danger to itself? .... — i.3 

his left cheek is a cheek of two pile . . — iv. 5 
for I have Pisa left, and am to. Taming of Sltreir, i. 1 
me, left solely heir to all his lands . . — ii. 1 

where left we last? — iii. 1 

how he left her with the horse — iv. I 

oourtsy with their left legs — iv. 1 

he hasleft me here behind — iv. 4 

since we have left our throne Winter's Tale, i. 2 

be left her to perform — ii. i 

pawn the little blood which I have left — ill. 2 

and, why he left your court — iii. 2 

if there be any of him left — iii. 3 

discern, by that'which is left of him — iii. 3 
the garments Jie hath left with thee.. — iv. 2 

is there no manners left among — iv. 3 

I had not left a purse alive in tlie whole — iv. 3 
great Alexander left his to the worthiest — v. 1 
and left them more rich, for what. ... — v. 1 

have left me issueless — v. 1 

care of goods at random left . . Comedy of Errors, i. 1 
and left the ship, then sinking-ripe — i. 1 

fortune had left to both of us alike . . — i. 1 

where have you left the money — i. 2 

patience in thee will be left — ii. I 

I'll weep what's left away — ii. I 

the great wart on my left arm — iii. 2 

it was two ere I left liim — iv. 2 

there left me and my man — v. 1 

some fading glimmer left — V. 1 

and me they left with those — v. 1 

only I have left to say Macbeth, i. 4 

why have you left the chamber? — i. 7 

your constancy hath left you — ii. 2 

is left this vault to brag of — ii. 3 

when there's no mercy left — ii. 3 



[ 434 ] 



LEG 



LEFT— why in that rawness left you . . Macbeth, iv. 3 
left to be finished by such a she .... King Jotin, ii. 2 
not an horn- since I left him well .... — iv. 3 

and England now is left to tug — iv. 3 

John, sore sick, hath left the field.. ., — v. 4 

I left him almost speechless — v. 6 

more patient than when you left him — v. 7 

which he hath left so shapeless — v. 7 

next highway, and there I left him. .iJi'c/iord IL i. 4 

here am I left to underprop — ii. 2 

every thing is left at six and seven .. — ii. 2 

the king is left behind — ii. 3 

is weak, and all ill left — ii. 3 

to be brief, left I his title out — iii. 3 

left me in reputeless banishment ..I Henry IF. iii. 2 

in deputation left behind him — iv. 3 

of my hundred and fifty left alive . . — v. 3 
hath left a witnessed usurpation ,...2HenryIV. i. 1 

so you left him; never, O never — ii. 3 

now, have you left pursuit? — iv. 3 

which, before cold and settled, left .. — iv. 3 

to mine leave, as 'tis left to me — iv. 4 

we left the prince my brother here .. — iv. 4 

my liege, we left it here — iv. 4 

hath left me open to all injuries .... — v. 2 

no sooner left his father's body Henry V. i. 1 

there left behind and settled certain., — i. 2 
have left their bodies here in England — i. 2 

thrice that power left at home — i. 2 

thy fall hath left a kind of blot — ii. 2 

late examples left by the fatal — ii. 4 

their wives left poor behind them.... — iv, 1 

upon their children rawly left — iv. 1 

there's not a boy left alive — iv. 7 

of it left his son imperial lord. . — v. 2 (chorus) 
and nunc but women left to wail .... 1 Henry VI. i. 1 
lam left out; for me nothing remains — i. 1 

but that they left me 'midst — i. 2 

so bold to take what they have left .. — ii. 1 

this malice, Somerset, be left? — i v, 1 

and left us to the rage of France .... — iv. 6 
he left me proudly, as unworthy .... — iv. 7 

were but his picture left — iv. 7 

and left thee to the mercy of the law.2Henry VI. i. 3 

and left behind him Richard — ii. 2 

left I the court, to see this quarrel . , — ii. 3 

but left that hateful office — iii. 2 

inheritance, my father left me — iv. 10 

stole away, and left his men ZHenryVI. i. 1 

thou wouldst have left thy dearest .. — i. 1 

whom we have left protectors — i.2 

hath left with thee; Ills dukedom (rep.) — ii. 1 
my father had left me no more 1 . . . . — ii. 2 

if any life be left in thee — ii. 5 

had left no mourning widows — ii. 6 

she on his left side, craving aid — iii. 1 

you left poor Henry at the bishop's.. — v. 1 
of all my lands, is nothing left me .. — v. 2 
comfort of thy children left thee ..Richard III. ii. 2 

distress was left unmoaned — ii. 2 

indeed, left nothing, fitting for your — iii. 7 

tree liatli left us royal fruit — iii. 7 

and so I left them both, to bear — iv. 3 

and left thee but a very prey to — i v. 4 

left them the heirs of sname — v. 3 

they have left their barge Henry Fill. i. 4 

I left him private — ii. 2 

unsolicited I left no reverend — ii. 4 

may be left to some ears unrecounted — iii. 2 

has left the cause o' the king — iii. 2 

now has left me, weary, and old .... — iii. 2 

left me naked to mine enemies — iii. 2 

and left him at primero with — v. 1 

no doubt, left for the ladies — v. 3 

we left them all at home Troilus «§- Cressida, i. 3 

left my possession , incurred — iii. 3 

happy, and has left me rich .... Timon of Athens, i. 2 
which ne'er left man i' the mire .... — i. 2 

there would be none left to rail — i.2 

lord Timon will be left a naked — ii. 1 

there is not so much left — iii. 4 

and left me open, bare for every .... — iv. 3 
what other means is left unto us .... — v. 2 
consume you wicked caitiffs leftl — v. 5 (epitaph) 

thou art left, Marcius Coriolanus, i. 4 

i' the shoulder, and i' the left arm .. — ii. 1 

now you have left your voices — ii. 3 

what is left, to lose it by his — iii. 1 

or else to him had left it f oh- ly — iv. 7 

yet he hath left undone that, which shall — i v. 7 
moreover, he hath left you all. . ..JuliusCasar, iii. 2 
left them you, and to your heirs for ever — iii. 2 
turned down, where I left reading? . . — iv. 3 
upon the left hand of the even field.. - v. 1 

keep thou the left — v. 1 

you had then left unseen .... Antony ^ Cleopatra, i. 2 
left unshown is often left unloved..., — iii. 6 
let that be left which leaves itself. ... — iii. 9 

on what I have left behind — iii.!) 

to hear from me you had left Antony — iii. 1 1 
my pillow left unpressed in Rome .. — iii. 11 

have empty left their orbs — iii. II 

that has this morning left thee — iv. 5 

there is left us ourselves to end — iv. 12 

and there is nothing left remarkable — iv. 13 
left these notes of wMiat commands . . Cymbeline, i. 2 

ere left to after-eye him — i. 4 

fold down the leaf where I have left — ii. 2 

on her left breast a mole — ii. 2 

too casually hath left mine arm — ii. 3 

motion and breath left out — ii. 4 

is it that which I left with her? — ii. 4 

which by thee lately is left nntendered — iii. 1 

and left me bare to weather — iii. 3 

I would have left it on the board .... — iii. 6 

in this place we left them — iv. 2 

if there be yet left in heaven — iv. 2 

at the heart, and left this head on .. — iv. 2 
O gods I I left out one tiling which . . — v. 5 
though you left me like a cnurl .. TitusAndron. i. 2 



LEFT— since I left him there (rep.) . . Titus .4nd. ii. 4 

slime left on them by a flood? — iii. 1 

is left to tyrannize upon my breast . . — iii. 2 

that left the camp to sin — iv. 1 

there's not a god left unsolicited .... — iv. 3 

tins one hand yet is left to cut — v. 2 

who died and left a female heir.. I'ericles, i. (Gower) 

left in trust with me — i.3 

scarce strength left to give them burial — i. 4 
and left me breath nothing to think on — ii. 1 

that he should never have left — ii. 1 

even as he left his life — ii. 1 

buildings left without a roof — ii. 4 

here's all that is left living — iii. 1 

and high estate, is left to govern — iv. 4 (Gower) 
where we left him, on the sea . . — v. (Gower) 
I left behind an ancient substitute .. — v. 3 

and left nothing in the middle Lear, i. 2 

out went the candle, and we were left.... — i.2 

yet have I left a daughter (rep.) — i. 4 

you have one eye left to see — iii. 7 

something he left imperfect — iv. 3 

who hath he left behind him general?.... — iv. 3 

and there Ileft him tranced — v. 3 

the pretty wretch left crying .... Romeo ^Juliet, i. 3 

let me now be left alone — iv. 3 

departed not, and left him there .... — v. 3 
had left the flushing in her galled ej'es. . Hamlet, i. 2 
for 'tis a question left us yet to prove. . . . — iii, 2 

a Dane, here's yet some liquor left — v. 2 

dear lords, if I be left behind Olliello, i. 3 

captain's captain, left in the conduct of. . — ii. 1 
my right hand, and this is iny left hand — ii. 3 

that he hath left part of his grief — iii. 3 

when Cassio left my wife — iii. 3 

and not know who left it there 1 — iv. 1 

LEG-afeard now of your four legs (rep.). Tempest, ii. 2 

four legs, and two voices — ii. 2 

I'll pull thee by the lesser legs — ii. 2 

if any be Trinculo's legs — ii. 2 

and steals her capon's leg — iv. 4 

heave up my leg — iv. 4 

what, that my leg is too long? — v. 2 

pinch them, arms, legs, backs Me7-ry }Vives, v. 6 

take thee between her legs TwelfthNight, i. 3 

by the excellent constitution of thy leg — i. 3 

no sir, it is legs and thighs — i. 3 

than forty shillings I had such a leg — ii. 3 

the shape of his leg — ii. 3 

she did praise my leg being — ii. 5 

taste your legs, sir — iii. I 

my legs do better understand — iii. 1 

by bidding me taste my legs — iii. 1 

though j'ellow in my legs — iii. 4 

his legs cannot: I'll give't him — iii. 4 

young nephew Titus lost his leg — v. I 

with a good leg, and a good foot Much Ado, ii. 1 

and with his bad legs, falls into — ii. 1 

Beatrice to you, who, I think, hath legs — v. 2 
my legs are longer though.... A/it<. N. s Dream,iii 2 
with leaden legs, and batty wings .. — iii. 2 

my legs can keep no pace with — iii. 2 

a waist, a leg, a limb? Love's L.Lost,iv. 3 

but your legs should do it — v. 2 

before the legs of this sweet lass — v. 2 

his leg is too big for Hector — v. 2 

use your legs, take the stSiTt.Merchant of Venice, ii. 2 
catch the strong fellow by the leg..AsyouLikeit,i. 2 

if my legs were not weary — ii. 4 

his leg is but so so — iii. 5 

a leg, put off 's cap (rep.) All's Well, ii. 2 

I am there before my legs — ii. 2 

no more stockings than legs .. Taming of Sh. 2 (ind.) 
scratching her legs, that one shall .... — 2 (ind.) 

with a linen stock on one leg — iii. 2 

court'sy with their left legs — iv. 1 

though' he took up my legs sometime. . Macbeth, ii. 3 

lizard's leg, and owlet's wing — iv. 1 

if iny legs were two such ridmg-roda.. King Joh7i, i. 1 
sir Robert never holp to make this leg — i. I 
and forbidden legs dared once to touch — ii. 3 
you make a leg, and Bolingbroke..ii!c/iar(i II. iii. 3 

my legs can keep no measure — iii, 4 

of Madeira, and a cold capon's leg? ..\ Henry IV. i. 2 

afoot awhile, and ease our legs — ii. 2 

well, here is my leg — ii. 4 

march wide betwixt the legs — iv. 2 

can honour set a leg? No — v. 1 

a decreasing leg? an increasing iHenrylV. i. 2 

he had no legs, that practised not — ii. 3 

because their legs are both of — ii. 4 

like unto the sign of the leg — ii. 4 

will you command me to use ray legs? — (epil.) 

is weary; when my legs are too — (ejpil.) 

upon one pair of English legs Henry V, iii. 6 

when all those legs, and arms — iv. 1 

that has but two legs, that shall — iv. 7 

a good leg will fall; a straight — v, 2 

1 will chain these legs and arms, ... 1 Henry VI. ii. 3 

the garter from thy craven's leg — iv. 1 

this cripple to his legs again? 2 Henry VI. ii. 1 

we must have you find your legs .... — ii. 1 

before his legs be firm to — iii. 1 

thy leg a stick, compared with — iv. 10 

clapped his tail between his legs .... — v. I 

your legs did better service ZHenryVI. ii, 2 

to shape my legs of an unequal — iii. 2 

into the world with my legs forward — v, 6 

and I came hither on my legs Itidiord III. i. 4 

they have all new legs, and lame . , Henry VIII. i. 3 

my legs, like loaden branches — iv, 2 

are drunk, sick, or have no legs. , Troilus ^ Cress, i. 2 

his legs are legs for necessity — ii. 3 

the sinews of this leg all Greek ...^.. — iv. 5 

hanging at his brother's leg — v. 1 

I doubt whether their legs be .. Timon of Athens, i. 2 
false hearts should never have sound legs — i. 2 

our steed the leg, the tongue Coriolanus, i. 1 

for poor knaves caps and legs — ii. 1 

from these old arms and legs — iv. I 



LEG 

LEQ— Wttlk under his liuge legs . ...JulimCcPtar, i. 2 

liis legs bcfitrid the oeeiiM Inlony ^ Cltopalra,v. 2 

your legs are voiina; I'll tread Cijmbelhie, in. 3 

I know the shone ot his tcK — iv. 2 

a leg of Kome shall Jiot return — .v. 3 

txirn a swan's bluck le^s to white. 7'i7u»/<Mi/ron. iv. 2 

stand upon sound legs Pericles, iv. 6 

serve seven vears tor the loss of a leg .. — iv. 6 

put in his legs: come, my good lord Lear, ii. 2 

by the legs: when a man is over-lusty (.rep.) — u. 4 

feel you your legs? You stand — iv. 6 

every man betake liini to his Icga.Itomeo ^Jutiel,]. i 

made of long spinners' legs — _i. 4 

straight leg, and quivering thigh .... — ;;. 1 

yet his les excels all men s — ii- 5 

fair thou^it to lie between maids' lega.Hnmlel, iii. 2 

these legs, that brought nie to a part Olhelto, ii. 3 

then laid his leg overmy thigh — iii. 3 

my leg is cut in two — V. 1 

LEG.VOIES— some charge in legacies.. /u'.Opsnr, iv. 1 
LEGACY— it wasEve's legacy..7Mo6eH.q/'/V'r.iii. 1 

shall, for my legacy, be sanctified All's Hell,]. 3 

and no legacy is so rich as honesty . . — iii. 5 

as a rich legacy, unto their issue. ../iid'iwCrt'.var.iii. "2 
LEGATE— holy legate of the pope ..King John, iii. 1 

from pope Innocent, the legate here — iii- 1 

the legate of the pope hath been .... — v. 1 

where the holy lejjate comes apace . . — v. 2 

not trusting to this halting legate here — v. 2 

stay, my lord legate; you shall 1 He^inj I'l.y. I 

YOU wrote to be a legate Hrmy I'll!, iii. 2 

LEGATINE— by your power legatine — in. 2 
LEGE— a verse; le^e, domine Lore's L. Lost, iv. 2 

what he leges in Latin Taming of Shrew, i. 2 

LEGG ED— legged like a man ! Tempest, ii. 2 

LEGERITY— andfresh legerity Henryl'. iv. ' 

LEGIOX— I'll tight their legions o'er . . Tempest, n\. 

she hath legions of angels Merry mi'es,i. 

Legion himself possessed him TwetfthNight, iii. 

not in the legions of horrid hell Macbeth, iv. 

to land his legions all as soon as I . . King John, ii. 

with man V legions of strange — v. 

and tell the legions, I can never Henry V. n. 

death from h is weak legions 1 Henry n. iv. 

methought, a Icfion of foul fiends. . Richard III. i. 

for gold to pay my legions JuliiitCtesar, iv. 

our legions are brim-full — iv. 

these bills unto the legions on the other — v. 

as Cassius' legions are by Antony — __v. 

our nineteen legions thou %ha\t.. Antony fyCleo. iii. 

keep by land the legions and the horse — iii. 

wilf I render ray legions, and my horse — iii. 

liis coin, ships, legions, may be — iii. 1 

and you shall hear the legions Cymbeline, ii. 

the legions now in Gallia are full — — iii. 

with tliose legions which I have spoke of— iii. 

to them, the legions garrisoned in Gallia — iv. 

the Roman legions, all from Gallia . . — iv. 
LEGITIMATE— prove it legitimate. Twrf/'/i N. iii. 

your brother is legitimate King.lohn, i. 

whether our daughter were legitimate Hen. nil. ii. 

well then, legitimate Edgar, I must have. . Lear, i. 

as to the legitimate : flue word (rep.') — i. 

Edmund the base shall top the legitimate — i. 

LEGITIMATION, name, and all KingJohn,i. 

LEICESTER— the town of Leicester. «ic/iard III. v. 2 

and safe in Leicester town — v. 3 

he came to Leicester, lodged in Henry y III. iv. 2 

LEICESTERSUIRE, shaltflnd ....SHenryri.iv. 6 
LEIGER— everlasting leiger Mcas.forMeas. iii, ' 

quite unpeople her of leigers Cymbeline, i. 

LEISURE— at picked leisure, which . . Tempest, y. 

to me at your convenient leisure. . Merry Wives, iii. 

at our more leisure shall I Meas.for Meas. i. 

might you dispense with your leisure — iii. 

I have no superfluous leisure — iii. 

which I, by my good leisure, have .. — iii. 

I shall attend your leisure — iv. 

and leisure answers leisure — v. 

and wait for no man's leisure MuchAdo, i. 

if your leisure served : I would speak — iii. 

make our leisures to attend . . Merchant of Venice, i. 

I am eorr3', that your leisure serves. . — iv. 

read it at your leisure; it comes.. .. — v. 

when than hast leisure, say AlVs Well, i. 

ond sickness debate it at tlicir leisure — i. 

and will stay upon your leisure .... — iii. 

more leisure shall express — v. 

leave and leisure to make love. 7'aining- o/S/ireui, i. 

shall have leisure for as much — iii. 

which at more leisure, I will — iii. 

he shall stay my leisure — iii. 

the tailor stays thy leisure, to deck.. — iv. 

this matter at more leisure . . Comedy of Errors, iv. 

I shall have leisure to make good — — v. 

we stay upon your leisure Macbcth,\. 

at your kindest leisure — ii. 

attend his leisure for a few words — iii. 

winds, whose leisure I have stayed. . King John, ii. 

than if vou had at leisure known. . . . — v. 

then our leisure would not let us ... . Hit hard II. i. 

ere further leisure yield them — i. 

we'll stoy vour leisure \ Henry tV. i. 

zounds! how Ims he the leisure — iv. 

at more leisure, may your highness. iHenrylV. iv. 
no leisure had he to enrank 1 Henry yi. i. 

since vour ladyshii) is not at leisure.. — ii. 
attenil upon your lordship's leisure — v. 

are you not at leisure? — v. 

some patient leisure to excuse Richard 111. i. 

had vou such leisure in the time — i. 

which ofter-hours give leisure to repent — iv. 
the leisure and the fearful time cuts off — v. 

God give us leisure for these rites — v. 

the leisure and enforcement of the time — v. 

to steal from spiritual leisure Henry y III. iii. 

ffarce have leisure to salute you Troilus Sf Cress, iv. 
Hector's leisure and your bounties .. — iv. 
at many leisures I proposed . . Timnn of Athens, \i. 
at your best leisure Julius C<esar, iii. 



[ 435 ] 



LEISURE-at thy sovereign Icisure./«n(on!/ ^ Cleo. i. 3 
I'll Irust, by leisure, hiui that. . . . Titus Andron. I. 2 
and attend the leisure of their answer.... Lear, ii. 4 
when thou canst; he better, at thy leisure — ii. 4 
are you at leisure, holy father.. Ilomeo ^- Juliet, iv. 1 
my leisure serves me, pensive daughter — iv. 1 

so slander any moment's leisure Hamlet, i. 3 

on the supervize, noleisiu'e 'bated .... — v. 2 

read it at more leisure — v. 2 

if viuii- lonl>hip wcic at leisure — v. 2 

LElSi:UKI,Y Liuli .iiif ilLiiiaiid ..Winter's Tale,\. 3 
s') ItisuiLlv, tluit, it'liis hiIl were.. Richard III. ii. 4 

LEMAN— Inr his wilt's kinan .... Merry Wives, iv. 2 
sixpence for thy Icinau [t'o(.-lemon]. 7uy'///A N. ii. 3 
drink unto the leman mine. . iHenryl y. v. 3 (song) 

LEMON— [Cii/.] for thy lemon ....TwelfihNighi, ii. 3 
a lemon. Stuck with cloves Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

LENA-what said Popilius Lena?.. Jii/ms Caisar, iii. 1 
Lena speaks not of our purposes .... — iii. 1 

LEND— lend thy hand Tempest, i. 2 

lend me the letter TuoGen. of Verona,\. 3 

lend me wings to make — ii. 6 

such grace did lend her — iv. 2(song) 

love lend ine patience to — y. 4 

did you lend It to Alice Merry Wives, i. 1 

I will not lend thee a penny — ii. 2 

is he, William, that does lend articles — iv. 1 

I'll lend you something Twelfth Night, iii. 4 

nor nature never lends .... Measure for Measure, i. \ 
lend him your kind pains to find .... — v. I 
lend me your knees, and (»cp.) — v. 1 

Isabel! will you not lend a knee? — v. 1 
and will lend nothing for God's saM.e. Much Ado, y. 1 

lend me the flourish of all Love'sL. Lost, iv. 3 

lend me your horn to make oue — y. I 

he lends out money gratis Merch.ofyenice, i. 3 

albeit I neither lend nor borrow (?■. /v.) — i. 3 

a cur can lend three thousand — j. 3 

I'll lend you thus much monies — i. 3 

if thou wilt lend this money, lend it — i. 3 

but lend it rather to thine — i-'i 

he was wont to lend money for — iii. I 

once lend my body for his wealth — v. I 

that least lend it you shall lack All's Well, i. 2 

lend me an arm: the rest have — i. 2 

I'll lend it thee, my dear — iv. 2 

his scornful perspective did lend me — r. 3 
Tom Drum, lend me a handkerchief — y. 3 

your gentle hands lend us — (epil.) 

lend tliine ear. Here. There . T'ami'ng- o/ SArra), iv. 1 

if God lend me life — iv. 2 

lend me thy hand (rep.') Winter' sTale, iy. 2 

but not lend a morrow Richard II. i. 3 

till time lend friends, and friends — — iii. 3 
lend no ear unto my purposes I Henry IV. i. 3 

1 pr'ythee, lend me'thy lantern — ii. 1 

and lend me thy hand to laugh — ii. 4 

it lends a lustre, and more great — iv. 1 

idle here? lend me thy sword — v. 3 

Othisboy lends mettle to us all! — — v. 4 
Hotspur's loss, lend to this weight ..2Henryiy. i. 1 

let him lend me the money — i. 2 

will your lordship lend me thousand — i. 2 

then lend the eye a terrible aspect — Henry y. iii. 1 

lend me thy cloak, sir Thomas — i v. 1 

wounds I will lend the French 1 Henry VI. i. I 

that should lend him aid — iv. 4 

Lord, that lends me life, lend 2Hev.rytV. i. 1 

here I lend thee this sharp-pointed . Ilichard III. i. 2 
lend favourable ear to our requests. . — iii. 7 

rise, .and lend an car — iv. 2 

ere I could lend thee aid — v. 3 

as I will lend you cause Henry V III. iii. 2 

cry, Trojans, cry! lend me ten. .Troilus ^ Cress, ii. 2 
this is notime to lend money. .Timonof Athens, iii. ' 
lend to each man enough (rep.) .. — iii. 6 (grace 

1 will lend thee money, borrow none — iii. i 
lend me a fool's heart, and a woman's — v.: 

lend you him, I will, for half Coriolanus,i. 

hereafter will I lend ear to — .y. 

lend me your hand Julius Ctrsar, iii. 

countrymen, lend me your ears .... — iii. 
to lend me arms, and aid .. Antony S/- Cleopatra, ii. 
the courage which the heart did lend it — y. 

I shall but lend my diamond Cymbeline, i. 

which rottenness can lend nature! .. — _ i. 

if savage, take, or lend — iii- 

and lend my best attention — _y. 

lend me thy hand Titus Andronicus, iii. 

my heart can lend no succour Pericles, i. 

stars that frown, lend us a smile — .i. 

neighbours: lend me your hands. — iii. 

hail, sir! My lord, lend ear — v. 

sir, lend your arm — v. 

lend less than thou owest Lear, i. 

lend me a looking-glass; if that her .... — v. 
how oue another lends content. . Romeo S/- Juliet, i. '. 
but passion lends them power . . — i. .'i (chorus 
with speedy help doth lend redress — iv. 5 (song 
that vainly lends his light to grubs — v. ; 

soul lends [Kn/.-gives] the tongue vows. Hamlet , i. ; 

pity me not, but lend thy serious — i.; 

that lend a tyrannous and a damned.... — ii. 

and that shall lend a kind of easiness — iii. 

to lend your patience to us — iv. 

to my unfolding lend a gracious ear .... Othello, i. 
off'ends me; lend me thy handkerchief .. — iii. 

lend me a garter. So; O for a chair — v. 

come, come; lend me alight — v. 

LENDER-bctter plight for a iender.Merry Wires.ii. 

thy pen from lenders' books Lear, iii. 

neither a borrower, nor a lender be .... Hawlei. i. 
LENDING— grace lending grace la's Well, ii. 

name of lendings for your highne.~s'./?iWiarrf //. i. 

lending yoin- kind commiseration. Titus Andron. v. 

off, you feiKlings: eimie: unbutton here.. /.ear, iii. 

not Brieve lending me this n<'(|uainlance — iv. 
LENGTII-that is of :iny hiiLth. Two Gen. ofVerAW. 

one of such onotli'T leiiL'th — iii. 

for this was of much leiit^lh .... Mcas.forMeas. v. 



LEO 



LENGTH of I'rcster John's foot Much Ado, ii. I 

measure his woe the length and breadth — v. I 

to measure out my length WrJ. A. 'jWream, iii. 2 

to draw it out in length Merchant nf Venice, iii. 2 

it seems the length of seven yeu.TB.Asyou Lil^e it,iii.i 

a month's lenglli a-piece Atl'sWetl, iv, 3 

at length the sun, gazing upon . . Comedy of lirr. i. I 
at length, another ship had seized .. — i. 1 
within my sword's length set him .. ..Macbeth, iv.3 
lengths ot seas and sliores between . . King John, i. 1 

your whole head's length Richard II. iii. 3 

18 not my arm of length — iv. 1 

there is such length in grief — v. 1 

at lengtli have gi)tten leave to look . . — v. 5 
never shall have length of life enough. 2 HeTrry/r.ii. 3 
left inc. but my body's lengthl .. .,3Henryyi. v. 2 
shall be drawn out all in length. ...Ricliard lll.v.3 
priile at length broke under me ..Henry Vlll. iii. 2 
at length her grace rose, and with . . — iv. I 
at length they came to the broomstaff — v. 3 
to end a tale of length, Troy . . Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 3 
at length how goes our reckoning?. 7V»ion o,fAth. ii.2 

leave nothing out for length Conolanus, ii. 2 

till, at length, your ignorance — iii. 3 

in Sicyon: her length oi' ?\cV,\\esH.. Antony ff Cleo. i.2 

for now all length IS torture — iv. 12 

once within my pistol's length Pericles, i. 1 

and now at length they overflow — ii. 4 

measure your lubber's length again Lear,i, 4 

within his truncheon's length Hamlet, i, 2 

then goes he to the length of all his arm — ii. 1 
than the length and breadth of a pair of — v. I 
these foils have all a length? Ay — v. 2 

LENGTHEN-lengthens life. Taming of Sh. 2 (indue.) 
lengthen out the worst that mnst.. Richard II. iii. 2 

I'll lengthen it with mine 2Henryyi. i. i 

as heaven and nature lengthens it.. Ricliard III. iv. 4 

who first shall die to lengthen life Pericles, i. 4 

what sadness lengthens nonieo's. Ro7neo '^- Julie', i. I 

LENGTHENED— lengthened hours ..7(ic/ia,d ;/. i. 4 
after many lengthened hours of grief./ti'c/inrrf III. i. 3 
my dream was lengthened after life — i. 4 

to die with lengthened shame Cymbeline, v. 3 

LENGTHENING my return — i. 7 

LENITY— lenity to lechery would. Mea. /or Mca. iii.z 

use lenit3% sweet chuck! Henry V, iii. 2 

for when lenity and criieltj' play for — iii. 6 
and of lenity, to ease your country. . 1 Henry Vl. v. 1 
this too much lenity and harmful ..ZHenryVl. ii. 2 

bold, but too much lenity? — ii. ti 

awake your dangerous lenity Coriolanus, iii. I 

away to heaven respective lenity. 7?oHieo 6- Juliet, iii I 

LEN'T- as thou hast lent me wit. TiroGen.of I'er. ii. 6 
lent him our terror, drest him ..Meas..forMeas. i. 1 
that you have lent him visitation .. — iii. 2 

my lord, he lent it me a wliile MuchAdo, ii. 1 

that eye my daughter lent her — v. 4 

the money by our father lent Love'sL. Lost, ii. 1 

the fool that lent out money . . Merch. of Venice, ii. 3 

if God have lent a man any All's Well, ii. 2 

who lent it you? It was not lent me — v. 3 

gracious England hath lent us Macbeth, iv 3 

what a mad-cap hath heaven lent us. KingJohn,i. \ 
to you here lent, shall point on me..Richujd U. i. 3 
money lent you, four-and-tweuty..lHf"ri/;A'. iii. s 

whose spirit lent a fire even to 2HcnryIV.\. I 

or two, in a whole Lent? — ii. 4 

his skin is surely lent him illenryV I. i\i. 1 

the Lent shall ije as long again — iv.3 

a bounteous hand was kindly lent Richard III. ii. 2 

the royal debt it lent you — ii. 2 

most narrow measure lent me .. Antony ff Cleo. iii. 4 

he lent me some shipping — iii. 6 

Lucina lent not me her aid Cymbeline, v. 4 

had nature lent thee but Titus Andronicus, v. 1 

as heaven had lent her all Pericles, i. (Gower) 

he lent me counsel, and I lent ..Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 2 

is very good meat in Lent — ii. 4 (song) 

ICol. Km.] God had lent us but this. . — iii. .5 

LENTEN— good lenten answer Tuel.rthXight,i. b 

a hare, sir, in a lenten pie Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 4 

wliat lenten entertainment Hamlet, ii. 2 

LENTUS audis scclera? (rep.) ..Titus Andron. iv. 1 

L'ENVOY— thy I'envoy; begin (rep.) Love's L.L. iii. I 
no I'envov, no I'envoy, no salve (rep.) — iii. 1 

LEONARDO— good I^onardo. . . . Mer. of Venice, ii. 2 

LEONATI— strength o' the Leonati.. Cymte/i/ie, v. 1 
exiled, and thrown from Leonati' seat .. — v. 4 

LEONATO, you are come Much Ado, i. 1 

if siguior Leonato be her father — 1. i 

Leonato, signior Claudio (lep.) — i. 1 

your hand I.eonato: we will go together — i. 1 

note the daughter of signior Leonato? — i. 1 
that yon followed not to Leonato's?. . — i. 1 

with'Hero, I..eonnto's short daughter — i. I 
repair to Leonato's: commend nie .. — i. 1 

hath Leonato any son, my lord? — i. 1 

is royally entertained b}' I^eonato. ... — i. 3 

the daughter and heir of Leonato — i. 3 

shall marry the daughter of Leonato — ii. 2 

to undo Hero, and kill Leonato — ii. 2 

come hither, Leonato: what was it.. — ii. 3 
even she. I..eonato's Hero, your Hero — iii. 2 
watch about siguior Leonato's dixir — iii. 3 

there Leonato, take her back again . . — iv. I 

no, Ivconato, I ne\ er tempted her — iv. 1 

I.eonnto, stand I here? is thisthe prince? — iv. I 
l^eonato. I am .>:orry you must hear.. — iv. 1 
signior Leonato, let the friar odvise.. — iv. 1 
bound, and brought to I.AOnato'3 .... — iv. 2 

we have some haste, Leonato — v. I 

Leonato and his brother — v. 1 

hath refonned siguior l.conato — v. I 

siguior Leonato. and the sexton too.. — v. 1 
is this the monument of r.eonato?.. .. — v. 3 
and then to leonato's we will go.... — v. 3 
siguior Leonato, truth it is — v. 4 

LEON.VTrS-sur-addition. I.eonatus..CV"'l'e''"e, i. I 
[(7o'. ^■ll^^call8 him Postlmmus Ix-onutus — i. I 
and my lA^oiiutns our neighbour — i.2 



LEO 



[ 43(3 ] 



ii. 1 
ii. 1 
ii. 2 



11. 7 



ill. 5 



LEON.YTUS is in safety Cymbeline, i. 7 

as you value your truest Leonatus — i. 7 (letter) 

O liiippy lyeoniitus! I may say — .i- 7 

one of Leonatus' friends. Leonatus!.... — ii. 1 
Leonatus! O master! wiiat a strange ... . — jij. 2 

that is my lord? Leonatus? — iii. 2 

your, increasing iu love, Leonatus — iii. 2 (letter) 
the scriptures of tlie lo3'al Leonatus .... — iii. 1 

with tlioni. since Leonatus false — iii. (j 

'twas Leonatus' Jewel — v. 5 

to make tlie nohle Leonatus mad — v. 5 

vi I Itiin be called Posthumtis Leonatus .. — v. 5 

LEl^NINE, a murderer Pericles, iv. (Gower) 

wallt forth with Leonine — iv. 1 

Leonine, take her by the arm — iv. 1 

w.ilk half an hour. Leonine — iv. 1 

alack, that Leonine was so slack .... — iv. 3 

villain Lcouine, whom thou hast. . — iv. 4 
none can know, leonine being gone — iv. 4 

LEONTES, I love thee Winter'sTale, i. 2 

mistook, my lady, Polixenes for Leontes — ii. 1 

iueen to the worthy Leontes.. — iii. 2 (indict.) 
leontes a jealous tyrant — iii. 2 (oracle) 

Leontes leaving the effects of his — iv. (chorus) 
'fore Leontes; she shall be habited .. — iv. 3 

methinks, I see Leontes, opening — iv. 3 

that you'll procure from kiug Leontes — iv. 3 
kliig'Leontes shall not have an heir.. — v. 1 

LEONARD— make leopards tame Richurd II. i. 1 

or oxen , from the leopard 1 Henry f'l.i.i 

seized by the leopard (rep.) . . Timon of Alliens, iv. 3 

LKPI'jR— iim no loathsome leper 2Hemyl'I. iii. 2 

LEl'EROUS— tilt leperons distilraent ... Hamlel, i. 5 

LEPIDirS are at C:i33ar's house ..Julius Ccesar, iii. 2 

consent you, Lepidus? I do consent — iv. 1 

Lepidus, go you to Caisar's house.... — iv. 1 

in some taste, is Lepidus but so — iv. 1 

Antony, and Lepidus have put to death — iv. 3 

Vou may see, Lepidus Antony ff Cleopatra, i. 4 

Lepidus flatters both, of both is — " ' 

Caesar and Lepidus are in the field .. — 
let us, Lepidus, not lack your company — 
be at mount before you, Lepidus — 

1 hope so, Lepidus; tlius we are agreed — 

Lepidus is liigh-coloured — 

strange serpents there. Ay, Lepidus — 

some wine: a health to Lepidus — 

this wine for Lepidus, What manner — 
these quicksands, Lepidus, keep off. . — 
this health to Lepidus. Bear him ashore — 
and Lepidus, since Porapey's feast .. — 
'tis a noble Lepidus. A very fine one — 
Ca:sai- and Ijcpidus have made way — 

cries, fool, Lepidus! and threats — in. s 

that LepidUH of the triumvirate .... — iii. 6 
told him, Lepidus was grown — iii. 6 

LEPROSY— be general leprosy ! 7'imo7i of Athens, iv. V 

make the hoar leprosy adored — iv. 3 

there is no leprosy, but what thou .. — iv. 3 
Egvpt, whom leprosy o'ertake! Antony SfCleo. iii. 8 

IjESS— we are less afraid to be drowned.. Tempest, i. 1 

and how the less, that bum 

and much less take, what 

less than a pound shall Two Gen.oft'i 

inucli less shall she — _ii. 7 

the greater hides the less — iii. 1 

and less than this — v. 4 

the less will prattle of Twelfth Night, \. 2 

thou knowest no less but all — i. i 

and my niece confirms no less — iii. 4 

I must have done no less — v. 1 

proclaim you are no less! Meas.forMeas. \. 5 

1 think no less: good-morrow — ii. 1 

serve heaven witii less respect than.. — ii. 2 
but, in the less, foul profanation .... — ii. 2 

more nor less to others paying — iii. 2 

if he be less, he's nothing — v. 1 

we did believe no less — v. 1 

he is no less than a stuffed man Much Ado, i. I 

no beard is, less than a man (rep.) .. — ii. 1 
which shall bear no less likelihood .. — ii. 2 
tlie less you meddle or make witli them — iii. 3 
less than an ace, man; for he is.Mid.N.'s Dream, v. 1 
of no less weight than Aquitain.. Loue'sL.tosf, ii. 1 

I am less proud to hear you tell — ii. 1 

I think no less; dost thou not wish.. — v. 2 

I cannot give yon less — v. 2 

he goes, with no less presence . . . Mer. of Venice, iii . 2 

make it less, for fear I surfeit! — iii. 2 

if she be less than an honest woman 

nor cut thou less, nor more 

or less, than a just pound 

so doth the greater glory dim the less — v. i 
and no less beloved of her uncle . . As youLike it,\. 1 
and I thought no less; that flattering — iv. 1 

with no less religion, than if — iv. 1 

even daughter, welcome in no less degree — v. 4 

the longer kept, the less worth All's Well, i. 1 

I cannot give thee less to be called . . — ii. I 

all the progress more and less — v. 3 

he is no less than what we say. Taming ofSh. 1 (ind.) 
I will love thee ne'er the less, my girl — i. 1 
rav father hath no less than three .. — ii. 1 
which is for me less easy to commit. . — ii. 1 
Biioke what did become you less . . Winter'sTale, i. 2 

wliich no less adorns our gentry — _i. 2 

hath no less prevailed than so 

yet that dare less appear so 

and no less honest than you are mad 
wanted less impudence to gainsay . . 

look for no less than death 

kings are no less unhappy 

and is less frequent to his princely . . 
much less the adventure of her person? 

lesBj in your knowledge Comedy of Errors, iii. 2 

his incivility confirms no less — iv. 4 

promised no less to them? Macbeth, i. 3 

present fears are less than horrible — i. 3 

would thou hadst less deserved (rep.).. — ..!• "* 
whose absence ie no less material — iii. 1 



— iii. 1 



iu. 5 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 



li. 3 



ill. 2 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
V. 1 



LESS— no less in truth, than life Macbeth, iv. 

both more and less have given — v. 

sorrow hath less power to bite Hichard II. i. 

the envy of less happier lauds — ii. 

'tis nothing less; conceit is still — ii. 

to joy, is little less in joy — ii. 

of much less value is my — ii. 

with no less terror than — iii. 

speak more or less than truth 1 Henry IT. ii. 

the more ond less came in — iv. 

I hope no less, yet needful 'tis — iv. 

grow great, I'll grow less — v. 

and less, do flock to follow him iHenrylV. i. 

my belt, cannot live in less — i. 

less noise, less noise. Who saw — iv. 

other, less fine in carat — iv. 

and not less happy, having such — v. 

make loss thy body, hence — v. 

we judge no less; uncle of Exeter Henry V. ii. 

no less for bounty bound — ii. 

in motion of no less celerity — iii. (cho. 

wherein thou art less happy — iv. 

achievements of no less account .... I Henry VI. ii. 

thou art no less than fame — ii. 

was nothing less than bloody — ii. 

much less, to take occasion — iv. 

little duty, and less love — iv. 

no less beloved, than when thou 2 Henry VI. ii. 

thou deservest no less; this monument — iv. 

is to make less the depth of ZHenry VI. ii. 

and less than I was born to — iii. 

for less I should not be; and men.... — iii. 

it were no less; but yet I'll — iii. 

she could say little less; she had .... — iv. 

I know you for no less — iv. 

I thought no less: it is his policy .... — x. 
brouglit forth less than a mother's .. — v. 
that some, less noble, and less loyal. Kic/iaid ///. ii. 
no less importing than our general .. — iii. 

yet much less spirit to curse — iv. 

a grandam's name is little less in love — iv. 
could do no less, out of the great. . . . Henry VIII. i. 
a woman of less place might ask .... — ii. 

honour to you no less flowing — ii. 

a heart with less allegiance in it! — y. 

less valiant than the virgin .. Troitus^ Cressida, i. 

and be't of less expect that — i. 

in no less working — i. 

that little little less than little wit .. — ii. 

no less noble, much more gentle — ii. 

discharging less than tlie tenth — iii. 

though less than yours in past — iii. 

each weighs nor less nor more — iv. 

rA'n(. J and no less in a sense as strong — iv. 

lordof Troy, no less to you — Iv. 

thou shalt be no less esteemed.. 7'mioi!o//f//ifns, ij. 
of purpose to have him send less .... — iii. 

it turns in less than two nights? — iii. 

we know him for no less, though we — iii. 
in the mean time he wants less, my lord — iii. 
steal not less, for this I give you .... — iv. 

and none less dear than thine Coriolanus, i. 

a man that fears you less than he — i. 

no less than a traducement — i. 

he covets less than misery — ii. 

some less, some more: your voices .. — ii. 

did claim no less than whiit he — ii. 

and tliey are no less, when, both — iii. 

you that will be less fearful — iii. 

with striving less to be so — iii. 

how is it less, or worse — iii. 

they then less need one another — iv. 

with no less confidence — iv. 

and is no less apparent — iv. 

to pardon when it was less expected.. — v. 

very well: could he say less? — v. 

heard a mother less? or granted less? — v. 

we looked for no less spoil — v. 

with no less honour to the — v. 

they would have done no less Julius Ctesar, i . 

Brutus' love to Ca3sar was no less.. ., — iii. 
not that I loved Casar less, but that — iii. 

a prize no less in worth — v.' 

I should have known no less .... Antony % Cleo.i. 

I could have given less matter — _ii. 

'twas a shame no less than was — iii. 1 

less noble mind than she — iv. 1! 

must no less beg than a kingdom. ... — v. 
and their story is no less iu pity .... — y. 

as little as a crow, or less Cymbeline, i. 

speak of him when he was less furnished — i. . 
\Col. Knt.l taking a beggar without less — i. 

bound for no less than my life — i . 

and less attemptible than any — i. 

was't not? or less, at first — ii. 

no whit less than in his feats — iii. 

put thyself into a 'haviour of less fear — iii. 
to show less sovereignty than they .. — iii. 

then had my prize been less — iii . 

and morn to the lark, less welcome. . — iii. 

no less young, more strong — iv. 

great griefs, I see, medicine the less. . — iv. 
movest no less with thy complaining — iv. 

but, be sure, no less beloved — iv. 

can' affnjnt no less than what — iv. 

I will begin the fashion, less without 

and by villauy less than 'twas — 

I say no more, nor wish no less .. Titus Andron 

makes me less gracious — 

more or less, or ne'er a whit — 

whose merit's less Pericles, 

much less in blood than virtue — 

no less than it gives a good — 

and you, our no less loving son Lear 

no less than life, with grace — 

no less in space, validity — 

to my bond; nor more, nor less — 

nor will you tender less — 

I do profess to be no less than I seem .... — 
speak less than thou knowest, lend less. . — 



— v. 1 



LET 

LESS — set less than thou throwest Lear, i. 4 

fools had ne'er less grace in a year — i. 4 (song) 

you less know how to value her ii. 4 

deserved much less advancement ii. 4 

servants, who seem no less iii, i 

die for it, as no less is threatened me — iii. 3 

which my father loses; no less than all.. — iii. 3 

[Col. Knt."] not an hour more nor less .... iv. 7 

thou art in nothing less than I v. 3 

I am no less in blood than v. 3 

making yourself no less. No less?/?o;nco &■ Juliet, i. 3 
her means much less to meet .. — i. .'i (cliorus) 

'tis no less, I tell you _ ii. 4 

a hair more, or a hair less, in his head — iii. 1 

what less than doomsday is — iii. 3 

more than kin, and less than kind .... Hamlet, i. 2 

and with no less nobility of love i. 2 

more matter, with less art ii. 2 

with less remorse than P3'rrhus — ii. 2 

the less they deserve, the more — ii. 2 

for youth no less becomes the light iv. 7 

more, or less, he should the bearers put. . — v. 2 

with the occurrents, more and less v. 3 

thine hath no less reason Othello, i. 3 

deliver more or less than truth ii. 3 

prerogatived are tliey less than the base — iii. 3 

LESSEN God's sending that way Much Ado, \i. 1 

Buckingham shall lessen this big . . Henry VIII. i. 1 

he lessens his requests Antony fy Cleo. in. 10 

place, which lessens, and sets off Cymbeline, iii. 3 

LESSENED— my numbers lessened .. Henry V. iii. 6 

and lessened be that small Richard III. i. 3 

is lessened by another's anguish.. i?omeo^Ju//e(,i. 2 

LESSER— by the lesser legs Tempest, ii. 2 

it is the lesser blot Two Gen. of Verona, v. 4 

my prayer, the lesser is my grace. . Mid. N. Dr. ii. 3 

alack, for lesser knowledge! Winter'sTale, ii. 1 

the kite builds, look to lesser linen .. — iv. 2 
lesser weight, but not with lesser. Comedi/ of Err. i. I 

lesser than Macbeth, and greater Macbeth, i. 3 

others, that lesser hate him — v. 2 

more strong when lesser is my iear.. King John, iv. 2 
thy death-bed is no lesser than ....Richard 1 1, ii. 1 

or lesser than my name — iii. 3 

and thou art far the lesser 'iHenryVI. iv. \0 

can lesser hide his love or hate Richard HI. iii. 4 

doth lesser blench at sufferance.. Troilusf/- Cress, i. 1 

though no man lesser fears — ii. 2 

the greater scorns the lesser . . Timo7i of Alliens, iv. 3 

that s lesser than a little Coriolanus, i. 4 

if any fear lesser his person — i. 6 

lesser had been the thwartings — iii. 2 

how lesser enmities may give ..Antony ^ Cleo. ii. 1 
no lesser of her honour confident. . . . Cymbeline, v. 5 

that caused a lesser villain — v. 5 

like lesser lights, did vail their Pericles, ii. 3 

the lesser is scarce felt Lear, iii. 4 

all night for lesser cause Romeo ^Juliet, iv. 4 

but, lesser a gulf, doth draw Hamlet, iii. 3 

LESSON— to lesson me Two Gen.of Verona, ii. 7 

any hard lesson tliat Aay do thee MuchAdo, i. 1 

but learn my lessons as I yiie^EQ. .Taming of Sh. iii. 1 

my lessons make no music iu — iii. 1 

learn this lesson, draw thy sword ..SHenryVI. ii. 2 
and Where's your lesson then>. Titus.4ndro7iicus,iv. 1 
the effect of this good lesson keep as Hnmtet, i. 3 

LKbSONED— he lessoned us to veep. Richard III. i. 4 

as vou were lessoned, when he Coriolanus, ii. 3 

well hast thou lessoned us Titus Andronicus, v. 2 

LESTHALE— Foix, Lestrale Henry V. iii. 5 

and Marie, Vaudemont, and Lestrale — iv. 8 

LET-wliat lets but one may enter. TwoGen.of Ver. iii. 1 
if nothing lets to make us happy.. TirelfthNight, v. 1 
at the heart. Alack, let it blood ..Love'sL. Lost, ii. I 
hath much blood let forth, and more. All's Well, iii. 1 

to let him there a month Winter'sTale, i. 2 

■what lets it but he would be herG?Comedy of Err. ii. 1 

to lef this land by lease Richard II. i. 1 

that I may know the let Henry V. v. 2 

to-morrow are let blood at Richard III. iii. 1 

I will let his humours hXooi.. Troilus ^ Cressida, ii. 3 
and let out their coin upon large.. 7Vjno» of Ath. iii. 5 

go lest I let foitli your half pint Coriolanus^v. 2 

whoelsemust be let blood Julius Ca:iar,n\. 1 

let a parish of such Cloten's blood . . Cymbeline, iv. 2 
that kings should let their ears hear .... Pericles, i. 2 

are no let fi^n^-stop] to me Romeo ^'Juliet, ii. 2 

I'll make a ghost of him that lets me .. Hamlet, i. 4 

LET-ALONE'-the let-alone lies not Lear, v. 3 

LETHARGIED— discernings are lethargied — i. 4 

LETHARGIES, cold palsies . . TroilusS- Cressida, v. 1 

LETHARGY— by this lethargy? . . TwelflhKight, i. 5 

in this time of lethargy Winter'sTale, iv. 3 

a kind of lethargy, an't please iHenrylV. i. 2 

peace is a very apoplexy, lethargy. . Coriolanus, iv. 5 
the lethargy must have his quiet Othello, iv. 1 

LETHE— my sense in Lethe steep.TwelfthNight, iv. 1 

may this be washed in Lethe 2 Henry IV. v. 2 

so in the Lethe of thy angry soul. . Hichard HI. iv. 4 

and crimsoned in thy Lethe Julius Ctpsar, iii. 1 

sense in soft and delicate Lethe. . Antony ^Cleo. ii. 7 
rots itself in ease on Lethe wharf Hamlet, i. 5 

LETHE'D- aLethe'd dullness Antony S,Cleo. ii. I 

LET'ST— thou let'st thy fortune sleep. . Tempest, ii. I 

frighted, thou let'st fall from Winter'sTale. iv. 3 

game's a-foot, thou still let'st slip . . 1 Henry I V. i. 3 

LE'TTER— letters should not be known. Tempest, ii. 1 
let me hear from thee by letters. r«'o Gen. o/Ter. i. 1 
gavest thou my letter to Julia? (rep.) — i. ) 

for carrying your letter (lep.) — i. 1 

henceforth carry your letters yourself — i. 1 
I would I had o'erlooked the letter . . — i. 2 

force the letter to ray view? — i. 2 

to be so anger'd with another letter.. — 1.2 
till I have found each letter in the letter — i. 2 
what letter are you reading there? .. — i. 3 

lend me tlie letter — 1.3 

to show my father Julia's letter — 1.3 

I have writ your letter — ii. 1 

to himself snould write the letter..,. — ii. 1 



LET 



LETTER— bv a letter TwoGen.qfreroiia.u. I 

she Imlli given you a letter (rep.) .... — n. 1 

what sav you til a Icttir from — .ii- 4 

to Iwariiiv k'llers to my friends .... — ni. 1 

wlmt letter is this s.uiR? — !!■• j 

tliy letters uiiiy lie Ik IV — !!!• j 

for reaillus inv letter — ;"• ' 

nmi llierewitlml tlii.s letter — jv. 4 

please vou peruse this letter — >v. 1 

this is the letter to your ladyship. ... — iv. I 

give liertliis letter Me,ru H ivcs, \. -2 

and the letter is, to desire — !• 2 

I luive writ lue lure a letter to her . . — \- ■i 

here's iinothor letter to her — !• 3 

bear tlioutliis Utter to mistress Vage — ;■ 3 

here, take tlie liumour letter — !• 3 

bear vou these letters ti-htly — ■• 3 

pive-'adis letter tosir Ifuiih — .i- 4 

letter fur letter; hut that the — !!■ ' 

here's the twin hn.ther >•( thy letter.. — n- 1 

a tlious.nid of these letters - ii. 1 

that mv luisbaud saw this letter! .. — ii. 1 
borne the humoured letter to her — — ii- 1 

you'll not bear a letter for me — ]]■ '2 

coaeh after eoneh, letter after letter.. — ;;• -' 

ebe hath received your letter — .i]- '^ 

will carry a letter twenty miles — iii- 2 

are these your letters, knight? — n<- 3 

both tiu-se letters at an instant? — iv. 4 

here is a letter will say somewhat — iv. 5 

1 have a letter from her of sueh — iv. 6 

by the letters that thou wilt drop.. Tu ellVi Nighl , ii. 3 

where he shall fiiul the letter — ;!■ 3 

for I know this letter will make — ;'• 5 

every one of these letters are in my name — .ii. 5 

we sliall have a rare letter from hun — ii]- 2 

he does obey every point of the letter — iii. 2 

this concurs directly with the letter.. — in. 4 

she incites me to that in the letter. ... — iii. 4 

if this letter move him not — ;!!• 4 

now will not I deliver his letter — in. 4 

therefore this letter, being so excellently — in- ■* 

than ever the hearingof letter did.... — iv. 2 

let me see his letter (rep.) ,■■•■•■■ — „ J- \ 

I have your own letter that induced — v. 1 (letter) 

pray you, peruse that letter — v. 1 

presupposed upon thee in the letter .. — v. 1 

Maria writ the letter, at sir Toby's . . — .v. I 
receives letters of strange tenor.., l/ras./oril/eas. iv. 2 

now will I write letters to Angelo — iv. 3 

this letter then to friar Peter give.... — iv. 3 

wend you with this letter: command — iv. 3 

every letter he hath writ, hath disvouched — iv. 4 

these letters at fit time deliver me.... — iv. 5 
I learn in this letter, that don Pedro. . Much.ido, i. 1 

I have already delivered him letters.. — i. I 

and in such great letters as they write — J. 1 

she tore the letter into a thousand .. — _!;. 3 

for the letter that begins them all.... — lu. 4 

this letter will tell you more Lnre sL.Losl,i. 1 

a letter from the magnificent Armado — ;. 1 

will you hear this letter with attention — _i. 1 

I must employ him in a letter to my love — in. 1 

he must carry me a letter — in. I 

I have a letter from monsieur Biron . . — iv. 1 

thy letter, thy letter; he's a good friend — iv. 1 

this letter is mistook, it importeth .. — iv. 1 

that indited this letter? — iv- 1 

who gave thee this letter? — iv. 1 

thou host mistaken his letter — iv. 1 

I will something atfect the letter .... — iv. 2 

be so good as read me this letter — iv. 2 

again on the intellect of the letter. ... — iv. 2 

and here he hath framed a letter to . . — iv. 2 

let this letter be read — iv. 3 

in his letter! Any thing like? (re/).).. — v. 2 

my golden letter; O that your face .. — v- 2 

the letter is too long by half — v- 2 

were longer, and the letter short — v. 2 

we have received your letters — v. 2 

our letters madam, showed much .... — v. 2 

see these letters delivered . . Merchant of Venice, ii. 2 

give him this letter; do it secretly .. — n.S 

was not that letter from fair — .ii. 1 

ere I ope his letter. I pray you — in. 2 

his letter there will show you — !)!'2 

here is a letter, lady, the paper — i).!- ^ 

but let me hear the letter of your — — m- i 
you to come, let not my letter . . — in 2 (letter) 

take this same letter, and use thou .. — ni- 4 

with letters from the doctor — iv- ' 

bring us the letters: call the — .iv. 1 

this letter from lie! lario doth connnend — iv. 1 

the court shall hear Bellario's letter — iv. 1 

at the receipt of your letter — iv. 1 (letter) 

here is a letter, read it at your leisure — v. 1 

unseal this letter soon; there you — — v. 1 

accident I chanced on this letter — — . .7.- ' 
write to him a very taunting letter. .<» yon Lilte il, in. !> 

startle at this letter, and play >.. — iv. 3 

this is a letter of your own device — iv. 3 

ehe never did invent this letter — iv. 3 

will you hear the letter? So please you — iv. 3 

to show the letter that I writ to you.. — v. 2 

there's letters from mv mother All sH ell, ii. 3 

I have writ my letters; casketed my — .;;. 5 

look on his letter, madam — iii- 2 

brought you this letter, gentlemen?.. — Jii. 2 

and would you take the letter of her? — )n. 4 

■ending me a letter? read it aizain .. — ;;;. 4 

tokens and letters which she diil re-send — in. B 

not given him his mother's letter — )v. 3 

the stronger part of it by her own letters — iv. 3 

offered him letters of commendution — iv. 3 

I think I have his letter in my pocket — iv. 3 

with the duke's other letters — iv. 3 

this l8 not the duke's letter, sir — iv. 3 

1 have letters, that my son will — iv. 5 

give my lord i.ofeu this letter — v. 2 

I have letters sent me, that set — v. 3 



[437] 

LETTER— here's your letter M'sirell, v. 3 

hath two letters for her name. Taminfinf shrew, iii. 2 
of gilts, letters, loving embassies .. ll'inter'sTale^ i. 1 
nav, hut mv U'ttrrs liy this means being — iv. 3 
the Utters nf .\iitigiiMiiB, found with it — v. 2 

at voiir inipoitaiit letters Comedy nf p.rrori, v. 1 

thy letters have transported me .l/.icM/i, i. h 

that it in golden letters should be . . Kin.; John, iii. 1 
who brought that letter from the .... — iv. 3 

call in the letters patents IticliarJ II. ii. 1 

anil yet my letters pu tent give me .. — ii. 3 

Willi letters of your liiye to licr — iii. 1 

letters came last night to a dear — iii. 4 

than I by letters shall direct your XHenryll'. i. 3 

have I not all their letters — ii. 2 

go bear this letter to .John of Lancaster — iii. 3 
what letters hast thou there? (rfp.) .. — iv. 1 
his letters bear his mind, not I, my lord — iv. 1 

my lor<l, here are letters for you — v. 2 

get posts, and letters, and make iHcnrylV. i. I 

bear this letter to my lord of Lancaster — i. 2 
3'ou shall have letters of me presently — ii. 1 

there's a letter for you — ii. ^ 

from Japhet: hut the letter — ii. 2 

my lord, I will steep this letter in sack — ii. 2 

bid them o'er-read these letters — iii. 1 

the letters that I sent you? — iii. 1 

new-dated letters from Northumberland — iv. 1 
learning and good letters peace hath — iv. 1 

fair words stilt in foulest letters? — iv. 4 

view these letters, full of bad MUnryVl. i. 1 

a letter was delivered to — iv. 1 

view the letter sent from our — iv. 1 

worst, this letter doth contain ? — iv. 1 

have you perused the letters from.... — v. 1 

with letters of commission from — v. 4 

in his pocket with red letters iu't . .IHenry VI. iv. 2 

to write it on the top of letters — iv. 2 

these letters are for you 3Henri/F/. iii. 3 

as my letters tell me, he's very — iii. 3 

letters, or what news,from France? (»<?/;.)— iv. 1 
makes king Lewis unto our letters?.. — iv. 1 
from the cross-row plucks the letter G.Rich. III. i. 1 

you shall have letters from me — iv. 1 

if she convey letters to Richmond .. — iv. 2 
send her a letter of thy noble deeds . . — iv. 4 
these letters [Col. Knl.-my letter] will — iv. 5 
and his own letter, the honourable. .Hen;;/ I'lII. i. 1 
send our letters, with free pardon — — i.2 
let there be letters writ to every shire — _ i. 2 
cardinal's letter to the pope miscarried — iii. 2 
digest this letter of the cardinal 's? . . — i i i . 2 
the letter, as I live, with all the business — iii. S 

tied it by letters patent — iii. 2 

patience, is that letter, I caused you — iv. 2 
bear a letter to him straight. Troi/us <$■ C)ess/da, iii. 3 

here's a letter for thee — v. 1 

here is a letter from queen Hecuba . . — v. 1 
here's a letter from yon' poor girl — — v. ;! 
your honourable letter he desires. . Timon ofAth. i. 1 
read me the superscription of these letters — ii. 2 

with letters of entreaty — v. 3 

I have the lett"r here Coriolanus,i. 2 

look, here's a letter from him — ii. 1 

a letter for me? Yes, certain (rep.) .. — ii. 1 
the senate has letters from the general — ii. 1 
receive his letters, and is comiug..JiiliusC<rsar, iii. I 

my letters, praying on his side — iv. 3 

I have here received letters, that young — iv. 3 
myself have letters of the self-same.. — iv. 3 
therein our letters do not well agree — iv. 3 

letters from your wife, my lord? ()fp.) — iv. 3 
letters too of many our contriving. Aniony S,- Cleo. i. 2 
of this, my letters before did satisfy you — ii. 2 

you did pocket up my letters — ii. 2 

our letters are prepared — iii- 3 

accuses him of letters he had formerly — iii. 5 
your letters did withold our breaking — iii. 6 

you shall have letters from me — iii. 9 

to me known but by letter Cymbeline, i. 2 

comes from my lord with letters — i. 7 

here are letters for you _— ii. 4 

the letter that I have sent her . . — in. 2 (letter) 
madam, here is a letter from my lord — iii. 2 
she hath my letter for the purpose — iii. 4 (letter) 

sirrah, is tills letter true? — iii. 5 

with liis forged letters, damned Pisanio — iv. 2 
the Roman emperor's letters, sent . . — iv. 2 

I heard no letter from my master — iv. 3 

I had a feigned letter of my master's — v. 5 
see'st thou this letter? take it up.. TilusAndron. ii. 3 

who found this letter? Tamora .. — ii. 4 

your letter is with Jupiter by this . . — iv. 3 

liave you any letters? — iv- 3 

I have brought you a letter — iv. 4 

I liave received letters from great — v. 1 

the letter that thv father found (np.) — v. 1 

by whose letters I'll dispose myself Pericles, \. 2 

now to my daughter's letter — ii. 5 

what's herel a letter, that she loves.. — li. 5 
of king Simonides are letters brought — iii. (Gow.) 
this letter, and some certain jewels.. — - iii. 4 

trained in music, letters — iv. Gow.) 

lord (ierimon hath letters of good credit — v. 3 

if this letter speed, and my invention Lear, i. 2 

seek you to put up that letter? — i.2 

It is a letter from my brother — i.2 

give me the letter, sir — i.2 

his very opinion in the letter! — 1.2 

have you writ that letter to my sister? . . — i. 4 

to Gloster with these letters — i. 5 

fiom lier demand out of the letter — i. 5 

till I have delivered yonr letter — i. 5 

would he deny his letter? — i). 1 

you come with letters against the king .. — ii.2 
whoreson zed 1 Thou unnecessary letter! — ii.2 

beams I may peruse this letter! — ii.2 

commend your highness' letters to them — ii. 4 
delivered letters, spite of intermission .. — |i. 4 
this approvci. her letter, that she — ii 4 



LEV 



LETTER— I have received a letter Lear, iii. 

I have locked the letter in mv closet — iii. 

instantly know: and of that letter too .. — iii. 

this is the letter he spoke of. — iii. 

show him this letter — iii. 

come, sir, what letters had 5'ou late — iii. 

I have a letter gucssingly set down — iii. 

this letter, madam, craves a speedy — iv. 

did yonr letters pierce the queen — iv. 

import my sister's letters to him? — iv. 

after him, madam, with my letter — iv. 

let me unseal the letter — iv. 

were all the letters suns. I could not — iv. 

and give the letters, which thou find'st .. — iv. 

these letters, that he speaks of — iv. 

before yon fight the battle, ope the letter — v. 

stay till I have read theletter — v. 

ay, if I know the letters Komeo ^Juliel, i. 

hath sent a letter to his father's house — ii. 

answer a letter. Nay, he will (.rcjj.) — ii. 

both begin with a letter? (icp.) — li. 

shall Romeo by my letters know — |v. 

with my letters to thy lord — iv. 

dost thou not brin^ me letters (rep.) — v. 

be writ, give me his letter — v. 

who bare my letter then to Romeo?.. — v. 

the letter was not nice, but full of . . — v. 

take this letter; early in the moniing — v. 

but he which bore my letter — v. 

yesternight returned my letter back — v. 

this letter he early bid me give his father— v. 

give me the letter, I will look on it . . — v. 

letter doth make good the friar's words — y. 

I did repel his letters, and denied his . Hamlet,]]. 

there's letters sealed — iji. 

by letters coniuring to that effect — iv. 

they say, they have letters for you [rep.) — iv. 

kin'g, they have letters for him (,rep.) — iv. 6 (let. 

give you way for these your letters.. — iv. 

letters, ray lord, from Hamlet — Iv. 

preferment goes by letter, and affection .Othello, i. 

my letters say, a hundred and seven . . — !• 

yourself read in the bitter letter — __i. 

these letters give, lago, to the pilot .... — in. 

may be, the letter moved him — iv. 

or did the letters work upon his blood.. — iv. 

here is a letter, found in the pocket (rep.) — v. 

I pray vou, in your letters, when you .. . — v. 
LETTERED— are you not lettered?.. Low's L.L. v. 
LETTING— as letting her pass so .... AlVi Well, iii. 

letting I dare not wait upon Macbeth, i. 

purge this choler without letting Richard II. i. 

not letting it decline on Troilus f/ Cresaida, iv. 

letting them thrive again on Cymbeline, v. 

letting it there stand Romeo ^ Juliet, ii. 

letting go safely by the divine Othello, ii . 

LETTUCE— plant nettles, or sow lettuce — i. 
LEVE— with gud leve, as I may pick.. Henri/ K. iii. 
LEVEL-we steal by line and level (rep.) Tempest, iv. 

so sways she level in her Tiretf/hAight, u. 

description, level at my affection.. jVcr. of renice, i. 

only where qualities were level All's ll'ell.i. 

against the level of mine aim — ii. 

out of the blank and level of my brain — ii. 

my life stands in the level of IVinter'sTale, iii. 

and hold their level with thy XHenryll'. iii. 

thrust me from a level iHeniylV.X}. 

make mountains level — iii- 

with as great aim level at the edge .. — in. 

and every thing lies level to our wish — iv. 

doth level at my life iWenryVI. iii. 

ambitious York did level at Sllenryl'I. ii. 

therefore level not to hit their VivQs.llichntd III. iv. 

1 stood i' the level of a full-charged. Hejiri/r///. i. 

there's nothing level in our Timon ofAth. iv. 

girls, are level now with men ..Antony f,- Cleo. iv. I 

hits the mark his eye doth level at I'ericles,}. 

that's the mark I know you level at .. — ii. 

from the deadly level of a gun . . Ilomeo Sr Juliet, iii. 

as level as the cannon to his Hamlet, iv. 

it shall as level to your judgment 'pear — iv. 

and hesort, as levels with her breeding.. OfA.7/oj i. 
LEVELLEO-but this be levelled false. /VurA ^c/o, iv. 

no levelled malice infects one Timon ofAth. i. 

she levelled at our purposes. /l/i(o»!/ *C(to/Mtra, v. 
'LE'VEN-evcry 'levcn tods; every tod. 'Vinler'sT. iv. 
LEVER— have you any levers to lift..lHf"r!//»'. ii. 
LEVI ATHAN-huge leviathans .Tu-oGen.ofl'er. iii. 

ere the leviathan can swim Mid.N.'s Dream,ii. 

to the leviathan to come ashore Henry r. iij. 

LEVIED— a tiencberous army levied Tempest, i. 

a thousand marks be levied Comedy of Errors, i. 

was levied in the body of a land King John, iv. 

the duke of York had levied there . . Richard II. ii. 

my ransom then will soon be levied ..Henry I', iv. 

distress; levied an arm;?, weening to. \ Henry VI. ii. 

that were le\ied for this siegel — iv. 

the levied succours that should — iv. 

that you withold his levied host — i.v. 

tliese soldiers shall be levied 3 Henry VI. in- 
to be levied without delay Henry VI 1 1, i. 

thv soldiers all levied in my name Lear, v. 

so'levicd as before, against the Polack . . Hnin/e/, ii. 
LEVIES— the benefit of our levies Coriolanm, v. 

in that the levies, the lists, and full Hamlet,]. 

to suiipress his nephew's levies — li. 

LEVlTY-disvalued in \v\ity .. ..Meas.forMeas. v. 

ere thev can hide their levity in All sH'ell.i. 

convince of levity as well my. 7'ioiV«»<^CreMi(/(i, ii. 

instruct us what leviiy's in youth.. 7'im«fi of Aih. i. 

business frowns at this levity Aniony ff Cleo. u. 

he is already traduced for levity — i". 

LEVY-foreign levy, nothing can touch. flfaoM/i, in. 

for us to levy power, proportionable. /tiVAard //. ii. 

a power of ftiii-'lish shall we levy ....MIenrylV.i. 

the which be ('•ni.ld not levy - iv. 

lew great sums of money illenryVl. in. 

po levy men, and make prepare illenryVl. iv. 

let's lew men, and heat iiim — iv. 

bid him" levy straight Richard III. iv. 



LEVY— for thin immediate levy CymbeUnr:, jii. 7 1 LIBERTINE-hast been a libertine. As youLike it, ii. 7 



— iii. 1 



V. 2 



— IV. I 



IV. 1 

iv. 1 
— iv. 3 

. ..Lovers L. Lost, v. 1 



wbereimto your levy must be sui^plyaat , 

never did thought or mine levy ottence. Pericles, ii. 5 
LEVYING— are levying powers ..Julius Cmar, iv. 1 

who now nre levying Antony ^ Cleopatra, iii. 6 

LEWD— bv this lewd feMow .Measure/or Measure, v. ! 

grew with til is lewd fellow MucU.Uo, v. 1 

wert near a lewd intei|ireter?..jl/(')TA.o/ rf/i/ce, iii. 4 

fiel 'tis lewd un.l filtliv Tnmiug nf Shreir, iv. 3 

halh detained fur lewd enipIovinei:ts./i'/c/i<j)<; ;/. i. 1 
sucli lewd, sueh mean attenipis .. ..\ Hcnn/lf. iii. i 

beeause vou jiave been so lewd 2 lloiry I r. ii. 2 

lewd, iiestiferons, and uissentioiis ..\ ll,„ry ri. iii. I 
trouble him with lewd eomplaints. .yit/cAuiii ///. i. :! 
he is not lolling on a lewd day-bed .. — iii. 7 
damn her, lewd minx! O damn her! ..Othello, iii. 3 
LEAVDLY-should be lewdly given ..\ Henry 11^. ii. 4 

■naughty persons, lewdly bent iHenry Vl. ii. 1 

LEWDLY- 1 NCLINED. I'll bring. . . . Perides, iv. 3 

LEWDNESS— end of their lewdness. H^nri/;'///. i. 3 

thonch lewdness court it in a shape of ..HamU't, i. 5 

LEWlJSTl^K-agiiintt sueh lewdsters..M»r>i/»'. v. 3 

LEAVD-TONGUED wife Winter'stale, ii. 3 

LICWIS- Lewis, determine what we ..KingJolm, ii. 1 
upon the years of Lewis the Dauphin 
shall Lewis have Blanch? irep.) .... 

O Lew is, sttmd fast; the devil 

thine honour, Lewis, tiiine honour .. 
of lich prosperity, as Lewis himself.. 

if Lewis do win the day c>-fp.) v. 4 

to Lewis the emperor, and Lewis HenryV. i. 2 

also king Lewis the tenth, who i. 2 

king Jjewis his satisfaction i. 2 

and Lewis a prince soon won Vi'iih . .'iUenry VI. iii. 1 
shonldst stand, while X^ewis doth sit — iii. 3 

be it known to noble Lewis, that Henry — iii. 3 
king Lewis, and lady Bona, hear .... — iii, 3 

look therefore, Lew is, that by iii. 3 

coming, Lewis was Henry's friend .. — iii. 3 

nay, mark how Lewis stamps — iii. 3 

king Lewis, I here protest, in sight .. — iii. 3 
if king Lewis vouchsafe to furnish us — iii. 3 
that J .cwis of France is sending (rep. iv. 1) — iii. 3 
as well as Lewis of France, or the earl — iv. 1 
they are but Lewis and AVarwick 
tiiat king Lev/is becomes your enemy — 
if both Ijcwis and Warwick be appeased 
answer makes king Lewis unto our .. 

is Lewis so brave? belike, he 

and tell wliat answer Lewis 

LIABLE— is liable, congruent _ , 

find liable to our crown and dignity. King- Jolinli-. _ 

apt, liable, to be employed in iv. 2 

such as to my claim are liable v. 2 

yet if n\y name were liable to fear../MKus Ccesar, i. 2 

and reason to my love is liable — ii. 2 

of each rogue thy ear is liable Pericles, iv. 6 

LI AK— I do despise a liar, as I do . . Merry Wives, i. 1 

else tile Puck a liar call Mid, N.'s Dream, (epil.) 

I know him a notorious liar AWslVeU,\. 1 

an influite and endless liar, an hourly — iii. 6 
now I find repoit a very liar . . Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 
your are liars all. Beseech your .. Winter' sTale, ii. 3 

than that, or there be liars — iv. 3 

then the liars and swearers (rep.) .... Macbeth, iv. 2 

liar and slave! Let me endure — v. 5 

good men hate so foul a liar Richard II. i. 1 

or else there be liars Troilus ^- Cressida, ii. 1 

howsoever j'ou Iiave been his liar. . . . Coriolanus, v. 2 
measureless liar, thou hast made .... — v. 5 
that he approves the common liar. Antony ^-Cleo. i. 1 

art turned the greatest liar — i. 3 

drmikards, liars, and iidulterers Lear, i. 2 

heretics, be burnt for liars! Itomeo ^- Juliet, i. 2 

doubt truth to be a liar Hamlet, ii. 2 (letter) 

elie's like a liar, gone to burning hell . . Otiiello, v. 2 

LTBBARD— with libbard's head Love'sL. Lost, v. 2 

LIBEL— libels, and dreams iiidiard III. i. 1 

LIBELLING against the senate . . Titus Andron. iv. 4 

LIBERAL— for the liberal arts Tempest, i. 2 

slie is too liberal Two Gen. of Verona, iii. 1 

most like a liberal villain Much Ado, iv. 1 

all liberal reason I will yield .... Love'sL. Lost, ii. 1 
the liberal opposition of our spirits .. — v. 2 
they show something too liberal.. Me r. of Venice, ii. 2 
I see sir, you are liberal in offers .... — iv. 1 

I will become as liberal as you v. 1 

and liberal to mine own children.. 7'am/ng-o/S/i. i. I 

and liberal largess, are grown Richard II. i. l 

disburdened with a liberal tongue .... — ii. i 
tire liberal kind offer of the king ....\HenryIV. v. 2 

his liberal eye doth give Henry V. iv. (chorus) 

she hath been liberal and free 1 Henry VI. v. 4 

wealth doth warrant liberal dower .. v. 5 

the people liberal, valiant, active ..2Henry VI. iv. 7 

courteous, liberal, full of spiiit ZHenryVI. i. 2 

a liberal rewarder of his friends .... Richard III. i. 3 
of liis way should be most liberal . . Henry VIII. i. 3 

wliere you are liberal of your loves .. ii. i 

this is all a liberal course allows.. TimonofAth. iii. 3 
well studied for a liberal thanks.. /hitonj/ <^ Cieo. ii. 6 
that liberal shepherds give a. grosser . ... Hinnlel, iv. 7 

and of very liberal conceit — v. 2 

a most profane and lib,,'ral counsellor?.. OMei/o, ii. 1 
this argues fruitfidness, and liberal heart — iii. 4 

a liberal hand: the hearts, of old — iii. 4 

I will speak as liberal as the air — v. 2 

LIBERAL-CONCEITED carriages ....Hamlef,v. 2 
LIBERALITY-Baptista's liberality 7'atntj7g-o/-A7,.i. 2 

virtue, youth, liberality Troilus ff Cress, i. 2 

■words, fair looks, and liberalitv?. . TilusAndrnn. ii. 1 
LIBERTE— de vous donner la liberte .. Henr,/ V. iv. 4 
LIBERT tES-sueh like liberties of sin. Cow. or Err. i. 2 

ever spake against yoiu- liberties Coriolanus, ii. 3 

will from them take their liberties .. ii. 3 

at point to lose your liberties _ iii. 1 

upon one battle all our liberties ..Julius Cirsar. v. 1 
for their liberties, are now in arms. . Cymbelhie, iii. 1 

•wrong my liberties in absence Pericles, i. 2 

LIBERTINE-libertines delight him .Much Ado, ii. 1 



the air, a chartered libertine, is still . . Henry V. .. . 

tie up the libertine in a field Antony 4 Cleo. ii. 1 

like a puffed and reckless libertine Hamlet, i. 3 

LIBERTY— my liberty Tempest, i. 2 

the earth let liberty make use of i. 2 

straightway, at liberty v. 1 

to put me into everlasting liberty. ^/erri, Wives, iii. 3 

from too much liberty (;■<•;>.) Meas. furMcas. i. 3 

and liberty plucks justice by the — i. 4 

and liberty, which have, for long — i. 5 

not eitlier delivered him to his liberty — iv. 2 

the liberty of the prison (I'cp.) — iv. 2 

if I had my liberty; I would do Much Ado, i. 3 

setting thee at liberty Love's L. Lost, iii. 1 

I give thee thy liberty, set thee — iii. 1 

to liberty, and not to banishment. .4s youLike it, i. 3 
I must have liberty withal, as large — ii. 7 

thy liberty into bondage — v. 1 

this liberty is all that 1 request .. Taming of Sh. ii. 1 
the patron of my life and liberty .... — iv. 2 
derive a liberty from heartiness .. Wintcr'sTale, i. 2 
a man is master of his liberty . . Comedy of Err. ii. I 
should their liberty than ours be more? — ii. 1 
why, headstrong liberty is lashed .. — ii. 1 
and bid you forsake your liberty .... — iv. 3 
give their eyes the liberty of gazing — v. 1 

gain a husband by his liberty — v. 1 

set thou at liberty; the fat ribs King John, iii. 3 

liberty! but now I envy at their liberty — iii. 4 

you have bid us ask his liberty — iv. 2 

your weal, he have his liberty — iv. 2 

any prince, so wild, at liberty I Henry IV. v. 2 

in liberty of bloody hand Henry V. iii. 3 

and the liberty that follows our — v. 2 

lost my liberty, and they their lives .1 Henry VI. ii. 5 
I may have liberty to venge this .... — iii. 4 

from the liberty of flight — iv. 2 

if thej' can gain your liberty — v. 3 

gained thy daughter princely liberty — v. 3 
show yourselves men, 'tis for liberty.2Henc!/F/. iv.2 
how no-wl is Somerset at liberty? '.. — v. 1 
hath good usage and great liberty.. 3 Henri/ ''J'- iv. 5 

my captive state unto liberty — iv. 6 

quite forget their loss of liberty _ iv. 6 

my joy of liberty is half eclipsed .... — iv. 6 
got my lord chamberlain his liberty.^/cAarti///. i. 1 
kites and buzzards prey at liberty .. — i. 1 

I muse, why she's at liberty — i. 3 

being pent from liberty, as I am — i. 4 

untainted, unexamined, free, at liberty — iii. 6 

to see you ta'en from liberty Henry VIII. i. 1 

from -Hdiose help I derived liberty.. T/mo?! ofAlh. i. 2 
lust and liberty creep in the minds . . — iv. I 

but if it were at liberty, 'twould Coriolanus, ii. 3 

liberty! Freedom! (rep.) Julius Ccesar, iii. \ 

the men that ^ave our country liberty — iii. 1 

he brings me liberty Antony ^ Cleopatra, v. 2 

a way, I think, to liberty Cymbeline, v. 4 

than eyesight, space, and liberty Lear, i. 1 

by giving liberty to thine eyes ..Borneo ^Juliet, i. 1 

so loving jealous of his liberty — ii. 2 

to prison, eyes! ne'er look on liberty! — iii. 2 

most known to youth and liberty Hamlet, ii. 1 

that they may seem the taints of liberty — ii. 1 
and tlie liberty, these are the only men — ii. 2 
bar the door upon your own liberty .... — iii. 2 

his liberty is full of threats to all — iv. 1 

and there is full liberty of feasting . ...ODiello, ii. 2 

requires a sequester from liberty — iii. 4 

LIBRARY was dukedom large enough. . Tempest, i. 2 
from my own library, with volumes . . — i. 2 
take choice of all my lihrarY. .Tiius.indronicus, iv. 1 

LICENCE— the licence of ink Ticelflh Night, iii. 2 

your virtue hath a licence in't ..Meas.forMeas. ii. 4 

IS a fellow of much licence — iii. 2 

licence of free foot hast caught ..As you Likeit, ii. 7 

we licence your departure with 1 Henry IV. i. 3 

from curbed licence plucks %Henry'lV. iv. i 

did give ourself to barbarous licence . . Henry V. i. 2 
for charitable licence, that we may .. — iv. 7 
thou shalt have a licence to Vill, .. .^Henry VI. iv. 3 

withsueh full licence, as both Antony if Cleo. i. 2 

by his licence, Fortinbras craves Hamlet, iv. 4 

LICENTIOXJS-I were licentious?Co»ic(^i/ o/£rr. ii. 2 

can hold licentious wickedness HenryV. iii. 3 

with all licentious measure Timon of Athens, y. 5 

to my sense bend no licentious ear Pericles, v. 3 

LICHAS— Hercules, and JAal\as..Mer. of Venice, ii. 1 
lodge Liclias on tlie horns ....Antony ^Cleo. iv. 10 

LICIO— his name is Licio Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 

now, Licio, to you ; good masters .... — iii. 1 

niusician, amorous Licio — iii. 2 

is't possible, friend Licio, that Bianea — iv. 2 

Licio, this is wonderful (rep.) — iv. 2 

then "we are rid of Licio. . . 



LICK— let me lick thy shoe Tempest, iii. 2 

is that, the forest bear doth lick?..,. 3Hi'»!!'!/f'/. ii. 2 
may diseases lick up their .... Timon of Alliens, iv. 3 

let them not lick the sweet Coriolanus, iii. 1 

the head-Iu"ged Iiear would lick Lear, iv. 2 

they can lick their fingers (rep.)Romeo ^Juliet, iv. 2 
tile candied tongue lick absurd pomp. . Hamlet, iii. 2 

LICKED— dogs licked his sores \ Henry IV. iv. 2 

LICTOR.S will catch at us Antony ^Cleopatra, v. 2 

LID— two grey eyes, with lids ....Twelfth Nig)it,\. 5 

than the lids of Juno's eyes Wintcr'sTale, iv. 3 

hang upon his penthouse lid Macbeth, i. 3 

by God's lid, it does one's \\eart.. Troilus^- Cress, i. 2 

and would nnder-peep her lids Cymbeline, ii. 2 

with thy vailed lids seek for thy noble. . Hamlet, i. 2 

LIE— thou might'st lie drowning Tempest, i. 1 

lie there my art — i. 2 

to credit his own lie — i, 2 

told thee no lies — i. 2 

full fathom five thy father lies .. — i. 2 (song) 

would it not say, he lies? — ii. 1 

ay, sir; where lies that? — ii. 1 

here lies your brother — ii. 1 

no better than the earth he lies upon . . — ii. 1 



LIE-^you here do snoring lie ....Tempest, ii. 1 (song) 

which lie tumbling in my — ji 2 

but you'll lie like dogs .'" _ i\\ 2 

wilt thou tell a monstrous lie .'. _ iii' 3 

I do not lie iii* 2 

give me the lie another time ".!!!'.'. '.!'.'. _ iii' 2 

I did not give the lie _ in' 2 

travellers ne'er did lie — iii'3 

and with him there lie mudded . .' _ iii' 3 

at this hour lie at rav mercy _ iv 1 

that now lie foul and muddy _ v! I 

in a cowslip's bell I lie '-1 v 1 (song) 

where my son lies '_ y 1 

let it lie for those (rep.) ....TwoGen. of Verona, i. 2 

and let the papers lie (rep.) _ i. 2 

where lies sir Proteus? jv. 2 

nay, then the -wanton lies _ v.i 

shall I tell you alie? Merry Wives,i'. 1 

and lie under Mount Pelion — ij. 1 

does he lie at the Garter? — jj' 1 

let it lie on my head ii' 1 

I -would have nothing lie on my head — ii.' 1 

all ways do lie open {j. 2 

and thou shalt he with his wife — ii! 2 

master Brook, I will not lie to you. . — iii. 5 

good It-ick lies in odd numbers — v. I 

shall lie with mistress Ford — v. 5 

love-thoughts lie rich Twelfh Night, i. 1 

here lies your way _ i. 5 

wliere lies your text? _ i. ,5 

there it lies in your eye _ ij. 2 

in delay there lies no plenty — ii. 3 (song) 

out o' time, sir? ye lie — ji, 3 

witenoujjh to lie straight in my bed — ii. 3 

lie thou there; for here comes — ij. 5 

the king lies by a beggar — iii. 1 

there lies your way, due west — iii. I 

and as many lies as will lie in thy .. — iii. 2 

where lie my maiden weeds _ v. 1 

yet in this life lie hid more ....Meas. for Meas. iii. I 

to lie in cold obstruction iii. 1 

it lies much in your holding up — iii. i 

to-night shall he his old betrothed .. — iii. 2 

when it lies starkly in — iv.2 

I had rather lie in the woollen Much Ado, ii. I 

tlie poison of that lies in you — ii. 2 

in my chamber window lies a book.. — ii. 3 

now -n-ill he lie ten nights awake — ii. 3 

would the two princes lie? (?-fp.) _ iv. 1 

if this sweet lady lie not guiltless 

and yet I lie not, I confess nothing . . 
that only tells a lie, and swears it .. 

some of us would lie low 

and she lies buried with her ancestors 
that lie, and cog, and flout, deprave. . 

was the Hero that here lies — v. 3 (scroll) 

were wont to lie, emptying our. Mid. N.'s Dream.i. I 

amend it then, it lies in you — ii. 2 

lie further off yet, do not lie (rep.) .. — ii. 3 

for lying so, Hermia, I do not lie — ii. 3 

she durst not lie near this lack-love — ii. 3 
happy is Hermia, -ivheresoe'er she lies — ii. 3 

wiio would give a bird the lie — iii. I 

there lies your love — iv. 1 

puts the wretch, that lies in -woe v. 2 

find where light in darkness lies.. Love's L. Lost, i. 1 

she must lie here on mere necessity. . i. i 

Hove to hear him lie _ j. 1 

which very seldom lies ii. 1 

a tongue which I know will not lie.. — ii. 1 
nothing in the world but lie, and lie in — iv. 3 

she is but corporal; there you lie — iv. 3 

where lies thy grief, O tell me — iv. 3 

where lies thy pain? jv. 3 

what upward lies the street — iv. 3 

in their hearts it lies — v. 2 

you lie, you are not he v. 2 

that lie within the mercy of v. 2 

a jest's prosperity lies in _ v. 2 

extremest means, lie all vnloeked.Mer. of Venice. i . 1 

in a golden bed lies all within — ii. 7 

and if my form lie there, tlien I — ii. 7 

of many a tall ship lie buried — iii. 1 

in the cradle where it lies iii. 2 (sons) 

for never shall you lie by Portia's side — iii.''2 
and tell quaint lies, how honourable — iii. 4 

twenty of these puny lies I'll tell iii. 4 

and the oflfender's life lies in — iv. 1 

and that it sliould lie with you — v. 1 

if I could add a lie unto a fault — v. I 

lie not a night from home v. 1 

last night did lie with me v. I 

absent, then lie witli my wife — v. 1 

and, as much as in him lies As you Like it, i. 1 

yonder they lie; the poor old man .. — i. 2 

that is so desirous to lie with his — i. 2 

and, lie there what hidden woman's — i. 3 

the lodging where you use to lie — ii. 3 

should in my old limbs lie lame .... — ii. 3 

who loves to lie with me — ii. 5(soug) 

iiere lie I down,'and measure out my . — ii. 6 



. I 



iv. I 



V. I 



— iii. 2 



iv. 1 



still give the lie to their consciences 
for shame, lie not, to say mine . 

but these are all lies ..'. .... 

these pretty country folks would lie _ v. 3 (song) 

upon alie seven times — v. 4 

he would say. Hie _ v. 4 

the lie circumstantial (rep.) y. 4 

in order now the degrees of the lie?.. — v. 4 

the lie with circumstance (i-o';;.) — v. 4 

our remedies oft in oursolvesdo lie All'slVell, i. 1 



remembrance, sir, lies richer i 

one that lies three thirds 

I know she will lie at my house 

two or three probable lies 

to return and swear the lies he forges 

tlierefore I'll lie -with him 

he will lie, sir, witli such volubility 
it lies in j'ou, my lord. 



— i. 2 

ii. 5 



in you it best lies 



iv. 2 

iv. 3 

V. 2 

— V. 3 (petit.) 



ii. I 



iv. 5 



LIE 

LIE— than in my thought it lies! Hralfell, v. 3 

how like a swine he licsl.. Taming (tTShrew, 1 OiidJ 

you lie, in faith; for you are 

could find it where it liea — 

open, sir, there lies your way 

the note lies in his throat .... 

there doth my father lie .... 

nav, then you lie 

it IS, you lie, vou lie Winter s TaU, i. 2 

that lies cnolosed in thi-: trunk . . . 

the chapel « Ikix' tiny lia 

there lie; uiul IhcTf tliy character. 
while we lie tunililini; in the hay 
where my luiul ami living lies ... 

for love to liu and pliiy on 

why should I I'lirr.N' lies abroad? . 

his own estate? lies he not bedrid? .. — 

to lie close by his honest bones — 

my fortimesdo all lie there — 

I see, the play so lies, that I — 

a lie; you arc rough and hairy — 

thev often give us soldiers the lie.. .. — 
Bir.there lies such secrets in this fardel — 

give me the lie, do — v. z 

(till lies out o' door Comedy of Errors, u. 1 

I'll take thee, and there lie — iij. 2 

for in my way it lies Macbeth, i, 4 

their drenched natures lie, as in .... — _i. 7 

a heavy summons lies like lead .... — ii. 1 

who lies i' the second chamber? .... — ii. 2 

they must lie there — ii. 2 

that vou did lie so late? — n. 3 

the lie, leaves him (rsp.) — ii. 3 

but I requited him for his lie — ii. 3 

of the mind to lie in restless ecstacy — iii. 2 

there the {irown serpent lies — iii. 4 

tell pale-hearted fear, it lies — iv. 1 

one that swears and lies — iv. 2 

all be hanged, that swear and lie — iv. 2 

here let them lie, till famine — v. 5 

the fiend, that lies like truth — v. 5 

I'll prove the lie thou speak'st 



[ 439 ] 



LIE 



— iii. 2 



— IV. 3 

— iv. 3 

— iv. 3 

— iv. 3 

— iv. 3 

— iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 



— V. 7 



in 


3 


111 


4 


IV. 


1 


IV 


1 


iv 


3 


iv 


3 


V 


2 


V 


2 


V 


3 


V 


7 



— i. 3 



iii. 2 

iii. 2 

iii. 2 

iii. 2 

iii. 3 



which fault lies on the hazards Kin, 

who says it was, he lies — i. 1 

it lies as sightly on the back of him — ii. 1 

whose sons lie scattered on the bleeding — ii. 2 
groveling lies, coldly embracing — — ii. 2 
whose fulness of perfectiou lies in him — ii. 2 

with me thy fortune lies - iii. 1 

Austria's head lie there '" " 

he lies before me 

absent child, lies in his bed .... 
my mercy, which lies dead .... 
and, where lies your grief? — 
what is he lies here? death . . 

who speaks not truly, lies 

it may lie gently at the foot of 
to lie, like pawns, locked up in 
60 long, lies heavy on me ..... 

lie at the proud foot of 

most falsely doth he lie Richard II. \. ] 

now swallow down that lie — i. 1 

a time lies in one little wordl — i. 3 

imagine it to lie that way 

where lies he? At Ely-house 

for their love lies in their purses .... 

if i udgment lie in them 

in my loyal bosom lies his power .... 
and heavy-gaited toads, lie in their.. 

how far off Res your power? 

and lie full low, graved in 

where lies our uncle with his 

king Richard lies within the 

there lies two kinsmen, digged 

with full as many lies as 

that lie shall lie so heavy {rev.) 

whilst I say, he lies, he lies, ne lies . . 

and soon lie Richard in 

my grief lies all within 

there lies the substance; and I thank 

in his dishonour lies — v. 3 

herein all breathless lies — v. 6 

Gadshill lies to-night in Rochester ..MlenrylV. i. 2 

the incomprehensilile lies that — i. 2 

reproof of this, lies the jest — i. 2 

when he lies asleep, and in his ear .. — i.3 
yet I lie; for they pray contioually .. — ii. 1 

jpeace, ye fat-guts! lie down — ii. 2 

you lie, you rogue; 'tis going to — ii. 2 

cowardly hind, and yon lie — ii. 3 

if I tell thee a lie, spit in my face — ii. 4 

these lies arc like the father — ii. 4 

here lies the point; why, lieing — ii. 4 

lie still, ye tliief, and hear — iii. 1 

you lie, hostess; Bardolph was shaved — iii. 3 
or we, must lower lie. Rare words! — iii. 3 

that lie too heavy on the — iv. 3 

without ransom to lie forfeited — Iv. 3 

here breathless lies the king — v. 3 

many a nobleman lies stark — v. 3 

where stained nobility lies trodden on — v. 4 

our duty this way lies — v. 4 

hand of' death lies on my tongue 

in blood by noble Percy lie 

1 lie, I am no counterfeit 

if a lie may do thee grace 

Northumberland lies crafty-sick.. 2//(fnri//*'. (ind 



his divination lies; and I will take . 

you lie in your throat, if you 

anil sweetheart, lie thou there 

then, happy low, lie down! (rrp.) 

and weak beginnings, lie intreasurcd 
and every third word a lie, ducr jiaid 
for lol within a ken, our army lies .. 
lords, we shall lie to-night together.. 
and every thing lies level to our wish 
why doth the crown lie there upon .. 
nf lireath, there lies a downy feather 

t" that chamber; there I'll lie 

a 1 ic, witli a slight oath 



— (ind. 



— IV. 



LIE— in his tomb lie my affections ..iHenryiy. V. 2 

when Pistol lies, do this — v. 3 

niitluinii, iiiitliocik, yoii lie; roine on — v. 4 

the Iniid siiliqiie lies in (iennuiiy Henry r. i. 2 

and lie pavilioned in the (kills — i. 2 

but this lies all witliin tlie will — i. 2 

silken dalliance in the wardrobe lies — ii. (clio.) 

till in her ashes slie lie buried — iii. 3 

tlie English lie within fifteen — iii. 7 

may say, now lie I like a king — iv. 1 

the giminal hit lies foul with — iv. 2 

their poor bodies must lie and fester — iv. 3 

doth he lie, larding the plain — iv. 

the noble earl of Suffolk also lies .... — iv, 6 

lies drowned and soaked in merceuary — iv. 7 

that's a lie in thy throat — iv. 8 

that in the field lie slain — iv. 8 

there lie dead one hundred — iv. 8 

of tliose their nobles that lie dead. ... — iv. 8 

husbandry doth lie on heaps — v. 2 

before so urged, lies in his answer.... — v. 2 

at, pleasure here we lie 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

her poor castle where she lies — ii. 2 

young Henry, with his nobles, lies .. — iii. 2 

York lies; he might have sent — iv. 4 

shall all thy mother's hopes lie in .. — iv. 5 

see, where he lies inhersed in — iv. 7 

and fly-blown, lies here at our feet .. — iv. 7 

tliere lies a cooling card — v. 3 

and I lie open to the law iHenry VI. i. 3 

load that lies upon liis heart — iii. 1 

there let his head and lifeless body lie — iv. 1 

here may his head lie on my — iv. 4 

so, lie thou there; for, underneath .. — v. 2 

manhood lies upon his tongue SHenryVI. ii. 2 

to lie with thee. To tell you («p.).. — iii. 2 

and in our.selves, our safety lies — iv. 1 

never to lie and take his natural rest — iv. 3 

/or this way lies tlie game — iv. 5 

iliere Southam lies; the drum — v. 1 

so, lie thou tliere ; die thou — v. 2 

or else lie for you ; meantime Richard III. i. 1 

with lies well steeled with — i. 1 

so will it, madam, till I lie with you — i. 2 

[Col. Knt.Z there lies the duke asleep — i. 4 

a man cannot lie with his — i. 4 

where peace and rest lie with me!.... — iv. 1 

this foul swine lies now even — v. 2 

here Willi lie to-ni^ht? — V. 3 

his regiment lies half a mile ^— v. 3 

vet I Tie, I am not ; fool — V. 3 

lie with our wives? ravish our — v. 3 

the penance lies on you, if Henry VIII. i. 4 

all men's honours lie ill one — ii. 2 

therefore in liim it lies, to cure me .. — ii. 4 

that she should lie i' the bosom of . . — iii. 2 

his faults lie open to the laws — iii. 2 

his faults lie gently on him! — iv. 2 

(and now I should not lie) but — iv. 2 

and here ye lie baiting of bumbards — v. 3 

in Troy there lies the scene . . 7'roilus ^ Cress, (prol.) 

lie drowned, reply not i.rep.) — i. 1 

there she lies, a pearl — i. 1 

knows not at what ward you lie .... — i. 2 

Hie, at a thousand watches — i. 2 

joy's sonllies in the doing — i. 2 

Dv itself lies, rich in virtue — i.3 

of chance lies the true proof of men.. — i.3 

in his tent lies mocking — i.3 

whose conceit lies in his hamstring . . — i.3 

of your wit too lies in your sinews . . — ii. I 

lie under this report — ii. 3 

in faith, Hie; my thoughts — iii. 2 

lie there for pavement — iii. 3 

but it lies as coldly in him — iii. 3 

BO good occasion to lie long — iv. 1 

intend to sell. Here lies our way — iv. 1 

doth this day lie on his fair — iv. 4 

my major vow lies here — v. 1 

thy master now lies thinking — v. 2 

shall I not lie in publishing — v. 2 

here lies thy heart, thy sinews — v. 9 

then I lie not. Art not a jioet? . Timon of Athens, i. I 

lands thou hast lie in a pitched — i. 2 

to lie heavy upon a friend of mine .. — iii. 5 

here lies my gown — iii. 6 

drink wine, lie soft — iv. 3 

lie where the light foam of — iv. 3 

snow that lies on Dian's lap! — iv. 3 

vacant lie for thy best use — v. 2 

here lies a wretched corse — v. 5 (epitaph) 

here lie I Timon — v. o (epitaph) 

go visit the good lady that lies 'm....Coriolanus, i. 3 

they lie in view — i. 4 

how far off lie these armies? — i. 4 

how lies their battle? know you — i. 6 

in praises sauced with lies — i.9 

yet they lie deadly, that tell — ii. 1 

in's nervy arm doth lie — ii. 1 

that, giving itself the lie, would .... — ii. 2 

on antique time would lie unswept .. — ii. 3 

because that now it lies you on to .. — iii. 2 

give to my noble heart a lie — iii. 2 

as much as in him lies — iii. 3 

my heart of what lies heavy to't .... — iv. 2 

this lies glowing, I can tell you — iv. 3 

where great AuHdius lies — iv. 4 

destroy what lies before them — iv. 6 

my wealth would buy this for a lie!.. — iv. 6 

so our virtues lie in the interpretation — iv. 7 

as many lies in his behalf — v. 2 

as virtuous to lie, as to live chastely — v. 2 

mv remission lies in Volscian breasts — v. 2 

which are as cheap as lies, he sold .. — v. .^ 

when he lies along, after your — v. 5 

must (?ive this cur the lie — v. 5 

shall join to thnist the lie unto him — v. 5 
itilid not lie there, when I went..,Aii/iuiC'i/^«<tr, ii. 1 

here lies the east; dnth not — ii. I 

shall Ciesar send a lie? — ii. 2 



LIE— now on Pompey's basis lies ..Juli\i$Ccetar,\\\ 

deserved to lie in death — iii 

O mighty Caisar I dost thou lie so low? — iii 

by many princes, dost thou here lie? — iii 

he lies to-night withi.i seven leagues — ill 

now lies he there, and none so poor.. — iii 

sirs, lie in my tent, and sleep — iv 

lie down, good sirs; it may be — iv. 3 

under which our army lies — V.I 

thatlies upon the ground? lie lies not — v. 3 

where, Messala, doth his body lie? .. — v. 3 

my tent his bones to-night shall lie . . — v. 5 
though in his tale lie death . . AntotiytfCleopatra, j. 2 

when our quick winds lie still — i. 2 

and where lies he? — ii. 2 

she did lie in her pavilion — ii. 8 

i' the east my pleasure lies — ii. 3 

should I lie, madam? — ii. 6 

lie they upon thy hand — ii. 5 

spurns the rush that lies before him — !!!• ^ 

our fortune lies upon this jump — iii. 8 

pelleted storm, lie graveless — iii. 11 

since the torch is out, lie down — iv. 12 

the worship of the whole world lies. . — iv. 12 

you lie, up to the hearing of the gods — v. 2 

out something given to lie — v. 2 

dost thou lie still? if thus thou — v. 2 

in thy possession lies a lass unparalleled — v. 3 

for his fortunes all lie speechless Cymbeline, i. 6 

lie [Co/, ivn'. -by] peeping in an eye.. — i. 7 

ape of death, lie dull upon her! — ii. 2 

on chaliced flowers that lies — ii. 3 (song) 

if not, let her lie still, and dream .... — ii.3 

(worthy the pressing) lies a mole .... — ii. 4 

swear you have not done 't, you lie .. — ii. 4 
testimonies whereof lie bleeding in me — iii. 4 (let.) 

will poor folks lie, that have — !('-6 

is sorer, than to lie for need — iii. 6 

gods, what lies I have heard! — iv. 2 

that let their fathers lie without — iv. 2 

worse than priests and fanes that lie — iv. 2 

faith, I'll lie down and sleep — iv. 2 

that here by mountaineers lies slain — Iv. 2 

if I do lie, and do no harm by it .... — iv. 2 

my bed, too, lads, and there I'll lie .. — iv. 4 

villain-like, I lie; that caused — v. 5 

there lie thy bones, sweet Mutius.. ?'i(««.4ndron. i. 2 

the snake lies rolled in — ii.3 

lord Bassianus lies embrewed here .. — ii. 

poor Bassianus here lies murdered.. — ii. 

calls me traitor, I return the lie Pericles, ii. 

and will not lie till the ship be cleared — iii. 

most wretched queen 1 Here she lies — iii. 

as doth the sea she lies in — iii. 

sweetest, and best, lies here — iv. 4 (Gower' 

faith, my acquaintance lies little .... — iv 

Kovemorof this place you lie before — v 

t would seem like lies disdained .... — y 
to lie; I would fain learn to lie. If you lie. /.ear, i 

O that way madness lies — iii 

will you lie down and rest (rfp.) — iii. 6 

'tis a lie, I am not ague-proof — iv. 6 

the let-alone lies not in your — v. 3 

traitor, villain-like he lies — v. 3 

with the hell-hated lie o'erwhelm — v. 3 

yes, better, sir. Yon lie Romeo 4r Juliet, j. 1 

griefs of mine own lie heavy — i. I 

of choice lies my consent and fair .. — i. 2 

obscured in this fair volume lies .... — i. 3 

that dreamers often lie — i. 4 

men's noses as they lie asleep (rep.).. — i. 4 

when maids lie on their backs — i. 4 

when good manners shall lie all in one — i. 5 
desire doth in his death-bed lie — i. 5 (chorus) 

the demesnes that there adjacent lie — ii. 1 

alack! there lies more peril in thine — ii. 2 

would I tear the cave where echo lies — ii. 2 

that lies in herbs, plants, stones .... — ii.3 

care lodges, sleep will never lie — ii.3 

thy help and holy physic lies — ii.3 

young men's love tnen lies not truly — ii.3 

there lies that Tybalt (rep.) — iii. I 

for your rude brawls doth lie a bleeding — iii. 1 

for thou wilt lie upon the wings .... — iii. 2 

so lies she, blubbering and weeping.. — iii. 3 

that dim monument where Tybalt lies — iii. 5 

lie alone, let not thy nurse lie with.. — iv. I 

all the kindred of the Capulets lie .. — iv. I 

this sliall forbid it: lie thou there.... — iv. 3 

lies festering in his shroud — iv. 3 

death lies on her, like — iv. 5 

see, there she lies, flower as she was. . — iv. 5 

Juliet, I will lie with thee to-night — v. 1 

for here lies Juliet, and her beauty — v. 3 

death, lie thou there, by a dead man — v. 3 

to lie discoloured by this place — v. 3 

in thy bosom there lies dead — v. 3 

pitiful sight! here lies the County .. — v. 3 

whereon these woes do lie — v. 3 

here lies the county Paris slain — v. 3 

to die, and lie with Juliet — v. 3 

as rich shall Romeo by his lady lie.. — v. 3 

best safety lies in fear Hamlet,i. 3 

that, opened, lies within our remedy . . — ii. 2 

rebellious to his arm, lies where it falls — ii. 2 

gives me the lie i' the throat, as deep.. — ii. 2 

iiidv, shall I lie in your lap? — iii. 2 

tha't's a fair thought to lie between — iii. 2 

there the action lies in his true nature — iii. 3 

for here lies the point — v. 1 

here lies the water, good — v. 1 

of liis lands will hardly lie in this box — v. 1 

you lie out on't, sir, arid therefore (rep.) — v. I 

'tis a quick lie, sir; 'twill away again — v. I 

how long will a man lie i' the earth .. — v. 1 

lo, here I lie, never to rise again — v. 2 

authority of this lies in our wills Olhelto, i. 3 

bragging and telling her fantastical lies — ii. 1 

lieutenant Cimsio lies. I dare say (rep.) — iii. 4 

for nic to say a soldier lies, is stabbing .. — iii. 4 



LIE 

LIE— ia to tell you where I lie Othello, ii j. 4 

he lies here, or he lies there, were to lie.. — lii. 4 
lie— With her? With her, on her (rep).. — iv. I 
that ni^htl;? lie in those unproper beds.. — iv. 1 

she mi gilt he by an emperor s side — iv. 1 

minion, your dear lies (lead — v. 1 

he that lies slain here, Cassio was my . • — v. 1 
he lies to the heart; she was too fond — — v. 2 
a lie; an odious damned lie; upon (rep,) — v. 2 

my mistress here lies murdered in — v. 2 

there lies your niece, whose breath — v. 2 

LIED— didst thou not say, he lied? Tempest, iil. 2 

meant to say, Lysander lied ..Mid. N.'\Dream, ii. 3 
I had lied in my tliroat if 2 Henry If. i, 2 

LIEF— as lief voii would tell Merry fVives, iii. 1 

I had as lief bear so much lead — iv. 2 

I had as lief be a Brownist TwelflhNighl, iii. 2 

as lief he a list of an English Meas./or Mens. i. 2 

as lief liave the fopoery of freedom .. — i. 3 
as lief liave heard the nijiht-raven ..Much.idn, ii. 3 
as lief thou didst break his neck ..Asyouhikeit, i. 1 

as lief liave been myself alone — iii. 2 

as lief be wooed of a snail — iv. 1 

I had as lief take her dowry . . Taming nf Shrew, i. 1 

I had as lief be none, as one Hidmrd II. v. '?. 

as had as lief liear tlie devil \ Henry IV. iv. 2 

had as lief they would put ratsbane. .2He?irJ//r. i. 2 

I had as lief be hanged, sir — iii. 2 

as lief have my mistress a jade Henry V. iii. 7 

as lief Helen's golden tongue . . Troitiis * Cress, i. 2 
I had as lief be a condemned man . . Coriolanus, iv. 5 
aslief notbe, as live to be in awe.. Julius CcBsar,i. 2 
I had as lief liave a reed . . Antony 4- Cteopalra, ii. 7 
had as lief see a toad, a very tonA.ltomeotf Juliet, ii. 4 
I had as lief the town crier spoke HamlH, iii . 2 

LIEFEST liege to be mine enemy . .iHenry F/. iii. 1 

LIEGE— sir, my liege, do not infest Tempest, v. 1 

gentle, my liege — Measure/or Measure, v. 1 

my liege,'your highness now may Much Ado, i. 1 

much, dear liege, I have already. Love's L. Lost, i. 1 

let me say, no, my liege, an' if — i. 1 

this article, my liege, yourself must — i. 1 
liege of all loiterers and malcontents — iii. 1 

ah. good my liege, I pray thee — iv. 3 

and where my liege's? all about .... — iv. 3 

a toy, my liege, a toy — iv. 3 

lie, and you, my liege, and I (^rep.) — iy. 3 

ay, ray liege, so please you give. . . .AsyouLikeit, i. 2 
Orlando, my liege; the youngest son — i. 2 

then, good my liege, mistake me not — i. 3 
that sentence then on me, my liege .. — i. 3 

my wife? my liege? I shall All's lVell,\\.i 

'tis past, my liege, and I beseech .... — v. 3 

I shall, my liege. What says — v. 3 

admiringly, my liege : at first — v. 3 

I'll put in bail, my liege — v. 3 

if she, my liege, can make me — v. 3 

I wish, my liege, yon had only . . Winter'sTale, ii. 1 
good my liege, I come; and I beseech — ii. 3 
we can ; my royal liege, he is not .... — ii. 3 
now, my liege, tell me what blessings — iii. 2 

now, good my liege, sir, royal sir — iii. 2 

sir, my liege, your eye hath too much — v. 1 

first yon, my liege, comes it not — v. 3 

my liege, I am advised what I say. Comeay of Err. v. 1 

'tis true, my liege, this ring — v. 1 

as sure, my liege, as I do see — v. 1 

my liege, they are not yet come back . . Macbeth, i. 4 

we are men, my liege (rep.) — iii. 1 

my liege, here is the strangest King John, i. 1 

as well begot, my liege, (fair fall .... — i. 1 

my gracious liege, when that my — i. 1 

good my liege, let me have — i. 1 

Philip, my liege; so is my name .... — _ i. 1 

but on, my Uege; for very little — iii. 2 

my liege, ner ear is stopped — iv. 2 

with all my heart, my liege — iv. 2 

let us, my liege, to arms — v. 1 

my liege 1 my lord I but now — v. 7 

I have, my liege. Tell me Richard I J. j. 1 

gracious sovereign, my most loving liege — i. 1 

no kinsman to my lie"e, I do — i. 1 

for that my sovereign liege was in . . — i. 1 

then, dear my liege, mine — i. 1 

mighty liege, and my companion peers — i. 3 
my most sovereign liege, and all ... . — i. 3 

farewell, my liege : now no way — i. 3 

I tliank my liege, that in — i. 3 

manage must be made my liege — i. 4 

my liege, old Gaunt commends him — ii. 1 

O my liege, pardon me if you please.. — ii. 1 
not be by, the while: my liege, farewell — ii. !• 
eomfort, my liege why looks your grace — iii. 2 
and happiness betide my liege, than can — iii. 2 

my liege, one word — iii. 2 

my liege, beware; look to thyself .... — v. 3 
what ho, my liege I for God's sake .. — v. 3 

hear me, gentle liege. Rise up — v. 3 

my liege, this haste was hot \ Henry IV. i. 1 

be uttered. I will, my lie^e — i. 1 

our house, my sovereign liege, little.. — i. 3 
my liege, I did deny no prisoners .... — i. 3 

my sovereign liege, but by the — i. 3 

hear me, my liege; for mine — v. 1 

we have, my liege. Then you 2 Henry /f. iii. 1 

the prince my brother here, my liege — iv. 4 
when we withdrew, my liege, we left — iv. 4 
O pardon me, my liege! but for my.. — iv. 4 
and dead almost, my liege, to think — iv. 4 

thus, my most royal liege, accusing it — iv. 4 

my gracious liege, you won it — iv. 4 

my person, or my liege's sovereignty — v. 2 

call in the ambassador my liege? Henry F. i . 2 

.and my thrice puissant liege is in .... — i. 2 
let their bodies follow, my dear liege — i. 2 
more feared than harmed, my liege . . — i. 2 

therefore to France, my liege — i. 2 

tennis-balls, my liege — i. 2 

jio doubt, my liege, if each man — ii. 2 

to did you me, my liege. And me . . — ii. 2 



[ 440 ] 



LIEGE— my good liege, she is so idly. . Henry V. ii. 4 
self-love, my liege, is not so vile a sin — ii. 4 
not so, my lie^je; this lodging likes., — iv, 1 
we shall, my liege, shall f attend .... — iv. 1 

my liege! my brother Gloster's — iv. 1 

God's will, my liege, would you and I — iv. 3 
the herald of "the Frencli, my liege .. — iv. 7 

so I will, my liege, as I live — iv. 7 

under Captain Gower, my liege — iv. 7 

my liege, this was my glove — iv, 8 

all offences, my liege, come from — iv. 8 

please your majesty, my liege \ Henry VI. iii. 4 

content, my liege? yes; but — iv. 1 

pardon, my liege, that I have staid .2 Henry r/. iii. 1 
my liefest liege to be mine enemy .. — iii. 1 
my liege, his railing is intolerable .. — iii. 1 

provedby reasons, to my liege — iii. 1 

I tender so the safety of my liege.... — iii. 1 

that I shall do my liege: stay — iii. 2 

from llcnrj', our dread liege, to know — v. 1 
and never live but true unto his liege! — v. 1 
my gracious liege, this too mucli . .ZHenry VI. ii. 2 
for shame, my liege, make them .... — ii. 2 

my liege, tlie wound, tliat bred — ii. 2 

I mean, my lovin" liege — !!'• ^ 

speak against thy liege, whom — iii. 3 

my sovereign liege, no letters — iv. 1 

my liege, it is young Henry, earl of. . — iv. 6 

my liege, I'll knock once more — iv. 7 

most sovereign liege [Co/. ivn(. -lord] /?/cAarti ///. ii. I 
so you are, my thriee-renowned liege — iv. 2 

first, mighty liege, tell me — iv. 4 

none good, my liege, to please you.... — iv. 4 

my liege, I cannot guess (.rep.) — iv. 4 

mighty liege [Col. Knt.-my good lord] — iv. 4 

in Kent, my liege, the Giiiltords — iv. 4 

proclamation liath been made, my liege — iv. 4 
tis said, my liege, in Yorksliire are — iv. 4 

my liege, tlieDuke of Buckingham is — iv. 4 
here, most gracious liege, Norfolk . . — v. 3 
it is, my liege; and all things are .... — y. 3 

I can, my liege. Proceed HenryVIII,i.2 

very well, my liege. I have spoke long — ii. 4 
most dread liege, the good I stand.... — v. 1 
ay , ay , my liege, and of a lovely boy — v. 1 
you are amazed, my liege, at lier. Troitus ^ Cress, v. 3 
remember, sir, my liege, the kings.. Cymbeline, iii. 1 

good, my liege, the day that she — iv. 3 

good, my liege, your preparation can — iv. 3 
my liege, and blood of your begetting — v. 5 
they are, my liege; and stay your .. Pericles, ii. 2 
I shall, my liege. Meantime we shall. . . . Lear, i. 1 

good, my liege. Peace, Kent! — i. 1 

alas, my liege, my wife is dead..fiomeo Sr Juliet, v. 3 

my good liege, I hold my duty Hamlel, ii. 2 

my liege, and madam, to expostulate — ii. 2 
fare you well, ray liege: I'll call .... — iii. 3 

LIEGEMAN— liegeman to us Winter's Tale, ii. 3 

swore tlie devil his true liegeman . . 1 Henry I r. ii. 4 

LIEGEMEN— become true liegemen. IHenry;'/. v. 4 
and liegemen to the Dane Hamlet, i. 1 

LIEN — had nine hours lien dead Pericles, iii. 2 

UEST— thou liest, malignant thing!.... Tempest, i. 2 
thou liest, most ignorant monster O'ep.) — iii. 2 

thou liest, I can 7'wo Gen . of Ver. iii. 1 

froth and scum, tliou liest Merry Wives, i. 1 

what? thou liest! sir Alice Ford! .... — ii. 1 
thou liest in tliy throat . . TwelflhNighl, iii . 4 (chall) 

varlet, thou liest, thou liest Mens, for Meas. ii. 1 

yet thou liest in the bleak As you L'ke it, ii. 6 

minion, thou liest; is't not . . Taming of Slirew, ii. 1 
thou liest, thou thread, thou thimble — iv. 3 

cut it to pieces: ergo, thou liest — iv. 3 

thou liest; his father is come — v. 1 

while thou liest warm at home — v. 2 

I say, thou liest, Camillo Winter's Tale, i. 2 

villain, thou liest; for even her. . Comedy of Err. ii. 2 

tliou liest, thou shag-eared villain Macbeth, iv. 2 

thoii liest, abhorred tyrant — v. 7 

of tliy throat, thou liest! Richard II. i. 1 

wherein thou liest in reputation .... — Ii. 1 
I say thou liest, and will maintain (rep.) — iv. 1 

thou liest, thou art notcolted \ Henry IV. ii. 2 

why ratlier, sleep, liest thou in 2Hen);//F. iii. 1 

why liest thou with the vile ^ iii. 1 

in my soul's throat, thou liest Richard III. i. 2 

betide tlie chamber where thou liest! — _ i. 2 
proudlord, thou liest, within these. Henry VIII. iii. 2 
thou liest. Art not one? Yes (rep.).TimonofAth. i. 1 

where liest o' nights, Timon? — iv. 3 

I w^ould say, thou liest, unto thee .. CoHolanus, iii. 3 

traitor, thou liest. Traitor! Pericles, M. b 

detested kite! thou liest Lear, i. 4 

whereto I speak, thoii liest — v. 3 

liest thou there in thy bloody ..Romeo 6,- Juliet, v. 3 

thine, indeed; for thou liest in't Hamlet, v. 1 

not for the quick; therefore thou liest — v. 1 

my sister be, when thou liest howling . . — v. 1 
filth, thou liest. By heaven. I do not . . Othello, v. 2 

LIETH-since correction lieth in those. Richard II. i. 2 

LIEU— in lieu o' tlie premises Tempest, i. 2 

only, in lieu thereof TwoGen.of Ver. ii. 7 

in lieu thereof, impose on thee . . Love'sL Lost, iii. 1 
in lieu whereof, three thousand Mer, of Venice, iv. I 

in lieu of tMs, last night did lie — v. 1 

inlieuof all thy pains and As yon Like it, W.Z 

in lieu whereof, I pray you, bear King John, v. 4 

in lieu of this desires you, let the Henry V.i.i 

LIEUTENANT— be my lieutenant ...Tempest, iii. 2 

your lieutenant, if you list — iii. 2 

like a lieutenant's scarf? Much Ado, ii. 1 

bid my lieutenant Peto meet me ..\HenryIV. iv. 2 

corporals, lieutenants, gentlemen — iv. 2 

lieutenant, is it you whose voice \HenryVI. i.3 

master lieutenant, now that God ..ZHenry VI. iv. 6 
for what, lieutenant? for well using — iv. C 

here tlie lieutenant comes (rep.) . . Richard III. iv. 1 
lieutenant, for quick accumulation. y4n(.^C/eo. iii. 1 

who's his lieutenant, hear you? — iii. 7 

suit to make me his lieutenant Othello, i. 1 



LIF 



LIEUTENANT-musi his lieutenant be. . ClUUo, i. 
servants of the duke, and my lieutenant — i. 
Michael Cassio, lieutenant to the warlike — ii. 
good lieutenant, is your general wived? — ii. 
the lieutenant to-night watclies on the — ii. 
not this hour, lieutenant; 'tis not yet ten — ii. 3 
come, lieutenant, I liave a stoop of" wine — ii. 3 
I am for it, lieutenant; and I'll do you.. — ii. 3 

it's true, good lieutenant — ii. 3 

to be saved. And so do I too, lieutenant — ii. 3 
the lieutenant is to he saved before tlie — ii. 3 

I pray you, after the lieutenant, go — ii. 3 

what s the matter, lieutenant? A kna^'el — ii. 3 
nay, good lieutenant; I pray you (rep.) — ii. 3 

what, are you hurt, lieutenant? — ii. 3 

and, good lieutenant, I think, you think — ii. 3 
good-night, lieutenant; I must to the.. — ii. 3 

good-morrow, good lieutenant — iii. I 

why, 3'our lieutenant Cassio — iii. 1 

now art thou my lieutenant. I am your — iii. 3 
how do you now, lieutenant? — iv. 1 

me, lieutenant! what villains have .. — v. 1 
LIEUTENANTRY, and no practice. /<n(,<?C;eo. iii. 9 

strip you out of your lieutenantry .... Oltiello, ii. 1 

LIFE- they would not take her life .... Tempest, i. 2 

here is every thin" advantageous to life — ii. 1 

ten leagues beyond man's life — ii. 1 

if of life you keep a care — ii. I (song) 

speak once in thy life — iii. 2 

and a clear life ensuing — iii. 3 

so with good life, and observation .... — iii, 3 

a thread of mine own life — iv. 1 

quiet days, fair issue, and long life .... — iv. 1 

his confederates, against my life — iv. 1 

our little life is rounded with a sleep .. — iv. 1 

1 liave received a second life — v. 1 

plotted with them to take my life .... — v. I 

tlie story of my life, and the — v. I 

I long to hear the story of your life — v. 1 

sweet lines! sweet life Two Gen. of Verona, i. 3 

but that lif^ is altered now — ii. 4 

without apparent hazard of his life.. — iii. 1 

as thoii lovest thy life — iii. 1 

I fly away from life — iii. 1 

some malignant power upon my life — iii. 1 

will abridge thy life • — iii. I 

to hazard life, and rescue — v. 4 

whose life's as tender to me — v. 4 

ha! 0' my life, if I were Merry If ives,i. \ 

it is a life that I have desired — i. 3 

leads an ill life with hira — ii. 2 

she leads a very frampold life with.. — ii. 2 

leads a better life than she does — ii. 2 

or bid farewell to your good life .... — iii. 3 

learned before in my life — iv. h 

1 know also, life is a shuttle — v. 1 

upon my life then you took — v. 5 

I am sure, care's an enemy to life. Twelfth Night, i. 3 

never in your life, I think 

tut, there's life in't, man 

such a suffering, such a deadly life . 

or a song of good life? 

ay, ay; 1 care not for good life 

my life iipon't, young though 

by my life, this is my lady's hand. . . 
M, O, A, I, doth sway my life {rep.), 
if you hold your life at any price ... 

on thy life, I charge thee, hold 

his life I gave him 



— i. 3 
i. 3 



more than my life, more by all mores — v 

punish my life, for tainting of — v 

nor are you therein, by my life, deceived — v 

a kind of cliaracter in thy life Meas.forMeas. i 

as for the enjoying of thy life — i 

how I have ever loved the life removed — i 

your brother's life falls into foi'feit . . — i 

doth he so seek hie life? — i 

sometime in your life en'ed in — ii 

it is pity of her life, for it is — ii 

against my brother's life — ii 

that respites me a life, whose — ii 

to take away a life true made — ii 

now took vour brother's life (rep.) .... — ii 

that I do beg his life, if it be sin — ii 

admit no other way to save his life .. — ii 

the austereness of my life — ii 

either death, or life, shall thereby. . . . — iii 

reason thus with life — iii 

that bears the name of life? (rep.).... — iii 

and seeking death, find life — iii 

that will free your life — iii 

a feverous life shouldst entertain .... — iii 

to conserve a life in base appliances.. — iii 

were it but my life, I'd throw — iii 

and shamed life a hateful — iii 

and most loathed worldly life — iii 

to save a brother's life, Nature — iii 

to take life from thine own sister's .. — iii 

I am so out of love with life — iii 

what corruption in this life, that it .. — iii 

canst thou believe thy living is a life — iii. 2 

to take away the life of a man? — iii. 2 

tlie very stream of his life — iii. 2 

many deceiving promises of life.. .... — iii. 2 

if his own life answer the straitness. . — iii. 2 

his life is paralleled even with the ., — iv. 2 

I will plead against it with my life .. — iv. 2 

by so receiving a dishonoured life .... — iv. 4 

labouring to save his life — v. 1 

that life IS better life, past fearing.... ^ — v. 1 

thereon dependant for your bi other's life — v. 1 

might reproach your life, and choke — v. 1 

all my life to come I'll lend you (rep.) — v. 1 

and squarest tliy life according — v. 1 

to make an account of her life to .... Much Ado, ii. 1 

my very visor began to assume life . . — ii. 1 

what life is in that, to be the death .. — ii. 2 

came so near tJie life of passion — ii. 3 

for my life, to break with him about — iii. 2 

of reproaches, strike at thy life — i v. 1 



LTF 

LIFE— bod life rcfl me so much Much Ado, iv. I 

the idea of her life sl\iill sweetly creep — iv. 1 

oreanof her life sliull come apparclea — iv. I 

and full of lili', into the e^ve and prospect — iv. I 

in some rcohise unci riUtiuius life — iv. 1 

God's niv life! wliere's the sexton? .. — iv. 2 

80 the life, that died witli shame. . — v. 3 (scroll) 

and partly, to save vour life, for [ was — v. 4 

out of thvsinf!le lite, to make thee .. — v. 4 
to live a barren sister all vour life..,Ui.(. A'.'t Dr. i. I 

for Bve, austerity, and sinple life (re;).) — i. 1 

ne'er" alter till tliy sweet 1 lie end .... — ii. 3 

and then end life, when I end — ii. 3 

not to tremble: my life for vours — ;ii. 1 

it were pity of my life: no, I am .... — iii- I 

mv love, niy life, my soni — iii. 2 

1 love thee, by my life I do (rep.) .... — lii. 'i 

God's my life! stolen hence — iv. 1 

eixpence a dav during his life — iv. 2 

tide life, tide death, 1 come without, . — v. I 

this place, 't\vere pity on my life — y. \ 

now, <!od save thy life! Love's L. Lost, ii. 1 

eir, God save your life I — iv. 2 

(saith the text,) is the happiness of life — iv. 2 

by mv life, my troth, I never — v. 2 

dead.'formy life. Even so — v. 2 

if this austere insociable life change not — v. 2 

a simple line of life! Merchant of Venice, ii. 2 

in peril of my life with the edge — ii 2 

many a man his life hath — ii. 7 (scroll) 

never in my life to woo a maid — ii. 9 

as well be amity and life 'tween snow — iii. 2 

promise me life; and I'll confess .... — iii. 2 

then parts life from hence — iij- 2 

he scelfs my life; his reason well .... — !!!• 3 

live an upright life; for, having — iii. 6 

and for thy life let justice be accused — iv. 1 

dear to me as life itself; but life — iv. 1 

not with me esteemed above thy life — iv. I 

he seek the life of any citizen — iv. 1 

and the offender's life lies in the — iv. 1 

against the very life of the defendant — iv. 1 

I pardon thee thy life before thou — iv. 1 

nay, take my life, and all — iv. 1 

you take my life, when yon do — iv. 1 

the verj' life of my dear friend — v, I 

you have given me life, and living . . — v. I 
till he hath ta'en thy life by some. /is yon Like it, i. 1 

that there is little hope of life in him — i. 2 

and on my life, liis malice 'gainst..,. — _i. 2 

made this life more sweet than — ii. 1 

and this our life, exempt from public — ii. 1 

vea, and of tliis our life: swearing- .. — ii. 1 

and this kind of life, I will your very — ii. 4 

what a life is tliis, that your poor..., — ii. 7 

this life is most .jolly — ii. 7 (song) 

never loved my brother in my life .. — iii. 1 

that my full life doth sway — iii. 2 

how like you this shepherd's life .... — iii. 2 

a good life; but in respect (rep.) — iii. 2 

howbrief the life of man runs .. — iii. 2 (verses) 

od's my little life! I tliink — iii. .'i 

by mv life, she will do as I do — iv. 1 

translate thy life into death — v. 1 

by mv life, I do; which I tender .... — v. 2 

how that a life was but a flower — v. 3 (song) 

I do engage my life — v. 4 

hath put on a religious life — v. 4 

under thy own life's key AWs fVell, i. 1 

the well-lost life of mine on his — i. 3 

that dotli my life besiege — ii. I 

able to brcatlie life into a stone — ii. 1 

let my life be ended — ii. 1 

thy life is dear; for all that life (rep.) — ii. 1 

I ne'er had worse luck in my life .. .. — ii. 2 

uncertain life and sure death — ii. 3 

than throw ames-ace for my life .... — ii. 3 

I'll beat him, by my life, if I — ii. 3 

on my life, my lord, a bubble — iii. 6 

as if his life lay on't — iii. 7 

and I shall lose my life for want .... — iv. I 

something to save thy life — iv. I 

yea, mv life be thine — iv. 2 

the web of our life is of a mingled — iv. 3 

upon my life, amounts not to — iv. 3 

my life, sir, in any case — iv. 3 

if your life be saved, will you — iv. 3 

dear almost as his life; which gratitude — iv. 4 

eon, on my life, I have seen — v. 3 

she reckoned it at her life's rate — v. 3 

I am afeard the life of Helen — v. 3 

no strumpet, by my life — v. 3 

I ne'er drank sack in my life.. Taming of Sh. 2 (ind.) 

upon my life, I am a lord — 2 (ind.) 

a thousand liarms, and lengthens life — 2 (ind.) 

to save my life puts my apparel (rep.) — i. I 

the jewel of my life in hold — i. 2 

sir, such a life, with such a wife .. — i. 2 
now, for my life, the knave doth .... — iii. 1 

upon my life, Petrucliio means — iii. 2 

where the life that late I led. . . . — iv. 1 (song) 

if God lend me life — iv. 2 

to Padua, careless of your life? My life — iv. 2 

to save your life in this extremity .. — iv. 2 

the patron of my life and liberty .... — iv. 2 

1 dare not, for my life — iv. 3 

villain, not for thy life: take up .... — iv. 3 

saw you before in all my life — v. 1 

now "for my life, Hortensio fears .... — v. 2 

and love, and fjuiet life, and awful rule — v. 2 

thy lord, thy life, thy keeper — v. 2 

desire yet their life, to see him H'inter'aTale, i. 1 

had we pursued that life — i. 2 

infected as her life, she would not live — i. 2 

If thou bear'st my life off hence .... — i. 2 

there is a plot against my life — ii. I 

no. by my life, privy to none — ii. 1 

I dare my life lay clown — ii. I 

more, alas, than the nuecn's life?.... — ii. 3 

a tyrant, where were ner life? — ii. 3 



[ 441 ] 



LIFE— to save this bastard's life .. Winter t Tale, Ii. 3 

ajlventure to save this brat's lii'e? .. — "• 3 

to take awuy the life of — iii. 2 (indict.) 

my past life hath been as continent — !'!• 2 

for life, and honour, 'fore who (rep.) — !}!• ^ 

my life stands in the level — !!)• 2 

can life he no commodity (rep.) .... — !!!■ -^ 

no! life, I prize it not a straw — !!!•'' 

some remedies for life — !?!* ''^ 

either for life, or death, upon the earth — iii, 3 

for tlie life to come, I sleep out — iv. 2 

prig, for my life, prig; he haunts.... — iv. 2 

to each iiart of you do give a life .. .. — iv. 3 

cliange this purpose, or my life — iv. 3 

I love a ballad in priut a' life — iv. 3 

hear me breathe my life before. . . . — jv. 3 

1 can but shorten thy life one — iv. 3 

who, on my life, did perish with — v. 1 

I desire my life once more to look . . — v. I 

dash of my former life in me — v. 2 

thou wilt amend thy life? — v. 2 

which never my life may last to answer — v. 3 

prepare to see the life as lively mocked — v. 3 

such life of majesty (warm life — v. 3 

tlie very life seems warm — v. 3 

dear life redeems you — v. 3 

if she pertain to Irfe, let her — y. 3 

by misfortunes was my life . . Comedy of Errors, i. I 

must end the story of my life — j. 1 

to buy out his life, according to — j. 2 

upon my life, by some device or other — \. 2 

never spake with her in all my life . . — ii- 2 

and with thee lead my life — jj! ^ 

a man would run for life, so fly I — iii. 2 

distemperatures, and foes to life?.... — v. 1 

upon my life, I tell you true — v. 1 

deep sears to save thy life — v. 1 

I see a friend will save my life — v. 1 

I never saw you in my life, till now — v. 1 

my night of life some memory — v. ) 

I never saw my father iu my life (rep.) — v. 1 

thy father hath his life — v. 1 

bears that life which he deserves Macbeth, i. 3 

notliing in his life became him — i. 4 

we'd jump the life to come — i. 7 

thou esteemest the ornament of life — i. 7 

the death of each day's life — ii. 2 

chief nourislier in life's feast — ii- 2 

the life o' the building. How (rep.) — ii. 3 

the wine of life is drawn — ii. 3 

no man's life was to he trusted — ii. 3 

ravin up thine own life's means .... — ii. 4 

our health but sickly in his life .... — iii. 1 

that I would set my life on any — iii. 1 

against my nearest of life — iii. 1 

after life's fitful fever, he sleeps — iii. 2 

no less in truth, than life — iv. 3 

upon my life, fast asleep — v. 1 

my way of life is fallen into — v. 3 

and stir as life were in 't — v. ,0 

brief candle! life's but a walking — — v.i 

hands took off her life — v. 7 

give his offspring life, shadowing King John, ii. 1 

my life as soon : I do defy thee — ii. 1 

let belief and life encounter so — iii. I 

darest not say so, villain, for thy life — iii. I 

by any secret course tliy hateful life — iii. 1 

my fortune lives, tliere my life dies.. — iii. I 

now by my life, this day — iii. 2 

my life, my joy, my food — iii. 4 

life is as tedious as a twice told tale — iii. 4 

whiles warm life plays in — iii. 4 

and lose it, life and all, as Arthur .. — iii, 4 

will not touch young Arthur's life .. — iii. 4 

may give life to yours — iv. I 

commandment on tlie pulse of life?.. — iv. 2 

no certain life achieved by others' .. — iv. 2 

break within the bloody house of life — iv. 2 

before tliis ruin of sweet life — iv. 3 

not for my life; and yet I dare (rep.) — iv. 3 

of life out, for his sweet life's loss.... — iv. 3 

the life, the riglit, and truth of — iv. 3 

where the jewel of life, by some .... — v. I 

retaining but a quantity of life — v. 4 

the life of all his blood is touched ,. — v. 7 

wherewith my life should sail — v. 7 

my life shall prove it true Riclmrd II. i. I 

upon his had life, to make all — i. 1 

shall do it, or this life be spent ^ i. I 

once did I lay an ambush for your life — i. 1 

my life thou shalt command — i. 1 

my life; both grow in one (rep.) — i. 1 

against the butchers of his life — i. 2 

my life, my Gloster, one phial — i. 2 

was the model of thy father's life .... — i. 2 

the naked pathway to thy life — i. 2 

to safeguard thine own life the best.. — i. 2 

companion grief must end her life. . .. — i. 2 

[Co^] Hereford, upon pain of life .... — i. 3 

against tliee, upon i)ain of life — i. 3 

be blotted from the hook of life — i, 3 

the sentence mv own life destroyed .. — i. 3 

though Richarfl my life's counsel — ii. 1 

vanish with my life, how happy — ii. 1 

he loves you, on my life, and holds .. ■ — ii. 1 

words, life, and all. old Lancaster..., — ii. i 

I spv life peering; but I dare not .. .. — ii. 1 

would dissolve in the bands of life.... — ii. 2 

I never in my life did look — ii. 3 

by Ilim that gave me life — ii. 3 

which walls about our life — iii. 2 

by my life, my troth, I will appeach — v. 2 

than my poor life must answer (rep ) — v. 2 

shamed life in his dishonour lies (rep.) — v. 3 

and with it joy thy life — v. 6 

I must give over this life 1 HcnrylV. i. 2 

I see a good amendment of life in thee — i. 2 

upon my life, it will do well — i. 3 

in his own languafje during my life.. — ii. 4 

other English in bis life — ii. 4 



LIF 

LIFE— flc upon this quiet life 1 \UenryIV. ii. 

ere I lead tnis life long — ii. 

and thee, dui'ing my life — ii. 

upon the particulars of my life — ii. 

and all the courses of my life do show — iii. 

in thy passages of life, make me — iii. 

if not, the end of life cancels oil bands — iii. 

amend thy face, and I'll amend my life — iii. 

by my life, (and I dare well (rep.)..., — iv. 

deprived him of his life, and, in the.. — iv. 

the lag-end of my lite with quiet .. .. — v. 

it will not be accepted, on my life .... — v. 

I never in my life did hear ..■ — v. 

the time of life is short — v, 

to beg during life. But who comes .. — v. 

give me life:' which if I can save .... — v. 

thou niakest some tender of my life.. — v. 

brook the loss of brittle life — v. 

but thought's the slave of life, and life — v. 

keep in a little life — v. 

who hath not the life of a man — v. 

the true and perfect image of life indeed — v. 

have saved my life. 'Zounds, I am .. — v. 
upon my life, spoke at a venture ,.,.2HenrylV. i. 

from whence with life he never — i, 

buckle under life, impatient — i. 

if we wrought out life, 'twas — i. 

gasi)ing for life under great — i. 

matters against you for your life — i. 

never shall have length of life enough — ii. 

what a life dost thou lead! — ii. 

laid his love and life under my foot.. — iii. 

as yet not come to life — iii. 

upon my life, [Coi.-soul] my lord — iii. 

to stop our very veins of life — iv. 

his own life hung upon the staff .... — iv. 

two greater in the heirs of life — iv. 

the word to sword, and life to death. . .— iv. 

will, on m3' life, one time or — iv. 

so thin, that life looks through — iv. 

thy life did manifest — iv. 

to stab at half an hour of my life — iv. 

that, which j?ave thee life, unto the .. — iv. 

preserving life in medicine potable . . — iv. 

even there my life must end — iv. 

that I truly did his life — v. 

shorten Harry's happy life one day .. — v. 

health and long life to you, master .. — v. 

where is the life that late I led — v. 

for competence of life, I will allow .. — v. 
the art and practick part of life must . .Henry V. i. 

some dishonest manners of their life — i. 

to sell his sovereign's life to death.... — ii. 

if you give him life, after the - ii. 

and my life, and my livings, and my — iii. 

for his life, and I will thee requite ,. — iii. 

a lad of life, and imp of fame — iv. 

thc}^ have borne life away — iv. 

the life of such a battle in life 60 .... — iv. 

he jirays you to save his life ~- iv. 

let life be short; else, .shame — iv. 

Alexander's life well, Harry of (rep.) — iv. 

in their huge and proper life be here — v. (clio 

his thread of life had not so \ Henry yi. i. 

if Henry were recalled to life again.. — i. 

fighteth as one weary of his life — i. 

Talbot, my life, my joy — i. 

Gargrave, "hast thou any life? — i. 

and prosperous he thy life, in peace.. — ii. 

his burial better than his life — ii. 

laid'st a trap to take my life — iii. 

thy spiritual function hot thy life .. — iii. 

in the world, to save my lite — iii. 

sell every man his life as — iv. 

yields up his life unto — iv. 

to England shall he bear his life .... — iv. 

rather than life preserved with — iv. 

born to eclipse thy life this afternoon — iv. 

I gave thee life, and rescued thee .... — iv. 

the life thou gavest me first — iv. 

shortening of mv life one day — iv. 

to save a paltry "life, and slay bright — iv. 

thy life to me IS sweet — iv. 

where is my other life? — iv. 

whose life was England's — iv. 

during the life, let us not — iv. 

could but call these dead to lifel .... — iv. 

what her kind of life hath — v. 

Lord, that lends me life 2Henryf'I. i. 

that ne'er sow in his life before — ii. 

but that in all my life, when I — ii. 

with danger of my life — Ii. 

never, before this "day, in all his life — ii. 

king Henry's life and death — ii. 

your honour in your life, shall — ii. 

upon my life, began her devilish .... — iii. 

their ci^mplot is to have my life — iii. 

doth level at my life — iii. 

to make awav my guiltless life — iii. 

subversion of thy harmless life? — iii. 

his life, the commons haply rise ()rp.) — iii. 

would have lost my life betimes — iii. 

in life, but double "death — iii. 

sighs recall his life, T would be — iii. 

hands were laid on Humphrey's life! — iii. 

1 see my life in death — iii. 

upon the life of this thrice-famed duke — iii. 

and tugged for life, and was by — iii. 

is shamefully bereft of life — iii. 

shall not he "ransom for thv life — iii. 

and farewell life with thee! — iii. 

live thou to joy thy life — iii. 

ah, what a sign it is of evil life — iii. 

so had a death argues a monstrous life — iii. 

and therefore spare my life — iv. 

their thread of life is spun — iv. 

to recover them, would lose my life. . — iv. 

but for pleading so well for his life . . — iv. 

relent, and save my life — iv. 

doom, of life, or death — iy. 



n. 


4 


iii. 


2 


iii. 


'2 


111. 


'2 


IV. 




IV. 




iv. 




IV. 




iv. 




iv 




IV 




IV 




IV 




IV 




IV 





LIF 

LIFE— my life for a thousand iHenry VI. iv. 10 

tliou preferr'st thy lite before illciiryl'I.i. I 

right depends not on his life, or death — i. 2 

thy priesthood saves thy life — 1-3 

to renown, by life, or deatli — 1.4 

life; here must I stay, and here ray life — i. 4 

prolong a wlii le the traitor's life ... . — i. 4 

now in his life against your holy — i. 4 

I slioulil not for my life but « eep. . . . — i. 4 

for vet is Iiope of life, and victory — ii. 3 

metliiiiks, it were a happy life — u. 5 

ah, what a life were this! how sweetl — n- ■> 

yield both my life and tlicra to ~ ii. 5 

my life, have by my hands of life — ii. & 

if any life be left in thee — n. 6 

f;ave thee life too soon (rep.) — ii. 6 

ike life and death's departing — n. 6 

o'ersliades his beams or life — u. 6 

■would but two hours' life — ii. 6 

gentleman did lose his life — iii. 2 

•wliile life upholds this arm — in. 3 

fair liope must hinder life's decay . . — iv. 4 

mvseU' will lead a private life — iv. 6 

hiMi reward, and he his life? — v. 5 

envious gulf did swallow up his life. . — v. 6 

dost thou come? is't for my life? — v. 6 

if any spark of life be yet remaining _ v. 6 

Edward sliall be fearful of his life . . — v. 6 

windows, tliat let forth thy life Richard III. i. 2 

my life. Black night o'ershade [rep.) — i. 2 

upon my life, she finds : — i. 2 

isoutrage, life ray shame .. — i. 3 

my dream was lengthened after life — i. 4 

reward you better for my life — i. 4 

would not entreat for life? — _i. 4 

of my sovereign's life — ii. 1 

in his life; yet none of you would (rep.l — u. I 

my husband lost his life to get — 

in fame though not in life — 

ay, on my life; and hopes to find you — 

my life as dear as yours — 

never in my life [Co(. Kn(.-daysJ — — 

now, for my life, she's wandering .. — 

more miserable by the life of tliee . . — 

dead life, blind sight, poor mortal . . — 

grave's due by life usurped — 

cancel his bond of life, dear God .... — 

Bhame serves thy life, and doth thy. . — 
save her life, I'll say, she is not so irep.) — 

blessed thee with a fairer life — 

kingdom, kindred, freedom, life — — 
fair life's end. But how long fairly {rep.') — 

thy life hath that dishonoured — 

upon my life, my lord...... — 

one that never in his life felt — v. 3 

I have set ray life upon a cast — v. 4 

lose some life, which action's self . . Henry VIII. 1. 1 

my life is spanned already — i. I 

my life itself, and the best heart of it — i. 2 

unfit for other life, compelled — i. 2 

by mv life, this is (rep. i. 4) .... . . . . — i. 2 

much he spoke, and learnedly, for life — ii. 1 

for further life in tliis world I — u. 1 

Henry tlie eighth, life, honour, name — ii. 1 

of my long weary life is come — ii. I 

by my life, she never knew Ijep.) — ii. 3 

should do no more ofiices of life to't.. — ii. 4 

by my life, and kingly dignity 

I know my life so even 

more near my life, I fear 

prayers, while I shall have my life . . 
the place and lionours, during my life 

the articles collected from his life — ■ 

to have given me longer life — i 

both of my life and office — 

remember your bold life too — 

how much more is his life in — 

send prosperous life, long — 

into whose hand I give thy life — 

for thy Btretclied-out life .... Troilus Sr Cressida. 

our proiect's life this shape — 

whose life were ill bestowed — 

you touched the life of our design .. — 

and, by mv life, you shall make — : 

I'll lay mv life, with my .• — 

I'll play t'lie liunter for thy life 

now, bv Anchises' life, welcome 

a. Grecian's life hath sunk 

I shall have such a life 

and thy life shall be as safe 

is yonder, dealing lifel 

to catch my life, so pleasantly 

life every man holds dear (rep.) 

and pay thv life tliou owest me 

I reck not though I end my life to-day 

armour, thus liath cost thy life 

close the dav up. Hector's life is done 
pursue thy life, and live aye with., 
it is a pretty mocking of the life. Ti 

these touches, livelier than life ...... — 

like madness is tlie glory of this life — 

I never tasted Timon in my life — 

to hazard life for ill ? — 

a sufficient briber for his life — 

he owes the law his life — 

with hira to supply his life — 

that the whole life of Athens were . . — 

oft thou sliouldst hazard thy life for — 

of thy kindred were jurors on thy life — 

still serve him with my life — 

gave life and influence to their — 

sustain in life's uncertain voyage .... — 

brave death outweighs bad life Coriolan 

I do owe them still my life — 

prefer a noble life before a long — 

which never I shall discharge to the life — 

than mine own life, my dear — 

mistake me not. to save my life — 

would bewray what life we have led — 

thou hast nevei in thy life — 



[ 442 ] 



LIFE— sir, if you'd save your life, fly .. Coi iolanut, v. 4 

our patroness, the life of Rome — v. 4 

which this man's life did owe you .. — v. 5 

and other men think of this life JutiusCcesar, i. 2 

and those sparks of life that should be — i. 3 

but life being weary of these — i. 3 

he that cuts off twenty years of life.. — iii. 1 

for your life, you durst not — iv. 3 

all the voyage of their life is bound .. — iv. 3 

BO to prevent the time of life — v. 1 

my life is run his compass — v. 3 

saving of thy life, that whatsoever .. — v. 3 

in all my liie, I found no man — v. b 

almost ended his life's history — v. 5 

thy life hath had some smatch — v. 5 

his life was gentle; and all the — v. 5 

the nobleness of life is, to do Antony ^Cleo. i. 1 

I love long life better than figs — i. 2 

higher than both in blood and life .. — i. 2 

hath yet but life, and not.. — i. 2 

and die with looking on his life .... — ..!• *^ 

shows a body rather than a life — .in. 3 

or take his life there — !!!■'** 

so dissolve my lifel — iii. 11 

I'll expect victorious life, than — iv. 2 

best fits my latter part of life — iv. 6 

that life, a very rebel to my will — _ iv. 9 

she rendered life, thy name so — iv. 12 

and I wore my life, to spend upon .. — v. 1 



iii. 1 

iii. 1 

iii. 1 

iii. 2 



IV. 1 

iv. 1 
iv. 1 



I o/Athe 



LIF 

LIFE— answer my life my judgment Lea. 

Kent, on thy life, no more. Aly life .... — 

I dare pawn down my life for him — 

now, liy my life, old fools are babes again — 

I'll tell thee; life and death! — 

godson seek your life? — 

ruffian, sir, whose life I have spared .... — 

as I've life and honour, there shall he ,. — 

to keep base life afoot — 

man's life is cheap as beast's — 

he sought ray life, but lately — 

his life, with thine, and all that ofler.... — 

we may not pass upon his life — 

life would not yield to age 



begin to make a better life — v. 2 

other elements I give to baser life . . — v. 2 

knot intrinsicate of life at once xmtie — v. 2 

bound for no less than my life Cymbeline,i. 5 

since the true life on't was — ii. 4 

by my life, I kissed it — ii. 4 

this life is nobler, than — iii. 3 

his book uncrossed, no life to ours .. — iii. 3 

haply this life is best, if quiet life be — iii. 3 

strikes life into my speech — iii. 3 

let thine own hands take away her life — iii. 4 (let.) 

no, on my life: I'll give but notice . . — iii. 4 

or in my life what comfort — iii. 4 

most retired hath her life been — •!!• ^ 

1 see, a man's life is a tedious one . . — iii. 6 
and though you took his life, as being — iv. 2 

of which her life's in danger — iv. 3 

Bir, my life is yours, I humbly set . . — iv. 3 

what pleasure, sir, find we in life.... — iv. 4 

the certainty of this hard life — iv. 4 

even for whom ray life is, every .... — v. 1 

became the life o' the need — v. 3 

dear life, take mine; and though (rfp.) — v. 4 

take this life, and cancel these cold — v. 4 

the action of my life is like it — v. 4 

by raedicine life may be prolonged . . — v. 4 

madly dying, like her life — v. 4 

whose life, but that her flight — v. 5 

should by the minute feed on life — v. 6 

I do not bid thee beg my life, good lad — v. 5 

your life, good master, must shuffle. . — v. 5 

my queen, my life, my wife! — v. 6 

would cease the present power of life — v. 5 

resign my life, and set abroad Titus Andron. i. 2 

Titus, father of my lifel — j. 2 

and shall do with my life — i- 2 

I sued for my dear son's life — i.2 

these looks infuse new life in me ..., — i- 2 

Moor, sweeter to me than life! — ij- 3 

as you love your mother's life — ii. 3 

my father's sake, that gave thee life — ii. 3 

for 'tis not life that I have begged .. — ii. 3 

bereft my brother of his life — ii. 4 

not then have touched them for his life — ."• 5 

nursed this woe, in feeding life — iij. 1 

life not shrink thereat (If/!.) — iij. 1 

his pledges dearer than his life — iii. 1 

violent hands upon her tender life (rep.) — in. 2 

will quickly melt thy life away — "i- 2 

that first gave life to you — iv. 2 

I never drank with hira in all my life — iv. 3 

never say grace in all my life — iv. 3 

lord of my life, commander of my . . — iv. 4 

as he regards his aged father's life . . — v. 2 

punishment for his most wicked life — v. 3 

if one good deed in all my life I did — v. 3 

her life was beast-like, and devoid . . — v. 3 

I life would wish, and that Pericles, i. (Gower) 

his riddle told not, lost his life . . — i. (Gower) 

who tells us life's but breath — i. I 

touch not, upon thy life, for that's .. — i. 1 

lest my life be cropped to keep you. . — i. 1 

have after nourishment and life by care — i. 2 

makes war upon your life — i.2 

power to take thy life — 1.2 

treason, will take away your life ... . — i. 2 

destinies do cut his threadof life — i.2 

each minute threatens life or death.. — i. 3 

who first shall die to lengthen life . . — i. 4 

give them life, who are hunger-starved — i. 4 

and have no more of life, than may.. — ii. 1 

even as he left his life — ii. 1 

that holds his life of you — 11.2 

so much blood unto your life — ;;. 3 

undertake a married life — ii- 5 

the king's subtlety, to have my life.. — ii. 5 

even as my life, ray blood that — ii. 5 

as a duck for life that dives — iii. (Gower) 

now, raild may be thy life — iii. 1 

and yet the fire of life kindle again.. — iii. 2 

'gins to blow into life's flower again — iii. 2 

Marina's life seeks to take off. . — iv. (Gower) 

never did her hurt in all my life — iv. 1 

or ray life imply her danger? — iv. 1 

your lady seeks my life — iv. 1 

daughter all his life's delight — iv. 4 (Gower) 

another life [Co!. Knl.-U'ke'] to Pericles — v. 1 

give them repetition to the life — v. 2 

no less than life, with grace Lear, i. 1 



pluck upon ray hateful fife — iv. 2 

dissolve the life that wants — iv. 4 

to despatch his nighted life — iv. 5 

treasury of life, when life itself yields .. — iv. 6 
thy life's a miracle: speak yet again .... — iv. 6 

I pardon that man 6 life — iv. 6 

then there's life in it — iv. 6 

ch'ud ha' been zwaggered out of ray life — jv. 6 
a plot upon her virtuous husband's life.. — iv. 6 

my life will be too short — iv. 7 

that thy life and wits at once — iv. 7 

and the strings of life began to crack — v. 3 

I pant for life; some good — v. 3 

for my writ is on the life of Lear — v. 3 

haste thee, for thy life — v. 3 

during the life of this old majesty — v. 3 

no, no, no life; why should a dog — v. 3 

a horse, a rat, have life, and thou no ... . — v. 3 

he but usurped his life — v. 3 

lovers take their life Borneo ^Juliet, (prol.) 

term of a despised life — |. 4 

my life is my foe's debt — .i. 5 

on my life, hath stolen him home .. — ii. 1 
my life were better ended by their hate — ii- 2 

a challenge on my life — ii. 4 

of my life for an hour and a quarter — iii. 1 

hit the life of stout Mercutio — iii. 1 

those twenty could but kill one life — iii. 1 

should end the life of Tybalt — iii. 1 

[A'n/.] thy lady, that in thy life lives — iii 3 

let day in, and let life otit — iii. 5 

when he shuts up the day of life .... — iv. I 
almost freezes up the heat of life .... — iv. 3 

my child, my only life, revive — iv. 5 

life and these lips have long been — iv. 6 

life leaving, all is death's — iv. 5 

life, not life, but love in death — jv. 5 

and breathed such life with kisses — v. 1 

upon thy life I charge thee — v. 3 

let my old life be sacrificed, some hour — v. 3 

did forfeit with his life, all those his Hamlet, i. 1 

if thou hast uphoarded in thy life — j. 1 

upon ray life, this spirit dumb to U6 — i. I 

as I have seen it in his life — j. 2 

1 do not set my life at a pin's fee — i. 4 

that did sting thy father's life — j. 5 

of life, of crown, of queen, at once ».. — j. 5 

except my life, except my life (rep.) — ii. 2 

upon whose property, and most dear life — ii. 2 

makes calamity of so long a life — !!!• ' 

to grunt and sweat under a weary life .. — iii. 1 
meraory maj' outlive his life half a year — jii. 2 
on wholesome life usurp immediately.... — jii. 2 

the single and peculiar life is bound — iji- 3 

like life in excrements, starts up — iii. 4 

and breath of hfe, Ihave no life to breathe — iii. 4 
who was in life a foolish prating knave . . — iii. 4 

even on the pith of life — iv. 1 

should be as mortal as an old man's life? — iv. 5 
our crown, our life, and all that we call — iv. .'j 

father slain, pursued ray life — jv. 7 

so conjunctive to ray liie and soul — iv. 7 

upon ray life, Lamoid. The very same .. — iv. 7 

death, shortens not his own life — v. 1 

with desperate hand fordo its own life .. — v. 1 

such bugs and goblins in my life — v. 2 

for my proper life, and with such cozenage — \.'i 
and a man's life's no more than to say .. — v. 2 
in thee there is not half an hour's life.... — v. 2 
had it the ability of life to thank you .... — v. 2 
for necessity of present life, I must show. O/AfWo, 1. 1 

I fetch my life and being from men — i. 2 

your sentence even fall upon my life ... . — i- 3 
still questioned me the story of my life .. — i. 3 

for life and education; my life — 1. 3 

my life upon her faith. Honest lago — i. 3 

a life's but a span ; why then — ii. 3 (song) 

'tis the soldier's life, to have their balmy — ii. 3 
think'st thou, I'd make a life of jealous}' — iii. 3 
hang a doubt on: or, woe upon thy life! — iJi. 3 

Imust live, or bear no life — iv. 2 

his unkindness may defeat my life — iv. 8 

treachery, and devise engines for my life — iv. 2 

he hath a daily beauty in his life — v. 1 

but of life as honest, as you that thus — v, I 

no, by ray life and soul; send for — v. 2 

I never did offend vou in my life — v. 2 

LIFE-BLOOD-issuing life-blood. A/fr. ofVenice.m. 2 

infect the very life-filood of our Henry I V. iv. 1 

draw life-blood from ray heart \Hi-nryVJ. iv. 6 

howcouldst thou drain the life-blood.3Hp«>!/)'7. j. 4 
my sword i' the life-blood of tliee.. Henry VIII. iii. 2 
to the quick, thv life-blood out..7'iVHs Ainhon. iv. 4 

LIFE-HARMING heaviness liiehard II. ii. 2 

LIFELESS— a mere lifeless block ..As you Like it, 1. 2 
to procrostinate his lifeless end ..Comedy of Err. i. I 

in life so lifeless as it shows itself Henry V. iv. 2 

let his head and lifeless body \\e.....'>.HrnryVI. iv. I 

LTFELING— od's lifclings Tu-elflh Night, v. 1 

LIFE-PBES ERVING rest .... Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

LIFE-RENDERING pelican H»m!e/, iv. 5 

LIFE-TIME— for this my life-time ..ZHenryVI. j. 1 
UFE-WEARY taker may fall . . Romeo ^Juliet, y. 1 

LIFT— you would lift the moon out Tempest, p. 1 

lift up your countenance Winter^s Tale, iv. 3 

lift up thy looks: fiom my succession — iv. 3 



LIF 



LIFT— that lift their swords in e\K\i .. King John, II. 1 
lift up thy brow renowned Salisbury — y. 2 

for I may never lift iin angry Richard II. i. 2 

vigour lift nie up to reaeli — ..i 3 

to lift shrewd stool aaainst — in- 2 

tliat lift v.nir vussalliands — m- 3 

but I will lilt the di.wn-trod \Henryiy.\.^ 

any levors to lilt mo up again — ii- 2 

can lift vour IiI(h"1 up with — y. 2 

Biiirit would lift liini wliere most 2nrnii/Ii . i. 1 

heuo'erliftuphishiuid \ ll,;„,i ri. i. 1 

topetlier lift our lioails to heaven tUciuiil I. i. -J 

andlift niysijul to lioaven Ihiu;,rin. ii. 1 

within three pound, lift as much. TinUus ijCiess. i. 2 

ehould lift their bosoms higher — .1-3 

in aspiration lifts him from — iv. 5 

as lift them against the Roman Coriolanus, i. 1 

shall lift up their rotten — i; 10 

hence I wilt thou lift vip Olympus? /Kii'i(.<C<rsnr, in. 1 

here I lift this one hand up to. Titus Aiidron. in. 1 

why lifts slie up her arms — ly. 1 

so. lift there. \Vlmt is tliat? Pericles, ui.2 

lifts me above the ground with ..Romeo ii- Juliet, v. 1 

etir, ordobut lift tills arm Othello, li. 3 

innocent, tliat e'er did lift up eye — v. 2 

LIFTED-lifted up their noses Tmnpesl, iv. 1 

she lifted the princess from Winter's Tale, v. 2 

it lifted up its liead, and did address Hamlet, i. 2 

LIFTER— and so old a lifter .. Troilus ^- Cresnida, i. 2 
LIFTING— the lifting up of day .. ..iHenryir. iv. 4 

tear this hand, for lifting food to't? Lear, ui. 4 

LIGARIUS [see Caius] 

exploit have I in hand, Ligarms.. jujiks Cwsar,u. 1 

Boine to Ligarius! awav; go — iii. 3 

LIGGF,— or aile ligge i' the grund Henry y. in. 2 

I.,IGUT— how to name tlie bigger light ..Tempest, i. 2 
toads, beetles, bats, light on you! ...... — i. 2 

lest too light winning make the prize light — i. 2 

are but light to me, mifrht I but — i. 2 

by tliis good light, this is (rep.) — .11.2 

offandon, by this light — 111.2 

as Hvmen's lamps shall light you — ly. 1 

to the tune of liglit o' love ..TwoGen. of Verona, 1. 2 

tooheavy for so light atune — _;■ 2 

or your own had the liglits they — 11. 1 

hath dazzled mv reason's liglit — ,11. 4 

that I had any liglit from tliee — in. 1 

it will be light, my lord — ii|. 1 

what lijiht is light, if Silvia .— >"• 1 

or any kind of light Mcrrynives,i\. I (letter) 

till we see the liglit of our fairies — v. 2 

light and spirits will become it well .. — v. 2 
hard by Heme's oak, with obscured lights — v. 3 

more than liglit airs Tu-elflhNight, 11. 4 

your eye shall light upon some — 111. 3 

help me to some light — iv. 2 

some ink, paper, and light (rep.) — iv. 2 

given me such clear liglits of favour — v. I 

not light them for themselves Meas.fnrMeas.X. 1 

he would never bring them to light. . — iii. 2 
lights that do mislead the morn .. — iv. 1 (song) 

from your eyes with alight heart — iv. 3 

as there comes light from heaven — — v. I 

for women are light at midnight — y. 1 

you may light upon a husband Mucli .4do, li. 1 

otherwise 'tis light, and not heavy .. — iii. 4 

clap us into liglit 0' love — i'i. 4 

yea, light o' love, with your heelsl .. — 111.4 

these tilings, come thus to 1 ight — iv. 1 

by this light, he changes more and more — v. 1 
these shallow fools have brought to light — T. 1 
but. by this light, I take thee for pity — v. 4 
and light them at the tiery.. ..;V/d,.V.'sDream, iii. I 

and both as liglit as tales — 111. 2 

yon liery oes and eyes of light — iii. 2 

wilfully exile themselves from light — iii. 2 

thou show me thy grey light, I'll find — iii. 2 

by his small light of discretion — v. 1 

tongue, lose thy li'4lit! moon take .. — v. 1 

this house give frliinniering light — v. 2 

hop as light as bird from brier — v. 2 

to seek the liglit of truth Lore's /,. Losl,\. 1 

lisht seeking light, doth light of light — i. 1 
where light in darkness lies, 5'our light — i. 1 

give him li"ht that was it blinded by — i. 1 

earthly godfathers of heaven's lights — i. 1 

that's great marvel, loving a light wench — i. 2 

saw her in the light (/cp.) — ii. 1 

by tills light, but for her eye — iv. 3 

through tears of mine give light — iv. 3 (verses) 
an attending star scarce seen a light — iv. 3 

resembling spirits of light — iv. 3 

no candles now, for dark is light — iv. 3 

light wenches may prove plagues — iv. 3 

had she been light like you, of such — v. 2 

foralight heart lives long — v. 2 

of this li"lit word? A light condition — v. 2 
light to find your meaning out irep.) — v. 2 
a light wench. Indeed, I weigh not (rep.)— v. 2 

fiery eye, by light we lose light — v. 2 

a light for monsieur Judas — v. 2 

truui will come to light .... Merchant of ytnice, ii. 2 

good sooth, are too too light — ii. 6 

but what lights o' my shoulders — iii. 1 

let the dauL'er light upon your charter — iv. 1 

as makes it light, or heavy — iv. 1 

that liL'ht we sec is burning in — v. 1 

give light, but let me not be light (rep.) — v. 1 
we'll light upon some settled low../)»|/oHti<cdV,ii. 3 
briRht radiance and collateral light ..Ali'iH'ell, i. 1 

in this mv light deliverance — ii. I 

no kernel in this light nut — ii. 6 

that he does weifth too light — iii. 4 

of youth light not vour mind — iv. 2 

ere we light on such another herb . . — iy. 5 
by any means lisrht on a fit man . . TamingofSh. i. 1 

an a man could light on them — i. 1 

but voung and light,— Too light for — li. I 

for, by this light, whereby I sec — ii. I 

1 am none, by this good light Ifintrr'i Tale, ii. 3 



[ 443 ] 

LIGHT-Doricles do light upon her. jyinier'sTale,iv. 3 
what obscured light tlie heavens.. Com<;J|/o/£rr. ;. 1 
by the benellt of Ills wished light .... — ..i. I 
let love, being light, be drowned .... — iii. 2 
and run from her by her own liglit. . — iii. 2 

in the habit of a light wench — iv. 3 

angels of light; liglit is an etfoct of .. — iv. 3 

ergo, light wenches will liiirn — iv. 3 

conies it, that Ills bond is light — v. I 

let not light see mv bhick Macbeth, i. 4 

when living light should kiss it? — ii. 4 

lij;ht thickens; and the orow makes — iii. 2 

giveusaliiiht there, hoi (;<.p.) — iii. 3 

who did strike out the light? — iii. 3 

by that light? why, it stood by her (rep.)— v. 1 

by this light, were I to get again KiiigJohji.i. 1 

or the light loss of England — iii. 1 

of our curses light on thee — iii. 1 

we had a kind of light -- iv. 3 

alive may I not light, if I Richard II. i. I 

turn me from my country's light — i. 3 

lamp, and time-bewasted light — 1. 3 

mocks at it, and sets it light — 1. 3 

are grown somewhat light — .1.4 

light vanity, insatiate cormorant — .11. I 

the globe, and lights the lower world — iii. 2 

darts his light through every — iii. 2 

vanities that make him light — 111.4 

thou art so light of foot — m. 4 

thy head by day nor light — v. 6 

then they liglit on us 1 HenrylV. 11. 2 

and your whole plot too light. . — li. 3 (letter) 
shall be the day, whene'er it lights . . — iii- 2 

but for the light in thy face - jii. 3 

bought me lights as good cheap — 111. 3 

[Co/ri God's light! I was never called so — in. 3 
did give a fair and natural light .... — v. 1 

his own lantern to light him iHeiirylV. i. 2 

your ill angel is light — i. 2 

by this light, I am well spoken of — 11.2 

by this light, did all the chivalry — ii. 3 

by this light flesh, and corrupt blood — H. 4 

shall seem as light as ehaft' — iv. 1 

I am passing light in spirit — iv. 2 

that light aud weightless down perforce — iv. 4 

vet that were but light payment — (epil.) 

for a few light crowns lightly Henry V.'n. 2 

hath brought to light this dangerous — ii. 2 
a most contagious treason come to light — iv. 8 
and this light, the fellow has mettle . . — iv. 8 

or with light skirmishes enfeebled \HenryVI. i. 4 

out, some light horsemen — iv. 2 

a plaguing mischief light on — v. 3 

that Hie will light to listen to iHenryVI. i. 3 

gives light in darkness, comfort in .. — ii. 1 
dark shall be my light, and nislit my day — ii. 4 
brineto light in smooth duke Humphrey — iii. I 

God s cur.se light upon you all! — iv. 8 

one lamp, one light, one sun SHenryyi. ii. 1 

notwithstanding, join our lights together — ii. 1 

contend with growing light — ii. S 

gave king Henry light — ii. 6 

thou keep'st me from the light — v. 6 

and untimely brought to light Richard i//._i. 2 

were it light'enough (rep.) — iii. 1 

yield me not thy right; nor nicht.... — iv. 4 
the lights burn blue, it is now dead . . — v. 3 

those two lights of men HenryyjII.i. 1 

how came his practices to light? - iii. 2 

bv this light I II have more — v. 1 

when the sun doth light a storm .Troilus^ Cress, i. 1 
he was harnessed light, and to the field — i. 2 

winnows the light away — i. 3 

let Achilles sleep; light boats — 11. 3 

there, where we see the lights — v. I 

lights more lights. The best of. . . . Timon ofAth. i. 2 

hath blazed with lights — ii. 2 

bv wanting light to give — iv. 3 

the plague of company light upon thee! — iv. 3 

lie where the light foam of the sea — iv. 3 

by free and offered light: come — v. 1 

contagion of the south light Coriolanus, 1. 4 

I am light, and heavy; welcome — ii. 1 

that needs must light on this JuliusCtcsar,]. 1 

in the air, give so much light — ii. I 

shallliaht upon the limbs of — iii. 1 

some light: O he lights too — y. 3 

no more light answers Antony ^ Cleopatra, i. 2 

and made the night light with drinking — ii. 2 

give light to thy fair wayl — iii. 2 

strange fowl light upon neighbouring.Cymiie/ine, 1. .■> 

as the smoky light that's fed — _i. 7 

to see the enclosed lights — ii. 2 

we will pay him tribute for light — — iii. 1 
though light, take pieces for — .... - v. 4 
for being too light, the purse too light — v. 4 
enfranchised and come to light ..TiiusAndron. iv. 2 
and welcome me to this world's light — v. 2 

fair glass of light, I loved yon Pericles, i. I 

no course to keep them from the light — i. 1 
day serves not light more faithful .. — i. 2 

I'll give some liglit unto you — i. » 

but Tike lesser lights, did vail — ii. 3 

Are in darkness, none in light — ii. 3 

pages and lights, conduct these knights — ii. 3 

to view nor day nor light — .ii- .^ 

no light, no fire; the unfriendly .... — iii. I 

light; ho, here: fly, brother Lear, ii. 1 

he that first lights on him. holla — iii. I 

men's faults, light on thy daughters! — iii. 4 
falseof heart, light of ear, bloody — — iii. 1 
how light and portable my iiain seems — iii. B 
in a heavy case, your purse in a light — iy. i> 

away from light steals home llomeo ^Juliet, i. 1 

stars, that make dark heaven light — i. 2 

but heavy, I will bear the light — i. 4 

to soar with his light feathers — i. 4 

let wantons, light of heart — ]• * 

our liclits in vain [Knf.-lights, lights] — ;• I 

more light, ye knaves (rep.) — i- J> 



LIK 



LIGHT— soft! what light through. «omeo 4- yu(iW,ii. 2 
with love's light wings did 1 o crpcrch — ii. Z 
thou may'st tiiink my 'haviour light — ii. 2 
not impute this yielding to light love — ii. 2 

the worse, to want thy light — ii. 2 

with streaks of light — ii. 3 

so light a foot will ne'er wear out — ii. 6 

yet not fall, so light is vanity — ii. 6 

puck or blessings lights upon thy back — iii. 3 
light to my chamber, ho! afore me .. — iii. 4 
yon light is not daylight, I know it — iii. 5 

and light tliee on tliy way to Mantua — iii. 5 
more light and light it /,'roW8 (rep.) — iii. 5 

my heart is wondrous light, since.,.. — iv. 2 
give me the light: upon thy life .... — v. 3 

a feasting presence full of light — v. 3 

that vainly lends bis light to grubs — T. 3 

conies one with light to ope the tomb — y. 3 

giving more light than beat Hamlet, i. 3 

to the last, bended their light on me — ii. 1 
of Boairy and light a quality, that it — ii. 2 
too lieavy, nor Plautiis too light .... — ii. 2 
a tyrannous and a damned li^ht .... — ii. 2 
to me give food, nor heaven light! .. — iii. 2 
give me some light: away! (lep.).... — iii. 2 

yet are they much too light — iv.6(letter) 

light and careless livery that it wears — iv. 7 

the election lights on Fortinbras — v. 2 

light, I say! light! Farewell; for I . . . . 0;/ie«o, i. I 
but, look", what lights come yonder? — i. 2 
if my bad blamelight on the man!.. — i. 3 

monstrous birth to tlie world's light — i. 3 

for his own rage, holds his soul light — ii. 3 
this matter, making it light to Cassio — ii. 3 
[Co/.] so light, so drunken, and so .. — ii. 3 
trifles, light as air, are, to the jealous — iii. 3 
witness, you ever-burning lights above! — iii. 3 
smiles, gestures, and light beliaviour — iv. I 
is he not light of brain? He is that he is — iv. I 
for, by this light of heaven, I know not — iv. 2 
heavenly light! Nor I neither (lep.) — iv. 3 

rCo(.] light, ho! murder! — v. 1 

in his shirt, with light and weapons — v. ) 
marry, heaven forbid ! light, gentlemen — v. I 
lend me a light: know we this face.. — v. 1 
put out the light, and then (rep.).... — v. 2 

again thy former light restore — v. 2 

[Co/. Knt.') but once put out thy light — V. 2 
Promethean heat, that can thy light — v. 2 

LIGHTED— Hymen's torch be hghled.. Tempest, iv. 1 

1 have lighted! well on this young TamingofSh. i. 2 

shot, hatn not yet lighted Macbeth, ii. 3 

havelightedfools the way to dusty .. — v. 5 

new liglited from his horse 1 HenrylV. \. 1 

now thy heavy curse is lighted on.. Richard III. iii. 4 
when tliey lighted, how they c\ung..llenryyill. i. 1 " 
when it is lighted, come and caU, .Julins Cirsur, ii. 1 
lighted the little O, the earth.... ^n/ony ,5- C/eo. v. 2 

LIGHTEN— lighten our own hearts . . Much Ado, v. 4 

lightens my humour with his. . Comedy of Errors, i. 2 

as is the eagle's, lightens forth Richard 11. iii. 3 

now the Lord lighten thee! iHenrylV. ii. 1 

a gem, to lighten all this isle Henry y I II. ii. 3 

thunders, lightens, opens graves ..Julius Crescr, i. 3 

ring, that lightens all the hole. TitusAndronicus, ii. 4 

ere one can say— it lightens Romeo Sf Juliet, i'\. 2 

LIGHTER— and the lighter people. TiretfrhNiglil, v. 1 

ray heart is ten times lighter than . . /(ic/i«ri/ ///. v. 3 
LIGHTER-HEELED, than L.Mid.N.'s Dream, iii. 2 
LlGHTEST-makingtliemlightest.iUer.o/;Wiice,iii.2 

whose lightest word would narrow up ..Hamlet, i. 5 
LIGHTFOOT-some lightfoot friend. Richard III. iv. ' 
LIGHTLY— and go as lightly ..Tu-oGen. ofVer. iii. 

for they are bui lightly rewarded . tore's L.Lost, i. 

not lightly trust the messenger. . Comedy of Krr. iv. 

a few light crowns, lightly conspired.. He<iri//'. ii. 

ever feather so lightly blown iHenryVI. iv. 

they love his grace but lightly Riclmrd Ill.i. 

short summers lightly have a forward — iii. 

I weigh it lightly, were it heavier — iii. 

and. believe't not lightly Coriolanus, iv. 

punish it seeming to bear it lightly. Jn».i5-C7eo.iv. 1 

with tears not liglitlv shed TilusAtnlronicus, ii. 

sits lightlv in his throne Ilnmco ^-Juliet, V. 

LIGHTNESS— woman's I i;;litiiess?,l/(ci..._/orjl/en». ii. 

eyes are witness of licr lightness.. Tamina of Sh. iv. 

such lightness with tlieir fciir 2Henryiy. 1. 

the lightness of his wife shines through it — i. 

such IS the lightnessof youcommon.Sflenry n. iii. 

60 great weight in his lightness ...-intonySfCleo. i. 

heavy lightness! serious vanity !Komeo'i./u/i'e/,i. 
thence to a lightness; and, by this Hamlet, ii. 

LIGHTNING— Jove's lightnings Tempest, 1. 

1 would the lightning had burnt up .. — iii. 
as the lightning in the eollied night. W/d.A'.'sD;-. i. 

thy eye Jove's lightning bears Love's L. lost. iv. 

in thunder, lightning, or in rain? Macbeth, i. 

be thou as lightning m the eyes KingJohn, i. 

be swift like lightning in the Richard II. i. 

their weaponslike to lightning SHenryVI. 11. 

with lightning strike the murderer.. /dVAarrf 111. i. 
the cross blue lightning seemed. . ..Julius Ca-sar. i. 
now he'll outstare the Mgbtning./lnlony^-C/eo.iii. 1 

yon nimble lightnings, dart your Lear, 11. 

nimble stroke ofquick, cross lightning?.. ~ iv. 

too like the lightning Romeo ^JuUel, 11. 

and to't thev go like lightning — 111. 

a lightning before death (rep.) — v. 

LIGHTNING-FLASH, nor ..Cymbeline,iv. 2 (song 

thunder's crack, or lightning-flash .. Titus And. ii. 
LIGHT-WINGED toys of feathered ....Othello, i. 
LIKE— make thyself like to a nymph.... Tempest, I. 

few in millions can speak like us — ii. 

if be were that which now he's like — ii. 

when I rear mv hand, do you the like.. — ii. 

such baseness had ne'er like executor . . — iii. 

besides ycnirsclf, to like of — iii. 

if the other two be brained like us .... - iii. 

as vou like this, give me — iii. 2 

dost thou like the plot — iii. 3 



LIK 



I.IKE— even with such like valour Tempest, in. 3 

my fellow ministers are like iuvuliieriible — iii. 3 

you are like to lose your hair — iv. 1 

and 't like your grace — iv. 1 

for the like loss, I have (rsp.) — v. 1 

very like; one of them — v. 1 

I do not like tliis tune TwoGen. of Verona, i. 2 

I like tliy counsel (rep.) 



[444] 



like exliibition thou shalt have ... 
you have learned, like sir Proteus, 
do you not like itV 

be not like your mistress , 

1 must minister tlie like to you . . . . 

that her father likes 

if Protens like your journey 

and I, for sucli like petty 

the music likes you not 

the musician likes me not 

I like thee well 

how likes she my discourse? 



— ji. I 

— ii. I 

— ii. 1 

— ii. 4 

— ii. 4 



I do not like dese toys Merry Wives, i. 4 

did you ever hear the like? — ii. 1 

I like not the humour of lying — ii. 1 

I like it never the better for that .... — ii. 1 

I like his money well — iii. 5 

I like not wlien a 'oman has — iv. 2 

and I was like to be apprehended .... — iv. 4 

speak I like Heme tlie hunter? — v. 5 

how like you Windsor wives? — v. 5 

for authority, the like of him Tu'elflh Night, i. 2 

are they like to take dust, like mistress — i. 3 

you are like to be much advanced. ... — i. 4 

wliat's a drunken man like, fool? .... — i. 5 

it is the more like to be feigned — i. 5 

lean write very like my lady — ii. 3 

how dost thou like this tune? — ii. 4 

to what thou art like to be — ii. 5 (letter) 

and fools are as like husbands — iii. I 

j'our wife is like to reap a proper man — iii. 1 

which now abhors, to like his love .. — iii. 1 

a fiend, like thee, might bear — iii. 4 

as you are like to find him — iii. 4 

like to the old vice — iv. 2 (song) 

never shouldst love woman like to me — v. 1 

much like the character — v. 1 

but do not like to stage me to Meas.for Meas. i. 1 

for the encouragement of the like. ... — i. 3 

here, if it like 3'our honour — ii. 1 

first, an it like you, the house — ii, 1 

I do desire tlie like — iv. 1 

the visage of Ragozine, more like to. . — iv. 3 

his actions show much like to madness — iv. 4 

give the like notice, to ValentinuB .. — iv. 5 

that's I, an't like your grace — v. 1 

that it were as like as it is true!.... — v. 1 

1 do not like the man — v. 1 

like doth quit like, and measure still — v. I 

to death, and with like haste — v. 1 

as like almost to Claudio (rep.) — v. 1 

for all Jlessina, as like him as she is . . Much Ado, i. 1 

but as she is, I do not like her — i. 1 

when I like your favour (rep.) — ii. 1 

well, I would you did like me — ii. 1 

hath your grace ne'er a brother like you? — ii. 1 

who is thus like to be cozened with. . — ii. 2 

faith, like enough _ ii. 3 

show some sparks that are like wit .. — ii. 3 

are like to prove a goodly commodity — iii. 3 

I like the new tire within excellently — iii. 4 

I do not like thy look, I promise thee — iv. 2 

when he shall endure the like himself — v. 1 

we had like to have had our two noses — v. 1 

that when I note another man like him — v. 1 

much like to you, for you have just his — v. 4 

I am your husband, if you like of me — v. 4 

thou art like to be my kinsman — v. 4 

like to Lysander sometime frame. .Mi'-i.iV.'sD)-. iii. 2 

rail thou like Demetrius — iii. 2 

that you are like to know — v. 1 (prol.) 

but like of each thing, that in Love's L. Lost, i. 1 

then was Venus like her mother .... — ii. 1 

none but minstrels like of sonneting — iv. 3 

is ebony like her? O wood divine! .. — iv. 3 

to look like her, are chimney-sweepers — iv. 3 

any thing like? — v. 2 

disguised like Muscovites, in shapeless — v. 2 

here is like to be a good presence .... — v. 2 
how like you the young German .Mei:ofFemce, i. 2 

I am as like to call thee so again .... — i. 3 

I like not fair terms, and a villain's — i. 3 

is't like, that lead contains her? .... 

if we are like you in the rest 

must be needs a like proportion .... — 

must needs be 1 ike my lord — 

how dost thou like the lord Bassanio's 

of what it likes, or loathes 

nor none is like to have As you Like il, i. 2 

the like do you; so shall we pass .... — 

I like this place, and willingly could — 

if you like, upon report, the soil .... — 

and how like you this shepherd's life — 

solitary, I like it very well — 

I do not like her name — 

they were all like one another — 

would now like him, now loathe — 

besides, I like you not — 

and like enough to consent — 

little acquaintance you should like her? — 

and like to have fought one — 

like this fellow. I like him very well — 

I desire you of the like — 

to like as much of this play as — 

what was he like? I have forgot him.. All' slVell, i. i 

ill, to like him that ne'er it likee = ' 

and I like the wear well 

to join like likes, and kiss like native 
like to prove most sinewy swordsmen 

I'll like a maid the better 

if thou canst like this creature 

make me but like my thoughts 



ii. 7 
iii. 1 
iii. 4 
iii. 4 
iii. 5 
iv. 1 



V. 2 
v. 4 
V. 4 

V. 4 
(epil.) 



ii. 3 



— IV. 5 

— V. I 

— V. 3 

— V. 3 

o/Sh. ii. 



HI. 2 
iv. 1 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 
iv. 3 
Iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 4 
iv. 4 
iv. 4 
iv. 4 
iv. 4 



LIKE— I like him well. 'Tis pity .... All's Well, Hi. i 

all men have the like oaths — iv. 2 

I like him well; 'tis not amiss — iv. 5 

how does your ladyship like it? 

since you are like to see the king .... 

I do not like her now; to prison 

when I was like this maid 

else you like not of my company, rami' 
to express the like kindness myself.. 

that doth make me like thee well 

if you like me, she shall have 

call you this gamut? tut! I like it not 

and like to mose in the chine 

'tis like, you'll prove a jolly surly . . 
of all mad matches never was the like! 

didst ever see the like? 

I take the like imfeigned oath 

that you are like to sir Vincentio.... 
I like it well; good Grumio, fetch it 

or love me not, I like the cap 

I see, she's like to have neither cap\ . 

if you please to like no worse 

then at my lodging, an' it like you .. 

you're like to have a thin and (rep.) 

and how she's like to be Lucentio's., 

one mess is like to be your cheer .... 

by me! how likes Hortensio that? . — v. 2 

how likes Gremio these quick-witted — v. 2 

on the like occasion whereon my .Winter's Tale, i. 1 

my bosom likes not, nor my brows . . — i. 2 

full like me: yet, they say («p.) .... 

to say, this boy were like me 

how like, methought, I then was .... 

I am like you, they say 

should a like language use to all 

a goodly babe, lusty, and like to live 

BO like you, 'tis the worse 

so like to him that got it 

have done like oflSces of pity 

upon Hermione, I little like 

been cast out ; Ii ke to itself 

'tis like to be loud wea tlier 

I never saw a vessel of like sorrow . . 

thou art fike to have a lullaby 

say you the like to him? 

palace, an it like your worship 

your worship had like to have given 
an't like you, sir? Whether it like (rep.) 
his successor was like to be the best . . 
as like Hermione as is her picture 
comes not like to his father s great 

nor are we like to be 

is so like an old tale (rep.) — 

ay, an it like your good worship .... — 

I like your silence, it the more — 

to trouble youi- joys with like relation — 

the one so like the other Comedy o/E, 

whilst I had been like heedful of ... . — 

for his case was like, reft of his — 

many such like liberties of sin — 

burdened with like weight of pain .. — 

live to see like right bereft — ii. 1 

or, if you like elsewhere, do it — iii. 2 

any tiling his rage did like — v. 1 

these two so like, and these two .... — v. 1 

that look not like the inhabitants Macbeth, i. 3 

look like the time (? pp.) — i. 5 

thanks, sir ; the like to you ! 

then, 'tis most like, the sovereignty 

that did the like for Fleance — in. 4 

too like the spirit of Banquo — iv. 1 

like the first; a third is like the former — iv. I 
and yelled out like syllable of dolour — iv. 3 

this comfort with the like! — iv. 3 

and show like those you are — v. 6 

ourfather, and this son like him King John, i. 1 

I like thee well; wilt thou forsake . . — i. 1 

being as like, as rain to water 

and both alike we like 

how like you this wild counsel 

I like it well ; France, shall we knit 

that makes him like, that any 

it likes us well ; 3'oung princes 

we like not this; thou dost forget..., 

'tis like I sliould forget myself 

O now you look like Hubert 1 

high majesty look like itself Richard IL 



s greatness — 



1.2 



ii. 2 
ii. 3 
ii.3 
ii. 3 
iii. 1 



IV. 3 



V. I 
V. 2 
V. 2 
V. 3 
V. 3 
r, i. I 



ii. 1 



— ii. 1 



— 11. 2 



iv. 1 



which show' like grief itself . 

needs must I like it well — in. 2 

yet looks he like a king — iii. 3 

I take the earth to the like — iv. 1 

or are we like to have? — v. 2 

is he not like thee? (rep.) — v. 2 

have before endured the like — v. 5 

[Kn/.] this, matched with other like..! Heiiry/F. i. 1 

ay, but, 'tis like, that they will know us — i. 2 

these lies are like the father — ii. 4 

for breath to utter what is like thee ! — ii. 4 

and persuaded us to do the like — ii. 4 

why then, 'tis like (rep.) — ii. 4 

of man, an it like your majesty? .... — ii. 4 

runs me up with like advantage .... — iii. 1 

thou, that art like enough — iii. 2 

1 do not like that paying back — iii. 3 

like enough, you do — iv. 4 

I like not siicn giinning honour .... — v. 3 

or thou art like never to hold it — v. 4 

that being which was like to be? lUenryli'. i. 1 

who, is it like, should lead his — i. 3 

saying, her eldest son is like you .... — ii. 1 

even like those that are kin — ii.2 

and be, like them, to Percy troublesome — ii. 3 

to abuse, to seem like him — ii.3 

[Co/.] troth, you like well — iii. 2 

he's like to be a cold soldier — iii. 2 

thy mother's son I like enough — iii. 2 

do you like him, sir John? — iii. 2 

if that rebellion came like itself — iv. 1 

like their articles? I like them all .. — iv. 2 

with the like, bold, just, and impartial — v. 2 



LIK 



LIKE— I like this fair proceeding iHenry IK v. 5 

was like, and had indeed against us ..Henry C i. 1 

shall be to you, as us, like glorious.. — ii.2 
the offer likes not: and the nimble — iii. (chor.) 

but one that is like to be executed .. — iii. 6 

this lodging likes me better — iv. 1 

they stoop with the like wing — i v. 1 

which likes me better, than to wish — iv. 3 

'tii so like as my fingers is to my.... — iv. 7 

our king is not like him in that .... — iv. 7 

your majesty came not like yourself — iv. 8 

do you like me, Kate? — v. 2 

like me. An angL-l is like you irep.) — v. 2 
none do you like but an effeminate ..XHenryVI. i. I 

whate'er we like, thou art protector — i. 1 

who ever saw the like? what men .. — i. 2 

saintPhilip'sdaughter, were like thee — i. 2 

ICol. Knt.'] like thee, Nero, play on .. — i. 4 

the substance shall endiu'c the like .. — ii.3 

Nestor, like aged, in an age of care.. — ii. 5 

else with the like, I had requited him — ii. 5 

of darnel; do you like the taste? — iii. 2 

we are like to have the overthrow again — iii. 2 

but yet, I like it not, in that he — iv. 1 

what you will, the like do I — iv, 6 

and like me to the peasant boys — iv. 6 

shall not find like opportunity — v. 4 

to find the like event in love — v. 5 

an' it like your majesty (rep.) 2Hei^ryFI. ii. 1 

'tis like, my lord, you will not keep — ii. I 

as, 'tis great like he will — iii. 1 

like her? or thou not false like him? — iii. 2 

'tis like you would not feast {rep.) . . — iii. 2 

then we are like to have biting statutes — iv. 7 

1 was, an't like your majesty — v. 1 

not now have the like success? SHenryVI. i. i 

the like yet never heard of — ii. 1 

neither like thy sire nor dam; but like — ii. 2 

to execute the like upon thyself .... — ii. 4 

the widow likes him not (rep.) — iii. 2 

where I must take like seat — iii. 3 

be thou still like thyself, and sit .... — iii. 3 

beseem a monarch like himself — iii. 3 

I like it well, that our fair — iii. 3 

how like you our choice — iv. 1 

than myself have had like fortune .. — iv. 1 

I like it better than a dangerous .... — iv. 3 

1 like not of this flight of Edward's. . — iv. G 

'tis like, that Richmond with — iv. 6 

brother, I like not this — iv. 7 

my sovereign speaketh like himself — iv. 7 

of like spirit to himself — v. 4 

not like the fruit of such a goodly .. — v. 6 

I am like no brother ' — v. 6 

resident ill men like one another .... — v. 6 

and such like toys as these Ricliard III. i. 1 

by like untimely violence! — i. 3 

I like you, lads: about your business — i. 3 

so thrive I, as I truly swear the like — ii. 1 

I do not like the Tower, of any place — iii. 1 

I do not like these several councils .. — iii. 2 

nay, like enough; for I stay dinner. . — iii. 2 

some conceit or other likes him well — iii. 4 

false traitors from the like attempts — iii. 3 

being not like the duke — iii. 7 

upon the like devotion as yourselves — iv. 1 

my queen is sick, and like to die .... — iv. 2 

for whom you bid like sorrow — iv. 4 

and Richard, likes of it — iv. 4 

like it your grace, the state Henry I'l II. i. 1 

can advise me like you — i. I 

believed, it was much like to do .... — i. 2 

you speak not like yourself — ii. 4 

I do not like their coming — iii. 1 

an't like your grace, — you are — iv. 2 

'tis as like you, as cherry is to cherry — v. 1 

for this, the girl is like to him? — v. 1 

may it like your grace to let — v. 2 

and there they are like to dance .... — v. 3 

the expected good we are like to hear — (epil.) 

in like conditions as our Troilus <Sr Cress, (prol.) 

like, or find fault; do as your — (prol.) 

like as there were husbandry in war — i. 2 

liberality, and such like IKnt.-so forth] — i. 2 

as like as Vulcan and his wife — i. 3 

breed a nursery of like evil — i. 3 

'tis like, he'll question me — iii. 3 

the like allayment could I give — iv. 4 

never like thee; let an old man — iv. 5 

I do not like this fooling — v. 2 

that that likes not you, pleases me . . — v. 2 

I like thy armour well — v. 6 

trumpets sound the like, my lord — v. 9 

I like your work {rep.} Timon of Athens, i. ! 

things of like value, differing — i. 1 

as that I am not like Tiniou — i. 1 

how dost thou like this jewel — i. 1 

there's no meat like them — i. 2 

joy had the like conception (rep.) .. — i. 2 

like madness is the glory of this life — i. 2 

and something like thee: 'tis a spirit — ii.2 

like a lord; sometime, like irep.) — ii.2 

he is very often like a knight — ii.2 

plate, jewels, and such like trifles .. — iii. 2 

the like to you, kind Varro — iii. 4 

in like manner was I in debt — iii. 6 

were I like thee, I'd throw away (rep.) — iv. 3 

ay, though it look like thee — iv. 3 

more things like men? eat, Timon . . — iv. 3 

but himself, which looks like man ., — v. 2 

I like this well, he will return again — v. 2 

never bearing like labour with Coriolanus, i. 1 

that like nor peace, nor war? — i. 1 

who's like to rise, who thrives — i. 1 

where he was like to find fame — i. 3 

mark me, and do the like — i. 4 

'tis most like, he will — ii. 1 

I never saw the like — ii. 1 

you are like to do such business .... — iii. I 

express what's like to be their words — iii. 1 



L<IKE— and bo arc like to do 

to botli it stiiiids in like iTiiiiesl? 

but wliat ia like me foniH-rly 

niid lie's us like to ilo't, us uiiv nuiii 
tliriv exiimples olllie like huvc .... 

Id., not like Ihi-^oews 

nmv »lu.w like uU yonrsell' 

nn.l liiseliiia like him hv ehanoe 



i-lliell ' 



liki 



iditi^ 



vill.... 
....Julii 



— V. ,1 

— V. 3 

: Crsai; i. 2 



time is like to luy npon u 

'tis very like; lie iKitli the — i. 2 

keep e^'er with their likes — 1.2 

that every like ii not the sume — ii. -' 

whul niuv full: I like it not — iii. I 

I>ueilins,<lo tlie like; and letno .... — iv. 2 

wus thut done like Cussius? — iv. 3 

I do not like voiir limits — iv. 3 

will he Coimdlike Urntiis, like himself — v. 4 

most like, y.>ii must not stay Aniony ffClco. i. 1 

toenforee the like tVoin him — i. 3 

1 do not like hot vet — ii. 5 

and well am like to do — ii. 6 

it is shuix>d, sir, like itself — ii. 7 

he cniiiiot like her long. Like her?.. — iii. 3 

kingdoms, 1 deriiunil the like — iii. 6 

yoirconie not like CiBsar's sister .... — iii. G 

yes, like enoniih. high-liattled Caisar — iii. U 

as he shall like, to (init me — iii. 11 

tlioii look'st like him that knows — iv. 4 

straipht, how 'tis like to go — iv. 10 

the like is on her arm — v. 2 

of the earth for one his like Cyinhvline, i. 1 

I do not like her: she doth think — i. 6 

so like .you, sir, embassadors — ii. 3 

tlionuh I am none, nor like to be — ii. 4 

'tis very like. Was Cains Lucius .... — ii. 4 
but not like me: yet like Ofp.) 



LIKE-notliing is at a like goodness still. HatnM, iv. 7 

Hike thy wit well, in good faith - • 



and num 



thi 



lik, 



ineh like as B of great 
ell; these foils .... 



V. 2 



— IV. 4 



— V. h 



like a figure, strikes life 

most like; bringing nie here to kill me 
first, make yourself but like one .... 

she looks as like a thing more 

he hearing, (as it is like him) 

the flower, that's like thy face 

use like note, and words 

that had a rider like my sel f 

lads more like to run a country base 

like hardiment Postliumns hath 

most like I did, for I was dead 

is it Diaii, habited like iier .... TilusAndronicus, 

was ever heard the like? - 

afford no tribune like to these - 

for this ungrateful country done the like - 

his child is like to her, fair as 

too like the sire for ever being good . . 

how like the empress (rep.) 

find'st a man that's like thyself - 

another that is like to thee — 

most wretched, to perform the like .. - 

shall have like wautof pity 

that like events may ne'er it ruinate - 

give my tongue like leave to love Pa 

in like necessity, which gods protect — 
which heaven makes like to itself . . — 
1 like that well; nay, how absolute. . — 

would die as I am like to do — 

If you like her so; if not, I have — 

where you are like to live — 

his hands, where I was like to die .. — 
come, youn" one, I like the manner — 

the gods do like this worst — 

did you ever hear the like? — 

never oame her like in Mitylene .... — 

you are like something that .... — 

my dearest wife was like this maid . . — 
for thou look'st like one I loved indeed — 
like a girl: yet thou dost look like . . — 
this maid is, or what is like to be .... — 
[Col. Kilt.'] another like to Pericles .. — 
like him you speak, like him you are — 

more like a god than you 

may fitly like your grace 

if I like thee no worse after dinner .... 

if I speak like myself in this 

as like this as a crab is like an apple .. 

she will taste as like this 

Ills countenance likes me not 

I like not this unnatural dealing 

only, I do not like the fashion of 

preparation; we are bound to the like 
pleasant to him ; what like, offensive . . 

ere long yon are like to hear 

one way I like this well 

take like hold on thee 

the arbitrement is like to be a bloody., 
and like her most, whose merit. . Itomeo ^Juliet 
can you like of Paris' love? (rpp.).. .. — 
my grave is like to be my wedding-bed — 
be heaped like mine, and that thy skill — 

am 1 like such a fellow? — 

doting like me, and like me banished — 
do you like this haste? we'll keep no — 
and yet no man, like he, doth grieve — 
unev'en is the course, I like it not. ... — 
is it not very like, the horrible (rep.) — 

same figure, like the king (ifp.) 

and even the like precursc of fierce ... 

but no more like my father 

■hall not look upon his like again 

a figure like your father, armed at ])oii 

these hands are not more I iVe 

to motion, like as it would speak 

very like, verv like; stayed it long? ... 

it likes us well; and. at our more 

as it is most like, if their means 

it came to pass, as most like it was ... 
play something like the murder of ... 

madamj how like you this play? 

if the king likes not the comedy irep.) 

I like him n^it; nor stands it safe 

who like not in their j udgment 



iii. 3 
iii. 4 



V 


2 


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V 


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. Lea. 



....Hamlet 



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do, with lil.e timorous accent O/AcHo, i. 1 

let me spenk like yourself; and lay.... — i. 3 

1 never did like molestation view — ii. 1 

not another comfort like to this succeeds — ii. 1 
and the general so likes your music... — iii. 1 
ha! I like not tluit. What dost thou sav? — iii. 3 
what cli.lst not like? and, when I told thee — iii. 3 

I do not like the otRce — iii. 3 

I like the work well (re/).) — iii. 4 

lest, being like one of heaven, the devils — iv. 2 
'tis like she comes to speak of Cassio's — v. 2 

even like thy chastity _ v. 2 

LIKICD— have I liked several women .. Tempest, iii. 1 
that liked, hut had a rougher task. ...Much Ado, i. 1 
saying, I liked her ere I went to wars — i. 1 
that loved, that liked, that looked, M/a. A'.'s Dr. v. 1 

complexions that liked me As you Like it, (epil.) 

certain it is, I liked her .-Ill's Well, v. 3 

he liked not the security 2lU'tuyl r. i. 2 

'twas a colour he iici'er "liked Henrij /'. ii. 3 

it is yours, because you liked it. Timon of Athens, i. 2 

LIKE'D'ST— thou liked'st not that Othello, iii. 3 

LIKELIEST-tliey are your likeliest.2Hra?y/r. iii. 2 
LIKELIIIOOD-these likelihoods T;™ Gen. ofVer.v. 2 
but what likelihood is in that?..A/eas./or il'/cns. iv. 2 
which shall bear no less likelihood ..Much Ado, ii. 2 
than I can lay it down iu likelihood — iv. 1 

whereon the likelihooddepends..../).syo!«L>7<f/7, i. 3 
many likelihoods informed me of this .All's ll'ell, i. 3 
and, by all likelihood, some .. Taming of Shreir, v. 1 
shape of likelihood, the news was, ...lHeuryII\ i. 1 
a fellow of no mark, nor likelihood .. — iii. 2 
to lay down likelihoods, and forms ..IHenrylV. i. 3 
but by loving likelihood werenow.. Henry f'. 5 (cho.) 
what' likelihood of his amendment.. n/cAoro! ///. i. 3 
to no apparent likelihood of breach .. — ii. 2 
by any likelihood [Co(. /fn/.-livelihood] — iii. 4 

by all likelihood have confounded Cymbeline, i. 5 

modesty enough, and likelihood to lead. Wamte(, v. 1 
these thin habits, and poor likelihoods . . Olhellv, i. 3 
what time? wdiat form? what likelihood? — iv. 2 
LIKELY— this is most likelyl ..Meas. for Mens. v. 1 
so likely an embassador of love. . Mer. of Venice, ii. 9 
never thought it possible, or \\ke.\y Taming of Sli. i. 1 

an edge, more likely to fall in iHenrylV.i. | 

the respect of likely peril feared .... — i. 1 
onr hopes (yet likely of fair birth) .. — i. 3 
'fore God a likeljy fellow! come, prick — iii. 2 
not seeing what is likely to ensue ..XHentyVl. iii. I 
is likely to beget more conquerors . . — v. 5 

nor likely to be slain ; for they IHenry VI. iv. 5 

he's very likely now to fall from ..ZHenryVI. iii. 3 

as likely to be blest in peace — iv. 6 

and hiinself likely, in time, to bless. . — iv. 6 

'tis likely, by all conjectures Henry VIII. ii. 1 

very likely to load our purposes. Timon of Athens, v. I 

most likely, 'tis for you Coriolanus, i. 2 (letter) 

this is most likely! Raised only .... — iv. 6 

so likely to report themselves Cymbeline, ii. 4 

it is not likely, that when _ iv. 4 

thereby may give a likely guess . . TilusAndron. ii. 4 
likely, sir. Nay, certainly to-night... ftriWfs, iii. 2 

did warrant me was likely — v. 1 

have you heard of no likely wars toward. .Lmr,ii. 1 
is it likely, thou wilt undertake. Womeo ^-Juliet, iv. I 

it may be, very likely Hamlet, ii. 2 

for he was likely, had he been put — v. 2 

a likelv piece of work, that yon should. 0(AfHo,iv. I 
LIKENED— likened oft to kingly ....3Hej!ry;'/. v.2 
LIKENESS— thyself in thy likeness . . Tempest, iii. 2 
how may likeness, made in .... Meas. for Meas. iii. 2 
to my house in the likeness of your . . Much Ado, i. 1 
nei?hing in likeness of a filly ioa\. Mid. N.'s Dr. ii. 1 

in very likeness of a roasted crab — ii. i 

now, m thy likeness, one more fool. Love's I..L. iv. 3 
he comes in the likeness of a Jew. Mer. of Venice, iii. 1 

so her dead likeness, I do well Itinter'sTale, v. 3 

likeness of anew untrimmed bride.. Kiriy./oAn, iii. 1 

thou, old Adam's likeness Richardll. iii. 4 

in the likeness of a fat old man ....IHenrylV. ii. 4 
dear to-day hath bought thy likeness — v. 3 ' 

love in her in his true likeness Henry V. v. 2 

the likeness of this railer here ZHenryVI. v. 5 

do not assume my likeness Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

thatcomesin likeness of acoal-black.raus^mi. iii. 2 

for which I razed my likeness Lear, i. i 

thou in the likeness of a sigh .. ..Romeo ^Juliet, ii. I 
that in thy likeness thou apjiear to ns — ii. 1 
can translate beauty into his likeness.. Hamlet, iii. j 
LIKER— the liker you; few taller.. Love' sL. Lost, v. 2 
this boy liker in feature to his father. Kifig./ohn, ii. I 
LIKEST— truly how thou likest her.. .. A/iic/i//i/o, i. 1 
he that is likest to a hogshead Love's L. Lost. 



doth then show likest God's ..Merch. ofVen 

well, in tliat thou likest it twt.TamingofShreu; iv. 3 

how likest thou this pictuje Timon of Athens, i. 1 

LIKKWrSE— I likewisewill visit.TwoGen.ofVer. i. 1 

I likewise hear that Valentine — iv. 2 

that likewise have we thought Merry fVives, iv. 4 

shall likewise shuffle her away — iv. (i 

likewise hath made promise to — iv. (i 

is likewise your own benefit Meas. for Meas. iii. 1 

I likewise give her my most humble. . Much Ado, i. I 
where we are, our learning likewise. Z.ot?e'*L.jL. iv. 3 

do we not likewise see our — iv. 3 

the error that love makes is likewise — v. 2 

that's likewise part of my H'tnter'sTale, iv. 1 

was likewise a Rnan|)cr-up of — iv. 2 

end likewise witlj theevening..romf'(yo<' Brrort, i. 1 



and liquor likewise will I give to thee. Henry V 
hath liicewisc sworn: but O, what .... 



ii. 2 

slaughtered, or took, likewise I Henry VI. i. 1 

his troubles likewise were exiiired — 11. 4 

widow-dolour likewise be uiiwept!./?ic/ior</ ///. ii. 2 

he likewise enriched poor Timoji of Athens, v. 1 

might from relation likewise reap . . Cymlieliue, 11. 4 



LIKEWISE— likewise variable ...Romeo ^Juliet, ii, 2 
my intercession likewise steads my foe — ii. 3 

he likewise gives a frock, or livery Hamlet, iii. 4 

to the citadel ; this likewise is a friend . . Othello, ii. 1 

LIKING— grow to your likings Merry H ivis. i. I 

to make difference in men's liking ii. 1 

to these habits of her liking TweinhMeht.W. 5 

i.:ii„...... .•....>... ,.<•,.: liking! A/fa.../brJl/,u«. iii. 2 



kills for faults of hii 
to drive likin 
but lest my 1 



to drive liking to the name of love 'MuchAdu,i. T 

iking might too sudden — i. 1 



if I had my liberty, I would do _ . „ 

much an ill word may impoison liking " 



■anting of Shrew, i. 2 

— iii. 2 

. H7;i/er'»7'a(e, iv. 3 



liking — 

. 'ing — iii. I 

y heart 18 with your liking _ y. 4 

a liking with old sir Kowland's As you Like it, i. 3 

changeable, longing, and liking jii. 2 

to lose it to her own liking? All's Well, i. 1 

in so true a flame of liking 1.3 

had married him against his liking .. iii. 5 

to his liking, will undertake .. 'I 

to add her lather's liking 

and bring him up to liking 

you have broken from his liking ... 

he sees, which moves his liking KingJi.hn, ii! i 

while I am in some liking \HenrylV. iii. 3 

likin" his father to a singing-man ..'UlenrylV. ii. I 

as— liking of the lady's virtuous 1 Henni VI. v. 1 

thought to contradict your liking.. 2HfHry';'/. iii, 2 

did Xcontinue in my likins? Henry VI II. ii. 4 

such as stand not in their liking Coriolanus, i. I 

with whom the father liking took.PcnWei, i. (Gow.) 

to avert your liking a more worthier Lear, i. I 

liath lost me in your liking ' i. 1 

to like, if looking liking prove ..Romeo^Juliet, i. 3 

ICol.i as liking not his voyage Hamlet, iv. 7 

needs no other suitor, but his likings ..OrtW/o iii 1 
LIK'ST— fashion thou best lik'st. TwoGen. of Ver. ii. 7 
LILIED-lilied [Co<.A'7i(.-twilled] brims. Tempest, iv. I 

LILIES— lilies of all kinds Winter'sTale, iv. 3 

thou mayst with lilies boast KingJohn, iii. 1 

LILY— she is as white as a lily., ruo Gen. of Ver. ii. 3 

the lily tincture of her face jy. 4 

these lily brows, this cherry nose. Mid. N. Dream, v. I 

as the unsullied lily, I protest Love's L. Lust, v. 2 

to paint the lily, to throw King John, iv, 2 

the lily, that once was mistress HenryVIILU]. 1 

a most unspotted lily shall she pass .. _ v. 4 
may wallow in the lily be<is..Troilus4Cressida, i\i. 2 

fresh lily! and whiter than Cymbeline ii. 2 

O sweetest, fairest lily! 'iv. 2 

the monster seen those lily hancls.TifusAndron. ii .5 

upon a gathered lily almost withered _ iii 1 

LILY-LIVEKED-lily-livered boy! ..Macbeth'v.S 

a lily-livered, action-taking knave Lear ii 2 

LILY-WHITE-lily-white of hue./l/irf.yv.Drram.'iii'. 1 
LIMANDER— like Limander am I trusty — v. 1 

LIMB— keep their limbs whole Merry II ives, l\i 1 

thy face, thy limbs, actions Twelfih Night, \. 5 

affection, limb, nor \seauty. Measure forMeasure, iii. 1 
strength of limb, and policy ot mWd. Much Ado] iv. 1 

a waist, a leg, a limb? Love'sL.Lost,i\. 3 

because of his great limb or joint .... y 1 

young in limb, in jud"ment.,fl/«-. ofVen. ii. 7 (scroll) 

without some broken limb AsyouLikeil i. 1 

should in my old limbs lie lame _ 'ji! 3 

those tender limbs of thine to All's Well iii! 2 

to wear your gentle limbs in my _ ' v! 1 

whom am I beholden for these limbs? A77ig-7oAn, i. 1 

cairs skin on those recreant limbs (rep.) in. j 

and do not break my limbs, I'll tind iv. 3 

learn to make a body of a limb Richard II. iii. 2 

[Co/.] bow, and bend my limbs jy. 1 

a perilous gash, a very limb lopped..! ffeHry/r. iv! I 

to crush our old limbs in ungentle .... y, 1 

even so my limbs, weakened with 'iHenrylV. i. 1 

he can part youn" limbs and lechery i. 2 

care I for the limb, the thewes jji. 2 

like a broken limb united iv. 1 

let us choose such limbs of noble .... v.2 

whose limhs were made in England . . Henry V. iii. 1 
drench their peasant limbs iu blond.. — iv. 7 

from my weary limbs honour is cudgeled v. 1 

proportion of his stronj-knit limbs. .1 //cioi/r/. ii.3 

so fare my limbs with king i;. 5 

sweat froiii his w;ir-wearied limbs _ iv. 4 

and weak unable limbs, should bring — iv! 5 

and a limb lopped off; this stuff 2 Henry /'/. ii. 3 

set limb to limb, and thou art far .. iv. 10 

to rend his limbs asunder SHennjVI.'i. 3 

isle doth want her proper limbs ..Richard III. iii. 7 

who set the body and the limbs Henry VI II. i. 1 

these are the limbs of the plot i. { 

have you limbs to bear that load ii. 3 

or the limhs of Limehonse, their dear — v! 3 
which entertained, limbs are his. 7"ro//us (J- Cre«. i, 3 

and bows directive by the limbs _ j. 3 

view thee limb by limb iv. 5 

that their limbs may halt as .. Timon of Athens, iv. 1 
venture all his limbs for honour ....Coriolanus, ii. 2 

O he's a limb, that has but — iii. 1 

have thewes and limbs like to their.JuliusCtPsar, i. 3 
and then hack the limbs: like wrath — ii. I 

Antony is but a limbof CiEsar — ii. 1 

shall light upon the limbsof men.... — iii. 1 
that we may hew his limbs .... Titus. -tndronicus, i. 2 

let's hew his limbs, till they be — i. 2 

Alarbns' limbs are lopped — i. 2 

drive upon thy new-transformed limbs ii. 3 

these broken limbs again into one v. 3 

brain doth couch his limbs Romeo ^ Juliet, ii. 3 

this hungry churchyard with thy limbs — v. 3 

the limbs and outward flourishes Hamlet, ii. 2 

with his sword her husband's limbs ii. 2 

LrMRETK-of reason a limbeck oiilv ..Macheih i 7 
LIMCEU-a good limbed fellow .. ..'L>7/,„,t/;r iii 2 
Hi\inEli-nie ort with limber vows. (r,„^.r''«7',./e i" 2 
LOFR MEAL-tearher liinli-meulI..C!/.,i6Wme, ii' 4 
LIMBO— and of limbo, and of furies ..All's ll'ell, v. 3 

no, he's in Tartar limbo Comedy of Krrori,iv. 2 

as far from hehi as liinlio is from. TilusAndron. iii I 
LIMBU I'ATllUM-in limbo patrum.HeH»vf/;;. v.S 



LIM 



LIME— some lime upon your fingers ..Tempesl,iv. 1 

you must lay lime TwoGen.of I'erona, iii. 2 

see thee frotli, and lime QKn(.-llve]. Merry Wives, i. 3 

with lime and rougli-east Hid. A'.'s Dream, v. 1 

[Co/.] this lime, this rough-cast — v. 1 

would you desire lime and liair to speak — v. 1 

with lime and hair knit up in thee — v. I 

from their fixed beds of lime had King John, ii. 1 

limits of yon lime and stone lliciiardJl. iii. 3 

here's lime in this sack too \HeunjIf'. ii. 4 

worse than a cup of sack with lime in it — ii. 4 

to lime tlie stones together ZHenryVJ. v. 1 

LIAIED— I have limed her Tu-elflh NiffM, iii. 4 

she's limed, [An/.-ta'en] I warrant.. i>/KcA Ado, iii. 1 
that they are limed with the twigs ..AU'sWell, iii. 5 

myself liave limed a bush for her iHenryVl.i. 3 

have all limed bushes to betray — ii. 4 

the bird that hath been limed in ?,Henry VI. v. 6 

where my poor young was limed — v. 6 

limed soul; that, struggling to be free.. J/ainfe/, iii. 3 
MME-GROVE[toJ.A'n/.-line-grovej ..T,mpest,v. 1 
MMEHOUSE— limbs orLiraehouse-Hcmiyr/i/. v. 3 
LIME-KILN— reek of a lime-kiln. il/erri/ Wires, iii. 3 
lime-kilns i' the palm, incurable. 7Voiius,§- Cress, v. 1 
LIME-TWIG— like lime-twigs sat ..iHenryl'I. iii. 3 

LIMIT— which had indeed no limit Tempest, i. 2 

beyond all limit of what else — iii. 1 

within the modest limits of ordeT..Tu'elflhNlghl, i. 3 

and limit of the solemnity Meas.forMeas. iii. 1 

the sadness is witliout limit Much.ido, i. 3 

within the limitof becomingmirth.LoBe'sL.Los/,ii.l 

out of all sanctified limit All's ll'ell, i. 1 

before I have got strength of limit.. Winler'sT. iii. 2 
I'll limit thee this day, to seek. Comedi/ ofErrurs,\. 1 

the furthest limit of my embassy King John, i. 1 

the dateless limit of thy dear exile . . Richard II. i. 3 

so high above his limits swells — iii. 2 

within the limits of yon lime — iii. 3 

and many limits of the charge iHenrylf'.i. I 

divided it into three limits — iii. 1 

so long, as out of limit, and true — iv. 3 

tive no limits to my tongue ZHenryVI. ii. 2 
espatch the limit of your lives . . Richard III. iii. 3 
I give a sparing limit to my tongue . . — iii. 7 

limit each leader to his several — v.i 

and the act a slave to limit.. Troihts ^ Cressida, iii. 2 

that not dares to stride a limit Cymbeline, iii. 3 

then into limits could I bind TilusAndron. iii. 1 

stony limits cannot hold love out Romeo 4- Juliet, ii. 2 

no end, no limit, measure, bound — iii. 2 

LIMIT ATION-stood your limitation ConVn/ms, ii. 3 
as it were, in sort, or limitation ..Julius Ccesar, ii. 1 

LIMITED— the hour limited Meas./or Meas. iv. 2 

to call, for 'tis my limited service Macbetli, ii. 3 

warrant limited unto my tongue King John, v. 2 

theft in limited professions Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

LIMNED— most truly limned AsyouLikeil, ii. 7 

LIMP behind the substance. . . . Merch. of Fenice, iii. 2 
report, that Kate doth limp?. . Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 
apish nation limps after, in hase.... Richard II. ii. 1 
doth limp so tediously away .. Henry V. iv. (chorus) 

LIMPED in pure love As you Like it, ii. 7 

LIMPING— thy old limping sire .. Timon of Alh. iv. 1 

on the heel of limping winter Romeo 4r Juliet, i. 2 

LINCOLN Washes have devoured . . King John, v. 6 

with vou, my lord of Lincoln Henn VIII. ii. 4 

LINCOLNSHIRE bagpipe lHenryir.i.2 

LINE— come, hang them on this line.. Tempest, iv. 1 
mistress Line, is not this my jerkin? .. — iv. I 

now is the jerkin under the line — iv. 1 

we steal bv line and level (icp.1 — iv. 1 

would not" deign my lines .. Two Gen. of Verona, i. 1 

E resume to harbour wauton lines? .. — i. 2 
ere in one line is his name — i. 2 

sweet love', sweet linesl sweet lifel.. — i. 3 
to write some lines to one she loves . . — ii. 1 

the lines are very quaintly writ — ii. 1 

and frame some feeling line — iii. 2 

upon your master's lines — iv. 4 

iKnt.'i husband is in his old lines.i»/erri/frrees, iv. 2 
smile his face into more lines .. Twelfth Night, iii. 2 
with full line of his authority .... Meas.forMeas. i. 5 

the stroke and line of his great — iv. 2 

I fear, these stubborn lines lack.. totie'sZ.. Lost, iv. 3 

what, did these rent lines show — iv. 3 

then his lines would ravish — iv. 3 

here's a simple line of life..J)/erc/ion( of Venice, ii. 2 
too capable of every line and trick .... AWs Well, i. 1 

and write to her a love line — ii. 1 

and warped the line of every other .. — v. 3 
looking on tlie lines of my boy's.. Winler'sTale, i. 2 
you perceive me not how I pive line — i. 2 

or did line the rebel with hidden Macbeth, i. 3 

hailed him father to a line of kings . . — iii. 1 

will the line stretch out to — iv. 1 

unfortunate souls that trace his line . . — iv. 1 
now doth death line his dead chaps. . KingJohn, ii. 2 
more general than these lines import — iv. 3 
we will not line his thin bestained . . — iv. 3 

at home, meet in one line — iv. 3 

show the line, and the predicament. .IHeiiry/r. 1. 3 
sent for you, to line hi.senterprize .. — ii. 3 

and in that very line, Harry — iii. 2 

hold hook andline, say I 2Henry IV. u. 4 

give him line and scope — iv. 4 

true line and stock of Charles (.rep.) ..HenryV. i. 2 

as many lines close in the dials — ^i. 2 

to line, and new repair, our towns .. — ij. 4 
sends you this most memorable line — ii. 4 
being but fourth of that heroic line — ii. h 

with deep premeditated lines 1 Henry VI. iii. 1 

make a volume of enticing lines — — v. 5 
from whose line I claim the crown.. 2//enry VI. ii. 2 
have all the line of John of Gaunt..3Heii7-!/r/. i 1 

root out their accursed line — i. 3 

lines of fair comfort Richard III. v. 2 

are under the line, they need no . . HenryVllI. v. 3 

in all line of order Troilus^Cressida.i. 3 

[Kn/.] his pettish linps, his ebbs — ii. 3 

and yon grey lines that fret JuliusCiesar, ii. 1 



[ 44G ] 



LTP 



LINE — line one of their hands? Cymbeline, ii, 3 

the lines of my body are as well .... — iv. 1 
nothing blurred those lines of favour — iv. 2 
weapons wrapped about with lines. . Titus And. iv. 2 

in bloody lines I have set down — v. 2 

wretched stump, these crimson lines — v. iJ 
he will line your apron with gold .. ..Pericles, iv. 6 

even from this line to this Lear, i. 1 

no sallets in the lines, to make Hamlet, ii. 2 

begin at this line; let me see — ii. 2 

a speech of some dozen or sixteen lines.. — ii. 2 
as lief the town crier spoke my lines.... — iii. 
wlien in one line two crafts directly .... — iii. 

LINEAL entrance to our own ! King John, ii. 

put on the lineal state and glory ... . — v. 

than for his lineal royalties Richard II. iii. 

not force this lineal honour from ..2HenryIV. iv. 

was lineal of the lady Ermengare Henry V. i. 

whence you spring by lineal descent. 1 Henry VI. iii. 
lineal glory of your royal house.. iii'c/tart/ ///. iii. 
unto a lineal true-derived course — iii. 

LINEALLY descended ZHenry VI. iii. 

LINEAMENT, branch, shape MuchAdo, v. 

a like proportion of lineaments. Mer. of Venice, iii. 
not in the lineaments of nature ..AsyouLike it, i. 
than any of her lineaments can show — iii. 
gentleman in blood and lineaments. K/cAartZ //. iii. 
well appeared in his lineaments . . Richard III. iii. 

I did infer your lineaments — iii. 

every married lineament Homeo (§■ Juliet, i. 

LINED— with good capon lined . . As you Like it, ii. 

all the pictures, fairest lined — iii. 2 (verses 

winter garments must be lined.. — iii. 2 (verses. 

who lined himself with hope iHenrylV. i. 

pluck the lined crutch from . . Timonof Alliens, iv. 
when they have lined their coats Uihello, i. 

LINEN— with rich garments, linens Tempest, i. 2 

and throw foul linen upon him . . Merry Wives, iii. 3 
'tis to have linen, and buck-baskets! — iii. 5 
will look some linen for your head . . — iv. 2 
I'll bring linen for him straight . . 

pluck me out all the linen 

let Thisby have clean linen . . Mid. N.'s D: 



— iv. 2 

— iv. 2 
,iv. 2 



him in Rome for wantof linen.... lotJe'sL.Losf, v. 2 
fine linen, Turkey cushions bossed. Taming ofSh.'ii. 1 

with a linen stock on one leg — iii. 2 

kite builds, look to lesser linen .. Winter' sTnle,vv 2 

those linen cheeks of thine Macbeth, v. 3 

they'll find linen enough on 1 Henry I V. iv. 2 

for it is a low ebb of linen with l\\^e.2HeniyIV. ii. 2 
that bawl out the ruins of thy linen — ii. 2 
for they have marvellous foul linen.. — v. 1 
senselesB linenl happier therein than I! . . Cymb.i. 4 

fet linen: now this matter must Pericles, iii. 2 
NG— old lings and our Isbels (rep.). All's Welt, iii. 2 

LINGARE-as heir to the lady Lingare. Henry r. i. 2 

LINGER-but if thou linger. Two Gen. of Verona, lii. 1 

she lingers my desires Mid. N.'s Dream, i. 1 

by the time I linger here . . Merchant of Venice, ii. 9 
false hope lingers in extremity .... Richard II. li. 2 
borrowing only lingers and lingers . .2 Henry IV. 1. 2 

linger your patience on Henry V. ii. (chorusl 

then linger not, my lord; away 2 Henry VI. iv. 4 

away; we may not linger thus SHenryVI.i. 1 

why do we linger thus? I cannot rest( — _,i. 2 

why linger we? let us lay hands — iii. 1 

linger not oui- sure destructions. Troilus Sr Cress, v. 1 1 

pent to linger but with a grain Coriolanus, iii. 3 

would not have thee linger in thy pain. 0(Ae//o, v. 2 

LINGERED— lingered about a match. Merry W. iii. 2 
say, that I lingered with you.Comedy of Errors, iii. 1 
unless his abode be lingered here Oitiello, iv. 2 

LINGERING— lingering perdition Tempest, Wi.Z 

draw out to lingering sufferance. Meas.forMeas. ii. 4 
from which lingering penance. A/erc/i. of Venice, iv. 1 
but with a lingering dram, that... Winter'sTale, 1. 2 

feed contention in a lingering act MHenrylV.!. I 

one would have lingering wars' \ Henry VI. 1. 1 

and, in advantage lingering, looks . . — iv. 4 
him with grievous lingeringdeath..2Hfjiry f/. 111. 2 
smarting in lingeringpickle./(n/on>/ i§-C(enpoiro,ii.5 

she has strange lingering poisons Cymbeline, i. 6 

and lingering, by inches waste you . . — v. 5 
a speedier course than lingering' . TilusAndron. 11. 

LINGtTIST— report, a linguist. Jk'o Gen ofVer. iv. 
tire manifold linguist, the armipotent. All's W ell, iv. 

LINING— as lining to the time Love'sL.Lost,v. 

the lining of his coffers shall make . . Richard II. i. 

LINK— to link my dear friend Much Ado, iv. 

there was no link to colour . . Taming of ahrew, iv. 
thousand marksin links and torches. 1 Henry I V.iii. 
now, sir, a new link to the bucket . .iHenrylV. v. 

to link with him that were not •iHenryVI.iM. 

of more strong link asunder Coriolanus, i. 

nor strong links of iron, can he... .Julius Cwsar. i. 

LINKED— and linked together KingJolm, iii. 

Margaret, he be linked in love 1 Henry VI. v. 

they are so linked in friendship ZHenry VI. iv. 

whose love is never linked to.Antony f,- Cleopatra,}. 
though to..a radiant angel linked Hamlet, i. 

LtNBEY-WOLSEY hast thou All's Well, iv. 

LINSTOCK now the devilish .. Hen? j/K iii. (chorui 

LION— like bulls, or rather lions Tempest, ii. 

of a whole herd of lions — ii. 

to walk like one of the lions. Two Gen. of Verona,n. 

been seized by a hungry lion — v. 

before the lion, than the violf/ ..Twelfth Night, 111. 

like an o'ergrowu lion Measure forMeasure.i. 

as mice by lions — !• 

the feats of a lion Much .ido, 1. 

Snug, the joiner, you, the lion's part. Aiid. A'. Dr. i. 
have you the lion's part written?.... — i. 

let me play the lion too — }■ 

be it lion, bear, or wolf, or bull — Jj- 

will not the ladies be afeard of the lion? — iii. 

a lion amongst ladies, is a most — iii. 

more fearful wild-fowl than your lion — ;;;. 

must tell he is not a lion — iii. 

must be seen through the lion's neck — iii. 
if you think I am come hither as a lion — iii. 



.Mid.N.Dr.iv. i 



LION— that plays the lion, pare . . . 
shall hang out for the lion's claws .. — iv. 

whicli by name lion bight — v. 

which lion vile with bloody mouth ., — v, 
let lion, moonshine, wall, and lovers — v. 

if the lion be to speak (re;).) — V. 

two noble beasts in, a moon and a lion — v. 

when lion rough in wildest rage — v. 

a lion fell, nor else no lion's dam (jep.) — v. 
this lion is a very fox for his valour,. — v. 
well roared lion. Well run, Tliisbe .. — v. 
well moused lion. And so comes .... — v. 
[Co/.A'n/.] and so the lion vanished .. — v. 
didst thou lions frame? since lion vile — v. 
moonshine and lion are left to bury — v. 

now tlie hungry lion roars — ^v. 

Nemean lion roar 'gainst thee .. Love* sL. Lest, iv. 
your lion that holds his poll-ax .... — v. 
an' thou wert a lion, we would do so — v. 
mock the lion when he roars. . Merch. of Venice, ii. 
and saw the lion's shadow ere himself — v. 
wounded with the claws of a lion. As you Like it, v. 
that would be mated by the lion, must. .4H's>fe/;,i. 
I met the ravin lion when he roared — iii. 
in my time heard lions roar?.. Taming of Shrew, i. 
or the hare, the lion: if I say sooth.... Macbeth, i. 

the awless lion could not wage KingJohn, i. 

he, that perforce robs lions of — i. 

that robbed the lion of his heart .... — ii. 

plucks dead lions by the beard — ii. 

that lion's robe, that did disrobe the lion — ii. 
I'd set an ox-liead to your lion's hide — ii- 

for you hear the lion roar — ii. 

not half so deaf, lions more confident — ii. 
talks as familiarly of roaring lions .. — ii. 

thou wear a lion's hidel — iii. 

a cased lion by the mortal — iii. 

shall they seek the lion in his den? . . — v. 

like a lion fostered up at hand — v. 

lions make leopards tame Richard II. \. 

was never lion raged more — ii. 

the lion, dying, thrusteth forth — v. 

which art a lion, and a king of beasts? — v. 

or an old lion; or a lover's lute IHunrylV. i. 

to rouse a lion , than to start — i. 

the lion will not touch the true — ii. 

I for a valiant lion, and thou — ii. 

you are lions too, yon ran away .... — ii. 
a couching lion, and a ramping cat.. — iii. 
valiant as a lion, and wondrous .... — iii. 

against the lion's armed jaws — iii. 

lion's whelp. And why not as the lion — iii. 

and the young lion repents 2HenryIV. i. 

like to a fangless lion, may offer — iv. 

to behold his lion's whelp forage in Henry V. i. 

the former lions of your blood — i. 

should with his lion gait walk — ii. 

eat his breakfast on the lip of a lion — iii. 

once did sell the lion's skin — iv. 3 

like lions wanting food \ Henry VI. i. 2 

ortear the lions out of England's.... — i. 5 

give sheep in lions' stead — ^i.b 

like a hungry lion, did — j.^* ^ 

men tremble, when tlie lion roars ..2HenryVI. iii. I 
tliat winter lion, wlio, in rage, forgets — v. 3 

the pent-up lion o'er the wretch ZHenry VI. i. 3 

as doth a lion in a herd of neat — ii. 1 

to whom do lions cast their — ii. 2 

whilst lions war, and battle for — ii. 5 

and when the lion fawns upon — iv. 8 

under whose shade the ramping lion — v. 2 
in their chains fettered the kingly lion — v. 7 

so looks the chafed lion upon Henry VIII. iii. 2 

he is as valiant as the lion .... Troilus 4 Cressida, i. 2 
yes, lion sick, sick of proud heart .... — ii. 3 

they that have the voice of lions — iii. 2 

like a dew-drop from the lion's mane — iii. 3 

and thou shalt hunt a lion — iv. 1 

which better fits a lion, than a man . . — v. 3 
th' ass, more captain than the lion. TimonofAth. iii. !> 

if thou wert the lion, the fox — iv. 3 

the lion would suspect thee — iv. 3 

thou wert german to the lion — iy. 3 

where he should find you lions Coriolanus, i. 1 

he is a lion that I am proud to hunt — i. 1 

I met a lion who glared upon rae.. Julius Ccesar, i. 3 

as doth the lion in the Capitol — i. 3 

he were no lion, were not Romans . . — 1-3 
elcphantc with holes, lions with toils — ii. 1 
we were two lions littered in one day — _ ii. 2 
playing with alien's whelp ....Antony 4rCleo. iii. 11 

sometime, like a bear, or lion — iv. 12 

should have shook lions into civil streets — v. 1 

and to grin like lions upon Cymbeline, v. 3 

when as a lion's whelps (rep. v. 5) — v. 4 (scroll ) 

the lion, moved with pity TilusAndron. ii. 3 

she's with the lion deeply still in league — iy. 1 

the lion and the belly-pinched wolf Lear, ii i. 1 

dog in madness, lion in prey — iii. 4 

as hardy as the Nemean lion's nerve. . . . Hamlet, i. 4 
doe, to affright an imperious lion Othello, ii. 3 

LIONEL fse" Clarence]— 
till Lionel's issue fails 2HevryVI. ii. 2 

LIONESS— a lioness, with udders., /jsi/ouij/tei';, iv. 3 
food to the sucked and hungry lioness? — iv. 3 
made him give battle tn the lioness .. — iv. 3 
the lioness iiad torn some flesh away — iy. 3 

with 3'our lioness, I'd set an ox-head. Kin^/oftn, ii. 1 
lioness hath whelped in the streets .JutinsCtesar, ii. 2 
the mountain lioness, the ocean .Tilus Andron. iv. 2 

LION- METTLED— be lion-mettled . . Macbeth, iv. 1 

LIP— or of your lips Merry Wives, i. 1 

that the lips is parcel of the mouth . . — i. I 

Diana's lip is not more smooth TwelfthNighl, i. 4 

or 1 will not open my lips — i. .^ 

two lips indifferent red — i. 5 

take you a blow o' the lips then? . . 

lips clo not move, no man _. . . . 

the contempt and anger of his lip I 
attested by the holy close of lips. . . . 



— ii. 5 



LIP 



[ 447] 



LIP— breathe witliiu your lips ...Heai./or Meat. il. 2 

I will open mv lips in vain — lii. 1 

locked witUinthc teeth and the lipa — iii. 2 

lake, lih take those lips awoy — iv. I (song) 

against her lii>s I bob, and on ..Mi'l. N.'sl>ream,n. 1 

thy lips, those kissing clierries — iii. 2 

mv cherry lips have often kissed thy — v. I 
the walls hole, not your lips at all — — v. 1 
ICnI. Kri(.] these lily lips, this cherry nose — v. 1 

unless we feed on your lips Lore's L. Lost, ii. 1 

my lips oi-e no common — ii. I 

I protiine my lips on tl\y — iv. 1 (letter) 

when. I ope my lips, let no dog . . Met; of renice.i. 1 
here ore severed lips, parted with.... — iii. 2 

then open not thy lips AsyouLikeit^ i. 3 

your lips will feel them — lii. 2 

Dought a pair of cost lips of Diana .. — iii. 4 

pretty redness in his lip — iii. 5 

would open his lips when he put it .. — v. I 

made to eat, and lips to open — v. 1 

lias neither leg, hands, lip, nor cap . . All's n'eU, ii. 2 
as the nun's liu to the friar's mouth — ii. 2 

1 saw her coral lips to move Taming o/Sh. i. I 

nor bite the lip, as angry wenches — ii. 1 

kissed her lips with such a clamorous — iii. 2 

my very lips might freeze to — iv. 1 

kissin" with inside lip? stopping . Il'iiiler's Tale, i. 2 
ond falling a lin of much contempt . . — _i. 2 
eye, nose, lip, trie trick of his frown — .!}• "^ 

in her lip, her eye, heat — iii. 2 

have taken treasure from her lips — v. I 

the very life seems warm upon her lip — v. 3 
the ruddiness upon her lip is wet .... — y. 3 
finger laying upon her skinny lips .... Macbeth, i. 3 
our poisoned chalice to our own lips .. — .^'7 

nose of Turk, and Tartar's lips — iv. 1 

and vour lips too; for I am well.. ..A'ing- JoAn, ii. 2 
and kiss the lips of nnacciuainted.... — iii. 4 
the murmuring lips of discontent.... — iv. 2 
bleak winds kiss my parched lips .. — v. 7 
with my teeth, and lips; and dull . . Richard II. i. 3 
the attainder of his slanderous lips .. — iv. 1 
shall daub her lips with her own .. ..MlenrijVI. i. 1 
and to tilt with lips; we must have.. — ii. 3 

villain! thy lips arescarce wiped.. — ii. 4 
foolish hanging of thy nether lip ... . — ii. 4 

my love, give me thy lips Hmry T. ii. 2 

and his lips plows at his nose — iii. 6 

his breakfast on the lip of a lion — iii 7 

wounded arm, and kissed his lips. . . . — iv. 6 

then I will kiss your lips, Kate — v. 2 

you have witchcraft in your lips. Kate — y. 2 
when my lips do touch his cheeks . . I Henry I'l. ii. 5 

seal up your lips, and give no iUenry f'l. i. 2 

to chafe his paly lips with twenty .. — iii. 2 
with mother's dug between its Hps . . — iii. 2 

to have thee with thy lips to — iii. 2 

thy lips that kissed the queen — iv. 1 

or else hold close thy lips SHenryVI. ii. 2 

and with thy lips keep in my — v. 2 

that glues iriy lips, and will not — v. 2 

upon the lips of this sweet babe — v. 7 

a cherry lip, a bonny eye Richard III. i. I 

teach not thy lip such scorn — i. 2 

never pass the lips of those that — i. 3 

see, he gnaws his lip. I will converse — iv. 2 

their lips were four red roses on — iv. 3 

he bites his lip, and starts Henry I'lII. iii. 2 

may chance to burn your lips. . . . Troilus ^ Cress, i. 1 

divide thy lips — i. 3 

lay thy finger on thy lips! — i. 3 

truant vows to her own lips he lovea — i. 3 

he hangs the lip at something — iii. 1 

bites his lip with a politic — iii. 3 

which cold lips blow to their deities — iv. 4 

rudely beguiles our lips of all — iv. 4 

that winter from your lips, fair — iv. 5 

her cheek, her lip, nay, her foot — iv. .5 

draws folly from my lips — iv. 3 

imagination moves in this lip!.. Timnno/.ilhens, i. I 

treads upon his lip, and vet.. — iii. 2 

as he would to the lip of his mistress — iii. 6 

thy lips rot ofll I will not kiss — iv. 3 

returns to thine own lips again — iv. 3 

these words become your lipa — v. 2 

lips, let sour words go by — v. 2 

marked you his lip, and eyes? Coriolanus, i, 1 

1 will make a lip at the physician .. — ii. 1 
drove tlie bristled lips before him .... — ii. 2 

make motion through my lips — iii. 2 

executed ere they wipe their lips .... — iv. .I 
yet to bite his lip, and hum at good.. — v. I 
my true lip, hath virgined it e'er since — v. 3 
coward lips did from their colour ..JuliusCcesar, i. 2 

for fear of opening my lips — i. 2 

do ope their ruby lips, to beg — iii. 1 

eternity was in our lips Antony ^Cleopatra, i. 3 

ioflen thy waned lip! — ii. I 

bestowed his lips on that unworthy.. — iii. II 

once more to kiss these lips — iii. II 

commend unto his lips thy favouring — iv. 8 
divided between her heart and lips.. — iv. 12 
the poor la5t I lay upon thy lips .... — iv. 13 

had my lips that power — iv. 13 

I harl rather seel my lips, than — v. 2 

of Egypt's grape shall moist this lip — v. 2 
take the last warmth of my lips .... — v. 2 

have I the aspick in my lips? — v. 2 

this cheek to bathe my lips upon ....Cymbeline, i. 7 

slaver with lips as common — i. 7 

let me my service tender on your lips — i. 7 
would not believe her lips in opening it — v. r> 
should from my lips pluck a hard .. — v. S 
rise and fall between tny rosed lips. Titus AnJron. ii. 5 

let me kiss thy lips — iii. 1 

this warm kiss on thy pale cold lips — v. 3 

Marcus tenders on thv lips — v. 3 

fill to your mistress* lips Pericles, ii. 3 

your hands and lips must seal it too .. — ii. .'» 
oh the touching of her lips I may .... — v. 3 



lill*— smiles, that jdayedon her ripe lip ..Lear, iv. 3 

power to seal the accuser's lips — iv. 

hung thy medicine on iny lips — iv. 7 

look on lier,— look,— her lips — v. 3 

o'er ladies' lips, who straight ....llomeo^Juliel, i. 4 
have not saints lips, and holy (rep.) — i. 5 

dear saint, let lips do what hands do — i. .') 
thus from my lips, by yours, my sin — i. 5 
my lips the sin that they have (rep.) — i. 5 

her scarlet lip, by her fine foot — ii. 1 

judgment vanished from his lips — — iii. 3 
steal immortal blessing from her lips — iii. 3 
and these lips have long been separated — iv. & 
breathed such life with kisses in my lips — v. I 
ensign yet is crimson in thy lips .... — v. 3 
and lips, O you the doors of breath. . — v. 3 
I will kiss thy lips; haply some poison — v. 3 

thy lips are warm — v. 3 

still your fingers on your lips Hamlet, i. 5 

here hung those lips, that I have kissed — v. 1 
would she give you so much of her liiis. Othello, ii. 1 

yet again your tiugers to j'our lips? — ii. I 

they met so near with their lips — ii. 1 

I found not Cassio's kisses on lier lips .. — iii. 3 

by the roots, that grew upon my lips — iii. 3 

pish! noses, ears, and lips; is it possible? — iv. 1 

to lip a wanton ia a secure couch — iv. 1 

steeped me in poverty to the very lips .. — iv. 2 

for a touch of his nether lip — iv. 3 

why gnaw you so your nether lip? — v. 2 

torments will ope your lips — v. 2 

LIPPED— that kings have lipped. Antony <S- Cleo. ii. 5 

LIPSBURY-in Lipsbury pinfold Lear, ii. 2 

LIQUID— decking with liquid pearl.. Af/ti. A'. Dr. i. 1 
liquid tears, or heart-offending ....illenryVl. iii. 2 

the liquid drops of tears Richard I II. iv. 4 

through liquid mountains cut . . Troilus <5 Cress, i. 3 
whose liquid surge resolves. . . . Timon nf Athens, iv. 3 
put this in any liquid thing- .... Romeo ^ Juliet, v. 1 
in the morn and liquid dew of youth . . Hamlet, i. 3 

in steep-down gulfs of liquid fire! Othello, v. 2 

LIQUOR— that would shed his liquor., rempts/, ii. 2 

and bears celestial liquor — ii. 2 

for the liquor is not earthly — ii. 2 

this grand liquor that hath gilded them? — v. 1 
praise her liquor. If her liquor TwoGen.of I'er.iii. 1 
there ia either liquor in his pate . . Merry IVives, ii. 1 

that o'erflow such liquor — ii . 2 

and liquor fishermen's boots — iv. 5 

drop the liquor of it in her eyes . . Mid.N.'sDr. ii. 2 
whose liquor hath this virtuous .... — iii. 2 

hot and rebellious liquors As you Like it, ii. 3 

and all the precious fiquor spilt .... Richard II. i. 2 
alteration with divers liquors! . ...i Henry I y. iii. 1 

and liquor likewise will 1 give HenryV. ii. 1 

mounts the liquor till it run o'er . . Henry yill. i. 1 
with this hatetul liquor temper . . Titus Andron. v. 2 
and this distilled liquor drink. . Romeo Sf Juliet, iv. I 

and fetch me a etoup of liquor Hamlet, v. 1 

here's yet some liquor left — v. 2 

LIQUORED her: we steal \HenrylV.\i. 1 

LIQirORISH draughts Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

LISBON, Barbary, and India? .. Mer. of Venice, iii.i 
LISP— he can carve too, and lisp . . Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

you lisp, and wear stranjre As you Like it, iv. I 

lisp, and nick name God's creatures.. Hamto, iii. 1 

LISPING hawthorn buds Merry Wives, iii. 3 

be not lisping to his master's ^Hennjiy. ii. 4 

such antic, lisping, affecting Romeo ^-Juliet, ii. 4 

LIS'T- your lieutenant, if you list .... Tempest, iii. 2 
if thou beest a devil, take't as thou list — iii. 2 
go to bed when she list (rep.) ....Merry Wives, ii. 2 

elves, list your names — v. 5 

she is the list of my voyage TteelfthNight, iii. 1 

the lists of all advice Measure for Measure, i. 1 

between the lists and the velvet (rep.) — i. 2 

I had as lief be a list of — i. 2 

think what I list; nor I list not ....Much Ado, iii. 4 

within the list of too cold All's Well, ii. 1 

list to me, I am my father's.. Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 

seize thee, that list; if once — iii. 1 

gartered with a red and blue list ... . — iii. 2 
take him up, quoth he, if any list .. — iii. 2 

or star, or what I list — iv. 5 

I list not prophecy Winter's Tale, i v. (chorus) 

then list to me — iv. 3 

come, fate, into the list, and champion Macbeth, i i i. I 

son, list to this conjunction KingJohn, ii. 2 

throw the rider headlong in the Msis.Richard II. i. 2 

in his royallists? against — i. 3 

in lists, on Thomas Mowbray — i. 3 

daring hardy, as to touch the lists . . — i. 3 

draw near, and list, what with — i.3 

and list if thou canst hear the tread — ii. 2 

[Knl.] for a wliile, and list to me MlenrylV. i. 3 

let her alone, and list tome — iii. 3 

tlie very list, the very utmost bound ^ iv. I 

list his discourse of war Henry V. i. 1 

within the weak list of a country's.. — y. 2 

and conquers as she lists 1 Henry I'l. i. 5 

forsakcth yet the lists by reason .... — v. 5 

but list to me, my Hiunphrey iHenryl'I. i. t 

and, madam, list to me; for I am bold — 1.3 

to enter the lists, BO please your .... — ii. 3 

see the lists ond all things fit — ii. 3 

of fortune, turns what he list Henry VIII. ii. 2 

'tis the list of those, that claim — iv. I 

should she remember? List! ..Troilus^ Crest, v. 'I 

list, what work he makes Coriolanus, i. 4 

doas thou list: thy valiantness — iii. 2 

list to your tribunes, audience — iii. 3 

good Volumnius, list a word Julius Cresar, v. .'> 

a more larger list of sceptres.... .^nfoiij/i^C'co. iii. G 
list! list! hark! music i' tlie air .... — iv. 3 

stand close, and list to hira — iv. 9 

will she do what she list Titus Andmnicus, iv. I 

I assume the lists, nor ask Pericles, i. I 

of the spheres,; list, my Marina — v. I 

that's as we list to grace him I.enr, v. 3 

within the lists of the army .... — v. 3 (herald) 



LIT 



LIST— list a brief tale Lear.v. 3 

let them take it as they list ItomeoSf Juliet, I. 1 

sharked up a list of landless resolutes ..Hamlet, i. I 

tlie lists, and full proportions — i.tl 

too credent ear you list his songs — i.3 

list, list, rAC7i(.-I]ttmletj O list! if ever — i. 5 

or, if we list to speak — i. 5 

the ocean overpeering of his list, cots not — iv. .■) 
when I have list \_Col. -leave] to sleep. . Othello, ii. 1 

list to me. The lieutenant to-night — ii. I 

do what she list, even as her appetite.... — ii. 3 

confine yourself but in a patient list — iv. I 

LISTED [Col. Kn(.-lusted] to make .Ilicltard III. iii. 5 

LISTEN— to listen our propose Much Ado, iii. 1 

and let us listen to the moon ..Mid.l^.'sDream, v. 1 

and reading! listen, ear Lnve'sL.Lnst, iv. 3 

listen to me, and if you speak me.. Taming of Sh. i. 2 
teach your ears to listen with ..Comedy of Err. iv. I 

listen, but speak not Macbeth, iv. I 

king Philip, listen to the cardinal ..King John, iii. 1 
ear of youth doth always listen ....Richard II. ii. 1 
on Tuesday last to listen after new6..2Henrj//r. i. 1 
lady, vouc'isafe to listen what I say..\ Henry VI. v. 3 

she will light to listen to the lays 'iHenryVI. i. 3 

and listen after Humphrey, how he ... . — 1.3 
pr'ythee, listen well; I heard ....Julius C(Fsar,ii. i 
now Octavius, listen great things — — iv. 1 
listen, fair madam; let it be ..'i'itus.4ndronicus,ii. 3 
LISTENED— is listened more than ..Richard II. ii. 1 
faith, they listened to me, as they .... Pericles, iv. 3 
LISTENING— to beseech MAemng.TamijigofSh. iv. 1 
hangman's hands, listening their fear.. Macbeth, ii. 2 
do so, for it is worth the listening to..\ HenrylV. ii. 4 

it is the disease of not listening iHenrylV. i. 2 

almost with ravished listening Henry VIII. i. 2 

should open to the listening air Pericles, i. 2 

it nips me unto listening, and thick .... — v. 1 

LIT— vou are lit into my hands — iv. 3 

LITERATURE in the wars HenryV.iv.7 

lilTHER-thro' the lither sky \HenryVI. iv. 7 

LITIGIOUS— in a litigious peace Pericles, iii. 3 

LITTER-the son that she did litter here. Tempest,}. 2 
blind puppies, fifteen i* the Mttcr.. Merry Wives, iii. 5 
to oroucli m litter of your stable ....King John, y. 2 

to my litter straight; weakness — v. 3 

overwhelmed all ner litter but one ..illenrylV. i. i 

Pendrogon, in his litter, sick I Henry VI. iii. 2 

there is a litter ready; lay him in't Lear, iii. 6 

LITTERED under Mercury Winter's Tale, iv. 2 

they are though in Rome littered . . Coriolanus, iii. 1 

were two lions littered in one day .JnliusCn-sar, ii. 2 

LITTLE— our own doth little advantoge. Tempest, i. 1 

hear a little further — i. 2 

of that there's none, or little — ii. 1 

who shall be of as little memory — ji. 1 

thou dost me yet but little hurt — ii. 2 

after a little time — iii. 2 

and our little life is rounded — iv. 1 

has done little better than played — iv. 1 

for a little, follow and do me service . . — iv. I 
threefold too little for carrying. . TuoCen.of Ver. i. 1 

his little speaking, shows his — i. 2 

as little by such toys as may — i. 2 

the reason I love him so little — ii. 4 

a little time will melt her (icp.) — iii. 2 

I have little wealth to lose — iv. 1 

reeking as little what betideth me.... — iv. 3 

what says she to my little jewel? — iv. 4 

yet the painter flattered her a little;.. — iv. 4 

that it is too little — v. 2 

a little wee face, with a little Merry Wives, i. 4 

tarry you a little-a while — i. 4 

come a little nearer this ways (rep.) — ii. 2 

not so little grace, I hope — ii. 2 

to send her your little page (rep.) .... — ii. 2 
to press with so little preparation .... — ^ii. 2 

nay, keep j^our way, little gallant — iii. 2 

here comes little Robin — iii. 3 

you little .lack-a-lent, have you — iii. 3 

I would little or nothing with you .. — iii. 4 

with as little remorse as they — iii. 5 

let's obe.y his humour a little further — iv. 2 

my daughter, and my little son — iv. 4 

better o little chiding, than a great .. — v. 3 

I can say little more than Twelfth I^'ight, i. 5 

I am to null here a little longer — i.3 

a little, by your favour — ii. 4 

but little in our love — ii. 4 

here comes the little villain — ii. 5 

yet, to crush this a little, it would — ii. 5 

all the devils in hell be ilrawu in Utile — iii. 4 

a little thing would make me — iii. 4 

let me speak a little — iii. 4 

hold little faith, though thou — v. 1 

leave my duty a little unthought of — v. I (letter) 
when that I was and a little tiny boy — v. 1 (song) 
and rather cut a little, than fall.. iWeaj./or.Vcoi. ii. I 

stay a little while — ii. 2 

drest in a little brief authority — ii. 2 

which seems a little fouler than it is — ii. 4 

ha! little honour to be much — ii. 4 

a little more lenity to lechery would do — iii. 2 
but indeed, I can do you little harm — iii. 2 

I shall crave vour forbeoronce a little — iv. 1 
this other doth command a little door — iv. I 

little have you to saj- — iv. 1 

ifit be too little for vour thief — iv. 2 

your thief thinks it little enough — iv. 2 

the duke is marvellous little beholden — iv. 3 
offend you, we'll have very little of it — iv. 3 

the better for being a little bad — v. I 

and too little for a great proise Much Ado, i. I 

I were but little happy, if I could.... — ii. I 

there's little of the melancholy _ ii. 1 

of this matter is little Cuiiid's crafty — iii. 1 

and the little hangman dare not — iii. 2 

sjieaks a little off the matter — iii. 5 

and salt too little, which may sea-son — iv. I 
hear mc a Utile; for I have only been — iv. 1 
that you are little better than false .. — iv. * 



LIT 



LITTLE -says she, a fine little one ...MuchAdo, v. 1 
speak in a monstrous little \oice. . Mid. N, Dream, i. 2 

I.1I0 but beg a little changeling — ii. 2 

it loll upon a little western flower.. .. — ii. 

tlie wren with little quill — iii. 1 (song 

j'ou should have little reason for that — iii. ' 

reason and love keep little company — iii. 

weeps every little flower — iii. 

but little, she is tierce. Little (re;).) .. — iii. 

never so little show of love to her — iii. 

our court shall be a little academe, /.ore's L. Lost, i. 

o'er the house to unlock the little gate — i. 

but little of the marking of it — i. 

thou pretty, hcoause little (rep.) — i. 

I have as little pntience as another .. — i. 

and much too little of that good I saw — ii. 

it seems, he little purposeth — ii. 

my little heart!— and I to be — iii. 

his almighty dreadt'id little might .. — iii. 

king Pepi!i of France was a little boy — iv. 

Guinever of Biitaiu was a little wench — iv. 

Priscian a little scratched; t'will serve — v. 

1 made a little fault in, great — v. 

you see how 'tis; a little o'er-parted,. — v. 

through the little hole of discretion .. — v. 
my little body is aweary ofthis . .Mer. of Venice, \. 

little worse than a man (7-ep.) — i. 

how little is the cost I liave bestowed — iii. 

to do a great right, do a little wrong — iv. 

but little; I am armed, and well — iv. 

your wife would give hut little thanks — iv. 

tarry a little; there is something else — iv. 

like a little shrew, slander her love . , — V. 

liow far that little candle throws .... — v. 

it looks a little paler — v. 

a little scrubbed boy, 110 higher — v. 

since the little wit Irep.) As you Lihe it, i. 

that there is little hope of life in him — i. 

you will take little delight in it — i. 

the little strength that I have, I would — i. 

little recks to find the way to heaven — ii. 

that little cares for buying any thing — ii. 

a little, comfort a little (tcp.) — ii. 

forbear your food a little while — ii. 

heaven would in little show .... — iii. 2 (verses 

fihepherd, go off a little — iii. 2 

he hath but a little beard — iii. 2 

let's meet as little as we can — !."• 2 

than a great reckoning in a little room — iii. 3 

go hence a little, and I shall conduct — iii. 4 

od's my little life! I think — iii. 5 

a little riper and more lusty red .... — iii. 5 

my pretty little coz, that thou — iv. 1 

little knows this love in me.... — iv. 3 (letter) 

that on so little acquaintance — v. 2 

than may in some little measure — v. 2 

a little, though therefore I die (rep.) AWs Well, i. 1 

little Helen, farewell: if I can — i. 1 

and writ as little beard — ii. 3 

is within a very little of nothing .... — ii. 4 

though little he do feel it — iii. 4 

came you off with so little? — iv. I 

in his sleep he does little harm — iv. 3 

I have but little more to say — iv. 3 

to be too little for pomp to enter — iv. 5 

mv fears of little vanity, having (rep.') — v. 3 
thou'dst thank me but a little. . . . Taming ofSh. i. 2 

scolding would do little good upon him — i. 2 

an' she stand him but a Tittle — i. 2 

think you a little din can daunt .... — i. 2 

walk a little in the orchard — ii. 1 

little fire grows great with little wind — ii. 1 

were not I a little pot, and soon hot. . — iv. ) 

the mustard is'too hot a little — iv. 3 

though tiiy little finger be armed .... — iv. 3 

a' has a little galled me, 1 confess .. — v. 2 

too little payment for so great — y. 2 

cannot praise us, as little accuse. . fVinler's Tale, i. 1 

that little thinks she has been sluiced — i. 2 

dares trust me with her little babe .. — ii. 2 

althoH"h the print be little — ii.3 

pawn the little blood which I have.. — ii.3 

ujion Herraione I little like — iii. 1 

to be or none, or little — iii. 2 

I have a little money for thee — iv. 2 

that know little but bowling — iv. 3 

not little of his care to have them.... — iv. 3 

consider little, what dangers — v. 1 

after a little amazedness, we were .. — v. 2 

and himself little better, extremity — v. 2 

mark a little while; please you — y. 3 

holy sport to he a little va.\n. . Coincdtj nf Ejrors, iii. 2 

deaf ears a little use to hear — v. 1 

a little water clears us of this deed. . . . Macbeth, ii. 2 

my little spirit, see, sits in — iii. ,^ 

as little is the wisdom, where — iv. 2 

hence, with TOur little ones — iv. 2 

of Arabia will not sweeten this little hand — v. 1 

professes yours, and little is to do — v. ; 

a little from the right King John, i. 1 

this little abstract doth contain — ii. 1 

and vietor.v, with little loss, doth play — ii. 2 

give her sadness very little cure — ii. 2 

thou little valiant, great in villany! — iii. 1 

for very little pains will bring — iii. 2 

come hither, little kinsman — iii. 3 

each little rub out of the path — iii. 4 

or, as a little snow, tumbled about . . — iii. 4 

food-morrow, little prince. As little — iv. I 

would you were a little sick — iv. 1 

set upon a little breach — iv. 2 

his little kingdom of a forced grave.. — iv. 2 

there is little reason in your grief. ... — iv. Ii 

put but a little water in a spoon .... — iv. 3 

up and down the little number — v. I 

to one thread, one little hair — v. 7 

bid his ears a little while be deaf. . . . Richard II. i. I 

atime lies in one little word! — i. 3 

breed of men, this little world — ii. I 

for little office, the hateful commons — ii. 3 



[ 448 ] 



LITTLE— is little less in joy Richard II. ii. 3 

a little scene to monarchise — iii. 2 

and with a little pin, bores through — iii. 2 

a little grave, a little little grave — iii. 3 

thou little better thing than earth .. — iii. 4 

pardon me, madam; little joy have I — iii. 4 

little are we beholden to (rep.) — iv. I 

it is too little, helping him to all. . . . — v. I 

being ne'er so little urged — v. 1 

some love, but little policy — v. I 

thoughts people this little world .... — v. i 

as thus; come, little ones — v. 5 

speak truly, little better than one ..MlenryW. i. 2 

ray sovereign liege, little deserves.. .. — i. 3 

add 'tis no little reason bids — i. 3 

I'll break thv little finger, Harry .. — ii.3 

lend me thy "liaiid to laugh a little .. — ii. 4 

praj' 3'ou, stay a little, my lord .... — ii. 4 

yea, but a little charge will — iii. 1 

whereof a little more than a little .. — iii. 2 

swore little; diced not above seven .. — iii. 3 

I hold a little counsel with weak.... — iv. 3 

steps me a little higher than his vow — iv. 3 

keep in a little life; poor Jack — v. 4 

hath a little gilded over your night's. 2 Hcniy/r. i. 2 

virtue is of so little regard — i. 2 

of their puissance made a little taste — ii.3 

you whoreson little valiant villain ., — ii. 4 

ah, you sweet little rogue, you! — ii. 4 

little tidy Bartholomew boar-pig.... — ii. 4 

good advice, and little medicine .... — iii. 1 

little , John Doit of Staffordshire .... — iii. 2 

give me always a little, lean — iii. 2 

there was a little quiver fellow — iii. 2 

to all the rest of this little kingdom — iv. 3 

we want a little personal strength .. — iv. 4 

a little time before that — iv. 4 

stay but a little; for my cloud — iv. 4 

any pretty little tiny kickshaws .... — v. 1 

I have but a very little credit — v. 1 

and my little soldier there be merry — v. 3 

welcome, my little tiny thief — v. 3 

may attest, in little place Henry V. i. (chorus) 

like little body with a mighty .... — ii. (chorus) 

I say little; but when time shall serve — ii. 1 

I would prick your guts a little — ii. 1 

if little faults, proceeding on distemper — ii. 2 

with scanting a little cloth — ii. 4 

small breath, and little pause — ii 4 

for pix of little price — iii. 6 

so little kin to the purpose — iii. 7 

a little touch of Harry in the — iv. (chorus) 

though it appear a little out of — iv. 1 

but in gross brain little wots — iv. 1 

a very little little let us do — iv. 2 

shall yield them little — iv. 3 

the phrase is a little variations — iv. 7 

also being a little intoxicates — iv. 7 

ever known so great and little loss .. — iv. 8 

tell him a little piece of my desires .. — v. 1 

in little room confining — v. 2 (cho.) 

lingering wars, with little cost 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

thou know'st little of my wrongs.... — i. 3 

partakers of a little gain — ii. 1 

a little herd of England's — iv. 2 

I owe him little duty, and less love. . — iv. ■) 

my death the French can little boast — iv. ii 

of one stands me in little stead — iv. 6 

deign to woo her little worth — v. 3 

had been a little ratsbane for — . v. 4 

as little shall the Frenchmen — v. 4 

make but little for his benefit 2 Henry VI. i. 3 

some reason, of no little force — i. 3 

and Humplirey is no little man — iii. I 

but little thinks, we shall be of SHenryVI. I. 1 

though with a little axe — ii. 1 

down a little while to breathe — ii. 2 

we'll hear a little more. My queen — iii. 1 

she could say little less — iv. 1 

a little fire is quickly trodden out . . — iv. 8 

a little gale will soon disperse — v. 3 

good was little better: good — v. 6 

maintain it with some little cost . . Richard III. i. 2 

as little joy, my lord, as you («p.) .. — i. 3 

nay, I pr'y thee, stay a little — i. 4 

he little thought of this divided — i. 4 

with some little train (rep.) — ii. 2 

my dagger, little cousin? — iii. 1 

little lord? I would that I l^rep.) — iii. 1 

because that I am little, like an ape — iii. 1 

this little prating York was not — iii. 1 

cradle for such little pretty ones I.... — iv. 1 

some little pause, dear lord — iv. 2 

Richmond was a little peevish boy . . — iv. 2 

and little Ned Plantagenet, his son? — iv. 4 

and there the little souls of Edward's — iv. 4 

a grandara's name is little less — iv. 4 

great a charge as little honour Henry VIII. i. 1 

we cannot feel too little, hear too much — i. 2 

if I chance to talk a little wild — i. 4 

for my little cure, let me alone — i. 4 

with dancing is a little heated — i. 4 

I'll tell you in a little — ii. 1 

the cause he may a little grieve at . . — ii. 1 

whieli makes me a little happier — ii. 1 

pluck off a little: I would not be.... — ii.3 

111 faith, for little England you'd — ii. 3 

full little, God knows, looking either — iii. 1 

in England, but little for my profit.. — iii. 1 

she now begs, that little thought — iii. 1 

you have as little honesty as Honour — iii. 2 

you'll show a little honesty — iii. 2 

to see him so little of his great self . . — iii. 2 

my little good lord cardinal (rep.) .. — iii. 2 

like little wanton boys that swim .. — iii. 2 

some little memory of me will — iii. 2 

now, mcthinks, I feel a little ease .. — iv. 2 

give him a little earth for charity! .. — iv. 2 

found the blessedness of being little — iv. 2 

and a little to love her for her — iv. 2 



LIT 



LITTLE— but little, Charles Henry VI 11. v. I 

and not a little,.toward the king first — v. 8 

and with no little study, that my .. — v. 2 

I make as little doubt, as you — t, 2 

you are a little, by your good favour — v. 2 

I have a little yet to say — v. 2 

will suffer but the little finger of — v. 2 

this little one shall make it holiday — v. 4 
whose crossness little characters . Troilus <5- Cresj. i. 3 

that little little less than little wit.. — ii.3 

at your request, a little from himself — ii.3 

to give me now a little benefit — iii. 3 

to dust, that is a little gilt — iii. 3 

my little stomach to the war — iii. 3 

a little proudly, and great deal — iv. 5 

extremity of great and little — iv. 5 

and too little brain, these two may . . — v. 1 

and too little blood, they do — v. 1 

stay a little while. How the devil .. — v. 2 

I will strain a little, for t'is Timon of Athens, i. 1 

as this pomp shows to a little oil; .... — i. 2 

the little casket bring me hither .... — i. 2 

there will little learning die then.... — ii.2 

there was very little honour showed — iii. 2 

it shows but little love or judgment — iii. 3 

deep enoiigh, and j'et find little .... — iii. 4 

should brook as little wrongs, as gods — iii. 5 

I have but little gold of late — iv. 3 

needs say, you have a little fault .... — v. 1 

to scale t a little more Coriolanus, i. I 

(of what you have Ii ttle) patience .... — i. I 

how does your little son? I thank .. — i. 3 

that's lesser than a little — i. 4 

as if I loved my little should be .... — i. 9 

for a very little thief of occasion will — ii. 1 

I know you can do very little alone — ii. 1 

make I as little question as he is ... . — ii. 1 

to report a little of that worthy work — ii.2 

a little help will serve — ii.3 

with those that have but little — iii. 1 

I have a heart as little apt as yours.. — iii. S 

as free as words to little purpose — iii. 2 

a very little I have yielded too — v. 3 

afire, and then I'll speak a little .... — v. 3 

and, sir, it is no little thing, to make — v. 3 

to displace it with your little finger.. — v. 4 

like to a little kingdom Julius Ca'sar, ii. I 

let me a little show it, even in — iii. 1 

shrunk to this little measure? — iii. 1 

lead their charges off a little from this — iv. 2 

which we will niggard with a little rest — iv. 3 
of seeresy, a little I can rea.d. Antony 4' Cleopatra, i. 2 

or a little, I should say myself offended — ii.2 

little jealousies, which now seem great — ii.2 

leave me, I pray, a little — iii. 9 

little thought, you woiild have followed — iii. 9 

sleep a little. No, my chuck: Eros.. — iv. 4 

yet come a little, wishers were — iv. 13 

some wine, and let me speak a little — iv. 13 

lighted the little O, the earth — v. 2 

nay , stay a little : were you but Cymbelinc,i. 2 

as little as a crow, or less — i. 4 

he hath a court he little cares for .. .. — i. 7 

these boys know little they are sons — iii. 3 

a little witness m.y obedience — iii. 4 

who may, haply, be a little angry at — iv. 1 

than themselves for wrying but a little — v. 1 

you snatch some hence for little faults — v. 1 

with the little skill I have TitusAndronicus, ii. 1 

or get some little knife between — iii. 2 

there's as little justice as at — iv. 3 

the eagle sufl'ers little birds to sing .. — iv. 4 
too little to contend, since he's so great. J'errV/es, i. 2 

and finding little comfort to relieve .. — i. 2 

were all too little to content and please — i. 4 

to eat those little darlings whom — i. 4 

the great ones eat up the little ones .. — ii. i 

of your queen,— a little daughter — iii. I 

look to your little mistress — iii. 3 

if you require a little space for prayer — iv. 1 

that lay with the little baggage — iv. 3 

my acquaintance lies little amongst .. — iv. 6 

thou little know'st how thou dost .... — v. 1 

O stop there a little! — v. 1 

more a little, and then done .... — v. 2 (Gower) 

mend your speech a little Lear, i. 1 

if aught within that little — i. 1 

it is not a little I have to say — i. 1 

we have made of it hath not been little.. — i. 1 

till some little time hath qualified — i. 2 

him that is wise, and says little — i. 4 

thou hadst little wit in thj' bald crown.. — i. 4 

a little to disquantity your train — i. 4 

this house is little; the old man — ii. 4 

strives in his little world of man — iii. 1 

O I have ta'en too little care ofthis! .... — iii. 4 

thus little mercy on their flesh? — iii. 4 

now a little fire in a wild field were .... — iii. 4 

the little dogs and all. Tray, Blanch .... — iii. 6 

Cordelia, Cordelia, stay a little — v. 3 

with a team of little atomies Ro7neo 4-Jutiet,\.i 

not half so big as a round little worm — i. 4 

stay but a little, I will come again . . — ii. 2 

who lets it hop a little from her hand — ii.2 

when 'twas a little prating thing .... — ii. 4 

is but a little way above our heads . . — iii . 1 

cut him out in little'stars — iii. 2 

a;nd little mouse, every unworthy thing — iii. 3 

IKnt.'] hear me a little speak — iii . 3 

removed but little from her own? .. — iii. 3 

in one little body thou counterfeit'st — iii. 5 

therefore have 1 little talked of love — iv. I 

his rest, that you shall rest but little — iv. 5 
a little ere the mightiest Julius fell .. ..Ham(e(, i. 1 

a little more than kin, and less than kind — i. 2 

a little month; or ere those shoes — i. 2 

as 'twere a thing a little soiled — ii. 1 

at last a little shaking of mine arm — ii. I 

here in our court some little time — ii.2 

an aieiy of children, little eyases — ii. 2 



LIT 

LITTLK-a-i>ioc-c, for his picture in little. f;<ii;iW,ii. 2 

tlioii(!l\ it lni'l<c'il form tt little — i;i. 1 

wluTO little fciirs grow jirpat — iii. 2 

excellent voice, in tliis little .irt!.!!! — iii. 2 

bestow this iiliieeoii \is II little while .... — iv. 1 

we li't tofinin 11 little imteh of-nniinl.. .. — iv. 4 

with voM»tiuii;ht: L'on little iKl'orc ;... — iv. ■! 

thev sluiU L'o fill- wi'th little .'... — iv. 5 

the hiiiul oi' little eoiplovmciit hath .... — v. 1 

with the little ir.xllitiess 1 have Olhello,i.l 

little l)les.<e(l with the set phrasfi of peaee — i. 3 

aiul little of this great world can I peulc — ;. 3 

therefore little shall I grace mv cause — i. 3 

she puts her tongue a little in her heart — ii. 1 

von have little cause to say so — ii. 1 

with us little a web as this, will I — ii. 1 

poc«l faith, a little one; notpast a pint .. — ii. 3 

ili<l some little wrong to him — ji- 3 

and a little more wit, return to Venice.. — ii. 3 

entreats her 11 little favo\ir of speech .... — iii. 1 

to leave me but a little to myself — iii. 3 

sec, this hath a little (lashed your spirits — !!!• 3 

^■our nankin is too little; let it alone ., .. — iii. 3 

Init, with a little act upon the blood .... — iii. 3 

the rack: than but to know't a little .... — iii. 3 

bring nie on the woy a little — iii. 4 

'tis but a little way, that I can bring you — iii. 4 

do vou withdraw yourself a little while.. — iv. 1 

with this little arm, and this good sword — v. 2 

LITTLEST-the littlest doubts arc feaT.llamlel, iii. 2 

LIVE— merely clieated of our lives Tempest, i. 1 

this lives in thy mind? — i. 2 

true: save means to live — ii. 1 

sir, he niav live: I saw him — ii. 1 

long live Gon/.iilol — ii. 1 

being most unlit to live — iii. 3 

or that for which I live — iv. I 

where live nibbling sheep — iv. 1 

let me live here ever — iv. 1 

mcrril}', merrily, shall I live now.. — v. 1 (song) 

how happily he lives Two Gen, of Verona, i. 3 

sourest-natured dog that lives — ii. 3 

than live in your air — ii. 4 

they live bj' your bare words — ii. 4 

command me while I live — iii. 1 

he lives not now — iii. 1 

let me not live to look — iii. 2 

hold excused our lawless lives — iv. 1 

and live as we do, in this wilderness? — iv. 1 

thou sh.alt not live to brag what — iv. 1 

and will live with you — iv. 1 

beauty lives with kindness — iv. 2 (song) 

sure as I live, he had .. — iv. 4 

not so; I think, she lives — iv. 4 

if shame live in a disguise — v. 4 

whilst I live again MeiTy Wives, i. I 

jet I live like a poor gentleman born.. — i. 1 

[Kii(. 3 let me see thee froth, and live .. — i. 3 
all affections else that live in herl.Tu-e/ftA Night,\. 1 

and thou shall live as freely as thy .. — i. 4 

do not our lives consist of — ii. 3 

an' we do not, it is pity of our lives . . — ii. 5 

shall this fellow live? — ii 5 

dost thou live by thy tabor? — iii. 1 

I live by the church (rfp.) — iii. 1 

to-morrow morning, if I live — iii. 4 

I will live to be thankful - iv. 2 

too doubtful soul may live at peace.. — iv. 3 

live you the marble-breasted ., — v. I 

live in thy tongue and heart .... Meas. for Meat. i. 1 

but, whilst I live, forget to — i. 2 

that would live. How would you live — ii. 1 

if you live to see this come to — ii. 1 

but, when tliey live, to end — ii. 2 

lives not to act another — ii. 2 

let her brother live — ii. 2 

your brother cannot live — ii. 4 

yet may he live awhile — ii. 4 

then Isabel, live chaste, and brother — ii. 4 

1 have hope to live, and am prepared — iii. 1 

to sue to live, I find, I seek to — iii. 1 

yes, brother, you may live — iii. 1 

sweet sister, let me live — iii. 1 

that it will let this man live! — iii. 1 

that is thy means to live — iii. 2 

1 eat, array myself, and live — iii. 2 

if I may live to report you — iii. 2 

unfit to live or die: O gravel hearti .. — iv. 3 

the best is, he lives not in them — iv. 3 

than that which lives to fear — v. 1 

1 will live a bachelor Much Ado, i. 1 

nnd there live we as merry as the day — ii. 1 

a man may live as quiet in hell — ii. I 

I did not think I should live till .... — ii. 3 

no glory lives behind the back — iii. 1 

do not live. Hero; do not one — iv. 1 

the practice of it lives in Jonu — iv. 1 

come lady, die to live — iv. 1 

bid my daughter live, that were — v. 1 

he shall live no longer in monument — v. 2 

I will live in thy heart — v. 2 

lives in death with glorious fame — v. 3 (scroll) 

but I do live, and, surely, as I live .. — v. 4 

to be my kinsman, live unbruised.... — v. 4 
to live a barren sister all your ..Mid.N,'sDream,\. 1 

grows, lives, and dies, in single — i. I 

BO live, so die, my lord — i. 1 

in those freckles live their savours .. — ii. I 

upon the next live creature that .... — ii. 2 

if you live, good sir, awake — ii. 3 

all hunt after in their lives, live .. l.nvc'sL.Loxl, i. 1 

for three years' term to live with me — i. I 

to live and study here three years.... — i. I 

to have his title live in Aquitain .... — ii. I 

a man, if I live; and this — iii. I 

where all those pleasures live, that art — iv. 2 

lives not alone immured — iv. 3 

for a light heart lives long — v. 2 

but comiietcncy lives longer. . Merchant of Venice, i. 2 

if I live to be as old 08 Sibylla — i. 2 



[ 449 ] 



LIVE-Uod be thanked, well to WveMrr. of Venice, ii. 2 

why, yet it lives there unchecked .... — iii. I 

as I am, I live upon the rack — iii. 2 

well then, confess, and live — iii. 2 

go, Ilereules! live thou, I live — iii. 2 

will live as maids and wi<low8 — iii. 2 

it is impossible I should live — iii. 2 (letlcrl 

to live in i)rayer nnd eniitentplution.. — iii. 4 

e'en as many ascoiild well li\'e — iii. .^ 

the lord Bassanio li\e an uprli^ht life — iii. 

than to live still, and write mine .... — iv. 1 

take the means wlureliv I live — iv. 1 

if lie live to 111- a man (,f/j.) — v. 1 

well, while 1 live, I'll tear no — v. 1 

where will the old duke live? Asyou LiUe il, i. 1 

and there they live like the old Robin — i. 1 

I cannot live out of her company .... — i. 3 

the enemy of all your graces lives.... — ii.3 

but now live here no niore — ii.3 

and loves to live i' the sun — ii. 5(song) 

live a little, comfort a little — ii. ti 

if there live any thing in this desert.. — ii. 6 

as I do live by food, 1 met — ii. 7 

and I to live and die her slave .. — iii. 2 (verses) 

and the other lives merrily — iii. 2 

and to live in a nook merely — iii. 2 

wiierc in the forest you live — iii. 2 

or we must live in bawdry — iii. 3 

he that dies and lives by l5loody — iii. ."> 

smile, and that I'll live upon — iii. 5 

and here live and die a shepherd .... — v. 2 

lean live no longer by thinking .... — v. 2 

lUnotfail, ifllive — v. 2 

so in approof lives not his AlCs tVell, i. 2 

let me not live,— thus his good — i. 2 

and I his servant live, and will his .. — i. 3 

riddle-like, lives sweetlj' where — i. 3 

whether I live or die, be you — ii. 1 

say to him, I live; and observe — ii. 1 

to those that wish him live — ii. 1 

health shall live free, and sickness .. — ii. 1 

ever whilst I live, into 3'our guiding — ii. 3 

with camping foes to live — iii. 4 (letter) 

let me live, and all the secrets — iv. 1 

for which live long to thank both .... — iv. 2 

1*11 live and die a maid — iv. 2 

and truly, as I hope to live (rep.) .... — iv. 3 

if I were to live this present hour .... — iv. 3 

let me live, sir, in a dungeon (ri?p.) .. — iv. 3 

tlie tiling I am shall make me live.... — iv. 3 

and Parolles, live safest in shamel .. — iv. 3 
your love must live a maid at . Taming of Shrew, i. I 

my fortune lives for me — i. 2 

will Hive? Will he woo her? _ i. 2 

if whilst I live, she will be only mine — ii. 1 

one that scorn to live in this disguise — iv. 2 

need none, so long as I live — v. 1 

lives my sweetest son? — v. 1 

to live. If the king had no (.rep.).. Winter's Tale, i. 1 

she would not live the running of one — i. 2 

a goodly babe, lusty, and like to live — ii. 2 

shall I live on, to see this bastard.... — ii.3 

but be it; let it live; it shall not — ii.3 

while she lives, my heart will — ii.3 

the king shall live witliout an heir — iii. 2 (oracle) 

you're well to live; gold! all gold! .. — iii. 3 

if tinkers may have leave to live .. — iv. 2 (song) 

and only live by gazing — iv. 3 

we may live, son, to shed many more — v. 2 

did ever so long live ; no sorrow — v. 3 

he'll think anon, it lives — v 3 

but it appears, she lives, though yet.. — v. 3 
to redeem their lives, have sealed. ComeJi/ of Err. i. 1 

all my travels worrant me they live.. — i. 1 

to make up the sum, and live — i. 1 

if thou live to see like right bereft.... — ii. 1 

1 livedisstained, thou uudishonoured — ii. 2 
thy sap, and live on thy confusion .. — ii. 2 

if she lives till doomsday — iii. 2 

to none that lives here in the city. ... — v. 1 

he shall live a man forbid Macbeth, i . 3 

live you? or are you aught that — i. 3 

the thane of Cawdor lives — i. 3 

who was the thane, lives yet — i. 3 

and live a coward in thine own — i. 7 

whiles I threat, he lives — ii. 1 

■whether they live, or die — ii. 2 

though our lives— Your spirits — iii. 1 

that Banquo. and liis Flcance lives .... — iii. 2 

I hear, Macduff lives in disgrace — iii. 6 

due of birth, lives in the English — ii=. 6 

then live, Macdufl, what need — iv. 1 

thou Shalt not live; that I — iv. 1 

shall live the lease of nature — iv. 1 

how will you live? As birds do — iv. 2 

no, not to live; O nation miserable .... — iv. 3 

and good men's lives expire before .... — iv. a 

whiles I see lives, the gashes — v. 7 

and live to be the show and gaze — v. 7 

who lives and dares but say King John, i. 1 

there to live in peace! — ii. 1 

to verify our title with their lives.... — ii. 1 

rescue those breathing lives to die in — ii. 2 

which only lives but by the death .. — iii. 1 

that faith would live again — iii. 1 

there where my fortune lives — iii. I 

thy voluntary oath lives in this — iii. 3 

he shall not live. Enough — iii. 3 

well, see to live; I will not — iv. 1 

fault lives in his eve — iv. 2 

doth Arthur live? O hnste thee to .. — iv. 2 

Arthur doth live: the king hath .... — iv 3 

told me, he did live. So, on my soul — v. 1 

die here, and live hence by truth? .. — v. 4 

a treacherous fine of all your lives . . — v. 4 

and too bad to live Richard II. i. 1 

despite of death, that lives upon .... — i. 1 

in that I live, and for that will — i. 1 

be ready as your lives shall answer it — i. I 

thy youthful blood, lie valiant and live — i. 3 



LIV 



LIVE— there lives, or dies, true to.. .. Ilichanl I J, i, 3 

tlum hast many j'ears to live — i. 3 

ends marked, tnan their lives before — ii. 1 

flatter with those that live? — ii. I 

live in thy shame but die not — ii. I 

love the;*" to live, that love — ii, I 

which live like venom, where no .... — ii. 1 

and doth not Hereford live? — ii. I 

'gainst us, our lives, our children.. .. — ii. i 

where nothing lives, but crosses .... — ii. 2 

too much urging yonrjpernicious lives — iii. 1 

our lives, and all are Bolingbroke's.. — iii. 2 

1 live with bread like you — iii. 2 

ere the cro«ii he looks for live in peace — iii. 3 

they tread, now whilst I live — iii. 3 

give Richard leave to live till — iii. 3 

that bearing boughs may live — iii. 4 

coward, live to see that day — i\'. 1 

or drink, or breathe, or live — iv. I 

as sure as I live, my lord — iv. I 

and long live Henry, of that name .. — iv. 1 

long may 'st thou live in Richard's .. — iv. 1 

our holy lives must win a new — v. [ 

mine honour lives when his dishonour — v. 3 

the traitor lives, the true man's — v. 3 

they shall not live within this world — v. 3 

prison, where I live, unto the world — v. .5 

in the music of men's lives — v. 

to make misfortune live? — v. 5 

the lives of tliose, that he did lead . . 1 Henry IV. i. 3 

wide mouth we live scandalized .... — i. 3 

youn^ men must live — ii. '.' 

tliere live not three good men — ii. 4 

O, while you live, tell truth — iii. 1 

I had rather live with cheese — iii. 1 

and, as true as I live — iii. I 

60 fretful, you cannot li^'e long — iii. 3 

and now I live out of all order — iii. 3 

comfort of retirement lives in this .. — iv. 1 

you, my lord, or any Scot that lives — iv. 1 

but will it not live with the living?. . — v. 1 

[Co/. Kn^] all our lives shall be stuck — v. 2 

all his offences live upon my head . . — v. -^ 

if we live, we live to tread on kings — v. 2 

and leave sack, and live cleanly — v. 4 

the lives of all 3'our loving 2HenryIV. i. I 

you live in great infamy — i. 2 

and our supplies live largely — i. 3 

lives so in hope, as in an early — i. 3 

cost some of us our lives — ii. 1 

will I live? go, with her, with her .. — ii. I 

I must live among my neighbours .. — ii 4 

he lives upon mouldy stewed prunes — ii. 4 

there is a history in all men's lives .. — iii. 1 

she lives, master Shallow — iii. 2 

all their lives, that, by indictment .. — iv. 1 

live, by which his grace must (rcn.) . . — iv.4 

and never live to snow the incredulous — iv. 4 

it may with thee in true peace livel.. — iv.4 

to our purposes, he lives no more — v. 2 

but Harry lives, that shall convert .. — v. 2 

till you do live to see a son of mine . . — v. 2 

60 shall I live to speak my fatlier's . . — v. 3 

and a merry heart lives long-a — v. 3 (songl 

your lives, your faith, and services .... Henry V. i. •! 

will live so long as I maj' (re/j.) — ii. 1 

that live honestlj' by the prick of their — ii. 1 

I'll live by Nym, and Nym shall live — ii. I 

for lambkins, we will live — ii. I 

I have not a ease of lives; the humour — iii. 2 

yield our town, nnd lives, to thy soft — iii. - 

let us not live in France — iii. .'■ 

and a many poor men's lives saved .. — i\-. i 

if I live to see it, I will never (.rep. ) . . — i v. I 

a quarrel between us, if you live — iv 1 

let us our lives, our souls — iv. 1 

and if to live, the fewer men — iv. 3 

he, that shall live /iTii/.-see] this day — iv. 3 

shall witness live in brass of this .... — iv. 3 

go offer up our lives unto these — iv. .'i 

lives he, good uncle? — iv. li 

who, if a live, and ever dare to — iv. 7 

so I will, my liege, as I live — iv. 7 

desire you to live in the mean-time . . — v. 1 

too famous to live long! \ Henry VI. i. I 

no, he lives; but is took prisoner .. — i. 1 

why live we idly here? Talbot — i. 2 

and while I live, I'll ne'er fly — i. 2 

could not live asunder day or night.. — ii. 2 

his trespass yet lives guilty — ii. 1 

1 will not live to be accounted Warwick — ii. i 

my liberty, and they their lives — ii. 5 

as sure as English Henry lives — iii. -J 

meet where both their lives are done — iv. 3 

lives, honours, lands, and all — iv. 3 

his fame lives in the world — i\-. 1 

for live I will not, if my father die .. — i\-. .'j 

side by side together live nnd die .... — iv. .'> 

all our lives in one small boat — iv. G 

we will have no bastards live — v. 4 

an' if it had a thousand lives — v. 4 

long liveqneen Margaret, England's. .SHtviry/'/. i. I 

shall I not live to be avenged — i, 3 

AVarwick may live to be the best of nil — i. 3 

the duke yet lives, that Henry (re/).) — i. 4 

lonrj live our sovereign Richard — il, 2 

Richard shall live to make the — ii. 2 

done, live in 3'Our country here — ii.3 

no, stir not, for your lives; let her.. ., — ii. 4 

and I may live to do you kindness .. — ii. 4 

weeps, that thou dost live so long.... — iii 2 

intends to live with that dread king. . — iii. 2 

live thou to joy thy life — iii. 2 

from thee, I cannot live — i|i. 2 

so thou wilt let me live, and feel .... — iii. 3 

can I make men live, whe'r they .... — iii. 3 

the lives of those which we have lost — iv. 1 

take ransom, and let him live — iv. 1 

and live alone as secret as I may .... — iv.4 

your king, your country, and your Uvea — Iv. J 

G (J 



LIV 



[ 450 ] 



LIVE— Iwon most worUiv to live ... 

Olotmelivel I iW-l iviWreo 

nnii ilolis'lit to livo ii> slnvery to .... 
nor knows lio li.nv to live, but by .. 

whilst vou live Ht iiir 

liBvo you mliiinol vour lives 

l.onl, who wouM livo tmmoiled In 



IIV 



SHrMiyli. iv. 7 

— Iv. 7 
.. — iv. S 

— iv. 8 
.. - Iv. 3 

tv. «i 



all nswillio 
m«v IiioM li 



I li 



It sni-li ofp.) 
•■.1.1 .,1 » 111 ii>i- lo SCO thi-ir iliiv.., 
how lon:j it is 1 liiivo to livo ...... 

ril Uiivo moiv lives. tli;ui .lvo,vs of. 

inteirii|.ts liiio, sluill not livo 

or live in peiiee, ;>l.Mniloiie.l 

una, wliil.st 1 live, to honour mo (IS .. 

Ions; live kiii« Heurv I ^^e;..^ 

i-oveiisea oil nun. iu'i,l let n\e live,.... 

tlieir lives, niul Ihiiie. wcit) not 

one.ilive, I livein hell 

lei nie live iu prison nil ny dftj's .... 

iill^ hopeless ol Iheir liv es . . . .„ 

tie'er nuiv he live tvv .see n inmshine ,, 

their ovv n lives in their vomit's aelViuro 

■ ■ ■ 1 thous:ii\a lives to-aay .. 



I Ih. 



orliil 1 
ul live 



SHcitru/V. I. 1 

- I. 1 

- i. I 

- i.\ 
~ i. I 

- i.» 

- US 

- i, 3 

- i, 3 
i, 4 

- ii, I 

- li. S 

- ii. S 

- ii. 5 



ii. .^ 
iii. S 
iii, S 
iii, 3 
iii. S 
iii. 3 



mist wither 

nnil, whiles 1 live, to neeonnt 

foriin\i\y lives stiiiul lietwa-n 

Binl foreea to live in Seothma « fovlorn 

Heiirv now lives in Seolhiiul 

how .simll poor llenrv live, iniless,... 

Ions live Kilvviir.l the foui III! _ iv. ; 

hiive sola their lives unto the house.. — v. 1 

niul, live we how wee;in, vet aio — v. a 

vet lives oiir pilot slill _ ,.,4 

live ii.;iiiii in Iluv; lona: mny'st thou livo — v. i 
why slionhl she live, to till the world — v. a 
hut 1 slmll live, uiy lonl, to givo....7JicA.iiiJ i/i. i. 1 

he eiinnot live, I hope _ i. 1 

hath not nimtherauv to live — i 1 

Kawiini slill lives, Huaivisiis _ i' 1 

criviiini; venonusl Iliiua: Unit lives! ,. _ ii 2 

so 1 nii-ht live one hour in vour — i. v 

he liv es. Ilnil loves vou hetl'er — i. « 

hut slulll I live iu h'ope? (.eo.) _ i. ; 

eaiuiol n phiin luau live, aiul think .. — i. 3 

lon.s nniy'st Ihou live to wail thy.... 

that none of yovi may live .vour 

in my shame still live niv sorrow's rage 1 
live eaeh of yon the suhjects to liis .. 

so 1 am. to let him live 

that means to live well (,»eji.l 

brother, live, aiul he a kingf , . . . 



II li 



neut 
rt livi 



i, .s 
i. 3 
1.3 
i. 3 

— 1.4 

— I.J 

— ii, I 
,— ii. - 

— ii. 2 

— iii. 1 

— Ill, 1 

— iii, 1 

— iii. 1 

— iii. 1 

— iii, 1 

— iii. 1 

— iii. 3 



the truth shouM live from nee tO aeo 

they say, ao ne'er live 1011.5 

wilhont eh.iraeters, fame lives long,. 

lon.ake his valour live 

for now he lives in fame thoudi 

an' if t live until 1 he a man' 

iiov none that live, 1 hope iu-p.) 

I live to look niion their trateav 

von live, that shall eiy woe't'v/'.l.. .. 
lives like a anmkeu sailor on a mast 
by .LM-eat preservation, we live to tell 

yon know, mv inoiUer lives 

.vour mother lives n witness to his .. 

nna live with Kiehinoua 

still live Ihev, ami lor ever let 

.vouii- Kvlwai-a lives; think now Irev.) 
that IMwai-a still shouia live ....,,'. 

1 shoiihl not live lorn; after I sivw 

Riehara yet lives, hell's hlaek 

that 1 may live to say, the dog is aeiul! 

level not to hit theirlives _ iv 4 

O let her live, aiul I'll eorrimt _ iy.' 4 

so she mav live imsearreil of — iv 4 

no, to their lives hail frienils were — iv4 

the parents live, whose ehiUlreu _ iv! 4 

live, anil tiomish! (.re;.. 1 _ vl! 

live, ana l.e;,'et a Inipiiy raeeofkingsl — vi 3 

be.L-trars.wearv of their lives 7.. _ v3 

let them not live to taste _ y. 4 

peace lives again; thai she may long live — v! 4 
their eurses now, live where their ..Ueiin/llII. i. S 

may his hi;;liiiess live in freedom 1_ is 

mnv he live lomjer than 1 have tinio — ii! 1 

we live not to he sripeil liv _ ij. a 

to be honest.1 aiul live a s'lihjeet? _ iii. 1 

my trust must iirow to, live'not here 

the letter, as I live, with all the 

if we live thus (anielv, to he thus ... 

who, if he live, will s'earee ho 

your meililMlions how to live better.. 

men's evil manuers live in brass 

that it may tliul good time, and live 

shall never have, while I live 

ns I live, if the kina blame me ,....' 
live niul aie i' the eves of Troilus. Tra 

IKiil.] Troy in our weakness lives 

BO many hours, lives, speeches 

60 dying love lives still - 

weep Sena, live in flre, cat roeks 

50U Sivy, live to come in my behalf . , 
ove, let vEneas live, if to iny 

for we niny live to have need 

I'll make my maleh to live 

you bia then rise, auil live 

I do believe thee j— live 

and live aj'e with thy nnmel 

strife lives iu these tonehes , , , . Tinw 
labour, and long live your lordship! 

long may he live in fortunes! 

ond safer for their lives 

who lives, that's not deinaved 

that you may live only in hone — 

live loathed, and lon!;,"iiiost smiling 

Bud yet cnufusion live I plagues 

or to live but iu a dream ot friendship? — 



— iv. 4 



— ■ 111. - 

— iv, 2 

— V. 1 

— V. 2 

— V, 3 
Im^Oess.i.i 

— i,3 

— ii. 2 
- iii. 1 (song) 

— iii. 2 

— iii. 3 

— iv. 1 

— iv, 4 

— iv. ,'> 

— V, 3 

— v. 4 

— y, II 
lo/A'htns.i. 1 



— I. 2 

— iii, 5 

— iii. ti 
iv. 1 
iv, 2 



LjVK in nil the spite of wrenkt\il.. n'nioM qr.Hh. Iv, ,1 
n me at others lives nniy InugU .... _ iv! .l 
live, aiiil love thv misevv'.., 
long live so, ana'so aie!" 1 am unit ".' 
we euuiioi live on eras,, on berrie.s , 
take wealth and lives lorellier 
go, live rieh and happy: imt thus,,," 
thy sooa mmie live with authority . 
-- live still; he .VIeihiaaesvour .. 



iipou 



go, live still: he .Vleihiaae: 

theiY a,.es ii.vt live a man 

nl tlrst, vvhieh von ilo livi 

eompetenev w lierehv the' 

n iH-ijr indeed, that lives like a laVn'b;; 

mill live you veti' O my sweet lady .. 

run reekiun o'er the lives of men .... 

«t .Viuiimi lives he'i' at .\nlium 

aiKl live with siieh as eaiiuot rule,,,, 
now, as I live, 1 will; mv noblei' ,,,. 
longer to live most weary , 
ana eauiiol live hnl to tl'iv slVnuio!!;; 

live ami thrive! tarewell kind 

virtuous to lie, as to live ehaslely ,,,, 
all that 1 live by, is, with the aw\..J„lh 
ns live to he iu «we of sueli a tiling .. 
tor he will live and hiii«h at this .... 
t lat virtue eaiinoi live out of the ..,, 
t>t':esar, thou mav'st live . 
live a Ihousaiid years, 1 shall not !!!.' 

dead, to live all t'lee men'i' 

el Bring hitn .. 



ol li 



itor li 



vio lives after theju — 



if 1 ilolive, 1 will h, 



let her live to io 



er s son (rco.) 
a to thee.... 

'a'sar! 

best 

nr lives..vlii(oiii/<i tv™. 1. I 



- iv. 3 

- iv. 3 

- Iv. 3 

- Iv, 3 

- iv. a 

- V. a 

- v, 4 

iul,ll)lis, i. I 

i. I 

U, I 

- ii, I 

- ii, a 

- Iii, I 

- iii. 1 

- iii. 1 

- iv. .^ 

- iv, ,1 

- iv, ti 

- v, a 

r('<i'»«r, i, I 

- 1.2 

- 11, I 

- il. 3 

- ii, 3 

- iii. 1 

- iii, i 
iii, a 
iii, a 
iii, a 
Iv. 1 
iv, 3 

V, I 



Ll\ E-C,loator. I livo to th»uk th«>e ftir .. ln». Iv 

eye, hehiLM.nl.lolet hlmlive -'iv 

I iMlcar live, Oblesshiinl .. _ K. 

howMiill 1 live.anawoik.tomaleh ,... - Iv 



., ,, '.'. ""d pray, una sing 

t> our lives sweetness! 
w heu one Is .lead, and w he'll' oiie Vivos'' 
slain the stone, vvbv. then she lives,, . 
shelivesl if it he so', it is a ehuiieu ,,,, 
eh. nor Iv 



while 



ng 



• Ibrfeil 



oil II 
your lives shall pa 

ehililish how slie lives miharmed..,, 
that she will slill live ehasle .. 
do 1 liyeileMil, that live to tell It n.'vw 
nil I shouia live 11 thousana vears 
nil' I nneht live to, see thee nmrned.. 
the lish lives in the sea 
onlheea.th.K.ili live, but io the I'.'ir'lh 
notluni;, but one ot vour nine lives 
sleWl'vl,,li, Koiiieomiislnotlive .',' 
thatever 1 shonUI livetosee theeiliaul! 

•-'•and lives, tluil ■|'vb.iil would 

e, vvheie.lnliel lives..,. 
n,e, live here in heaven 
earriou Hies 



— V 

— V 

— V 

— V. 

— V, 

— V, 



lieavei 



thy la.lv tootlnil li 



I tin 



where ihon sluill live, lill wi 

i must be Koiie ami live, or slav and dio ■ 

>i| make him live 

hinghtea'd ■ 



^by that whieh 11, 



poll 

iiailoms .... 
rieuaswith 
uishethit.. 



— 1.2 



— 11. J 



aiul requires to I 

if that thy father live, le'l'liun 

men did ransom lives of me for jests 
or I will live or bathe mv dving irri).) 
If it he well to live; but heller ..... 

lives he'/ wilt Ihou not answer 

"II y onr taiio 



I'or Ciesi'i 
not eomf 



eannot li 
Ilea to liv 



hut Ihat 

Ion;; a term as yet we have to live.,.. 

hle's'id li'v '•""'"' ""' ''''' '''"' '^"'""'^ 

whose ienuMi;'branec"yet'l'ive's'ii'r. '.■.■.'■ 

how live? or in my life what comfort 

by this rude place we live iu 

long live Ciesar! is l,iieius general' .. 

that he swore to take, our rives?... 

summer lasts, and ] live here, Fidelo 

since on your lives you set so slight ,. 

to die, than tlinu art to live ....f. 

there are verier knaves desire to live. . 

by whom, 1 Kiaut, she lives 

nothing but onr lives mav be called,. 

Augustus lives to think o'n't 

e'er thank thy (re;:.) 
? is be thv kin?.... 
sliouldsl live while 



— ill. II 

— iii, II 

— iv, a 

— iv. Ill 

— iv, 12 

— iv, 12 

— v. I 
Cuiiibeliitr, i. i' 



i, 

— i. / 

— iii. I 

— iii, 4 

— iii. li 

— iii, 7 

— iv. 2 

— iv. :• 

— iv. 4 

— v. 4 

— V. 4 

— V. .'1 

— V. .'l 



thou eonblsi 
that the vill 
been 1 
that 
live I 



liiiilo 



shed 1 
leil wife I 



agati 



herlminoiliil pint vv 
heivlivesaealtiifwi 
take thou Hull; live, 
live, aiul hereafters,! 
long live the kiii-l 1 
all. Unit live, must d 
a, Idolive, mv hone 
nil alone sluill live wi 



k..«i)iiipo ^Juli»l,\, 

i 
i, 
t. 
t. 
t. 

ill: 
til. 
lit. 
III. 

HI. 
III. 
111. 
iii. 
III. 
HI. 
til, 
ill. 
ill. 
Iii, 
Iv, 
Iv. 
Iv. 
Iv. 
Iv. 



li 

•doth live — 
et lovo — 



like. 

not in these .. 

lives mnrried long — 

liaiigeis''liv'ei!; Z 
•leh would sell _ 



111 b< 



sierous — 



V. 



ado? lie //.mile/, I. 

il lorit,''iis't'iiio" ~ 

1 the book 

ivaist 



ill re 
•ilaliendv 



thou slulll I 
that live, air 
deiicnd and 
nav, but to li' 
and live the 1 
why vet 1 livi 



I fe 



ort while you live 

all but one, shall live,, 
I this lair world behiml 
1 , upon your majesty ,. 



I hi 



wilt h;i 
Iliad 1 
mv fall 



s live 111 me.7'i/i(,v.(/i./i(iHi 

vitliin _ 

;: my noble loi\l(re;).)_ 

ivetliy _ 

>iir emperor! (.rep.) _ 



lives not tbis.biv v 
live lord ■I'itnsron, 
I.aviuia, live; oiitl 
and sav. lon^' livei 
and slnill, if'l.iieiii, 

he lives in liiiiie that died in ',.'. 

but. ifwe live, we'll be ns sharp .... 
dreails not yet their lives' destruction 
answer their suspicion with their lives 
mine shall save mv brothers' lives .. 
never, whilst 1 live, deceive men so 
nor l.avinia lives, but in oblivion .. 

•H"il^' 



oveat of .,,. 
iier with the other half ,. 
to sav, this thing's to do 



St by his looks 



- 1. 1 

- I.J 

- 11,1 

- li. : 

- ii.i 

- Iii. 1 

- Hi.! 

- iii. ; 

- iii. J 

- iii.l 

- Iii. J 

- Iv. I 

- iv. 7 



:■ With him 

when to live is .,,. 
lives hnd not ono .. 



mu-lc 

it sluill not 1 
shall she liv. 
oil.' IMiilit.ii 
bill, il' 1 liv.' 
that insti.'c I 
the pr.niilcst .■ 
Iliv chilli slial 
toliveaiul bn 
I weic.leiul.Hi 
lor.ls anil hub, 
ns V. HI will liv 



II l.an' if I li 
iC. It shall ! 
tobctrav 111 
lives, niv .-, 
hisfeimiea. 



^'tdic .... 
■guilt .... 
mliyman 



— iv. 4 



of 11 



■<alnriiiiins' liealth ... . 

ubn- that lives ., _ iv. .| 

■vei'laiii'nglVri'!; Z v! I 
li.llivcagniul .. _ V.:, 
ie/f,v, i. (Gower) 
— 1. 1 trid.Ue) 



resolve it vou 
ist not live l.> Iriimpct forth.... 

.11 wilt live, tlv after 

live so r..muraiul safe 

vel how the fishes live in the sea 

d live like go.ls above 

Iirincc .Io live, let ns snlute .... 
he world he live, we'll seek liini 
id veil, hi' lives to govern ns ,... 

loble lleliealie! 

■men, tbisiiiuen will live 

to live quietly 



— i, 1 

— i, 1 



— ii, 3 

— ii.4 

— ii. 4 

— ii. 4 

— ii. 4 

— iii. 2 

— iv. 3 



tuit 1 shall live aii.l tell him to bis teeth 

tierc lives within the verv tinme 

thus unknown, shall live'bebiml mc'f. 

Icaiiuot live to bear the ii.ws 

love the Mom- to I 
it issilliiu^sKloliv 
if the balaiieeofo 
hold, for v.iiir live 

thatcnek'oi.i lives in bliss",';;;;!:; 

long live she so! ami long live von _ ... , 

nii.l live upon the vapour ol'n (fiiiigeon.. — Iii; ;i 
U that llic s live liiid l.irty thoiisund lives! — iii. 3 

but, lei her live. Damn her _ 

for she shall not live ,.[ _ 

how docs lieiitemiiit t'nssio? l',ives,"sir;; — 

St live, or bear no _ 

alls me to a restitution — 
en lives, my great.... _ 
letmelivclo-niglit - 
list twenty liv.^s . .... _ 
IS sight woiilil make., — 

tor, in my sense -- v, * 

v.^il so long 7'™i,,es(, i, I 

,.„, I ,,„, . ,;, ,, , '"'.viais M<-nyll,rn,\u. 1 

I. a 1 nave lived loim eiuuigh ij o 

have I lived t,. be .■arricai'ii a basket - lij. 5 
have I live.l t.. st.ni.l at the taunt.... _ y, 5 

tliiit hve.l lUH.ii 111.' , sea.. . ■niel.flh NiKM.i. H 

lui.l been at lioiue, be had lived. W«u,yb.' /Wms. jv. S 
hesluMild bav.' hveil, save thnt his .. _ iv 4 

w.ml.l yet be lui.l lived! _ iv J 

as if my brother livi^a _ v; I 

I Much A{h^iv'.\ 



i. 2 


where eillu'r 1 


UllIN 


i. 2 


live K.i.lerig.., 


111-,' 


1,2 


luulall hisliai 


sill 


1,2 
1,2 


kill me to-ui..i 
known, lining 


1 1 


ii. n 

ii.4 


dill he livemiv 
I'll bavelhccl 


, lb 


iii. 1 


I.IVKIK viHilia 


vc ii 


ill. 1 


1 have live.l Io 





ii. ,1 
III. :i 
iii. 3 



iii. 3 
iv, I 
iv, I 
iv. 1 
V. I 
V. S 
V. S 

V. a 



that lived in the li 



a win 



I li 



■d 1 was 



Ollll 



— V. » 



live 
that 
to hold 



re vou ar.' like bv liv_ _ ,,^^, 

iiid you shall live ill pleasure..., — iv; il 

eep that you live ns yon do __ iv 't 

re our scenes seem to live , , — iv. 4 (Gowi-r) 

re do V. 01 liver — v. I 

loni lives hence, and banishment ....l.ciiri 1 

the bel,u..a of your brother .. _ I. 2(lctterl 

— i. 4 



• a thwart . . 



think to I 
if she live long, a 
Slill iii..spcrM,i.T, 
might 1 but live t 



till b.-b.' 
ig, ail.l, il 



't'lal — iii. r 

"1 fenr _ iv. I 

• lu m.v toiieh — iv. l 



but whiles ber sl.iiulcr li'v. a". _ y' 1 

that lived. Ibat loved, tluil liked ,, A//cf, A'.'« fie v; 1 
ivod long on the alms-basket , ...l.ot'e\I..L„sl, v. I 
Oyou have lived 111 desobili.m hero _ v, 2 

when in the worbl 1 lived, 1 was ,... _ v J 

almost f.nii s.-on. here lived I 4,, ,/oul.il<eit, ii. 3 

he would have live.l immv a fair year - (v 1 
the most miinilmal that lived 'in'ongst _ Iv. 3 

skilluleiuniKh to have lived still MfslVellA. 1 

when li.v obi wile lived . . ... (I'm/fr'.'/VW,., iv. 3 

I have live.l t... he when 1 desire ,,,, — ivS 
HP she live.l peerless, so her dead likeness — v. 3 

nii.l iiiaUcB b.'r as she lived now _ vS 

mnke'tmanili'sl where she has lived - y'.s 

where liveili' 111. w (omid thy luiber's _ v3 

Willi lu;r 1 livc.1 in joy CmnedynfUnort. I, 1 

1 bail lived a blessed tune Mncbrlh, ii. S 

ilu'il every .lay she livca _ Jv. 3 

'11;; .'iiough _ v; 3 

ml lill he was _ y. 7 

lalhei liveil. your Kingjnhti i'. I 

ive livid I,, bear Mcharri II. iii. 4 

, . I 111 g.'.iil .'.•mpass ll/rtiiu/r, iii. 3 

an.l Div.'s Hull lived in purple _ iij.) 

when liielnii.l lived, vv „nla have .. ..•illnirul I. (. 3 

1 have not live.l all this while ^^ ii 4 

while the beiisl live.l, was killea Hnirt,!: iy .t 

most gieally live.l thiN star .... _ y. a (chorus) 



ih li' 



"hi 111 
ell. I 



LIV 



[451 ] 



Wy.U for >t>i- Imlli IUivn.»>l<ii>K..I>r"nrv/7. V. 4 

tilrllirrniit llinii uf.i ri hi IiwmI . . .ill. ,„y y I. III. '^ 
Biul llixii It livi.l ill >«ril l.lv.liuii .. — Hi. 7 

not >lt UmH', liu'l yoiirtuilitf livr<l ..ailrntuflA. I , 
f.<r »IimI.v^<I hliii/. I>ut I <y<iiMi|||< .. -- V. It ! 
tlioii liuil t h.it llvi'il loklllnaoii .... — V. 11 > 

kiMl liw'l Uy I'u.kiiiK on Ilia Uuanei.lllchard III. ii. 2 I 

rll.. .. ».l<ll<r. a* llivr'lukinif — iii. I , 

lir liw.l Ir'.iii ull ullulli>li:r <il •>ul|M:<.-t — ill. !> 

.Ii.lt.i.-U lrr.Hj,rllir.li:v.Trliv..l _ Hi.!, 

Mllliiii llH':< live, hoiiri llaatlriKa lived — ill. H I 



Imvc I liw'<l II, II. |i,ii(/. (lit iiii: .(Kkk — lit, I 
I iimiKlil^ iiirtli? — y. I 



luiri: Iiii Ii 



;il 111; 



I till 



. tlittl llvwiy .... 'Iiffwii orAlhcn; fii. I 
llUVI; I lllll'L' livi'll t<> MX two luMicit incil'i' — V. I 

1 liitvc llvinl u, Ml' iiiliiTiU'il Cotiul'inuM, II. I 

ttiuti'viir llvuii ill till: ti'li: DliUiiet.JuliuttJirvji, iil. I 

wlK'iiCwMr livi'll. Ill- ilural not — iv. » 

liatli ''iu>«iii« livi'll t<i Ik: liijt mirth ., — iv. !) 
fiuiK,', lli'iii liu't livi'll tii-i I'liiK . Anianu Sr C'Iri), II. I> 

1 iiuvi: liviMl III mil h iliali'iiiKur — iy.ti 

(111. wlierr lli'iii liiul liv(.'i| — iv. i:i 

wliL'ri.-iii I livi'll. tin: i{rcati:al prince ., — iv. Kt 

■Ivive tliveli'iiiifiil tlxry llvi:<l In — v. 'J 

f<CiK.«r, tliKCIiurinlmi iivir'l but nirtr — v. I 
liviil In <:<iuil ( wl,ii:li rare it in V) i\i»..Cymbi!llne, i. I 
wlu^ri: J Imvi: livul ut li',iii:iil friMMlum — ill. » 

U)» nwUr MfliiTc wc littvi: llvi'd _ Iv. 4 

I iii:v<!r liiwl livi;.) t<. imtoii thin — v. I 

a iikIiIlt air iii-'irr llvnl 'twlxt alt^ — v. fi 

fliaii tlmti-vi:r livv/l ill Mi>nit',,TltiuAndrimiciu,\\\. I 
Aiitl'K^liiia rriiiri liiwat livi'll iiotlru: . . I'erUlrt. Ii. 'I 

you livi;il ut iiil'la ail |iinf< Komfo^Julitt, I. 2 

iniiiitliaat hiiii wliili; ifiy fallii.'r livi.il ..llamM.W. 't 
inyrntliir, In liialiuliitiuiliRiivul! .... - iil. 4 

I.IVI'.liSr-atiil tliou iivifil.t ..7iF/inn»,//l//ir/if, Iv. » 

J.IVKI.IKIl-t'iNoiii'a. Ilvi'li.rr than life — I.I 

1/1VI';1-IIII)<(|J^ tuki'. all livi.'lilioml ..AW, IVMA. 1 
[fill. Knl.) \,y any livelili-Ml Il.rliar'l I II. ill. 4 

l,IVi;i/>.V<; till' llveli.ni/ iii|;lit M.,rl,r/h, Ii. 3 

the liveliini/ ilay hri-aku aiiirril . . Trollu, *, Crr,,. i. » 
there iittve aal the liveli>n;< ilay JuJiu, f:,puir, i. I 

LI VKI-V-I a-i lively u/.led .... luo 0V„. „/ 1',,, iv, 4 
that riwinl la lively in my a')iil!..7'/i://'/i .Muhl, v. I 
lively t'liiehea of my riaiitfhti;r*a,../fi youl.thi' it, v. 4 
lu lively (miiiU:>l iia llie i/ei:'l . . Tuimuii of Sh. z riiiil.; 
t/> a<:ir tlie lile a« lively nir*ki;il .. Winlrr'tTiiU;. V, 3 
ami lively lintre, uiiif erit<:rtuiiie<l.. 7Vm/«i o//J//i. \.2 

tiiou i'i"iiti:rfeit'at ni'ift lively — v. I 

now I twhnl'l lli^ lively tcxly ao?. '/VVuf/fnJr'in.iii. 1 

preei'ilent, and lively worrant — v. .'( 

>ii'l the lively Helena ....Hwitrn ^JulM, I. SfrioU;) 

1,1 VKIt— al.ttU-a tin: ar'luur r^frny llver.VVm.n'.f. Iv. I 

with liver hnrnliiK hot Mrrrn ff.rr,, ii. I 

when liver, liruin, and heart Twel/lhMiiM, 1. I 

no inoli'in of the liver — 11,4 

tlila wina him, liver anil all — ii. .', 

anil hrimatone in your liver — iii. 2 

a<.mueh hliKUl in liiallveraa will.... — Hi. i 
if ever love hail inU.-reat in lihi liver. . MufhAdu,U. I 

thia la llie liver vein, whieh /.*iif'« l,.l.t,u, iv. 3 

ami let my liver rather heat lUer.o/fenici'.l. 1 

have livera wliit<: u« milk? — iil. 2 

til wojiii your liver ua elean /4au9u/>/ri>/(, Iii, •/ 

were my wife'a liver infected mnii-r'iTidi-, i. 2 

liver ofnlaaiiheminif Jew MncMh.iv. I 

hot livtra, anil luilil puraca Mlftirylf. ii, 4 

nieaaiire the heat of our livera 'llhntylf'. I, z 

lefttheliver white anil pale — iv, 3 

J will iiiflorne thy noble liver — v..', 

with hunil/le livera in OTUt<:nt .. ..Henry I'll!. 11. 3 
re»p<:et make livera imlc . . . . Trnilu, ^ IJ, emOa, 11. ii 
ilirt-rottiMi livera, wfieezint! liiriKa .• — V.I 
lli.'in '(xill'r'i livera in tiM; aairifii* .. — v. 3 
rather eat niy liver with drinkln(<.y4ri/o)i|/.1^r;//.«. |, z 
not wi hardly aa prouder livera th)..Cy»thiilhir, iil. 3 
think, therea livera out of IJritain .. — iii. ■! 
the liver, heart, and hrain of liritain — v. .', 

and the lonKer liver take all ....llomen AJuliel, i. !> 

LIVKHIKH-their hare livtrlca.. 7V»6>n,o/»'irr. ii, 4 
eliun;!e their wonted Hvtrla..M<d. A','» Dream, ii, -i 

((ivea rare new llveriea bUreJtanltif fenice. ii. 2 

put the liveriea t/i mttkirijf — 11. 'J 

time t'l have ma/le new iiverieti ....illrnrylV. v. i 

I-l VKKV-on the dealined II very. «--af. /<«>/«/«. 11. 4 
O'tlatlureunninc' livery of hell .... - iii. I 
you can endure the livery of a nuii.Mid.S.'tllr. i. I 
•ho/lowed livery of theh»rnl<liiMj,if«T,»/('<-nfc/', ii. I 

Kivc him a livery more K'lardeii — W.'i 

la a ((ixkI I i very of iionour Aid fTall, i v. !, 

to aue hia livery, and deny Ilichardll. ii, I 

denied Ui aiie my livery fierc — ii. 3 

Vj auc Ilia livery, and \h:u hia immx. I llruryll'. iv. 3 

anfmrel them all in one livery 'tllenryyi. iv. 'i 

tfic ailver livery of uilviaed a^e — v. 2 

and wear her livery Itirhnrd III. i, I 

our liearta wear Timon'alivcry 7'if»i»ri6//((/i/'H«, iv, 2 
in hia livery walked <;t»viiiii. Antony ^i:irnpidra, v, 2 

a hlldin(( for a livery CyinbeUne, ii. 3 

•iic'll wior Wana'a livery I'erlcle;ii. ,', 

a vealni livery will I take inc t') — iii, 4 

<J K'uldeaa, weara vet thy allvcr livery — v. 3 

iKr veatal livery ll hut alclc llomioif Juliet, ii. '.; 

Iianxeil, air, if he wear your livery .. — iii. i 
nature'a livery, or fortiine'a atar Ilamtrt I. t 

? Ivea a frwk, or livery, that aptly .... — ill. « 
he 'iuht and careleaa livery that it wcun — iv, 7 

LIVKTII-aman thi rehy liveth ....I Henry 11'. v, 4 

her mother liveth yet Mlenryll. v, 4 

mav auflii-e, that llenry liveth ....Sllenrt, I'l. iii, 3 

I^I VIA- have kept apiirt for I,ivla,,4ii/»/>|/*C'/i'». v. '/ 
J,lvla. alKnior Valentine.. /'omro^./iWiW, I. 2 (noU-j 

MyrNfi-toteepthem llvlriK 7>//i/>m/, i|, | 

and art thou living, Mt«pliano? — 11,2 

a livinif drollery _ ill, 3 

that a livln^f iirince d'ii;a v, I 

how ahould iViMpcrolw livInK — V, I 

that tbey were living Iwtli iu Naples. . _ v, I 



MVINU dullv i,litKX»r/Hi*<i .rwo flen.t^ fnima, i, I 

rather than livinir t'lrinenti' — Iii, I 

when ake ean apin for her llvinK ,,.. — III. I 

yet Ii '. In>r In my itlaaa Tuel/ih SIkM, III. 4 

eaiiat tholl iielirve thy llviiii/ ..Meiu.firr Meat. iii. 2 
lady Oia/laln! urti you yet llvin«?.. .. A/uf/i/4<///, I. I 

tluire were no livinx near her — ii. I 

aa honeat aa any man ilvliiK — Iii. Ii 

no man llvint; ahall oime over It .... — y.i 

than your lion, living IHid.N. 

and I'l/nl/rnplttllve In livln/ art ..Im 
with all thex: Ww'iun, in iihilinophy .. 
id youra liom lon^ livlntil 



hream. Hi. I 
(/.. Ij„l,i. I 

— 1. I 

- II. I 
. i 

iee, i. 2 



and youra liom lon^ livintil — 

alioiild ^I't your liviiiK by rckonititf — 
will of ttii villi/ dauu,liier eurlied..«er.«/ fen^,. ,. . 
In vlrtiu.a, beautie. livinK«. fricnda. . — Iil. S 
you have i/iven me li.i;, unu llviiifj ,, — v, I 

and ao villimoua tliiaday livInK ..Aiyoul./ktU, i. I 
enforiK a thievliih livini; on the autniium — Ii, 3 
truly limned, and Ii villi; in your <'a<% — 11,7 
hrinKhim di:a/l orlivini/. witliin .... — iii. I 
ti<a<:ek a liviui; ill our t<;rrilory .... _ iii. 1 
U) Kcl your llviiiK by the »i|iiilalion — ill. 2 
llvinK ['.»(, -lovluKJ humour irf'mu/lnCM — Iii. 2 
for tlie kiiiK'a "ike, lie were l|yin«! ..AW$WeU, I. I 
the enemy to the II vini/. Jf the liviuK — i, I 
there la no living, none, if llertram,, — I, ] 

If lie were livinj/, I would try him yet — I, 2 

do I aee you liviiiK'/ Miiu:eyc» — v, 3 

there la no iiuiy li.iiiu.vi niiu:lttir. Ifin/m'i'l'ale.ii.i 

wliere my Ian/I and liVinii Ilea — iv, 2 

and thoM: that Iwar them, livinK .,,. — v, I 
that aheia living, were it but told ,, — v, 3 
wretch, u living dead man,, ,, t'.fniudyitf Hrrtrrt, v. I 

when liviiiu liiflit alioiild kian iti' Uaj-belh.ii. 4 

liviuK bl'^id doth in tliCM U-rnnlea ..lOngJohn, 11, I 
although my will fiuive la living . — iv, 2 

in thy old bloiKl no living (Ire? tticliardll. I, 2 

no, no; men liviiiK flatu^r tluiae — il, I 

and llvinu toot for now liia aon ,,,, _ ji, I 
mcii'aoplniona, and my livini; blooil — iii, I 
from my death-lie/l, my Imt living leave — v. I 
friend will rid ine from tbia livini; i'tiar't — v. 4 
deail kin^ l/> the iiviiiif kiiiK I'll bear — V. b 
but here fa Carlialc livinx, t/i abide ., — v, (i 
wlitrc ia he livin(j,clip(ie'l In vilh. I Henryiy, iii, I 

will it not live witli the iivin($i: — v, i 1 

and liviiii/ t'l kill till* — v,3 

t'l ao; wh.'tt frieiiilaar'r livini; — v. 4 

lJou(/la» in living, uiid your hri>ltu:r,.i Henry 1 1', i, I 
la old Uoiibleof your townlivinx vet? — Iii, 2 I 
and I hull many livini/, to upbraid ,, — Iv. 4 J 
O that tlu; liviiK/ Hurry lim) the U;mper — v. 2 I 
and therefore, livini; benia', did Kive ..Henryy. i. 2 
and my life, and '' '" ' 

we lire enoiii ' 

for II ., . , 

the^iieeii, that living held 2i/enrii»';, Iv. I 

tiiat livini; wronijht me aneh — v, I 

A',iii:iu\>are ttiiviiiKi'tiul — v. z 

by livina low, where fortunecanni/t.3/»«/r(/r/. iv. 6 
they kill me with a livini; death ..Uidiard 111. i. 2 
your Joya in llvlni; fMward'a throne — ii, 2 

p'K/r mortal livini; kIi'M, woca — Iv, 4 

deo/l huppiiiena with livini; woe — iv, 4 

ia youiiK Ktitnley livlui;? — v. 4 

nohlc atriry, aa they were I'lvinn.. llenry t'l 1 1, (pT'ii.j 



li/re, iiviuH 111:111:1;, ijHi i;ive . . nitnryf. 1. 2 
fe, and my liviiixa — 111.6 

oii|/h yet livini; hi tlic Held — iv. b 
idfyhere. In pomp \ Henry y I. I. I 



to no creature livini;, but t'l in« 

for livini; miirrnurera, tliere'a — 

I um tlie moat unhappy woman living — 
no man livirij; lyiuld iiay, tbia ia my wife — 



1. 
Ii, 2 
iii, I 
Iv, I 
Iv, 2 
Iv, 2 



'lull livirii; lyiuld iiay, tbia la my wife — 
tlier BjK:aker of my livins; luXiiun — 
whom I mi/at hat':il livini/, thou boat — 
nor la there livini;, I aicii'k it with .. — v. 2 
few now livini; can lieli'jid tbatrri'7/.) — v. 4 
moat nec'lleaa creaturea livini/.. Tinwnof Alhcnt^ I. 2 
for all thy livini/ ia 'mon/at llie 'kad — I. 2 

when there l« notbinj; livfiin but thee — Iv, 3 

care of your f'Kjil ttiiil livini; — iv, 3 

my loni; »ickne«'!, of health uiul livini; — v, 2 

nor are they livlui;, wiio were — v, .'1 

who, alive, ull llvini/ iricn did liat« — v, ((epitaph; 
unfortunate than ull livitii; women , Corto/unu, v, 3 
t/) keep your name livini; to time ,... — v. 3 
Ca:»ar dea/l no well aa lirulua livinn,Jul.Cai$ar, iii. I 
liad you rather Oetar were livini; .. — 111,2 

he Ilea not like the livini; — v, 3 

ore yet two li'irnuna livini; aiich a* .. — v, ,') 

that liuly la not now living Cyml/eUne, I, ,'< 

and i:'iwarda livini; t'l die v, » 

wrarcheil anion/; the deml and living — V, ,'1 

ain<»: alie l» living, let tlie time — v. /j 

than any livini; man i:ould I/car.. TUuiAndrnn. v, 3 
all that la left living of your rjueeu , . I'ericlei, iii. I 

ill turn to any living creature — Iv. I 

if I gave tlieni all my living I.ear, I. 4 

who In living if thoae t'*o are gone'i'/(«nu«i^,/u/, iii, j! 
aa living here, and you no uae of him — ill, ,'1 
tliat living rnortala. Ill aiiiig tlwin ,. — Iv, 3 

[6Vy(,jlifc, living, all la d.;at(('a: _ Iv, .', 

noor living (yirfe, ci'HKrd III a dcail ,, — v, 2 
living honoured ( rV/l./Tn/. -nightly aball U:} _ v. 3 
two men there arc not living, bi wIkiiii. Hamlet, II, 2 
thia grave aball have a living rrioniirnent — v. I 
you, or any man living, may lie liruiiii .OtIuiUo, 11. 3 

give me a livini; rcofon ahe'adlBloyal — Hi. 3 

MfV'HT-biit, while tliou Ii v'at, keep . . Terrpeil, 111, 2 
think on nratlng wliilat thou ilv'tt.ram.n/ Hli. Iv, 3 
■tla pity, that thou llv'at t/< *tik.Cumedyrj/lirr. v, I 
and though thou llv'at, and brcath'it, mcAartl //, I, 2 

■'1, aa thou liv'kt In pcac': — v. 

while thou llv'at, dear Kate Henry F. v. 2 

yet llv'at thou, Kniiabury? IHenryyi. I, 4 

In naught, but that thou llv'at ■IHenryl'l. ill 2 

In <|nlet while Ih'.u llv'at ■illmryyi. I, 1 

thou llv'at, and take de*p traiUim . . Ilieliard III. I, 3 

if thou llv'at, J'ericlci, thou haat I'erlrlri, ill, 2 

or thou llv'at In wuc — v, 2 

no brerith, aball Ufatify thou \iy'»l.Homen^Jul. iv, I 
IloratIo, I am dcadi thou Itv'it llanUel, v, 2 



LOA ;/ 

MV'KT-thal liv'.t pi ,-l(|v'»t] t/j m»\ut.'tlheUo, iii.a 

l.VAM'.l) I virdaii'g /!».//•/,/•//., I V, I 

aaaiiiurt u. Ii/mda .tiiigal ■illemyl I. Hi. 1 

tit li/.nrda' d'eaJlful atinga IHenrij^l. II, t 

a toK/l, a ll/ard. un owl rroilu§'it;rt,tidti v, I 

I.UACII- briid. (Ii'ai-, liki: a loa';b .. ..iH.nryiy. II, I 

J/MI<~uiider the l<4iil iXunntW MurhAdii, V, I 

J waa wont to loo/l my ahc with.. H'inier't Tale, iv, 3 

your maj':aty l'«ij. onr lioiiaij M'jeljeil,, I, « 

ubic to loail him with hia (b-teril ....Henry y. iii, 7 

lieo/1 at Cerea' plenteoiia b«d'/ iHentyyi. 1, 1 

the en vioiM loo/l that Ilea u|ion — ill, I 

l/ure a living louij, nothing ao — », i 

act down your boiioioable looil lUdrnd III. 1. 1 

toward (,liertM:y with your holy l(/ad — 1,1 

tiiia mutual 111 avy load of moan — 11,2 

iiatlene^' Ui endure the I'/o/l , _ Hi, 7 

the bo/fk iomiiituM U> the inui Henry y II I. I, t 

iiinba U> licar that l>,u/l of title? — 11,3 

taken a loa/l would aiiik a navy _ 111, J 

with which the time wilt I'^dhlni ,, — v. I 

a cruelty, U/ l'/a<l a fklling man — v, 2 

loiula o' gravel 1' the l«ek Trnilut ^ CreuiiUt, V. I 

ia vfry likely tii lou/1 oar intT\XMi%.Timimo/Aili. V. I 

you were uaeil Uil'/o/i me Cw/ofanui, iv. I 

</f diveraalanik-roua I'/aila JuUiuCatar.iy. i 

then take we down hia loail _ I», 1 

am li'iuiid to loa/l thy merit riciily ..Cymhrilie, I, 6 
to relieve them of their heavy li/ad , , , . I'crieUi, I, 4 

',CM.\ part on 'I, and bioda l/xi Lear, I, 4 

Ilcrculea and hia \im\ Itio Hamlet, Ii, 2 

J/<>Al;K,V-from VValea, loa/lcn wilii..l Henry I y. i. I 

for I have loa/len me witi illenryyi. ii. I 

my lega. like b/O/len branehea Henry y I II. iv. 2 

the felon, loa/len with irona .. 'limimo/ Athent, iii. 4 

naiviy home, loa<l<:n with Iionour (JwioUiniu, v. 3 

thy car la i<«ulen w ith their lieada. I dtii AnUron, v. 2 

J/fJAI>l,N'<i— tragic lou/ling of tbia l/ed , . , , 0//irU«, v, Z 

l/>A I'— it la of a rut b/af t/i ateal . . 7V/iii Andrmi. ii. I 

I/MM— Borne plai«ter, or wime ltjam..Mid.K.lJT. Hi. I 

thia I'/ain (/>i/. -lime J, thia rough-caat v. t 

Iiu;n ore but gildeil b/am .' Itichard II. i, I 

wt make b/am: and why of that Itmin.. Hamlei, v. I 

IXJAN— ia u long loan 'j:<,l.K.nl.-iitu:i..'iHenryl y, ii. I 

B/lvantaging their l</an Iinhuid lll.iv. 4 

for loan oft low:« Ix/lli lta<:lf and fiicnii.. Hamlet, i. 3 

U>ATJI-i aball I* loath Ui do. luro Oen. <,/ ytr. iii. 2 

1 arn very b/atb b, U; your idol — Iv, 2 

but I would In: bmtb Ui turn Merry Hivei, ii, I 

J would Ik; loath to raut away .... Twel/tHfiiKliI, I. & 

J am loath U, pr'/ve reoeon _ Iii. | 

cpcak ao iiidlrei;tly, 1 am Umlli , , tfea: /or Meat. iv. 6 
lie b/atli to have you 'ivtr-niivin. Mid. H. hream, iv, I 

although I am a<i loath, I am Unrtl.,lM,i, I, 1 

J am right loath Uigo Merrhanl nf yenict, ii. i 

I would \i>: loath to foil him At you Lilie it,i. I 

but loath am Ui fir'Hlucc ao bail AItt WeU, v. 3 

I would I* b/ath t'l fall in\i> ..'lam>niiofSh. 2(lnd.> 

where you'll I a- b/ath to be <firi(«'ira/«, Iv. 3 

yet I'/tttb Ui leave una'/ugbt Cmntdy of I'.rrmi, I. 1 

rnctluiuglit, waa loath to aet Aing John, v. U 

for I am loath bi break our Iliehurdll. Ii. 3 

I would l/i; loath to f/ay him in:t<jie..l Henryl y. v. I 

I arn loath figall a ne'«-li«aled 'illenryiy. i. 2 

I am loath U/ jiawn my plate ii, 1 

and ao b/ath \i> afieak, in dumb I Henry yi. ii, 4 

for I were loath, to link with illenryyi. Ill, 3 

why then, tho' loath, yet murt — iv, <j 

e( loath to b/ftebim Ilieliard III. ii, 2 

h»ath bi t/cor me t/i the alaughter-houae — iii, 4 

biatli to dejxuse the child _ Hi, 7 

luiw loath you are t// offend,, 'lioiiut^Creiiida, 111, 2 
waa very loath bi lay hia hnger»,,,,yubiiftfl'«or, I, 2 

I am I'/ath UiU:\] you what Antony liClto. V. 2 

I am loath to lx:at tliec Cymbetme, iv. 2 

though loath t/. bid farewell I'rritlei, il, t, 

nm moat loath b/ call your fault* I.ear,i. I 

L/IATUI'M') wliat it loathea„7u.'/, «»n.'4/-f«o/ia,v.2 

ibib/athe thia viaoge now! Mid. N.'i tJream, iv, 1 

did I b/ailic thia fix/il; but, aa in — Iv, I 

of what it likea.or i'nahvt, . Mercluinlof yeniee,iv. I 
now like hini, now biatlic him ..At ym l.ikeil, Iii, 2 

doth play with what it loathca AW t Hell, iv. 4 

and iiegan to loathe the toatc of ,, ,,l Jbrnrg/^, Hi, 2 

loatlica audi Mivereignty ItfiMaid III. iv. 4 

that fiKxl, whii'li nature b/atbcn, 7'i//i///i </'4'Airn(, v, .'. 
and my relief niiiat l/e— t'l biathc her , , tiUxeUn, iii. 3 

I,OA'lHl';»_br..thcd worldly \iU:. Meat, for Meat.iii. I 
out, loathed midicine; bated i/otion.,Wi'/.A'./Jr.iii.2 
I'/tttlifl ia>uc ol thy fntliera \iiUx^\ , .Itirlutrd III. i. 3 
to l/a>e ill c'lcnaioii and loathed l.i|.'amy — Iil, 7 

not more loallud Ibau Iroiiut .f Creuida, iii. 3 

Olid the iierformanu: a</ loathed? .... v. II 

live loallied. and b/iig 7iw',n of Athent, iii. B 

and liamnwl her loatbial choice!.. '/■i/u»/4»iy»on. iv. 2 

doth alii In audi a loatlied manner I'enclet. I. I 

rny anuff, and loathed (lart 'dimture Uar, iv. 6 

from the loathed warmth whereof — iv. (/ (letter; 
tlmt I inuat love a loatlied isiiviny. Ilnmea 4 Julitt.i,!, 
•ay. the lark and loatbul b/aij change — i'l, i 
((.'//.] eye ahould bold her loathed OUuUo, ill. 4 

I.OA'l'IIKIl a liundrcd liiiiea b/ |/art, .tHenryyi. iii. I 

I,<»ATIII,Nf; Ui the atoiiinch .. .M.I. N.'t ll,eam,ii.3 
certain b/athing, I Uar Aub>nio.iWir,'//Vnui-, Iv, I 
tlieir IkkHo even b/ loathing I'erielei, 11, 4 

I/)A'I'III/Y_wltli wei'daao b/atlily,,,, 7V.«;,i-i', iv, I 

and loathly blrtha of nature •illei.iy //'. Iv, t 

•ccing how loathly oii|«/aiU; I afxxl Uar, Ii. I 

ahoiibl hold her loathly r';'i'.-loatlicdl, tjtheW., Iii, 4 

I/OATIINK.SH andoUdieiicc lempttt.H. | 

nor make replica of loatbneai ..Anionylftlto. Hi. 9 
the loath neaa t/i depart wniild uT<>w..LuaibrUne. i. 2 

UIATHHDMH 1. thine .... 7-„,.i„„,./ Wrrir, I (iud.; 
than a pfior and biatbw.inc Ungar.. — I (ibd./ 

a I'/athaome abji ct worn i.oo.edy 0/ Error,, Iv. « 

with the vile, in loolliM.me \*ii,....lHrnryiy. iii. I 

thia b«tha'inic wiuci-tration Illenryyi, ii, ,', 

within a loalhaome dungeon _ H, ,•, 

I um no loalba-inic le|«;r, bxik illenryyi. IU. 2 

Kuvy in her luathwine cave — U|. 2 



LOA 



[ 452 ] 



LON 



T.OATIISOJiE— loathsome pit. Tiliis .4ndr 
will 1 br"m.!» you ti.-i.W loathsome pit 



as loathsome as a toail air.omist — iv. 2 

heie within this loathsome stv Pericles, iv. 6 

honey is loathsome in his own . . Itomco (y Juliet, ii. G 

what with loathsome smells iv. 3 

moie murders in this loathsome world — v. 1 

witli vile ami loathsome erust Hamlet, \.b 

I-OAl IISOMKXESS of them ....Winler'sTale,iw. 2 
LOArU.-^O.Ml.ST seabinGreece.r»oi7us<SCicsj. ii. ) 
Lt>A\i:S— seven halfpenny loaves ..illenryt'l. iv. 2 
J^t)B— tarewell, thou lob of^ spirits. .AJirf. A'. 'j Dr. ii. 1 

.uul tlyeir poor iades lob down Henry)', iv. 2 

LdBlilKt; till with 'tendance ..■I'imon or Athens, i. 1 

LOBBY— how in our voiding lobbv..2Hfnry;7. iv. I 

four hours together, here in the lobby.. HaniW, ii. 2 

as you L'o up stairs into the lohhv _ iv. 3 

LOCAL liabitatiou and a uamc.Wrf. .V.'s Dream, v. 1 
;;ive tlie U>cal wound a nanw. I roilus^Cressitla,iv. 5 

Lv ICK— look liaud in hand Merry Ifives, v. b 

to look it in the wards of covert.AJeai. lor Meas. v. 1 

I know him, he wears a lock ;\iucA.Wo, iii. 3 

tor thee I'll lock up all the gates — iv. l 

and a lock hanging by it v. 1 

break the loijks of prison sates.. Mid. N.'s Dream, i. 2 

her sunny locks hang ou her Mer. qf Venice, i. 1 

Jessica; lock up my doors ii. 5 

snaky golden locks, whieli make — iii. 2 

here's ado, to Kx'k \ip honesty fyinter'sTale, ii. 2 

and so locks her in enibraeiug v. 2 

wlierel'ore didst thou lociv me .. Comedy of En: iv.' 4 

never shake thy gory locks at me Macbeth, iii. 4 

open locks, whoever knocks iv. i 

we do lock our former scruple KmgJohn, ii. 2 

drowned honour by the locks 1 Henrij I K i. 3 

since we have locks to safeguard Henry /'. i. 2 

tlie locks of your shrill-shrieking .. — iii. 3 
these "re.v locks, the pursuivants . . 1 Henry VI. ii. 5 

I will lock his counsel ii. 5 

I'll lock thy heaven from thee.. 7'/moH of Athens, i. 2 
break ope the locks o' the senate ..Coriolanns, iii. 1 
to lock such rascal counters from. Ji//iits Ccrsur, iv. 3 
to the monument; there lock... ^?i(oiiv^CT<'o.iv. II 

that lock up your restraint Cymbeline, i 2 

force him think I have picked the lock — ii! 2 
that make these locks of counsel! .. — iii. 2 

to lock it from action and adventure? iv. 4 

you have locks upon yon v. 4 

who is the key to unbar these locks. . — v! 4 

looks fair daylight oiit Jiomeo ^S' Juliet, i. I 

m gold clasps locks in the golden story — i. 3 
thy knotted and combined locks to part. Hamlet, i. 5 

that she should lock herself _ ii. 2 

sport and repose lock from me _ iiii 2 

a closet lock and key of villanous Othello, iv. 2 

LOCKED in her crystal looks ..TwoGen. of fer. ii. 4 

but the doors be locked _ iii. 1 

a secret must be locked within.. Wcos./oril/eas. iii. 2 

as fast locked up in sleep _ iv. 2 

his senses were locked in his eve. . Lore'sL.Lost, ii! 1 
lam locked in one of them.yi/')cAaii/o/Te;i/Ve, iii 2 

keep him dark, and safely locked All'siielt, iv! 1 

are packed and locked up' in rav.. Winfer'sTnle, iv. 3 
my door is locked; go bid theni. Comerfy of Err. iii 1 

my doors locked lip (rep.) _ iv. 4 

confess, sir, that we were locked out. . — iv! 4 

this woman locked me out v! 1 

not at home, but was locked out .... v' I 

like pawns, locked up in chests KingJohn, v! 2 

60 cherished, and locked up 1 Henry I V. v. 2 

though locked up in steel iHenry II. iii 2 

a jewel locked into the woefulest — iii'-) 

prevents our locked embrasures. Troilus ^ a-ess. iv. 4 

still locked in steel, I never saw iv. 5 

locked in her rrMmiment..A7itony 4- Cleopatra, iv. "|2 

her chambers are all locked Cymbeline iii 5 

her doors locked? Not seen of late? .. — iii' 5 

1 have locked the letter in my closet Lear iii 3 

tis in my memory locked Hamlet, i. 3 

no 1 let the door be locked r treachery I _ y 2 

areyour doors locked? Why? Othello i! I 

LOCKING— for locking me out. Comfrfi/n/'/riror,! iv' 1 
T ??o!!?4']'','i "i*^ locking up the spirits.. CymM/Hf, i! u 

LOCKRAM— lockram^bout her Coriolanus, ii. 1 

LO^US'T— is as luscious as locusts Othello, i. 3 

LODE-STAR— eyes are lode-stara.A/i'd. A'. Dream i 1 
LODGE— a bed, shall lodge thee.. Ttco Gen. of ler \ 2 

I nightly lodge her mriu _ jii | 

himself would lodge _ i\\ \ 

and broke open my lodge ilerry Wives i 1 

at the Eleplmnt, is best to lodge.. 7'irei«/i Night, iii 3 
18 melancholy as a lodge in a warren .'il/Kc/iyWo, ii. 1 

I will visit thee at the lodge Love'sL. Lost i 2 

means to lodge you in the field __ ii 1 

where do the palmers lodge All's Well iii' 5 

my stables where I lodge my Winter's Tale, u. 1 

shall lodge the summer corn Uichard II iii 3 

I well miglit lodge a fear HHenn/ir iv 4 

we cannot lodge and board a dozen Heiiry i: iii 

so often lodge in open field 2Henryl'I i' I 

and lodge by me this night iHenryvi. i! 1 

tollowers lodge in towns about _ iy 3 

my brother 1 roilus lodges there. Troilus Sf Cress, iv 1 
jirepare to lodge their companies.. ./M/msCrrsnr, iv' 3 
let me lodge l>ichas on the. Antony ij-Cleopatra, iv 10 

I lodge in fear; though this Cymbeline ii 2 

and his lady both are at the Xnise.TitusAndron. ii' 4 



i\. 3 I LODGED-two lodged together ^/u, 

■■ ' thou.gh bladed corn be lod,"ed, and trees 



summer s corn by tempest Imlged ..2Hp,i>-v/7. iii. 2 
any grudge were lodged between \\s. Richard lU. ii. 1 
to Uhcester, lodged in the abbey ..Hem,/ llll. iv. 2 

TO?>CIM,'«^'"'""'V'f "■■'""'"■' Hamlel,y.\ 

LOUGLR— wcwere lo(lL;ers at. . /■umDii'd/'S/ircir iv 3 

T ('mr- tv,'-""' ^'"" keep lodgers Henry r. ii! 1 

LODG M, -go see vour lodging?.. ■A,.<.(ft/,AY„/„, iii. 3 
hard lodging, uiul tliiii weeds .... Love's L.lost, v. 2 
to come anon to my lodging ..Merch. of Venice, ii. 2 

and enquire my lodging out _ ii 2 

disguise us at my lodging, and return — ii! 4 

at Gratiano s lodging some hour _ ii 4 

to burn the lodging wheiv> you . . .4s you Like it, ii 3 
to make tlic lodging sweet.. 7',imrnffo/SA. 1 (indue.) 
an<l take a lo.lging, ti( to entertain .. _ i. 1 

then atniy lod.-iiu;, an' it like _ iv. 4 

empt.v lodgings, and unfurnished ..Richard II. i! 2 

uiifo the lodging where I first 2HeHn//;-. iv. 4 

of the lark to the lodging of the \amb.Henryl. iii. 7 

this lodging hkes me better _ iv 1 

of that most delicate lodging Cymbeline, ii' 4 

I have, my lord, at my lodgmg _ iii',^ 

kmghts unto their several lodgings .. ..PenV/es, ii' ii 
sir, our lodgings, standing bleak upon — iii ■' 

retire with me to my lodging Lear i ' 2 

not to behold this shameful lodging.. — ii' •> 

steeds towaids Phcebns' lodging. «rfmeo"<S-Jt</ic(, iii'. 2 

thou know St my lodging _ v I 

being not at your lodging to be foii'iid" . . Othello, i! 2 
at my lodging. I'll be with thee betimes — i. 3 
1 wull in tassio s lodging lose this uapkiu — iii. 3 
and tor me to devise a lodging, and say — iii 4 
T An'!^^rT?.^#oing to your lodging, Cassio. . - iii! 4 
LOUUVICO—tis Lodovico, come from.... — iv 1 
what s the news, good cousin Lodovico?.. — iv. I 

this Lodovico is a proper man iv 3 

BigniorLodovico? He, sir. lory you .... — v" 1 
LODOAVICK-friar Lodowick (rep.^.Mea.for Mea. v! 1 

know you that ftiar Lodowick _ y I 

you knew that ftiar Lodowick to be . . _ v' 1 

X k??ii\?' I^odowick, and Gratii All's Well, iv! 3 

T Xi.J.fr"","!'* *'^''"' •^'P^' "nd Ioffe..M.d. N.'s Dr. ii. 1 

LOi i y— this was loftv I now name _ i 2 

his humour is lofty, his discourse.. toiv'st.Los*. v! 1 

too lotty in our commonwealth Uielmrd //.iii 4 

sound all the lofty instruments X Henry IV. v 2 

breasting the lofty surge Henri/ ''• iii. (chorus) 

and that we are most lofty runawavs — iii :, 

sucli a spacious lofty pitch .".1 Henry VI. ii 3 

i ranee must vail her lofty plumed .... — v 3 

thus droops this lofty pine 2Hen» 1/ VI. ii. 3 

and lofty proud encroaching tyranny -1 iv. I 

lotty, and sour, to them that Henry VI II. iv 2 

shall this our lofty scene be a.ete6..JuliusCa-sar, iii. I 



LONDON-forthcommg yet at London. 2/Jfiiru /•/ Ii 
t<>-morrow, toward London, back again — ii 

till I do come to London _ iv 

, let's inareh towaids London 



Jack Ciide hath 



otie 



l.oudo 



briilge — iv. 

KO and set London bridge on lire .... _ iv 

l«'oTh'''i,I'l'''?r ''''■',"'■'''.'■"",'''''' «""^'' - '*• 

i sit u Lin loniuii; It 111 J^ondon streets — iv, 

we sliull to London get » 

tied to London, to call .. _ v. 

pets; and to London y. 

with my soldiers. .SHencBfi. i. 

' - I. 



id tr 



drums 

I'll ke. 

thou shnit to Loudon presently. 

shall iH>st to Loudon 

1 then in London, keeper of 

now to London, ail the crew are gone 



— i. 



we should lodge them with this sign ..Pericles, iv 3 

know not where I did lodge last mght Lear iv 7 

and where care lodges, sleep will./iomco k-Juliet, ii' 3 

anatomy doth my name lodge? — iii 3 

those thorns that in her bosom lodge Hamlcl i 5 

where lodges he? To tell voii (rep.) .... Othello, iii 4 

T , ,S?°AV°? ^vhere he lodges, and for me — iii. 4 

LUJJGLD— lodged thee in mine own cell. Tempest, i. 2 

as you shall deem yourself lodged. Love'sL Lost, ii. 1 

a lodged hate, and a certain..VprcAa>i/o/Ten/ce iv I 

where you shall he lodged All's Well, iu. 5 

fon shall be friendly lodged.. T'am/n/.'o/S/irewi.iv. ' 
that honourable grief lodged here. »fV»/<.r's 7a/e ii 1 



uicu 111 iiuiiour s loity oea Vitus Andronicus, iii 

T Ji^ "''"^ K'* ^°*^'y ''""' shrill-sounding.. H.imte/, i. 1 
. j~L'°"^^ thousands of these logs. . . . Tempest, iii. I 

had burnt up those logs _ iii 1 

I'll hear your logs the while _ iii 1 

or with a log batter his skull — iii. 2 

and Tom bears logs into. . Love's L. Lost, v. 2 (son") 

sirrah, fetch drier logs Borneo fy Juliet, iv. 4 

that will find out logs, and never.... — iv. 4 
T xJ^5f^vF?T";;P'''5' "' loggats with them?.. Ham/e/, v. I 
LOGGERHEAD, you were born.. totic'sL. /,os< iv. 3 

with three or four loggerheads 1 Henry IV. ii. 4 

ha, thou Shalt be loggerhead ..Romeo SfJuliet, iv. 4 
LOGGLRHEADED and unpolished, ram. o/-A'/i. iv. I 
LOGIC— talk logic with acquaintance — i. I 
LCJG-MAN-ain Ithis patient log-nmn Tem/iest, iii. I 
LOINS— of thyproper loins. il/c(j,5wre /or j)/ca,M(rc, iii. I 
derives itself from unknown loins?".. il/ucA Ado, iv. 1 

that from his loins no hopeful AHenryll. iii. 2 

loathed issue of thy father's loinsl Ilichard HI. i. 3 
out of whorish loins are pleased. Troilus ^ Cress, iv. 1 

or treasure of my loins Coriolanus, iii. 3 

derived from honourable loins'. .. Julius Cresur, ii. 1 

they are the issue of your loins Cymbeline, v. 5 

blanket my loins; elf all my hair Lear, ii. 3 

monkeys by the loins, and men — ii. 4 

the fatal loins of these two foes.. flomeo ^Jul. (prol.) 

her lank and all o'er-teemed loins .... Hamlet, ii. 2 

LOITER— you loiter here too long ..IHenry IV. ii. 1 

LOITERERS and malcontents ..;,oi.e',s- L./.oj(, iii. 1 

O illiterate loitererl Tiro Gen.of Verona, iii. I 

LOITERING-two days loitering? — iv. 4 

LOLLS, and weeps upon nie Othello, iv. 1 

LOLLING [Co/.A'h(. -lulling] on ..Ilichard HI. in. 7 
on his pressed bed lolling .... Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 3 
full-hearted, lolling the tongue .... Cymbeline, v. 3 
■, that runs lolling up and down . . Romeo A- Juliet, ii. 4 
LOMBARDY-fruitful Lombardy. Taming nf Sh. i. I 
LONDON hath received, like a kind King John, v. 1 

set on towards London Richard //. iii. 3 

post you to London, and you'll — iii. 4 

to meet at London London's king .. — iii. 4 
our two cousins coming in to Loudon — v. 2 

enquire at London, 'mongst _ v. 3 

when I beheld, in London streets .. — v. 5 
have to London sent the heads (rep.) — v. 6 

riding to London with fat purses ] Henry IV. i. 2 

house in all London road for fleas .. — ii. I 
do yon mean to come to London? . . — ii. 1 
and go merrily to London, it would — ii. 2 
I could 'scape shot-free at London .. — v. 3 

through proud London he came 2HenrylV. i. 3 

19 your master here in London? — ii. 2 

way between St. Alban's and London — ii. 2 
by my troth, welcome to London .... — ii. 4 
not there to-day; he dines in London — iv. 1 
about l>ondon. 1 hope to see London — v. 3 

I were in an alehouse in LondonI Hi-nniV. iii. 2 

at his return into London _" iii. 6 

see him set on to London — v. (chorus) 

how London doth pour out her — v. (chorus) 
Harry : now in London place him — v. (chorus) 

as well at London bridge, as at \ Henry V I. iii. 1 

pity the city of London, pity ual _ ill. 1 



W'hy, via! to Lomlo 

from London liy the king was I ...! _ sV 

and now to London („•,/.) _ J 

mare 1 to Loudon witli our soldiers? _ iy 

that he comes towiuds London _ ly. 

doth nKuehanmiu to London _ jy" , 

shall rest in London, till we come .. — iv. 1 
heiuv (•• London on a serious matter — y j 

to Loudon, all in post _ y. j 

let s awa.v to London, and see our gentle — v. J 
hither to London, to be crowned.. /<ic/iar</ ;//. ii ! 

to London, to your cliamlier _ iii | 

the mayor of Loudon conies to greet — iii' i 

when they rode from L..ndoii, were.. — iii j 

towards London do tluv heiul their.. — iv' " 

ready to set out for Loridon..;(,,iri/ /'///. ii. 2 (let 1 

the king's secretary, the other, Loiidou — iv 'l 

LONDoSER-amongsttheLondouers _ i s 

vRS??'-'^'^''^^'^'^""i"*"^'""l""stone.2Henn/rf. Iv t 

T>;Sfer!'i?" *°'' " I?""'' '""6 woman. .2H<-Hrt///'. ii. 1 

LONELINESS-of your loneliness. ...J/;'/hW/ j 3 

T ,",'l.';-^f'^^7'*'^ '!'"-" '^'»our your loneliness.Ham/e/,iii, 1 

I'lVu t„ . 7 1 ''''I '' '''i^'^'y' aPiU't" Winter'sTale, v. 3 

Coriolanus,i\. I 

... Tempest,''!. I 



like to a lonely d-_^ 

Lt)NG— yon lune lived so lon„ 

long heatli, brown furze ." 

long live Gonzalo! 

ail' It had not fallen tlat long 

1 have no long spoon 

and 1 with mv king nails will 

it I then had waked after long sleep 
quiet days, fair issue, and long life .. 
long continuance, and iucreasing 

thou shalt erelong be free 

1 long to hear the story of your life.. — 
long hath she been detormed?..r(TO Gen.of I 

the way is wearisome and long _ 

so long a time 

for long agoiie I have forgot !.. — 

and longs for every thing _ 

a cloak as long as thine 

thou hast staid so long _ 

she shall not long continue — 

have you long sojourned there 

what, that my leg is too long? 

leave not the mansion so long tenantless — 

two such friends should be long foes — 

he will not stay long Metry Wi 

I tarry too long _ 

as long as I have an eye to 

there's the short and the long _ 

with my long sword, I would _ 

this is the short and the long of it . . _ 

and you have been a man long known — 

I have long loved her, and, I protest _ 

for I have lived long enough _ 

and how long lay you there? _ 

come, we stoy too long _ 

if my wind were hut long enough _ 

she and I, long since coutracted 



— IV. I 
iv. 1 (song) 



r. ii. I 
ii. 7 
ii. 7 
iii. 1 
iii. 1 
iii. I 
iii. 1 
iii. 2 
iv. 1 
V. 2 
V. 4 
V. 4 
?s,l. 4 
i. 4 
ii. 1 
ii. 1 



— V. 5 



I'll drink to her as long as there's 

for being so long absent 

he might have took his answer long ago 

1 am not weary, and 'tis long to night — 

is it so long? y_ j 

called me master for so long y! 1 

hung by the wall so long . . Measure for Measure i 3 

which have, for long, run by _ i. f, 

how long have you been in this — ;;' 1 

and it may be, as long as you, or I . 

dear sir, ere long I'll visit you 

your stay with liim may not be long. 

they will then, ere't he long _ iy. 2 

live we as merry as the day is long..A/uc-/i Ado, ii! 1 

shake the liead at so long a breathing ii. 1 

have railed so long against mai-riiige 

slie hath been too long a talking ot . . — 
long have you professed apprehension? — 

only been silent so long 

the which he hath used so long _ 

and how long is that, think you? — 

or a dowager, long withering . . Mid. N.'s Dr, 
how long within tliis wood intend .. — 

O long and tedious night, abate 

wish it, love it, long for it 

for the short and the long is 

to wear away this long age of three.. — 

my lord, some ten words long 

my lord, it is too long 

methinks, she should not use a long one — 

we will make amends, ere long 

and yours from long living! .... Lore's L. w','ii!'|' 
and keeii not too long ill one tune . 
have lived long on the alms-basket 
tiion art not so Ion- bv the head ... 

for a li-ht luiirt lives long 

tlie letter is too long by half 

quickly, sir. I long 

that which long jirocess could not . 

but the time is long 

that's too long for a |)lay 

murder cannot be hid long Me, 

indeed, the short and the long is . . . 



1. a 
i. & 

iii. 3 



11.4 
iii. 1 
iii. 1 



li. 3 
iii. 2 
iii. 4 
iv. I 
v. 1 
v. 2 



(epil.) 



v. 1 
V. 1 
V. 2 



LON 



LONG— patience fur my lunu alxjde. . Mer.of yen. 11. 

I'll watcli aa luriK for you then — ii. 6 

too lonf< a f)auM; t'lr that — 11.9 

for I long to net; ({uick Cnpid'ii — li, 9 

I aiicak (<io lonx; liiit'tiii to iwize .... — iii.it 
not long Ik; troulik'il with you ....Afi/"" l''l<'ii, i. I 

it.hall not l)..M)Joii|{ _ 1.1 

but is llivrv uny vIm: lon({<< to nee tliia — i. t 

tell inc, liow loiiK you woulil liave her — iv. I 



[ 453 ] 



Mfr and ucH-deserve«i l»e<l 
lie laatc<t longt hut on ui iMith did 

how lon« in't, ixiunt, ulntx- 

may iwrvc hmti, hut n'lt wrrve ever 



for whii.li live loni? to thank Ixjth.... 

In UNurpintf IiIk t*[iiir»^ tMi loni{ 

I long Ui talk with tlie younK 

would not iia\c knuvi.-H tlirive long , . 

J long to litar him call..,. Taming of Shmc, 1 (ind.) 

• - 2(ind.) 



v.i 
...AUilVeU.i.i 

— I. « 

— li. -i 

— Iv. 2 

— Iv. a 

— Iv. 6 



— ii. I 

— ii. 1 

— ii. I 

— iii. 1 

— iii. 2 

— iii. i 



I may hardly tarry to long . 

gofxl dayn, and lonK to nee 

that hsth iK'tn Ion;; ntndying at .... 

how I lon;< to have some chat .... 
now is the day we lon« have looked 
paatiny gamut long ago 

hath all ro long detained you 

1 stay too long from her 

and R'j long am I, at tlic leaHt — iv. i 

which hatli an long lovcl me — iv. 2 

trickii eleven and twenty long — iv. '.! 

I have watclie<l so long that I — iv. 2 

bring our homei) unto I>jng-lane end — iv. 3 

to Dtav him not too long — iv. 4 

ton of mine, whicli long I havcnotneen — iv. .0 

need none, iHi long a« 1 live — v. 1 

at la»t, thougli long, our jarring — v. 2 

time a« long again would Ije filled. Winter'tTate, i. 2 

to tell, he longH f>i!ec Ilia eou — i. 2 

nay, let me have 'ti I long — i. 2 

•» long ax nature will hear up (rr/y ) — iii. 2 

I'll not be lonir. licfore I call 

and -avour, all the winter long 

gcarce any joy di<l ever bo long live .. — 

•o long could I aland by — 

there «hchad not lx:en long Comiily of lirrori, 

for with long travel I am ktiff. — 

on' you u«c these blows long — 

rides me, and I long for grass — 

unfinishi.-d ma<lc mc stay thus long .. — i 
you tiKiught our love would last too long — 



iii. 3 



have held him here too long 

a long BfKion. Why Dromio frfp.) .. 

you may nrove it by my long ears. . . , 

I long to Know tlic truth 

I long, thot we were safe and sfjuiid. , 

how (ring iiiith this jKMiiessiun 

long since, thy Imsband 

service ttiat long since I did thee .... 

after so long grief, such nativity I .... 

shall not be long but I will 

tlie night is long, that never 

I havc'live<l long enough 

by long and vehement suit I was .... 

should lie as merry as the day is long 

our sorrows, and ere long, I doubt. . . . 

two long ilays' journey, lords, or e'er 

and he, long trailed in it, makes 

fever that liatli troubled me so long .. 

you have winhed v> long, are cast .... 

and longs to enter in 

ttiat vow a long and weary 

how long a time lies in one 

njust I not serve a long apprenttcehood 

more tiian things long [>ast 

small showers la«t long, but sudden.. 

fnr sleefiing England long time have I 

&t onci; a Uft long witiiered flower.... 

liow long «h«ll I be ratient? irep.) 

aVa long fmrted mother with 

til us long have we stfiod to 

whose colours he had fought so long 

and long live Henry, of that name .. 

long mayst thou live in Richard's .. 

of woeful ages lon;j ago betid 

I'll not be lon({ IfChinu 

no long staff, sixiienny strikers.. 

how long hast thou t'j serve 

h y'r laily, a long leaw; for 

• re I lead this life long 

liow long is't ago, ./ack. since 

v> frctfuf, you cannot live long 

of a culm world, ond a long peace.... 

I fear we shall sta^ too long 

t» lon!f as, out of limit 

t/jo inoireet for long c^mtinuancc .... 

held tlie king so long in his 

shortness Ijasely , were too long 

we breathe to<i long; come, cousin . . 
fought a long hour by .Shrewsbury clofik 
a long loan for a [KKir lone woman.. 2 H« 
ere long they should call me madam? 
sir John you loiter licre too long .... 

but he did long in vain 

which, long ere this, we riffered 

no. no; he cannot lonfj hold out .... 

will not stay so long till his 

1 stay to*! long by thee 

immortally, long guard it yoursi .... 

and a merry heart lives long-a 

health and long life to you master. . 

I have long dreamed of such 

I long t/i hear it 

and make you long become It ! 

faith, I will live BO long as I may .... 
no, by my troth, not long; for we.... 

that IS tlie breff and the long 

what a long night is this! 

longB for morning, fie longs U> eat. . 
he longs not for the dawning as we do 
why do you stay xi long, my lords .. 
else, ahamc will be too long 



— » iv. 1 

— iv. 3 



King John, i. 1 



— IV. 2 



AHenryiy. ii. 1 

— ii. < 

— ii. 4 



— li. I 

— ii. 1 

— ii. 3 

— Iv. I 

— iv. 4 

— iv. 4 

— Iv. 4 

— iv. 4 
— v. 3 (song) 

— v. 3 

— V. s 
..HrnryV. i. I 

— i. 2 

— ii. 1 



I/)NO— as long as It pleases his urace ,. Henry r. Iv. 7 

so long as your majesty is an hfincst — Iv. 7 

hath from France too long been chased — v. 2 

iiMi famous to live long! \llrnri/l'l, i. I 

but long I will not lie Jack-out-of-oflice — i. I 

my lord, methinks, is very long in talk — i. 2 

intend to have it, ere long 1,3 

{irove iKit masculine ere mng ii. i 

ong time tliy shadow liatii ii. .•? 

my liiiiha with long imprisonment .. — ii. A 

long ul'li-r tliiif, when Henry ii, j> 

witli long conlinuantx* in — ij. ft 

I trust ere long Uj choke thee — i i. 2 

ere it Is; long, or else reproach ....,, iii. 2 

that hath so long lieeii resident iii. 4 

long sinra we were res'ilvcd iii, 4 

where I horie ere long t/j t>c i v, I 

for Bhe hath lived t/x) long — v. 4 

long live '|uecn Margaret , iHmryl'J. i. I 

etuiiied so long, sat in the council-house — i. 1 

Frania; will I* lost ere long — i. 1 

BO long as breath <lid last — i. 1 

what, hast tliou Ijeen long blind — ii. 1 

how long lia«t thou >x;eni)lind? — ii. I 

tliis, and bear'st BO long?. — ii. | 

my lord, I long tij hear it at f^ull .... ii. 2 

long live our irfjvereign IJichard .... — ii. 2 

s<) long as I am loyal, true — ii. 4 

I long fi see my [iriwn _ ii. 4 

I will remedy this gear ere long — iii. 1 

my liege, that I have staid BO long .. — iii. I 

would have stayed in France lU) long — iii. 1 

by staying there BO long, till all — iii. 1 

and fought sr> long, till t)mt his — iii. I 

weerw, that thou dost live wj long .... — iii. 2 

the l><:nt sliall lie ae lon^; again as.... — iv. 3 

long sitting t<j determine iKxjr — iv. 7 

as Ido long and wish U> be u enhject — iv. 9 

God knows, how long it is X have .... — v. 3 

long live king Henry! (rfp.) 'AHi-nnjl't. i. I 

and long liereafter Bay unto his child — ii. 2 

uncrown him, erc't be long (r<?/(. iv. I) — iii. 3 

1 long, till Edward fall by war's .... — iii. 3 

v> long OS H/lward is tli.v constant — iv. 1 

shall have more wars, Ijefore't Ix: long — iv. 

long live Kdward tlie fourth! — iv. 7 

long mayst tliou live, t*^ tjear — v. 4 

iinpris'jnment shall not he long Richard til. i. 1 

kcfit an evil (liet long — i. I 

but I will not keep her long — i. 2 

I have Ux> long iK/rne your blunt — i. 3 

long mayst thou live U> wail — i. 3 

long die thy happy days Ijefore — i. 3 

I long with all my heart to see — ii. 4 

BO long a growing, and BO leisurely .. — ii. 4 

would long ere this have met US — iii. 1 

they say, do ne'er live long — iii. I 

without chara/;t€rfl, fame lives long .. — iii. 1 

but long X cannot stay there — iii. 2 

I liave been long a eleer>er — iii. 4 

he longs to see your hca/l — iii, 4 

tile preccilent was full as long a doing — iii. 6 

long live king Richard, X;ngland'8 .. — iii. 7 

hath he Bfj long held out with me .... — iv. 2 

I should not live long after I eaw .... — iv. 2 

but how long shall that title, ever — iv. 4 

long fairly (.hall her sweet life last? (rep.) — iv. 4 

as long as hell, and Richard — iv. 4 

which SI) long sundered friends should — v. 3 

long kept in IJrctagne at our — v. 3 

that long hath frowned Ufion — v, 4 

Kngland hath long been mad — v. 4 

that she may long live here — v. 4 

a fellow in a long motley coat ..Henry fill, (prol.) 

it's long, and it may be said, it reaches — i. 1 

not loii^ before your highness gjied to — i. 2 

a long time out of play, may bring ,. — 1,3 

as the long divorce of steel tiillB on me — ii. I 

the last hour of my long weary life .. — ii. i 

that so long have slept ufKin ii. 2 

having lived so long with her li. 3 

and we forgetful in our long absence ii. 3 

a queen, (or long have dreamed BoJ ., — ii, 4 

X nave Binke long; b« pleases] — ii. 4 

his love twj, long ago: I am old iii. 1 

have I lived thus long,— (let me .... iii. 1 

by my S'jul, your long c'«it, priest. ... — iii, 2 

farewell, a long farewell, tf) all — iii. 2 

hath in secrecy long married iii. 2 

I have not long to trouble thee iv. 2 

how long her fa/?e is drawn? iv. 2 

that so long, have followed — iv. 2 

say, his long trouble now is parsing . . iv, 2 

from your allairs I hinder you t'xj hing — v. 1 

X long to have this young one ma/Ie.. — v. 2 

prosjicroiis life, long, and eVer happy — v, 4 
his evasions have ears thus Um^.Troilui^Creii. ii. 1 

X long to hear hriw they six;d't<j-dav — iii. 1 

though they lje long ere they are wixied — iii. 2 

f) gtxxl occasion ti) lie long, as you .. iv. 1 

in calm: and, BO long, health iv. I 

we do, and long to know each other . . iv. 1 

doth long to see unarmed iv. .0 

that haBt BO long walked _ iv. .0 

X have not seen you long rinion o/Aihem, I, 1 

hath served me long; to build 1. 1 

and long live your lordship! 1, 1 

long may he five in fortunes! 1,1 

and call him to long[>eace I, 2 

thougivest so long, 'riinon, I fear me 1,2 

the detention of long sini* due debts ii. 2 

that, not long ago, one of his men iii. 2 

will not recoiiiiieiiBe this long stay .. — Iii. tf 

live loatlicd, and long, most smiling — iii, 6 

a madman s^> long, now a forjl iv. 3 

long live BO, and s<j die! X am quit ., iv, 3 

my long Hickness. of health, and living — v. 2 

and laBt B'i long enough! v, 2 

you ore long aUiut it Co'iolanui.S. I 

how long is t since? _ i, 6 



LON 

I/ONO— how lnngcontlnue<] Corlotanm, 11. 3 

that prefer a noble life lx;fore a long — iii. I 

X >hal I ere long have knowledge v. I 

B'unc death more long in tjieelatorship — v. 2 

for you, Ix; that you are, long — v, 2 

a kiss long as my exile — v. 3 

I have sat t'x> long. Nay, go not .... — v, 3 

do you hold me here so long? JuUiuCmtur, i, 1 

Antony tiiat revels long o' nights.... — li, 2 

I will not hold thee long: if I do live — iv. 3 

crying, long live! hail. Cicsar! _ v,l 

t^i live wj lod^, to Bee m.v best — v, 3 

X love long life lx:lter than flgs ..Antoriy ^Cteo. I. 2 

it cannot be thus long, the sides — i. 3 

that long time have been barren .... — ii. i 

rogue, thou hast lived t^Kj long — M. !> 

he'cunnot like her long — iii. 3 

her face in mind? is it long or round? — Iii. 3 

and serving you BO long — iii. 3 

approach, ting ere she did apiiear.... — iii. 6 

together, like friends long loBt — iv. lO 

the long day's task is done — iv. 12 

kind Cnarmian; Iras, long farewell.. — v. 2 

lirjw long is this ago? Cynhtline, I. I 

as long a term as yet we have — i. 2 

measured liow long a f'lol you were.. i. 3 

for BO long as he could make — i. 4 

have I not been tliy puj/il long? — i. 6 

longs after for the garb-jgc — 1.7 

that have stj long att<;iided thee — 1.7 

blessed live you long! a lady to tlie.. — 1,7 

how long is t Binr* she went _ Iii, .5 

after lon<{ absemx', such is yours — iii, 6 

abuiliite ciinmission: long live Cassarl — iii, 7 

we'll not be long away Iv, 2 

. long is it since I saw him — iv, 2 

did make my way long forth — iv, 2 

powers in motion, that long to move — iv. 3 

remaining BO long a ixxir unknown ., — iv, 4 

the time seems long; their bl'xyl ,,.. iv, 4 

vi-ho deserved Ki long a breeding ,,.. — v, 3 

over-roasted ratlier; really long ago., v. 4 

and honour live lord Titus long. TiluiAndronieui, i. 2 

long live lord Titus, my lx;loved .... 1.2 

and sav, loni; live our emperor! (rep.) — 1. 2 

whom thou in triumph long hath.... — ii, I 

liave ma/le him noted long — ii. 3 

not lifi; tliat I have begged so long . . — ii. 3 
thou ha«t stayed us here Uxt long ... 
the fountain shall we ga/e so long . 
X read it in the grammar long ago , 

servile ffxitinaii.all daylong 

long have I l)een forlorn 

was, with long use, awiount nosin,ft 
this long's [_Col. Kni. -'longti'] the text 



— iii. I 

— iv. 2 

— V. 2 

— V. 2 
■elei, i. (Gow.) 
— ii.fGow.) 

— ii. 



we sit too long on trifles, and waste 

with flngerB, Jijng, small, white as.. — iv. (Gow.) 

would Bcrve after a long voyage — iv. 6 

how long have you been at this (rep.) .. iv. 6 

now do I long tiy hear how you — v, 3 

long in our wiurt have made Lear, i, 1 

how long Iiave you lx;en a sectary — i, 2 

the hedge Bparrow fed tlie cuckoo bo long — i. 4 

shall not lie a maid long, unletB — 1,5 

been Tom's f<xxl for seven long year — iii. 4 (rung) 

X will not fx; long from .you — iii.fj 

if she live long, and in the end — iii. 7 

BO long as we can say, this is the worst .. — iv. I 

ere long you are like to hear — iv. 2 

not ha' been zo long as 'tis by a vortiiight iv. 6 

wake the king! he hath slept long iv. 7 

the wonder is, he liath endured BO long .. v. 3 

never see BO much, nor live BO long — v. 3 

give me my long sword, ho! Itotneo^JuUel, i. I 

ah me! soil hours seem long — i. I 

you lived at (xJds BO long _ 1.2 

how long is it now to Lammas-tide? — 1. 3 
wagonsjKikes made of longspinncrs' legs — i. 4 

how long is't now, Bincc last yourself — i. i 

till twelve is three long hours — ii. 5 

moderately; long love doth so _ ii. 6 



ill. 5 
iv. 1 



I Ii0|ic, thou wilt not ke<;p him long — 
t>e not BO long to S|X:ak ; 1 long to die — 

and these lips have long been separated — iv. 6 

have I tliought long t<j see this — )v. 5 

not well married, that lives married long Iv. 5 

how long hath he lx:en there? — v. 3 

is not s'l long as is a tedious tale .... — v. 3 

long live the king! Bernardo? Ilamtel.i. I 

birdof dawning singeth all night long .. — i. I 

very like, very like; stayed it long? — 1.2 

X stay t<xi long; but here my father come» — i. 3 

long stayed he so: at last a little — ii. I 

that we much did long to see you — ii. 2 

speak of that; that do I long fo hear — ii. 2 

this is t<;0 long. It shall to the barber's — ii. 2 

makes calamity of BO long life — iii. I 

that I have longed long f) redeliver — iii. i 

so long? Nay, then let the devil wear .. — iii. 2 

how long hath she been thuB? — iv. S 

nettles. daises, and long purples — iv. 7 

but long it could not lie. till that her — iv. 7 

how long hast thou Ixcn a grave-maker v. 1 

long's that since? Cannot .\ou tell that? — v. 1 

how long will a man lie i' the earth — v. 1 

tis not king after but I will wear Othello, i. I 



we lose it not, s<j long as we can smile .. 1.3 

that L>e«<Iemona should long continue .. — 1.3 

the one as long as the other M, 3 

you have kn>>wii him long ill, 3 

that iiolicy muy either last BO long — iii. 3 

long live she so! and long live vou iii. 3 

how long ago. and » hen he ha(h — . iv. 1 

but now he spake, after long seeming dead — v. 2 

and hold him long, it shall he his v. 2 

'LONG— that t/i great ones '\ona%. Mrai. for .\feai. 11. 2 

all this coil is 'long of you Mid.N.', Dream, iii. 2 

'tis "long of you that spur mc .... Lore'iL.l.ml, ii. 1 
'longs to women of all fashion ..Winler'i Tale, Iii. 2 
and of nations, 'long to him ff;>ir|^ V.xi.t 



LON 

LONG-aU "long of this vile trait^. I Henry Vl. iv. 3 
^Z?, all of So/.ers.t and his delay. • - ^, !- ) 

^c•^(.^■"^'Jtlus•lonssthl 

T.uir'iiville is one. Know you the, 
iT, Nonnandy saw I this LonHav.lle - 
wimt, Lon^aviUe!. and '^'l' i • .Jfne . 
would tlieiins. Biron, ^"^ l/:'™ej;,''ake 
T .iiu'aville did never sonnet tor nti saKB 
gen t?e Longaville. where lies thy pain? • 
?(i me sent LongaviUe • ";•.*' 



[ 454 ] 



..Lov 



yri.\v.\ 



.Lear^ iv. 6 
.. - V. 3 



T nNP bo\t-o r lonV/boa side .ithnry VI. iv 
loNGER-holditnolonger lempesi,iu - 

iL^jE^St^Spediii;^;:::::: - in.. 

longer than I prove loyal..... _ j,^, , 

if he mend, he is no longer dishonest - . i 

I am to liuU here a little longer - .i- •( 

will you stay no longer? _ j;j .^ 

I'll not stay a jot longer j.j 3 

drawn one to a longer vovage. j , 

if you tarry longer, I shall give - 

no longer staying but to give ■• .. 

in liis Reprieve, longer or shorter _ _ _ 

and hold no longer out _ ^ , 

no longer s.esB.m._hold^;'.Pon^ iongeV.-. WuoA Ado, i. j 



LONGER— a twelvemonth longer . . . . 
and will no longer have it be delayed 
if I could bear it longer, and not iail 

world stretch him out longer 

and the longer liver tal«e all ....«■>" 

and I'll no longer be a Capulet - • ^ 

to occupy the argument no longer. ... - ■ ' 

is longer than the tale thou doet .... - ". » 
T rinrPKtnv no longer. Go, get thee hence — v. 6 
Jf .eason%^uld Imve mou?ned longer ..Hamlet, i. 2 

tell a hundred. Longer, longer - i- ^ 

no longer than they can sing?....... - "-J 

until my eyelids will no longer wag • . . • — v- .', 
I will indeed, no longer endure it ... . Olhell^, v. . 

LONGEST-the longest night .. ''™'^^";5„,!'; ii i 
when nights are longest there. . . . Meas.lorMe:i>,.\\. i 

I^mt I may longest ifeep tliy........«.c/.a,.J //. in. 

nn 1nn"est Way Shall have tlie longest. . . — ,„ ^- ' 
^iKLt leagues mal.e short /.^W« IV 4 Gow.) 

•I^ONGETH— 'loiigeth to a lover s.ram.>.g'o/i/>. v. i 
'' udi auste^Mjy aApnge^h to a lather ^^ ^-,^^^ iv- 3 

ylV - ■ 



LOO 

LOOK— look you restore Meat. for. \f eat. y. 

see thee, ere I die, look pale with — Much Ailo, ;. 

I look for an earthquake too then — ;• 

and who? which wiiy looks he? — .»• 

how tartly tliat gentleman looks'. — !!• 

so you walk softly, and look sweetly — n. 

will you look to those things I told. . — n. 

appoint lier to look out of her lady s — n. 

look you for any other issue? — i'.' 

fair, or I'll never look on her — .;>• 

for look where Beatrice, like — lu. 

misprising what they look on. 



indeed he looks younger than he did 
methinks, you look \Cith yom- eyes.. 



— iii. 2 
_ iii. 4 

— iv. 1 

— iv. I 
_ iv. I 

iv. 2 



LONG-EXPERT ENClD time . . ^o,, 



— V. 1 



.i, 5 
ii. 4 



some occasion may 

have solved it with « wf.— 

Cuoid is no longer an archer ...•..■• 
Vr'l^ftiiou wilt U longer argum 



ii. 1 



or. If tiiou wilt iu"i"""sv, ■■=••„„,. _ iv. 1 

vea and I will weep awhile longei . . " , 

nor lo °er stay in your curst company - • ^ 

^"; legs arl loLeiVough, to n'Y„rirLorf, v! 2 



if I serve the Jew any longer 
I'll stay no longer question..... 
I will iio longer endxire it (rep.) 

no longer Celia, but Aliena 

I'll tarrv no longer with you... _ _, 

' l9"ser by Uiiiiknigjr^^j^ ••••;; , ^„,, „.,^ ;; . 



iy. 1 

you Like it, \. 1 

_ i. 3 

— iii. 2 



no longer uv li-hii'^>"& v -f' .: 
the longer kept, the less wprh 



fl, ?,"? tay!'(i..e sevenni.htlonger. .Km(e,'.T. 1. 
ds"^at sir will vet stay longer.... - •; 

'"heinia Slavs hfie longer (rep.).... — ^; : 



rr sMui ,'Hi ^aze on t.. 

ucr wc aid not retain. .ComfJy oj F.rorTs,_ 



ii. 2 
iii. '2 



^l^eru^JougJ^wijlil^atool 

ehe'U burn a week longer. .. • • . _ ^^^ ^ 

XS^f^SXl^?;itwo^id:::::::../«.^,ivj 

i^^t:^^:?ii!ia;?»couidwash:^.^.j.;u.. 

here is no longer stay • • " „ , y i. <i 

fiMit lon-er tlian he sees reason Mlimyn . i- '■ 

ill be noionger guilty of this sm . . . . - i>- \ 
1 can no longer brook thy vanities . . - \- ^ 
the way, staging no longer question..2 /Jc;.,-/ / < • . 

ihfs world no longer he a stage - i- ' 

no lonoer ago than Wednesday .... 
Snd when I cannot live any longer 
for wc no longer are defensible .... 

for I can stay no longer. _ _ 

no longer on saint Dennis.... ...' 

Talbot. I'll no longer trust tliee .... - V'- 

mv spiritcan no longer bear, .>,r^„,,,r; i' 

f I longer stay, we sTiall Ijegin. . . . ..UJcmy l.^ 

but three days longer, on the pam .. - .J". 

;i^!;j::i^'^rt'^Keh:buidui«;.:3H.,,--.r/.ii. 

stay we no longer dreaming ........ — • 

not willing any longer conference .. - !>. 

we'll no longer stay r'"'!' ii 

fore-slow no longer, make we hence - i- 
a dav longer than a wonder lasts. •.•.,— .„" 
can no longer hold me patient . . . . R^cM .U.. 
longer telling than thy kindness .... - 'v 



lONG-IMPHISONED thoughts 
LONGING-longing for that !ood.I'«.oGen.^>^e,. 1.7 

upon ray longing journey -K'ten, niM ii' 4 

sbC^^s^r^r bii^ur^sai^^?^t:;.|: , 

andlon|ing,asIsaiJ,forprunes .... - -1 

tliat longing I have been sick for. . . ... — , .!!• % 

diangeallehonging, and liking ..^»»ouL,fce,(, i.u 2 
sight I have a woman's lon^ng.. )n..to.s/>Te.iv. i 
no further than y^n'y .l""-'"?.- ;;■/,;; l'(v'.f,i,i 3 
I have a woman's longing ;.■ C'°;,'.' ,f,,'^,,7";/,, ', " 1 
sir, you have saved my longing.. V" °' ^'a r/m ii 6 
longing for what it had not ....Antony (fUeo. lu. 

I .havelmmortai longmgs ,n me ; • • • -^ „,;7. „_ ^t I 
nice longings, slanaers — ,. . . j >, 

quenched 0! hope, not longmg v. o 

we doour longing stay, to hear •••••• -^^.f/j^'J/'ivJ 

•LONGING-honour 'longing to our ■■fj!''//' 'Y ^ 
the many to them \o'"S^'"S-----y--;''^"'H''^''^l-A 

LONG-LEGGED spinners . . Mtd.N. '-^"^ "•. .^ j-'^Vg' 
LONG'ST-who long'st like me (rep.XCymbeime, . 2 

T5?^^^Lf-soXV.%"onT/-«i^^ 
LONG-TAIL--cut and long-tail . . M^ry mrej in. 4 
LONG-TONGUED Warwick? -■-^"^'■^^- 1 

a long-tongued babbling gossip?., '''"'f'' ''','■, 'l' \ 

LONG-USURPED royalty '^"'Z ',' iV 4 

LONG-VANISHED days Hf.-!/; . . ' 

LONG-AVINDED-thee lon^-wmded. 1 H<--nii' ' ■ i ■ ^ 
LOOFED-once being loofed . . .-inlony ^ t'.o. i . 8 
LOOK-I do not love to look on Tnnpeit, . ^ 

Lord, how it looks about!.. ...... ...... — ..• " 

how iush and lusty tire grass looks ! . . . . - iV i 

yond' huge one, looks like 

you look wearily ,' ' ' ' ; " ^i "„' " 

crowns, and ever harmless looks . 

you do look my son 

that yet looks on me 

I pray you, look in — 

look down, you gods, and on ..... 

look sir, look sir; here are more, 
as you look to have my pardon . •.••■■• " 
coy looks, with heart-sore sighs..ri™G«!. 0/ 

that, when I look on you 

from your ladyship s looks .... 

locked in her crytal looks 

to have a look of such 

we look to hear from you .,. .... 
when I look on her perfections 
his looks are my soul stood? . 

1 gave him gentle looks 



iii. 1 



v. 1 



_ iii. 1 



oflU 



iii. 


1 


IV. 


ii 


iv. 


2 


IV 


2 


iv 


« 


IV 


» 


iv 


3 


IV 


3 


IV 


3 


V 


2 



.Henry I', ii. 

_ in. 3 ] 
[Henry V I. \. 



X gave iiii" p^"^*^.V ■„ 
unless I look on Silvia 

no day for me to look upon — 

not live to look on your grace - 

Ipt mp look on that again ;••,*.' 

I wm no? look upon your master's lines - 
I had rather w int than look on them - 

for my meed, but one fair look - 

undergo for one calm looli t _ 

look to the boy _ 

look up; speak -^y „,-, 

you look very lU ■ mi,ij ^ 

when he looks so merrily 

well, I will look further into t - 

your cat-a-mountain looks 

will tliey yet look after thee? . . . . . ... 

me do look, he shall clapper-de-claw - 
YOU will also look that way ........■• 

?n-favoured faults looks liandsome . . - 
look on, master Fenton : this is ... ... — 

will look some linen for your head .. - 
as ever I did look upon . .,...■■ 
of order look you scour with ji 
go, look after him . . . . . . . • . . ■ . 

and the fool shall look to the . 

Hiat all that look on him ^ve him - 

what a deal of scorn looks beautitul . . 



111. i 
iv. 4 
iv. 4 
V. 2 



111. 4 
iii. 4 
iv. 2 



.'Twelflh .yigl'f, i 



nay. we must longer 



Wnecl Henrynil.i.i 



inav he live longer tlian 1 have. 

honour's train ""s logger than his .... - ! • 

that longer you desire the court .... - y 

to have given me longerlite.......... . 

will liid? our ioys no longer. ^>'>'''"P„^'2'T{v 

am longer to live most weary '^<'""'2'""' ' v 

v"u Zft not stay here longer.. ..^n«".ya^tl.<..,. 

I can behold no longer \v ., , 

mav ban" no longer on me •■ .. •> \ 

Teof him no longer than yesterday - • 

a dav, or two, longer: if you seek ..Cyn,beit»e, 111. 1 
lookout: no longer exercise, upon.... - . 
see that you take no longer days.T.dis -<"^'?;; 'V '^ 
forty davs longer we do respite you .... P« "■'"•'; ' 
was nothest linger for him to make - ii.(Oow.^ 

not mindi iig longer to withhold — • 

it shall no longer grieve 



than sir Toby to look to me, 
and so look to thyself . . . . . • ■ • 

kill one anotlicr by the look 

and pants, and looks imie 

look then to be well «l\"7,,--;c •■■«■,•/„, 
and do look to know what doth..jUfas. 

to look into the bottom • 

look into master Froth here, sir 

look in this gentleniau s iace 

look upon his honour .... •:••■••• 

mercy is not itself, that ott looks so.. 

like a prophet, looks m a glass . ..... 

will proclaim thee Angelo; look toi t 

but t'hat you have a hanging look. . . . 

look, here's the warrant, Claudio . . . . 

therefore! I beseech you, look iorward 

most bounteous sir. look 

till he did look on me 

let me look upon him 

look that you love your wite 



iii. 4 (chal.) 



— V. 1 
forSleas. i. 1 



this looks not like a nuptial 

dost thou look up? 

but on this travail look for greater .. 

I do not like thy look . . . • 

as I am an honest man, he looks pale 
would know your wronger, look on me 

we look for you to-morrow ._ — ■ • • 

if my cousin do not look exceeding.. _— v. 4 
must with his judgment look . . Mid.N. sDream, 1. 1 
fair Hermia, look you arm yourself — ". j 

O teach me how you look — V' 

love looks not with the eyes — }■ ' 

let the audience look to their eyes . . — .1. ^ 

then slie waking looks upon — }}■ f 

look on thee. And I am sick («■».) .. — \\- f 

when all the world is here to look — ii- ^ 

and look thou meet me ere the hrst. . — 1;. ;" 
a sweet look from Demetrius' eye ... . — .;!.>• 

and we ouglit to look to it — "i- ' 

a calendar! look in the almanack .. — 

the moon, methinks, looks witli — 

a murderer look, so dead, so grim (rep.) — 
yet you, the miu-derer, look as bright — 
and Helena of Atliens look thou hnd — 

I go, I go, look how I go — 

cotinterfeit sad looks, make mows . . — 

from eacli otlier look thou lead — 

lest day should look their shames upon — 

nor look me in the face — 

by day's approach look to be visited — 

eve-y man look o'er his part — 

seen them shiver and look pale. — 

so near to make a man look sad — •.. - 

Blind the eyesight of his look . . . . Love s L. Lost, 1. 1 
not be deep searched with saucy looks 

sign, sir, that he will look sad 

but what they look upon ■•■•• 

now will I look to his remuneration 

how deformed dost tliou look ! 

be a claw, look how he claws him . . 
I will look again on the intellect .... 
you may look pale, but I should blusU 
dares look upon tlie heaven of her . . 

she learn not of her eye to look 

to look like lier, are chimney-sweepers 

and pore, and thereon look ? 

why looks your highness sad? 

why look you pale? 

that look into these faults 

so did our looks ,••:■■,%• 

mistress, look on me, behold . . . . 

Mariana's nose looks red and rai. , . 

look not well, signior Antonio ..tlercn. of I tntce, 1. 1 
how like a fawning publican he looks! — 1- 3- 

why look you, how you storm! . ..... — 

out-stare the sternest eyes that look — 

do I look like a cudgel, or a hovel-post — 

in my pocket, look demurely — 

Jessica, my girl, look to my — 

mistress, look out at window — 

you do not look on me, for I am .... . — 
let good Antonio look he keep his day — 

YOU shall look fairer, ere I give — 

let him look to his bond (rep.) — 

look on beauty, and you shall see. . . . — 

yet look, how far tlie, substance — 

can look as swiftas yours — 

gaoler, look to him (rep.)..... — 

look, what notes and garments — 

yes, truly: for look you, the sms.. .. — 

let me look upon the bond ..... .... . 

more elder art tliou than thy _look~«l 

look, how the floor of heaven is — ■ ■ ■ 

it looks a little paler .....-- 'j\,,o,,Like il \ 1 

and thou were best look to t AjyouLiUe if, . 1 

and thou must look pale and wonder - • 1 

too Yonng: yet he looks successfully - i- - 

nnd'tlierefore, look you call inc. — •■ ■' 

wheiSe do you look upon that poor - ■ 

thougli I look old, yet I am strong and - . ., 

been all this day to look you - !!■. 

what ! YOU look merrily •,.../■■;,••■••■ : : ; ' 

but look to it; find out thy brother.. - -J 

eve which in this forest looks — ; • ■ 

for look here wliat I tinind on — ■; 

looks he as fieslily as he did — •; 

in the brook; look but m .j.- : 

why do YOU look on me.' ..... ••. ,..• ; 

frowning looks, I'll sauce her (rep.).. - . ■ 

sliepherdess, look on him better - • 

but do not look for further — '.' ■ 

do look on blood. There is more (rep.) - . 

come, yon look paler and paler - n. 

it is to lonk into happiness through .. — v. 

lookuponhim, love liiin ...■•.... jii\ir^ii i' 

virtue's steely bones look bleak in ... . .4"^" ell, . 

it looks ill, it eats dryly........ .' 

he did look far into the service - 

^.'S^K^^n'f^^^ipp- = i: 

whv, he will look upon his boot 

look on liis letter, madam 

and, bv midniglit, look to hear . .... . 

1 I must go look my twigs: he shall . . 



_ Y. 2 (song) 



11.8 
ii.9 
iii. 1 



iii. 5 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 



— 111. 



— 111. 



LOO 



[ 455 ] 



LOO 



liOOK—noy, look not 60 upon tne All'stVell^iv.a 

I iiorcoive, sir, l>y the general's looks — iv. 3 

so, look obout yon; know you — iv. 3 

for he looks lilie a poor tleciiyed — v. 2 

he look5 well ou't. I nm not — v. 3 

her bii?iiu'ss looks in her with — v. 3 

whv (lit > on look so strnnge npon.. .. — v. 3 

Idiili ill ihc I'hronicles Tamiiigo/Sh. 1 (indue.) 

well, mill In.ik into them all .... _ 1 (indue.) 

t.ies I, i,ik tlin>n,,^h the over-leather — 2 (indue.) 

on tlicni t" look, and praetise — i. I 

master, master, look about you — i. 2 

lo.ik so pali'V for fear, I promise (it/j.) — ii. 1 

I'll say, she looks OS elear as — ii. I 

you must not look so sour ()f;i.) .... — ii. 1 

thou canst not look askance — ii. I 

methinks he looks as thiiU!,'h he were — iii. 1 

by desrees we mean to look into .... — iii. 2 

nay, look not big, nor stump — iii. 2 

which way to stand, to look, to speak — iv. I 

for then she never looks upon her.. .. — iv. 1 

in women, not their beauteous looks — iv. 2 

thy spirits look cheerfully upon me — iv. 3 

if this be not that you look for — iv. 1 

every thing I look on secmeth preen — iv. 5 

see where he looks out of the window — v. 1 

look not pale, Bianca — V. 1 

but love, fair looks, and true — v. 2 

eome, sir pa^'c, look on me with .. miter'sTale,i. 2 

you look, as if you held — i. 2 

"yon, my lords, look on lier, mark — ii. I 

till the heavens look with — ii. 1 

I'll he gone; look to your babe — ii. 3 

nassaiie, look for no less than death.. — iii. 2 

look down and see what death is doing — iii. 2 

to liiok that way thou wert — iii. 2 

the ekies look grimly, and threaten .. — iii. 3 

get aboard; look to thy bark — iii. 3 

out, look thee here boy; now bless .. — iii. 3 

which look niKni his removedncss ,. — iv. I 

when the kite builds look to lesser .. — iv. 2 

how would he look, to see his work . . — iv. 3 

that makes her blood look ont — iv. 3 

he looks like sooth: he says — iv. 3 

the gifts, she looks from me — iv. 3 

but looks on alike: wilt please . 

why look you so upon me? 

liftnp thy looks; from my 

I will but look upon the liedge 

once more to look upon 

measured, to look upon yon. . . . 
dear, look up; though fortime. 



— IV. 3 

— iv. 3 

— iv. 3 

— iv. 3 

— v. 1 

— v. 1 

. , ., — V. 1 

look on now. I thought of her (rep.) — v. 1 

which my daughter came to look upon — v. 3 

make her do, I am content to look on — v. 3 

strike all that look upon with marvel — v. 3 

vou gods, look down, and from your — v. 3 

look upon my brother — v. 3 

between your holy looks my ill suspicion — v. 3 
pity from our threatning loo)s.s, Comedjj of Errojs^i. 1 

starve for a merry look — li. 1 

a sunny look of his would soon repair — ii. 1 

fashion your demeanour to my looks — ii. 2 

ay, ay, Antipholus, look strange .... — ii. 2 

look sweet, speak fair, become — iii. 2 

and let her read it in thy looks — iii. 2 

sweet love, as look on night — iii. 2 

sir, I did not look so low — iii. 2 

how flcry and how sharp he looksl .. — iv. 4 

how pale and wan he looks! — iv. 4 

ne'er may I look on day — v. 1 

wliy look you strange on me? — v. 1 

"We'll look to that anon — V.I 

what a haste looks throngh hiseyesi .^Macbeth, i. 2 

that look not like the inhabitants ., — i. 3 

look what I have. Show me — i. 3 

if you can look into the seeds of time — i. 3 

look like the time — i. 5 

look like the innocent flower — i. 5 

only look up clear , — i. 5 

to look so green and pale at — i. 7 

look on't again, I dare not — ii. 2 

counterfeit, and look on death itself — ii. 3 

look to the lady — ii. 3 

sleek o'er your rugged looks — iii. 2 

that dare look on that whiehmiglit.. — iii. 4 

you look but on a stool (rfn.) — iii. 4 

now now, Hecate? you look augerly — iii. 5 

yet grace mnst still look so — iv. 3 

heaven look on, and would not take — iv. 3 

look how she rubs her hands — v. 1 

put on your nightgown ; look not so pale — v. 1 

forgive us all! look after her — v. 1 

where got'st thou that goose look? .. — v. 3 

1 must not look to have — v. 3 

remhroke, look to't; farewell KingJohn^\. I 

lest men should say, look, where three — i. 1 

look here upon thy brother Geffrey's — ii. 1 

to look into the blots and stains .... — ii. I 

sirrah, look to't; i' faith, I will — ii, I 

look upon the years of I^ewis — 11.2 

I see a yielding in the looks of France — ii. 2 

what say'st thou, boy, look in — ii. 2 

whv dost thou look so sadly on — iii. I 

look to that, devil! lest that France — iii. 1 

look to thyself, thou art in jeopardy — iii. I 

cousin, look not sad — iii. 3 

and he will look as hollow as — iii. 4 

puts on his prettv looks, repeats .... — iii. 4 

she looks upon them with — iii. 4 

and, U)ok thou stand within the arras — iv. 1 

fear not J ou; look to't — iv. I 

Hubert? you look pale to-day — iv. 1 

even with the fierce looks of — iv. I 

nor look upon the iron angerlj' — iv. I 

he hath a stem look, but a gentle.. .. — iv. 1 

but still to look on yoni — iv. 1 

O now you look like Hubert! — iv. 1 

why look you sad? — v. 1 

you look but on the outside — v. 2 



LOOK— nor never look upon each . . . .Richard II. i. 3 

I mean my children's looks — ii. 1 

high majesty look like itself — ii. 1 

of careful business are his looks! .... — ii. 2 

I never in my life did look on him .. — ii. 3 

look on my wrongs, with an inditfercnt — ii. 3 

moon looks bloody on the earth — ii. 4 

rich men look sacf, and ruffians .... — ii. 4 

why looks your grace so pale? — iii. 2 

have I not reason to look pale and dead? — iii. 2 

look not to the ground, ye favourites — iii. 2 

and kill with looks, infusing — iii. 2 

although thy looks be sour — iii. 2 

and mark km^ Richard how he looks — iii. 3 

yet looks he like a king — iii. 3 

ere the crown he looks for live — iii. 3 

to look so poorly, and to speak — ii i. 3 

that look too lofty in our — iii. 4 

that my sad look should grace — iii. 4 

stand torth and look upon that — iv. I 

that stand and look upon me — iv. 1 

yet look up; behold; that you — v. i 

so many greedy looks of young and old — v. 2 

that he stares and looks so wildly. . . . — v. 3 

beware, look to tiiyself, thou hast. ... — v. 3 

in earnest? look upon his face — v. 3 

leave to look upon my sometimes — v. .'j 

affrighted with their bloody looks.. ..IHcwiy/r. i. 3 

strangers to his looks of love — i . 3 

anon, anon, sir. Look down into — ii. 4 

look to the guests within — ii. 4 

to make mine eyes look red — ii. 4 

of a cheerful look, a pleasing eye .... — ii. 4 

I see virtue in his looks — ii. 4 

henceforth ne'er look ou me — ii. 4 

his cheek looks pale — iii. 1 

I understand thy looks; that pretty — iii. 1 

thy looks are full of speed — iii. 2 

how! Poor? look upon his face — iii. 3 

love thy husband, look to thy servants — iii. 3 

and miscl\ance look big upon — iv. 1 

I can tell you, looks for us all — iv. 2 

why say you so? looks he not for supply — iv. 3 

the day looks pale at liis distemperaLure — v. 1 

to turn your looks of favour — v. 1 

look how we can, or sad — v. 2 

than I did look for of such an — v. 4 

I look to be either earl or duke — v. 4 

so looks the strond, whereon 'iHcnrylV. i. I 

so dead in look, so woe-begone — i. I 

he that looks upon me will take .... — i. 2 

but look you pray, all you tliat kiss — i. 2 

to look with forehead bold and big .. — i. 3 

threw many a northward look — ii. 3 

to look upon the hideous god of war — ii. 3 

therefore captains had need look to it — ii. 4 

and look whether the fiery Trigon .. — ii. 4 

look to the door there, Francis — ii. 4 

by my troth, you look [Coi. -like] well — iii. 2 

for you, rebels, — look to taste — iv. 2 

that you shall look upon when — iv. 4 

my gracious lord, you look beyond . . — iv. 4 

cheer up yourself; look up! — iv. 4 

. so thin, that life looks through — iv. 4 

coming to look on you, thinking .... — iv. 4 

might make tliem look too near .... — iv. 4 

look about, Davy; where are you.. ,. — v. 1 

Bardolph, look to our horses — v. 1 

which cannot look more hideously upon — v. 2 

you all look strangely on me — v. 2 

look who's at door there; hoi — v. 3 

if you look for a good speech now.... — (epil.) 

look back unto your mighty Henry K. i. 2 

strike the Dauphin blind to look on us — i. 2 

look to my chattels, and my moveables — ii. 3 

for, look you, the mines is not (^rep.) — iii. 2 

in a moment look to see the blind — iii. 3 

as in despite, the sun looks pale — iii. 5 

but freshly looks, and overbears .. — iv. ("cho.) 

plucks comfort from his looks ,. .. — iv. (cho.) 

that look to be washed off — iv. 1 

if you look in the maps of the 'orld . . — iv. 7 

it is necessary, look your grace — iv. 7 

the venom of such looks — v. 2 

stern looks, diffused attire i*. , . — v. 2 

I cannot look greenly, nor gasp — v. 2 

that never looks in his glass for — v. 2 

with tlie looks of an empress — v. 2 

whose very shores look pale — v. 2 

presume to look once in the face .... 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

they will look like drowned mice .... — i. 2 

methinks, your looks are sad — i. 2 

let thy looks be stern — i. 2 

meantime, look gracious on thy — i. 2 

let us look in, the sigiit will — i. 4 

one eye thou hast to look to heaven.. — i. 4 

unto Talbot; nay, look up to him.. .. — i. 4 

did look no better to that weighty.... — ii. 1 

for pale they look with fear — ii. 4 

look to it well; and say you are well — ii. 4 

why look you still so stern and tragical? — iii. I 

means no goodness, by his looks — iii. 2 

look on thy country, look on fertile.. — iii. 3 

as looks the mother on her lowly .... — iii. 3 

if they perceive dissension in our looks — iv. 1 

lingering, looks for rescue, you — iv. 4 

look to it, lords; let not his 'lUemyVI. i. 1 

haste away, and look unto the main — ' i. 1 

good king, look to't in time — i. 3 

and look, thyself be faultless — ii. 1 

to look into 'this business thoroughly — ii. I 

with envious looks still laughing .... — ii. 4 

hide thee from their hateful looks. . .. — ii. 4 

that e'er I'll look upon the world .. .. — ii. 4 

did but glance a far-off look — iii. 1 

with dimmed eyes look after him — iii. i 

look not upon me, for thine eyes .... — iii. 2 

look pale as primrose — iii. 2 

I am no loathsome leper, look on me — iii- 2 

look ou the sheets, his hair, you see.. — iii. 2 



LOOK— a thousand pound to look Henry VI, iii. 3 

ot the heavens, look with a gentle eye iii. 3 

look on my George, I am a gentleman — iv. I 

to weep, and look on tills? iv. 4 

look on me well: I have eat no _ iv. 10 

canst outface me with thy looks iv. 10 

fright us with an angry look — y. i 

loiHt in a glass, and call thy imoge .. v. I 

whoae looks bewray her anger 3Heiiry I'l. i. 1 

so looks the pent-up lion o er — i. 3 

not with such a cruel threatening look i. 3 

now looks he like a king! < — j. 4 

whose heovy looks fjretel some — ii. i 

to whom do lions east their gentle looks? — ii. 2 

look on the boy; and let his manly .. — ii. 2 

and look upcm, as if the tragedy — ii. 3 

frowns of war with peaceful looks — ii 6 

yet look to have them buz — ii. 6 

ner looks do argue her replete iii. 2 

likes it not, for she looks Slid — iii. 2 

from the golden time I look fori — iii. 2 

sweet ladies with my words and looks — iii. 2 

look thereibre, Lewis, that bj' — iii. j 

his looks are full of peaceful majesty — iv.fi 

look here, I throw my infamy at thee — v. 1 

look in his j'outh to liave him v. ."i 

plain devil, and dissembling looks../i'icAioc( ///. i. 2 

[A'n^] I cannot flatter, and look fair — i. 3 

trembles not, that looks ou me? — i. 3 

why looks your grace so heavily .... — i. 4 

thy looks are humlile. My voice (rrp.) — i. 4 

why look you pale? w ho sent — i. 4 

I spy some pity in thy looks — i. 4 

look behind you, my lord — i. 4 

look I so pale, lord Dorset, as the rest? — ii. I 

then, masters, look to see a troublous — ii. 3 

who doth not look for night? — ii. 3 

that looks not heavily, and full — ii. 3 

let me die, to look on death no more! — ii. 4 

and look to have it yielded — iii. 1 

I live to look upon their tragedy .... — iii. 2 

unprepared, and look not for it — iii. 2 

his grace looks cheerfully and smooth — iii. 2 

he had shown it in his looks — iii. 4 

look liow I am bewitched — iii. 4 

and Catesby, look that it be done ... . — iii. 4 

his hope in air of your fair looks — iii. 4 

sneak, and look back, and pry on every — iii. 5 

gliastly looks are at my service — iii. S 

look to the drawbridge there — iii. 5 

look back, defend thee, here are — iii. 5 

look for the news that the Guildhall — iii. 5 

and look you get a prayer-hook in .. — iii. 7 

stay yet; look back, with me — iv. 1 

that look into me wnth considerate .. — iv. 2 

your wife's son: well, look to it — iv. 2 

Stanley, look to your wife — iv. 2 

by thatknot, looks proudly on — iv. 3 

never look upon [/C"/,-more behold] thy — iv. i 

look your hea: t be firm, or else — iv. 4 

why look ye so sad ? my heart is (,tep.) — v. 3 

look that my staves be sound . . > — v. 3 

look on my forces with a gracious eye — y. 3 

that frowns on me, looks sadly — y. 3 

shall lessen this big look Henry I'm. i. I 

I read in his looks matter against me — i. ) 

to look on the business present — i. I 

pray, look to't; I put it to your care — i. 2 

look out there, some of you — i. 4 

let them look they glory not in — ii. 1 

all. that dare look into these affairs. . — ii. 2 

how sad he looks! sure, he is — ii. 2 

looks upon the ground, then, lays.. .. — iii. 2 

so looks the chafed lion upon — iii. 2 

how pale she looks, and of an earthy — iv. 2 

now, by thy looks I guess — v. 1 

look there, my lords; by virtue — v. 2 

do you look for ale and cakes here . . — v. 3 

fairer than ever 1 saw her look .. Troihis ^- Cresi . i. 1 

look, how he looks! there's — i. 2 

look you what hacks are on his (rep.) — i. 2 

look well upon him, niece; look you — i. 2 

and how he looks, and how he goes! — i, 2 

ne'er look, ne'er look, the eaglesare gone — i. 3 

those most imperial looks know — j. 3 

nay, look upon him. So I do — ii. 1 

but yet you look not well upon — ii. 1 

he there; that he; look you there — ii. 1 

save these men's looks — iii. 3 

neither gave to me good word, nor look — iii. 3 

her wanton spirits look out at — iv. 5 

which looks like pride, is courtesy .. — iv. 5 

that same that looks so heavy? — iv. 5 

let me look on thee. Behold — iv. ."i 

who neither looks upon the heaven . . — iv. 5 

you look upon that sleeve — v. 2 

one eye yet looks on thee — v. 2 

I'll go look on: that dissembling — v. 4 

my prize; I will not look upon — v, 6 

look in thy Inst work, where Tnnon of Alliens, i. 1 

make thee, and thy state, look ill .... — i. 2 

after distastefid loi^ks, and these .... — ii. 2 

J pr'ythee, man, look checrly — ii. 2 

1 will look you out a good turn — iii. 2 

when he looks out in an ungrateful.. — iii. 2 

to make an ugly deed look fair — iii. 5 

you cannot make gross sins look clear — iii. 5 

that none may look on you! — iii. 5 

let me look back upon thee, O thou .. — iv. 1 

for all her cherubim look — iv. 3 

and these looks of care? — iv. 3 

av, though it look like thee — iv. 3 

but himself, which looks like man .. — v. 2 

look out, and speak to friends — v. 2 

and make bold power look pale Coriolanut, i. 1 

than look upon nis schoolmaster .... — i. 3 

and make my wars on you; look to't — i. 4 

but, with thy grim looks, and the.... — i. 4 

and by his looks, methinks, 'tis warm — ii. !l 

which looks with us to break his neck — iii. 3 



LOO 



3 (paper) 
ii. 4 
iii. 1 



LOOK-and you'll look pale before . . CorMaous, iv. 6 
.hP^ofls look down, and this unnatural - v- i 

if 1 have veiled ray ^°'-'^:-\:w.-- ■■:;■• (. 2 

and I will look on botli mditterently - j- | 

a,ul all the rest look like a ch.dden . . - J 

a.iJ Cicero looks with such ferret .... - 
Cassiushasaleanandhimgrylook^ - ■ 

he looks quite tliroi.gh the deeds ot men - j- ^ 

that Cfflsar looks so sad .•■ • • .• , 

I'll ne'er look you i' tlie face aS;"" •;. _ 53 
you look palfc. aud gaze, and W/t o' .^Jf - • 3 

and look you lay it m tlie praitor s chair - 1. J 

looUsin tlie clouds, scorninsj ........ ..; , 

look in the caendar, and bring rae .. — ;• 
;»k fresh and merrily ; let notom- looks - • 

Btared upon me with ung>■ntle!ouk^-- - 
and look where Publiiis is eoine. . . . 

not immortal, looli about you ..•■ 

boy, if thy lord look well, for he . . 

if then thy spirit look upon us now 

look you lieie, here is hiniself, niauca — ■ 

young bloods look tor a time ot lust . . — '^^ 

and downward look on us . . . . . • • • ■ • „, , ; 

we will not look upon him . . '1" » ',!^,;?„'^'"'^'"™' 
look here, and at thy sovereign lei!.ui(. — 
and let it look like perfect honour .. - ! 

which some did die to look on . 

that make tlieir looks by his ..... ... - ., 

let Antony look over Cajsar f, "fad . • | 

Bir, look well to my husDand s house - 
Herod of Jewry dare not look upon - 
I followed tliat I blush to look upon - 
pray you, look not sad nor make .. - "' 
abusecl by one that looks on feeders? - uj- 

shake thou to lookout.. _ ;;, 

1 look on you, as one that . 

and look on their endeavour • 

they cannot tell, look grimly — ' • 

look out o' the other side _ ^ 

look you sad, friends? .-■.•; ^ 

declining day, or look on thine — 

of this man looks out of lum. 

would gladly look him 1' tlie face ... . — ^ 

but she looks like sleei;, as she r,nui,Mue 

to the bent of tlie king's looks C!/mi;ei(»t, 

look here, love; this diamond ...... 

cracked them, but to look upon him — 
am I one, sir? you look on me ..... . . 

is it fit, I went to look upon hiin .'.... — ! 

or look upon our Romans. . 

let her beauty look through a casement — i 

kills me to look on't :.-•■ ,: 

look for fury not to be resisted — 

how look I, that I should seem...... - 

afoointhemthatlcannotlookthrough — ! 

to me, with a look untender . , 

Bhe looks us like a thing more ... . — 
KO, look after; Pisanio, thou that. . . . — 

fike me, he'll scarcely look on t — '. 

bid the captains look to t _ j 

scarce ever look on blood ■•■•■••• ■ • ; ■ : 

I am ashamed to look upon the holy sun - 1 

but to look back in frown • • . 

gilded pale looks, part, shame, part. . — 
^;an to look the way that they did . . 
look out; no longer exercise upon . . 
naught but beggary and poor looks 
vou look like Romans, and not. . . ... 

under Titus' threatening look. ... /"u 

at my suit, look graciously on him. . 

nor with sour looks atnict nis 

these looks infuse new life m me .... - • 

not be denied: sweet heart, look back - • - 

words, fair looks, and liberality?.... — ■ 

your highness look so pale (rfp.).... — ;• 



[ 456 ] 

' TOOK-sneaking looks to noble Edmund .. Lear, iv. 5 
nilook*^^^ more; lest my brain turn.... - v. 6 

look up a height (rfp.) _ ■ ■ ^ 

K^n'^'s^'i^dUoidyil^hinds" _ iv! 7 

'tis time to look about •„ 

since thy outside looks so fair..... — y" 

SFSnte^l^K^;^:: = • 

at mv poor house, look to behold this - .^ 

I'll Took to like, if looking — !• " 

I'll be a candle holder, and look on 

look to the plate iv\:y"' 

bewitched by the charm of looks — 
look thuu but sweet, and I am prool 
toward school with heavy looks .... 
she looks as pale as any clout 
look to hear nothiii 



LOO 



_ v. 4 



. — 1. : 



_ ii. 4 (letter) 
_ ii. 4 
_ ii. 5 



,., ighni - . . 

Aaron and thou look down into 

look for thy reward among 

look, sirs, if you can find. 

%-et do thy ciieeks look red _ ^_ _ 

arise, and look upon her ...• , 

look by-and-by to have thy. sons .... - lu- [ 

look here; look here, Lavmia — "■ ^ 

Marcus, look to my house . • 3 

look ye draw home enough . ■ „ 

and then look for your reward — ' ■ 

lent thee but thy mother s look • . . . . - • 

look round about the wicked streets J „ J; 3 
as von grim looks do testify ... . P«' '■.'««, 1 (.1jO« trj 
the ostent of war will look so huge . . - • ^ 

what see'st thou in our looks? — • 

how dare the plants look up to heaven - -2 

Tyre I now look from thee — ;• f 

we do not look for reverence — .;■ | 

look how thou stirrest now. ..•••••■ — I.", 
ne"er come, but Hook to be. washed - 1. 

aud nobody will look after it - !'■ 

which looks for other revels .. ... ... - • 

your scholar be; therefore look to it — .'!• ; 
set't down, let's look on it . . 
for look how fresh she looks; 

look to your little mistress . 

and your looks foreshow you have . . - 
Sone would look on her, fcut cast.... _ . 

or else, look friend y upon thee. 

yet thou dost look like Patience .... - 

look to the lady; O she shut - 

look! Thaisa is recovered {rep.) ■ . .. — 
this ornament that makes me look 80 - 

then must we look to receive from Lear, 

let his knights have colder looks 

I will look further into t _ 

do you bandy looks with me ..... ■••••••■ _ 

ga/e me cold looks; and meeting here . - 
Srt not ashamed to look upon this beard? - 

creatures yet do look well-f avom ed - 

rKn'.l r will look hiin, and privily - 

whose warped looks proclaim 

how is't mv lord? how look you .' - 

looks fearfully iu the couflned deep .... - 



i. 5 

(choriis) 



; but discords 



iii. 5 
iv. 1 
iv. a 
iv. 4 
iv. 4 
iv. 4 
V. 1 
V. 1 



men's eyes were made to look 

calm look, knees l\">"'>ly, ''°^''?:'i ' •,". Z 

to prison, eyes 1 ne'er look 9" liberty !. - 

exile hath more terror m his look .. — 

nmy look on her, but Borneo may not - 

be wary, look about ■•.■■:: ••■„■■• 

or never after look me m the face .... — 

i,ir.i, tn't think on t, I do not use — 

to-mo°row night "oo'u that thou lie alone - 

from shrift with merry look.. ......... — 

look to the baked meats, good Angelica .- 

look! look! Oheavy day .......... - 

revive, look up, or I will die with thee - 

your looks are pale and wild — 

meagre were his looks, sharp misery — 

hislSoksIfear.andhisintensIdmiht - v.. 

eyes, look your last! arms,. take your - v. . 

ifldidstaytolookonhisintens .. - v.. 

wife, look how our daughter bleeds! - v.. 
look, and thou shalt see. . ...... .-...• ■ • 

with wild looks, bid me devise some — v. 

give me the letter I w:ill look on it . . - v. 

fooks it not like the king? Ho™"". • 

you tremble, and look pale . . . ..... . . — !■ 

and let thine eye look hke a friend . . - 

1 shall not look upon his like again . . — j- 
in thy memory look thou character — j. 

look to't, I charge you ■■••••• ~ ;" 

that looks so many fathoms to the sea — . 

and with a look so piteous in purport - • 

may conceive.-friend, look tot .... — • 

a kind of confession in your looks . . - 

I'll observe Ms looks; 1 11 tent him.. - . 

how cheerfully my mother looks ... . - "• 

day would quake to look on ........ ; • 

then I'll loo\ up: my fault is past . . - • 

look here, upon tins picture, and on this - . 

whereon doVou look? On him r'^p.) - ■ 

do not look upon me; lest, with this — 1 ■ 
look you there, look how it steals away ! - in- 

thy cicatrice looks raw and red — i- 

?fe^?';Si™^oS^soVia\;i:Uke? - ^ 

^JnTtri'ro^m.'Jfrift« - ^^ 

look to the queen there, ho........... - v 

you that looV pale and tremble at . . - V' 
look to your house, your daughter ...... Otheuo, 1 

iSlove with what she feared to look on? - 
looktoher.Moor; have a quick eye .... - 

looks sadly, and prays the Moor be sate Ji 

following, and not look behind.... — " 

' Khali she iiave to look on the devil? .... - " 

t at folly'and green minds look after.... - 

MLhaelfiook you to the guard to-n^^^^^^ - 

with my personal eye will I look to t. ... j 

ffentlemeu, let's look to our business .... — 1 

fooks Tot on his evils; is not this true? . . - i 
lago look with care about the town .... - 

look to your wife; observe her w-ell.. ..... — 1 

iTOk to't; I know our country disposition - 1 

to shake, and fear your looks .. - 

shall ne'er look back, ne'er ebb to - >.| 

therefore look to t well.... ■•; 

nor ofthem look for such o.bservances .. - u 

"et me see your eyes; look in my face.... - ^ 

ay, there, look grim as hell! . 

he looks gentler than he did - ■; 

what, look you pale? (rep.) _ , 

LrfnCn'-trfa^ispeakwUiu-ne - ; 

r,^iKtirw^!?t?i°;^siui:::::: = ; 



LOOKED; no sooner, ooked ......As 'J"«jf' •.^- 1 

let my horses be well looked to... . ... M ' ";"; 'Y- ^ 

yon looked so longly on the ma<d. lamtngo/Sh.i. 
18 the day we long have looked for .. - '■' 
my father is here looked tor ......... — ' • ^ 

and that you looked tor hira this day - 'X- ^ 
I have looked on thousands ...... I^mler si ait ,1. i 

if you had but looked big, and spit .. — iv. ^ 
I might have looked upon my queen 3 — v. 
have looked on, such goodly things.. — > • .' 

they looked, as they had heard — v. ^ 

excels whatever yet you looked upon - y 2 
unless I spake, looked, touched.. C'omfJyo/B.... i 

I looked for the chalky cbUs — i"- ' 

looked he or red, or pale .,ri.,i ;; 9 

stabs looked like a breach in nature . . MacbM, 1 . 3 

of mine eyes, that looked upon t — "■ ^ 

1 looked toward Birnam, and anon .... - ^- » 
looked upon, I hope, with cheerful.. K>i«-^»ft",iv. ^ 
alas, I looked, when some of you lhc/m,dll.u 3 
for even so looked he, accomplished.. — • .■ 

which, looked on as it is, is naught. . — »'• ^ 
little looked for at your helping .... — i^ • ' 

he wistly looked on me ,, ~.„ ; r i \ 

.!,„., i.;.„l,ool, lonkprl nale \Ufiiryll .]. J 

'.ille^yyir.i.i 
— iv. 4 
ryn.n.\ 



then his cheek looked pale 

if matters should be looked into 

I looked he should have sent me 

be looked upon, and learned • 

who looked full gently on his 3H 

not looked on in the world ;,„,,Zr, ,11 V ■! 

but looked for no reply •••■■••■• • • • ""^'"-rd lU. . i 
thence we looked toward England . . — i- •» 
kindred of the queen looked pale. . . . — • 

but looked not on the poison — j •■ 

when he looked upon the lower .... — ■ ' 

ever wretched age hath looked upon — ■< 

I never looked for betterat his hands — • ^ 

at each other, and looked deadly pale - n • 7 
when, I say, t looked on Richard's face - y. 1 
looked he o' the inside of the paper?. Hem-y f HI. 1 . 2 



! ^ Cressida, 



V. 5 

""...Julius CcFsar, ii. "i 



sweetest face I ever looked. on 

I looked you would have given . . . 

she looked yesternight fairer. Iro 

than if not looked on . . . ... ..•••,•■ 

looked not lovelier than Hector s. 

o' my troth, I looked upon him , 

'tis time it should be looked to. . . 

and looked upon things precious , 

a strange one as ever 1 looked on 

and that we looked for no less spoil 
and men of heart looked wondering 
ne'er looked but on my back •..••"" .. 

we looked not for Mark Antony. . Aulo„y ^Clco.u.b 
in Rome I looked her mt'ie. face ... . - 1 • ^ 
[Knf.] he not looked, or did it from. . - ,. " • \ 
rcould then have looked on hira .... Cyrnbehve u 5 
the fairest that I have looked upon .. — -4 

but what he looked for should oppose - i-S 

but must be looked to speedily — ii'- ^ 

thou hast looked thyself into my grace - .^ • ;- 
now this matter must be looked to....Pe> ides , 111. ^ 
the sun and moon ne'er looked upon . . - i^^. 4 

no, nor looked on us ■■••■■.■■■■• r,nrii'4 

looked black upon me; struck rae Lear, . 4 

I looked not for you yet, nor am ....... . — ii- « 

that told you so, looked b"t a-«l",l"'" ' V Zn., \ % 
you are looked for, and called ioj.Iiomeo Sr Juhetu h 
expect'st not, nor I looked not for ^„,,,„/' ' * 

what, looked he frowningly? . .. .. ....HamlH.i. - 

but, better looked into, he truly found - ■ ^ 
or looked upon this love with idle sight - n. i 

Alexander looked 0' this fashion — v. 1 

O villanous! I have looked upon .... ■■""il""''- ] 
LOOKER-ON here m Vienna .... .Vras./o' '"< "s- v. 1 



devour ineertainl-, — ^-.- — ^ . 7„„r,/.</ ii 

L(JOKING-this ghastly looking?-- y ■■ 7,^"/^"''= ' 3 
and blowing, anS looking wildly -I'^/yJi^^'^f^- ? 
was worth tlie looking on ...... Mea^.for Meas v. 

to feel only looking on fairest ....Love sL.Losl,n. 1 

shake offfifty, looking in her eye .... - l^ ■ ^ 

now for not looking on a w-oman s. . . . — . ly. j 

fooking on it with a l.ack-lustre . .^^!/o« '-^^ ^ > - 7 
idly I stood idly looking on.. .. la,mngoft>h,eu , . 

on a pillory, looking through the lute - ". 
There looking out otthe^window_^_.__^__-.^ v. 1 

_. { 
the 
your 
vhilst 



— 111. . 



I look down towards his teet 

look on the tragic loading of this bed .. - 

LOOK'DST onmaesty •••:,-t^'r!' -t^Xh- "' ' 

thou then look'dst like a villain. . . . Cyn'Miue in. 
T rK)KED--thing as e'er I looked on. . . . lewpesl, y. 
^ when vou lookld sadly . . . . TwoGen of ! .ron^ . 1 

vou hid looked through the grate. M«'!/ " '"«, . 2 

she is too bright to be looked against - . 2 

let this fcUow be looked to (lep.)..-. - "'- ' 
rst^re;rsi"Ck^^d'S^^.'?.^V^a«;;.^/or./...«r.,i:3 
r.Ji\^nef iSirbut^lSf on her.M«c;..do. i! 1 ] 

hypocrite once, you must be looked to - v. 
1 would my father looked^but ... AM. \.l>ieam u^ 
ere Demetrius looked on Hermia s.. - >- ' 

durst thou have looked upon him .. - "i- ^ 

, that liked that looked, with cheer . . — v. 1 
this is notVo well as 1 looked for. . t.,..VL.Lo^ , . 
mv foolish eyes looked upon ....Me,.oJI uucc ,1. i 
as any comer I have looked on yet.. -,..'.'.■' 

I ever vou have looked on better days.. ^>- !/»» L,ken. 7 
how looked he? wherein went he? .. — '"■ - 



sun looking with a southward eye - ly 3 
ir sweet malesty, looking awry ..« cAard "■ "■ 2 

wnilst I, looking on the praise 1 "j""J'^-'- 1 

before would not abide looking ou - • -• H*"'^/'-..X- ? 

lookine the way her harmless 2H«.t,;'/. ni. 1 

to shepVerls! Joking on their s"ly--3«";7.'^[ !!• ^ 
and lived by looking on his images .ii.c/.o.rf///. . i 
God knows, looking ei.ther for .... ""';;« '{; 'P- I 

he had so; looking, as it were :'^°r'}:7sar Ui' 1 

bv looking down on Caesar... ......J"''i"<''™''"- J 

and die wfth looking on his life ..Anlony ^Cleo.. . 
in Rome together, looking for Antony - • 1 

by looking back on what i. have left - 1 . J 

looking all downwards, tohe^o\d.T tlusAndron. 11. 1 
oSkiil for adventures in the world.. ..F|r.d«,i. .1 

to likeTif looking liking move . . '^""""^f.^M' \ 

lookin" before, and after gave ."^ "ot H.™ W, v. 4 

LOOKI^G-OLASS,.and threw, yr G« ..^r' ^r. IV 4 

practised smiles,asjnaj_^ooking-glass.^_..../.. ^.^7.^ 



aud fetch a looking-glass 

to court an amorouslookin-glass i(,c/,a,d ii/. . 1 
ril be at charges for a looking-glass - 1. ^ 

lend me a looking-glass ..... ....... ... „ • ^™''i::- % 

LOOK'ST for wars, and wilt noi.Mid.f,.Uiea 
■^ -■ • „ innlf'stcheerlv ..AsyouLik 



well said, thou look'st cheerly ..As ¥,»" /v'" '-. 

look'stthou pale, France? , 'i,a'dli\ 

yea, look'st thou pale?. ,„'"„, r/ 

look'st to command the prince . ..... '";";.' '■■■ 

how now? why look'st thou I'ale?- ■■'H""^ ^ i 

look'st like him that knows .Intouy ^Lieo. 1 

and look'st 60 viigia-like without? Cyv.beUne, 1. 



LOO 



[ 457 ] 



LOOK'ST— him thou look'st on? .... Cvmbeline, v. 5 
wherefore look'st tliou sad... ..rilm.linlmnrm, n. 3 

for thou look'st modest iia iustice Pericles, v. 1 

for thou look'st like one I loved indeed — y. 1 

lordl why look'st thou so siirt? nomro^Juliel,\}.i 
my eyesight fails, or thou look'st pttle — in. 5 
that lools'st dead with grieving OlhMo. ii. 3 

LdON'— tliouiMcani-fuL'C'd loon I Macbelli, v. 3 

LOOP— every Ioih'. Ironi wlience \Hinnjir. iv. 1 

no hinge, nor looii, to liang ii doubt ..Maclielh, in. 3 

l.OOPKO— your looped and windowed Lenr, iii. 4 

LOOSE— do now let loose my oiiinion .. Tempest, ii. 2 

the loose encounters of TieoGcii.nfl'erona, u. 7 

the boar loose, are yon not? Meni/ ll'i«es, i. 1 

have seen Saekerson louse twenty times — _J. 1 

I. would turn her loose to him — ,ii. 1 

vou arc not to go loose any longer — iv. 2 

in green, she shall be loose enrobed . . — iv. 6 

he will seem to break loose Mid. N.'s Dream, in. 2 

vile thing, let loose; or I will — "i- 2 

being loose. No, sir (rep.) Love sL.l,osl,\. 2 

is as cunning as fast and loose — i;'- ' 

and let me loose — in. 1 

at his verv loose, decides that — v. 2 

partv-cnn'ted presence of loose love . . — v. 2 

IS bei-Mt of that loose grace — .v. 2 

loose"[Co'. A'lif.-lose] the forfeiture. M. r. of Ven. iv. 1 

loose now and then aseattered 4sy^uLil<e il, iii. 5 

mercy 1 thev are loo^e again .. Comedy of Errors, iv. 4 
and his man are both broke loose — v. 1 

1 will loose his bonds — v. 1 

hang loose about him, like Macbeth, y. 2 

jilay fast and loose with faith? King John, in. I 

against these giddy loose suggestions — iii. 1 
with unrestrained loose companioiis.B/c/i«;d //. v. 3 

so, when this loose behaviour \Henri/If'.\. 2 

like an old lady's loose gown — in- 3 

madlv hath broke loose, and bears ..2Hei;ry//'. i. 1 

poorly are let loose, and our air Henry r. iv. 2 

thy womb let loose, to chase us — liichard III. iv.4 

be sure you be not loose Henry i'lll. \\. 1 

had their faces been loose, this day . . — iv. I 
a file of boys behind them, loose shot — v. 3 
negligent and loose regard upon. Troilus S; Cress, in. 3 

fumbles up with a loose adieu — .iv. 4 

hath, at fast and loose, beguiled. /(n'oni/ *aeo. iv. 10 
is Lavinia then become so loose . .Titus An dron. li. 1 

I will not loose again, till thou — .ii. 4 

Marcus, loose when I bid — iv. 3 

being loose, unfirm, with digging. Hotneo Si-Jnhel,v. 3 
at such a time I'll loose my daughter .. Hamlel, ii. 2 
dangerous is it, that this man goes loose. . — iv. 3 

let loose on me the justice of Olhello,i. 1 

of his salt and most hidden loose affection? — ii. 1 

[Knf.llhoth at a birth, shall loose me — ii. 3 

a kind of men 30 loose of soul — in. 3 

LOOSE-BODIED gown. Taming of Shrew, iv. 3 (note) 
LOOSED— and loosed his love-shaft. Mid. iV.'sD)-. ii. 2 

many arrows, loosed several ways Henry V. i. 2 

and he that loosed them from their.2 Henry F/. in. 2 
are slipped, dissolved, and Xoosai. TroUusSrCress. v. 2 

as if he had been loosed out of hell Hamlet, \t. 1 

LOOSELY— not be so loosely studied.. 2He)»j/ZF. ii. 2 

dreadful laws so loosely slighted — v. 2 

LOOSEN— shoidd loosen him and me Lear, v. 1 

LOOSE-WlVED-nian loose-wived Antony SfCleo. \. 2 

LOOSING— loosing upon thee .m's Well, n. 3 

for loosing ken of Albion's wished. .2Henrj/F/. ni. 2 

LOP— branches we lop away Richard II. iii. 4 

I'll lop a member otf 1 Henry ri. v. 3 

from every tree, lop, bark, and part.Henryl^IlI. i. 2 

to lop that doubt, he'll fill Pericles, i. 2 

LOPPED— a very limb lopped oflT 1 HenrylV. iv. 1 

banished, and a limb lopped ofi". iHenryVl. ii. 3 

that he lopped the branch in 3Hcnryri. n. 6 

shall be lopped branches (rep. v. 5) . . Cymbeline, v. 4 

Alarbus' limbs are lopped TiiusAiidronicus,i. 2 

have lopped, and hewed, and made .. — ii. .5 
LOQUITUR— qui pauca loquitur. Lotie's L.LosI, iv. 2 

LORAIN— duke of Lorain (rep.) Henry V. i. 2 

LORD— Lord, how it looks aboutl Tempest, i. 2 

yes, faith, and all his lords — i. 2 

to win it from me, the lord on't — i. 2 

good lord, how you take it". — ii. 1 

this lord of weak remembrance — ii. 1 

lords, that can prate as amply — ii. 1 

Prospero mv lord shall know — ii. 1 

I thank ni3'" noble lord — iii. 2 

thou Shalt he lord of it — m. 2 

the good old lord Gonzalo — v. 1 

but you, my brace of lords — v. 1 

these lords at this encoimter do so .... — v. 1 

was landed, to be the lord on't — v. 1 

Lord, Lord! to see the folly. Two Gen. of Verona, i. 2 

love's a mighty lord — ii. 4 

where their lord should be — ni. 1 

nay, Got's lords and his ladies Meny Wtves,\. 2 

I>ord, Ijordl your worship's a wanton — ii. 1 
vet there has been knights, and lords — ii. 2 

dc knight, de lords, de gentlemen — ii. 3 

I'll speak it before the best lord — in. 3 

by the Ix)rd, a buck-basket — iii. 5 

shalt live as freely as thy lord TwelflhSighl, i. 4 

you any commission from your lord — i. 5 

my lord and master loves you — i. 5 

your lord does know my mind — i. 5 

get yon to vour lord — i. 5 

desire him not to flatter with his lord — i. 5 
that you should put your lord into . . — ii. 2 
to report your lord's taking of this .. — ii. 2 

none of my lord's ring 1 — ii. 2 

nothing, madam, to mv lord by me? — iii. 1 

O lord! Pr'ythec, hold thy peace — ijj. 4 

his emplovment between his lord and — iii. 4 
what would mv lord, but that he .... — v. 1 

my lord, — My lord would speak — v. 1 

even what it please my li>rd — v. 1 

between this lady and this lord — v. 1 

by the lord, madam, yon wrong me — v. 1 (letter) 
my lord hath sent you this note. Meas.for Meas. iv. 2 



LORD- now for the Lord's sake . . Meas.for Meat. iv. 3 
what is he to a lord? A lord to a lord ..MuchAdo, i. 1 

lordl he will hang upon him like.. — .i- 1 
Lord! I could not endu.e a husband — ii. 1 

food lord, for alliance! — jj. 1 

he prince and my now-trothed lord — iii. I 

is not your lord honourable without — iii. 4 

is my lord well, that he doth speak . . — iv. 1 
rash wanton; am not I thy lord?.Uii<.A".'s£)reajn, ii. 2 

1 thought you lord of more true — ii.2 

Lord, what fools these mortals be! .. — iii. 2 

ray fairy lord, tills must be done .... — iii. 2 

two or three lords and ladies more .. — iv. 2 

no, no; O Lord, sir, no Love' sL. Lost, i. 2 

Lord, how wise you are! — .;. 2 

some merry mocking lord, belike — ii- 1 

Biion, the merry mad-cap lord — ii. 1 

love-rhymes, lord of folded arms — iii. 1 

strive to be lords o'er their lords? — iv. 1 

to any lady that subdues a lord — iv. 1 

from my lord to my lady (rep.) — iv. 1 

Lord, Ijord! how the ladies and I have — iv. 1 

sir, I praise the Lord for you — iv. 2 

one of the strange queen's lords — iv. 2 

by the Lord, this love is as — iv. 3 

and I mine too, good Lordl — iv. 3 

no, a fair lord calf? — v. 2 

the Lord doth know, have not — v. 2 

wi-ite, Lord have mercy on us — v. 2 

these lords are visited; you are (rep.) — v. 2 

the noble lord most honourably — v. 2 

how say you by the French lord. . Mer. ofl-'enice, i. 2 

what think you of the Scottish lord . . — i. 2 

the having any of these lords — _i. 2 

Lord worshipped might he be! — n. 2 

Lord, how art thou changed! — n- 2 

to signify the approaching of his lord — n. 9 

this Tbre-spurrer comes before his lord — li. 9 

Bassanio, lord love, if thy will — jj 9 

as from her lord, her governor, her king — in. 2 

but now I was the lord of this — lii. 2 

bearing thus the absence of your lord — in. 4 

loverof my lord your husband — m. 4 

of my lord, must needs be like my lord — in. 4 

until my lord's return — jn. 4 

her husband and my lord's return . . — in. 4 

goodly lord, what a wit-snapper — n\.b 

that your lord will never more break — v. 1 
three or four loving lords have . . As you Like il,\. 1 

O Lord, Lord! it is a hard matter for — jii- 2 

your features! Lord warrant us! — iii. 3 

or have a woman to your lord — v. 4 

than to see the lord the prologue — — (epil.j 
monsieur Parolles, my lord calls for ..AU'sH'ell, i. 1 

observe to-day in our young lords — i- 2 

my master, my dear lord he is — i. 3 

so that my lord, your son, were not my — i. 3 

my lord your son made me to — >. 3 

ceremony to the noble lords — ii. 1 

Lord sir,— there's a simple (;ep.) . . — ii.2 
call before me all the lords in court.. — ii 3 

your lord and master did well — ii- 3 

which if— Lord have mercy on thee . . — ii. 3 

old, filthy, sourvv lordl well, I must — ii. 3 

an' he were double and double a lord — ii. 3 

sirrah, your lord and master's married — ii. 3 

he is my good lord; whom I — ii. 3 

you are more saucy with lords — ii. 3 

madam, my lord will go away — ;;. 4 

my lord and you, monsieur (rep.).... — n. 5 

1 take my young lord to be a very . . — in. 2 

madam, my lord is gone, for ever — iii. 2 

she deserves a lord, that twenty such — iii. 2 

poor lord! is't I, that chase thee — — iii. 2 

do not touch my lord ! — iii. 2 

the wife of a detesting lord — in- ^ 

lord, sir; let me live — iv- 2 

leaveof my good lord the king — iv.4 

my lord, that's gone, made himself . . — iv. 5 

and that my lord your son was upon — iv. 5 

yonder's my lord your son with — iv. S 

Lord how we lose our pains! — v. 1 

the young lord did to his majesty — v. 3 

you remember the daughter of this lord? — v. 3 

but for this lord, who hath abused .. — v. 3 
nothing but a mighty lord. Taming ofSlirew, 1 (ind.) 

there is a lord will hear you — 1 (indue.) 

in noble ladies unto their lords — 1 (indue.) 

to see her noble lord restored — I (indue.) 

alord, and nothiuff butalord — 2 (indue.) 

am I a lord? and Imve I such — 2 (indue.) 

1 am a lord, indeed — 2 (indue.) 

now. Lord be thanked for my good — 2 (indue.) 

how fares my noble lord? — 2 (indue.) 

my men should call me, lord — 2 (indue.) 

and my lord ; my lord and husband — 2 (indue) 

so lords call ladies — 2 (indue.) 

good Lord, deliver us! (rep.) — i. I 

take him for thy lord — iii. I (gamut) 

food Lord! how bright and goodly ;. — iv. 5 

,ord let me never have a cause to sigh — v. 2 

they do owe their lords and husbands — v. 2 

to wound thy lord, tliy king — v. 2 

thy husband is thy lord, thy life — v. 2 

and graceless traitor to her loving lord? — v. 2 
take my lord, I'll give him my . . frinler's Tale, i. 2 

behind what lady she her lord — i. 2 

a lady's verily is as potent as a lord's — i. 2 

I'll question you of my lord's tricks — i. 2 

was not my lord the verier wag — i. 2 

a most unworthy and unnatural lord — n. 3 

these lords, my noble fellows — ii- 3 

of onr sovereign lord the king .. — iii. 2 (indict.) 

my lord the king, the king! — ii.i. 2 

of mine own lord, who is lost — V.\- ^ 

business put on thee by my lord — in. 3 

lord should to the heavens be contrary — v. 1 

vet if my lord will marry — v. 1 

lie h.id paired well with this lord — v. 1 

the noble honoured lord, is feared . . — v. 1 



LOR 

LORD— my lord's almost so far.... It'inler's TiiU, v. 3 

lords of the wide world Comedy of lirrors, ii. I 

to their females, and their lords .... — ii. I 

whom I made lord of me and all ... . — v. 1 

but the Norweyan lord, surveying Macbeth, i. 2 

the Lord's anointed temple — Ji.3 

my lord is often thus — iii. 1 

lordof thy presence, and no land KingJohn, i. 1 

shall your city call us lord — ii. 1 

of our person here; lord of our presence — ii. 2 

this ricn fair town we make him lord of — ii. 2 

gain, be my lord; for I will — ii.2 

lord! my boy, my Arthur — iii. I 

bring the angry lords, with all expedient — iv. 2 

the count Melun, a noble lordof frauce — iv. :s 

would not my lords return to me — — v. I 

return the precedent to these lords again — v. 2 

my holy lord of Milan — v. J 

if the French be lords of this loud. . . . — v. I 

in the field, and almost lords of it — v. .'i 

the English lords, by his persuasion — v. '> 

the lords are all come back — v. li 

myself, and other lords, if you — v. 7 

York lord governor of England Richard II. ii. 1 

parting from my lord the king — ii. i 

awry upon your lord's departure .... — ii. 2 

than your lord's departure weep not — ii.2 

by this the weary lords shall — ii- ■! 

in it are the lords of York , Berkley . . — i i . 3 

were I but now the lord of such — ii. 3 

my lords of England, let me tell — ii. 3 

the deputy elected by the Lord — i i i . 2 

our lord the king should so with civil — iii. 3 

in your lord's scale is nothing — iii. 4 

princes and noble lords, what answer — iv. I 

lords appellants; your differences .. — iv. 1 

my lord,— No lord of thine, thou hauglit — iv. 1 

my condemned lord is doomed — v. 1 

my hard-hearted lord, that set'st — v. 3 

so inform the lords \HenryII . i. 1 

by the Lord, thou say'st true, lad — i. 2 

by the Lord, I'll be a brave judge — i. 2 

an old lord of the council rated me . . — i. 2 

by the Lord, an' I do not, I am a villain — i. 2 

by the Lord, I'll be a traitor then — i. 2 

now, my good sweet honey lord .... — i. 2 

came there a certain lord, neat; — i. 3 

but I tell you, my lord fool — n. 3 

by the Lord, our plot is a good — ii. 3 

heavy business hath my lord inhand — n. 3 

by the Lord, so they call me — n. ' 

by the Lord, I knew ye as well — li. 4 

but by the Lord, lads, I am glad — n. 4 

leods'ancient lords, and reverend.. .. — 111.2 

now, when the lords and barons of . . — iv. :? 

1 did not think thee lord of such — v. 1 

didst thou? Lord, lord, how this world — v. I 
in the fortune of my lord your son ..iHenryir. i. I 

for my lord vour son,— Why, he is dead — 1. 1 

my lord your son had only but — 1. I 

sir, my lord would speak with you . . — 1. a 

and you took it like a sensible lord.. — _!. 2 

now the Lord lighten thee! — n. 1 

O the Lord preserve thy good grace! — n. 4 

O lord! good my lord captain — m. 2 

lord, lord, how subject we old men are — 111.2 

and these noble lords, had not been here — iv. 1 

or, by the lord, I will have it in — iv. 3 

O the Lord, that sir John were come! — v. 4 
in the bowels of the Lord, deliver .... Henry V.ii . 4 

call them in their native lords — in. 

my brothers to my lords of England — iv. 1 

the Lord in heaven bless thee — iv. 1 

not to-day, O Lord, O not to-day.... — iv. I 

my sovereien lord bestow yourself .. — iv. 3 

of other lords, and borons, knights .. — iv. 8 
where that his lords desire him .. —V (chorus) 

by the Lord, no; and yet I lovs thee too — v. 2 

is't so, my lords of England? .... — v. 2 

and ofit left his son imperial lord — v. 2 (chorus) 

the battles of the Lord of hosts 1 Henry ) I. 1. 1 

this dreadful lord, retiring from — 1. 1 

four of their lords I'll change — 1. 1 

the other lords, like lions — 1.2 

the Lord protect him! so we answer.. — 1. 3 

contrivedst to murder our dead lOrd — 1.3 

at the north gate; for there stand lords — 1. 4 

Lord have mercy on us (rep.) — 1. 4 

to me, blood-thirsty lord; and — n. 3 

moved these warlike lords to this — — 11. .'j 

methinks, my lord should be religious — 111. 1 

bold verdict enter talk with lords? .. — 111. 1 

in friendship, as your lords have done — 111.1 

and we be lords and rulers over Rouen — in. 2 

will be lord, and thou be thrust out. . — 111. 3 

return, thou wandering lord .... — iii. 3 

brave captain, and victorious lord! .. — ui. 4 

sirrah, thy lord I honour as he is — in. 4 

defence of my lord's worthiness — iv. I 

good Lord! what madness — iv. 1 

some succour to the distressed lord! . . — iv. 3 

and for the proffer of my lord your .. — v. 1 

and honour Henry as her lord „ ,, ~ .. , \- •'' 

O Lord, that lends me life.............2H'-"'v» /. 1. I 

it was the pleasure of iny lord the king — 1. ! 

and proud, as he were lord of all — 1.1 

still revelling, like lords, till all — 1. 1 

why droops my lord, like — 1.2 

if thou dost love thy lord — i. 2 

what dreamed my lord? — i. 2 

marry, the lord protect him...... — i. 3 

not all these lords do vex me hali .... — i. 3 

join with him, and with the lords. . . . — j. ,•) 

O liOrd have mercy on me! — i. 3 

for thee niayglorify the Lord — ii. 1 

remember what the Lord hath done _ ji. 1 

O Lord bless me, I pray God ...... .• — ii. 3 

all happiness unto my lord the kii.g. — iii. 1 

that these great lords, and Margaret — iii. 1 

free lords, cold snow melts (M'p.) — iii. 1 




LORD— here comes my lord 2 Henry I' I. 

blunt-witted lord (j-cp. ) 

how fares my lord? sneak, Beaufort 
Poole? sir Poole? lord? ay, kennel .. 
for daring to atfy a mighty lord unto 

disdain to call us lord 

and worship me their lord 

we will not leave one lord, one 

now is Mortimer lord of this city .... 

nay, thou buckram lord! now 

Lord, who would live turmoiled in .. 

here's the lord of the soil come 

and happiness tomv lord the kingi .. 

proud northern lord, Clifford of 

northern lords, that have forsworn... 3Hc»ri/r/. 
tlie loss of those three lords torments 

all the northern earls and lords 

and lords, bow low to hira 

father, and my loving lord 

cheer these noole lords, and hearten 

60 it please my lord 

why stops my lord? shall I not 

my lord and sovereign, and tliy vowed 

conveyance, and thy lord's false love iii. 3 

how far hence is thy lord, mine — v. I 

preposterous: therefore, not good lord — v. 6 
of day imto ray gracious lord I Richard III. i. 1 



iv 


2 


IV 


2 


iv 


6 


iv 


7 


iv. 


10 


IV. 


10 


V 


1 


V 

I.\ 


2 
1 


\ 


1 
2 


ii 


1 






ii. 


« 


iil' 


2 
3 



by my young lord, and theel 

Edward, her lord, wliom I, some three 



1.2 
— i. 2 



i. 3 

— i. 3 

— i. 3 

— i.3 

— ii. 1 

— ii. 2 

— iii. 1 

— iii. 1 



iii 


2 

7 


111 


7 


111 


7 


IV 


1 


IV 


4 


IV 


-1 


IV. 


.■) 


. 1. 


3 


1. 


3 


ii. 


4 


11. 


4 


11. 


4 


';.'■ 


2 



but loss of such a lord (»cp.) 

for his meed, poor lord, he is mewed up 

we followed then our lord, our lawful 

O Lord! methought, what pain 

dukes, earls, lords, gentlemen; indeed 
Edward, my lord, thy son 

here comes the sweating lord (rep.) .. 

[Cof. A'n(.] bid my lord, for joy of this 

go, return unto tliy lord, bid him 

many good-morrows to my noble lord! 

the lords at Pomfret, wlien they 

now by the holy mother of our Lord 

what saya your lord to my request?.. 

the Lord protect him from that 

by my dear lord's death 

rail on the Lord's anointed 

her father's brother would be her lord? 

well, hie thee to thy lord; commend ... „ 

an honest country lord, as I am.. ..Henry I' III. i. 3 

to many lords and ladies " " 

this coal betwixt my lord and me 

now the Lord help, they vex me past 

he might the king his lord advertise 

the Lord increase this business I 

and all else this talking lord can .... 

unworthy now to be thy lord and master 

a sorrow Cromwell leaves his lord. . . . 

the rich stream of lords, and ladies . . 

a lord of Trojan blood, nephew .. TroilusSfCreiS.i. 2 

sir, my lord would instantly speak .. 

strength should be lord of imbecility 

kings, princes, lordsl if there be one 

fio shall each lord of Greece 

thou mongrel beef-witted lord! 

ay, do, do; thou sodden-witted lord.. 

you scurvy lord! You curl 

this lord, Achilles, Aiax, who wears 

thy lord, Tliersites; then tell me .... 

Achilles is my lord; I am Patroclug' 

shall the proud lord, that bastes 

thrice-worthy and right-valiant lord 
this lord go to him! Jupiter forbid .. 

and here's a lord, come knights 

sir; I do depend upon the Lord 

the Lord be praised! 

at the request of Paris my lord 

I have business to my lord, dear queen 

if my lord get a boy of you 

be true to my lord ; ii he 

60 do each lord ; and eitlier preet .... 

no man is tlie lord of anytliing 

to see these Grecian lords ! 

to invite the Trojan lords after 

60 profoundly? Where's my lord gone? 

I tell thee, lord of Greece, she is 

mv well-famed lord of Troy 

when was my lord so muchungently 

O 'tis a worthy lord! Nay Timonof Alhens,'i.\ 

some dedication to the great lord .... — 

how this lord's followed! 

I eat not lords. An' thou shouldst (jrep.) 

heavens, that I were a lord! 

hate a lord with my heart 

that I had no angry wit to be a lord. . 

I bleed inwardly for my lord 

here comes the lord. So soon as dinner's — 

sometime, it appears like a lord 

the bounty of this lord! 

I have told my lord of you, he is ... . 

here's my lord: one of lord Timon's 

thy very bountiful good lord and master — 
which, in my lord's behalf, I come .. — 
alas, good lord! a noble gentleman 'tis — 
thy lord's a bountiful gentleman .... — 

has my lord's meat in him 

that part of nature wliicli my lord paid — 
yonder's my lord: I have sweat to see — 

me to thy honourable virtuous lord.. 

my lord hath sent— Ha! what has he 

endeared to that lord; he's always .. — 

Timon has been this lord's father .... 

and I amongst the lords be thought. . — 

how fairly this lord strives to appear 

this was my lord's best hope 

is not my lord seen yet? — 

your lord sends now for money 

as if your lord should wear rich — 

my lord hath spent of Timon's — 

pray, is my lord ready to come forth? — 

eat of my lord's meat? _ 

my lord and I have made an end .... — 



HI. 2 



iv. 1 



11. 1 
ii. 1 
ii. 1 



111. I 



— IV. 2 



— V. 3 



11. 2 



iii 

iii 


. 1 
. 1 

1 
2 


111 


2 


iii 


2 


III 


2 


iii 


3 


HI 


3 


iii 




iii' 




HI 




iii 




iii. 


^ 



sCcesar, ii. 4 



iii. 11 
iii. 11 
iii. 11 
iii. 11 
iii. II 
iv. 8 
iv. 10 
iv. 12 
iv. 12 
iv. 13 



LORD leans wondrously to Timon of Allien. 

I tliink this honourable lord did _ 

he's but a mild lord, and naught — 

I poor honest lord, brought low — 

alas, kind lord! lie's flung in rage _ 

denude tliat lord; the senator 

despised and ruinous man my lord?. . — 

and as my lord, still serve him 

a truer grief for his undone lord 

upon their first lord's neck _ 

till ray lord return from the wars Coriolan- 

your lord, and Titus Lartius, are set — 

are you lords o' the field? _ 

standing your friendly lord _ 

but for disturbing the lords within . . — 

which he was lord of; or whether — 

you must report to the Volscian lords — 

my lord and husband! These eyes — 

go, tell the lords of the citv, I am here — 

say no more; here come the lords 

you lords and heads of the state 

boy, if thy lord look well Jut, 

and commend me to my lord — 

calls my lord? I pray you, sirs, lie . . i 

stay thou by thy lord: thou art — 

saw you my lord? No, lady . . Antony ,5- Cleopatra, 
at your service: my lord approaches — 

lord of all the world? What say'st (rep.) — i 

O bless my lord and husband! _ ii 

thanks to my lord: the Jove of _ ii 

ray lord desires you presently ii 

hail, Caisar, and my lord! hail, most — ii 

why will my lord do so? irep.) _ ii 

lord of his fortunes, he salutes thee .. — in 
would make liis will lord of liis reason 
to follow witli allegiance a fallen lord 

that's my brave loid 1 I will be 

but since my lord is Antony again .. 
call all his noble captains to my lord 

lord of lords! O infinite virtue! 

why is my lord enraged against his love? 
what would my lord? Since Cleopatra 

what ho! come, your lord calls 

how heavy weighs my lord ! 

full reference freely to my lord 

my master and my lord (rep.) 

my lord your son drew on my Cyn 

at least, go see my lord aboard 

to hold the hand fast to her lord 

but wlien to my good lord I prove 

comes from my lord with letters 

continues well my lord? His health., 
tlie jolly Briton (your lord, I mean). . 

will my lord say so? 

my lord, I fear, has forgot Britain 

and sliall make your lord, that which 

for it concerns your lord 

and your lord, (the best feather of our 
since my lord hath interest in them. . 

to greet your lord wi th writing 

to enjoy thy banished lord 

to the madding of her lord 

to tell my lord that I kiss aught but he 
from my lord. Who? Thy lord? \rep.) 

of my lord's health, of his content 

who long'st, like me, to see thy lord 

shall be the lord o' the feast 

no more of worthy lord, speak, or thy 

I'll write to my lord, she's dead 

my dear lord I thou art one o' the .... 
Cloteu, hast here cut off my lord .... 
as he exceeds our lords, the odds .... 

this is a lord! O noble misery! 

he shall be lord of lady Imogen 

most like a noble lord in love v. £ 

I thought had been my lord v. .s 

see, lord and father, how we have. . TilusAndron. i. 2 

my noble lord and father, live in fame! i. 2 

■well worthy Rome's imperiallord.... i. 2 

where is my lord the king? _ ii. 4 

my lord theemperor sends thee this word — iii. 1 

what Roman lord it was durst iv. 1 

to see so great a lord basely — iv. 2 

lords and ladies of their lives . . Pericles, i. (Gower) 
hush, here come the lords of Tyre .. — i.3 

peace to the lords of Tyre! _ i. .? 

your lord has took himself to unknown — 1.3 
my distressed lord, even such our griefs — i. 4 
here stands a lord, and there a lady — i. 4 

doth my lord call? _ iii. 2 

Where's my lord? what world is this? — iii. 2 
it is my lord's. That I was shipped. . — iii. 1 
my wedded lord, 1 ne'ershall see again — iii. 4 

blame both my lord and me — iv. 1 

were I chief lord of all this spacious.. — iv. 4 

attended on by many a lord — iv. 4 (Gower) 

we should have both lord and lown.. — iv. (i 

ho, gentlemen! my lord calls — v. I 

calls my gracious lord? v. 1 

that lord, whose hand must take Lear, i. 1 

to content your lord; who hath received — i. 1 

bring you to hear my lord speak — i. 2 

my lord's knave: you wlioreson dog!.... 

that lord, that counseled thee 

lords and great men will not let me 

in the natures of their lords rebels 

post speedily to my lord your husband. . 
with some other of the lord's dependants 
lord Edmund spake not with your lord.. 

my lord isacad 

how does my royal lord? 

'tis she is subcontracted to this lord — 

lord and you were tlien at Mantua. Borneo 4- Jul. 
and follow thee my lord throughout 
lord, lord, she will be a joyful woman 
lord, lord! when 'twas a little prating 

Olord! why look'st thou sad? 

Lord, how my head aches! 

dear-loved cousin, and my dearer lord? 
ah, poor my lord, what tongue 



LORD— where is iny lady's lord. . Borneo A Juliet, iii 
Lord, 1 could have staid here all night — iii, 



iny love! my lord! my friend! li 
tell my lord and fiither ' 



lust 



— v. 3 



or to dispraise my lord witli that — 

with my letters to thy lord _ 

met the youthful lord at Laurence' cell — 
bring Juliet forth; her lord is come .. — 

my bosom's lord sits lightlv in _ 

deliver it to my lord and father _ 

O lord! they fight: I wlUgo call ... _ 

where is my lord? _ ,_^ 

their lord's murder ; A'ii(.-vile murders]. Hamlet, ii'. 2 

that lord; and look you mock him not .. " 

thy thoughts, wlien .thy first lord is dead — 

how fares my lord? 

the tithe of your precedent lord.!!!'.'.'.'. !'. _ 

for this same lord, I do repent — 

no, Guildenstern! bring inmy lord _ 

Lord, we know what we are, but know not — 

the rabble call him lord 

let a beast be lord of beasts 



ill. 2 



V. 2 



iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. I 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 



— 11. 1 



— iii. 3 

— iii. 5 

— iii. 6 

— iii. G 

— iv. 2 

— V. 2 

— V. 3 



i 


4 


I 


4 


iii 


'i 


'.'■ 


•1 


V 




IV 


7 


V 


•3 


. 1 


3 


ii 


2 


11 


4 


ii. 


.") 


11. 


h 




2 



but shows of service on their lords Othello i. 1 

you are the lord of duty, I am hitherto .. — is 

to the very quality of my lord _ i.3 

what tidings can you tell me of my lord ii. 1 

have my lord and you again as friendly _ iii. 3 
do love my lord; you have known him.. — iii 3 

my lord shall never rest _ iii. 3 

madam, here comes my lord _ iii. 3 

tell him, I have moved my lord in his .. — iii! 4 

my lord is not my lord _ iii 4 

ismylorfangry? _ jii! 4 

my lord is fallen into an epilepsy 

division 'twixt thy lord and Cassio? 

I hope, my noble lord esteems me honest? 

if to preserve this vessel for my lord 

madam, what's the matter with my lord? 
with my lord, madam. Who is thy lord? — iv 2 
alas, lago, my lord hath so bewhored her — iv. 2 
such as, she says, my lord did say I was — iv. 2 
what shall I do to win my lord again? .. — iv 2 
tell my lord and lady what has happed . . — v. 1 

then. Lord have mercy on me ! v. 2 

commend rae to my kind lord — v' 2 

rR§Rfl9;7'"^'"S thus lorded, not only . . Tempest, i! 2 

LORDING- were pretty lordiugs then . Winter sT. i. 2 

iordings, farewell; and say, when I..2Henryri. i. 1 

I -r .i.5^^ t*'^'" lording it in London streets — iv 8 

^ S LORDLINESS-ot'^thy lordliness ..Antonyi-Cteo. v. 2 

1. 7 LORDLY— ay, lordly sir; for what ..\Henryyi. iii. 1 

■ ' withalordly nation that will not.... -_ iii 3 

under the lordly monarch of _ v. 3 

England and her lordly peers 2Heniyri. i! 1 

an It Uke your lordly lord protectorship — ii i 

ICol. Knt.] lost his lordly honour Richard lll.iv 4 

LORDSHIP— that your lordship.. rw^oGei,.o/re,-. i. 3 

your lordship is not ignorant how _ i 3 

your lordship sent him thither _ j' 3 

may 't please your lordship _ i ' 3 

relying on your lordship's will _ i! 3 

not here so please your lordship. . Twelfth Night ii' 4 
were I a woman, I should your lordship — ii' 4 
good-morrow to your lordship ..Meas.for Meas. ii! 1 

shall I attend your lordship? _ ii. 2 

this is his lordship's man iv' 2 

we'll wait upon your lordship Much Ado, i! 3 

1 think I told your lordship, a vear since— ii 3 
means your lordship to be married .. — iii 2 
his lordship, whose unwished .. ^l/id. N.'s Dream, i. 1 
I thank your lordship; you ha.ve.Mer.of >'enice, iii. 2 

beseech your lordship to make All's IVelL'n. 3 

your lordship thinks not him ii. 5 

if your lordship find him not iii. 6 

worthy your lordship's entertainment — iii. 6 
be but your lordship present at his .. — iii. 6 
when your lordship sees the bottom .. — iii. 6 

he is not for your lordship's respect. . iii. 6 

as't please your lordship; I'll leave you — iii. 6 
his lordship will next morning for .. _ iv. 3 

here's his lordship now; how now, .. iv. 3 

it requires haste of your lordship .... _ iv. 3 

I have told your lordship already.... iv s 

if your lordship be in't, as, I believe.. 

we shall hear of your lordship anon . . — 
I shall beseech your lordship, to remain — 

and leave him to your lordship y. 2 

fly them, as you swear tliem lordship v. 3 

please your lordship cool .. Taming of Sh. 1 (indue.) 
that offer service to your lordship — 1 (indue.) 
please your lordship to accept our — 1 (indue) 

please your lordship drink a cup 2 (indue.) 

honour, nor lordship; I ne'er drank — 2 (indue.) 

r had forgot to tell your lordsiiip Richard 11. ii. 2 

because your lordship was proclaimed — ii. 3 

his lordship is walked forth into '2HenryiV. i. I 

Falstaff, aii't please your lordship (i-ep.) — 1.2 

God give your lordship good time (.rep.) — i. 2 

your lordship may minister 1.2 

will your lordship lend me thousand — i 2 

pleaseth your lordship, to meet iv. 1 

his lordship should be humbler 1 Henry J'l. iii. 1 

belike, your lordship takes us iii. 2 

attend upon your lordship's leisure v. 1 

your supplications to his lordship?. .2ifenryr/. i 3 
untoyour lordship. Be it a loi-dship — iv. 7 

what thinks your lordship? ZHenryVI. iv. 8 

how hath your lordship brooked Richard HI. i. 1 

to your noble lordship \_Col. KnI.-s&W] — iii. 2 
[Co/. A'n<.] then certifies your lordship — iii. 2 

sends to know your lordship's pleasure iii. 2 

keep your lordship in that gracious iii. 2 

that your lordship please to ask — iii. 2 

return before your lordship thence .. iii. 2 

I'll wait upon yourlordship _ iii. 2 

his lordship knows me well, and loves — iii. 4 
until your lordship came to see his end — iii. 5 

to that end we wished your lordship iii. .*> 

your lordship is a guest too Hmry I'm. i. 3 

your lordship sliall along; come, good — i. 3 



IV. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. .■) 



LOR 



[ 459 ] 



LOS 



LOIIDSHIP— I am yourlordship'3 ..Henryl'IIl i. 3 
your lordship were but now confessor — 1. 1 
by my faith, I thank your lordship.. — i. < 
the horses vour lordsliip sent for.. — n. 2 (letter) 
health to your lordsliips. Tlianlis.. — n. '-' 

'beseech your lordship, vouehsnfe — ii. 3 

nttendiince on tlieir lordsliips' pleasures — v. 12 
I do biiseech your lordships, that .... — v. 2 
1 shuU both hnd your lordship Judge — v. 2 
honiMir nnd lordship nre my . . Troilua frCress. iii. 1 
your lordslvip ever hiiuls huu ..Timon of Alliens, i. 1 

here ut voiir lordship's service — '■ I 

hiuiiliiv I thnnk vour lordship — i- 1 

labour; and loiiK live your lordship! — i. 1 

beseech your lordship to ncecpt — i. 1 

we will bear, with vour lordship .... — _i. .' 
please it your lordshi[i. he hatli put — ii. - 

I am sent expressly to your lordsliip — ii. 2 
I may make Ills lordship uuderstaud — ii. z 
hath sent to your lordship to furnish — in. 1 
please vour lordship, here is the wiue — \\\- 1 
your lordship speaks your pleasure. . — in. 1 

vour lorilship to supply his (rep.) — Jii. 2 

bountifuUv to l-.is uond lordship — "1.2 

your lordship's a goodly villain .... — in. 3 
we attend his lordship; 'pray, signify — Ji]. 4 

heariuf; well of your lordshin — in. 6 

more willing, than we your lordship — in- K 

not unkindlv with your lordship — IP. 

when vour lordship this other day . . — in. 

what does his lordship mean? — in. Ii 

I was sure, your lordship did not .Julhis Cwsar, iv. 3 



I'll attend your I. 
it is not fit vour 1^ 
ay, it is fit fur you 
one of vour lortl.-l 
I'll atteii.l your h 



. . . Cymbelu 
;hould .... — 
Iship only .... — 



ii. 1 



ips luiges 



ii. 8 
ii. 8 
iii. 2 



Isliip: that such — ii. 1 

your lordship is tlie most patient man — ii. 3 
after the noble tfm|)cr of your lordship — ii. 3 

what's vour lordship's pleasure — ii. 3 

with liis yifts present your lordships. TilusAnd. iv. i 
God give your lordship joy — i v. 3 

food-morrow to vour lordship Pencles, in. 2 
ut I much marvel that your lordsl-.ip — iii. 2 
doth his lordship call? Gentlemen.. — v. 1 

mv services to your lordship Lear, i. I 

so please your lordship, none — 1.2 

persuade me to the murder of your lordship — ii.I 
hail to your lordship; I am glad to see..Hamic(, i. 2 
what means your lordship? That if you — iii. 1 

your lordship is right welcome back — v. 2 

if vour lordship [An'.-friendship] were — v. 2 
I thank your lordship, 'tis very hot . . — v. 2 
your lordship speaks most infallibly .. — v. 2 

It your lordsliip would vouchsafe — v. 2 

I commend my duty to your lordship — y. 2 

we'll wait upon your lordshi p Othello, in. 2 

I do beseech your lordsliip, call her back — iv. 1 

LORENZO: fare you well (rep.) Merck, of Femce,\. 1 

and I must to Lorenzo, and the rest — ii. 2 

shalt thou see Lorenzo, who is thy .. — ii. 3 

Lorenzo, if thou keep promise .... — ii. 3 
the penthouse under which Lorenzo — ii. 6 

here comes Lorenzo, more of this — ii. 6 

Lorenzo, and thy love. Lorenzo — ii. 6 

who knows, but you, Lorenzo ■■ " 

lam sure, Lorenzo is not 

were seen together Lorenzo and his.. 

who comes here? Lorenzo 

Lorenzo, and Salerio, welcome hither 
Lorenzo, I commit into your hands — id. 4 

nay. you need not fear us, Lorenzo.. — iii. 5 
his son Lorenzo, and his daughter .. . — iv. 1 

will be well welcome to Lorenzo — iv. 2 

did young lyoreuzo swear he loved her — v. 1 
master Lorenzo, and mistress Lorenzo? — v. 1 
nor you, Lorenzo; Jessica, nor you.. — v. 1 

Lorenzo here shall witness — v. 1 

how now, Lorenzo? my clerk hath.. — v. 1 

LOSE— rather lose her to an African ..Temprsl,n. 1 

ay, but to lose our bottles... — i'*'- I 

you are like to lose your hair — iv. 1 

"we shall lose our time — i'- j 

when did you lose your daughter? — — v. 1 

one dear son, shall I twice lose — v. 1 

my studies, lose my time ..Tu^oGen. ofVerona,i. I 
yo'u will lose the tide — n- 3 

1 mean thou'lt lose the flood — ii. 3 

losing tlie tlood, lose thy voyage (rep.) — ii. 3 
fear thou should'st lose thy tongue (rep.) — ii. 3 

Julia I lose, and Valentine I lose — ;;• B 

I needs must lose myself — !)■ 6 

if I lose them, thus — .11.6 

and doth lose his form — i.n. 2 

I have little wealth to lose — 1*'. 1 

shall I not lose my suit? Merry lyives.u 4 

I lose not mv labour — .!)■ 1 

shall I lose my doctor? — hi- 1 

shall I lose my parson? — m. 1 

this deceit loses the name of craft . . — v. 6 

if I lose a scruide of this sport .. TwelflJi Night, n. b 

mv lady would not lose him — ni. 4 

make us lose the good we oft Mcas.fnrMeas.t. i 

if I do lose thee, I do lose a thing — in. 1 

tolosehishead — v. 1 

you do but lose your labour ...... .. „— ,. X- \ 

prove, that ever I lose more blood MuchAao,]. I 

tliat tier ear lose nothing of the false — iii. 1 

mvmind did lose it .Mid.N.'i Dream, \. 1 

ne""le(,-t me, lose me: only give me .. — _n. 2 
bythat which I will lose for thee .. — m. 2 
tongue, lose thy light! .............. . — v. 1 

to lose an oath to win . . Love « L. Lost, iv. 3 (versos) 
once lose our oaths, to find (re/).).... — iv. 3 

by light we lose light — v. 2 

you will lose your reputation. ... — y. j 

they lose it thatdobuv it with ..Mer.oflenicc.y. I 
the place I go to, and lose my hopes — 1;. 5 

wisdom by their wit to lose — " ' 

choosing wrong, I lose your company 



lii. 2 



— iv. I 



. . . . All's Well, 



— iii. 2 



— iii. 2 



iii. 1 
iii. 4 
iv. 1 
iv. 3 

— v. 4 



LOSE— I would not lose yow. Merchant of Venice, iii. 2 
if he lose, ho makes a swan-like end — iii. 2 

when you part from, lose, or give — iii. 2 

shall lose a hair through Biissauio's 
[To/. Kii(.] not only lose the forfeiture 
ere thoii shalt lose for mc one droii.. 
repent not you that you shall lose .. 

lose all, ay, sacrifice them all 

nor gi ve, nor lose it 

lose and neglect the creeping \\o\\rs.Asyou Like 

you lose your city 

you cannot clioose but lose by t 

to lose it to her own liking? 

will lose the gloss by lying 

and lack not to lose still 

and give where she is sure to lose.. .. 
wdien I lose thee again, I care not..., 
never win the honour that he loses. . 

a scar, as oft it loses all 

the city, we shall lose all the sight .. 

lose our drum! well — ill*'' 

but I shall lose the grounds — iii. 7 

shall lose my life for want of — iv. 1 

i' the world in me to lose — iv. 2 

lord, how we lose our pains! — ■ v. I 

I will lose a husband) send for your — v. 3 
I would not lose the dog ..TamingofSh. 1 (indue.) 

thou shalt not lose by it — 2 (indue.) 

60 may you lose your arms — ii 1 

thou shalt lose nothing here Whiler's Tule, iv. 3 

lose myself (rep.) Comedy of Errors,}. 2 

will lose his beauty; and though gold — ii. 1 

bath the wit to lose his hair — .ii- 2 

forty ducats is too much to_ lose — iv. 3 

or lose mv labour in assaying — y. 1 

life wliich he deserves to lose Macbeth, i. 3 

mightst not lose the dues — i. 5 (letter) 

so I lose none, in seeking to — jj. ! 

no external thing to lose King Jo/in, ii. 1 

by disjoining hands, hell lose a soul — iii. I 

must pray tliat thou mayst lose — iii. 1 

whoever wins, on that side shall 1 lose 
and lose it, life and all, as Arthur . . 

none, but to lose your eyes 

and lose my way among the thorns.. 

since I must lose the use of all 

and that breath wilt thou lose Richard II. ii. 1 

you lose a thousand well-disposed .. — ii- 1 

to make him lose at home — jj. 2 

in fear to lose what they — .ii- 4 

must he lose the name of king? — iii. 3 

what didst thou lose. Jack? i Henry I V. iii. 3 

in this land shall lose his sway — v. 5 

nor lose the good advantage iUenrylV. iv. 4 

and you, my gentle creditors, lose .. — (epil.) 
lose the better half of our possession . . Henry V. i. 1 

so soon did lose liis seat — j. I 

and our nation lose the name of ... . — _i. 2 
that you lose so much complexion? — ii. 2 

I would not lose so great an lionour — iv. 3 
born at Windsor, should lose all ..IHenryJ'I. iii. 1 

he dies, we lose; I break — jv. 3 

we lose, they daily get ...._ — iv. 3 

renown, nor canst not lose it — iv. 5 

shall lose his head for his 2HenryVLS. 2 

I lose indeed; besbrew the winners.. — iii. 1 

no, not to lose it all, as thou — iii. 1 

to recover them would lose my life . . — iv. 7 

to lose thy youth in peace — v. 2 

yet, meth'inks, you lose, father SHenry VI ' ' 

to lose his birthright thus? — 

should lose his birthright by his — _ii. '^ 

gentleman did lose his life — ].'!• ^ 

'twere pity, they should lose their .. — ?i!' "^ 
having nothing, nothing he can lose — iii. 3 

and lose no hour, till we meet — iv. 1 

Warwick, may lose, that now hath.. — iv. 4 
'twere to lose it and be miserable! . . Richard HI.}. 3 

as loath to lose him — ii. 2 

that he will lose his head, ere give .. — iii. 4 
shall lose the royalty of England's .. — iii. 4 
some scaffold, there to lose their heads? — iy. 4 

good discourser lose some life Henry VIII. i. 1 

and lose by over-running — J. I 

and then go home and lose me — ii.I 

loves you, beware, you lose it not ... . — iii. 1 
she will not lose her wonted greatness — iv. 2 
or let me lose the fashion of a man!.. — iv. 2 

should lose their names Troilm^Creiaida, i. 3 

would not lose so rich advantage .... — ii. 2 
and. Mercury, lose all the serpentine — ij. 3 

begin to lose their gloss — .!!■•' 

that I shall lose distinction in — '.!!• ^ 

my powers do their bestowing lose .. — iii. 2 

for which we lose our heads — iv. 5 

now if thou lose thy stay — v. 3 

I come to lose my arm, or win — v. 3 

I shall lose a stone by thee TimnnofA!hnit,\v. 3 

but thieves do lose it — iv. 3 

or all, or lose hi-; hire Coriolnmts, i. 3 

if we lose the field — i. 7 

but will lose those that he hath won — ii. 1 

to lose itself in a fog — !!..■? 

virtues wdiich our divines lose by them — ii ? 
you are at point to lose yoiir liberties — iii. 1 

our authority, or let us lose it — iii. 1 

to lose it by his country — iii. 1 

what each of them by th' other lose.. — iii.'. 

butthissingleplottblo.se — iii. S 

and lose advantage, which doth ever — iv. I 

or lose mine arm for't — iv. i 

his kindness, and cannot lose your way — v. 1 
alack! or we must lose the country .. — v.; 

did lose his lustre JuHusCrrsar, i. ! 

when it serves, or lose our ventures .. — iv. ! 

if we do lose this battle (rep.) — v. I 

or lose mvself in dotage .inlony Sr Cleopatra, i. ! 

like a fool: the way to lose him — }.'• 

gets monej', where he loses hearts — ii. 

at any game, thou art sure to lose.. .. — ii. ! 



i. 1 



LOSE the praise of it by telling ..Antony ^Clco.W.i 
if I lose mine honour, I lose myself .. — iii. 4 
would make any man cold to lose ..Cywheline, ii. 3 
'shrew me, if I would lose it for a revenue — ii. 3 

fains, or loses, your sword, or mine .. — ii.4 
am sure, she would not lose it — ii.4 

to win time to lose so bad employment — iii. 4 

what have we to lose — iv. 2 

and I must lose two of the swect'st . . — v. 5 
lose not so noble a friend on \a\n..Titui Avdron. i. 2 
his Pliilomcl must lose her tongue .. — ii. 3 

as jewels lose tlicir glory Pericles, ii. 2 

you'll liisi- nolliiiig hv custom — iv. 3 

at sea ilidst lose thy wife — v. 2 

nor fear to lose it, thy safety Lear, i. 1 

a father, that you must lose a husband . . — i. 1 

it shall lose thee nothing — i. 2 

with the waters that von lose — i. 4 

must draw me that wliich my father loses — iii. 3 

lose the knowledge of themselves — iv. 6 

I had rather lose the battle — v. I 

who loses and who wins — v. 3 

how to lose a winning match . . liomeo ^-Juliet, iii. 2 
which thou at once wouldst lose .... — iii. 3 
reason to the Dane, and lose your voice.. HamW, i. 2 

let not thy mother lose her prayers — i. 2 

or lose your heart; or your chaste — i. 3 

loan oft loses both itself and friend — i. 3 

doth the purpose lose, the violence — iii. 2 

heart, lose not thy nature — iii. 2 

you will lose this wager, my lord — v- 2 

as it may lose some colour Othello, i. 1 

we lose it not, so long as we can smile.... — i. 3 
both at a birth, shalllose [Kii'. -loose] me — ii- 3 

1 will in Cassio's lodging lose this napkin — iii. 3 

and loses tliat it works for — iii. 3 

where should I lose that handkerchief _. . — iii. 3 
to lose or give't away, were such perdition — iii. 4 

LOSER— thus losers part Merchant of Venice, ii. 7 

with the losers let it sympathise .. ..\HcnrylV.\. I 
subdued, and neither party losers ..'illenrylV. iv. 2 

but I can give the loser leave 2HenryVl. iii. 1 

and well such losers may have — iii. 1 

for losers will have leave to ease.. Ti7us..4nrf?orj. iii. 1 

friend and foe, winner and loser? Hamlet, iv. b 

unless j^ou repute yourself such a loser.. O'ftc/'o, ii. 3 
LOSEST— thou losest thy old siaeW.Asyon Lil<e it, i. 2 

thou losest labour: as easy Macbeth, v. 7 

thou losest here, a better where to find Lear, i. 1 

LOSETH-yet be loseth it in . . Comedy ofErrms, ii. 2 

a nobleman, loseth men's hearts illenrylV. iii. 1 

LOSING— losing his verdure. . Two Gen. of Verona, i. 1 

played the .sheep, in losing him — i. 1 

in losing the flood — ii. 3 

in losing thy voyage — ii. 3 

in losing thy master — ii. 3 

and, in losing thy service — ii. 3 

grows dark bj; losing of your eyes. . love'sL. Lost, i. 1 

on pain of losing her tongue — i. 1 

follow thus a losing suit against.il/er. of Venice, iv. 1 
but only the losing of hope by time ..All's IVell, i. 1 

than they are in losing them Winter'sTale, iv. I 

no more be in danger of losing — v. 2 

have you lost by losing this day? . . KingJuhn, iii. 4 

news hath but a losing office 2HeviyI V. i. \ 

burs, losing both beauty and utility . . Henry V. v. 2 
shall have glory by this losing iay.JuliusCa'sar, v. 5 
by losing of our prayers. I Bhall.. Antony SfCleo. ii. 1 
losing a mite, a mountain gain../*en'cie«, ii. (Gower) 

'faith, e'en with losing bis wits Hamlet, v. I 

LOSS— my father's loss, the weakness Tempest,} 

for our escape is much beyond our loss 

thank yourself for this great loss — 

so is the dearest of the loss — 

but an infinite loss — 

irreparable is the loss — 

for the like loss (rep.) — 

portable to make the dear loss — 

considered well his loss of time.. Tm'o Gen. 0// 

thus find I by their loss — 11.6 

in gold, more than your loss Merry tVives, iv. Ii 

and the tongue of loss, cried fame. Tueljlh Mghi.v. 1 

but in the loss of question Meas. forMeas. ii. 2 

no loss shall touch her by my company — iii. 1 
not proclaim against her maiden loss — iv. 4 

by the loss of a oeard Mvch Ado, iii. 2 

have had any loss at sea or no?..A/er. qf Venice, iij. 1 
why, thou loss upon loss! the thief .. — iii. I 
loss of virginity is rational increase ..AlVstf'etl, i. 1 
eithence, in the loss that may happen — i. 3 
that's the loss of men. thoupli it be .. — iii. 2 

we had in the loss of tliat drum — iii. « 

at the merest loss, and twice.. 7'ajm'7is'i)/"S/i. 1 (iud.) 

the matter, the loss, the gain H'inler'sTale, ii. 1 

poor thing, condemned to loss! — ii. 3 

art thus expn.«ed to loss, and what. ... — iii. 3 
wliose loss of his most precious queen — i\'. I 
declined for the loss of her husband .. — v. 2 
hazarded the loss of wdiom Iloved.Ci>roprf!/n/"JJ)r. i. 1 
victorv, with little loss, doth play ..King John, ii. 2 
tellso'f this war's loss, with slaughter — ii. 2 

or the light loss of England for — iii. 1 

assured loss, before the match be -— iii. 1 

had you such a loss as I — iii. 4 

for his sweet life's loss — iv. 3 

odvantage, and vour highness' loss ..Richard II. i. 4 

the w^orst is worldly loss, thou — iii. 2 

and what loss is it, to he rid of — iii- 2 

mv care is— loss of care, bv old — iv. 1 

better brook the loss of brittle life ..\HennilV. v. 4 

give tlien sncli instances of loss? 2Heinyll'. 'i. I 

heavy in Hotspur's loss — i. 1 

engaged to this loss, knew — i. 1 

repeat and history his loss to new — iv. 1 

enough to do our country In^s HenryV. iv. 3 

ever known so i^rcat and little loss .. — iv. 8 
of loss, of slaughter, and discomfiture. 1 Henry VI. i. I 

or the loss of those great towns — i 1 

that now our loss might be — ii.I 

betray to loss the conqueet of — iv. .•? 



— ii. I 



ii. 




IV. 




v. 




V. 




V. 




r. 1. 


3 



LOSS— lands, and all, hurry to loss . . 1 Henry I'l. i v. 3 
your loss is great, so your regard (.rep.) — iv. 5 

the utter loss of all the realm — v. 4 

biit wail her darling's loss IHenry I'l. iii. 1 

grieve I a,t an hour's poor loss — iii. 2 

the loss of those three lords SHennjVl. i. 1 

were brought me of your loss _ ii. 1 

our hap is loss, our hope but sad .... — ii. 3 

sad for the loss of thee, having ■ ii. 5 

for by that loss I will not purchase . . — iii. 2 
■what, loss of some pitched battle (rep.) — iv. 4 

quite forget their loss of liberty — iv. 6 

recover all our loss again I — v. 2 

ne'er sit and wail their loss — v. 4 

but loss of such a lord. The loss of. .Richard III. i. 3 

their kingdom's loss, my woeful — i. 3 

wail thy children's loss [Col. Knl.'^ death — i. 3 

liadso dear a lossi (r?p.) — ii. 2 

and weep, their gain and loss — ii. 4 

match not the high perfection of my loss — iv. 4 

bettering thy loss makes the — iv. 4 

tlie loss, yon have, is but a son (rep.) — iv. 4 
what a loss our ladies will have .... Henry I'l 1 1, i. 3 

my father's loss, like a most ii. 1 

a loss of her, that, like a jewel — ii. 2 

success, or loss, what is, or is not. Troilus ^ Cress, i, 3 

as honour, loss of time, travel — ii. 2 

with such a costly loss of wealth .... — iv. 1 

my grief, in such a precious loss iv. 4 

and loss assume all reason — v. 2 

that seest not thy loss in Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

harm, than so much lossof time....Cono(a)ii<s, iii. 1 

but the loss of what is past — iii. 2 

insupportable and touching loss !..y«K«s Crrsar, iv. 3 
rather makes choice of loss. Antony Sf Cleopatra, iii. 1 

no less than was his loss iii. II 

to the verj' heart of loss iv. 10 

your loss is as yourself, great — v. 2 

to your so infinite loss Cymbeline, i. 2 

in the holding or loss of that — i. 5 

is the most patient man in loss — ii. 3 

make not, sir, your loss your sport .. — ii. 4 
thou bidd'st me to my loss: for true — iii. 5 

though with the loss of many a bold one — v. 5 

tlieir dear loss, the more of you — v. 5 

all this lossof blood Timon of Athens, ii. 5 

whose loss hath pierced him — iv. 4 

by the loss of maidenhead Pericles, iii. (Gower) 

thy loss is more than can thy _ iii. 1 

serve seven years for the loss of a leg . . iv. 6 

all springs from the loss of a beloved .. — v. 1 

stand in assured loss Lear, iii. 6 

shall all repent theloss of mine .Romeo ^Juliet, iii. 1 

such a feeling loss (j-fp.') iii. 5 

feeling so the loss, but not the friend — iii. 5 

tlien weigh what loss your honour Hnmlel, i. 3 

touching the Turkish loss— yet he looks .Othello, ii. 1 

I am most unhappy in the loss of it — iii. 4 

LOSSES— a fellow that hath had losses. jVkc/i .4do, iv, 2 
might prove the end of his losses] Mer. of Tenlce, iii. i 
laughed_ at my losses, mocked at my — iii. i 

these griefs and losses have so 'bated me — iii. 3 

an eye of pity on his losses — iv. 1 

we make us comforts of our losses I . . All's IVcll, iv. 3 
unto their losses twenty thousand. TamingofSh. v. 2 

read in your own losses, if he stay Henry F. ii. 4 

jiroportion the losses we have borne. . iii. 6 

for our losses, his exchequer is too. ... — iii. 6 



wailing our losses, whiles the foe SHemyVI. ii. 3 

their aches, losses, their pangs .Timon of Alliens, v. 2 
great men great losses should endure Jul. Ccesar, i v. 3 

seeking to give losses tlieir remedies Lear, ii. 2 

LOST-all lost, to prayers, to prayers (j-ep.). Tempest, i. 1 

he hath lost his fellows i. 2 

for coming thence, my son is lost ii. 1 

we have lost your son, I fear ii.' 1 

all, all lost, quite lost iv.' 1 

thou wert but a lost monster iv! 1 

where I have lost, how sharp v[ 1 

for I have lost my daughter _ v! 1 

where he himself was lost v. 1 

if lost, why tlien a grievous.. Tu-o Gen. of Verona, i. I 

I, a lost mutton (rep.) i. I 

that had lost his A. B. C _ i\, \ 

no matter if the tied were lost _ ii.' 3 

Bridget lost the handle of her fan. . Meiry Wives, ii. 2 

so that I have lost my edifice ii. 2 

her eyes had lost her tongue Twelfth Night, ii. 2 

sooner lost and worn ii. 4 

young nephew Titus lost his leg — v' i 

since I have lost thee! v 1 

thus foolishly lost at a game of . . Meas.for Meas. i.' 3 

there she lost a noble and renowned iii. 1 

than let him so be lost v.* 1 

have died when Claudio lost his head — v! I 

have you lost in this action ? Much Ado, i'. I 

you have lost the heart of signior.... ii.' 1 

TOur grace may well say I have lost it — Ii' I 
but being lacked and lost, why, then — iv' 1 
the ploughman lost his sweat. .iV/id.iV.'s Dream, ii' 2 

thus weak, lost with their fears _ iii.' 2 

thus hath he lost sixpence a day .... i v.' 2 

with fire; so won, so lost Love's L.Lost i 1 

from tawny Spain, lost in the world's _ i,' 1 

uinee, to wail friends lost, is v. 2 

when I had lost one shaft Merch. of Venice, \. 1 

that which I owe is lost i. I 

a father, you a daughter lost _ ii'. ,^ 

cold indeed, and labour lost _ ii 7 

the end is, he hath lost a ship _ ii"i' 1 

the fleece that he hath lost _ iiii 2 

and swear, I lost the ring defending it — v' 1 
most true, I have lost my teeth . . As you Like it, i. 1 

you have lost much good sport i 2 

which you have lost the sight of _ i' 2 

monsieur, that the ladies have lost? — i 2 

we lost not our time (rep.) v 3 

till virginity was first lost All's ll'ell, i. 1 

once lost, may be ten times found (rep.) — i 1 

whereof the king is rendered lost ... . — i. 3 



LOST— we have lost our labour 
the modesty which is so lost . . . 
a drum so lost! there was .... 
I was the first that lost thee . . . 
we lost a jewel of her; and our . 
he lost a wife, whose beauty did 

praisin" what is lost, makes 

since I nave lost, have loved 

how I lost my crupper Ta 

as he had lost some province.... 

cry, lost, and so good-night 

are here by this discovery lost 

your favour, I do give lost; for I .. 

which is lost, be not found — 

mine own lord, who is lost too . . 
and, for the babe is counted lost . . . 
cozened by the way, and lost all my 
age, thou hast lost thy labour . . 

till his lost child be found? 

I lost a couple, that 'tivixt heaven . 
and then I lost (all my own folly) . . 



— V. 3 

— v. 3 

— V. 3 

ng of Shrew, iv. I 
Winter's Tale, i. 2 



— 111. 2 
i. 2 (oracle) 

— iii. 2 

— iii. 3 

— iv. 3 

— iv. 3 

— V. 1 

— T. I 



i.3 
— ii. 3 



tlien have you lost a sight _ 

were even then lost, when it was found — v' 5 

found again, lament till I am lost . . — v' 1 
and recover the lost hair (rep.) ..Comedy of Err ii" 2 

the sooner lost: yet he loseth _. ii 2 

no evil lost is wailed when _ iy' 2 

how hast thou lost thy breath? _ jy' 2 

hath he not lost much wealth _ v' 1 

blood that then I lost for thee — v' j 

wlien the battle's lost and won Macbeth i'l 

what he hath lost, noble Macbeth _ ' i' 2 

though his bark cannot be lost _ i'3 

be not lost so poorly in your thoughts — ii' 2 

wehavelostbest half of our affair .. _ iii' 3 

I liave lost my hopes {,,' 3 

rather, lost more; and by this hand.'. King John.ii 2 

is not Anglers lost? 1_ ]j; 4 

is my son, and he is lost ..." _ iii'4 

what have yon lost by losing _ iii' 1 

how much king John hatli lost — iii'4 

grievous taxes and lost their hearts.flicAard // ii' 1 

say, IS my kingdom lost? _ iii' o 

at Bristol lost their heads _ ijj' 2 

butthat is lost, for being Richard's.. — v 2 
therefore lost that title of respect.... lHeHn//r i' " 

they have lost and forfeited themselves? — ' " 

why hast thou lost the fresh 

thou hast lost much honour „ „ 

in this robbery lost three hundred . _ ii' 4 

place m council thou hast rudely lost — iii ' 2 

tor thou hast lost thy princely .. . . _ iii' 2 

was never lost in my house before '. .' — iii' 3 

lost a seal-ring of my grandfather's _ iii' 3 

hast redeemed thy lost opinion _ v' 4 

I have lost it with hollaing iHenrylV \ 2 

there were two honours lost ... _ 'ii' q 

had my father lost, that need to ... _ iv' ) 

about the sack he lost the other day _ v 1 

my lord, you have lost a friend, indeed — v' 2 
what men have you lost, Fluellen . . Henrv V iii' 6 

hath lost never a man, but one.. _ iii' k 

the subjects we have lost _ iji' g 

the time was blessedly lost, wherein — iv I 

in these ten thousand they have lost _ iv' 8 

have lost their quality _ y' 2 

have lost, or do not learn y' 2 

that they lost France, and made — v. 2 rchoriis) 

England ne'er lost a king of so IHenrVi'J i 1 

Poictiers, are all quite lost _ 'i'l 

is Paris lost? is Rouen yielded up? . _ i' 1 

how were they lost? _ ;' j 

he might recover what was lost .'.' _ ii' 5 

earlof Cambridge lost his head _ ii' 5 

I lost my liberty, and they their lives — ii' 5 

lost, and recovered in a day again!.. _ iii 2 

we lost twelve hundred men _ jy' 1 

and lost the realm of France? _ iy' | 

in you all hopes are lost _ iy' 5 

favest me first, was lost and done iv' g 
ave we not lost most 



ill be lost ere long 2Hejiry VI. i.' 1 



France 

father, Maine is lost 

Paris is lost; the state of Normandy 

was besieged, famished, and lost 

utterly bereft you ; all is lost 

whereof, his highness hath lost France 

1 rather would have lost my life 

so long, till all were lost 

1 lost fair England's view 

lives of those which we have lost in flgl 

I lost mine eye in laying 

I lost not Normandy 

to France, and get what you have lost 

the ten meals I have lost 

she hath lost her best man 

onefoot, if Salisbury be lost _ , o 

sith thou hast lost it all (rep.) 3Henru VI i 1 

and so my shoot is lost _ i'ii' 1 

your labour is but lost _ iii' | 

like one lost in a thorny wood ;;;'•> 

hath lost all that which Henry, 
to repair my honour lost to him 

the holding anchor lost 

won in blood, lost be it sol Richard HI 

were lost sorrow, to wail one that's lost — ii 2 

my husband lost his life _ ii'4 

his death hath lost much majesty ..' _ iii' 1 

hath lost his holy honour _ iy' 4 

biittle might be won and lost _ i v 4 

my lord, or else tlie day is lost! — y' 4 

then you lost the view of earthly ..Henry VI H. ]' I 
and lost your office on the complaint — i 2 
yet never lost her lustre 

a woman lost among ye 

in that one woman I have lostfor'ever — 
this day they had been lost . . _ 

since the cardinal fell, that title's lost _ 

if we have lost so many Troili 

what, lost in tlie labyrinth 



,4J,'« 'lath lost a friend ....'■. 'l' ( 

tilihe hath lost his honey.. ~ v',T 

I have lost my gown Vi^^mon of Athens ii'i fi 

Ji's "'Its are drowned and lost .... _. ' J' , 

the blood he hath lost. ... r„,-,v,i„„, ••^' 

jvhiehhe lost by lack of stooping :.'.'^°"°'l"'"' ";■ ' 
thou hast lost tlie breed of noble . . .lulius Ccrsar i I 
and men have lost their reason! ""'«J-<"-«"; i- i 
having lost her breath, she s\mkc.Antom, & Cleo "Ii 2 
by the minute, lost his favour '^'"'""J' *C(eo 11. 2 
together, the horse were merely lost " _ i ;" 7 
?LI"I l°'^^<^'^ lofi' ''ith very i-gnorance _ i i « 
that I have lost my way for evlr.... _ 'n 

for, indeed, I have lost command.... _ '0 

rates all that is won and lost .... _ ; • ' o 

all IS lost: this foul Egyptian ..'. _ i jo 

together like friends Imig lost. .... _ I' n 

a million more, now lost ' _ \l,\.> 

hP°l'i?!'i1,"^,'?T' 1° e' ^™' 'i°'l <=°"l<i not? - v. \'i 

he, that hath lost her, too Cmnheli,,). \ 1 

a paper lost as oflfered mercy is .. " """••' 
and X have lost the wager . " ' ~ ; ' 7 

what I have lost to-day at bowls' '. '. '. '. _ i ' ( 
twill not be lost. I hope so . .. _ "i 

if I have lost it, I should have lost '.'.' _ '4 

It may be probable, she lost it . . _ ,•,■ i 

for all was lost, but that .... " _ i' , 

I lost my children ; if these be they .' .' _ y 5 
she but ost her tongue, and in . . . : Titus Andron ii X 
his riddle told not. Tost his life . . Pericles i (GowGr") 
good nrmce,. having all lost ...... _ 'i ! q" .") 

have lost tins queen, worth all ... . _ iii 2 ('c roll 1 

heavenly jewefs which Pericles hath lost _ i -i 
we lost too much money this mart — iv i 

if not, I have lost my earnest ' _ iv' ? 

there him lost [Co«.-tumbled and tost] _ v. (Gow ) 
thy fricids? how lost thou them? . . . . _ T 1 

hath lost me in j'our liking 7 ,,„. \ , 

you have so lost a father 7. _ '1 

O poor Gloster ! lost he his other' ey'e'»' " ' " _ iv' 
even o'er the time he has lost . . — v 7 

lung Lear hath lost, he and his daughter' _ v.' 2 
the friend hath lost his friend _ v 3 

know, my name is lost _ y S 

their precious stones new lost !! _ y' ^ 

tut, I have lost myself; I am not. Romeo '& Juliet, \'. \ 
precious treasure ofhis eyesight lost — i 

have lost a brace of kinsmen _ y' i 

lands so by his father lost Hamlet i'l 

those lands lost by his father "anuet, 1. 1 

your father lost a father (rep.) _ i o 

lost all my mirth, forgone all custom";;;." _ ii" 2 
their perfume lost, take these again — iii' 1 

and so have I a noble father lost . . " " " _ iv" 7 
I am lost in it, my lord; but let . '" _ iv' 7 

you have lost half your soul '.'.'.'.'oihello i'l 

what, have you lost yoar wits? _ ; 1 

for I have lost him on a .langerous sea! . — ii" 1 

how lost you company^ The great _ ii" 1 

had lost these legs, that brouglit me _ ii'i 

lost my reputation ! I have lost _ ;' ? 

lost without deserving; you have lost.;;; _ ii' 3 
I had rather have lost my purse full of.. — iii 4 
butifshelpstit, ormadeagiftof it .... — iii 4 
is t lost? IS t gone? speak, is it out of .... — iii'4 
not lost; but what an' if it were? (rep.) .. — iii' 4 
If you have lost him, why I have lost him — iv 2 

I know not how I lost him — iv 2 

thee known, though I lost twenty lives ; . — v" 2 

, '^ a lost fear; man but a rush _ y' 9 

LOT-or fortune, cast ray lot Richard II. {.3 

had paid me scot and lot too 1 Henry I r v 4 

)t IS lots to blanks, my name Coriolanns', v'. 2 

if we draw lots, he speeds.... Antony^ Cleopatra, ii. 3 

no, Antony, take the lot _ i; c 

that man and wife draw lots. . ..'. Pericles i ' 4 

I OTTrr'^^ ^?h' 'fll ^°';,^"tl then.. .. ::H™;e/,'ii; 2 
LOlTERY-the lottery that he ..Mer. of Venice, i. 2 
besides, the lottery of my destiny . . _ ii f 

twould mend the lottery well; a man. All's Well, i" 3 
no, makealottery; and,Vdevice.rr(»7M4-Cre.«.i. 3 
I know not, it is put to lottery . . _ i f 

till each man drop by lottery Julius Ca-sar, ii' 1 

Octavia IS a blessed lottery to him..^n/. ^cteo. ii. 2 

LUUU-as well wound the loud winds., ^empe,<^ iii. 3 

you should have heard him so loud. il/err>/«7i'e.! i 4 

smg them loud even in the dead.. Twelfth Nijiiit'. l'. 5 

I speak too loud _ iji 4 

not relish well their loud app"l"a"use.".'i/eas./orJlfea« i" 1 
O your desert speaks loud; and I should — v" 1 
speak loud, and kneel before him ... _ y ! 
the passion of loud laughter.... M,rf.iV.'sDream, v; 1 
wliilst the scritch-owl, scritcbing loud — y 2 
thy lungs to speak so loud . . Merchant of Venice, iv" 1 
bellowing, and neighing loud, which is' — y 1 

that fame may cry you loud All's Welt ii' 1 

to endure her loud alarums .... Taming of Shrew i' 1 
though she chide as loud as thunder _ ' ;' 2 

m a pitched battle heard loud 'larums — i'o 

and swore .so loud, that, all amazed. . — iii' 2 

tis like to be loud weather Winter's Tale i i i ' •< 

curses, not loud, but deep Maclu-ih v' 3 

trumpets, and loud churlish drums.. Kme-JoAn, 'iii' 1 
reverberate all as loud as thine _ y 2 

if theFrenchbelordsofthisloud'd'a;y — y' 4 
roaring loud, on the unsteadfast .... 1 Henry IV. i. 3 
loud shouts and salutations from .. _ ■- 

when loud Rumour speaks? .. 
with what loud applause didst 
who knocks so loud at door? .. 
your tongue divine to a loud trumpet — ly 1 
and the loud trumpet blowing. _ iy' 1 

why, the enemy is loud .'. Henni r iv \ 

as loud as e'er thou canst XHenruv'l \ -K 

fills tlie world with loud report _ 'ii'i 

Temple hall we were too loud . . — ,-;' 4 

and crying with loud voice '•'Henrt/I'l i'l 

almost aijpears in loud rebellion.... 'Henry////' { 2 



— IV. 10 



— Hi. 3 

— iii. 3 

— V. 4 



— ii. 2 



1 4- Cressida. 



2HenrylV. (indue.) 
i. 3 
ii. 4 



LOU 



I.OUD, and to as many tunes HrnryVIIJ.xv. I 

spt'uk not so loud Troilus^-Cyvssida^\' 2 

]iutj;lis out a loud applause — i. 3 

trumpet, blow loud, send thy — i. 3 

who bpMls lu loud aitplnuse — i. 3 

vith th trumpet a loud note — iv. 5 

beat loiid the tambourines — iv. 5 

consort with nie iu loud and dear. . . . — v. 3 

pence, peace; be not so loud Cariolantm, iv. 2 

and speaks as loud as his ovin.... Antony ^Cleo. i. 4 

and speak as loud as Mars — ii. 2 

debate our trivial difTereuce loud .... — ii. 2 

to our ears with the loud music — ii. 7 

as lo\id as his strong sides can volley — ii . 7 

we bid n loud farewell to these — ii 7 

by crying out as loud, O bless my . . — iii. i 

ICot.'] to the loud noise we make Cijmheline, iii. 5 

rudeness answered my steps too loud — iv. 2 
with loud 'laruras welcome i\\iim..TilusAndron. i. 2 

this loud music is too harsh tor Pericles, ii. 3 

the wind is loud, and will not lie — iii. 1 

B£ loud as thunder threatens us — v. I 

with loud and coward cries Lear, ii. 4 

who calls so loud? Come hither.. fiomco^/«(/c(, v. I 

the morning cock crew loud Hamlet^ i. 2 

what act, that roars so loud, and thmiders — iii. 4 
too slightly timbered for so loud a wind. . — iv. 7 
sneh loud reason to the Cyprus' wars ..Olhelto, i. 1 
tongue at will, and yet was never loud .. — ii. I 
either by speaking too loud, or tainting .. — ii. 1 
LOUDER— are louder than the weather. Tempest, i. 1 

speak louder. "Tis not so Merry iVives, iii. 3 

no certainly ;— Speak louder — iv. 2 

ten times louder than beauty. . . . Meas.forMeas, ii. 4 
griefs crj' louder than advertisement. Much Ado, v. 1 
you were best knock louder . . Taming of Shrew, v. 1 
both roaring louder than the sea. Winler'sTale, iii. 3 
you must si)eak louder, my mtiBter . ,2 Henry I F. i. 2 

"and let him cry ha, louderl Henry VI 11. iii. 2 

breath that may proclaim them louder.i'cn'cics, i. 4 
made louder by the o'er-fed breast — iii. (Gow.) 

draw near; louder the music there Lear, iv. 7 

LOUDEST-advocate to th' loudest. mnter'sTale, ii. 2 

Fame with her loudest O yes cries. Troil. ^ Cress, i v. 5 

to the loudest of rCo(.-loudl noise . . Cymheline, iii. & 

LOUD-nOWLING wolves arouse ..iHenryVl. iv. 1 

I.O UDLT— speak loudly for him Hamlet, v. 2 

LOUSE— the dozen white louses .... Merry Wives, i. 1 

care not to be the louse of a lazar. Troilus gr Cress, v. 1 

LOUSY — on the lousy knave (rep.). Merry If'ii'es, iii. 3 

upon my knowledge, he is, and lousy. All'slfelt, iv. 3 

rascally, beggarly, lousy knave it is.. Henry V. iv. 8 

lousy. Dragging knave (rep.) — v. 1 

wait like a lousy footboy — v. 2 

L<)UT— to yon foolish lout. . TwoGen. nf Verona, iv. 4 

pronounce thee a gross lout iVinter^s Tale, i. 2 

m such a love, so vile a lout as he . . Kin'/ John, ii. 2 
but a calf's skin, most sweet lout.... — iii. 1 

rather show our general louts Coriolanus, iii. 2 

go before this loxit, as he exceeds .... Cymbeline, v. 2 

LOUTED— I am louted by a traitor. 1 Henry VI. iv. 3 

LOUVRE— your Paris Louvre shake . . Henry F. ii. 4 

he wise, and never see the Loiivre . . Henry VI U. i. 3 

LOVE— none that I love more than Tempest, i. 1 

so dear the love my people — i. 2 

I do not love to look on — i. 2 

and I the king shall love thee — ii. 1 

do you love me? — iii. 1 

do love, prize, honour you — iii. I 

were but my trials of thy love — iv. 1 

with such love as 'tis now — iv. 1 

do you love me, master? — iv. 1 

whose shadow the dismissed baclielor loves — iv. 1 
a contract of true love to celebrate (rep.) — iv. 1 

no, my dearest love — v. 1 

glances of thy honoTired love. Tu-oGcn.of Vero7ia, i. 1 

but since thou lovest, love still — i. 1 

when I to love begin — i. 1 

upon some book 1 love — i. 1 

some shallow story of deep love .... — i. j 

a deep story of a deeper love — i. 1 

more than over shoes in love — i. 1 

for you are over boots in love — i. 1 

to be in love, where scorn is bought — i. 1 

'tis love you cavil at; I am not Love — i. 1 
love is your master, for he masters j'ou — i. 1 

so eating love inhabits — i. 1 

even so by love the young — i. I 

of thy success in love — i. 1 

after honour hunts, I after love — i. 1 

my friends, and all for love — 1.1 

then counsel me to fall in love? — i. 2 

wliich is worthiest love? — i. 2 

have me cast my love on him? — i. 2 

thought vour love not cast away .... — i. 2 

I thiiik, best loves ye — i. 2 

shows his love but small — i. 2 

do not love, that do not show their love — i. 2 
love least, that let men know their love — i. 2 

to plead for love deserves more — i. 2 

how wayward is this foolish love .... — i. 2 

some love of yours hath writ — i. 2 

to the tune oi' light o' love — i. 2 

sweet love! sweet lines! — i. 3 

here is her oath for love — i. 3 

our fathers would applaud our loves — i. 3 

take exceptions to my love — i. 3 

excepted most against my love — i. 3 

how this spring of love resembleth — i. 3 

she, that your worship loves? — ii. 1 

how know you that I am iu love?.... — ii. 1 

if you love her. you cannot — ii. 1 

because love is blind — ii. 1 

for he, being in love (rep.l — ii. 1 

then yon are in love — ii. 1 

1 was in love with my bed — ii. 1 

yo!i swinged me for my love — ii. 1 

to write some lines to one she loves.. — ii. 1 

hath taught her love himself — ii. 1 

though the cameleon Love can feed — ii. 1 



[ 401 ] 



LOVE— my love's forgetfulnessl.'/'fra (len.ofVer. ii.2 

ay, so true love should do — ii.2 

ay boy, it's for love — ii. 4 

as worthy for an empress' love — ii. 4 

love hath twenty pair of eyes — ii. 4 

they say, that love linth not — ii. 4 

upon a homely object love can wink — ii. 4 

how thrives your love? — ii. 4 

my tales of love, were wont — ii. 4 

done penance for contemning love.... — ii. 4 

in revenge of my contempt of love.. — ii. 4 

love hath chased" sleep from — ii. 4 

love's a mighty lord — ii. 4 

except it be of love — ii. 4 

upon the very naked name of love. . — ii. 4 

for love delights in praises — ii. 4 

thou wilt except against my love. . . . — ii. 4 

seest me dote flpon my love — ii. 4 

for love, thou know'st, is — ii. 4 

but she loves you? — ii. 4 

the remembrance of my former love — ii. 4 

so is Julia, that I love — ii. 4 

I did love, for now my love is thawed — ii. 4 

and that I love him not — ii. 4 

O but I love this lady — ii. 4 

the reason I love him so little — ii.4 

without advice begin to love her?.... — ii.4 

if I can cheek my erring love — ii.4 

not though he burn himself in love . . — ii. 5 

to love fair Silvia — ii. 6 

love bade me swear, and love bids.. — ii. 6 

sweet-suggesting love — ii. 6 

1 cannot leave to love — ii. 6 

but there I leave to love — ii. 6 

where I should love — ii.fi 

for love is still more precious — ii. 6 

that my love to her is dead — ii. 6 

love, lend me wings — ii. 6 

in kind love, I do conjure thee — ii. 7 

that hath love's wings to fly — ii. 7 

the inly touch of love — ii. 7 

quench the Are of love with words.. — ii. 7 

your love's hot fire — ii. 7 

nave brought me to my love — ii. 7 

instances as infinite of love — ii. 7 

his love sincere — ii. 7 

deserve my love, by loving him — ii. 7 

this love of theirs myself nave — iii. 1 

for love of you, not hate — iii. 1 

hath drawn mv love from her — iii. 1 

to beget more love in you — iii. 1 

for love is like a child — iii. 1 

the love I ever bore my daughter. ... — iii. 1 

thou canst not see thy love — iii. 1 

the milk-white bosom of thy love .. — iii. 1 

that knows me to be in love — iii. 1 

yet I am in love — iii. I 

nor who 'tis I love — iii. 1 

because I love crusts — iii. 1 

but that she will love you — iii. 2 

this weak impress of love is as — iii. 2 

love of Valentine, and love sir Thurio? — iii. 2 

not long continue love to him — iii. 2 

this weed her love from Valentine . . — iii. 2 

it follows not that she will love — iii. 2 

as you unwind her love from him .. — iii. 2 

already Love's firm votary — iii. 2 

hate young Valentine, and love my — iii. 2 

shows thou hast been in love — iii. 2 

love thee as our commander — iv. 1 

my own love to prefer — iv. 2 

the more she spurns my love — iv.2 

love will creep in service — iv.2 

that you love not here? — iv.2 

love doth to her eyes repair — iv. 2 (song) 

and make thy love amends — iv.2 

I grant, sweet love, that I did love a lady — iv. 2 

my love is buried — iv.2 

your picture for my love — iv.2 

to your shadow I will make true love — iv. 2 

and thy true love died — iv. 3 

as well as you do love your lady Silvia — iv. 4 

on him that has forgot her love — iv. 4 

that cares not for your love — iv. 4 

'tis pity, love should be so contrary.. — iv. 4 

because he loves her — iv. 4 

because I love him, I must . — iv. 4 

my master's true confirmed love .... — i v. 4 

respects my mistress' love so much ., — iv. 4 

how love can trifle witii itself! — iv. 4 

if thjit be all the difterence in his love — iv. 4 

if this fond love were not a blinded god ! — iv. 4 

to make my master out of love with thee — iv. 4 

but love will not be spurred — v. 2 

when I discourse of love and peace?.. — v. 2 

than for the love of reckless Silvia .. — v. 2 

more for Silvia's love — v. 2 

more to cross that love — v. 2 

for Silvia, that is gone for love — v. 2 

they love me well — v. 4 

forced your lionour and your love. . . . — v. 4 

love, lend me patience — v. 4 

how I love Valentine — v. 4 

O 'tis the curse in love — v. 4 

wlien women cannot love — v. 4 

when Proteus cannot love — v. 4 

thy first beet love — v. 4 

descended into perjury, to love me . . — v. 4 

in love who respects friends? — v. 4 

andloveyou 'gainst the nature of love — v. 4 

that's without faitli or love — v. 4 

that my love may appear plain — v. 4 

live in a disguise of love — v. 4 

1 dare thee but to breathe upon my love — v. 4 

for a girl that loves him not — v. 4 

worthy of an empress' love — v. 4 

the story of your loves discovered — v. 4 

and signifies— love Merry Wives, i. I 

I love [rn(. A'n/. -thank] you always — i. 1 

can you love her? — i. 1 



LOV 



LOVE— can you love the maid? .... Merry iy:ves^i. 1 

but if tliere be no great love in — i. 1 

1 love the sport well — i. \ 

to make love to Ford's wife — i. 3 

of this love to Page — i. 3 

my master himself is in love with .. — i. 4 

sir, the maid loves you — i. 4 

I'll be sworn on a book, she loves you — i. 4 

but Anne loves him not ^ — i- 4 

ask me no reason, why I love .you.. — ii. 1 (letter) 

for though love use reason for — ii. I (letter) 

you love sack, and so do I — ii. 1 (letter) 

love of a soldier can suffice (rep.) .. — ii. 1 (letter) 

but I say, love me — ii- 1 (letter) 

he loves thy cally-mawfry — ii. 1 

love my wife? — ii- 1 

he loves your wife — ii- I 

Falstaff loves your wife (rep.) — ii. 1 

each other how they love me? — ii.2 

your little page, of all loves.- — ii- 2 

as love hath pursued me — ii.2 

love like a shadow flies, when (rep.) — ii. 2 

of what quality was your love then? — ii.2 

by gar, I love you — ii. ^ 

and de maid is love-a me — in. 2 

what made me love thee? — iii. 3 

I love thee; none but thee — iii- 3 

I fear, you love mistress Page — iii- 3 

as well say, I love to walk by — iii- 3 

well, heaven knows how I love you — iii- 3 

I love thee ; and none but thee — iii. 3 

T cannot get thy father's love — iii. 4 

a thing impossible I should love thee — iii. 4 

yet seek my father's love — iii. 4 

mistress Anne, my cousin loves j'ou — iii. 4 

as well as I love any woman — iii. 4 

love him, daughter "Anne — iii. 4 

for that 1 love your daughter — iii. 4 

ad I'ance the colours of my love — iii- 4 

will I question how she loves j'Ou .. — iii- 4 

to search his house for his wife's love — iii. 5 

you are obsequious in your love .... — iv.2 

m the simple ofiiee of love — iv. 2 

the dear love I bear to fair Anne .... — iv. 6 

love set on thy horns (rep.) — v. 6 

a swan for the love of Leda(7'ep.) .. .. — v. 5 

I will never take you for my love again — v. 5 

there was no proportion held in love — v. 5 

in love, the heavens themselves — v. 5 

music be the food of love, play on.rM'e(/l!AA'ig'/i(,i. I 

spirit of love, how quick — i. 1 

to season a brother's dead love — i. I 

this debt of love but to a brother (rep.) — i. 1 

did seek the love of fair Olivia — i. 2 

for whose dear love, they say — i. 2 

in question the continuance of his love — i. 4 

then unfold the passion of my love. . — i. 4 

my lord and master loves you (rep.) — i. 5 

how does he love me? — i. 5 

with groans that thunder love — i. 5 

1 cannot love him (rep.) — i. 5 

if I did love you in my — i. 5 

write loyal cantons of contemned love — i. .5 

love make his heart of flint (rep.) — i. 5 

a bad recompense for your love — ii. 1 

if you will not murder me for my love — ii. 1 

she loves me, sure — ii.2 

she were better love a dream — ii.2 

my master loves her dearly — ii.2 

is desperate for my master's love .... — ii. 2 

your true love's coming, that can — ii. 3 (song) 

what is love? 'tis not hereafter. ... — ii. 3 (song) 

an' you love me, let's do't — ii. 3 

for the love o' (Jod, peace — ii. 3 

all that look on him, love him — ii. 3 

in his way some obscure epistles of love — ii. 3 

and that she is in love with him .... — ii. 3 

if ever thou shalt love — ii.4 

to the seat where Love is throned. ... — ii.4 

upon some favour that it loves — ii.4 

then let thy love be younger than .. — ii.4 

and dallies with the innocence of love — ii.4 

tell her, my love, more noble than .. — ii.4 

but, if she cannot love you, sir? — ii.4 

hath for your love as great a pang . . — ii.4 

you cannot love her — ii. 4 

as love doth give my heart — ii.4 

their love may be called appetite .... — ii.4 

between that love a woman can — ii.4 

too well what love women to men ... . — ii . 4 

she never told her love, but let — ii.4 

was not this love, indeed? — ii.4 

but little in our love — ii.4 

died thy sister of her love, my boy?.. — ii.4 

say, my love can give no place — ii.4 

observe him, for the love of mockery — ii. 5 

Jove knows I love; but who? — ii. 6 

that my lady loves me — ii. .5 

she manifests herself to my love .... — ii. ."i 

if thou entertainest my love — ii. .') 

that's a degree to love — iii. 1 

than love that would seem hid: love's — iii. 1 

love thee so, that maugre all thy .... — iii. 1 

love sought is good, but given — iii. 1 

which now abhors, to like his love ., — iii- 1 

n great argument of love in her — i i i . 2 

and not all love to see you — iii. 3 

my willing love, the rather by — iii. 3 

your true love for my master — iii. 4 

one sir, that for his love dares — iii. 4 

relieved him with such sanctity of love — iii. 4 

and salt waves fresh in love! — iii. 4 

she loves another — iv.2 

and did thereto add my love — v. 1 

pure for his love, into — v. 1 

kill what I love — v. i 

whom, I know, you love — v. I 

sacrifice the lamb that I do love — v. 1 

after him I love, more than I love .. — v. 1 

than e'er 1 shall love wife — 7.1 



LOV 



LOVE— for tainting of my lovel .... TwelfihNighl, v. 

a contract of etCM-nal bond of love... — v. 

for the love of God (rep.) — v. 

never shoiildst love woman like to me — y. 

drcst him witli our love Measure forMeasure, i. 

I love the people, Imt do not — ■• 

we thought it meet to hide our love.. — ;• 

if slie he in love, mav sigli it off — !• 

the dribblim; dart of love can pierce — .;• 

what? do I love her, tliat I desire — — ii- 

love you tlie man tliat wronged {lep.) — i). 

we'd'not spare licaven, as we loveit.. — }}■ 

injurioiis love, that respites — ii- 

where tlieir untaught love must needs — ii. 

for his advantaL'e tliat I dearly love.. — ii. 

1 love yon. My brother did love Juliet — u 

if vou give me iove — .!!• 

1 am SI ont if love with life — i]!- 

to ehelove Ihave indoinggood...... — iii. 

in liis love toward lier ever most kind — in. 

reason should have quenched her love - in. 

and I love liim. Love talks with — — ui. 

and knowledge with dearer love .— lu- 

seals of love, but sealed in vain — iv. 1 (sonj 

that for the fault's love, is — JV. 

with all the effect of love — v. 

I love the duke, as I love myself — v. 

look that you love your wife — v- 

inv to you Mariana! love her Angelo — v. 

'for truly, I love none Much Ado, i. 

than a man swear he loves me — J- 

he is in love. With who? — ;• 

Amen.if vou love her — }• 

that I love her, I feel — '■ 

ere I die, look pale with love — !• 

or with hunger, my lord, not witlr love — i. 

that ever I lose more blood with love. . — i. 

my love is thine to teach — }■ 

than to drive liking to the name of love — i. 

if thou dost love fair Hero — ;• 

minister to love, that know love's grief — i. 

a carriage to rob love from any — .i- 

speak low, if you speak love — !!• 

I love you the better; the hearers .. — ii. 

verj' near my brother in his love .... — ]}■ 

how know you he loves her? — >;• 

and affairs (Jf love: therefore (rep.) .. — "• 

God, sir, here's a disli I love not . . — >;• 

till love have all his rites — ?!■ 

that she shall fall in love with Benedick — u. 
he shall fall in love with Beatrice .. — ii- 
that you know that Hero loves me . . — li- 
as— in love of your brother's honour — ;;■ 
lie dedicates his l^chaviours to love.. — Ji. 
of his own scorn, by falling in love .. — i;- 

but love may transform me to — ;;• 

ha! the prince and monsieur Love!.. — ii. 

yet will lie swear he loves — ;;• 

that vour niece Beatrice was in love — ;;• 

that she loves him with an enraged.. — ii. 

write to him that I love him? — ii.- 

yea, though I love him, I should — n. 

if he love her not, and she will (rep.) — Ji. 

if she should make tender of her love — n- 

and tell him of her love? — !>■ 

1 love Benedick well — ;!• 

love me! why it must be requited .. — n. 

if I perceive the love come from her — ii. 

for I will be horribly in love with her — ii. 

a man loves the meat in his youth .. — ii. 

I do spv some marks of love in her.. — ii. 

if I do not love her, I am a Jew — ii. 

is sick in love with Beatrice — iii- 

that Benedick loves Beatrice so — iii. 

god of love! I know, he doth deserve — iii. 
she cannot love, nor take no shape .. — iii. 
it were not good she knew his love .. — iii. 
and Benedick, love on, I will requite — iii. 
if thou dost love, my kindness (rep.^ — iii. 

1 hope, he be in love — ii]- 

to be truly touched with love — iii. 

vet say I, he is in love — iii. 

if he lie not in love with some woman — iii. 

as to sav, the sweet youth's in love.. — iii. 

conclude he is in love. Nay, but (,rep.) — iii. 

vou mav think, I love you not — iji. 

if you love her then, to-morrow wed her — iii. 

clap us into light o' love — iii- 

yea, light o' love, with your heels! .. — in. 

that I think you are in love — iii. 

in love, or that vou will be in love (rep.) — in. 

bashful sincerity, and comely love .. — iv. 

I'll lock up all the gates of love — iv. 

(if ever love had interest in his liver) — iv. 

you know, mv inwardness and love is — iv. 

I do love nothing in the world so well — iv. 

that you love me; and Iwill make (rep.) — iv. 

I protest, I love thee — Jv. 

I love you with so much of ray heart — iv. 

there is no love in you — iv. 

bv this hand, I love thee (rep.) — iv. 

she would love him dearly — v. 

for the love of Beatrice — v. 

and if your love can labour aught — — v. 

the god of love, that sits above — — v. 2 (son < 

over and over as my poor self, in love — v. 

didst thou first fall in love with me? — v. 

suffer love for me? Suffer love, a good — v. 

I do suffer love, indeed, for I love thee — v. 

I will never love that which my friend — v. 

serve God, love rae, and mend — v. 

and I do with an eye of love requite her — v. 

he would play the noble beast in love — v. 

what is your will? Do not you love rae? — v. 

ewore you did. Do not you love me? — v. 

then you do not love me? No, truly.. — v. 

love the gentleman. And I'll be (rep.) — v. 

live unbruised, and love my cousin .. — v. 

won thy love, doing thee injuries. . M'd. N. s Dr. i. 

verses of feigning love — i- 



[ 4(32 J 

LOVE— betwixt my love and me.Mid.N.'sO 

you have her fatlier's love, Demetrius — 

true, he hath my love; and what O/'P'") — 

my love is more than his — 

made love to Nedar's daughter, Helena — 

what cheer, my love? Demetrius — 

how now, ray love? why is your cheek — 
course of tnie love never did run smooth — 

hell! to choose love by another's eye! — 
as due to love, as thoughts, and dreams — 
and prospers loves; and by that fire — 

keep promise, love; look, here — 

Demetrius loves your fair — 

1 frown upon him, yet he loves me . . — 

yet he gives me love — 

the more I love, the more he — 

what graces in my love do dwell — 

love can transpose to form and {rep.) — 

nor liath love's mind of any — 

and therefore is love said to be — 

so the boy Love is perjured every. ... — 
kills himself most gallantly for love 
it is the lady that I'yramus must love 
and versinglove to amorous Phillida 
and your warrior love, to Theseus . . 
knowing I know thy love to Theseus? 

now purple with love's wound 

she shall pursue it witli the soul of love 
I love thee not, therefore pursue .... 
cannot love you? And even for (rep.) 

can I beg your love, (and yet a place. . — 
into the nands of one that loves you not — 
we cannot light for love, as men may do — 

to die upon tlie hand I love so well.. — 

and he shall seek thy love — 

a sweet Athenian lady is in love with — 

fond on her, than she upon her love — 

do it for thy true love take ; love .... — 

fair love, you faint with wandering — 

love takes the meaning, in love's .... — 

for love and courtesy fie further off. . — 

thy love ne'er alter, till — 

this flower's force in stirring love. ... — 

let love forbid sleep his seat on thy. . — 

he love your Hermia? (.rep.) — 

not Hermia, but Helena I love — 

love's stories, written in love's richest — 

address your love and might — 

speak, of all loves; I swoon almost . . — 

to say, to swear, I love thee — 

reason and love keep little company — 

and I do love thee: therefore, go with — 

to have my love to bed, and to arise — 
tre up my "love's [Co(. -lover's] tongue 
my mistress with a monster is in love 

why rebuke you him that loves you so? — 

some true love turned, and not — 

with sighs of love, tliat cost the fresh — 

wlien his love he doth espy, let her. . — 

Demetrius loves her, and he loves not — 

to what, my love, shall I compare . . — 

you both are rivals, and love Herraia — 

for you love Hermia; this, you know — 

in Hermia's love I yield you up — 

whom I do love, and will do to ray . . — 

all that love is gone — 

look, where thy love coraes — 

whom love doth press to go? what love — 

Lysander's love, that would not let. . — 

will you rent our ancient love asunder — 

and made your other love, Demetrius — 

deny your love so rich within — 

with love, so fortunate (rep.) — 

my love, my life, ray soul — 

Helen, I love thee; by ray life — 

that says I love thee not. I say, I love — 

isthis, sweet love? Thy love — 

Orae! what news, my love? — 

that I do hate thee, and love Helena — 

you thief of love ! what have you.... — 

stolen my love's heart from hira? .. — 

I evermore did love vou — 

save that, in love unlo Demetrius .. — 

for love, I followed him — 

never so little show of love to her . . — 

I with the morning's love have oft. . — 

some music, ray sweet love? — 

or say, sweet love, what thou desirest — 

how I love thee 1 how I dote — 

there lies your love — 

my love shall hear the music of my. . — 

my love to Hermia, melted as doth , . — 

BOW do I wish it, love it, long for it. . — 

joy, and fresh days of love, accompany — 

that have I told my love, in glorv of — 

of young Pyramus, and his love Thisbe — 
love not to see wretchedness o'ercharged — 

love, therefore, and tongue-tied — 

my love! thou art my love, I think.. — 

where is my love? Oh— — 

asleep, my love? what dead, ray dove? — 
to love, to wealth, to porap, I pine.toi'e'si.i 

1 protest, I love to hear him lie — 

I love not to be crossed (rep.) — 

in love; and as it is base for (rep.) .. — 

what great men have been in love?. . — 

like a porter; and he was in love.... — 

am in love too: who was Samson's love — 

but to have a love of that colour — 

my love is raost immaculate — 

hoy, I do love that country girl .... — 

better love than my master — 

my spirit grows heavy in love — 

I love thee — 

if I love: and how can that he true love — 

love is a familiar; love is a devil (rep) — 

for your manager is in love — 

of all that virtue love — 

bless my ladies! are they all in love — 

to my love. Master will you win (rep.) — 



LOV 



— 1. 2 



— II. 2 



— in. 1 



LOVE witli singing love Love\ L.Lost. iii. 1 

snuffed up love, by smelling love .... — iii. I 

call'st thou my love, hobby-horse? .. — iii. I 

your love, perliaps, a hackney (rep.) — iii. 1 

by heart you love her because — iii. I 

in heart you lovelier, because — iii. 1 

in love with her; and out of heart (rep.) — iii. 1 

in love! I that have been love's whip — iii. I 

what? I! Hove! Isue! I seek — iii. I 

to love the worst of all — iii. 1 

well, Iwill love, write, sigh — iii. I 

some men must love mv lady — iii. t 

thy love? I may: shall I enforce (rep.) — iv. 1 (let.) 

the weather, that love not the wind.. — iv. 2 

understandeth thee not, loves thee not — iv. 2 

if love make rae foresworn (rep.) — iv. 2 

oh pardon, love, this wrong — iv. 2 

by the lord, this love is as mad — iv. 3 

I will not love; if I do, hang me .... — iv. 3 

but for her ej'e, I would not love her — iv. 3 

by heaven, 1 do love: and it — iv. 3 

but do not love tliyself; then thou — iv. 3 (verses) 

in love, I hope; sweet lellowship .... — iv. 3 

one drunkard loves another — iv. 3 

the shape of love's Tyburn that — iv. 3 

empress of my love — iv. 3 

thou a heavenly love; thy grace — iv. 3 (verses) 

I'll mark how love can vary wit .... — iv. 3 
love, whose month is ever May — iv. 3 (verses) 

turning mortal for thy love — iv. 3 (verses) 

express my true love's fasting pain . . — iv. 3 

thy love is far from charity (rep.). ... — iv. 3 

you do not love Maria — iv. 3 

and Jove, for your love, would infringe — iv. 3 

for loving, that art most in love? .... — iv. 3 

rc<j(.] or groan for love? — iv. 3 

I post from love; good lover — iv. 3 

are pick-purses in love; and we — iv. 3 

rent lines show some love of thine? . . — iv. 3 

my love, her raistress, is a gracious ., — iv. 3 

O, but for ray love, day would — iv. 3 

by heaven, thy love is black — iv. 3 

look, here's thy love: my foot — iv. 3 

but what of this? are we not all in love? — iv. 3 

but love, first learned in — iv.3 

love's feeling is raore soft — iv. 3 

love's tongue proves dainty Bacchus — iv. 3 

is not love a Hercules, still — iv.3 

and when love speaks, the voice — iv. 3 

were terapered witli love's sighs — iv.3 

all men love; or for love's sake (rep.) — iv. 3 

and who can sever love from charity? — iv. 3 

forerun fair Love, strewing her — iv. 3 

yes, as much love in rhyme, as would — v. 2 

love doth approach disguised — v. 2 

BO shall your loves woo contrary .... — v. 2 

they unbosom shall to loves mistook — y. 2 

the king is my love sworn — v. 2 

myiove to thee is sound — v. 2 

loves her by the foot — v-2 

the smiling courtesy of love — v. 2 

yet, since love's argument was — v. 2 

as love is full of unbefitting strains .. — v. 2 

presence of loose love put on by us . . — y. 2 

our love being yours, the error that love — v. 2 

full of love; your favours (rep.) — v. 2 

and therefore met your loves in their — v. 2 

grant us your loves — v. 2 

if for my love, as there is no such — v. 2 

your love, but that it bear this trial (rep.) — v. 2 

what to me, my love? (rep.) — v. 2 

with threefold love I wish you — v. 2 

if I have much love, I'll give you some — v. 2 

some service on me for thy love — v. 2 

for her sweet love three years — v. 2 

then you are in love (rep.) .. Merchant of J'cvice, i. 1 

I love thee, and it is ray love that . . — i. 1 

in money, and in love (;?ep.) — i. 1 

wind about my love with circumstance — i. 1 

but one who you shall rightly love . . — i. 2 

for if he love rae to madness — i. 2 

and have your love, forget the shames — i. 3 

make incision for your love — ii. 1 

by my love, I swear, the best-regarded — ii. 1 

I am not bid for love ; they flatter. ... — ii • 5 

to seal love's bonds new raade — ii. 6 

and thy love. Lorenzo, certain (rep.) — ii. 6 

but love is blind, and lovers cannot.. — ii. 6 

an office of discovery, love — ii. 6 

beshrew me, but I love her heartily — ii. 6 

more than these, in love I do deserve — ii. 7 

let it not enter in your mind of love — ii. 8 

and such fair ostents of love as shall — ii. 8 

I think, he only loves the world — ii. 8 

so likely an embassador of love — ii. 9 

Bassanfo, lordlove, if thy will it be! — ii. 9 

Boraething tells rae (but it is not love) — iii. 2 

treason there is mingled with your love — iii. 2 

makes me fear the enjoying of my love — iii. 2 

snow and fire, as treason and my love — iii- 2 

confess, and love, had been the very — iii. 2 

if you do love me, you will find .... — iii. 2 

but with ranch more love, than — iii. 2 

O love, be raoderate, allay thy — !!'• ^ 

presage the ruin of your love — iii- 2 

was dry with oaths of love — iii. 2 

to have her love, provided that — iii. 2 

when I did first impart ray love .... — iii. 2 

dear bought, I williove you dear.... — iii. 2 
if your love do not persuade you .. — iii. 2 (letter) 

O love, despatch all business — .'j'- 2 

do bear an equal yoke of love — iii. 4 

the which ray love, and some necessity — iii. 4 

sought my love, which I denying — iii. 4 

with huraan gentleness and love .... — iv. 1 

there are, love not a gaping pig — iv. 1 

kill the things they do not love? — iv. 1 

whether Bassanio had not once a love — iv. 1 

whom, I protestj I love — iv. 1 

in love and service to you evermore.. — iv. 1 



LOV 



LOVE-aiul ror your love Merchant of reiikr, iv. 1 

ftiul you ill love slittll not (Icn.y — iv 1 

his ilescrvings, aud my love withal .. — iv, 1 

anil waved. Iicr love to come n^'aiii .. — v. I 

and with an unthrift love, did run from — v. 1 

slander her love, and he forgave it her — v. 1 

since you do take it, love — v. 1 

love me, and leave me not — v. 1 

I gave my love a ring, and made . , , . — v. 1 
her cousin, so loves her, being ever, .-Js you Like it, i. 1 

and for your love, I would be loath. , — i. 1 

therefore, out of my love to you .,.. — i. 1 

Charles, t thank thee for thy love to mo — i. 1 

not with the full weight that I love thee — i. 2 

I could have taught my love to take — i. 2 

if the truth of thy love" to me were . . — i. 2 

■what tliink you of falling in love? ., — i, 2 

but love no man in good earnest — i. 2 

irour father, loves. Sly father's love is — i, 2 

if you do kccv» \'our promises in love — i. 2 

true iipphi use, and love — i- 2 

whose lti\'es are dearer than — i. 2 

I shall desire more love and knowledge — i. 2 

that you should love his son dearly? — i. 3 

love him for that; and do you love him — i 3 

Rosalind lacks then the lo"ve which.. — i. 3 

I love to cone him in these sullen fits — ii. I 

why do people love you? and wherefore — ii. 3 

that thou kncw'st how I do love her? — ii. 4 

love were ever like mine (r<?p.) — ii. 4 

didst thou ne'er love so heartily .... — ii. 4 

that ever love did make thee — ii. 4 

I remember, when I was in love .... — ii. 4 

so is all nature in love mortal — ii. 4 

if that love, or gold, can in this — ii. 4 

who loves to lie with me, and tune — ii. ."j (song) 

and loves to live i' the sun — ii.o(song) 

raanv a weary step limped in pure love — ii. 7 

in witness or my love — iii. 2 

must find love's prick, and Rosalind — iii. 2 (yer.) 

what tedious homily of love have you — iii. 2 

Rosalind is your love's name? — iii. 2 

is to be in love. 'Tis a fault — iii. 2 

farewell, good signior Love — iii. 2 

for tliere lie fell in love — iii. 2 

the quotidian of love upon him .... — iii. 2 

how to know a man in love — iii. 2 

I could make thee believe I love .... — iii. 2 

her that you love believe it — iii. 2 

are you so much in love — iii. 2 

love is merely a madness — iii. 2 

that the whippers are in love too .. .. — iii. 2 

to imagine me his love, his mistress., — iii. 2 

from his mad humour of love — iii. 2 

not be one spot of love in 't — iii. 2 

now by the faith of my love, I will.. — iii. 2 

but for his verity in love, I do — iii. 4 

not true in love? Yes, wlien he — iii. 4 

the shepherd that complained of love — iii. 4 

the pale complexion of true love. ... — iii. 4 

feedeth those in love — iii. 4 

say, that you love me not — iii. .5 

that love's keen arrows make — iii. 5 

fasting, for a good man's love — iii..') 

cry the man mercy; love him — iii. 5 

in love with her foulness, and (rep.) — iii. .^ 

do not fall in love with me — iii..*? 

my grief in love, by giving love .... — iii. 5 

thou hast my love — iii. 5 

bear thee love: but since thou (rep.) — iii. 5 

and so perfect is my love — iii. 5 

think not I love him — iii. 5 

in love with hira, but for ray (>ep.).. — iii. 5 

to hate him, than to love him — iii. 5 

I do love it better than laughing .... — iv. 1 

be out of love with your nativity .... — iv. 1 

break an hour's promise in love? — iv. I 

part of a minute in the affairs of love — iv. 1 

he is one of the patterns of love .... — iv. 1 

but not for love, I would not — iv. 1 

then love me, Rosalind — iv. 1 

alas, dear love, I cannot lack — iv. I 

many fathom deep I am in love'. .... — iv. 1 

be judge, how deep I am in love .... — iv. 1 

with pure love, and troubled brain .. — iv. 3 

and that she could not love me — iv. 3 

her love is not the hare that I do hunt — iv. 3 

turned unto the extremity of love .. — iv. 3 

to raise such love in mine — iv. 3 (letter) 

■whiles you chid me, I did love — iv. 3 Oetter) 
love to thee, little knows this love — iv. 3 (letter) 

by him my love deny — iv. 3 (letter) 

■wilt thou love such a woman? — iv. 3 

I see, love hath made a tame — iv. 3 

Bhe love me, I charge her to love thee — iv. 3 

committing me unto my brother's love — iv. 3 

you do love this maid? I do, sir , . . . — v. 1 

but seeing, you should love her? .... — v. 2 

I love Aliena; say with her, that (rep.) — v. 2 

they are in the very wrath of love.. — v. 2 

if you do love Rosalind so near .... — v. 2 

look upon him, love him — v. 2 

tell this youth what 'tis to love — v. 2 

if this be so why blame you me to love — v. 2 

I would love you, if I could — v. 2 

love Rosalind, meet; as you love (rep.) — v. 2 

sweet lovers love the spring — v. 3 (song) 

for love is crowned with — v. 3 (song) 

why then, my love adieu! — v. 4 

you to his love must accord — v. 4 

a love, that your true faith doth (rep.) — v. 4 
for the love you bear to men, to like — (epil.) 

the love you bear to women ~- (epil.) 

love all, trust a few, do wrong to none. AU'sH'ell/t. I 

the best that shall attend his love .. — i. 1 

that I should love a bright particular — i. 1 

the ambition in my love thus plagues — i. 1 

by the linn, must liie for love — i. 1 

I love him for his sake, and yet — i. 1 

(hall your master have a thousand loves — i. 1 



[ 4()3 ] 



I-OVE-which mounts my love so h'lghi. All's Well, i. 1 

that did miss her love? i. ] 

his love and wisdom aniirove<l so to i. 2 

loves my flesh and blood, he that loves — i. 3 

madam, yon love your gentlewoman — i. 3 

to as much love as she hnds i. 3 

love, no god, that would not extend.. — i. 3 

where love's strong passion is — i. 3 

'tis gross, you love my son 1.3 

pardon me! do you love my sou?. , . . — i. 3 

love yon my son? do not you love (rep. ) — i. 3 

1 love your son; my friends were (rep.) — i. 3 

I know I love in vain 1,3 

pour in the waters of my love — i. 3 

your hate encounter with my love .. — i. 3 

and love dearly, that your Dian (rep.) i. 3 

my leave, and love, means 1.3 

and write to her a love line — ii. 1 

a poor friend of yours, that loves you — ii. 2 

mistress fall, when love please! ... — ii. 3 

who shuns thy love, shuns all his love — ii. 3 

and to imperial Love, that god .... — ii. 3 

love made your fortunes twenty .... — ii. 3 

and her humble love! No better.... — ii. 3 

my wish receive, which great love grant — ii. 3 

I cannot love her, nor will strive .... — ii. 3 

in vile misprision shackle up my love — ii. 3 

lovest her, thy love's to me religious — ii. 3 

prerogative and rite of love, wliich.. — ii. 4 

to love, as an old man loves money — iii. 2 

lay our best love and credence — iii. 3 

of thy drum, hater of love — iii. 3 

ambitious love hath so in me.. — iii. 4 (letter) 

delights to hear, and loves to grant.. — iii. 4 

led hither by pure love iii. 4 

for the love of laughter, let him — iii. 6 

I love not many words. No more (rep.) — iii. 6 

in your fine frame hath love no quality? — iv. 2 

but I love thee by love's own sweet.. — iv. 2 

love you ill? this has no holding (?^('p.) — iv. 2 

so holy-cruel; love is holy — iv. 2 

and ever my love, as it begins — iv. 2 

I begin to love him for this — iv. 3 

truly labour to recompense your love — iv. 4 

not nave owed her a more rooted love — iv. 5 

love her, strikes some scores away (rep.) — v. 3 

our own love waking cries to see .... — v. 3 

speak'st it falsely, as I love mine — v. 3 

did he love this woman? Faith (rep.) — v. 3 

did love her, sir, as a gentleman lovea — v. 3 

I'll love her dearly, ever, ever dearly — v. 3 
as he will win my love.. Taming of Shrew, 1 (indue.) 

and make known her love? — 1 (indue.) 

dost thou love hawking? — 2 (indue.) 

dost thou love pictures? — 2 (iuduo.) 

and, by my father's love and leave — i. 1 

both love Katharina, because (rep.) — i. 1 

for I will love thee ne'er the less .... — i. 1 

their love is not so great, Hortensio — i. 1 

yet, for the love I bear my sweet .... — i. 1 

be happy rivals in Bianca's love .... — i. 1 

that love should of a sudden take — i. 1 

I found the effect of love iu idleness — i. 1 

if love have touched you, naught.... — i. 1 

if you love the maid, bend — i. ) 

your love must live a maid — i. 1 

I love Ijucentio. Tranio, be so (rep.) — i. 1 

as foul as was Florentins' love — i. 2 

and rivals in my love: supposing.... — i. 2 

leisure to make love to her — i. 2 

'tis the rival of m}' love — i. 2 

all books of love, see that at any .... — i. 2 

'tis now no time to vent our love .... — i. 2 

I love no chiders, sir — i. 2 

she's the choice love of si»nior Gremio — i. 2 

and, for your love to her, lead — ii. 1 

if I get your daughter's love — ii. I 

this IS,— her love; for that is all — ii. 1 

I love her ten times more than e'er — ii. 1 

to believe how much she loves me. ... — ii. I 

in a twink she won me to her love .. — ii. 1 

I am one, that love Bianca more.... — ii. I 

not love so dear as I (rep.) — ii. 1 

shall have Bianca's love — ii. 1 

disguised thus to get your love — iii. 1 

the knave doth court my love — iii. 1 

that loves with all affection .. — iii. I (gamut) 

he looks as though he were in love .. — iii. 1 

to her love concerneth ns to add — iii. 2 

now, if you love me, stay — iii. 2 

serve it thus to me that love it not?. . — iv. I 

that I profess, the art to love — iv. 2 

despiteful love! unconstant — iv. 2 

forswear Bianca and her love for ever — iv. 2 

shall win my love: and so I take .. — iv. 2 

ta'en you napping, gentle love — iv. ? 

take in your love, and then let me .. — iv. 2 

he does it under name of perfect love — iv. 3 

a dish that I do love to feed upon. . . . — iv. 3 

here, love, thou seest how diligent . . — iv. 3 

and now, my honey love, will we. . . . — iv. 3 

1 love thee well (rtp.) — iv. 3 

a weighty cause of love between .... — iv. 4 

and for the love he beareth to your . . — iv. 4 

doth love my daughter — iv. 4 

love wrought these miracles (rep.) .. — v. 1 

now, pray thee, love, stay — v. 1 

and love, and quiet life, and awful rule — v. 2 

but love, fair looks, and true obedience — v. 2 

are bound to serve, love, and obej' . . — v. 2 
we will be justified in our loves . . IVinler's Tale, i. I 

the heavens continue their loves!.... — i. I 

were, in your love, a whip to me .... — i. 2 

Hove thee not ajar o' the clock .... — i. 2 

and clap thyself my love — i. 2 

think is mine, and'love as mine .... — i. 2 

region loved as he loves himself — i. 2 

I love you better — ii. I 

of love, as might become a lady () pp.) — iii. 2 

whose love had spoke, even since.. .. — iii. 2 



LOV 

LOVE-the love I bore your queen. H'inler's Tale, iii. 2 

humbling their deities to love — iv. 3 

for love to lie and plav on — jv. 3 

he says, he loves my claiiKhtcr iv. 3 

to choose, who loves another best ... . — iv. a 

I love a ballad but even too well .... iv. 3 

if I were not in love with Mopsa .... — iv. 3 

1 love a ballad in print a' life — iv. 3 

thou hast sworn my love to be.... — iv. 3(song) 

and handed love, as you do i\-. 3 

your lack of love, orbounty — iv. 3 

not ijrize them, without her love .... — iv.3 

do him love and honour — iv.3 

i' the love that I have borne your.... — iv.3 

please to think I love the king iv.3 

prosperity's the very bond of love iv.3 

grew so in love with the wenches' song — iv. 3 

women will love her, that she is — v. 1 

whom he loves (he bade me say so) . . — v. 1 

to change our loves v. 1 

whilst I laboured of a lo^'e to see. Comedy of Err. i. I 

ere I learn love, I'll practise — ii. 1 

as you love strokes, so jest ii. 2 

will jest upon my love, and make .. — ii. 2 

for know, my love, as easy ij . 2 

of love, thy love-springs rot? (;ep.).. — iii. 2 

muffle your false love with some .... — ii i. 2 

of credit, that you love us iii. 2 

let love, being light, be drowned — iii. 2 

sweet love, as look on night (rep.) .. — iii. 2 

thee will I love, and with thee — iii. 2 

thought our love would last too long — iv. 1 

that love I begged for you iv. 2 

persuasion did he tempt thy love? .. — iv. 2 

his affection in unlawful love? — v. i 

namely, some love, that drew v. 1 

toward your love and honour Macbeth, i. 4 

my dearest love, Duncan comes 1.5 

the love that follows us i. 6 

which still we thank as love — i. 6 

and his great love, sharp as his spur i. 6 

we love him highly, and shall — i. G 

such I account thy love — 1.7 

how tender 'tis, to love the babe .... — i. 7 

the expedition of my; violent love.... — ii. 3 

a heart to love, and in that heart (rep.') — ii. 3 

to the heart and love of us iii. 1 

wdiose loves I may not drop iii. \ 

to your assistance do make love .... iii. 1 

so shall I, love; and so, I pray iii. 2 

come, love and health to all iii. 4 

who, as others do, loves for his own iii. 5 

he loves us not iv. 2 

and nothing is tlie love iv. 2 

those strong knots of love — iv.3 

nothing in love — y. 2 

as honour, love, obedience, troops.... — v. 3 

reckon with yotir several loves — v. 7 

with very easy arguments of love King John, i. 1 

subject tribute to commanding love.. — i. 1 

heart full of unstained love ii . 1 

to this indenture of my love — ii. I 

to make a more requital to your love ii. 1 

England we love; and, for that — ii. I 

out of my dear love, I'll give ii. I 

if lusty love should go in quest ii. 2 

if love ambitious sought ii. 2 

can in this book of beauty read, I love — ii. 2 

he doth espy himself love's traitor .. — ii. 2 

in such a love, so vile a lout as he ,. ii. 2 

I will enforce it easily to my love.... ii. 2 

love the lady? (7'('p.) ji. 2 

for then I should not love thee iii. 1 

peace, amity, true love, between .... iii. 1 

so newdy joined in love, so strong iii. 1 

what is opposite to England's love .. — iii. 1 

now shall I see thy love iii. 1 

thy grandam loves thee iii. 3 

means to pay thy love iii. 3 

yet Hove thee well; and b.y my .... _ iii. 3 

Hubert, I love thee; well, I'll not say — iii. 3 

misery's love, O come to me! — iii. 4 

what love I note, in the fair — iii. 4 

inseparable faithful loves, sticking ., iii. 4 

so you wouid love me, Hubert — iv. 1 

1 ■«'arrant I love you more — iv. 1 

what good love may I perform — iv. 1 

you may think my love was crafty love — iv. 1 

I have a way to win their loves again iv 2 

the Dauphin's love, is much more.. .. — iv.3 

allegiance, and the love of soul — v. 1 

dear amity, and everlasting love — v. 4 

the love of him, and this respect besides — v. 4 

but I do love the favour and the form — v. 4 

the like tender of our love we v. 7 

the devotion of a subject's love Richard 11, i. I 

hath love in thy old blood no — i.2 

each other other's love in banishment — i. 3 

I wan er from the jewels th^t I love — i. 3 

love they to live, that love and honour — ii. 1 

he loves you, on my life — ii. 1 

as Hereford's love, so his — ii. ! 

to the king in love (rep.) — ii. 2 

for their love lies in their purses .... — ii. 2 

with thy love, it shall be still (rep.) .. — ii. 3 

I wot, your love pursues — ii. 3 

shall be your love and labour's — ii. 3 

and near in love, till you did — iii. 1 

with letters of your love to her — iii. 1 

sweet love, I see, changing his — iii. 2 

my heart might feel your love — iii. 3 

service shall deserve your love — iii. 3 

tears show their love, but want — iii. 3 

are we beholden to your love — iv. 1 

the love of wicked friends — v. 1 

hand, my love, and heart from heart — v. 1 

that were some love, but little — v. 1 

or any of my kin, and yet I love him -. v. 2 

shall I, for love, speak treason — v. 3 

and not love, begets his penitence .. — v. 3 



LOV 



LOVE, loving not itself, none other . . Richardll. v. 3 

'tis a sign of love, and love to Uichard — v. 5 

if thou love rae, 'tis time tliou — v. 5 

they love not poison that do — v. 6 

hate tlie murderer, love liim murdered — y. 6 

hetwixt my love and your high \ Henry IV. i. 3 

I tliink his father loves hira not .... — i. 3 

strangers to liis looks of love ^ — J. 3 

medicines to make me love him — ii. 2 

respect of the love I hear your house ii. 3 (letter) 

loves his own barn better than he loves — ii. 3 

know it, else he loves me not — ii- 3 

my horse, my love, my horse — n- 3 

60 far afoot, I shall be weary, love .. — n. 3 

you triflerl Love? I love thee not .. — ii. 3 

since you love me not, I will not love — ii. 3 

I will swear I love thee infinitely — ;;. 3 

if thou love me, practise — .Ji. 4 

1 will never be a truant, love — Jii. 1 

I love him well, he is an honest .... — iii. 3 

thy love is worth a million {.rep.) — iii. 3 

love thy husband, look to thy servants — in. 3 

a braver place in my heart's love — iv. 1 

some of us love you well — i v. 3 

you would accept of grace and love.. — iv. 3 

even oiu- love durst not come — v. 1 

we love our people well, even those {rep.) — v. 1 

if I were much in love with vanity . . — v. 4 

and terms of love to all of you? — v. 5 

their over-greedy love hath 2Henryir. i. 3 

Tr ake me out of love with ray greatness — ii. 2 

but, for all our loves, first let them. . — ii. 3 

but I do not love swaggering — ii. ■* 

all, rogue ! i' faith, I love thee — ;;• 4 

why does the prince love him so then? — ii. 4 

I love thee better than 1 love e'er. . . . — ii. 4 

wicked might not fall in love with him — ii. 4 

and laid his love and life under my foot — lu. 1 

and all their prayers and love were set — iv. 1 

proceeds from policy, not love — iv. 1 

were our royal faiths martyrs in love — iv. 1 

of our restored love, and amity — iv. 2 

but my love to you shall show — iv. 2 

sober-blooded boy doth not love me. . — iv. 3 

he loves tliee, and thou dost neglect — iv. 3 

blunt not his love; nor lose the good — iv. 3 

shall observe him with all care and love — _iv. 4 

which nature, love, and filial tenderness — iv. 4 

win the more thy father's love — iv. 4 

the young king loves you not — v. 2 

let riie but bear your love — v. 2 

assured, I love you not — v. 2 

your too much love and care of me . . Henry r. li. 2 

how apt our love was, to accord — ii. 2 

my love, give me thy lips — li. 3 

a man that I love and honour — 111.6 

the duke of Exeter doth love thee well — iii. b 

merited some love at his hands — iii. 6 

'tis good for men to love their — iv. 1 

I love the lovely bully — iv. 1 

you love him not BO ill — \^'^ 

testament of noble-endin» love — iv. 6 

apprehend him, an' thou dost love me — iv. 7 

you do not love it, nor your affections — v. 1 

all griefs, and quarrels, into love .... — v. 2 

on equal love, gr^at kings of — v. 2 

if you will love me soundly with .... — v. 2 

to mince it in love, but directly iiep.) — v. 2 

if I might buflFet for my love — v. 2 

if thou canst love a fellow of — v. 2 

in liis glass for love of anything .... — v. 2 

for thy love, by the Lord, no: yet I love — v. 2 

what say'st thou then to my love? .. — v. 2 

should love de enemy of France? (ifp.) — v. 2 

love the friend of France; for I love — v. 2 

canst thou love me? I cannot tell. ... — v. 2 

that you love witli your heart — v. 2 

because I love thee cruelly — v. 2 

in true English, I love thee, Kate — v. 2 

how perfectly I love her — v. 2 

conjure up tlie spirit of love in her . . — v. 2 

as love is blind, and enforces — v. 2 

as love is, my lord, before it loves. . . . — v. 2 

thank love for my blindness — v. 2 

I pray you then, in love and dear.... — v. 2 

being two, are one in love — v. 2 

not vield to any rites of lo%'e 1 Henry VI, i. 2 

I love no colours; and, without — ii. 4 

in sigual of my love to thee , — .ii. 4 

join your hearts in love and amity .. — iii. 1 

if you love me, as you say you do .. — iii. 1 

love for thy love, and hand for hand — iii. 1 

presence of a king engenders love.... — JU' * 

under feigned ashes of forged love .. — iii. 1 

as you love our favour, quite to — iv. 1 

mv kinsmen, and I love them both. . — iv. 1 

still continue peace and love — iv. 1 

if you forsake the offer of their love. . — iv. 2 

little duty, and less love — iv. 4 

O if you love my mother, dishonour not — iv. 5 

before thou make a trial of her love? — v. 3 

what? His love? I am unwortliy — v. 3 

never yet taint with love — v. 3 

Alengbn, that enjoyed my love — v. 4 

do breed love's settled passions — v. ."i 

where I may have fruition of her love — v. s 

to love and honour Henry as her lord — v. 5 

for wealth, and not for perfect love . . — v. 5 

Margaret, he be linked in love — v. 5 

any passion of inflaming love — v. 5 

to find the like effect in love — v. 5 

no kinder sign of love, than iHenryVI.i. I 

if sympathy of love unite our — i. 1 

cheerful voice welcome my love .... — ;. 1 

Warwick, OS he loves the land — i. 1 

and make a show of love to proud .. — i. I 

surfeiting in joys of love — i. 1 

if thou dost love thy lord — i. 2 

and as you that love to be protected — i. 3 

a tilt in honour of my love — i. 3 



[ 464 ] 



LOV 



LOA'E— his loves are brazen images . . .iHenry VI. i. 3 

as I in duty love my kin" and country! — i. 3 

tlieir master loves to be aloft — ii. 1 

to tell my love unto his dumb — iii. 2 

mere instinct of love, and loyalty .. — iii. 2 

you, that love the commons — iv. 2 

1 fear, my love, if that I had — iv. 4 

no, my love, 1 should not mourn .... — iv. 4 

who loves the king, and will embrace — iv. 8 

how well you love your prince — iv. 9 

pledges of my fealty and love — v. 1 

of Kent, that loves Ills king — v. I 

bearing should I be in love — v. 2 

nor he, that loves himself — v. 2 

nor he that loves him best SHem-yVI, i. 1 

how love to me, and to her son — i. 1 

a younker, prancing to his love? .... — ii. 1 

you love the breeder, better than .... — ii. 1 

tis love, I bear thy glories, makes .. — ii. I 

but love to go whither the queen — ii. S 

my love, and fear, glued many friends — ii. 6 

thou didst love York — ii. 6 

even of pure love, to greet — iii. I 

love your children? Ay, full as (rep. ■) — iii. 2 

an easy task; 'tis but to love a king — iii. 2 

oflovelmean. The fruits of love .. — iii. 2 

what love, think'st thou, I sue so (rep.) — iii. 2 

that love, which virtue begs (rep.) ., — iii. 2 

and she shall be my love, or else my — ?'!• ^ 

to enjoy thee for my love — iJ!- ■* 

why, love forswore me in my — iii. 2 

sole possessor of my love — iii. 3 

in kindness, and unfeigned love .... — iii. 3 

well-meant honest love — iii. 3 

the measure of his love unto our sister — iii. 3 

that this his love was an eternal .... — iii. 3 

and thy lord's false love — iii. 3 

this proveth Edward's love — iii. 3 

have turned my hate to love — iii. 3 

my love, forbear to fawn upon — iv. 1 

they shall obey, and love thee too .. — iv. 1 

you, that love me and Warwick .... — iv. 1 

I stay not for the love of Edward. . . . — iv. 1 

if you love Warwick more than me? — iv. 1 

an open hand in sign of love — iv. 2 

for love of Edward's offspring — iv. 4 

then why should they love Edward.. — Iv. 8 

more than the nature of a brother's love — v. 1 

neither pity, love, nor fear — v. 6 

and this word, love, which greybeards — v. 6 

and Gloster, love my lovely queen .. — v. 7 

and that I love the tree from whence — v. 7 

my country's peace, and brothers' loves — y. 7 

and want love s majesty Richard III. i. 1 

I do love thee so, that I will shortly — i. 1 

not all so much for love, as for — i. 1 

that loves you better than he could. . — i. 2 

for thy love, did kill thy love (rep.).. — i. 2 

then return lamenting to my love . . — i. 2 

a man that loves not me — i. 3 

and loves not me, be you, good lord . . — i. 3 

love them not? By holy Paul, they love — i. 3 

love, the devil, and my rage (rep.) . . — i. 

love my brother, hate not me (rep.).. — i. 

he loves me, and he holds me dear . . — i. 

from his soul to love each other .... — _i. 

not your hatred, swear your love. ... — ii- 

I seal my true heart's love — ii. 

perfect love! And I, as I love — ii. 

wife, love lord Hastings — ii. 

Hastings, love lord Marquis (rep.) . . — ii. 

but witli all duteous love doth — ii. 

in those where I expect most love! .. — ii. 

when I am cold in love, to you or yours — ii. 

of enmity, fair love of hate — ii. 

and desire all good men's love — jj. 

have I offered love for this, to be so . . — ii. 

who spoke of love? who told me .... — ii. 

the king doth love you well — ii- 

atid he would love me dearly as his. . — ii. 

cheer each other, in each other's love — ii. 

so loves the prince, that he will not be — iii. 

are near in love. I thank his (rep.).. — iii. 

knows me well, and loves me well .. — iii. 

can lesser hide his love, or hate — iii- 

the terder love I bear your grace-... — iii. 

the rest, that love me, rise, and follow — iii. 

them, that did love their country's good — iii. 

your wisdom, and your love to Richard — iii- 

we come to him in perfect love — iii. 

with your faithful love to me — iii. 

your love deserves my thanks — iii. 

mighty lord, this proffered love — iii- 

as in love and zeal, loath to depose. . — iii. 

on pure heart's love, to greet — iv. 

between their love and me? — iv. 

aunt I am in law, in love their mother — iv. 

I will love thee, and prefer thee for it — iv. 

from my soul, I love thy daughter . . — iv. 

love my daughter, from thy soul's (rep.) — iv. 

I love thy daughter, and do intend.. — iv. 

this inducement move her not to love — iv, 

say, that I did all this for love of her? — iv. 

having bought love with such a bloody — iv. 

a grandam's name is little less in love — iv. 

the law, my honour, and her love. . . . — iv. 

say, I will love her everlastingly .... — iv. 

if, with pure heart's love, immaculate — iv. 

be the attorney of my love to her. ... — iv. 

bear her my true love's kiss — iv- 

the ceremonious vows of love — v. 3 

give us leisure for these rites of love! — v. 3 

Richard loves Richard ; that is — v. 3 

what? myself on myself? I love myself — v. 3 

there is no creature loves me — y. 3 

that you would love yourself (rep.). Henry VIII. i- 2 

to gain the love of the commonalty — i. 2 

exceeding mad, in love too — i. 4 

my love and duty I would surrender it — i. 4 

this duke as much they love and dote on — ii. 1 



XiOVE-you are liberal of your loves. Henry VIII. ii. 1 

of her that loves him with that (rep.) — ii. 2 

I love him not, nor fear him — ii. 2 

thank the holy conclave for their loves — ii- 2 

must needs deserve all strangers' loves — ii. 2 

have I not strove to love, altliough. . — ii. 

to wedloclc, or my love and duty .... — ii. 

trutli loves open dealing — iii. 

you wrong the king's love with these — iii. 

nis love too, long ago: I am old .... — iii. 

kiss obedience, so much they love it — iii- 

the king loves you, beware — iii. 

my heart dropped love, my power .. — iii- 2 

as 'twere in love's particular — iii. i 

and all that love nis follies — iii. 2 

love thyself last — iii. 2 

the model of our chaste loves — iv. 2 

and a little to love her for her — iv. 2 

by that you love the dearest — iv. 2 

my lord, I love you — v- 1 

love, and meekness, lord, become .... — v. 2 

I am, for his love and service — v. 2 

embrace, and love this man — v. 2 

peace, plenty, love, truth, terror .... — v- 4 
1 am mad in Cressid's love .. Troilus Sf Cressida, i. 1 

tell'st me, when I say, I lovelier .... — i. 1 

in every gash that love hath given . . — i. 1 

for thy Daphne's love, what Cressid is — i. 1 

Helen loves him better than Paris . . — i. 2 

prove to you tliat Helen loves him (rep.) — i. 2 

love an addle egg as well as you love — i. 2 

tears, and love's full sacrifice — i. 2 

love got so sweet (rep.) — i. 2 

my heart's content firm love doth bear — i. 2 

not found in fortune's love — i. 3 

loves his mistress more than his (rep.) — i. 3 

a Grecian that is true in love — i. 3 

hath not, or is not, in love! — i. 3 

one spark of fire to answer for his love — i. 3 

and yet he loves himself — ii. 3 

at mine, sir, and theirs that love music? — iii. 

of beauty, love's invisible soul — iii- 

my niece is horribly in love — iii. 

let thy song be love; this love will undo — iii. 

love! ay that it shall, i' faith (rep.).. — iii. 

love, love., nothing but love (rip.) .. — iii. 1 (song 

so dying love lives still — iii- 1 (song 

in love, i' faith to the very tip — iii. 

nothing but doves, love — iii. 

hot deeds is love (rep-) — iii. 

is love a generation of vipers? — iii. 

sweet, above thought I love thee .... — iii. 

tastes indeed love's thrice reputed nectar? - ii 

in the fountain of our love? — ii 

this is the monstrosity in love, lady — ii 

I love you now; but not, till now.... — ii 

I show more craft than love — ii 

or else you love not (rep.) — ii 

for aye her lamp and flames of love. . — ii 

such a winnowed purity in love .... — !!!• 2 

true swains in love shall — Ml* '^ 

among false maids in love — iii. 2 

[Knf-J the sight I bear in things to love — iii- 3 

the love that leaned on them — iii. 3 

desert in service, love, friendship .... — iii- 3 

that you are in love with one..... ... — ?!.'• ^ 

and your great love to me, restrains — iii. 3 

no man alive can love, in such — iv- 1 

the noblest hateful love, that e'er — iv. 1 

but flies the grasps of love — iv. 2 

no kin, no love, no blood — iv. 2 

strong base and building of my love — iv 



I know what 'tis to love. 

my love admits no qualifying. 



iv. 3 
iv. 4 

Cressid, I love thee In so , — i v. 4 

hear me, my love — iv. 4 

hear why I speak it, love — iv. 4 

heavens! you love me not — iv. 4 

in love whereof, half Hector stays .. — iv. 5 

more vindicative than jealous love .. — iv. JJ 

sweet love is food for fortune's tooth — iv. 5 

from her daughter, my fair love .... — v. 1 

and one that loves quails — v. I 

orts of her love, the fragments — v. 2 

as much as I do Cressid love — v. 2 

for the love of all the gods — v. 3 

upon the love you bear me — v. 3 

my love with words and errors — v. 3 

Trojan ass, that loves the whore there — v. 4 

1 love bastards : I am a bastard begot — v. 8 
to his love and tendance all sorts. . Timon ofAlh. i. I 
that few things loves better than .... — i. 1 

man of thine attempts her love — i. 1 

does she love him? — i. 1 

love you the maid? — ;. 1 

he, that loves to be flattered — i. 1 

there should be small love 'mongst .. — i. 1 

you mistake my love; I gave it — i. 2 

lord Lucius, out of his free love — i- 2 

here, my lord; a trifle of our love.... — i. 2 

I love and honour him, but must not — ii. 1 

to broach the vessels of my love .... — ij.2 

commend me to their loves — ij. 2 

BO much I love his heart — iii. 2 

it shows but little love or judgment — iii.- 3 

of such a nature is his politic love . . — iii- 3 

your reverend ages love security .... — iii- 5 

wert a dog, that I might love thee . . — iv. 3 

they love thee not, that use thee ... . — iv. 3 

I love thee better now than e'er — iv. 3 

and will love naught but even — iv. 3 

live, and love thy misery! — iv. 3 

love not yourselves; away — iv. 3 

to love his enemies: grant I (rep.) .. — iv. 3 

then I love thee, because thou art — iv. 3 

heaven knows, is merely love — iv. 3 

we tender our loves to him — v. 1 

love him, feed him, keep in — v. 1 

look you, I love you well — v. I 

with one consent of love, entreatthee — v. 2 



LOV 



[ 4f55 J 



LOVE— sums of love ami wealth ..Timon o/Alh. v. 2 

in thee the flgurcs of their love — v. 2 

but I do prize it at my love — v. 2 

b\it j'et 1 love my eountry — v. 2 

their pangs of love, with other — v. 2 

our old love made a particular force — v. 3 

our ingrutitude with loves above .... — v. ri 

Timon to our city's love — v. 5 

and there's all t)ie love they bear ue.Coriolanus, i. 1 

where he would show most love .... — i. 3 

eaeli in my love alike — i. 3 

to save labour, nor that I want love — i. 3 

fall deep in love with thee! — 1.5 

that love this painting wherein — i. 6 

for they love not Marcius? — ii. I 

pray voii. who does the wolf love? .. — ii. 1 

one that loves a cup of hot wine — ii. 1 

for the love of Juno, let's go — ii. 1 

proud, and loves not the common people — ii. 2 

if they love they know not why .... — ii. 2 

whether they love, or hate him — ii. 2 

whether he had their love, or no .... — ii. 2 

to flatter them for their love — ii. 2 

he loves your people; but tie him not — ii. 2 

your people, I love them as they weigh — ii. 2 

I have not been common in my love — ii. 3 

lie may deserve your loves — ii. 3 

his irialice towards you into love.... — ii. 3 

when he did need your loves — ii. 3 

but your loves, thinking upon his .. — ii. 3 

that love the fundamental — iii. I 

when he did love his country — iii. 1 

for tlic inheritance of their loves .... — iii. 2 

in asking their good loves — iii. 2 

I'll mouutebanlc their loves — iii. 3 

plant love among usl — iii. 3 

t do love my country's good — iii. 3 

whose loves I prize as the dead — iii. 3 

plague o' the gods requite your love! — iv. 2 

who twin, as 'twere in love unseparable — iv. 4 

and my love's upon this enemy town — iv. 4 

and as nobly with thy love, as ever — iv. 5 

and patricians, love him too — iv. 7 

what your love can do for Rome .... — v. 1 

and love thee no worse than thy old — v. 2 

for whose old love, I have — v. 3 

infected with my country's love .... — v. 5 
that gentleness, and show of love. .JuliusCcesai; i. 2 

over your friend that loves you — i. 2 

forgets the shows of love to other men — i. 2 

with ordinary oaths my love to every — i. 2 

yet I love liim well: but wherefore .. — i. 2 

as I love the name of honour — i. 2 

that you do love me, I am nothing . . — i. 2 

so with love I might entreat you .... — i. 2 

he loves no plays, as thou doot — i. 2 

but he loves Brutus — i. 2 

the ingrafted love he bears to Caesar — ii. 1 

if he love Caesar, all that he can .... — ii. 1 

for he loves to hear, that unicorns .. — ii. 1 

he loves me well, and I have given. . — ii. 1 

by all your vows of love — ii. 1 

because I love you, I will let — ii. 2 

for my dear, dear love to your — ii. 2 

and reason to my love is liable — ii. 2 

Decius Brutus loves thee not .. — ii. 3 (paper) 

say, I love Brutus, and I honour him — iii. 1 

shall not love Cffisar dead so well ... . — iii. 1 

with all kind love, good thoughts.... — iii. 1 

why I, that did love Caesar when. . . . — iii. 1 

not least in love, yours, good Trebonius — iii. 1 

that I did love thee, Cajsar — iii. 1 

with you all, and love you all — iii. 1 

that Brutus' love to Ctesar was — iii. 2 

there is tears, for his love — iii. 2 

that will not love his country? — iii. 2 

you all did love him once — iii. 2 

plain blunt man, that love my friend — iii. 2 

when love be/jins to sicken and decay — iv. 2 

should perceive nothing but love .... — iv. 2 

notpresume too much upon my love — iv. 3 

you love me not. I do not like your — iv. 3 

liated by one he loves — iv. 3 

have you not love enough to bear. . . . — iv. 3 

love, and be friends, as two such men — iv. 3 

cannot drink too much of Brutus' love — iv. 3 

not that we love words better — v. 1 

even for that our love of old — v. fi 

if it be love indeed (rrp.) ..AnloinjfyCteopalra,\. 1 

how, my love! Perchance, nay — i. 1 

did he marry Fulvia, and not love her? — i. I 

now for the love of I^ove, and her ,. — i. 1 

I love long life better than figs — i. 2 

the finest part of pure love — i. 2 

and get her love to part — i. 2 

whose love is never linked to — i. 2 

if you did love him dcaily — 1.3 

are newly grown to love — i. 3 

O most false love I where be — i. 3 

so Antony loves. My precious (rcpS) — i. 3 

ne'er loved, till ne'er worth love .... — i. 4 

did I, Charmian, ever love Cajsar so? — i. 5 

people love me, and tlie sea is mine — ii. I 

but he neither loves, nor either cares — ii. I 

but all cliarms of love, salt Cleopatra — ii. I 

borrow one another's love — ii. 2 

her love to both, would, each to (rfp.) — ii. 2 

govern in our loves, and sway — ii. 2 

no brother did ever love so dearly. ... — ii. 2 

and never fly off our loves again!.. .. — ii. 2 

moody food of us that trade in love — ii. 5 

than the love of the parties — ii. 6 

O how he loves Caesar! — iii. 2 

loves Ca3sar best, yet he loves Antony — iii. 2 

sing, number, ho, his love to Antony — iii. 2. 

botli he loves. They are his shards — iii. 2 

as the cement of our love, to keep .. — iii. 2 

it is love's spring, and these the showers — lit. 2 

wrestle with vou in my strength of love — iii. 2 

let your best love draw to tliat — iii. 4 



LOVE— your love can equally . . Anlouy ^ Cleo. iii. 4 

prevented the ostent of our love — iii. 6 

of us, and those that love you — iii. 6 

in Rome does love and pity you — iii. 6 

love, 1 am full of lead: some wine .. — iii. 9 

as you did love, but as you feared him — iii. II 

I'll make death love me iii. II 

love, that thou couldst see my — iv. 4 

the business that we love — iv. 4 

why is my lord enraged against his love? — iv. 10 

let him that loves me, strike — iv. 12 

which my love makes religion to obey — v. 2 
look here, love; this diamond was . . Cijinbetine, i. 2 

it is a manacle of love — i. 2 

and that she should love this fellow. . — i. 3 

bring me word, she loves my son .... — i. 6 

much loves a Galiian girl at home .. — i. 7 

the love I bear him made me to fan. . — i. 7 

still, I swear, I love you — ii. 3 

1 barely gratify yom' love — ii. 4 

love, where there's another man .... — ii. 4 

upon the love, and truth, and vows. . — iii. 2 

relish of love, of my lord's health. ... — iii. 2 

one of them, for it doth physic love. . — iii. 2 
what your own love will out of this — iii. 2 (let.) 

and your increasing in love — iii. 2 (let.) 

love s counsellor should fill the bores — iii. 2 

the innocent mansion of my love .... — iii. 4 

winged with fervour of her love .... — iii. 5 

I love, and hate her; for she's fair .. — iii. 5 

I love her therefore; but disdaining me — iii. 5 

I'll love him as ray brother — iii. 6 

this imperseverant thing loves him.. — iv. 1 

I love thee; I have spoke it — iv. 2 

as much, as I do love roy father .... — iv. 2 

I know not why I love this youth .. — iv. 2 

love's reason's without reason — iv. 2 

Polydore, I love thee brotherly — iv. 2 

shall find I love my country — iv. 3 

deserved my service, nor your loves — iv. 4 

that's love, to have them fall no more — v. 1 

whom best I love, I cross — v. 4 

to love with such integrity — v. 5 

I love thee more and more — v. 5 

hearing us praise our loves of Italy .. — v. .'i 

qualities that man loves woman for. . — v. 5 

most like a noble lord in love, and one — v. 5 

though you did love this youth — v. 5 

I lov'e and honour thee and thine Tiitis A:idron. i. 1 

and to the love and favour of my .... — i. 1 

let Rome reward with love — i. 2 

that is another's lawful promised love — i. 2 

my true betrothed love — i. 2 

plead my passions for Lavinia's love — ii. 1 

that for her love such quarrels — ii. 1 

I love Lavinia more than all — ii. 1 

and cannot brook compctitorsinlove? — ii. i 

to achieve her whom I love — ii. 1 

than this Lavinia, Bassianus' love .. — ii. 1 

let her 'joy her raven-coloured love — ii. 3 

as you love your mother's life — ii. 3 

happiness, as half thy love? — ii. 5 

that, if thou love thy sons — iii. 1 

let me show a brother's love to thee.. — iii. 1 

and, if you love me, as I think j'ou do — iii. 1 

she loves thee, boy, too well to do. . ., — iv. 1 

my noble aunt loves me as dear — iv. 1 

for love of )ier that's gone, perhaps . . — iv. 1 

wish, and full of love — iv. 2 

the common people love so much.... — iv. 4 

this do thou for my love; and so ... . — v. 2 

for love, for league, and good to Rome — v. 3 

made me man, and sway in love Pericles, i. 1 

few love to hear the sins they love to act — i 1 

all love the womb that their first — i. 1 

my tongue like leave to love my head — i. 1 

of whicn love to all (of which thyself art — i. 2 

unlicensed of your loves, he would depart — i. 3 

we do not look for reverence, but for love — i. 4 

to just and tourney for her love — ii. 1 

he loves you well, that holds — ii. 2 

honour we love, for who hates honour — ii. 3 

as you do love, fill to your mistress' lips — ii. 3 

since they love men in arms — ii. 3 

too late to talk o;' love — ii. 3 

wrong not the prince you love — ii. 4 

if that you love prince Pericles — ii. 4 

if I cannot win you to this love — ii. 4 

then you love us, we you — ii. 4 

a letter that she loves the knight — ii. 5 

never aimed so high, to love your — ii. 5 

a deed might gain her love — ii. 5 

anj' syllable that made love to you? .. — ii. 5 

bestow your love and your affections .. — ii. 5 

yes, if j'ou love me, sir — ii. 5 

make us love your goodly gifts — iii. 1 

yet, for the love of this poor infant. ... — iii. 1 

inflame love in thy bosom — iv. 1 

I love the king your father — iv. 1 

I must love you, and sue to know Lear, i. 1 

rivals in our youngest daughter's love .. — i. 1 

shall we say, doth love us most? — i. 1 

sir; I do love 3'ou more than words — i. 1 

a love tliat makes breath poor — i. 1 

I love you. What shall Cordelia do? (rep.) — i. 1 

she names my very deed of love — i. 1 

in your dear niglniess' love — i. I 

my love's more richer than my tongue .. — i. I 

to whose young love the vines of France — i. I 

I love your majesty according to — i. 1 

obey you, love you, and most honour you — i. I 

if they say, they love you, nil? — i. 1 

shall carry half my love with him — i. I 

like my sisters, to love my father all ... . — i. I 

daughter does not love thee least — i. I 

may spring from words of love — i. I 

or cease yonr quest of love? — i. 1 

I would not from your love make — i. 1 

love is not love, when it is mingled — i I 

respects of fortune are his love — i. 1 



LOV^ 



LOVE-my love should kindle to inflamed. . Lear, i. 1 
without our love, our grace, our benison — i. I 
[CW. Knl.} love well oiir father: to your — i. 1 

our father's love is to the bastard — i. a 

so tenderly and entirely loves him — i. 2 

love cools, friendship falls off .... : — i. 2 

to love him that is honest — i. 4 

not so young, sir, to love a woman — i. 4 

thou servest me, and I'll love thee — i. 4 

whoop.jug! I love thee — i. 4 

drew from my heart all love — i. 4 

to the great love I bear you — i. 4 

if thou love me, tell me. I love thee not — ii. 2 

if you do love old men, if your — ii. 4 

ond thou art twice her love — ii. 4 

Shalt find a dearer father in my love — iii. 5 

a boy's love, or a whore's oath — iii. 6 

to Dover, do it for ancient love iv. 1 

for the love thou show'dst the king — iv. 2 

but love, dear love, and our aged father's — iv. 4 

I'll love thee much, let me iv. 5 

your lady does not love her husband — iv. .■> 

I'll not love; do thy worst iv. 6 

blind Cupid; I know, you do not love me — iv. 7 

love my sister? in honoured love v. 1 

fortune love you! Stay till I _ v. I 

to both these sisters have I sworn my love — v. 1 

will marry, make your love to me — v. 3 

a period to such as love not sorrow — v. 3 

of^ their death-marked love . . Itomeo 4- Juliet, (prol.) 

in love ? Out— of love ? Out of _ i. 1 

where I am in love. Alas, that Love i. 1 

alas, that love, whose view is miiifled — i. I 
with love: why then, O brawling love! — i. 1 
this love I feel, that feel no love in this — i. 1 
why, such is love's transgression .... — i. 1 

this love, that thou hast shown — i. 1 

love is a smoke raised with the — i . 1 

who she is you love i. 1 

cousin, I do love a woman — i. 1 

and she's fair I love. A right — i. 1 

from love's weak ehildishliow i. 1 

she hath forsworn to love i, 1 

many a guest, such as I love i. 2 

one fairer than my love! i, 2 

your lady's love against some other.. — i. 2 

Paris seeks you for his love i. 3 

can J'OU love the gentleman? i. 3 

this precious book of love i. 3 

can you like of Paris' love? i. 3 

inider love's heavy burden (jcp.) .... i. 4 

is love a tender tiling? i. 4 

if love be rough with you (rep.) .... — i. 4 

the mire of this (save reverence) love — i. 4 
brains, and then they dream of love — i. 4 

did my heart love till now? _ i. h 

prodigious birth of love it is to me (rep.) — i. 5 

that fair, which love groaned for .. — i..')(cho.) 

is beloved, and loves again — i. 5(clio.) 

and she steal love's sweet bait from — i.5(clio.) 
and she as much in love, her mean.s — i. 5('..liu.) 
couple but— love and dove; speak to — ii. 1 
blind is his love, and best bclits (rep.) — ii. 1 

it is my love; O that she knew — ii. 2 

be but sworn my love, and I'll no longer — ii. 2 

call me but love, and I'll be new — ii. 2 

with love's light wings did I o'er-perch — ii. 2 
cannot hold love out; and what (rep.) — ii. 2 
and, but thou love nie, let them find — ii. 2 

prorogued, wantin" of thy love — ii. 2 

by love, who first did prompt me ... . — ii. 2 
dost thou love me? I know thou wilt say — ii. 2 

if thou dost love, pronounce it — ii. 2 

my true love's passion — ii. 2 

not impute this yielding to light love — ii. 2 
lest that tliy love prove likewise variable — ii. 2 

if mv heart's dear love — ii, 2 

this bud of love, by summer's — ii. 2 

the exchange of tliy love's faithful vow — ii. 2 
for what purpose, love? But to be frank — ii. 2 

as the sea, my love as deep — ii. 2 

some noise within; dear love, adieu! — ii. 2 
if that thy bent of love be honourable — ii. i 

love goes toward love (rep.) — ii. 2 

remembering how I love thy company — ii. 2 
my heart's dear love is set on the fair — ii. 3 
love so dear, so soon forsaken ? (rep.) — ii. 3 

to season love, that of it doth not . . ii. 3 

and bad'st me bury love ii. 3 

grace for grace, love for love allow . . — ii. 3 

thy love did read by rote — ii. 3 

your households' rancour to pure love — ii. 3 
she had a better love to berhyme her — ii. 4 
better now than groaning for love?. . — ii. 4 
this drivelling love is like a great .. — ii. 4 

that loves to hear himself talk — ii. 1 

love's heralds should be thoughts .. — ii. ."i 
nimble-pinioned doves draw love.... — ii. ."i 
would bandy her to my sweet love .. — ii. S 
what says my love? Your love (rep.) — ii. b 
by the which your love must climb. . — ii. 5 
therefore love moderately; long love — ii. 6 
my true love is grown to such excess — ii. 6 

[Knl.2 Romeo, the love I bear thee .. iii. 1 

the reason that I have to love thee.. — iii. I 
but love thee better tl'.an thou canst — iii. I 

know the reason of my love — iii. 1 

or, if love be blind, it best agrees .. .. — iii. 2 

strange love, grown bold, think true love iii. 2 

all the world will be in love with night — iii. 2 
I have bought the mansion of a love — iii. 2 
Juliet thy love, an hour but married — iii. 3 

concealed lady to our cancelled love? iii. 3 

slinmcst thy shape, thy love, thy wit — iii. 3 

bedeck thy shape, thy love, thy wit.. iii. 3 

dear love, sworn, but hollow perjury (rep.)— iij. 3 
that ornament to shape and love .... — iii. 3 

pout'st upon thy fortune and thy love iii, 3 

get thee to thj' love, as was decreed.. iii. 3 

desjierale tender of my child's love .. — iii 4 



JjOVE— my sol^ Paris' love Borneo fy J uUel, iii. 4 

believe me, love, it was the ni"htiiignle — iii. 5 
loolt, love, what ouvioiis streaks .... — in. 5 
art thou gone so V my love I my lord! — iii. 5 
convey my greetings, love, to thee .. — }!!• & 
trust me, love, in niy eye so do you . . — ■;.!. 5 

Bome grief shows mueh of love — UV ** 

to wreali the love I bore my cousin . . — n;- 5 

even for hate, that is meant love — ;;;. 5 

I cannot love, 1 am too young — ii>. 5 

therefore have I little talked of love — ;v. 

must be, love, on Thursday next — ;v. 

that you love me, I will confess (rep.) — iv. 

I am sure, that you love me — iv. 

an unstained wife to my sweet love. . — iv. 

love, give me strength! — iv. 

gave him what becomcd love I might — iv. 2 
why, love, I say! madam! — iv. S 

love ! O life ! not life, but love — — iv. 5 
in this love, you love your child so ill — iv. 5 
is love itself possessed, when but love's — v. 1 
my obsenuies, and true love's rites?.. — v. 3 
that murdered my love's cousin — V. 3 

1 love thee, better than myself — v. 3 

my love 1 my wife ! death that — v. 3 

here^s to my love ! O true apothecary — v. 3 

my master, one tlrat you love — v. 3 

a cup, closed in my true love's hand? — v. 3 
their course of love, the tidings of her — v. 3 
means to kill your joys with love ! .. — v. 3 

asneetU'ul in our loves, fitting Hamlel,\. 1 

no less nobility of love, than that — ;. 1 

for God's love, let rae hear — ;. 2 

1 will requite your loves — 1.2 

your loves, as mine to you : farewell . . — i. 2 

perhaps he loves you now. — i. 3 

then, if he says he loves you, it fits — i. 3 

he hath importuned me with love — i. 3 

if tliou didst ever thy dear father love . . — i. 5 
as meditation or the thoughts of love. . — ;- 5 

whose love was of that dignity — i. 5 

with all my love I do commend — J. 5 

express his love and friending to you. . — i. 5 
mad for thy love? my lord, I do not . . — ji. 1 

this is the very ecstacy of love — !'. 1 

than hate to utter love : come — ii. 1 

but never doubt I love — ii. 2 (letter) 

but that I love thee best — ii. 2 (letter) 

but how hath she received his love?.... — ii. 2 
had seen this hot love on the wing .... — ii. 2 
looked upon this love with idle sight. . — ii. 2 
if he love her not, and be not from .... — ii. 2 

I suffered mueh extremity for love — ii. 2 

obligation of oiu- ever-preserved love . . — !!• "^ 

if you love me, hold not off — ii. 2 

that Hove passing well — .ij. 2 

the afBiction of his love, or no — iji. 

pangs of despised love, the law's delay — iii. 

I did love you once. Indeed, my lord.. — iii. 
love! his affections do notthat way — — iii. 

grief sprung from neglected love — in. 

tis brief, my lord. As woman's love . . — iii. 2 
since love our hearts, and Hymen did — iii. 2 
again count o'er, ere love be done ! . . . . — iii. 2 
as tliey love; and women's fear and love — iii. 2 
love is, proof hath made you know (rep.) — iii. 2 
where love is great, the littlest doubts .. — iii. 2 

great love grows there ! (rep.) — jij. 2 

Buch love must needs be treason — iii. 2 

respects of thrift, but none of love — iii. 2 

even our loves should with our fortunes — iii. 2 
love lead fortune, or else fortune love.. — iii. 2 
and hitlierto doth love on fortune tend. . — iii. 2 

iuter|)ret between you and your love — iii. 2 

the murderer gets the love of Gonzago's — iii. 2 

my lord, you once did love me — iii. 2 

too bold, my love is too unmannerly — iii. 2 

the fair forehead of an innocent love — iii. 4 

you cannot call it, love — iii. 4 

and making love over the nasty sty — iii. 4 

motlier, for love of grace, lay not tnat .. — iii. 4 
was our love, we would not underBtand.. — iv. 1 

if my love thou hold'st at aught — iv. 3 

how should I youi- true love know — iv. 5 (song) 

nature is tine in love — iv. 5 

instance of itself after the thing it loves. . — iv. 5 
remembrance; pray you, love, remember — iv. 5 
great love the general gender bear him — iv. 

your father, and we love ourself — iv. 

not love vour father (rep.) — iv. 

within the very flame of love a kind of .. — iv. 
in youth when I did love, did love — v. 1 (song 

quantity of love make up my sum — v. 

for love of God, forbear him — v. 

as love between them like the palm — v. 2 

they did make love to this employment — v. 2 
I do receive your offered love like love . . — v. 2 

am affined to love the Moor Othello, i. 1 

not I for love and duty, but seeming so.. — i. 1 
I must show out a flag and sign of love.. — i. I 
but that I love tire gentle Desdemona .. — i. 2 
of my whole course of love ; what drugs — i. 3 

to fail in love with what she feared — ;. 3 

thrive in this fair lady's love — i. 3 

that I did love the Moor to live with .... — 1.3 

tiie rites, for which I Jove him — i. 3 

I have but an hour of love, of worldly .. — ;. 3 

I sliall never love thee after it — j- 3 

a man that knew how to love himself .. — i. 3 
drown myself for the love of a Guinea-hen — i. 3 
wliereof i take this, that you call— love — i. 3 
should long continue her love to the Moor— i. 3 
love's quick pants in Desdemona's arms — ii. 
our loves and comforts should increase . . — ii. 
I have found great love amongst them . . — ii. 

base men, being in love, have then — ii. 

Desdemona is directly in love with him — ii. 
and will she love him still for prating?. . — ii. 

tliat Cassio loves her (rfp.) — ii. 

now I do love her too — ii. 



[ 4GG J 

liOVE— thank me, love mo, reward me..Ollwllo, ii. 1 
come, my dear love; the piu-chase made — ii. 3 

for the love of his Desdemona — ii . 3 

speaks, is it not an alarm to love? — ii. 3 

whom love has turned almost the wrong — ii. 3 

I do love Cassio well — ii. 3 

on thy love, I charge thee — ii. 3 

love doth mince tins matter (Iff.) — ii. 3 

look if my gentle love be not raised up . . — ii. 3 

I think, you think 1 love you — ii. 3 

tliis crack of your love shall grow stronger — ii. 3 
the sincerity of love, and honest kindness — ii. 3 

his soul is so enfettered to her love — ii. 3 

you, of all loves rCo(.Kn(.-for love's sakej — iii. 1 

but, he protests, he loves you — iii- 1 

you do love my lord — iii. 3 

general will forget my love and service — iii. 3 

if he be not one that truly loves you — iii. 3 

good love, call him back — iii. 3 

a suit, wlierein I mean to touch your love — iii. 3 
but I do love thee! and when I love .... — iii. 3 

wooed my lady, know of your love? — !!!• ^ 

love me, show me thy thought (rep.) .... — iii. 3 
know thou art full oflove and honesty . . — iii. 3 

loves not his wronger — iii. 3 

yet strongly loves. O misery ! — iii. 3 

my wife is fair, feeds well, loves company — iii. 3 

away at once with love, or jealousy — iii. 3 

to show the love and duty that I bear you — iii. 3 

what is spoke comes from my love — iii. 3 

a corner in the thing 1 love for others' uses — iii. 3 

but she so loves the token — iii. 3 

be sure thou prove my love a whore — iii. 3 

from hence, I'll no friend, since love .... — iii. 3 

by foolish honesty and love — iii. 3 

wary, let us hide our loves ! — iii. 3 

all my fond love thus do I blow — iii. 3 

yield up, O love, thy crown — iii. 3 

ne'er ebb to humble love — iii. 3 

I greet thy love, not with vain than'KS , . — iii. 3 

my fatlier entirely to her love — iii. 4 

founded his good fortune on your love .. — iii. 4 

and be a member of his love — iii. 4 

can ransom me into his love again — iii. 4 

i'faith, sweet love, I was coming — iii. 4 

not, that I love you not (>fp.) — iii. 4 

love man so. Alas poor rogue (rep.) .... — iv. 1 

out of her own love and flattery — iv. 1 

for the love I bear to Cassio — iv. 1 

if e'er my will did trespass 'gainst his love — iv. 2 
love him dearly, comfort forswear me! .. — iv. 2 
defeat my life,'but never taint my love .. — iv. 2 

my love doth so approve him — iv. 3 

she was in love ; and he, she loved — iv. 3 

I called my love, false love — iv. 3 (song) 

I will kill thee, and love thee after — v. 2 

heavenly; it strikes where it doth love .. — v. 2 
thy sins. They are loves I bear to you . . — v. 2 

warranty of heaven as I might love — v. 2 

villany hath made mocks with love! — v. 2 

recognizance and pledge of love — v. 2 

LOVE- ATF AIR-thy love affairs Two Gen. of Ver. iii. 1 
I,OVE-BED— [Co(. K)!i.] lewd love-bed Rich. III. iii. 7 
LOVE-BOOK— on a love-book pray Two Gen. of F. i. 1 
LOVE-BROKER in the world. . . . TicelflhNighl, iii. 2 
LOVE-CAUSE— in a love-cause.. ^s you Like it, iv. 1 

LOVED— of all the world I loved Tempest, i. 2 

knowing I loved my books — i. 2 

and then I loved thee — i. 2 

loved Mall, Meg, and Marian . . — ii. 2 (song) 
she loved not the savour of tar. . — ii. 2 (song) 

and his and my loved darling — iii. 3 

ever since you loved her TwoGen.of Verona, ii. 1 

I have loved her ever since — ii. 1 

breaking faith with Julia whom 1 loved — iv. 2 

he loved her out of all nick — iv. 2 

thyself hast loved — iv. 3 

she loved me well, delivered it to me — iv. 4 

it seems, you loved her not — iv. 4 

that she loved you as well — iv. 4 

my master loved her well — iv. 4 

kissed, loved, and adored ! — iv. 4 

I have long loved her i^Ierry Wives, ii . 2 

had a daughter loved a man Tu-ellili Kiglil, ii. 4 

how I have ever loved the life ..ileas.farMeas. i. 4 

I loved thy brother — iv. 3 

I am loved of all ladies, only you Much Ado, i. 1 

I neither feel how she should be loved — i. 1 
that he loved my niece your daughter — i. 2 
that lady would have loved any man — ii. 3 
if they loved Benedick, to wish him — iii. 1 

but mine, and mine I loved — Jv. 1 

who loved her so, that, speaking — iv. 1 

I love nothing so well as you — iv. 1 

I was about to protest, I loved you . . — iv. 1 

that so lovedjiis cliild — v. 1 

God knows, 1 loved my niece — v. 1 

the rare semblance that I loved it first — v. 1 

and when you loved, you were — v. 4 

perforce, witholds the loved boy ..A/i'd.A'.'sDr.ii. 1 

and straightway loved an ass — iii. 2 

if e'er I loved her, all that love is — iii. 2 

since night you loved me — iii. 2 

that loved, that liked, that looked .. — v. 1 
that virtue love, for virtue loved .. Love'sL.Iost, ii. 1 
of our clime have loved it too . . Mer. of Venice, ii. 1 
j-ou loved, I loved; for intermission — iii. 2 

say how 1 loved you — iv. 1 

young Lorenzo swear he loved her well — v. 1 
since he liatli got the jewel that I loved — v. 1 
never two ladies loved as they Ao..AsyouLikeil, i. 1 
my father loved sir Rowland as his soul — i. 2 

the duke my father loved his father.. — _i. 3 

for I have loved ere now — ii. 4 

thou hast not loved; or if thou — ii. 4 

not loved; or if thou hast not broke.. — ii- 4 
thou hast not loved: O Phebe, Phebe — ii. 4 

the duke, that loved your father — ii. 7 

I never loved my brother in my life — iii. 1 
who ever loved, that loved not at first — iii. 5 



LOVED; no sooner loved Asyou Lilieil,v.2 

you are loved, sir; they that least ....All's Welt, 1. 2 
her matter was she loved your son . . — i. 3 

it hurts not him, that he is loved of me — i. 3 

I would, he loved his wife — iii. 5 

I loved you dearly, would you — iv. 2 

that always loved a great fire — iv. 5 

sinee I have lost, have loved — v. 3 

he loved her, sir, and loved her not . . — v. 3 

more than that, he loved her — v. 3 

Bianca loved none in the world.. Taining of Sh. iv. 2 
hath as long loved me, as I have loved — iv. 2 

I have loved thee— make't thy Winter's Tale, i. 2 

a region loved as he loves himself. ... — i. 2 

I loved him, as in honour he — iii. 2 

excliange flesh with one that loved lier — iv. 3 

hath sometime loved; I take — iv. 3 

honoured lord, is feared and loved? . . — v. 1 

the loss of whom I loved Comedy of Errors, i. 1 

by his loved mansionry Macbeth, i. 6 

you have loved him well : he hath .. — iv. 3 

I do protest, I never loved myself KingJolin, ii. 2 

I honoured him, I loved him — iv. 3 

iust, and always loved us well i?i'c/ifir<///. ii. I 

lean kine are to be loved \ Henry IV. ii. 4 

before, I loved thee as a brother .... — v. 4 

John of Gaunt loved him well iHenrylV. iii. 2 

tlie king, that loved him — iv. 1 

better feared, and loved, than is Henry r. ii. 2 

how I have loved my king 2 Henry VI. ii. 1 

for they loved well, when they were — iv. 7 

the bonny beast he loved so well .... — v. 2 

where you are loved ; and where — v. 2 

hadst thou but loved him half illenryVI. i. 1 

so dear I loved the man, that I. . . . Richard III. iii. 5 
you few that loved me, and dare . . HenryVlll. ii. 1 

by those men we loved most — ii. 1 

has always loved her so dear — ii. 2 

loved him next heaven? obeyed him? — iii. 1 
my father loved you; he said, he did — iii. 2 

if 1 loved many words, lord — iii. 2 

som' to them that loved him not .... — iv. 2 
for her mother's sake that loved him — iv. 2 

she shall be loved, and feared — v. 4 

have loved you night and day.. Troilus^ Cress, iii. 2 

but though I loved you well — iii. 2 

she was beloved, she loved — iv. 5 

he loved me— O false wench ! — v. 2 

'twas one's that loved me better than — v. 2 
why should our endeavour be so loved — v. 1 1 
shouldst have loved thyself . . Tivwn of Athens, iv. 3 
ever young, fresh, loved, and delicate — iv. 3 
that hath always loved the people . . Coriolanus, i. 1 
as if I loved my little should be dieted — i. 9 
ne'er loved them; and there be (rep.) — ii. 2 

not, indeed, loved the common — ii. 3 

I shall be loved, when I am lacked .. — iv. 1 

I loved the maid I married — iv. 5 

Coriolanus had loved you as we did.. — iv. 6 

we loved him, but, like beasts — Iv. 6 

who loved him in a most dear — v. 1 

yet for I loved thee, take this along . . — v. 2 
loved we above the measure of a father — v. 3 

he loved his mother dearly — v. 4 

honoured him, and loved him .... Julius Ccesar, iii. 1 
not that I loved Caasar less, but (rep.) — iii. 2 
as Cajsar loved me, I weep for him . . — iii. 2 
you know how Cajsar loved you .... — iii. 2 

how dearly Cajsar loved him ! — iii. 2 

you and I have loved, but there's Antony SrClco. i. 3 

ne'er loved, till ne'er worth love — i. 4 

sir, I never loved you much — ii. 6 

might we have loved without this.... — iii. 2 
Hercules, wliom Antony loved, now - - _ iv. 3 
no, Antony; my mistress loved thee — iv. 12 

most praised, most loved Cymheline, I. I 

it is your fault that I have loved ... . — i. 2 

Cynibeline loved me; and when — iii. 3 

doth miracle itself, loved before me. . — iv. 2 
she confessed she never loved you.... — v. .'> 
I have loved and honoured Saturnine. Vi/us/lnd. i. 2 
Lavinia, therefore must be loved .... — ii. 1 
worse to her, the better loved of me . . — ii. 3 

thy grandsire loved thee well — v. 3 

fair glass of light, I loved you Pericles, i. 1 

those little darlings whom they loved — i. 4 

kept, I so dearly loved it — ii. 1 

he loved me deaa-ly, and for liis sake — ii. I 
thou look'st like one I loved indeed.. — v. 1 
will I, my loved Marina, clip to form — v. 3 

as much as child e'er loved Lear, i. 1 

have begot me, bred me, loved me — i.l 

I loved her most, and thought to set .... — i.l 

as my king, loved as my father — i.l 

and most loved, despised! thee and — i.l 

he always loved our sister most — i.l 

wine loved I deeply; dice dearly — iii. 4 

I loved him, friend, no father his — iii. 4 

if fortune brag of two she loved and hated — y. 3 
near, when I supposed you loved Romeo ^Juliet, i. 1 
king Cophetua loved the beggar-maid — ii. I 
she loved her kinsman Tybalt dearly — iii. 4 

the which he loved passing well Hamlet, ii. 2 

one speech in it I chiefly loved — ii. 2 

shall relish of it: I loved j'ou not — iii. 1 

he's loved of the distracted multitude — iv. 3 

I loved your father, and we love ourself — iv. 7 
I loved Ophelia; forty thousand brothers — v. 1 

I loved you ever: but it is no matter — v. 1 

her father loved me, oft invited me Othello, i . 3 

if I had a friend that loved her — i. 3 

she loved me for the dangers I had (rep.) — i. 3 

violence she first loved the Moor — ii. 1 

would never have loved the Moor — ii. 1 

fear your looks, she loved them most — — iii. 3 

and he she loved proved false — iv. 3 

that handkerchief, which I so loved .... — v. 2 
never loved Cassio, but with such general — v. 2 

she loved thee, cruel Moor: so come — v. 2 

of one, that loved not wisely, but too well — v. 2 



I>OVE-DAY— a lovc-dav, Tainora..7'(Vus/<n<(>on. i. 2 

I.OVE-DEVmTRINQ death do. .Itomeo^ Juliet, ii. G 

LOVE-DISCOURSE- 
vou iov not in a love-discoursc. Twoden. of rrr. li. 4 

I,6V[5D'ST— thou loved'st me not ..'IHi-mylV. iv. 4 
'mass, thou hjved'st plums well — 2Hctir!/l'l. ii. 1 
loveil'st him hettei- than ever {tep.).Jtiliui:C,rsar, iv.3 

LOVE-l'"E.VT will advance Love's L.LosI, v. 2 

liOVE-CiOD— are the onlv love-goda..il/uc/i^i<o, ii. 1 

LOVE-IN-IDIiENESS— 
maidens call it lovc-in-idleness.Wi'd. N. Dicam^'w.i 

LOVE-J UICE— ej-es with the love-juice — iji. 2 
laid the love-iuice on some true-love's — iii. 2 

LOVEL— Lovel, and Cateshy, look.fi/c/iacrf ///. iii. 4 
they are friends; llatcliffe and Lovel — iii. 5 
go Lovel, with all speed to doctor Shaw — iii. 5 
Thomas Lovel, and lord marquis Dorset — iv. 4 
sir Thomas I.nvL'l's heads should .. Henry VIII. i. 2 

■what news, sir Thomas Lovel? — j- 3 

sir Tliomas IaivoI (I'-p.) — .1.4 

sir Thomas I^ovel, 1 as free forgive you — ii. 1 

not yet, sir Tliomas Lovel (jcp. ) — v. 1 

now Level, from the ciueen what — v. 1 

Lovel,— Sir. Give her a hundred marks — v. 1 

LOVE-LETTERS in the holyday..-Vfir!/)r(jJM,ii. 1 

Sox of vour love-letters! . . . 7Vo Gen. of Verona, iii. 1 
VELlER— a lovelier gentleman.. Kic/iairf ///. i. 2 

looked not lovelier than Hector's Coriolanus, i. 3 

LOVELINESS— loveliness in favour Othello, ii. 1 

LOVELY— on lovely gentlemen.. r«'oGen.o/;'f)-. i. 2 

full as lovely as is this of hers — iv. 4 

for your lovely sake, give me . . Meas.for Meas.y. 1 
ever wast thou lovely in my eyes? ..Mueh Ado, iv. 1 
and every lovely organ of her life .... — i v. 1 
a most lovely, gentleman-like Taax\..Mid.N. Dr. i. 2 

hath a lovely boy, stolen from — ii. 1 

come our lovely kdy nigh — ii. 2 (song) 

and eke most lovely jew — iii- 1 

two lovely berries moulded on one stem — iii. 2 

O sweet, O lovely wall ^.rep.^ — v. 1 

that thou art lovely Love\L.Lost,iv. 1 {letter') 

even in the lovely garnish of .. Merch. of Venice, ii. 6 
o'erran her lovely face.. Taming of Shrew, 2 (indue.) 

where is my lovely bride? — iii- 2 

seal the title with a lovely kiss? — iii. 2 

fai r lovely maid, once more good day — i v. 5 

allot thee for his lovely bedfellow — iv. 5 

tlie Dauphin, and that lovely maid.KingJohn, ii. 2 

amiable, lovely death! — iii. 4 

Richard, that sweet lovely rose I HenrylV. i. 3 

many an English ditty, lovely well — . iii. 1 

1 love the lovely bully Henry V. Iv. 1 

France, put up her lovely visage?. . . . — v. 2 

jierfoetions of that lovely dame 1 Uenry VI. v. 5 

the husband of this lovely lady iHemyVl. i. 4 

— hath this lovely face ruled — iv. 4 

how sweet! how lovely! SHenryVJ. ii. 5 

love my lovely queen — v. 7 

ray lovely Edward's death Richard III. i. 3 

andof a lovely boy Henry VIII. v. I 

therefore, lovely 'Tamora (rep.).TilusAndroniciis,i. 2 
noble emperor, and his lovely bride — i. 2 

there will the lovely Roman ladies . . — ii. 1 
wake the emperor and his lovely bride — ii. 2 
my lovely Aaron, wherefore look'st.. — ii. 3 

hence to seek my lovely Moor — ii. 3 

but, lovely niece, that mean is cut , , — ii. 5 

gramercy, lovely Lucius — iv. 2 

ray lovely Saturnine, lord of my life — iv. 4 

and his lovely nieces Romeo SfJidiet,\, 2 (note) 

O he's a lovely gentleman! — iii. 5 

O thou weed, who art so lovely fair Othello, iv. 2 

LOVE-MONGER-old love-monger.tot'p'sZ..Z,os(,ii. 1 
LOVE-NEWS-love-news, in faith. Mer. of Venice.M.i 
LOVE-PERFORMING mi;\M..nomeo^- Juliet, iii, 2 
LOVE-PBATE— your love-prate. .4s youLike it, iv. 1 
LOVER— to estate on the bless'd lovers. Tempest, iv. 1 
carrying a letter to your lover.. 7'«ioGeii.o/ Ver. i. 1 

to write unto her lover — ii. 1 

parting strikes poor lovers dumb .... — ii. 2 
to see such lovers, Thurio, as yourself — ii, 4 

is become a notable lover — ii.o 

is become a hot lover — ii. 5 

the youthful lover now is gone — iii. 1 

hope is a lover's staff — iii. 1 

would quell a lover's hope — iv, 2 

for lovers break not hours — v. 1 

end in lovers' meeting .... Twelfth Night, ii. 3 (song) 
for such as I am, all true lovers are. . — ii. 4 
where sad true lover ne'er find .... — ii. 4 (song) 
your brother and his lover have.. Meas.for Mens. i. 5 
thou wilt be like a lover presently ..Much Ado, i. 1 
if then true lovers have been ever ..Mid.N.Dr. i. 1 

time that lovers' flights doth — i. 1 

from lovers' food, till morrow. .Afi'rf. A'. '» Dream, i. 1 

a lover, or a tyrant? A lover — i. 2 

a lover is more condoling — i. 2 

ah, Pyramus, my lover dear — i. 2 

[Co(.] tie up my lover's tongue — iii. 1 

pleading for a lover's fee — iii. 2 

these lovers seek a place to fight .... — iii. 2 
back to Athens shall the lovers wend — iii. 2 
I'll apply, to your eye, gentle lover. . — iii. 2 
the pairs of faithful lovers be wedded — iv. 

fair lovers, you are fortunately — iv. 

that these lovers speak of ? — v. 

lovers, and madmen, have such — v. 

the lunatic, the lover, and the poet . . — v. 
the lover, all as frantic, sees Helen's — v. 

here come the lovers, full of joy — v. 

which did these lovers sunder — v. 

did tliese lovers think no scorn — v. 

wall, and lovers twain, at large — v. 

tlirough which the lovers — v. 

tlie fearful lovers are to whisper .... — v. 

1 am thy lover's grace — v. 

Thishe comes back and finds her lover? — v. 
lovers, make moan! his eyes were.. .. — v. 
lovers, to bed; 'tis almost fairy time — v. 
is the colour of lovers Love't L, Lost, i. 2 



LOVER— send you many lovers!. ..X.ofc'sL.I.os<, ii. 1 
with that which we lovers intitle.... — ii. 1 
that the lover, sick to death .. — iv. 3 (verses) 
and Longaville, were lovers too! .... — iv.3 

good lover, let me go — iv.3 

sweet lords, sweet lovers, O let us.... — iv.3 

a lover's eyes will gaze (rep.) — iv. 3 

thousand verses of a faithful lover ., — v. 2 
wisegirls, to mock our lovers BO .... — v. 2 

or else die my lover — v. 2 

for lovers ever run before ..Merchant of Venice, ii. 6 

and lovers cannot see the pretty — ii. 6 

how dear a lover of ray lord — iii. 4 

being the bosom lover of mj' lord — iii. 4 

as true a lover as ever sighed ....As you Like it, ii. 4 
we that are are true lovers, run into — ii. 4 

and then the lover, sighing like — ii. 7 

to resolve the propositions of a lover — iii. 2 

then there is no true lover — iii. 2 

than seeming the lover of any other — iii. 2 

and lovers are given to poetry — iii. 3 

maybe said, as lovers, they do — iii. 3 

besides, the oath of a lover is no .... — iii. 4 

athwart the heart of his lover — iii. 4 

the sight of lovers feedeth those — iii. 4 

nor the lover's, which is all these — iv. 1 

you a lover? an' you serA'e me — iv. 1 

and for lovers, lacking (God warn us!) — iv. 1 

and the most hollow lover — iv. 1 

if you be a true lover, hence — iv. 3 

a lover of mine, and a lover of hers . . — v. 2 

it was a lover and his lass — v. 3 (song) 

sweet lovers love tUp spring — v. 3 (song) 

a lover of thy drum, hater of love. . . .AlVs Well, iii. 3 

to a lover's blessed case 1 Taming of Shrew, iv. 2 

an old lion; or a lover's lute \HenryIV. i. 2 

thejy are drops of thy lovers illenryiv. iv. 3 

ana a true lover of tlie holy chmch. ., .Henry V. i. I 

and betrothed lovers, tliat shall — ii. 4 

since I cannot prove a lover Richard III. i. 1 

is held no great good lover Henry VIII. iv. I 

this shall be told our lovers .... Troitus ^- Cress, i. 3 
these lovers cry— Oh, oh! they die! — iii. 1 (song) 

they saj', all lovers swear more — iii. 2 

I as your lover speak — iii. 3 

had she no lover there, that wails .... — iv. 5 
I do not always follow lover . . Tlmon of Athens, ii. 2 

the general is my lover Coriolamis, V. 2 

tliy lover, Artemidorus ..Julius Ccesar, ii. 3 (paper) 
Romans, countrymen, and lovers! .. — iii. 2 
slew my best lover for the good of Rome — iii. 2 

tliat we may, lovers, in peace — v. 1 

as to a lover's bed Antony fy Cleopatra, iv. 12 

of death is as a lover's pinch — v. 2 

lovers, and men in dangerous bonds. Cyjn&cKne, iii. 2 
all lovers young, all lovers must — iv. 2 (song) 

and one tliat had a royal lover — v. 5 

lovers will not keep the peace ..Titus Andron. ii. I 

makes pity in your lovers Pericles, iv. 3 

a pair of star-crossed lovers . , Romeo fy Juliet, (prol.) 

sparkling in lovers' eyes — i. 1 

nourished with lovers' [Kn'. -loving] tears — i. 1 
this unbound lover, to beautify him — i. 3 
you are a lover: borrow Cupid's wings — i. 4 
through lovers' braitis, and then .... — i. 4 
such vows as lovers tise to swear — i. 5 (chorus) 
at lovers' perjuries, they say, Jove laughs — ii. 2 
silver sweet sound lovers' tongues .. , — ii. 2 
a lover may bestride the gossomers . . — ii. 6 
lovers can see to do their amorous rites — iii. 2 

the lover shall not sigh gratis Hamlet, ii. 2 

may help these lovers into your favour. . Othello, i. 8 
lovers' absent hours, more tedious than — iii. 4 
LOVE-RHYMES, lord of folded.. Lol•<;'sL.Los^ iii. 1 
LOVE-SHAFT smartly from. . . . Mid.N. Dream, ii. 2 
LOVE-SHAKED— solove-shaked.^si/0Ml.!7tert, iii. 2 
LOVE-SICK with them .... Antony /i^ Cleopatra, ii. 2 
to love-sick Dido's sad-attending. ra«s.4)idron. v. 3 
LOVE-SONG, like a robin. . Two Gen. of Verona, ii. 1 

would you have a love-song TwelfihNight, ii. 3 

a love-song, a love-song — ii. 3 

with writing love-songs Asyoit Like it, iii. 2 

the prettiest love-songs for maids. Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

the ear with a love-song Romeo 4- Juliet, ii. 4 

LOVEST— but since thou lovest Two Gen. of Ver. i. 1 
Lucetta, as thou lovest me (jrp.) .... — ii. 7 

but as thou lovest thy life — iii. 1 

as thou lovest Silvia — iii. 1 

because thou lovest her — iv. 4 

now as thou lovest me let me Twelfth Night, v. 1 

'tis once, thou lovest; and I will fit .... MuchAdo, i. 1 
by my sword, Beatrice, thou lovest me — iv. 1 

if thou lovest me then Mid. N. Dream, i. 1 

I see thou lovest me not with .. ..Asyou Like it, i. 2 
as thou lovest her, thy love's to me ..All's Well, ii. 3 

tell whom thou lovest best Taming ofSh. ii. 1 

nay then, thou lovest it not — iv.3 

Ilortensio, if thou lovest me — iv.3 

how thou lovest us, show in Winter's Tale, i. 2 

as thou lovest me, (iamillo — iv. 1 

I think thou lovest me well KingJohn, iii. 3 

of that, Hal, an' thou lovest me .... I Henry 1 V. ii. 4 

come, I know, thou lovest me Henry V, v. 2 

I dare not swear. thou lovest rae — v. 2 

for thou lovest the flesh 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

as thou lovest and honour'st arms . .ZHenry VI. i. 1 

thou lovest me not; for, brother — v. 2 

Titinius, if thou lovest me, mount ./ufmsCo-sar, v. 3 

thy master, whom thou lovest Lenr, i. 4 

Rosaline, whom thou so lovest . . Romeo ^Juliet, i. 2 

as thou lovest me, let the porter — i. 5 

[Knt.') that lovest to make thine honesty 0//i<?/(o, iii. 3 

LOVE-SUIT— plead his love suit to her. . Henry V. v. 2 

whose love-smt hath been to me as Ct/mbeline, iii. 4 

LOVETH— isinlove; yea, he loveth Lo've'sL.Lost, i. 2 

and she loveth him Taming of Sh. iv. 4 

revenged on him that loveth thee ..Richard III. i. 2 
LOVE-THOUGHTS lie rich, whaaTueiri It NiglU. I. 1 
LOVE-TOKENS with my child ..Mid.N. Dream, i. 1 
LOVE-WOUNDED ProteuB ....Two Gen. of Ver. i. 2 



LOVING- did us but loving wrong TiinpesI, i. 2 

cease to persuade, my loving. J'(™6>«.o//(7(;iia, i. 1 

to tear such loving words! — i. 2 

a journey to my loving Proteus — ii 7 

deserve my love, by loving him — ii. 7 

goad us on to sin in lovingvirtue. /I/ens. /or il/ens. ii. 2 

your loving friend Benedick Much Ado, i. 1 

m every thing, but in loving Benedick — ii. 3 

and wise, but for loving me — ii. 3 

then loving goes by haps — iii. 1 

my wild heart to thy loving hand.. .. — iii. 1 

but in loving — Leander — v. 2 

ever true in loving be Mid. N.'e Dream, v. 2 

my loving lord, Dumain Love's L. Lost, i, 1 

loving a light wench — i. 2 

who are the votaries, my loving lords — ii. 1 

for my sake but one loving kiss — ii. 1 

athwart his loving bosom — iv.3 

these worms for loving, that art — iv.3 

now prove our loving lawful — iv.3 

what I have from the loving king .... — v. 2 
a christian and thy loving wife..il/o-. of Venice, ii. 3 
claim her with a loving kiss .. — iii. 2 (scroll) 
in loving visitation was with rae — iv. 1 (letter) 
and three or four loving lords ....As you Like it, i. I 

most loving mere folly — ii. 7(song) 

as loving yourself, than seeming .... — iii. 2 
{^CoW] to a loving humour of madness — iii. 2 
and loving, woo? aud, wooing, she .. — v. 2 

for thy loving voyage is but — v. 4 

for loving where you do All's Well, i. 3 

and my loving greetings to those of . . — i. 3 
entitle thee, my loving father Taming of Shrew, iv. 5 

Ilortensio, witli thy Iov ing widow — v. 2 

and graceless traitor to her loving lord? — v. 2 

gifts, letters loving embassies Winter's Tale, i. 1 

but thou from loving Engl.and King John, ii. 1 

my loving subjects— You loving men — ii. I 

and ne'er have spoken a loving word.. — iv 1 

my most loving liege! Richard II. i. 1 

leave, and loving farewell, of our — i. 3 

my loving lord, I take my leave — i. 3 

thanks my countrymen, my loving friends — i. 4 
love, loving not itself, none other can — v. 3 
should keep his word in loving us. . 1 Henry IV. v. \ 
lives of all your loving 'complices ..2 Henry IV. i. 1 
I pray thee, loving wife, and gentle .. — ii. 3 
lower but by loving likelihood Henry V. v. (chorus) 
but, in loving me, you should love. ... — v. 2 

a pair of loving turtle-doves 1 Henry VI. ii. 2 

my lord, your loving nephew now .... — ii. 5 
my friends, and lovmg countrymen.. — iii. 1 

loving uncle, kind duke of (rloster — iii. 1 
therefore, my loving lords, our pleasure — iii. 1 

no loving token to his majesty? — v. 3 

your loving uncle, twenty times . .2 Henry VI. iii. 2 

for their tender loving care — iii. 2 

father, and my loving lord ZHenry VI. ii. 1 

amongst the loving Welchmen — ii. 1 

like a loving sire, thou, being a king — ii. 2 

1 mean my loving liege — iii. 2 

tlie brother of your loving bride .... — iv. 1 

with the loving citizens, like to — iv. 8 

Oxford, and my loving Montague.... — iv. 8 

what says my loving son? — v. I 

we are advertised by. our loving friends — v. 3 

witness the loving kiss I give — v. 7 

our loving C Col. if n/.-noble] brother? . . Riclu III. ii i . 1 
which now the lovin" haste of these — iii. 5 
very worshipful andloving friends.. — iii. 7 

say on, my loving lord — iv. 2 

know, my loving lord, the marquis. . — iv. 2 

terms tell her my loving tale — iv. 4 

and my most loving friends, bruised — v. 2 
both give and take, my loving lord . . — v. 3 

how lares our loving mother? — v. 3 

than I have said, loving coimtrymen — v. 3 
beloved, and loving, may his rule.. Henry VIII. ii. 1 

he's loving, and most gracious — iii. 1 

they're loving, well composed.. Troilus 4r Cress, iv. 4 

signify this loving interview — iv. 5 

me to m.y loving countrymen.. 2Vmono//4(/ifns, v. 2 

your loving motion toward Coriolanus, ii. 2 

mighty, bold, royal, and loving ..Julius Crrsar, iii. 1 
commits some lovingactupon lier./)n(o;i;/*CTfo. i. 2 
eonntrymen, my loving followers. Ti/us Andron. i. 1 
I will here dismiss my loving friends — i. 1 
a loving nurse, a mother to his youth — i. 2 
tear for tear, and lovin" kiss for kiss — v. 3 

his loving breast thy pillow — v. 3 

like a loving child, shed yet some .. — v. 3 
some loving friends convey the emperor — v. 3 

you not your child well loving Pericles, iv. 4 

ourno less loving son of Albany Lear, i. 1 

our very loving sister, well be met — v. 1 

O loving hate! O any thing Ilomeo^-Juliet, i. 1 

[A'jif.] a sea nourished with loving tears — i. I 
not stay the siege of loving terms.... — i. 1 

so loving jealous of his liberty — ii. 2 

for loving Rosaline. For dotin» (rfp.) — ii. 3 
come, loving, black-browed night ... — iii. 2 
one poor and loving child, but one thing — iv. 5 

why, 'tis a loving and a fair reply Hamlet, i. 2 

so loving to my mother, that he might. . — i. 2 

thy loving father, Hamlet -- iv.3 

as loving liis own pride and purposes . . Othello, i. 1 
is of a constant, loving, noble nature.... — ii. 1 
your pardon, for too much loving you .. — iii. 3 
unnatural, that kills for loving — v. 2 

LOVINGLY— thus lovingly reserved. . Titus And. i. 2 
LOW— with foreheatls villanous low ..Timpest, iv. 1 

too Iowa mistress for TuoGen. of Verona, ii. 4 

ay, but her forehead's low — iv. 4 

and high and low beguile Merry Wives, i. 3 

both high ond low, both rich — ii. I 

falls into abatement and low priceTu-elfih Night, i. 1 
that can sing both high and low .. — ii. 3 (song) 

out of my lean and low ability — iii. 4 

but, soft and low, rcmemhcr .... Meas.for Meas. iv. I 
she is too low for a high nroisc Altu-hido.i. 1 



LOW 



LOW— siieak low if you speak love — ,yiucliAUo,h. 1 

it' low, ail ngate vciy vilely oit — i"- [ 

some ol'iis woiiUl lie low — v. 1 

bull Jove, sir, had an amiable low .. — y- < 
too hiL;b to be entliralled tolow?.l/i(/.,V. sDrcanuy. 1 
ami so low? how low am I, tlani .... — ni. '- 
how low am It I am not yet so low — iii. ^ 

nothio',' but low and little? ,— ";■ f 

bow low soever the matter Lofe s L.Losi,i. 1 

ahi!:rli nope lor a low having — . ;• ' 

lor that, in low simplicity ..Macliaiil oj I enicc, i. 3 
or shall I bend low, and m .......... — .!• ;> 

how much low peasantrj would then be — ii. 9 
my estate is very low, my bond to — ul. 2 (letter) 
lipon some settled low cor.tcnt.. . .As yuu Like il, n. J 

but the woman low, and browner. . . . — 'Y- f 

liis eir '.nent top to their low ranks . . All s holl,i. 2 
my low and humble name to propagate — .n- 1 

or Dane, Low Dutch, Italian — iv. 

must wear your spirits low ..... — v. 1 

a low submissive reverence. ramnigo/Sh. 1 (indue.) 
witli sol't low tongue, and lowly.. — ,1 (inuuc.) 
for lii^'h and low's alike iruiler s / aU\ v. 1 

sir.'l did not look so low. , Comedy of liirors, iii. 2 

come, hii;h, or low; thyself Mocbein, iv. 

that I were low laid in my grave. ...KnigJohii, n. 1 

stoop low within those bounds ~, „ X- ? 

Boliu'-broke, as low as to tliy heart..7(ic/io)(/ II. i. 1 
and lie full low, graved in the hollow — ii). 2 

although your knee be low — ni. 3 

now, in as low an ebb as the \Henryir. i. i 

that I descend so low, to show — _}_■ i 

sueh inordinate, and low desn-es .... — in. 2 
journey-bated, and brought low .... — iv. 3 
wretched and low, a poor uuminded — iv. 3 

lie.id as low as death -iHeniyll'. (mduc.) 

for it is a low ebb of linen — >!• 2 

because the rest of thy low countries — n. 2 

a iow transformation ! . — !;• J 

those that could speak low, and tardily — Ji. 3 

then, happy low, lie down 1 — i"- J 

sweet prince, speak low; the king .. — i^- * 

and low, and lower, put into parts Henry V.\. 2 

whose low vassal seat — V'" i? 

iilaee to flexure and low bending? — iv. 1 

asfinireof lowdegree: I pray you .. — v. 1 

more abase our sight so low 2Henry ^I-l-i 

and, lords, bow low to him ZHenry n. i. 4 

by living low, where fortune cannot — iv. 6 

than bear so low a sail — v. 1 

and kept low shrxibs from winter s . . — y. 2 

tiieir titles, and low name Richard III. i. 4 

her sovereign, am her subject low 

gone slightly o'er low steps Hei 

1 hope, it is not so low with him.7'imo; 

race of mankind, high, and low! 

brought low by his own heart — iv. 2 

frnni'Iiigh to low throughout — v. i 

weep for aj-e on thy low grave — .y--') 

as low as to thy foot doth Julius Ctesar, iii. 1 

dost thou lie so low? are all thy .... — "i- ' 
is she shrill-tongued, or low? . . Anlomj fy Cleo. in. 3 

and her forehead is as low as she — i;;- 3 

thy mind to lier is now as low Cymbelme, iii. 2 

wliose roof's as low as ours! 

in simple and low things 

favours on the low Posthumus 

distinction of place 'tween high and low 
you petty spirits of region low 



i)!/''i/r. ii. 4 
lofAlh. iii. 6 



iii. 3 



iv. 2 



. tear., i. 1 

— ii. 2 

— ii. 3 

— iv. 6 

— V 



think we are not brought so \o-w.TilusAndrnn. iii. 2 

if that ever my low fortunes better I'ericles. ii. 1 

nor do the low despise — "-3 

v.-hose low sound reverbs no hollowness . 
your purposed low correction is such .... 

from low farms, poor pelting villages 

to east one's eyes so low! 

her voice was ever soft, gentle, and low.. _,.,.- 

[Col. Kni.} now thou art so loy/..IlomeoSi-JuUel, in. 5 
I saw her laid low in her kindred's .. — v. 1 

as low as to the fiends ! f!?'"'f,'' '-V ? 

duck a^ain as low as hell's from heaven! Ol/iMo, ii. 1 

and th.ou art but of low degree — ii. 3 (song) 

I,0\V-BORiSr-prettiest low-born lass. IVinter s T. iv. 3 
LOW-CROOKED eurt'sies, and base. Jul.Ctesar, in. 1 

LOWER— yare, lower, lower Tempesi,i. 1 

hath to instrument this lower world .. — iii. 3 
sitting, as I say, in a lower chair..l/ras./o).Vras. ii. I 
lower t)ian myself Orp.) .... -VW- A'-'s Dream, lu. 2 

l>ut she herself is hit lower Love sL. Lost, iv. 1 

take vou a button-hole lower — v. 2 

her h'lgh-top lower than her nbs.. Her. ofl einee,]. 1 

set thy lower part wliere thy nose .-til s » ell, u. 3 

lower messes, perchance, are to Wilder sTale, i. 2 

seemest thou then to lower? llicliardll.i. 3 

and lights the lower world — in- 2 

bare-headed, lower than his — ,„ X't 

Ned Poins, and I will wiilk lower ..\HeiiryIV.ii. 2 

they, or we, must lower lie — in- 3 

speak lower, princes, for the king. .iUenry IV. iv. 4 

and low, and lower, put into parts Henry! . i. 2 

Cheshu Christ, speak lower [K'.i/.-fewerJ — iv. 
I will speak lower. I pray you ...... — iv. 1 

by a lower hut by loving likelihood — y. (cho.) 
at lower cud o' the hall, hurled wp.liichard ill. ni. 7 
doth frown and lower on our army . . — v. 3 
and set me lower; I Iiave not long. //<■»>■!/» ///. }v. 2 
a lower place, note ■xsn.....4nlony^- Cleopatra, ui. 1 

of lower Syria, Cyprus, Lydia — "■- « 

I eaiinot be much lower than Perieles. i. 2 

the lieavenc do lower upon you.Itomeo fyJulu-i, iv. b 
LOWICRKO— that lowered upon our.flic/ioirf ///. i. 1 
LOWERING- this lowering tempest .Richard II. i. 3 

whet lowering star now envies 2 Henry VI. in. 1 

by revolution lowering Antony fyChopalra,]. 2 

shadows over lowering hills .... Komeo S/Juliel.p. fi 
LOWEST— hear the lowest sound. Lofe s L. Lost, iv. 3 

from lowest place when virtuous Allsif ell, ii. 3 

one o' the lowest, basest, poorest. . . . Coriolanus.i. 1 

the fires i' the lowest hell fold in — ni- 3 

till the lowest stream do kiss Jidms Ccesar, i. 1 



r 4(58 



LOWEST— the ground's tlic lowest Perich's, i. 4 

the lowest and most dejected thing Lear, }V. 1 

from my lowest note to the top Hamlet, in. 2 

LOWINiJ-they my lowing followed ...Tempesl, ly. 1 
the dam runs lowing up and down .'illenry /'/. in. 1 

LOW-LAIi:)— your low-laid son CymMine, v. 4 

LOWLINESS-thy lowliness.Lore'si,. Los', iv. 1 (let.) 
mercy, lowliness, devotion, patience. . I\Iacbelh, iv. 3 

your garments, your lowliness Henry V. iv. 8 

with as humble lowliness of mind ..Mlemyl'l.y. 5 
that lowliness is young ambition 's.y»(/usC<i"sa>-, ii. I 

LOWLY feigning was called Tueljlh .\iifhl,\n. 1 

highly fed and lowly tauglit -M's Well, ii. 2 

and lowly courtesy .... Vnmmg- of Sh. 1 (induction) 
hence these abject lowly dreams — 2 (induction) 

and me, poor lowly maid Winter's Tale,iy. 3 

sets weeping in the lowly west Richard II. u. 4 

the mother on her lowly babe 1 Henry VI. iii. 3 

and lowly words were ransom -IHenry VI. lu. 1 

obscvire and lowly swain — iv. 1 

by such a lowly vassal as thyself — ly- > 

or lowly factor for another's gain .Itichard.III. in. 7 

'tis better to be lowly born Henry VIII. n. 3 

and these lowly courtesies Julius Ccesar, lu. 1 

LOWN— both lord and lowii Pericles, iv. 6 

he called the tailor lown Othello, ii. 3 (song) 

LOWNESS-lowuess. or the mean. Aiitony <§- Cleo. ii. 7 

aud palter in the shifts of lowness — in. '.I 

have subdued nature to such a lowness . . Lear, in. 4 
LOW-RATED English play at. Henry V. iv. (chorus) 

LO WRETII in your face Comedy of Err. n. 1 

LOW-SPIRITED swain. . . . Love'sL.Losl, i. 1 (letter) 
LOW-VOICED-she islow-voiced.^n(o»i/<5- Cteo. in. 3 

LOYAL sir to him thou followest Tempest, y. 1 

longer than I prove loyal to . . Two Gen.of I'er. in. 2 

with loyal blazon, evermore Merry Wives, y. 6 

write loyal cantons of contemned .Tu-etflhAiglit,u 5 

myself your loyal servant Winter's Tale, ii. 3 

and furious, loyal and neutral Macbeth, n. 3 

against tlie good, and loyal — ly. 3 

to him will we prove loyal KingJohn, u. 1 

to prove mvfelf a loyal gentleman ..Richard II. i. i 

a bold spirit in a loyal breast — i- ' 

a loyal just and upright gentleman .. — i- 3 

in my loyal bosom lies his power — n. 3 

O loyal father of a treacherous son.. — .y. 3 
had still kept loyal to possession ..IHetirylf .in. 2 

•^•iclier, and more loyal subjects Hetiry I . i. 2 

his subjects, and his loyal friends..lHpm!/; /. in. 1 

so long as I am loyal iHenryU.n.i 

■wert more loyal than thou art — in- 1 

as every loyal subject ought to do ..IHenryVI. iv. 7 

nor you, as we are, loyal Richard III.}. 4 

less noble, and less loyal — .?.'•' 

a loyal and obedient subject Henry VIII. in. 2 

take notice, lords, he has a loyal breast — in. 2 
deliver mvself your loyal servant ..Conolamts.v. 5 
that remains loyal to his vovf .Cymbelme, in. 2 (let.) 
the scriptures of the loyal Leouatus — in. 4 

hold me j'our loyal servant -- ly- 3 

of my land, loyal and natural boy Lear, ii- I 

andof the loyal service of his son -- iv. 2 

your true and loyal wife Othello, ly. 2 

LDYALEST— the loyalest husband . . Cymbelme, i. 2 
LOYALLY— of his subjection loyally — ly. 3 
LOYALTIES— of all their loyalties.. Heiiii/r'///. i. 2 
LOYALTY'- true loyalty to her.TwoGen.ofVer. iv. 2 
end life, when lend loyalty!. ./1/('rf.A'.'sO;fam, ii. 3 
last gasp, witli truth and loyalty .As you Like it, ii. 3 

the service and the loyalty I owe Macbeth, i. 4 

let this defend my loyalty Richard II.i.\ 

both to defend my loyalty and truth — i- 3 
wisdom, loyalty, and mere dislike-. IHenii//;. ly. 1 

with faith, and constant loyalty Henry V. n. 2 

with submissive loyalty of heart . . 1 Henry H. ni. 4 
map of honour, truth, and loyalty.. 2Hen>i/F/. in. 1 
mereinstinctof love, and loyalty .. — m. 2 

where is lovalty ? if it be banished — v. I 
firm loyalty? This shall assure {rep.'I.ZHenry VI. in. 3 
for truth, for duty, aud for loyalty. i!/r/mr:i i//.ni. 3 
which breaks the sides of loyalty . . Henry VI I L]. 2 

my loyaltv, which ever has — in- 2 

in tlie way of loyalty and truth .... — . ni- 2 
the loyalty, well held to iools.. Antony 4-Cleo. ni. 11 

soul to the oath of loyalty Cymbelme, i. 7 

beaten for loyalty excited me — y- 5 

her loyalty, and with tliat painted. Titus Andron. ii. 3 

of faith, of loyalty Pericles, v. 3 (Gow.) 

that nature thus gives way to loyalty . . Lear, iii. 5 

1 will persevere in my course of loyalty^ — in. o 
LOZEL, thou art worthy to be. . .. Winter s Tale, u. 3 

LllBB.VR— to the Lubbar's head 2Henry II . n. 1 

LUBBER— a notable lubber. '/Vo Gen.of Verona, u. 5 

I am afraid this great lubber .... TiretfthNight, iv. 1 

they clap the lubber Ajax on . . Trmtus <S- Cress, in. 3 

if you will measure your lubber's length. . Lear, i. 4 

LU6BERLY boy ; if it had not .... Merry Wives, v. 6 

LUCCIIESE [Co(.A')i/.-Luccicos], IS lie ..Olhella,i.3 

LUCE— the dozen wliite luces Merry Wives, i. 1 

the luce is tlie fresh fish — ..!• j 

let my master in, Luce Comedy of Errors, \\\. 1 

if thv name be called I,uce, Luce. . .. — in. 1 
LUCENTIO, because so well (ir/J.) TamingcfSh.i. 1 

Tranio is changed into Lucentio — i- I 

that Lucentio indeed had Baptista s 
places else, your ' ' "" 



LUC 



^ , _ .__ ster Lucentio 

so she shall; Lucentio shall make one 

Lucentio is your name? 

suppored lyiicentio must get a father 
1 am Lucentio; hie est, sou unto — 
and that Inicentio that comes a woomg 
signior Lucentio, this is the 'pointed 
wliat says Lucentio to this shame .. 
all for my master's sake, Lucentio .. 

I'll tell you, sir Lucentio 

lAicentio, you shall supply 

she shall, Lucentio: come, gentlemen 

fancy any other but lyiiceutio? 

in the world so well as lAicentio — 
signior Lucentio, here is my hand .. 



— i.2 

— ii. 1 

_ ii. 1 



LUCENTIO— signior Lucentio . . Tamiiigof Sh. iv. 2 
son Lucentio made me acquainted . . — iv. 4 
your son Lucentio here doth love.... — iv. 4 

not in my house, Lucentio — iv. 4 

Lucentio's father is arrived (jt'p.) .. — iv. 4 
what is his name? Lucentio, gentle sir — iv. 5 
the door, this is lAicentio's house.... — v. I 

is signior Lucentio within, sir — v. 1 

tell signior Lucentio, that his father — v. 1 
his name is Lucentio; and he is mine — v. 1 

Lucentio! O he hath murdered — v. 1 

where is my son Lucentio? — v. 1 

not Lucentio. Yes I know thee (rep.) — v. i 

is Lucentio? Here's Lucentio — v. 1 

Cambio is changed into Lucentio. . . . — v. I 

sir, Lucentio slipped me like — v. 2 

since the nuptial of^Luceiitio. . . . Romeo fy Juliet, i. 5 

LUCETTA, now we are alone . . Two Gen. of Ver. i. 2 

how chm-lishly I chid Lucetta — i.2 

my penance is, to call Lucetta back — i.2 

what ho! Lucetta! — i.2 

counsel Lucetta ; gentle girl — ii. 7 

gentle Lucetta, nt me with — ii. 7 

fashion thou best likest, Lucetta — ii. 7 

out, out, Lucetta! — ii. 7 

Lucetta, as tliou lovest me — ii. 7 

the least, Lucetta, of my fear — ii. 7 

LUCI ANA, it is two o'clock ..Comedy of Errors, ii. 1 
ah, Luciana, did he tempt thee so? . . — iv. 2 

LUCIANUS, nephew to the king Hamlel, iii. 2 

LUCIFER take all! Merry Wives, i. 3 

deep damned than xirince Lucifer ..KingJohn, iv. 3 

and made Lucifer, cuckold \ Henry IV. ii. 4 

his face is Lucifer's iJrivy-kitchen..2Henji//F. ii. 4 

as Lucifer and Belzebub himself Henry V. iv. 7 

falls like Lucifer, never to hope . . Henry VIII. iii. 2 

LUCILIUS— named Lucilius Timon of Athens, i. 1 

attends he here, or no? Lucilius!.... — i. 1 
what now, Lucilius? is Cassius ..JuliusCtvsar,iv. 2 
a word, Lucilius; how he received you — iv. 2 
ever note, Lucilius, when love begins — iv. 2 
Lucilius, do the like; and let no man — iv. 2 

lAicilius and Titinius, bid — iv. 3 

Lucilius; hark, a word with j-ou — v. 1 

even so, Lucilius. Now, most noble — v. 1 
Lucilius, come; and come, young Cato — v. 3 
hast proved Lucilius' saying true — — v. 5 

LUCINA lent not me her aid Cymbeline, v. 4 

(till Lucina reigned) Nature this Pericles, i. 1 

Lucina, O divinest patroness — iii. 1 

LUCIO— liberty, my Lucio Meas.forMeas. i. 3 

Ijuoio, a word witli you — i- 3 

1 pr'ythee, Lucio, do me this kind . . — i. 3 

I th.ank you, good friend Lucio .. — .,i. 3 

sir, my name IS Lucio — ill- ^ 

one Lucio's information against me — iii. 
one Lucio as then the messenger .... — v. 

signior Lucio, did not you say — v. 

you vouch against him, signior Lucio? — v. 
what! resists he? help him, Lucio .. — v. 
Lucio, and the lively Romeo Sf Juliet, i. 2 (not( 

LUCIUS, out of his free love ....Timonof Athens,). 

you, to lord Lucius — ii. 

lord Lucius, and lord LucuUus? .... — ii. 
he miglit have tried lord Lucius .... — iii. 
Lucius? what, do we meet together? — iii. 
Lucius, Lucullus, and Sempronius.. — iii. 

what, Lucius! ho! I cannot Julius Caesar, ii. 

Lucius, I say! I would it were (»pp.) — ii. 

fet me a taper in my study, Lucius. . — ii. 
oy; Lucius! Fast asleep? — ii. 

Lucius, who's that knocks? — ii. 

let Lucius and Titinius guard — iv. 2 

condemned and noted Lucius Fella. . — iv. 3 

Lucius, a bowl of wine — iv. 3 

fill, Lucius, till the wine o'erswell .. — iv. 3 

Lucius, my gown : farewell — iv. 3 

Lucius, here s the book I sought .... — iv. 3 
boy! Lucius! Yarro! Claudius! .... — iv. 3 
Lucius, awake. l\Iy lord! (rep.) .... — iv. 3 

sleep again, Lucius — iy- 3 

against my brother Lucius? Antony S; Cleo. ]. 2 

the one is Cains Lucius Cymbeline, ii. 3 

Caius Lucius will do his commission — _ii. 4 
the embassador, Lucius the Roman.. — iii. 4 
'fore noble Lucius present yourself.. — in. 4 

so, farewell, noble Lucius — ni. 5 

leave not the worthy Lucius — Jii. 5 

I>ucius hath wrote already — iii- 5 

he creates Lucius proconsul — in. 7 

is l/ucius general of the forces? — in. 7 

Lucius is taken: 'tis thought — v. 3 

and shall, if I-ucius live Titus Andron. i. 2 

help, Lucius, help! My lord — .1.2 

come, Lucius, come; stay not — .n. 4 

Lucius, for tliy brothers let me plead — in. 1 
why, foolish Lucius, dost thou not .. — ni. I 

ah, son Lucius, look on her! — iii. 1 

thy brother Lucius, and thou, and I — n;. 1 

till Lucius come again — in- 1 

nor Lucius, nor I^avinia lives — )n- 1 

if Lucius live, he will requite — in- 1 

standby me, Lucius; do not fear — iv. 1 

fear her not, Lucius (!<■;).) — jv- I 

Lucius, I will. How now, Lavinia?.. — iv. I 
Lucius, wh.at book is that she tosseth so.' — iv. 1 

Lucius, I'll tit thee ^ — iv. 1 

Imcius and I'll go brave it at the court — iv. 1 

here's tlie son ot Lucius — iv. 2 

lovely I^'icius: v/ho,t's the news? — jv- 2 

O well said, Lucius! good boy — iv. 3 

under conduct of Lucius , - — 1^.4 

is wavlike Ijiicius <-eneral of the Goths? — iv. 4 
I,ucius' banishment was wrongfully (rep.)— iv. 4 
ay, but the citizens favour Lucius .. — iv. 4 
requests a parley of warlike Lucius.. — iv. 4 
proud lAicius from the warlike Goths 
renowned Lucius, from our troops .. 

laicius, save the child 

why, assure thee, Lucius, 'twill vex 



— IV. 4 



LUC 



LUCIUS? this was but a deed.. TilusAinhimicus, v. 1 
Jjucius, and you princes of the Gotlis — v. 1 

I'll make him send for Lucius — v. 2 

to send for Lucius, tliy thrice — v. 2 

jlarcus, to tliy nepliew Lucius — v. 2 

cleave to no roven^'C but Ii>u-iiis — v. 2 

welcome, Lucius, nud welcome, all . . — v. 3 
hand iu liaud, Lucius and I will fall — v. 3 

Lucius our emucror — v. 3 

Lucius, all hail; Rome's royal (ipp.) — v. 3 

LUCK— if it be my luck, so Merry IVives, iii. 4 

as good luck would liave it — iii. 5 

I hope, good luck lies in odd numbers — v. 1 

strew good luck, ouphes — v. .5 

sir John, we have had ill luck — y. 5 

and good luck grant thee thy ..Mid.N.'sDream,). 1 

and they shall nave good luek — ii. 1 

if we have unearned luck now — (epil.) 

uor no ill luck stirring .... Merchant of Venice, iii. 1 
yes, other men have ill luck too .... — iii. I 
what, what, what? ill luek? ill luck? — iii. 1 

I ne'er had worse luck in my life AlVs Well, ii. 2 

good luck, an't be tliy will? mnler'sTale, iii. 3 

ay; or else 'twere hard luck — v. 2 

have but lean luck in the match. Corned)/ of Err. iii. 2 

that rebellion had bad luek 21Jmry IT. i. 1 

and good luck go with thee ! Henryr.iv.3 

all planets of good luck to ray . ... Richard 111. iv. 4 

ween you of better luck, I mean UeiinjI'lll. v. 1 

luck, m very spite of cuuuing. Troilus /,- Cressida. v. 5 
and, of that natural luck . . Antony^ Cleupatra, ii. 3 
I hear him mock the luck of Cajsar .. — v. 2 
was there ever man had such luck!..C!/n!6e(ine, ii. 1 

I,(TCKIER— with luckier issue speeds.Mtic/i Jrfo, V. 3 

LUCKIEST— by the luckiest stars AWsWell, i. 3 

LUCKILY— fall'st on me so luckily.. IHrari/Zr. v. 4 

LUCKLESS— in this luckless realm.. 3 Hen) i// 7. ii. 6 
cried, aboding luckless time — v. 6 

LUCKY— we are lucky, boy (rinto's Ta/e, iii. 3 

'tis a lucky day, boy — iii. 3 

I bring, and lucky joj's, and golden..2He»!7!/fr. y.3 

of a fair and lucky war Henry I', ii. 2 

'tis meet, that lucky ruler should ..iHenry VI. iii. 1 
mine hours were nice and lucky. .-l/i^ort)/ ^-Cleo. iii. 11 

Li:CKE-shall L for lucre of the Teit.\Uenryl'I. v. 4 
malice and lucre in them have Cymbelinn, iv. 2 

I>UCR£CE-imprcssure her Lucrece. Tu-elJ'lh A'ighi, ii. 5 

like a Lucrece knife — ii. 5 

Roman Lucrece for her chastity.. 7'a»i?n^o/S/!. ii. 1 
Lucrece was not more ch&ste. .TitttsAndrotiicus, ii. 1 
left the camp to sin in Lucrece' bed.. — iv. 1 

LUCRETIA's modesty ..AsyouLikeit, iii. 2 (verses) 

LUCULLUS-LucuUus, entreats. 7'imoii of Athens,}. 2 

to lord LucuUus you — ii- 2 

lord Lucius and lord LucuUus? humph! — ii. 2 
was with the lord LucuUus, to borrow — iii. 2 
have tried lord Lucius or LucuUus. . — iii. 3 
luisA''euiidiusand LucuUus denied him? — iii. 3 
Lucius, LucuUus, and Sempronius.. — iii. 4 

LL'CY-Lucv, farewell; no more my. 1 Henry F/. iv. 3 
here is sir William Lucy, who witli.. — iv. 4 
his contract with lady l.,ucy {rep.). Richard 111. Hi. 7 

LUD-nuideLud's town with rejoicing. Ci/m6e(zne, iii. 1 
on the pates uf Lud's town set (.re;;.) — iv. 2 

LIfDLOW-from Ludlow the y owwq. Ricliard 111. ii. 2 
that straight shall post to Ludlow . . — ii. 2 
towards Ludlow tlieu, for we'll not. . — ii. 2 

LUG-lug your priests and servants. Timon ofAlh. iv. 3 
log the guts into the neighbour room. .Ham/e(, iii. 4 

LUGGAGE— thus on such luggage? . . Tempest, iv. 1 
bestow your luggage where you found it — v. 1 

come, bring your luggage nobly \Henryir. v. 4 

with the luggage of our carap Henry V. iv. 4 

kill the poys and the luggagel — iv. 7 

LUGGED— a gib cat, or a lugged bear.l Henryll'. i. 2 

LUKE-presently to saint Luke's. ;U('«.s-./nr Jl/eas. iii. I 
old priest at saint Luke's clHucii. Taming of Sh. iv. 4 
appointed me to go to saint Luke's .. — iv. 4 

LUKEWARM— lukewarm blood oi ..3HenryVI. i. 2 
smoke and lukewarm water .. Timon of Athens, iii. 6 

LL^LL- that babies lulls asleep! Coriolanus, iii. 2 

lulls him wliilst she plaj'eth. . TilusAndrnnicus, iv. 1 

LULLABY-luUaby to your bounty. Tu-elflhNiglU, v. 1 
our sweet lullaby (jep. ).Mid. A'.'.« Dream, ii. 3 (simg) 
like to have a lullaby too rough. Win/er'sTale, iii. 3 
as is a nurse's song of lullaby. .7V/i(s.4/('/r';?j/c((.?, ii. 3 

LULLED-luUed in these flowers . . Mid.A.'snr. ii. 2 
and lulled with sounds of sweetest. .21h'uri/l i: iii. 1 

LULLING-LC'if.ifii/.] is not luUing.KiWmr;/ ;//. iii. 7 

1..UMEERT— head in Lumbert street.SHenry/F. ii. 1 

LUMP— this counterfeit lump of ore.. All's llelt, iii. 6 
unable to support this lump of clay.lHejiri/>7. ii. 6 
foul indigested lump, as crooked.... 2Henrj//''/. v. 1 

an indigest deformed lump ZHenryVl. v. 6 

thou lump of foul deformity........ /?ic/ia)(/ ///. i. 2 

lionours he in one lump before \\im. Uenry VIII. ii. 2 

LirMPISH- for she is lumpish. Tuo Gen. ofVer. iii. 2 

LUNA— a title to Phoebe, to Lrma. Aoue's L.Lost, iv. 2 

LU]>rACIES— [Co/. KnI.] of his lunacies. Hnm/e(, iii. 3 

LUNACY— that the lunacy is so. . As youLilm it, iii. 2 
hence by your strange lunacy. 7'ami>iffo/*7i . 2 (ind.) 
closing with him fits his lunacy. . Titus Andron. v. 2 
the very cause of Hamlet's luuacy .... Hamlet, ii. 2 
with turbulent and dangerous lunacy?.. — iii. 1 

LUNATIC— lest the lunatic innave. MerrytVives, iii. 5 

'oman, art thou lunatics? — iv. 1 

why, this is lunatics! — iv. 2 

to visit Malvoliu the lunatic TiretfthNight, iv. 2 

the lunatic, the lover, and the 'pact. M id. N.'sUr. v. I 

to make frantic, lunatic Love's L. Lost, v. 1 

that he hath been a lunatic ..Taming of .ih. 1 (ind.) 
wed to one half lunatic; amad-cap .. — ii. I 
that, being lunatic, he rushed . . Comedy of Err. iv. 3 

a lunatic lean-wittcd fool Itivltard II. ii. 1 

dispute not with her. she is lunatic. /<i't7iar<( ///. i. 3 

sometime with hum tic bans iLetir, ii. 3 

have you sent the lunatic king? — iii. 7 

LUNE-old luues [ K'/(. -lines] again. Werri/"''>M,i_v. 2 

these dangerous un>afc iunes ii'iuier'sTale, ii. 2 

watch his pettish Iunes [Kni. lines] Trod.^ Cress, ii. 3 



[ 4G9 ] 



LUNE— his Iunes [Co/. /v';ir. -lunacies] . . Hamlet, iii. 3 

LUNGS— as if it had lungs, and rotten.. Tempest, ii. 1 
are of such sensible and nimble luugH.. — ii. 1 
speak from thy lungs military ..Merry Wires, iv. 5 
heaving of mr lungs provokes me. Love's!.. Losl, iii. 1 
but ottcndst thy lungs to speak.. il/er.n/' Venice, iv. ] 

my lungs began to crow like AsyouLilieil, ii. 7 

but my lungs are wasted so illtnrylV. iv. 4 

let vultures vile seize on his lungs also! — v. 3 
God bless thy lungs, good knight .... — v. .'> 

and in thy hateful lungs Henry V. ii. 1 

now crack thy lungs, and split. T'roiius^- Cress, iv. 5 

wheezing lungs, bladders full of — v. 1 

which ne'er came from the lungs.... Cor/o^ajius, i. 1 

BO shall my lungs coin words — iii. 1 

laughs from's free lungs, cries Cymbeline, i. 1 

lungs [Co/. A'n/. -tongues] fetclr breath ..Pericles, i. 4 
hath been belched on by infected luugs — iv. 6 
whose lungs are tickled o' the sere .... Hamlel, ii. 2 
i' the throat, as deep as to the lungs? .... — ii. 2 

LUPERCAL— the feast of Lupercal. Juiius Ccesar, i. 1 
on the Lupercal, I thrice presented.. — iii. 2 

LURCH— to hedge, and to lurch . . Merry Wives, ii. 2 

LURCHED— he lurched all swords. . Coriolanus, ii. 2 

LURE— never looks upon her lure. 7'ammff o/'SA. iv. 1 
to lure this tassel-gentle back ..Romeo t^ Juliet, ii. 2 

LURK — and sometime lurk I iVL.Mid.N.'sDream, ii, 1 

and ugly treasons, lurk 1 Henry VI. v. 3 

tliat dauger lurks within Zllenry VI. iv. 7 

there lurks a still and dumb . . Troilus <§- Cress, iv. 4 
here lurks no treason, here no envy. 7'i7iis.Jiiii)o?i.i. 2 

safe 'scape the king! Lirrk, lurk Lear, iii. 6 

bid me lurk where serpents are .Romeo i^-.luliet, iv. I 

LURKED— confines have I lurked. flicAarrf ///. iv. 4 
where have you lurked, that you . . Coriolanus, v. i 

LURKETH— lurketh in men's ears Henry V.i. 1 

LURKING— with a lurking adder. . Riclmrd II. iii. 2 

treason, lurking iu our way Henry V. ii. 2 

astonish these tell lurking curs . . . .^Benry VI. v. I 
who 'scapes the lurking serpent's .... — ii. 2 
his soldiers lurking in the towns . .3Henry VI. iv. 2 

LURKING-PLACE, no vast . . Titus Andronicus, v. 2 

LUSCIOUS ICol. Kn/.2 woodbine Mid.N. Dr. ii. 2 

to him now is as luscious as locusts Othello, i. 3 

LUSH— how lush and lusty the grass ..Tempest, ii. I 
lush ICol. Knt.-luscioTisi woodbine. . Mid. N. Dr. ii. 2 

LUST— melt mine honour into lust Tempest, iv. 1 

till the wicked fire of lust have ..Merry Wives, ii. I 

fie on lust and luxury — v. 5 (song) 

lust is but a bloody fire — v. 5 (song) 

to be the decay of lust and late-walking — v. 6 
concuplscible intemperate lust.. i>/eas. /or Mens. v. 1 

and all these engines of lust AWsWell, iii. 5 

so lust doth play with what — iv. 4 

nor my lusts burn hotter than . . tVinter's Tale, iv. 3 
lust should be contaminate?. . Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 
is mingled with the crime of lust .... — ii. 2 

not fill up the cistern of my lust Macbeth, iv. 3 

root than summer-seeding lust — i v. 3 

bodies to the lust of English youth . . Henry V. iii. 6 

that are polluted with your lusts 1 Hem-y VI. v. 4 

matching more for wanton lust SHentyVI. iii. 3 

bestial appetite in change of lust. . Richard III. ill. 6 
hence, I'll answer to my lust. Troilus <$■ Cressida, iv. i 

lust and liberty creep in Timon of Alliens, iv. 1 

leaving with thee theii- lust — iv. 3 

in diil'erent beds of lust — iv. 3 

but thorough lust, and laughter — iv. 3 

to cool a gipsy's lust Antony ^Cleopatra, i. 1 

join with beauty, lust with both!.... — ii. 1 

that their lust since then hath — iii. 6 

an obstniot 'tween his lust and him — iii. 6 

lust and rank thoughts, hers Cymbeline, ii. 5 

and when my lust hath dined — iii. 5 

there serve your lust, shadowed. . Titns Andron. ii. 1 
make his dead trunk pillow to our lust — ii- 3 
from tlieir worse than killing lust .. — ii. 3 
let them satisfy their lust on thee .. — ii. 3 

by turn to serve our lust — iv. 2 

the base fruit of his burning lust .... — v. 

murder's as near to lust, as flame Pericles, i. 

of monstrous lust the due and just — v. 3 (Gower 
epiciu-ism and lust make it more like .... Lear, i. 

served the lust of my mistress's heart — iii. 

slept in the contriving of lust, and waked — iii. 

of lust, as Obidicut; Hobbididance — iv, 

won to his shameful lust the will Hamlet, i. 5 

so Inst, though to a radiant angel — i. 5 

our carnal stings, our un bitted lusts. . . . Othello, i. 3 

it is merely a lust of the blood — i. 3 

to the history of lust and foul thoughts — ii. 

not out of absolute lust, (though — ii. 

she repeals him for her body's lust — ii. 

sense had I of her stolen hours of lust? .. — iii. 
shall with lust's blood be spotted — v. 

LUST-DIETED man that slaves Lear, iv. 

LUSTED \_Col.Knt.] to make aprey.«;o/iariJ ///. iii. 

LUSTFUL— the lustful heti. . Tamingof Sh. 2 (indue 

encompassed with thy lustful I Henry VI. iii. 

the lustful Edward's title buried ..ZHenryVI. iii. 

the lustful sous of Tamora Tilus Andron. iv. 

rCo(.] I do suspect the lustful Moor 0»ie/(o, ii. 

LtlSTICK, as the Dutchman says ....All's Well, ii. 

LUSTIER— your dolphin is not lustier — ii. 

with lustier mnlutonauce than IHenrylV. v. 

an a' were lustier tliau he is .... Romeo ^Jidiet, ii. 

LU.STIEST— uuliorse the lustiest Richard 11. v. 

LUSTIIIOUD— bloom of lustihood Much.-tdo, v. 

livers pale, and lustihood deject. Troilus iS-Cress. ii. 

LUSTILY— to it lustily awhile TtroGen.of Ver. iv. 
determine to fight lustily for him .... Henry V. iv. 
and you luivu rung it lustily-. TitusAndronicus, ii. 

LUSTRE-a ■-uihI lostre of conceit ..l.ovc'sL.L. iv. 

tincture, or lustre, in her lip Winter's Tale, iii. 

it lends a lustre, and more great \HewylV. iv. 

hath not noble lustre iu your ej'es. . . . Henry /'.iii. 

equal in lustre were now best Henry VI 1 1, i. 

yet never lost her lustre — ii. 

the lustre of the better shall. . Troilus ^Cressida, i. 3 
the lustre in yoiu- eye, heaven — iv. 4 



LYS 

LUS i'RE, and entertained Timon of Athens, i. 2 

did lose his lustre: 1 did hear JuliusCa'sar, i. 2 

thy lustre thickens, when he shines. ^»/. (,cieo. ii. 3 

rather added a lustre to it Cymbeline, i. 2 

vllejelly! where is thy lustre now? Lear. iii. 7 

LUSTROUS-as lustrous as ehony. Twelfth Mghl, iv. 2 

good sparks and lustrous, a word .... All's Hell, li. 1 

LUST'ST— hotly lust'st to use her in that. Lear. iv. 6 

LirST-STAINliD, shall with lust's OUtelto, v. 1 

LUST- WEARIED Antony.. v4n/ony<5-C(eo/;o^rn, ii. 1 

LUSTY— and lusty the grass looks! Tempest, ii. 1 

his good arms in lusty stroke to the shore — ii. I 

that killed lusty Pudding Mcas.forMeas. iv. 3 

as once Europa did at lusty Jove. . . . Much Ado, v. 4 

yet I am strong and lusty As youLike it, ii . 3 

therefore my age is as a lusty winter — ii. 3 

riper and more lusty red than — iii . 5 

the horn, the horn, the lusty horn — iv. 2 (soug) 
by the world, it is a lusty wench. ramwi^o/S/i. ii. 1 

i' faith, he'll have a lusty widow — iv. 2 

a goodly babe, lustj', and like .... Winter sTale, ii. 2 
when this same lusty gentleman ....KingJolm, i. I 
we will bear home thai lusty blood. . — ii. 1 
come our lusty English, all with .... — ii 2 

if lusty love slioulu go inquest of — ii. 2 

begot this lusty blood? — ii. 2 

whath lusty trumpet thus doth — v. 2 

but lusty, young, and cheerly Richard II. i. i 

even in the lusty 'liaviour of his — i. 3 

is it a lusty yeoman? will a' stand. .2Hen;i//r. ii. 1 
you were called lust.y Shallow, then — iii. 2 
and lusty lads roam here and there — v. 3 (song) 
of lusty earls, Grandprc, and RousBi..He7i7i/ V. iv. 8 

Edward, and the lusty George? 3 Henry VI. i. 4 

tliou hast lusty arms Troilus <?• Cre.ss/rfa, iv. .5 

we did buftist it with lusty sinews.. jM/msCiesar, i. 2 
many lusty Romans came smiling .. — ii. 2 
comes here, led by a lusty Goth?. Titus Andron. v. I 

who, in the lusty stealth of nature Lear, i. 2 

as do lusty J'oung men feel when. Romeo ^-Juliet, i. 2 

on, lusty gentlemen. Strike, drum.... — i. 4 

do suspect the lusty [Co(.-lustfulj Jloor. 0//ic//o, ii. 1 

LUTE-Orpheus' lute was strung Teoo Gen. o/ Ver. iii. 2 

the lute should be like the case! Much Ado, ii. I 

as bright Apollo's lute, strung . . Love's L.Losi, iv. 3 

take you the lute, and you Tamingof Shrew, ii. I 

may hold with her, but never lutes . . — ii. 1 
to the lute? Why, no; for she hath {rep.) — ii. I 
looking through the lute: while she.. — ii. 1 

anoldlion; or a lover's lute IHenrylV. i. 2 

with ravisliing division to her lute.. — iii. 1 

pla.y on the lute, beholding 1 Henry VI. i. i 

to the lascivious pleasing of a lute. . Richard III. i. I 
take thy lute, wench: my soul....He7ir!/r///. ill. 1 
Orpheus with his lute made trees — iii. 1 (song) 
upon a lute, and make the silken. Tilus Andron. ii a 
or when to the lute she sung ..Pericles, iv. (Gower) 

LUTE-CASE— stole a lute case Henry r. iii. 2 

LXTTESTRING— into a lutestring.... il/ucA.J'/o, iii. 2 
LUTHERAN— a spleeny Lutheran. He/ir;/ VI 1 1. Iii. 2 

LUX— lux tua vita mlhi i'ericUs, ii. 2 

LUXURIOUS— of a luxurious bed . . Much Ado, iv. 1 

bloody, luxurious, avaricious Macbeth, iv. 3 

damned and luxurious mountain Henry V. iv. 4 

the dissembling luxurious drab .Troilus 4- Cress, v. 4 

most insatiate, luxurious woman .TilusAndron, v. 1 

LUXURIOUSLY picked out . . Antony <5- Cleo. iii. 1 1 

LUXURY— lust andluxuryl.il/erri/ Wives, v. 5 (song) 

one all of luxury Measure for Measuie, v. 1 

the empt.ying of our fatliers' luxury. . Henry V. iii. 5 

in-ge his hateful luxury 'Richard III. iii. 5 

how the devil luxury Troilus ^ Cressida, v. 2 

to't luxury, pell-mell, for I lack Lear, iv. 6 

a couch for luxury and damned incest .Hamlet, i. 5 
LYBIA— siie came from Lybia .... Winter's Tale, v. 1 

not only my success in Lybia — v. I 

as barren as banks of Lybia .... Troilus ij- Cress, i . 3 

Bocchus, the king of Lybia..^ii(ony ^ Cleopatra, iii. (i 

LYCHORIDA, her nurse Pericles, ill. (Gower) 

how, Lychorida, how does my queen? — iii. 1 
Lychorida! Lucina, O divinest patroness — iii. 1 
now Lychorida— here is a thing too young — iii. 1 
Lychorida, bid Nestor bring me spices — iii. 1 
no tears, Lychorida, no tears, look to — iii, 3 
good nurse Lychorida hath oft delivered — v. 1 

LYCURGUSES, if the drink Coriolanus, ii. 1 

LYDIA— from Syria to Lydia Antony fyCleo. i. 2 

Cyprus, Lydia, absolute queen — iii. G 

LYING— thou most lying slave Tempest, i. 2 

where senseless they are lying. T'icoGen.o/rfr. iii. 1 

1 like not the humour of lying.... A/erri/)rit>es,ii. 1 
than lyiu", vainness, babbling. . Ttrelflh Night, iii. 4 
that lying by the violet. . ..Measure for Measure, ii. 2 
why, j'ou bald-pated, lying rascal! .. — v. 1 
to conclude, they are lying knaves ..Much Ado, v. 1 

for, lying so, Hermia Mid. N.'s Dream, ii. 3 

as lying a gossip in that Merchant of Venice, iii. 1 

will lose the gloss with lying All's Well, i. 1 

on every grave, a lying trophy — ii.3 

tli.at now is lying in Alarseilles . . Taming ofSh. ii. ) 

let me have no lying Winter's Tate, iv. 3 

northward, lying off from Trent . . 1 Henry IV. iii. 1 

thou art perfect in lying down — iii. 1 

how this world is given to lying! .... — v. 4 
old men are tt> this vice of lying! ..2HenryIV. iii. 2 

lest rest, and l.viug still — iv. 4 

in th}' lyiu,g tongue both numbers.. Cor/o/a7it/s, iii, 3 

lying" still, are full of rest Julius Cnsar, iv. 3 

thus in a chapel lying! Cymbeline, ii . 2 

be it lying, note it, the woman's — ii. .'i 

thy corse, lying with simple shells! ..Pericles, iii. 1 

thou'lt have me whipped for lying Lear, i. .i 

'tis as easy as Iving Hamlet, iii. 2 

LYINGEST knave . . Tamingof Shrew, 2 (induction) 

the lyingest knave in Christendom.. 2 He7/r!/r/. ii. 1 

LYM— liouud, or spaniel, hrach, or Ivm ..Lear, iii, ti 

L^■i\I()GES— O Lynu);res, O Austria! .King John, iii. i 

LVNN-to Lyr.n,my lord 3Hcnr>,VI. iv. ,•) 

]>YSANDER— stand forth Lysandcr. .Mirf. .V.'s ;)7-. i. i 
I thou, Lysandcr, thou hast given .... — i. ) 



LYS 



LYS ANDER. In himself he is .... Mid. A'.'s Dr. i. 1 

and l>ysander, yield thy crazed title — i. 1 

scornful Ly saucier I true he hath — i. 1 

iiiv good Lysanderl I swear to tlicc — i. I 

Ijvsander and myself will fly this (jvp.) — i. 1 

there my I^ysander and myself — j. I 

keep word, Lysander: we must starve — _i. 1 

Avhere is Lvsauder, and fair Ilermia? — ii. 2 

be it so, Lysander: find you out a bed — ii. 3 

nay, good Lysander; for my sake.... — ii. 3 

Lvsander riddles very prettily — ii. 3 

meant to say Lysander lied — ii. 3 

who is here? Lysander! on the ground! — ii. 3 

Lysander, if you live, good sir, awake — ii. 3 

do not say so^ Lysander, say not so . . — ii. 3 

nevermay'st thou come Lysandernear! — ii. 3 

help me, Lysander, help me! — ii. 3 

Lysander, look, how I do quake — ii. 3 

Lysander! what removed? I^ysanderl — ii. 3 

if thou hast slain Lysander in his — — iii. 2 

■what's tliis to my Lysander? — iii. 2 

I am not auilty of Lysander's blood — iii. 2 

Lysander keep thy Hermia — iii. 2 

by mine eye, Lysander, found — in. 2 

Lysauder'fromny side? Lysander's — iii. 2 

liave you not set Lysander, as in scorn — iii. 2 

wherefore doth Lysander deny yoiir love — iii. 2 

Lysander, whereto tends all this? — iii. 2 

are not vou Lysander? — iii. 2 

what, with Lysander? — iii. 2 

like to Lysancler sometime frame — — iii. 2 

crush this herb into Lysander's eye.. — iii. 2 

Lysander! speak again, thou runaway — iii. 2 

heavens shield Lysander, if they mean — iii. 2 

and this Lvsauder; this Demetrius .. — iv. 1 

LYSIMACllITS— the lord Lysimachus .Pericles, iv. 6 

holy words to the lord Lysmiachus — iv. 6 

from wlience Lysimachus — v. (Gower) 

and in it is Lysimachus the governor. . — y. 1 

M 

MAB— Mab hath been with you . . Borneo ^-Juliet, i. 4 

which oft the an»ry Mab with — i. 4 

this is that very Mab, that — i. 4 

MACBETH-there to meet with Macbeth. JI/oc6e(/i, i. 1 
for brave Macbeth, (well he deserves .. — i. 2 
our captains. Macbeth and Banquo? .. — i. 2 

former title greet Macbeth — i. 2 

lost, noble Macbeth hath won — i.2 

a drum, a drum; Macbeth doth come.. — i. 3 

all hail, Macbeth! (rep.) — i. 3 

lesser tlian Macbeth, and greater — i. 3 

happily received, Macbeth, the news . . — i. 3 

worthv Macbeth, we stay upon — i. 3 

Macbeth doth murder sleep — ii. 2 

Macbeth shall sleep no more! — ii. 2 

those that iMacbeth hath slain — ii. 4 

the sovereignty will fall upon Macbeth — ii. 4 
as upon thee, Macbeth, their speeches — iii. 1 
join with us? Macbeth. He needs not — iii. 3 
to trade and traffic with Macbeth — iii. 5 

{;raciou3 Duncan was pitied of Macbeth — iii» 6 
low it did grieve Macbeth! — iii. 6 

Macbeth! Macbeth! Macbeth! beware — iv. 1 
none of woman born shall liarm Macbeth — iv. 1 

Macbeth shall never vanquished be — iv. 1 

and our high-placed Macbeth shall live — iv. 1 
why stands Macbeth thus amazedly?.. — iv. 1 
I am not treacherous. But iMacbeth is — iv. 3 

black Macbeth will seem as — iv. 3 

damned in evils, to top Macbeth — iv. 3 

better Macbeth than such a one — iv. 3 

devilish Macbeth by many of — iv. 3 

Macbeth is ripe for shaking — iv. 3 

fear not, IMacbeth ; no man — v. 3 

my name's jMaclJeth. The devil — v. 7 

either tlion, Macbeth, or else my — v. 7 

MACCABiEUS-[.«e Judas] 

ycleped Maccab.'BUB Love's L. Lost, V. 2 

alas, poor Rlaccabxus — v. 2 

]\I AC DdNW ALD, <worthy to be l\facbeth, i.2 

MACDUFF— here comes tlie good Macduff — ii. 4 

that Maeduffdenies his person — iii. 4 

I hear, Macduff lives in disgrace — iii. 6 

thither Macduif is gone to pray — iii. 6 

sent he to Macduff? He did ~ iii. 6 

beware Macduff: beware the thane.... — iv. 1 

then live Macduff; wliat need I — iv. I 

bring you word JIacduff is fled — iv. 1 

the cattle of Macduft' I will surprise .. _ iv. 1 

Macduff, this noble passion — iv. 3 

sinful Macduff, they were all struck . . — iv. 3 
and the good Macduff, revenges burn. . _ v. 2 
worthy Macduff, and we, shall take .. — v. 6 

tell thee, Macduff was from his — v. 7 

lay on, Macduff; and damned lie he . . — v. 7 

Macduffis missing, and your noble son — v. 7 

MACE— the warden pies; mace .. H'inter'sTale, iv. 2 

more exploits with his mace-Comeily of Errors, iv. 3 

the sword, the mace, the crown Henry V. iv. 1 

instead of maces, will we ride 2Henryri. iv. 7 

thy leaden mace upon my boy ..Julius CtPsar, iv. 3 

MACEDON— in Macedon (>-ep.) Henry V. iv. 7 

between Macedon and Monmouth .. — iv. 7 

there is a river in Macedon; and there — iv. 7 

a prince of Macedon, my roval father.. Pericles, ii. 2 

MACHIAVEL-am I a MuSumeVi Merry Wives.'id. 1 

Alencon! that notorious Machiavell.l Henri/ F/. v. 4 

the murderous Machiavel to aticiool.Z Henry V I . iii. 2 

MACHINATION, hollowness, treachery ..Lear,\. 1 

hatli so an end, and machination ceases.. — v. I 

JtACHINE-thismacliineisto liim.Hain/e(,ii. 2 (let.) 

MACICAREL— as stinking maekarel. I H<?n)!/;F. ii.4 

MACMORRIS, is it not? Henry f. iii. 2 

how now, captain Macmorris? (rep.) — lii. 2 

captain Macmorris, I think ('■'■p.).... — iii. 2 

M ACTTLATE-niost maculate thouirhts. Love's L. L. i.2 

MACULATION in thy heavt.Troilus^Cressitla. iv. 4 

MAD— but felt a fever of the mad Tempest, i. 2 



[_470_] 

JMAD— I have made you mad Tempest, iii. 3 

tlie fools are mad, if left alone. I'jco Gen. of f'er. iii. 1 
the young man there, and be mad. Merry IVives, i. 4 

trust me, a mad host — iii. 1 

if I have horns to make one mad .... — iii. 5 
he is very courageous mad, about .. — iv. 1 

this is mad as a mad dog! — iv. 2 

the finest mad devil of jealousy — v. 1 

the second mads him • TwclflhNight, i. 5 

ho is but mad yet, madonna — i. 5 

if you be not mad, be gone — i. 5 

my masters are you mad? — ii. 3 

he must run mad — ii. 5 

I'm as mad as he — iii. 4 

why, we shall make him mad, indeed — iii. 4 
already in the belief that he is mad — iii. 4 
the man grows mad ; away with him — iii. 4 

are all the people rnad? — iv. 1 

or I am mad, or else this — iv. 1 

food sir Topas, do not think I am mad — iv. 2 
am not mad (lep.) — iv. 2 

then you are mad, indeed (rep.) .... — iv. 2 

like a mad lad — iv. 2 (song) 

that I am mad, or else the lady's mad — iv. 3 

how now, art thou mad? — v. 1 

first told me, thou wast mad — v. 1 

by the lord, fool, I am not mad .... — v. 1 
it was a mad fantastical trick . . Meas.forMeas. iii. 2 
if she be mad, (as I believe no other) — v. 1 
many that are not mad, have sure .... — v. 1 
and the taker runs presently mad. . . . Much Ado, i. 1 

you will never run mad, niece — i. 1 

they would talk themselves mad .... — ii. 1 

how now, mad spirit? — iii. 2 

thus to make poor females mad./l//rf.7V. Dream, iii. 2 
do you hear, my mad wenches?. . Love's L. Lost, ii. 1 

tills love is as mad as Ajax — iv. 3 

farewell, mad wenches — v. 2 

some, that are mad Merchant of Venice, iv. 1 

if your wife be not a mad woman .... — iv. 1 
fetching mad bounds, bellowing .... — v. 1 
an 'twere to me, I shoidd be mad at it — v. 1 

the other mad without any As youLike it, i. 3 

drave my suitor from his mad humour — iii. 2 

but your son, as mad in folly ill's K'ell, v. 3 

for indeed, he was mad for her — v. 3 

would you make me mad?. Taming of Sh. 2 (indue ) 

that wench is stark mad — i. 1 

masters, help! my master is mad.... — i.2 

there is mad Petruchio's wife — iii. 2 

some meaning in his mad attire .... — iii. 2 

such a mad marriage never was — iii. 2 

be mad and merry,— or go hang .... — iii. 2 

of all mad matches, never was — iii. 2 

on all mad masters! and all foul .... — iv. 1 

I'll curb her mad and headstrong — iv. 1 

will make the man mad — iv. 5 

Kate! I hope thou art not mad — iv. 5 

I pray thee, for my mad mistaking.. — iv. 5 

away, away, mad ass! — v. 1 

carry this mad knave to the gaol — v. 1 

no less honest than you are mad.. Winter's Tale, ii. 3 
then run mad, indeed; stark mad! .. — iii. 2 

but, sure he's stark mad Comedy of Errors, ii. 1 

fond fools serve mad jealousy ! — ii. 1 

wast thou mad, that thus — ii. 2 

or waking? mad, or well-advised? .. — ii. 2 
it would make a man mad as a buck — iii. 1 
mad, that you do reason so? not mad — iii. 2 
Antipholus is mad, else would he.... — iv. 3 

that I gather he is mad — iv. "3 

is a mad tale, he told — iv. 3 

is not your husband mad? — iv. 4 

I am not mad. O that thou wert not — iv. 4 
dost thou mad me? will you ()cp.) .. — iv. 4 

for the mountain of mad flesh — iv. 4 

he is mad; some get witliin — v. 1 

that the man was mad — v. 1 

more deadly than a mad dog's tooth — v. 1 

would mad or man or beast — v. 1 

his bondman, all as mad as he — v. 1 

with his mad attendant and himself — v. 1 

might make one wiser mad — v. 1 

if lie were mad, he would not plead.. — v. 1 

you are all mated, or stark mad — v. 1 

thou'rt mad to say it Macbeth, i. 5 

so, it will make us mad — ii. 2 

some say, he's mad — v. 2 

madworld! mad kings! mad KingJohn,\\.2 

I am not mad, tliis hair I tear (rep.) — iii. 4 
thou fond mad woman, wilt thou ..Richard H. v. 2 

this music mads me — v. 5 

it will make wise men mad — v. i 

how now, how now, mad wag? I Henry IV. i. 2 

for he made me mad, to see — i. 3 

king hath made'your nephew mad.. — i. 3 

none of these mad, mustachio — ii. 1 

what, art thou mad? art thou mad? — ii.4 
that same mad fellow of the north . . — ii.4 
thou art essentially mad, without .. — ii.4 
cousin Percy, you will make him mad — iii. 1 
my daughter will run mad (rep.).... — iii. 1 
a mad fellow met me on the way .... — iv. 2 
what, Hal? how now, mad wag? .... — iv. 2 
my lord, this is a poor mad soul . . . .2HenrylV. ii. 1 

thou whoreson mad compound — ii. 4 

they will talk of mad Shallow yet .. — iii. 2 

the mad days that I have spent! . . — iii. 2 

whiles the mad mothers with — iii. 3 

rather moody mad, and desperate . . 1 Henry VI. iv. 2 

mad ire, and wrathful fury — iv. 3 

sure the man is mad '. . — v. 3 

mad, natural graces that — v. 3 

1 should be raging mad, and cry ..iHenryVl. iii. 2 

is the man grown mad? — v. 1 

thou mad misleader of thy brainsick — v. I 
thou sliouldst be mad, and I (iep.)..3Henry VI. i. 4 
wert distraught, and mad with terror? — iii. 5 

thy wife, (if any be so mad) Richard III. iv. 1 

England hath long been mad — v. 3 



MAD 



MAD, sir? O very mad (rep.) Henry VII I. i. 4 

that he ran mad, and died — ii. 2 

I am mad in Cressid's love ..Troilus^Cresstda, i. 1 

'tis mad idolatry, to make — ii. 2 

'tis our mad sister, I do know — ii.2 

our minds, because Cassandra's mad — ii. 2 

the young prince will go mad — iv. 2 

these two may run ma(i — v, I 

hath done to-day mad and fantastic — v. 5 

they are mad women Timonof Athens, i. 2 

I am worse than mad — iii..*) 

he's but amad lord, and naiiglit but — iii. 6 

lord Timon's mad. I feel 't upon — iii. ti 

tliey say, she's mad Coriolanus, iv. 2 

what, is the fellow mad? Julius Cccsar, iii. I 

it will make you mad; 'tis good .... ■ — iii. 9 

though I am mad, I will not Antony fyCleo. ii. 5 

I think, thou'rt mad; the matter.... — ii. 7 
'twas I, that the mad Brutus ended.. — iii. 9 

he is more mad than Telamon .... — iv. 1 1 
impatience does become a dog that's mad — iv. 13 
what! art thou mad? Almost, sir. . . . Cymbeline, i. 2 

are men mad? hath nature — i. 7 

fools are not mad folks — ii. 3 

as I am mad, I do (rep.) — ii. 3 

is Cadwal mad? — iv. 2 

to make the noble Leonatus mad — v. 5 

why, are you mad? TltusAndronicus, ii. 1 

should straight fall mad, or else .... — ii. 3 

doth not the sea wax mad — iii. 1 

my heart, all mad with misery — iii. 2 

no man should be mad but I — iii. 2 

of griefs would make men mad — iv. 1 

of J?roy ran mad through sorrow ... . — iv. 1 
ay, some mad message from his mad — iv. 2 

1 am not mad; I know thee well .... — v. 2 

miserable, mad, mistaking eyes — v. 2 

being credulous in this mad thought — v. 2 
tliougli they suppose me mad (rep.) .. — v. 2 

unmannerly, when Lear is mad Lear, i. I 

mad, not mad, sweet heaven ! (rep.) — i. 5 

what, art thou mad, old fellow? — ii.2 

pr'ythee, daugliter, do not make me mad 



Uiool, I shall go mad! 

grows mad; I'll tell thee, friend (rep.) 

for he's a mad yeoman, that sees 

he's mad that trusts in the tameness . . 

'tis poor mad Tom 

alack, sir, he's mad. 'Tis the times' . . 

as mad as the vexed sea 

what, art madi? a man may see 

the king is mad 

makes mad her sister Goneril. 



ii. 4 
iii. 4 



- IV. i 

— iv. 6 

— iv. 6 

- V. 1 
Romeo, art thou mad? Not mad. Romeo ^Juliet, i. 2 

that he will sure run mad — ii.4 

hot days, is the mad blood stirring .. — iii. 1 

thou fond mad man, here me but — iii. 3 

fie, fle' what are you mad? — iii. .'j 

it makes me mad — iii. 5 

mortals, hearing them, rxin mad .... — iv. 3 

that you run mad, seeing that — iv. 5 

mad for thy love? Hamlet, ii. 1 

that hath made him mad — ii. 1 

your noble son is mad (rep.) — ii.2 

I am but mad nortli-nortli west — ii.2 

make mad the guilty, and appal — ii.2 

it hath made me mad — iii. 1 

alas, he's mad. Do vou not come — iii. 4 

how does Hamlet? Mad as the sea — iv. i 

out of haunt, this mad young man — iv. 1 

he that is mad, and sent into England . . — v. 1 

why, because he was mad — v. 1 

as mad as he. How came he mad? — v. I 

a whoreson mad fellow's it was — v. 1 

a pestilence on him for a mad rogue! — v. 1 

O, he is mad, Laertes — v. 1 

poor lady! she'll run mad 0(Ae((p, iii. 3 

erewhile mad [CoI.Kni.-o'erwhelmed] .. — iv. 1 
as he shall smi'le, Othello shall go mad . . — iv. l 

I am glad to see you mad — iv. 1 

and he, she loved, proved mad, and did.. — iv. 3 
than she was wont; and makes men mad — v. 2 
what, are vou mad? — v. 2 

MAD-BRAlN rudesby, full ot.Taming of Shrew, iii. 2 

MAD-BRAINED bridegroom took him — iii. 2 

none, but mad-brained Salisbury IHenryVI. i. 2 

beastly, mad-brained war Timon of. Athens, v. 2 

MAD-BRED— of this mad-bred flaw.2 Henri/ F7. iii. 1 

MAD-CAP ruffian, and a swearing. Taming ofSh. ii. I 

come on you mad-cap TtcoGen. of Verona, ii. 5 

the merry mad-cap lord Love's L. Lost, ii. 1 

what a mad-cap hath heaven lent . . King John, i. 1 
once in my daj's I'll be a mad-cap ..\ Henry IV. i. 2 
where the mad-cap duke his uncle . . — _ i. 3 
nimble-footed mad-cap prince of Wales — iv. 1 

MADDED— madded Hecuba gave . . Cijinheline, iv. 2 
plight, it would have madded me. ri(ws.4H(/ron. iii. I 
most degenerate! have you madded ....Lear, i v. 2 

MADDING— madding my eagerness ..All'sWell, v. 3 
he to madding Dido, would unfold .iHmryVl. iii. 2 
to the madding of her lord Cymhrlinc, ii. 2 

MADE— made such a sinner of his Tempest, i. 2 

made thee more profit than — i.2 

made no mistakings — i.2 

that made gape the pine — i- 2 

than bees that made them — i.2 

with words that made them known _ — i.2 

of his bones are coral made — i. 2 (song) 

if youbeniaderCof. A'n/.-maid]orno?.. — i.2 
what strange fish hath made his meal . . — ii. 2 

which I made of the bark of a tree — ii.2 

thou art made like a goose — .ij- 1 

the suit I made thee? — ;|i- ^ 

I have made you mad — ih. 3 

such stuff as dreams are made of — iv. 1 

have I made shake — y. 1 

made me neglect my studies .... TwoGen. ofVer, i. I 

made wit with musing weak — J. 1 

when she hath made you write — ii. 1 

made use and fair advantage — ii.4 



MAD 



MADE them wateliors of TwoOen.ofl'er. ii. 4 

tlie ladder made of cords (icp.iii. 1) .. — ji. ■! 

that made her fair! — ii. ti 

V hon the flight is made to oue — .ii- 7 

one made lu-ivy to the plot — iij. 1 

hath made me publislier of this — in. 1 

therein made me happy — Jv. I 

na if the garment liad been, made for me — iv. 4 

I made Iter weep a-sood — iv. 4 

I liave made yon InipP-V — v. 1 

tlic gift Inith made nie happy — v. 4 

and made me drimlc ircp.) Menij ll'ives/i. 1 

made afar otf by sir ilugh — j. 1 

as sure as his guts are made of puddings — ii. 1 

I would have made you four tall fellows — ii. I 

and what they made there — ii. 1 

shrewd construction made of her — ii. 2 

the hour is fixed, the match is made . . — ii. 2 

he has made us his vlouting-stog — Hi. 1 

■what made me love thee? — lii. 3 

I ne'er made my will yet — lu. 4 

and my uncle, have made motions. ... — iii. 4 

there's a hole made in your best coat.. — iii. 5 

likewise hath made promise to — iv. 6 

tliat I am made an ass — v. 5 

how wit may be madca Jack-a-lent.. — v. 5 

could have made you our delight? — v. 5 

till I had made mine own occaiioiiTwelflh Night, i. 2 

she made good view of me — ii. 2 

for, such as we are made of, such we be — ii. 2 
thou art made (rep. iii. 4) . . . . — ii. .5 (letter) 

amlmade? — iii. 4 

hast made thine enemies? — v. h 

who hath made this havock — v. 1 

even for the vows we made each other — v. 1 

how have you made division of yourself? — v. 1 

that day that made ray sister — v. 1 

and made the most notorious geek. ... — v. 1 

shall be made of our dear souls — v. 1 

test made of my metal Meas. for Meas. i . 1 

impiety lias made a feast of thee — i. 2 

till time had made them for us — i. 3 

what's open made to justice — ii. 1 

like man new made — ii. 2 

stolen a man already made — ii. 4 

to take away a 1 ife true made — ii. 4 

we are made to be no stronger than faults — ii. 4 

wilt thou be made a man out of — iii. 1 

only he hath made an assay of her. ... — iii. 1 

hath made him that gracious denial . . — iii. I 

hath made you fair, hath made you good — iii. 1 

that Angelo hath made to you — iii. 1 

he made trial of you only — ijj. 1 

made it more violent and unruly .... — iii. 1 

what offence hath this man made you ■ — iii. 2 

images, newly made woman — iii. 2 

they say this Angelo was not made by — iii. 2 

how should he be made then? — iii. 2 

I am made to understand — Ji!- 2 

how may likeness, made in crimes .... — iii. 2 

there have I made my promise to call — iv. 1 

for I have made him know — iv. 1 

I have not yet made known to Mariana — iv. 1 

thou must be made immortal — iv. 2 

you will think you have made no offence — iv. 2 

of which he made five marks — iv. 3 

ere twice the sun hath made his — iv. 3 

thou hast made good ho ste — iv. 6 

we have made enquiry of you — v. 

my business in this state made me..,. — v. 

that e'er made a duke («/).) — v. 

he hath made great preparation Much Ado, i. 

thatweremade just in the mid-way.. — ii. 

not been amiss, tlie rod had been made — ii. 

she would have made Hercules have.. — ii. 

his grace hath made the match — ii. 

who hath made this match — ii. 2 

till he have made an oyster of me.... — ii. ? 

hath she made her affection known . . — ii. 3 

other respects, and made her half myself — ii. 3 

like favourites made proud by princes — iii. 1 

is little Cupid's crafty arrow made.... — iii. 1 

drawing of an antick, made a foul blot — iii. 1 

any slander that don John had made.. — iii. 3 

you'll be made bring Deformed forth.. — iii. 3 

and made defeat of her virginity — iv. 1 

that is stronger made — iv. 1 

nor fortune made such havock — iv. 1 

by what power X am made bo\d.Mid.N.'sDream, i. 1 

made love to Nedar's daughter — i. 1 

have every peltin" river made so proud — ii. 2 

and were not made to woo — ii. 2 

made me compare with Hermia's — ii.3 

your kindred hath made my eyes water — iii. 1 

made senseless things begin to do.... — iii. 2 

the hate I bear thee made me leave . . — iii. 2 

and made vour other love — iii. 2 

she hatli made compare between our — iii. 2 

of hindering knot-grass made — iii. 2 

the niMrniiig's love have oft made sport — iii. 2 

we had all been made men — iv. 2 

1 must conlcss, made mine eyes water — v. 1 

this artif'le is made in vain Love^sL.Losf, i. 1 

if she lie made of white and red — i. 2 

Navarre hath made a vow — ii. 1 

I only have made a mouth of — ii. 1 

till now made sore with shooting — iv. 2 (epitaph) 

we liave made a vow to study — iv. 3 

he made her melancholy, sad, and heavy — v. 2 

and ever and anon thej' made a doidit — v. 2 

was your visor made without a tongue? — v. 2 

1 made a little fault in, great — v. 2 

Pompey hath made the challenge — — v. 2 

not your offer made in heat of blood.. — v. 2 

well have made our sport a comedy.. — v. 2 

what stuff 'tis made of Merchant of Venice, i. 1 

till I had made you merry — i. 1 

than if you had made waste of all — i. 1 

God made him, and therefore let him — i. 2 

your hazard shall be made — ii. I 



[471 ] 



MADE good preparation Mer.qf Venice, ii. 4 

to seal love's bonds new made — ii. 6 

my atluirs, have made 3'ou wait — ii. 6 

or made her nei^jUbuurs believe — iii. 1 

that made the wings she flew withal — iii. 1 

having made <uie, metiiinks, it should — iii. 2 

I'll not be made a soft and dull-eyed — iii. 3 

at times made moan to me — iii. 3 

he hath made me a Christian — iii. 5 

why he hath made the ewe bleat for — iv. I 

let their beds be made a.s softas yours — iv. I 

she made me vow, that I should neither — iv. 1 

and made him swear never to part .. — v. 1 
you to mar that whicli God made. ./Is- youLikeit, i. 1 

when nature hath made a fair creature — i. 2 

were you made the messenger? — i. 2 

supplied when I have made it empty — i. 2 

that will be made after my flight. ... — i. 3 

hath not old custom made this life .. — ii. 1 

that I made yesterday in despite of. . — ii. 5 

with a woeful ballad made to his — ii. 7 

the better part made mercy — iii. 1 

I think it wasniade of Atalanta's .. — iii. 2 

gods had made thee poetical [rep.) .. — iii. 3 

the wound mine eye hath made — iii. 5 

falser than vows made in wine — iii. 5 

love hath made thee a tame — iv. 3 

made him give battle to the lioness. . — iv. 3 

that grapes were made to eat — v. 1 

have they made a pair of stairs — v. 2 

to be made of sighs and tears (rep) .. — v. 2 

when earthly things made even — v. 4 (verse) 
would have made nature immortal .. All's IVell, i. 1 

with tne breach j'ourselves made .... — i. 1 

that, you were made of, is metal .... — i. 1 

peevish, proud, idle, made of self-love — i. 1 

m.y lord your son made me to think — i. 3 

a further use to be made, than alone — ii. 3 

love made your fortunes twenty .... — ii.3 

you have made shift to run iuto't .. — ii. 5 

thinks himself made in the unchaste — iv. 3 

in fine made a groan of her last — iv. 3 

is match well made; match.... — iv. 3 (letter) 

saffron would have made all — iv. 5 

my lord that's gone, made himself . . — iv. 5 

of that I have made a bold charter .. — iv. 5 

since you have made the days — v. I 

our esteem was made much poorer . . — v. 3 

as she had made the overture — v. 3 

how Silver made it good. Taming of Shrew, 1 (indue.) 

that made great Jove to humble .... — i. 1 

the instrument my head made way.. — ii. 1 

are made to bear, and so are you (,rep.) — ii. 1 

I see, a woman may be made a fool — iii. 2 

coat, sir, was not fully made — iv. 1 

the gown is made just as my — iv. 3 

how did you desire it should be made? — iv. 3 

my son Lucentio made me acquainted — iv. 4 

the match is fully made, and all — iv. 4 

our first merriment hath made thee — iv. 5 

that have by marriage made — v. 1 

Bianca's love made me exchange. ... — V- 1 
royal necessities, made separation. Winter^sTale, i. I 

the offences we have made you do . . — i. 2 

made his business more material .... — i. 2 

in that be made more bitter — _i. 2 

or half-moon made with a pen — ii. 1 

Polixenes has made thee swell thus. . — ii. 1 

all other circumstances made up .... — ii. 1 

which hast made it so like — ii.3 

.you have made fault i' the boldness.. — ?!■. 2 

hath made thy person for — iii. 2 

you're a made old man; if the sins.. — iii. 3 

thine own goodness hath made — iv. 1 

thou, having made me businesses .. — iv. 1 

my father hath made her mistress . . — iv. 2 

made me four-and-twenty nosegays — iv. 2 

yet nature is made better by no .... — iv. 3 

that have made themselves all — iv. 3 

fairest youth that ever made eye swerve — iv. 3 

and made more homely than thy state — iv. 3 

no disjunction to be made — iv. 3 

nature might have made me as these — iv. 3 

hang him, he'll be made an example — iv. 3 

that heirless it hath made my kingdom — v. 1 

even in these looks I made — v. 1 

and made between's by vows — v. 3 

I often made to Epidamnum. . Comedy of Errors, i. 1 

had made provision for her — i. 1 

made daily motions for our home — i. 1 

my mistress made it one upon my .. — i. 2 

what patch is made our porter? — iii. 1 

the doors are made against you — iii. ! 

comment will be made on it — iii. 1 

by this, I know, 'tis made — iii. 1 

had not been made of faith — iii. 2 

and made me turn i' the wheel — iii. 2 

hatli almost made me traitor — iii. 2 

I have made it for you. Made it for me — iii. 2 

wliom I made lord of me and all I had — v. 1 

they made themselves air Maclelh, i. 5 (letter) 

but this bird hatli ma<le his — i. 6 

that made you break this enterprize — i. 7 

they have made themselves — 1.7 

mine eyes are made the fools — ii. 1 

hatli made them drunk, hath made me — ii. 2 

yet I made a shift to cast him — ii.3 

now hatli made his master-piecel .. — ii.3 

by the verities on thee made good .. — iii. 1 

this I made good to .you — iii. 1 

you made it known to us — iii. I 

are made, not marked; where violent — iv. 3 
been prevented, and made whole .... King John, i. 1 

that judge hath made me guardian.. — ii. 1 

not wortli this coil, that's miule for me — ii. 1 

but God batli made her sin — ii. 1 

and wide havock made for bloody .. — ii. 1 

this day hath made much work .... — ii. 2 

to two such streams made one — ii. 2 

that amity which you have made .. — ii. 2 



MAD 

MADE— for this match, made up King John, ii. 2 

this league, that we have made — ii. 2 

made to run even, upon even — ii. 2 

this news hath made thee — iii. 1 

and made his majesty the bawd — iii. 1 

that are not this day made — iii. 1 

and our oppression hath made up this — iii. 1 

let thy vow, first made to — iii. I 

O, upon my knee, made hard — iii. I 

and made it lieavj', thick — iii. 3 

thou hast made me giddy — iv. 2 

to be made, then shall this hand — iv. 2 

to a king, made it no conscience .... — iv. 2 

shook thy head, or made a pause — iv. 2 

struck me dumb, made me break off — iv. 2 

comment that my passion made upon — iv. 2 

death, made proud with pure .... — iv. 3 

and I have made a happy peace — v. 1 

John hath made his peace with Rome? — v. 2 

but stayed, and made the western . . — v. 5 

so sad to-night as this hath made me — v. S 

made the fault that we cannot Richard Il.'i.'i 

that fashioned thee, made him — i. 2 

manage must be made, my liege .... — i. 4 

hath made a shameful conquest .... — ii. 1 

hast thou made me gaunt — ii. 1 

now. He that made me, knows — ii. 1 

have ever made me sour my ~ ii. I 

the sick hour that his surfeit made.. — ii. 2 

base men by his endowments are made — ii- 3 

sinful hours, made a divorce — iii. 1 

that Power that made you king .... — ;!!■ 2 

have made peace with Bolingbroke.. — VS-'^ 

their peace IS made with heads — iii. 2 

that are made [Co(.-swear] to thee!.. — iv. I 

and made no deeper wounds? — iv. 1 

for with a kiss 'twas made — v. I 

when weeping made you break — v. 1 

time made me his num.beriug clock.. — v. 5 

this hand hath made him proud — v. 5 

1 was not made a horse; and yet I bear — v. 5 
for he made me mad, to see him ....\HenryIV. i. 3 
the king hath made your nephew . . — i. 3 

an' I have not ballads made on — ii. 2 

what cunning match have you made — ji. 4 

I made me no more ado, but took ... . — ii. 4 

knew ye as well as he that made ye — ii. 4 

and made Lucifer cuckold — ii 4 

hath Henry Bolingbroke made head — iii. 1 

enlarged him, and made a friend of him — iii. 2 

what the inside of a church is made of — iii. 3 

and they have made bolters of them — iii. 3 

hath alread.v made thee butter — iv. 2 

his vow made to my father — iv. 3 

and made us doff our easy robes of peace — v. 1 

he made a blushing cital of himself. . — v. 2 

Percy, I have made him sure — v. 3 

made me sick, being sick (rep.) illennjIV. i. I 

pregnancy is made a tapster — i. -' 

unless a woman should be made an ass — ii. 1 

and made her serve your uses both . . — ii. 1 

have made a shift to eat up — ii. 2 

he had made two holes in the — ii. 2 

which nature made his blemish .... — ii.3 

of their puissance made a little — ii.3 

methought, he made a shrewd thrust — ii. 4 

he would have made agoodpantler.. — ii. 4 

like a man made after supper — iii. 2 

retreat is made, and execution — iv. 3 

let there be no noise made — iv. 4 

be with him that hath made us heavy — v. 2 

time to have made new liveries — \.h 

never was such a sudden scholar ranHQ. Henry V. i. 1 

the king were made a prelate — i. 1 

I have made an offer to his majesty. . — i. I 

he hath made a match with such .... — i. 2 

what use we made of them — i. 2 

a' made a finer end, and went away — ii. 3 

had twenty years been made — ii. 4 

whose limbs were made in England — iii. 1 

the fault my father made in compassing — iv. ) 

his passport shall be made — iv. 3 

ere it is made an end and finished .. — iv. 7 

I made no offence; therefore — iv. 8 

as vet there is no answer made — v. 2 

fortune made his sword — v. 2 (cho.) 

lost France, and made his England — v. 2 (cho.) 
the church's prayers made him so ..^ Henry VI. i. 1 

our isle be made a nourish of — i. 1 

my grisly countenance made others — i. 4 

guarded, where the breach was made — ii. 1 

by llim that made nic, I'll maintain — ii. 4 

and made me almost yield upon — iii. 3 

made their march for Bonrdeaux — iv. 3 

the sword of Orleans liath not made me — iv. 6 

suddenly made him from my — iv. 7 

he would have made a noble knight — iv. 7 

happy, to be made a queen? To be made — v. 3 

fit to be made companion with — v. 3 

made thee feared, and honoured 2Hi-nnj VI. i, I 

and must be made a subject to a duke? — j. 3 

point, my lord, your falcon made — ii. 1 

and made me climb, with danger.... — ii. 1 

it made me laugh to see — ii. 1 

true; made the lame to leap — ii. I 

you made, in a day, my lord — ii . 1 

thv father Henry made it mine — ii.3 

was made a wonder — ii. 4 

made me collect these dangers — iii. 1 

but mine is made tlie prologue — iii. 1 

be judged, I made the duke away — iii. 2 

to see how deep my grave is made .. — iii. 2 

beard made rough and rugged — iii. 2 

suspect 'twas he that made the slaughter?— iii. 2 

a sword, though made of a lath — iv. 2 

an innocent lamb should be made .. — iv. 2 

sir, he made a chimney in my — iv. 2 

and made it an eunuch — iv. I 

lie that made us pav one and twenty — iv. T 

made me full of sickness and diseases — iv. 7 



— V. 2 



V. 2 



..iHenryVI. i 



— i. 1 



_ ii. 2 



iv. 1 
jv. 1 

iv. 3 



- V. 7 
art! in. i. 1 



Bl ADE all France to quake 

but I was made a kiue at nine 

this hand was made to'handle_(re>!.).. 

and made a prey for carrion kites 

hath made the wizard famous 

wliat are vou made of? you'll nor fight 
this breaeli, now in our fortunes made — 

made us by-words to our enemies ' " 

he made thee duke of York 

who mode the Dauphin and the French 
made him to resign his crown perforce 

rather than made that savage 

the duke is made protector of the 

hath made her break out into terms 
'twas he that made you to depose.... 

and made an evening at the noontide 
and made a preachment of your high 
made issue from the bosom of. . . ..... 

unchanging, made impudent with .. 
pinched a ftw, and made them cry . . 

by him that made us all 

and made the Dauphin stoop 

our sunshine made thy spring 

the nmtch is made; she seals 

when he was made a shriver 

our brother made a worthy choice?., 
stav till Warwick made return? .... 

he hath made a solemn vow 

for that it made my imprisonment . . 

but how made he escape? 

the gates nnide fast ! Brother 

so sorry for my trespass made 

is proclamation made 

and made the forest tremble 

and made our footstool of security . . 

of our discontent made glorious /?/ 

nor made to court an amorous — 

scarce half made up, and that — 

that made him send lord — 

kindred are made gentlefolks — 

hand that made these hep.) — 

be made more miserable (rpp.) — 

thou hast made the happy earth .... — 
the piteous moan that Rutland made — 

and twenty times made pause . . — 

and made them blind with weeping — 

for it was made for kissing, lady — 

say then, my peace is made — 

and made her widow to a woful ...... — 

many a gentle person made a Jack. . — 

impression made my dream — 

it made me once restore a purse .... — 

who made thee then a bloody — 

since I have made my friends — 

deeds of charity; made peace of enmity — 

I hope, the king made peace — 

hath made you melancnoly — 

have made it tedious, wearisome — 

made him my book, wherein my — 

made prize and purchase of his — 

I am not made of stone — 

than thou hast made me by my — 

made I him king for this? — 

unlawfully made drunk with innocent — 

your daue'liter is made queen — 

the king thy brother made 

hath made a prey for worms ........ 

such proclamation hath been made.. 

and made his course again for Bretagne 

the weary sun hath made a golden . . 

one that made means to come 

foul stone, made precious by the foil ,,„ . , 

the last made former wonders Henry VIII. i. 1 

they made Britain, India 

the ensuing night made it a fool 

but when the way was made 

made suit to come in his presence (.rep.) 

Hopkins, that made this mischief 

made my name once more noble 

and all that made me happy 

as I am made without him 

to him, that made him proud 

then you are weakly made 

or made it not mine ton? 

oft the passages made toward it 

and made to tremble the region 

or died where they were made 

an earnest motion made to the queen 

with his lute made trees — 

there had made a lasting spring — 

have I not made you the prime 

what cross devil made me put 

vou made bold to carry into Flanders 

1 am glad, your grace has made that 

the late marriage made of none effect 

the king has made him master 

thou hast made me, with thy 

my haste hath made me unmannerly 

he's made master o' the rolls ■ - . 

and that her sufferings made almost — v. 1 
to have tills young one made (rcp.1.. — v. 2 
I made no spare, sir. You did nothing — v. 3 
thev fell on, I made good my place . . — v. 3 

ye liave made a fine hand — 'v- ■> 

thou hast made me now a nian ...... — J-\ 

their vow is made Trodus Sr Cremda, (prol.) 

or made a toast for Neptune — !-3 

hand that made the engine — ..V f 

ere you be mode tame — "!• ^ 

go to, a bargain made: seal it — 

made tame and most familiar 

as fast as they are made 

though they are made and moulded 

made emulous missions 'mongst 

Ajax is half made of Hector's 

impiessure made of our rank feud. . . . 

hence my will shall here be made 

better that made the painter . . Timon n 

O joy, e'en made away ere it can 

and that unaptness made your mmister 



iii. 1 
iii. 1 
iii. 5 
iii. 7 



iv. 4 



_ iv. 4 

— iv. 4 

— iv. 4 
V. 3 
V. 3 
V. 3 



— ii. 3 



ii. 4 



iii. 1 (song) 
iii. 1 (song) 

— iii, 2 
_ iii. 2 

— iii. 2 



V. 2 



iii. 3 
iii. 3 
iii. 3 



1 — y. 3 
Coriolanus, i. 1 



ii. 2 
ii. 2 
ii. 3 
iii. 1 



V. 5 
V. 5 
V. 5 

'i.'l 



il.2 



MADE— this praise is made .... Timon of Athens, 

his necessity made use of me — 

when he made man politic — 

my lord and I have made an end — 

and made plenteous wounds? (rep.). . — 

as he made it seem — 

are made thy chief aiflictions — 

time hath made thee hard in't — 

has desperate want made — 

Timon liath made his everlastin"... - 

made a particular force, and made u 
sir, what answer made the belly?. . . , 

meat was made for mouths 

and hear how the despatch is made. . 
we never yet made doubt but Rome.. 

if renown made it not stir 

by the vows we have made to endure 

and made what work I pleased 

and cities be made all of false-faced.. 

let him be made an overture 

lie would have made them mules ... . 

and the commons made a shower 

when blows have made me stay 

when Tarquin made a head for Rome 
by his rare example, made the coward 

made you against the grain 

Aufidius then had made new head? 

often made against the senate 

my praises made thee first a soldier. . 
promise that you made your mother? 
unknit himself the noble knot he made 

'tis I that made thy widows 

his clothes made a false report ...... 

why, he is so made on here within .. 

you have made good work! (rep.) 

like a thing made by some other 

you have made fair hands 

you are they that made the air 

made him feared, so hated, so banished 
why, SO; you have made good work.. 

in the same time 'tis made? 

as a thing made for Alexander 

made him joint-servant with me .... 
what faults he made before the last. . 

we have made peace, with no less 

thou hast made my heart too 

you not made a universal shout Julius Cwsar 

sounds, made in her concave shores . . — 
then I know my answer must be made — 
tliere's a bargain made — 

1 have made strong proof of my — 

same ague which hath made you lean — 

vour swords, made rich with — i 

ambition should be made of sterner stuff— i 
I know not, that made them do it . . — ) 
best friends made, and our best means — 

h ave m ade themselves so strong — 

witness the hole you made in Caesar s — 
this parting was well made (rep.) .... — 

good to all, made one of them — 

state made friends of them . . Antony 4r Cleopal. 

her passions are made of nothing — 

and brother, made wars upon me — 

CtEsar, made out of her impatience . . — 

out of Egypt, made wars here — 

and made the night light with drinking — 
and made the water, which they beat — 

and made their bends adoruings — 

and made a gap in nature — 

royal wench! she made great Csesar — 

no; I made no such report — 

the news, made not the match — 

I have made no fault — 

and made a cistern for scaled snakes! — 

and what made the all-honoured — 

hath made me rig my navy .,. ., — 

you have made me offer of Sicily .... — 
would ne'er have made this treaty . . — 
purpose made more in the marriage — 
they have made him drink alms-drink — 
made his will, and read it to public ear — 
CiEsar and Lepidus have made wars — 

Cajsar, having made use of him — 

since then hath made between them — 

made her of lower Syria, Cyprus — 

my sword, made weak by my affection — 
repent thou wast not made his daughter — 

never anger made good guard for — 

I wish, I could be made so many men — 
like a T, and now 'tis made an H .... — 

with ships made cities — 

purchase what you have made known — v. i 

though ink be made of gall Cymbehne, i. 2 

wouldst have made my throne — !■ ^ 

hath made you reek as a sacrifice — — ;• 3 
thou shouldst have made him as little — i- 4 
assault you have made to her chastity — i. 5 

it is a thing I made — !• 6 

hands made hard with hourly .. — '• 7 

my father shall be made acquainted — \.l 

made me to fan you thus (rep.) — .'.-7 

if 'twere made comparative for — }}-i 

were they all made such men — n- 3 

of your answer made the speediness — ;;• 4 

to where they are made — !!• * 

dost deny thou hast made me cuckold — ii. 4 
with his tools made me a counterfeit — ii- S 
Cffisar made here, but made not here — ;!!• 1 

made Lud's town with rejoicing — in-' 

[ CuMvn'. J Mulmutius made our laws — in.! 
which I have made to thy command? — iii. i 
tell me how Wales was made so happy — iii. ! 
wherein you made great Juno angry — iii- '■ 

hath made us forward — 'i!' ■ 

a thing more made of malice — !>!• • 

court made me to blame in memory — iii- • 

have made the ground my bed — ij!- i 

so soon as I had made my meal — V.'.- ' 

I should have died had I not made it, — in- i 
was made by him that made the tailor — iv. 



MADE those clothes, which Cxjmheline, iv. 2 

my tailor made them not — J^' p 

being scarce made up, I mean — iv. 2 

dead, that we have made so much on — ;v. 2 

what man thou mightst have made.. — iv. 2 

from where they made the stand?.... — 

made good the passage; cried to — 

slaves, the strides they victors made . . — 

you are made rather to wonder — 

he'll do, as he is made to do — 

slaughter is here made by the Roman — 

happier much by his aflBiction made — 

I am called to be made free — 

whom the gods have made preservers — 

whose kinsmen have made suit — 

for beauty that made barren — 

which by his tongue being made — — 

I wretch, made scruple of his praise. . — 

and might have made you finish _ — 

the vision which X made known to Lucius — y 

coraest not to be made a scorn TUus Andron.\ 

have made him noted long — }] 

till all the Andronici be made away — ;■ 

with sight, made heart lament — J) 

they, that made away his brother .. — ii 

if fear hath made thee fain t — 1 1 

and made thy body bare of her 
that sweet tongue nath made 



a, i. 2 



iii 


9 


ill. 


II 


IV 


1 


IV 


2 


IV 


7 


iv. 


12 



V. 3 
V. 3 
V. 3 
V. 3 
V. 3 



V.5 
V. 5 
V. 6 
v.5 
v.5 
v.5 



ii. 5 
iii. I 
iii. I 



hath made thee handless in thy 

and made a brine-pit with our bitter 
has sorrow made thee dote already?., 
was burnt, and he made miserable?., 
thou art made of tears, and tears — 

that made me to fear ; although 

which made me down to throw 

by nature made for murders 

well made away, then let the 

well, well; I made thee miserable .. 
I made unto the noise: when soon . . 
these trenches, made by grief and care 

cut off, and made a merry jest 

my tears have made me blind 

made many princes thither — Pericles, 
which to prevent he made a law — 

ye gods that made me man 

what pitiful cries they made to us 

hath made the ball for them to 

what ground's made happy by his . . . 
made louder by the o'er-fed breast — 
is made, with all due diligence — 
and fear made me to quit the house . 
made familiar to me and to my aid . 
she made more sound by hurting — 
and made the night-bird mute — 

she made him roast-meatfor worms 

but he made a groan at it 

death hath made this slaughter — iv. 4 (Cower) 
why, hath your principal made known — jv. 6 
goodly vessel ride before us, I made to it — v. I 

that thus hath made me weep? -- v. 1 

the regent made in Mitylene — v. 2 (Gower) 
shemadeknownherself my daughter.. — X- f 

have made their amorous sojourn Lear, i. 1 

I am made of that self metal as — i. 1 

potency made good , take thy reward , 

by the' power that made me — 

the observation we have made of it 

nothing can be made out of nothing 

by the noise I made, full suddenly lie fled 

a tailor made thee 

could not have made him so ill 

made you no more offence than ......... 

made you my guardians, my depositaries 

but she made mouths in a glass 

made him proud of lieart ■ 

evil disposition made him seek his death 

true or false, it hath made thee earl 

what store her heart is made of 

it was he that made the overture 

which made me think a man a worm . . . 

made she no verbal question _ 

poor man, made tame by fortune's 

shortens my made intent 

sisters have in thy reverence made! 

I would have made them skip. 



iv. 3 



i. (Gower) 
i. (Gower) 
.. — i. I 
.. — ii. 1 
. . — ii. I 
.. — ii. 4 
iii. (Gower) 
iii. (Gower) 



iv. i,(i(i«er) 
iv. (Gower) 
iv. 3 
— iv. 



— i. 1 



— 111. i 

— iii. 4 

— iii. 5 



iii. 5 

— iii. 6 

— iii. 7 

— iv. 1 
_ iv. 3 

— iv. 6 

— iv. 7 
_iv.7 

^„^^„^ „ .^ - y.3 

made've'rona's ancient' citizens. .i?o)nco<5-./u(ie/, j. | 
your son : towards him I made ...... — i- J 

rCo(.iCn'.] love is a smoke made with — i- ' 
than she, are happy mothers made .. — !• 2 

marred are those so early made — !■ ;^ 

esteem, are made already mothers .. — i- •* 
waggon-spokes made of long spinners — i. 4 
made by the joiner squirrel.......... — .1- \ 

made by [Coi.A'ii(.and] Titan's wheels — ii. ^ 

and made exchange of vow — \\- ■> 

elsehavemade thy tale large (rep.).. — ]]■ * 
that God hath made himself to mar — ii. 4 
bring thee cords made like a tackled stair — ii. 4 
well, you have made a simple choice — i]- 5 

men's eyes were made to look — i;i. 1 

they have made worm's-meat of me — \]\. \ 
thy beauty hath made me effeminate — ;!!• ' 
he made you for a highway to my bed — >!!• ^ 

with his own tears made dnmk — i"- 3 

hear them told, have made me tremble — iv. i 
what made your master in this place? ~ , 'V- , 

this present object made probation Hamlet, i. I 

are all made out of his subject — i- -^ 

each word made true and good — i- ^ 

but answer made it none — !• ^ 

of late made many tenders of his — i. J 

even with the vow I made to her — i- 5 

no reckoning made, but sent to my — .i- 5 

that hath made him mad: lam sorry .. — ii. 1 

burst of clamour that she made — }!• 2 

a damned defeat was made — .!!• 2 

as made the things more rich — >i'.- J 

indeed, mv lord, you made me believe so — iii. i 

uomoreof't; it hath made me mod — in. 1 

journeymen had made men, and not (rep.) — in. 2 



MADE— proof Imth made you know Hamhl, in. 2 

if it be mode ot'penetr:il)le stuff — iii. 4 

•what replication should he made by — — iv. 2 
that made us with Buch large discourse.. — iv. 4 

tlicy say he made a good end — iv. 5 

that we are made of stuff so flat and dull — iv. 7 

he made confession of you — iv. 7 

custom hath made it in him — v. 1 

a pit of clay for to be made (rep.).. — V. 1 (song) 
is not parchment made of sheep-skins? .. — v. 1 
till of this flat a mountahi you have made — v. 1 
1 sav again, liath made a gross revolt. . . . Othello, i. I 

lawful prize, he's made for ever — i. 2 

that heaven had made her such a man . . — i. 3 
made the flinty and steel couch of war.... — i. 3 

when the blood is made dull with — ii. 1 

the wine she drinks is made of grapes .. — ii. 1 
the purchase made, the fruits are to ensue — ii. 3 

not yet made wanton the night — ii. 3 

1 have made bold, lago, to send in to your — iii. 1 

as gross as ignorance made drunk — i;;. 3 

can anything be made of this? — iii. 4 

and made ot no such baseness as jealous — iii. 4 

but if she lost it, or made a gift of it — iii. 4 

made demonstrable here in Cyprus — iii. 4 

that breath made up between them — iv. 2 

goodly book, made to write whore upon? — iv. 2 
made you to suspect me with the Moor . . — iv. 2 

mistress, villany hath made mocks, . . . — v. 2 

1 have made my way through more — v. 2 

he made him brave me upon the watch.. — v. 2 

JIADERIA— for a cup of Maderia. . . . 1 HimylV. i. 2 

AIADE-UP villain r/»i07i of Athens, v. 1 

MAD-HEADED ape! \henrylV.\\.Z 

M^VDLY used Malvolio.... rwe{/?AAV'. v. 1 (letter) 
that's somewhat madly svoVen. . Mens. forHeas. V. 1 
shot madly from their spnere3..M.JV.'s Dream, ii. 2 
or man or woman madly dote upon.. — .?)• - 
sever themselves, and madly sweep. . — iii. 2 
venture madly on a desperate. . . . Taming ofSh, ii. 1 

mad herself, slie's madly mated — iii. 2 

madly thou didst answer me? Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

and, madly bent on us — . y. 1 

or madly think, a babe of clouts. . . . Kins; John, iii. 4 
niodly hath broke loose, and bears ..-ZHenrylF. I. 1 
or is .vour blood so madly hot.. .. rroiVjWf^-Crejs. ii. 2 

witli horror, madly dying, like Cymbeline, v. 5 

madlv play witli my foreiathers'iJomeo Sf Juliet, iv. 3 
MAD JIAN— nothing but madman.. TwelfthNight, i. 5 

a fool, and a madman — i. 5 

the fool shall look to the madman . . — _ i. 5 

madman, thou errest — iv. 2 

nay, I'll ne'er believe a madman — iv. 2 

but as a madman's epistles are no.... — v. 1 
when the fool delivers the madman.. — v. 1 

is this the madman? — v. 1 

of luxurv, an ass, a madman. . . . Meas.forMeas. v. 1 
that is, the madman: the lovev. Mid. N.'sDream,r. 1 
a madman will murder me .... Taming of Shrew, v. 1 
but your words show you a madman — v. 1 

how now I a madman I Comedy of Errors, iv. 1 

in this the madman justly chargeth.. — v. 1 
sharp weapons in a madman's hands 2Henry FI. iii. 1 

for a madman owes 'em Timon of Alliens, iii. 4 

a madman so long, now a fool — iv. 3 

frighted, when a madman stares? JuliusCcesar, iv. 3 
wnether a madman be a gentleman .... Lear, iii. G 

madman and beggar too — iv. 1 

taught me to shift into a madman's rags — y. 3 
bound more than a madman is. . Romeo Sf Juliet, i. 2 
Romeo I liumours! madman! passion! — ii. 1 
a madman's mercy bade thee run away — v. 3 

MADMEN have no ears — iii. 3 

crown thee for a finder of madmen Twetfih Night, iii. 4 
lovers, and madmen, have such Mid. A'.'sD;eam, v. 1 
house and a whip, as madmen do.AsyouLikeil, iii. 2 
have help madmen to their wits Hichnrd 11. y. 5 

freat imagination proper to madmen IHenrylV. i. 3 
'II be a curer of madmen Troilus Sr Cress, v. I 

rid like madmen through the gates Jul. Ca-sar. iii. 2 
else such stuff as madmen tongue . . Cymbeline, v. 4 
will turn us all to fools and madmen .... Lear, iii. 4 
plague, when madmen lead the blind .... — iv. 1 
JIADNESS — do hiss me into madness . . Tempest, ii. 2 

I fear, a madness held me — v. 1 

any madness, I ever yet beheld . . Merry Wives, iv. 2 
if sad and merry madness equal be . Twelfth N, iii. 4 
why, this is very midsummer madness — iii. 4 

yet 'tis not madness — iv. 3 

some error, but no madness — iv. 3 

fellow, thy words are madness — v. 1 

no madam, I do but read madness . . — v. 1 

show much like to madness Meas.forMeas. iv. 4 

that I am touched with madness.... — v. 1 
her madness hath the oddest frame — v. 1 

as e'er I heard in madness — v. 1 

fetter strong madness in a silken ....Much Ado, v. 1 
such a hare is madness the youth. Mer. of Venice, i. 2 
for if lie love me to madness, I shall — i. 2 

love is merely a madness As you Like it, iii. 2 

to a living humour of madness — iii. 2 

i)orn of madness; that blind — iv. 1 

better pleased with madness .... Winter's Tale, iv. 3 
can matcli the pleasure of that madness — v. 3 

a fit of madness {rep.) Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

his flight was madness Macbeth, iv. 2 

lady, you utter madness, and not.. King John, iii. 4 
of this madness cured, stoop tamely. 2Hen7-T//f. iv. 2 
good Eordl what madness rules....! Henryr/. iv. 1 
were't not madness then, to make, .ilienry VI. iii. 1 

O plague and madness I Troilus ^- Cressida, v. 2 

negation hath no taste of madness . . — v. 2 
O madness of discourse, tliat cause . . — v. 2 
all the madness is, he cneere . . Timon of.ithens, i. 2 
like madness is the glory of this life — i. 2 
riotous madness, to be entangled. ./)>i'o»!/ (5- C/co. i. 3 

to leave you in your madness Cymbeline, ii. 3 

not al)sol>ite madness could so far have — iv. 2 
madness, of whicli her life's in danger — iv. 3 
O that way madness lies Lear, iii. 4 



MADNESS, lion in prey Lear, iii. 4 

his roguish madness allows itself — iii. 7 

reason in madness! — iv. 6 

madness most discreet, a choking. Womeo ^Juliet, i. 1 
and draw you into madness? thuik of it.HamW, i. 4 

to define true madness, what is't — li. 2 

into tlie madness wherein now he raves — ii. 2 
though this be madness, yet there's method — ii. 2 
a happiness, that often madness hits on — ii. 2 

with a crafty madness, keeps aloof — iii. 1 

lacked form a little was not like madness — iii. 1 

madness in great ones must not — iii. I 

to let his madness range — iii. 3 

for madness would not err; nor sense — iii. 4 

o'er whom his very madness, like some ore — iv. 1 
Hamlet in madness hath Polonius slain — iv. I 
thy madness shall be paid with weight.. — iv. 5 

a aocument in madness; thoughts — iv. 5 

this is mere madness; and thus awhile.. — v. 1 

I here proclaim was madness — v. 2 

who does it then? His madness — v. 2 

his madness is poor Hamlet's enemy .... — v. 2 
now, in madness, being full of supper . . Othello, i. 1 
his peace and quiet even to madness .... — ii. 1 
by-and-by breaks out to savage madness — iv. 1 

MADONNA, that di'ink and Twelflh Night, i. 5 

good Madonna, give me leave (rep.) — i. 5 
must catechise you for it. Madonna — i. 5 
I think his soul is in hell. Madonna — i. 5 

the more fool you, Madonna — i. 5 

thou hast spoke for us. Madonna ... . — i. 5 

he is but mad yet, Madonna — i. 5 

so I do. Madonna; but to read — v. 1 

MADRIGALS; there {rep.). Merry Wives,i\\. 1 (song) 

MAD'ST— and mad'st much of me Tempest, i. 2 

what observation mad'st fhovi .. Comedy of Ett. iv. 2 

O God, which this blood mad'st Richard III. i. 2 

thou mad'st away her uncle Clarence — iv. 4 
for her sake, mad'st quick conveyance — iv. 4 
thou mad'st thine enemies shake. . . . Coriolanus, i. 4 
ever since thou mad'st thy daughters .... Lear, i. 4 

MAGGOT ostentation Love'sL. Lost, v. 2 

if the sun breed maggots in a dead dog .Hamlet, ii. 2 

and w^e fat ourselves for maggots — iv. 3 

MAGGOT-PIES, and choughs Macbetli, iii, 4 

MAGIC— pluck my magic garment .... Tempest, i. 2 

this rough magic I here abjure — v. 1 

there's magic in thy majesty .... Winter'sTale, v. 3 

if this be magic, let it bean art — v. 3 

distilled by magic slights Macbeth, iii. 5 

by magic verses have contrived 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

see, magic of bounty I all these.. Timon of Athens, i. 1 
the noble ruin ofhey n\^^\c. Antony S,-Cleopatra,\n.^ 
thy natural magie and dire property . . Hamlet, iii. 2 
if shein chains of magic were not bound ..Othello, i. 2 
what mighty magic, (for such proceeding — i. 3 

there's magic in the web of it — iii. 4 

MACJICAL word of war . . . .Antony 4' Cleopatra, iii. 1 

MAGICIAN, profound in As ijouLike it, v. 2 

though I say I am a magician — v. 2 

a great magician, obscured in the circle — v. 4 

great magician, damned Glendower.l Henry /r. i. 3 

what black magician conjures up ..Ricliard 111. i. 2 

MAGISTRATE— name of magistrate, . Tempest, ii. 1 

like magistrates, correct at home Henry V. i. 2 

you, being supreme magistrates .... 1 Henry VI. i. 3 
magistrates be labouring men {rep.)2HenryVI. iv. 2 
before a true and lawfurmagistrate..3Henri/f/. i. 2 
testy magistrates (alias, fools) .... Coriolanus, ii. 1 

they choose their magistrate — iii. 1 

established the people's magistrates — iii. 1 
MAGNANIMITY, and make him . .ZHenry VI. v. 4 
MAGNANIMOUS, and most. Love'sL. Lost, iv. 1 (let.) 
be magnanimous in tire enterprize . . All's Well, iii. 6 
dove, or most magnanimous mouse. 2Henr?//^'. iii. 2 
is as magnanimous as Agamemnon . . Henry V. iii. 6 
or the huge, or the magnanimous .... — iv. 7 
valiant and magnanimous deeds. 7'roii. ^Cress. ii. 2 

of the magnanimous, and most — iii. 3 

MAGNE— magne Dorainator poli..7'i7«j Andron.'w. 1 

MAGNIFICENCE, in so rare Winter'sTale, i. 1 

MAGNIFICENT Armado Love'sL. Lost. \. 1 

than whom no mortal so magnificent! — iii. 1 

MAGNIFICO is much beloved Oitiello.i. 2 

MAGNIFICOES of greatest vort. Mer. of Venice,\\\. 2 
MAGNIFIEST with all these titles.. IHcjiri/)';. iv. 7 
MAGNUS— saint Magnus' corner! ..2HenryVI. iv. 8 
MAHOMET inspired with a dovel.... \ Henry VL i. 2 

MAHU— Modo he's called, andMahu Lear, iii. 4 

Mahu of stealing; Modo, of murder — iv. 1 

MAID— [Co(. Kn^Jif you he ma.id. ovno?. Tempest,!. 2 

but, certainly a maid — i. 2 

once a day behold this maid — i. 2 

if not, I'll die your maid — iii. 1 

wanton charm upon tliis man and maid — iv. I 

what is tliis maid, with whom — v. 1 

that knows I am a maid. . . . Two Gen. of Verona, i. 2 

since maids in modesty, say no — i. 2 

and not upon your maid — i. 2 

our maid howling — ii. 3 

this hat is Nan our maid — ii. 3 

yet 'tis not a maid _. ., — iii. 1 

a maid, for slie is her master's maid — iii. 1 

a sweet virtue in a maid with — iii. 1 

good will to the maid? Merry Wives, i. I 

can you love the maid? — i. 1 

this honest gentlewoman, your maid — i. 4 

sir, the maid loves you — i. 4 

as honest a maid as ever broke bread — i. 4 
never laugli but in tliat maid's company — i. 4 

good maid, tlicn — ii. 2 

and dc maid is love-a me — iii. 2 

my maid's aunt (rep.) — iv. 2 , 

the maid hath given consent — iv. 6 I 

bring you the rhaid, you shall — iv. 6 j 

there pinch the maids as blue — v. 5 

and where you find a maid — v. 5 i 

went you not with master doctor, maid? — v. 5 ' 

a virtuous maid, the daughter Twelfth Night, i . 2 

and tlic free maids, that weave — ii. 4 > 



MAID— a fair cruel maid . . Twelfth Night, ii. 4 (song) 
would have been contracted to a maid — v. I 

betrothed both to a maid and man . . y. 1 

hath my maid's garments — v. I 

is tliere a maidwith child by him?^/eas./oryi/eas. i. 2 

o woman with maid by him — i. 2 

with maids to seem the lapwing .... — i. 5 
a very virtuous maid, and to be .... — ii. 2 

be you content, fair maid — ii. 2 

from fasting maids, wliose minds.... — ii. 2 

but this virtuous maid subdues — ii. 2 

how now, fair maid? — ii. 4 

leave me a while with the maid .... — iii. 1 
to take this poor maid from the world! — iii. 1 
this fore-named maid hath yet in her — iii. 1 
we shall advise this wroufied maid.. — iii. 1 
the maid will I frame, and make .. — iii. I 

be acquainted with this maid — iv. 1 

a deflowered maid 1 andby — iv, 4 

I'd fain have said, a maid I — v. 1 

are you a maid? No, my lord — v. 1 

neither maid, widow, nor wife {rep.) — v. 1 

confess, besides, I am no maid — v. 1 

and now, dear maid, be you as free. . — v. 1 

most kind maid, it was the — v. 1 

here's no place for you maids Much Ado, ii. 1 

if a maid could come by them — ii. 1 

cozened with the semblance of a maid — ii. 2 
a maid, and stuffed! there's goodly.. — iii. 4 
give me this maid, your daughter? .. — iv. I 
how like a maid slic blushes here. . . . — iv. 1 

that she were a maid, by tliese — iv. 1 

now if you are a maid, answer to thi.s — iv. I 
they are dangerous weapons for maids — v. 2 
and, surely as I live, I am a maid . . — v. 4 
be advised, fair maid: to vow.. Mid. N.'s Dream, i. 1 
becomes a virtuous bachelor and a maid — ii. 3 

despised the Athenian maid — ii. 3 

reason says you are the worthier maid — ii. 3 
to conjure tears up in a poor maid's eyes — iii. 2 
most ungrateful maid! have you — iii. 2 

1 am a right maid for my cowardice — iii. 2 
a maid of grace, and complete .... Love'sL. Lost, i. 1 
with a maid. This maid shall not {rep.) — i. 1 
betray myself with blushing.— Maid — i. 2 
to the conn try maid Jaquenetta .... — iii. 1 
one of these maids' girdles for your.. — iv. 1 

not one word more my maids — v. 2 

and a maid not vendible Merchant of Venice, i. 1 

and nine maids is a simple — ii. 2 

to woo a maid in way of marriage .. — ii.9 
I beheld the maid; 3'ou loved, I loved — iii. 2 
my maid Nerissa, and myself (re/;.) — iii. 2 

none, but a holy hermit and her maid — v. 1 
to us, maids as we are, to travel ..AsyouLikeit, i. 3 
here's a young maid with travel .... — ii. 4 

speak sad brow, and true maid — iii. 2 

trots hard with a 3'oung maid — iii. 2 

maids are May when they are maids — iv. 1 

you do love this maid? 1 do, sir — v. 1 

fare thee well, kind maid AU'sWell.n. 1 

I'll like a maid the better, whilst .., — ii. 3 

fair maid, send forth thine eye — ii. 3 

simple maid; and therein (rep.) .... — ii.3 
canst like this creature as a maid.... — ii.3 
the misprizing of a maid too virtuous — iii. 2 
the honour of a maid is her name ., — iii. 5 
many a maid hath been seduced .... — iii. f> 

this young maid might do her — iii. 5 

corrupt the tender honour of a maid — iii. 5 
and this gentle maid, to eat with us — iii. 5 

I'll live and die a maid — iv. 2 

to a proper maid in Florence — iv. 3 

in the behalf of tlie maid — iv. 3 

a poor maid is undone — v. 3 (petition) 

no maid, and he'll swear to't (7ep.) .. — v. 3 

I am either maid, or else this — v. 3 

wlien I was like this maid — v. 3 

a wife herself, thyself a maid — v. 3 

as she was a maid; and how.. Tamingof Sh. 2 (ind.) 
maid of tlie house. Why sir {rep.)..,. ' — 2 (ind.) 

mates, maid! how mean you — i. I 

I do see maids' mild behaviour — i. 1 

you looked so longly on the maid . . — i. 1 
if you love the maid, bend thoughts — i. 1 
your love must live a maid at home — i. 1 
undertake the teaching of the maid — i. I 

a slave to achieve that maid whose .. — i. I 

a title for a maid, of all titles — i. 2 

a suitor to the maid j'ou talk of — i. 2 

why then the maid is mine from .... — ii. 1 

fair lovely maid, once more good — iv. .5 

and me, poor lowly maid Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

you see, sweet maid, we marry — iv. 3 

a malady most incident to maids. . . . — iv. 3 
the prettiest love-songi for maids.... — iv. 3 

he makes the maid to answer — iv. 3 

what maids lack from head to heel — iv. 3 (song) 
is there no manners left among maids? — iv. 3 
ballad against the hard hearts of maids — iv. 3 

two maids wooing a man (rep.) — iv. 3 

beaten the maids a-row Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

and your maids, could not fill up Macbeth, iv. 3 

the Daupliin, and tliat lovely maid .King John, ii. 2 
as maids of thirteen do of puppy digs! — ii. 2 
but the word maid, cheats the poor maid — ii. 2 
and pnle-visaged maids, like Amazons — v. 2 
to the fire-eyed maid of smoky ....\HenryJV.iv. 1 

for tlie maids in France to kiss Henry V. v. 2 

being a maid yet rosed over — v. 2 

aliard condition for a maid to consign — v. 2 
for maids, well-summered and warm — v. 2 

for one fair French maid that — v. 2 

the cities turned into a maid — v. 2 

so tlie maid, that stood in the way . . — v. 2 

a holy maid liither with me \HenryVl. i. 2 

fair maid, is't thou wilt do these .... — i. 2 

a maid, they say. A maid! — ii. 1 

youth, be vanquished by a maid — iv. 7 

such commendations as become a maid — v. 3 



if AID— because she is a maid \HenryVI, v. 4 

the holy maid with cliild? — v. 4 

there shall not a maid be married.. 2Hi;«ry;'J. iv. 7 
woidd I had died a maid, aud never. .SHenry VI. i. 1 

play the maid's part liiclmrd 7 //. i ii. 7 

set at work amons my maids Henry f'lll. iii. 1 

a fair young maid that yet wants.... — v. 2 
among false maids in love .. Troilus^-Ci'essida^ iii. 2 
here^ you maid! where's my cousin — iv, 2 

when Helen is a maid again — iv. 6 

and Niobes of the maids and wives . . — v. 1 1 
the maid is fair, o' the yomigest. Timon of Athens, i. 1 

love you the maid? ay — i. 1 

maid, to thy master's bed — iv. 1 

yells of motlicrs, maids, nor babes .. — iv. 3 

ladies aud maids their scarfs Conolanus, ii. 1 

I loved the maid I miirried — iv. 5 

your maids, manage this war .^Antony SfCleo. iii. 7 
maids, matrons, nay, the secrets.... Ci/mtednc, iii. 4 
by yom* leave, tliis maid is mine . . Titus Andron. i. 2 

ravish a maid, or plot the way — v. 1 

this maid hight Philoten Pericles, iv. (Gower) 

ah me I poor maid, born iu a tempest .. — iv. 1 

for me, that am a maid — iv. 6 

sir, we have a maid in Blitylene — v. 1 

I am a maid, my lord, that ne'er — v. 1 

my dearest wife was like this maid .... — v. 1 
what this maid is, or what is like to be — v. 1 
fortunes brought the maid aboard us . . — v. 3 

to their dear slielter take thee, maid Lear, i. 1 

buy this unprized precious maid of me .. — i. 1 

maid now, aud laughs at my (j-ep.) — i. 5 

any man or maid of Montague's.. Romeo ^Juliet, i. 1 
and thrust his maids to the wall ... . — i. 1 

I will be cruel with the maids — i. 1 

the heads of the maids? 0<'P-') — i. 1 

against some other maid that I will — i. 2 

these years that you are now a maid — i. 3 
pricked from the lazy finger of a maid — i. 4 

when maids lie on their backs — i. 4 

as maids call medlars, when they .. — li. 1 
thou her maid art far more fair (rep.) — ii. 2 
rKn(.] fair maid, if either thee dislike — ii. 2 
but I, a maid, die maiden-widowed.. — iii. 2 
this fair maid; how heaven hath (rep.) — iv. 5 
the chariest maid is prodigal enough ..Hamlet, ii. 3 
a fair thought to lie between maid? legs — iii. 2 
and I a maid at your window . . — iv. 5 (song) 
let in the maid, that out a maid — iv. 5 (song) 
dear maid, kind sister, sweet Ophelia! .. — iv. 5 
a young maid's wits shoiild be as mortal — iv. 5 
cold maids do dead men's fingers call. ... — iv. 7 
sweet maid, and not have strewed thy .. — v. 1 

a maid— so tender, fair, and happy Olhello, i. 2 

and poison this young maid's aftfections? — i. 3 
lie hath achieved a maid that paragons.. — ii. 1 
my mother had a maid called— Barbara — iv. 3 

JI AID-CHILD called Marina Pericles, v. 3 

MAIDEiSf— as tlie maiden's organ ..TwelflhNight, i. 4 

where lie my maiden weeds — v. 1 

when maidens sue, men give .... Meas.forMeas. i. 6 

maiden, no remedy — ii. 2 

will not proclaim against her maiden loss — iv. 4 
contempt farewell I andmaiden pride. Mj<c/i.4do,iii. 1 

why, tlien are you no maiden — iv. 1 

hold against her maiden truth — i v. 1 

than that which maiden modest}' doth — iv. 1 

such maiden pilgrimage Ulid.N.'s Dream, i. 1 

that fright the maidens of the villagery — ii. 1 
in maiden meditation, fancy-free. ... — ii. 2 
and maidens call it, love-in-idleness — ii. 2 
and here the maiden, sleeping sound — ii. 3 
past the bounds of maiden's patience — iii. 2 
have you no modesty, no maiden siiame — iii. 2 

now, by my maiden honour Lore's L.Lost, v. 2 

and, in our maiden council — v. 2 

maidens bleach their summer smocks — v. 2 (song) 
direction of a maiden's eyes ..Merck. of Venice, ii. I 

yet a maiden hath no tongue but — iii. 2 

that a maiden's heart hath.^Js you Like it, iv. 3 (let.) 
the best brine a maiden can season ..All's tf'elt, i. 1 
God's mercy, maiden! does it curd.. — i. 3 

we thank you, maiden — ii. 1 

my maiden's name seared otlierwise — ii. 1 
you are no maiden, but a monument — iv. 2 
you have conquered my yet maiden bed — iv. 2 
not a maiden, as thou say'st. Taming of Stirew, iv. 5 
wherefore, gentle maiden, do you. IVinter'sTate, iv. 3 
the maiden virtue of the crown .... Ki7ig Jotin, ii. 1 
is yet a maiden and an innocent hand — iv. 2 
hast thou fleshed thy maiden swotd.l Henry I V. v. 4 

the pining maidens' groans Henry f^. ii. 4 

if your pure maidens fall into — iii. 3 

put off your maiden blushes — v. 2 

are all girdled witli maiden walls .. — V. 2 

so the maiden cities you talk of — v. 2 

this pale and maiden blossom (rep.).lHenryVI. ii. 4 
thou maiden youth, be vanquished.. — iv. 7 
whose maiden blood, thus rigorously — v. 4 
strew me over with maiden flowers. Henry VIII. iv. 2 
the maiden Phccnix, her ashes new — v. 4 
grant all tongue-tied maidens. 7'roi7us 4" Cress, iii. 2 

a maiden battle then? — iv. 5 

lay bathed in maiden blood .. Titus Andronicus, ii. 4 
with lier fellow maidens, now witliin..Peiic(M, v. 1 
when my maiden priests are met together — y. 2 
would a maiden blush bepaint../to7Heo ^- Juliet, \\. 2 

Bomewliat scanter of your maiden Hamlet, i. 3 

her maiden strewments, *nd the bringing — v. 1 
a maiden never bold; of spirit so still . . Olhello, \. 3 
the skilful conserved of maidens' hearts — iii. 4 

BI AIDENHEAD, of Colebrook. . . . Merry Wives, iv. 5 

are as secret as maidenhead Twelfth Sight, i. 5 

full measure to her maidenhead. rami'ng-o/SA. iii. 2 
yet your maidenheads growing.. f^inler'sTale, iv. 3 
maidenheads as tliey buy hohnalla. .\HenryIV. ii. 4 
big upon the maidenhead of our affairs — iv. 1 

to get a pottlcpot's maidenhead? tHenrylV. ii. 2 

ray to me lier maidenhead ere tliey.2Wenri/ VI. iv. 7 
by my troth, and maidculicad Henry VIII. ii. 3 



MAIDENHEAD for't Henry VIII. u. 3 

liow now? how go maidenheads? 7'io/;«s trCress. iw.i 

by the loss of maidenhead Pericles, iii. (Gower) 

such a maidenhead were no clieap thing — iv. 3 
have your maidenliead taken off ... . — iv. G 
or their maidenheads; take it ..Itoineo ^Juliet,!. I 
now, by my maidenhead, at twelve. . — i. 3 
death, not Romeo, take my maidenhead — iii. 2 

MAIDENHOOD of thy first fight . . 1 Henry VI. iv. 6 
shows in the wreck of maiden hood., ^l/i's »'«;;, iii. 5 
a pair of stainless maidenhoods. /(omeo ^ Jidiet,'u\. 2 

MAIDENLIEST star in tlie firmament.... Leur, i. 2 

MjUDENLY man at arms iHenrylV. ii. 2 

not friendlv, 'tis not maidenly. ;!//<(. A'.'s Dream, iii. 2 

MAIDEN-WIDOWED. Coine../.'ow.-o 4- Juliet, iii. 2 

MAIDIIOOD, honour, trutli Tirelfth Aighl, iii. 1 

the property of youth and maidliood". . . Othello, i. 1 

MAID-PALE— her maid-pale face .. liiclmrd II. iii. 3 

MAIL in monumental Troilus ^- Crcssida, iii. 3 

de fingre, de mails Henry V. iii. 4 

tlie mail rcoi.-male, A'n(.-them all] Love'sL.L, iii. 1 

MAILED Mars shall on his \ Henry IV. iv. 1 

be led along, mailed up in shame ..iHenryVI. ii. 4 
with his mailed hand then wiping . . Coriolanus, i. 3 

MAIM as to be cast fortli Ricliard ll.i.i 

father's sickness is a maim to us . . 1 Henry IV. iv. 1 

that bears so shrewd a maim 2Henry VI. ii. 3 

and stop those maims of shame Coriolanus, iv. 5 

MAIMED you two outright . . Taming of Skrew, v. 2 

thereby is England maimed •illemyVI. iv. 2 

you maimed the jurisdiction Henry VIII. iii. 2 

and with such maimed rites! Hamlet, v. 1 

it is a judgment maimed, and most .... Olhello, i. 3 
I am maimed for ever: help, ho! — v. 1 

MAIN flood bate his usual . . Merchant of Venice, iv. 1 

brook into the main waters — v. 1 

the man that the main harvest. . As you Lil<e it, iii. 5 

in a main danger, fail you All'sH'etl, iii. 6 

and, between these main parcels .... — i v. 3 

the main consents are had — v. 3 

though the main part pertains Macbeth, iv. 3 

'tis his main hope : for where — v. 4 

hedged in with the main KingJolm, ii. 1 

to set so rich a main on the uicCg ^ . . 1 Henry IV. i v. 1 

of the main chance of things 2 Henry IV. iii. 1 

but fear tire main intendment Henry V. i. 2 

la main, en Anglois? Lamain? — iii. 4 

entre les mains d'un chevalier — iv. 4 

en baisant la main d'lme vostre .... — v. 2 
look unto the main. Unto the main ! 2Henry VI. i. 1 

which by main force Warwick — i. 1 

main cliance, father, you meant .... — i. 1 

charged our main battle's front ZHcnry VI. i. 1 

tumbling billows of the main Ricliard III. i. 4 

ourself will follow in the main battle — v. 3 
commission and main power. Henry VIII. ii. 2 (let.) 

see this main end, the French — ii. 2 

put your main cause into tlie king's — iii. 1 
made me put this main secret in .... — iii. 2 

by tlie main assent of all these — iv. 1 

did our main opinion crush .... Troilus <§- Cress, i. 3 

with all our main of power _ ii. 3 

it remains, as the main point Coriolanus, ii. 2 

the main blaze of it is past — iv.3 

9uite from the main opinion JuliusCcrsar, ii. 1 

if of my freedon 'tis the main part . . Cymbeline, v. 4 
but the main grief of all springs from. . Pericles, v. 1 
or swell the curled waters 'hove the main. Lear, iii. 1 
the main descry stands on the hourly .. — iv. 6 
is the main motive of our preparations.. Ham(e(, i. 1 
than the main voice of Denmark goes.... — i. 3 
it is no other but the main — ii. 2 

foes it against the main of Poland — iv. 4 
ut tlie main article I do approve Othello, i. 3 

'twixt the heaven and the main, descry — ii. I 
and monstrous main [Co^ Krt^-mane] .. — ii. 1 
till we make the main, and the aerial blue — ii. 1 
comes tlie master and main exercise .... — ii. 1 
M AIN-COUKSE— try with main-course. Tempest, i. 1 
MAINE— Touraine, Maine (ri-'P- ii- 2). King John, i. 1 
Touraine, Maine, in right of Arthur — ii. j 
Maine, Blois, Poictiers, and Tours. . 1 Henry VI. iv. 3 

duke of Anjou and Maine (7rp.) — v. 3 

and tlie county of Maine {rep.).2HenryVI. i. 1 (art.) 

fatlier, Maine is lost; that Maine.. — i. 1 

but I meant Maine (rep.) — i. 1 

Anjou and Maine were sold to France — iv. 1 
for selling the dukedom of Maine.... — iv. 2 

1 sold not Maine, I lost not Normandy — iv. 7 
MAINLY— aud mainly thrust at me.. I HenrylV. ii. 4 

so mainly as my merit Troilus fy Cressida, iv. 4 

for I am mainly ignorant wliat Lear, iv. 7 

else, you mainly were stirred up Hamlet, iv. 7 

MAINJIAST-with her mainmast. iVinter'sTale, iii. 3 
MAINTAIN no words with h.\m..Twelfth Night, iv. 2 

he will maintain you like Merry Wives, iii. 4 

you have courage to maintain it.A/eas. /or Meas. iii. 2 
and never could maintain his part. . . . Much Ado, i. I 
maintain a mourning ostentation.... — iv. 1 
father, I am able to maintain it.. TamingofSh. v. 1 
this business, and maintain this vfOx.KingJohn, v. 2 

to maintain I would allow him Ricliard II. i. 1 

and further will maintain upon his.. — i. I 

and will maintain, what thou hast . . — iv. 1 
I dare well maintain it with my life.IHenri//r. iv. 3 
but I will maintain the word with. . 2 HenryiF. iii. 2 
give it you, and will maintain my word — iv. 2 
all the world will rightfully maintain — iv. 4 

as much as would maintain Henry V.\. \ 

he will maintain his argument as well iii. 2 

the king keeps to maintain the peace — iv. 1 

that here you maintain several 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

but dare maintain the party of — . ii. 4 

and piercing, to maintain Ills truth.. — ii. 4 
shall maintain what I have said is true — ii. 4 
I'll maintain my words on any plot — ii. 4 
will not you maintain the thing .... — iii. 1 
darest tliou maintain the former words — iii. 4 
■Jesumaintain your royal excellence! 2HenryVI.i. 1 
Kent to maintain, the king, the realm — iv. 7 



MAINTAINS my state 'iHenryVI.iv. 10 

lord of Westmoreland sliall maiutain.3iJe/ir>//'/. i. I 

a father able to maintain you — iii. 3 

I will maintain it witli some little. , Richard III. i. 2 

not able to maintain the many Henry VIII. i. 2 

dare maintain,! know not v/liai. Troilus (r Cress, ii. 1 

to fight for and maintain! — ii. 2 

neither know how to maintain it. .TimojtofAlh. ii. 2 
none, but to maintain my opinion .. — iv.3 

right, with honour to maintain Cymbeline, v. 4 

maintain such a quarrel opci^iy?. .TitusAndron. ii. 1 
upliold and maiutain in your speeches — v. 2 

often heard him maintain it to be fit Lear, i. 2 

go you, and maintain talk with the duke — iii. 3 
maintain my trutli and honour firmly .. — v. 3 
will maiutain upon Edmund.... — v. 3 (herald) 
ej'e maintains such falsehood ....Romeo i^ Juliet,!. 2 

who maintains them? Handel, ii. 2 

MAINTAINED by the owl Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

I yesternight maintained the chaage.MuchAdo. iv. 1 

as it must be so maintained — iv. I 

maintained so politic a state of evil.. — v. 2 
be so far forth friendly maintained. Taming ofSh. i. 1 
boisterously maintained as gained.. A'mg-/o/ii7, iii. 4 
I have maintained that salamander.! HenrylV. iii. 3 

by a civil peace maintained 2HenryIV. iv. 1 

is gone, that maintained that fire Henry V. ii. 3 

be maintained, assembled, and collected — ii. 4 
very gallantly maintained the pridge — iii. 6 

if I maintained the truth 1 Henry VI . ii. 4 

fruit maintained with beauty's sun.SHcjir;///. iii. 3 
MAINTENANCE he from his ..TuoGen. ofVer. i. 3 
for thee, and for tliy iTiaintcnanco. Taming of Sh. v. 2 
with lustier maintenance than I.. ..IHemylV. v. 4 
MAIN-TOP— struck tlie main-top!.. Ci/mteftie, iv. 2 
MAISON— homme de bonne maison ..Henry V. iv. 4 
MAJESTAS— ah, sancta majestas! ..iHenryVI. v. 1 

MAJESTE m'ave fausse French Henry V. v. 2 

JIAJESTIC cedar joined; whose issue. Ci/mteime, v. 5 

this is a most majestic vision Tempest, iv. 1 

get the start of the majestic yioxlA. . JuliusCcesar, i. 2 

MA JESTICAL, high scorn ,1 Henry VI. iv. 7 

his gait majesticai, and his general Loz'e'sL.I.os(, v. 1 
presence majesticai would put him out — v. 2 
so appears this fleet majesticai. Henj-t//', iii. (chorus) 
in bed majesticai, can sleep so soundly — iv. 1 
the throne majesticai, the sceptred. iJic/iarJ///. iii. 7 

we do it wrong, being so majesticai Hamlet, i. 1 

this majesticai roof fretted with golden fire — ii. 2 
MAJESTICALLY, both in word .... I HenrylV. ii. 4 

MAJESTIES might, by the sovereign Hamlet, ii. 2 

beseeched me to entreat your majesties — iii. 1 
why answer not the double majesties. KingJohn, ii. 2 
if your majesties is remembered of it. . Henry V. iv. 7 
briiig your most imperial majesties .. — v. 2 

MAJESTY— save his majesty! Tempest, ii. 1 

maid of grace, and complete majesty. Love'sL.L. i. 1 
hold fair friendship witli his majesty — ii. 1 
that is not blinded by her majesty? .. — iv. 3 

E lease it your majesty, command me — v. 2 
ow fares your majesty? — v. 2 

sweet majesty, vouchsafe me — v. 2 

the attribute to awe and majesty. Mer.of Vc7iice, iv. 1 

Cleopatra's majesty AsyouLilie ii, iii. 2 (verses) 

must attend his majesty's command ..All's'l'ell, i. 1 
what hope is there of his majesty's .. — i. 1 
approved so to yuur majesty, may. ... — j. 2 
tlianks and duty are your majesty's. . — i. 2 

thank your majesty — i. 2 

at your bidding serve your majesty ! — ii. 1 

this is his majesty, say your — ii. 1 

such traitors his majesty seldom fears — ii. 1 
hearing your high majesty is touched — ii. 1 

please it your majesty, I have — ii. 3 

hismajesty,out of aself-gracious.... — iv. b 
may help me to his majesty's ear .... — v. 1 
I beseech your majesty to make it .. — v. 3 

did to his majesty, hie mother — v. 3 

BO please your majesty (rep.) — v. 3 

and at your majesty's command .... — r. 3 
bless tlie bed of majesty again.with. fCm/er'sra/e, v. 1 

the majesty of the creature — v. 2 

even with such life of majesty — v. 3 

there's magic in thy majesty — v. 3 

wlierewith your majesty loads our ....Macbeth, i. B 

mean you his majesty? — ii. 3 

thanks to your majesty. Ourself will — iii. 4 
better health attend his majesty!.... — iii. 4 
since his majesty went into thefleld — v. 1 
the majesty, the borrowed majesty .. King John, i. \ 
majest}'! how high thy glory towers — ii. 2 
and made Ills iiiaiesty the bawd to ., — iii. 1 

pawned to you my majesty? — iii. 1 

a counterfeit, resembling majesty.... — iii. 1 
Imuse, your majesty doth seem so .. — iii. 1 
fair return of banished majesty I .... — iii. 1 
I am much bounden to your majesty — iii. 3 
he shall not offend your majesty .... — iii. 3 
those powers o'er to your majesty.... — iii. 3 
know the meaning of dangerous majesty — iv. 2 
for the bare-picked bone of majesty . . — iv. 3 

how fares your majesty? — v. 2 

desires your majesty to leave the field — v. 2 
didst thou leave to tend his majesty? — v. G 
and they are all about his majesty .. — v. G 
how fares your majesty? Poisoned .. — v. 7 
spleen of speed to see your majesty .. — v. 7 
nothing but his majesty's ai)proncIi../;(c/iartf //. i. 3 
and bow m^' knee before his majesty — i. 3 

to entreat j'our majesty to visit liim — i. 4 

my seat's right royal majesty — ii. 1 

beseech your majesty, impute his.... — ii. 1 
Gaunt commends liim to your majesty — ii. 1 
and make high majesty look like.... — ii. 1 
niadam, your majesty is too much sad — ii. 2 

so your sweet majesty, looking — ii.2 

God save your majesty! and well.... — ii.2 
no; I'll to Ireland to his majesty.... — ii.2 

awake, tlion sluggard majesty! — iii. 2 

aud hairless scalps against thy majesty — iii. 2 



MAJ 



[ 475 ] 



MAJESTY— controlling majesty Richard II. iii. 3 

faithful service of your majeaiy .... — iii. 3 

will Ilia majesty give Ricliard leave — iii. 3 

what says his majesty? " iii- 3 

and show fair duty to his majesty .. — iii. 3 

which tired majesty did make thee.. — iv. 1 

oil iKirap and majesty I do forswear — iv. 1 

prond majestv, asuliject; state — iv. 1 

eince it is liaiikrupt of his majesty .. — iv. 1 

your majesty, to have some conference — v. 3 

grace, (majesty, I sliould say 1 Henry IT. i. 2 

and majesty might never yet endure — ;• 3 

as is delivered to your majesty — J. 3 

my prisoners, in your majesty's behalf — J. 3 

betwixt my love and your high majesty — .i. 3 

of man, an' it like your majesty? — .u. 4 

so please your majesty, I would I could — lu. 'i 

bent on sun-like majesty when — ui. 2 

swayed your majesty's good thoughts — in. 2 

Idobeseechyour majesty, may salve — »ii. 2 

you stand against anointed majesty I — iv. 3 

it pleased your majesty to turn — v. 1 

vet this before my father's majesty. . — v. 1 

I do beseech your majesty, make up — v. 4 

I hear his majesty is returned with..2H«i'!/i F. i. i 

whoreson mad compound of majesty — ' 11.4 

many good-morrows to youi- majesty! — in. 1 

your majesty liath been this fortuight ill — ui. 1 

tamely to the foot of majesty — iv. 2 

sliall go before us to his majesty .... — iv. 3 

but your majesty shall soon enjoy .. — iv. 4 

from enemies heaven keep your majesty — iv. 4 

comfort, your majesty! O ray royal — iv. 4 

Omajestv! when tliou dost pinch .. — jv. 4 

what would vour majesty? How fares — iv. 4 

no course of breath within your m.ajesty — iv. 4 

I would his majesty had called me .. — v. 2 

save your majesty! — t. 2 

gorgeous garment, majesty — v. 2 

we hope no other from your majesty — v. 2 

your majesty hath no just cause .... — v. 2 

the maj estv and power of law — v. 2 

flow henceforth in formal majesty .. — v. 2 

doth his majesty incline to it, or no?.. Henri/ F. i. 1 

I have made an offer to liis majesty. . — ;. 1 

with good acceptance of his majesty — i. 1 

who, busied in his majesty, surveys.. — i. 2 

may it please your majesty, to give. . — J. 2 

tliat I have laid by my majesty — .i. ^ 

and loved, than is your majesty ..... — n.a 

crave admittance to your majesty.... — n- 4 

and thus he greets your majesty — JJ. 4 

the bitter mock you sent his majesty — _ii. 4 

not 60, I do beseech your majesty — in. 5 

Got pless your majesty! How now .. — in. 6 

ay, so please your majesty; the duke — iii. 6 

I can tell your majesty, the duke is — in- 6 

if your majesty know the man — m- 8 

semblance, and sweet majesty — i v. (chorus) 

York commends him to your majesty — iv. 6 

here comes his majesty. I was not .. — iv. 7 

an't please your majesty, and your great — iv. 7 

your majesty says very true: if your — iv. 7 

which, your majesty knows, to this hc-ir — iv. 7 

your majesty takes no scorn to wear — iv. 7 

cannot wash your majesty's Welsh .. — iv. 7 

as it pleases his grace, and his majesty — iv. 7 

I am your majesty's countryman — — iv. 7 

ashamed of your majesty (rep.) — iv. 7 

I cliarge you in his majesty's name.. — iv. 8 

here is his majesty. How now! — iv. 8 

the glove which your majesty is take — iv. 8 

your majesty is hear now (rep.) — iv. 8 

j'our majesty is pear me testimony .. — iv. 8 

that your majesty is give me — iv. 8 

an' please your majesty (rep.) — iv. 8 

that might oiliind your majesty — iv. 8 

your majesty shall mock at me — v. 2 

your majesty entendre bettre que m.oy — v. 2 

God save your majesty: my royal cousin — v. 2 

where your majesty demands — v. 2 

in a vision full of majesty 1 Hemu FZ. i. 2 

inferior to none but his majesty — in. 1 

we do exhibit to your majesty — in. 1 

at Eltham Place I told your majesty — in. 1 

one thought against your majesty!.. — ni. 1 

best avail your majesty, to cross — — in. I 

yes, if it please your majesty, my liege — i);. 4 

but I'll unto his majesty, and crave — m. 4 

iirincely majesty is such — v. 3 

no loving token to his majesty? .... — v. 3 

swear allegiance to his majesty .... — v. 4 
imperial majesty I had in charge . . . .2Henry ri. i. 1 

words yclad with wisdom's majesty.. — i. 1 

I sat in seat of majesty — i. 2 

royal majesty! What say st (rep.) .. — i. 2 

please it your majesty (rep.) — i. 3 

and that your majesty was an usurper — i. 3 

I do beseech your royal majesty (rep.) — i- 3 

I humbly thank your royal majesty — _;. 3 

an' it like your majesty, my lord.... — ii. 1 

I beseech your majesty (rep.) — ii. 3 

your grace to his majesty's parliament — n. 4 

with what a majesty he bears himself — iii. 1 

I will, my lord, so please his majesty — iii. 1 

in grim majesty, to fright the world — in. 2 

glided towards your majesty, it M'ere — iii. 2 

by his majesty I swear, whose far . . — in. 2 

signify unto liis majesty, that cardinal — iii. 2 

sent to tell his majesty, that even now — in. 2 

Godsaveyour majesty! I thank you — iv. 2 

what canst tliou answer to my majesty — iv. 7 

God save his majesty! who Iiateth him — iv. 8 

and glad tidings, to your majesty ! . . — iv. 9 

I was, an't like your majesty — .v. 1 

I came unto your majesty SHenryl I. in. 2 

from our king unto your majesty.... — in. 3 

I told your majesty as much before. . — in. 3 

it pleased his majesty to raise my.... — iv. 1 

more inceused against your majesty — iv. 1 



MAJESTY— pardon of your majesty.} U»^ry VI. iv. 6 
his looks are full of peaceful majesty - iv. G 

that I owe unto your majesty — v. 7 

stamped, and want love's majesty .Hichard III. i. 1 
his majesty, tendering my person's.. — i. 1 

his majesty hatli some intent — i. 1 

his raaicsty hath straightly given .. — i. 1 
there's no doubt, his majesty will soon — i. 3 
God make your majesty joyful as you — i. 3 
are come from visiting his majesty.. — i. 3 
I never did incense his majesty against — i. 3 
I will acquaint his majesty, of tliose — i. 3 
madam, his majesty doth call for you — i. 3 
by ills death hath lost much majesty — iii. 1 

well become the seat of majesty — iii. 7 

I am unfit for state and majesty — iii. 7 

pleaseth your majesty to give me leave — jv. 4 
what time your majesty shall please — iv. 4 
the news I have to tell your majesty — iv. 4 

thank your majesty: that you Henry K///._i. 2 

I know, your majesty has always — ii. 2 

still growing in a majesty and pomp — ii. 3 
the king's majesty commends his good — _ii. 3 
service to his majesty and you (rep.) — ui. 1 
God and your majesty, protect mine — v. 1 
encountering the eye of majesty. Troikis <?- Cress, in.3 
good majesty, Herod of Jewry (rep.)..4n(.^c;eo._iii.3 
what majesty is in her gait? (rep.).. — iii. 2 
some majesty, and should know (rep.) — lu. 3 

that majesty, to keep decorum — v. 2 

good-morrow to your majesty Cymlcbne,ii. 3 

his majesty bids you welcome — Jii. I 

'beseech your majesty, forbear sharp — in. 5 
so please your majesty, the Roman.. — iv. 3 

I thank your majesty TilusAndnmms, i. 2 

you shall ask pardon of his majesty — i. 2 

to-morrow, an it please your majesty — .i. 2 
many good morrows to your majesty — _ii. 2 
give his majesty my hand .......... — in. 1 

yes, please your majesty. It pleaseth. . I'encles, ii. 5 
I love your majesty according to my bond. Lear, i. 1 

large effects that troop with majesty — i. 1 

when majesty stoops to folly — {■ 1 

most royal majesty, I crave (rep.) — . i. 1^ 

so ulease your majesty, that we may wake — iv. / 
how fares your majesty? you do me wrong — iv. 7 

during the life of this old majesty — v. 3 

which the majesty of buried Denmark. . Hamlel,i. 1 
the assay of arms against yoiu- majesty. . — ii. 2 
what majesty should be, what duty is . . — Ji. 2 

my dear majesty your ciueen here . — 11.2 

his majesty shall have tribute of me — 11. 2 

your majesty, and we that have free souls — in. 2 
that live, and feed, upon your majesty . . — in. 3 

the cease of majesty dies not alone — in. 3 

with all our majesty and skill — iv. 1 

if that his majesty would aught with us — iv. 4 
is the beauteous majesty of Denmark? .. — iv. 5 
this to your majesty; this to the queen.. — iv. 7 
impart a thing to you from his majesty. . _ v. 2 

my lord, his majesty bade me (rep.) — v. 2 

if it please his majesty, it is the breathing — v. 2 

MAJOR-I deny your major XHenrylV.ii. 4 

my major vow lies here Troihis <§- Crcssida, y. 1 

in compound with the major part ..Coriolaniis, ii. 1 

my nativity was under ursa major lear, 1. 2 

MAJORIT'^, and military 1 Henry I V. ui. 2 

MAKE— and make yourself ready Tempest, 1. 1 

make the rope of his destiny — i. 1 

andmake his bold waves — !• 2 

thy groans did make wolves howl — 1.2 

go make thyself like to a nymph — 1.2 

Tie does make our fire — ;■ 2 

took pains to make thee speak — i- 2 

make thee roar, that beasts — }• 2 

and make a vassal of him — '• ' 

I'll make you the queen of Naples — 1.2 

this swift business I must uneasy make — 1. 2 
lest too liglit -ivinning make the prize light — ;• 2 

make not too rash a trial of him — ». 2 

and make thy weapon drop — J- 2 

one word more will make me chide thee — }• 2 

the earth let liberty make use of — .1-2 

you make me study of that — n. } 

impossible matter will he make easy .. — n. 1 

I myself could make a chough — 11. 1 

to make an earthquake — ii- J 

and let's make further search — n- 1 

and make him by inch-meal — n- " 

thismonster make a man (rep.) — 11.2 

cannot make him give ground — n- 2 

to make a wonder of a poor drunkard — n. 2 

no more dams I'll make for fish — 11. 2 (song) 

and makes mv labom-s pleasures — in- j 

to make me slave to it — in. 1 

and make a stock-fish of thee — in. 2 

will make me sleep again — ni. 2 

your compensation makes amends — iv. 1 

and make it halt behind her — iv. J 

to make this contract grow — iv. 1 

to make cold nymphs chaste crowns . . _ iv. 1 

make this place Paradise — Jv. 1 

make holiday: your rye straw hats — iv. 1 

which may make this island thine .... — iv. 1 

make us strange stuff — 'V-\ 

more pineh-spotted make them — iv. 1 

the green-sour ringlets make — v. 1 

whose pastime is to make midnight — v. 1 

and portable to make the dear loss .... — v. 1 

this lady makes him to me — v. 1 

make flows and ebbs — v. 1 

shall make it go quick away — v. 1 

will make me cry baa Two Gen. of Verona, 1. 1 

she makes it strange — !• 2 

shall make known — .!• 3 

BO painted to make her fair — n- j 

which makes me the bolder — ii- 1 

wliy, then we'll make exchange — ii- 2 

mark the moan she makes — !;• 3 

1 shall make your wit bankrupt .... — ".4 



MAK 



MAKE— if he make this good . . TwoGen. ofVer. ii. 1 

that make rough wiuter everlastingly — ii. 4 

makes other worthies nothing — ii. 4 

will you make haste — ii- 4 

that "makes me reasonless — ii. 4 

to make my purpose swift — ii. ti 

till Proteus make return — ii. 7 

he makes sweet music with — ii. 7 

and make a pastime of each — ii. 7 

what fashion, madam, shall I make your — ii. 7 

it will make me scandalized — ii. 7 

scorn at first makes after-love the more — iii. 1 

make speed from hence — iji. 1 

will make me surfeit — iii- I 

bid him make haste — iii. 1 

that makes amends for her — ii;- 1 

that word makes the faults gracious — iii. I 

makes me the better to confer — iii. 2 

to make the girl forget — '.!!• ^ 

make tigers tame — iii- 2 

we'll make you sit — iv. I 

to make a virtue of necessit.y — jv. I 

it makes me have a slow heart — iv. 2 

and make thy love amends — iv. 2 

I will make true love — iv. 2 

and make it but a shadow, as I am . , — iv. 2 

where, I hear, he makes abode — iv. 3 

he makes me no more ado — iv. 4 

and make water against — iv. 4 

thinking on it makes me cry alas! .. — iv. 4 

but I can make respective iu myself — iv. 4 

to make my master out of love — iv. 4 

to make it somewhat rounder — v. 2 

sir, she malces no doubt of that .... — v. 2 

that make their wills their law — v. 4 

let this habit make thee blush! — v. 4 

makes him run through all — v. 4 

to make this happy close — v. 4 

to make such means for her — v. 4 

to m.ake your grace to smile — y. 4 

1 will make a star-chamber matter. Merry M'ives, i. 1 
to make atonements and compromises — i. 1 

and her father is make her — }• \ 

I will make a prief of it — i- ' 

I will make an end of my dinner. ... — i- 2 

an old cloak makes a new jerkin .... — j. 3 

to make love to Ford's wife — i-3 

make the beds, and do — !• 4 

priest to meddle or make — ,}■ i 

to make dift'erence of men's liking . . — u. 1 

it makes me almost ready to wrangle — fi. 1 

and make them his servants ! — ii. 2 

I'll make more of thy old body — ii- 2 

I make bold (rep.) — ;■• 2 

to make myself acquainted with you — ii. 2 

that is, he will make thee amends — ii. 3 

there will we make our peds of — iii. 1 (song) 

one way or other make you amends — iii. I 

haveyou make-ade sotof us? — iii. 1 

I'll make him dance — iii- 2 

and shall make thee a new doublet.. — in.3 

I would make thee my lady — j;!- 3 

thou wouldst make an absolute courtier — ?!!■ * 

why then make sport at me — !!!• ^ 

heaven make you better than your . . — iii. 3 

I will hereafter make known to you — ni. 3 

I shall make two (rep.) — }}!• * 

I'll make a shaft, or bolt out — in. 4 

he will make you a hundred — ?}}-^ 

she'll make you amends — ii.i- 5 

I would not, shall not make me tame — in. 5 

if I have horns to make one mad — iii- 5 

to make another experiment — iv. 2 

but what make you here? 

but I'll make them pay 

to make us public sport 

and makes milch-kine yield .... 
dat you make grand preparation 
I'll make a present recompence.. 
in some respects, makes a beast 



iv. 2 

— iv. 3 

— iv. 4 

— iv. 4 

— iv. 5 

— iv. 6 

— v. 5 



ciiild of conscience ; he makes restitution — v. 5 

make the fairy o-yes — v. 5 

one that makes fritters of English?. . — v. 5 

let that go to make amends — v. 5 

I'll make the best in Glostershire — y. 5 

would not so much as make water. Tieelflh Nigh.,\. 3 

rather than make unprofited return — ;. 4 

make that good — 1- 5 

make your excuse wisely, you were best — 1. 5 

make your proof — !• * 

doth ever make the better fool — 1 5 

one draught above heat makes him.. — 1. S 

to make one in so skipping a dialogue — i- 5 

make me a willow cabin at your gate — J- •'> 

and make the babbling ijossip of — 1- 5 

love make his heart of flint — .!- 5 

but shall we make the welkin dance — 11-3 

do ye make an alehouse of my — 1;- 3 

and make a fool of him — ;;• 3 

and make him a common recreation — n. 3 

we can hardly make distinction .... — n- 3 
your horse now would make him an ass • 

and let tlie fool make a third 

and the tailor make thy doublet of .. — ;;- ■; 

that always makes a good voyage — ii- 4 

make no compare between that love . . — ij. 4 

this letter will make a contemplative — n- o 

contemplation makes a rare turkey-cock — n. 5 

with an obedient start,make out for him— 11. 5 

and thus makes slic her great P's — n. 5 

if I could make that resemble — ii- * 

ay ! make up that — 11. 5 

and make him cry, O - n--^ 

I'll make one too — .'!- & 

quickly make them wanton (rep.) .. — lu. I 

1 would it "would make you invisible — i|i- I 
Slight! will you make an ass o' me? — iii- 2 
but since you make your pleasure .. — iii- 3 
I can no answer make, but thanks .. — ii;. 3 
this docs make some obstruction — in. 4 



ii. 3 



MAK 



[ 476 ] 



MAKE me thankful ! Twelfth Night, \\i. i 

why, we shall make him mad — iii. < 

I will make your peace with — iii. < 

I'll make the motion (rfp.) — iii. 4 

a little thing would make me tell. ... — iii. 4 

now my necessity makes me to ask you — iii. i 

I'll make division of my present .... — iii. i 

lest tliat it make me so unsoimd .... — iii. 4 

will you make me believe — iv. 1 

make liim believe thou art sir — iv. 2 

make the trial of it in any — iv. !i 

and make an ass of me — v. 1 

if your four negatives make your .... — v. 1 

I would you could make it anotlier.. — v. I 

such scathful grapple did lie make . . — v. 1 

that makes thee strangle tliy — v. 1 

to make us happy both — v. 1 

make ua pay domifor our offence. il/eas./o)-3/eas.i. 3 

that she make friends — i. 3 

for I now mu.'t make you know .... — i. 5 

sir, make me not your story — i. 5 

to make him an example — i. 5 

cod make us lose the good we oft.... — i. 5 

we must not make a scarecrow — ii. 1 

tin custom make it their perch — ii. 1 

as make the angels weep — ii. 2 

for those things that make her good? — ii. 2 

and to make me know t!>e nature of — ii. 3 

to make a false one — ii. 4 

I'll make it my morn prayer — ii. 4 

of late to make the law a tyrant .... — ii. 4 

as ensy Ijroke as they make forms .. — ii. 4 

bidding the law make court'sy to. . . . — ii. 4 

to make thy riches pleasant — iii. 1 

that makes these odds all even — iii. 1 

your best appointment make with speed — iii. 1 

tliat tlius can make him bite — iii. I 

go to your knees, and make ready .. — iii. 1 

makes beauty brief in goodness — iii. 1 

I do make myself believe — iii. 1 

and make fit for his attempt — iii. 1 

that when he makes water — iii. 2 

let me desire you to make your answer — iii. 2 

this would make mercy swear — iii. 2 

to make societies secure — iii. 2 

to make fellowships accursed — iii. 2 

wliieh professed to make him rejoice — iii. 2 

to make bad good, and good provoke — iv. 1 

that makes his opening with tliis .... — iv. 1 

but make haste; the vaporous night — iv. i 

thousand 'scapes of wit make thee .. — iv. 1 

when vice makes mercy, mercy's so.. — iv. 2 

to make you understand this — iv. 2 

I may make my case as Claudio's .. — iv. 2 

who makes that noise there? — iv. 3 

make a swift return — iv. 3 

I'll make all speed — iv. 3 

to make her heavenly comforts of ... . — iv. 3 

me quite, makes me unpregnaiit .... — iv. 4 

you make my bonds still greater .... — v. 1 

to make them know that outward . . — v. 1 

make not impossible, that which.... — v. 1 

serve to make the truth appear — v. 1 

as words could make up vows — v. 1 

ere you make that my report — v. 1 

and would not ratl'.er make rash .... — v. 1 

make it your comfort, so happy is . . — v. 1 
that will make a voyage with iiim . . Much Ado, i. 1 

scratching could not make it worse.. — i. 1 

not make the full show of this — i. 3 

but by the fair weather that you make — i. 3 

can you make no use of your (?-e/i.).. — i. 3 

make him my waiting gentlewoman? — ii. 1 

cousin's duty to make court'sy (;fp.) — ii. 1 

not till God make men of some otner — ii. 1 

to make an account of her life to a clod — ii. 1 

brother, make good room — ii. 1 

did he never make you laugh? — ii . 1 

either to make him a garland — ii. I 

wilt thou make a trust a transgression? — ii. 1 

have cleft his club to make the fire too — ii. 1 

what proof shalll make of that? .... — ii. 2 

Ire shall never make me such a fool.. — ii. 3 

he would but make a sport of it — ii. 3 

die ere she make her love known — ii. 3 

if she should make tender of her love — ii. 3 

by some large jests he will make .... — ii. 3 

I U make her come, I warrant you . . — iii. I 

lest she make sport at it — iii. I 

and make no boast of it — iii. 3 

you shall also make no noise — iii. 3 

if they make you tiren the better.... — iii. 3 

the less yoxi meddle or make with them — iii. 3 

poor ones may make what price .... — iii. 3 

I dare make his answer, none — iv. 1 

to make you answer truly to your .. — iv. 1 

and I will make him eat it, that says — iv. 1 

make misfortime drunk with — v. I 

make a pish at chance and sufferance — v. 1 

make those, that do offend you — v. 1 

I will make it goodhowyou dare.... — v. 1 

to make thee a double-dealer — v. 4 

to tear a cat in, to make all split . . Mi'd.N.'s Dr. i. 2 

and make and mar the foolish fates.. — i. 2 

I will roar that I will miike the duke — i. 2 

and makes him all her joy — ii. 1 

and bootless make the breathless.... — ii. 1 

and sometime make the drink to.... — ii. 1 

and make him smile, when I — ii. I 

and make him break his faith — ii. 2 

will make or man or woman — ii.2 

I'll make her render up lier page.... — ii.2 

the mild hind makes speed to — ii.2 

and make a heaven of hell, to die.... — ii.2 

and make her full of hateful fantasies — ii. 2 

to make my small elves coats — ii. 3 

so that but one heart we can make of it — ii. 3 

through thy bosom makes me see .. — ii. 3 

I have a device to make all well — iii. 1 

no, make it two more — iii. 1 



MAKE me afeard Mid. N.'s Dream, iii. 1 

this is to make an ass of me — iii. 1 

honest neighbours will not make them — iii. 1 

I shall make bold with you — iii. 1 

if for his tender here I make some stay — iii. 2 

the noise they make will cause — iii. 2 

patience, all to make you sport — iii. 2 

more quick of apprehension mokes.. — iii. 2 

could not this make thee know — iii. 2 

counterfeit sad looks, make mows upon — iii. 2 

you would not malce me such — iii. 2 

and make his eyeballs roll with wonted — iii. 2 

notwithstanding, haste; make no delay — iii. 2 

two of both kinds makes up four .... — iii. 2 

thus to make poor females mad - iii. 2 

to make it the more gracious — iv. 1 

make choice of which your liighness — v. 1 

which malics it tedious: for in all — v. 1 

make periods in the midst of sentences — v, 1 

till truth make all things plain — v. 1 

go near to mak e a man look sad — v. 1 

lovers, make moan! his eyes — v. 1 

trip away ; make no stay — v. 2 

we will make amends, ere long . . — (epilogue) 
and make us heirs of all eternity. . Love'sL. Lost, i. 1 

and dainty bits make rich the ribs .. — i. 1 

and make a dark night too of half . . — i. 1 

necessity will make us all forsworn. . — i. 1 

for he hath wit to make an ill sliape — ii. 1 

if you make me stay — ii. 1 

yourself should make a yielding — ii. 1 

may make tender of to thy true .... — ii. 1 

his behaviours did make tneir retire — ii. I 

to that sense did make their repair .. — ii. 1 

warble, child; make passionate my.. — iii. 1 

and make them men of note — iii. 1 

to make plain some obscure precedence — iii. 1 

where you may make the fairest shoot — iv. 1 

and one that makes sport to the prince — iv. 1 
L to sore makes fifty sores {rep.) — iv. 2 (epitaph) 

If love make me forsworn — iv. 2 

and makes his book thine eyes — iv. 2 

and still malse me weep — iv. 3 (verses) 

wliieh makes flesh a deity; a green . . — iv. 3 

your eyes do make no coaches — iv. 3 

what makes treason here? (?Tp.) — iv. 3 

lacked me fool to make up the mess — iv. 3 

where several worthies make one dignity — iv. 3 

therefore is she born to make black . , — iv. 3 

of all the gods makes heaven drowsy — iv. 3 

to make fi antic, lunatic — v. 1 

lend me your horn to make one — v. 1 

joyfulfatherwouldst thou make me! — v. 1 

that is the way to make an offence . . — v. 1 

I'll make one in a dance, or so — v. 1 

that was the way to make his — v. 2 

how I would make him fawn, and beg — v. 2 

and make him proud to make me proud — y. 2 

therefore I do it; and I make no doubt — v. 2 

to make theirs ours, and ours none but — V. 2 

your wit makes wise things foolish . . — v. 2 

to make my lady laugh, when — v. 2 

to make us thus untrue? — v. 2 

confounded makes most form in — v. 2 

did make my foe to sweat — v. 2 

to make Judas hang himself — v. 2 

or a painter; for he makes faces .... — v. 2 

these faults, suggested us to make .... — v. 2 

the error that love makes is — v. 2 

to those that make us both — v. 2 

to make a world-without-end bargain — v. 2 

the tongue of him that makes it — v. 2 

sadness makes of me, that I have .Mer. of Venice, i. 1 

that might make me fear misfortune — i. 1 

out of doubt would make me sad .... — i. I 

we'll make our leisures to attend .... — i. 1 

nor do I now make moan to be — i. 1 

which makes her seat of Belmont. ... — i. I 

and I no question make, to have it .. — i. 1 

and he makes it a great appropriation — i. 2 

I shall make .shift to go without him — i. 2 

inserted to make interest good — i. 3 

1 make it breed as fast — i. 3 

and let us make incision for your love — ii. 1 

to make me blest, or cursed'st — ii. 1 

Lorenzo deeired us to make stand .. — ii. 6 

I will make fast the doors, and gild — ii. 6 

noble prince: now make your choice — ii. 7 

he would make some speed of his return — ii. 8 

I can make what merchandize I will — iii. 1 

you'll make me wish a sin, that I.. .. — iii. 2 

which makes me fear the enjoying of — iii. 2 

doth make his choice (rf p.) — iii. 2 

which make such wanton gambols .. — iii. 2 

too much thy blessing, make it less. . — iii. 2 

I will make haste; but, till I — iii. 2 

makes me think, that this Antonio. . — iii. 4 

make room, and let him stand — iv. I 

and to make no noise, when the.y .... — iv. 1 

I do beseech you, make no more offers — iv. 1 

none tliat thou liast wit enough to make — iv. 1 

to hear you make the offer — iv. 1 

the wish would make else an unquiet — iv. 1 

be it but so inueli as makes it li.i^ht .. — iv. 1 

away, make haste: come, you and I.. — iv. 1 

which I did make him swear to keep — iv. 2 

away, make haste; thou knowst .... — iv. 2 

and the.y did make no noise; in such — v. 1 

you shall perceive them make a mutual — v. 1 

light wife dotli make a heavy husband — v. 1 

that is to make me cuckold? — v. 1 

what make you here? (?ep.) Asyou Likeil,i. 1 

to make sport withal: but love no .. — i. 2 

those that she makes fair (rep.) — i. 2 

that she makes honest, she makes .. — i. 2 

when fortune makes nature's natural — i. 2 

that wise men have, makes a great show — i. 2 

we will make it our suit to tlic duke — i. 2 

your mistrust cannot make me — i. 3 

I'll make him find him; do this .... — ii.2 



MAK 



MAKE— what make you here? Asyou Like il, ii. 3 

that is the way to make lier scorn .... — i i . 4 

that ever love did make thee run into — ii. 4 

as m.v passion now makes me — ii. 4 

it will make you melancholy — ii. 5 

and make no boast of them — ii. 5 

of such a nature make an extent — iii. i 

that good pasture makes fat sheep .. iii. 2 

God make incision in thee! iii. 2 

let us make an honourable retreat .. — iii. 2 

what makes he here? did he ask .... — iii. 2 

could make thee believe I love (>rp.). — iii. 2 

I pray the gods make me honest!;. . . . — iii. 3 

accustomed sight of death makes hard — iii. 5 

that love's keen arrows make — iii. f> 

that make the world full of — iii. i 

he'll make a proper man — iii. ."> 

his tongue did make offence — iii. 5 

makes you sad. I liad rather (rep.) ., — i v. I 

than you can make a woman iv. 1 

make the doors upon a woman's wit.. — iv. 1 

tliat cannot make her fault — iv. I 

in tune, so it make noise enough .... — iv. 2 

and all that I can make; or else — iv. 3 (letter) 

to make thee an instrument — iv. 3 

I kill thee, make thee away, translate — v. 1 

I have promised to make all this .... — v. 4 

to make these doubts all even v. 4 

'tis I must make conclusion — v. 4 

when I make court'sy, bid me farewell — (epil. ) 

which make fair gifts fairer AU'sH'etl,i. ! 

the excess makes it soon mortal i. 1 

your mistress, and make much of her — i. I 

is metal to make virgins — i. 1 

within ten years it will make itself ten — i. 1 

that your valour and fear makes .... i. 1 

thine ignorance makes thee awtiy.... i. i 

that makes me see, aud cannot feed.. i. 1 

seem to have us make denial — i. 2 

make foul the clearness of our deservings — i. 3 

ability enough to make such knaveries — i. 3 

may lawfully make title to as — i, 3 

and make you dance canary — ii. 1 

of heaven, not me, make an experiment — ii. 1 

make thy demand. But will you make it — ii. 1 

so make the choice of thy own time. . — ii. 1 

what place make you special, when — ii. 2 

he that cannot make a leg — ii.2 

to make modern and familiar things (jce.)— ii. 3 

thy frank election make (»ep.) — ii. 3 

seiid them to the Turks to make eunuchs — ii. 3 

to make yourself a son out of my ... . — ii. 3 

did well to make his recantation — ii. 3 

thou didst malce tolerable vent of thy. — ii. 3 

make some reservation of your wrongs — ii. 3 

dost make hose of thy sleeves? — ii. 3 

to make the coming hour o'eiilow .. — ii. 4 

and make this haste as your own .. .. — ii. 4 

may make it probable need — ii. 1 

I pray you, make us friends — ii. .'j 

and sworn to make the not eternal — iii. 2 (lett. ri 

make me but like my thoughts — iii. :i 

in sense to make distinction ........ — iii. 4 

he will make no deed at all of this ,. — iii. G 

we'll make you some sport with the — iii. 6 

would scarce make that be believed.. — iv. I 

many oaths, that make the truth .... — iv. 2 

I see that men make hopes — i^•. 2 

which makes her story true even to. . — iv. 3 

sometimes, we make us comforts of . . — i v. 3 

match, and well make it — iv. 3 (letter) 

the tiling I am shall make me live . . — iv. 3 

can such sweet use make of what .. .. — iv. 4 

but rather make you thank your .... — v. I 

our means will make us means — v. 1 

let the justices make you and fortune — v. 2 

to make it natural rebellion — v. 3 

praising what is lost, makes — v. 3 

dm'st make too bold a herald — v. 3 

our rash faults make trivial price .... — v. 3 

can make me know this clearly — v. 3 

I'll make sport with thee — v. 3 

to make the even truth in — v. 3 

to make the lodging sweet.. Tamivg of Sh. 1 (indue. 1 

make a dulcet and a hea\enly sound — 1 (indue.) 

and make known Iier love? — ] (indue.) 

would you make me mad? am not I — 2 (indue.) 

that makes your lad.y mourn (rfp.) — 2 (indue.) 

the hounds shall make the welkin .. — 2 (indue.) 

to make a stale of me amongst — i. I 

that I may soon make good — i . 1 

and make her bear the penance — i. 1 

this bar in law makes us friends .... — i. 1 

while I make way from hence — i. 1 

to make one among these wooers .... — i. 1 

leave and leisure to make love to her — i. 2 

Lueentio shall make one, though Paris — i. 2 

to make a bondmaid and a slave .... — ii. 1 

do make myself a suitor to your .... — ii. 1 

that doth make me like thee well .. — ii. 1 

never make denial, I must — li, 1 

wretch can make the curstest shrew — ii. 1 

let your father make her — ii. 1 

if you make this assurance — ii. 1 

my lessons make no music — iii. 1 

'pointthe day of marriage, make friends — iii. 2 

and make assurance here in Padua. . — iii. 2 

make it no wonder; if you knew .... — iii. 2 

sent before to make a fire (rep.) — iv. 1 

to make her come and know her .... — iv. 1 

and makes a god of such a cullion .. — iv. 2 

I'll make him glad to seem Vincentio — iv. 2 

to make the matter good — iv. 2 

you bid me make it orderly and well — iv. 3 

hence, make your best of it — iv. 3 

belike, yon mean to make a puppet.. — iv. 3 

for 'tis the mind that makes — iv. 3 

bid Biaiioa make her ready — iv. 4 

will make the man mad, to make.... — iv. 5 

and withal, make known which way — iv. 5 



MAK 



MAKE— to make ivieny \''itlial, Tinning ofSlmw, v. 1 
the subjeL't nmlccsoltl iieurts t'res\\.}Vinter*s'J'ale, i. 1 

to nmkc us sa3', tliis is put forth .... — i. 2 

of tliis make no conclusion — i. 2 

and make us as fat as tame things .. — i. 2 

ere I could make thee open thy — i. a 

thou diist make possii>Ic, thin-fs — i. 2 

and ninke itself a pastime to harder — i. 2 

he ni;ikos a.Tuly'sdu.vsliovt as — i. 2 

you luid mueli ado CO make liis — i. 2 

raake't tliy question, and go rot! .... — i. 2 

make me not siglited like — i. 2 

to hi?, eye, make known how he .... — ii. 1 

such ado to make no stain a stain .. — ii. 2 

laugli at me; make their pastime — ii. 3 

and would by combat make her good — ii. 3 

that makes lint trifles of his eyes .... — ii.3 

that makes the fire, not she — ii.3 

and will ignoble make you, yea — ii.3 

inntieencesliall make false accusation — iii. 2 

piety does my deeds make — iii. 2 

all faults I make, when — iii. 2 

make your best haste — iii. 3 

but to"raake an end of the sliip — iii. 3 

that make, and unfold error .. — iv. (chorus) 

and make stale the glistering . . — iv. (cliorus) 

cherish it to make it stay there — iv. 2 

if I m.ake not this cheat bring — iv. 2 

a way to make us better friends .... — iv. 3 

but nature makes tliat mean — iv. 3 

is an art that natiu'e makes — iv. 3 

and make conceive a bark of baser .. — iv. 3 

then make your garden rich — iv. 3 

these I lack, to make you garlands — iv. 3 
he tells her something that makes her — iv. 3 

he makes the maid to answer — iv. 3 

if you make a care of happy — iv. 3 

and will make her portion equal his — iv. 3 

yea, him too, that makes liimself — iv. 3 

make for Sicilia; and there present.. — iv. 3 

we'll make an instrument of this .... — iv. 3 

we must make an exchange — i v. 3 

to make me the king's brother-in-law — iv. 3 

will make him scratch his beard — iv. 3 

what wit can make heavy — iv. 3 

I'll make it as much more — iv. 3 

no fault could you make which — v. 1 

would make her sainted spirit a»ain — v. 1 

make proselytes of who she but bid.. — v. 1 

follow me, and mark what way I make — v. I 

1 make a broken delivery of — v. 2 

our absence makes us unthrifty .... — v. 2 

and makes her as she lived now .... — v. 3 

what was he, that did make it? — v. 3 

sweet Paulina, make me to think — v. 3 
I'll make the statue move indeed .... — v. 3 

what you can make her do — v. 3 

easy to make her speak, as move .... — v. 3 

ay, and make't manifest where — v. 3 

or borrow, to make up the sum. . Comedy of Err. i. 1 

of whom I hope to make much — i. 2 

servitude makes you to keep unwed — ii. 1 

make acommon of my serious liours — ii. 2 

let foolish gnats make sport — ii. 2 

I'll make you amends next — ii. 2 

lest it make you choleric — ii. 2 

stronger state, makes me with thy . . — ii. 2 

of welcome makes scarce one dainty — iii. i 

and great welcome, makes a merry.. — iii. i 

it would make a man mad — iii. 1 

good sir, make haste — iii. 1 

poor women! make us but believe ,. — iii. 2 

to make it wander in an unknown . . — iii. 2 

but to make a lamp of her — iii. 2 

therefore make present satisfaction . . — iv. 1 

God make me a light wench — iv. 3 

to make a loathsome abject scorn .... — iv. 4 

suffer them to make a rescue? — iv. 4 

unquiet meals make ill digestion.... — v. 1 

to niake of him a formal man — v. 1 

when tliou didst make him — v. 1 

fear of death doth make me dote — v. 1 

might make one wiser mad — v. I 

asre and dangers make thee dote .... — v. 1 

1 shall have leisure to make good.... — v. 1 
and we shall make full satisfaction . . — v. 1 
and thrice again, to make up riine .... Macbeth^ i. 3 
afeard of what thyself didst make .. — i. 3 
and make ray seated heart knock. ... — i. 3 

and make joyful the hearing of — i. 4 

than would make up his message. ... — i. 5 

make thiclc my Ijlood — i. S 

to make their audit at your — i. 6 

and yet you would make both — 1.7 

as we shall make our griefs — i. 7 

so, it will make us mad — ii. 2 

it makes him, and it mars him — ii.3 

makes him stand to, and not — ii.3 

I'll make so bold to call — ii.3 

courage, to.make his love known.... — ii.3 

as they would make war with — ii. 4 

that would make good of bad — ii. 4 

to make socictv tire sweeter welcome — iii. 1 

to make tlrem kings, the seed — iii. 1 

to your assistance do make love .... — iii. 1 

and make our faces vizards to — iii. 2 

and the crow makes wing to — iii. 2 

begun, make strong themselves — iii. 2 

gate malte it their walk — iii. 3 

wliy do you make such faces? — iii. 4 

you make me strange even — iii. 4 

but make amends now — iii..') 

let's make haste: slie'U soon iii. .■; 

make the gniel thick and slab — iv. 1 

but yet, I'll make assurance — iv. I 

what had he done, to make him fly . . — iv. 2 

our fears do make us traitors iv. 2 

a sauce to make me hunger more.. .. — iv. 3 

the means that make us strangers! . . iv. 3 

create soldiers, make our women .... — iv. 3 



[ 477 ] 



MAK 



MAKK us medicines of our great Macbeth, iv. 3 

make we our march toward v. 2 

your royal preparation makes us hear — y. 3 

and make disco\'cry err iji report — v. 4 

will M itii due decision make us know v. 4 

make all our trumpets sjicak _ v. 6 

impress, as make me bJc'ed v. 7 

and make us even with you — v. 7 

a landless kni'dit makes thee KhigJohn,\. 1 

now can I make any Joan a lady . . . . i. 1 

never holp to make "this leg — i. 1 

to make room for him in my — i. 1 

but we will make it subject ji. 1 

to make a hazard of new fortunes here — ii. I 

let me make answer — ji. 1 

shall make your shoulders crack ... . — ii. 1 

to make a siiakiug fever in ;. — ii. 1 

when . I ha^'e said, make answer to ., — ii. 1 

hide, and make a monster of 3'ou .... — ii. 1 

and, pell-mell, make work upon — ii. 2 

to this conjunction make this match — ii. 2 

and make her rich in titles ii. 2 

and makes your son a shadow — ii. 2 

in you, that makes him like — ii. 2 

this rich fair town we make him .... — ii. 2 

this commoditj', makes it take - ii. 2 

sorrow to make me die — iii. 1 

joined to make thee great iii. 1 

proud, -and makes Ins owner stout .. iii. 1 

good reverend father, make my person. — iii. I 

jest Nvitli heaven, make such imconstant — iii. 1 

religion, that doth make vows — iii. 1 

conquest never canst thou make .... — iii. i 

Philip, make up; m.y mother _ jii. 2 

O this will make my mother die .... — iii. 3 

and make reply without a tongue.... — iii. 3 

some philosophy to make me — iii. 4 

in this world, can make me joy — iii. 4 

may then make all the claim that .. — iii. 4 

strong reasons make strong actions.. — iii. 4 

you will but make it blush, and glow iv. 1 

it makes the course of tljoughts iv. 2 

doth make the fault the worse i v. 2 

doth make a stand at wdiat iv. 2 

O make a league with me — iv. 2 

nay, but make haste — iv. 2 

while he, that hears, makes fearful .. iv. 2 

makes deeds ill done! — iv. 2 

I'll make a peace between your — iv. 2 

and make them tame to their — iv. 2 

long traded in it, makes it seem like iv. 3 

and make fair weather in your — v. 1 

go I to make the French lay — v. 1 

and make him tremble there? v. 1 

and make compromise, insinuation .. — v. 1 

the cardinal cannot make your peace — v. I 

do make an earthquake of v. 2 

and makes me more amazed — v. 2 

and make you take the hatch — v. 2 

should make me now deceive v. 4 

by the idle comments that it makes.. v. 7 

to make his bleak winds kiss v. 7 

the like tender of our love we make v. 7 

nought shall make us rue v. 7 

my body shall make good upon (; ep.) Richardll. i. 1 

not reverence, makes thee to except.. i. 1 

by my sceptre's awe I make a vow . . i. 1 

deep malice makes too deep i. 1 

lions make leopards tame i. 1 

we cannot do to make you friends. ... i. 1 

to make the end most sweet — i. 3 

in thy good cause make thee — i. 3 

and make us wade even in our i. 3 

too strict, to make mine own away .. i. 3 

but grief makes one hour ten i. 3 

every tedious stride I make will .... i. 3 

we will make for Ireland i. 4 

shall make coats to deck our i. 4 

pray God, we may make haste 1.4 

misery makes sport to mock itself . . — ii. 1 

admonition, make pale our cheek.. .. ii. 1 

duty make me suiier wrong? — ii. 1 

and make high majesty look like ii. 1 

I think, makes me with lieavy nothing ii. 2 

to make him lose at home ii. 2 

our miles, and make them wearisome — ii. 3 

shall make their way seem short .... ii.3 

my heart this covenant makes ii.3 

your presence makes us rich ii. 3 

liefore I make reply to aught — ii.3 

and make you stoop unto the sovereign — ii. 3 

till you did make him misinterpret.. — iii. 1 

would they make peace? (ic p.l — iii. 2 

make dust our paper, and with rainy — iii. 2 

and learn to make a body of a limb.. — iii. 2 

every stride he makes upon my _ iii. 3 

make foul weather of despised (rep.) — iii. 3 

of heart makes him speak fondly.... — iii. 3 

to make the base earth proud iii. 3 

'twill make me think the world is .. — iii. 4 

like unruly children, make tlieir sire — iii. 4 

to make a second fall of cursed man? — iii. 4 

few vanities that make him light — iii. 4 

shall I make to this base man? — iv. 1 

tired majesty did make thee oifer.... — iv. 1 

make me, that notliing have iv. I 

body of a king; make glory base .... — iv. I' 

did make beholders wink? _ iv. I 

to make my end too sudden — v. I 

together weeping, make one woe ,... — v. 1 

we make woe wanton with ~ v. 1 

moke way, unruly woman — v. 2 

villain, I'll make thee safiB — v. 3 

suppliant makes this eager cry? .... — v. 3 

what dost thou make here? — v. 3 

but makes one pardon strong — v. 3 

I pray God make thee new — v. 3 

it will make wise men mad — v. 5 

to make misfortune live? v. 5 

sliould sprinkle me, to make me grow — v. u 



MAKE a voyage to the Holy Land . . Richard II. v. 6 

which makes him prune himself 1 liennjiy. \. 1 

lad, I'll make one (ifp.) j. 2 

so ofl'end, to make offence a skill _ {.'2 

have holp to make so portly i. 3 

and make the Douglas' son your only — i! 3 

to make us strangers to liis looks of. . i. 3 

I'll make a fat pair of gallows ii. 1 

credit sake, make all whole — ii. 1 

and inake her their boots ii. 1 

medicines to make me love him — ii. 2 

there's enough to make us all — ij. 2 

give him as much as will make — ii. 4 

ut he would make you believe ii, 4 

with spear-grass, to make them bleed — ii. 4 

to make mine eyes look red ii. 4 

cousin Percy; you will make him mad — iii. 1 

for thy tongue makes Welsh as _ iii. 1 

thy passages of life, make me believe — iii. 2 

make blind itself with foolish — jii. 2 

I shall make this northern youth — iii! 2 

a bawdy song; make me merry iii. 3 

I make as good use of it as many a man iii. 3 

what, will you make a younker of me? — iii. 3 

sugar-candy to make thee long-winded — iii. 3 

of ills absence make this use iv. 1 

can make a head to push against — iv! 1 

this bottle makes an angel _ iv. 2 

but sirr.ah make haste; Percy is — iv! 2 

to make that worse, suffered his — iv! 3 

irnport, you would make haste — iv. 4 

wisdom to make strong against him — iv! 4 

infinite do make against it y. 1 

let him make a carbonado _ v! 3 

beseech your majesty, make up {rep.) — v! 4 

I'll make it greater, ere I part — v. 4 

to make a garland for my head v. 4 

I should not make so dear a show of zeal — v. 4 

therefore I'll make him sure — v. 4 

I would make him eat a piece of my v! 4 

only I, make fearful musters . .iHenrylf. (indue.) 

and make thee rich for doing j. i 

before you said, let us make head _ i! 1 

and make friends with speed i! 1 

of rebellion can tell how to make it — i! 2 

the wise may make some dram _ 1.2 

good thing, to make it too common. . — i. 2 

a good wit will make use of any j. 2 

to marry me, and make me my lady ' — ii. 1 

if a man will make court'sy \\ \ 

let it alone, I'll make other shift — ii! 1 

these humble considerations make me out ii! 2 

you do not make him he hanged ii. 2 

and make him eat it. That's to make — ii. 2 

to make strength stronger ii.3 

that makes a still-stand ii!3 

you make fat rascals (lep.) ji! 4 

these villains will make the word.. .. ii! 4 

doth not make thee wrong this ji. 4 

consider of them; make good speed .. iii! 1 

of the times make mountains level .. iii. i 

will thou ma'Ke as many holes iii. 2 

mend him, and make him fit to go .. — iii! 2 

I will make him a philosopher's two. . — iii. 2 

I make my quarrel in particular _ iv. 1 

I muse, you make so slight a question — iv. 1 

if we can make our peace iv. J 

if we do now make our atonement well — iv! 1 

nor a man cannot make him laugh . . — iv. 3 

makes it apprehensive, quick iv. 3 

warms it, and makes it course from iv. 3 

should these good news make me sick? — iv. 4 

and make me as the poorest vassal . . iv. 4 

which thou must m.ake thy friends . . _ iv. 4 

might make them look too near iv. 4 

my worldly business makes a period iv! 4 

I should make four dozen such v. 1 

royal thoughts, make the case yours — v. 2 
nothing but eat, and make good cheer — v. 3 (song) 

he would make this a bloody day.. .. v. 4 

I will make the king do you grace .. — v. 5 

thy noble liver, and make thee rage. . v. .'j 

make less thy body, hence v. 5 

the man yet, that shall make you great — v. b 

good conscience will make any possible (ei)il.) 

make you merry with fair Katharine — (cpil.) 
and make imaginary puissance ..Henry I', i. (chi'.i 

and make 3'ou long become it! i. 2 

that make such waste in brief — i. 2 

there is no bar to make against i. 2 

make claim and title to the crown .. — i. 2 

with right and conscience, make this — i. 2 

who will make road upon us with. ... — i. 2 

and make your chronicle as rich i! 2 

armed in their stings, make boot upon i. 2 

shall make all Gallia shake _ i. 2 

we hope to make the sender blush .. i. 2 

to make you friends (rep.) ii. 1 

he that makes the first thrust _ ii. 1 

and of Orleans, shall make forth ii. 4 

his approaches makes as fierce — ii. 4 

he'll make your Paris Louvre ii. 4 

makes much against my manhood .. iii. 2 

the poet is make a most excellent.... iii. 6 

would gladly make show to the 'orld — iii. G 

I could make as true a boast as that — iii. 7 

our had neighbour makes us early .. — iv. 1 

and make a moral of the devil himself — iv. 1 

hath a heavy reckoning to make .... — iv. I 

said so, to make us fight cheerfully.. iv. I 

I will make it my quarrel jv. 1 

mount them, and make incision in .. iv. 2 

may make a peaceful and a sweet . . iv. 3 

the empty vessel makes tlie greatest iv. 4 

and make them skir away, as swift. . iv. 7 

how canst thou make me satisfaction? iv. 8 

I will make you to-day a squire — y. 1 

I say, I win make liim eat some .... v., 

you must make a circle v! 2 

your request shall make me let it puss — v! 2 



MAK 

MAKE divorce of their incorporate ....lien 
glorious star tliy soul will make ...AUeui 

Will make him burst his lead — 

in France forthwitli I ara to make .. — 

shall make all Euroiie quake — 

nor money, hath he to make war .... — 

proof I'll of thy valour make — 

but to make open proclamatiou — 

best place to make our battery nest — 

and make a quagmire of your — 

help SalishiuY to make his testament — 
hereof will make me hide my head . . — 
command the citizens make boniires — 

that we do make our entrance — 

mount, or make his grave — 

the enemy doth make assault! — 

make us paitakers of a little gain — 

in a moment makes them desolate .. — 

or malte mv ill the advantage — 

and makes him roar these — 

our jjolicy must make a breach — 

and make tliee curse the harvest .. .. — 

and we will make thee famous — 

in f:ivour, makes him lag — 

or nat\u-e miikcs me suddenly — 

thy friendsliiii makes us fresh — 

what makes you thus exclaim? — 

and make the cowards stand — 

and wratliful fury, makes me weep.. — 

to make a bastard and a slave — 

young Talbot's valour makes me .... — 
that snail make oil France afeard — — 
I'll either make thee stoop, and bend — 
the tongue, and makes the senses rough — 

before tlioii make a trial of her — 

I'll undertake to make thee Henry's — 

what answer makes your grace — 

make this marriage to be solemnized — 
country where you make abode! .... — 
■would make a volume of enticing . ... — 

to seek a queen to make him ricli — 

makes me the bolder to salute 2He7n 

makes me, from wondering — 

then let's make haste away — 

pirates may make cheap — 

and make a show of love to proud . . — 

I'll make him yield the crown — 

this night doth make me sad — 

that shall Inake answer to such — 

St. Albans we do make return — 

make merry, man (r^p.) — 

will make but little for his — 

would make thee quickly hop — 

before we make election, give me .... — 
we make your grace lord regent .... — 

we will make fast within — 

blessed for the peace I make — 

make up tio factious numbers for — 

shall one day make the duke of York — 
shall live to make the earl of Warwick — 
when he please to make commotion — 
if my death might make this island — 
and all to make away my guiltless life — 

'twill make them cool in zeal — 

to make the fox surveyor of the fold? — 

to make commotion, as full — 

will make him say, I moved — 

and make my image but an alehouse — 
but to make my sorrow greater? . . . . _ - 
my soverei'rn's presence makes me mild - 

make thee be" pardon for thy — 

makes them thus forward in - 

might make tlie sleep eternal 

two of you ; the devil make a third! 
scritch-owls make the concert full?. . 
that makes him gasp, and stare .... 
can I make men live, whe'r tlie^v .... 
pangs of death do make him grm .... 
make signal of thy hope; he dies (rep.) - 
here shall they make their ransom . . 

his mate, make boot of this 

not this make thee be bloody-minded 

and let it make thee crest-fallen 

small things make base men jjroud .. 

to make dog's leather of 

and I will make it felony 

nay, he can make obligations 

I will make myself a knight presently • 
and makes it fearful and degenerate 

what answer makes your grace 

wliich makes me hope you are not .. 
and that will make 'em red again. . . . 
if when you make your prayers .... 
I will m"ake shift for one; and so ... . 
and make the meanest of you earls . . 

should make a start o'er seas 

and makes them leave me desolate . . 

my sword make way for me 

treasons, makes me betake me 

but retired, to make him strong? .... 

but I'll make thee eat iron like 

I'll warrant, they'll make it good.... 

makes him oppose himself 

heavens do make their minister 

the hope thereof makes Clifford 3 He 

to make a shambles of the parliament 
which makes thee thus presumptuous 

that seeks to make them foes! 

but to make thy sepulchre 

that makes him close his eyes? 

do make me wipe off both 

did Richard make a lane to me 

are numbered that make up my life.. 

wrath makes him deaf 

come make him stand upon 

grieve, to make me merry, York .... 

and I, to make thee mad, do 

I see, to make me sport 

Jet's hear the orisons he makes 

proud queen, to make thee blush .... 



[ 478 ] 



ry V. V. 

!/ yi. i. 



1. \ 

i. 5 
i. 5 
i. 6 
ii. 1 
ii. 1 
ii. I 
ii. 1 



iii. 1 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 
iii. 3 



iv. 1 
Iv. i! 
iv. 3 



V. 3 
V. 3 
V. 3 
V. 4 
V. 5 
V. 5 
yVl.i. 1 



i. 


3 


i. 


3 


ii! 


1 


11. 


1 


11. 


2 


11. 


2 


ill. 


1 


iii 


1 


!!! 


1 


iii 


1 


111 




ill 


2 


ill 


2 


iii 


2 



— 111. 2 



iii. 3 
iii. 3 
iii. 3 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 



IV. 4 
iv. 4 
iv. 7 
iv. 7 
iv. 7 
iv. 8 
iv. 8 
iv. 8 
iv. 8 



MAKE— doth oft make women proud .ZlienrvVI. i. 4 

make tliem most admired (?ep.) .... — i. ■! 

is to make less the depth of grief .... — ii. 1 

short tale to make, we at St. Alban's — ii. 1 

thy glories, makes me speak — ii. 1 

may make against the house — ii. 1 

shall for the fault make forfeit — ii- 1 

make war with him that climbed — ii. 2 

my liege, molte them your precedent! — ii. 2 

soft courage mokes your followers faint — ii. 2 

that durst make you stay — ii. 2 

I'll make thee curse the deed — ii. 2 

to make this shameless callat know.. — ii. 2 

no longer, make we hence amain .... — ii. 3 

how many make the hour full — ii. 5 

stay not to expostulate, make speed. . — ii. 5 

an^ what makes robbers bold 

effuse of blood doth make me faint . . 
this covert will we make our stand . . 

her sighs will make a battery 

entreaty shall not make you guilty. . 

but yet I'll make a pause 

I'll make my heaven (rep.) 

to make an envious mountain 

the jointure that your king must make 
by this alliance to make void my suit 

I make king Lewis behold 

had he none else to make a stale .... 
what answer makes king Lewis unto 

and make prepare for war 

what makes you in this sudden change? 

this is it tliat makes me bridle 

this hour, he make his way — iv. 5 

I make you both protectors — iv. 6 

make much of him, my lords — iv. 6 

find means to make the body follow — iv. 7 

then we'll make our claim — iv. 7 

fellow-soldier, make thou proclamation — iv. 7 

that makes small brooks — iv. 8 

or did he make the jest against — v. 1 

I will make amends; and, Richard.. — v. 1 

and make him, naked, foU — v. 4 

and make him of like spirit to — v. 4 

the wolf, that makes this spoil — v. 4 

satisfaction canst thou make — v. 5 

to make a bloody supper in the — v. 5 

reason, think ye, to make haste — v. 6 

let hell make crooked my mind — v. 6 

the readiest way to make the wench RichanUlI. i. 1 

that makes us wretched by the — i. 2 

I'll make a corse of him that disobeys — i. 2 

thou canst make no excuse — !• 2 

brook it ill, it makes him worse — i. 3 

God make your majesty joyful as . . — i. 3 

he desires to make atonement between — i. 3 

and myself makes him to send — i. 3 

ICol. Kul.'] wrens make prey v.'here eagles — i- 3 

that will I make, before I let — i. 3 

as ours by murder, to make him a king! — i. 3 

O let me make the period to — ;• 3 

makes the night morning — i. 4 

it makes a man a coward — i. 4 

insinuate with thee, but to make thee — i. 4 

device ! and make a sop of liira — ;• 4 

make peace with God (7-<^p.) — _i. 4 

and make me happy in your unity .. — ii. 1 

to make the blessed period of — ii. 1 

to make an act of tragic violence .... — ii. 5 

and make me die a good old man ! . . — ii. - 

untim.ely storms make men expect . . — ii. 5 

are slow, and weeds make haste — ii. ■! 

conquerors, make war upon themselves 
;ood lords, make all the speedy haste 



ii. 6 



iii. 1 
iii. 1 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 
iii. 3 
iii. 3 
iii. 3 
iii. 3 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 4 
iv. 4 



_ iii. 1 
— iii. 1 



iv 


R 


IV 


!> 


IV. 


lO 


V 


1 


V 


1 


'/. i 


2 
1 




1 

1 
3 




3 




4 
4 
4 
4 


1 


4 
4 
4 
4 


> 


4 



(o make his valour live: de.atli makes 

an easy matter to make William lord 

which may make you and him to me — lu. 2 

and make pursuit, where he did mean — iii. 2 

ere a fortnight make me older — iii. 2 

the princes both make high account — iii. 2 

make haste, the hour of death is expiate — iii. 3 

makes me most forward in this — iii. 4 

make a short shrift, he longs — iii. 4 

he would make his son heir to the crown — iii. 5 

listed to make his prey — iii. 5 

on that ground I'll make a holy descant — in. 7 

and make, no doubt, us happy — iii. 7 

O make them joyful, grant their — iii. 7 

make me die tlie thrall of Margaret's — iv. 1 

and makes her pew-fellow with others' — iv. 4 

English woes shall make me smile .. — iv. 4 

bettering thy loss makes the bad-causer — iv. 4 

thy woes will m.ake them sharp — iv. 4 

to make the earth my hell — iv. 4 

when avoided grace makes destiny .. — iv. 4 

use of grief makes wild grief tame .. — iv. 4 

to make her queen of England (re/1.) — iv. 4 

to make amends, I'll give (rep.) — iv. 4 

make bold her bashful years — iv. 4 

can make seem pleasing to — iv. 4 

greatest strength and power he can make — iv. 4 

he makcsfor England, here to — iv. 4 

tell me. what makes he upon the seas? — iv. 4 

makes liis trough in your emboweled — v. 2 

kings it makes gods, and meaner .... — y. 2 

no discipline, make no delay — v. 3 

make some good means to speak .... — v. 3 

make us thy ministers of — v. 3 

enjoy it, and make much of it — v. 4 

and make poor England weep in — — v. -4 

come no more to make you laugh /rc";wr///. (prol.) 

to make that only true we now intend — (prol.) 

be sad, as we would make ye — (prol.) 

of his own merit makes his way — i. 1 

he makes up the file of all — i. 1 

and make mj; vouch as strong as — i. 1 

here makes visitation: his fears — i. 1 

which makes my whitest part black — i. 1 

this makes bold mouths — i. 2 

to make the sceptre his — i. 2 

this night he makes a supper — i. 3 



MAK 

MAKE— welcome can make good Henry V 

placed together makes cold weatlier. . — 

yes, if I make my play — 

and hither make as great embassadors — 

Iiere I'll make my royal choice — 

more than 1 dare make faults — 

make of your prayers one sweet .... — 

no black envy shall make my grave — 

will make them one day groan — 

which makes me a little happier .... — 

for those you make friends — 

I'll make you know your times — 

good lady, make yourself mirth .... — 

and make my challenge — 

my appearance malie in any of their 

to make this pressent summons — 

but all hoods make not monks — 

a strange tongue makes my cause. ... — 

but how to make ye suddenl3' — 

your studies make me a curse like tliis — 

Idarenot make myself so guilty — 

to make a seemly answer to such persons — 

will make this sting the sooner — 

as thick as thought could make them — 

then makes him nothing — 

make use now, and provide for — 

as the shrouds make at sea — 

and make them reel before them .... — 

to make your house our tower — 

there make before them : look — 

will make my boldness manners .... — 

prayed me to make great haste — 

they would shame to make me wait. . — 

in their hands to make them gentle — 

men that make envy, and crooked . . — 

I make as little doubt — 

to .your calling makes me modest.... — 

makes the church the chief — 

make me no more ado — 

as 'tis to make them sleep on May-day — 

make way tliere for the princess .... — 

or I'll make your head ache — 

laid up to make parents happy — 

shall be, and make new nations — 

this little one shall make it holiday. . — 
I'll not meddle nor make (rep.) . . Troilus Sf Cr 

this man, that makes me smile, make — 

that's true ; make no question — 

that hope makes in all designs — 

the splitting wind makes flexible .... — 

and make a sop of all this solid globe — 

and make perforce an universal — 

for these two to make paradoxes .... — 

makes factious feasts; rails on — 

horse makes many Thetis' sons — 

shall make it good, or do — 

in the publication, make no strain .. — 

souls, makes merit her election — 

no, make a lottery; and, by device .. — 

and make him fall his crest — 

I would make thee the loathsomest.. — 

and make you plough up the wars . . — 

reason and respect make livers pale.. — 

to make the service greater — 

and makes pale the morning — 

all engaged to make it gracious — 

than to make up a free determination — 

but makes it miicli more heavy — 

make that demand of the prover .... — 
requests sake only, he makes important — 

the step, that Aj ax makes when .... — 
I'll knead him, I will make him supple — 

Iwill make a eomplimental — 

you shall make it whole again — 

and to make a sweet lady sad — 

you will make his excuse (re/).) .... — 
after falling out, may make them three — 

'twill make us proud to be — 

what makes this pretty abruption?. . — 

fears make devils of cherubims — 

wouldst thou of us, Trojan, make demand — 

cannot make boast to have that — 

makes the whole world kin — 

let Patroelus make demands to me . . — 

Apollo get his sinews to make catlings — 

gods divine! make Cressid's name .. — 

call a virtuous sin, makes me afeard — 

shall oft make thee to hide thy head — 

let us make ready straight — 

I'll make my match to live — 

make cruel way through ranks — 

and make distinct the very breach .. — 

to make a recordation to my — 

that makes strong the vow — 

girl makes all these bodements — 

make wells and Niobes of 

make sacred even his stirrop ,.1'imoi 

and make him weigh with her 

make thy requests to thy friend 

no, you shall not make me welcome 

let my meat make thee silent 

those healths will make thee 

thou weep'st to make them drink .... 

music, make their welcome . . 

we make ourselves fools, to disport. . 
of no power to make his wislies good 

which makes it five and twenty 

that I may make his lordship 

you make me marvel: wherefore .... — 

ingratitude makes it worse than ... . — 

and make a clear way to the gods. ... — 

to make an ugly deed look fair — 

and make his wrongs his outsides. ... — 

you cannot make gross sins look clear — 

what make we abroad? — 

usury, that makes the senate ugly .. — 

make not a city feast of it _ — 

make yourselves praised (rep.).. — iii. 6 (; 

let's make no stay. LordTimon's .. — 

for bounty tliat makes gods — 



— 11. 4 



lofAilif 



V. 


3 


V. 


3 


V 


3 


v 


4 


V 


4 


V 


4 


i 


2 


i 


2 


i 


3 


] 


3 


1 


S 


1 


3 


I 


3 


1 


3 


1 


3 


i 


3 


i 


3 


i 


3 


i 


^ 


i 


3 


11 


1 


11 


1 


11 


2 


ii 


2 


II 


2 


]7 


2 


jl 


2 


11 


2 


11 


3 



iv. 4 
iv. 4 
iv. 4 



iv. 5 
V. 3 
V. 3 

V. 3 



_ i. 2 



— II. 'i 



MAK 

SIAKE— that makes him lean.. 7Vinon of Alliens, iv 

will miike bltti'k, wlute — iv 

make tlio lioar leprosy adored — iv, 

tliat makes the wapiieiied widow .... — iv 

I will m:ike thee ilo tliy right nature — iv, 

m:i.kv iiM' i.ftliv salt hours — iv 

(loth daili iiuiki- iwult — iv, 

let not iliL \ iiuiuV I heekmiilcesoft — iv 

make laiv.' tv.niusi.Mi — iv. 

make a wlunc liirswear her trade (j'fp.) — iv. 

make eurled-pate ruffians bald — iv. 

and make thine own self the conquest — iv. 

make thine epitaph, that death — iv. 

let us make the assay upon him .... — iv. 

his judgment that makes it — v. 

make them best seen, and known.... — v. 

to make it known to us — v. 

an alchemist, make gold of that .... — v. 

tlie former man may make him — v. 

to make their sorrowful render — v. 

all thv powers shall make their — v. 

to make vast Neptune weep for aye . . — v, 

make war breed peace; make ()(7J.).. — v. 

not the patricians, make it Coriolanus, i. 

make edicts for usurj', to support.... — i. 

I may make the belly sinile — i. 

yet I can make my audit up — i. 

but make you ready your stiff bats . . — i. 

your opinion, make j'oursolves scabs? — i. 

the other makes you proud — i. 

virtue is, to make him worthy — i. 

I'd make a quarry with thousands .. — i. 

and make bold power loolc pale — i. 

to make only my wars with him .... — i. 

and to make it brief wars — i. 

Ipr'ythee, make us quick in work .. — i. 

list, what work lie makes amongst .. — i. 

whieli makes me sweat with wrath . . — i. 

and make my wars on 3'ou — i. 

fetch him oil', or make remain alike — i. 

what noise the general makes I — i. 

numbers to make good the city — i. 

make you a sword of me? — i. 

make good this ostentation — i. 

but cannot make my heart — i. 

and make but an interior survey — ii. 

I m.ake a crooked face at it — ii. 

you make faces like mummers — ii. 

all the peace you make in their cau:^e — ii. 

I will make my very house reel — ii. 

I will make a lip at the physician .. — ii. 

make I as little question as he — ii. 

make way, they are coming — ii. 

make us think, rather our state's — ii. 

are well pleased to make thee consul — ii. 

were to make a monster of — ii. 

and to make us no better thought of — ii. 

he's to make his requests by — ii. 

I will make much of your voices .... — ii. 

make him good friend to the people! — ii. 

make them of no more voice — ii. 

to make road upon's again — iii. 

what makes this change? — iii. 

and make me your fellow tribune . . — iii. 

and make your channel his? — iii. 

it m.akos the consuls base — iii. 

and make the rabble call our cares .. — iii. 

that you have holp to make this .... — iii. 

'tis fit vou make strong party — iii. 

o hesgar's tongue make motion through — iii. 

make" them be strong; and ready for — iii. 

that would make invincible the heart — iv. 

that his fen makes feared — iv. 

he'd make an end of thy posterity . . — iv. 

a small thing would make it flame . . — iv. 

and make my misery serve — iv. 

our general himself makes a mistress — iv. 

av, and it makes men hate — iv. 

here do we make his friends blush .. — iv. 

that Rome can make against them .. — iv. 

to make coals cheap: a noble — v. 

the instant army we can make — v. 

only make trial what your love — v. 

which can make gods forsworn? .... — v. 

thus changed, makes you think so . . — v. 

to make wdiat cannot be, slight work — v. 

Bhould make our eyes flow with joy — v. 

that you make doubt of it? — v. 

Romans, make the sun dance — v. 

praise the gods, and make triumphant — v. 

fall of either makes the survivor heir — v. 

let's make the best of it — v. 

but, indeed, sir, we make holiday.. Jud'usCfFsoj-, i. 

will make Mm fly an ordinary pitch — i. 

to make them instruments ot fear .. — i. 

you make the weak most strong .... — i. 

with haste will make a mighty fire.. — i. 

O Rome! I make thee promise — ii. 

this shall make our purpose — ii. 

dear my lord, make me acquainted.. — ii. 

did incorporate and make us one. . . . — ii. 

that will make sick men whole (rep.) — ii. 

look, how he makes to Csesar — iii. 

by our permission is allowed to make — iii. 

inflame you, it will make you mad. . — iii. 

then make a ring about the corse ... . — iii. 

we must straight make head — iv. 

make gallant show and promise of . . — iv. 

abler tnan yourself to make conditions — iv. 

and make your bondmen tremble. . . . — iv. 

make your vaiuiting true — iv. 

Brutus makes mine greater — iv. 

mother gave me, makes me forgetful? — iv. 

of your philosophy you make no use — iv. 

by them shall make a fuller — iv. 

make forth, the generals woidd have — v. 

if arguing make us sweat — v. 

that make to him on the spur — v. 

what ill rcunest did Brutus make.... — v. 

can but make afire of liim — v. 



[ 479 ] 



— i. 2 



ii. 5 



11 


7 


11 


7 


HI 


1 


111 


1 


111 


1 


111 


a 


iii. 


2 


Ill 


2 



SI AKE— strives to make itself Antony fy Cleo. i. I 

I make not, but foresee i. a 

to make me a cuckold, they would make 

she makes a shower of rain 

there are members to make new .... 

Sextus Pomiieius makes his approaches 

make the sea serve them 

many hot inroads they make in Italy 

and make liis eyes grow in my brow 

that make their looks by his 

and will make no wars without doors 

and make the wars alike against .... 

you liave not to make it with 

shall not make poor my greatness . . 

to make you brothers, and to knit . . 

Agrippa, be it so, to make this good? 

she did make defect, perfection 

but she makes hungry, where most. . 

Enobarbus, make yourself my guest 

therefore make space enough between 

and though I make this marriage for 

make thee a fortune from me 

and make thy fortunes proud (cep.).. 

to punisli me for what you make me do 

his fault should make a knave of thee 

to make my heart her vassal 

possess it, I'll make answer 

make battery to our ears with 

of Marcus Crassus' death make me.. 

may make too great an act 

rather makes choice of loss 

as my thoughts make thee, and as my 

make me not offended in your distrust 

and make the hearts of Romans serve 

and make thy spirits all of comfort! 

cannot make better note 

go, make thee ready; our letters .... — 

make your soonest haste — 

the Jove of power make me — 

to do you justice, make them ministers — 

fly, and make your peace witli Caasar — 

nor make replies of loathness — 

your comfort makes the rescue — 

make thine own edict for thy pains — 

Antony only, that would make his will — 

does make our faith mere folly — 

should make a staff to lean upon .... — 

make us adore our errors — 

he m.akes me angry with him (,rep.) — 

I'll make death love me — 

but now make boot of his distraction — 

shall make it live again — 

and make as much of me, as when .. — 

to make his followers weep — 

the gods make this a happy day — 

to make me fight at land ! 

be took alive; make it so known .... — 

make her thanks bless thee 

through Alexandria make a jolly march — 

make mingle with our rattling — 

my heart makes only wars — 

and makes it indistinct, as water.. .. — 

with our spritely port make — 

when I did make thee free — 

make an end of what I have begun . . — 

as great as that which makes it — 

into heaviness, that makes the weight — 

make death proud to take us — 

by the pauses that he makes — 

some faults to make us men — 

does begin to make a better life — 

make your full reference freely — 

rather make my country's high ...... — 

make wtiy there,— Caesar — 

so well to make it clear — 

does even make me wild — 

make prize with you of things — 

make not your thoughts your — 

my love makes religion to obey — 

make your best use of this — 

she makes a very good report — 

in every ten that they make — 

he'll make demand of her — 

strike those that make them — 

and makes liim of his bed-chamber ..Ci/mljf/i 

make him the receiver of — 

and make yourself some comfort .... — 

a sin to make a true election — 

for so long as he could make me .... — 
make him swear the shes of It.aly.... — 
with that which makes him both. . , . — 

makes no stranger of me — 

make her go back, even to 

but I make my wager rather 

gather those flowers; make haste .... 
learned me how to make perfumes?.. 

but make hard your heart 

in what show oi' death it makes 

can we not partition make with .... 

what makes your admiration? 

should make desire vomit emptiness 
with pity, that doth make me sick .. 
would make tlie greatest king double ! 
should he make me live like Diana's 

and shall make your lord that 

you make amends. He sits 'mongst.. 

I will make bold to send them 

of the divorce, he'd make! 

stronger than ever law could make., 
it would make any man cold to lose 

make denials increase your 

and make Diana's rangers 

which makes the true man killed.... 

I will make one of her women 

had rather yon felt, tlian make 't my 

if you will make 'tan action 

what means do you make to him .... 

m.ake known to their approvers 

to make your vessel nimble 

I'll make a journey twice as far 



— iii. 3 



iii. 4 



iii. 9 
ii. 10 
ii. 11 
ii. 11 
ii. 11 
ii. II 
ii. 11 
ii. 11 
iv. 1 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 



iv. 6 
iv. 8 
iv. 8 



V. 12 
V. 12 
V. 12 
V. 12 
V. 13 
V. 13 
V. 13 
V. I 



V. 2 
V. 2 
V. 2 
V. 2 
V. 2 
V. 2 
V. 2 



V. 2 
e,i. 1 



— 1. 5 



i. 6 



— 1.7 



— ii. 1 



ii. 3 
ii. 3 
ii. 3 
ii. 3 
ii. 3 



— ii. 4 



MAK 

MAKE not, sir, your loss your sport . . Cymbeline, ii. 4 

if you can make 't apparent ii. 4 

near tlie truth, as I will make them ii. 4 

make pastime with us a day or two — iii. 1 

you bees, that make these locks .... — iii. 2 

that we should nia];c in time — iii. 2 

that makes them tine — iii. 3 

our cage we make a quire iii. 3 

that makes thee stare thus — iii. 4 

to make me certain it ie done..., — iii. 4 (letter) 

and make me put into contempt.... — iii. 4 

you'll make him know, if that iii. 4 

to the loudest of noise we make .... — iii. 5 

this she wished me to make known — iii. 5 

my end can make good use of either — iii. 5 

nature, makes it valiant — iii. 6 

make what's homely, savoury iii. 6 

I'll make 't my comfort, he is a man — iii. 6 

clothes, which, as it seems, make me iv. 2 

I wish my brother make good time .. iv. 2 

may make some stronger head — iv. 2 

did make my way long forth — iv. 2 

make him stoop to the vale — iv. 2 

he'll make his grave a bed — iv. 2 

make distinction of place — iv. 2 

which the brain makes of fumes .... — iv. 2 

forwardness makes our hopes fair.... — iv. 2 

nature doth abhor to make his bed . . — iv. 2 

and make him witli our pikes iv. 2 

and make them dread it to the doer's — v. 1 

and make me blessed to obey! — y. 1 

let me make men know more valour — v. I 

to make my gift, the more delayed .. — v. 4 

if our grace can make him so — v. 6 

which, I'll make bold, your highness — v. 5 

make thy demand aloud — v. 5 

to make the noble Leonatus mad .... — y. f> 

language tliat would make me spurn — v. a 

that I can make no collection of it . . — v. 5 
Romans, make way (rep.) .... Vitus Ar.dronims, i. 2 

away with him? and make a fire straight — i. 2 

let Andronicus make this his latest.. — i. 2 

and this suit I make, that you create — i. 2 

Lavinia will I make my empress .... — i.2 

can make you greater than — i.2 

none else in Rome to make a stale of — i.2 

and make them know, what 'tis to .. — i. 2 

makes me less gracious — ii. I 

youngling, learn thou to make some — ii. 1 

uncouple liere, and let us make a bay — ii. 2 

will follow where the game makes way — ii. 2 

every thing doth make a gleeful boast? — ii. 3 

and make a chequered shadow on .. — ii. 3 

thy sons make pillage of her chastity — ii. 3 

doth make your honour of his — ii. 3 

would make such fearful and confused — ii. 3 

and make his dead trunk pillow .... — ii. 3 

we will make that sure _(7-e/).) — ii.3 

and make the silken strings delight.. — ii. .5 

let us go, and make thy father blind — ii. b 

the sorrow that their sister makes .. — iii. 1 

or make some sign how I may — iii. 1 

to mal<e us wondered at in time .... — iii. 1 

sight should make so deep a wound.. — iii. 1 

make them blind with tributary tears — iii. I 

make proud SaturninuB, and his empress — iii. 1 

canst not strike it thus to make it still — iii. 2 

just against thy heart make thou a hole — iii. 2 

nor make a sign, but I, of these — iii. 2 

make my aunt merry (»-ep.) — iii. 2 

how much she makes of thee — iv. 1 

of griefs would make men mad — iv. 1 

I'll make you feed on berries — i\.^ 

make no more ado, but give your ... . — iv. 3 

that holp'st to make me great — ii. 4 

let him make treble satisfaction .... — v. 1 

make poor men's cattle break — v. I 

to make me ope the door — v. 2 

which makes the foul offenders quake — v. 2 

at the least, make them his enemies . . — v. 2 

I'll make a paste, and of the paste .. — v. 2 

make too pasties of your shameful heads — v. 2 

officious to make this banquet — v. 2 

and make a mutual closure of — v. 3 

furpose to make men glorious ..Pericles, i. (Gowcr) 

'11 make my will then — i. i 

which makes me pale to read it? ... . — i. 1 

to make man his lawful music — i. 1 

my pistol's length, I'll make him sure — i. 1 

can make his will his act — i.2 

may make him blush in being — i.2 

makes both my body pine — i.2 

you, makes war upon your life — i.2 

and make pretence of wrong that I . . — i.2 

sail of ships make hithcrward — 1.4 

and make a conquest of unhappy me — i. 4 

who makes the fairest show — i, 4 

corn, to make your needy bread .... — i, 4 
ICat.Knl.'] statue to make him glorious — ii. (Gow.) 

longer for him to make his rest — ii.(Gow.) 

make such unquiet, that the ship. . . . — ii. (Gow.) 

I'd wish to make one there — ii. I 

shall make the gazer joy to see him — ii. i 

my best gown to make thee a pair .. — ii. 1 

which heaven makes like to itself .. — ii. 2 

that makes us scan the outward habit — ii. 2 

make some good, but others to exceed — ii. 3 

like to gnats, which make a sound .. — ii, 3 

tlierefoie to make's entrance more sweet — ii. 3 

ofl'ence at that would make me glad? — ii. 5 

or I will make yon man and wife .... — ii.5 
his queen with child, makes her — iii. (Gower) 

make swift the pangs of my queen's — , iii. 1 

why do yon nialce us love your goodly — iii. I 

water, earth, and heaven can make.. — iii. 1 

O make for Tharsus — iii. 1 

make fire within — iii. 2 

to make the world twice rich (7f/).).. — iii. 2 

the gods make up the rest upon you! — jii. 3 

should therein make me vile — iii. 3 



MAK 



[ 480 ] 



MAKE— good madam, make me blessed. Pfmles, iii.3 
which makes her both the heart.. — iv. tGowcr) 

of qualities can make her be refused — iv. 3 

makes pity in your lovers — iv. 3 

and longest leagues make short — iv. 4 (Gower) 
make raging battery upon shores — iv. 4 (Cower) 

that slie would make a puritan of — iv. 6 

and make all mir swearers priests. . . . — iv.fi 

upon vou, make the judgment good — iv. 6 

she makes our profession as it were.. — iv. 6 

and make the rest malleable — iv. 6 

therefore I will make them acquainted — iv. 6 

make a battery through his deafened — v. 1 

and the gods make her prosperousi .. — v. 1 

she feeds, and makes them liungry . . — v. 1 

which you make more rich to owe?.. — v. 1 

make mv senses credit thy relation. . — v. 1 

to makethe world 1 augh at me — v. 1 

makes my past miseries sport — v. 3 

this ornament that makes me look . . — t. 3 

heavens make a star of him I — v. 3 

can make choice of cither's moiety Lear, i. 1 

a love that makes breath poor — i. 1 

we make thee lady — !• 1 

or he that makes his generation — i. 1 

our abode make with you by due turns.. . — i. 1 

ient and drawn, make from the shaft .. — i. 1 

election makes not up on sucli — i. 1 

from vour love make such a stray — 1. 1 

that vou make known it is no — i. 1 

makes the world Intter — i. 2 (letter) 

i t would make a ^reat gap in — i. 2 

we make guilty of our disasters — i. 2 

can you make no use of nothing ' — i. 4 

what makes that frontlet on? — i. 4 

would make use of that good wisdom — i. 4 

which tliey will make an obedient father — i. 4 

make it more like a tavern — i. 4 

make servants of their betters — i. 4 

intend to make this creature fruitful! .. — i. 4 

should make thee worth them — i. 4 

how an oyster makes his sliell? — i. 5 

thon wouldst make a good fool — i. 5 

in thee make thy words faithed? — ii. 1 

and tliou must make a dullard — ii. 1 

potential spurs to make thee seek it .... — it. I 

the means to make tliee capable — ii. 1 

make vour own purpose — ii. 1 

I would make thee care for me — ii. 2 

I'll make a sop o' the moonshine — ii. 2 

a tailor make a man? — ii. 2 

do make their children blind — ii. 4 

to our sister you do make return — ii. 4 

make it your cause — ii- 4 

pr'ythee, daugliter, do not make me mad — li. 4 

in their furv, and make nothing of — iii. 1 

so far to make your speed to Dover — iii. 1 

at once, that make ingrateful man ! — iii. 2 

makes his toe wliat lie his heart (,rep.) — iii. 2 (song) 

and make them keep tlieir caves — iii. 2 

tliat can make vile things precious — iii. 2 

make content with his fortunes lit . . — iii. 2 (song) 

this prophecy Merlin sliall make — iii. 2 

squints the eye, and makes the hair-lip — iii. 4 

Tom will make them weep and wail — ii i . 6 

that makes these hard hearts? — iii. 6 

make no noise, make no noise — iii. 6 

makes me bend, makes the kin»bow.... — iii. 6 

thy strange mutations make \)s hate thee — iv. I 

that I am wretched, makes thee — iv. 1 

at eacli make not tlie altitude — iv. 6 

who make them honours of men's — iv. 6 

and tlie wind to make me chatter — iv. 6 

this would make a man, a man of salt .. — iv. 6 

my boon I make it, that you — iv. 7 

to make him even o'er the time — iv. 7 

most just and heavy causes make oppose - v. 1 

exasperates, makes mad lier sister — v. I 

flesh and fell, ere they shall make us weep — v. 3 

thou dost make thy way to noble — v. 3 

if you will marry, make your love to me — v. 3 

CA'nf.] I'll make it on thy heart — v. 3 

of our pleasant vices make instruments. . — v. 3 

too much, would make much more — v. 3 

the heavens, that makes us tremble — v. 3 

makes civil hands unclean . . Romeo f,- Juliet, (prol.) 

and makes himself an artificial night — i. 1 

not having that, wliich, having, makes — i. 1 

bid a sick man in sadness make liis will — i. 1 

in that sparing makes huge waste . . — i. 1 

most welcome, makes mv number more — i. 2 

that make dark heaven li^ht — i. 2 

and I will make thee thimc thy swan — i. 2 

consent gives strength to make it fly — i. 3 

she, tliat makes dainty she, I'll swear _ i. h 

touching hers, make Iiappy my rude hand — i. 5 

you'll make a mutiny among my.... — i. .'i 

I'll make vou quiet; what! cheerly — i. 5 

makes my'flesh tremble in their — — i. 5 

and make her airy tongue more hoarse — ii. 2 

that thou dnst make in this delay. . . . — ii. 5 

stays a Iiusband to make you a wife — ii. .'> 

we will make short worli — ii. 6 

make it a word and a blow — iii. 1 

make ns minstrels? an' thou make . . — ui. 1 

here's that shall make you dance — — iii. 1 

that I mean to make bold withal — iii. 1 

make haste, lest mine he about — );;. 1 

affection makes him false — jii. 1 

he will make the face of heaven so fine — in- 2 

that make the answer, I; if he be slain — iii. 2 

tliese sorrows make me old — jii" 2 

unless philosophy can make a Juliet — iii. 3 

heavy sorrow makes thera apt unto.. — iii.3 

make haste, for it grows very late.... — iji. 3 

sir Paris, I will make a desperate.... — i|i. 4 

the lark makes sweet division — ijj- * 

thou couldst not make him live — !!!■■'' 

make thee there a joyful bride (jep.) — iii- ."i 

God's bread! it makes me mad — iii. 6 



MAKE the bridal bed Romeo Sr Juliet, iii. 5 

to make confession, and to be absolved — iii. .^ 

come vou to make confession — iv. 1 

makeliaste, make haste: sirrah (rep.) — iv. 4 

hath ta'en her lience to make me wail — iv. .5 

thinly scattered to make up a show.. — v. 1 

no law to make thee rich — v. 1 

her beauty makes this vault — v. 3 

to make me die with a restorative .... — v. 3 

doth make against me, of this — v. 3 

this letter dotlr make good the friar's — v. 3 

my watch, bid them make haste Hmnlet, i. 1 

doth make the night joint labourer — i. 1 

what make you from Wittenberg (rep.).. — i. 2 

to make it truster of your own report — i. 2 

makes us traduced, and taxed of other . . — i. 4 

and makes each petty artery in this body — i. 4 

by heaven I'll make a ghost of him that — i. 4 

make thy two eyes, like stars, start from — i. 5 

never make known what you have seen. . — _i. 5 

to make enquiry of his behaviour — ii. 1 

heavens malce our presence, and our .... — ii. 1 

makes vow before his uncle — ij. 2 

(a short tale to make) fell into — ii. 2 

good or bad, but thinking makes it so . . — ii. 2 

then your ambition makes it one — ii. 2 

friendship.whatmakeyouat Elsinore?.. — ii. 2 

the clown shall make those laugli — ii. 2 

to make them exclaim against — ii. 2 

to make the matter savoury — ii. 2 

saw Py rrhus make malicious sport — ii. 2 

make mad the guilty, and appal — ii. 2 

and lack gall to make oppression bitter. . — _ii. 2 

that makes calamity of so long life — iii.' 

his quietus make with a bare bodkin? .. — iii. 

makes us rather bear those ills we have — iij- 

conscience does make cowards of us all. — iii. 

what monsters you make of them — iii. 

one face, and you make yourselves — iii. 

make your wantonness your ignorance .. — iii. 

though it make the unskilfullaugh (rep.) — iii. a 

go, make you ready:— how now my lord? — iii. 2 

bid the players make haste — iii. 2 

sun and moon make xis again count o'er — iii. 2 

the poor advanced makes friends of — jii' ^ 

to make me a wholesome answer irep.) . . — iii. 2 

such answer as I can make — iij. 2 

how unworthy a thing you make of me? — iij. 2 

yet cannot you make it speak — iii. 2 

since nature makes them partial — iii. 3 

help, angels, make assay! bow, stubborn — iii. 3 

makes marriage vows as false as dicers' — iii. 4 

sweet religion makes a rhapsody of words — iii. 4 

to stones, would make them capable .... — iii. 4 

on the affair: pray you, make haste — iv. 3 

makes mouths at the invisible event — iv. 4 

indeed woidd make one think — iv. 5 

without an oath, I'll make an end on't . . — iv. .0 

go but apart, make choice of whom — iv. .5 

in thine ear, will make thee dumb — iv. G (letter) 

we'll make a solemn wager on your — iv. 7 

as make your bouts more violent to that — iv. 7 

did she make [A'K/.-come] of crow-flowers — iv. 7 

therefore, make her grave straight — v. I 

the houses that he makes, last till — v. 1 

she must come; make her laugh at that — v. 1 

of earth we make loam : and why of tliat — v. 1 

makes them stand like wonder- wounded — v. 1 

of love make up my sum — v. 1 

zone, make Ossa like a wart — v. 1 

or I could make a prologue to my brains — v. 2 

they did make love to this employment.. — v. 2 

to make true diction of him, his semblable — v. 2 

I amafeard, you make a wanton of me .. — v. 2 

heaven make thee free of it! — v. 2 

to make me his lieutenant — Othello, 1. 1 

make after him, poison his delight — i. 1 

or else the devil will make a grandsire . . — i. 1 

to make this bitter to thee — i. 1 

ancient, what makes he here? — >. 2 

the Turkish preparation makes for Rhodes — i- 3 

if we make thought of this, we must not — i. 3 

patience her injury a mockery makes — — i. 3 

mighty preparation makes for Cyprus . . — i. 3 

let noLisewives make a skillet of my helm — i. 3 

make head against my estimation ! — i. 3 

make all the money thou canst (rep.) — i. 3 

thus do I ever make my fool my purse . . — i. 3 

framed to make women false — i. 3 

even till we make the main — 

make love's quick pants in Desdemona's — 

to make fools laugh i' the alehouse — 

that e'er our hearts shall make! — 

the pegs that make this music — 

make the Moor thank me. love me — 

some to make bonfires, each man to .... — ii. 2 

behold, what innovation it makes here. . — ii 3 

I'll make thee an example — ii. 3 

to make me frankly despise myself — ii. 3 

tliat she may make, unmake, do what .. — ii.3 

out of her own goodness make the net . . — ii.3 

and action, make the hours seem short. . — ii. 3 

the wars must make examples out of — iii.3 

not enriches him, and makes me poor . . — iii.3 

[Col.] doth make the meat it feeds on — iii.3 

think'st thou. I'd make a life of jealousy — iii.3 

'tis not to make me jealous to say — iii.3 

the big wars, that make ambition virtue! — iii.3 

make me to see it; or (at the least) so — iii. 3 

do deeds to make heaven weep — iii.3 

to make thine honesty a vice! — iii.3 

that is, make questions, and by them.... — iii. 

'twould make ner amiable, and subdue.. — iii. 

make it a darling like your precious eye — iii. 

the sun to make^Coi.Kne.-course] — iii. 

what make you from home? — iii. 

for I will make him tell the tale anew . . — iv. 

but you shall make all well. Are you sure — iv. 

make her amends, she weeps — i v. 

wish, that I would make her turn — iv. 



MAK 

MAKE— to make me a fixed figure for ..OtheUu,iy. 2 
I should make very forges of my checks — iv. 2 

would it not make one weep? — iv. 2 

world's mass of vanity could make me — iv. 2 

I will make myself known to De.sdemona — iv. 2 
who would not make her husband (rep.) — iv. 3 
and you might quickly make it right.... — iv. 3 

it makes us, or it mars us — v. 

every way makes my gain : live Roderigo — v. 

that makes me ugly; and, besides — v. 

I will make proof of thine — v. 

hereabout, and cannot make away — v. 

that either makes me, or fordoes me quite — v. 
than she was wont; and makes men mad — v. 2 
if heaven would make me such another.. — v. 2 
I'll make thee known, though I lost .... — v. 2 
this sight wcudd make him do a desperate — v. 2 

MAKEPEACE— to be a makepeace . . Richard II. i. 1 

MAKER— are the makers of manners.. He>irj/K v. 2 
God, the best maker of all marriages — v. 2 

the image of his JNIaker Henry VIII. jii. 2 

this child does, and praise my Maker — v. 4 
peace is a great maker of cuckolds.. Cojiotan us, iv. 4 

MAICETH-that maketh all things.Loi'e'sL.ios;, iv. 3 
far fortune maketh us amends iHenryVI. iv. 7 

MAKING— of this business' making .. Tempest, ii. 1 
making both it unable for itself. itfeas./or Meas.u. 4 

making practice on the times — iii. 2 

in making me a cuckold — v. 1 

making it momentany as Mid. A".'» Dream, i. 1 

mistake your sliape and making quite — ii. 1 
as nature was in making graces .. Love's L. Lost, ii. 1 

making the bold wag by their — v. 2 

not like a man of God's making — y. 2 

making question of my nttermost.Me?-. o/Tenicc, i. 1 
put the liveries to making; and desire — ii. 2 
making them lightest that wear .... — iii. 2 

this making of christians will — iii. 5 

their father, making such pitiful. . Js youLike it, i. 2 

is he of (3od's making? — iii. 2 

almost chide God for making you — — iv. 1 
their low ranks, making them prowtX. . AW sWell, i. 2 
in her chamber, making a sermon . Tarn, of Sh. iv. I 
I'll find about the making of the bed — iv. ) 

and making practised smiles Winter' sTale, i. 2 

lest barbarism, making me the precedent — ii. 1 
from far making amain to us . . Comedy of Errors, i. I 
to see the making of her carkanet.... — iii. 1 
and reverted, making war against her — iii. 2 
stigmatical in making, worse in mind — iv. 2 

incarnardine, making the green Macbeth, ii. 2 

sorriest fancies your companions making? — iii. 2 

while 'tis a making, 'tis given — iii. 4 

making that idiot, laughter, keep . . King John, iii. 3 

of one wound, by making many — v. 2 

are making hither with all due .... Richard II. ii. I 

as sugar, making the hard way — ii.3 

heaviness; making such difference . I Her??-?///'', iii. 1 

making you ever Ijetter than — v. 2 

making the wind my vosl-hOTse.2 Henry 1 1\ (indue.) 

and making many iish-meals — iv. 3 

is of mine own making; and what .. — (epil.) 

making defeat on the full power Henry f. i. 2 

some making the wars their bulwark — iv. 1 

that making God so free an oftljr — iv. 1 

making another head to fight again. 37Jf!ir!/ ;'/. ii. 1 
for making me, so young, so old ..liichard III. iv. I 
all the royal makings of a queen . . Henry I'll I. iv. 1 

tlie making of the cdke Troilus Sf Cressida, i. 1 

making their way with those of — i. 3 

she's making her ready, she'll come.. — iii. 2 
not making any scruple of her soilure — iv. 1 
requite me.bymaking rich yourself. 7"imojio//(. iv. 3 
making your wills the scope of justice — y. 5 
making parties strong, and feebling,. Corioia7ius, i. 1 
making not reservation of yourselves — iii.3 
making the mother, wife, and child .. — v. 3 

making a treaty where there was — y . .'i 

see thy Antony making his peace. .Jw^w.^Crt'sar, iii. 1 
making peace, or war, as thou .... Antony (^ Cleo. i. 3 
I pleased, making, and marring fortunes — iii. 9 
you not making it appear otlierwise..Ci/"'i'e''nf, i. 5 

excellent in mailing ladies trip Fericles. ii. 3 

the former, making a man a god .... — iii. 2 
making, to take your imagination — iv. 4 (Gower) 

there was good sport at his making Lear, i. 1 

by milking this well known unto you.... — i. 4 
making just report of how unnatural .... — iii. I 

bliss bj' making me despair Romeo ^Juliet, i. 1 

having him, making yourself no less — i. 3 

m.aking them women of good carriage — i. 4 

in their promise, as it is a making Hamlet, i. 3 

of the moon, making night hideous — 1.4 

and making love over the nasty stye — iii. 4 

making so bold, my fears fogetting — v. 2 

now making the beast with two backs ..Otlwllo, i. 1 

for making him egregiously an ass — ii. 1 

this matter, making it light to Cassio — ii.3 

why, bv making him incapable — iv. 2 

MAK'ST— mak'st a show, but dar'st not. Tempest, i. 2 

thou mak'st me merry — iii. 2 

thou mnk'st me most unhappy.. Tjco Gen. o/rer. v. 4 

thou mak'st the triumviry Lore's L. Lost, iv. 3 

than thou that mak'st the fray..A/er. of Venice, iii, 2 

thou mak'st thy knife keen.... — iv. I 

tlion almost mak'st me waver in — iv. I 

thou mak'st a testament as As you Like it, ii. 1 

and mak'st conjectural fears to come All's ll'ell, v. 3 
so mak'st thon faith an enemy to ..King John, iii. 1 

and mtik'st an oath the surety — iii. 1 

vea, there thou mak'st me sa<i,0 ep) ..\ Henry I V. i. 1 
thou mak'st some tender of my life .. — v. 4 

thou mak'st use of any thing Henry V. iii. 7 

what mak'st thou in my sight? Richard III. i. 3 

and mak'st them kiss Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

that mak'st my blood cold Julius Ctesar, iv. 3 

thou mak'st thy bloody pillow Cymbeline, iv. 2 

what, mak'st thou me a dullard — v. 5 

wliy mak'st thou it so strange? ..TitusAndron. ii. 1 
thy wisdom mak'st a prince Pericles, i. 2 



MAK 



[ 481 ] 



MAN 



iii. 6 
V. 2 
V. 3 



AtAIv'ST tlimi this shame thy pastime? ....twir,.'!. * 

niiik'st his cam strauijer to thy OlhelU , iii. 3 

and mak'st me call, wlmt I intend to do . . - .v. i 

M \LA— 'tis hona terra, mala sens ..iHennjl I. \v. 7 

MALADIES— enRcnders maladies Love si. Inst, iv. 3 

JIALADY— on vour malady. 7Vo Gen. of I'erona. u. 

he owes the malady that doth my ..All s » c//, ii. 

our past-cure malady to empirics — _ n • 1 

incur your former malady.. Turning ofSh. 2 (mrtue.J 
a malady most incident to maids. Winter sTalf, iv. 3 
their maladv convinces the great .....Vncdert, iv. 3 

the malady of not markin" 2 Henry U . i. i 

i' the snital of malady of i ranee Henry I .v. 1 

the pining malady of France 1 Henri/) /. in. 3 

the infinite malady crust you.TinionofMtiens, i|i. b 
hut where the greater malady is fixed. . . . lenr, in. i 
M VLAPEKT-this malapert hlood. ■|■u■elfth^lglll, iv. 1 
untutored lad, thou art too maIapert.3Hcnry >•'/. v. ft 
master marquis; you are malapert. ./iic/m™ '''..l. 3 
MALCHUSof Arabia; kinj,' of.. ../In/ony .tC/eo.in. 6 

WAl-COLM— our eldest, Malcolm Muchclli,\. 1 

Malcolm! awake (rep.) ..,.......;. — n. 3 

were suborned; Malcolm, and Donnlbam — 
it was for Malcolm, and for Donalbaiu . . — 

led on bv Malcolm, his uncle — 

what's tlic boy Malcolm? was he ........ — 

the ground before youns Malcolm s feet.. — v. 7 
MALCONTENT— a malcontent. 7>oGra.o/;«-. ii. 1 
thou art the Mars of malcontents. .il/«7!/ » ives.\. 3 
of all loiterers and malcontents.. Lowe'si.. l-osl, in. 1 
stand pensive, as half malcontents? ZHenryl 1. iv. 1 
for a wife, that thou art malcontent? — iv. 1 
M.4.LE— my deer? my male deer?.. A/citi/ «'(?■«, y. f> 
rcoi.] no salve in the male, sir. .Love's L. Lost, ui. 1 
of such a burden, male Iwnns. .Comedy nf Errors.]. I 
are their males' subject, and at their — n. 1 

should compose nothing but males Maclelli.]. i 

Cain, the first male child .... KingJi./in, lu. 4 

female is the shadow of the ma\e..'i Henry II . in. i 
into a kind of male green-sickness . . — iv. 3 

sole heir male of the true line . HenryJ.\. i 

love the breeder better than the male.SHciiii/r/. ii. I 
the hapless male to one sweet bird .. -- v. fi 
if it conceived a male child by me-HenryVIIl. ii. 4 

for her male issue or died — n. 4 

Achilles' male varlet. Male varlet.. -- v. 1 

than there is milk in a male tiger . . Conoianus, v. 4 

MALEDICTIONS against king and nobles. /.«'!■, 1.2 

MALEFACTIONS-their malefactions.. Hni"W, ii- 2 

M VLEFACTOR-not malefactors? Meas. for Mens. n. 1 

which be the malefactors? Mttcit Ado, i_v. 2 

forth ^nme monstrous malefactor.,4n(on!/<?-CVfo. ii. 5 

MALEVOLENCE of fortune Macbeth, iii.U 

MALEVOLENT to you in all aspects.l Henry U.i. 1 

iNIALtCE—shrug'st thou, malice? Teinpesi, i. 2 

yet, by the very fangs of malice . . Tuelftlilnigiit, i. 5 
how with a sportful malice ._. . . ... ... - . v- 1 

much darkened in your mahce.Meas.for Meas. in. 2 
this fashion of thy malice .... Mercli. of f-enice, iv. 1 

it must appear that malice bears .... — ly. 1 

his malice 'gainst the lady will ..As youLilteil,]. 2 

subject me to the malice „„ — . „ .'■'■• l 

■without any malice, but to speak. ...All s»eu. n;. 6 
either malice, or matter, to alter .. n'mler s lale.i. 1 

I tight of treasonous malice _. Macbelli,u. 3 

wlnlst our poor malice remains — !>.'.• 2 

poison, malice domestic................. — >.i,i '^ 

our cannons' malice vamly shall be.iCing- Jolm, ii. 1 
sharpest deeds of malice on this town — _". 2 

there is no malice in this burning — iv. 1 

the blood of malice in a vein of ,"~, ,,'^- ? 

appeal theduke on ancient malice.. iJic/iar-di/. i. 1 
•at your highness, no inveterate malice — i. 1 

deep malice makes too deep — ,, i-' 

as the malice of this age shapes 2Henr;/n . i. 2 

from envious malice of thy I Henry F/. in. I 

bcun through malice of the bishop 8 — in. 1 
that malice was a great and grievous — in. 1 
will not this malice, Somerset, be left; — 



MALICE-vouch of very malice itseW.. Otiiello, ii. 1 ; MAN-why weep'st thou, man?.7Vo Gen.of 

more in policy than in malice - li. 3 that ever any i '' 

il' 



hath wi tness of his servant's malice . . 2 Hcnj-y F/. i . 3 
such malice; with such holiness (j-ep.) — .n. 1 

eyes blab his heart's malice — }\\- \ 

God forbid, anv malice shouldprevail — m. 2 
thont'h fortune's malice overthrow.3 Henry F/. iv. 3 

and avoiding, fortune's malice — iv. 6 

sickness and no grounded malice ..Richard III. i. 3 
the new-healed wound of malice .... — ii. 2 

the cardinal's malice and his Henry VIII. i. 1 

I bear no maUce for my death — n. J 

ifever any malice in your heart — n. l 

out of malice to the good queen — ii. I 

all offences malice ne'er meant. . .... — .n- 2 

(I mean, your malice), know, officious — 111.2 
vour envious courses, men of malice — in- 2 
Jrom any private malice in his end . . — 111. 2 
and with a malice of as great size . . — v. 1 

this is a piece of malice.. — v.'. 

I never sought their malice... — v. 2 

make envy, and crooked malice .... — v. i 
more out of malice than integrity. ... — v. 2 
purgation to the world, thaii malice -- v. 2 

larded with malice, and maX\ce..Iro>lusSi- Cress, y. 1 
no leveled malice infects one . . Timon of Athens, 1. I 

'tis in the malice of mankind. — ly. 3 

spend my malice in my breath Conoianus, 11. . 

upon their ancient malice, will forget — 11. 1 
to affect the malice and displeasure. . — 11. 2 
to report otherwise, were a malice . . — }}■ ^ 
and translate hismalicetowardsyou — .11. 3 
witness of the malice and displeasure — iv. 5 

and to thv ancient malice — !^'- » 

the deepest malice of the war — ly. 6 

in strength of malice •'"''"s C^s"''. n;. I 

both truth and malice have .... Antony <5- Cten. 1. 2 

will not trust one of her malice Cymbttme,\. b 

a thing more made of malice — V'- 'j 

malice and lucre in them have _ — iv. 2 

the malice towards you, to forgive you — v. .; 

malice of my swelling heart 7 itusAndron. y. i 

show too bold malice against Lear, 11. - 



what malice was between you? — v. 1 

nor set down aught in malice — .v. 2 

MALICIOUS, smacking of every sin ..Macbeth, ly. 3 
commander of this hot malicious day I KingJolin,\\. 2 
pretend malicious practices against. 1 Henry I'l. ly. 1 

to cope malicious censurers Henry I'lll.i. 2 

I hold niv most malicious foe — .n- 1 

good Griffith; I were malicious else.. — iv. 2 
confess yourselves wondrous malicious Coriolamis,\ . 1 
rougher accents for malicious sounds — iii. 3 

how malicious is my fortune, that I Lear, in. :> 

and our vain blows malicious mockery Hamlet, i. 1 

make malicious sport in mincing — ii. 2 

upon malicious bravery, dost thou comc.Othello, 1. I 

MALICIOUSLY, like poison lyintcr s Tale, 1. 2 

nay, but speak not maliciously Conoianus, 1. 1 

and fight maliciously ....Antony i- Cleopatra, 111. 1 1 

MALIGN our senators Cot lolanus, 1. 1 

fortune did malign my state Iencles,v. 1 

MALIGNANCY of my fate .Tu'elfih.\ight,M. I 

MALIGNANT— liest, raaliguant thing'..! e„ipesl.i. 2 
some malignant power upon Tu-oGen.of Veronn,ii\. 1 
with that malignant cause wherein ..Alls nelt, 11. 1 

malignant and ill-boding stars! 1 Henry I'l. iy. 5 

in pieces by malignant death R/cliard III. 11. 2 

his will is most malignant Henry fill. i. 2 

a malignant and a turbaned Turk beat. O/AcHo, v. 2 
JIALIGNANTLY remain fast foe . . Coriolanus, ii. 3 
MALKIN pins her richest lockram .. — ii. 1 

blurted at, and held a malkin Pericles, iv. 1 

MALL, Meg and Marian Tempest, 11. 2 (song) 

like mistress Mall's picture? TvelfihKighi,i. 3 

MALLARD— a doting mallard ..Antony frCleo. ui 8 
MAIiLEABLE-the rest more malleable. T'endf.?, iv. 6 
MALLECHO-this is miching mallecho.HamW, iii. 2 

MALLET— than is in a mallet •IHenryW. n. 4 

MALLOW— or docks, or mallows Tempest, 11. 1 

MALMSEY— wort, and malmsey .. ioue's L. i,os<, v. 2 

MALMSEY-BUTT in the next room.BicAardZ/i. i. 4 

I'll drown you in the malmsey-butt — i. 4 

MALMSEY-NOSE knave, Bardolpli.2H<!n!i//r. li. 1 

MALT— mar their malt with water Lear, in. 2 

MALTHOllSE drudge! Taming of Shrew, is-. 1 

malthorse, capon, coxcomb ..Comedy of Errors, m. I 
MALT-WORMS; but with nobility. .If/cnrj///'. li. I 

nothing but roast malt-worms iHenryW. ii. 4 

MALVOLIO-of this fool, Malyolio?.7'u'ei/l/iA/>A;, i. 5 

liow say you to that, Malvolio? — i. ."i 

O, you are sick of self-love, Mai volio — 1. .'3 

go you, Malvolio: if it be a suit — i. 5 

what ho, Malvolio! — i. .'i 

hie thee, Malvolio _ •• — .1-5 

for Malvolio's nose is no whipstock.. — u. 3 
Imveiiot called up her steward, Malvolio — ii. 3 

Malvolio's a Peg-a-Ramsey — li. 3 

monsieur Malvolio, let me alone — 11. 3 

Malvolio's coming down this walk .. — ii. 5 

to be count Malvolio — ii. .') 

if this should be thee, Malvobo — n. ft 

Malvolio, why tlrnt begins — ii. 5 

yon gull Malvolio is turned heathen — iii. 2 
where is Malvolio? he is sad (rep.) .. — iii. 4 

how now, Malvolio? — iii. 4 

wilt thou go to bed, Malvolio? — in. 4 

how do you Malvolio?(rep.) — iii. 4 

what meanest thou by that, Malvolio? — 111. 4 
not Malvolio, nor after my degree .. — 111.4 
who comes to visit Malvolio the lunatic — iv. 2 

master Malvolio! — iv. 2 

Malvolio, Malvolio, thy wits — iv. 2 

at Malvolio's suit, a gentleman — v. 1 

fetch Malvolio hither — v. I 

the madly used Malvolio — v. 1 (letter) 

how now, Malvolio? — v. I 

have I Malvolio? No — v. I 

alas, Malvolio, this is not my writing — v. 1 
set this device against Malvolio here — v. 1 
MAMILLIUS— prince Mamillius. ..«'(n(«'sra/e, i. 1 

Mamillius, art thou my boy? — i. 2 

go play, Mamillius; thou'rt an honest — i. 2 

MAMMERING— so mammering on Othello, iii. 3 

MAMMET— to play with mammets. . 1 Henry W. ii. 3 

a whining mammet, in her Romeo z^- Juliet, iii. ft 

MAMMOCKED it! Coriolanus, 1. 3 

MAN— me, poor man! 7 einpesi, 1. 2 

would I might ever see that man — i. 2 

was the first man that leaped — 1.2 

this is the third man that e'er I saw — 1.2 

no, as I am a man — ;■ 2 

no ambition to see a goodlier man — 1.2 

or this man's threats — .1-2 

none, man, all idle — };. 1 

ten leagues beyond man's life — n. 1 

the man i'the moon's too slow — 11. 1 

what have we here; a man or a fish? .. — ii. 2 
there would this monster make a man — ii. 2 
any strange beast there makes a man . . — ii. 2 

legged like a man! ._ — ii- 2 

misery acquaints a man with — 11.2 

scurvy tune to sing at a man's funeral — ii. 2 

as proper a man as ever went — ii. 2 

swam ashore, man, like a duck — ii. 2 

the whole butt, man — li. 2 

I was the man in the moon (^rep.) — ii. 2 

hut follow thee, thou wondrous man.. — ii. 2 
has a new master, get a new man — ii. 2 (song) 

was there ever man a coward — iii. 2 

monster, I will kill this man — iii. 2 

if thou beest a man, show — iii. 2 

where man doth not inhabit — in. 3 

chnrm upon this man and maid — iv. I 

holy Gonzalo, honourable man — v. 1 

when no man was his own — v. 1 

evcrv man shift for all — v. 1 

let no man take care for himself — y. 1 

he cannot he a perfect man..7'»o Gen. of Verona. 1. 3 

that no man counts of her beauty — ii- 1 

as a nose on a man's face — "• ' 



tilt, man, 1 mean thou'lt lose — 

why, man, if the river were dry — — 

come, come away, man — 

why, man, she is mine own — 

that a man is never undone — 

unworthily disgrace the man — 

that man that hath a tongue (rep.) . . — 
no man hatli access by day to her (rep.) — 

why man, how black — 

what need a man care for — 

stayed for a better man than thee . . — 

fur he's a proper man — 

a man I am, crossed with adversity — 

1 k illed a man, who.'iC death — 

a man of such perfection — 

because you are a banished man — 

how do you man? — 

Laimce, liis man, told me — 

subtle, perjured, false, disloyal man! — 

when a man's servant shall — 

how use doth breed a habit in a man! — 

treacherous man I — 

were man hut constant _ — 

your grace is welcome to a man disgraced — 

it is a familiar beast to man MertijlVi 

Where's Simple, my man ? — 

go sirrah, for all you are my man — 

beholden to his friend for a man — 

as any man in England — 

a softly-sprighted man, ishe not? .. — 
but he is as tall a man of his hands.. — 

run in here, good young man — 

if he had found the young man — 

he'll find the young man there — 

the young man is an honest man (rep.) — 

dere isiio lionest man shall — 

but notwithstanding, man, I'll do .. — 

ere one chaste man — 

and my good man too — 

commended him for a true man — 

a man may he too confident — 

what wouldst thou more of man?.. .. — 

he's a very jealousy man — 

knew a woman so dote upon a man . . — 

master Page is an honest man .. — 

a man long known to me — 

built upon another man's ground .. — 
if anv man may, you may as soon . . — 
would any man have tliought this? 

he is the wiser man 

though now a man of peace 

I never heard a man of his place 

he's the man should light with him . . 

go before you like a man 

between my good man and he 1 

a man may hear this shower 

having an'honest man to your husband 

that you have such a man here 

if not, happy man be his dole! 

for the water swells a man 

bid her think, what a man is 

a man of my kidney, think 

a man of continual dissolution 

bring my young man here to school 

and he's but a dead man — 

why, man, why,— Master Page (rep.) — 

if you find a man there (rep.) — 

the very same man that beguiled — 

as vou see, like a poor old man — 

for'in the shape of man, master Brook — 
no man means evil but the devil .... — 
makes a beast a man; in some (rep.) — 

no man their works must eye — 

I smell a man of middle earth — 

a puffed man? • • . — . 

a christian, or an ordinary man. . Tvclfth A 

tut, there's life in't, man — 

as any man in Illyria {_rep.') — 

I will not compare with an old man 

that say, thou art a man 

may pass for a wise man ...... — . ■, • 

bid the dishonest man mend himself 
no railing in a known discreet man 

'tis a fair young man, and well 

what's a drunken man like, fool?. . . . 
a drowned man, a fool, and a madman 
kind of man is he? Why, of man kind 

what manner of man is he? 

not yet old enough for a man 

between boy and man 

unless the master were the man 

messenger, the county's man 

I am the man 

ns I am man, my state is 

every wise man's son doth know . . — 

there dwelt a man in Babylon 

as to drink when a man's a-hungry 

a daughter loved a man 

I would exult, man 

no man must know (rep.) 

I will be point-de-vice the very man 

why man ? (ren.) 

as a wise man s art 

your wife is like to reap a proper rnan 
■prevail in man's commendation with 

for sure, the man is tainted 

how dost thou, man ? (rep.^ 

no worse man than sir Toby 

what, man 1 defy the devil ^rep.^ 

taken the infection of the devioe, man 

no man hath any quarrel to me 

of oftijnee done to an v man 

can iurnish man witlial 

belike, this is a man of that quirk . . 

what manner of man is he? 

why, man, he's a very devil 

how much I lack of a man 

this \6 the man; do thy oilice 

II 



iv. 2 
iv. 2 
iv. 4 



— 11. 2 



— 111. : 



— IV. : 



— 1. 4 

— i.' ft 

— 1. ft 

— i. ft 

— i. ft 



ii. ft 
ii 5 
iii. I 



MAN— so unsound a man Twelfth Night, iii. 4 

1 hate ingratitude more in a man..,, — iii. 4 

the man grows mad — iii. 4 

of some great man, and now — iv. 1 

an honest man, and a good — iv. 2 

a careful man, and a great — iv. 2 

how vexest tliou this man? — iv. 2 

never was man tlius wronged — iv. 2 

tliere was never man tlius abused {,rep.) — iv. 2 

in my wits, as any man in lUyria .. — iv. 2 

and witlx tliis lioly man — iv. 3 

I'll follow tliis good man — iv. 3 

here comes the man, sir — v. 1 

betrothed both to a maid and man . . — v. 1 

as well as a man in his case — v. 1 

■while you are a man — v. 1 

when I cnnie to man's estate — v. 1 (song) 

uor do I think the man of safe . . Meas.for Meas. i. I 

yonder man is carried to prison — i. 2 

what proclamation, man? — i. 2 

a man of .stricture, and firm — i. 4 

it is a man's voice — i. 5 

a man, whose blood is very snow-broth — i. 5 

thou honourable man, prove it — ii. 1 

master Froth here, this very man.... — ii. 1 

a man of fourscore pound a year .... — ii. 1 

what this man did to my wife? — ii. I 

that she was ever respected with man — ii. 1 

here is tlie sister of the man condemned — ii. 2 

and neitlier heaven, nor man — ii. 2 

liliC man new made — ii. 2 

if tlie first man that did — ii. 2 

O but man, proud man I — ii. 2 

a young man more tit to do another.. — ii. 3 

love you tlie man that wronged you? — ii. 3 

wherein (.let no man hear me) — ii. 4 

from nature stolen a man already made — ii. 4 

aloud, what man thou art — ii. 4 

wilt thou be made a man out of ray vice? — iii. I 

that it will let this man live! — iii. 1 

what offence hath this man made you — iii. 2 

is the world as it was, man? — iii. 3 

was not made by man and woman .. — iii. 2 

to take awav the life of a man? — iii. 2 

ere he would have hanged a man.. .. — iii. 2 

is accounted a merciful man — iii. 2 

what may man within him hide! . ... — iii. 2 

here comes a man of comfort — iv. i 

can you cut off a man's head? If the man — iv. 2 

but if he be a married man — iv. 2 

every true man's apparel fits (rep.) .. — iv. 2 

your true man thinks it big enough.. — iv. 2 

this is his lordship's man — iv. 2 

a man tliat apprehends death no more — iv. 2 

the rapier and dagger man — iv. 3 

not die to-day for any man's persuasion — iv. 3 

a man of Claudio's years — iv. 3 

fiven me by so holy a man — iv. 3 

do not like the man : had he — v. 1 

I know him for a man divine — v. 1 

a man that never yet did, as he — v. I 

I am affianced this man's wife — v. 1 

to accuse this worthy man — v. 1 

is this the man, tliat you did tell — v. 1 

for this new-married man, approaching — v, 1 

I crave no other, nor no better man . . — v. 1 

look if it please you, on this man .... — v. 1 

a friar told me of this man — V. 1 

a man to a man; stuffed (rep.) Much Ado, i. 1 

and now is the whole man governed — i. 1 

by this what you are, being a man .. — i. 1 

than a man swear he loves me — i. 1 

as an honest man should do — i. 1 

in vv hat key shall a man take you ,. — i. 1 

hath not the world one man, but he.. — i. 1 

I can be secret as a dimib man — i. 1 

Benedick the married man (rep.v. 1 & 4) — i. 1 

thus much overheard by a man of mine — i. 2 

smile at, no man's jests (rep.) — i. 3 

be said to be a flattering honest man — i. 3 

he were an excellent man, that were — ii. 1 

such a man will win any woman .... — ii. 1 

no beard, is less than a man (rep.) .. — ii. 1 

unless you were tlie very man — ii. 1 

do the part of an honest man in it.... — ii. 1 

you strike like the blind man — ii. 1 

that I stood like a man at a mark.... — ii. 1 

wliile she is here, a man may live.. .. — ii. 1 

that one man, seeing how much (?-ep.) — ii. 3 

and such a man is Claudio — ii, 3 

lilce an honest man, and a soldier .... — ii. 3 

that lady would have loved any man — ii. 3 

for the man, as you know all — ii. 3 

he is a very proper man — ii. 3 

for the man doth fear God — ii.3 

a man loves the meat in his — ii.3 

awe a man from the career of — ii. 3 

more than ever man did merit — iii. 1 

as much as may be yielded to a man — iii. 1 

I never yet saw man, how wise — iii. 1 

so turns she every man the wrong .. — iii. 1 

he is the only man of Italy — iii. 1 

hath any man seen him at — iii. 2 

the barber's man hath been seen .... — iii. 2 

your Hero, every man's Hero — iii. 2 

the most desartless man to be constable? — iii. 3 

to be a well-favoured man — iii. 3 

senseless and fit man for the constable — iii. 3 

you are to bid any man stand — iii. 3 

to be no true man; and, for such kind — iii. 3 

always called a merciful man, partner — iii. 3 

mucli more a man wlio hath any .. .. — iii. 3 

with any man that knows — iii. 3 

to offend no man; and it is (rep.) .... — iii. 3 

here, man, I am at thy elbow — iii. 3 

or a cloak, is nothing to a man — iii. 3 

wears out more apparel than the man — iii. 3 

by the weight of a man — iii. 4 

and now is he become a man — iii. 4 

an old man, sir, and his wits are .... — iii. 5 



MAN— as honest as any man (rep.) ..Much Ado, iii. & 

any man in the city, and tlvough (.rep.) — iii. 6 

a good old man, sir; he will be — iii. 5 

well, God's a good man — iii. 5 

what man was be talked with you .. — iv. 1 

I talk witli no man at that hour .... — iv. 1 

hath no man's dagger here a point .. — iv. 1 

lady, what man is lie you are accused of? — iv. 1 

if I know more of any man alive (rep.) — iv. 1 

how much might the man deserve of me iv. 1 

may a man do it? It is a man's office — iv. 1 

tliat I were a man! (rep.) _ iv. 1 

talk with a man out at a window? .. iv. 1 

that I were a man for his sake (>rp.) iv. 1 

1 cannot be a man with wishing .... iv. I 

this man said, sir, that don John .... — iv. 2 

but there is no such man y. 1 

but no man's virtue, nor sufficiency v. 1 

do not quarrel with us, good old man — y. 1 

tush, tush, man, never fleer and jest — v. 1 

do challenge thee to trial of a man . . — v. 1 

you say not light, old man v. I 

boy, thou Shalt kill a man v. 1 

that dare as well answer a man, indeed — v. 1 

what, man! I know them, .yea — v. 1 

here comes the man we went to seek — v. 1 

as I am an honest man, he looks jiale — v. 1 

what! courage, man! what though care — v. 1 

thou wast the properest man iu Italy — v. 1 

the old man's daughter told us all . . — v. 1 

what a pretty thing man is — v. 1 

then is an ape a doctor to such a man — v. 1 

overhea,rd me confessing to this man v. 1 

when I note another man like him . . — v. 1 

to satisfy this good old man, I would — y. 1 

this naughty man sliall face to face. . — v. 1 

no man living shall come over (_rep.) — v. 2 

there's not one wise man among twent.y — v. 2 

if a man do not erect in this age .... — v. 2 

tush, fear not, man, we'll tip thy .... — v. 4 

no: if a man will be beaten y. 4 

for man is a giddy thing, and this .. — v. 4 

a young man s revenue Mid.N.'sDream, i. 1 

this man bach my consent to — i. 1 

[CoMCn/.] this man hath bewitched.. — i. 1 

upon this spotted and inconstant man — i. I 

and ere a man hath power to say .... — i. 1 

call them generall.y , man by man ... . — i. 2 

here is the scroll of every man's name — i. 2 

a sweet-faced man, a proper man .... — i. 2 

gentlemanlike man; therefore you .. — i. 2 

will make or man or woman ii. 2 

thou slialt know the man by — ii. 2 

the will of man is by his reason — ii.3 

is't not enough, young man, that X .. — ii.3 

that a 1 ady, of one man refused. ... ii.3 

1 am a man as other men are — iii. 1 

some man or other must present wall — iii. 1 

Ninus' tomb, man: why you — iii. 1 

note full many a man doth mark — iii. 1 (song) 

this is the woman, but not this the man iii. 2 

that, one man holding troth — iii. 2 

you are a tame man, go! — iii. 2 

I should know the man by the Atlieuian — iii. 2 

that every man should take his own — iii. 2 

the man shall have his mare — iii. 2 

past the wit of man to say (rep.) .... — iv. 1 

man is but a patched fool — iv. I 

eye of man hath not heard (rep.) .... — iv. 1 

you have not a man in all Athens .. — iv. 2 

of any handycraft man in Athens. . . . — iv. 2 

every man look o'er his part — iv. 2 

this man is P.yramus, if you would know — v. I 

this man, with lime and rough-cast.. — v. 1 

at the which let no man wouder (rep.) — y. 1 

the man i' the moon (ref.) — v. 1 

the man should be put into (rep.) .... — v. 1 

make a man look sad — y. ) 

I pity the man — v. 1 

less than an ace, man — v, 1 

[Coi.] he for a man, God warrant us.. — v. 1 
item, if any man be seen to talk ..Lovers L.Lost, i. 1 

for every man with his affects is born — i. I 

a man in all the world's new fashion — i. 1 

a man of complements, whom right.. — i. 1 

a man of fire-new words, fashion's .. — i. I 

it is the manner of a man to speak . . — i. 1 

such is the simplicity of man to — i. 1 

and every man that dares not fight! — i. I 

a man of good repute, carriage.... — i. 1 (letter) 

my head to any good man's hat — i. 1 

when a man of great spirits grows .. — i. 2 

the varnish of a complete man — i. 2 

he was a man of good carriage — i. 2 

maid. Man. I will visit thee — i. 2 

I have as little patience as another man — i. 2 

of all perfections that a man may owe — ii. 1 

know you tiie man? .^ — ii. 1 

a man of sovereign parts he is — ii. 1 

but a merrier man, within the — ii. 1 

like a man after the old painting. ... — iii. 1 

a man, if I live; and this — iii. 1 

my sweet ounce of man's flesh! — iii. 1 

may a man buy for a remuneration? — iii. 1 

that was a man when king Pepin.. .. — iv. 1 

thou canst not hit it, my good man. . — iv. 1 

a most dainty man! — iv. 1 

Ovidius Naso was tlie man — iv. 2 

a true man, or a thief, that gallops so? — iv. 3 

that, like a rude and savage man of. . — iv. 3 

1 never knew man hold vile stuff .... — iv. 3 

every man attach the hand — iv. 3 

offered by a child to an old man — v. 1 

a soldier, a man of travel — v.) 

and not a man of them shall have.... — y. 2 

that some plain man recount — v. 2 

still she is the moon, and I the man — y. 2 

till this man showed thee? — v. 2 

to parfoct one man, e'en one poor man — v. 2 

doth this man serve God? — v. 2 



i. 3 
i. 3 
i. 3 



ii. 7 (scroll) 



HI. 4 

iii. 5 
iv. 1 



— iv. 1 



V. 1 



MAN— a man of God's making Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

a foolish mild man; an honest man — v. 2 

a mau so breathed, that certain v.' 2 

he ^yas a man,— but I will _ y! 2 

ay, if he have no more man's blood .. v.' 2 

like a northern man; I'll slash _ v2 

for a man replete with mocks — v." 2 

every man must play a part Mer. of Vertice, i. 1 

why should a man wliose blood is. . . . — i. 1 

more than any man in all Venice.... ii 1 

therefore let him pass for a man .... ii 2 

he is every man in no man _ j.' 2 

he is a proper man's picture i, 2 

little worse than a man j." 2 

Antonio is a good man (rep.) -■" •> 

the man is, notwithstanding, sufficient 

was the last man in our mouths .... 

w-liy fear not, man; I will not — 

of man's flesh; taken from a man.... 

play at dice which is the better man — 

being an honest man's son 

young man, you, I pray you - 

but a poor man's son 

is an honest exceeding poor man — 

ergo, old,man, ergo (rep.) — 

cannot be hid long, a man's son — 

I am Launcelot, the Jew's man (rep.) _ 
here comes the man ; to liim father . . - 

bemg I hope, an old man (rep.) — 

if any man in Italy have a fairer — 

a simple coming-in for one mau — 

many a man his life hath sold — 

why, man, I saw Bassanio 

drudge 'tween man and man 

the constitution of an3' constant man 
shape of man, so keen and greedy (rep.) 
the kindest man, the best conditioned 
use thou all the endeavour of a man 
between the change of man and boy 
a plain man in his plain meaning . . 

thou unfeeling man. to excuse 

hates any man the thing he would not 
Whatman? courage yet! the Jew.... 
in the tongue of man to alter me .... 

excellent young man I _ 

to let tlie wretched man outlive .... — 

1 hear the footing of a man 

leave hollaing, man; here — 

the man that hath no music 

let no such man be trusted 

a-sthe blind man knows the cuckoo. . — 

this is the man, this is Antonio — 

a man. Ay, if a woman live to be a man — 

neither man, nor master, would take 

what man is there so much unreasonable — 

unless he live until he be a man — 

of every man's good parts As youLike il, 

but love no mau in good earnest .... 

there comes an old man (rep.) 

isyonder theman? _ 

iCol. Kni.] there is such odds in the man — 

young man, have you challenged — 

cruel proof of this man's strength — 

Hercules be tliy speed, young man! (»ep.) — 

what is thy name, young mau? 

been son to some man else — 

before known this .young man his son — 

suit me all points like a man? — 

call thee, when thou art a man? — 

possible, that no man saw tliem? — 

the service of a younger man in aU.. — 

good old man ; how well (rep.) — 

to disgrace my man's apparel — 

a young man and an old, in solemn. . — 

as sure I think did never man love so 

one of you question yond man, if he — 

1 am shepherd to another man — 

if ever I thank any man (jep.) 

that any man turn ass 

can nowhere find him like a man ... . 
the wise man's foUy is anatomized . . 

unclaimed of any man 

art thou thus boldened, man 

ever sat at any good man's feast 

there is an old poor man, who 

and one man in his time plays 

so unkind, as man's ingratitude _ 

good old man, thou art right 

as wholesome as the sweat of a man? 

most shallow man (rep.) 

owe no man hate, envy no man's.... 
the life of man runs his erring . . — 

is it a man? And a chain 

though I am caparisoned like a man 

pour this concealed man out of 

BO you may put a man in 

what manner of man? Is his 

if the man will be thankful 

in this forest, and in man's apparel? 

and a rich man that hath not 

in his youth an inland man 

there is a man haunts the forest .... 

how to knoft' a man in love .•. . 

but you are no such mau 

am I tlie man yet? 

a man's verses cannot be (rep.) 

it strikes a man more dead 

a man may if he were of a fearful .. — 

a man knows no end of his goods (rep.) 

is the single man therefore blessed?. . — 
the forehead of a married man more — 

on gift of any man 

60 man hatirhis desires 

being a man of your breeding 

tears do not become a man 

such a man as Orlando? O that's (rep.) — 

a thousand times a properer man.... 

fasting for a good man's love — 

cry the man mercj;, love him 

you chide, than this man woo _ 



i. 3 



ii. 5 (song) 



ii. 7 (song) 

— ii. 7 

— iii. 2 



— iii. 3 

— iii 3 

— iii. 3 



iii. 3 



111. 3 



MAN 



[ 483 ] 



MAN 



iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 3 



— iv. 3 
_ iv. 3 

— iv. 3 

— iv. 3 

— iv. 3 

— V. I 

— V. 1 
_ V. 2 

— V. 4 
_ V. 4 
_ V. 4 
_ V. 4 

.All's Well, i. 1 



_ ii. 2 



ii. 3 



— 11. 4 



iii. 1 



— 111. 2 



iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 



MAX thut the main liarvest AsyouUkeH,\\\. 5 

lie'll make a proper man 

not any man died in liis own person 

a mantliat liad a wife with 

■\vere man as rare as plicenix 

this is a man's invention . — iv.a 

wliiles tlie eye of man did woo. . — iv. 3 (letter) 
wliat man I am, and liow, and why. 
a wretL-hcd ragged man, o'ergrown . 
wlien tliat the sleeping man should. 

Orlando did approach tlie man 

you a man? you laek a man's heart 

counterfeit to be a man 

here comes tlie man j'ou mean 

but tire wise man knows himself . . . 

if ever I satisfied man, and you 

if any man doubt that, let him 

tliat no man else will 

meeting with an old religious man . 
welcome young man; tliouoffer'st . 

called voii the man you speak 

man is'enemy to virginity — ;• | 

tliere is none; man, sitting down .... — i. 1 

being blown down, man will be ... . — i. 1 

such a man might be a copy — i- '^ 

a man may draw his heart out — i- 3 

man should be at woman's command — .i- 3 

liere's a man stands, that has 

if God have lent a man any 

as 'twere, a man assured of 

this is the man. Why then, young 
■what is man? To what is count's man 
I write man ; to which title, age .... 
in the default, he is a man I know .. 

every man should beat thee 

the tread of a man's foot 

a young man married, is a man .... 
the wiser man ; for many a man's . . 
tlie soul of tills man is his clothes . . 
like a common and an outward man 

to be a very melancholy man 

I know a man that had this trick . . 

as an old man loves money 

steal himself into a man's favour 

everv one be a man of his own fancy 
he changed almost into another man 
an honest man should not have (rep.) 
I would do the man what honour . . 
and means, for every man to live . . 
at a man's. Your distinction (rep.).. 

and nod at every man 

this man may help me to his 

or aaainst any man's metaphor 

I am a man whom fortune 

I saw the man to-day, if man he be 

I am a poor man, and at your 

if ever I knew man, 'twas you 

or else this old man's -wife _ 

practise on this drunken man.. ramjngo/SA. 1 (in(l.) 

that a mighty man, of such — 2 (ind.) 

nor no man ever saw •••••■/ 

light on a fit man, to teach her 

any man is so very a fool to 

why man, there be good fellows (rep.) 
happy man be hi s dole 1 he that — 
or mean man of Pisa 

1 killed a man, and fear I was 

is there any man has rebused your.. 

lichted well on this young man 

wnll not promise her to any man 

the man must stead us all 

I do present you with a man of mine 

a man well known throughout 

a mighty man of Pisa; by report 

be married to no man but me 

to refresh the mind of man 

Priami, is my man Tranio 

spit in the hole, man, and time 

to be noted for a merry man 

a horse, and a man is more than one 
I am to get a man, whate'er he be .. 
rescue thy mistress if thou be a man 

was ever man so beaten? (rpp.) 

a taller man than I will take cold 

winter tames man, woman 

•what, no man at door, to hold 

another way I have to man my 

a' will make the man mad 

happier the man.wliom favourable .. 
this is a man, old, wrinkled, faded .. 
wliat if a man bring him a hundred. . 
take upon you another man's name.. 

what, is the man lunatic? 

their life, to see him a man Winl 

why, happy man be his dole! 

and many "a man there is, even 

thou'rt an honest man: Camillo 

every one of these no man is free 

for cogitation resides not in that man 

do this? could man so blench? 

bv all the parts of man, which honour 

dishonoured by a man which ever 

there was a man ;— nay, come 

as cold as is a dead man's nose 

60 were I a man. the worst 

Camillo was an honest man 

whom I proclaim a man oftrutli.... 
what ail'st thou, man? I have seen .. 

to have helped the old man! 

you're a made old man 

a man, they say, that from very 

of such a man, who hath a daughter 

alas, poor man ! a million of 

I know this man well 

he hath songs for man, or woman 

whoop, do me no harm, good man . . 

fear not thou, man, thou shalt 

two maids wooing a man 

knowledge, more than was ever man's 
know man from man? dispute his ., 



MAN— you have undone a man of. Winlet's Tule, iv. 3 MAN-the nian that mocks at it Ridmrd //. !. H 



_ v. 3 



— 2 find.) 



— i. 2 

— i". 2 

— i. 2 

— ii. 1 
_ ii. 1 

— ii. 1 



— iii. 2 



— iv. 5 

— iv. b 

— iv. 5 

— V. 1 

— V. 1 

— V. 1 

•7'sTale,\. 1 

— i. 2 



iv. 3 



_ iv. 3 



iv. 3 



iii 


2 


111 


■i 


in 


■i 


'." 


2 


iv 


2 


IV 


3 


IV 


3 


IV 


3 


iv 


3 



— iv. 4 



iv. 4 
iv. 4 
V. 1 



call thee something more than man 
sometliing to be a reasonable man .. 
and had not the old man come in.. ., 

fear not, man; here's no harm 

time that the unjust man doth thrive 

yields a careful man work (rep.') 

is no honest man neither to his father 

a great man, I'll warrant 

will break the back of man 

has the old man e'er a son, sir 

in man , besides the king (rep.) 

and leave this young man in pawn .. — iv. 3 

as much as this old man does — iv. 3 

we are blessed in this man — iv. 3 

that e'er man bred his liopes out of .. — v. 1 

more worth tlian any man — v. 1 

to greet a man, not worth her pains. . — v. 1 
I brought the old man and his son .. — v. 2 

or liand of man hath done — v. 3 

let no man mock me — v. 3 

forward, old man, do not break. Comedy of Errors, i. 1 

many a man would take you at — _i. 2 

a man is master of his liberty — ii. 1 

here comes your man, now is — ii. 1 

so no man, that hath a name — i|. 1 

was there ever any man thus beaten — ii. 2 
time for a man to "recover his hair (rep.) — ii. 2 

whilst man, and master, laugh — ii. 2 

it would make a man mad as — iji. 1 

a man may break a word with you .. — iii. 1 
am I your man? am I myself? (rep.) — iii- 2 
a woman's man, and besides (lep.) .. — iii. 2 

as a man may not speak of — ;!!• 2 

a man may go over shoes — iii. 2 

as from a bear a man would run 

you are a merry man, sir 

there's no man is so vain 

I see, a man here needs not 

a man is well holp up 

why, man, what is the matter? 

there's not a man I meet 

the man, sir, that when gentlemen . . 
he that lirings any man to answer , . 

one that thinks a man always 

your man and you are marvellous . . 

fear me not, man, I will not 

here comes my man ; I think 

housed within this man 

both man and master is possessed. . . . 

ah me, poor man, how pale 

go, bind this man, for he is 

to see a wretched man do outrage .... 

I know the man ; what is 

how is the man esteemed 

hath this possession held the man? .. — v. 1 
much different from the man he was — v. 1 

came it, that the man was mad — v. 1 

would mad or man or beast — v. 1 

make of him a formal man again .... — v. 1 

my master and his man (rep.) — v. 1 

his man with scissars nicks — v. 1 

a living dead man — v. 1 

there left me and my man — v. 1 

Dromio, and his man, unbound — v. 1 

and whatsoever a man denies — v. 1 

behold a man much wronged — v. 1 

which is the natural man, and which — v. 1 

if thou be'st the man that — v. 1 

my man did bring them me (rep.).... — y. 1 

what bloody man is that? Macbeth, i. 2 

he shall live a man forbid — i. 3 

or are you aught that man may — i. 3 

shakes so my single state of man — i. 3 

I dare do all that may become a man . . — j . 7 

durst do it, then you were a man — _i. 7 

if a man were porter of hell-gate — ii- 3 

no man's life was to be trusted — ii. 3 

no man: the expedition of my — ii. 3 

which the false man does easy — ii. 3 

as troubled with man's act — ii- 4 

let every man be master of his — iii. 1 

given to the common enemy of man . . — iii. 1 

to pray for this good man — iii. 1 

are you a man? Ay — iii- 4 

brains were out, the man would die. . — ii;. 4 

what man dare, I dare — iii. 4 

being gone, I am a man again ., — iii. 4 

brought forth the secretest man — iii. 4 

laugh to scorn the power of man — i v. 1 

if you will take a homely man's advice — iv. 2 

the dead man's knell is tliere — iv. 3 

what, man 1 ne'er pull your liat .... 

dispute it like a man (rep.) 

who would have tliought the old mai 

excite the mortified man 

no man, that's born of woman 

by man that's of a woman born 

liatli cowed my better part of man I . . 
only lived but till he was a man — 

but like a man he died 

out on thee, rude man 1 

in the large composition of this man 

my picked man of countries 

that same mighty man? 

some proper man, I hope 

son to the elder brother of this man.. 

the half part of a blessed man 

common man; believe me (rep.) .... 

made thee a most ugly man 

that a man should speak those 

corrupted pardon of a man 

H ubert shall be your man 

the dull ear of a drowsy man 

many a poor man's son would — iv. 1 

this is the man should do — iv. 2 

to hurt his master, no man [ifn(.-man'sj — iv. 3 

made him a man Ilichnrd 11. i. 2 

against what man thou comest .... — i. 3 

to a wise man ports and happy .... — i, 3 



_ 


iv 


3 


— 


IV 


3 


— 


V 


1 


— 


V 


2 


— 


V 


3 


— 


V 


7 


— 


V 


7 


— 


V 


7 


— 


V 


7 


Johl 


,i 


1 



in. 1 



— in. 4 



what comfort man? 

out with it boldly, man — ii. I 

grown ban krufit, like a broken man — ii. 1 

tliou art a banislied man — ii. 3 

for every mail that Bolingbroke .... — iii- 2 

easily won to fawn on any manl .... — iii- '-' 

of comfort no man speak — iii. 2 

speak sweetly, man — iii. 2 

let no man speak again to alter — lii. '- 

banishment on yon proud man — iii. 3 

speak fondly, like a frantick man.. .. — iii. 3 

make a second fall of cursed man? .. — iii. 4 

look upon that man — iv. 1 

shall I make to tliisbase man — iv. 1 

will no man, say amen? — iv. i 

thou haught, insulting man (rep.).... — iv. I 

no man cried, God save him! — v. i 

he is as like thee as a man may be.... — v. S 

can no man tell of my unthrifty .... — v. c 

that no man enter till my tale — v. i 

tlie true man's put to death — v. :: 

believe not this hard-hearted man .. — v.i 

T would tliou wert the man that. ..... — v. ■! 

where no man never comes — v. ■' 

break the neck of that proud man — v. ! 

created to be awed by man — v. .' 

in the streets, and no man regards it. 1 Henry W. i. ' 

if a man should speak truly — ;• ■ 

for a man to labour in his vocation — i. '■ 

that ever cried. Stand, to a true man — )• : 

never hold that man my friend — i. • 

upon the head of this forgetful man.. — _i. ■ 

truly as a man of falsehood may .... — ii- 

purchase, as I am a true man — ii. 

to turn true man, and to leave — ii- ■ 

happy man be his dole, say I (rep.) .. — ii. : 

roguery to be found in villanous man — ii. ■ 

why, you whoreson round man ! . . . . — ii. 

what a hundred, man? I am a rogue — ij- ■ 

dealt better since I was a man — ii- ' 

bound, every man of tliem — ij. 

I would give no man a reason upon — ii- 

manner of man is he? An old man.. — ii- -i 

it blows a man up like a bladder ... . — ij- 4 

and yet there is a virtuous man — ij. 4 

what manner of man, an' it like ()pp.) — ii. 4 

if that man should be lewdly given — ii- l 

fat old man; a tun of man is — ii- « 

my lord, the man I know — ij- 4 

become a cart as well as another man — ii. -i 

a gross fat man. As fat as — ij- 4 

to answer thee, or any man — i]. < 

I think, there is no man speaks — ijj- 1 

why, so can I; or BO can any man.... — iji- ' 

that man is not alive, might — ijj- 1 

the soul of every man propheticoUy.. — ?!J- "^ 

as many a man doth of a death's head — ?!!• 3 

so has my husband, man by man, boy — iij. 3 

he is an honest man. Good my lord — !'!••' 

like a foul-mouthed man as he is — ijj. 3 

I am an honest man's wife — ijj- 3 

man knows not where to have her (rep.) — iji. 3 

as thou art but man, I dare — ijj. 3 

I have more flesh than another man — iii. 3 

heart's love, hath no man (rep.) — iv. 1 

tush man, mortal men, mortal men.. — iv. 2 

yea, every man shall be my friend .. — v. 1 

and that no man might draw short. . — v. 2 

he gave you all the duties of a man — v. 2 

let each man do his best — v. 2 

have better spared a better man — v. 4 

of a man.who hath not the life of a man — v. 4 

tell me, this fat man was dead? — v. 4 

I am not a double man ; but if I be - . — v. i 

if the man were alive, andwould deny it — v. 4 
and notaman of them brings. .2/fe?iri///'. (indiic.) 

yea. this man's brow, like to — i. 1 

even such a man, so faint — i. I 

he is a man who with a double — i. 1 

and counsel every man tlie aptest — |. I 

this foolish compounded clay, man . . — i. 2 

as if he had writ man ever since — j. 2 

and if a man is thorough with — i'- 2 

did I say you were an honest man?. . — j. 2 

all the other gifts appertinent to man — i. 2 

a man can no more separate — i. 2 

the utmost man of expectation — _i. 3 

neither woman, man, nor child — ii. 1 

what man of good temper would — ii. 1 

if thou wert nn honest man, thyself — ij. 1 

if a man will make court'sy — ij. 1 

let tlie end try the man — jj- 2 

it would be every mon's thought (rep.) — ij. 2 

what a maidenly man at arms — ij. 2 

every man must know that — ij. 2 

I will bar no honest man my house.. — ij. 4 

than will do me good, for no man's . . — ii. 4 

the fiery Trigon, his man, be not — ii. 4 

when the man of action is called on. . 
and truer-hearted man,— well, fare .. 

this Percy was the man nearest 

a man may prophecy, with a near . . 

"Will Squele, a Cotswold man 

it would have done a man's heart good 
I knew him a good backsword man. . 

when a man is, as they say (rpp.) — m. a 

butif he had been a man's tailor (rep.) — iii. 2 

a man can die but once; we owe — iii. 2 

no man's too good to serve his prince — iii. 2 

a man? care I for the limb (rep.) — iii. 2 

give me this man; he presents no — — iii. 2 

like a man made after supper — iii. 2 

to see you liere an iron man, cheering — iv. 2 

that nian, that sits within — iv. 2 

tryourfortunes tothelast man — iv. 2 

as good a man as he, sir, whoe'er — iv. 3 

nor a man cannot make him laugh . . — iv. 3 

of this little kingdom, man, to arm . . — iv 3 

an lioucst mun, sir, is able (rep.) .... — v. 1 



— 11. 4 



111 



_ 


i72 1 


— 


i. 2 





i. 2 





i.2 


ii. (clionis) 1 


_ 


ii. 1 





ii. 2 


— 


ii.2 


— 


ii. 2 


— 


ii. 2 


_ 


ii.2 










^~ 


ii. 3 


— 


ii. 3 


— 


iii. 1 


— 


iii. 2 





iii. 2 





iii. 2 


— 


iii. 2 



iii. 6 
iii. 6 
iii. 6 



iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 



MAN-no man could better coraraiind.2He«iy/;', v. I 

tliouch no man be assured wlmt — v. f 

that liave a man so bold, that dares . . v. i 

had been a man of tliis mettle v. ; 

tlieii say an old man can do somewhat — v. a 

■which blows no man to good — v. 3 

deliver them like a mau of tliis world — v. 3 

Harry tlie tifth's tlie man — v. 3 

let us talce any man's horses — v. 3 

tliere hatli been a man or two — v. 4 

for the uian is dead, tliat you and Pistol — v. 4 

thou tliiu man in accuser! — v. 4 

sjiealt to that vain man — v. 5 

I know tliee not, old man — , v. 5 

dreamed of sucli a kind of man — v. 5 

I will be tlie man yet, tliat shall — v. 5 

and this is not tlie mau: my tonirue — (epil.) 

thousand parts divide one man.. H<;n;i/r. i. (cliorus) 
[Co/.An/.] when the man dies, let tlic 
the state of luau in divers functions 
plodded like a man for working-days 

let e\'er3- man now task his 

in the breast of everj' man — 

endure cold as anotlier man's sword. . 
show the valour of a man, and put up 

nay, but the man that was his 

if eachnuui do his best 

enlarge t)ie man committed (ir;).).... 
and tliis man hath, for a few light . . 

to mark the fuU-frau^^ht man 

is like another fall of man 

if ever man went to Arthur's bosom 

what, man! be of good clieer 

there's nothing so becomes a man.... 

could not be a man to me 

an ticks do not amount to a man .... 
never broke any man's head but .... 

as well as any military man in 

being as goot a man as yourself .... 
and a man that I love and honour . . 
nnd he is a man of no estimation .... 

here comes the mau. Captain 

let man go free, and let not liemp. . . . 
he is not the man that he would .... 

tlie duke is a prave man 

the duke hatli lost never a man .... 

if your majesty know the man 

nay, the man hatli no wit 

the king is but a man (rep.) 

no man should possess him with .... 

as every siek man in his bed 

'tis certain, every man that dies ill . . 

wish not one man more (rep.) 

■we would not die in that man's company 
shall the good man teach his son .... 

perish the man, whose mind 

the man, that once did sell the 

not so much of man in me — 

and not a man of them, that we 

as your majesty is an honcBt man. . . . — 

if any man challenge this — 

I would fain see the man — 

I met this man ■B'ith my glove — 

appeared to me but as a common mau — i 

de tongues of mans is be full of — 

as man and wife, being two — 

what say'st thou, man, before dead. . 1 Henry VI. 

a third man thinks, ■without — 

I'll ne'er fly from a mau — 

a baser mau of arms by far — 

O I/ord, have mercy on me, woful man — 

she hath beheld the mau whose — 

is this the man? t>-(>p.) _ 

dare no man answer in a case — 

it will glimmer thro' a blind man's eye — 

even like a man new haled — 

more than well beseems a man — 

to be a man just and upright — 

twit with coivardice a man half dead — 

as good a man as York — 

ill beseeming any common man .... — 

no simple man that sees tliis — 

a breathing valiant man — 

sell every man his life as dear — 

the cause I cannot aid tlie man — 

that ever-living man of memory .... — 

a man of great authority in 

Charles the Dauphin is a proper mau — 

fond man! remember, thou hast — 

sure the man is mad — 

you have suborned this man 

a married man! that's most 

but privilege of a private man — ... 

than a man o' the church iHenryVI. i. 1 

■were I a man, a duke, and next ' " 

nay, fear not, man, we are alone .... 
what say'st thou, man? hast thou . . 

make merry, man, with thy 

for he's a good man I Jesu 

my lord cardinal's man, for 

York ismeetest man to be your 

is most unmeet of any man 

because here is a man accused of .... 
this is the man that doth accuse his. . 

say, man, were these tliy •words? 

do not cast away an honest man for. . 
the spite of man prevaileth against me 

vea, man and birds, are fain of 

had not your man put up 

a blind man at Saint Alban's irep.) 

the greatest man in England 

in the Isle of Man (rep. ii. 4) 

tlie armourer and his man 

drink, and fear not your man 

as It were, upon my man's Instigation 

and myself an honest man 

not his wont to be the hindmost man 
Humphrey is no little man in England 

Gloster is a man unsounded yet 

the cutting short that fraudful mau 



, nor no man wrong 



iii 


1 


n 


2 
4 


iv 
iv 


1 
2 


JV 


2 


IV 


3 


IV 


3 


V 


1 


V 


3 


V 


■A 


V 


i 


V 


4 


V 

V 


4 
4 


l.\ 


1 

2 




2 


i 


2 


i 


3 


J 


3 


i 


■A 


i 


3 


1 


3 


1 


3 


i. 


3 


i 


3 


1. 


3 


u. 


1 
1 


11. 

ii. 


1 
2 


11. 


3 


ii. 


3 


ii. 


3 


ii. 


3 


11. 


3 


iii' 


1 
1 


\\\' 


i 
1 



iv. 2 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 



iv. 10 

iv. 10 

iv. 10 

V. 1 



iii 


1 


111 


1 


111 


1 


111 


2 


III 


2 


m 


3 


IV. 


3 


IV. 


6 



— iv. 7 



MAN-wrong 

nj man alive so fain as I 

fear lieep with the mean-born man.. 
didst ever hear a man bo penitent? .. 
woe IS me tor Gloster, wretched man! 

full ghastly like a strangled man — iii. 2 

that no man should disturb your.... iii. 2 

a cunning man did calculate — iv 1 

an honest man, and a good bricklayer 
scribbled o'er, should undo a man ? . . 
and I was never mine own man since 

the man is a proper mau 

like an honest plain-dealing man? .. 
sliall be encountered with a man as good 

why dost thou quiver, man ? 

not amiss to cool a man's stomach .. 

to combat a poor famished man 

she liatli lost her best mau 

art thou the man that slew him? 

can brook I bow a knee to man 

is the man grown mad? _ y. 1 

to rob a man, to force a spotless v. 1 

ah wretched man! would I had died. SHenniVl.i. 1 

hated both of God and man _ i. 3 

he IS a man, and Clifford, cope with him _ i. 3 

why art thou patient, man? _ i. 4 

and tho' man's face be fearful — ii.2 

years a mortal man may live ii. 5 

this man, whom hand to hand I _ iii a 

to some man else, as this dead man.. ii. 5 

being the earl of Warwick's man.... — ii. 5 

weep, wretched man ii. 5 

[Co;.] man, for the loss of thee _ ii.a 

here comes a mau, let's stay' _ ;;; i 

not a man comes for redress . . . 

a man at least 

do I not breathe a man ? 

to the man that took liim 

am I then a mau to be beloved? 

become a banished mau 

each man take his stand 

nay, this way, man 

tush, man! abodements (rra.) . 
the good old man would fain . . . 

surly 'Warwick mans the wall _ 

naked, foil a man at arms _ v. 

suspect a fearful man _ v. 

he was a man v. 

and many an old man's sigh — v! 

and that good man of worHilp Richard III. i 

there is no man secure — 1. 

that no man shall have private i. 

we speak uo treason, man — i. 

know'st no law of God nor man — i. 

vouchsafe, diffused infection of a man — i. 

then man was never true — i. 

myself to be a marvellous proper man — i. 

a man that loves not me — i. ; 

cannot a plain m.an live — i. ; 

no man but prophesied revenge — i. ; 

as I am a christian faithful man i. ■ 

a man a coward; a man cannot (rpp.) — i. • 

a man, as you are. But not — i. - 

spurn at his edict, and fulfil a man's? — i. ■ 

and no man in the presence ii. 

but he, poor man, by your first — ii. : 

my brother killed no man _ ii. ] 

and not a man of y ou liad so ii. 1 

not a man would speak _ ii. ] 

and make me die a good old man ! .. — ii. i 

reason almost with a man that — ii. ; 

more can you distinguish of a man.. — iii. 1 

that Julius Cffisar was a famous man — iii. 1 

an'if I live until I be a man — iii. i 

chop oft' his head, man _ iii. i 

wliere is your boar-spear, man? — iii. 2 

I tell thee man, 'tis better witli me.. — iii. 2 

when I met this holy man, the men — iii. 2 

than my lord Hastings, uo man might — iii. 4 

there's ne'er a man in Christendom — iii. 4 

that with no man here he is offended — iii. 4 

so dear I loved the man, that I _ iii. 5 

true ornaments to know a holy man — iii. 7 

I partly know the man _ iv. 2 

by the man that slew her brothers . . — iv. 4 

away alone, no man knows whither — iv. 4 

every man's conscience is a thousand — v. 2 

every man unto his charge — v. 3 

enacts more wonders than a man. ... v. 4 

a man may weep upon his Henry I'JII. Cprol.) 

every man, that stood, showed — (prol.) 

no man's pie is freed from his — i. 1 

every man, after the hideous — i. I 

not a man in England can advise — i. 1 

free pardon to each man that — i.2 

this man so complete, who was — i.2 

there'smischiefm this man _ i.2 

in freedom, and this man out of prison? — i. 2 

the noble ruined man you speak of — ii. ) 

this from a dying man receive — ii. 1 

a man of my lord cardinal's — ii. 2 (letter) 

slept upon this bold bod man — ii.2 

or this imperious man will work.... — ii.2 

this good man, this just and learned — ii. 2 

such a man I would have wished for — ii. 2 

in this man's place before him {rep.) — ii. 2 

kept him a foreign man still _ ii.2 

grieve an able man, to leave so _ ii.2 

that man i' the world, who shall _ ii. 4 

like a good man, your late censure.. — iii. 1 

the prime man of the state? — iii. 2 

•went beyond all man's endeavours.. — iii. 2 

and no man see me more iii. 2 

dare mate a sounder man than iii. 2 

I could despise this man, but that I — iii. 2 

press not a falling man too far — iii. 2 

this is the state of man (rep.) — iii. 2 

wonder, a great man should decline? — iii. 2 

too heavy for a man that hopes iii. 2 

but he's a learned man _ iii. 2 



MAN— I am a poor fallen man 

how can man then, the image 

that ever lay by man 

no man living could say [, 

a man iu much esteem 

as a mau sorely tainted '.....'. 

alas, poor man! at last 

an old man, broken with '.'.'.'.' 

he was a man of an unbounded 

greater honours to his age than man 
or let me lose the fiishion of a man ! . . 
tongues, than I myself, poor man .. 

what manner of man are you? 

look, the good man weeps! .". 

to suffer a man of his place 

childish pity to one man's honour .. 

a man that more detests 

no man dare accuse you ,,,'. 

being but a private man again '. 

tisa cruelty to load a falling man .. 

of this man to be vexed 1 

against this man, (whose honesty..!! 

good man, sit down (rep. ) 

every man shall eat in safety 

thou hast made me now a man 

this day, no man think he has . . 



. . Henry Fill. iii. 2 
— iii. 2 



iv. I 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 
V. 1 



V. 2 
V. 4 
V. 4 
V. 4 



i 


2 


1 


2 


i 


2 


i 


3 


i 


3 


i 


3 


11 


1 


II 


1 


11 


2 


ii 


2 


]] 


3 


11. 


3 



he is a very man, per se (,rep.) i'Troilus <§• Cress, i! 2 

JUector s a gallant man _ j 2 

Troilus is the better man (rep.) _ i! 2 

IS he so young a man, and so old — i.2 

better than any man in all Phrygia — i! 2 

an twere a man born in April _ i.2 

.dineas; is not that a brave man?.... i! 2 

and he's a man good enough (rep.) .. =' " 
brave man? O a brave man! [rep.) .. 

do you know what a man is? 

season a man? Ay, aminced (rep.) .. 
one that was a man when Hector's (rep) 

a man distilled out of our virtues 

in taint of our best man (rep.) 

what's the matter, man? 

no man is beaten voluntary 

though no man lesser fears the Greeks 
propugnation tliere is in one man's.. 

he is a privileged man ; proceed 

if you will favour the man 

a better man than I am? _ „ „ 

why should a man be proud? (rep.) .. _ ji" 3 

here is a man, —but 'tis before — ji' 3 

I wished myself a man _ in! 2 

wise, and love, exceeds man's might — iii, 2 

and are the proud man's fees _ jii. 3 

not a man, for not being simple man — iii! 3 

that man— how dearly ever parted .. iii' 3 

that no man is the lord of anything _ iii" 3 

heavens, what a man is there! _ iii! 3 

how one man eats into another's .... — iii'3 

thou great and complete man in.3 

than an effeminate man in iii! 3 

the man's undone for ever iii 3 

what think you of this man _ iii! 3 

a man may wear it on both sides .... _ iii! 3 

no man alive can love, in such _ iv 1 

a naughty man, let it sleep? _ iv! 2 

you're an odd man; give even (rep.) — iv 5 

gentle, and too free a man _ iv' 5 

let an old man embrace thee _ iv' 5 

proud man, to answer such iv' 5 

any man at first sight. And any man — v 2 

never did young mau fancy _ y" 2 

life every man holds dear; but (rep.) _ v' 3 

how now, young man? mean'st — v! 3 

better fits a lion, than a man v! 3 

that, unless a man were cursed — v' 3 

much more a fresher man, had I _ v! B 

this is the man I seek y" 9 

great Hector was as good a man as he — v. 10 

a most incomparable man Timoti of Athens i. I 

shaped out a man, wiiom this 'i! 1 

with one man beckoned from i! 1 

call the man before thee i! 1 

I am a man that from my ! i! 1 

this man of thine attempts ! _ i! 1 

the man is honest j! 1 

almost the natural man; for since [rep.) i! | 

which will not cost a man a doit .... i. 1 

tlie strain of man's bred out into .... j! 1 

that ever governed man _ i! 1 

a humour there does not become a man — i! 2 

but yond' man's ever angry i, 2 

dip their meat in one man's blood — i! 2 

is the readiest man to kill him — i 2 

a huge man, I should fear to drink . . — i! 2 

which ne'er left man i' the mire i.2 

I pray for no man but myself (rep.) — i. 2 (grace) 

that man might ne'er be wretched .. — i.2 

that man goes up aud down in — ii.2 

nor thou altogether a wise man — ii.2 

I pr'ythee, man, look cheerly ii.2 

every man has his fault, and honesty — iii! 1 

denied that honourable man? iii. 2 

see the monstrousness of man iii! 2 

1 was the first man that e'er received — iii. 3 

when he made man politic iii. 3 

the villanies of man will set - iii. 3 

he is a man, setting his fate aside — iii. 5 

tlie worst that man can breathe .... iii. .>i 

but who is man, that is not angry? .. — iii 5 

every man here's so. What would . . _ iii. b 

this is the old man still — iii. 6 

each man to his stool _ iii! g 

lend to each man enough (rep.).. — iii. 6 (grace) 

of man, and beast, the infinite — iii. 6 

be of Timon, man, and all humanity I — iii. « 

when man's worst sin is, he does iv. 2 

and say, this man's a flatterer? — iv. 3 

showing me again the eyes of man?.. iv. 3 

is man so hateful to thee (rep.) _ iv. 3 

with man's blood paint the ground.. _ iv. 3 

a man! if thou dost perform (rep.) .. iv. 3 



MxVN — in hollow bones ofman..Tijnon of Athen 

being sick of man's ntikindness — 

arrogant man, is puftcd, engenders . . — 
no more bringout ingrateful man! {yep.') — 

more man? plague! plague! — 

what man didst thou ever know .... — 

think, thy slave man rebels — 

so miserable, b\it a man may be true — 
despised and ruinous man my lord?. . — 

wlien man was wislied to love — 

if thou crant'st thou'rt man — 

I ne'er had honest man about me — 

surely, this man was born of woman — 
I do proclaim one honest man {rep.) — 
ne'er see thou man, and let me ne'er — 
not paint a man so bad as tlyself . ... — 

each man apart, all single — 

which looks like man, is friendly with — 

the former man may make him — 

tliis man was riding from Alcibiades — 

tliere does not live a man — 

not a man shall pass his i^uarter .... — 

the cranks and offices of man Coriolan 

a sick man's appetite, who desires — 

ever man so proud as is this Marcius? — 

perform to the utmost of a mau — 

first seeing he had proved himself a mau — 

it more becomes a man, than gilt — 

no, nor a man that fears j'ou less .... — 
there is the man of my soul's hate .. — 
tongue from every meaner man's. ... — 

as with a man busied about — 

in Corioli, at a poor man's house — 

no more of him; he is a worthy man — 
if it be, the man I speak of cannot .. — 
he proved best man i' the field .... 

worthy man! He cannot but 

so soon out as another man's will — 

there was never a worthier man — 

the bewitchment of si^me popular man — 
go without any honest man's voice .. — 
my masters? have you chose this man? — 

no: no man saw 'em. He said — 

not a man of their infirmity — 

tliis man has marred his fortune .... — 
the city, and be every man himself . . — 

I play the man I am {rep.) — 

thy tears are Salter tliau a younger man's — 

to seek a single man — 

was not a man my father ! 

good man, the wounds that he 

the fittest time to corrupt a man's wife 
and am the man, I think, that shall 

speak, man; what's thy name? 

dost not tjiink me for the man I am. . 

never man sighed truer breath 

he is simply the rarest man i' the .... 
I had as lief be a condemned man .... 

as any man I can imagine 

crest up again, and tlie man in blood 
than nature, that shapes niiin better.. 

ever taints the happy man 

this man, Aufidius, was my beloved.. 

this last old man, whom with 

as if a man were a^ithor of himself .. 
can alter the condition of a man? .... 

is grown from man to dragon 

as with a man by his own alms 

the man is noble, and his fame 

which this man's life did owe you .. 
what man is that? A soothsayer.. /«(/k 
and this man is now become a god .. 

a mau of such a feeble temper 

why, man, he doth bestride the .... 

there is in it but one only man 

I do not know the man I should avoid 
I am no true man. What said he . . 

an' I had been a man of any 

name to thee a man most like 

a man no mightier than thyself 

poor man! I Know, he would not be.. 
and to such a man, there is no fleering 



and the state of man, like to a little. . — 

yes, every man of them; and no man — 

and every man hence to his idle bed. . — 

till each man drop by lottery — 

shall uo man else be touched — 

sometime hath his hour with every man — 

here is a sick man, that would — 

I have a man's mind 

will crowd a feeble man almost — 

do so; and let no man abide — 

ay, every man away: Brutus — 

shall be as strong as any man's — 

let each man render me his l^loody hand — 

the ruins of the noblest man — 

not a man depart, save I alone — 

Brutus is an nononi-able man {rep.')., — 

there's not a nobler man in Rome.... — 

a plain blunt man, that love — 

he gives, to every several man — 

a married man, or a bachelor {rep.) , . — 

this is a sliglit umVieritable man — 

lay these honours on this man 
and let no man come to our tei 

because I knew the man — 

the foremost man of all this world.... — 

away, slight man ! Is't possible? — 

no rnan bears sorrow better — 

yotnig man, thou couldst not die .... — 

that a man might know — 

more tears to this dead man — 

keep this man safe, give him — 

1 found no man, but he was true .... — 
what man is that? My master's man — 
and no man else hath honour by .... — 
flay to all the world, this was a man! — 
alike feeds beast as man .... Aninny ffClecpair 



iv 


3 


IV 


H 


IV 


:t 


IV 


:i 


IV 


3 


IV 


3 


IV 


;< 


IV 


3 



— II. ■ 



— IV. ; 



— I. 2 



— I. 2 



— li. i 



— IV. 2 



MAN-is this the man? Is't you, s\r. Ajitony ACleo. i. 2 

to see a Imndsome man loose-wived . . — i. 2 

the nian from Sicyon — i. i! 

she is cunning past man's thought ., — i. 2 

of a man from him, it shows to man.. — i. 2 

3'ou shall find there a man, wlio is. . . . — i. 4 

and tlie ebbed man, ne'er loved — i. 4 

'tis the man; but note him — i. 6 

so does it no man else — i. 5 

paragon again my man of men — i. 5 

witli snakes, not like a formal man. . — ii. .0 

thou'rt an honest man — ii. 5 

the man is innocent — ii.5 

they would have one man but a man? — ii. ei 

a man prepared to take this offer .... — ii. 6 

I will praise any man that will praise — ii. 6 

here they'll be, man; some o' their .. — ii. 7 

I am the man will give thee — ii. 7 

the third part of tlie world, man .... — ii. 7 

the holding every man shall bear.... — ii. 7 

so is he, being a man — iii. 2 

a proper man. Indeed, he is so — iii. 3 

the man hath seen some majesty .... — iii. 3 

strange news come, sir. Whatman.. — iii. 4 

will appear there for a man — iii. 7 

well I know the man — iii. 7 

now I must to the young man send. . — iii. 9 

a private man in Alliens — iii. 10 

the bidding of the fullest man — iii. 11 

leave thee now, like a man of steel .. — iv. 4 

as it had been each man's like — iv. 8 

behold this man; commend unto .... — iv. 8 

what man is this? stand close — iv. 9 

best force is forth to man his galleys — iv. 10 

'tis said, man; and farewell — iv. 12 

wilt thou not answer, man? — iv. 12 

the business of this man looks — v. 1 

might see but such another man! .... — v. 2 

such a man as this I dreamed of? .... — v. 2 

wert tiiou a man, thou wouldst — v. 2 

this is the m.aii. Avoid, and leave him — v. 2 
you do not meet a man but frowns . . Cymheline, i. 1 

alack, good man! and therefore banished — i. 1 

stuff within, endows a man but he .. — i. 1 

truly read, what kind of man he is .. — i. 1 

tenderness than doth become a manl — i. 2 

he is a man, worth any woman — 1.2 

desire my man's abode where I — i. 7 

that man,— who knows by history .. — i. 7 

was there ever man had such luck !. . — ii. 1 

and man's o'erlaboured sense repairs — ii. 2 

the most patient man in loss {rep.) .. — ii. 3 

gold which makes the true man {rep.) — ii. 3 

love, where there's another man — ii. 4 

that most venerable man, which I .. — ii.5 

that tends to vice in man — ii.5 

one that rode to his execution, man.. — iii. 2 

I see before me, man, nor here — iii. 2 

Pisaniol man! where is Posthumus? — iii. 4 

speak, man! thy tongue — iii. 4 

wretched man, a thing the most .... — iii. 4 

and am almost a man already — iii. 4 

that man of hers, Pisanio — iii. 5 

I would think thee an honest man .. — iii. 5 

I see, a man's life is a tedious one .. — iii. 6 

he is a man; I'll love him as — iii. 6 

for a man and his glass to confer .... — iv. 1 

so man and man should be — iv. 2 

the man that gave them thee — iv. 2 

I mean, to man, he had not — iv. 2 

what man thou might'st have made — iv. 2 

this bloody man the care on't — iv. 2 

a headless man! — iv. 2 

that I never did see man die? — iv. 4 

an old man, and two boys! — v. 3 

an old man twice a boy — v. 3 

the old man and his sons M'ere {rep.) — v. 3 

'tween man and man, they weigh not — v. 4 

when once he was mature for man .. — v. 4 

but a manthat were to sleep — v. 4 

that a man should have the best use — v. 4 

imless a man would marry a gallows — v. 4 

strive, man, and speak — v. 5 

qualities that man loves woman for. . — v. 5 

that headless man I thought had — v. 5 

this man is better than the man he slew — v. 5 

indeed, a banished man — v. 5 

no man shed tears for noble Mutius'. . Tints And. i. 2 

beholden to the man that brought .. — i. 2 

take up this good old man — i. 2 

what, man! more water glideth by .. — ii. 1 

where never man's eye may behold.. — ii. 3 

upon the dead man's earthy checks. . — ii. 4 

that man's face can fold — ii. 4 

no man is by, and you recount — iii. 1 

why, 'tis no matter, man — iii. 1 

happy man! they have befriended thee — iii. 1 

stands my other son, a banished man — iii. 1 

for thou, poor man, hast drowned — iii. 1 

the woefuliest man that ever — iii. 1 

no man should be mad but I — iii. 2 

alas, poor man! — iii. 2 

that if I were a man — iv. 1 

can you hear a good man groan — i v. 1 

the old man hath found tlieir — iv. 2 

then let no man, but I, do execution — iv. 2 

and leave you not a man of war — iv. 3 

for the man must not be hanged — iv. 3 

wdien I have walked like a private man — iv. 4 

as you think needful of the man — v. 1 

as kill a man, or else devise — v. 1 

know thou, sad man, I am not — v. 2 

find'st a man that's like thyself — v. 2 

tell us, old man, how shall'we — v. 2 

or more than any living man could.. — v. 3 

come, come, thou reverend man of Rome — v. 3 

no funeral rite, nor man in mournful — v. 3 
assuming man's infirmities ....Pcriclei, i. (Gower) 

to hear an old man sing — i. ((iower) 

ye gods that made me man — i. I 



MAN— he's no man on wliom perfections.PcrjWps, i. 1 

to make man his lawful music — i. I 

is wronged by man's oppression — i. I 

if a king bid a man be a villain i. 3 

that man and wife draw lots i. 4 

where each man thinks all is writ .. — ii. (Rower) 

all perishen of men, of pelf _ij. (Gower) 

earthly man is but a substance that .. — ii. 1 
why, man? Because he should have .. — ii. 1 
a man whom the waters and the wind — ii 1 

a man shrunk up with cold ii, 1 

for I am a man, pray see me buried ii. 1 

and what a man cannot get ii. 1 

like a poor man's right in the law — ii. I 

seas, that spare not any man — ii. 1 

outward habit by the inward man .... — ii. 2 

see, not a man in private ii. 4 

or I will make you man and wife — ii. ,') 

the former, making a man a god — iii. 2 

what else, man? iv. 3 

have you that a man may deal _ iv. e 

note, this is an honourable man — iv. 6 

and a man whom I am bound to — i^■. n 

where a man may serve seven years . . iv. i; 

this is the man that can, in aught — v. 1 

a man, who for this three months — v. 1 

thou art a man, and I have suffered — v. I 

can you remember what I called the man?— v. 3 

this man, through whom the gods v. 3 

what wouldst tliou do, old man? Leur,i. 1 

an admirable evasion of wlioremaster man — i. 2 

I am no lionest man, if there be i. 2 

idle old man, that still would manage .. i. 3 

how now, who art thou? A man, sir — i. 4 

this man hath had good counsel i. 4 

if a man's brains were in his heels i. 5 

that what a man cannot smell out — i. ."j 

put him on the old man's death — ii. 1 

a tailor make a man? — ii. 2 

put upon him such a deal of man — ii. 2 

a good man's fortune, may grow out .... ia. 2 

in contempt of man, brought near — ii. 3 

when a man is over-lusty at legs — ii. 4 

having more man than wit ii. 4 

when a wise man gives thee ii. 4 

and let tlie wise man fly ii. 4 

dost thou understand me, man? i!. 4 

and sickly fit for the sound man — ii. 4 

who put my man i' the stocks? (»e;).) _ ii. 4 

man's life is cheap as beast's — il. 4 

a poor old man, as full of grief as age — ii. 4 

water-drops, stain my man's cheeks! — ii. 4 

the old man and his people cannot ii. 4 

followed the old man forth _ ii. 4 

in his little world of man to outscorn iii. 1 

at once, that make irgrateful man! _ iii. 2 

weak, and despised old man _ iii. 2 

the man that makes his toe — iii. 2 (song) 

that's a wise man, and a fool iii. 2 

since I was man, such sheets of fire — iii. 2 

man's nature cannot carry the affliction — iii. 2 

and thou simular man of virtue — iii. 2 

hast practised on man's life! iii. 2 

I am a man, more sinned against iii. 2 

commit not with man's sworn — iii. 4 

unaccommodated man is no more — iii. 4 

?oor banished man! — iii. j 
smell the blood of a British man — iii. 4 (song) 

thou robed man of justice _ iii. 6 

if this man come to good iii. 7 

which made me think a man a worm _ iv. 1 

good man [Cni. A'n^-good man's son] — iv. 1 

let the superfluous, and lust-dieted man — iv. I 
undo excess, and each man have enough — iv. 1 
but never man so changed iv. 2 

the difference of man, and man! iv. 2 

and a gracious aged man _ iv. 2 

a man, a prince, by him 60 benefited? _ iv. 2 

milk-livered man! _ jv. 2 

what can man's wisdom do — iv. 4 

remediate in the good man's distress: — iv. 4 

well worth a poor man's taking — iv. 6 

1 took it for a man iv. b 

I pardon that man's life — iv! 6 

a man may see how this world goes - iv. i; 

this would make a man, a man of salt .. — iv. r 

a most poor man, made tame l)j' iv. 6 

nay, come not near the old man _ iv. (i 

I am a very foolish fond old man — iv. 7 

I should know you, and know this man 1 — iv. 7 

for, as I am a man, I think — iv. 7 

our sister's man is certainly miscarried.. — v. 1 
if e'er your grace had speech with man.. — v. i 

away, old man, give me thy hand — v. S 

a man ma.v rot even here — v. 2 

if it be man's work, I will do it — v. 3 

if any man of quality, or degree — v. 3 (hunld) 

came there a man, who having seen — v. 3 

what kind of help? speak, man (;c/).) — v. 3 

I am the very man. I'll see that — v..'. 

nor no man else; all's cheerless v. 3 

any man or maid of Montague's. /.'umtu 4 .hiJicI, i. I 

I serve as good a man as you — i. 1 

bid a sick man in saduesf make — i. 1 

tut, man, one fire buins out another's — i. 2 

'a was a merry man, took up — i. 3 

a man, young" lady! lady (>«).) _ i. 3 

every man bct.ake liim to his legs — i. 4 

wiiat.man! 'tis not fo mucli — i. 6 

you'll he the ni:in! Why, uncle i. 5 

any other part l^eh'U'Mn^ til a man.. ii. 2 

what man art tliDii, (hat tlius _ ii. 3 

in man as well as herbs, gruce — ii. 3 

his watch in every old man's eye. ... ii. 3 

I bear no hatred, blessed man — ii. 3 

X spoke witli liiri man — ji. 4 

any man, thot can write, may 

is lie a man to encounter Tybalt? .. 

a very tall man ! a verj' good 

case OS mine, man may strain .... 



II. 4 

ii. 4 



iii. 1 
iii. 1 
iii. 1 
iii. 2 



JM AN— constrains a man to bow. . Rom 
out upon yon I wliat a man are you? — 11.4 

I saw no man use you — ]>• * 

I dare draw as soon as anotlier man — n. 4 
■within this hour my nuvn shall be .. — ij- 1 
is your man secret? did you ne'er . . — \\- i 

my man's as true as steel — }}■ * 

that Paris is the propcrer man — ;;• •• 

send thy man away. Peter, stay — }]■ b 

vou know not how to choose a man — ii- ft 

face be better than any man's — ]\- b 

quarrel witli a man that (>rr-)..-;-- — ]]]■ ] 
nnv man should buy the fee-simple — iij- 1 

budge ftjr no man's pleasure — in- J 

here comes my man (rep.) — iii- J 

courage, man; the hurt cannot be .. 
and you shall find me a grave man 

a cat, to scratch a man to death I 

lies the man, slain by young Romeo 
all, Where's my man? give me some 

come forth, thou fearful man 

thou fond mad man, hear me 

stand, an' you be a man 

art thou a man? thy form uep-) ■■■■ 
I'll find out your man, and lie shall 

vet no man, like he, doth grieve 

could find out but a man (rep.) 

as one's lieart could wish a man .... 
hide me with a dead man in his — 
he hath still been tried a holy man.. 

unfortunate old manl 

that gives a dead man leave to think 
an' if a man did need a poison now 
this same needy man must sell it me 
come liither, man: I s(se, that thou., 
corse, closed in a dead man's tomb .. 

tempt not a desperate man 

what said my man, when my 

there, by a dead man interred 

here's Romeo's man (rep.) 

known thee for a holy man . 

they are actions that a man mifht play. Hamlet, 1. 

he was a man, take him for all m all — J- 

give every man thine ear — !■ 

take eacli man's censure — !• 

the apparel oft proclaims the man — i- 

canst not then be false to any man — ]■ 

as infinite as man may undergo — i- 

such an enmity with the blood of man . 

would lieart of man once think it? 

for every man hath business 

what so poor a man as Hamlet is 

or the addition, of man, and country . . . 
nor the inward man resembles that . . . 
as of a man faithful and honourable . . . 
then I would yon were so honest a man 
one man picked ont of ten thousand . . . 

to speak to you like an honest man 

what a piece of work is a man ! 

man delights not me (»cp.) 

if you delight not in man _. 

tlie liumorous man shall end his — ]]■ ^ 

ail old man is twice a child — i;- •■ 

bodikin, man, much better: use every man — .11. i 
the proud man's contumely, the pangs ot — in. 1 
of christian, pagan, nor man, have so.... — ni. 2 
as just a man as e'er my conversation .. — ni. ^ 
a man, thatfortune'sbuffetsandrewards — in. ^ 

that man that is not passion's slave — iii. 2 

what should a man do, but be merry? .. — ]]]■ .i 

D great man's memory may outlive — i]\. i 

the great man down, you mark — !!!• ;^ 

like a man to double business bound — — iii- J 
to give the world assurance of a man — _ in. 4 

kills the unseen good old man — iv. 

ont of haunt, this mad young man — iv. 1 

that this man goes loose? — ;v. 3 

a man may fish with the worm — iv. d 

no cause without why the man dies .... — iv. 4 

what is a man, if his chief good — iv. 4 

speak man. Wliere is my father? — iv. s 

should be as mortal as an old man's life? — iv. o 
stands tlie man, good: if the man go ... . — v. 1 
whatinandostthoudigitfor?Foruomau — V. 
sexton here, man and boy, thirty years. . — v- 1 
how long will a man lie 1' the earth .... — v. 1 

why, man, they did make love — v. ^ 

and a man's life's no more than to say .. — v. i 

hut, to know a man well, were to — v. z 

since no man, of aught he leaves, knows — v. 2 

as thou'rt a man, give me the cup — v. 2 

by the faith of man, I know my price ..Othello. 1. 1 

here is the man, this Moor — i. 3 

I have ta'en away this old man's daughter — i. 3 
that heaven had made her such a man .. — i. 3 

if mv bad blame light on the man I — 1 . 3 

a man he is of honesty, and truth — 1.3 

I never found a man that knew how to. . — 1. 3 

come, be a man : drown thyself? — 1 • 3 

Cassio's a proper man: letme seenow .. — i- 3 
and the man commands like a full soldier — 11. 1 

every man put himself into (rfp.) — ii. 2 

what, man! 'tis a night of revels — n. 3 

a man, a [Knf.-O man's] life's but — 11. 3 (song) 
to the general, nor any man of quality. . — 11. 3 

as 1 am an honest man, I thought — ];• 3 

what, man! there are ways to recover .. — 11. 3 
to be now a sensible man, by and by a fool — 11. 3 
or any man living, may be drunk (rep.) — ii. 3 
a man that languishes in your displeasure — 111. 3 

in a man that's just, they are close — lii- 3 

I think that Cassio is an honest man.. .. — jlj- 3 

good name, in man and woman — iii- 3 

are yon a man? have you a soul — i]!- 3 

not say,— he lies any where. Why, man? — iii. 4 
this is within the compass of man's wit. . — ji;- 4 
you'll never meet a more sufficient man — iii. 4 
a man, that all his time hath founded .. — iii- 4 

is not this man jealous? I ne'er saw — iii- 4 

'tis not a year or two shows us a man — — iii. 4 



^-Juliet, ii. 4 MAN— I think, bestow't on any man Otiiello, iv. I 



V. 3 
V. 3 
V. 3 



V. 3 



— i. 5 



i. 5 



— ii. 2 



— 11. ^ 



— ii. 2 



a horned man's a monster, and a beast . . — iv. 1 

good sir, be a man; think, every — iv. 1 

a passion most unsuiting sucli a man — iv. 1 

all in all in spleen, and nothing of a man — jv. 1 

I never knew a woman love man so — iv. 1 

chaste, and true, there's no man happy.. — iv. 2 
fye, there is no such man; it is impossible — iv. 2 

l^caunot go to, man ; nor 'tis not — i v. 2 

a proper man. A very handsome man . , — iv. 3 

'tis but a man gone: forth, my sword — v. 1 

some good man bear him carefully — v. 1 

none in the world, nor do I know the man — v. 1 

send for the man, and ask him — v. 2 

an honest man he is, and liates the slime — v. 2 
disprove this villain, if thou be'st a man — v. 2 
man but a rush against Othello's breast.. — v. 2 
this rash and most unfortunate man? — — v. 2 
MANACLE— I'll manacle thy neck and. Tempest, i. 2 
manaclesof the all-bindin"law..Afeas./orilieas. ii. 4 

and manacle the bear-ward iHennjVI. v. 1 

in manacles, then reason safely Coriolanus, i. 9 

it is a manacle of love Cijmbeline, i. 2 

knock off Ills manacles — v. 4 

MANAGE— the manage of my state Tempest, 1. 2 

and manage it against TuoGen.nf Verona, iii. 1 

hath this brave manage Love's L. Losl,v. 2 

the husbandry and manage of ..Mer. of Venice, iii. 4 
they are taught their manage ....As you Like it, i. 1 
and manage well tlie jest. . J'aming-o/S/i. 1. (indue.) 
can sufiiciently manage, must . . Winter'sTale, iv. 1 
now the manage of two kingdoms .... King John, i. 1 
expedient manage must be made ....lUcliardll.K. 4 
yea, distaff women manage rusty.... — iii. 2 
wanting the manage of unruly jades — iii. 3 

that I cannot manage alone 1 Henry IV.]. 2 

speak terms of manage to thy bounding — ii. 3 

come, manage me your caliver 2 Henry I V. iii. 2 

and a' would manage you his piece thus — 111. 2 

till they obey the manage Henry V III. y. 2 

slack, wanting his m.anage . . Troilus i,- Cressida, 111. 3 
your maids, manage this war ..Antony S^Cleo. ui. 7 

pains to work her to your manage Pericles, iv. 6 

and the son manage his revenue Lear, i. 2 

that still would manage those authorities — 1. 3 

or manage it to part these men ..Romeo ^Juhet.i. 1 

the unlucky manage of this fatal brawl — iii. 1 

to manage privateand domestic quarrel. Oi/ieHo, ii. 3 

MANAGED— well managed . . Comedy ofErrors, iii. 2 

other affairs must now be managed. I Henri/ VI. iv. 1 

MANAGER— manager of mirth?3fti(.iV.'s Dream, y. 1 

druml for your manager is in love.Love'sL. LnsI, 1. 2 

MANAGING— managing of quarrels.. i1/iic;i.4do, 11. 3 

so many had the managing . . Henry V. v. 2 (chorus) 

MANAKIN— a dear manakinto.. 7'«>e////i Night, in. 2 

M AN-CniLD— he was a man-ehild . . Coriolanus, j. 3 

MANDATE— powerful mandate to./4n/onj/(S-C(eo. i. 1 

special mandate, for the state aifairs — Othello, i. 3 

sir, I obey the mandate, and will return — iv. 1 

MANDRAGORA-drink mandragora./ia/..?^ ^feo. 1, 5 

not poppy, nor mandragora.nor all Othello, ni. 3 

MANDRAKE— whoreson mandrake.. 2He7»!//r. 1. 2 
and the whores called him mandrake — iii. 2 

as doth the mandrake's groan 2HenryVl. 111. 2 

and shrieks like mandrakes' Ron^eo HfJubet, yy. 3 

MANE— from the lion's mane..7'roi7!«*C»es'da,ni. 3 
ad mane fratrum sacrifice his. . Titus .-indronicns.L 2 

per Styga, per manes vehor — li. 1 

that plats the manes of horses . . Romeo Sr Juliet, i. 4 

rCol. Knt.'] high and monstrous mane . . Othello, 11. 1 

MAN-ENTERED thus, he waxed.. Cor/ofojms, ii. 2 

MANFULLY in fight Two Gen. of Verona, iv. 1 

in field, slain manfully in arms. TdusAndromcus, 1. 2 

MANGLE— smiled to see him mangle . . Henry V. 11.4 

dishonour mangles truejudgment.. Cor/oianus, 111. 1 

to mangle me with that word . . Romeo {(Juliet, iii. 3 

MANGLED— in mangled forms As you Lilte it, 11. 7 

my favours hide thy mangled face ..\Henryir. v. 4 
or mangled shalt thou be with this . . Henry V. iv. 4 
poor, and mangled peace, dear nurse.. — v. 2 
my mangled body shows, my blood..3Henr.v VI. v. 2 
with his mangled myrmidons .. Troilus^ Cress, v. 5 

or if, a mangled shadow Antony Sr Cleopatra, iy. 2 

of Caesar hath too much mangled . . Cymbeline, lii. 1 
tliv mangled daughter here . . Titus Andjontcus, 111. 1 

wi'fe.hath mangled it? Rnmeo Sj- Juliet. 111. 2 

and pluck the mangled Tybalt from — iv. 3 
should be, that have thus mangled jou?. Othello, v. 1 

MANGLING by starts the full Henry V. v. 2 

MANGY— issue of a mangy dog. Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

MANHOOD more approbation ..Twelfth Night, 111. 4 

manhood is melted into courtesies ..Much Ado, iv. 1 

we'll try no manhood here Mid.N. s Dream, 111. 2 

not in the worst rank of manhood Macbeth, 111 . 1 

even now protest their first of manhood — y. 2 

there's neither honesty, manhood \HenryIV. 1. 2 

if manhood, good manhood, be not forgot — ^ ;i. 4 

(saving your manhoods) 2HenryIf'. u. 1 

as manhood shall compound Henri/ V.n. I 

makes much against my manhood .. — 111.2 

and hold their manhoods cheap — iv. 3 

(saving your majesty's manhood) — iv. 8 

now is it manhood, wisdom, and iHenry VI. v. 2 

no, nor your manhood, that durst ..SllenryVI. li. 2 
Clifford's manhood lies upon his tongue — 11. 2 

with sleight and manhood stole — iv. 2 

thy prime of manhood, daring Richard III. iy. 4 

manhood, learning, gentleness.. . Troilus ^ Cress. \. 2 
manhood and honour should have .. — ii. 2 
purity of manhood stand upright. Timon ofAth. _iv. 3 

and manhood is called foolery Coriolanus, iii. I 

experience, manhood, honour . . Antony ^- Cleo. iii. 8 

and fit you to your manhood Cymbeline, iii. 4 

my bosom takes off my manhood .... — y. 2 

power to shake my manhood thus Lear, i. 4 

I marry, yonr manhood nowl what news? — iv. 2 
for my manhood, honesty, or wisdom. . Othello, iii. 3 

MANIFEST, and not denied Mens, for Mcas. iv. -i 

understand tliis in n manifest effect.. — iv. 2 
thus to retort your manifest appeal.. — v. 1 



MANIFEST-that I now will ma.n\kst.MuchAdo, iii. 2 
in this she manifests herself .. .. Twelfth Night, ii. 5 
appears by manifest proceeding .Mer. of Venice, iy. 1 

and nanifest experience All's If ell, i. 3 

manifest where she has lived .... Winter'sTale, v. 3 

thy life did man ifest, thou 2Henry 1 V. iy. 4 

back, thou manifest conspirator .... 1 Henry VI, i. 3 

what's more manifest? in that — iii. I 

you are manifest liousekeepers Coriolanus, i. 3 

manifests the true knowledge he has — ii. 2 

manifest treason. This a consul? — iii. 1 

thy heinous, manifest, and many treasons. leor, y. 3 

Boiil, shall manifest me rightly Othello, i. 2 

BIANIFESTED-can be manifested . A/erri/ H'ives, iv. 6 
find your safety manifested. ...Jl/eas. /or Jtfeus. iv. 3 

thy fault's thus manifested — v. 1 

MANIFOLD— for mJschiefs manifold. . . . Tempest, i. 2 

the manifold linguist AWsHill, iv. 3 

which he eonfessetli to be manifold.] Henry I V. iy. 3 
manifold record not matches? .. Timon of Alliens. \. 1 

how manifold and strong a bond Lear.Vi. 1 

he is a manifold traitor — v. 3 (herald) 

MANIFOLDLY dissuade me from .... All's Hell, ii. 3 

MANKIND-howbeauteous mankind is\. Tempest, y. I 

rails against all married mankind. A/e>Ti/»Vi;<s,iy. 2 

he's an enemy to mankind Tvelfth Night, iii. 4 

the tenth of mankind would hang.. Winter'sTale,\. 2 
outi a mankind witch! hence ........ — ji- 3 

they would make war with mankind. . Macbeth, ii, 4 
tlie common curse of mankind .. Troilus S/ Cress, ii. 3 

like all mankind, show me Timon of Athens, iii. 4 

beast more kinder than mankind .... — iv. 1 
to the whole race of mankind, high.. — iv. I 
destruction fang mankind! earth .... — iv. 3 
thou common wliore of mankind .... — iv. 3 
I am misanthropos. and hate mankind — iv. 3 
'tis in the malice of mankind, that he — iv. 3 

and disclaim'st flinty mankind — iv. 3 

fain would I have hated all mankind — iv. 3 

are you mankind? Ay, fool Coriolanus, iv. 2 

in hate of mankind, had destroyed.. yj;i'. <5 Cleo. iv. 8 
MANLIKE-more manlike than Cleopatra — i. 4 

MANLY— a most manly wit ,Vuch Ado, v. 2 

a trim exploit, a manly enterprize.il/W.A'.'sD;-. iii. 2 
somewhat drown my manly aimil.Mer.of Venice, ii. 3 
mincing steps into a manly stride .. — iii. 4 

and his big manly voice As you Like it, ii. 7 

spending his manly marrow in her ..All's Well, ii. 3 
let's briefly put on manly readiness ..Macbeth, ii. 3 

this tune goes manly: come, go we — iv. 3 

this effusion of such manly drops King John, v. 2 

no; for my manly heart doth yearn . . Henry F. ii. 3 

abate thy manly"rage ! abate — iii. 2 

you are strong and manly 2Henry VI. iv. 8 

so bear I thee upon my manly shoulders — v. 2 

and let his manly face, which 3HenryVI. ii. 2 

my manly eyes did scorn Richard III. i. 2 

manly as Hector, but more . . Troilus * Cressida, iv. 5 
boy hath taught us manly duties ..Cymbetine,iy. 2 

be manly, and take comfort Pericles, iii. 1 

here on his manly breast Romeo ^Juliet, iii. 2 

MAN-MONSTER hath drowned Tempest, iii. 2 

MANNA— drop manna in the way.Mer. of Venice, v. I 
MANNED witli three hundred men. .Richard II. ii. 3 

the castle is royally manned — iii. 3 

I was never manned with an ogate ..2HemyIV. i. 2 

I were manned, horsed, and wived — i. 2 

your ships are not well TDm\w:&. . Antony SrCleo. iii. 7 

MANNERS— manners are more gentle. 7e7npcs<, iii. 3 

as disproportioned in his manners .... — v. 1 

here's a million of nianners Two Oen. of Ver. ii. 1 

I'll show you the manner of it — ii. 3 

all the cunning manner of onr flight — ii. 4 

which is in the manner of his nurse. .l/erri/H'/i'es, i. 2 

dares in this manner assay me? — ii. 1 

all checks, rebukes, and manners — — iii. 4 
in a most hideous and dreadful manner — iv. 4 

what manner of man? (?ep.) TwelflhNight, i. 5 

tl-.erefore it charges me m manners . . — ii. 1 
so near the manners of my mother .. — ii. 1 
have you no witj manners, nor honesty — ii. 3 

the manner of his gait — ii- 3 

but in strange manner — iii. 4 

sets down the manner how — iii. < 

what manner of man is he? — iii. 4 

where manners ne'er were preached! — iv. 1 
heard it was ever his manner. . . . Ueas.forMeas. iv. 2 
in most uneven and distracted manner — iv. 4 
in self-same manner doth accuse .... — v. I 

in this manner accused (rep.) Much .ido, iy. 2 

now much beshrew my manners ..Mid.N.'sDr. ii. 3 
In such disdainful manner me to woo — ii. 3 

any pity, grace, or manners — iii. 2 

the grosser manner of these world's. Love'sL. Lost, i. 1 
the manner of it is, I was taken (rep.) — i. 1 

my lady, (to the manner of the days) — v. 2 
by the manner of my father's will. Mer.o/ Venice, i . 2 
to his blood, I am not to his manners — ii. 3 
of lineaments, of manners, and of spirit — iii. 1 
tell us the manner of the wiestling./fsi/ouIiVfeiV,!. 2 

if we judge by manners; but yet — J- 2 

or else a rude despiser of good manners — ii. 7 
good manners; and if thou never (rep.) — iii. 2 
that are good manners at the court .. — ?!!■"- 

what manner of man? Is his — ?!!■'- 

yes, one; and in this manner — iii. 2 

that I lack manners; she calls — iv. 3 

as you have books for good manners. . — y. 4 

succeed thy father in manners All's »t'e/(, i. 1 

have lent a man any manners — ii. 2 

with what manners I might safely .. — iv. 5 

which lay nice manners by, I put — v. I 

therefore frame your manners Taming of Sh. i. 1 

you use your manners discreetly — _ i. 1 

and mark the manner of his teaching — iv. 2 

that changes thus his manners IVinter'sTale, i. 2 

what manner of fellow was he that .. — iv. 2 
■we stand upon our manners: come .. — iv. 3 
is there no manners left among maids? — iv. S 
the manner of your bearing towaids. . — iv. 3 



MANNER— witli the maimer iyinler'sTaU;\v. 3 

deliver the manner liow he found it. . — v. 2 
and in snch manner, that, it seemed. . — v. 2 
with the manner how she came to it.. — v. 2 
I'll view tiic manners of the town. Cmncilij o/Rir. i. 2 

to relate the manner, were, on the ihfl.flh, \\. 3 

our country manners give our bettors. Ai«i;.yo/in, i. I 

than thou and Jolm in manners — _ii. 1 

not our manners, reason now (rep.) . . — iv. 3 
nay, it is in a manner done alrcnd.v . . — v. 7 
wh"ose manners still our tardj' aiiish. K/c/mrd ll.]']. 1 
you have, in manner, with your sinful — iii. I 
these external manners of lament.... — iv. 1 

the manner of their taking may — v. 6 

what manner of man is he? (.rep.) ..IHenryll'. ii. 4 

and wert taken witli the manner — ii- 4 

defect of manners, want of government — iii. 1 

good manners he 3'our speed! — iii. 1 

your manner of wrenching the tme..'2 Henry IF. ii. 1 
taught you these manners, sir John? — ii. 1 

and lavish manners meet together — iv. 4 

the manner how this action (rep.) — iv. 4 

the seasons change their manners — iv. 4 

some dishonest manners of their life . . Henry /'. i. 3 
the pretty and sweet manner of it — — iv. 6 
we are the makers of maaners, Jvate . . — v. 2 

all manner of men Mleunjl'l. i. 3 (prqcl.) 

the treacherous manner of his — ii- 2 

it is more than manners will — ii. 2 

the manner of thy vile outrageous . . — iii. 1 

as crooked in thy manners as thy iHenryVI. v. I 

to scorn us in this manner? ZHenry VI. iij. 3 

the manner and the purpose of his. /J/c/mrii III. iii. 5 

that no manner of person hai'e — iii. 5 

whom our manners call— the prince.. — iii. 7 
and I'll corrupt her manners, stain .. — iv. 4 

in desperate manner daring Henry VIII. i. 2 

in hiunblest manner I require yom:. . — ii. 4 
to see a nobleman want manners .... — iii. 2 
men's evil manners live in brass .... — iv. 2 
what manner of manare you? my lord — v. 1 

will make my boldness manners — v. 1 

among them, Cat least, good manners) — v. 2 
I ken the manner of his ga.it..Troilus .? Cressida, iv. 6 
in fellest manner execute your arms.. — v, 7 
'gainst the authority of manners.. Timono/Ath.u. 2 

in like manner was I in debt — iii. 6 

instruction, manners, mysteries .... — iv. 1 

as lamely as their manners! — iv. 1 

thou dost affect my manners — iv. 3 

(as the manner is,) his wounds Coriolanus, ii. 1 

I pray you, in wholesome maimer .. — ii. 3 
manner of it, gentle Casca (rep.) ..Julius Ccesarji. 2 
she is dead, and by strange manner. . — iv. 3 

but the manner of his speech Antony 8f Cleo. ii. 2 

what manner o' thing is your crocodile? — ii. 7 
in Alexandria,— beret's the manner of it — iii. 6 
the manner of their deaths ? I do not — y. 2 
can we, with manners, ask what. . . . Cymbeline,_i. .'i 

to forget a lady's manners — ii. 3 

and manners, to intrude where I am. Titus And. ii. 1 

doth sin in such a loathed manuer Pericles, i. 1 

• I like the manner of your garments well — iv. 3 
beyond all manner of so much I love you.. Lear, i. 1 
he answered me in the roundest manner _ — i. 4 

their manners are so apish — i. 4 (song) 

infected with their manners — i. 4 

and manners, blame us not — iv. 6 

the compliment which very manners — y. 3 

when good manners shall lie all.. Komeo fyJuUetj i. 5 
then (as the manner of our countr.y is) — iv. 1 
what manners is in this, to press before — v. 3 

native here, and to the manner born Hamlet, i. 4 

the form of plausive manners — i. 4 

my fears forgeting manners, to unseal . . — v. 2 

my manners tell me, we have your Othello, i. 1 

good lago, that I extend my manners .. — ij. 1 

aympathy in years, manners, and — ii. 1 

accidents must excuse ray manners .... — v. 1 
MANNERED— the truest mannered... Cymbf/me, i. 7 
she may be mannered as she is born . . Pericles, iii. 3 
MANNERLY— most mannerly. '/'«'or5e;i.q/'Fer. ii. 7 
post, that comes so mannerly . . Mer. of Venice, ii. 9 
mannerly distinguishment leave.. IVinter^sl'ale, ii. 1 

here is a mannerly forbearance 1 Henry VI. ii. 4 

we'll mannerly demand thee o{ thy. Cymheline, iii. 6 
which mannerly devotion shows. Borneo ^Juliet, i. 5 

MANNERLY-MODEST as a Much Ado, ii. 1 

MANI^flNG-TREEoxwith ] Henri/ IV. ii. 4 

MANNISH— other mannish cowards. /(si/niiLrte, i. 3 

impudent and mannish grown.. Troilus ir Cress, iii. 3 

voices have got the mannish crack. .Cj/m&e^/7?e, iv. 2 

MANOR— manor of Pickt-hatch . . .Merry Wives, ii. 2 

seen with her in the manor house.. loi>e'sZ,.Los(, i. I 

sold a goodly manor for a song AWslVM, iii. 2 

manors, rents, revenues, I forego . . Richard II. iv. 1 
mv walks, my manors that I had. . . .3 Henry VI. v. 2 

with laving manors on them Henry VIII, i. 1 

MAN-CJUELLER- aman-queUer..2Henry IV. ii. 1 
MANSION-the mansion so long. TnoOen. of Ver. v. 4 

lord of this fair mansion iter, of Venice, iii. 2 

his babes, his mansion, and his titles.. /l/ac'jc7i, iv. 2 
a treble hautbov was a mansion ...IHenrylV. iii. 2 
Jiath to the marbled mansion.. r;morio/.4(/iens, iv. 3 
made his everlasting mansion upon.. — v. 2 
the innocent mansion of my love..,Cym()e/inc, iii. 4 
peep through thv marble mansion . , -5- v. 4 

(accursed the mansion where!) — , v. 5 

Plicebus' mansion [Kii(. -lodging]. /Jomeo SfJul. iii. 2 

I have bought the mansion of a love — iii. 2 

that I may sack the hateful mansion — iii. 3 

MANSIONRY— by his loved mansionryAfnc'jcW, i. fi 

MANr^L.A.UGHTER Xntatorm. Timnnof Alliens, iii. b 

MANTLE— mantle their clearer reason. Tcmpesi, v. 1 

as she fled, her mantle she did fall. . Ulid. N.Dr. v. 1 

finds his trusty Thisby's mantle slain — v. I 

thy mantle, good, what, stained .... — y. 1 

do cream, and mantle Merchant of Venice, i. 1 

the mantle of queen Ilermione .. ll'inler'sTnte,y. 2 
whose pitchy mantle over-veiled. ... 1 Henry VI. ii. 2 



MANTLE— the night's black mantle.3 Henry VI. i v. 2 
you all do know this mantle .. ..JuliusCafsar, ill. 2 

and, in his mantle muffling up — iii. 2 

put my tires and mantles on \nni..ivtony f\Cleo. ii.O 
was lapped in a most curious ^nimWK. Cymlipline. v. 5 
the green mantle of the standing pool . . /.-■((/■, iii. 4 

with thy black mantle Unimn f,Jiihel, iii. 2 

look, the morn, in russet mantle clad . . Hnmlel, i. I 

MANTLED pool beyond yonr cell Teinpesl, iv. 1 

of others, but mantled in your own . . Cnriolnnns, i. 6 
MANTUA-and I from Mantua. Two Gen. of Ver. iv. 1 

to Mantua, where, I hear — iv. 3 

that leads towards Mantua — v. 2 

is Licio, born in Mantua Tfiming of Slircw, ii. I 

of Alantua. Of Mantua, sir? — iv. 2 

for any one in Mantua to come to . . — iv. 2 
and you were then at Mantua . . Uomeo 4'Juliel, i. 3 
for then thou canst not pass to Mantua — iii. 3 

sojourn in Mantua — iii. 3 

lijjht thee on thy way to Mantua. ... — iii. 5 

I'll send to one in Mantua — iii. a 

Romeo bear thee hence to Mantua .. — iv. 1 
I'll send a friar with speed to Mantua — iv. 1 
sale is present death in Mantua (r?p.) — v. 1 
from Mantua: what says Romeo .... — v. 2 
my speed to Mantua there was stayed — v. 2 
but I will write again to Mantua. . . . — v. 2 

in post he came from Mantua — v. 3 

MANTUAN-old Mantuan! (rep.). Love's L.Losi, iv.2 
MANUAL— manual seal of death ..Richard II. iv. 1 
MANURE -shall manure the ground — iv. 1 
MANURED— bare land, manured ..iHenrylV. iv. 3 
with idleness, or manured with industry. Othello, i. 3 
MANUS — serjients in his man us . . Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

MANY-COLOURED messenger rempcsi, iv. I 

many-coloured Iris, rounds tliine eye'i.All'slI ill.i. 3 

MANY-HEADED multitude Coriolcinus, ii. 3 

MAP— than are in the new map . . Tirell'ih Night, iii. 2 

peering in maps, for ports Merchant of Venice, i. I 

thou map of honour; thou king Richard II. v. 1 

upon it! I have forgot the map .... 1 Henry I V. iii. 1 

come, here's the map — iii. I 

look in the maps of the 'orld Henry V, iv. 7 

I see the map of honour, truth ....'iHenry I'l. iii. 1 
I see, as in a map, the end of all . . liiclmrd III. ii. 4 
if you see this in the map of my .... Coriolaniis, ii. 1 
thou map of woe, that thus dost. Titus Andrun. iii. 2 

give me the map there Lear, i. 1 

MAPPED— have mapped it truly Cymbeline, iv. 1 

M APPERY, closet war Troilus §- Cressida, i. 3 

MAR— you mar our labour Tempest, i. 1 

and mar the concord with . . TnoGen. of Verona, i. 2 
men their creation mar. . . . Measure for'Mcasnre, ii. 4 
and make and mar the foo\is\\.. Mid. N.'sDream, i. 2 

if it mar nothing neither Love'sL:Lost,iv. 3 

you'll mar the light, by talcing it..,. — v. 2 
I'll mar the young clerk's pea. Merch. of Venice, v. 1 
what mar you then, sir? (irp.).,,.Asyou Like it, i. 1 

I pray you, mar no more trees — iii. 2 

mar no more of my verses ■ — iii. 2 

I did not bid you mar it Taming of Shrew, iv. 3 

and mar the seeds within ! Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

you'll mar it, if you kiss it — v. 3 

it makes him, and it mars him Macbeth, ii. 3 

you mar all with this starting — v. 1 

winter mars our hoped-for hay . . . .SHenry VI. iv. 8 

that for ever mars the honey Henry Vlll. iii. 2 

makes gods, does still mar men. Timon of Alhens,iv. 2 

and mar men's spurring — iv. 3 

you'll mar all; I'll leave you Coriolanvs, ii. 3 

now all labour mars wha.t.Antony ^Cleopatra, iv. 12 

the devils mar five — v. 2 

ere the sea mar it Pericles, iv. 1 

lest it may mar your fortunes Lear, i. 1 

ride, run, mar a curious tale — _i. 4 

when brewers mar their malt — iii. 2 

they'll mar my counterfeiting — iii. 6 

to mar. By my troth (rep) Romeo Sf Juliet, ii. 4 

it makes us, or it mars us Othello, v. I 

MARBLE— a marble to her tears. A/eas./orWras. iii. 1 
be confixed here, a marble monument! — v. 1 

who was most marble there Winter's Tale, v. 2 

blunts it, more than marble hard. ComeJvo/f>j-.ii. 1 

whole as the marble, founded as Macbeih, iii. 4 

will pierce into a marble heart ....ZHenryVI. iii. 1 

and much rain wears the marble — iii. 2 

and sleep in dull cold marble ....HenryVIII. iii. 2 
peep through thy marble mansion . . Cymbeline, v. 4 

the marble pavement closes — y. 4 

did turn to marble . Titus Andronicus, ii. 3 

oped his ponderous and marble jaws. . . . Hamlet, i. 4 

by yond' marble heaven, in the due. . . Othello, iii. 3 

MARBLE-BREASTED tyrant ..Tiieinh.\ight,v. 1 

MARBLE-CONSTANT; "now....^»/t,ji)/<S-aeo. v. 2 

MARBLED-the marbled mansion. 3'/mo«o/ /l«/i. iv. 3 

MARBLED-HEARTED fiend Lear,i. 4 

MARCELLUS— of Caius Mavcellus .Ant. ^Clco. ii. 6 
if you do meet Horatio and Marcellus. . Hamlet, i. 1 
now it burns, Marcellus, and myself — i. 1 
stay and speak; stop it, Marcellus .. — i. 1 

Marcellus? my good lord — i. 2 

gentlemen, Marcellus and Bernardo — i. 2 
MAROH-take the winds of March. »7,i/<'r's Tale,iv.3 

march we on, to give (rep.) Macbeth, v. 2 

with much expedient march KingJohn, ii. 1 

in warlike march these greens — ii. 1 

to march a bloody host, and make . . — iii. I 
we step after a stranger march upon — v. 2 

dared to march so many miles Richard II. ii. 3 

while here we march upon the — iii. 3 

let's march without the noise — iii. 3 

march on, and mark king Richard . . — iii. 3 

march sadl.y after; grace my — v. 6 

well-beseeming ranks, march all.... IHenrylV. i. I 

the earl of March hath lately — i. 3 

will be a march of twelve score — ii. 4 

on Thursday, we ourselves will march — iii. 2 
must we all march? yea, two and two — iii. 3 

worse than the sun in March — iv. I 

our soldiers shall march through .... — iv.2 



MARCH— I'll not march through \ Henry IV. iv. 2 

the villains march wide betwixt .... — iv.2 

suffered his kinr.man March — iv. 3 

with Glendower, and the earl of March — v. i 

let our trains nuueh by us illenrylV. iv. 2 

they with merry inarcli liring HenryV. i 2 

touch her soft mouth, and m;n eh.... — ii. 3 
to-morrow for the march are we .... — iii. 3 
mortderaavie! if they march along — iii. 5 

and famished in their march — iii. .5 

be willing to march on to Calais .. .. — iii. G 
English legs did march three Fixnehmen — iii. (i 
march to the bridge; it now- dra\vs .. — iii. G 
to-morrow bid thein march a^vay.. .. . — iii. (i 

now soldiers, march away — iv. 3 

ay, we may march in England illenryl'I. iii. I 

and march unto him straight — iv, I 

and made their march for liourdcaiix — i\'. 3 
then march to Palis, royal Charles,. — v.:' 

earl of March (rep.) 2Henry VI. ii. 2 

earl of March, married the duke of . . — iv.2 



Roger Mortimer, earl of March ZHeniy VI. i. I 

brave earl of March (rc/i.) — ii. I 

to London will we maich amain .... — ii. 1 

towns as they do inarch along — ii. 2 

to London with triumphant march.. — ii. 6 

but march to London with — iv. 3 

and let us march away. Nay, stay .. — iv. 7 

march amain to I>oiidon (n'p.) — iv. 8 

march on to tight with us — v. 3 

as we march, our strength — v. 3 

now march we hence ." — v. 5 

let me march on (rep.) Richard III. iv. 4 

thither is but one day's march — v. 2 

then in God's name march — v. 2 

march on, join bravely, let us to 't . . ^- — v. 3 

march patiently along Troilus fyCie^sida, v. 10 

but, march, away: Hector is dead.... — v. 11 

strike a free march to Troy ! — v. ! I 

march, noble lord, into our city. Timon of Athens, v. ,5 

swords may march from hence Coriolanas, i. 4 

please you to march (rep.) — i. 6 

beware the ides of March (rep.) JulinsCcesar, i. 2 

isnot to-morrow, boy, the ides of March? — ii. 1 
sir, March is wastedi fourteen days . . — ii. I 

the ides of March are come — iii. I 

march gently on to meet him — iv.2 

remember March, the ides of March — iv. 3 

the ides of March begun — v. 1 

Alexandria make a jolly ma.K'h. Antony f,- Cleo. iv. 8 

so through Liid's town march Cymbeline, v. 5 

they hither march amain .... TitusAndronicus, iv. 4 

we will come : march away — v. I 

come, march to wakes and fairs Lear, iii. 6 

buried Denmark did sometimes march ?.Ham(f/, i. 1 
•with solemn march, goes slow and stately — i. 2 

the conveyance of a promised march — iv. 4 

MARCH-CHICK! how came Much Ado, i. 3 

MARCHED— have hither marched . . KingJohn, ii. 1 
that marched hence BO silver -bright . . — ii. 2 

when we first marched forth — ii. 2 

marched up to my lord of Lancaster. 2Hfnri//f. ii. I 
that he is marched to Bourdeaux . . I Henry VI. iv. 3 
as he marched along, by your espials — iv. 3 
with colours spread marched througli.3W«iri//7. i. 1 

marched towards St. Alban 's — ii . 1 

we marched on without impediment. Richard III. v. 2 

MARCKES-his marches are expedient. A'/ii^Jo/ui, ii. I 

to stop their marches, 'fore we are .... — v. I 

they of those marches Henry V. j. 2 

in our marches through the country — iii. 6 
for in the marches here, we lieard ..3 Henri/ VI. ii. i 

dreadful marches to delightful Richard III. i. 1 

MARCHETH— marcheth with thee ..IllenryVl. v. 1 

hears, marcheth from Warwick illeiiri/ VI. v. 1 

MARCHING— marching hitherwards.l/ie)iri//r.iv. 1 
the king hath many marching in ... . — v. 3 

with ramy marching in the Henry V. iv. 3 

their powers are marching unto ....1 Henry VI. iii. 3 

Charles? for I am marching hence .. — iii. 3 

is marching hitherward in proud ..iHenryVI. iv 9 

and bravely marching, it hath served — iv. 10 

at Dunsmore, marching hitherward. SHenryF/. v. 1 

ofmiirohing toPhilippi presently?Ju(/usC«'sai-, iv. 3 

the enemy, marching along by them — iv. 3 

British powers are marching hitherward. ieu)', iv. 4 

MARCHPANE-piece of marchpane. /(omeo fj^Jul. i. 5 

MARCIANS— house o' the Mareiaus. Cono/a/i«s, ii. 3 

MARCIUS-Lsee Caius] 

hail, noble Marcius! Thanks — i. 1 

Marcius, 'tis true that you have lately — i. 1 
then, worthy Marcius, attend upon . . — i. 1 
was ever man so proud as this Marcius! — i. 1 

will then cry out of Marcius — i. 1 

opinion, tliat so sticks on Marcius ,. — i. I 

honours are to Marcius, though iVlarcius — i. 1 

to Marcius shall be honours, though — i. I 

JIarcius, your old enemy — i. 2(leticr) 

dear than thine and m}'"good Marcius — i. :i 

what is become of Marcius? Slain .. — i. .1 

thou art left, Marcius; a carbuncle.. — i. 4 

'tis Marcius: let's fetch him otf — i. 4 

thou worthiest jNIarci us! go, sound.. — i. ,j 

given to Lartius and to Marcius battle — i. 6 

gods! he has the stamp of Marcius — i. s 

I know the sound of Marcius' tongue — i. 6 

Slarcius, we have at disad\anta;,'e .. — i. 6 

as I ^uess, Marcius, their bands — {.6 

his disp()sition, and follow Marcius. . — i. G 

if I fly, Marcius, halloo me like — i. 8 

Marcius, his name? By Jupiter, forgot — i. B 

five times, Marcius, I have fouplit .. — i. 10 
custom 'gainst my hate to Marcius.. — i. h) 
the people, ibr they love not I\i:ircius — ii. 1 

plebeians would the noble Marcius, . ii. 1 

in what enormity is Maieius poor .. — ii. ) 

you blame Marcius for being jirond? ii. i 

you must be sayiiie Marcius le proud _ ii. ; 



MAR 



[ 488 ] 



— iii. 1 

— iii. I 
_ iii. 1 



MARCIUS-boy Marciue approaches. Conodinus, 
Im! Marcins coming home? (' pp.) .. — 

these are the ushers of Maroius — 

ull alone Jtareius did flight witliin .. — 
'tis tliou?ht that JIarcius fhall he coiisnl — 
from wlieuce came that Aneus Marcius — 
jMurcius wouhl have all from you (ifp.) — i 
JIarcius is worthy of present deatli. . — i 
yielil, JIarcins, yield. Hear me one.. 
liclp, help Marcius! help, you that.. 

where, if vou brinj not Marcius 

tliis nioiiUl "f Marcius, they to dust — 
(> Jliircivis, Marcius, each word thou — 
all nolile Marcius, O let me twine .. — 
worthy Jliircius, had we no quarrel.. — 
enemy; vet, Marcius, that was much — 
heariii:,' of our Marcius' banishment — 
insliclled. wlicn Marcius stood for Kome — 

come, wluit talk vou of Marcius? — 

that Marciu,-, joined with Aufidius.. — 
may wi^li ltooiI Marcius home as;ain — 
if Marcius' should he joined with ... — 
towards Marcius. Well, and say (_rep.) — 
tliis IMarcius is srown from man to. . — 
are dislodged, and JNIarcius gone .... — '■■' 

tlie noise tliat banished Blarcms — v. 4 

traitor. Marcius. Blarcius? Ay, Marcius — V. 5 

MARCUS-hekilledmy cousin Marcus — v. 5 
first, Marcus Brutus, will I s\mVe.JiiliusCarsar,ni. 1 
wlien Jlarcus Brutus grows so covetous — iv. 3 

souof Marcus Cato, ho! (rep.) — v- < 

tlie wife of Marcus Antonius....^"'o'i!/ 'S-C/co. ii. b 



V. 4 



s Amlron 



i. 2 



_ iii. 1 
iii. 1 
iii. 1 



— iv. 1 



iv. 3 



iv. 3 



— iv. 3 



fortune does of Marcus Crassns' death 
(Ir.jdes, jmys this for Marcus Crassus 
Marcus Oc'tavius, Marcus Justeius . . 
Marcus Andronieus, so I do afty . . Tilu 
eentle tribune, noble brotlier Marcus 

Marcus, even thou hast struck 

s\itfcr thv brother Marcus to inter . . 
rise, Marcus, rise; the dismal'st .... 
I know not, Jlarcus; but, I know .. _ 
Marcus, for thy sake, and thy brother s — 
comes witli our brother Marcus here' 

wliy, Jlarcus, so she is 

look, Marcus! ah, son Lucius, look. . 
Jlarcus, Jlarcus! brother, well I wot 
mark, Jlarcus, mark! I understand 
let Jlarcus, I^ucius, or thyself ...... 

Jlarcus, \mknit that sorrow-wreathen 
win-, Jlarcus, no man should, be mad 

if Jlarcus did not name the word 

hark, Jlarcus, what she says 

wliat dost tliou strike at, JIarcns 

good uncle Jtarcus, see how swift 

if my uncle Jlarcus go,_I will most.. 

Jlarcus, what means tiris? 

vou're a young huntsman, Marcus . . 

Marcus, look to my house 

Marcus, attend hira in his ecstasy . . 

come, Marcus, come; kinsmen 

be you remembered, Jlarcus, she s gone 

Jlarcus, we are but shrubs 

hut metal, Jlarcus, steel to 

vou are a good archer, Marcus 

Jlarcus, loose when I bid 

Marcus, the post is come 

here, Jlarcus, fold it in the oration. . 

come. Jlarcus, let's go; Fublius 

unto my father, and my uncle Jlarcus 
Marcus, my brotherl 'tis sad (rep.).. — v. 'J 
uncle Jlarcus, since 'tis my father s — v. 3 

Marcus, we will. Welcome, my gracious — v- 3 

thy brother Jlarcus tenders on ~ „ ^' o 

Jlarcus Lucchese, is he not in town? (Vhello, i. 3 

MARDIAN— thou eunuch! Jlardian.^nf. (S-Cdjo.i. 5 

best play with Mardian — ."-5 

to the monument; Mardian, go tell hira — i_v. 

hence, Mardian, and bring me how he — iv. 10 

MARE— shall have his mare again.. .Wfi. A'. sDr.m. 2 

how now? whose mare's dead? 2tlenryir. u. 1 

like tlie mare. I think, I am as like (rep.) — ii. 1 
and rides the wild mare with the boys — ii. 4 

though patience be a tired mare ^'"'jy '•.!!■ ' 

and mares together, the (.rep.) . . Anlo^uj ^ Cho. in. 7 

MARESHAIj-to the lord mareshal..\Hp)in/7r. iv. 4 

great mareshal to Henrythe sixth. .1 Henii/I I. iv. 7 

the mareshal of France, Jlousieur le Fer.. I.rar, iv. 3 

JI ARO ARELON hath Dorens . . Tmilii-.t,- Cress, v. 5 

MARGARET— the favourofJIargaret.3/»c/i.iiio, ii. 2 

hear me call JIargaret, Hero (rep.') — }\. 'i 

good JIargaret,run thee into the parlour — m- ' 
Hero and Margaret have by this played — 
tliat I have to-night wooed JIargaret — 
and thouglit they, JIargaret was Hero — 
my master knew slie was JIargaret . . — 
saw mc court Margaret in Hero s . . . . — 

shall face to face he bronglit to Margaret — 
we'll talk with JIargaret, how her . . — 
sweet mistress JIargaret, deserve well — 
in so high a style, Margaret, tliat no man — 
a most manly wit, JIai-garet, it will not — 
if vou use them, JIargaret, you must — 
but Margaret was in some fault for this — 
then mv cousin, Margaret, and Ursula — 
Marffaret, my name, and daughter. . 1 Henry J I. 
theii'how can JIargaret he thy ...... — 

I'll win this lady JIargaret; for whom? — 
fair Margaret knows, that Suffolk - — 
shall Suffolk ever have of JIargaret 



JIARGARET— the lady JIargaret ..-iltenryl I.\. 1 
and dame Margaret, kneeled to me . . — 
now is Henry king, and JIargaret queen — 
ay, JIargaret; my heart is drowned.. — 
and JIargaret our queen, do seek — 

! I thank tliee, JIargaret [Co(.- Meg.j.. — 

] then dame JIargaret was ne'er thy .. 

I in thy palace perish JIargaret 

die, JIargaret! for Henry weeps 

I have feasted with queen Margaret? 

come, JIargaret, God, our hope 

outrun the heavens? good JIargaret 
pardon me, JIargaret ; pardon me ... 
stay, gentle JIargaret, and hear me . . 
for Margaret my queen, and Clifford — 
Where's captain JIargaret, to fence you — 

I then, Margaret may win him — 

' O JIargaret, thus 'twill be; and thou — 
of England, worthy JIargaret, sit — — 
now Margaret must strike her sail . . — 
be plain, queen Margaret, and tell thy — 
that I, poor JIargaret, with tiiis my son — 
injurious JIargaret! And why not queen — 
queen JIargaret, prince Edward, and — 
draw near, queen Margaret ; and be . . 

I still is friend to him and Margaret . . — iii- a 

I hers, and thine, and JIargaret s — m. 3 

is Warwick friends with JIargaret?.. — iv. 1 

I that Margaret your queen, and my . . — iv. G 
your grace have done with JIargaret? — y- 7 
queen JIargaret saw thy murderous, liichard 111. i. 2 

in Margaret's battle at St. Albans — i. 3 

Margaret. Richard! Ha? I call thee not — i. 3 
by me; and ends in— Margaret ...... — i- Jj 

and say, poor JIargaret was a prophetess — _i. 3 
now JIargaret's curse is fallen upon — ni. 3 

JIargaret, JIargaret, now thy heavy. . — in. 4 

die the thrall of Margaret's curse — iv. 1 

withdraw thee, wretclied Margaret ! . . — iv. 4 
as sometime JIargaret did to thy father — iv. 4 

tlius Margaret's curse falls heavy — v. 1 

remember JIargaret was a prophetess — y. 1 

JI ARGENT— the beached raargent. . ii/i'd. iV.'s Dc. u. 1 

his face'sown margent did qyx.ots..Love'sL.Losl, ii. 1 

on both sides the leaf, margent and all — v. 2 

vou must be edified by the margent Hamlet, v. 2 

JI'ARGERY, but none of us .... Tempest, ii. 2 (song) 
JIargery, your wife, is (rep.) ..Merch. of Venice, ii. 2 

oificious with Lady Margery Winter's Tale, u. 3 

TVT -t i«:.,H.« «...,«;,,^ ou««,-,/r/ 1 9 



i. 2 



— iii. 2 
_ iii. 2 

— iv. 1 

— iv. 4 

— V. 2 
.ZHenyl'I.i. 1 

— i. 1 

— ii. 5 



— iii. 3 



— iii. 3 



but hark you, Margaret: no princely — 
of beauteous JIargaret hath astonished — 
that JIargaret may be England's.... — 
I prav, is JIargaret more tlian that? — 

but JIargaret, that is daughter to — 

as is fair Margaret, he be linked — 

that JIargaret shall he queen (rep.) . . — 

that lady JIargaret do vouchsafe — 

to marrv princess JIargaret for 2 Henry I I. 

welcome, queen JIargaret, I can express — 
loug live queen JIargaret, England's — 



Margery Jourdain, the cunning 2Henry fl. i. 2 

JIARGIN— written in the margin. Borneo .§-./«//e/, i. 3 
JIARIA— a stoop of wine, 'M.axla,\..TwelfMNiglit, ii. 3 

Maria once told me, she did — li. 5 

good Jltiria, let this fellow be — m- -1 

out of question, 'tis JIaria's hand .. — v. 1 
Maria writ the letter, at sir Toby's.. — v. 1 
sweet Maria, empress of my loveltoDe'sL.ios;, iv. 3 

you do not love Maria — iv. 3 

what says Maria? — 7.-' 

Jesu Maria! what a deal of brine. Romeo S/ Juliet, u. 3 

MARIAN, and Margery Tempest, ii. 2 (song) 

Marian, I say! a stoop of wine!.. Tu-elflhNiglit,u. 3 
JIarian's nose looks red. . . . Love'sL. Lost,v. 2 (song) 
JIarian Hacket, the {at.. Taming of Shrew, 2 (indue.) 
JIaud, Bridget, Marian, CicaXy .Comedy of Err. in. 1 
maid JIarian may be the deputy's..! Hen>s//r. lu. 3 
JIARIANA— speak of JIariana.. Weas./orilieas. in. 1 

the poor Mariana advantaged — ni- 1 

resides this dejected JIariana — in- ] 

not yet made known to Mariana — iv. 1 

his company at Mariana's house — — iv. 3 
comehither, Mariana; say, wast thou — v. 1 
you must pardon for Jlariana's sake — v. 1 
joy to you, Mariana! love her, Angelo — _v. 1 

JIA'RIGOLD, that goes to bed Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

and marigolds, shall, as a chaplet .... Pericles, ly. I 

MARINA— my babe Marina . — ni. 3 

now to JIariua bend your muid. . — iv. (Gower) 
Marina's life seeks to take (rep.).. — iv. (Gower) 
how now, Jlarina! why do you keep . . _ iv. 1 
and they have seized Marina: let her go — iv. 2 

cast their gazes on JIarina's face — iv. 4 

Jlarina writ by wicked Dionyza — iv. 4 (Gower) 

Jlarina was she called — iv. 4 ( Gower 1 

Marina thus the brothel 'scapes — v. (Gower) 
my name, sir, is Marina (rep.) ........ — v. 1 

this is Marina: wliat was tliy mother s — '*'• 
tell Helicanus, my Marina, tell him . . — v. 1 

of the spheres: list, my Jlarina — v. 1 

lend your arm. Come, my Jlarina — v. 2 

to be wived to fair Jlarina.... — v. 2 (Gower) 
a maid-child called Marina (rep.) . . . 
will I, my loved Marina, clip to form 
MARINE'R-speak to the mariuers... 

all, but mariners plunged 

the mariners, say, liow thou 

the mariners all under hatches 

shalt thou find the mariners asleep.. . 

your mariners are muleteers Anlo) 

mariner, sav, what coast (rep.) It/-^^t-», m. . 

MARITIJIE— borders maritime.. /l"(o"!/ <saeo. i. 4 

MARJORaJI; the marigold Winter s Talc, iv. 3 

"ive the word. Sweet marjoram. Pas3..I.cnr, iv. 6 
Jl!ARK-[see ANTONY] 

no drowning mark upon him Tempest,!. 1 

I pray thee, mark me (rep.) — 1-2 

mark his condition — !• 2 

nor set a mark so bloody — .;■ 2 

and do you mark me, sir? — u. 1 

V. 3 mark but the badges of these men .... — v. 1 

by these special marks Two Gen. of I'erona, ii. 1 

V 5 mark the moan she makes — ii- 3 

had not been there (bless tlie mark) . . — iv. 4 

V. .^ still mark me, and do as I do? — iv. 4 

V. 5 but mark the sequel, master Merry Wives, ni. b 

v' 6 prav you mark: genitivo, hujus — iv. 1 

v' 5 raaik it, Cesario! it is old TwelflhNlght, ii. 4 

, i. I 1 mark his first approirch.....^........ -• W -J 

i 1 I dothyour honour mark his face?iVeas./orftfea.'i.u. 1 
i 1 I beseech you, mark it well — ".I 



iii. 2 



V. 1 



V. 3 
— y. 3 
npest, i. 1 



i-C/fo. ii 



MAR 

JIARK me; to be received plain. Meas./or ;li»is.ii. 4 
but mark, how heavily this befel.... — i". ' 

of whicli he made five marks — iv. 3 

mark what I say; which you shall .. — iv. 3 

as much in mock as mark — v. 1 

signior Benedick; nobody marks you.it/!ic/i.Wo,i. 1 
mark you this, on my allegiance .... — i. 1 

mark how short his answer is — .i. 1 

that I stood like a man at a mark .. — u- 1 
I do spy some marks of love in her.. — li- 3 
many a man doth mark. . Mid. N.'s Dr. iii. 1 (song) 

fairy king, attend, and mark — iv. 1 

and mark the musical confusion .... — iv. I 
but mark : poor knight, what dreadful — v. 1 
nor mark prodigious, such as are.... — .v. 2 
a mark marvellous well shot (rep.).i.ot'e's L.L. iv. 1 
if knowledge be the mark, to know thee — iv. 2 
once more I'll mark how love can vary — iv. 3 
they do not mark me, and that .... — v. 2 

I'll mark no words that — v. 2 

mark what;jacob did : when Laban Mer.of I'enicc, i. 3 
mark you this, Bassanio, the devil .. — i. 3 
who ((iod bless the mark!) is a kind — ii. 2 

mark me now; now will I raise — .ii- 2 

some mark of virtue on his outward — ui. 2 
O upright judge! JIark, 3ew (rep.) .. — iv. 1 

be trusted: mark the music — v. 1 

mark you but that! in both — .y. 1 

none of my uncle's marks (rep.) As you Like it, iii. 2 
conduct you, if you will mark it ... . — iii. ■* 

mark how the tyrant writes — iv. 3 

mark, what object did present — jy. 3 

to be the mark of smoky muskets?. . All's Well, in. 2 
stand by, and mark the manner. Taming ofSh. iv. 2 
a hundred marks, my Kate does — — y. 2 

therefore, mark ray counsel Winter' s Tale, i. 2 

look on her, mark her well — j;- ' 

mark, and perform it — .ii- 3 

the gracious mark o' the land — iv. 3 

mark our contract. Mark your divorce — iv. 3 

mark thou my words — l^'. 3 

I'd bid you mark her eye v. 1 

and mark what way I make — v. 1 

mark a little while — y- 3 

a thousand marks be levied Comedy of Err. i. 1 

cannot amount unto a hundred marks — i. 1 

marks thou hadst of me? (jep.) — i. 2 

thy mistress' marks! what mistress — _i. 2 

asked me for a thousand marks (jep.) — ii. 1 

with a thousand marks in gold — iij- 1 

told me what privy marks I htid (rep.) — in. 2 

mark! how he trembles — iv. 4 

mark, king of Scotland, mark Macbeth, i, 2 

do you mark that? — y. 1 

mark, how they whisper King John, ii. 2 



thirty thousand marks of English coin 

and eye-oftending marks — i!l- ' 

theretore, mark, John hath — iii. 4 

and mark my greeting well liichard II. i. 1 

mark king Richard how he — iii. 3 

that marks thee out for hell — iv. 1 

mark me how I will undo — iv. 1 

mark, silent king, the moral — iv. 1 

didst thou not mark the king — y. 4 

God save the mark! \ Henry IT. \. 3 

three hundred marks with him — ii- ' 

ay, and mark thee too. Jack — ii- 4 

mark now, how a plain tale shall . . — ii. 4 
in this robbery lost three hundred marks — ii. 4 

yea, but mark, how he bears — iii. 1 

of bargain, mark ye me — iij. I 

a fellow of no mark, nor likelihood — iii. 2 

thou hast saved me a thousand marks — iii. 3 
of my grandfather's worth forty marks — iii. 3 
caper with me for a thousand marks.2Hejiry/^. i. 2 

a hundred mark is a long loan — ii. 1 

he was the mark and glass — ii. 3 

he presents no mark to the enemy .. — iii. 2 

do but mark the countenance — v. 5 

fly to one mark Henry V. i. 2 

to mark the full-fraught man — Ji. 2 

mark then, a bounding valour in — — iv. 3 
my words, O siguieur Dew, and mark — iv. 4 
piece of knavery, mark you now (rep.) — iv. 7 
if you mark Alexander's life well .. — iv. 7 

but mark; as, in this haughty 1 Henry VI. ij. 5 

if your grace mark every circumstauce — iii. 1 
call we to mind, and mark but this. . — iii. 3 
that's the golden mark I seek to hit. 2 Henry VI. i. 1 

or hast thou a mark to thyself — iv. 2 

for reward a thousand marks — v. 1 

wipe away these bloody marks 3Henry VI. u. 5 

nav, mark, how Lewis stamps — iii. 3 

heil, have set their marks on him.. idcAard///. i. 3 

topity,if you mark him — _ i. 3 

mark how well the sequel — iii. 6 

I think, you have hit the mark Henry VIII. u. 1 

then mark the inducement — ii. 4 

mark but my fall, and that that ruined — iii. 2 

mark vou her eyes? — iv. 2 

hundred marks. I'll to the queen (rep.) — v. 1 

but mark Troilus (rep.) Trailus ^ Cressida, i. 2 

mark him, note him i. 2 

thou art a goodly mark — v. 6 

mark what I say; attend me — v. 7 

to mark me for his friend .... Timon of Athens, iii. 2 

mark, how strange it shows — iii. 4 

whose fall the mark of his ambition is — v. 4 

(this says the belly,) mark me Coriolanus, i. 1 

mark me, and do the like — i. 4 

he fought beyond the mark of others — ii. 2 

where it did mark, it took — ii. 2 

from the people. JIark you that? .. — ii. 2 
in the gown of humility; mark his.. — ii. 3 

in the official marks invested — ii. 3 

he sliould have showed us his marks of — ii. i 

mark yon his absolute shall? — iii. 1 

mark you this, people? To the rock _ iii. 3 

her enemies' marks upon me — iii. 3 

Aufidius, and you Volsces, mark — v. 3 



MAR 



[ 489 ] 

MARKET-PLACE-the market-place CoiotonMs, iii. 

meet on the market-place: we'll attend — iij. 

I have been i' the market-place .... — \\\- 

to the market-place; you nave put me — iii. 

mother, I am going to tlie market-place — iii. 

bid them repair to the market-place — v. 

he fell down in the market-place. ../u/Zus Ccesar^ i. 

upon the market-place, hooting .... — i. 

walk we forth, even to the market-place — iii. 

produce his body to the market-place — iii. 

borne this corse into the market-place — iii. 

enthroned in the market-place ..Antony f^Clca. ii. 

i' the market-place, on a tribunal .. — iii- 

MARKET- PRIC E ha\e bought All's Well, v. 

MARKING tlie embarked traders.. .Vid.A'.'s Dr. ii. 

but little of the marking of it . ...Love's L. Lost, i. 

lest I, by marking of your rage ....King John, iv. 

the malady of not marking ilienrylV. i. 

MARKSMAN— good marksman I . . Borneo fy Juliet, i . 
MARL— to a clod of wayward marl? . . Much Ado, ii. 

MARLE— and Marie, Vaudemont Henry V, iv. 

MARMOZET— the nimble marraozet.. Tempest, ii. 
MARQUESS— ever marquess gave iHenryl'I. i. 

lord marquess, kneel down — i. 

master marquess, you are malapert. /fic/iait/ ///. i. 

marry; learn it, learn it, marquess .. — i. 

Hastings, love lord marquess — ii. 

MARRED— or else our spell is marred . Teinpesl, iv. 

you had marred all else . . Measure for Mensure, ii. 

then the play is marred Mid.N.'s Dreitm, iv. 

married, is a man that's marred All'slVell,\\. 

that thou hast marred her ^own.Taming of Sli. iv. 

sliarp discourse be marred Comedy of Errors, ii. 

there all is marred 1 Henry I' I. v. 

repetition of .what thou hastmarrediiiWmrd Iir. \. 

this man has marred his fortune . . Coriolanus, iii. 

here is himself, marred as you GQe.Jul'usCiTsfir, iii. 

soon marred are those so early made. Romeo SrJul. i. 

all, that's spoke, is marred Otliello, v. 

MARRIAGE of the king's fair (rep.') .... Tempest, ii. 

'twas a sweet marriage — ii. 

honour, riches, marriage blessing — iv. 1 (son; 

our marriage hour, witli all . . Two Gen- of I'cr. ii. 

our day of marriage shall be yom's . . — v. 

and desire a marriage between Merry Wives, i. 

question is concerning your marriage — i. 

tor ray master, in the way of marriage — i. 

her marriage vow, and a thousand ... — ii. 

which forced marriage would have . . — y. 

Erevents a bad marriage Tirelflh Night, _[. 
e promised her marriage Meas.J'or Meas. iii. 

some speech of marriage betwixt .... — v. 

I tbouglit your marriage fit — y. 

intelligence of an intended marriage. M«c/i Ado, i. 

name tlie day of marriage — i'. 

how canst thou cross this marriage? — ii. 

to be the death of this marriage? .... — ii. 
presently go learn their day of marriage — ii. 
I have railed so long against marriage — ii. 
stay till your marriage be consummate — iii. 
in the new gloss of your marriage .. — iii. 
holp to eifect your ensuing marriage — iii. 
marriage IionouraWe in a beggar? (?v'p.) — iii. 
only to tlie plain form of marriage .. — iv. 
in the state of honourable marriage.. — v. 
marriage feast, between lord Perigort. Lw'sL. 1. ii 
afterward in way of marriage. .il/e?c/i. of renice, ji . 
to woo a maid in way of marriage .. — ii. 

and summon him to marriage — iii. 

much honoured in your marriage — iii. 

the contract of her marriage .....isyou Likeil, iii. 

or the marriage is not lawiiil — iii. 

can tell you what marriage is — iii. 

to marriage, which they will (rep.) .. — v. 

according as marriage binds — y. 

marriage, sooner than thy wickedness. J/r*- If W/, i. 

there were no fear in marriage — i. 

your marriage comes by destiny — i. 3 (son 

do you know he promised me marriage? — v, 

as promising her marriage — y. 

the ceremonial rites of marriage.. rome"7J^o/S/i. iii 

'point the day of marriage — iii. 

good, methinks, to steal our marriage — iii. 
such a mad marriage never was ....^ — iii. 
assurance of a dower in marriage 'twixt — i\'. 
thai; have by marriage made thy ... . — v. 
fat marriage. How dost(;c^.).Co?iKrf!/(i/£no!s,iii 
mad flesh that claims marriage of me — iv. 
rites of marriage shall be solemnized. K?7?A''./o/m, ii 
Ills marriage, nor my own disgrace.. flic/nurf II. ii, 

ye violate a twofold marriage — v. 

by the whicli marriage, tlie line of .... Henry V. i. 

tlie best maker of all marriages — v. 

troubles oft the bed of blessed marriage — v. 

prepare we for our marriage — v. 

to your grace in marriage .1 Henry n. v, 

marriage, uncle? alas! my years — v. 

make this marriage to be solemnized — v. 

marriage is a matter of more — y. 

fatal tliis marriage! cancelling 2He7rry I'l. i. 

got an empire by his marriage — i. 

to eifect this marriage 2 Henry I'l. i i , 

king in lawful marriage — iii, 

by this league and marriage — iii 

for mocking marriage with a dame. . — iii 
matter of marriage was the charge .. — iii 
tills new marriage with the lady Grey? — iv, 
hasty marriage seldom proveth well — jv, 
about tlie marriage of the lad.v Bona — i\'. 
dishonoured by this new marriage .. — iv 

than any home-bred marriage — iv, 

what said lady Bona to my marriage? — iv, 
yet in marriage I may not prove .... — iv 

nave I matched in marriage Itichard I if. iv, 

silent hours of marriage .ioys — iv, 

it seems, the marriage with his Henry I'll I. ii 

and all these for liis marriage — ij 

wlio deemed our marriage lawful .... — ii 

on the debating a marriage — ii 

respecting this our marriage — ii 



MAR 



BlARK— did mark how he did shake../«/'i«C(rsar, i. 2 

tliat bade tlie Romans mark him — i. '2 

I did not mark it — .;• ^ 

discover them by anv mark of favour — ii. 1 

mark well Metellus Cimber — ii. 3 (paper) 

look, liow he makes to Ciesar; mark him — iii. 1 

now mark him, he begins again — iii. '.i 

mark how the blood of CiEsar followed — iii. 'i 
but, sirrah, mark, we use to sa,y...lntony ^ Cleo.u. 5 

beyond the mark of thought — iii. 6 

tills be worth your hearing, mark \t .Cymbeline, i. 1 

nay, some marks of secret on — v. 5 

star; it was a marl< of wonder — y. 5 

and mark their veiling noise.. TUns.indronims, U. 3 
not mark me; or, if they did mark.. — iii. 1 

who marks the waxing tide — ;!!■ I 

mark, Marcus, mark! I understand — lu. 1 

than foemen's marks upon his — iv. 1 

hits the mark his eve doth level I'encles, i. 1 

I know it by this mark — \\. \ 

that's the niark I know you level at .. — u. 3 
all i.'raceful marks, tliat Cleon'e wife — iv. (Gower) 

Boii It, take you the marks of her — iv. 3 

mark me; you must seem to — iv. 3 

mark it, nuiicle; have more than Lear, i. 4 

for bv the marks of sovereignty — j. 4 

do vou mark that, my lord? — \. i 

d:' vou but mark how this becomes — ii. 1 

Toin, awav; mark tlie high noises — 111.6 

mark but the penning of it — iv. 8 

I will preach to tiiee; mark me — iv. 6 

mark, I ?av, instantly; and carry it so .. — v. 3 

a right fair mark, fair coz llnmeo ^- Juliet, i_. 1 

Gixi mark thee to his grace! — 1. 3 

blind, love cannot hit tlie mark — 11. 1 

thou dost not mark me — _\\- * 

God save the mark! — \\\'- 

bidlicr, mark you me, on Wednesday — 111. 3 

like the king? mark it, Horatio Hamlet, 1. 1 

mark nie. I will. My hour is almost come — 1. 5 

do you mark this, Reynaldo? — ii. 1 

mark vou, your part.y in converse — ii. 1 

in lier'duty and obedience, mark — ii. 2 

mark the encounter — ii- 2 

mark it: — you say, right, sir — 11.2 

ho! do you mark that? — jli- 2 

you are nauglit; I'll mark the play — in. 2 

you mark, his favourite flies — in- 2 

sav you? Nay, pray you, mark (rep.) .. — iv. 5 
will he,nill he, he goes: mark you that — v. 1 
that is Laertes, a very noble youth: Mark _ v I 

and I (God bless the mark!) Othello, i. I 

you shall mark many a duteous — i. 1 

mark me with what violence she first .. — ii. 1 
palm of this baud? didst not mark that? — ii. 1 
contemplation, mark, and denotement of — ii. 3 
mark the fleers, the gibes, and notable . . — iv. 1 

1 say, but mark his gesture — iv. 1 

but go after, and mark how he continues — iv. 1 

MARKED— not marked, or not MuchAilo, ii. 1 

I have marked a thousand blushing.. — iv. I 
yet marked I where the bolt ..Mid.N.'sDream, ii. '2 

and marked you both Love's L. lost, iv. 3 

much marked of the melancholy .AsyouLike it, ii. 1 
had they marked him in parcels — — iii. .I 

perhaps you marked not Taming of Shrew, i. 1 

saw you no more? marked you uot .. — i. I 

the fates have marked to bear Comedy of Err. i. 1 

when we have marked with blood Macbeth, i. 7 

are made, not marked; where violent — iv. 3 

by the hand of nature marked King John, iy. 2 

more are men's ends marked Richard II. n. 1 

of an oath, marked with a blot — iv. I 

but I marked him not 1 Henry IV. i. 2 

signs have marked me extraordinary — iii. 1 
go to, but marked him not a word .. — iii. 1 

that thou art only marked for — iii. 2 

if we are marked to die Henry V. iv. 3 

of Kent, marked for the gallows iHetnyl I. iv. 2 

marked by tlie destinies to be TiHenryl'I. ii. 2 

Richard marked him for the grave .. — ii. 6 

marked you not, how that Richard III. ii, 1 

tlieir witchcraft thus have marked me — iii. 4 

marked you his lip, and eyes? Coriolanus, i. 1 

marked ye his words? Julius Ccpsar, iii. 2 

my body's marked with Roman.... C!/m(yerti;e, iii 3 

to this your son is marked Titus .indron. i. 2 

for villains marked with rape — iv. 2 

marked he your music? Pericles, v. 1 

M.'i.RKET- not for idle markets . TiceZ/VA Xight. iii. 3 

and he ended the market Love' sL. Lost, iii. 1 

meetings, markets, fairs — .^''2 

initter-wornan's rate to market .As you Like it, iii. 2 

vou are not for all morkets — iii. 5 

I can buy me twenty at any market. . Macbeth, iv. 2 
he whipped through every market, .2He)»i/;7.ii. 1 
whipped three market days together — iv. 2 

run before my horse to market Richard III. i. I 

search the market narrowly (rep.) Pericles, iv. 3 

hast thou cried her through the market? — iv. 3 

wakes and fairs, and market towns Lear, iii. 6 

and market of his time, be but to sleep.Hnm/e', iv. 4 

M.VRKICTABLE. Mark but the badges. 7Vw/«-s/, v. I 

we shall be tlie more marketable.. ^s ynu Like it, \. 2 

MARKET-CROSSES, read in IHenriiir. v. 1 

MARKET-BELL is rung MIenryVI. iii. 2 

MVRKET-FOLKS— poor market-folks — iii. 2 

MARKET-iMAIDto Rome Antony t,-Clro. iii 6 

MARKET-MEN— of market-men ..XHenryl'I. iii. 2 

as market-men for oxen, sheep — v. 5 

MARKET-PLACE; and a\tn..TwoGcn.of Ver. iv. 4 
eat his heart in the market-place ..Much Ado, iv. 1 
more toward the market-place .. Taming of.Sh. y. 1 

wade to tlie market-place in King John, ii. 1 

in open market-place produced — MIetiryll.i. 4 

advance it in the market-place — ii. 2 

thy trumpet in the market-iilace Coriolanus, i. 5 

would he appear i' tlie market-place — ii. I 
on the market-i'lace, I know, tliey do — ii. 2 
give way; he shall to the market-place — iii. 1 



MARRIAGE— our marrioge hmfu\. IlenryfllL ii. 4 
his second marriage shallbe published — iii. 2 
the late marriage made of none eft'ect — iv. I 
in her marriage my consent be.. Timon of Athens, i. I 
and give out conjectural marriages.. Corintanns, i. I 

within the bond of marriage Julius Ccrsar, iii 

by this marriage all little.. ^nZo7(t/ ^Cleopatra, ii. 2 
though I make this marriage for my — ii. 3 
more in the marriage, than the love — ii. 6 

with marriage therefore was he Cymbeline, v. 4 

in marriage pleasures play-fellow. Fe^/c/c's,i.(Gol^■.) 
by Juno, tliat is queen of marriage .. .. — ii. 3 
this most pompous marriage feast — iii. (Gower) 
even ripe for marriage fight.... — iv. (Gower) 
well, tliink of marriage now .... Romeo <§ Juliet, i. 3 
thy purpose marriage, send me word — ii. 2 

must combine by holy marriage — ii. 3 

what says he of our marriage? — ii. .'> 

find a time to blaze your marriage . . — iii. 3 
delay this marriage for a month .... — iii. 5 

hastes our marriage, to stop — iv. 1 

lest in this marriage he should be.. .. — iv. 3 
to rid her from this second marriage — v. 3 
and to tlie marriage her nurse is privy — y. 3 

and with dirge in marriage Hamlet, i. 2 

coldly furnish forth the marriage tables — i. 2 

the vow I made to her in marriage — i. 5 

father's death, and our o'erhasty marriage — ii. 2 
I sa.y, we will have no more marriages . . — iii. 1 
the instances, that second marriage move — iii. 2 
makes marriage vows as false as dicei s' — iii. 4 
so opposite to mai'riage, that she shunned Othello, i. 2 

curse of marriage, that we can call — iii. 3 

MARRIAGE-BED of smiling veAce.KinsJohn, iii. 1 

by the honour of my marriage-bed.. — v. 2 
troubles of the marriage-bed. .Cometii/o/i?rro?s, ii. 1 

MARRIAGE-DAY, I'll beautify Pericles, v. 3 

our widower's second marriage-day.. /i/rs We//, v. 3 

their stolen marrioge-day was..i?omeo ^Juliet, v. 3 

MARRIAGE-DOWRY; with ..Meas. for Meas. iii. 1 

jNIARRIED-married my daughter there! Tempest, ii. 1 

when we are married, and have. . . . Merry Wives, i. 1 

this 'tis to be married! — iii. 5 

so rails against all married mankind — iv. 2 

master Slender liatli married — v. 5 

if I liad been married to him — v. b 

at the deanery, and there married .. — v. .^ 

1 ha' married un gargon, a boy — v. 5 

have married her most shamefully .. — v. 5 
of the strachy married the yeoman . . Tu-elflhN. ii.b 
having been three months married. . — ii. ."j 
keep no fool, sir, till she be married — iii. 1 

in recompense whereof, he hath married — v. 1 
before he married with her irep.) Mcas.forMeas. ii. 1 
her should this Angelo have married — iii. 1 

but if lie be a married man — iv. 2 

they would else have married me to — iv. 3 

what, are you married? — v. I 

I do confess I ne'er was married — v. 1 

Benedick the married (lep.v. 1 & 4)..,V«c7i.-Wo, i. I 

if tliey were but a week married — • ii. 1 

not tliink I should live till I were married — ii. 3 
when are you married, madam? .... — iii. 1 
means your lordship to be married.. — iii. 2 

to be married to her, friar — iv. 1 

to be married to this count? — iv. 1 

not to be man'ied, not knit my soul . . — iv. I 
let's have a dance ere we are married — v. 4 
lords and ladies more msuried. MnL N.'sVream, iv. 2 

mocks married men Love's L.Lust, v. 2 (song) 

unnleasing to a married ear! — v. 2 (song) 

rather be married to a death's ..Mer. of Venice, i. 2 
ere I will be married to a spunge.... — i. 2 
at that time I may be man-ied too .. — iii. 2 

Antonio, I am married to a wife — iv. I 

tlie foreliead of a married man ...-isyou Like it, iii. 3 

will you be married. Motley? — iii. 3 

be married under a bush — iii. 3 

better to be married of him than.. .. — !!'• 3 

and not being well married — iii. 3 

we must be married, or we — iii. 3 

they shall be married to-morrow () pp.) — v. 2 

to-morrow will we be married — v. 3 

your lord and master's married .ill's Well, ii. 3 

they have married me — ii. 3 

a young man married, is a man — ii. 3 

the king had married him against .. — iii. 5 
nnless tiiou canst say they are married — v. 3 
a fool to be married to hell? . . Taming of Shrew, i. I 
when be married; but here she comes — ii. I 
thou must be married to no man.... — ii. 1 
Kate, we will be married o' Sunday — ii. 1 

Katharine is to be married — ii. 1 

and Petruchio should be married — iii. 2 

to me she's married, not unto — iii, 2 

Iwill be married to a wealthy widow — iv. 2 

I knew a wench married in — iv. 1 

thy son by this hath married — \\\ h 

have you married my daughter — v. I 

we three are married, but you — v. 2 

married a tinker's wife within .. Winter' sTule, iv. i 
have married a shepherd's daughter — i\-. 3 

to murder her I married — iv. 1 

you are married? we are not, sir .... — iv. 1 
whose weakness, married to ..Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 
was I married to her in my dream?. . — ii. 2 
gone to be married! gone to swear. . King John, iii. 1 
our inward souls married in league.. — iii.] 
against t!ie blood that thou hast married — iii. 1 
betu ixt me and m.v married wife. . . . RichnrdlJ. v. I 
earl of March hath lately married ..1 llenryl I', i. 3 

their spirits are so married in illenryl V. v. 1 

that he is married to Nell Quickly Henry V. ii. 1 

to kiss before they are married — v. 2 

amarriedman! that'smost \HenryVI. w i 

who married ISdmund Mortimer iHenryVI. ii. 2 

heir unto thecrown, married Richard — ii. 2 
who married Pliilipjie, sole daughter — ii. 2 
whilst I think I am lliy married wife — ii. 4 
inarried the duke of Clarence' daughter — iv. ? 



MARRIED— not a maid be marriea..2;ip7ir!/f7. iv. 7 
your king married tlie lady Grey?..3//('/iJf//-7. iii. 3 
I must be married to my brotlier's../(/c/:ui'////. iv. 2 

but now married to one above Henry VU I. \. \ 

already hatli married the fair lady . . — !!'• - 
the king hath in secresy long married — iii. '?, 
the unity and marriedcalm of . . Troilus fy Cress, i. 3 
and is m"arried there where it may see — iii. 3 

I loved the maid I married Coriolanus, iy. 5 

a married man. or a ba.cMi;{oT'HrFp.).Jul.Ciesiir, iii. 3 
let rae be married to three k'uv^s.. Antony tj- Cteo. i. 2 

■what says the married woman? — i. 3 

I am not married, Casar: let me hear — i 
madam, he's maiTied to Octavia(;ep.) — i 
ray yon, Is he married to Cleopatra? — i 



v. I 



iii. 3 



iv. 1 



V. 3 



he married but his occasion here 

a master married to your good service — 

a widow that late he married Cywbeline 

I mean, that married her,— alack . . — 

it must be married to that your diamond — 

you married ones, if each of you would 

and iu our temple was he married . . — v. t 

married your royalty,— was wife to .. — y. A 

she'll not undertake a married life ....Pericles,)'}. 5 

till she be married, madam, by — iii. 3 

live to see thee married once Romeo fy Juliet, i. 3 

stands your disposition to be married? — i. 3 

every married [K«^ several] lineament — i. 3 
if he" be married, my grave is like to — i. 5 
Laurence' cell be shrived, and married — ii. ■) 
an hour but married, Tybalt murdered — 
she shall be married to this noble earl — 

I would, the fool were married to — 

I think it best you married with — 

Thursday next be married to this county — 
married to the [Coi. A'?!^-to-morrow] — 
because he married me before to Romeo? — 
not well married, that lives married long — 
best married, that dies married young — 
Paris should have married Juliet .... — 

I married them; and their stolen — 

married her perforce to county Paris — 

married with my uncle, my father's Hainlel, i. 2 

she married: O most wicked speed — _ i. 2 

those that are married already, all but one — iii. I 

are tliey married think you? Trulj Othello, i. 1 

but, I pray, sir, are you fast married? .. — i.'i 

I do not understand. He's married — i. '2 

true, I have married her; the very head — i. 3 
whore of Venice, that married with Othello — iv. 2 

MARRIES— your brother marries.. /4s i/oii Like it, v. 2 

that she, which marries you, must All's Well, v. 3 

prince Edward marries Warwick's.-SHenryK/. iv. 1 

MARRING— it is marring indeed .. Merry IVives, i. I 
I doubt, prove mine own marring.2 HcHry/;-'. (epil.) 
making, and marring fortunes ..Antony^-Cleo. iii. 9 

MARROW— his manly marrow in her..^«'s fKe«, ii. 3 

he were wasted, marrow, bones iliemyl'I. iii. 2 

the minds and marrowsof our. rnno«o/ J(/ie,-ii-, iv. I 

dry up thy marrows, vines — iv. 3 

when crouching marrow, in the bearer — v. 5 
the pith and marrow of our attribute ..Hamlel, i. 4 

M ARROWLESS, thy blood is cold. . . . Macbeth, iii. 4 

MARRY— if you will marry me Tempest, \\\. 1 

shall she marry him? (rep.) . . Two Gen. of I'er. ii. 5 
would enforce me marry vain Thurio — iy. 3 

I will say, marry trap Merry Wives, i. 1 

why if it be so I will marry her (jep.) — i. 1 

upon good dowry, marry her? — _ i. 1 

you two! would marry — !!!• ^ 

do not marry me to yond' fool — iii. 4 

and marry her at Eton — iv. 4 

to marry with Nan Page — iv. 4 

at Eton immediately to marry — iv. 6 

a priest attends, straight marry her. . — iv. B 

to marry mistress Anne Page — v. 5 

cannot you see but marry boys? — v. 5 

I could marry this wench for iMa.TwelflhKight , ii. 5 

let him marry herl Measiiie for Measure, i. 5 

take her hence, and marry her instantly — v. 1 
let her appear, and he shall marry her — v. 1 

do not marry me to a whore ! — v. 1 

upon mine honour, thou shalt marrj' her — y, 1 
and he swore he would marry her ..Much Ado, ii. 1 

1 would not marry her, though she .. — ii. I 
Claudio shall marry the daughter .. — ii. 2 

I did never think to marry — ii. 3 

why I should not marry her to-morrow — iii. 2 
he swore he would never marry .... — iii. 4 

to marry this lady? — iv. 1 

you come to marry her — iv. 1 

the whole assembly, and not marry her — iv. 2 
disgraced her, when you should niarry — v. I 
to marry with my brother's daughter — v. 4 

and swear to marry her — v. 4 

since I do purpose to marry, I will .. — v. 4 
hath my consent to marry her (iep.).Mid.N. Dr. i. 1 

do youfoarry him — i. I 

there, gentle Hermia, may I marry thee — _ i. 1 

marry me to one Frances .... Love's L. Lost, iii. 1 
if thou marry, hang me by the neck — iv. 1 
if I should marry him {re p.). Merchant ofl'enice. i. 2 

let tliem be free, marry them to — iv. 1 

a'! it may be, I will marry thee ..AsyouLilceit, iii. 3 
for he is not like to marry me well.. — iii. 3 
be the priest, and marry us (rep.).... — iv. I 

that must marry this woman — v. 1 

marries Aliena, you shall marry her — v. 2 

1 will marry you, if ever I marry .. — v. 2 
you'll marry me, if I be willing? .... — v. 4 

if you refuse to marry me — v. 4 

word, Phcebe, that you'll marry me — v. 4 

Silvius, that you'll marry lier — y. 4 

the reason why thou wilt marry All's Welt, j. 3 

I do marry, that I may repent — _i. 3 

to know why I should marry her. ... — .\\- ^ 
after this, to marry her, I'll add three — iii. 7 

he had sworn to marry me — iv. 2 

80 braid, marry that will, I'll live .. — iv. 2 
his many protestations to marry nie — v, 3 (i)etiL) 



M.\RRY— yet you desire to marry .... All's ll'ell, v. 3 
if you shall marry, you give away .. — v. 3 
she, which marries you, must niarry me — v. 3 
and marry him to a puppet . . Taming ofSltrew, i. 2 
yea, and to marry her, if her dowry — i. 2 

will you, uill you, I will marry you — ii. I 
please him come and marry her .... — iii. 2 

I trust, you will not marry her — iii. 2 

and marry sweet Bianca with consent — iii. 2 
ne'er to marry with her though she — iv. 1 

did he marry me to famish ine? — v. 3 

sweet maid, we marry a gentler.. Winter's Tale, iv. 3 
marry her; and, with my best endeavoiu'S — iv. 3 

will you swear never to marry — v. 1 

will marry, if you will, sir, no remedy — v. 1 

we shall not marry, till thou — v. 1 

well, I will marry one day . . Comedy nf Errors, ii. 1 
of all husbands that niarry wives. . . . King John, i. 1 
these two princes, if you marry them — ii.2 

Eewis marry Blanch! — iii. 1 

whom I have weekly sworn to marry.lHen?;//^. i.2 
to marry me, and make me my lady — ii. 1 
thou art to marry his sister Nell — ii. 2 (letter) 

must I marry your sister? — ii.2 

and then, when they marry, they get — iv. 3 

to marry princess ftlargaret ^Uenryfl. i. 1 

strange, if I .should marry her . . . .ZHenry >'/. iii. 2 

I'll niarry Warwick's youngest Richard 111. i. 1 

marry may she? marry with a king? — i. 3 

whom I will marry straight to Clarence' — iv. 2 
murder her brothers, and then marry her! — iv. 2 
king's sister; he shall marry her. . Henry Fill. iii. 2 
to say, they are fools that marry. Julius Ccesar, iii. 3 
why did he marry Fulvia ..Antony Sf Cleopatra, i. I 
to marry me with Octavius Cassar .. — i. 2 

let him marry a woman that — i.2 

unless a man would marry a gallows. Cymbeline, v. 4 
shall marry her at Pentapolis_. Pericles, y. 3 

1 shall never marry like my sisters Lear, i. 1 

■which she calls plainness, marry her... _.^ — i. 1 

so beggars marry many — iii. 2 (song) 

if you will marry, make your love — v. 3 

all three now marry in an instant — v. 3 

marry, that marry is the very . . Romeo ^Juliet,]. 3 

consent to marry us this day — ii. 3 

I will not marry yet — iii. 5 

rather than to marry county Paris {rep.) — iv. 1 

give consent to marry Paris — iv. 1 

if thou dost marry, I'll give thee this. .Hamlet, iii. 1 

wilt needs marry, marry a fool — iii. 1 

kill a king, and marry with his brother — iii. 4 

why did I marry? Othello, iii. 3 

gives it out, that you shall marry her (rep.) — iv. 1 

BIAIIRYING 'mong his subjects? Tempest, ii. 1 

you may, by marrying Merry Wives, i. 1 

in the lawful name ofinarrying .... — iv. 6 
at the doctor's marrying my daughter — v. 3 

marrying a punk, my lord Meas.forMeas. v. 1 

in marrying the renowned Claudio. .A/wcA Ado, ii. 2 
bless me" from marrying a usurer ! . Winter's Tale, iv. 3 
duke of York, marrying my sister . . 1 Henry I'l. ii. 5 
marrying her, which I must reach .Ricliard III. i. 1 
this matter of marrying his king's ..Cymbeline, i. 5 
did deceive her father marrying you ..Othello, iii. 3 

MARS'S hot minion is returned Tempest, iv. 1 

thou art the Mars of malcontents .Merry Wives, i. 3 
the armipotent Mars, of lances .... Love's L. Lost, v. 2 
Hercules, and frowning Mars ..Mer, of Venice, iii. 2 

under Mars, I (rep.) All's Well, i. 1 

Mars dote on you for his — ii. 1 

liigh curvet of Mars's fiery steed .... — ii. 3 
this very day, great Mars, I put .... — iii. 3 

the fear of Mars before it — iv. 1 

the seat of Mars, this other Eden . . Richard II. ii. 1 
the Black Prince, that young Mars. . — ii. 3 
this Hotspur Mars in swathing ....\HenryIV. iii. 2 
the mailed Mars shall on his altar! .. — iv. 1 

assume the port of Mars Henry V. i. (chorus) 

big Mars seems bankrupt — iv. 2 

Mars, his true movin" \ Henry VI. i. 2 

Mars his idiot! do, rudeness ....Troilus 'ti- Cress, ii. 1 

let iSIars divide eternity — ii. 3 

and drave great Mars to faction — iii. 3 

by Mars his gauntlet, thanks! — iv. 6 

but by great Mars, the captain — iv. .^ 

the forge that stithy'd Mars his helm — iv. 5 

as red as Mars his heart — v. 2 

nor the hand of Mars beckoning .... — v. 3 

thou valiant Mars! Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

now. Mars. I pr'ythee, make Coriolanus^ i. 4 

why, thou Mars! I tell thee — iv. 5 

as if he were son aud heir to Mars .. — iv. 5 

hear'st thou. Mars? Name not — v. 5 

have glowed like plated Mars 4iitony SrCleo. i. I 

and think, ■vyhat Venus did with Mars — i. 5 

and speak as loud as Mars — ii.2 

like a Gorgon, 'totlier way he's a Mars — ii. 5 
with Mars fall out, with Juno chide .Cymbeline, v. 4 

hammers fall ou Mars's armour Hamlel, ii. 2 

an eve like Mars, to threaten — iii. 4 

M ARSEILLES-is at Marseilles All's Well, iv. 4 

his majesty comes post from Marseilles — iv. 4 
now is lying in Marseilles' road .. Taming of Sh. ii. 1 

MARSH-theenemy is past the ma.rBh.RichardlII.Y.3 

MARSHAL'S truncheon Measure Cor Measure, ii. 2 

becomes the marshal to my will ..Mid.N.'sDr. ii. 3 

marshal, command our officers Richard 11. i. 1 

marshal, demand of yonder {rep. ).... — i. 3 

except the marshal, and such officers — i. 3 

lord marshal, let me kiss my — i. 3 

order the trial, marshal, and begin .. — i. 3 

lord marshal, what say you 2HenryIV. i. 3 

the marshal, and the archbishop .... — ii. 3 
for crowding among the marshal's men — iii. 2 
be assured, my good lord marshal.... — iv. 1 
Norfolk, he to be earl marshal. . . . Henry VIII. iv. I 

marshal the rest as they deserve Pericles, ii. 3 

these mutualities so marshal the way . . Olliello, ii. 1 

M.AR.SHALSEA— find a Marshalsea.Heni-y VIII. v. 3 

MARSIIAL'ST me the way Macbetti,ii. I 



M.VHT— sosmug upon the mavi.. Mer. of Venice, iii. 1 

madly on a desperate mart Taming of sh. ii. I 

at any Syracusan marts and {airs. Comedy of Err. i. 1 
" 1.2 



— i. 2 

— Ii. 1 

— ii.2 

— ii. 2 

— iii. 1 



I Ccpsnr, iv, 3 



I'll meet with you upon the m 
to fetch you from the mart .home. . . . 
from the mart he's somew here gone., 
at first I sent him from the mart .... 

deliver to me on the mart 

face me down he met me on the mart 

that you beat me at the mart 

come to the mart, where I will walk 
I'll to the mart, and there for Dromio 

first fiorswore it on the mart 

to sell and mart your oflices Julir 

to mart as in a Romish stew Cymbeline, i, 

we lost too much money this mart. . . . Pericles, iv. 3 

foreign mart for implements of war Hamlet, i. 1 

MAR'TED-nothingmarted with him. "7h/«'.s- T. iv. 3 
INIARTEM— ad martem, H\a.%'e.ior.T,tusAudron. iv. 3 

MAR-TEXT, the vicar {lep.) As you Like it, iii.i 

a most vile mar-text — v. I 

MARTIAL— in a martial hand . . Tu'elfth Night, iii. 2 
have a swashing and a martial ..AsyouLil;eit,i. 3 

with arts, and martial exercises HHenry IV. iv. 4 

if there is any martial law Henry I', iv. 8 

thou, mirror of all martial men? .... 1 Henry VI. i. i 

a maid! and be so martial I — ii. i 

warlike and martial Talbot — iii. 2 

his martial thigh: the brawns of ..Cymbeline, iv. 2 
with a martial scorn, with one .Romeo if Juliet, iii. 1 

with martial stalk hath he gone by Hamlet, i. 1 

MARTIN — Saint Martin's summer ..] Henry VJ. i. 2 
MARTINO— signior Martino.y(omeo^-/u;. i. 2 (note) 

MARTLEMAS, your master? iHenrylV. ii. 2 

MARTLET— like the martlet. . Merch. of Venice, ii. 9 

temple haunting martlet, does approve. jV/ac6f.Vi, i. G 

MARTYR— faith's martyrs in love..2HennjlV. iv. 1 

for Oldcastle died a martyr — (epil.) 

thou fall'st a blessed martyr Henry VIII. iii. 2 

how I mean to martyr you .... TIlusAndronicus, v . 2 

they here stand martyrs, slain in IWieles, i. 1 

MARTYRED-martyred thee? {rep.) .Titus And. iii. 1 
1 can interpret all ner martyred signs — iii. 2 

hated, martyred, killed! Romeo ^Juliet, iv. 5 

MARULLUS and Flavins for pulling. JuLCfPsar. i. 2 

MARVEL— I marvel, I hear not ..Merry Wives, iii. 5 

I marvel your ladj'ship takes .... Tv^einhMghl, i. 5 

may marvel, wh.y I obscured . . Meas.for Meas. v. 1 

no marvel, though Demetrius... V/ii. A'. 'sD/eajn, ii. 3 

and that's great marvel Love'sL.LosI, i. 2 

I marvel, thy master hath not — v. i 

is marvel he outdwells Wis.. Merchant of Venice, ii. 6 
I marvel, why I answered not ..AsyouLilieit,i[\.b 
you must not marvel, Helen, at my, .All's Well, ii. 5 
therefore we marvel much, our cousin — iii. 1 
'tis marvel; but that you're. . Taming of Shrew, iv. 2 
I marvel, Cambio comes not all this — v. 1 

my marvel, and my message yVinter'sTale, v. 1 

strike all that look upon with marvel — v. 3 
no marvel though she v^viss.. Comedy of Errors, ii. 1 

I do not only marvel where I Henry IV. ii. 4 

and 'tis no marvel, he's so humorous — iii. 1 
but that's no marvel, he drinks uo.2HenryIV. iv. 3 

Charles; I marvel, how he sped \HenryVl.ii. \ 

no marvel, an' it like your majesty. .2 Hoir;/''/. ii. 1 
no marvel, lord, though it affrighted. /((c/ia;d III. i. 4 

I marvel, that her grace did leave — ii.2 

I marvel, where Troilus is! {rep.). Troilus ^^ Cress, i. 2 

no marvel, though you bite so — ii.2 

who marvels then, when Helenus .. — ii.2 

then marvel not, thou great — iii. 3 

you make me marvel Timon of.ithens, ii. 2 

and, to kill the marvel, shall be Cymbeline, iii. 1 

master, I marvel how the fishes Pericles, ii. 1 

but I much marvel that your lordship — iii. 2 
marvel, what kin thou and thy daughters. Lrar, i. 4 

no marvel then, though he were ill — ii. I 

no marvel, you have so bestirred — ii.2 

1 marvel, our mild husband not met us — iv. 1 

of these gentlemen, this marvel to you. .Hamlet, i. 2 

MARVELljED-army marvelled at it.Coriotanus.wb 

MARVELLOUS sweet music! Tempest, iii. 3 

husband has a marvellous infection. A/fj-rji /('/Bra, ii.2 
is marvellous little beholden . . Meas.for Meas. iv. .'I 
a marvellous witty fellow, I assure.. M ut-h .-Ida, iv. 2 
a marvellous convenient placft.Mid.N.'sDream, iii. 1 
1 am marvellous hairy about the face — iv. 1 

a mark marvellous well shot Love's L.Lost, iv. I 

marvellous well for the pen — iv. 2 

he is a marvellous good neighbour .. — v. 2 

the rogues are marvellous poor Alt's Well, i v. 3 

you are marvellous forward .. Taming nf Shrew, ii. 1 
and you are marvellous merry. . Comedy of lirr. iv. 3 
that sa marvellous searching \\ine..'l Henry IV. ii. 4 
for they have marvellous foul linen. . — v. I 

solus in thy most marvellous face Henry /'. ii. 1 

is a marvellous falorons gentleman.. — ill. 2 

to be a marvellous proper man Richard III. i. •> 

she has a marvellous white hand. Troilus ^- Cress, i. 2 

a marvellous poor one Coriolanus, iv. 6 

comforted me marvellous much. Romeo &-Juliet,\\\. 5 

retirement, marvellous distempered ...Hamlet, iii. 2 

MARVELLOUSLY changed. MercAan/o/FfH/ct', i. 1 

you may be marvellously mistook ..IlenryV. iii. 6 

you shall do marvellous'ly wisely Hamlet, \\. 1 

MARVELL'ST-marvell'stat my words. iVnc6c//i, iii.2 
MARY— my name is Mary {rep,) ..Twelfth Night, i. 3 

where, good mistress Mary? — i. 5 

mistress Mary, if you prized my .... — ii. 3 

for at Saint Marj' s chapel King John, ii. 2 

workVs ransom, blessed Mary's son. Richard II, ii. 1 

of Orleans and our daughter I\Iary. Henry VIII. ii. 4 

by Hoi v Mary, Butts, tnere's knavery — v. 1 

MARY-BUDS begin to ope. . . . Cymbeline, ii. 3 (song) 

MASCULINE usurped attire .... Twetfih Nigh', v. 1 

prtt3' God! she prove not masculine. 1 UmryVl, ii. 1 

why, his masculine whore . . Troilus &■ Cressida, v. I 

MAS'IIAM- Scroopof Masharn..H,/HryA-. ii. (chorus) 

my kind lord of Masham, and you . . — ii. 2 

lord Scroop of Masham {rep. ) — ii. 2 



MAS 



L 491 ] 



M.\3K-8im-expelling mask '^ay-'''!",'^';";"^';/^ 3 
I delizht in masks and revels .... riictnhl\isht,u i 
iXle black masks p.oclaim ■■^.'f''?:-^^'-^^'- " • * 
you shall play it in a mask.. ...U.J. iV. s fljfaw., i. 2 
what masks, what dances ('<■''•■'■■■,•••■. ,7.,, ji 

now fair befall yoiii musk Loi-c jL.Lo.w, 11. 1 

dances, masks, and merry hmus .... - iv- ^ 
within yonr mask, and would alio d 
prepare for tins mask to-night? ..W« 
Iwill not say you shall see amask., 

what! ore there masks? 

no mask to-night.... ,•,■..••"■ 

masks for faces, and for noses. 1. n, 



.o/rt 



— ii. 6 
r. iv. 3(song) 



harnessed mask, and unadvised re\e.M ., 

^^'r^^&^JS^^e^^yr^l^icL;. i! . 

shows as fairly in the mask. ..-■•••• •,.,",„,. , , 

to mask thy monstrous visage?.... J«ta«C«..™, . . 1 

w i th faces fit for masks .,......•• ■ ■ • fi''"''7' ' •, \ f 

these happy masks, that kiss fair. Romeo <S Jutii-l, 1. 1 
we mean well, in going to this mask - -4 

^fice last yourself and I were m a mask? - . 6 

thou know'st the mask of night is . . - "• | 
her "loves, her mask, nor nothing? . . . .0(hMo, i v. i 

M-VSKIOD, he was not sure..'//™ Oeit. oj tc>ona,v. - 
must ail he masked and vizarded.W.ny » m^ iv. 6 

come hither masked • ■ ^Y,"/' f''; V 7, 

are masked under such colours . . Love iL.l.o^i,\. . 

we will every one be masked — ^- - 

be masked , the maskers come . . . . ..... — y- f 

fair ladies, masked, are roses in their - \ ■ 

-i-^'-cin thou sce'st me masked Couolntius.ua 

you up to the masked Neptune 



ill. I 
iii. I 
iii. I 




_ v. 1 

.Olhello,\\. 3 

_ ii. 3 



MASKING-^our mas„...» ■■■,--;:;'-■', ,/„.„,„ jv 3 
wliat maskin- stutf is here? . 7amn,s-o/.S/»™, v. 3 

masking the business from the .ilatbi^ili.m. 1 

MASOJSr-singing masons building roofs. H.,.,;/ / . 1. 2 
^lilds stronger than the mason (,ep.) ■•H<.|»W, v- 
MASONRY-on the plain masonry....^" sirai, 11. 1 
M ASS— nav bv the mass, tliat he ..Merr>j Wives, ly. 2 

mass, aiW elbow itched Much Ado, lu. 3 

yea.bythemass, tliatit IS • ".„;;, 

by the mass, there is ne'er a Vir,g...\ Henry IV. n. 1 
bv the mass, lad, thou says t trne . •••„-,„• ^ 
bV the mass, here comes Bardolph..2Henri//r. n. 2 
mass, thou say'st true; the prince . . - ii- 4 
by the mass, liere will be old utis .. • 4 

by the mass, I was called (rep.) ...... "i- ^ 

bv the mass, I have drunk (rtjj.).... — ^-f 

mass, you'll pay him tlienl.. Hcnr,jV.ix.\ 

by the mass, our hearts are in — ^\- % 

have cost a mass of public treasury . .iUemy H.\.i 

mass, 'twill be sore law then — "■< 

by the mass, so did we a.I. . . . . . . ... . . -- t. j 

and wliat hatl) mass, or matter.. Croilus *Crcsi. 1. 3 

fisure of the giant mass of '■ ^ 

a'^moiety ofthaf massof mnaii...... — "• ^ 

constringed in mass by the almighty - v. i 
noised, he hath a mass of treasure rnnoiin/f"- '^ ■ ^ 
come to you at evening mass?.. Homeo */«'«'. 'X- 

by the mass, I was about to say.. Hamie'.,u. \ 

bv the mass, and 'tis like a eamel .. — ii'.- ^ 
this solidity and compound mass.... — in- 4 
of such mass, and charge, led by ... . 
to't. JIass. I cannot tell. Cudgel.. 

I remem her a mass of things 

by the mass, 'tis morning .-. 

not the world's mass of vanity could — iv. I 

MASSACRE-triumpli in massacres!! Henry/) . y. 4 

the general wreck and massacre .... 1 Henry > /..;. I 

in all our bloody massacre, I muse.. — 11.- 
your subjects from such massacre .. — .„ X- * 
destruction, blood, and massacre l.-KfcAacd ///._ii. 4 
arch deed of piteous massacre. .. . .... — ly- J 

find a day to massacre them xs\\..Tilus Andron. 1. 2 
and massacres, acts of black night ... . — v. 1 

MASSES-Iiath masses of money . . Merry Wives,u. 2 
MASSY— too massy for your strengths. rcmpcs(, 111. S 

seems as massy as his club .Much Ado 111.3 

with massy staples Troilus Sr Cressida, (pro!.) 

withoutdrawing their massy irons .. — .!}• 3 

it is a massy wheel, fixed on the Hnmiel, 111. 6 

MAST— nor tackle, sail, nor mast ...... Tempesi, 1. 2 

to a strong mast, that lived TwelfthNiglU. i. 2 

him unto a small spare mast. . Comedy ofhrrors, 1 . 1 
ourselves at either end the mast. . . . .. — ..'. ) 

upon the high and giddy mast ....'menrylV.^n. 1 

what though the mast he now 3 Henry t'l. v. 4 

Somerset another goodly mast? ..•■■- -- ..Y- * 
like a drunken sailor on a mast . . Ilichard ///. 111. 4 
tlie oaks bear mast, the briers . Timon of Athens, iv. 3 
and, clasping to the mast, endured ..lericles, iv. 1 

ten masts at each make not......... Lenr, iv. b 

MASTER— here, master, what cheer? .. 

'tend to tlie master's whistle 

tlie master, boatswain? rKni.-bospnJ .. 

Prospero, master of a full poor cell 

then appointed master of this design .. 

all hail, great master! 

close by, my master 

I thank thee, master 

pardon, master: I will be 

that's mv noble masterl 

the masters of some merchant 

my master through his art foresees 

the master, the swabber — 

farewell, master, farewell, farewell — 
has a new master, get a new man — 
my valiant master would destroy thee 

tills will I tell my master 

what would my potent master? 

do you love me, master? no 

i-eak masters though ye be. 

the master and the boatswain 



MASTER— our master capering to eye.. Tempest, 

how fine my master is! — 

is your master, for he masters. . Tiro Gen. of I'er 
that my master is a shepherd Qep) . . — 
1 seek my master, and my master. ... — 
foUowest thy master, tliy master for — 
I'll commend .yon to my master .... — 
I can hardly think you my master . . — 

my master sues to lier — 

that my master, being scribe — 

thy master is shipiied -. — 

lose thy master, and in losing (rep.) — 

and the master, and the service? — — 
master, sir Thurio frowns on you .... — 

how did thy master part with — 

that my master is become — 

I meant thy master — 

my master is become a not lover — 

could their master come and go — 

master, shall I strike? — 

my master is a kind of knave — 

firslie is her master's maid — Ji;- 

with my master's ship? — !!.'• 

thy master stays for thee — >>'■ 

master, be one of them — jv. 

by his master's command — iv- 

from my master — ?^- 

how many masters would do ....... . — n- 

I am my master's true confirmed love — iv. 
cannot be true servant to my master — iv, 

from niy master, sir Proteus — iv. 

go, give your master this — ;v. 

will not look upon your master's lines — iv, 

my master wrongs her much — ;v 

my master loved lier well — '^ 

I hope my master's suit will be...... — iv 

make m v master out of love with thee — iv 

good sir, my master charged me . . — v 
a gentleman born, master parson. . Merry Wives, 1, 

sir John, and master mine — i 

with a master of fence — ! 

to solicit your master's desires — i 

and see if you can see my master — J 

Blender's your master? — \ 

1 will do what I can for your master — 1 

here comes my master — ! 

go enquire for my master — ' 

good master, be content — ! 

for my master, in the way of marriage — 1 
I'll do your master what good I can — 1 
master,— I may call him my master — 1 

my master himself is in love — .! 

now, good master doctor! (,rep.) — i'. 

but first, master guest .•••,.■.,• 

comes ray master, master Shallow .. 

how now, master parson ? Crcp. ) 

so do you, good master doctor 

or eye your master's heels? 

but my wife, master doctor (rep.'> 

my master, sir John, is come . . . . 

my master knows not of your being 

go tell thy master, I am alone 

help to cover your master, boy 

that's m v master, master doctor 

but yet, I would my master had 

met the jealous knave their master. . 
look, where his master comes. ...... . . 

answer your master, be not afraid . . 

your master is hard at door 

my master, sir, master Slender 

if it were my master's fortune ; 

I shall make my master glad — jv- 

here, master doctor, in perplexity .. — iv. 

master doctor, my daughter is in — v. 

why went you not with master doctor — v. 
my lord and master loves you.... Tuelfih Kight, 1. 
if I did love you in my master's name — ;■ 
my master, not myself, lacks.... — — ;• 
let your fervour, like m.v master s .. — 1. 

unless the master were the man — .i- 

mv master loves her dearly.. — ]!• 

is desperate for my master s love .... — !;. 

my masters, are you mad? — .H 

should he as oft with your master .. — 111. 

my master's tears to you deplore — ]]]■ 

go on mv master's griefs — ni. 

yonr true love for my master — i"- 

jove bless thee, master parson (rep.) — iv. 
sits crowned in his master's spite.... — v. 

your master quits you — ■". 

'called me master for so long — v. 

from this time be your master's mistress — y. 

to me master tapster (rep.) Meas.for Meas. 11. 

come hither, master constable ...... — _}}■ 

well, every one can master a gi-ief..M«c/i. irto, 111. 

both which, master constable — ;i;- 

well, masters, good night (rep.1.. — ui/ 

some treason, masters; yet stand — 

the prince, Claudio, and my master. . — 

Tempest, i.\ possessed by my master don Jolin .. — 
' ■ but the devil my master knew she .. — 
call up the right master constable .. — 
masters, masters,— You'll be (rep.l .. — 
let them come before master constable — 
master gentleman Con rade. Masters — 
masters, it is proved already tliat. . . . — 
master constable, you go not (rep.) . . — 

masters, I charge you, in the — 

tills is more, masters, than you can deny — 

but masters, remember, that 1 — 

who have you offended, masters .... — 
ii. 2 (song) mine and my master's false accusation — 
ii. 2 (song) and masters, do not forget to speedy — 

ii.2(song) good-morrow, masters (rep.) , — 

that master so their blood Mid..\.sDr 

by the scroll: masters, spread yourselves — 

but, masters, here are your parts — 

tliis is he, my master said — 

masters, you ought to consider with — 
pray, masters! fly, masters! helpl .. — 



MAS 

MASTERS the duke is coming.. Mid.N.'sDream, iv. 2 
masters I am to discourse wonders . . ^ — ly. 2 

you this in my praise, master? Love sL.Iost, 1. 2 

iierculcs, master (rep.) — '• 2 

most maculate thoughts, master — — 1. ^ 
a dangerous rhyme, master, against 

yet a better love tlian my master 

master, will you win your love with 

no, my complete master (rep.) 

and out of heart, master; all those .. 
honest master; or rather, muster, no 
a wonder, master; here's a Costard.. 
a good master of mine, to a lady of . . 
good-morrow, master [ir.rson. Master 
marry, master schoolmaster, he that 
good master parson, be so good as read 

so doth the hound his master 

I marvel, thy master hath not eaten 
remuneration I had of thy master .. 
master, let me take you a button-hole 
the prince, his master will he..Mc--'- 



iii. 1 
iii. 1 
iii. 1 



iv. 1 
iv. 2 
iv. i 



iii. 3 
iii. .3 
iii. 3 



1. 2 

iii. 1 

iii. 1 

iii. I 



— V. 2 

tfl'enice, i. 2 



Well, i 1 



iii'. 


3 


111. 


3 


IV. 


•2 


T'' 


2 


iv 


r, 


IV 


•2 


IV 


2 


IV 


2 


V 


1 


V 


1 


V 


1 


1, i 


3 
1 


I 


2 

2- 


ii 


3 


iii 


1 



to run from this Jew my master (rep.) 

master, young man, you (rep.) — ;;■ ^ 

no master, sir, but a poor man's — 11. 2 

how dost thou and thy master agree? — n- 2 

jn-y master's a very Jew — ".2 

his master and he, (saving your .... — ii- ; 

Shylock, thy master (rep.) — \\- f 

take leave of thy old master — !'■.•; 

where is your master? — !!■ 2 

who is thy new master's guest — ij- •' 

my old master tlie Jew to sup (rep.) — n. 4 

my young master doth expect your.. — .11. 3 

master of my servants, queen o'er . . — 111.^ 

[Co(.] masters [K7i<. -master] of passion — iv. 

IS my master yet returned? ........ .. — v. 

from my master, withhis horn full (rep.) — v 1 

for the wealth that the world masters — v. 1 

neither man, nor master, would take — y. [ 

yonder comes my master As youLike it, 1. I 

sweet masters, be patient; for your. . — J. ] 

God be with my old master! — 1. ' 

or something weoker, masters me . . — .J- - 

my young master? my gentle (rep.) — 11. i 

know you not, master, to some kind of — ii- 3 

your virtues, gentle master, are .... — ii- 3 

master, go on ; and I will follow thee — n.J 

die well, and not my master's debtor — 11. 3 

my master is of churlish disposition — 11. 4 

dear master, I can go no further — Ji- 1 

farewell, kind master — !!• ' 

right welcome as thy master is. .... . — ."• 7 

mistress, and master, you have oft . . — ]][■ 4 

the old carlot once was master of — m- ^ 

our master and mistress seek you 
your master have a thousand loves 

my master, my dear lord he is — ..- - 

and master did well to make his (rep.) — 11. 3 

my master. Are you companion .... — "■ 3 

count's master is of another style.... — ii- 3 

yonr lord and master's married — \\- o 

my master? Who? God? Ay, sir (rep.) — \\. o 

sliakes out his master's undoing ...— "-4 

my dearest master, your dear son — 111. 4 (letter) 

how now, Where's your master? — iv. 3 

to suggest thee from thy master — .iv. a 

end the master I speak of, ever keeps — iv. .^ 
I moved the king my master, to speak 

the displeasure of your master . . 

so please your majesty, ray master hath 
gentle master mine, 1 am in all .. Tavm 

only, good master, while we do 

master, some sliow, to welcome 

hush, master ! here is some good — 

well said, master, mum! — 

master, it is no time to chide — 

master, vou looked so longly on — 

hands of her, master, your love must _ — 
I have it, Tranio. Master, for my hana — 

or master; then it follows thus (rep.) — 

master, has my fellow Tranio stolen — 

sake, but your master's, I advise — 

m v master is grown quarrelsome — 

help, masters, help! my master is mad — 

to use his master so? being perhaps — 

master, master, look about you — 

if that be all, masters, I hear no — 

softly, my masters! if you be........ — 

in my liead to do ray master good .. — 

I must believe my master — 

good masters, take it not — 

fa rewell, sweet masters, both — 

master, master! news, old news — 

all for my master's sake, Lucentio . . — 

I will be master of what is mine — 

on all mad masters! on all foul — 

is my master and his wife coming . . — 

it hath tamed my old master — 

my master and mistress are (rep.) .. — 

my master riding behind my — 

touch a hair of my master s horse-tail — 

von must meet my master — 

iiow near is our master? — 

silence! I hear my master — 

what, master, read you? first — 

prove, sir, master of your art — 

andPetruchiois the master ........ — 

master, master, I liave watched . . — 
master, a mercatante, or a pedant . . — 

iust as my muster had direction — 

"I bid mv master cut out the gown . . - 
master, "if ever I said loose-bodicd .. 
BO, take it up unto thy master s use. . 

1 say, commend me to thy master . . - 
you saw mv master wink and laugh - 

my master'hath appointed me to - 

back to my master as soon as I can . . - 
mine old master, Vincentio? now we 
thy master's father, Vinccntio? (rep.) - 
O lie hath murdered his master 1 . . . . 



V. 3 

V. 3 

nrSh. i. 1 

_■ i. 1 

_ i. 1 



....■meitrijlV. i. 2 
i, 2 



back again to your master .. 
Bpeak louder, my master is deaf. 

wiuit foolish master taught you — ii. 1 

and how doth tliy master, Bardolph? — ii. 2 

is your master here in London? — ii. 2 

and a kinswoman of my master's.... — ii. 2 

no word to your master, that I — ii. 2 

feel, masters, how I shake; look you — ii. 4 
rogue.away! I am meat for yoiu- master — ii. 4 
lisping to his master's old tables .... — ii. 4 
mistress Tearsheet come to my master — ii. 4 
he is not his craft's master, he doth not — iii. i 
of being near their master; if to his men — v. I 
I'll to the king my master that is dead — v. j 
tlie prince our master says, that you ..Hmiryl'. i. 2 
Pistol, you must come to my master — ii. 1 

as dogs upon their masters, worrying — ii. 2 
and these he masters now; now he .. — ii. 4 
and the dulce of Exeter is master of the — iii. G 
shall I know of thee? my master's mind — iii. 6 
so far my king and master; so much — iii. 6 
tell thy master here lam; my ransom — iii, B 
go, bid thy master well advise himself — iii.fi 

under his master's command — iv. 1 

the business of the master the author — iv. 1 

soUj nor the master of his servant — iv 1 

their armed heels at their dead masters — iv. 7 

the master of the cross-bows — iv. 8 

farewell, m.v masters; to my task illenryl'!. i. I 

away, my rnasters! trouble us no.... — ill. 1 
did represent my master's blushing.. — iv. 1 
the faintness of my master's heart .. — iv. 1 
the profter of my lord your master .. — v. I 

my masters, let's stand close 2Heni!/l'l. i. 3 

against my master, Thomas Horner — 

my master wasi iS"o, forsooth : {rep.) — 

and send for his master with — 

mostmasterwearnobreech.es — 

doth accuse his master of liigh treason — 

come, my masters; the duchess — 

well said, my masters; and welcome all — 

tlieir master loves to be aloft — 

stand by, ray masters, bring him — 

a plum-tree, master. How long (rep.) — 
alas, good master, my wife desired . . — 

yes, master, as clear as day — 

alas, master, I know not (rep.) — 

•1 master that you could! my masters — 
and fear not thy master; fight for . . — 



• 


3 


] 


» 


J 


■A 


! 


3 


i 




11 





Sr.VSTER— catches for his master . raming of Sit. v. 2 

lest it should bite its master >l'in(ei'i'l'ale, i. 2 

is the obedience to a master _ i. 2 

wolf will sooner find, than the master — iii. 3 

the penitent king, my master, hatli sent — iv. 1 

O master, if you did but hear — iv. 3 

master, there is three carters — iv. 3 

that unhappy king, my master, whom — iv. 3 

may be to the flight of my master — iv. 3 

the prince ray master good — iv. 3 ; 

the same instant of their master's death — v. 2 

by that rare Italian master, Julio.... y. 2 | 

report to the prince inj' master — v. 2 

we'll be th.v good masters v. 2 

haste I sent to seek his master!. .Cumcdyo/'&T. ii. 1 

is master of his liberty; time is (icp.) ii. 1 

more divine, the masters of all these ii. 1 

are masters to their females ii. 1 

say, is your tardy master now at hand? ii. 1 

sure ray master is horn-mad ii. 1 

quoth my master: I know, quoth he ii. I 

letch thy master home — ii. I 

he's master of ray state ii. I 

1 pray yon, master, tell me — ii. 2 

I am transformed, master, am not I? — ii. 2 

whilst man, and master, laugh my.. — ii. 2 

if any ask you for your master, say. . ii . 2 

master, shall I be porter at the gate? — ii. 2 

ray master stays in the street — iii. 1 

ray master in, Luce. Faith no (>rp.) iii. 1 

if you went in pain, raaster, this .... iii. I 

they stand at the door, master — i i i. i 

would say so, raaster, if your garments — 
without a feather; master, mean.... — 

their owner, master, and 3'ourself 

servants must their masters miuds fulfil 

where is thy master, Dromio? — 

bring thy raaster home immediately 

raaster, here's the gold you sent .... — 

master, is this mistress Satan? — 

master, if you do expect spoon meat — 
but, surely, master, not a rag of ... . — 
both man and master is possessed. . . , — 

and, gentle master I received no .... 

masters, let hiin go! — 

raaster, I am here entered 

good master, cr3' the devil 

run, master, run; for God's sake — 

didst make him master of thy 

ray master and his man (rep.) 

my master preaches patience — 

my old master! who hath 

master, shall I fetch your stuff — 

1 am your master, Dromio — 

a fat friend at 3'our master's house.. — -. 
to .'Vleppo gone, master o' the Tiger ..Macbeth, i. 3 

from our royal raaster, thanks — i. 3 

is not thy master with him? — i. 5 

is thy master stirring? our knocking.. — ii. 3 

let every man be master of his time .. — iii. 1 

from our mouths, or from our masters' — iv. I 
snatchat his m.aster that doth tarre.A:(«?Jo/i;i, iv. 1 

to hurt his master, no man else — iv. 3 

my master, God omnipotent Kiohanl II. iii. 3 

look upon my sometimes master's face — v. 6 

no more shall cut his master \ Henry If', i. 1 

now, my masters (rep.) — ii. 2 

Dound them, and were masters of their — ii. 4 

why, hear ye, my masters — ii. 4 

and here I stand; judge, ray masters — ii. 4 

now my masters, for a true face — ii. 4 



iii 




iii 




IV 




iv 




IV 


2 


IV 


3 


IV. 


3 


iv. 


3 


;^- 




iv. 




IV. 




IV. 




V. 




V. 




V. 




V. 

V. 





MASTER— to deal with my master ..iHciin/ fl. ii. 3 
thump thy master well. Masters, I am — ii. 3 

good wine in thy master's way ii. 3 

master, this prisoner freely give I.... iv. I 

what is thy ransom, master? let me.. — iv. I 

the honour that thy master got iv. 10 

of York, pressed by his master iHenryVl. ii. a 

come on, my masters (rep.) — iv. 3 

so Judas kissed his master — v. 7 

then, masters, look to see liichard JII. ii. 3 

thy master [Co(. K/i/. -lord StanleyJ sleep — iii 2 
go bid thy master rise and come to me — iii. i 
to bar my master's heirs in true descent — iii. 2 
brought me in ray master's hate .... — iii. 2 
ere give consent, his master's child . . — iii. 4 

l)oints on their masters' bosoms — v. I 

for Dickon thy master is bought — v. 3 (scroll) 

became the next day's master Henry I'lll. i. I 

suggests the kingour master to this.. — i. 1 
the treasons of Ills master he shall .. — i. 2 
yet the king our master, whose lionour — i. 2 
his raaster would be served before — ii. 2 (letter) 

title your master wed me to — iii. i 

the king (mine, and your master,) with — iii. 2 

my ever royal master iii. 2 

unworthy now to be thy lord and master iii. 2 

so noble, and so true a master? iii. 2 

though thy master missed it iii. 2 

the king has made him master iv. I 

he's made master o' the rolls v. 1 

than your master, whose minister.... v.' I 

noble judge, the king my master v. 2 

Trojan that is master of his heart. Trail, fy Cress, i. I 
Hector's sword had lacked a master — i. 3 

how now? where's thy master? iii. 2 

so much but I miglrt master it iii. 2 

thy master now lies thinking 

but I'll be master of it _ 

yet are we masters of the field — 

are prized by their masters Timon o/Athe. 

commend me to your master 

my master is awaked by great 

know, ray lord, ray master's wants . , 

men come to borrow of your masters 

very bountiful good lord and master? 

a fool, and fit for thy master 

I feel my master's jiassion? 

to guard sure their master 

your master's confidence was 

when your false masters eat 

faith, I perceive, our masters may ., 

robbers your grave masters are 

maid, to thy master's bed _ 

Where's our master? are we undone? 

so noble a raaster fallen I _ 

a knell unto our master's fortunes . . 

my dearest master. Away! 

many so arrive at second masters .... — 

no, my most worthy raaster 

stay, and comfort you, my master . . 

our late noble master 

why, masters, my good friends Coriolanu 

masters o' the people {rep.) 

how now, ray masters? have you chose 

masters, lay down your weapons .... — 

hear me, my masters, and my common 

pr'y thee, call my raaster to him 

tell my master what a strange guest 

not thy master. How, sir (rep.) 

who? my master? nay, it's no 

go, masters, get you home irej>.) . . . 

my noble masters, hear me speak.... v. 5 

masters all, be quiet; put up your .. v. 5 

men at some time are masters JuliusCcesar, i. 2 

as subtle masters do, stir up ii. i 

Brutus, did my master bid me kneel — iii. I 

my master Antony. Thj; master is.. iii. 1 

the choice and master spirits _ iii_ i 

is thy master coming? he lies to-night 
has he, masters? I fear, there will .. 
O masters! if I were disposed to .... 
salutation from his master O'^p.) .... 

my noble master will appear 

my master's man; Strato (?ep.) 

how died my raaster, Strato? 

did the latest service to my master .. 

by sea he is an absolute master. ./4n/oHj/(§-c/eo. ii. 2 

that did his master conquer iii. 11 

our master will leap to be his friend — iii. 1 1 
to-morrow, you'll serve another master — i v. 2 
master married to your good service — iv. 2 

how now, masters? How now? iv. 3 

do you hear, masters? do you hear?.. — iv. 3 
find more cause to change a master.. — iv. 5 

and leave his master Antony — iv. 6 

see thy master thus with pleached arms — iv. 12 

my dear master, my captain — iv. 12 

Eros, thy master dies thy scholar. ... — iv. 12 
lie was my master; and I wore .... — v, 1 
if your master would have a queen.. — v. 2 
do not abuse my master's bounty . . — v. 2 
wait pinioned at your master's court — v. 2 
hast done thy master CiEsar knows.. — v. 2 
my master and my lord I must (rep.) — v. 2 

your son drew on my master Cymheline, i. 2 

but that my master rather played .. i. 2 

why came you from your master? .. — i. 2 

I am the raaster of my speeches .... . i. 5 

he's for his master, aiid enemy to.. .. i. 6 

as great as is thy master — 1.6 

the agent for his master — i. G ' 

it was thy master's ii. 3 

to raaster CiEsar'fi sword iii. 1 | 

I know your master's pleasure — iii. 1 I 

O master! what a strange (rep.) .... — iii. 2 

do thou thy master's bidding _ jii. 4 

• th.v master is not there — iii. 4 

thou art no servant of thj' master's. . — iii. i 
too slow to do thy master's bidding — iii. 4 

but that ii'.y master is abused — iii. 1 



iii. I 



— IV. 5 



— IV. 6 



— iii. 2 



— V. 5 

— V. 5 



MASTER— my master's enemy Cymbeline, iii. 5 

hast any of tny late master's ganneuts — iii. 5 

and are master of the feast — iii. 6 

good masters, harm me not — iii. 6 

my master, a very valiant Briton.. .. — iv. 2 

there are no more such masters iv. 2 

never find such another-master iv. 2 

than thy master in bleeding — iv. a 

I'll hide my master from the flies — iv. 2 

rather father thee, than raaster thee — iv. 2 

I heard no letter from my master .. iv. 3 

never master had a page so kind .... — v. 5 

ne'er thank thy master, live v. 6 

your life, good master, must sliuffie.. v. 5 

I'll be thy master; walk with me.. .. v. 5 

of my master's then in my pocket .. v. 5 

in ray master's garments v. 5 

her brothers, me, her master v. 5 

my good master, I will yet do you . . — v. 5 

how now, my masters? TitusAtidronieiis, iv. 3 

now, masters, draw: O well said .... iv. 3 

give them to his master for a present iv. 3 

led by their master to the flowered fields — v. 1 

commended to our master, uot to us Pericles, i. 3 

what say, you, master? (rep.) — ii. 1 

nay, raaster, said I not (rep.) — ii. 1 

but, master, if I had been (rep.) - ii. ) 

help, master, help; here's a fish hangs — ii. I 

sir, .you are music's master — ii. 5 

you must be her master _ ii. 5 

your master will be dead ere you iii. 2 

the master calls, and trebles iv. 1 

my masters, you say she is a virgin? .. iv. 3 

master, I have gone thorough for this — iv. 3 

well, follow me, ray masters — iv. 3 

to be my master, or rather my mistress — iv. 6 
if that thy master would gain aught . . — iv. 6 

since ray master and mistress have — iv. 6 

as ray father, as my raaster followed Lear, i. 1 

thy master, whom thou lovest i. 4 

which I would fain call master i. 4 

more knave than fool, after your master i. 4 

the noble duke my master — ii. 1 

come on, young master. Weapons! ii. 2 

every gale and vary of their masters — ii.-2 

it pleased the king his master _ ii. 2 

against the grace and person of my master — ii. 2 
and the good king his master will check — ii. 2 

hail to thee, noble master! ii. 4 

the king, my old master, must be relieved — iii. 3 

where is the king my master? iii. 6 

take up thy master ()ep.) — iii. 6 

bless thee, raaster! is that (rep.) — iv. 1 

do.9t thou know Dover? Ay, master iv. 1 

now, Where's your master? — iv. 2 

bending his sword to his great raaster — iv. 2 

I'll bring you to our master Lear iv. 3 

will ne'er accomodate liis master thus .. — iv. 6 

my masters, know you that? — iv. 6 

create thee here my lord and master — v. 3 

bid my king and master aye good-night v. 3 

my good master! pr'y thee, away — v. 3 

ray raaster calls, anci I must not sa3', no v. 3 

quarrel is between our masters. . Romeo fy Juliet, i. 1 
comes one of my master's kinsmen .. — i. 1 

whose house? My master's. Indeed.. i. 2 

my raaster is the great rich Capulet — i. 2 

am I the master here, or you? i. .'j 

lie will answer the letter's master _ ii. 4 

there's my master, one that you love — v. 3 
my master knows not, but I am gone — v. 3 

1 dreamt my master and another {rep.) — v. 3 
I brought my master news of Juliet s — v. 3 
what made your master in this place? — v. 3 
by and by, my raaster drew on him.. — v. 3 
you are welcome, masters! {rep.) Hamlel, ii. 2 

";vil _ iii. 4 



[Col.Knl.'i and master the devil.. 

that stole his master's daughter . . . . . _ 

till by some elder masters, of known — v. 2 

cannot all be masters, nor all masters . . Olhelli , i. 1 

much like his master s ass, for naught . . i. I 

my very noble and approved good masters — i. 3 

bring thou the master to the citadel — ii. 1 

comes the master and main exercise .... ii. 1 

to the platform, masters; come, let's set — ii. 3 

help, masters! here's a goodly watch — ii. 3 

what is the matter, masters? honest lago ii. 3 

masters, play here, I will content your.. — iii. I 

why, masters, have your instruments.... iii. 1 

but, masters, here's money for you .— iii. 1 

nay, stare not, masters; it is true, indeed — v. 2 
MASTER-CORD of his heart! ....HemyVIlI. iii. 2 
MASTERDOM— sway and masterdom..ilfoe(;e//i, i. b 
MASTERED— by might mastered.. to?>r'sZ,./,M/. i. 1 

as if he mastered there a double 1 Henry 1 1', v. 2 

thou shalt be so well mastered .... Oimbeline, iv. 2 
MASTER-GUNNER am I of this....l'HeHrvr/. i. 4 
MASTER-LEAVER, and afugitive..4.i^ frCleo. iv. 9 
MASTERLESS leaves both to who .. Cymheline, \\. 4 
what mean these masterless .... Romeo <!f Juliet, v. 3 
MASTERLY— speak masterly .... rveiriliMghl, ii. 4 
masterly done; thever.y life seems. Wiiiter'slale, v. 3 

gave you such a masterly report Hamlet, iv. 7 

can propose as masterly as he Ollieltn, i . 1 

MASTER-PIECE— his master-piece !..jV(ic6e(/i, ii. 3 
JI ASTER-REASONS, her prayers .... Pericles, iv. 6 
MASTERSHIP-yourinastership?ri™GeM. of f. iii. 1 
an't please your mastership. Merchant of Venice, ii. 2 
alike showed mastership in &oa.tmg.Coriolann$, iv. 1 
MASTICK— [A'n<.] mastick jaws.. Troiliis tf Cress, i. 3 

MASTIFFS areof unmatchable HenryV. iii. 7 

the men do sympathize with the mastiflfs — iii. 7 
his mastiff [/Cr(^-mastick] jaws.. 7'roi7w5^-Crcj(5. i. 3 

must tarre the mastiff on — i. 3 

mastiff, greyhound, mongrel grim Lear, iii. 6 

MATCH— a match Tempest, ii. 1 

wiU't be a match? Two Gen. of f'ei ona, ii. 5 

sought to match my friend ' — iii. 1 

the maffch were rich and honourable — iii. 1 
and if it be a match — iii. 1 



MAT 



MATCH iK'twCLMi sir Thmio.TwoGen.o/ rerona, iii. 2 

IVom a nuist unholy niatcli — iv. 3 

fixed, the match is made Merry )l'ives,'n. 2 

have lingered about a match between — i)].2 

she is no match for you — iii- 4 

even strong against that match .... — iv. S 
she'll not match above her iegree.rweirih Xigltl, i. 3 
that took away the match from.Afcas./bi- Meux. v. 1 

a sin to match in my kindred Much Ado, ii. 1 

God match me witli a good dancer! . . — ii. 1 

his grace hath made the matcii — ii. 1 

1 would t'aiu have it a match — li- 1 

who hath made this match — ii. 2 

titan myself, that I can matcli her. Mid. i\. Dr. in. 2 
there I have anotlier bad inatah. Mer. o/ renia; ni. 1 
should play some heavenly match .. — m. S 
could match this beginning with. . As you Like il,i. 2 

out of all reasonable match — 111- ^ 

fellow fault came to match it — iii- 2 

my deed sliall match thy deed Alls l^ell, n. I 

is match well made; match .... — iv. a (letter) ' 
then shall we have a match: I have — v. 3 
joy, Petrucliio! 'tis a match .. Taming of Slircw, ii. 1 

was ever matcli claiiped up so — ii. ' 

the match is fully made, and all is . . — iv. I 
a match; 'tis done. Wiio shall begin? — v. 2 
can match the pleasure of that ... n'inter's Tale, v. 3 
this is a match, and made between's. . — v. 3 
have but lean luck in the match. Co?)iprfy of Err. iii. 2 

souglit a matcl\ of birth King John, ii. 2 

for, at this match, with swifter — ii. 2 

without this matcli, tlie sea enraged — jj. 2 

conjunction, make this match — ii. 2 

for this match, made up — ii. 2 

loss, before the match be played .... — iii. 1 
to will this easy match played for .. — v. 2 
and make some pretty match with. Richard [I. iii. 3 

have seta match [Kuf. -watch] \HeiiryiV.\. 2 

what cunning match have you — ii. 4 

hath made a match with such Henry I', i. 2 

nobility will scorn the match 1 Henry I' I. v. 3 

whom should we match with Henry — v. 5 

to match with her that brings 2Henry VI. i. 1 

oppose yourselves to match lord Warwick — v. 1 
but match to match I have encountered — _y. 2 

the match is made; she seals it ZHenry VI. iii. 2 

grandam had a worser match Richard lll.i. 3 

whose humble means match not .... — iv. 2 

botli they match not the high — iv. 4 

to match us in comparisons.. Troilus % Cresxida, \. 3 

with tlie match and weight of — iii. 2 

I'll make my match to live — iv. 5 

it were no matcli, your nail — iv. 5 

could match thee in contention (j-ep.) — iv. 5 

deeds to matcli these words — iv. 5 

thy hand upon tliat match — iv. 5 

art tliou for Hector's match? — v. 4 

a match, sir: there is in all two Coriolamis, ii. 3 

tlie news, made not the match ..Anlony ^-Cleo. ii, 5 

that most desired the match CymbeUne,i. 1 

I dare you to tills match — i. 5 

like a cock tliat nobody can match.. — ii. 1 
'tis our matcli: tlie sweat of industry — iii. 6 
in this match, I hold me highly.. Titus Andron. i. 2 

to match you where I hate Lear, i. 1 

to match thy goodness? my life will .... — iv. 7 
ne'er saw her match, since first ..Romeo ^-Juliet, i. 2 

and spurs; or I'll cry a match — ii. 4 

learn me how to lose a winning match — iji. 2 
you are happy in this second match — iii. 5 
sight indeed, if one could match you ..Hamlet, iv. ^ 

maj- fall to match you with her Othello, iii. 3 

perdition, as nothing else could match . . — iii. 4 
thv match was mortal to him, and pure.. — v. 2 
MATCHED— matched in mouth . . Mid.N.'sDr. iv. 1 
is a sharp wit matched with too. . Love's L. Last, ii. 1 
a tliird cannot be matched.. <l/e)c/ia?t(o/re)iin;, iii. 1 
to have him matched; and . .Tanung of Shreic, iv. 4 
strcngtii matclied with strength .... King John, ii. 2 

this matched with other, did \HeiiryIV. i. I 

society, as thou art matched withal. . — iii. 2 
when we have matched our rackets. . . . Henry V. i. 2 
are matched with as few good deeds — iii. 2 

and, had he matched according to . .ZHenry VI. ii. 2 
the harder matched, the greater victory — v. 1 

meanly have I matched in Richard IT I. iv. 3 

tender Juliet matahei ..Romeo Sf Juliet, i. 5 jchorus) 
my care hath been to have her matched — iii. 5 
unequal matched, Pyrrhus at Priam . . Hamlet, ii. 2 
MATCHES -of all mad matches.. 7'a7nm°-o/S/!. iii. 2 
which manifold record not matches?. Tim. of Ath. i, 1 
not to affect many proposed matches . . Olliello, iii. 3 
has she forsook so many noble matches — iv. 2 
M.ATCHINtJ— matching to his youth.. Hmri/F. ii. 4 
for matching more for wanton .. ..3 Henri/ VI. iii. 3 

blown surmises, matching thy Othello, iii. 3 

MATCHLESS— matchless Navarre. ./.one's L.J,, ii. 1 
not yet mature, yet matchless.. rroi7«s^C/w.(. iv. 5 

MATE— the gunner, and his mate Tempest, ii. 2 

fawning smiles on equal mates. TwoGen. of Ver. iii. 1 

these are my mates, that — v. 4 

our masking mates by this .. Merchant of Venice, ii. 6 
these mates. Mates, maid!.... ra?n!ng'o/S/ircit', i. 1 

no mates for you, unless you — i. 1 

carousing to his mates after — iii. 2 

and there my mate, that's never .. Winter' sTale, v. 3 

hast no unkind mate to Comedn of Errors, 'u. 1 

rascally, cheating, lack-linen mate! .iHenrylV. ii. 4 
receive me for thy warlike mate .... 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

disgraced by an inkhoru mate — iii.! 

good deceit which mates hini first ..iHenryVI. iii. 1 

his mate, make boot of this — iv. 1 

towards Warwick, and his mates . .ZHfnry VI. iv. 7 
my hardy, stout, resolved mates? .. Uicliard III. i. 3 

dare mate a sounder man than Henry VIII. iii. 2 

as turtle to her mate Troilus SfCressida, iii. 2 

and we, poor mates, stand on .. Timon of.-tttiens, iv. 2 

my mate in empire Antony ^Cleopatra, v. I 

half-part, mates, lialf-part Pericles, i v. I 

when grief hath mates, and liearing .... Leur, iii. 6 



[ 493 ] 



MATE— one self mate and mate could not. /,<•»(, iv. .1 

MATED— hind that would be mated ...■tli's ll'elt, i. I 

mad herself, she's madly mated. .7'um/;/4'n/\s/i. iii. 2 

not mad, but mated; how Comedy of Errors, iii. 2 

j'ou are all mated, or stark mad — v. 1 

my mind siie has mated; and amazed. .Jl/ar6e(/i, v. I 

if she be mated with an equal. . Timon of.ithens, i. 1 

MATERIAL— a material fool!.. ../Isi^ou IJta-it, iii. 3 

made his business more material.. Wintcr's'l'iile, i. 2 

whose absence is no less material Mwbctti, iii. 1 

which is material to the tender of . . Cymbiliue, i. 7 

disbranch from her material sap Lear, iv. 2 

MATHEMATIC— the mathematics. rami/ig-o/SA. i. 1 
in music and the mathematics (7ep.) — ii. 1 

M A'PIN- glowworm shows the matin Hamlet, i. 5 

MATRON— please it this matron All's ll'ell, iii. b 

your daughters, your matrons Macbeth, iv. 3 

matrons, turn incontinent .... Timon of Athens, iv. 1 
strike me the counterfeit matron! .. — iv. 3 

the matrons flung their gloves Coriolamis, li. 1 

maids, matrons, nay, the secrets of.. Cymbeline, iii. 4 

thou sober-suited matron Romeo ^-Jnliet, iii. 2 

can'st mutine in a matron's bones .... Hamlet, iii. 4 

MA'TTER— what impossible matter Tempest, ii. 1 

proclaim a matter from thee — ii. 1 

what's the matter (j-ep. ii. 2) — ii. 1 

antl most poor matters point to rich ends — iii. 1 

no matter, since they (rep.) — iii. 3 

open the matter in brief Two Gen. of Verona, i. 1 

that the money, and the matter — _i. 1 

what's tlie matter? — ii- 3 

it is no matter, if the — ». 3 

how stands the matter with them? .. — ii. 5 

no matter who's displeased — _ii. 7 

nay, then no matter — ;;;• ' 

it's no matter for that — ijh ' 

there's some great matter she'd — iv. 3 

how now? what is the matter? — v. 4 

make a Star-chamber matter of it. . Merry Wives, i. 1 

if matters grow to your likings — i. I 

what matter have you (j-ep.) — }■ 1 

ay, it is no matter (lep.) — i. 1 

three umpires in this matter — i. 1 

you hear all these matters denied.... — i. 1 
I will description the matter to you.. — i. 1 

it is no matter-a for dat — .i. 4 

what's the matter, woman? — li. 1 

BO it be fairly done, no matter — ii. 2 

what's the matter? (rep.) — iii. 3 

what is the matter, sir? — iv. 5 

so larded with my matter — iv. 6 

the matter will be known to night .. — v. 1 
but 'tis no matter ; better a little .... — v. 3 

that it wants matter to prevent — v. 5 

you have some hideous matter to. . TwelflhNighi, i. 5 
words are as full of peace as of matter — i. 5 
on a forgotten matter we can hardly — '\\. 3 

no such matter, sir; I do live by — iii- 1 

the matter, I hope, is not great — iji. 1 

my matter hath no voice, lady — iii. 1 

it is no matter how witty, so it be — jij- - 

thou write with a goose pen, no matter — iii. 2 

why, what's the matter? (re;).) — iii. 4 

more matter for a May morning — iii. 4 

that is not the matter I challenge — iii. 4 (clial.) 

do you know of this matter? — ii!* "* 

let him let the matter slip — iii. 4 

yet it's no matter for that — iv. 1 

what's the matter? (/ep.) — v. 1 

leaves unquestioned matters ot..Meas.for Meas. i. 1 

and what's the matter? — ii. 1 

no matter for the dish, sir — ii. 1 

fewof any wit in such matters — ii. 1 

now what's the matter, provost? — ij. 2 

well; the matter? — ii. 2 

yet as the matter stands, he will — iii. 1 

to this tune, matter, and method? — iii. 2 

neither in time, matter, or other .... — iv. 2 
the matter being a-foot, keep your . . — iv. 5 

the phrase is to the matter — v. 1 

mended again: thematter; proceed.. — v. I 
to hear this matter forth, do with your — v. 1 

and I see no such matter Much Ado, i. 1 

I have almost matter enough in me.. — i. 1 
horn to speak all mirth, and no matter — ii. 1 

I will so fashion the matter — ii. 2 

ofanother's dotage, and no such matter — ii. 3 
of this matter is little Cupid's crafty — iii. 1 
that to her all matter else seems weak — iii. 1 

what's the matter? (;ep.) — iii. 2 

tliere be any matter of weight chances — iii. 3 

speaks a little off the matter — iii. 5 

but that's no matter (rep.) — v. 1 

reformed signior Leonato of the matter — v. 1 

why, what's the matter, that you — v. 4 

'tis no such matter — v. 4 

how low soever the matter, I hoi:ie. Love's L.Lost, i. 1 
the matter is to me, sir, as concerning — i. I 

no more of this matter (rep.) — iii. 1 

beg a greater matter — v. 2 

is the very defect of the matter. . Mer. of Venice, ii. 2 
so did mine too, as the matter falls .. — iii. 2 
I speak my agitation of the matter. . — iii. .5 
for a tricksy word defy the matter . . — iii. 5 
and yet no matter; why should we go — v. 1 
ho, already? what's thematter? .... — v. 1 
to acquaint you with a matter ....AsyouLike it, i. 1 

for then he's full of matter — ii. 1 

why, what's the matter? — ii. 3 

no matter whither, so you come not — ii. 3 

I think of as many matters as he — ii. .0 

that's no matter, the feet might bear — iii. 2 
it is a hard matter for friends to meet — !!'• - 
'tis no matter; ne'er a fantastical.. .. — iii. 3 

the matter's in my head — iii..') 

gravelled for lack of matter — iv. 1 

lacking (God warn us!) matter — iv. I 

and there begins new matter — iv. 1 

'tis no matter how it be in tune — iv. 2 

but that's no matter — iv. 3 



MAT 

M ATTER— was no great matter . . As you Like it, v. 3 

to make all this niiitter even — v. 4 

there is much matter to be heard..., — v. 4 

her matter was, she loved your son All's Well, \. 3 

what's the matter, that this distempered — i. 3 

what is the matter sweetheart! — ii. 3 

trust him not in matter of heavy.... — ii. 

what is the matter? — iii. I' 

understand it not yourselves, no matter — iv. 1 
no matter; his heels have deserved .. — iv. 3 

there is no fitter matter — iv. 6 

howe'er the matter fall, shall tax.. .. — v. 3 

we'll sift this matter further — v. 3 

a good matter, surely . Taming of Shrew, i. 1 (indue.) 

how now? what's the matter? — i. 2 

nay, 'tis no matter, what he 'leges .. — i. 2 

with oaths to face the matter out — ii. 1 

to makefile matter good — iv. 2 

hownow! what's the matter? — v. 1 

eitlier malice, or matter, to alter it Winter's Tale, i. 1 

my mirth, my matter — i. 2 

the matter, the loss, the gain — ii. 1 

to bear the matter thus — ii. 3 

the whole matter and copy of the father — ii. 3 

heavy matters! heavy matters ! — iii. 3 

may come to a great matter — iv. 2 

if it be doleful matter, merrily set .. — iv. 3 
break a foul gap into the matter .... — iv. 3 
here is more matter for a hot brain. . — iv. 3 

there may be matter in it — iv. 3 

which will have matter to rehearse .. — v. 2 
some great matter there in hand .... — v. 2 
will debate this matter at more .Comedy of Err . iv. 1 

what is the matter? (rep.) — iv. 2 

where men may read strange matters.. Mactei/i, i. 5 

what's the matter? — ii. 3 

and pick strong matter of revolt .... King John, iii. 4 

what better matter breeds for — iii. 4 

even in the matter of mine — iv. 1 

brought in matter tliat should feed . . — v. 2 
why, uncle, what's the matter? .... Richard II. ii. 1 

no matter where — iii. 2 

no matter tlien who sees it — v. 2 

itis a matter of small consequence .. — v. 2 

what is the matter i7-ep. v. 3) — v. 2 

read you matter deep and dungerous.l Heniy I r. i. 3 
if matters should be looked into .... — ii. 1 
round man! what's the matter? .... ■ — ii. 4 

instinct is a great matter — ii. 4 

both in word and matter, hang — ii. 4 

what's the matter? — ii. 4 

a trifle, some eightpenny matter .. .. — iii. 3 

well, 'tis no matter — v. 1 

war, and no such matter? 2 Henry IV. (indue.) 

when there were matters against .... — i. 2 

it is no matter, if I do halt — i. 2 

mare's dead? what's the matter? (rep.) — ii. 1 
how now? what's the matter? (rep.) — ii. 4 

I will devise matter enough — v. 1 

but 'tis no matter — v. it 

we think it so, it is no matter Henry V. ii. 4 

to answer matters of this consequence — ii. 4 

take the matter otherwise than — iii. 2 

it will be a black matter for — iv. 1 

how now! what's the matter? (rep.) — iv. 8 

'tis no matter for his swellings — v. I 

to write for matter of grant — v. 2 

to bring this matter to 1 Henry VI. iii. 3 

to confer about some matter — v. 4 

now the matter grows to compromise — v. 4 
marriage is a matter of more worth.. — v. 5 
more of your matter before the king .'IHenry VI. i. 3 

these are no women's matters — i. 3 

but, to the matter that we have in .. — i. 3 
said nor thought any such matter . . — i. 3 

factious numbers for the matter .... — ii. 1 
'tis no matter how, so he be dead.... — iii. I 

what is the matter, Sufiblk — iii. 2 

I liave great matters to impart to thee — iii. 2 
before them about matters they were — iv. 7 
matter of marriage was the charge. 3WeH)i//'/. iii. 3 
my thoughts aim at a further matter — iv. 1 

to London on a serious matter — v. 5 

but what's the matter, Clarence? ..Richard III. i. 1 
Gloster, you mistake the matter .... — i. 3 

'tis no matter; let it go — i. J 

is it not an easy matter to make .... — iii. I 
in deep designs, in matter of great .. — iii. 7 
I read in his looks matter ag&m&t. . Henry VIII. \. I 

a matter of some moment — i. 2 

the king hath found matter against.. — iii. 2 
what's the matter? it seems you are — v. 1 

in charging you with matters — v. 1 

nor make no more in the matter. Troihis^- Cress, i. I 

no matter. Nor his beauty — i. 2 

is it matter new to us — i. 3 

what hath mass, or matter — i. 3 

that matter needless, of importless . . — i. 3 
tlien would come some matter from him — ii. 1 

what's the matter, man? (7ep.) — ii. 1 

'tis no matter; 1 shall speak — ii. i 

but it is no matter — ii. 3 

then will Ajax lack matter — ii. Ij 

never suffers matter of the world.. .. — ii. 3 
no, no such matter, you are wide. . . . — iii. 1 
what's the matter? will you beat (rep.) — iv. 2 

my matter is so rash — iv. 2 

no matter, now 1 liave't (lep.) — v. 2 

mere words, no matter from the heart — v. 3 
intending other serious matters .. Timonof Ath. ii. 2 

no matter what; he's poor — iii. 4 

some that were hanged, no matter .. — iv. 3 

the matter? speak irep.) Corlolanus, i. I 

why, 'tis no great matter — ii. I 

have delivered the matter well — ii. I 

liearing a matter between — ii. 1 

what's the matter? You are sent for — ii. 1 

but that's no matter (rep.) — ii. 3 

the matter? Hath he not passed — iii. l 

nor by the matter which your heart — iii. 2 



MAT 



MATTER— what is tlie matter Coiiolmius, iii. 3 

we need not put new matter to his ,, — iii. i 

nay, it's no matter for tliat — iv. 5 

'tis no matter; if lie could bm-n — iv. 6 

wliaf a tlie matter? — \' 2 

no tradesmen's matters {rep.) Julius C<psar,i. 1 

it is no matter; let no images be hung — j. 1 

Casea will tell us wliat the matter is — i. 2 

for the base matter to illuminate — ,i. 3 

fast asleepi' it is no matter — ii. I 

when I asked you what the matter.. — n. 1 

eonsider riglitly of the matter — iii. 2 

that matter is answered direetly .... — !!!• ^ 

it is no matter, his name's Ciuna — iii. 3 

howeovert matters may be best disclosed — iv. 1 

what's the matter? (rep. ) — iv. 3 

thou deny me a matter of more.. /fn/oni/ (J- C(eo. i. 2 
what's the matter? I know, by that — _i. 3 
have given less matter a better ear.. — ii. 1 
tlie matter that is then born in it (rep.) — ii. 2 

nor cursiness grow to the matter — i;. 2 

as matter whole you have not — 11.2 

I do not much dislike the matter — ii. 2 

that matters are so well digested — ii. 2 

we had niucli more monstrous matter — u. 2 

nour out the pack of matter — ii- 5 

'tis no matter: go to the fellow — ii- 5 

I think, thou'rt mad. The matter?.. — u. 7 
hut 'tis no matter; tliou shait bring — in. 3 

vet now— no matter — iii. 9 

no matter, sir, what I have lieard .. — v. 2 

but what's tlie matter? Cymheline, i. 1 

this matter of marrying his king's .. — i. 5 

a great deal from the matter — i. 5 

what is the matter, trow? — ..?• 7 

wdiat's tlie matter? why tenderest .. — m. 4 
what's the matter, sir? By Jupiter.. — 111.6 
the matter? triumphs for nothing .. — iv. 2 

I am amazed with matter — iv. 3 

I stand on fire; come to the matter.. — v. 6 
new matter still? It poisoned me.... — .v. 5 

to take up a matter of brawl Titus Andi on. iv. 3 

many a matter hath lie told — .^'3 

now this matter must be looked to. . . . Pericles, in. 2 

how now? what's the matter? — iv. 6 

more than words can wield the matter Lear, i. 1 

if the matter were good, my lord — 1.2 

what grows of it, no matter — i. 3 

I know not what the matter is — 1.4 

what's the matter, sir? I'll tell thee — .1.4 

how now? what's the matter? (rep.) .... — n. 2 
priests are morein word than matter.... — ;}!• ^ 

and a worse matter than that — jji. 3 

if the matter of tliis paper be certain — iii. .t 

posted hence on serious matter — iv. 5 

in better phrase, and matter, than thou. . — iv. 6 

matter and impertineucy mixed — iv. 6 

come, no matter vor your foins — iv. G 

this is the matter Romeo ^-Juliet, i. 3 

conceit, more rich in matter — .ii. 6 

containing such vile matter — iii. 2 

and never trouble Peter for the matter — iv. 4 
what is the matter? Look, look! — — iv. 5 
no matter; get thee gone, and hire .. — v. 1 

unmixed with baser matter Hamlet, i. 5 

how now, Ophelia? what's the matter?.. — ii. 1 

more matter with less art — ii. 2 

the matter, my lord? Between who? (rep.) — ii. 2 

no such matter: I will not sort you ^ — ii. 2 

in such matters, cried in the top of mine — ii. 2 
make the matter savoury, nor no matter — ii. 2 

like a neutral to Ills will and matter — ii. 2 

to hear and see the matter — iii. 1 

something-settled matter in his heart . . — iii. 1 
do you think, I meant country matters? — iii. 2 

therefore no more, but to the matter — iii. 2 

now, mother, what's the matter? (rep.) .. — iii. 4 

there's matter in these sighs — iv. 1 

wherein necessity, of matter beggared .. — iv. a 

what is the matter? Save yourself — iv. a 

this nothing's more than matter — iv. 5 

too light for the bore of the matter — iv. 6 (letter) 

'tis no great matter there (rep.) — v. 1 

we'll put the matter to the present push — v. I 

sir, this is the matter— I beseech you — v. 2 

would be more german to the matter — v. 2 

about my lieart; but it is no matter .... — v. 2 
if ever I did dream of such a matter .... Olhello, i. 1 

what is the matter there (rep. i. 2) — i. 1 

why, what's the matter? ray daughter! — i. 3 
take up this mingled matter at the best — i. 3 

of worldly matters and direction — i. 3 

what's the matter, lieutenant? (rep.).... — ii. 3 

more of tills matter can I not report — ii. 3 

honesty and love doth mince this matter — ii. 3 
there's matter in't indeed, if he be angry — iii. 4 

prav heaven, it be state matters — iii. 4 

what is the matter? Jtly lord is fallen . . — iv. 1 
what's the matter with my lord? (rep.).. — iv. 2 

what's the matter? This is (rep.) — v. I 

what's the matter? (rep.) — v. 2 

MATTHEW— Matthew Gough -iHenri/n. iv. 4 

JMATTOCK— dig with mattock ..Tilus Andron. iv. 3 

give me that mattock Uomeo fy Juliet, v. 3 

we took this mattock and this spade — v. 3 

MATTRESS-Cajsar in a mattre6s.y4>i/oiiv<S- C/eo. ii. 6 

MATURE -more mature dignities. iVinter'sTate, i. 1 

not yet mature, yet matchless . Troilus f; Cress, iv. 6 

is almost mature for the violent Coriolanus, iv. 3 

who, being mature in knowledge. /in(o"y ^-Cleo. i. 4 

to the more mature, a glass that Cymbeline, i. 1 

wlien once he was mature for man .. — v. 4 
in the mature time, with this ungracious. Lear, iv. 6 
M ATURITY-maturity blown up. Troilus cj- Cress, i. 3 
]\IAUD, Bridget, Marian, Cicely. Comedy o/Brr. ill. 1 
MAUDLIN— token for fair Maudlin . . Alt's Ifell, v. 3 
MAUGRE-mauare all thy pride . Tu-elfi>i NigtU, iii. 1 
this, maugre all the world. . . . TilusAndronicus, iv. 2 

I protest, maugre thy strength Lear, v. 3 

MAUL— I'll so maul you and your.. Kiiig Jolin, iv 3 



[ 494 j 



ME A 



MAUL— to maul a runner. ..Antony ^- Cleopatra, iv. 7 

MAURI— non eget Mauri TilusAndronicus, iv. 2 

MAURITANIA— goes into Mauritania. 0(/ie//o, iv. 2 

MAUVAIS, corruptible, grosse Henry I', iii. 4 

MAW— what 'tis to cram a ma,\s-.Iileas.farMeas. iii. 2 
inethinks, your niaw, like mine .Comedy oj' Err. i. 2 

shall be the maws of kites Macbelli, iii. 4 

witclies' mummy; maw, and gulf.... — iv. 1 

his icy iiugers in my maw KingJoiiu, v. 7 

yea, in thy maw, peidy Henry!', ii. I 

into their gluttonous maws .. Timon of Alliens, iii. 4 
detestable maw, thou womb of. ./Borneo i^- Julie', y. 3 
MAXIM— this maxim out of \o\t. Troilus ^- Cress, i. 2 
MAY— he smells April and May...Werry I'/res, iii. 2 
more matter for a May morn'mg. TwelfiltKiglti, iii. 4 
as the iirst of May doth the last of ..Muclt Ada, i. 1 

his May of youth, and bloom of — v. 1 

do observance to a morn of May ..Mid. A'.'s Dr i. 1 

to observe the rite of May — iy. 1 

than wish a snow in May's Love^sL.Lost, i. 1 

love, wliose month is ever May — iv. 3 (verses) 
maids are May when tliey are . . As youLil<e it, iv. 1 
adorned hither like sweet May .... Richard II. v. 1 

of spirit as the month of May 1 Henry 11'. iv. I 

thirtieth of May next 'iHenryl'l. i. I (articles) 

an 'twere a nettle against May . . Troilus § Cress, i. 2 

ICol.'] were like a better May Lear, iv. 3 

crimes broad blown, as flush as May ..Hamlel, iii. 3 

rose of May I dear maid, kind sister .. — iv. 5 
MAY-DAY— a morris for May-day Ail's Well, ii. 2 

to make them sleep on May-day . . Henry y J U. v. 3 

MAY-MORN of his youth Henri/F. i. 2 

MAYOR— the mayor, and all his. Henry V. v. (chorus) 
peace, mayor; thou know'st little ..\ Henry VI. i. 3 
mayor, farewell: thou dost but what — i. 3 

we will have the mayor's sword . . . .iHenry VI. iv. 3 

the lord mayor craves aid — iv. 5 

but, master mayor, if Henry (rep.)..ZHenryVL iy. 7 
the mayor of London comes to .... Ricltard II J. iii. 1 

see, he brings the mayor along — !?!• ^ 

lord mayor,— look to the (;ep.) — iii. .'> 

the mayor towards Guildhall hies .. — iii. 5 
aslced tlie mayor, what meant this .. — iii. 7 
the mayor then, and his brethren (rep.) — iii. 7 
the lord mayor knocks. Welcome .. — iii. 7 
myself, the mayor and aldermen .... — iii. 7 
the mayor in courtesy showed me .. — iv. 2 
sent command to the lord mayor ..Henry VIII. ii. 1 

to you, my good lord mayor — v. 2 

MAYPOLE— painted mnypoXe?.... Mid.N.'s Dr. iii. 2 
MAZE— here's a maze trod, indeed .... Tempest, iii. 3 

as strange a maze as e'er men trod — v. 1 

and the quaint mazes in the . . Mid.N.'sDream, ii. 2 

thurst myself into this maze . . Taming of Slirea, i. 4 

MAZED— many mazed considerings. Henri/ f'/ii. ii. 2 

and the mazed world, by their.. Mid. N. Dream, ii. 2 

timorous deer, mazed with iHenry VI. iv. 2 

MAZZARD— about the mazzard Hamlet, y. 1 

or I'll knock .you o'er the mazzard .... Otiiello, ii. 3 

MEACOCK-a iheacock wretchcan. Taming of Sit. ii. 1 

ME AD-flat meads thatch'd with stover. Tempest, iy. 1 

forest, or mead, by paved fountain. A/id.A'.'sDr. ii. 2 

as frosts bite the meads Taming ofSlireu; v. 2 

the even mead, that erst Henry V. v. 2 

fallows, meads, and hedges — .y. 2 

will drown the fragrant meads. TilusAndronicus, ii. 5 

plenteous rivers, and wide-skirted meads.. Leaj-, i. 1 

MEADOWS with delight . . Loi'e's L. Lost, v. 2 (song) 

like meadows, yet not dry with.. TitusAndron. iii. I 

MEADOW-FAIRIES, look, you ..Merry Wives, v. 5 

MEAGRE— thou meagre lead ..Mer.of Venice, hi. 2 

meagre cloddy earth to glittering ..KingJohn,'A\. 1 

as dim and meagre as an ague's fit .. — iii. 4 

of ashy semblance, meagre, pale 'iHenryVI. iii. 2 

meagre were his looks, sharp .... Romea 4 Juliet, y. 1 
MEAL— hath made hismeal of theel ..Tempest,ii. ) 
one fruitful meal would set ine..Meas.forMens. iy. 3 
and but one meal on every day beside.Loue'sL.L. i. 1 
unquiet meals make ill digestions. Comedy of Err. v. 1 

ere we will eat our meal in fear Macbelli, iii. 2 

give them great meals of beef Henry r.iii . 7 

give me but the ten meals iHenryVI. iv. 10 

to ray table so many meals?., rroiiws ^-Cressida, ii. 3 
should fear to drinic at meals . . Timon of Athens, i. 2 
meal and bran together he throws . . Coriolanus, iii. 1 

whose meal, and exercise, are — iy. 4 

to keep with you at meals Julius Ccesar, ii. 1 

be bounteous at our meal . . Antony 4r Cleopatra, iy. 2 

so soon as I had made my meal Cymbeline, iii. B 

nature hath meal, and bran — iv. 2 

MEALED— were he mealed with. .V/eos. /or it/eas. iv. 2 
MEALY— show not their mealy. 7'roi7us<5- Cress, in. 3 

MEAN— I mean our preservation Tempest, ii. 1 

true; save means to live — ii. 1 

1 mean, in a sort — .ij. 1 

this my mean task would be — lii. 1 

since they did plot the means — iv. 1 

what do you mean, to dote — iv. 1 

have I means much weaker — y. 1 

I mean the pound, a pinfold.. '/'woGen.o/rerona, i. 1 
what means this passion at his name? — i. 2 

there wanteth but a mean to fill — i. 2 

the mean is drowned with your — i. 2 

even she I mean — ii- 1 

I mean, that her beauty is — ii. 1 

wliat means yoiir ladysliip? — ii. 1 

I mean thou'lt lose the flood — ii. 3 

he means to spend liis time — ii. 4 

but too mean a servant — ii. 4 

and all the means plotted — ii. 4 

tell me some fj'ood mean — .ii. 7 

they liave devised a mean — iii.! 

she doth not mean, away — iii. 1 

but she I mean, is promised — iii. 1 

you mean to whi;) the dog — iv. 4 

be my mean to bring me — iv. 1 

to make such means tor her ,. — v. 4 

what mean you by that saying? — v. 4 

I do mean to mak'e love to Ford's. . Merry Wivs, i. 3 
though I had never so good means .. — ii. 2 



MEAJST-i n my mind, or in my means. Afeni/ Wivet, ii. 2 

I mean, master Slender — iii. 4 

I mean it not; I seek you — iii. 4 

yes, b.v all means; if it be but — iv. 2 

her father means she shall — iv. 6 

which means she to deceive? -- iv. G 

no man means evil but the devil .... — v. 2 
wliat a plague means ray niece . . TwelfthXight, i. 3 

what dost tliou mean? . i. 3 

what means this lady? — ii. 2 

yon would not give means for this .. — ii. 'i 

I mean, she is tlie list of mj' — iii. 1 

what you mean by bidding me — iii. 1 

I mean, to go sir, to enter - iii. » 

and by all means stir on the youth.. — iii. 2 

that means to be saved by believing — iii. i 

if you mean well, now go — iv. 3 

by the woman's means? (rep.) ..Meas.forMeas. ii. I 

no sir, nor I mean it not - ii. 1 

does your worship mean to geld and spay — ii. I 

needful, but not lavisli, means — ii. 2 

as to put mettle in restrained means — ii. 4 

that there were no earthly mean to save — ii. 4 

we speak not what we mean — ii. 4 

thou art bj' no means valiant — iii. 1 

that is thy means to live — iii. 2 

my cousin means signior Benedick .,MuchAdo,i. I 

by no means; she mocks all — ii. 1 

when mean you to go to church?.... — ii. 1 

means your lordship to be maiTied .. — iii. 2 

1 mean, the fashion — iii. 3 

what means the fool, trow? — iii. 4 

what do you mean, my lord? — iv. 1 

made such havock of my means .... — iv. 1 

ability in means, and choice of friends — iv. 1 

count Claudio did mean, upon his words — iv. 2 

I mean in singing — v. 2 

by no means we may exten\iate..itfi(/.A'. Dream, i. 1 

for herein mean I to enrich my — i . 1 

1 mean, that my heart unto — ii. 3 

I understand not what you mean .. — iii. 2 

shield Lysander, if they mean a fray I — iii. 2 
things hid andbarred, you mean. .Loot's L.Lost, i. 1 
whidi 1 mean, I walked upon (rep.) — i. 1 (.letter) 

how mean you, sir? — i. 2 

my beauty, though but mean, needs not — ii. 1 

he rather means to lodge 3'ou in .... — ii. 1 

by my sweet soul, I mean, setting .. — iii. 1 

that my heart means no ill — iv. I 

nay, he can sing a mean most meanly — v. 2 

what mean you madam? (rep.) — v. 2 

if you my favour mean to get — v. 2 

than my faint means would grant. A/er.o/reiii'ce.i. I 

my extremest means, lie all — i. I 

had I but the means to hold — i. 1 

no mean happiness tlierefore (rep.) .. — i. 2 

yet his means are in supposition .... — i. 3 

I mean pirates — i. 3 

who wins me by that means 1 told you — ii. 1 

my house's ears, I mean, my casements — ii. 5 

healed by the same means — iii . i 

when your honours mean to solemnize — iii. 2 

do you, GratTano, mean good faith? — iii. 2 

to feed my means. Here is a letter . . — iii. 2 

if on earth he do not mean it — iii. S 

that no lawful means can carry me .. — iv. 

use no further means — iv. 

when you do take the means whereby — iv. 

that never means to do it — v. 

have by underhand means laboured. ..4s 1/011 LiUe, i. 

by some indirect means or other .... — i. 

you mean to mock me after — i. 2 

but that her hand lacks means — i. 2 

I'll put myself in poor and mean attire — i. 3 

and this night he means to burn — ii. 3 

will have other means to cut you off — ii. 3 

woo tlie means of weakness and debility — ii. 3 

that the very very means do ebb? .. — ii, 7 

and say, that I mean her — ii. 7 

my cost, (thinking that I mean him) — ii. 7 

that wants money, means, and content — j;j- ^ 

by no means, sir — ?!!• ^ 

why, what means this? — iii. 5 

she means to tangle my eyes too — iii. 5 

here comes the man you mean — v. 1 

that mean to see the Tuscan service ..All's Well, i. 2 

speak with her; Helen I mean — i. 3 

God shield, you mean it not! — i. 3 

and love, means, and attendants .... — i.i 

and when he means to come — iii. 2 

she is too mean to have her name . . — iii. 6 

how do you mean? — iii. a 

I mean the business is not ended — iv. 3 

and means, for every man to live — iv. ' 

so adverse, and means unfit — v. 

our means will make us means — v. 

means, travelling some journey. 2am. o/S/i. I (ind, 
'twas Soto tliat your Jiouour means — 1 (indue 

how mean you that! — i. 

by any means light on a fit man .... — 1. 

or mean man of Pisa — i. 

is't he you mean? Even he? — J. 

you mean not her to— Perhaps — i. 

I see, you do not mean to part — ii. 

if me you mean — ii. 

what, you mean my face? — ii. 

marry, so I mean, sweet Katharine. . — li. 

and means to wed at leisure — iii. 2 

yet never means to wed wliere — iii. 2 

Petruchio means but well — iii. 2 

oftentimeshe goes but mean oppareled — iii. 2 

that by degrees we mean to look — iii. 2 

here I mean to take my leave — iii. 2 

belike, you mean to makea puppet.. — iv. 3 

even in these honest mean habiliments — iv. 3 

this poor furniture, and mean array — iv. 3 

1 believe a' means to cozen somebody — v. 1 

1 mean, Hortensio is afeard of you . . — v. 2 

mistress, how mean you that? — v. i' 

very mean meaning (rep.) — v. 2 



ME A 



MEAN— I menu to shift my bush.. Tamiiignf fill. v. 2 
the king ofSicilia means to pay .. H'iiilei'sTule, i. 1 

what ml-ans Sieilia? — i. 2 

Iblhiwecl, as I mean to utter it — i. 2 

I mean, in tliis wliicliyouacouselier — ii. 1 

most of tlicnwneanii and bases — iv. 1! 

no mean but nature makes that mean — iv. 3 

so turtles pair, that never mean to part — iv. 3 

would, as It were, mean mischief. ... — iv. 3 

no, nor mean better — iv. 3 

as never I mean tliou slialt — iv. 3 

as, in faith, I mean not to see him .. — iv. 3 

wliat course I mean to liold — iv. 3 

by whieli means, I saw whose purse — iv. 3 

letters by this means, being there .. — iv. 3 

gold, ani a means to do the prince.. — iv. 3 

but few, and tliose but mean — v. 1 

by any means prove a tall fellow. ... — y. 2 

a poor mean woman was Comedy of Errors ^ i. 1 

for other means was none — ;• 1 

go indeed, having so good a mean .. — i. 2 

what mean you, sir? for God's sake.. — j. 2 

I mean not cuckold-mad — ii. 1 

wliat means this jest? — ii. 2 

what didst thou mean by this? — iii. 1 

but though my cates be mean — iii. 1 

master, mean you so? — jii. 1 

despite of mirth, mean to be merry — iii. 1 

that hath sueli means to die — iii. 2 

how dost thou mean, a fat marriage? — iii. 2 

what Adam dost thou mean? — iv. 3 

I hope, you do not mean to cheat me — iv. 3 

used the approved means I have .... — v. 1 

what do you mean? still it cried Macbtth, ii. 2 

mean you his majesty? — ii. 3 

ravin up thy own life's means! — ii. 4 

by the worst means, the worst — iii. 4 

with what I get, I mean — iy. 2 

it is myself, 1 mean — iv. 3 

what's the disease he means? — iv. 3 

the means that make us strangers .. — iv. 3 

remove from her the means of all ... . — v. 1 
I mean to learn; for it shall strew ..King John, i. I 

what means this scorn — i. 1 

by whose lielp, I mean to chastise it — ii. 1 

what dost thou mean by shaking.... — iii. 1 

what means that hand upon that .. — iii. 1 

with advantage means to pay thy love — iii. 3 

when fortune means to men most good — iii. 4 

breath of what T mean to speak — iii. 4 

the sight of means to do ill deeds — iv. 2 

he means to recompense — v. 4 

that which in mean men we ei\iitle.Jiichard 11. i. 2 

leisure yield them further means . . — _i. 4 

consuming means, soon preys — ii. I 

• I mean— my children's looks — ii. 1 

and shortly mean to touch — ii. 1 

the means that heaven yields — iii. 2 

the proffered means of succour (lep.) — iii. 2 

I mean the earl of Wiltshire, Bushy — iii. 4 

for some reasons, sir, I mean to see.. — v. 2 

what means our cousin, that he .... — v. 3 

how now I What means death — v. 5 

I mean, thou shalt have y.. I Henry I V. i. 2 

prisoners with tlie speediest means .. — j. 3 

or base second means — i. 3 

j'ou only mean for powers in Scotland — i. 3 

what time do you mean to come .... — ii. I 

what a plague mean ye, to colt — ii. 2 

Lord, sir, who do you mean? — ii. 4 

whom means your grace? — ii. 4 

such mean attempts — iii. 2 

he means to visit us — iv. 4 

by such means as you yourself — v. 1 

never promiseth, but he means to pay — ^ v. 4 
but what mean I, to speak so ..2HenryIV. (indue.) 

j'our means are very slender — i. 2 

1 would my means were greater .... — i. 2 
I mean not to sweat extraordinarily — i. 2 
our cause, and' known our means.... — i. 3 
how, in our means, we should advance — i. 3 
when we mean to build, we first ... . — i. 3 
he sure means brevity in breath .... — ii. 2 
all appliances and means to boot .... — iii. 1 
when means and lavish manners .... — iv. 4 
and sir, do you mean to stop any.... — v. 1 
that lack of means enforce younot.. — v. 5 

I did mean, indeed, to pay you — (epil.) 

admit the means, how things Henry y. i. 1 

hath cause, and means, and might .. — i. 2 

we do not mean the coursing — i. 2 

of courage, and with means defendant — ii. 4 

none of you so mean and base — iii. 1 

by the means whereof, a' faces — iii. 2 

then, mean and gentle all, behold — iv. (chorus) 

how, now! what means this, herald? — iv. 7 

b^ this means shall we sound I Henry Vl. i. 2 

smee he keeps no mean? He may mean — i. 2 

ambitiousHumphrey? what means this? — i. 3 

I mean to tug it, and to cuff you .... — i. 3 

or by what means got'st thou to be. . — i. 4 

I mean to prove this lady's courtesy — ii. 2 

X do, my lord, and mean accordingly — ii. 2 

what means he now? Go ask him .. — ii. 3 

gentlemen, what means this silence? — ii. 4 

except vou mean, witli obstinate.... — iii. 1 

our sacks shall be a mean to sack . . — iii. 2 

for Talbot means no goodness — iii. 2 

what means his grace — iv. 1 

mean and right poor; for that pure.. — iv. 6 

warriors wot not what it means — iv. 7 

and as the only means to stop effusion — v. 1 

we mean shall be transported — v. 1 

means to give you battle presently . . — v. 2 

hast thou Dy secret means used — v. 4 

command, I mean, of virtuous — v. 5 

nephew, what means this passionate.2Wenr!/f';. i. 1 

ana qneen do mean to hawk — i. 2 

what means this noise? — ii. 1 

if you mean to save yourself — ii. 1 



[ 495 j 



MEAN— l)y this means your lady i3..2Henry I'l 

by wicked means to frame our — 

by means whereof (le;;.) — 

steal a shape, that means deceit? .... — 

and the cardinal Beaufort's means .. — iii 

in vain are these mean obsequies .. .. — iii 

unto my state by Suffolk's means — iii 

tlie clothier means to di-ess — iv 

nay, tliat 1 mean to do. Is not this .. — iv 

if we mean to thrive and do good. . . . — iv 

we'll d-ivise a mean to reconcile you — iv 

and of so mean a condition — v 

1 mean to take possession of my .. ..SHeitryl'l. i 

he means, backed by the power of . . — 

that Ilenrj' means to use — 

of the queen mean to besiege us ... . — 

I am too mean a subject for thy wrath — i. 

I mean, our princely father — ii. 

where now we mean to stand — iii. 

I think, he means to beg a child .... — iii. 

canst do what I mean to ask — iii. 

I mean. The fruits of love I mean .. — iii. 

I did not mean such love (>f p.) — iii. 

I am too mean to be your queen .... — iii. 

I did mean, my queen — iii. 

chide the means that keep me — iii. 

bethink a means to break it off — iii. 

advertised him by secret means — iv. 

I mean, in bearing weight of — iv. 

by fair or foul means we must — iv. 

he'll soon find means to make — iv. 

by what safe means the crown — iv. 

know you what this means? — v. 

I mean, my lords, those powers — v. 

use means for her recovery — v. 

what means this armed guard? ....Richard III. i. 

is imprisoned by your means — i. 

[Co/. iijiL] that you were not the mean — i. 

every man that means to live well .. — i. 

what means this scene of rude — ii. 

you mean, to bear me, not to bear .. — iii. 

where he did mean no chase — iii. 

the garland? dost thou mean the crown? — iii. 

I mean, your voice, for crowning — iii. 

I mean, his conversation with Shore's — iii. 

my lord, you mean no good to him.. — iii. 

I mean, the lord protector — iv. 

whose humble means match not his — iv. 

[Co/. Kn(.] inquire me out some mean — iv. 

I mean those bastards in — iv. 

open means to come to them — iv. 

I mean, that with my soul I love — iv. 

well then, who dost tliou mean shall be — iv. 

make some good means to speak .... — v. 

if any mean to shrink from me — v. 

made means to come by (jep.) — v. 

for want of means, poor rats — v. 

who did guide, I mean, who set ... . Henry Fill. i. 

liunger and lack of other means — i. 

but where they mean to sink ye ... . — ii. 

all the clerks, I mean, the learned ones — ii. 

he (I mean, the bishop,) did require — ii. 

what should this mean? (rep.) — iii. 

(I mean, your malice) — iii. 

by what means got, I leave — iii. 

longer life, and able means — iv. 

I mean, in perjured witness • — v. 

come back, what mean you? — v. 

all fast? wnat means this? — v. 

to the utmost, had ye mean — v. 

what Troy means fairly Troilus ^Cressida, i. 

that means not, hath not (rep.) — i. 

I mean of ours; if we have lost — ii. 

cause that hath no mean dependanee — ii. 

you do depend upon him, I mean? .. — iii. 

command, I mean, friend — iii. 

what mean these fellows? — iii. 

the thing he means to kill — iv. 

that means eyes have seen .... Timon of Athens, i, 

his means most short — i. 

for I mean to give thee none — i. 

O, by no means, honest Ventidius .. — i. 

wliat means that trump? How now? — i. 

as I had leave of means — ii. 

means, but is lord Timon 's Crfp.).... — ii. 

what does his lordship mean? — iii. 

his means? who, without those means — iv. 

thou hadst some means to keep a dog — iv. 

strain what other means is left — v. 

message, and by promised means — v. 

then we shall have means to vent. . . . Coriolanus, i. 

like one that means his proper harm — i. 

I mean to stride your steed — i. 

I mean of us o' the right-hand file?.. — ii. 

seeking means to pluck away — iii. 

unless, bj using means, I lame — iv. 

I wish, sir, (I mean, for your particular) — iv. 

as I hear, mean to solicit him for.... — v. 

I mean, thy general. My general cares — v. 

by means whereof, this breast fuliuiCcesar, i. 

what means this snouting? I do fear — i. 

I know not what you mean by that.. — i. 

'tis Ca;sar that you mean — i. 

mean to establish Caesar as a king .. — i. 

that by no means I may discover.. .. — ii. 

no, by no means. O lot us have him — ii. 

his means, if he improve them — ii. 

Portia, what mean you? wherefore.. — ii. 

he would embrace tlie means to come — ii. 

what mean you, Cicsar? think you.. — ii. 

I mean, sweet words, low-crooked .. — iii. 

no mean of death, as here by Csesar — iii. 

what compact mean you to — iii. 

pardon me, I do not mean to read .. — iii. 

and our best means stretched out.. .. — iv. 

they mean this night in Sardis to be — iv. 

I can raise no money by vile means — iv. 

what do yon mean? love, and be friends — iv. 

so shall he waste his means — iv. 

they mean to warn usat Philippi.... — v. 



MEA 

. 1 MEAN— he means, in flesh ..Antony 4' Cleopatra, i. 2 

. 1 what mean you, madam? 1 have.. .. — ii. & 

■ 1 tlie lowness, or tlie mean, if dearth.. — ii. 7 

. I have loved without this mean — iii. 2 

last of many battles we mean to flght — iv. 1 

what means this? 'Tis one of — iv. 2 

what does he mean? (rep.) — iv. z 

what should this mean? 'tis the god — iv. 3 

a youth that means to be of note — iv. 4 

a swifter mean shall outstrike thought — iv. 6 

what Caasar means to do with me? . . — v. 2 

I mean, that married her;— alack ..Cymbeline, i. 1 

1 further good that I mean to thee..*.. — i. 6 

1 (your lord, I mean,) laughs from's free — i. 7 

. 1 yet who, than he, more mean? — ii. 3 

what means doyou make to him? .. — ii. 4 

if one of mean affairs may plod — i i i . 2 

for such means ! though peril to .. — iii. 4 

1 your means abroad you nave me .... — iii. 4 
neither want my means for thy relief — iii. 5 

1 mean, wliere they should be relieved — iii. 6 

in his own chamber, I mean — iv. I 

those runagates! means he not us?.. — iv. 2 

2 I mean, to man, he had not — iv. 2 

what does he mean? since death .... — iv. 2 

though mean and mighty, rotting .. _ — iv. 2 

3 some falls are means tlie happier to arise — iv. 2 
end it by some means for Imogen.... — v. 3 

the gods do mean to strike me — v. 5 

as you did mean indeed to be our. . . . — v. .^ 
noble-minded Titus means to thee'. .. Titus And. i. 2 

I know not what it means — ii. 3 

1 Bassianus 'tis, we mean — ii. 4 (letter) 

that mean is cut from thee — ii. 5 

sons with thee: their heads, I mean — iii. 1 

1 I know not what you mean — iv. 1 

what means my niece Lavinia by . . . . — iv. 1 

somewhat doth she mean — iv. 1 

what means this? some book — iv. 1 

I think, she means, that there — iv. 1 

1 I mean she's brought to bed — iv. 3 

have, by my means been butchered.. — iv. 4 

not careful what they mean thereby — iv. 4 

for what I mean to do — v. 2 

how I mean to martyr you 

your mother means to feast 

1 the emperor means no good to us 

the which we mean to have his head .. 

show, means most deceit 

what mean you, sir? To beg of you 

he had need mean better than his .... 

by no means can I get (rep.) 

what mean you? If you require 

what means the woman? she dies! .... 

as I shall find means, and acquaint j'ou.. Lear, i. 2 

I mean, the whispered ones — ii. 1 

when by no means he could (rep.) — ii. 1 

I'll work the means to make thee — ii. 1 

what means your grace? — ii. 4 

entreat him by no means to stay — ii. 4 

what mean j'our graces? good my friends — iii. 7 

what do you mean? My villain! — iii. 7 

our mean [A'li/. -means] secures us — iv. 1 

by no means will yield to see his daughter — iv. 3 

there is means, madam — iv. 4 

that wants the means to lead it — iv. 4 

or thrive by other means v. 3 

mean you to enjoy him? — v. 3 

what means that bloody knife? — v. 3 

some good I mean to do.'despite of — v. 3 

I mean an we be incholer ve'll. . Borneo &-Juiiel, i. 

you importuned him by any means? ' — i. 

I mean, sir, in delay we waste oiu* . , — i. 

and we mean well, m going — 1. 

her means much less to meet (rep.) — i. 5 (cl 



— V. 2 

— V. 2 

— V. 3 
Pericles, i. 1 

— i. 4 

— ii. 1 

— ii.2 

— ii. 5 

— iv. 1 

— V. 3 



him here, that means not to be found 
bid her devise some means to come., 
that I mean to make bold withal. . . . 

mean of death, though ne'er so mean — iii. 3 

find tliou the means, and I'll find; . . — iii. 3 

let's see for means; O mischief! .... — v. I 

what mean these masterless and gory — v. 3 

bid me de\'ise some means to rid ner — v. 3 

that heaven finds means to kill your — v. 3 

familiar, but by no means vulgar Hamlet, i. 3 

what does this mean, my lord? — i. 4 

this mean, that thou, dead corse — i. 4 

but do not go with it. No, by no means.. — i. 4 
and who, what means, and where they. 

if't be he I mean, he's very wild 

by time, by means, and place, all given. 

I mean, the matter that you read 

contrive the means of meeting between, 
by the means of the late innovation . . . 

if their means are no better 

what cause he will by no means speak . 

what means your lordship? 

I mean, my head upon your lap? 

what means this, my lord? (rep.) — iii. 2 

to tell you what it means — iii. 2 

both what we mean to do, and what's .. — iv. 1 

what dost thou mean by this? — iv. 3 

and strength, and means, to do't — iv. 4 

ask you, what it means, say you this — iv. 6 

for my means, I'll husband them so well — iv. 5 

his means of death, his obscure — iv. 5 

give these fellows some means to — iv. 6 (letter) 

what should this mean? are all the rest.. — iv. 7 

that he means no more to undertake it .. — iv. 7 

convenience, both of time and meaus.... — iv. 7 

I mean, sir, for his weapon — v. 2 

I mean, my lord, the opposition of your — v. 2 

found good means to draw from her Othello, i. 3 

by the means I shall then have to prefer — ii. l 

and I'll devise a mean to draw the Bloor — iii. I 

who is't you mean? Why, your lieutenant — iii. 3 

a suit, wherein I mean to touch your love — iii. a 

thou dost mean something: I heard .... — iii. 3 

what dost thou mean? Good name — iii. .s 

by that perceive him and his means .... — iii. 3 



ii. 1 
ii. I 
ii. 2 



iii. I 
iii. 1 
iii. 2 



ME A 



MEAN— with some swift raenns Oihello, iii. 3 

by your virtuous means, I nifty again .. — iii. 4 
not mean harni? it is liypoerisy (rep.) ,. — iv. 1 
^vlxrtt do you mean by tins haunting .... — iv. 1 

mean bythat same lumdkereliief — iv. I 

do it witli gentle means, and easy taslcs — iv. 2 
I have wasted myself out of my means.. — iv. 2 
I mean, purpose, courage, and valour.. .. — iv. 2 
how do you mean — removing of him? ., — iv. 2 
my lord, what may you mean by that?.. — v. 2 

MEAN-BORN-mean-born man....2H'eiin/''/. iii. 1 
mean-born [Co/. A'n/.-mean, poor] .Richard III. iv. 2 

MlCANDEUS-and meanders! Tempest, iii. 3 

MEANER— ray meaner ministers their — iii. 3 
thou aud tliy meaner fellows your last — iv. 1 
whom I from meaner form have .. IVinier'sTnle, i. 2 
with ambition of tlie meaner sort . . 1 Henri/ I't. ii. .5 
and meaner than myself have ha.i. 3 Henry f 1. iv. 1 
gods, and meaner creatures kings., /(ic/iaid ///. v. 2 
not to be griped by meaner persons. Henri/ VIII. ii. 2 

tongue from every meaner man's Coriolanas. i. 6 

that they strike a meaner tlian , .Antony ^Cleo. ii. 5 
ten tliousand meaner moveables .... Cytnbeline, i i . 2 
thougli it be allowed in meaner parties — ii. 3 
to make some meaner choice.. TitusAndronicus, ii. 1 

MHANEST-meanest thou bythat . Twelfth Nlght.'m. 4 
how meanest thou? (re/j. v. 2) .. Love's L. Lost, iii. 1 
nr'ythee,who is't that thou meanest?. .-Is (/""'•''''f,!. 2 
honour peereth in the meanest habi t. Tma. nfSh. iv. 3 
wliatl thou meanest an offiti&T.ComedyofKrrors.iv.'A 

what meanest thou, Suffolk? iHenryt'I. i, 3 

I yield to thee, or to tlie meanest groom — ii. 1 
and make the meanest of you earls .. — iv. 8 
York, if thou meanest well, I greet .. — v. 1 

how now? what meanest thou Richard III. \. 4 

there's not the meanest spirit on. Troilus <§- Cres^. ii. 2 
what meanest tliou to curse thus? .. — v. I 

meanest thou to flght to-day? — v. 3 

exceed the meanest house in Rome Coriolamis, iv. 2 

what meanest thou by that? JuliusC(P.sar, i. 1 

does the meanest chares ..Antony ^Cleopatra, iv. 13 
thou meanest to have him grant thee — v. 2 

his meanest garment {rep.) Cymbeline, ii. 3 

what meanest thou, Aaron? 'i'itus.4iulro7i. iv. 2 

prosecute the meanest, or the best. ... — iv. 4 
did change me to the meanest bird .... Peiicles, iv. 6 

what meanest by this? Lear, ii. 2 

a sight most pitiful in the meanest wretch — iv. 6 
if tliou meanest not well, I do . . Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 2 

MEANETH with acorded ladder. Tu-oGen.of I'er. ii.K 

MEANING!— know thine own meaning, .Tempest, i. 2 

there's meaning in thy snores — ii. 1 

moaning lienceiorth to trouble. TitJo Gen. o/Ter. ii. I 
according to our meaning (rep.) .... Merry Wives, i. 1 
is that the meaning of accost? .... Twelfth Niglu, i. 3 
not meaning to partake with me .... — v. 1 
there's a double meaning in that .... Much Ado, ii. 3 

I liave no moral meaning — iii. 4 

there's one meaning well suited .... — v. 1 
love takes the meaning, in love's. .VfW.A'.Drertmjii. 3 
tliy meaning, pretty ingenious?.. /,o»e'si.Los(, iii. 1 
what's your dark meaning, mouse .. — v. 2 
more light to find your meaning out — v. 2 
chooses his meaning, chooses 3^011. Mer.of Venice, i. 2 
my meaning, in saying he is a good — i. 3 

a plain man in his plam meaning .. — iii. 5 

meaning me a beast As youLike it, iv. 3 

into his mouth: meaning thereby.... — v. 1 
speak'st thou in sober meanings? .... — v. 2 

meaning in a lawful deed i_rep.) AlVsWell, iii. 7 

my meaninf; in't, I protest, was — iv. 3 

and now behold the meaning — v. 3 

he hatli some meaning in his mad. Taming ofSh. iii. 2 
to expound the meaning or moral .... — iv. 4 
ray meaning. A very mean meaning — v. 2 
could'st not feel his meaning .Comerf;/ of Errors, ii. 1 
folded meaning of your word's deceit — iii. 2 
the meaning of your dangerous .... King John, iv. 2 
'tis not my meaning to raze one.. ..iJic/iard //. ii. 3 
from my heart; meaning the king .. — v. 4 
wrested his meaning.and autliority.2Henr;/f r.iv. 2 

far otf the Dauphin s meaning Henry /'. i. 2 

I do partly understand your meaning — iii. 6 
will teach her to know raj meaning — v. 2 
shows, that her meaning is, no way. 1 Henry F/. iii. 2 
from meaning treason to our royal.. 2 Henry r/. iii. 1 

for that was my meaning 3 Henry n. iv. S 

'tis wisdom to conceal our meaning. . — iv. 7 
know your meaning, brother Gloster. Richard III. i.3 

he guiltless of the meaning — i. 4 

1 moralize two meanings in one word — iii. 1 
somewhat against our meaning .... — iii. 5 
meaning, indeed, his house, which .. — iii. 5 
so hasty to confound my meaning . . — iv. 4 
both in his words and meaning . . Henry nil. iv. 2 

meaning you; I'll go learn Troilus^ Cress, ii. 1 

with my more noble meaning. . Timon of Athens, v. 5 
I have fair meanings, sir ...4ntony ^Cleopatra, ii. 6 

read, and declare the meaning Cymbeline, v. 5 

tliou know'st our meaning . TitusAndron. ii. 4 (let.) 

bewray thy meaning so — ii. 5 

learn to know thy meaning — iii. 2 

he has found the meaning (rep.) Pericles, i. 1 

if there be any good meaning Lear, i. 2 

who, with best meaning, have incurred. . — v. 3 

take our good meaning Romeo Sf Juliet, i. 4 

meaning, to court' sy. Thou hast .... — ii. 4 
meaning to keep her closely at mv cell — v. 3 
that's not my meaning: but breathe . . Hamlet, ii. 1 
hour or more, not meaning any harm .Othello, iv. 1 

ME.\NLY— a mean most meanly .Lnve'sL.Lost, v. 2 
not meanly proud of two such . . Comedy of Err.^ i. 1 

meanly have I matched Richard III. iv. 3 

trained up thus meanly i' the cave. Cymbeline, iji. 3 

MEANT— than I meant you should . . Tempest, ii. 1 
I meant not thee: I meant thy. TwoCJen. of Ter. ii. 5 

I think my cousin meant .well Merry PVives. i. 1 

from his true meant design Meas.for Meas.^ i. 5 

1 will go further than I meant — iv. 2 

*ind meant to acknowledge it Mitch Ado, i. 2 



[ 49() ] 



MEA 



MEANT to take the present time Mnch.ido, i. 2 

I meant, plain holy-thistle — iii. 4 

my hand meant nothing to my sword — v. 1 

ifHermia meant to say Mid. N.Dream,y\.3 

madam, for I meant not so Love's L. Lost, iv. 1 

than purpose meant to kill — iv. I 

meant by the fool multitude .... Mer.of Venice, ii. 9 

is it not meant damnable AlVs »V/(, iv. 3 

as if the vicar meant to cozen . . Taming o/Sh. iii. 2 
tell me what you meant by that .... — v. 2 

I did not well, I meant well Winler'sTale, v. 3 

he meant, he did me none . . Comedy of Errors, iv. 2 

except they meant to bathe in Macbeth, i. 2 

the matter otherwise tlian is meant. . Henry /■'. iii. 2 
you meant; but I meant Maine .. . .iHenry V I . i. 1 

never meant him any ill — ii. 3 

far truer spoke than meant — iii. 1 

often spoke, and seldom meant — iii. 1 

when, as he meant, all harm iHenryVI. v. 7 

reason what is meant hereby Richard III. i. 4 

what meant this wilful silence — iii. 7 

little honour he meant to lay upon. Henry////, i. 1 

my father meant to act upon — i. 2 

that never knew what truth meant.. — ii. 1 

all offences malice ne'er meant — ii. 2 

that's to say, I meant to rectify .... — ii. 4 

where all faith was meant — iii. 1 

but where lie meant to ruin — iv. 2 

meant for his trial, and fair purgation — v. 2 
as if I meant naughtily .... Troilus ^ Cressida, iv. 2 
with which I meant to scourge.. ^n'oni/^-C/eo. ii. 6 

take me, if I meant it thus ! — iv. 2 

but when he meant to quail and shake — v. 2 

she meant thee a good turn Pericles, i v. 3 

although not done, but meant? — y. 3 

and meant, indeed, to occupy ..Romeo ^-Juliet, ii. 4 
even for hate, that is meant love .... — iii. 5 
but trifle, and meant to wreck thee .... Hamlet, ii. I 
do vou think, I meant country matters? — iii. 2 
will he tell us what this show meant? .. — iii. 2 

horse, when he meant to beg it — v. 1 

Roderigo meant to have sent this Oihello, v. 2 

MEANTIME, sweet sister, we ....TwelflhNight.v. 1 

in the meantime, good signior Much Ado, i. 1 

meantime, let me be that I am — i.3 

in the meantime, I will so fashion .. — ii. 2 
meantime, let wonder seem familiar — v. 4 
in the meantime, I will draw . . . Mid. N.'s Dr. i. 2 
meantime, receive such welcome. Love's L.Losl, ii. I 
meantime, the court shall hear,J>/er. of Venice, iv. 1 
meantime, forget tliis new-fallen. .4s youLikeit, v. 4 
in the meantime what hear you ....All's IVell, iv. 3 
and in the meantime sojourned at. . . . King John, i. 1 
meantime, but ask what you would — iv. 2 

meantime, let tliis defend Richard II. i, 1 

desire you to live in the meantime. . . . Henry V. v. 1 

meantime, look gracious on thy \ Henry VI. i. 2 

meantime, your cheeks do counterfeit — ii. 4 
meantime, in signal of my love to thee — ii. 4 

meantime, this deep disgrace Richard III. i. 1 

or else lie for you: meantime — i. 1 

meantime, God grants that we have — i.3 
meantime, but think how I may .... — iv. 3 
in the meantime he wants less . . Timon of Ath. iii. 2 
wliatyou shall know meantime. ...4n/oni/ <§ C/eo. i. 4 
the meantime, lady, I'll raise the .. — iii. 4 
meantime, laugh at his challenge.... — iv. 1 
meantime we shall express our darker. . . . tear, i. 1 

in the meantime, against Romeo <^ Juliet, iv. 1 

meantime forbear, and let mischance — v. 3 

meantime I writ to Romeo — y. 3 

meantime, we thank you for your .... Hamlet, ii. 2 

though in the meantime, some necessary — iii. 2 

in the meantime, let me be thought . . Othello, iii. 3 

MEANT'ST— that thou meant'st....2Henr?/r/. iii. 2 

MEANWHILE must be an earnest.He;i!-yK///. ii. 4 

meanwhile I am possessed .... Titus Andronicus, i. 2 

meanwhile, sir, with the little skill.. — ii. 1 

meanwhile, here's money for thy charges — iv, 3 

MEASURABLE for the afternoon. Loi'e'.sZ,.Los<, v. 1 

MEASURE us back to Naples? Tempest, ii. 1 

tolmeasure kingdoms with. Two Gen. of Verona, ii. 7 

within the measure of my wrath — v. 4 

de Jarterre to measure our weapon . . Merry JVives, i. 4 
to guide our measure round about . . — v. 5 

is a good trippling measure Twelfth Niglit, v. 1 

after a passy measure or a pavin .... — v. 1 
no sinister measure from his .. Meas.for Meas. iii. 2 

and measure still for measure — v. 1 

in great measure Much Ado, i. \ 

thus out of measure sad? (rep.) — i.3 

there is a measure in every tiling. ... — ii. 1 

is as a Scotch jig, a measure — ii. 1 

a measure full of state and ancientry — ii. 1 
I measure him, says she, by my own — ii. 3 
measure his woe the length and breadth — v. I 
I will condole in some measure. Mid. N.'sDream, i. 2 
which now in some slight measure . . — iii. 2 
to measure out my length on this.... — iii. 2 
always whirls in equal measure. . Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 

to tread a measure with (rep.) — v. 2 

the measure then of one is easily told — v. 2 
tell her, we measure them by weary — v. 2 
then in our measure do but vouchsafe — v. 2 

and so the measure ends (rep.) — v. 2 

his tedious measures with . . Merchant of Venice, ii. 6 

in measure rain thy joy, scant — iii. 2 

must measure twenty miles to-day.. — iii. 4 

and measure out my grave As youLike it, ii. 6 

than may in some little measure draw — v. 2 

I have trod a measure — v. 4 

according to the measure of tlieir states — v. 4 
with measure heaped in joy (7ep.) .. — v. 4 
for other than for dancing measures — v. 4 

the devil lead the measure AWslVell, ii. 1 

and undeserved measure, my lord .. 1 — ii. 3 

he might take a measure of his — iv. 3 

60 beyond all measure Taming of Shrew, i. 2 

full measure to her maidenhead — iii. 2 

Bhrew, measures my husband's sorrow — v. 2 



MEASURE— measure me Winter's Tale, ii. I 

tlie measure of the court? — iv. 3 

not measure her from liip to hip. Comedy of Err. iii. 2 

took measure of my body — iv. 3 

anon, we'll drink a measure Macbeth, iii. 4 

we will perfonn in measure — v. 7 

fill 111) the measure of her will (rep.) . King John , ii. 2 

be measures to our pomp? — iii. 1 

shears and measure in his hand — iv. 2 

large measure to thy father's Richard II, i. 2 

than a delightful measure, or a (lance — i. 3 

let the dangerous enemy measure.... — iii. 2 

no measure in delight (rep.) — iii. 4 

have in some measure made me ....iHenrylV. i. 1 
you measure the heat of our livers .. — i. 2 

as a pattern or a measure live — iv. 4 

nor measure: and for the other (rep.) Henry V. v. 2 
to add more measure to your woes ..'illenry VI, ii. 1 
or fortune given me measure of revenge — ii. 3 
measure for measure must be answered — ^ii. 6 
the measure of his love unto our .... — iii. 3 
marches to delightful measures .... Richard III. i. 1 
and a measure to lead them once . . Henry VIII. i. 4 
b.y measure of their observant toil. Troilus^' Cress, i. 3 

fair desires, in all fair measure — iii. 1 

with all licentious measure Timon of Athens, v. 5 

he cannot but with measure fit Coriolanus, ii. 2 

after the measure as you intended well — v. 1 
loved me above the measure of a father — v. 3 
shrunk to this little measure?,. . ..JidmsCa'sar, iii. 1 

o'erflows the measure Antony fyCleopatra,i. \ 

then, to send measures of wheat .... — ii. 6 

most narrow measure lent me — iii. 4 

knowing all measures, the full — iii. 11 

rather than unfold his measure dniy. Cymbeline, i. I 

above measure false! Have patience — ii. 4 

nor measiire our good minds — iii. 6 

their measures are as excellent Pericles, ii. 3 

if you will measure your lubber's length .. Lear, i. 4 

and ever^' measure fail me — iv. 7 

let them measure us by (rep.) Romeo fy Juliet, i . 4 

the measure done, I'll watch her place — i. 5 
if the measure of thy joy be heaped.. — ii. 6 
measure, bound, in that word's death — iii. 2 
taking the measure of an unmade grave — iii. 3 
would fain have a measure to the health. 0//tei^o, ii. 3 
nor for measures of lawn ; nor gowna — iv. 3 

MEASURED— cannot be measured ....Tempest, v. I 
have measured many miles (rep.). Love's L.Lost, v. 2 

and so we measured swords .4s you Like it, v. 4 

your throne and his measured .... Winter's Tale, v. I 
must not be measured by his worth . . Macbeth, v. 7 
the English measured backward .... King John, v. 5 

if I be measured rightly ,...2Hetiryn'. v.i 

who hath measured the ground? .... Henry V. iii. 7 
till you had measured how long .... Cymljeline, i. 3 

MEASURELESS content Macbeth, ii. 1 

measureless liar, thou hast made Coriolanus, v. 5 

MEASURING of their weapons. . . . Merry Wives, ii. 1 

not measuring what use we made Henry V. i. 2 

I, measuring his ati'ections by . . Romeo ^Juliet, i. I 

MEAT— stomach on your meat.. Two Gen.of Ver. i. 2 

and would fain have meat — ii. 1 

the smell of hot meat since Merry Wives, i. 1 

that's meat and drink, to me — i. I 

dress meat and drink — i. 4 

in the thanksgiving before meat.. Meas. forMcas. i. 2 
'twas tlie boy that stole your meat ..Much Ado, ii. 1 
a man loves the meat in his youth . . — ii. 3 
he eats his meat without grudging .. — iii. 4 
serve in the meat, and we will. . Mer. of Venice, iii. 6 

for the meat, sir, it shall be — iii. 5 

were to put good meat into As you Like it, iii. 3 

it is meat and drink to me to sec .... — v.i 

can eat none of this homely meat All's Well, ii. 2 

and so is all the meat: what dogs. 7'aniing-o/SA. iv. I 

the meat was well, if you — iv. I 

she eat no meat to-day — iv. 1 

as with the meat, some — iv. 1 

am starved for meat, giddy for — iv. 3 

it is tooeholeric a meat: how say.... — iv. 3 

with the very name of meat — iv. 3 

to dress thy meat myself, and bring. . — iv. 3 
so shall mine before you touch the meat — iv. 3 
the meat is cold; the meatiscold..Co7nei/!/o/£rr. i. 2 

your meat doth burn, quoth I — ii. 1 

the meat wants that I nave — ii.2 

tliat never meat sweet-savoured in . . - ii.2 

good meat, sir, is common — iii. I 

if you do expect spoon meat — iv, 3 

thou say 'st his meat was sauced — v.i 

the sauce to m.eat is ceremony Macbeth, iii. 4 

give to our tables meat, sleep to .... — iii. 6 
and who abstains from meat, that . . Richard II. ii. 1 
away! I am meat for your master ..2HenrylV. ii. 4 

what you want in meat, we'll — v. 3 

be not too much cloyed with fat meat — (epil.) 

1 have eat no meat these five 2HenryVl. iv. 10 

porridge after meat! I could live.. I'roil. 4-Crcss. i. 2 

ay, to see meat fill knaves Timon of Athens, i. 1 

let my meat make tliee silent (rep.).. — i. 2 
to see so many dip their meat in one — i. 2 

good for their meat, and safer for.... — i. 2 

tliere's no meat like them — i. 2 

has my lord's meat in him — iii. I 

eat of my lord's meat? — iii. 4 

to let the meat cool ere we — iii. 6 

make the meat be beloved — iii. 6 (grace) 

where my stomach finds meat — iv. 3 

you want much of meat — iv. 3 

to serve in meat to villains — iv. 3 

that, meat was made for mouths .... Coriolanus, i. I 

anger's my meat; I sup upon — iv. 2 

use him as the grace 'fore meat — iv. 7 

upon what meat doth this our Julius Ctesar, i. 2 

sir, I will eat no meat Antony >^- Cleopatra, v. 2 

there is cold meat i' the cave Cymbeline, iii. 6 

here's money for my meat — iii. 6 

3'ou come in faint for want of meat.. — v. 4 
unsavoury, wishing him my meat?. . . . Pericles, ii. 3 



--1 



ME A 



MEAT— and meat for these poor men . . Pericles, iii. 2 

and eat wp the meat, the two Lear, i. 4 

an eater of broken meata — li. 2 

very good meat in Lent. . nnmeo ^- Juliet, ii. 4 (song) 

quiirrels as an egg is full of meat — iii. 1 

l(iok to tlie liaked meats, pood An,';elica — iv. 4 
tlie funeral baked meats did coldly .... Ilamlel, i. 2 
which dotl> mock the n\eat it feeds on..OlheUo, iii. S 

rCo(. Kn(.] of Venice stay the meat — iv. 2 

MEAZEL— against those meazels ..Cariolanus,in. 1 
MECiEiSrAS-du not know, Mecajnas./Ini. ^Cleo. ii. 2 

worthily spoke, Mecicnas — ii. 2 

the heart nt'Ctcsar, worthy Meccenas! — ii. 2 
MECHANIC— poor mechanic porters ..Henry f. i. 2 

again with Rome's mechanics Coriolanus,y. 3 

on more mechanic compliment. .v4H/ony^ Cleo. iv. 4 

mechanic slaves with greasy aprons.. — v. 2 

MECHANICAL salt-bntter ro^uel.il/erri/'C/ijcs, ii. 2 

rude mechanicals, that work tor. .Mid. N.^sDr. iii. 2 

by most mechanical and dirty hand.2Hinry/>'. v. 5 

dunghill villain, and mechanical.... 2Hen»'!/F/. i. 3 

know you not, being mcclianical. . Julius Ccesar, i. 1 

MED AL— wears her like her medal. Winter's Tale, i. 2 

MED'CINABLE eye corrects. . Troilus i Cressida, i. 3 

I have derision med'cinable, to use.. — iii. 3 

some griefs are med'cinable Cymbeline, iii. 2 

MED'CINAL— words as med'cinal.»'mto's7a;f, ii. 3 
MEDDLE— meddle witli my thoughts .. Tempest, i. 2 

priest to meddle or make Merry Wives, i. 4 

were best meddle with buck-washing — iii. 3 
for meddle you miist, that's .... Twelfth Night, iii. 4 

ril not meddle with him — iii. 4 

and they are to meddle with none.. Much Ado, iii. 3 
tlie less you meddle or make with them — iii. 3 

do not you meddle, let me deal — v. 1 

we will not meddle with him AWsWell, iv. 3 

fo ply thy needle; meddle not .. TamingofUk. \\. 1 
'II not meddle with it, it is liichard III. i. 4 

I'll not meddle nor make (rep.). . Troilus ^ Cress, i. 1 

'faith, I'll not meddle in't — i. I 

whom relation durst never meddle. . — iii. 3 
meddle with my master (i-cp.) .... Coriolanus, iv. 5 

no; I'll not meddle. I pray you — v. 1 

I meddle with no tradesman's . . ..Julius Ccesar, i. I 
should meddle with his yard .... Komeo ^Juliet, i. 2 

MEDDLER-a temporary meddler. ATpas./wMeas. v. 1 

money's a meddler Winter'' sTale, iv. 3 (song) 

liadst hated meddlers sooner.. 7'imon of Athens, iv. 3 

MEDDLING-'tis a meddling friar.3/eas. /or Meas. v.l 
on meddling monkey, or on busy ape. Mid. N. Dr. ii. 2 
so grossly by this meddling priest. . King John, iii. 1 
beat away the busy meddhng fiend.2He)»)/ VI. iii. 3 

MEDE— the kings of Mede../(»!(ony S-Cleopatra, iii. 6 

MEDEA— Medea gathered the. . Merch. of Venice, v. 1 
as wild Medea youn" Absyrtus did..2Henn/yi. v. 2 

MEDIA— spur througn Media. ... Antony 4' Cleo. iii. 1 
great Media^^Parthia, and Armenia — iii. 6 

MEDIATION— effect oi mediation. .2HenryIV. iv. 4 
to induce their mediation ..Antony ^-Cleopatra, v. 2 

MEDIATOR— nonsuits my mediators . . Otiiello, 1. 1 

JMEDICE— mediee teipsum 2Henry ri. ii. l 

MEDICINABLE— medicinable to me..^IuchAdo, ii. 2 

MEDICINAL— their medicinal gum .... Othello, v. 2 

MEDICINE— obey this medicine. .Merry Wives, iii. 3 
yet a kind of medicine in itself .. Meas./or Meas. ii. 2 
nave no other medicine, but only hope — iii. 1 
a moral medicine to a mortifying. . . . Much Ado, i. 3 
would give preceptial medicine to rage — v. 1 
out loathed medicinel hatedpotion. Mid. N. Dr. iii. 2 
patiently receive my medicine . . As you Like it, ii. 7 

else Pans, and the medicine AlVs Well, i. 3 

I have seen a medicine that's able to — ii. 1 
the tinct and multiplying medicine — v. 3 

the medicine of our house! Winter\Tale,iv. 3 

let's make us medicines of our great.. i1/ac!)t'W,iv. 3 
meet we the medicine of the sickly .... — v. 2 

that present medicine must be King John, v. 1 

medicines to make me love him ....\ Henry IF. ii. 2 
I have drunk medicines; PoinsI .... — ii. 2 
good advice, and little medicine.... 2 Hemj/ir. iii. 1 
preserving life in medicine potable .. — iv. 4 
medicine for my aching bones I . Troilus ^ Cress, v. 1 1 
that great medicine hathwitii hi3..4ntony ^Cleo. i. 5 
great griefs, I see, medicine tlie les^.Cymbetine, iv. 2 
by medicine life may be prolonged .. — v. 5 

hang thy medicine on my lips Lear, iv. 7 j 

[A'n(.] if not, I'll ne'er trust medicine — v. 3 

residence, and medicine power. . liomeo ^Juliet, ii. 3 
no medicine in the world can do thee ..Hamlet, v. 2 
and medicines bought of mountebanks.. OMW/o, i. 3 
shall ever medicine thee to that sweet .. — iii. 3 
work on, my medicine, work! — iv. I 

MEDITATE tlie wliile upon TwetfthNighl, iii. 4 

nothing do but meditate on blood .... Henry V, v. 2 
Clitus: look, he meditates JidiusCtrsnr, v. :> 

MEDITATING on virgijiity? .-Itt's Weil. i. 1 

meditating tliat, shall die your ....1 Henry I' I. ii. 4 
meditating with two deep divines. /(/c/i«r(( ///. iii. 7 
whilst I sit meditating on tliat .. Henry I'lll. iv. 2 
meditating that she must die . inluisCrrsar, iv. 3 

MEDITATION, fancy-free .....Mirf. A'.'t Dream, ii. 2 

and let us all to meditation 2U,nryri. iii. 3 

divinely bent to meditation Unhard III. iii. 7 

but on his knees at mcditaiion — iii. 7 

bet.vixt thy begging and my meditation — iv. 2 

into my private meditations? Henry fill. ii. 2 

to your meditations how to live better — iii. 2 
continual meditations, tears, and sorrows — iv. 2 

with wings as swift as me«litation Hondet, i. 5 

in session sit witli meditations lawful?. 0?/(i7/o. iii. 3 

MEOITEltHANEAN Hote, bound sadly 7p-ipcsM. 2 
salt wave of the Mediterranean .. Lore's L.l.oii, v. 1 

MEDLAR- to the rotten medlar. Mi-as.fnrMeas. iv. 3 

graft it with a mtdlar As you Lilte it, iii. 2 

the riiiht virtue of the medlar — iii. 2 

a medlar for thee, cat it {rep.) . Timon of Athens, i v. 3 
will he sit under a medlar tree. . Komeo ^Juttet, ii. 1 
that kind of fruit, as maids call medlars — ii. I 

MEED— yet did want his meed.. Tuo Gen. offer, ii. 4 
for my raced, but one fair look — v. 4 



[ 497 ] 

MEED, I am sure, I have received none.Merry W. ii. 2 
the meed of punishment .. Love's L. Lost, i. 1 (letter) 

sweat for duty, not for meed 1 AsyouLiheit, ii. 3 

already blazing by our meeds illenryl'I. ii. 1 

my meed hath got me fame — iv. 8 

and, for his meed, poor lord liichard III. i. 3 

if you are hired for meed, go back . . i. 4 

and when I have my meed, I will away — i. 4 
no meed, but he repays sevenfold.. 7V<no>io/'yt(A. i. 1 
and for liia meed was brow-bound . . Coriolanus, ii. 2 
with slowness; labour be his meed'.. Cymbeline, iii. 5 
noble minds, is honourable meed.. Titus. indron. i. 2 
there's meed for meed, death for .... — v. 3 
in his meed he's unfcllovved Hamlet, v. 2 

MEEK-cau be meek, that have no. Comedy of Err. ii. 1 

liath borne his faculties so meek Macbeth, i. 7 

hadst thou been meek, our title , . ..ZHenry VI. ii. 2 
are meek, and humble-mouthed ..Henry VIII. ii. 4 
affable wolves, meek bears. . . . Timon of Athens, iii. 6 
I am meek and gentle with these .JuliusCcesar, iii. 1 
lordliness to one so meek ..Antony ^Cleopatra, v. 2 

MEEKLY— to hear meekly, sir Love's L. Lost, i. 1 

MEEKNESS-meekness in thy breast. fijf/iard ///. ii. 2 

with meekness and humility Henry VIII. ii. 4 

thy meekness saint-like, wife-like .. — ii. 4 
meekness, lord, become a churchman — v. 2 

MEET— then meet, and join Tempest, i. 2 

prepare to meet with Caliban iv. 1 

when thou dost meet good hap.. TwoGen.ofVer. i. 1 

Proteus, your son, wag meet — i. 3 

as meet to be an emperor's counsellor — ii. 4 

what thou think'st meet — ii. 7 

and meet me at the north gate — iii. 1 

where meet we? — iv. 2 

where shall I meet you iv. 3 

at Partrick's cell, should meet me .. v.l 

and meet with me upon — v. 2 

it is not meet the council Merry Wives, i. 1 

engrossed opportunities to meet her — ii. 2 

that sir Hudi promised to meet — ii. 3 

verefore vill you not meet-a me? — iii. 1 

I would my husband would meet him — iv. 2 

to meet him at the door with it iv. 2 

and they are going to meet him — iv. 3 

they'll meet him in the park — iv. 4 

at that oak shall meet with us — iv. 4 

they are gone but to meet the duke.. — iv. 5 

we could never meet — v. 5 

and I henceforth may never meet. Twelfth Night, v. 1 

he promised to meet me two Meas^ for Meas. i. 2 

from whom we thought it meet to .. — i. 3 

should meet the blow of justice ii. 2 

'tis meet so, daughter — ii. 3 

have I promised here to meet — iv. 1 

if you think it meet, compound with — iv. 2 

him I'll desire to meet me at — iv. 3 

who do prepare to meet him — iv. 3 

and why meet him at the gates — iv. 4 

of sort and suit, as are to meet him . . — iv. 4 
that's meet you all should know .... — v. I 

but he'll be meet with you MuchAdo,\. I 

they never meet, but there is i. 1 

you are come to meet your trouble . . — i. 1 
while she hath such meet food to feed it — i. 1 
and there will the devil meet me .... — ii. 1 

find me a meet hour to draw — ii. 2 

not bite one another, when they meet — iii. 2 

if you meet a thief, you may — iii. 3 

if you meet the prince in the night . . — iii. 3 
he -Aould meet her as he was appointed — iii. 3 

and meet me at the gaol iii..") 

sir, I shall meet your wit in — v. 1 

well, I will meet you v. I 

he and I shall meet; and till then . . — v. I 
I did meet thee once with Helena.MiV.A'. Dream, i.\ 

truly Willi meet with thee — i. 1 

my Lysander and myself shall meet — i. 1 
and meet me in the palace wood .... — i. 2 

for if we meet in the city — i. 2 

we will meet; and there we may .... — i. 2 

at t'ne duke's oak we meet i. 2 

and now they never meet in grove .. — ii. 1 
because I cannot meet with Ilermia — ii. 2 

and look thou meet me ere ii. 2 

for beasts that meet me ii. 3 

and Thisby meet by moonlight — iii. 1 

I'll meet thee, Pyramus, at _ iii. I 

meet presently at the palace — iv. 2 

to meet at Ninus' tomb, there — v. 1 

wilt thou at Ninny's tomb meet me — v. 1 

meet me all by break of day — v. 2 

where to meet some mistress Lore's L. Lost, i. 1 

were all addressed to meet you — ii. 1 

do meet, as at a fair, in her iv. 3 

upon the next occasion that we meet — v. 2 

therefore meet v. 2 

in mind where we must meet . . Merch. of Venice, i. 1 
meet me forthwith at the notary's .. — i. 3 
ineet me, and Gratiano,at Gratlano's — ii.4 
Tuiial, and meet me alt our synagogue — iii. 1 
fare you well, till we shall meet again •— iii. 4 
it is very meet, the lord Bassanio .. — iii. 5 
and it is meet, I presently set forth.. — iv. 1 

know me, when we meet again — iv. 1 

hard matter for friends to meei... As youLike it, iii. 2 

let's meet as little as we can — iii. 2 

if I could meet tliat fancy-monger .. — iii. 2 

hath promised to meet me — iii. 3 

.von meet in some fresh cheek ~ iii. 5 

to-morrow meet me all together — v. 2 

meet: as you love Phxbe, meet [rep.) — v. 2 
can meet him with any convenien«e../«rs;re;i, ii. 3 
an' if I could but meet him again .. — ii. 3 

with me till they meet together — iv. 5 

or, ere they meet, in me. O nature .. — v. 3 
and, if it end so meet, the bitter past — v. 3 
doctors hold it very meet. . . . Taming of Sh. 2 (ind.) 
our inventions meet and jump in one — i. 1 
two raging fires meet together, they do — ii. 1 
you must meet my master — iv. 1 



MEE 



MEET— did I not bid th'Be meet inc. Taming ofSh. iv. 1 
elsewhere they meet with charity.... — iv. 3 
a.nd in no sense is meet, or amiable.. — v. 2 

60 meet for this great errand Winler'sTale, ii. 2 

should I now meet my father iv. 3 

fair couple) meets he on the way .... — v.l 
ere the ships could meet by twice. Comedy of Err. i. 1 
I'll meet with you upon the mart.... — i. 2 

I'll meet you at that place — iii. 1 

he meets such golden gifts — iii. 2 

if any hour mefet a sergeant — iv. 2 

there's not a man I meet, but doth . . _ iv, 3 

did I meet him with a chain _ iv. 4 

we still did meet each other's man . . — v. 1 

when shall we three meet again Macbeth, i. 1 

there to meet with Macbeth _ i. 1 

let us meet, and question this — ii. 3 

and meet i' the hall together — ii.3 

at the pit of Acheron meet me i' the .. — iii..") 

and 'tis most meet you should — v.l 

shall we well meet them — v. 2 

meet we the medicine of the v. 2 

when I shall meet him in King John, iii. 4 

lords I will meet him at — iv. 3 

journey, lords, or e'er we meet — iv. 3 

discontents at home, meet in one line — iv. 3 

go meet the French; and from — v.l 

and run to meet displeasure — v.\ 

our party may well meet a prouder foe — v. 1 
if you think meet, this afternoon .... — v. 7 

and meet him, were I tied to Richard II. i. I 

never by advised purpose meet — i. 3 

and meet me presently at Berkley .. — ii. 2 
here part, that ne'er shall meet again — ii. 2 
well, we may meet again. 1 fear me — ii. 2 
Salisbury is gone to meet the king .. — iii. 3 
and myself should meet with no less — iii. 3 

to meet at London London's — iii. 4 

I dare meet Surrey in a wilderness .. — iv. 1 

for kings' mouths so meet — v. 3 

did latelymeet in the intestine IHenrylV. i. 1 

therefore we meet not now — i.l 

when we meet at supper — i. 2 

and meet me to-morrow night i. 2 

shall happily meet to.bear — i. 3 

sirrah, if they meet not with — ii. 1 

dare not meet each other — ii. 2 

to meet me in arms by the ninth .... — ii.3 
to meet your father, and the Scottish — iii. I 
unthought of Harry, chance to meet — iii. 2 

Jack, meet me to morrow i' the — iii. 3 

nor did he think it meet, to lay iv. 1 

hot horse to horse, meet, and ne'er part — iv. 1 
bid my lieutenant Peto meet me at .. — iv. 2 

power, meets with lord Harry — iv. 4 

that you and I should meet upon (rep.) — v. 1 
and night to meet you on the wav .. — v.l 
the best blood that I can meet withal — v. 2 

until I meet the king v. 3 

dearest speed, to meet Northumberland — v. » 
Doll Tearsheet meet you at supper?.2Henr!/ZK ii. 1 

it is not meet that I should be — ii. 2 

must go, and meet with danger there — ii.3 
fain would I go to meet the archbishop — ii. 3 

you two never meet, but you — Ii. 4 

then let us meet them like necessities — iii. 1 
of both our battles we may meet .... — iv. I 

to meet his grace just distance — iv. 1 

look to taste the due meet for iv. 2 

means and lavish manners meet together iv. 4 

we meet like men that had forgot. . . . v. 2 

several ways meet in one town Henry V.i.2 

[Col. A'7i(.] streams meet in one salt sea — i. 2 

it is most meet we arm us ii.4 

]tis meet we all go forth, to view ii.4 

is it meet, think you, that we — iv. 1 

no, nor it is not meet he should — iv. 1 

if we no more meet, till we meet in .. — iv. 3 
but we shall meet, and break (rep.') . .IHenry VI. i. 3 

farewell, until I meet thee next — ii.4 

come forth, and meet us in the field? — iii. 2 

I'll meet thee to thy cost iii. 4 

after, meet you sooner than — iii. 4 

when I did meet thee next — iv. 1 

pale destruction meets thee iv. 2 

now they meet where both their lives _ iv. 3 

but meet him now, and, be it in 2nenryVI. iii. 1 

'tis meet, he be condemned by — iii. 1 

'tis meet, that lucky ruler be" — iii. 1 

crying, Villageois I unto all they meet — iv. 8 

Buckingham, go and meet him — iv. 9 

meet me to-morrow in St. George's. . v. 1 

meet I an infant of the house of York — v. 2 

we'll meet her in the field 3Henrt/ VI. i. 2 

take leave, until we meet again .... — ii.3 

till we meet Warwick with his — iv. 1 

we'll meet both thee and Warwick. . — iv. 7 

let's meet at Coventry — iv. 8 

you'll meet him in the Tower — v. 1 

wheresoe'er I meet thee (as I will meet — v. 1 
farewell, to meet a"ain in heaven (rep.) — v. 2 

is't meet, that he should leave v. 4 

to meet with joy in sweet Jerusalem — v. 5 

it is meet so few should fetch liichard III. ii. 2 

come with me to meet your grace .. — iii. 1 

to meet you at the Tower — iii, 1 

met'st me last where now we meet . . — iii. 2 

until we meet again in heaven — iii, 3 

bid them both meet me _ Hi. s 

who meets us here? my niece iv, I 

let me but meet you, ladies iv. 1 

to meet you on the way iv. 1 

and meet me suddenly at Salisbury iv. 4 

and meet ,vour grace, where and what — iv 4 
this mightiness meets misery ! . . Henry VIII. (prol.) 

this night to meet here 1,4 

there ye shall meet about this ii, a 

I am joyful to meet the least occasion iii, 2 

thing meets in mere oppugnancy. Troilus ij- Cress. I. 3 

that one meets Hector (rcj).) 1.3 

KK 



Mi'.E 



AT GET— yes, it is most mett . . Tioitus <§■ Cressida, i. 3 
'tis meet, Acliilles meet not Hector. . — i. 3 

ever Hector ami Acliilles meet — i. 3 

it was thought meet, Paris should .. — ii. 2 

but when 1 meet you armed — iv. 1 

when contention and occasion meet. . — iv. 1 

his purpose meets you — iv. 1 

I wiU go meet tliem — iv. 2 

Agamemnon comes to meet us here. . — iv. 5 

to-morrow, do I meet thee — iv. 5 

I will not meet with you to-morrow — v. 2 
■would I could meet that rogue Diomed ! — v. 2 

one another meet, and all cry — v. 3 

I would fain see tl»em meet — v. 4 

know what it is to meet Acliilles .... — v. 5 
■what, do we meet together? ..Timonof Alliens, iii. 4 

wherever we shall meet — iv. 2 

all that you meet are thieves — iv 3 

how rarely does it meet witli this. ... — iv. 3 

when we maj' profit meet — v. 1 

I'll meet you at tlie tm-u — v. 1 

fi 1 1 do meet them — v. 1 

Caius Marcius cliance to meet Coriolanus, i. 2 

if e'er again I meet him — i. 10 

whom we meet here, both to thank.. — ii. 2 

you anon do meet the senate — ii. 3 

and are summoned to meet anon .... — ii. 3 
what's not meet, but what must be. . — iii. 1 

let what is meet be said (rep.) — iii. 1 

meet ou the market-place — iii. 1 

let's not meet her — iv. 2 

could I meet them but once a day .. — iv. 2 

I will i?o meet the ladies — v. 4 

■we will meet tlicm, and help the joy — v. 4 
find a time both meet to hear .... Julius Casai; i. 2 
therefore 'tis meet that noble minds — i. 2 

prodigies do so conjointly meet — i. 3 

I thiiik, it is not meet, Mark Antony — ii. 1 
when Caisar's wife shall meet with. . — ii- 2 

it is not meet you know how — iii. 2 

meet to be sent on errands — iv. 1 

march gently on to meet him — iv. 2 

' it is not meet that every nice — iv. 3 

'tis not meet they be alone — iv. 3 

and meet them at Philippi — iv. 3 

to meet all perils very constantly. ... — v. 1 

whether we shall meet again — v. 1 

•if we do meet again (j-ep.) — v. 1 

whilst I go to'meet the noble Brutus — v. 3 

did I not meet thy friends? — y. 3 

most meet, tliat first we come Anloyuj^-Cleo. ii. fi 

for Cydnus, to meet Mark Antony . . — v. 2 
if she first meet the curled Antony. . — v. 2 

you do not meet a man Cymbeline, i. I 

is't not meet that I did amplify .... — i. 6 
he never can meet more mischance. . — ii. 3 

I'll meet you in the valleys — iii. 3 

meet tliee at Milford Haven — iii. 5 

the place where they should meet .. — jv. 1 
tiiat possible strength might meet .. — iv. 2 
and meet the time, as it seeks us .... — iv. 3 

that we meet liere so strangely — v. .5 

did you e'er meet? Ay, my good lord — -^ v. 5 
if we miss to meet him. . tiUtsAndromcus, ii. 4 (let.) 
herbs as these are meet for plucking — iii. 1 
meet, and agreeing with thine infancy — v. 3 

be it as you think meet Pericles, iii. 1 

all witli me's meet, that I can Lear, i. 2 

we'll no more meet, no more see — ii. 4 

thou'dst meet tlie bear i' the mouth .... — iii. 4 

where thou shall meet both — iii. 6 

meet the old course of death — iii. 7 

would I could meet him, madam! — iv. 5 

till time audi tliinkmeet _ — iv. 7 

to meet her new-beloved. . Romeo ^Juliet, i. 5 (cho.) 

power, time means to meet — i. 5 (cho.) 

a beauteous flower when next we meet — ii. 2 
perelianee, she cannot meet hini .... — ii. 5 
aiul.if we meet, we shall not 'scape.. — iii. 1 

all three do meet in thee at once — iii. 3 

think'st thou, we shall ever meet again? — iii. !> 
God knows wlien we shall meet again — iv. 3 
if you do meet Horatio and Marcellus. . Hamlet, i. 1 
my tables,— meet it is, I set it down .... — i.ft 

hereafter shall think meet to put — i. 5 

meet what I would have well, and it.... — !!.'• ■^ 

'tis n^veet, tliat some more audience — iii. 3 

raetliouglit tliere was nothin" meet — v. 1 (song) 

for such a guest is meet (rep^ — v. 1 (song) 

i t seems noT; meet, nor wholesome Othello, i. 1 

i' the morning Iiere we'll meet again .... — i. 3 
where shall we meet i' the morniug? .... — i. 3 

let's meet him, and receive him — ii. 1 

do tliou meet me presently at tlie harbour — ii. 1 

meet me by and by at the citadel — ii. 1 

I meet tlie captains at the citadel — iii. 3 

Tou' II never meet a more sufficient man — iii. 4 

I will go meet him — iii. 4 

thus all guiltless meet reproach — iv. 1 

wind, that kisses all it meets — iv. 2 

'tis meet I should be used so, very meet — iv. 2 

when we shall meet at compt — v. 2 

ME ETER— meeter for your spirit Henry V. i. 2 

tell vou at some meeter season ,. Antony ^Cleo. v. 1 

MEETEST-meetest for death. /Vere/ianfo/Tenice, iv. I 

York is meetest man to be your ... .2 Henry VI. i. 3 

at vour meetest vantage Uiehard ///. iii. 5 

MEETING— befitting this first meeting. 7'«H/)t-s<, v. 1 

let's appoint him a meeting Mirry IVivcs,\i. 1 

your meetings and appointments ... . — iii. 1 
from her another emhiissy of meeting — iii. 5 
appoint a meeting with tliis old fat . . — iv. 4 

of FalstafTs and our meeting — v. 3 

end in lovers' meeting Twelflh Night, ii. 3 (song) 

if a merry meeting may be wished ..Much Ado, v. ! 
formeeting her of late, hehind. Mid. N.'s Dream, iv. 1 
wassails, meetings, markets, fairs. I.oue's L.Los/, v. 2 
meeting with Salerio by the vray.Mer. of Venice, iii. 2 

I would fain see this meeting As you Like it, iii. 3 

where, meeting with an old religious — v. 4 



[ 498 ] 



MEM 



BIEETING noses? kissing with H'itder'sTalc,i. ■> i 

is as a meeting of the petty gods . . . ." — i v. 3 
and not the hostess o' the meeting . . — iv. 3 | 
you see the meeting of the two kings? — v. 2 t 

bur point of second meeting Macbeth, iii. 1 

meeting were bare without it — iii. 4 

broke the good meeting, with most.. — iii. 4 
in tlie very meeting, fall, and die . . King John, iii. 1 

and smiles in meeting Richard II. iii. 2 

shock at meeting tears the cloudy . . — iii. 3 

appoint them a place of meeting 1 Henry IV. i. 2 

meeting the check of such another day — v. !i 
fearful meeting of their opposite.. ..2 Henri///', iv. 1 

peace to this meeting Henry V. v. 2 

and of this gracious meeting — v. 2 

that bred this meeting here ZHenryVI. ii. 2 

changed to merry meetings Richard III. i. 1 

by the conflux of meeting sap . . Troilus ^ Cress, i. 3 

and, meeting him, will tell him — i. 3 

meeting two such weals-men as .... Coriolanus, ii. 1 

and at first meeting loved Cymbeline, v. 5 

Lucius, and appoint the meeting. Titus Andron, iv. 4 
and meeting here the otlier messenger.. .. Lear, ii. 3 

with wilful choler meeting Romeo ^- Juliet, i. 5 

and for this time of meeting Hamlet, i. 2 

the means of meeting between him and.. — ii. 2 
JMEETIJS'G-FLACE, and the teWosw. Cymbeline, iv. 1 
MEETLY— but this is rac^tij. Antony f,- Cleopatra, i. 3 
MEET'ST— thou meet'st the fellow. . . . Henry V. iv. 7 
MEG— Mall, Meg, and Marian ..Tempest, ii. 2 (song) 

how now, Meg? Merry Wives, ii. 1 

good Meg, I'll wear this (rep.) Much Ado, iXi. 4 

tCol.'i I tliank thee, Meg 2Henry VI. iii. 2 

MEHERCLE, if their sons be ....Love'sL.Lost, iv. 2 
SIEILLEUR — meilleur que I'Anglois ..Henry V. v. 2 
MEHSTY- they summoned up their meiuy .Lear, ii. 4 
MEISEN— in Germany called, Meiseii ..HenryV.i. 2 

MELANCHOLIES I am ! Merry Wives, iii. 1 

MELANCHOLY god protect theal Tu-et/lhNigM, ii. 4 
with a green and yellow melancholy — ii. 4 
be boilgu to death witli melancholy . . — ii. 5 
being addicted to a melancholy as slie is — ii. .5 
lumpish,"lieavy, melancholy. Two Gen. of Ver. iii. 2 

so loud, and so melancholy Merry Wives, i. 4 

why art thou melancholy? (rep.) .... — ii. 1 
is of a very melancholy disposition. . Much Ado, ii. 1 
half count John's melancholy in signior — ii. 1 

strikes him into melancholy — ii. 1 

I found him here as melancholy as.. — ii. 1 
little of the melancholy element in her — ii. I 
the greatest note of it is his melancholy — iii. 2 
for we are high-proof melancholy .. — ■y. 1 
turn melancholy forth to funerals. .i>/;'d.iV.'s Dr. i. 1 
sable-coloured melancholy. .Love'sL.Lost, i. 1 (let.) 
of great spirits grows meliincholy? .. — i. 2 
thou part sadness and melancholy . . — . i. 2 
most rude melancholy, valoiu' gives thee — iii. 1 
and to be melancholy; and here '.rep.) — iv. 3 
he made her melancholy, sad, and heavy — v. 2 
not, with this melancholy bait ..jVer. o/Fen!'ce,_i. I 
the melancholy Jaqiies (rep.) ....As you Like it, ii. 1 

it will make you melancholy — ii. 5 

I can suck melancholy out of a song — ii. .^ 
under the shade of melancholy boughs — .!!■ ' 

adieu, good signior melancholy — iii. 2 

they say, you are a melancholy fellow — iv. 1 
neither the scholar's melancholy .... — iv. 1 

a melancholy of mine own — iv. 1 

thus his good melancholy oft began ..All'sWell.i. 2 
lord to be a very melancholy man .. — iii. 2 
a man that liad this trick of melancholy — iii. 2 
why is he melancholy? Perchance .. — iii. 5 
melancholy is the nurse of . . Taming of Sh. 2 (ind.) 
a new ship to purge melancholy.. Winter^ sTale, iv. 3 
dull with care and melancholy. Comedy of Errors, i. 2 
but moody and dull melancholy .... ^~ v. 1 
conies tills way to the melancholy vale — y.\ 
or if that surly spirit, melancholy. . King John, iii. 3 
of conscience, and sour melancholy., fi/c/iord //. ■y. 6 
I am as melancholy as a gib eat .... 1 Henry IV. i. 2 
or the melancholy of Moor-ditch?.... — i. 2 
musing, and cursed melancholy? .... — ii. 3 
drag the tragic melancholy night ..2HenryVl. iv. 1 
was troubled with deep melancholy . . — v. 1 
is sickly, weak, and melancholy . . Richard III. i. 1 
raethcught the melancholy flood — — i. 4 
weary way hath made you melancholy — iii. 1 

canst yield a melancholy seat — iv. 4 

the melancholy lord Northumberland — v. 3 
he is melancholy without cause.. Troilus <§■ Cress, i. 2 
you may callit melanchol.y; if you.. — ii. 3 
our melancholy upon your head] . ... — iii. 1 
unmanly melancholy sprung.. r/mono/^(Aens, iv. 3 
drove him into this melanclioly .... — iv. 3 
hateful error, melancholy's child! Julius Ciesar, v. 3 
mistress of true melancholy ....Antony S^CUo. iv. 9 
O melancholy! who ever yet couMl.Cymbeline, iv. 2 
a most rare boy, of melancholy ! . . . . — iv. 2 
silence, and my cloudy melancholy ?7'if us And. ii. 3 
dull-eyed melancholy, by me so used . . Pericles, i. 2 

doth sU too melancholy, as if the — ii. 3 

will_awake him from his melancholy.. — ii. 3 
hearing of your melancholy state .... — v. 1 

my cue is villanous melancholy Lear, i. 2 

to melancholy bells Romeo Sr Juliet, iv. 5 

of my weakness, and my melancholy. . Hamlet, ii. 2 
o'er wliich liis melancholy sits on brood — iii. 1 
lMELFORD-ofMelford....2Henr)/KLi. 3 (petition) 
MELIUS-quo antiquius, eo mAius. Pericles, i. (Gow.) 
MELL-men are to mell with ..All'slVell,iv. 3 (let.) 
MELLIFLUOUS voice, as I am. . Twelfth Night, ii. 3 
MELLOW— mine own occasion mellow — i. 2 

prosperity begins to mellow Richard 1 11. iv. 4 

did shake down mellow fruit Coriolanus, iv. 6 

shook down my mellow hangings.. Ci/m6e/i«c, iii. 3 

fall, unshaken, when they mellow \>e..Hamlei, iii. 2 

MELLOWED— his mellowed years-.SHenryr/. iii, 3 

mellowed bv the stealing hours . . Richard HI. iii. 7 

JIELLOWING of occasion Love's L. Lost, iv. 2 

MELODIOUS-melodious were it.TwoGen.ofVer.i.i 



MELODIOUS birds sing {rep.). Merry W. iii. 1 (song) 
sweet melodious birds ue unto us. Titus Andron. ii. 3 
where, like a sweet melodious bird.. — iii. 1 
from her melodious lay to muddy .... Hamlet, iv. 7 

MELODY-tongue's sweet melody. iV/iii.A'.'.vDreum, i. 1 
Philomel, with melody, sing in .. — ii. 3 (song) 
with sounds of sweetest melody? ..iHenrylV. iii. 1 
not bob us out of our melody . . Troilus ^- Cress, iii. 1 
chaunt melody on every hMsh.TitusAndronicus, ii. 3 
with his pretty buzzing melody .... — iii. 2 
at pleasure stint their melody — iv. 4 

MELT— candied be they, and melt .... Tempest, ii. I 

shall never melt mine honour — iv. 1 

will melt her frozen thoughts. ru'oGc!!. offer, iii. 2 
they would melt me out of myfat.JI/er;^,v"''t'es, iv. 5 

that fii'e cannot melt out of me MuchAdo.i. 1 

and showers of oaths did mc\t..Mid.N.\ Dream, i. 1 
to melt myself away in water-drops ! Richard II. iv. 1 
nay, if you melt, then will she ....\HenrylV.i\i. 1 

doth begin to melt, and drop iHenrylV. ii. 4 

firmness,) melt itself into the sea! .. — iii. 1 
for I should melt at an oflti;nder'a. .2Henry VI. iii. 1 

cold snow melts with the sun's — iii. 1 

never weep, now melt with woe ....ZHenryVI. ii. 3 

thy tough commixtures melt — .'!• ^ 

nay, then her wax must melt — iii. 2 

most hard temper melt and lament. Henry r///. ii 3 
and to melt the city leads upon. . . . Coriolanus, iv. 6 

I melt, and am not of stronger — v. 3 

let Rome in Tiber melt ! ....Anlony^ Cleopatra, i. 1 

the gold I give thee, will I melt — ii. 5 

melt Egypt into Nile! — ii. 5 

authority melts from me — iii. 11 

melt their sweets on blossoming .... — iv. 10 
the crown o' the earth doth melt .... — iv. 13 
with warm tears I'll melt the snow. TilusAnd. iii. 1 
tears will quickly melt tliy life away — iii. 2 

learn of us to melt in showers — v. 3 

melt thee, but be a soldier to Pericles, iv. I 

touching of her lips I may melt — v. 3 

this too too solid flesh would melt Hamlet, i. 2 

and melt in her own fire; proclaim no . . — iii. 4 
of oak, when mountains melt on them. .Othello, ii. 1 

MELTED— and are melted into air. . . . Tempest, iv. 1 
have melted him in hisowngrease.il/errj/ )ri't^rs,ii. I 
manhood is melted into courtesies ..Much Ado, iv. 1 
my love to Hermia, melted as doth.M/'d. A'.'sDr. iv.l 
counterfeit lump of ore will be melted, ^^^i/'s Well, iii. 6 
with shrieks, she melted into air. Winlet'sTale, iii. 3 
what seemed corporal, melted as breath. il/uc'6e;/i, i. 3 
lest zeal, now melted, by the windy. Kiiig John, ii. 2 
my heart hath melted at a lady's .... — v. 2 
they must perforce have melted .... Richard II. v. 2 
Titan, that melted at the sweet .. ..IHenrylV. ii. 4 

as doth the melted snow upon Hem-y V. iii. 5 

melted down thy youth Timon ofAthens,iv. 3 

three parts melted away with rotten. Cf)r/o(a;ius, ii. 3 
till he had melted from the Ci/mhe(ine, i. 4 

MELTETH-faith melteth into iiiooA. Micch Ado, ii. 1 
with that which melteth fools JuHusCtesar, iii. 1 

JIELTING the darkness Tempest, v. 1 

a sea of melting pearl .... Two Geii.of Verona, iii. I 

open as day for melting charity iHenrylV. iv. 4 

will quickly dry thj' melting tears.. 3 if en rt/T/. i. 4 

steel thy melting heart, to hold — ii. 2 

melting with tenderness and mild./i/c'iarrf ///. iv. 3 
the melting spirits of women .... Jidius Cwsar, ii. 1 
hug him in their melting bosoms. 7'«;Ms^ndroi!, iii. 1 
albeit unused to the melting mood Othello, v. 2 

IiIELUN-couut Melun , a noble lord . King Jo/m, iv. 3 
my lord Melun, let tliis be copied out — v. 2 

it is the count Melun — v. 4 

the count Melun is slain — v. 5 

MEMBER of the commonwealth.. Lojie's L. Lost, iv. 1 
a good member of the commonwealth — iv. 2 

members of my occupation Ueas.forMeas. iv. 2 

of some more mightier membcf — v. 1 

member of the commonwealth..i)/er. o/re7ff'ce, iii. 5 

all members of our cause itievryW. iv.l 

the slave, a member of the country's.. He;iri/F. iv. I 
as a branch and member of tills royalty — v. 2 

as festered members rot 1 Henry VI. iii. 1 

I'll lop a member off, and give it you — y. 3 

as no member of the war Troilus^- Cressida, i. 3 

not bear from me a Greek isli member — iv. 5 
all the body's members rebelled . ...Coriolanus, i. 1 
replied to the discontented members — i. 1 
and you the mutinous members .... — i. 1 
being members, should bring (rep.).. — ii. 3 
there are members to make new .Antony ^-Clro. i. 2 

and be a member of his love Otiiello, iii. 4 

our other healthful members even to — iii. 4 

MEMENTO MORI: I never see ....IHenrylV. iii. 3 

BIEMORABLE— memorable shame Henry T. ii. 4 

he sends you this most memorable line — ii. 4 
I wear it for a memorable honour. ... — iv. 7 
and worn as a memorable trophy — v. 1 

JIEMORANDUMS of bawdy-houses. 1 HenrylV. iii. 3 

JIEMORIAL— with the memorials . . Twelfth.^, iii. 3 
oblique memorial of cuckolds ..Troilus^ Cress, v. 1 
and gives memorial dainty kisses to it — v. 2 

MEMORIES— unbreathedmemories.jl/id. N.'sDr. v.V 

freshly pitied in our memories Henry I'll I. v. 2 

these weeds are memories of those worser. Lear, iv. 7 

MEMORIZE another Golgotha Macbeth, i. 2 

MEMORIZED-in itbe memorised.Hem^i/F///. iii. 2 

MEMORY— sucbasinnerofhis memory. refiipes*. i. 2 

who shall be of as little memory — ii. 1 

no memory of what it ■was . . Tuo Gen. of Verona, v. 4 

he is a good sprag memory Merry Wives, iv. 1 

else your memory is bad, going . . Love's L. Lost, iv. 1 
are begot in the ventricle of memory — iv. 2 
and quite divorce his memory from his — v. 2 
by the near guess of my memory... 1/er.o/ Venice, i. 3 
planted in his memory an army of .. — iii. 5 
O you memory of old sir Rowland. .4s you Like it, ii. 3 
miiny things of worthy memory. . TamingofSh. iv. 1 

hast the memory of Hermione Winter's Tale, v. 1 

oflife sfjme memory, my wasting. Comerfj/o//irr. v. I 
that memory, the warder of the brain.. A/ac6eiA, i. 7 



MEM 



[ 499 J 

MEN-all meii'soffico to speak patieuct;.il/iic/i^l((o,v. 1 

therein do men from cliildien — v. 1 

two of us, and men indeed — v. 1 

witli two old men witliout teetli — v. 1 

two of my lirotlier's men boundl — v. 1 

what offence have tliese men done?.. — v. J 

a pair of lionourable men — v. i 

that now men grow hard-hearted . . — v. 1 

witli armed men back to Blessina.. .. — v. 1 
abjure for ever the society of men. .^//rf.iV.'sDr. j. 1 

by all tlie vows that ever men broke — i. 1 

for love, as men may do — ij. 2 

tlie heresies, that men do leave — ii. 3 

I am a man as other men are — iii . 1 

he never numbered among men! .... — iii. 2 

if you were men, as men you are in.. — iii. ■> 

to join witli men in scorning your .. — iii. 2 

we liad all been made men — iv. 2 

liard-handed men, that work in .... — v. 1 

they may pass for excellent men .... — v. 1 
other men s secrets, I beseech y oix. Love' sL. Lost, i. 1 

men sit down to tliat nourishment — i. 1 (letter) 

what great men have been in love? .. — i. 2 

let them be men of good repvite — i. 2 

but his glory is, to subdue men — i. 2 

and make them men of note (re;).) .. — iii. 1 

some men must love my lady — iii. 1 

with moon [Co/, iin/. -men] like men — iv. 3 

affection's men at arms — iv. 3 

a word that all men love — iv. 3 

loves all men ; or for men's sake .... — iv. 3 

by whom we men are men — iv. 3 

prove plagues to men forsworn — iv. 3 

men of peace, well encountered — v. 1 

where will you find men worthy .... — v. 1 

nor I, delight in perjured men — v. 2 

never breaks men's troth — v. 2 

the two learned men have compiled.. — v. 2 
mocks married men, for thus smgs he — v. 2 (song) 
there are a sort of men, whose. .il/fj-cA. of Venice, i. 1 

these same dumb wise men — i. 1 

and poor men's cottages — i. 2 

and holy men at their death, have .. — i. 2 

of all the men that ever my — i. 2 

sailors but men' — i. 3 

is blessing, if men steal it not — i. 3 

or cursed st among men — ii. i 

what many men desire (rep. ii. 9). . . . — ii. 7 

men, that hazard all, do it in hope . . — ii. 7 

yes, other men have ill luck too .... — iii. 1 

where men enforced do speak any .. — iii. 2 

toentrap the hearts of men, faster .. — iii. 2 

that ever kept with men — iii. 3 

botli accoutered like j'oung men .... — iii 4 

that men sliall swear, I have — iii. 4 

why, shall we turn to men? — iii. 4 

some men there are, love not ........ — iv. 1 

do all men kill the things they — iv. I 

themselves into the trunks of men .. — iv. 1 

serves many men to save their — iv. 1 

did give the rings away to men — iv. 2 

a many merry men with him ,,,.As youLike it, i. I 

what wise men do foolishly — i. 2 

the little foolery, that wise men have — i. 2 

three proper young men, of excellent — i. 2 

be it known unto all men by these . . — i. 2 

thus men may grow wiser every day! — i. 2 

such odds in tlie men ICol.Knt.-mnn} — i. 2 

to some kind of men tlieir graces. . . . — ii. 3 

and sat at good men's feasts — ii. 7 

all the men and women merely — ii. 7 

glad of other men's good — iii. 2 

poor men alone? no, no — iii. 3 

your own lands, to see other men's .. — iv. 1 

men have died from time to time. . . . — iv. 1 

men are April when they woo — iv. 1 

unnatural that lived 'mor.gst men .. — iv. 3 

every day men of great worth — v. 4 

for tlie love you bear to men — (ejiil.) 

I charge you, O men, for the love.... — (epil.) 
how virgins might blow up men? .... All's IVell, i. 1 

if men could be contented to be what — i. 3 

which men full true shall find .... — i. 3 (song) 

of heaven we count the act of men., — ii.'l 

I have an answer will serve all men — ii. 2 

created for men to bveatlie tliemselves — ii. 3 

where are my other men, monsieur? — ii. b 

that's the los's of men, though it be.. — iii. 2 

that you do cliarge men with — iv. 2 

I see, that men make hopes — iv. 2 

she says, all men have the like oaths — iv. 2 
men are to mell with, bos's.. .. .. — iv. 3 (lettei ) 

reports of men very nobly held — iv.3 

but, O strange men! that can — iv. 4 

that she, wliom all men praised — v. 3 

men will stay themselves. 7'a7nm3-o/S/ireMJ, 1 (Ind.) 

nor no such men as you have.... — 2 (indue.) 

such names and men as these .. .. — 2 (indue.) 

my men should call me, lord .... — 2 (indue.) 

for to cunning men I will be very . . — i. 1 

as scatters youn^ men through — i. 2 

of all the men alive, I never yet .... — ii. 1 

when men and women are alone .... — ii. 1 

and may not young men die — ii. 1 

thou hast braved many men — iv. 3 

go, call my men, and let us — iv.3 

•whiles otiier men have gates Winter's Talc , i . 2 

saw I men scour so on their way .... — ii. 1 

tlie men are not yet cold — iii. 3 

are given to men of middle age — Iv.3 

and all men's ears grew to his tunes — iv. 3 

it behoves men to be wary — iv. 3 

that doth utter all men's wcar-a.. — iv. 3 (song) 

made themselves all men of hair — iv.3 

since these "ood men are pleased .... — iv. 3 

more than he, and men — iv.3 

that are not simple men — iv.3 

seem to be honest plain men — iv.3 

men, that she is the rarest of all women — v. 1 

has these poor men iu question — v. I 



MEN 



MEMORY— pluck from the memory . . Machelli, v. 3 

whose memory is written on illvmylV. Iv. 1 

keep no tell-tale to his memory — Iv. I 

and their memory shii 11 as a pattern — iv. 4 

may waste the memory of the — iv. 4 

your grandfather of famous memory. .Hciii'!//'. iv. 7 
m memory of her, when she is dead..liJ«i)!/;'i. i. 6 
note you in my book of memory .... — 11.4 
that ever-living man of memory .... — iv.3 
vour names from books of memory ..illcnryVI. i. 1 

I thank my memory, I yet Henry y III. iii. 2 

some little memory of me will stir him — iii. 2 
yet let memory, from false to .. I'l oit us S,- Cress, iii. 2 
of whose memory hereafter more.. Timon oj'Ath. v. 5 

yca» my memory is tired Coriolanns, i. 9 

a good memory, and witness of — iv. 

coals cheap: a noble memory! — v. 1 

yet he shall have a noble memory — y. 5 

beg a hair of him for memory .. ..JuliusCfPsar, iii, 2 
the memorv of my womb . Atttony ^- Cleopatra, iii. 11 
upon record bear "hateful memory .. — iv. 9 
riveted, screwed to v.\y memory? .... Cymbeline, ii. 2 
how thy memory will then be panged — iii. 4 

made me to blame in memory — iii..') 

it presses to my memory like ..Romeo ^-Juliet, III. 2 
brother's death the memory be green.... Ha;/iZp/, i. 2 

iu thy meniDvy look thou character — 1,3 

'tis in my memory locked, and you — i. 3 

while memory holds a seat in this — I. .5 

from the table of my memory — i. 5 

if it live in your memory, begin — ii. 2 

a great man's memory may outlive his . . — iii. 2 
would dizzy the arithmetic of memory .. — v. 2 
some rights of memory in this kingdom.. — v. 2 

it ctimes o'er my memory, as dotli Othello, iv. 1 

MEMPHIS— Ilhbdope's, or Memphis'. 1 Henri/ K/. 1. 6 

AIEN- play the men Tempest, i. 1 

to the most of men, this Is a Caliban .. — i. a 
than we bring men to comfort them.... — Ii. 1 

all men idle, all — ii. I 

ebbing men, indeed, most often — ii. 1 

now they are ray men — ii. I 

and men of liide? — ii. 2 

more that I may call men — iii. 1 

or that there were such men — iii. 3 

you are three men of sin — iii. 3 

you 'mongst men being most — Iii. 3 

inen hang and di'owu their proper selves — iii. 3 
as strange amaze as e'er men trod .... — v. 1 
mark but the badges of these men .... — v. 1 
that let men know their love .. Tico Gen. ofVer. i. 2 

while other men, of slender — i. 3 

encounters of lascivious men — ii. 7 

are servants to deceitful men — ii. 7 

base men, that use them — ii. 7 

kept severely from resort of men .... — iii. 1 

the company of awful men — Iv. 1 

by all men's judgment — iv. 4 

black men are pearls in — v. 2 

all men but Proteus — v. 4 

pliapes than men their minds ()-e/?.).. — v. 4 

these banished men, that I — v. 4 

are men endued with — v. 4 

von have beaten my men Merry Wives, i. 1 

I keep but three men and a boy yet.. — i. 1 

f ir the puttiniidown of men — ii. 1 

of fat men, as long as I have (rep.) .. — ii. 1 

a yoke of his discarded men — ii. 1 

were they his men? — ii. 1 

laughing'-stogs to other men's humours — iii. I 

give your men the charge — iii. 3 

like women in men's apparel — iii. 3 

send him by your two men to — iii. 3 

call your men, mistress Ford — iii. 3 

she does so take on with her men.... — iii..") 

I'll appoint my men to carry — Iv. 2 

I'll first direet my men — iv. 2 

we are simple men ; we do not — iv. 2 

Germans are honest men — iv. b 

what shall poor men do? — v. 5 

the company and sight of men .... TwelftliNight, i. 2 
X take these wise men that crow 60., — 1.5 

and three merry men we be — ii. 3 

I would have men of such constancy — ii. 4 
what love women to men may owe.. — ' Ii. 4 
we men may sa}' more, swear more . . — ii. 4 
but wise men, folly-fallen, quite taint — iii. 1 
I have heard of some kind of men .. — iii. 4 

these wise men, that give fools — iv. 1 

'gainst knave and thief men shut — v. 1 (song) 

such as moves men Measure for Measure, I. 3 

you must not speak with men — i. .^ 

when maidens sue, men give like. ... — \. b 

are there not men in your ward — ii. 1 

could great men thunder as Jove.... — ii. 2 

great men ma3'jest with saints — ii. 2 

ever, till now, when men were fond.. — ii. 2 

men their creation mar — ii. 4 

liny and sell men and women like beasts — iii. 2 
the steeled gaoler Is the friend of men — iv. 2 

gi\'e notice to such men of sort — iv. 4 

they say, best men are moulded .... — v. 1 
nc)t till (xod make men of some other. Afurt/lrfo, ii. 1 
for he both pleaseth men, and angers — ii. 1 
should hale souls out of men's bodies? — ii. 3 

men were deceivers ever — ii. 3 (song) 

the fraud of men was ever so — ii.3(song) 

are 3'ovi good men and true? — iii. 3 

you shall comprehend all vagrom men — iii. 3 
they are not the nien you took them for — Iii. 3 
and for such kind of men, the less .. — Iii. 3 
being taken u|) of these men's bills.. — iii. 3 

an' two men ride of a horse — Iii. 5 

all men are not alike — iii. .^ 

we are now to examination these men — iii. 5 
what men dare do? what men (rep.) — iv. 1 
and men are only turned into tongue — iv. 1 
in the prince's name, accuse these men — iv. 2 
let these men be bound, and brought — iv. 2 
for brother, men can counsel — v. 1 



MEN— as seafaring men provide ..Comedyof lirr. i. 1 

or any place that harbours men .... — i. 1 

men more divine, the masters of .... — ii. i 

what he hath scanted men in hair .. — ii. 2 

hairy men plain dealers without wit — ii. 2 

have you not heard men say — iv. 2 

takes pity on decaj'cd men — iv.3 

they appear to men like angels — Iv.3 

where any honest men resort — v. I 

prevailing much in youtliful men .. — v. 1 

one of thesemen isCienius to v. 1 

by men of Epidamnum — v. 1 

with new supplies of men Macbeth, i. 2 

deign him burial of his men — 1.2 

where men may read strange — i . 5 

there's daggers in men's smiles — ii.3 

attend those men our pleasure? — iii. 1 

men, my liege (re;).) — iii. i 

and so of men — iii. 1 

so all men do, from hence — Iii. 3 

men must not walk too late — iii 6 

to hear the men deny it — iii.G 

whj', the honest men — iv. 2 

and like good men, bestride — iv.3 

ten thousand warlike men (rep.) — iv.3 

and good men's lives expire — iv.3 

of all men else I have avoided — v. 7 

shall I produce the men ? • ■ King John, i. 1 

I doubt, as all men's cliildren may .. — 1. I 

lest men should say, look, where. .. — i. 1 

have is have, however men do catch — i. 1 

call for our ehiefest men of — ii. 1 

these men of Anglers C7ej9. ii. 2) .... — ii. 1 

mouthing the flesh of men — ii. 2 

old men, 3'oung men, maids — Ii. 2 

the fury of two desperate men — iii. 1 

be kept with slaughtered men? — iii. 1 

laughter, keep men's eyes, and strain — Iii. 3 

when fortune means to men most good — iii. 4 

the fierce looks of these bloody men — iv. 1 

drive these men away, and I will (rep.) — iv. 1 

the faiths of men ne er stained — iv. 2 

my lord; men's mouths are full .... — iv. 2 

old men, and beldams in the — iv. 2 

what men provided, what munition — v. 2 

and good men, hate so foul a liar Richard II.\.\ 

men are but gilded loam — i. 1 

that which In mean men we entitle. . — 1.2 

are like two men that vow — 1.3 

to men in joy; but grief — i. 3 

when they shall know what men are — i. 4 

the tongues of dying men enforce.... — ii. 1 

more are men's ends marked — ii. 1 

this happy breed of men, this little.. — ii. 1 

can sick men play so nicely with.... — ii. 1 

dying men flatter with those that (rep.) — ii. 1 

three thousand men of war — Ii. 1 

will you go muster men ? — ii. 2 

old York there, with his men of war? — ii.3 

manned with three hundred men.... — ii.3 

that young Mars of men — ii.3 

base men by his endowments — Ii.3 

rich men look sad, and ruffians — ii. 4 

bring forth these men; Bushy — iii. 1 

here, in the view of men — iii. 1 

the breath of worldly men cannot .. — Iii. 2 

weak men must fall: for heaven .... — iii. 2 

have twelve thousand fighting men ! — iii. 2 

the blood of twenty thousand men did — iii. 2 

wise men ne'er wail their present .. — iii. 2 

men judge by the complexion — iii. 2 

to great and growing men — iii. 4 

didst send two of thj' men to execute — iv. 1 

of Golgotha, and dead men's skulls.. — iv. 1 

the favour of these men; were they not — iv. 1 

the souls of men may deem that yo\i — Iv. ] 

roof did keep ten thousand men?.... — iv. 1 

been still a happy king of men — v.] 

bad men, ye violate a twofold — v. 1 

the eyes of men, after a well-graced.. — v. 2 

more contempt, men's eyes did seowl — v. 2 

steeled the hearts of men — v. 2 

It will make wise men mad — v. 5 

leading the men of Herefordshire ..\llenryir.'\. \ 

and let men say, we be men of good — i. 2 

us, that are moon's men — 1.2 

if men were to be saved by — 1.2 

shall rob those men that we have .... — 1.2 

by so much shall I falsify men's hopes — I. 2 

when men think least I will — i. 2 

that men of your nobilitj' — 1.3 

homo is a common name to all men — ii. I 

young men must live — ii. 2 

thieves have bound the true men .... — ii. 2 

such as we see when men restrain .. — ii.3 

there live not three good men — ii. 4 

some six or seven fresh men set upon us — ii. 4 

eleven buckram men gi'own out of .. — ii. 4 

know these men In Kendal green.. .. — ii 4 

swear it was the blood of true men . . — ii. 4 

followed certain men to this house {rep.) — ii. 4 

If he have robbed these men — i i . 4 

cousin, of many men I do not — iii. 1 

1 am not in the roll of common men — iii. 1 

a nobleman, loseth men's hearts — iii. 1 

common hackneyed in the eyes of men — Iii. 2 

that men would tell their children.. — iii. 2 

did pluck allegiance fiom men's hearts — iii. 2 

being daily swallowed by men's eyes — iii. 2 

as cloudy men use to their adversaries — iii. i 

feeds him fat, while men delay — iii. 2 

for men must think, if we — iv. 1 

tush man, mortal men, mortal men — \\. 2 

being men of such great leading — iv.3 

ten thousand men must 'bide — iv. 4 

and dear men of estimation — iv. 4 

and all his men upon the foot of — v. 5 

stuffing the ears of men with ..iHenryir. (indue.) 
so did our men, heavy in Hotspur's — (indue. ) 

and tlie shows of men, to fight — i. I 



ii. 4 
ii. 4 
iii. 1 



_ iii. 2 



Iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 2 



_ ii. 1 



MEN— as men drink potions 2 Ihiiryll . i. \ 

men of all sorts take a pride — !• ^ 

the cause that wit is in otlier men . . _ — ;• ^ 

five and twenty thousand men ot choice — i. ^ 

using thenamesofmen instead of men — i. ^ 

O thoughts of men accurst! — .J- ? 

O miracle of men! him did you .... 

die, men, like dogs; give crowns 

how men of merit are souglit alter .. 
there is a history in all men 3 lives. . 

two of sir Jolm Falstaff's men 

half a dozen sufficient men ? 

there are other men fitter to ^o out. . 
come, sir, which men shall I have?. . 
they are your likeliest men 

give me the spare men, and spare 
on, Bardolpli, lead the men away . . 
lord, lord, how subject we old men are — 
for crawdiii;,' amons the marslial's men — 

in tliL' tliroiv-'s of inllitary men — 

even liy those men tliat most — 

our men more perfect in the use — 

against ill cliances, men are ever ... . — . 

that we may peruse tlie men we sliould — iv. ^ 

use Ids men well, Davy; for they. . ._. — v. 1 

colierence of his men's spirits and his — v. 

1 would iiumour his men with the .. — v. i 

if to his men, I would curry with — v. i 

as men take diseases, one of — '*'• ' 

we meet like men that had forgot — — v. ^ 

one of tlie greatest men in the realm — v. 3 

thrice wider tiian for otlier men — X- S 

wliicli men devout by testament have.. Henri/ ( . _i. I 

lurketli in men's ears, to steal — J- J 

that men are merriest when 

men may sleep, and they may have 

sweet men, come to him — 

show men dutiful? why, so — 

men's faiths are wafer-cakes — 

witii men of courage, and with means — 

the dead men's blood, the pining — 

copy now to men of grosser blood • . . • — 

merciful, great duke, to men of mould 1 — 

tliat men of few words are the best men — 

the men would carry coals — 

as familiar with men's pockets — 

like to men proud of destruction — 

therefore, you men of Harfleur — 

wliat men have you lost, Fluellen?._. — 

just, just; and the men do sympathize — 

would men observingly distil it out — 

'tis good for men to love their .... — 

and a many poor men's lives saved . . — 

to feel other men's minds — 

now if these men do not die well .... — 

i f these men have defeated the — 

outstrip men, they have no wings . . — 

so that here men are punished ....... — 

kings neglect, that private men enjoys — 

creating awe and fear in other men? — 

them but the shales and husks of men — 

of fighting men they have full •.••■■ — 

ten thousand of tliose men in England — 

the fewer men, the greater share — 

if men my garments wear — 

old men forget : yet all shall — 

unwished five thousand men — 

dying like men, though buried — 

have reinforced tlieir scattered men — 

tliere is goot men porn at IMonmouth - 

our nobles frofn our common men — J v. 7 

fifteen hundred, besides common men — iv. 8 

of all otlier men, but five and twenty' — iv. 8 

from France arrived more happy men — iv-. 8 

pales in the flood with men — v. (ehorusl 

tlie tongues of men are full of deceit — v. 2 

confining mighty men — , .T' ^ (™?'■p^' 

did blind men with his beams IHenryVI.i. 1 

but want of men and money — }• j 

no leisure had he to enrank his men — i. 1 

keeps Ids men from mutiny — ;• 1 

nor men, nor money, hatli lie — . ;■ 2 

what men have I! dogs! — !• 2 

mean more tlian we poor men do know — i. .i 
draw, men; for all this privileged place _— i. 3 

allmannerof men, assemliled — i.3(procl.) 

mirror of all martial men? — !• •* 

cheer up tliy hunger-starved men — i. 5 

hear how we have played the men .. — .i. Jj 

amongst the troops of armed men. . . . — ii. 2 
when a world of men could not prevail — u. 2 

prove on better men than Somerset.. — ij. 4 

kindumpireof men's miseries — .li. 5 

through malice of the bishop's men.. — i;i. 1 

bishop and the duke of Gloster's men — in. 1 

and my power of men are yours — in- 3 

we lost twelve hundred men - iv. 1 

what madness rules in brain-sick men — iv. 1 

but great men tremble, wlien illeniyl I. ui. 1 

men's flesli preserved so whole — }]}■ ' 

will you lead a band of men — iii- j 

packing with a host of men — im- ] 

'twas men I lacked, and you — ilJ- 1 

noknife, to slaugliter sleeping men.. — i)i. 2 
pernicious bloodsucker of sleeping men! — iii. 2 

with the men of Bury — !';• 2 

blaspheming God, and cursing men — iii. -i 

can I make men live, whe'r they .... — !"• 3 

clip dead men's graves — iv. 1 

small things make basemen proud.. — iv. 1 

great men oft die by vile — i''' ' 

let the magistrates be labouring men — iv. 2 

for they are thrifty honest men — iv. 2 

O graceless men ! they know — i v. 4 

that thou hast men about thee — iv. 7 

to call poor men before them — iv. 7 

when honester men than thou — iv. 7 

you men of Kent,— what say — iv. 7 

great men have reaching hands — iv. 7 

determine poor men's causes — iv. 7 



iii. 


6 


111. 




iv. 




IV. 




IV. 




IV. 




IV. 




IV. 




IV. 




IV. 




IV. 




IV 




IV. 


2 


IV 


3 


IV 


3 


IV 


3 


IV 


3 


iv 


3 


iv 


3 


IV 


3 


iv 


fi 


IV 


7 



ii. 2 



_ iii. 1 

_ iii. 1 

— iii. 1 

— iii. 3 
_ iv. 1 



— 1.4 



iii. 2 



MEN— men shall holdof me in capite.2Hpniy;'/. iv. 7 
Cade driven back, his men dispersed — iv. 9 

come thou and thy five men — "-'J' 

dead men's cries do fill — v. 2 

York not om- old men spares — v. 2 

left his men: whereat the great illenry VI. i. 1 

will fill the house with armed men .. — i. 1 
hard by with twenty thousand men.. — i. 2 

what, witli five thousand men? — ;• 2 

let's set our men in order — ;• 2 

five men to twenty! though — !• 2 

be thou revenged on men — ;■ 3 

like men born to renown — ?• "i 

60 true men yield, with robbers 

a band of thirty thousand men 

a thousand men have broke 

sad-hearted men. much overgrown .. 
for wise men say, it is the wisest .... 

and men may talk of kings 

ah, simple men, you know not 

the liplitness of you common men . . 
with five thousand men, sliall cross. . 
go levy men, and make prepare for war 

so near as men report — ; 

that men must needs abide — \ 

his friends with horse and men — i 

for few men rightly temper — i 

for many men, that stumble — \ 

let's levy men, and beat him — i 

Shalt find men well inclined — i 

wise !men ne'er sit and wail — 

born to be a plague to men — 

and men ne'er spend their fury — 

men for their sons, wives for — 

be resident in men like one another. . — 

two braver men ne'er spurred — 

this it is, when men are ruled Hichard III. 

to be her men, and wear her livery . . — 

all men, I hope, live so — 

smile in men's faces 

a thousand men, that fishes gnawed 

some lay in dead men's skulls — 

from out a world of men, to slay — 

and desire all good men's love — 

wise men put on their cloaks — 

storms make men expect a dearth . . — 
the hearts of men are full of fear .... — 

men's minds mistrust en suing — 

oft have I heard of sanctuary men . . — 

when men are unprepared — 

and so 'twill do with some men else — 
the men you talk of came into my . . — 
momentary grace of mortal men .... — 
when holy and devout religious men — 
and all good men of this ungoyerned isle — 
and sage, grave men, since you will . . — 
ere men can say— God save the queen I — 

go, muster men (rep, i v. 4) — 

men shall deal unadvisedly 

what men of name resort to him? 

force the swords of wicked men to — — v. 
ICnl. Kj!(.] conscience is a thousand men — v, 
call for some men of sound direction — v, 

let men conquer us, and not — v, 

wliat men of name are slain — v. 

those two lights of men, met in Henry VIII. i. 

men might say, till this time — j 

I replied, men feared the French would — ; 
should j uggle men into such strange — 
abusing better men than they can be — 
understand again like honest men - . — 
men of his way should be most liberal — 
their evils on the graves of great men — 

by those men we loved most — 

that angels love good men with — 

all men s honours lie in one lump. ... — 

two equal men; the queen shall - 

fathers, men of singular integrity. ... — 
they should be good men; their affairs - 

like free and honest men, our just - 

ye speak like honest men — 

and to such men of gravity and learning - 
either for such men, or such business - 

holy men I thought ye 

myamento'tl All men's. There's.. - 
your envious courses, men of malice - 
main assent of all these learned men 
those men are happy; and so are all 
men's evil manners live in brass .... 
but, to those men that sought him . . 
those men are happy_ that shall (rep.) 

but we all are men, in our own 

men, that make envy, and crooked . . 

to men that understand you 

men so noble, liowever faulty 

men's prayers then would seek you. . 

out of the gripes of cruel men 

I had had men of some understanding 

if there be faith in men 

please your honour, we are but men. . 

all the best men are ours 

so do all men; unless they are. TroiVus .J C>- 

men prize the thing ungained 

persistive constancy in men? 

of chance lies the true proof of men .. 

or the men of Troy are 

that we have better men 

not much unlike young men 

an' all men were o' my mind 

at whose request do these men play? 
had men's privilege of speaking first 

let all constant men be Troiluses 

must fall out with men too 

for men. like butterflies 

save these men's looks 

some men do, while some men (rep.) 

that men do give themselves 

you men will never tarry 

that gods and men, address their . . . 
senators of Athens' happy men. Timi 



MEK— for 'tis a bond in men Timon of Athens, i. 1 

which all men speak with him — i. I 

what a number of men eat Timon . . — i. 2 

I wonder, men dare trust themselves (rep.) — i. 2 

great men should drink with harness — i. 2 

rich men sin, and I eat root .. — i. 2 (grace) 

to drink those men, upon whose — i. 2 

men shut their doors against — i. 2 

where be our men? Heie, my lord — i. 2 

O that men's ears should be to counsel — 1. 2 

usurers' men! (rep.) — ii. 2 

when men come to borrow — ii. 2 

men, and men's fortunes, could I .... — ii. 2 

one of lord Timon 's men? — iii. 1 

one of his men was with the — iii. 2 

has paid his men their wages — iii. 2 

what charitable men afford to — iii. 2 

but, I perceive, men must learn — iii. 2 

one of lord Timon's men. Flaminiusl — iii. 4 

why do fond men expose themselves — iii. .5 

sucn summer-birds are men — iii. R 

to borrow of men, men would.. .. — iii. 6 (grace) 

plagues, incident to men, your potent — iv. 1 

does still mar men — iv. 2 

societies and throngs of men ! . . , 

Eluck stout men's pillows from , 
ore at men's eyes, are not 

and mar men's spurring 

men daily find it such — iv. 3 

men report, thou dost affect — i v. 3 

the eyes, and hearts of men at duty .. — iv. 3 

why shouldst thou hate men? — iv, 3 

not been born the worst of men — iv. 3 

but men, men are the things themselves — iv. 3 

the beasts, to be rid of the men _ — i v. 3 

fall in the confusion of men, and remain — iv. 3 

more things like men! eat, 'Tirnon .. — iv. 3 

not thieves, but men that much do want — iv. 3 

iv. 3 
iv. 3 



— iv. 5 



i. 3 



i. 
ii-. 


3 

1 


11. 


1 


H. 


2 


ii. 


2 


ii. 


2 


11. 


4 


iii. 


1 


iii. 


1 


iii. 


1 


111. 


1 


111. 


1 


iii. 


2 


iii 


2 


Iv 


1 


IV 


2 


IV 


2 


iv 


2 


V 


2 


V 


2 


V 


2 


V 





iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 



— iv. 3 

— iv. 3 

— iv. 3 

— V. 1 

— V. 1 

— V. 1 



i. 6 



ii. 2 
ii. 2 
ii. 2 



V. 2 



— 


i. 3 





ii. 2 





ii. 3 





iii. 1 


z 


iii. 2 
iii. 2 


— 


iii. 3 
iii. 3 





iii. 3 


— 


iii. 3 


-^ 


iii. 3 


— 


iv. 2 


— 


V. 11 


of Athens, i. 1 | 



liave forgot all men; then.. 

and as rich men deal gifts 

thou shalt build from men 

give to dogs what thou deny'st to men 

be men like blasted woods 

thine own faults in other men ? 

lived to see two honest men ? 

naked, men may see't the better .... 

you are honest men (?pp.) — v. i 

men are not still the same — v. 2 

goodly aged men by the beards — v. 2 

graves only be men's works — v. 2 

all living men did hate — v. 5 (epitnph) 

though soft-conscienced men can.. .. Cnriolanus, i. 1 

corn for the rich men only — i. 1 

geese, that bear the shapes of men 
have placed their men of trust?. . . 

w'hicli men are best inclined — i. b 

you two are old men — ii. 1 

that say you are reverend grave men — jr. 1 

advanced, declines; and then men die — ii. 1 

yet, by the faith of men, we have some — ii. I 

I have seen the dumb men throng .. — ii. 1 

many great men that have flattered — 

so men obeyed, and fell below his stem — 

run reeking o'er the lives of men .... — 

the worthiest men have done't? .... — 

supplied with worthy men ! — 

the dead carcases of unburied men . . — 

chances common men could bear .... — 

of all the men i' the world — 

than war's a destroyer of men — 

ay, and it makes men hate one — 

the second name of men, obeys — 

3'ou guard like men; 'tis w-ell — 

whence men have read his fame .... — 

my iDcst and freshest men — 

and men of heart looked wondering — 

men and lads, if you have writ — 

as proper men as ever trod upon . . Julius Ctet 

lead these men about the streets? — 

you cruel men of Rome, knew you . . — 

assemble all the poor men of your sort — 

else would soar above the view of men — 

the shows of love to other men — 

if you know that I do fawn on men — 

what you and other men think of . . — 

ami we petty men walk under — 

men at some time are masters — 

have men about me, that are fat (rep.) — 
too much : such men are dangerous . . 

quite through the deeds of men — 

such men as he be never at — 

which gives men stomach to digest . . — 

they saw men, all in fire — 

let not men say, these are their — 

but men may construe things — 

it is the part of men to fear and tremble — 

old men fools, and children calculate — 

know I these men. that come — 

if not the face of men, the sufferance — 

cowards, and men cautelous — 

such creatures as men doubt — 

and buy men's voices to commend . . — 

any thing that other men begin — 

in the spirit of men there is no blood — 

with toils, and men with flatterers . . — 

care draws in the brains of men — 

and what men to-night have — 

that will make sick men whole — 

and dying men did gioan - — 

most strange that men should , — 

and that great men shall press , — 

but one mind in all these men .. — ii. 3 (paper) 

might fire the blood of ordinary men — ■■ ' 

furnished well with men, and men are — 

men, wives, and children, stare — 

drawing days out, that men stand upon — 

the men that gave our country liberty — 
shall light upon the limbs of men 
caiTion men, groaning for burial . 



— iii. 1 



iii. 1 



— iii. I 



MEN— issue of tliese bloody mca.. Julius Ctcsar, iii. 1 

dead, and live all tree men? — iii. 2 

the evil that men do lives after them — iii. 2 

all honourable men Cre^.) — iii. 2 

and men have lost their reason — iii. 2 

yoti are not stones, but men (jrp.) .. — }!!• ^ 

to stir men's blood: I only speak.... — iii. 2 

and staled by other men, begin his . . — iv. 1 

but hollow men, like horses — iv. 2 

I shall be glad to learn of noble men — i v. 3 

be friends, as two sucli men should be — iv. 3 

even so great men great losses — i v. 3 

there is a tide in the affairs of men .. — iv. 3 

Claudius, and some other of my men — iv. 3 

since the affairs of men rest still .... — v. 1 

show to the apt thoughts of men .... — v. 3 

rather have such men my fliends tlian — v. 4 
of all faults that all men follow. ./(n(on!/ 4rCleo. i. 4 

and men's reports give him much . . — i. 4 

the arm and burgonet of men — i. 5 

paragon again my man of men — i. 5 

shall assist the deeds of justest men — ii. 1 

tliat the men might go to wars with — ji. 2 

a husband than the best of men .... — ii. 2 

all men's faces are true — ii- 6 

to have a name in great men's — ii. 7 

why, he's the Jupiter of men — iii. 2 

and that slain men should solder up — iii. 4 

by the way should have borne men. . — iii. 6 

have well becomed the best of men.. — iii- 7 

and we are women's men — ..iii. 7 

I see, men's judgments are — !;'• " 

men did ransom lives of me — Iii. 11 

better fortune, he is twenty men to one — iv. 2 

I wish, I could be made so many men — iv. 2 

my fortunes have corrupted honest men! — iv, 5 

■when men revolted shall upon — iv. 9 

noblest of men, woo't die? — iv. 13 

are level now with men — iv. 13 

some faults to make us men — v. 1 

very many; men and women too.... — v. 2 

which the gods give men to excuse .. — v. 2 

wliati are men mad? Ctjmhetine, i. 7 

some men are much to blame — i. 7 

half all men's hearts are his — i. 7 

he sits 'mongst men, like a descended — i. 7 

attended by my men; I will — .i. 7 

were they all made such men — ii. 3 

our countrymen ai'e men more ordered — ii. 4 

is there no way for men to be — ii . 5 

remembrance yet lives in men's eyes — iii. 1 

men's vows are women's traitors! .. — iii. 4 

true honest men being heard — iii. 4 

la.y the leaven on all proper men — iii. 4 

great men, that had a court — iii. 6 

the common men are now in action — iii. 7 

let me make men know more — v. I 

we scarce are men, and .you are gods — v. 2 

pa?s was dammed with dead men .. — v. 3 

harts die flying, not our men — v. 3 

you are more clement than vile men — v. 4 

as men report, thou orphans' father art — v. 4 

in despite of heaven and men — v. 5 

to be where ill men were — v. 5 

to men of noble minds, is honourMe. Titus And. i. 2 

remit these young men's heinous faults — i. 2 

gentle aged men I unbind my sons .. — iii. 1 

with their tongues doom men to death — iii. 1 

whilst I live, deceive men BO ........ — iii. I 

and fair men call for grace — iii. 1 

of "riefs would make men mad — iv. 1 

no big-boned men, framed of the .... — iv. 3 

my uncle and one of the emperial's men — iv. 3 

a power of high-resolved men — i v. 4 

thou the giddy men of Rome — Iv. 4 

make poor men's cattle break — v. I 

digged up dead men from their graves — v. 1 

take vengeance of such kind of men — v. 2 

but we worldly men have miserable — v. 2 

you sad-faced men, people — v. 3 

are by, men praise themselves — v. 3 

purpose to make men glorious. . Pericles, i. (Gower) 

every virtue gives renown to men! — i. 1 

and as sick men do, who know the world — i. 1 

all good men, as every prince sliould do — i. 1 

countless eyes to view men's acts — i. 1 

those men blush not in actions — i. 1 

our men be vanquished — i, 2 

fits kings, as they are men — i. 2 

whose men and dames so jetted and .. — i. 4 

ships and number of our men — i. 4 

harbourage for oiirself. our ships, and men — i. 4 

the curse of heaven and men succeed.. — i. 4 
be quiet then, as men should be. . . . — ii. (Gow.) 
where when men been, there's seldom — ii. (Gow.) 

thinking of the poor men tlrat were.. ., — ii. 1 

why, as men do aland; the great — ii. 1 

these fishers tell tlie infirmities of men — ii. 1 

all that may men approve, or men detect! — ii. 1 

nature gat for men to see — ii. 2 

I see that time's the king of men ii. 3 

since men take women's gifts for — ii.3 

reft of ships and men (re;7.) — ii.3 

since tliey love men in arms — ii.3 

get fire and meat for these poor men . . — iii. 2 

if men were as they have been — iv. 3 

by men, then men must comfort (rep.') iv. 3 

that which ordinary men are fit for Lear; i. 4 

lords and great men will not let me .... — i. 4 
for wise men are grown foppisli. . . . — i. 4 (song) 

men so disordered, so debauched — i. 4 

to be such men as ma.v bcsort — i, 4 

my train are men of choice — i. 4 

by the loins, and men by the legs ii. 4 

are led by llieir eyes, but blind men .... — ii. 4 

if you do love old men, if your — ii. 4 

and fift,y men dismissed? -_ ii. 4 

O sir, to wilful men, the injuries — ii. 4 

pities neither wise men nor fools iii. 2 

hang fated o'er men's faults — iii. 4 



MEN— which men may blame, but not. . . . Lear, iii. 7 
them honours of men's impossiliilities .. — iv. 6 

they are not men of their words — iv.fi 

men must endure tlieir going v. 2 

that men are as the time is ^ .— v. 3 

howl I O you are men of stones v. 3 

Montague's men from the wall . . Romeo ^.httiel, i. 1 

our masters, and us their men i. 1 

when I have fought with the men . . — i. 1 

draw, if you be men : Gregory — i. 1 

to part these men with me — i. 1 

what ho! you men, you beasts — i. i 

on pain of death, all men depart — i. 1 

men so old as we to keep the peace . . i. 2 

as do lusty .young men feel — i. 2 

na.y, bigger; women grow by men — i. 3 

athwart men's noses as they lie asleep — i. 4 

all in one or two men's hands — i. 5 

yoimg men's love then lies not ~ ii.3 

fall, when there's no strength in men — ii. 3 

yet ills led excels all men's — ii. 6 

m the public haunt of men — iii. 1 

men's eyes were made to look iii. 1 

no faith, no honesty in men — iii. 2 

they are free men, but I am banished — iii. 3 
when that wise men have no eyes? . . — iii. 3 

fortune! all men call thee fickle — iii. 5 

covered quite with dead men's rattling — iv. 1 

answer me like men _ iv. 5 

the thoughts of desperate men! v. 1 

the strength of twenty men v. 1 

worse poison to men's souls — v. 1 

how often when men are at the point — v. 3 

fit to open these dead men's tombs . . v. 3 

o'erwhelm them, to men's eyes Hamlet, i. 2 

oft it chances in particular men — i. 4 

that these men, carrying, I say, the stamp — i. 4 
sure I am, two men there are not living — ii. 2 

that old men have grey beards il. 2 

and the liberty, these are the only men, . ii. 2 

for wise men know well enough iii. 1 

nature's journeymen had made men — iii. 2 

could of men distinguish her election. . . . iii. 2 

imminent deatli of twenty thousand men iv. 4 

young men will do't, if they come — iv. 5 (song) 

dead men's fingers call them _ iv. 7 

there the men are as mad as he v. 1 

even while men's minds are wild v. 2 

in the trade of war I have slain men .... Othello, i. 2 

life and being from men of royal siege .. 1.2 

and men wliose heads do grow beneath . . i. 3 

men do their broken weapons rather use — i. 3 

tliat tliinks men honest, that but seem . . i. 3 

ye men of Cyprus, let her have your _ ii. 1 

base men, being in love ii. 1 

(as if some planet liadunwitted men) — ii.3 

but men are men ; the best sometimes .. ii.3 

O tliat men should put an enemy ii.3 

men should be what tliey seem (rep.).... — iii. 3 
there are a kind of men so loose of soul . . — ii i . 3 
men's natures wrangle with inferior .... _ iii. 4 

we must think men are not gods _ iii. 4 

you'll couch with no men — iv. 3 (song) 

these men, these men! dost thou — iv. 3 

and frailty as men have? iv. 3 

kill men i' tlie dark? where be v. 1 

must die, else slie'll. betray more men. . . . v. 2 

let heaven, and men, and devils v. 2 

MENACE— your eyesdo menace me.ltichard 111. i. 4 
ever knew the heavens menace eo?. JuliusCfPsar,i. 3 

menaces and maledictions against Lear, i. 2 

and fearfully did menace me Komeo 4- Juliet, v. 3 

MENACED— harms that menaced . . Henry VIII. i. 1 
by oath he menaced revenge on — i. 2 

MENAPHON your most renowned. Comcdt/o/£)T. v. 1 

MENAS, famous pirates Antony fy Cleopatra, i. 4 

Menas, I did not think, this amorous — ii. 1 

1 know npt, Menas, how lesser — ii. 1 

to use our strongest hands; come Menas — ii. 1 

but "ive me your hand, Menas — ii. 6 

here s to thee, Menas — ii. 7 

there's a strong fellow, Menas — ii. 7 

Menas, I'll not on shore — ii. 7 

as Menas sa.ys, is troubled with — iii. 2 

MEN-CHILDREN only ! Macbeth, i. 7 

MEND— the dishonest nian mend irep.). TvelfthN. i. a 

let tlie botcher mend him — i. 5 

doth he not mend? — i. 5 

go, mend, go, mend Measure forMeasure, iii. 2 

serve God, love me, and mend Much Ado, v. 2 

if you pardon, we will mend.. Mid. A'.'sDream, (epil.) 
praise cannot mend the brow .... Love'sL. Lost, iv. 1 

mend him who can — v. 2 

we will mend thy wages As you Like it, ii. 4 

mend tlie instance, shepherd — iii. 2 

so God mend me, and by all pretty . . — iv. 1 

God mend your voices! — v. 3 

'twould mend the lottery well All's Well, i. 3 

mend the ruff, and sing — iii. 2 

I'll mend it with a largess Taming of Shrew, i. 2 

take that, and mend the plucking.... — iv, 1 
an art which does mend nature .. Winter' sTale, iv. 3 

garlic to mend her kissing with — iv. 3 

thus I mend it Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

a fault that water will mend — iii. 2 

we'll mend our dinner liere — iv. 3 

to mend it or be ridon't Macbeth, iii. 1 

I cannot mend it Richard II. ii. 3 

that we cannot mend — iii. 2 

sew nether-stocks, and mend them . . 1 Henry IV. ii. 4 

as God shall mend me — iii. 1 

well, heaven mend him! iHenrylV. i. 2 

that thou might'st mend him — iii. 2 

it will serve you to nieud your a\\ois..HenrriV. iv. 8 

God mend all! Henry VIII. i. 2 

but we'll mend it — i. 4 

mend them for shame, ray lords — iii. 1 

has the niendsin herownhands.. rim/miJ-Oess. i. 1 
you mend tlie jewel by wearing it. . Timon ofAth. i. I 
I will mend thy feast (re/).) — iv. 3 



MEND- -eo I shall mend mine own. Timon ofAth. iv. 3 

you take much pains to mend v. I 

now begins to mend _ y. 2 

plague and infection mend! _ v! 2 

mend, and charge home Coriolanus, i. 4 

you must return, and raond it — iii. 2 

I can mend you (rep.) JuliusCcusar, i. 1 

our worser thoughts heavens mend!.. .4n(.*c/fo. i. 2 

to mend the petty present _ i. 5 

I'll mend it, and then play — v. 2 

such that mend upon the world Cytnbrline, ii. 4 

heaven mend all! _ v. .'1 

mend your speech a little Lear, i. 1 

mend, when thou canst — ii. 4 

our toil shall strive to mend. . l>o7neo ^- Juliet, (prol.) 

God shall mend my sonl i. 5 

dullass will not mend his pace Hamlet, v. 1 

as it is, mend it for your own good .... Othello, ii. 3 

bad from bad; but, by bad, mend — iv. 3 

MENDED again; Uie maUzv. Measure forMeasure, v. 1 
that fault may be mended.. Tm'o Gen. of Verona, iii. 1 
would that have mended my liair?. Tuetfth Night, i. 3 

anything, that's mended, is but — i. 5 

but this (and all is mended). il/iVi. iV.'s Dream, (ei>il.) 
to-morrow it shall be mended . . Taming ofSli. iv. 1 

very well mended _ v. 2 

show now your mended faiths King John, v. 7 

■which he mended thus \Henrt,lV. v. 2 

will this gear ne'er be mended?. . Troilus <$- Cress, i. I 

tis not well mended so Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

my mended judgment (rep.) Cymbelive, i. 5 

MENDER of bad soles Julius Ciesar, i. 1 

MENDING of highways in summer.;V/er. ofVen. v. 1 

and can put them to mending Much Ado, ii.3 

'tis like a chime a mending Troilus ^ Cress, i. 3 

MENECRATES and Menas ..A7itony^Cleopalra,i. 4 

MENELAUS' queen Troilus 4 Cresslda, (prol.) 

by Mcnelaus. Let Paris bleed (rep.).. — i. 1 
fair Helen best, myself, or Menelaus? — iv. 1 

the first was Menelaus kiss — iv. 5 

answer? the noble Menelaus — iv. 5 

at Menelaus' tent, most princely Troilus — iv. 5 
but to be Menelaus, I would conspire — v. 1 

of a lazar, so I were not Menelaus. ... v. 1 

good-night, sweet Menelaus — v. 1 

thy husband maybe Menelaus ZHenryVI, ii. 2 

MENENIUS— Menenius Agripim ....Coriolanus, i. 1 
Menenius you are known well enough — ii. 1 
honourable Menenius, my boy Marcius — ii. 1 

ay, worthy Menenius — ii. 1 

on's brows, Menenius — il. 1 

ever right. Menenius, ever, ever ... . — ii. I 

noble Menenius, be you then as — iii. 1 

■with old Menenius, and those senators — iii. 3 
thou old and true Meuenius, thy tears — Iv. 1 
is this Menenius? 'Tis he, 'tis he ... . — iv. 6 
touched your ears: it is Menenius .. — v. 2 
remember my name is Menenius .... — v. 2 
than thy old father Menenius does '. . . — v. 2 
another word, Menenius, I will not hear — v. 2 

now sir, is your name Menenius — v. 2 

MENON-hath beat do-wn Menon. Troilus S[ Cress, v. 5 
MENTAL— the still and mental parts — i. 3 
'twixt his mental and his active parts — ii. 3 
■what a mental power this e.ye . . Timon of Athens, i. 1 
MENTEITH— Angus, and Menteith..lHenri//F. i. 1 
MENTION— where no mention of. . Henry VIII. iii. 2 

mention it within their wills Julius Ccesar, iii. 2 

MENTIONED a son o' the king's. WVn^er's 7". iv.(cho.) 

gold within the letter mentioned. Titus Andron. v. 1 

JIENTIS— tanta est erga te mentis.. Henri/ fYi/. iii. 1 

MENTON— et le menton? de chin Henry V. iii. 4 

MEPHOSTOPHILUSI Ay, it is....Mer7!/H'roes, i. 1 
MERCADE— welcome, Mercade . . Lovn'sL. Lost, v. 2 
MERCATANTE, or a pedant. Taming of Shreu; iv. 2 
MERCATIO-of the richMercatio?r«-oG'eji.r)//.-er. i. 2 

MERCENARIES; the rest are He"ri/r.iv.8 

MERCENARY-more mercenary.Mer.q^ Fen/ce, iv. 1 

and soaked in mercenary blood Henry V. iv. 7 

as if I had been mercenary Coriolanus, v. 5 

MERCER-Three-pile the mercer.il/eas. /or /Ueas.iv. 3 
MERCHANDIZE--with merchandize. Wid.iV.Dr. ii.2 
to think upon hismerchandize./l/ercA.o/rcnice, i. 1 
my merchandize makes me not sad.. — i. I 
I can make what merchandize I will — iii. 1 
by his father sent aboiit merchandize. Henry K iv. 1 
merchandize, which thou hast . . Antony ^- Cleo. ii. S 
adventure for such merchandize. Borneo 4- Juliet, ii. 2 

MERCHANT— of some merchant Tempest, ii. I 

and the merchant, have just — ii. 1 

merchants most do congregate, . Merch. ofVenice.i. 3 
what news among the merchants? .. — iii. 1 

how doth that royal merchant — iii. 2 

twenty merchants, the duke himself — iii. 2 
a pound of this poor merchant's flesh — iv. 1 

to press a royal merchant down — iv. 1 

the Jew and Antonio the merchant — iv. I (letter) 

whieli is the merchant here — iv. 1 

give sentence 'gainst the merchant .. — Iv. I 
cut off nearest the merchant's heart.. — iv. 1 
come, merchant, have you any thing — iv. 1 
a pound of tliat same merchant's flesh — iv. I 
a merchant of great trailic .... Taming of Shrew, i. 1 

now I play amercliant's part — ii. I 

amerchant of incomparable wealth.. — iv. 2 
merchant of Syracusa, plead no.. Comedy of Err. i. I 
merchnnts, our well-dealing countrymen — 1. 1 
tlierefore, mercliant, I'll limit thee .. — 1.1 

a Syracusan merchant is apprehended — i. 2 

to certain merchants, of whom I — i . 2 

some merchant hath invited him .... — ii. ) 
to see a reverend Syracusan merchant — v. 1 
there's a whole merchant's venture. .2Henry//'. ii. 4 
like merchants, venture trade abroad.. Henry I', i. 2 

tliis is a riddling merchant \ Henry VI. ii. 3 

our merchants' goods at Bourdcaux. Henry/''///, i. 1 

ourself the merchant Troilus 4- Cressida,i. 1 

like merchants, show our foulest wares — i. 3 
turn not back upon tlie merchant .. — ii.2 
turuedcrowned Kings to merchants.. — ii.2 



MERCHANX-I know the merchant. rimo»o//)/A. i. 1 

art not thou a merchaiit? — i* 1 

no merchant, to make prize {rep.). Antony ^- Cleo. v. 2 

what saucv merchant was this ..Romeo ff Juliet, ii. 4 

MERCHAIsTT-LlKE, I sell revenge.-2HpH<!/r/. iv. 1 

StERCHANT-MARRING rocks. Msr. o/ Venice, iii. 2 

lilERCIES- thee to tlieir mercies ..Twet/lhNiglU, v. 1 

commit mv body to your mercies .iHenrylf. (epil.) 

altliough tlie king liad mercies Henry VIll. ii. 1 

MERCltUL— tliey are merciful Tempest, y. 1 

merciful heaven', thou rather ..Meas.forMeas.u.i 
your honour is accounted a merciful man — Hi. 2 
been always called a mercifitl mau.MKcA Ado, iii. 3 
tlien must tlie Jew be merciful.. jU«-. of Venice, iv. 1 
be merciful; take thrice tliy money.. — iv. 1 

you are a merciful general All's Well, iv. 3 

death liad been more merciful . . Winter's Tale, ii. 3 

merciful powers! restrain in me Macbeth, \\. 1 

merciful heaven! what, man! — iv. 3 

O let us yet be merciful. So may .... Henry r. ii. 2 
be merciful, great duke, to men of mould! — iii. 2 
the king is merciful if you revolt ..'iHenryVI. iv. 2 
you are so merciful: 1 see youi.... Henry VI 1 1, v. 2 
tlie merciful construction of good. — (epil.) 
near them then in being merciful. T(i!«s.-lnrf)on.i. 2 

be merciful, sair — death Borneo Sf Juliet, iii. 3 

if thou be merciful, open the tomb .. — v. 3 

I, that am cruel, and yet merciful Othello, v. 2 

^MERCIFULLY— mock me mercifully.. Henri/ V. v. 2 

MERCILESS— merciless to -as\. Comedy of Errors, i. 1 

the merciless Macdonwald (worthy to.. Macbeth, i. 2 

merciless proceeding by theseFrench.K/jij-yo/iH.ii. 1 

and peasants, rude and merciless ..iHenryVI. iv. i 

the foe is merciless, and will not pity.3 Jfejiry VI. ii. 6 

the most merciless, that e'er was ..Richard III. i. 3 

JIERCXJRI.VL— his foot Mercurial ..Cymbetine.iv. 2 

MERCURIES— English Mercuries. Hf«ryf.ii.(cho.) 

JIEUCURY-my good she Mercury . Merry Wives, ii. 2 

Mercury endue thee with leasiug..2'«'c'W/iA'/g-/i(, i. 5 

the words of Mercury are harsh. . Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

littered under Mercury Winter's Tale, iv. 2 

be Mercury, set feathers to thy KingJohn, iv. 2 

the ground like feathered Mercury.! Henry/r. iv. 1 
that a winged Mercury did bear . . Richard III. ii. 1 
Jove's Mercury, and herald for a king — iv. 3 
like chidden Merciury from Jove. Troilus fy Cress, ii. 2 
and. Mercury, lose all the serpentine — ii. 3 
the strong-winged Mercury.... ^n'onj/ .5" '^'^o-iv- 13 
Pallas, Jove, or Mercury, inspire me. Titus And. iv. I 
here to Mei'cury : to Saturn, Caius . . — i v. 3 

to Jove, and this to Jlereury — iv. 4 

a station like the herald Mercury .... Hamlet, iii. 4 
JIERCUTIO, and his brother. Romeo fyJul. i. 2 (note) 

peace, peace, Mercutio, peace — i. 4 

call, good Mercutio, -Nay, I'll conjure — ii. 1 
pardon, good Mercutio, my business — ii. 4 
I pray thee, good Mercutio, let's retire — iii. 1 
Mercutio, tliou consort'st with Romeo — iii. 1 
gentle Mercutio, put thy rapier up .. — iii. I 
Tybalt, Mercutio— the prince expressly — iii. 1 

hold Tvbalt;— good Mercutio — iii. I 

brave Mcrcutii?s dead: that gallant — iii. 1 

in triumph! and Mercutio slain! — iii. 1 

for Mercutio's soul is but a little way — iii. 1 
wliich way ran he, that killed Mercutio — iii. ) 
slew thy kinsman, brave Mercutio .. — iii. 1 

steel at bold Mercutio's breast — iii. I 

hit the life of stont Mercutio — iii. 1 

Romeo slew him, he slew Mercutio. . — iii. 1 

Srince, he was Mercutio's friend .... — iii. 1 
lercutio's kinsman, noble county Paris — v. 3 

MERCY— mercy on us! {rep. iii. 2) Tempest, i. 1 

alack, for mercy! — i. 2 

mercy! mercy! this is a devil — ii. 2 

I'll turn my mercy out of doors — iii. 2 

lie at my mercy all mine enemies .... — iv. I 
that it assaults mercy itself — (epil.) 

cry you mercy, sir Tuio Gen. of Verona, v. 4 

mercy on me ! I have great Merry Wives, iii. I 

pless you from his mercy sake ...... — iii. 1 

X cry your mercy ; give your worship — iii. .') 
prompt us to have mercy on him. Twelfth Night, iii. 4 
God have mercy upon one of (rep.) — iii. 4 (chal.) 
mortality and mercy in Yienna,..Meas.for Meas. i. i 
mercy is not itself, that oft looks so.. — ii. 1 

nor man, grieve at the mercy — ii. 2 

lialf so good a grace, as inercy does. . — ii. 2 
anil mercy then will breathe within — ii. 2 
lawful mercy is nothing akin to .... — ii. 4 

there is a devilish mercy in tlie — iii. I 

mercy to thee would i.iDve itself — iii. I 

and that instructed liiiii tn iiKicy .. — iii. -' 
this would make intiLV .--veiir — iii. 2 

1 cry you mercy, sir; and well could — iv. I 
when vice makes mercy, mercy's so — iv. 2 
the very mercy of the law cries out most — v. I 
kneel down, in mercy of this fact . ... — v. 1 
crave death more willingly than mercy — v.! 
take this mercy to provide for — v. 1 

cry you inercy (re/), ii. Much.4do,\. 2 

let all my sins lack mercy ! — iv. 1 

leave thee to the'meroy of wild beasts. A/<((. N. Dr. ii. i 

1 cry your worship's mercy, heartily — iii. I 

now mercy goes to Itill Love's L. Lost, iv. 1 

Lord have mercy on us, on those .... — v. 2 

that lie within the mercy of your — _y. 2 

tell not me of mercy; this is.. Merch. of Venice, iii. 3 

there is no mercy for me in — ill. 5 

empty from any dram of mercy .... — iv. 1 
thou'lt show thy mercy, and remorse — iv. 1 

liow Shalt thou hope for mercy — iv. I 

the quality of mercy is not strained.. — iv. 1 
but mercy is aliove this sceptred sway — iv. 1 
likest God's, wlien inercy seasons justice — iv. I 
we do pray for mercy ; and that same — iv. 1 
all to render the deeds of mercy .... — iv. 1 
lies in the mercy of the duke only .. — iv. 1 

and beg mercy of tlie duke — i v. 1 

what mercy can you render him ... . — iv. I 
Cupid have mercy ! not a word : . . .Is ymi Like it, i. 3 



MERCY— better part made mercy.vls youLikeit, iii. 1 

cry the man mercy; love him — iii. 5 

God'^'mercy, maiden! does it curd.... /l«'sJKeK,i. 3 

to ask me mercy (rep.) — ji. 1 

Lord have mercy on thee for a hen ! . . — ii. 3 

mercy, God! what stuff is.. Taming of Shrew, iv. 3 
tliat mercy does; for calumny.. .. Winter' sTale, ii. I 
without more mercy, to its own .... — }}.'i 

a man of truth, of mercy — WV'- 

mercy on's, a barne! a very pretty.. — iii. 3 
name of mercy, when was this, boy? — in. 3 
God, for thv mercy! they are ..Comedy of Err. iv. 4 

when there's no mercy left Macbeth, ii. 3 

perseverance, mercy, lowliness — iv. 3 

mercy on me! metninks, nobody ..King John, iv. 1 
he will awake my mercy, which lies — iv. I 
that inercy, which fierce fire, and iron — iv. 1 
infinite and boundless reach of mercy — iy. 3 
God for his mercy! what a tide ....ttic/iard II. ii. 2 
nnto the sovereign mercy of the king — ii. 3 

then let them have that mercy — y. 3 

let my soul want mercy I Henry IV. i. 3 

1 cry you mercy. Those same — .i. 3 

and roared for mercy, and still ran.. — ii. 4 
I cry you mercy; I thought, your ,. — iv. 2 

there IS no seeming mercy in — v. 2 

this offer comes from mercy ZHenrylV. iv. I 

and do observance to ray mercy — iy. 3 

that's mercy, but too much security.. HmryT. ii. 2 

sir, you show great mercy, if you — ii. 2 

to your highness' mercy (rep. ) — ii. 2 

not dare, tor shame, to talk of mercy — i;. 2 

God quit you in his mercy! — ii. 2 

God, of his mercy, give you patience — u. 2 
and to take mercy on the poor souls — _ii. 4 

to our best mercy give yourselves — in. 3 

the gates of mercy shall be all shut up — iii. 3 
and'lives, to thy soft mercy: enter .. — lu. 3 
the French: use mercy to them all.. — iii. 3 
besides, in mercy, the Constable .... — iv. 3 

I will some mercy show — iv. 4 

shall take, shall taste our mercy — ly. 7 

have mercy onus (rep.) IHenryVI. i. 4 

if Salisbury wants mercy at thy .... — i. 4 

then, God take mercy on brave , — iv. 3 

I cry you mercy, 'tis but quid — V. 3 

left thee to the mercy of the law — 2 Henry VI. i. 3 
I cry you mercy, madam, was it you? — i. 3 
but God in mercy so deal with my . . — i. 3 

Lord have mercy upon me I — i. 3 

yield to mercy, whilst 'tis offered you — iv. 8 

stoop unto a Frenchman's mercy — iy. 8 

for grace and mercy at my feet SHenry VI. i. 1 

our mercy, proud Flantagenet (rep.) — i. 4 

open thy gate of mercy, gracious God! — i. 4 

revoke tliat doom of mercy — ii. C 

Clifford, ask mercy, and obtain no grace — _ii. fi 
my mercy dried tlieir water-flowing. . — iv. 8 

and at his hands beg mercy — v. 1 

no hoped-for mercy with the brothers — v. 4 
God take king Edward to his mercy. Richard III. i. 1 

1 cry thee mercy then; for I did think — _i. 3 

I do cry you mercy (rep. iv. 4) — ii. 2 

have mercy, Jesu ! soft ; I d id but — — v. 3 
mercy, lords, and watchful gentlemen — v. 3 

if he may find mercy in the law Henry VIII. i. 2 

that might have mercy on the fault — iii. 2 

to the mercy of a rude stream — iii. 2 

I cry your honour mercy; you may — v. 2 

is tliere no other way of mercy — v. 2 

mercy o' me, what a multitude — v. 3 

Juno have mercy ! Troilus S,- Cressida, i. 2 

stand at mercy of my sword — iv. 4 

you have a vice of mercy in you — v. 3 

brief plague be mercy, and linger not — v. 1 1 
emboldens sin so much as mercy. Timonof Ath. in. 6 
in defence, by mercy, 'tis most just.. — iii. 5 

from fools exhaust their mercy — i v. 3 

i' the part that is at mercy? Coriolanus, i. 10 

I would not buy tlieir mercy at — iii. 3 

unless the noble man have mercy — iv. 6 

and kneel the way into his mercy.... — v. 1 

mean to solicit him for mercy — v. 1 

yes, mercy, if you report him truly . . — v. 4 
what mercy his mother shall (rep.) .. — v. 4 

and whine aloud for mercy Antony S/- Cleo. ui. 1 1 

thou wouldst have mercy on me — v. 2 

a paper lost as offered mercy is Cymbeline, i. 4 

Gods are more full of mercy — y. 4 

inercy is nobility's true badge Titus Andron. i. 2 

and at thy mercy shall they stoop — y. 2 

this mercy shows, we'll joy Pericles, i. 1 

and hold our lives in mercy Lear, i. 4 

have thus little mercy on their flesh? — iii. 4 

cry you merc5'(7-ep. iii. 6) — iii. 4 

as for the mercy which he intends — _y. 1 

mercy but murders, pardoning. fiomeo^- .'"''«(, in. 1 
mercy, and thou see'st it not! (rpp.).. — iii. 3 
1 cry you mercy! you are the singer — iv. 5 

a madman's mercy bade thee run away — v. 3 

never, so help yoii mercy Hamlet, i. 5 

so graceand mercy at your most need.... — i. & 

whereto serves mercy, but to confront — iii. 3 

God a' mercy on his soul! — iv. 5 (song) 

dealt with me, like thieves of mercy — iv. 8 (let.) 

I cry you mercy (rep. v. 1) Othello, iv. 2 

heaven have mercy on me I (rep.) — v. 2 

and have you mercy too — v. 2 

JIE BCY-LACKING uses King John, iv. I 

MERE extra\agancy Tu-etflhSiglU, ii. 1 

cozenage ! meie cozenage ! Merry Wives, iv. 5 

the mere effusion of thy yjroper.Meas. far Meas. iii. 1 
upon his mere request, being come .. — y. 1 

on mere necessity (re;;.) Love's L. Lost, i. 1 

he speaks the mere contrary — i. 2 

my friend to his mere enciay. Merch. of Venice, iii. 2 

a mere lifeless block .4s you Like il,i. 2 

that we are mere usurpers, tyrants .. — ii. ! 
second childishness, and mere oblivion — ii. 7 
most loving mere folly — ii. 7 (song) 



MERE— judgments are mere fathers of. .All's Well, i. 2 

the mere word's a slave ,.... — ii. 3 

ay surely, mere the truth '.... — iii. 5 

the matter thus; mere weakness.. Winter'sTale, ii. 3 
shall proceed; tliis is mere falsehood — iii. 2 
your son, with mere conceit and fear — iii. 2 
a mere anatomy, a mountebank .Comedy of Err. v. 1 

and the mere lees is left Macbeth, ii. 3 

your will, of your mere own — iv. 3 

the mere despair of surgery — iv. 3 

loyalty, and mere dislike of our.. ..1 Henry IV. iv. 1 

honour is a mere scutcheon — v. I 

but this is mere digression from. .. .'ilienry IV. iv. I 

a mere hoard of gold kept by — i v. 3 

'tis a mere French word 1 Henry VI. iv. 7 

of mere compassion, and of lenity .. — v. i 
mere instinct of love, and loyalty.. 2Hc>ir;/r/. iii. 2 
your mere enforcement shall . . ..Hichartt 111. iii. 7 
madam, this is a mere distraction. Hejirj/ <'///. iii. 1 

that, out of mere ambition — iii. 2 

to the mere undoing of all the kingdom — iii. 2 

with the mere rankness of — iv. ! 

meets in mere oppugnancy . . Troilus ^- Cressida, i. 3 

a mere recreant prove — i. 3 

truth, catch mere simplicity — iv. 4 

words, words, mere words, no matter — v. 3 
a mere satiety of commendations. .'/'i'mowoyVl^/i. i. 1 
answer mere nature, bid tliem flatter — iv. 3 
even the mere necessities upon it.... — iv. 3 

the mere want of gold — iv. 3 

griefs were but a mere conceit — v. 5 

but in mere spite, to be Coriolamts, iv. 6 

mere foolery, I did not mark it ...JulinsCtesur, i. 2 
does make our faith mere folly. Antony ^ Cleo. iii. 1 1 

nay, to thy mere confusion Cymbeline, iv. 2 

your pleasure was my mere offence. . — v. .0 

and that opinion a mere profit Pericles, iv. 3 

mere fetches; the images of revolt Lear, ii. 4 

and our mere defects prove our — iv. 1 

this is mere practice, Gloster — v. 3 

but mere implorators of unholy suits . . Hamlet, i. 3 

we are pictm'es, or mere beasts — iv. 5 

this is mere madness: and thus awhile . . — v. I 
mere prattle, without practice, is all his. Othello, i. 1 
but I, for mere suspicion in that kind .. — i. 3 
than in putting on the mere form of civil — ii. 1 

the mere perdition of the Turkish — ii. 2 

MERED— the mered question ...4ft(on!/<!J-C/(?'). iii. II 

MERELY— we are merely cheated Tempest, i. I 

merely, thou art death's fool . . Meas. for Mens. iii. 1 
but merely thoughts. Merely, my lord — v. 1 
which will be merely a dumb show. . Mncli Ado, ii. 3 

he shall have merely justice Mer.of Venice, iv. I 

men and women merely players.. /Is yow Lilie it, ii. 7 

love is merely a madness — iii. 2 

to live in a nook merely monastic . . — iii. 2 
are we! Merely our own traitors ....All'sWsll,iv.i 

will inform, merely in hate Richard II. ii. 1 

are merely shadows to the unseen .. ■ — iv. 1 
but merely a fit or two o' the face . . Henry VIII. i. 3 

and merely to revenge — ii. 1 

I propose not merely to myself . Troilus tf Cress, ii. 2 

may be merely poison! Timon of Athens, iv. 1 

heaven knows, is merely love — i v. 3 

this is clean kam. Merely awry .. Coriolanus, i\i. 1 
of my countenance merely upon ..Julius Cresar, i. 2 
the horse were merely lost. Antony ^Cleopatra, iii. 7 
give up yourself merely to chance .. ■ — iii. 7 
not yielded, but conquered merely .. — iii. II 
some falling merely through fear. . . . Cymbeline, v. 3 

gross in nature, possess it merely Hamlet, i. i 

IS merely the shadow of a dream — ii. 2 

it is merelj' a lust of the blood Othello, i. 3 

JIEREST— the merest loss ..Taming of Sh. 1 (indue.) 

MERIDIAN of my glory HenryVlIl. iii. 2 

MERIT — unrivalled merit . . Two Gen. of Veronq., v. 4 

and then judge of my merit Merry ll'ives, ii:. h 

what a merit were it in death ..Meus.lor.'^has. iii. 1 

more than ever man did merit Much Ado, iii. 1 

which simpleness and merit purchaseth — iii. I 
takes it in might, not merit . . Mid. N.'s Dream, v. 1 
my beauty will be saved by merit.. Love'sL.L. iv. 1 
without the stamp of merit! ..Merch. of Venice, ii. !l 

by the nierit of the wearer! — ii. fl 

to show her merit, that did miss All's Well, i. I 

inspired merit so by breath — ii. I 

and it no more merits the tread .... — ii. 3 

but that the merit of service is — ii i . (1 

this kindness merits thanks.. Taming of Shrew, iv. 3 

as he from heaven merits it Winter'sTale, v. 1 

should merit any hate Ki7ig John, ii. 2 

by the merit of vile gold — iii. I 

a dearer merit, not so deep Ricliard II. i. 3 

right noble is thy merit — v. {; 

if men were to be saved by merit.... lHenr;/^r. i. 2 
how men of merit are sought after.. 2H6'nri//;'. ii. 1 

quittance of desert and merit Henry V. ii. 2 

a fellow, look you now, of no merits — . v. I 

may Iden live to merit such 2 Henry VI. v. I 

the force of his own merit makes . Henry VIII. i. 1 
makes merit her election .... Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 3 

what merit's in that reason — ii . 2 

some image of the afte!cted merit .... — ii. 2 
assubjugate his merit, as amply .... — ii. 3 

go bare, till merit crown it — iii. 2 

prizes of accident, as oft as merit.... — iii. 3 
in your thoughts, merits fair Helen.. — iv. I 

he merits well to have her — iv. i 

both merits poised, each weighs .... — iv. I 

so mainly as my merit ;... — iv. 4 

too mucli of yuiu- own merits . . Timon of Athens, i. 2 

indeed, in aught he merit not Coriolanus, i. 1 

have showed US his marks of merit.. — ii. 3 
falsely i' the plain way of his merit — iii. 1 

but he has a merit, to clioke it — iv. 7 

if for the sake of merit thou •w'rlt. Antony ^ Cleo, ii. 7 

we answer otiiers' merits — v. 2 

enough for the purchase, or merit. . . . Cymbeline, i. 5 

to load thy merit richly — i. 6 

the graces for his merits due — v. 4 



ME II 



[ 503 ] 

MEKHY sport, if yourcpiiy Mm-h. of I'cnici; i. :i 

direction for this mcrrv bond — i. :i 

and thou a merry devil, didst rob it of — ii. 3 
be merry; and employ your chiefest — }\.fi 
sliow a merry cheer; since you are .. — iii. y 
I am never merry, wlien I near sweet — v. 1 

many merry menwitli liim AsyouLikeit.'h. 1 

sweet my {',oz, be merry (7'cp.') — i. 2 

[&■»«.] Jupiterl how merry are my spirits — ii. 4 
and tune Jiis merry note unto .... — ii. 5 Xsong) 
here was he merry, hearing of a song — ii. 7 

have a fool to make me merry — iv. 1 

when you are disposed to be merry .. — iv. 1 

God rest you merry, sir — v. 1 

she's very merry ; but yet she All's Well, ii. ■! 

into some merry passion .. Taming of Hh. 1 (indnc.) 

to be noted for a merry man — iii. 2 

tliougli lie be merry, yet witlial .... — !!!•'' 

be mad and merry, or go hang — iii. 2 

good sweet Kate, be merry (.rep.) .... — iv. I 

and you, my merry mistress — iv. 5 

or two, to make merry withal — v. 1 

merry, or sad, shall't be? As merry. Winler'sT. ii. 1 

a merry heart goes all the day — iv. 2 (smig) 

be merry, gentle; strangle such thoughts — iv. 3 
a merry ballad; but a very pretty (rep.) — iv. 3 
my humourwith his merry jests. Corned!/ o/£rr. i. 2 

shall break that merry sconce — _i. 2 

at home starve for a merry look .... — ii. 1 

is your merry humour altered? — ii. 2 

to see you in this merry vein — .jj'^ 

great welcome, makes a merry feast — iii. 1 
espite of mirth, mean to be merry. . — iii. 1 

you are a merry man, sir — iii. 2 

saving your merry humour — iv. 1 

the merry wind blows fair from — iv. 1 

your man and you are marvellous merry — \y. 3 

I could be merry now; Hubert KingJolm, iii. 3 

I sho\ild be as merry as the day is long — iv. 1 

be merry, for our time of stay Richard 17. ii. 1 

shall sliow us all a merry day — iv. 1 

sliall we bo merry? As merry ijep.).\HenrylF. ii. 4 

if to be old and merry be a sin — ii. 4 

malce me merry. I was as virtuously — in. 3 
a merry song, come; it grows late ..'iHcnrijIf^.ii. 4 

ha, it was a merry night — iii. 2 

ill chances, men are ever meiTy — iv. 2 

therefore be merry, coz, since suddeu — iv. 2 

and bid the merry bells ring — iv. 4 

praise heaven for tlie merry year — v. 3 (song) 
there's a merry heart: good master.. — v. 3 

be merry, master Bardolpli — v. 3 

be merry, be merry, my wife's (rep.) — v. 3 (song) 
I have been merry twice and once .. — v. 3 
and a merry heart lives lone-a. ... — v. 3 (song) 
make you merry with fair Katharine — (cpil.) 

they with merry march bring Hennj V.i.'Z 

this was a merry message — i. 2 

her vine, the merry eheerer of. — v. 2 

make merry, man 2Henry VI. i. 2 

Hume must make merry — i- 2 

be merry, Peter, and fear not — .ii- 3 

never merry world in England, since — iv. 2 
grieve, to make me merry, York ....?iHenryVI.i. 4 
this merry inclination accords not .. — iii. 2 

changed to merry meetings Richard III. i. 1 

with quick and merry words — i. 3 

to liear a merry, bawdy play Henry VIII. (pi'Ol.) 

would have all as merry as first-good — i. 4 
not freely merry, is not my friend. . . . — i- 4 

ladies, you are not merry — i. 4 

you are a merry gamester — i- 4 

let's be merry ; good my lord cardinal — i- 4 
and sing the merry songs of peace . . — y . 4 
and merry against the hair .. Troilus^Cressida, i. 2 
then she's a merry Greek, indeed .... — _ i. 2 
Cressid 'mongst the merry Greeks! .. — iv. 4 

sadly, and go away merr}' Timon of Ath.w. 2 

his lordship is but merry with me .. — iii- 2 

in heart as merrj-, as when Coriolanvs,i. 6 

say, I am merry Julius Cwsar,n. 4 

fortune is merry, and in this mood .. — iii. 2 

was he sad, or merry? (i-cp.) Antony 4- Cleo.i. 6 

'twas merry, when you wagered .... — ii. 6 

so merry and so gamesome Cyinbeline_,i. 7 

and I'll be merry in my revenge — iii. 6 

my heart know merry cheer TilusAndro7i. \i. 3 

make my aunt merry with some .... — !!!• ^ 

came here to make us merry — iii. 2 

cut off, and made a merry jest — v. 2 

what, are you merry, knights? Pericles, ii. 3 

then I pr'y thee, be merry Lear, i. 5 

rest you merry '. (rep.) Romeo 4- Juliet, i. 2 

a' was a merry man — _i.3 

go home, be merry, give consent .... — iv. 1 
she comes from shrift with merry look — iv. 2 

a merry whoreson I — iv. 4 

O play me some merry dump — iv. b 

point of death have tliey been merry? — .v. 3 

you are merry, my lord. Who, I? Hamlet, iii. 1 

what should a man do, but be merry? . . — iii. 1 

lam not merry: but I do beguile Othelln.u. 1 

be merry, Cassio; for thy solicitor — iii. 3 

was free and merry — iii. 3 

MESCHANTE-O meschante fortune I. Hen»!/>'. iv.5 
MESH— a golden mesh to entrap. Wer. of Venice, iii. 2 
MESHED— meshed upon her cheeks. r/tus Ayid. iii. 2 
MESHES— meshes of good counsel, ^/er. ofi'enice, i. 2 
MESOPOTAMIA, and the slieUers../4n(.^-C7co. iii. 1 
MESS— tell of a mess of porridge . . Merry Wives, iii. 1 
me fool to make up the mess .... Love'sL. Lost, iv. 3 

a mess of Russians left us but — v. 2 

one mess is like to be your cheer. Taming ofSh. iv. 4 

in every mess liave folly Winttr'sTale, iy. 3 

at my worsliip's mess liingJahn, i. I 

to borrow a mess of vinegar iHenry IV.n. 1 

by the mess, ere tliese eyes Henry V. iii. 2 

where are your mess of sons ^HenryVI. i. 4 

lays her fu"l 1 mess liefore you. . Timnn of Alliens, iv. 3 
liis crib sliall stand at tlic king's mess.. //iimW, v. 2 



MES 



ME lilT— great, whose merit's less fericles, ii. 2 

by fortune, lady, (lian my merit — ii. 3 

where luerit [Co/. K»^-nature] doth Lear, i. 1 

but a provoking merit, set a-work — iii. ."> 

shall find their merits and our safety .. — v. 3 
merit bliss by making me despair.. /iomeo ^-Juliet, i. I 

whose merit most shall be — .;. 2 

the more merit is in j'our bounty Hnmin, ii. 2 

the spurns that patient merit — iii. I 

one, that, in the authority of her merit. 0//ic/(o, ii. 1 
oft got without merit, and lost witliout. . — ii. 3 
nor from mine own weak merits will I. . — iii. 3 

nor puniosed merit in futurity — iii. 4 

MERITED benotit Measure for Measure, iii. 1 

but, whatsoever I have merited. . . . Merry Wives, iX. 2 
your grace, how merited to be so. Winter'sTnle, iii. 2 

I have merited some love at Henry I', iii. 6 

more of thee merited than a band . . Cymbeline, v. 5 
more hath it merited, that let. TilusAiidmnicns, iii. 1 

MERITORIOUS service Merry Hives, iv. 2 

meritorious shall tliat liand be ....King John, Hi. I 

seeing the deed is meritorious 'i Henry I' I. iii. 1 

MERLIN— of the di-eamer Merlin ..\HenryIV. iii. 1 

this prophecy Merlin shall make Lear, iii. 2 

MERiMAID, onadolphin's ba.ck.Mtd. N.'sDream, ii. 2 
sweet mermaid, witli thy note. . Comedy of Err. iii. 2 
mine ears against the mermaid's song — iii. 2 
more sailors than the mermaid ... .3 Henry VI. iii. 2 
so many mermaids, tended her ..Antony ^Cleo. ii. 2 
at the helm a seeming mermaid steers — ii. 2 
MERM.\ID-LIKE awhile they bore her. ffamW, iv. 7 
MEROP— thou art Merop's son.. ru'oGcn. q/Ter. iii. 1 

MERRIER hour was never Mid. N.'s Dream, ii. 1 

but a merrier man within the limit. . Love's L.L. ij. 1 
would you yet I were merrier? . ...As you Like it, i. 2 
reserve them till a merrier hour. . Comedy of Err. i. 2 

indeed I have been merrier King John, iv. 1 

a merrier day did never yet greet . . Cnriolanus, v. 4 

I am merrier to die, than thou Cymbeline, v. 4 

MERRIEST was put down. Measure forMeasnre, iii. 2 

that men are merriest when they Henry V. i.2 

girls which hath the merriest eye . . 1 Henry VI. ii. 4 
MliRRILY— he looks so merrily ..Merry H'ives, ii. 1 

after summer, merrily (rep.) Tempest, v. 1 (song) 

holding a trencher, jesting merrily ?.i.oDes L. L. v. 2 

full merrily hath this brave — v. 2 

what! you look merrily As you Like it, ii. 7 

the other lives merrily, because — iii. 2 

to entertain it so merrily, with a fool.. All's Well, ii. 2 
merrily bent tlie style-a . . Winter's Tale, iv. 2 (song) 

dolefulmatter,merrLly set down — iv. 3 

or sad, or merrily? Comedy of Errors, iv. 2 

go merrily to London, it would .... 1 Henry IV. ii. 2 
nowmernly to horse; the thieves.... — ii. 2 

is near; die all, die merrily — iv. 1 

or sad, or merrily, interpretation .... — v. 2 
so merrily, and ever (rep.) . . . .2HenryIV. v. 3 (song) 
full merrilythehumblebee.. rroi/usiJ-Cjessida, v. II 
enter my mistress' house merrily., rimoji ofAlh. ii. 2 

I will merrily accompany you Coriolanus, iy. 3 

look fresh and merrily; let not JuliusCeesar, ii. 1 

news be sad, yet tell them merrily i?omeo<S-/Mi/e<, ii. 5 
MERRIMAN, the poor cur is. Taming ofSh. 1 (indue.) 
MERRIMENT than a vice. Measure for Measure, ii. 4 
Atlienian youth to merriments. .M'rf N.'sVream, i. 1 
to set against me, for your merriment — iii. 2 
do it but in mocking merriment. . Love's L.Lost, v. 2 
knowing aforehand of our merriment — v. 2 
but that thou interrupt'st our merriment — v. 2 

own fashion, like a merriment — v. 2 

friends that purpose merriment.. Mer.o^Feiifce, ii. 2 
to mirth and merriment ..TamimgofSh. 2 (indue.) 
our first merriment hath made thee — iv. 6 

their cheeks to idle merriment King John, iii. 3 

turn all to a merriment 2HenryIV. ii. 4 

tears are reason's merriment . . Romeo ^Juliet, iv. 5 

your flasiies of merriment, that were . . Hamlet, v. 1 

MERRINESS— climb in the merriness. Lowe's L.L. i. 1 

MERRY— beseech you, sir, be merry ..Tempest, ii. 1 

in this kind of merry fooling — ii. 1 

thou makest me merry — iii. 2 

from the furrow, and be merry — iv. 1 

because I cannot be merry.. Two Gen. of Verona, iv. 2 

come, we'll have you merry _ — iv. 2 

you are merry, so am 1 .... Merry Wives, ii. 1 (letter) 

my merry host hath had — ii. 1 

it is a merry knight — ii. 1 

wives may be merry, and yet — iv. 2 

heaven give you many, many merrydays! — v. 6 

three merry men we be Twelfth tXighl, ii. 3 

I warrant, thou art a merry fellow . . — iii. 1 
'twas never merry world, since lowly — iii. 1 
if sad and merry madness equal be . . — llj- * 
'twas never merry world, since. Meas. for Meas. iii. 2 
to see another merry, than merry at — iii. 2 
tliere is akind of merry war hetvii^t.. Much Ado, i. 1 
laugh when I am merry, and claw. . — i. 3 
there live we as merry as the day is long — ii. I 

out of the hundred merry tales — ii. I 

under that title, because I am merry — ii. I 

nor sick, nor merry, nor well — ii. 1 

in faith, lady, you have a merry heart — ii. 1 
and to be merry best becomes you .. — ii. 1 

you were bom in a merry hour — ii. 1 

and if a merry meeting may be wished — v. 1 

I assure you, and a merry Mid. N.'s Dream, i. 2 

I am that merry wanderer — ii. 1 

merry and tragical? tedious and brief — v. 1 
but more merry tears the passion.. .. — v. 1 
if ever I do see the merry days.... I.o»e'sL.Los(, i. 2 
some merry mocking lord, belike.... — ii. I 

Biron, the merry mad-cap lord — ii. 1 

dances, masks, and merry hours .... — iv. 3 
of such a merry, nimble, stirring — — v. 2 

I will now be merry — v. 2 

merry larks are idoughmen's .... — v. 2 (song) 

tu-whit, tu-who, a merry note — v. 2 (song) 

because you are not merry (rep.) .Mer. of Venice, i, I 

till I hacl made you merry — i. I 

Le licars merry talcs, and smiles not — i. 2 



MESSAGE-your message done.7'«'o Gen. of Ver. iv. 4 
many women would do such a message? — iv. 4 

the message I am sent on — iv. 4 

show you the heart of my message. TwetfthNight, i. 5 
some horrid message for a challenge — iii. 4 

it was by private message Ideas, for Meas. v. 1 

take pleasure then in the message? .. Much Ado, ii. 3 
a message well sympathised .... Love's L.Lost, iii. 1 
receive lair speechless messages. il/e>c"/i.o/re?;/cc, i. 1 
my marvel, and my message .... Winter's Tale, v. I 

than would make up his message Macbeth, i . 6 

unfold his message ere he come — iii.ii 

of Hereford, my message is to yoa.. Richard II. ii. 3 

this was a merry message . . '. Henry V. i . 2 

liis threatening, and my message .... — ii. 4 
by message craved, so is lord Talbot.lHenjj/F/. ii.3 

on what submissive message art — iv. 7 

send such message to their sovereign. 2Hen)yFL iii. 2 
go, tell this heavy message to the king — iii. 2 

X go of message from the queen — iv. 1 

by her woman I sent your message. Hen)!/ F///. v. I 
nov.', by thy looks I guess thy message — v. I 
do a fair message to his kingly ..Troilus^ Cress, i. 3 
by my place, and message, to be .... — iv. 4 
by humble message, and by . . Timon of Athens, v. 5 
give to a gracious message ahost.^n/oiii/ ^Cleo. ii. b 
thou'lt do thy message, wilt thou. TitusAndron. iv. 1 
some message to deliver to us (rep.).. — iv. 2 
.aimilius, do this message honourably — iv. 1 
with message unto princely Pericles . . Pericles, i. 3 
my message m.ust return from whence — i. 3 

and deliver a plain message bluntly Lear, i. 4 

do your messages yourself Romeo Sr Juliet, i i . 5 

not failed to pester us with message. . . . Hamlet, i. 2 
MESSALA with you immediately. ./ji/ms Caisar, iv. 3 
welcome, good Messala; now sit we close — iv. 3 
no more, 1 pray you: Messala, I have — iv. 3 
no, Messala. Nor nothing in your (lep.) — iv. 3 
we must die, Messala: with meditating — iv. 3 
farewell, good Messala; good-night — iv. 3 

Messala,— What says my general? (rep.) — v. I 
give me thy hand, Messala; be thou — v. 1 

ride, ride, Messala (jep.) — v. 2 

no, this was he, Messala, but Cassius — v. 3 

hie you, Messala, and I will seek — v. 3 

where, where, Messala, doth his body — v. 3 
from the bondage you are in, Messala — v. 5 
ay, if Messala will prefer me (cep.) .. ^ v. 5 
IMESSALINE, whom I know .... TwelfthNight, ii. I 
of Messaline: Sebastian was my father — v. 1 
MESSENGER— and messenger, am I.. Tempest, iv. 1 

hail, many-colour'd messenger — iv. I 

go send some better messenger. . TwoGen.of Ver. i 1 

or fearing else some messenger — ii. 1 

any liappy messenger from thence .. — ii. 4 

l)ure messengers sent from — ii. 7 

there is a messenger that stays — iii. i 

now am I (unhappy messenger) .... — iv. 4 
she shall be our messeuger to this. Merry Wives, ii. 1 
I have another messenger to j'our. ... — ii. 2 

I am a messenger TwelfthNight, i. 5 

run after that same peevish messenger — i.b 
invites me in this churlish messenger — ii. 2 
one Lucio as then the messenger. il/eas./or Meas. v. 1 
messengers of strong prevailment..il//t^A'.'sL>r. i. 1 

here comes my messenger — iii. 2 

here stays without a messenger. A/er.o/Feju'ce, iv. 1 

the letters; call the messeuger — iv. I 

instant that your messenger came — iv. 1 (letter) 
but there is come a messenger befove — v. 1 
were you made the messenger? ../isyouLike it, i. 2 
I am but as a guiltless messenger. ... — iv. 3 
this distempered messenger of wet.... /4;i's Well.i. 3 
O you leaden messengers, that ride — iii. 2 

despatch the most convenient messenger — iii. 4 
provide this messenger; my heart .. — iii. 4 
you home without a messenger.. Comedy of Err. i. 2 

send some other messenger — ii. 1 

not lightly trust tlie messenger — iv. 4 

the cloudy messenger turns me his ..Macbeth, iii. G 
our messenger Chatillon is &\-nve<i. .KingJohn, ii. 1 
hide you from our messengers of war — ii. 1 
some speedy messenger bid her repair — ii. 2 
messenger betwixt me and the peers — iv. 2 

call in the messengers sent from Henry V.\.2 

thou lialeful messenger, out of my..2Heii)yr;. iii. 2 
a messenger, or come of pleasure? (rep.) — v. 1 
such a messenger, as shall revenge ..SHenryVI. i. I 
cousin, you shall be the messenger .. — i. I 
England's messenger, return in post — iii. 3 
now, messenger, what letters, or wliat — iv. I 
herecomesauiessenger: what news?ii/c/ia)d ///. ii.-l 

he shent our messengers Tioilus <5 Cressida, ii. 3 

returned you an empty messenger. Timon ofAlh. iii. 6 

beat the messenger who bids Coriolanus, iy. 6 

the clouds, are messengers of day.V((//ws Cces-ar, ii. I 

call in the messengers (rep.) Antony ^-Cleo. i. 1 

110 messeuger; but thine and all alone — i. 1 
n:adam, twenty several messengers.. — 1. 5 

done already, and the messenger gone — iii. G 
had supertkious kings for messengers — jji. HI 

a messenger from Cicsar — !!!• " 

most kind messenger, say to great . . — iii. 1 1 
mv messenger he hath whipped with — iv. 1 

the messenger came on my guard — iv. a 

too slow a messenger. O come; apace — v. 2 
there is a messenger from llonie. . Titus Androti. v. 1 

the several messengers from hence Lear, ii. 1 

the messengers from our sister and — ii. 2 

of my master, stocking his messenger .. — ii. 2 
he's so slightly valued in his messeuger — ii. 2 

and not send back my messenger — ii. ■! 

meeting here the other messenger ...... — ii. 4 

is a winged messenger of heaven. /Borneo Si- Juliet, ii. 2 
nor get a mcssengei' to brijig it tliee . . — v. 2 
admit no messengers, receive no tokens. Hani/e/, ii. 2 
if your messenger lind him not there .... — iv. 3 

have sent a dozen sequent messengers . . Othello, i. 2 
whose messengers are Iiere about my side — i. 2 
a messenger ft'om the galleys. Now? .... — i. 3 



MES 



[ 504 ] 

MET— brothers, have we thus met? ..Cymbeline, v. 5 

how first met them? why fled — v. 5 

Tereus hast thou met withal.. I'itus Andronicus, ii. 5 

what, Iiave you met with her? ! — iv. 3 

when my maiden priests are met Pericles, v. 2 

he met tlie n iglitmare, and lier .... Lea?-, iii. 4 (song) 
questrists after him, met liim at gate.... — iii. 7 

husband met us not on the way — Iv. 2 

I met Iiira back again — iv. 2 

why, he was met even now — iv. 4 

our very loving sister, well be met — v. 1 

in this nabit met I my father — v. 3 

we met, we wooed, and made. . . . Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 3 

hast thou met with him? — ii. 5 

happily met, my lady, and my wife. . — iv. 1 

I m6t the youthful lord — iv. 2 

would X had met my dearest foe Hamlel, i. 2 

raised, and met, are at the duke's Othello, i. 2 

once more, well met at Cyprus — ii. 1 

they met so near with their lips — ii. 1 

METAL, corn, or wine Tempest, ii. I 

iCol.- Kill.'} my metal of India? . . Tu-elJthMghl, ii. 5 

more test made of my melal Meas.forMeas. i. 1 

make men of some other metal Mucli A<in, ii. 1 

is not lead a metal heavy, dull ..Love'sL.I.ost, iii. 1 
for barren metal of his friend?. . Merch. of Venice, i. 3 

but no metal can, no, not the — iv. 1 

is metal to make virgins AWs Well, i. 1 

a word good metals: you shall — ii. 1 

and to what metal this counterfeit . . — iii. 6 
as all the metal in your shop. Co^ntrfj/ of Errors, iv. 1 
must draw this metal from my side . King John, v, 2 

like bright metal on a sullen I Henry I y, i. 2 

for from his metal was his iHenrijW. i. 1 

inclusive verge of golden metal. ...i?ic/iard /i/. iv. 1 

the imperial metalcircling now — iv. 4 

of what coarse metal ye are Henry VIII. iii. 2 

of which metal is not found . . Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 3 
touched, and found base metal . . Timon ofAth. iii. 3 
whe'r their basest metal be not.,.. /u^/us Cresur, i. 1 
yet, I see, thy honourable metal may — i. 2 
but metal, Marcus, steel to the ..TiiusAndron. iv. 3 

in vegetives, metals, stones Pericles, iii. 2 

I am made of that self metal Lear, i. 1 

here's metal more attractive Hamlet, iii. 2 

among a mineral of metals base — i v. 1 

METAMORPHOSED me. . . . TwoGen. of Verona, i. 1 
now you are metamorphosed — ii. 1 

METAMORPHOSIS; my .. ..Titus Andronicns, iv. 1 

METAPHOR— Where's thy metaphor. . TwelfthN. i. 3 

a metaphor. Indeed, sir, if (rep.) All's Well, v. 2 

or against any man's metaphor — v. 2 

METAPHYSICS, fall to them. . Taming of Shrew, i. 1 

BIETAPHYSICAL aid, doth seem Macbeth, i. 5 

METE— to mete at, if it may be .. Love' sL. Lost, iv. 1 
by which his grace must mete 2Henryl V. iv. 4 

METELLUS— fsM CIMBER] 

now, good Metellus, go along JuliusCasar, ii. I 

Caius Ligarius, that Metellus spake of — ii. 1 
now, Metellus, what Treboniusl .... — ii. 2 
now yours, Metellus; yours, Cinna .. — iii. 1 

METEOR— like a meteor o'er Merry Wives, ii. 2 

of his heart's meteors iWtms.. Comedy of E7 rors, iv. 2 
and call them meteors, prodigies . . King John, iii. 4 
quite o'er with burning meteors .... — v. 2 
and meteors fright the fixed stars . . Richard i 7. ii. 4 

like the meteors of a troubled 1 Henry IV. i. 1 

my lord, do you see these meteors? . . — ii. 4 

be no more an exhaled meteor — v. 1 

I missed the meteor once, and hit .Henry VIII. v. 3 
it is some meteor that the sun . . Romeo Z^- Juliet, iii. 5 

METE- YARD, and spare not.. Taming of Shrew, iv. 3 

METHEGLIN-wine.and metheglins.UoTi/ irives, v.5 
metheglin , wort, and malmsey ..Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

METHINKS, he i>as no drowning mark. Tempest, i. 1 
raethinks, our garments are now .... — ii. 1 
and yet methinks, I see it in thy face — ii. 1 

methinks, I do — ii. 1 

methinks should not he .... Two Gen.of Verona, i. 1 
and yet, methinks, I do not like .... — i. 2 
methinks, my zeal to Valentine .... — ii. 4 

methinks, you're allycholly — iv. 2 

because, methinks, tliat she loved.... — iv. 4 

methinks, you prescribe to Merry Wives, ii. 2 

methinks, there would be no period.. — iv. 2 
methinks there should be terrors in . . — iv. 4 

methinks his flesh is pvmished — iv. 4 

methinks, sometimes I have no . . TwelfthNight, i. 3 
methinks I feel this youth's perfections — i. b 
why, then, methinks, 'tis time to..,. — iii. 1 
methinks, his words do from such .. — iii. 4 
methinks, strangely; for he, , . . Meas. .for Meas. iv. 2 
methinks, I see a quickening in his eye — v. 1 
why, i' faith, methinks she js too low. Much Ado, i. 1 
so say I; methinks, you are sadder . . — iii. 2 

out of all otlier tune, methinks — iii. 4 

but methinks, you look with your eyes — iii. 4 
oh, methinks, how slow this old. Mid. N. Dream, i. I 
methinks, mistress, you should have . — iii. 1 
methinks, looks with a watery eye .. — iii. 1 
for methinks, I am marvellous hairy — iv. 1 
methinks, I have a great desire to . . — iv. 1 
methinks, I see these things with parted — iv. 1 

so methinks: and I have found — iv. 1 

the wall, methinks, being sensible .. — v. 1 
methinks, she should not use a long one — v. 1 
methinks. I should outswear Cupkh.Love'sL.L. i. 2 
of that colour, methinks, Samson had — i. 2 
a time, methinks, too short to make — v. 2 
having made one. methinks. . Merch. of Venice, iii. 2 
now, methinkSj I have a mind to it.. — iv. 1 
and now, metlimks, yon teach me . . — iv, 1 

Troilus, methinks, mounted — v. 1 

methinks, it sounds much sweeter .. — v. 1 
this night, methinks, is but the daylight — v. I 
tlianks me heartily, methinks ....AsyouLikeil, ii. .■» 

methinks, I hear him now All's Well, i. 2 

methinks. in thee some blessed spirit — ii. 1 
metliinks, thon art a general offence — ii. 3 
gentle sir, methinks, you walk ,, Taming of Sh. ii. I 



MET 



MESSENGERS of Venice stay Othello, iv. 2 

ilESSES— lower messes, perchance.. Winler'sTnle, i. 2 

makes his generation messes Lear, i. 

I will chop her into messes Othello, iv. 

MESSINA— this night to Messina . . . . Much .ido, i. 
he hath an uncle here in IMessina .. — i. 
he set up his bills here in Messina .. — i. 
for all Messina, as like him as she is — i. 

as arrant knaves as any in Messina.. — iii. 
a piece of flesh as any is in Messina., — iv. 

is fled from Messina; you have — v. 

possess the people in Messina here how — v. 
with armed men back to IMessina.. .. — v. 

MET— they all have met again Tempest, i. 

the surges most swoln that met him . . — ii. 
I met her deity cutting the clouds .... — iv. 

how thou hast met usliere — v. 

friar Laurence met them both.. TiccGcn. of Ver. v. 

you arc very well met Merry Wives, i. 

well met, mistress Page (rep.) — iii. 

met the jealous knave their master . . — iii. 

she, and I, are newly met — iv. 

now sir, have I met you again?. . TwelfthNight, iv. 
very well met, and welcome .... Meas. for Meas. iv. 
my very wortliy cousin, fairly met . . — v. 

I met you at the prison — v. 

ill met by moonlight, proud .. Mid.N.'sDream, ii. 

met we on hill, in dale — ii. 

are we all met? Pat, pat — iii. 

were met together to rehearse — iii. 

fair lovers, you are fortunately met — iv. 

exceedingly well met Love'sL.Lost, iii. 

and tlierefore met your loves in — v. 

I met a fool (.rep.) As you Like it, ii. 

vou are well met (rep.) — iii, 

1 met the duke yesterday — iii. 

but I have met him oft — iii. 

till you met your wife's wit — iv. 

no sooner met, but they looked — v. 

well met, honest gentleman (?ep.) .. — v. 
that I have so often met in the forest — v. 
faith, we met, and found the quarrel — v. 
when the parties were met themselves — v. 
how thus we met, and these things , . — v. 

we met him thitlierward AlVsWell, iii. 2 

better 'twere, I met the ravin lion .. — iii. 2 

Us met the duke in the street — iv. 3 

and you're well met, signior .. Taming of Shrew, i. 2 

and I have met a gentleman — i. 2 

«fliom bv chance I met, upon — i. 2 

you are nappily met; sir, this is .... — iv. 4 

happily met ; the happier — iv, 5 

even now I met him with Winter's Tale, i. 2 

was ho met there? O'ep.) — ii. 1 

you are well met, sir — v. 2 

he met me on the mart Comedy of Errors, iii. 1 

the instant that I met with you — iv. 1 

well met, well met; master Antipholus — iv. 3 

withdrawn swords, met us again — v. 1 

by the way we met my wife — v. 1 

w'hich accidentally are met together — v. I 

they met me in the day of Macbeth, i. 5 (letter) 

we might have met them dareful .... — v. 5 

we might have met with foes that .. — v. 7 

before xVngiers well met King John, ii. 1 

besides, I met lord Bigot — iv. 2 

once more to-day well met ...., — iv. 3 

nor met with fortune other — v. 2 

well met gentlemen ; I hope Richard II. ii. 2 

now himself met with the fall — iii. 4 

at Holmedon met \ Henry IV. i. 1 

as well have met the devil alone — i. 3 

be glad he met with some mischance — i. 3 

and, the English rebels, met — iii. 2 

a mad fellow met me on the way .... — iv. 2 

met him in boroughs, cities — iv. 3 

so many of his shadows thou hast met — v. 4 

that rebellion had met ill luck? 2HenryIV. i. 1 

I met, and overtook a dozen captains — ii. 4 

crooked ways, I met this crown — iv, 4 

well met corporal Nym Henry V. ii. 1 

I met this man with my glove in ... . — iv. 8 

wherefore we are met I — v. 2 

fairly met: so are you, princes — v. 2 

that met them in their bent — v. 2 

met not with the Dauphin's grace ..\ Henry VI. ii. 2 

before we met, or that a stroke — iv. 1 

I met in travel toward his — iv. 3 

danger was, still there I met him . .2Henry VI. v. 3 

we at Saint Alban'smet SHenryVI. ii. 1 

when you and I met at Saint Alban's — ii. 2 
would ong ere this have met us . . Richard III. iii. 1 
well met, my lord; I am glad to see — iii. 2 

and when I met this holy man — iii. 2 

the cause' why we are met is — iii. 4 

daughter, well met — iv. 1 

well met; how have you done Henry VIII. i. I 

of men, met in the vale of Ai-de — i. 1 

yon met him half in heaven — ii. 1 

well met, my good lord chamberlain — ii. 2 

affections still met the king? — iii. 1 

you are well met once again — i v. 1 

why are we met in council? — v. 2 

lordiEneas,we met by chance ,. Troilus&- Cress, iv. 2 
Servilius! you are kindly met. Timon of Athens, iii. 2 

well met; good-morrow, Titus — iii, 4 

shall be met witli thanks — v. 2 

I met a courier, one mine ancient.... — v. 3 

a wager, they have met Coriolanus, i. 4 

has our general met the enemy — i. 4 

Tarquin's self he met, and struck — ii. 2 

how often l\e had met you, sword to sword — iii. 1 

you're well met — iv. 2 

so, sir, heartily well met — iv. 3 

I met a lion, who glared uJJbn me . . JuliusCn'sar, i. 3 
when she first met Mark ..Antony 4- Cleopatra, ii. 2 

to have met you here — ii. 6 

well met here. I hope so — ii- 6 

we shoiUd have met you by sea — iii. 6 

Cleopatra, when she met her Roman. Cymbeline, U. 4 



METHINKS, he looks as though.. 7'a»ni7ig-o/SA. iii. 1 

gentles, methinks you frown — iii. 2 

good, methinks, to steal our marriage — iii. 2 

this IS strange 1 methinks Wintcr'sTate, i. 2 

the celestial habits, (methinks, I 60.. — iii. 1 
methinks, I play as I have seen them — iv. 3 
methinks, a father is, at the nuptial — iv. 3 

methinks, I see Leontes, opening his — iv. 3 

but that, methinks, already — v. 3 

still, methinks, there is an air — v. 3 

methinks, your maw, like mine. Comedy of Errors, i. 2 
methinks, they are such a gentle nation — iv. 4 

methinks, you are my glass — v. 1 

to fright you thus, metniuks Macbeth, iv. 2 

ends of John, methinks, I see this ..KingJohn, iii. 4 
mercy on me! methinks, nobody should — iv. I 

I am amazed, methinks — iv. 3 

even there, methinks, an angel spake — v. 2 

methinks, I am a prophet Richard II. ii. I 

^et, again, methinks, some unborn . . — ii. 2 
for, methinks, in you I see old Gaunt — ii. 3 
methinks, king Richard and myself — iii. 3 
Bolingbroke (for yond', methinks, he is) — iii. 3 
by heaven, methinks, it were an easy. I Henry 7 ;'.i. 3 
methinks, my moiety, north from .. — iii. 1 
sir John, methinks, they are exceeding — iv. 2 

sweetheart, methinks, now you 2HenryIV. ii. 4 

this revoltof thine methinks, is like ..Henry v. ii. 2 
methinks, I could not die anywhere — iv. 1 
as one man more, methinks, would share — iv. 3 

methinks, your looks are sad 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

my lord, raethinks, is very long in .. i. 2 

yet, methinks, my father s execution — ii. 5 
methinks, my lord should be religious — iii. I 
methinks, his lordship should be ... . — iii. 1 

methinks, I should revive the soldiers' iii. 2 

you, my lords, methinks, you do not — iv. I 

he smiles, methinks — iv. 7 

yet, methinks, I could be well content — v. 3 

methinks, the realms of England iHenryVl. i. 1 

here a' comes, methinks — 1.3 

Buckingham, methinks, you watched — i. 4 
methinks, I should not thus be led .. — ii. 4 
but, methinks, he should stand in fear — iv. 2 
methinks already, in this civil broil — iv. 8 

yet methinks, you lose ZHenry VI. i. 1 

or, had he 'scaped, methinks, we should — ii. 1 
methinks, 'tis prize enough to be his son — ii. 1 
now methinks, I hear great Warwick — ii. 1 

God I methinks, it were a happy life — ii. 5 
his pale cheeks, methinks, present .. — ii. 5 
methinks, these peers of France should — iii. 3 
and yet, methinks, your grace hath not — iv. 1 
methinks, the power, that Edward . . — iv. 8 
methinks, a woman of this valiant spirit — v. 4 

1 am afraid, methinks, to hear .... Richard III. i. i 
and since, methinks, I would not grow — ii. 4 
not registered, methinks, the truth.. — iii. 1 

methinks, I could despise this Henry VIII. iii. 2 

I am able now, methinks — iii. 2 

now, methinks, I feel a little ease .. — iv. 2 
methinks, I could cry the amen .... — v. I 
for that, methinks, is the iiuvse. . Troilus ^Cress. ii. 3 
who do, methinks, find out somethings — iii. 3 
and this hill, methmks, with one.. Timon of Alh. i. 1 
methinks, they should invite them,. — i. 2 
cannot hold out water, methinks.... — i. 2 
methinks, I could deal kingdoms to — i. 2 
methinks, false hearts should never — i. 2 
methinks, he should the sooner pay — iii. 4 
methinks, thou art more honest now — iv. 3 

methinks, I hear hither your Coriolanus, i. 3 

methinks, I see him stamp thus — i. 3 

methinks, thou speak'st not well .... — i. 6 
by his looks, methinks, 'tis warm at his — ii. 3 
methinks, there is much reason.. JuliusCiesar, iii. 2 

that, methinks, is strange — iv. 3 

methinks, if you did love him.... Antony ^Cleo. i. 3 
why, methinks, by him, this creature's — iii. 3 

methinks, I hear Antony call — v. 2 

methinks, thy favour's good Cymbeline, iii. 4 

whereupon, methinks, 1 see him now — v. 5 
methinks I do digress too much. . Titus Andron. v. 3 
methinks, doth sit too melancholy ....Pericles, ii. 3 

methiuks, you are too much of late Lear, i. 4 

methinks, the ground is even — iv. 6 

methinks, thy voice is altered — iv. 6 

methinks, you are better spoken — iv. 6 

methinks, he seems no bigger than his .. — iv. 6 
far oir, methinks, I hear the beaten drum — iv. 6 
methinks, I should know you, and know — iv. 7 
methinks, our pleasure might have been — v. 3 
methinks, I see thee, now ihou. Romeo 4- Juliet, iii. 5 
and yet, methinks, it should not .... — iv. 3 
O look! methinks, I see my cousin's — iv. 3 
my father,— methinks, I see my father.. Hamto, i. 2 

methinks, I scent the morning air — i. 5 

the lady doth protest too much methinks — iii. 2 

methinks, it is like a weasel — iii. 2 

yet, methinks, it is very sultry and hot — v. 2 
methinks, the wind hath spoke aloud.. 0/Ae//o, ii. 1 
methinks, it sounds a parley of (?ep.).,.. — ii. 3 
methiuks, it should be now a huge eclipse — v. 2 

METHOD-answer by the method. TwelfH' Night, i. 5 
the tune, matter, and method?. .iVeos. /or Meas. iii. 2 
beat this method in your sconce.. Co//'e(/j/q/"i.'rr. ii. 2 

rehearse the method of my pen MIcnry VI. i i i . 1 

somewhat into a slower method Richard III. i. 2 

you do not hold tlie method to . . Antony t^-Cteo. i. 3 
be madness, yet there's method iu it . . Hamlet, ii. 2 
an honest method, as wholesome — ii. 2 

METHOUGHT, would open Tempest, iii. 2 

methought the billows spoke — iii. 3 

most unpitifully , methought .... Merry Wives, iv. 2 
methought, she purged the air . . Twelfth Night, i. 1 
that sure, methought, her eyes had.. — ii. 2 
methought, it did relieve my passion — ii. 4 
which, methought, did promise most — iii. 4 
methought, a serpent eat my heart. iV/d.A'.'sDr. ii. 3 
methought, I was enamoured of an ass — iv. ) 



MET 



[ 505 J 



MIL 



METHOUGHT I was there (rep.).M-d t>. s Dr ,v. 1 
methought, all his senses were . . Lnve »/•• f;"/'. "• ' 
hear you ; Aiethousht, you said . . iler.of I cnice, i. 3 
ever saw him, met\ought he ""S-J^y""'; '^^ | \ | 

a mother, methought you saw Alls 'CcH, i. J 

methought, you said, you saw <">e. . . . - v- J 

ofrav bSy'slace, raethoughts .... » into s iote, . _- 

how 'like, methought, I then was to - i- ^ 
onlythis, methought, I heard ...... — X- f, 

Sought, I hear°d a voice cry. s\eep. Macbeth, u. 2 
and anon, methouglit, the wood began - v. 5 

the sun of heaven, methought ■J'j/'^Jfr'^'^- 1 

and methousht, he had made two ..SHc-Hry/K. . 2 
methouglit, he made a shrewd thrust — ■ ^ 

ma foi!°the other day methonght •• f ™J«,';- - J 
prettily, methought, did play ...... 1 H"" !' J'.iv- ' 

methought, I sat in seat of majesty. .•-'H^.ryf;/.. 2 

methought, I had; and often did I-- — \- * 
mftlVilM the melanchov flood (rep.) - ^.4 
methought, the souls of all that {rep.) — v. J 
Ct. melhought, I stood not m . . . . "^^^^■^- 1 
a kind of face, methought %"°lZ"ni v 5 

S^J,^^aJ»^l^fofuiim|:s!t^:.:iv:6 

methought, thy very gait did prophesy .. - y. 3 
yet oScI, m'ethought,!t lifted JiP '»= • • • • ««'f f • "^ 

methought, it was very sweet (.ep.) - v. Uson„) 
methought, I lay worse than the ...... .. — v. ^ 

JIETRE-what? In metre?. . AJ™s««.fo,;, /<•«« r., . 2 

there are found lascivious metres . . Riclmrd II. ]i. 1 

JIETRE-BALLAD-MONGERS ..1 l^JJ^^ I 

METROPOLIS and see of Rome .... t^mg Jolm,\. f 

MET'ST-thou mefst with thmgs. ','" ;'■/'//;• • I 
than when thou met'st me last • ' '^''"™ ^'/- " • g 

mefst thou my posts? i"'r\iSfX«<p; ' 4 

AfPTTT mptte le au mon pocket . . Merry itives,\. i 

METTLE-ge" tlemen of b/ave mettle.. r.mpes(,u, 1 

"^ who knows^so much of my mettle. ru-elflhN,ght, m. 4 

against the mettle of your sex. . ...... - v. ^ 

al to put mettle in restrained . . Meas.for .Veas. . 4 

why, your mettle is the more — "i- •? 

Thou hast mettle enough in thee . . . . ^^"f .^/°' X- \ 
folly to the mettle of my speecli?...4s yuUked ii. 7 
thv undaunted mettle should compose.A/ac6W/., i. 7 
if thou hast the mettle of a king .... KmgJolm, ii. 2 

hit mettle, that self-mould J «!': '« jV 'i " 4 

a lad of mettle a good hoy ... . . . . .1 Be^iiy^ y. n 4 

that rascal hath good mettle in him — i>. ^ 
now their pride and mettle is asleep - 'V. 3 

O this boy lends mettle to us aui .. .. — "• ^ 

had been a man of this mettle ^^^"rf A» \ 

tlie mettle of your pasture Henry V. 111. i 

where have they this mettle? — i"- ° 

our mettle is bred out — V • 

the fellow has mettle enough m .... —,,!;•? 
evin ofyour mottle, of your x^tj.. Richard III. iv. 4 
Ivlry gS of mettle, lethim ...r™,a«*C««. 1. 3 

who?e self-same mettle Tmiori "Mihem,iv. 3 

was quick mettle, when he went J«i.«C<^sa,- , 2 
nor tfie insuppressive mettle of our. . - 1^. ^ 
show and promise of their mettle . . . . — „, „' V , 

do think, tVere is mettle in death./"'™!' ^S" ' \ 
of unimproved mettle hot and f ull . . . . . •«<"'''.;>• ' 

why, now I see there's mettle m thee..O(/.<.'iio iv. 2 

MEwLwhy will you mew her "»•• -^"'"'"fftf 'iv 2 

to mew up your tender kinsman.... AmffJoAn iv. i 

rather be Vkitten, and cry mew . . 1 i^'-'rv''; »»• 
the cat will mew, the dog will. . . . . ...... W™'^'; \ 

M15WED-in shady cloister mewed.Mi'i. N.s Dr. . 
hn, he closely mewed her up . . Tammg of Shrew, 1. 1 
Sthe'bilndeli cat hath'mewed •-.^f j'f ''^ 
should Clarence closely be mewed.. »c;ia7cii//. i. 

that the eagle should be mewed - j- ' 

noor lord, he is mewed up •• — , ..y". 

to-night she's mewed up . . .... . Bomjo S,Jnhet, . . 4 

MEWf ING-the infant. mewling..Js!/o«i.'''e''. '!• ? 

MEXICO-a third at Mexico Mer.of Venice i.. 3 

from Tripolis, from Mexico ~.. „\ . 

MICE-as mice by lions,) hath....J»tos./orW.a,,. . 5 
thpv will look like drowned mice .... 1 H »' >J>'-^-{ 
r^iJe, and rats, and such small ..tear, 111. 4 (song) 
walkiipon the beach appear, like mice - iv. 6 

MICHAEL-[.fe CASSIO] rjenrvIV iv. 4 

good sir MicTiael (»ep.) ..... ......•■' Hemyiy. v. 4 

to orevent the worst, sir Michael, speed - iv. 4 
frifndsraml so farewell, sir Michael - iv. 4 
worthy St.Michael, and the golden.lH™r!/r7 iv. 7 
[Knho Michael Hopkins? He . . . . H™!^/ f "•; ' \ 

good Michael, look you to the guard . . Olhello, . 3 

Michael, good-night: to-morrow — . ^ 

how cones it, MiShael, you arc thus .... - ■•3 

MICHAELMAS-afore Michaelmas? .. Merry W.u 1 
* about Michaelmas next I shall, be 1 Henry IV. u. 
MICI-IER-ofheavenproveaniicher - .4 

MrnilNG-marry, this is miching . ...IlamM, 111. ^ 

MICKLE -other mickle blame Co,nedyof hrr 1... 
an oath of mickle might; and fury ■■HenryV.u. 1 
I shall die with mick!e age .... .... ' "-;!/;'/■ >^- \ 

unto the grave with mickle age . . . .2Ueniyl'l. v. 1 

O mickle is the powerful grace. . Romeo /i.rnhet, u. 3 
MICROCOSM-mapof my microcosm Cnr-o/an»,5, 1 . 1 

MID-past the mid season .J? «'"?"/■'• ' 

about the mid of night, come . ■■■Richard U v. 3 

AttD\GE— midage and wrinkled, rroito- ^ Ciess.u. i 

MIDAS-ha"lfoSlforMida3.A/erc/,a«/o/fV,.,c. ,...2 

MID-DAY sun, fierce bent against.. ..I Hwrj/F/. 1. 1 

as piereing as the mid-day sun .3 Henry VI. v. 2 

i\ffDDLE-a man of middle earth . Merry mves.y. 5 

tl" heavy middle of the night . . l^'e"/.- M^'/"'- 'T- ' 

since the middle snmmcr'8.spring.M,rf..V. .«!).. 11. 2 

^e are for you; sit i' the micidle - ».J/-.,^i^„^, ''i^; | 

now, i' the middle •■•■■<■" """ ' :„ 5 

flowers of middle siinimer (.rep.) .... - iv. 6 
the middle centre ot this ■•••■■■•■^! "^"t' '/•; ' ? 
thy breath in middle of a word . . «'^'"" '*/",■ '"i \ 
v^iiin^ in the middle •■••^"'•'^.'^Crmv./a (prol.) 

ttie middle of humanity 5 """" ofAlhens, iv. 3 

our general is cut i' the middle .... Cor,oianus, iv. 5 



MIDDLE— very middle of my heart ..Cymbelme, 1. 7 
cut the egg i' the middle, and eat up . . . . . . Lear, 1. 4 

when thou clovest tliy crown i' the middle - 1. 4 
and left nothing in the middle .......... - i- « 

nose stands i' the middle ot his face? .... — V ° 

the dead waist and miildlc of the lught.., lamlet,]. i 

or in the middle of her favours? — , 'j- ^ 

MIDNIGHT fated to the purpose Tempest, 1. - 

thou call'dst me up at midnight .... — '• ' 

all's hush 'd as midnight yet — iv. 1 

to make midnight mushrooms ...... - v- 1 

him in the parE at midnight ! . . . . Merry Wives, v. 4 

all the winter time, at still midnight — iv. 4 
be you in the park about midnight . . — v. 1 
not to be a-beU after midnight (r€p.).TwelfthN.ii. 3 
'tis now dead midnight . . Measure for Measure, iv. 2 
for women are light at midnight .. . . — v. 1 

it coldly till midnight [Kni.-night]..Muc/i.4rfo 111. 2 

midnight, assist our moan •■.,— , Y: ^ (son„; 

till morrow deep midnight . Mid.N.'s Vream.i. I 
and will, to-morrow midnight, solemnly - ly. 
the iron tongue ofmidnight hath told -- . .y. 1 
sighed upon a midnight pillow ••''".'""■.^[f'.^'''; ' i 
by midnight, look to hear further . . All s »- ell, 111. 6 
when midnight comes, knock at my — iv- 2 
not till after midnight <,rep.)_ ..... . • • ,"„ , ' V ^ 

hours, minutes? noon, midnight?. Winter s Tale,i. 2 
secret, black, and midnight hag.3? ... Macbeth, ix. 1 
the midnight bell did, with his iron.A.i?!ff./o/»i, i.u. .i 
my hand at midnight held your head - 'V. 1 
present twelve o'clock at midnight .IHenry/K. 11. 4 
gravity out of his bed at midnight?. . — .!!• i 
we have heard the chimes at midnight -;■.. m. 2 
England, as dead midnight still.. Henrj/ V. 111. (cho.) 
'tis midnight, I'll go arm myself ..... — "1-7 



MKtHTILY— fear him mightily ....Richard III. 1. 1 
a knave, that mightily deceives .. Timonnf Alh. v. 1 
queen so mightily l)Ctrayed../l7i<on!/*C/CTpo(ra, 1. 3 
king, to be so mightily ohused! . . TitusAndron. u. 3 
fail daylight? I am mightily abused ....Lear,\v. 7 
MIGHTINESS to wash .... Tamingof Sh. 2 (indue. 

the native mightiness and fate Henry K. 11. 4 

your mightiness on both parts ...... -- v. 2 

this mightiness meets misery 1 . . Henry VI II. (prol.) 
hope braves your mightiness . . . . Tdus Andron. 11. 3 

MIGHTY— the most mighty Neptune .. 7-erapM(,.i.. 2 

love's a mighty lord Two Gen.of lerona,n. 4 

your hearts are mighty Merry 11 ives, 111. 1 

youdo yourself mighty wrong ■•.••. — "'■ f 

here, mighty Theseus Mid.N.'sDream, v. 1 

bv some mighty precedent Love sL.Los, i. i 

addressed a mighty pow er .:.••••• As 'JouLihe 1 , v. 4 
stand otfindifterences so mighty ....AUsWelUw. 3 
and his lady, oiFenceof mighty note.. — v. .1 
nothing but a mighty lord.. 7-anmi^o/SA. 1 (indue.) 

that a mighty man, of such — 2 (mduc.) 

1 a mighty man ofPisa; by report ..... — ". 1 

and as his person's mighty ........Winter sTale,\. 2 

in himself too mighty ; and m his. . . . — .u. i 

which are mighty ones, and millions -- ^X- f 
encountered by a mighty rock ..Comedy of hrr. 1. 
most mighty duke (lep.)........ ...... — v. j 

certain of one mother, mighty king. . King John, 1. 1 
that same mighty man? is it sir .... — '- 

like you this wild.counsel, mighty states^ — 
persevere not. but hear me, mighty kings — 

that promiseth a mighty fruit — 

I had mighty cause to wish — 

thine indignation, mighty heaven 



'tis midnight, I'll go arm myseit ..... - "■. / 

it is now <fead midnight "V^'"" ''///; l" ? 

at midnight, have in them a wilder. J/OTrj/FZi/.y. 
■tis midnight, Charles, pr'ythee, to bed - v. 
as patient as the midnight sleep. . . .Corwlanvs,m. 1 
let us go, for it is after midnight .. Julius Ca!sar,i.Z 
let's mock the midnight bell . . Antony %Cleo. 111.. 11 

at midnight, to encounter me Cymbeline,\. i 

almost midnight, madam. ... . . . . .... - "• ^ 

a few flowers; but about midnight .. - "■ % 

of midnight weeds collect.ed Hamle, 111. 2 

you shall hear more by midnight . . .... Othello, ly. 1 

MIDRIFF— with guts, and midriff ..\Henrylt . in.i 

MIDST-in the midst of sentences. i>//rf.Ar. Dream, v. 1 

in the midst of the street? . . . . Taming o.f Shrew v. 

ship was splitted in the midst. . Comedy of E, ,ors_,i. 1 

here I'll sft i' the midst . . . . , \^l'"'',t''yr"i 2 

they left me midst my enemies ...... 1 He'" yV'-i. 2 

through the very midst of you! .. . . .2Hcnry VI iv. 8 

in the midst of this bnght-shining.. 3 Henri/ J /...v. 3 
cleave in the midst, and perish .... Corwlanus, 11.2 

i' the midst o' the fight .... Antony <?• c;eopa(ra,.iii. 8 

then in the midst a tearing groan -- ly... 1^ 

MIDSUMMER madness TwelfthNisht, 111. 4 

been for a hot midsummer mght. As you Lil<e it, ly. 

»orgeous as the sun at midsummer . 1 Henry 1 1- . i.v. 1 

MID^VAY-just in the midway . . . . ..Much Ado, 11. 1 

midway between your tents .... Troilus^Cress.i. 3 

no midway'twixt these extremes.4?i(oni/ * Cfeo. ni. 4 

which now are midway stopped. Pericles, v. 1 

and choughs, that .wing, the mi.dway air..Lear^iv. 6 

MIDWIFE-aqua-vitce with ami.dwifer«T//A N. . 5 

your midwife, there, to save this Winter sTate,n. 3 

here's the midwife's name to;t •„ . , „T, r , 'n 2 

so. Green, thou art the midwife. .. . .Richard II. u. 2 
knew her well, she was a midwife. .2 Henry VI. iv. 2 
midwife wondered, and the women. .3Her.r!/r/..v. 6 
Cornelia the midwife (rep.) . . TitusAndromcus, iv. 2 
the midwife presently to me (rep.) .. — iv. - 
patroness, and midwife, gentle to ... . Fericles, 11 . 1 

ffie is the fairies' raidwit| Romeo SrJubel,u 4 

MIDWIVES— but the midwives say. 2HenryIV. 11. 2 

MIEN rCoi.-mine] is dangerous ■■■■ Merry tf ives.i. 3 

rKn(.] her mien or Valentinus'.rM.oGen..o/ Cer. 11. 4 

MIGHT-with all his might.Aierry>*'iDes,ii. 1 (le.tter) 

'^ no might nor greatness in . ■ ■^''''^/r^Zm ';'(• ' 

address your love and might .M-dW. »D; earn, 11. 3 

all error, with his might, and make — m- - 

takes it in might, not merit.. , 7", ,,X-' 

not by might mastered, but by. . . I.o«e s L.Lost,i. 1 
Ws almiglfty dreadful little inight . . - ".. 1 
I spread my conquering might ...... — y- ^ 

iow I find thy saw of might .. ...As you Like I'.in. 5 

that would not extend his niight . ...AllsHell i. 3 

give him oflice, honour, might ... . iHenrylV. v. 4 

live entertainment to the might oi it — iv. 4 
right should thus overcome might! . . - v. 4 
hath cause, and means, and might .... Hem y f .1. 2 

an oath ofmickle might; and fury .. — .11.1 
and love, exceeds man's might.. Tmtos ^-Cress. 111. 2 
man's mind, but a woman's m.ight. J«!msC<E5ar,.ii. 4 
not urge thy duty past thy might .. -- iv. 3 
submifs her to thy raight...4..(on!/ .S-«eopa^.-a, 111. 10 
with all his might, to enforce it on.. . . . . Olhello, 1. 2 

MIGHTFUL-tHemightful gods. .T,te.4«rfron. iv. 4 

MIGHTIER-mightier member . . Meas.forMeas. y. 1 

stU- themup aga^ist a mightier task K-"?7oA«, u. 1 

two mightier troops than that......lHen yf;/. iv. 3 

but mightier crimes are laid unto -^H^uy) /. 11 . 1 
a man no mightier than thyself. . . . Jxdn^ Cira, 1. 3 

both contend which is the mightier . • H«m^', iv. 
MIGHTIEST space m fortune .••••••• Alls "f '«• i- } 

'tis mightiest in the mightiest. . Mer. of '«"'«, ly. 1 
themightiestof thy greatest enemies.R.e/iard //.v. 6 
butkiiigs, and mightiest potentates.! Henri/ Fl. 111. 2 
provokes the mightiest luilkagainst — v- 3 
a little ere the mightiest Juliiis lell . ... Hamlet, u 1 

MIGHTILY— you mightily hold up . . Much Ado, n. 2 
the prince anfi Claufio mightily abused -- v. 2 
if he do not mightily grace himselt./lsyo« Likeit,i. 1 
her benefits are mightily misplacecl.. — 1. ^ 
that have so mightily persuaded him -- 1. 2 
how mightily, sometimes Uep, ) .. . .. . All » " ?«- iv. 3 

strive mightily, buteat and drink, 'a'"'"? "fSh.}. i 
kindreds are mightily strengthen.ed.2Henrv/K. 11. 2 
thou wrong'st thy cnildren mightily .3Hen) 1/ vi. 111. 2 



ii. 2 
ii. 2 
ii.2 

— iv. 2 

— v. 6 
..Richard II. i. 3 



iv. 1 
iv. 4 
. (cho.) 
i. 2 
— i. 2 



most mighty liege, and my . . . 

mostmighty prince, my lord......... — -.;. - 

he is in the mighty hold of Bolmgbroke - 111. 4 
mighty, and to be feared, than my ..IHenrylV.i. 3 
a rnighty and a fearful head they are — m- 2 
with strong and mighty preparation . — 
the king, with mighty and quick-raised — 
confined two mighty monarchies. . Henry V. 
look back unto your mighty ancestors — 

whiles his most mighty father — . 

for exploits and mighty enterprizes.. — 1.2 
raise your highness such a mighty sum .— 1. 2 
little body with a mighty heart. . . . — u. (chorus; 
weigh the enemy more mighty than — 11. 4 
not misbecome the mighty sender.... — ii- 4 
themistresscourt of mighty Europe — .".J 

or the mighty , or the huge "", v ''^' ^ 

like a mighty whiffler 'fore the .... - v. (chorus) 
in little room confining mighty men — v. 2 (cho.) 

the mighty duke of Yorkl 1 Henri/ ; /. in. 1 

the mighty army of the Dauphin? .. - iv. 3 
60 mighty are his vowed enemies ..2HenryVl. 111. 1 
in Ireland nourish a mighty band .. — ;;!•.' 
it is reported, mighty sovereign (rep.) — i". ^ 

for daring to affy a mighty lord — iv. 1 

a puissant and a mighty power — ly. » 

arguments of mighty force SHenry VI. 11. 2 

this way, like a mighty sea — .!!• ^ 

argumeutsofmighty strength ...... — iii- ' 

but, mighty lord, this merry inclination — 111. 2 

no, mighty king of France -.„"!• f 

mighty gossips in this monarchy ..Richard 111. \. 
didfbrsake the mighty Warwick.... — H- J 

the mighty dukes, Gloster and — .H- 4 

spoke with, but by mighty suit. . .... — H!- ', 

60 m-ighty, and so many, my detects — in. / 

a bark to brook no mighty sea — iV.- ^ 

refuse not, mighty lord, this — i."- ^ 

most mighty sovereign (rep.) ■■■■■■■■ — Jl' J 
mighty liege \_Col. Knt.-my good lord] — iv. 4 
have not been commanded, mighty king — iv. 4 

is with a mighty power landed — ly- J 

south from the mighty power. ......•• — .V ^ 

bearing a state of mighty moment.. Henry VII1.}\. 4 
as he then was, mighty .............. — ^^.i 

high and mighty princess of England — ▼■ 4 

mould up such a mighty piece -- y- * 

most mighty for thy place and . . Troilus tr Cress. _i. 3 
mightystates characterless .......... — "'• ^ 

Achilles hath the mighty Hector slain — y. 9 
unto his steward a mighty sum. Timon of Ami-ns, v. 1 
when the most mighty gods........ Julius Cresar, i. 3 

with haste will make a mighty fire — .1. J 

end is purposed by the mighty gods? — "- - 

most mighty Caesar (rep.) 

the mighty gods defend thee! .... 
most high, most mighty , and most 
Ca:sar was mighty, bold, royal, and. . 

O mighty CaDsar! dost thou lie 

then burst his mighty heart 

and sell the mighty space of 

down upon us with a mighty power 

two mighty eagles fell • • 

O Julius (5a5sar, thou art mighty yet! ^ - • 

a mighty strength they carry .... .4n(ony .§• C fo. 11. 1 

he not angry , most mighty princess . . Cymbelme,^. J 
mean and mighty, rotting together . . — ly- ^ 
mifhty sir, these two young gentlemen — y . jj 
proud'empress, mighty Tamora ..TitusAndron. v. i 
your reason, mighty lord! .........■■■ — y- ^ 

areason.mightv, strong, and effectual — v. J 
whom mighty kingdoms court sy to. . .— v. i 
have you seen a mighty king .Pericles, 11. (Gow'cr) 

stood equivalent with mighty kings - v. 1 

yon have mighty business in hand Lear, 111. 5 

i^Sa;?^?^i'?^youshaU"::H<;.;^e;;i;. ? deUer) 

ponits of mighty opposites ■^—,. X- ; 

conjuration, and what mighty magic... . Olhello, 1. 3 

tlie Turk with a most mighty preparation — !• 3 

MILAN-was the duke of Milan (rep.) ..Tempest, 1. 2 

he needs will he absolute Milan — 1. * 

alas, poor Milan! — !• * 

and confer fair Milan — 1.2 

open the gates of Jlilan......... — !• - 

the duke of Milan, and his (rep.) — 1. - 



— ii. 3 (paper) 



iv. 3 
iv. 3 
V. 1 



MIL AN— of Naples and of Milan (.rep.). Tempest, ii. ] 

that stand 'twixt me and Milan — ii. 1 

as thou "ot'st Milan. I'll come by Naples — ii. 1 
from Milan did supplant good Prospero — iii. 3 

as I was soiretime Milan — v. 1 

the wronged duke of Milan — V. 1 

was thrust forth of Milan — v. 1 

daughter to the famous dnke of Milan . . — v. 1 

theiii^e retire me to my Milan — v. 1 

at Milan, let mc hear Tiro Gen of Verona, i. 1 

all happiness bechance to thee in Milan! — i. 1 

to embark for Milan — _i. 1 

Avelcome to Milan — .•!• ^ 

there is a lady, sir, in Milan — iii. 1 

from Milan — iv. 1 

Milan [Cof.- Verona] shall not — v. 4 

I saw the duchess of Milan's gown . . Much Ado, iii. 4 
of fair Milan cathedral, and from . . KingJolm, iii. 1 
my holy lord of Milan, from the — v. 2 

MILCH— have made milch the burning. Hnm(c(, ii. 2 

MILCH-KINE yield blood Mernj fVucs, iv. 4 

a hundred milch-kine to the pail. Taming nfSh. ii. 1 

MILD— mild, and beautiful.. rij'ofifn.o/rcioiia, iv. 4 

mild, or come not near me iIuch.ldo,\\. 3 

the mild hind makes speed Mid.N.\Dream,\\. 2 

and she, in mild terms, begged my . . — iv. 1 

in tyrants mild humility Lovers L. Lost, iv. 3 

a foolish mild man — v. 2 

they work in mild aspect?. . /Is !/ouL//tei(, iv. 3 (let.) 
maids' mild behaviour and sobriety.. Tain. ofSh. i. 1 
wondrous qualities, and mild behaviour — ii. 1 
fault I should have been more raild.. Richard II. i. 3 

never gentle lamb more mild — ii. 1 

but be thou mild, and blnsh not.. ..2Heiiri/r/. ii. 4 

since he was mild and affable — iii. 1 

tile duke is virtuous, mild _ — iii. I 

my sovereign's presence makes me mild — iii. 2 
as mild and gentle as the cradle-babe — iii. 2 

women are soft, mild, pitiful ZHemyVI. i. 4 

the tiger will be mild, wliile she .... — iii. 1 

my mild entreaty shall not — iii. 1 

uttered with mild disdain — iv. I 

he was gentle, mild, and virtuous . . Richard III. i. 2 
if she be obdurate to mild entreaties — iii. 1 
with tenderness and mild compassion — iv. 3 
I will be mild and gentle in my words — iv. 4 
more mild, but yet more harmful.... — iv. 4 
will be more mild and tractable .. TilusAndron. i. 2 
could never be her mild companion ....Pericles, i. 1 
son, and husband mild, I mother — i. 1 (riddle) 

now, mild maj' be thy life! — iii. 1 

I marvel, our raild husband Lear, iv. 2 

MILDER— milder than she was. Tioo Gen.ofVer. v. 2 

change you to a milder form — v. 4 

of gentler, milder mould Taming of Shrew, i. 1 

■why did you wish me milder? Coriolanns, iii. 2 

MILDEST— in her mildest words! ..All's irdl, iii. 4 
a mutinv in the mildest thoughts. 'Titus. indron.iv. 1 

MILDEW— mildews the white wheat Lear, iii. 4 

MILDEWED ear, blasting His Hamlet, iii. 4 

MILDLY— him but mildly Comedij of Errors, v. 1 

deal mildly with his youth Richard II. ii. 1 

take thy correction mildly? — v. 1 

yourself to answer mildly (rep.) . . Coriolanns, iii. 2 
but mildly. Well, mildly be it irep.) — iii. 2 
what we did, was mildly TilusAndronicus, i. 2 

MILDNESS— thy mildness praisail.TamingofSh. ii. 1 

thou with mildness entertain'st — ii. 1 

for mildness, peace, and prayer 3 Henry VI. ii. 1 

bear with mildness my misfortune's — iv. 4 

my mildness hath allayed their — iv. 8 

in the mildness of your sleepy.... /ii'c/iord ///. iii. 7 
than praised for harmful mildness Lear, i. 4 

MILE— carry a letter twenty mWss. Merry JVives, iii. 2 
as good go a mile on his errand. .Vetis. for Meas. iii. 2 
he would have walked ten mile afoot. Much Ado, ii. 3 

a mile without the town M id. N.'s Dream, i. 2 

come within a mile of my court . . Love's L. Lost, i. 1 

too long by half a mile — v. 2 

measured many miles (rep.) — v. 2 

how many inches is in one mile — v. 2 

do fill up one mile — v. 2 

of many weary miles yon have — v. 2 

in the travel of one mile? — v. 2 

is a monastery two miles off Mer. of Venice, iii. 4 

must measure twenty miles to-day.. — iii. 4 
our public court as twenty miles. ..^s you Lil<e it, i. 3 
tliree-tinarters of a mile hence . . Winter's Tale, iv. 2 

within a mile where my land — iv. 2 

your sad tires in a mile-a — iv. 2 (song) 

almost a mile: but he does Macbeth, iW.Z 

within this three mile may you — v. 5 

draw out our miles, and make Richard II. ii. 3 

so many miles upon her — ii. 3 

threescore and ten miles afoot \HenrylV. ii. 2 

and I, have thirty miles to ride yet.. — iii. 3 
cannot go but thirty miles a day....2Hei!iy/r. ii. 4 

I must a dozen mile to-night — iii. 2 

I'll pledge you a mile to tlie bottom — v. 3 (song) 
come near our person Ijy ten mile. ... — v. 5 

I will trot to-morrow a mile Henry V. iii. 7 

some six miles off the duke is ^Henry VI. ii. I 

run so many miles about Hicliard III. iv. 4 

lies half a riiile at least — v. 3 

six miles off from .A.mpthill Henry VIII. iv. 1 

within this mile break forth . . Timon of.-Uhens, iv. 3 

witliin this mile and half Coriotaiius, i. 4 

infect another against the wind a mile? — i. 4 
'tis not a mile; briefly we heard .... — i. 6 

in a mile confound an hour — i. 6 

three or four miles about — i. 6 

a mile before his tent fall down — .X" ' 

how many score of miles may Cymbeline, iii. 2 

abused so many miles, with a pretence? — iii. 4 

can it be six miles 3'et? — iv. 2 

I aim a mile beyond the moon .. TitusAndron. iv. 3 

for many miles about there's scarce Lear, ii. 4 

and he are many miles asunder. /Borneo c$-y«/|■6'^ iii. b 

JIILE-END-there called Mile-end ..AIl'slVell,iv. 3 
I remember at 5Iile-eud green ....iHenrylV. iii. 2 



MILFORD-rsfe HAVEN] 
landed at ^lilford, is coldernews..RicAo»d ///. iv. 1 
it is to this same blessed Milford . . Cymbeline, iii. 2 
accessible is none but Milford way .. — iii. 2 
give thee opportunities at Milford — iii. 4 (letter) 

my revenge is now at Milford — iii. 5 

to Slilford go, and find not her — iii. 5 

Milford, when from the mountain top — iii. 6 

he embarked at Milford — iii. 6 

on the mountains near to Milford.. .. — v. 5 

M ILITAll 1ST, (that was his All's Well, iv. 3 

JIILITARY— thy lungs military . . Merry Wives, iv. 5 
most military sir, salutation ....Love's L. Lost, v. 1 

is there no military policy All's Well, i. 1 

and military title capital I Henry IV. iii. 2 

in military rules, humours of blood.2He7irt//r. ii. 3 

in the througsof miltary men — iv. 1 

as well as any military man HenryV. iii. 2 

the direction of the military discipline — iii. 2 

MILK— suggestion as a cat laps milk . . Tempest, ii. 1 

item, she can milk (rep.) . . Two Gen. of Verona, iii. 1 

think his mother's milk were TwelflhNighl, i. 5 

skim milk; and sometimes labour. ..l/id. N. Vr. ii. 1 

with hands as pale as milk — v. 1 

honey, and milk, and sugar Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

and milk comes frozen home .... — v. 2 (song) 
have livers white as m\\k\..Mercha7xtof Venice, iii. 2 
a wench that had shed her milk .... All's Well, iv. 3 
the innocent milk in its most .. Winter's I'ale, iii. 2 

but milk my ewes, and weep — iv. 3 

it is too full o' the milk of Macbeth, i. 5 

and take ray milk for gall — i. 5 

to love the babe that milks me — i. 7 

pour the sweet milk of concord — iv. 3 

a dish of skimmed milk with \ Henry IV. ii. 3 

I would, the milk thy mother 1 Henry VI. v. 4 

than there is milk in a male tiger . . Coriolanns, v. 4 

as the maid that milks Antony 4' Cleopatra, iv. 13 

the milk, thou suck'dst from her.. TitusAndron. ii. 3 
lingers, long, small, white as milk. /'er/des,iv.(Gow.) 
vines of France, and milk of Burgundy . . Lear, i. 1 
adversity's sweet milk, philosophy, iiojneo <§-/u(. iii. 3 

1 ike eager droppings into milk Hamlet, i. 5 

MILKED— hands had milked ....As you Like it, ii. 4 
MILKING-TIME.when you a.re..Winier'sTale, iv. 3 
MILK-LIVEllED-milk-livered man! . . Lear, iv. 2 
MILK-MAID-'tis amilk-maid.rHoGcH.o/rw. iii. 1 

a milk-maid, if she be in love Meas. for Meas. i. 3 

MILK-PAPS— for those milk-paps. Timon ofAtli. iv. 3 

MILKSOP-braggarts, Jacks, milksops! Much.ldo.v. 1 

a milksop, one thatnever in his liit.Richard III. v. 3 

MILK-WHITE bosom of thy ..rwoGe/j.o/Fcr. iii. 1 

western flower, before, milk-white ..Mid.N.Dr. ii. 2 

raise aloft the milk-white rose 2HenryVI. i. 1 

to you four milk-white horsea.. Timon of Athens, i. 2 
bull and cow are both milk- white. ri/usvlntfron. v. 1 
MILKY-faiut and milky heart. Timon of Athens, iii. 1 
this milky gentleness, and course of yoiu's.Lear, i. 4 
on the milky head of reverend Priam. . Hamlet, ii. 2 
MILL— more sacks to the mill ! . . Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 
goest to the grange, or mill. Winter's Tale, iv, 3 (song) 

('tis south the city mills,) bring Coiiolanus, i. 10 

more water glideth by the -miil ..TitusAndron. ii. 1 

villages, sheepcotes, and mills Lear, ii. 3 

MILLE-vous donne milleremercimens.Htjoyr. iv.4 

MILLER— a-piece of Yead Miller ..Merry Wives, i. I 

by the mill than wots the miller of.. Titus And. ii. 1 

MILLINER— no milliner can so fit. Winter's T. iv. 3 

was perfumed like a milliner \ Henry IV. i. 3 

MILLION— few in millions can speak.. 2'e;np(?s<, ii. 1 

here's a million of manners TwoGen.of Ver. ii. 1 

millions of false eyes are sX\XQk..Meas.f'jrMeas. iv. 1 
a million fail, confounding oath. Mid. N.'s Dr. Hi. 2 
hindei'ed me of naif a million . . Mer. of Venice, iii. 1 
imokler thee against a million ..TamingofSh. iii. 2 
and millions. Alas, poor (rep.) ..Winter'sTale,iv.i 
a million: thy love is worth irep.)..\ Henry IV. iii. 3 

in little place, a million Henry V. i. (chorus) 

hands clutched as many millions. . Coriolanns, iii. 3 

I fear, millions of mischief JuliusCmsar, iv. 1 

and fertile every wish, a million. Jh(o»!/ 4'Cleo. i. 2 

a million more, now lost — iv. 12 

ladies' flesh at a million a dram Cymbeline, i. 5 

count the turns; once, and a million! — ii. 4 

I would not for a million of gold. TitusAndron. ii. 1 

I remember, pleased not the million . . Hamlet, ii. 2 

let them throw millions of acres on us . . — v. 1 

there's millions now alive, that nightly. 0(/ic«o,iv. 1 

MILL-SIXPENCES-in mill-sixpences. jUmi/»r. i. i 

MILLSTONE— eyes drop millstones. id'c/mcd ///. i. 3 

ay, millstones; as he lessoned us to weep — i. 4 

eves ran o'er. With millstones. . Troilus ff Cress, i. 2 

I\II"LLAVHEEL— as millwheels strike . . Tempest, i. 2 

BIILO— bull-bearing Milo .... Troilus <S- Ci essida, ii. 3 

MIMIC— and forth my mimic comes. /l/«Z.A'. Dr. iii. 2 

MINCE— your head, and mince ..Merry Wives, iii. 1 

I know no ways to mince it in love . . Henry v. v. 2 

and mince it sans remorse .... Timon nf Alliens, iv. 3 

speak to me home, mince not — Antony ^Cleo. i. 2 

that minces virtue, and does shake Lear, iv. 6 

and love doth mince this matter Othrllo, ii. 3 

MINCING— two mincing steps.., Ver. of Venice, iii. 4 
nothing so much asmiucing poetry. IHcfiry/r. iii. 1 

saving your mincing Henry VIII, ii. 3 

mincing with his sword her husband's .Hamlet, ii. 2 

MIND— nave 3'ou a mind to sink? Tempest, i. 1 

this lives in your mind? — i. 2 

the bettering of my mind — i. 2 

for still 'tis beating in my mind — i. 2 

that you bore the mind that I do! .. — ii. 1 

perchance, he will not mind me — ii. 2 

to still my beating mind — iv. 1 

BO his mind cankers — iv. 1 

the affliction of my mind amends .... — v. 1 

do not infest 5'our mind with — v. 1 

to me that brought your mind.ruoGeii.o/rer. i. 1 
as hard to you in telling her mind .. — i. 1 
I'll show my mind according to .... — i. 2 

1 would I knew his mind — i. 2 

you have a month's mind to them .. — i. 2 



MIND-might her mind discnvQV. TwoGen.of Ver. ii. 1 

tliat hath more mind to feed — ii. 4 

complete in feature and in mind .... — ii. 4 

when I call to mind your — iii. 1 

do move a woman's mind — iii. I 

revolt and ch-ange yom* mind — iii. 2 

to call, and know her mind — iv. 3 

he bears an hononralile mind — v. 3 

shapes, than men their minds (rep.) — v. 4 

that is a virtuous mind Merry Wives, i. 1 

his mind is not heroic — i. 3 

1 know Anne's mind (rep.) — i. 4 

'faith, but you do, in my mind — ii. 1 

yon may know one another's mind.. — ii. 2 

either in my mind, or in my means — ii. 2 

of cholers I am, and trempling of mind — iii. 1 

keep in that mind, I'll deser\'e it — iii. 3 

or else I could not be in that mind . . — iii. 3 

knowing my mind, you wtoii" me . . — iii. 4 

to sir John, to know his mina — iv.4 

my mind is heavy, I will give — iv. 6 

otlier sports are tasking of their minds — iv. 6 

and 3'et the guiltiness of my mind .. — v. 5 

thou hast a mind that suits Twelfth Night, i. 2 

I am a fellow o' the strangest mind — i. 3 

tell me your mind — i. 5 

your lord does know my mind — i. 6 

too great a flatterer for my mind .... — i. b 

she bore a mind that envy could not — ii. I 

for thy mind is a very opal 1 — ii. 4 

not black in my mind — iii. 4 

nor admire not in thy mind.. — iii. 4 (cliall.) 

there's no blemish, but the mind.... — iii. 4 

may put you in mind — v. I 

with profits of tlie mind, study.. il/eas. /or if/ens. i. a 

whose minds are dedicate to — ii. 2 

hath he in him such a mind of honour — ii. 4 

and fit his mind to death — ii. 4 

my mind promises with my habit .. — iii. 1 

an unlawful bawd, time out of mind — iv. 2 

to transport him in the mind he is .. — iv. 3 
keep your ladyship still in that minU Much Ado, i. \ 

would the cook were of my mind! .. — i. 3 

to have all things answer my mind.. — ii. 1 

'fore God, and in my mind, very wise — ii. 3 

fit j'our honour to change yom' mind — iii. 2 

policy of mind, ability in means .... — iv. 1 

out of all eyes, tongues, minds — iv. 1 

you know iny mind — v. 1 

hold ray raiud, were she an Ethiop — v. 4 

my mind did lose it Mid. N.'s Dream, i. 1 

Helen, to you our minds we will unfold — i. 1 

not with the eyes, but with the mind — i. 1 

nor hath love's mind of any — i. 1 

nor none, in my mind, now you .... — iii. 2 

voices, and minds, had been incorporate — iii. 2 

and all their minds transfigured so. . — \. \ 

which never laboured in their minds — v. 1 

the mind shall banquet Love's L.Losl, i. 1 

he showed a mounting mind — iv. 1 

being of an old father s mind — iv. 2 

know their minds, Boyet — v. 2 

henceforth my wooing mind shall be — v. 2 

I wish you the peace of mind, most.. — v. 2 

will speak their mind in some — v. 2 

miud is tossing on the ocean .... Mer. of Venice, i. I 

have in mind where we must meet .. — i. 1 

I have a mind presages me such .... — i. 1 

fair terms, and a villain's mind — i. 3 

rouse up a brave mind, says the — ii. 2 

and better, in my mind, not undertook — ii. 4 

I have no mind of feasting forth .... — ii. 5 

never stale in thrifty mind — ii. 5 

a golden mind stoops not to shows .. — ii. 7 

not enter in your mind of love — ii. 8 

unless it be in mind; nor well {rep.) — iii. 2 

my people do already know my mind — iii. 4 

1 have within my mind a thousand.. — iii. 4 

for in my mind you are much — iv. 1 

my mind was never yet more mercenary — iv. 1 

and now, methinks, I have a mind to it — iv. 1 

world was of my father's mind . . As you Lilce it, i. 2 

give me leave to speak my mind .... — ii. 7 

let no face be kept in mind — iii. 2 (verses) 

I am not in the mind but I were .... — iii. 3 

my right Rosalind of this mind .... _ — iv. 1 

by him seal lip thy mind — iv. 3 (letter) 

he was in the mind it was — v. 4 

where an imclean mind carries All's Well, i. 1 

he and his physicians are of a mind — i.3 

an' thy mind stand to it, boy — ii. ! 

say your mind to him: a traitor .... — ii. I 

1 fiave no mind to Isbel, since I .. .. — iii. 2 

of youth light not thy mind — iv. 2 

frame your mind to mirth. 7'ammo- of Shrew, 2 (iud.) 

tell me thy mind: for I have Pisa .. — i. 1 

you do not mind the play — i. 1 (indue.) 

he tells yon flatly what his mind is — i. 2 

my mind presumes, for his own good — i. 2 

to refresh tlie miud of man — iii. 1 

have endured mc say my miud — i^'. 3 

for 'tis the mind that makes — iv. 3 

the moon changes even as 3'our mind — iv. 5 

my mind hath been as big as — v. 2 

give rest to the minds of others .. Winter'sTale, ii. 1 

Hast the ordering of the mind too — ii. 3 

but that the good mind of Camillo . . — iii. 2 

themselves are o' the minds — iv. 3 

does take 3'our mind from feasting .. — iv. 3 

but not take in the mind — iv. 3 

if I had a mind to be honest, I see .. — iv. 3 

I partly know his mind,) to fiud .... — v. 3 
convey unto our feari'iil minds ..Comedy of Err. i. 1 

that change the mind, sonl-killin" .. — i. 2 

his mind? ay, ay, he told his mind .. — ii. 1 

in mind, am not I? (rep.) — ii. 2 

must their master's minds fulfil .... — iv. 1 

in making, worse in mind _...._. — iv. 2 

to find the mind's construction in Macbeih.i. \ 

but a dagger of the mind ; a false — — i i . 1 



MIN 

MIND— balm of hurt mindg, great .... Macbeth, ii. 2 

to that dauntless temper of nis mind. — iii. 1 

have [filed my mind ; for them .... — iii. 1 

torture of the mind to lie in — iii. 2 

full of scorpions is my mind, dear wife I — iii. 2 

no mind, that's honest — iv. 3 

infected minds to their deaf pillows — v. 1 

my mind she has mated — v. 1 

tlie mind I sway by, and the heart . . — v. 3 

minister to a mind diseased — v. 3 

speak my salutation in their minds — v. 7 

your mind is all as youtli?ul KinsJolm,\\\. 4 

had not come into my mind — iv. 2 

the cover of a fairer mind than — Ir. 2 

his siege is now against tlie mind .... — v. 7 

in his physician's mind, to lielp .... Richard II. i. 4 

nay, speak thy mind; and let him .. — il. 1 

with the eyes of heavy mind — ii. 4 

far off from the mind of Bolingbroke — iii. 3 

now Bagot, freely speak thy mind (rep.) — iv. 1 

both in shape and miud transformed — v. 1 

my lord, the mind of Bolingbroke .. — v. 1 

but now I know thy mind — v. 2 

sweet husband, be not of that mind.. — v. 2 

I am not yet of Pei'cy's mind 1 Henry IV. ii. 4 

the earth was not of my mind — iii. 1 

his letters bear his mind, not I — iv. 1 

botli with body and with mind ZllenrylV. i. 1 

grief had wiped it from my mind.... — i. 1 

tis with my mind, as witlr the tide. . — ii. 3 

if captains were of my miud — ii. 4 

siiow a weak mind and an able body — ii. 4 

I'll ne'er bear a base mind — iii. 2 

to diet rank minds, sick of happiness — iv. 1 

care and labour of his mind hath ... . — iv, 4 

heaven put it in tliy miud, to take . . — iv. 4 

to busy giddy minds with foreign.... — iv. 4 

tell us the Daupliiu's miud Henry V. i. 2 

shall you know our mind at full .... — ii. 4 

grapple your minds to sternage .... — iii. (cho.) 
our performance with your mind .. — iii. (cho.) 

of my mind, as touchiug the direction — iii. 2 

I will tell him my mind — iii. 6 

my master's mind. Unfold it — iii. 6 

and when the mind is quickened.... — iv. 1 

to feel otlier men's minds — iv. 1 

a body filled, and vacant mind — iv. 1 

Idotliee wrong to mind thee of it .. — iv. 3 

if our minds be so- Perish the {rep.') — iv, 3 

break thy mind to me in broken .... — v. 2 

in your fair minds let this — v. 2 (chorus) 

and rest your minds in peace! IHLnryVI.i. 1 

meet, and break our minds at large.. — i. 3 

you perceive my mind — ii, 2 

misconstrue the mind of Talbot .... — ii. 3 

tall we to mind, and mark but this. . — iii. 3 

pen and ink, and write my mind. . . . — T. 3 

as humble lowliness of mind — v. 5 

conference that my mind hath had..2Henry K/. i. 1 

Winchester, I know your mind — i. 1 

bears this base and humble mind ... . — i. 2 

but all his mind is bent to holiness.. — i. 3 

base ignoble mind that mounts no . . — ii. 1 

we know your mind at full — ii. 2 

ill can thy noble mind abrook — ii. 4 

respecting what a rancorous mind he — iii. 1 

first been put to speak my miud ... , — iii. 1 

but in my mind, that were no — iii. 1 

shall pej'ceive the commons' mind ., — iii, 1 

the king shall know yoiu' mind .... — iii. 2 

no better sign of a brave mind — iv. 2 

that grief softens the mind — iv. 4 

continue still in this so good a mind — iv. 9 

my mind was troubled with deep .... — v. 1 
why so I am, in mind; and that's.. SHenryry. iii. 1 

other time, to know our mind — iii. 2 

ray mind. My mind will never grant — iii. 2 

but let thy dauntless mind still ride — iii. 3 

1 mind to tell him plainly what .... — iv. 1 

I shortly mind to leave you — iv. 1 

belike, she minds to play the — iv. 1 

but if you mind to hold your true..., — iv. 1 

my mmd exceeds the compass (,rep-) — iv. 3 

and fearless minds climb soonest unto — iv. 7 

my mind presageth happy gain — v. 1 

always haunts the guilty mind — v. 6 

let hell make crooked my mind — v. B 

provoked by thy bloody mind Richard III. i. 2 

let me put in your minds, if you .... — i. 3 

take the devil in thy mind _ i. 4 

grace to put it in my mind — ii. 1 

men's minds mistrust ensuing danger — ii. 3 

you shall o'errule my mind for once — iii. 1 

William lord Hastings of our mind.. — iii. 1 

your lordship in that gracious mind! — iii. 2 

the men you talk of came into my mind — iii. 2 

knows the lord protector's mind herein? — iii. 4 

should soonest know his mind — iii. 4 

in your form and nobleness of mind — iii. 7 

his haughty mind [Co/. Knt.-spir\\^ .. — iv. 2 

I have considered in my mind the late — iv. 2 

to put your grace in mind of what . . — iv. 2 

quoth Forrest, almost changed my mind — iv. 3 

shall understand from me her mind — iv. 4 

my mind is changed; Stanley — iv. 4 

will resolve him of my mind. Farewell — iv. 5 

nor cheer of mind, that I was wont.. — v. 3 

his mind and place infecting HenryVIII. i. 1 

the mind growing once corrupt — i. 2 

bears a bounteous mind indeed — i. 3 

you bear a gentle mind, and heavenly — ii. 3 

sir, call to mind that 1 have been.... — ii. 4 

and complete in mind and feature . . — iii. 2 

there is a mutiny in his mind — iii. 2 

your best graces in your mind — iii. 2 

shown at full their royal minds — iv. I 

to speak my mind of nim — v. 1 

my mind's not on't, you are too — v. 1 

what ease might corrupt minds procure — v. 1 

my mind gave me, in seeking — v.2 



[ 507 ] 



MIN 



MIND— and the minds of all . . Troilus <§• Cretsida, i. 3 

deject the courage of our minds — ii. 2 

and that great minds, of partial — ii. 2 

your mind's the clearer, Aj ax — ii. 3 

an' all men were o' my mind — ii. 3 

with a mind that doth — iii. 2 

appear it to your mind, that — iii. 3 

you know my mind, I'll fight — iii. 3 

my mind is troubled, like — iii. 3 

'would the fountain of your mind were — iii. 3 

that's my mind too: good-morrow ,. — iv. 1 

and let your mind be coupled with.. — v.2 

of our eye directs our mind — v.2 

then conclude, minds swayed — v. 2 

my mind is now turned whore — v. 2 

bastard in miud, bastard in valour .. — v. 8 
how all minds, (as well of gl^b.. Timon of Athens, i. 1 

the noblest mind he carries — i. 1 

ne'er be wretched for his mind — i. 2 

never mind was to be so unwise .... — ii. 2 

for his right noble mind, illustrious — iii. 2 

but for my mind's sake — iii. 3 

creep in the minds and marrows of .. — iv. 1 

I'll ever serve his mind with — iv. 2 

greases his pure mind, that from .... — iv. 3 

were obedient, and knew ray mind! — iv. 3 

noblest minds to basest ends! — iv. 3 

duty and zeal to your unmatched mind — iv. 3 
every minute you do change a mind.Coriolamts, i. 1 

where they shall know our mind ... . — _i. 5 

your minds pre-occupied with — ii. 3 

by Jove, 'twould be my mind (rep.) — iii. 1 

teach ray mind a most inherent .... — iii. 2 

yet my mind gave me, hisclothes.... — iv. 5 

will you be put iu miud of his : — v. 5 

your mind hold, and your dinner ..JutiusCasar, i. 2 

tis meet that noble minds keep ever — i. 2 

some sick offence within your mind — ii. 1 

not come, their minds ma.y change . . — ii. 2 

there is but one mind in all — ii. 3 (paper) 

1 have a man's miud, but — li. 4 

but yet have I a mind, that fears.... — iii. 1 

your hearts and minds to mutiny. ... — iii. 2 

nave mind upon your health — iv. 3 

now I change my mind, and partly, . — v. 1 

he bears too great a mind — v. 1 

I have a mind to strike thee .... Antony ff Cleo. ii. 5 

bear'st thou her face in mind? — iii. 3 

what cost your heart has mind to ... . — iii. 4 
which sorrow shoots out of the mind — _ iv. 2 

less noble mind than she — iv. 12 

as the fits and stirs of his mind could. Cymbeline, i. 4 

holds her virtue still, and I my mind — i. 5 

furnished with a mind so rare — i. 7 

and to expound his beastly mind to us — i. 7 

that temple, thy fair mind — ii. 1 

thy mind to her is now as low — iii. 2 

what is in thy mind, that makes .... — iii. 4 

if you could wear a mind dark as.... — iii. 4 

nor measure our good minds by this — iii. 6 

I had no mind to hunt this day — iv. 2 

all of one mind, and one mind good.. — v. 4 

and then a mind put in't — v. 5 

to men of noble minds Titus Andronicus,i. 2 

write down thy mind, bewray thy . . — ii. 5 

rail at him to ease my mind 1 — ii. 6 

in a tedious sampler sewed her mind — ii. 5 

and arm the minds of infants — iv. 1 

tell on thy mind; I say thy child .... — v. 1 

that bloody mind, I think — v. 1 

the gnawing vulture of thy mind — v. 2 

since 'tis my father's mind, that I.... — v. 3 
and our mind partakes her private .... Pericles, i. 1 

the passions of the mind, that have .... — i. 2 

and keep your mind, till you — i. 2 

musings into my mind, a thousand .... — i. 2 

good king Simonides were of my miud — ii. 1 
now to Marina bend your mind — iv. (Gower) 

bear you it in mind — iv. 4 (Gower) 

brought hither a corrupted mind — iv. 6 

my mind as generous, and my shape Lear, i. 2 

whose mind and mine, 1 know — i. 3 

an honest mind and pl.ain — ii. 2 

commands the mind to suffer — ii. 4 

when the mind's free, the body's (rep.).. — iii. 4 

proud in heart and mind — iii. 4 

suffers most i' the mind — iii. G 

but then the mind much sufferance — iii. 6 

into my mind; and yet m.y miud was.... — iv. 1 

these things sting his mind — iv. 3 

to know our enemies' minds — iv. 6 

I fear, I am not in my perfect mind — iv. 7 

a troubled mind drave me to.. ..Rovieo ^Juliet, i. 1 

put us in mind they hide the fair .... — i. 1 

out of mind the fairies' coachmakers — i. 4 

for my mind misgives, some — i. 4 

guilty deeds to sinners' minds — iii. 2 

and know her mind early to-morrow — iii. 4 

you do not know the lady's mind .. — iv. 1 
doleful dumps the mind oppress . . — iv. 5 (song) 

if his mind be writ, give me his letter. ... — v.2 
a mote it is, to trouble the mind's eye ..Hamlet, i. 1 

a heart unfortified, or mind impatient ., — i. 2 

in my mind's eye, Horatio — i. 2 

the inward service of the mind and soul — i. 3 

but to my mind,— though I am native .. — i. 4 

taint not thy mind, nor let thy — i. 5 

the flash and outbreak of a fiery mind .. — ii. 1 

'tis too narrow for your mind — ii. 2 

the lady shall say her mind freely — ii. 2 

whether 'tis nobler in the mind, to suffer — iii. 1 

for, to the noble mind, rich gifts — iii. 1 

what a noble raind is here o'erthrownl — iii. 1 
the strength and.armour of the mind. . . . — iii. 3 

conjectures in ill-breeding minds — iv. 5 

if your mind dislike anything — v.2 

even while men's minds are wild — v.2 

trust not your daughters' minds Othello, i. 1 

1 saw Othello's visage in his mind — i. 3 

to be free and bounteous to her mind .... — i. 3 



MIND and ne'er disclose her mind . . Othello, ii. 1 

that folly and green minds look after.... — ii. 1 

the general were put in mind of it — ii. 3 

farewell the tranquil mind! farewell. . . . — iii. 3 

your raind, perhaps, may change — iii. 3 

but my noble Moor is true of mind — iii. 4 

that handkerchief: my mind misgives.. — iii. 4 
keep that monster from Othello's mind! — iii. 4 

beauty unprovide my mind again — iv. 1 

good father! how foolish are our minds! — iv. 3 
song to night will not go from my mind — iv. 3 

MINDED— were I so minded Tempest, v. 1 

peremptory as she proud mi-n&ed. .Taming of tih. ii. 1 
that have ininded you of what .. ll'inter'sTale, iii. 2 

how you stand minded in Henry Fill. iii. 1 

so rnany, so minded, wave llius Coriolanus,i. 6 

I minded him, how royal 'twas — v. 1 

one minded like the weather Lear, iii. 1 

too much minded by herself Homco frJulici, iv. 1 

MINDING to content you.. A/id. jV.'s Dr. V. 1 (prol.) 

minding true things Henry V. iv. (chorus) 

most high gods not minding longer ....Pericles, ii. 4 
not minding whether I dislike or no! .... — ii. 5 

MINDLESS— a mindless slave Winler'sTale, i. 2 

mindless of thy worth Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

MINE— mines my gentilit.y with ray. As youLike it, i. 1 
not wed her for a mine of gold. Taming of Shrew, i. 2 

as bountiful as mines of India \ Henry 1 1', iii. 1 

come presently to the mines (lep.}.... Henry V. iii. 2 

the mines is not according to — iii. 2 

have you quit the mines? — iii. 2 

showed like a mine Henry Fill. i. 1 

a heart dearer than Plutus' mine.. .TuliusCcesar, iv. 3 
O Antony, thou mine of bounty .Antony <§- Cleo. iv. 

bm-n like the mines of sulphur Othello, iii. 3 

hushed within the hollow mine of earth . . — iv. 2 

MINERAL— a mortal mineral Cymbeline, v. fi 

among a mineral of metals base Hamlet, iv. 1 

with drugs, or minerals, that waken Otitello, i. 2 

like a poisonous mineral, gnaw my inwards — ii. 1 

MIN EKVA— hear Minerva speak .. 7'a?n!ng-n/SA. i. 1 
of Venus, or etraight-pight Minerva. Ci/)nf/fi/7ie, v. .5 

MINGLE— to mingle friendship far. \V inter' sTale, i. 2 

to mingle faith with him — iv. 3 

ourself will mingle with society Macbeth, iii. 4 

mingle, mingle, mingle, you (rep.) — iv. 1 (song) 
and mingle with- the English epicures. . . . — v. 3 
where it shall mingle with the state. .2H'enrv/r. v. 2 
where senators shall mingle tears. . . . Coriolanus, i. 9 

heavenly mingle! be'st thou ..Antony erCleo. i. 5 

would you mingle eyes with one — iii. 1 1 

do something mingle with our brown — iv. 8 

make mingle with our rattling — iv. 8 

both, mingle their spurs together ..Cymbeline, iv. 2 

we'll mingle bloods together in Pericles , i. 2 

those that mingle reason with your Lear, ii. 4 

MINGLED with your love . . Merchant of Venice, iii. 2 

red, and mingled damask As you Like H, iii. 5 

web of our life is of a mingled yarn . . AWs Well, iv. 3 
blood is mingled with the crime.. Comedj/ of Err. ii. 2 

part your mingled colours King John, ii. 2 

mingled his royalty with 1 Henry 1 V. iii. 2 

blood, mingled with venom of illenrylV. iv. 4 

a quagmire of your mingled brains . . 1 Henry VI. i. 4 

in her are so mingled Henry VIII. ii. 3 

her fortunes mingled with thine. Antony ^ Cleo. iv._ 12 
have mingled sums, to buy a present . Cymfeeime, i. 7 

(now mingled with their courages) — il. 4 

when it is mingled with respects Lear, i. 1 

take up this mingled matter at the best . . Othello, i. 3 
MINGLING— is mingling bloods .. Winter' sTale, i. 2 

by mingling them with us Coriolanus, iii. I 

MINIKIN— thy minikin mouth . . Lear, iii. 6 (song) 
MINIM — his minim rest, one, two. Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 4 
MINIME-Minime, honest master.. Lore's L. Lost, iii. 1 
MINIMO—quamqueasminimo. laming- o/S/ireir, i. 1 
M INIMTJS, of hindering knot-grass.. Mid.N. Dr. i i i . 2 

MINION, thou liest Taming of Shrew, iii. I 

Mars' hot minion is returned again . . Tempest, iv. 1 

how now, minion! TwoCen. of Verona, i. 2 

you, minion, are too saucy — i. 2 

but this your minion TmelfthNight, v. 1 

must do his minions grace.... Comedj/ o/' Errors, ii. 1 

do you hear, you minion? — iii. 1 

you'll cry for this, minion — iii. I 

you minion, you, are these — iv. ■) 

like valour's minion, carved out Macbeth, i. 2 

the minions of their race — ii. 4 

out of one side her happy minion ,, King John ii. 2 

who is sweet fortune's rainion MIenrylV. i. I 

minions of the moon — i.2 

'mongst her minions t'other day ....2HenryVI. i. 3 

what, minion! can j'ou not? — i. 3 

go rate thy minions SHenry t'l. ii. 2 

IS this the Athenian minion .. TimonofAthms, iv. .3 
the exile of her minion is too new . . Cymbelme, ii. 3 
minion stood upon her chastity . . Titus Andmn. ii. :! 
mistress minion, you, thank mG.Romeo6r Juliet, iii. j 

minion, yoiu* dear lies dead Othrll'/, v. 1 

MINISTER- ministers for the purpose.. re»ipcs(, i. -J 
by help of her more potent ministers .... — i.2 
to minister occasion to these gentlemen — ii. 1 

1 and my fellows are ministers of fate .. — iii. 3 
my fellow ministers are like invulnerable — iii. 3 

my meaner ministers their several — iii. 3 

I must minister the like to ^ou. Two Gen. ofVer. ii.4 
we two will still be the ministers. .il/errv»r/res, iv. 2 
and minister occasion to him .... Twelfth Night, i. 5 

send ministers to rae, asses — iv. 2 

the minister is here — iv. 2 

than we do minister to our po^s. Meas.forMeas. ii. 2 
that I may minister to them accordingly — ii. 3 

as cause doth minister — iv. 5 

you blessed ministers above — v. 1 

how sweetly do you minister tolove..itf«cA.,4(fo, i. I 

if you three will but minister — ii. i 

does them by the weakest minister ..All's Well, ii. 1 

that ministers thine own death — ii. 1 

and debile minister ii. 3 

durst not tempt a minister of .... IVnter's Talc, ii. 2 



MIN 



MIXISTER— for the minister fTintfr's Talt. iii. 2 

Tou murjering miiiL-ters Hacbelh., i. 5 

canst thou UvH rainister to a niind — v. s 

the p&tient must minister to himself .... — v. 3 

cruel ministers of this dead butcher — r. " 

an angry arm against his minister . . Rkharti II. i. 2 

minister correctTon to thy fault — ii. 3 

lordship may minister the potion. ., .iHrnryir. i. i 

master Dumb, our minister — U. -t 

ibul accursed minister of hell! \Bf:iryri. v. i 

overjoy of heart doth minister iHenryFl. 1. 1 

for a minister of mv intent — iii. 1 

heavens do make their minister — v. 2 

thou dreadful m i uister of hell ! RirMni III. i. 2 

their ministers attend on him — i. 3 

a bloody minister — i. 1 

make us thy ministers of chastisement — v. 3 
but minister conununication of ... . Benry nil, i. I 

wants not a minister in his power — i. 1 

vour Master, whose minister you are — v. 1 

with the ministers Troilns * Crvssida, (prol.) 

nnaptness made your minister.. Timon ij/lliAtfiit, ii. 2 

and minister in their steads! — iv. I 

did ministex unto the appetite CoriolaHus, i. 1 

but on the ministers that do — iii. 3 

make them ministers of vis.. Antony^ CXeopaIra, iii. 6 
whose ministers would prevail under — iii. 11 
not by a public minister of justice .. — v. 1 
fortune's Kna>"e, a minister of her will — v. 2 
to him the other two shall minister. Cynoei'if, iii. 3 

or hath more ministers than we — v. 3 

ministers, and come with me? {.rep.") Titus And. v. 2 
take my ministers aloni; with me.... — v. 2 
but yet' I call you servile ministers .... Lear, iii. 2 
angels and niiuisters of srace defend us! Hainiet, i. 4 
time shall more favourably minister . . Othello, ii. 1 
if I quench thee, thou damins minister.. — t. 2 
MIXIsTEKED to have me dead.fiornM ^Juivf, iv. 3 
with full and holy rite be ministered.. Tempest, iv. 1 

wanting may be ministered As you Like it, ii. 7 

as we do air, fast as 'twas ministered. CVi«iw/i«tf, i. 1 

there's nothing can be ministered to . . Ptrieles, iii. 2 

M EXIST E R IX& ansrel shall mv sister be. Hamlet, t. 1 

MIXISTER'STa potion unto me PerieUs,\. 2 

MIXISTRATIOX and required office.. JU'iH'fU, ii. 5 

illXXOW of thy mirth Lore'sL. Lost. i. 1 (letterl 

this Triton of the minnows! Cvrioianus, iii. 1 

MIXOLA-[wf BATTISTAJ 
her name is Kathariiia Minola . . Taming of Sh.i.i 
the narrow-prvini: father, Minola ... — iii. 2 

MIXORITT of the"m both All's frell, iv. 5 

present Hercules in minority .... Lore's L. Lost, v. 1 

quouiam. he seemetli in his'minority — v. 2 

his minority is put unto the trust ..RicAard III. i. 3 

MtXOS— father, Minos, that denied . .3 Hem-y y I. v. 6 

MIXOTArRS, and uslv treasons IHenryTI. v. 3 

MIXSTKEL— as we do 'the minstrels ...VucA Ado. v. 1 

tush, none but nimstrels Lore's LLosl, iv. 3 

hark! I hear the minstrels play.. Tamin^ofSh. iii. 2 

make us minstrels? {.rep.} Romeo ^Juliet, iii. 1 

I will sive vou the minstrel — iv. o 

MIXSTRELSY, and pretty din, PfnV/fS. t. 2 (Gower) 

I will use him tor my minstrelsy.. ierf'sl. Los;, i. I 

and braved with minstrelsv ..Timon of Athens, ii. 2 

MIXT— dre-new from the mint ..Tu-etnh Sight, iii. 2 

that hath a mint of phrases in Lore's L.Lost, i. I 

that mint. That columbine — v. 2 

hot lavender, mints, savory .... Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

gall ciins slanders like a inint . . Troilus 6r Cress, i. 3 

MIXUTE— the very minute bids thee ..Tempest^ i. 2 

minute of their plot is almost come.. — it. I 

to steal at a minute's rest Merry Wires, i. 3 

hours too soon than a minute too late — ii. 2 

the minute draws on — v. 5 

even in a minute! TtcelJVi Xi^fii, i. 1 

no interim, not n minute's vacancy . . — v. 1 
about the earth in forty minutes. ..Vid..V.'i Dr. ii. 2 
for the third part of a minute, hence — ii. 3 
I do repent the tedious minutes .... — ii. 3 

or spend a -uinute's time in Lore's L. Lost, iv. 3 

now, at the latest minute of the .... — v. 2 

else sighing every minute .4s you Like it, iii. 2 

will divide a minute into a thousand — iv. 1 
thousandth part of a minute in the . . — iv. I 
come one mmute behind your hour — iv. 1 

knew the true minute when All's Well, i. 2 

told the thievish minutes how they pass — ii. I 
hours, minutes? noon, midnight?.. Winter'sTale. i. 2 
every minute of his being thrusts.. ..Afacfce/A, iii. 1 

each' minute teems a new" one — iv. 3 

one minute, nay. on quiet breath .. King John, iii. 4 
like the watchftd minutes to the hour — iv. I 
but not a minute, king, that thou ..Richard II. i. 3 

my thoughts are minutes — t. 5 

show miiiutes, times, and hours .... — v. 5 

of sack, and minutes capons IHenryir. i. 2 

every minute now should be IHenryir. i. 1 

examples of every minute's instance — iv. 1 

and tnink it but a minute spent iBenryn. iii. 2 

to see the minutes how they run . .ZBenry n. ii. 5 
so many minutes, hours, days, weeks — ii. 5 

his hour of speech a minute Henry nil. i. 2 

fed liim every minute with words .. — i. 2 
with every rriinute you do change ..Coriolanus, i. 1 
there's not a minute of our lives. .-liifony 4'Cl^o. i. 1 
which he achieved by the minute . . — iii. 1 
throes forth, each minute, some .. .. — iii. 7 

one lice, but of a minute old Cymbeline, ii. 5 

should by the minute feed on life .. — v. 5 
each minute threatens life or death. . . . Pericles, i. 3 

trouble, for a minute's ease — ii. 4 

the verv minute I was bom — v. 1 

who did end the minute I began — v. 1 

will speak more in a minute.". ..Romeo S- Juliet, ii. 4 
that one short minute gives me .... — ii. 6 
in a miniite there are rnany days .... — iii. 5 

some minute ere the time of her — v. 3 

the perfume and suppliance of a minute. HainZ«f , i. 3 

for every minute is expectancy OtheUo.ii. 1 

what damned minutes tells he o'er — iii. 3 



[ 508 ] 



MIS 



MIXITE-JACKS! Of man ..Timon<ir Mhens,\i\.6 

MIXl'TELY revolts upbraid his .Macbeth, v. 2 

MIXIXE-WUILE. and if 1 did but.l Henry ri. i. 4 

MIX'X— my pravers, miiuc! Ticeinh Si^-M, iii. 4 

damn her. lewd minx ! Othello, iii. 3 

this is some minx's token — iv. 1 

MIR ABLE— so mirable Troilus ^^Crrssida, iv. 5 

MIRACLE— but for the miracle Tempest, ii. 1 

a most high miracle ! — v. I 

a miracler to 'scaj* suffocation . . .Merry Wires, iii. 5 
but 'tis that miracle, and queen.. TtcelnhSigiii, ii. 4 
a miracle! here's our own hands. . . . Much .4Jo, v. 4 
works a miracle in itature . . .Vereh. cif t'eniee, iii. 2 

when miracles have by All's Well, ii. 1 

they say, miracles are past — ii. 3 

love wrought these miracles .... Taming <i/'S*.t. I 
this, almost a miracle, be done?.. Winter s Tale, iv. 3 
think, you are come by miracle. Comftiyo/£rr. v. 1 

or a wondrous miracle KingJohn, ii. 2 

I have 'scaped by miracle \Bmry ll'.ii. 4 

miracle of men! iBenrylt'. ii, 3 

for miracles are ceased Henry f\ i. 1 

nature's miracle, thou art allotted.. lUniryl"/, v. S 
to work exceeding miracles on earth — T. 4 

the greatest miracle that e'er — v. 4 

miracle dost thou proclaim (rep.") ..iBenryt'I. ii. 1 
St. Alban here hatn done a miracle.. — ii. 1 
Himiphrey has doue a miracle to-day — ii. 1 
you have done more miracles tlian I — ii. 1 

1 would laugh at that miracle. . Troilus SCress. v. 4 

doth miracle itself Cynitielinc, iv. 2 

besides the gods, for this great miracle. Perirles, v. 3 
reason without miracle could never plant. L<far, i. 1 
nothing almost sees miracles, but misery — ii. 2 
thv life's a miracle: speak vet again — iv. 6 

MUftACULOrS harp T Tempest. Vi. 1 

a most miraculous work in this good.Macbeih, iv. 3 

MIRAXDA— and more. Miranda Tempest, i. 2 

twelve years since. Miranda — i. 2 

Miranda:— O my father — iii. 1 

admired Miranda ! indeed the top ... . — iii. 1 
in my condition, a prince, Miranda .. — iii. 1 

MIRE— pitch me i' the mire Tempest,ii. 2 

in a slough of mire Merry Wires, i v. 5 

till it leave the rider in the mire. lord's Z.. Los,', ii. 1 
great pails of puddled mire . . Comedy cf Errors, v. 1 

ne'er left man i' the mire Timoti oj'.ithens, i. 2 

till a horse may mire upon — iv. 3 

cast mil* upon me, set the dogs .... Cym'oeline, v. 5 

set our horses? i' the mire iear, ii. 2 

we'll draw thee from the mire ..Romeo ^Juliet, i. 4 

MIKED with infamy MuchAdo,i\: 1 

MIRKOR-to me a inirror Wi,Uer's Tale, i. 2 

command a mirror hither straight..J?iG'i«rd II. iv. 1 

the mirror of all christian Henry I', ii. (chorus) 

how farest t'nou, mirror of all 1 Henry II. i. 4 

wisdom was a mirror to the wisest,.3 Henry »V. iii. 3 

two mirrors of his princely Richardlll. ii. 2 

the mirror of all courtesy Henry Till. ii. 1 

that you have no such mirrors.... ./u/ms Ct^sar, i. 2 
such a spacious mirror's set.Aiilony i-CteopaIra, v. 1 
should be like a mirror, who tells us . . Pericles, i. 1 
as 'twere, the mirror up to nature , . . . Hamlet, iii. 2 

his serablable is his mirror — v. 2 

MIRTH- moment's mirth . . Ttr o Gen. of Verona, i. 1 

triumphs, mirtli, and rare — v. 4 

I was theu frugal of mv mirtl\ ..Merry Wires, ii. 1 

she enlargeth her mirtli so far — ii. 2 

themirtli^whereof so larded with — iv. 6 

mirth hath present laughter. Tirelfth N. ii. 3 (song) 
my mirth it much dispreased..J(/«M. for. Unu. iv. 1 

I was born to speak ail mirth Much Ado, ii. 1 

he is all mirth; he hath twice — iii. 2 

the pert and nimble spirit of mirth. Afid..V.'sDr. i. 1 
and waxen in their mirth, and neeze — ii. 1 
the lovers, full of joy and mirth .... — v. 1 
where is our usual irianager of mirth? — t. 1 
tragical mirth. Merry and tragical.. — v. I 
that base minnow of thy mirtfi . . Lore's L. Lost, i. 1 
within the limit of becoming mirth — ii. 1 
and sudden breaking out of mirth .. — v. 1 

and mirth is in his tace — v. 2 

makes most form in mirth — v. 2 

mirth cannot move a soul in aeony — v. 2 
with mirth and laushter let old. . Mer.o/Tenice. i. I 

your boldest suit ofmirth — ii. 2 

I show more mirth than I am,.... 4$ you Like it, i. 2 
then is there mirth in heaven.. — v. 4 (verse) 
frame yoiu- mind to mirth.. Taming o/5A. 2 (indue.) 

my exercise, my mirth 'Winter'sTale, i. 2 

darken not the "mirth o' the feast. ... — iv. 3 

and let's be red with mirth — iv. 3 

of mirth, mean to\>etueiTy....ComedyofErr. iii. 1 

be large in mirth Macbeth, iii. 4 

you have displaced the mirth — iii. 4 

of blood, of mirth, of gossiping KingJohn. v. 2 

his blood inclined to mirth iHenry ir. iv. 4 

or of mirth, or anger Henry t'. ii. 2 

pardon the frankness of my mirth ,. — v. 2 

replete with mirth and joy \ Henry V I, i. 6 

thy mirth shall turn to moan . — ii. 3 

make yourself mirth with yom- Henry fill. ii. 3 

is like that mirth fate turns to . . Troilus 4 Cress, i. 1 
must be the scene of mirth; to cough.. — i. 3 
will but disease our better mirth. . . . Coriolanus, i. 3 

I wish you much mirth — i. 3 

I'll use you for my mirth JiiKusCirsar, iv. 3 

to be hut mirth and laughter to his. . — iv. 3 

he was disposed to mirth intony <S- Cleopatra, i. 2 

if in mirth, report that I am sudden „ — i. 3 

to give a kingdom for a mirth — i. 4 

is he disposed to mirth: I hope, he is. Cymbeline, i. 7 

as the procuring of mirth — v. 4 

how well this honest mirth becomes ..Pericles, ii. 1 
for mirth, for mirth becomes a feast. ... — ii. 3 
with mirth in funeral, and witli dirge ..Bamte'. i. 2 

lost all mv mirth, forgone all custom — ii. 2 

MIRTHrd.r— mirthful comic shows.3Henr!/r/. v. 7 

MIRTH-MOVIXG jest Love's L. Lost, ii. 1 

MIRY— in how miry a place .. Taming of Shreu; iv. 1 



MIRY— mirv slime left on them.. Titus.inJron. iii. I 
MISADVENTURE. Tush! Romeo JiJuliel, v. 1 

what niis:»dveiiture is so earlv up — v. 3 

MISAOVEXTl'RED piteous "o>-er[hrows — (prol.) 
MISAXTHROIVS. and hate .. Timon of .ilhens, iv. 3 
MlS.\.rri.l£D-l*ing misapplied. RomroriJiihrt, ii. 3 
MISBECAME— misGecamc my place.2Hriiry//". v. i 
MISBECO.ME— may not misbecome ..UtHryl'. ii. 4 
M IS BECOMED-misbecomed our oaths. Lore'sL. Uv.i 
MISBEa(.>T-is valoiu- misbesot. Timon of.ilhrns, iii. 5 
MISBEGOTTEX devU ....T. KixgJohn.v.i 

free frvmi other misbegotten hate Richard Il.i. I 

I three misbegotten knaves, in Kendal.l HenryW. ii. 4 

misK^cotteii blood I spill of thine..! Hmry ry. iv. 6 
MISBEllAVED and sullen wench.. Ro»i«. /f-JuLiii. 3 
JIISBELIEVER, cut-throat doa .. Mer. of renice, i. 3 

MISBELIEVIXG Moor .'Tilus.indronicus, v. 3 

MISCALI when I miscall it so Richard II. i. 3 

thou dost miscall retire Troilus^ Cressida, v. 

MlSCARRIED-miscarried at seaJ.Veas.for.Veas. iii. 

of prv">gression, hath miscarried ..Lore sL.Lost, iv. 

there miscarried a vessel of our. . Mer.of Venice, ii. 

my ships have all miscarried .... — iii. 2 (^letter! 

husband's ring, had quite miscarried — v. 
I since miscarried xmder Bolingbroke.2 Henry I V. i v. 
' have miscarried by nuderhaiTd .... Richard III. v. 
I letter to the pope miscarried Henry nil. iii. 

our sister's man is certainly miscarried . . l^jr, v. 

' in this miscarried bv mv fault . . Romeo A- Juliet, v. 

MISCARRIES— for what miscarries. . Coriolanus. i, 

MISCARRY— have him miscarry. Turelflh Sight, iii. 

if horns that year miscarry Lore'sL. Lost, iv. 

i if they miscarry, we miscarry too . . King John, v. 

if they miscarry, theirs shall iHenr^If. iv. 

an' the child I now go with, do miscarry — v. 

the fruit of her womb miscarry ! — v. 

do sinfully miscarry upon the sea Henry F. iv. 

if he miscarry, farewell wars IBenry'ri.iv. 

I thousand base-born Cades miscaxry.2Hfni-y 'V. iv. 
I so it must be, if the king miscarry. . Richard Ill.i. 
'■ if you miscarry, your business of the lenr, v. 

be near at hand ;"l mav miscarrv iu't . . Othello, v. 

MISCARR YIXG, what heart Troilus^Cress. i, 

MISCHAXCE— mischance of the h.o\a.. Tempest, i. 

shall hood-wink this mischance, — iv. 

! some foul miscliauce torment me. riroGc«.o/»>r,ii. 

a thousand nwre mischances tlian — v. 

unkindness, than pity for mischance!. j.Vac6<r/A, iii. 

nimble mischance, tiat art so RichatilH. iii. 

glad he met with some mischance 1 Henry 1 1', i. 

the devil and misehauce look big upon — iv, 

full of bad misdiauce, France is , . . . 1 Benry n. i. 
j scorn, and subject of mischance? .... — iv. 6 
I mischance unto my state by iHenry I'l. iii. S 

mischance, and sorrow, go along "with — iii. 2 

but now mischance hath trod SHenryn. iii. 3 

in triumph over all miscliance — iii, 3 

till Edward fall by war's mischance — iii. S 
I in despite of all mischance, of thee .. — iv. 3 

and queen of sad mischance Richard III. iv. 4 

he never can meet more miscliance.. Cyin6W*Mf, ii. 3 

let mischance be slave to patience. .Boi.iro a- Jul. v. a 

never come mischance between us Hamlet, iii. 2 

] lest more mischance, on plots, and errors — v. 3 

'tis some mischance; the cry is \eTy....OlkeUo, v. 1 
MISCHIEF— for mischiefs manifold Temptst.i. a 

best is boded me, to mischief! — iii. I 

do that good mischief, which may . . — iv. 1 

extremity, rather than a mischief. .Uerri/ WJres, iv. 2 
I ray thoughts are ripe in mischief. rirWnn.YiyAf, v. 1 

medicine to a mortifyin" mischief .... J/ucAJdo, i. 3 

any model to build mischief on? .... — i. 3 

his bad voice bode no mischief! — ii. 3 

I O mischief strangely thwarting! .... — iii. 2 
I but I shall do thee mischief. . . . Mid.X.'sDream, ii. 2 

the field, you do me mischief — ii. 2 

mischief, and bretik a foul ga^ . . Winter's Tate, iv. 3 

you wait on nature's mischief Macbeth, i. 5 

the sky, and pours down mischief . . King John, iii. 3 

of broached mischief to the unborn..! Henri// r. v. 
I a' cares not what mischief he doth. .2iffnry/r. ii. 
; alack, what mischiefs mi"ht he set .. — iv. 
: fuccessof mischief shall be born .... — iv. 
' into a second course of misoliief Betiry r. i v. 

some sudden mischief may arise — iv. 

this sudden mischief never could.... lH«iivri. ii. 

see what mischief, and what murder — iii. 

wrought this hellish misdiicftmawaies — iii. 

a plaguing mischief light on — v. 

till inischref, and despair, drive you.. — v. 

mischiefs work the wicked ones ....zHenryfl. ii. 

hales them to a hundred mischiefs .. — iv. i 

my heart's on future mischief set.... — v. 

secret mischiefs that I set abroach.. fiiWinrd ///. i. ; 

and. as prone to mischief, as able . . Henry Till. i. 

there's mischief in this man — i. 

Hopkins, that made this niiscliief. ... — * ii. 

look they glory not in mischief. — ii. 

foreseeing those fell mischiefs — r. 

those thai woidd miscliief me.. Timon <ir Athens, iv. 

Volsccs, great hurt axid mischief . . Coriolanus. iv. 

should do vour age some mischief. JuliusCtesar, iii. 

Mischief, t"hou aft afoot, take thou .. — iii. 

I fear, millions of mischief — iv. 

all these mischiefs he returned ..TitusAndron. iii. 

complots of mischief, treason — v. 

r.o stroke of mischief in it? — v. 

[Co/. An/.] and seen with mischief's eyes.Pericles, i. 

that with the mischief of your person ....L*or,i. 

to see some mischief on him — iii. 

ere they have done their mischief. — iv. 

mischief! thou art swift to eutci. Romeo ^Juliel.v. 

micliing mallecho; it means mischief.. Hom/f/, iii. 

a miselnef that is past and cone (rep.) ..Othello, i. 
MISCHIETOUS foul sin. in eluding. Jiyow Like, ii. 

as his kind, sirow mischievous luliusCi^sar, ii. 

MISCOXCEIVED! Joan of Arc hath.XHenryVI. v. 
MISCOXSTKUCTIOX- 

strike at me. upon his misconstruction . . Lear, ii, 8 
MISCOXSTRUE— misconstrues aU. .4s you LOvi/ i. 2 



MIS 



MISCONSTlinK— m;sconetruc[K>i(.-mi3con>!tcr] 

the niimlol' Talbot \ Henri/ 11. ii. 3 

miiv niisi'nnstriie ns in liim liiclinrd III. Hi. & 

MISCONSTRlllOl) in tliu pliiccMcr. o/;Vn/<-c, ii. 2 
niiHciiiistniuil in liis wantonnesB . . . .\ llcnrij W . v. i 
Imst niiMumatruoil evcr.v tliiiic ....JuliusCicmr, v. 3 

MIMCKIO ANT— and a iniscreant Richard //. i. 1 

wull, nii«:rcant, I'll be there \ Henry VI. iii. 4 

curse, miseieant, wlien thou comCBt.. — v. 3 

I) vassal I misereantl [t'o(.-rcercant] Lear, i. 1 

HI [SCRKATE— opening titles misereate.Hfiui/r. i. 2 
AIISniOKD— misdeed of Edward's ..'iHenryVl. iii. 3 

he iivoii^i-'d on my misdeeds Richard III. i. 4 

l\lISI)IO.^rl•:A^'I:^) yourself HemyVlII. V. 1 

M rs 1 ) 10 M 10 A NO U lis, you are ... . TwHflh Kiaht, ii. 3 

MISDOUBT this sword Antony 4- Cleopatra, iii. 7 

I do not misdoubt my wifb Mcrrij IVi«c», ii. 1 

our parson misdoobUit Love's I., l.osi, iv. 3 

I could neither believe, nor misdoubt.. /fH's(fcW, 1.3 
if you miBdiHibt me tluit I am not she — iii. 7 
as his misdoubts present occasion ..2Henry1V. iv. 1 

change misdoubt to resolution iHenryl'I. iii. 1 

stab of rancour I misdo>d)t Richard III. iii. 2 

M ISlXiUBTETll every bush 3Hcjirii VI. v. 6 

MISDHEAO— conception by misdrcad ..Pericles, i. 2 
MFSKNIUM— mount Misenium ., Antony ffClco. ii. 2 
M ISER— dwells like a miser, sir . . As you Like it, v. 4 

doth, like a miser, spoil his coat Henry V. ii. 4 

decrepit miser! base ignoble MIenryVI.v. 4 

as misers do by be^'gars Troilus <5- Cressida, iii. 3 

compare our rich misers to nothing .... r« (cies, ii. 1 

MISEK.ABLE— our case is miserable.. .. rcmpcsZ, i. 1 

else I often had been miserable. Tu>o Gen. of Ver. iv. 1 

O miserable, unhappy that I am I — v. 4 

the miserable liave no other .... ^/ra-^./o?' Wcas. iii. 1 
miserable most, to love unloved?. .A/W. A'.'s Dr. iii. 2 
a miserable world 1 as I do live . . As you Like it, ii. 7 
from miserable slumber I awaked. ... — iv. 3 

O miserable lady I but, for me »'inter's Tale, i. 2 

O nation miserable Macbeth, iv. 3 

hence, poor miserable wretches Henry V. ii. 2 

what's more miserable than iHenryVI. iii. 1 

O miserable agel Virtue is not regarded — iv. 2 

O gross and miserable ignorance 1 — iv. 2 

should lament thy miserable state ..ZHenryVI. i. 4 
O pity, God, this miserable age! — _ii. 5 

miserable thought! — iii. 2 

let her be made more miserable Richard III. i. 2 

to lose it, and he miserable! — ;■ 3 

1 have passed a miserable night — i. 4 

bloody' KiehardI miserable England! — iii. 4 
more miserable by the life of thee — — iv. 1 
desire to die, being miserable (j(?p.).7'imonn//(?/i. iv. 3 

there is no time so miserable — iv. 3 

the miserable change now at my. Antony fy Cleo. iv. 13 

but most miserable is the desire Cymleline,\. 7 

leave me to this miserable death., r/tes/lnrfjwi. ii. 3 
was burnt, and he made miserable?. . — iii. 2 

1 made thee miserable — iv. 3 

have miserable, mad, mistaking eyes — v. 2 

to send the old and miserable king Lear, v. 3 

take lieed,for such die miserable. . Romeo S(Jal. iii. 3 
most miserable hour, that e'er time saw — iv. 5 
what miserable praise hast thou forlier. 0(/i(?i/o, ii. 1 

MISERABLY— miserably slain as I ..-iHenryVI. i. 3 
MISERICORDE! ayez pitic de moy .. Henry V. iv. 3 
MISERIES— if your miseries v.'eve..Mer. of Venice, i. 2 
all the miseries, which nature owes. . All's Well, iii. 2 
most certain, to miseries enough.. Winter' sTale, iv. 3 
whose miseries are to be smiled at .. — iv. 3 
to weep their intermissive miseries . . 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

kind umpire of men's miseries — ii. .'i 

eyes to see her miseries iHemyVI. ii. 4 

60 many miseries have crazed ....Richard III. iv. 4 

not wish ye half my miseries Henry VIII. iii. 1 

to endure more miseries — iii. 2 

a tear in all my miseries — iii. 2 

in some sort of thy miseries ..Timonof Athens, iv. 3 

in shallows, and in miseries lulius Co'sar, iv. 3 

our son is good, takeoff his miseries . C;/m!«?//ne, v. 4 

end his miseries trcp. V. .^) — v. 4 (scroll) 

reason lor these miseries .... Titus Andronicus, iii. 1 

these miseries are more than — iii. 1 

we have heard your miseries as fav .... Pericles, 1. 4 

makes my past miseries sport — v. 3 

scarcely think our miseries our foes Lear, iii. 6 

known the miseries of your father? — v. 3 

JIISERY— misery acquaints a man Tempest, ii. 2 

do not tempt my misery Twelfth Night, iii. 4 

of such a misery doth sue cat.Mcrch. of Venice, iv. 1 
thus misery doth part the ^ux. . . . As youLike it, ii. 1 

the world, and all our misery — iii. 2 

and the misery is example All's Well, iii. 5 

triumph thus upon my misftryl . .Taming of Sh. iv, 3 
but see the flatness of my misery. Winters Tale, iii. 2 

though bearing misery, I desire — v. 1 

to acknowledge me in misery. Comcii!/ of Errors, v. 1 

misery's love, O come to me! King John, iii. 4 

no, misery makes sport to mock. . . , Richard II. ii. 1 

that's the end of human misery IHenryl'I. iii. 2 

my body round engirt witli misery. .2Hcnry VI. iii. 1 
not that I pity Henry's misery ....iHenryl'I. iii. 3 
O ill-dispersed wind of misery! ..Richard III. iv. 1 
soon mightiness meets misery! ..Henry VIII. (prol.) 
point to misery and contempt. Timon of Athens, iv. 2 
willing misery outlives incertain .... — iv. 3 

live, and love thy misery! — iv. 3 

the gods out of my misery have — iv. 3 

the object of our misery, is Coriolanus,'i. 1 

he covets less than misery itself would — ii. 2 
make my misery serve tliy turn .... — iv. S 
andyourmisery increase with yourage! — . ^* 2 
grow hard, (O misery on't!) ..Antony •^Clco. iii. II 
exchange one misery with another .. Cymbeline, i. B 

O noble misery! to be i' the field — v. 3 

could our mourning case thy misery. Titus And. ii. 5 
plot some device oi further misery .. — iii. 1 
the misery of Tharsus may be theirs . . Pericles, i. 4 

taking advantage of our misery — i. 4 

nothing almost sees miracles but misery.. /.ci)-,ii. 2 



[J09 ] 

MTSERT-repair the misery thou dost bear,I.<?«»-, iv. 1 

in pity of hi:i misery, to despatcli — iv. 5 

misery could iiej-'iule tlie tyrant's rage .. — iv. ti 
mine own liirtonu in my misery. /?o;/ipo ^Juliet, i. 2 
sharp misery had worn liiin to the hones — V. I 
ragged misery [(A(.-/vri(. upon thy back] — v. 1 

misery! poor, and content, is ricli ..0//(p//o, iii. 3 
MISEORl'UNE drunk with candle-.. Much yUlo, v. 1 

make me fear misfortune Merch. of Venice, i. 1 

never dare misfortune cross her foot — ii. 4 
by misfortunes was my Vii'e. ... Comedy of Errors, i. I 
if misfortune miss the first career ..Richard II. i. 2 
brings me food to make misfortune live? — v. 5 
what late misfortune is befallen. ...3/;tn)i/ FA iv. 4 
with mildness my misfortune's cross — iv. 4 
what, amazed atiny misfortunes?. //cnri/ /'///. iii. 2 
who onl^ by misfortune of the seas. . . . Pericles, ii. 3 

1 pity his misfortune, and will awake him — ii. 3 
untangled, much misfortune bodes .RomeoSfJul, i. 4 
writ with me in sour misfortune's book! — v. 3 

MISGIVE— my heart misgives me..Merry Wines, v. 5 

so doth my heart misgive me iHenryVI. iv. 6 

for my mind missives, some .... Romeo ff Juliet, i. 4 

that handkerchief: my mind misgives. O/AcHo, iii. 4 

MISGIVING still falls shrewdly ..Ju(mjCfW,r, iii. 1 

MISGOVERNED hands, from Richard II. v. 2 

MISGOVERNMENT. O Hero! .... Much Ado, iv. 1 
MISGRAFFED, in respect ofyears. .Mid.N.'sDr. i. 1 
MISGUIDE thy opposers' swords!.... Con'oinnus, i. 5 
MISHAP— of my own m'lshapa.. Comedy of Errors, i. 1 

tlie extremity of dire mishap! — i. 1 

curse the planets of mishap \ Henry VI. i. 1 

from worldly chances and mishaps. Titus Andron. i. 2 
MISHEARD— misspoke, misheard ..King John, ii. 2 

MISINTERPRET me Richard II. iii. I 

M ISINTERPKETING, we might Pericles, i. 1 

MISLEAD-that do mislead. Mens. /orA/p^s. iv.l(song) 

mislead night-wanderers Mid. N.'s Dream, ii. I 

MISLEADER—misleadcT of youth ..\HenryIV. ii. 4 

done the rest of my misleaders 2HenryIV. v. & 

mad misleader of thy brainsick Gon\,2Henry VI. v. 1 

MISLEADING— foul misleading me.3H«7ir;/f'/. v. 1 

MISLED— wisdoms be misled in this.. MuchAdo, iv. 1 

no, no, no, your son was misled with..4/i's(f'i?/(, iv. 5 

you have misled a prince Richard II. iii. 1 

nerein misled by your suggestion ..I Henry IV. iv. 3 
that are misled upon your cousin's . . — v. 1 
misled the youthful prince (^rep.).. . .iHenrylV. i. 2 
the commons, whom thou hast misled — iv, 8 

and our peers are both misled ZHenryVI. iii. 3 

MISLETUE— and baleful misletoe.7V(w.«y)7i(/ron. ii. 3 

MISLIKE— mislike me not . . Merchant of Venice, ii. 1 

notmy speeches that you do mislike. 2 Hemyr/. i. 1 

scorns, and your mislike, aside — SHenry VI. iv. I 

if he mislike my speech ..Antony^ Cleopatra, iii. 11 

MISORDERED— time misordered ..2HenryIV.iv. 2 

MISPLACE— how he misplaces?./lfeas./o?- Mens. ii. ) 

MISPLACED— mightily misplaced.^s you Lil:e iV,i. 2 

misplaced John should entertain ..King John, iii. 4 

see the crown so foul misplaced ..Richard III. iii. 2 

MISPRISED— a misprised mood. Mid. N. Dream, iii. 2 

that I am altogether misprised As you'.Like it, i. 1 

shall not therefore be misprised — i. 2 

MISPRISING what they look on .... Much. 'iJo, iii. I 
misprising of a maid too virtuous . . All's Well, iii. 2 
misprising [Kn^-disprising]. Troilus Sf Cressida, iv. 5 
MISPRISION in the highest degree!7'z«f;/«iA'(g-/!<,i. 5 
there is some strange misprision ....Much Ado, iv. 1 
misprision must perforce ensue. Mid. N.'sDream,iii.2 
out in saucers; sweet misprision!. io!ie'sL.I,os<,iv. 3 
dost in vile misprision shackle up. . . . Alt's Well, ii. 3 
or misprision is guilty of tliis fault . . 1 Henry IV. i, 3 

MISPROUD-misproud York ZHenry VI. i'l. 6 

MISQUOTE— misquote our looks 1 Henry IV. v. 2 

MISREPORT your grace Meas. fm Meas. v. 1 

MISS— as 'tis, we cannot miss him Tempest, i. 2 

he could not miss it — ii. 1 

I shall miss thee — v. 1 

that will not miss you morning ..Merry Wives, ji. 2 

I will not miss her — iii. 5 

and so miss tlie accent Love' sL. Lost, iv. 2 

leading me, miss that which one. Mer. of Venice, ii. 1 

so may you miss me — iii. 2 

her merit, that did miss her love Alt'slVell, i. 1 

help thee to, thou shalt not miss .... — i. 3 

sensible, and yet you miss Taming ofSh. v. 2 

cannot miss a thriving issue Winter s Tale, ii. 2 

when he shall miss me — iv. 3 

daggers ready, he could not miss them. Macbeth, ii. 2 

friend Banquo, whom we miss — iii. 4 

I would the friends we miss — v. 7 

or it misfortune miss the first Richard II. i. 2 

I should have a heavy miss of tliee..l//cM?i///'. v. 4 

hit or miss, our project's life Troilus ^ Cress, i . 3 

would miss it, rather than carryit..Cojvo/</;ii/s, ii. 1 
told me, I could not miss my way..C'i//)it('/m(?, iii. 6 
an' if we miss to meet him. ntus Andron. 'li. 4 (.letter) 
what here shall miss, our toii. Romeo Sf Juliet, (prol.) 

well, in that hit, you miss — i. 1 

may miss our name, and hit Ihtmlet, iv. 1 

MISSED— all that shot and missed.Tamiug nf Sh. v. 2 

howe'er, unfortunate, I missed \ Henry VI. i. 4 

though thy master missed it Henry VIII. iii. 2 

I missed the meteor once, and hit. ... — y.Z 

is not mucli missed Corinlanns, iv. 6 

he that hatli missed the princess ....Cymbdine, i. 1 

you shall be missed at court — iii. 4 

lest, being missed, I be suspected ... — iii. 4 
when was she missed? he is in Rome — iii. 5 

MISSES— he misses not much Tempest, i\, 1 

MISSHAPED— my misshaped trunk.3 /(/■»iv ('/. iii. 2 
MISSlIAPEN-this misshapen knave ..Tempest, v. 1 

like a foul misshapen stigmatick Zllenry VI. ii. 2 

and thou misshapen Dick, I tell ye all — v.b 
that halt, and am misshapen thus?./i/c/i'm/ ///. i. 2 
misshapen chaos of well-seeming. /I'omt'o ^-Juliet, i. 1 
misshapen in the conduct of them .. — iii. 3 
MISSHEATHEDinmy'daughter's/;omco,^- '»//>/, v. 3 

MISSING— there are yet missing Tempest, v. 1 

♦br missing your meetings and ..Merry Wives, iii. 1 



MIS 



MISSING-to laugh, is also missing. /(« youLike it, ii. 2 
Macduft" is missing, and your noble . . Macbeth, v. 7 
marriage my consent be missing. Timon of Athens, i. I 

the day tliat she was missing Cymbdine, iv. 3 

upon my lady's missing — v. 5 

MISSINGLY, noted, he is of late.. »'m/<?r'«ra(e, iv. 1 
MISSION— emulous missions .. Troilus f/ Cress, iii. 3 

MISSIVES from the king Macheth, i. b (letter) 

gilie my missive out of audience. //»/o»i/ ffCteo. ii. 2 

MISSPOKE, mislieard KingJohn, 'ui. 1 

MI.ST— this mist at all adventures. Comedy of Err. ii.2 
through the foul and ugly mists ....Miem-ylV. i. 2 

will inist or stain the stone Lear, v. 3 

MISTA'EN his colours Richard III. v. 3 

this dagger hath mista'en Romeo Sf Juliet, v. 3 

MISTAKE the truth totally Tempest, ii. 1 

mistake; I mean the pound. Two Gen. of Verona, i. I 

mistake the word — iii. 1 

you mistake; the musician — iv. 2 

you mistake, knight: aeeost, is' .. Twelfth Night, i. 3 

you mistake, sir (rf;).) — iii. 4 

you must not, sir, mistake my niece. . Much Ado, i. 1 
either I mistake your shape and ..Mid. N.'s Dr. ii. 1 

to take what they mistake — v. I 

doth most mistake in her gifts ....As you Like it, i. 2 

good my liege, mistake me not — i. 3 

mistake me not, I sjjeak but as . . Taming ofSh.i'i. I 

mistake no more; I am not Licio — iv. 2 

you mistake, sir; you mistake, sir .. — v. I 
an elder sister, or I mistake you . . Winter'sTale, i. 2 

you, my lord, do but mistake — ii. 1 

you did mistake . No, no (.rep.) .... — ii. 1 

mistake me not; no! — iii. 2 

is, to mistake again KingJohn, iii. 1 

mistake me not, ray lord Richard II. ii. 3 

your grace mistakes me — iii. 3 

mistake not, uncle, further — iii. 3 

lest yon mistake; the heavens — iii. 3 

if I mistake not, thou art Harry 1 llenryl V. v. 4 

you mistake me, sir 2Henn/IV. i. 2 

gentlemen both, you will mistake Henry V. iii. 2 

as you did mistake the outward I Henry VI. ii. 3 

1 do not mistake 2Henry VI. v. 1 

I do mistake my person Richard III. i. 2 

brother of Gloster, you mistake — i. 3 

cousins, you mistake me both — ii. 2 

your rage mistakes us Henry VIII. iii. 1 

you mistake my love Timon of Athens, i. 2 

now you mistake my fortunes — ii.2 

one iionest man, mistake me not .. ., — iv. 3 
not out of hope, mistake me i\ot. ... Coriolanus, iv. ^ 
you do mistake your business.... .<4n^ony<$C/eo. ii. 2 

you did mistake him, sure Cymbeline, iv. 2 

you mistake iCol.Knt. -mrxst takejyourHnmW, iii. 2 

M'ISTAKEN— and she, mistaken.. WeZ/i'/i Night, ii. 2 

thou hast mistaken quite, and iaid. Mid. N.'sDr. iii. 2 

thou hast mistaken his letter Love's L. Lost, iv. 1 

you have mistaken him, my lord .... Alt's Well, ii. 5 

too much mistaken in this king Henry V. ii. 4 

he were something mistaken in't ..HenryVIII. i. 1 
as mistaken all this while between.. Coriolanus, v. 3 
you are mistaken: the one may be ..Cymbeline, i. .•) 

pardon me, my lord, if I be mistaken Lear, i. 1 

MISTAKEST— mistakest me.TwoGen.of Verona, ii. 5 
still thou mistakest, or else ..Mid. N.'s Dream, iii. 2 

but thou mistakest me much 2Henrt/VI. v. 1 

MISTAKETH -stool mistaketh me.Mid. N.'sDr. ii. 1 
MISTAKING— made no mistakings .... Tempest, i. 2 
by mistaking the place where I ..Merry Hives, ii. 2 
envy in you_, folly, or mistaking. .V/eas. /or Meas. iii. 2 
yet sinned i not, but in mistaking . . Much Ado, v. 1 
old father, my mistaking eyes . . Taming ofSh. iv. 5 
I pray thee, for my mad mistaking . . — iv. 6 
for thy mistaking so, we pardon ....iHenryVI. v. I 
miserable, mad, mistaking eyes .. Titus Andron. v. 2 

against him, mistaking his purpose Lear, i. 2 

mistaking, oft'er up to joy RomeoSfJutiel,'i'u. 2 

MISTERMED— is death mistermed .. — iii. 3 

MISTEMPERED humour rests KingJohn, v. 1 

your mistempered weapons to.... Romeo t^- Juliet, i. 1 
M'lSTERSHlP-an your mistership he.TihisAnd. iv. 4 

MISTFUL— with mistful eyes HenryV. iv. i; 

with mistful fCol. A'ni.-misehief'sjeyes. /'e?/f/(',<, i. 1 
MISTHINK-misthink the king ....ZHenryVI. ii. h 
MISTHOUGHT— are misthought..4»/o7ii/ ^ Cleo. v. 2 
MIST-LIKE— groans, mist-like. .Romeo .^-JudW, iii. 3 
MISTOOK— you mistook, sir. Two Gen. of Verona, i. I 
or else I mistook — ii. 1 

cry j'ou mercy, sir, I have mistook — y. 4 
how am I mistook in you I ...... Merry Wives, iii. 3 

they mistook their erection — iii. .') 

ladv, you have been mistook .... TwelflhNigh;, v. I 
and the 3'outh, mistook by me. . Mid. N, Dream, iii. 2 

1 mistook, did not you tell me — iii. 2 

this letter is mistook, it importeth. Z-out'sL. Los/, iv. I 
they unbosom shall to loves mistook.. — v. 2 
she mistook her frets, and bowed. 7'n»(ii>ifo/ -Si. ii. 1 

you have mistook, my lady Winter'sTale, i\. I 

act of purposes mistook is KingJohn, iii. 1 

for you have but mistook me Richard II. iii. 2 

father's purposes have been mistook. 2i;o)ir!///-'. iv. 2 
you may be marvellously mistook . . Henry V. iii. (i 

vet, liad he mistook him Timon of.4fhens, iii. 2 

have inneh mistook your passion .. Julius Ca-sar, i. 2 

so much thy iilaee mistook, to set Lear, ii. 4 

purposes mistook fallen on the Hamlet, v. 2 

MISTREADING- my mistreadings.lH(.-7iji//r. iii. 2 
MISTRESS— my mistress showed nie ..Tempest, ii. 2 

but the mistress which I serve — iii. 1 

my sweet mistress weeps when she — iii. 1 

O most dear mistress, the sun — iii. 1 

no, noble mistress: 'tis fresh morning — iii. 1 

mv mistress, dearest, and I — iii. I 

mistress line, is not this my jerkin? — iv. 1 

metamorphosed with a mistress. 7'«'o(7e;i. of Ver. ii. 1 
mndam and mistress, a thousand .... — ii. i 

O he not like your mistress — ii. 1 

Servant. Mistress? Master — ii. 4 

of my mistress then — ii. 4 

but that his mistress did hold — ii. 4 



MIS 

MISTRESS, I beseech you ..Two Gen. o/fVioiw, ii. 

mistress, it is — ]!• 

too low a mistress for so high — }]• 

a look of such a worthy mistress — ;!• 

welcome to a worthless mistress — ;;• 

except my mistress — .H' 

that ray poor mistress, moved — iv. 

for thy sweet mistress' sake — }y- 

respects my mistress' love so much .. — iv. 

kindly for my mistress' sake — iv. 

bv vour leave, good mistress Merry tfivcs, i. 

farewell, gentle mistress; farewell . . — m. 

were called forth by their mistress .. — in. 

I suspect without cause, mistress, do I? — iv. 

now mistress? how chance you — v. 

an' you part so, mistress, I v/ould.. Tirelph .\ighl, i. 

m'istress mine, where are you — ii. 3 (son; 

with your master, as witli my mistress — lu. 

nor never none shall mistress be of it — ;;;. 

how now, mistress? — "'• 

from tills time be your master's mistress — v. 

Orsiiio's mistress, and his fancy's queen — v. 

ti I lie L-rdunJ. mistress Measure for Measure,]. 

and his mistress is a respected woman — li. 

vour mistress's name? — .!'■ 

Kow doth my dear morsel, thy mistress? — iii. 

come on, mistress; here's a gentlewoman — v. 
nt her mistress's cliamber-window ..MuchAdo, in. 
here my mistress: would that he ..Mid.!\'.'s Dr. ii. 

vour bi'iskined mistress, and your. . . . — _ii. 

mcthinks, mistress, you should have — in. 

mv mistress with a monster is in love — in. 

you, mistress, all this coil is 'long of you — ii;. 
where to meet some mistress fine.. Loi'e'sL.tos/, i. 

an' vour waist, mistress, were as slender — iv. 

mv love, her mistress, is a gracious . . — iv. 

attach the hand of his fair mistress . . — iv. 

will advance unto his several mistress — v. 

white-handed mistress, one sweet — v. 

studies ray lady? mistress, look on me — v. 
mistress, look out at window .... Mer. of yenice, ii. 

farewell, mistress; nothin" else — .n. 

you saw the mistress, I beheld ...... — i;i. 

your fortune achieved her mistress . . — in. 

mistress [Co/.-masters K;l^-ma5ter] of — iv. 

my mistress will before the break of day — v. 

welcome for the mistress of the house — v. 

your mistress is at hand — v. 

touches pierce your mistress' ear .... — v. 
more mirth than I am mistress of. . .-Is you Like it, i. 

mistress, you must come away to .... — i. 

^•our inistToss shall be happy — i. 

mistress, desp-.iteh you with your safest — _i. 

the lieil untreiisureH of their mistress — ij. 

thy hearer in thy mistress' praise — li. 

made to liis mistress' eyebrow — u- 

mv new mistress's brotlier — in. 

will mil aaainst our mistress — iii. 

to iuiiiL'ine me his love, his mistress.. — iii. 

mistress, and master, you have oft .. — iii. 

sliephcrdess that was his mistress — — lii. 

no, 'faith, proud mistress — iii. 

but, mistress, know yourself — m. 

beloved mistress? marry that (rep.) .. — iv. 

our master and mistress seek you — v. 

tomv raotlier, your mistress All'sirell, i. 

a mother, and a mistress, and a friend — i. 

mine tionoui*able mistress — i. 

your pardon, noble mistress — _i. 

one fair and virtuous mistress fall .. — u- 

you have a new mistress — ii. 

and call her hourly, mistress — iii. 

as thy auspicious mistress! — iii- 

nor you, mistress, ever a friend — iv. 

iiunibly called mistress — y. 

have access to our fair mistress. Taming of Shrew, i. 

musician to instruct our mistress — i. 

quatfcarouses to our mistress' healtii — _ i. 

mistress, vour father pr.iys you leave — iii. 

faith, mistress, then I have no ciuise — iii. 

rescue tliy mistress if thou be a ra:in — iii. 

mistress, wliat's your opinion of your — iii. 

my new mistress, and myself — iv. 

complain on thee to our mistress — iv. 

for my master and mistress are almost — iv. 

my master and mistress fallen out. . . . — iv. 

ridins behind ray mistress — iv. 

my master, to countenance my mistress — iv. 

now mistress, profit you in wliat — — iv. 

sweet dear, prove mistress of my heart — iv. 

mistress, we have. Then we are rid.. — iv. 

mistress, and Petruehio is the master — iv. 

mistress, what cheer? 'faith, as cold.. — iv. 

i' tlie right, sir; 'tis for my mistress . . — iv. 

take up my mistress' gown for thy .. — iv. 

20od-raorrow, gentle mistress — iv. 

and you my merry mistress — iv. 

mistress, how mean j-ou that? — v. 

ay, mistress bride, hath that awakened — v. 

Biondello, bid your mistress come.... — v. 

sir, my mistress sends you word — v. 

Grumlo, go to your mistress — v. 

gracious mistress ^rep.) IPinlcr'sTale, i. 

to hear my sovereign mistress clouded 
this crack to be in my dread inistress 
your mistress has deserved prison .... 
more than mistress of, wliich comes.. 

mistress of tlie feast {rep. iv. 3) 

Mopsa must be your mistress 

where you may enjoy your mistress. . — iv. 

for she seems a mistress to most that — iv. 

fortunate mistress, let my prophecy. . — iv. 

I'd lieg your precious inistress — y. 

my mistress made it one upon.. C^medynf Errori, i. 

the saddler for my mistress' crupper — i. 

1 from my mistress come to you — i. 

my mistress, and her sister, stay for.. — i. 

some of mv mistress' marks (rep.) ... . — _i. 

why, mistress, sure my master is ... , — ii. 

my' mistress, sir. quotli I; hang (rep.) .— ii. 



[ 510] 



— i. 2 

— ii. 1 



— iv. 3 



MISTRESS— no wife, no misttess.Comedy of Ei r. ii. I 
your mistress sent to liave me home.. — ii. 2 

of a mistress and a dinner — ii. 2 

some other mistress hatli thy sweet.. — ii. '2 
sweet mistressj (what yourname is else — iii. 2 

will you send nim, mistress — iv. 2 

says the peacock : mistress, that you — iv. 3 
mistress, respicc flnem, respect your end — iv. 4 
mistress both man and master is — iv. 4 

mistress, mistress, shift and save .. — v. 1 
mistress, upon my life, I tell you .... — v. I 

I, gentle mistress. And are not — v. 1 

go, bid thy mistress, when my Macbeth, ii . 1 

and 1, the mistress of your charms — — iii. 5 

by our noble and ch:iste mistress 1 Henry I y. i. 2 

must be the mistress to this theorick . . Henry I'.i. I 
were it the mistress court of mighty — ii. 4 

a sonnet begin so to one's mistress .. — JH* " 

my horse is my mistress (rep.) — !!!• ' 

particular mistress. Ma foi 1 (rep.) . . — iii. 7 
to ray mistress. I had as lief have (rep.) — iii. 7 
rav mistress wears her own hair .... — Wl-'^ 
if 1 had a sow to my mistress — iii. 7 

1 do not use my horse for my mistress — iii. 7 
until the queen his mistress bury it.2 Henry VI. iy. 1 
that our fair queen and mistress . .SHenry VI. iii. 3 

our mistress' sorrows we were Henry Viri.\\. 3 

for their poor mistress' sake — iii. 1 

lily, that once was mistress of the field — iii. 1 
to be her mistress' mistress! the queen's — iii. 2 

my good mistress will remember — v. 1 

loves his mistress more tlian TroilusfyCress.i. 3 

rub on, and kiss the mistress — }!!• - 

harder for our mistress to devise .... — iii. 2 
you shall be mistress, and command — iy. 4 

now does your mistress? Timon of Athens, ii. 2 

look you, here comes my mistress' page — ii. 2 
my mistress is one, and I am her fool — ii. 2 
they enter my mistress' house merrily — ii. 2 
as he would to the lip of his mistress — iii. li 

thy mistress is o' the brothel! — iv. 1 

than to meddle with thy mistress.. Conoianiw, iv. 5 

first my wedded mistress saw — iv. 5 

makes a mistress of him — iv. 5 

companion me witli my mistress .Antony % Cleo. i. 2 

say thou, shall call her mistress — _i. S 

thou killest thj' mistress — ii. 5 

sovereign mistress of true melancholy — iv. 9 

my mistress loved thee — iv. 12 

my mistress Cleopatra sent me to thee — iv. 12 
the queen my mistress, confined in all — v. 1 
the diadem on her dead mistress .... — v. 2 
to his mistress, for whom he is now. . Cymbeline, i. 1 

my queen! my mistress! O lady — i. 2 

eitlier your unparagoned mistress is — i. ■'> 
to convince the honour of my mistress — i. 5 
get ground of your fair mistress .... — i. 5 
my mistress exceeds in goodness .... — i. .0 
dearest bodily part of your mistress.. — 1.5 

tell thy mistress how the case — i. C 

think thou hast thy mistress still — — i. 6 
and you his mistress — i. 7 

fiven good morning to your mistress — ii. 3 
rouslit the knowledge of your mistress — ii. 4 
thy mistress, Pisanio, hath played — iii. 1 (let.) 
my noble mistress, here is a bo.x .... — iii. 4 

discover where tliy mistress is — ni.b 

he took leave of my lady and mistress — iii. 5 

why should his mistress — iv. 1 

thy mistress enforced; thy garments — iv. 1 
but, for my mistress, I nothing know — iv. 3 

nor hear I from my mistress — iv. 3 

I liave killed thy mistress — v. 1 

it is my mistress: since she is living — v. 6 

he began his mistress' picture — v..') 

help mine, and your mistress — v. 5 

wake, my inistress! if this be so — v. 5 

how fares my mistress? — v. 5 

given his mistress that confection . . — v. b 
Home's roval mistress, mistress of. Titus.indran. i. 2 

aloft with thy imperial mistress — ii. 1 

and to deserve my mistress' grace . . — ii. 1 
come, mistress, now perforce we will — ii. 3 

thy noble inistress thus? (?-fp.) — iv. 2 

love, fill to your mistress' lips Periclfs, ii. 3 

mistress, 'tis well, your choice agrees,. — ii. 5 
yea, mistress, are you so peremptory?.. — ii. 5 

hear, therefore, mistress — .ii. 3 

look to your little mistress _ — iii. 3 

pen vail to her mistress Dian . . — iv. (Gower) 
fK)i/.]weepins for her only mistress' death — iv. 1 

but, mistress, ao you know — iv. 3 

take her liome, mistress, take her — iv. 3 

but, mistress, if I have bargained — iv. 3 

I warrant you, mistress, thunder shall — iv. 3 

worse and worse, mistress — iv. ti 

to be ray master, or rather, mistress .. — iv. 6 
since ray master and mistress htive.... — iv. 6 

to stand his auspicious mistress... Lear. ii. ! 

from Goneril his mistress, salutations .. — ii. 4 
served the lust of my mistress's heart .. — iii. 4 
hither, mistress; is your name Goneril? — iii. tj 

get horses for your mistress — iii. 7 

in your own behalf, a mistress's command — iv. 2 

when your mistress hears thus muiih — iv. 5 

as duteous to the vices of thy mistress . . — iv. 6 

a mistress that is passinjj fair Itomeo ^■Juliet, i. 1 

to raise a spirit in his mistress' circle — ii. 1 
in his mistress' name, I conjure .... — ii. I 
and wish his mistress were that kind — ii. 1 

to thy lady and mistress (rep.) — iii 

my raisti'css is the sweetest lady .... — ii. i 

he is even in ray mistress' ca.se — iii. 3 

mistress, what, mistress! Juliet! — iv. ■O 

mv young mistress thus did I bespeak.. Ham/e/, ii. 2 
wfiat? my young lady, and mistress!.... — ii. 2 
my dear soil! was mistress of her choice — iii. 2 

come hither, gentle mistress Olhello.i.i 

n sovereign mistress of etfects — i.3 

welcome, mistress: let it not gall — , ii. 1 



MOC 



MISTRESS— as my young mistress' dog.Olhello, ii. 3 
must move for Cassio to her mistress .... — ii. 3 
tliat this is from some mistress, some. . . . — iii. 4 
or voluntary dotage of some mistress.... — iv. 1 
mistress,— my lord? what would you.... — iv. 1 

some of your function, mistress — iv. 2 

you, mistress, that have the office opposite — iv. 2 
for you, mistress, save you your labour. . — v. I 
look j'ou pale, mistress? do you perceive — v. 1 
come, mistress, you must teli us another — v. 1 
O sweet mistress, speak ! A guiltless death — v. 2 
O mistress, villany bath made mocks .. — v. 2 

the Moor has killed my mistress — v. 2 

with Cassio, mistress; go to — v. 2 

ray mistress here lies murdered in — v. 2 

lav me bv mv mistress' side! — v. 2 

MISTRESSES -my two mistresses. il/cn-y Wives, iii. 4 

mistresses from common sense Love^sL.Lost, i. 1 

.your mistresses dare never come in.. — iv. 3 

and pretty mistresses, give ear — v. 2 

in praise of our country mistresses . . Cymbeline, i. 5 
ah ha, my mistresses! Romeo ^Juliet, i. 5 

MISTRUST my wife again Merry IVives, v. 5 

not to do them the wrong to mistrust. jUticA/ldo,;. 1 
ugly treason of mistrust ..Merchant of Venice, iii. 2 
yet your mistrust cannot maice ..AsyouLike it,\. 3 
yet I mistrust. Mistrust it noi ..Taming of Sh. iii. 1 

he needs not our mistrust Macbeth, i ji. 3 

more than mistrust, tliat shows SHenry VI. iii. 1 

care, mistrust, and treason wait ....SHenry VI. ii. b 

which now mistrust no parcel — v. (i 

minds mistrust ensuing danger. . . . Richard III. ii. 3 
indeed, had no cause to mistrust .... — iii. 2 

tlierefore mistrust me not — iv. 4 

mistrust of my success {.rep.) Julius Ciesar, v. 3 

MISTRUSTED— i mistrusted not ....Mnch.-ido. ii. 1 

all's true, that is mistrusted Winier'sTale, ii. 1 

vicious, to have mistrusted her Cymbeline, v. 5 

MISTRUSTFUL where a noble ....SHenniVI. iv. 2 

MISTRUSTING them, hoised sail.KiWmrd ;//. iv. 4 

MISTY— from their misty jaws iUenryVI. iv. 1 

hateful as Cocytus' misty mo\\i\i,Tilus Andron. ii. 4 

obscurity, or misty vale — v. 2 

on tlie misty raountain tops Romeo ^- Juliet, iii. 5 

MISUSE— we cannot misuse him . . Merry n'ii'es, iy. 2 
proof enough to misuse the prince ..Much Ado, ii. 2 
had studied to misuse me so . . Taming ofshreir, ii. 1 
there was such misuse, such beastly .\ Henry I V. i. 1 
misuse the tenor of thy kinsman's .. — v. 5 
for he misuses thy favours. .2H<-rery/^. ii. 2 (letter) 
but you misuse the reverence of .... — iv. 2 
[CoZ. KnI.} on my least misuse? Othello, iv. 2 

MISUSED me past the endurance MucliAdo,\l. 1 

you have simpjy misused our sex.^s you Like it, iv. 1 

1 have misused the kind's press ....\ Henry IV. iv. 2 
myself is self misused. Why then.RicAnrd ///. iv. 4 
for that thou hast misused ere used. . — iv. 4 

MITE— virginity breeds mites AlCs Well, i. 1 

losing a mite, a mountain gain .Pericles, ii. (Gower) 

MITHKIDATES, king of . . Anlotiy ^-Cleopatra, iii. 6 

MITIGATE the justice of thy plea .;l/er. ofVen. iv. 1 
nncle Glostcr, mitigate this strife.. 1 He jifi//'/. iii. 1 
to mitigate the scorn he gives Richard 111. iii. 1 

MITIGATION or remorse of voice? . . Tirelfh \. ii. 3 
wliere madam Mitigation comes !..l/e(i.<./or.Vens. i. 2 
how now for mitigation of this bill Henry V. i. 1 

MITYLENEisfull of gallants Pericles, iv. 3 

think you now are all in Mitylene — iv. 4 i.Gow.) 
tliere never came her like in Mitvlene — iv. 6 
there's a barge put off from Mitylene . . — v. 1 

sir, we have a maid in Mitylene — v. 1 

brought me to Mitylene; hut now — v. 1 

here IS the regent, sir, of Mitylene .... — v. I 
tlie regent made in Mitylene. . — v. 3 (Gower) 
better'stars brought her to Mitylene . . — v. 3 

5IIX-brothcrs, you mix your sadness .2HenryIV. v. 2 

MIXED— that mixed in liis cheek. Js you Like it, iii. s 

mixed with sugared words I Henry VI. iii. 3 

tlie elements so mixed in him JuHusCirsar, v. 5 

summer with your wniter mixed . TitusAndron. v. 2 
impertinene.v mixed! reason inmadness!. tear, iy. 6 
hast thoii no poison mixed Romeo A- Juliet, iii. 3 

MtXTURE-in evil mixture .. Troilus ^Cressida.i. 3 
what if this mixture do not work..i?ameo /yJut. iv. 3 

thou mixture rank, of midnight Hamlet, iii. 2 

with some mixtures powerful o'er Othello, i. 3 

BIOAN— tlie moan she makes. TuoGen. of Verona, ii. 3 

midnight, assist our moan Much Ado, v. 3 (song) 

full often hast thoulieardniy moans.-Vid.iV.Di-. v. 1 

and thus she moans, videlicet — v. I 

lovers make moan ! his eyes — y. 1 

now make moan to be abridged. ..Ver.o/TejiiVe.i. 1 

at times made moan to me — iii. 3 

way shall have the longest moans . . Richard II. v. 1 

thy mirth shall turn to moan \ Henry VI. ii. 3 

whiles, in his moan, the sliip SHenry VI. v. 4 

to hear the piteous moan that Ilichard III. i. 2 

iCol. Knt.j but a nioietv of my moan — Ii. 2 

tills mutual lieavy load of moan — ji. 2 

pew-fellow with others' moan! — iv. 4 

of that mass of moan to come. Troitus <;- Cresslda. i i . 2 
hast finished ioy and moan. . Cymbeline, iv. 2 (song) 
that still rec<irus witli moan ..Pericles, iv. (Gower) 
[Col. K'71/.) distilled by moans ../fomeo <S-./u(ie(, v. 3 
is gone, and we cast awa.y moan.HauUel, iv. 5 (song) 
and murmured lier moans O'.hello, i v. 2 (song) 

MOAT-fortune'smoat[Co/. Knt.-mooO.'\..m'sWell.M. 2 
or as a moat defensive to a house . . Richard II. ii. 1 

M.)ATED— at the moated granse.Meas.forMeas. iii. 1 

MOBI.ED— the mobled queen (rep.) Hamlei.u. 2 

MOCK— whiles thus vou mock it! Tempest, ii. 1 

lo, how he mocks me! — iii. 2 

and the sea mocks our frustrate — iii. 3 

but trust me. we'll mock him ... . Merry Wires, iii. 3 
ond mock him home to Windsor .... — iv. 4 

that It but mocks reproof Ttrel/lh A'ig-'t, iii 1 

OS miicn m mocK as mark Meas. for Meas. v. 1 

not mock me with a husband: — v. 1 

nay, mock not, mock not: the body. . Much .-tdo, i. 1 
slic mocks all her wooers out — ii. 1 



MOC 



[ 511 ] 



mOCK -she'd mook me into air Much Ado, i\\. 1 

a better detttl\ thnii die with mocks.. — iij. I 
join, in soule, to moi-k me too'i'iUid.A'. sDream, in. J 

Imth rivals, to mook Helena — ;)!• 2 

thoiiKh von nioek me, gentlemen.... , — 
wise !,'ir1s. to moek our lovers — ' ' 



. Love'sL.Lost, v. 2 



ii. 1 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 
iii. 3 



— iii. 5 



V. 1 

V. 1 
V. 1 

V. 2 



anil niock lor moek is only my intout — v. 2 

in these sharp moeks! — ■*'• ^ 

let's mock them still, as well known — v. 2 

they'll mock ns now dowmiglit — v. 2 

though my mocks come home by — v. 2 

for a man replete w itli mocks — v. 2 

on every tree, mocks married men — v. 2 (song) 
mock the lion when lie roars.. ^UcicA.o/renifc, ii. 1 
sit and moek the good housewife.. ^si/oij Likeit, i. 2 

you mean to mock me after — ..;■ 2 

afflict me with thy mocks, pity — i.u- a 

and mock us with our bareness Alls tfcl, i_v. J 

nay, that's a moek ; I have seen . .Winter s 2 ale, u. 1 
let no man mock me, for I will kiss . . — v. 3 
awttv, and mock the time with iairest...Uac6f(/i, i. 7 

do mock their charge with snores — n. i 

mock the deep-mouthed thunder KingJohn, v. i 

theman that mocks at it. ..... . ..... liicliard II. i. 3 

misery makes sport to mock itself .. — 

I mock ray nar.ae, great king — 

mock not ray ssmseless conjuration .. — 
and moek not flesh and blood with . . — 
talk but idly, fcud you mock at me .. — . 

sit in the clouds, and mock us 2Henryiy.u. 2 

how chances mock, and changes fill — i.ii- 1 

is come to mock at form — iv. 4 

and mock your workings in — v. 2 

to mock the expectation of the — „ X- 2 

this mock of his hath turned his Henry V. i. 2 

his mock mock out of their dear {rep.) — .1.2 
sweeten the bitter mock you sent.... — }>■ * 

and return you mock in second 

our* madams mock at us 

should they mock poor fellows thus? 
and gipes, and Knaveries, and mocks 

if you can moci a leek .••";; 

I prav you, mook at them, that is all 
will you mock at an ancient tradition 

your maiest3' shall moek at me 

but, good Kate, mock me mercifully 

make thee mad, do mock thee ams..3Henry t /. i. 4 

they mock thee, Clifford! swear as .. — .ii._6 

deformity to mock my body — iii- 2 

my brother mocks both you and. . Iltchard III. in. 1 
yo.i muck me, madam; this is not .. — iv. 4 
even for revenge moek my destruction — y. 1 
mv state now will but raock me . . Henri/ VIII. n. 1 
you smile, and mock me, as if I. Troilus <§■ Cress. _iv. 2 
now my achievements mock me ! — — iv. 2 

in .-ok i^ot, that I affect the — iv. 5 

si.ow their scars, a mock is due — iv. 5 

thou never shall mock Diomed — v- 2 

the gods begin to mock me Corwlanus,\. 9 

kind of speech, he did not mock us. . — u. 3 

did not ask, but mock — .!!• ^ 

for I mock at death with as big — '!!■ 2 

besides, it were a mock apt to be..Jiili'is C<fso)-, ii. 2 
gods will mock me presently ..Anlonii ^-Cleo.ni. 4 
once more let's mock the midnight bell — ni- 11 

mock me not, Enobarbus — . '^- Jj 

and mock our eyes with air — iv. 1. 

he mocks us bv tlie pauses — v. I 

I hear him mock the hick of Cffisar. . — v. 2 
and hear him mock the Frenchman.. Ci/m(/el)?!e, i. 7 

what an infinite mock is this — v. 4 

by leisure, him that mocks me once .. TitusAnd. i. 2 

w'hilst the babbling echo mocks — ii- 3 

for this proud mock, I'll be — "'•4 

did mock sad fools withal Pericles, v. 1 

one side will moek another Lear, in. 7 

^ , do not mock me: I am — iv. 7 

; pray tliee, do not mock me Hamlet, \. 2 

and look yon mock him not — ii- 2 

to mock your own grinning? — v. 1 

you mock me, sir. No, by this hand — v. 2 

to incur a general mock, run from Olliello, i. 2 

doth raock £Co/. -make] the meat — in. 3 

tlien lieaven mocks itself! I'll not believe — iii. 3 

dost thou mock me? I mock j'ou! — iv. 1 

villanv hath made mocks with lore! .... — v. 2 

MOCK Able at the court .is you Like it, n\. 2 

MOCKED— for this than moclieti.. Merry Wives, in. 2 

not amazed, he will be mocked — v. 3 

he will every way be mocked — Y- 3 

tlie rod becomes more mocked . . Meas.for Meas. i. 4 
it is your husband mocked you with — v. 1 
and so be mocked withal, upon . . Love's L. Lost. v. 2 
and they, well mocked, depart away — .y. 2 
my losses, mocked at my gains. Mer. of Venice, ni.. 1 
should not have mocked me before.. 4s you Like i',i. 2 
roared, and tlie sea mocked thcin. fl'i7Uer'sTale,Vn.i 
and tlie bear mocked him, both roaring — iii. 3 
as lively mocked, as ever still (rep.) — v. 3 

as we arc mocked with art — v. 3 

be mocked and wondered at SHenryVI. v. 4 

and mocked the dead bones that Richard-lll. i. 4 

a mother onlv mocked with two — i v. 4 

our motion v.-ill he mocked Henry VIII. i. 2 

who'd be so mocked with glory 1..rimon o/Ath. iv. 2 
they mocked thee for too much curiosity — iv. 3 
he mocked us, when he begged our. .Coriolamis,u. 3 
the iicople cry, you mocked them .. — iii. 1 

are only mocked for valiant — iv. 6 

a sort, as if he mocked liimself ... JuliusCirsar , i. 2 

that villain hath mocked me Cymbeline, i v. 2 

with marriage therefore was he mocked — v. 4 
their sports, thy resolution mocked. rilusAml. iii. 1 

T am mocked, and thou by some Pericles, v. 1 

MOCKER— mockers waste move.Mld.^\'sDream. iii. 2 

well said, old mocker tow's L. Lost, y. 2 

it is a sin to be a mocker Merch.o/ Venice,\. 2 

thou art a mocker of my labour.. /Is i/ou Like it, ii. 6 
very priests must become mockers.. Con'ofaims, ii. I 
mocker! that's the dog's name. . liomeo 4r Juliet, ii. 4 



Fi 



JIOCKERIES— and his mockeries! i^lerry Wives, lii. 3 
by what their mockeries be .. Henry V. iv. (chorus) 

MOCK K K.Y-tbr the hnc of mockery Tii'einhNighl,i\. 5 

is, as in mockery, set M id. N.s Dream, ii. 2 

was I to this keen mockery born? .. — ii. 3 
[Col.'] they do it but in motlkery ..Love'sL.Lost, v. 2 

what mockery will it be Taming of Shrew, iii. 2 

horrible shadow! unreal mockery.... il/nc6rtA, in. 4 
a mockery should it be to swear? ..KingJohn, iii. I 
that I were a mockery king of snow. i?/c/m?d II. iv. 1 
seek revenge on Edward's mockery .3Hci!r!/ PI. iii. 3 
to trust the mockery of unquiet . . Diehard III. iii. 2 
mail in moinunental mockery . Troilus <S- Cress, iii. 3 

was not this mockery? Coriolanus, ii. 3 

and vent it for a mockery? Cymbeline, v. 3 

our vain blows malicious mockery Humlel, i. 1 

patience her iniurj' a mockery makes . . Othello, i. 3 

MOCKING— in mocking me Meas.for Meas.i. 5 

some merry moclting lord, belike. Loce'sZ/.Losf, ii. 1 
worse fools,to purchase mocking so.. — v. 2 
in mocking rCoi.-moekery] merriment — v. 2 
shall we stay, mocking intended game — v. 2 
the tongues of mocking wenches are — y. 2 
nay, bn't the devil take mocking..4s you Like it, iii. 2 
come, come, you're mocking. . Taming of Shrew, v. 2 
mocking the air with colours idly . . KingJohn,_v. 1 

sits moclting in our plumes Henry V. iv. 5 

for mocking marriage with a Aame.ZHenryVI. iii. 3 
for mocking him about the marriage — iv. 1 
lies mocking our designs .... Troilus <?- Cressida, i. 3 

now will he be mocking — jv. 2 

yourself, you naughty mocking uncle! — iv. 2 
it is a pretty mocking of the lite ..Timon ofAlh. i. 1 

MOCK'ST— then thou mook'stme..Mit(.A'.'sD.-. in. 2 

MODE— my death changes tlie niode.2Hejiri//F. iv. 4 
modes, \_Col. Jfii/.-moods] shows of grief. Hamtef, i. 2 

MODEL— for any model to build Much Ado, i. 3 

wlio was the model of thy father's ..Richard //. i. 2 
that small model of the barren earth — in. 2 

as in a model, our firm estate? — m. 4 

ah, thou, the model where old Troy — v. 1 

then draw the model (.rep.) 2HenryIV. i. 3 

the plot of situation, and the model — n. 3 

Ensland! model to thy inward. Henn/f.ii. (cho.) 
I'll draw the form and model .... Richard III. v. 3 

the model of our chaste loves Henry VIII. iv. 2 

for princes are a model Pericles, ii. 2 

model of [Cof. K)i(.-nightly I]. . . . Romeo Sr Juliet, v. 3 
wliich was the model of that Danish ..Hamlet, v. 2 

MODENA— beaten from Modena.. /4n/on!/ ^-Cleo. i. 4 

MODERATE pace I have since ..Twelfth i\ight,u. 2 

be moderate, allay thy ecstacy..1/e)c/r.'o/renicT,ii.i. 2 

moderate lamentation is the right All's Well, i. I 

be moderate, be moderate Troilus 4r CresHda,'iv. 4 

how can 1 moderate it? — .iv. 4 

fnrnisli out a moderate table. . Timon of Athens, ni. 4 

while onewitli moderate haste might ..Hamlet, i. 2 

MODERATELY— laugh moderately ..Loi'e'sL.L. 1. 1 

therefore love moderately Romeo ^-Juliet, ii. 6 

TvlODERATION-of moderation?. Troj/ws i^-Cress. iv. 4 

MODERN instances As youLike it, ii. 7 

betray themselves to modern censure — ly. 1 
to make modern and familiar things. All's Well, ii. 3 

coming witli her modern grace — .v. 3 

sorrow seems a modern ecstasy Macbeth, iy. 3 

a modern [K;i(.-mother's]invocation. KingJohn, iii.4 
as we greet modern friends.. /Infoii?/ ^ Cleopatra, y_. 2 
modern lamentation might have Romeo <S- Juliet, iii . 2 

poor 1 ikelihoods of modern seeming Othello, i. 3 

MODEST— a civil modest wife Merry Wives, ii. 2 

the modest wife, the virtuous creature — iv. 2 
within the modest limits of order.. TwelflhNight, i. 3 

five me modest assurance — .i-5 
call thee by the most modest terms, — iy. 2 

joy could not show itself modest Much Ado, i. 1 

is she not a modest young lady? .... — .;. 1 

1 will do any modest office. — .n. 1 

as modest evidence to witness — iv. 1 

eyes turned to a modest gaze Mer. of Venice, y. 1 

hath in it a more modest working. /is youLike it,\. 2 

called tlie quip modest (>vrp.) — .y. 4 

a modest one, to bear me back Alls Well, ii. 1 

not this young modest girl Taming of Shrew, i. 1 

not froward, but modest as the dove — .ii. 1 

and modest wisdom plucks me Macbeth, iv. 3 

more wise and modest to the world. .2He!!r!//F. v. 5 
and decked in modest complement . . Hetiry I', ii. 2 

how modest in exception — .ij- 4 

as modest stillness, and humility — iii. 1 

good-morrow with a modest smile — iv. (eliorus) 

or modest Dian, circled with RHenry VI. i v. 8 

and with modest paces came Henry VIII. iv. 1 

young and of a noble modest nature — iv. 2 

to your calling makes me modest — y. 2 

modest as morning when she. . . . Troilus fj Cress, i. 3 

hut modest doubt is called — ii. 2 

bemock the modest moon Coriolanus, i. 1 

praises vouched, would seem but modest — i. 9 

too modest are you; more cruel — i. 9 

should but hunt with modest warrant — .in. 1 
Octavia, with her modest eyes.. /tn/cmi/($-C(eo. iv. 13 

were neither true nor modest Cymbeline. v. ft 

O sir, I can be modest Pericles, iv. 6 

for thou look'st modest as justice — .y. 1 

resolve me, with all modest haste X,ear,ii. 4 

all my reports go with the modest truth — iv. 7 
and yet, reethinks, right modest Othello, ii. 3 

MODESTIES have not craft enough HamM, ii. 2 

doubtful of your modesties. Taming of Shrete, 1 (ind.) 

MODESTLY examine himself MiichAdo, ii. 3 

a challenge urged more modestly ..IHenrylV. y. 2 

placed, and modestly directed 1 Henry VI. y. 3 

modestly I think, the fall of every. Troil.Sf Cress, iy. 5 
will modestly discover to yovecseXf.Julius Ciesiir, i. 2 

MODESTY- by my modesty Tempest, iii. 1 

by my modesty a goodly broker! Tjco Gen. q/Ttr.i. 2 

since maids, in modesty, say no — i. 2 

and she, in modesty, or else — ii. 1 

the lesser blot, modesty iinds — v. 4 

praised women's modesty MerryWives, ii. 1 



MOM 

MODESTY— veil of modesty MerryWives, iii. 2 

so excellent a touch of modesty.. TwelflhNight, ii. 1 
tell me, in the modesty of honour .. — v. 1 
can it be that modesty may .... Meat.forMeas. ii. 2 
to the extremest shore of my modesty — iii. 2 
her blush is guiltiness, not modesty. MucA Ado, iv. 1 
which maiden modesty doth warrant — iv. I 
how it may concern my modesty.. il//d.i\'.'s Dr.}. 1 
you do impeach your modesty too much — ii. 2 
in humau modesty such separation.. — ii. 3 
have you no moddsty, no maiden.... — iii. 2 
and in the modesty of fearful duty.. — v. 1 
some cold drops of modesty . . Merch. of Venice, ii. 2 
wanted the modesty to m-ge the tiling - v. 1 
sad Lucretia's modesty.. ^s 1/011 /.I'fceiV, iii. 2 (verses) 

for then we wound our modesty All'sWell.^'\. 3 

but the modesty which is so lost .... — iii. 5 
be husbanded with modesty.. Taming' o/S/i. 1 (ind.) 
as is the other for beauteous raodest.y — .i. 2 
basliful modesty, her wondrous qualities — . ii. 1 
and modesty, plead on her part. C'ojiif dy of Err. iii. 1 
as roughly as my niodest.y would.... — v. 1 

the modesty of it, to be otherwise Henry V. iv. 1 

the virgin crimson of modesty — y. 2 

with rnodesty admiring thy renown. 1 Henri/ ''/. ii. 2 
argue her replete with modesty . . . .ZHenry VI. iii. 2 
this with modesty to the queen — Henry VIII. ii. 2 
with thy religious trutli, and modesty — iv. 2 

win straying souls with modesty — y. 2 

you can with modesty speak .. r™ono//4(Acns. i. 2 
m a friend, it is cold modesty.. .../uims Ctesar, iii. 1 
if beauty, wisdom, modesty, can.Antony fyCleo. ii. 2 

gift beside thy modesty can beg — _}).i 

though peril to my modesty Cymbeline, iii. 4 

true love acted, simple modesty. Romeo fy Juliet, iii. 2 
even in pure and vestal modesty .... — iii. 3 

o'er the bounds of modesty — i.y. 2 

as much modesty as cunning Hamlet, ii. 2 

you o'erstep not the modesty of nature — V.I- ^ 

the grace and blush of modesty — iii.4 

follow him thither with modesty enough — v. 1 

that would to cinders burn np modesty . Othello, iv. 2 

MODICUM- whatmodicumsofwit'VVo(;.<§- Cress, ii. 1 

MODO— Modo he's called, and Mahu Lear, iii. 4 

Mahii of stealing; Slodo of murder — iv. 1 

MODULE [CoZ.-model] of confounded. Kino- ./oAn,v. 7 
this counterfeit module (;Co(.-model]/l(rs Well. iv. 3 

MOE— that moe and chatter at me Tempest, ii. 2 

MOIETY of the principal ..Merchantof Venice, iy. 1 

thou robb'st me of a moiety All's Well, iii. 2 

a moiety of my rest might come.. ('"in(er's7'o/e,.ii. 3 
which owe a moiety of the throne . . — iii. 2 

well, give me the moiety — i.y. 3 

methinks, my moiety, worth from,.! HenrylV. iii. 1 

for my English moiety, take Henry V. y. 2 

not equals Edward's moiety? Richard lll.i.2 

being out a moiety of my grief — ii. 2 

other moiety, ere you asky is given.. Henri/ VIII. i. 2 

let us pay betimes a moiety Troilus ^ Cress, ii. 2 

lay a moiety of the world ..Antony ^Cleopatra, y. 1 

pawn the moiety of my estate Cymbeline, i. 5 

can make choice of eitner's moiety Lear, i. 1 

a moiety competent was gaged Hamlet, i. 1 

MOIST— tears moist it again, . . TwoGen. of Ver. iii. 2 
occidental damp moist Hesperus ....All's Well, ii. 1 

have you not a moist eye? tHenry IV. i. 2 

my tears, the moist impediments. . . . — iv. 4 
mothers' moist [iin/.-raoistened] eyes.l Henry VI. 1. 1 
between the two moist elements. Troilus Sr Cress, i. 3 
fCol. Knt.] will these moist trees.. Timon of Alh. iv. 3 
Egypt's grape shall moist this ..Antony SrCleo. y. 2 
the moist star, upon whose influence ..Haintel,\. 1 

this hand is moist, my lady Othello, iii. 3 

hot, hot, andmoist: thishand of yours.. — in. 3 

MOISTENED— and clamour moistened ..Lear, iy. 3 

[ A'n'.] their mothers' moistened eyes.l Henry VI. i. 1 

MOISTURE scarce serves ZHenryVI. ii. 1 

MOLDWARP and the ant {HenrylV. iii. 1 

MOLE— the blind mole may not hear. . Tempest, iv. 1 

my father had a mole upon Twelfth Might, v. 1 

never mole, hare-lip, nor scar.. /Wd. A'. 'sDream, v. 2 

I will bring these two moles Winter'sTale, iy. 3 

the mole in my neck Comedy of Errors, iii. 2 

patched with loul moles KingJohn, iii. 1 

breast a mole ciuqne-sjiotted Cymbeline, ii. 2 

lies a mole, right proud of tliat — ii. 4 

Guiderjus had upon his neck a mole — v. 5 

the blind mole casts copped hills Pericles, i. 1 

some vicious mole of nature in them ..Hamlet, i. 4 

well said, old mole! canst work — i. 6 

MOLEHILL— upon thismolehiU here.3Henr!//7. i. 4 

here on this molehill will I sit — ii- 5 

as if Olympus to a molehill should. . Coriolanus, v. 3 
MOLEST— and melt, ere they molest! . . Tempest, ii. 1 
doth molest my contemplation . . Titus .indron. v. 2 
MOLEST ATIO'N view on th'enchafed ..Othello, ii. 1 
JIOLLIFICATION for your giant. Twelfth Sight, i. 5 
JIOLLIS- we call mollis aer (rep.).... Cymbeline, v. 5 

MOLTEN— as hot as molten lead 1 HenrylV.y. 3 

let molten coin he thydamnation!..7V?n.o//(/A. iii. 1 

tears do scald like molten lead Lear, iy. 7 

JIOME, malt-horse, capon Comedy of Errors, iii. 1 

MOMENT— moment's mirth.. rwoGen.o/rerona,!. 1 

for an eternal momen t Mei-ry /) i ns, i i 1 

his incensement at this moment.. 7'!/'e/.pAA'iV/ir, iii. 4 

when in that moment Mid.N.'s Dream, iii. i 

Charles in a moment threw him ..As you Like it, u 2 

thy palm some moment keeps — iii. 5 

loyal and neutral, in a moment? Macbeth, i]. 3 

o' the time, the moment on't — iii. 1 

from this moment, the very firstlings — iy. 1 

then, in a moment fortune sliall KingJohn, ii. 2 

at that very moment, consideration . . Henry /'. i . 1 
in a moment, look to see tlie blind .. — iii. 3 

what towns of any moment 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

and in a moment makes them — ii. 3 

in a moment, even with the — iv. 2 

an oath is of no moment, bein" ZHenryVI.i. 2 

in matter of great moment, no less. 7?ic/inrd III. iii. 7 
then, ill a moment, see how soon. Henry VIII. (prol.) 



MOM 



[ 512 J 



MOMENT— matter of some moment. Henry mi. i. 2 
bearing a state of mighty moment in't — ii. 4 

business of more moment — .'^* - 

but in this extant moment. . TroUus ^-Cresslda^ iv. 5 
tile moment follow his strides. . Timnn of Athens, i. " 
npon far poorer moment .... Antony «§■ Cteopatra, i. 
small request, and yet of moment loo. Cyutbeline,'\. 

the moment is thy death : away ! Lear, i. 

so slander any moment's leisure Ua7nlet,\. 

enterprisesof great pith and moment .. — iii. 
to the very moment that he bade me tell. OMe((o, i. 
angrv? something of moment, then .... — iii. 

MOMENTANY— nniking it momentany 

{Kilt. moTnentnry] as a sound Mid.N.'sDr. i. 

MOMENTAUY iinil sight out-running. rempcrf, i. 
fur the nioinent;iry trick be ....Meas.forMeas. iii. 
the lit is momentary; upon a thought. Jl/ac6«/A, iii. 
mr.nuntarv grace ot mortal men... Iliehard III. iii. 
with win-'s more momentary .. TroUus ScCress. iv. 

M0XACI1U."\I— non facit monachum..7'«'d///iiV. i. 
ciiculius Mou facit tnonachum . . Meas.forMeas. v. 

MOXAKCH— sweet, honey monarch. Love'sL.L. v. 
how to a new-crowned monarch.Mer.of Venice, iii. 

it becomes the throned monarch — iv. 

and you, monarch. No AU^sJVelt, i. 

the gallant monarch is in arms ....KingJohn,v. 2 
that sits within a monarch's heart..2 Henry 1 1', iv. 2 
to act, and monarchs to behold. .Henii/ r. i. (chorus 
kings and monarchs of the earth do all — i. ' 

never was monarch better feared — — ii. i 
neigh is like the bidding of a monarch — iii. 
displeasure can do against a monarch — iv. 
than a general petition of monarchs — v. 

the lordly monarch of the north 1 Henry VI. v. 

hath that poor monarch taught thee. iHenryFI.i. 
beseem a monarch like himself .... — iii. 
the greatest monarch now alive . . Henry VIII. v. 
a monarch's voice, cry havock ..JulinsCcFsar, iii. 
I was a morsel for a monarch. /ln(o?ii/i5-C(to/)a(ra, i. 
come, thou monarch of the vine — ii. 7 (song! 
the gates of monarchs are arched.. Ci/?)iMiiie, iii. .' 

a book of all that monarchs do Pericles, i. 

monarch of the universal eavth.Iiomeo^- Juliet, iii. 
monarchs, and outstretched heroes .... Hamlet, ii. 
a cuckold, to make him a monarch Othello, iv. 

MONARCHIES-mighty monarchiesHcni y r.i.(cho. 

jrONARCHIZE, be feared Richard II. iii. 

MONARCHO; and one that Love's L.Lost,iv. 

MON ARCH Y-of the last monarchy.. /I//'s IVell, ii. 
of what a monarchy you are the head. Henry V. ii. 

and is worth a monarchy iHenyyVLiv. 1 

mighty gossips in this monarchy . . Riclmrd III. i. 
can this dark monarchy afford false — i. 

JIONASTERY— some monastery. jVens./oril/cas. jv. 

is a monastery two miles oif Mer. of Venice, iii, 

Chertsey monastery this noble mng. Richard III. i. 
to gaze upon a ruinous monastery. Titus Andron. v. 

MONASTIC-nook merely monastia. .AsyouLike, iii. 

MONDAY— not till Monday Much Ado, ii. 

swore a thins to me on Monday night — v. 

snatched on Monday night I Henry IV. i. 

Monday, my lord. Monaay?.... Romeo ^Juliet, iii. 
you say rigfrt, sir; o'Monuay morning.. HnmZrt, ii. 

MONDE— France,pour tout le monde..HcHii/F. iii. 
la plus belle Katharine du monde . . — v. 

MONEY— will money buy them? Tempest, v. 

that the money, and the matter. TuoGen. ofVer. i. 

it was for want of money — ii. 

hold, there's money for thee Merry Wives, i. 4 

or money in his purse — ii. 1 

after the expence of so much money — ii. 2 

for they say if money go before — ii. 2 

money is a good soldier, sir — ii. 2 

I have a bag of money here troubles me — ii. 2 

there is money, spend it — ii. 2 

make bold with your money — ii. 2 

want no money, sir John — ii. 2 

knave hath masses of money — ii. 2 

for more money than I'll speak of . . — iii. 2 

I like his money well — iii. 5 

of horses and money — iv. 5 

and twenty pounds of money — v. 5 

tliat 3'ou have cozened of money .... — v. 5 

to repay that money will be — v. 5 

money buys lands, but wives — v. 5 

hadst need send for more money . T u- elf Ih Night, ii. 3 

send for money, knight — ii. 3 

some of that money. What money.. — iii. 4 

I dare lay any money, 'twill be — iii. 4 

there's money for thee — iv. 1 

that give fools money — iv. 1 

can tool no more money out of me . . — v. 1 
I do it for some piece of money . . Mens, for Meas. ii. 1 

for five marks, ready money — iv. 3 

and money enough in his purse Much Ado, ii. 1 

a horn for my money, when all's done — ii. 3 

if he be sad, he wants money — iii. 2 

and borrows money in God s name.. — v. I 
not valued to the money's wortli. Love's L. Lost, ii. 1 
have the money by our father lent . . — ii. 1 

in money, and in love Meixhant of Venice, i. 1 

nor have I money, nor commodity , . — i. 1 

inquire, and so will I, where money is — i. 1 

he lends out money gratis — i. 3 

hath a dog money? — i. 3 

if thou wilt lend this money — i. 3 

he was wont to lend money — iii. 1 

if he had the present money to discharge — iii. 2 
the fool that lent out money gratis . . — iii. 3 

a rasher on the coals for money — iii. 5 

is he not able to discharge the money? — iv. 1 

there's thrice thy mouey i,rep.) — iv. I 

here is the money — iv. 1 

have no mouey in your purse As you Like it, ii. 4 

he that wants money, means — iii. 2 

and I her money All's Well, ii. 4 

as an old man loves money — iii. 2 

■with all faults, and money enough. 7'am»ig-o/SA.i. 1 
comes amiss, so money conies withal — i. 2 

for I have bills for money by exchange — iv. 2 



MONEY— take eggs for money? Winter's Tale, \. 2 

my money and apparel ta'en from me — iv. 2 

lack any money? (rep.) — iv. 2 

money, or anything I want (rfp.) .. — iv. 2 

faster than you'll tell money — iv. 3 

thou shouldst take no money of me. . — iv. 3 
by the way, and lost all my mouey ? — iv. 3 

money's a meddler, that doth utter — iv. 3 (song) 
your money that 1 had to keep'. . Comedy of Err. i. 2 

where have you left the money — i. 2 

where is the money? — i. 2 

place you have bes'towed my money? — i. 2 

IS o'er- raught of all my money — i. 2 

greatly fear, my money is not safe .. — i. 2 
one to save the money that he spends — ii. 2 
receive my money for tlie chain .... — iii. 2 

the money now, for fear (rep.) — iii. 2 

I shall receive the money for the same — iv. 1 
not furnished with the present money — iv. 1 

return without your money — iv. 1 

to my wife, and fetch your money . . — iv. 1 

the money, that you owe me — iv. 1 

redemption, the money in the desk? — iv. 2 

there's the money, bear it straight . . — iv. 2 

some tender money to me — i v. 3 

so much money to warrant thee — iv. 4 

1 think, he brings the money — iv.4 

but Where's the money? (lep.) — iv. 4 

alas, I sent you money — iv.4 

surely, master, not a rag of money .. — iv.4 
I sent you money, sir, to be your bail — v. 1 
the curse that money may buy .... King John, iii. 1 
his goods, his money, and his lands, /i("c/tarrf/i, ii. 1 
he hath not money for these Irish ., — ii. 1 

how shall we do tor money — ii. 2 

there's money of the king'seoming..lflre?!j!//r. ii. 2 

your money . "Villains ! — ii. 2 

I am glad you have tlie money — ii. 4 

the money shall be paid back — ii. 4 

paid money that I borrowed — iii. 3 

of wildfii-e, there's no purchase in money — iii. 3 
you owe me money, sir John (rep.) . . — iii. 3 
and money lent ^ou, four and twenty — iii. 3 

the money is paid back again — ?!!■ ^ 

and there receive money, and order.. — iii. 3 
will you give me money, captain? .. — iv. 2 

let him lend me the money 'IHenrylV. i. 2 

what money is in my purse? — i. 2 

thyself, and the money too — ii. I 

one you may do with sterling money — ii. 1 
I shall receive money on Thursday — ii. 4 

I owe her money — ii. 4 

and betted much money on his head — iii. 2 

transporting a sum of money HenryV.iv. 1 

I will none of your money — iv. 8 

but want of men and money 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

nor money, hath he to make war .... — i. 2 
come to gather money for their corn — iii. 2 
the sum of money, which I promised — v. 1 

discharge, money, or furniture 2 Henry VI. i. 3 

take all the money that I have — ii. 3 

great sums of money thro' the realm — iii. 1 

there shall be no money — iv. 2 

Henry hath money, you are strong . . — iv. 8 
give tneir money out of hope. . . . Henry VIII. (prol.) 
what, you come for money? . . Timon of Athens, ii. 2 

toward a supply of money — ii. 2 

that this is no time to lend money .. — iii. 1 

he cannot want for money — iii. 2 

as money, plate, jewels, and such like — iii. 2 
nay, Timon's money has paid his .. — iii. 2 

for mine is money — iii. 4 

your lord sends now for money — iii. 4 

for which I wait for money — iii. 4 

send for money for 'em — iii. 4 

for certain money here, sir (rep.) .... — iii. 4 
throw their caps at their money .... — iii, 4 
while they have told their money.... — iii. 5 
if money, and the season can yield it — iii. 6 

stay I will lend thee money — iii. 6 

more counsel, with more money .... — iv. 3 

the wars, for my money Coriolanus, iv. 5 

raise no money by vile means ....JuliusCa-sar, iv. 3 
Caesar gets money, where he. ^ri;onj'(§-C/eopa/ra, ii. I 

this is the brief of money — v. 2 

here's money for my meat Cymbtline, iii. 6 

money, youth? all gold and silver .. — iii. 6 
empty purse, there was no raoue3' in't — iv. 2 
here's money for thy charges .... Tit-us Andron. iv. 3 

how much money must I liave — iv.4 

we lost too much money this mart .. ..Pericles, iv. 3 
shall have your money presently .... — iv. 3 
and have not money enough in the end — iv. 6 

there's monej' for thee Lear, iv. 6 

nor no money in your purse? — iv. 6 

no money, on my faith Romeo ^ Juliet, iv. 5 

give him this money, and these notes . . Hamlet, ii. I 

no money bid for argument — ii. 2 

put money in thy purse (rep.) Othello, i. 3 

my money is almost spent — ii. 3 

with no money at all, and a little — ii. 3 

but, masters, here's money for you — iii. I 

there's monev for your pains — iv. 2 

MONEY-BAGS to-night .... Merchant of Venice, ii. 5 
twenty money-bags at a burden.. Winler'sTale, iv. 3 

MONGREL- mongrels, spaniels, curs.. Moc6rt/i, iii. 1 
thou mongrel, beef-witted \o;:^\..TroihisfyCress. ii. 1 
in policy, tliat mongrel cur, Ajax . . , . — v. 4 

how now? Where's tliat mongrel? Lear,i. 4 

the son and heir of a mongrel bitch — ii. 2 

mastiff, greyhound, mongrel grim — iii. 6 

MONIED— doctor is well momeA.. Merry Wives, iv. 4 

MONIES— rated me about my monies. Mer. of Ven. i. 3 

Shylock, we would have monies — i. 3 

over your threshold; money is your suit — i. 3 

I'll lend you thus much monies — i. 3 

take no doit of usance for my monies — i. 3 
seven hundred pounds of monies ..Merry Wives, i, 1 
importune him for my monies.. Timnn of Athens, ii. 1 

MONK— I fear, is poisoned by a moak. King John, v. 6 



MON 

MONK— a monk, I tell you King John, v. G 

a monk o' the Chartreux Henry VIII. i. 1 

spoke by a holy monk — i. 2 

this monk might be deceived — i. 2 

but all hoods make not monks — iii. 1 

MONKEY— thou jesting monkey Tempest, iii. 2 

on meddling monkej', or on . . Mid. N.'s Dream, ii. 2 
of your daughter for a monkey ..Mer. of Venice, iii.l 

for a wilderness of monkeys — iii. 1 

in my desires than a monkey ....As you Like it, i v. 1 

now God help thee, poor monkey Macbeth, iv. 2 

yet as lecherous as a monkey 2 Henry IV. iii. 2 

bred out into baboon and monkey., r/mon ofAth. i. I 

for apes and monkeys, contemn Cymbeline, i. 7 

monkeys by the loins, and men by Lear, ii. 4 

as prime as goats, as hot as monkeys . . Othello, iii. 3 

this is the monkey's own giving out — iv. I 

goats and monkeys ! Is this the noble Moor — iv. 1 

MONMOUTH-isec-HARRY] 
have talked of Monmouth'sgrave ..2HenryIV. ii. 3 

ay, he was porn at Monmouth Henry V. iv. 7 

at Monmouth; it is called Wye (rep.) — iv. 7 
there is goot men porn at Monmouth — iv. 7 

leeks in their Monmouth caps — iv. 7 

sincejHenry Monmouth first began. 1 Henri/)'/, ii. 6 
born at Monmouth, should win all . . — iii. 1 

MONOPOLY— if I had a monopoly Lear, i. 4 

MONS— or, mons, the hill Love's L. Lost, v. 1 

MONSIEUR- monsieur monster Tempest, iii. 2 

a word, monsieur Muck-water Merry Wives, ii. 3 

for monsieur Malvolio, let me....rK'e(/i:AA'!^/i(,_ij. 3 

Dieu vous garde, monsieur — iii.l 

hal the prince and monsieur 'Loye\..yiuchAdu, ii. 3 
Where's monsieur Cobweb? (rep.) .. Mid. N.'s Dr. iv. I 

good monsieur bring me the — iv. 1 

m the action, monsieur (rep.) — iv. 1 

Where's monsieur Mustard-seed? (rep,') — iv. 1 
nothing good monsieur, but to help. . — iv. 1 

I must to the barber's, monsieur — iv. 1 

agallant lady! Monsieur Love's L. Lost, ii. 1 

Monsieur, are you not lettered — v. I 

ape of form, monsieur the nice — v. 2 

but what is the sport, monsieur . . As you Like it, i. 2 

Monsieur the challenger — _i. 2 

wh3', how now, monsieur I — U. 7 

do you hear, monsieur All's Well, ii. 3 

between my lord and you, monsieur — ii. 5 
farewell monsieur; I have spoken better — ii. 5 
where are my other men, monsieur? — ii. 5 
how now, monsieur? this drum sticks — iii. 6 
if you have a stomach to't, monsieur — iii. 6 

what says monsieur Remorse 1 HenryIV._ i. 2 

petit monsieur, que dit-il? Henry V. iv. 4 

pray our monsieurs to think Henry VII I. i. 3 

one, an eminent monsieur Cymbeline, i. 7 

MONSTER— fright a monster's ear — Tempest, ii. 1 
there would this monster make a man — ii. 2 

this is some monster of the isle — ii. 2 

a most delicate monster I — ii. 2 

this is a devil, and no monster — ii. 2 

this is a very shallow monster — ii. 2 

a very weak" monster — ii. 2 

a most poor credulous monster — ii. 2 

well drawn, monster, in good sooth — — ii. 2 
a most perfidious and drunken monster — ii. 2 
to death at this puppy-headed monster — ii. 2 

a most scurvy monster! — ii. 2 

but that the poor monster's in drink .. — ii. 2 

an abominable monster! — ii. 2 

a most ridiculous monster ! — ii. 2 

a howling monster, a drunken monster — ii.2 

brave monster! — ii.2 

he were a brave monster indeed — ii.2 

shalt be mj' lieutenant, monster — ii.2 

we'll not run, monsieur monster — ii.2 

thou liest, most ignorant monster .... — ii. 2 
being but half a fish, and half a monster? — ii. 2 
that a monster should be such a natural 1 — ii.2 

the poor monster's my subject — ii. 2 

interrupt the monster one word further — ii. 2 

a murrain on your monster — ii.2 

monster, I will kill this man — ii.2 

at thy request, monster, I will do reason — ii. 2 

no, monster, not I — ii.2 

lead, monster; we'll follow — ii. 2 

monster, your fairy, which, you say . . — iv. 
monster, 1 do smell all horse-piss .... — iv. 

do you hear, monster? — iv. 

thou wert but a lost monster! — iv. 

disgrace and dishonour in that, monster — iv, 
this is your harmless fairy, monster . . — iv. 

ho, monster; we know what — iv. 

be you quiet, monster — iv. 

monster, come put some lime — iv. I 

monster, lay to your fingers — iv. 1 

1 will show you a monster Merry Wives, iii. 2 

have with you, to see this monster .. — iii. 2 
I, poor monster, fond as much ..TweinhNighl, ii. 2 
as a monster, fly my presence .. Mid. N.'sVream, ii. 3 
my mistress with a monster is in love — iii. 2 
charmed eye release from monster's view — iii. 2 

O thou monster ignorance Love'sL.LosI, iv. 2 

let me turn monster As you Like it, i. 2 

since wives are monsters to you All's Well, y . 3 

a monster, a very monster . . Taming of Shreu\ iii. 2 
back of man, the heart of monster.. Wintei'sT. iv. 3 

as our rarer monsters are Macbeth, v. 7 

and make a monster of you King Jolm,ii. 1 

and be a carrion monster like thyself — iii. 4 

the blunt monster illenrylV. (induction) 

these English monsters! HcnnjI'. ii. 2 

it is a pity would move a monster .Henry VUI. ii. 3 
there is presented no monster.. TroUus^- Cress, iii. 2 

of hares, are thej' not monsters? — iii. 2 

a great-sized monster of ingratitudes — iii. 3 
a very iand-fish, languageless, a monster — iii. 3 

hang thee, monster! Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

teem with new monsters — iv. 3 

make a monster of the multitude . . Coriolanus, ii. 3 
the horn and noise o' the monsters .. — iii. l 



MON 



[ 513 1 



MOO 



JIONSTER— monster's her accuser^. CymMine, ni. i 
the imperious seas breed mousters .. — iv. 2 
tieing an ugly monster, 'tis strange .. — .\- ^ , 
the riionster seen those lily hands. 7'<7hs Andron. ii. 5 i 
but alack! the monster envy., i'endfs, iv. (Gower) | 

unnatural degree, iliat monsters it Lear,\. I \ 

he cannot be such a monster — ;. 2 

monster ingratitude! if thou wert my fool — i. fi 

women will all turn monsters — .i.5 

like monsters of the deep — iv. 2 

abhorred monster keeps thee Romeo AJitliei,v. 3 

what monsters yo\i make of tliem Hamlfl, iii. 1 

as if there were some monster Othello, iii. 3 

it is the green-eyed monster — jjl- 3 

'tis a monster, begot upon itself (ic;j.) .. — iii. 4 

a horned man's a monster and a beast . . — iv. 1 

nopnlous city, and many a civil monster — iv. 1 

JIbNSTERED— nothings monstered. Cor'o(anws, u. 2 

AIONSTER-LIKE, be shown ..Anlom/^-Clen. iv. 10 

Jl ONSTBOSITY in love Troilui^- Cressidn, in. 2 

MONSTROUS -tell a monstrous lie ..Tempesl,\\\. 2 
though they are of monstrous shape — lij- 3 

O it IS monstrousi monstrous! — iii. 3 

that's monstrous Ttro Gen. of Teiona, ni. 1 

speak in a monstrous little voice. W'V/. A'. Dr^a/n, i. 2 
O monstrous! O strange! we are haunted— iii. 1 
Binallest monstrous mouse that creeps — v. 1 

one fault seeming monstrous As you Like iV, iii. 2 

skill infinite, or monstrous desperate. /I'i's '^eH, ii. I 
be an answer of most monstrous size — ii. 2 

O monstrous beast! Taming of Shrew, 1 (indue.) 

O monstrous arrogance I — iv.3 

O monstrous villain! — v. 1 

trespasses, more monstrous Winter'sTalciW. 2 

all as monstrous to our human reason — v. 1 
how monstrous it was for Malcolm . . Macbeth, iii. 6 

thou monstrous slanderer (>c/j.) KinnrJohjt.u. 1 

O monstrous! eleven buckram men.l Hem-ylV. ii. 4 
blushed to hear his monstrous devices — ii. 4 
sheriff with a most monstrous watch — ii. 4 
O monstrous! but one halfpenny worth — ii. 4 
half moon, a monstrous cantle out .. — iii. 1 

curling their monstrous heads 'IHeiirylV.WX. 1 

and crush us, to this monstrous form — iv. 2 

O monstrous treachery! I HeiirrjFl. iv. 1 

death argues a monstrous life iHejiryVI. iii. 3 

and cast account. O monstrousi .... — iv. 2 

O monstrous coward! — iv. 7 

have slain, that monstrous traitor? .. — iv. 10 
against that monstrous rebel. Cade .. — v. 1 
O monstrous traitor! I arrest thee . . — v. 1 
O monstrous fault, to harbour sueh.SHfitr)/ r/. iii. 2 

O monstrous, monstrous! Richard, III. iii. 2 

Edward's wife, that monstrous witch — iii. 4 

hath into monstrous habits put Henry VIII. i. 2 

nor nothing monstrous neither?. Trnilus <5- Cress, iii. 2 

seat of monstrous friends Timonof Athens, iv. 2 

cannot cover the monstrous bulk — v. 1 

marry, 'tis not monstrous in you .... — v. 1 

ingratitude is monstrous Coriolanus, ii. 3 

bring ourselves to be monstrous .... — ii. 3 
faculties, to monstrous quality.... /ui/usC«sar, i. 3 

unto some monstrous state — i. 3 

to mask thy monstrous visage? — ii. 1 

that shapes this monstrous apparition — iv. 3 
monstrous matter of feast .. Antony ff Cleopatra, ii. 2 
bring forth some monstrous malefactor — ii. 5 
it's monstrous labour, when I wash.. — ii. 7 
O monstrous! what reproachful.. Tilus Andron. i. 2 
sliall I endure this monstrous villany ? — iv. 4 

of monstrous lust the due Pericles, v. 3 (Gower) 

commit a thing so monstrous Lear, i . 1 

whv, what a monstrous fellow art thou. . — ii. 2 
monstrous? know'st thou this paper? . . — v. 3 
is it not monstrous, that this player ..Hamlet, ii. 2 

this monstrous birtli to the world's Othello, i. 3 

surge, witli high and monstrous main .. — ii. I 
'tis monstrous. lago, who began it? .... — ii. 3 
O monstrous world! take note — iii. 3 

monstrous! monstrous! ^ iii. 3 

'tis a strange truth. O monstrous act ! .. — v. 2 

MONSTKOtfSLY. to have .... Comedy of Errors, v. 1 
MONSTBOTJSNESS of man . . Timon of,lthens, iii. 2 
JIONTACUTE-lord Montacute.. ..He!;/yF///. i. 1 
AlONTAGtJE— my brother Moiitague.SHeiii-yF/. i.2 
therefore comes my brother Montague — ii. 1 

valiant Richard, Montague — ii. I 

from your brother, marquis Jlontague — iii. 3 
and you too, Somerset, and Montague — iv. 1 
knowsuot Montague, that of itself .. — iv. 1 
and Montague, resolve my doubt . , — iv. 1 

so God help Montague — iv. 1 

brother Montague, in Buckingham.. — iv. 8 
Oxford, and my loving Montague .. — iv. 8 

our brother Montague? (rep.) — v. 1 

Montague, Montague, for Lancaster! — v. 1 

now, Montague, sit fast — v. 2 

ah, Montague, if thou be there — v. 2 

quicl<ly, Montague, or I am deadr(rfp.) — v. 2 

and Montague our top-mast — v. 4 

Warwick and Montague — v. 7 

a dog of the house of Montague., flomeo ^-y/(//>/, i. I 
of any man or maid of Montague's .. — i. 1 

1 will push Jlontague's men — i. 1 

twoof the house of the Montagues .. — i. 1 
as I hate hell, all Montagues, and thee — i. 1 
Capulets! down with the Montagues! — i. 1 
old Montague is come, and flourfshes — i. I 
bv thee, old Capulct, and Montague — i. 1 
Montague, come you this afternoon.. — i. 1 

and Montague is bound as well as I — i. 2 

you be not of the house of Montagues — i.2 
by his voice, should be a Montague. . — i. :> 
uncle, this is a Montague, our foe .. — i. b 

his name is Romeo, and a Montague — i. 5 

not a Montague: what's Montague? — ii. 2 
art thou not Romeo, and a Montague? — ii.2 
in truth, fair Montague, I am too fond — ii. 2 

Bweet Montague, be true — ii.2 

bloodof ours, shed blood of Montague — iii. 1 



MONTAGUE— to the Montague. /iomeo ^Juliet, iii. 1 
this is that banished liaughty Montague — v. 3 
stop thy unhallowed toil, vile Montague — v. 3 

raise up the Montagues — v. 3 

is emptv on the back of Montague .. — v. 3 
come, Montague; tor thou art early up — v. 3 
BInntngue! see, what a scourge — v. 3 

brother IMontague, give me thy hand — v. 3 
MONTANO, your" trusty and valiant Othello, i. 3 

sir,— Montano,— sir; help (lep.) — ;■• 3 

wortliy Montano, yon were wont be civil — ii. 3 

Montano and myself being in speech — — ii. 3 

JIONTANT-distance, thy montant.Wp))!/ Wives, ii. 3 

SIONTANTO--is eignior Montauto ..l^luch Ado,\, 1 

MONTEZ— montez a cheval Henry I', iv. 2 

MONTFEKKAT? Ves, yes; itwaB.il/«-.n/;'f,i,c<'.i. 2 
MONTGOMERY- John Montgomery. 3 Heiu'i/FJ.iv. 7 

thanks, good Montgomery (rep.) — iv. 7 

MONTH— once in a month, recount Tempest, i. 2 

havea month's mind to them . TwoGen. of I'er. i. 2 
whereon this month I have been .... — i. 3 

some sixteen moiitJis — iv. 1 

for but a month ago I went TwelfthNight, i. 2 

I'll stay a month longer — _i- •^ 

having been three months married;., — ii.ii 

and for three months before — v. 1 

three months this youtli hath — v. 1 

he hath every month a new sworn ..Much Ado, i. I 
stay here at the least a month _ — i. 1 

1 had rather pray a month Love's L. Lost, i. 1 

what was a month old at Cain's — iv. 2 

the moon was a month old (?cp.) .... — iv. 2 
love, whose month is ever May.. — iv. 3 (verses) 

she is two months on her way — v. 2 

for three months (rep.') ,Merchaiilof I'enice, i. 3 

how many months do you desire? .. — j- 3 

three months from twelve — !• 3 

within these two months (»ep.) — i. 3 

ships come home a month before .... — ..i. 3 
here some month or two. before you — iii. 2 
is but for two months victualled. . As youJ.ikeit, v. 4 

some six months since my lord All's IVeU,_ i. 2 

some two months since, fled .- — iv.3 

a month's length a-piece — iv.3 

to let him there amonth, beh'md... H'inter'sTale, i. 2 
three crabbed months had soured .. — _ i- 2 
very true: and but a mouth old .... — iv.3 
we had the tune on't amonth ago.... — iv.3 
there was not full a month between. . — v. I 
not a month 'fore your queen died . . — v. I 
my absence was not six months. . Comedy nf Err. i. 1 

'tis full three months, since I Rirhnrd II. v. 3 

laughter for a month 1 Henry 1 ''. ii. 2 

by the ninth of the next month? .... — ;;• 3 
where hast thou been this month? .. — ii. 4 

the eleventh of this month — iii. 2 

full of spiritas the month of May — iv. 1 

had found some months asleep 2 Henry I V. i v. 4 

besiege us one hour in a mouth 1 Henry I'l. '\. 2 

for eighteen months concluded i,rcp.).'l Henry 11. i. I 
shall oe tlie last of the next montli . . — _i. 3 
at Bury the first of tliis next montli — ii. 4 

made a king at nine months old .... — iv. 9 

I was but nine montlis old ZHenryVI.S. 1 

days, weeks, months, and years, passed — ii. 5 
king at nine months old; my father — iii. I 
whom I, some three months since ..Richard 1 1 1. \. 2 

in Paris but at nine months old — ii. 3 

hold you play these two moutlis . . Henry I'l 1 1, y. 3 

for many weary mouths TroilusSfCressida, iii. 2 

some two months hence my will — v- 1 1 

succession of new days this month. Timonof Alh.u. 2 
yet may your pains, six months, be.. — iv.3 

I'll follow thee a month Coriolanus, i v. 1 

some two months hence Julius Ctesar, ii. 1 

what will whole months of tears. JVa« Andron, 'u, 5 

my twelve months are expired Pericles, iii. 3 

for this three months hath not spoken .* — y. 1 

and with you; next month witli us Lear,\. 1 

till the expiration of 3'our month — ii. 4 

than he will stand to in a month. /Jtimfo 4' Juliet, \\. 4 

delay this marriage for a month — iii. 5 

but twomonthsdead! nay, not so much. Hamte', i. 2 

and yet within a month (rep.) — i.2 

a little month; or ere those shoes were old — _ i. 2 
nay, 'tis twice two months, my lord .... — i'.l- 2 
twi) months ago, and not forgotten yet? — iii. 2 
if you find him not within this month .. — iv.3 
two months since, here was a gentleman — iv. 7 

MONTflLY—ourself, by montlily course .,Lear.'\, 1 
moon tliat monthly changes Komeo ff Juliet, ii.2 

M(.)NTJOY, the herald? Henry V. 'Vu. h 

lord constable, haste on Montjoy.. .. — !!!■ ^ 

I know thy quality. Montjoy — !!!■'' 

there's for thy labour, Montjoy .... — iii. u 
and so, Montjoy, fare you well — iii. 6 

MONUMENTS shall be the mawsof .. Wncte'A, iii. 4 
like patience on a monimient .... TwelfhXight, ii, 4 
here, a marble monument! ..V/eas!«e/or;l/eii.<iire, v. 1 
on your family's old monument ....MnchAdo, iv. 1 
he shall livp no longer in monument — v. 2 
is this the monument of Leonato? .. — v. 3 
you are no maiden, but a monument. .J/''< lyrll, iy. 2 
saw some wondrous monument.. Tmniii'^' nf ^li, iii. 2 
noble deed-, as valour's moniur ent.l Hemiifl, iii. 2 
defacing monuments of conquered ..iHenryl'l.X. 1 
to wash away my woeful monuments — iii. 2 
this monument of the victory will I bear — iv. 3 

arms hung up for monuments Richard III.\. I 

and he fill up one monument! Henry fill. ii. 1 

O monument and wonder ot gooH. Timou of Aili. iv. 3 

to the monument (rep.) Antony iSr Cleopatra, iv. 1 1 

locked in her monument — iv. 12 

out o' the other side your monument — iv. 13 
confined in all she has, her monument — v. 1 
bear her women from the monument — y. 2 

her sense but as a monument Cymbeline. ii. 2 

fathers lie without a monument! .... — iv. 2 

monument five hundred years Titus Andron. i. 2 

like a taper in some monument — ii. 4 



MON UMENT-household'a monument. 7'/Vui/l;i J. y. 3 

, for a monument ujion thybones Pericles, iii. 1 

i her monument is alnio-it finished — iv. 4 

! dim monument where Tybalt WQs.RomeoSjJul. iii. 5 
her body sleeps in Capels' monument — v. 1 
I now must I to the monument alone.. — v. 2 
I it hurneth in the Capels' monument. — v. 3 
open outcry, toward our monument.. — v. 3 
I same place, to this same monument.. — v. 3 
I grave siiall have a living monument .. Hnndei, v. I 

MONUMENTAL ring All's IVell, iv. 3 

mail in mouumental mockery., rrortws <j Cress iii. 3 
and smootli as monumental alabaster ..Othello, v. 2 
MOOD— whom, in my mood. TwoGen. of Verona, iv. I 
he must observe their mood on .. Tv-etfthMght, iii. 1 
your passion on a misprized mood. Mid. \.'sDr. iii. 2 

sways it to the mood of what Mer, of Venice, iv. 1 

[Coi. Kn/.] muddied in fortune's mood. All's Well, v. 2 
to thwart me in my mood? . . Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

is in a wayward mood to-day — iv. 4 

does show' the mood of a much King John, iv. 2 

to break into this woman's mood .... 1 Henry IV. i. 3 

his moods, and his displeasures Henry V. iv. 7 

stabbed in my angry mood at Richard III. i. 2 

in her shift, and change of mood . . Timon of Ath. i. 1 

one of his father's moods Coriolanus, i. 3 

in this mood will give us Julius Ccesar, iii. 2 

in that mood, the dove.... Antony % Cleopatra, iii. II 
but fortune's mood [Kn<.-fortune moved] 

varies again Pericles, iii. (Gower) 

snow to their colder moods Lear, ii. 2 

when the rash mood's on — ii. 4 

as hot a Jack in thy moodasany../?omeotS Jii/. iii. 1 
TCol.Knt,'] together with all forms, mooisHamlet, i. 2 

her mood will needs be pitied — iy. o 

but now cast in his mood Othello, ii. 3 

albeit unused to the meltinc mood — v. 2 

MOODY— liow now ? moody? Tempest, i. 2 

but moody and dull melancholy .Comedj/ o//irr. y. I 

the moody frontier of a servant I Henry If. i. 3 

nor moody beggars, starving — v. 1 

being moodj', give him line 2HenryIV. iv. 4 

hath banished moody discontented., lifenryf/. iii. 1 

but rather moody mad — iv. 2 

after many moody thoughts SHenryVI. iv. b 

if that your moody discontented.... JJic'iar'/ Ill.y, I 

observe, observe, he's moody Henry VI 11. iii. 2 

music, moody food of us that Antony ■i-Cleo. ii. 5 

to he moody, and as soon moody. Romeo * Juliet, i ii. I 
MOON— lift the moon out of her sphere. Tempest, ii. 1 

the man i' the moon's too slow — ii. I 

out o' the moon, I do assure thee — ii.2 

I was the man in the moon (rep.) — ii.2 

could control tlie moon — v. 1 

'tis not that time of moon with me. TwelfthNight. i . 5 
strange eifects, after the moon..7*/ea5. for Meas. iii. I 
happy days bring in another moon.. Mid. N. Dr. i. 1 

how slow this old moon wanes! — i. I 

and then the moon, like to a silver .. — i. I 

hymns to the cold fruitless moon — i. i 

by the next new moon (the sealing-day — i. I 

the moon, the governess of floods — ii.2 

between the cold moon and the earth — ii. 2 
the chaste beams of the watery moon — ii.2 
doth the moon shine, that night .... — iii. I 

and the moon may shine in at — iii. 1 

the moon methinks, looks with...... — iii. I 

and that the moon may through — iii. 2 

swifter than the wandering moon .. — iv. 1 
two noble beasts in, a moon and a lion — \. 1 
to the moon. This lantern doth (rep.) — v. 1 
moon present; myself the man (rep.) — v. I 
how is it else the man i' the moon? .. — v. I 

I am aweary of this moon — v. 1 

proceed, moon — v. 1 

that the lantern is the moon (rep.; .. — v. I 

for they are in the moon — v ! 

well shone moon; truly, the moon .. — v. 1 
moon vanishes [Co(. Kilt. -lion vanislied] — v. 1 
I tliank thee, moon, for shining .... — v. 1 

moon, take thy flight! — v. 1 

and tlie wolf behowls the moon — v. 2 

to the moon. The moon was ....Lore'sL. Los(, iv. 2 
for the moon is never but a montli .. — iv. 2 
nor shines the silver moon one lialf — iv. 3 (vers.) 

her mistress, is a gracious moon — iv.3 

mj' face is but a moon, and clouded too — v. 2 
vouolisafe, bright moon, and 'these .. — v. 2 

thus change 1 like the moon — v. 2 

you took the moon at full — v. 2 

yet still she is the moon, and I — v. 2 

the moon shiues bright: in such../l/er.o/''e/iice, v. I 
when the moon shone, we did not .... — v. 1 
peace, hoa! the moon sleeps with .... — v. 1 
by yonder moon, I swear, you do ... . — v. 1 
of irisli wolves against the •moon. .Asyoul.ike it, v. 2 
shines the moon! The moon!.7ami'7(^/j/S/(reu', \y, o 

I say, it is the moon that — iv. ij 

it shall be moon, or star — iv. 5 

and be it moon, or sun, or what .... — iv. 5 

and the moon changes even as — iv. 5 

forbid the sea for to obey the moon. miter'sTale.'i 2 
now the ship boring the moon with _— iii. 3 
the pale moon shines by night.... — iv. 2 (song) 

for never gazed the moon upon — i v. 3 

the moon is down; I have not Macbeth, ii. 1 

upon the corner of the moon there .... — iii. 5 

slivered in the moon's eclipse — iv. 1 

they say five moons were seen King John, iv. 2 

can change their moons, and bring. . Richard II. i. 3 

the pale-faced moon looks bloody — ii. 4 

go by the moon and seven stars 1 Henry IV. i. 2 

minions of the moon; and let men say — i.2 
our noble and chaste mistress the moon — i. 2 

us, that are the moon's men — i.2 

bright honour from the pale-faced moon — i. 3 

the moon shines fair — iii. 1 

as much as the full moon doth 2HennjIV. iv. 3 

unto the gazing moon so many.. Henry V. iv. (cho.) 
and moon; or rather, the sun (rep.) .. — v.'i 
ij L 



MOO 



[ 514 ] 



MOR 



ilOOKT— that readies at the moon ..illcniii l-'l. Hi. 1 
"overned by the wntery niooti ....Richard III. ii. t 
he casts his eye against tlie moow. Henry 11 II. iii. 2 
liis tliinliings are lielow the moon .. — iii. 2 
as plantage to the moon .... Troiliis <5 CressiJa, iii. 2 

tlie sun borrows of tlie moon — v. 1 

ns tlie moon does (rep.) Timon of Alliens, iv. 3 

the moon's an arrant tliief — iv. 3 

resolves the moon into salt tears .... — iv. 3 
hang tliem on tlie liorn's o' the moon. Cori'oianus, i. 1 

bemock the modest moon — i. 1 

and the moon, were she earthly — ii. I 

and scared the moon with spliutersi — iv. ."> 

.vou arc smelt above tire moon — v. 1 

the moon of Rome ; chaste as — v. 3 

rather be a dog, and bay the moon. jM(msr.r.iiir, iv. 3 

not many moons gone by Antony ^Ctuo. iii. 10 

monn and stars! whip him — iii. 11 

alack, our terrene moon is now eclipsed — iii. 11 

thou blessed moon, wlien men — iv. 9 

I^ichas (in the horns o' the moon .... — iv. 10 
remarkable beneath the visiting moon — iv. 13 

therein stuck a sun, and moon — v. 2 

now the fleeting moon no planet .... — v. 2 

or pnt the moon in his pocket Cymbch'ne, iii. 1 

so jiale did shine the moon on.... 7'(7iM',l;ii/jo«. ii. 4 

1 aim a mile beyond the moon — iv. 3 

one twelve moons more she'll wear. . . . Peih'ln.. i i. a 

in twice six moons, home — iii. iCio^er) 

and cloudy billow kiss the moon — iii. 1 

the sun and moon ne'er looked upon ! — iv. 4 

in the sun and moon portend no good .... Lear, i. 2 

the sun, the moon, and the stars — i. 2 

conjuring the moon to stand his 

tlioush it he night, the moon shines . 
for all beneath the moon would I not. 

his eyes were two full moons 

that "ebb anil flow by the moon — 

and kill the cnviors niocn Romeo ^-Juliet 

lady, by yonder blessed moon — 

not by the moon, tlie inconstant moon — ii. 2 



— ii. 1 



IV. 6 



MOOR— and prays the Moor bo safe .... OMri/o, li. 1 
warlike isle that so approve the Moor .. — ii. 1 

the Moor,— I know his trumpet — ii. 1 

with what violence she first loved the Moor — ii. 1 

all whicli t!>e Moor is defective in — ii. I 

disrelish and abhor the Moor — ii. I 

she would never have loved the Moor .. — ii. I 
the Moor— howbeit that I endure hiin not — ii. 1 

suspect the lusty Moor hath leaped — ii. 1 

put the JNIoor at least into a jealousy.... — ii. 1 

abuse him to the Moor in the rank — ii. 1 

make the Moor thank me, love me — ii. 1 

that the noble Moor should hazard such 

to say £0 to the Moor 

the course to win the Moor again? 

and then for her to win the Moor 

for him pleads strongly to the Moor .... 
sliall undo her credit with the Moor .... 
myself, the while, to draw the Moor .... — 

to draw tlie Moor out of the way — 

tlxe Moor replies, that he, you hurt — 

her first remembrance from the Moor .. — 
that tlie Moor first gave to Desdenionn.. — 
the Moor already changes with my poison — 
cursed fate: that gave thee to the Moor! — 

but my noble Moor is true of mind — 

is this the uoble Moor, wliom our full . . — 
Moor's abused by some most villanons .. — 
made you to suspect me with the Moor.. — iv. 2 

the Moor may unfold me to him — v. 1 

the Moor has killed ray mistress — v. 2 

O thou dull Moor! that handkerchief .. — v. 2 

here recovered from the jMoor — v. 2 

Moor, she was chaste; she loved thee (rep.) — v. 2 
seize upon the fortunes of the Moor .... — v. 2 

MOORDITCII— of Moorditch? XHenrylV. i. 2 

MOOUFIELDS to muster iu? HenryVill. v. 3 

MOORSHIP'S ancient OlhelU>,\. 1 

M(5P — will be here with mop and mow. Tempest, iv. 1 
MOPE— to mope with liis fat-brained. . Henry I', iii. 7 
part of one true sense could not so mope Hn«i/e(, iii. 4 



— i!. 3 

— ii. 3 

— ii. 3 

— ii. 3 

— ii. 3 



iii. 1 



iii. 3 
iii. 3 
iii. 4 
iv. 1 



unma'sk her beauty to the moon Hamlet, i. 3 I MOPING— were broxiglit moping hither Tempest, v. 1 



revisit'st thus the glimpses of the moon.. — 
thirty dozen moons, with borrowed sheen — iii. 2 
the sun and moon make us again count.. — iii. 2 

that have virtue under the moon — i\-. 7 

till now some nine moons wasted Othello, i. 3 

to follow still the elianges of the moon .. — iii. 3 
stops the nose at it, and the moon winks — iv. 2 

now a huge eclipse of sun and moon — v. 2 

i' is the very error of tlie moon — v. 2 

.'iIOON-BEAMSfrom his sleeping.. M/rf. N.'s Dr. iii. i 

r>i')ON-CAI>F— siege of this moon-caXilTempcsl, ii. 2 

under the dead moon-calf's gaberdine — ii. 2 

how now, moon-calf? .". — ii. 2 

moon-calf, speak once in thy life — iii. 2 

if thou beest a good moon-calf — iii. 2 

JIOONES— than the moones sphere. ..Wd. A'. 'sD/'. ii. 1 

Ml lONISII— but a moonisli youth. .4.9 i/o« LHic II, iii. 2 

NiOOXLIGIIT at her window ..-Uid.,V.'s Dream, i. 1 

v.ithout the town, by moonlight .... — i. 2 

ill met by moonlight, proud Titania — ii. 2 

and see our moon iijzht revels — ii. 2 

to bring moonlight into a chamber.. — iii. 1 

and Thisby meet by moonlight — iii. 1 

how sweet the moonlight sleeps.. Afci-.o/ Venice, v. I 

it is not moonlight now Taming of Shreiv, iv. 5 

WOON-LIKE lCol.Knt.-mQ\\-\\'ke]Loce'sL.Lost, iv. 3 

MOONSHINE do the green-sour Tempest, v. 1 

moonshine revellers, and shades.. /l/«n/;ra'c.t, v. 5 
starlight, and moonshine be out — v. .i (song) 

find out moonshine, find out (_rep.).Mid. N. Dr. iii. 1 
or present, the person of moonshine — iii. I 

V-resenteth moonshine (rep.) — v. 1 

let lion, moonshine, wall, and lovers — 

how chance moonshine is gone — 

moouhhine and lion are left to bury — 

request'st but moonshine Love's L. Lost 

twelve or fourteen moonshines lag of .... Lcm 
I'll make a sop o' the moonshine of you — 



V. 1 
V. 1 
V. 1 



MOPPING— Flibbertigibbet, of mopping. . Lear, iv. 1 

MOPSA must be your mistress Winler'sTale, iv. 3 

if I were not in love with Mopsa .... — iv. 3 

MORAIj— to apply a moral medicine Much Ado, i. 3 

moral in this Benedictns. Moral?.. — iii. 4 

I have no moral meaning — iii. 4 

to be so moral, when he shall endure — v. 1 
a good moral, my lord: it is not ..Mid.N.'sDr. v. 1 

there's the moral: now the Love'sL.Lost, iii. 1 

say the moral again — iii. 1 

now will I begin yoiu' moral — iii. 1 

thus moral on the time As you Lilse it, ii. 7 

thy father's moral parts may'st AlCs Well, i. 2 

virtue, and this moral discipline... '/"aiiwHgo/i'A. i. 1 

the meaning or moral of his signs — iv. 4 

silent king, the moral of this sport.. iJuAarrf //. iv. I 

which is the moral of it Henry V. iii. 6 

look you, is an excellent moral — iii. 6 

make a moral of the devil himself .. — iv. 1 

this moral ties me over to time — v. 2 

unfit to hear moral philosophy .. 7'ro(7us .?" Cress, ii. 2 

these moral laws of nature — ii. 2 

the moral of my wit is plain and true — iv. 4 
a thousand moral paintings.... Timon of Athens, i. 1 

a pretty moral ijep. ii. 2) Pericles, ii. 1 

whilst thou, a moral fool, sit'st still .... Lear, iv. 2 
MORALER— are too severe a moraler . . Othello, ii. 3 
MORALITY of imprisonment . . Meas.fnr iMeas. i. 3 
MORALIZE— did he not moralize. /Is i/i»ii7(« it, ii. l 

I pray thee, moralize them Taming of Sh. iv. 4 

I moralize two meanings in one . . Richard III. iii. 1 

MORDAKE the earl of 1 ife Uep.'). ... 1 Henry 1 V. i. 1 

Mordake, and a thousand blue-caps — ii. 4 

hut there is Mordake, Vernon — i v. 4 

MORE— that sir Thomas More ....HenryVlJI. iii. 2 

MO RGAN— himself to Morgan All's WelL iv. 3 

Belarius, that am Morgan called ..Cymbeline, iii. 3 
I, old Morgan, am that Belarius .. 



the moonshine's watery beams ..Romeo 4- Juliet, i. 4 ' MORISCO— like a wild morisco 2HenryVI. iii. 



MOOR is with child by you. . Merchant of I't 

that the JSIoor should be more than . . — ii 
my sweet Moor, sweeter to me . . Titus Andron, i 

that 3'our Moor and you are singled — i 

accompanied witli a barbarous ]\Ioor — i 

will I hence to seek my lovely Moor — i 

like to the empress' Moor — it 

as it it were the Moor — ii 

comes in likeness of a coal-black Moor — ii 

did you see Aaron the Moor? — i\ 

but if you brave the Moor — i\ 

and told the Moor, he sliould not chuose — i\ 

fitted, had you but a Moor — \ 

jn her company there is a Moor .... — \ 

a queen, attended by a JNIoor — \ 

take you in this barbarous Moor .... — \ 

the issue of an irreligious iMoor — a 

hitlier hale that misbelieving Moor — \ 

done to Aaron, that damned Moor . . — i 

to feed, and batten on this moor? Hamlet, iV 

am alRiied tolove the Moor Oitielto, i 

were I the Iiloor, I would not be lago .. — i 

your daughter and the Moor are now.... — i 

to the gross clasps of a lascivious Moor.. — i 

' as, if I staj^, I sliall), against the Moor.. — i 

nnhappy girl! with the Moor — i 

we may apprehend her and the Moor? ,, — i 

signior, it is the Moor. Down with him — i 

comes Brabantio, and the valiant Moor.. — i 

here is the man. this Moor — i 

profess due to the Moor, my lord — i 

come hither'Moor; I here do give t'nee.. — i 

1 did love the Moor to live with him.... — i 

adieu, brave Aloor! (rep.) — i 

long continue her love to the Moor — i 

these Moors are changeable in their wills — i 

I hate the Moor (rep.) — i 

the Moor isofafreeand open nature.... — i 

to the warlike Moor, Othello (rep.) — ii 



MORN— in the morn I'll bring you lempest, v. 1 

for execution in the morn .... i'lro Gen. of I'er. iv. 2 
I'll make it my morn prayer.... jVeas./oijl/eas. ii. 4 
lights that do mislead the morn .. — iv. 1 (song) 

betimes i' the morn, I'll call — iv. 4 

but the next morn betimes — v. 1 

to do observance to a morn of May.il//d.iV.'sD»'. i. 1 

shall out-sleep the coming morn — v. I 

yea, from morn till night Love'x L. Lost, v. 2 

but temperate as the morn; .. Taming of Slireie, ii. 1 
each new morn, new widows howl ..Macbetlt, iv. 3 

from morn till even fought Henry r. iii. 1 

the morn that I was wedded 1 Henry 11. v. 4 

be it in tlie morn, when every one. .2 Henry ;7. iii. 1 

dimmed your infant morn liictiajd 111. iv. 4 

twice done salutation to the morn .. — v. 3 
trouble not yourself; the morn. Troilus <$- Cress, iv. 2 
next morn, ere the ninth hour ..Antony ^-Cleo. ii. 5 

the morn is fair: good-morrow — iv. 4 

by the second hour i' the morn — iv. 9 

at the sixth hour of morn Cymbeline, i. 4 

and morn to the lark, less welcome — iii. 6 

'tis the ninth hour o' the morn — iv. 2 

the golden sun salutes the morn.. Titus Andron. ii. 1 
the hunt is up, the morn is bright .. — ii. 2 
early, one blustering morn, this lady.. Pericles, v. 3 
the grey-eyed morn smiles on ..Romeo Sf Juliet, ii. 3 
was the lark, the herald of the morn — Wi.b 
early next Thursday morn, the gallant — iii. 5 
cock, that is the trumpet to the morn ..Hamlet, i. 1 
look, the morn, in russet mantle clad .... — i. I 
in the morn and liquid dew of youth.... — i. 3 

"Tuesday morn, or Tuesday noon Otlwlto. iii. 3 

MORN-DEW on the myrtle \i:af..intony(<Cleo. iii. 10 
MORNING— 'tis fresh morning ......Tempest,i\i. I 

as the morning steals upon the night. . — v. 1 
last morning you could not s&&.TwoGen. of Ver.u. I 

send to me 111 the morning — iv. 2 

angels given me this morning. . . . Merry Wives, ii. 2 



MORNING-not miss you mm-mng.Mcn y iVives, ii. 2 

a morning's draught of sack — ii. 2 

to-morrow morning to my house.... — iii. 3 
her liiisband goes this morning (re/j.) — iii. .'i 
lie done to-morrow morning.... Twelftli Niglit, iii. 4 
more matter iiir a Jliiy morning .... — iii. 4 
were set at eight i' the morning .... — v. 1 
have given it you to-day morning .. — v. I 
by nine to-morrow morning.. ..Meus.forMeas. ii. I 

to-morrow morning are to die — iv. 2 

you shall licar more ere morning.. .. — iv. 2 
Barnardine be this morning executed — iv. 2 
and is banged betimes in the morning — iv. 3 
there died this morning of a cruel fever — iv. 3 
good morning to .you, fair and gracious — iv. 3 
my knees ever.v morning and evening. Miuh Adn, i : . ! 

he brushes hid hat o' mornings — iii. 2 

next morning at the temple, and there — iii. 3 
have them tliis morning examined.. — iii..'j 
prince John is this morning secretly — iv. 2 
which he forswore on Tuesday morning — v. I 
to-morrow morning come you to my — v. 1 
until to-morrow morning, lords .... — v. I 
with the morning's love have o{.. Mid. N.'s Dr. iii. 2 

1 do hear the morning lark — iv. 1 

ears that sweep away the morning dew — iv. I 
and for tlie morning now is something — iv. 1 
your worship to-morrow morning. Love'sL. Lost, iii. 1 
to those fresli morning drops. . . . — iv. 3 (verses) 
the morning, when he is saber. Merch. of Venice, i. 2 

at six o'clock i' the morning — ii. 5 

he plies the duke at morning — iii 2 

and in the morning early will we both — iv. 1 
m.y master will be here ere morning — v. 1 
it is almost morning, and yet, I am sure — v. I 
in the morning eaiTy they found../lsi/o!(L/7.-eiV, ii. 2 
and shining morning face, creeping.. — ii. 7 
come this morning, and comes not?.. — iii. 4 

his lordship will next morning All's Well, iv. 3 

and this morning your departure hence — iv. 3 
soar above the morning lark.. Taming of Sh. 2 (ind.) 
at the high-cross every morning .... — i. 1 

as morning roses newly washed .— ii. 1 

the morning wears, 'tis time we were — iii. 2 
begins his morning story right. .Co»He('.i/o/'K»T. v. 1 

almost at odds with morning Macbeth, iii. 4 

meet me i' the morning; thither; — iii. 5 

to-morrow morning let ns meet .... King John, iv. 3 

spent on Tuesday morning llleurylf. i. 2 

to-morrow morning by four o'clock . . — i. 2 
ta'en a thousand pound this morning — ii. 4 
you must to the court in the morning — ii. 4 
be with me betimes in the morning.. — ii. 4 

and in the morning early shall — iv. 3 

will it never be morning? Henry f. iii. 7 

but I would it were morning — iii. 7 

the Dauphin longs for morning .... — iii. 7 
third hour of drowsy morning name — iv. (clio.) 
inly ruminate the morning's danger — iv. (elio.) 
is not that the morning which breaks — iv. 1 
become the morning field; their ragged — iv. 2 
rehearsal of my morning's dream . .2 Henry VI. i. 2 
how the morning opes her golden . .SHeury VI. ii. J 

fares like to the morning's war — ii. .'i 

when the morning sun sliall raise .. — iv. 7 

makes the night morning Richard II. i. i 

cheerfully and smooth this morning — iii. 4 
by the second hour in the morning. . _ v. 3 
prepare thy battle early in the morning — v. 3 
how far into the morning is it, lords? — v. 3 
this found I on my tent this morning — v. 3 

attend him here this morning Henry VIII. iii. 2 

this morning papers of state — iii. 2 

to-morrow morning to the council-board — 
.you shall this morning come before us — 
and this morning see you do appear — 
make them sleep on May-day morning — 

this morning, uncle Troilm ij- Cres. 

modest as morning when she coldly' — 
to-morrow morning call some knight — 

and makes pale the morning — 

take leave till to-morrow morning. . — 
it is great morning; and the hour .. — 
hownave we spent this morning? .. — 

to appear this morning to them — 

but repair to me next morning ..Timon ofAlh. ii. 2 
caudle thy morning taste, to cure .. — iv. 3 
with the forehead of the morning ..Coriolanws, ii. 1 
and then we pout upon the morning — v. 1 
this morning, for ten thousand of your — v. 4 

the morning comes upon ns JuliusCresar.,ii. 1 

condition to tlie raw-cold morning.. — ii. 1 
the humours of the dank morning?. . — ii. 1 

this morning are they fled away — v. 1 

of what I was i' the morning Antony SfCleo. ii. 2 

this morning, like the spirit of a youth — iv. 4 

this morning left thee (rep.) — iv. 5 

it's almost morning, is't not? Cymbeline, ii. 3 

advised to give her music o' mornings — 

food morning to your mistress — 
do think, I saw't this morning — 

and bows you to morning's holy oiEce — 

it is great morning; come — 

as fresh as morning's dew distilled. Titus Andr 

ii.ti'll m\ frt aiinr»pr i' fliP moV)liniT. . _ I.i'n 



V. 1 
V. 1 

V. 3 

iida, i. 2 

i. 3 

ii. I 



iv. .3 
iv. 4 
V. 3 



ii. 3 
ii. 3 
ii. 3 



IV. 2 

ron.W.A 

we'll go to supper 1' the morning Lear, iii. s 

many a morning hath he (rep.).. Romeo ^ Julie', i. I 
'tis almost morning, I would have thee — fii. 2 
yon grey is not the morning's eye .. — iii. 5 
in the morning comes to rouse thee.. — iv. 1 
this knot knit up to-morrow morning — iv. 2 
[C.if.j married then to-morrow morning? — iv. 3 
thought long to see this morning's face — iv. 5 
early in the morning see thou deliver — v. 3 
calls our person from om- morning's rest? — v. 3 
a glooming peace this morning with it — v. 3 

and I this morning know where we Hamlet, i. 2 

the morning cock crew loud — i . 2 

methinks I scent the morning air — i. .^ 

right, sir; o' Monday morning — ii. 1 

all this morning betime — iv. 5 (song) 



MiJR 



[515 ] 



MOT 



— 11. 2 



R10UNIN(;— at nine V Hie movninp here. Oilulh, i. 3 
whereshall wc meet i' the morning? .... — .i- •' 

anil betimes in tliemovniiig — }!• ■' 

bv till- nuiss, 'tis iiiorninpc ..... — ii- J 

MiiUOCCO— prinee of Morocco.. jVcrc/i.o/<cn'ce,). i 
iiansi- there, IMimicco , — .'!• / 

miRIilS-morris is tilled up ..Mul. A. f i?"","". ]\- - 
a morris for Pihiy-day ,••,:•■•• -■"' '"' " '^'h "■ ', 

M'.IKRIS-DANCE; for, my good liegc.. «.-■■■;_« ' .."• i 

Ml)KIlIS-FIKE-a morris-nike •'^"'"''.''y ';({•-'';;• ".■ ? 

MORROAV-morrow deep midnight .Mid. A. su>-. i. i 
never shall sun that morrow see! ... ...iVach-lli, i. s 

but not lend a morrow R,cliani'i._\. i 

good-night, till it be morrow. . . . Ri,meoS,;Juhet ii. 1 

BIORSEL-put thisaiicicnt morsel .... Ietnpcsl,i\. 1 
how doth my dear nwvf^\.Mn,^<ucfm-Menm,e, in. 2 
forth this morsel of dead royn ty . . hny^ .'nhn ly. i 
the sweetest morsel of the iiiL'lit . . ..ihenryl .u. 4 
liquorish draughts, and morsels.. 7 ;»;.)« ri//l'A. ly. ^ 
eaniest thou to a morsel of this tcast..ConoUnms, i. .) 

I was a morsel for a n\oiiarch Anlonij A Cleo._ i. o 

I found vou as a morsel — ".'■'' 

inay'st cut a morsel otf the spit . . .... ^•■' ;'■',':*• "■ i 

gorged with the dearest morsel.. Kouieo ^S /i.i't , _\ . 3 

MOHT— Mort dii Vinaigre ! ; -l" » " « . ■!■ ;' 

as 'twere the mort o' the deer . . . . " ";''"'■ » '«''■.-.!• - 

mort dc ma vie', (rep. iv. 5) ■':,''"''■' V/"' i 

pr-ftcefnl words? Jlort Dicul 2/V;/r,v7 /. i. 1 

Win RTAL— this is no mortal business . .Icmpesl, i. I 

sir, she's mortal; but by . — '^■\ 

excelseach mortal tiling. T:roGen.nl I er. ly. 2 (song) 
even to a mortal abitremLut .... ■I'lrrlflh Aighl, ui. 4 

with such a mortal motion — "'■ J 

he tinished, indeed, his mortal act •• — .Y- ' 
themselves laugh mortal. . Measure forMeasiire, u. ^ 

and desperately mortal ,, "7 . , ^' f 

well, we are all mortal l\T>irli.4do,\. 1 

tlie himiaii mortals want Mid.N.D 

but she being mortal, of that ._. 

I pray thee.l'eiitle mortal, sing again — 
1 will purrre thy mortal grossness so — 

hail, mortal! hail! hail! — 

lord, what fools these mortals be! .. — 
with these mortals, on the ground — ^ — 

no mijrtal so magnificent! Love s L. Lost, in. 1 

nor tongue of mortal tell — iv. 3 (verse-s) 

bv heavens, the wonder of a mortal eye! — iv. 3 

tiivnimimortal for thy love — iv. 3 (verses) 

their bucks to mortal views! ()-cp.) .. — . 7.- 2 

this mortal breathing Merchanlof Venice, n. 7 

is mortal in nature (re;;.) .., ''>!/°"f,' „.'''"■ , 

the excess makes it soon mortal ■■Ms 11 ell_,\. 1 

into my mortal prejiaration — '".• 6 

mortal ears might hardly endure. . . Taming nf Sh. 1. 1 
tills news is mortal to the queen, n'mier s Tale, lu. 2 
the mortal and intestine jars. . Comedy of Errors, j. 1 
them tlian mortal knowledge.. il/ac6e(/i, i. o (letter) 

tluit tend on mortal thoughts — ..i. 5 

with twenty mortal murders on — m. 4 

security is mortals' chiefest enemy 

to time, and mortal custom 

hold fast the mortal sword — Jv. j 

that know all mortal consequents.... — v. 3 
in mortal fury half so peremptory ..KnigJohn,]]. 2 
■without the assistance of a mortal hand — iii. 1 

a cased lion by the mortal paw ,~ ,,,"!• 1 

the purest treasure mortal times liichardll.]. 1 

be poor, it ends a mortal woe — ,?}■ ' 

not a mortal touch throw death — i)!- 2 

rounds the mortal temples of — i''- f 

the extremest point of mortal breathing — ^ iv. 1 

mortal men, mortal men 1 Hcnrt/U , iv. 2 

that suffer' st more of mortal griefs . . Henry I . ly. 1 
last breathing in this mortal world! 2Heury I /. i. 2 

the mortal worm might make ~ „ , '"■ H 

tlie lurknig serpent's mortal sting? .ZHenry f I. u. 2 
bide the mortal fortune of the field? — ii- 2 

years a mortal man may live — .;!• 5 

return his sworn and mortal foe .... — m- 3 

proclaim myself thy mortal foe ~, , ,, ^' i 

vou are mortal, and mortal eyes ..Kichard III. i. 2 
. , . , J 2 

i.2 
iii. 4 



iv. I 



iv. 1 



ryVin.n. 4 



JIOHTAT— luorlnl as an old man's life?/^imW, iv. » 
somortiil.tlKit, hul di|.aknifein it ••••,— '-^^ ? 
do omit tlioiv nu.rtal natures ()/lietlo,n. I 

voumnihil cn-iiios, whose rude .... .. - i.n. ; 

if ivcr mortal e\ es do see tliem bolster.. — m. 3 
if inv oU'eiKi' be of such mortal kind .... — lU. 4 

tin- loutcli wasmorhiUoliim — y- 2 

MUilTALlTV and mercy in .. ..Meas.for Meas.\. \ 
greatness in mortality can censure.. — in- 2 

insensible of mortality „„~,„ „'^-' T 

could be set up against movtality .... All s ^^ell,]. 1 

nothing serious in mortality Mae leiii, n. .s 

cannot hold mortality'sstrong hand. A.mi'Jo/i", iv. - 
foretell the ending of mortality .... — y- ' 
make such waste in brief mortality.. ..Hfm-y/ . i. 2 
killing in relaijse of mortality — "V. 3 

1 be" mortality, rather than life ..\HenryVl. iv. 5 
shall 'scape mortality; O thou whose — iv. 7 

what mortality is! , Cijmbeline, ly. 

taught my frail mortality to know lencles, i. 1 

o'erhear the shores of my mortality .. — .v.) 
wipe it first; it smells of mortality Lear, iv. b 

AIOKTALLY— down some mortally.. Ci/mfcridie.y. 1 

tliou'di they hurt vou mortally Vericles, lu. 3 

vet Twas iiiortallv brought forth — v.! 

]M( >ilTAlu-ST AIIING war Rieliard HI. y. 3 

ISIORTAR-villain into a mortar .......... Lfar u. i 

Ml ) RTAR-PIECE, to blow us .... .. Ueiiry ( ///. y. 3 

MOIIXIFIED—Dumain is mortified.. /.c/i(^ ,« L.L. i. 1 

alarm, excite the mortifiied man Macbelh, y. 2 

his wildness, mortified in him ..... . . . Henry y.i. 1 

conjured up my mortified spirit. .Juims Casar, ii. 1 
numbed and mortified bare arms .... ... . Lear, ii. 3 

MORTIFYING mischief M"e!> ^1;'". }■ 3 

cool with mortifying groaiis . . il/oc/i. o/ / enwe, i. 1 
MORTIMER-[sfe EDMUND]- 
that the noble Mortimer, leading... ..If/i-'oi/i'^. 1. 1 
his brother- in-law, the foobsh Mortimer — 

home revolted Mortimer (rep.) — 

never could the noble Mortimer receive — 
not hear vou speakof Mortimer.. .. 
speak of Mortimer? Zounds, I will 



\ UU UiC IliUl Lin, iiuvi 111... utfc. ,^.1 ^j 

but jiower over his mortal body. . 

would it were mortal poison 

momentaiw grace of mortal men .... 

jioor mortal living ghost 

Mlien I was mortal, my anointed body 
to wear our mortal state to come. . Hei 

amongst my brethren mortal — .'!•■' 

from eyes oi other mortals? .. TroUus ^- Ciessida, \. 3 
the mortal Venus, the heart-blood.. — in. 1 
by my mortal sword be drained! .... — ly. 5 

alone'he entered the mortal gate Coriolainis,u. 2 

mortal, to cut it off; to cure it — iii- 1 

and the mortal instruments Julius Ciesar, ii. 1 

see how mortal an unkindness . . Aniony Sf Cleo. i. 2 
by some mortal stroke she do defeat us — v. I 

tliis mortal house I'll ruin — v. 2 

mortal wretch, with thy sharp teeth — y. 2 

toi'etherwith so mortal a purpose Cymbeline,i. 5 

ecFs him oil', more than a mortal seeming — ..i. 7 
to read would be even mortal to me — 

are grown the mortal bugs o' the field — 



— iii. 4 
V. 3 



are grown rne raortui oui^s u l__, 

show thy spite on mortal flics — v. 4 

be not with mortal accidents oppressed — v. 4 
she had for you a mortal mineral . . — v. ."i 
to strike me' to death with mortal joy — y. S 
as any mortal bodv, hearing it ..Tilus Andron.n. 3 
by good advice, mortal revenge upon — ly. 1 
lo'oked to, for her relapse is mortal . . Peneles, in. 2 
which his mortal vessel tears — iv. 4 (Oower) 
one mortal night, drove him to this — v. 1 
the gods can have no mortal officer.. — y. 3 

wondering eves of mortals Homeo ^-Jaliei,>\. 2 

got his mortal hurt in my behalf — J! i. 1 

in mortal paradise of such sweet flesh — in. 2 
mortals, hearing them, run mad .... — iv. 3 

such mortal drugs I have — .y- ' 

unless things mortal move them not ..Hnndet,u. 2 
■when we have shuffled off this mortal coil — in. 1 
exiosing what is mortal, and uusiue — iv- 4 



MOTHER— prove the mother of fools.. /If i'f'i.4!?n,ii. 
no sure, niv lord, my mother cried — ii. 

you muht play Thisby's mother .Mid. A'. Dream, j. 



would ha 
his mol' 
down, < ' 
to ml-ti 

my nidi 

her mother's, I li: 



— i. 3 



— i. 3 



i. 3 



- i. 3 



ii. 3 



iii. 1 



iii. 2 
iii. 2 
iv. 4 



ryVI. iii. 1 
— iii. 1 



iv. 7 



lift the down-trod Mortimer as high 
trembling even at the name of Blortimcr 
ransom Mortimer; forbade my (jp/j.) 

in his ear I'll holla— Mortimer! 

tau'dit to speak nothing but Jlortimer 
and'of York, to join with Mortnner. . 
steal to Glendower, and lord Mortimer 
I fear, ray brother Blortimer doth stir 
shall play dame Mortimer his wife . . 
and his son-in-law, Mortimer. ....... 

lord Mortimer, and cousin Glendower 
so much she doteth on her Mortimer 
come, lord Mortimer; you are as slow 
grace of York, Douglas, Mortimer . . 

lord Mortimer of Scotland hath 

Douglas, and Mortimer {rep.') 

let dying iNiortimer here rest \ Henry 11 

thus the Mortimers, in whom the title — 
here dies the dusky torch of Jlortimcr 
under the title of John Mortimer. . 2 He 
that John Mortimer, which now is dead 

my father was a iMortimer 

rise up sir John Mortimer 

proclaims himself lord Jlortimer .... 

now is Mortimer lord ot this ci ty 

calls me other than, lord JMortimer . . 

the presence of lord Mortimer 

thy grandfather, Roger Mortimer. . .. ZHenry ''•:•■ 
sir John, and sir Hugh Mortimer .... — .1.2 

Mi)RTISE— can hold the mortise? oiiieilo, u. 1 

MORTISED-things are mortised and. . Handel, m. 3 

MORTON, didst thou come from .2Henryir. i. 1 

vet speak, Morton; tell thou thy earl —„.'•' 

Morton is fled to Richmond Eichardiu. iv. i 

bv Dorset, Buckingham, and Morton — ly. 4 
M!)SE— like tomosein the chine.. raimjis-r^/^.S/i. in. 2 

MOSS— brier, or idle moss Comedy of Errors, u. 2 

yea, and furred mossbesides........(;!/»ii'C''"(?, ly. 2 

o'ercome with moss, and baleful .. r(i»s.'l)i(/roiMi. 3 

MOSSED— boughs were mossed As you Likeil, iv. 3 

these mossed [Co!. Kn(-moist] trees. 7'(m.o/,J//i. jy. 3 

MOSS-GROWN towers 1 Henry U. in. I 

MOTE-a mote will turn the balance. il/'J. A'. sDr.y. 1 
found his mote: the king (rpp.) .. Love s L. Lost, iv. 3 
that there were but a mote iu yours. Ai"i',/o;i«, iv. 1 

wash every mote out of his Henry I. iv. \ 

like motes and shadows see ..Pericles, iv. 4 (Oower) 

a mote it is, to trouble ;;•;;.•; ",,"„"';.'.■ ', 

MOTH— Moth! and Mustard-seed !.Mit/. A. .i Dr. iii. 1 

Samson's love, my dear Moth? Love s L.Losl,i. 2 

nay, nothing, master Moth — ..i. 2 

thou hast no feeling of it. Moth — in. 1 

my dependants. Moth, follow — . in. 1 

the candle singed the moth Mereh. oft ema; ii. 9 

did but fill Ithaca full of mollis . . . , Cnrmtanni, 1. 3 

if I be left behind, a moth of peace Oihelln, i.3 

MOTHER was a piece of virtue J empesl, \ . 2 

mother brashed with raven's feather — i.2 

bv Sycorax my mother — 1-2 

his mother was a witch — y_- 1 

my mother weeping Tn-oGen. oflerona, ii. 3 

this left shoe is my mother (rep.) — n. 3 

now, come I to my mother — 11-3 

here's mv mother's breath up and down — ii. 3 

till my mother be dead Merry Hives,]. 1 

as my motlier was, the first hour — .11.2 

good mother, do not marry — in. 4 

come, mother Prat, come.. — iv. 2 

her mother even strong against . . 

to this her mother's plot she 

her mother liatli intended — iv. n 

she to deceive? Father or mother? .. — Jv. B 

good my mother, pardon — y- 5 

his mother's milk were scarce Twelfth Nighi,\. a 

so near the manners of my mother .. — i>- ' 
but to give the mother notice oi.. Mcas. for Mens. -i. b 

mv mother i.layed my father fair — in- J 

her mother liath many times told. . . . Much Ado, 1. 1 



iv. B 



every mother's son .. — .. - 

a votaress of my order — ii. 2 

111 r's son, and rehearse — iii. 1 

.' h, your mother .... — iii. 1 
in'iie, assist me! ..Lovc\L.Losl.,S. 2 

^, ^ 'c heard — ii- 1 

tlicn was Venus like her mother — ii. 1 

my lady his mother played false.. /Vcr. oflena-c, 1. 2 

as'his wise mother wrought in his — _;. 3 

Margery, your wife, is my mother .. — .n. - 

so the sins of my mother should he.. — }]',■ ^ 

damned both by father and mother. . — in. ■'J 

I fall intn Charybdis, your mother . . -- 111. ■; 

to lie with his mother earth? AsyoaLike il.t. 2 

whomi^ht be your mother ,,,r„. ,,"!' ? 

be comfortable to my mother .ills » ell, 1. 

is to accuse your mothers — !■ 

a mother, and a mistress, and a friend — 1. I 

JTclen, I am amother to yon — i. ■> 

a mother; why not a motlier? (rep.) — ."• ■• 

there's letters from my mother — !|- 3 

acquaint my mother with my hale .. — \\ 3 

my mother greets me kindly — v.- '' 

th'is to my mother: 'twill be two days — .n. ■> 

you should be as your mother was .. — iv 2 

my mother did but duty — iv. - 

ta ke my mother shall not hear — ; v. 2 

mother' told me j list how he — 1 v. '- 

not given him Ins mother's letter — iv... 

writ to my lady mother — }''''i 

the dearest groans of a mother — iv. 5 

his mother, and his lady — v- .i 

I am her mother, sir — ^' ;; 

good mother, fetch my hail — ^'- ^ 

O my dear mother, do I see you .... — y- J 
a wi'tty mother! witless else ..Tavungof ahrew.'.i. 1 

now by my mother's son — iv. a 

60 his mother says ••, ■;- \-\ 

thy mother plays, audi play too., n inter si ale, 1. 2 

the queen, your mother, rounds apace — n- > 

the dishonour of his motlier — .!!■ 3 

the mother to a hopeful prhice ....... — I'i-- 

thy mother appeared to me last night — i;i. -i 

that, for thy mother's fault, art thus — m. .j 

your mother was most true to wedlock — v. 1 

'in resemblance of the mother — v. '2 

cries, O thy mother, thy mother! — v. ^ 

hearing of her mother's statue ...... — v. 1 

to look upon, the statue of her mother — v. J 

and pray vour motlier's blessing — y. 3 

joyful nio'ther of two goodly sons. Comedy of Err. 1 . 1 

to find a mother, and a brother. . . — ' ' 

as birds do, mother 

why should I, mother? ;■•■■■ 

was my father a traitor, mother? . 

he has killed m.e, mother 

it cannot be called oiu: mother . . . 

was from his mother's womb 

silence, good mother - 

of one mother, then, it seems (rep.) . 

o'er to heaven, and to my mother — 

thou dost shame thy mother 

heaven guard my mother's honour . . — 
still I lay upon my mother's head , . — 
how he employed my mother ........ — 

between my father and my mother lay — 

that this, my mother's son — 

this concludes; m.y mother s son dui get — 

brother by the mother's side — 

O me, it is mv mother — 

therefore, good mother — 

kniglit, good mother, Basilicolike . . — 

O take his mother's thanks — 

wert his mother (j'cp.) — 

good my mother, peace! — 

his mother shames -him so — 

for tears in many an English mother — 
and slanderous to thy mother s womb — 
church, our holy mother, dost w 1 It u 1 ly — 
our mother, breathe her curse (rep.) — 
my mother is assailed in our tent. . .. — 

this will make my mother die — 

IKnt.l scorns a mother's invocation . . — 

where is my mother's care that — 

died vour noble mother — 

what! mother dead? (rep.) — 

of your dear mother England . . . 

my mother, and my nurse 

a gasping new-delivered mother — — 

as a long parted mother with her child — 111. 

of mothers' sons shall ill become — m- 

good mother, be con ten t — ^■ • 

rob me of a happy mother s name? . . — y- 

let your mother in — v. 

unto my mother's prayers, I bend . . — v. 

your m'other well hath prayed — y. 

moulded in their mothers' womb \ Henry n .1. 

send him back again to my mother . . — n. 

1 have partly thy mother's word .... — .n . 

if your mother's cat had kittened — _ 111. 

my mother's son, sir (rep.) ....■iHenryir. 111. 

better thou hadst struck thy mother — y. 

mock mothers from their sons Hemy r. 1. 

dishonour not your mothers ........ — iii. 

whiles the mad mothers with their ..Henry I . ni. 

but all mv mother came into — ly. 

when at their mother s moist eyes . . 1 Henry 1 1. 1. 

Ood'.-i mother deigned to appear — 1. 

Christ's mother helps me, else I ..... — i- 

Helen, the mother of great Constantinc — J. 

the mothers still their babes? — ii. 

for by my mother I derived — n. 

my sister, that thy mother was — .;;. 

as looks the mother on her lowly babe — in. 

O, if you love my mother — ;v. 

mother's hopes lie in one tomb? (rep.) — iv. 

iu thee thy mother dies — 'v. 



. Machelh, iv. 



...King.!ohH,\. I 



.Richard n. 



— iii. 1 

— iii. I 



MOT 



JIOTflER— her mother liveth yet. ... 1 Henri/ 1' I. v. 4 

that I was wedded to her motlier. ... — v. 4 
I would the milk tliy niother gave thee — v. 4 

now by God's mother, priest iHenryVI. ii. 1 

had'st thou been liis motlier, thou .. — ii. 1 

my mother being heir unto the crown — ii. 2 

thy mother took into her blameful .. — iii. 2 

dying with mother's dug between .. — iii. 2 

gobbets of thy mother's bleeding heart — iv. 1 

my mother a Plnntaizenet — iv. 2 

thy mother stands; fbr, well {rep.)..ZUeiirijyi. ii. 2 

how will my mother, for a father's . . — ii. 5 

when mj' daughters eall thee mother — iii. :i 

and, by God's mother, I, being but.. — iii. 2 

forswore uie in my mother's womb .. — iii. 2 

s|]enk to thy mother, boy! canst .... — v. 5 
mother felt more than a mother's (rep.) — v. 6 

I have often licard my mother saj' . . — v. 6 
flight theliopefnl mother at the ..Ilirhnrd III. i. 2 
die neitlicr niotlior, wife, nor England's — \.i 

thou shuider of tiiv mother's heavy.. — i. 3 

blame lier, liy God's lioly mother .. — i. 3 

>et tliou art a moth.er, and hast — ii. 2 

uiother, liad so dear a loss! {rep,]..., — ii. 2 

Cduiibrt, dear mother; God is much — ii. 2 

Ii lie a careful mother, of the young.. — ii. 2 

madam, my mother, I do cry you .. — ii. 2 
the butt-end of a mother's blessing. . 
and you mj' mother \_Col. KH^-sister] 

both by his father and mother 

ny, mother, but I would not have it so 

but yet let mothers doubt 

my mother, and my brother York .. 

what, will our motlier come? 

the queen your mother, and 3'our . . 
b.y his mother was perforce withheld 

can from his mother win the 

■will to your mother: to entre.at of .. 
not incensed by his sulitle motlier . . 

all the mother's, from the top to toe 

that my mother went with child .... — iii. 6 

ray lord, you know, my mother lives — iii. .5 

now by the holy mother of our Lord — iii. 7 

your mother lives a witness to his vow — iii. 7 

a care-crazed mother to a mauj' song — iii. 7 

their mother, who shall bar me (rp^.) — iv. 1 

in love their mother; then bring me — iv. 1 

salute your grace of York as mother — iv. 1 

mother, how fares your grace? — iv. 1 

thy mother's name is ominous to — 

mother, wife, nor England's counted — 

liear your mother's lamentation! .. — 

preys on the issue of his mother's body — 

a mother only mocked with two .... — 

for joyful mother, one that wails. ... — 

and brief, good mother; for I am .... — 

my daughter's mother thinks it .... — 

the doting title of a motlier — 

again shall you be mother to a king — 

go then, my mother, to t.iy daughter go — 

to wail the title, as her mother doth — 

dear mother, (I must call you so) . . — 

and be a happy mother by the deed.. — 

our loving mother? (I'/p.) — v. 3 

kept in Bretagne at our mother's cost? — v. 3 
to love her for her mother's sake. . Henry fill. iv. 2 

God's blest mother! I swear, he is .. — v. 1 
too headstrong for their mother. Trnilus /,- Ct es 

my mother's blood runs on tire — 

borrow'st from thy mother, my sacred — 

tliink, we had mothers; do notgive.. 

that can soil our mothers? — 

tlie hermit pity with our mother .... — 

thy motlier hath had visions — 

thy motlier's of my generation. Timon of.-llhe 

nor yells of mothers, maids, nor babes — 

common mother, thou, whose womb — 

he did it to please his mother Coriotan 

a mother should not sell him — 

my mother, who has a charter to extol — 

look, sir, your mother,— O j'ou have — 

and mothers that lack sons — 

know, good mother, I had rather — 

I muse, my mother does not approve — 

let thy mother rather feel thy pride — 

pray, be content; mother, I am going — 

promise that you made 3'oiir mother? — 

motlier, where is your ancient courage — 

nay, mother, resume that spirit — 

farewell, my wife, my mother! — 

my mother, you wot well — 

my dearest mother, and my friends 
here comes his mother. Let's not . . 
his mother and his wife hear nothing 
his mother, wife, his child, and this 
unless his noble mother, and his wife 

wife, mother, child, I know not 

my mother bows; as if Olympus 

the most noble mother of the world 
making the mother, wife, and child 
especially his mother, may prevail.. 

he loved his mother dearly 

no more remembers his mother now 
merc3' his mother shall brin 



[ 510 ] 



MOU 



iv. 




IV 




!^- 




iv! 




]V. 




IV. 




!^'- 




•v' 





IV. 4 



.iii. 2 



IV. 5 



V. 3 



IV. 1 



— IV. 1 



ith the welcome of his mother — v. 4 

( I say, your city.) to his wife and mother — v. 5 
if Caesar had stabbed their mothers. ./w/»/.vC«?sa»-, i. 2 

that mothers shall but smile — iii. 1 

rash humour, which my mother gave — iv. 3 

lie'll think your mother chides — iv. 3 

kill'st the mother that engendered thee — v. 3 
hast a sister by the mother's a\&s.Aniony Sf Cleo, ii. i 

j'our mother came to Sicily — ii. 6 

tills diamond was my mother's Cyinheline, i. 2 

because of the queen my motlier .... — i i. 1 

crafty devil as is his mother — ii. 1 

a mother hourly coining plots — ii. 1 

majesty, and to my gracious mother — ii. 3 
your motlier too: she's my good lady — ii. 3 
yet my mother seemed the Dian — ii. 5 



MOTHER— son, let your mother Crjmbel,i7>e, iii. 1 

they took thee for tlieir mother .... — iii. 3 
ne'er longed my mother so to see .... — iii. 4 
whose mother was her painting .... — iii. 4 
liardness ever of hardiness is mother — iii. 6 
but my mother, having power of his — iv. 1 

ill embassy to his mother — iv. 2 

since death of my dearest mother.. .. — iv. 2 

by good Euriphile, our mother — iv. 2 

to the ground, as once our mother .. — iv. 2 
thou hast created a mother, and two — v. 4 

Imogen, thy mother's dead — v. 5 

by the hand of his queen mother.... — v. 5 
a mother to the birth of three? (>e/7.) — v. 5 
a mother's tears in passion .,Tilus Androniciis, i. 2 

nurse, a mother to his youth — i. 2 

altho' our mother unadvised, gave you — ii. 1 

nor would your noble mother — ii. 1 

dear sovereign, and our gracious mother — ii. 3 

as j'ou love your mother's life — ii. 3 

your mother's hand shall right (rep.) — ii. 3 
yet every mother breeds not sons. ... — ii. 3 
our father's sake, and mother's care — iii. 1 

fly had a father and mother? — iii. 2 

as dear as e'er my mother did — iv. 1 

my mother gave't me — iv. I 

their mother's bedchamber should not — iv. 1 

jlierc lacks but your motlier — iv. 2 

for our beloved mother in her pains.. — iv. 2 
our mother. Villain, I have done (rep.) — iv. 2 

it must; the mother wills it so — iv. 2 

by this our mother is for ever shamed — iv. 2 

and give the mother gold — iv. 2 

lent tliee but thy mother's look — v. 1 

hold thee dearly for th,y mother's sake — v. 1 
spirit had they from their mother . . — v. 1 
your mother means to feast with me — v. 2 

gainst their mother comes — v. 2 

whereof their mother daintily hath fed — v. 3 

yet I feed on mother's flesh I'eridcs, i. I (riddle) 

mother, wife, and yet his child — i. 1 {riddle) 

an eater of her motlier's flesh — i. 1 

mothers, who, to nousle up their babes — i. 4 
when my mother died, this world .. — iv. I 
overboard thrown me, to seek my mother — iv. 3 

thy mother? My mother was — v. 1 

what was thj' mother's name? — v. 1 

my mother's name was Tliaisa? (rep.) — v. 1 
to be gone into my mother's bosom.. — v. 3 

sir, this 3'oung fellow's mother could Lear, i. 1 

yet was his mother fair — i. 1 

my father compounded with my mother — i. 2 
daughters thy mother [^Col, iCn(.-mothers] — i. 4 

turn all her mother's pains — i. 4 

how this mother swells up toward — ii. 4 

divorce me from thy mother's tomb — ii. 4 

than she are happy mothers ....Rojneo 4- Juliet, i. 2 
how now, who calls? Your mother.. — i. 3 
are raede already mothers (7ep.) .... — i. 3 
madam, your mother craves a word — i. 5 

what is her mother? (rep.) — i.5 

the earth, that's nature's mother .. .. ^ ii.3 

where is your mother? (jep.) — ii. 6 

thy father, or thy mother, nay, or both — iii. 2 

father, mother, 'Tybalt, Komeo — iii. 2 

where is my i'ather, and my mother — iii. 2 
your ladj' mother's coming C?Tp.) ... . — iii. 5 

I sweet my mother, cast me not — iii. 5 

not alone my inky cloak, good mother.. Ham/i?;, i. 2 

let not thy mother lose her jirayers — i. 2 

so loving to my mother, that he might . . — i. 2 

it was to see my mother's wedding — i. 2 

contrive against thy mother aught — i.5 

with blood of fathers, mothers, daughters — ii. 2 

better, my mother had not borne me — iii. 1 

let his queen mother all alone entreat .. — iii. 1 

no, good mother, here's metal more — iii. 2 

how cheerfull}' my mother looks — iii. 2 

the queen, your mother, in most great . . — iii. 2 
I will do your mother's commandment — iii. 2 

my mother: therefore no more (re;;.) — iii. 2 

so astonish a mother! but is there (rep.) — iii. 2 
obey, were she ten times our mother .... — iii. 2 

then will I come to my mother — iii. 2 

now to my mother;— heart, lose not.. — iii. 2 

he's going to his mother's closet — iii. 3 

more audience, than a mother, since .... — iii. 3 

my mother stays: this physic — iii. 3 

[Co/.Kh/.] mother! mother! mother!.... — iii. 4 

now, mother, what's the matter? — iii. 4 

mother, you have my father much — iii. 4 

it were not so!— you are m.y mother .... — iii. 4 

almost as bad, good mother, as kill — !!!• ^ 

amazement on thy mother sits — iii. 4 

and from liis mother's closet hath her .. — iv. 1 

farewell, dear mother (?-ep.) — iv. 3 

and so, my mother. Come, for England — iv. 3 

a father killed, a mother stained — iv. 4 

unsmirched brow of my true mother — iv. .5 

the queen, his mother, lives almost — iv. 7 

but even his mother shall uncharge .... — iv. 7 
killed my king, and whored my mother — v. 2 
thy mother's poisoned; I can no more .. — v. 2 

is the union here? follow my mother — v. 2 

duty as my mother showed to j'Ou Othello, i. 3 

did an Egyptian to my mother give .... — iii. 4 
my mother had a maid, called Barbara. . — iv. 3 

token my father gave my mother — v. 2 

MOTHER-QUEEN, an Ate King John, ii. 1 

MOTHER-WIT— my mother-wit.. 7'aming-o/SA. ii. 1 

MOTIIY— an old mothy saddle — iii. 2 

MOTION— to quick motion Tempest, iv. 1 

O excellent motion ! TwoGen.ofVe}ima,iK 1 

it were a goot motion Merry ll'ivcs, i. 1 

give ear to his motions — i. 1 

the potions, and the motions — iii. 1 

he gives her folly motion — iii. 2 

would give an excellent motion — i i i . 3 

my uncle, have made motions — iii. 4 

arid skittish in all motions else . . Twelfth Kisht, ii. 4 



MOTION— no motion of the liver. Twelfth Night, ii. 4 

put them to motion — iii. 1 

with such a mortal motion — iii. 4 

I'll make the motion — iii. 4 

and motions of the sense . . Measure for Measure, i. .i 
this sensible warm motion to become — iii. 1 

lie is a motion ungenerative — iii. 2 

I have a motion much imports — v. 1 

the motion of Demetrius'heart..il//d.A'.'sDjram, i. 1 

apprehensions, motions Love's L.Lost, iv. 2 

as motion, and long-during action.. — iv. 3 

butwith the motion of all elements.. — iv. 3 

vouchsafe some motion to it — v. ii 

to the motion of a school-boy's tongue — v. 2 

seem they in motion? Merehuntof Venice, iii. 2 

but in his motion like an angel sings — v. I 
the iv.otions of his spirit are dull as . . — v. 1 

with sprightly fire and motion AlVsWell, ii. I 

in what m.ition age will give me leave — ii. 3 

frames by relf-unable motion — iii. 1 

of other motions, as promising her .. — v. 3 
excellent motion! fellows (rep.) .. Taming nfSli. i, 2 

then he compassed a motion Winter's Tale, iv. 2 

the fixture of her eye has motion in't — v. 3 
daily motions for ouo home . . Comedy of lirrors. i. I 
we in your motion turn, and you .... — iii. 2 

on the foot of motion Maelielh, ii, 3 

the inward motion to deliver sweet . . King John, i. 1 

more free from motion — ii. 2 

this sway of motion, this commodity — ii. 2 

four in wondrous motion — i»'. 2 

the dreadful motion of a murderous.. — iv. 2 
goi'ern the motion of akiiigly ei'e.. ., — v. 1 

scalded with my violent motion — v. 7 

to keep his anger still in motion \HenrylV. i. 3 

in thy face strange motions — ii. 3 

keep not their motion in one sphere.. — v 4 

to nothing with perpetual motion 2 Henry IT. i. 2 

with the motion of apewterei's hammer — iii. 2 

in my poor and old motion — iv. 3 

setting endeavour in continual motion,. Henri/ r. i. 3 

in motion of no less celeiity — iii. (chorus) 

one that still motions war I Henry V J. i. 3 

your grace affect their motion? — v. 1 

thank you for your motion SHemyVI. iii. 3 

but from sincere motions Henry nil, i, I 

our motion will be mocked — i. 2 

an earnest motion made to the queen — ii. 4 
things in motion sooner catch . . Troilus i Cress, iii. 3 
still in motion of raging waste?.. 'V'('r.jonf!/.,4;//t';is, i. 2 

what, all in motion? — iii. 6 

tinder-like, upon too trivial motion. Coii'o/an«s, ii. 1 
your loving motion toward the common — ii. 2 

whose every motion was timed — ii. 2 

a beggar's tongue make motion through — iii. 2 
the first motion, all the interim , .Julius Casar, ii. I 
holds on his rank, unshaked of motion — iii. 1 

his corporal motion governed — iv. 1 

to rot itself with motion.. ..Antony ^-Cleopatra, i. 4 

I see't in my motion — ii.3 

lier motion and her station are as one — iii. 3 

the wild motion of mine eye Cymbetine, i. 7 

motion and breath left out — ii. 4 

for there's no motion that tends to .. — ii. 5 
liath Cadwal now to give it motion! — iv. 2 

but to p.t those powers in motion .. — iv. 3 
doth this notion please tnee? .... Titus Andron. i. 2 

no fairy? no motion? I'erlcles, v. 1 

in fell motion, with his preiared l,enr,i\. I 

she'd be as swift in motion as ..Romeo ^-Juliet, ii. a 
to earth resign; end motion here..., — iii. 2 

it did address itself to motion Hamlet, i. 2 

el.se, could you not have motion — iii. 4 

had neither motion, guard, nor eye — iv. 7 

when in your motion you are hot and dry — iv. 7 

or minerals, that waken motion Othello, i. 2 

that her motion blushed at herself — i. 3 

to cool our raging m,jtions — i. 3 

he dies upon his motion — ii.3 

MOTIONLESS-still and motionless.. //<•;/ ;(/('. iv. 2 

MOTI'V^E that I wooed Merry H'lrfs.Vu, 4 

this was your motive for Paris Alt's H'ett, 1. 3 

to be my motive and helper to — iv. 4 

are motives of more fancy — v. 3 

those precious motives Maelielh, iv. 3 

what motive may be stronger KingJohn, iii. I 

the slavish motive of recanting Richard II. i. I 

as a motive, the sooner to effect Henry K. ii. 2 

everyjointandmotiveof her body 7';o;V. ff- Cress, iv. s 
■who were the motives that yon.Timon oj Alhens, v. 5 
if these be motives weak, break ofC.JuliiisCa'sar, ii. 1 
ignorant motive, do so far ask ..Antony i^Cteo. ii. 2 

you had a motive for't Cymbeline, v. 5 

your three motives to the battle — v. .5 

thy safety being the motive Lear, i. 1 

is the main motive of our preparations .Hamlet, i. 1 
without more motive, into every brain .. — i. 4 
had he the motive and the cue for passion — ii. 2 

the other motive, why to a public — iv. 7 

whose motive, in this case, should stir .. — v. 2 
[Kiif.] am I the motive of these tears ..Othello, iv. 2 

MOTLEY in my brain Tu-elfthNiglit, i. 5 

a motley fool (rep.) Asyou Like it, ii. 7 

motley's the only wear! — ii. 7 

I am ambitious for a motley coat .... — ii. 7 

invest me in my motley — ii.7 

will you be married, motley? — iii. 3 

in a long motley coat Henry VIII. (prologue) 

the one in motley here, the other found . . Lear, i. 4 
MOTLEY-MINDED gentleman ..AsyouLil<eit,v. 4 

MOTS— deux mots d'Anglois Henry V. iii. 4 

la repetition de tons les mots — iii. 4 

vous prononcez les mots aussi droict — !!'• * 

ces sont mots de son mauvais — iii. 4 

ie ne voudrois prononcer ces mots .. — iii. 4 

MOTTO thus, in Spanish (rep.) Pericles, ii. 2 

MOULD— gentler, milder mould ..TamingofSh. i. 1 

the very mould and frame Winter sTalc, ii. 3 

cleave not to their mould Macbeth, i. 3 

great duke, to men of mould ! Henry V. iii. 2 



MOULD— mould up such a mighty. . Henry I'll I. v. 4 
[Kill.'] not in oiiv Grecian moiilil. Tiniliis >5- Cress, i. 3 
tliis nuuild ot'Miircius, they to dust. Coriolu7ius, in. 2 
then the honoured mould wherein .. — v. 3 
cniek nature's moulds, all perniins spiW. Lear, iii. 2 
of fashion, and the mould of form .... Hamlet, iii. 1 
MOUl-DED out of faults ..Mcasure.for Measure, v. 1 
lovely berries moulded on one stem.. l/i'd. A'. Dr. iii. 2 
this was moulded on a porringer, raining of Sh . iv. 3 
these brows, were mojilded out of his. King John, ii. 1 

whose arms wei'e moulded in 1 Henryir. i. 1 

what coarse metal ye are moulded .Henry fill, iii.2 
made and moulded of things past. Troilni )y Cress.iW. 3 
like his ancestry, moulded the stuff .Cymbeline, v. 4 

a babe is moulded Pericles, iii. (Gower) 

jr( HILDETU goblins swift as . . Troitus A Cress, v. 1 1 

MOULDY— in your mouldy chaps ..IHenryll^. ii. 4 

he lives upon mouldy stewed prunes — ii. I 

Ralph Mouldy: let them appear — iii.2 

is th.v name Mouldy? yea au't please you — iii.2 
things that are mouldy lack use .... — iii.2 
peace. Mouldy, you shall go; Mouldy — iii. 2 

to free Mouldy, and Bull-oalf — iii.2 

marry then, Mouldv, Bull-calf (rep.) — iii.2 

whose wit was mouldy ere .. Troilus 3f Cressida, ii. 1 

MOULT— and queen nioult no feather. . H«m(</^ ii. 2 

MinrLTEN"— and a moulten raven..lHeH/!/;('. iii. 1 

MOUNT— and niount their pricks Tempest, ii. 2 

but mount you presently ..TwoGen.ofl'emna, v. 2 

ond lie under mount Pelion Merry Wires, ii. I 

tlmt youth mounts, and folly.... /Is you Like it, iii. 4 

which mounts my love so liigh? AWs il'ell, i. 1 

there will we moiuit, andthiclier. ra»i!»go/s/i. iv. 3 
amen, amen! Mount, chevaliers! ..King John, u. I 
let France and England mount their — ii. 2 
down my need, and faith mounts up — iii. 1 

when I mount, alive may I not Richard IL i. 1 

wliilst you mount up on high — iv. 1 

after, Aumerle; mount thee upon .. — v. 2 
mount, mount, my soul! thy seat is up — v. 5 

and let desert mount (ivp.) 'IHenryiy. iv. 3 

while his rider mounts him Henry V. iii. 7 

mount them, and make incision in.. — iv. 2 
sonuance, and the note to mount.... — iv. 2 
here will Talbot mount, or make . .\ Henry I' L \\. 1 

dear boy, mount on my swiftest — iv. S 

never mount to trouble you again ..2Henry Fl. i. 3 
that mounts no higher than a bird .. — ii. 1 

fall, he is the next will mount — iii. 1 

mount you, my lord, towards ZUenry I'L ii. 5 

when I should mount with wings.. R/c/um/ III. v. 3 

that mounts the liquor till it Henry VIIL i. I 

tlie base o' the moimt is ranked. Timon of Athens, i. I 
against the steepy mount to climb.. .. — i. 1 
mount thou ni}' liorse, and hide .. Julius Ctpsar, v. 3 
did mount a termagant steed .... Antony Sc Cleo. i. 5 

about tlie mount Misenum — ii. 2 

be at mount before you, Lepidus .... — ii. 4 

the stairs that mount the capitol Cymbeline, i. 7 

mount, eagle, to my palace crystalline — v. 4 
to mount aloft with thy (rep.) . . Titus Andron. ii. 1 
will I mount myself upon a courser . . Pericles, ii. 1 
on the summit of the highest mount. . Handel, iii. 3 
on mount of all the age for her perfections — iv. 7 
MOUNTAIN— free as mountain wiu'.ls . Tempest^ i. 2 
tliy turfy mountains, where live nibbling — iv. 1 

hey, mountain, hey! — iv. 1 

ha, thou niountain foreigner ! Merry H'ives, i. 1 

slinuld have been a mormtain of mummy — iii. 5 
fit for the mountains, and the . . Twelfth Night, iv. 1 

into a mountain of affection Much Ado, ii. 1 

up to the mountain's top, and mark. Mid. iV.Dj-. iv. 1 
like far-off mountains turned into clouds — iv. 1 

on the top of the mountain Lovers L. Lost, v. 1 

sweet pleasure, for tire moimtain .... — v. 1 
well forbid the mountain pines. .Ver. of Venice, iv. 1 
but mountains may be removed. /fs you Like it, iii. 2 
as mountains are for winds . . Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 

upon a barren mountain Winter's Tale, iii. 2 

but for the mountain of msid. Comedy of Er?-ors, iv. 4 
mountains and rocks more (,rep.) ..King John, ii. 2 

anon becomes a mountain — iii. 4 

on the barren mountains (j'ep.) IHenrylV. i. 3 

gross as a mountain, open, palpable — ii. 4 

the goats ran from the mountains ., — iii. 1 
nialie mountains level, and the....2Hen?-!//r. iii. 1 

stand as firm as rocky mountains — iv. 1 

whiles that his mountain sire {rep.) ..HenryV. ii. 4 

upon this mountain's basis by — iv. 2 

damned and luxurious mountain goat — iv. 4 
like a mountain, not to be removed. 1 Henry VI. ii. 5 
standing naked on a mountain to\>.iHen.ry VI. iii. 2 
as on a mountain top the cedar shows — v. 1 

that raught at mountains witli iHenryVl. i. 4 

to make an envious mountain on.... — iii.2 

and the mountain tops Henry VIII. iii. 1 (song) 

and, like a mountain cedar, reaeli.. .. — v. 4 
through liquid moun tains cut . . Troitus <$• Cress, i. 3 
after liim to the mountain's top. Timon of Athens, i. 1 
set a huge mountain 'tween my. .Julius Cwsar, ii. 4 
a forked niountain, or blue .. ..Antony t^- Cleo. iv. 12 

now, for our mountain sport . ._ Cymbeline, iii. 3 

but, up to t!ie mountains; tills is not — iii. 3 
wlien tVom the mountain top Pisanio — iii. 6 

doth take the mountain pine — iv. 2 

sons, we'll higher to the mountains — iv. 4 

on tlie mountains near to Milford . . — v. 5 
the mountain lioness, the ocean.. TitusAndron. iv. 2 
throws down one mountain, to cast up. Pericles, i. 4 
losing a mit«, a mountain gain .. — ii. (Gower) 
on the misty mountain tops..../?omeo(5-.'«i'V-', iii. .'5 
on tills fair mountain leave to feed ..Hamlet, iii. 4 
no sooner shall the mountains touch.... — iv. 1 
his shroud as the mountain snow — iv. 5 (sung) 
till of this flat a mountain you have made — v. 1 
if thou prate of mountains, let tliem .... — v. I 
of oak, when mountains melt them. ..Othello, ii. 1 
MOUN'TAINEER-were mountaineers. Tempest, iii. 3 

some villain moiuitaineers? Cymbeline. iv. 2 

yield, rustic mountaineer — iv. 2 



MOUNTAINEER-traitor, mountaineer. Ci/m!). iv. 2 
tliat liore by mountaineers lies shxin — iv. 2 
MOUNTAIN-FOOT that leads.. TwoGev.ofVer. v. 2 
jMOUNTAINOUS error be toohighly.C'o/;Vi(n»i«s,ii. 3 
MOUNTAIN-SQUIRE.but I will ....Henry V. v. 1 
jMOUNTANT— aprons mountant.. TimonnlA'h. iv. 3 
MOUNTEBANKS, and many such. Comedy of Err. i.2 
a mountebank, a threadbare juggler — v. 1 

I'll mountebank their loves Coriolanus, iii. 2 

I bought an unction of a mountebank. //«»de(, iv. 7 
and medicines bought of mountebanks. .o//ic//o, i. 3 
SIOUNTEU-mounted are against .tore's- L. Lust, v. 2 
mounted the Trojan v/ilUs.. Merchant of Venice, v. I 
mounted on the wind ..As you Lilieit,\u. 2 (verses) 
ready mounted are they, to spit .... KinffJnlm. ii. 1 

great Bolinbroke, mounted upon ..Hichani 11. v. 2 
eing mounted, and both roused in.2neji) ;///'. iv. 1 

his affections are higher mounted Henry V. iv. 1 

where castles mounted stand lr(p.)..iHenryVl. i. 4 

that beggars, mounted, run their ZHenry VL i. 4 i 

I thouglit, it would have mounted . . — v. 6 

and now are mounted, where Henry VI U. ii. 4 

cried, oh! and mounted: found no. .Cymbeline, ii. 5 

MOUNTETH with occasion Kin!iJohn,i\. I I 

JMOUNTIN G to the welkin's cheek .... ■tempest, i. 2 
he showed a mounting mind. . . . Love's I,. Lost, iv. 1 

and fits the mounting spirit King John, i. 1 

wliere mounting larks should sing. Richard 11. iii. 3 
tlie mounting Bolingbroke ascends . . — v. 1 
instead of mounting barbed steeis.. Richard III. i. I 
mounting his eyes, he did discharge.. — i.2 
MOURN for your brother's soul . . Twelflh Night, i. h 
then shall he mourn, (if ever love..il^u(7i Ado, iv. 1 

to-uight I'll mourn with Hero — v. 1 

it mourns, that painting Love'sL.Lost,iv. 3 

that his lady mourns at his . . Taming of Sh. 1 (ind.) 

that makes your lady mourn — ';! (ind.) 

shall I go mourn for that.. IVinter'sTnle, iv. 2 (.song) 

and some will mourn in ashes Richard II. iv. i 

come, mourn w-ith me for what — v. 6 

I shall have time enough to mourn..2HeH);/f ;'. i. 1 
we mourn in black, why mourn we..lIIenryVI. i. 1 

mourn not, except thou sorrow — ii. 5 

wc mourn, France smiles — iv. 3 

Suffolk, mourn I not for thee iHenryVI. iii. 2 

I should not mourn, but die for thee — iv. 4 

makes Clifford mourn in steel ZHenry VI. i. 1 

will be mild, while she doth mourn — iii. 1 

with my soul I mourn for yours. . Richard III. iv. 1 
who hath any cause to mourn; but we? — iv. 4 
all the world shall mourn her .... Hent y VIII. v. 4 

and mourn you for him Coriolanus, v. 5 

you then to mourn for him? JuliusCaisar, iii. 2 

for we will mourn with thee,. Titus Andronicus, ii. 5 

gives cause to mourn his funeral Pericles, ii. 4 

and even yet we mourn — iv. 4 

to mourn thy crosses, with thy — v. 2 

and all we mourn \_Col. JiCnf.wai'i] for ..Hamlet, ii. 2 

to mourn a mischief that is past Othello, i. 3 

MOURNED— mourned for her AWs Well, iv. 1 

that mourned for fashion Comedy of Errors, i. I 

not have mourned so much for rae..2 Henry VI. iv. 4 

mourned by Mark Antony JuliusCa'sar, iii. 2 

of reason, would have mourned longer. H«m/e(, i. 2 
MOURNEK— cause to be a mourner. /iic/iard III. i. 2 

I am no mourner for that news — iii. 2 

tarry for the mourners, and stay .iJojneo ^-Juliet, iv.5 
MOURNFUL— mournful epitaphs ..Much Ado, iv. 1 

manner of his mournful death 1 Henry VI. ii. 2 

as the mournful crocodile with iHenryVI. iii. 1 

I may dew it with my mournful tears — iii. 2 
nor man in mournful weeds {rep.). Titus Aiulron. v. 3 
MOURNFULLY-speak mournfully . Con'oiajms, v. 5 
MOURNING— mourning over them ..Tempest, v. 1 
maintain a mourning ostentation ..Much Ado, iv. I 
the thrice three Muses mourning.. il/id. A'. 'sDr. v. 1 
the mourning brow of progeny .. Love' sL. Lost, v. 2 
my woeful self up in a mourning house — v. 2 

graee my mournings here Richard II. v. 6 

she a mourning widow of her nobles .. HenryV. i. 2 
and mourning for Suffolk's death?.2HeH)y VI. iv. 4 
liodies in black mourning govfns.,,.3HenryVI. ii. 1 
had left no mourning widows for .. — ii. 6 
my mourning weeds are (rep. iv. 1) — iii. 3 

here is a mourning Rome JuliusCaisar, iii. I 

lo, yonder; and Titinius mourning it — v. 3 

victorious in thy mourning weeds! TitusAndron. i. 2 

could our mourning ease tliy misery — ii. ."i 

my mourning, and important tears .... Lear, iv. 4 

these mourning duties to your father . . Hamlel, i. 2 

MOURNINGLY— andmourningly..../i/r.W(V/(, i. i 

MOURN'ST- -why mourn'st thou?. TwelfihXighl, i. 5 

MOUSE— good my mouse of virtue .... — i. !> 

the smallest monstrous mouse. A/id N.'s Dream, v. 1 

not a mouse shall disturb this — v. 2 

what's your dark meaning, mouse.. Loue's L.L. v. 2 

or most magnanimous mouse 2HenrylV. iii. 2 

playing the mouse, in absence Henry V. i. 2 

the mouse ne'er shunned the cat .... Coriolanus, i. 6 
couches 'fore the mouse's hole. /'ericies, iii. (Gower) 

I never killed a mouse, nor hurt — iv. 1 

look, look, a mouse! Peace, peace Lear, iv. 6 

dun's the mouse, the constable's. /(om?o<5-Juiie(, i. 4 
a rat, a mouse, a cat, to scratch a man — iii. 1 
little mouse, every unwortliy thing — iii. 3 
not a mouse stirring. Well, good-night. Ham/e(, i. 1 
MOUSED- well moused, liou ..Mid. N.'s Dream, v. 1 
MOUSE-EATEN dry cheese.. rroiTus SfCiessida, v. 4 

MOUSE-TRAP— the mouse-trap Hamlet, iii.2 

MOUSE-I-IUNT in your time .. Romeo (c Juliet, iv. 4 

MOUSING owl hawked at Mucbeih, ii. 4 

rCof. Knt.'] mousing the flesh of men. . KingJohn, ii. 2 
JVfOUTH— must our mouths be cold?. . .. Tempest, i. 1 

open your mouth (rep.) — ii. 2 

I will pour some in thy other mouth — ii. 2 

doth thy other mouth call me? — ii 2 

suffer the flesh-fly blow my mouth .. — ii. I 

this is the mouth o' the ceil — iv. I 

would even infect my mouth — v. 1 

hast thou 110 mouth by land? — v. I 



MOUTH— thou stop my nwiUM.TwoGen.of Ver. ii. 3 

she hatha sweet mouth — iii. 1 

to know tliat of your moutli Merry Wives, i. I 

tliat the lips is parcel of the mouth.. — i. I 

ginger shall be hot i' the nioutli.. Tirelflh Night, ii. 3 
indignation to him by word of mouth — ii. 3 
deliver his challenge by word of mouth — iii. 4 
rude sea's enraged and foamy mouth — v. I 

heaven in my mouth Measure for Measure, ii. 4 

O perilous months that bear in — ii. 4 

he would mouth with a beggar — iii- 2 

to speak, as from hisjnouln — v. I 

put your trial in the villain's mouth — v. 1 
in foul mouth, and in the witness.... — v. 1 

if I had my mouth, I would bite Much.ido.i- 3 

tongue in coiMit John's mouth — ii. 1 

stop his mouth with a kiss — ii. • 

as quick as the greyhound's mouth.. — v. 2 

peace, I will stop your mouth — y. ■i 

{^Col.'] make mouths upon mid.. Mid. N.'s Dream, iii. 2 
but matched in moutli like bells .... — iv. 1 

with bloody mouth did slain — v. 1 

have made a moutli of his eye Love's L.l.os', ii. I 

witli a bone in his mouth Merchant of Venice, i. 2 

the last man in our mouths — i. ^ 

with his mouth full of news Asyuu Likeil,'<.2 

even in the cannon's mouth — ii. 7 

quit thee by thj' brother's mouth.... — iii. I 
tills concealed man out of thy mouth — iii. '- 
take the cork out of thy moutli .... — iii.2 
mouth first: 'tis a word too great (rep.) — iii. 2 
approached the opening of his moutli — iv. 3 
lips when he put it into Ills mouth .. — ^^ 1 
as the nun's lip to the friar's mouth.. .^H's'feH, ii. 2 
my mouth no more were broken .... — ii. 3 
put you into a butter-woman's mouth — iv. 1 
not a jot of Trauio in your mouth. Taming ofSh. i. 1 
my tongue to the roof of my mouth.. — iv. I 

by the king's own mouth Winter's Talc, i. 2 

milk in its most innocent mouth .... — iii.2 

she drops booties in my mouth — iv. 3 

hear it from our mouths Macbeth, iv, 1 

my king's defiance from my mouth.. King John, i. 1 
battering cannon, charged to thelinouthsl — ii. 2 
turn thou the mouth of thy artillery — ii. 2 

shoot in each other's mouth — ii. 2 

tlie mouth of passage shall we fling . . — ii. 2 

here's a large mouth, indeed — ii. 2 

and from the mouth of England .... — iii. 1 
calf's-skin stop that mouth of thine — iii. 1 

how new is husband in my mouth!.. — iii. 1 
with his iron tongue and brazen mouth — iii. 3 
tongue were in the thunder's mouth! — iii. 4 

men's mouths are full of it — iv. 2 

is common in their mouths — iv. 2 

with open mouth swallowing — iv. 2 

take from my mouth the wish Richard II. i. 3 

unlocked for from your highness' mouth — i. 3 
within my mouth you have engaoled — i. 3 

in an ungracious mouth — ii.3 

one kiss shall stop our mouths — v. I 

cleave to my roof within my mouth — v. 3 

his words come from his mouth — v. 3 

pardon, for kings' mouths so meet .. — v. 3 

irora your own mouth, my lord — v. H 

in the world's wide mouth liie I Henry IV. i. 3 

and salutations from their mouths . . — iii.2 
to fill the mouth of deep defiance up — iii.2 
would put ratsbane in my mouth ..iHenrylV. i. 3 
with wax, our mouths with honey .. — iv. I 

with full mouth, speak freely HenryV. i. 2 

shall have a tongueless mouth — i.2 

worse, within thy nasty mouth! .... — ii. I 
touch her soft mouth, and march .. — ii.3 
coward dogs most spend their mouths — ii. 4 

with fatal mouths gaping on — iii. (chorus) 

into the mouth of a Russian bear.... — iii. 7 

and in their pale-dull mouths — iv. 2 

in their mouths [A'n/.-his mouth] as — iv. 3 
to take the tales out of my moutli .. — iv. 7 
stops the mouths of all find-faults .. — v. 2 

provender tied to their mouths \ Henry VI. i. 2 

which hath the deeper mouth — ii. 4 

was in the mouth of every sucking babe — iii. 1 

from their mouths to raise — iv. I 

thy lips to stop my mouth tHenryVI. iii. 2 

dam up this thy yawning mouth .... — iv. 1 

may come out of .your mouth — iv. 7 

for he was thrust in the mouth witli — iv. 7 

mouth shall be the parliament of England — iv. 7 
that I am now my father's mouth ..SHenryVl. v. 5 

open their conjjealed mouths Richard III. i. 2 

with curses inner mouth — i.2 

drop into the rotten mouth of death — iv. 4 

from a mouth of honour quite Henry VIII. i. I 

tliis makes bold mouths — i.2 

he had a black mouth — i. 3 

which stopped our mouths, sir. ... — ii. 2 (letter) 

have your mouth filled up — ii.3 

king's will from his month expressly? — iii.2 
I will not taint my mouth with .... — iii 2 
but stop their mouths with stubborn — v. 1 
soul of counsel: stop m,y moutli. 7'roi7«si§- Cress, iii.2 
he will spend his mouth, and promise — v. 1 
and foams at mouth, and he is aimed — v. 5 
would I had a rod in my moutli ..Timon of Aih. ii. 2 
will hardly stop the moutli of present — ii. 2 
the mouths, the tongues, tlie eyes.... — iv. 3 
that meat was made for mouths ....Coriolanus, i. 1 
tlie tongues o' the common mouth .. — iii. 1 

you being their mouths — iii. 1 

liisliearts his mouth — iii. 1 

tribunes are the people's mouths .... . — iii. 1 
spoke freely out of many mouths.... — iv. 6 
it doth become the mouth as v.e\\..JuliusCa:saT, i. 2 
foamed at mouth, and was speechless — i.2 

like dumb nioutlis (lep. iii. 2) — iii. l 

bid ine say to you by word of mouth — iii. 1 
I wear not my dagger in my mouth. Cy>iitWi?ie,iv 2 
foamed at the mouth, and swore .... — v. 5 



MOU 



[ 518 ] 



MUL 



V. 2 



ii. 3 
_ ii. 3 

— ii. 3 

— iv. 1 

— V. 2 



iii. i 



rnrMi-liVic, \. 3 

ihich Ado, iv. 1 



U- )UTn-I'll stop your mouth . . rnvsAnrlmi. \\. 3 

V, hose moiitli is covered witli — !!• ^ 

Jiatefol as Cocytus' misty mouth.... ..— "• "! 

tl>c moiitlv of that same pit — ii. Kietter; 

sirs, stop liis moiitli — ''• ' 

Ktop their moiitlis. if they begin (if^-) — v. J 
willeholieme.if I openiy inoutli.... — Y-^ 

tliese mouths, whom but of late' .^r>";["- '• \ 

crickets sin;; at tlV oven's mouth — iii. (Oower) 
was a Spaniard's mouth so watered... — iv. ^ 
\ cannot lieave my heart into my mouth.. /.en;..}- i 

but slie made moutlis in a glass. — '!!• ^ 

thoud'st meet the bear i' the mouth — iii- i 

as this iii.iuth should tear this hand .— m. 4 

one blast i.r iliv miuikiu mouth .. — ui. 6 jsoug) 

be thv mouth or black or white.... — nr fa 

shut Vour mouth, dame, or witli this paper — v. i 
whose foul mouth no healthsome. ./foi(/co.5-.fii/. iv. i 
seal up the mouth of outrage for. . . ... — v. 3 

hand more instrumental to the mouth ..IfumW.i. i 
make mouths iCnl. .\-»'.-mo\vosl at lum . . — _\\. i 

butifvouraouth it.as niiin\-.>l uur — in. - 

give it breath Willi yi.nrm.iuHi — '.n- f 

makes moutlis at the invisilik' event .... — iv. 4 

iiav,au' tlioul't moutli.I'llrantas — v. i 

not. from his moutli; !uid it tlic ability .. — 
and from his mouth wlioso voice will ■••• — 

your name is great in mouths ot OUiello. 

tills tongue cut from my mouth — — 

should put an enemy in their mouths. ... — 

had I as manv moutlis as Hydra 

if not, he foaiiis at mouth 

no, his mouth is stopped; honest lago . . 
MOUTHED wounds, wliich valiantly. l//^> .. . 

tirst moutlied, to be last swallov. ed .... llaml,-', iv. I 
MOUTH-FILLING oatli; and leave. 1 /Jou.'/n. in. I 
BliWTH-FRIENDS! smoke, and.JVmoi; r/ .-I'.'i. iii. G 

SDUTHFUL— all at a mouthful IWirlcs.n. 1 

JI )UTH-IIONOXTK, breath .......... pciiWA, y. 3 

MO'JTIIING [Co;. K7i/.-mousingj theflesli-.J'jAn, i_i. i 
MOUTH-MADE vows, which break. . Anl S,-Clen. i. 3 
MOVE— stripes may move, not kindness. Tempest, i. 2 

pity move my fatlier to be inclined — ..i- 2 

do move a woman's mind. . J"«'o Ccn. of I eronn, iii. ! 

lips do not move, no man rii-alfh!\i^ht.w. 5 

perhaps, may'st move tliat heart — m. 1 

do you not see you move him? . 

if this letter move him not 

such as moves men Mem 

let me but move one question . . . . . ■ ■^-•- . - 

could such affection move! ....iV/irf.A. sDieam, i. 1 

I will move stiirms — ..?• 2 

virtue's loicc pcrtnvce doth move me — in. 1 
stubborn lines larl- luwcv lomove.. Love's L. L. iv. 3 

it did move him to passion — 1^.3 

we v. ill not move a foot — v. ^ 

to move wild laughter in — v. 2 

mirth cannot move a soul _,— . .X- j^ 

thy plniuness mores me more . . Mcr. of Venice, 111.2 

move tiiese eyes? •• --. .,"!• ^ 

see if you can move him AsrjouLiUeil,i.)i 

more than your force move U3 — .!!• 7 

tiiey perceive not how time moves — m. 2 

how then might your prayers move.' — iv.3(let.) 

the Florentine will move us Adsl;elt,i. 2 

eat, speak, and move under — .i>- J 

move tlic stiU-piecin" air — \"- ^ 

whot the devil should move me — . iv. 1 

seem to move and wanton ..rnoun^ 'fiU. 2 (mdnc.) 
I saw her coral lips to move, and with — i. 1 

elie moves me not, ornot removes .. .. 

there is no ton,gue that moves W'i 

ciiold not move the gods, to look 

nothing hut tliat; move still 

tlic baupipe could not move you 

may tiiink anon, it moves 

I'll make the statue move indeed 

to make her speak, as move 

she moves me for her theme ..Comedy of E, 

turn, and you may move us - 

in an honest suit might move .... — v.- - 

towards his design moves like a ghost.. Macori/i, 11. 1 
^^ hat is't that moves your higlmess? .... — in- ■* 

stones have iieen known to move — 

violent sea, each way, and move — 

those lie commands, move only — 

intthought, the wood began to move — 

^vhat doth move you to claim • Khi'^Joh 

any tiling lie sees, which moves his liking — 

doih move the murmuring lips — 

should move you to mew up your — 

tliat move in yom- right spheres, — 

ere I move, what my tongue . . . 
pity may move thee pardon to 
what thou speak'st may move . 

move in that obedient orb again 

but that moves not him •illenvtjll . 11. 2 

of England move to do brave acts — .u. 3 

weishtless down perforce must move — iv. 4 

n>»w ly move witli casted slough Henry V. iv. 1 

I siiall never move thee in French . . — ... y-\ 

thy words move rage and not 'iJlmruii.iV. i 

but his passions move me so 3//toiry >'/. 1. 4 

that moves both wind and tide — ]".■ i 

to tliy harm, thou move our patience. Aif/mni ///. 1. .i 

mav move your hearts to pity — ••'•'7 

suit come I to move your grace — .. — V- ' 
if this inducement move her not to love — i v. 1 
itisapitvwould move a monster.. Henry f in. n. •* 



i Talc, 



— iii. 2 



iv. 2 
V. 2 
V. 5 



....liichard II. i. 1 

_ V. 3 

\ Henry IV. \. 2 



_ V. 4 
Cress, ii. 3 
_ ii.3 



heaven still move about her 
we dare not move the question 

what moves Ajax thus to bay 

did move yoiir greatness — 

•how novelty may move . . ... . . ••••.■•• — 

imagination moves in thishp! ..Timonof.un 
but moves itself in a wide sea .. — 

yet, more to move ycni ■•• .> 

scars to move laughter only Coriolanus,\u. .< 

none but myself could move thee .... — v. j 
when he walks, he move.i like an euymc — v. i 



_ iii. f> 



MOVE— or move the people with ....Corlolanus,v. 5 
if I could pray to move (lep.) ....Julius Ciesar, i.ii. 1 

bid them move away — i.v. j 

if Cajsar move him, let Antony . . Antony f,- Uen. u. i 

and not be seen to move in't — ;;■ 7 

and moves with its own organs — .'.!• 7 

your love can equally move with the — .?!'-,1! 

speaks in every power that moves — m-. lO 

rll move him to walk this way Cymbelnu; 1. i 

I'll move the king to any shape — ..••*> 

as truly as he moves — HI- J 

whence he moves his war for Britain — ni- a 

spider, 'twould move me sooner — }v. i 

in motion, tliat long to move — \v. .i 

move the gods, to send down . Titus Andronrcus, iv. 3 
when it should move you to attend .. — v. 3 

durst thy tongue move anger to Pericles,!. 2 

bid you, or you'll move me else . -- »••> 

shadows see them moveiawhile. . — JV. 4 (Gower) 

lie moves all hearts against us \ ,!'■' ,'^' "! 

of Montague moves me. To move. I'omi ^JuUei, 1. 1 
a doa of that house sluill move me to — !• 1 

if looking liking move — V 3 

saints do not move (rcj).1 — ..}■■> 

not had time to move ourdaughter. . — iii- 4 
to move the lieavens to smile uiTOii .. — iv. u 
move them no more, by crossing their — iv- s 

might move more grief to hide Hamlei.n I 

doubt, that the sun doth move .... — "•, - t'ette rj 
unless things mortal move them not at all — .11. 2 
the instances that second marriage move — i". f 
doth move the hearers to collection .... — iv. j 

revenue, it could not move thus — ;v. j 

as the star moves not but in his sphere . . — i\'- 7 
must move for Cassio to her mistress ..OlheUo,]!. 6 

any grace, or power to move you — ]]]■■> 

I'l'l move vour suit, and seek to eitect it — in- 4 
MOVEABLE— a moveable (rfp.).. Jamingo./'S/i. 11. 
revenues, and itioveables, whereof.. 7i'c'i<"d''- !;• 1 

mv chattels, and my moveables f'™',''' •.'.'• f 

the moveables whereof the king ..liichard 1 1 1. i}i. 1 
earldom of Hereford, and the moveables — i.v. 2 

ten thousand meaner moveables Cymbclnie, 11. 2 

MOVED— look my son, in a moved sort.. Tempest, 1. 1 

be kindlier moved than thou art? ;•„ ~ ^' i 

hath never moved me Two Gen. of Verona, \. i 

be moved, be moved ...■.■ — ."• ' 

my poor mistress, moved therewithal -- iv. 4 
if he had been thoroughly moved. . Merry Wives, 1. 4 
it hath not moved him at all ..Meas. for Mens. iv. 2 
why, a block moved with none .... Much Ado, 111. 1 
Pompey is moved; more Ates....I.oTC s L. Lost, v. i 
nor is not moved with concord.. il/er. of Venice, y. 1 

I moved the king my master Ms Hell, ly. b 

moved to woo thee for my {rep.) 'laming of bli. 11. I 
a woman moved, is like a fountain . . -;- v. - 

are vou moved, my lord? Winter sTale.i. i 

the "king is moved, and answers not.KingJo/in,_iu. 1 
this presence, that hath moved me.«'c/m«J //..iv. 1 

now Shalt thou be moved ..AHcnrylV.u. i 

in kind heart and pity movetl — iv. 3 

the reason moved these warlike ....\HenryVI.\i. 
moved with compassion of .. — iv. 1 (tetter) 
Christendom, moved with remorse .. —„,.y.-\ 

make liim say, I moved him i Henry VI. in. 1 

prayers and tears have moved nie .. — „,/Y- ( 
have moved hishighness to commit.«ic/iarii/Ji. 1. I 
upon you ! vou have all moved mine — ..1. 3 
in no worldly suit wouldhe be moved -- HI- '. 

now, what moved me to't Henry I lis. 11. 4 

I did reek, when I first moved you. . — H- * 
moved you, my lord of Canterbury. . — n- 4 
with which they moved, have broken — v. 1 

have moved us and our council — v. 1 

tixed, to-day was moved ■Irouus^-Cressuta, i. . 

be not moved, prince Troilus .... — iv. 4 
you are moved, prince; let us depart -- y. ^ 
my lord, you moved me much.. 2'/mono/ .-l./iciis, 1. ^ 

in" part for his sake moved .— \'- f 

being moved he will not spare tonoianus, i. 1 

1 was hardly moved to come to thee — v- 
their basest metal be not moved ..Julius tcesar,i. 1 
entreat you, be any further moved . . — ;■ 2 

that could he moved to smile... — !• ^ 

are not you moved, when all the sway — 1. ^ 
I have moved already some certain. . — ..i.3 
I could he well moved, if I were as .you — 111. 1 
how much the people may be moved — ii}- 1 
the neople, how I had moved them.. — i"- ^ 
he durst not thus have moved me .. — -Y.- i 
1 think, not moved by Awtuny. .. Antony ifUto. 11. 1 
that moved pale Cassius to conspire? — .a. b 
like er'g-shells moved upon their ..tymbelme, 111. 1 
I moved her to't; having received .. — v. -., 

and highly moved to wrath ./l itus.4ndron.i. I 

the lion, moved with pity, did endure — .ii- 3 

my sea be moved with her sighs — ni. 1 

in' passion moved, doth weep to see.. — ni- ^ 

Hclicanus, thou hast moved us I prides, 1. i 

fKd/.] fortune moved, varies again — 111. o.o.ver) 
Vmorant of what hath moved you Lcur, i. 4 

then it moved her. Not to a rage — 1 v. 3 

islici-e, her army is moved on — iv- 6 

tliis "peech of vcnivs hath moved me — v. 3 

beio' moved. But tUini m-t(.rep.)"omeo ^■Juliet, 1. I 

thcictorc, it thou art moved — }■ \ 

hear the sentence of your moved prince — .[i. 
as soini moved to be moody (lep.) .. — ii'.- ' 
lamentation might have moved? .... — "!• ; 
but virtue, as it never will be moved . . Homiei,}. .> 

but, I do see you are moved Olhellu, 11 1. 3 

moved. No.'not much moved — i;.'- :^ 

1 have moved my lord in his hehalt — lu- ■? 

may be, the letter moved liim TT, -'-V- ' 

MOVER— O thou eternal mover ot..27;cii)!// /. 111. 3 
see liere these movers, that do prize.. C;.i--o'n""s, 1. o 
the movers of a languishing death ..Cymhehne.i. fa 

MOVETH— he moveth not Itomeoji Juliet, u. 

MOVING-standing, speaking, moving .T«hpp.</, u. I 
if the gentle spirit of moving .... Two Oen. nj t tr. v. 4 



_ j. 3 



_ i. 3 



BIOVING-givetnee moving graces! Arra./or.1/ra. 11. 2 
movingdelicate, and full of life ....MucliAdo.w. 1 

-withcnit ripe moving to't? IV inter s Tate,i. 2 

I say, a moving grove Macbeth, v. ■> 

heavy accent of thy moving tongue .«'V'/i«n/ //. v. 1 
for moving such a dish of skimmed.. IHtnry/^. 11. 3 

Mars his true moving, even as 1 Henry VI. i. 'Z 

prince soon won with moving words.3 Henry >'/. 111. I 

not moving from the casque Coriolanus, iv. 7 

peace, for moving me to rage . . . .Antony -S- Cleo. 11. o 
moving, how express and admirable! .. Hamlet, n. i 
of moving accidents, by flood and field. . Othello, 1. 3 

[A'7i/.] his slow and moving finger at — iv. 2 

ha! no more moving? stiir as the grave.. — v. 2 

MOVINGLY— ninrc movingly. . Tu-oOen. of Vcr. 11. 1 

MOV'ST— whom thou iiiov'st?./I»'oii!/*C/fnpa(ra, i. S 

burn tlie great splicic thou luov'st m 1 — iv. 13 

thini mov'st no less with thy Cijmtieline,rv. 2 

MOW— with mop, and mow Tempest, iv. 1 

mows rCof.-mouths] upon me Mid. N. s Dr. 111. - 

to mow down thorns that would ..'iHenryVI. iii. 1 
to mow them down before me. ...... Henry VIII. v. ^ 

to mow or all, or lose his hire Conotumis, 1. .5 

he will mow down all before him — iv. o 

contemn with mows the other Cymlietine,\. 7 

^Cof.A'»^];makemowsat him Hamlet, 11. 2 

MOWBRAY— Thomas Movthvuyl. ...Eichardll. i. 1 
now, Thomas Mowbray, do I turn .. — 1. 
lay to Mowbray's charge? it must .. — i- ' 

that Mowbray hath received — J' 

fetcli from false Jlowbray their first — •• 

Mowbray, impartial are our eyes — i- j 

he is our subject, Mowbray — !■ } 

doth harbour, even in Mowbray's face — 1. I 
cousin Hereford and fell Mowbray fight! — 1.2 
may enter butcher Mowbray's breast! — i- 2 
be Mowbray's sins so heavy in his .. — ' ' 

my name is Thomas Mowbvay 

in lists, on Thomas Mowbray 

for Mowbray, and myself, are like two 
if I be gored with Mowbray's spear. . 

do I w i th Mowbray fight 

may enter Mowbray's waxen coat .. 

Thomas Mowbra.y, a traitor — ..-. 

page to Thomas Mowbray, duke of .'iHcnryIV.]u. - 

my good lord Mowbray, construe — iv. 1 

yon sneak, lord Mowbray — i^'- j 

Jlowbiay, youoverween,to take it so — iv. 1 
encountered here, my cousin Mowbray — iv. 1 
my lord, and gentle cousin, Mowbray — iv. 2 
lordMowbray, of capital treason .... — J v. 2 

Mowbray, the bishop Seroop — „ i^- * 

MOWED down, in tops ^llenryl I. v. 7 

JdOWER- mower's swath: liere.7Vo/ius A- Cress.y. b 

MOWING like grass your fresh fair ..Henrnl . 111. -i 

Flibbertigibbet, of mopping and mowing. '•«"■, iv. 1 

MOYSES, and Valerius .... Tu-o Ucn.ot I eroim, y. 3 

MUCK-nuick o' the world ........... Con«^'n«s, 11. - 

MUCK-VATER [Co/. K7i(.] MOCK-VAi KK- 

Muck-vater ! vat is dat? Merry n ivcs, 11 . 3 

I have as much muck-vater as de •• - "• ^ 
MUCK- WATER \_Col. hut.] iMOCK- WATER— . 

a word, monsieur Muck-water — ■!• J 

Muck-water, in our English tongue — ii- 3 

MUD— filled up with mud Mid. N. sDream.u. i. 

spring is not so free from mud 2Henry> I. 111. I 

she not, for all the mud in Egypt . . HemyJIll. ii. 3 

bred now out of your mud Antony^ tieo. n. 7 

rather on Nilus' mudlay me stark . . — v. 2 

vou have stained with mud Titvs.indmn.y. 2 

M'UDDED- there lie mudded lemprsl, iii. 3 

myself wereniudded in that oozy bed.. — v. 1 
I am now, sir, mudded in fortune s ..AUstteti, v. 2 

and, as he says, is mudded withal — , ,.^- f 

mudded, thick and unwliolesome Hamlet, iv. b 

MUDDY— lie foul and muddy 1 empesl,^ v. 1 

empty it in the muddy ditch .... Merry ^> ires, 111. 3 
thine eyne? crystal is m\^O.Ay.Mn^.^.■sDream, 111. 2 
but, whilst this muddy vesture . . Mer. oft emce, v. 1 
like a fountain troubled, muady. .1 >irninirotj>ii. y. i 

dost think I am so muddy "''"'" ■' J °7' '■ i 

stream through muddy passages.... /"f/mr'/y. v. 3 

farewell, you muddy knave l"'''"''-'',',; ' 1 

you muddy rascal, is that all iHenri/lV. 11. 4 

hang yourself, you muddy conger .. — ."• 1 

her melodious lay to muiidy death. . . . Hamlet, iv. 7 

MUDDY- JIETTLED vascal, peak . . . . . ; -■ "• 2 

MUFFLE your face -- . ■ ","""' '™^'!>> | 

muffle your false love Conic?!/ of Eno, *, 11 . i 

muttle me, night, awnile. ...... . Uo,neo4-Jutei, v. 3 

SIUFFLED fellow's that? .. Measure for Measa,ev 
and will keep him muffled, till we . . All s « ell, ]v. I 

a plague upon him! muffled! — })'■ i 

duke of Su&olk, muffled up in rags! 2 Hf »vv f /• v- 
not that his steward mufllcd so.' 7 o„o». -;/ J ' • " • < 
love, whose view is muffled still..;io»"'o ti-Jutiel, 1. \ 

MUFFLER, and akerchief Merry ly-ves, iv. 2 

her thrummed hat, and her muffle. . — iv- f 
Ispy agreat peaid under Iier iniiffler!__ — iv. .i 



Henry V. iii. 6 

./ii;(!(.sCfr.s-„)-, iii. 2 
..\ Ileum I r. ii. 1 
Mid.S.'s Dr. iii. 1 
y shade - .y. 1 



with a muffler belDi-c 1 
MUFFLING uphisliM 
MUGS— come, neighlioi 
SIULBERRIES-and 1 
MULBEURY-tanyinL, 

humble, as the npcst inulberiy . . . . t---,-— -■; ■.-•• 7 
MULE-your dogs, and mules ■•'""•»/'''"',' v' 
buy another of Ba.,azet's mule ■■■■■■'*} •'".'^"•/V i 
like mules, and have their provender. I //(■««// /,!. i 
plodded by my foot-clot)! mule •• •■J"''"',V',;- H' ' 
so ill, he could not sit his mule .-Henryl lll.'V- 2 
to he a dog, a mule, a cut.... Troilus^-Crcssnla, v. 
he would have made them mules . .Corwlanus.iu 1 
unloading of his mules ....Antony ^Cleopatra, }y. 6 

5IULETEERS of France! 1 H^"/!'' '■ }))■ i 

vour mariners are muleteers . . Antony e,- Uco. 111. 7 
MUr IRH- whicli mulier, I divine ..Cymtxtme.y. o 

MUM |-i;rs .„:• suceedant... f', 'i'V iv" 9 

,Mi; 1,1 •:■- \ > liws.my conn try man. . Til ns And. iv. i 
Mlii.l.t.l;. ■!. .it. sleepy, insensible . .I'onnfunvs, ly. 5 
Mli LiviUiiUb, which ordained l»c/' It V'"'" ''"'•"'• ' 



MUL 



[ 519 ] 



M Ul/rtPLIED— shall be mul ti pi icd..?i/c»ic!/ ('Z. i. 2 

by his.sif,'lithissin be muUii>liefl.... — .ii. 1 

how shall this bosom nniltipliccl ..Coriolitmis, in. 1 

MFT/rn'I'.Y— place, I multiply .. Wm/ci;\<V'«(i', i. 2 

Jl in /rrPLYlNG meaieine MU HV«, v. 3 

tlie muUipIyinff vilUuiies of nature lilacliMi, i. 2 

with multiplviug l>amisl TimonofAthens, iv. 1 

vour uuilti|ilVing spawn how caii..C'wiota»i»s, ii. 2 
Ji'Vf LTirOTE'NT, tlioushoulilst.7Voi7«s.5 Ciess. IV. 5 
MUIj TITUDli cull, the afternoon. Loi'e's /-. Lost., v. 1 

bv the fool multitude MnchanI <if Venice, ii. 9 

riink me with tlie liarbarous uiultituJcs — _ii. 9 

tlie buz/.in? plcascil multitude — i;i. 2 

fair miiltitiide oftho^e her luiirsl ..KingJohn, iii. 4 

would thev were multitudes I ncnr\i n.w.1 

nt the heels, in ^'oldeu nuiltitudes .. -. iv. 3 
W'lvcriii" multitude ran piav . .-.' .'/c/i. i/f ' ■ (mduc.) 

so few \uitrli sueh a muUiimle \l\,'nri,ri. i. I 

how tire niddy uudtitude do point. .2nf/H7//-7._ii. 4 

Willi the rude multitude — !"• 2 

multitude of hinds and peasants .... — iv. 4 
blown to and fro, as this multitude? — iv. 8 

to 20V€rn andrule muUitirles — .,X-' 

wdrat! multitudes, and fearV %nenry !■ I.i. 4 

by a multitude, the new-hcalcd ..Richard III. ii. i 

wliat a multitude are here I llenryl In. v. 3 

from the odds of multitude. . TroilusffCicssuhi, v. 4 
the multitude tobeingrateful (rep.)Coriolanus, n. 3 
call us,— the many-headed multitude — .Ji- 3 
have appeased the multitude ....JtiliusCcPsar, iii. 1 

gift of ditfering multitudes Cumbelmc, ui. 6 

loved of the distracted multitude .... Ihim!el. iv. 3 

MULTITUDINOUS seasincarnardine./Vacoe'/i, ii 2 

pluck out themultitudinoustongue.Cor/o/aniis,ui. 1 

BIUAI-mnm then, and no more Tempest, ill. 2 

her i n white, and cry, mum Merry » ives, v. 2 

what needs either j'our mum — v. 2 

and cried mum, and she cried budget — v. 5 

till we call upon you. Mum Meas.forUeas. v. 1 

go to, mum, you are he Much.iJo, u. I 

well said, master, mum! Taming of bla ew, i. i 

and give no words but mum! 2 Hemy I'l.u 2 

citizens are mum, say not a woid.Ricliard III. in. 7 

mum, mum, he that keeps nor crust Lear, i. 4 

MUMBLE-NEWS, some trencher- Lowe's /..Los?, v. 2 

MUAIBLINU of wicked charms '■<'.'"'<.]]■ ' 

peace, you mumbling fool! Ilomeo ^-.lidu-l, ui. 5 

MUMJIERS— faces like mummers . . Connluuas, u. 1 
MUMMY— a mountain of mummy. i)/erri/"'/ii -s, m. 5 

witches' mnmmv; maw, and gulf Marln'lh, iv. 1 

dved in mummy, which tlie skilful. . . . OlhMo, in. 4 
jMTTNCH your 20od dry oats . . Mid. N.'s Dream, iv. 1 
A] ljNCHED,andmimched, andmunelied jUacte(/i,i.3 

JI UND.A.JSrE cost Pericles, iii. 2 (scroll) 

MUNIMENTS and petty helps Coriolanus, i. 1 

MUNITION sent, to underprop King John, v. 2 

view the artillery and munition 1 Henry ri. i. 1 

MURAL— now is the mural down.. Mid. N. s Dr. v. 1 
MURDER— and do tlie murder first . . Tempest, iv. 1 

better shame than murder Merry H'ives, \v. 2 

if you will not murder me Tu-elflli A'ight, ii. 1 

what is it, murder? Measure for Measure, i. 3 

he murder cries, and help from . . it/i'rf. N.'s Dr. iii. 2 

murder cannot be hid long Merck, of Venice, ii. 2 

tliere is murder in thine eye ....AsymiLike a, in. 5 

virL'inity murders itself All sli ell, i. 1 

here's a madman will murder me. Taming of Sli. v, 1 
am appointed him to murder you.SI'inter'sTule,]. 2 

haled out to murder — ii'- 2 

to murder her I married — .v. 1 

what, will you murder me?. . Comedy o/Errors, w. 4 

whose murder yet is but fantastical Macbeth, i. 3 

and withered murder, alarumed by .. — ii. 1 

and one cried, murder! — u. 2 

Macbeth does murder sleep — ii- 2 

uiiist sacrilegious murder hath broke — ii. 3 

the alarum-bell: murder! and treason! — ii. 3 
a wcanan's ear, would mui'der as it fell — .ii. 3 

murders have been pei-formed — iii. 4 

with twenty mortal murders — ni. 4 

strange than such a murder is — iii. 4 

his secret murders sticking his hands.. — v. 2 

this murder had not come liingJohn, iv. 2 

murder, as baling wdiat himself .... — iv. 3 

unto the crest of murder's arms — iv. 3 

all murders past do stand excused . . — iv. 3 

hand, and murder's bloody axe liicliard I I.i. 2 

teaching stern murder how to — i. 2 

in murders, and in outrages, bloody — iii. 2 

tlicn murders, treasons, and — iii. 2 

I'll murder all his wardrobe IHenrylV. v. 3 

murder, murder! O thou honey- — iHoirylV.u. I 

I will murder yom' ruff for this — ii. 4 

murder, I warrant now — ii. 4 

rob, murder, and commit — iv. 4 

wilful adultery and murder IlenryV. li. 1 

treason and murder, ever kept together — ii. 2 
to wait on treason, and on murder .. — ii. 2 
of deadly murder, spoil, and villany — in. 3 
premeditated and contrived murder — iv. 1 

contrived'st tomurder ourdead lord.l Henri/ F/.i. 3 
wliat miscliief, and what murder too — iii. 1 

murder not then the fruit — v. 4 

munler, indeed, that bloody sin ilJcnryVI. in. 1 

slanders me with murder's crimson — iii. 2 

the guilt of murder bucklers thee .. — iii. 2 
shameful murder of a guiltless king — iv. 1 
you cannot but forbear to murder me — iv. 7 
'Clittbrd: murder not this innocent. .3Hei!i!/;'7.i. 3 
can smile, and murder while I smile — iii. 3 
murder is thy almsdeed; petitioners — y. 5 
by murder, to make him a king? . . Richard JII. i. 3 

to, to, to,— to murder me? ay, ay — i. 4 

that thou Shalt do no murder — i. 4 

forswearing, and for murder too .... — i. 4 

he sends you not to murder me — i. 4 

most grievous guilty murder done!.. — _ i. 4 
murderthy breath in middle of a word — iii. .") 
in the council-house, to murder mo — iii. .5 
murder lier brothers, and thcu marry — iv. 2 



MURDER iCol. Kni. slaughter] Richard III. iv. 4 

murder, stern murder, in the direst — v. 3 

heli>, ho! they murder Cresar JidiusCrpsar,'u.2 

we do commit murder in healing. .4»'oii;/<5't'''''''- "■ 2 
how ! that I should murder her? . . Cymbeline, in. 2 
murder in heaven! how? 'tis gone .. — iv. 2 

must murder wives much better — v. 1 

how easily murder is discovered.. 7'i7ws/lnt'»o)i.ii. 4 

made for murders, and for rapes — iv. 1 

for murder of our brother — iv. 4 

for I must talk of murders, rapes — v. 1 

of murder and of death — v. 2 

where bloody murder, or detested riipe — v. 2 

where Rape and Murder, stands — v. 2 

Kapine and Murder there (re/v.) — — v. 2 
Murder, stab him, he's a murderer .. — v. 2 
let Raiie and Murder stay with me. . — v. 2 

the one is Murder, Rape is the — v. 2 

murder's as near to lust, as flame Pericles, i. 1 

and hid intent, to murder him .... — ii. (Liover) 

did seek to murder me — v. 1 

at fourteen years he sought to murder — ^ v. 3 
the gods for'murder seemed so — v. 3 (Gov.er) 

no vicious blot, murder, or foulness Lc.ir, i. 1 

me to the murder of your lordship — ii. 1 

help, ho! murder! help! strike, you slave — n 2 

'tis worse than murder — n- 4 

Mudo, of murder; and riibbertigibbet .. — iv. I 
See thee, they will murder thee.. «o«ifo SrJuliet,]]- 2 
mercy but murders, pardoning those — iii- 1 
smil'st upon the stroke that miu-ders — in. 3 
to murder murder our solemnity? .. — iv. 5 
doing more murders in tliis loathsome — v. 1 
and know how this foul murder comes — v. 3 
of this direful murder; and here I .. — y. 3 
most unnatural murder. Murder?(jcp.)//a»ite', i. 5 

lord's murder [Knt. vile murders] — n. 2 

call you play the murder of Gonzago? . . — ii. 2 
for murder, though it have no tongue .. — ii. 2 

like the murder of my father — Ji- 2 

the image of a murder done in Vienna.. — i!i. 2 
eldest curse upon't, a brother's murder! — iii. 3 

forgive me my foul murder! — iii. 3 

effects for which I did the murder ~ iii- 3 

thou wilt not murder me? help _ — jii- 4 

indeed, should murder sanctuarize — iv. 7 

Cain's jawbone, that did the first murder! — y. 1 
conscience, to do no contrived murder. . Oiliello, i. 2 

how shall I murder him, lago? — iv. 1 

help, ho! murder! murder! (rep.) — v. I 

whose noise is this, that cries on murder? — v. 1 
a murder, which I thought a sacrifice .. — v. 2 

good my lord, yonder s foul murder . . — v. 2 

then murder's out of tune, and sweet — v. 2 

killed my mistress; murder! murder! .. — v. 2 
most lay their murders on your neck.... — v. 2 
your reports have set the murder on — v. 2 

MURDERED-thou hast murdered. iV/ui.W.'sD/-. ui.2 

so should the murdered look — iii. '- 

he hath murdered his master ! . . Taming of Sh. v. 1 

Glamis hath murdered sleep Macbeth, ii. 2 

our royal master's murdered! — ii- 3 

your royal father's murdered — _ii- 3 

the gracious Duncan have I murdered — iii- 1 
on the quarry of these murdered deer. . — iv. 3 

tliy hand hath mvirdered him King John, iy. 2 

all murdered; for within liicliard II. iii. '2 

the murderer, love him murdered — v. 6 

be deposed, and, shortly, murdered..! HenrylV.i. 3 
pray God, you have not murdered some — ii. 4 

are murdered for our pains illenrylV. iv. 4 

before my face murdered my father — iy. 4 

Kichnrd was murdered traitorously .2 Henri/ f'/. ii. 2 
thought to have murdered wrongfully — ii. 3 
Humphrey traitorously is murdered — iii. 2 
it cannot be, but he was murdered here — ui. 2 
banditto slave, murdered sweet Tully — iv. 1 
ay, to be murdered by his eueraies . .ZHenry VI. i. 1 

1 have murdered, where I should not — ii. 5 
told me, he was murdered there . . Richard III. iii. 1 
souls of all that I had murdered caine — v. 3 
souls, whose bodies Richard mm-dered — v. 3 
officer, that murdered Pompey.. ^nfojij/ fCleo. ni. 5 
poor Bassianus here lies murdered . . TilusAnd. n. 4 
should have murdered Bassianus here — ii. 4 

some bring the murdered body — n. 4 

her two sous that murdered Bassianus — . v. 1 
were they that murdered our emperor's — v. 3 
T \' bait's death, that murdered me. Romeo <S- Jul. 1 1 1 . 2 
Tybalt murdered, doting like me.... — ;;;- 3 
cursed hand murdered her kinsman — m. 3 
that murdered ray love's cousin .... — v- 3 
tlie son of a dear father murdered Hnmict, li. 2 

falsely, falsely murdered ! Oiiiello, v. 2 

why, how should she be murdered? — v. 2 

my mistress here lies nmrdered in her bed — v. 2 

MURDERER— like his murderer. Twelfth Mght, in. 2 
being a murderer, though he . . Meas.forMeas. iv. 2 
that Anu'elo's a murderer, is't not — — _y. 1 

so should a murderer look Mid.N.'sDream, iii. 2 

yet you, the murderer, look as bright — iii- 2 
stand and play the murderer in? Love'sL. Lost, iy. I 
tyrants, butchers, murderers!.... v4s!/o«L//ie (7, iii. 5 

to saj' mine eyes are murderers — iii. 5 

against his murderer shut the door Macbeth, \. 7 

tl'iere, the murderers steeped in — _ii.3 

sweaten from the murderer's gibbet .. — iv. 1 
till I she.ath it in a murderer's skin.7i.'(ng-./o/i)i, iv. 3 
thou art a murderer. Do not prove .. — iv. 3 
second a villain, and a murderer? .. — iv. 3 

1 hate the murderer, love him Richard II. y. 6 

unless it were a bloody murderer . .2Uenry VI. iii. 1 
bein^accused a crafty murderer .... — iii- 1 
yet jteolus would not be a murderer — iii. 2 
we. I hope, sir, are no murderers .... — iii.2 
O traitors! Murderers! they, that..37feji?!/r7. v. 5 
what's worse tlian murderer, that I.. — y. 

heirs the murderer shall be Richard II 1. 1. 1 

with lightning strike the murderer dead — ;■ 2 
if two sucli murderers as yourselves — i. 4 



MUS 

MURDERER— a murderer here? ..liicliard III. v. 3 
at the murderer's horse's tail . . Troilns S,- Ci ess. v. 1 1 
be called purgers, not murderers.. Ju/iws Ciesar,}]. 1 

they were villains, murderers — iii.2 

egregious miiidercr, tliief, imyihmg. Cymbeline. y. 5 
and lie a charitable murderer. Titus Amlronicus, ii. 3 
the inurilcred body, some the murderers — ii. 4 
out on thee, murderer! thou kill'st.. — ni. 2 
andfiud out murderers in their guilty — v. 2 
show me a murderer, I'll deal with him — v. '2 

stab him; he's a murderer •;- ■^'- - 

apresent murderer doesiirepare./'enWra, iv. (Gow.) 
ajipear, witb Leonine, a murderer _ — iv. (Gow.) 
a pliigue upon you, murderers, traitors .. hear, v. 3 

Tybalt that murderer Rmneo/iJidiei, m. I 

doth she not tiiiiik me an old murderer — in. 3 
because the traitor murderer lives .. — iii- ■'J 

begin, murderer; leave thy Hamlet, in. i 

how the murderer gets the love of — ._. — in- 2 
a murderer and a villain; a slave, that is — iii. 4 
nil honourable murderer, if you will — Olhetln, v. 2 

MURDERING ministers, wherever ....Macbeth, i. b 
the fatal balls of murdering basilisks. . Uenru V. y. 2 

prospect, murdering basilisks! 'illmryVl. iii. 2 

but set his murdering knife unto ..ZUenryl'I. u. ij 
if murdering innocents be executing — y. 6 
war with God by murdering me? ..Richard II f. i. 4 
murdering impossibility, to make ..Corinlamis, v. 3 

MURDERING-PIECE, in many Hamlet, iv. 

MURDEROUS guilt shows not . . Tu-elflhNi^xhi, iii. 1 

this murderous shaft that's shot Macbeth, i i. 3 

motion of a murderous thought — KingJnhn.. iy. 2 

blot of murderous suboruatiun 1 llenrylV.i. 3 

thy eyeballs murderous tyranny ..'ilienryVl. in. 2 

I would, false murderous coward — iii- 2 

to do a murderous deed, to rob a man — y- 1 

murderous Machiavel to school iUemyVI. ni. 2 

saw thy murderous faulcliion_. Richard HI. i. '1 

a murderous villain, and so still .... — . '- 3 
whose unavoided eye is murderous! — iv. 1 

no doubt the murderous knife was dull — iv. 4 
O murderous slumber I lay'st amu.JuHusCfPsar.iv .3 
found it murderous to the senses?. . Cymi.eline. iy. 2 
smiles such murderous tyranny. .TV.iiy.jHcijoji.u. 4 
stay, murderous villains! will you kill — iv. 2 

bringing the murderous coward to Lear,i\. 1 

the post unsanctified of murderous lechers — iv. 6 
incestuous, murderous, damned Dane .. i7am7e(, v. 2 
O murderous slave! O villain! Othello, v. \ 

murderous coxcomb! what should^such — v. 2 
MURE— hath wrought the mure ... .2 Uennj I V. iv. 4 

MURK— ere twice in murk and All's iVell, n. 1 

MURKIEST-the murkiest den Tempest, iv. 1 

MURKY-hellismuxky! fie, my lord...i/n(6e'A, v. 1 
MURMUR glides TwoGeu. of Verona, i\. 7 

then 'twas fresh in murmur Tin'it'ik.Sr^h:, i. 2 

heard thee murmur tales of Mien ry IV. ii. 3 

when creeping murmur, and . . Henry V. iv. (chorus) 

MXIRMURED her moans OthelU, iv. 3 (song) 

MURMURERS, there's places Henry VIU. li. 2 

M URMURING stream left on .... .-Is yon Like it, iv, 3 
doth move the murmuring lips of . . KmgJohn, ly. 2 
or murmuring, where's my serpent./ln/oii;/ S;- Cleo.i. 5 

the murmuring surge, th.at on the Lear,\v. 

MURMUR'ST, I will rend Tempest, i. 2 

MURRAIN on vour monster — iii- 2 

fatted with the murrain floclc . . Mid.N.'sDream, ii. 2 
red murrain o' thy jade's tricks. . Troilvs <§ Cress, ii. 1 
a murrain on't! I took this for iWytr.Conolanns, i. 5 

MURRAY, Angus, and Mciiteith 1 Henry I V.\.\ 

MUSCADEL, and threw the Taming ofSh. lii. 2 

MUSCLES— the fresh-brook muscles. . . . Tempest, i. 2 
MUSCLE-SHELL: what would ..Merry Hives, iv. .I 

MUSCOVITES, or Russians Love'sL. Lost, v. 2 

twenty adieus, my frozen Muscovites — v. 2 

disguised like Muscovites, in shapeless — v. 2 

MUSCOVY— coming from Muscovy .. — v. 2 

MUSE— I cannot too much muse Tempest, in. 3 

muse not, that I thus suddenly.. ruoGen. ofVer.i. 3 

why muse vou, sir? — n 

well, I will muse no further Merry IVn-es, v 

the thrice three Muses mourning . . .Vid..\. Dr. v 
and rather muse, than ask, why I . . . . All's li ell. n 
do not muse at me, my most Macbeth, in 

1 muse, your majesty doth KmgJohn, in. 

I muse, you make so slight 2 Henry IV. iv. 

for a muse of fire, that would . . Henry V. i . (clior us 

1 muse, we met not with the 1 Henry VI. ii. • 

I muse, my lord of Gloster is not ..iHenryVl. in. 

brothers, you muse what chat SllenryVI. in. 

I muse, why she's at liberty Richard III. u 

I muse, my mother does not Conolnniis, \u. 

but my muse labours Otlielio, ii . 

MUSED— hathmusedoftaking..^ii'o«.i/<St'/eo. m. I 
MUSHROOM— midniglit mushrooms . . Tempest, v. 
MUSIC— where should this music be? — ;. 

this musie crept by me — ..'- 

I shall have my music for nothing . . — in. 

marvellous sweet music! — '."■ 

as they smelt music — iv. 

required some heavenly music — y. 

makes sweet music'.with Two Gen.oflerona,)]. 

there is no music in the — !!l- 

well skill'd in music — V'- ■; 

some evening music to her ear — iv- "- 

wdiere you shall hear music — !V-2 

that will be music — jv- 2 

the music likes you not — jv. 

you delight not in music — }v. 2 

what fine change is in the music .... — iv. 2 

I thank you foryour music. — ^ /Y- ? 

if music be the food of love, play . . Twelfth Night, i. I 
speak to him in many sorts of music — _i. 2 

give me some music — .;i- 4 

save thee, friend, and thy music — nj- 1 

than music from the spheres — ni. 1 

as howling after music — .v. 1 

music oft hath such a charm . . Meas. for Meas. ly. 1 

hath he provided this mu.»ic? Much Ado, i. 2 

the fault will be in the music, cousin — n. i 



MUS 



[•5-20 



iv. I 



— V. i 



— V. I 



JIUSIC— when there wod no nuisic SladiAdu, ii. 3 

come, shall we lieur this musicV — ii. 3 

tlie music ended, we'll fit — ii. 3 

to slander music any more than once — ii. 3 

get us some excellent nuisic — ii. 3 

now, music, sound, and sing — v. 3 

tlierefore, play, music — v. 4 

to hear the sea-maid's music. 3//£/. A' 
some music, my sweet love? (icp.) . . 

Titania, music call — iv. i 

music, ho! music — jv 1 

Bound, music; come, my queen — iv. 1 

my love shall hear the music — i v. 1 

what mask, what music? — v. I 

one, whom the music of his own. . have's h. 1-off, i. 1 

is music, and sweet fii"e 

play, music, then 

the music plays 

let music sound, while he (loth. .Met: tif I 

a swan-like end, fading in nuisic 

what is music then? {rep.) _. . ,. 

bring your music fortli into the air ,. 

let the sounds of music creep into.... — v. I 

music. I am never merry Qjcji/.) — v. 1 

or any air of music touch their ears.. — v. 1 

by the sweet power of music — v. 1 

but music for the time dotlr change.. — v. 1 

the man that hatli no music — v. 1 

mark tlie music — v. I 

music! hark! it is yoiu' music, n)adam — v. I 

longs to see this broken music As yuu Like iV, i. 2 

give us some music — ii. 7 

play, music; and you brides — v. 4 

with musics of all sorts All's Well, iii. 7 

procure me music Tamingnf Shrew, I (indue.) 

wilt thou have music? — 2 (indue.) 

music and poesy use, to quicken you — i. 1 
most delight in music, instruments.. — i. 1 

well seen in music, to instruct Bianca — _i. 2 
music and the mathematics {rep.) . . — ii. 1 
when in music we have spent an hour — iii. I 
the cause why music was ordained! — iii. 1 

make no music in tliree parts — iii. 1 

it is my fatlier's music lyinler'sTale, iv. 3 

music; awake her; strike — y. 3 

nc\er words were music to thiae. Comcilij of Err. ii. 2 

and music at the close Richard II. ii. 1 

tliis music mads me — v. 5 

by tliat music let us all embrace 1 Henry IV. v. z 

would fain hear some music iHenrylV. ii. 4 

tlie music is come, sir — ii. 4 

whisper music to my weary spirit (jep.) — iv. 4 
whose music, to my thinking, pleased — v. 6 

battle rendered you in music Henry V.'i. 1 

a full and natural close, like music . . — i. 2 
in broken music; for thy voice is music — v. 2 
sings heavy music to thy timorous. . I Heiiry VI. iv. 2 

how irksome is tliis music i Henry VI. ii. 1 

their music, frightful as the serpent's — iii. 2 

thou sing'st sweet music Richard III. iv. 2 

by 'r lady, held current music too . . Henry VIII. i. 3 

let the music knock it — i. 4 

to his music, plants, and flowers — iii. 1 (song) 

in sweet music is such art — iii. 1 (song) 

all the ciioicest music of the kingdom — iv. i 

bid the music leave — iv.2 

we shall hear music, wit .... Troilvs ^-Cressidn,!. 3 

what music is this? (>fp.) — iii. 1 

and theirs that love music — iii. 1 

here is good broken music — iii. 1 

albeit sweet music issues thence .... — iii. i 

wliat music will be in him — iii. 3 

music make their welcome Tinwn of Athens, i. 2 

farewell, and come with bettermusic — i. ; 
feast your ears with the music awhile — iii. (i 
tongue, shriller than all the music. JuKks Ccrsar, i. 'i 

he liears no nuisic — /\. i 

that plays thee music? — iv. 3 

give me some rnusic; music. /In^ony fyCleopulrn, ii. 5 

tlie music, ho! Let it alone — ii. ."i 

there, my music playing far off — ii. 5 

to our oars with the loud music — ii. 7 

hark! Music i' the air — iv. r; 

would this music would come (rep.).Cynibelin 
1 will consider your music the better — 

I have assailed ner with music — 

his head have ear in music — 

the music would not please . . TitusAndronicu 

to make man his lawful music I- 

loud music is too harsh for ladies' heads 
for you sweet music this last night .... 

sir, you are music's master 

tlie rough and woeful music that we .. — iii. 2 

the music there — iii. 2 

by Cleou trained in music — iv. (Gower) 

marked lie your music? — v. 1 

but hark, what music? — v. 1 

wliat music? my, lord, I hear none (icp.) — v. 1 

louder the music there Lenr, iv. 7 

softest music to attending ears!. Romeo ^-.lutiel, ii. 2 
tliou shamest the music of sweet news — ii. .^ 

let rich music's tongue unfold — ii. 6 

the County will he liere with music — iv. 4 

music with her silver sound {rep.) — iv. 5 i song) 

and let him ply his music Hamlei.i]. I 

sucked the honey of his music vows ' — iii. 1 

some music; come, the recorders (rep.).. — iii. 2 
it will discourse most eloquent music; .. — iii. 2 
there is much music, excellent voice .... — iii. 2 
the soldier's music, and the rites of war — v. 2 

tl;e pegs that make tliis music 0(/ie//o. ii. 1 

tlie general so likes your music — iii. 1 

have any music that may not be heard.. — iii. I 

to hear music, the general does not — iii. 1 

I will play the swan, and Hie in music. — v. 2 

MUSICAL— here so musical Meas. for Mens. iv. I 

mark the musical confusion .. Ai"('rf. A.' s Dream, iv. 1 
I never heard so musical a discord .. — iv. 1 
and musical, as bright Apollo's.. Love's L.LosI, iv. 3 
compact of jars, grow musical tsyou Likeil, ii. 7 



11. 3 

ii. 3 

iii. 4 

■IS, ii. I 

les, i. 1 

■ Iii. 3 

■ ii. i 

■ ii. b 



JMLISICAL— be nothing but musical. IWoiri//;'. iii. 1 

more musical than the jjipe of Hrnn/V. iii. 7 

MUSICIAN likes me imt. ... TiroGen.of Vrmno, iv. 2 

an excellent musician Mvch Ado, ii. 3 

a musician than the wren ....Merch. of Venice, v. 1 
musician's, which is fantastical .Asyoii Lihc it, iv. 1 
a fine musician to instruct .... Tamivf^ of Shrew, i. 2 
will my daughterproveagoodmusician? — ii. 1 
our fine musician groweth amorous.. — iii. 1 
the quaint musician, amorous Licio — iii. 2 

nor a musichan, as I seem to he — iv. 2 

suppose the singing birds, musicians. y?i'c/io»-(///. i. 3 

those musicians that shall jilay IHenrylV. iii. I 

b3''r lady he's a good musician — iii. 1 

pay the musicians, sirrah; farewell. 2 77<'Hji//r. ii. 4 
cause the musicians play me that .Henry VIII. iv. 2 
know you the musicians? .. Troilns ^Cnssida, iii. 1 
come, musicians, play; a hall! ..Romeo ^Juliet, i. 5 

musicians, O musicians (rep.) — iv. 5 

because musicians sound for silver .. — iv. !> 
[Coi.] musicians have seldom gold .. — iv. 5 
an admirable musician! O she will sing. .OWe//o, iv. 1 
MUSING-with musing weak .TwoGen.ofVrmna, i. 1 
too much toallichoUy and raMsmg. Dlei ry W ives, i. 4 

to thick-eyed musing MlenrylV. ii. 3 

should still dwell in nis musings. . Henry VIII. iii. 2 
walked about, musing, and sighing. JuZ/KsCtpsv"-, ii.l 

musings into my mind, a thousand I'rm-les, i. 2 

MUSK— so sweetly, (all musk) Merry Wives, ii. 2 

JNIUSK-CAT-butnot a musk-cat All'sWell, v. 2 

MUSKOS— the Muskos' regiment — iv. 1 

MUSKET— mark of smoky muskets? — iii. 2 

MUSK-ROSES, and with eglantine ..Mid.N.'sDr. ii. 2 

kill cankers in the musk-rose buds.. — ii. 3 

stick musk-roses in thy sleek smooth — iv. 1 

MUSS— bovs unto amuss..^>i(on!/ ^Cleopnlra, iii. 11 

MUSTACHIO-with my mustachio. Love's L. Lost, v. 1 

tliese mad, mustachio, purple-hued .IHenrylV. ii. 1 

MUSTARD was iiauglit As youLike it, i. 2 

and the mustard was good — i. 2 

saw those pancakes or that mustard.. — i. 2 
a piece of beef, and mustard?. Taming of Sfirew, iv. 3 
the mustard is too hot a little (rep.).. — iv. 3 
as thick as Tewkesbury mustard. . ..IHenrylV. ii. 4 
MUSTARD-SEED! Ready ....Mid.N.'sDream,\\\.\ 
Mustard-seed. Good master Mustard-seed — iii. 1 
Where's monsieur Mustard-seed? (rep.) — iv. 1 

MUSTER your wits Love'sL. Lost, v. 2 

why does my blood thus muster. .Meas. for Meas. ii. 4 

there do muster true gait All's Well, ii.l 

the muster file, rotten and sound .... — iv. 3 

will you go muster men? Richard II, ii. 2 

let us take a muster speedily IHenrylV. iv. I 

make fearful musters iHenrylV. (indue.) 

our present musters grow upon — i. 3 

muster me all to their captain — iv. 3 

defences, musters, preparations HenryV. ii. 4 

the muster of his kingdom too faint. . — iii. 6 
those will I muster up;(»e/).) ZHenryVI. iv. 8 

fo, muster men Richard III. iv. 3 
'11 muster up my friends — iv. 4 

"well, go, muster men — iv. 4 

is this Moorfields to muster in? .... Henry VIII. v. 3 
we would muster all from twelve . . Coriolanus, iv. 5 
o'er the files and musters of thewar../Jn<. frCleo. 1. 1 

hasten his musters, and conduct Lear, iv. 2 

MUSTERED in my thoughts 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

mustered my soldiers, gathered ZHenryVI. ii. 1 

our present numbers be mustered . . Cymbeline, iv. 2 

not mustered among the bands — iv. 4 

MUSTERING in hisclouds Richard II. iii. 3 

ilUSTY— you had musty victual Much Ado,i. 1 

as I was smoking a musty room — i. 3 

to vent our musty superfluity Coriolanus, i. 1 

noisome, musty chaff (rep.) — v. 1 

forlorn, in short and mustj' straw? Lear, iv. 7 

bladders, and musty seeds ...... Romeo SfJuVet, v. 1 

the proverb is something musty Hamlet, iii. 2 

MUTABILITIES; and her foot Henry F. iii. 6 

MUTABILITY, all faults Cymtjelinv, ii. 5 

MU'TABLE rank-scented many .... Coriolanus, iii. 1 

MUTATION— nothing butmutation. Cymbeline, iv. 2 

but tliat thy strange mutations make iis..Le'(7-, iv. 1 

MUTE— hush and be mute Tempest, iv. 1 

and your mute I'll be Twelfth Mght, i. 2 

my servant strai-ght was mute .... Love'sL. Lost, v. 2 

all the rest is mute All's Well, ii. 3 

say, she be mute, and will not.Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 

rumour cannot be mute Winter's Tale, i. 2 

and the mute wonder lurketh HenryV. i. 1 

like a Turkish mute, shall have — i. 2 

woe-wearied tongue is still and mute — iv. 4 
thou wilt be a voluntary mute .... Cymbeline, iii. 6 
why should wrath be mute.... TilvsAndronicus, v. 3 

made the night-bird mute Pericles, i v. (Gower) 

my lieart a working, mute and dumb ..Hamlet, ii. 2 

that are but mutes or audience — v. 2 

MUTEST— my mutest conscience Cymbeline, i. 7 

MUTINE in a matron's bones Hamlet, iii. 4 

worse than the mutines in the bilboes — v. 2 

MUTINEER— if you prove a mutineer. Tempcsf, iii. 2 

worshinful mutineers, your valour . . Coriolanus, i. 1 

MUTINIES in a man'sbosom Riciiardlll. i. 4 

to cheer his dad in mutinies? SHenryJ'I.L 4 

their mutinies and revolts ..Coriolanus, iii. 1 

in cities, mutinies; in countries, discord ..hear, i. 2 

MUTINOUS winds Tempest, v. 1 

erroneous, mutinous, and unnatural. 3Heni!/F/. ii. 6 

not mutinous in peace — iv. 8 

the mutinous parts that envied his . . Coriolanus, i. I 

you the mutincms members — i. 1 

tlie people mutinous — i. 2 (letter) 

then let the mutinous winds strike — v. 3 

MU'TINY— umpire of their mutiny.J.oi>e'sL.Los(, i. 1 
to mutiny against this servitude... 4.s-!/ou Like it, i. 1 
where will doth mutiny with viit's.. Richard II. ii, 1 
horror, fear, and mutiny, shall here — iv. 1 

keeps his men from mutiny \Henry VI. i. 1 

to raise a mutiny betwi.xt — iv. 1 

sack this country with a mutiny — — v. 1 



NAT 

MUTINY- their splendid mutiny ..2HenryVI.ui.'i 
there is a mutiny in his mind.. ..Henry VI II. iii. 2 
what mutiiij'? wliat raging .. Troilus ^Cressida, i. 3 
this nuitiny were better put in .... Coriolanus, ii. 3 
conibundeu with this mutiny ....JutiusCarsar, iii. 1 

and minds to mutiny uud rage — iii. 2 

to such a sudden flood of mutiny.... — iii. 2 
stones of Rome to rise and mutiny (rep.) — iii, 2 
my very hairs do mutiny . . Anlony ^- Cleopatra, iii. 9 
to stir a mutiny in the mildest .. TitusAiidron. iv. 1 
mutiny there hehastes t'appease. /'f Wc/es, iii. (Gow.) 
grudge break to new mutiny .. Romeo ^- Juliet, (prol.) 
you'll make a mutiny among my guests — i. 6 
cause these of Cyprus to mutiny Othello, ii.l 

fo out, and crv— a mutiny — ii. 3 
ITIUS- give Mutius burial.. TitusAndronicus, i. 2 
my nephew Mutius' deeds do plead .. — i. 2 
to pardon Mutius, and to bury him .. — i. 2 
not I, till Mutius' bones bo buried.... — i, 2 
let not young Jlutius then, that was.. — i. 2 
there lie thy bones, sweet Mutius .... — i. 2 
no man shed tears for noble Mutius . . — i. 2 

MUTTER-what mutter you? \HevrylV. ii. 4 

what mutter you, or what coiisi)ire..3He»i;,v''y. i. 1 
his cashiered worship mutter?7V»ionti/'.4'Ai«.s, iii. 4 
ill tlieir sleeps will mutter their Othello, iii. ^ 

MUTTERED— this is muttered 1 Henri/ VI. i. 1 

MUTTON-I a lost mutton (,rep.).TwoGen.of Ver.i. 1 

to her, a laced mutton (rep.) — i. I 

for such a store of muttons — i. 1 

and I can cut the mutton to't Ttctlfth Ninht, i. 3 

would eat mutton on Yvid&ys. . Meas. fur Mens. iii. 2 

with mutton and porridge Love's L. Lost, i. 1 

as flesh of muttons, beefs Merchant of Vi'iiin-, i. 3 

grease of arautton as wholesome.. •l,!!/f<i//.//.p/7, iii. 2 
what is this? Mutton? Ay ..Taming of ^Inru-.iv. I 

what's a joint of mutton or two •IHenrylV. ii. 4 

a joint of mutton, and any pretty.. .. — v. I 

MUTUAL-one mutual happiness. TwoCen.o/Ver. v. 4 
confirmed by mutual joinder of. . Twelfth Mght, v. 1 
our most mutual entertainment. i'l/fa.v.,/fi)' Mens. i. 3 
seemed all one mutual cry ..Mid.^'.'s I)? ram, iv. 1 
them make a mutual stand. Merchant of Venice, v. 1 

in mutual, well-beseemiiig I Henry I v. i. 1 

the mutual conference tluU my 2}lcnnjV I. i. 1 

this mutual heavy load of moan ..Richard III. ii. 2 
being mutual act of all our souls. '/Vo//!i.« ^ Cress, i. 3 
when such a mutual pair ..Antony ^Cleopatra, i. 1 
corn into one mutual sheaf ..TUus Andmnicus, v. 3 
make a muttial closure of our house.. — v. 3 
it be covered with mutual cunning Lear, in. 1 

MUTUALITIES so marshal the way ..Othitlo, ii. 1 

MUTUALLY, hath answered my. .Merry Wives, \\. fl 

pinch him fairies, mutually — v. ,'j(s(iiig) 

was mutually committed 'i* {rep.).Meas. for Meas. ii. 3 
muttiallj' participate, did minister.. C'o)'o/o;iu,v, i. 1 

MUZZLE— trusted with a muzzle Much.idn, i 3 

plucks the muzzle of restraint iHenrylV. iv. 4 

have not the power to muzzle \\im..HenriiVIll. i. 1 

MUZZLED— my dagger muzzled ..Winter'sTale, i. 2 
like to a muzzled hear, save in KingJotm, ii. 1 

MYRMIDON-the myrmidons ..Twelfth Night, ii. 3 
will physic the great myrmidon. Troilns <§■ Cress, i. 3 
togetner with his mangled myrmidons — v. b 
come here about me, you my myrmidons — v. 7 
on, myrmidons; and cry j'oii all amain — v. 

MYRTLE- than the soft myrtle.. -Veas./oj-.Vras. ii. 2 
morn-dew on the myrtle leaf. ..4jWo)7?/(^-t7£o. iii. Ill 

MYSTERIES— strange mysteries? ..Henry VI II. i. 3 
manners, mysteries, and trades. . Timon of Ath. iv. 1 
as I can of those mysteries which.. Co7-/o/a7?H.v, iv. 2 
the mysteries of Hecate, and the night. . . . hear, i. 1 

MYSTERY of ill opinions Merry IVives, ii. I 

he will discredit our mystery ..Meas.forMeas. iv. 2 
a mystery? ay sir, a mystery (rep.) .. — iv.2 
prove my occupation a mystery (rep.) — iv. 2 

sir, it is a mystery. Proof — i v. 2 

I see the mystery of your loneliness.. i4H's Well, i. 3 

if you think your mystery in — iii. (1 

hath not in nature's mystery more.. — v. 3 
mystery remained undiscovered.. Winter'sTale, v. 2 
there is a mystery (with whom. Troilus S-Cress. iii. 3 
have us thrive in our mystery . 7Vjhoji of.ithens, iv. 3 
and take upon us the mystery of things.. ;,por, v. 3 

pluck out the heart of my mystery Hamlet, iii. 2 

your mystery, your mystery Othello, iv. 2 

N 

NAG— gait of ashufiling nag \ Henry II'. iii. I 

know we not galloway nags? iHenry IV. ii. 4 

NAIADS— you nymphs, called naiads.. 7'e;»;ies(, iv. ! 

NAIL— witn my long nails will dig .... — ii. 2 
niay'st knock a nail into his head .... — iii. 2 

as one nail by strength TwoO'en. of Verona, ii. 4 

pare thy nails, dad Twelfth Aighl, iv. 2 (song) 

but that my nails can reach ..Mid.N.'sDream, iii. 2 
pare his nails, for they shall hang .. — iv.2 
the slicplierd blows his iiail.Lorc'^L. Z,os/.v. 2 (song) 

as the nail to his hole All's Well,ii. 2 

too late to pare her nails now — v. 2 

we may blow our nails together.. Taming of Sh. i. 1 
half yard, quarter, nail; thou flea .. — iv. 3 
of hand, nail, finger: and, thou.. H'in^er'sTa/e, ii. 3 
but the paring of one's nail . . Comedy of Errors, iv, 3 

but with these nails, I'll pluck iv. 4 

how these vain weak nails may Richard II. v. :< 

as nail in door: the things i Henry IV. v. 3 

de nails. De nails. Escoutez HenryV. iii. 4 

may pare his nails with a wooden .. — iv. 4 
and with my nails digged stones — \ Henry VI. i. 4 
the very parings of our nails sliall .. — iii 1 

near your beauty with my nails 2 Henry VI. i. 3 

blowing of his nails, can neither ..SllenryVI. u. 5 
these nails should rend that beauty. «ic/i"r(/ ///. i. 2 

till that my nails were anchored — iv. 4 

ere your grandsires had nails on. Troilus^ Cress, ii. 1 

your nail against his horn — iv. 5 

one nail, one nail; rights by rights. Cor/o(n?i«s,i v. 7 
up with her prepared nails Anlony ^Cho. iv. 10 



NAI 



[ -521 ] 



NAM 



NAIL— ray nails are stronger than. /Jn'oiii/ ^Cleo.v. 2 

■with her nails she'll flay thy Lear,}. 4 

nails, sprigs of rosemary — ,\>- 3 

I would not see thy cruel nails paick . . — in. 7 

NAILKD— nailed for our advantage. .1 H«i"!//K.i. 1 

NAKED— naked name of love.. TwoGen.nf »'"•. u. 4 
or strip your sword stark naked. TirelfihNi^lU, in. 4 

and leave you naked Measure for Measure, in. 1 

the naked truth of it is, I have .. Lore's L. Last, v. 2 
to some forlorn and naked hermitage — v. 2 
years together, naked, fasting . . lyinler s Tale, iii. 2 
and conie witli naked sworda.Comedy of lirrors, iv. 4 

like a naked new-born babe ,. . . Macbeth, i. 7 

when we have our naked frailties hid. . — ii. 3 
leave them as naked as the vulgar.. A''"4'./o/in, ii. 2 
or wallow naked in December s\\ov.'..liicUard II. i. 3 
stand bare and naked, trembling. . . . — in. 2 

tlie naked shore at Ravenspurg \Hci\rylV. iv. 3 

a naked subject to the weeping ....'iHeury 11 .\. 3 

put up your naked weapons — .il-'l 

when he was naked, he was, for all.. — in. 2 

your naked infants spitted upon Henry V. in . 3 

to give each naked c'.n-tle-ax — iv. 2 

wli'y that the naked, poor, uiid mangled — v. 2 

he must appear naked and blind — V. 2 

of a nuked blind boy in her naked .. — v. 2 

tlie truth apiiears so naked 1 UrvryVI. n. 4 

he but naked, tliough locked up ..iHenry VI. iji. 2 
standing nalced on a mountain top. . — iii. 2 
and make him, naked, foil a man ..iUenryVI. v. i 
I lay it naked to tlie deadly stroke.. H/c/uirJ 111. \. i 
thus I clotlie my naked villany with — i. 3 
all tliin and naked, to the numb-cold — n. 1 
left me naked to mine enemies ..Henry VIII. ni. 2 
Timon will be left a naked gull.. IVmo;i ofA'h.u. 1 

whose naked natures live in all — iv.3 

let it go naked, men may see't — v. 1 

nor sanctuary, being naked, sick . . Coriolanus, i. 10 

stand naked, and entreat tliem — _ii. 2 

and here my naked breast Julius Crrsnr, iv. 3 

lay me stark naked, and let Aniony ^■.'leo. v. 2 

wliose naked breast stepped Vynilieline. v. 5 

poor naked wrctclies, wheresoe'er you. . Lear, in. 4 

IS that tl'e naked fellow? (rep.) — iv. 1 

bring some covering for this naked soul — iv. 1 

my naked weapon is out Romeo * Juliit, i. 1 

I am set naked on your kingdom. Ham.V(, iv. 7 (let.) 

'tis Hamlet's character. Naked — iv. 7 

naked with her friend abed (rep.) Othello, iv. I 

lash the rascal naked through the world — iv. 2 
or, naked, as I am, I will assault thee .. — v. 2 

NAKEDNESS- in proper nakedness?.VHc'f/l(/o, iv. 1 

in his nakedness he appears but HenryV. iv. 1 

but nakedness, thou detestable.. Totoji o/Ath. iv. I 
presented nakedness outface tire winds . . Lear, ii. 3 

N AME— for the name of king Tempest, i. 1 

teach me how to name tlie bigger light — i. 2 
dost here usurp a name thou ow'st not — i. 2 

no name of magistrate — ii. 1 

what is your name? • — j;;- 1 

i' the name of something holy, sir — lii. 3 

pronounced the name of Prosper — lii. 3 

repeat their names, I'll show ..TwoGen.ofrer. i. 2 
what means this passion at his name? — i. 2 

did in yourname receive it — i 2 

I throw thy name against the — i. 2 

poor wounded name ! — i.2 

except mine own name — i.2 

in one line is his name twice writ — — i.2 
he couples it to his complaining names — _i. 2 

and yet I will not name it — ii. 1 

sir Proteus, for that's his name — ii. 4 

the very naked name of love — ii.4 

not worth the name of a christian .. — ii. .'i 

and therefore have no names — iii. 1 

Sebastian is thy name? — iv. 4 

do not name Silvia thine — y. 4 

vou say your name is? Merry Wives, i. 4 

picked (with the devil's name) out of — ii. 1 
that the name of Page and Ford diifers — ii. 1 
with blank space for different names — ii. 1 
odious is the name. What name sir? — ii. 1 

my name is corporal Nym ijep.) — ii. 1 

my name is Brook tjep.) — ii. 1 

Broo::,is his name (;pp) — ii. 2 

her husband's name is Ford — ii. 2 

terms! Names'. Amaimon sounds well — ii. 2 
devils' additions, the names of fiends — ii. 2 
the devil himself, hath not such a name — ii. 2 
and friend Simple by your name.... — iii. 1 

wiiat the dickens his name is — iii. 2 

what do you call your knight'sname — iij. 2 

I can never hit on's name — iii. 2 

in the iiameof foul clotl'.es — iii. 5 

never name her, child, if she — iv. 1 

I'll to him again in name of Brook — iv. 4 

in the lawful name of marrying .... — iv. 6 

elves, list your names — v..') 

tills deceit loses the name of craft .. — v.h 
in his name. What is iiis name?. Tu-elfth i\'iglit, i. 2 
I have heard my father name him .. — i. 2 

my name is Mary, sir — i. 3 

hollayour name to the reverberate.. — i. 5 

my name is Sebastian, which — ii. 1 

close, in the name of jesting! — ii. .'5 

wliy, that begins my name — ii. 5 

everyone of these letters are in my name — ii. 

my sister had had no name, sir — iii. 1 

why sir, her name's a word — iii. I 

what is your name? (r^p.) — iii. 1 

way is he, in the name o.' sanctity?.. — iii. i 
your name is not master Cesario .... — iv. i 

these names you give me — v. 1 

what name? what parentage? — v. 1 

and, for a name, now puts Meas.for Meas. i. .1 

'tis surely, for a name — ;■ 3 

in the ambush of my name — i. 1 

as scliool-maids change their names — i. o 
how now, sir! what's your name? .. — ii. 1 
and my name is Elbow (J pp.) — ii. 1 



NA.ME— your mistress's name? ..il/«is./(ir.Vc«s. ii. I 

your name, master tapster? — ii. 1 

bring me in the names of some six . . — ii. 1 

as if I did but only chew his name .. — ii.4 

my unsoiled name, the austereness.. — ii.4 

that bears the name of life? — iii. 1 

should do what I abhor to name .... — iii. 1 

and good words went witli her name — iji. 1 

I pray you, your name? {rep.) — iii. 2 

had i more name for badness — v. 1 

his name is Barnardine — v. 1 

of any sort, and none of name Much Ado, i. 1 

I know none of that name, lady .... — i. 1 

but keep your way o' God's name .. — i. 1 

to drive liking to the name of love . . — i. I 

answer I in the name of Benedick .. — ii- 1 

I have wooed in thy name — ii- ' 

name the day of marriage — n. 1 

when I do name him, let it Ire tliy .. — iii. 1 

he liath an excellent good name .... — iii. 1 

God hath blessed you with a good name — in. 3 

any mail stand, in the prince s name — iii. 3 

a gentleman: I remember his name — iii. 3 

by tlie name of Hero — in- 3 

we charge you in the prince's name — iii. 3 

truly to your name (rep.') — j v. I 

what is your name, friend? — iv. 2 

and my nameis Conrade — iv. 2 

in the prince's name, accuse these men — iv. 2 

and borrows money in God's name.. — v. 1 

whose names yet run smoothly in .. — v. 2 

I answer to that name; what is — v. 4 

the scroll of every man's name.. Mid. N.'sDreain, i. 2 

then read the names of the actors — i.2 

ready : name what part I am for — i.2 

now name the rest of the players — — i.2 

that vile name, to perish on my sword! — ii. 3 

you must name his name (?ep.) — iii. I 

I beseech, ^our worship's name? (leyv.) — iii. 1 

a local habitation, and a name — v. 1 

which by name lion bight — v. 1 

one Snout by name, present a wall _ — y. 1 

and now subscribe yoiu- names . . Love's L. Lost, i. 1 

that give a name to every fixed star — i. 1 

and every godfatlier can give a name — i. 1 

I'll write my name ()cp.) — j. 1 

which we may name tough — i. 2 

more authority, dear boy, name more — .j. 2 

the reputation of your name — ii. 1 

heir of AlenQon, Rosaline her name — ii. 1 

I desire her name. She hath butone — ii. I 

what's her name, in tlie cap? — ii. I 

it is a fairer name tliau French crown — iii. 1 

tlien tliey name her name — iii. 1 

loves another of the name — iv.3 

Biron's writing; and here is his name — iv. 3 

he was fain to seal on Cupid's name — v. 2 

to change a word? name it — v. 2 

for the latter end of his name — v. 2 

her name is Portia Merchant of Venice, i. 1 

her name is Margery, indeed — ii. 2 

good enough to keep his name company — iii. 1 

his name is Balthazar — iv. 1 (letter) 

is your name Shy lock? (lep.) — iv. 1 

your name, I pray you, friend (rep.).. — v. 1 
what is thy name, young man? . . As you Like it, i. 2 

she robs thee of thy name — i. 3 

I'll have no worse a name than Jove's — i. 3 

I care not for their names — ii. .^ 

what woman in the city, do I name — ii- 7 

thy huntress' name, that my full — iii. 2 

how thy name should be hanged ... . — iii. 2 

your love's name? yes,just (»rp.).... — iii. 2 

deifying the name of Rosalind — iii. 2 

is thy name William? (rep.) — v. 1 

I will name you tlie degrees — v. 4 

humble, he from honoured name_ All's Well, i. 3 

my maiden's name seared otherwise — ii. 1 

can rate worth name of life — ii. 1 

my low and humble name — ii. 1 

dislikestof virtue for the name — ii. 3 

is good, without a name; vileness.... — ii. 3 

upon thee in the name of justice .... — ii. 3 

I do wash his name out of my blood — iii. 2 
his name with zealous fervour .. — iii. 4 (letter) 

the honour of a maid is her name.... — iii. 5 

his name, I pray you (rep.) — iii. 5 

too mean to have her name repeated — iii. 5 

they told me that your name was.... — iv. 2 

he has an English name — iv. .5 

my name, my good lord, isParolles.. — v. 2 

in whom my house's name must be. . — v. 3 

which contained the name of her .. .. — v, 3 

an instrument; his name's ParoUes.. — v. 3 

tlie name, and not the thing — v. 3 

I have forgot your name . . Taming ofSh. 1 ( 



twenty more such names and men 

tell me her father's name 

her name Is, Katharina Minola 

a stomach, to't o' God's name 

his name is Licio, born in Mantua . . 
your name? Petruchio is my luuno.. 

Jiis name is Camtiio; pray, accept 

Lucentio is your name? 

for that's your name, I hear 

which hath two letters for her name 

his name and credit shall you 

he does it under name of perfect love 
feed'st me with the very name of meat 
why, what o' devil's name, tailor. . . . 
come on, o' God's name; once more.. 

my name is called, Vincentio 

what is his name? Lucentio, gentle sir 
take upon you another man's name.. 
is his name? his name? as if (rep.) . . 
I charge you in the duke's name 

would her name were Grace! .. tf'inU 
deserves a name as rank as any 

1 cannot name tlie disease 

than our parents' noble names 



2 (.indue.) 



— 1. : 



. 1 



— ii. 3 



NAME-my name be yoked with his. Winler'sTale, i. 

comes to me in name of fault — iii. 

in Apollo's name, hie oracle — iii. 

said, his name was Antigonus — iii. 

name of inercy, when was tills, hoy? — iii. 
take upon mc in the name of Time — iv. (cho. 
which Florizcl I now name to you.. — iv. (cho. 

i' the name of me,— O help me — iv. 

and my name put in the book — iv. 

here's the midwife's name to't — iv. 

your names, your ages, of what .... — iv. 
remembrance of his most sovereign name — v. 
be distinguished but by names, t'omti^i/ "/Errors, i. 

but retained his name — i. 

no man, that hath a name — ii. 

certain ones then. Name them — ii. 

hurl the name of husband in my fiice — ii. 

call us by our names — ii. 

my name is Dromio — iii- 

mine office and my name — iii. 

for a name, or thy name for an ass.. — iii. 

if thy name be called Luce — iii. 

what your name is else, I know not — iii. 

her name? Nell, sir; hut her name.. — iii. 

ay, that's my name. I know it — iii. 

in the duke's name, to obey me — iv. 

doth call me by my name — i 

is not your name, sir, called — 

well lie deserves that name Macbeth, 

i' the name of truth, are ye — 

whom we name hereafter — 

by the name of most kind hostess — 

who's there, i' the name of Belzebnb? — i 
who's there, i' the other devil's n.ame? 
cannot conceive, nor name thee! .... 

when first they put the name of king — i: 

all by the name of dogs — i 

a deed without a name — i 

whose sole name blisters our — i 

every sin that has a name — i 

what is thy name? — 

a hotter name than any is in hell ijep.) — 

what is thy name? (.rep.) King John, 

and if his name be George, I'll call. . — 

made honour doth forget men's names — 

legitimation, name, and all is gone.. — 

in the name of God, how comes it then — i 

coupled to the name of kings — i 

wants nothing, to name want — i 

do in his name, religiously demand — ii 

what earthly name to interrogatories — ii 

devise a name so slight, unworthy .. — ii 

even for tliat name; — j 

stronger with thee than the name of — ii 

my name is (Jonstanee — ij 

both our tongues held vile to name . . — i 

cries out upon the name of Salisbury — 

on our actions set the name of right — 

we were happy we had other names. . — 

with a foul traitor's name stuff I liichard II. 

in name of lendings for your — 

but'my fair name — 

ask him his name — 

in God's name, and the king's, say.. — 

is thy name? and wherefore comest — 

furbish new the name of John — 

traitor, my name be blotted — 

how that name befits my — 

play so nicely with their names? — 

my name in me, I mock my name . . — 

but wliat, o' God's name — 

what I cannot name; 'tis nameless.. — 

none else of name — 

to seek that name in England — 

king's name forty thousand names? — i 

grief or lesser than my name! — i 

tiie name of king? o' God's name .. — i 
live Henry of that name the fourth (rep.) i 

1 have no name, no title (rep.) — i 

not now what name to call myself! . . — i 

iCol.^ name be sterling yet in England — j 

name it, fair cousin — i 

rob me of a happy mother's name . . — 

read not my name there — 

of good names were to be bought \ Henry W. 

in your highness' name demanded .. — 

even at the name of Mortimer — 

homo is a common name to all — 

call them by their christian names .. — 

to sweeten which name of Ned — 

in our land by the name of pitch... 

but I know not his name — ii 

I remember me, his name is Faistaff — ii 

for by tliat name as oft as Lancaster — iii 

Bcapesheiigues, in the devil's name — iii 

the several devils' names — in 

name profaned with their scorns (rep.) — nj 

and great name in arms — iii 

this, ill the name oi God, T promise — lii 

great deservings, and good name .... — iv, 

he bids vou name your griefs — iv 

of his great name, and estimation .. — v, 

and an adopted name of privilege .. — v 

this hateful name in us — v 

what is thy name that in the battle.. — v 

know then, my name is Douglas .... — v 

his name was Blunt — v 

as if I would deny my name (rep.) .. — v 

a vervvaliant rebel of the name — v 

would to God, thy name in arms were — v, 

well-bred, and of good name 'iHcnrylV. i 

worse than the name of rebellion — i 

set down your name in the scroll — i 

I would to God, my name were not so — i 

using the names of men instead — i 

to mc, to remember thy name? — ii 

oft as he has occasion to name himself — ii 

but the sound of Hotspur's name — }; 

I am in good name and fame — ii 

j'ou are in an ill name — ii 



— ii. 4 



NAM 



[ 522 ] 



NAM 



— IV. 1 



NAME— for taking their names illcnrylf. ii 

is tliy name Jloiildy? — iii 

is tliy name Wart? — iii 

.Tiilm nf Gaunt, lie beat liis own name — iii 

coueurring l)oth in name and quality — iv 

more full of names than yours — iv 

intended in the general's name — iv 

in God's name then set forward .... — iv 

prince's name, in deeds dishonourable — iv 

what's your name, sir? — iv 

my name is Coleville of thedale (rt'p.) — iv 

doth any name particular belong.,.. — iv 
M'e charge you in the name of God .... Henrijl\ i 

lose the iuime of hardiness — i 

and in whose name, tell the Dauphin — i 

Doll Tearsheet, slie by name — ii 

dnb thee with the name of traitor . , — ii 

treason, by the name of Richard (;v'p.) — ii 

of that black name, Edward — ii 

in the uame of God Almighty — ii 

a name, that in my thonglits — iii 

perfect in great comraanaers' names — iii 

what is thy liame? — iii 

he will heeii that good name still .... — iii 

third hour of drowsy morning name — iv. (chon 
ridiculous,— the name of Agincourt — ■ iv. (chon 

what's thy name? Harry le Koy (rep.) — iv 

my name is Pistol called — iv 

in the name of Chcshu Christ — iv 

rouse him at the nameofCrispian.... — iv 

then shall our names, familiar in .... — 'w 

■what is thy name, discuss? — iv 

in French, what is his name — iv 

he says his name is, master Fer — iv 

■whatcall you the town's name — iv 

the name of the other river — iv 

1 am forget )>is name. Sir John Falstafi' — iv, 

I charge 3'ou in his majesty's name ., — iv, 

the names of those their nobles that. . — iv 

none else of name — iv 

shall name your iiighness in this form — v, 
name not religion, for tliou lovest .. .A Henry VI. i, 

then come o' God's name, I fear no .. — i. 

excellent Pucelle, if thy name be so .. — i. 

in his highness' name, to repair to.... — i. 

so great fear of my name 'mongst .... — i, 

shall France be only in my name — i, 

in whose conquering name, let us..., — ii 

using no other weapon but his name — ii. 

witli his name the mothers still — i i , 

Henry, of that name the sixth ! 

usurp the sacred name of knight .... 

great York might bear tile name .... — i 

that Talbot'.s name might l5e in — i 

is my name Talbot? and am I your son? — i 

dishonour not lier honourable name.. — i 

yes, your renowned name — i 

our h(msehold's name, my death's . . — i 

Margaret my name; and daughter to — 

if thy name oe so, what ransom — 

in Henry's royal name, as deputy — 

blotting your names from books ....iHtnr VI. 

go in God's name, and leave us — 

name and power thou tremblest at .. — 

tell me.'sirrali, what's my name? .... — 

as well have known our names {rep.) — 

dishonoured Gloster's honest name ., — 

crowned by the name of Henry the . . — 

o' God's xiame, see the lists and all . . — 
sirrah, what's thy name? Peter, forsooth — 

at wliose name I oft have been — 

I do arrest you in his hiirhuess' name — i 

so shall my name with slander's — i 

bear the name and port of gentlemen? — i 

my name is, Walter Whitmore — i 

thy name affrights me, in whose — i 

thy name is, Gualtier,being rightly .. — i 

did base dishonour blur our name. ... — i 

what is thy name? Emmanuel — i 

dost thou use to write thy name — i 

that I can write my name , — i 

lie speaks not o' God's name — i 

the name of Henry the fifth hales them — i 

Alexander Iden, that's my name .. . — 
but by circumstance, the name of valonr — 

Kichard, I bear thy name ZHenryVl. 

his name that valiant duke hath — 

inGod's name.and in theking's(jc'p.) — i 

applaud the name of Henry — i 

two of thy name, both dukes of — 

tlien, in God's name, lords — 

worse than murderer, that I may name — 

because my name is— George Richard in. 

my name of George begins — 

fairer than tongue can name thee .... — 

if you will hear me name it — 

name him. Plantagenet (r^/j.) — 

called me all these bitter names — 

between their titles, and low name . . — 

in God's name, what art thou? — 

a traitor to the name of God — 

in God's name, sjieak — i 

you. my noble lord, may name the time — i 

thy mother's name is ominous to — i 

what is his name? Ilis name, my lord — i 

is thy name— Tyrrel? James I'yrrel .. — i 

at which name, I started — i 

mother, one that wails the name .... — i 

Cf>nifortable hour canst thou name . . — i 

should to thy ears not name my boys — i 

a grandam's name is little less — i 

what men of name resort to him?. . . . — i 

[Co/. K'l^] of great name and wortli.. — i 

in God's name, cheerly on (/r/i.) — 

besides, the king's name is a tow^er . . — ■ 

what men of name are slain on — 

from the flow of gall I name not fleiiri/l'lll. 

in the name of our most sovereign king — 

half your snit never name tons — 

by tliat name must die — 



ii. 1 



.-. 1 



— iv. 1 



— i. 3 



— iv. 2 



— iv. b 



— iv. 6 



— iii. 1 



— iii. a 



— IV. 5 



N.VME— lead on, o' God's name Henry VI II 

made my name once more noble .... — 

life, honour, mime, and all that made — 

in (iod's niiuH'.turu me away (,rep.).. — 

how, i' the name of thrift, does he rake — 

that the old name is fresh about me.. 

royal nephew, and your name Capucius — 

my poor name banished the kingdom — iv 2 

what is her name? Elizabeth — v. 4 

thegreatnessof his name shall be.... — v. 1 
tell you them all by their names. TroHusfy Cress, i. 2 
should lose their names, and so should — i. 3 

ay, Greek, that is my name — i. 3 

however it is spread in general name 

had it our name, the value 

we will not name desert 

to tlie world's end after my name . . 

incurred a traitor's name 

make Cressid's name the very ci'own 
at mercj' of my sword, name Cressid 
if not Achilles, sir. What is your name 

tell me name by name 

name her not now, sir; she's a deadly 
m,ay give the local wound a name .. 
untrutlis stand by thy stained name 

and live aye with thy name! — v. 11 

I called tliee by thy name Timon of Alliens, i. 1 

to use j'our signet and your name .. — ii. 2 
wliat is thy name? is man so hateful — iv. 3 

ifl name thee. I'll beat thee — iv. 3 

name them, my lord, let's know them — v. 1 
thy good name live with autliority ,. — v. 2 

seek not m}^ name — v. 5 lepiltiph) 

holding Coi-ioli in the name of Rome. C'oj/o/uhhs, i. i; 

Marciiis, his name? By Jupiter — i. 9 

gives my son the whole name of the \var — ii. 1 

with fame, a name to Cains Mareius — ii. I 

in whose name, myself attach thee.. — iii. 1 
that ever iie heard the name of death 

so can I name his faults 

in the name o' the people {rep.) .... 

your name, T tltink, is Adrian 

thy name? Why speak'st not? (.rep.) 
commands me name myself (,rep.) . . 
thy name? My name is Caius Mareius 

only that name remains — 

the second name of men — 

he did call me by my name — 

forbade all names; he was a kind of — 

a name i' the fire of burning Rome.. — 

my name hath touched your ears .. — 

the virtue of your name is not — 

remember, my name is Mencnius (rep.) — 

to keep your name living to time. . . . — 

is such a name, whose repetition .... — 

and his name remains to the ensuing — 

thy stolen name Coriolanus in Corioli? — 

name not the god, thou boy of tears — 
I love the name of lionour more.. Jnlins C)i 
why should that name be sounded (.rep.) 
now in the names of all the gods .. 
yet if my name were liable to fear 

that Rome holds of his name — i. 2 

could I, Casca, name to thee a man — i. 3 

name him not; let us not break .. — ii. 1 
exploit worthy the name of lionour — ii. 1 
what is your name? Whither (rep.) — iii. 3 

tridy, my name is Cinna (^7-ep.) — iii. 3 

pluck biit his name out ot his heart — iii. 3 

tlieir names are pricked — iv. 1 

the name of Cassius honours — iv. 3 

1 will proclaim my name about — v. 4 

my children shall nave no names. .4/i(on7/ ^Cleo. i. 2 

name Cleopatra as she's called — i. 2 

who, high in name and power — i. 2 

for Ponipey's name strikes more .... — i. 4 

once name you derogately (rep.) .... — ii. 2 

tills it is to have a name in great .... — ii. 7 

his name, that magical word of war — iii. 1 

and in our name, what she requires — iii. 10 
wliat's your name? My name is Th3'reiis — iii. II 

what's her name since she was — iii. 11 

groan did break the name of Antony — iv. 12 

tliy name so buried ill her — iv. 12 

inthe name lay a moiety of the world — v.'l 

tliy name? M.v name is Proculeius.. — v. 2 

other's merits in our name — v. 2 

to that name my courage prove — v. 2 

what's his name, and birth? Cijmbeline,\. 1 

he hath been allowed tlij name of .. — i. 5 

and his name is at last gasp — i. b 

how! my good name? or to report .. — ii. 3 

she hath bought the name of whore.. — ii. 4 

in Caisar's name pronounce I — iii. I 

i' the name of fame, and honour .... — iii. 3 

my na)ne was not far off — iii. 3 

tlie event is yet to name the 'a inner — iii. 5 

wliat is your name? Fidele, sir — iii. 6 

hear but my name, and tremlile (rep.') — iv. 2 

say his name, good friend — iv. 2 

thy name? Fidele (rep. v. .j) — iv. 2 

thy name well fits thy faith (rep.) .. — iv. 2 

lit and apt eonstruetion of tlii' name — v. 5 
by honour of his name, whom . . Tiltis Audi on. i. 1 

name thee in election for the emiiire — i. 2 

tliy name, and honourable family .. — i. 2 

for in that name doth nature (r.!'p.).. — i. 2 

for no name fits thy nature but .... — ii. 3 

l)I"t and enemy to oiir general name! — ii. 3 

when I did name her brotliers — iii. I 

death should let life bear his nmiie.. — iii. I 

wlierefore dost thou urge the name.. — iii. 2 

if .Marcus did not name the word.... — iii. j 

when I have writ my name without — iv. 1 

thy thoughts imperious, like thj' name — iv. 4 

whose name was once our terror — v. I 

tell them my dreailful name. Revenge — v. 2 

Rape is the other's name — v. 2 

the name of help grew odious rerichs,\. 4 

he gains the name of good — ii. 1 



v. 3 



V. 3 



— 1. 2 



NAME— his name and parentage Fcridcs, ii. 3 

your name anfl parentiige (;'f'y?.) — ii. 3 

names himself Pericles, a gentleman.. — ii. 3 
what I cannot name hut I sliall olieiid — iv. 6 

please .>'ou to na.me it — iv. G 

would own a name too dear — iv. 6 

omit that bears recovery's name — v. 1 

thy muiie, my most kind virgin? (rep.) — v. 1 

the name Marina, was given me — v. I 

what was thy mother's name? — v. 1 

my drow iicdqiieeu's nonic, thou art .. — v. 1 

mv nintlu'r's name ^^a.^ Thairia — v. 1 

di(l yon not name a trmpest — v. 3 

and Ii no ucd name of Pericles.. — v. 3 (Gower) 

she name; my very deed of love Leur, i. 1 

only we still retain the name — i. 1 

your i.auie, fair gentlewoman? — i. 4 

support the worsliiiis of their name .... — i. 4 
he sa^'S his name's poiT Torn — iii. 4 

}mnr names? Poor Tom; that eats — iii 4 
litlier, mistress; is your na-ine Goneril? — iii.fi 
[Kn'.] I must change mimes at home .... — iv. 2 
to hear of jileasure's mime; tile fitchew.. — i\'. G 
thy name is Gloster; thou must be palieiit — iv. (! 

soldiers, all levied in my name (rfp.) — v. 3 

what are you? your name? your qualitj'? — v. 3 

know, my name is lost — v. 3 

in wisdom, I should ask thy name — v. 3 

thou worse than any name, read 

my name is Edgar, and thy father's son 
whose names are written (.rep.) .. Romeo f,- Julicl , i. 2 
go, ask his name; if he be married .. — i. .5 
this name is Komeo, and a Montague — i. ii 
honest, and in his mistress' name. . .. — ii. 1 
deny thy father, and refuse thy name — ii. 2 
'tis but thy name, that is my (rep.).. — ii. 2 
by a name, I know not how (rep.) .. — ii. 2 
of my Romeo's name. It is my (rep.) — ii. 2 
have forgot that name, and that name's — ii. 3 
I am the youngest of tliat name .... — ii. 4 
ah mocker 1 that's the dog's name .. — Ii. 4 
which name I tender as dearly as mine — iii. 1 
I charge thee, in the prince's name. . — iii. 1 

that speaks but Romeo's name — iii. 2 

what tongue shall smooth thy name — iii. 2 
as if that name, shot from the deadly — iii 3 
as that name's cursed hand murdered — iii. 3 

anatomy doth my name lodge? — iii. 3 

■\^iliIe Verona by that name is known — v. 3 

frailtj', thy name is woman ! Hamlet, i. 2 

I'll change that name with you — i. 2 

with what, in the name of heaven? — ii. 1 

and lose the name of action — iii. 1 

Gouzago is the duke's name (rep.) — iii. 2 

may miss our name, and hit the — iv. I 

that hath in it no profit but tlie name .. — iv. 4 
if your name be Horatio, as I am let to.. — iv. G 

sheiilierds give a grosser name — iv. 7 

to keep my name ungored: but till — v. 2 

Horatio, what a wounded name, things.. — v. 2 
what are you? My name is— Roderigo. . Oilwllo, i. I 
your name is great in mouths of wisest. . — ii . 3 

for the luame of a night-brawler? — ii. 3 

if tlioii hast no name to be known by — ii. 3 

I pray thee, name the time — iii. 3 

good name, in man and woman — iii. 3 

filches from me my good name, robs .... — iii. 3 
her name, that was as fresh as Dian's.... — iii. 3 
am I that name, lago? What name .... — iv. 2 
let me not name it to you, you chaste . . — v. 2 
NxVMED— he named Sebastian .. Tnelfih Nh^'lii, iii. 4 
they are not to be named, my lord. . MvchAdn, i\-. 1 
what you will have it namiiA.Tammg of S/ireir. iv. 5 
my father named me, Autolycus. ll'inier's Tale. i\. 2 

he is already named, and gone to Machelh, ii. 4 

that ever Scotland in such honour named — v. 7 
breeds for you, than I have named!. A'('7j^'-./o/(?i, iii. 4 

the friends you liave named \BenrylV. ii. 3 

a tip-toe when this day is named IJenrii V. iv. 3 

in the time of Henry, named the . . 1 Uent y VI. iii. ! 
and the jiretence for this is named. . Henry I'm. i. 2 

that sad note I named my knell — iv. 2 

hast a servant nii.uied Lueilius.. .. TImonofAlh. i. 1 

newly named, what is it? Coiiolanus, ii. 1 

and nolily named so, being censor tu ice — ii. 3 
wlioni late you have named for consul — iii. 1 
tlian come to be but named oi i\\eQ..CymbeUne, ii. 3 

all faults that may be named — ii..') 

btu'ii at sea, 1 have named so Pericles, iii. 3 

called the man? I have named him oft — v. 3 

your faults, as they are named Lear, i. 1 

lie whom my father named? — ii. 1 

to hear him named Hmneo fi'.lidiel,in. 3 

NAMELESS friend of yours. Tteo Gen. oj Verona. i\. I 

she hath many nameless virtues — iii. I 

'tis nameless woe, I wot Uiehard II. ii. 2 

NAMELY— and did, sir; namely. Conici;;/ o/'iirr. ii. 2 
except it he the hift; namely, some .. — v. 1 

that owes it; namely, this young King John, ii. 1 

cause you emnt.'; mimel.v, to appeal. /?((*/i«7rf 11. i. 1 
and to his heirs; namely, the crown.. Humi/V. ii. 4 
simple gulls; namely, to Stanley ..Kehard ill. i. 3 
N AiMES'I'— as thou namest them . . Mer. of Venice, i. 2 
NAMING— but attends thy naming ...ill's Well. ii. 3 
whose very naming punishes me.ll'inier'sTale. iv. I 
'tis this naming of liim does him. Troilus fj; Cress, ii. 3 

against any lay worth namiii" Ollielln. ii. 3 

NAN— this hat is Nan our ma.\a.TuioGen.of Ver. ii. 3 

it is such another Nan Merry IVirrs.i. 4 

no more turn me to him, sweet Nan — iii. 4 
farewell gentle mistress; farewell Nan — iii. 4 

give my sweet Nan this ring — iii. 4 

and thus: Nan Page my daughter .. — iv. 1 
niv Nan shall be the queen of all.... — iv. 4 
shall master Slender steal my Nan away — iv. 4 

to marry with Nan Page — iv. 4 

must my sweet Nan present — iv. 6 

where is Nan now, and her troop.... — v. 3 

NAP— let your bounty take a na\^..Tn-elflhN!s:M, v. 1 

by my fay, a goodly nap..rami"i'o/A'/i)<ri/', 2 tiud.) 



NAP 



[ 523 ] 



NAT 



N ,\l'_ John Naps of Gveece ••^'''''"f"^,^;,'!']''}-! 

ami sft !i new nap npon it „ V i ti'r I' i 

ti-oiibleil thoughts, to take a imp . . nu'luv-.l III. y i 

N\TK-tlie napes of your necks .. .. f nMoMiiii.s, n. i 

NAl'KIN-an.l areasy napkins.... Wf-nv/r-res, i. . 5 

he ^enils this bloody napltin ....^^ ijouLihe i(, i\ . •' 

hut for the hhjody naplun ?.■■,••• :■■ - ■,''• 1^ 

!S b^:k'ru'uv^;;iVi;'ius-.;v.^;;;^;T!^:-ivi 

I "tVined il'ismipUin with the ZHemyyi. ;. 4 

keep lliou tlie napkin, and co boast. . — '. « 
a napliin steeped in tho luirodess . . - ■ 1 

din their naiikins in ins sacred ..JulnisCrrmr, iii. i 
thv napkin cannot drink a teai-.TO.<s Ainlron. in. 

liii napkin, witli liis true tears — ,,'"■' 

tnkeniy napkin; ruh tliv brows H,<mW, y. i 

your napkin is too little! let it alone.. O/Ari/., .n. 3 

lam glad, I have found tins napkin...; - • .^ 

\ will in Cassio's lodpins lose this napkin - iii. .3 

N VVLES-the kin:? oi Naples {rep.) .... Icwpest, i. i 

bound sadly home for Naples . — |- - 

ifthekiuL' of Naples heard thee? — !• ^ 

to hear tlie? speak of Naples — ]■ f 

invfclf am Naples ;.\v; ] , 

Til make you the queen ot Naples.... — .\. ■' 
hvir of Naples and of ,Milan(;^fp.) .... - !'■ 
who's tlie next heir ol Naples? (!<;p.).. — !!■ 

she thatfrom Naples can have — "• 

measure lis back to Naples? — •' 

there be, that can rule Naples ........ — !!• 

as thou gofst Milan, I'll come by Naples - !;• J 

and ^-et to Naples witli him . ._ — {'■ ^ 

if in Naples I ahonli report this now. . — m. J 

thev were livins; both in Naples — vj 

should become kings of Naples? — v. 

and so to Naples, where I — \- ' 

or sent to Naples..... ■• — .'f ,.; 

the king of Naples, whosoe er . . .... 1 Henry !■ I. v. s 

tlio' her father be the king of Naples — "i.J 
thekingof Naples, thatin-evaied.... — v. a 

thekingof Naples, and Jerusalem ■■,,:• ^^--i 
king of~Naples, Sicilia ........ iH^ry''/- i- 1 ("^ t-' 

outcast of Naples, England s bloody.. - v- l 
bears the type of king of Naples . . .iHenry 1- J. . 4 
iron of Naples, hid with English gilt - .^ 

vonr instruments been at Naples Ol/ello. in. I 

N"\PLESS-put the napless vesture.. Cn)io(o)!iis,ii. 1 

KAPPING-and taken napping so Lor<?.«i.. Los/, iv. 3 

nav, I have ta'en yon napping . . Tamm^cif Sh. iv. i 

K VKBON— Gerard de Narbon [rep.) ..An sll en,]. 1 

(ierard de Narbon was my father. . .. — I!- J 

NAllCISSUS in thy face ■t,ilo7iy^Cleopatra,u. ^ 

N \RTNES— qui a les navincsde feul .. «'-'»?!/; . in. 7 

NAnilOW seas, that part Mer.oJ I en,ce,ii. 8 

wrecked on the narrow seas ........ ,— "'■ ' 

for the house with the narrow gate ..All sWell, iv. 5 
allies creeks, and narrow lands.C<^mrf//n/i'/T. iv. 2 
thev'sav, as stand in narrow lanes.. K'V/"ov(//. y. 3 
froiit them in the narrow lane ....^Hemy It n. 2 

burdens at his narrow gate nrurni . i. 2 

charming the narrow seas —.,."• ',,"," " , 

commands the narrow seas Siiennji ;. i. i 

passed in safety thro' the narrow seas — ,iv. 8 
travels in a straight so narrow. 7 ro/d/.i /^- Cress, in. 3 
he doth bestride the narrow world. .;»/im»CVpju»,i. 2 

here the street is narrow — .!!• 4 

most narrow measure lent me . .Aniony A ( <'o. 111.4 
a narrow lane! an old man, and.. ..C,v"''j''I'"' • v. .i 
an inch narrow to an ell broadl. /.'omc;. A-.h,ti,'i, 11. 4 

'tis too narrow for your mind • UamI- , 11. i 

N MIROWLY tothee Much .-idn.y. i 

Bianca's steps so narrowly . . Tammg nj Shi-<;'\ ni. ^ 

search the market narrowly .....I '■"<■'''•'- }>:■ ^ 

NMIROWMOUTHED bottle.... /<si/to /.;/,.. ,(, .11. 2 

NARROWPRYING father raiiun:;nr Sk. 111. 2 

NASO-Ovidius Naso was (lep.). ■ I-ove .</-. (."<', iv. i 
NASTY— within thy nasty mouth!.... f/'"'!/ '-.il- 1 

making loveoverthe nasty stye .... " '"' '" 

N.M'HANIEIv, hand credo Lorn 

sir Nathaniel, will you hear 

sir Nathaniel, this Biron is one of .. 
did thev iilease you, sir Nathaniel?., 
eir Natlianiel, as concerning some .. 
Nathaniel, Joseph, Nicholas •■••.{■?" 
where is Nathaniel, Gregory, Philip 

■NT..H,o,i:ol'a nnnt. fiir_ WIl.S notfullv 



! L.Los, 



ofSh. 



iv. 1 
iii. 4 



Nathaniel's coat; sir, was notluliy 
K.VTli'fi— que les natifsd'Angleterre..«pnii/' 
K.\T10N-hates our sacred nation. A/er.n/rf?i',..._... „ 
scorned my nation, thwarted my. ... — !■;. j 

the curse never fell upon oiir nation — !]!• 1 
of tlie city consisteth of all nations .. — 111. -3 
the courtesy of nations allows you. A?!/™;.'!'-;/, ^ 
you mi'dit beiiii an impudent uation.ifi sll i-ll. ]\'. i 
youth of a nation in his colour...... — iv. 5 

they are sncli a gentle nation. Comcrfi/n/ kit"", .1 v. 4 
O nation miserable, with Miiche'h. iv. 3 

nation, that thou couldst remove!. K'"i'v'u/i", v. 2 
at the crying of vour nation's crow — v. i 
still our tardy apish nation limi.is ..Il/chnrd II.u. 1 
vet the trick of our English notion.. 2 H^v.jv/F. 1. 2 
rink with the best governed nation — y. 2 

and oiir nation lose the name of Ileirry J'. 1. 2 

of nature, and of nations, 'long to him — 11.4 
your nation. Of my nation? (irp.) — i;i. '^ 

that nation boast it so with ns . . .. 1 H-«n//7. 11;. 3 
with a lordlv nation, that will not. . — n- 3 
amongst a tickle wavering nation - iv. I 

our nation's terror, and their bloody — iv. 2 

betwixt onr nation and the — ,,, ^- ] 

and make new nations Henry I Ill.y.l. 

in each well-ordered nation. . Troilus ^CressiUn, n. i 
laws of nature, and of nations -;••.• — .u- 2 
amonizthe rout of nations ....TimonnfAllwm,}y. 3 
to some nation that won you Corwlatius, 111. 3 

1 would no the a Roman of all nations — ly. .) 

Iiath yoked a nation strong TlhisAiidrnmcus, i. 1 

some neighbouring nation, taking Vericles. 1. 4 

nation a traveller, we should lodge. . — iv. 3 



_ iv. 3 



NATION— curiosity of nations to deprive.. /.«ii- i. 2 
traduced, and taxed of other nations .. IhiiiUet.i. 4 
and the nation holds it no sin to tarre . . — n- "£ 
brooch indeed, and gem of all the nation — iv. / 
the scrimers of their nation, he swore.... — iv. 7 
wealthy curlcil darlings of our nation.. Olhrlln, 1. i 
NATIVE— which native she doth owe. Loi)e'si-.L. 1. 2 
for native blood is ecnmtcd painting — , iv- 3 
puts from her native bay . . Ulercliniil ofl cnice, 11. b 
native burghers of this desert .. ..-Isi/ouLikeil, ii. 
in their assigned and native dwelling — .i;- 1 

are vou native of this place? .„r,., ,,";'' 7 

and kiss like native things Allslfell, 1. 1 

and choice breeds a native slip to us — ..i- i 

again into his native quarter — iii- » 

departedst from thy native home. Com«'!/o. hrr.i. 
their fortunes at their native l)omes./vi»i'./o/iH, 11. 1 

shall leave his native channel — .!!• ^ 

chase the native beauty from. — "!■ ;^ 

native English, now I must forego. . Richard II. 1. 3 

from brcatliing native breath? — .!■ ^ 

from his native residence — !;• ' 

and fright our native peace with — ,]}■ f 

ere her native king shall falter — in. 2 

his true, native, and most proper . .2Henryiy. iv. I 

our civil swords, and native fire — Y- 'J 

suits not in native colours Henry 1 .1. - 

let us fear the native mightiness . . . . — 11.4 
from him the native and true challenger — .11 ■ 4 
we may call them in their native lords — in- o 

and outrun native punishment 

no doubt, iind native graves 

not speak English in the native garb — .. 
back again unto my native clime? 'i Henry FI. n 
England, for it is your native coast.. — i; 
put Henry from his native right ..Sllenryl' I. 11 
to -warrant in our native place! Trmlus Cress, i 

the beggar native honour Tunon o/A'liens, 1; 

could never be the native of our . . Cunolanm, 11 
your native town you entered like . . — >.. " 

thv native semblance on Jiiliiisrrrsar,i\. 1 

back to vour native spring fiomco ^- /»(<«', in. - 

[Col.Kni.J shall keep his native progress— ly. 1 
the head is not more native to the heart. Ham(e/, i. 2 

though I am native here — ..!• 4 

and thus the nativehueofresolution.... — in. 1 
or like a creature native and indued .... — iv. / 
the native act and figure of my heart ..Olliello.u 

in their natures more than is native — n- j 

NATIVITY, chance, or death Merry II ires.y. 1 

in their nativity all truth appears.jV/<LA. Dr. 111. i 

such as are despised i n nativi ty — .v. i 

be out of love with your nativity..l.< ynu Like il, _iv. I 
from the hour of my nativity.. Cojiict/v/ o/A)t. iv. 4 

thecalendarsof their nativity — v. I 

after so long grief, such nativity I — y- ' 

at my nativity, the front of. 1 Henry U. 111. 

and not in fear of your nativity — i"- 

cursed be the time of thy nativity!..! Henry I'l.v. i 
the heavens, in thy nativity ..... .SHenry I- /. 1 v. b 

sealed in thy nativity the slave oi..Un-li'nrl 111.], i 

thou hast as chiding a nativity Pcnr'rs. 111. 1 

and my nativity was under ursa major . . Lf oi , k 2 

NATURAL-nothing natural I ever saw. 7Vih;.cs'. 1. 2 

that a monster should be such a natural! — m. 2 

their words are natural breath — v. 1 

these are not natural events — v. 1 

he hath indeed,- almost ■natnia\..TwelflhNjght,_\. 3 

but I do it more natural — i'- 3 

a natural perspective — \- ' 

blunt his natural ed^e with Meets. forMeas.i. 5 

if it confess a natural guiltiness — .11. - 

ever most kind and natural — in- 

in health, come to mynatural taste. -l/i</.A'.L>r.iv, 1 
against me his natural brother . . As you Like it, 1. 1 
makes nature's natiir.al the cutter off — 1. 2 

our natural wits too dull {rep.) — i- Z 

dearer than the natural bond of sisters — .j. - 
such a one is a natural philosopher — m- 2 

to make it natural rebellion . . . ._. . .... .411 s n ell, y. 3 

our natural goodness imparts this. mler s I ale, 11. 1 
her natural posture! chide me, dear — v. 3 

which is th.e natural man Comedy nrnrrors.y. 1 

keep the natural ruby of your cheeks. /1/acfce//i, in. 4 

he wants the natural touch — }}'■'■' 

no natural exhalation in the sky ..King John, lu. 4 
will pluck away his natural cause .. — 111.4 

and thou a natural coward XHenryll ■ ]]. 4 

even of his natural scope — "'-J 

did give a fair and natural light — „ Y- ' 

in a full and n atural close Henry F.i.i 

all thy children kind and natural! — a. (clio.) 

so grossly in a natural cause — .". - 

shall we then behold their natural tears — _ iv. 2 
natural graces that extinguish .... 1 llinry I I. y. 3 

follow, but his natural king? ZHenryll.J.l 

lie and take his natural rest — , , , 'Y- ^ 

of you may live vour natural s.ge..I!ichnnl III. 1. i 

is almost the natural man Timon of. Mens, 1. 1 

'twixt natural son and sire! — ''■'■» 

thou art even natural in thine art .. — v. 1 

receive that natural competency r.onnlanvs. 1. 1 

they are natural; for, I believe Iiihusi'-rsnr, 1. 3 

it is' not Ca2sar's natural voice Avlomj A Cli'i,.]. 4 

of that natural luck, he beats thee . . — i;- 3 
some natural notes about her body.. C;yi»'ji''(».',ii. 2 
tOL'cthcr with the natural bravery of — n.l- I 

they take for natural father — !i|, 3 

than my noble and natural person . . — m. ■-> 
upon him still that natural stamp . . — v. 5 
her art sisters the natural roses. 7 Vr«'(cs, v. (GoNver) 

loyal and natural boy, I'll work Lpn),ii. I 

I am even the natural fool of fortune... — iv- •> 
sucking on her natural bosom.. Wowir-o q.'«'ie', \\. 3 
drivelling love is like a great natural — .11. 4 
his natural [Co/. Kn/.-native]l>rogres3 — , >Y- ] 
whose natural gifts were poor to those.. //omW, ;. b 
the natural L-ates and alleys of the body — .;• •> 
something ii) this more than natnrni .... — \\. ~ 
the thousand natural shocks that llcoli. . — ui. i 



NATURAE- natural magic and dire ..Hamlet, 111. 2 

a natural and prompt alacrity Olhello, i. 3 

NATirUALlZE thee, so thou wilt UCsllell, 1. 1 

NATUllAEEY performcil. . 7'nm'«,!r "/ «'. I (indue.) 

1 am not naturally honest (Cdi'iv's /■<,/,•, ly. 3 

a woman, naturally born to fears ..Kin^ .Jnhn. 111. 1 

naturally inherit of his father •illnnyiy. iv. 3 

N.\TnRE— awaked an evil nature Tempesl, 1. 2 

whii'li L'ood natures eiiuhl not — 1-2 

iin- i'iiIIht's oC a better nature, sir — _i. 2 

iiV u, mil nature shdiild produce — n- I 

hill iialine should bring forth — ii- 1 

on whose nature, nature can never stick — iv. 1 

expelled remorse and nature — v. 1 

more than nature was ever conduct of _ v. 1 
'gainst the nature of love..'/'«-o Gen. of T'prona,y. 4 

nature is thy friend Merry II ires. 111. 3 

a noble duke in nature Tircljlh ^igkl, 1. 2 

and though that nature with — ). 2 

and hath all the good gifts of nature — 1.3 

thou see'st, it will not curl by nature — 1.3 

nature's own sweet and cunning luuid — \. •> 

dimension, and the shape of nature.. — .1. ^ 

that nature pranks her in — .n. 4 

notof such a bloody nature — in- 3 

of what nature the wrongs are — 111. I 

in nature there's no blemish — 111 4 

there be that deity in my nature .... — v. 1 
but nature to h.er bias drew in that. . — y. 1 

the nature of our people Meas.farMeas.i. ! 

nor nature never lends the smallest. . — j- I 
of what strength and nature I am .. — 1. 1 

our natures do pursue, like '.'ats — 1- 3 

and yet my nature never ill the — _i- 4 

all her double vigour, art, and nature — n. 2 

know the nature of their crimes — ii- 3 

that hath from nature stolen a man — Ji. 4 

but in what nature? — \\\- \ 

and imprisonment can lay onrnature — 111. I 
nature dispenses with the deed so far — iii. 1 

with the disposition of natures — ui- 1 

but nature never framed a woman's. iI/wc/i^f?o, iii. I 
whv nature, drawing of an antick .. — iii- 1 
to -BTite and read comes by nature .. , — in. 3 
chid I for that at frugal nature's frame? — ly. 1 
Helena! nature here shows art ..Mid. N.'s Dr. 11. 3 

nature, did'st thou lions frame? — v. 1 

tlie blots of nature's hand shall not.. — v. 2 
nature was making graces dear ..Love'sL.Losl,u. 1 

your capacity is oi^ that nature — v. 2 

nature hath framed strange fellows. il/er.o/' Ven.x. 1 

offices, and of opposed natures — .;i-9 

works a miracle in nature — m- 2 

of a strange nature is the suit — iv. 1 

i'br the time doth change his nature.. — v. 1 
something that nature gave me . . Asyou Like zt,i. 1 

from fortune's ofiice to nature's — i- 2 

not in the lineaments of nature ()pp.) — 1.2 
though nature hath given us wit to flout — 1.2 

too hard for nature (jv'p.) — 1. t' 

not fortune's work neither, but nature s — 1. 2 

all is mortal in nature (r'-p.) — j;- 4 

let my officers of such a nature make — in. 1 

no wit bv nature nor art _..— iii-2 

therefore heaven nature charged — iii. 2 (vci-^es) 

nature presently distilled — iii- 2 (ver-;si 

theordinary of nature's sale-work.. — m..') 

nature, stronger than his just -;- i\'- 3 

would have made nature immortal All sll'ell, 1. I 

politic in the commonwealth of nature — i. I 

'tis against the rule of nature — i. 1 

as a desperate offendress against nature — 1. ! 

in fortune nature brings to join — ;• 1 

franknature, rather curious — 1.2 

nature and sickness debate it at their — i- '2 

if we are nature's, these are ours — i. 3 

the show and seal of nature's truth .. — 1-3 

adoption strives with nature — J. 3 

can never ransom nature from her '.. ^ 11. 1 
in these to nature she is immediate heir — i;. 3 
them tame.and know their natures... — ii. 5 
the 3-ounger of our nature, that surfeit — i;i. 1 
corrupts a well-derived nature with his — in. 2 
all the miseries, which nature owes.. — jii. 2 

in't that stings his nature — iv- 3 

the tenderness of her nature became — iv. 3 

in the nature lie delivers it — iv. 3 

repent out the remainder of nature .. — iv. 3 

that ever nature had praise for — iv. .■) 

ri"ht, by the law of nature — iv. •'J 

the nature of his great offeuce is dead — v. 3 

in me, O nature, cease! — v. 3 

hath not in nature's mystery more .. — v. 3 
whose nature sickens, but to speak .. — v. 3 
though the nature of oiu- quarrel .7'a"i'iixrf>/'.'-"'i- i. I 
how sometimes nature will betray. Jrm;cr'.(7'«;<-, i.2 
noted, is't, but of the finer natures?.. — 1.2 
bv \SL\v and process of great nature .. — !;• - 

aiid thou, good goddess nature — .ii- 3 

so long as "nature will bear up — in- 2 

which some call nature's bastards .. — iv. 3 
shares with great creating nature fiT-p.) — _iv. 3 
tonature, is an art, that nature makes — iv. 3 
mend nature, change it rather (ivp-) — !^- 3 
and then let nature crush llie sides .. — iv. 3 
vet nature iniErht have made me as . . — n'. 3 
nature shows above her breeding .... — v. 2 
would he^'uile nature of her custom — v. 2 

was wrouglit by nature Comedy of Errors, \. 1 

that crow's bald by nature — ;; - 

hair lost bv nature — ".2 

villanies of nature do swarm upon .Macbeth, i. 2 

against the use of nature? — j. 3 

yet do I fear thy nature — ]■ '< 

visitings of nature shake my fell — 1. -i 

you wait on nature's mischief — 1 •') 

their drenched natures lie — i- 7 

that nature gives way to in repose! .. — ii. I 
one half world nature seems dead — — 11. I 
that death and nature do contend — 11.2 



NAT 

NATUKK— great II at ure'ssticoiid course. iV«c^t*^/(, n. 2 

looked like a breach in nature — ii. 3 

turned wild in nature — ij- ' 

'gainst nature still — .>!•'• 

and in his royalty of nature reigns.. — iii. 1 

so predominant in your nature — iii. I 

which bounteous nature hath in him — ii;. 1 

but in them nature's copy's not etenie — ;;;•'-' 

tlie least a death to nature — i>i- < 

hatli nature that in time will — iii. 4 

you lack the season of all natures, sleep — iii. 4 

the treasure of nature's germins .... — iv. 1 

shall live the lease of nature — iv. 1 

a good and virtuous nature may recoil — iv. 3 

intemperance in nature is a tyranny — iv. 3 

for strangers to my nature — iv. 3 

a great perturbation in nature? — v. 1 

shall take in nature of a fee KhigJolui,]]. 1 

nature and fortune joined to make (tep. ) — iii. 1 

no scape of nature, uo distempered.. — iii. 4 

by the hand of nature marked — iv. 2 

slandered nature in my form — iy. '- 

seven are dried by nature's course ..Ilicliard II- ]■ 2 

built by nature for herself — ii. 1 

all of one nature, of one substance .JHeiiryl I'. \. 1 

diseased nature oftentimes breaks .. — iii. 1 

sent to knoiv the nature of your griefs — iy. 3 

the nature of a tra.^'ic volume ■iHennjlV. i. 1 

now let not nature's hand keen — ,i. 1 

which nature made his bleuiisli — ii. 3 

gentle sleep, nature's soft nurse — iii. 1 

fiu'uring tlie nature of tlio times — iii. I 

no reason.in the law of natiu-e — iii. 2 

a i>eaoe is of the nature of a conquest — iv. 2 

au.Uoathlv births of nature — iv. 4 

wl\ich nature, love, and filial tenderness — iv. 4 

how quicklv nature fulls into revolt — iv. 4 

he's walked the way of nature — v. 2 

by a rule in nature, teach the act lUnryV.u 2 

mangle the work of iiatiue — ii. 4 

bv law of r.ature, and filiations .... — ii.4 

disEiuise fair nature with Imid-fnvoured — iii. 1 

and began thus: Wonder of luiturc.. — iii. 7 

defective in their natures — v. 2 

to tlieir firm proposed natures — y. 2 

froward by nature 1 Henry VI. i i i. 1 

or nature makes me suddenly relent — iii. 3 

be not offended, nature's miracle .... — v. 3 

by nature proved an enemy to 'iUenryVl. iii. 1 

being opiiosites of such repairing iiature — y. 3 
corrupt trail nature with some bribe. 3 Ht/iri/*'/. iii. 2 

nature brouglit him to the door — iii. 3 

head by nature framed to wear a crown — iv. 6 

more than the nature of a brother's love — v. 1 
of feature by dissembling nature ..Ilichard III. i. 1 

self-same name but one of better nature — i. 2 

framed in the prodigality of nature — i. 2 

slave of nature, and the son of hell — i. 3 

replenislied sweet work of nature.... — iv. .3 

as heaven, and nature lengthens it — iv. 4 

you know his nature, that he's H ■nryl'lll. i. 1 

still exaction the nature of it? — i. 2 

to nature none more bound — i. 2 

who had commanded nature — |i. 4 

lord of York, out of his noble nature — iii. 1 

and nature does require her times of — iii. 2 

( I know his noble nature,) not to let — iii. 2 

to repair our nature with comforting — V. 1 

have in them a wilder nature, than — v. I 

men, in our own natures frail — v. 2 

thou hast a cruel nature — v. 2 

a man into whom nature hath . .Troilus -f Cress, i. 2 

the nature of the sickness found .... — i. 3 

gifts, natures, shapes, severals — i. 3 

nature craves, all dues be rendered.. — ii. 2 

if this law of nature be corrupted .. — ii. 2 

these moral laws of nature — ii. 2 

and thy parts of nature thrice-famed — ii. 3 

and most familiar to my nature .... — iii- 3 

one touch of nature makes the — iii. 3 

the secrets of nature have not — iv. 2 

witli gifts of nature flowing — iv. 4 

thou crusty batch of nature — v. 1 

dimiiuitives of naturel out, gall!.... — v. I 

a fi.L'ht of this strange nature — y. 2 

I'll "say of it, it tutors nature .. Timnnn/A.'hnns, i. 1 

good and gracious nature hanging .. — i. 1 

all kind ot natures, that labour — i. 1 

dishonour triifSes with man's nature — i. ! 

a noble nature may catch a wroncli — ii. 2 

and nature, as it grows again toward — ii. 2 

let not that part of nature wliicli my — iii. 1 

of such a nature is his politic love .. — iii. 3 

not nature, to whom all sores lay siege — iv. 3 

but bv contempt of nature — iv. 3 

nothing level in our cursed natures — iv. 3 

I will make thee do thy right nature — iv. 3 

this is in thee a nature but affected.. — iv. 3 

naked natures live in all the spite .. — iv. 3 

answer mere nature, bid them — iv. 3 

thy nature did commence in sufferance — iv. 3 

the bounteous housewii'e, nature .... — iv. 3 

almost turns my dangerous nature.. — iv. 3 

whose thankless natures — v. 1 

throes tliat nature's fragile vessel .. — v. 2 

are unremo\'eably coupled to iiatiu'e — v. 2 

that food which nature loatlies — v. .^ 

which from nigfiard nature fall — v. 5 

what he cannot lielp in his nature . .Carlo' inus, i. i 

such a nature tickled with good .... — i. I 

nature teaches beasts to know their.. — ii. 1 

so Iris irracious nature would think.. — ii. 3 

would have galled his surly nature.. — ij. 3 

if, as his nature is, he fall in a rage — .!!■ 3 

we debase the nature of our seats.... — iii. 1 

his nature is too noble for the world — iii. 1 

of catching nature, spread firrther .. — iii. I 

you have mc false to my nature? .. .. — iii. 2 

I would dissemble with my nature.. — '.'-^ 

some other deity tlian nature — iv.G 



[ 5-24 ] 



NAV 



v. 5 
;S i. 2 
i. 2 
ii. 3 
iv. 1 
V. 1 
V. 3 



NATLTKE— his nature in that's no.. Conofujius, iv. 7 

takes it by sovereignty of nature — iv. 7 

or whether nature, not to be other.. — iv. 7 

bond and privilege of nature, break! — v. 3 

which great nature cries, deny not . . — v. 3 

lie bowed his nature, never known . . — y. 5 
natures, and pre-formed faculties. ./j^^/ks Ciesar, i. 3 

how that might change his nature .. — ii. 1 

then the nature of an insurrection .. — ii. 1 

but yet my nature could not bear it — iv. 3 

and nature must obey necessity .... — iv. 3 

that nature might stand up — v. 5 

in nature's inlinite hoolL....Anlony /j- Cleopatra, \. 2 

the nature of bad news infects — i. 2 

the sides of nature will not sustain it — i. 3 

we see, the fancy outwork nature .. — ii. 2 

and made a gap in nature — ii. 2 

that nature must compel xis to — v. 1 

nature wants stuff to vie strange .... — v. 2 

Antony, were nature's piece 'gainst — v. 2 

if tliou and nature can so gently .... — v. 2 

of so slight and trivial a nature Cymbeline. i. 5 

a drug of such damned nature — i. u 

hath nature given them eyes to see.. — 1.7 

which rottenness can lend nature!.. — i. 7 

was as another nature dumb — ii.4 

to hide the sparks of nature! — iii. 3 

and nature prompts them, in simple — iii. 3 

if sleep charge nature, to break it .. — iii. 4 

ere clean it o'erthrow nature — iii. 6 

worthiness of nature! breedof.... — iv. 2 

nature hath meal, and bran — iv. 2 

thou divine nature, how thyself — iv. 2 

for nature doth ablior to make — i v. 2 

otherwise than noble nature did .... — iv. 2 

a very drudge of nature's, Iiave — v. 2 

he stayed attending nature's law — v. 4 

great nature, like his ancestry — v. 4 

shouldst live while nature will — v. 5 

postures beyond brief nature — v. .'j 

all offices of nature should again do — v. 5 
it was wise nature's end in the donation 
near the nature of the gods? . . Titus Audi 
doth nature plead. Father (rep.) .... 

for no name fits thy iiatm-e 

by nature made for murders (rep.) . . 

had nature lent thee but thy 

for nature puts me to a heavy task .. 

because kind nature doth require — v. i> 

nature this dowry gave, to glad Pericles, \. 1 

I, as fits my nature, do obey you — ii. I 

like beauty's child, whom nature gat. . — ii. 2 

nothing can be ministered to nature .. — iii. 2 

nature should be so conversant with pain — i 11. 2 

the disturbances that nature works — iii. 2 

death may usurp on nature — id. 2 

this queeu will live: nature awakes .. — in. 2 

if that my nature need a spur — iii. 3 

when nature framed this piece — iv. 3 

composes nature's own shape — v. (Gov.er) 

where nature doth with merit challenge. . Lcur, 1. 1 

nor our nature nor our place — i. I 

a wretch whom nature is ashamed — 1. 1 

tardiness in nature, which often leaves.. — 1. 1 

thou, nature, art my goddess — i . 2 

in the lusty stealth of nature — ".2 

though the wisdom of nature («p.) — i. 2 

falls from his bias of nature — i. 2 

whose nature is so far from doing — i. 2 

wrenched my frame of nature — i. 4 

bear, nature, hear! dear goddess, he :r! . . — i. 4 

1 will forget my nature — \. b 

natures of such deep trust we shall — ii. 1 

rascal, nature disclaims in thee — ii. 2 

tliat in the natures of their lords rebels.. — ii. 2 

quite from his nature; lie cannot — ii. 2 

when nature, being oppressed, commands — ii 4 

nature, in you, stands on the very verge — ii. 4 

thy tender-hefted nature shall not give — ii.4 

thou better know'st the offices of nature — ii.4 

nature more than nature ueeds (rfp.) — ii.4 

nature's moulds, all germins spill — iii. 2 

man's nature cannot carry the affliction — iii. 2 

too rough for nature to endure — iii. 4 

nothing could have subdued nature — iii. 4 

censured that nature thus gives way — — iii. 6 

is there any cause in nature — iii. B 

oppressed nature sleeps: this rest — iii. 6 

enkindle all the sparks of nature — iii. 7 

that nature, wdiich contemns its origin .. — iv. 2 

our foster- nurse of nature is repose — iv.4 

my snuff, and loathed part of nature — i v. 6 

nature's above art in that respect — iv. (i 

O ruined piece of nature! this great — iv. 6 

redeems nature from the general curse . . — iv. 6 

this great breach in his abused nature ! . . — iv. 7 

despite of mine own nature — y. 3 

of some strange nature Rmiuo ^- Julie', ii. I 

the earth, that's nature's mother — ii. 3 

by art as well as by natni-e — ii. t 

Ci nature! what hadst thou to do in hell — iii, 2 

though fond nature bids us lament Oep.)— iv. 5 
hath discretion fought with nature ....llamlei, i. 3 

passing through nature to eternity — i. 2 

cinnmendable in your nature — i. 2 

a fault to nature, to reason most absurd. . — i. 2 

things rank, and gross in nature — 1.2 

a violet in the youth of primy nature .. — i. 3 

for nature, crescent, does not grow alone — i. 3 

some vicious mole of nature in tbeiii — i . 4 

since nature cannot choose his origin.. .. — i, 4 

being nature's livery, or fortune's .-tiir .. — i. 4 

we fools of nature, so horridly to shake.. — i. 4 

done in my days of nature, are burnt — i. 5 

if thou hast nature in thee, bear it not . . — i. 5 

that docs afflict our natures — ii. I 

o'erstep not the modesty of nature — iii. 2 

as 'twere the mirror up to nature — iii. 2 

tlionght some of nature's journeymen .. — iii. 2 

O heart, lose not thy nature — liJ. 2 



— ii. I 

— ii. 1 

— ii. 1 



_ iv. I 
— iv. 1 



NATURE— nature makes them partial. HamW. iii 

there the action lies in his true nature .. — iii 

can change the stamp of nature — iii 

as sin's true nature IS, each toy seems .. — iv, 

nature is fine in love: and where 'tis fine — iv. 

so crimeful and so capital in nature — iv. 

nature her custom holds, let shame — iv. 

when the baser nature comes between .. — v. 

to let this canker of our nature come .... — v. 

after what flouri.^h your nature vv ill .... — v. 

your nature, lionour, and excetition .... — v. 

I am satisfied in nature, whose motive . . — v. 

so floodgate and o'erbearing nature Oiluitn, i. 

for natuie so preposterously to err — i. 

in spite of nature, of years, of country .. — i. 

could err against all rules of nature .... — i. 

baseness of'our natures woul d conduct us — i. 

the Moor is of a free and open nature. . . . — i. 

do omit their mortal natures — ii. 

a nobility in their natures — ii. 

very nature will instruct her in it 

is of a constant, loving, noble nature. . . . 

or his good nature prizes the virtue tliat 

it is my nature's plague to spy into abus5: 

your fi-ee and noble nature, out of 

and yet, how nature erring from itself . . 

we see, in all things nature tends 

are, in their natures, poisons 

nature would not invest herself in such 

this the noble nature whom passion .... 

ciinning'st pattern of excelling nature .. . — v. 

till that the nature of your fault be — v. 

NAUGHT-naught knowing of Tempest, i. 

he shall drink naught but brine — iii. 

set the world at naught .... Tuo Gen. of t'erona. i. 

and naught esteems my — iii. 

naught but mine eye could — v. 

nauglit enters there of wliat validity. Tirelfili i\. i. 

say, my knife's naught Mwli Ado, v. 

naught shall go ill Mid.N .\Dream, iii. 

Godblessus! a thing of naught! .... — iv. 

is, to know naught but fame Loire's!,. Lost, i. 

since naught so stockish, htiTd.Mereh. of Venice, v. 

when naught would be accepted but — v. 

be better emplo3'ed, and be naught. As you Like, i. 

was naught: now, I'll stand to it (»ep.) — i. 

a shepherd's life, it is naught — iii. 

important blood will naught deny ..AWsWell, iii. 

touched you, naught remains. Taniivguf .^hreir, i. 

naught for approbation WitUer''s Tate, i i . 

they staj' for naught at all . . Comedy of Errors, i v. 

naught's had, all's spent Macbetft, iii. 

his speech, but say thou nauglit — iv. 

naught that I am, not for — iv. 

that it yields naught, but shame . . King John, iii. 

naught shall make us rue, if England — v. 

and naught at all to say: first Richard II. i. 

inherits naught but bones — ii. 

is naught but shadows of what it is . . — ii. 

set 3'our decrees at naught 2HetiryIF. v. 

Pistol speaks naught but trutli — v. 

truth, it was corrupt and naught Henry V. i. 

there's naught in I'rance, that can.... — i. 

broad spreading, it disperse to naught. lHen»T/r/. i. 

naught rests for me in this tumultuous — i. 

can do nauglit but wail her 2Henry VI. iii. 

what, worse than naught? — iii. 

myself no joy in naught, but that .. — iii. 

was made to handle naught but gold — v. 

naught to do. Naught to do (rep^ .Richard III. i. 

and all will come to naught, when .. — iii. 

the disposing of it naught rebelled.. Henry f/iZ. i. 

let liim in naught be trusted — ii. 

60, 'tis clear, they'll say, 'tis naught.. — (epil 

that she beloved knows naught. . TroilusSf Cress, i. 

which are, indeed, naught else — i. 

he hears naught privately, that comes — i. 

naught but humour sways hira. Timon of Athens, \u. 

and will love naught but even the . . — i v. 

away, all will be naught else Coriolanns, iii. 

for we'll hear naught from Kome .... — v. 

when it is all to naught . ... Antony S^ Cleopatra, ii. 

'twill be naught; but let it be — iii. 

naught, nauglit, all naught! I can .. — iii. 

all's but naught; patience is sottish — iv. 1 

good troth, I nave stolen naught ..Cymbeline, iii. 

one that promised naught but beggary — v. 

she was naught; and 'long of her .. — v. 
remaineth naught, but to inter .. 7'ilus Andron . i. 
there naught hath passed — iv. 

1 will discover naught to thee — v. 

thought naught too curious Pericles, i. 

as know! ng n aught, like dogs Lear, i i . 

beloved Regan, thy sister's naught — ii. 

shall so wear out to naught — iv. 

naught could remove R omeo^ Juliet, (pro! 

for naught so vile that on the earth — ii. 

all forsworn, all naught, all dissemblers — iii. 

you are naught, you are naught Hamlet, iii. 

like his master's ass, for naught but .... Othello, i. 
despised time, is naught but bitterness 

unjustly. With nauglit but truth — i 

for naught I did in hate, but all in honour — 

NAUGHTILY-meant naughtily. Tmilus S,- Cress, i 
NAUGHTY— is a nauglity house. Meas. for Metis. 1 

thou naughty varlet! Mucli Ado, iv. 

this naughty man shall face to face be — v. 

these naughty times put bars . . Mer. of Venice, jii. 

I do wonder, thou naughty gaoler .. — iii. 

a good deed in a natighty world .... — v. 

my lord, but a naughty orator All's Well, v. 

tell me now, thounaughty varlet ..IHenryl V. ii. 

sort of naughty persons, lewdly hent.l HenrylV. ii. 

he lived upon this naughty (iarti\'!..HenryVl 11. v. 

you naughty mocking uncleV Troilus Sf Cressida, i v. 

would he not, a nauglity man, let it — iv. 

thou naughty knave, what trade?.. ./M'fii«C«'.«ar, i. 

this is a naughty night to swim in Lear, iii. 

naughty lady, these hairs, which thou .. — iii. 
NAVARRE shall be the wonder of. /.ore's L.Lost, i. 



1 
— i. I 



. I 



NAV 



NAVAR HE -of Navarre . . Love's L. Lost, i. 1 (letter) 
11 limn miiy owe, matchless Niivai-re.. — ii. 1 
Nnvavre }iath made a vow, till painful — ii. 1 

IS'avan-e had notice of your fair — ii. 1 

liere comes Navarre. Fair princess (rep.) — ;;. I 

better used on Navarre and his — ii. 1 

deceive me not now, Navarre is infected — ii. 1 
NAVE— unseamed him from tlie nas'cMnchi'ih, i. 2 

would not this nave of a wheel iHennjIV. ii. 4 

Imwl the round nave down the liill Hamlet, ii. 2 

NAVEL-when the navel of the state. Cor/o((i)i»s, iii. 1 
NAVIGATION— swallow navigation. i>/artt«, iv. 1 

NAVY— our navy is addressed iH<-in;/II'. iv. 4 

minds to sternageof tliis navy? .HemyV. iii. (cho.) 

rideth a puissant navy Ridmrdlll. iv. 4 

the Bretagne navy is (lispersed — j v. 4 

a load would sink a navy Henry VIII. iii. 2 

hath made me rig my navy./lii(oii!/ ii-Cleopatra,h. 6 

our great navy's rigged — ..'."• 5 

and leave his navy gazing ._. — ?.'.'•" 

our severed navy too have knit again — in. 1 1 

if to-morrow our navy thrive — iv. 3 

NAYWARD-lean to the naywavd-yVinlei'sTale, ii. 1 

NAY-WORD— have anav-word .. Merry lVives,n. 2 

and we have a nav-word how toknow — v. 2 

gnll him into a nav-word TwelftliMghl, ii. 3 

NAZARITE— tlie Nazarite ..Merclmnto/rcnkc, i. 3 
NEANT-MOINS-decon,neant-moins.iJeii>y»'. ni. 4 

ncant-moins, pour les esciis — iv. 4 

KEAPOLITAN-a noble Neapolitan .. Tempest, i. 2 

two Neapolitans 'scaped: — ij. 2 

there is the Neapolitan prince. . Merch.of fenice, i. 2 
a horse better than the Neapolitan's.. — i. 2 
some Neapolitan, or mean man .. Taming of Sh. i. 1 

blood-bespotted Neapolitan iHenryl'I. v. I 

[Co/.] the Neapolitan hone-ache. TroHus ^ Cress, ii. 3 

NEARNESS- nearness to our sacred. .K/c/mrd //._}. 1 
Ix'sides, our nearness to the king — ii. 2 

NEAT— as ever trod on neat's leather.. TcinpesJ, li. 2 
well spoken, neat and fine . . Ta-oGen. nf i'erona, i. 2 

in aneat's tongue dried Merchant of yenice,i. 1 

all ready, and all thiugs neat? Taming ofShrew,iv. 1 

what say you to a neat's foot? — iv. 3 

we must be neat; not neat Winter' sTals, i. 2 

heifer, aud the calf, are all called neat — i. 2 

lord, neat, and trimly dressed \HenryIV.\. 3 

wherein neat and cleanly — ii. 4 

as doth alien in a herd of neat ....ZHeriryVI.ii. 1 
as ever trod upon neat's leather ..Julius Ciesar, i. 1 
to such neat excellence opposed .... Cymbeline, i. 7 
but his neat cookery! he cut our .... — iv. 2 
btand ; you neat slave, strike Lear, ii. 2 

NEATHERD— three neatherds .. Winter'sTale,iv, 3 

1 were a neatherd's daughter! Cymbeline, i. 2 

KEATLY-wearing his aoparel wea.t\y.AlVsWell, iv. 3 
NEAT'S-TONGUE dried ....Merdtaninfl^enice,}. \ 

you dried neat's-tongue \HenryIV. ii. 4 

N'EB-she holds up the neb Winler'sTale, i. 2 

NEBUCHADNEZZAR, sir, I have «. . All's IVell, iv. 5 

NECESSARIES— stuffs, and necessaries. 7"finpes«, i. 2 

some necessaries that I needs ..TwoGen.ofVer. ii. 4 

locks to safeguard necessaries Henry V._ i. 2 

we have culled such necessaries. ./fomfo<5yi(i/e(, iv. 3 
my necessaries are embarked, farewell.. //u;»/e;, i. 3 

T must fetch his necessaries ashore Otiiello, ii. 1 

N ECESSARILY keep peace MucliAdo, ii. 3 

NECESSARY fitness? Mens, for .Meas. ii. 4 

lie, a harmless necessary cat . . Merch. of I'enice, i v. 1 

are odious, they are necessary AsyouLiUe it, iii. 3 

nimble hand, is necessary for Winter's Tale,_iv 3 

be great pity, yet it is necessary — iv. 3 

provide us all things necessary \Henryir. i. 2 

by the necessary form of this 2HenryII'. ii i. 1 

it is necessary, look your grace Hejiry r. i v. 7 

but necessary you were waked 2HenryVI. iii. 2 

must not stint our necessary actions. Henry VIII. i. 2 
omission to do what is necessary. 7>o(7«s<§-C)<?ss. iii. 3 
'tis necessary he should die . . Timon of Alliens, i i i. 5 
tliaii a necessary bencher in the .... Coriolanus, ii. I 
shall make our purpose necessary. J«/ius Ccesar, ii. 1 

seeing that death, a necessary end — ii. 2 

idle talk will once be necessary . . Antony 8,- Cleo. v. 2 
return was most required, and necessarv .Lear, iv. 3 
some necessary question of the play .. Hamlet, iii. 2 
most necessarv 'tis, tliat we forget to ... . — iii. 2 

NECESSITIEb to helo All's 'fell, v. 3 

NECESSITIES— royal necessities .. IVintei's Tali;'\. 1 
one of these two must be necessities — iv. 3 

all your business and necessities.. ^s?/oh Like it, ii. 3 
then necessities? then let us(»-ep.')..2WcH>j//F. iii. i 
construe the times to their necessities — iv. 1 
these should be hours for necessities. W«n;-i/f/n. v. 1 
the mere necessities upon it.. 2'»nonc/^(/is)is, iv. 3 

it must omit real necessities Coriolanus, iii. 1 

call in question our necessities JulinsCmsar, iv. 3 

your content these strong necessi ties. ^n(..5CTM. iii.6 

tlie art of our necessities is strange Lear,Vn. 2 

NECESSITY makes me to ask ....Tu-elflhMght, iii. 4 
in leaving his friend here in necessity — iii. 4 
to make a virtue of necessity . . TwoGen of Ver. iv. 1 

it shall bite upon my necessity Merry IP'ives, ii. 1 

hiding mine honour in my necessity — ii. 2 

the fairest grant is the necessity MuchAito, i. I 

on mere necessity. Necessity will.. Love'sL.Lost, i. 1 

I am forsworn on mere necessity — i. 1 

I'll rather dwell in my necessity.. /l/er. of Venice, i. 3 
some necessity, now lays upon you . . — iii. 4 
slialt not, till necessity be served .. .4s yoj/ Likeit, ii. 7 

must of necessity hold his virtue All's M'ell,i. 1 

were there necessity in your request.. (Fi»ito''s7'. i. 2 
thou must think there's necessity in't — iv. 3 

thy necessity to reason thus i_rep.) Richard II. i. 3 

sworn brother, sweet, to grim necessity — v. 1 

that is but a cursed necessity Henry V. i. 2 

God comfort him in this necessity'...! //i-jin/r/. iv. 3 

deceit, bred by necessity 3 Henry ri. iii. 3 

the necessity and state of times..../(/c/ia7-rfl//. iv. 4 
his legs are legs for necessity . Troilus ^- Cressida, ii. 3 
some cood necessity touches his .. Timon of Ath. ii. 2 
showed whatnecessity belonged to't — iii. 2 



[ 525 ] 

NECESSITY made use of me ..TimonofAihens,Vyi. 2 

necessity commands me name Coriolanus, iv. 5 

nature must obey necessitj' Julius Ctesar, iv. 3 

the strong necessity of time .. Antony fyCleopatra, i.3 
very necessity of this thought, that I.. — ii. 2 
till'lie hath passed necessity .... Pericles, ii. (Gower) 
in like necessity, which godsproteet.. — ii. 1 
there's no further necessity of qualities — iv. 3 

as if we were villains bynecessity Lear, i. 2 

necessity will call discreet proceeding.... — i. 4 

Necessity's sharp'pinch! — ii. 4 

wherein necessity, of matter beggared.. HnmW, iv. f> 

yet, for necessity of present life Othello, i. 1 

will show you such a necessity in his death — iv. 2 

NECK— I'll manacle thy neck and feet. . Tempest, i. 2 

item, one neck, one chin Twelfth Night, i. 5 

wilt thou set thy foot o' my neck? — ii. 5 

his neck will come to your waist.il/ms/orl/ras. iii. 2 
needs thrust thy neck into a yoke . . ..MuchAdo, i. I 

about yonr neck, like an usurer's — ii. 1 

be seen through the lion's neck . . Mid. K.'s Dr. iii. 1 

break the neck of the wax Love'sL. Lost, iv. 1 

hang me by the neck, if horns — iv. 1 

hanging about the neck of my . . Mer. of Venice, ii. 2 

thoiT didst break his neck As you Like it,i.\ 

with bills on their necks — ..i. 2 

that you once wore, about his neck .. — iii. 2 

about his neck a green and gilded — lv.3 

she hung about my neck Taming of Shrew, li. 1 

he took the bride about the neck — — iii. 2 
no greater a run but my head and neck — iv. 1 

hanging about his neck Winter's Tale, i. 2 

herfewelabout theneckof it — v. 2 

she hangs about his neck — . v. 3 

the mole in my neck Comedy of Errors, m. 2 

that self chain about his neck (>cp.) . . — v. 1 

a golden stamp about their necks Macbeth, ly. 3 

si" ns of war about his aged neck Richard II. ii. 2 

and stooped my neck under your.... — iii- 1 

lower than his proud steed's neck — v. 2 

break theneckofthatproudman.... — v. 5 

clerks I'll give thee this neck \HenryIV.n.\ 

in the neck of that, tasked _ iv. 3 

hanging on Hotspur's neck IHenrylV.^i- 3 

de neck, madame. De neck Henry V. in. 4 

in the Thames up to the neck — iv. 1 

over Sufi"olk's neck he threw — iv. 6 

let his neck answer for it — iv. 8 

wife about her husband s neck — v. i 

he yoketh your rebellious necks .... 1 Henry VI. ii. 3 

I may embrace his neck — ii.5 

drive you to break your necks — — v. 4 
myway upon their headless necks ..2HenryVI. i. 2 
I took a costly jewel from my neck . . — iii. 2 
his pen and inkhorn about his neck . . — iv. 2 
with your pardons about your necks? — iv. 8 
with halters on their necks expect . . — iv. 9 
yield not thy neck to fortune s yoke.3 Hetiry VI. lu. 3 

proud neck bears half my Richard HI. iv. 4 

curse falls heavy on my neck — v. 1 

hung twenty years about his neck ..HenryVm. n. 2 
shalffrom your neck unloose. r»0!7us<f-Ciess;rfo, iii. 3 
if Hector bre.ak not his neck i' the .. — iii. 3 

I would thev had broke's neck! — iv. 2 

but a plague break thy neck — v. 4 

upon their first lord's neck .... Timon nf.iihens, iv. 3 

and tread uiion his neck Coriolanus, i. 3 

eves towards the napes of your necks — ii. 1 

one in the neck, and two in the thigh — — ii. 1 
richest lockram 'bout her reechy neck , . — ii. 1 
which looks with us to break his neck .. — iii. 3 
sliall break his neck. or hazard mine .... — iv. 7 

and, he returning to break our necks — v. 4 

struck Caesar on the neck lulins Cwsar. v. 1 

were like a haltered neck.. -4??tonv§-Cteopa(ra, iii. U 

the first stone drop in my neck; — iii. 1 1 

chain my armed neck — iv. 8 

bending down his corrigible neck — iv. 12 

and thus I set my foot on his neck. . Cymbeline, iii. 3 

your neck, sir, is pen, book, and — v. 4 

Guiderius had upon his neck a mole — v. 5 
have brought up a neck to a fair end. Titus And. iv. 4 
poor men's cattle break their necks . . — v. 1 

dogs, and bears, by the neck _. Lear, ii. 4 

lest it break thy neck with following it. . — ii. 4 
he fastened on my neck, and bellowed .. — v. 3 
draw your neck out of the collar Borneo^ Juliet, i. 1 

she driveth o'er a soldier's neck — i. 4 

or paddling in your neck with his ....Hamlet, iii. 4 

break your own neck down — iii. 4 

she falls thus about my neck Othello, iv. 1 

men must lay their murders on your neck — v. 2 

NECKLACE- AMBER .... Winler'sTale, iv. 3 (song) 

NECTAR— the water Nectar . . Two Gen. of Ver. ii. 4 
love's thrice-reputed Nectar? ..Troilus if- V7 ess. iii. 2 

NED— good-morrow, Ned I Henry IV. i. 2 

Ned Poins and I will walk lower — ii. 2 

Ned, where are our disguises? — ii. 2 

away, good Ned; Falstaff sweats.... — ii. 2 

Ned, pr'vthee, come out — ii. 4 

but sweet Ned, to sweeten (re;).') — ii. 4 

but Ned, to drive away — ii. 4 

but do you use me thus, Ned? iHenrylV. ii. 2 

sh all we ste al upon them , Ned — i i . 2 

with the folly; follow me, Ned — ii. 2 

no abuse, Ned, in the world (re/>.) .. — ii. 4 
why not Ned and I for once 3Henry VI. v. 4 

jfed, sweet Ned! speak to thy: — v. 5 

young Ned, for thee, thine uncles .. — v. 7 
and little Ned Plantagenet Ilichard III. iv. 4 

NEDAR— to Nedor's daughter . . Mid.N.'s Dream, i. I 
this Helena, old Nedar's Helena — iv. 1 

NEED— he needs will be absolute Tempest, i. 2 

it must needs be of subtle — ii. 1 

or need of any engine, would I not have — ii. 1 
and yet I needs must curse — ii. 2 

1 needs must rest me — iii- 3 

faith, sir, you need not fear — iii. 3 

what need she, when she Two Gen. of Vet. ii. 1 

I need not 'cite him to it — ii. 4 



NEE 



NEED— that I needs must use... 7'wo Gen. o/;'er. ii. 4 

I needs must lose myself — ii. 6 

you must need have them — ii. 7 

of what I stand in need of ii. 7 

what need a man care for — iii. 1 

for then she need not be — iii. 1 

that I have need of such a youth .... — iv. 4 

she needs not, when she — v. 2 

in the fire, and need not Merry Wives, i. 4 

never need understand any thing.... — ii. 2 
and would needs speak with you .... — iii. 3 
afraid he will have need of washing — iii. 3 

she must needs go in — iii. 4 

but what needs eitheryourmmn .... — v. 2 

what need you tell me that? — v..') 

needs to fear no colours Twelfth Night, i. .'i 

since I must needs be gone — ii. 3 

thou hadst need send for more money — ii. 3 

and his must needs be yours — iii. I 

you must needs yield your reason .. — iii. 2 

you need to sustain — iv. 2('sonf;) 

nor need you, on mine honour. ...illeas./orAfeas. i. 1 
you need not change your trade .... — i. i 

5'ou need not to fear the bawds — ii. 1 

if you should need a pin — ii. 2 

must he needs die? — ii. 2 

must needs appear offence — ii. 4 

but that you will needs buy and sell — iii. 2 

must upon a warranted need — iii. 2 

this needs must be a practice? — v. 1 

and thou wilt needs thrust thy Much Ado, i. I 

what need the bridge much broader — i. 1 

when there is no need of such vanity — iii. 3 
when rich villains have need of poor ones— iii. 3 
therefore you must needs lAay.. Mid.N.'s Dream, i. 2 

that must needs be sport alone — iii. 2 

for your play needs no excuse — v. 1 

there need none to be blamed — v. 1 

but mean, needs not the painted, ^otie's L. Lost, ii. 1 

your grace needs not fear it — iv.3 

O she needs it not — iv.3 

dark needs no candles now — iv.3 

'tis more than need ! — iv.3 

we need more light to find your .... — v. 2 

1 must needs be friends with thee — — y. 2 

you need not fear, lady Merchnnt of Venice, i. 2 

it now appears, you need my help — — i.3 

I must needs tell thee all — ii. 4 

needs a like proportion — iii. 4 

must needs be like my lord — ni. 4 

nay, you need not fear us — m. 5 

must needs give sentence 'gainst — i.v. 1 

so had you need As you Like it, li. 7 

good wine needs no bush, 'tis true (rep.) — (epil. ) 

that j'ou must needs be born AlVsWeil, i. 1 

wilt thou needs be a beggar? — ;. 3 

and he must needs go — .i- 3 

thou this to hazard, needs must .... — "■ 1 

thy casement I need not open — 113 

may make it probable need — if- 4 

have in them a need, greater — .ii- •' 

I hope, I need not to advise you .... — in- ■'> 

you shall not need to fear me — in- " 

eifected many nicer needs ... — 1 v. 3 

Ineednotaskyou, if gold will ...... — iv. 3 

vou need but plead your honourable — iv. 6 

nay, you need not to stop your — y. /! 

you shall never need to fear ..lanmig of Shrew, 1. 1 

Bohadyouneed — •• J 

chance to need thee at home — v. 

he shall need none so long as I — v. 1 

nay, then she needs must come . . . . . . — y. ^ 

need no grave to bury honesty ..Wmter s Tale, 11. 1 

whv, what need we commune — n. 1 

weneednomoreof your advice — ii- J 

satisfied, and need no more — n } 

youneednotfear it, sir — n.- ^ 

what need these hands? — .n. >s 

the need I have of thee - iv. 1 

thou hast need of more rags to lay . . — iv. - 
he shall not need to grieve at knowing — iv. 3 

I needs must think it honesty — iv. o 

most opportune to our need — iv.J 

for advice, or stronger for your need — iv. 3 

forced by need, and accident — v. i 

of the one, it must needs be. ..... . . . ■ — .X- f 

what needs all that .Comedy ofhrrors, 111. I 

what need she be acquamted? — \\\. f 

here needs not live by shifts — \n. i 

it shall not need, thy father hath.... - v. 1 

I had most need ot blessing Macbeth.n. i 

he needs not our mistrust — in. f 

what need I fear of thee? ,. - iv. 

what need we fear who knows it ... . — v. 1 

moreneeds she the divine.. — v. J 

or, so much as it needs, to dew ,,.—,, X" f 

for it is more than need huigJolm, y 1 

needs must you lay your heart — ..1.1 

from her need (rep.) — !.'!•' 

thou Shalt not need — !)?. | 

uncle, I needs must pray that — ni. 

then Arthur needs must tall — 111.4 

alas, what need you be so. — iv. I 

your vile intent must needs seem ... . — iv 1 

of tongues must needs want pleading — iv. 1 
soripeitneedsmustbreak ........... — .iv. 2 

shall need some messenger betwixt. . — iv. 2 

used rather for sport than need -.,-.., ^■' I 

I shall not need transport Richard II. 11. 3 

I must needs confess — .n-* 

needs must I like It well — 111.^ 

taste grief, need friends — 111.2 

I need not to repeat ••....• — '."• f 

so great, I have no need to beg ...... — iv. I 

lovenot poison that do poison need.. — y. 6 

when we need your use 1 Henry I V. i. 3 

to prove that true, needs no more .... — i . 3 

nor shall we need his help — iii. I 

you must needs learn, lord — iii. 1 

presently have need of you — iii. 2 



NEE 



Iv'Kl^i)-of yri-uiiiess iiceiit. iiiii.-it liv.w .Ulrniiil I . iii. a 

given, US a gentleman neeil to lie .... — iii. 3 

that you must needs be out "fall.... — iii. 3 

why, n.y Kuod lord, you need luit I'eiir — iv. I 

what iiceil I be so tbrwnrd with — v. 1 

1 iKCil no more weight than — v. ;i 

I do not noed 3'ourhelp; und hoa\'eu — \. I 
what need I thus my well kuo\vn.-2f/cii7i//r. (ind.) 

jiever so few, and never .yet more need — i. I 

do not tiie rebels need soldiers? — i. 2 

if you will needs say, I aiii an old man — i. :! 

puissance, need not be dreaded — 1. a 

the immortal part needs a physician — ii. 2 

therefore captains had need look .... — ii. 4 

you need not to have pricked me.... — iii. a 

there is no need of an .V such redress — iv. 1 

that need to be revived — iv. 1 

that thou wilt needs invest thee — iv. 4 

a new link to the bucket must needs be — v. I 
therefore we must needs admit the .... Hcnnj /'. i. I 

no need to trouble himself with .... — ii. 3 

lie needs not, it is no hidden — iii. 7 

the gulf, thou needs must be cnghittcd — iv. 3 

I need not be ashamed of J'our — iv. 7 

you must needs be friends — iv. 8 

must needs be granted to be — v. 2 

must therefore needs prove a good . . — v. 2 

60 you had need; for Orleans 1 Ueunjl'l. i. 1 

my lord, you need not fear — v. 2 

and then I need not crave his — v. 3 

a crafty knave does need no hroker . .iUenry VI . i. 2 

what needs youi' grace to be protector — i. 3 

her fume can need no spurs — i. 3 

we did it for pure need — ii. 1 

thej' have the more need to sleep.... — iv. 2 

60 he had need, for 'tis threadbare .. — iv. 2 

a' must needs; for beggary is valiant — iv. 2 

he need not fear the sword — iv. 2 

will you needs be hanged with your — iv. 8 

a subtle traitor needs no sophister .. — v. 1 

she shall net need, we'll meet ZllenryVI. i. 2 

live hundred, father, for a need — i. 2 

it needs not, nor it boots thee not. ... — i. 4 

and, in thy need, such comfort — i. 4 

spite of spite, needs must I — ii. 3 

that Edward needs must down — iv. 3 

that men must needs abide — iv. 3 

depart, before we need his help — v. 4 

1 need not add more fuel — v. 4 

never may have need of you! (iep.).Ricliard III. i. 3 

lie needs no indirect nor lawless .... — i. 4 

when I have most need to employ .. — ii. 1 

my lord protector needs will have it so — iii. 1 

I hope, 1 need not fear — iii. 1 

they do need the priest; your honour — iii. 2 

[Co(. Kn(. J now I need the priest that — iii. 4 

nay, for a need, thus far come — iii. 5 

my lord, there needs no such aiJology — iii. 7 

there is no need of me (»ep.) — iii. 7 

which, in his dearest need, will fly.. — v. 2 
and, must needs say, a noble one.. Henry I'lII. ii. ! 

we had need pray, and heartily — ii. 2 

must needs deserve all strangers' loves — ii. 2 

a fool; for he would needs be virtuous — ii. 2 

what's the need? it hath already.... — ii. 4 

what need you note it? pray you.... — ii. 4 

must I needs forego so good — iii. 2 

but I must needs to the Tower — v. 2 

they need no other penance — v. 3 

r A.'"'.] needs tarry the grinding . . Troilus .J Cress, i. 1 

Helen must needs be fair — i. 1 

he shall not need it, if behave — i. 2 

wliite hand, I must needs confess.... — i. 2 

must needs, for youall cried (rep.) .. — Ii. 2 

I must needs praise him — iii.) 

come, come, what need you blush?.. — iii. 2 

for we may live to have need of such — iv. 4 

and what need these tricks? — v. 1 

my friend when he must need me. Timon ufAlh. i. 1 

we must needs dine together (rep.) .. — i. i 

truefriendship, there needs none.... — i. 2 
or my friends, if I should need 'em — i. 2 (gruee) 

what need we have any friends (rep.) — j. 2 

what need these feasts, pomps — i. 2 

immediate are my needs — ii. 1 

1 must needs confess, I have — iii. 2 

must he needs trouble me iu't? — iii. 3 

I need not tell him that _ iii. 4 

beyond them, and I must needs appear — iii. 6 
that one need not lend to another — iii. 6 (grace) 

must thou needs stand for — v. ) 

Imust needs say, you have — v. 1 

1 need not be barren of accusations.. Cojw/ajms, i. 1 

till when they needs must show — i. 2 

when lie did need your loves — ii. 3 

we need not put new matter — iii. 3 

because they then less need one another — iv. 5 

neither need we fear him _ iv. 6 

that needs must light on this JuliusCasar,i. 1 

his worth, and oiu- great need of him — i. 3 

what need we any spur, but our own — ii. 1 

or our performance, did need an oath — ii. i 

1 should not need, if you were gentle — ii. 1 

please my country to need my death _ iii. 2 
then must thou needs find out ..Antony ^ Cleo. i. 1 

the present need speaks to atone you — ii- 2 

what needs more words? — ii. 7 

your presence needs must i)uzzle.. .. — iii. 7 

a course, which has no need of you.. — iii. 9 
he needs as many, sir, as Csesar l^n■p.^ — iii. 11 

he needs must see himself — v. 1 

flt)ws over on all that need — v. 2 

we shall liave need to emplo.v you. . CymbfUne, ii. 3 

when yon shall find you need it not — ii. 4 

what shall I need to draw m_v sword? — iii. 4 

must needs appear unking-like .... — iii. 5 

is sorer, than to lie for need — iii.fi 

who needs must know of her departui'e — iv. 2 

became the lite o' the need — v. 3 

the emperor needs her not TitusAndron. h li 



[ 5-2(i ] 



NlilCD— whenever > on have need. . TitusAntlron. iv. 2 
and you must lucds bestow her .... — iv. 2 
peifbri'e you must needs stay a time — iv. 3 
you shall not need my fellow peers .... PmcZps, i. 3 
what they will, what need we fear? .. — i. 4 

what need speak I? — ii. (Gowcr) 

he had need mean better tb.au his .... — ii. 2 

I must needs be f^'one — iii. 3 

if to that my nature need a spur — iii. 3 

provision as our intents will need? — v. 2 

such need to hide itself- Let's see (rep.) ..Lear, i. 2 

thou must needs Mear my coxcomb — i. 4 

when thou hadst no need to care — i. 4 

deep trust we shall much need — ii. 1 

which I must needs call mine — ii. 4 

what should you need of mote? — ii. 4 

what need you five antl twenty — ii. 4 

need one? O reason not the need — ii. 4 

more than nature needs (j'fju.) — ii. 4 

for true need, — you heavens (;cp.) — ii. 4 

and must needs taste his folly — ii. 4 

from that place I shall no leading need. . — i v. 1 

I mtist needs after him, madam ,. — iv. 5 

'twas no need, I trow, to bid me.. Romeo 4- Juliet, i. 3 

God send me no need of thee! — iii. 1 

when, indeed, there is no need — iii. 1 

for here we need it not — iii. 5 

it needs must be by stealth — iii. 5 

ibr I have need of many orisons .... — iv. 3 
do .you need my help? No, madam\. — iv. 3 
to bed, and rest; for thou hast need. . — iv. 3 
my dismal scene I needs must act alone — iv. 3 
I needs must wake her: madam (rep.) — iv. !-> 
an' if a man did need a poison now. . — v. 1 
thought did but forerun my need .. — v. 1 
need and oppression starveth in th.y e.yes — v. I 

there needs no gliost, my lord, come Hanilet, i. 6 

and mercy at your most need help you! — i. 5 
the need, we have to use you, did iirovoke — ii. 2 

you could, for a need, study a speech — ii. 2 

or, if thou wilt needs marry — i i i . 1 

youneednot tell us what lord Hamlet., — iii. 1 

such love must needs be treason — iii. 2 

for who not needs, shall never lack — iii. 2 

when he needs what you have gleaned.. — iv. 2 

her mood will needs be pitied — iv. 5 

and you must needs have heard — v. 2 

but thou must needs be sure, my spiiit. .Otiiello, i, 1 

if thou wilt needs damn thyself — i. 3 

and needs no other suitor, but his likings — iii. 1 

frowth again, it needs must wither .... — v. 2 
must needs report the trutli — v. 2 

what needs this iterance, woman? — v. 2 

NEEDED— nor never needed that. Taming of Sli. iv. 3 

my armour. 'Tis not needed yet Macbeth, v. 3 

wliat needed then that terrible despatch. . Lear, i. 2 
NEEDEIi-the absence of the needer. Co«o/n)«is, iv. 1 

NEEDI'UIj— of needful value Meas.forMeas.i. 1 

the needful bits and curbs — i. 4 

it is but needful; mercy is not — ii. 1 

let her have needful, but not lavish.. — ii. 2 
do more than that.if more were needful — ii. 3 

needful that you frame the season Much Ado, i. 3 

tousseemeth it a needful course -Love'sL.Lost, ii. I 
they shall be no more than jieeiH'al. . AlfslVell, iv. 3 
'tis needful, ere 1 can perfect mine . . — iv. 4 

'twere needful I denied it Winter's Tale, i. 1 

but needful conference, about some — ii. 3 

this, and wliat needful else Blacbeih, v. 7 

the time but needful woe KingJolm, v. 7 

vet needful 'tis to fear 1 He)n 1/ 7 r. iv. 4 

'tis needful, that the most '2 Henry I r. iv. 4 

never so needful on the earth 1 Henry I' I. iv. 3 

of soldiers to this needful war ZHenryVI. ii. 1 

haste is needful in this desperate — iv. 1 

now then itis morethan needful .... — iv. 6 

from me this most needful note Richard lILv.'i 

'tis a needful fituess Henry VIIL ii. 4 

bend we our needful talk.... rco!Yus<S-Cressi'(ia, iv. 4 

so needful for this present Cymbeline, iv. 3 

as you think needful of the man . . TitusAndron, v. 1 

no needful thing omitted Pericles, y. 3 

bestow your needful counsel to our , Lear, ii. 1 

provision which shall be needful — ii. 4 

aueedful iCol.Knt. needy] time .. .Romeo S,- Jul. iii. 5 
to help me sort such needful ornaments — iv. 2 
needful in our loves, fitting our duty?. .Ha?nW, i. 1 

in the cap of youth, yet needful too — iv. 7 

with wliat else needful your good grace. Othello, i. 3 

NEEDLE— go ply thy needle.. Taming of aiireu; ii. 1 

marry, sir, with needle and thread... — iv. 3 

thread the postern of a needle's eye.Richard II. v. 5 

by the prick of their needles Henry V. ii. 1 

stop the eye of Helen's needle. . Troilus S,- Cress, ii. 1 

myself by with a needle Cymbeline, i. 2 

pointed him as sharp as my needle .. — i. 4 

so delicate with her needle! Otlietlo, iv. 1 

NEEDLESS— needless process hy.Meas. for Mens. v. 1 
how needless was it then to ask.. Love'sL.Lost, ii. 1 
weeping in the needless stream . . As youLitie it, ii. 1 
sigh at each his needless heavings.^r/7t/er'.\V'a/(?, ii. 3 

a volley of our needless shot KingJolm, v. a 

I prove a needless coward! Ric/mrd III. iii. 2 

that matter needless Troilus 4'Cressida, i. 3 

the most needless creatures living. 7V7non ofAth. i. 2 

their needless vouches?^ Coriotanus, ii. 3 

and brain with needless .jealousy. ...Ci/Hifceime, v. 4 

needless diffidences, banishment Lear, i. 2 

NEEDLEWOllK, pewter .... Taming of Slrrew, ii. 1 
NEEDLY will be ranked with. . Roweo 'Sf Juliet, iii. 2 
NEED'ST-nor need'st thou xnneh.TiioGen. n/;->/-.i.3 

when thou need'st him \ Henry IV. ii. 2 

what need'st thou run so Richard III. iv. 4 

if winterly, thou need'st but keep .. Cijmbcline, iii. 4 

thou need'st not to be gone Romeo ^-Juliet, iii. 5 

NEEDY— a needy, hollow-eyed ..Comedy o/Eir. v. 1 

not tax the needy commons iHtnry 1^1. iii. 1 

corn, to make j'our needy bread Pericles, i. 4 

{_Col.Knt.'] in such a needy time . . Romeo ^Jul. iii. 5 
iu his needy ohop a tortoise hung.... — v. 1 



NE[ 

NEEDY— needy m.an must sell., Romeo S Juliet, v. I 
N EE 1A)~[ Col. "NE E DLE]— 
with our neelds created both ....Mid.N.'sDr. iii. 2 
their neelds to launces, and their.... A'mg-Jo/ai, v. 2 
she would with sharp neeld ..I'erictcs, iv. (Gowcr) 
with her iieeld composes nature's — v. (Glower) 
NE'ER-IvEGGED before .... Taming of Shreu', iii. 2 

NE'ER-TOUCHED vestal Antony ^ Cleo. iii. 10 

K EEZE, and swear a meriier hour. Mid. N.'s Dr. ii. 1 
N EFAS— sit fas aut nefas, till I find . . Titus And. ii. 1 

N EGATION hath no taste Troilus <S Cressidn, v. 2 

NEGATIVE— your fournegatives.7'Me//MAV4'/i/, v. I 
or else be impudently negative . . Winter's Jule, i. 2 

NEGLECT my studies TwoGen.ofl'erona,\. 1 

she did neglect her loolting-glass .... — iv. 4 

out of my neglect, was — v. 4 

that thou neglect me not .. Measure for Measure, v. 1 

strike me, neglect me, lose me Mid.N.'slJr. ii. 2 

for my neglect of his almi{,'lity.. £o»e's X..Los(, iii. I 

lose and neglect the creeping As you Like it, ii. 7 

thrown into neglect the pomnous — v. 4 

niaideu, do you neglect tk..m? .. Winler'sTale, iv. 3 

awhile we liiust nejilect our 1 Henry I ;". i. 1 

thou dost neglect him, Thomas 'IHenrylV. iv. 4 

licart's-ease must kings neglect Henry I', iv. 1 

if not through your neglect iHenrylT. v. 2 

my absence doth neglect no (ivcal. Richard JUL iii. 4 
neglect [Co/. A'n/. -deferred] the visitation — iii. 7 
gi:od Cromwell, neglect him not. . Henry nil. iii. 2 

clap round fines, for neglect — v. 3 

construe any further my neglect. . Julius Ca-sar, i. 2 

from their coldest neglect my love Lear, i. I 

perceived a most faint neglect of late.... — i. 4 

infirmity doth still neglect all office — ii. 4 

1 shall first begin, and both neglect .. Hamlet, iii. 3 

NiCGLECTED act freshly Meus. for Mens. i. 3 

sakes have we neglected time. ...Love's L.Lost, v. 2 
a beard neglected; which you ,.Asyou Like it, iii. 2 

neglected my sworn duty in liichardll. i. 1 

and not neglected; else, if heaven .. — iii. 2 
hy the fatal and neglected English . . Henry F. ii. i 
it once it be neglected, ten to one . . 1 Henry t' I. v. 4 
or at least strangely neglected? . .Henry V III. iii. 2 
of rule hath been neglected .... Troilus ^ Cress, i . 3 
neglected, rather; and then .... Antony Sf Cleo. ii. 2 
their glory, if neglected, so princes.... yniWes, ii. 2 
the demand of our neglected tribute . . Hamlet, iii. 1 
of his grief sprung from neglected love .. — iii. 1 
excuse my manners, that so neglected. . Otiiello, v. 1 

NEGLECTING worldly ends Tempest, i. 2 

neglecting it may do much dangev. Romeo ^-Jul. v. 2 

neglecting an attempt of ease Othello, i. 3 

NEGLECTINGLY, 1 know not what.l Henry 1 1', i. 3 

NIOGLECTION doth betray 1 Hejiry yi. i v. 3 

this negleetion of degree it is. . Troilus <§■ Crrssida, i. 3 
if negleetion should therein make me.I'ericles, iii. 3 

NEGLTECT'ST- if thou neglect'st Tempest, i. 2 

NEGLIGENCE— or my negligence, TvelfUu\,ghi. i.4 
it is something of my negligence .... — iii. 4 

this is thy negligence Mid.N.'sDrenm, iii. 2 

but that his negligence, his follj; . . Winter's Tale, i. 2 
it was my negligence not weighing w ell — i. 2 
negligence, fit for a fool to fall hyl. llinryrill. iii. 2 
my rest and negligence befriend. 'Troilus <5 Cies:.. v. G 
or that the negligence may well be . . Cymiet.me, i. 1 
put on wliat weary negligence you please.. Ifai-, i. 3 
who, already, wise in our negligence .... — iii. 1 
both the worlds I give to negligence ■ ■ Hamlet, iv. 5 
by night and negligence, the fii'e is spied. 0//ie//o, i. 1 

she let it drop by negligence — iii. 3 

NEGLIGENT-negligent student!. /.oiv'sL. Lost, iii. 1 
serious trust, and therein negligent .. Winter' sT. i. 2 
I may be negligent, foolish, and fcari'ul — i. 2 

if ever I were wilful negligent — i. 2 

negligent and heedless discipline! ..IHenryVl. iv. 2 
lay negligent and loose regard.. Troilus i^- Cress, iii. 3 
and we in negligent da.naa\Anlony ^ Cleopatra, iii. 6 
more admiretl, than by the negligent — ■ iii. 7 

NEGOCIATE with my face Twelfth Night, i. 5 

let every eye negociate for itself .... Much Ado, i\. 1 
NEGOCIATIONS all must slack. Troilus^- Cress, iii. 3 
NEGRO— up of the negro's hellj.Mer.of Tenice, iii. h 
NEiF- give me your neif, monsieur.7l//(/.A'.'sflr. iv. 1 

sweet knight, I kiss thy neif 'iHcnrylf. ii. 4 

NEIGH-neigh, and bark, and gruat. Mid. N. Dr. iii. I 
nebour; neigh, abbreviated, ne ..Love's L.Lost, v. 1 

his neigh is like the bidding of Henry I', iii. 7 

in high and boastful neighs — iv. (chorus) 

how our steeds for present service neigh — iv. 2 
horses did neigh, and dying n\en. .JuliusCo'sar, ii. 2 
and the neighs of horse to tell ..Antony 4' Cleo. iii. 6 
they hear the Roman horses ne\gh..Cymbeline, iv. 4 
voii'll have vour nephews neigh to j'ou. . Otiiello, i. 1 
NEIGHBOUR, vccatur, nebour ...Love'sL.Lost, v. 1 

I stole into a neighbour thicket — v. 2 

he is a mar\ellous good neighbour .. — .."V" ^ 

my neighbours shall cry aim Merry Wives, iii. 2 

give them their charge, neighbour ..Much Ado, iii. 3 
come hither, neighbour Sea-coal .. .. — iii. 3 
and good night: come, neighbour .. — iii. 3 
one word more, honest neighbours .. — iii- 3 
would you with me, honest neigb.bour? — iii- 5 
neighbour Verges. Neighbours (rep.) — iii- 5 
alas, good neighbour! Indeed, neighbour — iii. 5 

cf-me neighbour — v. 1 

lived in tlie time of good neighbours — v. 2 
some honest neighbours will not..l7'V/. K.'s Dr. iii. 1 
niin-al down between the two neighbours — v. 1 
the Scottish lord, his neighbour.. "^Uw.o/ ;'t'/i(ti;,i. 2 

to whom I am a neighbour — \l. \ 

or made her neighbours believe — iii. 1 

as she, such is her neighbour? .. ..As you Like it, ii. 7 
wit going to your neighbour's bed .. — iv. I 

down in the neighbour bottom — iv. 3 

I have told my neighbour AU'sWell, iii. 5 

neighbour Baptista { rep.) .... Taming of^lirew, ii, 1 
neighbour, this is a gilt very grateful — ii. 1 
I am your neighbour, and was suitor — ii. 1 
neighbours and friends, though bride — iii. 2 
by his next neighbour (rep.) Winter's Tale, i. 2 



NET 



[ 527 ] 



NJOIGUBOiril-sfiU !Kii;lilii.iir mine.. 'I 
tlic iinngination I'i lii: laijiiboui'S .. 

and thismv iic)iil!li.,m- rno":' 

iioiKhliniinieLinK'-;: I.muu- sacred.... / 
jilouglii'd I'l' « I' 'i ■: I'liboiirs swords — i. 3 

come, lu 1 ' i >ii ., we'll call ..inc;i)i//r. ii. 1 

fomc, lu I I.; ... .i! . toy shalllcad.. — ji. 2 
I must live iiai.iiiy.;.t luy neighbours — ii. 4 
neiglibour Quickly, says lie, receive — .ii. 4 
now, neighbour confines, purge you.illeiirijlV. iv. 4 

a giddy neiglibour to ns Henry I', i. 2 

nnd suclr another neighboxir — id. 6 

our bad neighbour makes us early .. — iv. 1 
IKut.] on tlie vigil feast his neii-'hbours — iv. 3 
can any of your nelHhbours tell mc .. — v. 2 
neighbour Horner, I drink to ()rii.)..2rJeji>-i/F/. ii. 3 
lu 10, neighbour, here's a cup ofcnarneeo — ii. 3 
^..od double beer, neighbour: drink.. — ii. 3 
cannot lie with his neighbour's wife, nidinid HI-,]- 4 

good-morrow, neighbour .o — ij. 3 

neighbours, God speed! — ii. 3 

no more shall be the neighbour to my — iv. 2 

cheer .your neighbours Henry I'll J. i. 4 

our ne'ighbours.the upper Germany.. — v. 2 
songs of peace to alibis neighbours .. — .v. 4 
when neighbour states, but for. Timon nf Athens, iv. 3 
minehouest neighbours, will you.... Conotoinrs, i. 1 

good-e'en, our neighbours — iv. 6 

farewell, kind noiglibours » — iv.fi 

and die among our neighbours — v. 3 

mine honest neiglibours shouted ..Julius Crpsar, i, 2 

our neiglibour shepherd's sonl Cymbeline, i. 2 

my neighbour's on the approbation .... — ..i. .5 

hush, g^iutle neighbours Periclrs, iii. 2 

with thv breath "this neighbour air. Romen fyJul. ii. 6 

lug the "gilts into the neighbour room.. HamW. iii. 4 

NEIGHBOirREDby fruit of baser ....UmryV.i. 1 

he as well neigliboured, pitied, .and hear, i. 1 

so neighboured to his youth Hamlet, ii. 2 

NEIGHBOmillOOD.lnstruction.. 77)1101! o/.4(/i. iv. I 
trembled at the ill neighbourhood ....Henry I', i. 2 
nei;jIil>ourliood and christian-like accord — v. 2 

NElGllBOTJRING lan"uages AWsWell, iv. I 

and neighbouring gentlemen lHf»);//r. iii. 1 

light uppn neighbouring ponds CymhtUne, i. 5 

descried upon our neighbouring shore ..Pericles, i. 4 

some neighboiu-ing nation, taking — i. 4 

KEIGIIBOUEIjY charity in \i'm\. .Mer.oJVenke, i. 2 
mvlove; is not that neitrhbonrly ?./).« !/ou/,/7.e (7, iii. 5 
NI'UGnBOUR-STAIBTED steel ..Uomeo ^Juliet, i. 1 
NEIGHED— whoueighed so high.. /)»i(o»iyt?«(?o. i. 5 
NKEGHING in likeness of afilly foal. iV/t;. A'. 'sDi-.ii.l 

bellowing, and neighing loud Mer. of Venice, v. 1 

loud 'larums, neighing steeds. . Taming of Slirew, i. 2 
tlieir neighing coursers daring of ..2HenrylV. iv. 1 
farewell the neighing steed, and the. . . . Ot/iclto, iii. 3 
N E LIj— what's her name? Nell . . Comedy of En: iii. 2 
art to marry his sister Nen..2H'f>iri/7F. ii. 2 (letter) 

tiiat he is married to Nell Quickly Henryy. ii. 1 

nor shall my Nell keep lodgers — ii. l 

that my Neil [CoZ.-DoU] is dead — v. 1 

O Nell.sweet Nell, if thou dost iHeniyri. i. 2 

come, Nell, thou wilt ride — i. 2 

sweet Nell, ill can thy noble 

be patient, gentle Nell 

ah, Nel 1, forbear 

greatest help is quiet, gentle Nell .... 

niy Nell, I take my leave 

Nell, he is fidl of harmony . . Troitus^ CressiUa, iii. ) 
but my Nell would not have it so ... . — iii. 1 
let in Susan Grindstone and Nell. /Jomeo ^Juliet, i. 5 

NEMEAN lion roar Love's L. Lost, iv. 1 

11.: hardy as the Nemean lion's nerve Hamlet, i. 4 

NEPHEW— his nephew Proteus. . TwoGen. of Ver. i. 3 
when your youn g nephew Titus . . Twelfili Niffht, v. 1 

be yet my nephew: my brother Much Ado, v. I 

the duke of Saxony's nephew?.. ..Mer. of Venice, i. 2 
nephew, and right royal sovereign . . King John, i. 1 

hath made your nepbewmad \HenryIV. i. 3 

tell your nephew, the prince — v. I 

O no, my nephew must not know .... — v. 2 

my nephew's trespass maybe well .. — v. 2 

nephew, challenged you to single 

of Orleans, nephew to the king . 

keeper, will my nephew come . . . 

your loving nephew now is come . . . 

your nephew, late despised Richard. . — ii. .■) 

that cause, fair nephew, hath imprisoned — ii.5 

deiiosed his nephew Richard — ii..5 

with silence, nephew, he thou politic — ii.5 
jiephew, what means this |)assionate..2Hen);/r/. i. 1 

against my king and nephew — i. 2 

kiss your princely nepliew SHenry VI. v. 7 

tliy nephew's souls bid thee despair, fiu/mrrf III. v. 3 

the queen's great nepliew Henry VIII. ii. 2 

my royal nephew, and your name — iv. 2 

Trojan blood, nephew to llectm-.Troilns ^ Cress, i. ? 
■welcome, nephews, from successful . . 'I'ilus And. i. 2 
M.vnephew.Mutius' deeds do plead.. — i. 2 
to inter his noble nephew here in .. .. — i. 2 
the tribune and his nephews kneel .. — i. 2 
to ransom m.v two. nermewslrom their — iii. I 

and nephew, break the parle — v. 3 

6|ieak, nephew, were you by when. Romeo iSJii//.?/, 1. 1 

hears of this his nephew's purpose Hamlet, i. 2 

to suppress his nephew's levies — ii. 2 

one Ijucianns, nephew to the king — iii. 2 

the nephew to old Norway. Fortinbras .. — iv. 4 

You'll have your nephews' neigh to you . . Oihello, i. i 

Kr.PTUNE— mo^t mighty Neptune .... Tempest, i. 2 

do chase the ebbing Nciitune — v. 1 

Biit with me on Neptune's yellow . . Mid. K.'sUr. ii. 2 
opening on Neptune with fair blessed — iii. 2 

the green Neptune a ram Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

of the dreadful Neptune, to greet a man — v. 1 
win all great Nejitxme's ceean wash. . Macbeth, ii. 2 
tliat Neptune's arms who clippetli . . Kinff John, v. 2 

siege of watery Neptune Hicfiard II. ii. l 

too wide for Neptune's hips IHenrylV. iii. 1 

or made a toast for Neptune . . Troilus ^ CressiUa, i. 3 



— ii. 9 



iii. 4 
iii. 1 
iii. 4 
v. I 
V. 1 
V. 1 
V. 1 
V. 1 



....HenriiV. i 
. . 1 Henry VI. i 



NEPTUNE-clamour Neptune's ear. 7'fo,7..<; Ov.w v. 2 
— iv. 1 to make vast Neptune weep.... 'I'imonifAlhi'ns^ v. U 

iv. 3 ho would not flatter Neptune for ..Ciii'ii:l,iiur.:,Vu. \ 

rdll. i. 1 o'er green Neptune's back.. /lii/nH;/.S( /t'<7'«'/ II, iv. 12 

whicli stands as Neptune's park ....Cymhrlive, iii. 1 

shakes on Neptune's billow. . . . I'erlcles, iii. cUo" cr) 

give you up to the masked Neptune — iii- 3 

god Neptune's annual feast to keep — v. (Gower) 

luinouring of Neptune's triumphs .... — v. I 

whose influence Neptune's empire stands. I/ciwW, i.l 

Neptune's salt wash, and Tellus' orbed — iii. 2 

NKQUE— iaeulis, neque areu .... Tilns Andron. iv. 2 

NEREIDES— like the Nereides ..An'ony^-Cleo. ii. 2 

NEllISSA— b.v my troth, Nerissa. .Mer.of Venice, i. 2 

is it not hard, ISferissa, that I — i. 2 

I will do anything, Nerissa, ere I will — i. 2 

come, Nerissa: sirrah, go before 

come, draw tlie curtain, Nerissa 

come, come, Nerissa, for I long to see — 

Nerissa, and the rest, stand all aloof — 

is tliis true, Nerissa? — 

Nerissa, eheer yon stranger — 

my maid Nerissa, and myself — 

only attendeill by Nerissa here — 

come on, Nerissa; I have work in hand — 
they shall Nerissa; but in such .... — 
go in, Nerissa, give order to m.v servants — 
Nerissa teaches me what to believe — 

Nerissa there, her elerk — 

tlrat my Nerissa shall be sworn on . . — 

as keeping safe Nerissa's ring — 

NERO-[C'o(.A'n(.] Nero, play on MIcnryVI. i. 4 

and Nero will be tainted Sllenryl'I. iii. 1 

Nero is an angler in the lake of darkness, imr. iii 6 

let not ever the soul of Nero enter Handel, iii. 2 

NEROES— voii bloody Neroes King John, v. 2 

N EHi I- LIKE [Co;./Yn<.-like thee, Nero]l Henry Vl.\.i 
NER'VE— nerves are in their infancy .. Tempest, i. 2 
know the very nerves of state ..Meas.for Meas. i. 5 
my firm nerves shall never tremble. . Mac6c//i, iii. i 
nerve and bone of Greece .... Troilus ^- Cressida, i. 3 
the strongest nerves, and small .... Coriolanus, i. 1 
that nourishes our nerves.. .4n(oJi!/^C/eopai;u, iv. s 

strains his young nerves Cymbetine, iii. 3 

hardy as the Nemean lion's nerve Hamlet, i. 4 

NER'V'II — he overcame the Nervii../!((/MsC<«fl)-, iii. 2 
NIOHVY— dark spirit, in's nervy arm. Co>7oto?i!is. ii. 1 

N ESSUS— he parallels Nessus All's Well, iv. 3 

the sliirt of Nessus is upon me..Antony^Cleo. iv. 10 

NEST— show thee a jay's nest Tempest, ii. 2 

overjo.yed with finding a bird's nest. . Much Ado, ii. 1 
I take it, have stolen Ms bird's nest — ii. i 
bird hath done to her own nest , . As you Like it, iv. ) 

e'en a crow of the same nest .'Ill's H'ell, i v. 3 

a nest of traitors! Winter' sTale, ii. 3 

set on the head of a wasp's nest .... — iv. 3 
from her nest the lapwing . . Comedy of Errors, iv. 2 

lier young ones in her nest Macbeth, iv. 2 

that comes near his nest King John, v. 2 

did oppress our nest 1 Henry IV. v. 1 

to her unguarded nest the weasel Henry V. i. 2 

a nest of hollow bosoms — ii. (chorus) 

see here the tainture of thy nest ZHenryVI. ii. l 

seek not a scorpion's nest — iii. 2 

finds the partridge in the puttock's nest — iii. 2 
him that climbed unto their nest . .SHenry VI. ii. 2 

buildeth in our aiery's nest Richard III. i. 3 

where, in that nest of spicery — iv. i 

in Cleopatra's sails their nests.. .4)?(oni/^C/fo. iv. 10 
never winged from view o' tlie nest.Cymbeline, iii. 3 

in a. great pool a swan's nest — iii. 4 

nephew herein virtue's nest TUusAndron. i. 2 

own birds famisli in their nests .... — ii. 3 
must climb a bird's nest soon . . Romeo Sf Juliet, ii. b 
lady, come from that nest of death .. — v. 3 

NES'rOR play at push-pin Lore'sL. 1.ost,\v. 3 

Nestor swear the jest be Mer. of Venice, i. 1 

pursuivants of death, Nestor like ..1 Henry VI. ii. 5 

the orator as well as Nestor ZllenryVI. iii. 2 

Nestor shall apply thy latest.... 3'ro!7!« ^ Cress, i. 3 

venerable Nestor, hatched in — i. 3 

play me Nestor; hem, and stroke .. — i. 3 

'tis Nestor right! now play — j. 3 

tell liim of Nestor, one that — i. 3 

Nestor,— What says Ulysses? — i. 3 

old Nestor, whose wit was mouldy . . — ii. 1 
thus once again says Nestor from .. — ii. 2 

he's Nestor, instructed by the — ii. 3 

but pardon, father Nestor — ii. 3 

so much for Nestor. I'll take — iv. i 

'tis the old Nestor. Let me — iv. 5 

most reverend Nestor, I am glad — iv. 5 

old Nestor tarries; and you too — v. 1 

old mouse-eaten dry cheese, Nestor. . — v. 4 
bid Nestor bring me spices, ink and . . Pericles, iii. 1 

NET— fear the net, nor lime l^lut-bcih.iv. 2 

rather choose to hide them in a net Hemyi: i. 2 

doth the cone.y struggle in the net ..HHeiiryl'l. i. 4 

the net has fallen upon me UcnryVUl. i. \ 

and cast your nets TitusAndronicus, iv. 3 

for going on deatli's net, whom Pericles, i. 1 

ho! come, and bring away the nets .... — ii. ] 

I'll go draw up the net — ii. 1 

here s a fish hangs in the net — ii. 1 

and tlie painter with his nets .... Roi>ieo ^ Juliet, i. 2 
make the net, that shall enme.sh them. .6//ie//o, ii. 3 
NETHER-hangingoftliy nether lip. l//f»iy/r. ii. 4 
that these our nether crimes so speedily. .Z-raj-, iv. 2 
Palestine, fora touch of his nether lip. .O/Adio, iv. 3 

wliy gnaw you so your nether lip? — v. 2 

NETIIEKLAN I)S? O sir, I ..Comedi/ of I'rrnrs, iii. 2 
NETHERSTOCKS, and mend \.\\zm.\'UemylV. ii. ^ 

then he wears wooden netherstocks i.ear, ii. 4 

NETTLE— sow it with nettle seed Tempest, i. 2 

nettle [Cof. Knl. metal] ot India... Tirelfih.Mnhi, ii. 6 

thorns, nettles, tails of wasps? IVin'ter's 'Vale, i. 2 

yield stinging nettles to mine Richard II. iii. 2 

out of this nettle, danger \ Henry I v. ii. 3 

grows underneath the nettle Henry V. \. I 

an 'twere a nettle against May . . Troilus t, ciess. i. 2 



II. 4 



11.4 



— V. 2 



NEW 



NETTLE-cal! a nettle, but a nettle. Conofamis, ii. I 
iiiniing the nettles at the .... TilusAmJ. ii. 4 (letter) 

lifiiilock, nettles, ciickoo-flowerB tra)-,iv.4 

of eriiwlidwers, nettles, daisies Hamlet, iv. J 

so tliat if we will pla.nt nettles Oihello, i . 3 

NETTLED— with rods, nettled, and.. I HenrylV. i. 3 

Lewis stamps as he were nettled ..ZHcnry'vi. iii. 3 

NEUTRAL- loyal and neutral, in ....Maclielh, ii. 3 

from one that's of a neutral heart Lear, iii. 7 

like a neutral to his will and matter . . Hamlet, ii. 2 
NEUTRE— I do remain as neiitre ...Richard II. ii. 3 
NEVERDAUNTED Percy toi\\e.. ..-iHenrylV. i. 1 
NE'VERDYING honour hath he.... l/;enii/'/r. iii. 2 
NICVERIIEEDIOD iCol. neverneededJ''-'o(m;rinws,v. I 

NEVERQUENClUNG fire Richard II. v. n 

NEVERWITHEKING banks of ... . Cymbetine, v. 4 
NE"VlL-you, ecusin Nevil, as I may. 2 HenrylV. iii. 1 

I will take the Nevils' parts 'illeirry VI. i. 1 

do more in England than the Nevils — i. 3 
the Nevils are thy subjects to command — ii. 2 
and, Nevil, this I do assure myself. . — ii. 2 
and never of the Nevils' noble race.. — iii. 2 

Warwick, and the Nevils all _ iv. I 

my father's badge, old Nevil's crest.. — v. I 

NE'W— new created the creatures Tempest, i. 2 

or else new formed them — i. 2 

being rather new dyed — ii. l 

furnish it anon with new contents .... — ii. 2 
has a new master, get anew man — ii. 2 (soiii;) 

O brave new world, that has — v." I 

'tis new to thee — v. I 

what is the news? The best news — v. i 

and what news else betideth .. Tuo Gen. of Ver. i. I 

what news. There is no news — i. 3 

of much good news? — ii.4 

'tis no nnweleome news to you — ii.4 

once more, new servant, welcome.... — ii.4 

cannot hear good news (>ep.) — iii. I 

what news with your mastership? (rep.') — iii. 1 

plead a new slate in thy — v. 4 

old cloak makes a new jerkiu .... Merry Wives, i. 3 

what news? how does pretty — i. 4 

this news distracts me! — ii.2 

what news with you? — iii. 3 

and shall make thee anew doublet.. — iii. 3 

to a dog for a new year's gift — iii. .■) 

story of the prodigal, fresh and new — iv. 5 
how now? what news from her?.. TwelfthNight, i. 1 

than are in the new map — iii. 2 

what's the news with you? Meas.forMeas. i. 2 

and the new deputy now for — i. 3 

but this new governor awakes — i. 3 

like man new made — ii.2 

what news abroad, friar? (>fp.) — iii. 2 

this news is old enougli O'cp.) — iii. 2 

what is the news from this good deputy? — i v. 1 

now, sir, what news ()Tp. iv. 3) — iv. 2 

every month a new sworn brother. . . . Much Ado, i. 1 
I can tell you strange news that you — i. 2 
who comes here? what news Borachio? — i. 3 

but hear these ill news with the — ii. l 

carving the fashion of a new doublet — ii.3 
as great a soil in the new gloss of. ... — iii. 2 

as to show a child bis new coat — iii. 2 

1 like the new tire within excellently — iii. 4 

now, signior! what news? — v. i 

will you go hear this news, signior? — v. 2 
silver bow new [Coi.-now] hent..Mid.X.'sL>ream, i. 1 
what's the news with thee? Full of. . — i.l 

and by the next new moon _ i.l 

to seek new friends and stranger .... — i. i 

me! what news, my lovel — iii. 2 

and fetch thee new nuts — iv. i 

now thou and 1 are new in amity . . — iv. i 

new ribbons to your pumps _ iv. 2 

nightly revels, and new jollity — v. 1 

the world's new fashion planted.. Love's L.Lost, i. 1 

for a new devised court' sy — 1. a 

and learns news of him — ii. i 

thy news, Boyet? — v. 2 

for the news I bring, is lieav.y — v. 2 

how now! what news? Merclum' ofi'enice, i. 2 

what news on the Rialto? (jp;j. iii. l) — i. 3 

1 will tell you news of your son — ii.2 

who, indeed, gives rare new liveries — ii. 2 

who is thy new master's guest — ii.3 

friend Launcelot, what's the news? — ii.4 

with my new master the christian .. — ii.4 

to seal love's bonds new made — ii.i; 

the times, to be new varnished? .... — ii. (i 
what news among the merehan Is? .. — iii. 1 

what news from Genoa? hast — iii. 1 

no news of them?— why, so — iii. 1 

good news, good news: ha! ha! .... — iii. 1 
Be content, and seek no new .... — iii. 2 (scmll) 
if that the youth of my new interest — iii. 2 

what's the news from Venice? — iii. 2 

from the doctor, new come from Padua — iv. [ 

with his horn full of good news — v. 1 

and I have better news in store for you — v. 1 
new news at the new court? (rep.'i.AsyouLilieit, i. 1 

the new duke ()■(>;).) — i.l 

with his month full of news — i. 2 

monsieur le Beau: what's the news? — i. 2 
Ganymede, my new mistress's brother — iii. 2 

there begins new matter — iv. 1 

all but new things disdain All's IFetl.i. 2 

there's news for you; you have a new — ii.3 

yonder is heavy news within — iii. 2 

'some comfort in the news, some comfort — iii. 2 

prav, what's the news? Taming of shrew, i. 1 

I'll tell you news indifferent good .. — i. 2 

news, old news, and such news (r<7).) — iii. 2 
my old master, and my new mistress — iv. 1 

the news? Why, Jack, boy! (rep.) .. — iv. 1 
the serving-men in their new fustian — iv. 1 

I pray thee, ne vs. First, know — iv. I 

what "news with you (re/). V. 2) — iv. 3 

what is the news i' the court? Winter's Tale, i . 2 

our services to a ime new prince — ii. 1 



NEWS is mortal to tlie queen .... mnier'sTal<;\\i. 2 

to Polixeiiesj new woomy queen.... — 'ii. 2 

but let Time's news be known .. — iv. (chorus) 

he is gone aboard a new sliip to piuge — iv. 3 

the news, Kogero? — v. 2 

tliis news, w liieli is called true — v. 2 

some new grace will be born — v. 2 

and be new beaten home! .... Comedy r,f Errors, ii. I 

■would you create me newV — iii. 2 

picture of old Adam new appareled? — iv. 3 

arms, and new supplies of men Marbeth, i. 2 

JNIacbetli, the news of t!iy success — i. 3 

new honours come upon hini — i. 3 

he brings great news; the raven — i. 5 

hownowl what news? He lias — _i. 7 

events, new hatched to the woeful time — ii- 3 
destroy your sight with a new Gorgon — ii. 3 

old robes sit easier than our new! — ii. 4 

should quickly have a new fatlier .... — iv. 2 

each new morn, new widows ()■(■;).).... — iv. 3 

each minute teems a new one — iv. 3 

what news more? All is confirmed — v. 3 

a Jiazard of new fortunes here King .7o/ih, ii. 1 

this news hatli made thee — iii. 1 

in tlie likeness of a new untrinimed — iii. 1 

before this truce, but new before .... — iii. 1 

all, ahu'k, liow new is husband — iii. 1 

even at that news lie dies — iii. 4 

is as an ancient tale new told — iv. 2 

so new a fashioned robe — iv. 2 

wliiit news with you? — iv. 2 

Willi more ill news, for it — iv. 2 

hear'st thou the news abroad — iv. 2 

swallowing a tailor's news — iv. 2 

this news was brought to Richard .. — v. 3 

not let me welcome tliis good news . . — v. 3 

my friendsl new flight; and Imppy.. — v. 4 

here: what news? the count Mclun — v. .I 

ah, foul shrewd news! beshrew , — v. 5 

sans compliment, what news? (>rp.) — v. 6 

news fitting to the night (rep.) — v. f> 

but till thy news be uttered — v. 7 

you breathe these dead news in — v. 7 

and furbish new tlie name Rldnnit II. i. 3 

Bushy, wliat news? old John — i. 4 

so it be new, there's no respect — ii . 1 

I am a prophet new inspired — ii. 1 

and daily new exactions are — ii. 1 

the wind sits fair for news to go — ii. 2 

the news is very fair and good — iii. 3 

tongue sound tiiis unplensiug news .. — iii. 4 

to breatiie this news — iii. 4 | 

for telling me this news of woe — iii. 4 

intend to thrive in this new world .. — iv. 1 

gain of care, by new care won — iv. 1 

must win a new world's crown — v. 1 

well in this new spring of time — v. 2 

wliat news from Oxford? — v. 2 

I pray God make tliee new — v. 3 

the latest news we hear is (rep.) .... — v. 6 

new broils to be commeueed \HeiinjIV. i. 1 

loaden witii heavy news — i. 1 

unwelcome news came from tlie north — i. 1 

of likelihood the news was told — i. 1 

sir Walter Blunt, new lighted from — i. 1 

and hisehin, new reaped, showed.... — i. 3 

Charles' wain is over the new cliiuuiey — ii. 1 

what news? case ye, case ye — ii, 2 

ttiere's villanous news abroad — ii. 4 

beard is turned white with the news — ii. 4 

in a new channel, fair and evenly.... — iii. 1 

keep my person fresh, and new — iii. 2 

wherefore do I tell these news to thee? — iii. 2 

now, Hal, to the news at court — iii. 3 

pray (Jod, my news be worth — iv. 1 

there is more news; I learned — iv. 1 

at the news of hurly-burly innovation — v. 1 

uncle, wl-.atnews? tlie king will .... — v. 2 

with anew wound in your thigh .... — v. 4 

brings other news tlian they iHeiiryll (indue.) 

what news, lord Bardolph? — i. ) 

certain news from Shrewsbury? ()'ep.) — i. 1 

rendered me these news for true .... — i. 1 

Tuesday last to listen after news — i. 1 

look here comes more news — i. I 

first bringer of unwelcome news .... — i. 1 

Westmoreland; this is the news at full — i. i 

but in new silk, and old sack — i. 2 

now, master Gower; what news? (rep.) — ii. 1 

two holes in the alewife's new petticoat — ii. 2 

with new himeiUing nncieut — i'. 3 

how now? what news? (jep. iv. 1).. .. — ii. 4 

liistory his bias to new rcncinbiance — iv. 1 

deliver to the army this nesvs of peace — iv. 2 

our news shall go before us — iv. 3 

and new happiness added to tliat.... — iv. 4 

look! here's more news. From enemies — i\' 4 

wherefore should these good news make — iv. 4 

I should rejoice now at this happy news — iv. 4 

heard he the good news yet? — iv. 4 

now sir, a new link to tile bucket.... — v. 1 

this new and gorgeous garment — v. 2 

come from the court with news! .... — v. 3 

happy news of price (rep.) — v. 3 

and shall good news be baffled? — v. 3 

what! I do bring good news? — v 3 

to have made new liveries — v. 5 

to line, and new repair, our towns.. . .Henry V. ii 

I Rieliard's body have interred new — iv. 

the gay new coats o'er the French .. — iv. 

hark! wliat new alarum is tliis — iv. 

news have I that my Nell is dead.. .. — v- 
these news would cause him once .AHtnryl'l. i. 

Dauphin? I have news tor him — i- 

a holy prophetess, new risen up — i 

and lay new platforms — ii. 

like a man new lialed Irom the rack — ii. 

doth beget new courage — iii. 

determined time thou gavest new date — iv. 

these news, my lords, may cheer .... — v. 



NEW— to England with this news....l Wcni;/'''- v. 3 

cold news for me llhiirul'l. i. 1 

with his new bride, and England's .. — i. 1 

thither go these news, as fast — i. 4 

tliis news, I think, hath turned — ii. 1 

what news from France? — iii. I 

cold news, lord Somerset (rep.) — iii. I 

wliat news, I pr'ythee? (j-ep.) — iii. 2 

and set a new nap upon it — iv. 2 

how now! what news? — iv. 4 

say, what news with thee? — v. 1 

come, thou new ruin of old — y. 2 

let us tell the queen these news SHcnry I'L i. I 

what news? why comest thou — i. 2 

the news; had he been slain (rep.) .. — ii. 1 

what fare? what news abroad? (rep.) — ii. 1 

if we should recount our baleful news — ii. I 

I drowned these news in tears — ii. 1 

caused him, by new act of parliament — ii. 2 

if these news be true — iii. 1 

and mistress smiles at her news (rep.) — iii. 3 

with him and his new bride (rep. iv. 1) — iii. 3 

of this new marriage (rep.) — iv. 1 

lord Bonville on your new wife's son — iv. 1 

what letters, or what news — iv. 1 

is new committed to the bishop — iv. 4 

these news, I must confess, are full .. — iv. 4 

what news, my friend? — iv. 6 

unsavoury news: but how made he.. — iv. 6 

liear no news of his repair? — v. 1 

the head is warm, and new cut off .. — v. 1 

even now we heard the news — v. 2 

be sure to hear some news — v. 6 

that you shall be new christened . . Richard 111. i. 1 

wliat news abroad? no news — i. j 

by St. Paul, this news is bad indeed — i. i 

to his new kingdom of perpetual .... — ii. 2 

liear you the news abroad? (rep.) .... — ii. :t 

doth the news hold of good king .... — ii. : 

what news? Such news (rep.) — Vu A 

for joy of this good news — iii. I 

what news, what news — iii. '_ 

he sends you this good news .=- i i i. 1 

I am no mourner for that news — iii. ;■ 

look for the news that the Guildliall — iii. ' 

dead-killing news! (rep.) — iv. 1 

what's tiie news? (rep.) — iv. 2 

kind Tyrrel! ami happy in thy news? — iv. s 

good news or bad, that thou (rey;.) .. — iv. ? 

howjnow? what news? (rep.) — iv. 4 

till thou bring better news. The news — iv. 4 

is taken, that is the best news — iv. 4 

is colder news, but yet they — iv. 4 

and he begins anew hell in \nmse\t.Hem y rill.i. 1 

a vessel follow that is new trimmed — i. 2 

new customs, though they be never so — i. 3 

they have all new legs — i . 3 

what news, sir Thomas Lovel ? — 1.3 

but the new proclamation that's .... — i. 3 

these news are everywhere — ii. 2 

Gardiner to me, my new secretary". . — ii. 2 

sustain more new disgraces — iii. 2 

to hear sneli news as this once — iii. 2 

no new device to beat this from — iii. 2 

I feel my heart new opened — iii. 2 

what news abroad? — iii. 2 

that's news indeed — iii. 2 

from the queen what is the news? . . — v. 1 

I have news to tell you; come — v. 1 

new opinions, divers, and dangerous — v. 2 

a favourer of this new sect? — v. 2 

Iier ashes new create another' — v. 4 

shall be, and make new nations — v. 4 

what news, .apneas, from the field. Troilus^r Cress, i. 1 

is it matter new to us — i. 3 

become as new into the world — iii. 3 

what news with you so early? — iv. 2 

batcli of nature, what's the news?,;. . — v. 1 

how now, what news? 'Union of Alliens, i. 2 

succession of new days this month . . — ii. 2 

by the persuasion of his new feasting — iii. 6 

how do you? wha'.'s the news? — iii. 6 

teem with new monsters , — iv. 3 

the news is, sir, tlie Volsces are Coriolanus, i. 1 

tell yon excellent news of your husband — i. 3 

there came news from him last night — i. 3 

yonder comes news: a wager' — i. 4 

thy news? the citizens of Corioli .... — i. b 

and bring thy news so late? — i. 6 

augurer tells me, we shall have news — ii. 1 

these liis new honours — _ii. 1 

Aufidius then bad made new head? — iii. 1 

we need not put new matter to his .. — iii. 3 

what's the news in Rome? — iv. 3 

I can tell you news; news, you rascals — iv. 5 

but, more of thy news? — iv. .5 

but tlie bottom of the news is — iv. 5 

some news is come, that turns — iv. t 

what news? (rep.) — iv. B 

'fai th we hear faithful news — iv. B 

I do not like this news. Nor I — iv. 6 

what's the news? Good news (rep.) .. — v. 4 

he watered his new plants witli dews — v. .■> 

my love to every new^ protester JullusCcesar, i. 2 

new honours that are heaped on Caisar — i. 2 

I could tell j'ou more news too — _ i. 2 

in the disposing of new dignities .... — iii. 1 

sirrah, what news? (rep.) — v. 3 

I'll tell the news — v. 4 

needs find out new heaven (rep.)..Anlony /^-Cleo. i. I 

the nature of bad news infects — i. 2 

l.abienus, (this is stiff news) hath — — i. 2 

from Sicy on how the news? — i. 2 

there are members to make new — i. 2 

old smock brings forth a new petticoat — i. 2 

there's some good news — i. 3 

from Alexandria this is tlie news (jcp.) — i. 4 

I, that do bring the news — ii. .^ 

never good to bring bad news — ji. 5 

he liatn waged new wars 'gainst .... — iii. 4 



NEW— there's strange news comc.Anlony^Cleo. iii. ."> 
my news I might have told hereafter — iii. 5 

the news is true, my lord — iii. 7 

with news the time 8 with labour.... — iii. 7 

whiit news? Belike, 'tis but — iv. 3 

what news? My lord, your son drew. Cymbeline, i. 2 

who cannot be new built i. 6 

your lord, that which he is, new o'er i. 7 

the exile of her minion is too new .. — ii. 3 

good news, gods! — iii. 2 

if it be summer news, smile — iii. 4 

i' the field, and ask, what news, of ine! — v. 3 

thou bring'st good news — v. 4 

new matter still? It jioisoned me — v. 5 

new business for you all? Tilus Andronicus, i. 3 

these looks, infuse new life in me.... — i. i 

but dawning day new comfort — ii. 2 

the news? 'That yon are both (rep.).. — iv. a 

news, news from heaven! — iv. 3 

what news with thee JEmilius? — iv. 1 

wliat's the news from Rome? — v. I 

this fresh new seafanr, I would Pericles, iii. I 

new joy wait on you! — v. 3 (Gowcr) 

shape his old course in a country new ....Lear, i. I 

Edmund! how now? what news — i. 2 

I know no news, ray lord — i. 2 

of other your new pranks — 5.4 

you have heard of the news abroad — ii. 1 

I have heard strange news — ii. 1 

what news? O, my good lord, the duke.. — iv. 2 

the news is not so tart — iv. 2 

madam, news; the British — iv. 4 

and talk of court news — v. 3 

their precious stones new lost — v 3 

grudge break to new mutiny .Romeo ^Juliet, fpnil. ) 
this ancient quarrel new abroach? .. — i. I 

but new struck nine — i. I 

take thou some new infection — i. 2 

but love, and I'll be new baptized .. — ii. 2 

these new tuners of accents! — ii. 4 

who stand so much on the new form — ii. 4 

honey nurse, what news? — ii. .') 

though news be sad, yet tell them . . — ii. 5 
thou shamesttlie music of sweet news — ii. ."j 
liadst my bones, and I thy news ..... — ii. .'> 
is thy news good, or bad? answer. .... — ii. ."> 

in scarlet straight at any news — ii. .> 

wearing his new doublet before (re;;.) — iii. 1 

whiter than new snow on — iii. 2 

impatient child, that hath new robes — iii. 2 

my nurse, and she brings news — iii. 2 

what news? what hast thou (lep.) .. — iii. 2 
father, what news? what is the prince's — iii. 3 

these are news indeed! — iii. .'i 

some joyful news at hand — v. I 

news from Verona! — v. 1 

for bringing these ill news — v. 1 

dead before, warm, and new killed .. — v. 3 
broughtmymasternews of Juliet's death — v. 3 
Leartes, what's the news witli you? .... Hamlet, i. 2 

what news my lord? (rep. ii. 21 — i. 5 

still hast been the father of good news .. — ii. 2 

my news shall be the fruit to that — ii. 2 

but your news is not true — ii. 2 

news to tell you. My lord, 1 liave news .. — ii. 2 

vengeance sets him new a-work — ii. 2 

how now? what news? Letters, my lord 

<levised a new commission 

live to hear the news from England 

wliat is the news? The duke does greet.. OMeKo, i. 2 
there is no composition in these news.. ., — 

here is more news. The Ottomites — 

to draw new [Co(. -more] mischief on .... — 
to slumber the gloss of your new fortune — 
news, lords! our wars are done (rep.).... — ii. I 

see for the news — ii. I 

besides these beneficial news, it is the ,. — ii. 2 
our new heraldy is — hands, not hearts .. — iii. 4 

should hunt after new fancies ._. — !!'!• ^ 

what's the news with you? (rep. iv. 1).... — }]]• ^ 
tills is some token from anew friend .... — iii. 4 

NEW-ADDED, and encouraged ..Julius Crpsm; iv. 3 

NEW- ADOPTED to our hate Lear, i. 1 

NEW-APPEARING sweets! Richardlll. iv. \ 

NEW-BEGOT-lionours.new-begot.l Henry r/. i. I 
NEW-BELOVED anywhere .Romeo f/Jnt. i. 5 (cho.) 

N EW-BORN chins be rough Tempest, ii. I 

as if new-born, and gives tlie crutch. ioce'sL.i. iv. 3 

1 wi th things new-born Winter's Tale, iii. 3 

like a naked new-born babe Macbeth, i. 7 

praise new-born gawds, though. Troilus SrCress. iji. 3 
be soft as sinews of the new-born hahe.Hamlel, iii. 3 

N EAV-BTJILT virtue and Taming of Shrew, v. 2 

NEW-COME spring? Richard II. v. 2 

his new-come champion, virtuous.. lHe7ir!/>'/. ii. 2 
NEW-CONCEIVED, and so in .Meas.for Meas. ii. 2 

NEW-CREATE this fault? Othello, iv. I 

NEW-CROWNED mor\a.rch. .Merch. of I'enice, iii. 2 

before you were new-crowned A7»i^ John, i v. 2 

NEW-D"ATED letters from 2Henryir. iv. 1 

NEW-DELIVERED mother Riclinrd II. ii. 2 

the new delivered Hastings? Richardlll. i. 1 

NEW-ENKINDLED fire KingJohn, iv. 2 

NEWER object quite TwoCen. orlerima,}}. 4 

what old, or newer torture must. Winter's Tale, iii. 2 

here comes newer eomibrt Macbeth, v. 7 

NEWEST— not of the newest Tempest, ii. 2 

of the newest, and finest. . Winter'sTale, iv. 3 (song) 

of the revolt of the newest state Macbeth,]. 2 

worn now in their newest gloss — i.l 

what is the newest grief — iv. 3 

oldest sins the newest kind ofways.iHenryrf. iv. 4 

NEW-FALLEN dignity As you Likeil, v. 4 

than your new fallen right \HenryIl'.v. 1 

NEW-FANGLED shows Lore's L.Lost, i. 1 

more new-fangled than an ape ..AsynuLikeit, iv. 1 

NEW-FIRED. I follow you Julius Crrsar, ii. 1 

NEW-FORMED— or else new-formed. .Tejiipes/, i. 2 

NEW-FOUND oaths TwoGen.of Ferona, iv. 4 

NEWGATE fashion IHenjj^/*'. iii. 3 



iv. 7 
V. 2 
V. 2 



i. 3 



NEW 



KEAV-IIACTnED, unfledged comrade.. Hnni/ef, i. 3 

NEW-IIEAI,ED wound 2 Jlnin/ 1 V. i. 2 

the newhenli'd wouud oi'iiifilioe .. nirlitir'l III, it. 2 
NEW-I^IGIITED oil a hcavoii-kissiivv. llnmiH, iii. 4 
KEWLY-she, and I.nre newly met Mm ;/ i/uvs, iy. 4 

hath newly pnsseil between 'i'lrdf h Miilii, v. 1 

■who, newly in the eeat Measure far Mca!,uir, i. 3 

images, newly made woman — iii. 2 

he hath ta'en you newly into liis .... MiirhAtto, i. 3 
hare the subject newly "writ o'er ..Love'sL.LosI, i. 2 
rejoice at friends but newly found . . — v. 2 
roses newly waslicd with dew.. ., Taming of Sh. ii. 1 
but that you're but newly come .... — iv. 2 

and now newly performed H'inler'sTale, v. 2 

the statue is but newly fixed — v. 3 

iilanted newly with the time Macbetli.-v. 7 

hand and mine are newly Icnit KingJohn,in. 1 

60 newly joined in love, so strong. ... — iii. 1 

of the days but newly gone lUenrijIl'. iv. 1 

stints and teetli newly ta'en out .... — iv. 4 

newly move witli casted slough llenrii V. iv. I 

York is newlj' come from Ireland. .SHejiii/f/. iv. 9 
of Winchester, (newly preferred ..Henry VI 1 1, iv. 1 

of the senate newly alighted Timon of Alliens, i. 2 

sects and factions were newly boru.. — iii. 5 
deed-achieving honour newly rta.medCorlolanus, ii. 1 

are newly grown to love Antony fyCleopaIra, i. 3 

three kings I had newly feasted .... — ii. 2 

you are but newlj' planted TilnsAndron.i. 2 

but newly entertained revenge, fioineo <S-/u/(rt, iii. 1 
and newlj' dead, who here hatli lain — v. 3 

here is newly come to court, Laertes . . Hamlet, v. 2 

these handshave newly stopped Othello, v. 2 

KEW-M ADE honour doth forget men's. KinsJohu, i. 1 

fealty to tlie new-made king Richard If. v. 2 

tile new-made duke that rules 'iHenryFI. i. I 

the great and new-made duke of Suflfolk — i. 2 
'tis not his new-made bride shall . .ZHenry VI. iii. 3 
to wait upon thisnew-inade empress.. Y'lVus^nrf. ii. 1 
bid me go into a new-made grave. . Romeo ^Jul. iv. 1 
banished the new-made bridegroom — v. 3 

KE W-MARRIED man .... Measure for Measure, v. 1 
like a new-married wife about her .... Henry V. y. 2 
too early for new-married ladies. . TilusAndron. ii. 2 
NEWNESS— glimpse of newness ..Meas.forMeas. i. 3 
happy newness, that intends old right. A'mg-yo/i!!, v. 4 

newness of Cloten's death Cymbeline, iv. 4 

NEW-PLANTED orchards Julius Ccvsar, iii. 2 

NEW-RISEN from a dream ..Taming of Shrew, iv. 1 
NEW-SAD— out of a new-sad soul. Lotie'sL. Lost, v. 2 
NEWS-CBAMMED. All thebetter..4si/otiLi7,-e /(, i. 2 
NEW-SHED-drops of new-shed blood. Tilus.ind. ii. 4 
NEWSMONGER-basenewsmongei-s.lH«i»-i/ff'.iii-2 
NEW-STORE France with bastard . . Henry V. iii. 5 
NEWTS and blindworms.il/id.A'.'sDicojn, ii. 3 isong) 

eye of newt, and toe of frog Macbeth, i v. 1 

gilded newt, and eyeless venomed.. Timon ofAlh. iv. 3 

NEW-TA'EN sparrow Troilus <§• Cressida, iii. 2 

NEW-TRANSl ORMED limbs . . TilusAndron. ii. 3 

KEW-TROTHED lord MuchAdo,\yi. 1 

NEW-TUNED oaths Henry f. iii. G 

KIEBLING-where live nibbling sheep. 7'««pfs(, iv. 1 
so wedlock would be nibbling.... /)sv''"^''''^''i iii- 3 
NICANDEB bring me the satin coffer.. Pciicies, iii. 1 
NICANOR-know you me yet? Nicanor?.. Comi. iv. 3 
be welcome with tliis intelligence, Nicanor — iv. 3 
NICE— but she is nice and coy . . Two Gen. of Ver. iii. 1 

despite his nice fence Much Ado, v. I 

these betray nice wenches Love'sL.LosI, iii. 1 

we'll not be nice — v. 2 

of this measure; be not nice — v. 2 

and if you grow so nice — v. 2 

monsieur the nice, that when he — y. 2 

tj'nice direction of a maiden's ,. Mer. of Venice, \i. 1 
nor the lady's, which is nice .... As you Like it, iv. I 

■which lay nice manners by ( All'slVell.v. 1 

I am not so nice, to change true.. Taming of Sh. iii. 1 
Orelation.too nice, and yet too true!.. MacbeM, iv. 3 
makes nice of no vile hold to stay ..Kingjohn, iii. 4 

on the nice hazard of one MIenrylV.'vf. 1 

hence therefore, thou nice crutch ..,,2Henrt/iy. i. 1 
more precise and nice with others.... — ii. 3 
every idle, nice, and wanton reason . . — iv. I 

O Kate, nice customs comt'sy Henry V. v. 2 

t'ne nice fashion of j'our country .... — v. 2 

in these nice sharp quillets \Hen>yVI. ii. 4 

wherefore stand you onnicepoints?.3He)»^!/?'/. iv. 7 
respects thereof areniceand trivial. K/c/ioj^df//. iii. 7 
prenominate in nice conjecture. Troilus ^- Cress, iv. 5 

every nice otfenee should bear JuliusCaisar. iv. 3 

wiren mine hours were nice ....Antony if Cleo.iW. U 
disdain, nice longings, slanders .... Cymbeline, \'\. 5 
betliinlt how nice the quarrel ..Uomeo^ Juliet, iii. 1 

the letter was not nice, but full — v. 2 

feed upon sucli nice and^waterish diet.. Oz/icffo, iii. 3 

NICELY— they thatdally nicely.. rKv//7/iA'i'ir/i«, iii. 1 

play so nicely with their names?. . . . Richard II. ii. \ 

or nicely cliarge your understanding . . Henry V.\.2 

when articles, too nicely urged — v. 2 

one foot standing, nicely depending.. Cyml)c;<'9ie, ii. 4 

inflame ton nicely Vericles, iv. ) 

tlian stretch their duties nicely Lear, ii. 2 

what safe and nicely I might well — v. 3 

NTCELY-GA WDED cheeks Corii>lanus, ii. 1 

NICENESS, (the Iiandniaids of Cymbeline, iii. 1 

NICE-PRESERVED lionesty of yoius.7V/w.. ,!«((. ii. 3 

NICER — effected many nicer needs.... J/i's "■<■/;, i v. 3 

NICETY— lav bv all nicety, !m(l..Mer,s. for Mens. ii. 4 

KICHOLAS iie tliy speed! ..Tu-oCen.oh'nnna, iii. 1 

Nathaniel, Joseph, Nicliolas.. Taming nrslueir, iv. 1 

meet notwitli Saint Nicholas' clerkF.l llcnrylV.i]. I 

thon worship'st saint Nicholas as truly — ii. 1 

sir Nicholas Gawsevhatli (re;).) — v. 4 

ONicholasrK"/.-Micliacl]II..pkins?.l/eH)!/F//;.i.l 
a vain prophecy of NichuUi- liopkins — i. 2 
give up my charge to sir Kicliolas Vaux — ii. 1 

nav, sir Nicholas, let it alone — ii. 1 

NICK— loved her out of all nick .Tu-oOen.ofVer. iv. 2 
Nick Bottom, the wca^'er (lep.). . Mid A'.'s Dream, i. 2 
nicka him like a fwl Cowed y of Errors, v. I 



[ 529 ] 



— i. 1 



NICKED his captainship ..Antony ^Cleopatra, ui. 11 

NICKNAME virtue: vice you Love's L. Lust, v. 2 

one nickname for her purblind son. Homeo^- Jul. ii. 1 
and nickname God's creatures llamlel, iii. I 

NIECE— a plague means my niece. . Tuie-llhKight, i. 3 
with drinking healths to my niece .. — i. 3 

that will not drink to my niece — i. 3 

my niece's clianiber-mnid — i. 3 

your niece ivill not be seen — i. 3 

I can write very like mj' lady, your niece — ii. 3 

that they come from niy;ni( ce — ii. 3 

if I cannot recover your nil ce — ii. 3 

my fortunes having cast me on your niece — ii. 5 
my niece is desirous you should enter — iii. 1 

I am bound to your niece, sir — iii. 1 

marry, I saw j'our niece do more .... — iii. 2 
my niece is already in the belief .... — iii. 4 
between his lord and my niece confirms — iii. 4 

here he comes with your niece — iii. 4 

very wittily said to a niece of king .. — iv. 2 

so far in oti'enee with my niece — iv. 2 

what is he that you ask for, niece?. . . . Much Ada, i. 1 
faith, niece, .you tax signior Benedick 
you must not, sir, mistake my niece. . 

j'ou will never run mad, niece — i. i 

that he loved my niece your daughter — i. 2 
by my troth, niece,thou wilt never .. — ii. 1 

well, niece, I trust (rep.) — ii. 1 

niece, will .vou look to those things . . ~ ii. 1 

your niece Beatrice was in love — ii. 3 

well, I am sorry for your niece — ii. 3 

God knows I loved my niece — v.l 

your niece regards me witli an eye of — v. 4 
displeasure 'gainst his gentle niece, vis i/ou Like it, i. 2 

you, niece, provide yourself. — i. 3 

O my dear niece, welcome thou art;to — v. 4 
with her her niece, the lad}' Blanch .. Kin^'/oAn, ii. 1 
give witlroiu' niece a dowry large.... — ii. 2 

what say .vou, my niece? — ii. 2 

pass the^abuse done to my niece? ..SHenry VI. iii. 3 
you have no judgment, niece.. Troilus ^-Cressida, i. 2 
good niece.do; sweet niece Cressida.. — i. 2 
there's a brave man, niece (cep.) .... — 

look well upon him, niece — 

fareye well, good niece (;fp.) — 

my niece is horribly in love — 

commend me to your niece — 

who's this, mj' niece, that flies .. TilusAndron. ii. 5 

speak, gentle niece, what stern — ii. 5 

but, lovel.v niece, that mean is — ii. 5 

patience, dear niece; good Titus .... — 
thy niece and I, poor creatures, ■vvant — 

Bit down, sweet niece — 

write thou, good niece; and here display — iv. i 
a niece of mine shall there attend yo\x.Pcriclcs, iii. 4 

and his lovely nieces Romeo ^Juliet, i. 2 (note) 

my fairniece Rosaline — i. 2 (note) 

there lies your niece; whose breath .... Othello, v. 2 

NIGGARD of hair, being .... Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

be not a niggard of your speech Macbeth, iv. 3 

the devil is a niggard Henry VIII. i. 1 

from niggard nature fall Timon of Athens, v. 5 

we will niggard with a little rest-JulinsCirsar, iv. 3 
nicrgard of question; but of our demands Ham/^f.iii.l 

NIGGARDLY give me sight of. . . . Merry Wives, ii. 2 
niggardly rascally sheep-biter . . Twelfili Night, ii. 5 

ay, to a niggardly host Comedy of Errors, iii. 1 

of a weak and niggardly projection . .Henry V. ii. 4 

NIGH-but was not this nigh shore? Tempest, i. 2 

one tliat is well nigh \('orn Merry Wives, ii. 1 

come our lovely lady nigh . . Mid.N. Dr. ii. 3 (song) 
then I well perceive you are not nigh — ii. 3 
that dost not bite so ui^h. , As you Like it, ii. 7 (song) 

were not the proof so nigh Winter sTale, v. I 

' now is your husband nigh . . Comedy of Errors, ii. 1 

which is too nigh your person Macbeth, iv. 2 

with him, ere he come so nigh King .John, v. 1 

this rich reprisal is so nigh MIenry I V. iv. 



i. 2 

i. 2 

i.2 

iii. 1 

iii. I 



iii. 1 
iii. 2 
iv. 1 



tJiiSriClLlCpil&ULlbBUlllwll 

was I, for this, nigh wrecked . . . 
our foes are nigh, and this soft 

how nigh is Clarence now? 

ah, who is nigh? come to me. . . 

so nig]), at least, that though Cymbeline, iii. 4 

draw nigh, and take your )ilace. . TilusAndron. v. 3 

her revenge being nigh bade her Othello, ii. 1 

NIGHT— for that vast of night Tempest, i. 2 

that burn by day and night 
when you are by at nigli t . 
or night kept chaiu'd below 

or else good night, your vow ! — iv. I 

as the morning steals upon the night. . — v. 1 

your rest for tliis one night; — v. 1 

watchful, weary, tediousnightsJ'u^o Gen. of Ver. i. 1 

last night she enjoined me to — ii. 1 

this night, he meaneth with — .!'•'' 

this night intends to steal — iii. 1 

I would resort to her by night 

no man hath recourse to her by niglit 

this very night, for love is 

this night I will enfranchise thee . . 

b.y Silvia in tlie night 

visit by nigiit your lady's chamber- 

the night's dead silence will 

thy advice this night I'll put in .... 
by this pale queen of night 1 swear.. 

as wretches have o'er night 

the longest night that e er I watched 

a posset for't soon at niglit Merry Wives, i. 4 

by day or night — ii. 1 (letter) 

for thieves do foot by night — ii. 1 

come you to me at liight (j-fp.) ...... — ii. 2 

fear in deep of night to walk by .... — iv. 4 

the night is dark — v. 2 

at once display to the night — v. 3 

revellers, and shades of night — v. 5 

you brought in one night here. . . . TicelflhKis''l, i. 3 

loud even in the dead of nigh t — i. 5 

in very gracious fooling last nicht .. — ii. 3 
like tinkers at this time otni^lit? .. — ii- 3 
for this night, to bed, and — ii. 3 



Henry VI. iii. 2 
..ZHenryVI. ii. 2 
— V. 1 



iii. 1 



iii. 1 
iii. 1 
iii. 1 
iii. I 
iii. 1 



— iv. 2 



NIG 

NIGHT— good night, Penthesilea . TwelfihNighl, ii 

antique song we heard last night (>ep.) — ii 

love's nii^ht is noon — iii 

and 'tis long to night — iii 

both day and night did we — v 

that severs day irom night — v 

soon at night I'll send hinr Meas.forMeas. i. 

a niglit in Russia, when nights are.. — ii 

this niglit's the time that I should do — iii 

if for this night he entreat you — iii 

upon the heavy middle of the night — iv 

the vaporous night approaches — iv 

best and wholesomest spirits of the night — iv 

I have been drinking all night (rep.) — iv 

he that drinks all night, and is hanged — iv, 

good night. This deedunshapesme.. — iv 

but Tuesday night last gone — v, 

goodnight to your redress — v 

comes this night to Messina Much Ado, i 

meant to acknowledge it this night. . — i 

for the fool will eat no supper that night — ii 

though it cost me ten nights' watchings — ii 

at any unseasonable instant of the niglit — ii 

ver.y night before the intended wedding — ii 

and now will he lie ten nights awake — ii 

for to-morrow night we would have it — ii 

for she'll be up twent.v times anight — ii. 

even the night before her wedding-day — iii 

[A'n(.] bear it eoldly_ but til. night .. — iii. 

a child cry in the night, you must .. — iii. 

if you meet the prince in the night.. — iii. 

well, masters, good night (rep.) — iii 

bids me a thousand times good night — iii. 

partly by the dark night — iii- 

at tliat hour last night — iv. 

were you her bedfellow last night? . . — iv. 

until last night, I have this twelvemonth — iv. 

swore a thing to me on Monday night — v. 

■who, in the ni.ght, overheard me .... — v, 

pardon. Goddess of the night — v. 3 (son 

now, imto thy bones good niclit! .... — v. 
steep themselves in nights {rep.')Mid.N.'sDream, i. 

shall behold tlie night of our solemnities— i. 

as the lightning in the coUied night — i. 

thy father's house to-morrow night (rep.)— i. 

on his wedding-da.y at night — i. 

to con them by to-morrow night — i. 

I am that merry ■vvanderer of the night — ii. 

lead him through the glimmering niglit — ii. 

no night is now witli hymn — ii. 

by night, full often hath she gossiped — ii. 

to trust the opportunity of night .... — ii. 

itisnot night, when I do see your .. — ii. 

I think I am not in the night — ii. 

some time of the night, lulled in — ii. 

so good night with lullaby — ii. 3 (sou; 

and good night, sweet friend — ii. 

night and silence! who is here? .... — ii. 

doth the moon shine, that night {rep.") — iii. 

and for night tapers, crop their waxen — iii. 

dark night, that from the eye — iii. 

who more engilds the night than — iii. 

since night, you loved me (r<?p.) .... — iii . 

have you coine by night, and stolen — iii. 

overcast the iii|ht; the starry welkin — iii. 

for night's switt dragons cut the clouds — iii. 

for aye consort with black-browed night — iii. 

O wear.v night, O long and tedious night — iii. 

think no more of this night's accidents — iv. 

trip we after the night's shade — iv. 

tell me how it came this night — iv. 

or, in the night, imagining some — v. 

but, all the story of tlie night told .. — v. 

coming first b.y iiight, did scare — v. 

O grim-looked night! O night with hue 

night, which ever art (rep.).. . 

as much as we this night have — v. 

well beguiled the heai'.y gait of niglit — v. 

now it IS the time of night, that the. . — v. 

80, good night unto you all — (epil 

to think no harm all night (rep.) ,. Love'sh. tost, i. 

no more profit of their snining nights — i. 

good night, mj' good owl! — iv. 

the night of dew that on my cheeks — iv. 3 (vers, 

day would turn tonight! — iv. 

and the scowl of night — iv. 

from morn till ni"lit, out of — v. 

1 am glad 'tis night, you do not..)/er. of Venice, ii. 

for the close night doth play the — ii. 

as I heard, one night, fourscore — iii. 

plies the duke at morning, and at night 
must awa.v this night toward Padua 

in such a niglit as this (rep.) 

comes so fast in &ilence of the night? 
soft stillness, and the night, become 
of his spirit are dull as night, and his 

this night, niethinks, is but 

by these blessed candles of the night 

lie not a night from home 

last night did lie with me 

whether till tlie next night she had. . 

and this night lie means toburn../(syoii L/Zi.^i'', ii. 

tlirice-ciowued queen of night — iii. 

that a great cause of the night — iii. 

not been for allot midsummer niglit — iv. 
endured shrewd days and nights with — v. 
come, night; end day! y4H'j"''i/?, lii- 
which you shall see this very night — iii. 
every night becomes with musics of — iii. 
in tlie niiiht, I'll put auotlier ring .. — iv. 

and tliis night lie fleshes his will — iv. 

he has sat in the stocks all night — iv. 

defiles the pitcliy night! so lust — iv. 

day and ni.ght, must wear your — v. 

made the days and nights as one .... — v. 

lie hence removed last night — v. 

I had talk of you last nigiit — v. 

yet for a night or two Taming al' Sh 2 (indue 

nay then, good night our part! — ii. 

away to-day, before night come .... — iii. 

M M 



— V. 1 



r. 1 



— V. I 



NIG 



NIGHT, we'll fast for conipnny . . Taming of Sh. iv. 1 
last iii','ht she slent not, nor to-iiiglit — iv. 1 
in conclusion, she shall watch all ni;^ht — iv. 1 

and there, this night, we'll pass — iv. 4 

to watch the niglit in storms — v. 2 

God give yo\i good nightl Now go . . — y. 2 

nor night, nor day, no rest IVinlersTnte, ii. 3 

safety, to fly away by night — iii. 2 (indict.) 

appeared to me last night . — iii. 3 

the pale moon shines by night — i v. 2 (song) 

sweet love, as look on night.. Comerfj/o/Birors, iii. 2 

stealing on, by night ttr.tt day? — iv. 2 

I'uith, stay here this night — iv. 4 

nor sleep onniuht, but she tells 



o3() ] 



yet liath my night of life some 
neither night nor day, hang upon 



V. 1 



ii. 3 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 

V. 1 



^^....t. .,.s..w.v-. „„j,,.»..o -r — ....MachetKi.Z 
come, thick night, and pall thee 

this night's great business (rep.) — _i. 5 

how goes the night, boy? — ii. 1 

I dreamt last night of the three — u. 1 

drink gave thee the lie last night? .... — ii. 3 

the night has been unruly — ii. 3 

bird clamoured the livelong night .... — ii. 3 

'twas a rough night — ji- 3 

but this sore night hath trifled — li. 4 

dark night strangles the travelling {rep.') — ii. 4 

a borrower of the night, for a dark ... . — iii. 1 

adieu, till you return at night — iii- I 

time till seven at night — iii. 1 

hath rung night's yawning peal — ;;;. 2 

come, seeling night, scarf up — iii. 2 

whiles night's black agents to — iii. 2 

what is the night? Almost at odds .... — iii. 4 

this night I'll spend unto — iii. 5 

sleep to our nights; free from — iii. 6 

days and nights hast thirt3'-one — iv. 1 

the night is long, that never — iv. 3 

I have two nights watched — y. 1 

blessed be the hour, by night, or f}ia,y. KingJohn,}. 1 

one unto the drowsy race of night .. — iii. 3 

from the couch of lasting night — iii. 4 

would be as sad as night, only for .. — iv. 1 

that I might sit all night — iv. 1 

wrecked tliree nights ago on Goodwin — v. 3 

but even this night, whose black — v. 4 

the stumbling night did part our — — v. .■) 

and eyeless night have done me shame — v. 6 

in the black brow of night, to find . . — v. 6 

newsfitting to the night, black — v. 6 

half my power this night, passing. ... — v. 6 

for, in a night, the best part — v. 7 

shades of endless night (rep.) Richard J/, i. 3 

and pluck nights from me, but not. . 

there repose you for this night 

the cloak of night being plucked 

hath revelled in the night 

from Richard's night to Bolingbroke's 

in winter's tedious nights, sit by — 

go wander through the shade of night — 
that are squires of the night's body..l HenrylV. 

on Monday night, and most dissolutely — 

who studies, day and night, to answer — 

company, last night at supper — 

more beholden to the night — 

a business that this night may — ; 

von may away by night — i 

he held me, but last night, at least.. — i 

diiference betwixt day and night — i 

in the night to catch my horse — in. a 

walking with thee in the night; — m. 3 

theothernight I fell asleep here.... — lu. 3 

we must away all night [iCn(.-to-night] — iv. 2 

posted day arid night to meet you. ... — v. 1 

vet once ere night I will embrace — v. 2 

Priam's curtain in the dead of night.2Henri//r. i. 1 

gilded over your night's exploit .... — _i. 2 

or I'll ride thee o' nights, like — ii. 1 

where lay the king last night? — ii. 1 

fighting o' days, and foining o nights — ii. 4 

the sweetest morsel of the night — ii. 4 

calmest and most stillest night — iiJ- ' 

since we lay all night in the — lu. 2 

ha, it was a merry night........ _.... — in. 2 

openwide to many a watchful nightl — iv. 4 

snores out the watch of night — iv. 4 

drink, dance, revel the night......... — iv. f 

doth the man of war stay all night, sir? — v. 1 

now comes in the sweet of the iiigUt — v. 3 

we'll ride all night; O sweet Pistol.. — v. 3 

asit were, to ride day and night .... — v. 5 

I shall be sent for soon at night — v. .5 

fastest by night, unseen HenryV.i. 1 

a night IS but small breath — _ii. 4 

it now draws toward night — 111.6 

what a long night is tliis? ...••••: 
through the foul womb of night . 

piercing the night's dull car 

the cripple tardy-gaited night..., 
the weary and all-watched night 

touch of Harry in the night , 

vou heard him all night 
•: ij ;™i,f no 't;o ho 



v. (cho.) 

V. (cho.) 

v. (cho.) 

V. (cho.) 

V. (cho.) 

iv. 1 

iv. 1 

iv. 1 

iv. 1 



iv. 7 
iv. 8 

v. 2 



as cold a night as 'tis, he could .. .... 

never sees horrid night, the cliila. . . . 

and all night sleeps in Elysium .... 

days with toil, and nights with sleep 
yet ere night they'll be in fresher. . . . 

that swaggered with me last night . . 
witness tlie night, your garments . . 
and at night when you come into. ... 

yield day tonight! comets \Henry VI.).l 

this night the siege assuredly I'll .. — .1.2 
this happy night the Frenchmen.... — 11. } 

shall this night appear how — ;!• } 

most part of all this night — »!• ' 

and night is fled, whose pitchy mantle — 11. 2 
anddusky vapours of the night .... — !!■ ^ 

not live asunder day or night — 11.^ 

souls to death and deadly night .... — „ ,".• f 

bv dav bv night; waking, and in lUenrtj VI. 1. 1 

tliis nitlit doth make me sad — i. 2 



NIGHT-to me in the garret one w\g\\t.'iHennjl'I, i. 3 

deep night, dark night, the silent (rep.) — i. 4 

to sup with me to-morrow night .... — i. 4 

let never day nor night unhallowed — ii. 1 

well, for this night, we will repose .. — ii. 1 

be my light, and night my day — ii. 4 

watched the night, ay night by night — iii. 1 

could I curse aivay a winter's night — iii. 1 

drag the tragic melancholy night.... — iv. 1 

defer the spoil of the city until night — iv. 7 

and lodge by me this night SHennjVI. i. 1 

neither call it perfect day, nor night — ii. 5 

ere night yield both my life — ii. 5 

but, in night's coverture, thy brother — iv. 2 

covered with the night's black mantle — iv. 2 

but in the night, or in the time .... — iv. 7 

now, for this night, let's harbour — iv. 7 

be hewn up yet ere night — v. 4 

let ^sop fable in a winter's night . . — v. 5 

have watched the winter's night .... — v. 7 

black night o'ersliade thy day Richard III. i. 2 

passed a miserable night, so full — i. 4 

would not spend another such a night — i. 4 

the kingdom of perpetual night .... — i. 4 

makes tlie night morning (rep.) .... — i. 4 

and naked, to the numb-cold night? — ii. 1 

ICol. A'n(.] of ne'er changing niglit .. — ii. 2 

who doth not look for night? — li. 3 

last night, I heard, they lay at — ii. 4 

grandam, one night as we did sit .. — ii. 4 

thy master sleep the tedious nights? — iii. 2 

[Col. Kill.] this night he dreamt the boar — iii. 2 

dimmed your intant morn to aged night — iv. 4 

forbear to sleep the night, and fast.. — iv. 4 

save for a night of groans endured .. — Iv. 4 

thy light; nor night, thy rest! — iv. 4 

blind cave of eternal night 

about the mid of night, come. . . . 
comfort that the dark night can 



i. 3 



V. 9 



V. 3 



the ensuing night made it a fool . . Henry VIII. i. I 

by day and night, he's traitor to ... . — i. 2 

O 'tis true: this night he makes .... — i. 3 

this night to be controllers — i. 3 

this night he dedicates to fair content — i. 4 

this night to meet here — . i. 4 

and, three nights after this, about .. — iv. 2 

goodhour of night, sir Thomas! .... — v. 1 

1 wish your highness a ^uiet night. . — y. 1 
than the virgin in the night.. 7'ro!7MS<§-C»essida; = ' 

to answer in a night alarm" — 

I have loved you night and day — 1 

and dreaming night will hide our joys — i 

night hath been too brief — 

this night in banqueting must ' — 

not meet with you to-morrow night — 

and this whole night hath nothing.. — 

and tell you them at night 

how ugly night comes breathing .... 

the dragon wing of night o'erspreads — v. 9 

here starve we out the night — v._ll 

by night frequents my house . . Timonof Athens, 1. I 

and peasants, this night englutted I — _ii. 2 

it turns in less than two nights? .... — iii. 1 

where liest o' nights, Timon? — iv. 3 

before black-cornered night, find that — y. 1 
came news from him last night .... Coriolanus, i. 3 

more with the buttock of the night. . — ii. I 

at his house this night — iv. 4 

as far as day does night — ly. 5 

and such as sleep o' niglits Julius Caesar, 1. 2 

I will this night, in several — i. 2 

yesterday the bird of night did sit .. — ;• 3 

Cassius, what night is this? (rep.) .. — 1.3 

submitting me unto the perilous night — ;. 3 
a man most like this dreadful night 

for now, this fearful night (rep.) 

to show thy dangerous brow by night 
awake, all night: know I these men 
betwixt your eyes and night? ........ 

the unaccustomed terror of this night 
dare the vile contagion of the night?; 

Antony, that revels long 0' nights .. — .u. z 

they mean this night in Sardis — iv. 2 

thedeepof night is crept upon — }v. 3 

this was an illbeginniiig of the night — iv. 3 

yet ere night we shall try fortune .... — v. 3 

by niglit; at Sardis, once (rep.) — v. 5 

night hangs upon my eyes — y. 

last night you did desire it Anlony Sr Cleo. i, 1 

thelampsof night in revel — ;• ^ 

moieflery by night'sblackness — .1.4 

and made the night light with drinking — n. 2 

andthat nightl laughed him into .. — " "^ 

let's have one more gaudy night .... — 

to burn this night with torches — 

the night is shiny; and, they say.... — 

bear mewitness, night — 

the poisonous damp of night dispunge — 
an argument that fellout last night. Ci/mdciiiie, 1. 5 

only for this night; I must aboard.. — " " 

the tempters of the night, guard me — 

swift, swift! you dragons of the nightl — 

last night 'twas on mine arm — 

to enjoy a second night of such sweet — 

but, in one night,a storm, or robbery — 

day, night, are they not but in Britain? — 

may this night forestal him — 

and for two nights together have made — 

'tis almost night: you shall have. ... — 

the night to the owl, and morn to.. .. — 

on them cold dew 0' the night — 

1 have gone all night: faith, I'll.. . . . — 

last night the very gods showed — 

been troubled in my sleep this night. Titus And. 11. 2 

at dead time of the night — .11. 3 

for all the frosty niglits that I — ui. 1 

acts of black night, abominable — v. 1 

barns and haystacks in the night .... — v. 1 

that baleful burning night — . y- 3 

in actions blacker tJiau the night Pericles, \. 1 



1.3 



iii. 11 
iv. 2 
iv. 9 
iv. 9 
iv. 9 



iii. 3 
iii. 4 
iii. 6 
iii. 6 
iii. 6 
iii. 6 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 



_ iii. 4 
— iii. 4 



— iii. 7 



— iv. 7 
1 



— i. 5 



NIG 

NICSHT-glorious walk, or peaceful night. /'iriXesi 

under the covering of a careful night.. — i 

his son's a glowworm in the night .... — ii 

for your sweet music this last night. ... — ii 

to those that cry by night — iii 

a turbulent and stormy night (rep.) .. — iii 

she died by night: I'll say so — iv 

one mortal night drove hira to this.,.. — v 

will ofl'er my night oblations to thee .. — v 
the mysteries ol Hecate, and the night.... tear, i 

why, the night gone by — i 

by day and iiigTit! he wrongs me — i 

the good advantage of the night — ii 

now i' the night, 1' the haste — ii 

threading dark-eyed night — ii 

for though it be night the moon shines. . — ii 

till night, my lord; and all night too.... — ii 

I learned the night before there was — ii. 

alack, the night comes on, and the bleak — ii. 

'tis a wild niglit; my Regan counsels well — ii. 

this night, wncrein the cub-drawn bear. . — iii. 

here's a night pities neither wise men .. — iii. 

things that love night (rep.) — iii. 

this 16 a brave night to cool a courtezan — iii. 

I have received a letter this night — iii. 

the tyranny of the open night's too rough — iii. 
in such a night to shut me out (rep.) .... 
this cold night will turn us all to fools . . 

this is a naughty night to swim in 

and let this tyrannous ni"lit take hold . . 

what a nigh t^s this? I do oeseech 

in hell-black night endured 

i' the last night's storm I such a fellow 

■what i' the storm? i' the night? 

have stood that night against my fire . . 
1 know not where I did lodge last night 

himself an artificial night Romeo ^ Juliet, i. 

this night I hold an old accustomed 
behold this night earth-treading stars 

this night inherit at mjr house 

come I^ammas-eve at night 

this night you shall behold him .... 
seek happy nights to happy days. . . . 
she gallops night by night through 
plats the manes of horses in the night 

date with this night's revels 

hangs upon the crieek of night like . . 

I ne er saw true beauty till this night 

scorn at our solemnity this night.... — 1. 

consorted with the humorous night — ii. 

as glorious to this night, being oer.. — ii. 

thus bescreened in night — ii. 

I have night's cloak to hide me from — ii. 

thou know'st the mask of night is on — ii. 

which the dark night hath so discovered — ii. 

blessed nightl I am afeard (rep.) .... — ii. 

sweet sound lovers' tongues by night — ii. 

morn smiles on the frowning night . . — ii. 

and night's dank dew to dry — ii. 

you gave us the counterfeit last night — ii. 

must be my convoy in the secret night — ii. 

shall bear the burden soon at night. . — ii. 

and bring in cloudy night immediately — iii. 

love-performing night! — iii. 

agrees with night: come, civil night — iii. 

come, nightl come Romeo, come! (rep.) — iii. 

lie upon the wings of night whiter .. — iii. 

night; come, loving, black-browed night — iii. 

allthe world will be in love withnight — iii. 

as is the night before some festival . . — iii. 

your Romeo will be here at night .. — iii. 

I could have staid here all the night — iii. 

night's candles are burnt out — iii. 

to be to thee this night a torchbearer — iii. 

day, night, late, early, at home — iii 

to-morrow night look that thou lie alone — iv. 

and that vcr.y night, shall Romeo bear — iv. 

provision; 'tis now nearnight — iv. 

let the nurse this night sit up — iv. 

the horrible conceit of death and night — iv. 

at some hours in the night spirits resort — iv. 

sick to-morrow for this night's watching — i v. 

all night for lesser cause — iv. 

for the next night, I warrant — ■ iv. 

son, the night before thy wedding-day — iv. 

mufl[le me, night, awhile — v. 

this palace of dim niglrt depart again — v. 

hither come as this dire night — y- 

to watch the minutes of this night Hamlet, 1. 

what we two nights have seen — ;• 

last night of all, when yon same star .... — 1. 

nsurp'st this time of night — ;■ 

doth make the night joint labourer — i. 

bird of dawning singeth all night long . . — 1. 

the nights are wholesome — }• 

two nights together had these gentlemen — 1. 

the dead waist and middle of the night. . — J. 

the third night, kept the watch — ;• 

would the night were come! — >• 

making night hideous — •• 

for a certain term to walk the night .... — J. 
O day and night, but this is wondrous 

at night we'll feast together 

night, night, and time is time (jep.)' . 

the night resemble when he lay couched — 

we'll have it to-morrow night — :;• 

I'll leave you till night — .■!■ 

this night to play before him — ;!!■ 

'tis now the very witching time of night — 111. 

your patience in our last night's speech . . — v. 

likeastari' the darkest night — y- 

by night and negligence, the fire is spied. Othello, 1. 
ocld-even and dull'watch 0' the night. . . . — 

raise some special officers of night — 

goodness of the night upon you, friends! — 

messengers this very night — ;■ 

in council! in this time of the night! .... — 1. 

this night. With all my heart — ;■ 

hell and night must bring this monstrous — i. 

not yet made wanton the night with her — 11 



— ii. 2 

— ii. 2 



— i. 1 



.\lGHT-what, man! 'tisanightof reveIs.O;/i/,/(o, ii. 3 

that's said or done amiss this night — ii. 3 

in niglit, and on the court and guard .... — ii, 3 
to-morrow niglit; or Tuesday morn («;).) — iii. 3 

I slept the next niglit well — iii. :j 

seven days and nights? eight score — iii. 4 

it' I shall" see you soon at night — iii. 4 

poison, lago, this night (rep. 1 — iv. 1 

this night show it (;-cp.') — iv. 2 

siijiper-time, and the night grows to waste — iv. 'i 

it is a heavy night — v. 1 

tliis is the night; that either makes me., — v. I 

NIG HT-BIKD mute Pericles, iv. (Gower) 

NIGHT-BRAWLER— a night-brawler'^.O^/if/fo.ii .3 

NIGHTCAP— sweaty nightcaps JuliusCasar,\. 1 

for I fear Cassio with my nightcap too. . Olhello, ii. 1 
NTIGIIT-CRO'W-the night-crow eried.S/feiwv /'/. v. e 

MGHT-UOG— night-dogs run Merry Wives, \. 6 

-X IGHTED-to despatch Iiis nighted life. . Lear, iv. 6 

Hamlet cast thy niglited colour oif .... Hamlel, i. 2 

N^IGHT-FLIES-buzzing night-flies.2He)i)i//r. iii. 1 

NIGHT-FOES-from night-foes . . . .SHenry VI. iv. 3 

NIGIlTGOWN-it's but a nightgown. il/«t/i^rfo,iii. 4 

get on your nightgown, lest occasion . . Macbeth, ii. 2 

throw her nightgown upon her, unlock — v. 1 

put on yourniglitgown; look not so pale — v. I 

shall I go fetch your niglitgown? Othello, iv. 3 

KIGHTINGALfi-the nightingale. TwoGen.ofV. iii. 1 
to the nightingale's complaining notes — v. 4 

nightingales answer daws Twelfth Night, iii. 4 

an 'twere any nightingale Mid. N.'s Dream, i. 2 

the nightingale, if she should.. MercA. of Venice, v. 1 
twenty caged nightingales. Tamingctfsh. 2 (indue.) 
sings as sweetly as a nightingale .... — ii. 1 
my nightingale, we have beat. . Antony fyCleo. iv. 8 
poor 'torn in the voice of a nightingale.. Lcaj-, iii. 6 
the nightingale, and not (rep.). Romeo ^Juliet, iii. U 
JJIGHTLY— with nightly tears. Two Gen.of Ver. ii. 4 
I nightly lodge her in an upper .... — iii. 1 
harbour with my Silvianightly .... — iii. 1 
and nigiitly, meadow-fairies, \qo[^. Merry iVives, v. .0 
drunk nightly in your company., rzce^///! Night, i. 3 
the clamorous owl, that nightly.. Mirf.iV.'s Dr. ii. 3 
in nightly revels, and new jollity.... — v. I 
nigiitly sings the staring owl. Love's L.L. v. 2 (song) 

dreams, that shake us nightly Macbeth, iii. 2 

to give thee nightly visitation.. r»oi7us ^Ct-ms. iv. 4 
I liave nightly since dreamt of .... Coriolanus, iv. 5 
unless the nightly owl, or fatal . Titus Androii. ii. 3 

niglUIy she sings on yon Homeo & Juliet, iii. 6 

or shut me nightly in a charnel-house — iv. 1 
[Coi.Knf.] with sweet water nightly.. — v. 3 
[Cof.K'n;.] nightly shall be, to strew thy — v. 3 
so nightly toils the subject of the ^and.. Hamlet, i. 1 
that nightly lie in those unproper beds.O(/ic/<o,iv. I 
give me my nightly wearing, and adieu — iv. 3 
If IGHTMARE, and her ninefold.. Lrar, iii. 4 (song) 

NIGIlT-OWLin a catch TwelflhNighl, ii. 3 

for night-owls shriek, where liichard II. iii. 3 

like the night-owl's lazv flight ZHenryVI. ii. 1 

NIGHT-RAVEN— the night-raven.. Wiic/i^do.ii. 3 
NIGHT-REST, and neighbourhood. Timnn ofAth.iv.i 
NIGHT-RULE now about this.Mid.N.'sDream, iii. 1 
NiGHT-SHRIEK-a night-shriek ....Macbeth, v. !J 

NIGHT-TRIPPING fairy had illenryir.i. 1 

NIGHT- WALKING heralds that ..liichard III. i. 1 
NIGHT-WANDERERS, laughing.WiW.A'. 'sZ)r. ii. 1 

NIGHT-WATCH constable Love'sL.Losi,i\i. 1 

NIGHTWORK alive? She lives ..itienry IV. iii. 2 

Robin Nightwork by old Niglitwork — iii. 2 

NlIIlL—for absque hoc nihil est .... — v. & 

NILE— my serpent of old Nile? ..Antony ^Cleo. i. 5 

melt Esypt into Nile! — ii. .5 

they take the flow o' the Nile — ii. 7 

till the flies and gnats of Nile have. . — iii. II 
the aspick leaves upon the caves of Nile — v. 2 
outveuoms all the worms of Nile.. Cymbeline, iii. 4 
NILUS-o'ei-flowing Niluspresagetli.^n(onyiSCico. i. 2 
by the fire, tliat quickens Nilus' slime — i. 3 

tlie higher Nilus swells, the more .. — ii. 7 

rather on Nilus' mud lay me — v. 2 

hast thou the pretty worm of Nilus — v. 2 

like Nilus, it disdaineth hounAs. Titus.4nd7nn. iii. I 

NIMBLE— sensible and nimble lungs.. Tempest, ii. 1 

nor I my spirits are nimble — ii. 1 

to snare the nimble marmozet — ii. 2 

awake the pert and nimble spirit. . Mid. N.'s Dr. i. 1 
prisons up the nimble spirits .... Love'sL.Lost, iv. 3 
of such a merry, nimble, stirring spirit — v. 2 
you have a nimble wit; I think. . As ytjuLike it, iii. 2 
who with her head, nimble in tlireats — iv. 3 
a quick eye, and a nimble hand.. Winter'sTale, iv. 3 
as nimble jugglers, that deceive ..Comedy of Err. i. 2 
which his nimble haste had falsely. AViig- Jolin, iv. 2 
nimble mischance, that art bo .... Richard II. iii. 4 

but with nimble wing we 1 Henry IV. v. I 

full of nimble, fiery, and delectable.2He)/r!//F. iv. 3 

be with a nimble galliard won Henry V. i. 2 

the nimble gunner with linstock — iii. tchorns) 

to make your vessel nimble Cymbeline, ii. 4 

gently quench thy nimble Pericles, iii. 1 

you nimble lightnings, dart your Lear, ii. 4 

in the most terrible and nimble stroke . . — iv. 7 
dancing shoes, with nimble soles. /fom™ & Juliet, i.i 
NIMBLE-FOOTED, he hath . . Tu-oGen. of Ver. v. 3 
the nimble-footed mad-cap prince..! Henry IV. iv. 1 
NIMBLENILSS-and nimbleiiess..7u;!H.< Ctpsnr, iv. 3 
NIM BLE-PINIONED doves. . . . riomeo ^ Juliet, ii. f, 
NIMBLER-nimbler than the sands.. Cyndf/inp, iii. 2 

NIMBLY and sweetly recommends Macbeth, i. (i 

that rise thus nimbly by a true ....Uichard II. iv. I 
carried your guts away as nimbly . . 1 Henry IV. ii. 4 
capers nimbly in a lady's chamber. fi/c/iaj-d/ ///. i. 1 
NINE— between eight and nine irep.).MerryW. iii 5 
the youngest wren of nine comes. Twelfth Night,i\\. 2 

by nine to-morrow morning Meus.for.Meas. ii. I 

nine, sir; Over-done by the last. Ninel — ii. 1 
one that is a prisoner nine years old — iv. 2 

studied eight or nine wise words Much Ado, iii. 2 

tlie nine worthies (rep.) Love's L. Lost, v. 1 



NINE— three times thrice is nine ..Love'sL.Lost, v. 2 
is not nine. Under correction, sir .,., — v, 2 
I always took three threes for nine .. — v. 2 
eleven widows, and nine maids,. A/e»-.o/rcnice,ii. 2 

'tis nine o'clock; our friends — ii.fi 

an hour ago, since it was nine.. . . As you Lilte it, ii. 7 
I was seven of the nine days out .... — iii. 2 
among nine bad if one be (rep.).AWsWell, i. 3 (song) 
nine changes of the watery star .. Winter'sTale, i. 2 
and the third, nine, and some five .. — ii. 1 
too green and idle for girls of nine!.. — iii. 2 
weary sevennights, nine times nin&,.. .Macbeth, i. 3 

thrice a^ain, to make up nine — i. 3 

that hatli eaten her nine farrow — iv. 1 

these nine in buckram, that I \ Henri/ IV. ii. i 

at least nine hours, in reckoning .... — iii. 1 

better than the nine worthies iHe-nrylv, ii. i 

exceeding the nine sibyls of old ,.,.1 Henry VI. i. 2 
made a king at nine months old? ..i Henry VI. iv. 9 

I was but nine months old ZHenryVI. i. 1 

anointed king at nine months old .. — iii. 1 
in Paris but at nine months old . . Kichard III. ii. 3 
supper-time, my lord; it's nine o'clock — v. 3 
sixty and nine, that wore.. Troilus ^- Cressida, (prol.) 

I will buy nine sparrows for — ii. i 

to Isidore he owes nine thousand. 7"t;no?io/.,4;A. ii. 1 

labouring for nine. So much? — iii. 4 

there's nine that I know Coriolanus, ii. I 

had nine hours lien dead Pericles, iii. 2 

he hath been out nine years Lear, i. 1 

but new struck nine Romeo Sf Juliet, i. 1 

at the hour of nine ~- ii. 2 

the clock struck nine, when I did.... — ii. 5 
and from nine till twelve is three. ... — ii. .'i 
nothing, but one of your nine lives,. — iii. I 
or nine year; a tanner will last (rep.), . Hamlel, v. I 

he hath laid, on twelve for nine — v, 2 

nine or ten times I had thought to have. 0(/ie/to, i. 2 

till now some nine moons wasted — i. 3 

at nine i' the morning here we'll — i. 3 

I would have him nine years a killing .. — iv. I 
NINEFOLD-and her ninefold. . . . Lear, iii. i (song) 
NINE-MEN'S morris is filled up ..Mid.N.'sDr. ii. 2 
NINESCORE and seventeen ....Mens.forMeas. iv, 3 
I have foundered ninescore and oAH.'2 Henry IV. iv. 3 
NINETEEN zodiacks have gone .Mens.forMeas. i. 3 

boiled brains of nineteen Winter'sTale, ii'i. 3 

Canidius, our nineteen legions. . Antony % Cleo. iii. 7 

NINNY— what a pied ninny's thisl.... Tempest, iii. 2 

at Ninny's tomb (rep. v. 1) ..Mid. N.'sDrenm, iii. 1 

NINTH— be the ninth worthy .... Love'sL.Lnst, v. 2 

b.v the ninth of the next month?....IHenii//F. ii. 3 

I'll cavil on the ninth part — iii. I 

the ninth part of a sparrow,. Troihts^- Cressida, ii. 1 

about the ninth hour, lady Julius Ccpsar, ii. 4 

ere the ninth hour, I drunk. Ajilony if Cleopatra, ii. 5 

'tis the ninth hour o' the morn .... Cymbeline, iv. 2 

NINUS' tomb, man()ep. v. I) ..Mid.N.'sDream, iii. 1 

NIOBE— make wells and Niobes. 7'><i(7ms<5-Cj«s. v. 1 1 

like Niobe, all tears; why she, even she .Ham(e(,i . 2 

NIP— nips youth i' the Measure for Measure, iii. I 

thin weeds, nip not the gaudy. . . . Love'sL. Lost, v. 2 
here's snip, and nip, and cut. Taming of Shrew, iv. 3 

is aripeuing,— nips liis root HenryFIII. iii. 2 

these tidings nip me Titus Andronicus, iv. 4 

it nips me unto listening Pericles, v. 1 

NIPPED- bloodisnipjied ..Love'sL.Lost, y. 2 (song) 
NIPPING— wrathful nipping cold ..2HenryVI. ii. 4 

it is a nipping and an eager air Hamlet, i. 4 

NIPPI>E— ray nipple from his boneless. . Macbeth, i. 7 
taste the wormwood on the nipple. /'dmco ^Juliet, i. 3 

NIT— a most pathetical nit ! Love'sL. Lost, iv. ! 

tliou nit, thou winter Taming of Shrew, iv. 3 

NOAH— before Noah was a sa.ilor.Tu-elfthNight, iii. i 

Noah's flood could not do it.. Comedy of Errors, iii. 2 

NOB— I would not be sir Nob in a,ny.. King John, i. 1 

NOBILITY-against his own nobility.^«'s»'eH, iv. 3 

let his nobility remain in his — iv. 5 

3'our greatness, and nobility King John, iv. 3 

do make an earthquake of nobility ., — v. 2 
betwixt the wind and his nobility ..\ Henry IV. i. 3 
that men of your nobility and power — i. 3 
but with nobility, and tranquillity.. — ii. 1 

stand aside, nobility. This is — ii. 4 

where stained nobility lies trodden on — v. 4 
forage in blood of French nobility .... Henry V. i. 2 

awake, awake, English nobility! \HenryVI. i. 1 

peers, and chief nobility, destroyed. . — iv. I 

this jarring discord of nubility — iv. I 

and our nobility will scorn the match — v. 3 

as, like to pitch, defile nobility 2HenryVl.ii. 1 

such high vaunts of his nobility .... — iii. I 
true nobility is exempt from fear.... — iv. I 
the nobility think scorn to go in .... — iv. 2 

li\'e in slavery to the nobility — iv. 8 

and the nobility held in contempt. . Richard III. i. 3 

that your youn^ nobility could judge — i. 3 

like her true nobility, she has Henry VIII. ii. 4 

farewell nobility — iii. 2 

the state of our despised nobility — iii. 2 

would the nobility lay aside their. . . . Coriolanus, i, 1 

1 sin in envying his nol)ility — i. 1 

to curb the will of the nobility — iii. I 

the nobilit,y are vexed, who, we see .. — iv. 2 

the nobility of Rome are his — iv. 7 

these hands do lack nobility. /ln(o>j;/ ^- Cleopatra, ii. 5 
to justice, continence, and iwbllity'.TitusAndron. i. 1 

sweet cell of virtneandnobilit3' — i. 2 

sweet mercy is nobility's true badge.. — i. 2 
sith true nobilit.y warrants these ..,, — i, 2 

with no less nobility of love Hamlet, i. 2 

have then a nobility in their natures ..Othello, ii, i 

NOBLE— some noble creatures Tempest, i. 2 

that a noble Neapolitan — i. 2 

that's my noble master! — i. 2 

for nothing natural J ever saw so noble ,. — i. 2 

noble Sebastian, thou let'st thy — ii, I 

no, nolilc mistress; 'tis fresh — iii, 1 

1 thank my noble lord — iii, 2 

first, noble friend, let me — v. I 



NOBLE-know, noble lord,they,7'Mo Gen, o/r« iii, i 

a noble duke in nature Twelfili Night, \. 2 

sure, my noble lord, if she be — i. 4 

know him noble, of great estate — i, 6 

more noble than the world — ii, 4 

here comes my noble gull-catcher ii. 6 

with the most noble bottom of our fleet — v, 1 
Orsino, noble sir, be pleased that I 

to serve this noble count 

right noble is his blood 



— V. I 



— V. 1 

befcne so noble and so great Meat, for Meas. i, I 

had a most noble father _ ii, | 

thou art not noble iii, 1 

thou art too noble to conserve — iii, 1 

she lost a noble and renowned brother — iii. I 

liow now, noble Pompey? — iii. 2 

noble prince, as there comes light .... — v, 1 

my noole and well-warranted cousin — v, 1 

pardon me noble lord — v. 1 

in company of the right noble Claudio.il/iic/t Ado, i. 1 

God help the noble Claudio! — i. 1 

he is of a noble strain — ii. 1 

noble, or not I for an angel — ii. 3 

how noble, young, how rarely featured — iii, 1 

you learn me noble thankfulness ,,,. iv. I 

O, noble sir, your over-kindness doth — v. 1 

lie would play the noble beast in love — v 4 

got a culf in that same noble feat .. ,, — v. 4 
my noble lord, this man liath . . Mid.N.'sDream, i. 1 

none, of noble sort, would so offend ,. — iii, 2 

tragical, my noble lord (lep,) — v, 1 

noble respect takes it in might — v, 1 

here come two noble beasts in, a moon — v, 1 
sir, the king is a noble gentleman .Love'sL.Lost, v. 1 

the noble lord most honourably doth — v. 2 
your most noble kinsman, Gratiano./l/er.o/ fen. i. 1 

to be abridged from such a noble rate — i. 1 

caskets to this noble prince — ii. 7 

there stand the caskets, noble prince — ii. 9 

you have a noble and a true conceit.. — iii. 4 

O noble judge! (rep.) _ iv. 1 

full of noble device As you Like it. i. 1 

noble fool! a worthy fooll — ii. 7 

breaks his stafl" like a noble goose. . , . — iii, 4 

upon my parents, his all noble All's Well, i. 3 

your pardon, noble mistress! — i, 3 

noble heroes, my sword and youi'S .. — ii, 1 

we shall, noble captain — ii. 1 

spacious ceremony to the noble lords — ii. 1 

but you will, my noble grapes — ii. 1 

1 play the noble housewife with . , , . — ii, 2 
this youthful parcel of noble bachelors — ii, 3 
not one of those, but bad a noble father — ii, 3 
fields, where noble fellows strike .,.. — ii. 3 

such is his noble purpose — iii. 2 

God save you, noble captain — iv. 3 

or a noble scar, is a good livery — iv. 5 

to talk with the young noble soldier, . — iv. 5 

of her that threw it; noble she was .. — v. 3 

lay a more noble thought upon — v, 3 

turned off a first so noble wife — v, 3 

some noble gentleman . . Taming of Shrew, 1 (indue.) 
observed in noble ladies unto their — 1 (indue.) 
to see her noble lord restored .. — 
O, noble lord, bethink (rep.) .... — 
thrice noble lord, let me entreat — 

Baptista is a noble gentleman 

the spouse of any noble gentleman .. — iv. 5 
than our parents' noble names .... Winter'sTale, i. 2 

of your most noble offer — ii. 2 

these lords, my noble fellows . . , 
he is touched to the noble heart . 
to see his work, so noble, vilely bound up? — 

too noble for this place — 

he seems to be the more noble in being — 

Smalus, the noble honoured lord — 

most noble sir, that which I shall report — 

but, O, the noble com b-at, that — 

lost, noble Macbeth hath won Macbeth 

my noble partner you greet — 

great prediction of noble having — 

noble Banquo, that hast no less — 

fair and noble hostess, we are your — 

you do unbend your noble strength — 

good-morrow, noble sir! — 

your noble friends do lack you — i 

lie is noble, wise, judicious — i 

I should cut off the nobles for their — i 

Macduff, this noble passion, child of .... — i 

your ri^lit noble son, lead _ 

the noble thanes do bravely — 

is missing, and your noble son — 

a noble boy! who would not do thee. King John, 

O noble Dauphin, go with — i 

died your noble mother — i 

spoke like a spriteful noble gentleman 

my nobles leave me; and my 

count Melun, a noble lord of France 

your nobles will not hear you 

and, noble Dauphin, albeit we swear 
a noble temper dost thou show 

what a noble combat hast — v. 2 

so, nobles shall you all, that knit.... — v. 2 

hail, noble prince of France! — v. 2 

fly, noble English, you are — v. 4 

and you, my noble prince, with other — v. 7 
hath received eiglit thousand nobles. Richard II. \. 1 

for you, my noble lord of Lancaster.. — i. 1 

cold cowardice in noble breasts — i. 2 

let no noble eye profane — i. 3 

of you, my noble cousin, lord Aumerle — i. :i 

how fares our noble uncle, Lancaster? — ii. i 

1 am the last of noble Edward's sons — ii. 1 
his noble hand did win what he .... — ii. i 
many more of noble blood in this.... — ii. 1 

the nobles hath he fined for -_ ii 1 

[Co/.] Ilia noble ancestors achieved .. — ii. 1 

his noble kinsman: most degenerate — ii. I 

the nobles the.v are fled — ii. 2 

believe me, noble lord, I am — ii. 3 



1 (!ndi 

2 (indue.) 
2 (indue.) 



— ii.3 



— iv 



— v. 2 



NOBLE-I have, j'our iiol)le company. lOchcud 11. ii. 3 
of iiume, and noble estimate ........ — ii. 3 

makes us rich, most noble lord — ii. 3 

mynobleunele! show me tliy — ii. 3 

the noble duke hath sworn — ii. 3 

too late, I fear, my noble lord . 
noble lord, go to the rude ribs . 

his noble cousin is right 

noble Gloster's death (rep.') 

princes, and noble lords, what answer 
to execute the noble duke at Calais 
in this noble pre^ence wei-e enough noble 
thanks, noble peer; the cheapest .... 
riirht noble is tliy merit, well I wot. . 

that the noble Slortimcr 1 Henry 1 V. i 

by our noble and chaste mistress .... — 
nor never could the noble Mortimer — 

those same noble Scots, that are — 

of that same noble prelate — 

cannot choose but be a noble plot — 

pleasin" eve, and a most noble carriage — 
my noble lord, from Easteheap (rrp.) — 

well said, my noble Scot _ — 

wi tch tlie world with noble horsemansliip — 
gallant warriors, and noble gentlemen — 
the noble ^\'estmoreland, and warlike 

tliis hitter age witli noble deeds 

in blood by r.oble Percy lie 

a noble carl, and many a creature else 

the noble Scot, lord Douglas 

the noble Percy slain, and all his men 

of nulilc Hotspur's sword 'iHennjII'. (indue.) 

noble earl, I bring you certain news — 
from Shrewsbury, riiy noble lord (.rep.) — 



— iii.3 

— iii. 3 
_ iv. 1 

— iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 

V. 5 
V. 6 



— V. 1 



— V. b 



V. 5 



— IV. 4 



Henry i 


'\^ 


y — 


i. 2 
ii. 1 
ii. 1 


— 


ii. 2 



— IV. 8 



SO fought the noble I)o\iglas 

then was that noble Worcester too soon 

my most noble friends 

let it be but twenty nobles 

back from Wales, my noble lord? .. 
and youL's, most noble Bardolpli .... 

wherein the noble youth did 

till that the nobles, and the armed., 
recordation to my noble husband. . . . 
reverend father, and these noble lords 
my most noble lord of Westmoreland 
yoiu" noble and right well-remembcrcd 
to you, my noble lord of Westmoreland 

believe not the word of the noble 

and noble offices thou may'st eftcct. . 
and he, the noble image of my youLli 
the noble change that I have purposed! — 
'tis called Jerusalem, my noble lord 
how many nobles then should hold . 

such limbs of noble counsel 

I will inflame thy noble liver 

and Helen of thy noble thoughts .. . 
noble English, that eould entertain 

of England had nobles richer 

a mourning widow of her nobles ... 

the noble sinews of our power 

a noble shalt thou have, aud present pay 
I shall have my noble? in cash, 
my princes, and my noble peers 

come they of noble family!^ 

well supplied with noble counsellors 

tiiat hath not noble lustre in 

Lord in heaven bless thee, noble llarry 

my lord, yoiu- nobles, jealous of 

joyfully, my noble Imd of Bedford .. 

the noble earl of Suifolk also lies 

sort our nobb's from our common men 

and nobles bearing banners 

the names of those their nobles 

the noble duke of Gloster (rep.) I Ucnryt'I. 

that nobles should such stomachs bear! — 
ay, noble uncle, thus ignobly used.. — i 
BO fell that noble earl, and was beheaded — i 

that two such noble peers as ye — ii 

see, noble Charles! the beacon of. .. . — il 

and there erects thy noble deeds — ii 

th - re young Henry, with his nobles, lies — ii 
let's not forget the noble duke of Bedfurd— i i 
in honour of my noble lord of York.. — ii 
of the garter were of noble birth .... — i 

hear him, noble prince! (rep.) — i 

I cannot help the noble Chevalier.... — i 
rescue of the noble Talbot (rep.) .... — i' 
cries out for noble York and Somerset — i 
while he, renowned noble gentleman — i 
basely fled, when noble Talbot stood — i 
he would have made a noble knight — r 
my noble birth. 'Tis true, I gave a noble — 
tliou, nor thy nobles, to the crown . . — ' 

rave description, noble earl — 

ycur report, my noble lord of Suft'ollc — ' 
bear him like a noble gentleman. . . .•> Henry VI. 
for my part, noble lords, I care not. . — 
all the peers and nobles of the realm — 
noble she is; but,if she have forgot.. — i 

here, noble Henry, is my staflf — i 

ill can thy noble mind abrook — i 

then, noble York, take thou this task — ii 
well, nobles, well; 'tis politicly done — ii 
I'llcall him presently, my noble lord 
and all to have the noble duke alive — ii 

and noble stock was graft with — ii 

never of the Nevil's noble race — ii 

ay, noble father, if our words will .. — 
how now, my noble lord? what all .. — 
mj' noble father, three times to-day — 
but, noble as he is, look where he comes — 
noble Warwick, Cobham, and the rest.3Htnrj/ I'l. 
when as the noble duke of York was — i 
cheer these noble lords, and hearten — i 
the noble gentleman gave up the gho?t — i 

be it known to noble Lewis — ii 

my noble queen (rp/7.) — iii.3 

where a noble hearthath pawned.. .. — iv. 2 
thanks, noble Clarence; worthy .... — v. 7 
his noble queen well struck liiclianl 111. i. I 



— 111. 2 



i. 3 



NOBLE— with the noble duke Richard III. i. 1 

with patience, noble lord — i. 1 

at Chertsey monastery this noble king — i. 2 

towards Chertsey, noble lord? — i. 2 

two days since were worth a noble .. — i. 3 

the curse my noble father laid — i. 3 

befal thee, and thy noble house! .... — i. 3 

and yon, my noble lords (rep.) — i. 3 

the noble duke of Clarence to — i. 4 

here conies the noble duke — ii. 1 

of you, my noble cousin Buckingham — ii. 1 

some, less noble, aud less loyal — ii. 1 

if that our noble father be alive? .... — ii. 2 

title in thy noble husband! — ii. 2 

I say, with noble Buckingham — ii. 2 

the nobles were committed — ii. 4 

ICot. Kilt.'] how fares our noble brother? — iii. 1 

cousin, noble lord of York? — iii. 1 

for the instalment of this noble duke — iii. 1 

commends him to your noble lordship — iii. 2 

good-morroW'S to my noble lord! .... — iii. 2 

iatal and ominous to noble peers!.. ., — iii.3 

now, noble peers, the cause why we — iii. 4 

most inward with the noble duke? .. — iii. '4 

noble lord [Col. Km. lionourable lords] — iii. 4 

my noble lords and cousins, all — iii. 4 

this noble ["Co/. iCn^ princely] presence — iii. 4 

done this deed, my noble lord — iii. 4 

I do not doubt, right noble princes. . — iii. 5 

noble York, mj^ princely fa,ther .... — iii. 5 

being nothing like the noble duke .. — iii. 5 

entreat your grace, my noble lord .. — iii. 7 

my noble cousin should suspect me — iii. 7 

the noble isle;dotli want her proper.. — iii. 7 

draw forth your noble ancestry — iii. 7 

n(.)ble prince. O bitter (re;?.) — iv. 2 

send her a letter of thy noble deeds. . — iv. 4 

come, noble gentlemen, let us — v. 3 

thy person, noble father-in-law! .... — v. 3 

such noble scenes as draw Henry Till, (prol.) 

the very persons of oin- noble story — (prol.) 

challenged the noble spirits to arras — i. 1 

book, outworths a noble's blood .... — i. 1 

when these so noble benefits shall .. — i. 2 

not in your spleen a noble person. . .. — i. 2 

no doubt, he's noble; he had a black — i. 3 

in all this noble bevy — i. 4 

that noble lady, or gentleman — 1.4 

3"0ur grace is noble: let me — . i. 4 

a noble troop of strangers — i. 4 

a noble company! what are — i. 4 

of this so noble and so fair — i. 4 

rest showed a most noble patience .. — ii. 1 

and see the noble ruined man — ii. 1 

his noble friends, and fellows — ii.l 

noble father, Henry of Buckingham — ii.l 

made my name once more noble .... — ii. 1 

must needs saj', a noble one — ii.l 

the trial just and noble ~- ii. 2 

invited by your noble self — ii. 2 

all strangers' loves, you are so noble — ii. 2 

she is noble born; and, like her true — ii. 4 

may it please you, noble madam .... — iii. I 

noble lady, I am sorry my integrity — iii. 1 

out of his noble nature, zeal and .... — iii. 1 

that noble title your master wed me — iii. 1 

you have a gentle, noble temper ... . — iii. 1 

a noble spirit as yours was put — iii. 1 

bewailing land of noble Buckingham — iii. 2 

his noble jury and foul cause — iii. 2 

as you are tridy noble, as you respect — iii. 2 

or gild again the noble troops — iii. 2 

stir him, (I know his noble nature) — iii. 2 

sorgood, so noble, and so true — iii. 2 

is that old noble lad.v, duchess of.... — iv. 1 

noble madam, men's evil manners .. — iv. 2 

noble lady, first, my own service .... — iv. 2 

andof a noble modest nature — iv. 2 

that his noble grace would have .... — iv. 2 

good husband,let him be a noble... . — iv. 2 

without, my noble lords? (rep.) — v. 2 

men so noble, however faulty — v. 2 

to a most noble judge, the king — v. 2 

two noble partners (»ep. V. 4) — v. 2 

my noble gossips, ye have been — v. 4 

in noble eminence enthroned. 7'ro/7K.s- ^Cressida^ i. 3 

in our Grecian host one noble man.. — i.3 

find the welcome of a noble foe — i.3 

be brought home noble pi ize — ii. 2 

nor none so noble, whose life — ii. 2 

didl and factious nobles of the (Sreeks — ii. 2 

your greatness, and this noble state — ii. 3 

noble Ajax; 3'ou are as strong (rep.) — ii. 3 

our noble general do not do soj — ii. 3 

do depend upon a noble gentleman.. — iii. 1 

and tell me, noble Diomed — iv. 1 

answer? the noble Menelaus — i v. 5 

noble Ventidius! well; I am not.. Timon nfAlh. i. 1 

most noble Timon, call the man .... — i. 1 

I pr'ythee, noble lord (rep.) — i. 1 

a noble spirit. Nay, my lords — i. 2 

my lord, there arc certain nobles .... — i. 2 

other noble parts you'll suit, in — ii. 2 

great Timon, noble, worthy — ii. 2 

a noble nature may catch a wrench — ii. 2 

a noble gentleman 'tis, if he would not — iii. I 

for his right noble mind, illustrious — iii. 2 

with a noble fury, and fair spirit — iii. 5 

my noble lord,— ah, my good friend! — iii. B 

here's a noble feast toward — iii. 6 

so noble a master fallen! — iv. 2 

base, noble; old, young; coward .... — iv. 3 

the noble Timon (»ep.) — iv. 3 

our late noble master — v. 1 

BO it is said, my noble lord — v. 1 

speak to them, noble Timon — v. 2 

noble, and young, when thy first .... — v..") 

march, noble lord, into our city — v.;i 

fears with my more noble meaning ., — v. ."> 

my noble general, Timon is dead. . ■ . — v, 5 





1 




2 




2 




2 




2 




A 




■A 




3 



KOBLE-dead is noble Timon ..Timmiof.iihens, v. 5 

hail, noble Marcius! thanks Corinlunus, i. 1 

and call him noble, that was now.... — i. 1 
you cry against the noble senate .... — i. I 
noble Lartius! Hence! to your homes — i. I 
noble Aufidius, take your commission — i. 2 
indeed, la, 'tis a noble child — i.3 

noble fellow! who, sensible, outdares — i. 4 
my noble steed, known to the camp — i. 9 
plebeians would the noble Marcius.. — ii.l 
how now, my as fair as noble ladies — ii. 1 

and the desire of the nobles — ii.l 

the nobles bended, as to Jove's statue — 
and, out of bis noble carelessness. . . . — 

to gratify his noble service — 

he's right noble; let him be called for — 
and to our noble consul wish we all. . — 
liis noble deeds, we must also tell (rep.) — 
Godsave thee, noble consul! worthy — 
the noble house o' the Marcians .... — 
authority, ogainst all noble sufferance — 
passed the nobles (Col. Knl.-noble] aud — 

or never be so noble as a consul — 

prefer a noble life before a long — 

help, you that be noble; help him .. — 

1 pr'ythee, noble friend, home to.... — 
his nature is too noble for the world — 

the noble tribunes (rep.) — 

noble IMenenius, be you then as .... — 

well said, noble woman — 

therein you can never be too noble".. — 
these senators, the nobles; and you.. — 

noble lady! come, go with us — 

give to my noble heart a lie — 

amen, amen! anoblewish — 

the gods preserve our noble tribunes! 

craves a noble cunning 

and my friends of noble touch 

more noble blows than ever — 

unknit himself the noble knot he made — 
against the senators, patricians, andnobles — 
for the nobles receive so to heart .... — 
your noble TuUus Aufidius will appear — 

feasts the nobles of the state — 

thou show'st a noble vessel — 

permitted by our dastard nobles .... — 

all noble Marcius, — O let me — 

that I see thee here, thou noble thing I 

the nobles, in great earnestness 

unless the noble man have mercy. . .. 
like beasts, and cowardly nobles .... 

first he was a noble servant 

to make coals cheap: a noble memory I 
unless his noble mother, and his wife 

a noble fellow, I warrant him 

and the most noble mother of the world 

the noble sister of Publicola 

to show a noble grace to both parts . . 
the man was noble, but with his last 
honourable for a noble man still .... 
most noble sir, if you do hold the . . 

read it not, noble lords (rep.) 

the man is noble, and his fame 

my noble masters, hear me speak. . . . 

regarded as the most noble corse .... 

yet he shall liave a noble memory .. 

nave wished that noble Brutus . . .JuliusCcpsar., i 

hast lost the breed of noble bloods!.. — i.i 

till then, my noble friend, chew — i. 2 

he is a noble Koman, and well given — i. 2 

of any bold or noble enterprize — i.2 

well, Brutus, thou art noble — i.2 

meet that noble minds keep ever .... — i.2 
win the noble Brutus to our party .._ ^- i. 3 
which every noble Roman bears of you — ii.l 
render me worthy of this noble wife! — ii.l 
good-morrow, Antony. So to most noble — ii. 2 
the fortunes and aflViirs of noble Brutus — iii. 1 
with the most noble blood of all .... — iii. 1 
most noble! in the presence of thy corse? — iii. I 

the noble Brutus (rep.) — iii. 2 

noble Antony, go up (j-ep.) — iii. 2 

for when the noble Ctesar saw (rep.) — 

but that my noble master will — 

most noble brother, you have done . . — 

glad to learn of noble men — 

my heart is thirsty for that noble pledge — 

noble, noble Cassius (rep. V. 3) — 

by noble Brutus' power (rep.) — 

O young and noble Cato, art thou .. — 

we must not: a noble prisoner! — 

shall ever take alive the noble Brutus — 
now is that noble vessel full of grief — 
awhile. At your noble pleasure.. /fn/ony^CTeo. 
every hour, most noble Cjiesar ...... — 

noble friends, that which combined — 

then, noble partners, (the rather .... — 

noble Antony, not sickness should detain — 
is noble, courageous, high, unmatehable — 

but, he away, 'tis noble 

Kome east on my noble father 

noble Ventidius, whilst yet with .... 
'tis a noble Lepidus. A very fine one 
most noble Antony, let not the piece 
my noble brother! the April's in her 

O noble emperor, do not fight 

the noble ruin of her magic, Antony 
most noble sir, arise; the queen .... 

call all his noble captains to 

ay, noble lord. Sometime, we see ... . 
was Antony, most noble Antony! 



iii. I 
iii. 1 
iii. 1 



— iv. 1 



— iv.5 



— V. 3 



— V. 5 



iv 


2 


IV 


2 


iv 


A 


iv 


■A 


IV. 


■A 


V 


■A 


V 


4 


V 


4 


V 


4 


V 


5 



less noble mind than she, which .... — 

from me then thatn ble countenance — 

my noble girls! ah, women, women! — 

stained with his most noble blood .. — 

most noble empress, you have Iieard — 

that I sin uld not be noble to myself — 

now, noble Charmian, we'll despatch — 
how poor an instrument may do a noble — 

rouse himself to praise my noble act — 



li. 3 



ii. II 



v. 12 

V. 12 



NOB 



NOBLE— O noble weakness ! Anlony <S- Cleiipatni, y. 2 

as a noble friend of mine Cijnibeliite, i. 6 

madam, a noble gentleman of Rome — i. 7 

more noble than that runagate — i. 7 

myself, and other noble friends — _i. 7 

I iiad ratlier not be so noble as I am — ii. I 

after tlie noble temper of your lordsliip — ii. 3 

that harsh, noble, smiple, nothing . . — iii. ■! 

•fore noble Lucius present yourself. . — ijj- '' 

mj' nol3le mistress, Ixere is a box .... — ^J!* ** 

B), farewell, noble Lucius — iii. 5 

than my noble and natural person . . — jlj- '^ 

ay, my noble lord. Hou' long is't since — iii. .'> 

O noble strain I O worthiness of nature! — iv. 2 

that promise noble service — iv. 2 

otherwise timn noble nature did .... — iv. 2 

saved the noble Imogen to repent. . . . — v. 1 

uoble misery ! to be i' the field .... — v. 3 

1 never saw such noble fury — v. 6 

most like a noble lord in love — v. 5 

to make the noble Leonatus mad. ... — v. 5 
noble patricians, patrons of my .. Titus Andron. i. 1 

thy noble brother Titus, and his sons — i. 1 

my noble lord and father, live in fame I — i. 2 

gentle tribune, noble brother Marcus — i. 2 

and service of their noble country . . — i. 2 

and thanks, to men of noble minds. . — i. 2 

thanks, noble Titus ()-ep.) — i. 2 

accompany your noble emperor — i . 2 

his noble nephew here in virtue's nest — i. 2 

no man shed tears for noble Mntius — i. 2 

this noble gentleman, lord Titus here — i. 2 

lose not so uoble a friend — _}• 2 

nor would your noble mother — ii. 1 

great reason that nij' noble loi-d .... — \\ i 

fathers I noble tribunes, stay! — iii. 1 

noble father (;■!;/).) — iii. i 

thy noble CCo(.-aged] eyes to weep (,rep.) — iii. I 

for that noble hand of thine — iii. 1 

the heads of thy two noble sons — iii. 1 

farewell, Lavinia, my noble sister .. — iii. 1 

1 know, my noble aunt loves me .... — iv. 1 
■wilt thou betray thy noble mistress.. — iv. 2 
to see tliy noble uncle thus distract? — iv. 3 
tlien, noble auditory, be it known . , — v. 3 
the last true duties of thy noble son! — v. 3 
yourself then, noble Helieane (j-ep.) ..Pericles, ii. 4 
iilie noble subjects, and in your search — ii. 4 

my actions are as noble as my — ii. 6 

wiien noble Pericles shall demand .... — iv. 4 

to til ink of what a noble strain — iv. 4 

not but tliy training hath been noble.. — iv. 6 
pupils lacks she none of noble race — v. (Gower) 

of gentle, kind, and noble stock — v. 1 

thou art a grave and noble counsellor — v. I 

it seems you have been noble towards her — v. 2 

noble sir, if you have told Diana's — V, 3 

do you know this noble gentleman Leai, i. i 

France and Burgundy, my noble lord .. — i. 1 

right noble Burgundy (irp.) — i. 1 

and tlie noble, and true-hearted Kent . . — i. 2 

maledictions against king and nobles.... — i. 2 

father, and a brother noble — i. 2 

the noble duke my master, my worthy. . — ii. 1 

how now, my noble friend? — ii. 1 

occasions, noble Gloster, of some — ii. 1 

hail, to tliee noble master! How! — ii. 4 

touch me with noble anger! — ii. 4 

when nobles are tlieir tailors' tutors .... — iii. 2 

noble philosopher, your company — iii. 4 

speaking looks to noble Edmund — iv. 6 

dost make thy way to noble fortunes.... — v. 3 

yet am I noble, as the adversary — v. 3 

if my speech offend a noble heart — v. 3 

if tliou art noble, I do forgive thee — v. 3 

'tis noble Kent, your friend — v. 3 

you lords, and noble friends — V. 3 

my noble uncle, do you know . . liomeo ^- JtUiet, i. 1 

O noble prince, 1 can discover all. . . . — iii. 1 

tliy noble shape is but a form of wax — iii. 3 

she shall be married to this noble earl — iii. 4 

the gallant, young, and noble — iii. 5 

[Co(. Kn(.] a gentleman of uoble .... — iii. .'i 

uoble county Paris (;<;p.) — V. 3 

seek for thy noble father in the dust Hamlet, i. 2 

if it assume my noble father's person.... — i. 2 

doth all tlie noble substance often — i. 4 

but know, thou noble youtli — i. 5 

how is't, my noble lord? What news. ... — i. 5 

your noble son is mad — ii. 2 

how noble in reason! how infinite — ii. 2 

for to the noble mind, rich gifts — iii. 1 

what a noble mind is here o'erthrown — iii. 1 
now see tliat noble and most sovereign .. — iii. 1 

no noble rite, nor formal ostentation — iv. a 

he, which hath your noble fatlier slain.. — iv. 7 

and so have I a noble fatlier lost — iv. 7 

trace the noble dust of Alexander — v. 1 

tliat is Laertes, a very noble youth — V. 1 

forgiveness with me, noble Hamlet — v. 2 

now cracks a noble lieart — v. 2 

your noble self, I am sure, is sent for . . Othello, i. 2 

my very noble and approved good masters — i. 3 

do you perceive in all this noble company — i. 3 

my noble fatlier, I do perceive here — i. 3 

and, noble si''nior, if virtue no delighted — 1.3 

■wliat say'st thou, noble heart? — i. 3 

a nolile sliip of Venice hatlr seen — ii. 1 

is of a constant, loving, noble nature.... — ii. I 

onr noble and valiant general, that .... — ii. 2 

of Cyprus, and our noble general.. — ii.2 

lads of Cyprus, noble swelling spirits. . . . — ii. 3 

tliat tlie noble Moor should hazard such — ii. 3 

my noble lord (rep.) — iii. 3 

not have your free and noble nature .... — iii. 3 

is this tlie noble Moor, whom our full .. — iv. 1 

this tlie noble nature whom passion .... — iv. 1 

1 hope, my noble lord esteems me lionest — iv. 2 
lias slie forsook so many noble matches.. — iv. 2 
sucli noble sense of thy friend'.s wrong .. — v. 1 



[ 533 ] 



NOBLK-KNDING love UemyV. iv. 6 

NOBLEMAN— wortl\ynobleman..Msns./()»-^/ras. v. 1 

to give to a nobleman! All's ll'ell, v. 2 

name was Antigonus, a nobleman. Winter's Tale, iii. 3 

dar'st tiiou brave a nobleman? King Joint, iv. 3 

my lord, tiiere is a nobleman of .... 1 lleitnjiy. ii. 4 
haunting a nobleman loseth men's hearts — iii. I 
many a nobleman lies stark and stiff — v. 3 
live cleanly, as a nobleman sliould do — v. 4 
comes tlie nobleman thatcomraitted.2Hfr!j!//r. i. 2 
faultless may condemn a noblenianliHe/oj/F/. iii. 2 
what nobleman is tliat, that with .... — iv. 3 
to see a nobleman want manners. . Henry I' J J I. iii. 2 
tlie nobleman would have dealt with. . Pericles, iv. 6 

tliere's a nobleman in town . . Romeo Sr Juliet, ii. 4 
NOBLEMEN as guilty of duke 2HenryVI. iii. 2 

converse with noblemen .... Two Gen. of Verona, i. 3 
go search like noblemen, like noble. . . . Pericles, ii. 4 

NOBLE-MINDED Talbot \ Henry VI. iv. 4 

tlie good that noble-minded Titus Titus And. i. 2 

NOBLENESS of birth TwoGen. of Verona, i. 3 

to see his nobleness! conceiving .. IVinter'sTale, ii. 3 
may undergo, and nobleness impose — ii. 3 

the affection of nobleness, which nature — v. 2 

but si^ns of nobleness, like stars Macbeth, i. 4 

[iC«/.Jthen true nobleness would. . . . Richard II. iv. 1 
your form and nobleness of mind.. R/c/iaivi ///. iii. 7 
stamp and nobleness in any personHenryVIII. iii. 2 
wliose star-like nobleness gave . Timov of Athens, v. 1 

flatterers, foes to nobleness Coriolanus, iii. 1 

inform thy thou^lits witli nobleness — v. 3 

the nobleness of life is, to do thus .Antony <§- Cleo. i. I 

got upon me a nobleness of record — iv. 12 

see his nobleness well acted — v. 2 

cliarming with their own nobleness. . CymbtUne, v. 3 
greater than nobleness and riches .... Penrles, iii. 2 

Slit did prophecy a royal nobleness Lear, v. 3 
BLER— yet with my nobler reason .. Tempesf,y. 1 
but kindness, nobler ever than . . As you Like it, iv. 3 

was in my nobler thoughts most All's IVell,'\i. 3 

b3' bud of nobler race Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

thy nobler parts against these King John, iii. 1 

and spoil your nobler soul! Henry VIII. i. 2 

way with those of nobler bulk? . .Troilut^ Cress, i. 3 
moon, were she earthly, no nobler , . Coriolanus, ii. 1 

my nobler friends, I crave their — iii. 1 

you do the nobler. I muse, my mother. . — iii. 2 
there's not a nobler man in Jiovae. Julius Ceesar, iii. 2 
Antony, nobler than my revolt. . Anlony if- Cleo. iv. 9 

thrice nobler than myself! — iv. 12 

some nobler token I have kept — v. 2 

O, tliis life is nobler, than attending. Cymirime, iii. 3 
to taint his nobler heart and brain .. — v. 4 
a garment nobler than that it covers — v. 4 

a nobler sir ne'er lived 'twixt sky v. 5 

a nobler man, a braver warrior. Titus Andronicus. i. 1 
whetlier 'tis nobler in the mind Hamlet, iii. 1 

NOB LESS [Kji/.-nobleness] would ..Richard II. iv. 1 
[K'»i(.] nobless English, whose blood.. Hrari/F. iii. 1 

NOBLEST— the noblest grace she owed. Tempest, iii. 1 
so I do, the noblest that I have.. .. Tu-elfth Night, i. 1 

the noblest deer hath them as As you Like it, iii. 3 

you noblest [JCn(. -nobless] English . .Henry V. iii. 1 
noblest hateful love, that e'er. Troilus^- Cressida, iv. 1 

the noblest mind he carries Timon of Athens, i. I 

who can bring noblest minds to — iv. 3 

art the ruins of the noblest man ..JuliusCcesar, iii. 1 
if thou wert the noblest of thy strain — v. 1 

now, most noljlest Brutus, the gods . . — v. 1 

think not, tliou noblest Roman — v. 1 

this was the noblest Roman of them all — ..y-^ 
'tis your noblest course.. .. Antony ^ Cleopatra, iii. 11 

princeo' the world, the noblest — iv. 13 

noblest of men, woo't die? — iv. 13 

he is one of the noblest note, . Cymbeline, i. 7 (letter) 
demand a prisoner, the noblest ta'en — v. 5 
the noblest that survives, the eldest. TilusAndron. i. 2 
call the noisiest to the audience Hamlet, v. 2 

NOBLEST-MINDED Romans .... Julius Ca'sar, i. 3 

NOBLY— sin to think but nobly oH •my. .Tempest, i. 2 
kinds of baseness are nobly undergone — iii. 1 

1 think nobly of the soul Twelfth Aight, iv. 2 

that sometimes savours nobly? — v. 1 

that hears most nobly of him AU'slVell, i'n. 5 

reports of men very nobly held — iv. 3 

a scar nobly got, or a noble scar — iv. 5 

very nobly have you deserved . . Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

was not that nobly done? Uluchelh, iii. 6 

your luggage nobly on your back . . 1 Henry I V, v. 4 
both parties noblj' are subdued ....iHenrylV. iv. 2 

for you are more nobly born illenryVI. ii. 3 

then nobly, York; 'tis for a crown .. — v. 2 

and, pray, receive tliem nobly Henry J'lII.i. 4 

'tis nobly spoken: take notice — iii. 2 

all such emblems laid nobly on her.. — iv. 1 
so stale his palrn, nobly acquired .. Vroil.4' Cress, ii. 3 

'tis most nobly spoken Timon of Athens, v. 5 

I had ratlier had eleven die nobly for. Coriolanus, i. 3 

bear the addition nobly for ever! — i. 9 

to bear what you have nobly done — ii.2 

nobly of your country, and you (rep.) .. — ii. 3 

he has done noblj', and cannot — ii. 3 

nobly named so, being censor — ii. 3 

as hotly and as nobly with thy love .... — iv. 5 
every Roman bears, and nobly . . Julius Cresar, ii. 1 

'tis nobly spoken Anlony ^' Cleopatra, ii. 2 

our force by land hath nobly held .. — iii. 11 

you have been nobly borne — iv. 12 

nobly he j'okes a smiling with Cymbeline, iv. 2 

soldier, that so nobly fought — v. S 

nobly dooraedl will learn our — v. 5 

will use you nobly, and your ..Titus Andronicus, i. 2 
yes, and will nobly him remunerate — i. 2 

of Mitylene, speaks nobly of her rericles,v. 1 

sir, you speak nobly Lear, v. 1 

youthful, and nobly trained ..Romeo ^Juliet, iii. 6 

NOBODY— by the picture of nobody . . Tempest, iii. 2 

but nobody but has his fault Merry Wives, i. 4 

I warrant thee, nobody liears — ii. 2 

I am so glad you have nobody here . . — iv. 2 



NOI 

NOBODY-Benedick; T\oho6ymarka you. Much Ado,T.\ 
true speaking, I'll ottcind nobody .. .. — iii. 4 

just, said she, it hurts nobody — v. I 

did nobody come; but.haxk.. nierchant of J'eniee, v. 1 
nobot'.y will steal that from tliee. II iniit 's 'lute, iv. 3 

noliody should be sad buti KingJnlm, iv. 1 

but eyes, and nobody sees me 1 Henry I r. y. 4 

or no, there is nobody cares 2Htnryl V.i\. 4 

she has nobody to do any thing — iii. 2 

trust nobody, for fear vou be 2 Henry VI. iv. 4 

wind, that profits nobody iHenryVI. ii. 5 

PatrocUis.l'll speak with nobody .7'roi/.^-Cress._ i_i. 3 
who, I? why, he'll answer nobody .. — iii- 3 
like a cock that nobody can match.. Cymic^'ne, ii. I 

nobody will look after it Pericles, Vi. 1 

touch not you, it comes near nobody .. Othello, iv. 1 
let nobody blame him, his scorn . . — iv. 3 (song) 
nobody come? then shall I bleed to death — v. 1 
nobody; Imyself; farewell: commend me — v. 2 

NOCES— baisces devant leur noces Henry V. v. 2 

NOD— did she nod? (rep.) Two Gen. of Verona, i. 1 

nod, I? why that's noddy — i. I 

nod to him, elves, and do him..;i/u/. A'. Dremn, iii. 1 

and nod at every man All's H'rlt, iv. 5 

my lord, you nod Taming of Shrew, i. 1 (indue.) 

if she chance to nod, I'll rail — iv. 1 

if thou canst nod, speak too Macbeth, iii. 4 

with nods, with rolling eyes King John, iv. 2 

nod their heads, and throw iHenry VI. ii. 4 

nav, he nods at us — iv. 7 

duck with French nods and apish..i?/c/i«7-(i///.,i. 3 
read.y with every nod, to tumble .... — iii. 4 
you shall see liim nod at me (jcp.). Troil.S,- Cress, i. 2 

most rich in Timon's nod Timon of Athens,]. 1 

half-caps, and cold-moving nods .... — ii.2 
I will practise the insinuating nod . . Coriolanus, ii. 3 
to a molehill sliould in supplication nod — v. 3 
if Cojsar carelessly but nod on him. JuliusCcesar, i. 2 

if thou dost nod, thou break'st — iv. 3 

that nod unto the world. .^n/o»y ^-Cleopatra, iy. 12 
nor nod, nor kneel, nor make ..Titus Andron. iii. 2 
as her winks, and nods, and gestures . . Hamlet, iv. 5 

NODDED, and soberly did mount. ./("(oni/iS Cleo. i. 5 
Cleopatra hath nodded him to lier . . — iii. 6 

NODDING violet grows Mid.N.'sDream, ii. 2 

with nodding of their plumes Coriotnnu.'., iii. 3 

NODDLE— will smite his noddles.. il/wri/ Wives, iii. 1 
to comb your noddle with Taming of Stirew, i. 1 

NODDY-why that's noddy (,rep.)TwoGen.of Ver.i. 1 
nothing but the word noddy — i. 1 

'NOINTED an Athenian's eyes.Mi'rf. A'. 'sDrram, iii. 2 
then 'nointed over with honey .. Winter'sTale, iv. 3 

NOISE— insolent noise maker 'Tempest,). I 

there was a noise, that's verity — ii. I 

the isle is full of noises — iii. 2 

no noise, and enter — iv. I 

with strange and several noises — v. 1 

alas ! what noise? Merry Wives, y. 5 

but hark, what noise? {rep.') .... Meas.fm- Meas. iv. 'i 

who makes that noise there? — }y.-^ 

you shall also make no noise in ....Much Ado, iii. 3 
he goes but to see a noise ....Mid.N.'sDream, 'in. I 
the noise they make, will cause .... — iii. 2 
doth noise abroad, Navarre hatli.Love'.s L. Lost, ii, I 
and to make no noise when .... Mer. of Ven ice, i v. 1 

and they did make no noise — v. 1 

in tune, so it make noise enough. /Is you Like it, i v. 2 

there's noise in it: 'tis hard All's U'elt, ii. 3 

what noise there, ho? no noise .. Winter sTnte, ii. 3 

tliat keep all this noise? Comedy of F.rrors,'\'\\. 1 

didst thou not hear a noise? Macbeth, ii.2 

is't with me when every noise appals — ii.2 

and wliat noise is this? show! — iv. 1 

what is that noise? it is the cry of — v. .0 

that way the noise is; tyrant — v. 7 

from forth the noise and rumour King John, v. 1 

without the noise of threatening ..Richnrdll. iii. 3 

to noise abroad that Harry iHenrylV. (indue.) 

to find out Sneak's noise — _ii. -I 

let there be no noise made — iv. 4 

less noise; less noise. "Who saw .... — iv. 4 

not so much noise, my lords — iv. 4 

what noise is this? what traitors IHtriryVI. i. 3 

Cometh this alarum, and the noise?. . — i. 1 

if any noise, or soldier, you perceive — ii. ' 

what means this noise? fellow 2HenryVI. ii. I 

what noise is this? why, how now .. — iii 2 
what noise is this I hear? dare any be — iv. « 

the noise of thy cross-bow will SHenryJ'l. Hi. 1 

what dreadful noise of water Richaid 111. i. 4 

that, with the very noise, I.... — ,i. 4 

hark, what noise is this? — ii.2 

a noise of uirgets; or to see Henry VIII. (prol.) 

such a noise arose as the shrouds .... — iv. 1 

you'll leave your noise anon — y. 3 

the noisa goes, this: there is Troilus & Cress. \. 2 

what noise? what shriek is this? .... — ii.2 

tlieir noise be our instruction Coriolanus, i. 4 

hark, what noise the general makes! — \. '> 

before him he carries noise — ii. 1 

from the noise of our own drums .... — i|. 3 
being but the horn and noise 0' tlie.. — iii. 1 
unshiiut the noise that banished .... — v. 4 

splitting the air with noise — v. 5 

bid every noise be still: peace yet.. Julius Crrsar, 1. 2 

what was the second noise for? — ,i. 2 

the noise of battle hurtled in the air — ii- 2 

hark, boy, what noise is that? — ii. 4 

catching but the least no'ise.. Antony ij- Cleopatra,]. 2 
to a trull, that noises it against us .. — iii. (i 

peace, what noise? list, list! — iv. 3 

follow the noise so far as we — _iv. 3 

what's the noise? I have done — iv. 12 

wherefore's this noise? here is — v. 2 

to the loudest of noise we make .... CymheUne, iii. 5 

the noise is round about us — iy. 4 

no noise, but silence and eternal.. Titus. indron.i. - 
all the court may echo with the noise — ij.. 2_ 

and mark their yelling noise — i:. 3 

I made unto the noise — v. 1 



NOI 



NOISE— ghasted by tlie noise I made Lear, ii. 1 

make no noise, make no noise; draw..., — iii. 6 

mark tlie Iiigli noises; and thj'self — iii. 6 

wliat noise is this? give me my ..Romeo 4'Jutie!, i. 1 
I hear some noise within; dear love — ii. '2 
■what noise is here? O Inmentaljle day I — iv. .'i 
I liear some noise; lady, come from — v. 3 

yea, noise? then I'll be brief — v. 3 

and then a noise did scare me from.. — y. 3 
inexplicable dumb shows and noise ..Hamlet, iii. 2 
tiiy tongue in noise so rude asainst me? — iii. 4 

but soft, what noise? wlio calls on — iv. 2 

alack, what noise is this? (rep. 1 — iv. 5 

but, stay, what noise? how now — iv. 7 

what warlike noise is this? — v. 2 

what noise? the town is empty Othello,i\. 1 

but, harki what noise? you roguel .... — ii. 3 

to make no more noise with it — iii. I 

who's there? whose noise is this — v. 1 

what noise is this? not deadl — v. 2 

noise was high. Ha! no more moving! — v. 2 

NOISED-Iet It be noised, tliat Henri/ VIII. i. 2 

it is noised, he hath a mass. , . . Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

NOISELESS foot of time All's iVell. v. 3 

spreafls his banners in our noiseless land, tear, iv. 2 
NOISOME— foul breath is noisome ..Much Ado, v. 1 

root away tlie noisome weeds Richard II. iii. ■) 

and doves with noisome stench 1 Henry r I. i. .5 

a pile of noisome, musty chaff Coriolanus, v. 1 

will be both noisome and infectious.. Cymdedjie, i. 6 

NOMINATE— we may nominate .. Love' sL. Lost, \. 2 

can you nominate in order now ...4s you Like it, v. 4 

but suddenly to nominate them ii.\\..2HenryVL ii. I 

NOMINATED, or called Love's L. Lost, v. 1 

nominated for an equal pound ..Mer.offenice, i. 3 

is it so nominated in the bond? — iv. I 

NOMINATION of the party .... Love's L. Lost, iv. 2 

and want but nomiuation Richard III. iii. 4 

what imports the nomination of this . . Hamlet, v. 2 
NOMINATIVO, hie, htec (jep.) . . Merry Wives, iv, I 
NONAGE— that, in his nonage .... Richard III. ii. 3 

NONCE— buckram for the nonce I Henry I y. 1. 2 

a riddling merchant for the nonce . .\ Henry FI. ii. 3 

preferred him a chalice for the nonce. .Hamlet, iv. 7 

NON COM— of them to anon com ..Much.-iJo, iii. 5 

NONE-SPARING war? All's irell,ni.2 

NON NOBIS-there be sung non nobis. Henri/ r. iv. 8 
NONNY — hey nonny, nonny .. Much Ado, ii. 3 (song) 

says suum, mun, ha no nonny Lear, iii. 4 

no nonny, nonny hey nonny ..Hamlet, iv. 5 (song) 

NONPAREIL— calls her a nonpareil. . Tempest, iii. 2 

crowned the nonpareil of beauty. . Twelfth Nig/d, i. 5 

tliou art the nonpareil Macbeth, iii. 4 

of Caesar? how? the nonpareil!. /)n/on;/.S-C(eo. iii. 2 

doth my wife the nonpareil of this.. Cymbetine, ii. ,5 

NON-PERFORMANCE, 'twas .... iVinter'sTale, i. 2 

NON-REG ARDANCE oast my ..Twelflh Night, v. I 

KON-SUITS my mediators Othello, i. 1 

NOOK— in the deep nook Tempest, i. 2 

many winding nooks he strays.. TwoGen.ofVer. ii. 7 

and to live in a nook merely ....As you Like it, iii. 2 

NOOK-SHOTTEN isle of Albion .... Henry F. iii. i 

NOON- love's night is noon Twelfth Nijfhl, iii. 1 

hours, minutes? noon, midnight?.. IVinter'sTale, i. 2 
business must be wrought ere noon . . Macbeth, iii. 5 
Aseension-day at noon Oep. v. 1) ..King John, iv. 2 
and on that day at noon, whereon . . — iv. 2 
sleeping upon benches after noon . . ] Henry IV. i. 2 
p-hadow which he treads on at noon. .Coriolanus, i. 1 
to reel the streets at noon. .. .Antony ^Cleopatra, i. 4 
at noon, at midnight, to encounter .. Cymbetine, i. 4 
there sliall he sit till noon. Till nooni ..Lear, ii. 2 

and I'll go to bed at noon — iii. 6 

is now upon tlie prick of noon ..Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 4 

or Tuesday noon, or night Othello, iii. 3 

NOON-DAY — even at noon-day ....JuliusCcesar, i. 3 

NOON-TIDE— the uoon-tiile sun Tempest, v. 1 

noon-tide with the Antipodes. Mid.N.'sDream, iii. 2 
an evening at the noon-tide prick ..SHenryVI.i. 4 
morning, and the noon-tide night. . Richard III. i. 4 

NORBEHY— sir John Noihery Richard II. ii. 1 

NORFOLK— against the duke of Norfolk — i. 1 
Thomas of Norfolk, what say 'st .... — i. 1 

we'll calm the duke of Norfolk — i. 1 

of Norfolk's gage. And, Norfolk, throw — i. 1 

the duke of Norfolk (lep.) — i. 3 

Norfolk, for thee remains a heavier — i. 3 
Norfolk, so far as to mine enemy.... — i. 3 
I heard the banished Norfolk say . . — iv. 1 

with a gage, that Norfolk lies — iv. 1 

till Norfolk be repealed — iv. 1 

hath banished Norfolk fought for .. — iv. 1 

why bishop, is Norfolk dead? — iv. 1 

ThoraasMowbray, duke of Norfolk. 2 Henri/ir. iii. 2 
to all the duke of Norfolk's signories — iv. I 
thanks, gentle Norfolk; stay by me-lHeiiryVI. i. 1 
of Essex, Norfolk, Suffolk, nor of Kent — i, 1 
and I to Norfolk, with my followers — i. 1 

Shalt unto the duke of Norfolk — i. 2 

your brother, Norfolk, and myself . . — ii. 1 
where is the duke of Norfolk, gentle — ii. 1 
now, if the help of Noriblk, and myself — ii. 1 
the duke of Norfolk sends you word — ii. 1 
in Suffolk, Norfolk, and in Kent .... — iv. 8 
attendant on the duke of Norfolk.. flicAard ///. ii. I 
friend post the duke of Norfolk .... — iv. 4 

my lord of Norfolk (rep.) — v. 3 

good Nortblk. hie thee to thy charge — v. 3 
with the lark to-morrow, gentle Norfolk — v. 3 
John duke of Nortblk, TJiomas earl of — v. 3 
what thiiikest tliou, Norfolk? A good — v. 3 
Jocky of Norfolk, be not too bold — v. 3 (scroll) 
my lord of Norfolk, rescue, rescue!.. — v. 4 
John duke of Norfolk, Walter lord.. — v. 4 
my lord of Norfolk, as you are .... Hcnrt/ r// J. iii. 2 
next, the duke of Norfolk, he to be earl — iv. 1 
and tliat ray lord of Nortblk? Yes .. — iv. 1 
old noble lady, duchess of Norfolk . . — iv. 1 
tlie old duchess of Norfolk, and lady — v. 2 
NOKMAN-Normans.but bastard (rep.). Hem y /'. iii. 5 



[ 534 ] 

NORMAN— revolting Normans iHetiry VI. iv. 1 

a Norman, was't? A Norman Hamlet, iv. 7 

NORMANDY— in Normandy Baw./-oi'e'sL.Los(, ii. 1 
deep scars in France and Normandy? 2 Henry >'/.i. I 
counties were the keys of Normandy — i. 1 
giving up of Normandy unto monsieur — iv. 7 
not Blaine, I lost not Normandy.... — iv. 7 
here was a gentleman of Normandy . . Hamlet, iv. 7 

NORTH— the sharp wind of the north ..Tempest, i. 2 
meet meat the north gate (.np.). TwoGen. ofl'er. iii. I 
are now sailed into the north .. Twelflh fi'ight, iii. 2 
she would infect to the north star . . Much Ado, ii. 1 
it stands north north east ..Love's L.Lost,i. 1 (let.) 

east, west, north, and south — v. 2 

by the north pole, I do challenge — v. 2 

from east, west, north, and south.. IVinter'sTale, i. i 

I from the north King John, ii. 2 

from north to south; Austria — ii. 2 

nor entreat the north to make — v. 7 

towards the north, where shivering. /iiWmrd //. v. 1 

came from the north, and thus \HenryIF. i. 1 

cross it from the north to south .... — i. 3 

the Hotspur of the north — ii. 4 

tliat same mad fellow of the north . . — ii. 4 

my moiety, north from Burton — iii. I 

and on this north side win this — iii. 1 

posts, come from tlie north iHenrylV. ii. 4 

east, west, north, south; or, like .... — iv. 2 

I think, at the north gate \ Henry VI. i. 4 

the Percies of the north — ii. ,'i 

lordly monarch of the north — v. 3 

at Berwick in the north 2 Henry VI. ii. 1 

pursued the horsemen of the north . . 3 Henry VI. i, 1 
post with him toward the north ..Richard HI, iii. 2 
in the north. Cold friends (rep.).. .. — iv. 4 
the best breed in the north. Henri/ FZ/i. ii. 2 (letter) 

fly east, west, north, south Coriolanus, ii. 3 

up higher toward the north JuliusCrcsar, ii. I 

tyrannous breathings of the north . . Cymbetine, i. 4 
tlie north side of this pleasant . . Tilus Andron. ii. 4 
the grizzled north disgorges such. Perides, ill. (Gow.) 
when I was born, the wind was north. . — iv. I 
the frozen bosom of the north . . Romeo ffJidiet, i. 4 

I am but mad north north west Hamlet, ii. 2 

[Co/.A'n(.] speak as liberal as the north. .O/Zie/to, v. 2 

NORTHAMPTON, and in iHenryVI. iv. 8 

and at Northampton, they do rest .Richard III. ii. 3 
Stafford and Northampton, I arrest. Henr^FHi. i. 1 

NORTHAMPTONSHIRE; and eldest A'/n^/o/m, i. 1 

NORTH-EAST— north-east wind....«ic/iard //. i. 4 

NORTHERLY— the wind is northerly . . Hamlet, v. 2 

NORTHERN-like a northern man.Love'sL.Lost,v. 2 

bolted by the northern blasts Winter's Tale, Iv. 3 

to touch our northern shore Richard II. ii. I 

and all your northern castles yielded — iii. 2 
make this northern youth exchange. 1 Henry IV. iii. 2 

proud northern lord, Clifford 2HeuryVl. v. 2 

northern lords, that have forsworn ..ZHenryVI. 1. 1 
with all the northern earls and lords — i. 2 
I am constant as the northern stuv. JuliusCcesar, iii. 1 
angry northern wind will blow.. Titus Andron. iv. 1 

NORTHUMBERLAND, and warlike.Maciett, iii. 6 
confident to speak Northumberland.iJic/iardJ'i. ii. 1 
the lord Northumberland, his 3'oung — ii. 2 
not proclaimed Northumberland.... — ii. 2 
my lord Northumberland see them. . — iii. 1 
beseem the lord Northumberland, to say — iii. 3 
Northumberland, say, thus the king — iii. 3 
shall we call back Northumberland — iii. 3 
Northumberland comes back from.. — iii. 3 
my lord Northumberland, what says — iii. 3 
gentle Northumberland, if thy offences — iv. 1 
it no more, my lord Northumberland — iv. i 
Northumberland, thou ladder where — v. 1 

part us, Northumberland — v. 1 

that my lord Northumberland" \HenryIV. i. I 

my lord Northumberland, we license — i. 3 
and old Northumberland; and that — ii. 4 

perceived Northumberland did lean — iv. 3 
the sickness of Northumberland .... — iv. 4 
to meet Northumberland, and the .. — v. 6 
old Northumbeiiand, lies ..2HenryIV. (induction) 
upon the enraged Northumberland! — i. 1 
and the earl ot Northumberland .... — i. 2 
in the hope of great Northumberland — i. 3 
up head without Northumberland .. — i. 3 
against Northumberland, and the .. — ii. 1 
my lord Northumberland will soon — iii. 1 

since Richard, and Northumberland — iii. 1 

and rated by Northumberland — iii. 1 

Northumberland, thou ladder, by .. — iii. 1 
that great Northumberland, then .. — iii. 1 
the bisliop and Northumberland are — iii. 1 
dated letters from Northumberland — iv. 1 
earl Northumberland, and the lord.. — iv. 4 

Grey of Northumberland (rep.) Henry V. ii. 2 

the great lord of Northumberland ..SHenryVI. i. ] 
earl of Northumberland, he slew thy — i. 1 

rough Northumberland (rep.) — i. 4 

speak thou, Northvimberland, hold. . — i. 4 

ripe, my lord Northumberland? .... — i. 4 

Clifford's and Northumberland's (rep.) — ii. 1 

Northumberland, I hold thee — ii. 2 

the son, and two North umberlands — v. 7 

Nortliumberland, then present .... Ricltard III. i. 3 
the melancholy lord Northumberland? — v. 3 
what said Northumberland, as — v. 3 

NORTHWARD born Merch. of Venice, ii. 1 

the remnant northward, lying of£ . .\ Henry I V. iii. I 
threw many a northward look tHenrylV. ii. 3 

NORWAY himself, with terrible Macbeth, i. 2 

Sweno, the Norway's king, craves — i. 2 

he the ambitious Norway combated ....Hamlet, i. 1 

by Fortinbras of Norway, thereto — 1.1 

hath in the skirts of Norway, here and,. — i. 1 
we have here writ to Norway, uncle to,. — i. 2 
bearers of this greeting to old Norway .. — i. 2 

the embassadors from Norway — ii. 2 

what from our brother Norway? — ii. 2 

receives rebuke from Norway — ii, 2' 



NOT 



NORWAY— Norway, overcome with .ioy.Ham(c/,ii. 2 
powers are these? they are of Norway .. — iv. 4 
the nephew to old Norway, Fortinbras .. — iv. 4 
nor will it yield to Norway, or the Pole — iv. 4 

NORWEYAN lord, surveying vantage... Wac(ie(A, i. 2 
in the stout Norweyan ranks — 1.3 

NOSE— lifted up their noses Tempest, iv. I 

at which my nose is in great indignation — iv. 1 
as a nose on a man's face . . Two Om. of I'ei-ona, ii. I 
Malvolio's nose is no whipstock.. r«-c//V/i A'ighi, ii. 3 

to hear by the nose, it is dulcet — ii. 3 

I have 't in my nose too — ii. 3 

nor this is not my nose neither — i v. 1 

plucks justice by the nose Meas.for Meas. i. 4 

make him bite the law by the nose.. — iii. 1 
did not I pluck thee by the nose .... — v. 1 
to have had our two noses snapped ..MuchAdn, v. I 
this cherry nose, these yeWo'if .. Mid.N.'sDream, v. 1 
sometime through the nose .... Love's L. Lost, iii. 1 

your nose says, no (rep.) — v. 2 

and Marian's nose looks red and raw — v. 2 (song) 
that my nose fell a bleeding ..Merch. of Venice, ii. 5 

the bagpipe sings i' the nose — iv. I 

down his innocent nose Asyou Like it, ii. 1 

with spectacles on nose, and pouch.. — ii. 7 
lower part where thy nose stands .... All's Well, ii. 3 
you need not to stop your nose (rep. ) — v. 2 
I'll slit the villain's nose .... Taming of Sinew, v. 1 
what, hast smutched thy nose? . . Winter's Tale, i. i 
I have seen a lady's nose that has .. — ii. 1 

as cold as is a dead man's nose — ii. I 

eye, nose, lip, the trick of his frown.. — ii. 3 
masks for faces, and for noses .... — iv. 3(song) 

a good nose is requisite also — iv. 3 

receives not thy nose court-odour .. — iv. 3 
he is oft led by the nose with gold .. — iv. 3 

sir, upon her nose, all o'er. Comedy of Errors, iii. 2 

to be ballast at her nose — iii. 2 

nose of Turk, and Tartar's lips Macbeth, iv. 1 

he gave his nose, and took't 1 Henry I /•'. i . 3 

bloody noses, and cracked crowns .. — ii. 3 

yea, and to tickle our noses — ii. 1 

but 'tis in the nose of thee — iii. 3 

let them coin his nose — iii. 3 

whose zeal burns in his nose 2HenrylV. ii. 4 

put thy nose between his sheets Henry V.ii. 1 

for his nose was as sharp as a pen .... — ii. 3 
a flea stick upon Bardolph's nose.. .. — ii. 3 

and his lips plows at his nosp — iii. li 

his nose is executed, and Ms fire's out — iii. 6 

wring him by the nose 2HcvryVI. iii. 2 

fox hath once got in his nose SHenryl I. iv. 7 

their very noses had been counsellorsHen;-!/ VII J. i. 3 
more wasps that buz about his nose — iii. 2 
of the dog-days now reign in's nose., — v. 3 
three times was his nose discharged — v. 3 

Troilus for a copper nose .... Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 2 
in love, i'faith, to the very tip of the nose — iii. 1 
down with the nose, down with it. Timon of Alh . iv. 3 

1 have not washed my nose Coriolanus, 1. 9 

see 3'our wives dishonoured to your noses — iv. 6 

and still to nose the offence — v. 1 

not in my husband's nose . . .intony Sf Cleopatra, i. 2 
blown rose may they stop their nose — iii. II 

for wearing our own noses Cymbetine, iii. [ 

other of them may have crooked noses — iii. 1 
cleanly by the keeper's nose? .... Titus Andro 

why one's nose stands i' the middle ie 

eyes on either side his nose — 

all that follow their noses are led — 

there's not a nose among twenty .. 

he had a thousand noses 

athwart men's noses as they lie. .iJomeo ^Juliet, i. 4 
she gallops o'er a courtier's nose .... — i. 4 
tickling a parson's nose as a' lies .... — i. 4 
tweaks me by the nose,gives me the lie.Hamlet, ii. 2 
you shall nose him as you go up stairs . , — iv. 3 

will as tenderly be led by the nose Othello, i. 3 

at Naples, that they speak i' the nose. ... — iii. 1 
pish! noses, ears, and lips: is it possible? — iv. 1 
I see that nose of yours, but not that dog — iv. 1 
heaven stops the nose at it — iv. 2 

NOSEGAYS, sweet-meats Mid. N.'s Dream, i. 1 

four and twenty nosegays Winler'sTale,\v. 2 

NOSE-HERB— they are nose-herbs ..All's Well, iv. 5 
NOSELESS, handless, hacked .. Troilus Sr Cress, v. 5 
NOSE-PAINTING, sleep, and urine ..Macbeth, ii. 3 
NOSTRIL-Stephano breathes at nostril. Tempest, ii. 2 

that ever offended nostril Merry Wives, iii. 5 

strike the dullest nostril where . . Winier'sTale, i. 2 

and stretch the nostril wide Henry V. iii. I 

his nostrils stretched with struggling. .2 Hen. ^7. iii. 2 

smokes climb to their nostrils Cymbetine, v. 5 

as ever hit my nostrils Pericles, iii. 2 

NOTABLE-a notable lover. Two Gen. of Verona, ii. 5 

a notable lubber, as thou — ii. 5 

find notable cause to work Twelflh Night, ii. 3 

come by some notable shame? — ii. 5 

turn him into a notable contempt .. — il. 5 

a notable report of valour — iii. 4 

notable pirate! thou salt-water thief! — v. 1 
find this friar a notable fellow ..Meas.forMcas. v. 1 
thou wilt prove a notable argument. . Much Ado, i. 1 

he's a most notable coward All's Well, iii. 6 

a notable passion of wonder Winier'sTale, v. 2 

the gibes, and notable scorns Otiiello, iv. 1 

O notable strumpet! — v. I 

NOTABLY discharged Mid. N.'s Dream, v. 1 

NOTARY— with me to a notary.il/ercA. of Venice, i. 3 
meet me forewith at the notary's.... — i. 3 

NOTCHED— and notched him Coriolanus, iy. 5 

NOTE— can have no note unless 3'empest, ii. 1 

yet note their manners — iii. 3 

a tune, give me a note TwoGen. o/ Verona, i. 2 

to take a noie of what — ii. 7 

the nightingale's coniplainine notes — v. 4 

that is the very note of it Merry Wives, i. 1 

and goes to them by his note — iv. 2 

my niece shall take note of it .. Twelflh Night, iii. 2 
of such note, indeed, that — iii. 3 



. ii. I 



— iv. 6 



NOT 



NOTE— habit of some sir oi'note..Tu!elflhN/ght,\u. 4 

a good note: that Iceeps you — iii. 4 

wnling it shull come to note — iv. 3 

fairly note tliis act of mine 1 — iv. 3 

takes note of wliat is done Meas./orMeas. ii. 2 

a due and wary note iipon't — 1^* " 

my lord liath "sent you tills note .... — iv. 2 

pray yon, take note of it — v. 1 

didst thou note the daughter Much Ado, i. 1 

do it in notes. Note this before (rep.) — ii. 3 

tlie greatest note of it is his — iii. 2 

why tlien, take no note of liim — iii. 3 

wlien I note another man like — v. 1 

with his note so true..A//d. N.'s Dream, iii. 1 (song) 
whose note full many a man .... — iii. 1 (ong) 
ear is much enamoured of tliy note.. — iii. 1 

to each word a warbling note — v. 2 

sigh a note, and sing a note Love'sL.Losi, iii. 1 

men of note, (do you note, men?).... — iii- 1 
my foreliead wipe a perjured note .. — iv. 3 

bears not so stron" a note — v. 2 

a raerry note, while greasy Joan. . — v. 2 (song) 

but note me, signior Merchant of Venice, i. 3 

I come by note, to give, and to — iii. 2 

wlmt notes and garments he doth.... — iii. 4 
for, do but note a wild and wanton . . — v. 1 

that they take no note at all — v. 1 

tune his merry note nnto .. Asyou Like it, ii. 5 (song) 
I'll give you a verse to this note .... — ii. 5 

'tis lie, slink by; and note him — iii. 2 

yet the note was very untuneable. . . . — v. 3 

no note upon my psirents AU'sfVell, i. 3 

a bond whereof the world takes note — i. 3 
as notes, whose faculties inclusixe (_rep.) — _ i. 3 
precepts on tliis virgin, worthy tlie note — iii. 5 
what I shall ask you out of a note . . — iv. 3 

offence of mighty note — v. 3 

I have perused the note Taming of Shrew, i. 2 

one clitF, two notes have I — iii. I (gamut) 

the note of the fashion to testify (rep.)J — iv. 3 
though long, our jarring notes agree — v. 2 

that ever came into my note Winter' sTale, i. 1 

the shepherd's note, since we have .. — i. 2 
didst note it? he would not stay at. . — i. 2 

(laughter of most rare note — iv. 1 

dates, none; that's out of my note .. — iv. 2 
taking angry note, have left me .... — v. 1 

were very notes of admiration — v. 2 

with thy note, to drown me \a.. Comedy nf Err. iii. 2 

here's the note, how much — iv. 1 

shall be done a deed of dreadful note. Macbeth, iii. 2 

rest that are within the note of — iii. 3 

if mnoh you note Mm — iii. 4 

one of greatest note seems bruited .... — v. 7 

O what love I note in King John, iii. 4 

creatures of note for mercy-lacking — iv. 1 

taking note of thy abhorred aspect .. — iv. 2 
perusing o'er these notes, may Know — v. 2 

the more to aggravate the note Richard //. i. 1 

to take note how many pair iHenrylV. ii. 2 

no, no, my lord; note this, the king — iv. 1 

here is now the smith's note — v. 1 

we will hear, note, and believe Henry V. i. 2 

the king hath note of all that — ii. 2 

give dreadful note of preparation .. — iv. (cho.) 
upon his royal face there is no note — iv. (cho.) 
sonuance, and the note to mount.... — iv. 2 

this note doth tell me of — iv. 8 

I'll note you in my bookof memory.lHfn»-i/C/. ii. 4 

first, note, that he is near you iHenryVI. iii. 1 

now to sing a raven's note — iii. 2 

by notes of household harmony . . . .ZHenry VI. iv. 6 
from me this most needful note . . Richard I J I. v. 3 

he gives us note, the force of Henry Fill. i. 1 

whereof my sovereign would have note — i. 2 

please your highness, note this — i. 2 

and high note's ta'en of your many — ii. 3 

wliat need you note it? pray you.... — ii. 4 

play me tliat sad note I named — iv. 2 

do you note, how much her grace is — iv. 2 

mark him; note him; O brave.. Troilus SfCrcss. i. 2 

tlian in the note of judgment — ii. 3 

and give him note of our approach .. — iv. 1 

a loud note to Troy — iv. 5 

no notes of sally, for the heavens.... — v. 3 

and sweet notes together fail — 'v-, 1 1 

my windpipe's dangerous notQ^.Timmtnf Athens, i. 2 
ray lord, here is a note of certain dues — ii. 2 

note me this, good friend Coriotanus, i. 1 

which, without note, here's many else — i. 9 

they have ta'en note of us — i v. 2 

note but this fool: was not — iv. 2 

I have a note from the Volscian .... — iv. 3 
ratlier than pity note how much .... — v. 2 
hatli proceeded, worthy note, to-day JuliusCcesar, i. 2 
and take good note, what Ctesar doth — ii. 4 

ever note, I..ucilius, when love — iv. 2 

you must note beside that we have . . — iv. 3 
never Roman sliall take note of him — v. 3 
take but good note, and you shaW. Antony i^Cleo. i. 1 

and note tlie qualities of people — i. 1 

note him, notehim, good (Jharmian (rep.) — i. 5 

a lower place, note well, may — iii. 1 

three in Egypt cannot make better note — iii. 3 
the world should note something.... — iii. 11 
he is of note; our hour is fully out .. — iv. 9 
left these notes of what commands ..Cymbtline, i. 2 

he was then of a crescent note — i. 5 

who has the note of them? I madam — i. 6 

he is one of the noblest note — i, 7 (letter) 

but my design? to note tlie chamber — ii. 2 
all, but some natural notes about..., — ii. 2 
must not soil the precious note of it — ii. 3 

be it lying, note it, tlie woman's .... ■ — ii..^ 

first with tlie best of note — iii. 3 

I do note, tliat grief and patience.. . — iv. 2 
use like note, and words, save that .. — jv. 'J 

for notes of sorrow, out of tune — iv. '-' 

even to the note o' the king — iv. a 

waste their time upon our note — iv. i 



r 535 ] 



NOTE— service as if he were of note ..Vymbetine, v. 3 
averring notes of cliambcr-hanging.. — v. 5 
my brother, shall liavenoteof this. TOiis/lnif/on. ii.3 

it sung sweet varied notes — iii. 1 

note, how she quotes the leaves — iv. 1 

note it not you, Tliaisa? Pericles, ii. 3 

first, I would have you note, this is. . . . — iv. 6 

that I may wortliily note him — iv. 6 

may have due note of him Lear, ii. I 

rOj/.K"'.] upon the warrant of my note — iii. 1 

I do advise you, take this note — iv. 5 

take thou this note; go, follow — v. 3 

but as a note where I may read. . Romeo J^ Juliet, i. 1 

take no note of him — i. 5 

whose notes do beat the vanity — iii. 5 

do .vou note me? An you re us (rep.) — iv. 5 

for let the world take note Hamlet, i. 2 

to note tliat you know aught of me — i. 5 

this money, and these notes, Reynaldo.. — ii. 1 

five him heedful note: for I mine eyes — iii. 2 
did very well note him — iii. 2 

eound me from m.y lowest note to — iii. 2 

these three years have I taken note of it — v. 1 

note, if your lady strain his Othello, iii. 3 

take note, take note. O world, to be direct — iii. 3 

NOTE-BOOK— in my note-book Merry Wives, i. 1 

old tables; his note-book iHenrylF.ii.i 

set in a note-book, learned JuliusCcesar, iv. 3 

NOTED— I noted her not..,, Much Ado, i. I 

raven was well noted Love's L.Lost, iv. 3 

from you, noted well your passion . . — iv. 3 
to be noted for a merry man. Taming of Shrew, iii. 2 

not noted, is't, but of the finer Winter' sTale, i. 2 

but I have missinglv, noted, he is of — iv. 1 

and honesty, is richly noted — y. 3 

our noted outward garments \HenryIV. i. 2 

whom I have often noted in thy — ii. 4 

and never noted in him any study Henry V.'\.\ 

which we have noted in you Richard III. iii. 7 

this is noted, and generally HenryVlII. ii. 1 

can take her cliff; slie's noted . . Troilus Sf Cress, v. 2 
I have noted thee always wise.Timon of A/hens, iii. 1 
have condemned and noted Ziucius. JiditisCcPsar, iv. 3 

than of duty; we have noted it Cymbeline,in. b 

slips have made him noted long.. TitusAndron. ii. 3 

no more of that: I have noted it well Lear, i. 4 

late I noted in tattered weeds . . Romeo Sr Juliet, y. 1 

as are companions noted and most .... Hamlet, ii. 1 

tlie world hath noted, and your name. . Othello, ii. 3 

NOTEDLY— most notedly, sir ..Meas.forMeas.v. 1 

NOTE-WORTHY object in thy. .TwoGen.offer. i. 1 

NOT-FEARING Britain Cymbeline, ii. 4 

NOTHING— I have done nothing but.. Tempest, i. 2 

nothing of him that doth fade — i. 2 (song) 

for nothing natural I ever saw so noble — i. 2 
tliere's nothing ill can dwell in such .. — i. 2 

thou dost talk nothing to me — ii 1 

they always use to laugh at nothing .. — ii. 1 

am nothing to you — ii. 1 

and laugh at notliing still — li- 1 

I heard nothing — ii. 1 

but my rejoicing at nothing can be more — iii. 1 

and yet say nothing neither — ?!!• ^ 

why I said nothing — iii. 2 

why, what did I? I did nothing — iii. 2 

where I shall have my music for nothing — iii. 2 

is nothing, but heart's sorrow — iii. 3 

of my instruction hast thou nothing bated — iii. 3 
gave me nothing for my labour. TwoGen.of Ver. i. ' 

nothing but the word noddy — i- 

I could perceive nothing at all from her — i. 

what, said she nothing? — i. 

BO gingerly? Nothing — i. 

is that paper nothing? Nothing — i. 

my duty, will I boast of, nothing else — ii. 

all I can, is nothing to her — ii. 

makes other worthies nothing — ii. 

and say nothing, it will — ii. 

nothing. Can nothing speak? — iii. 

would'st thou strike? Nothing (rep.) — iii. 

OS nothing is impossible — iii. 

tliis, or else nothing, will — iii. 

nothing, but my fortune — iv. 

i' faitli, I'll eat nothing (rep.) Merry Wives, i. 

I would have nothing lie on — ii. 

my brows become nothing else — iii. 

I would little or nothing with you .. — iii. 
profits nothing in the world at his book — iv. 

we know nothing — iv. i 

they were nothing but about — iv. 5 

and I paid nothing for it neither .... — iv. 5 
he hath enjoyed nothing of Ford's .. — v. 5 

that nothing can dissolve us — v. 5 

though he do nothing but rail .... TwelfthNight, i. 5 

do nothing but reprove — i.5 

he speaks nothing but madman .... — i.5 
she's nothing allied to your disorders — ii.3 
always makes a good voyage of nothing — ii. 

and carest for nothing — iii. 

if that be to care for nothing, sir .... — iii. 
you'll nothing, madam, to my lord — iii. 

he does nothing but smile — iii. 

what can be said? Nothing — iii. 

nothing but this, your true — iii. 

negligence, nothing of my purpose .. — iii. 
but nothing of the circumstance more — iii. 

'twill be nothing yet — iii. 

nothing that is BO, is so — iv. 

talkest thou nothing but of ladies? .. — iv. 

you broke m^ head for nothing — v. 

you set nothing by a bloody coxcomb — v. 
if nothing lets to make us happy .... — v. 
and nothing come in partial ....Meas.for.Vcas. ii. 

tlvat do nothing but use their — ii. 

there was nothing done to her once.. — ii. 
for thunder, notlnng but thunder .. — ii. 
are dedicate to nothing temporal .... — ii. 
of mine, and nothing of your, answer — ii. 
let me be ignorant, and in nothing good — ii. 
lawful mercy is notliing akin to foul — ii. 



NOT 

NOTHING of what is writ Meat.forMeas. iv. 2 

nothing goes right — iv. 

if he be less, he s nothing; but he's .. — v. 

why, you are nothing then: neither — v. 

honest in nothing, but in his clothes — v. 

say nothing, I'll speak all — v. 

aliis, he gets nothing by that Much Ado, i. 

too like an image, and says nothing — ii. 

Ba.v nothing, I am yours for the walk — ii. 

[Co/.] notes, forsooth, and nothing!.. — ii. 

that her ear lose nothing of the false — iii. 

or a cloak, is nothing to a man — iii. 

nothing I; but God send every one.. — iii. 

nothing, unless you render her again — iv. 

love notiiing in the world so well (rep.) — iv. 

I confess nothing, nor I deny nothing — iv. 

do men from children notliing differ — v. 

my hand meant nothing to my sword — v. 

she was charged with nothing — v. 

I desire nothing but the reward of . . — v. 

will lend nothing for God's sake .... — v. 

notliin" certainer: one Hero died. . . . — v. 

he shall wear nothing handsome .... — v. 

I will think nothing to any purpose — v. 

for it is nothing but roaring Mid. N.'s Dream j\. 

oath with oath, and you will nothing — iii. - 

be certain, nothing truer; 'tis no jest — j'j- ^ 

again? nothing but low and little? . . — iii. 2 

what's your will? nothing — iv, 1 

sixpence a day, in Pyramus, or nothing — iv. 2 

and gives to airy nothing a local — v. 1 

it is nothing, nothing in the world .. — v. I 

they can do nothing m this kind .... — v. 1 

to give tliem thanks for nothin" .... — v. 1 

nothing impaired, but all disordered — v. 1 

for he is dead; he is nothing — v. 1 

in reason nothing. Sometlimg . .Love's L. Lost, I. 1 

nay nothing, master Moth, but what — i. 2 

and therefore, I will say nothing — _i. 2 

nothing becomes him ill, which he . . — ij- I 

shall break it, will, and nothing else — _ii. 1 

and yet nothing at all — iii. 1 

impose on thee nothing but this — iii. I 

nothing but fair is that whicli you . . — iv. 1 

imitari, is nothing: so doth the — iv. 2 

I do nothing in the world but lie.... — jv. 3 

makes nothing sir. If it mar nothing — iv. 3 

where nothing wants, that want .... — iv. 3 

nothing so sure; and thereby — iv.3 

came nothing else along with that? (rep.)— v. 2 

in the letters; nothing m the praise — v. 2 

nothing but peace, and gentle — v. 2 

we number nothing that we spend . . — v. 2 
and now worth nothing? shall I..Mer. qffenice, \ 

i-epnted wise, for saying notliing .... — i^ 

speaks an infinite deal of nothing .. — } 

is Portia: nothing undervalued to .. — J 
as they that starve with nothing .... — i. 

for he doth nothing but talk of — ;• ^ 

he doth nothing but frown — »• 2 

you know, I say nothing to him .... — J. 2 
alas, fifteen wives is nothing — >i. 2 

1 could do nothing without bidding — li. 5 
it was not for nothing that my nose — ij. S 

farewell, mistress; nothing else — .jj. 5 

if it will feed nothing else, it will . . — m. 1 
ICol. Knt.l, sum of me is sum of nothing — iii. 2 

a wild of nothing, save of joy — lii. 2 

else nothing in the world could tm-n — i;;. 2 

rating myself at nothing (rep.) — in. 2 

I was worse than nothing — m. 2 

he shall have nothing but the penalty — iv. I 
shalt have nothing but the forfeiture — iv. 1 

a halter gratis; nothing else — iv. 1 

I will liave nothing but only this .. — iv. 1 
nothing is good, I see, without respect — y. 1 

gain nothing under him but Asyou Like it, i. 1 

nothing that he so plentifully gives — i. 1 

nothing: I am not taught to make . . — i- 1 
know not why, hates nothing more — i 1 

nothing remains, but that I kindle.. — i- 1 

for in it I have nothing — .i. ^ 

there is nothing tliat you will feed on — ii. 4 
they owe me nothing; will j'ou sing? — ii. 5 
and we will nothing waste till you .. — ii. 7 
'tis good to be sad and say nothing^ . . — iv. 1 
have seen much, and to have nothing — iv. 1 
I will weep for nothing like Diana . . — iv. 1 
to prey on nothing that doth seem .. — ^ ly. 3 

thus he his special notliing ever All'sWell,\\. 1 

kiss his hand, and say nothing — ii- 2 

art thou good for nothing but taking up — n. 3 

and wants notliing i' the world — j;. 4 

why, I say nothing. Marry, you are .. — ii. 4 

nothing, to do nothing (i-ej'.) — \\. * 

within a very little ot nothing — ii. 4 

to pass a thousand nothings with — ii. •'' 

sir, I can nothing say, but that I am.... — ii.S 

scarce so much; nothing, indeed — Ji. 5 

are nothing like your old ling and your — ui. '2 
I have nothing in France (rep.) — m- 2 (letter) 
well born, nothing acquainted with these — iii. 7 
it nothing steads us, to chide him ...... — iii. 7 

confessed? nothing of me has he (rep.) .. — iv. 3 

nothing, but let him have thanks — iv. 3 

honest man should have, he has nothing — iv. 3 

as nothing can unroot you — v. I 

which nothing, but to close her eyes — v. 3 

is notliing but a mighty lord. Taming o/Sh. 1 (indue.) 
let tliem want nothing my house — 1 (indue.) 

and nothing but a lord — 2 (indue.) 

madam, and nothing else — 2 (indue.) 

why, nothing comes amiss, so money — i. 2 
why, that's nothing (rep. ii. 1) ...... — .1.2 

she comes to borrow nothing of them — iv. 1 

faith nothing; but he has left — iv. 4 

nothing but crost! — 'V. ."i 

undone and brought to nothing — v. 1 

nothing but sit and sit, and eat and eatl — v. 2 
Padua affords nothing but what is.... — v. 2 



NOT 



M OTHING— and fellowest nothing. . tVMcr's Tale, i. 2 

is whispering nothing? — i.i 

is this nothing? why, then (;-fp.) — i. 2 

but nothing of liis iU-ta'en snsiJieion! — i. 2 

my sense, that I wii.-i niilhiiig — iii. 1 

betrayed'st Polixeiies, 'twas untiling — iii. 2 

betake tliee to nothing but despair .. — iii. 2 

patience to you, I'll say nothing .... — iii. 2 

there is nothing in the between but.. — iii. 3 

requires notliiug but secrecy — iii. 3 

that from very nothing, and beyond.. — iv. 1 

appreliend nothing but jollity — iv. 3 

might ever do notliing but that — iv. 3 

nothing she does, or seems, but smacks — iv. 3 

man, thou shall lose nothing here — — iv. 3 

let hun go and notliing marted witli liim — iv. 3 

I cannot speak so well, notliing so well — iv. 3 

again does nothing but what he did. . — iv. 3 

wMiose joy is nothing else but fair .... — iv. 3 

but nothing altered; what I was, I am — iv. 3 

shall nothing benefit your knowledge — iv. 3 

nothing so certain as "your anchors . , — iv. 3 

nothing, to geld a codpiece of a purse — iv. 3 

60ug, and admiring the nothing of it — iv. 3 

omit nothing, may give us aid — iv. 3 

to the king concerns him nothing.... — iv. 3 

nothing but bonfires — v. 2 

nothing so aged, as this seems — v. 3 

there's notliing, situate under.. Comcdi/ of Errors, ii. 1 

nothing, sir; but that I am beaten .. — ii. 2 

that you gave me for nothing (rep.).. — ii. 2 

for that's nothing but words — iii. 1 

be it for nothin" but to spite my .... — iii. 1 

but her face nothing like ao clean kept — iii. 2 

thou art sensible in notliing but blows — iv. 4 

have nothing at his liauds tor — iv. 4 

sent for nothing hut a ropel — iv. 4 

will you be bound for nothing? — iv. 4 

fear nothing; guard with halberds .. — v. 1 
nothing afeardof what thyself didst.... il/ac6e/A, i. 3 

nothing is, but what is not — i. 3 

repentance; nothing in his life — i. 4 

should compose notliing but males — i. 7 

there's nothing serious in mortality — ii. 3 

to be thus, is nothing — iii. 1 

foreign levy, nothing, can touch — iii. 2 

whicn is nothing to those that know .... — iii. 4 

fortune nothing takes from his high .... — iii. 6 

nothing is the love — iv. 2 

where nothing, but who knows nothing.. — iv. 3 

our lack is nothing but our leave — iv. 3 

only in command, nothing in love — v. 2 

ve doubt it nothing — v. 4 

full of sound and fury, signifying nothing — v. 6 
infortunate in nothing but in thee ,. King John, ii. 1 

she again wants nothing, to name .. — ii. 2 

that nothing do I see in you — Ii. 2 

hang nothing but a calf 's skin — iii. 1 

nothing can allay, nothing but blood — iii. 1 

there's nothing in this world can .... — iii. 4 

nay, nothing is so black — iv. 3 

nothing there holds out, but Dover .. — v. 1 

Bliould nothing privilege him Richard II. i. 1 

stay for nothing but his majesty's;.,.. — i. 3 

boast of nothing else, but that I — i. 3 

nay, nothing; all is said — ii. 1 

my inward soul with nothing trembles — ii. 2 

show nothing but confusion — ii. 2 

heavy notliing faint and shrink (j-ep.) — ii. 2 

where nothing lives, but crosses, care — ii. 2 

I count myself in nothing else so Imppy — ii- 3 

speak of nothing but despair — iii. 2 

nothing can we call our own — iii. 2 

lord's scale is nothiug but himself ., — iii. 4 

no; ay; for 1 must notliing be — iv. 1 

that nothing have, with nothing grieved — iv. 1 

nothing else, with rage to be o'erpower'd — v. 1 

my lord, 'tis nothing — v. 2 

nothing but some bond — v. 2 

and straight am nothing — v, 5 

■with nothing shall be pleased (rep.) .. — v. 5 
knew thee, Hal, I knew nothing ...AHenrylV. i. 2 

nothing pleaseth but rare accidents .. — i. 2 

taught to speak nothing but Mortimer — i. 3 

that his tale to me may be nothing but — ii. 4 

there is nothing but roguery to be found — ii. i 

wherein worthy, but in nothing? .... — ii. 4 

nothing but papers, my lord — ii. 4 

eet my teeth notliing on edge (rep.) .. — iii. 1 

then should you be nothing but musical — iii. 1 

he is poor; he hath nothing — iii. 3 

for nothing can seem foul to those that — v. 1 

in account nothing so strong, and.... — v. 1 

that you did nothing purpose 'gainst — v. 1 

nothing but a colossus can do thee that — v. 1 

nothing confutes me but ej'cs — v. 4 

wear nothing but high shoes iHennjIV. i. 2 

than to be scoured to nothing with .. — i. 2 

and say nothiug, he is virtuous — ii. 1 

but my going, nothing can redeem it — ii. 3 

where nothing but the sound — ii. 3 

and are etceteras nothing? — ii. 4 

if he do nothing but speak (r''p.) .... — ii. 4 

where he doth nothing but roast .... — ii. 4 

hath done nothing but prate to me .. — iii. 2 

when there was nothing could have staid — iv. 1 

skill in the weapon is nothing — iv. 3 

nothing but well to thee, Thomas . . — iv. 4 
do notliing but eat, and make .... — v. 3 (song) 

lack nothing, be merry; look who's.. — v. 3 

thinking of nothing else (rep.) — v. 5 

good corpiral, offer nothing here Henry f. ii. 1 

desire nothing but odds with England — ii. 4 

there's nothing so becomes a man . . — iii. 1 

by Chrish, do nothing; 'tis shame .. — iii. 2 

there be nothing compelled from (rep.') — iii. 6 

all that I can do, is nothing worth .. — iv. I 

eternal shame, nothing but shamel., — iv. .5 

and buv nothing of me but cudgels.. — v. I 

and nothing teems, but hateful docks — v. 2 



[ 536 ] 

NOTHLNG— nothing do but meditate. .He/irj/r. v. 2 
for me nothing remains, but long....liie«ri/r/. i. I 

there's nothing hid from me — i. 2 

nothing less than a bloody execution — ii. 5 

by me tliey nothing gain — iv. 6 

will nothing turn your unrelenting.. — v. 4 
this was nothing but an argument ..2Henryyi. i. 2 

talking of hawking, nothing else .... — ii. 1 

nor stir at nothing, till the axe of .. — ii. 4 

run nothing but claret wine — iv. 5 

nothing but this; 'tis bona terra .... — iv. 7 

nothing so heavy as these woes of mine — v. 2 
that nothing sung but death to us..3i/ejir!/r/. ii. e 

having nothing, nothing he can lose — iii. 3 

challengeuothingof their sovereigns — iv. 6 

challenge nothing but my dukedom — iv. 7 

of all my lands, is notliing left me .. — v. 2 

his thanks, that yet hath nothing else — v.\i 
to win her all the world to nothing!. Ric/mrd ///. i. 2 

nothing that I respect, my gracious lord — i. 3 

there's nothing differs but the outward — i. 4 

where nothing can proceed — iii. 2 

being nothing like tiie noble duke .. — iii. 5 

indeed, left nothing, fitting for your — iii. 7 

but nothing spoke in warrant — iii. 7 

do impart help nothing else — iv. 4 

by nothing; for this is no oath — iv. 4 

owls! nothing but songs of death.... — iv. 4 
it will help me nothing, to plead ..Henryl'lll i. 1 

more than my all is uothing — ii. 3 

there's nothing I have done yet — iii. 1 

ye turn me into nothing: woe upon ye — iii. 1 

nothing but death shall e'er divorce — iii. 1 

can nothing render but allegiant thanks — iii. 2 

then makes him nothing — iii. 2 

performance, as he is now, nothing. . — iv. 2 

1 fear nothing what can be said against — v. 1 

you did nothing, sir. I am not Samson — v. 3 

nothing of that shall Troilus <§- Cressiila, i . 2 

Jove's accord, nothing so full of heart — i. 3 

infancy, that nothing can'st but cry — ii. 2 

things small as nothing, for request's — ii. 3 

love, love, nothing but love (rep.) .. — iii. 1 

he eats nothing but doves — iii. 1 

nothing monstrous neither? Nothing — iii. 2 

are grated to dusty notliing — iii. 2 

nothing, my lord. The better — iii. 3 

that he raves in sayin" nothing .... — iii. 3 

nothing but heavenly business should — iv. 1 

let us cast away nothing — iv. 4 

I'll nothing do on charge — iv. 4 

if not Achilles, nothing — iv..5 

the other blank as nothing — iv. 5 

were nothing; he is both an ass (rep.) — v. 1 

nothing but lechery! all incontinent — v. 1 

nothing at all, nnless that this were she — v. 2 

nothing else holds fashion — v. 2 

hath nothing been but shapes — v. 3 

of nothing so much, as that .... Timon of Athens, i. 1 

if doing nothing be death by the law — i. 1 

no, I will do nothing at thy bidding — i. 1 

no, I'll nothing; for if I should be .. — i. 2 

ask nothing, give it him, it foals me — ii. 1 

'faith nothing but an empty box.... — iii. 1 

nothing doubting your present (rep.) — iii. 1 

like trifies, nothing comparing to his — iii. 2 

nothing emboldens sin so much .... — iii. 5 

strict, and war is nothing more — iii..'i 

to me nothing, so in (?ep.) — iii. 6 (grace) 

nothing I'll bear from thee — iv. 1 

cast off? nothing remainingl — iv. 2 

nothing level in our cursed natures.. — iv. 3 

when there is nothing living but thee — iv. 3 

nothing can you steal, but thieves .. — iv. 3 

\^Col. Kill.'] debts wither them to nothing — iv. 3 

nothing else; you shall see him .... — v. 1 

nothing at this time but my visitation — v. 1 

that nothing, but himself, which looks — v. 2 

and nothing brings me all things .... — v. 2 

of Timon, nothing of him expect .... — v. 3 

they nothing doubt prevailing Corlolanus, i. 3 

leave nothing out for length — ii.2 

sit to hear my nothings monstered .. — ii.2 

'it follows, nothing is done to purpose — iii. 1 

I would the gods had nothing else to do — iv. 2 

and waked half dead with nothing .. — iv. 5 

this peace is nothing, but to rust iron — iv. 5 

I hear nothing (rep.) — iv. 6 

his raising! nothing but his report! — iv. 6 

a kind of nothing, titleless — v. 1 

for we have nothing else to ask — v. 3 

he wants nothing of a god, but eternity — v. 4 
do love me, I am nothing jeaXous. .JuliiuCresar, i. 2 

and nothing else? (rep.) — ii. 4 

sooth, madam, I hear nothing — ii. 4 

should perceive nothing but love .... — iv. 2 

nothing but death shall stay roe .... — iv. 3 

noi-anothing in your letters writj( rep.) — iv. 3 

see anything? Nothing, my lord (rep.) — iv. 3 
presages chastity, if nothing t\?,Q..Anlony ^Cleo. i. 2 

pity to cast them away for nothing .. — i. 2 

her passions are made of nothing but — i. 2 

cross him in nothing , — i. 3 

for I can do nothing but what in .... — i. 5 

if, or for nothing, or a little — ii, 2 

when you have nothing else to do .. — ii.2 

dangers, would then be nothing .... — ii.2 

thy plainness it nothing ill becomes thee — ii. 6 

there's nothing in her yet — iii. 3 

no such thing. O nothing, madam .. — iii. 3 

to Rome: nothing more dear to me.. — iii. 6 

heard you of nothing strange (rep.) .. — iv. 3 

and there is nothing left remarkable — iv. 13 

a princely hand, fear nothing — v. 2 

that I have reserved to myself nothing — v. 2 

and I have nothing of woman in me — v. 2 

very good: give it nothing, I pray you — v. 2 

but nothing, (alwiiys reserved my Cymbeline, i. 2 

I would abate her nothing — i. a 

1 do nothing doubt, you nave store.. — i. 5 



NOT 



NOTJilMG— nothing saves the viagei.Cymbeline, ii. 4 

to their virtues, which is nothing .... — ii. 4 

I will deny nothing — ii. 4 

and we will nothing pay, for wearing — iii. 1 

richer, than doing nothing for a babe — iii. 3 

we have seen nothing: we are beastly — iii. 3 

my fault being nothing (as I have told — iii. 3 

that harsh, noble, simple, nothing .. — iii. 4 

that nothing gift of differing multitudes — iii. 6 

but time hath nothing blurred those — iv. 2 

his humour was nothing but mutation — iv. 2 

triumphs for nothing, and lamenting — iv. 2 

nothing ill come near thee! — iv.2(song) 

a bolt of nothing, shot at nothing .. — iv. 2 

I am nothing: or if not, nothing to be — iv. 2 

I nothing know where she remains.. — iv. 3 

in such a time, nothing becoming you — iv. 4 

nothingroots us, but the villany .... — v. 2 

when all the rest do nothing — v. 3 

as I have done; wake, and find nothing — v. i 

either both, or nothing; or senseless — v. 4 

that nothing but our lives may be called — v. .'> 

he did me were nothing prince-like — v. .■> 
with weapon nothing darest perlorm.TilusAnd. ii. 1 

here nothing breeds, unless the .... — ii. 3 

nothing so kind, but something pitiful! — ii. 3 

ay, of my pigeons, sir; nothing else.. — iv. 3 

and nothing grieves me heartily .... — v. 1 

where is read nothing but curious Pericles, i. I 

good in nothing but in sight — i. 1 

left nie breath nothing to tliinlc on .... — ii. 1 

rich misers to nothing BO fitly as to — ii. 1 

for here's nothing to be got now-a-day — ii. 1 

there's nothing can be ministered .... — iii. 2 

you'll lose nothing by custom — iv. 3 

yet nothing we'll omit that bears — v. 1 

nothing, mj' lord. Nothing? (rep.) Lear, i. 1 

and nothing more, may fitly like your .. — i. 1 

nothing, I have sworn; I am iii'm — i. 1 

reading? Nothing, my lord — i. 2 

the qualitj' of notliing hath not such .... — i. 2 

if it be nothing, I shall not need spectacles — i. 2 

it shall lose thee nothing — i. 2 

nothing like the image and horror of it. . — i. 2 

this is nothing, fool — i. 4 

nothing for't: can you make no use (rep.) — i. 4 

nothing can be made out of nothing .... — i. 4 

and left nothing in the middle — i. 4 

I am a fool, and thou art nothing — i. 4 

face bids me, though you say notliing .. — i. 4 

have you nothing said upon his party .. — ii. 1 

and art nothing but the composition .... — ii.2 

awa.y, I have nothing to do with thee. ... — ii.2 

nothing almost sees miracles — ii. 2 

something yet; Edgar I nothing am .... — ii. 3 

in their fury, and make nothing of — iii. I 

pattern of all patience, I will say nothing — iii. 2 

go to; say you nothingj there is division — iii. 3 

couldst thou save nothing? didst thou .. — iii. 4 

death, traitor! nothing could have — iii. 4 

owes nothing to thy blasts — iv. I 

in nothing am I changed, but in ray .... — iv. 6 

there is nothing done, if he return — iv. 6 (let.) 

thou art in nothing less than I have — v. 3 
who, nothing hurt withal, hissed . .Romeo fy Jul. i. 1 

anything, of nothing first create!.... — i. I 

thou talkest of nothing..... — i. 4 

begot of nothing but vain fantasy .. — i. 4 

she speaks, yet she says nothing .... — ii.2 

look to hear nothing but discords .. — iii. 1 

nothing, but one of your nine lives .. — iii. 1 

is he gone, and hath nothing? — iii. 1 

0, she says nothing, sir, but weeps.. — iii. 3 
all the world to nothing, that he dares — iii. 5 
and I am nothing slow, to slack his.. — iv. i 
must, and nothing may prorogue it.. — iv. 1 
nothing can be ill, if she be well (rep.) — v. 1 

I have seen nothing. Horatio says Hamlel, i. 1 

we doubt it nothing; heartily farewell .. — i. 2 

were nothing but to waste night — ii.2 

but to be nothing else but mad — ii.2 

for there is nothing either good or ba.d .. — ii. 2 

to his will and matter, did nothing — ii. 2 

and all for nothing! for Hecubal — ii.2 

and can say nothing: no, not for a king — ii. 2 

are ciipable of nothing but inexplicable — iii. 2 

in suffering all, that suffers nothing .... — iii. 2 

I have nothing with this answer — iii. 2 

I think nothing, my lord (rep.) — iii. 2 

discomfort you, my lord, it nothing must — iii. 2 

see nothing there? Nothing at all (rep.) — iii. 4 

of nothing; bring me to him — iv. 2 

what dost thou mean by this? Nothing.. — iv. 3 

my thoughts be bloody, or be nothing .. — iv. 4 

her speech is nothing, yet the unshaped — iv. 5 

though nothing sure, yet much unhappily — iv. .'» 

will nothing stick our person to arraign — iv. ."V 

this nothing's more than matter — iv. ;* 

that he could nothing do, but wish — iv. 7 

and nothing i< at a like goodness still .. — iv. 7 
methought, there was nothing meet — v. I (song) 

trace him, his umbrage, nothing more .. — v. 2 

I will gain nothing but my shame — v. 2 

come on. Nothing neither way — v. 2 

nothing, but this is so Othello, i. 3 

that nothing bears but the free comfort.. — i. 3 

can you discern at sea? Nothing at all .. — ii. 1 

for lam nothing, if not critical — ii. 1 

nothing can or shall content my soul.... — ii. I 

are nothing to your English — ii. 3 

to speak the truth shall nothing wrong.. — ii. 3 

a mass of things, but nothing (rep.) — ii. 3 

nothing, my lord; or if— I know not what — iii. 3 

I will deny thee nothing (rep.) — iii. 3 

'tis something, nothing; 'twas mine .... — iii. 3 

1, nothing, but to please his fantasy .... — iii. 3 
her sweet body, so I had nothing known — iii. 3 
for nothing canst thou to damnation add — iii. 3 
yet we see nothing done; she may be. ... — iii. 3 
such perdition as nothing else coidd .... — iii. 4 



NOT 



[ 537 ] 



KOTHING— do notliiiij?, 'tisii venial aWi). OlIwUo, iv.l 
all in all in spleen, aiui nothing of a man — iv.l 

you have seen nothing tlicny — iv. 2 

her mask, nor niithingi' Never, my lord — iv. 2 
ay, and I have said nothing, liut what — iv. 2 

fear notliing; I'll be lit tliy elbow — v. 1 

demand me nothing: what you know .. — v. 2 
nothing extenuate, nor aet down aught.. — v. 2 

NOTICE— give her father notice. Tu-oGen.o/ Ver. ii. 6 
the mother notice of my affair . . Meas.for Meas. i. 6 

he batli carried notice to Escalus — iv. 3 

give notice to sucli men of sort and suit — iv. 4 
give the like notice, to Valentinus .. — iv. h 
at the least of thy sweet notice. Loue's L.L.i. 1 (let.) 

Navarre had notice of your fair — ii. 1 

had myself notice of my brother's./lsi/ou LiUeit, i. 1 

I have no certain notice 2 Henry 1 1', i. .S 

bring me just notice of tlie Henry I', iv. 7 

give notice to our friends 1 Henry i'l. iii. 2 
ad notice of your conventicles. ...2We?i?'(/r/. iii. 1 
given me notice of their vilUmies.... — iii. 1 
give us notice of his inclination .. Richard III. iii. 1 
and to give notice [Co(. Kn'. -order].. — iii. 6 
the state takes notice of the private. Henry r///. i. 1 

gave notice lie was from thence — ii. 1 

take notice, lords, lie has a loyal breast — '!'.•'- 

to my poor unwortliy notice Coriolanits^ ii. 3 

belike they had some notice JuliusCarsar, iii. 2 

let our officers have notice .. Antony ^ Cleopatra^ i. 2 

who sliall take notice of thee CymbcUne,}. 6 

but she vouchsafes no notice — ii- 3 

we must extend our notice — ii. 3 

take notice, tliat I am in Cambria — iii. 2 (^let.) 
I'll give but notice you arc dead .... — iii. 4 
and given him notice, that the duke of ..Lear, ii. 1 
to no more will I give place, or notice.... — ii. 4 
had no notice of these accidents. .ii07neo-^Jui'>^ v. 2 

you'd take no notice; nor build OlheUn^i'n.'i 

NOTIFY — she gives you to notify.. Merry Wives,\i. 2 

I sliall seem to notify unto her OlheUo, iii. 1 

NOTING— that's worth the noting Much Ado, ii. 3 

notes, forsootli, and noting [Co/.-nothing] — ii. 3 

by noting of the lady — iv.l 

which worthily deserved noting.. Aniony SrCleo. ii. 2 

noting this penury, to mysol£ I said. Romeo ^- Jut. v. 1 

NOTION crazed, say, thus did Sunquo. Macbeth, iii. 1 

his owu notion (who wears my Coriulanus, v. 5 

, his notion weakens, or his discernings Lear, i. 4 

NOTORIOUS wrong Twelfih.Maht, v. 1 

and made the most notorious geek — y. I 

two notorious benefactors Meas.for Meas. ii. 1 

for you h ave been a notorious bawd . . — i v. 2 
one Ragozine, a most notorious pirate — iv. 3 

I would it were not notorious Att's Well, i. 1 

yet I know him a notorious liar — i. 1 

what, you notorious villain, didst. Taming ofSh. v. 1 
to your notorious shame .... Comedy of Errors, iv. 1 
Alenson! tliat notorious MachiaveL.lHenrj/F/. v. 4 

shall be most notorious Henry VIIL iii. 2 

wherein I did not some notorious ill.. TitxisAnd. v. 1 

some base notorious knave Othello, i v. 2 

'tis a notorious villain — V. 2 

NOTORIOUSLY abused (rep. v. 1). Twelfth Night, iv. 2 
NOT'ST— what thou not'st about . . JulmsCccsar, v. 3 

NOTT-PATED, agate-ring 1 Henry IV. ii. 4 

NOUN-many numbers is in nouasl. Merry Wives, iv. 1 

because they say, od's nouns — iv.l 

usually talk of a noun, and a verb. .2 Henry VI. iv. 7 

NOURISH all tlie world Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 

such as you nourish the cause .... Winter'sTale, ii. 3 

this praise doth nourish agues \HcmylV. iv. 1 

islebemadeanourishof salt tears.. ..1 Henry V J. i. 1 

whiles I in Ireland nourish 2HeinyVI. iii. 1 

we nourish 'gainst our senate Coriolanus, iii. 1 

to nourish, and bring him up.. Titus Andronicus, v. 1 

NOURISHED by my victuals ..TuoGen. of Ver. ii. 1 

nourished in the womb of pia mater. Love'sL.L. iv. 2 

how begot, liow nourished?. . Mer. of Ven. iii. 2 (song) 

nourished him, as I did with my SHenry VI. i. 1 

oozes from whence 'tis nourished. Tivion of Alliens, i. 1 
I say, they nourislied disobedience.. Conodnuis, iii. 1 

I will see it nourished Titus Andronicus, v. 1 

a sea nourished with lovers' tears. /?o;»eo ^Juliet, i. 1 

NOURISHER in life's feast Macbeth, ii. 2 

NOURISHES OUT nurves.. ... Antony if Cleopatra, iv. 8 
NOURISHETH-which nourisheth it..4n'.*«<?o. ii. 7 

'tis age, tliat nourisheth Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 

NOURISHING dielies, or keep you Othello, iii. 3 

NOURISIIxMENT and life by care I'erides, i. 2 

from whence tliey have their nourishment? — i. 2 
nourishment which is called .Loue'sL.L. i. 1 (letter) 
crooked malice, nourishment, dare .Henri/ Vlll. v. 2 

NOUSLE lip their babes I'erides, i. 4 

NOVELTY is only in request ..Meas.for Meas. iii. 2 

it is a novelty to the world All's it ell, ii. 3 

how novelty may move Troilus S^Cressida, iv. 4 

NO-VERB— and tlie no- verbs. Merri/ Hives, iii.l 

NOVI hominem tanquam te Love's L. Lost, v. 1 

NOVICE of this place, and the Meas. for Mras. i. 5 

Mars dote on you for his novices! All's ll'elt, ii. 1 

you are novices! 'ti8aworld....ra>ii/H4'o/.S/i. ii.l 
that princely novice, was struck .... Rii liard III. i. 4 
hast sold me to tliis novics. Antony:^ Cleopatra, iv. 10 

NOVUM— abate a throw at novum . i.'n;(.''.\7-,. Los', v. 2 

NOW- A-DAYS, that will scarce Hamlet, v. 1 

little company to'ctlier now-a-days.-l/W. /V. Dr. iii.l 

here's notliing to he got now-a-daya . . Pericles, ii. 1 

NOW-BORN [f.'o/.-now borne] brief . . Alt's Well, ii. 3 

NOWL I fixed on liis head Mid. N.'s Dream, iii. 2 

'NOYANCE— keep itself from 'noyance. Hmntef, iii. 3 

NUBlBUS-invitisnubibus IHenryVI. iv. 1 

NUMA'S daughter's son Coriolanus, ii. 3 

NUMB— strengtliless slay is numb ..\ Henry VI. ii. 5 
a atony image, cold and nuvah. Titus Andronicus, iii. 1 

NUMB-COLD night? liichard III. ii. 1 

NUMBED— numbed and mortified Lear, ii. 3 

NUMBER— liow many numbers .. Merry Wives, iv. 1 

1 thought there had been one number — iv.l 

and the numbers of the genders! — iv.l 

Ihope goodluck lies in oddnuuilicrd — v. 1 



NUMBER-divinity in odd n umbers. A/erry Wives, v. 1 

and that poor number saved TwelfthNight, i. 2 

tlie numbers altered! — ii. 5 

3'ou slew great number of liis people — iii. 3 
more for number than account... Ueas./or/1/ras, ii. 4 
achiever brings home full numbers .. Much Ado, i. 1 

in number more than ever Mid.N.'sDream^ i. 1 

here are only numbers ratified . .Love's L. Lost, iv. 2 
these numbers will I tear, and write — iv. 3 

now the number is even — iv. 3 

such fiery uumlicrs, as tlie prompting — iv. 3 
numbers true; and, were tlie numbering — v. 2 
we number nothing that we spend ., — v. 2 

with terrible numbers assisted by Macbeth, i. 2 

sliadow the numbers of our host .... — v. 4 
or add a royal number to the dead. , King John, ii. 2 
the little number of your doubtfid .. — y. 1 

hath from the number of his Richard II, i. 3 

accomplished with the number of thy — ii.l 

and all the number of his fair — iii. 3 

the number of the kingexceedeth..lH'enri//r. iv. 3 

shall we go draw our numbers 'iHenrylV. i. 3 

but half their numbers, to day — ii. 3 

and echo, the numbers of the feared — iii. 1 
for we have a number of shadows . . — iii. 2 
two more called than your number.. — iii. 2 
to know the numbers of our enemies — iv. 1 
I judge their number upon, or near.. — iv.l 
by number, into hours of happiness — v. 2 
for in the book of Numbers is it writ .. HenryV. i. 2 
his numbers are so few, his soldiers sick — iii. 5 
too faint a number; and for our disgrace — iii. 6 
my num'oers lessened; and those few — iii. 6 

proud of their numbers — iv. (chorus) 

if the opposed numbers pluck their.. — iv.l 

just notice of the numbers dead — iv. 7 

here is the numlier of the slaughtered — iv- 8 
of princes, in this number, and nobles — iv. 8 
is the number of our English dead?. . — iv. 8 

of time, of numbers — v. (chorus) 

to number Ave-Maries on his beads .2 Henry VI. i. 3 
makesup no factious numbers for.... — ..^'- 1 
and, in the number, thee, that wishest — iii. 1 
people by number swarm to us .... 3 Henry VI. iv. 2 
increase the number of the dead . . Richard HI. iv. 1 
descried the number of the traitors? — v. 3 
BO are a number more. But, pvay.. Henry VIII. ii. 1 
so much I am happy above a number — iii. 1 

heart of our numbers Troilus Sf Cressida, i. 3 

and sanctify tlie numbers — iii. 2 

dreadful Sagittary appals our numbers — v. 5 
what a numlier of men eat Timon. Timon ofAlh. i. 2 
may these add to the number that .. — iii. 1 
take convenient numbers to make . . Coriolanus, i. 5 
a certain number, though thanks to all — _i. 6 
when you have draw'ii your number — ii. 3 

with us, the honoured number — iii. 1 

in thy lying tongue both numbers .. — iii. 3 
dissehtious numbers pestering streets — iv. 6 
among which number, Cassius .... Julius Ci^sar, i. 2 
yet in the number I do know but one — iii. 1 
pricked in number of our friends.... — iii.l 
the other street, and part the niuabers — iii. 2 

shall makea fuller number up — iv. 3 

whose numhei s threaten. . . . Antony f; Cleopatra, i. 3 
cast, write, sing, number, ho, his love — iii. 2 
let all the number of the stars give.. — iii. 2 
we may the number of the ships ... . — iii. 8 

will tie you to the numbers Cymbeline, iii. 7 

our present numbers be mustered.... — iv. 2 
half of the number that king. . TiiusAndronicus, i. 2 
not our ships and number of our men.. Pericles, i. 4 
I have cried her almost to the number — iv. 3 
good report to a number to be chaste — iv. 6 
IKiit.'] comes with so small a number?.... Lrar, ii. 4 

speak 'gainst so great a number? — ii. 4 

to be followed with such a number — ii. 4 

makes my number more Romeo S[ Juliet, i. 2 

stand in number; though in reckoning — i. 2 

now is he for the numbers — ii. 4 

I am ill at these numbers Hamlet, ii. 2 (letter) 

the numbers cannot try the cause — iv. 4 

NUMBERED thirteen years Tuelfth Night, v. 1 

be never numbered amon" men!../l/!(i.A'.'sUr. iii. 2 
are numbered in the travel o{ one. Love'sL. Lost, v. 2 

as when he numbered thirty All's Welt, iv. 5 

now herald; are the dead numbered?. Hejir.i/F. iv. 8 
the sands are numbered, that make..3Hen>!/r/. i. 4 
stones upon the numbered beach? . . Cymbeline,}. 7 
a sibvl, that had numbered in the world. Ot/teHo,iii.i 
NUMBERING too, I were the.. ..iow's L. Lost, v. 2 

is— numbering sands liichard II. ii. 2 

time made me his numbering clock.. — v. 5 

numbering our Ave-Maries with ..'iHenryVI. ii. 1 

NUMBERI-ESS offences 'gainst ..Henry VIII. ii. 1 

that numberless upon me stuck.. 7V»io;i of Ath. iv. 3 

NUMBNESS— your numbness Winter' sTale, y. 3 

NUN — have you nuns no further.. Meas.for Meas. i. 5 
can endure the livery of a nnn..Mid.N.'s Dream, i. 1 

a nun of winter's sisterhood AsyouLiheit, iii. 4 

though Hero had turned nun — iv.l 

as the nun's lip to the friar's monti\.. All's Well, ii. 2 

they shall be praying nuns Richard III. iv. 4 

among a sisterhood of holy nuns. . ttomeo SfJul. v. 3 
NUNCIO of more grave aspect .... TwelfthNight, i. 4 

NUNCLE— how now, nuncle? Lear, i. 4 

mark it, nuncle; have more than — 1-4 

can you make no use of nothing, nuncle? — i. 4 

five me an egg, nuncle, and I'll give .... — i. 4 
have used it, nuncle, ever since thou .. — i. 4 
pr'ythee, nuncle, keep a schoolmaster .. — 1.4 
and yet I would not be thee, nuncle .... — i. 4 
for you trow nuncle, the hedgesparrow — i. 4 
if thou wert my fool, nuncle, I'd have . . — i. 5 
cry to it, nuncle, as the cockney did .... — .1**4 
O nuncle, court holy-water in a dry .... — iii. 2 
good nuncle, in, and ask thy daughters' — iii. 2 
come not in here, nuncle, here's a spirit — iii. 4 

pr'ythee, nuncle, tell me, whether — iii. 6 

NUI^rNEUY— thee to a uuimery \tcp.). Hamlet, iii. 1 



NUT 

NUPTIAL— the nuptial of these our ..I'dnpest, v. 1 
and the nuptial appointed , ...Meas. for Meas. iii. I 

tlie nuptial finished, let him — v. 1 

this looks not like a nuptial Much Ado, iv. 1 

our nuptial hour draws on apacfe ..Mid.N.'sDr. i. 1 
some business against our nuptial .. — i. 1 
intended for great Theseus' nuptial day — iii. 2 
not sorting witli a nuptial ceremony — v. 1 
tliia same pla3', against your nuptial — v. I 
the catastrophe is a nupi\a\.Love'sL.Lost, iv. 1 (let.) 
straight shall our nuptial vites. . Mer. of Venice, ii. 9 
I will bid the duke to the nnptiaX. As yon Lilteit, v. 2 

celebration of that nuptial Winter'sTale,iy.Z 

at the nuptial of his son, a guest — iv. 3 

companion of his nuptial bed 1 Henry VI. v. 5 

that amity with nuptial knot illcnryVI. iii. ?. 

as when our nuptial day was Hone. .Coriolanus, i. 6 
her chastity, uiion her nuptial vow. . Titus Ami. ii. 3 

we'll celebrate their nuptials Pericles, V. 3 

dissipation of cohorts, nuptial breaches ..Lear, i. 2 

since the nuptial of Lucentio — i. 5 

of his nuptials [A'n(.-nuptial] Othello, ii. 2 

NURSE— will scratch the nurse. Two Gen. of Ver. i. 2 
the nurse and breeder of all good .... — iii. 1 
in the man ner of his nurse (.rep.) . . Merry Wives, i. 2 

the baby beats the nurse Meas.for Meas. i. 4 

is still the nurse of second woe — ii.l 

you must call to the nurse MuchAdo, iii. 3 

how if the nurse be asleep — iii. 3 

and puking in the nurse s arms../4.i you Like it, ii. 7 
never let her nurse her child herself — iv. 1 
is the nurse of frenzy .. Taminj^oj i^lireic, 2 (indue.) 
I am glad, you did not nurse him. Winler's'Tale, ii. 1 
where chance may nurse, or end it .. — ii. 3 

and ravens, to be thy nurses! — ii. 3 

be his nurse, diet his sieit-ness.Coinedy of Errors, v. 1 

too old to fawn upon a nurse liichard H. i. 3 

my mother, and my nurse, that bears — i. 3 

this nurse, this teeming womb — ii.l 

and if I were thy nurse, thy tongue — v. 3 

nature's soft nurse, how have 1....2HenryI V. iii. 1 

dear nurse of arts, plenties Henri/ V. v. 2 

being put to nurse, was by iHenryVI. iv. 2 

I am your sorrow's ntirse liichard III, ii. 2 

grandam, his nurse. His nurse! — ii. 4 

rude ragged nurse! old sullen — iv.l 

Rome, the nurse of judgment Henry VI II. ii. 2 

truth sbal I nurse her, holy and — v. 4 

3'our prattling nurse into a rapture. Corjofanws, ii. 1 

the country, our dear nurse — v. 3 

but at his nurse's tears he whined.... — v. 5 
the beggar's nurse and Cxsa.r'a. , Antoriy^ Cteo. v. 2 

that sucks the nurse asleep? — v. 2 

Euriphile, thou wast their nurse . . Cymbeline, iii. 3 
their nurse, Euripbile, whom for .... — v. 5 
a loving nurse, a mother to his. . . . Titus Andron. i. 2 

as is a nurse's song of lullaby — ii. 3 

nurse, give it me; my sword — iv. 2 

and the nurse, well made away — iv. 2 

Lyehorida, her nurse, she takes. Per ides, iii. (Gow.) 

Lychorida, our nurse, is dead — iv. cGow.) 

old nurse's [A'n/.-only mistress'] death — iv. I 

you have a nurse of me — iv.l 

my father, as nurse said — iv. 1 

nurses are not the fates — iv. 4 

asmy good nurse Lychorida hath .... — v. 1 
nurse, wliere's my daughter? .... Romro 4 Juliet, i. 3 
nurse, give leave awhile, we must (rep.) — i. 3 
stint thou too, 1 pray thee, nurse.... — i. 3 

were not I thine only nurse — i. 3 

the nurse cursed in the pantry — i. 3 

come hither, nurse; what is yon .... — i. .5 

anon, good nurse! sweet Montague.. — ii. 2 
a gentleman, nurse, that loves to hear — ii. 4 
nurse, commend me unto thy lady.. — ii. 4 

what wilt thou tell her, nurse? — ii. 4 

stay, good nurse, behind the abbey-wall — ii. 4 
what say'st thou, my dear nurse? ,. — ii. 4 
ay, nurse; what of that? both with — ii. 4 

when I did send the nurse — ii. 5 

O honey nurse, what news? hast thou — ii. 5 

now, good sweet nurse (rep.) — ii. 5 

to high fortune ! honest nurse, farewell — ii. 5 
my nurse, and she brings news (rep.) — iii. 2 
m.y father, and my motlier, nurse?.. — iii. 2 
come, nurse; I'll to my wedding-bed — iii. 2 
nurse! Ah sir! ah sir! Well, death's — iii. 3 
go before, nurse: commend me to .. — iii. 3 
nurse? Your lady mother's coming — iii. 5 

nurse! how shall this be prevented? — iii. 5 
some comfort, nurse. 'Faith, here 'tis — iii. 5 

let not thy nurse lie with thee — iv.l 

nurse, will you go with me (rep.).... — iv. 2 
but, gentle nurse, I pray thee, leave — iv. 3 
and let the nurse this night sit up .. — iv. 3 
nurse! what should she do here? .... — iv. 3 

and fetch more spices, nurse — iv. 4 

nurse! wife! what ho, what nurse .. — iv.l 
to the marriage her nurse is privy . . — v. 3 

NURSED— nursed by baseness ..Meas.for Meas. iii. 1 

but here nursed up and bred — iv. 2 

and they have nursed this woe. TiiusAndronicus, iii.l 
at Tharsus was nursed with Cleon .... Pericles, v. 3 
prettiest babe that e'er I nursed. Koinfo 4^ Juliet, i. 3 

1 nursed her daughter, that you talked — i. 5 
NURSE-LIKE-SO feat, so iiurse-like.Q/inbfKne, v. 5 

NURSER— nurser of his harms \ Henry VI. iv. 7 

NURSERY— a nursery to our gentry ..Alt'sWelt, i. 2 

to see fair Padua, nursery of arts.. Taming of Sh. i. 1 
breed a nursery of like evil ..Troitus^ Cressida, i. 3 

from their nursery were stolen Cymbeline, i, I 

to set niv rest on her kind nursery Lear, i. 1 

NURSH-A Quickly tell me Merry Wives, iii. 2 

NURSING— nursing a tiwusand. Meas. for Meas. iii. 2 

the nursing of thy sons (rep.) Cymbeline,v. 5 

there I'll leave it at careful nursing ..Pericles, iii. 1 

by nursing them, my lord Lear, v. 3 

NllRTURE— know some uutIutcAs you Like it, ii. 7 

NUT— and fetch thee new nuts. Alid. N.'sDrcam.iv. I 

sweetest nut hath (rep.) . . As you Like it, iii. 2 (ver.) 



NUT 



[ 538 



NUT— goblet, or a worm-eaten nut.AsuouLike il, iii. 

can be no kernel in this liglU nut ... . Alt's Well ii. 

a pm, a nut, a cherry-stone. . Comedy of Errors, iv. 

crack a fusty nut with no kernel. TroilusA Cress, ii. 

;^T?T'n';A??SV/?'' cracking nuts. . Komeo ^Juliet, iii. 

JN U J. HUUK b humour on me Merry IVivi-s, i . 

atWJJ^.??.^ nuthook, you lie •2HenrylF. v. ■ 

NUTMEG-a gilt nutmeg Love's L. Lost, w.\ 

niUmegs, seven; a race, or two .. Winler' sTali-, iv. : 

,-l'Si °' "^^ colour of tlie nutmeg Henrt/ ;'. iii. ' 

SKS?.^.^^^'^^-'"™ 'o nutriment. 7-.mono/:i;/.. iii. ! 

JN UifeHKLL— than a nutshell Tempest, i. 

I could be bounded in a nutsiiell Hamlet, ii. ! 

■■^YM— Bardolph, Nyra, and 'Pistol.. Merry iVives, i. 1 

away, sir corporal Nym (lep.) _ ii. ] 

my name is Nym ii ] 

you and your coach-fellow Nym. ... — ii.' i 

wliether one Nj'm, sir iv. ; 

well met corporal Nym (rtp.) Henri/ F. ii." i 

III live by Nym, and Nym shall live — ii. 1 
Nym, thou hast spoke the right .... — ii I 
Nym, rouse thy vaunting vems .... _ ii. ; 
for Nym, he liath heard, that men . . — iii. S 

Nym and Bardolph (rep. iv. 4) — iii. s 

rv YAIPH— like to a nymph o' tlie sea.... Tempest, i. i 
sea nymphs hourly ring his knell.. — i. 2 (song] 
to make cola nymphs chaste crowns .. — iv. I 

you nymphs, called Naiads _ iv. 1 

come, temperate nymphs _ iv. i 

and these tresh nymphs encounter ever — iv! 1 
tliou "entle nymph, clierisli tliy. TwoGen.of Ver. v. 4 
fare thee well, nymph: ere he do..J»//Vi. ISI.U Dr. ii. 2 
goddess, nymph, perfect, divine (rep.) _ jii. 2 
but, soft; what nymphs are these? .. — iv. 1 

Dian, circled with her nympha •iHenryVl.vi 8 

a wanton ambling nymph RichardHI. i. 1 

stately Plrabe 'mongst her nymphs ..Titus And. i. 2 

rCo/.A.'n(.] this Semiramis, this nymph ii. I 

nymph, in thy orisons be all my sins. . Hamlet^ iii. 1 

O 

OAK— I will rend an oak and peg tliee . . Tempest, i. 2 

aud rifted Jove's stout oak with _ v. 1 

walk round about an oak (rep ) . . Merry Wives, iv! 4 

Falstaff at that oak shall meet _ iv. 4 

to-night at Heme's oak(rep. v. 1) iv 6 

hard by Heme's oak _ v3 

the hour draws on : totheoakl totheoak!— v. 3 

round about the oak of Heme — v, 5 

the nnwedgeable and gnarledoak./lieas. for Mens. ii'. 2 
an oak, but with one green leaf on 'yt..MuchAdo, ii. 1 

at the dukes oak we meet Mid.N.\Dream,i. 2 

those thoughts to me were oaks . . Love'sL. Lost, iv. 2 
under an oak, whose antique root.^s youLike il, ii. 1 

under an oak, whose boughs were — iv. 3 

as ever oak, or stone, was sound ..Winter's Tale, ii! 3 

tell the hardest-timbered oak 3 Henry yi. ii. 1 

the knees of knotted oaks ....Troilus^Cressida, i. 3 

as leaves do on the oak Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

the oaks bear mast iv 3 

hews down oaks with rushes '.'.Curiolanus, i. \ 

his brows bound with oak (rep. ii. 2) i 3 

the rock, the oak not to be wind-shaken — v! " 

that should but rive an oak v 3 

winds have rived the knotty oa,\iS..JuliusCcEsar, i! 3 
to thee the reed is as the oak.Cymbeline, iv. 2 (sonc) 

what nbsof oak, when mountains Othello, ii°| 

her father's eyes up, close as oak _ iii' 1 

OAK-CLEAVING thunder-bolts Lenr, iii' 2 

OAKEN— with the oaken garland . . Coriolanus, ii' 1 

OAK— to post after with oars . Tu-o Gen. ofFerona, ii 3 

cut with her golden oars the silver . . MuchAdo, iii' 1 

^'heoars were silver Antony (rCleopaha, ii. 2 

OARED himself with his good arms Tempest, ii 1 

OAT— rye, barley, vetches, oats, and pease — iv. 1 
I could munch your good dry oats..,l/i((. N.Dr. iv 1 
the oats have eaten the horses. Taming of Shreiv, iii 2 
never joyed since the price of oats rose.l Henry/r.ii'i 

draw a cart, nor eat dried oats Lear v s 

S^!E9.-^T^^.-""Sh Oatcake, sir Much Ado', in'. 3 

>! . -t.ii^TP'P'^ °" •^'^'^^ straws . Love'sL.L. v. 2 (song) 
OAIH— the strongest oaths are straw ..Tempest, iv 1 

not an oath on shore? _ v 1 

here is her oath for love .... Two Gen. of Ferona i 3 

which gave me first my oath _ 'ii' g 

twenty thousand soul-confirming oatha — ii' 6 

a thousand oaths, an ocean ii 7 

his oaths are oracles " " ii' i 

andfuU of new-found oaths !!!! _ iv' 4 

rend thy faith into a thousand oaths — y' 4 

and all those oaths descended v' 4 

that gave aim to all thy oaths !!! _ v" 4 

and your bold-beating oaths Merry Wives ii' 2 

upon the oaths of judgment ....Twelfth Night 'iii! 2 
that a terrible oath, with a swaggering _ iii 4 
he will fight with you for his oatli sake — iii! 4 

pray God he keep his oath! iii 4 

was affianced to her by oath Meas.for Meas iii 1 

It is against my oath iv 2 

what he with his oath; and all probation — v 1 

think'st thou, tliy oaths v' 1 

but I'll take my oath on it ] MuchAdo, ii! 3 

partly by his oaths, which, first _ iii 3 

he hailed down oaths, that he ..Mid.N.'s Dream, i. 1 

showers of oaths did melt _ i 1 

two bosoms interchained with an oath — ii' 3 
a million fail, confounding oath on oath — iii! 2 
weigh oath with oath, and you will. . — iii. 2 

our oaths are past, and now Love's L Lost i 1 

subscribe to your deep oath [Co/.-oathsj — 'i!i 

your oath is passed to pass away _ i 1 

having sworn too hard-a-keeping oath — i! I 

the last that will last keep his oath . — 
these oaths and laws will prove an idle — 
he, and his competitors in oath, were — 
seek a dispensation for his oath, to let _ 
dear lady; I have sworn an oath ... _ 

tis deadly sin to keep that oath — u 1 

lose an oath to win a paradise? — iv. 3 (verses) 



OBE 



ii. 1 
ii. 1 
ii. I 



iii. 2 



V. 1 



i. 2 

i.2 

iii. 3 



OATH— would infringe an oath..toi>e'».i.X,os< iv 3 

who can give an oath? _ jv' 3 

our oaths, to find ourselves (rep.) ' _ iv' 3 
of your eye must break my oath .... _ v' 2 
of heavenly oaths, vowed with integrity — v' 2 
your oath once broke, you force. . _ y' 2 

when I break this oath of mine _ v' 2 

never swore this lady such an oath .. — v' 2 

played foul play with our oaths — y' 2 

misbecomed our oaths and gravities — v" 2 

your oath I will not trust — y" g 

hath ta'eu his oath, and comes . . Mer. of Fenice ii' 9 
I am enjoined by oath to observe .... _ ii'g 
111 keep my oath, patiently to bear.. — ii' q 

wasdry with oaths of love _ 

I have sworn an oath, that I will ... . _ 
an oath, an oath, I have an oath in , . _ 
yet for your vehement oaths, you should — 

stuck on with oaths _ 

and there's ail oath of credit _ 

never more will break an oath with tliee — v i 

when I break that oath, let me As youLike it, i 2 

where learned you that oath, fool?.. — i 2 

full of strange oaths _ ii. 7 

the oath of a lover is no stronger ... . iii' 4 

swears brave oaths, aud breaks them — iii! 4 
and b/ all pretty oaths that are not. . — iv 1 
promises, enticements, oaths, tokens.ylii'sireH, iii 5 
the divine forfeit of his soul upon oath _ iii. 6 
three great oaths would scarce make — iv 1 
tis not the many oaths, that make .. _ iv 2 

would you believe my oaths _ iv. 2 

therefore your oaths are words — iv! 2 

all men have the like oaths — iv! 2 

when he swears oaths _ iv. 3 (letter) 

he professes not keeping of oaths ... . _ iv. 3 

ask him upon his oath, if he does _ v. 3 

thinks with oaths to face .... Taming of Shrew, ii.' 1 

protesting oath on oath ii. 1 

1 take the like unfeigned oath i y. 2 

that I may surely keep mine oath . . _ iv. 2 

with oaths kept waking — iv. 3 

you had drawn oaths from him .. Winter'sTale, i. 2 
seek to unsphere the stars with oaths — i.2 
or by oath, remove, or counsel, shake 

if word, nor oath, prevail not 

according to thine oath, places remote 

to be by oath enjoined to this — iii. 3 

It becomes thy oath full well — iv. 3 (son ") 

break my oath to this my fair — iv 3 

bear witness to his oath — v. 1 

my crown, my oath, my dignity.. Comedi/o/Brr. i! 1 

with circumstance, and oaths — v. 1 

branch and parcel of mine oath — y. 1 

I have a king's oath to the contrary.A'mg-JoAn.iii. 1 
like a civil war, set'st oath to oath .. — iii. 1 
an oath the surety for thy truth (rep.) — iii. 1 

thy voluntary oath lives in this — jii. 3 

upon your oath of service to the Pope — v. 1 

according to thy oath and band Richard II. i. 1 

on the knighthood, and thy oath .... 

come engaged by my oath 

and take an oath with thee 

to keep the oath that we 

whom both my oath and duty bids.. 

see joy, that breaks that oath 

all duteous oaths: [Co/. -duties, ritesj 

God pardon all oatns, that are 

the strong warrant of an oath. 

let me uiikisa the oath 'twixt — v. 1 

such sarcenet surety for thy oaths. .IHenry/r. iii. 1 

a good mouth-filling oath — iii. 1 

my oath should be, by this fire — iii, 3 

proffered him their oaths — iv! 3 

broke oath on oath, committed wrong — iv. 3 

that oath at Doncaster (rep.) — v. 1 

a lie with a slight oath 2HenryIF. v. 1 

an oath of miekle might HemyF. ii. 1 

sword is an oath, and oaths must have — ii. 1 

for oaths are straws ii. 3 

trick up with new-tuned oaths — iii. 6 

that she may tread out the oath iii. 7 

this soldier keep his oath? (rep.) ...^ — iv. 7 

only downright oaths v. 2 

we'll take your oath v. 2 

our oaths well kept and prosperous be! — v!2 

lords, your oaths to Henry I Henry FI. i. I 

governor of Paris, take your oath.... iv. 1 

amity, and oaths, there should be. . . . iv. 1 

a ruler with unlawful oaths v. 5 

a dreadful oath, sworn with 2HenryFl. iii. 2 

against thy oath, and true allegiance — v. 1 

dispense with heaven for such an oath v. 1 

sin, to keep a sinful oath v. 1 

he was bound by a solemn oath? .. .. v! 1 

that here thou take an oath to cease.. SHenry FI. i. 1 

this oath I willingly take — i. p 

I took an oath, that he should quietly i. i 

any oath may be broken ()cp.) i! • 

an oath is of no moment i! s 

your oath, my lord, is vain iii 

trust not simple Henry, nor his oaths i. 5 

so soon, and broke liis''solemn oath? i. t 

his life, against your holy oath? .... i 4 

for my oath, here's for my father's . . _ i! 4 

touching king Henrv's oath — ii. j 

his oath enrolled in the parliament .. -_ ii' 1 
to frustrate both his oath, and what — ii! 1 

since when, his oath is broke — ii'2 

an oath? nay, then the world (7ep.).. _ ii! a 
break an oath? No, never such an oath — iii 1 

have you not broke your oaths? _ iii. 1 

but do not break your oaths iii 1 

my holy oath ; to keep that oath .... — v" 1 

I am bound by oath Richard in. iv. 1 

by nothing, for this is no oath iv. 4 

feared to break an oath by him (rep.) iv. 4 

to whom by oath he menaced Henry Fill, i 2 

he did discharge a horrible oath — i' 2 

swear the oaths now to her.. TroiViis ^-Crcssirfa, iii! 2 



i. 3 
i. 3 
ii. 2 



iv. 1 



^{^?T~°I°f*'}l' ^^'^ big compare. rrortiM*Cr«..ili.2 
that I affect the untraded oath . . _ iv 5 

to keep an oath that I have sworn . .' _ v' 1 
I pr ythee, do not hold me to mine oath _ y' 2 
man on his oath or bond . . Timon ofAth. i. 2 rcrac'e) 
your paths; I'll trust to your conditions — iv 3 

bound witli an oath, to yield Coriolanus, v! 1 

breaking his oath and resolution — v 5 

stale witli ordinary oaths my love.. Judas Ccesar, i. 2 

no, not an oath jj j 

and what other oath, than honesty'!.' _ ii' 1 
or our performance, did need an oath — ii 1 

come now, keep thine oath! y' 3 

the article of your oath (rep.).. . . Antony 4- Cleo. ii! 2 

soul to the oath of loyalty Cymbeline, i. 7 

as if I borrowed mine oaths of him .. — ii 1 
for any standers-by to curtail his oatha _ ii' I 

I will confirm with oath _ ii 4 

whosefalse oaths prevailed before .. — iii' 3 
with oath to violate my lady's honour — v. i 
how canst thou believe an oath? .. Titus Andron. v. 1 

therefore I urge thy oath _ y i 

and keeps the oath, whicli by that god — v! 1 
thy word for faith, not ask thine oath. . Pericles, i. 2 
he IS bound by the indenture of his oath — i. 3 

thy oath remember _ jv. 1 

and Btrangered with our oath, take her Lear, i. I 

swore as many oaths as I spake words .. — iii. 4 

a boy's love, or a whore's oath — iii 6 

I here take my oath before this _ iii 6 

my oath, and my profession y' 3 

pi-Mipse the oath, my lord '.'Hamlet, i! 5 

as false as dicers' oaths iii. 4 

without an oath, I will make an end on't — iv! 5 

and Cassio high in oath Othello, ii. 3 

tor to deny each article with oath — v. 2 

OATHAJBtE, although, I know ..TimonofAlh. iv. 3 
O ATHBKEAJCING ; which he mended. I Hen. I F. v. 2 

OB---[Co;.J item, bread, ob \ Henry IF. ii. 4 

OBDURACY and persistency iHenrylF. ii, 2 

OBUURATE— be so obdurate .. TwoGen.of Fer. iv. i 
but since he stands obdurate .. Mer. of Fenice, iv. 1 

God should be so obdurate as 2 Henry FI. iv. 7 

thou stern, obdurate, flinty, rough ..SHenryFI. i. 4 
withal obdurate, do not hear him..fiicAard ///. i. 3 

but if she be obdurate to mild — iii. 1 

„*;e not obdurate, open thy deaf ears.. Titos .4nd. ii. 3 
U±5i.UIENoE-loathness and obedience. Tempes/, ii. 1 

with a plausible obedience Meas. for Meas. iii. 1 

turned her obedience, which is. . Mid JV.'s Dream, i. 1 
your wife in all obedience.. Taming of Sh. 2 (indue.) 

of lier obedience, her new-built (rep.) v. 2 

fair looks, and true obedience v. 2 

is the obedience to a master Winter'sTale, i. 2 

commend my best obedience to the. . — ii. 2 
contending 'gainst obedieuce, as tliey..Mac6e</i, ii. 4 
togiveobedier.ee where 'tis truly owed.. — v. 2 
honour, love, obedience, troops of friends — v. 3 
make them tame to their obedience!. King-Zo/in, iv. 2 

from whose obedience 1 forbid my soul iv. 3 

our people quarrel ivith obedience . . v. 1 

calmly run on in obedience v. 4 

obedience bids, I should not bid Richard II. i. 1 

and true obedience, of this madness.2Henryfr. iv. 2 

no more from this obedience rise .... iv. 4 

as an aim or butt, obedience Heriry F. i. 2 

our obedience to the king wipes — iv. 1 

or bring him in obedience to your ..\ Henry FI. i. I 

vows obedience, and humble service iii. 1 

to your obedience fifty fortresses — . v. 4 

to hold your true obedience '.iHenryFI. iv! 1 

charity, obedience, and true A-aiy I.Richard III. ii. 2 
that tractable obedience is a slave ..Henry Fill. i. 2 
what kind of my obedience I should — ii. 3 

my thanks, and my obedience — ii. 3 

obedience, upward of twenty years.. ii. 4 

zeal and obedience he still bore your iii. 1 

with him is only in.y obedience iii. 1 

the hearts of prince's kiss obedience.. iii. 1 

in all obedience makes the church .. v. 2 

not fate, obedience, nor the hand of v. 3 

obedience fail in children! Timon of Athens, iv. 1 

obedience fails to the greater bench.Conotonijj, iii. 1 
not had a taste of his obedience? .... — iii. 1 

learn adoctrine of obedience Antony S^Cleo. v. 2 

past grace? obedience? past hope Cymbeline, i. 2 

you sin against obedience, which. ... ii. 3 

a little witness my obedience iii. 4 

change command into obedience .... iii. 4 

. Lear, i. 1 



you have obedience scanted, and well 

in pieces the heart of his obedience — 1.2 

by an enforced obedience of planetary .. — i.2 
whose virtue and obedience doth this .. — ii. i 

if your sweet sway allow obedience ii. 4 

in her duty and obedience (rep.) Hamlet, ii. 2 

where most you owe obedience? Othello, i. 3 

OBEDIENT— with this obedient steel.. Tempest, ii. 1 
she, seemingly obedient, likewise. /Verji/ZCiiies, iv. 6 
my people with an obedient start. TwelfihNight, ii. 5 

acting thii in an obedient hope — v. 1 

obedient to your grace's will Meas. for Meas. i. 1 

ground with obedient breast? Love'sL. Lost, iv. 3 

own fortunes that obedient right AU'sWell, ii. 3 

I am your most obedient servant — ii. 5 

and I am tied to be obedient .. Taming of Shrew, i. 1 
that beat, and will not be obedient .. — iv. 1 
whose wife is most obedient to come — v. 2 
and not obedient to his honest will .. — v. 2 
your most obedient counsellor . . Winter's Tale, ii. 3 
will tliereto be obedient, I have reason — iv. 3 

obedient to the stream Comedy of Errors, i. I 

move in that obedient orb again ....\ Henry IF. v. 1 
dohim homage asobedient subjects.l Henry I'/, iv. 2 
or, like obedient subjects, follow ..Richard III. ii. 2 
James Tyrrel, and your most obedient — iv. 2 

a loyal and obedient subject is HenryFIII. iii. 2 

poison were obedient, and knew.. Timon ofAlh. iv. 3 

obedient as the scabbard Cymbebne, iii. 4 

reproof, obedient, and in order Pericles, i. 2 

he, obedient to their doom — iii. (Gower) 



ORE 

OBEDIENT— make an obedient father .... Lear, i. 4 

whate'er you be. I am obedient OtheHo, iii. 3 

truly, nn obedient lady: Ido beseech.... — iv. 1 

and she's obedient, as you say (>ep.) — iv. 1 

OBEISANCE; tell.. Taming of Shrew, \ (indnctio,.) 

OBERON is passing fell and Mid. N.'s Dr. ii. 1 

jealous Oberon would liftve ovp.).... — ii. 1 
I jest to Oberon, and make him smile — ii. 1 
here comes Oberon. And here my.. — ii. I 
why should Titania cross her Oberon ? — ii . 2 

for I must now to Oberon — ii. 3 

Oberonl what visions have I seen! .. — iv. 1 

OBEY— obey, and be attentive Tempest, i. 2 

I must obey: his art is of such power.... — i. 2 
obey: thy nerves are in tlieir infancy .. — i.2 

my spirits obey; and time — v. I 

will scarce obey this medicine Meny Wives, iii. 3 

if he bid you set it down, obey him.. — iv. 2 

let's obey his humour a little — iv. 2 

he does obey every point of the.. Twelfth Night, iii. 2 

I must obey: this comes with — iii. 4 

let your flesh and blood obey it — v. 1 

I shall obey him Measure for Measxire, i v. 2 

let us obey you to go with us Much Ada, iii. 3 

come, we'll obey you — iii-3 

will not obey an old decree touc's' L. Lost, iv. 3 

I shall obey you in all Mer. of Venice, iii. 4 

check thy contempt; obey oxu- will ...WsTcH, ii. 3 

I shall obey his will; you must — ii S 

obey the bride, you that attend. . Taming ofSh. Iii. 2 

bound to serve, love, and obey — v. 2 

the sea for to obey the moon Winter' sTale, i. 2 

I willingly obey your command .... — i v. 1 
learn love, I'll practise to obey ..Comedij of Err. ii. 1 
if we obey them not, this will ensue — ii. 2 

in the duke's name, to obey me — i v. 1 

I do obey thee, till I give thee — iv. 1 

I did obey; and sent my peasant — v. 1 

offend you, and obey you, as I did..2Hem!/(r. v. 2 

let them obey, that know not iHenrijri. v. 1 

obey, audacious traitor ; kneel — v. 1 

arrested, but will not obey — v. 1 

command, and I'll obey ZHertryt'I. iii. I 

whom they must obey '/ (rep.) — i v. 1 

and will obey. We are (rep.) Richard III. i. 1 

lobey; O my lord Aberga^iy HenryVlll. i. 1 

spur them, till they obey the manage — v. 2 
shall more obey, than to the. Troitus S^ Cressida, iii. I 
he cares not, he'll obey conditions .. — iv. 6 

vow lies here, this I'll obey — v. I 

plagues, that thee alone obey!..7'imono/.4/Ae)is, v. 1 

I will obey you in every thing Coriolanus, i. 3 

obey, I charge thee, and follow to . . — iii. 1 
the second name of men, obeys Ids points — iv. 6 

such a gosling to obey instinct — v. 3 

and nature must obey necessity . . JuliusCresar, iv. 3 

the very dice obey him Antony 4' Cleopatra, ii. 3 

her tongue will not obey her heart . . — ii i. 2 

would obey it on all cause — iii. 9 

my master and my lord I must obey — v. 2 
which my love makes religion to obey — v. 2 

no more obey the heavens Cymbeline.i. 1 

that you in all obey her, save — ii. 3 

and make me blessed to obey ! — v. 1 

both ear and heart obey my tongue.TilnsAxid. iv. 4 

as fits my nature, do obey you Pericles, ii. 1 

we caunot but obey the powers above us — iii. 3 
goddess argentine, I will obey thee! .. — v. 2 

obey you, love you, and honour you Lear, i. 1 

obey thy parents; keep tliy word — iii. 4 

to obey in all your daughters' hard .... — in. 4 
you are a royal one, anu we obey you . . — iv. 6 
the weight of this sad time we must obey — v. 3 
obey, and go witli me; for thou../foineo Sj-Juliet, v. 3 
I shall in all my best obey you, max\.a.m. Hamlet, i. 2 
come your ways. 1 shall obey, my lord. . — i. 3 

'tis not fit thus to obey him — i. 4 

but we both obey; and here give up — ii. 2 

which he, in brief, obeys; receives rebuke — ii. 2 
I shall obey you: and, for your part .... — iii. I 

we shall obey, were she ten times — iii. i 

if your mind dislike anything, obey it .. — v. 2 
what if I do obey? how may the duke. . Olliello, i. 2 
to spend with thee: we must obey the time — _ ;• 3 

and to obey shall be in me remorse — iii. 3 

sir, I obey the mandate, and will return — iv. 1 

'tis proper I obey him, but not now — v. 2 

OBEYED— his tonaue obeyed his ha.\\A. AW sWrdl, i. 2 

your king's name be obeyed iHennjt't. iii. 1 

commanding all, obeyed of none../i'c/ian( ///. iv. 4 

king's pleasure by me obeyed Henry Vllt. i. 1 

loved him next heaven? obeyed him? — iii. 1 

as cause will be obeyed Coriolanus, i. B 

so men obeyed, and fell below his stem — . ii- 2 

to have command obeyed Antony ^Cleo. iii. II 

a dog's obeyed in office Lear, iv. 6 

OBEYED'S'T-whom thou obeyed'st.SHeHii/^/. iii. 3 
OBEYING— obeying with my wind .. — iii. 1 

obeying in commanding Henryl'IJl. ii. 4 

dexterity so obeying appetite .. Troilus Sf Cress, v. :, 

from his all obeying breatli Antony ^ Cleo. iii. 11 

OBtDICUT— of lust, as Obidicut Lear, iv. 1 

OB.JECT— note- worthy object. rjroGen.o/^'erona, i. I 
upon a homely object love can wink — ii. 4 

is by a newer object quite — ii. 4 

he doth object, 1 am too MerryWives, in. 4 

throwing it on any other object.. A/eas./orA/cas. v. 1 
the object, and the pleasure .. Mid.N.'sDream,iv. I 
for every object that the one Aoth.Looe'sL.Lost, ii. 1 
shapes, objects, ideas, apprehensions — iv. 2 
to every varied object in his glance. . — v. 2 
every object, that might make ..Mer. of Venice, i. I 

extracted from many objects As you Like it, iv. 1 

mark, what object did present itself! — iv. 3 

to a most hideous object All's Well, v. 3 

never object pleasing in tliine eye.Comedy oflirr. ii. 2 

without this object, form such King John, iv. 3 

what dost thou object against lUchardlt. i. 1 

one thing entire to many objects .... — ii. 2 
when gold becomes her object! ,,,.2 Henry IV. iv. 4 



r 539 ] 



OB JECT— so great an objeet .... Henry V. i. (chorus) 
tills blot, that tliey objeet against ..iHenryVI. ii. 4 
to answer what thou canst objeet .... — iii. 1 
doth not the object cheer your heart. 3Hen(!/ VI. ii. 2 

thou wilt object my holy oath — v. I 

the fatal objeet in my eye — v. 6 

him that did object the same . . . . i . Itichard III. ii. 4 

me, his abject object Henry Vlll. i. 1 

fixed on spiritual object, he should still — iii. 2 
flies the object of all harm . . Troitus ^ Cressida, i i. 2 

eye praises the present object — iii. 3 

subscribes to tender objects — iv. .'i 

swear against objects Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

the objeet of our'misery Coriolanus, i. 1 

dreadiul objects so familiar Julius Ccesar, iii. 1 

one th.at feeds on objects, arts, and ,. — iv. 1 
this objeet, which takes prisoner .... Cymbeline, i. 7 
or fruitful objeet be in eye of Imogen — v. 4 

hitting each bijject with a joy — v. 5 

with the dismalest object that.... Titus Andron. ii. 4 

ah me! this object kills me! — iii- 1 

by those fearful objects to prepare Pericles, i. 1 

even but now was your best object Lear, i. 1 

with this horrible objeet, from low farms — ii. 3 

see'st thou this object, Kent? — v. 3 

this present object made probation Hamlet, i. 1 

with variable objects, shall ex^el — iii. 1 

thoutth great ones are their object Othello, iii. 4 

the object poisons sight — v. 2 

IBJECTED— it is well objected iHenry VI. ii. 4 

)BJECTION—tlieir perverse objections — iv. 1 
as for your spiteful false objections ..iHenryVl. i. 3 
I dare \o\\v worst objections Henry Vlll. iii. 2 

OBLATION— night oblations to thee. . . . Pericles, v. 3 

OBLIGATION of our blood ....Troilus ^Cress. iv. 5 
warrant, ctuittance, or obligation ..MerryWives, i. ' 

make obligations, and write iHenryVI. iv. 

pure respect; no other obligation . . Henry VIII. ii. 
in the least would fail her obligation .... Lear, ii. 
the survi vor bound in filial obi igation . . Hamlet, i. 
the obligation of our ever-preserved love — ii. 

OBLIGED faith xmforMieA\..Mercliant of Venice, ii. 

OBLIQUE memorial of cuckolds.. TroiiMs^ Cress, v. 
all is oblique Timon of Alliens, iv. 

OBLIVION— razure of oblivion . . Meas.for Meas. v. 
childishness, and mere oblivion ..AsyouLilceit, ii. 

damned oblivion, is the tomb of All's Well, ii. 

deeper than oblivion we do bury .... — v. 
which now shall die in oblivion . . Taming of Sh. iv. 
putting all affairs else in oblivion ..2HenryIV. v. 
from the dust of old oblivion raked ..HenryV. ii. 
forgetf Illness and deep oblivion .... Itichard III. iii. 
blind oblivion swallowed cities. TroiiMSi^- Cress, iii. 
wherein he puts alms for oblivion.... — iii- 

and formless ruin of oblivion — iv. 

my oblivion is a very Antony Antony <§- Cleo. i. 

but in oblivion, and hateful griefs. Titus Andron. iii . 
now, whether it be bestial oblivion .... Hamlet, iv. 

OBLIVIOUS antidote Macbeth, v. 

'OBLOQUY— the greatest obloquy.... ^H's Well, iv. 
which obloquy set bars before 1 Henry VI. ii. 

OBSCENE and mostpreposterous Lowe'st.L. i. 1 (let. 
so heinous, black, obscene a deed!.fiic/iard //. iv. 
obscene, greasy tallow-keech ......I Henry IV. ii. 

OBSCENELY, andeourageously.il/;d.A'.'sDreom_,i. 
so obscenely, as it were Love's L. Lost, iv. 

OBSCURE epistles of love TwelfthMght,ii. 

some obscure precedence Love's L. Lost, iii. 

O base and obscure vulgar! — iv. 1 (letter 

cerecloth in the obscure grave . . Mer. of Venice, ii. 
with a gracious voice, obscures the .. — iii- 
obscure bird clamoured the livelong . . Macbeth,}]. 

little grave, an obscure grave Richard II. iii. 

ptirpose to obscure my noble 1 Henry VI. v. 

obscure and lowly swain iHenryVI. iv. 

hither to an obscure plot Titus Andronicus, ii. 

his obscure funeral, — no trophy Hamlet, iv. 

obscure prologue to the history of lust..O»ieHo, ii- 

OBSCURE D lights Merry Wives, v . : 

why I obscured myself .... Measure for Measure, v. 
and I should be obscured ., Mercliant of Venice, ii. i 

a great magician , obscured As you Like it, v. 

have obscured with a swain's .. Winter'sTale, iv. ; 

for wliat obscured light Comedy of Errors, i. 

the prince obscured his contemplation. Henrv^. i- 
then hath Richard been obscured .. iHenry VI. ii. '. 
been informed of my obscured course .... Lear, ii. 
obscured in this fair volume lies.. Romeo'Sr Juliet, i. 

OBSCURELY Caesar's ambition luliitsCiesar, i. 

OBSCURING and hiding from me. As you Litre it, i. 

OBSCURITY, or misty vale Titus Andron. v. 

OBSEQUIES— mean obsequies 2HenryVI. iii. 

are my sweet Rutland's obsequies ..SHenryVI. i. 

we have done our obsequies Cymbeline, iv. 2 

for my brethren's obsequies Titus Andron. i. 2 

ICol. knt,'] obsequies that I for. . Romeo ^Juliet, v. 3 
obsequies, and true love's rites? .... — v. 3 
her obsequies have been as far Hamlet, v. 1 

OBSEQUIOUS in your love Merry Wives, iv. 2 

in obsequious fondness crowd . . Meas. for Meas. ii. 4 
so obsequious will thy father be. ... 3 Henry VI. ii. 5 
to shed obsequious tears unon.... TitusAndron. v. 3 
sime term to do obsequious sorrow .... Hamlet, i. 2 
doting on his own obsequious bondage .. OWe/to, i. 1 

OBSEQUIOUSLY lament Richard III. i. 2 

OBSERVANCE-dotingobservanee MerryWives, ii. 2 
concerning her observance? ....Meos./oriV/ras.iv. I 
do observance to a morn of May ..Mid.N.'sDr. i. 1 
there are other strict observances.. Lore's/.. Los(, i. I 
all the observance of civility.. ..iVer. of Venice, ii. 2 
relish it with a good observance. . .4s i/owLt*ici(, iii. 2 
all adoration, duty and observance.. — v. 2 

nil trial, all observance — v. 2 

with true observance seek to eke out.. All's Well, ii. 5 
by what observance, I pray you?. ... — iii. 2 
and do observance to my mercy . .2lIenryIV. iv. 3 
observance of thy godlike seat.. Troilus 4- Cress, i. 3 

without observance or respect — ii. 3 

observances, customs, and laws. . Timon of Ath. iv. I 
or I have no observance ,. Antony ^ Cleopatra, iii. 3 



occ 



OBSERVANCE— than in the observance. Hamte, i. 4 
with this special observance, that you .. — iii. 2 

scattering and unsure observance Othello, iii. 3 

nor of them look for such observances — iii. 4 

OBSERVANT toil Troilus * Cressida, i. 3 

than twenty silly ducking observants . . Lear, ii. 2 

strict and rhost observant watcli Hamtpt.i. \ 

OBSERVATION-life, and observation. Tempest, iii. 3 
my reading, nor my observations . . Much Ado, iv. 1 
our observation is performed ....Mid. N.'s Dr. iv. 1 
if my observation, (which very.. Love's L. Lost, ii. 1 

ijy my pennv of observation — iii. 1 

crammed wftli observation As you Like it, ii. 7 

what observation madest thou.. Comerfyo/Err. iv. 2 
that doth not smack of observation.. A'/ji^'Jo/m, i. I 

tut, that's a foolish observation SHenryVI. ii. 6 

the observation we have made of it Lear, i. 1 

that youth and observation copied .... Hamlet, i. 5 

OBSERVE his construction of it ..TwelfthNighl, ii. i 

observe him, for the love of mockery — ii. 5 

he must observe their mood on — iii. 1 

to observe the right of May . . Mid.N.'s Dream, iv. 1 
the season, and observe the times. Love's L. Lost, v. 2 
by oath to observe three things . Mer.of Venice, ii. 9 

which I can well observe to-day All's Well, i. 2 

her eye is sick on't; I observe her now — i. 3 

and observe his reports for me — ii. I 

observe her; stand close Macbeth, v. 1 

we did observe; cousin Aumcrle ....Richard II, i. 4 
I shall observe him with all care ..2HenrylV. iv. 4 
for they do observe unfathered heirs — iv. 4 
will you not observe the strangeneBS.2 Henry r/. iii. 1 

observe, observe, he's moody Henry I' I II. iii. 2 

observe degree, priority, and place Troilus ff Cress, i . 3 
I come to observe; I give thee.. 7'«mon of Athens, i. 2 

do you observe this, Hostilius? — iii. 2 

how to observe a strange event — iii. 4 

whom thou'lt observe, blow off — iv. 3 

both observe and answer CoHolanus, ii. 3 

I do observe you now of late JutiusCo'sar , i. 2 

must I budge? must I observe j'ou?.. — iv. 3 
observe how Antony becomes .Antony jr Cleo. iii. 10 
I have seen thee careful to observe.. Tiiits And. v. 1 

observe his inclination in yourself Hamlet, ii. I 

I'll observe his looks; I'll tent him — ii. 2 

comment of thy soul observe my uncle . . — iii. 2 

observe her well withCassio Othello, iii. 3 

set on thy wife to observe: leave me .... — iii. 3 
von shall observe him; and his own courses — iv. 1 

OBSERVED tliat? TwoGen.of Verona, ii.) 

rhymes, observed your fashion . . Love'sL.Lost, iv. 3 

the premises ob.served,tliy will Atl'sWell, ii. 1 

such as he hath observed .. Taming of Sh. 1 (indue.) 
I have observed, the air is delicate .... Macbeth, i. 
and Green, observed his courtsliip.. i??cAa)vi //. i 4 
observed, a man may prophecy . . . .2HenryIV. iii. 1 
gracious, if he be observed; he hath.. — iv. 4 
therefore, must be well observed ... . — iv. 4 
I have observed these three swashers. Henry r. iii. 2 
I have observed thee always ..Timonof .ithens, iii. 1 

all his faults observed, set in JuliusCcesar, iv. 3 

at sea it still hath been observed 7'eric/cs, iii. 1 

the observed of all observers! Hamlet, iii 1 

OBSERVER doth thy history .... Meas. for Meas. i. 1 

he is a great observer JuliusCcesar, i. 2 

the observed of all observers! Hamlet, iii. I 

OBSERVING him, do bear 2HenryIV. v. 1 

we have stood here observing him, Henry VIII. iii. 2 
underwriteinanobseryingkind.T)w7us(|- Cress, ii. 3 
I observing, took once a pliant hour....O//ip»o, i. 3 

OBSERVINCJLY distil it out Henry V. iv. 1 

OBSTACLE— no obstacle TwelfthNight, iii. 4 

that thou wilt be so obstacle ! 1 Henry VI. v. 4 

it fills one full of obstacles Richard III. i. 4 

if all obstacles were cut away — iii. 7 

OBSTINACY— hellish obstinacy tie.. ..AlVsW(ll,i. 3 

von do not well in obstinacy \ Henry 11. v. 4 

OBSTINATE heretic Much Ado, i. 1 

witli obstinate repulse, to slay ....1 Henry VI. iii. 1 
the queen is obstinate, stubborn ..HenryVlll. ii. 4 
let it be virtuous to be obstinate .... Coriolanus, v. 3 
to persever in obstinate eondolement ..Hamlet, i. 2 

OBSTINATELY strong Troitua ^Cressidn.v. 2 

OBSTRUCT [/vji/. -abstract] 'tween. .4n(. e, Cleo. iii. 6 

OBSTRUCTION in this TwelJViNight, ii. i> 

this does make some obstruction — iii. 4 

yet complainest thou of obstruction? — iv. 2 
to lie in cold obstruction. A/easHre,/*or3/easKre, iii. 1 
purge the obstructions, whiclibcgin.2Henri//r. iv. 1 
OBTAIN— I would not obtain. . Two Gen. of Ver. iv. 4 
us I wooed for thee to obtain her. . . . Much Ada, iii. 2 

shall I obtain it? Name it Richard II. iv. 1 

intercession to obtain a league 1 Henry VI. v. 4 

ask mercy, and obtain no grace ....SHem-yVl. ii. 6 
'Titus, thou shalt obtain and aeii.. Titus Andron. i. 2 

yet, let me obtain my wish Perictes.v. 1 

OBTAINED— having obtained her Much Ado, i. 3 

his good will obtained — ii. 1 

great suit so easily obtained Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

unless I be obtained by the manner. Mer. 0/ fen. i. 2 

thou hast obtained thy suit (rep.) — ii. 2 

having this obtained, you presently.. /4«'s Well, ii. 4 
special thing is wellobtained.. raining- o/S/iieM', ii. 1 
when she has obtained your eye .. Winter'sTale. v. 1 
fair words peace may be obtained.... IHenry //. i. 1 

who hath oDtained the glory of — i v. 7 

OBTAINING of suits? (rep.) \HenryIV. i.2 

am desperate of obtaining her.. TwoGen. of Ver. iii. 2 

OCCASION to these gentlemen Tempest, ii. 1 

the occasion speaks thee — ii. 1 

have more occasion to know MerryWives, i. 1 

feed every slight occasion — ii. 2 

on the wing of all occasions — ii. 2 

made mine own occasion meUovr..Tirelflh Night, i. 2 
unless you laugh and minister occasion — i. 5 

upon the least occasion more — ii. 1 

I sent for thee upon a sad occasion .. — iii 4 
you may have very fit occasion for't — iii. 4 

what occasion now reveals before .... — v. 1 
if you have occasion to use me..Meas.forMfas. iv. 2 



occ 



OCCASION may detain lis longer .... Much Ado, i. 1 
no measure in the occasion that .... — i. 3 
nay. I can gleek.upon the occasion. yTid, N. Dr. iii- I 
liis eye begets occasion for his wit. Lore's L.Lost, ii. I 
delivered upon tl\e mellowing of occasion — iv. 2 

upon the next occasion that we — v. 2 

embrace the occasion to depart ,.Mer. of Venice, i. 1 

all unlocked to your occasions — _ i. 1 

yet more quarreling with occasion! .. — iii. 5 
you might take occasion to kiss ..AsyouLike it, iv. 1 
make her fault her husband's occasion — iv. 1 

stronger tl;an liis just occasion — iv. 3 

goaded witli most sharp occasions .... — v. 1 
till I can And occasion of revenge. rawingo/S/i. ii. I 
tell 113 what occasion of import hath.. — iii- 2 
on the like occasion whereon my .. IViiUer^sTate, i. 1 
courted now with a double occasion. . — iv. 3 

lest occasion call us, and show us Macbeth, ii. 2 

for courage mountethwith occasion. AV«5'./o/i?i, ii. 1 

to grace occasions, let it be our suit — iv. 2 

witliold thy speed, di-eadfiil occasion ! . . . . — iv. 2 
of this most fair occasion, by the which .. — v. 4 
of that occasion that shall bring it ou.lHe)»!//r. i. 3 
60 when he had occasion to he seen .. — iii. 2 
yon took occasion to be quickly wooed — v. 1 
I well allow the occasion of our arms.2Hf»i-!/ IV.l.'i 
publish the occasion of our arms.... — i. 3 

as ofl as he has occasion to name himself — ii. 2 
by the rough torrent of occasion .... — iv. 1 
as his misdoubts present occasion .... — iv. 1 
with gud leve, as I may pick occasion. Meni!/ V. iii. 2 
there is occasions and causes why and — v. 1 
wlien you take occasion to see leeks.. — v. 1 
having any occasion to write for matter — v. 2 
for those occasions at Eltham {rep.) .\ Henry V J. iii. 1 
to take occasion from their mouths .. — iv. 1 
whate'er occasion keeps him hom... '2 Henry VI. iii. 1 

repairs him with occasion? — v. 3 

but that 1 seek occasion liow to rise. .ZHenry VI. i. 2 

when I give occasion of offence — i. 3 

frame my face to all occasions — iii. 2 

as occasion serves, this noble queen .. — iii. 3 

I'll sort occasion, as index to Richard III. ii. 2 

on what occasion, God he knows, not I — iii. 1 
joyful to meet the least occasion . . Henry VIII. iii. 2 

the occasion shall instruct you — v. 1 

had I so good occasion to lie long. Trail. Sr Cress- iv. 1 
when contention and occasion meet.. — iv. 1 
master is awaked by great occasion. Timon ofAlh. ii. 2 
tliat my occasions have found time .. — ii. 2 
having great and instant occasion .. — iii. 1 
denied his occasion so many talents — iii. 2 

has only sent his present occasion now — iii. 2 
if his occasion were not virtuous .... — iii. 2 
but his occasions might have wooed — iii. 3 
many my near occasions did urge me — iii. 6 
for a* very little thief of occasion .... Cor/o/anMS, ii. 1 
he married but his occasion here. Antony SrCleo. ii. 6 
but what occasion hath Cadwal . . . , Ci/mbcUne, iv. 2 
and brings the dire occasion in liis arms — iv. 2 

60 tender over his occasions — v. 5 

I would breed from hence occasions Lear, i. 3 

occasions, noble Gloster, of some poise .. — ii. 1 
see occasion in a good quarrel . . Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 4 

give me occasion ()e/).) — iii. 1 

occasion smiles upon a double leave. . . . Hamlet, i. 3 
80 much as from occasion you may glean — ii. 2 
to visit you, my lord: no other occasion — ii. 2 
how all occasions do inform against me .. — iv. 4 
recount the occasion of my sudden — iv. 7 (letter) 

a flnder-out of occasions Olhello, ii. 1 

do you lind some occasion to anger Cassio — ii. 1 
to take the safest occasion by the front . . — iii. 1 
I would on great occasion speak with you — iv. 1 
the occasion [/vn^-motivc] of tliese tears — iv. 2 
OCCIDENT-passage to the Occident. iiic/iard//. iii. 3 
I may wander from east to occ'iAaai. Cymbeline,\v. 2 

OCCIDENTAL damp moist Alfsn'ell,\\. 1 

OCCULTED guilt do not itself Hamlet, Vi\. 2 

OCCUPAT artus: 'tis thee I fcax....2HenrijVI. iv. 1 

OCCUPATION— no ooCupation Tempest, ii. I 

your occupation a mystery? .... Meas.forMeas. iv. 2 
being members of my occupation. ... — iv. 2 
prove my occupation a mystery .... — iv. 2 
tis my occupation; have at it .. H'inter's Tale, iv. 3 
in Rome, and occupations pevish'... Coriolanus, iv. 1 
60 much upon the voice of occupation — iv. 6 
had been a man of any occupation. JudusCfrsar, i. i 
knew'st the royal occupation! .. Antony /^Cteo. iv. 4 

sir, 'tis my occupation to be plain Lear, ii. 2 

farewell! Othello's occupation's gonc\. Othello, iii. 3 

OCCUPY-odious as the word occupy. 2Up");/;(-'. ii. 4 

occupy the argument no longer.. Romeo <5J«(<e/, ii. 4 

OCCURRENCE of my fortune Twetfih Niglit, v. ) 

and omit all the occurrences. .. Heiuy r. v. (chorus) 

OCCURRENTS.more and less Hamlet, v. 2 

OCEAN— to the wild oceau.. Tiro Gen. o/Veiona, ii. 7 

an ocean of his tears — ii. 7 

or ocean whelm them all! Merry Wives, ii. 2 

your mind is tossing on the ocain. Mer-o/Vrnice, i.l 
that in the ocean seeks another. . Comedy of Err. i. 2 
all great Neptune's ocean wash this . . Macbeth, ii. 2 
spurns back the ocean's roaring tides. A'mffJo/m.ii. 1 

a peaceful progress to the ocean — ii. 2 

it shall be as all the ocean, enough .. — iv. 3 
even to our ocean, to our great king — v. 4 

and drinking oceans dry Richard II. ii. 2 

tlie beachy girdle of the ocean too . .2 Henitj I V. iii. 1 
narrow ocean parts asunder. . . . Henry V, i. (chorus) 
with the wild and wasteful ocean.... — iii. 1 

his face an ocean of salt tears 2Henry VI. iii. 2 

island, girt in with the ocean — iv. 8 

deep bosom of the ocean buried Richard III. i. 1 

seen the amiiitious ocean swell ....Julius C'rsir, i. 3 
the anjjered ocean {oa,ms. ... Antony ^ Cleopatra, ii. 6 

whate er the ocean pales — ii. 7 

his legs bestrid the ocean — v. 2 

as many inches as you have oceans. . Cymbrltne, i. 3 
gilt the ocean witli his beams .... TitusAndron. ii. 1 
for all tire water in the ocean can .... — iv. 2 



[ 540 ] 



O'ER 



OCEAN— the ocean swells not so. . TitxisAndron. iv. 2 

the ocean overpeering of his list Hninlft, iv. S 

O'CLOCK— by seven o^clock.7'a'oGen.o//'erona, iii. I 

eleven o'clock tlie hour Merry Wives, ii. 2 

to-morrow eight o'clock, to liave .... — iii. 3 

it liath struck ten o'clock — v. 2 

but till 'tis one o'clock, our dance . . — v. 6 

what's o'clock, think you? Meas.forMcas. ii. 1 

to-morrow four o'clock — iv. 2 

'tis almost five o'clock, cousin MachAdo, iii. 4 

'tis now but four o'clock Merchant of Venice, ii. 4 

at si.x o'clock i' the morning — ii. 5 

'tis nine o'clock; our friends all — ii. C 

what is't o'clock? You should ..Asyoiitikeit, iii. 2 
by two o'clock I will be with thee irep.) — iv. 1 
is it not past two o'clock? and here.. — iv. 3 
ten o'clock: within these three hours. .J/rs»rri;,iv. 1 
'tis now some seven o'clock., luming of Shrew, iv. 3 
it shall be what o'clock I say it is .. — iv. 8 
60011, at five o'clock, please j'ou ..Comedy of Err. i. 2 
it is two o'clock. Perhaps, some .... — ii. 1 

at five o'clock, I shall receive — iv. 1 

by four o'clock, early at Gadshill ..MIenrylV. i. 2 
morrow, carriers: what's o'clock? irep.) — ii. 1 
twelve o'clock at midnight (»ep.).... — ii. 4 

at two o'clock i' the afternoon . — iii. 3 

'tis one o'clock, and past 2He»7'i/7^. iii. 1 

it will be two o'clock ere they — v. 5 

is't four o'clock? It is. Then we go in. Henry V. i. 1 
it is now two o'clock: but let me see — iii. 7 
sirs, what's o'clock? Ten, my lorA..2HenryVI. ii. 4 
what is't o'clock? Upon the stroke. i?/c/ia)'d III. iii. I 
towards three or four o'clock, look for — iii. 5 
what's o'clock? I am thus bold (rep.) — iv. 2 
what is't o'clock? It's supper-time (.rep.) — v. 3 

it's one o'clock, boy, Is't not? HenryVIII. v. 1 

by eleven o'clock it viiW go..Troilus & Cressida, iii. 3 

what is't o'clock? Caesar Julius Ccesar, ii. 2 

'tis three o'clock; and, Romans — v. 3 

at what o'clock to-morrow Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 2 

hath rung, 'tis three o'clock — iv. 4 

'tis not yet ten o'clock; our general.. ..Othello, ii. 3 

OCTA VIA— admired Octavia Antony <5 Cleo. ii. 2 

take Antony Octavia to liis wife .... — ii. 2 

and his power unto Octavia — ii. 2 

Octavia IS a blessed lottery to him .. — ii. 2 
my Octavia, read not my blemishes — ii. 3 
will e'en but kiss Octavia, and we'll — ii. 4 

he's bound unto Octavia — ii. 6 

madam, he's married unto Octavia i,rcp.) — ii. 5 
report the feature of Octavia, her years — ii. 5 

Cffisar's sister is called Octavia — ii. 6 

Octavia is of a holy, cold, and still . . — ii. 6 
then shall the sighs of Octavia blow — ii. 6 
Octavia weeps to part from Rome . . — iii. 2 
what, Octavia? I'll tell you in your ear — iii. 2 
no, sweet Octavia, you shall hear from — iii. 2 
didst thou behold Octavia? Ay, dread — iii. 3 
nay, nay, Octavia, not only that .... — iii. 4 
gentle Octavia, let your best love draw — iii. 4 
and let patient Octavia plough thy.. — iv. 10 
your wife Octavia with her modest.. — iv. 13 

the sober eye of dull Octavia — v. 2 

for Livia, and Octavia, to induce .... — v. 2 
OCTAVIUS-serve Octavius Csisar. Julius Cccsar, iii. I 
no Rome of safety for Octavius yet. . — iii. 1 
to young Octavius of the state of things — iii. 1 
sir, Octavius is already come to Rome — iii. 2 
had moved them. Bring me to Octavius — iii. 2 
Octavius, I have seen more days than — iv. 1 
60 is my horse, Octavius; and, for that — iv. 1 
and now, Octavius, listen great things — iv. 1 
and young Octavius, come (;fp.) .... — iv. 3 
Octavius, Antony, and I^epidus have put — iv. 3 
Octavius, lead your battle softly on.. — v. 1 
are better than bad strokes, Octavius — v. I 
cold demeanour in Octavius' wing . . — v. 2 
having some advantage on Octavius — v. 3 
for Octavius is overthrown by noble — v. 3 
bring us word unto Octavius tent .. — v. 4 
more tlian Octavius, and Mark Antony — v. .'j 
Oetavius, then take him to follow thee — v. b 
to marry me with OctaviusCa3sar..iii(oni/<5-Weo. i. 2 
Marcus Octavius, Marcus Justeius .. — . iii. 7 
OCULAR— give me the ocular iJroof....O'/ieHo, iii. 3 

OD— od's plessed will! Merry Wives, i. 1 

od'sme! qu'ay j'oublie? — i. 4 

my willy od's heartlings — iii. 4 

because they say, od's nouns — Iv. ) 

od's lifelings, here lie is TwelfthNight, v. 1 

od's my little life! I think Asyou Likeit, iii. 6 

od's my will! her love is not — iv. 3 

od's pittikins! can it be six Cymbeline, iv. 2 

od'sbodikin [Co/.-God's bodkin], man. .Ham(i!(, ii. 2 

ODD— in an odd angle of the isle Tempest, i. 2 

some few odd lads — v. 1 

is at most odds with his own ....Merry Wives, iii. I 
good luck lies in oddnumbers (rep.).. — v. 1 
that makes tliese odds all even.. Meas. for Meas. iii. 1 
I may chance have some odd quirks. Aiuc/i^do, ii. 3 
no: not to be so odd, and from all .. — iii. 1 
and therefore too much odds for.. Lone's L.Lost, i. 2 

were still at odds, being but — iii. 1 

stayed the odds by adding four (rep.) — iii. 1 
too odd, as it were, too peregrinate.. — v. 1 
and such odd sayings, the sisters. /Uei-. of Venice, ii. 2 
there is such odds in the men ....As you Like it, i. 2 
eyeing of his odd behaviour.. Taming of Hh. 1 (ind.) 

true rules for odd inventions — iii. i 

'tis some odd humour pricks him.... iii. 2 

Grumiol then he shall have no odds iv. 3 

yields— pound and odd shiUinjj.. Winter'sTale, iv. 2 
the odds for high and low's alike .... — v. 1 
amount to tliree odd ducats. . Comedy of Errors, iv. I 

almost at odds with morning Macbeth, iii. 4 

I would allow him odds Richard II. i. 1 

and with that odds he weighs king. . — iii. 4 
three hundred and odd pounds ....IHcnrylV. iv. 2 

that he sliall take the odds of — v. 1 

foundered uiueseore aud odd posts.. 2Henr!//f. iv. 3 



ODD— I will lay odds, that, ere t\\i9..21lenrylV. v. 5 

notliing but odds with England Henry V. ii. ■! 

'tis a fearful odds! God be wi' you .. — iv. 3 

b.y some odd gimmals I Henry VI. i. 2 

his life unto a world of odds — iv. 4 

odds; a poor earl's daughter (rep.) .. — V. .') 

took odds to combat a poor 2HenryVI. iv. 10 

tliough the odds be great ZHenryVl. i. i 

Hercules himself must yield to odds — ii. 1 

'twas odds, belike, when valiant iUenryVI. ii. I 

naked villany witli old odd ends . . Richard III. i. 3 
with whom my soul is any jot at odds — ii. 1 
eighty odd years of sorrow have I.... — iv. 1 

an odd man (,rep.) Trnilus <$• Cressida, iv. h 

that you are odd, and he is even — iv. 5 

scarce entreat you to be odd with him — iv. 5 
withdrew me from the oddsof mnltit'ide — v. 4 

are equals; there's no odds Tii.-ionof Athens, i. 2 

with most lands to be at odds — iii. 5 

that put'st odds anion" the rout .... — iv. 3 

set them into confounding odds — iv. 3 

but this is something odd Corio/aHws, ii. 3 

bear of wounds two dozen odd — ii. 3 

but now 'tis odds beyond arithmetic — iii. 1 
he beats thee 'gainst the odds.. ...dji^ojiyiS-C/eo. ii. 3 
ever beat mine, inhooped, at odds.... — ii- 3 
one of tliose odd tricks, which sorrow — iv. 2 
the odds is gone, and tliere is nothing — iv. 13 
most fallihle, tlie worm's an odd worm — v. 2 

the odds is, that we scarce Cymbeline, v. 2 

thou hast the odds of me .... Titus Andronicus, v. 2 

that sets us all at odds Lear, i. 3 

you lived at odds so long Romeo S/- Juliet, i. 2 

a fortnight, and odd days. Even or odd — i, 3 

how strange or odd soe'er I bear Hamlet, i. 5 

nothing but my shame, and the odd hits — v. 2 

I shall win at the odds — v. 2 

your grace hath laid the odds — v. 2 

bettered, we have therefore odds — v. 2 

on some odd time of his infirmity Othello, ii. 3 

any beginning to this peevish odds — ii. 3 

ODD-CONCEITED true-love . . Two Gen of Ver. ii. 7 
ODDEST— hath the oddest frame.Mens./or Meas. v. 1 
ODD- EVEN and dull watch o' the night. 0(Ae/to,i. 1 
ODDLY— but O how oddly will it sound. Tempest, v. 1 
how oddly he is suited! . ... Merchant of Venice, i. 2 
shall be oddly poised in this.. Troilus Sr Cressida, i. 3 

how oddly thou reply'sti Romeo S,-Jidiet, ii. b 

ODE— once more I'll read the ode.. Lore'sL./.os^ iv. 3 

hangs odes upon hawthorns AsyouLilcc it, iii. 2 

ODIOUS— heavy to me, as 'tis odious. . Tempest, iii, 1 

O odious is the name". Merry Wives, ii. 1 

flowers of odious savours sweet. Mid. N. Dream, iii. 1 
hornsareodious, they are necessary. .(4s i/ow/./fre, iii. 3 

traduced by odious ballads Alt's Well, ii. 1 

captain as odious as the word 2 Henry IV. ii. 4 

the sight of me is odious 2 Henry VI. iv. 4 

of you, and odious.I will not taint. Henrj/ /'///. iii. 2 
name of help grew odious to repeat .... Pericles, i. 4 

an odious, damned lie Othello, v. 2 

ODORIFEROUS flowers Love's L. Lost, iv. 2 

thou odoriferous stench 1 King John, iii. 4 

ODOROUS— comparisons are odoTous. Much Ada, iii. 5 

an odorous chaplet of sweet Mid.N.'sDream, ii. 2 

ODOUR-stealing, and giving odour. Tu-elflhi\'ight,i. I 
the heavens rain odours on you! (rep.) — iii. I 
odours, pregnant, and vouchsafed.... — iii. 1 
odours, odours —odours savours ..Mid. N.'sDr. iii. 1 

a delicate odour Pericles, iii. 2 

'ODSBODYl the turkeys inmvpannier.lHeii./r.ii. 1 
CEILIADS—[Co(.] judicious oeiliads. Jl/erri/ Wives, i.3 

she gave strange oeiliads Lear, iv. 5 

O'EllBEAR— reasons force, o'erbears it..4;rs Well, v. 3 

impediments would o'erbear Macbeth, iv. 3 

to check, to o'erbear such as are ot..3HenryVI. iii. 2 
o'erbear what they are used tobear.Cor/o/rt?(ws, iii. 1 

o'erbear the shores of my mortality Pericles, v. I 

a riotous head, o'erbears your officers!. Ha7n/e^ iv. 5 

O'ERBEARING interruption KingJolw, iii. 4 

is of so floodgate and o'erbearing nature. O/Ae/io, i.3 
O'ERBEAT-fiood o'erbeat [Co(.-o\rbear].Cor/ol. iv. 5 

O'ERBLOWS the filthy and Henry V. iii. 3 

(J'ERBOARD— swear'st grace o'erboard. Tempest, v. 1 
I threw her o'erboard with these very . . Pericles, v. 3 

O'ERBORNE their way Coriolanus, iv. 6 

friends o'erborne i' the former wave.. Cv»i6e/(?ie, v. 3 

O'ERCAME— Salisburyo'ercame \'HenryVl. i. 4 

O ERCAST with blood KingJohn,i\i. 1 

you see, how soon the day o'ercast. /('Wiurd 111. iii. 2 

O'ERCHARGED, and duty Mid. N.'s Dr. v. 1 

her heart is but o'ercharged Winter'sTale, iii. 2 

break o'ercharged with grief ZHeury VI. ii. 5 

sea's stomach be o'ercharged with .... Pericles, iii. 2 
O'ERCHARGING your free purses . . 1 Henry VI. i. 3 

O'ERCLOYED country vomits Richard III. v. 3 

O'ERCOME with pride Coriolanus, iv. 6 

to o'ercome you with her show Cymbeline, v. 5 

o'ercome with moss, and baleful.. Tilvs.-iiidron. ii. 3 

O'ERCOUNT thee (rep.) Antony^- Cleopatra, ii. 6 

O'ERCOVERED quite with ....Romeo,^Jidiet,iv. 1 

O'ERCROWS my spirits Handel, v. 2 

O'ERDOING Termasant — iii. 2 

0'ERDUSTED-giUo'erdusted..2ro(7!(s<^-Cre.«,'i. iii. 3 

O'ERD YE D blacks Winter's Tale, i. 2 

O'E B EATEN fai th Troilus 4- Cressida, v. 2 

O'EREYE— hccdfuUy o'ereye LoresL.lost, iv. 3 

O'ERFED breast of Perictrs. iii. (Gower) 

O'ERFLOURISHED by the devil. Ticeirih AV-/./, iii. 4 

O'ERFLOW sucli liquor Mcrri/ Wires, ii. 2 

the coming hour o'erflows with All's Welt, ii. 4 

in his proper stream o'erflows himself — iv. 3 

o'erflows the measure Antony (,- Cteopn'ra, i. 1 

dotli not the earth o'erflow? Titus Andion. iii. 1 

O'ERFLOWED, hath Thetis'.. /'eWcte, iv. 4 (Gowcr) 
0'EUFLOWINGNiluspresageth..^ii;o/i7/<§-c;<eo. i. 2 

O'E RFRAUGHT heart, and bids Maeiieih, iv. 3 

O'ERGALLED with recourse of., rroiiiis* Cress, v. 3 

O'ERGLANCED the articles lienry V. v. 2 

O'ERGONE-milesyouhaveo'ergone.J.ore'.? /../,. v. 2 
O'EKGREAT cardinal hath showed ..Henry Vlll. i. 1 



O'EliGROW the gardeii ■ilUriryVI. iii. 1 

O'KKGHOWN lion in a cave Meas.for Mcas.i.i 

rni^L'Ccl man, o'ergrown with \\a.\v.AsvouLikeit^ jv. 3 

anil thereto so o'ergrown Cymbeline^ iv. 4 

O'EKGRIIWTH of some complexion Hamlet, i. 4 

O'KHUANCr and jntty Henry i'. in. 1 

O'EHIIAN'tJING firmament Hamlet, ii. 2 

O'EKIIASTY— our o'erhastj- marriage .. — ii- 2 

O'EK HEAR the speeeli, of vantage — iii. 3 

O'EKIIE AHD, and tal<en napping Love'sL.Losl, iv 3 
secretly o'erheard your daiignter-^sj/oui/Ae/7, ii. 2 

I luwe o'erheard a plot of death I.ear, iii. 6 

O'EK JOYED, save these in houds....Cymbeliiie, v. 5 

she's but o'erjoved I'eiirtes, v. 3 

O'ERLABOURED sense repairs ....Cymbeliiie, ii. 2 
O'EKLEAP, for in my way it lies Machclh,{. 4 

ambition, which o'erleaps itself — _i. 7 

let me o'erleap that custom Coriolatms, ii. 2 

O'ERLEAVENS the form of Hamhl, i. 4 

O'ERLOOK love's stories, written. . Mid.N.'sDr. i\. 3 

Catesby, o'er look the walls Richard III. iii. 5 

let your cares o'erlook what shipping. . I'ericles, 1. 2 

1 will o'erlook thy paper Lear, v. 1 

O'ERLOOKED the letter .... TwoGen. nf Verona, i. 2 

o'erlooked even in thy birth Merry Wives, v. 5 

they have o'erlooked me Mer. of Venice, iii. 2 

those bounds we have o'erlooked.... Awig-Zo/m, v. 4 

O'ERMASTER it as you may Hamlet, i. 5 

O'ERMASTEREST? From whom hast.iCing-./o/m,ii.l 

O'ERMATCHED forces 1 Henry fl. iv. 4 

yield, with robbers so o'ermatelied..3He)ir!/F/. i. 4 

O'ERMOUNT the lark Henry VIII. ii. 3 

O'ER-NIGHT'S surfeit? Tlmonof Athens, \v. 3 

O'ER-OFFICES— [Kn«.] ass o'er-offices.. HamW, v. 1 

O'ERP AID— madam, is o'erpaiQ Lear, iv. 7 

O'ERPAYS all I can do Cymbeline, ii. 4 

O'ERPARTED-a little o'erparted.. Love's i..I,os(, v. 2 
O'ERP AST— in the time o'erpast ..Richard III. iv. 4 

O'ERPERCH these walls Romeo^Juliet, ii. 2 

O'ERPICTURING that Venus ..Ayitony fyCleo. ii. 2 

O'EKPOSTING that action 'i Henry I V. i. 2 

O'ERPOWERED; and wilt thou.... ftc/iorrf/L v. 1 
a Fear, as being o'erpowered....^n^ony(5-C/eo. ii. 3 

O'EKPRESSED Roman Coriolanus, \i. 2 

O'ERPRISED all popular rate Tempest, i. 2 

O'ERRAN her lovely face.. ramiriffo/S/i. 2 tinduc.) 

O'ERRATE my poor kindness Cymbeline, i. 6 

O'ERRAUGH't of all my money. Comedy of Krr. i. 2 

pl.ayers we o'erraught on the way .... Hamlet, iii. 1 

OVERREACH them m their own . . Titus Andron. v. 2 

O'ERREACHES f/LH-'.-o'er-oftices] ....Hamlet, v. 1 

( )'ERREACHING as this? Merry Wives, v. 5 

O'ERREAD these letters 2 Henry / F. iii. 1 

doth desire you to o'erread JutiusCeesar, iii. 1 

that I have not all o'erread Lear, i. 2 

O'ERRULES; that, one man ....Mid.N.'sDr. iii. 2 

let me o'errule you now Love's L. Lost, v. 'I 

you shall o'errule ray mind Richard III. iii. 1 

so you will not o'errule me to a pe.ice- Hamici, iv. 7 

O'ERRULEDby prophesies \HenryIV.iv. 4 

O'ERRUN the stew Meas. for Meas. v. 1 

I will o'errun thee with policy ..As you Like it, -v. 1 
thought o'errun my former time . . . .'illenry VI. i. 4 
a chilling sweat o'erruns .... Titus Andronicns,'\\. i 

\ O'ERSET— since we are o'erset 2HenrylV.i.\ 

\ O'ERSHADE— fear o'ershades me.. Winler'sTale,_i. 2 
cloudy death o'ei'shades his beams. . 3 Henry VI. ii. 6 

! black night o'ershade thy day ,RichardIII. 1. 2 

O'ERSHINE you as much as 2He)iry/*'. iv. 3 

: O'ERS HOT— thus much o'ershot? . . Love's L. L. i v. 3 

j I have o'ershot mvself, to tell .. Julius Ccesar, iii. 2 

O'ERSHOWERED", leaves. . . . Pericles, iv. 4 (Gower) 

! O'ERSIZED with coagulate gore Hamlet, ii. 2 

I (J'ERSKIP— sufferance doth o'erskip ....Lear, iii. 6 
O'EHSLIPS me in the day ..TuoGen. of Verona, ii. 2 

O'EKSPREAD tlie land Pericles, 1. 2 

wing of uiglit o'erspreads. . . . Troilus 4' Cressida, v. 9 
O'ERSTARE [Kn(.] the steniest..Me»'.o/reH!ce,ii. 1 
O'EHSTEP not tlie modesty of nature.. Hamlel, iii. 2 

O'E HSTUNK their feet Tempest, iv. 1 

O'ERSWAY his state Love'tL Lost, v. 2 

BO resolved, I can o'ersway him.. Julius Ctesar, ii. 1 

great command o'ersways the order . . Hamlet, v. 1 

O'ERSWELL with course disturi)ed.. KingVo/m, ii. 2 

let floods o'erswell, and fiends Henry V. ii. 1 

till the wine o'erswell the cup ..JulinsCceiar, iv. 3 

O'ERTA'EN — have been o'erta'en All's Well, iii. 4 

O'EKTAKE his bad intent Meas.forMeas. v. 1 

o'ertake me, if thou canst I Henry VI. i. 5 

trial of the law o'ertake you Henry Vlll. iii. 1 

of Egypt, whom leprosy o'ertakel Ant.ifCleo. iii. 8 

I will o'ertake thee, Cleopatra — iv. 12 

might never o'ertake pursued success — v. 2 

if, for my sake, tl:ou wilt o'ertake us Lear, iv. 1 

O'ERTEEMED— all o'erteemed loins . . Hamlel, ii. 2 
O'ERTHROW law, and in .. Winter' sTale, iv. (eho.) 

too late, o'erthrows thy joys Richard II. iii. 2 

allegations to o'erthrowhisstate?..2Hen7"t/r/. iii. 1 

ere clean it o'erthrow nature Cymbeline, iii. 6 

O'ERTIIKOWN— all o'erthrown Tempest, (epil.) 

as sport by sport o'erthrown Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

your honour not o'erthrown Winter's I'ale, v. 1 

lord Talbot was o'erthrown 1 Hem-y VI. i. 1 

valour hath o'erthrown A.ntony.AnlonySf Cleo. iv. 13 
what a noble mind is here o'erthrown I. HaiJi/e/, iii, I 

O'ERTOOK- never is o'ertook Macbeth, i v. 1 

there o'ertook in his rouse Hamlet, ii. 1 

O'ERTOP— must o'ertop yours.. Troilus //Cress, iii. 3 

to o'ertop old Pelion, or the skyish Hamlel, v, 1 

t)'EKTOPPlNG woman's power.. ..Henry nil. ii. 4 

O'ERTRIP the dew Merchant of Venice, v. 1 

O'EKTURN it topsy-turvy 1 HinrylV. iv. 1 

of our valour will o'erturn them .... Henry V. iv. 2 

O'ER V ALU ES it something Cymbeline, i. b 

O'ERWALK a current, roaring \HetirylV. i. 3 

O'ERWATCHED-art o'erwatched../u//us Cirsar, iv. 3 
all weary and o'erwatched, take vantage. Lear, ii. 2 

O'EKWEEiSr to think so Winler'sTale, iv. 1 

my heart o'erwcens too much 3HenryVL iii. 2 

O'ERWEENIKG cur run back 2 Henry VI. v. 1 



O'ERWEIGHS your true Meas. for Meas. ii. 4 

o'erweigh a whole theatre Jhimltt, iii. 2 

O'ERWHEEM custom .. Winler'sTale, iv. (cliorns) 
the brow o'ei-whclm it, as fearfully . . Henry V. iii. 1 
wretch! despite o'erwhelmtliee I ..Cnriolajnis,Vn.\ 

water must o'erwhelm thy corse I'ericles, iii. 1 

hell-hated lie o'erwhelm thy heart? Lear, v. 3 

though all the earth o'erwhelm them . . Hamlet, i. 2 

O'ER WHELMED my pity Coriolanus, i. 9 

[Col. Knt.] o'erwhelmed with your ... .Othello, iv. 1 
O'ERWORN widow, and herself .. ..flicAnrd ///. i. 1 
O'ERWRESTED seeming ....Troilus & Cressida. i. 3 

OES— fiery oes and eyes of light Mid.N.'sDr. iii. 2 

your face were not so full of oes I. Loi'e's L. Lost, v. 2 

OSUVRES— couronne les ccuvres 2Henry VI, v. 2 

OFFAL— barrow of butcher's oSai.Meyryirives, iii. 5 

what rubbish, and what offal JuliusCiz'sar, i, 3 

the region kites Avith this slave's offiil.. Hamlel, ii. 2 

OFFCAPPED— [ Vri^] oifcapped to liim . . Olhello, i. 1 

OFFENCE-for what offence?.. TwoGen. of Ver. iv. 1 

be a sufficient ransom for offence.... — v. 4 

in submission as in oft'ence Merry Wives, iv. 4 

the offence is holy, that she hath.... — v. 5 
offence is not of such a bloody . . TwetflhNighl, iii. 3 
from any image of offence done to .. — iii. 4 

what my offence to him is — iii. 4 

gentleman have done offence — iii. 4 

so far in offence with my niece — iv. 2 

but what's his ofl'ence? Meas. for Meas. i. 2 

pay down for our offence by weight — i. 3 

what's thy offence, Claudio? — i. 3 

may not so extenuate his offence.. .. — ii. 1 
because he hath some offences in him — ii. 1 
is it that hath died for this oflfence? — ii. 2 

which a dismissed offence would .... — ii. 2 
more fit to do another such offence. . — ii. 3 

must needs appear offence — ii. 4 

and his offence is so, as it appears .. — ii. 4 

from this rank offence — iii. 1 

what offence hath this man made .. — iii. 2 

hence hath offence his quick — iv. 2 

Will think you have made no offence — iv. 2 

the offence pardons itself — v. 1 

and it is an offence to stay a man . . Much Ado, Iii. 3 

without offence to utter them — iv. 1 

What offence, sweet Beatrice? — iv. 1 

offence, my lord! officers, what offence — v. 1 

I ask what's their offence (rep.) — v. 1 

nor snail, do no offence.. il/(d.iV.'sL>rfam, ii. 3 (song) 
thou Shalt fast for thy offences .... Love's L. Lost, i. 2 
the way to make an offence gracious — v. 1 
every offence is not abate ....Merch.of Venice, iv. 1 
with so many giddy offences ....AsyouLikeit, iii. 2 
than his tongue did make offence.... — iii. 5 
art a generaloffence, and every man..AirsWetl, ii.3 
but that, my offences being many . . . , — iv. 3 
and his lady, offence of mighty note — v. 3 
the nature of his great offence is dead — v. 3 

turns a sour offence, crying — v. 3 

an' it be, sir, is it any offence?. romt'ng-o/S/ireu', i. 2 
the offences we have made you do. Winler'sTale, i. 2 

their offences being so capital? — iv. 3 

not by vile offence, I'll utter what. Comerfyo/ Err. i. 1 

beheaded publicly for his offence — v. 1 

the issue of my dear offence I^ing John, i. I 

to do offence and scath in Christendom — ii. 1 

have all offence sealed up — ii. I 

their souls are topful of offence — iii. 4 

their spotted souls for this oSencel. Richard II. iii. 2 
if thy offences were upon record .... — iv. 1 

to make offence a skill iHenrylV. i. 2 

for what offence have I — ii.3 

I could auit all offences with as — iii. 2 

to punish this offence in other faults — v. 2 
all his offences live upon my head .. — v. 2 
heavier than our offences; we see ..2 Henry IV. iv. 1 

but the shame of your offence — iv. 1 

were thine without offence — iv. 4 

repentance of all your dear offencesI..Henrj/F. ii. 2 
all offences, rny liege, come from .... — i v. 8 

took j'ou for, 1 made uo offence — iv. 8 

overthrow wrought this offence? ....iUenryVI. i. 2 

and what offence it is, to flout — iv. 1 

may bo broke without offence — v. 5 

good uncle, banish all offence — v. 5 

deaths for small offences done? ....2Henr;/f'/. iii. 1 

when I give occasion of offence 'iHenry VI. i. 3 

no offence at om' abuse (rep.) — i v. 1 

what ismy offence? Where is Richard III. i. 4 

for what offeuce? The sum of all . . . . — ii.4 
I have done some offence, that seems — iii. 7 
numberless offences 'gainst me .... Henry VIII. ii. I 
that pardons all offences malice ne'er — ii. 2 

no great oft'ence belongs to't — v. 1 

too thin and base to hide offences . . — v. 2 
sweet lady sad, is a sour offence. Troilus Sr Cress, iii. 1 
between my will and all offences a guard — v. 2 
their offences can weigh down. .Timon of Athens, v, 2 

whose offence subdues him Coriolanus, i. 1 

and still to nose the offence — v, 1 

his last offence tons sliall have — v. 6 

whicli would appear oft'ence in nB..JutiusCcpsar, i. 3 
you have some sick offence within .. — ii. 1 
nor his offences enforced, for wl-.ich — iii. 2 
that every nice offence should bear.. — iv. 3 
doing himself offence; whilst we .... — iv. 3 
take no offence, that 1 would not.Anlony^Clco. ii. 5 
in Ilia offence should my performance — iii. 1 
her wheel, provoked by my offence.. — iv. 13 

pays dear for my ott'ences Cymbeline, i. 2 

and, to bar your oft'ence herein — i. 5 

without offence; my conscience bids — _i. 6 
every companion that yon give offence — ii. 1 
should commit offence to my inferiors — ii. 1 

I am fallen in this offence — iii. 6 

your pleasure was my mere offence — v. 5 

for the oft'ence he dies Titus Andronicus, v. 3 

punished, that ne'er thoueht offence ..i'ericles, i. 2 

for mine, if I may call't oft'ence — .i. 2 

my proffer lake for an offence — ii.3 



I due to this heinous capital offence .... — ii.4 
never did thought of mine levy offence — ii. 5 
who takes offence at that would make — ii. 5 

sure, her offence must be of such Lear, i. I 

his oft'ence, honesty! strange! strange!.. — i. 2 
do you that offence, which else were .... — i. 4 

what's his oft'ence? [K7i<.-fault] — ii. 2 

what was the offence yon gave him? .... — ii. 2 
made you no more offence than what .. — ii.4 
all's not offence, that indiscretion finds.. — ii.4 

down to tame these vile offences — iv. 2 

for that oft'ence, immediately.. /fomeoij- ./■«(/*/, iii. 1 

there's no offence, mj' lord Hamlet, i. .'> 

Horatio, and much offence too — ..!■ * 

with more offences at my beck than I .. — iii. 1 

argument? is there no oft'ence in't? — iii. 2 

poison in jest; no offence i' the world .. — iii. 2 

my offence is rank, it smells to heaven — iii. 3 
but to confront the visage of offence?.... — iii. 3 
one be pardoned, and retain the offence? — iii. 3 
offence s gilded hand may shove by justice — iii. 3 

is weighed, but never the offence — iv. 3 

and w'herc the offence is, let the great .. — iv. ."> 
as full of quarrel and offence, as my ..Othello, ii. 3 
no offence to the general, nor any man.. — ii.3 

he that is approved in this oft'ence — ii.3 

than it should do offence to Michael Cassio — ii. 3 
there is more oft'ence [Kn'. -sense] in that — ii.3 
since love breeds such offence. Nay, stay — iii. 3 
if my offence be of such mortal kind .... — iii. 4 
the business of the state does him offence — iv. 2 

OFFENCEFUL- offenceful act../Veas./ori1/eas. ii. 3 
OFFENCELESS-his offenceless dog.... 0;/ie(/o, ii. 3 

OFFEND- if you offend him TuelflhMght, iii. 4 

to speak of, would offend again ..Meas. for Meas. i. 3 

do so offend, let mine own — ii. 1 

if yon head and hang all that offend — ii. 1 

so to offend him still — iii. I 

if bawdy talk offend j'ou — iv. 3 

your silence most offends me Much Ado, i\. 1 

1 cannot see how sleeping should offend — iii. 3 
the watch ought to offend no man .. — iii. 3 

I'll ottend nobody — iii. 4 

make those, that do offend you, suffer — y. 1 

would so offend a virgin Mid.N.'s Dream, iii. 2 

if we offend, it is with (rep.) — v. 1 (prol.) 

for none offend, where all alike do..Loi!e'.sL, L. iv. 3 
to offend, and judge, aredistinct.il/er. o/Feru'ce, ii. 9 
as to offend, himself being offended .. — iv. 1 

I will no further offend you As youLike it, i. I 

did I offend your highness — i. 3 

the dust that did offend it All's Well, v. 3 

merry passion, and so offend. T'aim'ng-o/S/i. I (indue.) 
loathsomeness of them offends me. Winter's Tate, iv. 2 
you shall offend him, and extend . , . . Macbetli, iii. 4 
he shall not offend your majesty .... King John, iii. 3 

of all the world, will not offi;nd thee — iv. 1 

I'll so offend, to make offence \ Henry IV. i. 2 

they offend none but the virtuous .... — iii. 3 

the tongue offends not, that 2HemyIV. i. 1 

you shall hardlv offend her — ii.4 

a son of mine offend you, and obey you — v. 2 
we'll not offend one stomach . . Henry V. ii. (.chorus) 

they do offend our sight — iv. 7 

that might offend your majesty — iv. 8 

it is not that offends ] Henry VI. iii. 1 

if this servile usage once offend .... — v. 3 
I must offend, before I be attainted. .2Henry VI. ii. 4 

buz, to ofl'end thine ears SHenry VI. ii. (i 

did not offend, nor were not worthy. . — v. 5 
let me march on, and not offend . . Richard III. iv. 4 
might offend the weakest spleen. Troilus fy Cress, ii. 2 
how loath you are to offend daylight! — iff 2 
what offends von, lady? — iii. 2 

pardon ; I o'ffend — iv. .'> 

you train me to ofi'eud you — v. 3 

we but offend him Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

or oft'end tlie stream of regular — v. 5 

it does oft'end my heart Coriolanus, ii. 1 

that I would not offend jou.Antony 4r Cleopatra, ii. 5 

but 'twould oftend him — iii. 1 

if I offend not to say it is mended Cymbeline, i. 5 

offend our hearing; hushi — v. 1 

would it oft'end you then that .... TilusAndron. ii. I 

offend as well as we (rep.") I'ericles, iv. 3 

what I cannot name but I shall offend — iv. 6 
last surrender of his will but offend Lear, i. 1 

1 shall offend, either to detain — . i. 2 

none does oftend, none, I say, none — iv. 6 

if my speech oft'end a noble iieart — v. 3 

I am sorry they offend you, heartily Hamlel, i. 5 

it offends me to the soul, to hear — iii. 2 

some action that may offend the isle Othello, ii. 3 

speech wliich something now offends me — ii. 3 
a salt and sullen rheum offends me — iii. 4 

five her patent to oft'end — iv. 1 
will not stay to oft'end you — iv. 1 

1 never did offend you in my life — v. 2 

OFFENDED nostril Merry Wires, iii. 5 

be not offended, dear Cesario Tu-etfthNigiu, iv. 1 

I do perceive it hath offended you — y. 1 

hath but as offended in a dream Ijl/eas. /or Meas. ii. 2 
marrv.sir, he hath offended the law.. — iii. 2 
if he had so ofttinded, he would have — v. 1 

who have you offended, masters Much Ado, v. 1 

if we shadows have offended. .i>Virf.A'.'.« Dream (epil.) 

good sir, be not offended Love'sL.Lnst, ii. 1 

to offend, himself being offended.Mer. o/reiiire, iv. I 

be not oft'ended All's Well, i. 3 

love hath so in me offended — ill. 1 (letter) 

how hast thou offended ? Taming of Shrew, v. 1 

blood has not oft'ended the king . . Winter's 'Tale, iv. 3 
those vapours that oft'ended na. Comedy of Errors^ i. ! 

be not oft'ended Macbcih, iv. 3 

done, hath not offended me iHenry VI. ii. 3 

be not oft'ended, nature's miracle — v. 3 

wherein I have offended most? -iHenryVI. iv. 4 

Richard, are you oft'ended too? IHenryVI. \T. 1 

oft'ended you? Offended us you luchard tll.i. t 

to cut off those that have offended him — i. 4 



OFF 



[ 542 ] 



OFFENDED-here he is offended.. J!if/m.ii///. iii. 4 
sir, in what have I offended you?. . Henry Vlll. ii. 1 
Andromache, I am offended.. T'roiVus .J- tVcvsWa, v. 3 

all have not offended Timon o/Alheiis, v. 5 

must fall with tliose that have offended — v. 5 
for liim have I offended (rep.} . . ..JuliusCresar, iii. 2 

then none have I offended — iii. 2 

this tongue had not offended so — v. I 

I should say myself offended ....AnlonySrCleo. ii. 2 
make me not offended in your distrust — iii. 2 

I have offended reputation — iii. 9 

soon as I ean win tlie offended king .Cymbeline, i. 2 
tliou in person i^e'er offended me TiUtsAndron, ii. 3 

how have I offended Pericles, iv. 1 

I cannot be offended witli my trade. . — iv. 6 

wherein you may liave offended him Lear, i. 2 

how liave I offended? all's not offence .. — ii. 4 

It is offended. See! it stalks away Hamlet, i. 1 

much otlended. Mother, you have (rep.) — iii. 4 
offended, plavers in your housewifery. . Othello, ii. 1 

OFFKNDENDO; it cannot be else Hamlet, \. 1 

UFFKNDEK— be such an offender.. Jl/crj!/ If/res, ii. 2 
love, is the offender friended . . Meas.forMeas. iv. i 
but, wliich are t!\e offenders that are. Much Ado, iv. 2 
this plaintiff" lierc, the offender, did call — v. 1 
offender's life lies in the mercy. .il/«-. of Venice, iv. 1 

examines all such offenders As you Like it, iv. 1 

a stranger, no offender Alt'sWell, v. 3 

where we offenders now appear . . Winter's Tale, v. 1 
hot ventreanee on offenders heads . . Richard II. i. 2 
other offenders we will pause npon..l Henry IV. v. 5 

all his rods on late oft'eiiders iHenrylV. iv. 1 

whereon, as an offender to your father — v. 2 
would have all siieli offenders cut oH.HenryV. iii. 6 

cliief offender in tlie same? 1 Henry VI. iii. 1 

upon offenders, hath exceeded law ..iHenryVl. i. 3 
call tliese foul oflenders to tlieir .... — ii. I 

8train;e tortures for offenders — iii. 1 

should melt at an offender's tears.. ., — iii. 1 
and tlie offender rranted scope of speech — iii. 1 

to doom the offenders Richard III. iii. 4 

betwixt her and this great offender. Hen/yF///. v. 2 

bind the offender, and take him Cymbeline, v. 5 

makes tlie foul offenders quake ..Titus Andron. v. 2 

which can pursue the offender Lear, ii. 1 

the offender's scourae is weighed Hamlet, ;v. 3 

OFFENDETII-and offendeth not..Titus Andron. iii. I 

•JFFENOING twice as much LoveUL. Lost, iv. 3 

should import offending iyinier'srale,i. 2 

the chureli, offending charity King John, iii. 4 

whipped the offending j\dam out of .. Henry V. i. 1 
I am tile most offending soul alive .. — iv. 3 
front of my offending hath this extent. . Othello, i. 3 

OFFENDRESS against nature An'slVell,i. 1 

( JFFEND'ST thy lungs to speak. ..Ver. or Venice, iv. 1 

UFFENSIVE— like an offensive wife.2He;ir!//r. iv. 1 

pleasant to him, what 1 ike, offensive .... Lear, iv. 2 

OFFER— not omit the heavy offer ofit.Tempest, ii. 1 

that dare not offer what I desire — iii. 1 

I take your offer, and will.. Tu'o Gen. o/f'crojia, iv. 1 
didst thou offer her this from me? .. — iv. 4 

the kn iglit would offer it Merry IVives, ii. 1 

most apt to embrace your offer . . TwelfihS'ight, v. 1 
without trial: offer tnem instances. . Much Ado, ii. 2 
I do embrace your offer; and dispose — v. 1 
if he will offer to say what.... Mid. iV.'sDieam, iv. 1 
change not your offer made in . . Love's L. Lost, v. 2 
if he should offer to choose. . Merchant of Venice, i. 2 

this is kind I offer i. 3 

to off'er to counsel me to stay — ii. 2 

which doth offer to swear upon ii. 2 

malce no more offers, use no further — iv. 1 

to hear you make the offer — iv. 1 

'tis well you offer it behind her — iv. 1 

I take this offer then — iv. i 

I see sir, you are liberal in offers ,.., iv. 1 

and to offer to get .your living.... As youLikeit, iii. 2 

take his offer; ioul is most foul — iii. .'j 

the faithful offer take of me .... — iv. 3 (letter) 

for my kind offer, when I make (epil.) 

we'll take youroifer kindl.v All's Well, iii. ft 

of base fear, offer to betray you iii. 6 

that offer service to your . . Taming of Sh. 1 (indue.) 
and offer me, disguised in sober robes — i. 2 
I must confess, your offer is the best — ii. I 
sir, wliat are you, that offer to beat my — v. 1 
to offer war where they should kneel — v. 2 
th e queen of your most noble offer. Winter's Tale, ii. 2 

offer me no money, I pray you — iv. 2 

you offer him, if this be so, a wrong.. iv. 3 

to offer to have his daughter come .. — iv. 3 
you offer to break in now. . . . Comedy of Errors, iii. 1 
some offer me commodities to buy .. — iv. 3 
to offer up a weak, poor, innocent .... Macbeth, iv. 3 

have I offer of goodly thousands — iv. 3 

fondly pass our proffered offer King John, ii. I 

this gentle offer of the perilous — iv. 3 

to offer service to your enemy v. 1 

from him such offers of our peace,... — v. 7 

to offer service to the duke , ..Richard II. ii. 3 

an offer, uncle, that we will — ii. 3 

will not, heaven's offer we refuse .... — iii. 2 

the offer of a hundred thousand — iv. 1 

tired majesty did make thee offer — iv. 1 

and bleeding, will we offer them ..\HenrylV. iv. 1 
with gracious offers froin the king .. — iv. 3 
will tliey take the offer of our grace.. — v. 1 

we offer fair, take it advisedly — v. I 

l<ind offer of the king (rfp.) — V. 2 

wouldst thou turn our offers contrary? — v. 5 

asoftiir to stop it with securit.y iHenrylV. i. 2 

forced us to compel this offer '. — i v. 1 

this offer comes from mercy, not from — iv. 1 

enraged him on to offer strokes — iv. 1 

like to a fangless lion, may offer — iv. 1 

I have made an offer to his majesty . . Henry V.\. 1 
how did this offer seem received .... — i, I 
good corporal, offer nothing here .... — ii. 1 
the king doth offer him Katharine — iii. (clio.) 
the offer likes not; and the nimble — iii. (clio.) 



OFFER— offer us his ransom llenry V.iW. 5 

go offer up our lives unto these — iv. 5 

we'll offer up our arms I Henry VI. i . 1 

I offer thee my hand. Fie, uncle .... — iii. 1 

forsake the offer of their love — iv.2 

offer at my shrine, and I will iHenryVI.ix. 1 

the king comes, offer him no violence. SHen/i/r/. i. 1 
offers, as I do, in a sign of peace ..Henry Vlll. 'n'l. 1 

the good we offer into envy — iii. 1 

if you omit the offer of this time .... — iii. 2 
my weak-hearted enemies dare offer — iii. 2 
he offers in another's eiiterprire.. Troilus f; Cress, i. 2 

a fool to offer to command — ii. 3 

come to off'er you our service . . Timon of Athens, v. 1 
I saw Mark Antony offer him .... JutiusCiesar, i. 2 
take the offers we have sent ^on., Antony ^CLeo. ii. 6 
you have made me off'er of Sicily.... — ii. 6 

that's our offer. Know then — ii. 6 

a man prepared to take this offer.... — ii. 6 
but these offers, which serve not .... — iii. 7 
scorn her most, when most she offers — iii. 9 

from thine invention, offers — iii. 10 

I will embrace your offer Pericles, iii. 3 

and will off'er my night oblations — v. 3 

offer this office to you Lear, iii. I 

good my lord, take his offer — iii. 4 

and all that offer to defend him — iii. 6 

is a gentlemanlike offer Romeo Sf Juliet, ii. 4 

mistaking, offer up to joy — iii. 2 

to offer it the show of violence Hamlet, i . 1 

that shall not be my offer, not thy — i. 2 

coming to offer you service — ii. 2 

OFFERED— tliat's offered Tempest, ii. 1 

she hath off'ered to the doom . . TwoGen, of Ver. iii. 1 

to brag what we have offered — iv. 1 

and then I offered her mine own .... — iv. 4 

and I offered him my company Much Ado, ii. | 

offered by a child to an old man. . Love's L. Lost, v. 1 
tlirice thy money offered ihee.Merch. of Venice, iv. I 
the duke hath offered Iiim letters .... All's Well, iv. 3 
nay, I have offered all, I have. Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 

fairly offered. Tlii s shows Winter's Tale , i v. 3 

Fll entertain the offered fallacy. Comedy o/ £(7 . ii. 2 

refuse so fair an offered chain — iii. 2 

and deny his offered homage Richard II. i i. 1 

as ever offered foul play ..IHeniy IV. iii. 2 

we off'ered to the king, and might ..-IHemylV. iv. 1 

as can be offered, in the 'orld Henry V.iv.7 

which Somerset hath offered to my.. 1 Henry VI. ii. 6 
to mercy, whilst 'tis offered you.... 2 Henry F/. iv. 8 
why, madam, have I offered love. . Richard III. ii. 1 

but that time offered sorrow Henry Vlll. iv. 1 

want'st by free and offered light. . Timon ofAth. v. I 

I off'ered to awaken his regard Coriolanus, v. I 

once more offered the first conditions — v. 3 
there was acrown offered him {rep.).JaliusCa^sar, i. 2 
then he offered it to him again (rep.),. — i. 2 
and offered them his tliroat to cut .... — J. 2 

when once 'tis offered Antony 6r Cleopatra, ii. 7 

a paper lost as offered mercy is Cymbeline, i. 4 

ay, he offered to cut a caper Pericles, iv. 3 

no more than hath yonr highness offered.. i-enr, i, 1 
and place will be fruitfully offered — iv. 6 (let.) 
an ill thing to be offered to any.. Romeo ^Juliel, ii. 4 
1 do receive your offered love like love. Hamlet, v. 2 

OFFERlNG^faithfullest offerings. TifeWAAV^Af, v. 1 
unearthly it was i' the offering! . Winter sTale, iii. I 
celebrates pale Hecate's offerings .... Macbeth, ii. 1 

with rich offerings, and traders \ Henry IV. i. 2 

offering their own lives in their ....SHenryVI. ii. 2 
there offering to it his own heart. Troilus 4' Cress, iv. 3 
they are polluted oft'erings, more .... — v. 3 
offering the fortunes of his former. Timon ofAlh. v. 2 
the entrails of an offering forth ..Julius Casar, ii. 2 

OFFER'ST— thou oft'er'st fairly ^syoit Like it, v. 4 

wliate'er thou offer'st next - . Taming ofSttrew, ii. 1 
moimtain goat, offer'st me brass? .... Henry V. iv. 4 

OFFICE— or our office Tempest, i. 1 

the key of officer and office — i.2 

and serves in offices that profit us — i.2 

their eyes do, offices of truth — v. i 

'tis an office of great v/orlh.. Two Gen. of Verona, i. 2 

'tis an ill office for a gentleman — iii. 2 

therefore the office is indifferent .... — iii. 2 
I would I could do a good office . . Merry Wives, i. 1 

to do a good office, master — iii. 1 

in the simple office of love — iv.2 

attend your office, and your — v. 5 

speak your office TwelflhNigkt, i. b 

do me tills courteous office — iii. 4 

this is the man; do thy office — iii. 4 

on Angelo imposed the office .,., Meas.forMeas. i. 4 

by your readiness in the office — ii. 1 

do you your office, or give — ii. 2 

who in his office lacks a helper — iv.2 

thinking me remiss ill mine office ., — iv.2 

thus fail not to do your office — iv. 2 (note) 

that yet can do thee office? — v. 1 

do j'ou the office, friar — v. 1 

I do discharge .you of your office .... — v. 1 
save in the office and affairs o{ iove.. Much Ado, ii. 1 
I will do any modest office to lielp , . — ii. 1 
this is thy office, bear tliee well in it — iii. 1 

by virtue of your office (rep.) — iii. 3 

it is a man's office, but not yours .... — iv. 1 
'tis all men's office to sjieak patience — v. I 

you know your office, brother — v. 4 

to your offices, and let me rest ....Mid.N.'sDr, ii. 3 
their functions and their offices.. Love'sL.Lost, iv. 3 

for virtue's office never breaks — v. 2 

why, 'tis an office of discovery ..Mer. of Venice, ii. (i 
degrees, and offices, were not derived — ii. 9 
are distinct offices, and of opposed .. — ii. 9 

to offices of tender courtesy — iv. 1 

from fortune's office to nature's ..As you Like if, i. 2 
no more enforce mine office on you ..All's Well, ii. 1 
and required office on my particular — ii. ft 
which could not be her office to say — iv. 3 

I did him a desired office — iv. 4 

at once both the office of God — v. 2 



OFF 



OFFICE— truer office of mine eyes? . . All's Well, v. » 
and each one to his office. Taming of Shrew,) (indue.) 
each in his office ready at thy beck — 2 (indue.) 

being slow in tliy hot office — iv. I 

in every office but thine — iv. 1 

that's my office. Spoke like an officer — v. 2 
the office becomes a woman best.. Winler'sTale, ii. 2 

have done like offices of'pity — ii. 3 

you ha' done me a charitable office .. — iv. 2 
who do their best office, if they can .. — iv. 3 

give me tlie office to choose you — v. 1 

and these thy office, so rarely kind . . — v. 1 
both mine office, and my tinme.. Comedy of Err. iii. I 

qu ite forgot a husband's office? — iii. 2 

for it is my office .^ — v. I 

so clear in his great office Macbeth, i. 7 

great largess to your offices — ii. 1 

IS an office which the false man — ii. 3 

our offices, and what we have to do.. — iii. 3 

thyself, and office, deftly show — iv. 1 

deny their office King John, iv. 1 

whose office is this day to feast — v. 2 

to do the office for thee of revenge . . — v. 7 
when the tongue's office should lie ..Richard II. i. 3 

serves in the office of a wall — ii. 1 

for little office the hateful commons — ii. 2 

broken his staff' of office — ii. 3 

the bloody office of his timeless — iv. 1 

to do that office of thine own good .. — iv. I 

my staff of office did I break 1 Henry I V. v. 1 

and they shall do their office — v. 1 

my office is to noise abroad .. ..2HenryIV. (indue) 

hath but a losing office — i. 1 

the model in fewer offices — i. 3 

offices, do your offices, master Fang — ii. 1 

and noble offices thou ma.y'st — iv. 4 

England shall give him office — iv. 4 

a foutra for thine office! — v. 3 

choose what office thou wilt — v. 3 

do the office of a warming-pan Henry f. ii . 1 

shall forget the office of our hand.. .. — ii. 2 

and master; so much my office — iii. G 

thou dost thy office fairly — iii. 6 

since then my office hath so far — v. 2 

that never may ill office — v. 2 

and know the office that belongs .. 1 Henry T'f. iii. 1 
sale of offices, and towns in France.. 2 Henry/'/, i. 3 

it is my office (rep.) — ii. 4 

that hateful office unto thee — iii. 2 

is my office, for my father's sake . . ..SHenry VI. i. 4 
taught his son the office of a fowl? .. — v. 6 
both are read}' in their offices ....Ric/iard III. iii. .5 
the sceptred office of .your ancestors.. — iii. 7 
take thy office from thee on m.v peril — iv. 1 
the office did distinctly his full .... Henry VIII. i . 1 

your office, Serjeant; execute it — i. 1 

the dignity of your office, is the point — i.2 
lost your office on the complaint. . . . Henry VIII, i. 2 
ns't please yourself pronounce your office — ii. 4 

do no more offices of life to't — ii. 4 

sir, for hol.v offices I have a time .... — iii. 2 
since I had my office, I have kept .. — iii. 2 

tliat claim their offices this day — iv. 1 

of my life and office, I have laboured — v. 2 
season, form, office, and custom . . Troilus ^ Cress, i. 3 
wliicli is that god in office, guiding . . — i. 3 
thou shonld'st have my office, ere that — v. 6 
which bears that office, to signify.. Timon of Ath. i. 2 

gently put out of office, before I — i.2 

when all our offices have been oppressed — ii. 2 
alwa3's a villain's office, or a foors .. — iv. 3 
through the cranks and offices of man. Conotanns. i. 1 
then our office may, durins; his power — ii. I 
let the high office and the honour go — ii. 3 

what are your offices? — iii. 1 

to take from Rome all seasoned office — iii. 3 
cannot office me from my son Coriolanus — v. 2 
.sell and mart your offices for goid.Julius Cmsar, iv. 3 

that's not an ofhce for a friend — v. 5 

office and devotion of their view.. Antony 4rCleo. i. 1 

that y arely frame the office — ii. 2 

the world, and my great office, will .. — ii. 3 

be it so; declare thine office — iii. 10 

I must attend mine office — iv. 6 

but it is an office of the gods Cymbeline, i. 7 

bows you to morning's holy office. . . . — iii. 3 
yon are appointed for that office .... — iii- 5 
all offices of nature should again .... — v. 5 

I would wish no better office Pericles, ii. I 

but bent all offices to honour her — ii. 5 

sliown your fatlier a child-like office .... Leor, ii. 1 
infirmity doth still neglect all office .... — ii. 4 
thou better know'st the otKces of nature — ii. 4 

offer this office to you — iii. 1 

a dog's obeyed in office — iv. fl 

who has the office? — v. 3 

turn from their office to black . . Romeo 4- Juliet, iv. 5 
s'nce you did leave it for my office .. — v. 1 
the insolence of office, and the spurns. .Hamlet, iii. 1 

the trust, tlie office, I do hold of 3'ou Othetto.i. 3 

'twi.xt my sheets he has done my office .. — _i. 3 

ail offices are open — ii. 2 

or leagued in office, thou dost deliver — ii. 3 

take mine oflice — iii. 3 

I do not like the office — iii. 3 

[(•>/. An(.] with all the office of my I'.eart — iii. 4 
that have the office opposite to Saint Peter — iv. 2 
to get some office, have not devised this .. — iv.2 

OIFICE-BADGE in court iHenryVI. i. 2 

OFFICED-aud angelsofficed all All'sWell, iii. 2 

TKnt.'] my speculative and officed Otheltc, i. 3 

OFFICER— the key of officer and office.. Tempest, i. •> 
you an officer fit tor the iilace .. Two Gen. of Ver. i. 2 
with all the officers in Windsor . . Merry Wives, iii. 3 
calling my officers about me .... Twelfth Night, ii. ."> 

here come the officers — iii. 4 

come, officer, away Meai.JbrMeas.x. 3 

here's a wise officer — ii. 1 

thin'K me the poor duke's officer — ii. 1 

truly, officer, because he hath — ii. 1 



OFF 



r 543 ] 



OLD 



01'1>'1C1C11— ijeltiiifi peltv otlicui- ..Mrits.foi AXw.u. 2 

take him to prison, oliieer — iii. 2 

until tlie officer arise to let Iiim in .. — iv. " 

nu otlieerl to prison with her — v. 

we are the poor duke's officers Much Ado, iii. 

the prince's officer, coxcomb — iv. 

which is more an officer — iv. : 

officers, what ofience have these — v. 

by thy sweet grace's officer.. Lore's f..Los^ i. I (letter 

from special officers of Cliarles — .ii. 

go, Tuoal, see me an officer ...,Mrr. of Venice, iii. 
let my officers of such a nature ..As you Like it, iii. 

a filthy officer he is in those All's IVetl, iji. i 

but a poor officer of mine — iv. ; 

to be the officer at a place there — i v. ^ 

every officer his wedding-garment Taming ofSh. iv. 
call forth an officer: carry this mad — v. 

stay, officer; he shall not go to prison — v. ^ 

spoke like an officer — .v. I 

1 11 attach you by this officer. Comedi/o/£rrers, iv. 

I'll leave him to the officer — iv. 

well, officer, arrest him at my suit .. — iv. 

on, officer, to prison till it come — iv. 

what I thou meanest an officer — iv. 

what wilt thou do thou peevish officer — iv. 

he did arrest me with an officer — v. 

then fairly I bespoke the officer — v. 

put upon his spungy officers Macbelh, i. 

command our officers at arms Richard II. \. 

and such officers appointed to direct — _i. 

takes his fellow for an officer — ii. 

God's officers, and the king's? tUenrylV. ii. 

but for these foolish officers — ii. 

do desire deliverance from these officers — ii. 

pluck down my officers, break — iv. 

a king and officers of sorts Henry f. i. 

art thou officer? or art thou base .... — iv. 

come.officir, as loud ase'erthou' \}ienryVl.'\. 

then broke I from the officers that led — _ i. 

therein some expert officers — iii. 

invectives 'gainst the officers ZHenryVJ.i. 

to go with lis unto the officers — iii. 

fear eacli bush an officer — -v. 

[CoJ.-K»!(.] lead me, officers, tothe../J/cAard ///. v. 

call thither all the officers Cmiolanus.X. 

to chouse an officer, that with his. ... — iii. 
be you then as the people's officer .. — iii. 
allow their officers, aud are content.. — !.'!••' 
beating your officers, cur^'ing yourselves — iii. 3 
Caius Aliircius was a worthy officer., — iv. 6 
as if he were his officer; desperation — iv. 6 
I am an officer of state, and come ... . — v. 2 
his own change, or by ill officers .Julius Ccesar, iv. 2 
let our officers have notice ..Antony ^Cleopatra, i. 2 
more in tlieir officer, than person.... — iii. 1 

tho throat of that his officer — iii. 6 

than thyself domestic officers Cymbeline, iii. 1 

he would change places with his officer — v. 4 

can have no mortal officer Pericles, v. 3 

some officers take them away Lear, v. 3 

such officers do the king besLservice ..Hamlet, iv. 2 

o'erbearsyour officers I the rabble — iv. 5 

I have al ready chose my officer Olliello, i. I 

raise some special officers nf niglit — i . 1 

Othello, leave some officer behind — i. 3 

your officer, lago, can inform you — ii. 3 

but nevermore be officer of mine — ii. 3 

so drunken, and so indiscreet an officer.. — ii. 3 

with mine officer! that's fouler — iv. ] 

OFFICI.\L marks invested Coriolanus, ii. 3 

OFFICIOUS, in lier behalf Mid.N.'sDream.lii. 2 

officious with lady Margery Winter' sTale, ii. 3 

for being 80 far officious — iv. 3 

officious lords, I dare, and must ..HenryVlII. iii. 2 

officious, and not valiant Coriolanus, i. 8 

be every one officious to make .... Titus Andron. v. 2 
OFFSPRING— Hagar's offspring .Mer. of Venice, ii. 5 

you give his ofispring life KingJotin, ii. 1 

for love of Edward'soffspriiig SHenryVI. iv. i 

offspring of the house of Laucuster',. Ricliard III. v. 3 
offspring of great Priamus .. Troilus^ Cressida, ji. 2 
the offspri ng of so foul a fiend 1 . Titus Andronicus, iv. 2 
OFTENTIMES have purposed.. Twoden.of Ver. iii. I 
yet oftentimes he goes but i.ieau Taming of S/i. iii. 2 
natlr oftentimes upbraided me. . Comedy of Err. iii. I 
and oftentimes, to win us to our harm. . Macbeth, i. 3 
and, oftentimes, excusing of a fault. /Cmg-JoAn, iv. 2 
nature oftentimes breaks forth in. .\HenryIV. iii. 1 
yet oftentimes it doth present harsh — iii. 1 

OKTSUBDUED slaves IHeyiryVL i. 5 

OFTTiMES not knowing why Cymbeline,]. 7 

OIL — of metal, corn, or wine, or oil .... Tempest, ii. 1 
so many tons of oil in his beKy .. Merry Wives, ii. 1 

lest the oil that is in me — v. 5 

after my flame lacks oil All's Well, i. 2 

when oil and fire, too strong — v. 3 

in leads, or oils? what old Wiriter'sTale, lii. 2 

and I have bought the oil. . . . Comedy of Errors, iv. 1 

hath been smooth as oil \ Henry IV. i. 3 

like lamps whose wasting oil \ Henry VI. ii. 5 

flaming wrath be oil and flax 'iHenryVI. v. 2 

as holy oil, Edward Confessor's ..HenryVlII. iv. 1 

instead of oil and balm Troilus «§- Cressida, i. \ 

shows to a little oil, and roo'; ..Timon of Alliens, i. 2 

bring oil to fire, snow to their Lear, ii. 2 

OIL-UKIEU— my oil-dried lanp Riclmrd II. i. 3 

OtijY— own with oily painting .... Winter's Tale, v. 3 

this oily rascal is known \ Henry IV. ii. 4 

nay, if an oily palm be not.. Antony fy Cleopatra, i, 2 

I want that glib and oily art Lear, i. 1 

OLD— wast not out three years old Tempest, i. 3 

I'll rack thee with old cramps — i. 2 

the old cock — ii. 1 

no further, sir; my old bones ache — iii. 3 

old lord, I cannot blame theo — iii. 3 

my old brain is troubled — iv. I 

the good old lord Gonzalo — v. 1 

but his experience old .... TwoGen. of Verona, ii. 4 

well, your old vice still — iii. 1 

and the old saying ia — T. 2 



iii. 2 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 
iii. 5 
iii. 5 



OLD— it is an old coat (rep.^ M.nry Wives, i. I 

overtake seventeen years old — i. 1 

ail old cloak makes a new jerkin .... — i. 3 

here will be an old abusing of — i. 4 

both young and old, one with — ii. 1 

old folks you know have discretion — ii. '.i 

say'st thou so, old Jack? — ii.2 

make more of thy old body than ... . — ii.2 

though I now be old, and of — ii. 3 

old Windsor way, and every — iii. 1 

your husband is in his old lunes again — iv. J 

he cannot abide the old woman (rep.) — iv. 2 

'tis old but true, still swine — iv. 2 

an old cozening quean! — iv. 2 

a meeting with this old fat fellow.... — iv. 4 

grievously peaton, as an old 'oman.. — iv. 4 

there is an old tale goes — iv. 4 

there is an old woman {rep.) — iv. 5 

as you see, like a poor old man — v. 1 

like a poor old woman — v. 1 

old, cold, withered, and of intoler.ible — v. 5 
will not compare with an old man Twelfth Night, i. 3 

how your fooling grows old — i. 5 

not yet old enough for a man — _i. 5 

that old and antique song we — ii. 4 

too old, by heaven; let still — ii. 4 

it is old, and plain — ji. 4 

like the old age — ii. 4 

see thee the while, old boy? — iii. 2 

for as the old hermit of Prague — iv. 2 

like to the old vice — iv. 2 (song) 

and the old saying is — v. 1 

if it be aught to the old tune v. 1 

old Escalus, though first in. Measure for Measure,!. 1 

and when thou art old and rich .... — iii- 1 

his child is a year and a quarter old — iii. 2 

this news is old enough — iii. 2 

shall lie his old betrothed — iii. 2 

and perform an old contracting .... — iii. 2 

one that is a prisoner nine years old — iv. 2 

here be many of her old customers .. — iv. 3 

commodity ojp brown paper and old. . — iv. 3 

for the olcl ;ff-omen were all dead .... — iv. 3 

if the old fantastical duke of — iv. 3 

our old and faithful friend, we are . 

I know you of old 

like the old tale, my lord 

ere you flout old ends any further . . 
like" an old cukold, with horns on . , 

there is no believing old signs 

the old ornament ot his cheek hath. . 
old signior, walk aside with me .... 

in the old church window 

an old man, sir, and his wits (rep.) . . 

and on your family's old monument — iv. 
not quarrel with us, good old man {rep.) — v. 

or what would do, were I not old .... — v. 

with two old men without teeth .... — v. 

the old man's daughter told — v. 

to satisfy this good old man — v. 

an old, an old instance. Beatrice .... — v. 

yonder's old coil at home — v. 

now slow this old moon Vfanesi. Mid. N.^s Dream, i. 

O spite, too old to be engaged to youngi — _i. 

on old Hyem's cliin,and icy — .ii. 

this Helena, old Nedar's Helena.... — iv. 

that is an old device; and it was .... — v. 

this is old Ninny's tomb — v. 

appertinent title to your old tune .Love'sL.Lost, i. 

thou art an old lovemonger, and speak 'st — ii. 

like a man after the old painting — iii. 

come upon thee with an old saying.. — iv. 

with one as old, that was — iv. 

being of an old father's mind — iv. 

a month old at Cain's birth (rep.) .. — iv. 

the moon was a month old (rep.) .... — iv. 

ah, good old Mantuan 1 (rep.) — iv. 

an old infant play: like — iv. 

will not obey an old decree — iv. 

offered by a child to an old man ... 
yet I have a trick of the old rage ... 
well said, old mocker; I must needs 

the face of an old Koman coin 

doth not end like an old play 

let old wrinkles come Merchant of I' 

when he grows old, being so full 

if I live to be as old as Sibylla 

but I pray you ergo, old man (rep.) 
the old proverb is very well parted . . 

take leave of thy old master 

my old master the Jew 

of old Shylock and Bassanio 

in j udgment old, your answer 

out upon it, old carrion! rebels 

she is not yet so old, but she may. . . . 
wliat, and my old Venetian friend . . 
young a body with so old a head — 

came you from old Bellario? 

Antonio and old Shylock, both stand 
show my youth old Shylock's house 

we shall have old swearing 

that did renew old .dOsou — 

you old dog. Is old dog Asyou Lilieit. 

God be with my old masterl — 

but the old news: that is, the old duke — 

where will the old duke live? — 

live like the old Robin Hood of England- 
one that old Frederic, your father . . — 

thou losest thy old smell — 

an old man, with his three sons (rep.) — 

liking with old sir Rowland's — 

hath not old custom made this life . . 
O you memory of old sir Rowland!., 
should in my old limbs lie lame .... 
though I look old, yet I am strong .. 

Ogood old man (rep.) 

young man, and an old, in solemn talk 
no, Corin, being old, thou can'st not 

there is an old poor man 

good old man tnoii art right 



— V. 1 



i. 1 



i. 2 



— iii. 1 

— iii. 2 

— iii. 2 
iv. 1 (letter) 

— iv. 1 

— iv. I 

— iv. '2 

— iv. '2 

— v. ) 
. 1 
.. 1 
. 1 



— ii. I 



— V. 1 



OLD— old, cuckolUly ram is yon Like it, ii 

an old religious uncle of mine — iii 

that the old carlot once was master of — iii 

isalmost six thousand years old .... — iv 

well, time is the old justice that .... — iv 

that her old gloves were on — iv 

for all the old gentleman's saying 

how old are you, friend? 

the revenue that was old sir Rowland's — 

since I was three years old, conversed — v. 

the second son of old sir Rowland .. — v. 

meeting with an old religious man .. — y. 

like an old courtier, wears her cap All's Well, i. 

your old virginity, is like one of ... . — i. 

old Poysam the papist — }■ 

of his old experience the only — j). 

too old, sir (rep.) — ij. 

scurvy, old, filthy, scurvy lord — ii. 

how does my old lady? — ji. 

our old lings and our Isbels (rep.).... — jii. 

to love, as an old man loves money . . — iii. 

first smoked by the old lord Lafeu .. — iii. 

for we are old, and on our quickest . . — v. 

by my old beard, and every hair — v. 

or else this old man's wife — v. 

Christopher Sly, old Sly's son. ramm?o/SA. 2 (ind 

old John Naps of Greece. . , — 2 (ind 

my old friend Gruraio! — i. 

to Padua here, from old Veronal .... — i. 

as old as Sibyl and as curst and shrewd — i. 

or an old trot with ne'er a tooth .... — i. 

to old Baptista as a schoolmaster .... — i. 

to beguile the old folks — i. 

born in Verona, old Antonio's son .. — \. 

anyone old signior Greniio has in Padua — ii. 

he is old, I young (rep.) — }]■ 

an old Italian fox is not so kind .... — ii. 

beguile the old pantaloon — iii- 

old fashions please me best — iii. 

news, old news, and such news as (rep.) — iii. 

it hath tamed my old master — iv. 

how now, old lad? welcome, you .... — iv. 

the rest were ragged, old, and beggarly — iv. 

besides, old Gremio is hearkening.... — iv. 

this is a man, old, wrinkled — iv. 

pardon, old father, my mistaking — iv. 

do, good old grandsire — iv- 

let me embrace with old Vincentio .. — iv. 

mine old master, Vincentio? (rep.) .. — v. 

ever since he was three years old .... — v. 

well, go thy ways, old lad — v. 

makes old hearts fresh Winler'sTale, i. 

lay the old proverb to your charge .. — Ji. 

what old, or newer torture must .... — iii. 

to have helped the old man ! — iii. 

you're a made old man — iii. 

when my old wife lived, upon this day — iv. 

very true; and but a month old — iv. 

old sir; I know she prizes not such .. — iv. 

thou old traitor, I am sorry — iv. 

had not the old man come in with.. — iv. 

an old sheep-whistling rogue — iv. 

has the old man e'er a son (rep.) — iv. 

heard the old shepherd deliver (rep.) — v. 

is so like an old tale (rep.) — V. 

should be hooted at like an old tale .. .— v. 

I, an old turtle, will wing me — v. 

absence was not six months old. Comedy of Errors, i. 

nay, forward, old man, do not — i. 

in Ephesus 1 am but two hours old . . — ii. 

crooked, old, and sere, ill faced — iv. 

the picture of old Adam new — iv. 

all these old witnesses — v. 

my old master! who hath bound .. — v. 

speak old iEgeon , if thou be'st — v. 

for those of old, and the late Macbeth, i. 

he should have old turning the key — ii. 

lest our old robes sit — ii. 

before thy here approach, old Siward .... — iv. 

yet who would have thought the old man — v. 

which should accompany old age — v. 

if old sir Robert did beget (rep. ) King John, i. 

the rotten carcase of old death — ii. 

of beggars, old men, young men — ii. 

old Time the clock-setter, that — iii. 

fresh in this old world! — iii. 

of plain old form is much — iv. 

old men, and beldams, in the streets. . — iv. 

the burning crest of the old — v. 

newness, tliat intends old right — v. 

old John of Gaunt, time-honoured ..Richard II. i. 

hath love in thy old blood — i. 

farewell, old Gaunt — i. 

what shall good old York there — i. 

1 am too old to fawn upon — i. 

old John of Gaunt (rep. ii. 1) — i. 

and all, old Lancaster hath spent .... — i>. 

what stir keeps good old York — ii. 

in you I see old Gaunt alive — ii. 

though you are old enough to be .... — iii. 

thou, old Adam's likeness, set to .... — iii. 

of care by old care done — iv. 

the model where old Troy did stand.. — v. 

sit by the fire with good old folks — v. 

looks of young and old through — v. 

though I be old, I doubt not — v. 

shall thy old dugs once more a traitor — v. 

come, my old son — y. 

our purpose is a twelvemonth oM... .\HetiryIV. i. 

with drinking of eld sack — i. 

honey of Ilybla, my old ladof — i. 

curb'of old father Antick the law?.... — i. 

or an old lion; or a lover's lute — i- 

an old lord of the council rated — i - 

if I hang, old sir John hangs with me — ii. 

howoldart thou.Francis? — ij. 

my lord, old Sir John, with half .... — ii. 

since the old days of goodman Adam — ii. 

go thy ways, old Jack (rep.) — ii. 

one of them is fat, and grows old .... — u. 



OLD 



OLD— thou know'st my old ward \ Henry I V. ii. 4 

what manner of man is he? An old man — ii. 4 

old Northumberland; and that sprightly — ii. 4 

in the lilcencss ot'a tat old man — ii. 4 

Falstaff, tliat old wliite-bearded Satan — ii. 4 

that lie is old, (the more the pitj) .. — ii. 4 

if to be old and merry be a sin (if;).) — ii. 4 

being as he is, old Jaclc Falstaflf — ii. 4 

shakes the old beldam earth — iii. I 

this advertisement is five days old .. — iii. 2 

like an old lady's loose gown? (rep.) — iii. 2 

ragged tlian an old faced ancient .... — iv. 2 

to crush our old limbs in ungentle .. — v. 1 

wliatl old acquaintance! could not.. — v. 4 
father, old Northumberland .... 2 Henry I V. (indue. ) 

you that are old, consider not — i. 2 

written down old witli all the characters — i. 2 

I am only old in judgment — i. 2 

if you will needs saj', I am an old man — i. 2 

and this to old mistress Ursula — i. 2 

doth the old boar feed in the old frank? — ii. 2 

Ephesians, my lord: of the old churcli — ii. 2 

but old mistress Quickly, and mistress — ii. 2 

by tlie mass, here will be old ntis — ii. 4 

by my troth, this is the old fashion. . — ii. 4 

to patch up thine old body for heaven? — ii. 4 

lisping to his master's old tables .... — ii. 4 

I am old, I am old. I love thee — ii. 4 

see how many of mine old acquaintance — iii. 2 

is old Double of your town (rep.) .... — iii. 2 

my old dame will be undone now .. — iii. 2 

old, old, m.aster Shallow (ifp.) _ iii. 2 

a little, lean, old, chapped — iii. 2 

let our old acquaintance be renewed — iii. 2 

how subject we old men are to this vice — iii. 2 

dace be a bait for the old pike — iii. 2 

have I, in my poor and old motion .. — iv. 3 

and the old folk, tinre's doting — iv. 4 

with wolves, thy old inhabitants!.... — iv. 4 

then say, an old man can do somewhat — v. 3 

what! is the old king dead? — v. 3 

I know thee not, old man — v. 5 

BO surfeit-swelled, so old, and so profane — v. 5 

a saj'ing, very old and true Henry F. i. 2 

from the dust of old oblivion raked.. — ii. 4 
grandsires, babies, and old women — iii. (chorus) 

then, belike, she was old and gentle — iii. 7 

old sir Tlioraas Erpingham — iv. 1 

god-a-mercy, old heart! thou speak'st — iv. 1 

a good old commander, and a most . . — iv. 1 

good old knight, collect them all ... . — iv. 1 

live this day, and see old age — iv. 3 

old men forget; yet all shall be — iv. 3 

than tliis roaring devil i' the old play — iv. 4 

enforced from the old Assyrian slings — iv. 7 

old I do wax; and from my weary .. — v. 1 

my comfort is, that old age — v. 2 

of old I know them 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

the nine sibyls of old Rome — i. 2 

out of a deal of old iron I chose — i. 2 

forth the body of old Salisbury — ii. 2 

heavens keep old Burgundy safe! .... — iii. 2 

1 tliink, her old familiar is asleep .. — iii. 2 
(as yet I am not old,) I do remember — iii. 4 
young Talbot from old Talbot fly.... — iv. 6 

now my old arms ai'e young — iv. 7 

this upstart is old Talbot's ghost .... — iv. 7 

the king is old enough (rep.) 2 Henry VI. i. 3 

ten to one, old Joan had not gone out — ii. 1 

made a king at nine months old ... . — iv. 9 

old Salisbury,— shame to thy silver . . — v. 1 

art thou old, and want'st experience? — v. 1 

my fatlier's badge, old Nevil s crest.. — t. 1 

York not our old men spares — v. 2 

new ruin of old Cliflbrd's house (,rep.) — v. 2 

his will in his old feeble body — v. 3 

I was but nine months old (,rep.) ZHenryVI. i. 1 

ay, and old York, and yet not satisfied — ii. 2 

anointed king at nine months old .. — iii. 1 

quite forget old faults, and joy — iii. 3 

the good old man would fain — iv. 7 

many an old man's sigli — v. 6 

naked villany with old odd ends . . Richard III. i. 3 

and make me a good old man! — ii. 2 

in Paris but at nine months old ii. 3 

could gnaw a crust at two hours old — ii. 4 

so young, so old a widow I — i v. 1 

nurse! old sullen playfellow for .... — iv. 1 

old barren plants, to wail it — iv. 4 

a kind of puppy to the old dam Henry Fill. \. 1 

or pack to their old playfellows — i. 3 

old Time shall lead him to his end.. — ii. i 

would hire me, old as I am, to queen it — ii. 3 

a lady once, ('tis an old story) — ii. 3 

I am old, my lords, and all the — iii. 1 

and old witfi service, to the mercy . . — iii. 2 

is that old noble lady — iv. 1 

in the old time of war _ Iv. 1 

that the old name is fresh about me — iv. 1 

an old man, broken with the storms — iv. 2 

the old duchess of Norfolk, and lady — v. 2 

eitlier young or old, he or she — v. 3 

young a man, and so old a lifter? Troiius <5- Cress, i. 2 

he is old now; but, if tliere — i. 3 

I see them not with my old eyes .... — i. 3 

there's XJlj'sses, and old Nestor — ii. I 

the seas and winds, (old wranglers). . — ii. 2 

and, for an old aunt, whom — ii. 2 

[Kn(.] boys, mid-age, and wrinkled old — ii. 2 

when time is old and hath forgot — iii. 2 

let an old man embrace thee — iv. 5 

'tis the old Nestor (7!?p.) — iv. 5 

and that old common arbitrator .... — iv. 5 

old Nestor tarries; and you too — v. 1 

that stale old mouse-eaten dry cheese — v. 4 

these old fellows have their Timon of Athens, ii. 2 

now the gods keep j'ou old enough .. — iii. 5 

this is the old man still iii. 6 

crutch from thy old limping sire — iv. I 

base, noble; old, young; coward .... — iv. 3 



[ 544 ] 

OLD love made a particular .... Timon of-ilhens, v. 3 

Marcius, your old enemy Coriolanni, i. 2 (letter) 

you two are old men; tell me — ii. I 

we liave some old crab-trees here. ... — ii. 1 

and his old hate unto you ii. 3 

hence, old goat: We'll surety him .. — iii. 1 

help him, young, and oldl — iii. 1 

I'll tiy whether ray old wit be — iii. 1 

with old Menenius, and those — iii. 3 

insisting on the old prerogative — iii. 3 

thou old and true Menenius — iv. 1 

from tliese old anirt and legs — i v. 1 

I urged (jur old acquaintance — v. 1 

the easy groans of old women — v. 2 

no worse tlian thy old father — v. 2 

this last old man, whom witli — v. 3 

forwliose old love, I have — v. 3 

than an eight j'ear old horse — v. 4 

a surgeon to old shoes JiUhis Ccesar, i . 1 

upon liis shoulder the old Ancliises bear — i. 2 

why old men fools, and children — i. 3 

set this up with wax upon old Brutus' — i. 3 

as he hath used of old — iv. 2 

O Cassius still! come Antony — v. 1 

even for that our love of old — v. 5 

shall paint when you are old ....Antony ^Cleo. i. 2 

tliat when old robes are worn out. . . . — i. 2 

your old smock brings forth — j. 2 

Where's my serpent of old Nile? — i. 5 

this is old; what is the success? — iii. 5 

than with an old one dying — iii. 11 

let the old ruflian know — iv. 1 

then old and fond of issue Cymbetine, i. 1 

might well have warmed old Saturn — ii. 5 

but of a minute old (»ep.) — ii.5 

when we are old as you? — iii. 3 

at three, and two years old — iii. 3 

Pisanio, her old servant — iii. 5 

an old man, and two hoys! — v. 3 

an old man twice a boy — v. 3 

the old man and his sons were angels — v. 3 
be jointed to the old stock (rep. v. 5) — V. 4 (scroll) 

why, old soldier, wilt thou undo .... — v. 5 

then, spare not the old father — v. 5 

I, old Morgan, am that Belarius .... — v. 5 

take nip this good old man TitusAndron. i. 2 

the unhappy son of old Andronicus.. — ii. 4 

or thyself, old Titus, or any one of j'ou — iii. 1 

chanced in the times of old — iii. 2 

revenge the heavens for old Andronicus! — iv. 1 

the old man hath found their — iv. 2 

who should say, old lad, I am thine own — iv. 2 

it comes from old Andronicus — iv. 3 

wilful sons of old Andronicus (»ep.) — iv. 4 

his old ears deaf, yet should both. . . . — iv. 4 

tell us, old man, how shall we be ... . — v. 2 

go, go into old Titus' sorrowful house — v. 3 
to Slug a song of old was sung. .. i'eriries, i. (Gower) 
and that to hear an old man sing — i. ((Jower) 

pardon old Gower — ii. (Gower) 

old nurse's [Kiii.-only mistress'] death — iv. 1 

did steal tire eyes of young and old . . — i v. 1 

shame to get when we are old? — iv. 3 

old Eseanes, whom Helicanus late — iv. 4 (Gow.) 
old Helicanus goes alon» behind.. — iv. 4 ((Jow.) 
passion stands for true old woe!.. — iv. 4 (Gow.) 

empty old receptacles — iv. 6 

he'll shape his old course in Lear, i. I 

like the catastrophe of the old comedy .. — i. 2 

idle old man, that still would — i. 3 

old fools are babes again — i. 3 

how old art thou? — i. 4 

nor so old, to dote on her — i. 4 

as you are old and reverend, you should — i. 4 

old fond eyes, beweep this cause — i. 4 

beaten for being old before thy time — i. 5 

thou sliouldst not have been old, before — i. 5 

O madam, my old heart is cracked — ii. 1 

put him on the old man's death — ii. 1 

our good old friend, lay comforts — ii. ! 

what, art thou mad, old fellow? — ii. 2 

sir, I am too old to learn — ii. 2 

sir, you are old — ii. 4 

1 confess that I am old — ii. 4 

heavens, if J'OU do love old men — ii. 4 

if yourselves are old, make it your cause — ii. 4 

must be content to think 3'ou old — ii. 4 

you gods, a poor old man — ii. 4 

the old man and his people (rep.) — ii. 4 

against the old kind king — iii. 1 

infirm, weak, despised old man — iii. 2 

so old and white as this — iii. 2 

the king my old master must be relieved — iii. 3 

younger rises, when the old doth fall — iii. 3 

your old kind father, whose frank — iii. 4 

were like an-old lecher's Iieart — iii. 4 

IKni.} Witliold footed thrice the old — iii. 4 (song) 

swallows the old rat and the ditch-dog.. — iii. 4 

cruel nails pluck out his poor old eyes ., — iii. 7 

j'et, poor old lieart, he holp ' — iii. 7 

think to live till he be old — iii. 7 

meet the old course of death — iii. 7 

let's follow the old earl iii. 7 

thou old unhappy traitor _ iv. 6 

nay, come not near the old man — iv. 6 

1 am a very foolish fond old man iv. 7 

forget and forgive; I am old, and foolish — iv. 7 

away, old man; give me tliy hand — v, 2 

and tell old tales, and lau"li at v. 3 

to send the old and miserable king — v. 3 

I am old now, and these same crosses.. .. — v. 3 

during the life of this old majesty — v. 3 

old Montague is come Itomeo ^Juliet, i. 1 

by thee, old Capulet, and Montague — i. 1 

to wield old partizans, in hands as old — i. 1 

to old Free-town, our common — i. 1 

for men so old as we to keep the peace — i. 2 

I hold an old uccustomed feast i. 2 

the rank poison of the old will die .. — i. 2 

at twelve year old, I bade her come. . — i. 3 



OMI 



OLD— joiner squirrel, or old grub ..Jiomeo^Jul, i. 4 

the son and heir of old Tiberio — i. 6 

old desire doth in his death-bed lie — i. 5 (chorus) 

watch in every old man's eye — ii. 3 

thy old groans ring yet in my — ii. 3 

an old tear that is not washed — ii. 3 

Tybalt, the kinsman of old Capulet — ii. 4 
cannot sit at ease on the old bench? — ii. 4 
old hare hoar, and an old hare hoar — ii. 4 (song) 

but old folks, many feign as — ii.5 

tving his new shoes with old ribband? — iii. I 

tnese sorrows make me old — iii, 2 

doth she not think me an old murderer — iii. 3 

unfortunate old man! — iv. 5 

packthread, and old cakes of roses .. — v. I 

have my old feet stumbled — v. 3 

warns my old age to a sepulchre .... — v. 3 

let my old life be sacrificed — v. 3 

this greeting to old Norway Hamlet, i. 2 

or ere those shoes were old, with which.. — i. 3 

grow not instant old, but bear — i. .'i 

well said, old mole! canst work — i. 5 

wliereon old Norway, overcome with joy — ii. 2 

that old men have grey beards — ii. 2 

yourself, sir, shall be as old as I am — ii. 2 

these tedious old fools! — ii. 2 

an old man is twice a child — ii. 2 

am I not i' the right, old Jephtha? — ii. 2 

old friend! why thy face is valanced.. .. — ii. 2 
the hellish Pyrrhus old grandsii-e Priam — ii.2 

dost thou hear me, old friend — ii.2 

cannot so inoculate our old stock — iii. 1 

tlie nephew to old Norway, Fortinbras . . — iv. 4 
should be as mortal as an old man's life? — iv. .'i 
ere we were two days old at sea. . — iv. 6 (letter) 

she chanted snatclies of old tunes — iv. 7 

to o'ertop old Pelion, or the skyish — v. 1 

not by the old gi-.adation, where each.... OtficUo,i. 1 

and, when lie's old, cashiered — i. 1 

an old black ram is tupping — i. 1 

have ta'en away this old man's daughter — i. 3 
these are old fond paradoxes, to make .. — ii. 1 
how do our old acquaintance of this isle? — ii. 1 

the hearts, of old, gave hands — iii. 4 

an old thin" 'twas, but it expressed — iv. 3 

pure grief sliore his old thread in twain — v. 2 

OLDCASTLE died a martyr . .'iHenrylV. (epilogue) 

OLDEN— i' the olden time, ere human. A/acte/A, iii. 4 

OLDEU— an older, and a better soldier — iv. 3 

ere a fortnight make me older .... Richard III. iii. 2 

a soldier, I, older in practice ....Julius Cresar, iv. 3 

Romeo will be older when you. .Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 4 

OLDEST— commit the oldest sins ..iHevrylV. iv. 4 

between the youngest and oldest ..Coriolanus, iv. 6 

tlie oldest hath borne most Lear, v. 3 

OLD-FACED— your old-faced ■wiil\s..Kin^John, ii. 1 

OLDNESS cannot relish them Lear, 1. 2 (letter) 

OLIVE— the olive in my hanii ....Tu'elflh M^hl, i. a 

'tis at the tuft of olives As you Like it, iii. 5 

puts forth her olive everywhere ....iHemylf. iv. 4 

adjudged an olive brancli SHeuryri. iv. 6 

use the olive with my sword .. Timon of Athens, v. 5 

world shall bear the olive freely. /Iji/oiii/ fyCleo. iv. 6 

OLIVER— Oliver Mar-text {rep.^.Asyou Lilie it, iii. 3 

good master Oliver! (,rep.) — iii. 3 

a most wicked sir Oliver, Audrey .. — v, 1 

all Olivers and Rowlands 1 Heiwy VI. i. 2 

OLIVE-TREES-witholive-trees?.4si/owi.*e77iiv. 3 

OLIVIA— eyes did see Olivia fivst .. Twelfth Kiglu, i. I 

he did seek the Icve of fair Olivia .. — i. 2 

gossip of the air cry out, Olivia! .... — i. 5 

even now with tlie countess Olivia? — ii. 2 

sighs shall poor Olivia breathe? — ii.2 

that the lady Olivia's father took ... , — ii. 4 
a pang of heart as you have for Olivia — ii. 4 

and that I owe Olivia — ii. 4 

where I left Olivia sleeping — ii. .'j 

art not thou the lady Olivia's fool?.. — iii. 1 

the lady Olivia has no folly — iii. 1 

thou coinest to the lady Olivia.. — iii. 4 (chall.) 
belong you to the lady Olivia, friends? — v. I 
whereiii Olivia may seem serviceable? — v. I 

gracious Olivia — v. 1 

OLYMPIAN wrestling 7'ro!7»s <§■ Cresslda, iv. 5 

OLYMPUS— thunder-darter of Olympus — ii. 3 

as if Olympus to a mole-hill Coriolanus, y. 3 

wilt thou lift up Olympus? JuliusCa'sar, iii. I 

do appear as huge as high Olympus — iv. 3 

climbeth Taniora Olympus' top.. TitusAndron. ii. I 

or the skyish head of blue Olympus Hamlet, v. 1 

OLYMPUS-HIGH-seas 01vmpus-high.O(/iei;o, ii. I 

'OMAN— can you affection the oman? Merry W. j. 1 

for it is a o'man that altogether's. ... — i.i 

your wife is as honest a 'omans .... — iii. 3 

you are a very simplicity 'oman .... — iv. 1 

leave your prabbles, 'oman — !^' 1 

'oman, forbear (rep.) — iv. 1 

'oman, art thou lunatics? — iv. 1 

I think tlie 'oman is a witch indeed — iv. 2 

I like not wlien a. 'oman has — iv. 2 

one of the pest discretions of a 'oman — iv. 4 

grievously peaten as an old 'oman .. — iv. 4 

OMEN— proIo!;ue to the omen coming on. HamJe/, i. 1 

OMINOUS— very ominous endings Much Ado, y. 2 

O ominous: he comes to kill AsyouLitie it, iii. 2 

thou ominous and fearful owl ....IHenry VI. iv. 2 
Gloster's dukedom is too omino\\s..2HenryVI. ii. 6 
fatal and ominous to noble peers! Richard III. iii. 3 

thy mother's name is ominous — iv. 1 

prove ominous to the day (rep.) Truitus^ Cress, v. 3 

the quarrel's most ominous to us.... — v. 8 

lie lay couclied in the ominous horse . . Hamlet, ii. 2 

OMISSION to do what is necessary 7Vi)/i.<^-Cre.ss.iii. 3 

OMIT— if now I court not, but omit.. .. Tempest, i. 2 

do not omit the lieavy offer of it — ii. I 

if we do omit this reprobate Meas.for Meos. iv. 3 

omit nothing may give us aid .. Winter'' sTale, iv. 3 

tiicrefore, omit liim not 2 Henry I V. iv. 4 

therefore, my lords, omit no happy. , . . Henry V. i. 2 
and omit all the occmrences.. — v. (chorus) 



OMIT the ofter of this time IleiinjJin. iii. 2 

must omit real necessities Vnriolnnus, iii. 1 

the due of lionour in no point omit Ci/mhctine, iii. 5 
omit we all their dole and woe. Pericles, iii. (Gower) 
vet nothing we'll omit that bears .... — v. 1 
I will omit no opportunity . ... Rnmeo ^Juliet, iii. 5 
do omit their mortal natures, letting . . Olhello, ii. 1 

OMIT'ST— that still omits' t it., rimon n/A/hcns, i. 1 

OMITTANCE is no quittance As ymiLike it, iii. 5 

OiMITTED— shall be omitted .... Low's L. Lnsl, iv. 3 
his apparent open guilt omitted.. K/c/urrf ///. iii. 5 
omitted, all tlie voyage of their lit'e.Jul.CcPsar, iv. 3 
no needful tiling omitted Pericles, v 3 

OMITTING the sweet benefit.. Two Gen. o/rer. ii. 4 
omitting Suffolk's exile 2 Henri/ f/. iii. 2 

OiMNE— But, omne bene, say I. . . . Love's L.LosI, iv. 2 
quando peons omne sum umbra .... — iv. 2 

OiMNlPOTENTlovel how near .. Merry Wives, v. b 
is the most omnipotent villain \ Henry IV. i. 2 

ONE— my dear one! Tempest, i. 2 

like one, who having — i, 2 

one midnight fated to the purpose .... — i. 2 

for one thing she did — i. 2 

one thing or other — i. 2 

soft, sir; one word more (rep.) — i. 2 

one:— tell — ii. 1 

as if it had lungs, and rotten ones .... — ii. I 
if but one of his pockets could speak .. — ii. 1 

one stroke shall free thee — ii. I 

O, but one word — ii. 1 

and that a strange one too — ii. I 

yond' huge one, looks like — ii. 2 

1 do not know one of my sex — iii. 1 

interrupttliemonster one word further — iii. 2 
nor hatn not one spirit to command .. — iii. 2 

do not, for one repulse, forego — iii. 3 

tliere is one ti-ee, the Phoenix throne .. — iii. 3 
one I?lioenix at this hour reigning there — iii. 3 

each putter-out on five for one — ii i . 3 

fisdiminisli one dowle that's in — iii. 3 

but one fiend at a time — iii. 3 

each one tripping on ills toe — iv. 1 

encounter every one in country footing — i\'. 1 
shall not myself, one of tlieir kind .... — v. 1 

not one of them, that yet looks — v. 1 

one dear son, shall I twice lose — v. 1 

nor thought I had one — v. 1 

in one voyage did Claribel — v. 1 

one of them is a plain fish — v. 1 

and one so strong that could — v. 1 

for he's a bastard one — v. 1 

I sliould have been a sore one then .... — v. 1 

your rest for this one night — v. 1 

one fading moment's mirth . TwoGen. of Verona, i. 1 

twenty to one then, he is — i. 1 

in one line is his name twice writ — i. 2 

fold them one upon another — i. 2 

as one relying on your — i. 3 

for this is but one — ii. 1 

like one that had the pestilence (lep.) — ii. 1 

because the one is painted — ii. 1 

some lines to one she loves — ii. 1 

I am one that am noui'ished — ii. 1 

shed one tear — ii. 3 

even as one heat another — ii. 4 

or as one nail by strength — ii. 4 

for one shot of fivepence ii. 5 

and understand is all one — ii. 5 

is made to one so dear — ii. 7 

myself am one made privy — iii. 1 

but one may enter at — iii. 1 

that one cannot climb it — iii. 1 

I'll get me one of such another — iii. 1 

that's all one, if he be but one knave — iii. 1 
spoken by one whom she esteemeth.. — iii. 2 

master, be one of them — i v. 1 

always play but one thing? ()ep.).... — iv. 2 

one, lady, if you knew his — iv. 2 

one that attends your ladyship's .... — i v. 3 

one that I brought up iv. 4 

one that I saved from drowning..,., . — iv. 4 

even as one would say (rep.) iv. 4 

out with the dog, says one iv. 4 

one .Julia, that his changing — iv.4 

elie says, it is a fair one — v. 2 

more mischances than tliis one — v. 3 

for my meed, but one fair look (rep.) — v. 4 

which is too much by one v. 4 

I have one friend alive — v. 4 

when one's right hand is — v. 4 

that one error fills him — v. 4 

one feast, one liouse, one mutual .... — v. 4 

but this is all one Merry '<Vives, i. 1 

as I do despise one that is false ijep.) — i. 1 

as it shall become one that — i. 1 

to know one another — i. 1 

there dwells one mistress Quickly .. — i. 2 

to come under one body's hand — i. 4 

and one that is your friend — i. 4 

one that is well nigh worn to pieces — ii. 1 

if it were not for one trifling respect — ii. I 

ere one chaste man — ii. 1 

liliC one that I am not acquainted .. — ii. 1 

one with another Ford — ii. 1 

there is one .mistress Ford, sir — ii. 2 

I warrant vou, all is one with her . . — ii. 2 
and one (I tell you) that will not .. — ii. 2 
a kind woman in Windsor, she is one — ii. 2 
that you may know one anotlier's mind — ii. 2 
this punk is one of Cupid's carriers.. — ii. 2 

there's one master Brook below — ii. 2 

as you have one eye upon my — ii. 2 

vat be all you, one, two, tree — ii. 3 

my finger i tches to make one — ii. 3 

and I will one way or other — iii. I 

and you shall one day find it — iii. 3 

to searcli for such a one — iii. 3 

if tiiere is one, I shall (rep.) — iii. 3 

comes in one mistress Page — iii..') 

if Ihavehorns to malie one mad .... — iii. 5 



— 11. ; 



— in. 



ONE— thought there had been one.. M, rry ll'ives, i v. 1 

there was one conveyed out — iv. 2 

help to search my house this one time — iv. 2 

'tis one of tlic pest discretions of — iv. 4 

whetiier one NyiTi, sir — iv. 5 

one that Imth taught me more wit .. — iv. 5 

from heliiiid one of tliem — i v. .5 

tlie devil take one party — iv. 5 

epeoionsly one of tliem — iv. 5 

sure, one of you does not serve — iv. 5 

iust 'twixt twelve and one (rep.) .... — iv. 6 

liow to know one another (7-ep.) — v. 2 

but till 'tis one o'clock — v. i 

to stand at the taunt of one that .... — v,5 

and one that is as slanderous — v. 5 

to one master Brook — v. ii 

let us every one go home — v. 5 

wi tl> one self king! TiielfthXiglU, i. 1 

what great ones do, the less will — i. 3 

that you brouglit in one night here. . — i. 3 

it's four to one she'll none of me .... — i. 3 

that if one break, the other — i. 5 

for here he comes, one of thy kin — i. b 

tliere's one at the gate — i. S 

give me faith, say 1. Well, it's all one — i. 5 

one drauglit above heat makes — i. ."j 

one would think his mother's milk.. — i. 5 

gentle one, give me modest assurance — i. !> 

to make one in so skipping a dialogue — i. 5 

eucli a one as I was th is present .... — i. 5 

item, one neck, one chin, and so forth — i. 5 

60 quickly may one catch the plague — i. ^ 

and one tiling more; that you be never — ii. 2 

ifoneknight give a— — ii. 3 

draw three souls out of one weaver? — ii. 3 

first time I have constrained one — ii. 3 

and one that adores me; what o' that? — ii. 3 

come, but one verse _. — ii. 4 

no one so true did share it — ii. 4 (song) 

will be paid, one time or another, ... — ii. 4 

it should be one of my complexion .. — ii. 5 
than any one else that follows her .. 

one sir Andrew 

for every one of these letters are .... 

I'll make one too 

I am almost sick for one 

to one of your receiving, enough .... 

if one should be a prey 

one lieart, one bosom, and one truth 
might Jiave drawn one to a longer voi'age 

if it please the eye of one 

please one, please all 

have mercy upon one of our souls! — i: 

that they will kill one another 

I am one tliat would rather go with 

have one bout with you 

one sir, that for his love dares 

I snatched one half out of the 

he started one poor heart of 

for I am one of those gentle ones .... 
though it please you to be one of my 
put you in mind; one, two, iliree .... 

while one would wink 

send one presently to sir Toby 

the count's gentleman, one Cesario.. 

that's all one; he has hurt me 

pardon roe, sweet one, even for 

one face, one voice, one habit 

one day shall crown the alliance on't 

I was one sir, in tills interlude 

one sir Topas, sir, but that's all one . . 

all one, our play is done — ■> 

to one that can my part in him . , il/e;is. fo, 

but scraped one out of the table .... — 1. 1 

nay, not as one would say — 1. i 

there's one yonder arrested — i. S 

one word, good friend — i. ; 

only this one: Lord Angelo is — i. ' 

some one with child bj' him? — i. ; 

one who never feels the — i. ; 

and let it keep one shape — ii. 1 

'tis one tiling to be tempted — ii. 1 

one tliat serves a bad woman — ii. 1 

that such a one, and such a one .... — ii. 1 

she had any more than one husband? — ii. 1 

that to great ones 'longs — ii. i 

with one half so good a grace — ii. i 

that answering one foul wrong — ii. ; 

look, here comes one; a gentlewoman — ii. : 

repent you, fair one, of the sin you .. — ii. ! 

wlio's there? One Isabel, a sister .... — ii. 

the foolish throngs with one that swoons — ii. 

to make a false one — ii. 

If you be one, as you are well expressed — ii. 

I have no tongue but one — ii. 

ill them one and the self-same tongue — ii. 

in such a one as (you consenting to't) — iii. 

young sister, but one word — iii. 

dried not one of them with his comibrt — iii. 

this is one Lucio's information — iii. 

one, that, above all other strifes .... — iii. 

one has my pity, not a jot the — iv. 

one that is a prisoner nine years old — iv. 

one would think, it were mistress .. — iv. 

then is there one master Caper — iv. 

one Ragozine, a most notorious pirate — iv. 

one of our convent, and his confessor — iv. 

one fruitful meal would set me to't.. — iv. 

you'll answer this one day — iv, 

'tis not impossible, but one — v. 

I am the sister of one Claudio — v. 

one Lucio as then the messenger .... — v. 

some one hath set you on — v. 

one that I would were here — v. 

as she from one ungot — v. 

one that hath spoke most villanous — v. 

in testimony wheieof, one ill the prison — v. 

I am sorry, one so learned and so vise — v. 

and yet ht-re's one in place 1 caniiut — v. 

one all of luxury, au ass, a niudniaa — v. 



I (chal 



— V. 



— V. 



ONE whom he begot with child , , Mens, for Mens. v. 1 

is the whole man governed with one. .Much Ado, i. I 

hath not the world one man — i. 1 

the one is too like an image, and says — ii. 1 

I hope to see you one day fitted with — ii. I 

which is one? — ii- 1 

and but one visor remains — ii. 1 

you must wear it one way — ii. 1 

but with one green leaf on it — ii. 1 

a double heart for his single one .... — ii. 1 

thus goes every one to the world .... — ii. I 

I will get you one. I would (rep.) .. — ii. I 

undertake one of Hercules' labours — ii. 1 

of affection, the one with the other .. — ii. I 

contaminated stale, such a one as Hero — ii. 2 

that one man, seeing how much .... — ii. 3 

one woman is fair; yet I am — ii. 3 

come in one woman, one woman .... — ii. 3 

one foot in sea, and one on (rep.) — ii. 3 (song) 

to write to one that she knew would — ii. 3 

we have ten proofs to one — ii- 3 

rather than she will 'bate one breath — ii. '} 

when they hold one an opinion of .. — ii. 3 

one doth hot know, how much — iii. I 

well, every one can master a grief .. — iii. 2 

I warrant, one that knows him not.. — iii. 2 

two bears will not bite one another.. — iii. 2 

five shillings to one on't, with any .. — iii. 3 

one word more, honest neighbours .. — iii. 3 

need of poor ones, poor ones may.... — iii. 3 

and one Deformed isoneof them.... — iii. 3 

send every one their heart's desire!.. — iii. 4 

ride of ahorse, one must ride behind — iii..') 

one word, sir: our watch, sir — iii. 5 

let nie but move one question to — iv. I 

your window, betwixt twelve and one? — iv. I 

g'ieved I, I had but one? — iv. I 

, one too much by thee I (rep.) — i ^• . 1 

into tongue, and trim ones too — iv. I 

and one that knows the law, go to .. — iv. 2 

and one that hath two gowns — iv. 2 

but sucli a one whose wrongs do .... — v. 1 

if such a one will smile, and stroke.. — v. I 

are you so hasty now? well, all is one — v. 1 

let him kill one first — v. I 

true, says slie, a fine little one — v. I 

a great gross one — v. 1 

brother's men bound! Borachio, one! — v. I 

there's one meaning well suited .... — v- I 

heard them talk of one Deformed.... — v. I 

not one wise man among twenty .... — v. 2 

for here comes one in haste — v. 2 

to bind me, or undo me, one of them — v. 4 

nothing certainer; one Hero died.... — v. 4 

reverend than one tipped with horn — v. 4 

one that composed your (rep.).. Mid. N.'s Dteam, i. 1 

that's all one; you shall play it .... — i. 2 

as one shall see in a summer's — i. 2 

tlie one I'll slay , the other — ii . 2 

into the hands of one that loves .... — ii. 2 

one, aloof, stand sentinel — ii. 3 

one turf shall serve as pillow — ii. 3 

one heart, one bed, two bosoms (rep.) — ii. 3 

O t'nat a lady, of one man refused .. — ii. 3 

ay, or else one must come in with .. — iii. I 

BO every one according to his cue.... — iii- 1 

here o'er and o'er one falls — iii. 2 

that one man holding troth — iii. 2 

then will two, at once, woo one — iii. i 

lo, she is one of this confederacy ! . . . . — iii. 2 

one flower, both on one sampler (rep.) — i i i . 2 

moulded on one stennrep.) — iii. - 

as one come not within another's way — iii. 2 

here comes one. Wliere art tliou.... — iii- '.i 

come one more ; two of both — iii. 2 

go, one of you, find out the — iv. 1 

seemed all one mutual cry — iv I 

one sees more devils than vast hell .. — v. 1 

not one word apt, one player fitted .. — v. I 

one lion may, when many asses do .. — v. 1 

that I, one Snout by name (rep.) .... — v. I 

an ace for him; for he is but one .... — v. 1 

she should not use a long one — v. 1 

every one lets forth his sprite — v. 2 

one day in a week to touch (rep.)..I,oi'e's L. Lost, i. I 

one, whom the music of his own .... — i. I 

affliction may one day smile again .. — i. 1 

sadness is one and the self-same .... — i. 2 

how many is one thrice told? — i. 2 

amount to one more than two — i. 2 

or one of the four (rep.) — i.2 

Longaville is one — ii. 1 

every object that the one doth cateli — ii. I 

every one her ov/n hath garnished .. — ii. 1 

like one that comes here to besiege — ii. 1 

being but the one half (rep.) — ii. 1 

one part Aquitain is bound to us.... — jj. 1 

she hath but one for herself — ij- I 

for my sake but one loving kiss .... — ij- 1 

keep uot too long in one tunc — jij- ' 

O marry me to one Frances — iii 1 

do one thing for me tliat I shall .... — iii. 1 

by heaven, one that will do the deed — iii. ! 

one of these maids' girdles for your — iv. I 

monsieur Biron, to one lady Rosaline — iv. I 

and every one give ear — iv. 1 

became, one; saw, two; overcame — iv. 1 (lolteri 

on both in one, or one in both .. — iv. 1 (letter) 

and one that makes sport to the .... — iv. 1 

so I may answer thee with one as old — iv. 1 

Armathoo' the one side — iv. 1 

of one sore I a hundred make (rep.) — iv. 2 (epit.) 

and if one should be iiierced f/ep.) .. — iv. 2 

from one monsieur Biron, one of the — iv. 2 

this Biron is one of the votaries — iv. 2 

well, she hath one o' my sonnets — iv. 3 

here comes one with a pa|ier _ — iv. 3 

silver mf)on one half so bright .. — iv. 3 (verses) 

now in thy likeness, one more fool .. — iv. 3 

one drunkard loves another — iv. 3 

N N 



ONE 

O-N E— ah me, says one (rep.) Love's L. Los/, iv. 3 

se^•e^■al worthies make one dignity . . iv. 3 

and I Imd hut one penny in the v. 1 

I'll make one in a dance, or so v. 1 

one ruhbed his elbow, thus — v. 2 

we will every one be masked — v. 2 

how many inehes is in one mile 0<W-) — '"•2 

then of one is easily told — v. 2 

do but vouchsafe one change v. 2 

one sweet word (lep.) _ v. 2 

that smiles on every one v. 2 

for every one pursents three — V. 2 

but to partlct one man, e'en one poor — v. 2 

art th(ni one of the worthies? v. 2 

to have one shosv worse than — v. 2 

that's all one, my fair, sweet, honey v. 2 

take each one in his vein v. 2 

the one maintained by the owl — v. 2 

not in one bottom trusted (>ep.)...Wer.o/r'<.'n!C(?,i. I 

and mine a sad one — i. I 

I must be one of these same i. 1 

when r had lost one shaft — i. 1 

rival place with one of them i. 1 

than be oue of the twenty to follow .. — i. 2 

that I cannot choose one — i. 2 

but one who you shall rightly love . . 1.2 

for there is not one among i. 2 

shut the gate upon one wooer i. 2 

which one unworthier may attain .. — li. 1 

can you tell me whether one Launcelot — ii. 2 

your present to one master Bassauio — ii. 2 

as one would say, to serve ii. 2 

one speak for both, what would you? — ii. 2 

a simple coming-in for one man .... — ii. 2 

like one well studied in a sad ii. 2 

and part with him to one that I would ii. 5 

one of them contains my picture (rep.) — ii. 7 

never to mifold to any one ii. 9 

every one doth swear, that comes. . . . ii. 9 

M-ith one fool's head I came to woo. . — ii. 9 

a young Venetian, one that comes .. ii. 9 

as I heard, one night, fourscore iii. 1 

one of them showed me a ring i ii . 1 

one half of me is yours — iii, 2 

I am locked in one of them iii. 2 

haviug made one, methinks iii. 2 

like one of two contending in iii. 2 

you have got me one _ iii. 2 

I got a promise of this fair one here — iii. 2 

what, not one hit? from Tripolis.... _ iii. 2 

and not one vessel'scape (cep.) iii. 2 

and one in whom the ancient — iii. 2 

there is but one hope in it that — iii. 5 

as could well live, one by another .. — iii. 5 

and Portia one, there must be iii. 5 

go one, and call the Jew into the .... — iv. 1 

lose for me one drop of blood (rep.) .. iv. 1 

the twentieth part of one poor scruple iv. I 

shall seize one half his goods (rep.) .. iv. 1 

many vows of faith, and ne'er a true one — v. 1 
there is not one so young and so . . As you Like it, i. 1 

one that old Frederic, your i. 2 

whipi)ed for taxation, one of these .. — i. 2 

there is but one shamed that (rip.) .. — i. 2 

you shall try but one fall _ i. 2 

one out of suits with fortune i. 2 

not one to throw at a dog 1.3 

when the one should be lamed with — i. 3 

teacheth thee that thou and lam one — i. 3 

coursed one another down his innocent — i. 1 

1 pray you one of you question — ii. 4 

and after one hour more, 'twill be .. — ii. 7 

one that hath been a courtier — ii. 7 

thou shall have one — ii. 7 

when such a one as she ii. 7 

and one man in his time plays — ii, 7 

the more one sickens, the worse .... — iii. 2 

such a one is a natural philosopher.. — iii. 2 

ill-roasted Ci-'g, all on one side iii. 2 

that one body should be filled . . — iii. 2 (verses) 

one inch of (felay more is — iii. 2 

answer me in one word _ iii. 2 

for the one sleeps easily, because .... iii. 2 

the one lacking the burden of — iii. 2 

oue that knew courtship too well.... — iii. 2 

like oue another, as halfpence are (rep.) — iii. 2 

th.'it is one of the points in iii. 2 

yes, one: and in this manner iii. 2 

shall not be one spot of love iii. 2 

then one of you will prove iii, 3 

as good cause as one would desire.... iii. 4 

spurs his horse on one side iii. 4 

but that's all one; omittance iii. 6 

and he is one of the patterns of love iv. I 

ivliy then, can one desire too much of — iv. 1 

'tis I)ut one cast away, and so ,- iv. 1 

break one jot of 3'Our promise (rep.).. — iv. 1 

that alnises every one s eyes — iv. 1 

food-morrow, fair ones — iv. 3 

y filling the one doth empty the other — v. 1 

bu t the.y asked one an other — v. 2 

her and death were both one thing .. — v. 4 

and like to have fought one — v. 4 

met themselves, one of them thought — v. 4 

to one, his lands withheld — v. 4 

it were all one, that I should love All's IVell, i. 1 

one that goes with him; I love — i. 1 

how might one do, sir, to lose it — i. 1 

is like f>ne of our French withered pears — i. 1 

and he is one— What one, i' faith? ,. — i. 1 

their heads are both one, they may .. — i. 3 

if one be good, among nine bad (rep.) — i. 3 (song) 

what, one good in ten? ()ep.) — i. 3 

his heart out, ere he pluck one — i. 3 

confess it, one to the other i. 3 

no sword he worn, but one to dance with!— ii. 1 

of the Spinii, one captain Spurio .... — ii. 1 

my lord, there's one arrived ii. 1 

I liave spoke with one, that, in her .. — ii. 1 

now, fair one, doca your business — ii. 1 



[ 546 ] 



ONE 



ONE, which, as the dearest All's K'ell, ii. 1 

a modest one, to bear me back ii. 1 

as one near death to those that — ii. 1 

but such a one, thy vassal, whom I . . _ ii. 1 

toeachof you one fair and virtuous — ii. 3 

marry to each, but one! _ ii. 3 

not one of those, but had a noble — ii. 3 

fair one, I think not so. There's one — ii. 3 

a most harsh one ii. 3 

one, that she's not in heaven — ii. 4 

but one that lies three thirds _ ii. 5 

hang him! one ParoUes — iii. 5 

thitherthey send one another — iii. 5 

know you such a one? — iii. 5 

the owner of noone good quality.... — iii. 6 

unless some one among us, whom ., iv. 1 

we must every one be a man of — iv. 1 

what we speak to one another — iv. I 

yet slight ones will not carry it — iv. I 

and great ones I dare not give iv. 1 

you shall hear one anon _ iv. 1 

you should be such a one as you are — iv. 2 

all's one to him; what a past-saving — iv. 3 

whether one captain Dumain be. . — iv. 3 (note) 

one Diana, to take heed of (rep.) .... _ iv. 3 

is reputed one of the best that is ... . — iv. 3 

wronged you, one of the greatest .... — iv. 4 

made the days and nights as one — v. 1 

to hear me one single word (rep.) .... _ v. 2 

not one word more of the consumed v. 3 

a commoner o' the camp, if I be one — v. 3 

you saw one here in court could .... v. 3 

young one kick (rep.) — v. 3 

courtesies alone, they are scurvy ones — v. 3 
here? one dead, or driuik?. 7'amwi^ of Sh. 1 (indue.) 
let one attend him with a silver.... — I (indue.) 
some one be ready with a costly .. — 1 (indue.) 

and each one to his office — 1 (indue.) 

friendly welcome every one — 1 (indue.) 

that one shall swear she bleeds .... — 2 (indue.) 

and effect one thing specially _ 1. 1 

inventions meet and jump in one.... i. 1 

pne tiling more rests (rep.) _ i. 1 

if tliou know one rich enough to be.. — i. 2 

books, good ones, I warrant you .... — i. 2 

more suitors have, and me for one . . i. 2 

then well one more may fair i. 2 

make one, though Paris came — i. 2 

the one as famous for i.2 

the one half of my lands — ii. 1 

well aimed of such a young one — ii. 1 

to wish me wed to oue half lunatic .. — ii. 1 

and I am one that love Bianca ii. 1 

as any one old signior Gremio has in — ii. I 
U sol re, one cliif, two notes .... — iii 1 (gamut) 

been candlecases, one buckled — iii. 2 

orie girt six times pieced — iii. 2 

with a linen stock ou one leg — iii. 2 

why, that's all one — iii. 2 

more than one, and yet not many .. — iii. 2 

let them go, a couple of quiet ones . . — iii. 2 

both on one horse? — iv. 1 

one, Kate, that you must kiss — iv. 1 

and sits as one new-riseu — iv. 1 

but one that scorns to live in this (rep.) — iv. 2 

as one un worthy all the former — iv. 2 

'tis death for any one in iVIantua — iv. 2 

among them, know you one Vincentio? — iv. 2 

as an apple doth an oyster, and all one — iv. 2 

'twixt me and one Baptista's daughter — iv. 2 

then both, or one, or any thing — iv. 3 

gentle, you shall have one — iv, 3 

with one consent to have her so .... — iv. 4 

'tis ten to one it maimed you — v. 2 

let's each one send unto his wife .... v. 2 

ay, and a kind one too — v. 2 

to sip, or touch one drop of it — v. 2 

thy sovereign ; one that cares for thee — v. 2 

as big as one of 3' ours, my heart — v. 2 

one that, indeed, physics the fVinler's Tale, i. 1 

to live on crutches till he had one .. — i. 1 

with one we thank you, many i.2 

one sevehnight longer i.2 

and bleat the one at the other — i.2 

one good deed, dying tougueless .... — i.2 

with one soft kiss, a thousand — i.2 

the one for ever earned a royal — i.2 

by oue that fixes no bourn — i.2 

o'er head and ears a forked one — i. 2 

in every oue of these no man is — i, 2 

would not live the running of one glass — i.2 

thou hast the one half of my heart .. — i.2 

a master; one, who, in rebellioa .... i. 2 

bears not one, let villany 1.2 

than one condemned by the king's .. i.2 

a fine new prince, one of these days . . — ii. 1 

I have one of sprites and goblins .... — ii. 1 

a spider steeped, and one may drink — ii. 1 

but if one present the abhorred ii. 1 

one that knows what she ii. ) 

in the which three great ones suffer .. — ii. 1 

one whom much I honour ii. 2 

as well as one so great, and 60 forlorn — ii. 2 

nor any, but one, that's here — ii. 3 

you'll leave yourself hardly one suhjoot — ii. 3 

if she did know me one '.. ii. 3 

not one of you: so, SO; farewell — ii. 3 

one of us too much beloved iii. 2 

if one jot beyond the bound _ iii. 2 

I am barred, like one infectious — iii. 2 

thoughts high for one so tender iii. 2 

one grave shall be for both — iii. 2 

sometimes on one side, some — iii. 3 

a pretty one, a very pretty one — iii. 3 

in one self-bora hour — iv. (chorus) 

song-men all, and very good ones .... jv. 2 

but one Puritan amongst them iv. 2 

which are mighty ones, and millions — iv. 2 

one of these two must be necessities .. — iv. 3 

to each oue sip (rep.) iv. 3 



. trinler'tTale, iv. 3 



iv 


3 


IV 


3 


IV 


3 


JV 


3 


IV 


3 


IV 


3 


IV 


3 


IV. 


3 


IV 


3 



ONE— (a fair one are you) 

to set one slip of them _ 

here's one, to a very doleful tune .... — 
name to't, one mistress Tale- porter . . _ 
would not exchange flesh with one that — 
very pretty one. Let's have some (rep.) — 

one three of them, by their own _ 

of your daughter: one being dead .... _ 
I can but shorten thy life one week . . — 

the one he chides to hell _ 

as you shake off one, to take another — 

one of these is true 

you shall not « ant— one word. ..!!!.. _ 

had like to have given us one 

one that will either push on 

though m.y case be a pitiful one _ 

these blind ones, aboard him _ 

if one by one, you wedded all the world — 
you are one of those, would have him 
no wife: one worse, and better used ., 

one that gives out himself prince 

the one I uave almost forgot 

with staring on one another 

a world ransomed, or one destroyed .. 

extremity of the one, it must 

beheld one joy crown another 

she had one eye declined 

one of the prettiest touches of all 

from one sign of dolour, she did 

to say, one would speak to her 

your exultation partake to every one 

leisurely each one demand — ,. „ 

the one so like the other Comedy of Errors, i. 1 

to him one of the other twins ■ 

made it one upon my cheek 

well, I will marry one day, but to try 
sound ones too. Nay, not sound (rep.) 
certain ones then. Name them (rep.) 

for, if we two be one, and thou 

want wit in all one word to 

of welcome makes scarce one dainty 

such store, when one is one too 

the one ne'er got me credit 

one that claims me, one that (rep.) . , 

ay, such a one as man may not 

it every one know us 

jealous then of such a one? 

one, whose hard heart is buttoned.. .. 

a shoulder-clapper, one that 

now the clock strikes one 

every one doth call me by my 

one that thinks a man always 

ask but the paring of one's nail 

both oue, and other, he denies 

one Angelo, a goldsmith 

each one with ireful passion 

might make one wiser mad 

they brought one Pinch; a hungry .. 

one of these men is Genius to 

these two Dromios, one in semblance 

by this sympathised one day's error.. v I 

hand in hand not one before another — v! I 
every one did bear thy Macbeth, \. 3 



— V. 1 



v. 2 



— V. 2 



— i. 1 

— i. 2 



— V. 1 



spoke with one that saw him die 

as one that hath been studied 

one of my fel lows had the 

now o'er the one half world _ 

there's one did laugh in his sleep, and one — 

one cried, God bless us, and, amen 

making the green— one red 

trouble to you ; but yet, 'tis one _ 

every one according to the gift 

1 am one, my liege, whom the vile 

there's but one down 

ay, and a bold one, that dare 

there's not a one of them, but in 

and every one shall share i' the 

but one word more. He wiU not 

my heart throbs to know oue thing 

her young ones in her nest 

why, one that swears and lies 

every one that does so 

hence, with your little ones 

than such a one to reign 

if such a one be fit to govern ,. 

each minute teems a new one 

all my pretty ones? did you say 

and their dam, at one fell swoop? 

neither to you, nor any oue 

out, I say I one ; two 

such a one am I to fear, or none 

by this great clatter, one of greatest 

must not yield to one of woman born . . . 

to each one, whom we 

you came not of one mother, then Kii 

and, as I think, of one father 

one that will play the devil, sir 

one must prove greatest 

thou hast not saved one drop of 

let confusion of one part confirm .... 
out of one side her hai)py minion .... 

two such streams made one 

what say these young ones? 

but this one word, whether 

scorched veins of one new burned .... 
sound one unto [Co^Kn^-on intoj the 
an hour, one minute, nay, one quiet 

then I, as one that am 

whisper one another in the ear 

at home, meet in one line 

the inveterate canker of one wound.. 

commend me to one Hubert . . . 

I come one way of the Plantageuets. . -. v. 6 

one thread, one little hair (rep.) — v. 7 

yet one but flatters us RiclmrdU. i. 1 

the one my duty owes i. 1 

both grow in one i! 1 

whereof thyself art one, were — i.2 

sprijiging fi-om one root — i.2 

Oiie phial full of Edward's sacred (lep.) — i! 2 



— i. 4 

— i. 4 

— i. 5 

ii. 1 



— iii. 1 

— iii. 1 



— iii. 4 

— iv. 1 

— iv. 1 

— iv. I 

— iv. 2 



iv. 2 
iv. 2 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 



- V. 7 

— v. 7 

r J oh 71, i. 1 

i. I 
ii. I ' 
ii. 2 ; 
ii. 2 
ii. 2 



li 2 
iii. I ; 
iii. I i 



— iv. 2 



IV. 3 
V. 2 



ONE 



ONE word more; grief boundeth Bichurdll.X. 2 

permitted us, one of our souls — i. 3 

how loiiK a time lies in one little .... — i. 3 

but grief makes one hour ten — i. 3 

or bend one wrinkle on my — ii. 1 

did not the one deserve to have — ii. 1 

divides one thing entire to many .... — ii. 2 

the one's my sovereign, whom botli . . — ii. 2 

where one on his side fights, thousands — ii. 2 

to raze one title of your honour — ii. 3 

the one, in fear to lose what — ii. 4 

one daj' too late, I fear — iii. 2 

each one thrice worse than Judas! .. — iii. 2 

one word. He does me double — jji- - 

epring from one most gracious head — iii. 3 

to drop them still \ipon one place. ... — 

for every one doth so against — 

no more than every one doth know. . — 

excepting one, I would he were the best — 

a thousand spirits in one breast .... — 

found truth m all but one — 

two buckets filling one another — 

ehould'st thou find one heinous article — 

I'll beg one boon, and tlien be gone. . — 

and hate turns one, or both, to worthy — 

together weeping, make one woe .... — 

twice for one step I'll groan — 

one kiss shall stop our mouths — 

from one side to the other turning .. — v. 2 

I had as lief be none, as one — v. 2 

but makes one pardon strong — v. 3 

come, little ones; and then again.... — v. 5 

thus play I, in one person — v. 5 

of one natiu-e, of one substance bred.l HenrylV. i. 1 

march all one way — i. I 

little better than one of the wicked. . — i. 2 

I'll make one; an' I do not, call .... — i. 2 

Hal, wilt thou make one? — j. 2 

ask me fur one penny cost to ransom — i. 3 

needs no more but one tongue — i. 3 

him tell it to one of his company.... — ii. 1 

thieves cannot be true to one another! — ii. 2 

one horse, my lord, he brought — ii. 3 

proficient in one quarter of an hour — ii. 4 

under-slinker; one that never — ii. 4 

in England; and one of them is fat.. — ii. 4 

all's one for that; a plague of all ... , — ii. 4 

and one Mordake, and a thousand .. — ii. 4 

as like one of these harlotry — ii. 4 

one of them is well known — ii. 4 

monstrous! but one halfpenny-worth — ii. 4 

equals not one of yours — iii.l 

than one of these same metre — iii.l 

one no persuasion can do good upon — iii. ! 

one poor penny-worth of sugar-candy — ii i . 3 

where shall I find one that can steal — iii. 3 

at one cast? to set so rich (rej7.) — iv. I 

till one drop down a corse — iv. 1 

death's hand, for this one half-year.. — iv. 1 

but that's all one; they'll find — iv. 2 

in one sphere; nor can one England — v. 4 

is come to end the one of us — v. 4 

I spake with one, my lord 2HenryIV.\. 1 

let one spirit of the first-born Cain.. — i. 1 

wrought out life, 'twas ten to one .. — i. 1 

overwhelmed all her litter but one .. — i. 2 

than he shall get one on his cheek . . — i. 2 

to be on any side but one — i. 2 

but the gout galls the one, and the . . — i. 2 

for the one, or the other, plays — i. 2 

like one, that draws the model of. ... — i. 3 

one power against the French (rep.) — i. 3 

ICol. KjiiJ] a hundred mark is a long one — ii- 1 

one you may do with sterling — ii. I 

not have attached one of so High blood — ii. 2 

that were the peach-coloured ones? — ii. 2 

one for superfluity, and one other .. — ii. 2 

shall I tell thee one thing, Poins? .. — ii. 2 

to thee cas to one it pleases me — ii. 2 

perfumes the blood ere one can say. . — ii. 4 

you cannot one bear with auotlier's — ii. 4 

what the good-year! one must bear — ii. i 

I am the worse, when one says — i i . 4 

for one of them, she is in hell — ii. 4 

and asking every one for sir John ,. ■ — ii. 4 

'tis one o'clock, and past — iii.l 

heaven! that one might read .... — iii.l 
fight with one Sampson Stockfish .. — iii. 2 
one of the king's justices of the peace — iii. 'i 

for one to do her husbandry — iii. 2 

and spare me the great ones — iii. 2 

to end one doubt by deatli — iv. 1 

on my life, one time or other — iv. 3 

whole strength into one giant arm .. — iv. 4 

take diseases, one of anotlier — v. 1 

shorten Harry's happy life one day.. — v. 2 

there's one Pistol come from the court — v. 3 

sweet knight, thou art now one of ., — v. 3 

one word more, I beseech you — (epil.l 

thousand parts divide one mun. Henry)'', i, (chornsj 

than ever at one time the clergy .... — i. 1 

are every one a woe, a sore — i. 2 

four hundred one and twenty years — i. 2 

never did the clergy at one time .... — i. 2 

doth keep in one concent (cep.) — i. 2 

several w-ays, fly to one mark — i. 2 

in one town; as many fresh (7pp.) .. — i. 2 

once afoot, end in one purpose — i. 2 

take you one quarter into France .. — i. 2 

we'll not otfend one stomach.. — ii. (chorus) 

it is a simple one; but what though — ii. 1 

1 will cut thy throat, one time or other — ii. ) 
the crow a pudding one of these days — ii. I 
knives to cut one another's throats? — ii. 1 

nor leave not one behind, that — ii. 2 

I one, my lord; your highness — ii. 2 

extract one spark of evil — ii. 2 

even just between twelve and one .. — ii. 3 

I knew there was but one way — ii. 3 

with one appearing hair — iii. (chorus) 



[ 547 ] 

ONE that is like to be executed HenryV. iii. 

upon one pair of English legs — iii. 

a sonnet begin so to one's mistress .. — iii. 

by one that knows him better — iii. 

dedicate one jot of colour — iv. (chnrui 

give to every one, thawing — iv. (ulioru; 

twenty French crowns to one — iv. 

there's five to one; besides, they all.. — iv. 

but one ten tliousand of those — iv. 

wish not one man more iri'p.) — iv. 

likes me better, than to wish us one — iv. 

that every one may pare — iv. 

are all one reckonings — iv. 

but 'tis all one, 'tis so like as my .... — iv. 

'tis the gage of one that I should fight — iv. 

there lie dead one hundred — iv. 

on one part and on the other? — iv. 

there is one "oat for you — v. 

princes English, every one — v. 

what says slie, fair one? — v. 

for the one, I have neither words.... — v, 

if thou would have such a one — v. 

needs be granted to be much at one.. — v. 

for one fair French maid that — v. 

let that one article rank with — v. 

in one, 3^our realms in one! (j'ep.).. .. — v. 

one would have lingering wars 1 Henry VI. i, 

coat one half is cut away — i. 

not having struck one stroke — i. 

I'll change for one of ours — i. 

besiege us one hour in a month .... — i. 

sees me go back one foot, or fly ... . — i. 

he flghteth as one weary of — i. 

one to ten! lean raw-boned — i. 

one that still motions war — i. 

I can count every one, and view .... — i. 

one of thy eyes, and thy cheek's side — i- 

one eye thou hast to look to — i. 

with one .loan la Pucelle joined .... — i. 

that one day bloomed, and fruitful.. — i. 

if it chance the one of us do fail .... — ii. 

that every one may read — ii. 

kindly give one fainting kiss — ii. 

when one will kill; mourn not — ii. 

no one should sway but he; no one.. — iii. 

but one imperious in another's throne? — iii. 

BO fast at one another's pate — iii. 

that grudge one thought against .... — iii. 

one sudden foil shall never breed. . . , — iii. 

one drop of blood, drawn from — iii. 

French were almost ten to one — iv. 

that any one should therefore be .... — iv. 

for vantage, every one will swear.... — iv. 

mother's hopes lie in one tomb? .... — iv. 

the help of one stands me in — iv. 

all our lives in one small boat — iv. 

shortening of my life one day — iv. 

among professors of one faith — v. 

have tlieir answers every one — v. 

two parts, is now conjoined in one .. — v. 

ten to one, we shall not find — v. 

or one that at a triumph — v. 

lords, witli one cheerful voice iHenry VI. i. 

vouchsafe one glance unto the — i. 

so, one by one, we'll weed them all. . — i. 

or York, all's one to me — i. 

doth any one accuse York for — i . 

in the garret one night, as we — i. 

ten to one, old Joan had not gone .. — ii. 

then send for one presently — ii. 

mischiefs work the wicked ones .... — ii 

shall one day make the duke of York — ii- 

when every one will give the — iii. 

nor ever had one penny bribe — iii. 

her harmless young one went — iii. 

were't not all one, an empty — iii. 

show me one scar cliaractered — iii. 

fixed on end, as one distract — iii. 

as one that surfeits thinking — iii. 

it is our pleasure, one of them depart — i\' 

apparel them all in one livery — iv. 

by her he Jiad two children at one birth — iv. 

will not leave one lord, one gentleman — iv. 

kill for a hundred lacking one — iv. 

one and twenty fifteens, and one .... — iv. 

struck'st thou one blow in the field? — iv. 

let them kiss one another — iv. 

I will make shift for one — iv. 

if one so rude, and of so mean condition — v. 

of one or both of us the time — v. 

nor have we won one foot — v. 

hear but one word; let me SHenry VI. i. 

a tliousand oaths, to reign one year. , — i. 

hath been ten to one — i. 

and leave not one alive, I live in .... — i. 

thou hast one son, for his — i. 

blows, twice two for one — i. 

for one to thrust his hand between . , — i. 

and ten to one is no impeach of — i. 

each one a perfect sun — ii. 

but one lamp, one light, one sun .... — ii. 

each one already blazing by his .... — ii. 

ah, one that was a wofuf looker-on.. — ii. 

protection of their tender ones — ii. 

now, one the lietter; then, another .. — ii. 

the one, his purple blood right well.. — ii. 

wither one rose and let tlie other.... — ii. 

one way, or otlier, she is for a king.. — iii. 

like one tliat stands upon a promontory — iii. 

like one lost in a thorny wood — iii. 

and this English queen's, are one.... — iii. 

but answer me one doubt — iii. 

for thi s one speech, lord Hastings .... — i v. 

nor how to be contented with one wife — iv. 

yet in this one thing let me — iv. 

and, ten to one, you'll meet him .... — v. 

in case some one of you would fly . . . . — v. 

hapless male to one sweet — v. 

resident in men like one another .... — v. 

the one against the other Richard HI. i. 



ONE 



— i. 3 



ONE, had best to do it ()Y'p.) liichanl III 

yea, one place else, if you will hear.. — 

so I might live one hour in your .... — 

name, but one of better nature — 

beg one favour at thy gracious — 

nor no one here ; for curses never .... 

but while one would tell twenty .... — i. 

it fills one full of obstacles — i. 

been factious one against the other . . — ii. 

to wail one that's lost — ii. 

have but one false glass — ii. 

frandani, one night as we did — ii. 

moralize two meanings in one word — iii. 

one from lord Stanley — iii. 

may be determined at the one — iii 

and myself, are at the one — iii. 

ladies, one hour hence, and I'll — iv. 

for never yet one hour in his bed .... — iv. 

cradle for such little pretty ones!.. .. — iv. 

girdling one another within their.... — iv. 

one heaved o' high, to be hurled — iv. 

one that wails the name (rep,) — iv. 

for one that scorned at me (I ep.) — iv. 

now fearing one; for one commanding — iv. 

as one being best acquainted — iv. 

children, but one step below — iv. 

of all one pain, save for a night — iv. 

some one take order, Buckingham.. — iv. 

thither, is but one day's march — v. 

by this one bloody trial of sharp war — v. 

well, all'sone for that; who hath.... — v. 

yet one thing more, good captain — v. 

and every one did threat to-morrow's — v. 

one raised in blood, and one (;ep.) . . — v. 

one that hatli ever been God's enemy — v. 

they would restrain the one, distain — v. 

a milksop, one that never in his ... . — v. 
what four throned ones could (rep.). Henry VIII. i. 

but now married to one above itself — i. 

'twas said, they saw but one — i. 

one, certes, that promises no element — i. 

and place infecting one another — i. 

once weak ones, is not ours — i. 

and, witli one hand on his dagger.. .. — i. 

but they are shrewd ones; for when — i. 

lame ones; one would take it, tliat .. — i. 

a supper, and a great one, to many . . — i. 

but few now give so great ones — i. 

brought with her one care abroad .. — i. 

a sweet society of fair ones — i. 

confessor to one or two of these! .... — i. 

you are one will keep them waking — i. 

there should be one amongst them ., — i. 

such a one, they all confess — i. 

one of her highness' women (rep.) .. — i. 

lead in your ladies, every one — i. 

of state was a deep envious one — ii. 

of your prayers one sweet sacrifice .. — ii. 

goodness and he fill up one monument! — ii. 

will make them one day groan for't — ii. 

at one stroke has taken for ever .... — ii. 

must needs say, a noble one — ii. 

thus far we are one in fortunes — i i . 

the king will know hira one dn.y .... — ii. 

heaven will one day open the — ii. 

I'll venture one heave at him — ii. 

I mean, the learned ones — ii. 

hath sent one general tongue — ii. 

was not one doctor Pace in — ii. 

was reckoned one the wisest prince.. — ii. 

spake one the least word — ii. 

a wife, a true one? — iii. 

one that ne'er dreamed a joy — iii. 

an arch one, Cranmer; one hath.... — iii. 

all the land s wealth into one — iii 

but, thus much, they are foul ones .. — iii. 

all my glories in that one woman .. — iii. 

a sure and safe one, tliough my — iii 

and. sometimes, falling oiies — iv. 

so strangely in one piece — iv. 

the one, of "Winchester, (newly _ iv. 

and one, already, of the privy-council — iv. 

one, that l)y suggestion tied all — iv. 

scholar, and a ripe, and good one .... — iv. 

one of which fell with him — i v. 

of which there is not one, I dare avow — iv. 

it's one o'clock, boy, is't not? — v. 

who dare speak one syllable — v. 

the honour they do one another? ircp.) — v. 

childish pity to one man's honour .. — v. 

might go oiie way, and safely — v. 

one tliat, in all obedience — v. 

and one as great as you are? — v. 

this young one made a Christian (^ep ) — v. 

a dozen crabtree staves, and strong ones — v. 

as much as one sound cudgel — v. 

this one christening will beget — v. 

leave her blessedness to one — v. 

this little one shall make it — v. 

'tis ten to one, this play can — (epil 

for such a one we showed them — (cpil 

on one and other side, Trojan. Troilus^- Cress, tprni 

black-a-moor: 'tis all one to me — i. 

one [Co/, ^'n^-two] and fifty hairs {tep.) — i. 

he's one of the flowers of Troy — i. 

he's one o' the soundest judgments.. — i. 

it's all one: by God's lid, it does one's — i. 

you are such a woman! one knows not — i. 

say one of your watches — i. 

that's one of the chiefest of them too — i. 

by him one step below — i. 

niay one. that IS a herald — i. 

which with one voice call Agamemnon — i. 

if there be one, among the fairest.,.. — i. 

one is, or hath, or means to be, that one — i, 

one that was a man when Hector's .. — i. 

one noble man, that hath one spark — i. 

and such a one, that dare maintain.. — ii. 

thus one again says Nestor — ii. 

the value of cue ten — U. 



ONE 

ONE— is in one man's valour 7Voi7iM<5-c>ess. ii. 2 

Paris, you speak like one besotted .. — ii. 3 

we understand not one anotlier — iii. I 

less than the tentli part of one — iii. 2 

if ever yon prove false one to another — iii. 2 

greatness, one fallen out with — iii. 3 

do one pluck down another — iii. 3 

how one man eats into another's .... iii. 3 

where one but goes abreast — iii. 3 

that one by one pursue iii. 3 

one touch of nature makes — iii. 3 

with one conseut, praise new-born .. — iii. 3 

in love with one of Priam's iii. 3 

it will go one way or other — iii. 3 

tlie one and other Diomed embraces — iv. 1 

hark! there's one up iv. 2 

brevity and discharge of one — iv. 4 

I'll give you three for one — iv. 5 

the one almost as infinite — iv. 5 

one that knows tlie youth — iv. 5 

as welcome as to one that would .... — iv. 5 

time, will one day end it — iv. .■> 

and one that loves quails — v. i 

hark, one word in your ear — v. 2 

I'll fetch you one. You have — v. 2 

'twas one's that loved me better — v. 2 

one cannot speak a word v. 2 

farewejl! one eye yet looks on thee.. — v. 2 

like witless anticks, one another meet — v. 3 

what one thing, what another {rep.) — v. 3 

they are clapper-clawing one another — v. i 

think they have swallowed one another — v. 4 

one bear will not bite another (rep.) — v. 8 

let one be sent to pray Achilles — v. 10 

of gesture, one might interpret. . . . Ttmon ofAth. i. 1 

infects one comma in the course .... — i. 1 

one do I personate of lord Timon's , . — i. 1 

with one man beckoned from — i. 1 

not one accompanying liis — i. 1 

than one which holds a trencher (rep.) — i. 1 

art not one? Yes. Then I lie not — i. 1 

shouldst have kept one to thyself. ... — i. 1 

dip their meat in one man's blood .. — 1.2 

commanding one another's fortunes! — i. 2 

that bears not one spurn i. 2 

would one day stamp upon me — 1.2 

my lords, I have one word to say. . — i. 2 

but rather one that smiles — ii. i 

one Varro's servant, mv good lord . . — ii. 2 

my mistress is one, and" I am her fool — ii. 2 

the reason of this? I could render one — ii. 2 

two stones more than his artificial one — ii.2 

one cloud of winter showers — ii. 2 

one of lord Timon's men (rej.. iii. 4) — iii. 1 

and one tliat knows what belongs .. iii. I 

1 can tell you one thing, my lord — iii, 2 

one of his men was with lord Lucullus — iii. 2 

I count it one of my great afflictions — iii. 2 

one business does command us all .. — iii. 4 

one may reach deep enough — iii. 4 

deljts may well be called desperate ones — iii. 4 

that one need not lend to another — iii. 6 (grace) 

one day he gives us diamonds — iii. 6 

and not one friend, to take his — iv. 2 

not one word more: thus part we .. — iv. 2 

twinned brothers of one womb iv. 3 

if one l)e, 60 are they all _ iv. 3 

let not thy sword skip one — iv. 3 

thy plenteous bosom one poor root! — iv. 3 

the one is filling still _ iv. 3 

have with one winter's brush — iv. 3 

no prodigal. I, that I am one now .. — iv. 3 

away; rob one another _ iv. 3 

one honest man, —mistake me not {rep.') — iv. 3 

expecting in return twenty for one . . — iv. 3 

I'd excliange for this one wish — iv. 3 

there's ne'er a one of you but trusts — v. I 

reside but where one villain is — v. 1 

the senators, with one consent of love — v. 2 

and am not one that rejoices in .... v. 2 

I met a courier, one mine ancient .. v. 3 

one word, good citizens Curiolanus, i. 1 

one that hath always loved (rep.) .. _ i. i 

for that being one o' the lowest — i. I 

the one side must have bale i. 1 

the one aftnghts you, the other — i. 1 

which else would feed on one another? — i. 1 

a strange one, (to break — . i. i 

one's Junius Brutus, Sicinius Velutus — i. 1 

I'll lean upon one crutch — i. i 

till one can do no more 1.2 

than one voluptuously surfeit out of — i. 3 

one of his father's moods i. 3 

with one part of our Roman power.. — i. 3 

and one infect another against — i. 4 

like one that means his proper 1. 9 

tell me one thing that I shall ask you — ii. 1 

he's poor in no one fault — ii. 1 

and one that loves a cup of hot wine — ii. 1 

one tliat converses more with — ii. 1 

you are a pair of strange ones — ii. 1 

I think, there's one at home for you — ii. 1 

one in the neck, and two ii. 1 

only there is one thing wanting — ii. 1 

'tis thought of every one, Corimanus — ii.2 

I had rather have one scratch my .. — ii.2 

that's thousand to one good one .... — ii.2 

than one of his ears to hear it? — ii.2 

neither will they bate one jot — ii.2 

our wits were to issue out of one skull — ii. 3 

their consent of one direct way should — ii. 3 

by ones, by twos, and by threes .... — ii. 3 

every one of us has a single honour — ii. 3 

to one that would do thus (rep.) — ii. 3 

not one amongst us, save yourself .. ii, 3 

one thus descended, that hath beside — ii. 3 

and siich a one as he, who puts iii. 1 

and take the one by t'other iii. 1 

whj' shall the people give one iii. 1 

where one part does disdain — iii. J 



r 548 ] 



ONE 



ONE-hearme one word: beseech you.Cu;iu/u;i«s, ii=. I 

one time will owe another _ iij, 1 

hence, were but one danger iii. 1 

one word more, one word iii. 1 

when one but of my ordinance iii. 2 

at the price of one fair word _ iii. 3 

to go rove with one that's yet iv. 1 

shalMoff'but one seven years iv. 1 

baited with one that wants her wits? — iv. 2 

a most royal one: the centurions — iv. 3 

seem to wear one heart iv. 4 

to take the one the other iv. 4 

a strange one as ever I looked on .... — iv. 5 

a maveilous poor one. True iv. 5 

take the one half of my commission.. — iv. 5 

as one would set up a top. — iv. 5 

than he, you wot one. W ho? — iv. 5 

'faith, look you, onecannot tell how — iv. 5 

and but one half of what lie W.1S .... — iv. 5 

hate one, another. Reason (rep.) .... — iv. 6 

and atfecting one sole throne — iv. 6 

not to be other than one thing iv. 7 

but, one of these, as he hath spices .. iv. 7 

one fire drives out one fire, one nail, one — iv. 7 

yet one time he did call me — v. 1 

to one whom they had punished .... — v. 1 

for one poor grain or two {rep.) v. 1 

lam one, that telling true v. 2 

than seek the end of one v. 3 

prate, like one i' the stocks — v.3 

o' the chiefest soldiers; I'll be one .. — v. 5 

widowed and unchilded many a one — v. 5 

Cassius, be you one Julius Cwsar, 1. 2 

set lionour in one eye, and death .... — i. 2 

with more than with one man? {rep.) — i. 2 

'twas one of these coronets i. 2 

smiled at one another and shook .... — i. 2 

for here comes one in haste i. 3 

no, it is Casca; one incorporate — i. 3 

shall Rome stand under one man's awe?— ii. I 

give me your hands all over, one by one — ii. I 

good-morrow to you every one — ii. 1 

which did incorporate and make us one — ii. 1 

hark, hark! one knocks: Portia — ii. 1 

there is one within, besides the — ii.2 

two lions littered in one day — ii.2 

to be rendered, for some one to say . . ii.2 

there is but one mind in all — ii. 3 (paper) 

every one doth shine (rep.) — iii. 1 

I do know but one that unassailable — iii. 1 

that one of two bad waj's you — iii. 1 

should stand one of the three to share it?— iv. 1 

one that feeds on objects, arts iv. 1 

what, shall one of us, that struck.... — iv. 3 

hated by one he loves; braved by — iv. 3 

Cicero being one. Cicero one? — iv. 3 

farewell, every one — iv. 3 

hacked one another in the sides — v. I 

to set upon one battle all our — v. 1 

good to all made one of them — v. 5 

pray then, foresee me one ..Antony ^Cleopatra, i. 2 

IS there such a one? He stays upon.. — i. 2 

good now, play one scene — i. 3 

courteous lord, one word; sir, you and I — i. 3 

to hate one great competitor — i. 4 

or, if 3'ou borrow one another's love — ii. 2 

I'll tliink them every one an Antony — ii. 5 

painted one way like a Gorgon — ii. 5 

they would have one man but a man? — ii. 6 

pinch one another by the disposition — ii. 7 

than drink so ranch in one — ii. 7 

Sossius, one of mv place in Syria.... — iii. 1 

a verj' fine one: how he loves CsBsarl — iii. 2 

her motion and her station are as one — iii. 3 

I have one thing more to ask him jet — iii. 3 

grind the one the [Coi.-each] other . . — iii. 5 

tliey say, one Taurus — iii. 7 

one of them rates all that is won — iii. 9 

one, that but performs the bidding.. — iii. u 

than with an old one dying — iii. 11 

by one that looks on feeders? — iii. II 

with one that ties his points? — iii. 11 

let's have one other gaudy night .... — iii. 11 

when one so great begins to rage .... — iii. 11 

fortune, he is twenty men to one .... — iv. 2 

'tis one of those odd tricks — iv. 2 

as one that takes his leave — iv. 2 

it will determine one way — iv. 3 

who? one ever near thee — iv. 5 

run one before, and let the queen.... — iv. 8 

the last day was a shrewd one to us.. — iv. 9 

death of one person can be paid — iv. 12 

nor any one. Thy death and fortunes — iv. 12 

one word, sweet queen — iv. 13 

or ever were one such — v. 2 

honour of thy lordliness to one so meek — v. 2 

with one that I have bred? v. 2 

I heard of one of them no longer .... — v. 2 

in Rome, at one Philario's Cymbelinc, i. 2 

O thou vile one! sir, it is your fault — i. 2 

the one may be sold, or given — i. 5 

the one is but frail, and the other casual — i. 6 

by the gods, it is one — i. 5 

will not trust one of her malice i. 6 

to exchange one misery with — i. 6 

he is one of the noblest note — i. 7 (letter) 

one an eminent monsieur — 1.7 

am I one, sir? you look on me — i. 7 

should at one tmie encounter i. 7 

and he is one the truest mannered .. — i. 7 

would he had been one of my rank! — ii. 1 

'tis thought, one of Leonatus' friends — ii. l 

one of your lordship's pages li. 1 

might touch! but kiss; one kiss! .. .. — ii.2 

hell is here: one, two, three,— time .. — ii. 2 

the one is Cains Lucius — ii. 3 

what if I do line one of their hands? — ii, 3 

one of her women (rep. ii. 4) ii. 3 

one of your great knowing should learn — ii. 3 

one, bred of alms, and fostered — ii. 3 



ONE— your lady is one tlie lairest ....Cy./rAeii/ie, ii. 4 

eacli on one foot standing ii. 4 

believed of one persuaded well — ii. 4 

like a full-acorned boar, a German one — ii. 5 

one vice but of a minute old, for one ii..'i 

I do not say, I am one iii 1 

are med'ciuable; that's one of them — iii. 2 
if one of mean affairs may plod it .. — iii. 2 

one score, twixt sun and sun iii. 2 

why, one that rode to his execution iii. 2 

but, in one night, a storm iii. 3 

one, but painted thus, would be .... iii. 4 

I have not slept one wink — iii 4 

first, make yourself but like one .... — iii. 4 
from every one the best she hath .... — iii. .5 

I forgot to ask him one thing — iii,.") 

I see, a man's life, isa tedious one ., — iii. 6 

when rich ones scarce tell true — . iii. 6 

thou art one o' the false 07ies — iii.B 

no comfort to one not sociable — iv. 2 

he is but one: you and my brother .. — iv. 2 

cut off one Cloten's head — iv. 2 

from one bad thing to worse — iv. 2 

wears thee not the one half so well .. — iv. 2 

rotting together, have one dust — iv. 2 

young one, inform us of thy fortunes — iv. 2 

never bestrid a horse, save one — iv. t 

reserve my cracked one to more care — iv. 4 
you married ones, if each of you .... — v. 1 

no bond, but to do just ones — v. 1 

soldier; an honest one, I warrant.... — v.3 
ten, chased by one. are now each one — v. 3 
here is one: two boys, an old man .. — v.3 

yet am I better than one that's sick v. 4 

from her his dearest one — v. 4 

rare one ! be not, as is our fangled world — v. 4 

you'll never return to tell one — v. 4 

I never saw one so prone v. 1 

so should I, if I were one {rep.) — v. 4 

one that promised naught but beggary — v. !> 
though with the loss of many a bold one — v. :> 

this one thing only I will entreat — v. 5 

one sand another not more resembles — v. ;] 
of all amongst the rarest of good ones — v. 5 

and one that had a royal lover — v. 5 

I left out one thing which the queen — v. 5 

a prince. A most uncivil one — v. 5 

buried one and twenty valiant sons .. Titus And. I. i 
one fit to bandy with thy lawless sons — i. 2 
my foes I do repute you every one .. — i. 2 

nor me, so I were one — ii. 1 

tiger's young ones teach the dam? . . — ii. 3 
and one thing more, that womanhood — ii. 3 

one hour's storm will drown — ii. 5 

that the one will help to cut — iii. 1 

I stand as one upon a Tock — iii. I 

or any one of you, chop off — iii. I 

O here I lift this one hand up — iii. 1 

turn me to each one of you — iii. 1 

more than one confiderate in — iv. 1 

one Muliteus lives, my countryman — iv. 2 

hast shot off one of Taurus' horns .. — iv. 3 

my uncle and one of the emperial's.. — iv. 3 

when as the one is wounded with .... — iv. 4 

as willingly as one would kill ally .. — v. 1 

and, if one arm's embracement — v. 2 

tl'.e one is Murder, Rajie is the other's — v. 2 

this one hand yet is left to cut — v. 2 

come, be every one officious to — v. 2 

corn into one mutual sheaf (rep.) .... v. 3 

if any one relieves or pities him — v.3 

if one good deed in all my life — v.3 

one sin, I know, another doth provoke .rnicles, i. I 

of whicli thyself art one. who now — i. 2 

who shuns not to break one — i. 2 

by the indeutureof his oath tobe one ,. — i. 3 
throws down one mountain, to cast up ,. — i. 4 

like one another's glass to trim — i. 4 

one sorrow never comes, but brings .... — i. 4 

the great ones eat up the little ones — ii. 1 

I'd wish to make one there — ii. 1 

to every one that comes to honour them — ii. 3 

therefore each one betake him to — ii. 3 

one twelve moons more she'll — ii. 5 

let me ask one thing — ii 5 

every one with claps 'gan sound — iii. (Gowei) 

I have one myself, who shall not be — iii. 3 
hath our Cleon one daughter .... — iv. (Gouer) 

ha! says one, wilt out? — iv. 1 

therefore, let's have fresh ones — i v. 3 

wliy lament you, pretty one? — iv. 3 

come, young one, I like the — iv.3 

you are like one, tliat superstitiously .... — iv. 4 
to use one language, in each several — iv. 4 (Gow.) 

we have here one, sir, if she would — i v. 6 

now, pretty one, how long (rep.) — iv. B 

I beseech your honour, one piece for me.. — iv. 6 

one thing first. Come,now, your one thing — iv. 6 

in the end to buy him a wooden one? .... — iv. li 

she sings like one imiiortal — v. (Gowcr) 

hath not spoken to any one — v. 1 

that, one mortal night, drove — v. 1 

welcome, fair one! (rep.) — v. I 

such a one my daughter might — v. 1 

for thou look st like one I loved indeed .. — v. ) 

was given me by one that had some — v. 1 

early, one blustering morn — v.3 

I know, in that, are one Lear^ i. 3 

for taking one's port that is out — i. 4 

the one in motley here — i. 4 

gavest thy golden one away — i. 4 

here conies one o' the parings — i. 4 

a fox, when one has caught her — i. 4 

why one's nose stands i' the middle — i. 5 

I mean, the whispered ones, for they .... — ii. I 

I have one thing, of aqueazy — ii. 1 

one that wouldst be abawd, inway of. ... — ii.2 

one whom I will beat into clamorous .... — ii.2 

thus to rail on one, that is neither — ii.2 

but the great one that goes UD the hill .. — ii. 4 



ONE — no more see one another Lear, ii, 4 

how, ill one iiouse, should many penpic , . — ii. 4 
what need oneV O reason not the need ,. — ii. 4 

him gladly, but not one follower — ii. 4 

one minded like the weather — iii. 1 

I have one part in my lieart — iii. 2 

one, that slept in the contriving — iii. 4 

let rae ask you one word in private — iii. 4 

for one blast of thy minikin mouth — iii. 6 (song) 

lentertain youfor oneof my — iii. 6 

one that's of a neutral heart, and not (rep.) — iii. 7 

one side will mock another — iii. 7 

my lord, j'ou have one eye left — iii. 7 

dizzy 'tis, to cast one's eyes so lowl — iv. 6 

liangs one that gathers samphire — iv. 6 

ere the black ones were tliere — iv. 6 

all the letters suns, I could not see one . . — iv. 6 
you are a royal one, and we obey you ... . — iv. 6 

tliou hast one daughter, who redeema — iv. 6 

every one hears that, which can distinguish — iv. 6 

BO poor, hear me one word — v. 1 

shall I take? Both? one? or neither? .... — v. 1 

packs and sects of great ones — v. 3 

one step I liave advanced thee — v. 3 

the one the other iJoisoned — v. 3 

I know when one is dead, and when one — v. 3 

oneof them we behold — v. 3 

'tis all one, I will show myself . . Itomeo ^ Jutiel, i. 1 
here comes one of my master's kinsmen — J. \ 
stir one [A'n/.-a] foot to seek a foe. ... — i. 1 

ill urged to one that is so ill! — i. 1 

one more, most welcome, makes my — i. 2 
being one, may stand in number .... — i. 2 
one fire burns out another's burning, one — i. 2 
one desperate grief cures with another's — i. 2 

one fairer tlian my love! — i. 2 

see how one another lends content . . — 5.3 

why, may one ask? — i. 4 

lie all in one or two men's hands .... — i. 5 
learned even now of one I danced.... — i. 5 
but one ryhme, and I am satisfied .. — ii. 1 
A'enus one fair word, one nick-name — ii. 1 

ere one can say— it lightens — ii. 2 

on a sudden, one hath wounded me. . — ii. 3 

a grave, to lay one in, another — ii. 3 

in one respect I'll thy assistant be . . — ii. 3 
one, two, and tlie third in your bosom — ii. 4 
more of the wildgoose in oneof thy wits — ii. 4 
one, gentlewoman, that God hath made — ii. 4 
keep counsel, putting one away? .... — ii. 4 

a nobleman in town, one Paris — ii. 4 

of joy that one short minute gives me — ii. 6 
holy church incorporate two m one.. — ii. 6 
thou art like one of those fellows ... . — iii. 1 

for one would kill the other — iii. 1 

a word with one of you (lep.) — iii. 1 

nothing, but one of your nine lives .. — iii. 1 
with one hand beats cold death aside — iii. 1 
those twenty could but kill one life. . — iii. 1 
and Romeo, press one heavy bierl .. — iii. 2 

that one word, banished, hath — iii. 2 

arise, one knocks; good Romeo — iii. 3 

one kiss, and I'll descend — iii. 5 

as one dead in the bottom of a tomb — iii. 5 

I'll send to one in Mantua — iii. 5 

one, who, to put thee from thy heaviness — iii. 5 
in one little body thou counterfeit'st — iii. 5 

I see tliis one is one too much — iii. 5 

may not one speak? Peace — iii. 5 

proportioned as one's heart could wish — iii. 5 
out one, poor one, one poor and (r^p.) — iv. 5 
every one prepare to follow this fair. . — iv. 5 

one of our order, to associate me — v. 2 

one writ with me in sour misfortune's — v. 3 
here's one, a friend, and one that knows — v. 3 

my master one that you love — V, 3 

anon, conies one with light to ope the — v. 3 

the bell tiien beating one Hamlet, i. 1 

to be contracted in one brow of woe — i. 2 

with one auspicious, and one dropping eye — i. 2 

while one witli moderate haste — i. 2 

carrying, I say, the stamp of one defect. . — i. 4 
that one may smile, and smile, and be . . — i. 5 

give me one poor request — i. 5 

[Co/. ifn(.] one to my gracious king...... — ii. 2 

then is the world one. A goodly one .... — ii. 2 

Denmark being one of tlie worst — ii. 2 

then your ambition makes it one — ii. 2 

why— one fair daughter, and no more . . — ii. 2 
I remember, one said, there were no ... . — ii. 2 

one speech in it I chiefly loved — ii. 2 

God hath given you one face, and you . . — iii. 1 
married already, all but one, shall live.. — iii. 1 

madness in great ones must not — iii. 1 

the censure of which one, must, in your — iii. 2 

as one, in sufiering all, that suffers — iii. 2 

one scene of it comes near — iii. 2 

do not itself unkennel in one speech — iii. 2 

one as kind for husband shalt thou — iii. 2 

this is one Lucianus, nephew to the king — iii. 2 
o whole one, I. For thou dost know .... — iii. 2 

O the recorders: let me see one — iii. 2 

may one be pardoned, and retain the.... — iii. 3 

when one can not repent? — iii. 3 

but a sickly part of one true sense — iii. 4 

but one word more, good lady — iii. 4 

but I will delve one yard below their. ... — iii. 4 

when in one line two crafts — iii. 4 

two dishes, but to one table — iv. 3 

man and wife is one flesh — iv. 3 

hath but one part wisdom, and, ever .... — iv. 4 
would make one think, there might .... — iv. b 
true love know from another one? — iv. 5 (song) 
such envy fn;m him, as did that one .... — iv. 7 
a sight indeed, if one could match you .. — iv. 7 

one woe doth tread upon another's — iv. 7 

as one incapable of her own distress .... — iv. 7 

one that would circumvent God — v. 1 

his purchases, and double ones too — v. 1 

one, that was a woman, sir >•- v. 1 



ONE now, to mock your own grinning?. . Hamlet, v. 1 

fr'ythee, Horatio, tell me one thing .... — v. 1 
ife's 110 more than to say, one — v. 2 

come, one for me. I'll be your foil — v. 2 

one. No. Judgment. A hit — v. 2 

three great ones of the city Olliello,i. 1 

one JMichael Cassio, a Florentine i. 1 

and such a one do I profess myself — i. 1 

zounds, sir, you are one of those — i. 1 

I am one, sir, that comes to tell you .... — i. 1 

some one way, some another i. 1 

this very night, at one another's lieels . . — i. 2 
goodnight to every one: and, noble signior — i- 3 

supply it with one gender of herbs — i. 3 

had not one scale of reason to poise i. 3 

one that excels the quirks of blazoning .. — ii. 1 
'tis one lago, ancient to the general .... — ii, I 

there's one gone to the harbour? — ii. 1 

the one's for use, the other useth it — ii. l 

pranks which fair and wise ones do — ii. 1 

one, that in the authoritj' of her merit . . — ii. 1 
he is a good one, and his worthiness does — ii. 1 

but one cup; I'll drink for you (rep.) — ii. 3 

good faith a little one; not past a pint . . — ii. 3 

the one as long as the other — ii. 3 

with one of an ingraft infirmity — ii. 3 

and tilting one at other's breast — ii. 3 

as one would beat his offenceless dog. .. . — ii. 3 
discourse fustian with one's own shadow? — ii. 3 
one unperfectness sliows me another .... — ii. 3 
tell her, there's one Cassio entreats her. . — iii. I 
if he be not one that truly loves you .... — iii . 3 

from one tliat so imperfectly conjects — iii. 3 

fob! one may smell, in such, a will — iii. 3 

yet, 'tis the plague of great ones — iii. 3 

one of this kind is Cassio — iii. 3 

I gave her such a one; 'twas ray — iii. 3 

oneis too poor, too weak for my revenge! — iii. 3 

'tis a good hand, a frank one — iii. 4 

though great ones are their object — iii. 4 

his second fit, he had one yesterday — iv. 1 

to beguile many, and be beguiled hy one — iv. I 
another fitchew! marry, a perfumed one — iv. 1 
a most unhappy one; 1 would do much.. — iv. 1 
lest, being like one of heaven, the devils — iv. 2 

would it not make one weep? iv. 2 

to fall out between twelve and one — iv. 2 

all's one: good father! how foolish are.. — iv. 3 
shroud me iu oneof those same sheets.... — iv. 3 

to go hang my head all at one side — iv. 3 

here's one comes in his shirt, with light — v. 1 

one of them is here about (,rep.) — v. 1 

one more, one more (.lep.) — v. 2 

but while I say one prayer — v. 2 

world of one entire and perfect chrysolite — v. 2 
the one of them imports the death of ... . — v. 2 

of one, that loved not wisely (rep.) — v. 2 

of one, whose hand, like the base Judean — v. 2 

of one, whose subdued eves, albeit unused — v. 2 

UNE-TRUNK-INHERITING slave .... Lear, ii. 2 

ONEYER— and great oneyers \HenryJV. ii. 1 

ONGLEri— les oiigles? les ongles? .... Henry V. iii. 4 
O'NIGHT— in earlier o'nights .... TwelflhNlght, i. 3 
ONION— eat no onions, nor garlick.Jlftd.iV.'sDr. iv. 2 

mine eyes smell onions, I shall All's Well, v. 3 

an onion will do well for. . Taming of Sh. 1 (indue.) 

the tears live in an onion Antony^ Cleopatra, i. 2 

ONION-EYED— I, an ass, am onion-eyed — iv. 2 
ONSET-to give the onset to thy. TwoGen. ofVer. iii. 2 

the onset and retire of both your King John, ii. 2 

for an onset, Titus, to advance .. Tilus Andron. i. 2 
ON WARD— when you went onward . . Much Ado,\.\ 

which we have goaded onward Cariolanus, ii. 3 

OOZE— to tread the ooze of the salt deep. Tempest, i. 2 
therefore my son i' the ooze is bedded — iii. 3 

as is the ooze and bottom of the sea Henry V. i. 2 

a gum, which oozes from whence.. Timon ofAth. i. 1 
upon the slime and ooze scatters. Antony SfCleo. ii. 7 
find the ooze, to show what coast ..Cymbeline, iv. 2 

scarcely cofiined, in the ooze Pericles, iii. 1 

OOZ Y— mudded in that oozy bed Tempest, v. 1 

OPAL— thy mind is a very opal! ..TwelfthNiglit, ii. 4 

OPE— bids thee ope thine ear Tempest, i. 2 

do not ope tliine eyes Much Ado, i v. 1 

when I ope my lips, let no dog . . Mer. of Venice, i. 1 

ere I ope nis letter, I pray you — iii. 2 

I'll break ope the gate Comedy of Errors, iii. 1 

hath broke ope the lord's anointed.... il/acl)f (A, ii. 3 
shall we fling wide ope, and give. . . . KingJolm, ii. 2 
now, citizens of Anglers, ope your gates — ii. 2 
he is come to ope the purple Ric/iard 1 1, iii. 3 

Henry, ope thine eyes! "iHenryVl. iii. 2 

set ope thy everlasting gates — iv. 9 

the morning ojpes her golden gaXss.. ZHenry FT. ii. 1 
brazen gates of heaven may ope .... — ii. 3 

wilt thou ope the city gates — y. 1 

when rank Thersites opes his. Troilus fy Cressida, i. 3 
rampiied gates, and they shall ope.TimonofAlh. v.b 

so, now the sates are ope Coriolanus, i. 4 

in time break ope the locks o' the .. — iii. 1 

behold, the heavens do ope — v. 3 

he plucked me ope his doublet .... Julius Ccesar. i. 2 

do ope their ruby lips — iii. 1 

to ope their golden eyes Cymbeline, ii. 3 (song) 

thy crystal window one — v. 4 

to make me ope the door .... Tilus Andronicus, v. 2 

will choke me, if I ope my mouth — v. 3 

his bed of blackness unlaid ope Pericles, i. 2 

before you fight the baltle, ope this letter. Lenr, v. 1 
ope her lap to saint-seducing.... /?omeo<^J«/(>«, i. 1 
comes one with light to ope the tomb — v. 3 

thus wide I'll ope my arms Hamlet, iv. 5 

torments will ope your lips Olhello, v. 2 

OPED— oped, and let them forth Tempos/, v. 1 

and oped their arms to embvace..TilusAndrou. v. 3 

1 oped the coflfin, and found there Pericles, v. 3 

hath oped his ponderous and marble. . . . Hamie-, i. 4 

OPEN— did Antonio open the gates .... Tempest, i. 2 

to be asleep with eyes wide open — ii. 1 

open your mouth (lep.) — ii. 2 



OPEN your chaps again Tempest, ii. 2 

the clouds, methoiight, would open.... iii. 2 

open the matter in brief TuoGen. of Verona, i. 1 

open your piu se, tjiat the — i. I 

and broke open my lofige , . Merry Wives, i. 1 

his thefts were too open — i. 3 

take heed ; have open eye — ii . 1 

which I with sword will open — ii. 2 

all ways do lie open — ii. 2 

lay open mine own imperfection .... — ii. 2 
never trust me when I open again . . — iv. 2 

or I will not open my lips Twelfth A'ight, i. 5 

thy fates open their hands — ii. .'> (letter) 

discovers not more: this is open .... — ii. ft 

do not then walk too open — iii..'? 

by my troth, thou hast an open hand — iv. 1 

open it, and read it — v. 1 

what's open made to justice .... Meas.forMeas. ii. I 

because it is an open room ' — ii. 1 

I will open ray lips in vain — iii. I 

where we play, open Afid.N.'s Dream, iii. 1 

refused it in the open court ....Mer. of Venice, iv. 1 

then open not thy lips As you Like it, i. 3 

would open his lins when he put it .. — v. I 

made to eat, and lips to open — v. I 

thy casement I need not open All's ll'ell, ii. 3 

the door is open, sir Taming uf Shrew, iii. i 

ere I coidd make thee open thy ..Winier'sTule.i 2 
how came the posterns so easily open? — ii. I 
so shall she have a just and open trial — ii. 3 
partly laid open, thou, Hermione — iii. 2 (imiict.) 
open air, before I have got strength.. — iii. 2 

open't: so, let's see (rep.) — iii. 3 

to his entrance open, or hoop — iv. 3 

to have an open ear, a quick eye ... . — iv. 3 
I command thee to open thy affair . . — iv. 3 

be asleep, and not an ear open — v. 2 

ho, open the door Comedy of Errors, \n. 1 

lay open to my earthy gross conceit — iii. 2 

slanders, and this open shame! — iv. I 

the doors are open; and the surfeited.. il/acteWi, ii. 2 

open, locks, whoever knocks — iv. 1 

you see, her eyes are open — v. 1 

open w ide your sates (rep. ) King Joh ;i , i i . 2 

with open mouth swallowing — iv. 2 

doth lay it open, to urge on revenge — iv. 3 

being brought into the open air — v. 7 

or, being open, put into his hands ..Ricliardll. i. 3 

the open ear of youth doth — ii. 1 

mine ear is open, and my heart is. . .. — iii. 2 

open the door (rfp.) — v. 3 

and lay open all our proceedings ..\HenrylV. ii. 3 
and then open the door. Poins!.... — ii. 4 
gross as a mountain, open, palpable — ii. 4 
from this open and apfjarent shame? — ii. 4 

open your ears; for which 'iHenrylV. (indue.) 

hand open as day for melting charity — iv. 4 
keep'st the ports of slumber open.... — iv. 4 

this door is open; he is gone — iv. 4 

hath left me open to all inj uries . . . . — v. 2 
from open haunts and popularity ....Henry V. i. 1 
their faults are open, arrest them .. — ii. 2 

this war opens Ills vasty jaws — ii. 4 

open your gates: come, uncle Exeter — iii. 3 

open the gates irep.) 1 Henry VI. i. 3 

but to make open proclamation .... — i. 3 
in open market-place produced .... — i. 4 

and banquet in the open streets .... — i. G 

open your city gates, be humble — i v. 2 

often lodge in open field iHenryVL i. I 

and I lie open to the law — i. 3 

wink now; now open them — ii. 1 

after three days' open penance done — ii. .1 
my lord, to see my open shame I .... — ii. 4 

break open the gaols, and let out — iv. 3 

if I claim by open war SHenryVI. i. 2 

I'll open them. So looks the — i. 3 

my father's blood open it again — i. 3 

open thy gate of mercy, gracious .... — i. 4 

how to find the open air — iii. 2 

hath pawned an open hand — iv.2 

open the gates, we are king Henry's — iv. 7 
the gates are open, let us enter too .. — v. 1 

welcome to this open air liichard lll.\. I 

dead Henry's wounds open their.... — i. 2 

earth, gape open wide, and eat him.. — i. 2 

so, when he opens his purse to give. . — i. 4 
his apparent open guilt omitted .... — iii. .i 
laid open all your victories ill Scotland — iii. 7 
have open means to come to them .. — iv. 2 
'tiswoful; we are too open here ..HenryVIIl. ii. 1 
will one day open the king's eyes .. — ii. 2 
mouth filled up, before you open it. . — ii. 3 

truth loves open dealing — iii. 1 

for .vou have seen him open't — i ii. 2 

his faults lie open to the laws — iii- 2 

this day was viewed in open — iii. 2 

pour'st in the open ulcer of . . Troilus SfCressida, \. 1 
what, are all the doors open here? .. — iv. 2 

his heart and hand both open — iv. 5 

a juggling trick, to be— secretly open — v. 2 
and left me open, bare for every.. Timon ofAth. iv. 3 

break open shops; nothing ciin — iv. 3 

it opens the eyes of expectation — v. I 

often of your open bounty tasted.... — v. 1 
descend, and open your uncharged ports — v. h 

they'll open of themselves Corinlnnns, i. 4 

to open the breast of heaven JuliusCtPsar, i. 3 

lightens, opens graves, and roars .... — i. 3 

and open perils surest answered .... — iv. 1 

he'd lay the future open Cymbeline, iii. 2 

open the gates, and let me in.. Tiius Andronicus, i. I 
be not obdurate, open thy deaf cars.. — ii. 3 

open them, boy: but thou art — iv. 1 

that I should open to the listening air . . Pericles, i. 2 

your purse, still open, hath built — iii. a 

wrench it open straight (rep.) — iii. 2 

and open tliis to Pericles — iv. 4 

at point to show their open biinner Lear, iii. 1 

open this purse, and take what it coutuius — iii. 1 



(iPEN— the tyrntiny of tlie open night's . . Lear, iii. 4 

Iicre is better than the open air — iii. 6 

ICol.'] an open etcetera Romeo Sf Juliet, ii. 1 

enforce thj' rotten jaws to open — v. 3 

if thon be merciful, open the tomb .. — v. 3 
and all run, with open outcry, toward — v. 3 

fit to open dead men's tombs — v. 3 

or your chaste treasure open to his ....Hawlet.i. 3 

that he is open to incontinency — ii. 1 

the Moor is of a free and open nature . . Othello, i. 3 
offices are open; and there is full liberty — ii. 2 

OPENED— as mine eyes oijencd, I saw . Tcmpesi, ii. 1 
if he were opened, and you find.7'»'(;/v/i Aj^/i/, iii. 2 
and those gates opened, as mine.. Winii'i\ lair, i. 2 

■when they shall be opened, black Miifiwi!,. iv. 3 

I have opered to his grace at large .... Ihm i/i'. i. 1 

the gates shall then be opened ZHinnjl I iv. 7 

mv hand as opened bounty to yon.Henry till. iii. 2 

I feel my heart new opened — iii. 2 

opened, m despite of hea\en Cymbcline, v. 6 

equal mine, if both were opened I'erieles, v. 1 

that, opened, lies within ovir remedy . . Hmnlct, ii 2 

OPENER— opener and intelligencer .iEenrijlf. iv. 2 

OPEN-EYED conspiracy his Tempest, ii. 1 ^song) 

OPENING with tlus bigger \i.ty..Meus..rorMer,s. iv. 1 
all fiery-red, opening on Neptune. Wid.iV.'sDr. iii. 2 
the first opening of tlie "orgeous.topc'sL. /.os/, iv. 3 

the opening of his mouth As you I ike it, iv. 3 

Leontes,opening his free arms .. Wiuler'sTale, iv. 3 
I was by at the opening of the fardel — v. 2 

with opening titles miscreate Henry V. i. 2 

at the openingof his tent ....Troilus ^■Cressi(la,n.3 

for fear of opening my lips JuliusCrr-sar, i. 2 

not believe her lips in opening it Crjinbfline, v. 5 

OPENLY— proclaimed it openly.. Tnmmi'nfSh. iv. 2 
since we so openly proceed in.... IVinler sTnle, iii. 2 
which now you wear so openly. . Comedy of Err. v. 1 
and my case so openly known to ..iHenryll'. ii. 1 
shall show itself more openly hereafter — iv. 2 
calls your grace usurper, openly. ...2ffe>Mi/r/. iv. 4 
madam! be dishonoured openly ..TitusAitdron.i.i 
maintain such aquarrel openly? .... - ii. 1 

OPENNESS— with more openness .... Cymheline, i. 7 

i OPERANT— most opei ant poison I. Timono/.-1/A.iv. 3 

operant powers their functions leave.. Hdm/tv, iii. 2 

OPERATE-operate another way. Troilus Sf Crrss. v. 3 
I in your duller Britain operate most. Cyynbetinc, v. 5 

OPERATIONS in my head Merry lyires, i. 3 

hath a twofold operation in it IHenryll'. iv. 3 

hath an operation more divine.. TroilusS/ Cress, iii. 3 
by tlie operation of your sun ....Antony^ Cteo. ii . 7 
edge, sting, or operation. I am safe .. — iv. 13 

by all the operations of the orbs I.enr, i. 1 

the operation of the second cup, Romeo ^-Juliei, iii. 1 

OPERATIVE— many simples operative . . Lrur, iv. 4 

OPHELIA, fear it, my dear sister Hamlet, i. 3 

farewell, Ophelia; and remember well .. — i. 3 
what is 't, Ophelia, he hath said to you? — i. 3 

Ophelia, do not believe his vows — i. 3 

how now, Ophelia? Avhat's the matter? .. — 

the most beautified Ophelia — ii .2 (letter 

dear Ophelia, I am illjat these.. — ii. 2 (letter 

may liere aifront Ophelia — 

for your part, Ophelia, I do wish .... — 

Ophelia, walk you here — 

soft you now; the fair Ophelia — 

how now, Ophelia? (rep. iv. 5) — 

nay, but Opbelia— Pray you, mark .. — iv. 5 
prett3' Ophelia! Indeed, without an oath — iv. 5 

jioor Ophelia divided from herself — iv. 5 

dear maid, kind sister, sweet Ophelia! — iv. .'i 
Ophelia, and therefore I forbid my tears — iv. 7 
the fair Ophelia! sweets to the Bwcet — v. I 

1 loved Ophelia; forty thousand brothers — v. 1 
OPINION — let loose my opinion Tempest, 11. z 

in thy opinion, which is .... TwoGen. of Verona, i. 2 

a hard opinion of his truth — ii. 7 

in this mystery of ill opinions Merry H'ives, ii. 1 

cannot put oft my opinion so easily.. — ii. 1 
the north of my lady's opinion.. TirelflhNighl, iii. 2 
into a most hideous opinion of his rage — iii. 4 
the opinion of Pythagoras (re;j.) .... — iv. 2 
what thiuk'st thou of his opinion? ., — iv. 2 

no way approve his opinion — iv. 2 

ny poor opinion, they willto't. . Mens. for Meas. ii. 1 
with that opinion that I am touched — v. 1 
is the opinion that fire cannot melt ..Much.ldo, i. 1 
one an opinion of another's dotage .. — ii. 3 

learned without opinion Love^sL.I ost, v. 1 

dressed in an opinion of wisdom. , Mer. of Venice, i. 1 

this fool's gudgeon, this opinion — i. 1 

say thy opinion, how dost thou like — iii. 5 
nay, but a^k myoi)inion tooof that.. — iii. 6 
to hold opinion with Pythaf»ora3 .... — iv. 1 
he is furnished with my opinion — iv. 1 (letter) 
opinion that grows rank in them..-!.': you Like it, ii, 7 
bear a good opinion of my knowledge — v. 2 

at least, in my opinion AWsll't'tt, iv. 2 

what's your opinion of your sister? V'ainiiij'o/.s/i. iii. 2 
be cured of this diseased opinion.. Il'inler'sl'ale, i. 2 

in my true opinion? Alack — ii. I 

remove the root of his opinion — ii . 3 

I have bought golden opinions Machelh, i. 7 

makes sound opinions sick King John, iv. 2 

men's opinions, and my living blood. ydV/i'iri //. iii. 1 

partly my own opinion 1 Henry IV. ii. 4 

haughtiness, opinion, and disdain .. — iii. 1 
opinion, that did help me to tlie crown — iii. 2 
a lustre, and more great opinion .... — iv. 1 
thou hast redeemed thy lost opinion — v. 4 

speak plainly your opinions tHenrylV. i. 3 

better opinion, better confirmation .. — iv. 4 

and to raze out rotten opinion — v . 2 

killed with your hard oijinions — tejiil.l 

partly, to satisfy my opinion Heviyl'. iii. 2 

let me have your express opinions . . 1 Henry Vl.i. i 
yield the other in the ri"ht opinion . . — ii. 4 
opinion bleed, opinion shall be surgeon — ii. 4 

in our opinions she should be — v. .^» 

in my opinion, yet thou see'st not ..iHenryVI. ii. 1 



[ 550 ] 

OPINION— in craving your opinion ..iUenryVI. ii. 2 

then, this is my opinion 3//i'h;;//7. iv. I 

mj' opinion, ought to be prevented .lUchardlU. ii. 2 

in mine opinion, cannot have it — iii. 1 

the opinion that we bring ..Henry VIIL (prolo^jue) 
there s an ill opinion spread then .... — ii. 2 
commends his good opinion to you .. — ii. 3 
envy and base opinion set against them — iii. 1 

our just opinions, and comforts — iii. 1 

he is returned, in his opinions — iii. 2 

his own opinion was his law — iv. 2 

new opinions, divers, and dangerous — v. 2 

Achilles, whoin opinion crowns.. Troilus 4' Cress, i. 3 
oiiiiiioii crowns with an imperial voice — i. 3 
in the trial mueh opinion dwells .... — i. 3 

to steal a strong opinion to themselves — i. 3 
our raaiu opinion crush in — i. 3 

fo we under our opinion still — _i. 3 
lector's opinion is this, in way of .. — ii. 2 
a pla,!,'ue of o^iinioii! a man may .... — iii. 3 

fish witli cratt for great opinion — iv. 4 

and policy grows into an ill opinion — v. 4 

none, but to maintain my opinion. Tiinon of Alh. iv. 3 

the poor itch of your opinion Coriolunus, i. 1 

opinion, that so sticks on Marcius .. — i. 1 

so, your opinion is, Aufidius, that.... — i. 2 
all tending to the great opinion that — _i. 2 

yon had hut that opinion of yourself — ii. 1 

will purchase us a good opinion — ii. 1 

quite from the main opininn he held — ii. 1 
bring me their opinions of success.. .. — ii. 2 
Epicurus strong, and his Oinnion . . JuliusCfPsar, v. 1 
let us rear the higher our opinion /in^OTii/ ^ Cleo. ii. 1 
or this gentleman's opinion, by this. . Cymheline, i. 5 
which, in ray opinion, o'ervalues it .. — i. 5 
for your ill opinion, and the assault .. — i. 5 
foul opinion you hadof her pure honour — ii. 4 
is in opinion, and in honour, vrrovged.Tilus And. i. 2 

opinion's but a. fuol, that maltes Pericles, ii. 2 

a good opinion, and that opinion a mere — iv. 3 

his very opinion in the letter! Lear, i. 2 

when false opinion, whose wrong thought — iii. 6 
in the gross and scope of mine opinion . . Hamlet, i. 1 
to cast beyond ourselves in our opinions — ii. 1 
the most fond and winnowed opinions.. — v. 2 
opinion, a sovereign mistress of efiects . , Othello, i. 3 
spend your rich opinion, for the name of — ii. 3 
smallest opinion on my greatest abuse? .. — iv. 2 
do build on thee a better opinion than . . — iv. 2 

OPINIONED-let them be opinioned.il/«c/i Ado, iv. 2 

OPPORTUNE place, the strongest.... Vewpffsi, iv. I 
most opportune to our need l1'iiiler''sTale, iv. 3 

OPPORTUNITIES to meet her ..Merry Wives, ii. 2 

when I have good opportunities — iii. 1 

give thee opportunities at. . Cymheline, iii. 4 (letter) 
opportunities to cut him off Lear,\v. 6 (letter) 

OPPORTUNITY and humblest ..Merry Wn>es,\\\. 4 
double gilt of this opportunity. . TwelfthNighl, iii. 2 
trust the opportunity otmght.Mid.N.'sDream, ii. 2 

more better opportunity to be Henry V. iii. 2 

embrace we then this opportunity. .IfleKij^/'/. ii. 1 
we shall not find like opportunity . . — v. 4 
sluttish spoils of opportunity.. Troilus Si' Cress, iv. 5 

admittance, and opportunity Cymheline, i. 5 

the opiiortunity of a second conference — i. 5 
that opportunity, which then they had — iii. 1 
shall give thee opportunity .... — iii. 2 (letter) 
with opportunity of sharp revenge. Titus.indron. i. 2 
I will omit no ojiportunity;. . . . Homeo Sr Juliet, iii. 5 
if I can bring it to any opportunity Othello, ii. 1 

OPP SE— opposes her against. Two Gen. of Ver. iii. 2 
I do oppose my patience to his. Mer. of Venice, iv. 1 

oppose against their wills Winter's Tale, v. 1 

that woiud oppose my will Macbeth, iv. 3 

alone do me oppose against the yope.KiiigJohn, iii. 1 
and 0!>pose not myself against .... Richard II. iii. 3 
oppose himself against a troop of..2HenryVL iii. I 

oppose thy stedfast-gazing eyes — iv. 10 

makes him oppose himself against .. — v. 1 
if you oppose yourselves to match i. — v. 1 
too weak to oppose your cunning.. HeniiyF7/f, ii. 4 
whom may you else oppose .... Troilus ^- Cress, i. 3 

he did oppose his foe Timonof Athens, iii. 5 

to oppose his hatred fully Coriola»us, iii. 1 

where I will oppose his fate.... .4n(on!/i§-C(eo. iii. 11 
what he looked for should oppose . . Cymheline, ii. 5 
oppose not Sc\'thia to ambitious.. Titus Andron. i. 2 
to oppose the bolt against my coming in.. Lear, ii. 4 
and heavy causes make oppose — v. 1 

OPPOSED end of our intents Love's L.Losl, v. 2 

offices, and of opposed natures .Merch. of Venice, ii. 9 
black and fearful on the opposed .... All's Well, iii. 1 
to give ray hand, opposed against. T'ainiVigo/.s/i. iii. 2 
from the ends of opposed winds . . Wittier' s Tale, i. 1 

when 'tis opposed, as it must be — iv. 3 

thou opposed, being of no woman horu. Macbeth, v,7 
opposed eyes, which, like meteors. . . . 1 Henry IV.].\ 
no.more opposed against acquaintance — i. 1 
gelding the opposed continent as much — iii. 1 
my lord, they shall be well opposed.. — iv. 4 
whereby we stand opposed by such .. — v. 1 
fronting peril, and opposed decay !..2Henii//r. iv. 4 
if the opposed numbers pluck their ..Henry V. iv. 1 

you are potently opposed Henry I^IIL v. 1 

out eye to eye opposed salutes. . Troilus 4 Cress, iii. 3 

misprising the knight opposed — iv. 6 

they are opposed already — iv. h 

sword drawn, opposed to hinder me.. — v, 3 
are my doors opposed against .Timonof Athens, iii. 4 
in general part we were opposed .... — v. 3 
half to half the world opposed. ./ln(o>i!/iS-C/eo. iii. 11 

to such neat excellence opposed Cymheline, i. 7 

neutral heart, and not to one opposed . . Lear, iii. 7 

remorse, opposed against the act — iv. 2 

[A'u/. J opposed against the jarring winds? — iv. 7 
two such opposed foes encamp . . Homeo SfJuliei, ii. 3 
guard, nor eye, if you opposed them . . Hamlet, iv. 7 

OPPOSEIiESS— great opposeless wills Lear, iv. 6 

Oi'PO.SMR— thy opposers' swords! ....Coriatanns. i. 
siew three upposers — ii. 2 



! OPPOSER Coriolanus being now Coriolanus,\v. 3 

I bear it that the opposer may beware Hamlet, i. 3 

OPPOSINt; freely the beauty of her Henri/ ;/;;. iv. 1 

opposing laws with strokes Conotanns, iii. 3 

by the four opposing coignes ..Pericles, iii. (Oowei) 
and, by opposing, end them? to die r. . Hamlet, iii. 1 

OPPOSITE to humanity Timonof Alliens, i. 1 

opposite with a kinsman (rep. iii. 4) TwelfthN.ni (let.) 

and his opposite, the youth — iii. 2 

for ^our opposite hath in him — iii. 4 

skilful, bloody, and fatal ojiposite .. — iii. 4 
too unhurtfulan oppositeMeaswei/'oj- Measure, iii. 2 
what is opposite to England's love. .A'ing-./o/in, iii. 1 
the Dauphin is too will'iil opposite .. — v. 2 

to weigh against his opposite iHcnrylV. i. 3 

and fearful meeting of their opposite — iv. 1 
from a stubborn opposite intent. . ..2Henry VI. iii. 2 
being opposites of such repairing nature — v. 3 
thou art as opposite to every good . .3 Henry VI. i. 4 
to be thus opposite with heaven ..Richard III. ii. 2 

food stars were opposite — iv. 4 
e opposite all planets of good — iv. 4 

daring an opposite to every danger.. — v. 4 
fully discover him their opposite . . Coriolanus, ii. 2 
does become the opposite of itself ..-^ntojii/i^'C'fo. i. 2 
who were the opposites of this day's strife. Lear, v. 3 
not bound to answer an unknown opposite — v. 3 
opposite to what thou justly. ../(omeoi^ ./'<''>'. iii. 2 
each opposite, that blanks the faee....Hu)nW, iii. 2 

incensed points of mighty opposites — v. 2 

so opposite to marriage, that she Othello, i. 2 

have the ofiice opposite to saint Peter .. — iv. 2 

OPPOSITION of our spirits Love' sL. Lost, v. 2 

in single opposition, hand to hand .,\ Henry IV. i. 3 
countcrpoiseof so great an opposition — ii. 3 
found no opposition but what he . . Cymheline, ii. 5 
more remarkable in single oppositions — iv. 1 
disobedient opposition to you.. Komeo Sf Juliet, iv. 2 

in our peevish opposition Hamiel, i. 2 

my lord, the opposition of yourperson.. — v. 2 
one at other's breast, in opposition .... Othello, ii. 3 

OPPRESS— did oppress our nest \HenrylV. v. 1 

so oppress me with thine eye? Troilus <S Cressida, i v. 5 

dumps the mind opiimss. Itomeo ^ Juliet, iv. b (song") 

OPPRESSED— oppressed with travel . . Tempest, iii. 3 

maid with travel much oppressed. .-ii'ynu Likeit, ii. 4 

first sufiiced,— oppressed with two — ii. 7 

ne'er oppressed me with a mother's ..All's Well, i. 3 

from the heat oppressed brain? Macbeth, ii. I 

and rights of this oppressed boy ....KingJohn, ii. 1 
in the relief of this oppressed child.. — ii. 1 
oppressed with wrongs, and therefore — iii. 1 
much oppressed them with great ..SHenryVI. iv. 8 
all our offices have been oppressed. Timon of.'tth. ii. 2 

when nature, being oppressed Lear, ii. 4 

oppressed nature sleeps; this rest — iii. 6 

for thee, oppressed king, ami cast down — v. 3 

by their oppressed and fear-surpvised ..Hamlet, i. 2 

OPPRESSES— it oppresses me already ..Othello, i. 1 

OPPRESSETH-oppresseth strength. /(/c/iujrf//. iii. 2 

OPPRESSING and betraying mi..Timon of Alh. iv. 3 

OPPRESSION-of shame, oppression. King John, iii. 1 

our oppression hath made up this league — iii. 1 

counterfeit oppression of such grief. . Richard i/. i. 4 

stoop with oppression of their prodigal — iii. 4 

subjects to oppression and contempt . . Henry V. ii. 2 

such as your oppression feeds. 1 Henry VI. iv. 1 (let.) 

free from oppression, or the stroke of war — v. 3 

how under my oppression I did. . . . Henry VIII. ii. 4 

our oppression exceeds what. ...Antony 4' Cleo. iv. 7 

in the oppression of aged tyranny ..Lear, i. 2 (let.) 

at thy good heart's oppression ..RomeoSf Juliet, i. I 

too great oppression for a tender thing — i. 4 

need and oppression starveth in thy eyes — v. 1 

lack call to make oppression bitter .... Hamlet, ii. 2 

OPPRESSOR— the oppressor's wrong — iii. 1 

OPPROBRIOUSLY? No doubt ..Uiehard III. iii. 1 
OPPUGNANCY-mereoppugnancy. Trail.4- Cress, i. 3 
OPULENCY— youth and opulency. 7'i)ko»i of Alh. v. 1 
OPULENT— her opulent throne ..Antony 4 Cteo. i. 5 
a third more opulent than yom' sisters? . . Lear, i. 1 

ORACLE — against an oracle Tempest, iv. 1 

some oracle must rectify our knowledge — y. 1 

his oaths are oracles Two Gen. of Verona, ii. 7 

as we would hear an oracle Love's L. Lost, i. 1 

I am sir Oracle, and when I ope. .Mer. of Venice, i. I 
from the oracle they will bring .. Winier'sTale, ii. 1 

yet shall the oracle give rest to — ii. 1 

those you sent to the oracle, oi-e come — ii. 3 
the ear-deafening voice 0' the oracle — iii. 1 

I do refer me to the oracle — iii. 2 

in Apollo's name, his oracle — iii. 2 

have brought this sealed- up oracle .. — iii. 2 
there is no truth at all i' the oracle — iii. 2 
profaneness 'gainst thine oracle! .... — iii. 2 

is't not the tenor of his oracle — v. 1 

the oracle is fulfilled (rep.) — v. 2 

that the oracle gave hope thou wast — y.'i 
may they not be my oracles as well ..Macbeth, iii. 1 
these oracles are hardily attained . .2 Henry VI. i. 4 

my oracle, my prophet I Richard III. ii.'i 

of the king, and is his oracle Henry VIII. iii. 2 

this Oracle of comfort has so pleased nie — y. 4 
hear music, wit, and oracle . . Troilus <§" Cressida, i. 3 
bold as an oracle: and sets Thersites — i. 3 
wert thou an oracle to tell me so ... . — iv. 5 
the oracle hath doubtfully . . Timon of Athens, iv. 3 
let my gravestone be y oiir oracle .... — v. 2 
answering the letter of the oracle . . Cymheline, v. 5 

ORANGE— civil as an orange Mueh Ado, ii. 1 

give not this rotten orange to your . . — iv. 1 

ORANGE-TAWNY beard ....Mid. N.'s Dream, i. 2 

(if hue, with orange-tawny bill .. — iii. 1 (song) 

ORANGE-WIFE— an orange- wife ..Coriolanus, ii. 1 

ORATION— oration fairly spoke.Mer. of Venice, iii. 2 

being 'drest to some oration. . Troilus 4' Cressida, i. 3 

thy horse will sooner con an oration — ii. 1 

there shall Itry, in my oration. .J«('».s C/Tsar, iii. I 

to serve for your oration Titus .■indiovb-us, iv. 3 

deU\er an oration to the emperor. ... — iv, 3 



ORATION— fold it in the oration. . TiliisAiidroii. iv. 3 

OliATOR— very good orators Asynu Like U, iv. I 

my lord, but a naughty orator All's ilell.y. 3 

thy own shame's orator Comedy of Ermrs, iii. 2 

methought, did play the orator ...AHeuryl'l. iv. 1 

how quaint an orator you are iHcnryVl. iii. 2 

no, I can better play the orator . . ..iHenry VI. i. 2 

hath Cliiford played the orator — ji. 2 

for Warwick 13 a subtle orator — iii. 1 

pi av the orator as well as Nestor — iii. 2 

I'lfplay the orator, as if the Richard 111. in. 5 

gold were as good as twenty orators — iv. 2 

5)oor breathing orators of miseriesi .. — iv. 4 
[ am no orator, as Brutus is JuliusCirsar, iii. 2 

my tears are now prevailing oTatora.TilusAud. iii. 1 
sweet poetry and Tully's orator .... — iv. 1 

ORATORY— with all their oratory. . 1 Ilmry Vl-n. 2 
if my weak oratory can from his.. RiclmrdlJ I. in. 1 

when my oratory grew to an end — iii. 7 

of tears will drown mv oratory .. Titus Andron. v. 3 

ORB— does walk about the orl) . . TwelfthNight, ui. 1 
you seem to me as Dian in her orb . . Ahicli Ado, iv. 1 
to dew her orbs upon the green ..Mid. N.'s Dr. ii. 1 
there's not the smallest oro.Merchanl of Venicf, v. I 
move in that obedient orb again — 1 Henry I y. v. 1 
thy sister's orb infect the aivUTiinonof Alliens, iv.3 

folds in this orb o' the earth Coriidanus, v. 5 

have empty left their orbs Antony ^ Cleo. ill. II 

meant to quail and shake the orb — v. 2 

'twixt tlie fiery orbs above Cymbeline, i. 7 

after this strange starting from your orbs — v. b 

but in our orbs we'll live so Pericles, i. 2 

by all the operations of the orbs Irar, i. 1 

changes in her circled orb Romeo Sf Juliet, n. 2 

and tlie orb below as hush as death Hamlet, ii. 2 

ORBED-that orbed continent. . . . Twelfth Night, v. 1 
and Tellus' orbed ground Hamlet, iii. 2 

ORCHARD-I saw't i' the OTcharii.TwelfthNlg/d,in. 2 
me for him at the corner of the orchard — iii. 4 

attends thee at the orchard end — iii. 4 

thick-pleached alley in my orchard ..MuchAdo,_i. 2 
bring it hither to me in the orchard — ii. 3 

I and Ursula walk in the orchard .. — iii. 1 
saw afar off in the orchard this amiable — in. 3 
brought into the orchard, and saw me — v. 1 
very well, here in your orchard ..AsyouLikeit.i. 1 
walk a little in the orchard . . Taming of Slirew, ii. 1 
let him be brought into the orchard.. A'i'Hi'JoAn, v. 7 

walked forth into the orchard iHenryW. i. 1 

you shall see mine orchard — v.i 

walk here 1' the orchard Troilus ^ Cressida, iii. 2 

and new-planted orchards Julius C<esar, iii. 2 

and leaped tliis orchard wall Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 1 

the orchard walls are high, and hard to — ii. 2 
sleeping in my orchard (rsp.) Hatnlet,!. 5 

'ORD— as prave 'ords at the pridge Henry F. iii. 6 

ORDAIN-ordain, impose some gentle. Km^fJo/in, iii.l 

OKDAINED-music was ordained. Tanmig'o/S/i. iii.l 
being ordained his special governor. .IHeyiri/W. i. I 
from heaven, ordained is to raise this — _ i. 2 
this order was ordained, my lords . . — iv. 1 

wast thou ordained, deoi- father 2Henry FI. v. 2 

amongst the rest, was I ordained — 3 Henry VI. v. B 
this shoulder was ordained so thick.. — v. 7 
Mulmutius, which ordained our laws ..Cymb. iii. 1 
ordained to an honourable end ..Titus Andron. v. 3 
things, that we ordained festival, fiornco ^Juliet, iv. 5 

ORDAINING he should be MerryWives, iii. 5 

1 jOKDER— the several chairs of order . . — \.f> 

<" yourselves in order set — v. 5 

within the modest limits ot otier.TieelfthKight , i. 3 
denunciation lack of outward ordev.Mea.forMea. i. 3 
as 'twere a brother of your order ... . — i . 4 

if your worship will take order for .. — ii. 1 
there are pretty orders beginning. . . . — ii. I 

liad'st thou not order? — ii. 2 

there shall be order for it — ii. 2 

and my blessed order, I come to visit — ii. 3 
allowed by order of law a furred gown — iii. 2 
I am a brother of gracious order .... — iii. 2 

by tlie vow of mine order — i v. 2 

trust not my holy order — iv.3 

that should by private order else have — v. 1 
was a votaress of my order. . . . Mid. N.'s Dream, ii. 2 
give order to my servants ..Merchantof Venice, v. 1 
can you nominate in order now ..AsyouLike ii,y. 4 

fiven order for our horses All'sU'ell, ii. 5 
'11 order take my mother — iv. 2 

this order hath Baptlsta ta'en..Taming of Shrew, i. 2 
to learn the order of my fingering .. — iii.l 
carpets laid, and every thing in order? — iv. 1 

it was the friar of orders grey — iv. 1 (song) 

gave order how it should be done (rt-p.) — iv.3 
ere ancientest order was.. Winter'sTate, iv. (chorus) 
charitable duty of my order ..Comedy of Errors, v. I 

to take order for the wrongs — v. 1 

not upon the order of your going .... Macbeth, iii. i 

according to our order — .X' ^ 

impose some gentle order King John, iii. I 

all form is formless, order orderless . . — iii. 1 
such temperate order in so fierce .... — iii. 4 
Bend fair-play orders, and make .... — v. I 
having our fair order written down.. — v. 2 
order tlie trial, marshal, and begin .. /iic/iard II. i. 3 
which way, to order these afliiirs .... — ii. 2 
madam, there is order ta'en for you — v. 1 
help to order several powers to Oxford — v. 3 
according to our threefold order.... 1 Hen j-j/Zf. iii. 1 

now I live out of all order — iii. a 

and order for their furniture — iii. 3 

let order die! and let this world i Henry IV. i. 1 

I will take such order, that thy fiieuda — iii. 2 

the manner and true order of — iv. 4 

the act of order to a peopled kingdom.. Henci/f'. i 2 
doth order give to Bounds confused — iii. (.chorus • 
to whom the order of the siege is given — iii. 2 
any order might be thought upou (rep.) — iv 5 

toorder peace between them — v. (chorus) 

that things are set in order here ....\HenryVl. ii. 2 
give oi'Uur lor uiy funeral — ii. 



ORDER— some order in tlie town \ Henry VI. iii. 2 

when first this order was ordained .. — iv. 1 
profaning tliis most honourable order — iv. 1 

of the noble order of St. George — 'v. 7 

can take due orders (or a priest ....2HenryVI. iii. 1 
whiles I take order for mine own .... — jii. 1 
until they liear the order of his death — iii. 2 
in order, and march toward us (itp.) — iv. 2 

let's set our men in order 3 Uenry Vl.i.2 

till that the duke give order for ....Richard Ul.i. 4 

the order was reversed (jep.) — ii. 1 

to take some privy order to draw.... — iii. 5 

rC«i.A'"(.] to give order, that no — iii. 5 

I will take order for her keeping close — iv. 2 
some one take order, Buckingham . . — iv. 4 

order gave each thing view HenryVIII. 1. 1 

there's order given for her coronation — lii. 2 

and reverend fathers of his order — iv. I 

in all line of order Troilus ^ Cressida, 1. 3 

plots, orders, preventions — .i. 3 

any voice or order of the field? — iv. 5/ 

consent upon the order of their fight — iv. 5 

will you go see the order of JuliusCa:sar,i. 2 

speak in the order of his funeral .... — iii. I 

and bv that order of proscription — _ 1 v. 3 

order for sea is given .... Antony ir Cleopatra, w. 10 
see high order in this great solemnity — v. 2 
afterwards, toorder well the stSLie.TitusAndrun. v. 3 
reproof, obedient, and in order, fits ....Pericles.i. 2 

we have given order to be next — ii. 3 

a son hy order of law ^''"K'.h ' 

by my holy order, I thought ..Romeo ^Juliet, 111. 3 

one of our order, to associate me — v. 2 

they have already order this night Hamlet, in. 1 

that great command o'ersways the order — v. 1 

give order, that these bodies high on — v. 2 

honest lago hath ta'en order for't Othello, v. 2 

ORDERED- so safely ordered Tempest, 1. 2 

unless it may be quaintly orderedil/er.o/'/'fjiJce, ii. 4 

my battle shall be ordered, Richard JII. v. 3 

all this was ordered by the good — Henry VIII. i. 1 
like a soldier, ordered honourably. Vu;/ii»Cfl;.!ar. y. 5 
are men more ordered, than when..C'?/m6e/iM(!, ii. 4 
bear his courses to be ordered. .fei7'c/es, iv. 4 (Gow.) 

ORDERING on't, is all properly . . Winter' sTale, u. 1 
if thou hast the ordering of the mind — ii. 3 
for the ordering your aftairs, to sing — iv. 3 
have thou the ordering of this ...... King John, v. 1 

ORDERLESS— order orderless — m. 1 

ORDERLY— very orderly . . Two Gen. of Verona,}. 1 

such orderly and well-behaved Merry Wives, li. 1 

bought, and orderly bestowed ..Mer. of Venice, ii. 2 
you are too blunt, go to it orderly. Taming of iVi. ii. 1 
you bid me make it orderly and well — iv. 3 
and orderly proceed to swear him ..Richard II. i. 3 

frame yourself to orderly solicits Cymleline.ii. 3 

but orderly to end where I begun ....Hamlet, iii. 2 

ORDINANCE of times HenryV.\i.i 

by God's just ordinance (rep. v. i). Richard III. ly. 4 
one but of my ordinance stood up. . Coriolanus, iii . 2 
from their ordinance, their natures./uims Ca'sar, 1. 3 
let ordinance come as the gods .... Cymbeline, iv. 2 
man, that slaves your ordinance Lear, iv. 1 

ORDINANT— was heaven ordiuant .... Hamlet, v. 2 

ORDINARIES, to be a pretty wise. ...All's IVell, ii. 3 

ORDINARY— an ordinary man ..Twelfth Nighi, i. 3 
the other day with an ordinary fool — i. 5 

the lunacy is so ordinary As you Like it, iii. 2 

in the ordinary of nature's sale- work — iii. 5 

being an ordinary inundation King John, v. 2 

with his highness very ordinary iUenrylV. iv. 4 

an ordinary groom is for such HenryVIII. V. 1 

make him fly an ordinary pitch . .Julius Caisar, i. 1 
to stale with ordinary oaths my love — i. 2 

fire the blood of ordinary men — iii. I 

for his ordinary, pays his \\eavi.. Antony Sr Cleo. ii. 2 
that which ordinary men are fit for Lear, i. 4 

ORDNANCE- great ordnance.. Taming of Shrew, \. 2 
the compulsion of their ordnance . . King John, ii. 1 

second accent of his ordnance Henry f. ii. 4 

behold the ordnance on their .... — iii. (chorus) 

a piece of ordnance 'gainst it \ Henry VI. i. 4 

all the battlements their ordnance fire. . Hamlet, v. 2 

ORDURE— with ordure hide Henry V. ii. 4 

ORE— counterfeit lump of ore All'sn'ell.ui. 6 

like some ore among a mineral Hamlet, iv. 1 

ORGAN— rai.se up the organs Merry»ives, y. 6 

is as the maiden s organ, shrill. . . . TweiphNight, i. 4 
all the organs of our own power .Meas.forMeas. i. 1 
and every lovely orjjan of ner life ..MuchAdo,iy. 1 
hath not a Jew hands, organs . . Mer. of Venice, iii. 1 

within an organ weak All's Well, ii. 1 

the organs, though defunct H>nryV. iv. 1 

if those organs had deceptions. TroilusSr Cressida, v. 2 
and moves witli its own organs ..AntonySfCleo. ii. 7 

dry up in her the organs of increase Lear, i. 4 

will speak with most miraculous organ. Hamte', ii. 2 

excellent voice, in this little organ — iii. 2 

devise itso, that I might be the organ — iv. 7 

ORGAN-PIPE- dreadlul or"au-pipe.. rempesf, iii. 3 
from the organ-iiipc of frailty King John, v. 7 

ORGULOUS, their high blood. rroi(«s(§C) ess. (prol.) 

ORIENT pearls, stood Mid N.'s Dream, iv. 1 

from the orient to the drooping. 2fieri)j///'. (indue.) 
again transformed to orient pearl .Richard 111. iy- 4 
doubltd kisses, tliis orient paxrl. . Antony 4- Cleo. i. 5 

ORIPICE—admits no orifice ....Troilus ^ Cress. y. 2 

ORIGIN— which contemns its origin Lear, iv. 2 

nature cannot choose his origin Hamlet, j. 4 

the origin and oommcncenient of his grief — iii. I 

ORIGINAL— parents and original. .A/iii.A'.'sDr. 11. 2 
it hath its original from much grief- iHenrylV. i. 2 

ORISONS 'gainst this poor Uenry V. 11. 2 

let's hear the orisons he makes HHe-iryl I. 1. 4 

to encounter lue with orisons Cymbeline, i. 4 

I have need of many orisons ..Romeo cV Juliet, iy. 3 
nymph in thy orisons be all my sins.. Hamlet, iii. 1 

'ORK— we will afterwards 'ork ....MeiryWixvs,]. 1 
good o|iportiMiities for the 'ork — ii>. ' 

OKLAKDO— brother, Orlaudo ....AsyouLikeu.i. 1 



ORLANDO, my liege, the yowi^a^ti. AsyouLike it, i. 2 
poor Orlandoi thou art overthrown — i. 2 

yet I hate not Orlando. No, 'fiiith .. — ..i. 3 
run, run, Orlando, carve, on every tree — iii- 2 
it is young Orlando; that tripped up.. — iii. 2 

'tis he. Orlando? Orlando. Alas — iii. 2 

when there is such a man as Orlando? — iii- 4 

why, how now, Orlando! — iv. I 

give me your hand, Orlando — iv. 1 

will you, Orlando,- Go to (jrp.) — iv. 1 

take thee, Orlando, for my husband — iv. I 
no, no, Orlando! men are April when — iv. 1 
cannot be out of the sight of OrUnirio — iv. I 
two o'clock? and here much Orlando! — iv. 3 
Orlando doth commend him to you.. — ;v- 3 

the young Orlando parted from — ]v. 3 

seeing Orlando, it unlinked itself. ... — iv. 3 
this seen, Orlando did approach .... — iv.3 
but to Orlando; did he leave him .. — iv. 3 
dost thou believe, Orlando, that .... — v- 4 

will bestow her on Orlando here? — v. 4 

yon, yours, Orlando, to receive his . . — v. 4 
'ORLD— fery verson for all the 'orld. Merry Wires. 1. 1 

he is an ass, as in the 'orld Henry V. iii. -2 

well as an^ military man in the 'orld — ii;- 2 

any hurt in the 'orld — ji'- *• 

a man of no estimation in the 'orld.. — ni- li 

make show to the 'orld he is — in- <> 

in the universal 'orld (rep. iv. 8) .... — iv. I 

as can be offisred in the 'orld — iv- 7 

I will confess it to all the 'orld — n ■ 7 

any martial law in the 'orld — iv 8 

yourself, and all the 'orld know to be — v. I 
ORLEANS— and of Orleans, shall make — .ii- 4 

you dukes of Orleans, Bourbon — I !!• ^ 

mv lord of Orleans, and my lord high — iii 7 
cousin Orleans. Now! ray lord .... — iv. 2 
Charles duke of Orleans, nephew.... — iv. 8 
Eheims, Orleans, Paris, Guysors ....\HenryVl. i. 1 
the bastard of Orleans with him .... — i. 1 
retiring from the siege of Orleans..,. — i. 1 

for Orleans is besieged — i. • 

here we lie, near Orleans — 1. 2 

shall we give over Orleans or no?. . . . — 1. 2 

drive them from Orleans — i. 2 

sirrah, thou knowest how Orleans is — }. 4 
now it is supper-time in Orleans .... — i. * 
I must go victual Orleans forthwith — i. 5 

Pucelle is entered into Orleans — i. 5 

rescued is Orleans from the English — i. 6 
recovered is the town of Orleans .... — .!■ 6 

engraved the sack of Orleans — ii. 2 

was not the duke of Orleans thy foe? — ni. 3 

Orleans the bastard, Charles — • iv. 4 

beat down Alengon, Orleans — iv. 6 

the ireful bastard, Orleans, that — iv. 6 

the sword of Orleans hath not IHenryVI. iv. 6 

the dukes of Orleans, Calaber illenryVl.i. 1 

'twixt the duke of Orleans, and Hejiry VIII. ii. 4 

we have known together in Orleans.. Cymbeline, 1. 5 

ORNAMENT th.at decks. . . . Two Gen. of Verona, ii. 1 

ornament, for him I imitate .... Twelfth Night, iii. 4 

the oldornament of his cheek il/uf/i/Jdo, iii. 2 

bedecking ornaments of praise? . . Lore's ;..Los«,ii. 1 
is still deceived with ornament. Mer. of Venice, iii. 2 
hiding the grossness with fair ornament? — iii. 2 
thus ornament is but the gulled shore — iii. 2 
let us see these ornaments . . Taming of Shrew, iy. 3 
so prove, as ornaments oft do .... Winter's 'Tale, i. 2 

thou esteemest the ornament of life Macbeth,]. 7 

the tongue a helpful ornament ....IHenryl V. iii. 1 

this ornament of knighthood IHenryVI. iv. 1 

clothing me in these grave ornaments — y. 1 
deck my body in gay ornaments ..ZHenryVI. in. 2 
true ornaments to know a holy . . Richard III. iii. 7 

and ornaments of household HenryVIII. in. 2 

Rome's rich ornament, that I TilusAndron.i. I 

those sweet ornaments, whose circling — ii. 5 

this ornament that makes me look Pericles, v. 3 

their grave beseeming ornaments. . Romeo ^-Jut.U 1 
brags of his substance, not of ornament — ii. 6 
wit, that ornament to shape and love — iii. 3 
help me sort such needful ornaments — iv. 2 
ORODES, pays this for Marcus .. Antony & Cleo. iii. 1 

ORPHAN— new orphans cry Macbeth, iv.3 

the widows' tears, the orphans' cries.. Henri/ r. 11. 4 
reave the orphan of his patrimouy..2He?i/!(F/. v. 1 
many an orphan's water-standing.. 3 Heiai/K/. v. 6 

and orphans for their parents' — y . 6 

and call us, orphans, wretches Richard III. ii. 2 

were never orphans, had so dear a loss — ii. 2 
a tomb of orphans' tears w ept o-u..Henry VIII. iii. 2 

thou orphans' father art Cymbeline, V. 4 

ORPHAN-IIEIRS of fixed destiny.A/errt/ Wives, v. 5 

ORPHEUS— for Orpheus' lute.. 7Vo&e//.f./; er. in. 2 

didfeign that Orpheus drew trees. Mer. of Venice, v. I 

Orpheus with his lute ....HenryVIII. 111. 1 (song) 

ORSINO— name? Orsino. Orsino'.. . TwelfthNiglu, u i 

from the count Orsino, is it? — i. 5 

we'll once more hear Orsiuo's embassy — 1. 5 

in Orsino's bosom — .!■ * 

the count Orsino's court (irp.) — n. I 

I saw thee late at the count t)rsino'3 — ni- I 
you are servant to the count Orsino — iii.l 
young gentleman of the count Orsino's — iii. 1 

at the suit of count Orsino — in- 4 

Orsino, this is that Antonio — v. I 

Orsino, noble sir, be pleased — v. 1 

ground enough, Orsino's enemy — v 1 

Orsino's mistress, and his fancy's queen — v. 1 

OKT— her faith, orts of her love. . Troilus ^- Cress, v. 2 

some slender ort of his reinai nder. Timou ofAlh. iy. 3 

'ORT— in the 'ort dissolutely (rrp.).. Merry Wn<es, i. I 

ORTHOGRAPHKR; his words MurhA.to, ii 3 

ORTHOGRAPHY, as to speak Love's L.Lost, v. 1 

OSIER— to thee like osiers bowed — iv. 2 

till' rank of osiers, by the AsynuLikeit, iv. 3 

upfill this osier cage of ours ....Romeo «f Juliet, ii. 3 
OSl'ltEY-as is the osprey to the hob .Coriolanus, iv- 7 
O&IUCK— toyou by young Osrick Hamlet, v. i 



OSR 



OSKICK— tue foils, young Osuclt Ilamlel, v. 2 

a woodcock to my own springe, Osrick.. — v. 2 

OSSA— make Ossa like a wart! — v. 1 

OSTENT— a sad ostent to v\q;\sc . . i>lei:o/ reiiice, ii. 2 

in such fair ostcntsof love as ' — ii. 8 

lull tropliy, signal, and ostent. H<^n>y/'. v. (chorus) 
the ostent [Co/. A:»/.-ostentaiion]..<ii/<»i!/ <5-CVpo. iii. 6 
the oslent [Kn/.-stint] of war will look./VriWcs, i. 2 
OSTENTARIC— or rather, ostentarcLove'sL.t. iv. 2 
OSTENTATION mourningostentiitionWMr/i.-lfM.iv.l 
with some dcliglitt'nl ostentation.. Loi'e'sL.Los(, v. 1 
blown me full of mutrgot ostentation — v. 2 

and ostentation of despised arras?.. Richard II. ii. 3 

taken from me all ostentation 2HemyII''. ii. 2 

make good this ostentation Coriolanits^_ i. 6 

[Co/. A'n^] ostentation of our \oxe. Antony ^-Cleo. iii. 6 
nor formal ostentation, cry to be heard. Hnmlei, iv. 5 
OSTLER— what ostler! Anon (rep.).. lHc">'i//r. ii. 1 
upside down, since Robin ostler died — ii. 1 
bid the ostler bring my geldiu" .... — ii. 1 
out, ro"ue! shall f be your ostler? . . — ii. 2 

and ostlers trade-fallen — iv. 2 

as an ostler, that for the poorest ..Cminlanus, iii. 3 

OSTRIDGE— like anostridge iHennjfl. iv. 10 

OSWALD— what, Oswald, ho! irep.) Lear, i. 4 

how now, Oswald? what, have you writ .. — i. 4 

OTHELLO— valiant Othello, we must ..Othello, i. 3 

but, Othello, speak: did you by indirect — i. 3 

say it, Othello. Her father loved me — i. 3 

Othello, the fortitude of the place is best — i. 3 

I saw Othello's visage in his mind — i. 3 

Othello, leave some otHcer behind — i. 3 

to abuse Othello's ear, that he is too .... — i. 3 
throw out onr eyes for brave Otheilo.... — ii. I 
great Jove, Othello guard, and swell his — ii. 1 
my dear Othello 1 It gives me wonder .. — ii. 1 

it IS Otliello's pleasure, our noble — ii. 2 

of Cyprus, and our noble general Othello! — ii. 2 

to the health of the black Othello — ii. 3 

the trust Othello puts him in — ii. 3 

worthy Othello, 1 am hurt to danger. ... — ii. 3 
how now, my dear Othello? your dinner — iii. 3 
fare\\'eU! Otnello's occupation's gone! .. — iii. 3 

heart, to wronged Othello's service! — iii. 3 

keep that monster from Othello's mind! — iii. 4 

Isayl Othello! Uow now, Cassio? — iv. 1 

as he shall smile, Othello shall go mad . . — iv. 1 
how, sweet Othello? JJevil! I have not.. — iv. 1 
of Venice, tliat married with Othello.. .. — iv. 2 

Cassio in Othello's place (rep.) — iv. 2 

making liim xmcai'able ol'Olhello's place — iv. 2 
this is Otliello's ai;cicnt, as I take it .... — v. 1 
who'sthere? Othelli)? Av, Dcsdemona .. — v. 2 

against Utiicllo'bhrcflst (rrp.) — v. 2 

that's he that was Otlicllo; here I am .. — v. 2 

thiin Uihfllo, that wast once so good.. — v. 2 

OTIIi;iiG.\TKS than he did TweinhNi^ht, v. 1 

OTlIEKV\' 1 1 EKE-some otherwhere? Com. of Err. ii. 1 

his eye doth homage otherwhere — ii. 1 

the king hath sent me otherwhere. Hej/n/T///. ii. 2 
OTIIERW J 1 1 LES, the iamished .... 1 Hmry VI. i. 2 
OTHERWISE— importuned otherwise. Tempest, ii. 1 

1 never knew him otherwise. . Two Gen. of I'er. ii. 5 

otherwise he had been executed — iv.4 

otherwise he had snijered for't — iv. 4 

if she be otherwise, 'tis labour Merry Wives, ii. 1 

otherwise you might ship away ere .. — iv. 2 

otherwise, he mi gilt put on a hat — iv. 2 

you'll find it otherwise, I aasure.Twelflh Kii,'ht, iii. 4 

Uod forbid it should be otherwise Much Ado, i. 1 

otherwise 'tis light, and not heavy . . — iii. 4 
and seemed I ever otlierwise to you? — iv. 1 
my maiden's name seared otherwise.. ^H's(rei(, ii. i 
in you it best lies; otherwise . . — v. 3 (petition) 
which otherwise would growramiiis"o/.</i. i (indue.) 
if it prove she's otherwise, I'll keep ll'inier's Tale, ii. 1 

pel siiades me, it is otherwise Richard II. ii. 2 

thou art a beast to say otherwise ..1 Hcnryll\ iii. 3 
I would it were otherwise (j-ep.w.i)..iHenrylv. i.2 

take the matter otherwise Henry I', iii. 2 

and the modesty of it, to be otherwise — iv. 1 
you find it otherwise; and, henceforth — v. 1 
otherwise, I renounce all coniidence.l HenryVI. i. 2 
we do no otherwise than we are willed — i. 3 

and otherwise will Henry ne'er — v. .5 

otherwise, he knew his man . . Troilui. 4- Cressida, ii. 1 
to report otherwise, were a malice.. Cono/./?ais, ii. 2 
I shall otherwise bethink me ....Jnlins Crrsar, iv. 3 

doth tune us otherwise Pericles, i. 1 

and he that otherwise accounts of me — ii. 5 
said 'tis sn, when it proved otherwise? .Hamlet, ii. 2 
take tills from this, if this be otiierwise.. — ii. 2 
how otherwise? will you be ruled by me? — iv. 7 
the thing I am, by seeming otherwise . . Othello, ii. I 

OTTER— an otter, an otter (rep.) \Henrt/l l\ iii. 3 

OTTOMAN— general enemy Ottoman Otheilo, i. 3 

UTTOMITES, reverend and gracious .... — i. 3 
these present wars against tlie t")ttomites — i. 3 
which heaven hath forbid the Ottomites? — ii. 3 

OUBLIE— je oublie les doigts Henry I', iii. 4 

O seigneur Dieul je m'en oublie .... — iii. 4 
OUBLiE— od'sme! (ju'ay ,i'oublie?..Afen;/»r/j).'s, i. 4 

n'avez vous pas deju oublie ce que Henry K iii. 4 

OUGHT— christians ought to si^ealk. Merry IVives, i. 1 

will have it as it ought to be Tu-elft'hNiaht, v. 1 

good christians ought to have ..Meas.fnr.Veas. ii. I 

he ou'jlit to enter into a quarrel Much Ado, ii. 3 

the watch ought to offend no man .. — iii. 3 
masters, you ought to consider. Mid N.'s Dream, iii . 1 

and we ought to look to it — iii. 1 

asdoubletand hose ought toshow. Asyou Like it, ii. 4 
which true prayers ouglit to have . . Itichnrd II. v. 3 
you ought him a thousand pound.. 1 Henri/ 7 r. iii. 3 
as in discretion you ought to us-e me. . He;iri/ /•". iii. 2 

for discipl ines ought to he used — iii. 6 

such cowards ouglit to wear \HenryVI. iv. 1 

as every loyal subject ought to do. .3 Henry I' I. iv. 7 

opinion, ought to be prevented Richard III. ii. 2 

wc ought not to deny him Coriolanus, ii. 3 

Bay then: 'tis true, I ought so — iii. 3 



r '">5-2 ] 

O UOiiT-mechanicttl, you ought noX,.Juiii sCresar, i. I 

of my place, I ought to know of — ii. 1 

wliat wc feel, notVhat we ought to say . . Lear, v. 3 

OIKJHT'BT not to let thy horse 2 HenryVI. iv. 7 

OUNCE— have an ounce or two .. TwetfihSight, iv. 1 

be it ounce, or cat, or bear Mid. N.'s Dream, ii. 3 

my sweet ounce of man's flesh! . . Lore's!.. Lost, iii. 1 
by I know how much an ounce .. If'tnler'sTate, iv. 3 
in a scale of common ounces? . . Troilus c?- Cress, ii. 2 
that he hath, by many an ounce ..Coriolanus, iii. 1 

give me an (unice of civet Lear, iv. 6 

OUPIIES, and fairies Merry IVives, iv. 4 

good hick, ouphes, on every sacred .. — v. 5 

OUSEL— a black ousel, cousin 2Heiiruir. iii. 2 

OUSEL-COUK [Co/.-oosel-cock] 

[A'li^-woosel-cock] so black. .jUit/.A'.Dr. iii. 1 (song) 
OUTBID— the devil outbids him ....2HenrylV. ii. 4 
OUTBRAVE the heart most .... Mer.of Venice, ii. I 

OUTB HE AK of a fiery mind Hamlet, ii. 1 

OUTBRE ATH'D to Harry 2 Henry I V. i. 1 

OUTCAST quite abjured Taming of Shrew, i. 1 

outcast of Naples, 'England's 2HenryVI. v. 1 

OUTCRAFTIED him Cymbeline, iii. 4 

OUTCRIES raised the duke...T/erc/ian/o./ renice, ii. 8 
OUTCRY, toward our monument. /ionieo i^- Juliet, v. 3 

OUTDARE the dangers \ Henry IV. v. 1 

sensible, outdares his senseless sword. Cor/oton us, i. 4 

OUTDARED dastard? llictiard II. i. 1 

OUTDONE his former deeds Coriolanus, ii. 1 

OUTDWELLS his hour .... Merchant of Venice, ii. 6 

OUTFACE them, and outswcar. . Mer. of Venice, iv. 2 

outface it with their semblances ...■isijoaLilicit, i. 3 

outface the brow of bragging horror. . K/ng- John, v. 1 

see if thou canst outface me iHeii7?/F/. iv. 10 

presented nakedness outface the winds ..Lear, ii. 3 
outface me with leaping iu her grave?. . Hamlet, v. 1 

OUTFACED them all Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

of posterity, outfaced infant state . . KingJotin, ii. 1 
at last outfaced by Bolingbroke? .. Richard II. iv. 1 
with a word, outfaced you from .... 1 Henry IV. ii. 4 

OUTFACINtit, fashion-mougering Much Ado, v. 1 

as 'twere, outfacing me Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

OUTFLY our apprehensions .... Troilus^ Cress, ii. 3 

OUTFRO WN faLe fortune's frown Lear, v. 3 

OUTGO his father, by as much Henry VIII. i. 2 

shall not outgo my thinking . . Antony <§■ Cleo. iii. 2 
OUTGOES the very heart of ... . Timon of Athens, i. 1 

OtJTGROWNmefar Richard II I. in. \ 

OUT-HERODS Herod: pray you Hamie(, iii. 2 

OUTLAW sneaking home IHenryir. iv. 3 

yes, as an outlaw in a castle 1 Henry VI, iii. 1 

we are held as outlaws: hence Cymbeline, iv. 2 

hunt here, are outlaws, and in time.. — iv. 2 

OUTLAWED from m.y blood Lear, iii. 4 

OUTLAWRY— bills oif outlawry.. /uimsCffsar, iv. 3 

OUTLIVE his wealth Merchant of Venice, iv. 1 

if he outlive the envy of this day . . . .} Henry I V. v. 2 
so many years outlive performance? 2 Heiiry/r. ii. 4 
he let hiin outlive that day to see.... Henry V, iv. 1 
he that outlives this day, and comes — iv. 3 

but him outlive, and die (rep.) iHenryVI.i. 4 

outlive thy glory, like my wretched liiclMrd III. i. 3 

unwilling to outlive the good Henry VIII. iv. 2 

misery outlives incertain pomp. . Timon of .ith. iv. 3 

of Ciosar, should outlive Caesar luliusCiPsar, ii. 1 

you shall outlive the lady Antony ^ Cleo. i. 2 

outli\e thy father's days TilusAndronicus, i. 2 

let not this wasp outlive us both to sting — ii. 3 
to outlive the age I am, and die as I . . Pericles, v. 1 
a great man's memory may outlive ..Hamlet, iii. 2 
ttiTit frame outlives a thousand tenants.. — v. 1 

OUTLIVED the eagle Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

OUTLIVING beauty's outward. Troilus i Cress, iii. 2 

OUTLOOK conquest, and to win KingJolin, v. 2 

OUTLUSTRES many Ci/mbeline, i. 5 

OUT-NIGHT vou, did nobody ..Mer. of Venice, v. 1 

OUT-PAKAMOUKED the Turk Lear, iii. 4 

OUTPE ER these twain Cymbeline, iii. 6 

OUTPKAV— prayers do outpray his Richard II. v. 3 

OUTPRIZED by a triile Cymbeline, i. 5 

OUTRAGES on sill.y women .. Two Gen. ofVer. iv. 1 
keep tliem from uncivil outrages.... — V. 4 

she will do a desperate outrage /Uiic/i /J Jo, ii. 3 

rancorous outrage of .yourduke.. Comec/y of Err. i. 1 

wretched man do outrage — iv. 4 

I fear some outrage, and I'll follow. Km^'Jo/in, iii. 4 
in murders, and in outrage, hXoudy.Richardll. iii. 2 

clamorous outrage to trouble 1 HenryVI. iv, 1 

shall pardon thee these outrages:. ..SHenry VI. v. 1 

my charity is outrage Ilicltard III. i. 3 

O preposterous and frantic outrage.. — ii. 4 
been known to commit outrages. Timon of Ath. iii. 5 

Epace, ho; no outrage; peace Coriolanus, v. 5 
e no slielter to these outrages .. Titus.4ndron. iv. 4 
more cause than he to do this outrage — v. 3 
to do upon resjiect such violent outrage. . Lear, ii. 4 
for shame forbear this outrage. . Romeo 4- Juliet, iii. 1 
seal up tlie mouth of outrage — v. 3 

OUTRAGEOUS, and so variable.Mer. o/Fenrce, ii. 8 
most outrageous fit of madness. . Comedy of Err. v. 1 

of thy vile outrageous crimes IHenryVl. iii. 1 

remorse of these outrageous broils .. — v. 4 
beats with outrageous beating .. Titus Andron. iii. 2 
and arrows of outrageous fortune ....Ha/«/e/, iii. 1 

OUTRAN the pauser, reason Macbeth, ii. 3 

swift of Coot, outran my iiurnose Othello, ii. 3 

OUTKIGIlT-you two outrig"lit .. TamingofSh. v. 2 

prince llnrrv slain outriglit 2HenryI V. i. 1 

kills thy father's heart outright! ..\ Henry VI. v. 4 
then must I chide outright illenryVI. i. 2 

OUTROAR the horned herd! .. Antony ^- Cleo. 'xii. U 

OUTRODE-horscd, outrode nie .. ..-IHenrnlV. i. 1 

OUTRUN— he hath outrun us .. r«'o Gen. o/ier. v. 3 

he was outrun on Cotsale Men-y Wives, i. 1 

in a retreat he outruns any lackey ..All sWell, iv. 3 

and outrun native punishment Henry V. iv. 1 

can we outrun the liea\"ens? 2 Henry VI. v. 2 

it will outrun you, father, in the end.3 Henri//'/, i. 2 
we mav ontrun.by violent swiftness. Henri/ r///. i. 1 

OUTRUN'S V grace Timon of Athens, ii. 2 



OVE 



OL'TSCOlyD— tliou canst outseold ns..KingJo/in,v. 2 
OUTSCORN the to and fro conflicting wind L.'nr,iii.l 

OUTSELL— did outsell her gift Cymbeline, ii. 4 

of all ccmipounded, outsells tliem all — iii. 5 

OUTSHINING beams Richard III. i. 3 

OUTSIDE have not charmed her! TwelfthNight, ii. 2 
a goodly outside falsehood hath! Mer. of Venice, i. 3 

but my outside to behold — ii. 7 (scroll) 

a swashing and a martial outside.. /Is you Z./Aei/, i. 3 
for the outside of thy poverty.... Winter'sTale, iv. 3 
of your jinrse to the outside of his hand — iv. 3 

the outside of this work {.rep.) King John, v. 2 

■were but the outside of a Roman Henry V. ii. 4 

created with a Btubborn outside .... — v. 2 
man's nature, he is but outside . . Timon of Athens, i. I 
and make his wrongs his outsides ., — iii. 5 

by his rusty outside, he appears Pericles, ii. 2 

thy outside looks so fair and warlike .... Lear, v. 3 
OUTSLEEP the coming morn ..Mid.N.'sUream,v. 1 

OUTSPEAKS possession of Henry VIII. iii. 2 

OUTSPORT-not to outsport discretion. . Oltielle, ii. 3 
OUTSTARE [Kn(.-o'erstare] the.. Mer. of Venice, ii. 1 

I'll follow, and outstare him HenryVllI. i. 1 

he'U outstare the lightning ..Antony ^Cteo. iii. H 

OUTSTAY— you outstay the time.. /Is you Lit<e it, i. 3 

OUTSTUOD-I have outstood my timcCi/mde/ine, i. 7 

OUTSTRETCHED ihroat..il/eastjre/or;i/ea»i(re,ii. 4 

mountains with outstretched arras. .SHenrj/A^/. i. 4 

with his arms outstretched. . . . Troilus i^Cress. iii. 3 

who hath outstretched his span ..Timon of Ath. v. 4 

our monarcliB, and outstretched heroes. Hom/e/, ii. 2 

OUTSTRIKE thought Antony % Cleopatra, iv. 6 

OUTfiiTRIP— will outstrip all praise .. Tempest, iv. 1 

thougli they can outstrip men Henry V. iv. 1 

if thou wilt outstrip death Richard III. iv. 1 

OUTSWEAR-should outswear Cupid. Loire's L.L. i. 2 

and outswcar them too ....Merchant of Venice, iv. 2 

OUTSWEETENED not thy breath. Ci/mW/ne, iv. 2 

OUTS WELL the cliolic Troilus <5- Cressida, iv. 5 

OUT- T.i\-LK— will out-talk us all. . Taming of S/i. i. 2 

OUT-TONGUE his complaints Olhello, i. 2 

OUTVENOMS all the worms of NWe.Cymbeline, iii. 4 
OUTVIED— Gremio is outvied. . Taming ofahrew, ii. 1 

OUTVILLANED villany so far All's Well, iv. 3 

OUTVOICE the deep-mouthed sea. Henry V. v. (clio.) 

OUTWARD— the outward face of Tempest, i. 2 

thy fair and outward character. . . . Twelfth, Sight, i. 2 
the wrong side may be turned outwardi — iii. 1 
the denunciation lack of outward. Meas./orMeas. i, 3 
though augel on the outward side! .. — iii. 2 
to make them know that outward .... — v. I 
a good cover, they show well outward. /l/wc/i/ldo, i. 2 
whom she hath in all outward behaviour — ii. 3 
hath, indeed, a good outward happiness — ii. 3 
if half thy outward graces had been.. — iv. 1 

show outward hideousness — v. 1 

for praise, an outward part, we hend. Love' sL.L. iv. \ 
the weather on the outward wall. . Mer. of Venice, ii. 9 
so may the outward shows be least .. — iii. 2 
mark of virtue on his outward parts — iii. 2 

like a common and an outward man .AlVslVell, iii. 1 
hang out our banners on the outward. . Mucl'eth, y. ii 
exterior form, outward accoutrement. /iing-./o/in, i. 1 
clapped on the outward eye of fickle.. — ii. 2 
having preyed upon the outward parts — y. 7 

showing an outward pity Richard II, iv. 1 

the outward watch, whereto my finger — y. 5 

to immask our noted outward \ Henry IV. i. 2 

they are our outward consciences .... Henry V. iv. 1 
he may show what outward courage — iv. I 

such outward things dwell not in .... — iv. 3 
the outward composition of his body.l HenryVI. ii. 3 
in your outward action shows itseli. Richard III. i. 3 
au outward honour for an inward toil — i. 4 
nothing differs but the outward fame — __i. 4 
of a man, than of his outward show .. — iii. 1 
outliving beauty's outward.. Troilus (/ Cressida, iii. 2 

if these sliows be not outward Coriolanus, 1. 6 

not fearing outward force, so shall .. — iii. 1 
as I <lo know your outward favour .Julius Cn-sar. i. 2 
things outward do draw theinward. Am. tS cleo, iii. 1 1 

all is outward sorrow Cymlieline, i. 1 

so fair an outward, and such stuff witliin — i. I 
better than his outward show can, ....Pericles, ii. 2 
that makes us scan the outward habit .. — ii. 2 
neitlier in our hearts, nor outward eyes.. — ii. 3 
helps him, take all iny outward worth .. Lear, iv. 4 

tediousness the Ihnbs and outward Handel, ii. 2 

must show fairly outward, should more .. — ii. 2 

outward habit of encounter — y. 2 

for when my outward action doth Othello, i. 1 

almost the wrong side outward [A'«(. -out] — ii. 3 

OUTWARDLY, or breath within. MVn/er's7'a/e, iii. 2 

that indeed which outw ardly ye show. . Macbeth, i. 3 

be patient; outwardly I viMl. Troilus ^ Cressida, v. 2 

and tills will w-itness outwardly Cymbeline, ii. 2 

OUTWARD-SAINTED deputy. .1/ea.';..fcr.Ue«s. iii. 1 

OUTWEAR— outwear three years. Love's L. Lost, ii. 1 

sun is high, and we outwear the day ..Henry V. iv. 2 

OUTWElGH-find outweighs ability.iHenri///'. i. 3 

brave death outweighs bad life Coriolanus, i. 6 

OUTAV lONT her, motion and breath. . Cymbeline, ii. 4 

OUTWORK nature Antony^ Cltojititra, ii. 2 

OUTWORTHS a noble's blood Henry nil. i. 1 

OVEN— the oven, and the baking. rroi.'us-V Cress, i. I 
concealed, like an oven stopped .. TilusAndron. ii. 5 
crickets sing atth'oven's mouth. Per/des, iii. (Gow.) 

OVERAWE- .you may overawe IHenryVI. i. 1 

OVERIiEAR-overbearyour will ..Mid. N.Dr. iv. 1 

pleased your liigliness to overbear it. KingJohn, iv. 2 

overbears attaintwithcheerlnl. Henry ;'.iv. (chorus) 

OVERBLOW N-the storm overblown?.. Teinpes/, ii. 2 

at 'scapes and perils, overblown .. TamingofSh. v. 2 

ague-fit of fear is overblown Richard II. iii. 2 

choler being overTjlown with walking 2 Henry VI.i.3 

clean overblown, themselves Richard III. ii. 4 

OVliRBOARD— heaved overboard Tempest, ii. 2 

the mast be now blowm overboard ..^HenryVI. v. 4 
thit thought to stay him, overboard. Kic/iari///;. i. 4 
your queen must overboard (.rep.) ....Pericles, iii. 1 



OVERBOARD tlirowii me, to seek my. . Poi<7«, i v. 3 

OVRRBOLD-sauey, and overbold? ..Mucheih, iii. 5 

OVERB; )L,DLY we have borne . . Lore's L. Lost, v. 2 

OVlOlvBORNK— much ovcrliorne lier...Vuc/i .•<'.'(), ii. 3 

have overborne tlieir continrnts . . Mid. jV.'s Ur. ii. 2 

slioiilders, overborne witli burdening. I Henry VL'u.i 

iVV, see the bisliop be not overborne.. — iii. 1 

bisliop will be overborne by thee — .■*'•' 

eniptror of Konie tlms overborne. Tida/lndron. iv. 4 

OA'K K BULK— to overbulk us all. Troilus .5- Cress, i. 3 

OVKRBUYSme almost the sum he ..Cymbeline/i. 3 

UVEKCAME:hecame(r(pp.).Loi>t'sI..ios(,iv. I (let.) 

who overcame he? the beggar . . — iv. 1 (letter) 

I eame, saw, and overeaine .is you Like U,y. 2 

I came, saw, and overcame iHenryiy. iv. 3 

wherein Talbot overcame? is't so? ..\HeuryVl. i. 1 
that day he overcame the Nervii .JuliusCiesar, iii. 2 

Brutus only overcame himself — v. 5 

came, and saw, and overcame Cymbeline, iii. 1 

last king Hamlet overcame Fortinbraa. Hamfef, v. I 

OVERCANOPIED with lush ..Mid.N.'sDream, ii. 2 

OVERCAREFUL fathers have ....iHenryU'.iv. i 

OVERCAST-overcast the night./Wid.iV.'sjD)fam,iii.2 

OVEKCUARGED, you were best TwoGen.of Ver.i. 1 

as cannons overcharged with double ..Mucbelh, i. 2 

or like an overcharged gun, recoil.. 2 Henri/ r/. iii. 2 

the secrets of ills overcharged soul .. — iii. 2 

OVERCOME: to whom came ..Love's L.L. iv. 1 (let.) 

fond to overcome the bony priser .AsyouLike it, ii. 3 

such tilings be, and overcome us like.il/acde^/i, iii. 4 

riglit shoiud thus overcome mightI..2Hen)!//r. y. 4 

liave I overcome miue enemies tHenryl^I. ii. 3 

war may'st thou be overcomel ZHenryl'I.i. 1 

enough alone to overcome him. Timon of Athens, iii. 5 
whereas no glory's got to overcome .... Ferietes.i. 4 

old Norway, overcome with joy Hamlet, ii. 2 

OVERCOOL— overcool their blood ..2HenryIV. iv. 3 

OVE RCRKDULOUS haste Macbetti, iv. 3 

OVERDARING Talbot hath sullied. IHcnn/r/. iv. 4 
OVERDONE-Overdone's means. jWeos./br.l/ras. ii. 1 

mistress Overdone — ii. I 

nine, sir; Overdone by the last — ii. 1 

it were mistress Overdone's own house — iv. 3 

for anything so overdone is from Hamlet, iii. 2 

now this, overdone, or come tardy off. ... — iii, 2 
OVEREARNEST with your Brutus. Ju;.C<ssar, iv. 3 
OVEREYEING of his odd.. Tammffo/S/i. I (indue.) 
OVERFAR— overfar believe that.. TwelflliNighl, ii. 1 

OVERFLOW of kindness !HucliAdo,i. 1 

overflow of good converts to bad. . . . Richard II. v. 3 

at length they overflow their banks . . Pericles, ii. 4 

OVE RFEOWED and drowned . . Titus Andron. iii. 1 

OVERFLOWN with a liouey-bag..M/rf.A'.'sDr. iv. 1 

OVE RFOND of the shepherd's .... Winter's Tale, v. 2 

OVE RFULL of self-affairs Mid. N.'s Dream, i. ) 

OVERGLANCE the superscript.. Lome's L. Lost, iv. 2 
OVERGO thy plaints, and drown . . Ricliard III. ii. 2 
OVERGORGED with gobbets of thy.2Heiiry VI. iv. 1 
OVERGREEDY love hath surfeited.. 2 Henri/ /F. i. 3 
OVERGROWN with hair, put forth ..Henry f. v. 2 

much overgrown with care iHenryl'I. ii. 5 

OVERHj^PFY— we are not overhappy.. HamW, ii. 2 

OVERHEAR their conference Mid. N.'s Dr. ii. 2 

overheard what you sliall overhear Love'sL.L. v. 2 
OVERHE.VRD what hath past. . Meas.for Meas. iii. I 

thus mucli overlieard by a man Mu^h Ado, i. 2 

in the night, overheard me confessing — v. 1 
and overheard what you shall. . . . Love'sL.Lost, v. 2 
I overheard him and his practices.-4.s youLike it, ii. 3 
if they have overheard rae now.. Winter' sTale, iv. 3 
hatli often overheard them say . . Titus. indroti. iv. 4 

OVERHE.\RD'STus; and bid MuchA-lo, iii. 1 

thou overheard'st, ere I was .... Romeo Sf Juliet, ii. 2 
t IVEllHOLD his price so much.. Troilus if Cress, ii. 3 
OVEH.IOY of heart doth minister ....'IHenryyi. i. 1 

OVERJOYED with finding Much Ado, n. 1 

ovei'ioyc'l to see her nl^\i\Q. .Taming of Sh, \ (indue.) 

OVERKIND to Bohemia mnter'sT,de,\. 1 

OVERKINDNESS doth wring tears ..il/«<-/i,-l<io, v. 1 
OVERLEATHER ..Taming of Slirew, 2 (induction) 

OVEIiLIVE the hazard 2lle,iri/ir. iv. 1 

OVERIjONG— with silenceoverlongll Hcini/F/. v. 3 

OVIORLOOK— climate overlooks King John, ii. 2 

willing you, overlook this pedigree . . Henry V. ii. 4 

and overlook their grafters? — iii. 5 

Y'ork overlook the town of York ZHenryFI. i. 4 

overlooks thi; higliest-peering hills.. 7'i7Msj)i(i. ii. ! 
OVERLOOKED this, give . ...Hamlet, iv 6 (letter) 
OVERLOOKING— to my overlooking.. -^iCs iVell, i. 1 

£ find it not fit for your overlooking Lear, i. 5 

OVEKLUSTY French do HenryV. iv. ^chorus) 

wlien a man is overlusty at legs Lear, ii. i 

OVERMASTERED witha piece of....MurhAdo, ii. 1 

OVERMATCHING waves SHenryFI. i. 4 

OVER-MEASURE. No, take more.. Coriotafius, iii. 1 
OVEUJIERRY spleen ..Taming of Slirew, 1 (indue.) 

OVE RMOUNTING spirit 1 Henry r/. iv. (i 

OVER.MUCH-tempt him overmuch «7n(er"s rate, v. 1 

overmuch consumed his royal Richard III. i. 1 

OVERNAME them Merchant of I 'enice, i. 2 

OVERNIGIIT-whathesawovem>ght..Wi(c.'i.4,yn, iii. 3 

bad given you this at overnight All's IVell, iii. 4 

OVERPASSED thy days 1 Henry VI.W. h 

OVERPAY— which I will overpay .... All's iVeU, iii. 7 
OVERPEER the petty traffickers.. A/er.o/- i'enice, i. 1 

tower, to overpeer the cit.y 1 Henry ;'/. i. 4 

heaped for truth to overpeer Coriolanus, ii. 3 

OVERPEERED Jove's spreading 3Henn/Vl. v. i 

OVEKPEERINGof hislist Hnmirl,\v. r> 

OVERPLUS of sljipping wWlwe.. Antony t^Cleo. iii. 7 
treasure, witli his bounty overplus .. — iv. 6 

OVERPRESSED spirits I'ericles,u\. 2 

OVERPROUD with sap and blood . . Richard II. iii. 4 
we think himoverproud .... Troilus ^Cressida, ii.3 
OVERREAD it at your pleasure. .Wea<./(r;U,as. iv. 2 
OVERREACH the greybeard.. rn»ii;i«-o/S/irew, iii. 2 
OVERRED— prick tliy face, and overred..U«i:/je//i, v. 3 
OVEKRIPENED corn, hanging the ..'iHenryVI. i. 2 

OVERRO.VSTED flesh Taming of Shrew, iv. 1 

overroasted ratlier; ready long ago,. Cymbcliuc, v. 1 



OVERRODE him on the way •'HennjlV.i. I 

OVEHHULED: and therefore tell bcr.l Henry I'l. ii. 2 

in tluit, are one, not to be overuled Lear, i. 3 

OVlCHRirN-France is overrun \HenryVI. i. I 

(_)VEIIRUNNING— by overrunning.HeHj-j/;'///. i. 1 

t)VEli,SCUTCHED huswives •iHennjIV. iii. 2 

OVERSET tliy tempest-tost bo^y .. Uonieo Sf Jul. iii. b 
OVERSIIADi;S the mouth. Titus Andron. ii. 4 (letter) 
OVERSHINB the earth, as tins ZHenryll. ii. 1 

yea, overshines ourself Troilus fy Cress, iii. 1 

dost overshine the gallant'st dames 7'i7i« Andron. i. 2 
OVERSHOT— evermore is overshot. LoKe'sL.Ios/, i. 1 

not the first time you were overshot.. Henry V. iii. 7 
OVERSIGHT— ancient oversights ..'iHenrylV. ii. 3 

OVERSPREAD with them — iv. 4 

OVERSTAINED with slaughter's... Kmg'JoAn, iii. 1 
OVERSWEAR; and all those ....Tu'elfthNigM, v. 1 

OVERT— more certain and overt test Othello, i. 3 

OVERTA'ENhiminhis Richard II I. ii. 4 

fjod-will, hath overta'en mine act . . Coriolanus, i. 9 
ERTAKE your slow purse ..Two Gen. of Ver. i. 1 
she is able to overtake seventeen . . Merry Wives, i. 1 

run and overtake him Merchant of Venice, iv. 1 

upon the company you overtake? Taming of Sh. iv. 5 

is slow to overtake thee Macbeth, i. 4 

vengeance overtake such children Lear, iii. 7 

I'll overtake you: speak — v. 1 

OVERTAKEN— well overtaken .. Mer o/" A'cn/ce, iv. 2 
OVERT .A.KETH in his pilgrimage. rK'oGen.ji/T.ii. 7 
OVERTEDIOUS-be not overtedious. 1 Henri/ A";, iii. 3 
OVERTHROW-be thine overthrow T«'cZ/i!AA'/g-/i(, v. 1 
hath all the glory of my overthrow . . Much Ado, i. 3 

or overthrow incurable ensues King John, v. 1 

at Oxford thy dire overtlirow Richard II. v. 6 

before thy most assured overthrow . . Henry V. iv. 3 
plotted thus our glory's overthrow?..! Henri/ F/. i. 1 
hath the late overthrow wrought .... — ;• 2 
that seeks to overthrow religion .... — . '■ ^ 
like to have tlie overthrow again .... — iii. 2 
I have seen our enemies' overthrow — iii. 2 

O Lancaster! I fear thy overtlirow.3Henri/ F/. ii. 6 

malice overthrow my state — iv. 3 

his overtluow heaped happiness ..HenryVIII. iv. 2 
push gives them the overthrow . . Julius Ccesar, v. 2 
e-xpecting overthrow, are stored with . . Pericles, i. 4 
piteous overthrows do . . . . Homeo Sf Juliet, (prologue) 
sweats not to overthrow your Almain! . . Othello, ii. 3 
OVERTHROWN, you are undone.A/erry Wives, iii. 3 
and all the preperation overthrown.. jWi(c/i/4<io, ii. 2 
you have overthrown Alisander . . Love'sL.Lost, v. 2 
overthrown more than your enemies/).? youLike it, i. 2 

poor Orlando! thou art overthrown . . — i. 2 
and proved, have overthrown him .... Macbeth, i. 3 
sheri fl: of Yorkshi re overthrown .... 2 Henry IV. iv. i 
this quarrel hath been overthrown. .1 Henri/ VI. v. 4 
is overthrown by noble Brutus.... /«(ms Ccesar, v. 3 
cruel thee quite overthrown 1 .... Romeo Sf Juliet, v. 5 
that our devices still are overthrown. . Hamlet, iii. 2 

OVERTOOK, a dozen captains iHenrylV. ii. 4 

OVERTOPPED them all . . Antony Sf Cleopatra, i v. 9 
OVERTOPPING-trash for overtopping. Tempest, i. 2 
OVERTURE— no overture of war . rHc/ft/i A'iV/i(,i. 5 

1 hear, there is an overture of peace. . All's Well, iv. 3 
as she had made the overture, she ceased — y. 3 
tried it, without more overture .. Winter'sTale, ii. I 

made an overtm-e for the wars Coriolanus, i. 9 

made the overture of thy treasons to us. . Lear, iii. 7 

OVERTURNED- will be overturned.2Hen)i//r. v. 2 

OVERVEILED the earth 1 Henry VI. ii. 2 

OVERVIEW— to thy overview. . Love'sL. Lost, iv. 3 
OVERAVATCHED. This palpable. Mid.iV.'sOr. V. 1 
OVERWEATHERED ribs..il/e»c/ian(o./' KeniVc, ii. 6 

OVERWEEN— you overween IHcnrylV. iv. 1 

tliou dost overween in all .... Titus Andronicus, ii . 1 

OVERWEENING slave!.. rwoGen.q/- Verona, iii. 1 

here's an overweening rogue!.... TicelfihNight, ii. 5 

this overweening traitor's foot Richard II. }■ 1 

whose overweening arm I have ....iHetiryVI. iii. 1 

these overweening rags of France .. iJiWiard ///. v. 3 

O v^ERWEIGH, that you shall stifle Me.a.forMea. ii. 4 

OVERWHELM— overwhelm thee.. 2Henii/7F. iv. 4 

and overwhelm you all. Awayl Pencfes, iv. 6 

OVERWHELMED like mine MuchAdo,Y. 1 

hath overwhelmed all her litter 2HenryIV. i. 2 

have so overwhelmed his wits .. Titus.indron. iv. 4 

OVERWHELMING brows Romeo fy Juliet, v. 1 

OVE RWORN-word is overworn. I'l/'ei/fAM^/i/, iii. 1 

OVID— honest Ovid, was among ..As youLike it, iii. 3 

as Ovid be an outcast quite . . Taming of Shrew,_ i. 1 

'tis Ovid's Metamorphosis .. Titus.indronicus, iv. 1 

OVIDIUS Naso was tlie man ....Love's L. Lost. iv. 2 

OWCHES— pearls, and owches 2HenrylV. ii. 4 

OWE— nor no sound that the earth owes. Tempest, i. 2 
such an ass should owe them ..TwoGen.ofVer. v. 2 

ourselves we do not owe TwelfthNighl.i.b 

and that I owe Olivia — ii. 4 

wliat love women to men may owe . . — ii. 4 
themselves would owe them ....Meas. for Meas. i. 5 

but only he, owe, and succeed — ii- 4 

I owe you a good turn — iv. 2 

your brother, I owe you all duty .... MuchAdo,\. 1 
I will owe tliee an answer for that ., — iii. 3 

for this I owe you: here come — v. 4 

all the power this charm doth owe.MiVi.iV.'sD/. ii. 3 

that bimkrupt sleep doth owe — iii. 2 

whicii native she doth owe Love's L.Losl,i. 2 

all perl'eetions that amaii may owe.. — ii. 1 
I owe llie most, in money . . Merchant of Venice, i. 1 

clear of all the debts I owe — i, I 

I owe you much; and like (rep.') .... — _i. 1 
of the sum that he did owe him .... — •!!•- 

what sum owes lie the Jew? — iii. 2 

they owe me nothing As you Like it, ii. ."i 

get tliat I w-ear; owe no man h:ite .. — iii- 2 
will not confess he owes the mahiiy.. All's Well, ii. 1 
whicli both thy duty owes, and our — ii. 3 

not worthy of the wealth I owe .... — ij. 5 
the miseries, which nature owes .... — iii. 2 
my lord, such as vou owe .your wife — iv. 2 
but not wheu he iocs owe it ... . — iv. 3 (Ictlcr) 



OWE— the jeweller that owes the ring. . All's Well, v. 

tliey do owe tlieir lords and . . Taming of shrew, v. 

as the subject owes the prince — v. 

which he j ustly owes him (I'm(ev's Tale, i. 

which owe a moiety of the throne .. — iii. 

out from the houselowe? . .Comedy of Errors, iii. 

no homage do I owe — iii. 

the sum, that I do owe to you — iv. 

the money, that you owe me (rep.'i .. — iv. 

and owes more than he's wortli — iv. 

the debt he owes, will be required of me — iv. 

what is the sum he owes? — iv. 

whence you owe tliis strange Macbeth, i. 

and the loyalt.y I owe, in doing it ... . — i. 

to the disposition that I owe — iii. 

sa.y we have, and what we owe — v. 

which owe the crown that thou .... King John , ii. 

you trul.y owe, to him that owes it .. — ii. 

we owe thee much — iii. 

all the treasure that thine imcle owes — iv. 

the one my duty owes Richard II. i. 

the dut.y that you owe to heaven ... . — i. 

that owes two buckets filling one.... — iv. 

all the debt he owes you IHenrylV. i. 

you owe me money (rep.) — iii. 

sirrah, do I owe you a thousand .... — iii. 

England did never owe so sweet — v. 

the gross sum that I owe thee? '2 Henry IV. ii. 

pay lier the debt you owe her — ii. 

for the other, 1 owe her money — ii. 

we owe God a death; I'll ne'er — iii. 

I owe .you a thousand pound — v. 

that owe your lives, your faith Henry V. i. 

upon the deaths they owe — iv. 

if I owe 3'ou anything, I will — v. 

I owe him little duty \ Henry VI. iv. 

for now we owe allegiance ZHenry VI. iv- 

the dut.y, that I owe unto your — v. 

nor feels not what he owes.. Troilus SfCressida, iii. 

he owes for every word Timon of Athens, i . 

to Isidore he owes nine thousand.... — ii. 

all these three owe their estates .... — iii- 

should pay more than he owes — iii. 

desperate ones, for a madman owes 'em — iii. 

if b.y this crime he owes the law his life — iii. 

I do owe them still my life Coriolanus, i i . 

one time will owe another — iii. 

but owe thy pride thyself — iii. 

though I owe my revenf^e properly.. — v. 

which this man's life did owe you .. — v. 

friends I owe more tears to Julius C<rsar, y. 

a liberal thanks, which I do owe you. /In/. (J-C/eo.li. 

targets like the men that owe them .. ~ iv. 

obedience, which you owe your Cymbeline, ii. 

but to owe such straight arms, none.. — iii. 

life, I beseech you, which I so often owe — y. 

the tribute that I owe, mine .. Titus Andronicus, i. 

by all the duties that I owe to Rome — i- 

which you make more rich to owe? .... Pericles, v. 

with those infirmities she owes Lear, i. 

you owe me no subscription — iii. 

owes nothing to thy blasts — iy. 

dear perfection which he owes ..Romeo S^ Juliet, ii. 

the price of his dear blood doth owe? — iii- 

a full fortune does the thick-lips owe Othello, i. 

where most you owe obedience? — i- 

OWED— the noblest grace she owed .... Tempest, iii- 

I could not have owed her a more. . . . All's Well, iv- 

liath it been owed, and worn — v. 

since you owed no more to time ..Winter'sTuU 

the dearest thing he owed Macbeth, i. i 

to give obedience where 'tis truly owed . . — v. : 

which owed the breadth of all this ..KingJohn, iv. : 

for the party that owed it 2 Henry I V. i. I 

slaughter of the prince that owed.. Richard III. iv. ' 

which is not owed to you! Timonof iihens,\. 1 

OWED'ST— sleep which thou owed'st. . . . Othello, iii. ; 
OWEN [see GLENDOWERJ 

OWETH to her husband Taming of Shrejr, v. ! 

OWING— there is more owing her than./IH'sWe//, i. ; 
OWL— when owls do cry Tempest, v.\ (song 

keep back the clamorous owl ..Mid. N.'sDream,\i. ', 

good night, my good owl Love'sL. Lost, iw 1 

m jjraise of the owl and the cuckoo? . . — v. ; 

mainta ined by the owl, the other — v. ! 

nightly sings the staring owl, to-who — v. 2 (song 

goblins, owls, and elvish sprites. •Comer'i/o/'Krr. |_i. : 

it was tlie owl that shrieked Macbeth, ii. : 

I heard the owl scream, and the crickets — ii. 1 

was by a mousing owl hawked at — Ji. ■ 

against the owl — iv. : 

ominous and fearful owl of death ..\HenryVl. iv. I 

and, like the owl by day ZHenry V J. v. ' 

the owl shrieked at thy birth — v. I 

out on ye.owlsl nothing but songs. Kic/iarrf///. iy, 

I bade the vile owl go learn me. . Troilus 6s Cress, ii. 

a lizard, an owl, a puttock — \. 

the night to the owl, and morn .... Cymbeline, iii. 1 

unless the nightly owl, or fatal raven. 7'i7u.« And. ii. 

a comrade with the wolf and owl i,fnr, ii. 

the owl was a baker's daughter Hamlet, iv. 

OAVLET— lizard's leg, and owlet's wing..Uaf)je(/i, iv. 
OWN— you will not own it Winter'sTale, iii. 

not Afric owns a serpent Coriolanus, i. 

would own a name too dear Pericles, iv. 

OWNER— worthy the owner (rep.') .. Merry Wives, v. 

restore them to the owner Much Ado, ii. 

the owner of it blest Mid. K.'s Dream, v. 

between the owners and their . . Mer. of Venice, iii. 

are not you the owner of the ....As you Like it, iv. 

tlie owner of no one good quality All's Well, iii. 

but for their owner, master . . Comedy of Errors, iv. 

proud, and makes his owner st^ut ..KinaJohn, iii. 

who is, if every owner were well I HenrylV. iv. 

wliile as the silly owner of the good..2Henrv''/. i. 

in spite of me the owner — iv. 1 

dues be rendered to their owners. Troilus ^Cress. ij- 

dillVring in the owners Timon of Athens, i. 

bid tlie owners quench them . . Titus Andronicus, v. 
like the ow ner of a foul disease Hamlet, iv. 



. 1 



OWNING— my father owning it ..IVinler'sTnlo, iii. 2 

OWS'T— usurp a name tliou ow'st not ..Tempest, \. I 

a million; tliou ow'st me tliylove ..\HeiiryiV. iii. 3 

why, thou ow'st God a death — v. 1 

a son, thou ow'st to me ttichard III. i. 3 

life thou ow'st nie for my \\oxea\.Troilusfy Cress, v. 6 

lend less than thou ow'st Lear^ i. 4 

thou ow'st t\\e worm no silJk iii. i 

OX— ay and an ox too Merry Wives, v. 5 

tlie ox hath therefore stretched ..Mid.N. Dream, ii. 2 

it may prove an ox Love's L. Lost. v. i 

not from the stalling of an ox As you Like it, i. 1 

as the ox hath his bow, sir — iii. 3 

my liorse, my ox, my ass .... Taming of Shrew, iii. 2 

that roasted Manning-tree ox \Henryll'. ii. 4 

then is sin struck down like an ox, .2 Henri/ f/. iv. 2 

ox: to an ox were nothinj,' ^rep).Troilu: ^ Cress, v. I 

OX-BEEF— giant like, ox-beef hath... Wid.A'.Dj-. Iii. 1 

OXEN and wainropes Ttt'elflhNight, iii. 2 

six score fat oxen standing in . Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 

we shall feed like oxen at \ Henry IK v. 2 

or horse, or oxen, from the 1 Henry FJ. i. i 

for oxen, sheep, or horse — v. 5 

fiiU before thee like sheep and oxen.2Henry I'l. iv. 3 

on sheep or oxen could I spend my fury I — v. 1 

yoke you like draught oxen . . Troilus SfCressida, ii. 1 

OXFORD— what news from 0.xford?..«icAa)t« II. v. 2 

to kill the king at Oxford — v. 2 

told him of these triumphs held at Oxford — v. 3 
help to order several powers to Oxford — v. 3 
I have from Oxford sent to Tjondon . . — v. 6 

that sought at Oxford thy dire — v. 6 

he is ut Oxford, still, is he not? iHenrylV. iii. 2 

Oxford, how haps it, that in 3 Henry I'l. iii. 3 

can Oxford, that did ever fence — iii 3 

and Oxford, vouchsafe, at our request — iii. 3 
and Oxford, with five thousand men — iii. 3 

therefore lord Oxford, to prevent .... — iv. 6 
and thou, brave Oxford, wondrous .. — iv. 8 
sweet Oxford, and my loving Montague — iv. 8 
the post that came from valiant Oxford? — v. 1 

see, where O.xford comesi (rep.) — . v. 1 

welcome, O.xford! for we want thy help — v. 1 
and Somerset, with Oxford, fled to her — v. 3 
is not Oxford here another anchor? .. — v. 4 

sweet Oxford, thanks — v. 4 

away with Oxford to Hammes' castle — v. 5 

when Oxford had me down Richard HI. ii. 1 

Oxford, redoubted Pembroke — iv. 5 

my lord of Oxford, you.sir William.. — v. 3 

Ipswich and Oxford I Henry VII I. iv. 2 

OXFORDSHIRE shall musterup....3Hf?<ryf/. iv, 8 

OXHEAD to your lion's hide King John, ii. 1 

OXLIPSandthe nodding violet ....iWid. iV.'sDr. ii. 2 

hold oxlips, and the crown Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

O- YES— make the fairy o-yes Merrii IVives, v. 5 

Fame with her loudest O-yes. Trnilus <5 Cressiria, iv. 5 

OYSTER— the world's mine oyster..il/e;v!/ff7c<;.(, ii. 2 

love may transform me to an oyster. . Muck.ido, ii. 3 

till he have made an oyster of me — ii. 3 

as your pearl, in your foul oyster.. Jsj/ok Like it, v. 4 

as an apple doth an oyster Turning oJMreie, iv. 2 

sends this treasure of an oyster ..Antony fyCleo. i. 5 
canst tell how an oyster makes Lear, i. 5 

P 

PABYLON— satin Pabylon.MerryW/j.cs, iii. 1 (song) 

P-i.CE— on a moderate pace Twelfth KIght, ii. 2 

if you can, pace yoiu: wisdom ..Meas. for Mens. iv. 3 
what pace is this that thy tongue . . SluchAdo, iii. 4 
can keep no pace with my ...Mid. N.'s Dream, iii. 2 

that he did pace them first? Mer. of Venice, ii. 6 

travels divers paces with divers.. /4s yoK Like it, iii. 2 

time's pace is so hard that it — iii. 2 

he has no pace, but runs where All's iVell, iv. 5 

speed so pace to speak Winler'sTale, iv. (cliorus) 

pace softly towards my kinsman's .. — iv. 2 

thus with his stealthy pace Macbeth, ii. 1 

creeps in the petty pace from day to day — v. 5 
with slow, but stately pace, kept on. ttichard II. v. 2 

hoofs of hostile paces 1 Henry IV.'i.\ 

or hold me pace in deep experiments — iii. 1 
but now, two paces of the vilest .... — v. 4 
fifteen hundred paces of your tent.... Hem-!/ f. iii. 7 
60 swift a pace hath thought .. — v. (choriisj 

requires slow pace at first Henry VI II. i. 1 

was not one doctor Pace in this — ii. 2 

with modest paces came to the altar — iv. 1 
wild horses, pace them not in tlieir.. — v. 2 
by a pace goes backward .... Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 3 

by the first pace that is sick — i. 3 

that to the pace of it I may spur . . Coriolanus, i. 10 
I cannot bring my tongue to such a pace — ii. 3 
with a snaffie you may pace easy..4ii(07ii/ ^Clco. ii.2 

I saw her once tiop forty paces — ii.2 

in pace another Juno Pericles, v. 1 

endeavour keeps in the wonted pace ..Hamlet, ii. 2 
[Kd/.] God hath given you one pace .... — iii. 1 
your dull ass will not mend his pace .... — v. 1 
my bloody thoughts, with violent pace. Othello, iii. 3 

PACED alon" upon the giddy Kidvjrd ill. i. 4 

the same full state paced back ....Henry VIII. iv. 1 

my lord, she's not paced yet I'ericles, iv. 6 

PACIFIED— not now be pacified. Tu-elfih Mglit. iii. 4 
thou see'st I am pacified; still? ....\ Henry IV. iii. 3 

P.\C IF Y yourself, sir John 2 Henry IV. ii. 4 

PACK— a pack of sorrows ..TwoGen. of Verona, iii. 1 

seek shelter, pack! Merry Wives, i. 3 

a pack, a conspiracy against me .... — iv. 2 
revenged on the whole pack of youL.T'wW/'AA'. v. 1 

bids me pack; via] Merchant of Venice, ii. 2 

if she do bid me pack, I'll give ..Taming of Sh.'u. 1 
on thee, and all the pack of you .... — iv. 3 
more than mv pack will hold.... Winler'sTale, iv. 3 

bring away thy pack after me — iv. 3 

to keep my pack from fasting — iv. 3 

to trudge, pack, and be gone . . Comedy of Err. iii. 2 

confederate with a damned iiack — iv. 4 

to travel with lier f uircd pack iHenry VI. iv. 2 



PACK— from all the pack of you! ..liichind III. iii. 3 

or pack to their old playfellows Henry VIII. i. 3 

hence! pack! there's gold Timo7i of .Athens, v. \ 

ere yet the fight be done, pack up ..Coriolanus, i. 
pour out the pack of matter ....Antony fyCleo. ii. 5 

go pack with him TilusAndronicus, iv. 2 

will pack, when it begins to rain Lear, ii. 4 

packs and sects of great ones — v, 3 

a pack of blessincrs lights a\mn..Romeofy Juliet, iii. 3 
PACKED [Co/.-paet] iu all thiswrong..1/«c/i.-ldo, v. 1 
are paclred and locked up in .... Winter's Tale, iv. 3 
were he not jiacked with her . . Comedy of Errors, v. 1 
our horse not packed. What ostler! \ Henry IV. \\. 1 

our thighs packed with wax 2 Henry IV. iv. 4 

George be packed with posthorse . . Richard III. i. ! 
has packed cards with Csesar ..Antony Si Cleo. iv. 12 
buried ancestors are packed.... iJojneo ^Juliet, iv. 3 

PACKET is not come, where Love's L. Lost, ii. 1 

small packet of Greek and I>atin. Taming ofSh. ii. 1 
is GiUiams with the packet gone?..! Henry/F. ii. 3 

this packet, please it you 2 Henry IV. iv. 4 

the packet, Cromwell, gave it you. Henry VIII. iii. 2 
put this paper in the packet, to bless — iii. 2 
secret in the packet I sent the king? — iii. 2 
goodness of your intercepted packets — iii. 2 

like a post with packets — v. n 

fingered their packet; and, in fine Hamlet, v. 2 

PACKHORSE in his great afiairs . . Richard III. i. 3 
packhorses, and hollow pampered ..iHenrylV. ii. 4 

PACKING, with a witness Taming of Shrew, v. 1 

faith, and I'll send him packing....! Hem v/F. ii. 4 

be packing therefore, thou that 1 Henry VI. iv. 1 

to send me packing with a host iHenryVl.'iW. 1 

mine eyes be packmg with my heart — iii. 2 
I'll send some packing, that yet .. Richard III. iii- 2 
what! are you packing, sirrali? ....Cymbeline, iii. 5 
in snuifs and packings of the dukes .... Lear, iii. i 

this man shall set me packing Hamlet, iii. 4 

PACKS ADDLE-an ass s packsaddle. Cono/anus, ii. 1 
PACKTHREAD-with packthread Taming of Sli. iii. 2 

remnants of packthread Romeo ^Juliet, v. 1 

PACORUS, Orodes, pays this Antony^ Cleo. iii. 1 

PACT— [Co(.!) was pact in all this ....Much Ado, v. 1 

PACTION of these kingdoms Henri/ V. v. 2 

PAD— suffer for a pad conscience . . Merry Wives, iii. 3 

PADDLE with tlie palm of his hand? ..OHiello. ii. I 

PADDLING— be paddling palms .. Winler'sTale, i. 2 

or paddling in j'our neck with his.... Hamlet, iii. 4 

PADDOCK calls: anon, fair is foul Macbeth, i. 1 

would from a paddock, from a bat. . . . Hamlet, iii. 4 

PADGE— an honourable padge Henry V. iv. 7 

PADUA— signior Benedick of Padua. . Much Ado, i. ! 
a man, in si^eed to Padua. . Merchant of Venice, iii. 4 

new come from Padua (rep.) — iv. 1 

must away tliis night toward Padua — iv. 1 
it comes from Padua, from Bellario — v. 1 

to see fair Padua (i ep.) Taming of Shrew, i. 1 

as time in Padua shall beget — i. 1 

the best horse in Padua to begin his — i. ! 
and be in Padua here Vincentio'a son? — i. 1 
to see my friends in Padua; but, of all — i. 2 
blows you to Padua here, from old.. — i. 2 

in Padua; if wealthily (rep.) — i. 2 

renowned in Padua for her scolding — i. 2 
old signior Gremio has in Padua.... — ii. 1 
here in Padua of greater sums than — iii. 2 

that stops mv way in Padua — iii. 2 

and come to Padua (re;).) — iv. 2 

looked for him this day in Padua .. — iv. 4 
having come to Padua to gather in.. — iv. 4 

father is arrived in Padua — iv. 4 

and bound I am to Padua — iv. b 

your son was beloved in Padua — v. 1 

Padua affords this kindness (7e;).) .. — v. 2 

PAGAN— most beautiful pagan. il/cj-c/i.o/Fent'ce, ii. 3 

grapple thee unto a pagan shore .... King John, v. 2 

against black pagans, Turks Richard II. iv. 1 

to chase these pagans, in those holy..! Henry IV. i. 1 

what a pagan rascal is this? — ii.2 

what pagan may that be? 2HenryIV. ii. 2 

are after such a pagan cut too HenryVIII. i. 3 

nor the gait of christian, pagan Hamlet, iii. 2 

bond-slaves, and pagans, shall our Othello, i. 2 

PAGE— [s.'e ANNE] 

sir Valentine's page TwoGen. of Verona, i. 2 

some well-reputed page — ii. 7 

what think you of this page, my lord? — v. 4 

let us see honest master Page Merry Wives, i. I 

I will peat the door for master Page — i. 1 
master Page, I am glad to see you .. — i. 1 

how doth good mistress Page? — i. 1 

wronged nie, master Page (lep.) .... — i, 1 
master Page, fidelicet, master Page.. — i. 1 
and here another to Page's wife .... — i. 3 
bear thou this letter to mistress Page — i. 3 

myself, and skirted pace — i. 3 

humour of tills love to Page (;ep.) .. — i. 3 

let it suffice thee, mistress Page .. — ii. 1 (letter) 

mistress Page! Trust me (rep.) — ii, i 

the name of 3?age and Ford differs .. — ii. 1 
believe it. Page; he speaks sense .... — ii. 1 

will you go, mistress Page? — ii. 1 

good master Page! Master Page .... — ii. i 
tis the heart, master Page; 'tis here — ii. 1 

thougli Page be a secure fool — ii. i 

in his company at Page's house — ii. ! 

mistress Page hath her hearty (rep.) — ii. 2 
has Ford's wife, and Page's wife .... — ii.2 
to send her your little Page (rep.) .. — ii.2 

master Page is an honest man — ii.2 

mistress Ford, and mistress Page. ... — ii. 2 

Page is an ass, a secure ass — ii.2 

revenged on Falstaff, and laugh at Page — ii. 2 
is it not true, master Page (rep. ) .... — ii. 3 

master guest, and master Page — ii. 3 

well met, mistress Page — iii. 2 

has Page any brains? — iii -i 

tlie so seeming mistress Page (;■'/).).. — in. 2 
I have your good will, father Pcige .. — iii.-.i 
so shall you master Page — iii. 2 



PAGE— wooing at master Page's.. JUcr>!/ Wives, iii. 2 

mistress Page, remember you — iii. 3 

I fear, you love mistress Page — iii. 3 

here's mistress Page at the door (rep.) — iii. 3 

true, master Page — iii. 3 

'tis my fault, master Page — iii. 3 

come wife, come mistress Page — iii. 3 

ju'ay you go, master Page — iii. 3 

nay, master Page, be not impatient — iii. 4 

speak to mistress Page (rep.) — iii. 4 

comes in one mistress Page — iii. 5 

farewell, mistress Page — i i' . ! 

how near is he, mistress Page? — iv. 2 

mistress Page and I will lotik. — iv. 2 

if it p.-ove true, master Page — iv, 2 

master Page, as I am a man — iv. 2 

what hoa, mistress Page! — iv. 2 

Nan Page my daughter, and my .... — i v. 4 

to marry with Nan Page — iv. 4 

mistress Page is come with me — v. A 

whoo,hol ho! father Page! — v. 5 

vere is mistress Page? — v.,') 

make her render up her pui^e. . Mid. N.'sDream, ii. 2 

no, liage: it is an epilogue Love's L. Lost, iii. 1 

and his page o' t'other side — iv. 1 

the page, Hercules (rep. v. 2) — v. 1 

a pretty knavish page, that well .... — v. 2 

put Armado's page out (»ep.) — v. 2 

BO is Alcides beaten by his page. Mer. of Venice, ii. 1 

what page's suit she hath in — ii. 4 

than Jove's own page As youLike it, i. 3 

come two of the banished duke's pages — v. 3 
to Bartholomew my page ..TamingofSh. 1 (indue.) 
come, sir page, look on me with .. Winler'sTale, i. 2 

as pages followed him \ Henry IV. iv. 3 

and page to Thomas Mowbray ....iHenrylV. iii. 2 
master page, good master page, sit. . . . — v. 3 

their dwarfish pages were as Henry VIII. i. 1 

work us all from princes into pages — ii. 2 
'mongst pursuivants, pages, and .... — v. 2 
here comes my mistress' page.. Timon of Athens, ii. 2 
outlived the eagle, page thy heels .. — iv. 3 

prosperity be thy page ! Coriolanus, i. 5 

that pages blushed at him — v. 5 

one of your lordship's pages Cymbeline, i'l. 1 

how! a page! or dead, or sleeping .. — iv. 2 
never master had a page so kind .... — v. 5 
thou art my good youth, my page . . — v. 5 
thou scornfulimge, there lie thy .... — v. 5 

pages and lights, conduct these Fericlis, i i . 3 

where is my page? go, villain. . liomeo ^Juliet, iii. 1 
where is the county's page, that raised — v. 3 
PAGEANT— insubstantial pageant. . . . Tempest, iv. 1 
all onr pageants of delight . Two Gen. of Verona, iv. 4 
shall we their fond pageant see'i.-Mid.N.'sUr. iii. 2 
or show, or pageant, or antic .... Love's L. Lost, v. 1 
as it were the pageants of the sea. Mer. of Venice, i. ) 

more woeful pageants than As you Like it, ii. 7 

see a pageant truly played — iii. 4 

a woeful pageant have we here .... Richard II. iv. 1 
to play my part in fortune's pageant. 2 HeiijT/r;. i. 2 

index of a direful pageant Richardlll iv. 4 

pageants, and sights of honour. . . . Henry VIII. iv. 1 
imitation calls,) he pageants us.. Troilus S!f Cress, i. 3 

in all Cupid's pageant there is — iii. 2 

you shall see the pageant of Ajax .. — iii. 3 

they are black vesper's pageants. /4n<onj/ fy Cleo. iv. 1 2 

'tis a pageant to keep us in false gaze . . Othello, i. 3 

PAGEANTRY, what feats .... Pericles, v. 2 (Gower) 

PAID— so, you've paid Tempest, ii. 1 

that no bed-rite shall be paid — iv. I 

till some certain shot be paid. Two Gen.ofVerona, ii. 5 

then I am paid — v. 4 

I paid nothing for it neither (rep.). Merry Wives, iv. 5 
which must be paid to master Brook — v. 5 
pleasure will be paid, one time . . Twelfth Night, ii. 4 

to be paid from the Sophy — ii 5 

would have paid for the nursing. Mcas./jril/eas. iii. 2 
you have paid the heavens your .... — iii. 2 
and paid me richly for the practice.. JliwcA Ado, v. 1 
and never paid, that now men grow.. — v. 1 
hath so faithfully been paid .... Love's L. Lost, ii. I 
virgin tribute paid by howling .Mer. of Venice, iii. 2 
when it is paid, bring your true .... — iii. 2 

when it is paid according to — iv. 1 

he is well paid, that is well — iv. 1 

do account myself well paid — i v. 1 

than is paid; and more shall be paM,, All's Well, i. 3 
not used, must by thyself be paid.... — ii. 1 

and my honour's paid to him — v. 3 (petit.) 

say thou wilt see the tailor paid. TamingofSh. i\\ 3 
paid you all he promised (rep.) .. Winler'sTale, iv. 3 
indeed, paid down more penitence .. — v. 1 
all my services you have paid home — v. 2 

has paid a soldier's debt Macbeth, v. 7 

he parted well, and paid his score .. — v. 7 
thy due, thou hast paid all there ....\HenryIV. i. 2 

two, I am sure, I have paid — ii. 4 

seven of the eleven I paid — ii. 4 

the money shall be paid back — ii. 4 

paid money that I borrowed — iii. 3 

the money is paid back again — iii. 3 

I have paid Percy, I have made .... — v. 3 
Scot had paid me scot and lot too .... — v. 4 
a lie, duer paid to the hearer than. .2ifenrs(/r. iii. 2 

let it be cast, and paid — v. 1 

the sum is paid HenryV, ii. (chorus) 

in cash most justly paid — ii. 1 

nothing taken but paid for — iii. 6 

now have I paid my vow I Henry VI. ii. 2 

without his ransom paid — iii. 3 

what thou wilt, thou slialt be_paid..2HeHr!/F;. iv. 1 
the emperor paid ere he promised . . Henry VIII. i. I 

their wages duly paid them — iv. 2 

wherefore you are not paid .... Timon qfAthetis. ii. 2 
of nature which mv lord paid for.... — iii. 1 

has paid his men their wages — iii. 2 

ambition's debt is paid ..JuliusCresar, iii. 1 

1 am paiil fnr't now ..Antony t^Clevpalra, ii. 5 

'ow wouldst thou have paid my .... — iv. 6 



I'AID— can be paid but once. /(n'onu <5CTcopa.'rn,iv. 12 
tilling!^ of any penny tribute paitl . . Cymbeline, ii. 4 
tliere 9 no more tribute to be paid .. — iii. 1 
paid move pious debts to lieaveu ,... — iii. 3 

rememljer, l>e was paid tor that — iv. 2 

Borry tliat jjou liave paid too niucli (;v'p.) — v, 4 
praises, wliicli are paid as debts .I'ericLes^ iv. (Gow.) 
maduess sluill be paid witli wei"lit.... Hal»te^ iv. 5 

TAIL— frozen liorae in pail ^Love s L. Lost^ v. 'i (son:i) 
a hundred mileii-lcine to tire pwXl. Taming n/Sh, ii. 1 
great pails of puddled mire Comedy oj'lirrors, v. 1 

PAU.l"Ub_but fall by pai Ifuls Tempest, ii. 2 

PAIN— since thou dost give me pains — i. 2 

took pains to make thee speak — i. 2 

on wlioni my pains liumanely taken — iv. 1 
pains to set it together (rep.) . . Two Gen. of Ver. i. 1 
Diit tlie word noddy, for my pains .. — i. 1 

here is for your pains (rep.) — _i. 1 

you think too mucli of so miieh pains — ii. 1 
there's for thy pains Merry Wives, iii. 4 



V. 5 

elfthNight, i. 2 
— i. 5 



PAIN— fur this pains, Ca;aar liatli..4K'0H)' SfCleo. iv.C 
of Nilus there, that kills and pnins iwl'l — v. 2 
the biting of it, what pain she felt .. — v. 8 

I thank you for your pains Cymbeii 

you lay out too mucli pains — 

a pain that only seems to seek out . . — 

wliat pain it cost, what tlanger! — 

pleasures here are past, so is tlieir pain — 
never heard of tortnrin^^ pain. . , . 'I'itus Atidro 
for our beloved motlier in lier pains 
eliould be so conversant witli pain..., Pi 
and not your knowledee, personal pain 

take some pains to work her to 

put me to present pain 

turn all her motlier's pains 

in whicli your pain that way; I'll this . 
on pain ot their perpetual displeasure . 
how light and portable my pain seems. 



n, I. 1 
i. 2 
V. 1 



I. 3 
ii. 1 
iii. 1 
iv. 1 
V. 
V. B 



ii.3 



iv. 2 
Ues, iii. 2 

— iii. 2 

— iv. 6 

— V. 1 
Lear, i, 4 

— iii. 1 

— iii. 3 



and turn him to no pain 

it may be worth thy pains T 

taken "reat pains to eon it (rep.) . . 

I thanK you for your pains — i. a 

you might have saved me my pains — ii- 2 

there's for thy pains. No pains, sir . . — ii. 4 
you make your pleasure of your pains — iii. 3 
It hatli been great pains to yo\\\. Mens, for Mcas. ii. 1 
accountant to the lawupon that palu — ii. 4 
lend him your kind pains to find.... — v. 1 

thank you for your pains (rep.) Much.-ldo, ii. 3 

no more pains for tliosc thanks (rep.) — ii.3 

any pains tliat I take for you — ii.3 

tliiuik thee for tliy care and honest pains — v. 1 

there's for thy pains — v. 1 

I mu.it entreat your pains, I thinit .. — v, 4 
mean I to enrich my pain .... Hid. N.^s Dr 

take pains; be perfect; adieu — 

and conned with cruel pain — 

pain purchased, doth inherit pain.Loue'sL. Lo5^ i. 1 

on pain of losing lier tongue — i. 1 

express my true love's fasting pain .. — iv. 3 

where lies thy pain? — iv. 3 

pray tliee, take pain to allay ..Merch. offenice.n. 2 

it is worth the pains — ii. 6 

hath ta'en great pains to qualify .... — iv. 1 

cope your courteous pains witlml.... — iv. 1 

that took some pains in writing...... — v, 1 

of all thy pains and husbandry . . As you Like if, ii. 3 

because he feels no pain — iii. 2 

that weigh llieir pams in sense AlVsWell, i. 1 

shall pay me for my pains — ii. 1 

thy pains, not used, must by — ii. 1 

are sorry for our pains. Ipr'ythee .. — iii. 2 

Lord, how we lose our pains! — v. 1 

make you thank yoiu- pains for it.... — v. 1 
his studies, or his usual pain? Taming of Shrew, iii. 1 

I tliank you for your pains — iii. 2 

and all my pains is sorted to no proof — iv. 3 
not worth her pains; much less .. Winler'sTale, v. 1 
burdened witli like weight of paiuComedi/'i/'^''''- 'i- 1 

if you went in pain, master — iii. 1 

to take the pains to go with us — v. 1 

thanks for your pains; do you not .... Macbeth, i. 3 
your pains are registered where every — i. 3 

bid God yield us for your pains — i.6 

we delight in, physics pain _ ii.3 

well done! I commend your pains . . — iv. 1 
bones that took the pains for me .... King John, i . 1 

took pains to get this son i. 1 

that will take pains to blow — i. 1 

for very little pains will bring — iii. 2 

let hell want pains enough to torture — iv. 3 

to recompense the pains you take — v. 4 

on pain of death (rep.) Richard II. i. 3 

on pain to be found false and (rep.).. — 

against tliee upon pain of life — 

that breathe their words in pain .... 

injustice with the pains of hell — 

and, for your pains, of capital treason — 
tliank thee, gentle Percy, for thy pains — 
thy pains, Fitzwater, sliall not he fjrgot — 
knew what pains I have bestowed.. 2 /fenr?//f. iv. 2 

are murdered for our pains — iv. 4 

with more than with a common pain — iv. 4 

banish thee on pain of death — v. 5 

and your pains, we thank you for Henry V,. i. 2 

love their present pains, upon example — iv. 1 
will take the pains but to examine .. — iv. 1 

my wits, my pains, and strong — v. 2 

upon pain of death ..) Henry VI. i. 3 (proclamation) 

banish thee, on pain of death iv. 1 

wliora I with pain have wooed v. 3 

indebted for this piece of pains 'iHenryVI. i. 4 

I know, no pain, they can inflict — iii. 1 

in pain of your dislike, or pain of death — iii. 2 
tliree days longer, on the pain of death — iii. 2 

let me live, and feel no pain — iii. 3 

felt that pain which I did for him ..ZHenryVI. i. I 
unless the lady Bona quit his pain .. — iii. 3 

felt more than a mother's pain — v. 6 

to speak, my pains are quite forgot. Kic/mrd III. i. 3 

on pain of death? I was (rep.) — i. 3 

franked up to fatting for his pains . . — i. 3 
methought, what pain it was to drowul — i. 4 

of all one pain, save for a night — iv. 4 

shall pay your pains the hire — v. 3 

hath ta'en much pain in the Henry fill, iii. 2 

out of the pain you suffered — iv. 2 

I should have ta'en some pains to.... — v. I 
such pains to bring you together. Troilus tj- Cress, ii i. 2 
1 have done, in most accepted pain.. — iii. 3 
with such a hell of pain, and world .. — iv. 1 
your words have took such pains. 7'imon o/A'.h.iU.i 

yet may your pains six montlis — iv. 3 

you take much pains to mend — v. 2 

our sufferance is a pain to them .... Corinlanus, i. 1 

I thank you for your pains JutivsCresrir, ii. 3 

I^iind on pain of punishment ititony fyVleo. i. I 

maii tiimuowu edict lor thy paius.. — iii. It) 



. Romeo Sf Juliet, i 



V. 3 



ii. 4 



that with tile pain of death 
on pain of torture, from those 

once more, on pain of death — 

one pain is lessened by another's anguish — 
here is for thy pains. No, truly, sir.. — 
be trusty, and I'll quit thy pains .... — ii. i 
harsh world draw tny breath in pain ..Hniidet, v. 2 
good Koderigo; I'll deserve your pains. . Otkelio, i. 1 
elie gave me for my pains a world of sighs — i. 3 
have so much experience for my pains . . — ii.3 
play here, 1 will content your pams .... — iii. 1 
I have a pain upon my foreheadhere.... — iii. 3 

even to that sense of pain — iii. 4 

tliere 's money for youi' pains — iv. 2 

I wo idd not have thee linger in thy pain — v. 2 

PAINED— employed and pained.. .Veas. /or Weas. v. 1 

to enforce tlie pained impotent to. Love^sL. Lost, v. 2 

PAINED'ST— the pained'st flend of hell I'cjictes, iv. 6 

PAINFUL— some sports are painful . . Tempest, iii. 1 

witli most painful feeling il/eas./oriUeus. i 2 

if it had been painful, I would not . . Much Ado, ii. 3 
till pahiful study shall outwear. . Love's L. tost, ii. 1 
commits his body to painful labour. Taming ofSh. v.2 

marching in the painful field Henry V. iv. 3 

the painful service, the extreme . . Coriolanus, iv. 5 

many a dearn and painful Pericles, iii. (Gower) 

PAIN'FULLY remain a dozen years. . . . Tempest, i. 2 

painfully to pore upon a book Love's L.Lost, i. 1 

who painfully, witli much expedient. King John, ii. 1 

thou liast painfully discovered. 7'/mo7io/.i4//ie«s, v. 3 

PAINT— does.Bridget paint still.-Ueas./nr.l/eas. iii. 2 

yea, or to paint himself? Much Ado, iii. 2 

too good to paint out her wickedness — iii. 2 

nay, never yaint me now Love' sL. Lost, iv. 1 

jiaints itself black, to imitate — iv. 3 

do paint the meadows with delight — v. 2 (song) 
and paint your face, and use.. Taming of shrew, i. 1 
where revenge did paint the fearful. A.i?;ff./o/m, iii. 1 
to paint the lily, to throw a perfume — iv. 2 

you do paint the white rose red 1 Henry VI. ii. 4 

with your blood you daily paint. Troilus <§• Cress, i. I 
witli man's blood paint the ground. Twiau o/Ath. iv.3 

paint till a horse may mire — iv.3 

thou canst not paint a man so bad . . — v. 1 

I paint him in the character — v. 4 

you shall paint wlien'you are old. Antony S,-Cleo. i. 2 

let her paint an inch thick Hamlet, v. 1 

PAINTED— with colours fairer painted. Tempest, i. 2 

and had but this fish painted — ii. 2 

because the one is painted (rep.)Tu'oGen.of Ver. ii. 1 

so painted, to make her fair — ii. 1 

'tis painted about with the story. .Me^'ry H'ives, iv. 5 

let me be vilely painted Much Ado, i. 1 

winged Cupid painted blind ..Mid. N.'s Dream, i. 1 
pluck the wings from painted butterflies — iii. 1 
now low am I, thou painted maypole? — iii. 2 
needs not the painted flourish . . Love's L. Lost, ii. 1 
painted rhetoric! O she needs it not — iv. 3 
out of the painted cloth for this .... — v. 2 
sweetthan thatof painted pomp? AsyouLikeil, ii. 1 

I answer you right painted cloth — iii. 2 

painted by a running brook.. J'aming-o/SA. 2 (ind.) 
OS lively painted as the deed was .. — 2 (ind.) 
because his painted skin contents . . — iv. 3 

were I painted, I would wish. . . . Winter's Tale, iv. 3 
childhood, that fears a painted devil . . Macbeth, ii. 2 
monsters are, painted upon a polo . . — y. 7 
cold in amity, and painted peace ..King John, iii. 1 

not painted with the crimson — i v. 2 

but gilded loam, or painted clay .... Richard II. i. 1 
with painted imagery, had said .... — v.2 
as Lazarus in the painted cloth .... 1 Henry IV. iv. 2 
with pennons painted in the blood ..Henry V. iii. 5 

Fortune is painted plind — iii. 6 

she is painted also with a wheel .... — iii. 6 
falchion, painted to the hiltin blood.37fe?(ryF/. i. 4 
poor painted queen, vain flourish.. iJic/mrii III. i. 3 

poor shadow, painted queen — iv. 4 

your painted gloss discovers Henry VIII. y . 2 

pluck his painted wings .... Troilus SfCressida, iii. 2 

set this in your painted cloths — v. 11 

wrought he not well, that painted . . Timon o/Ath. i. 1 
but only painted, like his varnished — iv. 2 
he painted with shunless destiny ..Corinlanus, ii. 2 

are painted with unnumbered JxdinsCtesar, iii. 1 

though he be painted one way . . Anlnny .', Cleo. ii. 5 
painted thus, would be interpreted. CymAe/iMe, iii. 4 
with that painted hope braves.... Titus Andron. ii. 3 

ye alehouse painted signs! — iv. 2 

a Tartar's painted bow of lath .. Eomen/y Juliet, i. 4 
80, as a painted tyrant, Pyn'hus stood.. Hamlet, ii. 2 

my deed to my most painted word — iii. 1 

PAINTEH flattered her ....TwoGen.ofrerona,vi. 4 

he's a god or a painter Love's L.Lost, v. 2 

the painter plays the spider. . . . Mer. of I'enice, iii. 2 
better, that made the painter .... Timon ofAth. i. 1 
yonder comes a poet, and a painter.. — iv.3 
a stonecutter, or a painter, could not ....Lear, ii. 2 

and the painter with his nets Romeo ^Juliet, i. 2 

PAINTING, sir. I have heard ...Meas.forMeas. iv. 2 
painting, do iJiove my occupation. ... — iv. 2 
soldiers iu the icechy paiutiug ..... . Muih Ado, iii. 3 



PAINTING-afterthe old painting. Lofe'sL.Los(, iii. 1 
that painting, and usurping hair .... — iv.3 
native blood is counted painting now — iv.3 
stain yourown with oily paintinp. lt'inter'sTfdr,v. 3 
this is the very painting ot your fear .Mucbelh, iii. 4 
labour was to them as a painting ,. Hem y f III. i. I 
a thousand moral paintings 1 can.. Tunono/Ath. \. 1 
a piece of painting; which I do iieseech — i, 1 

painting is welcome: the painting is — i. I 

that love tliis painting wherein you .Coriolanus, i. 6 
whose mother was her paiutim^ .... Cymbeline, ill. 4 
of your paintings [Kn/.-prattlings] too. Hamte/, iii. 1 
or are you like the painting of a sorrow — iv. 7 
PAlO(3KE— [A'h/.] a very.very- Paiocke — iii. 2 
PAIR— twenty pair of eyes .. TwoGen.of Verona, ii. 4 

apair of anc'ioring hooks — iii. 1 

I can to get you a pair of horns . . Merry Wives, v. 1 
not a pair of these have bred. . . . Tuelflh NiglU, iii. 1 
there went but a pair of sheers ..Meus.for Meas. i. 2 
here stand apair of honourable mtn.MndiAdo, v. 1 
shall tlie pairs of faithful lovers ..Mid..\.'sUr. iv. 1 
hath bought a pair of cast lips ..As you Like it, iii. 4 

have they made a pair of stairs — v. 2 

here comes a pair of very strange — v. 4 

a pair of stocks, you rogue. Taming o/Sh. 1 (indue.) 
pair of old breeches, thrice turned (rep.) — iii. 2 
so turtles pair, that never mean.. Winter'sTale, iv. 3 

and a pair of sweet gloves — iv.3 

by us, a pair of kings — v. 3 

a pair of stocks In the town? ..Comedy of Err. iii. 1 
want pleading for a pair of eyes ....KingJohn.iv. 1 

for a pair of carved saints Richard i/. iii. 3 

have fretted us apair of graves — iii. 3 

I'll make a fat pair of gallows IHenrylV. ii. I 

show it a fair pair of heels — ii. 4 

to note how many pair of silk iHenrylV. ii. 2 

canvas tlice between a pair of sheets — ii. 1 

upon one pair of English legs Henry V. iii. 6 

like to a pair of loving turtle-doves .IHe;ir!/ri.ii.2 

a pair of crafty knaves 2 Henry VI. i. 2 

a pair of bleeding hearts Richard III. iv. 4 

what a pair of spectacles is here! Troilus^- Cress.iv.i 

you are a pair of strange ones Coriolanus, ii. 1 

a pair of tribunes that nave racked . . — y. 1 
when such a mutual pair ..Antony Sr Cleopatra, i. 1 
world, thou hast a pair of chaps .... — iji- * 

like a pair of twins appearea — iii. 8 

shall clip in it a pair so famous — v.2 

how to wish a pair of worthier sons. . Cymbeline, v. 5 
a pair of cursed hell-hounds. . TilusAndronicus, v. 2 

unprovided of a pair of bases Pericles, ii. 1 

my best gown to make thee a pair .. — ii. 1 
pair oi star-crossed lovers iaka.. Romeo fy Jul. (prol.) 
for a pair of stainless maidenhoods .. — iii. 2 

for a pair of reechy kisses Hamlet, iii. 4 

lengtli and breadth of a pair of indentures? — v. 1 

PAIRED well with this lord Winter's Tale, v. 1 

PAISAN— un paisan, by gar, a boy .Merry Wives, v. 5 
paisans, pauvres gens de France ..IHnnyVl. iii. 2 

PALABRAS, neighbour Verges MuehAdo, iii. 5 

PALLABRIS-paucas pallabris. I'ammg' o/A7i. 1 (ind.) 

PALACE— the gorgeous palaces Tempest, iv. I 

so, bring us to our palace Meas. for Meas. v. 1 

meet me in the palace wood. ...Mid.N.'s Dream, i. 2 

meet presently at the palace — iv. 2 

through this palace, with sweet peace — v. 2 
men's cottages, princes' palaces. . Mer. of Venice, i. 2 
pray heartily he be at palace .... Winter'sTale, iv. 3 
to the palace, an' it like your worship — iv. 3 

the king is not at the palace — iv.3 

without the palace gate Macbeth, iii. 1 

something from the palace — iii. 1 

from hence to the palace gate — iii. 3 

though palaces, and pyramids — iv. 1 

gorgeous palace, for a hermitage . . Richard II. iii. 3 
ruin combat with their palaces! . . . .\Henry VI. v. 2 
in golden palaces, as it becomes .... — v. 3 

might in thy palace perish 2HenryVI. iii. 2 

tear him from your palace — iii. 2 

is crept into the palace of our king .. — iv. 1 

the palace of the fearful king ZHenryVI. i. 1 

through the city to the palace gates.. — i. 1 
my soul's palace is become a prison.. — ii. 1 
your prisoner to your palace gate. ... — iii. 2 
here at the palace will I rest awhile — iv. 8 
poor Henry at the bishop's palace.... — v. 1 
our great palace the capacity . . Antony^ Cleo. iv. 8 
thoughts do hit the roofs of palaces. Cymtie/ine, iii. 3 
mount, eagle, to my palace crystalline .. — v. 4 
or climb my palace, till from .... 7 itus Andron. i. 2 
so near the emperor's palace dare.... — ii. 1 
the palace full of tongues, of eyes. . . . — ii. 1 
before tlie palace gate to brave the ,. — iv, 2 
thou seem'st a palace for the crowned.. Per/des, v. I 
and his they in ills palace burn — v. 3 (Gower") 

in palaces, treason; and the bond Lear, i. i 

or a brothel, than a graced palace — i. 4 

in such a gorgeous palace! ....Romeo ^Juliet, iii. 2 

never from this palace of dim night.. — v. 3 

as Where's that palace, whereinto fon\. O/hello, iii. 3 

PALx\MEDE3 sore hurt and .... Troilus ^-Cress. v. 5 

PALATE— liver, but the palate ..Twelfih Night, ii. 4 

let their palates be seasoned Mer. of Venice, iy. 1 

repute w^ith their finest palate. Troilus 6r Cressida, i. 3 
when that tlie watery palate tastes. . — iii. 3 

to a weak and colder palate — iv. 4 

sauce his palate with thy most. Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

touch my palate adversely Coriolanus, ii. I 

the greatest taste most palates theirs.. — iii. 1 
thy palate tlien did deign ..Antony ^Cleopatra,!. 4 

and never palates more the dung — v.2 

those palates, who not yet two summers. /'errc/es,i. 4 

to please the palate of my appetite Othello, i, 3 

their palates both for sweet and sour .... — iv. 3 

PALATINE— county Palatine. ..Verc/i. of Venice, i. 2 

frowning than the count Palatine .. — i. 2 

P ALATING the taste of her Troilus <S- Cress, iv. 1 

PALE— thev waxed pale Two Gen. of Verona, iii. I 

by this pule queen of night I swear.. — iv. 2 
and looks pale, aa if 9. beai ,,..,. Twelfth Might, iii. 4 



PAIiE at mine heart Measure for Measure, iv. 3 

ere I die, look pale with love Much Ado, i. 1 

he looks pale: art thou sick, or angry? — v. 1 
the pale companion is not for . . Mid.S.'s Dream, i. 1 

why is your cheekso pale? i. 1 

over pale, thorough flood — ii. 1 

of floods, pale in ner anger ii.2 

all fancy-sick she is, and pale of clieer — iii. 2 

seen them shiver and look pale .... v. 1 

with hands as pale as milk _ v. 1 

you may look pale, but I s]\o\\\A. Love' sL. Lost, iv. 3 
why look you pale? sea-siok, 1 think — v. 2 
thou pale and common (irmh^e. ..Mer.nf Venice, iii. 2 
thou must look pale and v,-oaAev . . As you Like it, i. 1 
this heaven, now at our sorrows pale — i. 3 

from thy pale sphere above — iii. 2 

between the pale complexion of — iii. 4 

what, pale again? myfearhath AlVsWell,\.3 

60 pale? For fear I promise trrp.). Taming o/Sli. ii. 1 

look not pale, Biancn; thy father v. 1 

reigns in the winter's pole. . Ifititer's T. iv. 2 (song) 

the pale moon shines by night — iv. 2 (sona) 

pale primroses, that die unmarried.. — iv.'s 
breaks the pale, and feeds Uon\.. Comedy of Err. ii. 1 

looked he red, or pale — iv. 2 

I know it by their pale and deadly .. — iv. 4 

how pale and wan he looks I iv. 4 

troop of pale distemperatures v. 1 

to look so green and pale at what Macbeth, i. 7 

bond which keeps me pale! iii. 2 

look not so pale; I tell you yet v. 1 

that pale, that white-faced shore ....King John, ii. I 

look'st thou pale, France? _ jii. i 

you look pale to-day 1 v. 1 

the cygnet to this pale faint swau .. v. 7 

pale trembling coward Richard II. i. 1 

or with pale beggar fear impeach .... i. i 

is pale cold cowardice in noDle 1. 2 

make pale our cheek _ ii. j 

why looks your grace so pale? _ jii. 2 

reason to look pale and dead? — iii. 2 

iu the compass of a pale iii. 4 

yea, look'st tliou pale? let me see.... — v. 2 

tlien his cheek looked pale \ Henry IV. i. 3 

his cheek looks pale iii. 1 

the day looks pale at Iiis distemperature — v.' 1 

left the liver white and pale iUenrylV. iv. 3 

delivering o'er to executors pale Henry /'. i. 2 

with pale policy seek to divert — ii. (chorus) 

as in despite, the sun looks pale .... — iii. 5 
pining and pale before, beholding — iv. (chonis) 
behold t]>e English beach pales in — v. (clionis) 
whose very shores look pale with envy _ v. 2 

like pale gliosts, faintly besiege iHenry VI. i. 2 

I pluck this pale and maiden _ ii 4 

for pale they look with fear _ ii. 4 

this pale and angry rose _ ii[ 4 

and pale destruction meets iv. 2 

withered, bloody.pale, and dead .... _ iv. 2 

parked, and bounded in a pale iv' 2 

why look'st tliou pale? iHenryVI. iii! 2 

look pale as primrose iii. 2 

meagre, pale, and bloodless iii! 2 

these cheeks are pale for watching .. — iv' 7 

and will you pale your head ZHenryVI. (. 4 

but severed in a pale clear-shining .. _ ii 1 
the other, his pale cheeks, methiiika — ii' 5 

pale ashes of the house of Richard III. i 2 

why look you pale? who sent _ 14 

look I so pale, lord Dorset, as the rest? — ii' 1 
guilty kindred of the queen looked pale — ii. 1 
each otiier, and looked dcadlv pale . . — iii. 7 

?ale she looks, and of an earthy ..Henry VIII. iv. 2 
'11 pick you o'er the pales else — v' 3 

of pale and bloodless emulation . Troilus <$• Cress, i. 3 
make livers pale, and lustihood deject — ii 2 
and makes pale [A'n^-stale] the morning— ii. 2 
a pale, a shore, confines thv spacious — ii 3 

look, how thy eye turns pale! _ v. 3 

and her pale fire shesnatclies.. Tmion o/Alhens. iv 3 

and make bold power look pale Coriolauus i 1 

faces pale witli flifrht and agued fearl _ 1.4 

ay; and you'll look pale before you.. — iv' 6 

Calphnrnia's elieek is pale Julius Cwsar, \. 2 

you look pale, and gaze, and put on fear — i 3 
I am pale, Cha,rniian Antony^ Cleopatra, ii! 5 



ii.7 



— 11. 4 

iii. 1 
V. 3 



that moved pale Cassius to conspire? — 

whate'er the ocean pales, or sky — ^ , 

il'*^?.' '/". ,^°",_'='*"' ^^ Piile Cymbetine, i i.' 4 

that s like thy face, pale primrose .. _ iv 2 

give colour to my pale clieek _ iv' 2 

gilded pale looks, part, shame, part.. — v' 3 
above pale envy's threatening.. .. TilusAndron. ii! 1 

look 60 pale and wan? (rfp.) .- - ;. •> 

so pale did shine the moon on 

struck pale and bloodless _ 

this warm kiss on thy pale cold lips — ,. ^ 
speechless tongues, ancf semblance ^aXe. Pericles i 1 

which makes me pale to read it? _ i' 1 

already sick and pale with grief, nomeo ^Juliet, ii! 2 
ah, tliat same pale hard-hearted wench — ii 4 

slie looks as pale as any clout _ ii' 4 

heavy and pale as lead _ ii' 5 

pale, pale as ashes all bedaubed in blood — iii.' 2 
tis but the pale refle.x of Cynthia's brow— iii 5 
my eyesight fails, or thou look'st pale — iii' 5 

your looks are pale and wild — v 1 

and death's pale flag is not advanced — v' 3 
Roraeol Opale! what else? what .. — v 3 
you tremble, and look pale Hamlet, ( \ 

E ale, or red? Nay, very pale i 2 
reaking down the pales and forts ! — i! 4 

and gins to pale his uneffectual fire — i 5 

pale as his shirt; his knees knocking — ii' | 

Bickhed o'er with the pale east of thought — iii' I 

look you, how pale he glares! . _ iii 4 

you that look pale and tremble at this .. — v' 2 

what, look you pale! (i ep.) Olhello. v. I 

T. Vt i"^''"'?!'' ^'■^""''^ ' !«"« "5 'hy smock ! _ v. 2 
TILLED with rocks uuscaleable .... Cymbeline, iii. 1 



PALE-DEAD e.ves Henry V. iv. 2 

PALE-DULL mouths the ginimal — iv. 2 

PALE-FACED villages with war Richard II. ii. 3 

tiie pale-faced moon looks bloody .. ii. 4 

honour from the pale-faced moon ..\HenryIV. i. 3 

letpale-facedfear keep with ZHenryVI. iii. 1 

PALE-HEARTEDfearitlies Macbclh,iv. 1 

PALENESS of this flower 1 Henry VI. iv. 1 

{Col.Knl.'] paleness moves me more Mer.of'Ven. iii. 2 
PAI,ER— looks aiittle paler: 'tis a daj' — v. 1 

you look paler and paler As you Like it. iv. 3 

PALESTINE— wars in Palestine KinaJolm, ii. I 

have walked barefoot to Palestine ....Olhello, iv. 3 

PALE-VISAGED maids, like KingJohn, v. 2 

PALE-WHITE— pale-white shown. .ioue'sL.L. i. 2 

PALFREY— the prince of palfreys Henry V. iii. 7 

vary deserved praise on my palfrey — iii. 7 

shall my palfrey go to grass 2HenryVl. iv. 2 

provide tliee proijer palfreys.. TilusAndronicus, v. 2 
PALISADOES, frontiers, parapets ..\ Henry IV. ii. 3 

PALL— and pall thee in the dunnest Macbeth, i. 5 

well, when our deep plots do pall Hamlet, v. 2 

PALLAS-Pallas, Jove, or Blercurv. TitusAndron. iv. 1 
here, boy, to Pallas: here, to Mercury — iv. 3 

m "Vir.go's lap, give it Pallas _ iv. 3 

PALLED fortunes more Antony ^Cleopatra, ii. 7 

PALLET— upon uneasy pallets iHenry IV. iii. 1 

PALLIAMENT of white and spotless. TitiisAnd. i. 2 

PALM— and, by this virgin v^lm.. Love' s L. Lost, v. 2 

thy palm some moment keeps ..As you Like it, iii. 5 

but to be paddling palms Winter's Tate, i. i 

still virginaling upon his palm? — i. 2 

hard, in the palm of the hanH.. Comedy of Err. iii. 2 
fairangels would salute my palm ..KingJohn, ii. 2 

again to snatch our palm from palm iii. 1 

grow in the palm of my hand iHenry IV. i. 2 

hard as the palm of ploughman! JTroi/us ^ Cress, i. I 

must not so stale his palm ii. 3 

gives us more palm in beauty — iii! 1 

limekilns i' tlie palm, incurable .... v. 1 

shall see him a palm in Athens . . Timon of Ath. v. 1 

the virginal palms of your Coriolanus, v. 2 

and bear the palm, for having bravely — v. 3 

and bear the palm alone Julius Ctesar, i. 2 

an itching palm (;ep.) _ iv. 3 

there's a palm presages chastity. .^n(on7/<5-c;eo. i! 2 

nay, if an oily palm be not.. _ i. 2 

palm to pahn is holy palmers' kiss.i?om«) fyJul. i. 5 

but do not dull thy palm with Hamlet, i 3 

between them like the palm might flourish — v. 2 
he takes her by the palm: ay, well said .Othello, ii. 1 
see her paddle with the palm of his hand? — ii. 1 

PALMER— do the palmers lodge All's Well, iii. 5 

for a palmer's walking-staft' Richard II. iii. 3 

made to grasp a palmer's staff 2 Henry VI. v. 1 

holy palmers^ kiss (_rep.) Romeo 4-Juliel, i. 5 

PALM- 'TREE— on a palm-tree ..AsyouLike it, iii. 2 

PALMY— and palmy state of Rome Hamlet, i. 1 

PALPABLE-this palpable gross play. Mid.N. Dr. v. 1 
in form as palpable as this which now. Macbeth, ii. 1 

as a mountain, open, palpable IHenrylV, ii. 4 

cannot see this palpable device? . . Richard III. iii. 6 

a hit, a very palpable hit Hamlet, v. 2 

tis probable, and palpable to thinking.. OrteZio, i. 2 
PALSIED-almsof palsied eld.. it/eas. ftr .Ufa.?, iii. I 

or witli the palsied intercession Coriolanus, v. 2 

PALSIES— cold palsies, raw eyes. Troilus ^ Cress, v. 1 

PALSY— now prisoner to tlie palsy . . Richard II. ii. 3 

the palsy, and not fear, provoketh..2Henivr/. iv 7 

PALSY-EUMBLING on his .. Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 3 

PALTER with us in a double sense Macbeth, v. 7 

that shall palter thus with us. .Troilus ^-Cress. ii. 3 

pho, pho! adieu; you palter v. 2 

the word, and will not palter? JuliusCwsar, ii! 1 

palter in the shifts of lowness .. Antony frCleo. i\\ 9 
PALTERING becomes not Rome . . Coriolanus, iii. 1 
PALTRY— to this paltry knight ..Merry Wives, ii. 1 

a very dishonest paltry boy TieelfthiMght, iii. 4 

a paltry ring, that she did give.Merch.of Venice, v. I 

it is a paltry cap Taming of Shreu; iv. 3 

your forces from this paltry siege . . King John, ii. 1 

to save a paltry life, and slay I Henry VI. i v! 6 

upon these paltry, servile, abject ..illenryVl. iv. 1 
underneath an alehouse' paltry sign — v, 2 

but a paltry fellow, long kept Richard III. v 3 

a paltry, insolent fellow Troilus 4 Cressida. ii. 3 

'tis i>aitry to be Ca;sar; notheing.Anlony ^Cli-o. v. 2 

PALY— their paly flames HetiryV.'iv. (chorus) 

would I go to chafe his paly lips ..iHenry VI. iii. 2 

shall fade to paly ashes Romeo ^Juliet, iv. 1 

PAMPER it with lamentations ....Richard III. ii. 2 

PAMPERED animals that rage Much Ado. iv 1 

hollow pampered jades of Asia iHenryir ii 4 

PAMPHLETS studiously devised?.. IHcH)!/;-/. iii. 1 
PANCAlfE-were good pancakes ..AsyouLike it, i. 2 

the pancakes were naught _ j. 2 

before ever he saw those panr-akes i! 2 

as a pancake for Shrove-Tuesday All's Well ii' 2 

PANDAR— but by Pandar .... Troilus ^ Cressida, i! 1 

what Cressid is, what Pandar _ i 1 

tliissailingPandar, our doubtful hope — i! 1 

than in tlie glass of Pandar's praise.. i 2 

call tliem all— Piindars (rep.) _ jj;' 2 

bed, chamber, and Pandar to provide ~ iii 2 

weep out at Pandar's fall _ y 11 

FANDARU.S-sir PandaruBof Trov.A/cjrj/Tft-r'.! i 3 
play lord PaMdarusofPhrygia..7'«<.Vf//iAV"-A; i'ii' 1 
Pandarus! I tell thee {rep.) ..Troilus S- Cressida i' 1 

art thou angry, Pandarus? ()fp.) _ j' 1 

madam, your uncle Pandarus (rep.) _ j" 2 

know me better; I am the lordPandarus — iii' 1 
my lord Pandarus; honey-sweet (rep.) — iii' 1 

you know all, lord Pandarus iii'i 

no, Pandarus: I stalk about her door — iii' 2 

O gentle Pandarus, from Cupid's iii! o 

PAJJDER— have been a pander Merry ll'ircs, v 5 

the first employer of panders Much .Mi,', v. 2 

his help iu this, his pander H'inier'srale.'u. 1 

like a base pander, hold the Ih-myv! iv 5 

many as be here of pander's hall. 7'roil. 4 Crcss. v. 1 1 



PANDER to her dishonour Cymbeline, iii. 4 (let.) 

ah, you precious pander! villain — iii. 5 

beggar, coward, pander, and the son Lear, ii. 2 

T, ?',li.'',^,'i?2'U"'"'^<^''^ ^'" Ha?nlet, iii. 4 

PANDERLY-you panderly rascals IJt/errwWiwes, iv.2 

PANDULPH, of fair Milan cardinal. Km4.,;o/in, iii. 1 

the cardinal Paiidulph is within at rest — v. 7 

PANG— suffered the pangs of three.AferryJriMs, iii. 5 

till the pangs of death shake him.Tweifth Night, i. 5 

in the sweet pangs of it _ ii. 4 

for your love as great a pang of heart — ii. 4 
but by pangs of death and sepulchre — iii. 4 
finds a pang as great as when...'V/eas. forMeas. iii. 1 

I do see the cruel pangs of death kingJolm, v. 4 

cannot long hold out these pangs ..iHrnryll\ iv. 4 

see, how the pangs of death iHmryVl. iii. 3 

and, in the very pangs of death ....ZHenryVI. ii. 3 
tor that neither; here's the pang ..Henry VIII. ii. 3 

more pangs and fears than wars _ iii. 2 

made almost each pang a death — v. 1 

losses, their pangs of love Timon of Athens, v. 2 

pitying the pangs of barred atfections.Cymf/e/r/ie, i. 2 

subdues all pangs, all fears — j. 2 

make swift the pangs of my queen's. . Pericles, iii. J 
T> A »?/'?''"?^ of despised love, the law's ..Hamlet, iii. 1 
PANGED— then be panged by me ..Cymbeline, iii. 4 

PANGING as soul and body's Henry r in. ii 3 

PANNEL— a slirunk pannel AsyouLikeit. iii. 3 

PANNIER-turkeysin my pannier. .IHeHvj/"' ii. I 
PANNONIANSandDalmatians(»ep.iii.7)C'i/».6.iii.l 
1 ANSA-slew'st Hirtius and T&nsa.Aniony/^'cieo. i. 4 

PANSIES, that's for thoughts Hmnlet, iv. 5 

PANT— pants and loolis pale.... r^e////! AV"/!? iii 4 

for frighted peace to riant 1 Henry IV. i. 1 

sliall sit and pant in your great. . Timon of 'Ath. v. 5 
ride on the pants triumphing . . Antony ^ Clto. iv. 8 

I pant for life; some good I mean Lear, v. 3 

love's quick pants in Desdemoiia's sxmsOi hello, ii. I 

PANTAlLOON-the old pantaloon Taming of Sh. iii. 1 

the lean and slijjpered pantaloon. ,1s youLikeit, ii. 7 

PANTED, that she did make ieftQt. Ant. fyCleo. ii. 2 

PANTHEON— in tlie sacred Pantheon. Titus And. i. 2 

ascend, fair queen, Pantlieon _ i 2 

PANTHER— to hunt the panther .... — i. 2 

will rouse the proudest panther _ ii.2 

where I espied tlie panther fast asleep — ii. 4 
PANTHINO— tell me Panthino.. iTuo Gen. o/Ter. i. 3 

come on, Pan thino; you shall i. 3 

PANTING sides of his poor jade iHenrylV. i. 1 

smothered it within my panting ..Richard III. i. 4 

to ease his breast with panting Coriolanus, ii. 2 

breathless, panting forth from Goneril ..Lear. ii. 4 
PANTlNGLY-offatherpantingly forth — iv. 3 

PANTLER, butler, cook IVinier's Tale, i v. 3 

he would have made a good pantler.i Henry IV. ii. 4 
call me pantler, and bread-chipper. . — ii. 4 

a squire's cloth, a pantler, not so Cymbeline, ii. 3 

PANTRY— cursed in tl:e pantry.. «oHieo<S-y»;/e(, i. 3 

PAP— thepapof Pyramus (7-ep.) Mid.iX.'sDr. v. 1 

thy bird-bolt under the left pap.. Lome's /,.ios/, iv. 3 

the pap [Coi.-help] of a hatchet iHenry VI. iv. 7 

PAPER— peruse this paper ..TwoGen. nfv'erojia, i. 2 

there, take the paper, see it i. 2 

to take a paper up that I let fall .... _ i. 2 

is thiit paper nothing? _ j. 2 

and let the papers lie i. 2 

I'll kiss each several paper for amends — i. 2 
shall these papers lie like tell-tales.. — i. 2 

what news then in your paper? — iii. 1 

try me in thy paper iii. 1 

delivered you a paper that I _ iv. 4 

as I do tear his paper iv. 4 

baillez me some paper Merry Wires, i. 4 

as will lie in thy sheet of paper. 7'w-eZ/;A Night, iii. 2 

and pen, ink, and paper iv. 2 

some light, and some paper (rep.).... iv. 2 

a commodity of brown paper . . Meas. for Meas. iv. 3 

have writ a sheet of paper (rep.) Aluch Ado, ii . 3 

and these paper bullets of tlie brain _ ii. 3 

for here's a paper, written in his — v. 4 

give me the paper, let me read Lovc'sL.Lost, i. I 

he hatli not eat paper, as it were iv. 2 

deliver this paper into the roj'al hand iv. 2 

here comes one with a paper — iv. 3 

I'll drop the paper; sweet leaves — iv. 3 

like a perjure, wearing papers — iv. 3 

be crammed up in a sheet of paper.. — v. 2 
whiter tlian the paper itwrit on.iI/ej-.o/ Venice, ii. 4 

contents in yon same paper (rep.) .. iii. 2 

words that ever blotted paper! — iii. 2 

the paper as the body of mv friend.. — iii. 2 
here's a paper; shall I read it to you?All's Well, iv. 3 
commend the paper to his gracious.. — v. 1 

this paper. Foh, pr'ythee (rep.) — v. 2 

wrapped in a paper, which contained — v 3 

take your papers, too, and let Taming of Sh. i. 2 

take forth paper, fold it, write Macbeth, v. 1 

remain, let paper show Richard II. \. 3 

make dust our paper, and with rainy — iii. 2 
read o'er this paper, while the glass.. — iv. 1 
at large discoursed in this paper here — v. 6 

nothing but papers, my lord IHenrylV. ii. 4 

we fortify in paper, and in figures ..iHenrylV. i. 3 
at hand: the rest the paper tells .... — ii. 1 

what see you in those papers Henry V. ii. 2 

tlieir cheeks are paper — ii.2 

witli papers on my back iHenry VI. ii. 4 

sends me a paper to persuade me. .Silent y VI. iii, 3 
crown his warlike brows with paper ..Rich, lll.i.3 
give me some ink and paper (rep.) .. — v. 3 

IS ink and paper ready? — v. 3 

must fetch him in the papers Henry t'lll. i. 1 

looked lie o' the inside of tlie paper? — iii. 2 

this morning papers of state — iii. 2 

put this paper in the packet — iii. 2 

1 must read this paper (lep.) — iii 2 

contains, that paper in your hand? .. — iv. 1 
have been beholden to your paper . . — iv. I 
give away thyself in pajier shortly TimonofA'h. i. 2 
deliver thenl this paper Coriolanus, v. 5 



PAP 

I'Ai'ER— Ciiina, take tliia paper ....Juliusilaisar, i. 3 
bestow these papers as you bid me .. — i. 3 
I foiind this paper, thus sealed up .. — ii. 1 
inlc and paper, Charmian {rep.) ^ , Anfony ^ Cleo. i. 5 
'twere a paper lost as offered Cijmbelinc. i. 4 

damued paper! black as the ink.. — iii.2 
why tender St thou that paper to me — iii. 4 
the paper hath cut her throat already — iii. 4 
then, sir, this paper is tlie history .. — iii. 5 
ink and paper, my casket and my.... Pericles, iii. 1 

what paper were j;ou reading? Lear, i. 2 

it" the matter of this paper be certain.... — iii. 5 

their papers, is more lawful — iv. 6 

with this unfjracious paper strike — iv. 6 

fare thee well; I will o'erlook tliy paper — v. 1 

or with this paper shall I stop it — v. 3 

know'st thou this paper? — v. 3 

get me ink and paper, and hire. . liomeo ^ Jiiliel, v. 1 
he did not call; he's busy in the paper . Olhetto, iv. 1 
this fair paper, this most goodly book .... — iv. 2 
now here's another discontented paper . . — v. 2 

PAPER-FACED villain iHenrylF. v. 4 

PAPHR-MILI.-builta paper-mill ..2Henryr/. iv. 7 

PAPHLAGONIA; the Thracian../<ii(ont/*CTco. iii. 6 

PAPHOS— the clouds towards Paphos . . Tempest, iv. 1 

witli the dove of Paphos might .Pericles, iv. (Gower) 

P.^PIST— old Poysara the papist All's Well, i. 3 

PAR ABLE-but by a parable . . TiroGeu. nfVer. ii. 5 
PARADISE— make this place paradise. Temp»s(, iv. 1 
is a paradise to what we fear of .Meas.fnrMeas. iii. 1 
seemed Athens as a paradise to \ns..Mid.N.'sDr. i. 1 
an oath to win a paradise . . Lore's L.L. iv. 3 (verses) 
you would for paradise break faith . . — iv. 3 
although tlie air of paradise did fan .. .4H's 'f'eW, iii. 2 
that kept the paradise, but tha,t..Comedy nfErr. iv. 3 

leaving his body as a paradise Henry r. I. 1 

lead her into a fool's paradise Romeo 4' Juliet, ii. 4 

in mortal paradise of such sweet fiesli? — iii. 2 

PARADOX! Black is the badge ..Love'sL.Lost.iv. 3 

you undergo too strict a paradox, rnnofi of Ath. iii. 6 

this was some time a paradox, but now. Hamlei, iii. 1 

PARADOXES to make fools laugh Othello, ii. 1 

these two to make paradoxes. . . . Troilus ■§- Cress, i. 3 

PARAGON to their Queen Tempest, ii. 1 

but she is an earthly paragon .. Two Gen.ofFer. ii. 4 

you must say, paragon Mid. IV.'s Dream, iv. 2 

exposed this paragon to the fearful. Winter's Tale, v. 1 
with Cajsar paragon again my ma,n..4nloiiy^ Cleo. i. 5 

or, if not, an earthly paragon ! Cymbeline, iii. 6 

that paragon, thy daughter — v. 5 

find our paragon to all reports, tlius , .Pericles, iv. 1 

tlierefore say what a paragon she is — iv. 3 

of tlie world! the paragon of animals L.HamW, ii. 2 

a maid tliat paragons description Othello, ii. 1 

PARAGONED o' the world Hejiry VIII. ii. 4 

PARALLEL— without a parallel Tempest, i. 2 

ravishments he parallels Nessus All's Well, iv. 3 

did lack a parallel — v. 3 

remembrance cannot parallel a fellow .Macheih, ii. 3 
the extreraest ends of paral lels . . Troilus ^ Cress, i. 3 
world's lai-ge spaces cannot parallel. . — ii. 2 
that could stand up his parallel .... Cymhelive, v. 4 
to counsel Cassio to this parallel coiurse.. OihMo. ii. 3 
PARALLELEDeven with the strokc.Weas. forM. iv.2 
PARAMOUR, for a sweet voice (rep.). Mid. N. Dr. i v. 2 

with thy lustful paramours ! \HeuruVl. iii. 2 

than wanton dalliance with a paramour — v. 1 
how can Margaret be thy paramour? . — v. 3 
here in dark to be his paramour?. Borneo fy Juliet, v. 3 

P-iRAPETS. of basilisks I Henry IV. ii. 3 

P^IRAQUITO, answer me directly .. — ii. 3 

PARASITE, my soldier, statesman . Winter'sTale, i. 2 

he is a flatterer, a parasite, a keeper . B/'c/ia>rf //. ii. 2 

detested parasites, courteous .. Timon of Athens, iii. 6 

frows soft as the parasite's silk Cor'olanus, i. 9 
RCA— fold up Parca's fatal web? Henry V. v. 1 

PARC EL— the lips is parcel of the . . Merry Wives, i. 1 
a holy parcel ot the fairest dames .Love'sL. Los', v. 2 

1 am glad this parcel of wooers ar&.. Mer. of I'en. i. 2 
marked liim in parcels as I did. . . As you LiUc iV, iii. 5 

this youthful parcel of noble All's Well, ii. 3 

between these main parcels of — i v. 3 

about me many parcels of cliarge. Winter's Tale, i v. 3 
it is a branch and parcel of mine. Comct/yo/iTjr. v. 
eloquence, the parcel of areckoning.lHeiiri//;'. ii. 

that swoln parcel of dropsies — ii. 

the smallest parcel of this vow — iii. 

t'ne parcels and particulars of our ..iHenrylV. iv. 

no parcel of my fear SHenryl-'I. v. 

the several parcels of his plate Henry fill. iii. 

some parcels of their powers are forth. Coriolanus, i. 
ns it were, a parcel of their feast .... — i v. 
judgments area parcelof tl\eir...-4H(on!/,^C/eo. iii. 1 
sliould parcel the sum of my disgraces — v. 
here comes a parcel of our liopeful Titus Andron. ii. 
wliereof by parcels she had something . . Othello, i. 

PARCEL-fiAWD: one that serves Mea. for.Mea. ii. 

PARCliL-GILT goblet 2 Henry I V. ii. 

PARCELLED— woes are parcelled.. fiic/iard///. ii. 

PAIlCil in Airic sun Troilus 4- Cressida, i. : 

PARCHED— kiss my parched lips .... King John, v. 

thy fti.-ry heart so parched thine ....SHenryVI. i. 
PARCHING heat displayed 1 Henry VI. i. : 

and summer's parchmg heat 2Henry VI. i. 

impasted with tlie parching streets ....Hamlet, ii. 
PAIiCHMENT bears not Winter'sTale, i. 

if the skin were parchment.. Comerfyo/Enors, iii. 

drawn with a pen upon a parcliment Km? Jo/i>!, v. 

blots, and rotten parchment bonds. . Richard It. ii. 

made parchment? that parchment.2Hfnr!/;'/. iv. 

here's a parchment, with the seal. /uHhs Crssar, iii. 

is not parchment made of sheep-skins?. Ham(e(, v. 
PARD, or cat o' mountain Tempest, iv. 

or bear, pard, or boar with .....Mid. N.'sDream.ii. 

and bearded like the pard ..Asyou Like it, ii. 

pard to the hind, or step-dame. TcoiVus * Cies». iii. 
?ARDON, master: I will bo Tempest, i. 

and do entreat thou pardon me — v. 

as you look to have my pardon — v. 

pardon, dear madam; 'tis. , Two Gen. of Verona, i. 



[ 557 ] 



PARDON the fault I pray Two Gen.ofVer. i. 2 

pardon me, Proteus: all I can — ii. 4 

even now about it: I will pardon you — iii. 2 

?ardon me, madam (rpp.) — iv. 4 
pardon them, and thee — v. 4 

I pray you, pardon me 1 Merry Wives,]. 1 

pardon, guest justice — ii. 3 

pardon me; pray heartily, pardon me — iii. 3 

pardon me, wife: henceforth do — iv. 4 

pardon, good father! good Crep.) .... — v. 5 

pardon me, sir, your bad Twelfth Ninld, ii. 1 

would you'd pardon me — iii. 3 

pardon me, sweet one, even for — v. 1 

pardon is still the nurse Mens, for Meas. ii. 1 

X crave your honour's pardon — ii. 2 

that you might pardon him — ii. 2 

it were as good to pardon him — ii. 4 

and free pardon, are of two houses .. — ii. 4 

O, pardon me, my lord — ii. 4 

sign me a present pardon for my brother — ii. 4 
you hope of pardon from lord Angelo? — iii. 1 

let me ask my sister pardon — iii. 1 

no,— pardon;— 'tis a secret must be .. — iii.2 
I hope it is some pardon, or reprieve — iv. 2 
and nere comes Claudio's pardon.... — iv.2 
this is his pardon: purchased with .. — iv. 2 
pardon me, good feather; it is against — iv. 2 

her brother's pardon irep.) — iv. 3 

for her poor brother's pardon — v. 

pardon it, the phrase is to the matter — v. 

pardon, my lord (jcp.) — v. 

what you have spoke, I pardon — v. 

give me pardon, that I, your vassal — v. 
you must pardon for Mariana's sake — v. 
here's one in place I cannot pardon . . — v. 

the offence pardons itself — v. 

all women shall pardon me MuchAdo, i. 

no, you shall pardon me — ii. 

1 beseech your grace, pardon me (rep.) — ii. 
pardon. Goddess of the night .... — v. 3 (sonj 
entreat your grace to pardon me . . Mid.N.'sDr. u 
pardon, my lord. I pray you all. . . . — iv. 

if you pardon, we will mend — (epilogue! 

pardon me, I am too sudden-bold. Lore's L.LoiV.ii, 

O pardon me, my stars! — iii. 

pardon me, madam, for I meant not — iv. 
under pardon, sir, what are the contents? — iv. 

oh pardon, love; this wrong — iv. 

good my liege, I pray thee, pardon me — iv. 

pardon, sir, error; he is not — v. 

pardon me, sir, this jewel did she.... — v. 

and soldiers, pardon me — v. 

pardon thee thy life before thou .Mer. of Venice, iv. 
take my life and all, pardon not that — iv. 

or else I do recant the pardon — iv. 

do desire your grace of pardon — iv. 

not to deny me, and to pardon me (rep.) — iv. 
pardon me, good lady; for, by these — v. 
nay, but hear me: pardon this fault — v. 

pardon me, Bassamo (rep.) — v. 

pardon me, I pray you AsyouLikeit, ii. 

but I pardon you for that — iii. 

but first begs pardon; will you — iii. 

pardon me, dear Rosalind — iv. 

pardon me, I am but as a guiltless . , — iv. 

your mother. Pardon, madam All's Well, i. 

pardon me! Do you love my son? (rep.) — i. 
pardon, my lord, for me ana for my — ii. 

tliat has brought his pardon — ii. 

pardon, my gracious lord — ii. 3 

pray, sir, your pardon. Well, what.. — ii. 5 

pardon me, madam, I had given — iii. 4 

but first I beg my pardon — v. 3 

let him not ask our pardon — v. 3 

dear sovereign pardon to me — v. 3 

like a remorseful pardon slowly .... — v. 3 
both, both; O pardon! O my good .. — v. 3 
to pardon me yet for a night.. Taming of Sb. 2 (ind.) 
O pardon me, signior Gremio (rep.).. — ii. 1 
sir, pardon me in what I have to say — iv. 4 
pardon, old father, my mistaking eyes — iv. 5 
pardon, I pray thee, for my mad. .. . — iv. 5 

pardon, sweet father (rep.) — v. 1 

whom, for this time, we pardon. . Winter's Tale, ii. 3 
Apollo, pardon my great profaneness — iii. 2 

pardon, that I name them — iv.2 

your pardon, sir, for this; I'll blush — iv. 3 
pardon, madam: the one I have almost — v. 1 
to pardon me all the faults I have .. — v. 2 
both your pardons, that e'er I put . . — v. 3 
may pity, though not pardon thee. Comedy of Err. i. 1 

1 crave your pardon ; soon>at five ... . — i. 2 

implored your highness' pardon Macbeth, i. 4 

but crave your pardon; that which.... — iv. 3 
pardon me, madam, I may not .... King John, iii. 1 
corrupted pardon of a man (jep.).... — iii. 1 

your grace shall pardon me — v. 2 

brave soldier, pardon me, that any.. — v. 6 

begged your grace's pardon Richardll. i. 1 

O my liege, pardon me, if you please — ii. 1 
pray, pardon me: go, fellow, get thee — ii. 2 

pardon me, madam; little joy — iii. 4 

God pardon all oaths that are broke — iv. 1 
beseech your grace to pardon me .... — v. 2 
be" thy pardou ere he do accuse thee — v. 2 
unless a pardon, ere I rise, or speak. . — v. 3 
win thy after-love, I pardon thee (rep.) — v. 3 
whose wrongs in us God pardon!.. ..IHenry/r. i. 3 
O pardon me, that I descend so low — i. 3 

i as you, God pardon it! have done .. — i. 3 

first pardon me, my lord — ii. 4 

find pardon on my true submission (rep.) — iii. 2 

and pardon absolute for yourself — iv. 3 

did we not send grace, pardon — v. 5 

Sardon; a soldier is better (rep.) ..IHenrylV. iii. 2 
pardon me, my liege ! but for my tears — iv. 4 
give me pardon, sir; if sir, you come — v. 3 
and my speech, I beg your pardon . . — (epil.) 
but, pardon gentles all (rep.) ..HenryV. i. (chorus) 
more advice, we pardon turn — ii. 2 



PAR 

PARDDN-Uod, and you, to pardon me .HenryV. ii. 2 
but not my body, pardon, sovereign — ii. 2 
toward heaven, to pardon blood .... — iv. 1 
comes after all, imploring pardon.... — iv. 1 
I beseech your highness, pardon me — iv. 8 
pardon tlie frankness of my mirth .. — v. 2 

Talbot! pardon my abuse \Henry VI. ii. 3 

pardon me, princely Henry — iv. 1 

fardon me, gracious lord iHenryVI. i. I 
pray , my lord, pardon me ! — i. 3 

and, madam, pardon me — ii. 4 

pardon, my liege, that I have staid. . — iii. I 
make thee beg pardon for thy passed — iii. 2 
pronounce free pardon to them all .. — iv. 8 

and will embrace his pardon — iv. 8 

hanged with your pardons about your — iv. 8 
with thanks, and pardon to you all — iv. 9 

I pr'ythee, pardon me, that I have . . — . v. 1 
for thy mistaking so, we pardon thee — v. 1 
the right, and therefore pardon me..iHenryVI. i. 1 
pardon me, Margaret; pardon me .. — i. 1 
pardou me, God, I knew not (rep.).. — ii.fi 
without your special pardon (rep.) .. — iv. 1 

crave pardon of your majesty — iv. 6 

he shall pardon thee these outrages — v. 1 

?ardonme, Edward, I will make.... — v. 1 
'11 pardon thee my death — v. .5 

forgive my sins, and pardon thee! .. — v. 6 
graces both to pardon me {rep.) .... Richard III. i. I 
which Jesu pardon ! Which God.... — i. 3 
God pardon them that are the cause — i. 3 
that tongue give pardon to a slave?.. — ii. 1 
are on your knees for pardon, pardon — ii. 1 
and pardon us the interruption of thy — iii. 7 

do beseech you pardon me — iii. 7 

by oath, and tlierefore pardon me.... — iv. 1 
proclaim a pardon to the soldiers. . . . — y. 4 

under your promised pardon Henry VIII. i. 2 

with free pardon to each man — i. 2 

of the king's grace and pardon — i. 2 

this revokement and pardon comes.. — _i. 2 
gracious king, that pardons all offences — ii. 2 
do entreat your highness' pardon.... — iv.2 
'tis like a pardon after execution.... — iv.2 

pardon me, pardon me Troilus ^r Cress, i. 2 

sir, pardon; 'tis for Agamemnon's ears — j. 3 

five pardon to my speech — i. 3 
ut pardon, fatlier Nestor — .'!■ ^ 

pardon me; if I confess (rep.) — iii.2 

pardon ; I offend. I have — iv. 5 

pardou me this brag, his insolence .. — iv. 5 

1 beseech you, pardou me Timon of Athens, i . 2 

under favour, pardon me, if I speak — iii. 5 

pardon him, sweet Tymandra — iv. 3 

no, good madam, pardon me Corio(anu5, i. 3 

my sweet lady, pardon — ii. 1 

1 crave their pardons: for the mutable — iij. 1 
for they have pardons, being asked.. — iii.2 
to pardon when it was less expected — v. 1 
sworn 3'ou out of reprieve and pardon — v. 2 
and conjure thee to pardon Rome .. — v. 2 
pardou me, lords, 'tis the first time.. — v. 5 

O pardon, sir, it (loth JuliusCcesar, ii. I 

pardon me, Cresar; for my dear dear — ii. 2 

pardon, Ciesar; Caesar, pardon — iii. 1 

pardon me, Julius! here wast thou — iii. 1 

pardon me, Caius Cassius — !'!■ ' 

by your pardon; I will myself into.. — iii. I 

pardon me, tliou bleeding piece of — iii. 1 
pardon me, I do not mean to read .. — iii.2 
under your pardon: you must note.. — iv. 3 
by your most gracious pardon . . .inlony (§- Cleo. i. 5 
as much as to have asked him pardon — ii. 2 
do so far ask pardon, as befits mine. . — ii- 2 

pardou what I have spoke — ii. 2 

the actor may plead pardon — ii. 5 

1 crave your highness' pardon — ij. .5 

I begged his pardon for return — i;i. ij 

O my pardon (rep.) — iii. 9 

cried he? and begged he pardon?.... — iii. 11 
Cleopatra, and weep for my pardon — iv. 12 

sir, pardou me. When I did make — iv. 12 
(dear my lord, pardon,) I dare not .. — iv. 13 

by your pardon, sir, I was then Cymbeline, j. f> 

give me your pardon: I have spoke this — i. 7 
pray, your pardon. All's well, sir .. — __;. 7 
pardon me, gods! I'd change ray — iii- 6 

1 hope they'll pardon it — iv.2 

pardon's the word to all — \. i 

madam, and pardon me Titus .indronicus, i. 2 

to pardon Mutius, and to bury him — j. 2 

sweet, pardon for what is past — j. 2 

you shall ask pardon of his majesty — _ i. 2 
they die before their pardon come .. — iii. 1 

pardon me, sir; 'twas a black — ?!!• '^ 

then pardon me for reprehending thee — iii. 2 
but pardon me, sweet aunt — iv. I 

pardon me; for when no friends .. — y. 3 

prince, pardon me, or strike me Pericles, i. 2 

shall be ne.xt, pardon old Gower — ii- (Go« er) 
pardon us, sir; with us at sea — in. \ 

iiardon nie, royal sir; election makes .... Lear, i. I 
[ beseech you, sir, pardon me (rep. i. 4) — i. 2 
yet, under pardon, you are much more.. — ,i. 4 

1 hear my father coming, pardon me. . . . — .u. 1 

I liardon that man's life — 'V- 6 

pardon me, dear madam; yet to be known — iv. 7 
our power, shall never see his pardon . . — _y. 1 
therefore pardon me; and not .. Romeo Sf Juliet, ii. 2 

God pardon sin! wast thou with — ii. 3 

pardon, good Mercutio, my business — _ii. 4 
be,' pardon of the prince, and call thee — iii. 3 
Gjd pardon him! I do, with all my — iii. 6 
pardon me; but, an' you will not (rep.) — lii. 5 
begyour pardon: Pardon, I beseech — iv. 2 
pardon me for bringing these ill news — v. 1 
pardon me, sir, [Ce/. Kii(.-I do beseech] — y. 1 

to your gracious leave and pardon Hamlei, i. 2 

if not, vour pardon, and my return — iii.2 

virtucitself of Vice must pardou beg .... — iii. 4 



PAEDON-first asking your pardon, llam'et, iv. 7 (let.) 

give me your pardon, sir Cfy-) — v. i 

I will, my lord, I pray yon pardon me .. — v. 2 

good your grace, parcfon me Olhello, i. 2 

pardon me, I cannot speak — ii. 3 

good my lord, pardon me; though I am — iii. 3 

(lo beseech you of your pardon — iii. 3 

but pardon me; I do not, in position.... — iii. 3 
pardon me, Bianca; I have this while .. — iii. 4 
heaven pardon himl A halter pardon himl — iv. 2 

pardon me; 'twill do me good to walk — iv. 3 

1 cry you gentle pardon; these bloody .. — v. 1 
I do believe it, and I ask j'our pardon .. — v. 2 

PARUONED-pardoned the deceiver. 7'empc.t/, (epil.) 
as you from crimes would pardoned bo — (epil.) 

you are pardoned, Isabel Mem.forMeas. v. I 

tor his sake is he pardoned; and, for your — v. I 
thy olienees, ere thou be pardoned. Z.oi)e'si,.f,os(, i. 2 

the king hath pardoned them King John^ v. 6 

I pleased not to be pardoned Richard II. ii. 1 

till Bolingbroke have pardoned thee — v. 2 

by you being pardoned Pericles, iv. 4 (Gower) 

some shall be pardoned, and some.Komeo^Juliel, v. 3 
or pardoned, being down? then I'll ..Humlel, iii. 3 
may one be pardoned, and retain — iii. 3 

PAKDONER himself is in Meas.for Meas. iv. 2 

PAKUONING Rutland Richard II. v. 3 

murtlers. pardoning those that..i?o7neo ^Juliet, iii. 1 

PARDONNER— me pardonner! Henry f. iv. 4 

de pardonner aucuu prisonnier — iv. 4 

P.VRDONNEZmoy Richard II. v. 3 

p:irdonnez moil say'st thou me so ..Henryy.iv.i 
pardonnez moi, I caunot tell vat is.. — v. 2 

PARDONNEZ-MOIS-rAH(.-pardon-mes] 

who stand so much on the new. Romeo fi- Juliet, ii.4 

P.VRE thy nails, dad TwlflhNighl, iv. 2 (song) 

that plays tlie lion, pare his nails. Wiii./V.'sDc. iv. 2 

too late to pare her nails now AWsiVell,-<i. 2 

may pare his nails with a wooden. . . . Henry V. iv. 4 

FAKED my present havings Henry y I II. iii. 2 

to have his princely paws pared.. TilusAndron.. ii. 3 
thou Iiast pared thy wit o' both sides Lear, i. 4 

P.V KENT— like a good parent rcmppst, i. 2 

we are their parents and original. . Mid.N.'sDr. ii. 2 
tlie parents of tlie foresaid child.. Loue'sL.Lo.v;, iv. 2 

no note upon my parents All's yVell, i. 3 

the parents ot so fair a child .... Taming ofSh. iv. 5 
than our parents' noble names.... WirUer'sTale,i. 2 

by the honour of my parents — i. 2 

their parents were exceeding poor. Comedy of Err. i. 1 
these are tlie parents to these children — v. 1 
of parents good, of fist most valiant . . Henry F. iv. 1 
for their parents' timeless death ....ZHenryVI. v. 6 
whose parents [Co(./vni. -fat)iers]thou./i!cA./7i.iv. 4 
tlie parents live, whose children .... — iv. 4 

laid up to make parents happy Henry VIII. v. 4 

do't in your parents' eyes Timon of Athens, iv. 1 

between the child and parent Coriolnnus, v. 3 

our parents, and us twain Cymheline, v. 4 

by the defiling of her parent's bed Pericles, i. 1 

he's their parent, and lie is their grave — ii. 3 

between the child and the parent Lear, i. 2 

obey thy parents; keep thy word justly.. — iii. 4 
bury their parents' strife .... Romeo ^-Juliet, (proU) 
the continuance of their parents' rage — (prol.) 

PARENTAGE I was As you Like il. Mi. i 

what is your parentage? (rep.).. ..TwelflhNigld, i. 5 

what name? what parentage? — v. I 

upon knowledgeof my parentage. Tam/n^n/S/!. ii. i 
the next by birth and parentage.... lHe«ryF/. ii. 5 

wilt thou deny thy parentage? — v. 4 

ignorant of his birth and parentage.2Hcnr2/ VI. iv. 2 

his name and parentage (rep.) Pericles, ii. 3 

time hath rooted out my parentage.... — v. I 
my fortunes — parentage— good parentage — v. 1 

ifyou did know my parentage — v. 1 

report thy parentage — v. J 

she would never tell her parentage.... — v. 1 
P.IRFECT one man Love'sL.Lost,y.2 

i^iKlNG— itself to the very paring AU'siyell.i. 1 

ask but the paruig of one's nail .Comedy of Err. iv. 3 
the very parings of our nails shall. . 1 Henry VI. iii. 1 

here comes one o' the parings Lear, i. 4 

P.-i.RING-KNIl"E? No, forsooth ..Merry iyives,i. i 

PAlilS— welcome to Paris All's IVell, i. 2 

speak truly, to go to Paris? — i. 3 

your motive for Paris, was it? — i. 3 

else Paris, and the medicine — i.3 

though Paris came, in hope . . Taming of Shrew, i. 2 
tliose Paris balls. He'll make (rep.) ..Henry V. ii. 4 
t>rl';ans, Paris, Guj-sors, Poictiers . . 1 Henry VI. i. 1 
is Puns lost? is Rouen yielded up? ., — i, 1 
then depart to Paris, to the kin" .... — iii. 2 
governor of Paris, take your oatli.... — iv. 1 
now to Paris, in this conquering vein — iv. 7 

then march to Paris — v. 2 

as did the youtliful Paris once — v. 6 

been crowned in Paris, in despite 2HenryVI. i. 1 

Paris is lost; the state of Normandy — i. 1 
till Paris was besieged, famislied .... — i.3 

crowned in Paris but at nine Richard III. ii. 3 

with wanton Paris sleeps Troitus ^ Cress. Qjrol.) 

that Paris is returned home, and hurt — i. 1 
let Paris bleed, 'tis but a scar (rep.).. — i. i 

complexion above Paris. Why, Paris — i. 2 

lleien loves him better than Paris .. — i. 2 

which of these hairs is Paris — i. 2 

Helen so blushed, and Paris so chafed — i. 2 
yonder comes Paris, yonder comes Paris — i. 2 

Paris? Paris is dirt to him — i. 2 

Paris should do some vengeance .... — ii. 2 

'twas wisdom Paris went — ii. 2 

our firebrand brother, Paris, burns . . — ii. 2 
Paris should ne'er retract what lie .. — ii. 2 
Paris, you speak like one besotted .. — ii- 2 
Paris, and TroiluB, you have both .. — ii. 2 
do not you follow the young lord Paris? — iii. 1 
at the request of Paris, ray lord .... — iii. 1 

1 come to speak with Paris — iii. 1 

if it be not my lord Paris — iii. 1 



PARIS— to be his servant, Paris Troilus^ Cress, iii. 1 
as yon, prince Paris, nothing but.... — iv. I 

hear me, Paris, for every false — iv. 1 

there is at hand Paris your brother.. — iv. 2 

for thus popped Paris in his — iv. 5 

Paris, and I, kiss evermore for him.. — iv. 5 

no, Paris is not; fur, you know — iv. 5 

'loo, Paris, 'loo! now my (ifp.) — v. 8 

but woo her, gentle Pans Romeo ^ Juliet, i. 2 

the valiant Paris seeks you — i.3 

the volume of young Paris' face .... — i.3 

can you like of Pans' love? — i.3 

one Paris, would fain lay his knife.. — ii.4 
and tell her that Paris is the properer — ii. 4 
sir Paris, I will make a desperate.... — iii. 4 
acquaint her here of my son Paris' love — iii. 4 
the county Paris, at St. Peter's church — iii. 5 
you know I hate, rather than Paris — iii. 5 

to go with Paris to St. Peter's church — iii. 5 

60 fair an eye, as Paris hath — iii. 5 

rather than to marry county Paris (rep.) — iv. 1 

five consent to marry Paris — iv. 1 
will walk myself to county Paris.. — iv. 2 

I'll go and chat with Paris — iv. 4 

the county Paris hath set up his rest — iv. 5 
and go, sir Paris: every one prepare — iv. 5 

noble county Paris; what said — v. 3 

Paris should have married Juliet — v, 3 

what, Paris too? and steeped in blood? — v. 3 

there lies dead, and Paris too — v. 3 

some— Juliet, and some— Paris — v. 3 

here lies the county Paris slain — v. 3 

married her perforce, to county Paris — v. 3 
here untimely lay the noble Paris .. — v. 3 

first what Danskers are in Paris Hamlet, ii. 1 

PARIS-GARDEN? Ye rude slaves., ffeiiry /'///. v. 3 

PARISH — suflBcient of your parish. Meas./orA/ras. ii.l 

the parish curate, Alexander .... Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

plain as way to parish church ....As youLike it, ii. 7 

as the parish heifers are to 2Henryiy. ii. 2 

beget her, all the parish knows 1 Henry VI. v. 4 

within the parish saint Lawrence ..HenryVIlI. i. 2 
let a parish of such Clotens blood . . Cymbeline, iv. 2 

parish, church, steeple (rep.) Pericles, ii. I 

PARISHIONERS, for their sons . . Love'sL.Lost, iv. 2 
wearied your parishioners withal. .4s you Like it, iii. 2 

PARISIANS do revolt 1 Henry VI. v. 2 

PARIS-WARD-marehing unto Paris- ward — iii. 3 
PARITOR— of trotting paritors . . Love's L. Lost, iii. I 
PARK— I vill cut his treat in de park. Merry fVives, i. 4 

come, come, walk in the park — iii. 3 

they'll meet him in the park at — iv. 4 

be you in the park about — v. 1 

go before into the park — v. 3 

over park, over pale Mid.N.'sDreaw-, ii. 1 

taken following her into the park. Love's L. Lost, i. 1 

it is ycleped, thy park — i. 1 (letter) 

that I took in the park with — i.2 

I must keep her at the park — i.2 

comes to hunt here in the park — iii. 1 

first, from the park let us conduct.... — iv. 3 
stays for us at the park gate . . Merch. of Venice, iii. 4 
bid" thee meet me in the"park. Taming of Slirev, iv. 1 
disparked my parks, and felled .... Ricliard II. iii. i 

lead him forth into the park 1 Henry IV. ii. 3 

chiefest thicket of the park iHenry VI. iv. 5 

stands ready at the park corner — iv. 5 

my parks, my walks, my manors .... — v. 2 
which stands as Neptune's park. . . . Cymbeline, iii. 1 
straying in the park, seeking. . , . Titus Andron. iii. 1 

PARK ED— how are we parked 1 Henry VI. iv. 2 

PARK- WARD, every way Merry Wives, iii. 1 

PARLE— every day with parle. TwoGen. of Verona, i. 2 

to paiic, to court, and dance Love' sL. Lost, v. 2 

yet never brooked parle, knownow. 'laming of Sh. i. i 

called you to this gentle parle King John, ii. 1 

the French, amazed, vouchsafe a parle — ii.l 

or sound so base a parle Richard 11. i. I 

send the breath of parle into — iii. 3 

this is the latest parle we will admit. . Henry V. iii. 3 

dites moi, si je parle bien — iii. 4 

meilleur que I'Anglois lequel je parle — v. 2 

to the walls, and sound a parle 3Heni-y VI. v, \ 

nephew, break the parle Titus Andn^uicus, v. 3 

once, when, in an angry parle, he smote . Hamlet, i. 1 

PARLER— quej'apprenne a parler . ... Henry V. iii. 4 

PARLES— et tu paries bien le language — iii. 4 

PARLEY— we parley to you . . Two Gen.ofVcrojia, iv. 1 

to parley with the sole inheritor. . Love's L. Lost, ii. 1 

calls to parley the sleepers of the house?. A/uc6e//i, ii. 3 

they are at hand, to parley, or to fight. Kmg'yo/in,ii. l 

in signs again parley with sin — iv. 2 

insinuation, parley, and base truce .. — v. i 
in such a parley would I answer ..IHenry IV. iii. i 

we shall admit no parley 'iHenrylV. iv. 1 

the town sounds a parley Henry V. iii. 2 

summon a parley >v e will talk 1 Henry VI. iii. 3 

apailey withthedukeofBurgundy()ep.) — iii, 3 

we'll crave a parley, to confer — v. 3 

will parley with Jack Cade 'IHenryVl. iv. 4 

so bold to sound retreat or parley — iv. 8 

break off the parley iHenry VI, ii. 2 

they stand, and would have pa.vley. JuliusCwsar, v. 1 

the emperor requests a parley TitusAndron. iv. 4 

lie craves a parley at your father's — v. 1 

higher rate, than a command to parley.. Hajnfc;, i. 3 

it sounds a parley of provocaiion Olhello, ii. 3 

PARLE YED— tongue hath parleyed. 2 Heiir.vF/. iv. 7 

L'ARLEZ— le Francois que vous iMulez. Henri/ V. v. 2 

i*APvLIAMENT-in the parVmmeut. Merry Wives, ii. 1 

I am in parliament pledge for his . . Riclmrd II. v. 2 

the siieaker in his parliament 2HenryIV. iv. 2 

call we our high court of parliament — v. 2 
the king hath called his parliament.. — v. 5 
wiped out in the next parliament ..\ Henry VI. ii. 4 
therefore haste I to the parliament ,. — ii. 5 

God speed the parliament I — iii. 2 

grace to his majesty's parliament . .2Henry VI. ii. 4 
your highness leave tlie parliament? — iii. 1 
shall be the parliament of Euglaud.. — iv. 7 



P.iRLIAMENT-court of parliament .2HrnryVI.v.3 

iiere holds her parliament 'iHenryVI.i. 1 

the bloody parliameut shall this be.. — i. 1 
here in the parliament, let us assail — i. 1 

a shambles of the parliament house! — i. 1 
until that act of parliament be repealed — i. 1 
you that revellecf in ourpai-liament — i. 4 

our late decree in parliament — ii.l 

his oath enrolled in the parliament.. — ii.l 
new act of parliament, to blot out me — ii. 2 

PARLOUR-into the parlour Much Ado,\u. \ 

sit conferring by the parlour fire.. Taming of ah. v. 2 
bells in your parlours, wild cats in Othello, ii. 1 

PARLOUS— a parlous fear .... Mid.N.'sDream, iii. I 
art in a parlous state, shepherd.. /Is i/ou Like it, iii. 2 

a parlous boy (rep. iii. 1) Riclmrd III. ii. 4 

a parlous knock Romeo ^Juliet, i. 3 

PAROLLES, my lord calls for you AW s Well, i. I 

Parolles, you were born under — i. I 

sweet monsieur Parolles! — ii.l 

my Parolles, they have married me — ii. 3 
some time known. Parolles, was't not? — iii. 2 
what's his name? Monsieur Parolles — iii. .■) 
this is monsieur Parolles, the gallant — iv. 3 
to thee in thine ear, Parolles ... . — iv. 3 (letter) 

God bless yon, captain Parolles — iv. 3 

and Parolles, live safest in shame! .. — iv. 3 
my name, my good lord, is Parolles — v. 2 

his name's Parolles. I saw the man — v. 3 

'PARREL— the best 'parrel that I have ..Lear, iv. 1 

PARRICIDE— their cruel parricide ..Macbeth, iii. 1 

'gainst parricides did all their thunders.. Lear, ii. 1 

PARROTS, at a bagpiper ....Merchant of Venice, i. I 

in none only but parrots — iii. 5 

more clamorous than a parrot As youLike it, iv. I 

parrot, beware the rope's end ..Comedy of Err. iv. 4 

fewer words than a parrot I Henry IV. il. 4 

his poll clawed like a parrot 2He7iryIV. ii. 4 

the parrot will not do more .. Troilus SfCressida, v. 2 

and speak parrot? and squabble? Othello, ii. 3 

PARROT-TEACHER. A bird of my .Much Ado, i. 1 

PARSLEY to stuff a rabbit . . Taming of Shrew, iv. 4 

PARSON— born, master parson .... Merry Wives, i. 1 

tell master parson Evans — i. 4 

1 hear the parson is no jester — ii. 1 

parson Hugh, the Welshman — ii.2 

how now, master parson ! — iii. 1 

you study them both, master parson? — iii. 1 
to do a good olfice, master parson..., — iii. 1 

nay, good master parson, keep — iii. 1 

shall 1 lose my parson? — iii. I 

Jove bless thee, master parson .. TwelfihNight, iv. 2 
being master parson, am master parson — iv. 3 

well said, master parson — iv, 2 

master parson, be so good as read. Love'sL. Lost, iv. 2 

our parson misdoubts it — iv. 3 

drowns the parson's saw — v. 2 (song) 

if I were the parson All's Well, i. 3 

tickling a parson's nose as a' lies. Romeo if Juliet, i. 4 

PART— Detween this part he played .... Tempest, i. 2 

for my part, the sea cannot — iii. 2 

'gainst my fur^ do I take part — v. I 

which (part of it) I'll waste — v. 1 

how did thy master part with. . TwoGen. of Ver. ii. 5 

and ere I part with thee — iii. 1 

the company parts — iv. 2 

eot me to play the woman's part .... — iv. 4 
lor I did play a lamentable part .... — iv. 4 

for my part, I say Merry Wives, i. 1 

examined my parts with — i. 3 

the attraction of my good parts aside — ii. 2 

truly, for mine own part — iii. 4 

and remember your parts — v. 4 

an' thou let part so (rep.) Tuelfth Night, i. 3 

is serablative a woman's ipart — i. 4 

and that question's out ot my part . . — i. .^ 
my part of death no one so true — ii. 4 (song) 
the parts that fortune hath bestowed — ii. 4 
I will not give my part of this sport — ii. 5 

being skill-less in these parts — iii. 3 

have found in any part of lUyria — iii. 4 

and part, being prompted by — iii. 4 

stubDorn and uncourteous parts .... — v. 1 

we will not part from hence — v. 1 

can my part in him advertise . . Meas. for Meas. i. I 

for mine own part, I never — ii.l 

dispossessing all my other parts .... — ii. I 
quit their own part, and in obesquious — ii.4 
to accuse him so, that is your part . . — iv. 6 

sweet Isabel, take my part — v. 1 

much deserved on his part Much Ado, i. 1 

who? now that is your grace's part.. — i. I 
and never could maintain his part . . — i. I 
I will assume thy part in some disgui.-e — i. 1 
you maj^ do the part of an honest man — ii. 1 
I have played the part of lady fame — ii. 1 

let it be thy part to praise him — iii. I 

fear you not my part of the dialogue — iii. I 
jjlayed their parts with Beatrice .... — iii. 2 

tor 'mine own part (rep. iv. 1) — iii. 5 

no port of it is mine, this shame ... . — iv. 1 

come to part almost a fray — v. 1 

for which of my bad parts didst thou — v. 3 
any good part to intermingle with (rep.) — v. 2 
for thy part, Claudio, I did think . . — v. -i 

name what part I am for Mid.N.'sDream, i. 2 

or a part to tear a cat in — i. 2 

the joiner, you the lion's part — i.2 

have you the lion's part written? — i. 2 

you can play no part but Pj'raiuus . . — i. 2 

but, masters, here are your parts .... — i.2 
for her sake, I will not part with hira — ii. 2 
for the third part of a minute, hence — ii. 3 

and rehearse your parts — iii. 1 

you speak all your part at once .... — iii. 1 
and Irom thy hated presence part I so — iii. 2 
and superpraise my parts, when .... — iii. 2 

I yield you up my part — iii. 2 

she shall not, though you take her part — iii. 2 
take not her part: for if thou — iii/2 



PAR 



[ 559 ] 

PART— of all his gracious parts KiugJohn, iii. 4 

tiinue all and every part of wliat .... — iv. 2 

to part by tlie teeth the unowed .... — iv. 3 

and part this body and ray soul .... — v. 4 

night did part our weary powers?. ... — v. 5 

of the part of England — v. 6 

preyed upon the outward parts — v. 7 

the best part of my power — v. 7 

three parts of that receipt I had .... Richard II. 1. 1 

the other part reserved I by — i. 1 

alas, tlie part I had in Gloster's — i. 2 

part tlierein we banish with yourselves — i. 3 

to-morrow we must part — ii . 1 

we three here part, that ne'er shall.. — ii. 2 

your souls must part your bodies.. ., — iii. 1 

Ijart of your cares you give me with — iv. 1 

takeleave, and part (rep.) — v. 1 

part us, Northumberland — v. 1 

stop our mouths, and dumbly part . , — v. 1 

'twere uo good part to take on — v. 1 

call for thee to pay thy part ? 1 Henry 1 V.'\.m 

but how shall we part with them. . . . — i. 2 

the best part of an hour in — i.3 

yea, on his part f^n'.-in his behalf] — i.3 

tor mine own part, ray lord — ii. 3 (letter) 

and east, is to my part assigned ,.,, — iii. 1 

on the ninth part of a hair — iii. 1 

upon the beauty of all parts besides — iii. 1 

she will not part with you — iii. 1 

he had his part of it; let him pay .. — iii. 3 

and ne'er part, till one drop down.... — iv. I 

tlie better part of ours are full of rest — iv. 3 

for mine own part, I could be (rep.) — v. 1 

misled upon your cousin's part — v. 1 

greater, ere 1 part from thee — v. 4 

better part of valour is discretion (rep.) — v. 4 

for my part, if a lie may do thee grace — v. 4 

the better part burnt out 2IienrylV. i. 2 

and every part about you blasted..., — i. 2 

tlian he can part young limbs — i. 2 

tap for tap, and so part fair — ii. 1 

I could discern no part of his face.... — ii. 2 

marry, the immortal part needs .... — ii. 2 

I have done the part of a careful — ii. 4 

yet, for mine own part, sir, I do (rep.) — iii. i 

and, for your part {rep. iv. 1) — iii . 2 

why not to him, iu part — iv. 1 

let them have pay, and part — iv. 2 

inwards to the parts extreme — iv. 3 

this j)art of his conjoins with my .... — iv. 4 

imagine me taking your part — v. '2 

'tis all in every part — v. 5 

narrow ocean parts asunder .... Henry V. i. (chorus) 

a thousand parts divide one man — i. (chorus) 

the art and practick part of life — i. 1 

swaying more upon our part — i. 1 

did to his predecessors part withal .. — i. 1 

put into parts, doth keep in — i. 2 

for my part (rep. iii. 6) — ii. 1 

the sick and feeble parts of France . . — ii 4 

have, in these parts, from morn — iii. 1 

for mine own part, I have not a case — iii. 2 

leaving their earthly parts to — iv. 3 

the numbers dead on both our parts. . — iv. 7 

on one part and on the other f — iv. 8 

make him eat some part of my leek. . — v. 1 

on both parts best can witness — v. 2 

that I will not part with a village — v. 2 

dispraise those parts iu me — v. 2 

your French part of such a boy — v. 2 

most part of all this night 1 Henry VI. ii. 1 

tlie smallest part and least proportion — ii. 3 

I'll turn my part thereof into — ii. 4 

would some part of ray young years. . — ii. 5 

banding themselves in contrary parts — iii. 1 

bravelj; played her part in this — iii. 3 

regent in these parts of France — i v. 1 

part of tliy father may be saved (rep.) — iv. 5 

into two parts, is now conjoined — v. 2 

regent in the parts of France 2Henry VI. i. 1 

I will take the Nevils' parts i. 1 

to play my part in fortune's — i. 2 

for my part, noble lords, I care not . . — i.3 

leather a hundred times to part than — iii. 2 

these rags are no part of the duke .... — iv. 1 

dare not) take our parts — iv. 2 

now part them again, lest they — iv. 7 

ere thou and I part _ iv. 10 

too much presumption on thy part . . — v. 1 

bosoms of our part hot coals of — v. 2 

the hearts of all our present parts .... — v. 2 

came on the part of York SHenry VI. ii 5 

disproportion me in every part — iii. 2 

subdue the greatest part of Spain .... — iii. 3 

Clarence shall not want his part .... — iv. 6 

for my part, I'll not trouble — v. 5 

so part we sadly in this troublous — v. 5 

I repent ray part thereof Richard III. i. 3 

in peace my soul shall part to — ii. 1 

upon my part, shall be inviolable .... — ii. 1 

to part the queen's proud — ii. 2 

for my part, I'll resign unto your — ii. 4 

I see, you'll part but witli light gifts — iii. 1 

I presume, he'll take in gentle part. . — iii. 4 

lord Hastings had pronounced your part — iii. 4 

play tlie maid's part, still — iii. 7 

in the parts wliere he abides — iv. 2 

part in j ust proportion our — v. 3 

shall share his part thereof — v. 3 

peep through each part of him Henri/ VIII. i. 1 

tor the most part such too — i. 1 

which makes my whitest part black.. i. 1 

I know but of a single part i. 2 

the sixtii part of his substance i. 2 

sixth part of each? _ i. 2 

bark, and part o' tile timber — i. 2 

the part my father meant to act — i. 2 

you, that liave so fair parts of woman — ii. 3 

thy parts sovereign and pious else .. — ii. 4 

fiud me here part of a housewife .... — iii. 1 



PAR 



PAllT-every man look o'er his part .Vid.lV.'sDr. iv. i' 

tlius have I, wall, my part discharged — v. 1 

part sadness and melancholy Love's L. Lost, i. 3 

a man of sovereign parts he is — ii. I 

one part of Aquitain is bound to us.. — ii. 1 

an outward part, we bend to that.... — iv. I 
and my heart on thy every part .. — iv. 1 (letter) 

only sensible in the duller parts .... — iv. 2 

for tliose parts that do fructify in.... — iv. 2 

that 1 ill}; parts admire — iv. 2 

and here is part of my rhyme — iv. 3 

or I would tliese hands might never part — v. 2 

divorce his memory from his part. ... — v. 2 

only to part friends: court'sy — v. 2 

let's part the woitl — v.i 

put A rmado's page out of his part ! . . — v. 2 

for my own part, I am (?cp.) — v. 2 

the extreme parts of time extremely — v. 2 

do deny, let our hands part — v. 2 

the better part of ihy aflections. . Mer. of Venice, i. 1 

every man must play a part — i. 1 

appropriation to his own good parts.. — i. 2 

in wliat part of your body pleaseth .. — i. 3 

but, for mine own part, as I have.... — ii. 2 

parts, tliat become tliee happily enough — ii. 2 

therefore I part with him; and part — ii. 5 

a tedious leave: thus losers part — ii. 7 

tiie mu-row seas, that part the French — ii. 8 

I saw Bassanio and Antonio part.... — ii. 8 

I, for my part, knew the tailor — iii. 1 

for his own part, knew the bird was. . — iii. I 

mark of virtue on his outward parts — iii. 2 

wliich when you part from, lose, or give — iii- 2 

when tills ring parts from this (rep.) — iii. 2 

for my part (rep. iii. 4 and V. 1) — iii. 2 

in six parts; and every part a ducat — iv. 1 

in slavish parts, because you — iv. l 

the twentieth part of one poor scruple — iv. 1 

to part so slightly with your wife's . . — v. 1 

made liim swear never to part with it — v. 1 

for my part, he keeps me rustically As youLike it, i. 1 

you shall have some part of your will — i. 1 

of every man's good parts, a secret .. — i. 1 

the beholders take his part with weeping — i. 2 

my better parts are all thrown down — i. 2 

they take tne part of a better — i.3 

shall we part, sweet girl ? — i.3 

thus misery dotli part the flux — ii. 1 

much commend tlie parts and graces — ii. 2 

for my part, I had ratlier irep. iii. 5) — ii. 4 

in his time plays many parts — ii. 7 

and so he plays his part — ii. 7 

were I not the better part made — iii. 1 

Atalanta's better part .... — iii. 2 (verses) 

of many parts by heavenly — iii. 2 (verses) 

are for tlie most part cattle of — iii . 2 

thousand psirts, and break but (rep.) . . — iv. 1 

clubs cannot part them — v. 2 

you and you no cross shall part .... — v. 4 

to speak on tlie part of virginity All's Well, i . 1 

to stand on eitlier part — i. 2 

tliy fatlier's moral parts may'st thou — i. 2 

at full I know, thou know'st no part — ii. 1 

from your sound parts shall fly — ii. 1 

set thy lower part wliere thy nose.... — ii. 3 

a great part of your title — ii. 4 

tlie quarrel upon your grace's part .. — iii. I 

for my part, I only hear, your son .. — iii. 2 

tlie champion honour onmy part.... — iv. 2 

stronger part of it by her own letters — i v. 3 

and yours our parts; your gentle.... — (epil.) 

we'll play our part Taming of Sh. 1 (inducti'm ) 

sure, that part was aptly fitted — 1 (induction) 

and that part of philosophy will I . . — i. 1 

for who shall bear your part — i. 1 

come you to part the fray? — i. 2 

you do not mean to part with her .. — ii. 1 

nay, tlien, goodnight our parti — ii. 1 

now I play a merchant's part — ii. 1 

make no music in three parts — iii.) 

in some part enforced to digress .... — iii. 2 

sliall with either part's agreement .. — iv. 4 

well agree with our external parts? .. — v. 2 
and pay them when you part .... Winter's Tale, i. 2 

we'll part the time between's then .. — i. 2 

but so disgraced a part, whose — i. 2 

by all the parts of man — i.2 

queen, part of his tlieme — i.2 

not in being; part o' the cause — ii. 3 

and the testimony onmy part iii.'.' 

for the most part, been aired abroad — iv. 1 

that's lilcewise part of my intelligence — iv. i 

to each part of you do give a life .... — iv. 3 

tliat never mean to part — iv. 3 

a part, thou slialt hear; it is in (rep.) — iv. 3 

I can bear my part iv. 3 

'tis time to part tliem; he's simple .. — iv. 3 

that I must liear a part — iv. 3 

for what dull part in't you — v. 1 

and answer to his part performed in — v. 3 
her part, poor soul! 6eeining...Con!ed!/ o/ Errors, i. 1 

than thy dear self's better part ii. 2 

take tliem in good part iii, 1 

we shall part with neither — iii. 1 

mine own seirs better part — iii. 2 

in what part of her body is Ireland? — iii. 2 

your highness' part is to receive Macbeth, i. 4 

was never called to bear my part — iii. 5 

though the main part pertains to you.... — iv. 3 

and would not take their part? — iv. 3 

cowed my better part of man! — v. 7 

eye hatli well examined his parts King John, i. 1 

sir Kobert miglit have eat his part .. — i. 1 

let confusion of one part confirm .... — ii 2 

and part your mingled colours once ii. 2 

he is the half part of a blessed man.. — ii. 2 

willingly departed with a part — ii. 2 

thy constant and tliy nobler parts .. — iii. 1 

u|)cjn which better part our prayers.. — iii.! 

my reasonable part produces — iii. 4 



PAltX — you'll part away disgraced .HenryVlll. iii, 

to think upon the part of business .. — iii 

witli tliee and ail tliy best parts bound — iii 

his blessed jiart to heaven — iv 

from all parts tliey are coming — v 

for my part (rep.) Troilus ^ Cressida, i 

the still and mental parts — i 

receives from hence a conquering part — i 

not worth the nintli part of — ii 

for my private part, 1 am no — ii, 

virtuously on his own part beheld .. — ii 

his mental and his active parts — ii 

thy parts of nature thrice-lamed .... — ii 

thy spacious and dilated parts — ii 

it is music in parts — iii 

fight your hearts out, ere I part you — iii 

less than the tenth part of one — iii, 

communicate his parts to others .... — iii 

for my own part, 1 came in late — iv 

may move, and parts witli person .... — iv, 

come, kiss, and let us part — iv 

tlie expecters of our Trojan part .... — iv 

in which part of his body shall I .... — iv, 

after we part from Agamemnon's.... — iv, 

nay, but you part in anger — v. 

a retreat upon our Grecian part — v, 

now, parts bread with him Timon of Athens, i, 

express some part of our zeals — i, 

use thee well; good parts in thee .... — iii. 

let not that part of nature — iii, 

purchase the day before for a little part — iii, 

for mine own part, I never — iii, 

if not for any parts in him — iii. 

we must all part into this sea of air . . — i v. 

thus part we rich in sorrow — iv. 

for thy part, I do wish thou wert .... — iv. 

it is our part, and promise to the .... — v, 

thougli in general part we were — v. 

in part for liis sake moved — v. 

the mutinous parts that envied Corintanus, i. 

witli one part of our Roman power . . — i. 

stand ux^on my common part with .. — i, 

find i' the part that is at mercy? — i. 

with the major part of your syllables — ii, 

it is a part that I shall blush — ii. 

where being three parts melted away — . ii, 

the greater part carries it — ii. 

the one part suffered, the other will I do — ii, 

where one part does disdain with .... — iii, 

love the fundamental part of state . . — iii. 

upon the part o' the people — iii. 

you have put me now to such a part — iii. 
perform a part thou hast not done before 

you take my part from me, sir 

rudely visit them in parts remote .. 

for mine own part (rep. v. 3) 

I have forgot my part, and I am out 
to show a noble grace to both parts., 
which to a mother's part belongs.... 

a full third part, the charges of 

from Aufidius a great part of blame 

lack some part of tliat quick spirit.JuliusCasar, i, 

and for mine own part (rep.) — i. 

for my part (rep. ii. 1) — i, 

it is the part of men to fear and tremble — i. 

that part of tyranny, that I do bear — i. 

three parts of him is ours already .. — i. 

'tis time to part. But it is doubtful yet — ii. 

for your part, to you our swords have — iii. 

shall cumber all the parts of Italy .. — iii. 

the other street, and part the numbers — iii. 

Csesar's better parts shall now be ... . — iii. 

tlie greater part, the horse in general — iv. 

for mine own part, I shall be glad .. — iv. 

this is a Roman's part — v. 

to part the glories of this happy day — v. 
the finest part of pure love.. Antony ^Cleopatra, i. 

and get her love to part — i. 

none our parts so poor, but was a race — i. 

you and 1 must part, but that's not it — i. 

to part with unbacked edges — ii. 

we'll feast each other, ere we part .. — ii. 

for my part, 1 am sorry it is tiu-ned — ii. 

third part o' the world, man (rep.) .. — ii. 

gentle lords, let's part; you see — ii. 

Octavia weeps to part from Rome .. — iii. 

you take from me a great part of ... . — iii. 

if on both parts this be not — iii. 

yourendsl we will here part — iii. 

for the most imrt too, they are foolish — iii. 

we had not rated him his part o' the isle — iii. 

conquered, I grant him part — iii. 

best fits my latter part of life — iv. 

fortune and Antony part here — iv. i 

if thou and nature can so gently part — v. 
he takes his part: to draw upon .... Cynibelinc, i. 

dear as my finger, 'tis part of it .... — i. 

enjoyed the dearest bodily _part of your — i. 

find out the woman's part in me I .. — ii. 

I affirm it is the woman's part — ii. 

why, hers, in part, or all; but, rather — ii. 
that part, thou, Pisanio, must act — iii.4(lette: 

all courtly parts more exquisite .... — iii. 

feared gods, a part of it! — iv. 

south to this part of the west — iv. 

Imogen, the great part of my comfort — iv. 

and shall perform all parts of his — Iv. 

I'll fight against the part I come with — v. 

part, shame, part, spirit renewed.... — v. 

I have resumed again the part I came in — v. 

of my freedom 'tis the main part .... — v. 

scornful page, there lie thy part .... — v. 

for mine own part, unfold a dangerous — v 

thanks in part of thy deserts TitusAndron. i. 

take Titus' part, and so supplant.... — i. 

I would not part a bachelor from.,.. — i, 

let's kiss and part, for we have much — iii. 

come from nil parts of the world I'ericlrs, ii. 

mine own. part of mine lieritage ii. 

begin to pai't their fringes of bright gold — iii. 



— iv. 3 



— v. 5 



PAR 

PART— have done tlieir pnit in .vou. . . . Perlclei:, i v. 3 
swallowed some purl o* tile eiirth — iv. 4 (.Gower) 

you are of honourable parts — iv. G 

a battery through his deafened parts .. — v. 1 
the thousandth part of my endurance — v. 1 

how came you in these parts? — v. 1 

this coronet part between you Lear, i. 1 

ns in part I understand tliem — i. 2 

I will not part from thee yet — i- 4 

tor takiupr one's part tliat is out of — i. 1 

they would liave part on't — i. I 

and ga vest away both parts — i. 4 

men of clioice and rarest parts — i . 4 

and take vanity the puppet's part — ii. 2 

how now? what's the matterV Part — ii. 2 

wi\ieh, for my part, I will not be — ii. 2 

send down, and take my parti — ii. 4 

I have one part in my heart — iii. 2 

there is part of a power already footed .. — iii. 3 

begin to take his part so much — iii. G 

my suutf, and loathed part of nature. ... — iv. 6 

he, that parts us, shall bring — y. 3 

part fools; put up your swords . . Romeo ^Juliet, i. 1 

or manage it to part these men — i. 1 

to part your canltercd hate — i. 1 

I drew to part them — i. 1 

fouglit on part and part (rep.) — i. 1 

to her consent is but a part — i. 2 

nor any other part belonging to a man — ii. 2 
that name, which is no part of thee — ii. 2 

with that part cheers each part — ii. 3 

that every part about me quivers.... — ii. 4 
hold friends, friends, parti and, swifter — iii. 1 

ere I could draw to part them — iii. 1 

affliction is euamoured of thy parts — iii. 3 

but the kind prince, taking thy part — iii. 3 
in what vile part of this anatomy .. — iii. 3 

so brief to part with thee — iii. 3 

each part, deprived of supple — iv. 1 

lieavcu and yourself had part in this — iv. 5 
your part in her you could not keep — iv. 5 
heaven keeps his part in eterntil life — iv. 5 
lier immortal part with angels lives — v. I 

to illume that part of heaven Hamlei, i. I 

so have I heard, and do in part believe it — i. 1 
thy knotted and combined locks to part — i. 5 

that we sliake hands, and part — 1.5 

and, for my own poor part, look you .... — i. 5 

his friends, and in part, him (r«p.) — ii. 1 

that I will more willingly part withal .. — ii. 2 

in the secret parts ot fortune? — ii. 2 

the humorous man shall end liis part in — ii. 2 

for your part, Ophelia, I do wish — iii. 1 

for "the most part, are capable of nothing — iii. 2 

it was a brute part of him, to kill — iii. 2 

where you may see the inmost part of you — iii. 4 

but a sickly part of one true sense — iii. 4 

that is not twentieth part the ty the .... — iii. 4 

throw away the worser part of it — iii. 4 

against some part of Poland — iv. 4 

but one part wisdom, and, ever (^jcp.) ., — iv. 4 

1 do not know from what part of the .... — iv. 6 

your sum of parts did not together — iv. 7 

what part is that, my lord? — iv. 7 

for my part, I do not lie in't — v. 1 

the continent of what part a gentleman — v. 2 

part tliem, they are incensed — v. 2 

my parts, my title, and my perfect soul .O.'/ieWo, i. 2 
what, in your own pai't, can you say .... — i. 3 
to his honours, and to his valiant parts — i. 3 

on most part of their fleet — ii. I 

for mine own part, no offence to the .... — ii. 3 

that brought me to apart of it — ii. 3 

when you"yourself did part them — ii. 3 

1 liave lost the immortal part, sir — ii. 3 

and denotement of her parts and graces — ii. 3 
dispraisingly, hath ta'en your part .... — iii. 3 
have not those soft parts of conversation — iii. 3 
ill some part [/f«(. -place] of my soul .... — iv. 2 
this wretch hath part confessed his — v. 2 

PARTAKE— to partake with me.. Tuelflh Night, v. 1 
depart, and yet jiartake no venom, n inter's Tale, ii. 1 
your exultation partake to every one — v. 3 
may partake of any thing we say. . Richard III. i. 1 

what, what? let's partake Curiolanus, iv. .'j 

by and by thy bosom shall partake Ju/ms Crrsar, ii. 1 
not let him partake in the glory. /fn'ony <SCTco. iii. 6 
our mind partakes her private actions.. I'ericles, i. 1 

PAKTAKEN of my flesh AWsWell, iv. 5 

PARTAKER in thy happiness. . Two Gen. of Fer. i. 1 
make us partakersof a little gain ..\ Henry FI. ii. 1 
partaker Poole, and you yourself. ... — ii. 4 

to let me be partaker Antony i^ Cleopatra, i. 4 

P.VKT-CREATED cost a naked 2HenryIl'. i. 3 

PARTED— he parted hence .... r«io Gen. ofVer. i. 1 

they parted very fairly — ii. 5 

when he parted from me — i v. 4 

or go-between, parted from me.. .. Merry Wives, ii. 2 
a donblecherry, seeming parted.. Wid.A'.'sUr. iii. 2 
I see these things with parted eye .. — iv. 1 
wall is downr tliat parted their fathers — v. 1 
the oldjproverbisvery well parted jUer.n/rcnifC.ii. '.' 
Bassanio's hand, and so they parted — ii. 8 
here are severed lips, parted with.... — iii. 2 

you would not then have parted — v. 1 

how parted he with thee? As you Lilte it, iii. 2 

measured swords, and parted — v. 4 

when his disguise and he is parted .. All's IVell, iii. 6 
who parted with me to rro fetch. Comedy of Err . v. 1 

thou know'st, we parti d — v. 1 

he parted well, and paid his score ....Macbeth, v. 7 

when you parted with him? BickardlJ.i. i 

when you parted with the king — ii. 2 

as a lone parted mother with — iii. 2 

a' jiarted even just between Henry V. ii. 3 

yet parted but the shadow with . . . .ZHenry I'l. i. 4 

when we parted last, thou — iv. 3 

he parted frowning from me HenryVJIl. iii. 2 

so she parted, and with the same .... — iv. 1 
able means, we had not parted thus — iv. :; 



[ 5G0 ] 



PAR 



PARTED so much honesty Henry IllJ.y.i 

man — how dearly ever parted .. Troilus ^- Cress, iii. 3 
and parted thus you and your argument — iv. 5 
than when I parted hence, but still .Coriolaims, v. 5 
what are the brotliers parted? . .Antony ^Clco. iii. 2 
that have my heart parted betwixt.. — iii. 6 
were parted by gentlemen at hand ..Cymbetine, i. 2 
and parted with prayers for the provider — iii. 6 

how parted will) your bi-othcrs? — v. 5 

when we witli tears jjarted Pcntapolis .Pericles, v. 3 

and France in choler parted ! Lear, i. 2 

parted you in good terms? — i. 2 

which parted tlienee, as pearls from .... — iv. 3 
what thing was that which parted from — iv. K 

who parted either part Itomeo ^Juliet, i. 1 

they were parted witli foul and violent. 0//(t'//o, ii. 1 
of tire sea and skies parted our fellowship — ii. 1 

the day had broke before we parted — iii. 1 

was not tliat Cassio, parted from my wife?— iii. 3 

PARTEST a fair fray Love'sL. Lost, v. 2 

PARTHIA did 1 take thee prisoner JuliusC<esar,v. 3 
compose well here, to Partliia .. Antony fy Cleo. ii. 2 

lie sliall to Parthia {rep.) — ii. 3 

now, darting Parthia, art thou struck — iii. I 
that ne'er yet beaten horse of Parthia — iii. 1 
great IMedia, Parthia, and Armenia.. — iii. 6 

PARTHIAN force Antony^- Cleopatra, i. 2 

with Parthian blood thy sword i,rep.> — iii. ' 
that, which all the Parthian darts .. — iv. 12 
like the Parthian,! shall Hying fight ri/m6r<me, i. 7 

PARTIAL— come in partial Mens.jorMnis. ii. 1 

I am not partial, to infringe.. Comedi/ of Errors, i. I 
a partial slander sought I to avoid . . h'ichurft U. i. 3 

canst thon, Opartial sleepi 'iHevrylV. iii. 1 

of partial indulgence to their,. Troilus <5- Cress, ii. 2 

I cannot be so partial, Goneril Lear, i. 4 

since nature makes them partial Hamlet, iii. 3 

PARTIALIZE the unstooping liichard IL i. 1 

PARTIALLY affined, or leagued in Othello, ii. 3 

IMRTICIP ATE, did minister Cnriolanus,i. 1 

from the womb I did participate. Twelftli Niglu, v. 1 

PxiRTICIPATION of society iHenrylV. v. 1 

privilege with vile participation ..IHenrylF. iii. 2 

PARTICLE, and utensil TwelfthNigtit, i. 5 

if he do break the smallest particleViiim.sCtT'sa)-, ii. I 
PARTICULARS of thy preservation ..Tempest, v. 1 
and the particular accidents, gone by — v. 1 
that no particular scandal once Meas.forMeas. iv. 4 
swear down each particular saint.... — v. 1 
shall recount their iiarlicular duties. il/wc/i.-iifo, iv. 1 
trans-shape thy particular virtues . . — y. 1 
ay, and no, to these particulars .. ^s yow L?'A-e it, iii. 2 
should love a bright particular star .. All's IVell, i. 1 
required office on my particular .... — ii. 5 

I knew in what particular action — iii. G 

ay, and the particular couflrinations — iv. 3 

let me answer to the particular — iv. 3 

their own particular thrifts Winter's Tale, i. 2 

by each particular star in heaven. . . . — i. 2 

so singular in each particular — iv. 3 

does receive particular addition Macbeth, iii. 1 

all the particulars of vice — iv. 3 

examine me upon the particulars . . 1 Henry IV. ii. 4 
I make my cinarrel in particular ..'iHenrylV. iv. 1 
parcels and particulars of our grief.. — iv. 2 
1 will have it in a particular ballad — iv. 3 

with every course, in his particular.. — . iv. 4 
doth any name particular belong to — iv. 4 

xipon my particular knowledge Henry V. iii. 2 

to lay apart their particular functions — iii. 7 
of a good and particular mistress.... — iii. 7 
the particular endings of his soldiers — iv. I 
whose tenors and particular eifeets.. — v. 2 
here I am, thou particular fellow.. 2He»»i/F/. iv. 2 
mirth with your particular fancy., Henry Fill. ii. 3 
but IJy particular consent proceeded — ii. 4 

as 'twere in love's particular — iii. 2 

of their particular additions. . Troilus 4r Cressida, i. 2 
soon bring his particulars therein .. — i. 2 

although particular, shall give — i. 3 

as far as toucheth my particular — ii. 2 

dwells not in particular will — ii. 2 

yet is the kindness but particular. ... — iv. 5 
but what particular rarity?.,.. 7'!mono/./4(Aens, i. 1 

that his particular to foresee — iv.3 

our old love made a particular force — v. 3 
to make his requests by particulars. Con'ofaniis, ii. 3 
revenge thine own particular wrongs — iv. 5 

I mean, for your particular — iv. 7 

loved him in a most dear particular — v. I 
about thy particular prosperity .... — v. 2 

give me particulars Antony SfCleopatra, i. 2 

my more particular, and that which — i. 3 
world should note something particular — iii. 11 
forgive me in thine own particular . . — iv. 9 

more particulars must justify Cymbetine, ii. 4 

that all particulars of duty know Lear, i. 4 

inform her full of my particular fear. ... — i. 4 
for his particular, I'll receive him gladly — ii. 4 
for these domestic and particular broils — v. 1 
in what particular thought to work .... Hamlet, i. 1 
why seems it so particular with thee?. . . . — i. 2 

particular act [Knt.-peculiar sect] — i. 3 

oft it chances in particular men — i. 4 

corruption from that particular fault. . . . — i. 4 
and each particular hair to stand on end — i. 5 

than your particular demands will — ii. 1 

let me question more in particular — ii. 2 

my particular grief is of so flood-gate . . Othello, i. 3 
PARTICULARITIES. Idonotknow.Hcnfi/F. iii. 2 

particularities and petty sounds 2Henri/VI. v. 2 

PARTICULARIZE their abundance. Cono/a/iiK, i. 1 
PARTICULARLY, and to all the Volsces — iv. 5 

drift halts not particularly Timon of Athens, i. 1 

PARTIES— from the two po-rtiea ..Merry Wives, iv. 5 
the parties themselves, the actovs.Lnve'sL.Lost, v. 2 
but when the parties were met. . . . AsyouLilie it, v. 4 
and in his parties, his alliance .. Winler'sTale, ii. 3 
the parties sure, andourinduction.lffenj-i/Zr. iii. I 
for then both parties nobly are ,,,, iHenrylV. iv. 2 



PArvTIKS— wlicrcof the parties .Troilus /^ Cress, iii. 2 
making parties strong, and feebling .Coriolanus, i. 1 

calling both the parties knaves — ii. I 

lest jiarties (as he is beloved) break out — iii. I 

wbertin yuu wished us parties — v. 5 

tlian the love of parties .... Antony^ Cleopatra, u. 6 
it be allowed in meaner parties ....Cymheline, ii. 3 

forth the parties of suspicion liomeo ii Juliet, v. 3 

PARTING strikes poor lovers.. Tioo Gen.of fer, ii. 2 

wept to have seen our iiarting — ii. 3 

wept herseli blind at my parting.... — ii. 3 
httsty-footed time for parting \xs..Mid.N.'sDr. iii. 2 
for parting iny fair Pyiumus and me — v. 1 
and our parting is a tortured body ..All's Well, ii. 1 
procured bis leave for present parting — ii. 5 
father charged me at our parting. Taming of Sh. i. I 
at the parting all the church did eclio — iii. 2 

prefixed for his parting Winter's Tale, i. 2 

proclaimed his, parting with her .... — y. 1 
what store of parting tears were shed ?/?jV/frtrd7/. i. 4 
did grace our hollow parting witli .. — j. 4 
more than with parting from my.... — ii. 2 
the parting of your wives and you..\ Henri/ IF- iii. I 

no war, befal tliy parting soul I \ Henry VI. u. h 

away! though parting be a fretful .2HenryVI. iii. 2 
my body's partin" with my soul....3H(»j!//7. ii. 6 
ills parting guest oy the hand.. Troilus 4 Cress, iii. 3 

for it is parting from us — iv. 4 

rich in sorrow, parting poor . . Timon of Athens, iv. 2 
tills parting was well made (rep.) Julius Cffsar, v. I 

Buch parting were too petty Cymbetine, i. 2 

ere I could give him that parting kiss — i. 4 
which are often the sadness of partmg — v. 4 

hurt in parting two that fought Pericles, iv. 1 

parting is such sweet sorrow .. ..Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 2 

PARTITION— a union in partition. itfsd. N. Dr. iii. 2 

it is the wittiest partition that ever I — v. 1 

good from bad find no partition ....2HentyIJ'. iv. 1 

can we not partition make with Cymbetine, i. 7 

PARTIZAN I could not heave ..Antony <S Cleo. ii. 7 

with our pikes and partizans Cymheline, iv. 2 

clubs, bills, and partizans! stnkel Romeo Sf Juliet, i. 1 
to wield old partizans, in hands as old — i. 1 
shall I strike ut it with my partizan? ..Hamlet, i. 1 
PAJRTLET— by thy dame Partlct., Winter'sTale, ii. 3 
how now, dame Partlet the hen? ..\ Henry IV. iii. 3 

PARTLY, seeing you are Two Gen.of Verona, iv. 1 

partly, that I have need of such — iv. 4 

that I partly know the instrument. Twelfth Kighl, v. I 
you are partly a bawd Pompey ..Meas.forMeas. ii. 1 

partly, for that her promised — v. 1 

I partly think, a due sincerity — v. 1 

partly by his oaths, which first (rep.). Much Ado, iii. 3 

and partly to save your life — v. 4 

'tis partly mine own fault. . . . Mid. N's. Dream, iii. 2 
marr3', you may partly hope that.Mer.ufl'enice, iii.lj 
J partly guess; for I have loved ..Asyou Lrlieit, ii. 4 
by circumstances partly. Winter'sTale, iii. 2 (indict.) 

for him, 1 partly know his mind — v. 3 

partly thy mother's word, partly ..\Hemy IV. ii. 4 
as partly touching or concerning .... Henry V. iii. 2 
partly to satisty my opinion (i-cp.) .. — iii. 2 
1 do partly understand your meaning — iii.fi 
but now you partly may perceive . .SHenry VI. iii. 2 
he knows, and you may partly see. /iic/m»d ///. iii. 7 

I partly know the man — iv. 2 

I do but partly know, sir. . . . Troiltis ^ Cressida, iii. I 

to be partly proud Coriolanus, i. 1 

shall seem, as partly 'tis, their own . . — ii. 3 
partly credit things that do presage. ./u/msCa!sar, v. I 

I but believe it partly — v. 1 

for he partly begs to he desired.. /4n(o«y|C;eo. iii. 11 

apace, despatch; I partly feel thee — v. 2 

I partly know him; 'tis Cloten ....Cymbetine, iv. 2 
partly, to behold my lady's face. . Romeo ^Juliet, v. 3 
(as partly, Ifind. it is) that your fair,... OMtWo, i. 1 

but partly led to diet my revenge — ii. 1 

PAR'TNER of his fortune .... TwoGen. ofVerona, i. 3 

your partner, as I hear Mens, for Meas. ii. 3 

some instruction from my fellow partner — iv. 2 

called a merciful man, partner Much Ado, iii. 3 

go, good partner, go, get you to — iii. 5 

marry, that am I and my partner. . . . — iv. 2 
be my present partner in this .... Winter's Tate, i v. 1 
as it becomes the partner of your bed — i v. 3 

my noble partner .you greet with Macbeth, j. 3 

look, how our partner's rapt — i. 3 

my dearest partner of greatness . . — i. 5 (letter) 
my vows are equal partners with ..\HenryVI. iii. 2 
will be partner of your weal, or woe — iii. 2 
sweet partner, Imustnotyet forsake. Heniy Fill, i .4 
you shall have two noble partners .. — v. 2 

my noble partners, and myself _ — v. 4 

my partner in this action Coriolanus, v. 3 

I seemed Iris follower, not partner. ... — v. a 
vouchsafed to think he had puTtners. Ant. fy Cleo. i. 4 
then, noble partners, (the rather .... — ii. 2 

that I, your partner in the cause — ii. 2 

are partners in the business Cymheline, i. 1 

PARTNERED with tomboys — i. 7 

PARTRIDGE' wing saved Much Ado, ii. I 

finds the partridge in the puttock'B.2He;ii!/ /'/. iii. 2 

PART'S'- bring me to the party? Tempest, iii. 2 

and the three party is Merry Wives, i. 1 

the devil take one party — iv. 5 

the nomination of the party writing Love'sL. L. iv. 2 
the party is gone, fellow Hector .... — v.i 
tlie party, 'gainst the which he.A/cr. of Venice, ly. 1 
therein tax any pri vate party ? ..Asyou Lilie i(, ii. 7 
must be a party in this alteration. Winter's Tale, i. 2 
not a party to tne anger of the king.. — i\.2 

the party tried, the daughter of — iii. 2 

are you a party in this business? .... — iv.3 
upon the right and party of her son'l.KingJohn, i. 1 
wnose party do the townsmen yet .. — ii. 2 

and swear upon my party! — iii. 1 

our party may well meet a prouder.. — v. I 
thy tongue a party verdict gave .... Richard II.\. 3 
in arms upon his party [K"'. -faction] — iii. 2 
on thy royal party gruuted once ... . — iii. 3 



PAR 



[ 561 ] 



PARTY-knifilits upon our party slain .1 Hnt.ll'. v. 5 

ugliest mask to IVigiitour inirty •iHeiiiyW. j. 1 

from his metal was liis party steeled — j. 1 

but, for the party that owed it — . i. 2 

BulJducd, ana neither party loser .... — iv. 2 
maintain the party of the truth ....llleimjll. ii. 4 

upon thy party wear this rose — 'i. ■• 

tofigiit on Edward's party Richard III. \. 3 

to ftud you forward upon his party. . — iii. l! 
iny prayers on the adverse parly tight — iv. 4 
came from Buckingham upon his party — iv. 4 
the meanest spirit on our party. Troilmff Cress, ii. '2 
and he upon my party, I'd revolt. . . . Coriolaitus^ i. 1 
I saw our parly to their trenches .... — .;■ 6 
hearing a matter between party and pai-ty— _ii. 1 

'tis tit you make a strong party — iii- 2 

roclionary on tlie partj' of jour general — y. 2 
win the noble Brutus to our party .Jul'UsCrrsar, i. 3 
I would not be tlie party . . Aniomj^Cleopalra, v. 2 
to the king's party there's no goiug.CijntbHiiie,iv. i 
for whom we stand a special party. I'ilusAndron.i. 1 
have you nothing said upon his party — /.ear, ii. 1 
which approves liim an iutcUigCMt party — iii. 5 

1 would show what party I do follow — iv. 5 

seek him out upon the British party — i v. 6 

party in converse, liim you would .... Hamlet, ii. 1 

to be a party in this inj ury Olhello, v. 1 

rAKTY-COATED presence of ....Lovr'sL.Losi, v. 2 
VAKTY-COl.O'URKD lambs.... Merch.o/I't'iuce, i. 3 

TASH.and the shoots I'lriler'sTale, i. 2 

I'll posh him over the face ..Troilus ^-Cressida, ii. 3 
PASIIED— upon the pashed corses of — v. 5 
rASilFUL- should you be so pa4iful?.l Uenrxj V. iv. 8 

PASS— an excellent pass of pate 'rempes', iv. 1 

ways are dangerous to pass ..Two Gen.o/ycr iv. 3 

I'll tell you as we iJass along — y. 4 

and pass good humours Merry Ifiups, i. 1 

will that uuniour pass? — i. 3 

but let that pass — i. 4 

that I may pass with a reproof — ii. '.i 

to see thee pass thy punto 

what's brought to pass under 

may pass for a wise man Tuelflh Sight, \.f>\ 

but he will not pass his word — ..?■■' 

nay, an' thou pass upon me — iii- I 

for it comes to pass oft — iii- 4 

I liad a pass with him — iii- 4 

have tlieir permissive pass Meas.forilens.u 4 

that thieves do pass on thieves? — ii- 1 

if you live to see this come to pass .. — ii- 1 
on the duke, he shall not pass you . . — iv. B 
that moment (so it came to pass)..Jl//d.A'.'si5r. iii. 2 

how came these things to pass? — iv. 1 

they may pass for excellent men — y- 1 

oath is passed to pass away from . . Love's L. Lost, i. I 

let it pass: I do beseech (>cp.) — v. 1 

shall pass Pumpey the great — , y. 1 

therefore let him passtoramau ..IMer.of Venice, i. 2 

to bring to pass, but swayed — i. 3 

so shall we pass along, and never .... — i. 3 

if it do come to pass, that any — u.h (song) 

o'er the green corn-field did pass.. — v. 3 (song) 
the thievish minutes how they pass .. .4H's Wcii, ii- 1 

it might pass; yet the scarfs — ii. 3 

truth to pass a thousand nothings with — ii- 5 

gives him a wortliy pass — ii- 3 

as letting her pass so — iii- 4 

for it will come to pass, that every - . — iv. 3 
though it pass your patience -- TamingofSlireic, i. 1 
which to bring to pass, as I before.... — iii. 2 
a, wealthy widow, ere thiee days pass — iv. 2 

to pass assurance of a dower in — iv. 2 

pass my daugliter a sufficient — iv. 4 

we'll pass the business privately.... — iv. 4 

brought to such a silly pass! — y. 2 

what I sliall incur, to pass it ....IVin!er'sTalc,u 'I 

let me pass the same 1 am — iv- (chorus) 

accident, should pass this way, as you — iv. 3 
and, being at that pass, you ..Comedy of Errors, iii. 1 

liefore he pass tlie abbey — v. 1 

if you fondly pass our proffered AVng-JoAn, ii. 1 

pass them current too 1 Henry W. ii. 3 

daSed the world aside, and bid it pass? — iv. I 

if it pass against us, we lose HenryV. i. 1 

seas to give you gentle pass — ii. (chorus) 

if we may pass, we will — iii.G 

suddenly, pass our accept — v. 2 

request shall make me let it pass — v. 2 

I have no power to let her pass 1 Henry I'l, v. 3 

must I pay before I pass? — v. 3 

thou shalt not pass from hence iHenryVI. i. 4 

•never day nor night unhallowed pass — ii. 1 

for your lives; let her pass by — ii- 4 

disturb him not; let him pass peaceably — iii- 3 
tlicse silken-coated slaves, I pass not — iv. s 

weapon at us, and pass by — iv. 8 

may pass into the presence of a king — v. I 

in every borough as we pass along ..3HeiiryFl. ii. 1 

did I let pass the abuse done to — iii. 3 

let former grudges pass, and henceforth — iii- 3 
no delight to pass away the time. . . . idehmd III. i. 1 
stand back, and let the coffin puss.... — i. 2 

that I may see my shadow as I pass.. — i.2 

for curses never pass the lips of — i- 3 

■will't please you pass along? — iii. I 

the play may pass UeniyVIII. (pid!.) 

it's come to pass, that tractable — i.2 

if these fair ladies pass away frowning — i. 4 

pray you, pass on — ii. 4 

the loay Anne pass from her conuiation — iv. I 
if your will pass, I shall both find .. — v. 2 
when they pass back from the christening — v. 3 

to let the troop pass fairly — v- 3 

lily shall pass tu the ground — v. 4 

see them, as they pas:^ toward Ilium. 7>oi7.<5-Cr*?i's. i.2 

by their names, as tliey pass by — i.2 

were I alone to pass the — ii.2 

to pass strangely by him — iii. 3 

of strangeness as we pass along — iii. 3 

they pass by Btrangely — iii. 3 



— iii. I 



— v. 2 



PASS-still invites all that pass. . I'/omii oJAIhens,\l. I 

let me pass quietly — iii. ' 

become your lips as they pass through — v. 2 
not a man shall pass his quarter .... — v..> 
pass by, and curse thy fill; but pass — v. l)(opit.) 

that I'niay pass this doing Coriolan 

all noble suti'erance- Pass no furtl 

if you will pass to where you are bound — 

you mav not pass, you must return 

I must have leave to pass 

you should not pass here (>cp.) — >'. 2 

see great Pompey pass the streets ..JuliusCasar, i. I 
adreamer; let us leave him; pats.... — j. 2 

as they pass by, pluck Casca — _i. 2 

I stand, till Coesar pass along — ii. 3 

to see liim pass on to the Capitol — .li- 4 

tliey pass by me as the idle wind .... — ly- 3 
hefore him: on, there; pass along..J)i(onj/(S-C(eo.iii. 1 

shall pass on thy approof — iii. 2 

fear of what hath come to pass — iv. 13 

the straight pass was dammed ^fl\X'h..Cymheline, y- 3 

my lord, you pass not here TilusAndronicus, i. 2 

iu'dumb shows pas the remainder .. — iii- 1 

ere half an hour can pass — iii. 1 

broken astaff, or so; so let it pass Pericles, li. 3 

his daughters brought him to this pass?. . Lear, iii. 4 

we may not pass upon his life — iii. 7 

this trusty servant shall pass between us — iv. 2 

tlius might he pass indeed — iv- (j 

sweet marjoram. Pass. I know that voice — iv. G 

and let poor volk pass — iv. 6 

OlethirapassI — y. 3 

I will frown as I pass by Romeo 4' Jiiliet,\. I 

I'll tell thee as we pass — _ii- 3 

then thou caust not pass to Mantua — iii- 3 

give quiet pass througKyour dominions. J/am;f(,ii. 2 

it came to pass, as most like it was — ii. 2 

and, in a pass of practise, requite — iv. 7 

I pray you, pass witli your best violence^ — ^ v. 2 
whi( • ■• 



__ch patience could not pass Othello, li 

let iiiin not pass, but kill him rather — v 

. 2 I PASSABLE— not here passable Coriolanus, v 



his body's a passable carcase Vymbelin, 

PASSADO he resiiects not Lores L. Lnt, i. 2 

ah, the immortal passado! Romeo Si- Juliet, h. -1 

come, sir, your passado — iii- 1 

PASSAGE— a passage in ray thioaLTvelfthSighl,]. 3 
such impossible passages of grossness _— iii. 2 
all imseen, 'gun passage Una Love's L.L. iv. 3 (ver.) 
O that had! how sad a passage 'tis! ..All'sU'ell,i. 1 
in whose easiest passage, look. . . . IVinler's'l'ale, iii. 2 
or my swift passage, that I slide. . — iv. (chorus) 
the stirring passage of the day-. Come^/i/o/fijT. iii- 1 
one that countermands the passages of — iv. 2 
carved out his passage, till he faced . . Macbeth, i. 2 

and passage to remorse : . . — i. 5 

passage, vexed with thy impediment. Kmg-JoAii, ii. 2 
the mouth of passage shall we fling. . — ii. 2 

the false passage of thy throat Richard II. i. 1 

the sullen passage of thy weary — i. 3 

apprenticehood to foreign passactes .. — i. 3 
his bright passage to the Occident .. — iii. 3 
this stream through muddy passages — v. 3 
may tear a passage through the flinty — v. 5 
in thy passages of life, make me . . 1 HenrylV. iii. 2 

will cut their passage through HenryV. ii.2 

is gallant and most prave passages .. — iii. e 
redeem the passage of your age! ....IHenryVI.Vx.b 
is the best and safest passage in? ... . — iii. 2 
the hollow passage of my poisoned .. — v- 4 

hath stopped the passage where SHenryVI.i. 3 

give sweet passage to rhy sinful — ii. 3 

our halberds did shut up his passage — iv. 3 

oft the passages made toward it Henry VIII. ii. 4 

nassage and whole carriage of .. Troilus 4' Cress. _\i. 3 
opposed against my passage?.. 7'!monn/.4/Aens, iii. 4 

and leave his passage polled Coriolanus, iv. 5 

with bloody passage, led your wars-. — v.-') 

it is no act of common passage Cyinbeline, iii. 4 

made good the passage — v. 3 

keep then this passage to the Capitol. TilnsAvd.i. 1 
passage of their death-marked.. «ow™iS-./u(. (prol-) 
lie is fit and seasoned for his passage? . Hamlet, iii. 3 
I see, in passages of proof, time qualifies — iv. 7 
and, for liis passage, tlie soldiers' music. — v. 2 
if such actions may have passage free . . Olhello, i. 2 
no watch? no passage? murder! murder! — v. 1 
PASSANT— it agrees well, po-ssant. .iVerrylVives, i. 1 

PASSED— passed the careires - — i. I 

shrieked at it, so that it passed — __i. 1 

what hath passed between — iii. 6 

hath newly passed between this.. TwelflhKight, v. 1 

most shrewdly passed upon thee — v. 1 

with knowing what hath passed ....Much Ado, v. 2 
the imperial votaress passed on ..Mid. N.'s Dr. ii. 2 
your oath is passed to pass away- . Love's L.Losl,i. 1 
to buy tliem, along as you passed .... — ii. 1 

which I have passed upon her As you Like it, i. 3 

your gallery have we passed^ W inter' sTale, v, 3 

and passed sentence may not be. . Comedy of Err. \. 1 

passed in probation with you Madieth, iii. 1 

still doing, thus lie passed along Richard II. v. 2 

and had indeed against us passed Henry Ki. 1 

lie hath passed the river Some — iii. 5 

beg pardon for thy passed speech. .2/rfiii;/r/. iii. 2 
and years, passed over to the end ..SHenryfl. ii. b 

well have we passed, and now — iv. 7 

hath passed in safety the narrow . ... — iv. 8 

I Iiave passed a miserable night Richard 111. i. 4 

I passed, methought, the melancholy — i. 4 
my lord, the enemy is passed the raarsli — v. 3 

and that not passed me. but by Henry VIII. i. 2 

but, pray, how passed it? — ii- I 

the rest so laughed, that it passed. TroiJ.cJCjrss.i. 2 

for they passed by me — iii. 3 

hath yet passed my heart Tiwonttf Athens, ii- 2 

upon liim as he passed Coriolanus, ii. I 

and passed him uneleoted — .!!••' 

hath he not passed the nobles '. — i.ii- 1 

tliat being passed for consul — iii. 3 



PAS 

PASSED-that hath pansed from him. 7»Wii«C'(»',va7-,ii. I 
I have passed my word and promise.. 3'iViuv)«t(. i. 2 

there uauglit hath passed — iv. 4 

till he hath passed necessity ..Pericles, ii. (Gower) 
who passed that passing fair?. . . . Ilomvo ^Jntiel. i. 1 
[A'n/.jso far he passed my thought.... //(/m/</, iv. 7 
sieges, fortunes, that I have passed .... Othello, i. 3 
she loved me for the dangers I had passed — i. 3 
PASSENGER-1 see a passenger. TwoGen. of Ver. iv. 1 
silly women, or poor passengers .... — iv. 1 
some unhappy passenger in chace.... — v. 4 
our watch, and rob our passengers.. /Ji'c/iarrf/f. v. 3 

that fleeced poor passengers iHcnryVI. iii. I 

with sorrow snares relenting passengers — iii. 1 
PAS.SES— your passes, BtoocaAoa.. Merry Wives, ii. I 

why, this passes! (re/».) — iv. 2 

hath looked upon my passes ....Meas.forMeas. v. 1 
she passes praise; then praise. ...Love'sL.Lost. iv. 3 

a stain, as xtasses colouring Winter' s't'ale, ii. 2 

he passes some humours, and careers.. Henry V. ii. 1 
continuate goodness: he passcs.Timonof Athens, i. I 

to yield what passes here Coriolanns. ii. 2 

tliat in a dozen passes between yourself. HaH//<-/. v. 2 

PASSETIIby with stiff unbowed.... 2 Wcnri//7. iii. 1 

1 have that v.'ithin which passeth sliow..HaiH^'/, i. 2 

PASSING— 'tis a passing shame. .TwoOen. of Ver. i. 2 

and her passing deformity — ii. 1 

is she not passing fair? — iv. 4 

Vapians passing the equinoctial.. Tw'e(/?/iA'/ff/i/, ii. 3 

passing on the prisoner's life Meas.forMeus. ii. 1 

you apprehend passing shrewdly ....MuchAdo, ii. 1 
Oberon is passing fell and wrath ..Mid.lS.'sth-. ii. i 
spied a blossom, passing fair..Loi)c'si.i. iv. 3 (ver.) 
bitter with him. and passing short. .4s youLikcil, iii. 5 
be pastime passing excellent.. 7'anim^o/AVi. 1 (iud.) 
you are passing welcome, and so I pray — ii. I 

I find you passing gentle — ii. 1 

pleasant, gamesome, passing courteous — ii. I 

I know him passing wise — iii. 2 

now is sharp, and passing emijty.... . — iv. I 

'tis passing good; I pr'ytlice let — iv. 3 

this is a pas-iiig merry one IVinter'sTale, iv. 3 

passing tlle^e flats, are taken by King John, v. i; 

I am jiassing light in spirit 'iHenryl V. iv. 2 

our air shakes them passing scornfuUj'.He)/?///'. iv.2 
was employed in passing to and fro. i Henry VI. ii. I 
O passing traitor, perjured, and ....iHemyVl.v. I 

a passing pleasing tongue Richard III. i. 1 

is passing out of tliis world — iv.2 

yet are they passing cowardly Coriolanus, i. 1 

fits tlie purpose passing vie\l..TitusAnd7oniiics, ii. 3 

that is passing fair {r.''p.^ Romeo fy Juliet, i. 1 

passing through nature to eternity ....Hamict, i. 2 
the which he loved passing well (rep.) .. — ii.2 
'twas strange, 'twas passing strange .... Olhello, i. 3 
PASSIO— Hysterica passio? down, thou ..Lenr, ii. 4 
PASSION— their fury, and my passion.. Tempest, i. 2 
in some passion that works him strongly — iv. 1 
passion as they, be kindlier moved .... — v. 1 
means this passion at his narae'iTiroGen.of Ver. i. 2 
and hispassion of my heart! ....Merry Wives, iii. I 
unfold the passion of my love ... . Twelfth Sight, i. 4 
tlie cunning of her passion invites me — ii- 2 

it did relieve my passion much .— ii- 4 

the beating of so strong a passion.... — ii.4 
wit, nor reason, can my jiassion hide — iii- 1 
same 'haviour that 3'our passion bears — iii- 4 
liis words do from such passion fly .. — iii. 4 
thy wisdom, not thy passion, sway in — iv. 1 
if my passion change not shortly .. ..MuchAdo, \. 1 
counterfeit of passion came so near (rep.) — ii- 3 
what effects of passion shows she? .. — ii- 3 
counsel him to fight against his passion — iii. 1 

their counsel turns to passion — v. 1 

spend your passion on a misprized. yi//d. N. Dr. iii- 2 
the passion of loud laughter never shed — v. 1 
this passion, and the death of a dear — v. 1 

and her passion ends the pla3' — v. 1 

with this I passion to say ..Love's L.Lost, i. 1 (let.) 

noted well your passion — iv. 3 

it did move him to passion — iv. 3 

their folly, passion's solemn tears.-.. — v- 2 
never heard a passion so confused Mer.ofl'enice, ii. 8 
dimensions, senses, affections, passions? — iii- 1 
how all the other passions fleet to air — iii. 2 

mistress of passion, sways it to — iv. 1 

what passion hangs these weights. .Jsj/ou Like it, i. 2 

as my passion now makes me — ii.4 

this shepherd's passion is much upon — li. 4 
for every passion something (rep.) .. — iii. 2 

that it was a passion of earnest — iv. 3 

all made of passion, and all made.... — v. 2 
love's strong passion is impressed ....All's Well, i. 3 
the proclamation of thy passion .... — i- 3 

for your passions have to the full .. — i. 3 
Cox' my passion 1 give me your hand — v- 2 
into some merry passion. Taming of Shrew, 1 (indue.) 
to plead Hortensio's passion.... — iii. 1 (gamut) 
Cock's passion, silence: I hear my .. — iv. 1 
you his tyrannous passion more.. Winler'sTale, ii. 3 
cast your good counsels upon his passion — iv. 3 
a noiahle passion of wonder appeared — v. 2 
his passion ne'er brake into .. Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

each one with ireful passion — v. 1 

ofl'end him, and extend his passion . . Macbeth, iii, 4 
this noble lassion, child of integrity .. — iv. 3 
a passion hateful to my purposes ..KingJohn, iii. 3 
then with a passion would 1 shake .. — iii. 4 

his passion is so ripe, it needs — iv.2 

the comment that my passion made — iv. 2 

for I mu.st speak in passion \Henryiy. ii i 

not in pleasure, but m passion — ii. 4 

(listemperature, in passion shook.... — iii. 1 
tills strained passion doth you wrong.2Hen»!//;'. i. 1 
if you give o'er to stormy passion.... — i. 1 
till that liis passions, like a whale.... — iv. 4 

unto whose grace our passion is HenryV. i. 2 

free from gross passion, or of mirth.. — ii.2 

had the passions of thy heart \HenryVI.\v. 1 

of all base passions, lear is — v. 2 





PAS 

PASSION— passions in my heart \Hemyyj. v. 5 

with any passion of infliiniing love.. — v. 5 

Init l)is passions move me so ZlJenryVI. i. 4 

to tell the passion of my sovereign's — Hi. 3 

makes me bridle piissioii — iv. 4 

but allay, the th-e of passion Henri/ fill. I. 1 

the hot passion of distempered.. 7Voi7us^6Vcss. ii. 2 
even sneh a i»assion dotli embraee .. — iii. 2 
•whieh here his passion dotli express? — v. 2 

your passion draws ears hither — v. 2 

preceaent passions do instruct.. Ti'moiio/^f/iens, i. 1 

I feel my master's i>assion! — iii. 1 

Bucli sober and unnoted i)assion — iii. 5 

v-'hose passions and whose plots Cm-iotatius^iv. 4 

with passions of some ditt'erenee ..Jutiits Ciesar, i. 2 
I have much mistOi^k your passion.. — i. 2 

passion, 1 see, is catching — iii. I 

wliose every passion fully strives. Antony ^Cleo. i. 1 
niack, sir, no; her passions are mude — i. 2 

your speeeli is passion — ii. 2 

what's thy passion? The greater eantle — iii. 8 
by such poor passion as the maid.... — iv. 13 
the quality of lier passion shall require — v. 1 
mother's tears in passion for her son. Tilus And. i. 2 
plead my passions for Lavinia's love — ii. 1 

then be my passions bottomless — iii. 1 

in passion moved, doth weep to see. . — iii. 2 
tile 1 assions of the mind, that have .... Pericles, i. 2 
borrowed passion stands for true — iv. 4(Gouer) 

smooth every passion Lear, ii. 2 

mingle reason with your passion — ii. 4 

she was a queen over lier passion , — iv. 3 

*tvvixt two extremes of passion — v. 3 

passion lends them yiow a .Uomeo :i Juliet, i. 5 (cho.) 
llomeo! humours! madmanl passionl — ii. 1 

my true love's passion — ii. 2 

as oft as any passion under lieaven .... Hamlet, ii. I 
eyes of heaven, and passion iii the gods. . — ii. 2 

in a dream of passion, could force — ii. 2 

the motive and the cue for passion — ii. 2 

(as I may say) whirlw ind of your passion — iii. 2 
tear a passion to tatters, to very rags .... — iii. 2 
that man that is not passion's slave .... — iii. 2 
in passion we proiiose, the passion ending — iii. 2 
lapsed in time ar.d passion, lets goby .. — iii. 4 
atBietion, passion, hell itself, she turns — iv. .=i 

did put me into a towering passion — v. 2 

and passion having my best judgment.. OMeHo, ii. 3 
from tlie heart, that passion cannot rule — iii. 3 
I see, sir, you are eaten up with passion — iii. 3 

lierself in such shadowing passion — iv. 1 

a passion most unsuiting such a man.... — iv. 1 

well-painted passion! — iv. I 

nature whom passion could not shake?.. — iv. 1 
some bloody passion shakes your very . . — v. 2 

PASSIONATE Proteus Iiro Gen. of rerona, i. 2 

amazed at your passionate words. .V/irf. tf.'sDr. iii. 2 
make passionate my sense of ... . Love^sL. Lost, iii. 1 

she is sad and passionate King John, ii. 2 

what means this passionate discourse? i Henry t'l. i. 1 
[Cut. Kill ] this passionate humour. . Uicliard IIL i. 4 
cannot passionateourtenibldgrief. TitusAndrun.Kii. 2 

come, a passionate speech Hamlet, ii. 2 

PASSIONING for Theseus' perjury Tu-oGen.ofV. iv.4 

PASSIVE drugs of it freely Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

PASSPi IKT ; when thou canst get AlVs IVell, iii. 2 

his passjjort shall be made Henry I', iv. 3 

a passport too! Apollo perfect me .... Pericles, iii. 2 

PASS Y measure or a pavin TwelftUNight, v. 1 

PAST— past the mid season Tempest, i. 2 

whereof what's past is prologue — ii, 1 

till the dregs of the storm be past — ii. 2 

siiiee I feel the best is past — iii. 3 

it is past her cure — v. I 

for my folly past Two Gen. of Verona, i. 2 

'tis past the hour, sir Merry Wives, ii. 3 

my riots past, my wild — iii. 4 

'tis past eiglit already, sir — iii. 6 

past question, for thou see'st Twelfth Night, i. 3 

a wreck past hope he was — v. I 

that have on both sides past — v. I 

were past cure of the thing Meas.forMeas. ii. 1 

what hath past between you — iii. 1 

he's now past it, yet, and I say — iii. 2 

of whai's past, present, or to come .. — iv. 2 
life is better life, past fearing death. . — v. 1 
she misused me past the endurance. .Muc/i/)do, ii. I 

it is past the iiilinitc of thought — ii. 3 

your cue is past; it is MiU. K.'sDream, iii. 1 

thou drivest me past theboirads of. . — iii. 2 
saint Valentine IS past — iv. 1 

1 have had a dream,— past the wit of — iv. 1 
oaths are past, and now subscribe . . Love's L. L. i. 1 
forbear till this company be past.... — i. 2 

for, past cure, is still past care — v. 2 

his hour is almost past ....Merchant of Venice, ii. 6 
did eiitri at me, past all saying nay.. — iii. 2 

past all expressing: it is very — iii. 6 

is it not past two o'clock? As you Litie it, i v. 3 

in theealendar of my past endeavours. /!«'« W'e((, i. 3 

when lielp past sense we deem — ii. 1 

not past power, nor you past cure..., — ii. 1 

they say, miracles are past — ii. 3 

fordoing 1 am past: as I will by .... — ii. 3 
the troop is past; come, pilgrim .... — iii. .^ 

to what is past already — iii. 7 

token to the future our past deeds . . — iv. 2 

'tis past, my liege; and I beseech — v. 3 

the bitter past, more welcome — v. 3 

why, I ajn past my gamut . . Taming of Shrew, iii. ) 

past cure of the lives — iii. 2 

as weak, our weakness past compare — v. 2 
Camillo, (.but that's past doubt .. IVinter'sTale, i. 2 
he so troubles me, 'tis past enduring — ii. 1 

then, 'twere past all doubt — ii. 3 

dear services, last, and to come ■ — ii. 3 

my past life hath been as.continent.. — iii. 2 

were past all shame c?-p)>.) — iii.'.; 

what s past help, should be past grief — iii. 2 
« kinsjnan not past three quarters . , — iv. 2 



[ o62 ] 



PAST— I am past more children .. IVinlrr's Tale, v. 2 

now he's there, past Hioiight ComeihjofErr.v. I 

in the times past, which held yon.... Mncbelh, iii. 1 

strongly urged past my defence King John, i. 1 

all murders past do stand excused .. — iv. 3 

more than things long past Picliard II. ii. I 

things past redress, are now with me past— ii. 3 
as thou resid'st, thy promise past .... — v. 3 

nay, that's past praying for \ Henry IF. ii. 4 

though not clean past your youth .,2HenrylV. i. 2 

past, and to come, seem best — i. 3 

'tis one o'clock, and past. "Why then — iii. I 

what perils past, what crosses — iii. 1 

still; yon are past service — iii. 2 

the heat is past, follow no ftu'thernow — iv. 3 
turning past evils to advantages .... — iv.4 

faint souls, past corporal toil HenryV. i. 1 

citlier past, or not arrived to .... — iii. (chorus) 
by remembering yon— 'tis past .. — v. (chorus) 

to-day? St. Davy's day is past — v. I 

what's past, and what s to come .... I Henry VI. i. 2 

grief that they are past recovery •iHenryVI. i. 1 

let's stay till ne be past 'iHenryVI. iii. I 

thou see'st what's past, go fear — iii. 3 

till storms be past of civil enmity.... — iv. 6 
that string, madam; that is \)i).si..Itiehard III. iv. 4 

for time past, wronged by thee — iv. 4 

they vex me past my patience! HenryVIII. ii. 4 

no more call it York-place, that is past — iv. 1 

but now I am past all comforts — iv. 2 

as he past along, how earnestly — v. 2 

has not past three or four hairs. , Troilus ^Cress. i. 2 
past hidi)ig, and then it is past watching — i. 2 

the past proportion of his intinite.. .. — ii, 2 
those scraps are good deeds past .... — iii. 3 

though less than yoius in jiast — iii. 3 

made andraoulded oi things past.... — iii. 3 
what's past, and what's to come .... — iv. 5 

well, well, 'tis done; 'tis past — v. 2 

his (lays and times are past. . . . Timon of Athens, ii. 1 

my lord, six weeks, and past — ii. 2 

Timon's happy hours a:e done and past — iii. 2 
the law, which is past depth to those — iii. 5 
his present bearing with his jiast . , Coriolanus, ii. 3 
than stay, past doidit. lor greater.... — ii. 3 

but the loss of what is past — iii. 2 

the main blaze of it is i>a«t — iv. 3 

ambitious past all lliinking — iv. 

I have tumbled past the throw — v. 2 

I should not urge thy duly i'as{..JuliusCwsar, iv. 3 
things, tliat are past', are i\onc. ....4ntony'^-Cteo. i. 2 
she is cunning past man's thought .. — i. 2 
the deserver till his deserts arc iiast.. — i. 2 

it's past the size ol drcamin" — v. 2 

past grace? obedience? past hope ( lep.) . . Cymb. i. 2 
for certainties either are past remedies — i. 7 
thou art past the tyrant's stroke. . — iv. 2 (song) 
their pleasures here are jiast, and so is — iv. 2 
is strikes me. past the hope ol comfort — iv. 3 

of what's past, is, and to come — V- 4 

tliat's due to all the villains past .... — y- 5 
sweet, pardon for what is jnist .... Titus Andron. i. 2 

his sorrows are past remedy — iv. 3 

unsiieakable, past patience — v. 3 

bethought me what was [last .,, Pericles, i. 2 

makes my past miseries sport — v. 3 

by this, had thought been past Lear, iv. 6 

past speaking of in a king! — iv. 6 

tis past, and so am 1; but what — v. 3 

until some half hour past — v. 3 

and I are past our dancing-days.. /?omeo<S-/ui(e/, i. 5 

yet they are past compare — ii. 5 

but that a joy past joy calls out — iii. 3 

past hope, past cure, past help! — iv. 1 

it strains me past the compass of .... — iv. 1 

all pressures past, that youth and Hamlet, i. 5 

then I'll look up; my fault is past — iii. 3 

repent what's past; avoid what is to come — iii. 4 

O thou deeeivest me past thought! Othello, i. 1 

remedies are past, the griefs are ended .. — i. 3 

a mischief that is past and gone — _i. 3 

not past a pint, a,s I am a soldier — ii. 3 

hurt, lieutenant? Ay, past all surgery .. — ii. 3 

neither service past, nor present sorrows — iii. 4 

PAST-CUKE malady to empirics ....AWsH'ell, ii. 1 

feared his sickness was past-cin-e . . King John, iv. 2 

PASTE— serves as paste and cover ..Richard 11. iii. 2 

I'll make a paste (,rep.) Titus Andron. v. 2 

in that paste let their vile lieads .... — v. 2 
when she put them i' the paste alive .... Lear, ii. 4 

PASTERN— but on four pasterns Henry V. iii. 7 

PASTIES of your shameful . . Titus Audronicns, v. 2 

PASTIME is to make midnight Tempest, v. 1 

make a pastime of each. . . . Tuo Gen. of Verona, ii. 7 
till our very pastime, tired out . . TwetfthNight, iii. 4 
with some strange pastime solace them — iii. 4 

we have had pastime here Love'sL. Lost, v. 2 

to see no imstime As you Like it, v. 4 

the catastrophe and heel of pastime . . AtCs Well, i. 2 
be pastime passing excellent.. Taming of ah, 1 (ind.) 
here is some good pastime toward. ... — i. 1 

make itself a pastime to harder Winter'sTale, i. 2 

make their jjastime at my sorrow — ii. 3 

make pastime with us a day Cymbeline, iii. I 

our pastimes done, possess a golden. .7'i(«s/l»or. ii. 3 

makest thou this shame thy pastime? Lear, ii. 4 

did you assay him to any pa-iinie? Hamlel, ii. 2 

shook with danger, and think it pastime — iv. 7 
PASTOR— as some ungracious i)astors do — i. 3 
PASTORAL— Whitsun 'pastorals.. H'inler'sTale.iv.S 

pastoral, pastoral-comical (rep.) Hamlet, ii. 2 

PASTRY— quinces in the pastry ./Jomeo ir Juliet, iv. 4 

PAST-SAVING slave is this! AlVs Well,\\. 3 

PASTURE— too small a pasture . TwoGen. of Ver. i. 1 

and i pasture irep.) Love's L. Lost, ii. 1 

full of the pasture, jumps along ..AsyouLiiieit, ii. 1 
bu.y his flock and pasture? (rep.) .... — ii. 4 
that good pasture makes fat sheep .. — iii. 2 
and bedew her pastures' grass with./?iV/ia>.'J 77. iii. 3 
they sell the pasture now Henry V. ii. (chorus) 



PAT 

PASTURE- the mettleof your pasture. Henry f. iii. 1 
is the pasture lards the brother's .Timon of Ath. iv. 3 
when snow the pasture sheets . ...Antony ifrCleo. i. t 

so graze, as you find pasture Cymbeline, v. 4 

PASTY- venison pasty to dinner.... A/errj/'Kircs. i. I 

if you pinch me like a pasty All's Well, iv. 3 

PAT, pat; and here's a marvellous. .Ui<<. A.'s Dr. iii. I 

it will fall pat as I told you — v. E 

come pat betwixt too early Henry VIII. ii. » 

and pat lie comes, like the catastrophe. . . . Lear, i. 2 

now might I do it jiat Hamlet, iii. 3 

PATA Y— at the battle of Patay .... I Henri/ VI. iv. 1 

PATCH— thou scurvy patch I Tempest, iii. 2 

pateli grief with proverbs Much Ado, v. 1 

were there a patch set on learning. Lot'e'si.tojf, iv. 2 
the patch is kind enough . . Mercliant of Venice, ii. 5 
a patch of velvet on's lace (rep.) ....All'sWell, iv. 5 
capon, coxcomb, idiot, patch :.Coine(/i/o/'£rrors, iii. 1 

what patch is made our porter? — iii. 1 

what soldiers, patch? Macbeth, v. S 

begin to patch up thine old body ..'iHenrylV. ii. t 
if you'll patch a quarrel.... .4ii/ony<^C'ieo»a(ro, ii. 2 

to gain a little patch of ground Hamlet, iv. 4 

should natch a wall to expel tlie winter.. — v. 1 

PATCHBREECH.Isay! What say you.PenWes.ii. I 

PATCHED— man is but a patched. A/ii/. N.'s Dr. iv. I 

thing that is mended, is patched. . Tu-ellth Sight, i. 5 

is but patched with sin (rep.) — i. 5 

prodigious, patched with foul moles. . King John, iii. 1 
the fault before it was so patched .... — iv. 2 
this must be patched with cloth .... Coriolnnns, iii. I 
but you patched up your excnxs. Antony (fCleo. ii. 2 
PATCHERY, such juggling . . Troitns ^ Cressida, ii. 3: 
know his gross patchery, love him. Timon of Ath. v. 1 
PATCHES— a crew of patches. . MiU. N.'s Dream, iii. I 

as patches, set upon a little KingJohn, iv. 2 

with patches, colours, and with forms. Henry A', ii. 2 
patches will I get unto these scars .. — v. I 

a king of shreds and patches Hamltl, iii. 4 

PATE— an excellent pass of pate Tempest,'vi. \ 

there is either liquor in his pate ..Merry W^ves, ii. 1 

fat paunches have lean pates Love sL. Lost, i, 1 

so I had broke thy pate, and asked . .All's u ell, ii. I 
I'll knock yourknave's pate .. Taming q) Shrew, i. 2 
through the instrument my pate made — ii. I 
by any understanding pate but. . . . Winter'sTale, i. 2 
score yoiu' fault upon my ^vlIk .Comedy of Errors, i. 2 

marks of yours upon my pate — i.2 

or I will break thy pate across — ii. 1 

enter, lest 1 break your pate — ii. 2 

I'll break your knave's pate — iii. I 

tliat still breaks the pate of faith .... KingJohn, ii. 2 

to break the pate of thee IHenrylV. ii. 1 

here's no scoring, but upon tlie pate.. — v. 3 
I'll knock his leek about his pate .... Henry V. iv. 1 

or I will peat his pate four days — v. 1 

there is a groat to heal your pate (rep.) — v. 1 

a curled pate will grow bald — v. 2 

doiielt so fast at one another's pate.l Henry*'/, iii. 1 
chop away that factious pate of )iis..2HenryF/. v. I 
the learned pate ducks to the. . Timonof Athens, iv. 3 
melt the city leads ujion your pates. Cor/o/an«s, iv. Ii 
have broke his pate with 3'our bovl.. Cymbelme, ii. I 
creature's dagger on your pate . . liomeo ^Juliet, iv, .5 

villain? breaks my piate across? Hamlel, \\. 2 

this might be the pate of a politician .... — v. I 
to have his fine pate full of tine dirt? .... — v. 1 

singeing his pate against the — v. 1 

my invention comes from my pate Othello, ii. I 

PATENT— yield my virgin patent u<^.Mid.N.Dr. i. I 
wliicli he thinlcs is a patent for his ..All'sWell, iv. 5 
call in the letters patents that he ..liichard II. ii. 1 

yet my letters patent gi\e me — ii. 3 

tied it by letters patents Henry Vlll. iii. 2 

give her patent to oft'end Othello, iv. t 

PATERNAL-disclaiin all my paternal care. Lear, i. I 

PATH— in their so sacred patlis Merry Wives, iv. 4 

your wisdom in that good path..il/eoi..frrjVeai-. iv. 3 
m the churchway paths to glide, ,.Uii;,A'.7)i™n!, v, 2 
if we walk not in the trodden \>ixt\:s.AsyauLilie it.i. 3 
out of the path which shall directly. Kinj,' John, iii. 4 

the stranger paths of banishment Riclinid //. i. 3 

haunted us in our familiar paths HenryV. ii. 4 

go tread tire path tliat thou slialt . , Hichaidlll. i. 1 
that my path were even to the crown — iii, 7 

keep tlien the path Troitns <5- Cressida, iii, 3 

for if thou path, thy native Jiilins Crrsnr, ii, I 

what is this? here is a |iath to it.. ..Cymbeline, iii. (i 

pursue, and I have found the path. 7'i'ns/l«'/rovi. ii, 1 

liimself the primrose path ol dalliance . . Hamlet, i. 3 

PATHETICAE break-promise ..Ayou Uln-ii, iv. 1 

most pretty, and pathetieall Love'sL.Lost. i. 2 

it is a most pathetical nit! — iv. I 

PATHWAY— naked pathway to thy . . TiicAard //, i. 2 

see pathways to his will ! liomeo ^Juliet, i. I 

from forth day's pathway [Co/. /in/. -path] — ii. 3 

PA'riENCE— I am out oi patience Tempest, i, 1 

by your patience, I needs must — iii. 3 

and patience says, it is — v. 1 

have patience, gentle Jidia . . Two Gen. of Ver. ii. 2 
my patience more than thy desert .. — iii. I 
I do entreat your patience to hear me — iv, 4 
lend me patience to forbear a w bile.. — v. 4 
be an old abusing of God's patience. Merry Wives, i. 4 
odds with his own gravity and patieuce — iii. I 

pray you, use your patience — iii. I 

but lameness, civility, and patience.. — iv. 2 

by your patience, no TwelfihNight, ii. I 

she sat like patience on a monument — ii. 4 
nay, patience, or wc break the sinews — ii. .') 

daugliter, in your patience Meas.forMeas. iv. 3 

keep me in patience — v. 1 

my patience hereis touched — v. I 

God give me patience! Much Ado, ii. 3 

liBve patience, and endure — iv. i 

and bid him speak of patience — v. 1 

and I of him will gather patience .... — v. I 
to speak patience to those that wring — v. 1 

we will not wake 3'onrpntiece — v. i 

1 know not liow to pray your patience — v. 1 



PAT 

l»ATIENCE-our trial patience ..Mid.N.'sDream,}. 1 

.1 know your patience well — iii. 1 

past tlie bounils of maiden's patience — !!!• '^ 
a poor soul's patience, all to make .. — iii. 'i 
begged my patience, 1 then did ask . . — iv. 1 

God grant us patience! Love's L. Lost, \. 1 

I have as little patience as anotlier .. — i. 2 
witli what sti-iet patience have I sat — iv. 3 

I'Ustaywitli patience — v. 2 

your patience for my long tihode.Mer.of fetncc^u. 6 
J doop[iose niy patience to liis fury.. — iv. I 
lier patience, speak to the people. . As you Like i', i. 3 
never cried, luive patience, aood people 1 — iii. 2 
Patience lierself would startle at this — iv. 3 

Audrey; patience, gentle Audrey — v. 1 

himibl'eness, all patience, and impatience— v. 2 
patience once more, wliiles our compact — v. 4 
sir, by your patience: if I heard j'ou — v. 4 

your patience, and your virtue, well — y. 4 

tliink upon patience Alt's ll'etl, iii. 2 

you must liave the patience to liear it — iv. 3 

ours be your patience then — (cpil.) 

tliougli it pass your patience TamingofSh. i. 1 

patience; I am Grumio's pledge .... — i. 2 

hear me with patience — i. 2 

for patience slie will prove a second — Ji. 1 

patience, I pray you — iv. 1 

and tyranny tremble at patience. ll'inter'sTale, iii. 2 

take yotu' patience to you — ]'.]■ '^ 

your patience this allowing, I turn ., — iii. 3 
O patience; the statue is but newl}'.. — v. 3 
patience, unmoved, no marvel ..Comedi/o/Err.n. 1 
helpless patience wouldst relieve me — ii. 1 
this fool-begged patience in thee will — ii. 1 
have patience, sir: O let it not be so — iii. 1 
depart in patience, and let us to .... — iii. 1 

have patience, I beseech — iv. 3 

my master preaches patience to him — v. 1 
find j'our patience so predominant. . . . Macbeth, iii. 1 
you must have patience, madam .... — iv. 2 
devotion, patience, courage, fortitude — iv. 3 

patience, good lady! KmgJolin,\\i. 4 

of such tame patience boast Ricliardil. i. 1 

call it not patience. Gaunt — i. 2 

in mean men we entitle patience .... — 12 

and prick my tender patience — ii. 1 

badges of his grief and patience — v. 2 

patience is stale, and I am weary of it — v. 5 

you tiead upon my patience 1 Henry IF. i. 3 

beyond the bounds of patience — i. 3 

to put him quite beside his patience — iii. 1 

on purpose, to try my patience 2 Henry IF. ii. 4 

not to have patience to shift me — v. 5 

to pray your patience for it — (epil.) 

your humble patience pray .... Henry F. i. (cliorus) 

lingeryour patience on — ii. (chorus) 

though patience be a tired mare .... — ii. 1 
give you patience to endure, and true — ii. 2 
by your patience, ancient Pistol .... — iii. 6 

have patience, noble duke 1 Henry Fl. i. 3 

but only (with your patience) that we — ii. 3 
tliis place commands my patience .. — iii. 1 
patience, good lady; wizards linovr..iHenryFl. i. 4 

sort tliy heart to patience — ii. 4 

patience is for poltroons, and such ..SHenryFI. i. 1 
renowned queen, with patience calm — iii. 3 
a paper to persuade me patience?.... — iii. 3 
stoop with patience to my fortune . . — v. 5 

meantime, have patience Ridiard III. i. I 

with patience, noble lord, as prisoners — i. 1 
have patience, madam; there's no doubt — j. 3 
to thy harm, thou move our patience — i. 3 
I must have patience to endure the load — iii. 7 
by your patience, I maj^ not suffer you — iv. 1 

in tempting of your patience Henry FIIL i. 2 

rest slrowed a most noble patience .. — ii. 1 

they vex me past my patience! — ii. 4 

add an honour, — a great patience.... — iii. 1 

food sir, have patience. So I have .. — iii. = 
'atieiice, be near me still; and set . . — iv. 2 
we wake lier; softly, gentle Patience — iv. 2 
Patience, is tliat letter, I caused you — iv. v 
nay. Patience, you must not leave .. — iv. 2 
you must take your patience to you — v. 1 

fulfilled, and I attend with patience — v. 2 
all the weight ye can upon my patience — v. 2 
Patience herself, what goddess . . Tmilus i§- Cress, i. 1 
Hector, whose patience is, as a virtue — i. 2 
bid them have patience, she shall .. — iv. I 
hold, patience! How now, Trojan?.. — v. 2 

you have not patience, come — v. 2 

and all offences a guard of patience — v. 'j 

you have sworn patience — v. 2 

of what I feel; I am all patience .... — v. 2 
T did swear patience. You shall not — v. 2 

patience, a while, you'll hear Coriolaniis, i. 1 

by your patience (rep. i. 9) — i. 3 

rob you of a great deal of patience . . — ii. I 
■up the bloody flag against all patience — .ij. 1 
Coriolanus, patience: speak, good .. — iii. I 

I will with patience hear JutiusCrvsar, i. 2 

can I bear that with patience, and not — ii. I 
have patience, gentle friends, I must not — iii. 2 
hear me with patience. Peace, ho! .. — iii 2 
1 have the patience to endure it now — iv. 3 
arming myself with patience, to stay — v. 1 
with patience more than savMgcs../liifon!/^-Cto. i. 4 
out or patience; and that night (jep.) — ii. 5 
good madam, patience. What say you? — ii. 5 
pray you be ever known to patience — iii. 6 
patience is sottish; and impatience.. — iv. 13 
what patience your wisdom may . . . . Cymbeline. i. 2 
'beseech your patience: peace, dear lady — i. 2 
no, faith; not so much as his patience — i. 3 
have patience, sir, and take your ring — ii. 4 
besides the government of palicncel — ii. 4 
good lady, hear me with patience .. — iii. 4 
grief and patience, rooted in hira both — iv. 2 



[ 503 ] 



grow, patience! and let the stinking — 
patience, prince Saturnine. . . . Titus Aiidronic 



, i. 2 



PATIENCK, gentle empress ..TduiAndrtmims, ii. 3 
why have I jiatience to endure all this? — ii. 3 
patience, dear niece: good Titus .... — iii. 1 
past patience, or more than any .... — v. 3 
with patience bear such griefs as you . . Vericles, i. 2 
I shall with a^ed patience bear your yoke — ii. 4 

patience, good sir (rep.) — iii. 1 

patience then, and tliink you now — iv. 4 (Gow.) 

yet thuu dost look like Patience — v. 1 

patience, good sir, or here I'll cease .. — v. I 
so on your patience evermore .. — v. 3 (Uouer) 
I pray you, sir, take patience; I have . . . . Z.far, ii. 4 
give me tliat patience, patience I needl — ii. 4 
no, I will be the pattern of all patience — iii. 2 
where is the patience now, that you so oft — iii. 6 
patience and sorrow strove who should.. — iv. 3 

sir, by your patience, I hold you but — v. 3 

patience perforce witli wilful . . liomeo ^ Juliet, i. 3 
hear me with patience but to speak — iii. b 
ICol. Knt.] beseech you, sir, have patience — v. 1 
let mischance be slave to patience .. — v. 3 
bear this work of lieaven with patience — v. 3 

they stay upon your patience Hamlet, iii. 2 

of thy distemper sprinkle cool patience — iii. 4 

content to lend your patience to us — iv. .'i 

your patience in our last night's — v. 1 

till then, in patience our proceeding be.. — v. 1 
liatience, good sir. What tell'st thou me. Othello, i. 1 
yet, by your gracious patience, I will .. — i. 3 
patience her injury a mockery makes .. — i. 3 
pay grief, must of poor patience borrow — _i. 3 
let it not gall yom" patience, good lago.. — ii. 1 
indignity, which patience could not pass — ii. 3 
how poor are tliey, that have not patience!— ii. 3 

and talk him out of patience — iii. 3 

patience, I say; your mind, perhaps .... — iii. 3 
marry, patience; or I shall say, you are — iv. 1 
found most cunning in my patience .... — iv. 1 
in some part of my soul a drop of patience — iv. 2 
patience, thou young and rose-lipped.... — iv. 2 
patience a while, good Cassio — v. 1 

PATIENT— nay, good be patient Tempest, i. 1 

am I this patient log-man — iii. 1 

be patient, for the prize I — iv. 1 

I'll be as patient as TwoGen. of Ferona, ii. 7 

come, come, be patient — v. 3 

I will be patient; Iwillfind i\IerryWives,n. 1 

shown himself a wise and patient.... — ii. 3 
de lords, de gentlemen, my patients.. — ii. 3 
sir Toby, be patient for to-night. Twelfth Night, ii. 3 

alas, sir, be patient — iv. 2 

thou must be patient .... Measure for Measure, iv. 3 

yet a patient sufferance Much, Ado, i. 3 

sir, sir, be patient: for my part — iv. 1 

borne it with a patient shrug.. JI/ercA. of Fenice, i. 3 

sweet masters, be patient As you Lilie it, i. 1 

for I, tliy resolved patient, on thee .. All' s Well, ii. 1 
my preserver, by thy patient's side .. — ii. 3 
well, I must be patient (»-ep. V. 3) .... — ii. 3 

the patient, gentlemen Taming of Shrew, ii- 1 

to this most patient, sweet, and virtuous — iii. 2 
be jiatient; to-morrow it shall be.... — iv. ] 

I must be patient, till the Winter's Tale, ii. 1 

if so, be patient, sister Comedy of Errors, ii. 1 

good sir, be patient. Nay, 'tis for (rep.) — iv. 4 

be patient; for I will not — v. 1 

you are not Pinch's patient, are you — v. 1 

how does your patient, doctor Macbeth, v. 3 

therein the patient must minister .... — v. 3 

he is more patient than when King John, v. 7 

patient underbearing of his foYtune..IlichurdII. i. 4 

too careless patieiit.as thou art — ii. 1 

how long shall I be patient? — ii. 1 

ever made me sour my patient cheek — ii. 1 
sweet York, be patient; hear me .... — v. 3 
aiS Job, my lord; but not so patient. .2Henry I F. i. 2 
but how I should be your patient to — i. 2 

be patient, princes; you do not know — iv. 4 

food corporal, be patient here Henry F. ii. 1 
e patient, for you shall remain .... — iii. 5 
but only in patient stillness, while his — iii. 7 

be patient (.rep. v. 4) \ Henry VI. iv. 1 

madam, be patient ( rep. iii. 2) iHenryVI. i. 3 

be patient, gentle Nell; forget this .. — ii. 4 

be patient (rep.) 3HenryFI. i. 1 

why art thou patient, man? — i. 4 

some patient leisure to excuse .... Richard III. i. 2 
I can no longer hold me patient .... — ..i- 3 

be patient, they are friends — iii. 5 

cither be patient, and entreat me fair — iv. 4 
no, my good lord, therefore be patient — y. 1 
be patient yet. I will, when you ..HenryFIII. \i. i 
his physic after his patient's death.. — iii. 2 
pray, sir, be patient: 'tis as much .. — v. 3 
sail upon her patient breast .. Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 3 
physician, that should be the patient — ii. 3 
the surgeon's box, or the patient's .. — v. 1 
by Jove, I will be patieut (jep.) .... — V. 2 
were I as patient as the midnight.. Con'oJonus, iii. ) 

nay, pray, be patient; if you — V. 1 

and patient fools, whose children.... — y. 5 

with patient exptctation JulinsCeesar.i. 1 

only be patient, till we have appeased — iii. I 

be patient till the last — iii. 2 

will you be patient? will yon stay .. — iii. 2 
and let patient Octavia plough. Triton;/ €,Cleo. iv. 10 
your lordsliip is tlie most patient man Cymbeline, ii. 3 

but not every man patient after — ii. 3 

if you'll be patient, I'll no more be mad — ii. 3 
sir, be patient: this is not strong enouglt — ii. 4 
patient yourself, madam, and \>a,v(k>a.Tit as And. i. 2 
even here, where is a kingly patient . . Pericles, v. I 

I'll be patient; thou little know'st — v.) 

pray sir, be patient. Detested kite! Lear, i.i 

I can be patient; I can stay with Regan — ii. 4 

bear free and patient thoughts — iv. 

thou must be patient; we came crying .. — iv. (i 
if you with patient ears attend .Romeo SfJid. (i)rol.) 

be patient (rep. iii. 3) — i. 5 

the spurns that patient merit of the ..Hamlet, iii. 1 



PAU 

PATIENT— we must be patient. HamlH, iv. 5 

anon, as patient as the female dove — v. 1 

you must a while be patient ^ Othello, iii. 4 

confine yourself but 111 a patient list .... — iv. I 

PATIENTLY— tills patiently.. 'Aco Gen. ofFtr. y. 3 
bear the shame most patiently. ..Weas. /or Meas. ii. 3 

if you take it not ijatiently — iii. 2 

could endure the toothach pjtiei tly .Mik7i,4(;o, v. 1 
if you will patiently dance. . . . Mid. N.'s Dream, ii. 2 
I'll keep my oath, patiently ....Mer.ofFrmce, ii. 9 
patiently receive my medicine .... As yau Lilte it, ii. 7 
you will not bear them patiently Comedy of lirr. i. 2 
I embrace this fortune patiently.. . .1 Henry I F. v. 5 
sit patiently, and inly ruminate. //en>(/ A', iv. (cho.) 

therefore, patientlj;, and yielding — v. 2 

patiently hear my impatience .... Richard III. iv, 4 

march patiently along Troi'.usSr Cressida, v. 10 

for since patiently and constuntly .. Cymbeline, iii. 5 
good heavens, hear patiently mj; purpose — v. 1 

shake patiently my great affliction Lear, iv. 6 

we beg your liearing patiently .Hamlet, iii. 2 (prol.) 

PATIN ES [Co«.-patternsj of bright .Mer. of Fen. v. 1 

PATHICIANS, good: what authority. Corm/a/iKs, i. 1 

care have the patricians of you — i. 1 

the gods, not -the patricians, make it — i. I 
where great ijatricians shall attend . . — i. 9 
I am known to be a humorous patrician — ii. I 
the good patricians must be visited — ii. 1 

but most unwise patricians, why — iii. 1 

tribunes, patricians, citizens! what ho! — iii. 1 
against tlie senators, patricians, and — iv. 3 
senators, and patricians, love him too — iv. 7 
by the consuls and patricians, together — v. 6 
patricians, patrons of my right .. TiiusAndron. i. 1 
patricians draw your swords, and sheathe — i. 2 
patrii;iaiis, and plebeians, we create.... — i. 2 
lest then the people, and the patricians — i. 2 

PATRICK— friar Patrick's cell. TwoGen.of Fer. iv. 3 

at Patrick's cell (rep. V. 2) — v. 1 

yes, by saint Patrick, but there is Hamlet, i. 5 

PATKlMONY-for my patrimony. rOTn/Tig-qZ-A'A. iv. 4 
bereft and gelded of his patrimony. ./I'/Wiarii II. ii. 1 
reave the orphan of his patrimony. .2We;tr{/r/. v. 1 
prisoners, patrimony; dispose of tlieni Lear, v. 3 

PaTKOCLUS, upon a lazy bed. Troilus Sf Cressida,'\. 3 
now play hira me, Patroclus, arming — i. 3 
enough, Patroclus; or give me ribs . . — i. 3 
there's for you, Patroclus. I will see — ii. 1 
then tell me, Patroclus, what's Achilles? — ii. 3 

tliy knower, Patroclus (rep.) — ii. 3 

]?atroclus is a fool (rep.) — ii. 3 

Patroclus, I'll speak with nobodj- .. — ii. 3 
may easily untie: here comes Patroclus — ii- 3 
hear you, Patroclus; we are too well — ii. 3 
how now, Patroclus? Good-morrow — iii. 3 
call Thersites hither, sweet Patroclus — iii. 3 
let Patroclus make demands to me.. — iii. 3 
to him, Patroclus: tell him— I humbly — iii. 3 

this, mine: Patroclus kisses you — iv. 5 

Patroclus, let us feast hira to the height — v. 1 
my sweetPatroclus,! am thwarted.. — v. 1 
must all be spent: away, Patroclus.. — v. 1 
Patroclus will give me anything for — v. 2 
Patroclus ta'en , or slain — v, 5 

fo, bear Patroclus' body to Achilles — v. 5 

'atroel us' wounds have roused — v. 5 

PATRON— fostering patron.. Loue'sL. Lost,\. 1 (let.) 
as for my patron, (stand you so . . Taming ofSh. i. 2 
the patron of my life and liberty .... — iv. 2 
been patron to .Antipholus. . , . Comedy of Errors, v, 1 

call Warwick patron, and be 3 Henry FI. v. 1 

acknowledge thee their patron.. Timon of.Hhens, i. 2 
patricians, patrons of my right. . . . Tilus.lndron. i. I 
the good Andronicus, patron of virtue — i. 2 
as my great patron thought on in my .... Lear, i. 1 
mv worthy arch and patron, comes to night — ii. 1 

PATRONAGE his theft 1 Henry FI. iii. 1 

as well as you dare patronage the.... — iii. 4 

PATRONESS of heavenly harmony. Tarn, of Sh. ii. 1 
behold our patroness, the life of Rome Coriolanus, v. 4 

divinest patroness, and midwife. . . . Pericles, iii. 1 
PATTERN— pattern out my ....Meas. for Meas ii. ) 

pattern in himself to know — iii. 2 

fCol.1 with patterns of bright gold. Mer. of Fenice, _ v. 1 
he is one of the patterns ol love.. As you Lil:e it, iv. 1 

tlian history can pattern Winier'sTule, iii. 2 

by the pattern of mine own thoughts — iv. 3 
find some pattern of our shame .... King John, iii. 4 
shall as a pattern or a measure , . ..2Henry I F. iy. 4 

and deface the patterns that Henry F. ii. 4 

and is a pattern of celestial peace . . 1 Henry FI. v. 5 

this pattern of thy butcheries Richard 1 1 1, i. 1 

a pattern to all princes living Henry Fill. v. 4 

a pattern, precedent, and lively . . TiiusAndron. v. 3 

1 will be the pattern of all patience ....Lear, iii. 2 
cunningest pirttern of excelling nature.. ti/Zie/Zo, v. 2 

PATTERNED bv that the poet .. Titus. 4ndron. iv. 1 
PATTLE— a most prave pattle here . . Henry F. iv. 7 

PAUC A verba, sir J ohn ; . . . Merry Wives, i. 1 

slice, I say! Pauca, pauca; slice!.... — . i. I 
vir sapit, qui pauca loquitur. . . . Love's L.Lost, iv. 2 
you shall not say me nay: pauca verba — iv. 2 
therefore, paucas pallabris .. Taming of Sh. 1 (ind.) 
only slie; and, pauca, there's enough. Henry F. ii. 1 
PAUE— is known as well as Paul's . . 1 Henry IF. ii. i 
I bought hira in Paul's, and he'll.... '2 Hemy IF. i. 2 

now. By saint Paul, this news Richard III, i. I 

taken from Paul's to be interred .... — i. 2 

or, by saint Paul, I'll make O'ep.) — i. 2 

by holy Paul, they love his grace — i.3 

now by saint Paul I swear, I will not — iii. 4 
may be to-day read o'er in Paul's . . — iii. 6 
by the apostle Paul, shadows to-night — v. 3 
we may as well push again&tFaid's-HenryFIII.v.Z 
PAULINA— see thy wite Paulina, n'inter's Tale, iii. 3 
good Paulina, who hast the memory — v. 1 
no wife, I'll have no wife, Paulina.. — v. 1 
never. Paid ina; so be blessed my spirit! — v. 1 
my true Paulina, we shall not marry — v. 1 
here comes the lady Paulina's steward — v. 2 



PAU 



PAULINA— that Paulina knows.. H'liiier's I'm,; v. 2 

tluxt was foujjht in Paulina! — v. 2 

which is in the keeiiiu^ of Paulina. . — v. -2 
O grave and good Paulma (>•(•;).) .... — v. 3 

but yet, Paulina, Hermione was — v. a 

O sweet Paulina, make me to tliink — v. 3 

do, Paulina; for this affliction — v. 3 

knowing by Paulina that the oracle — v. 3 

pence, Paulina; thou sliouldet (rfp.) — v. 3 
PAUNCH him with a stake Tempest, iii. 2 

what, acoward, sir John Paunch?.. IHeiui/i/'. ii. i' 
zonnds, ye fat paunch, an' ye call .. — ii. -l 

PAUNCHES liave lean pates Love'sJ..Losl.\. I 

PAUSE, or staggering Merry llU'es, iii. 3 

pause awhile, and let my counsel . . Much Ado, iv. ) 

take time to pause Mid. N.'s Dream, 1. 1 

as he deserves? pause there ..Merch. of Venice, ii. 7 
too long a pause for that which you — ii. 9 

1 pray j'ou, tarry ; pause a day or two — iii. i 

why doth tile Jew pause? — iv. 1 

while I pause, serve in your.. Taming of Shrew, iii. 1 
no marvel though she pause. . Comedy of Errors, ii. 1 

we coldly pause for thee Hinf^John, ii. I 

peace, lad}'; pause, or be more — ii. 1 

or made a pause, when 1 — iv. 2 

then pause not; for tlie present — v. 1 

but yet I'll pause: for I am loath . . Richard II. ii. S 
stay", and pause awhile: here comes., l/fe«/i/Z/'. i. 3 

there did he pause — v. ii 

otlier offenders we will pause upon.. — v. !> 

and pause us, till these rebels -2 Henry IV. iv. 4 

Binall breath, and little pause HenryV. ii. -1 

pause, and tal<e thv breath I Henry VI. iv. ti 

why dost tliou pause? Witli thy -IHenryVl. v. 2 

I'll never pause again, never ZHenryVI. ii. 3 

good fortune bids us pause — ii. G 
ut yet I'll make a pause — iii. 2 

and twenty times made pause Richardlll. i. :; 

nay, do not pause, for I did kill ... , — i.'i 

some little pause, dear lord — iv. 'i 

rouglily by all time of pause . . Troitus 4' Cress, iv. 4 
I have seen thee pause, and take .... — iv. 5 

pause, if tliou wilt. I do disdain — v. B 

1 pause for a reply Julius Ccesar, iii . 2 

I umst pause till it come back to me — iii. 2 

by the pauses tliat he makes Antony ^-Cleo. y. I 

yet pause a while: you knight Pericles, ii. i 

so, after Pyrrlius' pause, a roused Hamlet, ii. ■- 

this mortal coil, must give us pause .... — iii. 1 
I stand in pause where I shall first begin — iii. 3 

must seem deliberate pause — iv. S 

to Cassio, and entreats his pause Othello, ii. 3 

being done, there is no pause — v. 2 

PAUSEIl— love outran the pauser Macbeth, ii. 3 

PAUSINGLY ensued Henry VIII. 1. 2 

PAU N'RES gens de France 1 Henry VI. iii. 2 

PAVED— paved bed would break. A/eas./o»' Meas. v. 1 
paved ibuntain, or byrushy brook../UJd A'.'sD;. ii. 2 

if the streets were paved with Love'sL Lost, iv.'i 

my way shall be paved with English .Hem y/'. iii. 7 

was made, and paved with gold Henry I' It I. i. 1 

PAVEJUENT to the abject . . Trnilus ^Cressida, iii. 3 

the marble pavement closes Cymbeline, v. 4 

PAVILION— come, to our pavilion. Loue'sL.Los^, ii. 1 
the princess at her pavilion, in the .. — v. 1 

till night, out of his pavilion — v. 2 

desire tliem all to my pavilion Henry V. iv. ) 

do pitcli their brave pavilions Troilusfy Cress, (prol.) 

to our pavilion shall I lead you — i. 3 

she did lie in her pavilion ., AntonySr Cleopatra, ii. 2 
PAVILIONED in the fields of France . H,iny V. i. 2 
PAVIN— passy measure or a pavin.. Twelfth Kight, v. 1 

PAW — by the mortal paw KingJuhn. iii. 1 

tiirusteth forth his paw, and vtounde.. Richard II. v. 1 

with the bear's fell paw, hath 2 Henry I' I. v. 1 

trembles under liis devouring paws . .ZHcmy VI. i. 3 

to have his princely paws pared . . Titus Andron. ii. 3 

PAWN— her Iiouour's pawn .. TwoGen. of Verona, i. 3 

some other pawn for tealty — ii. 4 

lay my countenance to pawn Merry IVives,i\. 2 

lay their swords to pawn — iii. 1 

I'll pawn the little blood Winter'sTale, ii. 3 

leave this young man in pawn — iv. 3 

your pawn, till it be brought you .... — iv. 3 
these ducats pawul for my fallier.Comed!/ of E;t. v. 1 

to lie, like pawns, locked up in King John, v. 2 

to take up mine honour's pawn .... Uichard li. i. 1 

redeem from broking pawn — ii. 1 

there is my honour's pawn — iv. 1 

I must be fain to pawn both my ....2HenryIV. ii. 1 

I'faith I am loath to pawn my — ii. 1 

have it, though I pawii my gown .... — ii. 1 

my honour is at pawn — ii. 3 

they'll pawn their swords for my . . ..2Henry VI. v. 1 

thereon I pawn my credit 3 Henr'i VI. iii. 3 

IKnt.l I'll pawn this truth with . . Troitus <§• Cress, i. 3 
most noble lord, pawn me to this. Timon of Alliens, i. 1 

I'll pawn my victories — iii. .5 

thut he would pawn his fortunes . . Coriolnnus, iii, I 
pawn their experience to ....AntonySfCleopaira, i. 4 
I dare thereupon pawn the moiety . . Cymbeline, i. 5 
willingly; and pawn mine honour .. — i. 7 
as a pawn to wage against thine enemies . . Lear, i. 1 

1 dare pawn down my life fur him — i. 2 

PAWNED— hath pawned his horses. .l/erj-yTjues, ii. 1 
must be suraethiuE else pawned. A/cr. of Venice, iii. 5 

have I not pawned to you my KingJotin,i\i. 1 

I pawned thee none 2 Henry I V. iv. 2 

hath pawned an open hand SHenry VI. iv. 2 

hath pawned tlie Sicils — v. 7 

honour and your faith is pawned.. y?if/ia;d III. iv. 2 
blemished, pawned his knightly virtue — iv. 4 
I pawned mine lionour for liis truth. Co; io/an«s, v. 5 
PAY— shall pay for him that hath him..Tempest, ii. 2 
I will pay thy graces home — v. 1 



r 564 



but I'll make them pay 

to pay this debt of love but to TwelflhNiglil, i. 1 

and I'll pay thee bounteously — _i. 2 

I'll pay thy pleasure then — ii. 4 



PAY— with such uncurreiit pay .. Twelfth Night, iii. 'a 

I shall pay dear — iii. 3 

he pays you, as surely as — iii. 4 

the third pays for all — v. 1 

make us pay down for our Meas. for. Meas. i. 3 

pay with falsehood false exacting.... — iii. 2 
haste still pays haste, and leisure. ... — v. 1 
in some slight measure it will pay.il/i'd.JV.'sDr. iii. 2 
it pays the hearing double recompence — iii. 2 

in delit, pay him the due of Love's L. Last, v. 2 

swore he would pay him again. . Mer. of Venice, i . i 
keep his day, or he shall pay for ... . — ii. 8 
no more? pay him six thousand .... — iii. 2 

to pay the petty debt twenty — iii. 2 

to see me pay his debt, and then .... — iii. 3 

I will be bound to pay ten times — iv. 1 

repents not that he pays your debt .. — iv. 1 

I'll pay it instantly with all my — iv. 1 

Ijay the bond thrice, and let — iv. I 

thou shalt have to pay for it of us. .4s you Like it, ii. 4 

shall pay me for my pains All's Well, ii. 1 

which I will overpay, and pay again — iii. 7 
he never pays the score (rep.).. .. — iv. 3 (letter) 
who pays before, but not when .. — iv. 3 (letter; 

and I'll pay thy dower — v. 3 

which we will pay, with strife — (epil.) 

will not pay for the classes . . Taming of Sh. 1 (ind.) 
tailor, I'll paj; thee for thy gown.... — iv 3 
to pay Bohemia the visitation. . . . Winter's Tale, i. 1 

you pay a great deal too dear — i. 1 

and pay them when you part — i. 2 

so you shall pay your fees — i. 2 

if this prove true, they'll pay for't .. — ii- 1 

and you shall pay well for 'era — iv. 3 

we pay them for it with stamped coin — iv. 3 
pay the saddler for ray mistress'.. CoH!(?d!/o/Err. i. 2 

if i should pay your worship — i. 2 

yes, to pay a fine for a peruke — ii. 2 

consent to pay this sum (j-ep.; — iv. 1 

I warrant you, will pay them all — iv. 4 

how the debt grows, I will pay it.... — iv. 4 

friend will pay the sum (rep.) — v. 1 

herald thee into his sight, not pay thee.Macbeth, i. 3 

more than all can pay — i. 4 

in doing it. pays itself — i. 4 

pay his breath to time — iv. I 

our duties did his welcome pay — iv. 1 

shall pay tliis expedition's charge . . King John, i. I 
to pay that duty, which you truly owe — ii. 1 
with advantage means to pay thy love — iii. 3 

let us pay the time but — v 7 

hath in heavenly pay a glorious ..Richard II. iii. :? 

their heads shalt pay for it — iii- 2 

fearing dying, pays death servile — iii. 2 

to pay tlieir awful duty to — iii. 3 

call for thee to pay thy part? 1 Henry IV. i. 2 

and pay the debt I never promised . . — i. 2 
soul ne'er pays, but to the proud .... — i. 3 

find a time to pay us home — . L 3 

to fight against me under Percy's pay — iii. 2 
let him pay. He? Alas, he is poor .. — iii. 3 

I'll not pay a denier — iii. 3 

what time to promise, when to pay . . — iv. 3 
many a soul shall pay full dearly . . — v. 1 

1 would be loath to pay him before. . — v. 1 

the spring of all, shall pay for all — v. 2 

never promiseth, but he means to pay — v. 4 

pay her the debt you owe her iHenrylV. ii. I 

you'll pay me all together? — ii. 1 

pay the musicians, sirrah — ii. 4 

let them have pay, and part — iv. 2 

shall, O dear father, pay thee — iv. 4 

to pay you with this .*. — (epil) 

bate me some, and I will pay you some — (iimI.) 

you'll pay me the eight shillings Henry V. ii. I 

base is the slave that pays — ii. 1 

a noble shalt thou have, and present pay— ii. I 
although my body pay tlie price of it — ii. 2 

the word is, pitch and pay — ii. 3 

pay it as valorously as I may — iii. 2 

mass, you'll pay him then I — iv. I 

poor I have in yearly pay — iv. 1 

I will pay you in cudgels — v. I 

there is none but I shall pay iHenryVI. i. I 

my body shall pay recompense — v. 3 

must I pay before I pass? — v. 3 

what ransom must I pay? — v. 3 

swear to pay him tribute — v. 4 

for soldiers pay in France iHenry VJ. iii. I 

stayed the soldiers' pay; by means.. — iii. 1 
never robbed the soldiers of their pay — iii. 1 
much to pay two thousand crowns .. — iv. i 
he that made us pay one and twenty — iv. 7 

unless he pay me tribute (rep.) — iv. 7 

you shall have pay, and every thing — v. 1 

with promise of high pay ZHemyVI. n. 1 

and pay for their presumption — iv. 1 

doubt not of large pay — iv. 7 

the common sort with pay and thanks — v. 5 

for Edward pays a dying debt Richard III. iv. 4 

shall pay .your pains the hire — v. 3 

for whicii I pay them a thousand . . Henry VIII. i. 4 

does pay the act of it , — iii- 2 

let us pay betimes a moiety., rroi/iij ^rCresslda, ii. 2 

words pay no debts, give her — iii. 2 

howsoever, he shall pay for me — iii. 3 

and pay thy life thou owest me — v. 6 

I'll pay the debt, and free him.. Timon of Athens, i. 1 

if I should pay you tbr't as 'tis — i. 1 

and to pay thee for thy labour — i. 1 

tlmt he now pays interest for't — i. 2 

lacks a half to pay your present debts — ii. 2 

should pay more than he owes — iii. 4 

he should the sooner pay his debts . . — iii. 4 

five thousand drops pays that — iii. 4 

there's gold to pay thy sold iers — i v. 3 

but tliat he pays himself with Coriolanus,i. 1 

a bribe, to pav my sword — _ i. 9 

and pay you for your voices — iv. 6 

to you for gold to pay my legions../u(iu» Cceaar, i\. 3 



PEA 

PAY— than you shall sec me pay hdmsCrrsar, v. 3 

else so thy cheek pays shame ....Antony fyCleo. i. 1 

for his ordinary, pays his heart — ii. 2 

liays this for Marcus Crassus — iii. 1 

conldnotbutpay me terms of honour — iii. 4 

dries pay thy labour richly — iv. 12 

liays dear for my ofiijnces Cymbeline, i. 2 

overbuys me almost the sum he pays — i. 2 
will be ever to pay, and .yet pay still — i. 5 

we will nothing pay, for wearing.. .. — iii, I 

■why should we pay tribute? — iii. 1 

we will pay him tribute for light.... — iii. 1 

the disli pays the shot — v. 4 

first pay me for the nursing of — v. .1 

promising to pay our wonted tribute — v. 5 
pay countless and infinite {rep.... Titus'Andron. v. 3 

or pay you with uuthankfulncss Pericles, i. 4 

I'll pay your bounties — ii. I 

fresh ones, whate'er we pay for them . . — iv. 3 
shall receive such pay as thy desires.. — v. 1 
shall pay the forfeit of the peace. /?oweo 4" Juliet, i. 1 
I'll pay that doctrine, or else die ... . — i. 1 
pay no worship to the garish sun.. .. — iii. 2 

I pay [Xri/.-pray] thy poverty — v. I 

ta'en these tenders for true pay Hamlet, i. 3 

'scape detecting, I will pay the theft.... — iii. 2 
to pay ourselves what to ourselves is debt — iii. 2 
and thy free awe pays homage to us .... — iv. 3 
to pay five ducats, five, I would not .... — iv. 4 
that, to pay grief, must of poor patience. Othello, i. 3 

PAYING— paying for them Meas. for Meas. ii. 1 

more nor less to others paying — iii. 2 

not paying me a welcome Mid. N.'s Dream, v. I 

and since in paying it .. Mer. of Venice, iii. 2 (letter) 

expire; paying the fine of rated KingJohn, v. 4 

I dn not like that paying back ....\ Henry IV. iii. 3 

PAY'MENT— tliee worse ■pa.yment.TwelfthNighl. iv. 1 
payment ofa hundred thousand (rep.) Love'sL. L.ii. 1 

fair payment for foul words — iv. I 

I'll give him his payment As youLike it, i. 1 

little payment for so great a debt. Tamingof Sh.v.2 
both of thanks and payment might. ...Macbeth,!. 4 
even with the bloody payment of.... \ Henry IV. i. 3 
yet that were but light payment.. 2Hej!»!///'. (epil.) 

I will give treason his payment Henry V. iv. 8 

with downright payment, showed.... SHenryf/.i. 4 

groom is for such payment Henry VIII. v. 1 

prays your speedy payment . . Timon nf Athens, ii. 2 
done work for me, there's payment .. — v. 1 
be called to no more payments Cymbeline, v. 4 

PAY'ST— tribute wliien thou pay'st. . . . Tempest, ii. 1 

PEA— barley, vetches, oats, and peas .. — iv. I 
a handful, or two, ot dried peas...il//rf. A'.'sDr. iv. 1 
pecks up wit, as pigeons peas .... Love's L. Lost, v. 2 
peas and beans are as dank here 1 Henry I V. i\. 1 

PEACE— work the peace of the present.. Tempest, i. 1 

pr'ythee peace (>ep.) — ii. 1 

all the creatures against your peace — iii. 3 

we wish your peace — iv. 1 

peace, here she conies Two Gen, of Verona, ii. I 

peace ; we'll hear him — iv. 1 

peace, villain — iv. I 

ay, but peace, let's hear 'em — iv. 2 

peace! stand aside I — iv, 2 

wlien I discourse of love and peace .. — v. 2 

when you hold your peace — v. 2 

justice of peace, and coram {rep.).. Merry Wives, i. 1 

peace; I pray you! (»cp. i. 4) — i. 1 

peaec-a your tongue — i. 4 

though now a man of peace — ii. 3 

thougli I now be old, and of the peace — ii.3 

I am sworn of the peace — ii.3 

pence, I say (rep.) — iii. 1 

follow me, lad of peace — iii. 1 

ay, ay, peace: you use me — iii. 3 

peace lie with you, sir — iii. 5 

peace your tattlings — iv. 1 

1 pray you peace (rep.) — iv. 1 

peace, you rtigiie, no more o' that . Twelfth Night, i. 5 
my words are as fjll of peace as matter — i. 5 
hold thy peace, thou knave (rep.).... — ii.3 

never begin, if I hold my peace — ii.3 

for the love o' God, peace — ii. .3 

O peace! contemplation (rep.) — ii.6 

drawn from us with cars, yet peace.. — ii. 5 

fo to, go to; peace, peace I rep.) — iii. 4 
will make your peace witli him. . . . — iii. 4 
and unjust extent against thy peace — iv. I 
what liua, I say, peace in this prison ! — iv. 2 

doubtful soul may live at peace — iv. 3 

and entreat him to a peace — v. 1 

lieaven grant us its peace Meas.forMeas. i. 2 

the petilion well that prays for peace — i. 2 

ho! peace be in this iJlacel — i. 5 

peace and prosperity! who is't — i. b 

what ho! peace here (rep. iv. 3) — iii. 1 

peace be with you 1 — iii. 2 

peace; the friar is come — iv.fi 

nor wished to hold my peace — v. 1 

but, peace be with him I — y. 1 

keep peace; if he break the peace . . Much Ado, ii. 3 
why then, depart in peace, and let .. — iii. 3 

peace, stir not — iii. 3 

pray thee, fellow, peace; I do not like — iv. 2 

1 pray thee, peace; I will be flesh.... — v. 1 

and till then, peace be witli him — v. 1 

peace, I will stop your mouth — v. 4 

and all things shall be peace.. M/J. A. 'sDream, iii. 2 
through this palace, with sweet peace — v. 2 
peace— be to me, and every man .Love'sL. Lost, i. 1 

go in peace away together — iv. 3 

men of peace, well encountered — v. 1 

peace, the peal begins — v. 1 

mounted are against your peace — v. 2 

nothing but peace and gentle visitation — v. 2 

?eace, lor I will not (rep.) — v. 2 
wisli you the peace of mind — v. 2 

peace! The arraipotent Mars, of lances — v. 2 
well, peace be with you ! . . Merchant of Venice, i v. 1 
peace, hoa! the moon sleeps with .... — v. 1 



PEACE, fool; he's not thy (rfD.) ..Asyou Like i7, ii. 4 

pence, 3'ou (lull fool; Iloundthem.. — iii. y 

jieuce liol I bar con fusion; 'tis I .... — v. 4 
tiless liim lit home in peace.. yliCs WM, iii. a (letter) 

of peace. Nay, 1 assure you, apeace.... — iv. 3 

lu'liavioiu- and sobriety, peace Tamii\g of Sh. i. I 

11 n-Censio, peace; tlioLi know'st not — i. 2 

peace, Grumio; 'tis tlie rival {rep.) .. — i. 2 

war where tlicj' slionlcl kneel for pence — v. 2 
to liaycheld my peace, until you.. lVinier'sTale,i. 2 

Itold your peaces. Good my lord — ii. 1 

peace, Paulina; thou shouldst a husband — v. 3 

peace, dotint^ wizard, peace Comedy of Err. iv. 4 

peace, fool, thy master and his man — v. 1 

peace! the charm's \vound up Macbeth,]. 3 

unr keep peace between the effect. ... — i. ."i 

pr'y thee, peace; I dare do all — _ i. 7 

rancours in the vessel of my peace only — iii. 1 

place [Co(./f)i<. -peace] lia\e sent to peace — iii. 2 

but peace! for from broad words ... . — iii. 6 

uproar the uniyersal peace — iv. 3 

their peace? no; they were well at peace — iv. 3 
and so depart in peace: be thou as ..KingJokn,\. I 

tlie peace of lieaven is theirs — ii. 1 

tliat right in peace, whicli here we . . — ii. 1 

peace be to France; if France in peace — ii. 1 

contempt that beat his peace to heaven — ii. I 

power to rush upon your peace — ii. 1 

your children, wives, and you, in peace — ii. 1 

confirm the other's peace; till then.. — ii. 2 

I sh.all show you peace, and fair-faced — ii. 2 

to abase and vile concluded peace .. — ii. 2 

gone to swear a peace! false blood .. — iii- 1 

cold in amity and painted peace .... — iii- 1 

wear out the day in peace — iii. 1 

peace. War! war! no peace! peace is — iii. I 

deep, sworn peace, amity, true love — iii. 1 

to clap this royal bargain up of peace — iii. 1 

of smiling peace to march — iii. 1 

than keep in peace that hand — iii- 1 

now see tlie issue of your peace! .... — iii- 4 

fair atHiction, peace- No, no — iii- 4 

peace, no more; adieu: yoiiruncle .. — iv. I 

I'll nialce a piece between your — iv. 2 

keep the peace, I say — iv. 3 

siiarleth in the gentle eyes of peace.. — iv. 3 

have made a happy peace with him . . — v. 1 

the cardinal cannot make your peace — v. 1 

lie gently at the foot of [)eaee — v. 2 

peace with Rome? what is that peace — v. 2 

and turn thy face in peace — v. 2 

the remnant of mv thoughts in peace — v. 4 

from liim sucli offers of peace as we.. — v. 7 

set you on to wake our jieace Richard lI.'i.Z 

from our quiet confines fright fair peace — i- 3 

in peace was never gentle lamb — ii- 1 

more hath he spent in peace — ii- 1 

and fright our native peace with - . . . — ii. 3 

made peace with Bolingbroke. Peace — iii. 2 

would they make peace? terrible hell — iii. 2 

their peace is made with heads — iii.'.; 

ere the crown he looks for live in peace — iii. 3 

the complexion of her maid-pale peace — iii. 3 

hold thy peace: lie that hath — iii. 4 

peace shall go sleep with Turks — iv. 1 

peace, foolish woman- I will not peace — v- 2 

so, as thou livest in peace, die free . . — v. 6 

for frighted peace to pant XUenrylF. i. 1 

peace, cousin, say no more — i- 3 

peace, ye fat-kidneyed rascal (rep.).. — ii. 2 

peace, good pint-pot; peace, good.... — ii. 4 

peace, cousin Percy; you will — iii. 1 

aud shake tlie peace and safety of our — iii . 2 

a calm world, and a long peace — iv. 2 

from tlie breast of civil peace such . . — iv. 3 

his livery, and beg his peace — iv. 3 

made us doif our easy robes of peace — v. 1 

and he found it. Peace, chewet, peace — v. I 
I speak of peace, while covert ..2He<iii//r. (indue.) 

all yon that kiss my lady peace at home — i. 2 

keep the peace here, ho! Good my lord — ii. 1 

pr'y thee peace; pay her the debt .... — ii. 1 

peace, good Doll! do not speak like — ii. 4 

one of the king's justices of the peace — iii. 2 

it well befits you should be of the peace — iii. 2 

go to; peace. Mouldy, }'ou shall go-. — iii. 2 

prosper your affairs, and send us peace! — iii- 2 

my lord of Westmoreland, in peace.. — iv. 1 

by a civil peace maintained (rep.) ,. — iv. 1 

nor do 1, as an enemy to peace — iv. 1 

not to break peace, or any branch (rep.) — iv. 1 

andeither end in peace, which heaven — iv. 1 

of our peace can stand (rep.) — iv. 1 

our peace will, like a broken limb .. — iv. 1 

against the peace of Ilea ven — iv. 2 

am not Iiere again.-t your father's peace — iv. 2 

deliver to tlieiii this news of peace . . — iv. 2 

to breed this present peace — iv- 2 

the word of peace is rendered — iv- 2 

a peace is of the nature cl a coniinest — iv. 2 

but peace puts forth her olive — iv. 4 

woinifling supposed peace — iv. 4 

may with thee in true peace live! — iv. 4 

peace and happiness to mv rovul {rep.) — iv. 4 

well, peace be with him tliat hath (rep.) — v. 2 

tliat war, or peace, or both at once .. — v. 2 
so, get yon hence in peace; and tell ..HenryV. i. 2 

for peace itself should not so dull — ii. 4 

O peace, prince Dauphin! you are .. — ii. 4 

in peace there's nothing 60 becomes — iii. I 

tlie gentle bosom of peace with — iv. 1 

a member of the country's peace .... — iv. I 

tlie king keeps to maintain the peace — iv. I 

God's peace! I would not lose so great — iv. 3 

to order peace between them — v. (chorus) 

peace to this meeting, wherefore .... — v. 2 

poor, and mangled peace, dear nurse — v. 2 

why gentle peace should not expel - . — v. 2 

the peace whose u ant gives growth - . — v. 2 

must buy that peace with full accord — v. 2 



— V. 3 



PEACE— rest your minds in peace! ,.\Henry VI. i. 

words peace may be obtained — i. 

should break the peace 1 Peace — i. 

still motions war, and never peace.. — i. 

against God's peace, and the king's — i. 3 (procl 

in peace, and war! And peace, no war — ji- 

enemy to peace; lascivious, wanton — iii. 

who prefereth peace more than — iii. 

slaiigliteriug hands, and keep the peace — iii. 

who should study to prefer a peace. . — iii- 

tlien be at peace, except ye thirst..., — iii. 

Pucelle, hold thy peace; if Talbot .. — iii. 

I pray, and be at peace — iv. 

your highness shall command a peace — iv. 

in peace, so let us still continue peace — iv- 

if you frown upon this proifered peace — iv. 

to have a godly peace concluded .... — v. 

draw conditions of a friendly peace. . — v. 

peace be amongst them, if they 

these fingers for eternal peace 

and peace established between these 
implored a general peace betwi.xt. . . . 
conclude efleminate peace? {reii.') .... 

to breathe in fruitful peace 

for here we entertain a solemn peace 

will confirm our peace 

and is a pattern of celestial peace .... 

the articles of contracted peace iHenry VI. i 

peace, son ;— and show some reason 
peace, headstrong Warwick! (rep.) 

I pr'y thee, peace good queen — ii. 

let me be blessed for the peace I make — ii- 

and go in peace, Humphrey; no less — ii. 

may honourable peace attend — ii. 

peace to his soul, if God's good pleasure — iii- 

liast appointed justices of peace — iv. 

forsake tliee, and go home in peace. . — iv. 

the reason of these arms in peace - - . . — v. 

peace, for thou art still. Peace with.. — v. 

to lose thy youth in peace — v. 

sons, peace! Peace thou! ZHenryVI.i. 

or live in peace, abandoned — i. 

famed formildness, peace, and prayer — ii. 

hadst kept thy chair in peace — ii. 

peace, impudent and shameless (rep.) — iii. 

as likely to be blest in peace — iv. 

not mutinous in peace, yet bold — iv. 

peace wilful boy, or I will charm.... — v. 

might'st repossess the crown in peace — v. 

my country's peace, and brother's .. — v. 
tins weak piping time of peace .... Richard III. i. 

say then my peace is made — i. 

the troubler of the poor world's peace ! — i. 

peace, master marquis (re^.) — i. 

awake God's gentle-sleepmg peace . . — i. 

make peace with God, for you must die — i. 

counsel me to make my peace with God — i. 

in peace my soul shall part to (jep.) .. — ii. 

the blessed period of this peace — ii. 

made peace of enmity, fair love — ii. 

reconcile me to his friendly peace - . . . — ii. 

I entreat true peace of you — ii- 

I pr'ythee, peace — ii. 

peace, children, peace! — ii. 

the king made peace with all of us .. — ii. 

the peace of England, and our persons' — iii- 

wisdom in peace, your bounty — iii- 

where peace and rest lie with mel..-. — iv. 

infer fair England's peace by — iv. 

reap the harvest of perpetual peace . . — v. 

sleep in peace, and wake in joy — v. 

you sleep in peace, the tyrant — v. 

to come with smooth-faced peace .... — v. 

this fair land's peace! (rep.) — v. 

peace between the French and us ..Henry VIJI. i. 

dashing the garment of this peace.... — i. 

a proper title of a peace — i. 

and break the foresaid peace — i. 

"gainst me, I can't take peace with . . — ii. 

God's peace be with him! (rep. ii. 2).. — ii. 

peace to your highness! — iii 

in a sign of peace, his service and his — iii. 

a peace above all earthly dignities .. — iii- 

in thy right hand carry gentle peace — iii. 

the rod, and bird of peace, and all such — iv. 

to heaven, and slept in peace — iv. 

peace be with him!— Patience, be near — iv. 

spirits of peace, where are ye? — iv. 

as you wish christian peace to souls. . — iv. 

defacers of a public peace, than I do — v. 

the merry songs of peace to all — v. 

nor shall this peace sleep with her.... — v. 

peace, plenty, love, truth — v. 

peace, you ungracious {rep.) .. Troilus Sf CresMa, i. 

peace, for shame, peace! — i. 

that's their fame in peace — i. 

but peace, .iEiieas, peace, Trojan .... — i. 

peace, fool! I would have peace — ii. 

peace. I will hold my peace — li- 
the wound of peace is surety — ii. 

peace, sister, peace — ii- 

peace, fool ; I have not done — ii. 

see great Hector in his weeds of peace — iii- 

peaee, drums. Achilles! Achilles! .. — v.; 
returns in peace most rich in .. Timonnf Alliens, i. 

call him to long peace — i. 

peace, justice, truth, domestic awe .. — iv. 

let us first see peace in Athens — iv. 

peace and content be here! — v. 

doth root up his country's peace .... — v. 

make war breed peace; make peace stint — v. 

that like nor peace, nor war? Coriotanus, i. 

all the peace yon m:il<c in iheircause — ii. 

peace, peace: stay, lii'M. j'carc! t/ep.) — iii- 

[Coi.A.';!/-] to biin>; hin). in jieaee — iii. 

(in peace) to his ulniost peril — iii. 

stood up to speak ot iicaee, or war.... — iii- 

grant that, and tell me, in peace — iii- 

companionship in peace with honour — iii- 

large temples with the shows of peace — iii. 



.3 



PEACE, I say First, hear (rep.) ....Cor/o/a»iM, iii. 3, 
peace, pence; be not so loud (rep.) .... — iv. 2 

this peace is nothing, but to rust .... lv.;i 

it exceeds peace, as lar as day — iv. :> 

peace is a very apople.vy. lethargy .. iv. a 

but peace is a great maker ol cuckolds — iv. 5 
tame i' the present peace and quietness — iv. ti 
but commanding peace even with the — iv- 7 

I beseech you. peace — v. S 

be blessed lor in;iking up this peace!,. — v. 3 
true wars, I'll (rarae convenient iieace — v. .3 
what peace you I! make, advise me .. — v. 3 

could not liave made this peace — v. 3 

we have made peace, with no less honour — v. h 
peace, both, ami hear me speak (rep.) — v. .'> 
Aufidius, and trouble not the peace .. — v..') 

peace, ho! Caisar S|)eaks(rep.) JtdiusCrrsar. i. 2 

peace, count the clock — ii. 1 

heaven, nor earth, have been at peace — ii. 2 
all cry Peace! Freedom! and Liberty! — iii. 1 
to see thy Antony making Ills peace — iii. I 
peace; silence! Brutus speaks (rep.) — iii. 2. 
peace, peace; you durst not so have . . — iv. :i 
lovers, in peace, lead on our days .... — \. \ 

peace then, no words — v .'j 

making; peace, or war, as thou..../4r?(o»ii/ ^Clco. i. 3 

which fronted mine own peace — ii. 2 

I make this marriage for my peace .. — ii. 3 
blow thou hadst shall make thy peace — ii h 
and make your peace with Caisar. ... — iii. 9 
pr'ythee, peace. Is this his answer?.. — iii. 11 

peace, what noise? (rep.) — iv. 3 

the time of universal peace is near . . — iv. t> 
peace, hark further. O sovereign .... — iv. si 

hence, saucy eunuch: peace — iv. 12 

IJeace; not Cajsar's valour — iv. 13 

peace, peace, Iras (rep. V. 2) — iv. 13 

peace, dear lady daughter, peace .... Cymbeline, i. 'i 

plenty, and peace, breeds cowards — iii. U 

now, peace be here, poor house — iii. 6 

peace! I'll give no wound to thee — v. 1 

flourish in peace and plenty (rep. v. 5) — v. 4 

peace, peace! see further (rep.) — v. 5 

promises Britain peace and plenty {rep.) — v. ;> 
do tune the harmony of this peace . . — v. 5 
publish we this peace to all our subjects — v. .5 

our peace we'll ratify — v. .^j 

hands were washed, with such a peace — v- 5 
plead your deserts in peace.... TilusAndronicus, i. 1 
and sleep in peace, slain in your .... — i. 2 
in peace and honour rest you here {rep.) — i. 2 
these lovers will not keep the peace.. — ii. I 
peace tender sapling; thou art made — iii. 2 

peace, tawny slave (?-ep.) — v. 1 

bequeath a liappy peace to you Perir.les, i. 1 

peace, peace, my lords, and give .... — i.2 

here does proclaim a peace — i.2 

peace to the lords of Tyre! — i. 3 

they bring us peace, and come to us. . — i. 4 
welcome 13 peace, if he on peace .... — i. 4 
here to have death in peace, is all. . . . — ii. I 

peace be at your 1 abour, honest — i i 2 

Tyrus stands in a litigious peace.... — iii. 3 
not to be a troubler of your peace. ... — v. 1 

peace, Kent! come not between Lear, i. i 

so be my grave my peace, as here — i- 1 

peace be with Burgundy! since that ... . — i. 1 

I am whipped for holding my peace — i. 4 

keep peace upon j'our lives — ii. 2 

peace, sirrah! you beastly knave — ii. 2 

pence, Smolkiri, peace, thou fiend! — iii. 4 

peace, peace; this piece of toasted cheese — iv. (j 
thunder would not peace at my bidding — iv. li 

I do but keep the peace Romeo ^ Juliet, i . 1 

what, drawn, and tallt of peace? .... — i. I 
enemies to peace, profaners of this .. — i. 1 
cankered with peace, to part your .. — i. I 

sh.all pay the forfeit of the peace — i. I 

so old as we to keep the peace — i.2 

I pray thee, hold tliy peace (rep.) ... . — i. 3 

peace, peace, Mereutio, peace — i. 4 

peace in thy breast; would I were {rep.) — ii. 2 
well, peace be with you, sir! here comes — iii. I 

of 'Py bait deaf to peace, but — iii. l 

peace, you mumbling fool! — iii. .^j 

geace, ho, for shame! confusion's cure — iv. 6 
iscoloured by this place of peace? .. — v. 3 
a glooming peace this morning with it — v. 3 

peace, break thee off; look Hamlet, i . 1 

shouldgape, and bid me hold my peace.. — i.2 
humorous man shall end his part in peace — ii. 2 
peace; sit you down, and let me wring ,. — iii. i 
imposthume of much wealth and peace-. — iv. 4 

me to a peace. To thine own peace — iv. 7 

as peace should still her wheaten garland — v. 2 
pea:'e; who comes here? your lordship .. — v. 2 
I have a voice and precedent of peace — — v. 2 
lit:le blessed with the set phrase of peace OrteHo, i. 3 

if I be left behind, a moth of peace — i. .t 

and practising upon his peace and quiet — ii. 1 
to put up in peace what already X have. . — iv. 2 

peacc.andbestill! I will so — v. 2 

peace, you were best (rep.) — v. 2 

PEACEABLE way for you MucliAilo.ut 3 

peaceable reign, and good government.. Pericles, ii. 1 

PEACEABLY-wise to woo peaceably .Mu<-kA<l„, v. 2 
let him pass peaceably 2Henryl'l. iii. :i 

PEACEFUli progress to the ocean King John, ii. 2 

so many miles upon her peaceful . . Richard II. ii. 3 
our confines with such peaceful steps? — iii. 2 
may make a peaceful and a sweet — He7try V.iv.3 
how many would the peaceful city quit — v. (cho.) 

unto a peaceful comic sport 1 Henry VI. ii. i 

that peaceful truce shall be — v. 4 

up again with perceful words? 2HenryVI. i. I 

the frowns of war with peaceful looks — ii. 6 
his looks are full of peaceful majesty 3 WeHry/f. iv. (i 
lieacefnl commerce from dividable Troilns Sr Cress, i. 3 
day's glorious walk, or peaceful niglit.. /'irr/dcs, i. 2 
return to us, peaceful and comfortable! — i.2 



PEACEMAKER; much virtue in it'.Asi/ou Uke, v. 4 
lor blessed are the peacemakers ....iHenryfl. ii, 1 
those we profess, peaocmalcers .,.. Henri/ fill. iii. 1 

rEACE-PARXIOD souls HnmM,v. 1 

PKACH— I'll peach for this \IIeriri,ir. ii. 2 

PEACU-COLOURED satin ....nfeiis./oiMms. iv. 2 
that were the peach-coloured ones ..■iHenrull'. ii. 2 

PEACHES him a bejrgiir Meas. for. Mens. iv. 2 

PEACOCK— her peacocks fly amain .. Tempest, iv. I 
fly pride, says the peacock . . Comedy of Errors, iv. 3 
ill his face with a peacock's feather . . Hriiri/ 1', iv. 1 
likea peacock sweep along his tail..l llenri/n. iii, 3 
up and down like a peacock .. Troiliis f,- Cress, iii. 3 
a very, very— iJeacock [A'nf. PaioclceJ..i/"in'i/, iii. 2 

Ph.AK— dwindle, peak, and pine Macbi'ih, i. 3 

rascal, peak, like John-a-dreams H'niild, ii. 2 

PEAKING coruuto her husband... I/en;/ ll'irrs, iii. 5 

PEAL— peace; the yeal begins ....Love's L.Lost, v. I 

whetlier th'>se peals of praise .Mercli. of Venice, iii. 2 

hath rung niglit's yawning peal Macheih, iii. 2 

and ring a hunter's poal (rep.) ..Titus Andron. ii. 2 
PEAR-crest-fallen as a dried \KM-..Merrii IVivrs, iv. 6 

withered pcurs; it looks ill {rep.) -til's ll'e:/, i. I 

your majesty is pear nie testimony .. ftenri/ 1', iv. 8 
*PE.-i.R— judgment 'pear [K';l^-piereeJ .. Hamlet, iv. b 
PEjVRD-a 'Oman has agreat penrd. ilerry If'ives, iv. 2 

I spy a great peard under — iv. 2 

I will vei'ify as jnucli in his peard ,. Henry r. iii. 2 

PEARL-pearls that were his eyes. Tempest, i. 2 (song) 

if all tlieir sand were pearl .Ttco Gen. of Verona, ii. 1 

a sea of melting pearl — iii. 1 

but pearls are fair — v. 2 

black men are pearls in (rep.) — v. 2 

like sappliire, pearl, and rieli Merry fV/ves, v. f> 

this pearl she gave me Tweifh Ni^hi, i v. 3 

set with pearls, down sleeves Much.4do, iii. 4 

decking witli liiiuiri pearl Mid.A.'sDream, i. 1 

hang a pearl in every c^)wslip's ear.. — ii. 1 

like round and orient pearls — iv, 1 

pearl enoiigli for a swine Love'sL. Lost,iv. 2 

tliis. and these pearls, to me sent ... — v. 2 
will you have me, or your pearl again? — v. 2 
as your pearl, in your foul oystei- .As you Like it, v. 4 
all with gold and peai'I . Taming nf Shrew, 2 (indue.) 
Turkey cushions bossed with pearl . , — ii, 1 

if I wear pearl and gold? — v. I 

compassed with thy kingdom's pearl.. Wacie/A, v. 7 
draw those heaven-moving pearls ..King Jolin, ii. I 
your brooches, pearls, and owehes ..iHenryir. ii. 4 

robe of gold and pearl Hennj r. i v. 1 

heaps of pearl, inestimable stones ..Richard III. i. 4 

transformed to orient pearl — iv. 4 

there she lies, a pearl Troitus 4'C)-^ssida, >. 1 

why, she is a pearl — ii. 2 

doubled kisses, tills orient pearl ../Ijifoni/c^-C/eo. i. a 

and hail ricli pearls upon tliee — ii. 5 

and shine in pearl and gold . . Titus Andronicus, ii. 1 

this is the pearl that pleased — v. 1 

as pearls from diamonds dropped Lear, iv. 3 

Hamlet, this pearl is thine Hamlet, v. 2 

threw a pearl awav, richer than all .... Othello, v. 2 

PEASANT— whoreson i)easant?7'wo Clen. ofVer. iv. 4 

she's fled unto tliat peasant Valentine — v. 2 

gredominate o'er the peasant .... Merry Wiiu-s, ii. 2 
ave trained me like a peasant . . As you Like it, i. 1 
homage to this simple peasant. 7'ainin4'o/SA. 1 (ind.) 
you peasant swain! you whoreson .. — iv. 1 
hence, prating jieasant; fetch .. Comedy of Err. ii. 1 
I sent my peasant home for certain .. — v. 1 

a subject; state, a peasant Richard II. iv. 1 

through the peasant towns , iHenrylV. (indue.) 

even to the dullest peasant m his camp — i. I 

whose hours the peasant best Henry I', iv. 1 

supei-fluous lacqueys, and our peasants — iv. 2 
par ma foy, peasant, unless thou .... — iv. 4 

areneh their peasant limbs in blood — iv. " 
like peasant footboys do they keep.l Henry VL iii. 2 
to tlie peasant boys of France...... .. — iv. 6 

peasant, avanntl you have suborned — v. 4 
80 worthless peasants bargain for.. .. — v. S 

of hinds and peasants, rude and 2Henry I'l. iv. 4 

and you, base peasants, do ye believe — iv. 8 

and base lacquey peasants Richard FIf. v. 3 

and peasants, this night Timon of Athens, ii. 2 

from the hard hands of peasants.. JuiiusC^su?', iv. 3 
suit myself as does a Briton peasant. Ci/jnf/ef/iie, v. 1 

a peasant stand up thus! Lear, iii. 7 

wherefore, bold peasant, darest thou .... — iv. 6 
what a rogue and peasant slave am I!.. Hamlet, ii. 2 
that the toe of the jjeasaiit comes so near — v. I 

PEASANTRY would then ..Merchant of Venice, ii. 9 

PEAS-BLOSSO.M! Cobweb! Uo\,MMid.N.'sDr. iii. 1 
honest gentleman? Peas-blossom (rep.) — iii. 1 
Where's Peas-blossom? Ready (i-ep.) — iv. 1 

PEASCOD— before 'tis a peascod .. Tire'flh Nighl, i. b 
and to master Peascod, your father. Mid. A". Dr. i ii. 1 
the wooing of a peascod instead ..Asyou Likeir, ii. 4 

years, come peascod time iHenrylV. ii. 4 

that's a shealed peascod Lear, i. 4 

PEAT— I will peat the door for Merry Hires, i. 1 

a pretty peat! 'tis best put. . . . Taming of Shrew, i. 1 
or I wiil peat his pate four days Henry V. v. 1 

PEATEN— and grievously peaien.. Merry IVices. iv. 4 

PEBBI.,E— a very pebble stone.. Tu-o Gen. ofVer. ii. 3 

is a stone, AVilhara? A pebble Merry Wives, iv. 1 

their pockets full of pebble stones,. IHenr;//'/. iii. I 

such a shower of pebliles Henry VIU. v. 3 

then let the pebbles on the hungry. .Coriolanus, v. 3 
that on the unnumbered pebbles chafes .. Lenr, iv. 6 
shards, flints, and pebbles, should be ..Hamlet, v. I 

PECK— circumference of a peck . . Merry Wives, iii. b 
truly, a peck of provender .... Mid.N.'s Dream, iv. 1 
birds best peck, and men sit. Love's L.Lost, i. 1 (let.) 

this fellow pecks up wit — v. 2 

doves do peek the falcon's piercing.. 3 fJenrj//'/. i. 4 
and doves will peck, in safeguard.... — ii. 2 

one Gilbert Peek, his chancellor Henry VIII. i. 1 

sir Gilbert Peck, his chancellor .... — ii. 1 

[Co(.] peck you o'er the pales else — v. 3 

tlie crows to peck the eagles Coriolanus, iii. 1 



PECK— will peck the e8tridge....-ln(on!/^CTeo. iii. II 
upon ray sleeve for daws to peek at .... Othello, i. 1 
PECKED— erows have pecked them.. Cymbeline, v. 3 
PECUEIAR— in a peculiar river. .il/eas./or Mcas. i. 2 
peculiar and in self-admission.. Troilus SfCress. ii. 3 
and so much for my peculiar care ..Cymbeline, v. o 
[/»«;.] as he in his peculiar sect and ....Hamlet, i. 3 
the single and peculiar life is bound .. . — iii. 3 
but seeming so, for my peculiar end.... O/'ie/io, i. 1 
to do peculiar profit to your own person — iii. 3 

beds, which they diire swear peculiar — iv. 1 

PECUS— quando pecus omne sum. Love'sL. Loxl, iv. 2 
PEU— our peds of roses .. ..Merry Wives, in. 1 (song) 

PEDANT— like a pedant TireirihMght, iii. 2 

domineering pedant o'er the boy. tope's i/.Los(, iii. 1 

the pedant, Judas Maccabajus — v. 2 

pedant, the braggart, the hedge-priest — v. 2 
but, wrangling pedant, this is .. Taming of Sh. iii. I 
how fiery and forward our pedant is! — iii. 1 

cause to pry into this pedant — iii. I 

or a pedant, I know not what — iv. 2 

PEDANTICjVL; these summer-flies. tone's L.L. v. 2 
PKDASCULE, I'll watch yoa. Taming of Shrew, iii. 1 

PEDE-[K,i/.] Where's Pede? Merry Wives, v. b 

PEDI.iKEE-overlook this pedigree , .Henry V. ii. 4 
of Gaunt doth bring his pedigree ..) Henry VI. ii. 5 
you tell a pedigree of threescore ..SHenryVI. iii. 3 
buckler falsehood with a pedigree?.. — iii. 3 

PEDLER— he is wit's pedler Love'sL. Lost, v. 2 

birth a pedler, by education.. Tammg- o/S.'i. 2 (ind.) 
but hear the pedler at the door. . Winler'sTale, iv. 3 
you have of these pedlers, that have — iv. 3 

pedler, let's have the first choice .... — iv. 3 

come to the pedler, money's — iv. 3 (song) 

have ransacked the pedler's silken .. — iv. 3 
pocket up my pedler's excrement.... — iv. 3 
was, indeed, a pedler's daughter ..2HenryVl. iv. 2 
I had rather be a pedler: far be it. . Hichard 111. i. 3 
PEDRO— don Pedro of Arragon comZ'i. Much Ado, i. 1 
that don Pedro hath bestowed much — i. I 

and equally remembered b3^ don Pedro — i. 1 

don Pedro is apiJroached — i. 1 

look, don Pedro is returned to seek you — i. 1 

to draw don Pedro and the count. . . . — ii. 2 

PEELED [Kn<.-pilled] me certain.. Mev.o/'^'enjce, i. 3 

[Kn(.] peeled priest, dost thou 1 Henry VI. i. 3 

PEEP— thine own fool's eyes peep..Mit<.A'.'si)r. iv. ) 
evermore peep through their eyes.3/er. of Venice, i. I 
whose antique root peeps out '....AsyouLike it, ii. 1 
Tartar's bosom would peep forth .... All's Well, iv. 4 
which fairly peeps through it. . . . Winler'sTale, iv. 3 
peep through the blanket of the darii... Macbeth, i. 5 

action can peep out his head 2Henryl V. i. 2 

through a rust.y beaver peeps Henry V. i v. 2 

ay, where thou darest not peep . . ..iHenry VI. ii. 1 

and durst not peep out, for all — iv, 1 

his pride peep through each part . . Henry VIII. i. i 

durst not once peep out Coriolanus, iv. 6 

and peep about to find ourselves ..JuliusCcesar, i, 2 
no vessel can peep forth .... Antony <5- Cleopatra, i. 4 
force the wine peep tJuo' their sears — iii. 1 1 
peep through thy marble mansion . . Cymbeline, v. 4 
at your eyes your spirits wildly peep. .Hamto, iii. 4 
treason can but peep to what it would .. — iv. 5 

PEEPED— and peeped through IHenrylV. ii. 2 

peeped harms tliat menaced him ..Henry VIII. i. 1 

PEEPING thorough desire Lo»e'si.£,os«,ii. 1 

tlieu lie peeping in an eye Cymbeline, i. 7 

PEER— O king Stephano! Opeerl 7'Mn;;es(, iv. I 

crying, peer out, peer out! Merry Wives, iv. 2 

daffodils begin to peer .... Winler'sTale, iv. 2 (song) 

think of this, good peers il/ac6e(A,iii. 4 

my discontented peers 1 what ! King John, iv. 2 

betwixt me a nd the peers — i v. 2 

O haste thee to the peers — iv. 2 

and my companion peers Richard It. i. 3 

are all the English peers — iii. 4 

the suu begins to peer above you. ... I Henry 1 1', v. 1 

what peer hath been suborned 2 Henry IV. iv. 1 

no prince, nor peer, shall have just .. — v. 2 
and you peers, that owe your lives .... Henry V.\.2 
my princes, and my noble peers .... — ii. 2 
his princes aud his peers to servitude — ii, 2 
are embattled, you French peers .... — iv. 2 

many of your horsemen peer — iv. 7 

princes French, and peers, health. . . . — v. 2 

and all the peers', for surety — v. 2 

that two such noble peers as ye.... \ Henry VI. iii. 1 
dissension, grow betwixt the peers .. — iii. I 
gracious prince, and honourable peers — iii, 4 

king Henry's peers, and chief — iv. 1 

inferior to the proudest peer — v. 1 

slaughter of so many peers — v. 4 

England and her lordl.y peers illcnry VI. i. 1 

brave peers of England (;rp.) — i. 1 

the peers agreed: and Henry was .. — i. 1 
Humphrey with the peers be fallen.. — i. 1 
and Warwick, are no simple peers .. — i. 3 

and all the peers and nobles of the realm — i. 3 

dangerous peer, that smooth'st — ii, 1 

quarrel, and so bad a peer — ii. 1 

whet not on these furious peers — ii. 1 

the king and all his peers are here .. — iii. 2 

tlie proudest peer in the realm — iv. 7 

Warwick, that false peer,) to aspire. .3He«ri/ VI. i. 1 
our people and our peers are both . . — iii. 3 
tliese peers of France should smile .. — iii. 3 
you peers, continue this uniteiX.... Richard I II. ii. 1 
and, princely peers, a hapijy time .. — ii. 1 
these swelling wrong-incensed peers — ii. J 
and lieart-sorrowing peers, that bear — ii. 2 
fatal and ominous to noble peers! .. — iii. 3 
DOW, noble peers, the cause why .... — iii. 4 
where be the bending peers that .... — iv. 4 

so his peers, upon this evidence Henry VIII. ii. 1 

which of the peers have uncontemned — iii, 2 
first, all you jjeers of Greece, Troilns fyCressida, iv. 5 
not need, my fellow peers of Tyre .... Pericles, i. 3 

when peers thus knit, a kingdom — ii. 4 

king Stephen was a worthy ]pecr. Othello, ii. 3 (song) 



PEERED forth the golden Romeo /^Juliet, i. 1 

PEEHETII in the meanest Taming of Shreto, iv. 3 

PE ERING i n maps, for norts Mer.of Venice, i. 1 

Flora, peering in April's front .. Winler'sTale, iv. 3 

like a proud river peeriu" o'er KingJolm, iii. I 

I spy life peering; but I dare not .. Ricliard II. ii. 1 

PEERLESS— perfect, and so peerless.. Tempest, iii. 1 

the most peerless piece of earth .. Winler'sTale, v. I 

as she lived peerless, so her dead .... — v. 3 

it is a peerless kinsman Macbeth, i. 4 

her peerless feature, joined \HenryVI. v. 5 

to weet, we stand up peerless .... Antony fpieo. i. 1 
stand peerless by this slaughter. /V/i'c(es, iv. (Gow.) 

PEESEL— good captain Peesel iHenrylV. ii. 4 

PEEVISH, sullen, froward.. Two (Jen.o/Z'ejona, iii. I 
why, this it is to be a peevish girl.... — v. 2 
he IS something peevisii that vtay .. Merry Wives, i. 4 
after that same pee vish messenger, ru'e/yy/i AV^/i^, i. 5 
the jaundice by being peevish?.. />/«-. of Venice, i. 1 

'tis but a peevish boy Asyou Like <V, ii i . 5 

besides virginity is peevish, proud .... y)H's W'eH, i. 1 
froward, peevish, sullen, sour. Taming of shrew, v. 2 
why thou peevish sheep ....Comedy of Errors, iv. 1 
what wilt thou do, thou peevisii officer? — iv. 4 

as we are, by this peevish town King John, ii. 2 

a peevish self-willed harlotry iHenrylV. iii. 1 

what a wretched and peevish fellow . . Henry V. iii. 7 
thee and thy fashion, peevish buy ..\ Henry VI. ii. 4 

leave this peevish broil — iii. 1 

to send such peevish tokens to — v. 3 

why, what a peevish fool was that. .3 Henry VI. v. 6 

answer for that peevish brat Richard III. i. 3 

what an indirect and peevish course — iii. 1 
when Richmond was a little peevisii boy — iv. 2 

and be not peevisii found — iv. 4 

deaf to hot and peevisii vows ,. Troilus <^ Cress, v. 3 

a peevisii schoolboy, wortliless lulius Ccrsar, v. ; 

he is strange and peevish Cymbeline, i. 7 

if the peevish baggage would but give.Pericles, iv. (i 
if your peevisii chastity, which is not.. — iv. 6 
a peevish self-willed harlotry. . liomeo ^Juliet, iv, 2 
should we, in our peevisii opposition . . Handel, i. 2 
any beginning to this peevish odds ....Oi/iello, ii. 3 
or else break out in peevish jealousies . — iv. 3 
PEEVISHLY threw it to her .... TwelflhNight, ii . 2 

PEG thee in his knotty entrails Tempest, i. 2 

but I'll set down the pegs that make . . Othello, ii. 1 

PEG-A-RAMSEY, and three . . . , TvelflhMght, ii. 3 

PEGASUS— lodgers at the Pegasus. Taming of.^h. iv. 4 

to turn and wind a fiery Pegasus ..1 Henry IV. iv. 1 

the Pegasus, qui a les narines de i'eu. Henry V. iii. 7 

PEIZE— but 'tis to peize the time- Mer. of Venice, iii. 2 

lest leaden slumber peize me down.fi/c/iarrf ///. v. 3 

PEIZED-who of itself is peized weli. King John, ii. 2 

PELF— I crave no pelf . . Timon of Athens, i. 2 (giaee) 

all perishen of man, of pelf .... Pericles, ii. (Ciower) 

PELICAN— like the pelican, hast ..Richard II. ii. 1 

flesh begot those pelican daughters Leor, iii. 4 

like the kind life-rendering pelican ..Hamlet, iv. 5 

PELION— too'ertopoldPelion — v. 1 

PELLA— and noted Lucius Pella... 'u(/MsC«sar, iv. 3 

PELLETED storm Aniony ^Cleopatra, iii. 11 

PEIjL-MELL, down with them!,. Love'sL. Lost, iv. 3 
pell-mell, make work upon ov.rielves.KingJohn, ii. 2 
of pell-mell liavock and confusion..! HenrylV. v. 1 

let us to't pell-mell liiclmrd III. v. 3 

to't, luxury, pell-mell, for I lack Lear, iv. 6 

PELL Y— your pelly is all putter . . Merry Wives, v. 5 

has mettle enough in his pelly Henry C. iv. 8 

PELLY'-DOUBLET; he was full of jests — iv. 7 
PELOPONNESUS are they fled..^n(ojiy*C/eo.iii.8 
PELT so fast at one another's pate ..IHenryVI. iii. 1 

billow seems to pelt the clouds Othello, ii. 1 

PELTINfi petty officer .... Measure forMeasure, ii. 2 
have every pelting river made so., Mid. ^\'s Dr-ii. 2 
like to a tenement, or pelting farm.. R/rAard II. ii. I 
we have liad pelting wars .. Troilus ^ Cressida, iv. 5 

poor pelting villages, sheep-cotes Lear, ii. 3 

tliat bide the pelting of this pitiless storm — iii. 4 

PEMBROKE, look to't King John, i. 1 

Pembroke, and Stafford, you SHenryVI.iv. 1 

wlien 1 have fought witli Pembroke — iv. 3 
at Pembroke, or at Ha'rfordwest. . Richard III. iv. 5 
redoubted Pembroke, sir James Blunt — iv. 5 
earl of Pembroke keep his regiment — v. 3 

marchioness of Pembroke (tep.) .. Henry VIII. ii. 3 

the marchioness of Pembroke! — iii. 2 

PEN— that shall pen thy breatli up Tempest, i. 2 

stole two geese out of a pen Merry Wives, iii. 4 

though thou write with a goose pen. Twelfth N. iii. 2 

never saw pen and ink (jejj.) — iv. 2 

eyes with a ballad-maker's pen Much Ado, i. 1 

bid him bring his pen and inkhorn.. — iii. 5 
the poet's pen turns them to . . Mid.N.'sDream, v. 1 
from my snow-white pen..Z,oi'e'sL.Los(, i. 1 (letter) 
write pen; for I am whole volumes.. — i. 2 

marvellous well for the pen — iv. 2 

poet touch a pen to wTite — iv. 3 

I'll mar the young clerk's pen. . Mer. of Venice, v. I 

great Cba rlemain a pen in his Alt's Well, ii. I 

and I will presently pen down my. . — iii. 6 
or half-moon made with a pen . . IViriter's Tale, ii. 1 
drawn with a pen upon a parchment. AVng- Jo/171, v. 7 

your pens to lances iHenrylV. iy. 1 

for his nose was as sharp as a pen ....UenryV. ii. 3 
with rough, and all unaule pen — v. 2 (chorus) 
to rehearse the method of my pen. .IHenryVI. iii. 1 

I'll call for pen and ink — v. 3 

hang hini with his oenandinkhorn.2He!i;;/F/. iv. 2 
autlior's pen, or actor's voice. 7'roiVMS .^ C'j ess. (prol.) 

than breath, or pen, can give — iii. 3 

away with her, and pen her up Cymbeline, i. 2 

your neck, sir, is pen, book — v. 4 

heaven guide thy pen to print .. TitusAndron. iv. 1 

give me a pen and ink — iv. 3 

with rich and constant pen... ./"eri'ries, iv. (Gower) 

thy pen from lenders' books Lear, iii. 4 

in'his chamber pens himself ....TiomeoSf Juliet, i. 1 

writ there with beauty's pen — i. 3 

e.\cels the quirks of blazoning pens ....Otliello, ii. 1 



PEN 



PKNALTIES, which have Meas.for Meas. i. 3 

acqnitti'il of grievous pemilties.. jWcr. nf i'mke, iv. 1 

PKNAI/rY— inuler penalty Mens, for Mens. iv. 2 

let's see the penalty Love's L. Lost, i. 1 

them hence with tliat dread penalty — i. 1 
witli better t'liee exaet tlie penalty Mer.of Venice, i. 3 
wliere thou now exnct'st the penalty — iv. 1 
tlie penalty and forfeit of my hond .. — iv. 1 

hatli full relation to the penalty — iv. I 

he shall have nothing but the penalty — iv. 1 
feel we but the penalty of AAam..AsyouLiUeil, ii. I 

to quit the penalty Comcdij of Krrnrs i. 1 

as well as I, in penalty alike llonieo ti-JuHet, i. 2 

PKNANCE is.to call TwoGen.of I'enna.y 2 

I have done penance for — ii. 4 

as he in penance wandered — v. 2 

'tis vour penance, but to hear — y. 4 

for our pleasure, and his penance. Tu'e/MAiV/if, iii. 4 

impose me to what penance your MuchAilo, v. 1 

bide the penance of each three years'. Lowe's I-.i.. i. 1 
take no delight, nor no penance .... — i. 2 

I go woolward for penance — v. 2 

from which lingering penance. .VCTc/t.o/TeniVe, iy. 1 
bear tlie penance of her tongue?. . Taming; of Sh. i. 1 
after tliree days' open penance dontitlemyVI. ii. 2 

now thou dost penauce too — ii. 3 

let not her penance exceed — ii. 4 

madam, your penance done — ii. 4 

they should find easy penance Henry Vlll. i. 4 

gentlemen, the penance lies on you.. — i. 4 

thev need no other penance — v. 3 

VE, X'CE— one shot of five pence . . Two Gen.ofl''er. ii. 5 
two shillings and two pence a-piece ..Merry tV. i. 1 

hadst thou not fifteen pence? — ii. 2 

fourteen pence on the score. I'amuig-o/S/i. 2 (indue.) 

seven groats and twopence i Henry I y. i. 2 

is it bitter? forty pence, no Henry V III. ii. 3 

PENCILS! How? let me not Love's L.Losl,v.2 

over.-tained with slaughter's pencil, Kmg-Jo/m, iii. 1 

the fisher with his pencil Romeo ^S- Juliet, i. 2 

PENCILED figures are even ... .Timon nf Alliens, i. 1 

PENDANT— pendant flaring Merry IVives, iv. 6 

round about the pendant world. ftfeas./oril/ens. iii. 1 
his pendant bed, and procreant cradle.. JV/actsWi, i. 6 
pendant rock, a forked mountain . Ant. <S- Cteo. iv. 1 2 
on the pendant boughs her coronet — Hamlet, iv. 7 
PENDRAGON, in )iis litter,yick....lHe)iry^/. iii. 2 

PENDULOUS air hang fated o'er Lear, iii. 4 

PENE-[Co<. Knl.A penftgelidns timer 2 Htnn/''/. iv. 2 
PENELOPE— be another Penelope . . Coriolanus, i. 3 
PENELOPHON lCol.1; and he it was Love'sL. L. iv. 1 

PENETRABLE to your kind Richard III. iii. 7 

if it be made of penetrable stuff Hamlet, iii. 4 

PENETRATE the breasts of ever-angry J'^wyjcs;, i. 2 

penetrate her uncompassionate. Two Gsj!. of Ver. iii.l 

they say, it will penetrate (re■p.^ .... Cymbeline, ii. 3 

if this penetrate, I will consider your — ii. 3 

PENETRATIVE shame ..AnlonySrCleopatra,iv. 12 

PENITENCE, if it be sound Meas. forMeas. ii. 3 

penitence the Eternarswrath's.7'!«oGe>i.o/Fe»'. v. 4 
more penitence, than done trespass. iVinter'sTale,v. 1 
and not love, begets his penitence ..Richard II. v. 3 

that my penitence comes after all Henry V. iv. 1 

Clifford, repent in bootless penitence.SHcjijy/r. ii.6 
PENITENT— they being penitent .... Tempest, v. I 
hangman is a more penitent txade. Mea.forMea. iv. 2 
say, it was the desire of the penitent — iv. 2 
60 deep sticks it in my penitent heart — v. 1 
of enjoined penitents there's four ....AlVsWell, iii. 5 
departed thy penitent reformed . . IVinter'sTale, i. 2 
besides the penitent king, my master — iv. 1 
with the remembrance of tliat penitent — iv. 1 

Senitent for your default to-day. .Comedy of Err. i. 2 
idst ever hear a man so penitent? .iHenryVI. iii. 2 
be penitent, and thou shalt remain. .SHou-^r/. v. 1 
to see you are become so penitent ..Ricliard III. i. 2 
I'll play the penitent to you .... Antony 4- Cleo. ii. 2 
give me the penitent instrument ....Cymie/me, v. 4 

in faith, he's penitent O'hello, in. 3 

PENITENTIAL groans .... TwoGen. of Verona, ii. 4 

PENITENTLY in prison? Meas. forMeas. iv. 2 

PENKER— go thou to friar Penker. fl/cAoid ///. iii. 5 

PENKNIFE-edge of a penknife ^HenrylV. iii. 2 

PENNED-excellently well penned. TwelfthNighl, i. 3 
nor to their penned speecli render. Lo!>e'sZ..i,os(, v. 2 

and prologue vilely penned — v. 2 

never will I trust to speeches penned — v. 2 

as sweet as ditties highly penned ..I Henry IV. iii. 1 

eon of Clarence have I pen\ied up .Richard III. iv. 3 

PENNING—mark but the penningof it ..icnr, iv. 6 

PENNONS painted in the 'olood Henry V. iii. 5 

PENNY— make her a petter penny .Merry IVives, i. 1 

I will not lend thee a penny — ii, 2 

not a penny. I have been content — ii. 2 

by my penny of observation ....Loyc'sL.I-os^ iii. 1 

a penny: no, I'll give you — . iii.l 

an' I had but one penny in the world — v. 1 

I have given him a penny As you Like it, ii. 5 

you beg a single penny more All'slVell,v. 2 

I hold you a penny, a horse and.. 7'am/ng-o/S/i. iii. 2 

what penny hath Rome borne King John, v. 2 

ask me for one penny cost to 1 HenrylV. i. 3 

not a penny, not a penny iHenrylV. i. 2 

is b tter than a penny in purse — v. 1 

with edge of penny cord Henry V. iii. 6 

had one penny brilie from YrtuKC . .'iHcnry VI. iii. 1 
seven halfpenny loaves sold for a penny — iv. 2 
of all I liave to the last penny ....HenryVlII. iii. 2 
buy nine sparrows for a penny .Troilus^ Cress, ii. I 
tidingsof any penny tribute paid ..Cymbeline, ii. 4 

the uliarity of a penny cordl — v. 4 

no, truly, sir; not a penny Romeo ^- Juliet, ii. 4 

PENNYWORTH is good Love's L. Lost, iii. 1 

fit the kid-fox with a pennyworth . . Much Ado, ii, 3 

1 have a poor pennyworth .. Merchant of Venice, i. 2 

the pennyworth on his side Win/er'sTale, iv. 3 

give thee this pennyworth of sugar .1 HenrylV. ii. 4 

twas a penny wortli was't not? — ii. 4 

one poor pennywortli of sugar-candy — iii. 3 
cheap pcuny worths of thcii- filiate. .'iUcnry VI, i. l 



[ 507 ] 

PENNYWORTHS now; sleep... Romeo -5J«(iW,_iy. 5 

PENSE— je peuse qn'ils sont (rep.) Henry V. iii. 4 

tritp difhcile, madame, comme ie pense — iii. 4 
je pense, que vous cstes Ic gentilhomme — iv. 4 

jepensc, Ic plus brave, valiant — iv. 4 

PEN S ION of thousands to be Twrlf/h Nigh', i\. h 

my pension shall seem the more ....'IHenrylV.i. 2 

siinire-like, pension beg to keep Lenr, ii. 4 

PENSIONER— is more, pensioners.Afcni/ Wires, ii. 2 
cnwsliiis tall her pensioners h&..Mid.N.'sDreiim,\\. 1 

I'ENStVE, as half malcontent? SllcnnjVI. iv. 1 

leisure serves me, pensive daughter /fofHco <^ .Jul. \v. I 
PENT— let me not be pent up sir ..Love's L.losl. i. 2 

and, in thy closet pent up, rue illcnriiVl. ii. 4 

so looks the pent up lion o'er 3 Henry VI. i. 3 

being pent from liberty, as I Richardlll. i. 4 

tliat my pent lieart may have some. . — iv. 1 
pent to linger but with a grain ....Coriolanus, iii. 3 

PENTAPOEIS, and our king Pericles, ii. 1 

brought hi tlier to Pentapolis — iii. (Oower) 

did wed thefair ThaisaatPentapnlis.. — v. 3 
when we with tears parte'.! Peiitaiiolia — v. 3 

shall niarrv lier at Pentapolis — v. 3 

PENTECOST, when all o\iy:.TwoGen. of Verona, iv. 4 

since Pentecost the sum is. . . . Coii^edy of Errors, iv. 1 

come Pentecost as quickly as it. . Romeo i^- Juliet, i. a 

PENTHESILEA. Before me, she's7'M'e//(AAVi''';,ii-3 

PENTHOUSE-under this penthouse. /liyic/i Ado,i\\. 3 

this is the penthouse, under ..Merch. of Venice, ii. 6 

hang upon his penthouse lid Mncbetli.^.S 

PENTHOUSE-LIKE, o'er the shop. LoKe's/,.L. iii. 1 

PENT-UP-close pent-up guilts, rive your, i^ear, iii. 2 

PENURIOUS-my penurious ba,nd.TimonofAth. iv. R 

PENURY, and imprisonment ..7iyeas./o),)/e«s. iii. 1 

1 should come to such ijenury — AsyouLikeii,'\. 1 

no burden of heavy tedious penury.. — iii. 2 

then crushing penury persuades me. Richard II. v. 5 

that ever penury, in contempt of man . . Lear, ii. 3 

noting this penury, to myself . . Romeo ^-Juliet, v. 1 

PEONIED [CoL/vni.-pioned] andlilied7'cw/'es7, iv. 1 

PEOPLE— the love my iJCople bore me — _i. 2 

to feed my innocent people — ii. 1 

for, certes, these are people of the island — iii. 3 

that has such people in't — v. 1 

mine own people, mine own people. il/ecrr/ irives, ii.2 

why, none but mine own people — iv. 2 

who of my people hold him TwelfthNighl, j. 6 

grows old, and people dislike it — i. 5 

sevenof my people, with an obedient *— ii. .i 
slewgreat number of his people .... — iii. 3 

let some of my people have — iii. 4 

and tliere; are all the peoide mad? .. — iv. 1 

sir Toby, and the lighter people — v. 1 

the nature of our people ..Measure for Measure, i. 1 
I love the people, but do not like.... — i. 1 

to give the people scope — i. 4 

visit both prince and people — i. ) 

if tliese be good people in a common-weal — ii. 1 

and people sin upon purpose Much Ado, ii, I 

possess the people in Messina here — — v. 1 
let none of your people stir me.Mid.N.'sDream, iv. ! 
the people i'all a hooting.. Loue's/..Los(, iv. 2 (epit.) 

the weary beds of peoiJle sick — v. 2 

hath done well in people's eyes.Mer. of Venice, iii. 2 
my people do already know my .... — iii. 4 

in the way of starved people — v. 1 

but that tlie people praise her As you Like it, i. 2 

speak to the people, and they pity her — i. 3 

why do people love you? — ii. 3 

have patience, good people ! — iii. 2 

'tis Hymen peoples every town — v. 4 (song) 

my people did expect my hence .. Winler'sTnie, i. 2 
be quietpeoiJle; wherefore tlirong. Gomei/y of Err. v.! 
good people, enter, and lay hold .... — v. 1 
tliese people saw the chain about .... — v. I 

and fan our people cold Macbeth, i. 2 

jfrora all sorts of people, which would. . — i. 7 
but strangely visited people, all swoln — iv. 3 

the tyrant's people on both sides — v. 7 

the hearts of all his people (rep.') . . King John, iii. 4 

I find the people stran^ly — r iv. 2 

our people quarrel with obedience . . — v. I 
his courtship to the common people. RicAnrrf //. i. 4 

people this little world (rep.; — v. a 

in one person, many people, and none — v. :> 
a thousand of his people butchered. . 1 HenrylV. i. 1 

we love our people well — v. i 

good people, bring a rescue or two . .'iHenrylV. ii. l 
familiarity with such poor people .. — ii. I 
the people fear me; for they do observe — iv. 4 
and of your people, whiles yet my ..HenryV. iii. 3 
whiles a more frosty people sweat .. — iii. 5 
my people are witli sickness much .. — iii. G 

among the people gather up 1 Henry VI. v. h 

coin, and people in the wars? iHenryVI. i. 1 

the common pcoiile favour him — i. I 

and honoured, of the people — i. I 

tlie ai]jeet people, gazing on thy face — ii. 4 
the envious people laugh, and bid me — ii. 4 
I thank you, good people; there sliall — iv. ■> 
it is to you, good people, that I speak — iv. 2 

the rascal people, thirsting after — iv. ^ 

the people liberal, valiant, active — iv. 7 

the common people swarm like .. ..SHenryVI. i\. a 
our people and our peers are both . . — iii. 3 

the common people by number — iv. 2 

to study for the people's welfare .... — iv. 3 

the people of this blessed land — iv. (i 

and many giddy people flock to iiim — iy. 8 
the people were not used to be. . . . Richard III. iii. 7 
welcome, can make good people.... Hen li/Fl/'.i. -1 

nil good people, you that (rep.) — ii. 1 

the beauty of her jjcrson to the people — iv. 1 
which when the people liad tlic full — iv. 1 

rose again, and bowed her to the people — iv. 1 

stand these poor people's friend — i v. 2 

do you not hea,r the peniile cry. . Troilus ^-Cress. i. 2 
the common lag of pe'iple. limon ofAlh. iii. 6 (grace) 
phiiiier and siniplrr kind nfpeoiJle .. — v. 1 
IS chief eucmy to the people Coriolanus, i. 1 



— iii- ' 

I 
1 



PEP 

PEOPLE— always loved the people ..Cmotanus, i. I 
we were chosen tribunes for the pcoijlc — i. I 
the people mutinous: and it is rumoured — i. 2 

not according to the prayer of the peoiilo — ii. 1 
be large cicatrices to show the people — ii. I 
his wounds to the people, be^ tlieir.. — ii. I 
we must suggest the people, in wliat — ii. I 
shall teach the people (which time.. — ii. I 

and loves not the common people — ii.2 

flattered the people, who ne'er loved — ii.2 
tlie malice and displeasure of the iieople — ii.2 
been supple and courteous to the people — ii. 2 

masters 0' the people (rep.) — ii.2 

a kinder value of the people — ii.2 

he loves your people (rep. ) — ii.2 

that you do speak to the people — ii.2 

sir, tiie people must have their voices — ii. 2 
might well be taken from the people — ii. 2 
tribunes of the people (rep. iii. 1) .... — ii. 2 
you see how he intends to use the people — ii.2 
I say, if he would incline to the people — ii. 3 
not, indeed, loved the common people — ii. 3 
flatter my sworn brother the people — ii. 3 
make him good friend to the people! — ii. .i 
endue you with the people's voice .. — ii.3 

the people do admit you — ii, 3 

we stay here for the people — ii.3 

will you dismiss the people? — ii.3 

Censorinus, darling of the people — ii.3 

there before the stream o' the people — ii.3 
tlie people are incensed against him — iii.l 
the people cry, you mocked them .. — iii.l 
scandaled the suppliants for tlie people — iii.l 
for which the people stir: if you will — iii. 1 

the people are abused; set on — iii.l 

you speak o' the people, as if you.... — iii.l 
'twere well, we let the people know't — iii.l 
though there tlie people had more . . — iii.l 

wliy shall the people give one — iii.l 

what should the people dowith these — iii.l 
go, call the people; in whose name.. 

hear me, people; peace 

but the people? True, the people are — 
established the people's magistrates — 

pronounce, upon the part o' the people — 

tribunes are the people's mouths — 111. 1 

good people, I may be heard — iii.l 

be you then as the people's officer .. — iii. 1 
it lies vou on to speak to the people — iii. 2 

with his envy to the people — iii. 3 

assemble presently the yeoiile hither — iii. 3 

draw near, ye people. List to — iii. 3 

submit you to the people's voices.... — iii. 3 

hell fold in the people! — iii. 3 

niarlc you this, people? To the rock — iii. 3 
envied" against the people, seeking .. — iii. 3 

in the name o' tlie people (rep.) ... — iii. .1 

as enemy to the people (rep.) — iii. 3 

the people against the senators — iv. 3 

to take all power from the people — i\'. 3 

the cruelty and envy of the people .. — iv. 5 
peace and quietness o' the people. . . . — iv. 6 
the people deserve such pity of him.. — iv. ti 

and their people, will be as rash — iv. 7 

intends to appear before the people.. — v. 5 
as we do find the people. The people — v. 5 

or move the people with what he — v. 5 

I do fear, the people choose Ciesa.r.JulinsCiPsar, i. 2 
and then tlie people fell a shouting. . — i. 2 
if the tag-rag people did not clap him — i. 2 
sits high in all the people's hearts .. — i. 3 
peoiile, and senators! be not affrighted — iii.l 
lest that the people, rnsliing on us . . — iii.l 
know you how much the people may — iii. 1 
how the people take the cruel issue.. — iii.l 
they had some notice of the people.. — iii.l 
the people, 'twixt Philippi and this — iv. 3 

tliese people at our back — iv. 3 

and note the qualities of people. . Antony ^Ctco. i. 1 
our slippery people (whose love is .. — i. 2 

the people love me, and the sea — ii. 1 

the city cast her people out upon .... — ii.2 
the people know it; and have now.. — iii. 6 
people ingrossed by swift impress.... — iii. 7 
but in the keeping of wise people .... — v. 2 

they are people, such that mend Cymbeline, ii. 4 

the people of Rome trep. i. 2) TilusAnUron. i. 1 

my fortunes, and the people's favour — i. I 
I will restore to thee the people's hearts — i. 2 
the people will accept whom he admits — i. 2 
lest then tlie people, and patricians too — i. 2 
you heavy people, circle me about .. — iii.l 
threw the people's suffrages on him — iv. 3 

buz in the people's ears — iv. 4 

the common people love so much — — iv. 4 

people and sons of Rome — v. 3 

gentle people, give me aim awhile .. — v. 3 
tor which the people's prayers still ..Pericles, iii. 3 

find the inclination of the people — iv. 3 

before the people all, reveal how — v. 2 

strike my people; and your disordered.. .. Lear, i. 4 

go, go, my people. My lord, I am — 1.4 

many people, under two comraands — . ii. 4 

the old man and his people cannot — ii. 4 

who is conductor of his people? — iv. 7 

the people in the street cry Komeo 6 Juliet, v. 3 

the people muddied, thick llamlel.iv. f, 

call up all my people: this accident .... Othello, i. 1 
brow 0' the sea stand ranks of people.... — ii. 1 

the people's hearts briniliil of fear — ii.3 

couhlalmost read the thnirJUs of people — iii. 4 

PEOPLED— had peopled else this isle.. Tempest, i. 2 
than flourisliinu peopled towns. 3'M-oGen.q/' Ver. v. 4 

no: the world inustbe peopled Mwlt Ado, ii. 3 

wilderness again, peopled with 2HenryIV. iv. 4 

of order to a peopled kingdom HenryV. i. 2 

PEPIN-king repin of France LoDe'.s L.I.ost, iv. 1 

powerful toaruise king Pepin Atl'slleii,\i, \ 

their writers SUV, king Pepin HemyV. i. 3 

king Pepin's title, and iluj;li Capet's — i. 2 



PEP 



ri5PIN, or Clotharius, tliey keep ....Hcnnj 1^1 1 1, i. 3 
I'EPPBR-x iiic'-ar and pepper iirt. Tu-elflhNighl, iii. 4 
PKPPER-BOX-into a pepper-box .Merry ff'ives, iii. 5 
I'UPPERCORN, a brewer^s horse .AHcnrijIV. iii. 3 

PEPPERED two of them — ii. 4 

ragamuffins where they are peppered — y.Z 

I am pc'ijpered, I warrant lioiiieo SrJuIiel^ iii. 1 

PEPPER-GINGERBREAD, to... .lH(»7y/r. iii. 1 
I'ERADVENTURE, prinpsgoot ..Mernj Hives, \. 1 
that, iKiaiheiitures, shall tell you .. — i. 1 
ii'puratU entiire, he sliall ever..i>/i?as./o?'iUeas. iii. 1 
if peiiulvt'nture he spealc against me — iv. 6 
answer, if peiadventure this be tiue. .Mucli Ado, i. '2 
■wliieh, peradventure, not marked .. — ii. 1 
perad venture, to make it tlie move.Mld. N. Dr. iv. 1 
peradveutnre, this is not fortune's. /Is youLike il, i. 2 
and iierad venture, may recover .... King JoUn, v. 6 
peradveuture, I will with you . . . .•llienryiy. iii. 2 
captain ilacraorris, perad venture.... HtviryF. iii. 2 
some, perad venture, have on them .. — iv. 1 
more goot towards you, peradveuture — iv. 8 
peradveuture, thou wert accused. 'i'-'moiio/ylW. iv. 3 
peradveuture, some of the best .... Coriolanus, ii. I 

peradveuture, I stand accountant Olliello, ii. I 

PERCEIVE, these lords at this Tempest, v. 1 

well, I perceive, I must be . .TwoGen.of I'erona, i. 1 
couldst tliou perceive so much (j-™.) — i. 1 
that thou niayst perceive liow well. . — i. 3 

do you not perceive the jest? — ii. 1 

didyou perceive her earnest? — ii. 1 

tluit thou niayst perceive myfear .. — iii. 1 
I perceive, you delight not — iv. 2 

f>erceive how I mi"lit be \in\g\\tei. Merry Wives, ii. 1 
lal do I perceive dat? — iii. 1 

I do begin to perceive, that I am .... — v. 5 
but I perceive in you so excellent. TwelflhNighl, ii, 1 

as I perceive she does ; — iv. 3 

and by that I do perceive it hath — v. i 

lie's coming; 1 pe\-ce\ye't.. Measure forMeasure, ii. 2 
I do perceive, these poor informal ,. — v. 1 

■when I perceive, your grace — v. 1 

lord Angelo perceives he's safe — v. 1 

if I perceive tlie love come from her. MiichAJo, ii 3 
I well perceive you are not nigh.. Mid, N.^s Dr. ii. 3 
now I perceive tiles' have conjoined — iii. 2 

for I perceive, a weak bond (rep.).... — iii. 2 
you shall perceive'them make ..Mer.ofyenice,Y. 1 
then tliey perceive hot how iXvue. As yoaLike it, iii. 2 
as I perceive by your simpering .... — (epil.) 

I perceive, by this demand AWs Well, iv. 3 

I perceive sir, by the general's looks — iv. 3 
that you may well perceive I have.. — iv. i 
now I well perceive, you have ..Taming of Sh. ii. 1 
I perceive, thou art a reverend father — iv. 5 
tliougli you perceive me not how. . Wmler'sTiile, i. 2 
didst perceive it? they're here witli.. — i. 2 
tliat he shall not perceive, but that.. — iv. 3 
youperceive, she stirs: start not .... — v. 3 
might'st thou perceive austerely. Comerfyo/Krr. iv. 2 

but can perceive no truth Macbeih, v. i 

and well shall you perceive King John, iv. 2 

where it perceives it is but faintly . . liichard //. i. 3 

■when he perceives the envious — iii. 3 

I perceive, the devil understands ..\ Henry IV. iii. 1 

then you perceive, the body of iHenryiy. iii. 1 

when you perceive his blood inclined — iv. 4 
eo shall the world perceive, that I . . — v. 5 
I cannot perceive now, unless you . . — v. 5 

I do perceive, he is not the man Henry V. iii. 6 

or soldier, you perceive, near to .... 1 Henry VI. ii 1 
you perceive my mind. I do, my lord — ii. 2 
your honours shall perceive how .... — iii. 3 
you may perceive their powers are . . — iii. 3 
let him perceive, how ill we brook .. — iv. I 

if tliey perceive dissension in — iv. 1 

then, I perceive, that will be verified — v. 1 
thou shalt well perceive, that, neitlier — v. 1 

for, I perceive, 1 am thy prisoner — v. 3 

■we do perceive his guilt , 2 Henry VI. ii. 3 

by this I shall perceive the commons — iii. 1 

may perceive my mind (lep.) ZHenryVl. iii. 2 

if we perceive lord Hastings Ridiard III. iii. 1 

whatof his heart perceive you in — iii. 4 

when tliey once perceive the least. . Henry Vlll. ii. 1 
fair lady, perceive I speak sincerely — ii. 3 
I may perceive, these cardinals trifle — ii. 4 
quoth he, perceive, my king is tangled — iii. 2 

the king in this perceives liim — iii. 2 

or my father should perceive me. 7VoiZiis ^ Cress, i. 1 
a maiden battle then? O, I perceive you — iv. f> 
shall perceive how you mistake.... TimonofAlh. ii. 2 
but, I perceive, men must learn .... — iii. 2 
'faith, I perceive, our masters may.. — iii. 4 
you shall perceive whether I blusli. . Coriolanus, i. 9 

may they perceive's intent! — ii.2 

did you perceive, he did solicit — ii. 3 

ynu shall perceive that a .Jack guardant — v. 2 
where youperceive tliem thick.... Jh(/us Ccesar, i. 1 
and 1 perceive, you feel the dint of pity — iii. 2 
which should perceive nothing but love — iv. 2 
for I perceive but cold demeanour .. — v, 2 
my tents, where I perceive tlie fire?. . — v. ^ 
I perceive, four feasts are toward. .^7i(o7iJ/(§-C^eo. ii. 6 
he's very knowing, I do perceive 't .. — iii. 3 

when you above perceive me Cymbeline, iii. 3 

thou perceive how much I dare .. Titus Andron. ii. 1 
dost tnou not perceive, that Rome .. — iii. 1 

well, I perceive he was (rcp.l Pericles, i. 3 

I now perceive, it was not altogether.... tear, iii. 5 

I perceive you know it — v. 3 

didst perceive? Very well, my lord Hamlet, iii. 2 

you perceive in all this noble company.. OWieiio, i. 3 

1 do perceive here a divided diity — i. 3 

if more thou dost perceive, let me know — iii. 3 
you shall by that perceive him and his.. — iii. 3 
ym perceive ho« he laughed at his vice? — iv. I 
'! > A'oii pcK'i'ivc the ghastness uf her eye? — v. 1 
1 rJRiJSClTi.D in me'Hiep.)..Tu-oGen.ofVerona,V\. 1 

cnaii'4es I iniceived in the king H'inicr'sTale,\'. 2 

baious oi the realm perceived 1 Henry 1 V. iv. 3 



[ 568 ] 



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PERCEIVED the first white hair 2HenrylV. i. 2 

as I perceived his grace would fain. . . . Henry V. i. 1 

when he perceived me shrink 1 Henry I' I. iv. 7 

he percei vcd the common herd .... Julim Cresar, i . 2 
till we perceived, both how jou.Anlony ^Cl'-o. iii. 

wliich was when I perceived tliee Pericles, v. 1 

I have perceived a most faint neglect .... Lear, i. 4 
welcome, I perceived, had poisoned mine - ii. 4 
that my charity be not of him perceived •- iii. 3 
as I perceived it, I must tell you that.. Haiklel, ii. 2 

PERCEIVING our natural wits ...-Is ynu Like a, i. 2 

PERCH— make it their perch ....Meas./nr.Vras. ii. 1 
prey where eagles dare not perch ..Itn'iaul III. i. 3 
a dearu and painful pcrcli ....Pericles, iii. (Gower) 

PERCHANCE, he will not mind me remjesi, ii. 2 

perchance, you think too much. Ti/o (ien.o/ let. ii. 1 
perchance I'.e is not drowned {rep.1.Tuei/iii.\iglii,i. 2 
unless perchance, you come to mc... — i. b 
and perchance, wind up my watch .. — ii. b 
perchance, of tlie duke's ( rep.) . . Meas./or.Veas. iv. 2 
perchance, publicly she'll be ashamed — v. 1 
you may think, perchance, that I ...Vnch Ado, iii. 4 
perclianco, till after Theseus'.. .'>/irf..V.'s Orram, ii. 2 
gentles, perchance, .you wonder at this — v. 1 
now, perchance, both quake and tremble — v. 1 

perchance, light in the I'ght Love's L. Lost, ii. 1 

but hear perchance a trumpet .. .Ver. of Venice, v. 1 

perchance he's hurt i'the battle Alt's iVcll, iii. .'i 

lower messes, perchance, are to this, il'inier's Tale, i . 2 
the want of which vain dew, perchance — ii. 1 
worship those again, perchance- Comedy of Errors, i. 2 
percliauee, I will be there as soon as you — iv. 1 

it may be so perchance idacbelU, iv. 3 

perchance, even there, where I did find .. — iv. 3 
nay, it, perchance, will sparkle in , . King John, iv. 1 
when, perchance, it frowns more .... — iv. 2 
to arms: perchance, the cardinal cannot — v. 1 

think, perchance, they'll sell Troilui^Ciess. i- 3 

lest, perchance, he tlunk we dare not — ii. 3 
perchance, my lord, I show more CI aft — iii. 2 
perchance, some single vantages. . Timon of Aih. ii. 2 
Fulvia, perchance, is angry (rep.). Antony ffCleo.\. 1 
pcrchauGe, to-morrow you'll serve.... — iv. 2 
which first, perchance, she'll prove ..Cymbeline, i b 

perchance he spoke not — ii. i 

perchance, she weeps because (rep.).. TiiusAnd. iii 1 
no more, perchance, does mine, or his '.. .. Lent, ii. 2 
if, sir, paichance, she have restrained.... — ii. 4 
perchance, these are but furnishinns .... — iii. I 

sh.all, perchance, do good, but speak — v. 3 

perchance, she cannot meet him. linmeo^-Jutiei, ii. ;i 
as I perchance, hereafter shall think.... Hamlei. i. .*> 
perchance, I saw him enter such a house — ii I 

to sleep I perchance to dream — iii.) 

tears, perchance, for blood — iii. 4 

though I, perchance, am vicious in my.Oihello, iii. 3 
perchance, lago, I will ne'er go home — v. 2 

PERCHED, gorging and feeding ..Julius Cresar, v. 1 

PERCIES of tlie north, finding i'.ienryVI. ii. 6 

PERCUSSION of thv sounds C^i iolanus, i. 4 

PERCY [see HARRY and HENRY]- 
thankthee, gentle Percy (rfp.v. 6).. fii'c/ia)'(Z //. ii. 3 
called mine-Percy, his-Plantagenet! .\HenryIV. i. 1 

of this young Percy's pride? — i. 1 

thou dost belie him, Percy, thou — i. 3 

I am not yet of Percy's mind — ii. 4 

I'll play Percy, and that damned — ii. 4 

that same mad fellow of the north, Percy — ii. 4 
Douglas, that spirit Percy, and that devil — ii. 4 

Bit, cousin Percy; sit (rep.) — iii. 1 

mv aunt Percy will follow in — iii. 1 

as hot lord Percy is on fire to go — iii. 1 

as I was then, is Percy now — iii. 2 

what say you to this? Percy — iii. 2 

fight against me under Percy's pay . . _ iii. 2 
I will redeem all this on Percy s head — iii. 2 
Percy is but my factor, good my lord — iii 2 

Percy stands on high — iii. 3 

Percy is already in the field ~ iv. 2 

the power of Percy is too weak — iv. 4 

for, if lord Percy thrive not — iv. 4 

Esperance! Percy] and set on — v. z 

I have paid Percy, I have made — v. 3 

if Percy be alive (rep.) — v. 3 

I saw him hold lord Percy at the point — v. 4 
seek Percy, and thyself, about the fli-ld — v. 4 
no, Percy, thou art dust, and food(r -p.) — v. 4 

in blood by noble Percy lie — v. i 

I am afraid of this gunpowder Percy — v 4 
there is Percy; if your father will .. — v. 4 
let him kill the next Percy himself.. — v. 4 

why, Percy, I killed myself — v. 4 

the noble Percy slain, and all his .... — v. 5 

I my Percy's death, ere thou 2HenryIV. i. 1 

for all this, say not that Percy's dead — i. 1 
beat down the never-daunted Percy.. — i. I 

like them, to Percy troublesome — ii. 3 

when your own Percy, when my heart's — ii. 3 
since this Percy was the man nearest — iii. 1 

PERDITA, I pr'ythee, call't IVinler'sTale, iii. 3 

to speak of Perdita, now grown in — iv. (chorus) 
thou dearest PcriUta, with these forced — iv. 3 

your hand, my Perdita — iv. 3 

hark, Perdita; I'll hear you by and by — iv. 3 
my prettiest Perdita: but,0, the thorns — iv. 3 
O Perdita, what have we twain forgot? — iv. 3 
our Perdita is found — v. 3 

PERDITION— not fo much penlition ..Tempest, i. 2 

pronounce by me, lingering perdition — iii. 3 

shall end without the perdition.. V'lrfWA Kighi, iii. 4 

or to their own perdition Il'inlrr's tale, iv. 3 

the perdition of th'athvcrsary hatli . . Henry V. iii. G 
can revolt without perdition.. TrortuscS-Crcw/rfa, v. 2 
sir, his delinement suifers no perdition.. Ham(e/, v. 2 
the mere perdition of tlie Turkish fleet. . Othello, ii.2 
perdition catch my soul, but I do love thee I — iii. 3 
such perdition, as nothing else could match — iii. i 

PERDONATE, gentle master mine. raining o/SA. i. 1 

PERDU, tout est perdu I Henry V. iv. .0 

to watch (poor perdu!) with this third ., (.enr.iv. 7 



PERDUR.\13EE shamel HenryV. iv. 

with cables ofjierdiirable toughness .... Othello, i. 

PERDUR.MiEY Hned':' Mens, for Meas. iii. 

PERDY— lady is unkind, perdy ..Tu-eiflhKight, iv. 

perdy, your doors were locked ..Comedy oflirr. iv. 

lungs, yea, ill thy maw, perdy HenryV. ii. 

the fool no knave, peid.v Lear.'ii. 

belike, he likes it not, perdy Handet, iii. 

PE RE— please de roy mon pere Henry V. v. 

PEREGKIN.VTE, as 1 may call it..Love'sL.Losl, v. 

PERE.MPTOKIEY I speak it \HenrylV. ii. 

PER E.MPTORY eagle-sighted eye. Lode's L.i,os(,iv. 

his discourse peremptory — v. 

not, for I am peremptory .... TwoGen. ol Verona, i. 

peremptory as she proud min&ei.Tami ng of Sh. ii. 

not hall so peremptory, as we King John, ii. 

presence is too bold and peremptory.! He^ry/F. i. 

our accept, and peremptory answer . . Henry V. v. 

your priesthood grown peremptory?.2HeH?-yry.ii, 

proud, peremptory, and unlike himself? — iii. 

peremptory Warwick now reinains.3Henryf/. iv. 

that with his iieremptory shall ....Coriolanus, iii. 

briet^y then ; for we are peremptory . . — iii. 

yea, mistress, are you so peremptory ?..ftri'c/es, ii. 
PERFECT— is perfect gallows Tempest, i. 

so perfect, and so peerless — iii. 

he cannot be a perfect man . . Tu-oGen. of Verona, i. 

the substance of your perfect self .... — iv. 

mine is lierfect yellow _ — iv. 

man but constant, he were perfect ., — y. 

her cause, and yours, I'll perfect. Meos./or.Meas.iv. 

pray heaven, you then be perfect .... — v. 

your perfect yellow Mid.N.'s Dream, i. 

take pains; he pi.'rfect: adieu — i. 

goddess, nymph, perlcct, diviuel — iii. 

but, 1 hope, I was perfect Love'sL.Losl,v. 

so holy, and so perfect is my love.AsyouLikeil, iii. 

I will return |ierlcct courtier Atl'slVetl, i. 

ere I can perfect mine intents — iv. 

under name ol perleet luve... Taming of Shrew, iv. 

thou art perfect then, our ship .. yViuter'sTale, iii 

to make a perlcct woman — 

he was not inhis perfect viiis..ComedyofEirors, v. 

which in his death were perfect Macbeth, iii. 

acquaint you with the perfect spy .. — iii. 

I liad else been pei'tect — iii. 

in your state of lionour I am perfect — iv. 

and finds them pcrlect Richard KingJohn, i. 

since law itscll is perfect wrong .... — iii. 

tlioii ha.<t a (lerlect thou^ht — v. 

Francis! Thou art perfect IHenrylV. ii. 

swelling heavens, 1 am too perfect in — iii. 

thou art perlcct in lyins down — iii. 

but the true and periect image of — — v. 

might create a perfect guess iHenrylV. iii. 

our men more periect in the u^e — iv. 

such fellows are perfect in great Henry f-. iii. 

wealtii, ami nut (or perfect love I Henry VI. v. 

each one a perfect sun iHenryVl. ii. 

neither calf it perfect day, nor iiiBht — ii. 

prosper I. as 1 swear perfect io\e\. .tiichard III. ii. 

we come to him 111 perfect love — iii. 

read the periect waysol honour.. .. Hoiri/ ('///. v. 

fine, full, iierfect, that 1 taste ..Troilus ^ Cress, iv. 

think ourselves f^orever perfect.. Timon of. -tihens, i. 

let it look like perfect honour.. ...4)i/ojii/ i5C''fo. '■ 

and thy most perfect goodness Cymbeline, i. 

I am perfect, that the I'annonians .. — iii. 

prevailed before my perfect honour — iii. 

I am perfect, what — iv. 

dumb action will 1 be as perfect . '/V(Ms.47irfro»>. iii. 

Apollo, perfect me i' the characters L./'erictes, iii. 

thou hast been godlike perfect — v. 

that sons at periect .age. and fathers Lear,i. 

I am not in my perfect mind — iv. 

perfect model \Col. Ku/.-sweet water]. UomeoffJul.\ 

is't not perfect conscience to quit? Hamlei, v. 

my parts, my title, and my perfect soul.Oi/ieZ/o, i. 

of one entire and perfect clirysolite — v. 

PERFECTED how to grant sui ts Tempest, i. 

perfected by tire swift cour.se. TwoGen.of Verona, i. 

the means, how things are perfected ..HenryV. i. 

PEKFECTER giber for the table Coriolanus, ii. 

PE KFECTEST herald of joy Much Ado, ii. 

learned by the perfectest lepoH.. Macbeih, i. 5 (let, 
PERFECTION govern, sir Tempest, ii. 

age with angel-like perfection. 'i'woGew.o/rer. ii. 

her true perfection (rep.) — ij. 

of such divine perfection — ii. 

feed upon the shadow of perfection.. — iii. 

a mail of such perfection — iv. 

and filled (her sweet perfections) . Twelfth Night, i. 

I feel this youth's perfections — _i. 

even when they to perfection grow! — ii. 

to a most prosperous petiection. Meas.ftjrDtcas. iii. 

a strange face on his own perfection .Much.-ido, ii. 

the sole inlieritor of all perfection, ioi'e's L. Lost, ii. 

right praise, and true perfection I Mer. of Venice, \. 

whose dearperi'ection, hearts that .... A'l'sll'ell, v. 

fulness of perfection lies in him KingJohn, ii. 

turn their own perfection to abuse. .2HenrylV. ii. 

perfection of a good and particular ..HenryV. iii. 

the chief perfections of that lovely. . I Heniy VI. v. 

perfections challenge sovereignty . .SHejiry VI. Hi. 

divine perfection of a woman Richard III. i. 

the high perfection of my loss — iv. 

more tlian the perfection of ten. Troilus <5 Cress, iii. 

no perfection in reversion shall — iii. 

lukewarm water is your jjerfection. 7Vmono/.4//i.iii. 

she did make defect, peTt'ection. . Antony ^Cteo. ii. 

to knit in her their best perfections Pericles, i. 

no man on whom perfections wait . . ■ 

retain that dear perfection Ilomeo ^-Juliet, ii, 

of all the age for her perfections Hamlet, iv. 

perfection so could err against all rules.. t)(/iciii),i. 

she is, indeed, perfection ■ — ii. 

PERFECTLY he is her ape IViuier'sTale, v. 

this they con pirfcctly in the phra* . HenryV. iii. 

cousin I'uiw peiicctly f love her — v. 

aspcrfectly isours, a' yours .. Tnilus^Cress. iii. 



. 1 



.1 



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C 509 ] 



PERFECTNESS? be gone Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

will in the nerfcctnessoftime 'ZlleinrjlV. iv. 4 

r KKFI DlOUS-be so pei-lidiousl Tempest, i. 2 

(jiioted for a most perfidious alave .... Mi's It'etl, v. 3 
pi-rfiilious to tl>e king's daii^'er ....Heiui/yill. i.2 

ri5KFIDr(>U.SLY lie lias betrayed . . CorifiUmus, v. 5 

i'!OHl'"()RCE— which, perforce, I know. . Tempest, v. 1 

iierforce against all checks l\ren!/ll'ives,\\\. 4 

but she, pcrtbrce, witholda .... Mid. N.'s Dream, ii. 1 

perforce I nnist confess — ii. 3 

virtue's force perforce doth move me — iii. 1 
of tliy niisprision must perforce ensue — iii. 2 
tiiUon away from tliy fatlier perforce. /isyoif Lihe, i. 2 
and took perforce my riiig away.Come;'y of Err. iv. 3 

and take perforce my Iiusband — v. 1 

lie, that perforce robs lions of their . . King- John, i. 1 
furc; perf.irce, keep Stephen Langton — iii. 1 
jil ucked from my arms perforce .... Itichard i /. ii. 3 

they must perforce have melted — v. J 

passion must perforce decay iHenryiy. i. 1 

perforce a third must take up us .... — i. 3 
these iiufeasoned Irovirs, perforce, must — iii. 1 

was, force perforce O'fp. iv. 4) — iv. 1 

weiglitless down perforce must move — iv. 4 

I must perforce compound witlr Hcnnj I', iv. 6 

for he perforce must do thee right. ... — v. 2 

and must perforce endure it ! ] Henry VI. ii. 4 

and foiceperlovce, I'llmake him ....iHeuri/VI. i. 1 

to resign his crown perforce ZHenry t'l. i. 1 

go, bear her hence perforce — v. 5 

1 must perforce; farewell Richard III. i. 1 

by his mother was perforce witheld.. — iii. 1 
li'er jealous arms pluck him perforce — iii. 1 
must perforce be their acejuaintance. Henry VIII. i. 2 

which, perforce, I her frail son — iii. 2 

moke p:;rtbrce an universal prey. . TroilusS,- Cress, i. 3 
perforce he could not but pay me Antony <5 Cleo. iii. 4 

I m ust perforce have shown — v. 1 

to seek of me again, perforce Cymheline, iii. 1 

you must perforce accomplish ..Titus Andion.ri. 1 
new perforce we will enjoy that .... — ii. 3 
so that perforce you must needs .... — iv. 3 

tears, which break from me perforce Lear, i. 4 

to take it again perforce! — i. 5 

weaves itself perforce into my busiuessl — ii. 1 

perforce must wither and come to — iv. 2 

humanity must perforce prey on itself . . — iv. 2 

perforce witli wilful choler Romeo ^-Juliet, i. 5 

would have married her perforce .... — v. 3 
no weapon, and perforce must sutfer. . . . Othello, v. 2 

TEKFOKM— to perform an act Tempest, ii. 1 

must I perform mucii business — iii. I 

last service did worthily perform — iv. 1 

and perform an old contracting.jVea."!. /or ;Veas. iii. 2 
to perform your father's will .. Merck, of Venice, i. 2 
are coming to perform it (rep.) . . . . As you Like it, i.2 

be left her to perform: come Winltr'sTale, ii. 1 

wilt perform my bidding. I will (»«p.) — ii. 3 
what they did, than to perform it first — iii. 2 

■what cannot j'ou and I perform Macbeth, i. 7 

we shall my lord, perform what j'ou — iii. 1 
while you perform your antique round — iv. 1 

we will perform in measure — v. 7 

good love may I perforin for you? ..King John, iv. 1 

common s will perform for us Richard II. ii. 2 

if )\e be pleased I shall perform .... 1 Henry IV. iii. 2 

I will perform with amost -iHenrylV. iv. 2 

wiUiiigly take, and will perform.... 3 He»i7;/ K/. i. 1 
will iierform it, to enfranchise you .Richard III. i. \ 
they did perform beyond thought's. Henry f II I. i. 1 

to mischief as able to perform it — i. 1 

ability that they never perform Troilus ^ Cress, iii. 2 
but \\lien lie performs, astronomers .. — v, 1 
me friendship, but perform none.. TimonofAth. iv. 3 
if thou dost perform, confound thee.. — iv. 3 
though he perform to the utmost .... Coriolaniis, i. 1 
perform a part thou hast not done before — iii. 2 
perform't,or else we damn thee ..Antony fy Cleo. i. 1 
this if she perform, she shall not sue — iii. 10 
one, that but performs the bidding of — iii.il 
to perform it, directly and truly. . . . Cymheline, iii. 5 
shall perform all parts of his subjection — iv. 3 
let us with care perform his great behest — v. 4 
weapon nothing darest perform . .Titns Andron.ii. 1 
mosc wretched, to perform the like .... — v. 3 
would I perform, if I might have my will — v. 3 
topreFCrve mine honour, I'll perform.. Pciictes.ii. 2 

shall for itself, itself perform — iii. (Gower) 

perform my bidding, or tliou livest — v. 2 

to perform thy just command, I here.... — v. 3 

what time thou wilt perform Romeo S,- Juliet, ii. 2 

it is, to act, to do, and to perfoi-m Hamlet, v. \ 

I'll jierl'orm it to the last article hello, iii. 3 

PERFORiVIANCE shall be served ....AH's Well, ii. 1 

but it takes away the performance Macbeth, ii. 3 

and otiier actual' performances, wliat — v. I 
80 many years outli ve performaiicc?.'iWejii!//r. ii. 4 

and eke out our performance HenryV. iii. (cho.) 

performance of your promises 'i Henry VI. i. i 

as much as a performance does Henry VIII. i. 2 

but bin performance, as he is now .. — iv. 2 
the performance of our heaving Troilus ^ Cress, ii. 2 
with a piece of your performance.... — iii. I 
more performance than they are able — iii. 2 
and the performance so loathed! .... — v. 11 
performance is ever the duller . Timon of Athens, v. 1 

performance is a kind of will — v. I 

or our performance, did need JuliusCrrsar, ii. 1 

should my performance perish.. /4ri<onj/<S-C(eo. iii. 1 

performance shall follow Pericles, i v. 3 

look through our bad performance ....Hamlet, iv. 7 

for vour words, and performances Othello, iv. 2 

PERfOR.VIED to point Tempest,]. 2 

tliv charge exiiclly is performed — i.2 

which is not yet performed me — i.2 

of thia harpy, hast thou performed — iii. 3 

let this be duly performed. Meas.fnr Meas. iv. 2 (note) 
now our observation is performed .Mid.N.'sDr. iv. 1 
brief, and shall be performed tc-night./l«'s»r<'//, ii. 3 
and naturally performed ..Taming of Sh. 1 (indue.) 



PERFORM KD— once performed . . Taming of Sh. iii. 2 
so the king'swill be performed! .. IVinter'sTale, ii. I 

when the business is performed — iv. 3 

have 'performed asaint-like sorrow .. — v. 1 

wildly by us performed before — v. 1 

now newly performed by that rare . . — v. 2 
to his part performed in this wide gap — v. 3 
murders have been performed too .... Macbeth, iii. 4 

first be to heaven performed King John, iii. I 

may not be performed by thyself — iii. 1 

and who performed the hloody Richard II. iv. 1 

swore him assistance, and performed! HenrylV. iv.3 
see performed the tenor of our word..2H'On'?//r. v. 5 
laPucelle hath performed her word..! Henry VI. i.o 
I have performed my task, and vias.,2HenryVI. i. I 
to see her coronation be performed .. — i. I 
that's not suddenly to be performed — ii. 2 

lord York, that I will see performed — iii. 1 
that's soon performed, because I am — iii. 2 
would have it suddenly performed. Ri'c/iajrf III. iv. 2 
which performed, the choir, with . . Henry VI II. iv. I 
worthy work performed by Caiug . . Coriolanus, ii. 2 
C«sar says do this, it is performed .Julius Ceesar, i. 2 
1 have performed your pleasure.. ^n(oi'j/i§-Cteo. v. 2 
to see performed tlie dreaded act .... — v. 2 

Iiath to Cymbeline performed Cymheline, v. 1 

have performed our Roman rites . . Titus Andron. i. 2 
to hear, yet piteously performed .... — v.) 
well asked, 'twas so well performed.... ren'cte, ii. 3 

performed to your sole daughter — iv. 4 

what have you performed? Lear.iv. 2 

though performed at height, the j)itti,,,. Hatnlet, i. 4 

let this same be presently performed — v. 2 

PERFOR.MER, Iwould have thut.... A If s^Vell, iii. G 

for three performers are the file Cymbeline, v. 3 

performers of this heinous, bloody . . TitusAnd. iv. 1 
PERFORMING of it; if I do it.. .Wd. N.'sDreani, i. 2 
PERFUME— are an excellent perfume. /V«cA/(do, iii. 4 
with her breath she did perfume . . TamingofSh. i. 1 
she is sweeter than perfnme itself. ... — i. 2 
perfume fora lady's chamber. if'inter'sT. iv. 3 (song) 
all the perfiimes of Arabia will not.... Macbeth, v. I 
to throw a perfnme on the violet ....KOTg-JoAn,iv. 2 

it perfumes the blood ere one 2Henry IV. ii. 4 

hug their diseased perfumes. . . . Timon of Athens, iv. 3 
in iliy gilt, and thy perfume, they . . — iv. 3 
astrauge invsible perfume hits .. Antony fi-Cleo. ii. 2 
learneif me how to make perfumes? . . Cymbeline, i. 6 
her breathing that perfumes the chamber — ii. 2 
like incense, doth perfume the %ky. Tilus Andron. i. 2 
the sheep no wool, the cat no perfume . . Lear, iii. 4 
tlie perfume and suppliance of a minute. Ham/e/, i.3 

their perfume lost, take these again — iii. 1 

PERFUMED— perfumed by a fen Tempest, ii. 1 

hands ate perfumed with civet . . As you Like it, iii. 2 
have them very well perfumed .... Taming o/ S/i. i . 2 

he was perfumed like a milliner IHenrylV. i. 3 

than in the perfumed chambers of. .2He)i)y/>'. iii. 1 

the air shall be perfumed 2Henry VI. i. 1 

so perfumed, that the winds vitxeAntony fyCleo. ii. 2 

marrv, a peri'uraed one Othello, iv. 1 

PERFUMER— fora perfumer MuchAdo, i. 3 

PERGK,good master {rep.') Love'sL.Losi, iv. 2 

PERIAPT-spells and periapts \ Henry VI. v. 3 

PERICLES,- that would be son to Pericles, i. 1 

prince Pericles, toiicli not, upon thy life — i. I 

my lord, prince Pericles is fled — i. 1 

say, prince Pericles is dead (rep.) — i. 1 

message unto princely Pericles — i.3 

keep it, ray Pericles, it hath been — ii. l 

my name, Pericles (rep.) — ii. 3 

if that you love prince Pericles, forbear.. — ii. 4 
of Pericles the careful search .... — iii. (Gower) 

if king Pericles come not — iii. (Gower) 

I. king Pericles, have lost this queen — iii. 2 (scroll) 
if thou liv'st, Pericles, thou hast a heart — iii. 2 
heavenly jewels whicli Pericles hath lost — iii. 2 
since king Pericles, my wedded lord .... — iii. 4 
imagine l?ericles at Tyre, welcomed — iv. (Gow.) 

when noble Pericles shail demand — iv. 4 

open this to Pericles — iv. 4 

and as for Pericles, what should we say? — iv. 4 
Pericles is now again tliwartiii" — iv. 4 (Gow.) 
Pericles, in sorrow all devoured .. — iv. 4(Gow.) 
let Pericles believe his daughter's — iv. 4(Gow.) 

Pericles think this the bark — v. (.Ciower) 

I am the daughter to king Pericles (rep.) — v. 1 

I am Pericles of Tyre — v. 1 

another life to Pericles thy father — v. 1 

you are— O royal Pericles! (rep.) — v. 3 

in Pericles, his queen and daughter — v. 3 (Gow.) 

honoured name of Pericles — v. 3 (Gow.) 

PERIGENIA,whomheravished?^//d.iV.Dream, ii. 2 

PERIGORT and the beauteous Love's L. Lust, ii. 1 

PER IIj— so much as his peril Merry ll'ivcs, iii. 3 

most provident in peril Tireifih Kighi, i. 2 

as a peril to my soul (rep.) Meas. foi Meas. ii. 4 

as y(m will answer it at your peril — iv. 2 (note) 
stay, on thy peril ; I alone will go. Mid.N.'sDr. ii. 3 
lest, to thy peril, thou ahy it dear .. — iii. 2 
without the peril of the Athenian .. — iv. 1 
there is the peril of waters ..Merchant of Venice, i. 3 
and to be in peril of my life with.... — ii. 2 

to be so taken at thy peril, Jew — iv. 1 

his own peril on his forwardness.. .44' you Like it, i. 2 

more free from peril tlian the — ii. ! 

I knowing all my peril All's Well, ii. 1 

if you prattle me into tliese perils .. — iv. I 
in peril to incur your former.. T'ajn/ng'q/'SA. 2 (ind.) 
to smile at 'scapes and perils overblown — v. 2 

on your displeasure's peril IVinter'sTale, ii. 3 

on thy soul s peril, and thy body's .. — ii. 3 

on peril of a curse (rep.) King John, iii. 1 

as full of peril, and advent'rous .... 1 Henry IV. i. 3 
he walked o'er perils, on an edqe.. ..2He)ir!//>'. i. 1 
the respect of likely peril feared .... — i. 1 

what iierils past, what crosses — iii. 1 

towards fronting peril and opposed.. — iv. i 

with peril T have answered — iv. 4 

that yet suspect no peril ■iHcnryVl.Vn. 1 



TER 

I'ERIIi— which peril heaven forfendl .SHenry VI. ii. 1 

the extreme peril of the case — iii. 5 

thy office from thee, on my peril. . Richard III. iv. I 

if without peril it be possible — v. 3 

though perils did abound He>iri/r/ir. iii. 2 

more than he fears his peril .. Troiiiis ^Crosida, i. 3 
own peril [Co^.K/i/.-appcrilJ.... Timon of Athens, i. 2 

left unto us in our dear peril — .^' '- 

(in peace) to his utmost peril Coriolanus, iii. 1 

in peril of precipitation from off — iii. 3 

and open perils surest answered.. ./iifmsCtesar, iv. I 

to meet all perils very constantly — .v. 1 

which promises royal peril Antony SfCleo. iv. 8 

upon his peril, that I have reserved.. — v. i 
than, to my peril, speak that which . . — v. 2 

you know the peril: I'll fetch Cymbeline.i. 2 

though peril to my modesty — iii- 4 

to the face of peril myself I'll dedicate — v. I 
the after-enquiry on your own peril — v. 4 

wast thou not charged at thy peril Lear, iii. 7 

more peril in thine eye Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 2 

resist, subdue him at his peril Othello, i. 2 

there stand I in much peril — v. 1 

PERILOUS— O perilous mouths. Meas. /or Meas. ii. 4 

bosom of that perilous stuff Macbeth, v. 3 

gentle offer of the perilous time ....Kin<iJnhn, iv. 3 
a perilous gash, a verj' limb lopped. I HenrylV. iv. 1 

the adventure of this perilous day — v. 2 

the perilous, narrow ocean parts. . Henry V, 1. (choO 
that's a perilous shot out of an elder — iv. 1 
a sword employed is perilous . . Troilns ^-Cress. ii. 2 
submitting me unto the perilous ..JuliusCiesar, i. 3 

more perilous than the head Cymbeline, iv. 2 

unsifted in such perilous circumstance.. Hamlet, i. 3 

PXCRIOD-a pretty period! .. Two Gen.of Verona, ii. I 
this is the period of liiy ambition. Merry IVives, iii. 3 
there would be no period to the jest — iv. 2 

make periods in the midst of . . Mid. ^'.'sDream,v. 1 
worldly business makes a period ..iHenrylV. iv. 4 

the period of thy tyranny 1 Henry VI. iv. 2 

prove the period of their tyranny. .2 Henry VI. iii. 1 

a period of tumultuous broils 3 Henry IV. v. 5 

let me make the period to my curse.iSi'cAardi//. i."3 

t!ie blessed period of this peace — ii. I 

there's his period, to sheath his .... Henry VI II. i. 2 
to him, periods his comfort .... Timon of Athens, i. 1 
it is the period of your duty .... Antony i^- Clto._ iv. 2 

and time is at his period — iv. 12 

my point and period will be thoroughly., tear, iv. 7 
this would have seemed a period to — v. 3 

bloody period! All that's spoke Othello, v. 2 

PERISH— and his great person perish .. Tempest, i. 2 

cannot perish havmg thee .. TwoGen. of Verona, i. I 

die! perish! might but my Meas. for Meas. i\i. 1 

vile name, to perish on my swot:A\ Mid. h'.'s Dr. ii. 3 
labouring perish in tlieir birth . . Love'sL. Lost, v. 2 

1 burn, I pine, I perish, Tranio ..Taming of Sli.i. 1 

gain, or perisli on the seas — ii. 1 

did perish with the infant Winter'sTale, v. I 

we strike not, but securely perisli . . Richard II. ii. I 
wliere they would be safe, they perish Henry F. iv. 1 

perish the man, whose mind is — j.X- ' 

so perish they that grudge one ....i Henry VI. iii. 1 
perish, base prince, ignoble duke .... — iii. 1 
let Talbot perish with this shame .. — iii. 2 
and perish ye, with your audacious.. — iv.'l 

ill thy palace perish Margaret iHenryVI. iii. 2 

simple souls should perisli by the sword! — iv. 4 
grief and extreme age shall perish. fi'cAard III. iv. 4 

I shall perish under device and Henry Fill, i.- 1 

I'll hang my head, and perish — iii. 1 

thy hopeful service perish too — iii. 2 

reinforcement, or we perish all.. Troilus ^-Cress.v. 5 
cleave in the midst, and perish .... Coriolanus, iii. 2 
trades in Rome, and occupations perisli! — iv. 1 

and perish constant fools — iv. 6 

that else must perish here. .Antony ^Cleopatra, ii. 6 
offence should my performance perish — iii. 1 
or this, or perish: she's far enougli. Cj/?»6e/i»e, iii. 5 

the land, to perish on the seas I'l-ricles, i. 3 

let her rot, and perish, and be damned. 0</it//o, iv. I 

PERISHED— they perished Tempest, i. 2 

not a hair perished — .i.2 

having in that perished vessel.. il/eas. /or Meas. iii. 1 

an intent that perished by the way . . — v. 1 

PERISIIEN"- all perishen of man.PenWes, ii. (Gow.) 

PERISHEST-cIownthou perishest.^si/oii I.ikeit,v. I 

PERISHETH by your default 1 Hem y VI. iv. 4 

PERISHING— his service perishing.WW.A'.'sDr. v. 1 

grief, untwine his perishing root ..Cymbeline, iv. 2 

PERIWIG— a coloured periwig. TwoGen. o/ZVr. iv.-4 

rCot. Knt.'i a fine for a periwig . . Comedy of Err. ii. 2 

PiORIWIG-PATED fellow tear Hamlet, ii\.2 

PER.TURE, [Coi.-perjureiO wearing.. Lope's t.L. iv.-3 

will perjure the ue'er-touched..4?i/o»i/i§ C(eo. iii. 10 

PERJURED, false, disloyal man ! TnoGen.ofVer. iv. 2 

I do detest false perjured Proteus.... — v. 4 

hand is perj ured to the bosom ? — v. 4 

the boy love is perjured every where. M/W. N.'s Dr. i. 1 

for you'll prove perjured Love's L. Lost, ii. 1 

nay, to be perjured, which is worst of all — iii. 1 
the first that have been perjured so? — iv. 3 
from my forehead wipe a perjured note — iv. 3 
you'll not be perjured, 'tis a hateful — iv.3 

nor I, delight in perjured men — v. 2 

your grace is purjured much, full of — v. 2 
O perjured woman! tliey are.. Comedy of Errors, v. I 

there did this perjured goldsmith — v. 1 

these perjured kings! (rep.) KingJohn.iu. 1 

thou art perjured too, and sooth'st up — iii. I 

if lie he perjured, see you now Henry V. iv. 7 

now, perjured Henry! wilt thou 3HenryVI. ii.2 

passing traitor, perjured, and unjust! — v. 1 
and thou, perjured George, and thou — v. .1 
false, fleeting, perjured (Clarence ..Richard HI. i. 4 

1 mean, in pequred witness HenryVIIl. v. 1 

shall be false, and perjured Cymbeline, iii. 4 

thou perjured, and thou simular man ..Lear, iii. "2 

all perjured, all forsworn Romeo^Jidiet, iii. 9 

O perjured womanl thou dost stoue.... O/AeWo, v. 2 



PER 

PERJURTES-at lovers' rerjuries..«omfo^-./!i(. ii. 2 

rEKJURY— tlireelbld peij ury . . 7Vo Gen.o/Ter. ii. 6 

Ariadne paasioning fur Tlieseus' iierjury — iv. 4 

a J tliose oatlis descended into perjury — v. 4 

with perjury cleft tile rootl — v. 4 

to jier damnation a sin of perjury ..Mitch Ado. iv. \ 

wliy, tliis is flat perjury, to call — iv. 2 

my heart to this false perj uryytooe'st. i. iv. 3(ver.) 

Eome salve for perjury — iv. 3 

pour tlie stars down plagues for perjury — v. 2 
now, to our perjury to add more terror — v. 2 

attaint with faults and perjury — v. 2 

siiall I lay perjury upon my soul?iV('r.o/Feni'cfi,iv, 1 
day of sliamo, oppression, perjury.. King' /o/m, iii. 1 
witli the broken seals of jperjury .... Hent-y V. iv. 1 

for twitting me with perjury SHenryyt, v. 5 

what scourge for jjerj ury can this. . liidiard llt.i. i 
perjury, penury, in the highest degree — v. 3 

sworn, but hollow perjury Ilomco ^- Jidiet, iVi. 3 

take heed, take heed of perjury Othello, v. 2 

PERKED up in a glisteniig grief ..Henry VIII. ii. 3 

FEKKESoftliehill •iiienrylV.v. 1 

PERMANENT, sweet, not lasting Hamlet, i. 3 

PEKMISSION-and by permission. ./kWusC«m<-, iii. 1 
and say, you do't by our permission — iii. 1 
by our permission is allowed to make — iii. 2 

and II permission of the will Othello, i. 3 

PERMISSIVE pass Measure for Pleasure, i. 4 

PERMIT— thuspermitablasting.... — v. I 
ifFrancein peace permit our just ..Kinff John, ii. 1 

but time will not permit HicUardll. ii. 2 

will you permit tliat I shall stand .. — ii. 3 
who dotli permitthe base contagious. I HenrylV. i. 2 
if that my fading breath permit. ... 1 Henri/ yi. ii. 6 

to nerniit John de la Court Henry fllt.i. 2 

will not so permit me Coriolanus, ii. 3 

convey \vi til us will permit .intony ^-Cleo. iii. t 

3'ou some permit to second ills Cymbeline, v. 1 

will not permit mine eyes once . . 7V(iis Andron. ii. 4 

and permit the curiosity of nations Lear, i. 2 

PERMITTED us, one of our souls . . likhard II. i. 3 
permitted bv our dastard nobles ..Coriolanus, iv. 5 

PERNICIOUS purpose! Meas.forMeas. ii. 4 

1 went to this pernicious caitiff deputy — v. 1 
and thou pernicious woman, compact — v. 1 
been troubled with a pernicious suitor. Mitc/i/ldo,!. 1 
pernicious and indubitate beggar Loye's-/..L.iv.U let.) 
this pernicious slave, forsooth. Comedy of Errors, v. 1 
let this i^ernioious hour stand eiyc... MacbeUi, iv. 1 
grows with more pernicious root .... — iv. 3 
of thy adverse pernicious enemy .... liiehard II. i. 3 
too much urging your pernicious lives — iii. i 
to rid the realm ot' this pernicious blot? — iv. 1 

a most pernicious usurer iHenryy I. iW. 1 

forsaken your pernicious faction — iv. 1 (letter) 
pernicious protector, dangerous ... .2Henry VI. ii. 1 
pernicious bloodsucker of sleeping .. — iii. 2 
not reformed, may prove pernicious. Heiiri/ VIII. v. 2 
that have with twoperniciousdaughters. /.ear, iii. 2 
the fire of your pernicious rage ..l{oineoSi-Juliet,\. I 

O most pernicious woman I Hamlet, i. h 

may his pernicious soul rot half Othello, v. 2 

the pernicious caitiff I how came 3'ou — v. 2 
PERNlCIOUSLy,ando'mvconscienceH«i.f///.ii.l 
PERORATION with such circumstance? 2He;!.;'i.i.l 
PERPEND— Ford, perpend MerryWives, ii. 1 

therefore perpend, my princess ,. TwelflkNighl, v. 1 
learn of the wise, and perpend ..AsyauLikeil, iii. 2 
perpend my words, O seigneur Dew. . Hem-y V. iv. 4 

per[)end: I have adaui^hter Hamlet, ii. 2 

PERPENDICULAR. He that rides at 1 Hen. IV. ii. 4 

PERPENDICULARLY fell Leai-.iv. 6 

PERPETUAI, wink for aye Tethpest, ii. I 

may stand till the perpetual doom.Jl/erij/H'jues, v. 5 
perpetual durance? Ay l_rep.) ..Meas.forMeas. iii. 1 
more respect than a perpetual honour — iii. 1 
and a perpetual succession for it .... All's Well, iv. 3 
still winter in storm perpetual ..Winter'sTale, iii. 2 

unto our shame perpetual — iii. 2 

destruction, and perpetual shame ..KingJohn, v. 7 

thou art a perpetual triumph \ Henry IV. iii. 3 

scoured to nothing with perpetual ..'IHenry IV. i. 2 

why, 'twere perpetual shame SHenryVI. v. 4 

the kingdom of perpetual night Richard III, i. 4 

perpetual rest[Coi./wi(. ne'erchanging night] — ii. 2 

be not fixed in doom perpetual — iv. 4 

reap the harvest of perpetual peace . . — v. 2 

as if 'twere a perpetual spoil Coriolanus, ii. 2 

to hold you in perpetual amity ..AnlonyiCleo. ii. 2 
thine and Albany's issue be this perpetual. Lear, i. 1 
on pain of their perpetual displeasure . . — iii. 3 
PERPETUALLY-for it perpetually.. /IH'sK'eH, iv. 3 
though they blow perpetually. Vamnig-o/ii/irrasii. 1 
cloud they not their sights perpetually .I'ericles, i. I 
PERPETUAL-SOBER gods! ..rimonnfA'hcns, iv. 3 

PKRPETUITY, go hence in IVinter'sTale, i. 2 

in bonds of perpetuity I Henry VI. iv. 7 

rather groan so in perpetuity Cj/wheline^v. 4 

PERPLEX— perplex thee more KingJohn, iii. 1 

PERPLEXED, and know not what to say — iii. 1 

1 rest perplexed with a thousand .... Henri/ VI. v. 5 
perplexed beyond self-explication. . Cymbeline, iii. 4 

but remain perplexed in all — iv. 3 

and boys: why stands he so perplexed? — v. 5 
wrought, perplexed in the extreme Olhetto, v. 2 

PERPLEXITY-great perplexity. TwoGen. of Ver .ii. 3 
perplexity, and doubtful dilemma. Merry iyives,iv. 5 

perplexity! what shall we do Love's L. Lost, v. '2 

PEK SE— a very man per se ..Troilus^Cressida.i- 2 

PERSICCUTED time with hope All's IVelt,i. 1 

PERSECUTIONS of the skv iear, ii. 3 

P|!;KSECUT0R, I am sure, thou art. .3Henry Vl. v. 6 

PE USE US— it is a beast for Perseus Henry V. iii. 7 

elements, like Perseus' horse.. Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 6 

as hot as Perseus, spur — iv. 5 

PERSEVERANCE, mercy, lowliness.. J/ac6ef/.,iv. 3 

perseverance, dear my lord .... Troilus ^Cress. iii. 3 

PEKSEVERE-she perseveres so. r«'o6>n.o/rer. iii. 2 

persevere, counterfeit sad looks ..Mid.N.'sDr. iii. 2 

will you persevere to enjoy \\&s:1..Asyou Likeit, v. 2 



[570] 



PERSEVERE— she shall persevere . . All's Hell, ii i. 7 

as it begins, shall so persevere — iv. 2 

as they say, and persevere so..Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 
persevere not, but hear me KingJohn, ii. 2 

fersevere still in that clear way I'ericles, iv. 6 
will persevere in my course of loyalty. . y.ea;-. iii. 5 
to persev'ere in obstinate condolenient . . Hamlet, i. 2 
PERSIA— I am bound toFevs'in.. Comedy of Err. iv- 1 
PERSIAN— and a Persian prince.il/er. qf Venice, ii. I 
vou will say, they are Persian attire .... Lear, iii. fi 

PERSISTS, as if his life lay on't Alt's Ifell, iii. 7 

thus to persist in doing wrong . . TroUus ^ Cress, ii. 2 
PERSISTED-persisted deeds.... .^»i-onv,5-C(''o. v. 1 

PERSISTENCY: let the end illenrylV. ii. 2 

PERSISTIVE constancy in men?. Troilus fy Cress, i. 3 
PERSON— any other house, or person?.. Tempest, i. 2 

and his great person perish — i. 2 

thou miglit'st call him a goodly person — i. 2 

will guard your person — ii. 1 

takes exceptions at your person. TwoGen. of Ver.v. 2 
authentic in your place anil person, jl/erry^r/ye.?, ii.2 
having received wrong by some person — iii. 1 
shape of nature, a gracious person. TwelflhNighl, i 5 
no respect of place, persons, nor time — ii. 3 
the quality of persons, and the time — iii. I 

one habit, and two persons — v. 1 

in person bear me like a true friar Meas.forMeas. i. 4 
a more respected person than any .. — ii. 1 
finding yourself desired of such a person — ii. 4 
do no stain to your own gracious person — iii. 1 

in her imagined person — v. 1 

to be a dishonest person? — v. 1 

cliange persons with me — v. 1 

that puts the world into her person.. i>/uc/i,4rfo, ii. 1 
are to present the prince's own person — iii. 3 
two aspicious persons, and we would — iii. 5 
present, the person of moonshine. . Mid.N.'sDr. iii. 1 

yea, and the best person too — iv. 2 

IS the duke's own person? {rep.} ..Love's L.Losl, i. 1 

enfreedorai ng thy person — iii . 1 

good-morrow, master person (rep.) , , — iv. 2 

to the person written unto — iv 2 

purse, my person, my extremest.A/er. oj Venice, i. 1 
divers paces with divers persons. .Wsyouii'/a'!/, iii. 2 

in her person, I say (rep.) — iv. 1 

we have our philosophical persons.... /)/(',« )fV(;, ii. 3 

and, as his person's mighty Winter's Tale, i. 2 

from our free person she should be .. — ii. 1 

appear in person here in court — iii. 2 

made thy person for the thrower-out — iii. 3 

as 'twere i' the father's person — iv. 3 

tender your persons to his pretence . . — iv. 3 
much less the adventure of her person? — v. 1 
against whose person, so sacred as .. — v. I 
his grace to come in person {rep.}. Comedy of Err. v. 1 

to go in person with me to my — v. 1 

were the graced person of our Macbelh, iii. 4 

denies his person, at our great — iii. 4 

which is too nigh your person — iv. 2 

pmiished in the person of this child .KingJohn, ii. I 
bear possession of our person here .. — ii.2 
make my person yours, and tell me — iii. 1 

no person be so bold, or daring hardy. Richard 1 1, i. 3 
we will ourself ill person to tills war — i. 4 

here comes liis grace in person — ii. 3 

to ills most roj'al person — iii. 3 

committed by your person — iv. 1 

in one person, many people — v. .5 

fire, that staggers thus my person .. — v. 5 
to such a person, in such a place ....XHemylV. i. 3 
thus did I keep my person fresh .... — iii. 2 
the king himself in person is set forth — iv. 1 
counterfeit'stthe person of aking? .. — v. 4 
your uses botji in purse and person .2HenryIF. ii. I 
here doth he wish his person, with .. — iv. 1 
denied access unto his person even by — iv. 1 
I then did use the person of your father — v. 2 
the peace and safety of your person.. — v. 2 
my place, my person, or my liege's . . — v. 2 

near our person by ten mile — v. 5 

heed how you impawn our person .... Henry V. i . 2 

that railed against our person — ii.2 

preservation of our person, would have — ii. i 
conspired against our royal person . , — ii.2 
touching our person, we seek no.. .. — ii.2 
his own persim, kneeling at our feet — iii. 6 

and an enemy to our person — iv. 7 

in thine own person answer 2Henry VI. ii. 1 

a sort of naughty persons, lewdly bent — ii. i 

come about your royal person — iii, 1 

meaning treason to our royal person — iii. I 

to keep your royal person from — iii. 1 

in care of your most royal person .... — i i i . 2 
so might your grace's person be in .. — iv. 4 
as are of better person tlianmyself.3He);ri/;'/. iii. 2 

greetings to thy royal person — i i i . 3 

myself in person will straight — iv. i 

to defend his person from niglit-foes? — iv. 3 

loss of his own royal person — iv. 4 

tendering my person s safety Richard III. i. 1 

over-mucli consumed his royal person — i. 1 
I do mistake my person all this while — i. 2 
there's many a gentle person made. . — i. 3 
England, and our person's safety.. .. — iii. .t 

thus far come near my person — iii. 5 

no manner of person have, any time — iii. .") 
be to thy person, noble fatiier-in-law! — v. 3 
very persons of our noble story.. Henry VIII, (prol.) 

is he In person ready? — i. i 

there's difference in no persons — i. 1 

in person I'll hear him his confessions — i. 2 

my faculties, nor person, yet will.... — i. 2 
to your high person his will is most — i. 2 

charge not in your spleen a noble person — i. 2 

by his person, more worthy this place — i. 4 
as suits the greatness of his person .. — ii. I 
not to be griped by meaner persons. . — ii.2 
against your sacred person, in God's — ii. 4 

yon teiKler more your person's honour — . ii. 1 
or touch other good iiersonf — ii. 4 



PER 



PERSON-I left no reverend person., f/e/iryf///. ii. 1 
against the person of the good queen — ii. 4 
a seemly answer to such persons .... — iii. I 

and nobleness in any person — iii. 2 

good of your most saered person .... — iii. 2 

the beauty of her person to the — iv. 1 

will triumph o'er my person; which I — v. 1 
and shade thj' person under their.. .. — v. 1 
and a proper man of person . . Troilus ^Cressida, i. 2 
untent his person, and share the air — ii. » 

who is there in person; with him — iii. 1 

safe conduct for his person — iii. 3 

is the prince there in person — iv. 1 

and parts with person, alas, a kind of — iv. 4 
honour would become such a person. Con'otonw*, i. 3 
if any fear lesser his person than .... — i. S 

in his person wrought to be set .— ii. 3 

he hated your person most — iii. 1 

so far as thou hast power and person — iii. 2 
more proudlier even to my person .. — iv. 7 
or else thy iierson, our comfort in.... — v. 3 
his designments in mine own person — v. 5 
no harm intended to your \Krson.JuliusCfvsar, iii. 1 
and but twelve persons thereAnlony ^Cleopatra, ii. 2 
for her own person, it beggared all.. — ii. 2 

more in tlieir officer, than person — iii. I 

why should not we be there in person? — iii. 7 

can he be there in person? — iii. 7 

death of one person can be paid .... — iv. 12 
your lady's person ; is she ready? . . Cymbeline, ii. 3 
I create you companions to our person — v. 5 
your place; abhorred your person .. — v. 5 
some marks of secret on her person. . — v. 5 
myself, my person, and the cause .TitusAndron. i. I 
tend the emperor's person carefully — ii. 2 

hadst thou in person ne'er offended me — il. 3 

this was a goodly person I'ericles, v. 1 

the mischief of your person it would Lear, i. 2 

agai ust the grace and person of my master — ii. 2 

himself in person there? — iv. 5 

the commission of ray place and person.. — v. 3 

appear to prove upon thy person — v. 3 

find those persons out (,rep.) Romeo ^Juliet, i. 2 

that calls our person from our morning's — v. 3 
if it assume my noble father's person . . Hamlet, i. 2 
as unvalued persons do, carve for himself — i. 3 

our person to arraign in ear and ear — iv. 5 

do not fear our person ; there's such .... — iv. 5 
the opposition of your person in trial. ... — v. 2 
he hath a person, and a smooth dispose.. 0(Aei(o,i. 3 
to do peculiar profit to your own person — iii. 3 
PERSONAGE— of what peisoimge. .ruvlfthNigh!, i. 5 
her personage, her tall personage. Mid. A''s. Dr. iii. 2 
lords, and honourable personages .... All's Well, ii. 3 
treason to our royal personage ....2 Henry)'/, iii. 1 

PERSONAL conference with Love'sL.Lost, ii. 1 

though not personal, have been .. Winter'sTale, i. I 

he reads thy personal venture in Macbeth, i. 3 

he was personal in the Irish war ..IHenrylV. iv. 3 
we want a little personal strength.. 2//en>y/r. iv. 4 
thyself, or me, in personal action.. Jw(nisC<esar, i. 3 
I know no personal cause to spurn at — ii. 1 
dares me to personal combat . ...Antony ^Cleo. iv. I 
not your knowledge, personal pain . . Pericles, iii. 2 
his personal return was most required ..Lear, iv. 3 
no further personal power to business . . Hamlet, i. 2 

in personal suit to make me his Othello, i. 1 

with my personal eye will I look to't — ii. 3 

PERSONALLY accused ..Measure for Measure, v. 1 

therefore personally I lay my claim. /((c/iard //. ii. 3 

could not personally deliver to her. Henry VIII. v. 1 

PERSONATE of lord Timon's . . Timon nf.iihens, i. 1 

royal Cymbeline, personates thee . . Cymbeline, v. f> 

PERSONATED— feelingly personated. TwetflhN. ii. S 

PERSONATING of himself. . . . Timon of Athens, v. 1 

PERSPECTIVE— natural perspective.. Twe'fthN v.i 

his scornful perspective did lend me. . All's Well, v. 3 

like perspectives, which, rightly..,. /Jj'cAard //. ii. 2 

PERSPECiTIVELY, the cities Henry V. v. 2 

PERSPICUOUS even as substance. Troilus <5- Cress, i.3 

PERSUADE my heart to this. LoKe'sL.L. iv. 3 (ver.) 

ICol. Knt.'] only professes to persuade . . Tempest, ii. 1 

cease to persuade, my loving. TwoGen. of Verona, i. 1 

sir Hugli, persuade me not Merry Wives, i, I 

let that persuade thee, there's — iii, 3 

that persuades me to any other.. Twelfh Night, iv. 3 

and well she can persuade Meas.for Meas. i. 3 

doyou persuade yourself that I .... — iv. I 
whiles I persuade this rude wretch . . — iv. 3 
love do not persuade j'ou . . Mer.ofVen. iii. 2 (letter) 
feelingly persuade me what I am.AsyouLike it, ii. 1 
persuade him, tliat he hath .. Taming of Sh. 1 (iiid.) 
we will persuade him, be it possible — iii. 2 
of pure innocence persuades .... (Cinder's T'a/e, ii. 2 
rather persuade him to hold. Corned;/ o/ Errors, iv. 4 
it persuades him, and disheartens him. .Vac(ie//i, ii. 3 
yet my inward soul persuades me . . Richard 11. ii. 2 
then crushing penury persuades me . — v. .5 
sooner persuade Harry of England . . Henry V. v. 2 
let me persuade you to forbear .... 1 Henry Vl.iW. I 
Bedford, let us now persuade you ,. — iii. 2 
let me persuade you take a better .. — iv. I 

discretions better can persuade — iv. l 

that labour to persuade ray soul ..2HenryVI. iii. 2 

to persuade me patience? ZHenryVI. iii. 3 

but we shall soon persuade both him — iv. 7 
will your grace persuade the queen. /(/cAard ///. iii.l 
I persuade me, from her will fa,\\..HenryVlII. iii. 2 
call my father to persuade . . Trodus^ Cressida, v. 3 
if I cannot persuade thee rather to. . Coriolanus, v. 3 
there did persuade great llevod.. Antony ^- Giro, i v. 6 

persuade me to the murder of your Lear, ii. i 

this act persuades me that this reraotion — ii. 4 

persuade me rather to be slave and — ii. 4 

thy wits, and didst persuade revenge .... — iv. 5 

yet I persuade myself, to speak Othello, ii. 3 

that dost almost persuade justice to break — v. 2 

PERSirADED- persuaded the king . . Tempest, ii. 1 

could have persiuided me . . TwoGen of r,ronn, v. 4 

tlie best persuaded of himself. . . . TweiithNiglu, ii. 3 



PER 



PEKSUAUED him, the youth's ..Tii-elfihXi);IU, iii. 4 
luiw 1 persimded, how 1 pra\e(l../Vms. /oi-.Ufus. v. I 
but I pci'suaduil them, it they lowd. Much. t'lii, iii. 1 
liavo all iKTsiiaded with hini...Ui';t'/i. o/ I'l'iiice, iii. 2 
have 0i> inii;litilv pereiiadud liiin...-Ifi-f/o(( LiUe il, i. 2 

ttiul [icrsuudcd us to do the like llleirri/ir. ii. 4 

who thi'U persuaded you to iliiy....'2llfiiiifir. ii. 3 

since \\ e are wlU iwrsuailed Ilrn'ii/ 1', ii. 2 

are von now peiv-uadeil that Talbot. 1 Urtiiyn. ii. 3 

persuadrd him truni any t'nrllicr ■illenrijri. v. 3 

stout eaplain, and iiei-~nailed ^i>\m\.iHi;iirijl'l, iv. 7 
be persuaded: do not connl it .. 7Vo/7k.v<S Oess. v. 3 
are almost thorough h' per.-juadcd ..Corinlanua/x. 1 
believed of one pLisiuuled well of .. Cj/iiibelme, ii. 4 
be fal^e persuaded 1 liad daughters.... ... Lear, i. 4 

she is iiersnaded I will marry her Olhello, iv. 1 

nor am 1 vet iicrsrmiled, tn luit ut^ in peaee — iv. 2 

PEilSUAUlA'G me not to kill Iliduirdlll. i. 4 

fair spoken, and persuading lleiinj I'lll. iv. 2 

by persuadin" me to it Tiiiwnn/.liheiis, iv. :t 

rEKSUASION-your persuasion. '/'/coCcji.o/rtv. iii. 2 
to yon can lack persuasion? .... Tirelj'ih AVs-A/, iii. 4 

whose persuasion is, I conic Mens. for Meas. iv. I 

my coat, intej-oitj', nor my persua-ion — iv. 2 
not die to-day lor any man's persuasion — iv. 3 

I yield up"n great persuasion Much Ado, v. 4 

a good persuadon; tlierelbre ..;U;i/. A.'s/Jcram, i. 1 
to hirr womanly persuasion .. Tuniiiigiif ^/ncir, v. 2 
what persuasion did lie tempt . . Cootedij of Err. iv. 2 
by his persuasion, are again fMiin. . King John, v. 5 

the spirit of persuasion, and he I Hem y IF. i. 2 

one no persuasion can do good upon — iii. 1 
lift vour blood up with persuasion .. — v. 2 

by f'air persuasions, mixed with 1 Henry VI. iii. 3 

best persuasions to the contrary Henry I III. v. 1 

that persuasion eould but tluis..7'jo!(us<5- Cress, iii. 2 
the persuasion of hia new leasting. 7Vm»?i o/.4(/i.iii. fi 
the persuasion of his augurers ....JuliusCrsnr, ii. 1 
ai)nsed.in too bold a persuasion Cyrnhfline, i. 5 

PERT— pert and nimble spirit ..Mid. N.'s Dream, i. I 
this pert Biron was out of 1 ove's L. Los!, v. 2 

PEKTAIN— pertains to nie..il/erc/irt)i( nrreuice, iii. 2 

if she pertain to life, let her Winler'sTale,v. 3 

the miiin part pertains to yon alone ..MaeUeUi, iv. 3 
and honours that pertain, by custom.. HeHji/K. ii. 4 

in aught pertains to the state Henry y II I. i. 2 

more than pertains to feats of broil Olhello, I. 3 

P ERTAINING thereunto Henry rill.i.3 

PERTINENT; but so it is Winter's Tale, i. 2 

mv caution was more pertinent . ...Coriolanus, ii 2 

PERTLY— and pertly— no tongue Tempest, iv. 1 

that pertly front vour town.. Troilm ^ Cressida, iv. 5 

PERTURBATION follows her MuchAJo, ii. 1 

a great perturbation in nature! Macbith, v. I 

and penurbation of the brain iHeitryU'. i. 2 

polished perturbation! golden care! — iv. 4 
fills thy sleep with perturbations .. liirhnTd III. v. 3 

PERTURBKD— the perturbed court. Cymbe/me. iii. 4 

rest, rest, perturbed spirit 1 Handel, i. ."i 

PERUKE i;r;ol./i:;i(,-periwig] .. Comedy of Hi r:.7s, ii. 2 

PERUSAL— such perusal of my face Htimlei, ii. I 

PERU-SE-peruse this ]>-x\kv . .ra-oGen.of ftrona.i. 2 

please you peruse this letter — iv. 4 

pi ay yon, (jeruse tliat letter Tweir/h Kight, y ■ 1 

come, go with me; peruse t\\\^ . Merch. of Venice, ii. 4 

peruse them well; not one All's IVell, ii. 3 

of the town, peruse tlie traders. Comedy of Errors, i. 2 
peruse tins writing liere, and thou . . Uie.hard II. v. 3 

Unit we may peruse the men iHenrylV. iv. 2 

some light horsemen and peruse I Henry VI. iv. 2 

of state lie sent me to peruse Henry I' 1 1 1, iii. 'J 

and I to peruse him by items Cymbcline, i. 5 

peruse this writing else. Wliat's here!. /Viidw-, ii. 5 

1 may peruse this letter! Lear, ii. 2 

let me peruse this face Romeo ^ .luliei, v. 3 

will not peruse the foils Hamlet, iv. 7 

PERUSED-have perused the note. Taming- or Sh i. 2 
appointments may be well perused. /((c/m/d II. iii. 3 
liave yon perused the letters from . . 1 Henry VI. v. 1 

I have perused lier well Henry v III ii. 3 

with exact \ iew perused thee . . Troihts Sf Cress, iv. 5 
have you witlr Iieed [terused what l.Conoianus, y. 5 

for so much as I perused, I iind Lear, i. 2 

PERUSUXGo'er these notes Kivg.rohn, v. 2 

I'EKVEllSE -covetous, ambitious, or perverse 

• .,..- " , ^- I Henry VI. iii. 1 

bear with their perverse objections .. — iv. 1 

I'll frown, and be perverse Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 2 

PEIiVERSELY she perseveres. 7>o Gen.of Ver. iii. 2 
PERVERSENESS? You uncivil lady .7'/re//rtiV. v. 1 

PERVERT your course Meas.for .'\Ieas. iv. 3 

and pervert tlie present wrath Cymbeline, ii. 4 

PERVEKTEDayounggeiUlewomaH./fH'sWcH, iv. 3 

PESEECUyou now (ir;;. iv. 8) Henry V. iii. 2 

I peseech you heartili', scurvy — v. 1 

PEST— one of the jiest discretions. . Merry Wives, iv. 4 

kill his pest friend, Clytus HenryV. iv. 7 

PESTEli us with message Handel, i. 2 

PESTERED— his pestered senses Macbeth, v. 2 

to be so pestered with a popinjay \H' nrylV. i. 3 

how tlie poor world is pestered... 7'ro/(Hs<S-Crt's.t. v. 1 

PESTERl XG streets Coriolanus, iv. 6 

PESTIFEROUS reports of men All's iVell. iv. 3 

lewd, pestiferous, and dissentious. .IHrjiri/ r/. iii. I 

PESTILENCE hangs in our air Hictiard II. i. 3 

armies of pestilence; and they shall — iii. 3 
one that had the pestilence.. Two Gen.of Ver. ii. 1 
she purged the air of pestilence .. TiretfihNighl, i. 1 
is sooner caught than tire pestilence.. 3/«r/*,4(7o, i. 1 
pestilence that does infect tlie land. Hejiry /'///. v. 1 
a pestilence on himi now will.. Troilus^ Cress, iv. 2 
tlie red pestilence strike all trades.. CoWotaims, iv. 1 
the most infectious pestilence ..Antony fyCleo. ii. 5 

like the tokened pesLiienee — iii. 8 

infectious pestilence did reign ..Romeo iff Juliet, v. 2 
a pestilence on him for a mad rogue! ..Hamlet, v. 1 

I'll pour this pestilence into his ear Othello, ii, 3 

PESTILENT to the hearing Henry VIII. i. 2 

with his pestilent scythe... 4 n^ony ^Cleopatra, iii. 11 

a pestilent gall to me! Lear, i. 4 

what a pestilent knave is tliis..7iomeo ^Juliet, iv. b 



[ 571 ] 

I'ESTI LENT congregation Hamlet, ii. 

pestilent speeclies oi his father's death.. — iv. 

a jiestilcnt complete knave Othello, i i. 

PETAR— hoist with his own petar Hamlet, iii. 

PETER Simple, you say your naine.iVcm/ ll'ires, i. 

to liiar Peter give (rep. iv. 6) . . Mens. fiirMens. i v. 

and away to saint Peter for lilncli Ado, ii. 

first, good Peter Quince ()r;).)...V/(/. A'.'j Dream, i. 

here, Peter Quince u'"/).) — i. 

Peter Quince,— What say'st {rep. Iv. 1) — iii. 

I will get Peter Qniiiec to write .... — iv. 

Peter Turf, and 1 lenry .... -laming of Sh. 2 (indue 

was no linl< to colour Peter's hat .... — iv. 

Peter, didst ever see the like? — iv. 

name be George, I'll call him Peter. . King/oAn, i. 

Peter EuU-call of the green 'IHenrylV. iii. 

and a flg for Peter! llerc, Peter ....'iHenryVI.\\. 

be merry, Peter, and lear not — ii 

Peter, forsooth. Peter! what niorey., — ii. 

therefore, Peter, have at thee with .. — ii. 

hold, Peter, hold! 1 confess — ii. 

Peter, thou hast prevailed — ii. 

Peter! Anon. i\Iy Ian ('<■/).) Romeo ^ Juliet, ii. 

Peter, stay at tlie gate — ii. 

at saint Peter's chinch (re;'.) — iii. 

call Peter, he will show thee where.. — iv. 
never trouble Peter (or llie matter .. — ^ iv. 
the otKce opposite to saint Peter Othello, iv. 

PETIT monsieur, (lue dit-ili' Henry V. iv. 

PETITION— relish the iictition ..Meas.forileas. i. 

all their petitions are as freely theirs — i. 

they should exhibit their petitions.. — iv. 

to give this poor petition to the k'mg.All's Well, v. 

here's a petition from a Florentine.. — v. 

would not stay at your petitions.. tVinter'sTale, \. 

not receive affliction at my petition — iii. 

but j'our petition is yet unanswered — v. 

of soft petitions, pity, and remorse.. Kin^'John, ii. 

and my petitions, to cat, look yau... .HenryV. v. 

than a general petition 01 monarchs — v. 

thatismy petition, noble lord ....\ HenryFI. iv. 

is the point of my pelitioi Henry VIII. i. 

my next poor petition is. that liis noble — iv. 

you would have given me your jietition — v. 

tlie zeal of m.y petition to tlice.. Troilus^- Cress, iv. 

with me in loud and tiear petition .. — v. 

andapetltion granted them Coriolanus, i. 

it was a bare petition of a state — v. 

reason our petition with more strength — v. 

thou receivest thy full petition JidiusCa^sar, ii. 

urge you your petitions in the street? — iii. 

in Rome petition us at home Antony i^Cleo. i. 

deliver him this petition .... Titus Andronicus, iv. 

mv slow leave, by laboursome petition.. Ha7n/e/, i. 
PEtITION.A.RY veliemence As youLlke it, iii. 

and thy petitionary countrymen .. Coriolanus, v. 
PETITIONED all the gods for my . . — ii. 
PETITIONER- vain petitioner!.. Lr>i'f's/..£(is<, v. 

let us, that .are poor petitioners .. Taming of Sh. ii. 

1 am but a poor petitioner '2 Henry VI. i. 

petitioners for blood tliou ne'er ^ Henry VI. v. 

both put by, a poor petitioner .... Richard III. iii. 

PETO— Bardolph, Peto, and Gadshill. \HenryIV. i. 

Bardolph! Peto! I'll starve — ii. 

so did you, Peto; so did you, Bardolph — ii. 

banish Peto, banish Bardolph — ii. 

bid my lieutenant Peto meet me .... — iv. 

Peto, now now';' what news? iHenrylV. ii. 

PETRARCH flowed in Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 

PETRUCtllO [A'h/.-PETRUCIO]— 

and my good friend Petruclrio? .. TamingofSh. i. 

molto honoratosignior mio Petniehio — i. 

Petruchio, patience: I am Gruniio's — i. 

Petruchio, shall I then come roundly — i. 

rich enough to be Petruchio's wife .. — i. 

Petruchio, since we have stepped thus — i. 

I can, Petruchio, helj) thee to a wife — i. 

tarry, Petruchio, I must go with .... — i. 

now shall my triend Petruchio do me — 1. 

Petruchio, stand by a while — i. 

be it so; Petruchio, I shall be your.. — i. 

saving your tale. Petruchio, I pray — ii. 

signior Petruchio, will you go {.rep.") — ii. 

she comes; and now, Petruchio, speak — ii. 

hark, Petruchio! she sa.ys, she'll see — ii. 

God send you joy, Petriiehio! — ii. 

lo, there is mad Petruchio's wife .... — iii. 

my life, Petruchio means but well . . — iii. 

to hear of Petruchio's coming — iii. 

why, Petruchio is coming, in a new — iii. 

that Petruchio came? Ay, that (rep.) — iii. 

I warrant him, Petruchio is Kated .. — iii. 

and Petruchio is the master — iv. 

Petruchio, fie! you are to blame .... — iv. 

Petruchio, go thy ways -- iv. 

well, Petruchio, this hath put me — iv. 

brother Petruchio,— sister Katharina — v. 

this kindness, son Petruchio (7-ep.) .. — v. 

ho, Petruchio, Tranio hits you now — v. 
now fair befal thee, good Petruchiol — v. 

1 think, be young Petruchio .... Romeo S,- Juliet, i. 
PETTER that friends is the sword. . Merry Wives, i. 

her father is make her a petter penny — i. 

nay, it is pet ter yet — i. 

Iwarrant you, it isthe petter foryou.ffcnri/T. iv. 

no petter tlian a fellow, look you.. .. — v. 
PETTICOATS will catch them .... As youLike it, i. 

to show itself courageous to petticoat — ii. 

like fringe upon a petticoat — iii. 

all my raiment, to my petticoat.. Taming of Sh. ii. 

holes in the alewife's new petticoat.2He7iri//K. ii. 

thou hast done in a woman's petticoat? — iii- 

still have worn the petticoat illenryVI. v. 

brings forth a new petticoat. yjn/ony ^Cleopatra, i. 

nor gowns, petticoats, nor caps O'hello, iv. 

PET'riNESS would bow under HenryV. iii. 

PETTISH luiies, his ebbs .... 7'rmViM ^ Cressida, ii. 
PETTITOES, till he hud hotix .... Winter's Tale, iv. 
PETTY crimes as these Two Gen.of Verona, iv. 

every pelting petty officer Meas.for Mcas, ii. 



PHI 



PETTY trafflckers that curt'8y..Me;c/i. o/Fch/cc, i. I 

to pay the iictty debt twenty — iii. 2 

these petty brands, that calumny. W(H(er'srn(e,ii. 1 

as a meeting of the petty gods — iv. 2 

creeiJs in the petty pace from day .... Macbetli, v. 5 

and inland pett.y spirits 2 Henry I V. iv. 3 

to catch the petty thieves Henry V. i. 2 

some petty and nnprolitable .... — iii. (chorus) 

except some petty towns 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

tut! these are petty laiiits •illenryVI. iii. 1 

couiiter|ioised with such a petty sum — iv. 1 
particularities and pett^' sounds .... — v. 2 

the petty rebel, dull-brained Richard III. iv. 4 

other innniinents and petty helps ..Coriolanus, i. I 
but was a petty servant to the rtate.. — ii. 3 
we pett.ymeii walk under his liuge../«;i«sC<rsrtr, i. 2 
to mend the petty pr<;sent....Anlony^Cteopatra,i. 5 

his helm for such a petty war — ii. I 

and bind up the petty difTerence .... — ii. 1 
I was ol late as petty to his ends .... — iii. 10 

not petty things admitted — v. 2 

such parting were too fietty Cymbeline, i. 2 

no more, you petty spirits oi region low — v. 4 
tliis petty brabble will undo us all ..Titus And. ii. 1 

the petty [Cot. Ki//. -pretty] wrens Pericles, iv. 4 

makes each petty artery in this body . . Hamlet, i. 4 
each small annexmcnt, petty conseqiience — iii. 3 

nor caps, nor any petty exhiiiitiou Othello, iv. 3 

PETTY-WARDfCo/.]the petty ward... Weoy'r'. iii. 1 

PEU — uu peu.madamc HenryV. iii. 4 

deDieii; et en pen de temps — iii. 4 

PEW — halters in his pew Lear, iii. 4 

PEW-FELLOW with others' inoan?/f;c/«i»'i ///. iv. 4 

PEWTER— ill needlework, pewter.. ramnii(nfSh. ii. 1 

long lease for the clinking ol pcwtcr.l Henry IV. ii. 4 

PEWTERER'S hammer 2 Henry I V. iii. 9. 

PHAETON- like glistering V\ni:lou.Hfct,ard II. iii. 3 
why Phaeton, ((or thou art.. TnoGen.nr Verona, iii. I 
now Phaeton hath tumbled from ....SHenry VI. i. 4 
thatPliaeton should check thy fiery steeds — ii.6 
such a waggoner as l'hacUin....Ranienii- Juliet, iii. 2 

PHANTASM, a monarcho iote'si-.Los^. iv. 1 

T abhor sucli fanatical iihantasm .... — v. 1 

PIIANTAS.'MA, or a hideous dream..yu(iusCa?sa;-, ii. 1 

PIIARAMOND-from Pharamoiid ....Henry V. i.2 

Pharamoiid the founder of this law.. — i. 2 

Pharamoiid idly supposed the founder — i. 2 

PHARAOH'S soldiers Mitch Ado, iii. 3 

then Pharaoli's lean kine are to ,...\HenryIV. ii. 4 
PHARSALIA— battle at Pharealia.. /!)!(. <5Cteo. iii. 7 
PHE ASAN'P— for a pheasant i>i<. p.). Winter's Tale, iv. 3 
PlIEERE— unto him took a pheere . Pericles, i. (Gow.) 
PHEESE you in faith . . Turning of Shrew, 1 (indue.) 

I'll pheese his pride Troilus S, Cressida, ii. 3 

PHEEZAR [Co/.-Plieazar] I will ..Merry Wives, i. 3 

PHIAL— as sesen phials of his sacred.. /?/c/mrd //. i. 2 

one phial full of Edward's sacred .... — i. 2 

take thou this phial, being titen. RomeoSfJuliel, iv. 1 

come, phial: what if this mixture .. — iv. 3 

PHIBBUS' ear shall shine from far..Mid.A'.'s Dr. i. 2 

PIl ILADELPIIOS, king of. . Antony 4- Cleopatra, iii. 6 

PHILARIO-in Rome, at one Philario's ..Cymb.i.i 

PHILARMONUS! Here, my good lord . . - v. 5 

PHILEMON— my visor is Pbilemon's.il/iirt/lrfo, ii. 1 

Philemon, ho! Doth my lord call? .... Pericles, iii. 2 

PHILIP— come Phi lip and Jacob. i)7eus. /or Meas. iii. 2 

Nicholas, Philip, Walter (rep.) .. Taniingnf^h. iv. 1 

Philip of France, in right and true ..KingJohn, i. 1 

Philip, my liege; so is my name (rep.) — i. I 

kneel thou down Philip, hut arise .. — i. 1 

food leave, good Philip. Philip? .... — i. 1 
'hilipof France (re/), iii. 1} — ii. 2 

king Philip, listen (pe/).) — iii. 1 

while Philip breathes (rep.) — iii. 2 

Philip of M.aeedon, as I take it HenryV. iv. 7 

nor yet St. Philip's daughter iHenn/Vl. i. 2 

PHILIPPAN— his sword Vhiiiw^n.. Ant. ^Cleo. ii. .5 

PHILIPPE, a daughter (rep.) illenryVI. ii. 2 

PHILIPPI -toward Philippi JuliusCasar, iv. 3 

of marching to Phi lippi presently? .. — iv. 3 
'twixt Pliiiippi and this ground? .... — iv. 3 
if at Philippi we do face him tliere . . — iv. 3 
ourselves, and meet them at Philippi — iv. 3 
thou Shalt see me at Philippi (rep.).. — iv. 3 
tliey mean to warn ns at Philippi here — v. I 
who to Philippi here consorted tis.... — v. I 
last uiglit, here in Philippi fields .... — v. 5 
wdio at Philippi the good IBrutus. ..Jn'oni/c? Cleo. ii. (i 
when at Philippi he found Brutus slain — iii. 2 
he, at Philippi, kept his sword even — iii. 9 

PHILL-HORSE [Col. KnI.'' has on. Mer.or Venice, ii. i 
PHILLIDA— to amorous Phillida .Mid. N.'s Dr. ii. 2 
PHILOMEL, with melody, sing.... — ii. 3 (s,nig) 
turned down, where Philomel gave.. Cymtietijie.u. i 
his Philomel must lose her ton'^weTitusAndron ii. 3 
could have better sewed than Philomel — ii. .5 

this is the tra"ic tale of Philomel — iv. I 

worse than Philomel you used my .. — v. 2 

PHILOMELA, she but lost \\ev.. ..TitusAndron. ii. 5 

ravished, and wronged, as Philomela — iv. 1 

PHILOSOPHER-diversphilosopherSil/errylf/fes.i. 1 

for there was never .vet philosopiier . . Much Ado, v. 1 

prove the weeiiing philosopher Mer. of Venice, i. 2 

the heathen philosopher, when ..Asyou Lil<e it, v. 1 
I will make him a philosopher's ..2 Henry I V. iii. 2 
how now, pliilosopher? thou liest. . Timon of.Ilh. i. 1 
sometime, like a philosopher, with two — ii. 2 
and woman; scmietime the philosopher — ii. 2 

first let me talk with this philosopher /.ear, iii. 4 

noble pliiloso]iher, your company — iii. 4 

I will keep still with my philosopher.. .. — iii. 4 

PHILOSOPHICAL persons .4H'.«"e;;, ii. 3 

PHILOSOPHY in thee, eheplierd?. /4s you Like it, iii. 2 
with all these living in philosophy. lore's/,. Ln»<,i. 1 
that part of philosophy will I.. Taming qfShreu; i. 1 
to suck the sweets of sweet philosophy — i. 1 

give me leave lo read philosojih.v.... — iii. 1 
preach some philosophy to make ..KingJohn, iii. 4 
of your philosophy you make no. Julius Ctesar, iv. 3 
even by the rule of that philosophy.. — v. 1 



PIIILO.SOPriY— milk, philosopliv.. Romeo 4- Jut. iii. 3 
liang up philosophy! unless philosophy — iii. 3 
tiuin are dreamt of in your philosophy.. Uatnlet^ i. 5 
if philo^ophv could fii\d it out — ii.2 

PUILOS TilATE, stir op the ....Mkl.N.'sDream, i. I 
o;iU Philostrate. Here, miijhty Theseus — v. 1 

PlHLOTEN: and it Pericles, iv. (Gowor) 

this Philoteii contends in skill.... — iv. (Gower) 
so darks in Philoten all graceful.. — iv. (Gower) 

Pllll.OTUS tool Good-day ....TlmonnrAlhem.iil. 4 

PIIISNOMY is more liotter in France. /)//'.( <feH, iv. 5 

PirtEliE doth behold her silver. .,W»/.A'.'sDr<'om, i. 1 

a title toPlioehe, to Luna Love's L.Lost, iv. 2 

O Phcebe, Phoebe, Phoebe! As, jou Like it, li. 4 

Phoebe, do not scorn me, I'hoebe {rep.) — iii. 5 
O dear Plioebe, if ever, (as that ever.. — iii. 5 

Pliccbe, with all my heart — iii. 5 

my gentle Phcclie Ind me give vou .. — iv. 3 

the content?; Phoebe did write it — iv. 3 

ol'Pliojbe's cruelty. She PlicelK-sme.. — iv. 3 

and so am I for Plioebe (rr;). ) — v. 2 

as you love Phoebe, meet — v. 2 

that you'll have Plioebe, if she will? — v. 4 
keep j'our word, Phoebe, that you'll.. — v. 4 
like the stately Phoebe 'mongst. Titus Anflronicus, i. a 

PIICEBUS' steeds are foundered YVm()i's', iv. 1 

before tl\e wlieels of Phoebus Ulurli Ado, v. 3 

wliere Phcebus' tire scarce \,\\iV.v^.Mer.of I'enice, ii. 1 

can behold bright Phcebus in Winter' sTale, iv. 3 

not by Phcebus, he, that wandering..! Henry IV. i. 2 
tlie young Plioebus fanning ..Henry I', iii. (chorus) 
sweats in the e\'e of Phoebus — iv. 1 

Plioebus! hadst thou never given. 3 Henrii i'l. ii. 6 
coldly eyes tlie vontliful Phcebus. Troilus i^-Cress. I 3 
^vanton'spoll o^Plicebusburning ..Coriofanus, ii. 1 
that am with Phojbus' amorous. ./l/i(oHi/ f/Cleo- i. .^) 
carbuneled like holy Phcebus' car .. — iv. 8 
and golden Phcebus never be beheld.. — v. 2 

and Phoebos 'gins arise CymbfUne, ii. 3 (song) 

a carbuncle of Phcebus' wheel — v. 5 

fire on flickering Phcebus' front Lear, ii. 2 

steeds, towards Plioebus' mansion Romeo ^Ju'iet,i\\. 2 
full thirty times hath Phoebus' cart . . Hamlet, iii. 2 

PHtENICtA— and Phoenicia Antony ^Cleo. iii. 6 

PHtJONICIANS, go a ducking — iii. 7 

PUCE XIX— tree, tlie plicenix' throne.. Tcmpes/, iii. 3 
one phoenix at this hour reigning there — iii. 3 
took the Phoenix, and her fra.ught.Tu'eWhNighl,v. 1 

were man as rare as phoenix As youLilce it, iv- 3 

a phcenix, a captain, and an enemy ..Att'sJVell, i. 1 
your liouse, the Phoenix (rep. ii. 2). .Com. of Err. i. 2 

11. y mistress, at the Phoenix — i. 2 

a phoenix tliat shall make 1 Henry VI. Iv. 7 

my ashes, as the phoenix, may bring .3 Henry VI. i. \ 

the maiden phoenix, her asiies HennjVIII. v. 1 

■which flaslies now a phcenix . . Timon of Athens, ii. 1 
PI-IOTINUS an eunuch . ... Antony Sr Cleopatra, iii. 7 

PlIPiASE— what phrase is this Merry IVives, i. \ 

foil; a fico for the phrase! — i. 3 

'tis not a soldier-like phrase — ii. 1 (letter) 

your red-lattiee phrases — ii. 2 

her very phrases! TwelflhNight, ii. ^ 

if youcjan, in hand, or plrrase — v. 1 

tiie phrase is to the matter Meas. forMeas. v. I 

that hath a mint of phrases Love'sL.Lost, i. 1 

taffeta phrases, silken terms — v. 2 

that was his own phrase All's Well, iv. 3 

good phrases are surely, and ever ..'iHenrylV. iii. 2 

plirase, call you it? (jpp.l — iii. 2 

con perfectly in the phrase of war. . . . Henry V. iii. 6 
save the phrase is a little variations — iv. 7 

these suns (lor so the}' phrase them). Henry Pill. i. 1 
there's a ste^^'ed phrase, indeed! Troilus t^-Crpss. iii. ! 

rail thou in Fulvia's phrase Antanyfi-Cleo. i. 2 

better phrase, and matter, than thou .... Lear, iv. (i 
proverbed with a grandsire phrase.. /^ompo ^Jul. i. 4 

crack the wind of the poor phrase Hainlet, i. 3 

with swinisli phrase, soil our addition .. — i. 4 

pronouncing of some doubtful phrase — i. .^ 

according to tlr*^ phrase, or the addition.. — ii. 1 

an ill phrase, a Tile phrase (7ep.) — ii. 2 

nor no matter in the phrase — ii. 2 

whose phrase of sorrow conjures — v. 1 

tlie phrase would be more german to ... . — v. -2 

little blessed with the setimrase of peace.nWirfto, i.3 

PIirtYGIA-Pandarus of Phrygia.TwW///. Ats-/i(, iii. 1 

pot forth toward Phrygia Troilus ir Cress. Qjrol.) 

better than any man in all Phrygia — i. 2 

PIII4YGIAlSr— spur thy Phrygian steed — iv. 5 

tlie fall of every Phrygian stone .... — iv. 5 

proudly pight upon our Phrygian plains — v. 1 1 

base Phrygian Turk ! ,l/'-rr.y Wives, r. 3 

ruriYNIA and Tymandra had. . TimnnnfA'/iens.v. 1 

PHYSIC— himself doctor of physic?. Men-!/ !Vii>es, iii. 1 

my physic will work with liim . . Tn etfili Night, ii. 3 

for 'tis a physie tliat's bitter Meas. for Meas. iw u 

moat wholesome physic of .. Love's L.L. i. 1 (letter) 
my physic says, I — ii. I 

1 will physie your rankness is you Like it, i. 1 

not cast away my physie, but on .... — iii. 2 

thy physic I will try All'sWell,i\. I 

day by day, come here for physic — iii. 1 

tliat, indeed, physics the subject .. Winler'sTale, i. I 

physic for't there is none — i. 2 

t le labour we delight in physics pain . . MaodrtA, ii. 3 

throw physie to the dogs — v. 3 

for the liealth and physic of our right. Ki/ig-./o/iji, v. 2 

in poison there is physic IHenrylV. i. 1 

he will recover without physic — iv. i 

I will see what physic the tavern . . i Henry I'l. i ii . 1 

'tis time to^ive them physic Henry V in. i. 3 

he brings his phj'sic after his — iii. 2 

that gentle physic, given in time .... — iv. 2 
contagious sickness, farewell, all physic — v. 2 
will pliysic the great myrmidon . 7'roi(i/s (5- C;ts.t i. 3 

soft, take thy physic first Timonof Athens, iii. 6 

a body witli a dangerous physic Coriolauus, iii. I 

craves it as physic for the wliole state — iii. 2 
one of tliem, for it doth physic ]ove.Cymhelinr, iii. 2 
learning, physic, muot all follow this — iv. 2 (song) 



PHYSrC-I have given her physic . Titus Amlrnn. iv. 2 

sharp pliysic is the last Pericles, \. ! 

I e\er nave studied piiysic — iii. 2 

have been sold dearer than physic — iv. 6 

thy sacred physie shall receive such pay — v. 1 

take phytic, pomp; expose tliyself Lear,'i'\\.i 

witiiin tliy help and holy physic. /?omco 'S./»/ie(, ii. 3 
this ptivsic but iiroioniis thy sickly.... Hamlet, iii. 3 
PHY.SIC.vr,-isratl\er pliysieal than.. Coi/o/aHus, i. b 
is it plivsical to walk unbraced ..Julius Cccsar, ii. 1 
PHYSIC IAN to comment. . . . TwoGen. of Verona, ii. 1 
showed yourself a w ise physician . . Merry Wives, ii . 3 

the renowned French pliysician — iii. 1 

on a fool, and a physician? — iii. 4 

he hath abandoned his physicians . ...All's JVell,i. I 
since the physician at your father's died? — i. 2 
he and his physicians, are of a mind — _i. 3 

a poor physician's daughter (7-ep.).. .. — ii. 3 
for your physicians have .. Taming nf Sh. 2 (indue.) 

ph3''sician,your most obedient Wmier'sTale, ii.3 

needs she the divine, than the physician.. Vrecte/A, v. 1 

we prescribe, though no pliysician Richard II. i. 1 

in his physician's mind, tohelp — i. 4 

of those physicians that first wounded — ii. I 

much feared by his physicians I Henry IV. iv. I 

if 1 do become your physician 2HenryIF. i. 2 

the immortal part needs a physician — ii. 2 

I take not on me here as a physician — iv. 1 
his physicians fear him mightily ..Richard III. i. 1 

'tis Bntts, the king's physician Henry VIII. v. 2 

he'll be physician, that should . . Troilus 4 Cress, ii. 3 
liis friends like physicians, ihvive.Tivionuf Ath. iii. 3 

trust not tlie pliysician — iv. 3 

I will make a lip at the physician ..Coriotanus, ii. 1 
for her physician tells me .. Antony ^ Cleopalra, v. 2 
than be cured by the sure physician. . Cymbeliiw, v. 4 

thou speak'st like a physician Pericles, i. 2 

do; kill thy pliysician, and the fee Lear, i. 1 

to die, when death is our physician Othillo, i. 3 

PIA MATElt— a most weak pia mater . Twelfth N. i. 5 
nourished in the womb of pia mater.. Loi'e's L.L. iv. 2 

his pia mater is not worth Troilus Sf Cr^ss. ii. 1 

PIBBLE PABBLE,in Pompey's HenryV. iv. 1 

PIBLE— he has pray liis Pible veW. Merry Wives, ii. 2 

PIC AKDY— Walloon, and Picarcfy. . 1 Henry VI. ii. 1 

Picardj hatli slain their governors.. 2 We?)?;/ r/. iv. 1 

PiCK-did you pick master Slender's.()/er?!/"!i!es, i. 1 

pick out my eyes with a ballad- Much Ado, i. 1 

and sing; pick his teeth, and sing ..All's Well, iii. 2 

we may pick a thousand salads — iv. 5 

and pick strong matter of revolt. .../On^'JoA/?, iii. 4 

the world pick thee out three 1 Henry If. ii. 4 

and now you pick a quarrel to beguile — iii. 3 
turned bawdy-liouse, they pick pockets — iii. 3 

as I may pick occasion Henry V. iii. 2 

or pick a salad another while ....2Henry VI. iv. 10 

I'll pick [Coi.-peck] you o'er Henry VIII. v. 3 

as high as I could pick my lance . . Coriolanus, i. 1 

he could not stay to pick them in — v. 1 

to pick that bolt, then, free for ever! Cymbeline, v. 4 
we could pick up some pretty estate ..Pericles, iv. 3 

ch'ill pick your teeth, zir Lear, iv. 6 

not to pick bad from bad; but, by bad.O(/ieHo, iv. 3 

PICKAXE— p or pickaxes can dig . . Cymbeline, iv. 2 

a piclvaxe, and a spade, a spade. .Ham/e^ v. 1 (song) 

PICKBONE-FrancisPickboue ....'i Henry IV. iii. 2 

PICKED— at picked leisure Tempest, v. 1 

and afterwards picked my pocket. . A/e7T?/ Wives, i. 1 
hath this Flemish drunkard picked.. — ii. 1 
hath picked out an act .... Measurefor Measure, i. ly 

yet, I picked a welcome Mid. N.'sDream, v. I 

he is too piclted, too spruce Love's L.Lost, v. 1 

how much honour picked from. Mer. of Venice, ii. 9 
picked out the dullest scent.. Taming of Sh. 1 (Ind.) 
I picked and cut most of their . . Winler'sTale, iv. 3 

my picked man of countries KingJohn, i. \ 

who picked my pocket? (?ep.) lf/e«?i//r. iii. 3 

confess then, you picked my pocket? — iii. 3 
no awkward claim, picked from the. . Henry V. ii. 4 
like empty purees picked .... Timon of Athens^ iv. 2 
have luxuriously picked out ..Antony ^Cleo. iii. 11 

think I have picked the lock Cymbeline, ii. 2 

one man picked out of ten thousand . . Hamlet, ii. 2 

the !ige is grown so picked, that the .... — v. 1 

PICKFTK— by these pickers and stealers.. — iii. 2 

PICKING— ?or picking a kernel All's Well, ii. 3 

I know by the picking on's teeth. Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

no more from picking of purses I Henry I V. ii. 1 

an honest woman with picking thy. . — iii. 3 

and such picking grievances 2Henry IV.iv. 1 

PICKLE— camest thou in this pickle?.. Tempest, v. 1 

I have been in such a pickle — v. 1 

smarting in lingering pickle ....Antony ^-Cleo. ii. .5 
PICKLE-HERRINGS! Hownow,sot?r?reWijV. i. 5 
PFCK-LOCK-strange uick-loek. . Mens. /b?- .1/eas. iii. 2 
PICK-PURSE-if it is a pick -purse. iV/c??-?/ IVives, i. 1 

and I, are pick-purses in love Love'sL.Lost, iv. 3 

a pick-purse, nor a horse-stealer.^syow Like it, iii. 4 

at hand, quoth pick-purse \ Henry IV. ii. 1 

PICK-THANKS and base newsmongers — iii. 2 

PfCKT-HATCH-ofPickt-hatch../t/e>ri/'>7t'cs, ii. 2 

PICTURE— by the picture of nobody.. Tempest, iii. 2 

'tis but her picture I have.. Tu'v Gen. of Verona, ii. 4 

vouchsafe me yet your picture — iv. 2 

the picture that is hanging in — iv. 2 

the promise for her heavenly picture — iv. 4 

he sends you for a picture? — iv. 4 

bring my picture there — iv. 4 

here is her picture — iv. 4 

you may come and see the picture. Merry IVives, ii. 2 

like mistress Wall's picture? Tu-elfth Night, i. 3 

and show you the picture — i. i 

you never see the picture of we three? — ii. 3 
wear this jewel for me, 'tis my picture — iii. 4 

I will go get her picture Much Ado, ii. 3 

my eyes on thy picture . . Love'sL.Lost, iv. 1 (song) 

he hath drawn my picture in his — v. 2 

he is a proper man's picture . . Merch. of Venice, i. 2 
the one nftliem contains my picture — ii. 7 
contaius her heavenly pictiiie — li. 7 



PICTURES, fairest, lined.... /Is !/ouLi7,e.7,iii. 2 (^ver.) 
with all my wanton pictures.. 7'ajmni' o/iVi. 1 (ind.) 
dost thou love pictures? we will fetch — 2 (ind.) 
whose purse was best in picture. . Winler'sTale, iv. 3 
are going to see the queen's picture ., — v. 2 

and the dead, are but as pictures Macbeth, ii. 2 

with mine own picture on the top..2HenryI V, iv. 3 
in my gallery thy picture hangs.. ..1 He?i/i//7. ii. 3 
were but his picture left among .... — iv.V 
and let's see your picture .. Troilus ^ Cressida, iii. 2 
thou picture of what thou seemest .. — v. 1 
a picture, sir; and when comes .. Timon of Ath. i. 1 
how likest thou this picture, Apemantus? — i. I 

such, and such, the pictures Cymbeline, ii. 2 

hath altered that good picture? — iv. 2 

he began his mistress' picture — v. 5 

chamber-hanging, pictures, this her — v. 5 

had I but seen thy picture in this. Titus.indron. iii. I 
vigour, and the picture of my youth — iv. 2 
have drawn her picture with my voice. /'e?ic/es, iv. 3 

his pietiue 1 will send far and near Lmr, ii. 1 

for his picture in little Hamlet, ii. 2 

look here, upon this picture, and on this — iii. l 

we are pictures, or mere beasts — iv. ft 

you are pictures out of doors Othello, ii. I 

PICTURED-not seen him so pictured Cymbeline, v. 4 

PICTURE-LIKE to hang by Coriolanus, i. 3 

PID— do as I pid you Merry Wives, v. i 

PIE— by cock ancl pie, you shall not.... — i. 1 

in your pie and your porridge All's Welt, i. 1 

a bauble, a silken pie Taming ofShreir, iv. 3 

to colour the warden pies Winler'sTale, iv. 2 

by cock and pie, sir, you shall 2 Henry IV. v. I 

aiid chattering pics in dismal SHeuryVI. v. fi 

no man's pie is freed from Henry VIII. i. I 

baked with no date in the pie. . Troilus^- Cressiila, i. 2 
they are both, baked in that pie.. TitusAmlron. v. 3 

a hare, sir, in a lenten pie Romeo fy Juliet, ii. 4 

PIECE— dashed ail to pieces Tempest, i- 2 

thy mother was a piece of virtue — i. 2 

but would give a piece of silver — ii. 2 

well nigh wort' to pieces with age. MeriyWives, ii. 1 
lest he transform me to apiece of cheese — v. 5 

with a piece of toasted cheese — v. .'j 

as witty a piece of Eve's flesh as.. Twelflh Night, i. 5 

Ijut that piece of song, that old — ii. 4 

thou art a three-piled iiiece ....Meas. for Meas. i. 2 

I doit for some piece of money — ii. 1 

with a piece of valiant dust? MuchAdo,M. 1 

the most dangerous piece of lechery — iii. 3 

as pretty a piece of flesh as — iv. 2 

a very good piece of work .... Mid. N.'s Dream, i. 2 
sir, is this such a piece of study ?..X-ore'sL. Los/, i. 2 

cut me to pieces with thy keen — v. 2 

of a good piece of flesh ^sj/oi/LiAe ?7, iii. 2 

lest they shake themselves to pieces. ..4»'s Well, iv. 3 
excelleut piece of work .. Taming of Sh, i. 1 (indue.) 

a piece of ice: if thou doubt it — iv. 1 

what say you to a piece of beef — iv. 3 

did not bid liim cut it to pieces — iv. 3 

never for a piece of beauty rarer. Winler^sTale, iv. 3 
fresh piece of excellent witchcraft .. — iv. 3 

is about a piece of iniquity — iv. 3 

not apiece of honesty to acquaint .. — iv. 3 

the most peerless piece of earth — v. 1 

he was torn to pieces with a bear.... — v. 2 

a piece many years in doing — v. 2 

with our company piece tlie rejoicing? — v. 2 

royal piece, there s magic in — v 3 

as he will piece up in himself — v. 3 

this most bloody piece of work Macbeth, ii. 3 

and tear to pieces that great bond .... — iii. 2 
cut him to pieces. Keep the peace . . KingJohn, iv. 3 
like curs, to tear us all to pieces.... 7iic/m?(i//. ii. 2 

and piece the way out with — v. 1 

never call a true piece of gold I Henry I v. ii. 4 

all his wardrobe, piece by piece — v. 3 

make him eat a piece of my sword .. — v. 4 
would manage you his piece thua..2He)??'if/r. iii. 2 

and dash themselves to pieces — iv. I 

piece out our imperfections. . . . Henry V. i. (chorus) 
or break it all to pieces; or there .... — i. 2 

1 knew, by that piece of service — iii. 2 

there's not a piece of feather in our.. — iv. 3 
'tis as arrant a piece of knavery .... — iv. 7 

a little piece of my desires — v. 1 

a piece of ordnance 'gainst it 1 Henry VI. i. 4 

and spurn in pieces posts of adamant — i. 4 

hew them to pieces, hack their — iv. 7 

break thou in pieces, and consume .. — v. 4 

on the pieces of the broken wand iHenryVI. i. 2 

deeply indebted for this piece of pains — i. 4 
and such a piece of service will you do — v. 1 
they dash themselves to pieces .... Kicliard III. i. 3 
with a piece of scripture, tell them.. — i. 3 
are cracked in pieces by malignant.. — ii. 2 
to do this piece of ruthless butchery — iv. 3 
rush all to pieces on thy rocky bosom — iv. 4 
thus jaded by a piece of scarlet ..Henry VIII. iii. 2 
woven so strangely in one piece .... — iv. 1 
this is a piece of malice; I am glad.. — v. 2 
not being torn a pieces, we have done — v. 3 

mould up such a mighty piece — v. 4 

shall piece it out with a piece. . Troilus 4^ Cress, iii. 1 

and dregs of aflat tamed piece — iv. 1 

let's see your piece. 'Tis a good piecit.Tim.ofAth. i. 1 
a piece of painting; which I do oeseecli — i. I 
and j'et he's but a filthy piece of work — i. 1 
show me this piece: I am joyful .... ' ' 

and just of the same piece is every .. 
a thousand pieces. A thousand pieces! 
1 will promise liiin an excellent piece 
and their friends to piece 'era . 
that for the poorest piece will. . 

cut me to pieces, Volsces — v. .■> 

tear him to pieces, do it presently — v. & 

thus must I piece it out Julius C<esar, ii. 1 

apieceof work, that will make — ii. 1 

pardon me, thou bleeding piece of earth — iii. 1 
tear him to pieces, he's a conspiratos — iii. 3 



— iii. 2 

— iii. 6 

— v. I 



r, iv. 3 



i. 5 



IV. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. i 



— IV. 6 



PIECE— dash him to pieccsl IttVms Ctv. 

a wonderful piece of work .. Antoiiy^fCleopat, 

I will piece her opulent throne — 

let not tlie piece of virtue — in. z 

bruised pieces, jzo; yoii have been.. .. — iv. 12 

were nature's piece" 'gainst fancy — v. 2 

a piece of work so bravely done .... Cymbeliiie, ii. 1 
to pieces with me I O men's vows .. — iii. 4 
thy garments cut to pieces before thy — iv. 1 

to let an arrogant piece of flesh — , iv. 2 

take pieces for the figure's sake — * v. 4 

a piece of tender air (.rep. v. 5) — v. 4 

wagered with him pieces of gold .... — v. 5 
give that changing piece to him . . TiliisAwliou. i. 2 
a very excellent piece of villany .... — ii. 3 

this piece of yoru" dead queen Pericles, iii. 1 

a strong wind will blow it to pieces.... 
I have gone through for this piece .... 
bated one doit of a thousand pieces. . . . 
when nature framed this piece 

Dionyza, such a piece of slaughter .. 
thou art a piece of virtue 

1 beseecli your honour, one piece for rae 
if she were a thirnier piece of ground 

and shake in pieces the heart of his Lear, i. 2 

caitiff, to pieces shake, that under — iii. 2 

I will piece out the comfort with — iii. 6 

this piece of toasted clieese will do't .... — iv. (j 

a ruined piece of naturel this great — iv. G 

I am a pretty piece of flesh Romeo ^Juliet, i. 

save me a piece of marchijane — i. 

beats as it would fall in twenty pieces — ii. 
what, is Horatio there? a piece of lum. . Hamlel, i. 

what a piece of work is man! — ii. 

like a piece of uncurrent gold, be not.... — ii. 
will the king hear this piece of work? .. — iii. 

'tis a knavish piece of work — iii. 

there's a poor piece of gold for thee .... Othello, iii. 

I'll tear her all to pieces — iii. 

likely piece of work, that you should find — iv. 
could neither graze, nor piece? — iv. 

riECED— girt six times pieced .. Taming of Sh. iii. 

liere and there pieced with packthread — iii. 

with our displeasure pieced Lear, i. 

riFJCES-OUT his wife's inclination, .Menyfr. iii. 
I'lED— what a pied ninny's this! Tempest, iii. 

when daisies pied Love's L. Lost, v. 2 (song^ 

which were streaked and pied ,, Merch. of Venice, i. ' 

riEDNESS, shares with great IVinter'sTale, iv. 

I'lEDS— appellez-vous le pieds HenryV. iii. 

riELED [Co(.-pilled «(. -peeled] priest .1 Hen. /'A i. 
I-'IER— ports, and piers, and roads. Afer. of Venice, i. 

at Flampton pier embark Henry V. iii. (chorus 

PIERCE a wink beyond Tempest, ii. 

which pierces so, that it assaults ... . — (epil. 

can pierce a complete bosom .... Meas. forMeas. i. 

sliould pierce a hundred thousand. /If id. A^.'sZ))-. ii. : 

best pierce tlie ear of grief Love'sL.Lost, v. 

can no prayers pierce thee? . . Mereh. of Venice, iv. 

with sweetest touches pierce your.... — v. 

our plaints and prayers do pierce . . Richard II. v. \ 

sir Pierce of Exton who lately — v.; 

if Percy be alive, I'll pierce him .... 1 Henry IV. v. i 

I come to pierce it, or to give 3 Henry VI. ii. 

her tears will pierce into — iii. 

can curses pierce the clouds Richard III. i. 

Bharp, and pierce like mine — iv. 

some graver eye pierce into that ... . Henry VIII. i. 

may pierce the head of Troilus «§- Cressida, iv. 

bleeding, shall pierce a jot.... Timon of Athens, iv. 

'gan pierce his ready sense Coriolanus, ii. 

he is able to pierce a corslet — v. 

my bended hook shall pierce Antony fyCleo. ii. 

and pierce the imnost csntYe.Titus/IndronicKs, iv. 

curse pierce every sense about thee ! Lear, i. 

how far your eyes may pierce — i. 

did your letters pierce the queen — iv. I 

a pigmy's straw doth pierce it — iv. i 

fKni.'] as level to your judgment pierce. Hamlet, iv. ; 
ERCED through the heart Mid.N.'sDr. iii. : 

pierced and pricked a pretty. Love'sL.L. iv. 2 (epit. 

one should be pierced, which is the one? — iv. ; 

pierced to the soul with slander's. . . . Richard II. i. 

whose loss hath pierced him deep. Titus Andron. i v. 

it pierced me thorough Pericles, i v. 

that pierced the fearful hollow . liomeo ^Juliet, iii. 

heart was pierced through the ear Otiiello, i. 

PIERCETH through tlie body of . . ^s youLike it, ii. 
PIERCING a hogshead! Love'sL.Lost, iv. 

air, that sings with piercing All's IVelt, iii. 

ehe uttereth piercing eloquence.. Taming of Sh, ii. 

as it is now piercing to my soul . . Winler'sTale, v. 

piercing the night's dull ear . .Henry V. iv. (chorus! 

ay, sharp and piercing to maintain.. IHcniyr/. ii. 

do peck the falcon's piercing ta\ona..iHenryVI. i. 

have been as piercing as the mid-day — v. 

provide more piercing statutes AaWy. Coriolanus, i. 

piercing steel, and darts envenomed. J«^Ca?sar, v. 

the air is quick there, piercin" Pericles, iv. 

tilts with piercing steel at bold .Romeo ^-Juliet, iii. 
PIETY— thou art full of piety Much Ado, i v. 

and how his piety does my deeds. IVinter'sTale, iii. 

from glistering semblances of piety.. . .Henry V. ii. 

piety, and fear, religion to the gods. Timon ofAlh. iv. 

piety in thine, it is in these.. .. TilusAndronicus, i. 

cruel, irreligious piety! — 1. 

PIG— not a gaping pig (rep.) ..Merch. of Venice, iv. 

the capon burns, the pig falls Comedy of Err. i. 

the pig, quoth I, is burned — ii. 

where Alexander the pig was burn ? . . Henry V, iv. 

1 pray you, is not pig, great? the pig — ' iv. 
so cries a pig, prepared to .... Titus And7-oiiicus, iv. 

PMEONegg of discretion Love'sL.Lost, v. 

pecks up wit, as pigeons peas — v. 

faster than Venus' pigeons fly . . Mer. of Venice, ii. 

as pigeons feed tlieir young As you Like it, \. 

as pigeons bill, so wedlock would. ... — iii. 

are there no young pigeons? iHenrylV. v. 

some pigeons, Davy — v. . 

ay, or my pigeons, sir TilusAndron. iv. 3 



[ 573 ] 

PIGEON— going with my pigeons. Titus Andron. iv. 3 
the pigeons to the emperor (rep.) .... — iv. 3 

and a couple of pigeons here — iv. 4 

PIGEON-IjIVERED, and lack gall .... Hamlet, ii. 2 
PJGHT— thus proudly pight . . Troilus ^ Cressida, v. 1 1 

found him pight to do it Lear, ii. 1 

PIGMIES- embassage to the pigmies. JWuc/i^rfo, ii. 1 
PIGMY arms, from out the circle .... KingJohn, v. 2 

a pigmy's straw dotli pierce it Lear, iv. 6 

PIG-iVUT— will dig thee pig-nuts Tempest, ii. 2 

PIOROGROMITtrS, of the Vapians.. rwe/yi'AA'. ii. 3 
PIKE— treason, felony, sword, pilie .... Tempest, ii. 1 

you must put in the pikes witli Much Ado, v. 2 

with his pike bent bravely 'sHenrylV. ii. 4 

be a bait for the old pike — iii. 2 

naked infants spitted upon pikes ....Henry V. iii. 3 

trail'st thou the puissant pilie? — iv. 1 

he wanted pikes to set before 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

should have tossed me on their pikes.SHciirt/ VI. i. 1 
let us revenge this with our pikes . . Coriolanus, i. 1 

trail 3'our steel pikes — v. 5 

make him with our pikes Cymbeline, iv. 2 

like lions upon the pikes o' the hunters — v. 3 

PILATE, wash your hands (rep.) .... Richard II. iv. 1 

how fain, like Pilate, would I wash./?!'c/i«rd ///. i. 4 

PILCH! Ho! come, and bring Pericles, \i.\ 

PILCHARDS are to herrings .... Twelfth Kight, iii. 1 

PILCtlER by the ears? Romeo & Juliet, iii. 1 

PIL'D-ESTEEMED [Co(.-vile-esteemed] .1 H. VI. i. 4 

PILE— tliese logs, and pile them up 7'empes(,iii. 1 

tliat you are enjoined to pile! — iii. 1 

I'll carry it to the pile — iii. 1 

is a cheek of two pile and a half All's Well, iv. 5 

what piles of wealth hath he Henry VIII. m. 2 

in heaps and piles of ruin Coriolanus, iii. 1 

or pile ten hills on the Tarpeian .... — iii. 2 
could not stay to pick them in a pile — v. 1 

on a pile, ad manes f ratrum TilusAndron. i. 2 

upon a pile of wood, let's hew — i, 2 

now pile your dust upon Hamlet, v. I 

PILER, as thou art piled Meas. forMeas. i. 2 

foundation is piled upon his faith. Winter's Tale, i. 2 
they have engrossed and piled up . .iHenrylV. iv. 4 

PILFERING borderers Henry V. i. 2 

for pilferings and most common trespasses. Lear, ii. 2 

PILGRIMS going to Canterbury \ Henry IV. i 2 

a true devoted pilgrim is not .. Tu-oGen.ofVer. ii. 7 
I am saint J aques pilgrim ..All'sWell, iii. 4 (letter) 

look, here comes a pilgrim — iii. 5 

God save you, pilgrim! — iii- 5 

if you will tarry, holy pilgrim — iii. 5 

if you shall please so, pilgrim — iii. 5 

the troop is past; come, pilgrim — iii. 5 

my lips, two blushing pilgrims . . Romeo i- Juliet, i. 5 
good pilgrim, you do wrong your .... — i. 5 
have hands that pilgrims' hands do touch — i. 5 

PILGRIMAGE to saint Jaques Alt's Well, iv. 3 

he overtaketh in his pilgrimage. TwoGen. ofVer. ii. 7 
the utmost of his pilgrimage .... Meas. for Meas.'\i. 1 
to xindergo such maiden pilgrimage. Af id. A'.'siJj-. i. I 
you swore a secret pilgrimage. Jl/erc/ian( of Venice, i. 1 
his erring pilgrimaj»e ....AsyouLikcit, iii. i (verses) 
tliat vow a long and weary pilgrimage. iJ/c/iardi/. i 3 

stop no wrinkle in his pilgrimage — i. 3 

which finds it an enforced pilgrimage — _i. 3 

is spent, our pilgrimage must be — ii. 1 

prison hast thou spent a pilgrimage. IHemi/F/. ii. b 
from first to last told him my pilgrimage., iear, v. 3 
lasting labour of his pilgrimage !. (fomco <5-.'H(;e(, iv. 5 
that I would all my pilgrimage dilate . . Othello, i. 3 
PILL— you gave me bitter pills.. Tu'o Gen.ofVer. ii. 4 

for pills to cool the reins Merry Wives, iii. 5 

grave masters are, and pill by law. Timon ofAth. iv. 1 

PILLAGE they with merry march Henry V. i. 2 

the gentle bosom of peace with pillage — iv. 1 
to be the pillage of a giglot wench . . 1 Henry VI. iv. 7 
cheap pennyworths of their pillage ..2HenryVI. i. 1 
thy sons make pillageof her chastity. 7'i7iis/lnd. ii. 3 
PILLAR— with gold on lasting pillars . . Tempest, v. 1 
you ai-e a well-deserving pillar.. il/er.o/ Venice, iv. 1 

of England, pillars of the state iHenryVI. i. 1 

call them pillars, that will IHenryVI. ii. 3 

these ruined pillars, out of pity . . Henry VIII. iii. 2 
her base and pillar by us ... . Troilus ^Cressida, iv. 5 
triple pillar of the world transformed..4ji«.-§-Meo. i. I 
PILLED iKnl.^ me certain wands. . Mer. of Venice, i. 3 
the commons hath he pilled with . . Iticliard II. ii. 1 
that which you have pilled from me.Richard III. i. 3 

[Co/.] pilled priest, dost thou IHenryVI. i. 3 

PlLLICjOCK sat on pillicock's hill Lear, iii. 4 

PILLORY— stood on the pillory. Two Gen. of Ver. iv. 4 
as on a pillory, looking through. . Taming ofSh. ii. 1 

PILLOW for us both Mid. N.'sDream, ii. 3 

sighed upon a midnight pillow ..AsyouJ^ikeit, ii. 4 

here I'll fling the pillow Taming of Slireu; iv. 1 

we found upon their pillows Macbeth, ii. 3 

to their deaf pillows will discharge — v. I 

set me the crown upon my pillow ..2HenryIV. iv. 4 

lie there upon his pillow — iv. 4 

the crown? who took it from my pillow? — iv. 4 
a good soft pillow for that good white. . Henry V. iv. 1 
and whispers to his pillow as to him.2Henr!/C/. iii. 2 
a book of prayers on their pillow . . Richard III. iv. 3 
fair thoughts be your fairpillowlTroiVusi?- Cress, iii. 1 
pluck stout men s pillows from. I'i)>iojio/y((/iens, iv.3 
have I my pillow left u'npressed.Anlony^-Cleo. iii. 1 1 
sloth finds the down pillow hard ..Cymbeline, iii. 6 
is this thou makest thy bloody pillow? — iv. 2 
his dead trunk pillow to our lust. Titus Andron. ii. 3 

his loving breast thy pillow — v. 3 

lay tlie babe upon the pillow Pericles, iii. I 

a pillow for his head — v. 1 

that hath laid knives under his pillow ..Lenr, iii. 4 

PILOT— twenty times the pilot's glass. . All's Well, ii. I 

be pilot to me, and thy places shall, (fm/er'srofe, i. i 

here I have a pilot's tnumb Macbeth, i. 3 

yet lives our pilot still SHenryVI. v. 4 

allowed the skilful pilot's charge?.... — v. 4 
two traded pilots 'twixt the .. Troilus ^ Cressida, ii. 2 
think his pilot thought Pericles, iv. 4 (Gower) 



PILOT— I am no pilot Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 2 

thou desperate i)ilot, now at once .... — v. 3 
his pilot of very expert and approved . . Othello, ii. 1 
thete letters, give, lago, to the pilot iii. 2 

PIMPERNELL,and twenty. .rom/iiffo/S/t. 2 (indue.) 

PIN— from a pound to a pin? TnoGen. of Ver. i. 1 

now's not worth a pin — ii. 7 

a cod-piece to stick pins on — ii. 7 

tut, a iiin I this shall be Merry Wives, i. 1 

no, indeed sir, not of a pin Meas. forMeas. ii. 1 

if you should need a pin — ii. 2 

as frankly as a pin — iii. I 

get the upshot by cleaving the pin. /.one's L.L. iv. 1 
I would not care a pin if the other . . — iv. 3 

this gallant pins the wenches — v. 2 

scratch thee but with a pin As you Like it, iii. 5 

all eyes blind with the pin and web.. Winicr'sT. i. 2 
pins, and poking-sticks of sleel .. — iv.3 (song) 

as if she would pin her to her — v. 2 

a drop of blood, a pin Comedy of Errors, iv. 3 

and with a little pin bores Richard II. iii. 2 

my wretchedness, unto a row oi pins — iii. 4 

no bigger than pins' heads \ Henry IV. iv. 2 

give crowns like pins iHenrylV. ii. 4 

the whole frame stands upon pins ,, — iii. 2 
which show like pins' heads to her .. — iv.3 

my sword like a great pin — iv. 10 

pho.pho! come, tell apin .. Troilus SrCrcssidn, v. 'i 
the kitchen malkin pins her richest. Cor/o;a;i!«, ii. 1 
numbed and mortified bare arms, pins.... iear, ii. 3 

he gives the web and the pin — iii. 4 

let's see; I feel this pin prick — iv. 7 

the very pin of his heart cleft ..Romeo ^ Julie', ii. 4 
I do not set my life at a pin's fee Hamlel, i. 4 

PIN-BUTTOCk, the quatch-biittock...4«'4 Well. ii. 2 

PINCH— each pinch more stinging Tempest, i. 2 

but they'll nor pinch, nor fright us — ii. 2 

let the supposed fairies pinch liim. ^/errt/ Wives, iv. 4 

to pinch her by the hand — iv. 6 

there pinch the maids as blue — v. 5 

pinch them, arms, legs, backs — v. 5 

still pinch him to your time — v. .i 

pinch him, fairies (rep.) — V. 5 (song) 

if you pinch me like a pasty All's Well, iv. 3 

or pinch us black and blue . .Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

good doctor Pinch, you are no — iv. 4 

they brought one Pinch; a hungry ., — 'v. I 

you are not Pinch's patient — v. 1 

to gall and pinch this Bolingbroke. . 1 HenrylV. i. 3 
when thou dost pinch thy bearer ..2HenryIV. iv. 4 

to fall down with a pinch \ Henry VI. iv. 2 

as they pinch one a,uot\ier .. Antony ^Cleopatra, ii. 7 
stroke of' death is as a lover's pinch.. — v. 2 
cannot be a pinch in death more .... Cymbeline, i. 2 

necessity's sharp pinch! Lear, ii. 4 

pinch wanton on your cheek Hamlet, iii. 4 

PINCHED as thick as honeycombs .... Tempest, i. 2 
thou'rt pinched for't now, Sebastian .. — v. 1 

I shall be pinched to death — v. I 

pinched the lil.y tincture.. Two Gen. of Verona, iv. 4 
what, have I pinched you .... Taming of Shrew, ii. t 
and I remain a pinched thing.... Winler'sTale, ii. I 
you might have pinched a placket .. — iv, 3 
kind of cholic pinched and vexed ..\HenrylV. iii. 1 

who having pinched a few ZHenryVl. ii. I 

chance to be pinched with the cholic. Coriotonis.ii. 1 

PINCHES— fill our skins with pinches. Tempesf, iv. I 

whose inward pinches therefore — v. 1 

and the pox pinches the other 2HenryIV. i. 2 

here's the pang that pinches Henry VI II. ii. 3 

with Phoebus' amorous pinches .. Antony^- Clen. i. 5 

PINCHING— and pinching fingers. Winter sTale.i. i 
in this our pinching cave Cyntbrline, iii. 3 

PINCH-SPOTTED make them 7>«!pes(, iv. 1 

PINDABUS is come to do you .... Julius Ciesar, iv. 2 
your master, Pindarus, in his own .. — iv. 2 
Pindarus, bid our commanders lead — iv. 2 

go, Pindarus, get higher on that hill — v. 3 
tarfrom this country shall Pindarus run — v. 3 

with Pindarus his bondman — v. 3 

what, Pindarus! where art thou (rep.) — v. 3 
and I will seek for Pindarus — v. 3 

PINE— into a cloven pine Tempest, i. 2 

that made gape the pine — i. 2 

by the spurs pluck'd up the pine — v. 1 

banquet, though the body pine Love'sL.Lost, i. 1 

to pomp, I pine. Idle — i. 1 

forbid the mountain pines .. Merchant of Venice, iv. 1 
I burn, I pine, I perish, Tranio .. Taming ofSh. i. 1 
behind the tuft of pines, I met .. Winter's'l'nle, ii. 1 

shall he dwindle, peak, and pine Macbeth, i. 3 

all which we pine for now — iii. G 

the proud tops of the eastern pine., iiic/iard //. iii. 2 
to Flint castle; there I'll pine away — iii. 2 
cold and sickness pines the chine .... — v. I 
loathsome dungeon, there to pine' . . 1 Henry VI. U. 5 

thus droops this lofty pine iHenry VI. ii. 3 

infest the sound pine, and divert. Troilus <§■ Cress, i. 3 
where yonder pine does stand. ..47Uorty<^C/eo. iv. jo 
and this pine is barked, that overtopped — iv. 10 

doth take the mountain pine Cymbeline, iv. 2 

makes both my body pine, and soul .... Pericles, i. 2 

PINED— she pined in thought ... Twelfth Aight, ii. 4 
dearth that I have pined in. Two Gen.of Verona,ii. 7 

the fool hath much pined away Lear, i. 4 

and not for Tybalt, Juliet pined. /(o?Heo S- Juliet, v. 3 

PINFOLD— a pound, a pinfold ..TwoGen.ofVer. i. 1 
if I had thee in Lipsbury pinfold Lear, ii. 2 

PINING maidens' groans, tor HenryV. ii. 4 

wretch, pining and pale before .. — iv. (chorus) 
see, the pining malady of France ..\HenryVl. iii. 3 

PINION of his wing Antony Sr Cleopatra, iii. 10 

pinion him like a thief, bring him Lear, iii. 7 

PINIONED— must be pinioned MeiryWives, iv. 2 

I will not wait pinioned at your./l>i/o)i!/<5 C/eo. v. 2 

PINK— Bacchus, with pink eyne .. — li. 7 (song) 
[link of courtesy. Pink for flower.. /?omeo <§-./«/. ii. 4 

PINKED porringer fell off Henry VIII. v. 3 

PIN i^JAOE— sail like my pinnace ..Merry W.vis, i. 3 
whilst our pinnace auchors in 2 Henry VI. iv. I 



PIN 



PINNACE-being captain of a pinnace .2 lien. I' J. ir. I 

riNNKD witli rushes Coi-Mnmis, i. 4 

I'INSE— fairies will not pinse yM\..Menij H'lri's, v, .5 
PINT— fortli your half pint of Wood. . ConnUinus, v. i 

notiiast a pint, as I am a soUiier Otfwtln^ ii. 3 

PINT-POT; peace, good ticlile-brain.l He»)!//r. ii. 4 

P[ONEDrC(,/.KH<.J and twilled brims . Tempest, iv. 1 

riONEEK-have the pioneers given o'er?. Hen. f. iii. 2 

a worthy pioneer 1 once more remove ..Hamlel,i. 5 

if the general camp, pioneers and all . . Qlhdlo, iii. 3 

PIOUS sir, you will demand Meas.fnrMeas, i. 4 

in pious rage, the two delinquents.. . . Macbeth, iii. 6 
is received of the most pious Edward — iii. 6 

and is not this course pious? Henry Vlll. ii. 2 

and he whose pious breath seeks .Timonof Aih. iv. 3 
paid more pious debts to heaven ..Cijinbeline, iii. 3 

[Co/.J play_ the pious innocent Pericles, iv. 4 

like sanctified and pious bonds Hamltt, i. 3 

tlie first row of the pious chanson -~ ii. 2 

devotion's visage, and pious action — iii. I 

PIP— two and thuty,— a pip out? . . Tamins: ofSh. i. 2 

PIPE is as a maiden's organ Twelfth Night, i. 4 

rather hear the tabor and the pipe ..Much Ado, ii. 3 

playing on pipes of corn Mid. N. 's Dream, ii. 2 

shepherds pipe on oaten.. Love's L. Lost, v. 2 (song) 
childish treble, pipes and v^hisiles. As you Like it, ii. 7 
dance again after tabor and pipe. Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

rumour is a pipe blown by 2Henr!//r. (indue.) 

musical tiian tue pipe of Hermes Henry V. iii. 7 

and split thy brazen pipe .. Troilus 4-Cressida, iv. 5 
into a pipe small as an eunuch ....Coriolanus,in. 2 
when we have stuffed these pipes.. .. — v. 1 
spouting blood in many pipes ....Julius Cresar, ii. 2 
then we may go pipe for justice. . TitusAndron. iv. 2 

we may put up our pipes Romeo 4' Juliet, iv. 5 

they are not a pipe for fortune's finger. Hamte<, iii. 2 

will you play upon this pipe? — iii. 2 

am easier to be played ou than a pipe?. . — iii. 2 

then put up your pipes in your bag Othello, iii. 1 

PIPER— strike up, pipers Much Ado, v. 4 

PIPE-AVINE— in pipe-wine first.. il/erryJrines, iii. 2 

PIl'ING to us in vain .. = Mid. N.'s Dream, ii. 2 

this weak piping time of peace .... Richard III. i. i 

PIPPINS and cheese to come MerryiVives, i. 2 

we will eata last year's pippin iHenrylf. v. 3 

PIRATE -notable pirate I TwelfthNight, v. 1 

never yet was thief, or jiirate — v. 1 

like the sanctimonious pirate.... A/ecw. /or iV/eas. i. 2 
one Ragozine, a most notorious pirate — iv. 3 
I mean piratess and then, there.. A/ei'.o/Tenice, i. 3 

pirates may make cheap ilienryVI. i. 1 

Bargulns the strong lilyrian pirate.. — iv. 1 

and Suffolk dies by pirates — iv. 1 

and boarded with a pirate — iv. 9 

you wrangling pirates, that fall o\it. Richard III. i. 3 
famous pirates, make the sea ....Antony S^Cleo. i. 4 

rid all the sea of pirates — ii. 6 

serve the great pi rate Valdes Pericles, iv. 2 

or that these pirates, (not enougli — iv. 3 

a crew of pirates came and rescued me — v. 1 

a pirate of very warlike Hamlet, iv. 6 (letter) 

PISA, renowned for grave citizens.. Taming of Sh.\.\ 

for I have Pisa left, and am to — i. 1 

Neapolitan, or mean man of Pisa.... — i. 1 
of Pisa, sir; son to Vincentio (rep.)., — ii. 1 
within rich Pisa walls, as any one .. — ii. ) 

Vincentioof Pisa (rfp. iii. 2) — iii. 1 

ever been at Pisa? Ay, sir (rep.) .... — iv. 2 
come, sir; we'll better it in Pisa .... — iv. 4 
my dwelling— Pisa; and bound I am — iv. 5 
his father is come from Pisa (rep.) .. — T. I 

PISANIO, when shall we hear Cymbeline,i. 4 

how now, Pisanio? Doctor, your service — i. 6 

fare thee well, Pisanio — i. 6 

what ho, Pisanio! {rep.) — i. 7 

how now, Pisanio? (rep. iii. 2) — ii. 3 

hear'st thou, Pisanio? he is at Milford — iii. 2 
true Pisanio, (who long'st, like me. . — iii. 2 
Pisanio! man! where is Posthnmus? — iii. 4 
thy mistress, Pisanio, hath played — iii. 4 (let.) 
that part, thou, Pisanio, must act — iii. 4 (let.) 
tliat man of hers, Pisanio, her old .. — iii. 6 
Pisanio, thou that stand'st so for .... — iii.. 5 
from the mountain top Pisanio showed — iii. 6 

if Pisanio have mapped it truly — iv. 1 

Pisanio, I'll now taste of thy drug .. — iv. 2 
Pisanio, all curses madded Hecuba. . — iv. 2 
Pisanio hath with his forged letters (rep.)— iv. 2 

Pisanio might have killed thee — iv. 2 

Pisanio? 'tis he, and Cloten — iv. 2 

this is Pisanio's deed, and Cloten's.. — iv. 2 
O Pisanio! every good servant does — v. 1 

if Pisanio have, said she, given his .. — v. 6 

PISH [Coi.A'n(.-push] at chance Much Ado,v. 1 

P tSMIRE— stung with pismires I Henri/ir. i. 3 

PISS- blame me to piss my talliw?..jl/errifrrjBes,v. 5 
PISSING— a pissing while.. 7-//'n Gen. n./Terrma, iv. 4 
PiSSING-CONDUIT run nothing.. 2 ff^nri/Cf. iv. e 
PISTOL— Nym, and Pistol (rep.) ..Merry Wives, i. 1 

Pistol, did you pick master — i. 1 

is this true. Pistol ? — i. 1 

no quips now, Pistol — i.3 

watch the door with pistols — iv. 2 

pistol him, pistol him Tu'elflhNight. ii. 5 

and with his pistol kills a sparrow.. 1 Weiiry/r. ii.4 

but take my pistol, if thou wilt — v. 3 

ancient Pistol's below (rep.) 2Henryiy. ii. 4 

Pistol. No, good captain Pistol — ii.4 

Pistol, be quiet. Sweet knight — ii.4 

there's one Pistol come from the court — v. 3 
how now. Pistol? God save you (rep.) — v. 3 
sir John, I am thy Pistol, and thy triend— v. 3 
then Pistol, lay thy head in Furies' lap — v. 3 
when Pistol lies,dotliis; and fig me — V. 3 

Pistol, I will double-charge thee with — v. 3 
Pistol: awny, Bardolph: come. Pistol — V. 3 
that you and Pistol beat among you. . — v. 4 
caine liere, Pistol, stand behind me., — v. 5 

Pistol speaks naimht but truth — v. .^ 

come lieutenant Pistol; come, Bardolph — T. 5 



[ 574 ] 

PISTOly and you friends Henry I', ii. 1 

liere comes ancient Pistol and his wife — ii. I 
Pistol's cock is up, and flashing fire.. — ii. 1 
if you LTou-roiil with me, Pistol .... — ii. I 
mine liost Pistol, you must come .. .. — ii. 1 
for Pistol, he hath a killing tongue.. — iii- 2 

he is called, ancient Pistol (rep.) — iii. G 

my name is Pistol called. It sorts well — iv. I 
lousy, pragging knave. Pistol, which — v. 1 
Got bless you, ancient Pistoll you scurvy— v. 1 

once within my pistol's length Pericles, i. \ 

PISTOL- PROOF, sir: you shall IHenrylV. ii.4 

PIT — brine pits, barren place Tempest, i. 2 

are all couched in a pit hard by . . Merry lyives, v. 3 

follow me into the pit — v. 4 

she is fallen into a pit of ink! MuchAdo, iy. 1 

and at the pit of Aclieron Macbeth, iii. .'i 

soon lie Richard in an earthy pit! . . Richard 11. iv. 1 

they'll fill a pit, as well as \ Henry IV. iv. 2 

enemies have beat us to the pit ..JuUusCa-sar, v. 5 

showed me this abhorred pit Titus Andron. 11. 3 

some loathsome pit (rep. ii. 4) — ii. 3 

detested, dark, blood-drinking pit .. — ii.4 
shows the ragged entrails of this pit — ii.4 
the swallowing womb of this deep pit — ii. 4 
overshades the mouth of that same pit — ii. 4 (let.) 
this is the pit, and this the elder tree — ii. 4 
drag them from the pit unto the prison — ii. 4 
what, are they in this pit? O wondrous — ii. 4 

there is the sulphurous pit, burning tear, iv. 6 

and grace to the profoundest pit I Hamlet, iv. .5 

a pit of clay for to be made (rep.) — v. 1 (song) 

PITCH- pour down stinking pitch Tempest, i. 2 

pitch me i' the mire _ — ii- 2 

the savour of tar nor of pitch — ii. 2 (song) 

of what validity and pitch soever. TwelfihKight.i. 1 

and pitch our evils there? Meas. forMeas. ii. 2 

they that touch pitch will be defiled. .W!(cA.Ji;o. iii. 3 
with two pitch balls stuck in ..Love's L. Lost, iii. 1 
I am toiling in a pitch; pitch, that .. — iv. 3 

how high a pitch his resolution Richard 11. i. 1 

by the name of pitch; this pitch IHenryir. ii. 4 

the word is, pitch and pay : Henry V. ii. 3 

such a spacious lofty pitch 1 Henry i'l. ii. 3 

hawks, which tiles the higher pitch. . — ii.4 
shall pitch a field, when we are dead — iii. 1 

plaee barrels of pitch upon the — v. 4 

and what a pitch she flew above .... 2 Henry VI. ii. 1 
thoughts above his falcon's pitch.... — ii. 1 
as, like to pitch, defile nobility .... — ii. I 

here pitch our battle, hence SHenryVl. v. 4 

here pitch our tents, even here .... Richard I II. v. 3 

into what pitch he please Henry Vlll. ii. 2 

pitch their brave pavilions ..Troilus 6r Cress, (prol.) 
mistress, and mount her pitch . . TitusAndron, ii. I 
I cannot bound a pitch above ..Romeo Sf Juliet, i. 4 

so will I turn her virtue into pitch OUiello, ii. 3 

PITCHED-have pitched a toil . . Love'sh. Lost, iv. 3 

have I not in a pitched battle Taming ofSh.i. 2 

sharp stakes, pitched out of hedges . . 1 Henry VI. i 1 

there are squadrons pitched — iv. 2 

loss of some pitched battle 3 Henry VI. iv. 4 

lands thou hast lie in a pitched field. Timonof Ath. i. 2 

PITCH ERS have ears Taming of Shrew, iv. 4 

with the child. Pitchers have ears .Richard III. ii. 4 

PITCHY— defiles the pitchy nightl . . All's Well, iy. 4 

whose pitchy mantle over- veiled.... IHenci/r/. ii. 2 

I will sort a pitchy day for thee ZHmryVl. v. 6 

PITE, I pray you; it is goot for Henry V. v. 1 

PITEOUS— tell your piteous heart Tempest, i. 2 

his innocent nose in piteous chase.. •ts!/')iit*e(7,ii. 1 

'twere most piteous to be wild Winter'sTale, ii. 1 

the most piteous cry of the poor souls! — iii. 3 
piteous plainings of the pretty babes. Com. o/"Frr. i. 1 
or, in thy piteous heart plant thou.. ftc/iard /?. v. 3 

or piteous they will look like \ Henry VI. i. 2 

alas, it was a piteous deed! ZHenryVI. i. 4 

O piteous spectacle! O bloody times! — ii. 5 
liearthe piteous moan that Rutland Richardlll. i. 2 
most arch deed of piteous massacre . . — ;v. 3 

his piteous and unpitied end — iv. 4 

O piteous spectacle! O noble C«sar!.JM;.C^<ar,iii.2 

told the most piteous tale of Lear Lear, v. 3 

misadventured piteous overthrows Rom. r^-JuZ. (prol.) 
a piteous corse, a bloody piteous corse — iii. 2 
woeful sympathy! piteous predicament! — iii. 3 
true ground of all tliese piteous woes — v. 3 

with a look so piteous in purport Hamlet, ii. I 

he raised a sigh so piteous and profound — ii. 1 

lest, with this piteous action, you — iii. 4 

PITEOUSLY-pr'ythee, piteously..Jn/on!/ <S-aeo.iv.l 1 
to hear, yet piteously performed.. TitusAndron. v. 1 

PITFALL, nor the gin Macbeth, iv. 2 

PITH -that's my pith of business .Meas. for Meas. i. 5 
marked flot what s the pitli of all. Taming of Sh. i. 1 

or not arrived to, pith Henry V. iii. (chorus) 

the pith and marrow of our attribute . . Hamlet, i. 4 

enterprizesof great pith and moment — iii. I 

let it feed even on the pith of life — iv. 1 

arms of mine had seven years' pith .... Othello, i. 3 
PITHLESS arms, like to a withered.. IHcnriy^'/. ii. 5 
PITHY— pithy, and effectual.. Tommg-o/ Shrein, iii. ) 

PITIE— ayez pitie de moy! Henry V. iv. 4 

PITIED thee, took pains to make Tempest, i. 2 

be lamented, pitied, and excused .... MuchAdo, iv. 1 
what 'tis to pity, and be pitied . . As you Like it, ii. 7 

know how far I moy be pitied All's Well, v. 3 

better than to be pitied of thee . Winler'sTale, iii. 2 

Duncan was pitied of Macbeth Macbeth, iii. 6 

barbarism itself have pitied him....R/c/ia>d II. v. 2 

a woman to be pitied much ZHenryVI. iii. I 

and pitied me, and kindl;y kissed. . Richard III. ii. 2 
but all was either pitied in him ..Henry VI II. ii. 1 

freshly pitied in our memories — v. 2 

such to be pitied and o'erwrested. Troilus f( Cress, i. 3 
your plight is pitied of him .Antony S^ Cleopatra, v. 2 
our name, are therefore to be pitied . . — v. 2 

thus, unknown, pitied or hated Cymbelinc, v. 1 

neighboured, pitied, and relieved Lettr,\. I 

hath pitied, no blown ambition — iv. 4 



PIT 



PITIED- her mood will needs be pi tied. Huintef, iv. 5 

PITIED'ST— thou pltied'st Rutland.3Henri/r/. ii. 6 

PITIES— O, ay; and pities them. ru'oGen. 0/ Fer. v.'i 

perchance, shall dry your pities.. Winter'sTale, ii. 1 

what beggar pities not? Richard III. i. 4 

if any power pities wretched tears .. TitusAnd. iii. I 

if any one relieves or pities him — v. 3 

here's a niglit pities neither wise men ..tear, iii. 2 

PITIFUL-be a pitiful lady Merry Wives, iii. 3 

how pitiful I deserve Much Ado, v. i (song) 

such pitiful dole over them AsyouLikeit, i 2 

that pitiful rumour may report ....All's WM, iii. 2 

the ballad is very pitiful Winter'sTale, iv. 3 

though my case be a pitiful one .... — i v. 3 
scarf up the tender eye of pitiful Aa,y .Macbeth, iii. 2 
all swoln and ulcerous, pitiful to the eye — iv. 3 
good ground, be pitiful, and hurt ..King John, iv. 3 
thou'dst be more pitiful; but navr .. Richard 11. v. 2 

for a pitiful bald crown! I Henry I V. ii. 4 

I did never see such pitiful rascals . . — iv. 2 
should be pitiful, if you be not? ..IHenryVl. iii. 1 

with the pitiful complaints — iv. 1 (letter) 

soft, mild, pitiful, and inflexible ....ZHenryVI. i. 4 
be pitiful, dread lord, aid grant .... — iii. 2 

or Edward's soft and pitiful R'ir.hard III. i. 3 

where he meant to ruin, pitiful . . Henry VI IT v. 2 
let all pitiful goers-between be. Troilus ^ Cresi. iii. 2 

you see not, they are pitiful JuliusCcesar.\,i. I 

so kind, but something pitiful! TitusAndronicus, ii. 3 
be pitiful to my condemned sons.... — iii. I 
what pitiful cries tliey made to us .... Pericles, ii. 1 

a sight most pitiful in the meanest teor, i v. 6 

you know, this is a pitiful case. Romeo Si Juliet, iv. •'> 
pitiful sightl here lies the county slain — v.Z 
and shows a most pitiful ambition.... Ham/e^ iii. 2 
'twas pitiful, 'twas wondrous pitiful.... 0//ieWo, i. 3 

'tis pitiful: but vet lago knows — v. 2 

PITIFUL-HEARTED Titan \HenrnlV. ii. 4 

PITIFULLY-him most pitifully.il'/err.v>r/j;es, iv. 2 
are great, be pitifully good.... Timonof Athens, iii. 5 
pitifully disaster the cheeks ....Antony i^Cleo. ii. 7 

they are so pitifully sodden Pericles, i v. 3 

PITILESS— be proud and pitiless? A^ you L,ke it, iii. A 
a fairy, pitiless, and rough . . Comedy of Errors, iv. 2 

even for his sake am I pitiless Titus Andron. ii. 3 

bide the pelting of this pitiless storm teor, iii. 4 

PITTANCB-and slender pittance. TamingofSli. iv. 4 
PITTIE-WARD LKn*.] the park- ward.. l/erryfF. iii.l 
PITTIKINS-od's pittikinsi can it be.Cymbetine, iv. 2 

PITY— alack, for pity ! Tempest, i. 2 

to the wind, whose pity, sighing back.. — i. 2 
pity move my father to be inclined.... — i. 2 

sir, have pity — i. 2 

no more pity in him than a dog. TwoGen.ofVer. ii. 3 

pity the dearth that — ii. 7 

I pity much your grievances — iv. 3 

cannot choose but pity her (rep.) .... — iv. 4 
'tis pity, love should be so contrary.. — iv. 4 

why do I pity him that — iv. 4 

because I love him, I must pity him — iv. 4 

'twere pity two such friends — v. 4 

I will not say, pity me. ... Merry Wives, ii. I (letter) 

but you should pity me Twelfth Night, i . 5 

an' we do not, it is pity of our lives.. — ii. 5 

I pity you — iii.l 

that very oft we pity enemies — iii.l 

tliere will be pity taken ou you..Meas./orilfeas. i. 2 

it is pity of her life — ii. 1 

yet snow some pity — ii. 2 

for then I pity those I do not know — ii 2 

'tis pity of him — ii. 3 

if my brother wrought by my pity . . — iii. 2 
one has my pity; not a jot the other — iv. 2 

they seem to pity the lady MuchAdo, ii. 3 

if I do not take pity of her — .ii. 3 

or else it were pity but they should. . — iii. 3 

I take thee for pity — y. 4 

ah me, for pity! whata &rea,m. Mid. N.'s Drea7n,i\. 3 
it were pity of my life (rep. v. 1) .... — iii.l 
tlie more tiie pity, that some honest — jii. 1 
this you should pity, rather than .. — iii. 2 
if you have any pit.y, grace, or manners — iii. 2 
her dotage now I do begin to pity .. — iv. I 
beshrew my heart, but I pity the man — _v. 1 
not wounding, pity would not . .Love's L. Lost, iv. 1 
it were pity you should get your living — y. 2 
that were pity; I would entreat.. Mer.qf Venice, ii. 2 
uncapable of pity, void and empty .. — iv. 1 

glancing an eye of pity on his — ly. 1 

the more pity, that fools may DOt. As you Like it, 1. 2 
in pity of the eliallenger's youth — — i. 2 
and pity her for her good father's sake — i. 2 
to the people, and they pity her .... — i.3 
fair sir, I pity her, and wish for her — ii. 4 
know what 'tis to pity, and be pitied — ii. 7 
drops that sacred pity hath engendered — ii. 7 

though it be pity to see such — iii. 2 

pity me not; as, till that time (rep.) — iij. 5 

sweet Phoebe, pitv me — ii- 5 

do you pity him? no, he deserves no pity — ly. 3 

there commendations go with pity Jll'sWeU, i. 1 

'tis pity— what's pity? That w ishing — i. 1 

then give pity to her, whose state — i. 3 
without all termsof pity: speak .... — li. 3 
I'll have no more pity of his age ... . — .11. 3 
'tis pity, he is not hpnest — ui. 5 

1 do pity his distress in my smiles . . — v. 2 
show pity, or I die . . Taming.of Shrew, iii. 1 (gamut) 

'tis pity,' she's not honest Winter's Tale, ii. 1 

have done like offices of pity — .!} ■' 

vet with eyes of pity, not revenge! .. — m. 2 

I'll take it nil for pity — ii'- 3 

'tis pitv she lacks instructions — jv. 3 

though it be great pity, yet it is .. .. — iv. 3 

you pity not the state — v. 1 

excludes all pity from our Comedy of Errors, 1. I 

for we may pity, though not pardon — _ i. 1 
he, sir, that takes pity on decayed .. — iv. 3 

'tis pitv, that thou livest — v. 1 

pity , like a naked new-born babe Macbeth, 1.7 



PIT 



riTY— than jiity for mischance] Mnrhpili,u\, 4 

oi'soft petitions, pity, and remorse.. A'm4'7()/i», ii. 2 

tliis is pity now, tliut hanf^ed — ii. 2 

is't not pity, O my grieved friends!.. — v. 2 
to pity iiim, bereft and gelded of..., Richard 1 1, ii. 1 

OI what pity is it, tliat lie ~ iii. 4 

eliowing an outward pity — Iv. I 

that you in pity may dissolve — v. 1 

forget to pity him, lest thy pity — v. 3 

speak with me, pity me — v. 3 

let pity teach thee now — v. 3 

pity may move thee pardon to — v. 3 

great pity, so it was, that viUanou9..1H«ir!//r. i. 3 

laugliiug, I should pity him — ii. 2 

old (the more the pity), his white.... — ii. 4 

in kind heart and pity moved — iv. 3 

he hath a tear for pity 2 Henri/ IK iv. 4 

take pity of your town Henry K iii. 3 

where (O for pity!) we shall much — iv. (chorus) 

in pity of my hard distress \ Henry FI.M.b 

pity the city of London, pity U3l .... — iii. 1 
pity was all the fault that was ....^HenryVl. iii. 1 

too full of foolish pity — iii. 1 

liope you are not void of pity — iv. 7 

I will not have to do with pity — v. 2 

sweet Clifford, pity me! (rep.) iHenryVI. i.Z 

harmful pity, must be laid aside .... — ii. 2 
were it not pity, that this goodly.... — ii. 2 
in pity to the gentle kin" — ii. 2 

pity, God, this miserable agel (rfp.) — ii. 5 
not pity; for, at their hands (ri'p.) .. — ii. 6 
pitied'st Rutland, I will pity thee . . — ii. 6 
'twere pity, they should lose tlieir .. — iii. 2 

not that 1 pity Henry's misery — iii. 3 

niy P't.y hath been balm to heal .... — iv. 8 

neitlier pity, love, nor fear — v. 6 

more pity, that the eagle should. . . . Richard III. i. 1 

but knows some touch of pity — i. 2 

may move j'om' hearts to pity — i. 3 

1 spy some pity in thy loolcs — i. 4 

adieu; I pity thy complaining — iv. 1 

pity, you ancient stones, those tender — iv. I 
tear-falling pity dwells not in this eye — iv. 2 

if I die, no soul will pity me — v. 3 

find in myself no pity to myself — v 3 

tliose, that can pity, here may ..Henry VIII. (prol.) 
tliat thus far have come to pity me. . — ii. 1 

this is full of pity! — ii. 1 

it is a pity would move a monster .. — ii. 3 
so much the more must pity drop ... — ii. 3 

and to bestow your pity on me — ii. 4 

it' you have any justice, any pity.... — iii. I 

where no pity, no friends — iii. 1 

out of holy pity (rep.) — iii. 2 

would have some pity upon my — iv. 2 

childish pity to one man's lionour .. — v. 2 
as I shall pity, I could help! Troilus ^ Cressida, iv. 3 

let's leave the hermit pity — v. 3 

'tis pity, bounty had not eyes .. Timon o/.ilhens. i. 2 
'tis pity,— and so, intending other .. — ii. 2 

for pity IS the virtue of the law — iii. 6 

and pity tliee, dear Timon (rep.) .... — iv. 3 

pity not honoured age for his — iv. 3 

within tlie leaf of pity writ — iv. 3 

pity'ssleeping: strange times — . iv. 3 

in pity of our aged, and our youth . . — v. '2 
you luiglit leave pricking it for pity. Coriolanus, i. 3 
and wratli o'erwlielmed my pity .... — i. 9 
tlie people deserve sucli pity of him.. — iv. 6 

banish him, I said, 'twas pity — iv. 6 

his injury tlie gaoler to his pity .... — v. 1 
rather than pity note liow much .... — v. 2 

tlian pity to our prayers — v. 3 

pity to the general wrong {rep.') . . .JuliusCeesar, iii. 1 
all pity chuUed witli custom of fell.. — iii. 1 

1 perceive, you feel the dint of pity. . — iii. 2 
it were pity to cast them away ..Aniony^-Cleo.'i. 2 

it ispity of liira — i. 4 

pity me, Cliarmian, but donot — ii. 5 

heart in Rome does love and pity yoa — iii. 6 

he does pity, as constrained — iii. 1 1 

our care and pitv is so inucli upon you — v. 2 

no less in pity, than his glory — v. 2 

it iiad been picy, yon shouiu nave ..Cymbeline, i. 5 
bound to pity too. What do you pity — i. 7 

in me, deserves your pity? (rfp.) — i. 7 

doth strike my heart witli pity — i. 7 

took pity from most true — iii. 4 

as small a drop of pity as — iv. 2 

a thing of pity! Great nature — v. 4 

'tis pity, tliey should take liim for. . Titus And. ii. 3 
entreat her sliow a woman pity .... — ii. 3 

the lion, moved with pity — ii. 3 

for pity of mine age, wliose youth . . — iii. 1 
bootless to tliem, they'd not pity me — iii. 1 
devoid of pity, and, being so (je^.) .. — v. 3 

care of them, not pity of mysell Pericles, i- 2 

entreats you pity iiini; he asks — ii. 1 

now, by tlie gods, I pity his misfortune — ii. 3 
nor let pity, wliich even women have cast — iv. 1 

makes pity in your lovers (jcp.) — iv. 3 

their leave tliat I miglit pity him Lear, iii. 3 

pity! sir, where is the patience now .. — iii. G 

wlio IS too good to pity tliee — iii. 7 

foolsdo tliose villains pity — iv. 2 

let pity not be believed! — iv. 3 

in pity of his misery, to despatch — iv. Ii 

am pregnant to good pity — iv. c 

hadcliallenged pity of tlietn — iv. 7 

1 should even die with pity — iv. 7 

tremble, touches us not with pity — v. 2 

and pity 'tis you lived at odds . . Romeo ^Juliet, i. 2 

is there no pity sitting in the — iii. 5 

pity me not, but lend thy serious Hamlet, i . 5 

tis pity, and pity 'tis, 'tis true — ii.'i 

and the more pity; that great folks .... — v. 1 

I loved lier, that she did pity them Othello, i. 3 

as the other: 'tis pity of him — ii. 3 

and 'tis great pity, that the noble Moor — ii. 3 
the pity of it, lagol O lago, the pity of it — iv. l 



[ 575 ] 



PITYING my fatlier's loss lUnryl'lll. ii. 

our mistress sorrows we were pitying — ii. 

or pitying, threatening the other Cnrinlnnus, i. 

pitying the pangs of barred Hlfeetinn. ( ■(/'"'"'"'"'i '• 
PI [TS— Aiulronious, surnaniedPius.7*i7//s^//rfro7/. i. 
PIX-ljCW./C/i/.-PAX] stolen a pix Hemyy. iii. 

for pix of little price — iii. 

PlZZr.E— neat's tongue bull's pizzle.l WcHri/f f. ii. 
PL/ACK— and burn in many places .... Tempest, i. 

barren place, and fertile — i. 

or that we quit tills place — ii. 

the most opportune place — iv. 

here, to this place (»cp.) — iv. 

make this place Paradise — iv. 

enforce them to this place — v. 

you an officer fit for the place.. Th'o Gen. ofVer. i. 

never welcome to a place — ii. 

and place it for lier chief virtue — iii. 

hangman's boys in the market-place — iv. 

and Keep place together Merry Wives, ii. 

appointed them contrary places .... — ii. 

by mistaking the place where I .... — ii. 

yet, in other places, slie enlargeth .. — ii. 

autlientic in your place and person.. — ii. 

I never heard a man of his place.... — iii. 

at de place I did appoint? — iii. 

this is the place appointed — iii. 

I liave directed you to wrong places — iii. 

I will search impossible places — iii. 

for the remembrance of such places.. — iv. 

hours travel from this very place. Twelfth Night, i. 

give us the place alone — i. 

IS there no respect of place — ii. 

let all the rest give place — ii. 

say, my love can give no place — ii. 

telling them, I know my place — ii. 

hurt liim in eleven places — iii. 

if I be lapsed in this place — iii. 

from my true place in your favour.. — v. 

each circumstance of place, time — v. 

into the bottom of my place ....Meas.J'&rMeas. i. 

though you change your place — i, 

whether the tyranny be in his place — i. 

my absolute power and place here in — i. 

ho! peace ije in this place! — i. 

a novice of this place, and the — i. 

upon his place, and with full line .. — i. 

time cohered with place, or place with — ii. 

how long have you been in this place — ii. 

or give up your place — ii. 

to some more fitter place — ii. 

Oplace! O form! how often — ii. 

or own great place, could fetch your — ii. 

and my place i' the state — ii. 

and the place answer to convenience — iii. 

your appointment, go in your place — iii. 

at that place call upon me — iii. 

Oplace and greatness, millions of .. — iv. 

and advise him for a better place — iv. 

your provost knows the place where he — v. 

respect to your great place! — v. 

we'll borrow place of him — v. 

here's one in place I cannot pardon — v. 

employ thee in a worthier place .... — v. 

have left their places vacant iluch Ado, I. 

here's no place for you maids — ii. 

dost thou not suspect my place? — iv. 

when time and place shall serve — v. 

to that place the sharp (rop.) Mid. N.'s Dr. i. 

Lysander and myself will fly this place — _i. 

wliat worser place can I beg (rep.) .. — ii. 

and the ill counsel of a desert place — ii. 

a marvellous convenient place for our — iii. 

but I will not stir from this place .. — iii. 

these lovers seek a pla<;e to fight .... — iii. 

shifting every place, and darest not — iii. 

and take your places, ladies — v. 

as lion come in strife into this place — v. 

will we sing, and bless this place — v. 

fit in his place and time Love's L.Lnst, i. 

then for the place where (rep.) — i. 1 (lettei 

own wish wish I tliee in every place! — ii. 

melancholy, valour gives thee place — iii. 

trusted, nor to one place Merchant of Venice, i. 

a rival place with one of them — i. 

in such a place, such sum, or sums . . — i. 

misconstrued in the place I go to — ii. 

I think they call the place — iii. 

in place of lord Bassaiiio — iii. 

tliat stand in better place, garnished — iii. 

give him courteous conduct to this place — iv. 

you are welcome; take your place .. — iv. 

from heaven upon the place beneath — iv. 

bars me the place of a brother As you f^ilie it, i . 

for here is the place appointed for .. — i. 

I fill up a place, whicli may be better — i. 

counsel you to leave this place — i. 

to the which place a poor sequestered — ii. 

their assigned and native dwelling place — ii. 

ehow me the place — ii. 

this is no place, this house is but .... — ii. 

I was in a better place — ii. 

in this desert place buy entertainment — ii. 

I like this place, and willingly could — ii. 

he hath strange places crammed with — ii. 

are you native of this place? — iii. 

in this place of the forest — iii. 

west of this place, down in — iv. 

right hand, brings you to this place.. — iv. 

how I came into that desert place .. — iv. 

that they take place, when virtue's ..AlVsWell, i. 

as creatures of another place — i. 

I fill a place, I know't — .i- 

wliy, what place make you special .. — li. 

lowest idace when virtuous things (rep.) — ii. 

you know your places well — iii- 

that leads dim to these places — iii- 

that time and place, with this deceit — iii. 

coiiflrnied by the rector of the place.. — iv. 

tube the olhcer at a plage there called — iv. 



PLA 



PLACE luid means for every All's Hell, iv. 3 

to whicli place we have convenient .. — iv.4 
but in all places else, your .... Taming of Ulirew, i. I 

as yourself were still in place — i. 2 

to supiily the places at the table .... — iii. 2 

shall supply the bridegroom's place.. — iii. 2 

in liow miry a place — iv. 1 

what, is there such a place? — iv. 2 

and I had thee in place where, thou.. — iv. 3 

and place your hands below your.... — v. 2 
standing in rich place, I multiply. Wintrr'sTale, i. 2 

and thy places shall still neighbour.. — i. 2 

I'll not call a creature of thy place.. — ii. 1 

to some remote and desert place .... — ii. 3 

strangely to some place, where chauce — ii. 3 

hurried here to this place — iii. 2 

besides, this place is famous for .... — iii. 3 

places remote enough are in Bohemia — iii. 3 

tliou shalt accompany us to the place — iv. I 

too noble for this place — iv. 3 

have you thought on a place — iv. 3 

the place of your dwelling — iv. 3 

let's from this place: what? look upon — v. 3 
or any place that harbours men. . CnwedynfErr. i. 1 

in what safe place you have bestowed — i. 2 

been Dromio to-day in my place .... — iii. 1 

I'll meet you at that place — iii. I 

he took this place for sanctuary .... — v. 1 

the place of death and sorry — v. 1 

assembled in this place, that by — v. I 

where the place? Upon the heath Macbeth, i. 1 

and you whose places are the nearest — i. 4 

nor time, nor place, did then adhere — i. 7 

bring these daggers from the place?.. — ii. 2 

but this place is too cold for hell .... — ii. 3 

towering in her pride of place — ii. 4 

to gain our place [Co/.ivn/. -peace] .. — iii. 2 

here is a place reserved, sir — iii. 4 

in a place from whence himself — iv. 2 

Ihope, in no place sounsauctified .. — iv. 2 

in measure, time, and place — v. 7 

never stir from off this place King.John, i. 1 

stands upon a slipiiery place — iii. 4 

all places that the eye of heaven .... Richard IJ.'i.Z 

to drop them still upon one place.... — iii. 3 

here in this place. Ill set — iii. 4 

fellow, give place: here is no longer — v. 5 

choose out some secret place — v. 6 

appoint them a place ofmeeting ,,..\HeurylV. i. 2 

and in such a place, at such a time . . — i. 3 

wh.at do you call the place? — i. 3 

and thy place shall be honourable .. — ii. 4 

current in this place dammed up ... . — iii. 1 

thy place in council thou hast — iii. 2 

hut a braver place in my heart's — iv. 1 

when yet you were in place — v. I 

doth this become your place iHenrylV. ii. 1 

and he holds his place — ii. 2 

at the old place, my lord — ii. 2 

or it ivill seek me in another place .. — ii. 3 

or to the place of difference call — iv. 1 

misuse the reverence of your place .. — iv. 2 

condition are you? and of what place — iv. 3 

the dungeon your place,— a place deep — iv. 3 

tliou hast a better place in his atiection — iv. 4 

immediate from thy place and blood — iv. 4 

notiles then should hold their places — v. 2 

your highness pleased to forget my place — v. 2 

that misbecame my place, my person — v. 2 

in little place, a million Henry I', i. (chorus) 

we died at such a place — iv. 1 

aught else but place, degree, and term — iv. 1 

will it give place to flexure and low.. — iv. I 

you know your places: God be — iv. 3 

now in London place him — v. (chorus) 

it was in a place where I could not.. — v. 1 

not the gift to woo in other places — v. 2 

that follows our places, stojis the .... — v. 2 

each hath his place and function .... 1 Henry VI. i. \ 

stand thou as Daupliin in my place — i. 2 

to carry thee out of tliis place — i.3 

draw, men, for all this privileged place — i.3 

where is best plaee to make our — i. 4 

sirs, take your places, and be vigilant — ii. 1 

some place but weakly guarded — ill 

he liears him on the place's privilege — ii. 1 

long continuance in a settled place.. — ii. ,') 

this place commands my patience .. — iii. 1 

at Eltham Place I told your majesty — iii. 1 

be wary how yon placft your words. . — iii. 2 

bestow you in some better place .... — iii. 2 

set thy statue in some Iioly place — iii. 3 

France were no place for Henry's .. — iii. 3 

in our coronation take your place .. — iii. 4 

my cornets— were in Talbot's place!.. — iv. 3 

place barrels of pitch upon the — v. 4 

greatness of his place be gi'ief to us ..^HenryVl. i. 1 

if Somerset be unworthy of the place — i.3 

his pleasure, will resign my place .. — i.3 

though in tills place most master wear — i.3 

if 1 be appointed for the place — i.3 

combat, in convenient place — i.3 

unto the place of execution — ii.3 

as place duke Humphrey for the king's — iii.-l 

lords, take your places; and, I pray — iii. 2 

rain of heaven wet this place — iii. 2 

the civilest place of all this isle- — iv. 7 

no home, no place to fly to — iv. 8 

give place, by heaven, thou shalt .... — v. I 

but did usurp the place SHenryVJ. i. 2 

rear it in the place your father's .... — ii. 6 

thy place is filled, thy sceptre — iii. 1 

and support king Edward s place — iii. I 

their rooms, ere I can place myself.. — iii. 2 

heard, that she was there in place.... — iv. 1 

choosing me, when Clarence is in place — iv. 6 

Henry's" body, and supply his place.. — iv. 

riddles sort not with this place — v..') 

that place, than earth (rep.) Richard III. i. 2 

poison from ho sweet a place — j. 2 



PLACE, and those that have (rrp.^. . Wrimrdlir. iii. 1 

place: did JuUus Cajsar build tlmt place — iii. 1 

begin that place; wliicli, since — iii. I 

thou didst usurp my plucc, and dust — iv. 4 

buys a place next to the king Henri/ 1' 1 1 1, i. I 

his mind and place infecting one .... — " !■ ' 

arise, and take place by us — '. - 

'tis but the fate of place — i- - 

place you that side, I'll take — i. 4 

more worthy this place tlian myself — i. 4 

not be so sick tliongh, for his place.. — ii. 2 

a woman of less place might ask .... — ii. 2 

in this man's place before him? — ii. 2 

murmurers, there's places of rebuke. . — ii. 2 

most convenient place that I can think of — ii. 2 

'tis a tender place, and I must leave her — ii. 2 

you sign yonr place and calling — ii. 4 

alas! our places, the way of our .... — iii. 1 

for if I did take place, 1 do — iii. 2 

with the place and honours — iii. 2 

chosen lord chancellor iu your place — iii. 2 

to a prepared place in the choir .... — iv. 1 

Buifer a man of his place, and so near — v. 2 

private conscience, and his place — v. 2 

once think his place becomes thee not — v. 2 

is this a place to roar in? — v. 3 

I made good my place ; at length .... — v- 3 
here, here's an excellent place ..Troilus ^- Cress, i. 2 

mighty for thy place and sway — i. 3 

priority, and place, insisture — i. 3 

stand in authentic place? — i. 3 

in full as proud a place as — i. 3 

they place before his hand — i. 3 

to warrant in our native place! — ii. 2 

mnve the question of our place — ii. 3 

as place, riches, favour, prizes of .. .. — iii. 3 

keeps place with thought — iii. 3 

privileged by my place, and message — iv. 4 

in what place of the field doth — iv. 5 

this place is dangerous; the time right — v. 2 
that might have known my place. Timon of Atk. iii. 3 

the pUice, which I have feasted — iii. 4 

yoiu' diet shall be in all places alike — iii. 6 

ere we can agree upon the first place — iii. 6 

place thieves, and give them title .... — iv. 3 

■why this spade? this place? — iv. 3 

I took note of the place, it cannot.... — v. I 

by all description tliis should be the place — v. 4 
in these several places of the city ... . Coriolanus, i. I 

than by a place below the first — i. 1 

when he shall stand for his place .... — ii. 1 

nay, keep your place — ii. 2 

arriving at place of potency — ii. 3 

to be set hijjh in place we did — ii. 3 

here's no place for you (rep.') — iv. o 

all places yield to him ere he sits .... — iv. 7 
in every place, save here in Italy ..Julius Cn^sar, i. 3 

bv the richt and virtue of my place . . — ii. I 

I'll get me to a place more void — ii. 4 

bnt one in all doth hold his place .... — iii. 1 

so please him come unto this place . . — iii. I 

no place will please me so — iii. 1 

a place in the common wealth — i ii. 2 

there will a worse come in his place.. — iii. 2 

look! in this place, ran Cassius' dagger — iii. 2 

we'll burn his body in the holy place — iii. 2 

if you give place to accidental evils .. — iv. 3 

of force, give place to better — iv. 3 

content to visit other places — v. 1 

to such whose place is imder us .. Antony^ Clen. i. 2 

the while, I'll place you — ii. 7 

a lower place, note well, may — iii. 1 

Sossius, one of my place in Syria .... — iii. 1 

from which place, we may the number — iii. 8 

earnsaplacei' the story — iii. 11 

hie lips on that unworthy place — iii. 11 

shall hang in what place you please — v. 2 
I'll place it upon this fairest prisoner. Ci/mte/ijif, i.2 

that it is place, which lessens — iii. 3 

which attends in iilace of greater state — iii. 3 

this place? mine action, and thine own? — iii. 4 

glad you think of other place — iii. 4 

by this rude place we live in — iii. 6 

1 am near to the place where they . . — iv. 1 

in this place we left them — iv. 2 

distinction of place 'tween high and low — iv. 2 

accommodiited by the place — v. 3 

he would change places with his officer — v. 4 

was wife to your place — v. 5 

that place them on the truth of girls and — v. 5 

to attain in suit the place of his bed.. — v. 5 

nor the time, nor place, will serve.... — v. s 

he would have well liecomed this place — v. 6 

till from forth this place I lead Tilus Andrun. i. 2 

would vouch't in any place but here — i. 2 

have 'ticed me hither to this place .. — ii. 3 

own hands kill me in this place — ii. 3 

a very fatal place it seems to me .... — ii. 4 

ay, such a place there is, where we . . — iv. I 

suhstitnlecl in the place of mine — iv. 2 

draw nigh, and take j'our places .... — v. 3 

from the place where you — v. 3 

to place upon the volume of your deeds. /"cricfej, ii. 3 

so yon are,) here take .your place — ii. 3 

sir, yond's your place — ii. 3 

here is a thing too young for such a place — iii. ) 
heart and place of general wonder — iv. (Gow.) 

in such a place as this, she being once gone — iv. 5 

this house to be a place of such re-'ort .... — iv. 6 

and are the governor of this iilace — iv. 6 

hrinf* me to some private place — iv. 6 

free from this unhallowed place — iv. 6 

thou hold'st a place. for which — iv. 6 

safely from tills place deliver me! — iv. 6 

if I can place thee, I will — iv. 6 

here we lier place — v. (Gower) 

your place? i am governor of this place.. — v. i 

from the deck you may discern the place — v. 1 

our nature nor our place can bear Lear., i. 1 

1 would prefer bim to a better place — i. I 



PLACE you where you shall hear Lmr, i. 2 

come place him here by me — i. 4 

of nature from the fixed place — i. 4 

sir, fly this place — ii. I 

no place, that "uard, and most unusual.. — ii. 3 

so much thy place mistook to set — ii. 4 

ere I was risen from the place that — ii. 4 

to no more will I give place, or notice.... — ii. 4 

Iiere is the ijlace, iuy lord — iii. 4 

man of justice, take thy place — iii. 6 

corruption in the placel false justicer .. — iii. u 
from that place I shall no leading need.. — iv. \ 

come on, sir; here's the place — iv. U 

change places; and handy-dandy — iv. 6 

time and place will be fruitfully — iv. 6 (letter) 
supply the place for your labour — iv. 6 flelter) 

1 am mainly ignorant what place this is — iv. 7 
my brother s way to the forefeiided place? — v. 1 

her father, requires a fitter place — v. 3 

the commission of my place and person . . — v. 3 

youth, place, and eminence, despite — v. 3 

the dark and vicious place where thee. . . . — v. 3 
I'll watch her place of stand . ... Romeo 4' Juliet, i. 5 
and the place death, considering \vho — ii. 2 
withdraw into some private place.... — iii. 1 
together with the terror of the place — iv. 3 

to lie discoloured by this place of peace? — v. 3 
this is the place, there, wliere the torch — v. 3 
as the time and place doth make against — v. 3 
from Mantua, to this same place .... — v. 3 
what made your master in this place? — v. 3 
act and place \_Knt.-sect and force] may..Hamte(, i. 3 
the very place puts toys of desperation .. — i. 4 

by time, by means, and place — ii. 2 

I must be idle; get you a place — iii. 2 

will but skin and film the ulcerous place — iii. 4 
bestow this place on us a little while .... — iv. I 

seek him i' the other place yourself — iv, 3 

in many places gives me superfluous death — iv. 5 

no place, indeed, should murder — iv. 7 

I am worth no worse a place Olhello, i. 1 

and my place, have in tnem power — i. 1 

not meet, nor wholesome to my place. . .. — i. 1 
neither my place, nor aught I heard of. . — i. 3 
conduct them, you best know the place — i. 3 
the fortitude of the place is best known.. — i. 3 
due reference of place, and exhibition .. — i. 3 
toget his place, and to plume up my will — i. 3 
I hold him to be unworthy of his place.. — ii. 3 
Moor should hazard such a place, as his — ii. 3 

forgot all sense of place and duty? — ii. 3 

to give place to the devil, wrath — ii. 3 

as the time, the place, and the condition — ii. 3 

I will ask him for my place again — ii. 3 

she'll help to put you in your place again — ii. 3 
my place supplied, my general will forget — iii. 3 

I give thee warrant of thy place — iii. 3 

though it be fit that Cassio have his place — iii. 3 

she haunts me in every place — iii. 4 

Cassio shall have my place — iv. I 

rA'«(.] found in some place of my soul .. — iv. 2 
what place? what time? what form? .... — iv 2 
to depute Cassio in Othello's place (jep.) — iv. 2 
the time, the place, the torture — v. 2 

PLACED— virtuously are placed. Two Gm.of I'er. iv. 3 
be placed in contempt 1 Twelfth Sighl,_ i. 6 

Elan ted, and placed, and possessed.. il/uc/i^-To, iii. 3 
ad been jjlaced about thy thoughts — iv. I 
she be placed in my constant ..Mer. of Venice, ii. 
upon my head they placed a fruitless. Wac(<e//i, iii. 1 
if every owner were well placed. ... I Henry II'. iv. 3 

wel 1 placed ; there stands your HenruV.'\\\.7 

in the vaward, (placed behind IHemyFI. i. 1 

ordnance 'gainst it I have placed .... — i. 4 
words sweetly placed, and modestly.. — v. 3 

thou Shalt be placed as viceroy — v. 4 

were placed the heads of William ..^HenryVl. i. 'i 
placed a quire of such enticing birds — i. 3 
head, which Cliiford placed there ..aHenryfl. ii. 6 
archers shall be placed in the midst. liichmd III. v. 3 
two women placed together makes ..Henry VII. i. 4 

alas, are placed too late Timon of Alliens, iv. 3 

they have placed their men of Coriolanus, i. 6 

my resolution's placed Antony Sr Cleopatra, v. 2 

hath placed me here within this Pericles, iv. 6 

placed her here in Diana's temple (rep.') — v. 3 
I'll be placed, so please you, in the ear.Ham(e(, iii. J 

the impression; placed it safely — v. 2 

on a stage be placed to the view — v. 2 

PLACENTIO, and his lovely. Romeo ^-Jw(. i. 2 (note) 

PLACETH — she placeth highest! Coriolanus, i. 5 

PLACING therein some expert ....\HenryVl. iii. 2 
the placing of the British crown. . . . Cymbeline, iii. 5 

PLACK prince of Wales Henry V. iv. 7 

as ever his plack shoe trod upon .... — iv. 7 
PLACKET— prince of plackets .. Love'sL.Losi, iii. I 

will they wear their plackets IV'mter's Tale, iv. 3 

you might have pinched a placket . . — iv. 3 
on those that war for a placket . Troilus Sf Cress, ii. 3 

brothels, thy hand out of plackets Lear, iii. 4 

PLAGUE— a plague upon this howling! Tempest, i. 1 

the red plague nd you — i.2 

a plague upon the tyrant — ii. 2 

I will plague them all — iv. 1 

still reward with plagues . . Two Gen. of Verona, iv. 3 
what a plague means my niece ... . Twelflh Night, i. 3 
a plague o' these pickle-herrings! .. — i. .'j 

BO quickly may one catch the plague — i. 6 

plague on't; an' I thoU''ht he — iii. 4 

come what plague could have come..il/«c/i/lrfo, ii. 3 

plague right well prevented! — iii. 2 

It is a plague that Cupid will Love'sL.Lost, iii. 1 

may prove plagues to men forsworn — iv. 3 

thus pour the stars down plagues for — v. 2 
they have the plague, and caught it — v. 2 
I'll plague him; III torture him. Mer.of Venice, iii. i 

in my love thus plagues itself All'sH'ell,i. 1 

'twas pretty, though a plague — i. 1 

a plague upon him! nnifiled! — iv. 3 

a plague ol all drums! ouly to seem — iv. 3 



PLAGUE— to plague the inventor Mucbiih, i. 7 

made her sin and her the plague.. ..AVnf7o/m, ii. i 
the difti2ient plague of each calamity — iii. 4 
plague injustice with the [>a,'ins . . . , liichard II. iii. 1 
it any plague hang over us, 'tis he .. — v. 2 

what a plague have I to do with ] Henry IV. i. 2 

a plague upon't: it is in Glocestershire — i. 3 

a plague on thee! hast thou never .. — ii. 1 
Poins! Hal! a plague upon you both! — ii. 2 
plague upon't, when thieves cannot — ii. 2 

what a plague mean ye, to colt me thus? — ii. 2 

a plague of all cowards, I say — ii. 4 

a plague of sighing and grief I — ii. 4 

what a plague call you him? — ii. 4 

a plague on my bringing up! — ii. 4 

a plague upon it! I have forgot — iii. I 

shall breed a plague in France Henry V. iv. 3 

plague upon tliat villain Somerset, .i Henry VI, iv. 3 

or we will plague thee with — \. i 

a plague upon them! wherefore ..2Henry VI. iii. 2 
plague thee for thy foul misleading '.iHenryVI. v. 1 
I'll plague you for that word irep.).. — v. 5 

a plague upon you all! Kicliard 111. i. 3 

have any grievous plague in store .. — i. 3 

plague of your policy! you sent.. Henry VIII. iii. z 
O gods, how do you plague me! Troilus ^ Cress, i. 1 
what plagues? and what portents?.. — _i. 3 

the plague of Greece upon thee — .!!• ' 

a plague of opinion! a man may.... — iii. 3 
a plague upon Antenorl (rep.) — iv. 2 

plague and madness! You are moved — v 2 

but a plague break thy neck — v. 4 

let your brief plagues be mefcy — v. 11 

a plague upon him, dog ! Timon of Athens, ii. 2 

plagues, incident to men — iv. I 

the gods plague thee, for thou art.... — iv 3 
be as a planetary plague, when Jove — iv. 3 
plague all; that your activity may.. — iv. 3 
more man? Plague 1 plague! I was.. — iv. 3 
plague of company light upon thee! — iv. 3 
a plague on thee, thou art too bad . . — iv. 3 
for aye be crowned with plagues .... — v. I 
would send them back the plague .. — v. 2 

be Alcibiades your plague, you his .. v. 2 

amiss, plague and infection mend! ., — v. 2 
plague consume you wicked caitiff's — v. 5 (epit.) 
boils and plagues plaster you o'er . . Coriolanus, i. 4 
a plague! Tribunes for them! — i. '> 

1 pray, sir,— Plague upon't! ii. 3 

the hoarded pUigue o' the gods — iv. 2 

and tlie gods will plague thee v. 3 

intermit the plague that needs must.JuliusCwsar.'-^ 

that all the plagues of hell Cymbeline, i- 7 

very devils cannot plague them better ii- ■> 

a plague on them, they ne'er come ....Pericles, ii. I 

stand in the plague ot custom Lear, i. 2 

a plague upon your epileptic visage! .... ii. 2 

vengeance! plague! death! confusion! .. — ii. 4 

now all the plagues that in iii. 4 

'tis the time's plague, when madmen ... . — iv. I 
thou whom the lieaven's plagues have .. — iv. 1 

[Co(. /in(.] make instruments to plague us v. 3 

a plague upon you, murderers, troitors . . — v. 3 
aufiry Mab with blisters plagues. Bo/neo ^Juliet, i. 4 
a ijlague o' both the bouses ! (7 cp ) .. — iii. I 
I'Ugive thee tbisplague for thy dowry. Homte,!!!. I 

or my plague, be It either which — iv. 7 

climate dwell, plague him with flies Othello, i. I 

it is my nature's plague to spy into abuses iii 3 

yet, 'tis the plague of great ones iii. 3 

then this forked plague is fated to us.... iii. 3 

as 'tis the strumpet's plague, to beguile.. — iv. 1 

PLAGUED for her sin King John, ii. 1 

hath plagued thy bloody deed Richard Ill.i 3 

do come:— I shall be plagued. Troilus ^Cressida, v 2 
PLAGUE-SORE, an embossed carbuncle. . Lear, ii. 4 

PLAGUING mischief light on \HenryVi. v. 3 

PLAGUY— he is so plaguy proud. Troilus ^ tress, ii 3 

PLAIN and holy innocence Tempest, iii. 1 i 

one of them is a plain fish — v. I ' 

may appear plain and free.. Two Gen. of Verona, v. 4 

a plain kerchief, sir J'ohn Merrii li'ives, iii. 3 

it is old, and plain TirelkhXighl, ii. 4 

as plai n as I see you now — iii. 2 

in plain dealing, Pompey .Meas.forMens. ii. I 

to be received plain, 1 11 speak — ii. 4 

he was wont to speak plai n Much Ado, ii. 3 

I meant, plain holy-thistle — iii. 4 

only to the plain form of marriage .. — iv, I 
till truth make all things plain.... A/i'rf.iV.'snr. v. I 

sir, plantain, a plain plantain. Lore's L.Lost, iii. 1 

to make plain some obscure — iii. 1 

and something else more plain — iv. 3 

to tell you plain, I'll find — iv. 3 

that some plain man recount — v. 2 

have worn plain statute-caps — v. 2 

and to confirm it plain, you gave .... — v. 2 

my 'scutcheon plain declares — v. 2 

.ludas Maccabasus dipt, is plain Judas — v. 2 

honest plain words best pierce — v. 2 

in plain terms, gone to heaven ..Mer. of Venice, ii. 2 
or crossing the plain highway — iii. 1 

1 was alwavs plain with you — iii. 5 

understand a plain man in his plain — iii. 5 
with all brief and plain conveniency — iv. 1 
to blame, I must be plain with you.. — v. 1 
the why is plain as way to \>¥ir'is)\. AsyouLike it, ii. 7 

my slices on the plain masonry All''siyell,'\\. 1 

but the plain single vow — iv. 2 

if it appear not plain, and prove untrue — v. 3 

not these words plain,— sirrah Taming of Sh, i. 2 

I'll tell her plain, she sings as — ii. 1 

for you are called plain Kate — ii. 1 

thus in plain terms: your father .... — ii. 1 
and, to be plain, I think, there is. Wntter^sTale, iv. 3 

we are but plain fellows, sir — iv. 3 

seem to be nonest plain men — iv- 3 

as plainas the plain bald pate ..Comedy of Err. ii. 2 

no! why 'tis a plain case — iv. 3 

up higher to the plain; where we'll .King John, ii. 1 



PLAIN cannon, Arc, ami smoke KiugJohn,n. 2 

frtce of plain old form is niucl\ — iy. 2 

brother Gloster, plai!\ wcll-n^eaning.R/c/jani II, ii. 1 
upon the grassy carpet of'tliis plain.. — iii. 3 
sir Walter see on llolmeilon's plains .1 Hewy/r. i. 1 
niarlc now, how a plain tale shall.... — ii. 4 
so eas.y, andso plain a stop ....2HenrylV. (indue.) 

then plain and riftht, must my — iv. 4 

it is i>lain pocketing ui> ol' wrongs. . . , Ileiu-y r. iii. 2 
larding the nlain: and liy his blourtv — iv. 6 
but in plain shock, and even play of — iv. 8 
thou wouldst lind nie such a plain king — v. 2 

I siieak to tliec plain suhlier — v. 2 

take a I'cUuw of plain and uncoined.. — v. 2 
which is so plain, that Exeter doth. U/oiri/K/. iii. 1 

no more but, plain and bluntly — iv. 1 

for, to be plain, they, knowing 2H(;nryVL \. 'i 

shall he be upon the sandy plains ij-ep.) — i. 4 

■what plain proceedings are more plain — ii. 2 

to tell thee plain, I aim {rep.) ZUenrijl'I. iii. 2 

be plain, queen Margaret, and tell .. — iii. 3 
simple, plain Clarenecl I do love . . Kichard III, i, 1 
but the plain devil, and dissembling — i. 2 

cannot a plain man live — i. 3 

shall I be plain I 1 wish — iv. 2 

in plain terms [Co^K/ii. -plainly to lier] — iv. 4 
plain, and not honest, is too harsh .. — iv. 4 
lead forth my soldiers to the plain . . — v. 3 

a sectary, that's the plain truth Utinryf'III. v. 2 

his branches to all the plains about liini — v. 4 

now oil Dardan plains Tioilits <$- Ciess. (prol.) 

hollow upon this plain, so many 
ay, ay, ay; 'tis too plain a ease., 
is, plain and true, there's all the 
j)ight upon our Piirygian plains 



— V. 11 

i. 1 



— II. 2 



i' tlie plain way of his merit Corlolan 

a plain blnnt man, that love .. ..JidiunCats. 

no tricks in plain and simple faith . . — iv. 

run like swallows o'er the plain .Tilus Andron. ii. 

this sandy plot is plain — iv. 

thy pen to print thy sorrows plain .. — iv. 
dumb in show, I'll plain vi\t\\ .. Pericles, iii. (Gow. 

which she calls plain, marry her Lear, i. 

and deliver a plain message bluntly .... — i. 

if I had 3'ou upon Sarnm plain 

'tis my occupation to be plain 

and plain, — he must speaK truth {rep.) . 

in a plain accent, was a plain knave .... — n. 2 

sorrow, the king hath cause to plain — iii. 1 

Ch'ill be plain with you — iv. 6 

be plain, good son, and homely .Romeo ^.hUiet, ii. 3 
I would not, in plain terms, from this ..Humlet, i. 3 
knavery's plain face is never seen Ol/iello, ii. 1 

PLAIN-DEALERS without wit.. Comf-(yo/-E>T.ii. 2 

PLAIN-DEALING villain Much Ado, i. 3 

now to plain-dealing Lovers L.Losf, iv. 3 

like an lionest plain-dealing man?.2Hej»!/F/. iv. 2 
not so well as plain-dealing Timon o/.4fhens, i. ] 

PLAINER and simpler kind — v. 1 

follow me then to plainer ground iV;'d. A'.'.? Dr. iii. 2 
be plainer with me; letmeknow. . Winier'sTale, i. 2 
the plainer dealer, the sooner , .Comedy of Err. ii. 2 

PLAINEST truth tell you .... Mid. N.'s Dream, ii. 2 
I took him for the plainest Richard III. iii. 5 

PLAININGSof the pretty babes. .Comerfyo/Err. i. 1 
sentence, plaining comes to late Richard II. i. 3 

PLAINLY-my foes tell me plainly. Twelflh Night, v. 1 
plainly conceive, 1 love you .... Meas. for Meas. ii. 4 

I must tell thee plainly, Claudio Much Ado, v. 2 

tell them plainly, he is Snug.. Mid. N.'s Dream, iii. 1 
plainly give you out an unstained. Winter'sTale, iv. 3 
tell him plainly, the self-same sun .. — iv. 3 
nay, he struck so plainly, 1 could, Comprfy of Err. ii. 1 
and tonsucs of heaven, plainly ....KingJohn, iii. 4 
speaks plainly your opinions of ....illenrylV. i. 3 
hear me more plainly, I liave in equal — iv. 1 
and plainly say, our mettle is bred . .Henry V.iW. ^ 

tell him plainly what I think 3 Henry n. iv. 1 

plainly signifted, that I should snarl — v. 6 

speeds best being plainly told Richard III. iv. 4 

[Co/. Kn(.] plainly to her tell my loving — iv. 4 

lets them plainly see't Coriolanus, ii. 2 

how plainly I have borne this business — v. 3 

and, to deal plainly, I fear, I am not Lear, iv. 7 

plainly know, my heart's dear . . Rnmeo ^Juliet, ii. 3 

PLAINNESS iCol. A'n/.-paleness] Mer. 0/ Venice, iii. 2 
and now in plainness do confess. . Taming of Sh. i. 1 
your plainness, and your shortness — iv. 4 

frank and with uncurbed plainness .. Henry V. i. 2 
the truth and plainness of the Q^^Q.AHenryt'I. ii. 4 
plainness, and thy hoiisekeeping ..2He>iry VJ. i. 1 
witli truth and plainness I do. . Truilus <§- Cress, iv. 4 
enjoy tliy plainness, it nothiug../)?i(oii!/<5-C/eo. ii. 6 

which she calls plainness, marry her Lear,\. 1 

to plainness honour's bound, when majesty — i. I 
■which in this plainness harbour more craft — ii. 2 
in honest plainness thou hast heard m&.Olhello, i. 1 

PLAlN-SONGcuckoogrey..jW«d.iV.Dr. iii. I (song) 

the very plain-song of it (j-ep.) H.nryV. iii. 2 

may bring his plain-song Henry Pill. i. 3 

PLAINTS and prayers do pierce .... Richard II. v. Z 
bootless are plaints, and cureless ,,SHenryFI. ii. 6 

her plaints, and brinish tears — iii. 1 

overgo thv plaints ICol.Knt.-wocs], Richard III. ii. 2 

PLAINTIFi'-be both the plaintiff. yu'c///AA7^/i(, v. 1 

come, bring away the plaintiffs MiichAdo,v. 1 

this plaintiff here, the offender, did call — v. 1 

PLAISTEli— should bring the plaister Tempest, ii. 1 
and let him have some plaister..l/irf. A'.'.«l>rca;w, iii. 1 
seek a plaister by contemned Hing John, v. 2 

FL.'VITS the manes of horses Romeo ^Juliet, i. 4 

PLAITED {Col. A'n(.-plighted] cunning. . . . Lear, i. 1 

PLANCHED - a planched gate. . Meas. for Mea^. iv. 1 

PLANET— under a rhyming planet . . Much Ado, v. 2 
it is a bawdy planet, that will.... Winter'sTale, i. 2 

there's some ill planet reigns — ii. 1 

we curse the planets of mishap \ Henry VI. i. I 

combat with adverse planets m the. . — i. 1 
ruled, like a wandering planet ....illenryVI. iv. 4 
be opposite all planets of good.. ../iic/ioid ///. iv. 4 



PLANET— the planets, and thi9..rroi(Hs fyCress. i. 3 
therefore is the glorious planet, Sol . . — i. 3 

ill aspects of planets evil — i. 3 

but, when the planets, in evil — i. 3 

struck Corioli, like a planet Coriolanus, ii. 2 

moon no planet is of m'nK .. Antony ^ Cleopntru, v. 2 
some planet strike inc down.. TiiusAndronicus, ii. !) 
the senatc-liouse of planets all did sit . . Pericles, i. 1 
then no planets strike, no fairy takes .. Hamlet, i. I 

as if some planet had unwittcd men Otfielto, ii. 3 

PLANETARY plague Timon of Alliens, iv. .3 

obedience of planetary influence Lear, i. 2 

PLANK— litter of your stable planks. A'm^'/o/iH, v. 2 

trust not to rotten planks. ..Jii(o»!/ ^Cleopatra, ill 7 

PLANTS, with goodly hmA^n.. Tempest, \v. 1 (song) 

I will plant you two, and let TioelflhNight, ii. 3 

barren plants are set before us . . Love's L.Lost, iv. 2 
and plant in tyrants mild humility.. — iv. 3 
that abuses our young plants . .As you Like il, iii 2 

it is in us to plant thine honour All's lyell, ii. 3 

plant and o'erwhelm custom. IVinler's Tale, iv. (cho.) 

I have begun to plant thee Macbelh. i. 4 

advise you where to plant yourselves — iii. 1 
I would the plants thou graft'st ..Richard II. iii. 4 
the wa.y to plant unrightful kings.... — v. 1 

heart plant thou thine ear — v. 3 

the very straightest plant \HenryIV. i. 1 

and plant this thorn, this canker .... — i. 3 
conjunction plant neighbourhood . ...Henry V. v. 2 

laboured to plant the rightful 1 Henry VI. ii. 5 

I'll plant Plantagenet, root him ....'illen/yVl.i. 1 
this may plant courage in their .... — ii. 3 

his love was an eternal plant — iii. 3 

how sweet a plant have you untimely — v. 5 

and plant yonr joys in living liichardlll. ii. 2 

stock graft with ignoble plants — iii. 7 

but we will plant some other in ... . — iii. 7 
old barren plants, to wail it with. . . . — iv. 4 
music, plants, and flowers.. //ejir?/ /'///. iii. 1 (song) 
under his own vine, what he plants. . — v. 1 

plant love among us I Coi-iolanus, i i i . 3 

he watered his new plants with — v. .5 

some 0' their plants are WX-voutfiH. Antony ^Cleo. ii. 7 
charge Agrippa plant those that ... . — iv. 6 
how dare the plants look up to heaven. feric/es, i. 2 

could never plant in me Lear, i. 1 

in herbs, plants, stones Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 3 

the canker death eats up that plant. . — ii. 3 

so that if we will plant nettles Othello, i. 3 

PLANTAGE to the moon. ...Troilus^Crcssida, iii. 2 

PLANTAGENET, lays most hwiiuX.. KingJohn, i. 1 

arise sir Richard, and Plantagenet .. — i. 1 

the very spirit of Plantagenet! — i. 1 

stands young Plantagenet, son to the — ii. 1 
I come one way of the Plantagenets — v. 6 

Perc.v, his— Plantagenet! \ Henry IV. i. 1 

and Henry Plantagenet is thine Henry V. v. 2 

Plantagenet, I will; and Nero-like.. 1 Henry KI. i. 4 
this wliite rose, with Plantagenet .. — ii. 4 
no, Plantagenet; 'tis not for fear .... — ii. 4 
hath not thy rose a thorn, Plantagenet? — ii. 4 
where false Plantagenet dare not be seen — ii. 4 
thy scorns this way, Plantagenet. ... — ii. 4 
Richard Plantagenet, my lord {rep.) — ii. 5 
in honour of a true Plantaaenet .... — ii. 5 
Plantagenet, I see, must hold his.... — iii. 1 
in the right of Richard Plantagenet — iii. 1 
rise, Richard, like a true Plantagenet — iii. 1 

my mother a Plantagenet i Henry VI. iv. 2 

unless Plantagenet, duke of York ..iHenryVl.i. 1 
I'll plant Plantagenet, root him np.. — i. 1 

Plantagenet, of thee, and these thy sons — i. I 

Plantagenet shall speak first — i. 1 

Planta^jenet, for all the claim thou.. — i. 1 
RichardPlantagenet, enjoy the kingdom— i. 1 
Plantagenet, embrace him. And long — i. 1 
Plantagenet! I come, Plantagenet!.. — i. 3 
yield to our mercy, proud Plantagenet — i. 4 
that great Plantagenet is crowned . . — i. 4 

the sons of brave Plant.agenet, each one — ii. 1 
that Plantagenet, which held thee .. — ii. 1 
Edward Plantagenet, arise a knight — ii. 2 

deaths of these Plantagenets Richard III. i. 2 

name him. Plantagenet — i. 2 

brave Plantagenet, that princely novice — i. 4 
famous Plantagenet, most gracious.. — iii. 7 
my niece Plantagenet led in the hand of — iv. I 
Edward Planta:ienet, why art {rep.) — iv. 4 
and little Ned Plantagenet, his son! — iv. 4 
PLANXAIN-plain plantain {rep.). Love'sL. Lost, iii. 1 
your plantain leaf is excellent . . Romeo 4- Juliet, i. 2 

PLANTAT ION of this isle Tempest, ii. 1 

PLANTED— planted, and placed Much Ado, iii. 3 

world's new fashion planted Love's L.Lost, i. 1 

hath planted in his memory.. il/prcA. of Venice, iii. 6 
would be planted newly with the time.iV/oc6e//i, v. 7 

crowned, planted many years Richard II. iv. I 

he hath so planted his honours .... Coriolanus, ii. 2 
I saw the treasons planted. . Antony ^ Cleopatra, i. 3 

newfy planted in your throne Titus Andron. i. 2 

should be planted presently with horns — ii. 3 
PLANTETH— planteth anger. Taming of Shrew, iv. I 
PLASH— that leaves a shallow plash .. — i. 1 
PLASUY— al I good speed at Plashy . . Richard II. i. 2 

get tlice to Plash.y (rep.) — ii. 2 

PLASTER- lilagues plaster you o'er. .Coj-iotanus, i. 4 

PLASTE ItEll— was a plasterer 'iHenry VI. iv. 2 

PLASTERING— with plastering art . . Hamlet, iii. I 

PLATE— with plate and gold.. Vamins (7/ .S/o-d-!c, ii. I 

we do seize to us, the plate, coin. . . . Richard II. ii. 1 

his plate, his goods, his money — ii. 1 

to pawn both ray plate {rep.) iHenrylV. ii. 1 

the several parcels of his plate .... Henry t-'ll I. iii. 2 

as money, plate, jewels Timon of Athens, iii. 2 

were as plates dropped from K\i.. Antony ^Cleo. v. 2 

this is the brief of money, plate — v. 2 

'tis plate, of rare device Cymbeline, i. 7 

plate sin with gold, and the strong lance. Lear, iv. 6 

look to the plate; good thou KomeoSf Juliet, \. b 

PLATED in habiliments of war Richard Il.i.S 



PLATED— like plated Mars . . . Antony ff Cleopatra, i . I 

PLATFORMS to endamage them .. ..\ Henry VI. ii. 1 

upon the platform where we watched .. Hamlet, i. 2 

the platform, 'twixt eleven and twelve .. — i. 2 

to the platform, masters Othello, ii.3 

PLAUSIBLE oliedience Meas.for Mens. iii. 1 

PLAUSIVE words he scattered not ..,,Aa'sHell, i. 2 
it must be a very plausive invention .... — iv, I 

o'erleavens the form of j>lausive Hamlet, i. 4 

PLAUTUS— nor Plautus too light — ii. 2 

PLAY— play the men Tempest, i. I 

what foul play had we (icp.) — i. 2 

but play with sparrows — iv. 1 

sweet lord, you play me false — v. I 

and I would call it fair play — v. 1 

with wliom thou wast at play? — v. 1 

he plays false, father I'woGen. or Verona, 'iv. 2 

always play but one thing? {rep.) .... — iv. 2 
when a man's servant shall play the cur — iv. 4 
got me to play the woman's part .... — iv. 4 

for I did play a lamentable part — iv. 4 

is let the Doys leave to play Meri-y Hives, i.. I 

go your ways, and play, go — iv. I 

music be the food of love, play on . , Twelfth Night , i. 1 

he plays o' the viol-de-gambo ' — i. 3 

I swear, I am not that 1 play — i. 5 

and play the tune the while — ii. 4 

or play with some rich jewel — ii. 5 

shall i play my freedom at tray-trip — ii. 5 

I would play lord Pandarus — iii. I 

this fellow's wise enough to pla.y the fool — iii. 1 
'tis not for gravit.v to play at cherry-pit — iii. 4 

tertio, is a good play — v. 1 

that's all one, our play is done .... — v. 1 (song) 
when she will play with reason ..Meas.for Meas. i. 3 

play with all virgins so — i. 3 

like an angry ape, plays such fantastic — ii. 2 

so play the foolish throngs with — ii. 4 

make mercy swear, and play the tyrant — iii. 2 

or do you, play the flouting Jack Much Ado, i. 1 

when he would play the noble beast — v. 4 

therefore, play, music — v. 4 

to play in our interlude before., jl/i'i. A'. 'sDream, i. 2 

say what the [day treats on — i. 2 

marry, our play IS, the most — i. 2 

I could play Efcles rarely — i. 2 

nay, faith, let me not play a woman.. — i. 2 

you shall play it in a mask — i. 2 

let me play Thisby too — i. 2 

you must play Pyramus (rep.) — i, 2 

you must play Thisby's mother — i. 2 

I hope, here is a play fitted — i. 2 

let me play the lion too — i. 2 

what beard were I best to play it in? — i. 2 

then you will play barefaced — i. 2 

such as our play wants — i. 2 

that night we play our play? — iii. I 

great chamber-window, where we play — iii. 1 

wliat, a play toward? — iii. 1 

to rehearse a play, intended for great — iii. 2 

in the latter end of a play, before — iv. 1 

if he come not, then the play is marred — iv. 2 

the long is, our pla3' is preferred. — iv. 2 

let not him, that [ilays the lion — iv. 2 

is there no play to ease the — v. 1 

a play there is, my lord — v. 1 

as brief as I have known a play — v. 1 

for in all the play there is not. . . 
what are they that do play it? . 

witli this same play 

I will hear that play 

her passion ends the play 

for your play needs no excuse . . . 

this palpable gross play hath ... 

aged ears play truant at his tales.. Love's L.Lost, ii. I 

must stand and play the murderer in? — iv. 1 

from forage will incline to play . . 

an old i nfant play 

Nestor play at pusli-pin with .... 

I v\ ill play three myself 

or I wdl play on the tabor 

play, music, then {rep.) 

I'll play no more with you 

that when he plays at tables 

faith, unless yon play tlie honest 
played foul play with our oaths . . 



V. 1 
V. 1 

V. 1 
V. 1 
V. 1 



— iv. I 



- V. I 



doth not end like an old play . 

that's too long for a play — v. 2 

where every inan must play ajmrt. il/er.o/reni'ce, i. 1 

let me play the fool — i. 1 

if Hercules and Lichas pla.y at dice .. — ii. I 
if a christian do not play the knave.. — ii.3 
when you shall please to play the thieves — ii. 6 
the close night doth pla,y the run-awaj' — ii. 6 

tile painter plays the spider — iii. 2 

we'll play with them, the first boy .. — iii. 2 
how every fool can play upon the word! — iii. 5 

if two gods should play some — iii..') 

than the scene wherein we play in. As you Like it, ii. 7 
one man in his time plays many parts — ii. 7 

so he plays his part — ii. 7 

under that habit plaj' the knave .... — iii. 2 
I'll prove a busy actor in their play.. — iii. 4 
startle at this letter, and pla.y tlie.... — iv. 3 

play false strains upon thee! — iv. 3 

play, music; and you brides — v. 1 

that a good play needs no epilogue ,, — (cpil.) 

good plays prove tlie better — (cpil.) 

in the belialf of agoodplay — (epil.) 

as much of this play as please — (epil.) 

and the women, the play may ulease — Cei>il.) 

death should have play for laclt of .,..All'sll'rll, i. 1 

I play the noble housewife with — ii, 2 

fortune play upon thy prospenms — iii. 3 

so lust doth play with what it loathes — iv. 4 

a beggar, now tlie play is done — (epil.) 

we'll play our part Taming of ahrew, 1 (indue.) 

a lord will hear yon ijlay to-night.. — ■ 1 (indue.) 
yet his honour never heard a play — 1 (indue.) 
Wrkl Apollo plays, and twenty caged — 2 (indue.) 



PLA 



PLAY-sedges play witli wind. Taming oJ'S/i. 2 (indue.) 
arc come to play a pleasant comedy — 2 (indue.) 
tliouglit it good you hear a pliiy .... — 2 (indue.) 

let tliem play it — 2 (indue.) 

you do not mind the play — i. 1 (indue) 

now I play a merchant's part — ii. I 

your instrument, play you the whiles — iii. I 



[578] 



[ hear the minstrels play 
while I play the good hushaud . 



iii. 2 
V. I 

go. play, boy, play (»rp.) ll'inler's Tale, i. 2 

a very trick for them to play at will.. — ii. 1 

for love to lie and play on — iv. 3 

metliinks, I play as I have seen — iv. 3 

as if tlve scene you play, were niiue . . — iv. 3 

I see the play so lies, that I — iv. 3 

thou play false, I do digest the. . Comedij of Err. ii. 2 

Dromio, play tlie porter well — ii. 2 

wouldst not plaj' false, and j'et Macbeth, i. 5 

and play file humble host — iii. 4 

I could play the woman with — iv. 3 

■why should I pla5' the Roman fool — v. 7 

and, if she did plaj» false, the fault . . King John, i. I 

one that will play the devil, sir — ii. I 

doth play upon the dancing — ii. 2 

I'd play incessantly upon these .jades — ii. 2 
his course, and p'.a^'s the alelicnrist ., — iii. 1 

play fast and loose with faith? — iii. 1 

whiles warm life plays in that — iii. ■! 

can sick men play so nicely with. . . . Uichard II. ii. I 

witli her child pla.vs fondly with — iii. 2 

I play the torturer, by small and small — iii. 2 

or shall we play the wantons — iii. 3 

madam, well play at bowls — iii. 4 

thus play I, in one person — v. 5 

no world, to play with mammets ..1 HenrylV. ii. 3 

and bid you play it off — ii. 4 

as to play the coward with — ii. 4 

I'll play Percy, and tliat damned (rep.") — ii. 4 

shall we have a play exterapoie? — ii. 4 

stand for me, and iMl play my father — ii. 4 
out, you roguel play out the play.... — ii. 4 
those musicians that shall play to you — iii. 1 
as ever offered foul play in a state.... — iii. 2 

the soutlieru wind doth nlay — v. 1 

you shall find no boy's play liere .... — v. 4 

or is it fantasy that plays upon — v. 4 

multitude, can play upon it iHenrylV. (indue.) 

or the other, plays the rogue with. . . . — i. 2 

well, thus we play the fools — ii. 2 

an' you play tlie saucy cuttle — ii. 4 

let them play; play, sirs — ii. 4 

and he plays at quoits well — ii. 4 

in the end of a displeasing play — (epil.) 

kindly to judge, our play Hennj V. i, (chorus) 

by God's grace, play a set — i. 2 

distance, while we force a play — ii. (clio ) 

not offend one stomach with our play — ii. (cho.) 
and play with flowers, and smile .... — ii. 3 

fanning, play with your fancies — iii. (cho.) 

for when lenity and cruelty play for — iii. G 
do the low-rated English play at dice — iv. (cho.) 
this roaring devil i' tlie old play .... — iv. 4 
even play of battle, was ever known — iv. 8 
dotli fortune play the huswife with.. — v. 1 
and Nero-like, play on tlie lute .... 1 Eenry I'l, i. 4 
prettily, methouglit, did play the orator — iv. 1 
as piays the sun upon the glassy .... — v. 3 

to play my part in fortune's iHenryVI. i. 2 

made the prologue to their play .... — iii. 1 
on thy death-bed play the ruffian '.. — v. 1 

no, I can better play the orator SHcnryVI. i. 2 

I'll play the orator as well — iii. 2 

to play the broker in mine own — iv. 1 

belike, she minds to play the Amazon — iv. I 

and bite, and play the dog — v. 6 

a saint, when most I play the devW.Kichard III. i. 3 
I'll play the orator, as if the golden — iii. 5 

play the maid's part, still answer nay — iii. 7 

now do I play the touch — iv. 2 

the beholders of this tragic play .... — iv. 1 
our tents I'll play the eaves-dropper — v. 3 

the play may pass Henry fill, (prologue) 

to hear a merry, bawdy play .. .. — (prologue) 

beaten a long time out of play — i. 3 

yes, if 1 make my play — i. 4 

every thing that heard him play — iii. 1 (song) 

out of thy honest truth to play — iii. 2 

simony was fair play — iv. 2 

cause the musicians play me that . . — iv. 2 
Charles, I will play no more to-night — v. i 

when ray fancy's on ray play — v. 1 

yon play the spaniel, and think — v. 2 

shall hold you play these two mon Ills — v. 3 

this play can never please all — (epil.) 

to hear for this play at this time .... — (epil.) 

that our play leaps o'er Troilus ^Cress. (prol.) 

whatmay be digested in a play — (prol.) 

now play me Nestor (rfp.) — i. 3 

who play they to? To the hearers .. — Iii. 1 
at wliose request do these men play? — • iii. 1 
confess much, you will play the tyrant — iii. 2 

whiles others play the idiots — iii. 2 

I'll play the hunter for thy life...... — iv. 1 

nor play at subtle games iv. 4 

fair play. Fool's play, by heaven — v. 3 

if our betters play at that game. 7'imon nf Athens, i. 2 

and the cap plays in the right — ii. 1 

seldom play the recanter — v. 2 

I must have von play the idle Coriolnnus, i. 3 

I play the man I am — iii. 2 

ray boy. that plays thee music? ..Julius Cirsar, iv. 3 
play one scene of excellent. . Antony ^ Cleopatra, i. 3 

I'll play the penitent to you — ii. 2 

if thou dost play with him at — ii. 2 

best play with Mardian _ ii. 5 

come, you'll play with me, sir? — ii. 5 

five thee leave to play till doomsday — v. 2 
'11 mend it, and then play — v. 2 

that play with all infirmities Cymbeline, i. 7 

will play the cook, and servant — iii. 6 



PLiAT — I must play ti.e workman .... Cymbeline, iv. 1 
play judge and executioner, all himself — iv. 2 

yon and Fidele jilay the cooks — iv. 2 

and do not play in wench-like words — iv. 2 

shall's have a play of this? — v. 5 

will let thee, play the scribe .. Titus Andronicus, ii. 5 

for I will play the cook — v. 2 

plays, and tumbles, driving the iioor . . Pericles, ii. 1 

tor them to play upon — ii. 1 

unless 3'ou play the impious iimoceut — iv. 4 

cry out, she died by foul plaj' — iv. 4 

[K"/.] while our tears must play — iv. 4 (Gower) 

here our play has ending — v. 3 (Gower) 

such a king should play Do-peep . . Lear, i. 4 (song) 

do me no foul play, friends — iii. 7 

bad is the trade must play the fool — iv. 1 

come muscians, play Romeo ^-Juliet, i. .'j 

[Co/. A."«/.] tide, time, work, play, alone — iii. 5 
this bloody knife shall play the umpire — iv. 1 
I'll play the housewife for this once — iv. 2 
madly play with my forefathers' joints? — iv. 3 
will have me live, play,— heart's ease — iv. 5 

my heart itself plays (rep.) — iv. 5 

'tis no time to play now — iv. 5 

are actions that a man miglit play Hamlet, i. 2 

I doubt so some foul play — i. 2 

he that plays the king, shall be welcome — ii. 2 
for the play, I remember, pleased not .. — ii. 2 

an excellent play; well digested — ii. 2 

a play to-morrow (»ep.) — ii. 2 

fuilty creatures, sitting at a play — ii. 2 
ave these players play something like.. — ii. 2 
the play's the thing, wherein I'll catch.. — ii. 2 

this night to play before him — iii. 1 

that he may play the fool nowhere but.. — iii. 1 

after the play, let his queen mother — iii. 1 

there be players, that 1 have seen play .. — iii. 2 

let those, that play your clowns — iii. 2 

some necessary question of the play .... — iii. 2 
there is a play to-uight before the king .. — iii. 2 

the whilst this play is i)lay lug — iii. 2 

they are coming to the play — iii. 2 

show imports the argument of the play. . — iii. 2 
you are naught; I'll mark the play .... — iii. 2 

madam, how like you this play? — iii, 2 

what do you call the play? — iii. 2 

this play is the ima"e of a murder — iii. 2 

give o'er the play. Give me some light . . — iii. 2 

go weep, the hart ungalled play — iii. 2 

will you play upon tills pipe? — iii. 2 

you would play upon me — iii. 2 

can fret me, you cannot play upon me .. — iii. 2 
sudden coming o'er, to play with you.... — iv. 7 

but to play at loggats with them — v. 1 

brains, they had begun the play — v. 2 

your pleasure hold to play with Laertes — v. 2 

to Laertes before you fall to play — v. 2 

will this brother's wager frankly play .. — v. 2 
I'll play this bout first, set it by awhile — v. 2 
I thus would play and trifle with your .. Othello, i. 1 
you rise to play, and go to bed to work . . — ii. 1 

you are most apt to play the sir in — ii. 1 

that says, I ijlay the villain? — ii. 3 

even as her appetite sliall play the god .. — ii. 3 
play here, I will content your pains .... — iii. 1 

sings, plays, and dances well — iii. 3 

I wdl play the swan, and die in music .. — v. 2 

PLAYED and hira he played it for Tempest, i. 2 

and played some tricks — i. 2 

played by the picture of nobody — iii. 2 

done little better than played the Jack — iv. 1 
and I have played the sheep.. Two Gen. of Verona, i. 1 
all our pageants of delight were played — iv. 4 
since I plucked geese, played truant it/err?/ IVlves, v. I 
if this were played upon a stage . TvelfthiSight, iii. 4 

that e'er invention played on? — v. 1 

mother played my father ia.\Y\..Meas.forMeas. iii. 1 

my lord, I have played the part Much Ado, ii. 1 

have by this played their parts with — iii. 2 
Pyramus than e'er played here! .Mid. N.'s Dr. iii. 1 
it was played when I from Thebes .. — v. 1 
indeed, he hath played on this prologue — v. 1 
that writ it, had played Pyr.amus . . — v. 1 

a set of wit well played Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

played foul play with our oaths .... — v. 2 
his mother played false with .. Merch. of Venice, i. 2 
learned, played, eat together ....As you Like it, i. 3 
see a pageant truly played, between — iii. 4 
wherein have you played the knave.. /(ZZ's jrell, v. 2 
once he played a farmer's. . Taming ofSh. 1 (indue.) 
that see'st a game played home .. lI'inler'sTale, i. i 
if industriously, I played the fool .. — i. 2 
though devised, and played, to take — iii. 2 

before the match be played King John, iii. 1 

this easy match played for a crown? — v. 2 
on the French gi-ound played a tragedy. Henry K i. 2 
wretches that we played atdice for?.. — iv. 5 
myself have played the interim.. — v. (chorus) 
Fastolfe had not played the coward .1 Henry VI. i. i 
liear how we have played the men .. — i. G 

Pucelle hath bravely played her part — iii. 3 
winners, for they played me false! ..i Henry VI. iii. \ 

hath Clifford played the orator 3 Henry VI. ii. 2 

as if the tragedy were played in jest — ii. 3 

have played the part my father Henry VIII. i. 2 

woman with an eunuch phiyed.. Antony ^Cleo. ii. 5 
played as I pleased, making, and.... — iii. 9 
and false played my glory unto .... — iv. 12 
master rather played than fought . . Cymbeline, i. 2 
mistress, Pisauio, hath played .. — iii. 4 (letter) 

you have played your prize TilusAndron. i. 2 

1 played the cheater for tliy father's — y. 1 

but, being played upon before Pericles, i. 1 

that pliyed on her ripe lip Lear, iy. 3 

played for a pair of stainless. . Romeo A- Jul t, iii. 2 
if I had played the desk, or table-book. HamW, ii. 2 
played once in the university, you say? — iii. 2 
do you think, I am easier to be played on — iii. 2 
would store the world tliey played for .Othello, iv. 3 

PLAYED'ST most foully for't Macbeth, iii. I 



PLE 

PLAYER— the rest of the players ..Mid. N.'s Dr. i. 2 
not one word apt, one player fitted .. — v. 1 

for when the players are all dead — v. 1 

men and women merely players ..AsynuLikeitAi. 7 
players that offer service .. Taming of ah. 1 (indue.) 
your honour's players, hearing youi' — 2 (indue.) 
a poor player, that struts and frets .... Macbeth, v. 5 

one of these harlotry players \HenryIV. ii. 4 

like a strutting player Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 3 

as they used to do the players JuliusCcesar, i. 2 

you base football player Lear, i. 4 

the players shall receive from you ....Hamlet, ii. 2 
what players are they? Even those you.. — ii. 2 
grow themselves to common players .... — ii. 2 
the poet and the player went to cuffs.... — ii. 2 
there are the players, gentlemen, you .. — ii. 2 

lest my extent to the players — ii. 2 

he comes to tell me of the players — ii. 2 

will you see the players well bestowed? — ii. 2 
that this player here, but in a fiction.. .. — ii. 2 
I'll have these players play something .. — ii. 2 

that certain players we o'er-rau"ht — iii. 1 

as many of our players do, I had as lief — iii. 2 
there be players, that I have seen play . . — iii. 2 

bid tlie players make haste — iii. 2 

be the players ready? Ay, my lord — iii. 2 

the pla3'ers cannot keep counsel — iii. 2 

a fellowship in aery of players, sir? .... — iii. 2 

players in your housewifery. . . , Othello, ii. 1 

PLAYETH— while she playeth on. TilusAndron. iv. I 

PLAYFELLOW— sweetplayfellow.. Mid.A'.'sDr. i. 1 

the eyes of my young playfellow. . Winter' sTale, i. 2 

shall I be your playfellow? No — ii. I 

playfellows to keep you company! .2HenryVI. iii. 2 
sullen playfellow for tender princes. K/c/iard ///. iv.I 
or pack to their old playfellows .... Henry Fill. i. 3 
familiar with my playfellow ..Antony ^Cleo. iii. 11 

you bred him as my playfellow Cymbeline, i. ! 

in marriage-pleasures playfellow. Peiic/es, 1 (Gow.) 
PLAYHOUSE-there is the playhouse Hen. r.ii.(oho.) 

that thunder at a iJlayhouse Henry VIII. v. S 

PLAYING at sword and dagger Merry tVires, i. I 

playing on pipes of corn Mid. N.'sDream, ii. 2 

sixpence a day for playing Pyramus — iv. S 
playing in the wanton ..Love's!,. Lost, iv. 3 (verses) 
if all the year were playing holidays \HenryIV. i. S 

playing the mouse, in absence Henry V. i. 2 

there, my music playing far off. . Antony ^ Cleo. ii. t 
'tis better playing with a lion's whelp — iii. 11 
by playing it to me with so sour, fiomco fy Juliet, ii. b 

is from the purpose of plaj'ing Hamlet, iii. 2 

the whilst this play is plaj'ing — iii, 2 

PLAYING-DAY, I see Merry mves,iv. 1 

PLAY'ST so subtly with a king's Henry V. iv. 1 

PLEA of no less weight than Love's L.Lost, ii. 1 

plea so tainted and corrupt .... Mcr. of Venice, iii. 2 
can drive hira from the envious plea — iii. 3 

though justice be thy plea — iv.I 

to mitigate the justice of thy plea.... — iv.I 

that is my brother's plea King John, i. 1 

PLEACHED-into the pleached bower. .Vuc/i.4dD, iii.l 

master thuswithpleacliedorms./(«(OH!/4'C/eo. iv. 12 

PLEAD— to plead for love....7'woC?en.o/fen)no. i. 2 

I will so plead, that you — iv. 2 

to plead for that which — iv. 4 

plead a new state — v. 4 

not plead, but that I must {rep.) Meas.for Meas. ii. 2 

he cannot plead his estimation — iv. 2 

I will plead against it with my life.. — iv. 2 

to plead my tlioiights Mid.N.'sDream, i. 1 

may plead for amplest credence Alt's Ifell, i. 2 

you need but plead your honourable — iv. i 
I'll plead for yon, as for irep. ii. 1) Taming of Sh. i. 2 
to plead Hortensio's passion.. — iii. 1 (gamut) 
merchant of Syracuse, plead no. . Comedy of Err. i. 1 

plead you to me, fair dame? — ii. 2 

and modesty, plead on her part — iii.l 

that he did plead in earnest — iv. 2 

he would not plead so coldly — v. 1 

his virtues will plead like angels Macbeth, i. 7 

let the tongue of war plead for King John, v. 2 

pleads he in earnest? look upon ....Richard II. v. 3 

to plead his love-suit to her Henry V. v. 2 

fitteth not a prelate so to plead.. ..I Henry VI. iii. 1 

let me plead for gentle Suffolk iHenry VI. iii. 2 

if thou dost plead for him, thou wilt — iii. 2 

untaught to plead for favour — iv. 1 

our swords shall plead it in the field.SHfnri/r/. i. I 

advocate to plead for him Richard 111. i. 3 

do not hear him plead — i. 3 

once plead [Co(. -begl for his life .... — ii. 1 
for which I plead, were for myself .. — iii. 5 
and if you plead as well for tliem.... — iii. 7 

plead what I will be, not what — iv. 4 

nothing, to plead mine innocence.. HenryVIII, i. 1 

assembled to plead your cause — ii. 4 

cheek, pleads your fair usage . . Tmilus 4- Cress, iv . 4 
may never more false title plead . T'lnio?! of Ath. iv. 3 
the actor may plead pardon. /)ii/o"v i^C/«ipa(ra, ii. 5 
plead my successive title with j'our. TitusAndron. i. 1 

plead your deserts in peace — i. 1 

Mutius' deeds do plead for him — i. 2 

did graciously plead for Ills funerals — i. 2 

leave to plead my deeds — i. 2 

plead ray passions for Lavinia's love — ii. I 

for thy brothers let me plead — iii. ) 

successfully, and plead to him — iv. 4 

she for hira pleads strongly to the 'bloor. Othello, ii. 3 

PLEADED I for you Comedy ol Errors, iv. 2 

suppose that I have pleaded truth ..1 Henry VI. ii. 4 

he pleaded still, not guilty Henry VI II. ii. 1 

PLEADER— silenced their pleaders. . Coriolanus, ii. 1 

if you would be your country's jjleader — v. 1 

PLEADING for a lover's fee . . lUid. N.'s Dream, iii. 2 

must needs want pleading for KingJohn. iv. 1 

love, pleading so wisely in excuse.. 2 Henri/ /K. iv. 4 
for pleading so well for his life ....2Henry VI^ iv. 7 

I will be deaf to pleadin" Romeo if Juliet, iii. I 

PLEASANT — thy riches pleasant Meas.forMeas, iii. I 
you are pleasant, sir; and speak apace — iii. a 



PLE 



[ 579 ] 

PLEASE-pIeases you contents you.Asyoii Like it, v. 2 

he cut it to please himself — v. ■» 

as much of this play as please them — (epil.) 

and the women, the play may please — (epil.) 
may it please you, madam, that he ..AU'slVell, i. 3 
when love please! marry, to eacli .. — ii. 3 
please it your majesty, I have done — ii. 3 
no hetter, if you please. My wish.... — ii. 3 
where we please to liave it tj'row .... — ii. 3 

if you shall please so, pilffrini — iii. 5 

please it tins matron, ana this gentle — iii. 5 
as't please yoni' lordship: I'll leave — iii. 6 

that it will please you to give — v. 1 

howe'cr it pleases yon to take it so . . — v. 3 

so please your majesty (>ep.) — v. 3 

with strife to please you — (epil.) 

please your lordship i^rep. ).. Taming of Sh. 1 (indue.) 
will't please your lordship drink . . — 2 (indue.) 
wiirt please your mightiness to wash — 2 (indue.) 
and to marry her, if lier dowry please — i. 2 
in sign whereof, please ye we may .. — i. 2 
learn my lessons as I please myself.. — iii. 1 

old fashions please me best — iii. 1 

if it would please him come and marry — iii. 2 

nor till I please myself (jep.) — iii. 2 

to the uttermost, as I please, in words — iv. 3 
the house; please it you, that I call? — iv. 4 
and if you please to like no worse .. — iv. 4 
and j'our shortness, please me well . . — iv. 4 
or what you please: and if you please — iv. 5 

if he please, my hand is ready — v. 2 

please your highness to take the.. Winter^sTcde, i. 2 
will do't, sir, please you to accept it — ii. 1 
so please you, madam, to put apart. . — ii. 2 

please your ladyship to visit — ii. 2 

please you, come something (re/).) .. — ii. 2 
if they please, can clear me in't .... — ii.3 
please your highness, posts (rep.)..,. — ii. 3 
fore wlio please to come and hear .. — iii. 2 
if fortune please, both breed thee. . . . — iii. 3 

I, that please some, try all — iv. (chorus) 

it will please plentifully — iv. 3 

will't please you, sir, he gone? — iv. 3 

if you may please to think I love.... — iv. 3 
an't please you, sir, to undertake.... — iv. 3 

please you, great sir, Bohemia — v. t 

please you to interpose, fair madam — v. 3 
at five o'clock, please you .... Comedy of Errors, i. 2 

great care to please his wife — ii. 1 

my beauty cajinot please his eye .... — ii. 1 
what please yourself, sir; I have.. .. — iii. 2 

and please your wife withal — iii. 2 

I will please you what you will demand — iv. 4 
maj' it please your grace, Antipholus — y. 1 

so please you, it is true Macbeth, i. 5 

so please your highness (?-ejD. iii. 4) .. .. — iii. 1 

if it please you, Fleance killed — iii. 6 

as, an't please heaven, he shall not.... — iii. 6 

the English force, so please you — v. 3 

an' if thou please, thou may'st Kins: John, v. 6 

and wish, (so please my sovereign).. iii'c/iucd II. i. 1 

pardon me, if you please, if not — ii. 1 

to please the king, I did; to please — ii. 2 

unless you please to enter in t.. — . ii.3 

may 't please j'ou to come down .... — iii. 3 

thoy shouldst please me better — iii. 4 

niay't please you, lords, to grant .... — iv. 1 
my lord, will t please you to fall to? — v. 5 
when he please again to be himself. . I HenrylV. i. 2 
so please yoiu- majesty, I would I could — iii. 2 
fine colour, that may please the eye — v. 1 
please it your honour, knock but. . . .iHenrylV. i. i 

an't please your lordship (r«p.) — i. 2 

an't please your grace (j-ep. iii. 1).... — ii. i 

as toone it pleases me — ii. 2 

where is Mouldy? Here, an't please you — iii. 2 

four, of which you please — iii. 2 

an't shall please your grace — iv. 1 

our general. Please you, lords, in sight — iv. 1 
if this may please yuu, discharge .... — iv. 2 
I know, it will well please them .... — i v. 2 
and, good my lord, so please you .... — iv. 2 
this packet, please it you, contains.. — iv. 4 
will't please your grace to go along.. — iv. 4 
an' it please your worship, there's one — v- 3 
may it please your majesty {.rep. ill. 6). Henry F. i. 2 

as, if God please, they shall — iv. 3 

famous memory, an't please j'our majesty— iv. 7 

as long as it pleases his grace — iv.7 

an't please your majesty irep. ) — iv. 7 

an' please Got of his grace, that I .. — iv.7 
he is my dear friend, an' please you — iv. 7 

an' please 5'our majesty (jep.) — iv. 8 

please de roy mon fj^re (rep.) — v. 2 

shall Kate be my wife? So please you — v. 2 

depart when heaven please 1 Henry VI. iii. 2 

yes if it please your majesty — iii. 4 

and, as you please, so let them have — v. 1 
but his can please your dainty eye.. — v. 3 
an' if my father please, I am content — v. 3 
in Anjou what your honour pleases — v. 3 

shall be Henry's, if he please — v. 3 

my lords, an' please you, 'tis not so — v. 4 
dismiss your army when ye please. . — v. 4 
60 it please your grace, here are .... 2 Henri/ VI. i. 1 
they please us well; lord marquess .. — i. 1 
mine is, an't please your grace (rep.) - i. 3 
born blind, art't please your grace (rep.') — ii. 1 
Saunder Simpcox, an' if it please you — ii. 1 

please it your majesty ()ep.) — ii.3 

BO please your grace (rep.) — ii. 4 

when he please to make commotion — iii. 1 
I will, my lord, so please his majesty — iii. 1 

please it your grace (rep. V. 1) — iv. 9 

this marriage, so it please my \ovi..ZlIenryVI. ii. C 
may it please your highness to resolve — iii. 2 
an' if what pleases him, shall pleasure — iii. 2 
please you dismiss me, eitlier witli ay — iii. 2 

till Goil please to send the rest — iv.7 

please your worship, Brakeubury . . Richard III. i. 1 



PLE 



PLEASANT as ever he wag Much Ado^ i. 1 

bv my troth, most pleasant I Love's L.Lost, iv. I 

pleasant without scurrility, witty .. — v. I 
and pleasant game; a mess of Kussians — v. 2 
courtship, pleasant jest, and courtesy — v. 2 
to play a pleasant comedy . . Taming of Sh. 2 (ind.) 
the pleasant garden of great Italy .. — i. 1 
trusty, pleasant servant Grumio .... — i. 2 
for thou art pleasant, gamesome .... — ii. I 
been thus pleasant witli you both..., — iii. I 
more pleasant, pithy, and etiectiial.. — iii. 1 
like pleasant travellers, to break .... — iv. 5 

rare, pleasant, and speedy Jfinler's Tale, iii. 1 

or a very pleasant thing indeed — iv. 3 

this castle hath a pleasant scat Macbeth, i. 6 

to that pleasant country's earth ..Richard II. iv. 1 

welcome these pleasant days 'iHenrijlV. v. 3 

the Dauphin is so pleasant with us. ... Henry V. i. 2 

and tell the pleasant prince — i. 2 

but like a pleasant slumber 2Henry VI. iii. 2 

your grace is grown so pleasant .... Henry Vlll.i. 4 

come, you are pleasant — ii.3 

sweet queen, you are pleasant.. Troilus ^- Cress, iii. 1 
upon a high and pleasant hill.. Timon rif Alliens, i. 1 
exceeding pleasant; none a stranger Cymbeline,i. 7 
north side of this pleasant chase.. TilusAndron. ii, 4 
should dislike, seems pleasant to him. . . . Lear, iv. 2 
of our pleasant vices make instruments — v. 3 
awake as from a pleasant sleep Romeo f,Jullel, iv. 1 

fractises, pleasant and helpful to liim I Hamlet, ii. 2 
EASANTEST angling is to see ..Much Ado, iii. 1 
PLEASANTLY-so pleasantly., rroi/us .5- Cress, iv. h 

PLEASANT-SPIRITED lady MiichAdo.ii. I 

PLE ASE— please you further Tempest, i. 2 

please you, sir, do not omit — ii. 1 

will't please you taste of what is here? . — iii. 3 

on a trice, so please you — v. 1 

please you draw near — v. 1 

which was to please — (epil.) 

please j'Ou, repeat their names.. Tu-oGen.nfVer. i. 2 
come, come, will't please you go?. ... — i. 2 
to-morrow, may it please you (rep.) — i. 3 

please you, deliberate a day or two.. — i. 3 
I will write, please you command .. — ii. 1 

please you, 1 11 write your — ii. 1 

and if it please you (?ep.) — ii. 1 

if it please me madam! — ii. 1 

please it your grace, there — iii. 1 

m what you please — iv. 4 

madam, please you peruse tliis letter — iv. 4 

please you, I'll tell you as — v. 4 

will't please your worship to Merry tVives, i. 1 

that it pleases your good worship. . . . — i. 4 
not so, an't please your worship .... — ii. 2 
I know not which pleases me better — iii. 3 

BO please my lord, I might not TwelfthNighl, i. 1 

if not, an' it would please you to take — ii.3 
he is not here, so please your lordship — ii. 4 

if it please the eye of one — iii. 4 

please one, and please all — iii. 4 

put up your sword, if you please .... — iii. 4 
though it please you to be one of . . . . — v. 1 

even what it please my lord — v. 1 

think of me as you please — V. 1 (letter) 

my lord, so please you (rep.) — v. 1 

we'll strive to please you — v. 1 (song) 

if it please your honour (rep.) . . Meas.forMeas. ii. 1 

yes, and 't please you, sir — ii. 1 

please but your honour hear me .... — ii. 2 

would much better please me — ii. 4 

please you to do't. Ill take it — ii. 4 

as many as you please — iii. I 

and much please the absent duke .. — iii.) 
continuance, may it please your honour — iii. 2 
so please you, this friar hath been .. — iii. 2 

will't please you walk aside? — iv. 1 

look, if it please you, on this man . . — v. 1 
but I had rather it would please you — v. 1 

please it your grace lead on Much Ado, i. 1 

and say, father, as it please you (rep.) — ii. 1 
when i please. And when please you — ii.1 
shall be of what colour it please God — ii.3 
if it please you; yet count Claudio .. — iii. 2 
it pleases your worship to say so ... . — iii. 5 

that will never please Mid. N.'s Dream, iii. 1 

and those things do best please me . . — iii. 2 
BO please your grace, the prologue is — v. 1 
will it please you to see the epilogue — v. 1 

ray liege, an' if j'on please Love's L.Lost, i. 1 

study me how to please the eye indeed — i. 1 
me an't shall please you; I am Antony — i. 1 
BO please your grace, the packet is . . — ii. 1 

so it shall please you to abrogate — iv. 2 

did they please you, sir Nathaniel?. . — iv. 2 
it shall please you to gratify' the table — iv. 2 
it will please his grace (by the world) — v. 1 

please it you, as much (rep.) — v. 2 

again when CJod doth please — v. 2 

tliat sport best pleases, that doth .... — v. 2 
there, an't shall please you (?rp.).... — v. 2 
if you please to shoot another ..Mer. of Venice, i. 1 

if it please you to dine with us — 1.3 

Launcelot, an't please your mastership — ii. 2 
in a sad ostent to please his grandain — ii. 2 
an' it shall please you to break up this — ii. 4 
you shall please to play the thieves. . — ii. 6 

so please your grace (rep.) — iv. 1 

I am not bound to please thee with. . — iv. 1 
1 will not, till I please: you shall../)s!/ouZ.;V(ciV, i. 1 
60 please you, he is here at the door — i. I 

and. if it please your ladyships — i. 2 

so please you give us leave — i. 2 

I cannot please you. I do not (rep.) — ii. 5 

at your request, than to please myself — ii. .5 

a stubborn will to please — ii. 5{8ong) 

to blow on whom I please — ii. 7 

speaks them pleases those that hear — iii. a 

it pleases him to call you so — iv. ] 

BO please you, for I never heard it.. ., — iv. 3 
if you please, that I can do strange.. — v. 2 



PLEASE— if thou please to hide ....Richara 111. i. 2 

that it may please you leave — i. 2 

direct his course as please himself .. — ii. 2 

then where you please, and sliall be — iii. 1 

will't please you pass along? — iii. 1 

that your lordship please to ask .... — iii. 2 

would it might please your grace .... — iii. 7 

please you to be crowned? (rep. ) . . . . — iii. 7 

please you; but I had rather kill .... — iv. 2 

what, may it please you, shall I do .. — iv. 4 

to please you with the hearing — iv. 4 

what time your majesty shallplease — iv. 4 

whither, if it please you, we may — v. 4 

here, so please you (rep.) Henry VIII. i. i 

that he would please to alter the .... — i. 1 

and sell his honour as lie pleases .... — , i. 1 

please you, sir, I know (rep.) — i. 2 

1 think, would better please them . . — i. 4 

sweet ladies, will it please you sit? ., — i. 4 

an't please your grace, sir Thomas . . — i. 4 

fashioned into what pitch he please.. — ii.3 

so I'll stand, if the king please — ii. 2 

if you might please to stretch it — ii.3 

please you, sir, the king your father — ii. 4 

as't please yourself pronounce their — ii. 4 

that it shall please you to declare .. — ii. 4 

so please your highness (rep.) — .^• ^ 

an't please your grace, the two great — iij. I 

may it please you, noble madam .... — iii. 1 

if .you please to trust us in your — iii. 1 

may it please your highness to hear.. — iv. 2 

please your honours, the chief cause — v. 2 

may'it please your grace (rep.) — v. 2 

will these please you? once more.... — v. 2 

an't please your honour, we are but men — v. 3 
this play can never please all that — (epilogue) 

yet let it please both Troilus iJ-Cressii/a, i. 3 

lilease it our great general (I ep. iii. 3) — ii.3 

or, if you please, haste there — i v. 1 

E lease you, walk in, my lords — iv. 3 

lir lady Cressid, so please you — iv. 4 

so please you. I am not warm yet (rep.) — iv. 5 

likes not you, pleases me best — y. 2 

please you, my lord (rep.) Timon of Athens, i. 2 

may it please your honour (rep.) .... — i. 2 

please it your lordship (rep. ill. 1) .. — ii. 2 

please you, gentlemen, the time is . . — ii. 2 

may it please your honour, my lord — iii. 2 

it pleases time, and fortune, to lie .. — iii. 5 

dost please thyself in't? — iv. 3 

if thou couldst please me with speaking — iv. 3 

therefore, so please thee to return .... — v. 2 

whoso please to stop affliction — v. 2 

he did it to please his motlier Coriolanus, i. 1 

but, an't please you, deliver — i. 1 

please you to march; and four — i. 6 

therefore , please you (rep.) — ii. 2 

please it your honours to call me .... — v. 5 

if you please to speak with me JuliusCresar, i. 2 

if it will please Caesar to be so good.. — ii. 4 

so please him come unto this place . . — iii. 1 

no place will please me so — iii. I 

when it shall please my country to.. — iii. 2 

vaunting true, and it shall please me well — i v. 3 

so please you, we will stand, and watch — iv. 3 

ay, my lord, an' it please you — iv. 3 

if it might please you, to ewfoTce. Antony^ Cleo. ii. 2 

will't please you, hear me? — ..}''^ 

if Ca3sar please, our master will leap — iii, 11 

it much would please him — iii. II 

till we do please to doSTt for our .... — iv. 4 

please you, retire to your chamber?.. — iv. 4 

we please them not by land — iv. 10 

do not please sharp fate to grace it . . — iv. 12 

but please your thoughts, in feeding — iv. 13 

if thou please to take me to thee ... . — v. 1 

if he please to give me conquered Egypt — v. 2 

I will speak what you shall please . . — v. 2 

if it might please you,— His face .... — v. 2 

shall hang in what place you please — v. 2 
please your highness, 1 will from . . Cymbeline, i. 2 

may it please yon to take them in . . — i. 7 

if it.please you to greet your lord.... — i. 7 

please you, madam. What hour is it? — ii. 2 

please you, read; and you shall — iii. 4 

so please J'OU, leave me (rep.) — iv. 2 

but first, an't please the gods — iv. 2 

so please you entertain me — iv. 2 

please your majesty, the Roman legions — iv. 3 

1 « ill report, so please you — v. 6 

we did, so please your highness — v.5 

if you please to give me hearing .... — v. 5 
doth this motion please thee? .... TitusAndron. i. 2 

to-morrow, an' it please your majesty — i. 2 

the music would not please — ii. 1 

may it please you, my grandsire .... — iv. 2 

let the ladies tattle what they please — iv. 2 

demand what pledge will please him — iv. 4 

please me which thou speak'st (rep.) — v. 1 

would it please thee, good Andronicus — v. 2 

please you, therefore, draw nigh .... — v. 3 

please you eat of it (rep.) — v. 3 

your ear, and please your eyes. . Pericles, i. (Gpwer) 

pardon me, or strike me, if you please — i. 2 

the king it sure must please — ;. 3 

too little to content and please — i. 4 

he could not please me better — ii.3 

yes, please your majesty — ii. 5 

to please the fool and death — ii. 2 

if you please, a niece of mine — iii. 4 

will but please themselves upon her — iv. 2 

if it please the gods to defend you.... — iv. 3 
now please you wit the epitaph — iv. 4 (Gouer) 

please you to name it — iv. 6 

please you, sit, and hark — v. (Gower) 

so please your lordship, none iear, i. 2 

if it shall please you to suspend — i. 2 

what weary negligence you please — _i- 3 

how in my strength you please — ii. 1 

withyou,goodman boy, U'you please. . .. — ii. 2 



PLE 

I'LEASE-again to die before you please! . . Lear, iv. 6 

so please your mivjesty, that we — iv. 7 

pleiise you, draw near; louder the music — iv. 7 

will't please your liighness walk? — iv. 7 

please you, step aside {rep. iv. 3). Romeo ^Jidiel, i. 1 
lady's ear, such as would please .... — i. 5 

60 please you, sometIiinj» toucliing Hamlet^ i. 3 

put on him what forgeries you please .. — ii. 1 
if it will please you to show us so much — ii. 2 
that it might please you to give quiet .. — ii- 2 

gracious, so please you (rf-p!) — i i i. 1 

my lord, do as you please — iii. I 

to sound what stop she please — iii. 2 

if it sliall please you to make me — iii. 2 

will't please you go, ray lord? — iv. 4 

he shall sirj an't please him — iv. 6 

if it please his majesty it is the breathing — v. 2 

if you please to get good guard ...Othello, i. 1 

please it yoiu: grace (icp.) — i. 3 

if you please, be't at her father's — i. 3 

to please the palate of my appetite — i. 3 

or troin what other course you please — ii. 1 

yet, iryou please to hold him off a wliile — iii. 3 

nothing, but to please his fantasy — iii. 3 

the justice of it pleases, very good — iv. 1 

PLE ASED— what tune pleased lus ear. . Tempest, i. 2 

wilt thou be pleased to hearken — iii. 2 

if you be pleased, retire — iv. 1 

she would be best pleased to be.. TwoGen. ofVer. \. 2 
he will scarce be pleased withal .... — ii. 7 

for those are pleased — v. 4 

if tlie heavens had been pleased.. TwelflhNighl, ii. I 

be pleased that I shake off — v.) 

tied up justice, when you pleased Meas.for Meets, i. 4 

pleased you to do't at peril * — ii. 4 

but pleased my woe — iv. I 

were so pleased, that thou wert. . Love's L. Lost, v. 1 

I am best pleased with that — v. 2 

it pleased ihem, to think me wortliy — v. 2 
if you be well pleased v/ithMer. of Ten. iii. 2 (scroll) 
arr.ong the buzzing pleased multitude — iii. 2 
it is, so you stand pleased withal .... — iii. 2 

and am well pleased to wish it — iii. 4 

and I be pleased to give ten thousand — iv, 1 
if you had pleased to have defended — y. I 
shouldst have better pleased me ..Asyou Like it, i. 2 
and pleased with what he gets .. — ii. 5 (song) 
as had beards that pleased me.... — (epil.) 

a shrewd turn if she pleased All's^Vell, iii. i 

she and I be pleased, what's that. Taming of Sh. ii. 1 
she ivill be pleased, then wherefore.. — iv. 4 
since these good men are pleased. Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

better pleased with madness — iv. 3 

be pleased then to pay that duty. . . . King John, ii. I 
if thou be pleased withal, command — ii. 2 
if heaven be pleased that you must. . — iv. 1 
I am best pleased to be from such. ... — iv. I 
but tliat your liighness pleased [rep.) — iv. 2 
till I have pleased my discontented. . — iv, 2 
if not, I pleased not to be pardoned.. /i!c/iaic( //. ii. 1 
witli all pleased, that hast all achieved! — iv. 1 

with nothing shall be pleased — v. 3 

the which if he be pleased I shall.. IHenri/ZF. iii. 2 

it pleased your majesty to — v. 1 

your highness pleased to forget ....IHenrylV. v. 2 
to my thinking, pleased tlie king.... — v. 5 

hath it pleased to shine on my 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

angry, 1 am pleased again 2Henryl'I. i. 2 

it hath pleased him, that three times — v. 3 

before it pleased his majesty Z Henry VI. \y. 1 

as himself pleased; and they were.. Henri/ VIII. i. I 

the king is pleased, you shall — i. 1 

be pleased yourself to say how far .. — ii. 4 
if heaven had pleased to have given — iv. 2 

of comfort has so pleased me — v. 4 

are pleased to breed out your . . Troilus ^- Cress, iv. 1 

pleased with this dainty bit — v. 9 

liath pleased the gods remember .. TimonofAlh. i. 2 

all pleased from thy table rise — i. 2 

pleased to let him seek danger Coriolanus, i. 3 

and made what work I pleased — i. 8 

are well pleased to make thee consul — ii. 2 
as he pleased, and displeased them. JidiusCtpsar, i. 'J 
j'ou may be pleased to catch at...intony^Cleo. ii. 2 
be pleased to tell us (for this is from — ii. 6 

and now pleased fortune does — iii. 1 

but when you are well pleased — iii. 3 

as I pleased, making, and marring . . — iii. 9 
when it pleased you to employ me ..Cymbeline, i. 2 

as when Ills god is pleased — v. 4 

be pleased awhile; this gentleman.. — t. 5 

if thou be pleased witli this Titus Atidron. i. 2 

the pearl that pleased your empress' — v. 1 

what, are you both pleased? Pericles, ii. a 

fates l\ad pleased you had brought ... . — iii. 3 

than not to have pleased me better Lear, i. 1 

never any: it pleased the king his master — ii. 2 

I remember pleased not the million Hamlet, ii. 2 

but heaven hath pleased it so — iii. 4 

it hath pleased the devil, drunkenness.. Of/ie//o, ii. 3 

had it pleased heaven to try me with — iv. 2 

PIjEASE-MAN, some slight zany .Love's L.Lost, v. 2 
PLE ASEST, God, dispose the day ! . . . . Henry V. iv. 3 
if thou pleasest not, I yield thee.. /l;i(oni/<!j-Cicn. v. 1 
PLEASETH men, and angers them ..Much Ado, ii. I 
it pleaseth his greatness to impart.. .. — v. 1 
part of your body pleaseth me ..Mer. of Venice, \. 3 
in the fields, it pleaseth me VfeW..AsyouLikeit.\\\. 2 

pleaseth you walk with me Comedy oflirr. iv. I 

nothing pleaseth but rare accidents. .li/e/irj///'. i. 2 

sing the song that pleaseth you — iii. 1 

pleaseth your lordship to meet his.. 2 Henry /F. iv. 1 

pleaseth your grace, to answer — iv. 2 

pleaseth your grace to appoint some . .Henry V. v. 2 
lord Talbot, pleaseth Burgundy ..IHrvry 11. iii. 2 
and undo, as him pleaseth beet .. ..Z Henry VI. ii. 6 

it pleasetli neither of us well Hicliard III.]. 1 

I hope, which pleaseth God above .. — iii. 7 
pleaseth your majesty to give me leave — iv. 4 
when it pleaseth their deities Antony ^ Cleo. i. i 



[ 580 ] 



PLEASETH your highness, ay Cymbeline, i. 6 

it plea-seth you, my fatlier, to express.. y'enc/es, ii. 2 
it pleaseth me so well, I'll see you wed — ii. .'i 
PLEASING pricket ....Love's L.Lost, iv. 2 (eiiitapli) 
was no thought of pleasing you.. /JsyoH LiV.e /(,iii. 2 
it is more pleasing stuff. Taming of Shrew, 2 (indue.) 

more quaint, more pleasing — iv. 3 

pleasing punishment that Cornea. Comedy of Err. i. 1 
never object pleasing in thine eye .. — ii. 2 
of acheerful look, a pleasing eye.. ..IHcHry//'. ii. 4 
your blood with pleasing heaviness. . — iii. 1 

to whom I would be pleasing SHenry VI. iv. 1 

to the lascivious pleasing of a lute.. /iic/iarc////. i. I 

a passing pleasing tongue — i. 1 

a pleasing cordial, princely Buckingham — ii. I 
can make seem pleasing to her tender — iv. 4 
convented upon a pleasing treaty . . Coriolanus, ii. 2 
very pleasing night to honest men.. JuliusCresar.i.S 
with such pleasing eloquence. . . . TilusAndron. iii. 1 
my aunt merry with some pleasing tale — iii. 2 
swouiided almost at my pleasing tale — v. 1 
such delightful pleasing harmony .... Pericles, ii, 5 
hath power to assume a pleasing shape. Ham(e/, ii. 2 
PLEASURE— answer thy best pleasme. Tentpest, i. 2 
and makes my laboms pleasures .... — iii. 1 

I am full of pleasure — iii. 2 

what's thy pleasure? — iv. I 

I'll wait upon his pleasure.. TwoGen. of Verona,ii. A 
it is your pleasure to command me in — iv. 3 
what I do, is to pleasure you, coz .. Merry Wives, i. 1 

it is admirable pleasures — iv. 4 

I take pleasure in singing (rep.) . . TwelflhNighl, ii. 4 
truly, sir, and pleasm'e will be paid.. — ii. 4 
you make your iileasure of your pains — iii. 3 
he attends your ladyship's pleasure.. — iii. 4 
for our pleasure, and his penance .. .. — iii. 4 
to know .your pleasure trep. ii. i^.Meas.fjrMi'us. i. 1 
your worship's pleasure I should do — ii. 1 

I'll know his pleasure — ii. 2 

what pleasure was he given to? — iii. 2 

shall anon overread it at 3'our pleasure — iv. 2 

unto your height of pleasure — v. 1 

and see our pleasure herein executed — v. 1 
take pleasure then in the message? ..MuchAdo, ii. 3 
do the minstrels; draw to pleasure us — v. 1 
at my pleasure, taunted her . . Mid. N.'sDream, iv. 1 
and the pleasure of mine eye, is only — iv. 1 
duke's pleasure is, that you keep..Loi'e'i-L, I,ns^i. 2 

to know his pleasure — ii. 1 

where all those pleasures live — i v. 2 

at your sweet pleasure (rep.) — y. 1 

remote from all the pleasm-es of — v. 2 

will you pleasure me? Merchant of Venice, i. 3 

use your pleasure — iii. 2 (letter) 

any extraordinary pleasure As you Like it, i. 2 

your pleasure and your own remorse — i. 3 

so to your pleasures — v. 4 

what is your pleasure, madam? AU'siVell, i. 3 

your pleasure sir I — ii. 3 

even to the world's pleasure — ii. 4 

and pleasure drown the brim — ii. 4 

presently attend his furtlier pleasure — ii. 4 
be it his pleasure. But lam sure .... — iii. 1 
with the general, and know his pleasure — iv. 3 

she goes off and on at pleasure — v. 3 

the even truth in pleasure flow — v. 3 

where is no pleasure ta'en Taming of Sh. i. 1 

to court her at your pleasure — i. 1 

to your pleasure humbly I subscribe — i. 1 

sith it your pleasure is — i. 1 

nor hast thou pleasure to be cross . . — ii. 1 

or is it else your pleasure — iv. 5 

it is his highness' pleasure Winter's Tale, iii. 2 

tlie pleasure of tliat madness — v. 3 

their audit at your highness' pleasure. . MacbeUi, i. 6 

been iu unusual pleasure — ii. 1 

attend those men our Iileasure? — iii. 1 

only it spoils the pleasure of the time — iii. 4 
convey your pleasures iu a spacious . . — iv. 3 

what is your gracious pleasure? — v. 3 

your pleasure, and continue friends. Ki7ig John, iii, i 
attended with the pleasures of the world — iii. 3 
but that your royal pleasure must .. — iv. 2 
never to taste the pleasures of the world — iv. 3 
travel tliat thou takest for pleasure., fli'c/iarrf //, i. 3 
pleasure, that some fathers feed upon — ii. 1 
wherein it is at our pleasure to fail ..I Henry IV. i, 2 
thy stomach, pleasm'e, and thy golden — ii. 3 

not in pleasure, but in iiassion — . ii. 4 

such barren pleasures, rude society.. — iii. 2 

deliver liira up to Ills pleasure — v. 5 

do me good, for no man's pleasure . .2HenryIV. ii. 4 
what is your good pleasure with me? — iii. 2 

to know the pleasure of our fair Henry V.\.2 

to use his goot pleasure — iii. 6 

Got's will and his pleasure, captain.. — iv. 8 

at jdeasure here we lie 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

our pleasure is, that Kichard be .... — iii. 1 
break it when your pleasure serves.. — y. 4 
the pleasure ofmy lord the king ....2HenryVI. i. 1 
not worldly pleasure at command .. — 1.2 

'tis his highness' pleasure (rep. ii. O — i. 2 

at his pleasure, will resign my place — i. 3 

at your pleasure, my good lord — i. 4 

every several pleasure in the world.. — iii. 2 

ifGod's good pleasure be! — iii. 3 

it is our pleasure, one of them depart — iv. 1 
a messenger, or come of pleasure?.... — v. 1 
in possession any jot of pleasure .. ..3HenryVI. ii. 2 
what your pleasure is, sliall satisfy me — iii. 2 
what pleases him, shall pleasure you — iii. 2 
other pleasure can the world afford? — iii. 2 
surprise and take him at our pleasure? — iv. 2 
a pleasure, ay, such a pleasure as incaged — iv. C 
such as befit the pleasures of the court? — v. 7 

the idle pleasures of these days liichard III. i. I 

all the pleasures you usurp, are mine — i. 3 
sends to know your lordship's pleasure — iii. 2 
his gracious pleasure any way therein — iii. 4 
this, what is your grace's pleasure?.. — iii. 7 



PLE 

PLEASUKE-may do your pleasure ./iic/iarr/ /;/. iv. 2 

tell me your highness' pleasure — iv. 4 

'tis his highness' pleasure Henry VIII. i. 1 

king's pleasure by me obeyed — i. 1 

by my life, this is against our pleasure — i. 2 

what arc their iileasurcs? — i. 4 

pray them take their pleasures — i. 4 

to know your royal pleasure — ii. 2 

of God, your pleasure be fulfilled! .. ii. 4 

your pleasure, madam? — il. 4 

what are your pleasures with me .... — iii. I 

'gainst his highness' pleasure — iii. 1 

ne'er dreamed a joy bej'ond his pleasure — iii. 1 
my lords, .you speak your pleasures.. — iii. 2 
hear the king's pleasure, cardinal (jep.) — iii. 2 
but, I pray you, wliat is your pleasure — iv. 2 
he attends your highness' pleasure Oep.) — v. 1 
but their pleasures must be fulfilled — v. 2 

attendance on their lordships' pleasures — y. 2 

to know your pleasures — v. 2 

'tis his highness' pleasure, and our .. — v. 2 
till the king's further pleasure be .... — v 2 
do as your pleasures are . . Troilu; <5- Cressidu, (prnl.) 
sweet niece Cressida. At your pleasure — i. 2 

in pleasure of my spleen — i. 3 

the pleasures such a beauty brings . . — ii. 2 
for pleasure, and revenge, have more oars — ii. 2 
your sport and pleasure did move your — ii. 3 

at whose pleasure, friend? iii. i 

3'ou speak your fair pleasure — iii. I 

bounteous time in different pleasure. Timon ofAlh. i. 1 
that office, to signifj' their pleasures.. — i. 2 
you have done our pleasures mucli grace — i. 2 
here, sir; what is your pleasure? .... — ii. 1 
your lordship speaks your pleasure.. — iii. 1 
I cannot pleasure such an honourable — iii. 2 

at your pleasures (yep. ) Coriolanus, W. \ 

lean shake off at pleasure Julius Ctesur, i. 3 

in the suburbs of your good pleasure — ii. 1 
fatesi we will know your pleasures.. — iii, 1 
reek and smoke, fulfil your pleasure — iii. 1 
common pleasures, to walk abroad .. — iii. 2 
we will stand, and watch your pleasure — iv. 3 
stretch without some pleasure now. Antony <$• Cleo. i. 1 

at your noble pleasure — i. 2 

the present pleasure, b^ revolution . . — i. 2 

what's your pleasure, sir? i. 2 

say, our pleasure, to such whose place — i. 2 
experience to their present pleasure.. — i. 4 
highness' pleasure? Not now (rep.).. — i. 6 

i' the east my pleasure lies — ii. 3 

whom he may at pleasure whip — iii. 1 1 

bestow it at j'our pleasure — v. 2 

I have performed your pleasure .... — v. 2 

myself to your sweet pleasure Cymbeline, i. 7 

might not spend them at my pleasure — ii. I 
what's your lordship's pleasure? .... — ii. 3 
me of my lawful pleasure she restrained — ii. 5 

I know your master's pleasure — iii. 1 

their pleasures here are past — iv. 2 

are like the pleasures of the world . . — iv. 2 
what pleasure, sir, find we in life .... — iv. 4 
wherein our pleasure bis full fortune — v. 4 
your i)leasure w^as my mere offence . . — v. 5 
now talk at pleasure of your safety . . Titus And. iv. 2 
he can at pleasure stint their melody — iv. 4 
madam, depart at pleasure, leave us here — y . 2 
to your wishes pleasure bring .. Pericles, i. (Gower) 
in marriage pleasures playfellow . . — i. (Gower) 

nothing but curious pleasures — i. 1 

which pleasure fits a husband — i. 1 

here pleasures court mine eyes — i. 2 

yet neitlier pleasure's art can joy — i. 2 

I am at your grace's pleasure — ii. 3 

it is your grace's pleasure to commend . . — ii. 5 

ay, and you shall live in pleasure — iv. 3 

use her at thy pleasure — iv. 6 

in space, validity, and pleasure Lear, i. 1 

'tis the duke's pleasure, whose disposition — ii.2 
to grudge my pleasures, to cut off my train — ii. 4 
why then let fall .your horrible pleasure — iii. 2 

bid thee, or rather do tliy pleasure — iv. 1 

to hear of pleasure's name — iv. 6 

bring his constant pleasure ..." — v. 1 

until theirgreaterpleasuresfirstbeknown — v. 3 
methinks, our pleasure might have been — v. 3 
to know our further pleasure .... Romeo ^ Juliet, i. 1 

welcome on their pleasure stay — i. 2 

at his pleasure? (rep.) — ii. 4 

budge for no man's pleasure — iii. 1 

to draw him on to pleasures Hamlet, ii. 2 

put your dread pleasures more into — ii.2 

or in the incestuous pleasures of his bed — iii. 3 

guarded, to know your pleasure — iv. 3 

if your pleasure hold to play with Laertes — v. 2 

they follow the king's pleasure — v. 2 

if't be your pleasure, and most wise Othello, i. 1 

thou dost thyself a pleasure — i. 3 

it is Othello s pleasure, our noble and.... — ii 2 

so much was his pleasure should be — ii.2 

with joy, revel, pleasure, and applause .. — ii. 3 
pleasure, and action, make the hours seem — ii. 3 
I kiss the instrument of their pleasures.. — iv. 1 

what is your pleasure? (rep.) — iv. 2 

you may take him at your pleasure — iv. 2 

PLEBEIANS swarming at Henry V. y. (chorus) 

with fne fusty plebeians, hate thine.. Corio/aii«s, i. 9 

as the hungry plebeians would the noble — ii. 1 

the herdsmen of the beastly plebeians — ii. 1 

you are plebeians, if they be senators — iii. I 

plebeians have got your fellow-tribune — v. 4 

up to the shouting plebeians . . Antony ff Cleo. iv. 10 

patricians, and plebeians, we create . . Tilus And. i. 2 

PLEBEII— fast foe to the plebeii ...Coriolanus, ii. 3 

PLEBS-pigeons to the tribunal ^Xeyis-.TiiusAnd. iv. 3 

PLEDGE— I am Grumio's pledge.. Tamingof Sh. i. 2 

our duties and the pledge Macbeth, iii. 4 

I am in parliament pledge for Hicliard II. v. 2 

I pledge your grace; and, if you.... 2 Henri/ '^'. iv. 2 
pledge you a mile to the bottom.. — v. 3 (song 



FLEDGE— there is my pledue 1 Henry VI. iv. I 

tliis jewel, pledge nf my aftectiou.... — v. 1 

i'faith, and I'll pledge you nil iUenrijl'I. ii. 3 

as pledges of my fealty and love — — .v. 1 
what pledge have we of tliy Arm . .3 Henry VI. iii . 3 
to pledge my vow, I give my hand. . — iii. 3 

and pledge it, madam, for 'tis Henry Jill. i. 4 

now the pledge; now, now, now. Troiliis^ Cress, v. 2 
O pretty pretty pledge! thy master.. — v. 2 
and pledges the hveatli of him in . . Timon ofAlh. i. 2 
is thirsty for that noble pledge ..Julius Cresar, iv. 3 
I'll pledge it for hira, Pompey ..Antony SrCleo.\\. 7 
he leaves his pledges dearer ihan. TitusAndron. iii. 1 
did him demand what pledge will .. — iv. 4 
give his pledges nn to my father .... — v, 1 

and pledge him freely Pericles, ii. 3 

there is my pledge ; I'll ^l^ove it Lear, y. 3 

brays out the triumph of his pledge .... Hamlet, I. 4 

tliat recognizance and pledge of love Othelln, v. 2 

PLEINES— des homines sont pleines ..Henry V. v. 2 
PLENTEOUS joys, wanton in fulness. . Macbeth, i. 4 
even so her plenteous womb .... Meas.forMeas. i. 5 
think it a most plen teous crop . . As youLitie it, iii. 5 
the head at Ceres' plenteous load? ..iHenryVI.i. 2 
may send forth plenteous tears.. .. Richard III, ii, 2 
towards you honour and plenteous. . Henry VIII. i. 1 
lilenteous bosom {rep. iv. 3) .... Timonof .ilhens, i. 2 
conflict, and made plenteous wounds? — iii. 5 
witli plenteous rivers and wide-skirted . . Lear, i, I 
PLENTEOUSLY: my due, from thee.2He)!r!/Zr. iv. 4 

PLENTIES, and joyful births Henry V. v. 2 

PLENTIFUL an excrement? . . Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

more plentiful than tools to do't Cymbeline, v. 3 

that they have a plentiful lack of wit. . Hamlei, ii. 2 

PLENTIFULLY gives me As you Lilce it, i. 1 

if fairings come thus plentifully .Lniu'sL. ios<,_v. 2 

it will please plentifully. Away I yVinter^sTafe, iv. 3 

PLENTY— and foison plenty .. Tempest, iv. \ (song) 

there lies no plenty Twelfth Niglit, ii. 3 {song) 

as there is no more plenty in it . . As you Lilce it, i\i, 2 
himself on the expectation of plenty.. ilfac6e//i, ii. 3 
your pleasures in a spacious plenty.... — iv. 3 

if reasons were as plenty as \HenrylV. ii. 4 

smiling plenty, and fair prosperous. Richard III. v. 4 
peace, plenty, love, truth, terror . . Bcnry VIII. v. 4 
he has made too much plenty. Timon of Athens, iii. 5 
plenty, and peace, breeds cowards. . Cymbeline, iii. 6 
in peace and plenty (rfp. v. 5).... — v. 4 (scroll) 
promises Britain peace and plenty .. — v. 5 

on wliom plenty held full hand Pericles, i. 4 

let those cities, that of Plenty's cup — 1.4 

PL ESS— Got plesB your house herel.jl/eiry Wives, i. 1 

pless my soiill ijep.) — iii. 1 

pless you from his mercy sake — iii. 1 

Ciot pless your majesty! How now . .Henry V. iii. 6 
Got pless it and preserve it, as long as — iv. 7 
(Jot pless you, ancient Pistol! {rep.) — v. 1 

PL ESSED— od's plessed will 1 Merry Wives, i. 1 

God be praised and plessed ! Henry V. iii. 6 

PLESSING— here is Got's plessing. . Merry Wives, i. 1 

PLIANT— took once a pliant hour Othello, i. 3 

PLIED— he plied tlrem both with. Antony 4-Cleo. iii. 2 

PLIES-pliesthe duke at morning.. Ver. of Venice, iii. 2 

he plies her hard; and much rain.. 3 Henry r/. iii. 2 

wherefore she plies thee thus? . . TitusAndron. iv. 1 

this honest fool plies Desdemona Ottwtlo, ii. 3 

PlilGHT— in better plight Merry Wives, ii. 2 

plight me the full assurance TwelfthNinht, iv, 3 

you see, my plight requires it .... Winler'sTale, ii. I 

as seemeth by his plight Macbeth, i. 2 

see'st, ourselves in heavy pliglit . .^Henry VI. iii. 3 
constancy in plight and youth. Troilus ^ Cress, iii. 2 

your plight is pitied of him Antony^ Cleo. v, 2 

that did e'er plight troth Cymbeline^ i. 2 

seen thy picture in this plight ..TitusAndron. iii. ' 

comfort his distressed plight — iv. 

wiiose hand must take my plight Lecrr, i. 

bid her alight, and her troth plight — iii. 4 (song 
PLIGHTED— plighted faith to me.Love'sL.Lost, v7 

fur sign of plighted faith \ Henry VI. v. 

[f'ol.Knt.'] unfold what plighted cunning.. Lear, i. 
PLIGHTEE of high hearts] Antony <§- Cleopatra, iii. 1 

PLIND- fortune is painted plind Henry V. iii. 

PLOD— plod, away o' the hoof Merry Wives, i. 

barefoot plod I the cold around Alls Well, iii. 

a tired mare, yet slie will plod Henry V.ii. 

may plod it in a week Cymbeline, iii. 

PLODDED— and plodded 1 ike a man . . Jfe;iri/ V. i. 

plodded by my footcloth mule .... 2 Henry VI, iv. 

PLODDER— continual plodders ..Love'sL. Lost, i. 

PliODDING— plodding prisons up.... — iv. 

I'LOOD— Got's ploodi up to the Henry V. iii. 

your majesties Welsh plood out of ,. — iv. 
Pi>OODY— and your ploody coxcomb — v. 

PLOT— dost thou like the plot Tempest, iii. 

since they did plot the means — iv. 

the minute of their plot is — iv. 

wit to plot this drift TwoGen. of Verona, ii. 

one made privy to the plot — iii. 

then she plots, then slieruminates-il/erri/W/ues, ii. 

good plots! they are laid — iii. 

1 \v ill lay a plot to try that — iii. 

but let our plot go forward — iv. 

what is your plot? — iv. 

to this her motlier's iilot — iv. 

break the sinews of our plot TwelfthNight, ii. 

knows our purpose and ourplot.iVras.ybr Meas. iv. 
this green plot shall be our stage. .A/irf.A'.'sDr. iii. 
to unburthen all my plots . . Merchant of Venice, i. 

let us assay our plot All's Well, iii. 

who cannot be crushed with a plot? — iv. 
there is a plot against my life.... Winter'sTate, ii. 
to cull the plots of best advantages.. /fHi^'JoAn, ii. 

John lays you plots; tlie times — iii. 

that lie did plot the duke of Richard II. i. 

to plot, contrive, or complot any ill.. — i. 
tills blessed plot, this earth, this realm — ii. 
is there no plot to rid the realm .... — Iv. 

I will lay a plot, shall sliow us — jv. 

they do plot unlilcely wonders — v. 



[ 581 ] 

PLOT— choose but be a noble plot 1 Henry IV. i. 3 

thou lay'st the plot how — ii. 1 

and your whole plot too light — ii. 3 (letter) 

our plot is a good plot as ever was . . — ii. 3 
my lord of York conunends the plot — ii. 3 

we first survey tlic plot iUenrylV. i. 3 

the plot is laiil; if all things \HenryVI. ii. 3 

on any plot of ground in — ii. 4 

a pretty plot, well chosen to build ..iHcnryVI. i. 4 
in tills private plot, be we the first .. — ii. 2 

plots have I laid, inductions Richard III. i. 1 

conspire my death with devilish plots — iii. 4 

these are the limbs of the plot Henry VIII. i. 1 

to second all his plot — iii. 2 

achievements, plots, orders . . Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 3 
purposed thing, and grows by plot.. Cor/o(a?iMs, iii. 1 
call t not a plot; the people cry .... — iii. 1 
were there but this single plot to lose — iii. 2 
passions and whose plots have broke — iv. 4 

and I fall under this plot — iv. 10 

a motlier hourly coining plots Cymbeline, ii, 1 

the prettiest daisied plot we can — iv. 2 

you do but plot your deaths. . Titus Andronicus, ii. 1 
many unfreiiuented plots there are.. — ii. i 
wandered liither to an obscure plot,. — ii. 3 
plot some device of further misery .. — iii. 1 

this sandy plot is plain — iv. 1 

or plot the way to do it — v. 1 

strange plots of dire revenge — v. 2 

suggestion, plot, and damned practice.. .. Lear, ii. 1 

Ihave o'erheard a plot of death — iii. 6 

a plot upon her virtuous husband's .... — iv. 6 
fight for a plot whereon the numbers.. Hamlet, iv. 4 

well, when our deep plots do pall — v. 2 

mischance, on plots, and errors, happen — v. 2 
PLOT-PROOF— my brain, plot-proof. Winter'sT. ii. 3 

PLOTTED— had plotted with them Tempest, v. 1 

all the means plotted TwoGen. of Verona, ii. 4 

and now 'tis plotted. I have it Taming nf ah. i. 1 

when Gloster's death was plotted. . Richard II. iv. 1 
is ruminated, plotted, and set &ovin..\HenrylV. i. 3 

that plotted thus our glory's 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

and "Talbot, too rashly plotted — iv. 4 

not conclude their plotted tragedy. SHenry 7'/. iii. ) 

had plotted, in the council-house. J?('c/ia7-d ///. iii. 5 

PLOTTER— plotter of these woes.. 7«Ms.4/idron. v. 3 

PLOUGH— to hold the plough for. . Love'sL. Lost. v. 2 

make you plough ux) tlie wars.. Troilus ^Cress. ii. 1 

let the Volsces plough Rome Coriolanus, v. 3 

Octavia plough thy visage. Antony ^Cleopatra,iv. 10 

sword shall plough thy bowels up. TitusAndron. iv. 2 

PLOUGHED up with neighbours' .... B/cAard //. i. 3 

we ourselves have ploughed for. . . . Coriolanus, iii. 1 

ploughed her, and she cropped. . .intony .5 Cleo. ii. 2 

than she is, she shall be ploughed .... Pericles, iv. 6 

PLOUGH-IRONS. Let it be cast .. ..2Henry/^. v. 1 

PLOUGHMAN lost his sweat . . Mid. a:' s Dream, ii. 2 

whilst the heavy ploughman snores.. — v. 2 

hard as the palm of ploughman! Troilus i^- Cress, i. 1 

PLOUGHMEN'S clocks.... LoDe'sL.Los(, v. 2 (song) 

PLOUGH'ST— plough'st the foam.. 7Vmo;i of Ath. v. 1 

PLOUGH-TORN— and plougli-torn leas — iv. 3 

PLOW— I think, a' will plow up all .. Henry V. iii, 2 

and his lips plows at his nose — iii. 6 

give treason liis payment into plows — iv. 8 
PLUCK— and pluck my magic garment. Tempest, i. 2 

I'll pluck thee berries — ii. 2 

I here could pluck his highness' frown — v. 1 
shall not pluclc that from me..TwoGen.of Ver. iii. 1 

pluck the borrowed veil Merry Wives, iii. 2 

pluck me out all the linen — iv. 2 

may rather pluck on laughter .. Twelfth Kis:ht, v. 1 

and liberty plucks justice Meas. for Meas. i. 4 

than it is, to pluck on others — ii. 4 

to pluck all fears out of you — iv. 2 

I will to him, and pluclc out his eyes — iv. 3 
did not I pluck thee by the nose .... — v. 1 
pluck off the bull's horns, and set. . . . Much Ado, i. 1 

pluck up, my heart, and be sad I — v. 1 

to pluck this crawling serpent. .^/W.A'.'sDream, ii. 3 
and pluck the wings from painted .. — iii. 1 
ne'er to pluck thee from . . Love'sL. L.iv.3 (verses) 
youth so apt to pluck a sweet.. — iv. 3 (verses) 
pluck the young sucking cubs.-VercA. of Venice, ii. 1 
pluck commiseration of his state .... — iv. 1 

nor pluck it from his finger — v. 1 

and my prayers pluck down All'sU'ell, i. 1 

his heart out, ere he pluck one — i. 3 

to pluck his indignation on thy head — iii. 2 
my remedy is then, to pluck it.. Tamingof Sh. ii. 1 
through the dirt to pluck him ofi' me — iv. 1 
you rogue! you pluck my foot awry — iv. I 
pluck up tliy spirits, look cheerfully — iv. 3 

the angle that plucks our son Jrinler'sTale,iv. 1 

pluck but off these rags — iv. 2 

and pluck it o'er your brows — iv. 3 

or pluck back thy business there — i.v. 3 

we'll pluck a crow together.. Comedy of Errors, iii. 1 

I'll pluck out these false eyes — iv. 4 

ha! they pluck out mine eyes! Macbeth, ii. 2 

modest wisdom plucks me from — iv. 3 

pluck from the memory a rooted — v. 3 

whose valour plucks dead lions King John, ii. 1 

but they will pluck away his — iii. 4 

and pluck nights from me Ric/tard II. i. 5 

you pluck a thousand dangers — ii. 1 

sworn to weed, and pluck away .... — ii. 3 

from thy bosom pluck a flower — iii, 2 

do not pluck my cares down — iv. 1 

to plucK him headlong from — v. 1 

wilt thou pluck my fair son from .... — v, 2 
creature pluck a glove, and wear it.. — v, 3 

to pluck bright honour from iHmrylV. i. 3 

and pluck up drowned honour by .. — i. 3 

we pluck this flower, safety — ii. 3 

that I did pluck allegiance from ... . — iii. 2 

go, pluck him by the elbow iHi nrylV. i. 2 

almost, to pluck a kingdom down .. — i.-i 

pluck down my officers -- iv. 4 

Horn curbed licence plucks — iv. 4 



PLUCK down justice from your iHenryl V. v. 2 

beholding him, plucks comfort, , Henry r. iv, (clio.) 
numbers pluck tlieir hearts from them! — iv. I 

or tliey will pluck the gay new — iv. 3 

pliiclc a wliite rose (rev. ) 1 Henry VI. i i . 4 

and pluck no more, till you conclude — ii. 4 
pluck this pale and maiden tlossoin — ii. 4 
prick not your finger as you jiluck it — ii, 4 
on my behalf would pluck a flower.. — ii, 4 
and pluck the crown from feeble.... 2 Henry Fi. v. 1 

let's pluck him down SllenryVI. i. 1 

can pluck the diadem from — ii. I 

were it further oft', I'll pluck it down — iii, 2 
the cross-row plucks the letter G . . Richard III. i. 1 
her jealous arms pluck him perforce — iii. 1 

that sin will pluck on sin — iv. 2 

pluck off a little; I would not Henry V III. \i. S 

pluck it out, and give it him. .. .Troilus ^Cress. i. 2 

plucks down Achilles' plumes — i, 3 

shoulder pluck his painted wings .. — iii. 2 

do one pluck down another — iii. 3 

pluck the grave wrinkled senate.. 7"i:mon ofAlh. iv. 1 
son of sixteen, pluck the lined crutch — iv. 1 

pluck stout men's pillows from — iy. 3 

sec him pluck Auhdius down Coriolanus, i. 3 

pluck reproof and rebuke from every — ii. 2 
at once pluck out the multitudinous — iii. 1 
to his house, and pluck him thence — iii. I 

means to pluck away their power .. — iii. 3 
to pluck from them their tribunes .. — iv. 3 

as they pass by, pluck Casca JuliusCcesar, i. 2 

pluck down benches. Pluck down forms — iii. 2 
pluck but his name out of his heart — iii. 3 
the hand could pluck her back .. Antony ^ Cleo. i. 2 

mine ear must pluck it thence — i. 5 

pluck the ne'er lust-wearied Antony — ii. 1 
off, pluck off; the sevenfold shield .. — iv. 12 
from my lips pluck a hard sentence. CymteKne, v. 5 
hope to pluck a dainty doe . . Titus Andronicus, ii. 2 
no strength to pluck tl;ee to the brink — ii. 4 

to pluck proud Lucius from — iv. 4 

this cause again, I'll pluck you out icar, i. 4 

pluck out his eyes (rep.) — iii. 7 

ignobly done, to pluck me by the beard — iii. 7 
all the building in my fancy pluck upon — iv. 2 
to pluck the common bosom on his side — v. 3 
wiUi a silk thread plucks itback/Joineo ^r Juliet, ii. 2 
pluck your sword out of his pilcher.. — iii. 1 
and pluck the mangled Tybalt fjora — iv. 3 
plucks off my beard, and blows it in . . Hamlet, ii. '2 
would pluck out the heart of my mystery — iii. 2 

of contraction plucks the very soul — iii. 4 

did not together pluck such envy from .. — iv. 7 

pluck them asunder — v. 1 

from frize, it plucks out brains and all . Othello, ii. I 

PLUCKED up tlie pine Tenn^est, v. 1 

since I plucked geese, played truant, jlferry Wives, v.l 
of Viennamust DC plucked Aovin. Meas. for Meas. i. 2 

plucked down in the suburbs — ii. 1 

hose plucked over your head — AsyouLike it, iv. 1 

have plucked my nipple from his Macbeth, i 7 

hath plucked on France to tread KingJohn, iii. 1 

royalty was ne'er plucked off — iv. 2 

of his banished years plucked four . . Richard II. i. 3 
my rights and royalties pluclied from — ii. 3 
being plucked from off their backs .. — iii. 2 

are plucked np root and all — iii. 1 

I plucked this glove from his helm . . Henry V. iv. 7 
sharp stakes, plucked out of hedges. . 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

arm Ihave plucked back i Henry v I. iii. I 

set thee up and plucked thee down? .ZUenry VI. v. 1 

brutish wrath sinfully plucked Richard Ill.iX. \ 

plucked two crutches from my feeble — ii. 2 

have I plucked off, to grace thy — v. 4 

witli comeliness plucked all gaze .... Coriolanus, i. 3 
from him plucked eitlier his gracious — ii. 3 
tliese growing feathers plucked ....JuliiisCaisar, i. 1 
he plucked me ope his doublet 



i. 2 



their hats are plucked about their ears — 

as he plucked his cursed steel away.. — in. a 

an orgument that he is plucked — ii:. 10 

may be, she plucked it off, to send . . Cymbeline, ii. 4 
I may be plucked into the swallowing. Titus And. ii. 4 
never plucked yet, I can assure you ..Pericles, iv. 6 

which since hath plucked him after Lear, iv. 2 

as if he plucked up kisses by the roots.. O/AeHo, iii. 3 
now he tells, how she plucked him to my — iv. I 

when I have plucked thy rose — v. 2 

PLUCKER down of kings! ZHenryVl. ii. 3 

PLUCKING the grass Merchant nf Venice, i. I 

mend the plucking off the other, .Tamingof Sli. iv. 1 
straining on, for plucking back .. Winter'sTate, iv. 3 

plucking to unfix an enemy 2 Henry 1 1', iv. 1 

plucking the entrails of an oflering. ./ii/ms C^p.-ar, ii. 2 
are meet for plucking up, and .. TitusAndron. iii. 1 

PLUE, and sometimes red lUnryV. iii. G 

PLUM— eat plums at your wedding. Meiry Wins. v. 5 

give it a plum, a clierry, and a fig KingJohn, ii. 1 

'mass, thou lovedst plums well iHenryl'l. Ii. 1 

PLUME— dowle that's in my plume .. Tempest, in. 3 
jets under his advanced plumes! . . Twelfth Kighi, \i. 5 

change for an idle plume Meas.forMeas. ii. 4 

what plume of feathers is he Love sL.Lost, iv. 1 

he; that with the plume All's Well, iii. 5 

no plume in any English crest KingJohn,ii. 2 

sits mocking in our plumes Henry V. iv. 5 

we'll pull his plumes, and take 1 Henry VI. iii. 3 

plucks down Achilles' plumes .. Troilus ^ Cress, i. 3 

with nodding of their plumes Coriolanus, iii. 3 

his place, and to plume up my will Othello^i. 3 

PLUMED like estridges, that wing ..\HenryIV. iv. 1 

must vail her lofty plumed crest \ Henry VI. v. 3 

with plumed helm thy slajer Lear, iv. 2 

Farewell the illumed troop, and the big.Othettn, iii. 3 

PLUME-PLtJCKED Richard Uichardll. iv. 1 

PLUMMET-deeper than e'er r lummct. Tempest, iii. 3 
ignorance itself isaplnmmol o'er.. Merry Hives, v. .'> 

PI JUMP— banish plump Jack ] Henry IV. ii. 4 

PLUMPY Bacchus, with pinV.Ant.^Cleo. ii. 7 (song) 
PLUM-TREE, master IHenry VI. ii. I 



PLU 



[ 582 ] 

POINS— and master Poius uuon iHenrylF. ii. 4 

they say, Poina lias a good wit — ii. 4 

and art thou Poins his brother? .... — ii. 4 
b3f heaven, Poins, I feel me much .. — ii. 4 
with Poins, and otlier liis continual — iv. 4 

POINT— to point tlie tempest that Tempest, i. 2 

exactly do all points of my command — i. 2 
most poor matters point to rich ends , . — iii. 1 

how sliarp the point of this — v. 1 

ay, there's the point, sir Meny fl'ives, i. I 

marry, is it; the very point of it ... . — i. 1 

hilt to point, heel tohead — iii. 5 

I am resolved on two points Twelfth Night, i. 5 

he does obey every pomt of the letter — iii. 2 
the Egyptian thief, at point of death — v. 1 
have touching that )io\nt..Measure for Measure, i. 1 

this is the point — i. 5 

erred in this point which now you . . — ii. 1 

but to tlie point — ii. 1 

let me know the point — iii. 1 

agree with his demands to the point — iii. 1 
you may take upon a knife's point . . MuchAdo, ii. 3 
no man s dagger licre a point for me? — iv. 1 
pray j'ou, examine him upon that point — v. I 

and so grow to a point Mid. N. 's Dream, i. 2 

and touchiug now the point of liuman — ii. 3 
this fellow doth not stand upon points — v. 1 
no point, with my knife {jep.v. 'Z).Love'sL,Lost,\\. 1 

did point you to buy tliera — ii. 1 

all points like a man? AsyouLikeit, i. 3 

the thorny point of bare distress ... . — ii. 7 

that is one of the points in tlie — iii. 2 

that, from point to point Qrep. v. Z).,All'sWell, iii. 1 

even to the point of her deatli — iv. 3 

conlii'inations, point from point .... — iv. 3 
now must tlie world point at poor. Taming of Sit. iii. 2 

with two broken points — iii. 2 

of any point in't shall not only .. lVinter\Tale, ii. 3 
you cannot thrust a bodkin's point. . — iii. 3 

but that's not to the point — iii. 3 

i' the rainbow; points, more than all — iv. 3 

I'll point you wliere yoii shall — iv. 3 

the which sliall point you forth — iv. 3 

I think, the dial points !\X ^ve. Comedy of Errors, \. 1 
point against point i-ebellious, arm .... Macbeth, i. 2 

in every point twice done, and then — i. 6 

our point of second meeting — iii. 1 

and points at them for liis — iv. 1 

all ready at a point, was setting — iv. 3 

whence tirey gape and point at yoVir. KingJohn, ii. 2 

and bloody point to point — ii. 2 

yea, at all points Richard IJ. i. 3 

steel m5^ lance's point, that it — i. 3 

shall point on me, and gild my — i. 3 

forged, with my rapier's point — iv. 1 

to the extremest point of mortal .... — iv. 1 

takes on the point of honour — v. 3 

like a dial's point, is pointing still.... — v. 5 

put a few flocks in the point 1 Henry IV. ii. 1 

thus 1 bore my point — ii. 4 

but took all their seven points in ... . — ii. 4 
tlieir points being broken, — down fell — ii. 4 

here lies the point — ii. 4 

then, to the point — iv. 3 

'tis a point of friendshij) — v. 1 

if life did ride upon a di.il's point .... — v. 2 

hold lord Percy at the point — v. 4 

for a silken point I'll give my barony.2Henr!/Zr. i. 1 

ay, marry, there's tlie point — i. 3 

wliat, with two points on your shoulder? — ii. 4 

come we to full points here — ii. 4 

loud trumpet, and a iioint of war? .. — iv. 1 

from hilts unto the point Henry V. ii. (chorus) 

the military discipline; that is the point — iii. 2 

je ne doute point d'apprendre — iii. 4 

thou diest on point of fox — iv, 4 

service, till the point of death \ Henry VI. iii. 1 

Normandy stands on a tickle point .."iHemy VI. i. 1 

but what a point, iny lord — ii. 1 

how the giddy multitude do point . . — ii- 4 

Beaufort is at point of death — iii. 2 

be wiped from tliy point — iv. 10 

such pity as my rapier's point aSmds.ZHenry VI. i. 3 
with his rapier's [Joint, made issue .. — i. 4 

the steely point of Clifford's lance.. .. — ii. 3 
carve out dials quaintly, point by point — ii. 5 
wherefore stand you on nice points? — iv. 7 

better brook thy dagger's point — v. 6 

thy brother beat aside the point .. ..Richardlll. \. 2 

'tis a point of wisdom — i. 4 

turn their own points on their masters' — v. 1 
point by point the treasons of his ..HenryVIII. i. 2 

is the ijoint of my petition — i. 2 

dangerous conception in this point ., — i. 2 

to this point hast tliou heard liim.. ., — i. 3 

all their honourable points of ignorance — i. 3 

my good lord cardinal to this point .. — ii. 4 

but the sharp thorny iioints of — .^^* ^ 

in such a xioiut of weifiht, so near mine — iii.] 
but in tills point all his tricks founder — iii. 2 
the highest point of all my greatness — iii. 2 
I do enjoy at ample point all . . Troilus «§- Cress, iii. 3 

admits no orifice for a point — v. 2 

since riches point to misery .. Timon of Ailiens, iv, 2 

any benefit that points tome — iv. 3 

are at the point of battle Corlolanus, i. 1 

as the main iioint of this our — ii. 2 

whom with all praise I point at — ii. 2 

to all points o' tlie compass — ii. 3 

you are at jjoint to lose your liberties — iii. 1 

in this point charge him home — iii. 3 

obeys his points as if he were liis .... — iv. 6 

almost at point to enter — v. 4 

and swim to yonder point? JuliusCcesar, i. 2 

ere we could arrive the point proposed — i. 2 
the climate that they point upon .... — i. 3 
here, as I point my sword, tlie sun .. — ii. 1 
to you our swords have leaden points — iii. 1 
swayed from the point, by looking down — iii. 1 
or driven, as we point the way — iv. 1 



POI 



PLUM-TREE— and plum-tree gum Hamlet, ii. 2 

PLUNGE in the deep Mid.N.'s Dream,i\i. 2 

do not plunge thyself too far AlVs IVetl, ii. 3 

to plunge him in the deej) Taming of Shrew^i. 1 

without heed, do plunge into it . . Timon nfAth. iii. 5 
perhaps, plunge him into more choler. . Hamlet, iii. 2 

PLUNUED-all, but mariners plunged in. Tempest^ i.2 
thou woulilst have plunged thyself. Timon ofAih. iv.3 
accoutred as I was, I plunged in ..JuliusCcesar, i. 2 

PLUKAL— than plural faith. Tu-o Gen. of Verona, v. 4 
what is vour genitive case, plural. Merry fVives, iv. 1 

PLURISY— growing to a plurisy, dies . . Hamtrt, iv. 7 

PJ..UTU— to Pluto's damned lake iHenrylV. ii. 4 

for, by the dreadful Pluto ..Troilus 4- Cressida, iv. 4 

nnrl.by Pluto — V. 2 

etroiig as Pluto's gates — v. 2 

Pluto and lielll all hurt behind Corlolanus, i. i 

when you come to Pluto's region. TitusAndron, iv. 3 
but Pluto sends you word if you .... — iv.3 

PLUTUS hiinselfthat knows AlVslfell, v. 3 

almost every grain of Plutus' gold. Troil. ^ Cr«s.iii.3 

Plutus, the god of gold TimonofAthens.i. 1 

a heart dearer than Plutus' mine.JuUus Cassar, iv. 3 

PJjY— shepherd, ply her hard AsyouLilieil, iii. 5 

keep house, and ply his book.. i"a»u»g-<i/'S/irc«', i. 1 

go ply thy needle; meddle not — ii. 1 

ami I must ply my theme TitusAndronicus, v. 2 

and let him ply his music Hamlet, ii. I 

ply Desdemoiia well Oihello, iv. 1 

P0_the Pyrenean, and the river Po ..KingJohn, i. 1 

POCKET— of his pockets could speak . . Tempest, ii. 1 

or very falsely pocket up his report — ii. 1 

will carry this Island home in his pocket — ii. 1 
and afterwards picked my pocket.. Merry IVives, i. I 

mette le an mon pocket — i. 4 

put your grace in your pocket Twelfih Night, v. 1 

putting the hand in the pocket. Meas.forMeas. iii. 2 

stolen from her pocket Much Ado, y. 4 

your hands in your pocket ...... Love'sL. Lost, iii. 1 

wear prayer-books in my pocket. il/er.o/ Venice, ii. 2 

I have his letter in my pocket AlVsWell, iv. 3 

let me pocket up my pedlar's fVin/er'sTale, iv. 3 

I must pocket up these wrongs KingJohn, iii. 1 

search his pockets 1 Henryl V.ii. 4 

who picked my pocket? («/).) — iii. 3 

honest woman with picking thy pocketl — iii. 3 
anvthing in thy pocket but tavern.. — iii. 3 

you will not pocket up wrong — iii. 3 

confess then, you picked my pocket? — iii. 3 

as familiar with men's pockets Henry V. iii. 2 

from another's pocket, to put into .. — iii. 2 
I have another leek in my pocket .. — v. 1 

have filled their pockets full of \ Henry VI. iii. 1 

h' as a book in his pocket, with ied.2HeHryVl..iy. 2 
brings a' victory in his pocket? .... Corlolanus, ii. 1 
I put it in the pocket ot my gown.JuliusCcnsar, iv. 3 

you did pocket up my letters Antony <<f Cieo. ii. 2 

aa plates dropped from his pocket — v. 2 

or put the moon in his pocket Cymbeline, iii. 1 

of my master's tlien in iny pocket . . — v. 5 
terrible despatch of it into your pocket? ..Lear, i. 2 

let's see his pockets; these letters — iv. 6 

diadem stole, and put it in his packet \ Hamlet, iii. 4 
letter found in the pocket (rep.) Othello, v. 2 

POCKETING up of wrongs Henry V. iii. 2 

POCKY— we have many pocky corses . . Hamlet, v. 1 

POD Y— be any pody in the house. . Merry H'ives, iii. 3 
Welsh ploodout of your pody Henry V. Iv. 7 

PO KM— or poem unlimited Hnmlet, ii . 2 

POESY— of heaven-bred poesy. . TwoGen.of Ver. iii. 2 

and golden cadence of poesy Lore's L. Lost, iv. 2 

music and poesy use, to CLuieken . . Taming of Sh. i. 1 
our poesy is as a gum Tinwn of Alliens, i. I 

POET— with poets^ sinews ..TroCen.of Verona, iii. 2 
and the poet, are of imagination . . Mid.N.'sDr. v. 1 
the poet's eye, in a fine frenzy rolling — v. 1 

the poet's pen turns them into — v. 1 

never durst poet touch a pen to..Loce'sL.Lnst, iv. 3 
tlierefore, the poet did feign that.jUtr. of Venice, v. I 

as the most capricious poet As you Like it, iii. 3 

now, if thou wert a poet — iii. 3 

in good truth, the poet is make Henry V. iii. 6 

all that poets feign of bliss and joy. .i Henry VI. i. 2 
ferryman wliicli poets write of .... Kichard III. i. i 
how now, poet? How now .. .. 7'/mono//l(/icns, i. 1 
art not a poet. Yes. Then thou liest — i. 1 
yonder comes a poet, and a painter.. — iv.3 
I am Cinna the poet, I am Oep.) .Julius Ciesar, iii. 3 
figures, scribes, bards, poets .... Antony SfCleo. iji. 2 

at the Thraeian poet's feet Titus .indronicus, ii. 5 

patterned by that the poet here — iv. 1 

unless the poet and the player went . . Hamlet, ii. 2 

POETICiVL— and 'tis poetical Twelfth Night, i. 5 

had made thee poetical {rep.) AsyouLikeit, iii. 3 

what poetical is. Is it honest — iii. 3 

POETHY— savouring of poetry .. Love's L. Lost, iv. 2 
cutler's poetry upon a knife . . Merch. of Venice, v. 1 
for the truest poetry is the most. As you Like it, iii. 3 
poetry; and wliat they swear in poetry — iii. 3 
and poetry, schoolmasters will I.. TttmingofSh. i. 1 
well-read in poetry, and other books.. — i.2 
nothing so much as mincing poetry. I Henryl V. iii. 1 
sweet poetry, and TuUy's ova.tor.TilusAnUron. iv. 1 

POICTIERS, Anjou, Touiaine KingJolm, i. 1 

Maine, Poictiers, and all (rep.) — ii. 2 

Poictiers, are all quite lost 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

Alaine, Blois, Poictiers, and Tours .. — iv.3 

POINS— the wild prince and Poins.A/eiTj/ Wives, iii. 2 

Poins! now shall we know if 1 Henry IV. i. 2 

Poins! Poins, and be hanged! (rep.l — ii. 2 
Ned Poins and I will walk lower . . — ii. 2 
an the prince and Poins be not two — ii. 2 

no more valour in that Poins — ii. 2 

Poins! Anon, anon, sir. Sirrah — ii. 4 

answer me to that; and Poins there? — ii. 4 
banish Poins: but for sweet Jack.... — ii. 4 

and so good-morrow, Poins — ii. 4 

go, Poins, to horse, to horse; for thou — iii. 3 
shall I tell thee one thing, Voine'! ..2HniriiIV. ii. 2 
be not too familiar with Poina .. — ii. 2 (letter) 



POINT— the sourest points with ... Antony SfCleo- ii. 2 
there's the point — ii.6 

let your best love draw to that point — iii. 4 
at such a point, when half and lialf . . — iii. 1 1 
mingle eyes with one that ties his points? — iii. 11 
even to the point of envy, if 'twere. . Cymbeline, ii. 3 
was once at point, (Ogiglot fortune!) — iii. 1 

he's at some liard point — iii. 4 

well then, here's the point — jjl- * 

tlie due of honour in no point ornit.. — iii. 5 
and, in that [joint, I will conclude .. — V\'** 

I was at point to sink for food — iii. 6 

when fearful wars point at me — iv.3 

thy lopped branches point thy two . . — v. 5 
christen it with thy dagger's point . . Tilut And. iv. 2 
dies upon my scimitar^ sharp point.. — Iv. 2 

witness my knife's sharp point — v. 3 

from her bosom took the enemy's point — v. 3 

to points that seem impossible Pericles, v. 1 

tell lilm o'er, point by point — v. 1 

stand aloof from the entire point Lear, i. 1 

to let him keep at point, a hundred — i. 4 

arc at point to show their open banner . . — iii. 1 
my point and period will be thoroughly.. — iv. 7 

turns deadly point to poin t Romeo Sr Juliet, iii. 1 

beats down their fatal points — iii. 1 

there's a fearful point! — iv.3 

did spit his body upon a rapier's point — iv. 3 
when men are at tne point of death .. — v. 3 

armed at point, exactly, cap-i-pe Hamlet, i. 2 

your business, and desire, shall point you — i. 5 

to this point I'll stand — iv. 5 

I'll touch my point with this contagion.. — iv. 7 

for here lies the point — v. 1 

the pass and fell incensed points of — v. 2 

the point envenomed too! — v. 2 

ay, there's the point Otiiello, iii. 3 

to point his slow immoving finger at ... . — iv. 2 

I hope, they do not point on me — v. 2 

'POINT the dav of msa:t\s.«e..Tamingof Shrew, iii. 2 

POINT-BLANK twelve score .... Merry Wives, iii. 2 

now art thou within point-blank ..'iHenryl'I. iv. 7 

POINT-DE-VICE the yeryman. .TwelfthNighl, ii. S 

and point-de- vice companions . .Love's L. Lost, v. 1 

you are rather point-de-vice As yon Like /(, iii. 2 

POINTED-art thou so pointed at?. . 1 Henryl V. ii. 4 
evermore they pointed to the good. Hejiry /'///. iii, 2 
had pointed him as sharp as my .... Cymbeline, i. 4 
death; (and pointed to this brace) ....Pericles, n.\ 

'POINTED times Taming of Shreu; iii. 1 

this is the 'pointed day that Katharine — iii. 2 

POINTIN G on him Troilus * Cressida, i. 3 

pointing still, in cleansing them Richard II. v. 5 

POINTING-STOCK, to every idle ..'ZHenryll. ii. 4 
POINT'ST— thou point'st out?.. ..Timon ofAlh. iv. 3 

POISE of sin and charity Meas.forMeas. ii. 4 

poise the cause in justice' equal . . ..2Henry VI. ii. ) 
so is the equal poise of tliis fell waT.ZHenry VI. ii. 5 
swing and rudeness of his poise.. Troilus Sf Cress, i. 3 
occasions, noble Gloster, of some poise. . . . Lear, ii. 1 
reason to poise another of sensuality .... Othello, i. 3 

it shall be full of poise and difficulty — iii. 3 

POISED— shall be oddly poised ..Troilus ^Cress. i. 3 
both merits poised, each weighs nor less — iv. 1 

herself poised with herself Romeo fir Juliet, i. 2 

POISING us in her defective AU'sWell. ii.3 

POISON — like poison given to work . . Tempesi, iii. 3 

to deal with poison Merry Wives, i. 3 

what a dish of poison has she TuelflhNighl, ii. 5 

poison of that lies in you to temper. . Much Ado, ii. 2 
I have drunk poison, whiles he uttered it — v. 1 
if you poison us do we not die? .Mer.of Venice, iii. 1 
practise against thee by poison ..Asyou Ltkeit, i. 1 

I will deal in poison with thee — _ v. 1 

his lady, I'd poison that vile rascal .All^s Well, iii. 6 
not work maliciously, like poison. Winter' sTale, i. 2 

to poison my friend Polixenes — iii. 2 

I do digest the poison of thy flesh. Comedy of Err. ii. 2 
clamours of a jealous woman poison more — v. 1 

nor poison, malice domestic Macbeth, iii. 2 

sweet poison for the age's tooth KingJohn, i. 1 

of that fell poison which assaileth him — v. 7 
and there the poison is, as a fiend. . . . — v. 7 
blood which breathed this poison. . , . Richard II. i. 1 
they love not poison that do poison.. — v. 6 

let a cup of sack be my poison \ Henry IV. ii. 2 

in poison there is physic 2HenryIV.i. I 

hide not thy poison with such ,.,.2HenryVI. iii. 2 

poison be their drink! — iii. 2 

bring the strong jioisoii that I — iii. 3 

whose tongue more poisons than ....ZHenryVI. i. 4 

poison, for thy sake ! {rep.) Richard Ill.i.i 

looked not on the poison of their .... — iii. 1 
goodness is poison to thy stom&eh.HenryVIIl. iii. 2 
when he is turned to poison?.. Timon of Athens, iii. 1 

may be merely iioisoiil — iv. 1 

with thy most operant poison I — iv. 3 

hang his poison in the sick air — iv.3 

would poison were obedient, and knew — iv. 3 
whose antidotes are poison, and he .. — iv.3 
a poison where it is, not poison .... Corlolanus, iii. I 

the sweet which is their poison — iii. 1 

in grateful forgetfulness shall poison — y. 2 
and not a serpent's poison . . AntonySf- Cleopatra, i. 2 
feed myself with most delicious poison — i. 5 
poison it in the source; and the first — iii. 11 
if they had swallowed poison 'twould — v. 2 
awttv! thou art poison to tny^\ooA.. Cymbeline, \. 2 
tliiiiK, she has strange lingering poisons — i. S 

as well might poison poison ! — \.7 

we will fear no poison, which attends — iii. 3 

she had ta'en otf by poison — v. 5 

orknife, or poison, some upright .... — v. 5 
thou gavest me poison: dangerous. ... — v. 5 

to temper poisons for her — ..Y-* 

hither purposely to poison me. . TitusAndron. iii. i 

yet they poison breed. Antioch Pericles, i. 1 

poison and treason are the hands of sin — i. 1 
behold, here's poison, and here's gold — ]■ I 

tooth that poisons if it bite Ltar, iii. 6 



POI 



[ 583 ] 



POISON— if you have poison for me ......Lear, iv. 7 

I'll ne'er trust poison CKn'.-medieineJ . . — . v. J 
rank poison of tl\e old will die . . Komeo (; Juhel,\. i 
poison hath residence, and medicine — .}}■ ^ 
poison more thim the death-darting — I!;- ^ 
no poison mixed, no sharp-ground . . — !•!• ■; 
find out but a man to bear a poison . . — }n. a 
what if it be a poison, which the iriar — iv. J 
on' if a man did need a poison now. . — iv. i 
let me have a dram of poison — v. i 

fold, worse poison to men s souls — v. i 
sell thee poison, thou hast sold me none— v. j 
cordial, and not poison: {|o with me — v- 1 
poison, I see, luith been his timeless end — v.i 
some poison yet doth hang on them . . — v. J 
did buy a poison of a poor 'potliecary — .v. ^ 
no, no, thev do but jest, poison in jest .Hamlet, ui. i 

he poisons Kim i' the garden for his — in- ^ 

Ol this is the poison of deep grief — iv. ij 

it is a poison tempered by himself — v. ^ 

the potent poison quite o ercrows my . . . . - v. ^ 

make after liim, poison his deligU. . . . . .Olhello, . 1 

and poison this young maid satfections/ — ..i. J 
■with my poison: dangerous conceits (re/3. J — iii. ^ 
or knives, poison, or hre, or suffocating. . — in. J 
get me some poison, lago, this night .... — iv. i 

do it not with poison ; strangle her — iv. i 

the object poisons sight; let it be hid . • ; • — ..Y- ^ 

POISONED good CamiUo'.s . . . .irmter'sTaeni. 2 

the ingredients of our poisoned chalice. A/ac!ie(/._, i. 7 

in the poisoned entrails throw — iv. i 

I fear, is poisoned by a monk Kmg John, v. 6 

how fares your majesty? Poisoned.. — .v. 7 
some poisoned by their wives. ..... Richard I l.m. ^ 

I'd have him poisoned with a pot. ... 1 Henry I r. i. i 

homage sweet, but poisoned flattery? Henry V.iv. 1 

passage of my poisoned voice .1 Henry f'- v. 4 

my valour's poisoned, with only .Corwlanus, i. 10 
wiien poisoned hoiurs had bound.yinfony ^ Cleo. ii. i 
this was his basket. Poisoned then. . — v. i 
would our viands had been poisoned! Cym6e/tne, v. 5 
it poisoned me. O godsl I lett out ••„-:, .'^■^, 
Leonine, whom thou hast poisoned . ,. Pencles, iv. 4 
welcome, I perceived, had poisoned mine, iear, u. 4 
and her sister by her is poisoned ........ — v. i 

the one t!ie other poisoned for ray sake — v. d 

transports his poisoned shot Hamlel, iv. i 

it is thepoisonedcup; itist09late...... — v./ 

the drink, the drink ; I am poisoned ! . . . . — v. J 

thv mother's poisoned; I can no more ;• — \i 
POISONER of good Polixenes...... Wmter sTale,i. i 

PO ISONING— talk of the poisoning. . . . Hamlet, iii. 2 

POISONO US-thou poisonous slave . . ..lempeit, i. i 

as all the poisonous potions in .... . .\ Henry i I ._ v. 4 

poisonous too, and kill thy forlorn .^ Henry r/.iii. 2 
this poisonous hunchbacked toad . . Rtckard ill. i. 6 
with poisonous spite, and envy. Timon of Athens,}, i 
very poisonous wliere the disease.. Cono(aH«s, in. 1 

as poisonous of your honour -- .v. i 

the poisonous damp of night. ...^u(on!/<5«i?o. iv. » 

these most poisonous compounds .... Cymbelme,i. b 

as poisonous tongued, as handed .... — lu. i 

doth, like a poisonous mineral, gnaw . . Olhello, u. 1 

POKE— drew a dial from his poke. Jsi/ou Like it, ii. 7 

POKING-STICKS of steel.. )F;«(e»-'sra(e, iv. 3 (song) 

POLACK— he smote the sledded Polack..Ha»!«e(, i. 1 

a preparation 'gainst the Polack (I ep.) .. — ii. j 

then the Polack never will defend It .... — iv. 4 

you from the Polack wars /•■••A "" ■^- i 

POLAND winter. . . . ..... . - ... Comedy of Errors, iii 



supposes me travelled to Poland.,Ueas./or Meas._ i. 4 
a-ainst some part of Poland Oep-) .... Hamlet, iv. 4 
with conquest come from Poland. ... .... — v. i 

POLD-be pold, I pray you Merry Wives v. 4 

but I will be so pold o,s to wear ...... Henry V y. 1 

POLE, I do challenge thee (rep.) . . Love sL. Lost, v. i 



painted upon a pole .............. ., ..Macbeth, v. 7 

sooner dance upon a bloody pole ..2 Henry I L iv. 1 

will stand steadier on a pole — iv. 7 

both upon two poles hither — . iv. , 

the soldier's pole is fallen . ..Antony^ Cleo. iv. U 
star that's westward from the pole .... Hamlet, i. \ 
toNorway, or the Pole, a ranker rate.... — iv. 4 

the I'uards of the ever-fixed pole Othello, u. 1 

POLECATS! there are fairer {rep.^ Merry Wives, iv. \ 

youhaggage, you polecat, you rony on! — iv. 2 

POLE-CLIPT vineyard .............. empesi, iv. 1 

POLEMON and Amintas ..Antony Sr Cleopatra, in. 6 

POLI— inagne dominator poll Titus Andron. ly. 1 

POLICIES— wit for secret policies . . 1 Henrt/ yi. iii. 3 
POLICY— of valour or policy .... Tuelflhl^i^'ht, in. 2 

for policy I hate — _ i."- '^ 

policy of mind, abibty m means.... 

'tis some policy to have one ehow.L 

I will o'errun thee with policy ..^s^m.. ^.... .., . . . 

is there no military policy, ........... AlU Welt,u 

if she be curst, it is for policy Tammgof !,lirei,; _ii. 1 

not something of the policy ? ^"f ■'"'?! "; i 

some love, but little policy Hickard 11. v. 1 

bare and rotten policy colour .\HenryIV._ i. 3 

proceeds from policy, not love.......2He»r!//* . ly. 1 

to any cause of policy, the gordian. . . . Henry V. i. 1 

the name of hardiness and policy. ... — 

with pale policy seek to divert.. " ' 

through wliich our policy must .. 
it is your policy, to save your 



POLICY grows into an ill opinion Troilus <§• Cress, y. 4 
for policy sits above conscience . . Timon nf.ith. iii. 2 
and policy, like unsevered friends.. Conoiimus, hi. 2 

best ends, vou adopt your policy — iii. 2 

all the policy, strength, and defence — i_v. 6 
not wanted shrewdness of policy. Wn(ony(S-C/eo. ii. 2 
I think the policv of that purpose .. — 11.6 
policy and stratagem must do . . Titus Andron. u. 1 

'tis a deed of policy — ,, 'Y'^ 

this policy, and reverence of age., tear, 1. 2 (letter) 
hunts not the trail of policy so sure.... Hamlel, 11. 2 

more in policy than in malice 0;/ic(to,_ii. 3 

that policy may either last 60 long — m. 3 

POLISUED perturbation! 2HenrylV. iv. 4 

POLITIC— I politic? am I 3Ubtle?./V/erry Wities, 111. 1 

I will read politic authors Twelfth Night, ii. 5 

maintained so politic a state MuchAdo,y. 2 

nor the lawyer s, which is politicks youLike it, iv. 1 
I have been politic with my friend . . — v. 4 
it is not politic in the commonwealth. ^K s Well^ 1. 1 

you must seem very politic — „, '.Y- ' 

nephew, be tliou politic \HenryVI. 11. 5 

with politic grave counsel Richard Ill.n. 3 

his lip with a politic regard Troilus Sf Cress. 111. 3 

when he made man politic Timonof Athens, 111. 3 

of such a nature is his politic love .. — hi- 3 

'tis politic, and safe, to let him keep Lear, 1. 4 

a certain convocation of politic worms. Hamlet, iv. 3 
no furtlier off tlmn in a politic distance. 0/Ae/io,iii. 3 

POLITICIAN, Bolingbroke 1 Henry J K i. 3 

a Catalan, we are politicians Twel/thNight, ii.3 

as lief be a Brownist, as a politician — in- 2 

and, like a scurvy politician, seem to Lear, iv. 6 

this might be the pate of a politician . . Hamlet, v. 1 

POLITICLY begun my reign Taminif of Sh. iv. 1 

nobles, well; 'tis politicly done ....2Henryl'I. 111. 1 
POLIXENES— of good Polixenes .. Winter'sTale,i. 2 

for 'tis Polixenes has made — u- 1 

mistook, my lady, Polixenes for Leontes — n. 1 
Camillo and Polixenes laugh at me. . — ii. 3 

the issue of Polixenes {.rep. iii. 3) — .".3 

adultery with Polixenes, king — m. 2 (mdict.) 
before tolixenes came to your court — in. 2 
Polixenes, (with whom I am accused) — 111. 2 

you had a bastard by Polixenes — 111.2 

IS chaste, Polixenes blameless . . — 111. 2 (oracle) 

I'll reconcile me to Polixenes — in- 2 

to poison my friend Polixenes — m. 2 

that thou betrayed'st Polixenes — 1 n. 2 

son of Polixenes, with his princess .. — v. 1 

Polixenes is slain Troilus S,-Cressida, v. 5 

POLL— not to fifteen thousand poll ... . All's Well, iv. 3 

hath not his poll clawed like 2HenryiK. ii. 4 

we are the greater poll Coriolanus, hi. 1 

setdownby tliepoU? — !"■ 3 

all flaxen was his poll Hamlet, iv. .5 (song) 

POLL-AX— holds his poll-ax sitting. /-ore's L.L. v. 2 
POLLED— leave his passage polled .. Corin/ajuts, iv. 5 

POLLUSION holds in Love's L.Lost, iv. 2 

POLLUTED with your lusts 1 Henri/ /'/. v. 4 

they are polluted offerings ..Troilus S,- Cressida, y. 3 

POLLUTION— close in pollution.. TwelfthNight,\. 2 

stoop to such abhorred pollution. Mens.ybr Mens. ii. 4 

POLONIUS? He hath, my lord, wrung ..Hamlet, 1. 2 

Hamlet in madness hath Polonius slain — iv. 1 

where is Polonius? In heaven — iv. 3 

and whispers, for good Polonius' death . . — iv. 5 

POLTROONS, and such as he 3 Henri/ ri.i. 1 

POLYDAMUS hath beat down.. Troilus Sr Cress, v. 5 

POLYDORE, the heir of Cymbeline . Cymbeline, Hi. 3 

you, Polydore, have proved best .... — iii. B 

would Polydore, thou hadst not done't I — iv. 2 

Polydore, I love thee brotherly — iv. 2 

I'll stay till hasty Polydore return . . — iv. 2 
hark, Polydore, it sounds! but what — iv. 2 
let us, Polydore, though now our voices — iv. 2 
this gentleman, whom I call Polydore — .v. 5 
POLYXENA-than Polyxena. Troi/ws .^-Cress/da, 111. 3 
POMANDER— pomander, brooch. Ciii^er'jJ'ate, iv. 3 
POMEGRANATE— of a pomegranate. .4«'s»reH, ii. 3 
look down into the Pomegranate . . 1 HenrylV.^i. 4 
6in"S on yon pomegranate U&e..KomeoS^ Juliet, iii. 5 
POM°EWATER— as a xjomewater.. Lore's/.. Los(, iv. 2 
POMFRET— the streets of Pomfret..A'!nf /oAn, iv. 2 

you must to Pomfret, not unto Iticliard II. v. 1 

meaning the king at Pomfret — v. 4 

scraped from Pomfret stones 2Henry II .1. 1 

and him to Pomfret; where, as all. .2Henry VI. 11. 2 
and lord Grey, are sent to Pomfret. BicAarii III._}}- 4 

are let blood at Pomfret castle "" ' 

of the queen, must die at Pomfret . , 
the lords at Pomfret (rep.) .......... 

O Pomfret, Pomtret! O thou bloody 
at Pomfret bloodily were butcliered 

Rivers, that died at Pomfret! 

POMP— is not for our porap Mid. N. sDream, 1. 1 

with pomp, with triumph, and with .. — 1. 1 



i. (chorus) 
IHenri/K/. iii. 2 



to keep by policy what Henry gotl..2He7uyyi.i. I 
it is no policy, respecting what ...... — in. J 

that he should die, is worthy policy — ni. } 
that were no policy; the king will .. — Ji.'- | 

with all his far-fet policy, had — in. 

by devilish policy art thou grovra . . — lY- ' 
with powerful policy strengtiien .. ..SHenri/f i. 1. 2 
'tis but his policy to counterteit .... — n- b 
it is his policy, to haste thus fast . ... — .v. 4 
plague of your policy! you sent .Henry nil. 11 . 2 
they take our policy, and call it . 7 roilus d/ Cress._ 1. 3 

my force, pursuit, and policy..; — iv. 1 

the policy of those crafty ssveanug .. — v. 4 
they set me up, in policy, that mongrel — v. 4 



POO 

POMP-his pomp, and all what . 7'imon of Athens, iv. 2 

misery outlives incertain pomp — iv. 3 

behold, how pomp is followed! ..Antony^ Cleo. v. 2 

triumph is this funeral pomp Titus Andron. i. 2 

take physic, pomp; expose thyself Lear, in. 4 

the candied tongue lick absurd pomp..Ha7;i(e/, 111. 2 
pride, pomp, and circumstance of . . . , 0(/ie(Io, in 

POMP^-me pompiB provexit apex 



..Pericles, ii. 



iii. 1 

— iii. 2 

— iii. 2 

— iii. 3 

— iii. 4 
_ V. 3 



Willi pw'F, ,^11'" .'^^■-'"i'", ■- ■■.--"■- , , r 1 ' 

to wealth, to pomp, I pine and die. Lone s L.Lost, 1. 
sweet than that of painted ponip?./)s!/ouLi4et/, n. 1 

to be too little for pomp to enter All's Well, iv. 5 

nor the pomp that may be Winter's Tale, ly. 3 

this unlooked-for unprepared pomp.A:n£-JoAn, 11. 2 

be measures to our pomp? — m- 1 

to be possessed with double pomp. ... — iv. 2 
with dreadful pomp of stout invasion! — iv. 2 
the imminent decay of wrested pomp — iv. 3 

and grinning at his pomp Richard II. 111. 2 

all pomp and majesty I do forswear — iv. 1 
set forth in pomp, she came — — v. 1 

nor the tide of pomp that beats 
in pomp and ease, whilst such 

to think upon my pomp 

why, what is pomp, rule, reign 
till this time, pomp was single 
only to show his pomp as well in. 
still growing in a majesty and pomp 
much better, she ne'er had known pomp 
vain pomp, and glory of the world . . 
as this pomp shows to a little oil.. Ti 
what need these feasts, pomps 



Hem-y V. iv. 1 

...AHenryl'I.l. 1 

'iHenryVI. ii. 4 

....SHenii/l'I. V. a 
....Henry VIII. i, 1 





2 




■i 




2 




2 


, V 


1 


V 


'2 


V 


2 


V 


2 


V 


2 


V. 


'2 


V, 


'2 


V 


2 
2 



lofAth. i. 2 



Sextus Pompeius makes his approaches — 
in Sicily SextusPompeiua spoiled .. — i;; 
POMPEY— tapster? Pompcy .... Meas. /or Meas. 11 
Pompey the Great. Porapey (rep.) .. — 11 
how would you live, Pompey? (rep.) — n 
the law will not allow it, Pompey (_rep.) — 11 
Pompey told you so. Thank you irep.) — 11 
if I do,'Pompey, I shall beat (rep.) .. — .11 

how now, noble Pompey? — !!' 

art going to prison, Pompey? (rep.) — in 

for debt, Pompey, or how? — in 

farewell, good Pompey (rep.) — 

no indeed will I not, Pompey (rep.) — 

adieu trusty Pompej' (rep.) — 

go to kennel, Pompey, go — 

shall pass Pompey the great Love s L. Lost. 

the swain, Pompey the great (rep.) . . — 

1 Pompey am,— You lie (rep.) — 

Pompey proves the best worthy — 

stand aside, good Pompey — 

for Pompey tliat is dead by him (rep.) — 

Pompey the huge! (rep.) — 

most resolute Pompey I — 

Pompey is uncasing for the combat?. . — 

Pompey hath made tlie challenge — .v. 2 

the wars of Pompey the gi-eat Henry F. iv. 1 

nor pibble pabble, in Pompey's camp — iv. 1 

Pompey the great; and Suffolk -iHenryFI. ly. 1 

knew you not Pompey? JutiusCcssar, 1. 1 

to see great Pompey pass the streets — 1. I 
comes in triumph over Pompey s blood? — 1. 1 

in Pompey's porch (rep.) : — i- 3 

that done, repair to Pompey's theatre — _,i. 3 
that now on Pompey's basis lies along — in. ' 
even at the base of Pompey's statue — 111.2 

against my will, as Pompey was — v- 1 

begin to throw Pompey tlie Great. Antony Sr Cleo. 1.2 
the condemned Pompey, rich in his — i. 3 
Pompey is strong at sea; and it appears — 1. 4 

for Pompey's name strikes more — 1. 4 

Pompey thrives in our idleness — 1-4 

and great Pompey would stand — 

know, worthy Pompey that what they — 
you hear no more words of Porapey — 
to draw my sword 'gainst Pompey . . — 
of us must Pompey presently be souglit — 

thou canst not fear us, Porapey — 

I have heard it, Pompey; and am well — 
tliatwilll, Pompey. No, Antony .. — 
thy father, Pompey, would ne'er have — 
Pompey doth this day laugh away. . — 
Pompey, a word. Say in mine ear .. — 
with the health that Porapey gives him — 
no, Porapey, I have kept me from . . — 

I'll pledge it for him, Pompey — 

Pompey, good-night; good brother.. — 
they have despatched with Pompey — 
and Lepidus, since Pompey's feast . . — 
hath waged new wars 'gainst Pompey — 
Lepidus have made wars upon Porapey — 

in tlie wars 'gainst Pompey — "■• " 

he had formerly wrote to Porapey . . — lu. 5 
that his officer, that murdered Porapey — 111. 5 
that often have 'gainst Pompey fought - .in. 7 
were a fragment of Cneius Pompey's — 111. 1 1 

POMPION the great (rep.) Love s L. Lost, v. 2 

POMPOUS— the pompous court? . . As youLike it,y. 4 
undeck the pompous body of a king. Richard II. iv. 1 
most pompous marriage feast . . Pericles, iii. (Gower) 
POND— a pond as deep as hell . . Meas..rorMeas. ni. I 
and mantle, like a standing pond.Mer. of Venice,). 1 
and his pond fished by his next ..Winter'sTale, 1. 2 

as fish are in a pond iHenrylV. 1. 1 

lii'lit upon neiglibouring ponds Cymbeline, 1. 5 

PONDER— give me leave to ponder on . . Lear, iii. 4 

PONDEROUS and settled Winter'sTale, iv. 3 

IKni.} more ponderous than ray tongue ..Lear, i. 1 

oped his ponderous and marble jaws Hamlel, 1. 4 

POND' ROUS and substantial Meas.forMeas. iii. 2 

PONIARD— she speaks poulards Much Ado, ii. 1 

seventeen poniards are at thy bosom. All'sWell, iv. I 

stab poniards in our flesh SHenryVl.n. I 

give me thy poniard; you shall .. Titus. indron. n. 3 

six French rapiers and poniards Hamlet, y. 2 

PONT— king of Pont; Herod ol.. Antony ^-Cleo. iii. 6 

PONTICK— like to the Politick sea Othello, iii. 3 

PONTIFICAL— a robe pontifical....! Henri/ /r. iii.2 

PONTON— Ponton de SantraiUes MIenryVI. 1. 4 

POOL— mantled pool beyond your cell. Tempest, iv. 1 

but to lose our bottles 111 the pool — ly. 1 

in a great pool, a swan's nest Cymbeline, ui. 4 

POOLE-proud Poole, I will MicnryVI. 11. 4 

away, away, good William De la Poole! — n. 4 

for your partaker Poole, and you — 11.4 

have with thee Poole, rarcwell...... — 11.4 

proud Somerset, and WilUam Poole — 11. 4 

and William de la Poole iHenryVI. 1. 1 (art.) 

and William de la Poole (rep. iv. 1) — 1.2 

I tell thee. Poole, wlien in the city . . — . 1. 3 
yes, Poole. Poole? Poole? Sir Poole? — iv. 1 

POOP— the lantern in the poop \HenryIV. hi. 3 

the poop was beaten gold ..Antony S, Cleopatra, ii. 2 

POOPED— she quickly pooped him Pericles, 1 v. 3 

POOR— poor souls! Tempest, i. 2 

a full poor cell — !■ 2 

me, poor man I — }• 2 

alas, poor Milan! — i- 2 

further search for ray poor son — 11. 1 

a most poor credulous monster — 11.2 

but that the poor monster's in drink .. — ii. 2 
to make a wonder of a poor drunkard 



ii. 1 
ii. 2 
ii. 2 
ii. 2 
ii. 6 
ii. 6 



ii. 6 
ii.7 
ii. 7 
ii.7 
ii.7 



iii. 2 



— ii.3. 



POOR matters point to rich ends Tempest, iii 

poor worm! tliou art infected — iii 

the poor monster's my subject — iii 

his dukedom in a pour isle — v, 

to my poor cell — v 

poor wounded name! Two Geiuo/ Verona^ i 

poor forlorn Proteus — i 

tliis pai'ting striites poor lovers dumb — ii. 

falsehood, cowardice, and poor descent — iii. 

my riclies are these poor habiliments — iv. 

Billy women, or poor passengers — iv 

alas, poor Proteusl — iv. 

alas, poor fool! — iv. 

poor gentlewoman 1 — iv. 

my poor mistress, moved therewithal — iv 

alas poor lady! desolate and left!.... — iv. 
yet I live like a poor gentleman . . Merry If'ives, i. 

tliericli and poor (rep. ii. 1) — i. 

hang him, poor cuckoltlly knave!.... — ii. 

yet, I wrong liim to call him poor.... — ii. 

you have killed tlie poor woman.... — iv. 

the poor unvirtuous lat knight — iv. 

as you see, like a poor old man — v. 

master Brook, like a poor old woman — v. 

what Bliall poor men do? — v. 

and as poor as Job? — v. 

tlnit poor number saved with you. Twelfth A'/V/i/, i. 

if it be so, (as 'tis) poor lady, she .... — ii. 

and I, poor monster, fond as — ii. 

thriftless sighs shall poor Olivia breatlie? — ii 

not a friend'greet ray poor corpse.. — ii. I (son 

not a bosom, hides my poor heart .. — iii 

liow apt tlie poor are to be proud! .. — iii 

cue poor lieart of mine in tliee — iv 

they say, poor gentleman, he's — v 

alas, poor fool! !iow have they — v 

Uwixtyou and your poor hroiher, Meas.ftirMeas. i 

the poor dulse's constable (?■?/;.) — ij 

a poor widow's tapster — ii 

truly sir, I am a poor fellow — ii 

truly sir, in my poor opinion — ii 

but yet,— poor Clandiol — ii 

are eitlier rich, or poor, as fancy .... — h 

as much for my poor brother — ii 

tlie softand tender fork of a poor worm — iii 

if thou art rich, thou art poor — iii 

and tlie poor beetle, that we tread upon — iii 

a poor wronged ladj' a merited beneht — iii 

tliis befel to the poor gentlewoman.. — iii 

to take this poor maid from the world! — iii 

the poor Mariana advantaged — iii 

I have laboured for the poor gentleman — iii. 

for my poor self I am combined — iv 

away with her: poor soul, she speaks — v 

fof her poor brotlier's pardon (jcp.).. — v 

do perceive, tliese poor informal women — v 

but, O poor souls, come yon — v 

alas, poor liurt fowl! now will Much Ado, ii 

I thank it, poor fool, it keeps on — ii 

and torment the poor lady worse .. — ii 

have need of poor ones, poor ones may — iii 

but we are the poor duke's officers .. — iii 

and though I be but a poor man .... — iii 

dispose for henceforth of poor Claudio — v 

turned over and over as my poor self — v 

alas! poor heart! ifyou spite it — y 

tears, poor fancy's followers .... Mid. N/s Dream, \ 

conjure tears up in a poor maid's eyes — iii 

and extort a poor soul's patience.... — iii 

in scorning your poor friend? — iii 

from tliese that my poor company detest — iii 

thus to make poor females mad — iii 

and what poor duty cannot do — v. 

and through wall's chinks, poor souls — v 

but mark, poor kniglit, what dreadful — v 
to spill the poor deer's blood .... Love'sL.LosI, iv 

but if thou strive, poor soul — iv 

Bometime to lean upon my poor shoulder— v, 

and rich tilings but poor ._ — v 

e'en one poor man; Pompion — v, 

alas, poor Maccabeus, how hath he.. — v, 

the poor wench is cast away — v 

poor men's cottages, princes'.. Merchant of I'enice, i 

t'lat I liave a poor pennyworth in .. — _i 

a poor man's son (rep.) — ii 

a poor boy,— not a poor boy, sir — ii 

yet, poor man. my fatlier — ii 

tlie follower of so poor a gentleman.. — ii 

•will go hard witli poor Antonio .... — iii 

for the poor rude world hath not .... — iii 

a pound of this poor merchant's flesh — iv 

the twentieth part of one poor scruple — iv 

but a poor thousand crowns As you Like it, i 

a poor unworthy brotlier of yours — i 

or give me the poor allottcry — i 

the poor old man, tlieir fatlier — i 

O poor Orlando! tliou art overthrown — i 

O my poor Rosalind! — i 

I'll put myself in |)oor and mean .... — i 

yet it irks me, the poor dappled fools — ii 

to the which place a poor sequestered stag — i i 

poor deer, quoth he, thou makest — ii 

wherefore do you look upon that poor — ii 

but poor old man, thou prunest — ii 

alas, poor shepherd! searching of .. .. — ii 

tliat your poor friends must woo .... — ii 

there is an old poor man — u 

even so; poor men alone? — iii 

to have ricli eyes, and poor hands., .. — iv 

the poor world is almost six thousand — iv 

alas, poor shepherd! — iv 

a poor virgin, sir, an ill-favoured .... — v 

a poor humour of mine, sir, to take . . — v 

like a miser, sir. in a poor house — v 

bless our poor virginity from All'n tVell, i 

in tlieir poor praise he humbled — i 

a poor fellow. Well, sir (r^p.) — j 

my poor body, madam, requires it . . — i 

suffer her poor knight to be surprised — i 

my friends were poor, but honeet .... — i 



1 POOR— how shall they credit a poor.... .lH's>fe((, i. 3 

1 I sir, I am a poor friend of yours — ii. 2 

a poor physician's daughter (?ep.).... — ii. 3 

my poor doing eternal — ii. 3 

poor lord! is't I, that chase tliee — iii. '2 

tlie dark, poor tliief, I'll f teal — iii. 2 

alas, poor lady! 'tis a hard — iii. 5 

are words, and poor conditions — iv. 2 

all night, poor gallant knave — iv. 3 

commanders very poor rogues (rep.) — iv. 3 

the rogues are marvellous poor — iv. 3 

no other but a poor officer of mine .. — iv. 3 

his qualities being at this poor price — iv. 3 

under my poor instructions yet — iv. 4 

to give this poor petition to the king — v. I 

he looks like a poor decaj'ed member — v. 2 

and speech of the poor suppliant — v. 3 

and a poor maid is undone .... — v. 3 (petition) 

I am a poor man, and at 3'our — v. 3 

the poor cur is embossed .. TamingofSh. 1 (indue.) 

no better than a poor and loathsome — 1 (indue, 



Bianca, stand aside: poor girl! — ii. I 

let us, that are poor petitioners, speak — ii. 1 

the world point at poor Katharine .. — iii. 2 

can change these poor accoutrements — iii. 2 

that she, poor soul, knows not — iv. 1 

shall be proud, our garments poor.... — iv. 3 

the worse for this poor furniture .... — iv. 3 
my poor prisoner, I am innocent.. Winter^s Tate, ii. 2 

come on, poor babe, some powerful . . — ii. .'! 

on thy side, poor tiling, condemned .. — ii. 3 

poor trespasses, more monstrous — iii. 2 

the thrower-out of my poor babe .... — iii. 3 

poor wretch, that, for thy mother's .. — iii. 3 

than tlie poor thing is liere — iii. 3 

piteous cry of the poor souls! (re/).) .. — iii. 3 

alack, poor soul (rep.) — iv. 2 

and me, poor louly maid, most — iv. 3 

a poor humble swain, as i seem now — iv. 3 

you liave heard of ray poor services.. — iv. 3 

I am a poor fellow, sir — iv. 3 

now liath these poor men in question — v. 1 

O my poor fatlier! the heaven — v. I 

my poor house to visit — v. 3 

the sight of my poor image would — v. 3 

a poor mean woman was delivered. Comet/y of Err. i. 1 

parents were exceeding poor, I bought — i. 1 

her part, poor soul! — i. 1 

beauty took from my poor cheek? — Ii. 1 

from home; poor I am but his — ii. I 

alas, poor women! — iii. 2 

carries poor souls to hell — iv. 2 

wert not, poor distressed soul I — iv. 4 

ah me, poor man, how pale and wan — iv. 4 

God lielp, poor souls, how idly — iv. 4 

to fetch my poor distracted — v. 1 

60 cracked and splitted iny poor tongue — v. I 

were poor and single business Macbeth 



i. 7 



— iv. 2 



like the poor cat i' the adage? 

whilst our poor malice remains 

for the poor wren, the most diminutive . 

poor bird ! thou'dst never (rep.) 

now, God help thee, poor monkey! 

poor prattler 1 how thou talk'st 

a weak, poor, innocent lamb 

bleed, bleed, poor country ! (rep.) 

the poor state esteem him as 

■which tlie poor heart would fain deny . 

a poor player, that struts 

his mother shames him so, poor boy. Ki7ig John, ii. 1 
heaven-moving pearls from his poor eyes — ii. 1 
thy sins are visited in this poor child — 

cheats the poor maid of that — 

like a poor beggar, raileth on — 

because my poor child is — 

many a poor man's son — 

find the inheritance of tliis poor child 
hath one poor string to stay it by 



iv. 3 



ii. 1 



iv. 1 



— V. 7 

: poor craftsmen Ricliard II. i. 4 

.... ... .. J 

ii. 1 
ii.2 



though death be poor, it ends 

nor the prevention of poor Bolingbroke 

alas, poor duke! the task 

thanks, the exchequer of the poor . . 

when my poor heart no measure keeps — iii. 4 

poorqneen! so that thy state — iii. 4 

alas, poor Richard! where rides — v. 2 

no more than my poor life must — v. 2 

strike him, Aumerle; poor boy — v. 2 

1 was a poor groom of thy stable — v. .5 

for tlie poorabuses of the time \HenryIV. i. 2 

the poor jade is wrung in — ii. 1 

way to give poor jades tlie hots — ii. 1 

poor fellow! never joyed since — ii. I 

a hundred upon poor four of us — ii. 4 

or three and fifty upon poor old Jack — ii. 4 

encli poor, such bare, such lewd — iii. 2 

he is poor: he hatli nothing (rep.) .. — iii. 3 

one poor pennyworth of sugar-candy — iii. 3 

■what should poor Jack Falstatf do .. — iii. 3 

they are exceeding poor and bare .... — iv. 2 

a poor imminded outlaw sneaking .. — iv. 3 

while his blood was poor — iv. 3 

clianj;eliiigs. and poor discontents.... — v. 1 

poor Jack, farewell! I could liave .. — v. 4 

the panting sides of his poor jade 2HenryIV. i. 1 

I am as poor as Job, my lord — i. 2 

a long loan for a poor lone woman .. — ii. 1 

poor widow of Easteheap (rep.) — ii. 1 

liimiliarity with such poor people.... — ii. I 

my lord, this is a poor mad soul .... — ii. 1 

reputation, and satisfy the poor woman — ii. 1 

I do now remember the poor creature — ii. 2 

I am the king's poor cousin, sir — ii.2 

grant that, ray poor virtue — ii. 4 

you poor, h.ase, rascally, cheating. . . . — ii. 4 

for tearing a poor whore's ruff — ji. 4 

alas, poor ape, how thou sweat'st I .. — ii. 4 

and burns, poor soul ! for the other.. — ii. 4 

a poor esquire of tliis county — iii. 2 

have I, in my poor and old motion . . — iv. 3 



POOR— such are the poor, in liealtli..2/le«rj/7>'. iv. 4 

O my poor kingdom, sick with — iv. 4 

this poor show doth better — v. 5 

the poor mechanic porters crowding . .Henry V. i. 2 

valued this poor seat of Jilngland .... — i. 2 

ah, poor heart! he is so shaKed — ii. 1 

orisons 'gainst tliis poor wretch — ii.2 

therefore hence, poor miserable — ii.2 

take iiierey on the poor souls — ii. 4 

poor, we niay call them, in their native — iii. 5 

his exchequer is too iioor — iii. 6 

alas, poor Harry of Kiiglandl — iii. 7 

the poor condemned English, like — iv. (chorus) 

and a many poor men's lives saved.. ^ iv. 1 

tlieir wives left poor behind them .. — iv. 1 

that a poor and private disiileasure.. — iv. I 

poor I have in yearly pay — iv. I 

behold you poor and starved baud .. — iv. 2 

and their poor jades lob down — iv. 2 

their poor bodies must lie and fester — iv. 3 

should they mock poor fellows thus? — iv. 3 

and my poor soldiers tell me — iv. 3 

the naked, poor, and mangled peace — v. 2 

the pour and untempering — v. 2 

more than we poor men do know 1 Hoiry t'i. i. 2 

thus are poor servitors (when others — ii. I 

to visit her poor castle where she .... — ii.2 

Soor gentleman! his wrong — ii. .'i 

ow am I so poor? or how — iii . I 

poor market-folks, that come to sell — iii 2 

mean and right poor; for that — iv. G 

poor boy! he smiles, methinks — iv. 7 

yet is he poor, and our nobility — v. 3 

a poor earl's daughter — v. 5 

so abject, base, and poor, to choose . . — v. 5 

unto the poor king Reignier 2HeitryI'I. i. 1 

I am but a poor petitioner _ i. 3 

poorsuul! God's goodness hath been — ii. 1 

sent his poor queen to France — ii.2 

and innocence of this poor fellow.... — ii. 3 

that fleeced poor passengers — iii. I 

so the poor chicken should be sure.. — iii. 1 

thus is poor Suffolk ten times banished — iii. 2 

grieve I at an hour's poor loss? — iii.--' 

to call poor men before them iv. 7 

to determine poor men's causes — iv. 7 

and sends the poor well-pleased .... — iv. 10 

to combat a poor famished man — ii-. 10 

a poor es(juire of Kent — v. 1 

poor Cliftord 1 how I scorn his ZHenry TI. i . 1 

p;ior queen! how love to me — i. 1 

in vain thou speak'st, poor boy — i. 3 

alas, poor York ! but that I hate .. .. — i. 4 

hath that poor monarch taught — i. 4 

graced thy poor sire with his bridal day — ii.2 

ere the poor fools will yean — ii. .■> 

poor harmless lambs abide their .... — ii. 5 

poor queen, and son, your labour.... — iii. 1 

that sue, poor wretch, for grief — iii. 1 

thou, poor soul, art then forsaken .. — iii. 1 

that I, poor Margaret, with — iii. 3 

how sliall poor Henry live — iii. 3 

alas, poor Clarence! IS it for — iv. i 

for a poor earl to give — v. 1 

you left poor Henry at the — v. 1 

the enemies to our poor bark — v. 4 

where my poor younjj was limed. ... — v. 6 

I Diedalus; my poor boy, Icai-us .... — v. li 

my sword weeps for the poor king's — v. H 
poor key-cold figure of a holy king !J?ec^(irri ///. i. 2 

the lamentation s of poor Anne — i . 2 

t'ne helpless balm of my poor eyes .. — i. 2 

encloseth my poor heart — i. 2 

if thy poor devoted servant may — i. 2 

Edward, my poor son, at Tewksbury — i. 3 

poor Clarence did forsake his fatlier — i. 3 

and for his meed, poor lord, he is — i. 3 

the troubler of the poor world's peace! — i. 3 

poor painted queen, vain flourish.... — i. 3 

aay poor Margaret was a prophetess. . — i. 3 

my guiltless wife, and my poor children I— i. 4 

bitter sentence of poor Clarence' death? — i. 4 

but he, poor man, hy your — ii. 1 

how tlie poor soul did forsake — ii. ! 

speak unto myself for him, poor soul — ii. 1 

help me to my closet. O poor Clarence! — ii. 1 

is liglited oil poor Hastings' wrctclied — iii. 4 

these both put by, a poor petitioner.. — iii. 7 

go, go, poor soul (rep.) — iv. 1 

poor heart, adieu — i v. 1 

[Coi.K)i(.] some mean, poor gentleman — iv. 2 

ah, my poor princes! — iv. 4 

blind siglit, poor mortal living ghost — iv. 4 

I called thee then, poor shadow .... — iv. 4 

poor breathing orators of miseries! .. — iv. 4 

the dire death of my poor sons — iv. 4 

a poor bark, of sails and tackling reft — iv. 4 

too deep and dead, poor infants — iv. 4 

poor Clarence, by tlij' guile — v. 3 

for want of means, poor rats — v. 3 

and make poor England weep — v. 4 

communication of a most ]ioor issue? Hen ^t/T///. i.l 

I am the shadow of poor Buckingham — i. 1 

they have done my poor house grace — i . 4 

now, poor Edward Bohun — ii. 1 

alas, poor lady! she's a stranger — ii. 3 

for I am a most poor woman — ii. 4 

with me, a poor weak woman — iii. 1 

for tlieir poor mistress' sake — iii 1 

alas! poor wenclies, wliere are now . . — iii. 1 

upon me, poor undeserver — iii. 2 

how wretched is that poor man .. — iii. 2 

1 am a poor fallen man — iii 2 

alas, poor man! — iv. 2 

and my poor name banished — 1^* "-^ 

my next poor petition is — iv. 2 

stand these poor people's friend .... — iv. 2 

the estate of my poor queen — ' v. 1 

tongues, than 1 ms'selr, poor man — v. 1 

that am a poor and humble subject. . — v. 2 



1*00R — you see the poor remainder.. He «»!/ I'UI. v. 3 
tiiinselfl Alas, poor Troilusl.. Troilus ir Cicssida, i. 2 

alas, poor chin 1 many a wart is — i. 2 

no, your poor disposer's sick — iii. 1 

what, am I poor of late? — iii. 3 

esteem, and poor in worth! — iii- 3 

alas, poor wretch 1 a poor capocchial — iv. 2 

O poor gentlcnuml a plague — iv. 2 

all, how the poor world is pestered . . — v. 1 

ahl pooroursex! this fault in us.. .. — v. 2 

how poor Andromache shrills her. . . . — v. 3 

here's a letter from yon' poor girl — v. 3 

thus is the poor agent despised! — v. II 

poor rogues, and usurers' men!. VVnion of Athens, ii. 2 

when he was poor, imprisoned — ii. 2 

he's poor, and that's reveuge enough — iii. 1 

righteous gods, I am as poor as you. , — iv. 2 

and his poor self, a dedicated — i v. 2 

and we, poor mates, stand on — iv. 2 

rich in sorrow, parting poor — i v. 2 

poor honest lord, brought low — iv. 2 

and thatcli your poor thin roofs with — iv. 3 

thy plenteous bosom one poor root! . . — iv. 3 

a poor unmanly melancholy — iv. 3 

thy father, that poor rag, must be .. — iv. 3 

compounded thee poor rogue hereditary — iv. 3 

some poor fragment, some slender .. — iv. 3 

an honest poor servant of yours — iv. 3 

ne'er did poor steward wear — iv. 3 

whilst this poor wealth lasts — i v. 3 

he likewise enriched poor straggling — iv. 3 

interprets for my poor ignorance — v. a 

we are accounted poor citizens Coiiolanus, i. 1 

tliey say, poor suitors have strong ,, — i. 1 

to chain up and restrain the ijoor .... — i. 1 

rubbing the poor itch of your — i. 1 

at a poor man's house — i. 9 

to give my poor host freedom — i. 9 

is Marcius poor, that you two (rep.) — ii. 1 

you are ambitious for poor Icnaves' caiis — ii. 1 

to trouble the poor with begging — ii. 3 

to ray poor unworthy notice — ii. 3 

a marvellous poor one (rep.) — iv. 5 

one poor grain or two (rfp.) — v. 1 

tills is a poor epitome of yours — v. 3 

and to poor we, tliine enmity's most — v. 3 

when she (poor lien), fond of no — v. 3 

that sliall our poor city find — V. 4 

all the poor men of your sort Julius CcBsar, i. 1 

than that poor Brutus, with himself — i. 2 

poor man! I know, he would not be — i. 3 

when that the poor have cried, Cassar — iii. 2 

poor soul : his eyes are red as fire .... — iii. 2 

and none so poor to do him reverence — iii. 2 

wounds, poor, poor dumb mouths.. ., — iii. 2 

poor knave, I blame thee not — iv. 3 

come, poor remains of friends, rest .. — v. 3 
none our parts so poor but was ..Antony fyCleo. i. 3 

shall not make poor my greatness — ii. 2 

although thou think me poor, I am — ii. 7 

so the poor third is up; till death.... — iii. 5 

when Iiither he sends so poor a pinion — iii. 10 

I liad thought, to have lield it poor. . — iii. 1 1 

earned the waste: poor Antony! .... — iv. 1 

poor Enobarbus did before thy face. . — iv. 9 

the poor last I lay upon thy lips .... — iv. 13 

by such poor passion as the maid .... — iv. 13 

a poor Egyptian yet: the queen — v. 1 

liow poor an instrument may do .... — v. 2 

poor venomous fool, be axxgty — v. 2 

unto a poor, but worthy, gentleman .Cymbeline, i. 1 

as I my poor self did exchange — i. 2 

sir, you o'errate my poor kindness . . — i. 5 

alas, poor princess, thou divine Imogen — ii. i 

telling you that I am poor of thanks — ii. 3 

his shipping (poor ignorant baubles!) — iii. 1 

we, poor unfledged, nave never — iii. 3 

poor I am stale, a garment out of. ... — iii. 3 

thus may poor fools believe — iii. 4 

will poor lulks lie, that have afflictions — iii. 6 

poor house, that keep'st tliyself! .... — iii. 6 

for the dish, poor tributary rivers .. — iv. 2 

poor sick Fidele! I'll willingly — iv. 2 

as deep as these poor pickaxes can dig — iv. 2 

remaining so long a poor unknown . . — iv. 4 

hath my poor boy done aught — v. 4 

or we poor ghosts will cry to — v. 4 

poor shadows of Elysium, hence — v. 4 

poor wretches that depend on greatness — v. 4 

that the poor soldier, that so richly . . — v. 5 

such noble fury in so poor a thing . . — v. 5 

but beggary and poor looks — t.6 

these three in poor beseeming — v. 5 

Tribunes! and raeapoor competitor riViis.Inrfron.i. 1 

behold the poor remains, alive, and dead!— i. 2 

poor I was slain, when Bassianus died — ii. 3 

poor Bassianus (7Tp.) — ii. 4 

for thou, poor man, hast drowned.... — iii. 1 

alas, poor heart, that kiss is — iii. 1 

thjfniece, and I, poor creatures, want — iii. 2 

this poor right liand of mine is , — iii. 2 

when thy poor heart beats with _ iii. 2 

ail the tears that thy poor eyes — iii. 2 

poor harmless fly! that with his .... — iii. 2 

alas, poor man! grief has so wrought — iii. 2 

make poor men's cattle break — v. 1 

although the cheer be poor, 'twill lill — v. 3 

the poor remainder of Andronici .... — v. 3 

and the poor worm doth die for't Pericles, i. 1 

I am thinking of the poor men — ii. 1 

alas, poor souls, it grieved«ny heart .. — ii. 1 

driving the poor fry before liim — ii. 1 

like a poor man's riglit in tlie law .... — ii, 1 
up and down the poor sliip di'ives — iii. (Gower) 

for the hive of this poor infant — iii. 1 

fire and meat for these poor men — iii. 2 

ah me! poor maid, born in — iv. 1 

and save poor ine, the weaker — iv. 1 

we have but poor three, and they — iv. 3 

'tis not the bringinj; up of poor bastards — iv. 3 



[ 585 J 

POOR Transilvanian is dead Pericles, iv. 3 

a love that makes breath poor Lear, i. 1 

then poor Cordelia; and yet not BO — i. 1 

that art most rich, being poor — i. 1 

and with what goor judgment — i. 1 

as poor as the king (rep.) — i. 4 

poor pelting villages, slieep-cotes — ii. 3 

poor Turly good! poorTomI — ii. 3 

ne'er turns the key to the poor ii. 4 

here, you gods, a poor old man — ii. 4 

a poor, infirm, weak, and despised — iii. 2 

poor fool and knave, I have one part .... — iii. 2 

nor no poor knight; when slanders — iii. 2 

poor naked wretches whereso'er you are — iii. 4 

fatliom and half ! poor Tom! (rep.) — iii. 4 

betray tliy poor heart to women — iii. 4 

but such a poor, bare, forked animal .... — iii. 4 
and liurts the poor creature of earth .... — iii. 4 

poor Tom's a-cold (rep. iv. U — iii. 4 

poor banished man! tliou say'st — iii. 4 

the foul fiend haunts poor "Tom in — iii. B 

she kicked the poor king her father — iii 6 

poor Tom, thy horn is dry — iii. 6 

pluck out his poor old eyes — iii. 7 

yet, poor old heart, lie help the — iii. 7 

tis poor mad Tom — iv. 1 

poor Tom liatli been seared (?ep.) — iv. 1 

but, O poor Gloster ! lost he — iv. 2 

well sir; the poor distressed Lear — iv. 3 

alack, poor gentleman! of Albany's .... — iv. 3 

well worth a poor man's taking — iv. 6 

a poor unfortunate beggar — iv. 6 

a most poor man, made tame — iv. 6 

and let poor volk pass — iv. 6 

to watch, (poor perdu!) with this thin.... — iv. 7 

and wast thou fain, poor father — iv. 7 

vour grace had speech with man so poor — v. 1 

near poor rogues talk of court news — v. 3 

and my poor fool is hanged! — v. 3 

thou hadst been poor John Romeo 4- Juliet, i. 1 

only poor, that, when she dies — i. 1 

at my poor house, look to behold — i. 2 

like a poor prisoner in his twisted gyves — ii. 2 

alas, poor Romeo, he is already — ii. 4 

my heart! poor bankrupt, break at once! — iii. 2 
ah, poor my lord, what tongue shall — iii. 2 

poor ropes, you are beguiled — iii. 2 

13 my poor heart so for a kinsman . . — iii. 6 

Eoor soul, thy face is much abused . . — iv. 1 
ut one, poor one, one poor and loving — iv. 6 

I see, that thou art poor — v. 1 

then be not poor, but break it — v. 1 

than these poor compounds that thou — v. 1 
poor living corse, closed in a dead man's — v. 2 
buy a poison of a poor 'potiiecary .. .. — v. 3 

poor sacrifices of our enmity ! — v. 3 

she followed my poor father's body Hamlet, i . 2 

and your poor servant ever — i. 2 

crack the wind of the poor plirase — i. 3 

alas, poor ghost! (jfp.) — i. .'j 

whose natural gifts were poor to those .. — i. 5 
and, for my own poor part, look you .... — i. 5 

give me one poor request — i. 5 

and what so poor a man as Hamlet is.... — i. 5 

where sadly the poor wretch comes — ii. 2 

I am even poor in thanks — ii- 2 

rich gifts wax jjoor, when givers prove .. — iii. 1 

wliy should the poor be flattered — iii. 2 

of violent birth, but poor validity — iii. 2 

tlie poor advanced makes friends of — iii. 2 

poor Ophelia (rfp. iv. 7) — iv. 5 

pulled tlie poor wretch from her — iv. 7 

alas, poor Yorick! I knew him, Horatio — v. 1 
his madness is poor Hamlet's enemy .... — v. 2 

thin habits, and poor likelihoods Othello, i. 3 

must of poor patience borrow — i. 3 

if this poor trash of Venice, whom I trash — ii. 1 
I have very poor and unhappy brains for — ii. 3 
how poor are they that have not patience I — ii. 3 

there's a poor piece of gold for thee — iii. 1 

not enriches him, and makes me poor. ... — iii. 3 
poor, and content, is ricli, and rich enough — iii. 3 
as poor as winter, to him that ever (rep.) — iii. 3 
poor lady! she'll run mad, when she .... — iii. 3 
one is too poor, too weak for my revenge! .— iii. 3 

alas, poor caitift'! look, how he — iv. I 

alas, poor rogue ! — iv. 1 

at one side, and sing it like poor Barbara — iv. 3 

the poor soul sat sigliing by — iv. 3 (song) 

let's go see poor Cassio dressed — v. 1 

poor Desdemonal I am glad thy father's — v. 2 
POORER— that we, the poorer horn ..All's Well, i. 1 
our esteem was made mucli poorer by it — v. 3 
often wished myself poorer . ...Timon of Athens, i. 2 
times upon far poorer moment . . Anlom/ ^ Cleo. i. 2 

POOREST service is repaid Taming of Shrew, iv. 3 

thousand of my poorest subjects ..'iUenri/ir. iii. 1 
make me as the poorest vassal is ... . — iv. 4 
they are the poorest, but poverty. . Henry Fill. iv. 2 
the lowest, basest, poorest, of this . . Corinlanus, i . 1 

that for the poorest piece will — iii. 3 

Rome is thine, thou art poorest of all — iv. 7 
shown for poorest diminutives. ./-l/i^oni/ ^-Cleo. iv. 10 

to take the basest and poorest shape Lear, i i . 3 

are in the poorest tiling superfluous — ii . 4 

POOR-JOHN-of the newest, poor-john. rempesi, ii 2 

POORLY— so poorly in your thouglits ..Macbeth, ii. 2 

to look so poorly, and to speak so. . Richard II. iii. 3 

curtains poorly are let loose HenryV.iv. 2 

must poorly sell ourselves with. Trotlus ^ Cress, iv. 4 

let me die, stealing so poorly Cymbeline, iv. 2 

my father, poorly led? Lear, iv. I 

POI^ — if he can prove, a' pops me out. . KingJolin, i. 1 
POPE— legate of the pope (_rep. v. 1) .. — iii. 1 

to an answer, as the poiie — iii. 1 

so tell the pope; all reverence set — iii- I 

against the pope, and count his — iii. I 

as lioldin" of the pope your sovereign — v. 1 

your stubborn usage of the pope — v. 1 

your oath of service to the pope .... — v. 1 



POPE— spite of pope, or dignities of ..IHenryyi. i. 3 

answer this before the pope i. 3 

perused the letters from the pope.... — v. 1 
would choose him pope, and carry ..2Henri/l'I. i. 3 
that made him proud, the pope.... Henry;'///, ii. 2 

appeal unto the pojic to bring my .. ii. 4 

letter to the pujie miscarried, and came — iii- 2 
what's this— to tla- iHipc? the letter.. — iii. 2 
you writ to the |i"iie, ugainst the king — iii. 2 

POPEDOM-to gain the popedom .... — iii. 2 

POPILIUS [see LENA]- 
wliat entcrprize, Popilius? JuliusCiPsar. iu. 1 

POPIN.IAY— with a popinjay \ Henry ir. i. 3 

POPISH— twenty popish tricks.... riYus^jidron. v. 1 

POPPED— for thus popped Paris. Troilus ^-Cress. iv- 5 
popped in between the election Hnmiet, v. 2 

POPPY— not poppy, nor mandragora ..Othello, iii. 3 

POPRIN PEAR-[CoZ.J poprin pear. Romeo <^ Jut. ii. 1 

POPULAR— o'erprised all popular rate. Tempest, \. 2 
thou base, common, and popular?. . . . Henry I', iv. 1 
do press among the popular throngs. Cor/o/onzii-, ii. 1 
the bewitchment of some popular man — ii. 3 
his shall, his popular shall, against — iii. 1 
in a violent popular ignorance v. 2 

POPULARITY— to popularity ....] Henry IK iii. 2 
from open haunts and popularity .... Henry F. i. 1 

POPULOUS— tlie world is populous.. /i/c/mr<( II. v. b 
a wilderness is populous enough ..IHenryi'I. iii. 2 
raised by your populous troops.. .^n/ony ^'Cieo. iii. 6 
I doubt not but this populous eity..../'er/c(e-5, iv. fi 

the fire is spied in populous cities Otiiello. i. I 

many a beast then in a populous city .. — iv. 1 

PORCH— here in the porch Merry Wives, i. 4 

calved i' the porch 0' the Capitol . . Coriulanus, iii. 1 
for me in Pompey's porch irep.^ ..Julius Cmsnr, i. 3 

PORCHES— in the porclies of mine ears.. Ha»?;e/, i. 5 

PORCUPINE— to the Porcupine. ComeJy 0/ /Jrr. iii. 1 
to have ta'en you at the Porcupine.. — iii. 2 

breach of promise to the Porcupine.. iv. 1 

to bring it to the Porcupine {tep.)., ,, v. 1 

like a sharp quilled porcupine 2 Henry fl. iii. 1 

do not, porcupine, do not Troilus fy Cressida, ii. 1 

like quills upon the fretful porcupine . . Handet, i. 5 

PORE— to pore upon a book Love'sL.LosI, i. I 

still dream, and pore, and thereon look? — iv. 3 

PORING— and the poring dark . .Henry r. iv. (eho.) 

PORK— yes, to sme U pork Merchant of Venice, i. 3 

you raise the price of pork — iii. 5 

PORK-EATERS, we shall not _ iii. 5 

PORN at Monmouth (rep.) Henry V. iv. 7 

in Macedon, where Alexander is porn iv. 7 

PORPUS— when I saw the porpus Pericles, ii. ) 

PORRIDGE-comforc like cold porridge. Tempest, ii. 1 
tell me of amess of porridae .. ..MerryWives,\i\. 1 
mouth with mutton and porridge- Lore's L. Lost, i 1 

in your pie and your porridge .All's ll'ell, i. I 

should not drop in his porridge.. Cu?Herfyo/ Err. ii. 2 

they want their porridge I Henry I' I. i. 2 

and bran! porridge after meat!.. Tro/Vus 4Cress. i. 2 
set ratsbane by his porridge Lrar, iii. 4 

PORRINGER— on a porringer . . Taming of Sh. iv. 3 
till her pinked porringer fell ofi' . . Henry Till. v. 3 

PORT— maps, for ports, and piers..iVcr. of Venice, i. 1 
showing a more swelling port than.. — i. 1 
and the magniflcoes of greatest port — iii. 2 
saint Francis here, beside the port...4H's Well, iii. 5 
keep house, and port, andservauts.'/'amijiffo/S/i.i. 1 

bearing my port,— celsa senis — iii. 1 

and the very ports they blow Maclietli, i. 3 

to a wise man ports and happy. . .... liicliard II. i. 3 

I have from Port le Blanc, a bay in.. — ii. I 
keep'st the ports of slumber open ..2HenryIV. iv. 4 

assume the port of Mars Henry V. i. (chorus) 

the name and port of gentlemen?. .2//e»iry/7. iv. 1 
have to the port of Athens. Troilus <S- Cressida, (prol.) 

he touched the ports desired — ii. 2 

at the port, lord, I'll give her iv. 4 

come, to the port; I'll tell thee — iv. 4 

and open your unchanged ports. Timon of Athens, v. h 

so, let the ports be guarded Coriolanus, i. 7 

tlie city ports by this liath entered .. v. s 

approaches to the port of Rome . .Antony <§- Cleo. i. 3 

to the ports tlie discontents — i. 4 

and at the port expect you — iv. 4 

and with our spritely port make — iv. 12 

the anchor's in the port Titus Andronicns, iv. 4 

all ports I'll bar; tiie villain Z,ear,ii. 1 

no port is free; no place — ii. 3 

secret feet in some of our best ports — iii. 1 

PORTABLE to make the dear loss Tempest, v. 1 

all these are portable, with other .... Macbeth, i v. 3 
like an engine not portable.. rroi/Ksij- Cressida, ii. 3 
how light and portable mj' pain seems . . Lear, iii. G 

PORTAGE of the head Henry r. iii. 1 

is more than can thy portage quit . ... Pericles, iii. 1 

PORTAL— fiery portal of the east ..Eiclnrd II. iii. 3 
even now, out at the portal! Hamlet, iii. 4 

PORTANCE— his present portance.. Cor/o(a;i us, ii. 3 
and portance in my travel's history .... Othi llo, i. 3 

PORTCULLISED.with my teeth.... Ricliard II. i. 3 

PORTEND no good to us Lear, i. 2 

these eclipses do portend these divisions! — i. 2 
that alphabetical position portend?.. TwelflhN. ii. ."i 

what think you they portend? \Henryiy. ii. 4 

portends alone the fall of Antony .Ant.^clro. iii. 1 1 
Cloten's being liere to us portends. . Cymbelhie, iv. 2 
which portends, (unless my sins abuse — iv. 2 

PORTENT— what portents are these? 1 Henry If. ii. 3 
and a portent ot broached mischief. . — v. 1 
plagues, and what portents? .... Troilus ^ Cress, i. 3 
portents, and evils imminent ....Julius Crpsar, ii. 2 
these are portents; but yet, I hope Othello, v. 2 

PORTENT-LIKE woula I o'ersway .Love'sL.L. v. 2 

PORTENTOUS things unto Julius Civsar, i. 3 

portentous must this humour.. ../lomeo S,- Juliet, i. 1 
this portentous figure comes armed Hnmlei,\. I 

PORTER— to be your porter Merry Wires, ii. 2 

on his back, like a porter Loije*s/../,os/, i. 2 

Dromio, play the porter well . . Comedy of Errors, ii 2 
shall I be porter at the gate? ii. 2 



POR 



[ 586 ] 



PORTER— made our porter?. . Comedy of Errors, in. 

the porter for tliis time, sir — iii- 

if a man were porter of hell-gate Macbeth, ii. 3 

I pray you, remember the porter .... — i;. 3 
the poor mechanic porters crowding . . Henry V. i. 2 

porter, remember what I gave 1 Henry Vl. ii. 3 

good master porter (rep.^ Henry I' 111. v. S 

are these porters, these lazy knaves? — y. 3 
Achilles; a drayman, a porter ..Troilus^Cress.i.2 

no porter at his gate Timon of Alliens, u. I 

has the porter his eyes in his head. Coriolanus, iv. 5 

the porter of Rome gates — iv- ^ 

good porter, turn the key Lear, lu. 7 

let tlie porter let in Susan ItomeoS^Jidiel, i. 5 

PORTIA; nothing (rep.) Merchant qf re ntce, i. 1 

toBelmont, to lair Portia — .?• 1 

to come view fair Portia (ifp.) — ii. 7 

Portia, adieu! I have too grieved — ii. 7 

how much unlike art thou to Portia? — _ii. 9 
find I here? fair Portia's counterfeit? — ui. 2 

sweet Portia, welcome (« p.) — iij- 2 

never shall you lie by Portia's side.. — }}\-'i 
and Portia one, there must be something — in. 5 
or I am much deceived, of Portia — — v. 1 
sweet Portia, if you did know to whom — v. 1 
Portia, forgive me this enforced wrong — v. 1 

you shall find, that Portia was — v. 1 

Portia, what mean you? luUusCa;sar,\i. 1 

why so I do: good Portia, go to bed. . — n. 1 

kneel not, gentle Portia — ;;■ ' 

tie no more, Portia is Brutus' harlot — n- 1 

Portia, go in a while — !'• 1 

Portia is dead. Ha! Portia? — iv. 3 

Portia! art thou gone? No more — iv. 3 

why, farewell Portia: we must die .. — iv. 3 
PORTION— with him the -pOTtion.Meas.forMeas. iii. 1 

prodigal portion have I spent As you Like it,\. 1 

answerable to this portion Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 

make her portion equal to hia .. Winter's Tale, iv. 3 
and have no portion in the choice . . 1 Henry VI. v. 3 
accumulated to his own portion I . . Heni-y VIIL iii. i 

that portion which yourself proposed Lear, i. 1 

PORTLY— ray portly belly Merry Wives, i. 3 

your argosies with portly sail . . Mer. of Venice, i. 1 
hands have holp to make so portly.. IHenT-yiF.i. 3 

a good portly man, i' faith — ii. 4 

by his large and portly size Troilus fy Cress, iv. 5 

a portly sail of ships make hitlierward-Perictes, i. 4 

like a portly gentleman Rnmeo fy Juliet, i. 5 

PORTRAIT of a blinking Merch. of Venice, ii. 9 

PORTRAITURE— I see the portraiture. Hamie«, v. 2 
PORTUGAL— bay of Portugal..../l.«i/otiL"'"!i(, iv. 1 
POSIES-fragrant posies {rep.) Merry Wives, ui.l tsong) 

POSITION portend? TwelflhNighl,h.b 

I do not strain at the position.. Troilus 4- Cress, iii. 3 
a most pregnant and unforced position. 0(/ie«o, ii. 1 
do not, in position, distinctly speak of her — iii. 3 

POSITIVE as the earth is firm Merry Wires, Iii. 2 

'tis positive 'gainst all exceptions Henry V. iv. 2 

Ptttroclus is a fool positive . . Troilus fy Cressida, ii. 3 

POSITIVELY speak in this Itichard in. iy. 2 

that I have positively said, 'tis so Hamlet, ii. 2 

POSSESS— to possess his books Tempest, iii. 2 

I will possess him with yellowness. iVenj/ Wives, i. 3 
possess us, possess us; tail us... .Ttcetfih Night, ii. 3 

you both, possess the people Mnch Ado, v. 1 

still her cheeks possess the same.. Love'sL.Lost, i. 2 
I am yours, and all tliat I possess . . — v. 2 

spirit again possess her corpse Winter'sTale,v. 1 

which shall possess them with Macbeth, iv. 3 

why seek'st thou to possess me King John, iv. 2 

in reversion that I do possess Richard II. ii. 2 

the present benefit which I possess .. — ii. 3 
nor did the French possess tue Salique. Henry V. i. 2 
no man should possess hira with any — iv. 1 
my soldiers' hearts! possess them not — iv. 1 

possess it, York, for tliis is thine ZHenry VI. i. 1 

and good thoughts possess thee! . . Richard III. iv. 1 
you nave promised I shall possess . . — iv. 2 
good dreams possess your iancy .'. Henry VIJI. iv. 2 
all that 1 did possess, save . . Troilus Sr Cressida, iii. 3 

by the way, possess tliee what — iy. 4 

and possess me some harlot's spirit! Cori'oZanus, iii. 2 

?osgess it, I'll make answer. .^n^ony 4- Cleopatra, ii. 7 
will possess you of that ship — iii- 9 

done, possess a golden sluinber . . Titus Andron. ii. 3 
some fit or frenzy do possess her .... — iy. 1 
share all that he doth possess. . . . Romeo 4- Juliet, i. 3 
and gross in nature, possess it merely .. Hamlet, i. 2 

POSSESSED with guilt Tempest, i. i 

already hath possessed them .r«'o Gen. of Ver. iii. 1 

he is sure possessed Tweinh Night,ii\. i 

and Legion himself possessed him .. — iii. 4 
and that I have possessed him.. Meas. for Meas. iv. 1 
that spirit's possessed witli haste .... — iv. 2 
an' she were not possessed with a turj. Much Ado, i. 1 
and possessed by my master Don John — iii. 3 
by his oaths, which first possessed tliem — iii. 3 
as well possessed; my love ismore..J'/W..V.'sDr. i. 1 
is he yet possessed, how much you. Mer. of Venice, i. 3 
I have possessed your grace of what.. — iv. 1 

of all he dies possessed (rep. v. 1) — iv. 1 

after you have possessed her As you Like it, ly. 1 

possessed with the glanders .. Tamingof Hhrew, iii. 2 
possessed with an adulterate blot. Comedy o/£rj-._ii. 2 
her fair sister, possessed with such .. — iii. 2 
both man and master is possessed.... — iv. 4 

cries out, I was possessed — v. I 

tliou possessed with a tliousand ....King John, iii. 3 
to be possessed with double pomp. ... — iv. 2 

I have possessed you with — iv. 2 

possessed with rumours, full of idle. . — iy. 2 
wert possessed, which art possessed.. R/c/iaid I/, ii. 1 
our uncle Gaunt did stand possessed — ii. 1 
and possessed with fear so strongly. .iHcnri/fr.ii. 2 
the king is certainly possessed of all — iy. 1 
that we now possessed the utmost . .iHenrylV. i. 3 
1 am possessed with more than half.l Henry VI. v. 4 
you be possessed with devilish . . ,.2Uenry VL iv. 7 
possessed with some store of crowns.Silenrv VI, ii. b 



POSSESSED— brother was possessed. Richard III. iii. I 
possessed him with a scruple that. . Henry VIII. ii. 1 
possessed he is with greatness .. Troilus Sf Cress. \\. 3 
certain and possessed conveniences.. — 'U- ^ 

is the senate possessed of this? Coriolanus, ii. 1 

and jewels, I am possessed of..... /lii'onj/iS'Cleo, y. 2 
I arai possessed of that is mine ....Titus.lndron. i. 2 
of a love, but not possessed it ..Romeo <S- Juliet, iii. 2 
how sweet is love itself possessed .... — _ y. 1 
I am still possessed of those eft'ects .... Hamlet, iii. 3 

POSSESSES— drowsiness possesses Tempest, ii. 1 

enter, where folly now possesses? .... Cymbeline, i. 6 
most precious square of sense possesses. . . . Lear, i. 1 

who since possesses chambermaids — iv. 1 

POSSESSETII me. and I am faint . . . . King John, v. 3 

POSSESSIONS are so huge.. 'AcoWen. of Verona, ii. 4 

me, and my possessions she esteems not — iii. I 

considers she my possessions? — y. 2 

take but possession of her with a touch — T* ** 
I got possession of Julietta's bed. Meas. for Meas. i. 3 
his possessions, although by confiscation — y. 1 
possession would not show us whiles. Muc/i^ido, iy. 1 
I should take possession of the bride .All's Well, ii. 5 
possessions, and so high esteem .Tarn. ofSh, 2 (ind.) 
possession, twenty thousand crowns — ii. 1 
where it once gets possession .Comedy of Errors, iii. 1 
to yield possession to my holy prayers — iv. 4 
how long hath this posession held .. _— y. 1 

our strong possession O'ep.) KingJohn,_i. 1 

stalk in blood to our jiossession? — ii. 1 

and bear possession of our person here — ^ii. 2 
words do take possession oi my bosom — iy. 1 
broke the possession of a royal bed.iJicAarrf //. iii. 1 
to the possession of thy royal hand . . — iy. 1 
had still kept loyal to possession ..\HenryIV. iii. 2 
and right, must my possession be ..'iUenrylV, iy. 4 

the better half of our possession Henry V. i. 1 

th' athversary was have possession . . — iii. 6 
quand j'ay la possession de France (>-£p.) — v. 2 
mean to take possession of ray riglit SHenry VI. i. 1 
than in possession any jot of pleasure — ii. 2 
to see these honours in possession . . — ii. 6 
outspeaks possession of a subject. . Henry Fill. iii. 2 
now to deliver her possession vp.Troilus^Cress.ii. 2 
left my possession, incurred a traitor's — iii. 3 
possession lies a lass unparalleled. /Ijifoni/ ■5-C(eo.y.2 
master's garments inthypossession?C!/m6cime,iii.5 

spacions m tlie possession of dirt Hamlet, v. 2 

the possession of this heavenly sight! ..Othello, v. 2 

POSSESSOR; ay, he was Merchant of Venice,i. 3 

sole possessor of ray love ZHenryVI. iii. 3 

POSSET— have a posset for't soon . . Merry Wives, i. 4 
thou shalt eat a posset to-night at . . — y. 5 

I have drugged tneir possets Macbeth, ii. 2 

posset and curd, like eager droppings . . Hamlet, i. 5 

POSSIBILITIES, and do not .... Titus Andron. iii. 1 

hundred poundSj and possibilities. . Merry (ri'ties, i. 1 

POSSIBILITY of thy soldiership .... AlVs Well, iii. 6 

very extreniest inch of possibihty.. 2 Hem-y/r. iv. 3 

be cast from possi bility of all 1 Henry VI. v. 4 

POSSIBLE— as may be possible. . TwoGen. of Ver. i. 2 

is't possible? (rep.) TwelflhNight, iii. 4 

'tis not possible. Who? ..Measure for Mcasure,iii. 2 
is it possible? Very easily possible . . Much Ado, i. 1 

possible, disdain should die — J.I 

is't possible? sits the wind in that .. — ii. 3 

'tis very possible, he'll scorn it — ii. 3 

possible tnat any villany should {lep.) — iii. 3 
it were as possible for rae to saj' .... — iv. 1 
it is not possible: you liavenot.Mici.M'sDrenm, iv. 2 
possilile, a cur can lend three . . Merch. of Venice, i. 3 
is it possible, on such a sudden. . . .AsyouLikeit, i. 3 

can it be possible, that DO man — ii. 2 

is it possible? Nay, I pray thee — iii. 2 

possible, tliat on so little acquaintance — v. 2 
is it possible he should know what. . All's Well, iv. 1 

thinks, it were not possible — iv. 3 (note) 

is it possible that love should Taming ofSh. i. 1 

I never thought it possible, or likely — i. 1 
not possible, for who shall bear your — __i. 1 
persuade him, be it possible, to put. . — iii. 2 
is't possible you will away to-night? — iii. 2 
is't possible, friend Licio, that Bianca — iv. 2 
thou dost make possible, things .. Winter'sTale, i. 2 
any thing possible. It shall be possible — ii. 3 
may this be possible? may this be . . King John, v. 4 

it is not possible, it cannot be \ Henry IV. v. 2 

make any possible satisfaction ..iHenrylV. (epil.) 
may it be possible, that foreign hire . . Henry V. ii. 2 
is it possible dat I should love (rep.") — v. 2 

what question thou canst possible . . 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

if without peril it be possible Richard III. y. 3 

being now seen possible enougii Henry VIII. i. 1 

possible, the spells of France — i. 3 

is't possible? (rep. i v. 4) .... Troilus 4- Cressida, iv. 2 
possiljle, the world should so. . Timon of Athens, iii. 1 
not possible- The nobles, in great.. Coriofanus, iv. 6 
if it be possible for you to displace it — v. 4 

is't possible, tliat so short a time — v. 4 

is't possible? Hear me, for I will . . JuliusCresar, iv. 3 
that possible strength might meet. . Cymbeline, iv. 2 
is it possible? O tliere has been much.. Ham;e(,_ii. 2 
possible, a young raaid's wits should be — iv. 5 
is't possible? Here's the commission .... — v. 2 
is't not possible to understand in another — v. 2 
nay, it is possible enough to judgment. . Othello, i. 3 

with him! why, 'tis not possible — ii. 1 

is it possible? 1 remember (7fp. iii. 3) .. — ii. 3 

is it possible? 'Tis true (rep. iv. 1) — iii. 4 

possible? O heaven forgive lis! — iv. 2 

POSSIBLY-when possibly I can. Tin Gen. of I'er. ii. 2 

you could possibly have found ..TwelfthNight, iii. 4 

of the court can possibly devise . . Love's L. Lost, i. 1 

were found; how possibly preserved ..Pericles, v. 3 

POSSITABLE— speak possitable ..Merry Wives,i. 1 

POST— unless the sun were post Tempest, ii. 1 

from such a worthless post. .'/"uoGen.q/TeroHa.i. 1 

thou art to post after with oars — ii. 3 

at your door like a sheriif s post. . Twelfth Night, i. h 
I am no fee 'd post, lady — i. 5 



POS 



POST— and you'll beat the post MuchAdo, ii. 1 

I post from love; good lover .... Love'iL.Lost, iv. 3 
quick Cupid's post, that comes. . Mer. of Venice, ii. 9 
there's a post come from my master.. — v. 1 

'tis good to be a post As you Like it, iv, 1 

highness comes post from Marseilles. /i/rsWe/i, iv. 5 

I have despatched in post Winter's Tale ii. 1 

please your highness, posts, from.... — 'ii. 3 
myself on every post proclaimed .... — iii. 2 
hie thee presently, post to the . . Comedy of Err. iii. 2 

tliick as tale, came post with post Macbeth, i. 3 

will post to consummate KingJolin, v. 7 

which else would post, until it Richard II. i. 1 

and hath sent post haste, to entreat — i. 4 
away, with rae, in post to Ravenspurg — ii. I 
what, are their posts despatched .... — ii. 2 
post you to London, and you'll find — iii. 4 
spur, post; and get before him to the — V. 2 

there came a post from Wales 1 Henry IV. i. 1 

tlie posts come tiring on 2 Henry IV. (indue.) 

get posts, and letters, and make friends — i. 1 
twenty weak and wearied posts .... — ii. 4 

if I be not sent away post — ii. 4 

foundered ninescore and odd posts .. — iv. 3 
against a post, when he was drunk . . Henry V. iii. 2 
spurn in pieces posts of adamant .... 1 Henry VI. i. 4 

post, ray lord, to France ; agree — v. 6 

to be the post, in hope of his reward. 2/fen7-yr^. i. 4 

why comest thou in such post? ZHenryVI. i. 2 

Montague shall post to London — i. 2 

as swiftly as the posts could run .... — ii. 1 

in haste, post haste, are come — ii. 1 

towards Berwick post amain — ii. 5 

some post to us, or thee — iii. 3 

messenger, return in post .— iii. 3 

where is the post that came (rep.) ., — v. 1 

to London, all in post — v. 6 

that straight shall post to Ludlow.TJicAard III. ii. 2 

and with all speed post with him — iii. 2 

towards Guildhall hies him in all post — iii. 5 
some light-foot friend post to the. ... — iv. 4 

come hither; post to Salisbury — iv. 4 

told me, I should post betore — iv. 4 

like a post with packets Henry VIII. v. 2 

and posts, like the commandment. Troilus <§- Cress, i.3 
native town you entered like a post. Cor/o/a/iMs, v. 5 
post baekwith speed, and tell him. JuliusCcesar, iii. 1 

met'st thou ray posts? Antony ff Cleopatra, i. 5 

away to Britain post I in this Cymbeline, v. 5 

away he posts with unchaste — "v. 5 

post on the larae feet of Pericles, iv. (Gower) 

came there a reeking post, stewed Lear, ii. 4 

post speedily to my lord your husband.. — iii. 7 
our posts shall he swift, and intelligent — iii. 7 

the post unsanctified of murderous — iv. 6 

presently took post to tell it you. fiomeo ^Juliet, v. 1 
then in post he came from Mantua . . — v. 3 

to post with such dexterity Hamlet, i. 2 

from us; wish him post post -haste Oflielto, i. 3 

POSTED day and night to meet you..lHen)y/F. v. 1 

should be but idly posted over 2 Henry VI. iii. 1 

nor posted off their suits with ZHenryVI. iv. 8 

and is posted, as the agent of out. .Henry VIII. iii. 2 
the swiftest harts have posted you. .Cymbeline, ii. 4 
faith, he is posted hence on serious Lear, iv. 5 

POSTER— posters of the sea and laud . . Macbeth, i. 3 

POSTERKJRS of this day (rep.) ..Love'sL.Lost, v. 1 

POSTERITY, await for wretched .... 1 Henry VL i. 1 

fair posterity [Co(.-prosperity] Mid.N. Dr.iv. 1 

is notliing else but fair posterity. . Winter'sTale, iv. 3 
should not stand in thy posterity .. ..Macbeth, iii. 1 
for amends to his posterity, at our ..King John, ii. I 
cut off the sequence of posterity .... — ii. 1 
as 'twere retailed to all posterity.. i?vc/iaj'd 7/7. iii. 1 
he'd make an end of thy posterity. . Coriolanus, iv. 2 
cuts beauty off from all posteritv. iSomeo ^Juliel,i, 1 

POSTERN by the &hhny-viMsTwoGcn.of Verona, v. I 
wounds the unsisting posteni ..Meas. for Meas. iv. 2 
at several posterns, clear them .... Winter's Tale, i. 2 

the keys of all the posterns — i. 2 

how came the posterns 60 easily open? — ii. 1 
thread the postern of a needle's eye .Richard II. v. 5 

POST-HASTE and romage in the land ..Hamlet, i. 1 
requires your haste post-haste appearanceO//ic;/o, i. 2 
write from us; wish hira post post-haste.. — i, 3 

POST-HORSE up to heaven Itichard III. i. 1 

the wind my post-horse ....2HenryIV. (induction) 
hire post-horses: I will hence Romco/^ Juliet, v. 1 

POSTHUMUS; breeds hira Cymbeline, i. 1 

for you Posthiimus, so soon as I can win — i. 2 
your fault that I have loved Posthumus — i. 2 
in love, Leonatus Posthumus .... — iii. 2 (letter) 
whereisPosthiinius? what is in thy mind — iii. 4 
BO thou, Posthuraus, wilt lay (rep.).. — iii. 4 
near the residence of Posthumus .... — iii. 4 
since theexileofPosthumus.mostretired — iii. 5 
thou, that stand'st so for Posthumus! — iii. 5 
she's flown to her desired Posthumus — iii. 5 
throwing favours on the low Posthumus — iii. 5 

is she with Posthumus? — iii. 5 

it is Posthumus' hand; I know't .... — iii. 5 
bare fortune of that beggar Posthumus — iii. 5 
even there, thou villain Postliumus.. — iii. 5 
the very garment of Posthumus .... — iii. 5 
more equal ballasting to thee, Posthumus — iii. 6 
Posthumus, thy head, which now is., — iv. 1 
the garments of Posthumus! I know — iv. 2 
O I?ostliumus! alas, where is tliy head? — iv. 2 
that from me was Posthumus ripxjed — v. 4 
like hardiment Posthumus hath to .. — v.i 
then shall Posthumus end (rep. v. 5) — v. 4 (scroll) 
the good Posthumus (what should I say? — v. 5 
this Posthumus (most like a noble lord — v. 5 
am Posthumus, that killed thy daughter — v. 5 
every villain be called Posthumus .. — v. 5 
O my lord Posthumus I you ne'er killed — v. 5 
Posthumus anchors upon Imogen. . . . — v. 5 

POSTING on in Bolingbroke's Richard II. v. 5 

exceeding posting, day and night All's Welt, v. 1 

breath rides ou the posting winds . . Cymbeline, iii. 4 



POST-MASTER'S boy (rep.) Merri/ » ives,y. 6 

I'OSTSCBIPT here, he say s, alone Hamlet, iv. 7 

here is yet a postscript Tirelfth NiglU, u. 5 

POSTURE— her natural posturel .. n'inler sVate.v. 3 
in most strange postures we have. . Henry I'lll. ui. 2 

aiirl gave him graceful postiu-e Coriotanus, u. 1 

Antony, tlie posture of your Mows.JuliusCcesar, v. 1 
Rreatues^ i' the posture of a whote.An'oiiy SfCleo.y. 2 
puts himself in postiu-e tliat acts . . Cymbettne, in. 3 
Rlinerva postures livond brief nature — V. 5 
POSY [Co/. K"/.-l'01iS\']- 
whose posy was I'or all the world.. 1/er«/^rem»e, V. 1 

wliat talk you of the posy ......„— v. 1 

is this a prologue, or tl\e posy of a ring? Hamfei, lu. 2 
POT— Ualf-eau that stabbed Pots. Meas. for Meas. iv. 3 
creasy Joan doth keel the pot.Lore\L.L. v. 2 (soug) 
a pot of small ale (rtp.) . Taming of Shrew. 2 (mdue.) 
were not I a little pot, and soon...... — iv. 

boil thou first i' tlie charmed poti Macbelh, iv. 1 

have him poisoned with apotof alclHe/iry/*'. i. 3 
m V fame tor a pot of ale, and safety . . He7iry V. iii. 2 
an'd here's a pot of good double beer .2 Henry FI.u. 3 
the three hooped pot shall ... ^ ..... — iv- 2 
Are under the pot of her eyes.. Troiius 4- Ciessida, j. 2 

to the pot, i. warrant hiin Coriolanus, i. 4 

green cinliern pots, bladders Romeo iffJuhet.y. 1 

PUTABLE-life in medicine potable.2H£n>i/iF. iv. 1 
POTATION— to forswear thin potations — iv. 3 

caroused potations pottle deep Othello, ii. 3 

POTATO E-the sky rain potatoes . . . Merry Wives, v. 5 

his fat rump, and potatoe finger. Tro/lus ^- Cress, y. '2 

POTCH— I'll potch at him some way. Conoianus, i._ 10 

POTfiNCY— I had your potency . jUeas. for Meas. u. 2 

cardinal's malice and his potency . . Henry yill. i. 1 

on their chaageful potency. . Troilusei-Creasida, iv. 4 

arriving at place of potency Vonolanus, ii. 3 

our potency made good, take thy reward.. tear, i. 1 

throw him out with wondrous potency. Hamfc/, ni. 4 

POTENT— of her more potent ministers. Tempest, i. 2 

what would my potent master! — iv. 1 

by invso potent art -. ■ — .v. 1 

aiid his friends potent at court . . Merry Wines, iv. 4 
Buch a headstrong potent fault ..TwelfthNighl, ui. 4 

at large, a poteut dukedom As youLike it, y. 4 

a lady's verily is as potent as a lord s. Wmier s7 . i. 2 

more potent than the first MtKbeth, iv. 1 

you equal potents, fiery kindled .... King John, n. 2 

no man so potent breathes 1 Henry ly. iv. 1 

induced by potent circumstances ..Henry I'lII. u. 4 
too fine, too subtle potent . . Troilus ^-Cresstda, in. 2 
the reasons are more potent and lieroical — in. 3 
your potent and infectious fevers.. Timon ofAth. iv. 1 
and gives his potent regiment io-Antony^-Cleo. in. 6 

thvharsh and potent uijuries Cymbeline,_y. 4 

O you most potent godsl ; ■; ' ericles, in. J 

as he is very potent with such spirits . . Hamlet, ii. 2 

the potent poison quite o'ercrows — y. 2 

most poteut, grave, and reverend Othello,}. 6 

thev are most potent in pottiag — ii. 3 

POTENT ATE-great potentates. r«o Gen.ofVer. ii. 4 
infamonize me among potentates?. i.o!)e'sL.Los(,y. 2 
and mightiest potentates, must die .1 Henry FI. in. 2 

POTENTIAL spurs to make Lear, u. 1 

a voice potential as double as the duke a.Othello, i.2 

POTENTLY opposed Henry yill. y. 1 

powerfully and potently believe Hamlet, n. 2 

'FOTHECARY-tliis to the 'potliecary. . . Pericles, ui. 2 

buy a poison of a poor 'potliecary . . Homeo SrJul. y. 3 

POTHER, as if that whatsoever god . . Coriolanus, ii. 1 

keep tills dreadful pother [Ji:n(.-pudder]..Lear, ui. 2 

POTION— he gives me the potions. Merry Wives, ui. 1 

loathed medicine! hated potion ..Mid.N.'sDr. iii. 2 

that with no rash potion Winder s Tale, i. 2 

as all tlie poisonous potions in 1 Henry IT. y. 4 

constrained, as men drink potions . .'iHenrylV. i. 1 
may minister the potion of imprisonment — i. 2 

miuister'st a potion unto me Pericles, i. 2 

by my art, a sleeping potion Romeo 8^ Juliet, v. 3 

the time the potion s force should cease — v. 3 

drink off this potion Hamlet, y. 2 

POTPAN— Where's Potpan (rep.') . . liomeo Sf Juliet, i. 5 

POTTER -like a potter's wheel \HenryVI.\. 5 

POTTING— are most potent in potting . . Othello, n. 3 

POTTLE of burnt sack Merry Wives,}}. 1 

go brew me a pottle of sack finely — ni. 5 

caroused potations pottle deep Othello, ii. 3 

ere the next pottle can be filled — 11.3 

POTTLEPOT'S maidenhead? 2HenryIV. ii. 2 

yes, sir, in a pottlepot ,•••••,• ~. Y' 5 

POUCH- tester I'll have m pouch ..Merry Wives,}. 3 

on nose, and pouch on side As youl.ike it, ii. 7 

POULTER— or apoulter'share IHenrylV. ii. 4 

POULTICE for mv aching bones?/'omeo ^Juliet, li. 6 
POULTNEY— St. 'Lawrence Poultney Henry yill. i. 2 
PO U.VCET-BOX. which ever and anon. I Henry /K.i. 3 
POUXD— 'twere best pound you. .TwoGen. of yer. i. 1 

less tlian a pound shall serve — i. 1 

I mean the pound, a pinfold — i. 1 

from a pound to a pin? — ;• 1 

and seveu hundred pounds (rep.) ..Merry Wives, i. 1 

I sit at ten pounds a week — ..i. 3 

I had rather than a thousand pound — in. 3 

in three hundred pounds a yearl — iii. 4 

a hundred and fifty ijounds jointure — in. 4 

a hundred pound in gold — iv. Ii 

his cudgel, and twenty pounds of money — v. 6 

I had rather than forty pound Twelfth Sight, y. 1 

fourscore pound a year (rep.) Meas. for Meas. }i. 1 

nineseore and seventeen pounds — iv. 3 

it willcost him a tliousand poundere.Muc/i.4dci, i. 1 
[Co(.] an' 'twere a thousand pound more — iii. 5 
an equal pound of your fair flcsli.jl/er. of yenice,i. 3 

a pound of man's flesh, taken — i. 3 

shall hardly spare a pound of flesli .. — in 3 
a pound of this poor merchant's (rep.) — iv. 1 

the pound of flesh (jep.) — iv- 1 

more, or less, than a just pound — iv. I 

the dog for twenty pound .. Taming of Sh. 1 (mduc.) 
bring him a hundred pound or two .. — v. 1 
keep your hundred pound* to yourself — v. I 



I'OUND and odd smiling Winter's Tale, i v. 2 

three pound of sugar; five pound of. . — jv. 2 
four pound of prunes, and as many .. — iv. 2 
I buy a thousand pound a year!. Come'/y of Err. iv. I 
fair five hundred pound a year (rep.)..KingJohn, i. I 
send me presently a thousand pouud./d'c/iard //. ii. 2 
give thee for it a thousand pound ..IHeiiry/T. ii. 4 
Dut I would give a thousand pound.. — ii. 4 
ta'en a thousand pound this morning — ii. 4 
money lent you, four and twenty pound — •!!• ^ 
three or four bonds of forty pound .. — iii. 3 
a thousand pound. Sirrah do I (rep.) — iii. 3 

three hundred and odd pounds — iv. 2 

lordship lend me thousand pound ..2Henryl'^._i. 2 

let it be ten pound, if thou canst — ii. 1 

of good ewes may be worth ten pounds — iii. 2 
I have three pound to free Mouldy . . — iii. 2 
the thousand pound I borrowed ot you — v. 5 

I owe you a thousand pound — v. 5 

a thousand pounds by the year Henry y.i. 1 

many a pound of mine own proper..2HerijyF/. in. 1 
I'll give a thousand pound to look .. — i.ii. 3 

one shilling to the pound, the last — iy. 7 

a thousand pound a year (rep.) .... Henry VIII. ii. 3 

for any suit of pounds — ij. 3 

within three nound, lift as much. Troilus ^Cress. i. 2 
rather than they shall pound ua .... Coriolanus,}. 4 

tie leaden pounds to his heels — iii. 1 

I had a hundred pound on't Cvmbeline,n. 1 

a tribute, yearly three thousand pounds — iii. 1 
the ghost's word for a thousand pound. Ho)ii!e(, iii. 2 

POUK down stinking pitch Tempest,}. 2 

I will pour some in thy other mouth — n. 2 

let me pour in some sack Merry Wives, iii. 5 

her witnered dew-lap pour the ale.Mid.N.'s Dr. ii. 1 
thus pour the stars down plagues. Love's L.Losl.y. 2 

that thou mightest pour this As you Like it, iii. 2 

as fast as you pour aff'ection in — iy. 1 

I still pour in the waters of my love . . All's Well, i. 3 
from your sacred vials pour your. Winter's Tale, y. 3 

that I may pour my spirit Macbeth, i. 5 

pour in sow B blood, that hath — iv. 1 

I should pour the sweet milk of — iv. 3 

and with him pour we, in our — .y. 2 

the sky, and pours down mischief ..Kinff/o'"", m. 2 

the age will pour it in iHenrylV. iv. 4 

how London doth pour out her. Henry V. v. (chorus) 

I pour the helpless balm of Richard Jll.i. 2 

pour all your tears, I am — ii. 2 

pour in, pour in; his ambition. . Troilus SrCress. ii. 3 

he pours it out; Plutus Timon of Athens, i. 1 

senate pours into captains' wounds? — iii. 5 
pour down thy iU-uttering thioa,t.Antony4r Cleo.ii.i 

pour out the pack of matter — ii. 5 

who pour their bounty on her". . Pericles, v. (Gower) 

pour on, I will endure iear, iii. 4 

did pour the leperous distilment Hamlet, i. 5 

I'll pour this pestilence into his ear Othello, ii. 3 

and pour our treasures into foreign laps — iv. 3 

POURED out of a cup into As you Like it, y. 1 

and heat, poured all together All's Well, ii. 3 

have poured it to her acceptance. Winter' sTale, iy. 3 

and poured them down before him Macbeth, i. 3 

I poured forth tears in vain. . TitusAndronicus, ii. 3 
Ephesus poured forth your charity . . Pericles, iii. 2 

he poured a flagon of Rhenish on Hamlet, v. 1 

POURING, like the tide into Henry V. i. 2 

pouring war into the bowels of. Coriolanus, iv. 5 

POURQUOY, my dear knight? (rep.). Tu-elfthNigM,i.Z 

POUR'ST down from these \ Henry IV. iii. 1 

pour'st in the open ulcer of my.. Troilus ^Cress. i. 1 

POUT upon the morning Coriolanus, v. 1 

POUT'ST upon[A'n(.-puttestup] thy./iom.i5-./u;.ui.3 

POVERTY— of riches or of poverty Tempest, ii. 1 

and what with poverty, I am ... . Meas. for Meas. i. 2 
poverty in wit, kingly-poor floutl.toDe'sL.Los*, v. 2 

afool, and full of poverty — .v. 2 

an age of poverty Merchant of Venice, ly. 1 

to think my poverty is treacherous. As youLike it, i. 3 

and I in such a poverty in grace — iii. 5 

poverty of her, the small acquaintance — v. 2 

the outside of thy poverty Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

faith, for their poverty, I know not .1 Henry IV. iv. 2 

to ir.e, in respect of poverty iHenrylV. i. 2 

with hollow poverty and emptiness.. — i. 3 
the truth is. poverty hath distracted her — ii. I 
in her heart she scorns our poverty . .2Henry Vl.i. 3 
BO much is my poverty of spirit . . Richard 111. iii. 7 
poverty could never draw them . . Henry VIII. iv. 2 
his disease of all-shunned poverty. IVmono/ .4//i.iy.2 

all poverty was scorned Pericles, i. 4 

you houseless poverty, nay, get tliee in. .Z.ear, iii. 4 
poverty, but not my will (rep.).. liomeo Sf Juliet, v. 1 
steeped me in poverty to the very lips . CK/ieHo, iv. 2 

POWDER; food for powder 1 Henry IV. iv. 2 

I'll give you leave to powder me — v. 4 

spleen than powder can enforce KingJohn, ii. 2 

will l)reak to powder, and finish. /l)i(ony<5-C(eo. iv. 9 
grind tlieir bones to powder small. V'itMsJ//rfron.y.2 

like fire and powder UnmeojyJuliet,}\. 6 

like powder in a skill-less soldier s flask — ni. 3 
as liasty powder fired doth hurry from — v. 1 

POWDEIiED bawd Meas.forMeas. in. 2 

POWDERING tub of infamy Henry V. ii. 1 

POWER— had I been any god of power . Tempest, i. 2 

and a prince of power — 1.2 

what my power might else — i- 2 

his art is of such power — }• 2 

they are botli in cither's powers .... — i. 2 
till mine enemy has more power .... — _}■ 2 
tlie powers delaying, not forgetting.. — iin 3 

they now are in my power — in. 3 

o'er whom I give thee power — iv. 1 

some heavenly power guide us — v. 1 

without her power — y- J 

and even that power, whicli .. Two Gen. ofVer.u. 6 



11 1)011 



— iii. 1 



some raalio ■ » - - — „,. , 

tlie sudden s'lrprisc of my powers.. VerryM'iBes, y. h 

the organs of uur own power Meas.forMeas. i. 1 

apower Ihave: buto''what — >• ' 



POWER-absolute power and place.Meas.forMeai.i. i 

if power change purpose — i. 4 

assay the power you have. My power! — i. 6 

which he spurs on his power to qualify — iv. 2 

there to give up their power — iv. 3 

which shall then have no power to.. — iv. 4 

your grace, like power divine — v. 1 

rash remonstrance of my hidden power — t. 1 

their pride against that power Much Ado, iii. 1 

kindly power tliat you have in her . . — iy. I 

within his power to leave Mid. N.'s Dream, i. I 

I know not by what power I am — i. 1 

ere a man hath power to say, behold! — i. 1 

your power to draw (rep. ) — ii.2 

1 throw all the power this charm doth — ii. 5 

and all my powers, address your love — U. 3 

hath such force and blessed power .. — iv. 1 

what power, (but by some power it is) — iv. 1 
whose edge hath power to cut ....Love'sL, Lost, ii. I 

none spare that come within his power — ii. 1 

most power to do most harm — ii. I 

lines lack power to move — i v. 3 

in every power (rep.) , . — iv. 3 

since all the power thereof it doth .. — v. 2 

flatter up these powers of mine with — t. 2 
not in his power to bring to pass.Mer. of Venice, i. 3 

it should have power to steal both .. — iii. 2 

there is such confusion in my powers — iii. 2 

have power to bid you welcome .... — iii. 2 

if law, authority, and power deny not — iii. 2 

upon my power, I may dismiss — iv. 1 

shows the force of temporal power .. — iv. 1 

and earthly power doth then show .. — iv. 1 

no power in Venice can alter — iv. 1 

there is no power in the tongue of man — iv. 1 

she could entreat some pow;er to change — iv. I 

by the sweet power of music — v. I 

is nearer death than thy powers.. .4s ynu Like it, ii. 6 

in some fresh cheek the power of fancy _ — iii. 5 
have power to raise sucli love .... — iv. 3 (letter) 

addressed a mighty power — v. 4 

rather in power, than use All's Well, i. 1 

what power is it, which mounts — _i. 1 

stands cliief in power, I come to .... — ii. 1 

my art is not past power, nor you .... — ii. 1 

what husband in tnj' power — ii. 1 

great power, great transcendence.. .. — ii. 3 

both sovereign power and a father's.. — ii. 3 

thou hast power to choose — ii. 3 

whilst I live, into your guiding power — ii. 3 

to defeat, I must produce my power — ii. S 

and our power claims; or I will throw — ii. 3 

all the intelligence in his power against — iii. 6 

but have no power to give it from me — iv. 2 

if liewouldsiiendliispower:God save — v. 1 

aid me with that store of power — v. 1 

nor shall she, within my power .. Wititer'sTale,ii. 3 

if powers divine behold our — !.'?• 2 

the higher powers forbid ! I say — iii. 2 

since it is in my power — iv. (chorus) 

by the power o' the king; one of these — iv. 3 

had she such power, she had just — v. 1 

power no jot hath she, to change our loves — v. 1 

I will prove so, sir to my power — v. 2 

have power to take off so much grief — v. 3 

I am assisted by wicked powers — y . 3 

and to your power I'll yield .Comedy of Errors, ui. 2 

some blessed power deliver us — ly. 3 

merciful powers! restrain in me Macbeth,]}. 1 

with barefaced power sweep him .... — iii. 1 

tell me, thou unknown power — iv. 1 

laugh to scorn the power of man .... — iv. I 

nay, had I power, I sliould pour — iv. 3 

sought to win me into his power — iv. 3 

I saw the tyrant's power a-foot — iv. 3 

our power is ready ; our lack — iv.3 

and the powers above put on their . . — iv. 3 

when none can call our power to — v. 1 

the English power is near — v. 2 

shall e'er have power on thee — v. 3 

find the tyrant's power to-night — v. 6 

for bloody power to rush upon KingJohn, li. 1 

power confronted nower: both arealike — ii.2 

a greater power than we, denies — ii. 2 

shall we knit our powers, and lay .. — ii. 2 

not that I have the power to — .ii. 2 

then, by the lawful power that I — ni. 1 

no tongue hath power to curse — iii. 1 

and raise the power of France on ... . — iii. 1 

send those powers o'er to your — in. 3 

never such a power for any — iv. 2 

came those powers of France — iv.2 

with ranks of foreign powers — iv. 2 

now powers from home, and discontents — iv. 3 

use all your power to stop their — v. 1 

the Dauphin and his powers — v. 1 

promised to dismiss the powers led by — v. 1 

did part our weary powers — v. 5 

our power! I'll tell thee, Hubert (;ej).) — v. 6 

the best part of my power, as I — v. 7 

where be your powers? show now.. .. — v. 7 

hath less power to bite the man Richard II. i. 3 

might have retired his power — .... — ;;. 2 

for us to levy power proportionable.. — ii. 2 

to discover what power the duke — n. 3 

in ray loyal bosom lies his power — ii. 3 

because my power is weak — .li. 3 

that power tliat made you king (rep.) — in. 2 

fcof.Jgreat in substance, and in power — iii. 2 

how far oft" lies 3'our power? — iii. 2 

hath power enough to serve our turn — ni. 2 

than I have power to tell — iii. 2 

the duke my father with his power? — in. 2 

my father hath a power; enquire — iii. 2 

where lies our uncle with his power? — lii. 2 

that power I have, discharge — iii. 2 

to lay my arms and power — in. 3 

I'll use tlie advantage of my power.. — in. 3 

help to order several powers to Oxford — v. 3 
forthwith a power of English shall ..IHenrylV. i. 1 



POWER— of your nobility and power. 1 Henry /;'. i, 3 

only mean for powers in Scotland .. — i. 3 

and Douglas, and our powers at once — i. 3 

if thou have power to raise him — iii. I 

made head against my power — iii. 1 

fatlier, and the Scottisli power — iii. I 

■who leads his power? )uider whose . . — iv. 1 

he cannot draw his power this — iv. 1 

the powers of us may serve so great.. — iv. 1 

but my powers are there already .... — iv.'i 

with mighty and ^uick-raised power — i v. 4 

whose power was m the fii'st proportion — iv. 4 

the power of Percy is too weak — iv. 4 

ere the king dismiss his power — iv. 4 

that we divide our power — v. .^ 

a speedy power, to encounter you....iHeii7-i/lV. i. 1 

is up, with well-appointed powers .. — i. I 

the power and puissance of the king. . — i. 3 

with project of a power much smaller — i. 3 

led his powers to deatli — i. 3 

beyond his power to build it — i. 3 

one power against the French — i. 3 

you speak as having power to do wrong — ii. 1 

to see his father bring up his powers. . — ii. 3 

the powers that you already have.... — iii. 1 

with such powers as might hold — iv. 1 

and knit our powers to the arm — iv. 1 

so that his power, like to a fangless lion — iv. 1 

discharge your powers unto their .... — iv. 2 

call in tile powers, good cousin — i v. 3 

our power collected, our substitutes — iv. 4 

with a great power of English — iv. 4 

and by whose power I well might lodge — iv. 4 

the image of his power lay then in me — v. 2 

majesty and power of law and justice — v. 2 

and in your power, soft silencing .... — v. 2 

on the full power of Prance Henry r. i . 2 

thrice that power left at home — i. 2 

the noble sinews of our power — i. 2 

that the powers we bear with us .... — ii. 2 

thus come the English with full power — ii. 4 

that his powers are not yet ready — iii. 3 

you have power enough — iii. 5 

livings, and my uttermost powers .. — iii. 6 

take witli you free power, to ratify. . — v. 2 
liad him brought into my power ...,\ Henry TI. i. 4 

is come with a great power to raise . . — i. 4 

at all times will you have my power — ii. i 

follow them with all the power we have — ii. 2 

their powers are marching unto .... — iii 3 

my forces and my jpower of men — iii. 3 

on. my lords, and join our powers .. — iii. 3 

withdraw me and my bloody i)Ower — iv. 2 

niarclied to Bourdeaux with his power — iv. 3 

keep not back your powers in dalliance — v. 2 

I have no power to let her pass — v. 3 

name and power thou tremblest a.t..2Henryri. i. 4 

grief have vanctuished all my powers — ii. 1 

had twenty times their power — ii. 4 

time bereft my vital powers — iii. 2 

until a power be raised to put — iv. 4 

and all his powers do yield — iv. 9 

with a puissant and a mighty power — iv. 9 

so great a power without his leave .. — v. i 
backed by the power of Warwick. ...SHenrj/F"/. i. 1 

'tis not thy southern power, of Essex — i. 1 

their power, I think, is thirty thousand — ii. 1 

meet Warwick with his foreign power — iv. i 

if secret powers suggest but truth.. .. — iv. 6 

raethinks, the power, that Edward . . — iv. 8 

France hath brought a puissant power — v. 2 

to meet the queen's great power I — v. 2 

those powers, that the queen hath . . — v. 3 
hadst but power over his mortal . . Eichard III. i. 2 

you liave power in me, as a kinsman — iii. 1 

and still his power increaseth — iv. 3 

the greatest strength and power — iv. 4 

■where is thy power then, to beat .... — iv. 4 

and their power grows strong — iv. 4 

with a mighty power landed — iv. 4 

\_Col. Knl.l do they bend their power — iv. 5 

seven thousand is their utmost power — v. 3 

part in just proportion our small power — v. 3 

from the mighty power of the king.. — v. 3 

bid him bring his power before O'ep.) — v. 3 

will he bring his power? My lord . . — v. 3 
wants not a minister in his power.. Henry I'lII. i. 1 

I have not the power to muzzle him — i. 1 

you have half our power: the other.. — i. 2 
and main po«er, took 'em from me — ii. 2 (let) 

of wisdom o'ertopping woman's power — ii. 4 

where powers are your retainers — ii. 4 

yea, with a splitting power — ii. 4 

my power rained honour, more on you — iii. 2 

andevery function of your power — iii. 2 

by which power you maimed — iii. 2 

by your power legatine within — iii. 2 

I have no power to speak, sir — iii. 2 

I gave ye power as he was a counsellor — "v. 2 
power, power into will, will into. 'froilus i^ Cress. i. 3 

seconded with will and power — i. 3 

whereof all our power is sick — i. 3 

and had as ample power as I — ii. 2 

all our main power stand fast — ii. 3 

the capacity of ray ruder powers .... — iii. 2 

all my powers do their bestowing.... — iii. 2 

tempt the frailty of our powers — i^v. 4 

all tliese spirits thy power [inih, Timon of Athens, i. 1 

what a mental power this eye — ;. 1 

I myself would have no power — i. 2 

bein" of no power to make his — __i. 2 

beof any power to expel sickness.... — iii- 1 

because I have no power to be kind — iii. 2 

Apemantus, if it lay in thy power?. . — iv. 3 

in their rough power have unchecked — iv. 3 

that you had power and wealth — iv. 3 

allowed with absolute power — v. 2 

within the shadow of your power. ... — v. 5 

ere thou hadst power, or we had — v. 5 

all thy powers shall make their .... — v. a 



POWER-make bold power look pale.. Cora/aims, i. 1 

it will in time win upon power — i. I 

they have pressed a power, but it is not — i. 2 
some parcels of their powers are .. — i. 2 (letter) 
with one part of our Roman power.. — i. 3 

both our powers, with smiling — i. 6 

wrench up tliy power to the highest — i. 8 

to the fairness of my power — i. 9 

slily crept into his human powers .. — ii. 1 

during his pow'er, go sleep — ii. 1 

to his powei'j he would have made them — ii. I 
have power in ourselves to do it (rep.) — ii. 3 
when he had no power, but was a petty — ii. 3 

when he hath power to crush — ii. 3 

virtue, no, nor power, but that which — iii. 1 
have power, then vail your ignorance — iii. 1 
the people had more absolute power — iii. 1 
not having the power to do the good — iii- 1 
and throw their power i' the dust . . — iii. 1 

take from you all your power — iii. 1 

in whose power we were elected their — iii. 1 
or Jove for his power to thunder .... — iii. 1 
the severity of the public power .... — iii. 1 
have liad you nut your power well on — iii. 2 
ere they lackeii power to cross you . . — iii. 2 
so far as thou hast power and person — iii. 2 
that he atfects tyrannical power .... — iii. 3 
the old prerogative and power i' the — iij. 3 
wind yoru'selt into a power tyrannical — iii. 3 
those whose great power must try him — iii. 3 
to pluck away their power; as now.. — iii. 3 
and in the power of us the tribunes — iii. 3 

have the power still to banish your — iii. 3 

now we have shown our power — iv. 2 

I would, I had the power to say so . . — iv. 2 

to take all power from the people — iv. 3 

I tell thee, we have a power on foot — iv. 5 
the Volsces with twoseveral powers — iv. 6 

leads a power 'gainst Rome — iv. 6 

power, unto itself most commendable — iv. 7 
tis a spell, you see, of much power. . — v. 2 

he hath abused your powers — v. .'i 

never lacks power to dismiss itseif.Jutius Cccsar, i. 3 
bears the power to cancel his captivity — i. 3 
when it disjoins remorse from power — ii. 1 
utterance, nor the power of speech .. — iii. 2 
Brutus, and Cassius, are levying powers — iv. I 
down upon us with a mighty power. . — iv. 3 
bid him set on his powers betimes .. — iv. 3 
stay the providence of some high powers — v. 1 
is overthrown by noble Brutur power — v. 3 
and malice have power to utter ..Antony frCleo. i. 2 
high in name and power, higher .... — i. 2 

I have no power upon you — i. 3 

two domestic powers breed — J. 3 

the wise powers deny us for our good — ii. 1 
my power's a crescent, and my auguring — ii. 1 

nor my power work without it — ii. 2 

what power is in Agrippa, if I would — ii. 2 
the power of Csesar, and his power unto — ii. 2 
and breathless, power breathe forth. . — ii. 2 
the Jove of power make me most weak — iii. 4 

strange, that his power should be — iii. 7 

grows not in the power on't — iii. 7 

his power went out in such distractions — iii. 7 

in every power that moves — iii. 10 

as he had power to beat me out — . '^- ' 

had I great Juno's power — iv. 13 

had my lips that power, thus would I — iv. 13 

taie my power i' tlie court Cymleline. i. 7 

shall, by the power we hold — iii. 1 

powers that he already hath in Gallia — iii. 5 
my mother having power of his testiness — iv. 1 
but to put those powers in motion .. — iv. 3 
and so, great powers, if you will take — v. 4 
would cease the oresent power of life — v. 5 
the power that I have on you, is to. . — v. 5 
the fingers of the powers above do . . — v. 5 
Rome have law, or we have power .. Titus And. i. 2 
had I the power, that, some say, Dian — ii. 3 
if any power pities wretched tears .. — iii. 1 
and raise a power, to be revenged on — iii. 1 
and with a power of high-resolved men — iv. 4 
but, O you powersi that give heaven .. Pericles, \. 1 

thou know St I have power to take — i. 2 

these hollow vessels with their power. . — i. 4 
suffice the greatness of your powers .. — ii. 1 

beauty hath his power and will — ii. 2 

■B'e cannot but obey the powers above us — iii. 3 

heard something of my power — iv. 6 

given me by one that had some power — v. 1 
whom the gods liave shown their power — v. 3 

invest you jointly with my power Lear,i. 1 

when power to flattery bows? — i . I 

betwixt our sentence and our power .... — i. 1 

by the power that made me, I tell — i . 1 

subscribed his power I confined to — i. 2 

not as it hath power, but as it — i. 2 (letter) 

that thou hast power to shake my — i. 4 

may enguard his dotage with their powers — i. 4 
from France there comes a power into . . — iii. 1 
there is part of a power already footed .. — iii. 3 
all the power of his wits has given way.. — iii. 6 

yet our power shall do a courtesy — iii. 7 

feel your power quickly — iv. 1 

his musters, and conduct his powers .... — iv. 2 
of Albany's and Cornwall's powers you — iv. 3 

whose power will close the eye — iv. 4 

the British iiowers are marching — iv. 4 

but are my brother's powers set forth? .. — iv. !i 

who have the power to seal the — iv. G 

the powers o' the kingdom approach — iv. 7 

draw up your powers — v. 1 

and they within our power, shall never — v. 1 
he led our powers; bore the commission — v. 3 

majesty, to him our absolute power — v. 3 

passion lends them power. Romeo Sf Juliet, i. !> (cho.) 
hath residence, and medicine power — ii. 3 

myself have power to die — iii. 5 

hath had no power yet upon thy beauty — v. 3 



ii. 2 
ii. 2 
ii. 2 
iii. I 
iii. 1 
iii. 2 
iv. 3 



POWER than we can contradict,. Koineo ^Juliet, v. 3 

nor witch hath power to charm Hamlet, i. 1 

no further personal power to business .. — i. 2 

that have the power 60 to seduce? — i. 5 

by the sovereign power you have of us . . 
in general synod, take away her power., 
and the devil hath power to assume .... 
ny, truly; for the power of beauty will.. 

heavenly powers, restore him I 

my operant powers their functions leave 
as my great power thereof may give .... 

good sir, whose powers are these? — iv. 4 

nave in them power to make this bitter.. 0(/it/(o, i. 1 
why, the power and corrigible authority — i. 3 
amen to that, sweet powersi I cannot .. — ii. 1 

any grace, or power to move you — iii. 3 

suit lay in Bianca's power [Kn(. -dower] — iv. 1 
hast not half the power to do me harm . . — v. 2 

O heaven! O heavenly powersi — v. 2 

your power and your command is taken — v. 2 

POWERFUL-O powerful love I ..Merry Wives, v. 5 

is powerful to araise king Pepin All'sWeU,ii. I 

his powerful sound, within an organ — ii. I 

and 'tis powerful, think it Winter'sTale, i. 2 

you're powerful at it. There was a man — ii. I 
some powerful spirit instruct the kites — ii. 3 
are too powerful on the highway. ... — iv. 2 

for a charm of powerful trouble Macbeth, iv. 1 

with all their powerful friends .... Richard ll.ii.i 

out of the powerful regions 1 Henry VI. v. 3 

with powerful policy strengthen ....SHenryVI. i. 2 

from winter's powerful wind — v. 2 

the quarrel from his powerful arm.. Richard III. i. 4 
with a broad and powerful fan.. TroilusS,- Cress, i. 3 
sent his powerful mandate to yon. .47i(ony (§-C/eo. i. 1 
drawn by the powerful sun, to fall Lear, ii. 4 

mickle is the powerful grace.. liomeo^'Jntiet, ii. 3 
some mixtures powerful o'er the blood. . Othello, i. 3 
his sail with thme own powerful breath — ii. I 

POWERFULLY and potently believe. . Hamlet, ii. 2 
POWERLESS-a powerless hand ....KingJohn, ii. 1 

POX— a pox o' your throat I Tempest, i. 1 

apoxo'thati how came — ii. 1 

a pox o' your bottle! — iii. 2 

'poxof your love-letters!.. I'aoGfn.o/Teronn, iii. 1 

pox on't, I'll not meddle TweiflhKight, iii. 4 

a pox o' your throats I . . . . Measurefor Measure, i v. 3 
your knave's visage, with a pox to you I — v. 1 
a pox of that jest 1 and beshrew . . Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

a pox on't, let it go; 'tis but All'sWell, i'd.d 

a pox upon him lor me (rep.) — iv. 3 

ivliat a pox have I to do with mj....\ Henry IV. i. 2 

and the pox pinches the other 2 Henry IV. i. 2 

a pox of this gout! or a gout of this pox! — i. 2 

with— a pox of the devil Henry V. iii. 7 

your face: a pox oPwi'ir\l'iles\..Ti7nonof Athens, iv. 3 
a pox on'tl I had rather not be so.. Cymbeline, ii. 1 
now, the pox upon her green-sickness. /*enc/e5, iv. 6 

but by the way to the pox — iv. 6 

the pox of such antick, lisping. .i?o»ieo if Juliet, ii. 4 
a pox of drowning thyself 1 it is clean ..Othello, i. 3 

POYS and the higgagel Henry V. iv. 7 

POYSAM the papist, howsoe'er their . . All's IVell, i. 3 

POSE — then I shall pose you Meas.forMeas. ii. 4 

I^RABBLE— pribbles and prabbles . . Merry Wives, i. I 

leave your prabbles 'oman — iv. 1 

and starin^B, pribbles and prabbles?. . — v. 5 

prawls, and prabbles, and quarrels . . Henry r. iv. 8 

PRACTICK— art and practick part of life — i. I 

PRACTISE tilts and tournaments. TwoGen.ofVer. i. 3 

this night I'll put in practise — iii. 2 

such vae base practises — iv. 1 

both teaching him the maxtise. . ..TwelfthNight, i. 2 
this is a practise, as full of labour.... — iii. 1 
this practise hath most shrewdly passed — y. 1 

will so practise on Benedick MuchAdo,i\.\ 

as art and practise hath em:ic\\eii. Meas.forMeas. i. I 
to practise his judgment with the.... — iii. 1 

making practise on the times — iii. 2 

against his honour, in hateful practise — v. 1 

this needs must be a practise — ■v. 1 

to find this practise out — v. 1 

in practise let us put it presently .... Much Ado, i. 1 

1 will put it in practise — ii. 2 

the practise of it lives in John the . . — iv. 1 
his active practise, his May of youth — v. 1 
paid me richly for the practise of it . . — v. I 
to put ill practise that which each. Loue's L.Losl, i. I 

finding barren practises, scarce — i'V. 3 

which I will practise Merchant of Venice, iii. 4 

he will practise against thee As you Like it, i. I 

I overheard him, and his practises .. — ii. 3 
whose practises he hath persecuted. . . . All's Well, i. 1 

the dearest issue of his practise — ii. I 

the practise in the chape of his dagger — iv. 3 
I will practise on this drunken. Taming of Sh. 1 (ind.) 
practise rhetoric in your common.... — i. 1 

to look, and practise by myself — i. I 

proceed in practise witn my younger — ii. 1 
sweet Bianca practise how to bride it? — iii. 2 

unclasped my practise Winter's Tale, iii. 2 

learn love, I'll practise to obe.y. . Comedy of Err. ii. 1 
this disease is beyond my practise .... Macbeth, v. I 

I will not practise to deceive KingJohn, i. 1 

my uncles practise more harm to me — iv. I 
the practise and the purpose of the king — iv. 3 

love me, practise an answer ] Henry IV. ii. 4 

sworn unto the practises ofFvuvice..., Henry V. ii. 2 
God acquit them of their practises! . . — ii. 2 
well, let them practise and converee.X Henry VI. ii. I 
whereon to practise your severity. . . . — ii. 3 
malicious practises against his state.. — ly. I 

began lier devilish practises 2He7iryVI. iii. 1 

be approved in practise culpable .... — iii. 2 

perish under device and practise Henry VIII. i. 1 

bid him recount the fore-recited practises — i. 2 

how came his practises to light? — iii. 2 

their practises must bear the same . . — v. 1 
practise your eyes with tears ! . . Troilus ^ Cress, ii. 2 
I will practise the insinuating nod. . Coriolanus, ii. 3 



PR A 



I'RACTISE— baits ami practise .... Corioltinus, iv. 1 

older in practise, abler thiin JidinsCwsar, iv. :< 

I do not, till 3'ou practise them on me — iv. 3 
if you tiiere did practise on my . . Anlonij^- Cteo. ii. 2 
no practise had in the hvave squares — iii. 9 
shall from this practise but make .... Cymbeline, i. u 
my practise so prevailed, that I returned — _y. 5 
and, by still practise, learn to know. Ti(us And. iii. 3 
some cnnning practise out of hand .. — v. 2 
in those that practise tliem, they are ..Pericles, ii. 3 

together with my practise — iii. 2 

quenched with some present practise .... — iv. 3 

hone-ity my iiractises ride easyl Li:ar,i. 2 

sug.^estion, plot, and damned practise .. .. — ii. 1 

he did liewray his practise — ii. 1 

of tlie duke and lur is practise only — ii. 4 

this is mere practise, Glostcr — y. 3 

heaven should practise stratagems. /Borneo fy,ftd. iii. 5 
malie our presence, and our practises . . Hamlet, ii. t 
his mother shall uncharge the practise ,. — iv. 7 
and, in a pass of practise, requite him. . . . — iv. 7 

I have been in continual practise — v. 2 

tlie foul practise hath turned itself — v. 2 

mere prattle without practise, is all his.. 0/Ae//o, i. 1 
to find out practises of cunning hell .... — i. 3 

or some unhatched practise — iii. 4 

fallen in the practise of a cursed slave .. — v. 2 

PRACTISED well to this Merry inves, iv. 4 

throttle their practised accent in. . IMiil. iV.'s Or. v. 1 

making practised smiles, as in Winter^ uTale, i. 2 

as it appears to me, practised u\m\\ . .'itienry IV. ii. 1 
BO legs, that practised not Ills gait .. — ii. 3 
woultlst thou have practised on me ..Henrys, ii. 3 
have practised dangerously against. .2 Henry I'l. ii. 1 
how intend you, practised?. ..4n/oj(?/4"C/t'op((^r(i, ii. 2 

I never practised it Pericles, ii. I 

to have practised more the whipstock.... — ii. 2 

hast practised on man's lifel Lear, iii. 2 

that tliou hajt practised on her with (oul.Olhetlo, i. 2 

PRACTISED, thy physic I will All's ll'ell, ii. 1 

a practiser of arts inlril)ited and out of . . Othello, i. 2 

PRACTISING upon his peace and quiet.. — ii. 1 

practising to steal away a lady. TwoGen. ofVer. iv. I 

practising behaviour to his own .. TwetftliNii^lU, ii. o 

PRiEAMBULA; we will be Love's L.Lost, v. 1 

PR.<£;CLARlSSIjMUSrtliuB noster ....Henryr. v. 2 
PR^MUNIRE, that therefore ....Henry nil. iii. 2 
PRJiTUR— in the prxtor's chair . . JuliusCiesar, i. 3 
of praetors, common suitors, will crowd — ii. 4 
PRAGGING-Iousy pragging knave ..HenryV. v. 1 
PRAGUE— old hermit of Prague.. Twelfl/i Night, iv. 2 

PRAIN— device in my praiu Merry H'wes, i. 1 

let us kuog our prains together .... — iii. 1 

remember in your prain — iv. 1 

but it is out of my prains Henry I', iv. 7 

being a little intoxicates in his prains — iv. 7 

PRAISE— praise in departing Tempest, iii. 3 

she will outstrip all praise — iv. 1 

all the praises that I now ..TwoGen. of Verona, ii. 4 

for love delights in praises — ii. 4 

or Valentinus' praise — ii. 4 

flatter, and praise, commend — iii. 1 

she will often praise her liquor — iii. I 

to praise his faith — iv. 4 

I praise lieaven for it i_rep. iii. 4) . . Merry Wives, i. 4 
with my speecli in your praise.... Tu-elfthNight, i. 5 

I forgive you tire praise — i. 5 

were you sent hither to praise me? . . — i. 5 

'however we do praise ourselves — ii. 4 

did praise my leg being cross-gartered — ii. s 

marry sir, they praise nie — v. i 

for a high praise, too brown (rep.) MuchAdo, i. 1 

and too little for a great praise — i. I 

thus far can I praise him — ii. 1 

to praise liim more than ever man .. — iii. 1 
of Milan's gown, tluit tiiey praise so — iii. 4 

and I praise God for you — v. 1 

a sonnet in praise of my beauty ? — v. 2 

among twenty, that will praise himself — v. 2 
and praise my eyes and taee?.il/irf. A'.'s Dream, iii. 2 

in my praise, master? [^lep.) Love'sL.Losl, i. '^ 

will praise an eel with the same praise — i. 2 

the painted flourish of your praise .. — ii. I 
spending your wit in the praise of mine — ii. 1 
such bedecking ornaments of praise? — ii. 1 
what, what? first praise me, and again — iv. 1 
is not, praise cannot mend the brow — iv. I 
though foul, shall liave fair praise . . — iv. 1 
that more for praise, than purpose . . — iv. 1 
for praise, an outward part, we bend — iv. 1 
as I, for praise alone, now seek to spill — iv. 1 
only for praise' sake, when they strive — iv. 1 
for praise: and praise we may afford — iv. 1 

sir, I praise the Liurd for you — iv. 2 

which is to me some praise, that I thy — iv. 2 
that sings heaven's praise witli such — iv. 2 

that I will praise a hand, a foot — iv. 3 

seller'spraise belongs; slie passes (rep.) — iv. 3 

1 praise God for you, sir — v. I 

in t'oe letters; nothing, in the praise — v. 2 
the bold wag by their praises bolder — v. 2 
in courtesy, gives undeserving praise — v. 2 
in praise of tlie owl and the cuckoo? — v. 2 
remember iiim worthy of thy praise. ^/(?r.o/Ten. i. 2 
the substance of my praise dotlr .... — iii. 2 
those peals of praise be his or no ... . — iii. 2 

nay, let me praise you, while I — iii. o 

seasoned are to their right praise.... — v. 1 

but tliat the people praise her for..AsyouLikeit, i. 2 

your praise is come too swiftly — ii. 3 

hath heard your praises; and this night — ii. 3 
thy hearer in tliy mistress' praise, ... — ii. 4 
a maiden can season her praise in .... All's Well, i. 1 
in their poor praise be humbled .... — i, 2 

spare my praises towards him — ii. 1 

in argument of praise, or to the worth — iii. 5 
that ever nature had praise for creating — iv. 5 

I praise God for you — v. 2 

though they cannot [)raise us .... Winter'sTale, i. 1 
cram us with praise, and make us .. — i. 2 



[ 589 ] 



PKAISE-our praises are our wages . Winter'sTale, i. 2 
praise her but for this her withoiit-door — ii. I 
surpassing the common praise it bears — iii. I 

Doricles, your praises are too large — iv. 3 
first, he did praise my beauty .. Comedy of Krr. iv. 2 

and his praises do contend Macbeth, i. 3 

did bear thy praises in his — i. 3 

that England had tliis praise, so yfQ.KingJohn. iii. 4 

as, praises of his state Hichard //. ii. 1 

by looking on the praise of him .. ..\ Henryl/^. i. 1 
to praise him so for running? — ii, 4 

1 laud them, I praise tliem — iii. 3 

this praise doth nourish agues — iv. 1 

all tlie world in praise of Henry Percy — v. I 

trimmed up your praises with — v. 2 

better than his praise, by still (,rep.) — v. 2 

adieu, and take thy praise with thee — v. 4 
to blow away tliis praise, ending .. ..IHenrylV. i. 1 
praise heaven for the merry year.. — v. 3 (song) 
your chronicle as rich with praise .... Henry A', i. 2 
ay, I praise Got; and I have merited — iii. 6 
vary deserved praise on my palfrey — iii. 7 

I once writ asonnet in his praise.... — iii. 7 
is the prescript praise and perfection — iii. 7 
even as your horse bears your praises — iii. 7 
cry, praise and glory on his headi — iv. (chorus) 

or take that praise from God — iv. 8 

sing her endless praise 1 Henry VL i. 6 

the latest glory of thy praise — iv. 2 

good wishes, praise, and prayers .... — v. 3 
solicit Henry with her wondrous praise — v. 3 

preface of her worthy praise — v. 5 

annoy our foot, is worthy praise ..iHenryfl. iii. I 

my vows of tlianks and praise! — iv. 9 

want praise and esteem, but that .... — v, 2 

heard his praises in pursuit 2HenryVI. ii. 1 

sin's rebuke, and my Creator's praise — iv. 6 

that we may praise thee in Uichard III. v. 3 

him in eye, still him in praise HenryVIlI. i. 1 

this cliild does, and praise my Maker — v. 4 

as they term it, praise her Troilus Sf Cressida, i. 1 

too flaming a praise for a good — i. 2 

in the glass of Pandar's praise may be — i. 2 
of praise distains his worth (lep.).... — i. 3 

that praise, sole pure, transcends .... — i. 3 
seeks his praise more than he fears .. — i. 3 
so to be valiant is no praise at all.. ,, — ii. 2 
praises itself but in the deed (rep.) . . — ii. 3 

force him with praises — ii. 3 

or covetous of praise? — ii 3 

praise him tliat got thee — ii.3 

I'll not praise thy wisdom — ii.3 

I must needs praise him — iii. I 

praise us as we are tasted — iii. 2 

shall have a praise in present — iii. 2 

one consent, praise new-born gawds — iii. 3 

eye praises the present object — iii. 3 

as far high-soaring o'er thy praises ., — iv. 4 

do deeds worth praise, and tell — v. 3 

jewel hath sufl'ered under praise. Timon of Athens,!. 1 

no man can justly praise — i. 2 

this praise, the breath is gone (rep.) .. — ii. 2 

praise his most vicious strain — iv. 3 

sir, praise me not; my work Coriolanus, i. .5 

when she does praise me, grieves me — i. 9 
to the spire and top of praises vouched — i. 9 

in praises sauced with lies — _i. 9 

whom with all praise I point at — ii. 2 

my praises made thee first a soldier (rep.) — iii. 2 
and, in his praise, have, almost, stamped — v. 2 
praise the gods, and make triumijhant — y. 4 
to bury Caesar, not to praise him .Julius Ca-sar, iii. 2 
you praise yourself by laying .. ..Anlony^cleo.ii. 2 
though I lose the praise of it by telling — ii. 6 
will praise any man that will praise me — ii. 6 
would you praise CcBsar, say, — Caesar — iii. 2 
plied them both with excellent praises — iii. 2 
rouse himself to praise my noble act — v. 2 

in praise of our country mistresses . . Cymbeline, i . 6 
praise be given to your remembrance — ii. 4 
famous in Ccesar's praises, no whit .. — iii. 1 

and praise myself for charity — iv. 2 

deserved the praise o' the world — v. 4 

hearing us praise our loves of Italy . . — v. 5 

made scruple of his praise — v. 6 

eternal date, for virtue's praise! .. TilusAndron. i. 2 
my worthless praise: O pardon me (rep.) — v. 3 

with the glory of her praise Pericles, i. 1 

her face, the book of praises, where is read — i. 1 

oft the wrack of earned praise — iv. (Gow.) 

Marina gets all praises, which are paid — iv. (Gow.) 

express a general praise to her — iv. 4 

the argument of your praise Lear, i. 1 

got praises of the king for irira attempting — ii. 2 

stands in some rank of praise — ii. 4 

funeral praises do adorn thy tomb! liomeo ^.lul. v. 3 
seen play, and heard others praise ....Hamlet, iii. 2 

if praises may go back again — iv. 7 

those shall praise your excellence — iv. 7 

you shall not write my praise Othello, ii, 1 

if thou shouldst praise me? (rep.) — ii. 1 

what miserable praise hast thou ftir — ii. 1 

but what praise couldst thou bestow on — ii. I 
as thou Shalt prove' us, praise us — v. 1 

PR-\ISED women's modesty Merry Wives, ii. 1 

heaven be praised for my jealousy!.. — ii. 2 
I shall be rather praised for this .... — iii. 2 
good things should be praised.. 7'wo Gen. ofl'er. iii. 1 
Jove, and my stars be praised! .. Twelf'h Night, ii. 5 
and mine I praised, and mine ihsit^.. Much. -ido, iv. 1 
how Beatrice praised thy wit the other — v. 1 
well, praised be the gods for thy .As youLike it, iii. 3 

is now the praised of the king Alt's Welt, ii. 3 

whom all men praised, and whom .. — y. 3 
thy mildness praised in every townTaming of Sh. ii. 1 

be the great Apollo! praised! Winier'sTule, iii. 2 

heisnot (God be praised and plessed!)HeH7'i//''. iii. 6 

E raised be (Jod, and not our (rep.).... — iv. 7 
ere is (praised be Got for it!) — iv. 8 

God be praised! that to believing ..2He>i?!//7. ii. 1 



PR A 



PRAISED— your arms, be praised . . Hiclmrd I ll.v. -i 
she praised his complexion (rep.) Troilus «5 C7-ess. i- 2 
if that the praised himself bring ,,., — i. 3 

the lord be praised! — iii. i 

and scratch my praised cliecks — iv. 2 

for recompense have praised the vile 7'('7no»o//l//i. i. 1 
make yourselves praised: but reserve - iii. 6 (grace) 
the soothsayer that you praised ..Antony ij-Cleo. i. 2 
but 1 have praised you, when you .. — ii. 6 

most praised, most loved Cymbeline, i. 1 

I praised her, as I rated her; so do I — i. 5 
in the clothes that she so praised .... — iii. ,'j 

great .Jupiter be praised I Lucius — v. 3 

not dispraising whom we praised .... — v. 5 
diamonds of a most praised water ....Pericles, iii. 2 

than praised for harmful mild iiess Lear, i. 4 

who, having been praised for bluntness.. — ii. 2 
which she liath praised him with Homeo Sf. Juliet, iii. 5 
rashly, and praised be rashness for it .. Hnmtet, v, 2 

well praised! liow if she be black Othello, ii.\ 

PRAISEPUL [Co(.-preyful] Love's L.Lost, iv. 2 (epit.) 

PRAISEST the worst best Ol hello, ii. 1 

PRAISEWORTHY; and now tell me.MuchA'lo, v. 2 
PRAISING me as much ....TwoGen.oflerona,i\i. 3 

so much for praising myself MuchAdo, v. 2 

praising her when lam dumb .... — v. 3 (scroll) 
high-day wit in praising him . . Mereh. of Venice, ii. 9 
comes too near the praising of myself — iii. 4 
on the turf, praising the proud ..AsyouLilieil, iii. 4 
praising what is lost makes All's Well, v. 3 

Eetition to thee, in praising her. Troilus ^- Cress, iv. 4 
lame you not for praising CiEsar. Jw//wsC<??.?ar, iii. 1 
praising Antony, 1 have dispraised. /i"(. S,Cteo. ii. 5 

PRANCING to his love? SHeiiry ri. ii. I 

PRANK— nature pranks her in .. Twelfth Mglit, ii. 4 

how many fruitless pranks this — iv. 1 

and his son's pranks too Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

you of a thousand idle pranks.Comer/i/o/£.'7vo/.f. ii.2 
pestiferous, and dissentious pranks.l Henry VI. iii. 1 
they do prank them in authority ..Coriolanus, iii. 1 

of other your new pranks Lear, i . 4 

tell him, his pranks have been too ....Hamlet, iii. 4 

does foul pranks which fair and wise . . Othellu, ii. 1 

let heaven see the pranks they dare not — iii. 3 

PRANKED-goddess-like prankedup.M'>nte-'.5r. iv. 3 

PRAT— come, mother Prat, come.. Meri-y Wives, iv. 2 

I'll prat her — iv. 2 

PRATE-lords, that can prate as amply. Te7npes(, ii. I 
we must give folks leave to prate.. Merry Wives, i. 4 

I cannot cog, I cannot prate — iii. 3 

to prate and talk for life Winter's Tale, iii. 2 

very stones prate of my whereabout . . Macbeth, ii. 1 
with his innocent prate he will .... King John, iv. 1 

done nothing but prate to me 2HenryIV. iii. 2 

with your audacious prate! 1 Henry VI. iv. 1 

we will not stand to prate Kichard III. i. 3 

what do you prate of service? Coriolanus, iii. 3 

you godsl I prate, and the most noble — t. 3 

yet here he lets me prate — v. 3 

and, if thou prate of mountains Hamlet, v. 1 

thou prate rogue? Nay, good lieutenant. 0//icifo, ii.3 

PRATED, and spoke such scurvy — i. 2 

PRATER— a speaker is but a prater Henry V. v. 2 

PRATEST thou to thyself .... Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

thou pratest, and pratest; serve Coriolanus, iv. 5 

PRATING boy, that begged it as . Mer. of Venice, v. 1 
think on prating whilst thou livest! Tarn, of Sh. iv. 3 

leave your prating H'inter's Tale, iv. 3 

cheaters, prating mountebanks ..Comedy of Err. i. 2 
hence, prating peasant; fetch tliy master — ii. 1 

a fool, and a prating coxcomb Henry V. iv. I 

this little prating "York was not ..Richard ill. iii. 1 

why stay we prating here? Coriolanus, i. 1 

when'twas a little prating thing .Romeo ^ Juliet, ii.i 
who was in life a foolish prating knave. Hamlet, iii. 4 
and will slie love him still for prating? .Otiiello, ii. 1 

PRATTLE something too wildly Tempest, iii. 1 

the less will prattle of Twelfth Mghl, i. 2 

some cause to prattle for himself.^/erts./or.Veas.v. 1 
if you prattle me into these perils ..All's Well, iv. 1 
thinking his prattle to be tedious ..Richard 11. v. 2 
as very infants prattle of thy pride. lHe»/;//7. iii. 1 
mere prattle, without practise Othello, \. 1 

my sweet, I prattle out of fashion .... — ii. 1 

PRATTLER! how thou talk'st! Macbeth, iv. 2 

PRATTLING nurse into arapture .. Coriolanus, \i. 1 

pr'y thee, no more prattling Merry Wives, v. I 

[A'n/.] I have heard of your prattlings .H<i»i/e(, iii. 1 

PRAVE— uttered as prave 'ords at.. ..HoiryV. iii, 6 

there is gallant and most prave passages — iii. 6 

the duke is a prave man — iii. 6 

fought a most pra\ e pattle here in . . — iv. 7 

PRAWLS,and prabbles HenryV. iv. 8 

PKAWN— a good dish of prawns iHenrylV. ii. I 

PRAY for my success TieoGen of Verona, i. 1 

upon some book I love, I'll pray for thee — i. 1 
and pray her to a fault for which .... — _i. 2 

he has pray his Pible veil Merry Wives, ii. 3 

master Ford, you must pray — iv. 2 

my lady praysyou to have a ojaxeTwelflhNiglil, iii. 4 

good sir Toby, get him to pray — iii. 4 

petition well that prays for peace. if/ea5./ori)/eas. i. 2 
when I would pray and think {.rep.) — ii. 4 

I'll pray a tliousand prayers for thy — iii. 1 

1 will pray, Pompey to increase — iii. 2 

I pr'y thee, pray for me — iii. 2 

comfort you, and pray with you .... — iv. 3 
and he heartily prays, some occasion .MuchAdo, i. 1 

but prays from his heart — i. 1 

tears her hair, prays, curses — ii.3 

1 know not how to pray your patience — v. 1 
pray thou for us, and good \\i<^..Mid.N. Dream, i. 1 
1 had rather praya month with .. Love'sL.Lost, i. 1 

to watch for herT to pray for herl — iii. 1 

write, sigh, pray, sue, and groan .... — iii. 1 
drink with you, nor pray v.-it\\yo\i.Mer.of Venice,\. 3 
we do pray fui' mercy; and tliat same — iv. 1 
where she kneels and prays for haiijiy — v. 1 
therefore I pray the gods make. . As you Like ii, iii. 3 
and pray God's blessing into thy All's Well, i. 3 



PRA 

PRAY— O pray, pray, pray All's If'ell, iv. i 

and so I pray you all to tliink. Taming of ahrew, ii. 1 
vour father prays you leave your.... — iil. 1 

I pray the gods she may — i v. 4 

80 give alms: pray so; and, for,. IVi uteres Tale y iv. 3 

pray heartily he be at palace — iv. 3 

and pray your mother 8 blessing .... — v. 3 
know what 'tis to fast and pray .. Cmnedy of Err. i. 2 
and prays that you will hie you .... — i. 2 

my heart prays for him — iv. 2 

to pray for this good man Macbeth, iii. 1 

is gione to pray the holy king — iii. 6 

let wives with child pray, tlint King John, iii. 1 

do pray to thee, thou virtuous Uauphin — iii. 1 
(;unnot pray that tliou may'st win i_rep.) — iii. 1 

I will pray, if ever I remember — iii. 3 

most heartily I pray your highness.. TJiV/mrrf II. i. 1 
visit him: pray God we may make haste — i. 4 

to pray for your foul sin (rep.) — v. 3 

he prays but faintly, and would be (.rep.) — T. 3 

I pray God make tnee new — v. 3 

pray: andyetllie; for they pray ..lllcnrylV.ii. 1 
•watch to-night, pray to-morrow .... — ii. 4 

but look you pray, all you •IHenrylV. i. 2 

to pray your patience for it — (epilogue) 

but, indeed, to pray for the (lueen .. — (epilogue) 
your humble patience pray .... Henry V. i. (chorus) 
we pray you to proceed; andjustly .. — i. 2 

lie prays you to save his life — iv. 4 

I prav you to serve Got, and keep you — iv. 8 

I humbly pray them to admit — v. (chorus) 

except it be to pray against thy XUenryVl. i. 1 

drink, and pray for me, I pray yo\x,.'ilienryVI. ii.3 

iu that I pray you use her well — ii. 4 

priests pray for enemies — v. 2 

let me pray before I take ray death .illenryVl. i. 3 

and pray tlint I may repossess — iv. 5 

God, 1 pray liim, that none of Richard 111. i. 3 

to pray for them that hath done scath — i. 3 

saiuis pray, to have hini suddenly . . — iv. 4 
who prays continually for Kiuliinond's — v. 3 
the wronged heirs of York do pray for — v. 3 
thy adveisary's wife doth pray for tliee — v. 3 
now I would pray our monsieurs . . Henry Fill. i. 2 
and pray them take their pleasures .. — i. 4 

all good people, pray for me I — ii. 1 

we had need pray, and heartily — ii. 2 

now I prav God, amen! — ii.3 

whose health and royalty, I pray for — ii.3 

pray their graces to come near — iii. 1 

that sun, I pray, may never set! ... . — iii. 2 
she is goin", wench 1 pray, pray .... — iv. 2 

sir, I most humbly pray you to — iv. 2 

the fruit she goes with, I pray for heartily— v. 1 
most heartily to pray for her {rep.) .. — v. 1 
noble partners, and myself, thus pray — v. 4 
to pray Achilles see us nt our.. 7'roi(Ms SrCrfss. v. 10 
I pray for no man but myself Timon of. ilk. i. 2 (grace) 

and humbly prays you (rtp.) — ii. 2 

as free as I do pray the gods Coriolanus, iii. 3 

are bound to pray for you both — iv. 6 

how can we for our country pray — v. 3 

pray to the gods to intermit Julius Ccesar, i. 1 

and pray, and fawn, for him, I spurn — iii. 1 
if I could pray to move, prayers would — iii. 1 
when I shall pray, O bless my ..AnlonySrCteo. iii. 4 

prays, and destroj's the prayer — iii. 4 

will pray in aid for kindness — v. 2 

to pray they have their will Cymbeline, ii. 5 

men in dangerous bonds, pray not alike — iii. 2 

[Co(.] blessed pray you be — v. 5 

and pray the Koraan gods {rep.') . . Tilus Andron. iv. 2 

pray to the devils — iv. 2 

pray be careful all, and leave you not — iv. 3 
protect you! and we'll pray for you .... Pericles, i, 4 

a man, pray see me buried — ii. 1 

pray; but be not tedious — iv. 1 

I'll pray, and then I'll sleep Lear, iii. 4 

pray, innocent, and beware — iii. 6 

well pray you, father — iv. 6 

80 we'll live, and uray, and sing, and tell — v. 3 
they pray, grant thou, lest faith . . Romeo Sf Juliet, i. 5 
[K»(.J I pray thy poverty, and not thy — v. 1 

we pray you throw to earth this Hamlet, i. 2 

I pray you all, if you have hitherto — i. 2 

look you, I will go pray — i. 5 

pray can I not, tnougli inclination — iii. 3 

of all cliristian souls, I pray God — iv. 5 

I will, my lord; I pray you iiardou me .. — v. 2 

and prays you to believe him..-, Olhellt,i. 3 

looks sadly, and prays the Moor be safe.. — ii. 1 
pray lieaven he be; for I Irave served him — ii. 1 
I am to pray you, not to strain my speech — iii. 3 
never pray more, abandon all remorse . . — iii. 3 

and yet she'll kneel, and pray — iv. 2 

what? not to pray? Torments will ope .. — v. 2 

PRAYED— I prayed, and kneeled. iVeas./or Meas. v.l 

how she praj'ed, that never prayed. TamingofSU. iv.l 

your motlier well hath prayed Richard II. v. 3 

had not churchmen prayed 1 Henry I'l. i. 1 

thus they prayed to tell your qvucq.. Henry VIII. i. 4 
eyes to heaven, and prayed devoutly — iv. 1 
from tlie council, prayed me to make — v. 2 
prayed you to hold your hand.. 'i'lmono/ /((/tens, ii.2 

you have prayed well to day Coriolanus, v. 4 

and prayed me, oft, forbearance .... Cymbeline, ii. 5 
prayed me to excuse her keeping close — iii. 5 
1 fast, and prayed, for their intelligence — iv. 2 
have you prayed to-night, DeBdeniona?.0//ieHo, v. 2 

PRAYER— to prayers! to prayers! Tempest, i. 1 

the king and prince at prayers! — i. 1 

vouchsafe, my prayer may know, if you.. — i. 2 

that I might set it.in my prayers — iii. 1 

unless I be relieved by prayer — (epil.) 

grievance to my holy prayers . . Ttvo Gen. of Ver. i. 1 

he is given to praj'er Merry ivives. i. 4 

miss you morning nor evening prayer — ii. 2 

long enough to say my prayers — iv. 5 

has thrice ner prayers said — v. 6 

get him to say his prayers Twelfth Kight, iii. 4 



[ 590 ] 



PRAYER— my prayers,.minx? . . Tu-elflh Night, iii. 4 
by your fair prayer to soften .... Meas. for Meas. i. 5 
but with true prayers, that shall .... — ii.2 
prayers from preserved souls — ii.2 

foing to temptation where prayers ., — ii.2 
'U make it my morn prayer to have — ii. 4 
I'll pray a thousand prayers for thy.. — iii' I 

as our iirayers are he may — iii. 2 

with a prayer they may prove prosperous — iii. 2 
desire you to clap into your prayers — iv. 3 

I say nij prayers aloud Much.Ado, ii. 1 

that my prayers could such affection. Mid. N. Dr. i. 1 

amen, to that fair prayer, say I — ij. 3 

the more my prayer, the lesser — ,!!• ^ 

no more strength, than her weak prayers — iii. 2 
lest the devil cross my prayer . . Mer. of Venice, iii. I 
follow him no more witli bootless prayers — iii. 3 
to live in prayer and contemplation — iii. 4 

can no prayers pierce thee? — iv. 1 

that same prayer doth teacli us — iv. I 

might your prayers move?. As you Like it. iv. 3 (letter) 

my prayers pluck down, fall on All's Well, i. 1 

say tliy prayers; when thou hast none — i. 1 
3'ou had my prayers to lead them on — ii. 4 
though I took him at his prayers ... . — ii. 5 
bosom against our borrowing prayers — iii. 1 

unless her prayers, whom heaven — iii. 4 

many a prayer upon her grave .... H' inter's Tale, v. 3 
possession to ray holy prayers. Come^/i/ ofEirors, iv. 4 
drugs, and holy prayers, to make .... — v.l 
until my tears and prayers have .... — v.l 

but they did say their prayers Macbeth, ii. 2 

my prayers with him! — iii. 6 

put on with holy prayers — iv. 3 

better part our prayers come in .... King John, iii. 1 
unto mine armour with thy prayers. . Richard II. i. 3 
unto my mother's prayers, 1 bend.... — v. 3 
no tears, his prayers are in jest irep.') — v. 3 
how our plaints and prayers do pierce — v. 3 

say thy prayers, and farewell 1 Henry 1 1', v. 1 

concludes in hearty prayers iHenrylV.iw. 1 

all their prayers, and love, were set .. — iv.l 

fall to thy prayers — v. 5 

he scorns to say his prayers Henry V. iii. 2 

they have said their prayers, and they — iv. 2 

churcli's prayers made him so I Henry VI. i. 1 

I would prevail, if prayers might .... — iii. 1 
good wisnes, praise, and prayers .... — v. 3 
prayers and tears have moved me ..2HenryVI. iv. 7 

when you make your prayers — iv. 7 

famed for mildness, peace and prayer.. 3H<?jiri/ VI. i i. 1 

ray humble thanks, ray prayers — . iii. 2 

if a humble prayer may prevail — iv. 6 

to your good prayer will scarcely . . Ricliard III. i. 3 
if ray deep prayers cannot aijpease .. — i. 4 
with earnest prayers all to that ett'ect — ii. 2 

to hear her prayers for them — iii. 3 

a book of prayer in his hand — iii. 7 

a book of prayers on their pillow lay — iv. 3 

my prayers on the adverse party — iv. 4 

turned my feigned prayer on my, head — v. 1 

tlie prayers of holy saints — v. 3 

live where their prayers did Henry VIII i. 2 

make of your prayers one sweet — ii. 1 

my vows and prayers j'et are the king's — ii. 1 
ray prayers are not words duly hallowed — ii. 3 
prayers and wishes are all I can retiu-n — ii. 3 
almost forgot my prayers to content — iii. 1 

shall have my prayeis, while I shall — iii. 1 

ray pra3'ers to heaven for you — iii. 2 

but mj prayers lor ever, and for ever — iii. 2 
past all comforts here, but prayers .. — iv. 2 
in thy prayers remember the estate . . — v. 1 
mistress will remember in mj' prayers — v. 1 
men's prayers then would seek you . . — y. 2 
than thou learn a prayer without. 2'roil. 4' Cress, ii. 1 

I have said my prayers — ii.3 

art thou devout? wast thou in prayer? — ii. 3 

and visit her with my prayers Coriolanus, i. 3 

the prayers of priests, nor times — i. 10 

not according to the prayer of the people — ii. 1 

take my prayers with you — iv. 2 

tliou barr'st us our prayers to the gods — v. 3 

than pi ty to our prayers — y . 3 

pray to move.lJrayers would VL\oy&.JuliusCa'sar, iii. I 
hear me this prayer, though t\\o\i. Antony ^ Cleo. i. 2 

hear that prayer of the people! — _i. 2 

by losing of our prayers — ii. 1 

my knee shall bow my prayers to them — ii.3 
undo that prayer, by crying out .... — iii. 4 

prays, and destroys the prayer — iii. 4 

for so bad a prayer as his was never.. — ^.V.- ^ 
parted with prayers for the'provider. Cymbe^me, iii. 6 
and on it said a century of prayers .. — iv. 2 
in bootless prayer have they h&tw.TitusAndron, iii. I 
for heaven shall hear our prayers .. ^- iii. 1 

hermits in their holy prayers — iii. 2 

that, with base prayers, 1 should repent — y.i 
which the people's prayers still fall ..Pericles, iii. 3 
madam, my thanks and prayers .... — iii. 3 
come, say your prayers speedily .... — iv.l 
a little space for prayer, 1 grant it . . — iv. 1 
master-reasons, her prayers, her knees — iv. 6 
cold as a snowball; saying his prayers — iv. G 
great patron thought on in ray prayers. . . . Lear, \. 1 

sometime with prayers, enforce their — ii.3 

swears a prayer or two Homeo ^-Juliet, i. 4 

lips that they must use in prayer. ... — i. .'i 

tliough grant for prayer's sake — i. .'i 

while my prayer's efiect I take — i. 5 

tears, nor prayers, shall purchase out — iii. 1 
let not thy mother lose lier prayers .... Hamlet, i. 2 
what's in prayer, but this twofold force — iii. 3 
but, O what form of prayer can serve.... — iii. 3 
for charitable prayers, shards, flints .... — v.l 
to draw from her a prayer of earnest .... Othello, i. 3 

Erayer rCoi.-prayingJ much castigation.. — iii. 4 
ut wliHe I say one prayer — v. 2 

PRAYER- BOOK in your hand .... Richard ///. iii. 7 
wear prayer-books iu my pocket. Mer. of Venice, ii. 2 



PRE 



PRAYING for our husbands' .... Mer. of Venice, v. 1 

from praying to purse-taking IHenrylV. i. 2 

nay, that's past praying for — ii. ' 

praying to enrich his watchful 60u\. Richard III. iii. 

they sliall be praying nuns — iv. 

my letters, praying on his side , . Julius Crrsar, iv. 

between, praying for bothliarts.Antoiiy ^Cleo. iii. 

raiglit I do it, pat, now he is praying. . Hamlet, iii. 

PRA Y'ST— thou pray 'st not well — v. 

PREACH some philosophy, to make . KingJohn, iii. 

ICol.Knt.'i up to the preach, you dogs. . Hen ryV. iii. 

I liave heard you preach tliat I Henry VI. iii. 

I will preach to thee, mark me Lear, iv. 

PREACHED-divinity preached thetel Pericles, iv. 

where manners ne'er were preachedl TwelflhN. iv. 

PREACHERS to us all HenryV.iv. 

PREACHES rCu/./i;)i(.-preach](!fp.) — iii. 

master preaches patience to him.Comedy of Err. v. 

PREACHING to stones Hamlet, iii . 

PREACHMENT of your liigh descent ? SHeriri/ VI. i. 

PRE AD and salt yesterday Henry V. v. 

PRECEDENCE that hath tofore.. Loot's L.LosI, iii. 

it does allay the good precedence. ^n/oyiy fyCleo. ii, 
PRECEDENT, should a like Hint'-r'sTale, ii. 

dear friend, shall be my precedent .... Tempest, ii. 

by some mighty precedent Love' sL. Lost j i. 

be recorded for a precedent .... Merch.ofVevice, i v. 

return the precedent to these lords . . King John, v. 

be a precedent and witness good Richard II. ii. 

aside, and I'll show thee a precedent. 1 Hfnri//r.ii. 4 

make them your precedent! ZHeuryVI. ii.2 

precedent was full as long a &o'mg. Richard III. iii. 6 

you a precedent of this commission ?He7iri/ VIII. i. 2 

grace has given a precedent of wisdom — ii.2 

precedent passions do instruct us.. Timon of Ath. i. 

or thy precedent services are . . Antony <§- Cleo. iv.l 

precedent, which, not to read, would. Cymbeline, iii. 

precedent, and lively warrant. TiinsAmlronicus, v. 

gives me proof and precedent of Bedlam .Lear, ii. 

the tythe of your precedent lord Hamlet, iii. 

a voice and precedent of peace — v. 

PRECEDING still the fates — i. 

of six preceding ancestors, iX\&tg&V[\..All'sWell, v. 
PRECEPT, he did show Meas. for Meas. iv. 

my father's precepts therein forget .. Tempest, iii. 

I will bestow some precepts on tliis../i;i's »(>/(. iii. 

those precepts cannot be served IHenrylV. v. 

as send precepts to the Leviathan .... Henry V. iii. 

the icy precepts-of respect .... Timon of Athens, iv. 

precepts, that would make invincible ..Cariol. iv. 

and these few precepts, in thy memory .Hamlet, i. 

and then I precepts gave her, that she .. — ii. 

PRECEPTIAL medicine to rage Much Ado, v. 

PRECINCT, I was employed 1 Henry VI. ii. 

PRECIOUS creature, 1 had rather Tempest, iii. 

love is still more precious in itself. 7'«'oGt7i.o/F.ii. 

of balm, and every precious &o\ieT.Meiry Hives, v. 

this rich and precious gift? Much Ado, iv. 

come appareled in more precious habit — iv. 

and rare, precious, celestial? ....Mid. A'.'s Vr. iii. 

held precious in the world's esteem .Love'sL.L. ii. 

it adds a precious seeing to — iv. 

hold me dear as precious eyesight .. — v. 

two rich and precious stones . . Mcrch. of Venice, ii. 

and other precious, precious jewels . . — iii. 

thy words are too precious to be ..As you Like it, i. 

wears yet a precious jewel in his head — ii. 

more precious than to want — iii. 

is the jay more precious than . . Taming ofSh. iv. 

precious self had then not crossed. HVn(cr's2'a;e, i. 

this jealousy is for a precious creature — i. 

wliose loss of his most precious queen — iv. 

ray father will grant precious things — v. 

I'd beg your precious mistress — v. 

go together, you precious winners all — v. 

those precious motives, those strong .. Macbeth, iv. 

that were most precious to me — iv. 

with splendour of his precious eye. . KingJohn, iii. 

any annoyance in that precious sense! ^ iv. 

found it too precious princely for a grave — iv. 

we hold our time too precious to be . . — v. 

tendering the precious safety oi my,. Richard II, i. 

and all the precious liquor spilt .... — i. 

the precious jewel of thy home return — i. 

this precious stone set in the silver .. — ii. 

the glory of my precious crown — iii. 

and thy precious rich crown 1 Henry IV. ii. 

to profane the precious time iHenrylV. ii. 

more iJrecious, preserving life in .... — iv. 

in an urn more precious than 1 Henry VI. i. 

and set a precious crown upon — v. 

and defaced the precious image of .Richard III. ii. 

was it more precious to me than 'tis.. — iii. 

made precious by the foil of — v. 

'tis precious of itself Tj-oilus ^Cressida,n. 

in such a precious loss ~- iv. 

far more precious dear than life — v. 3 

O what a precious comfort 'tis . . Timon of Athens^ i. 2 

yellow, glittering, precious gold? ... . — iv. 3 

and looked upon things precious. . . . Coriolanus, ii. 2 

my precious queen, forbear Antony SrCleo. i. 3 

not seen the most precious d'lanioiid .. Cymbeline, i. 5 

so precious 'twixt fair and fool? — i. 7 

the precious note of it with a base slave — ii. 3 

what's in't is precious — iii. 4 

he believes it is a thing most precious — iii. 5 

ah, you precious pander! — iii. 5 

thou precious varlet, my tailor made — iv. 2 

said, was precious and coidial to me — iv. 2 

such precious deeds in one that promised — v. 5 

thought by me a precious thing — v. .^ 

returns with precious lading . . Titus Andronicus, \. 2 

he doth wear a precious ring — ii. 4 

the most precious square of sense Lear,i. 1 

buy this unprized precious maid of me.. — i. 1 

that can make vile things precious — iii. 2 

their precious stones new lost — v. 3 

forget the precious treasure Romeo 4- Juliet, i. 1 

this precious hook of love — i. 3 

from her dead finger a precious ring — v. 3 



PRE 

PRECIOUS— the precious diadem etole.Hamlet, iii. 4 

it sends some precious instance of — iv. £ 

make it a darling like your prec-'ioiis eye. Othello, iii. I 

precious villain! Tlie woman tails — v. s 

PKEC[OUS-JUICEDfiowers....Romfo,S/i((it'<, ii. J 

PRECIOUSliY— spent most preciously.. 'A'mpfs(, i. S 

PllECIPICE-prccipice for no \i:a.p .. I'leiiry y 11 1, v. 1 

PKECIPtTATlNG-down preciiJitatiiig..Lrar, iv. ( 

PKECIPITATION miglit down.. ..Corwlamis, iii. i 

in peril of precipitation from olf the rocic — iii. i 

PRECISE — of my honour precise . . Mtrrtj IVives, ii. 1 

ever precise in promise-keeping.. A7eas./oril/eas. i. i 

lord Aiifjelo is precise; stands at ... . — i. ■^ 

but precise villains they are — ii. I 

tKii(,3 deep as hell. The precise Angelo? — iii. 1 
Bilkeu terms precise, tliree-piled. . Love's L. Lost, v. 5 
vonr honour more pi'ccise and nice. .'■iHenn/ir. ii. i 
PltECISELY— say precisely.... Two Gen. offer, iv. i 
therefore, precisely, can you carry. il/i?-rj/M7iics, i. 1 
tellmeprecisely of whatoomplexionVLfH'f'sL L. i.2 
say precisely, were not for the court. . .4U'sil'ell, ii. i 
cannot so precisely weed this la.ml..'2lli'ini/l I', iv. I 
of thinking too precisely on the event. ILunlel. iv. i 

PKECISENESS come to this? \ Henri/ f I. v. 4 

PKECISIAN-forhisprecisiaii.jVeni/WViies, ii. 1 (let.: 

PHE-CONSENT, lie did not flow Pericles, iv. 4 

PRE-CONTRACT; to bring yoa.Meas.for.Meas. iv. 1 

PRECOR gelida quaudo pecus Love's L.Lost, iv. 1 

PRECURSE— precurse of fierce events ..Hamlet, i. 1 
PRECCJRSOR-precursorso' the dreadful. Tempest, i. S 

PKE-UECEASED valour Henry I', v. I 

PREDECESSOR— of his predecessors ..Machelli. ii. 4 
did to his predecessors part witlial .... Henry F. i. 1 
your great predecessor, king Edward — _i. S 

13 worth all your predecessors Coriolanus, ii. 1 

as your predecessors have, your honour — ii. 1 
PREDESTINATE scratched face ....Mudi.ido, i. I 
PREDICAMENT, I say, t\\ovi.Merch. o/renice, iv. I 

the line, and the predicament \HenryIt^.i, i 

piteous predicament! Romeo Sr Juliet, iii. 2 

PREDICTION of noble having Macbeth, i. S 

these predictions are to tlie vorU. .JuliusCcrsnr, ii. i 

of mine comes under the prediction Lear, i. i 

of a prediction r read this otlier day — i. i 

PREDOMINANCE, or the day's sh.ii.me.Hacbeth, ii. 4 

his humorous i)redominance. Troilus ^rCressida, ii. 2 

treacliers, by spherical predominance .... Lear, \. S 

PREDO.MINANT. When he was .. ..All'sWell,\. I 

strike where 'tis predominant .... Winler'sTale, i. S 

so predominant in your nature Macbeth, iii. 1 

foul subornation ispredorainant ..iHenryVI. iii. 1 

tlie worser is predominant Romeo St Juliet, ii. 2 

PREDOMINATE o'er the peasant.J/err;/iriwM, ii. 5 
your close fire predominate . . Timon of.ithens, iv. 2 

PREECHES— must be preeches Mem/ Wives, Iv. 1 

PRE-EMINENCE than fish and. Comedi/ o/ Err. ii. I 
witii my power, pre-eminence, and ti.\\....Lear, i. 1 

PRE- EMPLOYED by him Winter's Tale, ii. 1 

PUEFACE— a preface of her worthy..) HenryVl. v. £ 
PREFER— to prefer mine ovin7..Tu-oGeii.o/ Fer. ii. 4 

I will help thee to prefer her too — ii. ■( 

I have access my own love to prefer — iv. S 
that it prefers itself, and le&ves. .Meas.for.Meas, i. I 
any such, prefer them hither .. Taming of S/irew, i. 1 
study to prefer a peace, if holy .... 1 Hennj I' I. iii. 1 
love thee, and prefer thee for it . . Richard III. iv. 2 
ne'er prefer his injuries to his . . Timon ofAlh, iii, 5 

prefer a noble life before a long Coriolanus, iii. 1 

presently prefer his suit to Csssar. JuliusCtesar, iii. 1 
ay, if Messala will prefer me to you.. — v. £ 
you must not so far prefer her 'fore.. Cymbeline, i. £ 
that may prefer you to his daughter — ii. 3 
sooner tlian thine own worth prefer thee — iv. 2 

1 will prefer my sons — V. £ 

before all the world, do I prefer.. Titus Andron. iv. 2 
is the first that doth prefer himself? . . Pericles, ii. 2 

I would prefer him to a better place Lear, i. I 

seeming, do prefer against him Othello, I. 2 

the means I shall then have to prefer them — ii. 1 

PREFERMENT-preferment out. TwoGen.if Ver. i. 2 

if it be prefermen t, to leave a rich. Mer. of Venice, ii . 2 

the preferment of the eldest sister. '/'ammg-o/S/i.ii. 1 

fireferment drop on my head .... Winter's Tale, v. 2 
abour for their own preferment ....iHenryVI. i. 1 
help you to many fair preferments. /f<c/imd 111. i. 3 
gap and trade of more preferments. Henii/ A'///, v. I 

to any shape of thy preferment Cymbeline, i. e 

nor my voice for thy preferment .... — iii. £ 
and true preferment shall tender itself — iii. £ 
but my wish hath a preferment in't — v. ■) 
preferment falls on him that cuts liim . . Lear, iv. £ 
PREFERRED with twenty. . TwoGen. of Verona, ii. e 
the long is, our play is preferred.. Wui. A'.'j Dr. iv. 2 
this day, and hath preferred thee. Mer. of Venice, ii. 2 

altho' in writing I preferred 1 Henry VI. ill. 1 

ehe should be preferred: for what is.. — v. £ 
why Somerset should be preferred ..2HenryFl. i. 3 
because mv book preferred me to... . — iv. J 
newly preferred from the king's . . Henry VIII. iv. I 
wiry tlien preferred you not yowv. Timonof Ath. iii. 4 
hated for being preferred io'vteW .... Cymbeline, ii. 2 
boy, he is preferred by thee to us ... . — i v. 2 
I'll have preferred hiin a chalice for ..Hamlet, iv. J 
PHEFERRETH peace more than ..\HenryVI. iii. I 
PREFERRING you before her father . . Othello, i. 2 

PREFEIl'STthy life before SHenryVI. i. 1 

PREFIXED-preflxed by Angelo. Meas. for Meas. iv. 2 
the gest prefixed for his parting .. Winler'sTale, i. i 
the hour prefixed of her delivery. Troilus ^ Cress, iv.! 
the prefixed hour of her waking. fiomeo Sr Juliet, v. '< 

PRE-FORMED faculties JuliiuCcesar, 1. ! 

PKEGIA— ei non te pregia Love's L.Lost, iv. S 

PREGNANCY is made a tapster -2 Henry IV. i. V 

PREGNANT enemy does much . . TwelfthNight, ii. ! 
most pregnant and vouchsafed ear .. — iii. 1 
odours, pregnant, and vouchsafed .. — iii. 1 
you are as pregnant in, as art.. ..Meas. for Meas. i. 1 
lis very pregnant, the jewel that we — ii. 1 
were pregnant by circumstance., f^'in^cr'.* Tale, v. '. 
are most prompt and pregnant. Troilus ^ Cress, i v. '. 



[ 591 ] 



PREGNANT they should Bqusae .Antony 4- Cleo. ii. 1 

'tis pregnant, pregnant 1 Cymbeline, iv. 2 

pregnant instrument of wrath. /'er/cte'.v, iv. (Gower. 
were very pregnant and potential spurs. .Lear, ii. 

am pregnant to good pity — iv. 

how pregnant sometimes his replies ..Hamlet, ii. 
crook the pregnant hinges of the knee .. — iii. 

a most pregnant and unforced position.. Othello, ii. 

PREGNANTLY than words .... Timon of .dihens. i. 

PRE.I UDICATES the business All's Well, i. 

PREJUUlCE-may prejudice the iae.\Henry VI. iii. 

breed liim some prejudice Henry Vlll. i. 

miglit be to the prejudice of her present — ii. 

PREJUDICIAL to his crown? 'iHenryVl. i. 

PRELATE, well-beloved \ Henry IV. i. 

Northumberland, and the prelate Scroop — v. 

the king were made a prelate Henry V. i. 

that haughty prelate, whom Henry . . — i. 
no, prelate; such is thy audacious..) Henry VI. iii. 
and am not I a prelate of the cliurch? — iii. 
it fitteth not a prelate so to plead. ... — iii. 

proud prelate, in thy face 1 2Henry1'I. i. 

hanglity prelate, bishop of Exeter .Richard III. iv. 

PREMEDITATED welcomes ..Mid.N.'sDream, v. 
premeditated and contrived murder . . Henry V. iv. 

PREMEDITATION for my purirasel SHenryVI. iii. 

PREMISE— in lieu o' t)ie premises Tempest, i. 

the premise observed, thy will All's Well, ii. 

ui'jon the i^remises, but justice ....Henry Vlll. ii. 

PREMISED flames of tlie last day .... 2 Henry VI. v. 

PRENNEZ misericordel avezpitie .. ..HenryV.'iv. 

PRENOMINATE in nice conjecture 7'?w/.<5-cVes. iv. 
ever seen, in the prenominate crimes . . Hamlet, ii. 

'PRENTICE_a botcher's 'prentice.. . . All's Welt, iv. 3 

from a prince to a 'prentice? 2 Henry IP', ii. 2 

my accuser is my 'prentice 2Henry VI. i. 3 

fight for credit of the 'prentices — ii. 3 

PRE-OCCUPIED with what Coriolanus, ii. 3 

PRE-ORDINANCE, and first ....JubusCo'sar. iii. 1 

PREPARATION upon you Merry Wives, ii. 2 

court-like, and learned preparations — ii. 2 

preparation, for thy assailant TwelfthNight, iii. 4 

have all cliaritable preparation .Meas. for Meas. iii. 2 

he hath made great preparation MuchAdo.i. 1 

and all the preparation overtlirown.. — ii.2 
have not made good preparation.. A/ei-. of Venice, ii. 4 
myself into my mortal preparation., .^/^sfre/^, iii. 6 
would have informed for preparation . . Macbeth, i. 5 
your royal preparation makes us hear — v. 3 
all preparation for a bloody siege . . King John, ii. 1 
for any foreign preparation, was levied — iv. 2 
with strong and mighty preparation.! /Jcnri/Zr. iv. 1 
of this most dreadful preparation. He/o-yr. ii. (cho.) 
musters, preparations, should be maintained — ii. 4 
give dreadful note of preparation — iv. (chorus) 
M'Jierein such preparation was gained — iv. 1 

to go about my preparation 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

lead on this preparation .... Coriolanus, i. 2 (letter) 
they are in a most warlike preparation — iv. 3 
raise the preparation of a war ..Antony SfCleo- iii. 4 
their preparation is to day by sea .. — iv. 10 
the way to fool their preparation .... — v. 2 
your preparation can affront no less.Ci/mted'ne, iv. 3 

to a most festinate preparation Lear, iii. 1 

our preparation stands in expectation — iv. 4 

is the main motive of our preparations .Hamlet, i. 1 

to be a preparation 'gainst the Polack — ii.2 

Turkish preparation makes for {rep.) . . Ofliello, i. 3 

PREPARE to meet with Caliban Tempest, iv. 1 

O, prepare it ; my part .... Twelf/h Night, i i . 4 (song) 

prepare yourself to death Meas. for Meas. ill. 1 

well, go, prepare j'ourself — iv. 2 

1 will have more time to prepare me — iv. 3 

who do prepare to meet him — iv. 3 

upon that day either prepare to die .Mid. N. Dr. i. 1 

prepare, madam, prepare I Love'sL.Lost, v. 2 

go, bid them prepare — v. 2 

Boyet, prepare; I will away (?■<?/!.) .. — v. 2 
will you prepare for this ma.sk. ilerch. of Venice, ii. 4 
bid tliem prepare for dinner (/ff).) .. — iii. 5 
you must prepare your bosom for .. — iv. 1 

a sentence; come prepare — iv. 1 

therefore, prepare thee to cut off .. .. — iv. ) 
let us prepare some welcome for .... — v. 1 

go you, and prepare Aliena AsyouLikeit, v. 2 

prepare you, lords; summon Winler'sTale, ii. 3 

prepare to see the life as lively — v. 3 

that he prepares for some attempt. ...JWnc&e^/i, iii. 6 
prepare. How much unlooked for . . King John, ii. 1 

come, boy, prepare yourself — iv. ) 

when you should be told they do prepare — iv. 2 
coronation : lords, prepare yourselves. Richard II. iv. 1 
queen, prepare thee hence for France — v. 1 
my lord, prepare; the king comes . . 1 HenrylV. v. 2 
teach others how they should prepare. HeHj;/ V.iv. 1 

bid liim prepare, for I will cut — iv. 4 

seems to prepare his way — v. (chorus) 

prepare we tor our marriage — v. 2 

you do prepare to ride unto iHenryVI. i. 2 

and I'll prepare my tear-stahied eyes — ii. 4 

and make prepare for war ZHenry VI. iv. 1 

prepare you, lords, for Edward is — v. 4 

my lord; therefore prepare to die ..Richard III. i. 4 
prepare her ears to hear a wooer's .... — i v. 4 

prepare thy battle early — v. 3 

prepare there, theduke is coming.. He>irj/r///.|i. 1 
prepare the ways you have for dignities — iii. 2 
must prepare to fight without .. Troilus Sf Cress, ii. 3 
presently prepare thy grave . . Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

in, and prepare; ours is thefall — v. 3 

prepare thy brow to frown Coriolanus, i v. b 

to Rome, and prepare for your execution — v. 2 

bid them prepare within JuliusCcesar, ii. 2 

prepare the body then, and follow us — iii. 1 

Erepare to shed them now — iii. 2 
id the commanders prepare to lodge — iv. 3 
prepare 3'ou, generals: the enemy comes — y. 1 
prepare thy noble eyes to weep .. TitusAndron. iii. ) 

and now prepare your throats — v. 2 

to prepare this boay, like to them Pericles, i. 1 



PRE 



PREPARE for mirth, for mirth becomes Pericles, ii. 3 
a present murderer does prepare .. — iv. (Gower) 

my very course: prepare for dinner Lear, i. 3 

prepare my horses. Ingratitude! ' — i. 4 

gentlemen, prepare not to be gone. . Romeo 4- Jul. i. 5 
id my sweet prepare to chide — iii. 3 

prepare her, wife, against this — iii. 4 

to prepare him up against to-morrow — iv. 2 

prepare to follow tins fair corse — iv. 5 

tlierefore. prepare you (rep. iv. 3) Hamlet, iii. 3 

PREPARED— prepared a rotten carcase. I'empest, i. 2 
a leavened and prepared elioice.. A/eas./orilieas. i. I 

let him be prepared — ii. 1 

he's not prepared for death! — ii.2 

and am preijared to die — iii. 1 

to know how you find Claudio prepared — iii. 2 
be the better prepared for an answer.. Much Ado, i. 2 
I am armed, and well xirepared. Mer. of Venice, iv. 1 
the duke; his banquet is prepared. .4s i/0Ht/Ae?7,ii. 5 

prepared I was not for such All's Well, ii. 5 

our waggon is prepared, and time .. — iv. 4 
and haie prepared great store of. Taming ofSh. iii. 2 
but not prepared for thisdeBiga..Wtnter'sTale, iv. 3 

welcome then, we are prepared King John, ii. 1 

he is prepared ; and reason too, he should — v. 2 
is well prepared to whip this dwarfish — v. 2 

the champions are prepared liidiard //. i. 3 

and my heart prepared; the worst is — iii. 2 

we are prepared; Iwill set \HenryIV. ii. 3 

musters, and prepared defence. .2Hem7//r. (indue.) 

now we are well prepared to know Henry V.i.2 

I am prepared; here is my keen- . . ) Henry VI. i. 2 
to a prepared place in the choir . . Henry VIII. iv. 1 
find tliey have not prepared for xna .. Coriolanus, i. 2 
for they are prepared with accusations — iii. 2 

who am prepared against your — iv. 5 

good Brutus, be prepared to hear .. Julius Ciesar, i. 2 
be prepared to know the purpose3..^ji(o7i!/ 4 Cleo. i. 3 
a man prepared to take this oifer. . . . — ii. 6 
our letters are prepared. A proper man — iii. 3 
hearing that you prepared for war .. — iii. 6 

at sea, Deing prepared for land — iii. 7 

thy visage up with her prepared nails — iv. 10 
I am prepared and full resolved.. TitusAndron. ii. 1 

a pig, prepared to the spit — iv. 2 

witli his prepared sword, he charges .... Lear, ii. 1 
Tybalt, with his sword prepared. ./iojneociS-Jii/iX, i. 1 
come when you are next prepared for. . Othello, iv. 1 

PREPAREDLY may h-a,me. .Antony^-Cteopalra, v. 1 

PREPARING hitherward King John, v. 7 

thou art preparing fire for us Coriolanus, v. 2 

PREPOSTEROUS event ..Love'sL.Lost,!. 1 (letter) 
preposterous ass! that never. .Taming of Shrew, iii. I 
in so preposterous estate as we are. Winler'sTale, v. 2 

both iireposterous; therefore ...ZHenry VI. v. 6 

preposterous and frantic outrage.. /f(c/ia»d /;;. ii. 4 
such preposterous discoveries!.. Troilus ^ Cress, v. 1 
to most preposterous conclusions Othello, i. 3 

PREPOSTEROUSLY to err, being not . . — i. 3 
to yourself very preposterously . . Merry Wives, ii. 2 

that befal preposterously Mid.N.'sDream, iii. 2 

wrought upon thee so preposterously.. JJe7t7yr. ii. 2 

PREROGATIFES and laws of the wars — iv. 1 

PREROGATIVE— with all prerogative. Tempes/, i. 2 

this prerogative of speech Twelfth Night, ii. ii 

the great prerogative and rite of love. All's Well, ii. 4 
me leave to have prerogative. Taming of Shrew, iii. 1 
our prerogative calls not your .. Winler'sTale, ii. 1 

so much irora that prerogative ) Henry VI. v. 4 

prerogative of age, crowns .... Troilus 4- Cressida, i. 3 
on the old prerogative and power .. Coriolanus, iii. 3 

PREROGATIVED are they less than . . 0(/.e/(o, iii. 3 

PRESAGE— presage of cruelty TwelfthNight, iii. 2 

a mind presages me such thrift. Mei-ch. of Venice, i. 1 
let it presage the ruin of your love . . — iii. 2 

sullen presage of your own decay King John, i. 1 

abortives, presages, and tongues of heaven — iii. 4 

if heart's presages be not vain Richard II. ii. 2 

doth presage some ill event 1 Henry VI. iv. 1 

credit things that do presage Julius Ciesar, v. 1 

there's a palm presages ciiastity.. Aiitony 4 Cleo. i. 2 
my dreams presage some joyful. .yiomeo ^J'tHet, v. 1 

PRESAGETH-presageth happy gain.3 Henry VI. v. 1 
the o'ei-flowing Nilus presageth. . Antony ij- Cleo. i. 2 
between her forks presageth snow Lear, iv, 6 

PRESAGING prophecy did glad .... 3 Henry VI. iv. 6 

PRESCIENCE-by my prescience I find. Tempest, i. 2 
forestal prescience, and esteem . . Troilus 4- Cress, i. 3 
vex not his prescience Antony 4- Cleopatra, i. 2 

PRESCRIBE to yourself very Merry Wives, ii. 2 

this we prescribe, tliougli no Richard II. i. 1 

make each prescribe to other . . Timon of Alliens, v. 5 

Sreseribe not us our duties Lear, i. 1 
ESCRIBED [Xn(.] prescribed his power! — i. 2 
PRESCRIPT of this scroll. . Aittony 4-Cleopalra, iiL 8 

PRESCRIPTIONS of rare All'sWeU,i.3 

to follow your prescriptions iHenrylV. i.2 

make prescription for akingdom'g..3Hen»-j/r/. iii. 3 
I'll go along by your prescription . . Henry VIII. i. 1 
most sovereign prescription in Galen. Corio/anuj, ii. 1 
and then we have a prescription to die. . Oihello, i. 3 
PRESENCE— with thy presence. Two Gen. of Ver. v. 4 
when he approacheth to your presence — v. 4 
in my presence still smile. . TwelfthNight, ii. 5 (let.) 
in the presence of the prioress .. Meas. for Meas. i. 5 
crowd to his presence, where their ... — ii. 4 

if you come in her presence Much Ado, i . 1 

excepting your worship's presence . . — iii. 5 
in such a presence here, to plead ..Mid.N.'sDr. i. 1 
as a monster, fly my presence thus.. — ii. 3 
and from thy hated presence part I so — iii. 2 

from tlie presence of the sun — v. 2 

a doubt, presence majestical Love'sL.Lost, v. 2 

is like to be a good presence of wortliies — v. 2 
party-coated presence of loose love . . — v. 2 
with no less presence, but with Mer.of Venice, iii. 2 
although I speak it in your presence — iii. t 
of excellent growth and presence. ..4s you Like it, i. 2 
for his presence must be the whip ..All's Well, iv. 3 
to come into his presence. The king's — v. ) 



PRESENCE may well abate .. TamingofSl,. I (ind.) 
^oiir royal presence I'll adventure. H'iiiier'sTale, i. 2 

from his presence I am barred — iii. 2 

behold the sternness of his presence? — iv. 3 
tender your persons to his presence.. — iv. 3 

access to your iiiglv presence — v. 1 

bear a fair presence, though .. ..Cornell;/ of Err. iii. 2 
sucli enchanting presence and discourse — iii. 2 
I promised your presence, and the chain — iv. 1 

and I'll re(^uest 3'our presence Macbeth^ iii. I 

he tailed his presence at the tyrant's.. — iii. 6 

lord of thy presence, and no land KhigJohn, i. 1 

it ill beseems this presence, to cry aim — ii. I 
lord of our presence, Angiers, and of — ii. 2 
your royal presences be ruled by me — ii. 2 
her presence would have interrupted — ii. 2 

requests your presence straiglit — iv. 3 

then call them to our presence Richard II, i. I 

appellant to this princely presence. . — i. 1 

what presence must not know — i. 3 

thou tread'st, tlie presence strewed . . — i. 3 

vour presence makes us rich — ii. 3 

in all this presence, that hath — iv. 1 

yovi were in presence then; and you — iv. 1 
in this royal presence maj' I speak .. — iv. I 

an3" in this noble presence were — iv. I 

a traitor in tliy presence there — v. 3 

your presence is too bold and \ Henry IF. i. 3 

so iavisli of my presence been — iii. 2 

even in the presence of tlie crowned — iii. 2 
my presence, like a robe pontifical .. — iii. 2 
being with his presence glutted .... — iii. 2 
my good lord, he is in i)resence here.2He?ir(//'r. iv. 4 

not here in presence. Send for him HennjV. i. 2 

unless the Dauphin be in presence here — ii. 4 
with our stately presence glorify.. ..1 Henry ri. i. 1 
the presence of a king engenders love — iii. 1 
in presence of the kings of France ..iHenryVI. i. 1 

but 'tis my presence tiiat doth — i, 1 

all in this presence are thy betters ., — i. 3 
overcome mine enemies in this presence? — ii 3 
call onr uncle to our presence straight — iii. 2 
my sovereign's presence makes me mild — iii. 2 
if from this presence tliou darest go.. — iii. 2 

here in our presence? Dare you — iii. 2 

by these presence, even the presence of — iv. 7 
may pass into the presence of a king — v. 1 
approaclieth boldly to our presence? 3 Henry VI. iii. 3 
for 'tis thy presence timt exhales . .Richard III. \ 2 
to warn them to his royal presence , . — i. 3 
to wliom in all this presence speaks.. — i, 3 

avoucli in presence of the king — i. 3 

by any in i\\U presence, I desire to .. — ii. 1 
to be so flouted In tliis royal presence? — ii. 1 

no nmu in the presence, but his — ii. 1 

by my presence might have been .... — iii. 4 
most forward in tills noble presence.. — iii. 4 

as presence did present them Henry VIII. i. 1 

made suit to come in his presence.... — i. 2 

conduct tliem into our presence — i. 4 

cardinals wait in the presence — iii. I 

i'tlie presence he would say untruths — iv. 2 
such flattery now, and in my presence — v. 2 
received much honour by your presence — v. 4 
her presence shall quite strike off. Troil.^ Cress, iii. 3 

I will put on his presence — iii. 3 

that not in the presence of dreaded. Cor/o^anj/s, iii. 3 
most noble! in tlie presence ot'.... Julius CfCsar, iii. 1 
you wrong this presence . . .. AnlonySr Cleopatra, ii. 2 
your presence needs must puzzle Antony — iii. 7 
not be denied your highness' presence — v. 2 

take him from our presence Cymheline, v. 5 

to be admitted to your presence .. TilusAndron. v. I 

by her presence still renew — v. 3 

to glad her presence, the senate-house.. Pozctes, i. 1 

your presence glads our days — ii. 3 

otiier, in tills royal presence? — ii. 3 

is't not a goodly presence? — v. 1 

forbear liis presence, till some little time . . Lear, i. 2 

rciid them in my presence — iv. 3 

show a fair presence, and put ofS .Rnmeo S^ Juliet., \. 6 
this vaultafeastiiigpresencefull of light — v. 3 

scanter of your maiden presence Hamlet, i. 3 

heavens make our presence, and our — ii. 2 

this presence knows, and you must needs — v. 2 
by you invited, do attend your presence. OWp;;o, iii. 3 

PRESENT— the peace of the present Tempest, i. 1 

I'll bring thee to the present business — i. 2 

he's a present for any Emperor that — ii. 2 

for some of you there present — iii. 3 

to euact my present fancies — iv. 1 

and myself present, as I was — v, 1 

your own present folly TwoGen.ofl'erona, ii. 1 

did scorn a present that I sent her . . — iii. 1 

he must carry for a present to — iv. 2 

as a present to mistress Silvia — iv. 4 

good enough for such a present — iv. 4 

not only bought many presents Merry Wives, ii. 2 

folly of my soul dares not present itself — ii. 2 

■we'll all present ourselves — iv. 4 

Nan present the fairy queen — iv. 6 

I'll make a present recompense — iv. 6 

present me as an eunuch Twelfth Xighi, i. 2 

such a one as I was this present — i. 5 

present mirth hath present laughter — ii. Slsong) 
being prompted by your present trouble — iii. 4 
I'll make division of my present with — iii. 4 
the condition of this present hour . . — v. I 
Bigu me a present pardon for my. Meas. for Meas. ii. 4 
in doing g>od, a remedy presents itself — iii. 1 
use him, for the present and dismiss him — iv. 2 
of what's past, present, or to come.... — iv. 2 
both a present and a dangerous courtesy — iv. 2 

I will give him a present shrift — iv. 2 

he meant to take the present time MuchAdo^ i. 2 

if not a present remedy, yet a patient — i. 3 

are to present the prince's own person — iii. 3 
to disfigure, or present, tlie person. iV/iJ.iV.'s Dr. iii. 1 

must present wall (rep. v. n — iii. i 

the horued moon present irep.) — v. 1 



PRESENT— of this present breath.. ..Lore'sL.t. i. 1 

what present hast thou there? — iv. 3 

would have me present tlie princess .. — v. 1 

sir, yon shall present before her — v. I 

none so fit as to present the nine .... — v. I 
worthy enough to present them ? .... — v. 1 
he shall present Hercules in minority — v. I 

zeal of them which it presents — v. 2 

he presents Hector of Troy — v. 2 

and present the other five — v. 2 

the fortune of this present year. Merch. of I'cnice, i. 1 

to raise a present sum — i. I 

1 am debating of my present store .. — i. 3 
supply your present wants, and take — i. 3 

I have brouglit him a present — ii. 2 

give him a present! give him a lialter! — ii. 2 
give me your present to one master . . — ii. 2 
that if he had the present money .... — iii. 2 
that holds this present question in . . — iv. I 
unto all men by these presents ..Asyou Like it, i. 2 
theatre presents more woeful pageants — ii. 7 

thou present; but look to it — iii. 1 

let's present him to the duke, like . . — iv. 2 
mark, what object did present itself! — iv. 3 

and therefore take the present time — v. 3 (song) 
urge lier to a present answer buck.... All' sll'etl, ii. 2 

his present gift shall furnish me — ii. 3 

procured his leave for present parting — ii. 5 
be but your lordsliip present at his .. — iii. 6 
if I were to live this present hour .... — iv. 3 
now by present profession.. TamingofSh. 2 (indue. I 
you would present her at the leet . . ' — 2 (indue.) 

I do present you with a man of — ii. I 

upon entreaty, have a present alms., — iv. 3 

sickness, or else present death — iv. 3 

even at this present, now If'inler'sTate, i. 2 

without my present vengeance taken — i. 2 
we sliall present our services to a fine ii. 1 

but if one present the abhorred — ii. 1 

I must be present at your conference — ii. 2 
though a present death had been ... . — ii. 3 
look grimly, and threaten present .. ^ iii. 3 

the glistering of tliis present — iv. (chorus) 

pr'ythee be my present partner in ... . — iv. 1 
and present yourself that w hioh you are — iv. 3 
what you are doing in tlie present deeds — iv. 3 

honest wives that were present — iv. 3 

and there present yourself, and your fair— iv. 3 

to him I will present them — iv. 3 

royalty's repair, for present comfort — v. i 
as every present time doth boast .... — v. 1 
were you present at this relation?. ... — v. 2 
present your hand: when she was young — v. 3 
my present business calls me .... Comedy of Err. i. 2 
therefore make jiresent satisfaction . . — iv. 1 
not furnished with the present money — iv. I 
besides this present instance of liis rage — iv. 3 
unless you send some present help . . — v. 1 

till this present hour, my heavy — v. 1 

[Cof.A'nJ.I pronounce his presentdeath .Macbeth, i.2 

you greet with present grace — i. 3 

present fears are less than horrible .. — i. 3 

beyond tliis ignorant present — i.o 

and take the present iiorror — ii. 1 

present him eminence, both with eye — iii. 2 

no teeth for the present ".. — iii. 4 

graced person oi^our Banquo present — iii. 4 
present time's so sick, that present . . King John, v. 1 
thou tlie ordering of this present time — v. 1 

grief is present for that time Richard //. i. 3 

join with the present sickness — ii. 1 

the present benefit which I possess .. — ii. 3 

ne'er wail their present woes — iii. 2 

and lie himself not present? O forbid it — iv. 1 

within this cotfin I present thy — v. 6 

age of this present twelve o'clock....! Henri/ 7r. ii. 4 

it doth present harsh rage — iii. 1 

his present want seems more than we — iv. 1 

and raise tliis present liead — v. 1 

this present enterxirize set off Ills liead — v. 1 
this present grief had wiped it from. ,'iHenryIV. i. 1 

our present musters grow upon — i. 3 

whether our present five and twenty — i. 3 
yes, in this present quality of war.. . — i. 3 

seem best; things present, worst .... — i. 3 

he presents no mark to the enemy .. — iii. 2 
every minute's instance (present now) — iv. 1 
from the king, or ill tlie present time — iv. 1 
and present execution oi^our wills .. — iv. 1 
as Ills misdoubts present occasion .... — iv. 1 

to breed this present peace — iv. 2 

to York, to present execution — iv. 3 

let me in my present wildness die — iv. 4 

his present, and your pains, we thank.. Henry I'. i. 2 
a noble slialt thou have, and present pay— ii. 1 
we'll give them present audience .... — ii. 4 
I did present him with those Paris balls — ii. 4 

m'avez appris d6s a present — iii. 4 

good for men to love their present pains — iv. 3 
draws a sword, 'tis present deatli . . I Henry I'l. iii. 4 
present your highness with the man. iHenry VI. ii. 1 
dotli present him-;elf unto your higliness — v. 1 
I present your grace a traitor's liead — v. 1 

tlie hearts of all our present parts.. .. — v. 2 
to call a present court of parliament.. — v. 3 
his pale cheeks, methinks, present . ..1 Henry I'l. ii. 5 
from whence this present day he is .Ridiard III. i. 1 

will take the present at our hands — i. 1 

Northumberland, then present, wept — i. 3 

therefore present to her, as sometime — iv. 4 

withholds my present aid — iv. 5 

tlirough the clouds behold this jjresent — v. 1 
the eye to flow, we now present .HenryVIlI. (prol.) 
I was then present; saw them salute — i. i 

present them; hira in eye (rep.) — i. 1 

call him to present trial — i.2 

once more, I present unto your highness — ii. 2 
the king is present: if it be' known to him— ii. 4 
to the prejudice of her present state.. — ii. 4 
now present here together; tliat's to say — ii. 4 



— iii. 3 



ii. 2 



PRESENT— this present summons . . Henry nil. i 

bnt pared my present liavings — ii 

to sit here at this present, and behold — ^ 

whose present courage may beat. Trollusfy Cress, i 

shall have a iiraise in present.. 

then what they do in present .. 

the present eye praises the iiresent object - 

present grace to present slaves. . Timon of Athens, i. 1 

three talents on tlie present; in future — i. 1 

let tlie presents be wortliily entertained — i. 2 

for some trifling present, you have .. — 

a half to pay your present debts — 

hardly stop the mouth of present dues — .. 
nothing doubting your present assistance — iii. 1 
he has only sent his present occasion — iii. 2 

for these my present friends — iii. 6 (grace) 

I will present my honest grief — iv. 3 

either in hope, or present, I'd exchange — iv. 3 
what have you now to present unto him? — v. 1 
his expedition promises present approach — v. 3 

the present wars devour him Coriolamis, i. I 

he goes upon this present action — i. 1 

that you not delay the present i. 6 

to desire the present consul, and last — ii. 2 
apprehension of his present portance — ii. 3 
scaling his present bearing with his past — ii. 3 
Marcius is worthy of present death .. — iii. 1 

present me death on the wheel — iii. 2 

not what is dangerous present — iii. 2 

enforce the present execution of .... — iii. 3 

no further than this present? — iii. 3 

that sliall set them in present action — iv. 3 

and present my throat to thee 

are tame i' the present peace 

for this present, I would not Julit 

I did present myself even in the aim 

he first presents his fire 

go bid the priests do present sacrifice 

and this our present act, j'ou see we do — iii. ! 

present pleasure, by revolution Antony^ Cleo. i. 2 

not thrived upon the present slate .. — i. 3 
experience to their present pleasure — i. 4 

to front this present time — i. 4 

to mend the petty present, I will piece — i. 5 
the present need speaks to atone you 

a studied, not a present thought 

for this is from the present 

and present our Alexandrian revels. . 

to bnj' a present for the emperor Cymbeline, i. 7 

material to the tender of our present — ' " 
quake in the present winter's state .. — 
it gave me present hunger to feed again — 

and pervert the present wrath he — 

'fore noble Lucius present yourself .. — 

our present numbers be mustered — 

her son gone, so needful for this present — 
tliese present wars shall find I love . . — 

I spealc against my present profit — 

were present wlieii sue finished — 

would cease the present power of life — 
preseuts well worthy Rome's Titus Audron. 



— iv. 6 
s Ccesar, i. 2 



— ii. ! 



ii. 2 
ii. ii 

v. 2 



V. 5 



— ii. 3 



to the empress' sons presents _ 

with his gifts present your lordshiiM — iv. 2 

give them to his master for a present — iv. 3 

but I'll present me Pericles, i. 3 

stay your coming to present tliemselves — ii. 2 
who IS the second that presents himself? — ii. 2 
a present murderer does prepare.. — iv. (Gower) 
quenched with some present practice — iv. 3 

put me to present pain — v. 1 

your present kindness makes my past — v. 3 

require in present dower with Iier Lear, i. 1 

I have this present evening from — ii. ! 

wliy you answer this present summons? — v. 3 

vain it is that we present us to liini — v. 3 

our present business is general woe — v. 3 

give me some present counsel ..Romeo^Jnliet,iv. 1 
shall free thee from this present shame — iv. I 
wliose sale is present death in Mantua — v. 1 

this present object made probation Hamlet, i. 1 

that effect, the present death of Hamlet. . — iv. 3 
we'll put the matter to the present push — v. 1 

for necessity of present life Othello, i. 1 

upon some present business of the state . . — i.2 

to your grave ears I'll present — i. 3 

and to undertake these present wars .... — i. 3 

true advantage never present itself — ii. 1 

from this present hour of five, till the bell — ii. 1 

his present reconciliation take — iii. 3 

nor present sorrows, nor purposed merit — iii. 4 

PRESENTATION of tliat, he slioots..ls!/oKL/7,(?, v. 4 
tlie presentation of but what I was. Richard III. iv.4 

PRESENTED, in their sport ..Mid. IV.' s Dream, iii. 2 

when I presented Ceres Tempest, iv. 1 

be presented at our tent to us Love's L.Lost, v. 2 

Hercules is presented liy this imp..., — v. 2 
of blood presented thee more hideous. King John, iv. 2 
or staring rage, presented to the tears of — iv. 3 

of the king whom I presented i Henry I V. v. 2 

proper life be here presented . . Henry F. v. (chorus) 
to be presented, liy your victories . . [Henry I'l. iv. 1 
tliere is presented no monster. 'Troilus S,- Cressida. iii. 2 
presented to you four milk-wliite. . I'imon ofAth. I. 2 
mansion all above never presented!.. — iv. 3 

presented to my knife his throat Cm-inl„nus, v. 5 

presented him akinglycrown hUinsC.i-sur, iii. 2 

witli presented nakedness outface Lear. ii. 3 

PRESENTETII moonshine ....Mid.N.'s Dream, v. I 
presentetli them unto tlie gazing.ffenry ('. iv. (cho.l 

PRESENTING nieasohedule..il/erc/i.o/r '•" 

PRESENTLY extirpate me T 

presently? Ay, with a twink ,. 

and presently, I pr'ythee — v. I 

presently, all humbled, kiss TwoGen.ofVer. i. 2 

it was presently after dinner — ii. 1 

I'll send him hither to you presently — ii. 4 
and then I'll presently attend you .. — ii. 4 
I'll to the alehouse with you presently — ii. a 
now presently, I'll give her — ii 6 



. Tempest^ i. 2 



PRESENTLY go with me ..TwoGen. o/Ferotia, ii. 7 

answer not, but to it presently — ii. 7 

tliia way conies he witli it presently — iii. 1 

into the city presently — iii. 2 

tliat presently yo)i hie you liomc .... — iv. 2 
employ thee in some service presently — iv. 4 

I Lio presently, and talte tliis ring — iv. 4 

but mount you presently — v. 2 

needs spealc with you presently . . Merry Wives, iii. 3 
sure he is by tliis, or will be presently — iv. 1 

nay, but he 11 be liere presently — iv. 2 

ana presently after him TwelflhNight, iii. 4 

send one presently to sir Toby — v. 1 

I will presently to saint Luke's. /l/eas./o)iWras. iii. 1 

dispatch it presently — iv. 3 

sliall be done, good fatlier, presen tly — i v. a 
and the taker runs presently mad .... Much Ado, i. 1 
thou \vilt be like a lover presently . . — i. I 

in practice let us put it presently — i. 1 

I will presently go learn tlielr day .. — ii. 2 

come, t warrant you, presently — iii. 1 

and presently call the rest of the watch — iii. 3 
'tis well consented; presently away.. — iv. I 

will you come presently? — v. 2 

and to the ehapel let us presently. . . . — v. 4 
meet presently at the palace... Uii/. N.'sDream, iv. 2 
presently inquire, and so will I. . Mer. of Venice, i. 1 
and presently I will be with you .... — i. 3 
Bassanio presently will go aboard .. — ii. 6 

conies to his election presently — ii. 9 

for this favour, he presently become — iv. 1 

it is meet, I presently set forth — iv. 1 

Tou and I will thither presently — iv. 1 

I will here bewitlithee jiresently. /Is you Like it, ii. 6 
natm-e presently distilled Helen's — iii. 2 (ver.) 
but presently do thine own ioxtww^s,. AW sWell, ii. 3 

j'ou presently attend his further — ii. 4 

that presently you take your way for — ii. b 
and I will presently pen down my.. — iii. 6 
shall go see your pupilspreseiitly. Taming ofSli. ii. 1 
shall fetch the scrivener presently .. — iv. 4 
I'll presently acquaint the queen. IVinler'sTale, ii, 2 

quit presently the chapel — v. 3 

hie thee presently, post to the. . Comedy of Err. iii. 2 

see him presently di soharged — i v. 1 

against thee presently, if tliou darest — v. I 
given his hand, tliey presently amend. iVa(!6e<A,iv. 3 
at saint Mary's chapel, presently.. ..King John, ii. 2 
with purpose presently to leave this.. — v. 7 
■we will make for Ireland presently. .flic/mrii //. i. 4 
bid her send me presently a thousand — ii. 2 
meet me presently at Berkley castle — ii. 2 

since presently your souls must — iii. 1 

but presently prevent the ways — iii. 2 

shall presently have need of you ..IHenrylV. iii. 2 
he presently, as greatness knows .... — iv. 3 
the king will bid you battle presently — v. 2 
shall liave letters of me presently ..'iHenrtjlV. ii. 1 
you must away to court, sir, presently — ii. 4 
good husband, come home presently. . Henry f^. ii. 1 
you must come presently to the mines — iii. 2 
some of yom' council presently to sit — v. 2 

presently we'll try: corae, let s \HeyiryVI. i. 2 

that will I show you presently — ii. 3 

and cry— the Dauphin, presently.. .. — iii. 2 
transported presently to France .... — v. 1 
means to give j'ou battle presently . . — v. 2 
but we will presently provide for them — v. 2 
I'll to the duke of Suffolk presently. 2 Henry/'/, i. 1 

good lord, I'll follow presently — i. 2 

his master with a pursuivant presently — i. 3 
then send for one presently. Sirrah.. — ii. 1 
I'll call him presently, my noble lord — iii. 2 
I will make myself a knight jiresently — iv. 2 
and strike off his head presently .... — iv. 7 
marry, presently. O brave! But is .. — iv. 7 

thou shalt to London presently ZHenryP'I. i. 2 

your sword, and dub him presently. . — ii. 2 
I will away towards Barnet presently — v. 1 
presently repair to Crosby-place . . Richard III. i. 2 
unto his princely brother presently? — iii. 1 

if presently you will take horse — iii. 2 

[Col.KnI.) resolve you herein presently — iv. 2 
presently tlie duke said, 'twas the. . Henry VIII. i. 2 
render up the great seal presently . . — iii. 2 
the king sliall understand it presently — v. 2 

I shall be with you presently — v. 3 

and bring his answer presently. Troilus ^ Cress, ii, 3 
I'll bring her to the Grecian presently — iv. 3 
he shall be executed presently .. Timonof Ath. iii. 6 

we shall to't presently. I hope — iii. 6 

Timon, presently prepare thy grave — iv. 3 
presently', when you have drawn . . Coriolanus, ii. 3 
assemble presently the people hither — iii. 3 

to-morrow; to-day, presently — iv. 5 

behold now presently, and swoon for — v. 2 
tear liim to pieces, do it presently . . — v. 5 
presently prefer his suit to Csisa.t.JidiusC<rsnr, iii. 1 

I'll fetch him presently. I know — iii. 1 

and let us presently go sit in council — iv. I 
of marching to Philippi presently? .. — iv. 3 
must Pompey presently be sought. /Jji/ouy fy Cleo. ii.2 
the good gods will mock me presently — iii. 4 

presently denied him rivality — iii. 5 

my lord desires you presently — iii. 5 

my woman hie tliee presently Cymbeline, ii. 3 

provide me, presently, a riding suit — iii. 2 
and bring liim to dinner presently .. — iv. 2 
be planted presently with horns. . Titus. indron. ii. 3 

send the midwife presently to me — iv. 2 

away, and hang him presently — iv. 4 

a death, as hanging presently — v. 1 

fo, fetch them hither to us presently — v. 3 
'U bri»» the body presently Pericles, iii. 1 

you shall have your money presently .. — iv. 3 
a word, and I'll liave done presently .. — iv. 6 

I will seek him, sir, presently Lear, i. 2 

sweet and bitter fool will presently appear — i. 4 

which presently they read; on whose — ii. 4 

I'd speak with them; now, presently.... — ii. 4 



PRESENTLY-I shall attend you presently. /.car, v.l 
this knife I'll help it presently. ./iomeo ^Juliet, iv. 1 
when presently, through all thy veins — iv. 1 
and presently took post to tell it you — v. 1 
I'll board him presently: O give me . .Hamlet, W.i 
that presently they have proclaimed their — ii. 2 
and the queen too, and that presently .. — iii. 2 
would speak with you, and presently.... — iii. 2 
let this same be presently performed. ... — v. 2 

meet me presently at the harbour Othello, ii, I 

by and by a fool, and presently a beast 1 — ii. 3 
I II send her to you presently; and I'll.. — iii. 1 

Ses, presently: therefore confess thee.... — v. 2 
■ESENTMENT of two brothers ....Hamlet, iii. 4 
upon the heels of my presentment.. Timon ofAlh. i. 1 
PRESERVATIOISr— our preservation.. Tempest, ii. I 
give us particulars of thy preservation.. — v. 1 
tender preservation of our person .... Henry V. ii. 2 
by great preservation we live .... Richard III. iii. 5 
require her times of preservation. .Henri/ r///. iii. 2 

those for preservation cased Cymbeline, v. 3 

PRESERVATIVE, of no better . . . . Coriolamis, ii. 1 

PRESERVE— that did preserve me! Tempest, i. 2 

now good angels, preserve the king! . ... — ii. 1 

of nature, to preserve virginity All's Well, i. 1 

which to preserve, is sleep Winter's Tale. i. 2 

heaven preserve you 1 I dare Machetit, iv. 2 

Jesu preserve thee 1 welcome Richard II. v. 2 

there is sixpence to preserve thee . .2HenryIV. ii. 2 

tlie Lord preserve thy good grace! — ii. 4 
Got pless it and preserve it, as long .. Henry V. iv. 7 
preserve the good duke HumphreyI..2He7ir!/;'/. i. 1 
Jesu iireserve your royal majesty! .. — i. 2 
and to preserve my sovereign from . . — iii. 1 

whom ( Jod preserve better than Richard III. i. 3 

the gods preserve youl Timon of Athens, i. 1 

the gods preserve our noble Coriolanus, iii. 3 

the gods preserve you both! — iv. G 

which seeks best to preserve it.. Antony ^ Cleo. iii- 4 

so the gods preserve thee! i — v. 1 

you cannot preserve it from tsiinting. Cymbeti7ie, i. 5 
distil? preserve? yea, so, thati our .... — i. B 
no more than will preserve just so.. Titus And, iii. 2 

which, to preserve mine honour Pericles, ii.2 

the gods i^reserve you 1 (r-ep. v. 1) — iv. B 

1 will preserve myself; and am Lear, ii. 3 

if to preserve this vessel for my lord . . Othello, iv. 2 

PRESERVED— help I was preserved.. Ttt'eift/i iV. v. I 
prayers from preserved souls .. ..Meas.forMeas. ii. 2 
where hast thou beeJi preserved?.. Winter'sTate, v. 3 
have preserved myself, to see the issue — v. 3 
rather than life preserved with .... 1 Henry VI. iv. 5 
men's flesh xireserved so whole ....'IHemy VI. iii. 1 

must gently lie preserved Richard III. ii.2 

a lane, preserved the Britons Cymbeline, v. 3 

have preserved her welfare. . . . Titus And^■on^cus, v. 3 

how possibly preserved I'ericles, v. 3 

virtue preserved from fell — v. 3 (Gower) 

Impossibilities, have preserved Uiee Lear, iv. 6 

what canot be preserved when fortune . . Othello, i. 3 

PRESERVER— my true preserver Tempest, v. 1 

sit, my preserver, by thy patient's All's Well, ii. 3 

Camillo, preserver of my father.. Winter'sTate, iv. 3 
have made preservers of my throne. . Cymbeline, v. 6 

PRESERVING life in medicine . . . .2 Henry IV. iv. 4 
choking gall, and a preserving sweet. Romeo ffJul. i.l 

PRESIDENT of my kingdom. ...^n(ony,5-C(eo. iii. 7 

PRESS— would press you down. , TwoGen.of Ver. iii. 1 

what he puts into the press Merry Wives, ii. 1 

to press with so little preparation .... — ii.2 
neither press, coffer, chest, trunk .... — iv. 2 

press me to death with wit Much Ado, iii. \ 

doth press to go? what love tj-ep.).Mid. N.'s Dr. iii. 2 
to press a royal merchant .. Merchant of Venice, iv. 1 
you press me far, and therefore I will — iv. I 
I press in here, sir, amongst the ..Asyou Like it, v. 4 

press me not, beseech you, so Winter's Tale, i. 2 

throng and press to that last hold . . King John, v. 7 
I have misused the king's press .... 1 Henry 1 V. iv. 2 
I press me none but good householders — iv. 2 
suitors press to speak for right . . ..ZHemy VI. iii. 1 

my lord, press not a falling man. Henry VIII. iii. 2 
of war, would shake the press, and make — iv. 1 
go, break among the press, and find.. — v. 3 

press it to death Troilus .§■ Cressida, iii. 2 

do press among the popular throngs.Coriolnnus, ii. 1 
who is it in the press, that calls on .JuliusCivsar, i, 2 
great men shall press for tinctures .. — ii.2 

what suitors press to him — ii. 4 

lie is aildresseJ; press near, and second — iii. 1 

nay, press not so upon me — iii. 2 

thus did softly press the rushes Cymbeline, ii. 2 

or for tlie press of boats, or pride .... — ii. 4 

so bold to press heaven in Titus, 4ndron. iv. 3 

Romeo, press one heavy bier! . . Romeo ^-Juliet, iii. 2 
to press before thy father to a grave? — v. 3 

PRESSED-wisher's eyes be pressidl. jVid.N.'sDr. ii. 3 
while thou on pressed flowers dost .. — iii. 1 
am pressed down with conceit Comedy of Errors, iv. 2 
that Bolingbroke hath pressed ....Richard II. iii. 2 

1 am pressed to death, tnrough — iii. 4 

I pressed me none but such toasts.. lHe«r^/r. iv. 2 
the gibbets, and pressed the dead bodies — iv. 2 
by the king was I pressed forth ,...3 Henry VI, ii. 6 

ot York, pressed by his master — ii. 5 

preSfCd in with thfs caution Henry nil. ii. 4 

on his pressed bed lolling Troilus^ Cressida, i. 3 

they have pressed a power . . Coriolanus, i, 2 (.letter) 
being pressed to tlie war, even when — iii. 1 

as if it pressed her heart Lear, iv. 3 

with leaden thoughts been pressed Othello, iii. 4 

PRESSES him from sleep Winter's Tale, ii. 3 

in the coffers, and in the presses. . Merry Wives, iii. 3 

that presses them, and learns Romeo fy Juliet, i. 4 

O! it presses to my memory — iii. 2 

PRESSING to death, whipping ..Meas.forMeas. v. 1 
her breast (worthy the pressing) .... Cymbeline, ii. 4 

PRESS-MONEY-there's your press-money. Lear, iv.B 

PRESSURE— all forms, all pressures past. Hamlet^ i. 5 
of the time, his form and pressure — iii. 2 



PREST— I am prest unto it . . Merchant of Venice, i. 1 
vous dire que voiis faitea vous prest . . Henry *'. iv 4 
of wrath prest for this blow .... I'ericles, iv. (Gower) 
have it prest with more of thine. /iomen * Juliet, i. I 

PRESTER John's foot Much.ido, ii. 1 

PRESUME to harbour wanton .. Tu-o Gen. of Ver. i. 2 
let none presume to vieax...,Merchantof Venice, ii.^ 

I do presume, sir, that you are All's Welt, v. 1 

presume, shall render you no blame.. — v. 1 
my mind presumes, for his own . . Taming ofSh,i.2 

regia, presume not — iii. l 

not presume to touch a hair of ^ iv. I 

presume not, that I am the thing ..iHenrylV. v. 5 

durst not presume to look once 1 Henry VI. i . I 

that doth presume to boast of — iv. 1 

I dare presume, sweet prince — iv. 1 

1 will not so presume, to send — v. 3 

and otherwise will Henry ne'er presume — v. h 

dare he presume to scorn us iHenry VI. iii. 3 

killed, when fii'st thou didst presume — v. 6 
which, I iiresume, he'll take in . . Richard HI. iii. 4 
I presume, tliat, as my hand has . .Henry V 11 1, iii. 2 
for, I presume, brave Hector. . . . Troilus cj- Cress, ii.2 

this, I presume, will wake him — ii.2 

as, if it can, I will presume in you .. — iii. 2 
by the fire, and presume to know .... Coriolanus, i. I 
presume too much upon myiove.. Julius Ca-sar, iv. 3 
because thine eye presumes to reach .... PeWcies, i. 1 
PRESUMING on an ague's privilege. 7?/c/ia;ri//. ii. I 
our powers, presuming on their. Troihis^ Cress, iv. 4 
PRESUMPTION in us, when the help. All's Welt, ii. 1 
let my presumption not provoke .... 1 Henry VI. ii. 3 
lose his head for his presumption . ...iHenry VI. i.'i 
is too much presumption on thy part — v. 1 
wars, and payfor their presumption. SHenryT/. iv. I 
thy son I killed for his presumption — v. G 

PRESUMPTUOUS suit All'sWell.i. 3 

presumptuous priest! this place i Henry VI. iii, 1 

presumptuous vassals! are you not .. — iv. 1 
presumptuous dame, ill-nurtured ..illennj VI. i. 2 
which makes thee presumptuous ....ZHenryl'l. i.l 

PRESUPPOSED upon ihee TueirthiXi'ght,v. i 

PRESURMISE, that in the dole i'Henryir. i. 1 

PRETENCE is a pilgrimage to saXnt.. All's Well, iv. 3 
publisher of this pretence. . TwoGen. of Vnrona, iii. 1 

the pretence whereof Winter's Tale, iii. 2 (indict.) 

against the undi\'ulged pretence Macbeth, ii. 3 

under pretence to see the queen Henry VIII, i. 1 

the pretence for this is named — i. 2 

to keep your great pi-etences veiled. . Coriolanus, i 2 
60 many miles, witli a pretence?. . . . Cymbeline, iii. 4 

make pretence of wrong that I Pericles, i, 2 

to no other pretence of danger Lear, i. 2 

than as a very pretence and purpose — i. 4 

PRETEND— good could theypretend?...Wac6e//i, ii. 4 
but such as sliall pretend malicious. 1 Henry r7. iv. 1 
superscription pretend some alteration — iv. 1 

if you pretend no title? 3 Henry VI. iv. 7 

you pretend with that base wretch ..Cymbeline, ii. 3 
whom you pretend to honour and.. TitusAndron. i. 1 

PRETENDE D flight Tu-o Gen. of Verona, ii. 6 

PRETENDING, in her discoveries /l/eas./or.Veas. iii.l 
still pretending the satisfaction of .. Cymbeline, v. .■> 
PRETEXT to strike at him admits ..Coriolanus, v. 6 
PRETTIER fellow of the two .. Mer., -f Venice, iii. 4 
PRETTIEST— the prettiest Kate. .TamingofSh, ii. 1 

the prettiest low-horn lass Winter'sTate, iv. 3 

he has the prettiest love-songs for maids — iv. 3 

my prettiest Perdita — iv. 3 

one of the prettiest touches of all — v. 2 

it is the prettiest villain Troilus 4- Cressida, iii. 2 

let us find out the prettiest daisied. . Cymbeline, iv. 2 

thou wast the prettiest babe Romeo ^Juliet, i. 3 

she hath the prettiest sententious of it — ii. 4 

PRETTILY he couples it.... Two Gen. of Verona, i. 2 

Lysander riddles very prettily .J)/(rf. A'. 's Dream, ii. 3 

how prettily the young swain Win ter's Taie,iv.3 

the king prettily, metliought I Henry VI. iv. 1 

he prettily and aptly taunts Richard III. iii. 1 

PRETTIISTESS-favour, and to prettiness. Ham/ef, iv.5 
PRETTY— a pretty period! ..TwoGen.of Verona, ii. 1 

why.my pretty youth? — iv. 2 

which is pretty virginity Merry Wives, i . 1 

how does pretty mistress Anne? — i. 4 

and she is pretty, and honest — 1.4 

had 3'ou this pretty weathercock? .. — iii. 2 
od's heartlings, that's a pretty jest .. — iii. 4 
trip no further, pretty sweeting. TwelfthN. ii. 3 (song) 
there are pretty orders beginning. .Vtai./or:l/eos. ii. 1 

Opretty Isabella,! am pale — iv. 3 

I can tell thee pretty tales — iv. 3 

I remember a pretty jest your Much Ado, ii. 3 

tlius, pretty lady, I am sorry for thy — iv. 1 
as pretty a piece of flesh as any is ... . — iv. 2 

what a pretty thing man is — v. 1 

with pretty and with swimming ..Mid. N.'sDr. ii. 2 
pretty soul! she durst not lie near .. — ii. 3 

withm the pretty flouret's eyes — iv. 1 

pretty and apt. How mean (rep) . . Love'sL. Lost, i, 2 
pretty, because little. Little pretty . . — i. 2 

most pretty, and pathetieall — 1.2 

thymeauing, pretty ingenious? — iii.l 

pricked a pretty pleasing pricket.. — iv. 2(cpit.) 

tis pretty; it is well — iv. 2 

tlicir herald is a pretty knavish page — v. 2 
madam, and pretty mistresses, give ear — v. 2 
cannot see the pretty follies .yVercAan( of Venice, ii. 6 

did pretty Jessica, like a little — v. 1 

that her pretty chopped hands . . As you Like it, ii. 4 

you are full of pretty answers — iii. 2 

where dwell you, pretty youth? — iii. 2 

'tis pretty, sure, and very probable .. — iii. 5 
a pretty youth: not very pretty .... — iii. 5 
there was a pretty redness in his lip — iii. 5 

I pr'ythee pretty youth, let me be .. — iv. 1 
all pretty oaths that are not dangerous — iv. 1 

coz, coz, my pretty little coz — iv. 1 

ay, sir, I have a pretty wit — v. 1 

the only pretty rank time — v. 3 (song) 

these prettj' country folks would lie - - v. 3 (soiu;) 

Q Q 



PRE 



[ 594 ] 

PREVAILING— doubt prevailing.... Coj/oifKiiis, i. 3 
tears arc now prevailing era tors. 7'iiK«^nrfron.iii. 1 

PKEVAILMENT in unliardened ..Mid.N.'sDr. i. 1 

PREVENT-tliou didst prevent me ... . Temprsl, i. 2 
for I would prevent the \(iose..TwoGeu.of I'er. ii. 7 

prevent, or go thou, like MeiiyH'ives, ii. 1 

1 will prevent tliis, detect my wife . . — ii. 2 
to prevent so gross o'errcachms; as this? — v. 5 
a good lianging prevents a bad .. Tn-elfthNi^ht, i. b 
prevents the slander of his wife .^A^ymi Likeit, iv. 1 
but presen tly prevent the ways .... Kichard //. iii. 2 

prevent, resist it, let it not be so — iv. 1 

if God prevent it not, I purpose so .. — v. 2 
to prevent the worst, sir Michael . . 1 tIenryJV. iv. 4 

the degrees prevent my curses 2Uenri/lV. i. 2 

but to i)revent the tyrant's 3[ie7i7-y VI. iv. 4 

lord Oxford, to prevent the worst .... — iv. 6 

too near, if God prevent not liichardlll. ii. 3 

forcibly prevents our locked .. TroUus ^ Cress, iv. 4 
I'll teach tliem to prevent y/'ilCi.Timonof A/hens. v. 2 

then, lest he may, prevent JutiusCcosar, ii. 1 

■whicii to prevent, let Antony, and Caasar — ii. 1 

I must prevent thee, Cimber — iii. 1 

so to prevent the time of life — v. 1 

whicli to prevent, he made a law .Perlclfs, i. (Gow.) 
to prevent the fiend, and to kill vermin.. Lear, iii. 4 

lest it see more, prevent it — iii. 7 

tell me how I may prevent it . . Romeo fy Juliet, iv. 1 
desperate which we would prevent .. — iv. 1 
so snail my anticipation prevent your. . Hamlet, ii. 2 
to prevent, I have in quick determination — iii. I 

PREVENTED— we are prevented. rwri/'/iA'iVW, iii. 1 
O plague right well preventedl .... Much Ado, iii. 2 
friends liad not prevented me . . Merch. of Venice, i. I 

which tlius she hath prevented All's Well, iii. 4 

Caasar himself could not have prevented — iii. 6 

slie hath prevented me Taming of Shreio, v. 2 

which way to be prevented Winter' sTale, i. 2 

this might have been prevented King John, i. 1 

o'er myself, prevented from a damned. Henry K. ii. 2 
but tliat I am prevented, I should. . 1 Henry VI. iv. 1 

ought to be prevented Richard HI. ii. 2 

too fond, might have prevented this — iii. 4 
against our meaning, hath prevented — iii. 5 
the gods have well prevented it .... Coriotamis, Iv. 6 
prevented the ostent of our love. Antony^- Cleo. iii. 6 
one death might have prevented many — iv. 10 

but see, I am [Drevented Pericles, v. 1 

how shall this be prevented?. . . . Romeo ^Juliet, iii. 5 

PREVENTION of poor Bolingbroke. fljc/iajd //. ii. 1 

but what prevention ? Henry V.\.\ 

but God be thanked for prevention . . — ii. 2 
never seek prevention of thy Soes. . . .IHenrij VI. ii. 4 
orders, preventions, excitements. Tro/fus ^- Cress, i. 3 
to hide thee from prevention .... Julius Ctesar, ii. 1 
for we fear prevention — iii. 1 

PREY— if one should be a prey ..TwelfthKight, iii. 1 

that goes not out to prey Meas.forMeas. i. 4 

to fear the birds of prey — ii. 1 

you sat smiling at Ids cruel prey ..Mid.N.'sDr. ii. 3 

tliat standest as his prey Love's L. Lost, iv. 1 

the lion when he roars for Drej .. Mer. of Venice, ii. 1 
prey on nothing that doth seem ..AsyouLikeit,iv. 3 
iDeeame as a prey to lier grief ........ All's Well, iv. 3 

famous for the creatures of prey. . Winter' sTale, iii. 3 
reft the fishers of tlieir prey . . Comedy of Errors, i. 1 
black agents to their prey do rouse . . Macbeth, iii. 2 

means, soon preys upon itself Richard II. il. 1 

not pray to her, but prey on her .... 1 HenrylV. ii. 1 

the eagle England being in prey Henry V.i.2 

might iiave a ^ood prey of us — iv. 4 

upon us as then* hungry prey 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

as a prey to law, and shame illenryVI. ii. 1 

thirstin" after prey, join with — iv. 4 

and made a prey for carrion kites .... — v. 2 
thou a prey unto the house of York. .ZHenryVI. i. 1 

insulting o'er his prey — i. 3 

to my foes this body must be prey . . — ii. 3 

and buzzards prey at liberty Richardlll. i, 1 

that wrens may prey where eagles ,. — .^'^ 
without control, listed to make his prey — iii. 5 
preys on the issue of his mother's body — iv. 4 
left tliee but a very prey to time .... — iv. 4 
broken faith hath made a prey for worms — iv. 4 
make perforce an i^niversal p\'ey.Troilus<&- Cress, i. 3 
look on us, as we were sickly ptey.JulivsCcpsar, v. 1 
Nile have buried them for prey .Antony ij- Cleo. iii. 1 1 

when valour preys on reason — iii. 11 

subtle as tlie fox, for prey Cymbeline, iii. 3 

of tigers? tigers must prey ..Titus Andronicus,i\\. 1 

shall seize this prey out of his — iv. 2 

forth to beasts, and birds of prey .... — v. 3 

dog in madness, lion in prey Lear, iii. 4 

must perforce prey on itself — iv. 2 

in a celestial bed, and prey on garbage.. Hamte(, i. 6 
down the wind, to prey at fortune .... Othello, iii. 3 

PREYED upon the outward parts .... King John, v. 7 
the wolves have preyed; and Xaok. . . . MiLchAdo, v. 3 

PR EYFUL-[ CoW] prevf ul pri ncess. Love's L. Lost, iv. 2 

PRIAM— this king Priam's joy.. ^i;'s»rc//, i. 3 (song) 
drew Priam's curtain in the dead....2H«i)!/2F. i. 1 

but Priam found the fire — i. I 

as Priam was for all his valiant . . ..ZHenry VT. ii. 5 

Priam's six-gated city Troilus ^ Cress, (prol.) 

at Priam's royal table do I sit — i. 1 

called Hector, (Priam is his father) — i. 3 
dread Priam, thei'e is no lady of .... — ii. 2 
no more touched tliau all Priam's sons — ii. 2 

let us to Priam's hall, to greet — iii. I 

a son of Priam, in change'of him .... — Iii. 3 

with one of Priam's daugliters — iii. 3 

by Priam, and the general state of 'Troy — iv. 2 

as safe as Priam is in Ilion — iv. 4 

the youngest son of Priam, a true — iv. 5 

cousin-german to great Priam's peed — iv. 5 
lay hold upon him, Priam, hold hira — v. 3 
forbid me, royal Priam. O Priam ,. — v. 3 

a bastard son of Priam's — v. 8 

who shall tell Priam so, or Hecuba? — v. II 
word will Priam turn to stone — v. 1 1 



PRI 



PRETTY lady: you must hold All'sWell, i. 1 

'twas prettv'tliough a plague — i. 1 

with a world of pretty, foiid — i. 1 

to be a pretty wise fellow — ii. 3 

a oretty peat! 't'\s best put finger.. TamingofSh.i. 1 
you were prelty lunlin'.rs thou .... Winter'sTalc, i. 2 

the pretty din\plcsonus chin — ii. 3 

breed thee, pretty, and still rest thine — iii. 3 
very pretty Imrne! a boy, or a child (rep.) — iii. 3 
merry ballad; but a very pretty one — iv. 3 

plainiuijs of tlie pretty babes . . Comedy of Errors, i. 1 
of excelleut discourse; pretty and witty — iii. 1 
my pretty cousin, blessmg upon you! .Macbeth, iv. 2 
all my pretty ones? did you say, all? — iv. 3 

■wliat, all my pretty cliiekeus — iv. 3 

beliold my pretty Artliur more .... King John, iii. 4 
puts on liis pretty looks, repeats .... — iii. 4 

prettv child, sleep doubtless — iv. 1 

and make some pretty match with .Richard II. iii. 3 

that pretty Welsh which thou \ Henry IV. iii. 1 

yea; I tliank your pretty sweet wit . .2HenrylV. i. 2 

a pretty sliglit drollery — ii. 1 

and any pretty little tiny kickshaws — v. 1 
and pretty traps to catch tlie petty .... Henry f'. i. 2 
the pretty and sweet manner of it.... — iv. 6 
a pretty plot, well chosen to build. . ..IHenry VI. i. 4 
the prett3' vault! ng sea refused to ... . — iii. 2 

this pretty lad will prove our ZHenry VI. iv. 6 

Shore's wife hath a pretty foot Richardlll. i. 1 

faultless blood of pretty Rutland .... — i. 3 

my pretty cousins, you mistake — ii. 2 

I pr y tliee, pretty York, who told .... — ii. 4 
cradle for such little pretty ones! .... — iv. 1 
the hair, as at his pretty answer.. Troilus ^-Cress.i. 2 
what makes this pretty abruption? .. — iii. 2 
pretty, 'ifaith. My lord, I do beseech — iii. 2 
not speak of your pretty encounters.. — iii. 2 
sleep kill those pretty eyes — iv. 2 

pretty pretty pledge! thy master now — v. 2 
it is a pretty mocking of the life. Timon of Athens, i. 1 
imder thy cloak, pretty Flaminius?.. — iii. 1 

1 shall tell you a pretty tale Coriolanus, i. 1 

I'll swear, 'tis a very pretty boy — i. 3 

stood pretty dimpled boys.. Antony ^Cleopatra, ii. 2 
liast thou the pretty worm of Nilus . . — v. 2 
but had most pretty things to say . . Cymbeline, i. 4 
■with every tiling that pretty bin . . — ii. 3 (song) 
her pretty action did outsell hergift. . — ii. 4 

a course pretty and full of view — iii. 4 

more truly, woman, its pretty self . . — iii. 4 
liath cut those pretty fingers off . . Titus Andron. ii. 5 
from fortli that pretty hollow cage .. — iii. 1 
that with his pretty buzzing melody — iii. 2 

a pretty moral (j-ep. ii . 2) Pericles, ii. 1 

were as pretty a proportion to live — iv. 3 

we could pick up some pretty estate — iv. 3 

lament you pretty one? that I am pretty — iv. 3 
rco;.K7l^l think the pretty wrens of .. — iv. 4 

now, pretty one, how long (rep.) — iv. 6 

minstrelsy, and pretty din — v. 2 (Gower) 

how now, my pretty knave? how dost .... Lear, i. 4 

thou wast a pretty fellow, when — i . 4 

no more than seven, is a pretty reason .... — i. 5 

I am a pretty piece of flesh Romeo ^Juliet, i. 1 

my daughter's of a prettj' age — i.3 

bitter, pretty fool! f rep.) — i.3 

the pretty wretch left crying — i.3 

hatli a sweet sound. Pretty! (rep.) .. — iv. 5 

how do you, pretty lady? well Hamlet, iv. 5 

pretty Ophelia! indeed, without an oath — iv. 5 

PREVAIL in man's commendation.. Tu-etfthN. iii. 2 
nor oath, prcvuil not, go and see . Winter's Tale, iii. 2 
I shall so prevail, to force him after.. — iv. 3 
where how he did prevail, I shame to King John,]. 1 
if we prevail, their heads shall .... Richard II. iii. 2 

if wishes would prevail with me HenryV. iii. 2 

can you suffer hell so to prevail? .... 1 Henry VI. i. 5 
must I still prevail, or wdl you blame — ii. I 
could not prevail with all their oratory — ii. 2 
admonishments prevail with me .... — ii. 5 
would prevaih.if prayers mightprevail — iii. i 

whose rightful cause prevails iHenryVI.W. ) 

malice should prevail, that faultless — iii. 2 
seeing gentle words will not prevail.. — iv. 2 

sometime tlie flood prevails ZHenryVI. ii. s 

humble prayer may prevail — iv. 6 

an upright zeal to right prevails .... — v. 1 
di'cad curse prevail so much with ..Ricliard III. i. 3 

he cannot prevail with me — i. 4 

they shall no more prevail Henry VIII. v. 1 

his mother, may prevail with him . . Coriolanus, v. 4 

on my knee, prevail-in this JuliusCresar, ii. 2 

whose ministers would prevail .Antony <§-CVeo.iii. II 

you shall prevail, were it to woo Pericles, v. 2 

it helps not. it iirevuils not Pomeo Sr Juliet, '\\\, 3 

PREVAILED, my lord .... TwoGen. ofVerona, iii. 2 

thou hast prevailed : I pardon — v. 4 

she hath prevailed with him .Mid.K.'s Dream, iii. 2 

hath no less prevailed than so Winter'sTalc, ii. 1 

you have prevailed ; I will depart. Comedy of Err. iii. 1 

my office hatli so far prevailed Henry V. v. 2 

king of Naples, that prevailed \ Henry VI. v. 4 

thus SuffolK hath pravailed — v. 5 

the Dauphin hath prevailed beyond. 2Henr!/r/. i. 3 
O Peter, thou hast prevailed in rightl — ii. 3 
have prevailed as much on hira .... Richard III. i. 1 
that have prevailed upon my body.. — iii. 4 
ere so prevailed with me: it will ....Coriolanus,'!. 1 

but how prevailed you? — i. 6 

dangerously you have with him prevailed — v. 3 
the ladies have prevailed, the Volsces are — v. 4 
much prevailed on your condition. J«//HsCfl?sar,ii. 1 
had once prevailed to make me., Antony fyCleo. iv. 5 
to understand you have prevailed.. ., C'j/m6ci/ne, i. 5 
Iiatb prevailed on thy too ready hearing! — iii. 2 
whose false oaths prevailed before .... — iii. 3 
my practise so prevailed, that I returned — v. 5 
ri^e, my empress hath prevailed.. 2'i/«,s.4nrfro??. i, 2 

PREVAILETH against me iHenn/VI. i. 3 

PREVAILING much in youthful.Co7ne</i/ o/£rr. v. 1 



PRIAM— that king Priam had .... Titus Andron. i. 2 
surprised king Priam's Troy — v. 3 

where he speolcs of Priam's slaughter .. Hamlet, ii. 2 
hellish P^'rrhua old grandsire Priam seeks — ii. 2 

Pyrrhus at Priam drives; in rage — ii. 2 

on the milky head of reverend Priam .... — ii. 2 

sword now falls on Priam — ii. 2 

PRIAMI regia colsa Taming of SIireu<,i\\. 1 

Priami, is my man Tranio — iii. 1 

liic steterat Priami, take heed — iii. 1 

PRIAMUS— of great Priamus. . . . Troilus <$- CreSs. ii. 2 

not Pi ianius and Hecuba on knees .. — v. 3 

PRIAPUS— to freeze the god Priapus ..Pericles, iv. 6 

PRIBBLES andprabbles {rep. v. d).. Merry Wives, i. 1 

PRICE— abatement and low price . . Twelfth Niglit, i. 1 

if you hold your life at any price.... — iii. 4 

and held in idle price to haunt ..Meas.forMeas. i. 4 

may make what price they will Much Ado, iii. 3 

what's tlie price of this inkle? .. Love's L. Lost, iii. 1 
we can afford no more at such a price — v. 2 
raise the price of hogs (rep.) Merchant of Venice, iii. 5 
his (jualities being at this poor price .. ^H's TeU, iv. 3 
make trivial price of serious things.. — v. 3 
have bought me at a common price., — v. 3 
never joyed since the price of oats ..\HenryIV. ii. 1 

and happy news of price 2HenryIV. v. 3 

my body pay the price of it Henry V. ii. 2 

for pix of little price — ' iii. 6 

whose price hath launched . . Troilus % Cressida, ii. 2 
if he overliold his price so much .... — ii. 3 
and we'll have corn at our own price. Cor/otanus,i. 1 
your price o' the consulship? The price — ii. 3 

at the price of one fair word — iii. 3 

her own price proclaims how Cymbeline, i. I 

jewels purchased at an easy price. Toms Jnrf)-o«. iii. 1 
what's her price, Boult? I cannot be . . Pericles^ iv. 3 

but now her price is fallen Lear, i. 1 

who now the price of his dear blood. fionieoijjM/. iii. 1 
willbeof more price, being spoke behind — iv. I 
I know my price, I am worth no worse. . Othello, i. 1 

'tis a great price for a small vice — iv. 3 

PRICK— their pricks at my foot-fall Tempest, ii. 2 

my duty pricks me on Two Gen.of Verona, iii. 1 

esteemed duty pricks me on.... Lore's L.Z..i. 1 (let.) 

will you prick twithyoure.ye? — ii. 1 

let the mark have a prick in't — iv. 1 

she's too hard for you at pricks, sir . . — iv. 1 

cannot prick out five such — v. 2 

ifyouprickus, do we notbleed?.ilfe)-. o/'^ejijoe, iii. 1 
love's prick, and Rosalind. ^syow Likeit,\U. 2 (ver.) 
leave our thorns to prick ourselves . . All's Well, iv. 2 
some odd humour pricks him.TamingofShreu\\ii. 2 

to prick the sides of my intent Macbeth, i. 7 

go, prick thy face, and over-red — v. 3 

which he pricks and wounds with . . King John, v. 7 

and prick my tender patience Richard //. ii. 1 

to know, what pricks you on to take — ii. 3 
pricks me on. Yea, but how (_fep.)..lHenryIV. v. i 

they never prick their finger iHenrylV. ii. 2 

very well said. Prick him (7-ep.) .... — iii. 2 

prick the woman's tailor well — iii. 2 

come, prick me Bull-calf till he .... — iii. 2 
honestly by the prick of their needles .HenryV. ii. 1 

I would prick your guts a little — ii. 1 

prick not your finger as you pluck.. I Henri/ F/. ii. 4 
an evening at the noontide prick . . ..ZHenry VI. i. 4 
to prick thy finger, though to wound — i. < 
so young a thorn begin to prick? .... — v. b 

scruple, and prick, on certain HenryVIII. ii. 4 

although small pricks to their . . Troilus<^ Cress, i. 3 

to prick us to redress? JuliusCcesar, ii. 1 

prick him down, Antony — iv. 1 

that I might prick the ^oer back .... Cymbeline, i. 2 

pins, wooden pricks, nails, sprigs of Lear, ii. 3 

let's see; I feel this pin prick — iv. 7 

and it pricks like thorn Romeo i^- Juliet, i. 4 

prick love for pricking — i. 4 

is now upon the prick of noon — ii. 4 

bosom lodge, to priek and sting her .... Hamlet, i. 5 

PRICK-EARED cur of Iceland! HenryV.iX. 1 

PRICKED—they pricked their ears. . . . Tempest, iv. 1 
and pricked a isretty.. Lore's L.Losl, iv. 2 (epitaph) 
forty fancies pricked in't for. Taming or Shrew, iii. 2 

hath pricked down Bardolph iilenrylV. ii. 4 

I was pricked well enough Before.... — iii. 2 
tailor, he would have pricked you .. — iii. 2 
dost tiiou roar before tliou art pricked? — iii. 2 

pricked on by public wrongs I Henry VI. iii. 2 

will you be pricked in number ..Jidivs Ccesar, iii. 1 
their names are pricked. Your brotlier — iv. 1 
his voice who should be pricked to die — iv. I 

pricked from the lazy finger Romeo ^Juliet, i. 4 

tliereto pricked on by a most emulate ..Hamlet, i. 1 

pricked to it by foolish honesty Othello, iii. 3 

PRICKET— 'twas a pricket {rep.)..Love'sL.Lost, iv. 2 
the deer the princess killed, a pricket — iv. 2 
pricked a pretty pleasing pricket — iv. 2 (epit.) 

or pricket sore, or else, sorel — iv. 2 (epit.) 

PRICKING-sharp furzes, prickinggoss. Teij/peiMv. 1 

by the pr'okingof my thumbs Macbeth, iv. 1 

you might leave pricking it for pity. Coriolanus, i. 3 

priclv love for pricking liomeo ^-Juliet, i. 4 

PRICK-SONG— as you sing prick-song — ii. 4 
PRICK'ST— thou prick'st her with ..Much Ado, iii. 4 
PRIDE— tills pride of hers ..TwoGen.ofVerona,\n. 1 

that maugre all thy pride Tvelflh Kight, iii. 1 

no man hear me,) I take pride. .il/cas-./brA/eos. ii. 4 
advance their pride against that ....Much.-ido, iii. 1 

for pride and scorn so much? — iii. 1 

and maiden pride, farewell! — iii. 1 

my manners and my pride..... Ui^i.iV.'s Dream, ii. 3 

all pride is willing pride Love'sL.Lost, ii. 1 

in his eye pride expressed — ii. 1 

O short-lived pride! not fair? — iv. 1 

my pride fell W'ith my fortunes . . As youLil<e il, i. 2 
who cries out on pride, tliat can .... — ii. 7 

and the "reatest of my pride is — iii. 2 

and yet Jiis pride becomes hira — iii. 5 

were in his pride or sharpness All's Well, i. 2 

fly pride, says the peacock . . Comedy of Errors, iv. 3 



PRI 



[ 595 ] 

PRIEST-tlie protector, saxioy priest?.! Henry VI. 

ere the priest sliould ever get — 

I gave a noble to the priest — 

now, by God's motlier, priest iHenry VI, 

Beaufort, that false priest — 

the word, and I will be his priest 
can take due orders for a ijriest , . 

priests pray for enemies — v. 

a priest, lord chamberlain? {^rep.)., Richard III. iii. 
now I want the priest tliat spake to me — iii. 
blind priest, like the eldest son ....HenryVIII. ii. 

this priest has no pride in him? — ii. 

and learned priest, cardinal Campeius — ii. 

thou art a proud traitor, priest — iii. 

your long eoat, priest, protects you . . — ^ iii. 

Helenus is a priest Troilus Sj Crcssida, i. 

brother priest, you fur your gloves . . — ii. 

and thy brother Troilus a pnest — iv. 

lug your priests and servants.. Timonof.-Uhens, iv. 
nor siglit of priests in holy vestments — iv. 

prayers of priests, nor times of Coriolanus, i. 

our very priests must become mockers — ii. 
swear priests, and cowards Julius Ctvsar, ii. 

fo bid the priests do present sacrifice — ii. 
ive like Diana's priests Cymbetincj i. 

worse than priests and fanes that lie — iv. 

priest and holy water are so near-.. Titus Andron. i. 

part a bachelor from the priest — _i. 

make all our sweai'crs priests Pericles^ iv. 

when my maiden priests are met .... — v. 

when priests are more in word than .... Lear, iii. 

tell thee, churlish priest, a ministering.. HamW, v. 
PRIESTHOOD grown peremptory? ..2Hen>!/F/. ii. 

thv priesthood saves thy life iHenry VI. i. 

PRIEST-LIKE, thou hast cleansed.. /riH^er'sTate.i. 

than in our priest-like fasts Coriolanus, v. 

PRIESTLY farewell to her Pericles, iii. 

PRIG, for my life, prig Winter's Talc, iv. 

PRIMAL— from the primal state . .Antony SfCleo. i. 

hath the primal eldest curse upon't . . Hamlet, iii. 
PRIME— and Prospero the prime duke. . Tempest, i. 

my prime request, whioli I do last — i. 

his verdure even in tlie prime. . Two Gen. of Ver. i. 

is crowned with the prime.. AsyouLikeit, v. 3 (sonj 

happiness and prime can happy call,..4H's Well, ii. 

cropped before 3'ou come to prime . . Richard II. v. 

resembles it the prime of youth ....SHenryVI. ii. 

the golden jjrime of this sweet liichard III. i. 

that from the prime creation — iv. 

thy prime of manhood, darin" — iv. 

in my prime of youth at Tewksbury — v. 

the prime man of tlie state? Henry VIII. iii. 

were they as prime as goats, as hot .... Othello, iii. 
PRIMER-thereisno primer busmess.Henry VIII. i. 
PRIMERO— I left him at primero with — v. 

I foreswore myself at primero Merry Wives, iv. 

PRIMEST creature that's paragon'd.Henjy Fill. ii. 
PRIMITIVE statue, and oblique . Troihis ^- Cress, v. 

PRIMO, secundo, tertio TwelflhNight, v. 

PRIMOGENITIVE, and due of . . Troilus <<r Cress, i. 
PRIMROSES, that die unmarried. Wmfcj-'s Taie, iv. 

that go the primrose way to the Macbeth, ii. 

look pale as primrose, with 2 Henry VI. iii. 

cowslips, and the primroses, bear to. . Cyinbeline, i. 

like thy face, ijale primrose — iv. 

himself the primrose path of dalliance . . Hamlet, i. 
PRIMROSE-BEDS were wont to Ws.Mid.N.'sDr. i. 
PRIMY — in the youth of primy nature ..Hamlet, i. 
PRINCE— king and prince at prayers . . Tempest, i. 

and a prince of power.. — i. 

than other princes can — i. 

in my condition, a prince, Miranda — iii. 

a living prince does now speak to thee . . — v. 

know, worthy prince, sir . . TwoGen. of Verona, iii. 

with the wild prince and Poins . . Merry Wives, iii. 

visit both prince and people .... Meas.forMeas. i. 

O worthy prince, dishonour not — v. 

O prince, I conj ure thee, as thou .... — v. 

believe it, royal prince, if he — v. 

noble prince, as there comes light.,.. — v. 

then stood prince, no longer session . . — v. 

your Triar is now your prince — v. 

slandering a prince deserves it — v. 

reconciled to the prince your brother.. A/acA.4cio, i. 

tire prince and count Claudio (rep. i. 3) — i. 

the prince discovered to Claudio .... — i. 

the prince, your brother, is royally . . — i. 

if tire prince do solicit you — ii. 

if the prince be too important, tell him — ii. 

he is the prince's jester (rep.) — ii. 

the prince wooes for himself — ii. 

for the prince hath got your Hero ... . — ii. 

think, the prince would have served — ii. 

the prince's fool I ha! it may be .... — ii. 

go you to the prince your brother.... — ii. 

proof enough to misuse the prince .. — ii. 

to the prince and Claudio, ^rep. iii. 1) — ii. 

ha! the prince and monsieur Love!.. — ii. 

like favourites made proud by princes — iii. 

so says the prince, and my new-trothed — iii. 

bein" chosen for the prince's watch — iii. 

stand in the prince's name (rep.) .... — iii. 
none of the prince's subjects (rep.) .. — iii. 
to present the prince's own person (»*ep.) — iii. 
not without the i)rince be willing .. — iii. 

Irow the prince, Claudio (rep.) — iii. 

the prince, the count, signior Benedick — iii. 

sweet prince, you learn me (rep.) — iv. 

is this the prince? is tliis tlie prince's — iv. 

would the two princes lie? — iv. 

the errors that these princes hold (?-pp.) — iv. 
your daughter here the princes left for — iv. 
very much unto the prince and Claudio — iv. 

?rinces and counties! surely, a princely — iv. 
cliarge you, in the prince's name . . — iv. 
the prince's brother was a villain frep.) — iv. 

the prince's officer, coxcomb — iv. 

so shall the prince, and all of them . . — v. 
here comes the prince, and Claudio .. — v. 
sweet prince, let me go no further..,. — v. 



PRI 



PRIDE-towcring in lier pride of place ..Macbeth, ii. 4 
eagle-win"ed pride of sky-aspiring..7?ic/iari(//. i. 3 

hath set a ulot upon my pride — iii. 2 

the pride of kingly sway from out .. — iv. 1 

cannot, die in their own pride — v. 5 

kingly doom, and sentence of his pride — v. 6 
and pride of their contention did....! WcHri/Zr. i. 1 
fortune's minion, and her pride .... — 1. I 
coz, of this young Percy's pride? .... — i. 1 
want of government, pride, haughtiness — iii.! 
now their pride and mettle is asleep — iv. 3 
uU sorts take a pride to gird at me ..iHenry IV. i. 2 
my thouglits to any strain of pride .. — iv. 4 
their forces the full pride of France. . . . Henry V. i. 2 
vainness, and self-glorious pride.. — v. (chorus) 
very infants prattle of thy pride . . 1 Henry VI. iii. 1 

we escaped tlie pride of 1 ranee — iii. 2 

and from the pride of Gallia rescued — iv. 6 

proved, let's die in pride — iv. 6 

my Icarus, my blossom, in his pride — iv. 7 
Humphrey's pride, and greatness.. ..2 Henri/ r/. i. I 
pride went before, ambition follows him — i. 1 

suppress the pride of Sufl'olk — i.l 

for 1 cannot natter thee in pride .... — i. 3 
Image of pride, wliy should I hold my — i. 3 
at Beaufort's pride, at Somerset's. . . . — ii. 2 
thus Eleanor's pride dies in her .... — ii. 3 

and allay this thy abortive pride — iv. 1 

this tumult, but thy pride? SHenryVI. ii. 2 

in tops of all their pride? — v. 7 

falls in height of all his pride Richard III. v. 3 

to bear the pride upon them Henry VIII. i. 1 

hut I can see liis pride peep — i.l 

thispriest has no pride in him? — ii. 2 

with arrogancy, spleen, and pride .. — ii. 4 
my high-blown pride at length broke — iii. 2 
the seeded pride that hMh. . . . Troilui ^ Cressida, i. 3 
tlian in the pride and salt scorn .... — i. 3 

Eride alone must tarrc the mastiffs on — i. 3 
ut, bj^ my head, 'tis pride — ii. 3 

how doth pride grow? I know (rep.) — ii. 3 

pride is his own glass, his own — ii. 3 

but with a pride that quarrels — ii. 3 

I'll pheeze his pride; let me go — ii. 3 

shall pride carry it? An 'twould — ii. 3 

between your strangeness and his pride — iii. 3 
pride hath no other glass to show (^rep.} — iii. 3 
into another's pride, while pride is . . — iii. 3 
valour and pride excel themselves .. — iv. 5 
which looks lilce pride, is courtesy .. — iv. 5 
to castigate thy pride, 'twere weU.TimonofAth. iv. 3 
pride and wrath would confound thee — iv. 3 
especially in pride. And topping ..Coriolanus, ii. 1 

because you talk of pride (rep.) — ii. 1 

enforce his pride, and his old hate . . — ii- 3 
let thy mother rather feel thy pride — iii. 2 

but owe thy pride thyself — iii. 2 

o'ercome with pride, ambitious past — iv, 6 
whether 'twas pride, which out of daily — iv. 7 

Coriolanus, 'longs more pride — v. 3 

and took some pride to do myself this — y. 5 
or for the press of boats, or pride. . . . Ci/mbeline, ii. 4 
change of prides, disdain, nice longings — ii. 5 
with arms our enemies' pride .... Titus Andron. i. I 

afflict the emperor in his pride — iv. 3 

and pride so great, the name of help.... PerMes, i. 4 

let pride, which she calls plainness Lear, i. 1 

and, with strained pride, to come betwixt — i.l 

to fall and blast her pride'. — ii. 4 

wliose easy-borrowed pride dwells — ii. 4 

summers wither in their pride . . Romeo ^Juliet, i. 2 
and 'tis mucli pride, for fair without.. — 1.3 
pricked on by a most emulate pride .... Hamlet, i. I 
as loving his own pride and purposes . . Othello, i. 1 
pride that pulls the country down — ii. 3 (song) 
quality, pride, pomp, and circumstance — iii. 3 
as salt as wolves in pride, and fools as .. — iii. 3 

PRIDGE-at the pridge Oep.) Henry V. iii. 6 

but keeps the pridge most valiantly — iii. 6 
speak with him from the pridge .... — iii. 6 
very gallantly maintained the pridge — iii. 6 

possession of the pridge (rep.) — iii. 6 

PltlE— je te prie, m'enseignez — iii. 4 

PRIEF— I will make a pnef of it Merry Wives, i. ! 

PRIES not to the interior ....Merchant of Venice, ii. 9 

PRIEST to meddle or make Merry Wives, i. 4 

kill de Jack priest (rep. ii. 3) — i. 4 

though the priest o' the town — ii. 1 

between sir Hugh the Welsh priest., — ii. 1 

scurvy jack-dog priest! — ii. 3 

shall I lose my parson? my priest? ., — iii. ! 
the deanery, where a priest attends . . — iv. 6 

you shall not lack a priest — iv. (3 

rather go with sir Priest than. . . . TwelfthNighl, iii. 4 

visited by the priest — v.! 

like god Bel's priests in the Much Ado, iii. 3 

with a priest that lacks Latin ..As you Like it, iii. 2 

liave a good priest that can — iii. 3 

you shall be the priest, and marry .. — iv. 1 
there a girl goes before the priest .... — iv. 1 
fai th, the priest was good enough .... — v. 1 
althouiili before the solemn priest . ...All's Well, ii. 3 
when tne priest attends to speak . Taming ofSh,ni.2 
when the priest should ask, if Katharine — iii. 2 

the priest let fall tlie book — iii. 2 

down fell jpriest and book (rep.) — iii. 2 

the old priest at saint Luke's church — iv. 4 

take the priest, clerk, and some — iv. 4 

to bid the priest be ready to — iv. 4 

for the priest is ready — v.! 

delivered of great Apollo's priest. ll'inler'sTale, iii. 2 

where no priest shovels in dust — iv. 3 

no Italian priest shall tithe or toll. . KingJohn, iii. I 
led so grossly by this meddling priest — iii. I 

am I both priest and clerk? ..~ Richard II. iv. 1 

the sad and solemn priests sing still . .Henry V. iv. 1 

pieled priest, dost thou command IHenry VI. i. 3 

priest, beware your beard i. 3 

all the priests and friars in my realm — i. 6 
presumptuous priest! this place — iii. l 



— iii. 1 



PRINCE-X tlmnk you, princes, for mj.MuchAdo, v. 1 

the prince and Claudio mightily abused v. 2 

so are the prince and Claudio ire/i.). . — v. 4 

food-morrow prince; good-morrow.. — v. 4 

'11 tell thee what, prince — v. 4 

prince, thou art sad; get thee a wife — v. 4 
m crystal for some prince to buy .. Love's L. Lost, ii. I 

dread prince of plackets — iii. 1 

sport to the prince and his book-mates — iv. I 
men's cottages, princes' palaces. . Mer. of Venice, i. 2 

there is the Neapolitan prince — i. 2 

the prince, his master, will be here .. — i, 2 

yourself, renowned prince, then stood — ii. 1 

slew the Sophy, and a Persian prince — ii. I 

caskets to tills noble prince -~ ii. 7 

contains my picture, prince — ii. 7 

for princes to oomo view fair Portia. . — ii. 7 

there, take it, prince, and if my form — ii. 7 

there stand the caskets, noble prince — ii. 9 

fairly spoke by some beloved prince — iii. "2 
the cost of princes on un worthy . . .4s you Like it, ii. 7 

I can serve as great a prince as All's Well, iv. 5 

prince is that? Tlie Black Prince (rep.) — iv. 6 

lie is the prince of the world — iv. 5 

owes the prince, even such.... Tanim^o/S/ircw, v. 2 
you so fond of your j'oung prince.. Winter'sTale, i. 2 

to the blood o' the prince my son .... — i. 2 

to a iine new prince, one of these .... — ii. 1 

leave out betwixt the prince and beggarl — ii. ! 

the motlier to a hopeful prince — iii. 2 

the prince your son, with mere — iii. 2 

of the young prince, whose honourable — iii. 2 

three days since I saw tlie prince .... — iv. 1 

once a servant of the prince — iv. 2 

knew'st this was the prince — iv. 3 

the prince himself is about apiece .. — iv. 3 

to do the prince ray master good .... — iv. 3 

had our prince (jewel of children) .. — v. 1 

most true to wedlock, prince — v. 1 

quitted with this young prince — v. 1 

tlie audience of kings and princes . . — v. 2 

aboard the prince; told him — v. 2 

and tiren the prince, my brother .... — v. 2 

report to the prince my master — v. 2 

I will swear to the prince — v. 2 

the kings and princes, our kindred . . — v. 2 
princes, would they, may not .... Comedy of Err. i. 1 

to thee engaged a prince's word — v. 1 

justice, sweet prince, against tlus — v. I 

namely, this young prince King John, ii- 1 

to these two princes, if you marry.... — ii.2 

young princes, close your hands .... — ii.2 

good-morrow, little prince (rep.) .... — iv. 1 

at your sick service had a prince .... iv. 1 

no conscience to destroy a prince ■ . . , — iv. 2 

who killed this prince? _ iv. 3 

yet, believe me, prince, I am not glad — v. 2 

where is my prince the Dauphin? — v. 5 

be of good comfort, prince — v. 7 

my noble prince, with other princes.. — v. 7 

now these her princes are come home — v. 7 
the precious safety of my prince ....Richard II. i. I 

in him a royal prince — ii. I 

rescued the Black Prince, that young — ii. 3 

you have misled a prince — iii. I 

myself— a prince, by fortune of — ill. 1 

as he is a prince, is just — iii. 3 

mighty prince, my lord Northumberland — iii. 3 

princes, and noble lords, what — iv. 1 

some two days since I saw the prince — v. 3 

hail, royal prince! Thanks — v. 5 

a conquest for a prince to boast of ..I Henry IV. i. 1 

leare tlie prince and me alone — i. 2 

that the true prince may — i. 2 

an' the prince and Poins be not two — ii. 2 

turn upon the true prince? (rep.) — ii. 4 

nay, I'll tickle ye for a young prince — ii. 4 

the court and princes of my blood .. '— iii. 2 

I have heard the prince tell him .... — iii. 3 

the prince is a Jack, a sneak-cup.... — iii. 3 

but as thou art prince, I fear thee .. — iii. 3 

became him like a prince indeed. ... — v. 2 

of any prince, so wild, at liberty .... — v. 2 

brave death, when princes die with us! — v. 2 
which princes, fleshed with couquest..2He«r!//r. i. 1 

if the i)rince put thee into my service — i. 2 

the Juvenal, the prince your master — i. 2 

nobleman tliat committed the prince — i. 2 

the youthful prince. The yoimg irep.) — i. 2 

the ear that the prince gave you [rep.) — i. 2 

the prince a better companion! (,rep.) — i. 2 

this to the prince; this to the earl .. — i. 2 

when the prince broke thy head .... — ii. 1 

why, a prince should not be so loosely — ii. 2 

how many good young princes would — ii.2 

from a prince to a prentice? — ii.2 

the prince once set a dish of apple-johns — ii, 4 

will be the prince, and master Poins — ii. 4 

eirrah, what humour is the prince of? — ii. 4 

why does the prince love him so then? — ii. 4 

the which the prince admits him (rep.) — ii. 4 

no man's too good to serve his ijrince — iii. 2 

the prince, lord John and duke of .. — iv. 1 

the prince is here at hand — iv. 1 

as a false favorite doth his prince's name — iv. 2 

where is the prince your brother? (rep.) — iv. 4 

the prince but studies his companions — iv. 4 

the prince will, in the perfectness of — iv. 4 

be patient, princes (rep.) — iv. 4 

we left the prince my brother here .. — iv. 4 

the prince hath ta'en it hence — iv. 4 

I found the prince in the next — iv. ^ 

sweet princes, what I did, I did in . . — v. 2 

here comes the prince. Good-morrow — v. 2 

how might a prince of my great hopes — v. 2 

and princes, all, believe me, I beseech — v. 2 

no prince, nor peer, shall have — v. 2 

for a stage, princes to act Henry V, i. (chorus) 

and so tlie prince obscured Jiis — i.l 

uncle's, Edward the black prince. ... ^ i. 2 



PRINCE our master says, that you .... llenrij V. i. 'i 

and tell tlie pleasant prince, this mock — i. 2 

my princes, and my noble peers (/ep.) — ii. 2 

and, princes, look you strongly arm ii. 4 

and all our princes captived _ ii. 4 

like to the prince of fiends ,...., — iii. 3 

lip, princes; and with spirit of honour — iii. 5 

high dukes, great princes, barons, lords — iii. 6 

lord constable, and princes all — iii. 5 

ns any prince in tlie world — iii. 7 

itis the prince of palfreys; his neigh — iii. 7 

of my lady, he's a gallant prince — iii. 7 

commend nie to tlie princes iu our camp iv. 1 

to iiorse, .vou gallant princesl iv. 2 

God be wi' you princes all! — iv. 3 

for many of our princes (woe the whilel) — iv. 7 

their peasant limbs in blood of princes — iv. 7 

ot princes, in this number, and nobles iv. 8 

and princes French, and peers, health v. 2 

60 are you, princes English (rep.) .. _ v. 2 

CO with the (jrinces, or stay here .... — v. 2 

but an efleniinate prince, whom .... 1 Henry VI. i. I 

Iqok'st to command the prince i. 1 

himself king, and suppress the prince — i. 3 

the prince's espials have informed . . _ i. 4 

asprincesdo their courts when _ ii. 5 

Buffer such a prince, so kind a father — iii. 1 

sweet prince, an' ifyour grace mark — iii. 1 

high prince, the mighty duke (rep.) _ iii 1 

regard this dying prince, the valiant — iii. 2 

dismay not, princes, at this accident — iii. 3 

niy gracious prince, and honourable — iii. 4 

hear him, noble prince! And this .. _ iv. 1 

wlien foreign princes shall be certified — iv. 1 

Bweet prince, he thought no harm .. _ iv I 

for princes should be free _ v' 3 

the Christian prince, king Henry .. _ v. 3 

than all the princes in the land 2Hp«™f/. i 1 

unto tlie prince's heart of Calydon . . _ i i 

that virtuous prince, the good duke — ii. 2 

and thou a prince, protector of this laud — ii. 4 

a prince, and ruler of the land irep.) — ii. 4 

and princes' courts be filled with my _ iii 2 

for thy prisoner is a prince, the duke — iv. 1 

putting down kings and princes .... iv. 2 

you love your prince and country .. — iv. 9 

for enemies, but princes kill _ v. 2 

is this unto the prince your son? ZHenryVI. i! 1 

that is spoken like a toward prince.. — ii. 2 

18 far beyond a prince's delieates .... _ ii. 5 

and Lewis a prince soon won with .. — iii. 1 

and thou no more art prince _ iii 3 

after that wise prince, Henry the . . _ iii' 3 

renowned prince, how shall poor Henry _ iii. 3 

this noble queen and prince (rep.) .. _ iii 3 

O brave yonnij prince! Thy famous _ v.' 4 

you have rid this sweet young prince — v. 5 

and yours, as to this prince! — v. 5 

king Henry, and the prince his son — v! 6 

that brave prince, Edward, her Richard III. i. 2 

golden prime of this sweet prince _ i •> 

princes have but their titles _ i. 4 

which of you, if you were a prince's son — i. 4 

a begging prince what beggar pities not? — i. 4 

of the young prince your son _ ii . 2 

you cloudy princes, and heart-sorrowing — ii. 2 

irom Ludlow the young prince be . . _ ii' 2 

meet so few should fetch the prince _ ii! 2 

whoever journeys to the prince _ ii. 2 

queen's proud kindred from the prince — ii. 2 

with all my heart to see the prince. . — ii. 4 

liow doth the prince? i^rep. iv. I) _ ii. 4 

welcome, sweet prince (,rep.) _ jji! j 

the tender prince would fain have come — iii! 1 

this prmce hath neither claimed it .. — iii 1 

the prince my brother hath outgrown — iii' 1 

so loves the prince, that he will not he — iii. 1 

the princes both make high account — iii 2 

God keep the prince from all the _ iii. 3 

any tinie, recourse unto the princes — iii. 5 

this prince is not an Edward! — iii. 7 

would this virtuous prince take on.. — iii! 7 

of virtue for a christian prince — iii. 7 

most gracious prince, lend favourable — iii. 7 

whom our manners call— the prince — iii. 7 

call them again, sweet prince _ iii. 7 

heart's love, to greet the tender prince — iv. 1 

to gratulate the gentle princes there — iv. 1 

sullen plavfellow for tender princes — iv. 1 

Edward should live,— tme, noble prince — iv. 2 

ah, my poor princes! ah, my tender _ iv. 4 

the slaughter of the prince that owed — iv. 4 

both the princes had been breathing — iv. 4 

the wronged souls of butchered princes v. 3 

embassadors from foreign princes . . Henry I'm. i. 4 

like a most royal prince, restored.... ii. 1 

work us all from princes into pages ii. 2 

wisdom above all princes, in committing — ii. 2 

a prince most prudent — ii. 4 

reckonedonethe wisestprince, that.. — ii. 4 

the hearts of princes kiss obedience.. — iii. 1 

or else to foreign princes. Ego et Rex — iii. 2 

that han gs on princes' favours ! — i i i . 2 

that sweet aspect of princes, and their — iii. 2 

ever ranking himself with princes..., — iv. 2 

thanks, that gave us such a prince . . — v. 2 

if a prince may be beholden to — v. 2 

a pattern to all princes living with .. — v. 4 
the princes orgulous ., ..Troilus^ Crns. (prologue) 

brave Troilus! the prince of cliivalry! — i. 2 

princes, wliat grief hath set irep.).... — i. 3 

a herald, and a prince, do a fair message — i. 3 

a prince called Hector ' — i. 3 

kings, princes, lords! if there — i. 3 

fair prince, here is good broken — iii. 1 

now, princes, for the service -~ iii. 3 

give us a prince of blood, a son of — iii. 3 

let him be sent, great princes — iii. 3 

and, princes all, lay negligent — iii. 3 

is the prince there in person? — iv. 1 



PRINCE-the thanks this prince. '/'roi/us ,§■ C/ws. iv. 4 

the prince must think me tardy — iv. 4 

princes, enough, so please you — iv. 5 

welcome, princes all. So now, fair prince — v. I 

you arc moved, prince; let us depart v. 2 

what hath she done, prince, that .... — v. 2 

have with you, prince: mycourteous v. 2 

courage, princes! great Achilles — v. 5 

blaze forth the death of princes ..JuliusCiemr, ii. 2 

stricken by many princes iii. 1 

the greatest prince o' the world .Anlony^ClL'o. iv. 13 
of courts, of princes, of the tricks ..CymbMne, iii. 3 
to prince it, much beyond the trick.. — iii. 3 

abide it OTth a prince's courage — iii. 4 

yet bury him as a prince — iv. 2 

ny out, and show them i>rinces born.. — iv. 4 

breathe not where princes are — v. 5 

he was a prince. A most uncivil one — v. 5 
these gentle princes, for such and so. . — v. 5 

most worthy prince, as yours v. 5 

your servant, princes: good my lord — v. 5 

princes, that strive by factious Titus Aijdron. i. 1 

content tliee, prince; I will restore .. — i. 2 

this prince in justice seizeth but i. 2 

to jut upon a prince's right? — ii. 1 

rouse the prince; and ring a hunter's — ii. 2 
the wandering prince and Dido once — ii. 3 

princes of the Goths (rep. V. 2) v. 1 

made many princes thither frame. Pmc/es, i. (Gow.) 

you sometime famous princes — i. 1 

as every prince should do i. 1 

therefore instantly this prince must die — i. 1 

prince, pardon me, or strike me — i. 2 

such a dart in princes' frowns — i. 2 

and servant for a prince, who by ('cp.) i. 2 

bring arms to princes, and to subjects — i. 2 
how many worthy princes' bloods .. — i. 2 
a subject's shine, I a true prince .... — i. 2 

to fulfil his prince' desire — ii. (Gower) 

good prince, having all lost — ii. (Gower) 

to have bereft a prince of all his .... — ii. 1 
there are princes and knights come from — ii. 1 

for princes are a model — ii. 2 

so princes their renown, if not respected — ii. 2 
princes sit, like stars, about his throne — ii. 3 

and princes, not doing so — ii. 3 

princes, it is too late to talk of love . . — ii. 3 

the sea-tost prince appears to — iii. (Gower) 

that e'er was prince's child — iii. 1 

Tliaisa, this prince, the fair-betrothed — v. 3 

the princes, France and Bnrguudy Lear, i. 1 

thus Kent, O princes, bids you all adieu — i. 1 

the prince of darkness is a fine iii. 4 

a man, a prince, by him so benefited? .... — iv. 2 

'gainst this high illustrious prince — v. 3 

worthy prince, I know it well — v. 3 

the sentence of your moved prince Romeo ^Juliet, i. 1 

till the prince came, who parted i. 1 

more than prince of Cats ii. 4 

the prince expressly hath forbid this — iii. I 
this gentleman, the prince's near ally — iii. 1 

tlie prince will doom thee death — iii. 1 

I charge thee in the prince's name .. — iii. 1 

noble prince, I can discover all ... . iii. I 

ICol. Knt.l O jjrince, O cousin, husband — iii. 1 

as thou art true, for blood of ours .. iii. 1 

justice, which thou, prince, must give iii. I 

not Romeo, prince, he was Mercutio's — iii. 1 

what is the prince's doom? {rep.) .... iii. 3 

but the kind prince, taking thy part — iii. 3 
beg pardon of the prince, and call .. — iii. 3 
go, tell the prince; run to the Capulet's — v. 3 
m safety, till the prince come hither — v. 3 

lord Hamlet is a prince out of thy Hamlet, ii. 2 

led by a delicate and tender prince .... iv. 4 

good night, sweet prince; and flirfits of — v. 2 
tliat thou so many princes, at a sliot .. — v. 2 

PRIN"CE-LIKE— nothing pr\nce-\ike. Cyynbeline, v. 5 

PRINCELY— hid my princely trunk .. Tempest, i. 2 

princely [Knf. -precise] Angela?. Meas.forMeas. iii. I 

invest and cover in princely guards! ' iii. 1 

surely, a princely testimony Much Ado, iv. 1 

fall his princely feet before Love'sL. Lost, iv. 1 

towards any of these princely .... Mer. of Venice, i. 2 
this chamber with her princely.. Tamingof Sli. ii. 1 
less frequent to his princely .... Winier's Tale, iv. 1 
nor keep his princely heart from . ...KingJohn, i. 1 
thy priuceiy son, can in this book.... — ii. 2 
made proud with pure and princely. . — iv. 3 
too precious princely for a grave .... — iv. 3 
appellant to this priuceiy presence .^Richard 11. i. 1 
than was that young ana princely.. — ii. 1 

you debase your princely knee — iii. 3 

good word, nor princely favour — v. 6 

level with thy princely heart? 1 Henry 1 1', iii. 2 

hast lost thy princely privilege — iii. 2 

your praises with a princely tongue — v. 2 

my appetite wasnot princely got ..IHenryll'. ii. 2 
think thee a most princely hypocrite — ii. 2 
from our princely general, to know .. — iv. 1 

1 take your princely word for....,,.. — iv. 2 

and so sucks her princely eggs Henry V. i. 2 

princely [Co^ ivn^-graciousj favours.. ii, 2 

as in kindness; princely in both — iv. 3 

fair and princely cousin Katharine .. — v. 2 
which of this princely train callye..lH(!7iii/r/. ii. 2 

created princely duke of York — iii. 1 

the princely Charles of France iii. 3 

pardiin me, princely Henry, and the — iv. 1 
thou princely leader of our English — iv. 3 
beauty's princely majesty is such.... — v. 3 
gaineu thy daughter princely liberty — v. 3 

lipon thy princely warrant, I descend v. 3 

to be the princely bride of such a lord — v. 3 
no princely commendations to my king? — v. 3 
entertainment to my princely qiieen .iUenryl'l. i. 1 

the princely Warwick, and the Nevils iv. 1 

not to grace an awful princely sceptre — v. 1 
unto this princely duke of York ....ZHenryVI. i. 1 
our princely father ircp.) — jj. 1 



PRINCELY eagle's bird ZHmryn ii 1 

I mean, our princely father, duke .. — ii. 6 

gave shelter to the princely eagle — v! 2 

and kiss your princely nephew _ v' 7 

princely Buckingham {rep. ii. 1 ) . . Richard III. \. 3 

Plantagenet, that princely novice — i. 4 

when that our princely father York — i' 4 
and, princely peers, a happv time . . — ii' 1 
among thisprincely heap, if any here — ii I 
twomirrorsofliis princely semblance — ii 2 
unto his princely brother presently? — iii' 1 

are dear to princely Richard _ iii' 2 

for my sister and her princely sous . . — iii! 3 
\_Col. Knt.'] most forward in this princely — iii 4 
ray princely father, then had wars in — iii. 5 
not thy beauteousbrincely daughter! — iv! 4 
where is princely Richmond now? .. — iv. 5 

madam, he was most princely Henry VIII. iv. 2 

sends you his princely commendations — iv. 2 
of his great grace and princely care . . — v. 1 
all princely graces, that mould up .. — v. 4 
confirm ray princely brother's.. '/Voi;ms<S-C)M». iv. 5 
Menelaus tent, most princely Troilus — iv 5 

1 that now refused most princely gifts Coriolamis, i. 9 
have fallen into a princely hani.. An/onn^ Clen. v 2 
even then the princely blood flows. . Cmnbeline, iii. 3 

thesuitsof princely fellows ' _ iii. 4 

blazon'st in these two princely boys! iv' 2 

our foe was princely; and though you — iv 2 
■a-rviragus, j'our younger princely son — v5 
winch foreshowed our princely eagle — v 5 
princely shall be thy usage every way. Titus And. i! 2 

these words m princelv courtesy . i 2 

gracious in those princely eyes of thine — i! 2 

to have his princely paws pared — ii. 3 

I thought It princely charity to gneve.. Pericles, i. 2 

message unto princely Pericles _ i. 3 

to give her princely training _ jii 3 

T>J^rAT??WP°':*^"'--°°l''<^]P'i''e"tageflomCT*7irf.iii'.5 

PRINCEhbot pure white Mid. N.'sDream iii. 2 

his only heir a princess Tenipesl, i. 2 

servant's name, fair princess Twelfth Kighl, iii. 1 

therefore perpend, my princess — v. 1 

•vainly comes the admired princess. Love's L.Losl.'i. 1 

lairprincess, welcome()ep.) _ ii 1 

dear princess, were not his requests . . — ii' 1 
the princess comes to hunt here in .. — iii 1 
a pricket that the princess killed (?ep.) — iv. 2 

princess pierced and pricked _ iv. 2 (epit.) 

there is no certain princess that — iv 3 

tocongratulate the princess at her .. — v! 1 

present the princess, sweet chuck _ v. 1 

before the princess; I say, none so . . — v. 1 
what would you with the princess?.. — v. 2 
tlie princess bids you tell, how many — v 2 

where is the princess? _ y. 2 

and this, the princess did I give — v! 2 

fair princess, you have lost irep.).. As you Like il,i. 2 
iCol.Knt.^ the princess calls for you. . — i. 2 

the princess' gentlewoman, confesses — ii. 2 

if thou takest up the princess Winter'sTule ii 3 

and your fair princess, for so, I see .. — iv. 3 

the hands of your fresh princess _ iv! 3 

with his princess (lep.) _ •„. \ 

and yourfair princess, goddess! — v' 1 

she lifted the princess from the earth — v' 2 
princess, hearing of her mother's statue — v. 2 

and the princess, my sister y. 2 

holds hand with any princess KingJohn, ii! 2 

tlie best I had, a princess wrought it me iv. 1 

de princess. The princess is the better. Henry F. v. 2 
the rather, gentle princess, because I — v2 

teach you our princess English? _ y! 2 

say, gentle princess, would you not . . 1 Heniy VI. v. 3 
iCol.Knt.i she is a royal princess ..Richard III. iv. 4 

acquaint the princess with — iv. 4 

Katharine, the princess dowager ?..Henr!/f 7//. iv. 1 
from Ampthill, where the princess lay _ iv. I 
make way there for the princess ! . . . . _ v. 3 
an aged princess; many days shall .. — v. 4 

and fitting for a princess Antony^ Cleopatra, v. 2 

lie that hath missed the princess Cymbeline, i. I 

the gentleman, the queen and princess — i. 1 
be not angry, most mighty princess . . — i. 7 
alas, poor princess, thou divine Imogen — ii. 1 

shall think is good? The princess — ii. 3 

a lady, the princess of his country .. — v2 

the bracelet of the truest princess — v' 5 

as ot a most virtuous princess Pericles, ii! 5 

yet a princess to eqiial any single .. — iv. 4 
kiiowledge, she is tliy very princess — v. 1 

kind and dear princess! Lear iv. 7 

E5 JSSfS??^ Cfo^. A'n«.-princess] calUs you Like it, i". 2 

PRINCIPAL of all thedeer ZHenryVI. iii. 1 

a moiety of the principal .... Merch. of Venice, i v. 1 
give me my principal, and let me go — iv. 1 
sliall I not have barely my principal? — iv I 

the principal evils (rep.) As youLike it. ni. 2 

principal itself not much the worse . . All's IVell, i. 1 

but with her vile principal Winler'sTale, ii. I 

the very principals did seem to rend . . Pericles, iii. 2 
T,i?&^.°'^'" F'"'=''?"-li"''"3e known (fcp.) — iv. 6 
?5JS,9f?i|4Tl£s. Tliat head..4»;o,'!, fcCleo. iii. 11 
rRINCIPALITY, sovereign to.. TnoGen. of Ver. ii.4 
IRINCIPLE— these warlike pnnciples. All's iVelt, ii. 1 

niust needsinfer this principle KingJohn, iii. 1 

T.4 .^T^'?,'-,'."™"" principle I -koxM.. i Henry rv. iv. 3 

S« JS^9^' ?°,'. ^^ ^P'**' •«'""^° S- Juliet, i. 5 

I-KllNGb goot discretions with it Merry IVives, i. 1 

Tji^T'iiT?.! "'^ P'^^^^ '^"'1 ^''l' yesterday .. Henry V. v. I 

rltlJN I— any print of goodness Tempest, i. 2 

in print, for in print! found iLTwo Gcn.ofVer. ii. I 
he will print them out of doubt . . Merry IVives ii. 1 

and credulous to false prints Meas.forMeas. ii. 4 

wear the print ofit, and sigh MuchAdo.i. 1 

witli your print impressed Love's L. Lost, ii. I 

I will do it, sir, in print _ iii. 1 

we quarrel in print, by the hoo]i..AsyouLikeil, v. 4 

although the print be little Winter's Tale, ii. 3 

1 love a ballad in print, a' life — iv 3 



PIITNT your royal father off Winler's Tale, v. 1 

that leaves the print of blood KiugJohu, iv. 3 

■wear the print of his remembrance. . CymbcUue, ii. 3 

to print thy sorrows plain .. TiUnt Atidrotiicus, iv. 1 

PUINTED— is printed in her blood?.. Wuc/i.4do, iv. I 

this kiss be printed in thy hand. ,. .'IHenry yi. iii. 2 

PRINTING tlieir proud hoofs .. Henry r. i. (chorus) 

hnst cnvised printing to be used ....iHenryVI. iv. 7 

PRINTLESS— printless foot do cliase ..Tempest, v. I 

PRIORESS— of tlie priovess.. Measure for Measure, i. R 

PRIORIES, shall pay this K!ni,'Jolui, i. 1 

PRIORITY— priority, and place.. Troilus §- Cress, i. 3 

right worthy you priority Coriolanus, i. 1 

PRIORY— this is some priory.. Coin<;rfy o/ Errors, v. 1 

PRISCIAN a little scratclied Love'sL.Lost, v. 1 

PRISER— priser of tlie liumorous..j4syo« Like it, ii. 3 

PRISON— more than a prison Tempest, 1. 2 

through my prison once n day behold. . — i. 2 
space enough have I in such a prison . . — i. 2 
to close prison lie commanded. TwoGen. ofVer. iii. 1 

peace in this prison I Twelfth Night, iv. 2 

and carried to prison (rep.) Meas.forMeas. i. 'i 

Claudio to prison! 'tis not so — i. 2 

led by the provost to prison — i. 2 

bear me to prison, where I am — i. 3 

not to he weary with you, lie's in prison — i. 5 
the afflicted spirits here in the prison — ii. 3 

take him to prison, officer — iii. 2 

art going to prison, Pompey? — iii. 2 

commend me to the prison — iii. 2 

away with lier to prison (j-ep.) — iii. 2 

here is in our prison a common — iv. 2 

borne himself penitently in prison?.. — iv. 2 
evermore had tlie liberty of the prison — iv. 2 

here in the prison, fatlier, there — iv. 3 

an officer I to prison with her — v. 1 

I saw them at the prison — v. 1 

away with him to prison (.rep.) — v. 1 

I met you at the prison — v. 1 

one in the prison, tliat should — v. 1 

break the locks of prison gates.. Mid. N.'s Dream, i. 2 

thou shalt to prison Love'sL. Lost, i. 2 

plodding prisons up the nimble — iv. 3 

to prison with her (rep.) All's Well, v. 3 

he shall not go to prison (lep.) .. Taming of Sh. v. 1 

away with lier to prison lVinler'sTale,\\. 1 

your mistress has deserved prison.. ., — ii. 1 

the keeper of the prison, call to — ii. 2 

what dost thou tlien in prison? — ii. 2 

to prison till it come Comedy of EiTors, iv. 1 

but that Adam, that keeps tlie prison — iv. 3 
the vile prison of afflicted breath . . King John, iii. 4 
so I were out of prison, and kept .... — iv. 1 

this is tlie prison ; what is he — iv. 3 

in vaults and prisons; and to thrill.. — v. 2 
how I may compare this prison .... Richard II. v. 5 

world, my ragged prison walls — v. 5 

had the most of tliemout of prison.! Henri///', iv. 2 

send to prison the immediate 2 Henry IT. v. i 

base durance, and contagious prison — v. 6 
our wretches fettered in our prisons . . Henry I', i. 2 

in prison hast thou spent I Henry FI. ii- 5 

hell our prison is, but tell me — iv. 7 

away witlithem to prison 'iHettryl'I. i. 3 

from hence to prison back again .... — ii. 3 

I long to see my prison — ii. 4 

moreover, thou ha-st put them in prison — iv. 7 
yield myself to prison willingly .... — iv. 9 

live in prison all my days? ZHenryFI. i. 3 

my sours palace is become a prison — ii. I 

I had rather lie in prison — iii. 2 

thou bloody prison, fatal Richard III. iii. 3 

and this man out of prison? HenryVIII. i. 2 

whom he redeemed from prison . . Timon ofAlh. iii. 3 

let prisons swallow them, debts — iv. 3 

whom we have put in prison Coriolanus, iv. 6 

make not your thoughts your prisons. ^n^(5'C/eo. v.2 
tliough forfeiters you cast in prison. Cymleline, iii. 2 

a prison for a debtor, that not — iii. 3 

this earthly prison of their bones.. Til-us Andron. i. 2 
drag them from the pit unto the prison — ii. 4 
beats in this hollow prison of my flesh — iii. 2 

come, let's away to prison ^ Lear, v. 3 

in a walled prison, packs and sects of — v. 3 

go, follow them to prison: one step I have — v. 3 
to hang Cordelia in the prison, and to lay — v. 3 
shut up in prison, kept without.. flomeo ^Juliet, i. 2 
to prison, eyes! ne'er look on liberty! — iii. 2 

to prison hither? Prison (rep.) Hamlet, ii. 2 

to me it is a prison. Why, then your — ii. 2 

an anchor's cheer in prison be my scope — iii. 2 
to prison; till lit time of law Othello, \. 2 

PRISONED— doth the prisoned bird.Cymbeline, iii. 3 

PRISONERS in the lime-grove Tempest, v. 1 

she holds them prisoners stiU. .TiroGen.of I'er. ii. 4 
passing on the prisoner's life ... . Meas.forMeas. ii. 1 
to be a judge, and what a prisoner .. — ii. 2 
and the prisoner the very deljt of — iii. 2 

1 am going to visit the prisoner .... — iii. 2 
one that is a prisoner nine years old — iv. 2 

how do you find the prisoner? — iv. 3 

this is another prisoner, that I saved — v. 1 
and take her hearing prisoner Much Ado, i. 1 

fo, I discharge thee of thy prisoner .. — v. 1 
would take desire prisoner Lsve'sL.Lost, i. 2 

it is not for prisoners to be too — i. 2 

I am sure, you are not prieoner.. As you Like it, iii. 2 
as prisoners to her womanly. . Taming ofSfircw, v. 2 

to keep you as a prisoner IVinter's Tale, i. 2 

how say you? my prisoner? — i. 2 

to be your prisoner, should import .. — i. 2 

my poor prisoner, I am innocent as you — ii. 2 
the child was prisoner to the womb.. — ii. 2 

produce the prisoner. It is his — iii. 2 

I am thy prisoner; wilt thou .. Comedy of Err. iv. 4 
he is my prisoner; if I let him go .. — iv. 4 

that takes tlie reason prisoner? Macbeth, i. :i 

Artiiur ta'en prisoner? divers dear..KmffJoAn, iii. 4 
because my poor child is a prisoner — iii. 4 

grieved, that Aithur is hie prisoner? — iii. 4 



PRISONER to the palsy, chastise. . . . Richard II. ii. 3 
doomed a prisoner by proud Bolingbroke — v. 1 

of prisoners. Hotspur took \HenryIV. i. 1 

the prisoners, which he in this i. 1 

those prisoners in your highness' name — i. 3 

I did deny no prisoners i. 3 

demanded my prisoners, |n your .... — i, 3 

yet he doth deny his prisoners — i. 3 

send me your prisoners with the — i. 3 

he will, forsoothj have all my prisoners — i. 3 
that are your prisoners,- I'll keep . . — i. 3 

those prisoners you shall keep — i. 3 

once more to your Soottisli prisoners — i. 3 
of prisoners' ransom, and of soldiers slain — ii. 3 
unless thou yield thee as my prisoner — v. 3 

the hulk sir John is prisoner iHenrylV.i. 1 

Worcester too soon ta'en prisoner .... — i. 1 

Edward's fame with prisoner kings Henry V.i.2 

into Rouen bring him our prisoner . . — iii. .5 
with me for twenty English prisoners — iii. 7 

every soldier kill his prisoners — iv. 6 

to cut his prisoner's throat — iv. 7 

what prisoners of good sort are taken — iv. 8 
like prisoners wildly overgrown with — v.2 
is took prisoner, and lord Scales .. ..\ Henry VI. i. 1 
how wert thou handled, being prisoner? — i. 4 
the duke of Bedford had a prisoner .. — i. 4 
art thou prisoner. Prisoner! to whom? — ii. 3 
was he not in England prisoner? .... — iii. 3 
five hundred prisoners of esteem .... — iii. 4 
tliere surprised, and taken prisoners — iv. 1 
to know what prisoners thou hast ta'en — iv. 7 
for prisoners ask'st thou? hell our .. — iv. 7 
thou wilt, thou art my prisoner .... — v. 3 
keeping them prisoners underneath her — v. 3 

is she not here thy prisoner? — v. 3 

I perceive, I am tliy prisoner — v. 3 

see, thy daughter prisoner. To whom? — v. 3 
lord cardinal, he is your prisoner ..iHenryVl. iii. 1 
master, this prisoner freely give I thee — iv. 1 

for thy prisoner is a prince — i v. 1 

open the gaols, and let out the prisoners — iv. 3 
prisoner? upon mine honour, he is prisoner— v. 1 
your prisoner to your palace gate . .SHenry VI. iii. 2 
for he is taken prisoner; either betrayed — iv. 4 
my brother, is prisoner to the bishop — iv. f> 

king is Edward's prisoner — v. 1 

is prisoner to the foe; his state — v. 4 

noble lord, as prisoners must Richard III. i. 1 

sir Thomas Vaughau prisoners — ii. 4 

then was I going prisoner to the Tower — iii. 2 

come, bring forth the prisoners — iii. 3 

stayed me a prisoner in my chamber. Henry VIII. 1. 1 
whole time I was my cliamber's prisoner — i. 1 
ceremony of bringing back the prisoner — ii. 1 

conveyed to the "Tower a prisoner — v.2 

you have a Trojan prisoner . . Troilus ^Cress. iii. 3 
hath Doreus prisoner: and stands .... — v. 5 
and takes his valour prisoner .Timon of Athens, iii. 5 

I saw him prisoner; but then Coriolanus, i. 9 

Parthia did I take thee prisoner ..JuliusCaisar, v. 3 
a noble prisoner! Room, ho! tell Antony — v. 4 
you are my prisoner, but j'our gaoler. Ci/mJidme, i. 2 
I'll place it upon this fairest prisoner — i. 2 

takes prisoner the wild motion of ... . — i. 7 

bring your prisoner to the king — v. 4 

have threatened our prisoners with .. — v. 5 
though thou do demand a prisoner .. — v. 5 
give us the proudest prisoner .TitusAndronicus, i. 2 
my sword, my chariot, and my prisoners — i. 2 

are you prisoner to an emperor — i. 2 

ransomless here we set our prisoners free — i. 2 
hath prisoner held, fettered in amorous — ii. 1 
what, a prisoner? I am even the natural, tear, iv. 6 
then am I the prisoner, and his bed — iv. 6 (let.) 

my soldiers, prisoners, patrimony — v. 3 

a poor prisoner in his twisted gyves. Romeo ^- Jul. ii. 2 

takes prisoner Pyrrhus' ear Hamlet, ii. 2 

so I alone became their prisoner — iv. 6 (letter) 

you shall close prisoner rest Othello, v. 2 

PRiSON-HOUSE, I could a tale Hainlet, i. 5 

PRISONMENT. OI sir, when he .. AVn-Jo/in, iii. 4 

PRISONNIER; neantmoina Henry K iv. 4 

PRISTINE wars of the Romans — iii. 2 

to a sound and pristine health Macbeth, v. 3 

PRIVAC Y-fle 1 privacy? fie ! .... Merry Hires, iv. 5 

my privacy I have strong (rep.). Troilus (?• Cress, iii. 3 

PRIVATE wound is deepest.. TwoGen.of Verona, v. 4 

let me enjoy my private TwelfthKig/U, iii. 4 

he is a devil in private brawl — iii. 4 

in private brabble did we — v. 1 

it was by private message. . Measurc.forMeasure, v. 1 
that should by private order else have — v. 1 

in private? if it please you Much Ado, iii. 2 

I have some private schooling for.. Mid. N.'t Dr. i. 1 

in private then. I am best Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

as much in private, and I'll bid adieu — v. 2 

one word in private with you — v.2 

therein tax any private party? ..Asyou Like it, ii. 7 

but in respect that it is private — iii. 2 

desires some private speech with you .4ll'slVell, ii. 5 
duke (for private quarrel 'twixt.. TamingofSh. iv. 2 

Imply, in private Comedy nf Errors, v. 1 

whose private with me, of the King John, iv. 3 

nor England's private wrongs Richard II. ii. I 

with some few private friends — iii. 3 

[Co(. Knf.J some private conference..! //cnri//F. iii. 2 
cannot put him to a private soldier .2H<;Hri,ir. iii. 2 
I sliall be sent for in private to him . . — v. 5 
that a poor and private displeasure . .Henry V. iv. I 

that private men enjoy? (?e/).) — iv. 1 

in private will I talk with thee \HenryVI. i. 2 

your private grudge, my lord of York — ' iv. 1 

let not your private discord — iv. 4 

privilfge of a private man? — v. 4 

ill this private plot, be we the first ..iHenry VI. ii. 2 

myself will lead a private life 3 Henry VI. iv. 6 

no man shall have private Richard III. i. 1 i 

takes notice of the private difference. Henry VlII.i.^ I 
let's think in private more — ii. 1 



PRIVATE, full of sad thoughts .... Henry VI II. ii. 2 
thrust yourselves into my private.. .. — ii. 2 

but an hour of private conference.. .. ii. 2 

first, I began in private with you .... — ii. 4 
to withdraw into your private chamber — iii. 1 

from any private malice in his end .. iii. 2 

both in his private conscience — v.2 

being but a private man again — v. 2 

for ray privale part Troilus ^ Cressida, ii. 2 

and, with private soul, did in great .. — iv. 5 
should fall for private faults in. Timon of Athens, v. 5 
wiiich shall be yours in private .... Coriolanus, ii. 3 

which he could show in private — ii. 3 

regard for his private friends (rep, v. 3) — v. 1 
never admitted a private whisper.... — v. 3 
we'll hear naught from Rome in private — v. 3 
but for your private satisfaction ..Julius Ccesar, ii. 2 
what private griefs they have, alas . . — ii. 2 
Ills private arbours, and new-planted — iii. 2 
not a time for private 6tomaching./(n(on!/ (J- C/eo.ii. 2 

a private man in Athens — iii. 10 

in private, if you please to give me . . Cymbeline, v. 5 
controller of our private steps! . . Titus Andron. ii. 3 
when I have walked like a private man — iv. 4 
partakes her private actions to your .... Pericles, i. 1 

public war, or private treason — i. 2 

see, not a man in iirivate conference .... — ii. 4 
come, bring me to some private place .... — iv. 6 

let me ask you one word in private Lear, iii. 4 

and private in his chamber pens.Tiomeo ^ Juliet, i. 1 
withdraw into some private place. ... — iii. I 

given private time to you Hamlet, i. 3 

'faith, her privates we — ii. 2 

manage priviite and domestic quarrel ..Othello, ii. 3 

to incur a private check — iii. 3 

what, to kiss in private? — iv. 1 

PRIVATELY, she would sooner . . Meas. .for Meas. v. 1 

speak it privately, go Merchant of Venice, ii. 4 

we'll pass the business privately . Taming of Sh. iv. 4 
she hath privately, twice or thrice. Winter' sTate, v. 2 

he hears naught privately Troilus 4- Crrsnda, i. 3 

be it as you shall privately determine . . Othello, i. 3 

PRIVILEGE for thy departure . TwoGen. ofVer. iii. I 
you nuns no further privileges . . Meas. for Meas. i. h 
under privilege of age, to brag what..il/i(c/i^(/o, v. I 
beg the ancient privilege of Aihens. Mid. N.'sDr. i. 1 
your virtue is my privilege for that. . — ii. 2 
a privilege, never to see me more — iii. 2 

Erivilege I have with the parents. Lokc'sL. Lost, iv. 2 
adst thou not the privilege of All'sWell, ii. 3 

need but plead your honourable privilege — iv. 5 
the child-bed privilege denied . . Winter'sTale, iii. 2 
and it shall i?rivilege him from . . Comedy of Err. v. 1 

do bear their privilege on earth King John, i. 1 

sir, sir, impatience hath his privilege — iv. 3 

should nothing privilege him Richard II. i. 1 

presuming on an ague's privilege, dar'st — ii. 1 

only they, hath privilege to live — ii. 1 

hast lost thy princely privilege iHenry IV. iii. 2 

an adopted name of privilege — v.2 

bears him on the place's privilege . . 1 Henry VI. ii. 4 
should ever get the privilege of me .. — iii. 1 
warranteth by law to be thy privilege — v. 4 

but privilege of a private man? — v. 4 

infringe the holy privilege of blessed. iJicAard /I/.iii.l 
you break no privilege nor charter there — iii. 1 
men's privilege of speaking first. Troilus S,- Cress.iii.2 
shall lift up their rotten privilege ..Coriolanus, i. 10 
all bond and privilege ot nature, break! — v. 3 
there's the privilege your hevmty.TilusAndron. iv. 2 
nor honour shall shape privilege .... — iv. 4 

yes, sir; but anger has a [irivilege Lear, ii. 2 

it is {_Col. Knt.-my privilege] tlie privilege — v. 3 

PRIVILEGED place 1 Henry VI. i. 3 

am a king, and privileged to 3peak..3Hfn7!/^/. ii. 2 
the laws of war you are privileged. . Hem y VIII. i. 4 

he is a privileged man Troilus ^ Cressida, ii. 3 

let me be privileged bv my place — iv. 4 

PRIVIIjEGIO ad imprimendum.. rajniiij-o/'S/i. iv. 4 
they may, cum privilegio. wear .... Henry VIII. i. 3 

PRIVILY— I'll privily away Meas. .for Meas. i. 1 

and tell him privily of our intent ..iHenri/VI. i. 2 

privily deals with our cardinal Henry VIII. i. 1 

seek him, and privily relieve him Lear, iii. 3 

PRIVITY 0' the king HenryVIII. i. 1 

PRIVY-made privy to the plot . Two Gen. ofVer. iii. 1 
comes to the privy coffer of. Merchant of Venice, iv. 1 
privy to this their late escape (rep.). Winter's Tule,ii\ 

told me what privy marks I ComedyofErr. iii. 2 

his face is Lucifer's privy kitchen ..iHenry IV. ii. 4 

of your highness' privy council iHenry VI. ii. I 

were not privy to those faults — iii. 1 

yet the king not privy to my drift . .ZHenryVI. i. 2 
to take some privy order to di:a.vf..Rii:lmrd III. iii. 5 

ready i' the privy chamber Henry VIII. i. 4 

and one, already of the privy council ■ — iv. 1 
sheets are privy to your wishes . . Antony ^ Cleo. i. 2 
to the marriage her nurse is privy .Romeo ^Jul. v. 3 
if thou art privy to thy country's fate . . Hamlet, i. 1 

PRIZ K above my dukedom Tempest, i . 2 

too light winning make my prize light — i. 2 

do love, rrize, honour you — iii. 1 

for the prize I'll bring thee to — iv. 1 

a prize, a prize, a prize'. ....Two Gen. of Verona, v. 4 

she is my i)rize, or ocean Merry Wives, ii. 2 

the world, prizes not quantity .. Twelfth Kighi, ii. 4 
that what we have we prize hot ....Much Ado, iv. I 

prize you yourselves Lore'sL.Lost, v. 2 

is that my prize? Merchant of Venice, ii. 9 

one of two contending in a prize .... — iii. 2 
I'll never wrestle for prize more ..As you Like it, i. I 
'tis deeds must win the prize. . Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 
life, I prize it as I weigh (rep.) .. Winter'sTale, iii, 2 
the thought of it; a prize! a prize! .. — iv. 2 
I Icnow, she prizes not such trifles.. .. — iv. 3 
would not prize them, without her love — iv. 3 

a gallant prize? ha, cousin \HenryIV.i.\ 

outfaced you from your prize — ii. 4 

shall bring this prize in very eaiiXj. IHenry I V. iii. I 
sender, doth he prize you at Hemy V.n.i 



PRI 



[ 598 ] 

PROCE ED-hear now liow I did proceed.?Hamie(, v. 2 
beseccli you, proceed to the affairs of ..Othello, i. 3 
proceed you in your tears:— concerning.. — iv. I 
but tlmt I did proceed upon just grounds — v. 2 

PROCEEDED to you Measure for Measure, i. 1 

in-occeded well, to stop all good .. Love's L.Losl, i. 1 

proceeded furtlier; cut me off 1 Henry I r. i v. 3 

graces both Imve well proceeded . . Richard III. iii. 5 
how far I have proceeded, or how. .Henri/ fill. "• 4 
by particular consent proceeded...... — _ii. 4 

first swath, proceeded the sweet.. TlmonofAth. iv. 3 

tell you what hath proceeded JuliusC<esar, i. 2 

when I struck him, have thus proceeded — iii. 1 
calm and gentle I proceeded iliW. Antony Sf Cleo. v. 1 

having thus far proceeded Cymheline, i. 6 

having proceeded but by both your wills — ii. 4 
why you proceeded not against these.. Hamlc(, iv. 7 

PROCEEDERS-quiek proceeders. TWrnm? o/ S/i. iv. 1 

PROCEEDING-dull proceeding. TwoGen. of Ver. ii. 6 
an engine fit for my proceeding? .... — iii. 1 
afterward determine our proceedings — iii. 2 
and to these violent proceedings.. il/erryfTu'es, iii. 2 
straitness of his proceeding .... Meas.for Meas. iii. 2 

and dull to all iwoeeedings — iv. 4 

to stop all good proceeding Love's L. Loslj i. 1 

appears by manifest ptocenHng.Mer. of Venice, iv. 1 
haste as your own good proceeding ..All's yfell, ii. 4 
on your j ust proceeding, I'll keep off — v. 3 

dotn push on this proceeding IV inter's Tale,\\.\ 

a false creation, proceeding from the.. Macbeth, ii. 1 
merciless proceeding by these French. 7Cmg-Jo/i»,ii. 1 
to curse the fair proceedings of this day — iii. 1 
with shame of your proceedings .... — iv. I 

the world to your proceedings? — iv. 2 

unurg-ed faith to your proceedings .. — v. 2 
and lay open all our proceedings ..1 Henry If, ii. 2 
and mere dislike of our proceedings — iv. 1 

is this proceeding just and ^HenrylV. iv. 2 

I like this fair proceeding of the king's — v. 5 

faults, proceeding on distemper Henry V. ii. 2 

of benefit proceeding from oiu- king. 1 Henry VI. v. 4 

by our proceeding in hostility — v. 4 

what plain proceedings are more ..iHenryVI. ii. 2 
a feigned friend to our proceedings.SHenji/ VI. iv. 2 
all your just proceedings in this ..Richard III. iii. 5 

of good luck to my proceeding — iv. 4 

you further in the proceeding Henry VIII. i. 2 

of equal friendship and proceeding .. — ii. 4 
contrary proceedings are all unfolded — iii. 2 
sirs, and ray proceedings eye. Troilus ^ Cressida, v. 7 
inform them of our proceedings .... Coriolanus, ii. 2 
love to your proceeding bids vaQ.. Julius Ccesar, ii. 2 
testimony of her foul proceedings .. Titus And, v. 3 
to such proceeding who ever but his ..Pericles, iv. 4 
necessity will call discreet proceeding .... Lear, i. 4 

ancient'of war on our proceedings — v. 1 

in yoiu' hates' proceeding Romeo Sf Juliet, iii. 1 

in patience our proceeding be Hamlet, \. 1 

that in this foul proceeding, hath ttwis.. Othello, i. 3 
for such proceeding 1 am charged withal — i. 3 

PROCESS-tlie needless pi-ocess by..Meas.forMeas. v. 1 
long process could not arbitrate . . . Love's L. Lost, v. 2 
tell her the process of Antonio's end Mer.of Ven. iv. 1 
no other advantage in the process .... Alt's Well, i. 1 
by law and process of great nature. Winter's Tale, ii. 2 
tediousness and process of my travel. Richard //. ii. 3 

finish the process of his sandy 1 Henry VI. iv. 2 

shalt tell the process of their death Richard III. iv. 3 
lest that the process of thy kindness — iv. 4 
after this process, to give her the ..HenryVIII. ii. 3 

course and process ot this time — ii. 4 

the process of your speech Troilus^ Cress, iv. 1 

proceed by process; lest parties ....Coriolanus, iii. I 
Where's Fulvia's process? C!esa.v's..4nlony ^Cleo.i. 1 

is by a forged process of my death Hamlet, i. 6 

to hear the process; I'll v/arrant — iii. 3 

may'st not coldly set our sovereign process — iv. 3 
to speak, such was the process Othello, i. 3 

PROCESSION— go we in procession .. Henry V. iv. 8 
in procession, sing her endless praise. 1 Henrj/ VI. i. 6 
liere come the townsmen on procession. 2Henr VI. ii. 1 

PROCESS-SERVER, a baililF tlien Winter'sTale, iv. 2 

PROCLAIM— proclaim a matter Tempest, ii. 1 

well, I will proclaim myself yrhsit.Mern/ Wires, iii. 5 

as those cheek-roses proclaim Meas.forMcas. i. h 

black masks proclaim and enshield — ii. 4 

I will proclaim thee, Angelo — ii. 4 

why should we proclaim it in an hour — iv. 4 
her tender shame will not proclaim . . — iv. 4 
would fain proclaim favours that keep — v. 1 
proclaim it, provost, romid about .... — v. I 
large tongue proclaims you for. . . . Love'sL. Lost, v. 2 
that proclaim myself against the .... All's Well, ii. 1 
yes, and proclaim the banns, . Taming of Shrew, iii. 2 
whom I proclaim a man of truth. Winter's Tale, iii. 2 
hottest day prognostication proclaims — iv. 3 
otlier evidences, proclaim her, with all — v. 2 
once again proclaim it publicly. .Co»ie<(y of Err. v. 1 
and to proclaim Arthur of Bretagne .Aui^'Jo/m, ii. 2 

did king Richard proclaim my 1 Henry IV. i. 3 

rather proclaim it, Westmoreland.... Hc'iri/r. iv. 3 
then I will proclaim young Henry.. .IHeiDi/rAi, 1 
significants proclaim your thoughts — ii. 4 
what miracle dost thou proclaim? ..iHenryVI. ii. 1 
proclaim them traitors that are up with — iv. 2 
Jack Cade proclaims himself in — — iv. 4 
proclaims him king, and many &y..ZHenryVI. ii. 2 
if you'll not here proclaim yourself. . — iv. 7 
we will proclaim you out of hand. ... — iv. 7 
once again proclaim us king of England — iv, 8 
I here proclaim myself thy mortal foe — v. 1 
proclaim a pardon to the soldiers ..Richard III. v. 4 
or proclaim, there's difference in no.HenryVIll. i. 1 
the Grecians begin to proclaim.. TroiVtis^-Cress. v. 4 
I do proclaim one honest man.... Timonuf.ith. iv. 3 
run lience, proclaim, cry it tCbowH.JuliusCccsar, iii. 1 
I will proclaim my name about the field — v. 4 
hint which my despair proclaims/l;i(ony<5- Cico. iii. 9 
and to proclaim it civilly, were like — iii. 1 1 
hath sent me to proclaim the truth. . — iv. 12 



TRO 



■pRIZE, fit for the devil's graeel XHcnryVI. v. 

bring forth the soldiers of our prize. tHenryVI. iv. 

i«i laying the prize aboai'd — iv. 

my lord, a prize, a prize I — iv. 

it is war's prize to take all SHenryVI. i. 

methinks, tis prize enough to be his son — ii. 

made prize and purchase of his ,. Richard III. iii. 

men prize the thing ungained ..Troilus 4Cress.i. 

he brought home noble prize — Jj. 

favour, prizes of accident as oft — iii. 

he is ray prize: I will not look upon — v. 

but I do prize it at my love Timon nf Athens, y. 

that do prize their hours at Coriola7ius,\. 

whose loves I prize as the dead — iii. 

a prize no less in worth JulimCcesar, v. 

to make prize with vou of ..Antony ^- Cleopatra^v . 

then had my prize been less Cymbeline, iii. 

you have played your prize ,, Titus Andronicus, i. 

a prize! a prize! llalf-part, mates Pericles, iv. 

and prize me at her worth Lear, i. 

a proclaimed prize 1 most happy I — i\'. 

wicked prize itself buvs out the law ..Hamlet, iii. 

prove lawful prize, he's made for ever . . Othello, i. 

or his good nature prizes the virtue that — ii. 

to see how he prizes the foolish woman . . — iv. 
PRIZED my lady's favour TvelfthNight,\\. 

a wit, as she is prized to have Much Ado, iii. 

the touches dearest prized. /is you Like it, iii. 2 (ver, 

which you prized riclier than . . Troilus 4^ Cress, ii. 

to lier own worth she shall be prized — iv. 

are prized by their masters Timon of Athens, i. 

than he hath hereto prized them at. Coriolanus, ii. 

witli Antonius prized so slight? .. Atitony ffCleo. i. 

and said, slie prized it once Cymbeline, ii. 

I'KIZEK— as in the prizer Troilus ^ Cressida, ii. 

PRIZEST— prizest him'foreme? XHenryVI. i. 

PKOB ABLE— shall seem probable .... Tempest, v. 

and very probable, that eyes ,...As you Like it, iii. 

may make it probable need Mi's Well, ii. 

two or tliree probable lies — iii. 

of all these signs were probable iHenryVI. iii. 

how probable, I do not know Coriolanus, iv. 

most probable, that so she died.. /iiiton!/<S-Meo. v. 

it may be probable, she lost it Cymbeline, ii. 

vet is't not probable to come alone . . — iv. 

'tis probable, and palpable to thinking. . Othello, i. 
PROBAL— and Iionest, probal to thinking — ii. 
PROBATION— under probation.. 7'Mie;//AA%/»(, ii. , 

I, in iirobation of a sisterhood ..Meas. for Meas. v. 

with his oath, and all probation — v. 

passed in probation with you Macbeth, iii. 

for more probation, I can with ease.. Cymbeline, v. 

this present object made probation .... Hamlet, i. 

that the probation bear no hinge Othello, iii. : 

PROCEED— no more, proceed {rep.) .. Tempest, iii. 

that 1 thus suddenly proceed. . Two Gen. of Ver. i. : 

I was much unwilling to proceed in — ii. 

well ; proceed — iii. 

very well, sir; proceed Merry Wives, ii. 1 

that I may proceed in ray speech. Twelfth Night, i. ; 

from thy fate, it should proceed. ;l/eas./ori)/ras. iii. 

we shall proceed with Angelo — iv. I 

before your time. Proceed ir<!p.) .... — v.: 

heard more, proceed accordingly ..Much Ado, iii. ; 

part I am for, and proceed (.rep.) ..Mid.N.'sDr. i. ; 

proceed, moon — v. 

§-oceed, sweet Cupid Love'sL. Lost, iv. : 
some authority how to proceed — iv. ; 

is dismayed: proceed, good Alexander — v.: 
imnugn you, as you do proceed.. Mer.of Venice, iv. 
well-deserving pillar, proceed to judgment — iv. 
audience, good madam. Proceed.. yls7/o«L!7i:e!7,iii.: 
proceed, proceed; I'll give her ij-ep. v. 4) _ iii. ; 

when virtuous things proceed All'sWell, ii. : 

what in time proceeds, may token — iv. : 

proceed in practice with my.. Taming of Shrew, ii. 
J said, a gown. Proceed. With a small — iv. : 

since we so openly proceed Winter's Tale, iii. ! 

therefore, proceed; l)ut yet heai- this — iii.! 
tlic sessions shall jiroceed; this is mere — iii. 

proceed; no foot shall stir — v.: 

liroceed, Solinus, to procure my. .Cotnedy of Err. i. 
we will proceed no further in this .... .Macbeth, i. 
orderly proceed to swear him in .... Richard II, i. 
80 we shall proceed without suspicion — iv. 

and it proceeds from policy 2 Henry I V. iv. 

wc pray you to proceed; and justly . . Henry V. i. 
if thou proceed in this thy insolence.! Henry VI. i. 
after Humphrey, how he proceeds ..'iHenryVI. i. 
I pray you all, proceed no straighter — iii. 
them heart and courage to proceed. . — iv. 
I think, proceeds from wayward . . Richard III. i. 

where notliing can proceed — iii. 

proceed thus rashly in the villain's. . — iii. 

lady mine, proceed (rep.) Henry VIII. i. 

from this lady may proceed a gem .. — ii 
be't so:— Proceed. Say, Henry king of — ii. 
slionld proceed to put me oft', and take — ii. 

fit this royal session do proceed — ii. 

it fits we thus proceed, or else no .... — v. 
a privileged man; proceed .. Troilus ^Cressida, ii. 

before we proceed any further Coriolanus, i. 

would you proceed especially against — i. 
but it proceeds, or comes, from them — i. 
and know how we proceed. Is it not — i. 
proceed, Cominius. I shall lack voice — ii. 
and temperately proceed to what you — iii. 

proceed by process; lest parties — iii. 

we'll proceed ill our first way — iii. 

we must proceed, as we do find — y. 

proceed directly. Directly fuUus Ccesar, iii. 

and so proceed accordingly .... Antony ff Cleo. iii. 

find you need it not. Proceed Cymbeline, ii. 

liis absence proceed by s\vallowing that — iii. 

her lips in opening it. Proceed — v. 

whence this same device proceeds. 2't7us/4nrf/(m,iy. 

we might proceed to cancel of Pericles, '\. 

if you violently proceed against him Lear, i. 

and proceed i' the sway of your own will — iv. 
so proceed you. 'Fore God, my lord. . . . Hamlet, ii. 



PROCLAIMS how she esteemed Cymbeline, i. 1 

proclaim our honours, lords, with Titus And. 1. t 

sooth here does proclaim a peace Pericles, i. 2 

that may proclaim them louder — i. 4 

proclaims you to be a creature of sale. . — iv. 6 
proclaim that I can sing, weave, sew .. — iv. 6 

by his authority I will proclaim it Lear, ii. 1 

warped looks proclaim what store her .... — iii. 6 

the apparel oft proclaims the man Hamlet, i. 3 

proclaim no shame, when the compulsive — iii. i 

that's calm, proclaims me bastard — iv. 5 

I here proclaim was madness — v. 2 

poison iiis delight, proclaim him in the.. Othello, i. 1 

PROCLAIMED: betimes.. ;»/rasiire /or Measure, iv. 4 
and hath this been proclaimed? .. Love'sL. Lost, i. 1 
contrary to thy established proclaimed — i. 1 (let.) 
it was proclaimed a year's imprisonment — i. i 
it was proclaimed damosel (7-ep.) — i. I 

fiublished and proclaimed it openly. 7"a;n.o/S/i. iv. 2 
leard it else proclaimed about — iv. 2 

the by-gone day proclaimed Winter's Tale, i. 2 

on every post proclaimed a strumpet .. — iii. 2 
his tears proclaimed his parting with her — v. 1 
not proclaimed Northumberland ... Richard II. ii. 2 
your lordship was proclaimed traitor — ii. 3 
was he not proclaimed by Richard . . 1 HeniylV. i. 3 
articulated, proclaimed at market-crosses — v. 1 

joined with an enemy proclaimed Henry V. ii. 2 

and be it death proclaimed thro' our host — iv. 8 
truce shall be proclaimed in France. 1 Henry VI. v. 4 

I proclaimed a coward through illennil'I. iv. 1 

shalt tliou be proclaimed in every ..'iHennjVI. ii. I 
Edward shall be here proclaimed.. .. — iv. 7 

well-advised friend proclaimed Richard III. iv. 4 

art proclaimed a fool, I think .. Troilus f/- Cress, ii. 1 
is proclaimed througli all our host. ... — ii. 1 

his sons be there proclaimed Antony^- Cleo. iii. (j 

I heard myself proclaimed ; and, by the. . Lear, ii. 3 

a proclaimed prize! most happy! — iv. 6 

than I have here proclaimed tliee — v. 3 

that presently they have proclaimed ..Hamlet, ii. 2 
was his pleasure should be proclaimed. . Othello, ii. 2 
PROCLAIMETH, as he comes along.2 Henry VI. iv. 9 
PROCLAMATION that you are Two Gen. of Ver. iii. 1 
according to our proclamation, gone? — iii. 2 
with the proclamation irep.) Meas.forMeas. i. 2 

tive him a better proclamation — iii. 2 
id you hear the proclamation? . .Love'sL, Lost, i. 1 
find it out by proclamation .... Mer. of Venice, iv. I 
against the proclamationof thy passion. ,4H's»re/(,i. 3 
these proclamations, so forcing .. Winter'sTale, iii. I 

I heard the proclamation 1 Henry I V. i. 3 

but to make open proclamation .... 1 Henry VI. i. 3 

soldier, make thou proclamation 3 Henry VI. iv. 7 

is proclamation made, tliat, who finds — v. 5 
such proclamation hath been made Richardlll. iv. 4 
but the new proclamation that's. . . . Henry VIII. i. 3 
learn rae the proclamation {rep.) Troilus ^- Cress, ii. I 

the tenor of the proclamation — ii. 1 

be chosen with proclamations .... TilusAndron. i. 2 
to cut a caper at the proclamation .... Pericles, iv. 3 

the bloody proclamation to escape Lear, v. 3 

PRO-CONSUL: and to you Cymbeline, iii. 7 

PROCRASTINATE his lifeless end .Co7n.ofErr. i. 1 

PROCRE ANTS alone, and shut O'helto, iv. 2 

pendant bed, and procreant cradle .... Macbeth, i. 6 

PROCREATION, residence, and 7Vmo)i or.4them,iv. 3 

PROCRUS was so true (rep.) .... Mid.N.'sDream, v. 1 

PROCULEIUS— butProculeiu3./(n/oii!/<S-«eo. iv. 13 

Where's Dolabella, to second Proculeius? — v. 1 

my name is Proculeius. Antony did tell — v. 2 

Proculeius, what thou hast done thy.. v. 2 

PROCURATOR to your excellence ..iHenry VI. i. I 
PROCURE me music ready. Taming- ofSh. 1. (indue.) 

Procure-a you de good guest MerryWives, ii. 3 

that you'll procure the vicar — iv. 6 

procures she still? ha?....il/easwre/or Measure^ iii. 2 

that such sorrow I procure — v.l 

you'll procure from king Leontes. Winter'sTale, iv. j 

Solinus, to procure my fall Comedy of Errors, i. 1 

our arrest, procure your sureties . . Richard II. iv. 1 
I'll procure this fat rogue acliarge..lHej»-!//r. ii. 4 
sir, you should.procurc him better ..iHenry IV. i. 2 

I must do, to procure rae grace 1 Henry VI. i. 4 

and procure that lady Margaret do . . — v. 5 
all these could not procure me any .iHenryVI. ii. 4 
the loving Welshmen canst procure .'iHenryVI, ii. 1 
minds procure knaves as corrupt ..HenryVIII. v. 1 
and to procure safe conduct . . Troilus ^ Cress, iii. 3 

injuries that they themselves procure Lear, ii. 4 

one that I'll procure to come. . . . Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 2 

unaccustomed cause procures her hither? — iii. 5 

Desdemona procure rae some access . . Othello, iii. 1 

PROCURED his leave for present ....All'sWell, ii. 5 

have procured thee. Jack, a charge..! HenrylV.iii.S 

the voices that we have procured . . Coriolanus, iii. 3 

PROCURING-the procuring of mirth. Ci/mfte/ine, v. 4 

PRODIGAL-story of the prodigal. Me/ ly Wives, iv. .') 

he's a very fool, and a prodigal . . Twelfth Night, i. 3 

be now as prodigal of all dear grace tofc'si,. Los(, ii. 1 

and spend his prodigal wits in bootless — v. 2 

somctiiing too prodigal, hath left.;Ver. of Venice, i. 1 

to feed upon the prodigal christian.. — ii. 5 

like a younker, or a prodigal — ii. 6 

a prodigal doth she return — ii. 6 

a prodigal, who dare scarce show his — iii. 1 
what prodigal portionhaveIspent./ls»/owZ,/7ce?7,i. I 
a motion of the prodigal son .... Winter's Tale, iv. 2 
was killed for the prodigal ..Comedy of Errors, iv. 3 
tlie tongue's office sliould be prodigal. Ricliard II. i. 3 
with oppression of their prodigal weight — iii. 4 
hundred and fifty tattered prodLigals.l Henry II'. iv. 2 

or the story of the prodigal iHenrylV. ii. 1 

ye have been too prodigal Henry VIII. v. 4 

thou tassel of a prodigal's purse. Troilus <S- Cress, v. I 
how many prodigal bits have.. Timon of Athens, ii. 2 
that a prodigal course is like the ... . — iii. 4 

I, tliat I was no prodigal — iv. 3 

the chariest maid is prodigal enough . . Hamlet, i. 3 
how prodigal the soul lends the tongue vows — i. 3 



PRO 

PRODIGALITY of nature Richard Ill.i. 

I'KODIGALLY gave tliem all toyou.Love'sL.L. ii. 
PKODIGIES.and signs, abortives KingJolm, iii. 

tliose protligies do so conjointly, . . . JuUu^ Cccsar^i, 

these apparent prodigies — ii. 

distnrbed witli prodigies on eartli.. Titus Andron. i. 
PRODIGIOUS son TwoGen. 0/ Verona, ii. 

nor marlt prodigious, sncli as are. . Mid. N.'s Dr. v. 

prodigious, patclied with foul moiCS.KingJohn, iii. 

prodigious, and untimely hrouglit ..liicliard III. i. 

It is prodigious, there will come.. Troitus ^Cress, v. 

yet prodigious grown, and i'ea.rhd..JtUiusCwmr, i. 

prodigious birtli of love it is to iiie..liomeoSrJul. i. 

PRODIGIOUSLY be crossed King John, iii. 

PRODIGY'— or unusual prodigy?.. Jamin^o/S/i. iii. 

my soul brought fortli her prodigy., /i/c/iard //. ii. 

a prodigy of fear, and a portent ot . . 1 Hetiry 1 1', v. 

that valiant crook-back prodigy ZHenry ri. i. 

PRODITOR— most usurpmg proditor.lHeiiri/F/. i. 
PRODUCE without sweat or endeavour. Tempest, ii. 

you can produce aquittances .... Love's L. Lost, ii. 

to defeat, I must produce my power ..AU'sWeU,ii. 

we must produce for au interpreter . . — iv. 

but loath am to produce so bad — v. 

tlxan tliey sliould not produce fair. trinter'sTale, ii. 

not able to produce more accusation — ii. 

produce tlie prisoner — iii. 

shall I produce tire men? King Mm, i. 

I can produce a will tliat bars — ii. 

my reasonable part produces reason.. — iii. 

whieli they produce from Pharamond. . Henry V. i. 

produce tlie grand sum of his sins .Henri/ fill. iii. 

that I may produce his body to ... . JuliusCwsar, iii. 

I can with ease produce Cymbetine, v. 

ay, though thou didst produce my very . . Lear, ii. 

I can produce a champion — v. 

produce tlieir bodies, be tliey alive — v. 

PRODUCED (as, if I stay, I shall) Olhetlo, i. 

in open market-place produced \ Henry VI. i. 

tlieir arguments be now produced .. H<;«;y F///. ii. 
PRODUCING holy witness . . Merchant of Venice, i. 

producing forth the cruel ministers . . Macbeth, v. 
PROF ACE ! what you want in meat. .iHenrylV. v. 
PROFANATION in the world . . Meas- forMeas. ii. 

but, in the less, foul profanation — ii. 

to any otlier's, profanation TwelfthNight, i. 

PROFANE— in shape profane Merry Wives, iv. 

profane my lips on thy foot. . Love'sL.L. iv. 1 Cletter 

most i^rofaue coxcomb 1 — iv. ' 

let no noble eye profane a tear Richard II. i. 

should so profane tlie word, that taught — _i. 
an ungracious mouth, is but profane ,, — ii. 
unless he do profane, steal, or usurp — iii. 
whicli our profane hours here have . . — v. 
so idly to profane the precious time. .iHenrylV. ii. 

so old, and so profane — v. 

instruments, wliich you profane .... Corlolamis, i. 
profane fellow! wert tliou tlie son ot.Cymbeline, ii. 
if I profane with my unworthy . . Romeo Sr Juliet, i. 
should profane the service of the dead. . Hamlet, v. 

what profane wretch art thou? ,, Othello, i. 

own gained knowled;:e should profane .. — _i. 
a most profane and liberal counsellor? .. — ii. 

PROFANED the ring Two Gen. of Verona, i v. 

had his great name profaned with. . 1 Henry IV. iii. 

your own dignity so much profaned .iHenrylV. v. 

profaned, disiionoured, and Richardlll. iv. 

thy george, profaned, liath lost his . . — iv. 
PROI'ANELY-not to speak it profanely. Hamlet, iii. : 
PROFANENESS 'gainst ihvae.. ..Winlrr'sTate, iii. : 
PROFANERS of this neighbour-stained flom.<S-J'i<<. i. 
PROFANING this most honourable\l Henri/ Ti. iv. 
PROFESS— and crown what I profess.. Tempest, iii. 

profess requital to a hair's breadtli.Jl/er/T/ IVives, iv. ; 

bytlie saint whom I piotess.... Meas. for Meas. iv. ; 

1 profess curing it by counsel ....As you Lilse ii, iii. : 
in wliat he did profess, well found. . . . All's Well, ii. 

■whetlier dost thou profess thyself — iv. i 

since you do profess to be a suitor. Taming ofSh.i. 
I read that I profess, the art to love.. — iv. 
profess myself your loyal servant. Winter's Tale, ii. 

let me hear what you profess — iv. 

eo we profess ourselves to be — iv. 

by that which you profess ' Macbeth, iv. 

for I profess not talking IHenrylV. v. 

I do profess, you speak not like. . . . Henry VIIJ. ii. 
think us those we profess, peace-makers — iii. 
for, I profess, you have it (rep.) — iii. 

Erofess [Co/.A'n(.-protestJ to do't. .Timono/Ath. iv. 
ear me profess sincerely Coriolanus,i. 

I profess myself in banqueting .. .. JuliusCccsar, \. 

though I profess myself lier adorer ..Cymbeline, i. 

but 1 now profess myself the — ii. 

but, profess, had that was well worth — ii. 

tliat.I profess myself an enemy Lear, I. 

wliat dost thou profess? — i. 

I do profess to be no less than I seem ... . — i. 

such a one do I profess inj'sclf Othello, i. 

may profess due to the Moor, my lord .. — i. 
PROFESSED to make him teioice.Meas. for Meas. iii. 

to the public ear professed the contrary — iv. 

being a professed tyrant to their sex. . Much Ado, i. 

long have you professed apprehension? — iii. 

a man which ever professed Winter's Tate, i. 

that you are thieves professed . Timon of Athens, iv. 

to your professed bosoms I commit him . Lear, i. 

my friend professed, to mangle me. Romeo 4' Jut. iii. 

1 have professed me tliy friend Othello, i. 

PROFESSES a liot-house . . Measure for Measure, ii. 

he proft'ssi'S to have received no — iii. 

[Col. Kilt.] only professes to persuade ..Tempest, ii. 

hu iirot'cssL'5 nut keeping of oaths ....All's Welt, iv. 

ahnjst itselliirofcsoes yours, and little. /Uac)/rf/i, v. 

he prnfcsses not answering .. Troitus SfCressida, iii. 

P i;< )I ESSEST, a baboon I'erictes, iv. 

PROFESSION, a tinker.. rnmins-o/S/irra', 2 (indue 

against the hair of your professions. A/erry Wives, ii. 

under tlie profession of fortune-telling — iv. 

was in our house of profession . . Meas. for Mens. iv. 

be was famous, sir, in his profession . . All's Well, i. 



[ 599 ] 



PROFESSION-greatest of his profession All'sWell^i. 3 
years, professioUj wisdom, and constancy — li. 1 
over many knavish professions .. Wintcr'sTale, iv. 2 

constant to my profession — iv. 3 

to have let in some of all professions . . Macbeth, ii. 3 

to do the profession some grace \HenryIV. ii. 1 

my profession's sacred from above . . 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

beseems a man of tliy profession — iii. 1 

than your high profession spiritual. Henry ;'///. ii. 4 
way of our profession is against it ., — iii. 1 
tlieft in limited professions ..Tinwnof Athens, iv. 3 
almost cliarmed me from my profession — iv. 3 
without the sign of your j)rofession7.y«/. Coisor, i. 1 
have subdued me. in my profession?. Ci/m6c/me, v. 2 
neither is our profession any trade. . . . Pericles, iv. 3 
do me the kindness of our profession — iv. 6 
long have you been of this profession? — iv. 6 
makes our profession as it were to stink — iv. 6 
my oatli, and my profession : 1 protest. . . . Lear, V. 3 
they hold up Adam's profession Hamtel, v. 1 

PROFESSORS of one faith 1 Henry VI. v. 1 

tlie zeal of all professors else Winter's Tale, v. 1 

and all such false professors! Henry VIII. iii. 1 

PROFFERS, not took, reap thanks ior. All'sWell, ii. 1 

greyhound then didproifer me! \HenryIV. i. 3 

in France, proffers his only daughter. IHenri/F/. v. 1 

and for the protfer of my lord — v. 1 

this proifer is absurd and reasonless.. — v. 4 

daily she was bound to proft'er Cymbeline, iii. 5 

he may my proft'er take for Pericles, ii. 3 

PROFFERED offer King John, li. 1 

the proffered means of succour .... Richard II. iii. 2 

proffered him their oaths 1 Henry IV. iv. 3 

frown upon this proft'ered peace .... 1 Henry VI. i v. 2 
tliis proffered benefit of dignity . . R'lchard III. iii. 7 
refuse not, mighty lord, this proffered — iii. 7 

PROFFERER construe, ay ..TwoGen.of Verona, i. 2 

PROFICIENT in one quarter oiwn...\HemyIV. ii. 4 

PROFIT tlian other princes can Tempest,i. 2 

serves in offices tliat profit us — i. 2 

and my profit on't is — i. 2 

son profits nothing in the world ..Merry Wives, iv. 1 
profit in the knowledge of myself. Tiiielfih Night, v. 1 

with profits of the mind Meas. for Meas. i. 5 

ere this rude beast will profit — iii. 2 

nor profits you a jot — iv. 3 

no more profit of their shining ....Love'sL.Lost. i. 1 
daugliters profit very greatly under.. — iv. 2 
snail-slowin profit, and he sleeps..t/er.o/ Venice.ii.b 
since that the trade, and profit of ... . — iii. 3 

speaks goldenly of his profit As you Like it,\. 1 

the soil, the profit, and this kind of. . — ii. 4 
if that an eye may profit by a tongue — iv. 3 
no profit grows, where is no . . Taming ofShreiVj i. 1 
now, mistress, profit you in what .... — iv. 2 
alike mine honour as their profits . Winter' sTale, i. 2 
and my profit therein, the heaping .. — iv. 1 
and clear, profit again should hardly.. il/ac6c(/i, v. 3 
tliat without profit suck the soil's. . Richard II. iii. 4 
against the state and profit of this land — iv. 1 

the camp, and profits will accrue Henry V. ii. 1 

trust thee, but for profit's sake? . ... 1 Henry VI. iii. 3 

do tend the profit of the land 2 Henry VI. i. 1 

and common profit of liis country! .. — i. 1 

the wind, that profits nobody 3 Henry Vl.ii. b 

England, but little for my profit. . Henry VIII. iii. 1 
where high profits might come home — iii. 2 

and tlie profit of the state — iii. 2 

I profit not by thy talk Troilus ^ Cressida, v. 1 

■when we may profit meet Timon of Athens, v. 1 

so find we profit, by losing.. y)n(D»ii/ Sf Cleopatra,).]. 1 
'tis not my profit that does lead .... — ii. 7 
draws us a profit from all things . . Cymbeline, iii. 3 
for danger where tliere's no profit .... — iv. 2 
I speak against my present profit .... — v. 4 
60 soon, to yield thee so much profit ..Pericles, iv. 1 
wherein my death might yield her profit — iv. 1 
despise profit, where you have most gain — i v. 3 

and that opinion a mere profit — iv. 3 

thought the profil;s of my death Lear, ii. 1 

the supply and profit of our Iiope Hamlet, ii. 2 

both in reputation and profit, was better — ii. 2 
that hath m it no profit but the name .. — iv. 4 

a snipe, but for my sport and profit Ottiello, i. 3 

profit's yet to come 'twixt me and you . . — ii. 3 

peculiar profit to your own person — iii. 3 

I thank you for tliis profit — iii.3 

ay; if you dare do yourself a profit — iv. 2 

PROFITABLE, as to rejoice at Love'sL.Lost, v. 2 

so estimable, profitable neitlier.il/erc/i. of Venice, i. 3 

the search, sir, was profitable All'sWelt, li. 4 

ever-running year with profitable.... Henri/ F. iv. 1 

PROFITABLY removed Othelto, ii. 1 

I might answer thee profitalily. rimon o/^//iens, ii. 2 

PROFITED in strange concealments.! Henri/ /F. iii. 1 
hath not tlie boy profited? iHenrylV. ii. I 

PKOFITING-in profiting by themil/eos./or Mec^. ii. 4 
the ears of profiting \HenryIV. i. 2 

PROFITLESS as water in a sieve .... Much Ado, v. 1 
and wage, a danger profitless Othello, i. 3 

PROFOtlND— my profound heart .TwelfthKlghl, i. 5 

hips lias the most profound Meas. for Meas. i. 2 

he is in most profound earnest Much Ado. v. 1 

profound Solomon to tune a jig.. Love'sL.Lost, iv. 3 
vilely compiled, profound simplicity — v. 2 

so profound, that in this spleen — v. 2 

gravity, profound conceit.... i!/e;c/m?i^ of Venice, i. 1 
magician, most profoinid in liisart .AsyonLike it, v. 2 

or tiie profound seas hide in Winter's Tate, iv. 3 

tliere Iiangs a vaporous di'op profound. W«if/ie//i, iii. 5 
profound respects do pull you. KingJohn, iii. 1 



such ^ _ _ , . . ... 

holy, and profound, ^lian mine own.Cono/<iii««, iii. 

raised a sigli so piteous and so profound. Hamlet, ii. 

matter in these sighs; these profoundheaves — iv. 
PROFOUNDEST— to tlic protbundcst piti — iv. ; 
PROFOUNDLY-so profoundly V. Trnilus fy Cress, iv. ; 
PR(JGENITOR— and your prog(;uitors..Heii>!/K. i. : 

sons of your progenitors, go \HenryVI. iv. 

our great progenitors liad conquered? — v. ■ 
PROUENYof evils come8from..Wii/. A'. 'sDrenm, ii. : 



PRO 

PROGENY-brow of progeny forbid. ioi'c'sL.7.,o.(/,v, 2 

tliy birth and lawful progeny \llenryVI. iii. 3 

from the iirogeny of kings — v. 4 

tlie wliii) of your bragged progeny . . Cnriolanus, i. 8 

PROGNE wil 1 I be revenged Tif.us Andron. v. 2 

PROGNOSTICATION proclaims . Winter'8Tale,iv. 3 
be not a fruitful prognostication . . Antony fyCleo. i. 2 

PROGRESS to be iiatclied Meas. for Meas. ii. 2 

and all tlie progress more and less ,,.. All'sWelt, v. 3 
a peaceful progress to tlie ocean .... KingJohn, ii. 2 
tliat silverly doth progress On thy ciieeks — v. 2 

his golden progress in the east \ Henry IV. iii. 1 

viewing his progress through 2Henr'i/lV. iii. 1 

in progress towards Saint Albau's ..'2 Hetiry VI. i. 4 

i' the progress of this business Henry VIII. ii. 4 

tlie progress both of my life and office — v. 2 
cannot by the progress of tlie stars. yu(msCrt>sar,ii. 1 
shall keep his natural progress. . Romeo 4 Juliet, iv. 1 
how a king may go a progress through. Hnmte(, iv. 3 
PROGRESSION, hath miscarried .Love'sL.Lost, iv. 2 

PROHIBIT— God prohibit it A/«c/i Ado, v. 1 

PROHIBITION so divine, that Cymbeline, iii. 4 

PROJECT— else his project dies Tempest, ii. I 

alwa.yB bending towards their project.. — iv. 1 
now does my jirojcct gather to ahead.. — v. I 

or else my project fails — (epilogue) 

no shape nor project of affection Much.4do,iii. 1 

my project may deceive me All's Well, i. I 

project may suffer alteration .... Winter's Tate, iv. 3 

with project of a power much 2HcnrylV.i. 3 

our project's life this shape Troilus 4- Cress, i. 3 

attending on so dire a project — ii, 2 

his projects to accomplish, my best.. Con'ofaims, v. 5 
cannot project mine own cause ..Antony 4 Cleo. v. 2 

this project should have aback Hnmlel,iv. 7 

PROJECTION— niggardly projection.. Hem i/T. ii. 4 
PROKEN-goot for your proken coxcomb — v. 1 
PROLIXIOUS blushes .... Measure for Measure, ii. 4 
PROLIXITY, or crossing ..Merchant of Venice. iii. 1 
the date is out of such prolixity.. Boiiico.S-,/!i«!V^ i. 4 

PROLOGUE of our comedy Merry Wives, iii. 5 

whereof what's past is prologue Tempest, ii. 1 

a prologue: and let the prologue. . Mid, N.'sDr. iii. 1 
well, we will have such a prologue .. — iii. 1 
therefore, another prologue must tell — iii. 1 

the prologue is addrest — v. 1 

he hath rid his prologue, like v. 1 

played upon this prologue, like a child _ v. 1 

a prologue vilely penned Love'sL.Lost, v. 2 

the only prologues to a bad voicel. As youLike it, v. 3 
than to see the lord the prologue . . — (epilogue) 

as happy prologues to the swelling Macbeth, i. 3 

serve to be prologue to an egg \HenryIV. i. 2 

who, prologue like, your humble. . Henry V. i. (cho.) 
is made prologue to their play ....2Henri/;'/.'iii. 1 
I come a prologue armed. . . . Troilus 4 Cress, (prol.) 
nor no without-book prologue ..Romeo fy Juliet, i. 4 
and prologue to the omen coming on. . . . Hamlet, i. I 
is this a prologue, or the posy of a ring?. . — iii. 2 

seems prologue to some great amiss — iv. .^ 

or I could make a'prologue to my brains — v. 2 

obscure prologue to the history of lust. . Otltello, ii. 1 

'tis evermore the prologue to his sleep. . . . — ii. 3 

PROLONG a while the traitor's life ..3HenryVl. i. i 

but prolong his hour ! Timon of Athens, iii. 1 

but prolongs thy sickly days Hamlet, iii. 3 

PROLONGED— is but prolonged .... Much Ado, iv. 1 

was my life prolonged Comedy of Errors, i. 1 

would be, were the day prolonged. Wi'c/iaid ///. iii. 4 
by medicine life may be prolonged. . Cymbeline, v. 5 

PROMETHEAN fire (repO Love'sL.LosI, iv. 3 

know not where is that Promethean heat. Othello, v. 2 
PROMETHEUS tied to Caucasus.. TitusAndron. li. 1 

PROMIS— que vous I'avez promis Henri/ V. iv. 4 

PROMISE— thou didst promise to \>aie.. Tempest, i. 2 
it is my promise, and they expect .... — iv. I 

and promise you calm seas — v. 1 

the promise lor her heavenly.. TwoGen. of Ver. iv. 4 
have you received no piomise .... Merry ll'ives, ii. 2 

he promise me to bring me — iii. 1 

not by my consent, I promise you .. — iii. 2 
build upon a foolish woman's promise — iii. .5 
likewise hath made promise to the .. — iv. 6 
then to break promise with him. .Twelflhl't'ighl, ii. 3 
nothing of that wonderful proniise .. — iii. 4 
did promise most venerable worth .. — iii. 4 
you do not keep promise with me .. — v. 1 
my mind promises with my. . . . Meas. for Meas. iii. 1 

give him promise of satisfaction .... iii. I 

many deceiving promises of life .... iii. 2 

I made my promise to call on him .. iv. 1 

beyond the promise of his age Much Ado, i. 1 • 

I do not like thy look, I promise thee — iv. 2 
keej) jiromise, love; look, hcre..i1//iJ.A'.'sI>rean7, i. 1 

I fear it, I promise you (rep.) iii. 1 

I fear my Tiiisby's promise is forgot! — v. 1 
if thou keep promise, I shall end.Mer,ofVenice,ii. 3 

which this promise carries — ii. 7 

promise me life, and I'll confess .... — iii. 2 
than dost promise aught, thy plainness — iii. 2 
if promise last, I got a promise of this — iii. 2 
therefore, I promise you, I fear you — iii. 5 

or I, I promise thee As youLike iV, i. 2 

keep your promises in love (re;).).... — i. 2 

an hour of my promise (i ep.) — j v. 1 

break one jot ot your promise — iv. l 

my censmc, and Iceep your promise.. — iv. I 
he left a promise to return again within — iv. 3 
you might excuse his broken promise — iv. 3 

that her education promises All's Well, i. 1 

where most it promises; and oft it .. — ii. 1 
if I help, what do you promise me?.. — ii. 1 
to whom I promise a counterpoize .. — ii. 3 

their promises, enticements, oaths .. iii..') 

for the promise of his life, and in the — iii. 6 
I'll promise thee she shall be rich. Taming of Sh, i. 2 
and will not promise her to any man — i. 2 
now, I promise you, you have showed — ii. I 

by your firm promise ; G remio is ... . <j^ i 

1 promise you, I should be arguing — nf. 1 



PRO 



[ 600 ] 

PROMISED— I promised, yet Bhall.. 3 Henry T/. iii. 3 
you have promised I shall possess , Richard III. iv. 2 
grace in mind of what you promised me — iv. 2 
tlie emperor paid ere he promised .. Henry fill. i. 1 
boldened under your promised pardon — _ i. 2 
tliey promised me eternal happiness., — ^Y- ^ 
fails in tlie promised largeness .. Troilus Sf Cresx.u 3 
60 ricli advantage of a promised glory — ii- 2 
message, and by promised means. . Timnn o/Ath. v. 5 

no, I am promised fortli JidiusCii^sar^ 1. 2 

the courtesy your cradle promised. . Cyinbeline, iv. 4 
one that promised naught but beggary — v. 5 

another'a lawful promised love TUusAndron. i. 2 

I promised your grace a hunter's peal — ii. 2 
promised to be wived to fau" ..Pericles, v. 2 (Gower) 

IS this the promised end? Lear, v. 3 

in half an hour she promised to. . Romeo ^Juliet, ii. b 
the conveyance of a promised march . . HamU-l, iv. 4 

you promised me to wed — iv. 5 (song) 

with me; the which he promised Olhetlo, iv. 1 

PROMISED'ST to strike Henry r. iv. 8 

PKOMISB-KEEPING. Besides ..Meas.JorMeas.i.'i 

PKOMISETH a mighty fruit King John, ii. 2 

never promiseth, but he means to . . 1 Henry If^. v. 4 
wliicli promisetli successful fortune. .3Henry yi. ii. 2 
PROMISING— thy promising fortune .^(i's Well, iii. 3 
as promising her marriage, and things — v. 3 
more promising than a wild .... Winter'' sTale, iv. 3 
to go fetcli a chain, promising to. Comedy of Err. v. 1 
promising is tlie very air o' tlie time. Tim. of Alh. v. 1 
promising to pay our wonted tuhntn. Cyinbeline, v. 5 
PKOMONTORY have I made shake. . . . Tempesl,v. 1 
since once I sat upon a- promontory.^/id. N. Dr. ii. 2 
one that stands upon a promontory. 3 Henri/ r/. iii. 2 
mountain, or blue promontory. , Antony ^Vleo. iv. 12 
climb tlie highest promontory top . TUusAndron. ii. 2 
earth, seems to me a steril promontury . Hamlet, ii. 2 

PROMOTION fol lows Winter's Tale, i. 2 

none will sweat, but for promotion. As you Like it, ii. 3 
honours, and promotions, as she .. ..King John, ii. 2 
great promotions are daily given . . Ricltard III. i. 3 
to high promotions and great dignity — iv. 4 
the high promotion of liis grace of. . Henry yill. v. 2 
you sought was— her promotion . Romeo Sf Juliet, iv. 5 
PRO MPT— goes on as my soul prompts. . Tempest, i. 2 
prompt me, plain and holy innocence .. — iii. 1 
prompt us to have mercy on him. TwelflhNight, iii. 4 
sound as you do prompt mine ear ..'iHenryiy. v. 2 
story, tliat I may prompt them. Henry V. v. (chorus) 

prompts my tongue to speak Richard III. i. 2 

of tlie time prompts me aloud . . TroilusSf Cress, iii. 3 
the Grecians are most prompt and . . — iv. 4 
for a towardly prompt spirit .. Timon of Athens, iii. 1 
ready when time shall prompt them. Corio/ajnw, iii. 1 
tlie matter which your heart prompts — iii. 2 

come, come, we'll prompt you — __iii. 2 

1 am prompt to lay my crown.. /4n(onyi5-C/eo. iii. 11 
nature prompts them, in simple .... Cymbeline, iii, 3 
prompt me, that my tongue may.. Titus Andron. v. 3 
first did prompt me to enquire ..Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 2 

a natural and prompt alacrity Otiiello, i. 3 

PROMPTED by your present trouble. Twelfth N. iii. 4 

than shall my prompted sword.. Troilus S^ Cress, v. 2 

when I have prompted you .... Timon of Athens, ii. 2 

prompted to my revenge by heaven .... Hamlet, ii. 2 

PROMFTEMENT: de hand, de fiugre. Henry F. iii. 4 

PROMPTER— after the prompter.. /iciineo<5-Jufe(,i. 4 

have known it without a prompter Othello, i. 2 

PROMPTING mehowfair young.Hero..UMc/i.-liio, i. 1 

prompting eyes of beauteous tutors, i-oue's L.h. iv. 3 

PROMl^TURE-fallen by prompture Mea.forMea. ii. 4 

PROMULGATE, I fetch my life Otl,ello,i. 2 

PRONE and speechless dialect ....Meas.forMeas. i. 3 

I am not prone to weepi ng Winter's Tale, ii. 1 

and as prone to mischief Henry yill.i. I 

I never saw one so prone Cymbeline, v. 4 

PRONONC ER-je ne voudroisprononcer. Henry r.iii.4 

PRONONCEZ-vous prononcezles mots — iii.4 

PRONOUN— borrowed of the pronoun Merry W. iv. 1 

some declensions of your pronouns .. — iv. 1 

PRONOUNCE, is, O you wonder! Tempest, i. 2 

and do pronounce by me — iii. 3 

pronounce a sentence on your ..Meas.for.Meas. ii. 4 
sir, I will pronounce your sentence. Love's i.. Lost, i. 1 
det, when he should pronounce, debt — v. I 
pronounce that sentence then on me As youLilie it, i. 3 

pronounce thee a gross lout Winter's Tale, i. 2 

to our great grief, we pronounce — iii. 2 

go, pronounce his death, and with Macbeth, i. 2 

wherefore could not I pronounce, ainen? — ii. 2 

pronounce it for me, sir, to all — iii.4 

devil himself could not pronounce a title — v. 7 
my tongue did ne'er pronounce .... King John, iii. 1 
with some unwillingness pronounce ./(ic/iard //. i. 3 
in every language 1 pronounce. .2Henry/*''. (indue.) 
and here pronounce free pardon.... 2 Henry/'/, iv. 8 
I do pronounce him in tliat very . . Henry yill. i. 1 

no tongue could ever pronounce — ii. 3 

as't please yom'self pronounce their .. — ii. 4 
if what I now pronounce, you have .. — iii. 2 
we do here pronounce, upon the part. Coriolanus, iii. 1 
let them pronounce the sleep Tarpeian — iii. 3 
pronounce the beggary of his change Cymbeline, i. 7 
do here pronounce, by the very truth — ii. 3 
that 1 am to pronounce Augustus Ca;sar — iii. 1 
in Ctesar's name pronounce 1 'gainst — iii. 1 
ICol, Knt.} pronounce but love ..Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 1 
dost love, pronounce it faithfully .... — ii.2 
changed? pronounce this sentence then — ii. 3 

I am tame, sir; pronounce Hamlet, iii. 2 

PRON()UNCEI) tlie name of Prosper.. Tempest, iii. 3 
sentences, and well pronounced . . Mer.ofVeuice, i. 2 
the pardon, that I late pronounced here — iv. 1 
consequents, pronounced me thus .... Macbeth, v. 3 
whose condemnation is pronounced . . Henry I', iii. 6 
Edward be pronouuced a traitor.... 3 Henry /'/. iv. 6 
who pronounced the bitter sentence. /VicAa7-tZ III. i. 4 
ikastings had pronounced your part — iii. 4 

liath doubtfully jironouuced . . Timon of Alliens, iv. 3 
his tale pronounced shall bury his . . Coriolanus, v. 5 



PRO 



PROMISE— of the greatest promise. I>'i/i(er's7'a/e, i. 1 
breachofpromise to tlie Porcupine .. — iv. I 

lays blame upon his promise Machrlh, iii. 4 

keep the word of promise to our ear ■. — v. 7 
is this your promise? go to, hold. . . . KingJohn, iv. 1 

as tliou read'st thy promise past liidinrd ii. v. 3 

these promises are fair, the parties. 1 Henry/C. iii. 1 
in the name of God, I promise here — iii. 2 
if promises be kept on every hand .. — iii. 2 

knows at what time to promise — iv. 3 

eating the air on promise of supply. .2Henry/r. i. 3 

and to promise you a better — (cpil.) 

as most debtors do, promise infinitely — (epil.) 
and treason liold their promises.. Henry F. ii. (clio.) 
between the promise ol his greener days — . ii. 4 
now to promise; do but now promise — v. 2 

thy promises are like Adonis' 1 Henry I' I. i. S 

my lord of York, I promise you — iv. 1 

perfomiaiice of your promises 2 Henry VI. i. i 

with promise of high pay 3 Henry ri. ii. 1 

promise them such rewards as — ii. 3 

with promise of his sister — iii. 1 

I promise you, I scarcely (rep. v. 3). Richard III. ii. 3 
claim that promise at your grace's hand — iii. 1 
my due by promise, for which your — iv. 2 

my lord, your promise for tlie earldom — iv. 2 
and promise them success and victory — iv. 4 
one, certes, that promises no element. Henry F///.i. 1 
my life, that promises more thousands — ii. 3 
I cannot promise, but that you shall — iii. 2 
his promises were, as he then was .. — iv. 2 
'tis a girl, promises boys hereafter ., — v. 1 
yet now proniises upon this land .... — v. 4 
many registered in promise. 7'roi7«s <§- Cressuto, iii. 3 
could promise to himself a thought., — iv. 5 
and promise, like Brabbler the hound — v. 1 
mine honour on my promise .. Timon of Athens, i. 1 
I promise you, my lord, you moved.. — i. 2 
his promises ily so beyond his state. . — _ i. 2 

promise me friendship (rep.) — iv. 3 

only 1 will promise Irim an excellent — v. 1 

to promise is most courtly and — v. I 

his expedition promises present approach — v. 2 

it is your former promise Coriolanus, i. 1 

either his gracious promise, which you — ii. 3 

nay, temperately; your promise — iii. 3 

is this the promise that you made .. — iii. 3 

Romel I make thee promise JuliusCrsar, ii. 1 

of any promise that hatli passed ..,. — ii. I 

show and promise of their mettle — iv. 2 

Nilus swells, the more it proraises.^n(ony ^ Cleo. ii. 7 
the way which promises assurance . . — iii. 7 
promise, and in our name, what she — iii. 10 

which promises royal peril — iv 8 

your pleasure, and my promise — v.i 

and ou promise to see your grace. . . . Cymbeline, i. 7 
spirits, that promise noble service .. — iv. 2 
did promise to yield me often tidings — iv. 3 
unlike our courtiers, as good as promise — v. 4 
wliose issue promises Britain peace.. — v. 5 
my word and promise to the emperor. Titus.ind. i. 2 
and mine, I promise you; were't not — ii- 4 
fill his aged ear with golden promises — iv. 4 

1 promise you, the ettects (i-ep. iii. 4) Lear, i. 2 

even in their promise, as it is a making. Ha(n/ef,_i. 3 
come now, your promise. What promise. O^/te/fo, iii.4 
love and flattery, not out of my promise — iv. 1 

PROMISE-BREACH, thereon ..Meas.forMeas. v. 1 
PROMISE-BREAKER, the owner of-All'sWell, iii. 5 

worse than a promise-breaker CorioUaus, i. 8 

PRO.MISE-CRAMMED: you cannot.. HamW, iii. 2 

PROMISED— what tliou hast promised. . Tempest, i. 2 

promised by her friends unto. . Tu-o Gen. offer, iii. I 

that sir Hugh promised to meet ..Merry Wives, ii. 3 

well, I promised you a dinner — iii. 3 

for so I have promised, and I — iii.4 

but he has promised me, as he . . TwelflhNight, iii. 4 

and for that I promised you — iii. 4 

promised to meet me two hours . . Meas.forMeas. i. 2 
duke's time, lie promised her marriage — iii. 2 

have I promised here to meet — iv. 1 

for that her promised proportions .... — v. I 
I promised to eat all of his kiUing .... Much Ado, i. I 

Cfaudio promised byithis hour — v. 4 

have promised to study three yeata. Love'sL.Losi, i. 2 
that you to-day promised to tell. . Mer. of Venice, i. 1 
who hath promised to meet me . . AsyouLil:e it, iii. 3 
do all this that he hath promised? . . — v. 4 
I liave promised to make all this .... — v. 4 
a confirmation of my promised gift . . All's Well, ii. 3 
his highness hath promised me to do it — iv. 5 
do yon know he promised me marriage? — v. 3 
I promised to enquire carefully . . Taming of Sh. i. 2 
hath promised me to helj) me to another — i. 2 
I promised, we would be contributors — i. 2 
greater sum than I have promised .. — iii. 2 
promised them against the (lep.) . Winter' sTale, iv. 3 

paid you all he promised you — iv. 3 

come, you promised me a tawdry lace — iv. 3 
after I have done what I promised?.. — iv. 3 
promised rae aehain l rep. iv. 3).. Comedy of Err. ii. 1 

1 promised your presence — iv. I 

tlie chain, you promised me (rep.J .. — iv. 3 
Cawdor to me, promised no less to them?Afae6e//j, i. 3 
of what greatness is promised thee — i. 5 (letter) 

Blialt be what thou art promised — i. .'i 

as tlie weird women promised — iii. 1 

hath promised to dismiss the powers. K/7ig'/o/in, v. 1 
you promised, when you parted .... Richard II. ii. 2 

pay the debt I never promised \HenrylV. i. 2 

1 promised you rech'css of these . . ..2Henry I V. iv. 2 

here, I promised you, I would be — (epil.) 

of his youth promised it not Henry V.i. 1 

and coronets, promised to Harry — ii. (chorus) 
promised to wear it in his cap (rep.).. — iv. 8 
her aid she promised, and assured . . I Henry Vl.i.l 
delays my promised supply of liorsemen — iv. 3 
which I promised should be delivered — v. 1 
this tliey have promised, to show ....IHenryVI. i. 2 
promise'd knighthood to our forwai'tL3Henrj VI. ii. 2 



PRONOUNCED-liave pronounced .. . Titus.ind. iii. 1 
state would treason have pronounced . . Hamlet, ii. 3 
I prav you, as 1 pronounced it to you — iii. 2 

PRONOUNCING it, like to Richard II. ii. 1 

at tliis badge, pronouncing —that .. 1 Henry ('/. iv. I 
by pronouncing of some doubtful phrase. H'j/n(e^ i.5 

PROOF— such another proof will. Ttn Gen. of Ver. i. 1 

well leave a proof, by that . , Merry Wives, iv. 2 

both the proofs are extant — v. .5 

make your proof Twelfth Night, i. 5 

I'll bide your proof — i.5 

for 'tis a vulgar proof, that very oft.. — iii. 1 
than ever proof itself would have .... — iii. 4 
to find him in the proof of liis valour — iii.4 
have given thee proofs for sin ..Meas.forMeas. iii. 2 

sir, it is a mystery. Proof — iv. 2 

came not to an undoubtful proof .... — iv. 2 
this is an accident of hourly proof . . Much Ado, ii. I 
what proof shall I make oi that? Proof — ii- 2 

we have ten proofs to one — ii. 3 

if you, in your own proof have — iv. 1 

what was true, and very full of proof — v. I 
I urge tliis childhood proof . . Merc/iant of Venice, i. 1 
you nave seen cruel proof of this . . As youLike it, i. 2 

my fore-past proofs, howe'er All's Well, v. 3 

tliat ring s a thousand proofs — v. 3 

to the proof; as mountains are . . Tamingof Sh. ii. 1 

all my pains is sorted to no proof — iv. 3 

all proofs sleeping else Winter'sTale, iii. 2 

I am proof against that title — iv. 3 

no credit, were not the proof so nigh — v. 1 
there is such unity in the proofs .... — v. 2 
lapt in proof, confronted him with ....Macbeth, i. 2 

add proof unto my armour Richard II. i. 3 

in proof wliereof, there is my honour's — iv. 1 
as for proof now; a purse of gold ....2Hen?y/r. i. 2 
well, we leave that to the proof — ii. 2 

fentle exercise and proof of arms .... — v. 2 
'11 drink no proofs, nor no bullets. .IHenry/F. ii. 4 

demure boys come to any proof — iv. 3 

this proof I'll of thy valour make . . 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

mark but this, for proof — iii. 3 

in argument and proof of which contract — v. 1 
argues proof of your accustomed .... — v. 3 

for his coat is of proof 2 Henry F/. iv. 2 

as, by proof, we see the water Richard HI. ii. 3 

armed in proof, and led by shallow . . — v. 3 
proofs as clear as founts in July .... Henry VIII. i. 1 
very shape, he shall appear in proof. . — _i. I 
examinations, proofs, confessions of — ii. 1 
Trollus will stand to tlie proof ..Troilus ff Cress, i. 2 

lies the true proof of men — i. 3 

a proof of strength she could not .... — v. 2 

and am her knight by proof — v. 5 

that proof is called impossibility .... — v. 5 

and set me on the proof Timon of Alliens, ii. 2 

whose proof, nor yells of mothers — iv. 3 

witli hearts more proofs than shield.^.CorM/aims, i. 4 
but 'tis a common proof, that ....JuliusCcesar,}]. I 
I have made strong proof of my .... — ii. 1 

the proof of it will turn to redder — v. 1 

through proof of harness to mj.. Antony If Cleo. iv. 8 
or his own proof, what woman is .... Cymbeline, i. 7 
let proof speak. His majesty bids.... — iii. 1 

out of your proof you speak _ — iii. 3 

from proof as strong as my grief — iii. 4 (letter) 
breast stepped before targe of proof . . — v. 5 
returned with simular proof enough — y. 5 

gives me proof and precedent of Lear, ij. 3 

in thy just proof, repeals — iii. 6 

I'll put it in proof — iv. 6 

60 tyrannous and rough in iprooi'.. Romeo Si-Juliet,i. 1 
in strong proof of chastity well armed — _i. 1 
and I am proof against their enmity — ii. 2 

forged for proof eterne, with less Hamlet, ii. 2 

but now the time gives it proof — iii. 1 

my love is, proof hath made you know . . — iii. 2 
that it lie proof and bulwark against sense — iii. 4 

in passages of proof, time qualifies — iv. 7 

if this should blast in proof — iv. 7 

of whom his eyes had seen the proof .... Othello, i. 1 

to vouch this i6 no proof — i.3 

on the proof, there is no more but this . . — iii. 3 

I speak not yet of proof — iii. 3 

strong as proofs of Holy writ — iii-''' 

five me the ocular proof — |;i- 3 
'11 have some proof — iii. 3 

help to thicken other proofs — iii. 3 

speaks against her, with the other proofs — iii. 3 

I will make proof of thine — v. 1 

PROP— of my age, my very prop . Mer. of Venice, ii.2 
or a hovel-post, a staif, or a prop? . . — ii- 2 
when you do take the prop that doth — iv- I 
duke of York, our prop to lean upon.3 Henry VI. ii.l 
two props of virtue for a christian. id'c/iard ///. iii. 7 

60 much as but to prop him? Cymbeline, i. 6 

but for this virgin that doth prop it up. Pericles, iv. 6 

the ratifiers and props of every word . . Hamlet, iv. 5 

PROPAGATE with any branch or. . . . .-ill's Well, ii. 1 

to propagate their states Timnn of.lihens, i. 1 

an issue I might propagate Pericles, i. 2 

wilt propagate, to have it prest.../fomeo.S-Ju/ie«, i. 1 

PROPAGATION of a dower Meas.for Meas. i. 3 

PROPEND to you in resolution .. T'roi/ws ^-Cress. ii. 2 
PROPENSION— wings to my propension — ii. 2 

PROPER a man as ever went Tempest, ii. 2 

men hang and drown their proper selves — iii. 3 

for he's a proper man TwoOen. of Verona, iv. I 

is like to reap a proper man .... Twelfth Night, iii. 1 

and at my proper cost — v. I 

are not thine own so proper. iVeaiure /or Measure,!. 1 
that ravin down their proper bane .. — i.3 

the mere efl:'usion of thy proper loins — iii. 1 

pursue faults proper to himself — v. 1 

and in the witness of his proper ear . . — v. 1 
even from his proper tongue, an Angelo — y. 1 
a proper squire ! and who, and who? . . Much Ado,_i. 3 

he is a very proper man — ii. 3 

that which appears in proper nakedness? — iv. 1 
out at a window?— a proper saying 1.. — iv. 1 



PRO 



[ 601 ] 



iHcnrylV. iv. 4 

iHenryVl. i. 1 

Ucliard III. i. 3 

Harl-v. that propiiesied thou sliouldst be — .v. 3 

PROPIIESIEfe.>.n.»g him forth ._._. . AlC^ tVdl, iv. 3 



three proper young men As you Like .(, i. i 

had not that been as proper? • — | •- 

she sees herself more proper, than any - & 

he'll make a proper man A„'rivell iv" 2 

thus your own proper wisdom .... ..All s Weu, iv. i 

in his proper stream o'erflows himself - v. 3 
an advertisement to a proper maid in - iv- J 
a proper stripling, and an ^morousTamm^'o/i/'. i. / 

with these my proper hands » "%'rLih'i\i 4 

O proper stuft! this is the very ?'-,J'\' 

some proper man, Ihope \„';l rir' ;' 



PROPHET-and, like a propliet . . W^s./o; ..yrai. i . 2 
which your prophet, the Nazante./Uer.o// en„e, i. J 
a prophet, I, madam; and I speak ..All sjf.i- 3 



.-iHenryiy.i. 3 



some proper . 

imagination, proper to madmeu 

and that I am a proper fellow — :r- - 

a proper gentlewoman. sir — ."• 

native, and most proper shape — »^- ' 

do justice on my proper son . . . . ...... ", ,^ -g) 

in their huge and proper lile • • """ i', 'i J;,;7>;°™'^ 
the Dauphin is a proper man . . ••■••■«"".!' ' L" ^^ 
own proper cost and charges .iHemyl 1. 1. 1 (.au.| 

a proper jest, and never heard - >■ ' 

many a pound of mine own proper store - i"- \ 

the man is a proper man n.v.^„^ fff l' 2 

to be a marvellous proper man .... Richard ///.. i. i 



. . Henry Vlll. 
lus 4- Cressida, i. 2 



doth want her proper limbs 

a proper title of a peace 

and a proper man ot person . . i r 

^fe'SSrhrp%e7lfaTm\. CoWoW^ i. 9 
a" proper men as ever trod upon JuUus Cwsar, . I 
conceptions only proper to myself . . - i- ^ 

in our own proper entrails — 

Inc; 



John, iv. 

— V. 1 

Richard 11. ii. 1 



a proper man. 



indeed, he is so . . Anlony Sr Cleo. lii 
fay'tlTe'leaven on all proper men . . Cymbeline, iii. 

slain thee with my P™Per l^,^°<V,v;,VJ«rfro'^?cws v 
provide thee proper palfreys., ri/us.^nd.onjcm, v, 

the issue of it being so proper i-eai , 

proper deformity, seems not 



!v.2 
to ca'sV Hamld, ii. 1 



it is as proper to our age „„ ^»-. ■ ■ - - 

tlirown out his angle for my proper life 



. Olhello, 



our proper son stood in your action 

in ray distinct and proper satistaction .. 

Cassio'saproperman: letmeseenow .. - i. 3 

this Lodovico is a proper man — iv. J 

'tis nroper I obey him, but not now ...... — .X- ( 

PRoffiER man, than she a woman 'isyoM''"}-^ 
betfer or properer can we call • ■ '^'"'"' "/^ f,^"/'; ' i 
that Paris is the properer man ..IlomeoJrJulel, u. 4 

PROPEREST rga?r in Italy , MuchMo,^ 1 

PROPER-FALSE in women's ....TivelJlhNigitt, ii. i 

PROPERLY, stays me here at \\oms.. As you Like i. 

^ U?e o^ering on'l is all properly . "'"'^^^^ !!• 

rto speak more properly) • . ■ • -'"'^.Sf"'"'; "■ ; 

though I owe my revenge PfoPe-^l?,; -,5° Sf '> l 

PROPERTIED me i welflh A .? , iv. 2 

ton hi.'h-bom to be propertied King John, v. i 

h°s ™ree w "propertied as ..AntonyJCleopalray 2 

PROPERTIES-get us properties.. Mo, t/>K,,,«, ly. 4 

S^ properties to°unfold ■••;:"-'"'j'^;"^3,t ' 2 
I will draw a bill of properties..il/-d.N. sD«a , . 2 
subdues and properties to l"S.i°^'=J""'',"l« iri'' 4 

the property by what it is should 6° 7 .!'.' ^ 
chan''in>' his property, turns to ... . Richard II. ui. 2 
selo^ri p°oper?y of your excellent • -^'f^-J ' ' • !^- ] 
talk of Mm, but as a property .... /"i"s Cjsa,, iv. 
too short of that great property . .Antony SfCleo ■ 
propinquity and property o'. '^l'"??--,-/ ' Vr;„,y»/ i ' 
whose violent property foredoes itself .Hamtei, . 1 
upon whose property, and most dear life - • - 
thy natural magic and dire property ... . - lu- - 
custom hath made it in him a property - v. 
the property of youth and maid!iood....OMio. 
PROPHECIES-audlusprophecies.. Hen,y/A. 111. 1 
comeTnot in, o'er-ruled by prophecies - iv. 4 
to ft-ustrate prophecies; and to i"ze.2H™> y y . v. 2 

buz abroad such prophecies 3 Henry U v. b 

drunken propliecies, libels Richard III. 1. 

he hearkens after prophecies. ... . . . .... ,77 ,, . • 

that fed liim with his propliecies?.. Henry //f/. • 
PROPHECY— of your prophecy. . Meas.for Aleas. 11. 1 
ensuesri list not prophecy.. l^V„i.rsrate, iv. (cho.5 
let mv oropliecy come home to you! — iv. .i 
or rather the prophecy, like the parrot - jv. 4 
he hath a hcTenly gfft of prophecy .,l/ac6.,. iv 3 
do prophecy upon it dangeroiisly ..King John v. i 

let me propliecy ; the blood of Riclia,dII. ly. 1 

I could prophecy, but that the ^' "™ fZ/'iff , 

now proved a prophecy? iHenry Ik-, in. 

ti mnn mav oroiiliccy, witli a near aim — 111. 1 
th™?pirit offfip prophecy she hath. I HenryPLu 2 
and here I prophecy,. tins brawl .... — • ^ 

and now I fear tliat fatal prophecy . . - ni- 
Henry the fifth did sometime prophecy - v. 1 
their deatlis, if York can prophecy..2f/emyr/. . 2 
my thouglits do liourly propliecy..... - "i- ^ 

Henry-slate presagm.? prophecy did - ly. 6 
and tfius I propliecy, tliat many . . . ■l"j''J ' /: \ \ 
about a prophecy, wluoli says . . . . . . Richard lll.i. 1 

I prophecy the fearful'st time to thee — in. 1 

Henry the sixth did prophecy — iv- ^ 

thou didst propliecy, the time ;,„„ "^rrr'V 1 

broke into a general Propliecy . . ... .Henry Fill. . 1 

by a vain prophecy of Nicholas il .pkins - 1. 2 
prophecy fs but half his journey. Trod. S,- Cress, v. 5 
thv wounds now do I propliecy.. J«'""C<ir»'>', '!!• ' 
I would not prophecy so. . . . Anlony S, Cleovijra.n. 5 

I'll speak a prophecy ere I go i-^ ar, . 2 

this propliecy Merlin shall make — "'• ;; 

tliy very gait did prophecy a royal...... — v., 

I will prophecy, he comes to tell me otHamlet n- 2 

but I Jo prophecy, the election lights on - v. 2 

PROPUECYING, with accents terrible. A/or6e(/, II. 3 

propliecviiis' fear' of wliat liatli.^«(o»!/ * Cleo. iv 12 

PR0i?HESIED, if a gallows were on . . J empest, V. 1 



a prophet, *, • ^v.- \ .. f 

here's a prophet, tliat I brouglit. . . . Ki 

did not the prophet say, that, before 
I am a propliet new inspirea . .... . ' 

with a prophet's eye, seen how his 
and lean-looked prophets whisper . . - 

no prophet will I trust, it she prove .1 HeinyVl.i. 2 
a prophet to tlie fall of all our foes! - "• 2 

the prophets, and apostles 'A?" ' f r/' v 6 

die, prophet, in thy speech... ■^■'i"',,tir iT" 2 

ray oracle, my prophet! my deax..RwhardlIl.n. 2 
how cliauce, the prophet could not . . - Jy f, 
a prophet, weep what t foresaw, i ro,;us 4 Cress, i. 2 
prophet may you be! it I be false .. - "i- ^ 
am like a prophet suddenly cnrapt.. - v. ^ 

pi^5ii«^h^»et;ss-::iH™^r^l: 4 

PROPHETIC-such prqplietic greeting?. MacSe'A, 1. 3 

speak, with a prophetic spirit ■■■■■•tj'"%X"l ii' 2 

fill them with prophetic tears . . Troilus ^ Cress, i . 2 

Gray prophetic soul! myunelel ••.••■•"°"'f ViJ' 4 

in her prophetic fury sewed the work..Oi/.rito, 111. 4 

PROPHETICALLY does forethink.l Henry I V. .1.1.1. 2 

and is so prophetically proud .J,oii«* Crm m. 3 

PROPHET-LIKE, tliey hailed him ..Macmh,iu. 

PROPINQUITY and property of blood.... i-ear,i. 1 

PROPONTICK and the Hellesporit . . Olhello,^^ 3 

PROPORTION— mv proportion. J a'o (red. 0/ kei. u.o 

"^ was no proportionUld?n \o.^... Merry Wives v. 5 

in any proportion, or.in any . . . .Meas.for Meas.x. 2 

her promised proportions came short - v. 1 

a like proportion of lineaments .Mer.of I emce -in. 3 

or contracted all proportions f'-j!:^:';,, ^;' 4 

proportion both of thanks and Payment ^acbei/ ,1. 4 
and due proportion, showing , . . . • • «''^'""-'' "• "'■ \ 
-^--", broke, and no proportion kept! — v. 



— ill. 

..MerrykVives, iii. 



power was in the first proportion --IH™ y/^ f- \ 
the just proportion that we gave .iHenrylV.iw. 1 
lay down our proportions to defend. . . . Henry r. 1. 2 

let our proportions for these wars be — i- 1 
'gainst all proportion didst bring in - 1 • 2 
so tlie proportions of defence are AHed - • l 

must proportion the losses we have borne - in. 6 
against all proportion of ^"''J'^f ''?"•{ „^-p,, "' 3 
large proportion of his strong-knit.. 1 Hen; y ('i. . ^ 
and least proporti.on of humanity. . . . - >!• ■> 

bear that proportion to ray flesh ....iHennjI I. i. 1 

in courage, courtship, and proportion - }■ ^ 
curtailed of this fair proportion Ricliardlll.i. 1 
the j U3t proportion of ray sorrow? . . . . - ly. ^ 

and part in just proportion our small - ^- ^ 
must bear tne same proportion . ■•■^f""-''^'"; \ I 
course, proportion, season, form..J»(»(us .5 Cess. 1. 6 
tlie past proportion of his infinite? .. — "■ ^ 
know her by thy own Proportion .T,h«^..d,»». v. 2 
pretty a proportion to live quietly .... '^""ff; >.Y- ^ 

time, distance, and proportion . /iomeo *^« «( 11. 4 

and full proportion, are a I made out . • "f™ f . • f, 

PROPORTIONABLE to the enemy . «;f^%^^ ": "-j: 

PROPORTIONED to our cause. ./4n<ony<5-C'''."-'X-.'^ 

"^m^oportiined as one's heart • •. • «°-° f/ji^- ; 1 1 

PROPOSE not merely tomyself .rroi;MS<^L«3J. 1 . ^ 

to listen our propose [Kn(.-purpose] ■'''"^,f,f>'.}'\- 

when fear proposes the safety . . ... ...Alls iyeu,i. 1 

did first propose; his higlmess hath.. — „"■ i 
the wager which we will proPose- '«'";,"=^,^f^- ^- I 

the father, and propose a son i „" " ^ // I' 5 

whilst I propose the self-same . . . . . ..3 Hertry I 1. v. 

housandVaths would I propose -T'lusAndi^n .1. 1 

propose the oath, my lord • • • • Hamlet, u S 

what to ourselves in passion we propose - " • ^ 

wherein the toged consuls c^s-nP^pose . . WMo . \ 

PROPOSED for tlie deserver!. Troilus ^'{"'J'f'f'"]- \ 

for the gain proposed choked 2 Hf>'^ '/:•'• ' 

according to their firm proposed . . . -yf '"/':■. \ .j 
thy beauty is proposed my fee. ... . . ««'">'« '"■.]■ i 

at many leisures t proposed. . . . T^mon ff''^«^'^ > • ^ 

we could arrive the point proposed Jui<«sCfl.sar, 1. 2 
that portion which yourself proposed . • • • ■f';« V- \ 
IKnt^ how proposed, sir, I pray you?. . Hamlel, iv. 4 
not to affect many proposed matclies . . OlheUo, i . 3 
PROPOSER could charge you withal . . ""'"jf •. • ^ 

PROPOSING with the prince V^M^/'ViV •> 

PROPOSITIONS of a lover As !/."«i;'«^ '• "!• " 

the ample proposition, that hope. Troilus ^C ess . 3 

PROPOUNDED him • • -^Wcm yl. 1. - 

PROPPED by ancestry, whose grace . Henry kui.i. ■ 

PROfRE-a son propre vomissement.. Henry F. 111. 7 

pSoPRIETY-strangle thy vroini^il.TwelflhN. v. 1 

it frights the isle from her propriety.... OfAWto .3 

PROP^JGNATIONisin one • • ■ ; ^'■°''"?,£„'l"."- ' ? 

PROROGUE his honour ....Anlony f,-Ueopat->a,n. 

sustenance, but to prorogue, his gr^f ; •^"•'J ^7- X" \ 

than death prorogue, wanting . . Romeo ^JuUet,n. i 

nothin" may prorogue it, on Thursday — ly- 

PROSCRIPTION-and proscriptionJu(ms tosor.iy. 1 

proscription, and bills of outlawry .. — Y'% 

that died by their proseriptions — "■ ^ 

and by that order of proscription .... - 'X ^ 

PROSE-soft; here follows prose •• 1«'<^'f";A s'''';"' \ 

will I tear, and write in prose .. .- L""'-, V:,';"']]:-.- , 

PROSECUTE my right? ■•''';''■;)■• "TAii" 

the king severely Prosecu eaga.nst... ;c «„( /. 11. 

will prosecute, by good advice ..liiusAnaion. y. 

can prosecute the meanest, or the best - ly. 

PROSECUTION of d sgrace.-ln'ony * Cleopatra, iv. 1 i 

PROSELYTES of who she but bid.. mnler'sTale,y. 1 

PROSERPINA, for the flowers now . . - >v ^ 

is at Proserpina's beauty 't° // 7/, avw.' i 4 

PROSPECT of mv hopes Tweljihi\igiu, \". h 

hito theeye and^prospect of his soul MuchAdo, iv. 1 



PRO 

PROSPECT— within the prospect Macbeth, i. 3 

the eye and prospect of your town ••{'/"'•"'''"'.H- i 
their chiefest prospect, murdering. .2J/e»ry/. . 2 

to bring them to that prospect """'"°<, "■'■• , 

PROSPER well in our return lempest, . 1 

on Prosper fall, and make him — >-^ 

now Prosiier works upon thee .. — "■ ■* 

pronounced the name of Prosper 
heaven prosper the right! . . 

heaven prosper our sportl v;„ „,„. ,y,v),/ V 4 

prosper well in this, and thou .... T<;elflh!^ie I, - 4 
kiiitteth souls, and prospers loves.. A/,d N. sDr.x. 1 
and seen our wishes prosper ..Merch.onen'ce, 11. f 
prosper you, sweet sir! your purse.. Wmlei s7. y. 2 

as your good flock shall prosper - ly- ^ 

for this rorgiveness, prosper ^'■7---JH'''"'^fi''\y-: t 
bless you, andprosper your affairs .2Hen,y/>^ n • 2 

prosper this realm, keep it 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

prosper our colours in. — "• 

but prosper better tlian the ■ - v. d 

they prosper best of all when.. ......3Hen>v^/. i- •> 

so prosper I, as I swear perfect love ! /iic/iar-rf lll.u 4 
as I intend to prosper, and repent! .. -.,"■ J 
(tell you the duke,) shall prosper . . Henry Vlll. . - 
every trade , we shall never prosper . . / encles, i\ . .s 

well may you prosper !..... ^^'"■' \ ' 

I grow; I prosper; now, gods..... — i- ' 

forgive me that, and prosper him ! ...... — "i- / 

fairies, and gods, prosper it with thee! . . - y. b 
PROSPERED since I forswore .... Merry mves, iv. a 

PROSPERITIES so largely taste . .... . . . ..Pencics, i. 4 

PROSPERIT Y-bed j oy and prosperity. Mtd. N. Dr._ n.i 
[Co/.] bless it to all fair prosperity .. — iv. i 
peace and prosperity ! ...... Measure for Measure, 1. 5 

welcome the sour cup of prosperity L.iM'e s L.L.i. 1 
a jest's prosperity lies in the ear. . .... -- y- ^ 

prosperity's the very bond of love. "''"'.''•'» ™f' AY" \ 
the liate and terror to prosperity.. ..Kni^Jo/m, 111. 4 

into the purse of rich prosperity ..... — y- ^ 

like to my followers m prosperity ..Richard 11. y. 1 
now prosperity begins to mellow... /i<c/iar<i/n. iv. 4 
saw'st them, when I had prosperity. Im. ofAlh. iv. A 
satire against the softness of prosperity - v- ' 
gentleman, prosperity be thy page I . . Conoianw, i. 5 
petitioned all the gods for my prosperity - n. » 
synod about thy particular prosperity -- v. ' 
were no expectation of our prosperity . .OlheUo-. 11. 1 
PROSPERO; master of a full poor cell . . Tempest, 1. 2 

and Prospero the prime duke ..:..-• 

supplant your brother Prospero trep. iii. 3) 

Prospero my lord shall know 

when Prospero is destroyed 

the wronged duke of Milan , Prospero. . . . 

but how should Prospero be living - ■ - - 

if thou beest Prospero, give us — v. 1 

know for certain, that 1 am Prospero .... — y. 

Prospero his dukedom, in a poor isle .... — y. 1 

PROSPEROUS-tliey may prosperous be.. - }\- ' 
she hath prosperous art when.. . .Meas.for Meas.u 3 

grow to a most prosperous perfection — "i- i 
a prayer they may prove prosperous - J"- 1 
play lipon tliy prosperous helm......^" ''^e' .' • 3 

be prosperous in more than this .. M inter sTale, 11. 6 
a prosperous south-wind friendly.. .. — v 

bv prosperous voyages I often .Comedy ofEr, o>s, 1. 1 
the thane of Cawdor lives a prosperous .Macbeth i. 3 
hath been botli grave and prosperous - " • ' 
good cause malce thee prosperous! . . ""^''"^/Yi ' 1 
fnduction full of prosperous hope ••' "X^rifj' v " 
our oaths well kept and prosperous bel He " y J . v. . 

prayers made him prosperous 1 H"iry *• /. - 1 

prosperous be thy life, in peace .. . . • • - "• J 
plenty, and fair prosperous days! . . Richard III. y. 1 
send prosperous life; long, and ever. Henry r///. y. 4 
protection of the prosperous gods. . ^''"°« °{^ ' • X- f 
with most prosperous approbation ••/"""f"'"';"- i 
prove this a prosperous <Iay • -■l«"»'y'5- C(eo;ia(, a iv 6 

raay'st thou prove prosperous! Peucles,!. I 

ifthatthy prosperousartificialfeat.... '- y. 1 
the gods make her prosperous! ■•■■■■■•. ,77 .'■ , 
BtroSg and prosperous in this . . Borneo f Juliet, ly. 1 
be prSsperous: and farewell, good fellow - y 3 

rcol Knt 1 lend your prosperous ear uineuo, 1. a 

pkoSPEROUSLY I Lve attempted. Cor,otanus.v. 5 

could not so prosperously be delivered. Ho,nW . 2 

PROSTIT UTE our past-cure malady . . ' ' » ' f '.' • ' 

prostitute me to the basest groom. . ... ■ l'%'^j'i'^\; ° 

PROSTRATE at his feet. .... . -^^"ifvgf'Tv'w \ 

this prostrate and exterior bend ng .2H«nryi K. ly. 1 
look gracious on thy prostrate thrall.l Hen y K/. i. 2 

he voii nrostrate, and grovel on i Henry i i.\. » 

and befng prostrate, thus he h^de.JuliusCfsar i.i.l 
holy Senee to fall prostrate.. «o,neoJ-/u;.e( iv. 2 
ROTECT-melancholy god protect Twetlth.^ight 1 . 4 

Uie Lord protect him! ^"^.^S'/ ' ? 

why should he then protect our ... .iHeniyVi. 1. i 

marry, the lord protect him. ..• 

see to't well, protect yourself — i • 

sir John, protect my lady here?.. .. . . - i'- * 

the bearward that protects the bea • • . - Jr } 
_.-_„!. «i.^o tr. ,iratpc.fr. hia frrace.iuc'rtarrt jii.ii. o 



ii. 1 
ii. 1 
iii. 2 
v. 1 



virtuous uncles to protect his grace. Ju 
the Lord protect him from that kingly 
your loni^eoat, priest, protects.... Henry ri//. 

God, and your majesty, protect mine — y. 1 

God protect thee!.... Cinnbeline i'. 2 

the gods protect you! cym^edne, 1. ^ 

tlie law protects not us . .•■•••■ Vericlcs i" 4 

the gods of Greece protect you! ....... • ' ericics, 1. 1 

ke necessity, whic> gods protect ee . . - 1 • J 

t uit vou protect this course, and PUt it ••iM,, . 4 

PROTrCTED-love to be p.rotectec\ ..2Henry^'i. . 3 

s^iould be to be protected like a child - ' ■ » 

PROTECTIO N of his son ■J'-^'VthN'^M, 1. 2 

leave me to mine own Protection.Mer.o/femce. y. 1 
to its own protection, and iavour.. VVmler sTnle, 1 . 3 
whose protection is most divinely. . ■■ ^'"g-lflh}- ' 
sSon, had him in protection.. ..2i^emi^^^^^^ 
in protection of their tender.ones • •^H'-'p' [/-.V- f 
thp kinir's protection (rep. m. 2) . . Hem y Vill. 111. > 
proteSSf the prosperous gods! .r.mo„„/^(ft. v. 2 



PRO 

PROTECTION-babe to his protection . Cijmleline, i. 1 
please you to take them in protection? — i. 7 
your protection I commend me, gods! — ii. 2 
meet botli welcome and protection Lear, iii. 6 

PROTECTOR— tliou art protector .. .Allenryyi. i. 1 
answer you so the lord iirotector? (rep.) — i. 3 

there's no protector of the realm, but 1 — i. 3 
not protector of the king or realm.... — i. 3 
because he is protee.tor of the realm. , — ..V ^ 
am I not the protector, saucy priest. . — iii. 1 
is not l\is grace protector to the king? — iii. 1 

my lord i)rotector, yield — iii. 1 

and now, my lord protector {rep.) .... — iv. 1 
my lord protector, see them guarded — v. I 

my lord protector, give consent — v. 5 

my lord protector, so it please your ..iHenry VI. i. 1 
there goes our protector in a rage .... — i. 1 

be found a dangerous protector — i. 1 

he'll be protector. Or thou, or I (rep.) — i. 1 
and the protector's wife (rep. i. 3) . . . . — i. 2 

my lord protector, 'tis his highness' . . — i. 2 

my lord protector will come this way — i. 3 
Suffolk, and not my lord protector .. — i. 3 

to my lord protector! — i. 3 (petit.) 

•wings of our protector's grace, begin — i. 3 
beside tlie liaus'ht protector have we — i. 3 
De protector of ills excellence? irfp.;.. — i. 3 

my lord protector will, I doubt it not — i. 4 
a sorry breakfast for my lord protector — i. 4 

my lord protector's hawks do tower so — ii. I 
pernicious protector, dangerous peer — ii. 1 
against tliis, proud protector, with my — ii. 1 

Srolector, see to't well — ii. 1 
lleanor, the protector's wife — ii. 1 

so my lord protector, by this means.. — ii. 1 
Henry will to himself protector be .. — ii. 3 
when tliou wert protector to tliy king — ii. 3 
and tlion a prince, protector of this land — ii. 4 
being protector, stayed tlie soldiers' pay — iii. 1 
that wliiles I was protector, pity .... — iii. 1 
Humphrey for the king's protector? — iii. 1 

but I II be protector over him — iv. 2 

the lord protector lost it, and not I..3HetinjFI. i. 1 
the duke is made protector of the realm — i. 1 
■we have left protectors of the kiag .. — i. 2 
choose Clarence only for protector . . — i v. 6 
I make you botli protectors of this land — iv. 6 
concluded, he shall be protector? ..Richard III. i. 3 
my lord protector needs will have it so — iii. 1 
knows the lord protector's mind herein? — iii. 4 
lord protector? [Co(.K;i(.-duke of Gloster] — iii. 4 
thou protector of this damned strumpet — iii. 4 
not as protector, steward, substitute — iii, 7 

I mean, the lord protector — iv. I 

who seemed my good protector Perides, i. 2 

PROTECTORSHIP. Why, Suffolk. .2Hcnr!/F/. ii. 1 

in his protectorship, levy great — iii. 1 

in your protectorsliip, you did devise — iii. 1 

PROTECTRESS of her honour too Othello, iv. 1 

PROTEST true loyalty Two Gen. of Verona, i v. 2 

I do protest, that I have — iv. 4 

for, 1 protest, mine {rep.) Merry Wives, ii. 1 

I protest to you, bestowed much — ii. 2 

protests to my husband, he is now here — iv. 2 
I protest, I take these wise men . . Twelfth Night, i. Ty 
he protests he will not hurt you .... — iii. 4 

my lord, I do protest — v. I 

I protest, I love the duke Meas.forMcas. v. 1 

I protest, I love thee Much.ido, iv. 1 

I was about to protest, I loved you .. — iv. 1 

that none is left to protest — iv. 1 

or I will protest your cowardice .... — v. 1 
or on Diana's altar to protest . . Mid. N.\ Dream, i. 1 
I protest, I love to hear him lie.... Lo»e'sL.Los(, i. 1 

I do protest, I never heard of it — ii. 1 

I protest, a world of torments though — v. 2 

protest, by this white glove — v. 2 

I protest, the schoolmaster is exceeding — v. 2 
a wife, whom, I protest, I \ow&. Merch. of Venice, iv. 1 
I protest, her frown might kill ..As you Like it, iv. 1 
no, I protest, I know not the contents — iv. 3 

that, I protest, 1 simply am All's Well, ii. 3 

by him whom I protest to love — iv. 2 

my meaning in't, I ^protest, was very — iv. 3 

which I protest a^amst Winter's Tale, v. 3 

but, I protest, without desert. Comedy o/ Errors, iii. 1 

but, I protest, he had tire chain — v. 1 

if trembling I inhibit tliee, protest . . Macbeth, iii. 4 
that even now protest their first .... — v. 2 
I do protest, 1 never loved myself . . King John, ii. 2 
I protest, hath very much beguiled .Bi'cAarrf //. ii. 3 
lords, I protest, my soul is full of woe — v. 6 
such protest of pepper-gingerbread. IHenry/r. iii. 1 

I do protest, I have not sought — v. 1 

for I protest, we are well fortified . . 1 Henry VI. iv. 2 
I here protest, in sight of lieaveu ..ZHenryVI. iii. 3 

for, I protest, as yet I do not Richard III. i. 1 

I here protest, upon my part, shall be — ii. 1 
I do protest, was it more precious .. — iii. 2 
.yet, I protest, were I alone .. Troilus 4-Cressida, ii. 2 

full of protest, of oatli, and big — iii. 2 

yet I protest, for his right noble. . Timon cifAth. iii. 2 
\Col. Kiif.^ protest to do't like workmen — iv. 3 
I will protest he speaks by leave .JvUus Crvsar, iii. 1 
on mine honom' here I do protest. TiliisAndron. i. 2 

1 do protest, were never better fed Pericles, ii. 5 

but I protest to thee, pretty one — iv. 6 

I protest,— niaugre thy strength, youth . . Lear, v. 3 
I protest unto thee— (Jood heartl.flomeo ^ Juliet, ii.i 

protest; which as I take it, is — ii. 4 

I do protest, I never injured tliee — iii. 1 

lady doth protest too mucli, methinks. HajnieJ, iii. 2 

I prtitest, in tlie Sincerity of love Othello, ii. 3 

hut, he protests, he loves you — iii. 1 

but wluit I protest intendment of doin".. — iv. 2 
yet, \ profL'st, I have dealt most directly — iv. 2 

PROT.-STATION! go, get you-V^o Gen. ofVer. i. 3 
tliey are stuffed witli protestations .. — iv. 4 

but say tlieir protestation over Love's L. Losl, i. 1 

many protestations to marry. . All's Well, v. 3 (petit.; 



[ 602 ] 



PROTESTATION-your protestation. Winter's T. iv. 3 

no cunning in protestation Henry V. v. 2 

in my sequent protestation.. Troilus &Cressida, iv. i 
PROTESTED— kissed, protested ..Merry Wives, iu. 5 
PROTESTER-every new protoster./ui/iMCtPsur, i. 2 
PROTESTING oath on oath ..Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 
PROTEUS— my loving Proteus.. 7'wo Gen. o/fer. i. 1 
tliink on thy Proteus, when tliou.. .. — i. 1 

sweet Proteus, no; now let us — i. 1 

sir Proteus, save you — i. 1 

think'st thou of tire gentle Proteus? — i. 2 
why not on Proteus— as of all the rest? — i. 2 

and sent, I think, from Proteus — i. 2 

I bid tlie base for Proteus — i. 2 

here is writ, love wounded Proteus .. — i. 2 

was Proteus written down — i. 2 

forlorn Proteus, passionate Proteus., — i. 2 

'twas of his nei:)hew Proteus — i. 3 

he said that Proteus, your son — i. 3 

with them shall Protexis go — i. 3 

sir Proteus, your father calls for you — i. 3 
you have learned, like sir Proteus .. — ii. 1 
you chid at sir Proteus for going .... — ii. 1 

sir Proteus, you are staid for — ii. 2 

going with sir Proteus to — ii. 3 

yet hath sir Proteus, for that's — ii. 4 

welcome dear Proteus ! — ii. 4 

ay, Proteus, but that life — ii. 4 

gentle Proteus, love's a mighty lord — ii. 4 

pardon me, Proteus; all I can — ii. 4 

good Proteus, go with me — ii. 4 

a journey to m^y loving Proteus .... — ii. 7 

perfection, as sir Proteus — ii. 7 

till Proteus make return — ii. 7 

if Proteus like your journey — ii. 7 

warrant me welcome to my Proteus.. — ii. 7 

did govern Proteus' birth — ii. 7 

now tell me, Proteus — iii. 1 

Proteus, I thank thee for — iii. I 

how now, sir Proteus? (rep. iv. 2 and v. 2) — iii. 2 

Proteus, the good conceit — iii. 2 

and, Proteus, we dare trust you iii. 2 

sweet Proteus, my direction-giver .. — iii. 2 
thissirProteus.tliat wetalkon (rep.) — iv. 2 

where lies sir Proteus? — iv. 2 

alas, poor Proteus! — iv. 4 

from my master, sir Proteus, madam — iv. 4 
tliinks that Proteus hath forsook her — iv. 4 

sir Proteus, what says Silvia — v. 2 

tlian have false Proteus rescue me .. — v. 4 

1 do detest falseperjured Proteus.... — v. 4 
wlien Proteus cannot love where .... — v. 4 

all men but Proteus — v. 4 

Proteus, I am sorry I must — v. 4 

Proteus, let this habit make — v. 4 

come, Proteus; 'tis your penance ... — v. 4 
change shapes, with Proteus iHenryVl. iii. 2 

PROTRACT— long protract his speech 1 Henry VI. \. 2 

and not protract with admiration . . Cymbeline, iv. 2 

PROTRACTIVE trialsofgreat Jove 7'roi(.4- Cress, i.3 

PROUD— rich scarf to my proud earth.. Tempest, iv. 1 

eogreatafavourgrowingproud. . TwoGen.ofVer. ii. 4 

forward, proud, disobedient — iii. I 

she is proud — iii. 1 

see what you are: you are too proud. . Twelfth N, i. 5 

1 will be proud, I will read politic... — ii. 5 
how apt the poor are to be proud! ... — iii. I 

O, but man, proud man! Meas.forMeas. ii. 2 

I must not seem proud Much Ado, ii. 3 

like favourites, made proud by princes — iii. 1 

and mine that I was proud on — iv. 1 

met by moonlight, proud Titania. Mid. N.'sDr. ii. 2 
have every pelting river made so proud — ii. 2 
where art thou, proud Demetrius? .. — iii. 2 
why should proud summer boast .. Love' sL. Lost, i. 1 

I am less proud to hear you tell — ii. 1 

proud of emplo.yment, willingly I go — ii. 1 

proud with his form, in his eye — ii. 1 

make him proud to make me proud . . — v. 2 
more proud to be sir Rowland's ..Asyou Like it ^ i. 2 
proud, fantastical, apish, shallow.... — iii. 2 
the proud disdainfulshepherdess.... — iii. 4 
glow of scorn and proud disdain .... — iii. 4 

must you be therefore proud — iii. .^ 

no, faith, proud mistress, hope not .. — iii. 5 
and be not proud; tliough all the ... — iii. 5 
but, sure, he 's proud; and j'et his .. . — iii. h 
nor the courtier's, which is proud ... — iv. 1 
callsme proud; and, thatsliecould not — iv. 3 
peevish, proud, idle, made of self-love ..All'sWell,\. I 
his humble ambition, proud humility — i. 1 
making tliem proud of his humility.. — i. 2 
take her hand, proud scornful boy ,. — ii. 3 
find what it is to be proud of thy .... — ii. 3 
our virtues would be proud, if our ... — iv. 3 
peremptory as slie proud-minded, raining' o/SA. ii. 1 

this proud disdainful haggard — iv. 2 

our purses shall be proud, our — iv. 3 

not meanly proud of two such .... Comrdy of Err. i. 1 
lion-mettlecl, proud; and take nocare. .i/ac6^'//?, iv. 1 
proud control of fierce and bloody ....liingJohn, i. 1 
their proud contempt that heat liis .. — ii. 1 
like a proud river peering o'er his .. — iii. 1 

to be proud ; for gi-ief is proud — iii. 1 

and tlie proud day, attended witli ... — iii. 3 

O death, made proud with pure — iv. 3 

lie at the proud foot of a conqueror. . — v. 7 
report of iashions in proud Italy .... Richard II. ii. 1 
he fires the proud tops of tlie eastern — iii. 2 
chid'st mewell. Proud Bolingbroke — iii. 2 

on yon proud man, should take — iii. 3 

Bwell'st thou, proud heart? I'll give.. — iii. 3 
to make the base earth proud with... — iii. 3 
being over proud with sap and blood — iii. 4 
traitor to proud Hereford's king .. .. — iv. 1 
a slave; proud majestj', a suliject .... — iv. 1 
a prisoner by proud Bolingbroke .... — v. 1 
lower than his proud steed's neck.... — v. 2 
posting on iuBolingbroke's proud joy — v. 5 
so proud that Bolingbroke was ou lua — v. 5 



PRO 



PROUD— made him proud with Richard II. v. 5 

the proud soul ne'er pavs (rep.) MlenrylV, i. 3 

contempt of this proud "king — i.3 

I am no proud Jack, like lalstaff .. — ii. 4 
thou proud [Kn/.-haughty] Scot .... — v. 3 
than those proud titles thou hast.... — r. 4 
when througli proud London he ....2HenryIV. i. 3 
printing their proud hoofs i' the. . Henry V. i. (cho.) 
like to men proud of destruction .... — iii. 3 
proud of tlieir numbers, and secure — iv. (cho.) 
no, thou proud dream, that play 'St.. — iv. 1 
thy wife is proud; she holdeth thee..] Henrj^r/. i. 1 
now am I like that proud insultin" ship — i. 2 
proud Poole, I will; and scorn both — ii. 4 
against proud Somerset, and William — ii, 4 
vvlio in proud heart doth stop my. .. . — iv. 3 

heart with proud desire of bold-faced iv. 6 

with a proud, majestical, high scorn — iv. 7 
with such a proud eomraanding spirit — iv. 7 

proud iirelate, in thy face iHenryVI. i. 1 

as stout, and proud, as he were lord.. — i. 1 
show of love to proud duke Humphrey — i. 1 
nor sliall jiroud Lancaster usurp .... — i. 1 

as that proud dame, the lord — i.3 

I it was, proud Frenchwoman — i.3 

against this proud protector — ii. l 

did follow thy proud chariot wheels — ii. 4 
how proud, peremptory, and unlike — iii. I 
thou darest, proud lord of Warwickshire — iii. 2 
and lofty proud encroaching tyranny — iv. 1 
small things make base men proud.. — iv. I 
marching hitherward in proud array — iv. 9 
and be proud of thy victory: tell Kent — iv. 10 

to remove proud Somerset from v. I 

proud northern lord, Clifford of ... . — v. 2 

thus presumptuous and proud iHenryVI.i. 1 

to our mercy, proud Plautagenet. . . . — i. 4 
I would assay, proiul queen (lep.) .. — i. 4 

that doth oft make women proud.... — i. 4 

the proud insulting queen — ii. 1 

many more proud birds — ii. 1 

thy minions, proud insulting boy! .. — ii. 2 
while proud ambitious Edward — iii. 3 

Eroud setter up and puller down .... — iii. 3 
reathe out so proud words? — iv. 1 

like a subject, proud ambitious York 1 — v. 5 
my proud heart sues, and prompts,. Ric/iard III. i. 2 
hate not you for her proud arrogance — i.3 
a weeder~out of his proud adversaries — i.3 
to part the queen's proud kindred .. — ii. 2 

and brothers, haught and proud .... ii. 3 

now thy proud neck bears lialf my .. — iv. 4 
thy age confirmed, proud, subtle, sly — iv. 4 

spur your proud horses hard — v. 3 

that made him proud, the pope Henry VIII. ii. 2 

I find at such proud rate — iii. 2 

thou art a proud traitor, priest. Proud — iii. 2 

in full as proud a place as Troilus 4 Cressida, i. 3 

were he not proud, we all should .... — i.3 
sick of proud heart; you may call .. — ii. 3 

why should a man be proud? — ii. 3 

he that is proud, eats up himself .... — ii. 3 

I do hate a proud man — ii. 3 

he is so plaguy proud, tliat )i.3 

an' he be proud with me ii.3. 

if he were proud? Or covetous of ... . ii. 3 

'twill make us proud to be — iii. I 

a burden which 1 am proud to bear — iii. 3 

and are the proud man's fees — iii. 3 

so prophetically proud of a heroieal — iii. 3 
discredit the blessed gods, proud man — iv. 5 
hark! Proud Diomed, believe I come — v. 3 
disdain thy eoiu-tesy proud Trojan .. — v. 6 

thou art proud, Aperaantus Timon of Athens, i. 1 

feasts are too proud to give thanks to — i. 2 
and I am proiul, say, that my occasions — ii. 2 

when I have laid proud Athens — iv. 3 

whereof thy proud child, arrogant man — iv. 3 
art thou proud yet? ay, that 1 am not — iv. 3 
before proud Athens he's set down .. — v. 4 

pays himself with being proud Coriolanus, i. 1 

his motlier, and to be partly proud . . — i. 1 

the other makes you proud i. I 

he is a lion that I am proud to hunt — i. 1 

■was ever man so proud as is this — i. 1 

too proud to be so valiant — i. 1 

you blame Marcius for being proud? — ii. 1 

unmeriting, proud, violent, testy — ii. 1 

you must be saying, Marcius is proud — ii. 1 

he has more cause to be proud ii. 1 

as he is proud to do't _ ii. 1 

but he's vengeance proud, and loves not — ii. 2 
with a proud heart he wore his liumble — ii. 3 
strike tlie proud cedars 'gainst the .. — v. 3 
fret, till yoiir proud heart break.. /«;i«sCrt!snr, iv. 3 
and make thy fortunes proud .. Antony fy Cleo. ii. 5 
for he seems proud and disdainful .. — iii. 1 1 

and make death proud to take us — iv. 13 

the story proud Cleopatra Cymbeline, ii. 4 

a mole, riglit proud of that most — ii. 4 

proud and ambitious tribune. . Titus Andronicus, i. 2 
proud Saturnine, interrupter of the good — i. 2 
how proud I am of thee, and of thy gifts — i. 2 

with that proud brag of thine i. 2 

farewell, proud Rome! till Lucius come — iii. 1 

make proud Saturnine and his empress iii. 1 

for this proud mock, I'll be thy — iv. 4 

to pluck proud Lucius from the — iv. 4 

I know thee well for our proud empress — v. 2 
Thetis, being proud, swallowed. Pericles, iv. 4 (Gow.) 
proud, sliallow, beggarly, three-suited ..Lear, ii. 2 

made him proud of heart, to ride — iii. 4 

set not thy sweet heart on proud array.. — iii. 4 
a serving-man, proud in heart and mind — iii. 4 

and frustrate his proud will — iv. 6 

is she not proud? dotli she not. Romeo 4- Juliet, iii. 5 
not proud, you have: but thankful (rep.) — iii. ^ 
no thankings, nor proud me no prouds — iii. 5 

the proud man's contumely Hamlet, iii. 1 

I am very proud, revengetul, ambitious — iii. I 



PRO 



[ 603 ] 

PROVE-lawful, may prove coherent.. /l«'j^e((,iii. 7 
if it should prove that thou art so (;rp.5 — V. 3 
shall prove tliis ring was ever hers {rep.) — v. 3 
fairer prove your honour, than in ,. — v. 3 

not plain, and prove untrue — v. 3 

deeds shall prove. And that {rep.). Taming of Sh. i. 2 

I know, he'll prove a jade — i. 2 

my dangluer prove agiiod C't'p.) .... — ii. 1 

she will prove a secondGrissel — ii. 1 

'tis like you'll prove a jolly surly.... — iii. ? 
and may you prove, sir, master of . . . . — iv. 2 
sweet dear, prove mistress of my .... — iv. 2 
and that I'll prove upon thee, though — iv. 3 
if you seek to prove, I dare not.... H'inter' sTale, i. 2 

lestyour justice prove violence — ii. 1 

if it prove she's otherwise, I'll keep.. — ii. I 
if this prove true, they'll pay for't .. — ii. 1 
if I prove honey-mouthed, let my tongue — ii. 2 
o' the journey prove successful to the — iii. 1 
fairy gold, boy, and 'twill prove so . . — iii. 3 
and the shearers prove sheep, let me be — iv. 2 
will prove so, sir, to my power (rep.') — v. 2 

ifit prove so, 1 will be gone .. Comedy of Errors^i. 2 
you may prove it by my long ears.... — iv. 4 

I'll prove mine honour — v. 1 

with my sword I'll prove the lie Macbeth, v. 7 

the which if he can prove, a' pops me. King John, i. I 
that proves the king, to hnn will we prove— ii. I 
one must prove greatest; while they — ii. 2 

cause to prove my saying true — iii. 1 

and tried, proves valueless — iii. 1 

and prove a deadly bloodshed but a jest — iv. 3 
do not prove me so; yet, I am none.. — iv. 3 
my right-drawn sword may prove . . Richard II. i. I 

my life shall prove it true — i. 1 

I say, and will in battle prove — i. 1 

to prove myself a loyal gentleman .. — i. 1 

to prove him, in defending of — i. 3 

to prove, by heaven's grace (rep.) .... — i. 3 

to taste, prove in digestion sour — i. 3 

and these stones prove armed soldiers — iii. 2 
to prove it on tliee to the extremest.. — iv. 1 
division prove tliat ever fell upon. ... — iv. 1 

lest thy pity prove a serpent — v. 3 

well hath prayed, and prove you true — v. 3 

my brain I'll prove the female — v. .5 

(for recreation sake) prove a, false.. . .IHenryl F. i. 2 
to prove that true, needs no more .... — i. 3 
blessed sun of Iieaven prove a micher — ii. i 
sliall the sou of Kngland prove a thief — ii. 4 
he would prove the better counterfeit — v. 4 
which, to prove fruit, hope gives not.2HenryIV. i. 3 
prove that ever I dress myself handsome — ii. 4 

and thou shalt prove a shelter to — iv. 4 

I doubt, prove mine own marring — (epilogue) 
needs prove a good soldier-breeder .... Henry V. v. 2 

will I trust, if she prove false \Henryt'I. i. 2 

pray God, she prove not masculine . . — ii. 1 
I mean to prove this lady's courtesy — ii. 2 
and tliat I'll prove on better men'. ... — ii. 4 

but prove a chief offender in — iii. 1 

prove them, and I lie open to the ,.2 Henry FI. i. 3 
to prove him a knave, and myself .. — ii. 3 
and prove the period of their tyranny — iii. 1 
this spark will prove a raging fire .. — iii. 1 
warrant thee, if dreams prove true .. — v. 1 
prove it, Henry, and thou shalt be ..ZHemyFI. i. 1 
I'll prove the contrary, if you'll hear — i. 2 
to prove him tyrant, this reason .... — iii. 3 
in hope he'll prove a widower (rep. iv. 1) — iii. 3 
I may not prove inferior to yourself — iv. 1 

Montague, as he proves true! — iv. 1 

will prove our country's bliss — iv. 6 

since I cannot prove a lover Richard III. i. 1 

determined to prove a villain — i. 1 

here you urge, to prove us enemies . . — i. 3 

'twill prove a giddy world — ii. 3 

I prove a needless cowardi — iii. 2 

prove me, my gracious lord — iv. 2 

the consequence willproveaa bitter.. — iv. 4 

witli him, as I prove true to you — iv. 4 

will our friends prove all true? — v. 3 

shall prove not well disposed ......HenryVIII. i. 2 

the French would prove perfidious .. — i. 2 

'twould prove the verity of certain . . — i. 2 

you can report, and prove it too — ii. 4 

prove but our marriage lawful — ii. 4 

iionest men, (pray God, ye prove so!) — iii. 1 
not reformed, may prove pernicious.. — v. 2 
to prove to you that Helen (_rep.). Troitus ^ Cress, i. 2 

to the proof, if you'll prove it so — i. 2 

a mere recreant prove, that means not — i. 3 

I'll prove [/i'»(.-pa\vu] this truth _ i.3 

allow us as we prove — iii. 2 

if ever you ijrove false one to another — iii. 2 

expressly proves, — thatnoman — iii. 3 

will, sure, prove ominous to the day — v. 3 
I may never prove so fond .Tiinon ofAth. i. 2 (grace) 
so it may prove an argument of laughter — iii. 3 

I sliould prove so base, to sue — lu.b 

now prove good seconds Coriolanus, i. 4 

we prove this very liour — i. 6 

shall i' the field prove flatterers — i. 9 

the other course will prove too bloody — iii. 1 

may prove as benefits to thee — iv. 5 

and tnat to prove more iortunes .... — iv. 5 

which will not prove a whip — iv. 6 

good faith, I'll prove him, speed how — v. 1 
that thou mayst prove to shame .... — v. 3 
it proves not so; their battles are.. /h^^'ws Ccp.s'aj-, v. 1 
sliall prove the immediate. . Antony <§- Cleopatra, ii. 6 

sister, prove such a wife as my — iii. 2 

prove this a prosperous day — iv. 6 

my courage prove my title! — v. 2 

tliis proves me base; if she first meet — v. 2 

expected to prove so worthy Cymbeline, i. 5 

she'll prove on cats, and dogs — j. 6 

when to my good lord I prove untrue — _i. 6 

that this will prove a war — .ji. 4 

my purpose would prove well — iii. 4 



PRO 



PROUU death I what feast is toward .... Hamlet, v. 2 

to as proud a fortune as this Othello, i. 2 

she that M'as ever fair, aiul never proud.. — ii. 1 

PROUDE ll-of prouder stutt'than that. Much. Uo. iii. 1 

would be prouder of the v/ork. Merch. of Fenice, iii. 4 

may well meet a prouder foe King John, v. 1 

that prouder tlian blue Iris bends. rro/iuA'-S-Cres*. i. 3 
and now is the ciu- ^Vjax prouder than — v. 4 
not so hardlj' as prouder livers do.. Cymbeline, iii. 3 
prouder, than rustling in unpriid-for silk — iii. 3 
PROUDEST- proudest of them all. Merry Wi,ie», ii. 2 
the proudest of them shall weWhe&r.MuchAUo,^. 1 
mine action on the proudest \\e. .Taming of Sh. iii. 2 
and the proudest of you all shall find — iv. 1 

amaze the proudest of you all \ Henry Fl. iv. 7 

be inferior to the proudest peer — v. 1 

the proudest peer in the realm ....2 Henry FI. iv. 7 

the proudest he that holds up 3 Henry FI. i. 1 

any he tlie proudest of thy sort — ii. 2 

the proudest of you all have heen.. Richard in. ii. 1 
now let me see the proudest he .... Henry Fill. v. 2 
give us the proudest i:)risoner of . . Titus Andron. i. 2 
will rouse the proudest panther in .. — ii. 2 
cut oft' the oroude?t conspirator .... — iv. 4 

PROUD-HEARTED Warwick iHenryFI. v. 1 

PROUDLIER even to my person . . Coriolanus, iv. 7 

PROUDLY, if I perceive the love .... Much Ado, ii. 3 

birthrights proudly on their hdiCks .. King John, ii. 1 

so proudly, as if he disdained Richard II. v. 5 

hath proudly flowed in vanity iHenrylF. v. 2 

let me speak proudly ; tell the Henry F. iv. 3 

question her proudly; let thy looks.. I Henry T/. i. 2 
he left me proudly, as unworthy .... — iv. 7 

looks proudly on the crowni Richard III. iv. 3 

a little proudly, and great deal. Troitus ^ Cress, iv. 5 
thus proudly pight upon our Phrygian — v. 11 

PROUD-SWELLING state King John, iv. 3 

PROVAND only for bearing burdens. Con'ofanus, ii. 1 

PRO VE— if you prove a mutineer .... Tempest, iii. 2 

this will prove a brave kingdom to me — iii. 2 

and prove a bald jerkin — iv. 1 

if this prove a vision of the island .... — v. 1 

I fear you'll prove TwoGen.of Ferona, i. 1 

this proves me still a sheep — i. 1 

but I'll prove it by another — i. 1 

I fear, she'll prove as hard to you.... — i. 1 

I cannot now prove constant — ii. 6 

pray heaven he prove so — ii. 7 

this proves, that thou canst not read — iii. 1 

it may be; I'll prove it — iii. 1 

tliau I prove loyal to your grace — iii. 2 

unless I prove false traitor — iv. 4 

his dove will prove, his Merry Wives, i. 3 

ay, but if it prove true — iv. 2 

do very oft prove fools Twelfth Niglit, i. 5 

gi ve me leave to prove you a fool .... — i. 5 
tor still we prove much in our vows — ii. 4 
I am loath to prove reason with .... — iii. 1 

I will prove it legitimate, sir — iii. 2 

often prove rou^Ti and uniiospitable — iii. 3 
how vile an idol proves this god I.... — iii. 4 
prove true, imagination, O prove true — iii. 4 

O if it prove, tempests are kind — iii. 4 

the world, will prove a cockney .... — iv. 1 
prove it before these varlets (rep.) Meas.forMeas. ii. 1 
prove tills, thou wicked Hannibal . . — ii. 1 
and prove a shrewd Caesar to you. ... — ii. 1 

I'll prove a tj'rant to him — ii. 4 

mercy to thee would prove itself a bawd — iii. 1 

but yet, sir, I would prove — iii. 2 

proofs for sin, thou wilt prove this .. — iii. 2 
with a prayer they may prove prosperous — iii. 2 
do prove my occupation a mystery . . — iv. 2 
this may prove worse than hanging. . — v. 1 
prove, that ever I lose more blood ....Much Ado, i. I 
thou wilt prove a notable argument — i. I 
this may prove food to my displeasure — i. 3 
Bliall we go prove what's to be done? — i. 3 
lest I should prove the motlier of fools — ii. 1 

ifit prove so, tlien loving goes by — iii. I 

are like to prove a goodly commodity — iii. 3 

my father, prove j'ou that any man — iv. 1 
I'll prove it on his body, if he dare .. — v. 1 
he may prove more fond on her ..Mid.N.'sDr. ii. 2 
badge of faith, to prove them true?.. — iii. 2 

to prove him false, that says — iii. 2 

withdraw, and prove it too — iii. 2 

so far blameless proves my eiiterprize — iii. 2 
lie might yet recover, and prove an ass — v, 1 
oaths and laws will prove an idle, tone's L.Lost, i. 1 

to prove you a cypher — i. 2 

his knowledge must prove ignorance — ii. 1 
for you'll prove perjured, if you make — ii. 1 
all those three will I prove (rep.).... — iii. 1 

to thee I'll faithful prove — iv. 2 

where I will prove tliose verses to be — iv. 2 
but I will prove, thou being .... — iv. 3 (verses) 

I'll prove her fair, or talk till — iv. 3 

now prove our loving lawful — iv. 3 

love's tongue proves dainty Bacchus — iv. 3 
none at all in aught proves excellent — iv. 3 
what is sworn, you will prove fools . . — iv. 3 
may prove plagues to men forsworn — iv. 3 

to prove, by wit, worth in simplicity — v. 2 

it may prove an ox — v. 2 

this proves you wise and rich — v. 2 

Fompey proves the best worthy — v. 2 

we to ourselves prove false — v. 2 

1 fear, he will prove the weeping. iVcr. of Fenice, i. 2 

to prove whose blood is reddest — ii. 1 

I would it might prove the end — iii. 1 

f rove it so, let fortune go to hell .... — iii. 2 
'U prove the prettier fellow of — iii. 4 

prove you that, in the great heap..y4s youLike it, i. 2 

one of you will prove a shrunk — iii. 3 

I'll prove a busy actor in their play — iii. 4 

I knew what you would prove — iv. 1 

and good plays prove the better by — (epilogue) 
to prove most suiewy swordsmen ....All'slVell,U. I 
and I shall prove a lover of thy drum — iii. 3 



PROVE— which I fear, prove false! ..Cymbeline, iii. 5 
may prove his travel, not her danger — iii. 5 

true to thee, were to prove false — iii . 5 

so, if I prove a good repast to the.... — v. 4 

and prove it in thy feeling — v. 5 

tears, that fall, prove holy water .... — v. 5 

Ijut I will prove that twoof us — v. 5 

thou have ine prove myself — ii. 3 

to prove thou hast a true-divining ... — ii. 4 
which I wish may prove more stern.. — v. 2 
save that, mayst thou prove iirosperous! Pericles, i. I 

prove awful both in deed — ii. (Gower) 

this sword shall prove, his honour's.. — ii. i 
prove that I cannot, take me home . . — iv. 6 
if thine considered prove the thousandth — v. 1 

mere defects prove our commodities Lear, iv. 1 

on the way, may prove efiiicts — iv. 2 

I'll prove it on a giant — iv. 6 

that will prove what is avouched there .. — v. 1 

jesters do oft prove prophets — v. 3 

and prove my title thine — v. 3 

if none appear to prove upon thy — v. 3 

I'll prove iKnt.-makej it on thy heart ... — v. 3 
to prove upon thy heart, whereto I speak — v. 3 

must this humour prove Ilomeo ^Juliet, i. 1 

swear'st, thou mayst prove false .... — ii. 2 

I'll prove more true than tliose — ii. 2 

thy love prove likewise variable .... — ii. 2 
may prove a beauteous flower when — ii.2 

this alliance may so happy prove.... — ii. 3 

froves thee far and wide a broad goose — ii. 4 
would'fain prove so. But what -.Hamlet, ii. 2 

wax poor, when givers prove unkind — iii. 1 

a question left us yet to prove — iii. 2 

if it prove lawful prize, he's made Othello, i. 2 

he'll prove to Desdemona a most dear ii. 1 

when I doubt, prove; and on the proof — iii. 3 
if I do prove her haggard, though that — iii. 3 
be sure thou prove my love a whore.. — iii. 3 

or at the least, so prove it, that — iii. 3 

each drop she falls would prove iv. 1 

would I knew, that stroke would prove — iv. I 

as you shall prove us, praise us — v. 1 

PROVED the sliding of Meas.forMeas. ii. 4 

masters, it is proved already that MuchAdo,i\'. 2 

as shall be proved upon thee by good — iv. 2 
it is proved, my lady Hero hath been — v. 2 
and, if you proved it, I'll repay.. Love'sL.Lost, ii. 1 

well proved wit 1 by the lord — iv. 3 

proved again on my side ! — iv. 3 

how art thou proved Judas? v. 2 

true she is, as she hath proved ..Mer. of Venice, i\. B 

if it be proved against an alien — iv. 1 

rare and proved eifeots, such as h.\s., ..AlVsWell, i. 3 
would all this time have proved.. Come!(!/ of Err. ii. 2 
confessed, and proved, have overthrown iVocteW, i. 3 

that it could be proved, that somc.l Henry IF. i. 1 
these words now proved a prophecy? i Henry IF. iii. 1 
commendable proved, let's die in . . I Henry FI. iv. 6 

that e'er I proved thee false iHenryFI. iii. 1 

by nature proved an enemy to the . . — iii. 1 
as Humphrey, proved by reasons.... — iii. 1 
might happily have proved far worse — iii. 1 

it will be proved to thy face — iv. 7 

seeing thou hast proved so unnatural. 3 Henry FI. i. 1 

this proved Edward's love — iii. 3 

proved the subject of mineown....JJic/i<zrrf/f/. iv. 1 
is not proved worth a blackben-y Troitus <§■ Cress, v. 4 
has been proved; if I were a huge.. TimonofAth. i. 2 
as if he had but proved an argument — iii. .'j 
seeing he had proved himself a man . . Coriolanus, i. 3 

he proved best man i' the field — ii.2 

as shall be proved upon you? — iii. 3 

hast proved Luoilius' saying t'[Vie..JuliusCcpsar, v. 5 
you have seen and proved a fairer. /4/i/o»!/ <§• Clco. i. 2 

you, Polydore, have proved best Cymbeline, iii. 6 

description proved us unspeakiiig sots — v. 5 
if the fault be proved in them(_iep.)Tilus.-tndro7i.\i. 4 
said, 'tis so, when it proved otherwise?. .Hamto,ii. 2 
too much proved, that, with devotion's.. — iii. 1 

to have proved most roj'ally — v. 2 

proved mad, and did forsake her Othello, iv. 3 

PROVENCIALroseson my razed shoes. Hnmiri, iii. 2 

PROVENDER— a peck of provender, jl/i'rf. N.Dr. iv. 1 

give their fasting horses provender . . Henry F. iv. 2 

have their provender tied to 1 Henry FI. i. 2 

do appoint him store of provender../w/;>;sC^,<:ar, iv. 1 

master's ass, for naught out nrovender . . Qihelln, i. 1 

PROVER— demand ol the prover. Tmikis^- Cress, ii. 3 

PROVERB— gives me the proverbs. MerryWives, in. 1 

let the proverb go with me — iii. 5 

and thereof comes the proverb. TwoGen. of Fcr. iii. 1 

IJatch grief with proveras Much Ado, v. 1 

and the country proverb known.iI//d. A'. Dreum, iii. 2 
old proverb is very well parted. . Mer. oj Venice, ii.2 

a proverb never stole in thrifty — ii. 5 

might we lay the old proverb to .. n'inter'sTale, ii. 3 
have at you with a proverb. . Comedy of Errors, iii. 1 
the hare of whom the proverb goes . . King John, ii. 1 

never yet a breaker of proverbs 1 Henry IF. i. 2 

or any such proverb so little kin ,,.. Henry F. iii. 7 

1 will cap that proverb with (rep.) .. — iii. 7 

you are better at proverbs — iii.'/ 

the ancient proverb will be eflfected .2 Henry FI. iii. 1 
sighed forth proverbs; that, hunger. . Coriolanus, i. I 
grassgrows,— the proverb is something. Ham/.'/, iii. 2 

PRO VERGED with a grandsire . . Ilmneo /^-Juliet, i. 4 
PROVETH-marriu;;e seldom provcth..37/<-». r/. iv. 1 
PROVEXIT— me ponip;u provexit apex.. I'criclcs, ii. 2 
PROVIDE to bottom it on me ..TwoGen.of Fer. iii. 2 

I'll provide you a chain Merry fVives, v. I 

you sirrah, provide your block . . Meas.for Meas. iv. 2 
an accident that heaven provides! .. — iv. 3 
to provide for better times to come . . — v. 1 

you, niece, provide yourself As you Like il, i. 3 

provide this messenger Alt's n'ell, iii. 4 

to horse again; go, go, provide — v. 1 

provide the feast, father, and bkX.TamingofSh. ii. 1 
as seafaring men provide for . . Comedy of Errors, i. I 
and your spells, provide your eXiarmi.Macbclh, iii. 5 



PRO 

TROVIDE— his wisdom can provide... iVac6»«/i, iii. fi 
get thee home, provide some carts . . Diehard II. ii. 2 

provide us all things necessary 1 Henry 11'. i. 2 

we will presently provide for them , . 1 Henry ri.v. 2 

with all speed provide to see 2HenryVl.i. 1 

I'll provide his executioner — iii. 1 

provide me soldiers, lords, whiles .... — iii. 1 
art malcontent? I will provide ....SHenryl'I.iv. 1 

to provide a salve for any sore — iv. (i 

provide for thine own future Henry I'lll. iii. 2 

Pandar to provide this gear?. Troilus^ Cressida, iii. 2 
he commands us to provide ....Timonof.itkens, i. 2 

my cook and I'll provide — Hi. ■! 

provide more piercing statutes Coriolanus. i. 1 

provide your going Antony ^ Ctenpafra, iii. 4 

provide me, presently, a riding suit .Cymbcline^ iii. 2 
provide thee proper palfreys .. Tiiiis.4ndronicvs^ v. 2 

we'll sure provide: thou shalt have Pericles, ii. 1 

we will ourselves provide Hnmlet, iii. 3 

traverse; go; provide thy money Othello, i. 3 

PROVIDED for you Measure for Measure, ii. 3 

I cannot be so soon provided . . Tivo Gen. of I'er. i. 3 
provided that you do no outrages .... — iv. 1 

hath he provided this music? Much Ado,\.2 

immediately provided in that case. . Mid.N.'sDr. i. 1 
I am provided of a torch-bearer.. /\fer.o/renice,ii. 4 
to have her love, provided that yom- — iii. 2 

two things provided more — iv. I 

it is myoiilysuit; provided, that., ^a- you L//fe/(, ii. 7 
provided, that lie u in her .... Taming of Skrewj i. 2 

f)rovided, that when he's removed. Winter^s Tale, i. 2 
le was provided to do us good — iv. 3 

he that s coming must be provided for. . Macbeth, i. 5 
provided that, my banishment .... Richard II. iii. 3 

and find me worse provided 'iHenrylV. ii. 3 

gentlemen, have you provided me .. — iii. 2 
shall all be very well provided for.... — v. 5 

you are. as well provided of both Henry V. iii. 7 

we are therefore provided 2HennjVI. i. 4 

I myself am not bo well provided.. BjcAard/ J/, iii. 4 
than, I fear, you are provided for . . Henry VIII. v. 2 
the gods themselves have provided, rimond/zli/i. i. 2 
I pr ytliee let us be provided to show — i. 2 
I shall say I have provided for him . . — v. 1 
spoke already, anci it is provided .Antony fifCleo. y. 2 
provided, I liave your eommendatiou,Ci/m6e//nc,i. 5 

provided none but I and my Pericles, v. 1 

nor am provided for your fit welcome tear, ii. 4 

flow provided a gentleman of . . Romeo ^Juliet, iii. 5 
wliensoever, provided I be so able as . . Hamlet, v. 2 
PKOVIDENCE— by Providence divine. . Tempest, i. 2 
but by immortal providence, she's mine — v. 1 
providence that's in a.v!t\,tc\ii\i\.Trodus ^ Cress, iii. 3 
stay the providence of some \\\%h.. . JuliusCwsar , v. 1 
whose providence should have kept . . Hamlet, iv. 1 
special providence in the fall of a sparrow — v. 2 

PROVIDENT in peril Ttoelfih Night, i. 2 

to be as provident as fear may teach .. Henry V. ii. 4 
PROVIDENTLY caters for the. ... ^j youLike it, ii. 3 
PROVIDER-prnyersfor the provider.Ci/mM«ie,iii.6 
PROVINCE— the province with. Meas. for Mens. iii. 2 

as he had lost some province Winter's Tale, i. 2 

these five provinces, with her to thee. A'jHg-/o/m, ii. 2 

and Blanch those provinces? — iii. 1 

be extirped from our provLices . . , , 1 Henry VI. iii. 3 

those provinces these arms of 2HenryVI, i. 1 

upon their towns and provinces 3 Henry VI. i. 1 

a_province I will give tliee .. Antony ii- Cleopatra, ii. 5 
kissed away kingdoms and provinces — iii. 8 

and so inflict our province Pericles, v. 1 

PROVINCIAL— here provincial. .Meas./or Mens. v. I 

PROVISION in mine art Tempest, i. 2 

made provision for her following Comedy of Err. i. 1 
of me, that my provision wasour. 7Vmojio/^//i. iii. 6 

for our gold we may provision have Pericles, v. 1 

Buch provision as our intents will need? — v. 2 
for provision to shield thee from diseases.. Lear, i. 1 
of that provision which sliall be needful — ii. 4 

that will some provision ^ive thee — iii. 6 

shall be short in our provision . . Romeo S^ Juliet, iv. 2 

PROVISO, and exception \ Henry I V.i.Z 

PROVOCAXION-a parley of provocation. 0(/ie/(o, ii. 3 

come a tempest of provocation — Merry iVives, v. 5 

PROVOKE— provokes that question .... Tempest, i. 2 

this ecstacy may now provoke them to — iii. 3 

provokes me to this TwoGen. of f'erona,\\.6 

and I will provoke him to't Merry Wives, ii. 3 

and good provoke to harm Meas.forMeas. iv. 1 

lungs provokes me to ridiculous. .Loye's L. Lost, iii. I 

not for that which you provoke — v. 2 

things does drink especially provoke?.. Mac6e//i, ii. 3 

it provokes, and unprovokes (rep.) — ii. 3 

oppressed child, religiously provokes. A'l'n^' Jo/m, ii. 1 

why, did you not provoke me? — iv. 2 

let my presumption not provoke. . . . 1 Henry VI. ii. 3 

gusts provokes the mightiest — v. 5 

provokes this deluge most unnatural. /JicAartiZ//. i. 2 
and thy fault, provoke us hither .... — i. 4 
your goodness, since j^ou provoke.. Henry VIII. iii. 2 
our gentle flame provokes itself ...Timonof Ath.i. 1 
keep whole: provoke not battle.. Antony^'Cleo. iii. 8 

for he did provoke me with Cymbeline, v. 5 

and her to incest did provoke . . Pericles, i. (Govver) 

I know, anotlier doth provoke — i. 1 

that to provoke in him, are many Lear, iv. 4 

wilt thou provoke me? then have. /(om«o ^Juliet, v. 3 

did provoke our hasty Hamlet, ii. 2 

provoke him, that he may: for, even ..Othello, ii. 1 

PROVOKED and instigated Merry Wives, iii. 5 

nor heady-rash, pro voice with raging. Com. o/^rr. v 1 
my untruth had not provoked him ..Richard 1 1, ii.2 
except I be provoked? no, my good. 1 Henry/'/, iii. 1 
my lord, I was provoked by him .... — iv. 1 

stomachs be provoked to wilful — iv. 1 

I was provoked by her slanderous.. TSicAard///. i. 2 
thou wast provoked by thy bloody mind — i. 2 
'twas thy beauty that provoked me .. — i. 2 
and not provoked by any suitor else ., — i. 3 
the king, provoked to't by the queen.. — ii.2 
provoked, nor, being provoked.. Troilus ^ Cress, iv. 5 



[ 604 ] 



PUL 



PROVOKED by him, you cannot .... Coriolanus, v. 5 
provoked by my offence . . Antony ^ Cleopatra, iv. 13 
so far provoked as I was in France . . . Cymbeline, i. 5 

PROVOKER— is a great provoker Macbeth, ii. 3 

PROVOKETH thieves sooner than. As you Like it.i. 3 
and not fear, provoketh me 2 Heiiry VI, iv. 7 

PROVOKING— but a provoking merit ..Lear, iii. 5 
such scurvy and provoking terms Othello, i. 2 

PROVOK'ST-thouoft provok'st..l7eas./orMeas. iii. 1 
that thou provok'st thyself to cast ..iHenrylV. i. 3 

PROVOST— tlie provost to prison.. Meas. forMeas. i. 2 
the provost hath a warrant for his .. ' — i. 5 

where is the provost? irep. iv. 3andv. — ii. 1 
now, what's the matter, provost? .... — ii.2 
provost! so I think you are (rep.) .. _ ii. 3 

provost, a word with j'ou (rep.) — iii. I 

provost, my brother Angelo will not — iii 2 
of the night envelope you, good provost! — iv. 2 
this is a gentle provost: seldom, when — iv. 2 
as near the dawning, provost, as it is — iv. 2 
there is written in your brow, provost — iv. 2 

tlie provost, he shall bear them — iv. 3 

the provost knows our purpose and our — iv. 5 
your provost knows the place where he — v. 1 

here with the provost — v. 1 

first, provost, let me bail these — v. I 

go with him, provost — v. 1 

provost, how came it, Claudio was .. — v. 1 
proclaim it, provost, round about. ... — v. 1 
thanks, provost, for thy care, and secrecy — v. 1 

PROWESS confirmed in the Macbeth, v. 7 

nor should thy prowess want praise.2 Henry r/. v. 2 
who by his prowess conquered s.l\..3Hemy VI. iii. 3 

PRUDENCE— tliis sir Prudence Tempest, ii. 1 

hold your tongue, good prudence, flomeo if Jul. iii. 5 

PRUDENT— among the prudent.. TweZfl/i Night, i. 3 

prudent discipline! from nortli to.KingJohn, ii. 2 
reputed for a prince most prudent., Henry VIII. ii. 4 
that seem like prudent helps Coriolanus, iii. ) 

PRUNE— for a dish of stewed prunes. Merry Wives, i . 1 
reverence,) for stewed prunes . . Meas.for Meas. ii. 1 
and longing, as I said, for prunes .... — ii. 1 
cracking the stones of the foresaid prunes — ii. 1 

four pound of prunes Winter's Tale, iv. 2 

whicli makes him prune himself ....1 Henry/ F. i. 1 
faith in thee than in a stewed prune — iii. 3 
lives upon mouldy stewed prunes ..iHenrylV. ii. 4 
his royal bird prunes the immortal .Cymbeline, v. i 

PRUNING— in pruning me? Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 

all for want of pruning Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

PRUN'ST— prun'st a rotten tree ...is you Like it, ii. 3 

PRY— have cause to pry into this. Taming of ah. iii. i 

eye of reason may pry in upon us ..\ Henry IV. iv. 1 

to pry into his title, the which we .. — iv. 3 

let it pry through the portage of Henry V. iii. 1 

to pry into the secrets of the state ..iHenryVI. i. 1 
look back, and pry on every side. . Richard III. iii. 5 
return to pry in what I further.. ifomeo ^Juliet, v. 3 
PRY'D me through the crevice .. Titus Andron. v. I 
PSALM— the hundredth psalm ....Merry Wives, ii. 1 
he sings psalms to hornpipes . . . Winter's Tale, iv. 2 

1 could sing psalms or any thing ]..\ Henry IV. ii. 4 
PSALMIST— as the Psalmist saith..2Henry;F. iii. 2 
PSALTERIES— psalteries, and fifes. .Cor/o/aniw, v. 4 
PTISICK-whoreson ptisick (rep.). Troilus ^ Cress, v. 3 
PTOLEMIES' pyramises are very. Oniony <S-C/eo. ii. 7 

craves the circle of the Ptolemies..,. — iii. 10 
PTOLEMY— nor the queen of Ptolemy — i. 4 

to tumble on the bed of Ptolemy ... . — i. 4 
to Ptolemy he assigned Syria, Cilicia — Iii. 6 
PUBLIC— to inake us public sport.. Merry Wives, iv. 4 
that the body public be a horse. . Meas.forMeas. i. 3 
lord Angelo hath to the public ear . . — iv. 2 
yield you forth to public thanks .... — v. 1 
and then with public accusation .... il/wcA Ado, iv. 1 
he shall endure suchpublic shame. Loire's L.Losf, i. 1 
your head into the public street.A/er. of Venice, ii. 5 

so near our public court As youLike it, i. 3 

exempt from public haunt, finds — ii. 1 

we are to speak in public Winter's Tale, ii. 1 

at chiefest stem of public weal 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

to be a public spectacle to all — i. 4 

pricked on by public wrongs — iii. 2 

together, for the public good iHenryVl.i. 1 

cost a mass of public treasury — 1.3 

defacers of a public peace Henry VIII. v. 2 

the public body, — which doth. . Timon of Athens, v. 2 

to your public laws at heaviest — v. 5 

you shall find, no public benefit .... Coriolanus, i. 1 

a foe to the public weal — iii. 1 

the severity of the public power — iii. 1 

public reasons shall be rendered.. Jti(ms Cresar, iii. 2 
let him go up into the public chair.. — iii. 2 
that gave me public leave to speak . . — iii. 2 
forty paces through the public street. Jn(.^C!eo. ii. 2 
made liis will, and read it to public ear — iii. 4 
this in the public eye? I' the common — iii. 6 
not by a public minister of justice .. — v. 1 

'twas a contention in public Cymbeline, i. 6 

either by public war, or private treason. Vericles, i. 2 

in the public haunt of men Romeo ^Juliet, \\\. 1 

why to a public count I might not go.. Hamlet, iv. 7 

tliou public commoner! I should. ...0(/iei/o,iv. 2 
PUBLICAN— a fawning publican. jVer. of Venice, i. 3 
FL'BLICATION-tlie publication. 7Voi/tts fyCress. i. 3 
PUBLICLY shamed irep.') Merry Wives, iv. 2 

1 am bound to enter publicly . . Meas. far Meas. iv. 3 
percliaiice, publicly she'll be ashamed — v. 1 
as she hath been publicly accused. tVinter'sTale, ii. 3 
beheaded publicly for his off'ence. Comedy of Err. v. I 
yet once again proclaim it publicly .. — v. 1 

that he doth it publicly Richard III. i. 4 

it hath already publicly been read. f/eiiry )'///. ii. 4 
of gold were publicly en throned. . 47i(oni/ ■S'C/eo. iii. 6 

PUBLICOLA— sister of Publicola. . . . Coriolanus, v. 3 
Marcus Justeius, Publicola .. ../l"(on!/(5- C/eo. iii. 7 

PUBLISH-boldlv publish her. . . . Twelfth Night, ii. 1 

and publish it, that she is dead Much Ado, iv. 1 

publish his commendation. .Ver.o/ Venice, iv. 1 (let.) 
when of ourselves we publish them ..All's Well, i. 3 



jv. 3 
iv. 3 
v. 2 
v. 2 
v. 2 



i. 5 
ii. 1 

iii. 2 



PUBLISH the occasion of our arms ..2 Henry IV. i. 3 
she could not publish more.. Troilus ^Cressida, v. 2 
publish we this peace to all our .. ..Cymbeline, v. b 

to publish our daughters' several Lear, i. 1 

PUBLISHED and proclaimed \t..Taming of Sh. iv. 2 
that you thus have published mo. Winter's Tnle, ii. 1 
if he he guilty, as 'tis publi shed.... 2 Henry >-"/. iii. 2 
second marriage shall be published. Henry VIII. iii. 2 
darest thou support a published traitor?.. Leor, iv. 6 
PUBLISHER of this pretence.. 7«'o Gen. of Ver. iii. I 

P UBLISHING a truth? Troilus Sr Cressida, v. 2 

PUBLIUS, and Quintus Coriolanus, ii. 3 

look where Publius is come {rep.) .JuliusCasar, ii. 2 

that Publius Cimber may (rep.) — iii. 1 

Publius? Here, quite confounded.... — iii. 1 
Publius, good cheer, there is no harm — iii. 1 

BO tell them, Publius (rep.) — iii. 1 

upon condition Publius shall not live — iv. 1 
no Publius and Sempronius. Titus Andronicus,\v . 3 
O Publius, is not this a heavy case .. — iv. 3 

Publius, how now? — iy. 3 

Publius, Publius, what hast thou done? — 
when Publius shot, the bull being galled — 

let's go; Publius, follow me — 

Publius, come hither — 

fye, Publius, fye! — 

therefore bind them, gentle Publius.. — 
PUCELLE, [see JOAN], if thy name. . 1 Henry VI. S. 2 
Pucelle or puzzel, dolphin or dogfish 

Pucelle is entered into Orleans 

but what's that Pucelle, whom they 
entered Pucelle, and her practisants 
Pucelle, that witch, that damned.. .. — iii. 2 

yet, Pucelle, hold thy peace — iii. 2 

but where is Pucelle now? — iii. 2 

speak, Pucelle, and enchant him .... — iii. 3 

Pucelle hath bravely played her part — iii. 3 

PUCK— call yon, and sweet Puck ..Mid.N.'s Dr. ii. 1 

ray gentle Puck, come hither — ii.2 

gentle Puck, take tins transformed . . — iv. 1 
and, as I am an honest Puck, if we .. — (epil.) 

else the Puck a liar call — (epil.) 

PUDDER iKnt.'] o'er our heads Lear, iii. 2 

PUDDINGS he hath stolen Two Gen. of Ver. iv. 4 

as his guts are made of puddings. .Merry WVjies, ii. 1 

that killed lusty Pudding Meas.forMeas. iv. 3 

nay, as the pudding to his skin AlVsWell, ii. 2 

with the pudding in his belly \ Henry IV. ii. 4 

he'll yield the crow a pudding one. . . . Henry V. ii. 1 
and moreo'er puddings and flap-jacks . Pericles, ii. 1 
blessed pudding! didst thou not see her. Othello, ii. 1 

PUDDLE, sink; whose filth iHenry VI. iv. \ 

gilded puddle which beasts would. /4n(ony (5- C/eo.i. 4 
PUDDLED mire to quench. . . . Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

hath puddled his clear spirit Othello, iii. 4 

PUDENCY so rosy Cymbeline, ii. 5 

PUERITIA, with a horn added .. Love's L. Lost, v. 1 

PUFF of Barson. PuflV Puffin thy ..'iHenrylV. v. 3 

and puff" to win a vulgar station .... Coriolanus, ii. 1 

aiigered. pufi"s away from thence ..Romeo ^Jul. i. 4 

PUFFED— a puffijd man? Merry Wives, v. 5 

with your sweet breaths puflfed out .. Lone's iL. L. v. 2 
the sea, puffed up with wmds. .Tamingof Shrew,!. 2 

great, and puffed up with this iHenrylV. iv. 3 

the cholic of puffed Aquilon. Troilus <5- Cressida, iv. 5 

arrogant man, is puffed Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

like a puffed and reckless libertine .... Hamlet, i. 3 

with divine ambition puffed, makes — iv. 4 

his very arm puffed his own brother . . Othello, iii. 4 

PUFFING with wind As you Like it, iii. 5 

powerful fan, puffing at all . . Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 3 
PUGGING tooth on edge .. Winter'sTale, iv. 2 (song) 

PUISSANCE together King John,i\\. 1 

the power and puissance of the king.2HenryiF. i. 3 

come against us in full puissance — i. 3 

have of their puissance made a little — ii. 3 
and make imaginarjr puissance. Henry?', i. (chorus) 
let us deliver our puissance into .... — ii.2 
arrived to, pith, and puissance . . — iii. (chorus) 
but that my puissance holds it up ..2HenryVI. iv. 2 
whose puissance on either side .... Richard III. v. 3 

PUISSANT arm renew their Henry V.i.2 

and my thrice puissant liege is in ... . — i. 2 

trail'st thou the puissant pike? — iv. I 

supplie, mon trfes puissant seigneur. . — v, 2 
with a puissant and a mighty power.2 Henry VI. iv. 9 
queen is coming with apuissant host.3Henry VI. Ii. I 
at Daintry, with a puissant troop .... — v. 1 
France liatli brought a puissant power — v. 2 
western coast rideth a puissant army. Rich. III. iv. 4 
mighty, and most puissant C!esiir.JuliusCa!snr,iii. 1 
grief grew puissant, and the strings of life. Lear, v. 3 
PUKE-STOCKING, caddis-garter ..\HenryIV. ii. 4 

PUKING in the nurse's arms As you Lilieit, ii. 7 

PULCHER. Polecats! there are ..Merry Wives, iv. 1 

PULIiS'G, like a beggar Two Gen.of Verona, ii. 1 

he, like a puling cuckold Troilus f Cress, iv. I 

leave this faint puling, and lament. Cor/oianiiJ, iv. 2 
to have a wretched puling fool.. /Borneo S^ Juliet, iii. 5 

PULL thee by the lesser legs Tempest, ii. 2 

doth backward pull our slow All'sWell,i. 1 

for thou hast to pull at a smack .... — ii. 3 

I'll pull them oft myself Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 

ne'er pull your hat upon your hrovra. . Macbeth, iv. 3 

applaud again: pull't off, I say — v. 3 

I pull in resolution; and begin — y. 6 

profound respects do pull you on . . King John, iii. I 

we'll pull his plumes \ Henry VI. iii. 3 

two pulls at once 2Henry VI. ii. 3 

now go some and pull down — iv. 7 

let them pull all about mine ears . . Coriolanus, iii. 2 
and pull her out of Acheron .... Titus .indron. i v. 3 

pull oft' my boots Lear, iv. 6 

that pulls the country down .... Othello, ii. 3 (song) 

so hales, and pulls me — iv. 1 

PULLED-be pulled down? Meas.forMeas. i. 2 

and pulled the law upon you — ii. 1 

other had pulled out thy tongue ,. As you Like it, i. I 
hath pulled fair England down ....iHenry VI. i. 1 
unless his teeth be pulled out — iv. 7 



PUL 



[ G05 ] 

rUPIL-LIKE, take thy correction . . Tlichard 11. v. 1 

I'UPl'ET— O exceeding; puppetl .TwoGen.of Ver. ii. 1 
puppet, you! Puppet! why Bol.Micl.N.'uDream, iii. 2 

and marry him to a puppet , Taming of SU. i. 2 

a puppet of me. Why, true (rep.) .. — iv. 3 

au Egyptian puppet, slialt be Antony SrClfo.v. 2 

take vanity the puppet's part a_^ainst .... Lear, ii. '2 
if I could see the puppets dallying Hamteft iii. 2 

PUPPIES— a bitch s blind puppies. ilfi?)-rf/ Wines, iii. 5 

very wisely; puppies 1 Winter' sTate, iv. ,3 

inches as you have oceans: puppiesI.-Cy?tt6t/(/ie,i.3 
drown cats, and blind puppies Othello, i. 3 

PUPPY— brought up of a puppy. TwoGen. of Ver. iv. 4 
maids of thirteen do of puppy dogsI./Cmg- Jo/m, ii.2 

stroke him as gently as a puppy 2Hemylf. ii. 4 

Roman disciplines, than is a puppy . . Henry V. iii. 2 
is a kind of puppy to the old dam. . Henry VIII. i. 1 
witli you presently, good master puppy — v. 3 

PtlPP'S'-HEADED monster Tempest, ii. 2 

PUR— here is a pur of fortune's, sir Alt's Well, y. 2 

purl the cat is grey Lear, iii. G 

PURBLIND, wayward boy Love'sL.Losl, iii. 1 

are to this business purblind Winter'sTale, i. 2 

that any purblind eye may find 1 Henry VI. ii. 4 

puiblind t Kn'.-purblinded] Argus Troilus 4- Cress, i.3 
nick -name for lier purblind son.Hoineo fcJuliet, ii. 1 

PURCHASE— desire to purchase.. rtfci/JAJVi^At, iii. 3 

after fourteen years' purchase^ — iv. 1 

worse fools, to purchase mocking. Z-ouc'5 L.Lost, v. 2 
finer than you could purchase ..As you Litieit, iii. 2 
is not hot e'nough to purchase.... Winter' sTale, iv. 2 
purchase again the sight of dear Sicilia — iv. 3 
purchase me another dry basting . . Com. of Err. ii. 2 
purchase corrupted pardon of a manKi7i^Jo/i?i,iii. 1 
the difference is, purchase of a heavy — iii. 1 
I sent thee forth to purchase honour .Richardll. i. 3 
shalt have ashare in our purchase.. I Henrj///'. ii. 1 
of wildfire, there's no purchase in money — iii. 3 
steal anything, and call it, purchase. . Henry V. iii. 2 
may, haply, purchase him a box .... — iv. 7 
and purchase friends, and give to. . . .iHenry VI. i. 1 
enougli to purchase such another. ... — iii. 3 

loss 1 will not purchase them 3HenryVL iii. 2 

they purchase great alliance? — iii. 3 

I will purchase with my duteous ..Richard Hl.i'}. 1 
prize and purchase of his wanton eye — iii 7 
which she shall purchase with still . . — iv. 4 
I should purchase the day before. T/jjion ofAlh. iii. 2 
thougli his right arm might purchase — iii. 5 
will purchase us a good opinion ..JuUusdPsar, ii. 1 
enough to purcliase what jou.... Antony SrCleo.Y. 2 
were wealth enough for the purchase . Cymbeline, i. 5 
purchase us thy lasting friends. Titus And. ii. 4 (lett.) 
sought the purchase of a glorious beauty. Pericles, i. 2 

shall purchase out abuses Romeo ^-Juliet, \'\\. 1 

vouch him no more of his purchases. . . . Hamlet, v. 1 
purchase made, the fruits are to ensue. . Othello, ii. 3 

PURCHASED— worthily purchased .. Tempest, iv. 1 
I have purchased at an infinite . . Merry Wives, ii. 2 
have purchased as many diseases Meas.for Meas. i. 2 
this is his pardon; purchased by such — iv. 2 
pain purchased, doth inherit pain.. Low's i,.Los«,i. 1 
liast thou purchased this experience?.. — iii. 1 
purchased by the merit of the.iV/erc/t. of Venice, ii. 9 
siiall see 'tis purchased by the weiglit — iii. 2 
among you many a purchased slave — iv. 1 

I purchased this caparison Winter^s Tale, iv. 2 

for what in me was ijurchased ...,2HenrylV. iv. 4 
purchased at a superiiuous rate! .... Henry VIII. i. 1 
hereditary, rather than purchased.^nloni/ dr Cleo. 1. 4 
jewels purchased at an easy price. Titus Andron. iii. 1 

PfjRCHASETH- merit purchaseth..Mui-/ivl'io, iii. 1 

PURCHASING the semblance.. /l/cr. of Venice, iii. 4 
and not without his true purchasing. Con'otenus, ii. 1 
pains for purchasing but trouble Cymbeline, ii. 3 

PURE— but innocent and pure Tempest, ii. 1 

the rocks of pure gold TwoGen.of Verona, ii. 4 

pure messengers sent — ii. 7 

m thy pure bosom rest them — ii i . 1 

pure hands held up — iii. 1 

if you knew his pure heart's truth .. — iv. 2 

thou vow'dst pure chastity — iv. 3 

expose myself, pure for his love ..Twelflh Night, v. 1 

farewell, thou pure impiety Much Ado, iv. 1 

a halting sonnet of his own pure brain — v. 4 
that pure congealed white .... Mid. N.'s Dream, iii. 2 

this princess of pure white — iii. 2 

a goddess; pure, pure idolatry .. Love' sL. Lost, iv. 3 

all dry-beaten with pure scoff! — v. 2 

yet as pure as the unsullied lily .... — v. 2 

welcome, pure wit! — v. 2 

what follows is pure innocence . . Mer. of Venice, i. 1 
than with safety of a pure blush . . As youLilie it, i. 2 
many a weary step limped in pure love — ii. 7 
with pure love, and troubled brain .. — iv. 3 

led hither by pure love All's Well, iii. 4 

silence often of pure innocence .. Winter's Tale, ii. 2 

in pure white robes, like very — iii 3 

against my soul's pure truth .Comedy of Ki-rors, iii. 2 

will seem as pure as snow Mavlieth, iv. 3 

with our pure honours, nor attend ..King John, iv. 3 
made proud with pure and princely.. — iv. 3 
his pure brain (wliich some suppose . . — v. 7 

his pure soul unto his captain Richard II. iv. 1 

see now, whether pure fear 2 Henry I V. ii. 4 

in my pure and immaculate valour.. — iv. 3 

as pure as sin with baptism Henry V. i. 2 

though, in pure truth, it was corrupt — i. 2 

if your pure maidens fall into — iii . 3 

he is pure air and fire — iii. 7 

Pucelle whom they term so pure? ..\HenryVl. ii. I 
thy cheeks blush for pure shame .... — ii. 4 

for that pure blood of mine — i v. 6 

a pure unspotted heart — v. 3 

forsooth, she is a virgin pure — v. 4 

God knows, of pure devotion 2HeniyVI. ii. 1 

alas, sir, we did it for pure need .... — ii. 1 

stolen, even of pure love 3 Henry VI. iii. 1 

on pure heart's love, to greet Richard III. Iv. 1 

if, with pure £A';i'. -dear] heart's love — iv. 4 



PUR 



PULtiED— that pulled me down . . . . Henry VI II. ii\. 2 

you pulled me by the cloak Julius Cmsar. i.2 

pulled the poor wretch from her Hamlet, iv. 7 

PULLERdown ofkings! SIlenn/VL iii. 3 

PULLET-SPERM in my hrewagc. Merry Wipes, iii. 5 

PULLING scarfs off Cscsar's imnsiea. JuliusCiesar, i. 2 

PULPIT— some to the common pulpits — iii. 1 

go to the pulpit, Brutus. And Cassi lis — iii. 1 

and in the pulpit, as becomes a friend — iii. 1 

I will mj'self into the pulpit first .... — iii. 1 

and you shall speak in the same pulpit — iii. I 

PULSE— or e'er your pulse twice beat .. Tempest, v. 1 

thy pulse beats, as of ilesh — v. 1 

60 strive upon your pulse .-KCsWW/, i. 3 

and let me feel your pulse . . Comedy of Errors, iv. 4 
feeling my pulse, and with no face .. — v. 1 
commandment on the pulse of life? .KingJohn, iv, 2 
thicker than a feverous pulse . . Troilus <$- Cress, iii. 2 

liave you a working pulse? Pericles, v. 1 

no pulse shall keep his uatural .fiomeo ^Juliet, iv. 1 

my pulse, as yours, doth temperately .Hamlrt, iii. 4 

PULSIDGE beats as extraordinarily. 2 H^'iirv/r. ii. 4 

PUMMEL of Cscsar's faulchiou .... Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

PUMP-new ribbons to your pnmpi. Mid. K.'s Dr. iv. 2 

and Gabriel's pumps were all . Taming ofihieu; i v. 1 

then is my pump well ^ov,'ered. .Romeo^Juliet,ii. 4 

till thou hast wdrn out thy pump .. — ii. 4 

PUMPION-gross watery pumpion .Merry Wives, iii. 3 

PUN-would pun thee into shivers .Troilus tfCress. ii. 1 

PUNCHED full of deadly holes .... Richard III. v. 3 

PUNISH my life Twelflh Night, v. 1 

must ei ther punish me, not Meas. for Meas. v. 1 

and punish them unto your height of — v. 1 
I beseech you, punish me not ....Asyou Like it, i. 2 
to commit, than you to punish.... Winter'sTale, i. 2 

to punish my mistreadings 1 Henry IV. iii. 2 

to punish this oft'ence in other faults — v. 2 

to punish you by the heels iHenrylV. i. i 

highness, and yet punish too Henry V. ii, 2 

God punish me with hate in those.. /iic/ttird //. ii. 1 
nay, before, or God will punish me.HenryVIII. ii. 4 
as if you were a god to punish . . . . Coriolanus, iii 1 
before you punisli him, where he .. .. — iv. 6 
to punish me for what yon.. Antony S;- Cleopatra, ii. 5 
comes to punish us, and we punish it — iv. 12 
punish that before, that he would punish ftr/cfe.?, i. 2 
seemed so content to punish tliem — v. 3 (Gower) 

but I will punish home Lear, iii. 4 

punish me with this, and this with me. Ha?»/e^iii. 4 
PUNISHED— austerely punished j'ou .Tempest, iv. 1 

have punished me with TwoGen.of Verona, ii. 4 

methinks his flesh is punished. . . . Merry Wives, iv. 4 
thou shalt be heavily punished ..Love's L.Lost, i. 2 
they are not punished and cured .As you Lile it, iii. 2 
let me be punished, that have .... Wi^uer's Tale, iii. 2 

is not to be punished by him — iv. 3 

punished in the person of tliis child. . KingJohn, ii. I 
tliou shalt be punished for thus frighting — iii. 1 

let him be punished, sovereign Henry V. ii. 2 

of our person, would have hiin punished — ii. 2 

60 that here men are punished — iv. 1 

the coming of my punished duchess. 2 Hsnri/rz. ii. 4 
not be punished with my thwarting. 3 Henry VI. iv. 6 
to one whom they had punished. . . . Coriolanus, v. I 

she's punished for her truth Cymbeline, iii. 2 

subjects punished, that ne'er t\\o\ig)\t.. Pei ides, i. 2 
common trespasses. are punished with.... Lear, ii.2 
and stocked, punislied, and imprisoned.. — iii. 4 

who are punislied ere they have done — iv. 2 

of kinsmen: all are punished Romeo^ Juliet, v. 'i 

eliall be pardoned, and some punished — v. 3 

I am punished with a sore distraction . . Hamlet, v. 2 

PUNISH ES me with the remembrance Winter's T. iv. 1 

PUNISHMENT-another puuisliment?il/erry W. iii. 3 

and not the punishment Meas.forMeas. i. 4 

should receive his punishment in thanks — i. ^ 
tliat were a punishment too good . . . Much Ado, iii. 3 
let it be remembered in his punishment — v. 1 
I'll devise thee brave punishments .. — v. 4 
the meed of punishment ..Love'sL.Lost,i. 1 (letter) 
broke, deserve not punishment — iv. 3 (verses) 
punishment that women bear..Come(/i/p/'ii'rrors,i. 1 
outrun native punishment, though . .Henry V. iv. 1 
cave them condign punishment ....SHenrj/TL iii. 1 
his punishment was bitter death . . Richard /;/. ii. 1 
the foulness is the punishment. . . . Henry VIII. iii. 2 
on pain of punishment, the world. /InionycJ-Cieo. i. 1 

deserve more; a punishment too Cymbeline, i. 5 

knowing 'tis a punishment, or trial! — iii. 6 
punishment itself, and all my treason — v. 5 
having received the punishment before — v. 5 
punishment for his most wicked life. . Titus And. v. 3 
judicious punishment! 'twas this flesh ..Lear, iii. 4 
punishment might have the freer course — iv. 2 
a punishment more in policy than in ..Othello, ii. 3 
PUNK is one of Cupid's carriers.... ^/errt/ir/yes, ii. 2 
my lord, she may be a punk .... Meas.forMeas. v. 1 
marrying a punk, ray lord, is pressing — v. 1 
French crown for your taffeta punk . . .4!!'.! Well, ii. 2 
PUNTO— to see thee pass thy ^unto. Merry Wives, ii. 3 
pnssado! the punto reverse! .... Romeo Sf Juliet, ii. 4 
'"UNY-twenty of these puny lies. Afe?-.o/*'e«/ee, Iii. 4 
as a puny tilter, that spurs his ..As you Like it, iii. 4 
a puny subject strikes at thy great.. Ricfiardll. iii. 2 
while I question my puny drawer ..1 Henry IV. ii. 4 

flesh his puny sword in I Henry VI. iv. 7 

witli stones, in puny battle slay mc. Coriolanus, iv. 4 

every puny whipster gets my sword .... Othello, v. 2 

PUPIL-being her pupil, to become Two Gen.of Ver. ii. 1 

father's of a certain pupil of mine Lovc'sL.Lost,iv. 2 

of the foresaid child or pupil — iv. 2 

shall go see your pupils presently ram/n^-o/SA. ii. I 
too far in years to he a pupil now . . . Richard II. i. 3 

to the pupil age of this present \ Henry IV. ii. 4 

which calls me pupil, or hath read.... — iii. I 

king Henry be a pupil still 2HenryVI. i.3 

his pupil a^je man-entered thus ....Coriolanus, ii. 2 

have I not Dcen thy pupil long? Cymbeline, i. 6 

that pupils lacks she none Pericles, v. (Gower) 

not for loving, pupil mine Romeo SfJuli 'l, ii. 3 



PURE— for pure respect Henry VIII. ii. 3 

than this pure soul shall be — v. 4 

that praise, sole pure, transcends. Troilus^ Cress, i. 3 

that most pure spirit of sense — iii. 3 

greases his pure mind, that from. . Timon ofAlh. iv. 3 

stand by thee, are pure — iv. 3 

hundred spouts did run pure hlooA..JulinsCa'sar, ii. 2 
the finest part of pure love .. Antony ^ Cleopatra, i. 2 
opinion you had other pure honour. Cj/mteZ/ne, ii. 4 
let desert in pure election shine .. TitusAndron. i. 1 
the pure surprise and fear made me . . Pericles, iii. 2 
pure Diana! I bless thee for thy vision .. — v. 3 

in pure kindness to his horse Lear, ii. 4 

households' rancour to pure ]ove. Romeo ^- Juliet, ii. 3 
even in pure and vestal modesty .... — iii. 3 
I will raise her statue in pure gold .. — v. 3 

be they as pure as grace, as infinite Hamlet, i. 4 

as chaste as ice, as pure as snow — iii. 1 

of metals base, shows itself pure — iv. 1 

in simple and pure soul I come to you . . Othello, i. 1 

who has a breast so pure — iii. 3 

pure grief shore his old thread in twain.. — v. 2 
PURELY— strained purely from. rroi7i« <S- Cress, iv. 5 
PURER-where should he find it purer. KingJohn, ii. 2 

bird that flies i' the purer air ! Pericles, iv. 6 

and live the purer with the other half. . Hamlet, iii. 4 

PUREST treasure mortal times Ricliard II. i. 1 

the purest spring is not so free 2 Henry VI. iii. I 

defiler of Hjinen's purest bed.. Thnon of Athens, iv. 3 

by the frost from purest snow Coriolanus, v. 3 

purest of their wives is foul as slander. . Othello, iv. 2 
PURGATION did consist in words./ls you Lilce it, i. 3 
let him put me to my purgation .,.." — v. 4 
now you will be my purgation ..Love's L.Lost, iii. I 
to the guilt, or the purgation .... Win'er'sTale, iii. 2 
and fair purgation to the world .... Henry VIII. v. 2 

for me to put him to his purgation Handel, iii. 2 

PURGATIVE drug, would scour these. Macbeth, v. 3 
PURGATORY, torture, hell itself. Romeo ^Juliet, iii. 3 

I should venture purgatory for't Othello, iv. 3 

PURGE thy mortal grossness ..Mid. N.'s Dream, iii. 1 

to purge him of that humonr ll'inte7-'sTale,ii.3 

aboard a new ship to purge melanclioly — iv. 3 
the blessed gods purge aUinfection .. — y. 1 
in our country's purge, each drop .... Macbeth, v. 2 
and purge it to a sound and pristine .... — v. 3 

let's purge this choler without Richard II. i. 1 

I can purge myself of many iHenrylV. iii. 2 

for I'll purge, and leave sack — v. 4 

purge tlie obstructions, which begin.2Heiir,y/r. iv. I 

purge you of your scum — iv. 4 

to purge this field of such a hilding . . Henry V. iv. 2 
whereof you cannot easily purge ..iHenry VI. iii. 1 
from his bosom purge this black .... — iii. 3 

then, to purge his fear SHenry VI. v, 6 

with such freedom purge yourself. . Henry VIII. v. 1 
hoping to purge himself with viords. Coriolanus, v. 5 
purge by any desperate change ..Antony i^i- Cleo. i. 3 
would purge the land of these drones . . Pericles, ii. 1 
to impeach and purge myself. . . . Romeo ^Juliet, v. 3 

PURGED the air of pestilence Twelfth Night, i . 1 

you must be purged too Love's L.Lost, v. 2 

ere human statute purged the gentle. .3/acb«(A, iii. 4 
certain king purged and deposed .... KingJohn, ii. 2 
these hands, so lately purged of blood — iii. 1 
but in purged judgment, trusting .... Henry V. ii. 2 
my soul is purged from grudging . . Richard III. i. 4 
your rage would not be xi'orged. Antony^- Cleo. iv. 12 
being purged, a fire sparkling in. Women ^Juliet, i. 1 

by yours, my sin is purged — i. 5 

are burnt and purged away Hamlet, i. 5 

PURGERS, not murderers JuliusCcesar, ii. 1 

PURGING thick amber Hamlet, ii. 2 

to take him in the purging of his soul . . — iii. 3 
PURIFIES itself, and turns to grace.. Lom-'sL.L. v. 2 

PURIFYING 0' the song All's Well, i. 3 

PURITAN— is a kind of puritan.. J'we;/i:A Night, ii. 3 

what, for being a puritan? — ii. 3 

the devil a puritan that he is — ii. 3 

for young Charbon the puritan All's Well, i. 3 

though honesty be no puritan — i.3 

but one puritan amongst them .. Winter'sTale, iv. 2 
she would make a puritan of the devil. Pericles, iv. 6 
PURITY— the ward of her purity .. Merry Wives, ii. 2 
pure impiety, and impious purity !.. A/wcA Ado, iv. 1 
all purity, all trial, all ohservtiuce.AsyouLikeit,v. 2 
sully the purity and whiteness of.. Winter'sTale, i. 2 

I cut out the purity of his — iv. 3 

shall give a holiness, a purity KingJolin, iv. 3 

such a winnowed purity in love. Troilus ^Cress. iii, 2 

in so strained a puritj' — iv. 4 

purity of manhood stand upright . Timon ofAlh. iv. 3 

PURLIEUS of this forest /Is you Like it, iv. 3 

PURPLE, blue, and white Merry Wives, v. 5 

now purple with love's wound .Mid.N.'sDream, ii. 2 

with purple grapes, green figs — iii. 1 

flower of this purple dye, hit with .. — iii. 2 

to ope the purple testament of Richard II, iii. 3 

and Dives that lived in purple ,...{ Henry IV. iii. 3 

with purple falchion, painted to ZHenryVI.i. 4 

his purple blood right well resembles — ii. 5 
may such purple tears be always shed — ^v. 6 
did drain the purple sap from r.er .Richard III. iv. 4 
whilst your purple hands do reeis-.JutiusCtvsar, i\i. \ 

beaten gold; purple tlie sails Antony f/Cleo. ii. 2 

the purple violets, and marigolds Pericles, iv. 1 

purple fountains issuing from .. Romeo ^- Juliet, i. I 

nettles, daisies, and long purples Hamlet, iv. 7 

PURPLED hands, dyed m KingJohn. ii.2 

PURPLE-HUED malt-worms \HenryIV. ii. 1 

PURPLE-IN-GRAIN beard .... Mid.N.'sDream, i. 2 
PURPORT— a look so piteous in purport. Hamlet, ii. 1 

PURPOSE— fated to the purpose Tempest, i. 2 

the ministers for the purpose hurried — i. 2 
I endowed thy purposes with words — _i, 2 

how j'ou the purpose cherish — ii, 1 

forego the purpose that you resolved — iii. 3 

the sole drift of my purpose doth — v. 1 

to make my purpose swift. . Two Gen. qf Verona, ii. 6 
here's the ladder for the purpose .... — iii. 1 



PUR 



PURPOSE— but to the purpose. . TiroGen. ofl'er. iv. I 
importuned her to audi puriiose? . . Men-y Ifives, ii. 2 
to wl>at purpose have you unfolded.. — ii. 2 

he'll tell me all his ])urpose — iv. 1 

assist me in my purpose — iv. G 

the purpose why, is here — iv. 6 

I kuew of your purpose : . . — v. 5 

what's that to the purpose? rwelflh Night, i. 3 

my puruose is, indeed, a horse — _ii- 3 

she semis him on purpose that I .... — iij. 4 

nothin;^ of my purpose — ill. 4 

give safety to your pm'poses! Meas.forMcas. i. 1 

the speech we had to such a purpose — i. 2 

hatli a purpose more grave — i. l 

if power change purpose, what our .. — _i.4 

the effect of your own purpose — ii. I 

to the purpose; what was done — ii. I 

*tis for a good purpose — ii* 1 

my words cx(ires3 my purpose — ii. 4 

and most pernicious purpose! — .ii- 4 

liad never the purpose to corrupt her — iii. 1 

the provost knows our purjiose — iv. 5 

he says, to veil full purpose — iv. 6 

he purpose surfeiting, he sends — v. I 

but wo will know this purpose — v. 1 

tliat brained my purpose — v. 1 

people sin upon purpose, that they ..MuchAdo, ii. 1 
to speak plain, and to the purpose .. — ii. 3 
as hushed on pm-pose to grace harmony! — ii. 3 
[Kn(.] hide her, to listen our purpose — iii. 1 
since I do purpose to marry (jep.) .. — _v. 4 

of this tlieir purpose hither — iv. 1 

to read the purpose of ray coming. Low'sl.Losf.ii. 1 

more for praise, than purpose — iv. 1 

I will have an apology for that purpose — v. 1 
their piu-pose is, to parle, to court . . — v- 2 
recount their purposes; know what.. — v. 2 
and purpose now to lead you to our.. — v. 2 

to the purpose of his speed — y. 2 

with purpose to be dressed in . . Merch.ofVenice, i. 1 
all mv plots, and i)iirpose3 how to.... — j. 1 
can eite scripture for his purpose .... — i. 3 
we have friends that pm-pose merriment — ii. 2 
my purpose was not to have seen you — iii. 2 
possessed your grace of what I purpose — iv. 1 
for tlie intent and pm'pose of the law — iv. 1 

notice of my brother's purpose As you Like it, i. 1 

no song, forester, for tliis purpose? . . — iv. 2 
for now I speak to some purpose — — v. 2 

such is his noble purpose All's Well, iii. 2 

solicits her in the unlawful pxu-pose — iii. 5 
now I see the bottom of your purpose — iii. 7 

is to know straight our purpose — iv. 1 

and knowing 1 had no such purpose? — iv. I 

their force, their purposes; nay — iv. 1 

come, come, to the purpose : did he love — _ v. 3 
on ijm-pose trimmed up.... Taming of Sh, 2 (indue.) 

never spokeat to better pm-pose H'inter'sTale, i. 2 

but once before I spoke to the purpose — i. 2 

I have spoke to the pm-pose twice — _;. 2 

that you do change this purpose — U- 3 

that you must change this purpose . . — iv. 3 
as I have purpose to put you to't .... — iv. 3 

you do not purpose to him — iv. 3 

I not purpose it. I think, Camillo.... — Iv. 3 
if you will not change your purpose. . — iv. 3 
have fulfilled their secret purposes .. — v. 1 
and told thee to wliat pm-pose. Comedy of Errors, iv. 1 

on purpose shut the doors against — iv. 3 

shake my fell purpose, nor keep peace .Macbeth, i. 5 

to-morrow,— as lie purposes — i. 5 

and had a purpose to be his purveyor — i. 6 
infirm of purpose; give me the daggers — ii. 2 
the flighty purpose never is o'ertook — iv. 1 

before this purpose cool — iv. 1 

confident from foreign purposes King John, ii. 1 

all direction, purpose, course intent — ii. 2 
the better act of purposes mistook .. — iii. 1 
a passion hateful to my purposes .... — Ui. 3 

and I did purpose, boy, with this — iv. 1 

to sound the purposes of all their — iv. 2 

between his purpose and his conscience — iv. 2 
the practice and the purpose of the king — iv. 3 
they saw we had a purpose of defence — v. 1 

■with purpose presently to leave — v. 7 

never by advised purpose meet Richard //. i. 3 

to what purpose (lost thou hoard .... — i. 3 
for some strong purpose, steeled the — v. 2 

if God prevent it not, I purpose so .. — -y. 2 
tills our purpose is a twelvemonth . . 1 Henry I V. i. 1 

our holy purpose to Jerusalem — i. 1 

lend no ear unto my purposes — 1-3 

the purpose you undertake — ii. 3 ^letter) 

is certainly possessed of all our purposes — iv. 1 
bring liim our purposes; and so farewell — iv. 3 

I)lay the trumpet to his purposes — v. 1 

did nothing purpose 'gainst tiie state — v. 1 
purpose must weigh with the folly. .2HcHr!/ir. ii. 2 

spoke it on purpose, to try my — ii. 4 

mere digression from my purpose — iv. 1 

and to our purposes, consigned — iv. 1 

my father's purposes have been mistook — iv. 2 

and had a purpose now to lead — iv. 4 

and, to our purposes, he lives no more — v. 2 
to the purpose, and so to the venture .. — (epil.) 

end in one purpose, and be all well Henry f. i. 2 

seek to divert tiie English purposes — ii. Icho.) 
sworn to cither's purpose, working .. — ii. 2 
my purpose should not fail with me — iii. 2 
proverb so little kin to the purpose .. — iji. ? 
thev purpose not their death (rc/j.) .. — iv. 1 
with purpose to relieve and follow .AHenryVI.i. 1 

speech purpose to answer what — iii 1 

purpose is both goodandreasonable — v. 1 

of purpose to obscure my noble — v. 4 

because his purpose is not executed .iUenryyi.ni. 1 
yet did I purpose as they do entreat — iii. 2 

premeditation for my purpose! SHenryfl. iii. 2 

doth stand affected to our purpose./(ic/ia;-d III. iii- I 
for liis purpose in the coronation — iii. 4 



[ 606 ] 

PURrOSE of his treasons Ridiard 111. iii. 5 

fitting for your purpose, untouched.. — iii. 7 
and said, the better for our purpose — v. 3 

docs an irresolute purpose Henry Vlll. i. 2 

and docs purpose honour to you uo less — ii. 3 

my studied pm-poses requite — iii. 2 

this is of purpose laid, by some thot -- v. 2 
with a purpose itliath to climb.. 7'ro<i«5^ Cress, i. 3 

and to this purpose sjieak — i. 3 

relates in purpose only to Achilles (rep.') — i. 3 
find Hector's purposcpointing on him — .."j- ^ 
'twas not my purpose thus to beg a kiss — iii. 2 
we'll execute your purpose, and put on — iii. 3 
Ills purpose meets you; 'twas to bring — iv. 1 

and haste her to the purpose — i v. 3 

or do you purpose, a victor shall be. . — iv. 5 
till accident, or purpose, bring you to't — iv. 5 
thwarted quite from my great purpose — v. 1 
it is the purpose, that makes (rep.).. — y. 3 
of purpose to have him spend less. Timon ofAih. iii. 1 
every tongue, to every purpose! .... — iv. 3 
to load our purposes with what they — y. 1 

but, since it serves my purpose Coriolanus, i. 1 

did retire, to win our pm-pose — i. 6 

when you speak best unto the purpose — ii. 1 
than have liim hold that purpose. . . . — ii. I 
of the people, om- purjjose to them . . — ii. 2 
purpose so barred, it follows (i-cjii.) .. — iii. 1 
as free as words to little purpose .... — iii. 2 
and 1 had purpose once more to hew — iv. 5 
I purpose not to wait on fortune .... — v. 3 
from the purpose of the things .... Julius Ccesar, i. 3 
this shall make our purpose necessary — ii. 1 
let not our looks put on our purposes — ii. 1 
I fear, our purpose is discovered .... — iii. 1 
Popilius Lena speaks not of om- purposes — iii. 1 

falls slirewdly to the purpose — iii. 1 

have notice what we purpose .... Antony ^ Cleo. i. 2 
sorry to give breathing to my purpose — i. 3 

prepared to know the purposes I bear — i. 3 
may I never to this good purpose.... — ii. 2 

my purposes do draw me much — ii. 4 

our written purposes before us sent.. — ii. 6 
timelier than my purpose, hither.... — ii. 6 
I think the policy of tliat pm-pose made — ii. 6 
a brave army, and full of purpose . . — i v. 3 

we purpose her no shame — v. 1 

bereave yourself of my good purposes — v. 2 

she levelled at our purposes — v. 2 

with so mortal a purpose, as then. . , . Cymbeline, i. 5 
you bear a graver purpose, I hope . . — i. 5 

I crossed tlfe seas on purpose — i.7 

albeit he comes on angry purpose now — ii. 3 
she hath my letter for the pm-pose — iii. 4 (let.) 
whereunto I never purpose return?.. — iii. 4 

my purpose would prove well — iii. 4 

out, .sword, and to a sore purpose! .. — iv. 1 

of late, of this war's purpose? — iv. 2 

nor wheu she purposes return — iv. 3 

hear patiently my purpose — v. 1 

despite of heaven and men, her purposes — v. 5 

nay, nay, to the purpose — v. 5 

dreading that her purpose was of ... . — V. 5 
away he posts with unchaste piu-pose — v. 5 
a fitment for the purpose I then followed — v. 5 
fits the purpose passing well.. TitusAndronicus, ii. 3 
purpose to make men glorious.. f*eric/(?s, i. (Gower) 

and on set purpose let his armour — ii. 2 

madam, if tliis you pm-pose as you speak — iii. 4 

but be a soldier to tliy purpose — iv.l 

Diana, aid my purpose! — iv. 3 

make them acquaiuted with your purpose — iv. 6 

my purpose was for Tharsus — v. 2 

we shall express our darker purpose Lear, i. 1 

oily art, to speak and purpose not — i. 1 

mistaking his purpose, it would make .. — i. 2 
pretence and purpose of unkindness .... — i. 4 

to understand my pm-poses ariglit — i. 4 

suspend thy purpose, if thou didst — i. 4 

opposite I stood to his unnatural pm-pose — ii. 1 
make your own purpose, how in my .... — ii. 1 
was no purpose in them of this remove .. — ii. 4 

good sir, to the purpose. Who put — ii. 4 

transport her purposes by word? — iv. 5 

if his last purpose hold — v. 1 

ask him his purposes, why he appears . . — v. 3 

for what purpose, love? Romeo 4' Juliet, ii. 2 

be honourable, thy purpose marriage — ii. 2 
a grey eye or so, but not to the purpose — ii. 4 

hears of this his nephew's purpose Hamlet, i. 2 

anything, but to the purpose — ii. 2 

black as his purpose, did the night — ii. 2 

and drive his purpose on to these delights — iii. 1 
so overdone is from the purpose of playing — iii. 2 

purpose is but the slave to memory — iii. 2 

tlie passion ending, doth the purpose lose — iii. 2 
to wliet tliy almost blunted purpose .... — iii. 4 
so is it, if tliou knew'st our purposes .... — iv. 3 
for the purpose, I'll anoint my sword.... — iv. 7 
our purpose may hold there: hut stay .. — iv. 7 
if thou answer'st me not to the purpose — v. 1 
and the king hold his purpose, I will win — v. 2 

I am constant to my purposes — v. 2 

in this upshot, purposes mistook fallen.. — v. 2 
as loving his own pride and purposes ..Othello, i. 1 
appearance their purposes toward Cyprus — i. 3 
the better shall my pm-pose work on him — i. 3 

swift of foot, outran my purpose — ii. 3 

ill at ease, unfit for mine own purposes.. — iii. 3 
if it be not for some purpose of import .. — iii. 3 
I mean, purpose, courajj'e, and valour .. — iv. 2 
for a special purpose, wliich wrought .... — v. 2 
PURPOSE-CHANGER, that sly ....Kin-fJohn, ii. 2 
PURPOSED— truer tlian you purposed . rempes<, ii. I 
have purposed to forbid sir . . Two Gen. of Ver. iii. 1 
our purposed hunting sliall be set .Mid.N.'sDr. iv. 1 
great clerks have purposed to greet me — v. 1 
to interrupt my purposed rest .... Lovt'sL.Lost, v. 2 

jiistle it from what it purposed — v. 2 

turn his back, and purposed so ..As you Like it, iv. 3 



PUR 



PURPOSED— what I purposed KingJohn, iv. 2 

noble change that 1 have purposed!. 2 Wenrv/C iv. 

of Toledo, this is purposed Henry fill. ii. 

what was purxjosed concerning his .. — v. 
it is a purposed thing, and grows . . Coriolanus, iii. 
end is purposed by the mighty.... yudus Ccesar, ii. 
he purposed to his wife's sole son .... Cymbeline, i. 
which time she purposed, by watching — v. 
your purposed low correction is such ....Lear, ii. 
so am I purposed: where is my lord of . . — ii. 
how purposed [ Kn(. -proposed], sir .... Hamlet, iv. 
let my disclaiming from a purposed evil — v. 
nor purposed merit in futurity Othello, iii. 

PURPOSELY on others TwelfthNight, ill. 

his own conduct, purposely to ....As you Like it, v. 
purposely tlierefore left I the court, .iilenry VI. ii. 
hither purposely to poison me., . . TitusAndron. iii. 

PURPOSETH, for here he doth. . . . Love's L. Lost, ii. 
he purposeth to Athens .... Antony &■ Cleopatra, iii. 

PURPOSING the Dauphin to 1 Henry /'/. iv. 

PURSE— overtake your slow purse. TwoGen.ofVer. i. 
open your purse, tliat the money .... — i. 

of her purse she shall not — iii. 

here, youth, there is my purse — iv. 

you pick master Slender's purse? . . Merry Wives, i. 

the rule of her liusband's purse — i. 3 

she bears tlie purse too — i. 3 

or money in his purse — ii. 1 

there's my purse — ii. 2 

he cannot creep into a halfpenny purse — iii. 5 

keep your purse Twelfth Night, i. 5 

hold, sir, here's my purse — iii. 3 

why I your purse? — iii. 3 

makes me to ask you for my purse . . — iii. 4 

denied me mine own purse — v. 1 

and money enough iu his purse MuchAdo, ii. 1 

thou halfpenny purse of wit Love's L. Lost, v. 1 

purse, my person, my extremest..il/er. of Venice, i. 1 
I will go and purse the ducats straight — i. 3 
help to waste nis borrowed purse .... — ii. 5 
you have no money in your pursers youLikeit, ii. 4 
take this purse of gold, and let me . . All's Well, iii. 7 

hold thee, there's my purse — iv. 5 

crowns in my purse I have .... Taming ofShrew^ i. 2 
our purses shall be proud, our garments — iv. 3 

four purse is not hot enough Winter'sTale, iv. 2 
saw whose purse was best in picture — iv. 3 

to geld a codpiece of a purse — iv. 3 

most of their festival purses — iv. 3 

I had not left a purse alive in the .... — iv. 3 
show the inside of your purse to the.. — iv. 3 
there is a purse of ducats .... Comedy of Errors, iv. I 

the desk, tlie purse — iv. 2 

to her for a purse of ducats? — iv. 4 

tills purse of ducats I received — v. 1 

into the purse of rich prosperity King John, v. 2 

for their love lies in their purses ....Richard 11. ii. 2 

for we, that take purses, go \ Henry IK i. 2 

apurseof gold most resolutely — i. 2 

riding to London with fat purses ... . — i. 2 

I will stuff your purses full of — i. 2 

variest no more from picking of purses — ii. 1 

hot livers, and cold purses — ii.4 

prove a thief, and take purses — ii.4 

what money is in my purse? 2Henryiy. i. 2 

against this consumption of the purse — i. 2 
your uses both in purse and person . . — ii. 1 

is better than a penny in purse — v. 1 

for a foreign purse, so sell his Henry V. ii. 2 

for convoy put into his purse — iv. 3 

o'ereharging your free purses with . .1 Henry VI. i. 3 
not with the leanness of his purse. . . .2Henry VI. i. 1 
Gloster's purse. So, when he (j-ep.) . . Ricltard III. i. 4 
it made me once restore a purse of gold — i. 4 
there is my pm-se, to cure that blow. . — iv. 4 
thou, trumpet, there's my purse. Troilus ^ Cress, iv. 5 
thou tassel of a prodigal's purse, thou! — v. 1 
nor will he know his purse .... Timon of Athens, i. 2 

kept his credit with his purse — iii. 2 

winter in lord Timon's purse — iii. 4 

like empty purses picked — iv. 2 

in your despite, upon your i)urse? . . Cymbeline, i. 7 
give me thy hand, here's my purse .. — iii. 5 
an empty purse, there was no money — iv. 2 

purse and brain both empty — v. 4 

the purse too light, being drawn .... — v. 4 

your purse, still open, hath built Pericles, iii. 2 

open tills purse, and take what it contains. Lear, iii. 1 

here, take this purse, thou whom — iv. I 

here, friend, is another purse — iv. 6 

nor no monej' in your purse? — iv. 6 

heavy case, your purse in a light — iv. 6 

villain, take my purse; if ever — iv. 6 

thy habit as thy purse can buy Hamlet, i. 3 

I liad my fatlier's signet in my purse.... — v. 2 
his purse is empty already'; all his golden — v. 2 
that thou, lagOj who liast had my purse. O/Zitiio, i. 1 

flit money in thy purse (rep.) — i. 3 
ever make my fool my purse — i, 3 

contract and purse thy brow together.... — iii. 3 

who steals my purse steals trash — iii. 3 

I had rather nave lost my purse full of . . — iii. 4 
PURSE-BEARER, and leave ....Tu-elfthNight,\\\.3 
PURSED up his heart upon the . . Antony S-Cleo. ii. 2 
PURSENT— every one pursents . . Love's L. Lost, v. 2 
PURSE-TAKING. Why, Hal, 'tis ..\ Henry IV. i. 2 

PURSUE, up with your fights Merry Wives, ii. 2 

when substance love pursues — ii.2 

and flying what pursues — ii.2 

pursue him with any fiuther revenge? — ii. 2 

e'er since pursue me Twelfth Night, i. I 

nay, pursue him now: lest — iii. 4 

that I cannot pursue with an,y safety — iv. 2 

pursue him, and entreat hiin to — v. 1 

our natures do pursue, (like rats.i1/eas./o7-iVeas. i. 3 

your sense pui-sues not mine — ii.4. 

Iieshould pursue faults proper to.... — v. I 
Athenian law cannot pursue us.Mid.N.'sDream,\. 1 
will he, to-morrow night, pursue lier — i. I 

she shall pursue it with the soul of love — ii.2 



PURSUE mejiot Mid. N.'sDreatn,i\. 2 

tlie dove puriJues the griiRn — ii. 2 

when cowardice pursues, and valour flies— ii. 2 
I pray thee, pxu'sue sentQWce.. Mt'ich. of I'cjiicc.iv. I 

I will pursue thcuuiity i^'s/IWf, ii. 5 

pvu'suc mc 11 -^ ^■ntl «lr:t\v Your how.Tumiii^ol' Sft. v. 2 

vourlove pursiir^ ;i banished Richard ir. ii. 3 

iliiuns, iiiirur 111.; -iMtlcred stray. .2//c)ir!//;'. iv. 2 

let us [lursuL' him, no the writs 2 Heiiryl'l. v. 3 

the fiital t'ollouA'rs ilo pursue ZHenrij II. i. 4 

some troops pursue the hloody-minded — ii. 6 
before tlie boar pursues, were to . . liichnrd III. iii. 2 

that one by one pursue Troilui ^ Cressida^ iii. 3 

all extremity pursue each other? .... — iv. 5 

pursue we liim ou knees — v. 3 

pursue your life, and live ayo with . . — v. 1 1 

piursue him to his house Corintanus. iii. 1 

o' the world I would pursue it . . Antony cj' Cleo. ii. 2 

fortune pursue thee! bring him — iii. 10 

I will pursue her even to ■Au.L,'ustus'.C!/mfieii')!(?,iii. 6 
must we pursue, and I have t'o'und. Titits Andion. ii. 1 

pursue him, ho I go after Lear, ii. 1 

too short, which can pursue the offender. . — ii. 1 
will tliey pursue the quality no longer .Hamiet.'n. 2 

and hence, pursue me lasting strife — iii. 2 

mvself the crying fellow did pursue .... Olhello, ii. 3 
PUllsUED her, as love hath pursued.. ilierri/'F. ii. 2 

had we pursued that life Winter'sTale, i. 2 

whither we pursued them .... Comedy of Errors, v. 1 
author hath pursued the story . . Henry f. v, 2 (cho.) 
pursued the horsemen of the north ..SHenryVI. i. 1 
like Iambs pursued by hunger-starved — i. 4 
his sickness pursued nira still .... Henry Fill. iv. 2 
never o'ertake pursued success ..Antony^ Cleo. v. 2 
she hath pursued conclusions infinite — v. 2 
80 the revenge alone pursued me 1 . . Cymbeline, iv. 2 
is he pursued? ay, my good lord, he is.... Lear, ii. 1 
pursued my humour, not pm-suing. Borneo <§-/ui. i. 1 
can vengeance be pursued further than — v. 3 

father slain, pursued my life Hamlet, iv. 7 

PURSUERS took him 1 Henry I V. v. .5 

PURSUING that that flies Merry Wives, ii. 2 

^Col.'] mistrust pursuing danger .... liicltard III. ii. 3 
boys pursuing siunmer Dutterflies ..Coriolanns, iv. 6 
not pursuing his, and gladly .... Romeo S; Juliet, 1. 1 

PURSUIT would be but vain AWsWell, iii. 4 

set forth in your pursuit Twelfth Kight, iii. 3 

to hide us from pursuit that will ..As you Like it, i. 3 

now, have you left pursuit? tUenrylV. iv. 3 

turn head, and stop pursuit Henry F. ii. 4 

retreat, and cease our hot pursuit . . 1 Henry VI. ii. 2 
and Northumberland's pursuit ....ZHenryVI. ii. 1 

heard his praises in pursuit — ii. 1 

weak we are, and cannot shun pursuit — ii. 3 
for death doth hold us in pursuit .... — ii. .^ 

pursuit, where he did mean no Ric'iard III. iii. 2 

nor faint in the pursuit Troiius ^ Cressida, ii. 2 

all my force, pursuit, and policy .... — iv. 1 

PURSUIVANT presently iHenry FI. i. 3 

now! repent I told the pursuivant. R/cAard ///.iii. 4 

send out a pursuivant at arms — v. 3 

pursuivants, pages, and footboys . . Henry Fill. v. 2 
PURSU'ST— whom thou pursu st . . Cymbeline, iii. 6 

howsoever thou pursu'st this act Hamlet, i. 5 

PURSY insolence shall break Timon of Athens, v. b 

in the fatness of these pursy times .... Hamlet, iii. 4 
PURUS— vita;, scelerisque purus.. Titus Andron. iv. 2 

PURVEYOR-to be his pm-veyor Macbeth, i. 6 

PUSH him out of doors As youLil<e it, iii. 1 

fCol.Knt.'] made a push at chance MnchAdo, v. I 

doth push on this proceeding .... Winter'' sTale, ii. 1 

will you not push her out? — ii. 3 

I pray you, do not push me — ii. 3 

and one tliat will either push on .... — iv. 3 
upon this push, to trouble your joys — v. 3 

and push us from our stools 21/ac6ei/i, iii. 4 

this push will cheer me ever — v. 3 

to push destruction, and perpetual . . King John, v. 7 
stand the push of every beardless ..IHenrylF. iii. 2 
a head to push against the kingdom — iv. 1 

I stand the push of your one IHenrylF. ii. 2 

did push i t out of further question .... Henry F.i.\ 
as manhood shall compound; push home — ii. 1 
we may as well push against Paul's. Henri/ FIII.v. 3 
to stand the push and enmity . . Troiius ^- Cress, ii. 2 

and sudden push gives them JuliusCtBsar, v. 2 

than taiTy till they push us — v. 4 

when I did push tliee back Pericles, v. 1 

I will push Montague's men ....Romeo^-Jtdiet,i. I 

put the matter to the present push Hamlet, v. 1 

PUSHED out your gates Coriolanus, v. 2 

PUSHES 'gainst our heart Winter'sTale, iii. 2 

PUSH-PIN— play at push-pin .... Love' sL. Lost, iv. 3 
PUSILLANI.MITY and cowardice.. 2//eiiri//F. iv. 3 

PUT— put the wihl waters Tempest, i. 2 

and to him put the manage — i. 2 

your story put heaviness in me — i. 2 

and hast put tliyseU' upon this island — i. 2 

put thy sword up, traitor — i. 2 

as when we put them on first in Afric — ii. 1 

'twould put me to my slipper — ii. 1 

might put this ancient morsel — ii. 1 

do you put tricks upon us — ii. 2 

and put it to the foil — iii. 1 

even here I will put off ray hope .... — iii. 3 

your rye-straw hats put on — iv. 1 

put off that gown, Trinoulo — iv. 1 

as when you first put (Alt to sea — v. 1 

put forth their sons to seek. . Two Gen. ofFerona, i. 3 

see to put on your hose — ii. I 

this night I'll put in practice — iii. 2 

such pearls as put out ladies' eyes. ... — v. 2 

but 111 ne'er put my finger Merry Wives, i. 4 

what he puts into the press — ii. 1 

when he would put us two — ii. I 

yet I cannot put off my opinion — ii. 1 

and hath threatened to put me into — iii. 3 

aquart of sack; put a toast in't — iii. 5 

shall I put him into the basket again? — iv. 2 
otherwise, he might put oualiat.... — iv.2 



PUT on the "own the while McrryWives,\y. 2 

when did I see thee so put down? . Twe'iflhNighl, i. 3 

unless you see canary put me down.. — i. 3 

put mo into good foo'ling! — i. 5 

I saw him put down the oilier day .. — \. b 

that you should put your lord into .. — ii. 2 

men of such constaiicv put to sea — ii. 4 

put thyself into I he trick of .... — ii. 5 (letter) 

thou hast put him ill such — ii. 5 

kept together, and put to use — iii. 1 

put them to motion — iii. 1 

to put lire in your heart — iii. 2 

put thyself into the trick of — iii. 4 

that put quarrels purposely on others — iii. 4 

put up your sword (rep.) — iii. 4 

my young soldier, put up your ii'on — iv. 1 

I pr ytliee, put on this gown — iv.2 

well, I'll put it on, and I — iv.2 

put your grace in your pocket — v. I 

may put you in mind — v. I 

put strange spcecli upon me — v. 1 

thougli you have put me into — v. 1 (let.) 

induced me to the semblance I put on — v. 1 (let.) 

to put on yellow stockings — v. 1 

since I am put to know, that your. il/ras./oi-A/eas.i. 1 

they put foTth to steal — i. 2 

a wise burgher put in for them — i. 2 

now puts the drowsy and neglected. . — i. 3 

to put you so oft upon't — ii. 1 

why do you put these sayings upon me? — ii. 2 

if it be sound, or hollowly put ou.... — ii. 3 

as to put mettle in restrained — ii. 4 

the merriest was put down — iii. 2 

he puts transgression to't — iii. 2 

till eatiu" and drinking be put down — iii. 2 

to put a ducat in her clack-dish .... — iii. 2 

put not yourself into amazement.... — iv.2 

to rise and be put to death iv. 3 

put them in secret holds iv. 3 

and put your trial in the villain's .. — v. 1 

yea, and a case to put it into Much Ado, i. 1 

in practice let us put it presently. ... — i. I 

tliat puts the world into her person., — ii. 1 

you have put him down (rep.) — ii. 1 

I will put it in practice — ii. 2 

to put a strange face on his own .... — ii. 3 

and can put them to mending — ii. 3 

you must put in the pikes with .... — v. 2 

masters; put your torches out — v. 3 

let us hence, and put ou other weeds — v. 3 
I'll put a girdle round about . . Mid. N.'s Dream, ii. 2 

this will put them out of fear — iii. 1 

your vows, to her and me, put in two — iii. 2 

the man should be put into the lantern — v. 1 

seritching loud, puts the wretch .... — v. 2 
which put together, is, in manner.. /.one's L.Ios*, i. 1 

to put m practice that which each .. — i. 1 

and how easy it is to put years to the — i. 2 

here, sweet, put up this — iv. 1 

finely put off; _ iv. 1 

iinely put on! (rep.) iv. 1 

the ladies and I have put him down! — iv. 1 

be capable, I will put it to them .... — iv.2 

I could put thee in comfort — iv. 3 

presence majestical would put him out — v. 2 

that put Armado's page out (j-e/).) .. — v. 2 

but we will put it, as they say — v. 2 

I will not be put out of countenance — v. 2 

we have put thee in countenance (rep.) — v. 2 

of loose love put on by us — v. 2 

put the liveries to making.. il/ercAanto/TeTiice, ii. 2 

if I do not put on a sober habit — ii. 2 

rather to put on your boldest — ii. 2 

the scarfed bark puts from her — ii. 6 

he put his hand behind him — ii. 8 

these naughty times put bars between — iii. 2 

which cunning times put on to — iii. 2 

and when she put it on, she made me — iv. 1 
loving lords have put tliemselves...Jsi/ou/,!7tei7, i. 1 

which he will put on us, as pigeons.. — i. 2 

I'll put myself in poor and mean — i. 3 

therefore put I on the countenance .. — ii. 7 

so you may put a man in your — iii. 2 

were to put good meat into — iii. 3 

then she puts you to entreaty — iv. 1 

when he put it into his mouth — v. 1 

therefore put you in your best array — v. 2 

let him put me to my purgation .... — v. 4 

and put him to the sword — v. 4 

the duke hath put on a religious life — v. 4 
that had put such difference betwixt. . All's Well, i. 3 

and put you in the catalogue of those — i. 3 

I shall now put you to the height of — ii. 2 

when you put off tliat with (;cp.) — ii. 2 

nay, put me tn't, I warrant you .... — ii. 2 

but puts it off by a compelled — ii. 4 

Iputmyself into thy file — iii. 3 

nay, my good lord, put him to't .... — iii. 6 

in my certainty, put myself into — iii. 6 

and would not put mj' reputation now — iii. 7 

tongue, I must put you into — iv. 1 

I'll put another ring iv.2 

I pray you, sir, put it up again — iv. 3 

if I l>ut any tricks upon 'em — \\.h 

I put you to the use of your own .... — v. 1 

dost thou put upon me at once v. 2 

tliat she would never put it from .... — v. 3 

I'll put ill bail, my liege v. 3 

rings put upon his fingers. . Taming ofSh. 1 (indue.) 

we could at once put us in readiness — i. 1 

'tis best put finger in the eye i. 1 

Silts my apparel and my (rep.) — i. 1 

put me in thy books — ii. i 

to my cliamher, put on clothes of mine — iii. 2 

to put ou better ere he go to church.. — iii. 2 

this hath put me in heart — iv. 5 

my Kate doesput her down., — v. 2 

mine honesty puts it to utterance. Winter'sTale, i. 1 

this is put forth too truly! — i. 2 

brother, than you can put us to't. ... — i. 2 



PUT— you put me off with limber.. Winter'sTale, i. 

may a free face put on — i, 

of the world sometime puts forth .... i. 

that puts to before her troth-plight. . i, 

which puts some uf us in distemper.. — i 
to put apart these your attendants . . — ii. 
forced baseness which he has put upon't?— ii. 
business, put on thee by my lord. . . . — iii. 
shall help to put him i' the ground.. — iii.: 
the rogue, that put me into this apparel — iv. 

my name put in the book — iv. 

I'll not put the diblile in earth — iv. : 

no I have purpose to put you to't .... — iv. ; 

food man; puts him oft', slights — iv. ; 
have put you out — iv. : 

I am put to sea with her — iv. : 

could put breath into his work — v. : 

that e'er I put betsveen your holy.... — v.; 
to put the finger in the eye and. . Comedy of Err. ii. '. 
know not what use to put her to .... — iii. I 

if any bark put fortli (rep.) — iii.; 

is there any ship puts forth — iv. I 

that you would put me to this shame — v. 
had hoisted sail, and put to sea to-day — v. 

who put imluckily into — v. 

you shall put this night's Macbeth, i. ! 

what not put upon his spungy — i. ; 

let's briefly put on manly readiness — ii. I 

which puts upon them suspicion — ii. ■ 

when first they put the name of — iii.: 

and put a barren sceptre in — iii.! 

put rancours in the vessel of — iii. 

I will put that business in — iii.: 

enchanting all that you put in — iv. 

do I put up that womanly defence — iv. I 

I put myself to thy direction — iv. ! 

about their necks, put on with holy — iv. : 

the powers above put on their iv. ! 

wash your hands, put on your — v.: 

I'll put it on ; send out more — v. ■ 

come, put mine armour on — v. i 

put we on industrious soldiership — v.' 

and put the same into young King John, i. 1 

I put you o'er to heaven, and to .... — i. ! 

hath put himself in arms ii. : 

we'll put thee down, 'gainst ii. ! 

and put my eyeballs in thy — iii.' 

and down with me; puts on his pretty iii. ' 

will you put out mine eyes! cre;;.) .. — iv. : 

whatever torment you do put me to. . iv. ' 

sword is bright, sir: put it up (rep.),. — iv. '. 
drown thyself, put but a little water. . — iv. i 

and put on the dauntless spirit of . . . . v. 1 

up once again; put spirit in the v. ' 

and put his cause and quarrel to .... v. 1 

happily may your sweet self put on. . — v. ! 

put we our quarrel to the will Richard II, i. i 

being open, put into his hands 1. ! 

now put it, heaven, in his i. ' 

the true niau's put to death v.; 

put on sullen black incontinent .... v.( 

to put down Richard, that sweet IHenrylF. i. ; 

beat Cut's saddle, put a few flocks .. ii. 1 

how a plain tale shall put you down ii. « 

stuff as puts me from my faith iii. I 

to put him quite beside his patience.. iii. 1 

where hateful death put on his 2HenryIF.i. 1 

we will all put forth — i. 1 

if the prince put thee into my service — i. 5 

had as lief they would put ratsbane.. i. 5 

he hath put all my substance — ii. 1 

I put thee now to thy book-oath ... . ii. 1 

put on two leather jerkins [rep. ii. 4) ii. 2 

put not you on the visage of — ii. 3 

alas, alas! put up your naked weapons — ii. 4 
I cannot put him to a private soldier iii. 2 

Eut me a caliver into Wart's hand ., — iii. 2 
ave put us in these ill-beseeming .. — iv. 1 

peace puts forth her olive iv. 4 

and put the world's whole strength . . iv. 4 

accusing it, I put it on my head iv. 4 

my son! Heaven put it in thy mind iv. 4 

deeply put the fashion on, and wear it — v. 2 
and lower, put into parts, doth keep . . Henry F. i. 2 

to put forth my rightful i. 2 

put up thy sword (rep.) ii. i 

food IJardolph, put thy nose ii. 1 
put my hand into the bed ii. 3 

from another man's pocket, to put into iii. 2 

our scions put in wild and savage stock — iii. 5 

and put him to executions iii. 6 

crowns for convoy put into his purse — iv. 3 
France, put up her lovely visage?.... — v. 2 

with hair, put forth disordered twigs v. 2 

marry, if you would put me to verses v. 2 

put oft' your maiden blushes v. 2 

to init a golden sceptre in \lIenryVI.-v. 3 

put forth thy hand 2HenryFJ. i. 2 

had not your man put up the fowl .. — ii. 1 

had I first been put to speak — iii. 1 

put the Englishmen unto the sword — iii. 1 

you put sharp weapons in — iii. i 

and Henry put apart, the next — iii. 1 

the elder of them, being put to nurse — iv. 2 
a power be raised to put them down — iv. 4 

thou hast put them in prison — iv. 7 

to seek to put me down, and reign ..SHenry FI. i. 1 

and put liis own son in — ii. 2 

in justice puts his armour on ii. 2 

when liis leaves put forth ii. G 

our soldiers put to flight — iii. 3 

did I put Henry from his native .... — iii. 3 

1 am ready to put armour on (rep. iv. 1) _ iii. 3 

well, well, put up your sword Richard III. i. 2 

his minority is put unto the — i. 3 

let me put in 3'oiir minds — i. 3 

grace to put it in my mind jj. 1 

and put meekness in thy breast ji. 2 

it should be put to no apparent ii. z 

wise men put on their cloaks — ii. 3 



PUT 



[ 608 ] 



PUT 



PUT-tliose enemies are put to death. lUclmrd III. iii. 2 

how Edward put to death a citizen .. — iii. b 

tliese botli put bj', a poor petitioner., — iii. 7 

to put your grace in mind of wliat .. — iv. 2 

unless thou couldst put on some .... — iv. 4 

put in lier tender Iieart the — iv. 4 

put thy fortxuie to tlie arbitrement ,. — v. 3 

put in tlieir hands tliy bruising — v. 3 

sweat to put a tyrant down — v. 3 

stuff tliat puts liim to these ends. . . . Henry t'lIL i. 1 

even this instant cloud puts on — i. 1 

have put off tlie spinsters, carders.... — i. 2 

pray, look to't; I put it to your care — i. 2 

into monstrous liabits put the graces — i. 2 

would have put his knife into him .. — i. 2 

put tlie king from these sad tlioughts — ii. 2 

sliould proceed to put me oft" — ii. 4 

tlie queen is put in anger — ii. 4 

put your main cause into the king's — iii. 1 

put mj' sielc cause into his hands .. .. — iii. 1 

as yours was put into you — iii. 1 

on my conscience, put unwillingly?,, — iii. 2 

sonre spirit put tliis paper in — iii. 2 

made me put tliis main secret — iii. 2 

to day he puts fortli the tender — iii. 2 

■while it is hot, I'll put it to the issue — v. 1 

wjien we first put this dangerous — v. 2 

put fortli toward Plu-ygia. Troilus Sf Cj-essida^ (prol.) 

puts me her white hand to — i. 2 

thy topless deputation he puts on.... — i. 3 

put this witliered brawn — 1.3 

here p\it ICol. Kn(.-but] to tlirash Trojans — ii. 1 

I know not, it is put to lottery — ii. 1 

savage strangeness he puts on — ii. 3 

we'll put you i' tlie tills — iii. 2 

put on a form of strangeness — iii. 3 

wherein he puts alms for — iii. 3 

I will put on his presence — iii. 3 

injury of cliance puts back leave-taking — iv. 4 
his land's put to tlieir books (rrp.). Timoii o/Alh. i. 2 

fmt on a most importunate aspect.... — ii. 1 

le hath put me off to the suceessinn — ii. 2 

your steward puts me off, my hud .. - ii. 2 

when my indisposition put you back — ii. 2 

I would have put my wealth into .. — iii. 2 

he that has no liouse to put his head in — iii. 4 

put in now, Titus. My lord — iii. 4 

tliey have e'en put my breath — iii. 4 

occasions did urge me to put off .... — iii. 6 

nay, put all your hands: not one .... — iv. 2 

put up thy gold: go on — iv. 3 

put armour on thine ears — iv. 3 

will put tliy shirt on warm? — iv. 3 

if thou didst put this sour-cold — iv. 3 

who in spite, put stuff to some she .. — iv. .3 

as common bruit doth put it — v. 2 

Aufidius, that will put you to 't .... Coriolanus, i. I 

your valour puts wel 1 forth — i. 1 

put vour shields before your hearts.. — i. 4 

we'll put j'ou (like one that means . . — i. 9 

nor on liira put the napless vesture. . — ii. 1 

that purpose, and to put it in execution — ii. I 

shall not want, if he be put upou't . . — ii. 1 

for I cannot put on the gown — ii. 2 

put them not to't: pray you — ii. 2 

to put our tongues into those wounds — ii. 3 

this mutiny were better put in hazard — ii. 3 

wlio puts his shall, his popular shall — iii. I 

shall it be put to that? Tliegods.... — iii. 1 

be gone; put not your worthy rage.. — iii. 1 

I would have had you put your power — iii. 2 

I would put mine armour on, which I — iii. 2 

else would put you to your fortune.. — iii. 2 

you have put me now to such a part — iii. 2 

put him to choler straight — iii. 3 

we need not put new matter to his.. — iii. 3 

whom we have put in prison — iv. 6 

will you be put in mind of liis blind — v. 5 

be quiet; put up your swords — v. 5 

do you now puton your best attire?. .Au(i'usC«sar,i. 1 

lie put it by with the back of his iiand — i. 2 

and he put it by tlirice (_rep.) — i.2 

scarfsoffCtesar's images, are put to,. — i.2 

however lie puts on this tardy form.. — i.2 

and put on fear, and cast yourself . . — i. 3 

I grant, we put a sting in him — ii. 1 

let not our looks put on our purposes — ii. I 

first time ever CcBsar put it on — iii. 2 

and put a tongue in every wound . . — iii. 2 

have put to deatli a hundred — iv. 3 

I put it in the poclcet of mj'gown.... — iv. 3 

put on my brows this wreath — v. 3 

ere we put ourselves in arms .... Anloiiy Sf Cleo. it-. 2 

then put my tires and mantles — ii. 5 

but Mark Antony put me to some .. — ii. 6 

when we are put on, fall to — ii. 7 

and put garlands on thy head — iii. 1 

to put yourself under his shroud .... — iii. II 

goodfellow, put tliine ironon — iv. 4 

go, put on thy defences _ iv. 4 

tliey have put forth the haven — iv. 10 

put colour in thy cheek — iv. 12 

put off my helmet to my — iv. 13 

put your eliildren to that destruction — v. 2 

put we i' the roll of conquest — v. 2 

go, put it to the haste — v. 2 

puts to him all the learning Cymbelhie, i. 1 

sliould have been put together witli so — i. 5 

'faith, yes, tobe put to the arbitrement — i. 6 

would I liad put my estate — i. 5 

winning will put any man into courage — ii. 3 

you put-rae to forget a lady's manners — ii. 3 

or put the moon in his pocket — iii. 1 

here did put the yoke upon us — iii. I 

which did put his brows within .... — iii. 1 

and puts himself in posture that — iii. 3 

put thyself into a 'haviour oi'less fear iii. 4 

and make me put into contempt .... — iii. 4 

fortune, put them into my handl.... — iv. I 

and put us to our answer — iv. 2 



PUT my clouted brogues from off Cymheline, iv. 2 

but to put those powers in motion .. — iv. .S 

I never had lived to put on this — v. 1 

gods, put the strength o' the Leonati — v. 1 

you have put me into rhyme — v. 3 

and then a mind put in't v. 5 

as I could put into them — v. 5 

be oaujidatus then, and put it on. . Tilus Adron. i. 2 
basely put it up without revenge? .. — i. 2 

for shame, put up — ii. 1 

it is you that puts us to our shifts.... — iv. 2 

nature puts me to a heavy task — v. 3 

targets, to put off tlie shame reticles, i. 1 

so puts himself into the shipman's . . — i. 3 
knowing so, put forth to seas .... — ii. (Gower) 
come, put it on, keep thee warm.. .. — ii. 1 
he puts on sackcloth, and to sea — iv. 4 (Gower) 

if l)ut upon yon, make the — iv. 6 

supposing once more put your sight — v. (Gow.) 

a liarge put off from Mitylene — v. I 

put me to present pain; lest this ,,'. . — v. 1 

seek you to put up that letter? Lear, i. 2 

put on what weary negligence you — i. 3 

that will put me in trust — i. 4 

and put it on by your allowance — i. 4 

and put away these dispositions — i. 4 

why, to put his head in; not to give — i. 5 

'tis they liave put him on the old man's — ii. I 
and put upon him such a deal of man. ... — ii. 2 

her affairs: put in his legs — ii.2 

when she put them i' tlie paste alive .... — ii. 4 

who put my man i' the stocks? — ii. 4 

he hath put himself from rest — ii. 4 

he tliat has a house to put his head in. , . . — iii. 2 

going to put out tlie other eye — iv. 2 

I'll put it in proof — iv. 6 

hand put strength enough to it — iv. 6 

I pr'y thee, put them off. Pardon me .... — iv. 7 

we put fresh garments on him — iv. 7 

put up your swords (rep.) Romeo ^-Juliet, i. 1 

being black, put us in mind — i. 1 

give me a case to put my visage in .. — i. 4 
presence, and put off these frowns .. — i. 5 
gentle Mercutio, put thy rapier up . . — iii. I 
let me be put to death; I am content — iii. 6 
who, to put thee from thy heaviness — iii. 5 

may be put from her by society — iv. 1 

we may put up our pipes (rep.) — iv. .'i 

put up your dagger, and put (rep.) .. — iv. 5 
put tills in any liquid thing j'ou will — v. I 
yet, put it out, for I would not be seen — v. 3 
l^Col. Knt.'] put not another sin upon my — v. 3 
as so 'tis put on me, and tliat in way , . . . Hamlet, i. 3 
the very place puts toy s of desperation .. — i. 4 

to put an antick disposition on — i, 5 

and there put on him, what forgeries you — ii. 1 

3'ou must not put another scandal — ii. I 

that thus hath put him so miicli from.... — ii.2 

put your dread pleasures more into — ii.2 

why he puts on this confusion — iii. 1 

than I liave thoughts to put them in ... . — iii. 1 
puts him thus from fashion of himself .. — iii. I 

for me to put him to his purgation — iii. 2 

my lord, put j'our discom-se into some .. — iii. 2 
for we will fetters put upon this fear .... — iii. 3 

andput it in his pocket! — iii. 4 

or livery, that aptly is put on — iii. 4 

yet must not we put tlie strong law — iv. 3 

we put on a compelled valour. . . . — iv. 6 (letter) 
and you must put me in your lieart ..,, — iv. 7 

we'll put on those shall praise — iv, 7 

I'll put another question to thee — v. 1 

we'll put the matter to the presejit push — v. I 
he should the bearers put to sudden death — v. 2 

bravery of his grief did put me into — v, 2 

of deatlis puton by cunning — v, 2 

had he been put on, to have proved — v. 2 

for shame, put on your gown Othello, i. 1 

or put upon you what restraint — i.2 

not my unhoused free condition put into — i. 2 
not there reside, to put my father in ... . — i. 3 

put money in thy purse (rep.) — i. 3 

the ship is here put in (rep.) — ii. 1 

she puts her tongue a little in her heart. . — ii. 1 

gentle lady, do not put me to't — ii, 1 

did justl.y put on the vouch of very malice — ii, 1 

yet that I put the Moor at least into — ii. 1 

every man put himself into triumph ... . — ii.2 
am I to put our Cassio i n some action ... . — i i . 3 

the trust Othello puts him in — ii. 3 

well, the general were put in mind of it — ii. 3 

shame, put by this barbarous brawl — ii. 3 

she'll help to put you in your place again — ii. 3 
devils will their blackest sins put on ... . — ii. 3 
then put up your pipes in your bag — iii. 1 

1 do repent me, that I put it to you — iii. 3 

and will upon the iustant put thee to't .- — iii. 3 

a trick to put me from my suit — iii. 4 

if any wretch hath put this in your liead — iv. 2 

and put in every honest hand a whip — iv. 2 

to put up in peace what already I have . . — iv. 2 
think yourself bound to put it on him . , — iv, 2 
your good rapier bare, and put it home. . — v. 1 
put out the light, and then— put out .... — v. 2 
but once put out thine, thou — v. 2 

PUTREFIED core, so fair without. Trail. ^ Cress, v. 9 

PUTREFY the air \ Henryri.iv. 7 

PUT'ST— thou ne'er put'st back aHenry /'/. v. 5 

that put'st odds among the rontTimon 0/ Athens, iv. 3 

and put'st down thine own breeches Lear, i. 2 

PUTTER; your pelly is all {rep.). .Merry Wives, v. 5 

seese and putter 1 Have I lived — v. 5 

PUTTER-ON of these exactions. . . . Henri/ VIU. i. 2 
areabused.and by some putler-on,)>'m(er's7'afe,ii,l 

PUTTER-OUT on five for one Tempest, iii. 3 

PUTTEST iKnt.} up thy fortune. Komeo ff Juliet, iii. 3 

PUTTING down of men Merry Wives, W. 1 

with the swiftness of putting on., Tiretfth i^'i<^ht, ii. b 
by putting on the destined hvery.Meas.for Meas. ii. 4 
for putting the hand in the pocket ,. — iii. 2 



PUTTING-unwonted putting on.Meas.forMeas. iv. 2 

there's a simple putting off AlVa Well, ii. 2 

for putting so new a fashioned KingJohn, iv. 2 

and, putting off his hat, said 2HenrylV. ii. 4 

putting all affairs else in oblivion .. — v. 5 

of God, putting it straight in Henry V. ii. 2 

of putting down kings and princes. .2He7j7*yr/. iv.2 
by putting on tlie cunning of .. Timonof Athens,\\.3 
60, putting him to rage, 3'ou should . Coriotanus, ii. 3 
but by our putting on; and presently.. — ii. 3 
if lie were putting to my house tlie brand — iv. 6 
at every putting by, mine honest ..JuliusCtFsar,i. 2 
keep counsel, putting one away?/?omeo SrJulii-i, ii. 4 
than in putting on the mere form of. . . . Othello, ii. 1 
stand the putting on, I'll have our Michael — ii. 1 
PUTTOCK— in the puttock's nest . .2 Iletiry I' I. iii. 2 
an owl, a puttock, or a hetrmg.. Troilus^ Cress, v. \ 
an eaale, and did avoid a puttock,,.. C>>Htie/!»ie, i. 2 

PUZZ EL— Pucelle or puzzel 1 Henry F/. i. 4 

PUZZIjE— must puzzle Antony .. Antony i^ Cleo. iii. 7 

puzzles the will, and makes us rather. HnmW, iii. 1 

PUZZJ^ED- art more puzzled . . , , Twetflh Night, iv, 2 

PYE-COKNER— toPj'e-eorner iHenryll'. ii, 1 

PYGMALION'S images . . Measure for Measure, iii. 2 

PYRAMID— and pyramids, do slope . . Macbeth, iv. I 

b.y certain scales 1* the pyramid. .Antony ^Cled. ii. 7 

PYRAMIDES—pyramides my gibbet — v. 2 

PYRAMIS to her I'll rear I Henri/ FI. I 6 

PYRAMISES are very goodly, , , , Antony 4- Cleo. ii, 7 
PYRAMUS— Pyramus and Thisby...il/id.A'.'s;Or. i. 2 

forPyramus. What is Pyramus? — i.2 

it is the lady that Pyramus must love — i- 2 

ah, Pyramus, my lover dear — i.2 

you must play Pyramus (rep.) — i.2 

you, Pyramus's father; myself, Thisby's — i. 2 
no part but Pyramus: for Pyramus is — i.2 

of Pyramus and Thisby (rep.) — iii. I 

and that Pyramus is not killed indeed — iii. 1 
that I Pyramus am not Pyramus .. — iii. I 
.vou know, Pyramus and 'Thisby meet — iii. 1 
for Pyramus and Thisby, says the story — iii. 1 
shall Pyramus and Thisby whisper — iii. I 

Pyramus, you begin : w lien you have — iii. 1 
s^ieak, Pyramus: Thisby, stand forth — iii. 1 
a stranger Pyramus than e'er played — iii. 1 
most radiant Pyramus, most lily-white — iii. 1 
I'll meet thee, Pyramus, at Ninny's — iii. I 

that you answer to Pj'ramus — iii. 1 

Pyramus, enter; your cue is past.... — iii. I 
who Pyramus presented, in their. .. . — iii. 2 
and left sweet Pyramus translated there — iii. 2 

my next is. most fair Pyramus — i v. 1 

alile to discharge Pyramus, but he .. — iv.2 
sixpence a day for playing Pyramus (rep.') — iv. 2 
for Pyramus therein doth kill himself — v. 1 
this man is P.yramus, if you would . . — v, 1 

anon comes P3'ramus (I'e/),) — v. i 

which the lovers, Pyramus and Thisby — v. 1 
Pyramus draws near the wall: silence ! — v.) 
for parting my fair Pyramus and me — v. I 

and wound the pap of Pyramus — v. 1 

not use a long one, for such a Pyramus — v. 1 

which Pyramus, wliich Thisbe — v. 1 

O Pyramus, arise, speak, speak — v. 1 

had played Pyramus, and hanged .. — v,.! 
did sliine the moon on Pyramus,, VViuj^ndron, ii, 4 

PYRENEAN, and the river Po King John, i, 1 

PYRRHUS-youngPyrrhus now. 7'roi(jis <?- Cress, iii, 3 

the rugged Pyrrhus (rep.) Hamlet, ii. 2 

the hellisli Pyrrhus old grandsire Priam — ii. 2 
unequal matched, Pyrrhus at Priam drives — ii.2 

takes prisoner Pyrrhus' ear — ii.2 

asapainted tyrant, Pyrrhus stood — ii.2 

so, after Pyrrhus' pause, aroused — ii.2 

less remorse than I?yrrhns' bleeding sword — ii. 2 
when she saw Pyrrhus make malicious . . — ii. 2 

PYTHAGORAS concerning Twelfth Night, iv. 2 

shall hold the opinion of Pythagoras — iv.2 
liold opinion with Pythagoras ..Mer.of Venice, iv. I 
be-rhymed since Pythagoras' time .AsyouLike,iu. 2 



QUADRANGLE, I come to talk . . ..2Henry VLi.S 

QUAFF carouses to our mistress' , , Taming of Sh. i, 2 

QUAFFED off the muscadel — iii. 2 

whichnever quaffed but blood 2Henryll'. iv, 4 

QUAFFING and drinking v,m ....Tuelfih Night, i. 3 

tiU AGMIRE of your mingled \Henry IJ.i. 4 

whirlpool, over bog and quagmire Lear, iii, 4 

QUAIIj, crush, conclude Mid.N.'sDream, v. 1 

let not search and inquisition quail.4s i/om i.i/(e i(, ii.2 

and one that loves quails Troilus Sf Cress, v. I 

and his quails ever beat mine ..An/ony SfCleo. ii. 2 
but wlien he meant to quail and shake — v. 2 
spirits quail to remember Cymbeline, v. 5 

QUAILING-thereiBnoquailingnow..lHenr!//;'. iv. 1 
courage in their quailing breasts.... 3 Hen/i/f/. ii. 3 

QUAINT— my quaint Ariel, hark Tempest, i. 2 

that quaint in green she shall .... Merry Wives, iv. 6 

but for a fine, quaint, graceful Much Ado, iji. 4 

the quaint mazes in the wanton . . Mid. N.'s Dr. ii, 2 

and wonders at our quaint spirits — ii, 3 

tell quaint lies, how honourable, Wer.o/ Venice, iii. 4 
quaint musician, amorous Licio.. Taming n/Sh. iii. 2 
more quaint, more pleasing, nor more — iv. 3 

with forged quaint conceit 1 Henry VI. iv, I 

show how quaint an orator you are .2 Henri/ T/, iii. 2 

QUAINTLY writ TwoGen. of Verona, ii, 1 

a ladder, quaintly made of cords.... — iii. 1 
iinless it may be quaintly ordered.Mcr.o/Feni'ce.ii. 4 
to carve out dials quaintly, point . .3 Henry VI. ii. 5 
with your fine fancies quaintly. Pericies, iii. (Gower) 
but breathe his faults so quaintly Hamlet, i\. 1 

QUAKE, lest thou a feverous WiQ.Meas.forMeas. iii, 1 

thou wilt quake for this shortly Much Ado, i, 1 

look, how i do quake with fear,,.. il/id. iV. 'sDr. ii. 3 

both quake and tremble here — v. 1 

never saw I wretclies so quake,.,, }Vinter'sTale,v. 1 
but they will quake and tremble , . King John, iii, 1 



QUAKR-make all Europe quake MlenryVI. i. 1 

tlial made all l'"rance to q^uake 2Heln1/^'I. iv. 8 

j'ou deposed, you quake like rebels? Kidiardlll.i. S 
thou quake, and change thy colour? — iii. !> 
quake in the presi'Ut winter's state. . Cymbelhii', ii. 4 
makes tlic foul offenders quake .. TitHsAndron.v. 2 

shook, as the earth did quake Pericles, iii. 2 

see how the subject quakes Lear, iv. 6 

day would quake to took on Hamlel, iii. 2 

QUAKED for fear, lest the lunatic. .VerryH'iues, iii. 5 

and, gladly qiiaked, hear more Coriolanus, i. 9 

QUALIFICATION shall coine into no..O»iri(o, ii. 1 

yUALIFIED as may beseem Taming of Sh. iv. 5 

8) qualified as your charities .... Winler'sTale, ii. 1 

by vou only to be qualified KingJolm, v. 1 

chaste, constant, qualified, and less.. Cymbeline, i. .■> 
some little time hath qualified the heat . .. Lear, i. 2 

men are fit for, I am qualified in — i. 4 

and that was craftilv qualified too O'hello, ii. 3 

QUALIFIES the spark and fire of it Hamlel, iv. 7 

QUALIFY the fire s extreme TwoGen-of Verona, ii. 7 
to enforce, or qualify the laws ..Meas.forMeas.\. 1 
spurs on his power to qualify in others — iv. 2 

all this amazement can I qualify Murh.4do,_v. 4 

ta'en great paius to qualify his. .Mer. cf Venice, iv. 1 
strive to qualify, and bring him. . Winler'sTale, iv. 3 
bad cause, to qualify the same?.. 7Vo/i«s.5- Cress, ii. 2 

QUALIFYINU dross TroilusifCressida, iv. 4 

QUALITE— de bonne qualite Henry V. iv. 4 

QUALITIES— the qualities o' the \s\e.. Tempest, \. 2 
and qualities beseeming such. Tuo Gen. of I'er. iii. 1 
more qualities than a water-spaniel — iii. 1 

endued with worthy qualities — v. 4 

for I have many ill qualities MuchAdo, ii. 1 

so I admiring of his qualities ..Mid.N.'s Dream,]. 1 
and in qualities of breeiiag. MerchanI of Venice, ii. 7 

all gentleman-like qualities As you Like it, i. 1 

mind carries virtuous qualities All's H'ell, i. 1 

only where qualities were level — i. 3 

his qualities beina at this poor price — iv. 3 
her wondrous qualities, and mild. Taming of Sh.W. 1 

to your strength, and qualities 2 Henry IV. v. 5 

bless us with lier former qualities Henry V. v. 2 

the world with vicious qualities .... 1 Henry VI. v. 4 

if thy rare qualitiesj sweet Henry I'lIL ii. 4 

nor his qualities;— no matter.... Troilus 4' Cress, i. 2 

cost, in qualities of the best Timon of Alliens, i. I 

and note the qualities of people.. /l«'oni/,f-C/eo. i. I 

the adornment of my qualities Cymbeline, iii. 5 

a sliop of all the qualities that man .. — v. 5 

Boult, has she any qualities? Pericles, iv. 3 

no further necessity of qualities can make — iv. 3 

iKnl.] for qualities are so weighed Lear,\. 1 

and their true qualities Itomeo^ Juliet, ii. 3 

and knows all qualities, with a learned. 0(/ie//o, iii. 3 
QUALITY— Ajiel, and all liis quality.. J"«n/)es/, i. 2 

it is the quality o' the climate — ii. 1 

do in our quality much want.. TwoGen. of Ver. iv. 1 
of what quality was your love ....MerryyVives,\i. 2 

your otHee, and your quality — v. 5 

the quality of persons Twelfth Night, iii. 1 

the quality of tlie time, and quarrel — iii. 3 
what quality are they of'i. Measure for Measure, ii. I 
counsels not in such a quality .. Mer. of Venice, iii. 2 
the quality of mercy is not strained — iv. I 
no one good qualitj' worthy your.... AW sU'ell, iii. 6 
hath love no quality? if the quick .. — iv. 2 
burning quality of that fell poison . . King John, v. 7 
the quality and hair of our atterapt.W/cncj///'. iv. 1 
because you are not of our quality . . — iv. 3 
yes, in this present quality of war . .2HenrylV. i. 3 
as might hold sortance with his quality — iv. 1 
concurring both in name and quality — iv. 1 
swims against your stream of quality — v. 2 
neighboured bj' fruit of baser quality.. ffenrj/T. i. 1 

I know thy quality. Montjoy — iii. 6 

quality call you me? Construe me .. — iv. 4 
and gentlemen of blood and quality — iv. 8 
have lost their quality; and that this — v, 2 
hitting a grosser quality, is cried .. Henry VIII. i. 2 
the whole quality wherefore ..Trnilut^ Cress, iv. 1 
the Grecian j'ouths are full of quality — iv. 4 
as of grave and austere quality. TVinono/zli/iens, i. 1 
the quality uf lord Timon's fiiry? .. — iii. 6 
scolds against the quality of the flesh — iv. 3 
and beasts, from quality and kind. ./u^'us Ctvsar, i. 3 

faculties, to monstrous quality — i. 3 

from the true quality with that which — iii. 1 
whose true-fixed, and resting quality — iii. 1 
whose quality, going on .. .. Aniony <-^-Cleopalra,i. 2 
do draw the inward quality after them — iii. 11 

the quality of her passion shall — v. 1 

a beggar without more quality Cymbeline, i. i 

to a stranger of his quality — i. 5 

more composition and fierce quality Lear, i. 2 

the quality of nothing hath not — i. 2 

you know the fiery quality of the duke. . — ii. 4 

what quality? why Uloster, Gloster — ii. 4 

of how depraved a quality— O Regan! .. — ii. 4 
if any man of quality, or degree — v. 3 (lierald) 

your name? your quality? and why — v. 3 

of so airy and liglit a quality Hamlet, i'l. 2 

will they pursue the quality no longer .. — ii. 2 
come, give us a taste of your quality .... — ii. 2 
for a quality, wherein they say, you shine — iv. 7 

even to the very quality of my lord Othello, i. 3 

such things else of quality and respect .. — i. 3 
to the general, nor any man of quality.. — ii. 3 

and all quality, pride, pomp — iii. 3 

QUALM— only thing for a (inalm.... MuchAdo, iii. 4 
he called me? Qualm peuJiaps.... Lout's L. Los(, y. 2 
some sudden qualm hath struck .,,.2HcnryVI. i. I 

QUALMISH at the smell of leek Henry V. v. 1 

QUANDO— quando pecus omne ..Love's L.Lost, iv. 2 
QUANTITIES-sawedintoquantities.2Hert;!//r. v. 1 

QUANTITY of dirty lands Twelfth Sight, \\. 4 

holding no quantity, love ctin,. Mid.N.'s Dream, i. 1 
he is not quantity enough for that. . Love's L.L.v. 1 
thou rag, thou quantity, thou .. Taming of Sh, iv. 3 
retaining but a quantity of life King John, v. 4 



[ 609 ] 

QUANTITY equals not one of ] Henry I V. iii. 1 

soldiers with great quantity .. Timon of Alliens, V. 1 

with loves above their quantity — y.b 

how much the quantity the weight. C!/mi;c(/»e,iv. 2 

set on some quantity of barren Hamlet, iii. 2 

women's fear and love hold quantity.... — iii. 2 
but it reserved some quantity of choice.. — iii. 4 
with all their quantity of love make up — v. 1 

QUARREL with the noblest grace Tempest, iii. 1 

I sliall as soon quarrel at it Merry H'ives, i. I 

the time, and quarrel, might wellTwelfih Night, iii. 3 

no man hath any quarrel to me — iii. 4 

that put quarrels purposely on others — iii. 4 
I have his horse to take uj) the quarrel — iii. 4 
better bethought him of his quarrel — iii. 4 
and let no quarrel, nor no brawl .... — v. 1 
lady Beatrice hath a quarrel to you.. Much Ado, ii. 1 
and in the managing of quarrels you — ii. 3 
he ought to enter into a quarrel with — ii. 3 
do not quarrel with us, good old man — v. 1 
in a false quarrel there is no true valour — v. 1 

a quarrel, no, already ? Merchant of Venice, v. 1 

the unhappy subject of these quarrels — v. I 
sudden and quick in quarrel ....AsyouLil!eil,ii.7 
I have had four quarrels, and like to — v. 4 
found the quarrel was upon (rep.) . . — v. 4 

sir, we quarrel in print, by the .... — v. 4 

could not take up a quarrel — v. 4 

holy seems the quarrel upon your . . All's Well, iii. 1 
though the nature of our quarrel . Taming of Sh. i. 1 
for in a quarrel, since I came ashore — i. 1 

we will compound this quarrel — i. 2 

the duke (for private quarrel 'twixt.. — iv. 2 
his damned quarrel ICol. &!(. -quarry] .Macbeth, i. 2 
should forge quarrels unjust against — iv. 3 

be like our warranted quarrel! — iv. 3 

our people quarrel with obedience . . KingJohn, v. 1 

and put his cause and quarrel to — v. 7 

put we our quarrel to tlie will of ... . Richard II.i.2 
heaven's is the quarrel; for heaven's — i. 2 

and what thy quarrel (rep.) — i. 3 

fined for ancient quarrels, and quite — ii. 1 
now you pick a quarrel to beguile.. Iflenry/F. iii. 3 
would the qn.arrel lay upon our heads — y. 2 
derives from heaven Iris quarrel .. ,.2HenryIV. i. 1 

1 make my quarrel in particular .. .. — iv. 1 
hold this quarrel up, whiles England — iv. 2 

tlie quarrel of a true inheritor — iv. 4 

daily grew to quarrel, and to bloodshed — iv. 4 
busy giddy minds with foreign quarrels — iv. 4 

nor no known quarrel Henry V. ii. 4 

being just, and luB quarrel honourable — iv. 1 

in now the king's quarrel — iv. 1 

let it be a quarrel between us — iv. 1 

I will make it my quarrel — iv. 1 

we have French quarrels enough .... — iv. 1 
prabbles, and quarrels, and dissentions — iv. 8 
all griefs, and quarrels, into love.... — v. 2 

this quarrel will drink blood \HenryVI.ii. 4 

the quarrel touclieth none but us ... . — iv. 1 

quite to forget this quarrel — iv. 1 

so good a quarrel, and so bad a peer..2He»r!/ ('/. ii. I 

to see this quarrel tried — ii 3 

armed that hath his quarrel just .... — iii. 2 

what is your quarrel? (rep.) 'iHemy I'L i. 2 

and in that quarrel use it to the death — ii. 2 
tills deadly quarrel daily doth beget! — ii. 5 
because in quarrel of the house oi York — iii. 2 
my quarrel, and this English queen's — iii. 3 

it is a quarrel most unnatural Richard HI. i. 2 

a quarrel just and reasonable — i. 2 

in quarrel of the house of Lancaster — i. 4 
take not the quarrel from his powerful — i. 4 

fill the court with quarrels Henry VII I. i. 3 

yet if that quarrel, fortune, do divorce — ii. 3 
and that's the quarrel.... Troilus^ Cress, (prologue) 
cannot distaste the goodness of a quarrel — li. 2 
of those this quarrel would excite? .. — ii. 2 
a good quarrel, to draw emulous .... — ii. 3 

that quarrels at self-breath — ii. 3 

worth that hangs upon our quarrel.. — ii. 3 
the quarrel's most ominous to us ... . — v. 8 
had we no quarrel else to Rome. . . . Coriolanus, i v. 6 
since the quarrel will bear no .. ..JuliusCtesar, ii. 1 
quarrel no more, but be prepared. . 4 K(oni/ ^CTeo.i. 3 
if you'll patch a quarrel, as matter .. — ii. 2 
my quarrel was not altogether slight. C.vm()c/me,j. a 
in wrongful quarrel you {rep.). . . . Titus Andron. i. 2 
this day all quarrels die, Andronicus — i. 2 
maintain such a quarrel openly ? .... — ii. 1 

such quarrels maj' be broached — ii. 1 

to back thy quarrels, whatsoe'er .... — ii. 3 

in Rome's great quarrel shed — iii. 1 

these quarrels must be quietly debated — v. 3 

that fought Rome's quarrel out — y. 3 

do hourrv carp and quarrel Lear, i. 4 

bold in the quarrel's right — ii. 1 

sjieak, yet, how grew your quarrel? — ii. 2 

I'd shake it on this quarrel = . — iii. 7 

and not fall to quarrel with your great . . — iv. 6 

and the best quarrels, in the lieat — v. 3 

quarrel is between our masters . . Borneo ^Juliet, i. 1 

quarrel, I will back thee — i. 1 

do you quarrel, sir? Quarrel, sir? no — i. I 
set this ancient quarrel new abi'oach? — i. 1 
in a good quarrel, and the law on .. — ii. 4 
quarrel with a man that hath (rep.) — iii. I 

an' I wert so apt to quarrel as thou artr — iii. I 
bethink how nice the quarrel was .. — iii. 1 

beware of entrance to a quarrel Hamlet, i. 3 

greatly to find quaiTcl in a straw — iv. 4 

he'll be as full of quarrel and offence ..Othello, ii. 3 
to manage private and domestic quarrel — ii. 3 
a quarrel, but nothing wherefore — ii. 3 

QUARRELLED with a man for. Romeo 4-Juliei. iii.l 

QUARRBLLER-great quarrelier. TwelfthNight, i. 3 

QUARRELLING— hath in quarrelling — i. 3 

could right himself with quarreIling.ilf«c/i.4rfo, v. 1 

more quarrelling with occasion .Mer. of Venice, iii. 5 

quarrelling upon the head of valour Timon of Ath.iii.b 



QUARRELLING, drabbing Ilumlel.ii. 1 

addle as an egg, for quarrelling.. iJoHieo ^-Juliet, iii. I 

wilt tutor me from quarrelling — iii 1 

QUARRELLOUS as the weasel .. ..Cymbelin, .\\\. i 

QUARRELSOME: I should \.noc\<..TumingofSh. i. 2 

countercheck quarrelsome (rep.) . . A" you Lil<v it, \. 4 

QUARRIES, rocks, and hills whose heads. 0//ie;/c;,i. 3 

QUARRY cries on havock Hamlel, v. 2 

[C'l/. A'7i(.]liis damned quarry smiling... 't/uc(/e(/i, i. 2 

were, on the quarry of these mu'dered — iv. 3 

I'd make a quarry with thousands . . Coriolanus, i. I 

QUART of ale is a dish ....Winter'sTaU; iv. 2 (song) 

go fetch me a quart of sack Merry Wives, ii\. 6 

and no sealed quarts . . Taming o/Shrrw, -j (indue.) 

you'll crack a quart together iHenrylV. v. 3 

QUART- D'ECU he will sell AlVsWell, iv. 3 

there's a quart-d'ecu for you — v. 2 

QUARTER— I may quarter, coz? . . Merry Wives, i. 1 
it is marring, indeed, if he quarter it — i I 

if he has a quarter of your coat — i. 1 

within a quarter of an hour — iv. 4 

a year and a quarter old . .Measure for Measure, iii. 2 
in clamour, and a quarter in rheum . . MuchAdo, v. 2 

again into his native quarter All's Well, iii. 6 

three quarters, half yard, quarter. Taming of Sh. iv. 3 
not past three quarters of a mile. . Winter's Tale, iv. 2 
he be three quarters and a dram dead — iv. 3 
keep fair quarter with liisbedI..Comerfy o/jBrr. ii. 1 
three quarters, that is, an ell and (rtp.) — iii. 2 
blow, all the quarters that they \inov,'.. Macbeth, i. 3 

continue in this a quarter of an hour — v. 1 

keep good quarter, and good care KingJohn, y. h 

one quarter of an hour, that I can ..1 Henry IV. ii. 4 
not ahove once in a quarter of an hour — iii. 3 
once or twice in a quarter bear out ,. — v. I 

take you one quarter into France Henry V. i, 2 

had all your quarters been as Ba{ely.\HennjVI. ii. 1 
within her quarter, and mine own .. — ii. 1 
not a man shall pass his quarter .. Timon of Ath. v. .•> 
noise so far as we have quarter .. Antony'^ Clen. iv. 3 
life for an hour and a quarter ..Ilomca ^Juliet, iii. 1 
even now, in quarter, and in terms like. Othello, ii. 3 

QUARTERED in her heart! KingJohn,il. 2 

drawn, and quartered, there should be — ii. 2 

where is lord Stanley quartered Richard III. v. 3 

Strand, where she was quartered . . Henry VI II. v. 3 
thousands of these quartered slaves. . Coriolanus, i. I 
behold their infants quartered.... Ju/iusCcEsar, iii. 1 
this night in Sardis to be quartered . . — iv. 2 
my sword quartered the world... -I7iii)7ij/ i^'C'". iv. 12 

behold their quartered fires Cymbeline, iv. 4 

a thought, which, quartered, hath but . Hamlet, iv. 4 

QUARTERING steel IHenryVl. iv. 2 

QUART-POT to drink in 2Henry VI. iv. 10 

QUASI — master person, quasi pers-on. Loue sL.L.iv.2 
QUAT— I have rubbed tliis young quat . . Othello, v. I 
QUATCH-BUTTOCK, the brawn ....All's Well, ii. 2 
QUEAN, an old cozening quean! . . Merry Wives, iv. 2 
as a scolding quean to a wrangling . . All's Well, ii. 2 

throw the quean in the channel 2Henryl I', ii. 1 

QUE AS— te captum queas minimo . Taming of Sh. I I 

(JUEASINESS-fight withqueasiness.2Henrv/r. i. 1 

QUEASY— quick wit and his queasj'..il/uc/i.-!iio, ii. 1 

who, queasy with b.is insolence ..AnionySfCleo. iii. 6 

one thing, of a queasy question Lear, ii. I 

QUEEN-sueh a paragon to their queen. Tempest, ii. 1 
your daughter, who is now queen.... — ii. 1 
daughter and I will be king and queen — iii. 2 

the queen o' the sky — iv. I 

hath thy queen summoned me hither? — iv. 1 

do now attend the queen? — iv. 1 

highest queen of state ,... — iv. 1 

the king and queen there! — v. 1 

pale queen of night I swear ..TuoGen.ofVer. iv. 2 
be the queen of all the fairies .... Merry Wives, iv. 4 

must present the fairy queen — iv. 6 

our radiant queen hates sluts — v. 5 

that II iracle and queen of gems.. Twelfth Night, ii. 4 

and his fanc.v's queen — y. 1 

burned the Carthage queen ....Mid. N.'sDream, i. I 

I serve the fairy queen, to dew — ii. 1 

our queen and all her elves come. . .. — ii. 1 
the queen come not within his sight — ii. 1 
come not near our fairy queen .... — ii. 3 (song) 
80 near the cradle of the fairy queen? — iii. I 
to my queen, and beg her Indian boy — iii. 2 
first I will release the fairy queen .... — iv. 1 

wake you, my sweet queen — iv. I 

come, my queen, take hands (rep.) .. — iv. I 
fair queen, up to the mountain's top — iv. 1 
Aquitain; a dowry for a queen .. Love's L.Lost, ii. 1 
one of the strange queen's lords (rep.) — iv. 2 
O queen of queens, how far dost — iv. 3 (verses) 
your thoughts, my gentle queen. 71/er, of Venice, ii. I 
of my servants, queen o'er m.vself.... — iii. 2 
thrice-crowned queen of night ..As you Like it, iii. 2 

gave you, fair queen. And you 4lTsWell,l. I 

Diana, no queen of virgins, that would — i. 3 

as Anna to the queen of Carthage. Tamingot Sh. i. I 
tonguetied, our queen? speak you. Winler'sTale, i. 2 

we were, fair queen, two lads — i. 2 

your queen and I are devils — i. 2 

at the good queen's entreaty (rep.) .. — i. 2 

■will talte again your queen — i. 2 

with Bohemia, and with your queen — i. 2 

have touched his queen forbiddenly — i. 2 

and comfort the gracious queen — i. 2 

the queen, your mother, rounds apace — ii. 1 

call tlie queen again — ii. I 

yourself, your queen, your son — ii. 1 

"that the queen is spotless — ii. 1 

conduct me to the queen — ii. 2 

the queen receives much comfort .... — ii. 2 

my best obedience to the queen -~ ii. 2 

I'll presently acquaint the queen of — ii. 2 
I'll to the queen; please you, come .. — ii. 2 

if 't please the queen to send — ii. 2 

the trespass of the queen — ii. 2 

more, alas, than the queen's life?.... — ii. 3 
good queen. Good queen! (rep.) — ii. :» 



QUE 

QUEEN-qucen's, his hoiiel'ul eon's. lyiiUei'sTah; ii. 3 

biitthia most cruel usa^e of your queea — ii. 3 

prove as successful to the qiieeu .... — iii. I 

that the quee!i appear ill iJcrgou — iii. 2 

queen to the wortliy Leontes ., — iii. 2 (indict.) 

tliis news is mortal to the queen ".. — iii. 2 

new woo my queen; recalfthe good — iii. 2 

my practice; queen his fortunes liere — iii. 2 

tlie queen, the queen, the sweetest . . — iii. 2 

the luve I bore your queen — iii. 2 

dead bodies of my queen, and son ... . — iii. 2 

whose loss of his most precious queen — iv. I 

petty gods, and you the queen on't .. — iv. 3 

that all your acts are qiieens — iv. 3 

she is the queen of curds and cream.. — iv. 3 

I'll queen It no inch further — iv. 3 

to rejoice, the former queen is well? — v. I 

looked upon my queen's full eyes..,. — v. I 

to choose you a queen — v. I 

your fu-st queen's ghost (r^p.) — v. I 

not a mouth 'fore your queen died .. — v. 1 

at the relation of tlie queen's deatli .. — v. 2 

are going to see tlie queen's picture., — v. 2 

the statue of our queen — v. 3 

lady, dear queen, that ended when I — v. 3 

the queen, that bore tliee Macbeth, iv. 3 

the queen, my lord, is dead — v. 5 

butcher, and his fiend-like queen..., — v. 7 

thou may'st be a queen KivgJohu^n, 1 

dowry shall weigh equal with a queen — ii. 2 
went to France to fetch his queen . . Richard II. u 1 

come on, our queen; to-morrow .... — ii. I 

tlien, tlirice gracious queen — ii. 2 

why is he not with the queen? — ii. 3 

divorce betwixt his queen and him — iii. i 
the beauty of a fair queen's cheeks .. — iii. 1 
you say, the queen is at your house. . — iii. I 

poor queen! so tliat thy state — iii. 4 

remembrance of a weeping queen. . .. — iii, 4 

resting for her true king's queen .... — v. 1 

good sometime queen, prepare thee.. — v. 1 

[Kii(.] my queen to France; from whence — v. 1 

weep not, sweet queen \HentylV. ii. 4 

convey my tristtul queen — ii. 4 

snug by a fair queen in a summer's . — iii. i 

to pray for tlie queen iHenryW. (epil'isue) 

and I call you, iny queen lleinij I'.v. 2 

here 1 kiss her as my sovereign queen — v. 2 

the kings and queens of France \Hemyri. i. 6 

England's queen (rep. V. 5) — v. 1 

to he made a queen? to be made a queen — v. 3 

undertake to make thee Henry's queen — v. 3 

his queen, and not to seek a queen to — v, ."j 

ray title in tlie queen to your ^UertfyVl. i. 1 

the fairest queen that ever king — i. i 

entertainment to my princely queen. — i. 1 

and England's dear-bought queen .. — i. 1 

where kings and queens are crowned — i. 2 

tliu king aiid queen do mean to hawk — i. 2 

and the qiieen with him; I'll be tlie first — i. 3 

in court do take her for the queen .. — i. 3 

peace, goodqucen; and whet not on these— ii. 1 

sent liis poor queen to Frn nee — ii, 2 

now is Henry Icing, and Jlargaret queen — ii. s 

nor tlie king, nor the queen — ii. 3 

Margaret our queen, do seek subversion — iii. i 

be a queen, and crowned with infamy! — iii. 2 

poisonous too, and kill thy forlorn queen — iii. 2 

ungentle queen, to call him gentle.. — iii. 2 

cease, gentle queen, these execrations — iii. 2 

thy lips, that kissed the queen — iv. i 

message from the queen to France .. — iv. 1 

until tlie queen his mistress bury it,. — iv. 1 

the queen that living held him dear — iv. 1 

Somerset comes with the queen — v. I 

the queen, this day, here holds her ..ZHcnryVI. i. 1 

let us tell the queen these news — i, 1 

liere comes the queen, whose looks .. — i. 1 

be patient, gentle queen, and I will stay — i. 1 

poor queen! how love to me — i. i 

the queen, with all the northern .... — i. 2 

the army of the queen (rep. i. 4) .... — i, 2 

1 would assay, proud queen (ifp.) .,. — i. 4 

see, ruthless queen Crep. ii. U — i. 4 

Clifford, and the queen; who crowned — ii. i 

St. Alban's to intercept the queen .. — ii. l 

looked full gently on his warlike queen — ii. 1 

we fled; the king unto the queen — ii 1 

the proud insulting queen, with Clifford — ii. 1 

the queen is coming with a puissant — ii. 1 

for Jlargaret my queen, and Clitford — ii. 5 

love to go whither the queen intends — ii. .'j 

pursue tlie bloody-minded queen ... . — ii. 6 

ask the lady Bona for thy queen .... — ii, G 

my queen, and son (rep.) — iii. 1 

that talk 'st of kings and queens?.... — iii. i 

my queen: say that king Edward (rep.) — iii. 2 

I am too mean to be .your queen .... — iii. 2 

you cavil, widow: I did mean, my queen — iii. 2 

no more, for thou shalt be my queen — iii. 2 

great Albion's queen in former golden — iii. 3 

why, say, fair queen, whence springs — iii. 3 

renowned queen, with patience calm — iii. 3 

and wliy not queen? because thy.. .. — iii. 3 

no more art prince, than she is queen — iii. 3 

you yourself, oiu- quondam queen .. — iii. 3 

that our fair queen and mistress smiles — iii. 3 

ray noble queen, let former grudges pass — iii. 3 

thj' help to this distressed queen?. ... — iii. 3 

my quarrel, and this English queen's — iii. 3 

queen and prince sliall follow (rep.) — iii. 3 

my wife, and England's queen — iv. 1 

raise my state to title of a queen .... — i v. 1 

but what said Henry's queen? — iv. I 

tlrat Margaret your queen, and my son — iv, 6 

the queen from France hath brought — v. 2 

away, to meet tlie queen's great power! — v. 2 

that the queen hath raised in Gallia — v. 3 

the queen is valued thirty thousand — v. 3 

our gentle queen how well she fares — v. 5 



QUEEN— love my lovely queen SIIetiryTI. v. 7 

the queen's kindred (,rep. ) Richard III, i. 1 

and his noble queen well struck — i. 1 

we are the queen's abjects, and must — i. 1 

than a great queen, with this condition — 1.3 

have I m being England's queen .... — i. 3 

ere you were queen, ay, or your .... — i. 3 

being the queen thereof (rep.) — i. 3 

I beiui^ queen, you bow like subjects — i, 3 

thj'selt a queen, for me that was a queen — i. 3 

mother, wife, nor England's queen.. — i. 3 

poor painted queen (lep. iv. 4) i. 3 

teach me to be your queen, and you my — i. 3 

'tis the queen and her allies, that stir — 1. 3 

to my sovereign king, and queen — ii. 1 

guilt.v kindred of the queen looked pale — ii. 1 

provoked to't by the queen, devised — ii. 2 

to part the queen's proud kindred .. — ii. 2 

and the queen's sons, and brothers.. — ii. 3 

the queen your mother, and your .. — iii. 1 

persuade the queen to send the duke of — iii. 1 

the kindred of the queen, must die.. — iii. 2 

the suggestion of the queen's allies.. — iii. 2 

reverendlooker-onoftivo fair queens — iv. 1 

to be crowned Richard's royal queen — iv. 1 

wife, nor England's counted queen., — iv. 1 

God save the queen! (rep. iv. 4) .... — iv. 1 

that Anne my queen is sick — iv. 2 

a queen in jest, only to fill the — iv. 4 

and queen of sad mischance — iv. 4 

praying nuns, not weeping queens .. — iv. 4 

even lie, tliat makes her queen — iv. 4 

your daughter is made queen — iv. 4 

she shall be a high and mighty queen — iv. 4 

the queen hath heartily consented . . — iv. 5 
under pretence to see tlie queen. . , . Henry VIII. i. 1 

out of malice to the good queen .... — ii. 1 

the emperor, the queen's great nephew — ii. 2 

the queen shall be acquainted forthwith — ii. 2 

deliver this with modesty to the queen — ii. 2 

I would not be a queen (rep.) — ii. 3 

old as I am, to queen it — ii. 3 

the queen is comfortless, and we .... — ii.3 

but, thinking that we are a queen .. — ii. 4 

the queen is obstinate, stubborn .... — ii. 4 

the queen of e.artlily queens ...„,.. — ii. 4 

some of these, the queen is put in anger — ii. 4 

against the person of the goodqucen — ii. 4 

Is-atharine our queen, before the — ii. 4 

your highness, the queen being absent — ii. 4 

an earnest motion made to the queen — ii. 4 

to a creature of the queen's, lad.v Anne — iii. 2 

Katharine no more shall be called, queen — iii. 2 

the late queen's gentlewoman — iii. 2 

her queen's queen! — iii. 2 

viewed in open, as his queen, going.. — iii. 2 

stand close, the queen is coming .... — iv. 1 

having brought the queen to — iv. I 

all the royal makings of a queen).... — iv. 1 

went on each side oi the queen ? , . . . — iv. 1 

the queen's in labour, they say — v. 1 

from the queen what is the news? .. — v. 1 

remember the estate of my poor queen — v. 1 

is the queen delivered? Say, ayi and of — v. 1 

sir, your queen desires your visitation — v. I 

I'll to the queen. A hundred marks! — v. 1 

and tlie good queen, my noble partners — v. 4 

ye must all see the queen, and she .. — v. 4 
Menelaus' queen, with wanton. Trail. ^Cress. (prol.) 

he brought a Grecian queen — ii. 2 

treason were it to the ransacked queen — ii. 2 

especially to you, fair queen! — iii. I 

speak your fair pleasure, sweet queen — iii. 1 

I have business to my lord, dear queen — iii. 1 

well, sweet queen (rep.) — ill. l 

not I, honey-sweet queen — iii. i 

now by the jealous queen of lieaven. Coriolarfits, v. 3 
as I am Eg.ypt's queen, thou .... Antony ^-Clen. i. 1 

fye, wrangling queen ! whom every — i. 1 

come, my queen ; last night you .... — i. I 

that you praised so to the queen?. . . . — i. 2 

here comes Antony. Not he, the queen — i. 2 

I must from this enchanting queen.. — i. 2 

the cause of our expedience to the queen — i. 2 

now, my dearest queen, -Pray you., — i. 3 

never was there queen more mightily — i. 3 

most sweet queen, — Nay, pray you . , — i. 3 

hear me, queen: the strong necessity of — i. .3 

she's dead, my queen: look here .... — i. 3 

my precious queen, forbear — i. 3 

nor the queen of Ptolemy more womanly — i. 4 

last tiling he did, dear queen, he kissed — i. 5 

a certain queen to Ctesar in a mattress — ii. H 

ay, dread queen. Where? Madam .. — iii. 3 

Cyprus, Ijydia, absolute queen — iii. 6 

do, most dear queen. Do! — iii. 9 

the queen, my lord, the queen — iii. 9 

arise, the queen approaches — iii. 9 

the queen, of audience, nor desire .. — iii. 10 

the queen shall then have courtesy . . — iii. 11 

come on, my queen; there's sap in't yet — iii. 1 1 

and my queen 3 a squire more tight — iv. 4 

let the queen know of our guests .... — iv. 8 

and the queen, whose heart, I thought — iv. 12 

I come, my queen: Eros! — iv. 12 

my queen and Eros have, by their .. — iv. 12 

one word, sweet queen : of Ouesar .... — iv. 1 3 

the queen my mistress, confined .... — v. I 

would have a queen his beggar — v. 2 

royal queen! O Cleopatra! thou art (rep.) — v. 2 

and take a queen worth many babes — v. 2 

as for the queen, I'll take her to my — v. 2 

good queen, let us entreat you — v. 2 

no, dear queen; for we intend so to. . — v. 2 

where is the queen? (reyj.) — v. 2 

adieu, good queen; I must attend.... — v. 2 

show nie, my women, like a queen . . — v. 2 
so is tlie queen, that most desired.... Cynibeline, i. 1 

the gentleman, the queen, and princess — i. 1 

my queen! my mistress! Olady .... — i. 2 



QUE 



QUEEN— thither write, my qneen. ...Ci/mbeliue, i. 2 
have had the sole son of my queen !. . — i. 2 

'twas, his queen, his queen! — i. 4 

the queen madam, desires your ,.,. — i. 4 

I will attend the queen — i. 4 

or she, that bore you, was no queen.. — i. 7 
because of the queen my mother .... — ii. 1 

attend the queen, and us — ii.3 

come, our queen. If she be up — ii.3 

kings, queens, and states, maids .... — iii. 4 

I had it from the queen — iii. 4 

my gentle queen, where is our daughter? — iii. i 
Cloten, the sono the queen (rep.) .... — iv. 2 

my queen upon a desperate bed — iv. 3 

for the counsel of my son, and queen I — iv. 3 

I must report the queen is dead — v. 5 

my queen, my life, my wife! — v. 5 

I had it froin the queen — v. .'i 

one thing which the queen confessed — v. 5 
tlie queen, sir, very oft importuned me — v. :> 
by the hand of his queen mother .... — v. 5 
we were dissuaded by our wicked queen — v. 5 
eldest son of this distressed queen. . Titus Andran. i. 2 
were Goths, and Taniora was queen — i. '2 

clear up, fair queen (rep,) — i. 2 

what 'tis to let a queen kneel in the.. — i. 2 

to wanton with this queen — ii. I 

queen [Coi.A'nZ.-nymph], this syren.. — ii. 1 

believe me, queen, your swarth — ii.3 

O Tamora, be called a gentle queen .. — ii. 3 

like Tarquin and his queen — iii. 1 

confederate with the queen, and her — v. I 
would you represent our queen aright — v. 2 
there is a queen, attended by a Moor — v. 2 
welcome, dread queen ; welcome .... — v. 3 

come, queen o' the feast Pericles, ii.3 

b.v,runo, that is queen of marriage .... — ii.3 
his queen with child, makes her.. — iii.(Gower) 
how, Lyohorida, how does my queen?.. — iii. I 

the pangs of my queen's travails! — iii. 1 

all tnat is left living of your queen ... . — iii, 1 

sir, your queen must overboard — iii. I 

most wretched queen! — iii. I 

have lost this queen, worth all our — iii. 2 (scroll) 

this queen wilt live — iii. 2 

O your sweet queen! — iii. 3 

his woeful queen leave at Ephess — iv. (Gower) 

my queen's square brows „ — v. i 

my drowned queen's name — v. 1 

hail, madam, and my queen ! — v. 3 

how this dead queen re-lives? — v. 3 

yet there, my qiieen, we'll celebrate ,. — v. 3 
his queen and daughter, seen .. — v. 3 (Gower) 
queen of us, of ours, and our fair France . . Lear, i. I 
pierce the queen to any demonstration .. — iv. 3 

she was a queen over her passion — iv. 3 

though that the queen on special cause .. — iv. B 

with him, I sent the queen — v. 3 

our sometime sister, now our queen .... Hamlet, i. 2 

my most seeming virtuous queen — i. 5 

of life,of crown, of queen, at once bereft — i. ,'> 
or my dear majesty your queen here .... — ii. 2 

the good king and queen (rep.) — ii. 2 

the mobled queen— the mobled (lep.).. .. — ii. 2 
let his queen mother all alone entreat him — iii..l 
and the queen too, and that presently .. — iii. 2 
the queen, your mother, in most great .. — iii. 2 
my lord, the queen would speak with you — iii- 2 

mine own ambition, and m.v queen — iii. 3 

the queen, your husband's brother's wife — j'i- "* 
for who, that's but a queen, fair, sober .. — iii. 4 
the queen, his mother, lives almost by his — iv. 7 
this to your majesty; this to the queen .. — iv. 7 

how now, sweet queen! — iv. 7 

the queen, the courtiers — v. 1 

the king, and queen, and all are coming — v. 2 
the queen desires you, to use somege:itle — v. 2 

the queen carouses to thy fortune — v. 2 

look to the queen there, ho! — v. 2 

how does the queen? she swoons to see .. — v. 2 
wretched queen, adieu! j'ou that look pale — v. 2 

QUELL a lover's hope Tuio Gen. nf Verona, i v. 2 

quail, crush, conclude, and quell!. .Jtfid.A'.'.'Dr. v. 1 

tne guilt of our great quell? Macbeth, i. 7 

either to quell the Dauphin utterly..! Henry VI. i. 1 

to quel I the rebels, and their 2HenryVI. v. 1 

your activity may defeat and quell. Timon ofAth. iv. 3 

QlJENCH-seek to quench t^rep.) Two Gen. of Ver.n. 7 
quench the wonder of her infamy ..Mnch Ado, iv. 1 
satiety seek to quench his thirst.. Taming of Sh. i. 1 
the thing, she took to quench it. . Winter sTale, jv. 3 

come, quench your blushes — iv. 3 

might quench the zeal of all professors — v. I 
puddled mire to quench the hair. Comedy of Err. v. 1 
ere our blood shall quench that fire.. A'lji^Jo/m, iii. 1 
and quench his fiery indignation .... — iv. 1 
to quench my furnace-burning ....SHenry VI. ii. 1 

suttered, rivers cannot quench — iv. 8 

sap of reason you would quench. . . . Henry VIII. i. 1 

which God's dew quench! — ii. 4 

to quench mine honour — v. 2 

the way to kindle, not to quench . . Coriolanus, iii. 1 
look tliee, here's water to quench it . . — v. 2 
think, in time she will not quench . . Cymheline, i. G 
the owners quench them with ... . TilusAndron. v. 1 
to blow at fire, in hope to quench it ....Pericles, i. 4 
quench thy nimble, thy sulphurouB — iii. 1 

quench the fire of your pernicious.. Borneo ,^/u;. i. 1 
quencli the fire, the room is grown .. — i. 5 

qneuch tlie guards of the ever-fixed Othello, ii. 1 

i t' [ quench thee, thou flaming minister . . — v. 2 

QUENCHED her love Meas. forMeas. iii. 1 

quenched in the chaste beams ..Mid. N. Dream, ii. 2 
Hesperus hath quenched his sleepy . . All's Well, ii. ! 

what hath quenched them, hath il/oc6e//i, ii. 2 

thus quenched of hope, not longing. . Ci/mbeline, v. 5 

bl ushes of hers must be quenched Pericles, iv. 3 

buoyed up, and quencligathe stelled fires. Lear, iii. 7 

QUEiN'CHING mv familiar smile.. TireilihNi-rht.ii.h 
quenching the flame of bold....2Henri//r. (indue.) 



QUE 



[611 ] 



QUI 



QUENCHIjESS fury to more rage — 3 Henry VI. i. 4 

UUJiRN— labour in the quern ..Mid.N.'s Dream, li. 1 

QUEST-raost contrnrious quests. Mens. for Meas. iv. 1 

Jasons come in quest ot'\ii:r..Merclmnlof I'eiuce, i. 1 

company in the quest of him Cnmedy of Err. i. 1 

in quest ol them, unhappy, lose myself — _i. 2 

should go in quest of beauty King John, u. 2 

what lawful quest have given Richard 111. i. 4 

expence, can stead the quest ..Pericles, iii. (Gower) 

or cease your quest of love? Lear, i. I 

hath sent about three several quests Othello, \. 2 

QT7ESTANT shrinks, flud AWs Well, ii. 1 

QUESTION— provokes that question . . Tempest, i. 2 

here cease more q\iestions — i. 2 

is not the question; the question .. Merry »'ives,\. 1 
disarm thcn\, and let thejn question — in. 1 
mv daughter will I question how she — in. 4 
ask him some questions in his accidence — iv. I 
does harm to my wit. No question Twetflh Night,i. 3 

past question ; for thou see'st .... — 1.3 

that you call in question the continuance— i. 4 
and that question's out of my part .. — \. b 

in contempt of question, her hand .. — ii. 5 

in any constant question — iv. 2 

out of question, 'tis Maria's hand — v. 1 

thoufli first in question, is thy .. ileus. for. Meas.x. 1 

but in the loss 01 question — ii. 4 

wise? why, no question but he was. . — in. 2 

give me leave to question — y. I 

question me, as an honest man much Aao,x. 1 

send for him, and question him yourself— i. 2 
for, out of question, you were born . . — ii. 1 
a commodity in question, I warrant — iii. 3 
let me but move one question to your — iv. 1 
question? why, an hour in clamour — v. 2 
in the true course of all the question — v. 4 
which out of question, thou wilt be. . — v. 4 
Ilerraia, question your desires .Mid. N. s Dream, i. 1 
1 will not stay thy questions ........ — _ii. 2 

therefore, be out of hope, of question — in. i 
was it then to ask the question! ..LouesL. Los/, ii. 1 

that spiu: me with sucii questions — ii. 1 

and out of question, so it is sometimes — iv. 1 

I do, sans question — . X- ) 

makina question ot my uttermost. Mer. of I emce, 1. 1 
and I no question make, to have it .. — i. 1 
fiel what a question's that, if thou .. — iii. 4 
think vou question with tlie Jew.... — iv. 1 
von may as well sue question with .. — iv. 1 
holds this present question in the court? — iv. 1 

I'll stay no longer question — iv. I 

one of you question yond man AsyouLikeit, u. 4 

to question you about your fortunes — ii. 7 
whence you have studied your questions — lii. 2 
and had much question with him . . — iii. 4 
call tlie giddiness of it in qiiestiou .. — v. 2 

after some question with hira — y. 4 

let me ask you a question Alls Well, i. 1 

more should I question thee, and more — ii. 1 

that fits all questions (.rsp.) — ii. 2 

I will be a fool in question — ii. 2 

rather than suffer question for your . . — ii. 3 
ask questions, and sing; pick his teeth — iii. 2 

l-'ll question her. God save you — 111.5 

I'll question you of my lord's ....Winter s Tale, 1.2 

make't thy question, and go roti — 1. 2 

thanquestionhow'tisborn.. ........ - _ 1. 2 

have some question with the shepherd — iv. 1 

has tliese poor men in question. , — „ '^^ ' 

a question: how shall we try M. Comedy nfErr. v. 1 
are you aught that man may questiouyiliac(je</i,i. 3 
I burned in desire to question them. . — i. .^ ilet.) 
and question this most bloody piece — ii. 3 

question enrages him; at once — lu. 4 

tiiat is question now; and then King John. 1. I 

says question; I, sweet sir, at yours (j-ep.) — i. 1 

the haste was hot in question.,.. \ Henry IV. 1. I 

directly to this question that I ask . . — ii. 3 
henceforth question me wluther I go — 11. 3 
while I question my puny drawer .. — li. 4 

a question not to be asked — ii. 4 

may breed a kind of question in our — iv. 1 
staying no longer question ..... ....iHi-nrylV. i. 1 

he that was in question for the robbery / — 1.2 

the question then, lord Hastings — i. 3 

question surveyors; know ourown . . — 1. 3 
the question stands: briefly to this end — iv. 1 
I muse you make so slight a question — iv. 1 

question your royal thoughts — v. 2 

push it out of further question Henry V. 1. 1 

no known quarrel, were in question — ii. 4 

question your grace the late — ii. 4 

himself to question our delay — 11. 4 

heard some question 'tween you tway — iii. 2 
outof questions too, and ambiguities — v. I 
question this gentlewoman about me — v. 2 
question her proudly; let thy looks..! llenryVI. 1. 2 
ask me what question thou canst .... — 1.2 

question, my lords, no further — 11. 1 

about a certain question in the law.. — iv. 1 

make answer to such questions iHrnryVl. i. 2 

I'll tliink upon the questions — i. 2 

no question of that; for I have seen.. — iv. 2 
ay, there's the question; but, I say . . — iv. 2 

to question of his apprehension Zirniryl'l. iii. 2 

with youroholer question Henry rill. i. 1 

induceyou to the question ou't? — ii. 4 

your highness, the question did at first — ii. 4 
the truth o' the question carries the due — v. 1 
this is her question (rep.) .... Troilus f,- Cnssida, i. 2 
Bword was drawn about this question — ii. 2 
the cause and question now in hand — ii. 2 

I'll decline the whole question — ii. 3 

not move the question of our place .. — ii. 3 

no question. Will you subscribe — ii. 3 

if she call your activity in question.. — iii. 2 

'tis like, he'll question me — iii. 3 

during all question of the gentle truce — iv. 1 
I do not caU your faith in question . . — iv. 4 
to answer sucii a question, stand agoia — iv. 5 



UUESTION— asked the question ..TinwaofAlh. ii. 2 
make 1 as little question, as he is . . Coriolanus,n. 1 

no question asked him by any — iv. ii 

his nature, there's the question JnliusCaisar,\\. 1 

the question of his death is enrolled — iii. 2 
and call in question our necessities .. — iy. ■' 
in Egypt might be my question.. yldfony ^Cleo. ii. 2 

out of our question wipe him — ..."•'' 

he being the mercd question — iii. 11 

besides this gentleman in question . . Cymbeline, i. 1 
doctor, thou ask'st me sucli a question — i. *> 

we were to question further — ii. 4 

question me noinore, weareespie(1.3'i(u«/(n'iran.ii.3 

turther to question of your king's Pericles, i. 3 

I'd have itcome toquestion; if he dislike.. 2-<"ai-,i. 3 

one thing, of a queasy question — ii. 1 

set i' the stocks for that question — _ii.4 

made she no verbal question? — iv. 3 

particular broils are not to question here — v. 1 

employment will not bear question — v. 3 

the question of Cordelia, and her father — y. 3 
hers, exquisite, in question more. Itomeo fy Juliet, i. 1 
stay not to question, for the watch is. . — y. 3 

ICol. Knt.] question it, Horatio Hamlet, i . 1 

was, and is, the question of these wars ... — i. 1 
encompassment and drift of question.... — ii. 1 

let me question more in particular — ii. 2 

cry out on the top of question — ii- 2 

the player went to cuffsin thequcstion.. — ii.2 
niggard of question; but, of our demands — iii. 1 
to be, or not to be; that is the question . . — iii. 1 
some necessary question of the play be. . — iii. 2 
for 'tis a question left us yet to prove .. — iii. 2 
go, you question with a wicked tongue . . — iii. 4 
will not debate the question of this straw — iv. 4 
to earth, that I must call't iu question . . — iv. 6 
I'll put another question to thee: if thou — v. 1 
when you are asked this question next .. — v. 1 

BO jump upon this blo'Xly question — y. 2 

with more facile question bear it Olliello, i. 3 

fair question as soul to soul aifordeth? .. — i. 3 

make questions, and by them answer — iii. 4 

now will I question Cassio of Bianca.... — iv. 1 

there be some such, no question — iv. 3 

QUESTIONABLE shape Hamlet, i. 4 

QUESTION ED by my fears, of what. Winter's Tale, i. 2 

is to be questioned ; for I saw her — v. 3 

he questioned me; among the rest ..I Henry 1 1', i. 3 
county, where tliis is questioned .... Henry Vlll. i. 2 
it is not to be questioned tliat they .. — ii. 4 
so o'ergrown canuot be questioned . . Cymbeline, iy. 4 

questioned me the story of my life Othello, i. 3 

QUESTIONEDST every sail; if he .... Cymbeline, i. 4 

QUESTIONING, that reason AsyouLikeit, v. 4 

QUESTIONLESS be fortunate. . Merch. of Venice,!. 1 

questionless, with her sweet havmony.. Per ides, v. 1 

QUiOSTllISTS after him, met him at gate. Leac, iii. 7 

QUEUBUS-equiuuctial of Q,ueubusTwelflhNigni,u. 3 

QUICXv—be quick, thou wert best Tempest, i. 2 

not show him where the quick freshes — iii. 2 

incite them to quick motion — iv. 1 

I am struck to the quick — v. I 

shall make it go quick away — v- 1 

but you have a quick vrit..,,TwoGen.of Verona, i. 1 

more than quick words — iii- 1 

you have a quick ear — iy. 2 

I'd rather be set quick i' the earth. Meiry iyives,m. 4 

quick, quick, well come dress — i v. 2 

brief, short, quick, snap — iv. !> 

ay, come, quick — iv. 5 

how quick and fresh art thou'. ....Twelflh Night, 1. 1 

thy assailant is quick, skilful — iii. 4 

hence is of so quick condition . . Meas.for Meas._ 1. 1 

haste thee quick away — iv. 1 

hence hath oifeiiee his quick celerity — iv. 2 
quick, despatch, and send the head.. — ly. 3 

that in despite of his quick wit Much.Uo, ii. 1 

thy w it is as quick as the greyhound's — v. 2 
so quick bright things come to..Mid.N.'e Dream,]. 1 
the ear more quick of apprehension.. — iii 2 
quick, come,— Lvsander, whereto.... — iii. 2 
tliere noquiek recreation granted?. .Loiic'sL-jLusi, i. 1 

and therefore apt, because quick — i. 2 

an eel is quick. I do say thou art quick — i. 'J 
craving quick despatchjimportuues.. — ij. 1 

you must not be so quick — ii. 1 

quick venew of wit; snip, snap, quick — v. 1 
and quick Biron hath plighted faith — v. 2 
she's quick; the child brags in her . . — v. 2 
for .Taquenetta that is quick by him.. — v. 2 
quick, quick, I pray thee, draw... Mer.of Venice, n. 9 
for I long to see quick Cupid's post. . — ii. 9 

sudden and quick in quarrel As you Lilce it, ii. 7 

if the quick tire of youth light AU's H'eU, iv. 2 

one tliat's dead is quick: and now ... — _v. 3 
quick proceeders, marry I now. Taming ofShreir, iv. 2 
not to be buried, but quick, and., ll'inter'e Tate, iv- 3 

a quick eye, and a nimble hand — iv. 3 

wouldittonch theetothequick..Co»i(?rf!/')/&T. 11. 2 
quick is mine ear, to hear of good ..lliclmrd II. n. 1 
with as quick dexterity, and roared. 1 Henry/ T. 11. 4 
come, quick, quick; that I may lay — ni. 1 

and hatli his quick wit wasted iHenrylV. 1. 2 

makes it apprehensive, quick, forgetive — iv. 3 
mcicv thai was quick in us but lute ..if<;?ir!/r. ii. 2 
and shall our quick blood, spirited . . — iii- 5 
in the quick forge and working — V. (chorus) 

lean to cutpurse of quick hand — _ v. 1 

this speedy and quick appearance . . I Henry VI. y. 3 
that craves a quick expedient stop!.-2Hraj!/ '''.iii. 1 

my eye's too quick, my heart 3 Henry VI. iii. 2 

open wide, and eat him quick It'ichard 111. 1. 2 

his grace with quick and merry words — ;. 3 
way, dull clouds, to my quick curscsl — ..1-3 

bold, qiuck, ingenious, forward — i". ' 

mad'st quick conveyance with her .. — iv. 4 
reasons are too shallow and too quick — ,„'Y- * 
would give it quick consideration . . Henry Vlll. i- 2 

a woman of quick sense Troilus Sr Cressida, ly. 5 

demonstrate these quick blows of.. Tinwn ofAlh. u 1 



QUICK; but yet I'll bury thee.... 7"™o« of.i'h. iy. 3 
I pr'ythee, make us quick in work . . Cor/o/ttriKX, i- 4 
lack some part of that quick spivit. JutiusCcDsar, i- 2 

he was quick mettle — i. 2 

when our quick winds lie still . . Antony SfCleo. i. 2 
requires our quick remove from hence — i. 2 

sudtlen sick; quick and return — i. 3 

fur quick accumulation of renown .. — iii. 1 

quick, or I am gone — iv. 13 

quick, quick, good hands. Hold, worthy — v. 2 
the quick comedians extemporally .. — v. 2 

yare, yare, good Iras, quick — v. 2 

beyond their feeling, to the quick. TitusAndron. iv. 2 

1 have louohcd thee to the quick — iv. 4 

the air is quick there, piercing Pericles, iv. I 

for the gods are quick of ear — iy. 1 

some provision give thee quick conduct. .i.f«r, iii. G 
iiimbie stroke of quick, cross lightning? — iv- 7 
so green, so quick, so fair an eye. flomco ^Juliet, Hi, 5 

true apothecary! thy drugs are quick — v. 3 
I'll tent him to the quick; ifhedo Hamlet, i'l. 2 

1 have, ill quick determination, thus set — iii. 1 

but to the quick o' the ulcer — iv. 7 

for the dead, and not for the quick — v. 1 

'tis a quick lie, sir; 'twill away again .. — v. 1 
pile your dust upon the quick and dead — v. 1 
be buried quick with her, and so will I,. — v. 1 

in respect of his quick sail — v. 2 

quick eye rCo(.A'n<-liast eyes] to see Othello,]. 3 

love's quicK pants in Uesdemona's arms — ii. 1 
whom I trash for his quick hunting .... — ii. • 
quick, quick; fear notning; I'll be at thy — v. 1 

QUICK-ANSWERED, saucy Cymbeline, Vn. 4 

QUICK-CONCEIVINGdiscontents..lHe«7i//;'. i- 3 

QUICKEN— quickens what's dead Tempest, iii. 1 

quicken his embraced heaviness. .JV/er.o//'e"!C(?, ii. 8 
quicken a rock, and make you dance.All's If ell, ii. 1 
ixiesy use, to quicken you . ...TamingofSlirew, i. 1 

quicken them with thine! Richard 111. iv. 4 

to quicken your increase — iy. 4 

that quickens Nilus' slime Antony SfCleo. i. 3 

quicken with kissing; had my — 'y.-. '■' 

will quicken, and accuse thee tear, iii. 7 

is fated to us, when we do quicken Othello, iii. 3 

that quicken even with blowing — iv. 2 

QUICKENED- the mind is quickened- Hemi/ >'. iv. 1 

qiiickeued with youthful spleen 1 Henry VI. iv. G 

QUICKENING inhiseye. .Meamrefor.Measure,y. 1 
Hyperion's quickening fire , . Timon of Athens, iv. 3 
QUICKER— are quicker for a fray.Mii/. iV.'sDr. in. 2 
QUICKEST— on our quickest decrees.. /(«'s IVell, v. 3 
QUICKLIER— will be quicklier blown up — 1. 1 
QUICKLY— quicklv, spirit; thou s\\&\t.Tempest, v. 1 

and quickly shot o"ff Two Gen.of Verona, ii. 4 

I'll quickly cross by some sly — .i>- 6 

you'd quickly learn to know — ' iv. 2 

there dwells one mistress QmcUy -.Merry Wives, 1. 2 
le au mon pocket; depeche, quickly — .1. 4 

my nursh -a Quickly tell me so — ni- 2 

quickly, quickly; is the buck-basket — iii- 3 
go, take up these clothes here, quickly — iii- 3 
m Datcliet-muad; quickly, come.... — lij. 3 
that foolish carrion, mistress Quickly; — iii. 3 
break tlieir talk, mistress Quickly ., — iii. 4 
here's mistress Quickly, sir — iii- S 

1 must cany her word quickly — iii- 5 

obey him: quickly, despatch — iv. 2 

send quickly to sir John, to know .. — iv- 4 

and despatch it quickly — v. 3 

he would quickly have the gift ot'.TwelflhNight, i. 3 

even so quickly may one catch — __i- 5 

how quickly the wrong side may be 
may quickly make them wanton... 

do it quickly; I'll call sir Toby 

thy craft so quickly grow — y. • 

then I shall poze you quickly ..Meas.forMeas.ii. 4 

'tis best that thou diest quickly — iii.' 

with Angelo, that it may be quickly — iii. 1 
he must awake, and that quickly too — iv. 3 

thou wouldst not quickly die Much Ado, iy. 1 

will quickly steep theinselvcs (tep.). Mid.N.'s Dr. i. 1 
for your reason ! quickly, sir .... Love's L. Lost, v. 2 
call tlicm forth quickly, we will do so — v. 2 

and I'll be with thee quickly As you Lilce it, 11- 6 

who is it? quickly, au'd speak apace _ — iii- 2 
the lioness, who quickly fell before him — iy. 3 
quickly were dissolved from my hive. .AWilVcll.j. 2 
send her quickly! the other (.rep.) .. — ii. * 

that she may quickly come — .y. 3 

went they not quickly, I should. Taming of Sh. iii. 2 
let them come in; but quickly .. Winter' sTal-e, iy. 3 

'twere well it were done quickly Macbeih. x. 7 

that I should quickly have a new father — iv. 2 
keep it not from me, quickly let me have — iv. 3 
thy story quickly; gracious my; lord .. — v. 5 
speak quickly, or I shoot. A friend.. A'ing-Jo/iii, y. I> 

do not so quickly go; I shall Itichaid II. i- 2 

six winters? tliey are quickly gone.. — .1.3 
that is not quickly buzzed into his ears? — 11- 1 
how quickly should this arm of mine — h.. 3 
what say'st thou, mistress Quickly?. -IHeji.//'. 111. 3 
you took occasion to be riuickly wooed — v. 1 
cannot choose but bring him quickly on — y. 2 

at the suit of mistress Quickly 2HenrylV. 11 1 

and call me gossip Quickly? — n. ' 

but old mistress tjuickly, and mistress — 11. 2 
neighbour Quickly, soys he, receive — a- 4 
how quickly nature falls into revolt — iv. 4 

that it will quickly drop — ly. 4 

that he is married to Nell Quickly ..Henry P. 11. 1 
the quondam Quickly for the only slie — ii- j 

come in quickly to sir John — .ii- ' 

quickly bring us word of England's — 111..^ 

and qu'ickly will i-eturn au injury .. — iv. 7 
I should quickly leap into a wife — — y. 2 
open, if that you come not quickly . . 1 Henry VI. 1. 3 
I quickly ehed some of his bastard .. ~ iv. 6 

and will quickly yield: madam — y. 3 

we'll quickly hoise duke Humphrey .2Henryr/. i. 1 
thee quickly hop without thy head.. — i. * 



— iii. 1 



QUI 



[ (512 ] 



QUICKLY— your iloiiblet quickly ,.2Henn/r/. ii. 1 

I wonder will be quickly worn — ]i- i 

fiiiilts are easy, quickly answered .. — iii. 1 
a staff is quickly found to beat a dog — iii. I 
this Crloster should be quickly rid .. — iii. 1 
bid lier hide him quicklv from tlie duke — v. I 

is slain, they'll q^uickly fly SHenry VI. i. I 

and that will quickly dry tliy molting — _ i. 4 

or quickly will be landed — iv. 1 

a little fire is quickly trodden out — iv. 8 

at hand, and you sliall quickly know — v. 1 

we'll quickly rouse tlie traitors in — v. 1 

come, quickly, Montague, or I am dead — v. 2 

wliy, tliere you quickly sink — v. 2 

alliance quickly shall call home... Richard III. iv. 4 

vou may guess quickly what Henry VIII. ii. 1 

how quickly wliere it gone? Timon of Athens, ii. 2 

and four shall quickly draw out .... Coriolanus, i. fi. 
bring in the banquet quickly ....Antony ^Cleo.i. 2 

I am quickly ill, and well — i. 3 

let his shames quickly drive liim .... — i. 4 

bring me word quickly — ii. 5 

lie could so quickly cut the Ionian sea — iii. 7 
he'll quickly fly my friendsliip loo. .Cymbeli7ie, v. 3 
unless tliou woiildst grieve quickly .. — v. 5 
will quickly melt thy life away. . Titus Andron. iii. 2 

ay, she quiclcly pooped liim Pericles, iv. 3 

feel your power quickly I^ar, iv. 1 

send quickly down to tame tliese vile — iv. 2 

quickly send, be brief in it, to the castle — v. 3 
he'll strike, aud quickly too; lie's dead . . — v. 3 
strike quickly, being moved {rep.') Romeo Sf Juliet, i. 1 
come Pentecost as quiclcly as it will — i. 5 
if tliou think'st I am too quickly won — ii. 2 
weapon should quickly have been out — ii. 4 

to a nunnery, go; and quickly too Hamlet, ui. 1 

power, how quickly should yotx speed?. 0//ieHo, iv. 1 

and you rai^ht quickly make it right — iv. 3 

QUICKNESS— with fiery quickness .... Hamlet, iv. 3 

QUICK-RAISED power 1 Henry I V. iv. 4 

QUICKSAND of deceit? iHenryVI.v.i 

quicksands, Lepidus, keep off Antony SrCleo. ii. 7 

QUICKSILVER— like quicksilver ..iHenrylV.iX. \ 
swift as quicksilver, it courses through.. Hamlet, \.b 

QU tCK- WITTED folks? Taming of Shreir, v. 2 

QUID FOR QUO-but quid for quo. 1 Henri/ F/. v. 3 

QUIDDITS now, his quillets Hamlet, v. I 

QUIDDITIES? whataplague \HenrytV. i. 2 

QUIET— as I hope for quiet days Tempest, iv. 1 

my king, be quiet (rpp.) — iv. 1 

lam glad he is so quiet Merry Wives, i. 4 

Biie is much out of quiet Twelfth Niglil, ii. 3 

Jove would ne'er be quiet. . Measure for Measure, ii. 2 

a man may live as quiet in hell Much Ado, ii. 1 

an ancient and most quiet watchman — iii. 3 
you will let me quiet go, to Athens-Mid.N.Dr. iii. 2 

and therefore I can be quiet Love's L.Lost.i. 2 

into so quiet and so sweet a style AsyouLike it, ii. 1 
I seek is— quiet in the match . ramMig" of Shrew, ii. 1 

he liath got a quiet catcli — ii. I 

father, be quiet; he shall stay — iii. 2 

let tliem go, a couple of quiet ones ., — iii. 2 
and love, and quiet life, and awful rule — v. 2 
thought to fill his grave in guiet . Winler'sTnle, iv. 3 
bid be quiet, when we hear itcry.Coincdi/o/Brf. ii. 1 

I will depart in quiet — iii. 1 

be quiet, people (rep.) — y. 1 

never at quiet! what are you? ^^acbel!l,i^. 3 

nay, one quiet breath of rest King John, iii. 4 

I will sit as quiet as a lamb — iv. 1 

truth hath a quiet breast Richard II. i. 3 

might from our quiet confines fright — i, 3 

as quiet as thy father's skull — iv. 1 

fie upon this quiet lifel 1 HenrylV. ii. 4 

the lag-end of my life with quiet hours — v. 1 
your quiet o'er-posting that action . .2Heni~yir. i. 2 
good captairn Peesel, be quiet (rep.) .. — ii. 4 

Pistol, I would be quiet — ii. 4 

from our most quiet sphere by — iv. 1 

descend with better quiet, better opinion — iv. 4 
could not keep quiet in his con6cience..//firtrt/r._i. 2 
a Itilling tongue, and a quiet sword.. — iii. 2 
quiet tliy cudgel I thou dost see, I eat — v. i 

sleep upon their quiet beds \HenryVI. ii. 1 

now, quiet soul, depart when — iii. 2 

quiet yourselves, I pray, and be at peace — iv. 1 

sweet aunt, be quiet iHenryl'l. i. 3 

thy greatest help is quiet — ii. 4 

may enjoy such quiet walks — iv. 10 

ehatt reign in quiet while thou livest.3H<?nci/r/. 1. 1 

white hairs unto a quiet grave — ii. 6 

cannot be quiet scarce a breathing.. /?icA/irrf ///. i, 3 

not sleep in quiet at the 'Tower — iii. 1 

God give you quiet rest to-nightl .... — v. 3 

quiet untroubled soul (rep.) — v. 3 

never slept a quiet hour with thee . . — v. a 
quiet of my wounded conscience ..HenryVIlI. ii. 2 

as well for your own quiet — ii. 4 

a still and (luiet conscience — iii. 2 

food wench, let's sit down quiet — iv. 2 
wish your highness a quiet night .. — v. I 

masters all, be quiet Coriolanus. v. 5 

if quiet life be best Cyinbeline, iii. 3 

quiet consummation have — iv. 2 (song) 

should sleep), can breed me quiet! Pericles, i. 2 

be quiet tlien, as men should be .. — ii. (Gower) 

quiet and gentle tliy conditions! — iii. 1 

seafarer, I would it would be quiet — iii. I 

disturbed the quiet of our streets, fionieo 4' Juliet, 1. I 

be quiet, or— more light (rfp.) — __i. 5 

upon receipt thereof, soon sleep in quiet — iii. 5 

have you had quiet guard? Hamlet, i. 1 

please you to give quiet pass through.... — ii. 2 

all his days of quiet with turbulent — iii- 1 

good my lord, be quiet , — v 1 

an hour of quiet shortly siiall we see .... — v. 1 

dost thou come to start my quiet Othello, i 1 

of spirit so still and quiet — i. 3 

practising upon his peace and quiet — ii. 1 

)t were not for your quiet, nor your good — iii. 3 



I QUIET— must have his quiet course Othello, \v. 1 

QUIETER-wiU be the quieter ..TwelWiMght, iii. 4 
QUIETLY enjoy your hope ..Tamingof Shrew, \\\. 2 

I may quietly enjoy {rep.) 1 Henry I'l. v. 3 

that he should quietly reign 3 Henry VI. i. 2 

let me pass quietly Timon of Athens, iii. 4 

let the foes quietly cut their throats — iii. b 
quarrels must be quietly debated. TOiM/lnrfro??. v. 3 

to live quietly, and so give over Pericles, iv. 3 

wherein we saw thee quietly inurned . . Hamlet, i. 4 

QUIETNESS of spirit, the very ..Mcr.ofl'enice, iv. 1 

'stablish quietness on every side .... 1 Henry VJ. v. I 

five me worship, and quietness . . ..3Henry VI. iv. 3 
would have peace and quietness Troi/us i?- Cress. Ii. 1 
peace and quietness o' the people .. Coriolanus^ iv, 6 
and qiiietness, "rown sick of rest. . Antony 4' Cleo. i. 3 
O, quietness, lady! she is dead too .. — iv. 13 
QUIETUS make with a bare bodkin? ..Hamlet, iii. 1 
QUILL— with little quill. . ..Mid. N.'s Dr. iii. 1 (song) 
deliver our supplications in the qu\\\..t Henry VI. i. 3 
like quills upon the fretful porcupine . . Hamlet, i. 5 

are afraid of goose quills, and dare — ii. 2 

QUILLED— sharp quilled porcupine. iHe/irv''/. iii. 1 

QUILLET-some tricks, some quillets. Laee'sL.L. iv. 3 

these nice sharp quillets of the law ..\ Henry VI. ii.4 

do not stand on quillets 2 Henry VI. iii. 1 

nor sound his quillets shrilly., ri'mon of.Uhens, iv. 3 

his quillets, his cases, his tenures Hamlet, v. 1 

pr'ythee, keep up thy quillets Othello, iii. 1 

QUILT-blown Jack ? now now, quilt?. I Henry IV.iv.i 
QUINAPAI.,US-what says Quinapalus? Twe'tfthN. i. 5 
QUINCE rsee PETER] 
they call for dates and quinces .Romeo 4' Juliet, iv. 4 

QUINTAIN, a mere lifeless As youLike it, i. 2 

QUINTESSENCE of every sprite heaven — iii. 2 

what is this quintessence of dust? Hamlet, ii, 2 

QUINTUS— Publius and Quintus ..Coriolanus, ii. 3 
QiriP— all her sudden quips. TwoGen. of Verona, iv. 2 

no quips now, Pistol Merry fVives, i. 3 

shall quips, and sentences Much Ado, ii. 3 

called the quip modest (rep.) As you Like it, v. 4 

in thy quips, and thy quiddities?.. ..IHenryZf'. ii. 2 

QUIRE— whole quire hold their hips. /t/id.iV.'s Dr. ii. I 

placed a quire of sucli enticing birds .2 Henry VI. i. 3 

our ca^ we make a quire Cyinbeline, iii. 3 

QUIRED with my drum Coriolanus, iii. 2 

QUIRING to the voung-eyed ..Merch.ofVenice,v. 1 

QUIRK -a man of that quirk ....Twelfth Night, iii. 4 

some odd quirks and remnants of wit. Wuc/i Ado.ii. 3 

I have felt so many quirks of joy .... All's fVell, iii. 3 

she has me her quirks, her reasons .... Pericles, iv. 6 

excels the quirks of blazoning pens Othello, ii. 1 

QUIT— very rats instinctively had quit it. Tempest, i. 2 

and quit the vessel — i. 2 

or that we quit this place — ii. 1 

your master quits you Twelfth Night, v. 1 

quit their own part, and with . . Meas.for Meas. ii. 4 

like doth quit like — v. I 

I quit them all — V. 1 

your evil quits you well — v. I 

to quit me of them thoroughly Much Ado, iv. 1 

to quit the fine for one half .... Mer. of Venice, iv. 1 

till thou canst quit thee by As you Like it, iii. I 

never harmed me, here I quit him. . . . All's Well, v. 3 
Hortensio will be quit with thee. Tamingof Sh. iii. 1 
forbear; quit presently the chapel. Winttr'sTale,\. 3 
quit the penalty, and to ransom. . Comedy of Err. i. 1 

avaunt! and quit my sight! Macbeth, \i\. i 

to quit their grief, tell thou Richard II. v. 1 

I would I could quit all offences. ... I HenrylV. iii. 2 

I think, thou art quit for that 2HenryIV. ii. 1 

dies this year, is quit for tlie next.... — iii. 2 

God quit you in his mercy I Henry V. ii. 2 

have you quit the mines? — iii. 2 

I sail quit you, with gud leva — iii. 2 

let us quit all, and give our vineyards — iii. 5 

now quit you of great eiiames — . iii. 5 

at all adventures, so we were quit here — iv. 1 
many would the peaceful city quit — v. (chorus) 
unless the lady Bona quit his pain. .3 Henri/ VI. iii. 3 

doth quit Plantagenet liicliard III. iv. 4 

dead, to quit ray Edward ^- iv. 4 

children's children quit it in your age — v. 3 
God safely quit her of her burden . . Henry VII I. v. 1 
I am quit! more things like men'/rtmonn/'.J(/i. iv. 3 
to be full quit of those my banishers.(7orio/a?ius, iv. 5 
for thy dearest quit thee .. Antony 4r Cleopatra, iii. 11 
and say, God quit you! befamiliar.. — iii. 11 

as he shall like, to quit me — iii. II 

took sueh sorrow, that he quit be'ing.Cyoibeline, i. 1 
contradiction you shall now be quit. . — v. 4 

let's quit this ground, and smoke — v. 5 

to quit the bloody wrongs upon ., Titus Andron. i. 2 

more than can thy portage quit Pericles, iii. 1 

made me to quit the house — iii. 2 

now quit you well: yield; come before ..Lear, ii. 1 

to quit this horrid act — iii. 7 

and quit the house on purpose — iv. 2 

be trusty, and I'll quit thy •pa.ins.. Romeo f,- Jul. ii. 4 

to quit him with this arm? Hamlet, v. 2 

or quit in answer of the third — v. 2 

QUITTANCE, or obligation Merry Wives, i. 1 

omittance is no quittance As you Like it, 'n\. 6 

rendering faint quittance, wearied ..2HenryIV. i. 1 
than quittance of desert and merit .... Henry V. ii. 2 

to quittance their deceit I Henry VI. ii. 1 

exceeding all use of quittance.. Timon of Athens, i. 1 
QUITTED with this young prince. . Wm(ef'sra/t, v. 1 

CjUITTING thee thereby often 2HenrvVI. iii. 2 

QUIVER— all his quiver in Venice Much Ado, i. 1 

there was a little quiver fellow ....2 Henry IV. iii. 2 

why dost thou quiver, man? 2HenryVI. iv. 7 

leaves quiver in the cooling Vfind. Titus Andron. ii. 3 
every part about me quivers .... Romeo 4' Juliet, ii. 4 

QUIVERING thigh — ii. 1 

QUOIFS and stomachers .. Winter'sTale, iv. 3 (song) 

and hence, thou sickly quoif 2HenryIV. i 1 

QUOINT, all Ihese well furnished ..Richard II. ii. 1 

QUOIT him down, Bnrdulph, like....2Henri//;'. ii. 4 

and he plays at quoits well — ii.4 



RAC 

QUONDAM carpet-mongers Much Ado, v. 2 

I did converse this quondam day . Love's L.Lost, v. I 
quondam Quickly for the only she . . Henry V. ii. 1 

this is the quondam king SHenryVI. iii. 1 

you yourself, our quondam queen .. — iii. 3 
your quondam wife swears still. 7'roi7«s<5- Cress, iv.d 

QUONIAM, he seemeth in minority .Love'sL.L. v. a 

QUOTE you my folly? I quote.. TwoGen. of Ver. ii. 4 
own margent did quote such amozes.i.oiie'»Z..Z.. ii. 1 

we did not quote tliem so — v. 2 

note, how she quotes the leaves.. 7'i7uj /Inrfron. iv. 1 
eve doth quote deformities? Romeo ^Juliet, i. 4 

QUOTED for a most perfidious slave .. All's WeU, v. 3 
marked, quoted, and signed to do ..King John, iv. 2 

and quoted joint by joint Troibis ^ Cressida, iv. a 

aud judgment, I had not quoted him ..Hamlet, ii. I 

QUO'TH- quoth he! that a monster .. Tempest, 'ni. 2 
quoth I, you mean (rep.) .. TwoGen. of Verona, iv. 4 
air, quoth he, thy cheeks.. Loi'e's L.Los/, iv. 3 (vcr.) 

did tliey, quoth you? who sees — iv. 3 

for, quoth the king, an angel shalt .. — v. 2 

veal, quoth the Dutchman — v. 2 

no point, quoth I; my servant — v. 2 

poor deer, quoth he (rep.) As you Like it, ii. I 

ay, quoth Jacques, sweep on, you fat — ii. 1 
fool, quoth I; no, sir, quoth he (rep.) — ii, 7 

let me not live, quoth lie, after my All's Well, \. 2 

thisfair face the cause, quoth she.. — i. 3 (song) 
serviceable to my son, quoth he .. Tamingof Sh. \.\ 

frets call you these? quoth she — ii. 1 

ay, by gogs-wouns, quoth he (rep.).. — iii. 2 
'tis dinner-time, quoth I (rep.) . .Comedy of Err. ii. 1 
give me, quoth I: aroint thee, witch!..A/ac6«/A, i. 3 

have I no friend? quoth he Richard II. v. 4 

at hand, quoth pick-purse \HenrylV. ii. 1 

at hand, quoth the chamberlain .... — ii. I 

how now, sir John, quoth I Henry V. ii. 3 

ay, quoth my uncle Gloster Richard III. ii. 4 

citizens, and friends, quoth I iii. 7 

be thou, quoth I, accursed — iv. 1 

thus, quoth Dighton (rep.) — iv. 3 

when he, quoth she, shall split — v. 1 

if, quoth lie, I for this had been Henry VIII. i. 2 

1 do, quoth he, perceive, my king is — iii. 2 
quoth she, here's but (rep.) . . Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 2 
my incorporate friends, quoth he . . Coriolanus, i. 1 
good friend, quoth he, say . . Antony ^ Cleopatra, i. 5 

shake, quoth the dove-house Romeo 4 Juliet, i. 3 

wilt thou not, Jule? quoth he — i. 3 

yea, quoth my husband, fallest — i. 3 

quoth she, before you tumbled.. Ham/e/, iv. 5 (song) 

QUOTH'A— humour of it, quoth'a..*/err!/ Wives, ii. 1 
one in ten.quoth'al an' we might ....All'sWell,\.S 

lend me thy lantern, quoth'a? \Henryll'. ii. 1 

ah, sirrah, quoth'a,— we shall i Henry I V. v. 3 

sweet, quoth'a! sweet sink .. Troilus ^Cressida, v. \ 

die, quoth'a? now gods forbid! Pericles, ii. ) 

for himself to mar, quoth'a? ....Romeo 4- Juliet, ii. 4 

QUOTIDIAN of love upon him ..AsyouLike it, iii. 2 
of a burning quotidian tertian Henry V. ii. I 

E 
RABATO— other rabato were better. . Much Ado, iii. 4 
RABBIT— like a rabbit on a spit.. LoKe'sL.ios/, iii. 1 
for parsley tostuft"a rabbit .. Tamingof Shrew, iv. 4 
away, you whoreson rabbit, awayI..2Henr!//K ii. 2 
RABBIT-SUCKER, or a pouUer's ..IHenrylV. ii. 4 
RABBLE-bring the rabble, o'er whom. rempes/, iv. 1 

a rabble of his com.panions Merry Wives, iii. 5 

rabble more of vile confederates. Comerf!/o/£>r. v. 1 

baited with the rabble's curse Macbeth, v, 7 

and followed with a rabble 2Henry VJ. ii. 4 

or let a rabble lead you to your — iv. 8 

there's a trim rabblelet in Henry VIII. v. 3 

rabble should have first unroofed .. Coriolanus, i. I 
and make the rabble call our cares.. — iii. 1 

'twas 3'ou incensed the rabble — iv. 2 

and your disordered rabble make Lear, i. 4 

the rabble call him lord Hamlet, iv. 5 

RABBLEMENT hooted JuliusCwsar, i. 2 

RACE— but thy vile race Tempest, i. 2 

now I give my sensual race .... Meas.for Meas. ii.4 
race of youthful and unhandled..jl/er. of Venice, v. 1 

a race or two of ginger Winter's Tale, i v. 2 

by bud of nobler race — iv. 3 

the minions of their race, turned Macbeth, ii. 4 

unto the drowsy race of night KingJohn, iii. 3 

never of the Nevils' noble race ....iHenryVI. iii. 2 

as runners with a race, I lay 3HenryVI. ii. 3 

and beget a happy race of kings! ..Richard III. v. 3 
to the whole race of mankind.. Timon of .4tliens, iv. 1 
so poor, but was a race of heaven. j^n^oni/ ,5- C(eo. i. 3 
forborne the getting of a lawful race — iii. U 

upon a valiant race, thy harsh Cyinbeline, v. 4 

lacks she none of noble race Pericles, v. (Gower) 

RACK— I'll rack thee with old cramps.. Tempest, i. 2 

leave not a rack behind — iv. I 

and rack thee in their fancies!.. Meas./orJl/eas. iv. I 
take him hence; to the rack with him — v. 1 

than he dare rack his own — v. 1 

why, then we rack the value Much Ado, iv. I 

I live upon the rack (rep.). .Merchant of Venice, iii. 2 

you speak upon the rack — iii. 2 

what wheels? racks? fires? Winter'sTale, iii. 2 

or all the racks in the world \ HenrylV. ii. 4 

like a man new haled from the rack.l Henry VI. ii. 5 
needs confess. Without the rack. Troilus <§- Cress, i. 2 
a thought, the rack dislirans ..Antony 4' Cleo. iv. 12 
that would upon the rack of this tough . . Lear, v. 3 

the heavens, the rack stand still Hamlet, i i . 2 

thou hast set me on the rack Othello, iii. 3 

RACKED— have the hours ra.cked..Ttrelflh Night, v. 1 
that shall be racked, even to .... Mer. of Venice, i I 

the commons hast thou racked 2HenryVI. i. 3 

say, he be taken, racked, and tortured — iii. 1 
racked rCo(.- wrecked] for Rome . ...Coriolanus, v. 1 

RACKERS of orthography Love's L. Lost, v. 1 

RACKET— keepest not racket there. .2Henr!///'. ii. 2 
when we have matched our rackets . . Henry V.i. i 



RAC 

li ACKINO— with tlie racking cloud8.3Hen>-!//'/. ii. 1 
KAUIANCE— in his bright radiance .. ^«'j »♦'««, i. 1 

by the sacred radiance of tlie sun Lear, i. I 

KADI ANT queen hates sluts Merry tVives, y. 5 

most radiant, exquisite, and TwelflUNigUl^x. b 

most radiant Pyramus Mid. N.'s Dream, iii. 1 

to liide me from tlie radiant sun .... Cymbetine, i. 7 

lie is entered his radiant roof — v. 4 

liis favour with the radiant Cynibeline — v. 

lilie the wreath of radiant Are Lear, ii. 2 

thoufiVi to a radiant angel linked Hamlet, i. 5 

KADISH— I am a bunch of radish . .\ Henry I y . ii. 4 

like a forked radish 2 Henry I r. iii. 2 

RAFT— on the fatal raft? Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

RAG— will ensconce your rags .... Merry Wives, ii. 2 

you rag, you baggage — iv. 2 

exchange for rags? robes. Lope'sL.Los^iv. \ (letter) 
away, thou rag, thou quantity .. Taming of Sh, iv. 3 

pluck but off these rugs M'inler's Tate, iv. 2 

need of more rags to lay on thee .... — iv. 2 
her rags, and the tallow in thera-Co/ncdi/ of Err. iii. 2 
surely, master, not a rag of money . . — iv. 4 

of old death out of his rags I King John, ii. 2 

Suffolk, muffled up in rags] {rep.)..2He»ryyi. iv. 1 

thou rag of honour', thou Richard III. i. 3 

tliese overweening rags of France .... — v. 3 

thy father, that poor rag Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

in thy rags thou knowest none — iv. 3 

whose rags shamed gi Uled arms .... Cymbeline, v. 6 

arm it in rags, a pigmy's straw Lear, iv. (i 

to shift into a madman's rags — v. 3 

to very ra"8, to split the ears of the. . . . Hamlet, iii. 2 
RAGAMUFFINS where they are....lHenrv/r. y. 3 

RAGE — her most immitigable rage Tempest, i. 2 

the fire's extreme rage .... TwoGen. of Verona, ii. 7 

impatiently doth rage — ii. 7 

of his rage, skill, fury, and Twelfth Night, iii. 4 

in his rage and his wrath — iv. 2 (song) 

that rage in savage sensuality Much Ado, iv. 1 

give preceptial medicine to rage — v. 1 

theXhracian singer in their Tage.Mid.N.Uream,v. 1 
lion rou"h in wildest rage doth roar.. — v. 1 
food for nis rage, repasture for . . Lovers L. Lost, iv. 1 
yet I have a trick of the old rage .... — v. 2 
the very tyranny and rage q? \i\Q.Mer.ofVemce,iv. 1 
60 stockish, hard, and full of rage .. — v. 1 
winds, rage like an angry .... Taming of Shrew, i. 2 
how it rages, how it takes up. . . . Winter's Tale, iii. 3 
this present instance of his rage. CoMcdy o/£/T.iv.3 
and did not I in rage depart from .... — i v. 4 

have felt the vigour of his rage — iv. 4 

all in rage, to-day came to my — iv. 4 

brakeintoextremity of rage — v. 1 

any thing his rage did like — v. 1 

in pious rage, the two delinquents ..Macbeth, iii. 6 
shall we give the signal to our rage.. King John, ii. 1 
and, in their rage, I having hold .... — iii. 1 

a rage, whose heat hath this — iii. 1 

thy rage shall burn thee up — iii.! 

tiiis report on their incensed rage. ... — iv. 2 

for ray rage was blind, and foul — iv. 2 

or staring rage presented to — i v. 3 

lest I, by marking of your rage, forget — iv. 3 

doth lie still rage? He is more — v. 7 

the Dauphin ra"e3 at our very — v. 7 

in rage deaf as the sea Richard II. i. 1 

rage must be withstood — i. 1 

being raged, do rage the more — ii. 1 

toenjoyoy rage and war — ii. 4 

swells the rage of Bolingbroke — iii. 2 

the rage be his, while oil — iii. 3 

with rage tobe o'erpowered — v. 1 

and fawn on rage with base — v. 1 

when I was dry with rage \ Henry IV. i. 3 

it doth present harsh rage — iii. 1 

in rage dismissed my father — iv. 3 

before the Douglas' rage ....2He»!r!///'. (induction) 
guarded with rage, andcountenanced — iv. 1 

when rage and hot blood are — iv. 4 

and make thee rage ; thy Doll — v. 5 

fair nature with hard-favoured rage.. He hj-j/F. iii. 1 
thy rage, abate thy manly rage (>ep.) — iii. 2 

iii'his rages, and his furies — • iv. 7 

and with wild rage, 3'erk out their ., — iv. 7 

and left us to the rage of France I Henry VI. iv. 6 

and warlike rage, beat down Alengou — iv. u 

die not witli Frenchmen's rage — iv. 6 

commence rough deeds of rage — iv. 7 

fury, and great rage of lieart — iv. 7 

that I, in rage, might shoot — iv. 7 

tliere goes our protector in a rage 'iHenryVl. i. 1 

and traitor's rage, be thus upbraided — iii. 1 

and stop the rage betime — iii. 1 

shall not cease to rage until — iii. 1 

thy words move rage, and not remorse — iv. I 
who, in rage, forgets aged contusions — v. 3 

tireak out into terms of rage! ZHenryVI.i. 1 

vour quenchless fury to more rage .. — i. 4 

bid'st tliou me rage? wliy — i. 4 

and, when the rage allays — i. 4 

whiles the foe doth race — ii. 3 

and Warwick rages like a chafed bull — ii. 5 

that was in thy rage: speak liichard III. i. 2 

shame still live my sorrow's ragel .. — i. 3 

love, the devil, and my rage — i. 4 

or in my rage, have aught committed — ii. 1 

your rage mistakes us — iii. I 

roused with rage, with rage doth. Trailus <§■ Cress, i. 3 

Achilles in commotion rages — ii.3 

effect your rage with speed! — v. 1! 

he's flung in rage from this.... Timon of Alliens, iv. 2 

to give thy rages balm — v. 5 

l)ut leave witliout thy rage — v. 5 

so, putting him to rage, you should. Cor("o/a;iw«, ii. 3 

fall in a rage with tlieir refusal — ii. 3 

not your wortliy rage into your tongue — iii. 1 

whose rage doth rend like — iii. I 

tills tiger-footed rage, when it shall.. — iii. 1 
with Aufidius, rages upon our territories — iv. 6 
not to allay my rages and revenges . . — v. 3 



[613 ] 



RAGE, provoked by him Coriolanus, V. 5 

my rage is gone, and I am struck .... — v. 5 
and rnge, and foam, tobe exalted.. JuiiusC(8»ar,l. 3 

their servants to an act of rage — ii. 1 

and minds to mutiny and rage — iii. 2 

thy peace, for moving me to rage. Antony ^ Cleo. ii. 5 
when one so great begins to rage .... — iv. 1 

thou mine ancestor, thy rage — iv. 10 

that your rage would not be purged.. — iv. 12 
marry, yet the fire of rage is in him,. Cymbeline, i. 2 

what his rage can do on me — i. 2 

go in, and cheer the king; he rages .. — iii. 5 
nor the furious winter's rages .... — iv. 2 (song) 

if the winds rage, doth not TilusAndron. iii. ! 

the emperor, in his rage, will doom . . — iv. 2 
till that his rage and anger be forgot . . Pericles, i. 2 

took it in rage, thougli calmed — ii. 1 

could I rage and roar as doth the sea — iii. 3 

to rage the city turn — v. 3 (Gower) 

till the speed of his rage goes slower Lear, i. 2 

the king is in high rage — ii. 4 

with eyeless rage, catch in their — iii. 1 

crack your cheeks', rage ! blow 1 — iii. 2 

when the foul fiend rages, eats — iii. 4 

not to a rage; patience and sorrow — iv. 3 

lest his ungoverned rage dissolve — iv. 4 

could beguile the tyrant's rage — iv. 6 

the great rage, you see, is cured — iv. 7 

continuance of their parents' rage.Kom. ^ Jul. (prol.) 
quench the fire of your pernicious rage — i. 1 
excuse the appertaining rage to such — iii. 1 
and, in this rage, with some great.... — iv. 3 

in rage, strikes wide Hamlet, ii. 2 

asleep, or in his rage — iii. 3 

like the hectic in my blood he rages .... — iv. 3 
how much I had to do to calm his rage'. — iv. 7 

next to carve for his own rage Othello, ii- 3 

as men in rage strike those that wish .... — ii. 3 

RAGED, do rage the more Richard II. ii. 1 

never lion raged more fierce — ii. 1 

RAGETH— at this instant sorageth in him. /.par, i. 2 
KAGGED-unto a ragged, fearful. TwoGen. of Ver. i. 2 

with great ragged horns ^ . . . . Merry Wives, iv. 4 

overweathered ribs, and ragged., il/er. of Venice, i\. 6 

my voice is ragged; I know As you Like it, i\. b 

a wretched ragged man, o'ergrown . . — iv. 3 
were ragged, old, and beggarly . . Taming ofSh. iv. 1 

my ragged prison walls liichard II. v. 5 

slaves as ragged as Lazarus \ Henry IV. iv. 2 

ten times more dishonourable ragged — iv. 2 
worm-eaten hold of ragged stone.. 2 Hem y/f. (ind.) 

thou art a very ragged wart — iii. 2 

you see what a ragged appearance . . — iii. 2 
that I will beg a ragged and forestalled — v. 2 
five most vile and ragged foils . .Henry V. iv. (cho.) 

their ragged curtains poorly — iv. 2 

me with their ragged sides iHenryVI. iii. 2 

and sent the ragged soldiers — iv. 1 

his army is a ragged multitude — iv. 4 

chained to the ragged staff — v. 1 

Richard, but a ragged fatal rock SHenry VI. v. 4 

rude ragged nurse! old sullen .... Richard III. iv. ! 
the ragged entrails of this pit. . TilusAndronicus, ii. 4 
and on the ragged stones beat forth . . — v. 3 
ragged misery \_Col.Knl. -thy hvii^\ Romeo ^ Jul. v. 1 

KAGGEDNESS, defend you from Lear, iii. 4 

RAGGED'ST hour that time IHenrylV. i. 1 

RAGING— into the raging seal ..TwoGen.ofVer. i. 2 
the raging rocks, with shivering.Mirf.A'.'sBieam, i.2 
where two raging fires meet .. Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 
time it is, when raging war is done . . — v. 2 
thereof the raging fire of fever. Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

provoked with raging ire — v. 1 

more furious raging broils 1 Hemij VI. iv. \ 

whelp of Talbot s, raging wood — iv. 7 

this spark will prove a raging flre..2H€7iri/r/. iii. I 
I should be raging mad, and cry out — iii. 2 
for raging wind blows up incessant ..ZHenryVl. i. i 

even where his raging eye Richard til. iii. 5 

what raging of the sea? Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 3 

to curb those raging appetites — ii. 2 

still in motion of raging waste?. ''■"n<'n''/^"i™s,ii. 1 
raging battery upon shores of. . Pericles, iv. 4 (Gower) 
toward the raging [Coi.Kn^.-roaring] sea. . Lear, iii. 4 

raging with thy tears Romeo ^Juliet, iii. 5 

to cool our raging motions, our carnal . . Otiiello, i . 3 

being troubled with a raging tooth — iii. 3 

RAGOZINE, a most notorious . . Meas.for Meas. iv. 3 

with the visage of Ragozine — iv. 3 

the head of Ragoziiie for Claudio's .. — v. 1 

RAIED with the yellows Taming of Shr(nij, iii. 2 

RAILS against all married mankind. Merry Wives, iv.2 

though lie do nothing but rail Tirelflh Night, i. h 

sometime rail thou like Demetrius. .l/iJ. TV. 'siir. iii. 2 

he rails, even there Merchant of Venice, i. 3 

till thou canst rail the seal — iv. 1 

I'll rail against all the first-born. Js you Like it, ii. .'j 

we two will rail against our — iii. 2 

can a woman rail thus? — iv. 3 

rail upon the hostess of the. Taming of Sh. 2 (indue.) 

he'll rail in his rope tricks — i. 2 

say, that she rail — ii. 1 

and rails, and swears, and rates — iv. 1 

chance to nod, I'll rail, and brawl. ... — iv. 1 
did not her kitchen-maid rail . . Comedy of Err. iv. 4 

why rail I on this commodity? KingJohn, ii. 2 

I will rail, and say, there is no — ii. 2 

why do I rail on thee, since thou .... Richard II. v. 5 
in all despite might rail at him ....SllenryVl. ii. 6 

rail on the Lord s anointed Richard III. iv. 4 

you i' the camlet, get up o' the rail.HenryVIII. v- 3 

rails on our state of war Troilus 6r Cressida, i. 3 

I shall sooner rail thee into wit — ii. I 

firoclamation, and he rails upon me.. — ii. 1 
le beats me, and I rail at him — ii.3 

good Thersites, come in and rail .... — ii- 3 
an' you begin to rail on society .Tirnon of Athens, i- 2 

such may mil against great — iii. 4 

rail thoii in Fulvia's phrase . . Antony /jr Cleopatra, i. 2 
and let me rail BO high, that — iv. 13 



RAI 

RAIL— winds that sailors rail at Cymbeline, iv. 2 

that I might rail at him to ease . . TilusAndron. ii. 5 

thus to rail on one, that is Lear, ii. 2 

see how yon' justice rails upon yon' — iv. 6 

'faith, I must, she'll rail in the street ..OthHlo, iv. 1 

RAILED— and railed at me . TwoGen. of Verona, iii. 2 

railed at herself, that she should he..'Much.ido, ii. 3 

because I have railed so long against — ii. 3 

thoii hast railed on thyself Asyuu Like it, i. I 

railed on lady Fortune in good — ii. 7 

that railed against our person Henry V. ii. 2 

railed upon me till her pinked ....Henry I'll 1. v. 3 
could beat him, whilst he railed.. Troilus^ Cress, ii. 3 

being down, insulted, railed, and put Lear, ii. 2 

RAILER— likeness of this railer here.3Henrv'7. v. 5 

RAILEST-grumblestandrailest .Troilus^ Cress, ii. 1 

why railest thou on thy birth ..Romeo ^Juliet, iii. 3 

RAILETH on the rich KingJohn, ii. 2 

RAILING— nor no railing in Twelfth Night, i. 5 

call you this railing? AsyouLilteit, iv. 3 

did you ever hear such railing? — iv. 3 

were hindered by thy railing .... Comedy of Err. v. 1 
a railing wife; worse than \HenrylV. i\i. 1 

I speak not to that railing Hecate.. IHejiryFJ. iii. 2 
my liege, his railing is intolerable.. 2Hen»y/'/. iii. 1 
a scurvy railing knave Troilus <§• Cressida, v. 4 

RAIMENT— immodest raiment. Two Gen. of Ver. v. 4 

what raiment will your TamingofSh. 2 (indue.) 

ne'er ask me what raiment I'll wear — 2 (indue.) 
yea, all my raiment, to my petticoat — ii. 1 
wear them like his raiment .. Timon of Athens, iii. 5 
our raiment, and state of bodies .... Coriolanus, v. 3 
vouchsafe me raiment, bed, and food ;,car, ii. 4 

RAIN — heavens rain grace on that .... Tempest, iii. 1 

let the sky rain potatoes Merry Wives, v. 5 

heavens rain odours on you 1 (rep.) TwelfihNight, iii. 1 

the wind and the rain (rep.) — v. 1 (song) 

the rain it raineth every day (rep.) — v. 1 (song) 
drowned i' the last rain?. . AfeasMre/or Measure, iii. 2 

for it drizzles rain Much Ado, iii. 3 

belike, for want of rain Mid.N.'sDream.i. 1 

dare never come in rain, for fear.ioue's L.Lost, iv. 3 
in measure rain thy joy. . . . Merchant of Venice, iii. 2 
droppeth, as the gentle rain from heaicn — iv. 1 
the property of rain is to wet ....As youl.ike it, iii. 2 

puffing with wind and rain? — iii. 5 

clamorous than a parrot against rain — iv. 1 
rain a shower of commanded ra?n!7iffo/S/i. 1 (indue.) 

in thunder, lightning, or in rain? Macbeth, i. 1 

it will be rain to-night — iii. 3 

being as like, as rain to water King John, ii. 1 

shallrain their drift of bullets — ii. 2 

rain hot vengeance on offenders' .... Richard II. i. 2 

wiiile on the earth I rain luy — iii. 3 

to rain upon remembrance '2 Henry IV. ii. 3 

how now ! rain within doors — i v. 4 

to watch in darkness, rain and cold. . 1 Heyiry VI. ii. 1 

but thunder, rain will follow — iii. 2 

nor let the rain of heaven wet 2 Henry VI. iii. 2 

when the rage allays, the rain begins. SHeiiri/ VI. i. 4 
and much rain wears the marble ... . — iii. 2 

like trees bedashed with rain Richard III. i, 2 

rain, to lay this wind Troilus <$• Cressida, iv. 4 

rain sacrificial whisperings in . . Timon of.Hhens. 1. 1 
like conies after rain, and revel .... Coriolanus, iv. 5 

II shower of rain as well as Jove . Antony fy Cleo. i. 2 

we shall hear the rain and wind Cymbeline, iii. 3 

unrelentingflint to drops of rain .TilusAndron. ii. 3 

befriend thee more with rain — iii. 1 

wind, rain, and thunder, remember.. .. Penc/es, ii. ) 

will pack, when it begins to rain Ltar, ii. 4 

the to and fro conflicting wind and rain . . — iii. 1 
spit, flrel spout, rain! nor rain, wind.... — iii. 2 
such groans of roaring wind and rain.... — iii. 2 
heigh ho, the wind and the rain .. — iii. 2 (songv 
for the rain it raineth every day. . — iii. 2 (song/ 

he holp the heavens to rain — iii. 7 

you have seen sunshine and rain at once — iv. 3 

when the rain came to wet me once — iv. 6 

of my brother's son, it rains . ... Romeo ^- Juliet, in. 5 
is there not rain enougli in tlie sweet.. //a;i/if(, iii. 3 

RAINBOW— colours of the r&inhow.. Merry W. iv. J 
of all colours i' the rainbow .... Winter's Tale, iv 3 
another hue unto the rainbow KingJohn, iv. 2 

RAINED— of blood, rained from ....Richard II. i\i. 3 
it rained down fortune showering . . 1 Henry IV. v. 1 

my power rained honour Henrijl'lll. ii:. 2 

as it rained kisses Antony ^ Cleoi'aira.iW. il 

and in his grave rained many . . Hamlet, iv. ii ( song) 
liad he rained all kinds of sores Othello, iv. 2 

RAINETH every day(>(p.)..r!;'e//y/iA(V/i(,v. 1 (son^) 
for the rain it raineth every day . . Lear. iii. 2 (song; 

RAINING the tears of lamentation. f.oi'e's/..;.ns'. v. 2 

RAIN-WATER— than this rain-water ..Lear, iii. 2 

RAINY eyes write sorrow on Richard //.iii. 2 

with rainy marching in the painful . .Henry V. iv. 3 
mine eyes were rain}' like to his .. Tiius.indron.v. 1 

RAISE up the organs of her Merry Wives, v. 5 

be gar, I'll raise all Windsor — v. 6 

let me in safety raise me from . . Meas.for Meas. v. 1 

to raise a present sum Merch. of Venice, i. I 

instantly raise up the gross of — i. 3 

now will I raise the waters — ii. 2 

will raise the price of hogs (rep.) .... — iii. 4 
power to raise such love .. .45- you Lihe it,iv. 3 (letter) 
raise up such a storm, that mortal. Taming of Sh. i, 1 
for this business will raise us all.. nVji/cr'.ty'n/e. ii. I 

shall raise such artificial sprites Macbeth, iii. h 

and raise the power of France upon. King John, i\[. 1 

[Col.'] if you raise this house Iticliard II. iv. 1 

if thou have power to raise him.... \ Henry IV. iii. 1 

and raise this present head — v.) 

raise your highness such o mighty sura. Henry /'. i. 2 
not yet ready to raise so great a siege.. — iii- 3 
from her blood raise up issue tome .... — v. 2 

let's raise the siege (rep.) \ Henry VI. i. 2 

a great power to raise the siege — i. 4 

to advance or raise myself — iii.) 

to raise a mutiny betwixt — iv. 1 

then will I raise aloft the 2HenryVl.i. 1 



RAISE, we will make fast iHenryVI. i. 4 

shouldst raise so great a pov?er without — v. I 
and raise his issue, like a loving sire. SHenry/'/. ii. 2 
to raise my state to title of a queen . . — iv. 1 

sun shall raise his car above — iv. 7 

to conjure and raise devils Troiltis^ Cress, ii. 3 

raise me this beggar, and denude . Timnn nf Ath. iv. 3 
1 can raise no money by vile m&ansJidiusCcesar, iv. 3 
I shall raise you by and by on business — iv. 3 

but it raises the greater war Antony ifCleo. ii. 7 

I'll raise the preparation of a war .. — iii. 4 
the Goths, and raise an army i\\neTUu»Andion.\\\.\ 
and raise a power, to be revenged on — iii. I 
first framed flesh to raise my fortunes . . Lear, iv. 6 
raise a spirit in his mistress' circle. /(oHieo S^Jul. ii. 1 
I conjure but only to raise up him .. — ii. I 
the Capulets, raise up the Blontagues — v. 3 
for I will raise her statue in pure gold — v. 3 
get more tapers; raise all my kindred . . Othello, i. 1 
and raise some special otticers of night.. — i. 1 
RAISED in me an undergoing stomach. Tempest, i. 2 

he hath raised the wall — ii. 1 

when first I raised the tempest — v. 1 

with outcries raised the duke . . Mer. of Venice, ii. 8 

she has raised me from my sickly All's iVHl, ii. 3 

when I sleep; raised with it .... Comedy of Err. iv. 4 

a spirit raised from depth •illenry VI. i. 2 

until a power be raised to put — iv. 4 

that raised him to the crown 3 Henry VI, iii. 3 

that the queen hath raised in Gallia — v. 3 

by him, that raised me to this Richard III. i. 3 

one raised in blood, and one in blood — v. 3 

who first.raised head against Henry VIII. ii. I 

whose hand has raised me — ii. 2 

of learning, that he raised in you .... — iv. 2 
deserves an heir more raised .... Timon of Athens, i. 1 
raised only, that the weaker sort . . Coriolanus, iv. 6 

I raised him, and I pawned — v. 5 

raised by your populous troops. .vlnfony SfCleo. iii. 6 

he raised the house with loud Lear, ii. 4 

than is tl>e stone whereof 'tis raised iii. 2 

smoke raised [Coi.if!^^-made^ witli. Romeo ^Jul. i. 1 
the county's page, that raised tlie watcli? — v. 3 
he raised a sigh so piteous and profound. Hamlet, ii. 1 
lead to the Sagittary the raised search.. 0(/ie/(o, i. 1 

the raised father, and his friends — i. 2 

many of the consuls, raised, and met .. — i. 2 
hatli raised me from my bed; nor doth — 1. 3 
look if my gentle love be not raised up — ii. 3 

RAISIN— as many of raisins yVinler'sTak; iv. 2 

RAISING this sea-stoi-ra? Tempest, i. 2 

must answer for your raising? All's Ifell, ii. 3 

till, raisin" of more aid Comedy of Error.',, v. 1 

our heads by raising of a head I Henry IV. i. 3 

raising up wicked spirits from 2HeniyVI. ii. 1 

RAKE— let me rake it from Tioo Gen. of Ver. iv. 2 

in your hearts, there will he rake for it. Henry V. ii. 4 

does he rake this togetlier? Henry VI ir. iii. 2 

oiu' pikes, ere we become rakes Coriolanus, i. 1 

thee I'll rake up, the post unsanotifled ..Lear, iv. 6 

RAKED— dust of old oblivion vaked. ... Henry V. ii. 4 

RALPH— Adam, Ralph, and Gregory 7'nm.o/SA. iv. 1 

down into the pomegranate, Ralph ..1 Henry IV. ii, 4 

yea, marry, sir: Ralph Mouldy iHenrylV. iii. 2 

RiUil— turned to the rams Merck, nf Venice, i. 3 

is your gold and silver, ewes and rams? — i. 3 

the ewes and the rams together.. /fsyouLiVte it, iii. 2 

a crooked-pated, old,cuckoldly ram — iii. 2 

but the iight of two rams, and Caesar's — v. 2 

green Neptune, a ram, and bleated li'inter's Tale, iv. 3 

like rams in the old time of war ..HenryVIIl. iv. 1 

so that the ram, that batters.. Troiius if Cressida,\. 3 

be the ram, to batter the fortress./fji^oHy <S-a^i). iii. 2 

fell both the ram's horns in. . Titus Andronicus, iv. 3 

black ram is tupping your white ewe ...Qlhello, i. 1 

RAMBURES— Chatillon,Rambures..Henr!/r. iii. 5 

ItAMMED me in with foul shirts. .Merri/ Wives, iii. 5 

have we rammed up our gates against. King John, ii. 1 

RAMP— vaulting variable ramps ....Cymbeline, i. 7 

R.VMPALLIAN! you fustilarian! ..iHenryl V.iu I 

RAMPANTbearcliaiued to the ....iHenryVI.v. \ 

RAMPING— thou, a ramping fool ...Kingjnhn, iii. 1 

lion, and a ramping cat {Henry IV. iii. i 

under whose shade the ramping lion.3ffenri/f/. v. 2 
RAMPIRED— our rampiredgates.. 2'imono/J(/i. v. 5 

RA.MSTON— Sir John Ramston Ricliard II. ii. 1 

RAM-TENDER, to offer to have. .JVinier's Tale,iv. 3 
RAN— wealth I had, ran in my veins.Mer.ofVe7i. iii. 2 

and ran dismayed away — y. I 

how the horses ran away Taming of Shrew, iv. i 

that ever ran on the greensward .. Wmier'sTale, iv. 3 
ran between France and it . . Comedy of Errors, iii. 2 

that I, amazed, ran from her — iii. 2 

your wife, now ran from you — iv. 4 

immediately ran hither to your grace — y. i 
and when he ran in here, these people — v. 1 

there ran a rumour of many Macbeth, iv. 3 

bloody looks, ran fearfully among.. 1 Henry IV. i. 3 
and still ran and roared, as ever I .. — ii. 4 

you ran away iq)on instinct — ii. 4 

faith, I ran when I saw others run .. — ii. 4 
the goats ran from the mountains .. — iii. 1 
ran from Shrewsbury, ray noble lord.2Herir!///-'. i. 1 

when yon ran away by GadshiU — ii. 4 

cowardly rascals, that ran from Henry V. i v. 7 

tliat he ran mad, and died HenryVIIl. ii. 2 

laughed, that her eyes ran o'er . . Troilus (^Cress i. 2 
ran from the noise of our own drums.Cor/o/a;t/w, ii.3 
than when these fellows ran about .. — iv. tj 
ran Cassius' dairger through ....Julius Ccesar, iii. 2 

wliich all the wliile ran blood — iii. 2 

that ran through Caesar's bowels — v, 3 

of Troy ran mad through sorrow. 7'iius/lnrfron. iv. 1 
he ran tills way. and leaped this. /Borneo ^- Juliet, ii, 1 
which way ran he? There lies that.. ' — iii. 1 
tlicn I ran away to call the watch . . — v. 3 
[K/i/.] and they ran well on horseback. Kam/e/, iv. 7 
ran it I hrough, even from my boyish days. Otiiello, i. 3 

the fresh streams ran by her — iv. 3 (song) 

RANCOROUS outrage of your.. Comerfy of Errors, i. 1 



RANCOROUS spite, more furious. . ..\ Henry VI. iv. 1 
respecting what a rancorous mind..2i/e7iri/f/. iii. 1 
be scoured in his rancorous heart.... — iii. 2 
must be held a rancorous enemy ,, Richard III. i. 3 

RANCOUR,- O God, that I Much Ado, iy. 1 

rancours in the vessel of my peace. . . . Macbeth, iii. 1 

from tlie raueuur of a villain liichnrd II. i. 1 

rancour will out: proud prelate 'i Henry VI. i. 1 

cliased hence bj' rancour s hand — iii. 1 

the broken rancour of your high ..Richard III. ii. 2 

stab of rancour I misdoubt — iii. 2 

turn ynur household's rancour.. /Borneo ^-Juliet, ii. 3 

,RANDOM-I writ at random. . TwoGen.of Vernna,ii. 1 
he talks at random ; sure 1 Henry VI. v. 3 

RANGE— he did range the town .. TwclfthNighi,iv. 3 
his affection, ranges evenly with mine. il/uc/j.4tio, ii. 2 
and robbers range abroad unseen , .Richard II. iii. 2 

wherein you range under this \ Henry IV. i. 3 

shall range with conscience wide .... Hen? y V. iii. 2 

iu the battle range about 3 Henry VI. ii. I 

and range with humble livers in . . Henry VIII. ii. 3 
all, wliicli yet distinctly ranges ....Coriolanus, iii. 1 
let liigh-siglited tyrauny rangeon. Julius Ccesar, ii. 1 
whose several ranges frighted...4n(oii!/.5C(eo. iii. 11 
safe with us, to let his madness range.. Ham/e(, iii. 3 

RANGED— with her father ranged../Js!/0KL//ie/V, i. 3 
where most trade of danger ranged. .2f7e7ii!/yr. i. 1 
arch of the ranged empire fall! ..Antony ^ Cteo. i. 1 

RANGER-makeii Diana's rangers i'sdseCymbetine, ii. 3 

RANGING— I find thee ranging.. rniHii/g-o/A/i. iii. 1 
Cajsar's spirit, ranging for revenge. .yuf.CoJsar, iii. I 

RANK— something raiik on foot ..Merry IVives, iv. 5 
though it be as rank as a fox .... Tnelflh Night, ii. 5 

from this rank offence Mens, lor Meas. iii. 1 

your sins are rank; yon are attaint. Love's L. Lost, v. 2 
the ewes, being rank, in the end. . Mer.of Venice, i. 3 
and rank me with the barbarous .... — ii. 9 

nay, if I keep not my rank As you Like it, i. 2 

opinion that grows rank in them — ii. 7 

[Coi.A'H/.] butter-woman's rank to market — iii. 2 
the rank of osiers, by the murmuring — iv. 3 

Eretty rank ["Co/. AVif. ring] time.. — v. 3 (song) 
is eminent top to their low ranks All's Jt'eil, i. ii 

anameasrank as any flax-wench. ;Fmto's7'a<e,i. 2 

in tlie stout Norweyan ranks Macbeth, i. 3 

not in the worst rank of manhood .. — iii, 1 

with ranks of foreign powers King John, iy. 2 

and fill up her enemies' ranks — v. 2 

from forth the ranks of many Richard 77. ii . 3 

well-beseeming ranks march I Henry IV. i. 1 

what rank diseases grow 2HenrylV.m. 1 

to diet rank minds, sick of — iv. 1 

in equal rank witli the best governed — v. 2 

why, all our ranks are broke Henry V, iv. 5 

hemlock, and rank fumitory — v. 2 

all uncorrected, rank, conceives by.. — v. 2 
that one article rank with the rest .. — v. 2 

our ranks are broke, and ruin ZHcnryVI. ii. 3 

to rank our chosen truth with ..HenryVIIl. (prol.) 

hal what, so rank? Ah, ha! — i. 2 

he's a rank weed, sir Thomas — v. 1 

when rank Thersites opes his. .. .Troilus SrCress.'i. 3 

how rank soever rounded iu — i. 3 

maturitj' blown up in rank Achilles — i. 3 
a gallant horse fallen in fii-st rank .. — iii. 3 

made of our rank feud — iv. 5 

through ranks of Greekish youth.... — iv. 6 
bring in thy ranks, but leave . . Timon of Athens, v. 6 
in ranks, and squadrons, and Tight.JuliusCiFsar,ii. 2 
that unassailable holds on his rank.. — iii. 1 

be let blood, who else is rank — iii. 1 

and his well-paid ranks, that . . AntonySf Cleo. iii. 1 
let the world rank me in register .... — iv. 9 

breaths, rank of gross diet — v. 2 

would ho had been one of my tanli... Cymbeline, ii. 1 

lust and rank thoughts, hers — 11.5 

in rank and not to be endured riots Lear, i . 4 

stands in some rank of praise — ii. 4 

yours in the ranks of death — iv. 2 

crowned with rank fnmiter — iy. 4 

and the rank poison of the old . . Romeo ^Juliet, i. 2 

things rank, and gross in nature Hamlet, i. 2 

of the best rank and station, are most.... — i. 3 
none so rank as may dishonour him .... — . ii. 1 
thou mixture rank, of raidnirfrt weeds.. — iii. 2 

O, my ort'ence is rank, it smells — iii. 3 

' in the rank sweat of an enseamed bed .. — iii. 4 

whiles rank corruption, mining all — iii. 4 

[Krt^] o'er the weeds to make them rank — iii. 4 

o' the sea stand ranks of people Othello, ii. 1 

to the Moor in the rank [Knt. right] garb — ii. 1 

a will most rank, foul disproportion — iii. 3 

when it hath blown his ranks into the air — iii. 4 

RANKED— as fairly ranked ....Mid. N.'s Dream,i. 1 

embattled and ranked in Kent .... King John, iv. 2 

is ranked with all deserts Timon of Athens, \. I 

be ranked with other griefs ....Romeo ^Juliet, iii. 2 

RANKER than my wit As ynu Like it, iv. 1 

weeds, to make them ranker rKn(.rank]Ha»ite/,iii. 4 

or the Pole, a ranker rate, should it — iv. 4 

RANKEST— forgive thy rankest fault.. 7'empfs/, v. 1 

there was the rankest compound .Merry Wives, iii. 5 

RANKING liimself with princes . . Henry VIII. iv. 2 

RANKLE— doth never rankle more ..Riclmrd II. i. 3 

tooth will rankle to the death Richard III. i. 3 

RANKLY— of my death rankly abused. . Hatnlet, i. 5 

RANKNESS and irregular course King John, v. 4 

I will physic your rankness .,4.! youLike it, i. 1 

the mere rankness of their joy .... Henry VIII. iv. 1 

RANK-SCENTED many Coriolanus, iii. 1 

RANSACK Troy 7-roi(iis ^ Cressida, (prologue) 

RANSACKED, my reputation Merry Wives, ii. 2 

ransacked the pedler's silken .. .. Winter'sTale, iv. 3 
were it to the ransacked queen.. T'roidi,! ^ Cress, ii. 2 

R.VNSACKING tlie ehureli King John, iii. 4 

RAtN SOM— ransom for offence. . Two Gen. of lei.v.i 
ill ransom, and free pardon .... Meas. for Meas. ii. 4 

with. ransom of such. shame — iv. 4 

ransom him to any French courtier.. ioiie's7,.Z..i. 2 
the fust assault, or ransom afterward... 4H's Well,i. 3 



RANSOM— can never ransom xxatnre.. All's Well, ii. 1 
ransom, ransom; do not hide mine eyes — iy. I 
the penalty, and to ransom hiny. .Comedy of Exr.i. 1 
the world's ransom, blessed Mary's. .Tiic/iard //. ji. 1 
ransom straiglit his brother-in-law..liJc)i»y /T.i. 3 
to ransom home revolted Mortimer .. — i. 3 
and when I urged the ransom once. . — i. 3 
he said, he would not ransom Mortimer — i. 3 

without tlieir ransom straight . — i. 3 

prisoners' ransom, and of soldiers slain — ii. 3 
there without ransom to lie forfeited — iv. 3 
for achievement, offer us his ransom.. Hc7iryV. iii. 6 
what willing ransom he will give.. .. — iii. 5 

consider of his ransom — iii. 6 

my ransom, is this frail and worthless — ' iii. 6 

if for thy ransom thou wilt now _ iy. 3 

my ransom then will soon be levied — iy. 3 

come thou no more tor ransom (rep.) — iv. 3 

do give to me egregious ransom — iv. 4 

and for his ransom, he will give you — iv. 4 

king we sent to for his ransom? — iy. 5 

ransom? comest thou again for ransom? — iv. 7 
shall be the ransom of my friend .... 1 Henry VI. i. I 
set him free, witliout his ransom paid — iii. 3 
what ransom must I pay before I pass? — v. 3 

that is lier ransom, I deliver her — v. 3 

words were ransom for their fault.. 2 Henry VI. iii. 1 
the world shall not be ransom for.... — iii. 2 

make their ransom on the sand — iv. I 

what is my ransom, master? — iv. 1 

take ransom, let him live — iv. 1 

as for tlie^e whose ransom we have set — iv. 1 
hither have they sent it for her ransom — v. 7 

the ransom of my bold attempt Richard III. y. 3 

Twill send his ransom Timon of Athens, i. 1 

ransoms did the general coffersfill JuliusCcesar, iii. 2 
men did ransom lives of me.... .4n(on!/<§-C/eo. iii. II 

for me, my ransom's death Cymbeline, v. 3 

but our lives may be called ransom . . — v. 5 
be the ransom for their fault ....TitusAndron. iii. 1 
let it serve to ransom my two nephews — iii. 1 
use me well; you shall have ransom ....Lear,iv. 6 
can ransom me into his love again ....Othello, iii. 4 
RANSOJIED— a world ransomed .. Winter'sTale, v. 1 
so should he be sure to be ransomed. . Henry V. iv. 1 
king say, he would not be ransomed — iv. 1 
ransomed, and we ne'er the wiser. ... — iv. 1 
I was exchanged and ransomed .... 1 Henry VJ. i. 4 
a Briton born, let him be ransomed.. Ci/indeiine, v. b 

RANSOMING him, or pitying Coriolanus,!. 6 

RANSOMLESS, and free 1 HemylV. v. b 

ransomless here we set our prisoners. . Titus And. i. 2 
RAN'ST— and yet thou ran'st away.. 1 Henri///', ii. 4 

when thou ran 'st up Gad's-hill — iii. 3 

RANT— I'll rant as well as thou Hamlet, v. i 

RANTING host of the Garter Merry Wives, ii. I 

RAP me well, or I'll knock (rep).Tami7ig of Slirew, i.2 

and rap him soundly, sir — i.2 

what, dear sir, thus raps you? Cymbeline, i. 7 

RAPE upon the maiden virtue of ....King John, ii. 1 
for rapes and ravishments he parallels. /IZ/'j.- Well, iv. 3 
the soil of her fair rape wiped off. Tmilus J Cress, ii 2 
shall repent this rape. Rape, call.. TitusAndron. i. 2 
fitted by kind for rape and villany .. — " ' 
his rape; and rape, I fear, was root .. — 
made for murders, and for rapes .... — 

Brutus sware for Lucrece' rape — 

for villains marked with rape — 

talk of murders, rapes, and massacres — 

bloody murder, or detested rape — 

where Rape, and Murder (rep.) — 

a villain that hath done a rape — 

Rape is the other's name — v. 2 

RAPIER— hat and rapier in my cell ,...Tempesl,v. I 

take-a j'onr rapier {rep. ii. 3) Merry Wives, i. 4 

Ru"by, my rapier — i. 4 

hath good skill in his rapier — ii. 1 

dubbed with unhacked rapier . . Twelfth Night, iii. 4 

rapier, scabbard, and all — iii. 4 

the rapier and dagger man .... Meas. for Meas. iv. 3 

I do excel thee in my rapier Love'sL.Lost, i. 2 

too much odd.s for a Spaniard's rapier — i.2 

rust. rapier! be still, druml — i.2 

forged, with my rapier's point Richard II. iy. I 

five me my rai)ier, boy 2HenryIV. ii. 4 
will scour you with my rapier Henry V. ii. 1 

such pity as my rapier's point 3Henry VI. i. 3 

Cliftord, witli his rapier's point — i. 4 

sheathed my rapier in his bosom . Titus Andron. ii. 1 

the tadpole on mj- rapier's point — iv. 2 

fetch me my rapier, boy Romeo ^Juliet, i. 5 

gentle Mercutio, put thy rapier up .. — iii. I 
spit his body upon a rapier's point .. — iv. 3 
whips out his rapier, cries, a rat! aratl.Hani'e;, iv. 1 

for your rapier most especial — iv. 7 

what's his weapon? Rapier and dagger — v. 2 

six French rapiers and poniards — v. 2 

wear thy good rapier bare Othello, v. 1 

RAPINE and Murder {rep.) .... Titus Andronicus, v. 2 

good Rapine, stab him — y. 2 

RAPPED 'em o' the coxcombs Lear, ii. 4 

RAPT— that he seems rapt withal Macbeth, i. 3 

look, how our partner's rapt — i. 3 

whiles I stood rapt in the — i. 5 (letter) 

I was much rapt in this Troilus ^ Cressida, iii. 3 

fou are rapt, sir, in some work.. 3'imu'j of Athens, i. 1 
'm rapt, and cannot cover the — v. I 

more dances my rapt heart Coriolanus, i v. 5 

RAPTURE lets her baby cry — ii. I 

her brain-sick raptures cannot. . Troilus ^-Cress. ii. 3 

for, in this rapture, I shall surely — iii. 2 

[^Col.'] spite of all the rapture of the sea. .Peiv'de.s-.ii. 1 

RARE — of two most rare affections .... Tempest, iii. I 

so rare a wondered father — iv. 1 

some rare note-wortliy object ..TwoGen.of Ver. i. I 

mirth, and rare solemnity — v. 4 

makes a rare turkey-cock of him. Twelfth Night, ii. .■> 

that youth's a rare courtier! — iii. 1 

we shall have a rare letter from him — iii. 2 
you are a rare parrot-teacher Much >4do, i. 1 



ii 


1 


IV 


1 


IV 


1 


IV. 


1 


IV. 


2 


y. 


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V. 


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RAll 



[615 ] 



RA^RE— Vulcan arare carpenter? MuchAdo, i. 1 

BO rare a gentleman as signior — iii. 1 

and j'our gowni's a most rare fashion — iii. 4 
in tlie rare semblance tliat I loved . . — y. 1 
divine, and rare, precious .. ..Mid.N.'sDream, iii. 2 

1 luive lind a most rare vision — iv. 1 

a rare talenti Love'sL. Lost, iv. 2 

most rare Pompey ! — v. 2 

indeed, gives rare new liveries ..Mer.of Venice, ii. 2 

O rare fortune I here comes — ii. 2 

were man as rare as phoenix ....As youLike it, iv. 3 
is not this a rare fellow, my lord?, . . . — v. 4 
of rare and proved effectg, eucli as .... All's il'ell, i. 3 

in so rare— I know not wliat Winter's Tale, i. 1 

none rare, my lord — i. 2 

as slic's rare, must it be great — i. 2 

as it liatl> been to us, rare, pleasant.. — iii. 1 
something rare even then will rush.. — iii. I 

a daugliter of most rare note — iv. 1 

performed by tliat i-are Italian master — v. 2 

shall I? O rare I By the Lord 1 Henry I V. i . 2 

and so become a rare hangman — i. 2 

nothing pleasetli but rare accidents.. — i. 2 

O rarci lie doth it as lilse one — ii. 4 

rare words! brave world! hostess — iii. 3 

their censure of tliese rare reports . . I Henry F/. ii . 3 

for his rare success in arms — iv. 7 

your wondrous rare description — v. 5 

a most rare speaker, to nature Henry I'll I. i. 2 

if tliy rare qualities, sweet gentleness — ii. 4 
there's Achilles, a rare engineer. 7Voi7ms ^-Cress. ii. 3 
and, by his rare example, made .... Coriolanns, ii. 2 
his composure must h&\-a,x&..Anlo7iyt<! Cleopatra, i. 4 
O rare for Antony! Her gentlewomen — ii. 2 
rave Egyptian! Upon her landing .. — ii. 2 
lived in court (which rare it is to Ao).Cymbeline, i. 1 
a touch more rare subdues all pangs — i. 2 

furnished 'with a mind so rare — i. 7 

in tlie election of a sir so rare — i. 7 

'tis plate, of rare device; and jewels.. — i. 7 

that wliat's else rare, is choked — iii. 6 

a most rare boy, of melancholy I . . . . — i v. 2 
a book? O rare one! be not, as is our — v. 4 

rare instinct! when sliall I hear .. — v. 5 
fair creature, rare as you seem to be ..Pericles, iii. 2 

is not tliis strange? Most rare — iii. 2 

Cleon's wife, with envy rare — Iv. (Gower) 

can be valued, ricli or rare Lear, i. 1 

no cataplasm so rare, collected Hamlet, iv, 7 

R.\RELY — how rarely featured MuchAdo, iii. 1 

doth not my wit become me rarely? — iii. 4 

1 could play Ercles rarely ....Mid. N.'s Dream, i. 2 

thy offices, so rarely kind Winler'sTale, v. 1 

how rarely does it meet with. . Timon of Athens, iv. 3 
rarely, rarely: he that nnhucMXes Anlony^ Cleo. iv. 4 

O rarely base ! good queen — v.2 

be so rarely and exactly wrought . . Cymbeline, ii. 4 
and tl^ink me rarely wed ; fair one .... Pericles, v. 1 

RARENESS— and won by rareness..! Henryir. iii. 2 

but a strain of rareness Cymbeline, iii. 4 

such deartli, and rareness, as, to make . . Hamlet, v. 2 

RARER— the rarer action is in virtue .. Tempest, v. 1 
never for a piece of beauty rarer.. Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

as our rarer monsters are Macbeth , v. 7 

a rarer spirit never did steer .... Antony SfCleo. v. 1 

RAREST— the rarest that e'er came . . Tempest, ii. 1 

why, 'tis tlie rarest argument of All's il'ell, ii. 3 

s!ie is the rarest of all women .... Winter's 'Tale, v. 1 

he is simply tire rarest man Coriolanus, iv. 5 

than any the rarest of our ladies ....Cymbeline, i. 5 

forget that rarest treasure — iii. 4 

amongst the rarest of good ones .... — v. 5 

this is the rarest dream tliat e'er Pericles, v. 1 

rarest sounds! do j'e not liear? — v. 1 

men of clioice and rarest parts Lear, i. 4 

RARITIES-many vouched rarities are. Tempest, ii. I 

RARITY— but tlie rarity of It is — ii. 1 

so far, that the rarity redeems him ..All'sWell, iv. 3 

but wliat particular rarity? Timon of Athens, i. 1 

sorrow would be a rarity most beloved . . Lear, iv. 3 

RASCAL— this wide-chopped rascal .... Tempest, i. 1 

your coney-catcliing rascals Merry Wives, i. 1 

what a damned epicurean rascal is this! — ii. 2 
hang him, dislionest rascal! — iii. 3 

you panderly rascals ! — i v. 2 

delight in sucli a barren rascal . . TwelftkNight, i. 5 
words are very rascals, since bonds.. — iii. I 
why laugh you at such a barren rascal? — v. 1 

here comes the rascal {rep.) Meas.forMeas. v. 1 

why, you bald-pated, lying rascal! .. — v. 1 
liath tliera as huge as the rascal.. Asyon Litie i', iii. 3 

I'd poison that vile rascul All's Well, iii. .'j 

bade tlie rascal knock upon your.. Tainin^ of Sh. i. 2 
while she did call me— rascal fiddler — ii. 1 
bring along these rascal knaves with — iv. 1 
go, rascals, go, and fetch my supper — iv. 1 

wliere is tlie rascal cook? — iv. 1 

stretch-mouthed ra-cal would .. Winler'sTale, iv. 3 
talk we of these traitorly rascals .... — iv. 3 

peace, ye fat-kidiieyed rascal 1 Henry IV. ii. 2 

the rascal liath removed my — ii. 2 

if the rascal have not given me — ii.2 

zounds, an' I were now by this rascal — ii. 3 

what a pagan rascal is tins? — ii. 3 

tiiat rascal liath good mettle (.rep.) .. — ii. 4 
tliis oily rascal is known as well .. .. — ii. 4 
whoreson, impudent, einlxissed rascal — iii. 3 

1 did never see such pitiful rascals .. — iv. 2 
rascal, is that all the comfort (,rep.)..iHenryIV, ii. 

liang him, swaggering rascal! — ii. 

away, you cut-purse rascal! — ii. 

you bottle-ale rascal! you basket-hilt — Ii. 

1 cannot endure such a fustian rascal — ii. 
the rascal is gone: ah, you whoreson — ii. 
yes, sir; the rascal's di-unk; 3'ou have — ii. 

a rascal! to brave me 1 — ii. 

tliou damned tripe-visagcd rascal . . — v^ 
Gome, you tliin tiling; come, you rascal! — v. 

rascals! [Co(.Kn^-you dogsl] HennjV. iii. 

Bud a knave, and a rascal? wlmt ish — iii. 



RASCAL— arrant counterfeit rascal .. Henry V. iii. 6 
and the cowardly rascals, that ran . . — iv. 7 
an't please your majesty, a rascal. . . . — iv. 7 

lean raw-boned rnscalsl I Henry VL i. 2 

every idle rascal follower IHenryVI. ii. 4 

the liarvest which that ras<;al sowed — iii. 1 
tlie rascal people, thirsting after .... — iv. 4 
vagabonds, rascals, and runaways.. /fic/iard ///. v. 3 
leave your noise anon, ye rascals ..Henry VI II. v. 3 
ale and calces here, you rude rascals? — v. 3 
you rascal! Peace, fool; I have.. TroiVM,?- Cress, ii. 3 
those crafty swearing rascals,— that stale — v. 4 

no, no; I am a rascal ; a scurvy — v. 4 

I'll once more feast the rascals. Timon of Athens, iii. 4 
turn rascal; hadst thou wealth (?cp.) — iv. 3 

rascal thieves, here's gold — iv. 3 

make gold of that; out, rascal dogs! — v. 1 
tliou rascal, that art worst in blood. . Coriolanus, i. I 

from rascals worse tlian they — i.6 

news, you rascals. What, what — iv. 5 

to lock such rascal counters f<corR.JuliusC<esar, iv. 3 

here comes a flatterin" rascal Cymbeline, i. G 

Leonatus I a banished rascal; and he's — ii. 1 
no, nor tliy tailor, rascal, who is tliy — iv. 2 

bandy looks with me, you rascal? Lear, i. 4 

a knave; a rascal, ail eater of broken.... — ii.2 
draw, you rascal: you come with (rep.).. — ii.2 
you cowardly rascal, nature disclaims . , — ii. 2 
thou rascal beadle, hold thy bloody hand — iv. 6 

a dull and muddy-mettled rascal Hamlet, ii. 2 

you rogue I you rascal! What's the .... Othello, ii. 3 

to lash the rascal naked througli the world — iv. 2 

RASCALLIEST, sweet young prince.l Henry IV. i. 2 

RASCAL-LIKE— not rascal-like....! Hen n/C/. iv. 2 

RASCALLY— rascally knave MerryWives, ii. 2 

rascally sheep-biter come by TwelfthNighl, ii. 5 

that blind rascally boy As you Like it, iv. 1 

ingenious, foolish, rascally knave .... All's Well, v. 2 

a rascally yea-forsooth knave! iHenrylV. i. 2 

away, you rascally Althea's dream . . — ii. 2 
you poor, base, rascally, cheating .... — ii. 4 

a rascally slave I I will toss — ii. 4 

what an arrant, rascally, beggarly .. Henry V. iv. 8 
the rascally, scald, beggarly, lousy .. — v. 1 
a wlioresou rascally ptisick... TjoilusfyCressida, v. 3 
RASE— the boar did rase his heIm..flicAard///. iii. 4 
RASED— boar had rased off his helm — iii. 2 

as from thence sorrow were ever rased.. Pericles, i. 1 

RASH— not too rash a trial of him Tempest, i. 2 

lest I miglit be too rash MeasurcforMeasure, ii. 2 

first, here's young master Rash — iv. 3 

not rather make rash remonstrance.. — v. 1 
tarry, rash wanton; am not I.. Mid.N.'sDream, ii. 2 
this is not well, rash and unbridled. . All's Well, iii. 2 

our rash faults make trivial — v. 3 

that with norasli potion, but Winler'sTale, i. 2 

thathot rash haste so indirectly ....King John, '\\. 1 
rash, inconsiderate, fiery voluntaries — ii. 1 

Ills rash fierce blaze of riot Iticlmrd II. ii. 1 

jesters, and rash bavin wits 1 HenrylV. iii. 2 

as aconitum, or rash gunpowder. ...2Henry/r. iv. 4 

be not so rash; take ransom illenryVI.'vr. 1 

salute you, my matter is so rash. Troilus S,- Cress, iv. 2 

not rash, lilie Jiis accusers Coriolanus, i. 1 

will be as rash in tlie repeat — iv. 7 

and room to your rash choler?.... JuimsC^sar, iv. 3 

when that rash humour, which — iv. 'J 

fear not slander, eensurerash,.Cy?n6eZ/He, iv. 2 (song) 
was it well done of rash Virgiiiius. Titus Andron. y. 3 
soundest of his time hath been but rash . . Lear, i. 1 

when the rash mood's on — ii. 4 

ICol.^ his anointed flesh rash bearish fangs — iii. 7 

it is too rash, too unadvised Rnmeo ^ Juliet, il. 2 

what a rash and bloodj' deed is this! ..Hamlet, iii. 4 
thou, wretched, rash, intruding fool .... — iii. 4 
though I am not spleiieti ve and rash .... — v. 1 
he is rash, and very sudden in eholer . . Othello, ii. 1 
why do you sueak so startingly and rash? — iii. 4 
thou art rash as fire, to say that she was — v. 2 
is this rash and most unfortunate man? — v.2 
RASH-EMBRACED despair ..Merch. of Venice, iii. 2 
RASHER on tlie coals for money .... — iii. 5 

RASH-LEVIED strength Richard IlL iv. 3 

RASHLY in the villain's death — iii. 5 

the father rashly slaughtered Ills .... — v. 4 

and Talbot, too rashly plotted 1 Henry VI. iv. 4 

rashly, and praised be rashness for it . . Hamlet, v. 2 

RASHNESS that I ever yet . TwoGen. of Verona, iii. 1 

showed too much the rashness .. Winler'sTale, iii. 2 

a better soldier, tlian rasliness Henry V. iii. 6 

this is the fruit of rashnessi Rictiard III. ii. 1 

condemn rashness in cold blood?. . Timon ofAth. iii. 5 
my general and exceptless rashness.. — iv. 3 
were well deserved oi rasliness . .Antony ^Cleo. ii. 2 
white reprove the brown for rashness — iii. 9 

clicck this hideous rashness Lear, i . 1 

and praised be rashness for it Hamlet, v. 1 

RAT— the very rats instinctively Tempest, i. 2 

tall fellows skip like rats Merry wives, \\. 1 

like rats that ravin down Meas.for Meas. i. 3 

house be troubled with a rat., Merch. of Venice, iv. 1 

that I was an Irish rat .isyouLikeil, iii. 2 

and, likearat without a tail Macbeth, i. 3 

poor rats, had hanged themselves ..Richard III. v. 3 

Rome and her rats are at Coriolanus, i . 1 

take these rats thither, to gnaw — i. 1 

she is served as I would serve a rat, , Cymbeline, v. 5 

like rats, oft bite the holy cords Lear, ii, 2 

swallows the old rat, and the ditch-dog.. — iii. 4 

rats, and such small deer — iii. 4 (song) 

a rat, have life, and thou no breath at all? — v. 3 
a dog, a rat, a mouse, a cat .... Romeo /i- Juliet, iii. 1 

how now! a rat? dead, for a ducat Hamlet, iii. 4 

wliips out his rapier, cries, a rat! a rat! — iv. 1 

RATALORllM too; and Merry Wires, i. 1 

RATCATCHER, will you walli? .Romeo 4 Jntiet,ui.\ 

RATCLIEF-sir Richard Ratclilf ...Richard III. iii. 3 

rCo(.A';i/.]Lovel and Ratcliff, look .. — iii. 4 

they are friends Ratcliff, and I>ovel . . — iii. 5 

Ratcliff, thyself, or Catcsby; where... — iv. 4 



RAV 

RATCLIFF, come hither; post to ..Iticliardlll. iv. 
Rateliff.-my lord? (rep.) v. 

Ratcliff, I have dreamed a fearful.. — v. 
Ratcliff, I fear, I fear, — naj', good..., — v. 

RATIO- o'erprised all popular rate Tempest, i. 

and, in my rate, she too — ii. 

have purcliased at an infinite ra.tti. Merry Wives, ii, 

whose rates are either rich — ii. 

a spirit, of no common rate ... Mid.N.'sDream, iii. 
from such a noble rate; but my ..Mer. of Venice, i. 

brings down the rate of usance — i. 

then let me se^j the rate — i. 

butter-woman's rate [Col.Knt.rsaikl]AsyouLike, iii. 

for all, that life can rate worth All'slVell, 'li. 

she reckoned it at her life's rate — v, 

subdued me to her rate — v. 

and rails, and swears, and rates. Taming of Sh. iv. 
valued at the highest rate, cannot. Comerfyo/Brr. i. 

five hundred at the rate — iv. 

we rate the cost of the erection 2HcnryIV. i. 

upon, or near, the rate of thirty thousand— iv. 
what! rate, rebuke, and roughly send — v. 
before he'll buy again at such a rate. 1 HenrvT/. iii. 
why do you rate my lord of Suffolk.2He«)i/ VI. iii. 

rate me at what thou wilt, thou — iv. 

all the rest is held at such a rate.... 3 Henri//'/, ii. 

go rate thy minions, proud — ii. 

purchasea at a superfluous rate! Henry VIII. i. 

1 find at such proud rate — iii. 

of your proper wisdoms rate Troilus (f Cress, ii. 

for corn at their own rates Coriolanus, i. 

to be chid as we rate boys Antony A Cleopatra, i. 

one of them rates all that is won and lost — iii. 
thy adulteries, rates and revenges . . Cymbeline, v. 

even thus he rates the babe Titus Andron. y. 

to blame, my lord, to rate her so. Romeo ^-Juliet, i'u. 
no figure at such rate be set, as that.. — v. 
3'our entreatmcnts at a higher rate .... Hamlet, i. 
or the Pole, a ranker rate, should it be .. — iv. 

RATED— council, rated them at...Lot!e's L.LosI, y. 

have rated me about my monies. . Mer.of Venice, i. 

if thou be'st rated by thy estimation — ii. 

affection is not rated from the.Taming of Shrew, i. 

paying the fine of rated treachery . . KingJolm, y. 

an old lord of the council ratedme..lHenrj//f'. i. 

rated my uncle from the — iv. 

who with them was a rated sinew too — iv. 

and rated by Northumberland illenrylV. iii. 

thus upbraided, chid, and rated at..iHeni-yVI. iii. 

my lord, 'tis rated as those Timon of Athens, i. 

miglit have so rated my expense .... — ii. 

who rated him for speaking viell. . Julius Cmsar, ii. 

we had not rated him his part ..Antony SrCleo. iii. 

I praised her as I rated her Cymbeline, i. 

noble lord be rated for saueine3s..7'i7Ks.4>ic/r(m. ii. 
RATHEREST, unconfirmed fashion. Loce'sl.L. iv. 
RATIFIED— are only numbers ratified — iv. 

confirmed, signed, ratified by you. Mer. o/J'cnice.iii. 

and they were ratified, as he cried. . Henry VIII. i. 

well ratified by law, and heraldry Hamlet, i. 

RATIFIERS and props of every word .... — iv. 
RATIFY— afore heaven, I ratify this . . Tempest, iv. 

with him above to ratify the yiorl<.... .Macbeth, iii. 

to ratify, augment, or alter Henry V. y. 

our peace we'll ratify; seal it Cymbeline, y. 

RATING-— yet, dear lady, rating..JI/er.o/ Venice, iii. 
RATIONAL hind Costard Love's L. Losi,i. 

loss of virginity is rational 'mcreass .. .All'slVell,]. 
RATSBANE— have put ratsbane in ..2HenryIV. i. 

a little ratsbane for thy sake! IHenryVI. v. 

set ratsbane by his porridge Lear, iii. 

RATTLE— rattles in tlieir hands . . . Meiry Wives, i v. 

loud as thine, rattle the welkin's KingJolm, y. 

RATTLING— dread rattling thunder. . 'Tempest, y. 

as from the rattling tongue of ... Mid. N. Dream, v. 

with our rattling tabourines Antony^- Clco. iv. 

he was as rattling thunder — v. 

with dead men's rattling bones.. Romeo ^Jnliet, iv. 
RAUGHT not to five weeks Love'sL.Lost, iv. 

in the face, raught me his hand Hemy V. i v. 

this staff of honour ranglit 2HenryVI, ii. 

that rau"ht at mountains with Z Henry VI. i. 

hand of death hath raught him . . Antonyfy Cteo. iv. 
RAVE— does he rave? TwelfthNighl. iii. 

stamp, rave, and fret, that I may ZHntry VI. i. 

that he raves in saying nothing.rroiVus<§- Cress. iii. 

and rave and cry for food Titus Andronicus, v. 

the madness wherein now he raves HamM, ii. 

RAVED— could so far have raved. . . . Cymbeline, iv. 
RAVEIi— lest it should ravel . . TwoGen. or Ver. iii. 

must I ravel out my weaved-up Richard II. iv. 

make you to ravel all this matter out..Hamlci, iii. 
RAVEI/LFD-the ravelled sleeve of care.il/«c))e(/;, ii. 
RAVEN— brush'd with raven's feather. . 'Tempesl,i. 

young ravens must have food Merry Wires, i. 

to spite a raven's heart within TwelfthNighl, v. 

not change a raven for a dove?. . Mid. N. Dream, ii. 

an amber-coloured raven was....Loi»c'sL. /.os(, iv. 

he that doth the ravens feed .4s you Like it, ii. 

instruct the kites and ravens .... Wiifler'sTale, ii. 

the raven himself is hoarse Macbeth, i. 

as doth a raven on a sick-fallen .... KingJoliu, iv. 

and a moulten raven, a couching ..IHe/n-yll'. iii. 

disposed as the hateful raven iHenryVI. iii. 

now to sing a raven's note iii. 

tlve raven rooked her on the SHenn/Vl v. 

the raven chides blackness Troilus 4- Cress, ii. 

I would croak like a raven v. 

ravens, crows, and kites, fly o'er..../i(('«sC(rsor, v. 

may bare the raven's eye Cymbeline, ii. 

the nightly owl, or fatal raven .. Titus Andron. ii. 

the raven doth not hatch a lark — ii. 

some say , that ravens foster forlorn . . ii. 

did ever raven sing so like a lark.... iii. 

new snow on a raven's hac^....Itojneo^ Juliet, iii. 

dove-feathered raven! wolvisli-raveuing iij. 

the croaking raven doth bellow for Hamlet, iii. 

as doth the raven o'er the infected house. Otiiello, iv, 
RA VEN-COLOITRED love. ... Titnt A ndronicus, ii. 
RAVENING first the lamb Cymbeline, i. 



.5 



RAV 



RAVENOUS— starved and ravenou3.jl/ei-.o/ Ten. iv. I 
sweets comfort his ravenous sense . . RichanI II. iii. 2 

I wish some ravenous wolf had \HenrijVI. v. 4 

inclined as are the ravenous wolves. 2i/e;)irv''/. iii. 1 
he is equal ravenous, as he is SKihtie-Henry y 1 1 1, i. I 
as ravenous flslies, do a vessel follow — i. 2 
this ravenous tiger, this accursed.. TittisAndron. v. 3 
RAVENS!' UKG-pnst to Ravenspurg.Wic/iaiii //. ii. 1 

is safe arrived at Ravenspurg — ii. 2 

weary way from Ravenspurg to Cotswold — ii. 3 

is gone to Ravenspurg (re/3.) — ii. 3 

you and he came hack to Ravenspurg. IH^nrj///''. i.3 
from France set foot at Ravenspurg. . — iii. 2 
upon the naked shore at Ravenspurg — iv. 3 
being thus arrived from Ravenspurg. SHenryff. iv. 7 

RAVIN— like rats that ravin Heas. for Mens. i. 3 

better 'twere, I met the ravin Won,... Ail's Well, iii. 2 

tiiat wilt ravin up thy own life's Macbeth, ii. 4 

RAVINED-gulf.oftlieravined salt sea — iv. 1 
RAVISH, like enchanting harmony . . Love'sL. L. i. 1 

ravish doters with a false aspect — iv. 3 

would ravish savage ears, and plant. . — iv. 3 

able to ravish an/ dull conceit 1 Henry VI. v. h 

hersiglit did ravish iHmryl'l. i. 1 

ravisli your wives and daughters .... — iv. 8 

wives? ravisli our daughters? liichar-l III. v. 3 

holp to ravisli your own daughters.. Corwlanus, iv. 6 
suit upon my back, will I ravish . . Cymbeline, iii. 5 
ravish a maid, or plot the way. . . , TUusAndmn. v. 1 

faith, t must ravish her,or she'll Pericles, iv. 6 

these hairs, which thou dost ravish from. Lenr, iii. 7 

RAVISHED-now is his soul ravished!. .l/ucA.Wo.ii. 3 

from Perigenia, wliom he ravisIied?.iV/i*rf. A'. Dr. ii. 2 

younger hearings are quite ravished. Love'sL L. ii. 1 

almost with ravished listening Henry ^Itl. i. 2 

the ravished Helen Troilus Sr Cresiida, (prol.J 

cut thy tongue and ravished (rep. v. Vj. Titus. ■ind.M. 5 
sweet girl, ravished, and wronged.... — iv. 1 

what, was slie ravished? i^rep.) — V. 3 

they it were wlio ravished our sister.. — v. 3 

whom they have ravished Pericles, i v. 2 

we must either £!et her ravished — iv. 6 

RAVISIIER— said to be a ravisher .. Con'okji us, iv. 5 

stab liim; he is a ravisher Titus.-indrojiicu^.v. 2 

RAVISHING-Tarquin's lavishing stridos.Uacfce^/i.ii.l 

with ravishiD" division to her lute. .1 Henri// /-". iii. 1 

R.iVlSI-IMENTS he parallels Nessu3..4H's/re«, iv. 3 

RAW— this raw rheumatic day? . . Merry Wires, iii. 1 

nose looks red and raw .... Love'sL. Lost, v. 2 (song) 

a thousand raw tricks Merchant of yenice, iii. 4 

thou art raw .isyou Likeii, iii. 2 

raw as he is, and in the hottest . . Winier'nTnle, iv. 3 

being tender, raw, and young Richard II. ii. 3 

their climate fog^y, raw, and dull? .. Henry V, iii. 5 

the air is raw and cold Richard III. v. 3 

cold palsies, raw eyes, dirt-rotten. Troilus Sr Cress, v. 1 

upon a raw and gusty day Julius Cirsar, i. 2 

may not be raw in her entertainment. . Pericles, iv. 3 
thy cicatrice looks raw and red after . . Hamlet, iv. 3 

yet but raw neither, in respect of — v. 2 

R.\W-BONED rascals I IHenn/Fl. i. 2 

R .A. W-CO,LD morning Julius Cresar, ii. 1 

RAWER— our more rawer breath? Hamlet, v. 2 

RAWLY— their children rawly left.... Henry r. iv. 1 

RAWNESS left you wife Macbeth, iv. 3 

RAYS have smote Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 (verses) 

with those clear ravs whicli 1 Henry yi. i. 2 

take up the rays of the beneficial . . Henry yill, i. 1 
for, in her ray and brightness . . Troilus^ Cress, i. 3 
as in thy red raj's tliou dost sink . . /u(j lis Ccesar, v. 3 

as Titan's rays on earth Titus Andronicus, i. 2 

RAYED— ever man so T&yedl . .Tamingof Shrew, iv. 1 

RAZE the sanctuary Measure for Measure, ii. 2 

raze out the written troubles Macbeth, v. 3 

to raze one title of your honour ....Richard II. ii. 3 
two razes of ginger, to be delivered ..I Henry I y. ii. 1 

and to raze out rotten opinion 2 Henry I y. v. 2 

raze tlieir faction, and their family. Titus Andron. i. 2 

R.\ZED— ay, that he razed Meai.for Meas. i. 2 

household coat, razed out my impress /iicAard//. iii. 1 
that the Britons have razed out .... Cymbeline, v. 5 

for which I razed my likeness Lear.i. 4 

Provencial roses on my razed shoes. . . . Hamlet, iii. 2 
R.A.ZKTH your cities, and subverts.'.. IHenn/ FA ii. 3 

RAZING the characters of your 2Henryyi. i. 1 

RAZOR— as is the razor's edge Love'sL. Lost, v. 2 

these words are razors to n\y.. Titus Andronicus, i. 2 

fourteen years no razor touched Pericles, v. 3 

R.-VZORABLE-be rough and razorable . Tempest, ii. 1 

R AZURE of oblivion Measure for Measure, v. 1 

REACH-I cannot reach so high. Tu-o Gen. of yer. i. 2 

wilt thou reach stars — iii. 1 

my nails can reacli unto tliine eyes. Mid. Pf.'sDr. iii. 2 
carry me out of his envy's reach. Mer. of yenice, iv. I 

if my royal fux could reacli them All's Well, ii. 1 

should riot laugh, if I could reach .Winter'sTnle.W. 3 

and boundless reach of mercy KintjJolin, iv. 3 

to reach at victory above my Richard II. u 3 

from fortli thy reach he would have. . — ii. 1 
the king's whole battle reachunto?.! Henryiy. iv. I 

reach at the glorious gold 2 Henry yi. i, 2 

above the reach or compass — i. 2 

which I must reach unto Rtcliard III. i. 1 

with Richmond, from tlie reaoh of hell — iv. 1 

wliat envy reach you? ..Henry y I II. ii. 2 

reach a criq,ir;— so,— now, methiriks.. — iv. 2 

to me you cannot reach — v. 2 

a mountain cedar, reach his branches — v. 4 
true, there's all tlie reach of it.. Troilus^ Cress, iv. 4 
one may reacli deep enough .. Tinwno/.lthens, iii. 4 

pale envy's threatening reaoh Tiius Andron. ii. 1 

reach me thy haiid, that I may help.. — ii. 4 
thine eye presumes to reac!>, all thy....Pe>iWe.!. i. 1 

when canst thou reach it? — iii. 1 

madam, from the reacli of these Ron\eoS,-Jnliet, iii. 3 

tiius do we of wisdom and of reacli Hamlet, i i. 1 

nor to larger reach, than to su3p"icion . . Othello, iii. 3 
REAClIED-as this that I have reached .. — i. 2 

REACHES at the moon 2 Henry r I. iii. 1 

if may be said, it reaches far Henry f^i. i. 1 



[616] 



REA 






REACHES of our BOuls? Hamlet, i. i 

REACH ETH from the restful Richard II. iv. 1 

REACHING at the sun Pericles, ii. 2 

great men have reaching hands 2Henryyi. iv. 7 

READ it over TwoGen.of Perona, ii. 1 

I read your fortune in your eye — ii. 4 

let me read tliem — iii. I 

thou canst not read fjep.) — iii. 1 

mended with a breakfast: read on .. — iii. I 

read over Julia's heart — v. 4 

here read, read; perceive how I ..Merry Wives, ii, 1 
O, I have read it; it is heresy .... TwelfthNighl, i. 5 

I will read politic authors — ii. 5 

here's the challenge, read it — iii. 4 

do but read iii. 4 

to read him by his form — iii. 4 

open it, and read it (rep.) _ v. 1 

no madam, I do but read madness .. ^ v. 1 

read i' thy right wits (7-en.) — v. I 

being often read, grown feared . . Meas. for Meas. ii. 4 

if I read it not truly ' _ iv. 3 

for they can write and read Much Ado, iii. 3 

to write and read comes by nature .. — iii. 3 
for aught that ever I could read . . Mid. N.'s Dr. i. 1 
then read the names of the actors.... — i. 2 
I read as much, as from the rattling — v. 1 

how well he's read, to reason Love'sL. Lost, i. 1 

let me read tlie same — i. 1 

as I have read, sir; and the best .... — i. 2 
vouchsafe to read the purpose of my — ii. 1 

we will read it, I swear — iv. 1 

be so good as read me this letter .... — iv. 2 

I beseech you, read it — iv. 2 

once more I'll read the ode that .... — iv. 3 

let this letter be read — iv. 3 

Biron, read it over — iv. 3 

I'll read the writing Merchant of Venice, ii. 7 

a schedule? I will read it — ii. 9 

here is a letter, read it at your — v. 1 

for here I read for certain — v. 1 

teaching all that read ..AsyouLike it, iii. 2 (verses) 

I have heard him read many. . — iii. 2 

you shall read it in,— what do All's Well, ii. 3 

sending me a letter? Read it again.. — iii. 4 

audit shall be read to his face — iv. 3 

shall I read it to you? — iv. 3 

nay, I'll read it iirst, by your — iv. 3 

see you read no other lectures., ramtng of Shrew, i. 2 
what will you rea<l to her? (rep.).... — i. 2 

that never read so far to know — iii. 1 

give me leave to read philosophy..., — iii. 1 
yet read the gamut of Hortensio ... . — iii. 1 
you read? what, master, read you?. . — iv. 2 
note of the fashion to testify. Read it — iv. 3 

that e'er was heard, or read I Winter's Tale, i. 2 

read the indictment — iii. 2 

nor read the secrets in't — iii. 2 

break up the seals, and read — iii. 2 

hast thou read truth? — Iii. 2 

yet I can read waiting-gentlewoman in — iii. 3 
and read, as 'twere, my daughter's eyes — iv. 3 
let not my sister read it in your. ComeiZi/ of Err. iii. 2 
and let iier read it in your looks .... — iii. 2 

and when he reads thy personal Macbeth, i. 3 

I turn the leaf to read them — i. 3 

where men may read strange matters — i. 5 

write upon it, read it, afterwards — Iv. 1 

do you not read some tokens King John, i. 1 

can in this book of beauty read, Hove — ii. 2 
who hath read, or heard, of any .... — iii. 4 
read here, young Arthur: how now.. — iv. 1 

can you not read it? is it not — iv. 1 

or have you read, or heard? — iv. 3 

but that you read these accusatious. Richard II. iv. 1 

to read a lecture of them? — iv. 1 

read o'er these articles (rep.> — iv. 1 

I'll read enough, when I do see — iv. 1 

that glass, and therein will I read .. — iv. 1 

read not my name there — v. 3 

I'll read you matter deep IHenrylV. i. 3 

see what they be, read them — ii. 4 

pupil, or hath read to me? — iii. 1 

for therein should we read — iv. I 

at market-crosses, read in churches.. — v. 1 

I cannot read them now — v. 2 

I have read the cause of his effects ..2Henryiy. i. 2 

have you read o'er the letters — iii. 1 

heaven! that one might read the book — iii. 1 
at more leisure, may your highness read — iv. 4 

for you shall read, that my great Henry y. i. 2 

this same is yours; read them — ii. 2 

why, what read you there, that hath — ii. 2 
which you shall read in your own losses — ii. 4 

as I have read in the chronicles — iv. 7 

to those that have not read the story — v. (cho. ) 

that every one may read 1 Henry VI. ii. 2 

for once t read, that stout Pendragon — iii. 2 

that 1 can read no further 2HenryVI. i. 1 

I never read but England's kings . . — i. 1 

John Southwell, read you; and let us — i. 4 

as I have read, laid claim unto — ii. 2 

he can write and read, and cast account — iv. 2 
but stay, I'll read it over once again — iv. 4 
and, because they could not read .... — iv. 7 
may be to-day read o'er in FtmVs.. Richard III. iii. 6 
that you read the cardinal's malice. Henry VIIl. i. 1 

I read in his looks matter — i. 1 

commission from Rome is read — ii. 4 

already publicly been read — ii. 4 

wherein was read, how that — iii. 2 

read o'er this; and, after, this; and then — iii. 2 

I must read this paper; I fear — iii. 2 

you may read the rest — iv. I 

from her shall read the perfect — v. 4 

he shall as soon read in the eyes. Troilus ^ Cress, iii. 3 
a book of sport thou'lt read me o'er — iv. 5 

let me read. A whoreson ptisiek .... — v. 3 
read me the superscription .... Timon of Athens, ii. 2 

canst not read? No — ii. 2 

ever to read them thine — v. 3 



READ— this tomb I cannot read. Timon of Athens, v. 4 

say, we read lectures to you Coriolanus, ii. 3 

whence men have read his fame v. 2 

having read it, bid them repair — v. .5 

read it not, noble lords _ v. 5 

he reads much ; he is a great Julius Ccetar, i. 2 

so much light, that I may read by them — ii. 1 
if thou read this, OCaasar, thou .... — ii. 3 
read this schedule. Trebonius doth.. — iii. 1 
read mine first; for mine's a suit {rep.) — iii. 1 
delay not, Cffisar; read it instantly.. — iii. 1 

I do not mean to read — iii. 2 

the will; read it, Mark Antony .... — iii. 2 

gentle friends, I must not read it — iii. 2 

read the will (I ep.) _ iii. 2 

bonk of secrecy, a little Icanread./(>i;onj/<5-C(co. i. 2 
leisure, read tlie garboils she awaked — i.3 
my Octavia, read not my blemishes — ii. 3 
his will, and read it to public ear ... . — iii. 4 
mav be truly read, what kind of mon.Oj/mdeiine, i. I 

so far I read aloud : but even — i. 7 

I have read three hours then — ii. 2 

which, not to read, would show ,.,, — iii. 1 

read, and tell me how far 'tis — iii. 2 

this story the world may read in me — iii. 3 
to read would be even mortal (rep.) _ iii. 4 
and read, be henceforth treacherous I — iv. 2 

who is't can read a woman? — v. 5 

read, and declare the meaning v. 5 

go read with thee sad stories .... Titus Andron. iii. 2 
and thou shalt read, when mine .... — iii. 2 
read to her sons, than she hath read ' — iv. I 
and I have read, that Hecuba of .... — iv. I 

but thou art deeper read — iv. 1 

Lavinia, shall I read? this is — iv. 1 

do you read, my lord — iv. 1 

1 read it in the grammar — iv. 2 

have read it for restoratives Pericles, i, (Gower) 

where is read nothing but curious .... — i. 1 
read the conclusion, then; which read — i. I 

which makes me pale to read it? — i. 1 

(I prediction I read this other day Lear, i. 2 

which presently they read — ii. 4 

I'll read, and answer — iv. 2 

she took them, read them in my presence — iv. 3 

read thou this challenge; mark — iv. H 

read. What, with the case of eyes? — iv. 6 

stay till 1 have read the letter — v. 1 

and read out this. Sound, trumpet — v. 3 

any name, read thine own evil — v. 3 

where I may read, who passed ..Romeo ^ Juliet, i. 1 

can you read anything you see? — i. 2 

stay, fellow, I can read — i. 2 

read o'er the volume of young Paris' — i.3 

thy love did read by rote — ii. 3 

and recks not his own read Hamlet, i, 3 

we'll read, answer, and think upon this — ii. 2 

read, my lord? Words — ii. 2 

the matter that you read — ii. 2 

read on this book — iii. I 

read it at more leisure — v. 2 

have you not read, Roderigo, of Bonie....OWiei/o, i. 1 
you shall yourself read in the bitter letter — i.3 
could almost read the thoughts of people — iii. 4 

RE ADER-every ticklish reader. . Troilus 4- Cress, iv. 5 
READIEST way to the house ..Tamiiin or Shrew, i. 2 

readiest way to make the wench Richard III. i . 1 

is the readiest man to kill him.. Timon of Athens, i. 2 
Rome's readiest champions, repose. Tiius Andron. i. 2 

READILY be stopped iHenryVI. v. 2 

READINESS to go TwoGen.of Verona, i. 3 

I thought, by your readiness in., itfens. /or iWeas. ii. 1 
page's suit she hath inreadiness..ilfer. o/Fen/cc, ii. 4 

at once put us in readiness Taming of Sh. i. 1 

briefly put on manly readiness Macbeth, ii. 3 

ships already are in readiness 1 Henry VI. iii. 1 

be in readiness, for, with a band ....3 Henry VI. ii. 2 

deceived, we are in readiness — v. 4 

and all things are in readiness Richard III. v. 3 

here, my lord, in readiness ....Timon of Athens, i. 2 
joyful to hear of their readiness .... Coriolanus, iv. 3 
and our horsemen be in readiness .. Cymbeline, iii. 5 
your ships; they are here in readiness — iv. 2 
every thing in readiness for Hymeneus TiVus/f jiJ. i. 2 
yet it will come: the readiness is all . . Hamlet, v. 2 
READING— you reading there?.. ru'ofien.q/'Fer. i. 3 

for readin;^ my letter — iii. 1 

cozened all the hosts of Readings. . Merry Wives, iv. 5 
intimate reading aloud to him! .. TwelfihNight, il. 5 
uncle's fool, reading the challenge. . . . MuchAdo, i. I 

writ it, and was reading it over — ii. 3 

for your writing and reading, let that — iii. 3 

trust not my reading — iv. 1 

read, to reason against reading! ..Love's L.Last, i. \ 
what, Longavillel and reading! listen — iv. 3 
here comes my sister, reading ..As you LiUeit, iii. 2 

reading them ill-favouredly — iii. 2 

such as his reading, and manifest ....All's Well, i. 3 

on the reading it, ne changed — iv. 3 

wrest, or bow your reading Henry V. i. 2 

I'll interrupt nisreading .. Troilus ^ Cressida, iii. 3 
what are you reading? A strange .... — iii. 3 
turned down, where I left readiug?yu/msC<»sar, iv.3 

she hath been reading late Cymbeline, ii. 2 

what paper were you reading? ieor, i. 2 

saxlly the poor wretcli comes reading... . Hamlet, ii. 2 

RE AD'ST, thy promise Richard II. v. 3 

RE ADY— make yourself ready Tempest, i. 1 

I am ready now — i. 2 

riches ready to drop upon me — iii. 2 

madam, dinner's ready TwoGen. of Verona, i. 2 

'tis ready, sir, here in the porch. . . . Merry Wives,^ i 4 

almost ready to wrangle with — li. 1 

my heart is ready to crack with — ii. 2 

be ready here hard by in — iii. 3 

are you ready, sir? Twelfth Night, ii. 4 

I'll get 'em all three ready — iii. I 

that I am ready to distrust — iv. 3 

be ready, Claudio, for your. Measure for Measure, iii. 1 
go to your knees, and make ready < • -r^ iii. I 



REA 



RIDADY-Btory rendy for your e«.r..Meat.foiMeas. iv. 1 
he made five marks, ready money .. — iv. 3 

block, sirrah? Very ready, sir — iv. 3 

lord, will you walk? dinner is ready..MKc/i/Wo,ii.3 

'tis time you were ready — iji. 4 

I will wait upon tliem, I am ready . . — iii. 5 

here's tlie friar ready — v. 4 

ready: name what part I am for ..MUl.N.'sDr. i. 3 
ready. And I. And I. Where shall we — iii. 1 

here, villain, drawn and ready — iii. 2 

Where's Peas-blossom? Ready (^rep.) — iv. 1 
supper be ready at farthest by . . Mercli.o/renice, ii. 2 

ready, so please your grace — iv.l 

he's ready at the door: he comes — iv. 1 

I have them ready — iv. I 

I have it ready for thee: here it is . . — iv. 1 

they are ready to perform it As you Like it, i. 2 

ready, sir; but his will hath in it .. .. — i. 2 

grocure me music readv TamingiifSh. 1 (indue.) 
e ready straiRht (rep.) — Minduc.) 

each in his office ready at thy — 2 (indue.) 

ay, sir, they be ready; the oats — iii. 2 

there's fire ready ; and therefore, good — i v. I 
is supper ready, the house trimmed.. — iv.l 
all ready, and tlierefore, I pray thee — iv. 1 

are tliey all ready? iiep.) — iv. 1 

me shall you find most ready, and most — iv. 4 
bid Bianca make her ready straight — iv. 4 
to bid the priest be ready to come.... — iv. 4 

for the priest is ready. I fly — v. I 

my hand is ready, may it do hira ease — v. 2 
my ships are ready, and my {leople. lyinler's Tale, i. 2 
being ready to leap out of himself. ... — v. 2 
when my drink is ready, she strike.... iVfac6e(A, ii. 1 
I laid their daggers ready, he could not — ii. 2 

all ready at a point — iv. 3 

our power is ready; our lack is — iv. 3 

and ready mounted are they King John, ii. 1 

a drum is ready braced, that sliall.... — v. 2 
be ready, as your lives shall answer.. fi/cAarrf II. i. I 
ready to direct these home alarms .... — i. I 

who ready here do stand in arms — i. 3 

Glendower is not ready yet IHenri/Zr. iii. 1 

go make ready breakfast — iii. 3 

see, what a ready tongue suspicion ..2Henryiy.i. 1 

as ready as a borrower's cap — ii. 2 

if my heart be not ready to burst .... — ii. 4 

if-uot, we ready are to try — iv. 2 

with a ready guess, declare HewyF.i. 1 

his powers are not yet ready — iii. 3 

all things are ready, if our minds.... — iv. 3 

ready they were to slioot me 1 Henry Vl-}. 4 

find us ready for thee still — ii. 4 

ready to starve, and dare not touch. .2H«irvr/.i. 1 

and ready are the appellant — _ ii. 3 

and yet am ready to famish I — iv. 10 

our army's ready; come, we'll after..3Hcnrj(K/. i. 1 
I am ready to put armour on (rep. iv. 1) — iii. 3 
your horse stands ready at the park — iv. 5 

at hand, ready to fight — v. 4 

ready to catch each other by the . . Richard III. i. 3 
are all things ready for that royal time? — iii. 4 
ready, with every nod, to tumble.... — }!!• ^ 

both are ready in their offices — iii. 5 

is ink and paper ready? It is — v. 3 

is lie in person ready? Henry VIII. i. I 

banquet ready i' the privy chamber? — _i. 4 
see the barge be ready : and fit it ... . — ii. 1 
when they were ready to set out.. — ii. 2 (letter) 

we are ready to use our utmost — iii. 1 

is he ready to come abroad? — iii. 2 

some o' ttie guard be ready there .... — v. 2 

more ready to cry out Troituj ^ Cressida, ii. 2 

she's making her ready, she'll come — iii. 2 

this challenge; Ajax is ready — iii. 3 

at hand, and ready to effect it — iv. 2 

ray lord! is the lady ready? — iv. 4 

let us make ready straight — iv. 4 

ready for his friends Timon of Athens, \. 2 

Eray, is my lord ready to come forth? — iii. 4 
utmake you ready your stitf bats, . Coriotanus, i. 1 
but Rome was ready to answer us . . — i. 2 

din of war 'gan pierce his ready sense — ii. 2 
ready, when time shall prompt tliem — iii. 1 
I have; 'tis ready, liere. Have you .. — iii. 3 

strong, and really for this liint — iii. 3 

have you an army ready, say you? .. — iv. 3 

your city is ready to flame in — v.2 

are we all ready? What is now ..JutiuaCtBsar, iii. I 
ready, gods, with all your tliunderbolts — iv. 3 
at the height, are ready to decline .. — iv. 3 
our army lies, ready to give up the ghost — y. I 
your commission's ready . . Antony ii' Cleopatra, ii. 3 
go, make thee ready ; our letters are — iii. 3 

ne shall in time be ready — v. 1 

your lady's person: is she ready? ..Cymbeline, ii. 3 
prevailed on thy too ready hearing? — iii. 2 

ready in gibes, quick-answered — iii. 4 

conic more, for more you're ready .. — iv. 3 
ready for death? Over-roasted (;f7P.) — V. 4 
if you be ready for that, you are well — v. 4 
tliey shall be ready at your . . Titus Andronicus, ii. 4 
and see them ready 'gainst their .... — v.2 
the feast is ready, which the careful., — v. 3 

tlius ready for the way of life Pericles, i. 1 

are ready now, to eat those little — i. 4 

are tlie knights ready to begin — ii. 2 

return theiii, we are ready; and our .. — ii. 2 
the liatches, caulked and bitumed ready — iii. 1 
go, get it ready. How now, what art thou?. Lear, i.4 
are the horses ready? Ready, my lord .. — i. 5 

where both lire and food is ready — iii. 4 

he may be ready for our apprehension .. — iii. 5 
there is a litter ready; lay him in't .... — iii. 6 

and they are ready to-morrow — v. 3 

for I am almost ready to dissolve — v. 3 

ay, boy; ready. You are looked.. Itomco ^ Juliet, i. .'i 
two blushing pilgrims, really stand.. — i. 5 

will you be ready? do you like this.. — iii. 1 
is the bride ready to go to church? (rep.) — iv. 5 



[617 ] 



READY— make you ready. How iwvf . , Hamlel, iii. 2 

be the players ready? Ay, my lord — iii. 2 

the barK is ready, and the wind at help.. — iv. 3 

mine is ready; now, or whensoever — v.2 

REAL— is't real, that I see? All's Well, v. I 

it must omit real necessities Cnriolanus, iii. 1 

REALLY— you will do't, sir, really . ..Hamlet, v. 2 

REALM— through the realm Merry Halves, v. 5 

truth of all this realm is fled to .... King John, iv. 3 

ere thou fly the realm Richard II. i. 3 

enforced to farm our royal realm .... — i.4 
this earth, this realm, this England — ii. 1 

of Wiltshire hath the realm in farm — ii. 1 
to rid the realm of this pernicious blot? — iv. 1 
though he divide the realm, and give — v. I 
fill fields witli harness in the Tea.lm.\ Henry I y. iii. 2 
and barons of the realm perceived .. — iv. 3 
of the greatest men in the realm ....2HenryIV. y. 3 

the realm of Fra.nce (rep.) Henry r. i. 2 

in one, your realms in one! — v.2 

to command the prince and realm ..\HenryVI. i. I 
prosper this realm, keep it from .... — i. 1 

protector of the real m (rep.') — i.3 

all the priests and friars in my realm — 1. 6 
applauded through the realm of France? — ii. 2 
your sovereign, and destroy the realm — iii. 1 

of your arrival in this realm — iii. 4 

the realm of France? {»ep. iv. 7) — iv.l 

the realms of England and France .. — v. 1 
peace established between these realms — v. 3 

loss of all the realm of France — v. 4 

both her, the king, and realm — v. 5 

the learned council of the realm ....iHenryyi.i. 1 

us to labour for the realm — i. 1 

the realms of England, France — 1. 1 

not second woman in tile realm .... — i. 2 
madam, I am protector of the realm — i.3 
peers and nobles of the realm have .. — i.3 
to be your regent in tlie realm of France — i. 3 
seized on the realm ; deposed the .... — ii. 2 

[Co;.] govern England's realm — ii. 3 

staff, sir, and the king his realm .... — ii. 3 
sums of money through the realm .. — iii. 1 
swallowing the treasifre of the realm — iv. 1 
all the realm shall be in common. ... — iv. 2 

burn all the records of tlie realm — iv. 7 

corrupted the youth of the realm .... — iv. 7 

the king, the realm, and you? — iv. 7 

the proudest peer in the realm — iv. 7 

unpeople this my realm SHenry VI. i. I 

is made protector of the realm — i. 1 

thousand in this luckless realm .... — ii. 6 

his realm a slaughter-house — v. 4 

wear the garland of the realm ....Uichard III. iii. 2 

council to them of every realm Henry VIII. ii. 4 

danger which my realms stood in . . — ii. 4 
filling the whole realm, by your .... — y. 2 
would set whole realms on fire . . Timonof .4th, iii. 3 
realms and islands were as 'pla.^ea. Antony ^Cleo. v. 2 

then shall the realm of Albion Lear, iii. 2 

you twain rule in this realm — v. 3 

this realm dismantled was of Jove .... Hamlet, iii. 2 

RE- ANSWER, his pettiness Henry V. iii. 6 

RE AP— like to reap a proper man. Twelfth Nigh:, iii. I 
our corn's to reap, for yet our . . Meas.forMeas. iv. 1 
they that reap, must sheaf. As you Like it, iii. 2 (verses'> 
the man that the main harvest reaps — iii. 5 

proffers, not took, reap thanks AlVs Well, ii . 1 

little vantage shall I reap thereby . . Kichardll.'i. 3 
reap the harvest which that rascal.. 2 fTenr*/^/". iij. 1 

as now I reap at thy too 'iHenryVl. i. 4 

labours tliou slialt reap the gain — y. 7 

we are to reap the harvest Richard III. ii. 2 

to reap the harvest of perpetual peace — v.2 
benefit which thou shalt thereby reap. Coriolanus,v. 3 

liolp to reap the fame — v. 5 

might from relation likewise reap . . Cymbeline, ii. 4 

REAPED— reaped no corn Love sL.Lost, iv. 3 

his cliin.new reaped, showed \ Henry IV. i. 3 

anger's this? how have I reaped it? Henry VIII. iii. 2 
REAPER— are muleteers, reapers. /tji<oHj/§-C(eo. iii. 7 
REAPING— grew the more by reaping — v. 2 

REAR— when I rear my hand Tempest, ii. 1 

I do rear up her boy Mid. N.'s Dream, ii. 2 

no, I'll not rear another's issue .. Winter' sTale, ii. 3 
her breeding, as i' the rear of birth .. — iv. 3 
rear [Coi. -raise] this house against. . Richard II. iv. 1 
old dugs once more a traitor rear? .. — v. 3 

pyramis to her I'll rear 1 Henry VI. i. 6 

rear up his body; wring him iHenryVI. iii. 2 

rear it in the place your SHenryVI. ii. 6 

pavement to the abject rear.. Troilus ^Cressida,i\i.3 
the first tliat rears your hand .... Julius Civsar, iii. 1 

but let us rear the higher our Antony&Cleo. ii. 1 

a coffin I will rear, and make . Titus Andronicus, y. 2 
keep you in the rear of your aft'ection ..Hamlet, i. 3 

REARED with stronger blood .Winter's Tale, i. 2 

liave benched, and reared to worship — \.'i 
aslies shall be reared a phoenix .... 1 Henry VI. iv. 7 
veins of actions liighest reared ..Troilus^ Cress, i. 3 

some beast reared this Timon of Athens, v. 4 

his reared arm crested the vi orlti. Antony ^Clco. v. 2 

reared aloft the bloody battleaxe..7'i/Ms/i7irf7'ora. iii. I 

REAR-MICE— war with rear-inice.Mirf.iV.'s Dr. ii. 3 

REARWARD of reproaches Much Ado, iv. 1 

ever in the rearward of tlie fashion. 2 Henry IV. iii. 2 

now in the rearward, comes the duke.l Henry VI. iii.3 

rearward following Tybalt's death, flomeo ^Jul. iii. 2 

REASON for raising this sea-storm .... Tempest, i. 2 

would not infect his reason? — i. 2 

I will do reason, any reason — iii. 2 

yet with my nobler reason, 'gainst — v. 1 

that mantle their clearer reason — v. 1 

that they devour their reason — v. 1 

him best. Your reason? Two Gen. of Verona, i. 2 

no other but a woman's reason — i. 2 

'tis you that have the reason — ii. I 

have I not reason to prefer — ii. 4 

reasonless, to reason thus? — ii. 4 

that's the reason I love him — ii. 4 



REA 



BEASON-my reason's Ufiht. . . . Tu'oGen. of Ver. ii.4 

there is no reason but I shall — ii. 4 

above the bounds of reason — ii. 7 

I shall do that that is reason Merry Wives, i. 1 

one that would do reason — i. 1 

your reiiuest, cousin, in any reason .. _ — i. I 

ask me no reason why I love you — ii. I (letter) 
though love use reason for his ... , — ii. 1 (letter) 

reason, 3'ou rogue, reason — ii. 2 

there is reasons and causes for it .... — iii. 1 
the teeth of all ryhme and reason. . . . — v. 5 

if you have reason, be brief TwelfthNight, i. 5 

I'll give him reasons for it — i. 5 

thy exq^uisite reason, dear knight? . . — ii. 3 
reason tor't, but I have reason good. . — ii. 3 

for every reason excites to this — ii. 5 

thy reason, man? — iii. I 

I am loath to prove reason with them — iii. I 
nor wit, nor reason, can my passion — iii. 1 

do not extort thy reasons irom — iii. 1 

reason thus with reason fetter — iii. I 

thy reason, dear venom, give thy reason — iii. 2 

yield your reason, sir Andrew — iii. 2 

upon the oaths of judgment and reason — iii. 2 
I will show thee no reason for't .. — iii. 4 (ehal.) 

and wrangle with ray reason — iv.3 

when she will play with reason ..Meas.forMeas. i. 3 

more reasons for this action — i.4 

reason thus with life — iii. I 

that in all reason sliould have"quenched — iii. 1 

he shows his reason for that — iv. 4 

yet reason dares her? — iv. 4 

not banish reason for inequality (rep.) — v. I 

have sure more lack of reason — v. I 

next, it imports no reason, that with — v. 1 

you should hear reason Much Ado^ i.3 

you have no reason, I do it freely.... — iv. I 

there tliou speak'st reason — v. 1 

ne'er weigh more reasons in her balance — v. 1 

no, no more than reason (rep.) — v. 4 

by his reason swayed (rep.) ....Mid.N.'sDream, ii. 3 

till now ripe not to reason — ii. 3 

reason becomes the marshal to my. . . — ii. 3 
you should have little reason for that — iii. 1 
reason and love keep little company — iii. 1 
more than cool reason ever comprehends — v. 1 
in all reason, we must stay the time — v. 1 
he's read , to reason against reading I Love'sL. Lost, i. 1 

in reason notliing — i. 1 

had small reason for it — i. 2 

against the reason of white and red.. — i.2 
so far from reason's yielding, your ., — ii. 1 
'rainst some reason, in my Breast.... — ii. 1 
all liberal reason I will yield unto .. — ii. 1 
your reason? Wliy, all his behaviours — ii. 1 
your reasons at dinner have been.... — v. 1 
great reason; for past cure is still .... — v. 2 
I know the reason; lady, why (;ep.).. — v.2 

what reason have you for't? — v.2 

his reasons are as two grains Mer.of Venice, i. 1 

and what's his reason, I am a Jew .. — iii. I 
I did, my lord, and I have reason for it — iii. 2 

his reason well I know — iii 3 

should be more than reason : but if she — iii. 5 

as there is no firm reason to be — iv. 1 

so can I give no reason, nor I will not — iv 1 
the reason is, your spirits are attentive — v. 1 
too dull to reason of such goddesses. ..45 you L//ce, i. 2 

come, lame me with reasons — i.3 

the one should be lamed with reasons — i.3 

by reason of his absence — ii.4 

will not be answered with reason.. .. — ii. 7 
for not being at court? Your reason.. — iii. 2 

neither rhyme nor reason can — iii. 2 

and the reason why they are not so.. — iii. 2 

you liave great reason to be sad — iv. 1 

the reason; no sooner knew the reason — v.2 
that reason wonder may diminish .. — v. 4 
tell me thy reason \vhy thou wilt marry .^(i's Well, i. 3 
worship's reason? Faith, madam, (»ep.) — i.3 
the fundamental reason of this war — iii. 1 

good my lord, the reasons of our state — iii. 1 

my reasons are most strimg — iv. 2 

too strong for reason's force — v. 3 

I hope, this reason stands .. TamingofSh. 2 (indue.) 
my reasons are both good and weighty — i. I 

for what reason, I beseech 3'0u?(jep.) — i.2 
I see no reason, but Buppo^^ed Lucentio — ii. 1 
having no other reason, but thot his — iii. 2 

my reason, haply, more, to bandy — v.2 

reason, my son should choose (rep.) Winter'sTale,iv, 3 
for some other reasons, my grave sir — iv. 3 
if my reason will thereto be onedientfrep.) — iv. 3 
as monstrous to our human reason . . — v. 1 

may unfurnish me of reason — v. 1 

is neither rhyme nor reason . . Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

your reason? Lest it make you — ii. 2 

for what reason ? For two — ii. 2 

but your reason was not substantial — ii. 2 
the reason of this strange restraint ., — iii. 1 

mad, that you do reason so? — iii. 2 

how fondly dost thou reason? — iv. 2 

littth he not reason to turn back .... — iv. 2 
the reason that I gather he is mad .. — iv. 3 

past thought of human reason — v. 1 

that takes the reason prisoner? Macbeth, i. 3 

and the receipt of reason a limbeck.. — i. 7 
violent love outran the pauser reason — ii. 3 

for sundry weighty reasons — ii i. 1 

liave I not reason, beldams — iii. 5 

the flight so runs against all reason. . — iv. 2 

no, I have no reason for it King John, i. 1 

produces reason how I may be — iii. 4 

then, have I reason to be fond — iii. 4 

strong reasons make strong actions., — iii. 4 
some reasons of this double coronation — iv. 2 
and not our manners, reason now (rep.) — iv. 3 
and reason too, he should: this apish — v. 2 
teach thy necessity to reason thus ..Richard II. i. 3 
what was his reason? he wns not .... — ii. 3 



— 


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1 


— 


IV 


1 


..Hen 


yy.i. 


1 







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111. 


1 


J — 


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V. 


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.Richard lit. i. 2 



ii 


3 


iii 




111 


1 


iii 


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IV. 


4 


IV. 


4 


V. 


3 



KE ASON— have I not reason Richard II. iii. 2 

for some reasons I would not {tep.) .. v. 2 

I see no reason, wliy tliou shouldst..lHen?!/;/'. i. 2 

I will lay liimdown sucli reasons.... i. 2 

fi^lit longer tlian he sees reason i. 2 

which, for divers reasons, which I will i. 3 

and 'tis no little reason bids i. 3 

whither I go, nor reason whereabout ii. 3 

your reason; what saysttlion (rep.).. — ii. 4 
a reason on compulsion! if reasons were — ii. 4 

tractable to any honest reason — iii. 3 

from whence the eye of reason may — iv. 1 

any otiier reason than to set me o&..2Ihnnjll'. i. 2 
in reason taken from me all (rep.) .. — ii. 2 

many thousand reasons hold me .... ii. 3 

I see no reason, in the law of nature — iii. 2 
then reason wills, our hearts should 

nice, and wanton reason, shall 

hear him but reason in divinity . . . 

for your own reasons turn into 

for a sovereign to reason on, and for 
wlien he sees reason of fears, as we do 
always reason themselves out again.. 

consented to all terms in reason — v. 2 

the reason moved these warlike 1 Henry VI. ii. 5 

you have great reason to do Richard iii. 1 

I see no reason, if I wear this rose. . . . iv. 1 

by reason of his adversary's odds .... v. ."i 

most of all these reasons bindeth us.. — vis 
there's reason lie should be displea3ed.2H(?H)'i/r/. i. 1 

show some reason (j-fjo.) i. 3 

1 see no reason, why a king of years ii! 3 

Ibetter reasons can supplant iii. 1 

hath more reason for his death iii.' 1 

proved by reasons, to my liege iiii 1 

and good reason; for thereby is England — iv. 2 
the reason of these arms (; ep. v. 1) . . — iv. 9 

and have no other reason for this ... . v. 1 

but I have reasons strong and forc\\Ae.ZHeniyVl. i. 2 

and reason too; who sliould succeed ii. 2 

this reason may suffice iii. 3 

then 'tis but reason, that I be released iii. 3 

tell me some reason, why the lady .. iv. 1 

and his brothers, unto reason... 
had I not reason, think ye, to. . , 
for divers unknown reasons .... 

I will not reason what is meant. 

no, we'll reason with him 

you cannot reason almost with 

what a sliarp-provided wit he reasons; 

thou know'st our reasons urged 

and tell him all our reasons 

lord mayor, the reason we have sent 

your reasons are too shallow (^rep.) ., 

while we reason here, a royal battle 

great reason; why? lest I revenee .. 

let your reason with yoiu- oholer" . . Henry Vlll. i. 1 

if with the sap of reason you would.. i. 1 

many sharp reasons to defeat the law ii. 1 

took 'em from me, with this reason ii. 2 (let.) 

thorny points of my alleged reasons — ii. 4 

our reasons laid before him v. 1 

what merit's in that reason.. rroiVxs fyCressida, ii. 2 

fears and reasons? fie, for godly {rep.) ii. 2 

Bway of Ills affairs with reasons ii. 2 

your gloves with reason (rep.) ii. 2 

and reason flies the object of all harm ii. 2 

wings of reason to his heels _ Ji. 2 

nay, if we talk of reason, let's ii. 2 

crammed reason ; reason and respect ii, 2 

that no discourse of reason 

the reasons, you allege, do more .... 
the reason why we ascribe it to him 
reason leads, finds safer footing (lep.) 

I have strong reasons (rep.) iii. 3 

where reason can revolt without (rep.) ~ v! 2 

no reason can found his state TiinmioJAIk. ii. 1 

the reason of tills? I could render one ii. 2 

one that knows what belongs to reason iii. 1 

in manacles, then reason safely Coriotanus, i. 9 

I'll give my reasons, more worthier.. iii. 1 

the other insult without all reason .. — iii.' i 

reason; because they then less need.. iv. 5 

bnt reason witli the fellow _ iv. 6 

revenges, wi th your colder reasons . . — v. 3 

move nim more than can our reasons v. 3 

does reason our petition with more.. v. 3 

bury his reasons witli his body v. 5 

these are tlieir reasons JuliusCivsar.i. 3 

swayed more than his reason — ii. 1 

and I have given him reasons ii! j 

and reason to my love is liable — ii. 2 

that you shall give me reasons iii. I 

our reasons are so full of good regard — iii. 1 

show the reason of our Ca3sar's death iii. 1 

public reasons shall be rendered of .. iii. 2 

and men have lost their reason! .... iii. 2 

methinks, there is much reason in .. iii. 2 

no doubt, with reasons answer 3'ou , . — iii. 2 
your reason? This it is: 'tis better .. — iv. 3 

good reasons, must, of force, give place iv. 3 

Jet's reason with the worst that may v. 1 

if you can, your reason? .. .. Anlony^Cleapalra, ii. 3 

though my reason sits in the wind .. iii. 8 

would make his will lord of his reason iii. 1 1 

when valour preys on reason iii. 11 

that's the reason I was up so earlv. . Cymbeline, ii. 3 
not very sick, since I can reason of it — i v. 2 
love's reason's without reason ; the bier — i v. 2 

but, in all safe reason, he must iv. 2 

my father hath a reason for't — iv. 2 

no reason I, since on your lives i v. 4 

do myself this reason and this right .. TilmAnd.i. 2 
great reason that my noble lord be . . — ii. 3 
have I not reason, think you, to look — ii. 3 
but yet let reason govern tliy lament — iii. 1 
and wilt tliou have a reason for this — iii. 1 
had he not reason, lord Demetrius?.. — iv. 2 

your reason, mighty lord? _ v. 3 

a reason, mighty, strong, and effcelual — v. 3 



ii. 2 
ii. 2 
ii. 3 

iii. 2 



REASOIST— not to ask the reason why.... Pericles, 

now do I see he had some reason for it 

we have no reason to desire it i. 3 

her reason to lierself is only known.... ii- 5 

is not to reason of the deed iv. 1 

qiiirks, her reasons, her master-reasons — iv. 6 

tnat reason without miracle could Lear, i. 1 

can reason it thus and thus, yet — i. 2 

sovereignty, knowledge, and reason — i. 4 

add sucli reasons of your own, as may ... . i. 4 

tlie reason why the seven stars {rep-l — i. 5 

those that mingle reason with your ii. 4 

reason not the need: our basest ii. 4 

he has some reason, else lie could not beg — iv. 1 
suddenly gone back know you the rtasou? — iv. 3 

reason in madness! iv. 6 

tlie queen; my reason all the same — v. 3 

stay yet, hear reason ; Edmmid — v. 3 

no otlier reason, but because . . Romeo 4- Juliet, iii. 1 

or reason coldly of your grievances.. iii. 1 

the reason that I have to love thee (rep.} iii. I 

do you know the reason of this haste — iv. 1 
nature's tears are reason's merriment — iv. 5 
you cannot speak of reason to the Dane. Hamlet, i.2 

to reason most alisurd; whose common i.2 

that wants discourse of reason, would.. — i.2 

down the pales and forts of rea5on .... i. 4 

might deprive your sovereignty of reason — i. 4 
and be not from his reason fallen thereon — ii. 2 

whicli reason and sanity could not so.... ii. 2 

for, by my fay, I canno't reason ii. 2 

how noble in reason! how infinite — ii. 2 

that noble and most sovereign reason. . . . iii. 1 

and reason panders will. () Hamlet iii. 4 

god-like reason to fust in us unused — iv. 4 

excitements of my reason, and m.y blood — iv. 4 

for two special reasons; which may to you iv. 7 

what is tlie reason that you use me thus? v. 1 

the reason of this terrible summons? Othello, i. 1 

witli such loud reason to the Cyprus wars i. 1 

this cannot be, by no assay of reason .... i 3 

one scale of reason to poise anotiier 

but we have reason, to cool our raging .. 

thine liath no less reason : let us be 

in our common reason, (save that, tliey.. 



1 I REBEL-safe-conducting the rebels. «/t7iani///.iv. 1 
competitors flock to the rebels and tlieir — iv. 4 
to beat down these rebels here at home — iv. 4 
think, thy slave man rebels . . Timan of Alliens, iv. 3 

Ca3sar bears such rebel blood hiliusCwsar, iii. I 

so rebel to judgment Antony /^ Cleopatra, i. 4 

a very rebel to my will jv. 9 

and not to be a rebel to her state Pericles, ii. 6 

in tlie natures of their lords rebels Lear, ii. 2 

youth to itself rebels, though none eX&e .. Hamlet, i. 3 

devil liere that commonly rebels OthHIo, iii. 4 

REBELLED— of it naught rebelled.. HeHrj/A^'/ZZ. i. 1 
the body's members rebelled against. Cor/otonHs i. 1 

REBEL-LIKE, souglit to be king Lear, iv. 3 

REBELLING coasts? Cymbeline, v. 4 

REBELLION of acod-piece Meas.fnrMeas. iii. 2 

now, God delay our rebellion AlVsWell, iv. 3 

natural rebellion, done i' tlie blaze .. — v. 3 
wlio, in rebellion witli himself .... Winter' sTale, i. 2 



i. 3 
iii. 3 
iii. 3 
iii. 3 



for now I shall have reason to show 

give me a living reason, she's disloyal 

which I have greater reason to believe , . . , . _ 

is it within reason, and compass? iv. 2 

I will hear furtlier reason for this iv. 2 

.vet he has given me satisfying reasons .. y. 1 

REASONABLE shores Tempest, v. 1 

you shall find me reasonable Merry Wives, i. 1 

upon any reasonable demands i. i 

if he be ofany reasonable stature.... — iii. 3 

my jealousy is reasonable _ iv. 2 

to be known a reasonable creature . . Mucli Ado, i. 1 
I have a reasonable good ear . . Mid.N.'sDream, iv. 1 
of wooers are so reasonable .... Merch. of Venice, i. 2 

out of all reasonable mateli Asyou Lilie it, iii. 2 

incapable of reasonable affairs?.. Winter'sTalc, iv. 3 
sometliing to be a reasonable man.... — iv. 3 

my reasonable part produces KingJohn,\\i. 4 

out of all reasonable compass \Hetiryll'. iii. 3 

shall seem the more reasonable 2HenrylV. i. 2 

with reasonable swiftness, add more . . Henry K i. 2 
been very great, very reasonable great — iii. 6 
yet a reasonable measure in strength — v. 2 

both good and reasonable 1 Henry VI. v. 1 

is aquarrel just and reasonable ....liichurdlll. i. 2 

REASONjVBLY die. and never rise ..\ Henry IV. i. 3 

REASONED, and in his own division, il/uc/i^irfo, v. ] 

I reasoned with a Frenchman.. il/ercA.o/TcH/ce, ii. 8 

why is tliis reasoned? Combine together. . Lear, v. 1 

REASONING with yourself?.... T'H.oG.-n.o./- Ver. ii. 1 

reasoning is not in the fashion ..Mer. of Venice, i. 2 

REASONLESS, to reason tlius? . TwoGm. of l^er. ii. 4 

proffer is absurd and reasonless .... 1 Henry I'l. v. 4 

REAVE her of what sliould stead iWs'lVell, v. 3 

to reave the orphan of his patrimony.2 Henry VI. v. 1 
REBATE and blunt his natural.. iVfea,'!. /ur Meas. i. 5 
REBECK— you, Hugli Rebeck?.. «omeo */u/(V/, iv. 5 
REBEL— blood to rebel! (lep.) .Merch.of Venice, iii. 1 

but a foul contending rebel Taming of Shrew, v. 2 

worthy to be a rebel; for, to that Macbeth, \. 2 

showed like a rebel's whore i.2 

personal venture in the rebel's fight. . — i. 3 

line the rebel with hidden help _ i. 3 

now for the rebels, which stand oat.. Richard II. i. 4 
clierisli rebellion, and are rebels all. . — ii. 3 

tliough rebels wound thee with — iii. 2 

both young and old rebel, and all goes — iii. 2 
tliat tlie rebels have consumed with — v. 6 

a hundred thousand rebels die ....IHenrylV. iii. 2 
Douglas, and the English rebels, met — iii. 2 

God be thanked for tliese rebels — iii. 3 

he calls us rebels, traitors? — v. 2 

and rebels' arms triumph in massacresl — v. 4 
a very valiant rebel of the name .... — v. 4 
even with the rebels' blood.. 2 Henry IV. (induction) 

do not the rebels need soldiers? i.2 

Bays that wliieh his flesh rebels against — ii. 4 

clieering a rout of rebels with iv. 2 

but, for you, rebels— look to taste .... iv. 2 

a famous rebel art thou, Colevile .... — iv. 3 

till these rebels, now afoot iv. 4 

there is not now a rebel's sword iv. 4 

if any rebel or vain spirit of mine iv. 4 

to wilful disobedience, and rebel? .. \ Henry VI. iv. I 
that rebels there are up, and put ..2HenryFI. iu. 1 
your grace to tlie rebels' supplication? — iv. 4 

the rebels are in Southwark iv. 4 

these Kentish rebels (rep.) iv. 4 

defend the city from the rebels iv. 5 

the rebels have assayed to win — i v. ii 

fight against that monstrous rebel. Cade v. 1 

to quell the rebels, and their complices — v. 1 
look, where the sturdy rebel sits ....SHenryJI. i. 1 

you quake like rebels? Richard III. i.3 

the petty rebel, dull-brained — iv. 4 



is in thyself rebellion to thyself KingJohn, u\. 1 

rebellion, flat rebellion: WiU't not be? — iii. 1 
untlireo.d the rude eye of rebellion .. — v. 4 
gross rebellion, and detested trtason.Richard II. ii. 3 
cherish rebellion, and are rebels all., — ii. 3 

falter under foul rebellion's arms — iii. 2 

to face the garment of rebellion \ Henry IV. \. \ 

thus ever did rebellion find rebuke .. — v. 5 

rebellion in this land shall lose — v. 5 

tlie flame of bold rebellion even ..iHemylV. (ind.) 
he told me, that rebellion had bad luck — i. 1 
that same word, rebellion, did divide — i. 1 

worse than the name of rebellion can i.2 

if that rebellion came like itself — iv. 1 

of forged rebellion with a seal divine — iv. 1 
due meet for rebellion, and such acts _ iv. 2 
bringing rebellion broached on .. Henry V. v. (cho.) 
twas by rebellion against his king ..3 Henry VI. i. 1 

almost appears in loud rebellion Henry VIII. i. 2 

of this most wise rebellion Cori'olanus, i. 1 

the cockle of rebellion, insolence .... — iii. 1 

in a rebellion, when what's not meet — iii. 1 

that tliy rebellion looks so giant-like? .Hamfe(, iv. 5 

REBELLIOUS liquors in my blood.. .AsyouLilie, ii 3 

point against point rebellious Macbeth, i.2 

rebellious head, rise never, till (v. i 

rebellious earth have any resting ..Richard II. \. 1 

he yoketh your rebellious necks I Henry VI. ii. 3 

nor be rebellious to the crown — y. 4 

rebellious hinds, the filth and 2 Henry VI. iv. 2 

rebellious subjects, enemies to peace.i?omco4./u;. i. 1 
sword, rebellious to his arm, lies where. Ha»n/e<, ii. 2 

rebellious hell, if thou canst mutine — iii. 4 

REBOUND of yours, a s^lsL. Antony 6f Cleopatra, v. 2 

REBUKABLE, and worthy ehamefiil — iv. 4 

REBUKE— rebukes, a.Miima.nn&rs.Merry Wives, iii. 4 

O why rebuke j^ou him that loves.. /)/«/. N.'sDr. iii. 2 

rebuke me not for that which you. Lowe's L. Lost, v. 2 

does not the stone rebulte me Winter's Tale, v. 3 

why bear you these rebukes . . Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

to rebuke the usurpation of thy KingJohn , ii. 1 

not Gaunt's rebukes, nor England's./fiWiard//. ii. 1 

rebuke and dread correction IHenrylV. v. I 

thus ever did rebellion find rebuke .. — v. 5 
rebuke and check was the reward ..iHenrylV. iv. 3 

forestalled this dear and deep rebuke iv. 4 

what, rate, rebuke, and roughly send — v. 2 

rebuke, and my Creator's praise ZHenry VI. iv. 6 

murinurers, there's places of rebuke. Henry r///. ii. 2 

pluck reproof and rebuke from Coriolanns, ii. 2 

than the rebuke you give it — ii. 2 

rebuke, which might have ■vifill..A>itony SfCleo. iii. 7 

the gods rebuke me, but it is v. I 

she's a lady so tender of rebukes Cymbeline, iii! b 

of this great vast, rebuke these surges. . Pericles, iii. 1 

receives rebuke from Norway Hamlet, ii. 2 

we have your wrong rebuke Othello, i. 1 

the best of you shall sink in my rebuke ii 3 

REBUKED, as, it is said Macbeth, iii. I 

could have rebuked him at Hai-fleur. . Henry I^. iii. 6 

REBUSED yoiu- worship Taming of Shreu-, i 2 

RECALL the good Camillo Winter'sTale.'ni. 2 

sighs recall his life, I would be 2Henriif^I. iii. 2 

here below, recall not what we gi ve . . Pericles, iii. ] 
RECALLED from their exile .. TwoGen. of Ver. v. 4 

sentence may not be recalled Comedy of Err. i. I 

if Henry were recalled to life again. . 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

RECANT the pardon Mercliant of Venice, iv. 1 

RECANTATION. Recantation? My..".^«'s>re«, ii. 3 
REC ANTER-play the recauter. . Timon of Athens, v. 2 

RECANTING goodness _ i.2 

slavish motive of recanting fear .... Richard II. i, 1 

RECEIPT of tliat which hath ....Lore'sL.Losi,\\ 1 

at tliereceipt of your letter. Wer.o^;'e/iice.iv. 1 (let ) 

that his good receipt shall All's Well, i. 3 

many receipts he gave me — ii. 1 

thou didst deny the gold's receipt. Comedy of Err. ii.2 

the sum on the receipt thereof — iv. 1 

the receipt of reason a limbeck only ....Macbeth, i. 7 

parts of that receipt I had for Richard II. \. i 

we have the receipt of fern-seed IHenrylV. ii. 1 

for such receipt of learning Henry VIII. ii. 2 

parts that envied his receipt Coriolanns, \. 1 

upon receipt thereof, soon sleep.iJo»ieo ^Juliet, iii. b 

RECEIVE this villanous wrong . . Merry Wives, ii. 3 

he receives comfort like cold porridge. . 'l'empest,\\. 1 

did in your name receive it. . TwoGen. of Verona, i. 2 

he from his friends receives i. 3 

once again I do receive thee lionest . . — v. 4 

receive it so Tii<elflhMght,ii. 2 

his youth will aptly receive it — iii. 4 

there receive her approbation Meas.forMeas. i. 3 

he should receive his punishment.... — i. 5 
which he is most glad to receive .... — iii. 1 

be glad to receive some instruction ., iv. 2 

for he this very day receives letters.. — iv. 2 
receive the meed of punishment. Lore's!,. L.i. l(let.) 

meantime, receive such welcome at . . ii. 1 | 

receive fair speechless messages . . Mer. 0/ Venice, i. I | 

by note, to ^ve, and to receive " iii. 2 1 

than to receive tliree thousand ducats — iv. 1 ! 



IlECEIVJE— will patiently receive . . At you Like il, ii. 7 
you yours, Orlando, to receive his .. — v. 4 
good duke receive tliy daugliter .. — v. 4 Cverse) 

we here receive it a certainty ..AU'siycll,\. 2 

your supposed aid, he would receive it? — _i. 3 
our hearts receive your warnings ... — !.'• ' I 
a second time receive the confirmation — >!• 3 
my wish receive, wliich great love grant! — ii. 3 
would never receive the ring again .. — .Y' 3 1 
tlie queen receives mucli comfort.. H'inler'sTalu,)]. 2 . 

or newer torture must I receive — Jij- 2 j 

do not receive affliction at my — .'!,'■" | 

which I receive much better tliau .. — if- 2 I 
receives not thy nose court-odour.... — .'>'. 3 , 
receive my money for the irep.). Comedy of Err. in. 2 

I shall receive tlie money for — iv. 1 

none, till I receive the clmia — iv. 1 

part is to receive our duties Macbeth, i. 4 

who dares receive it otlier — ..i. 7 

whereby lie does receive particular — ni. 1 

and receive free houours, all which — in. G 

receive wliat cheer you may — iv. 3 

to receive at once the benefit — v. I 

and Derby, receive thy lance Richard II. i. 3 

noble Mortimer receive so many — 1 Henry I r. i. 3 
there receive money, and order for . . — Jii. 3 
sayj he, receive those that are civil. .2 Henry 1 1', u. 4 
take heed what guests you receive (rep.) — li. 4 
I shall receive money on Thursday.. — n. 4 
receive the secret whispers .... Henry I', iv. (chorus) 
French Englislimen, receive each otlier! — v. 2 
if thou receive me for thy warlike . . 1 Henry VI. \. '2 

you shall fii-st receive the sum — v. 1 

sooner will receive, than give — v. 5 

receive the sentence of the law 2HenryVl. n. 3 

as others would ambitiously receive it — ii. 3 
thou didst receive the sacrament . . Richard III. i. 4 
aud here receive we from our father — v. 2 
and, pray, receive them nobly ...... Henry VIH.i. 4 

from a dving man receive as certain — ii. 1 

clieveril conscience would receive — ii- 3 

receive him, and see him safe — v. 2 

wliat heart receives from hence . . TroilusSi- Cress, i. 3 

sliall receive of us in duty gives — 1 1 1 . 1 

receives and renders back his figure. . — in. 3 
and perhaps, receive mucli honour . . — iii. 3 
in kissing, do you render, or receive? — iv. b 

iie gives, if he receives Timon o/Athens, i. 2 

tlian common thanks I will receive it — i. 2 
let the war receive 'tin valiant gore — nu 5 

tliat I receive the general food Coriolanus, i. 1 

receive that natural competency .... — j. 1 

do back receive the flower of all — ;. 1 

benefit, which you receive — . i- 1 

for the nobles receive so to heart — ;v. 3 

receive you in witli all kind love.. /u/iutCaisac, ni. 1 
he did receive his letters, and is coming — iii. 1 
shall receive tlie benefit of his dying — lii. 2 

follow me, and receive it Antony ^-Cleopatra, ii. 3 

we must receive him according to ..Cymiieline,\\. 3 

receive it from me, then:— war — iii. 1 

receive it friendly — ?''• S 

or receive us for barbarous — iv. 4 

receive-tliem then, the ttihute. Titus Andronicus, i. 2 
receive him then to favour, Saturnine — i 2 

they humbly at my feet receive — iii. 1 

bason tliat receives your guilty blood — v. 2 

come, receive the blood — v. 2 

let him receive no sustenance — v. 3 

expound now, or receive your sentence. . Pencles, i. 1 

wouldst tremble to receive tliyself — i. 2 

graciously, I will thankfully receive .. — iv. 6 
shall receive such pay as tliy desires .. — v. 1 
then must we look to receive from his age .Lear.'u 1 
ray sister may receive it much more .... — ii. 2 

receive attendance from those — ii. 4 

I'Ureceivehimgladly, but not — ii. 4 

both receive in either by tliis. . . . Romeo S/- Juliet, ii. 6 
your visitation sliall receive such thanks. HunUei, ii. 2 

receives rebuke from Norway — ii- 2 

admit no raessengers,receive no tokens-.. — ii-2 

the players shall receive from you — ii. 2 

did he receive you well? — iii. 1 

I pray you, now receive them — iii. 1 

I will receive it, sir, with all diligence .. — v. 2 
I do receive your offered love like love . . — v. 2 

let's meet him, and receive him Othello, ii. 1 

as 1 am bound, receive it from me — iii. 3 

RECEIVED a second life Temp.-s'.v. 1 

t have received my proportion.. '/'no GcH.o/rcr.ii. 2 

but she received my dog? — iv. 4 

she hath received your letter Merry IVives, ii. 2 

I am sure, I liave received none .... — ii. 2 
have you received no promise of .... — ii. 2 
having received wrong by some person — iii. 1 
I have received from her anotiier .... — iii. 5 
received, and bid deliver to our age .. — iv. 4 
tlie foppery into a received belief .... — v. 5 

and soil is received Measure /or Measure, i. 4 

to be received plain, I'll speak — ii. 4 

he professes to have received no — lii. 2 

that he had received a thousand .. ..Much Ado, iv. 2 
Cas neither have) received that sum. Love'* L. Lost, ii. 1 
you shall be so received, as you shall — ii. I 
we have received your letters full of — v. 2 
I hojie, which yon received of me. Mer. of Venice, v. 1 

loth stretch itself as 'tis received All's fVeii, ii. 1 

tile influeuce of the most received star — ii. 1 
that had received 60 much shame.... — iv. 3 
as I express it, be so received .... IVinler sTale, iii. 2 
order, or what is now received.. — iv. (.chorus) 
more than the stripes I have received — iv. 2 
received no gohl (.rep. iv. 4) ..Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

of him received the chain — v. 1 

this purse of ducats I received from.. — v. 1 

the king hath liaiipily received Maclielh, i. 3 

will it not be received, when we have. . — i. 7 
and is received of tlie most pious Edward — iii. 6 
Iv^ndon hath received, like a kind ..Kin^./olin, v. 1 
hath received eight thousand nobles. Wirtard //. i. 1 



REU EI"VED the sacrament Richard II. i. I 

in Britany, received intelligence .... — ii. 1 
have received a certain instance., illenrylf. iii. 1 
that I have received new-dated letters — iv. 1 

how did this otfer seem received Henry V. }. 1 

and from his coffers received the golden — ii. 2 

queen that ever kin» received 2IIenryVI. j. 1 

Warwick received deep scars ill .... — _i. 1 
within this half hour, hath received — ii. i 
the sea received it; and so, I wislied — iii. 2 
strokes received, and many blows. ,. ,^ Hetu-y VI. i'l. 3 
who at his hands received my life.. ,. — ii. 5 

this day received a traitor's Henry VIII. ii. 1 

my conscience fiist received a tenderness — H. 4 
convent, honourably received him . . — iv. 2 

I have received much honour — v. 4 

let them be received, not without.. 7Vmon o/Alh.i. 2 
I liave received some small kinduesses — iij. 2 
that e'er received gift from him .... — iii. 3 

you have received your griefs — y. 5 

received in the repulse of Tarquin. . Coriolanus, ii. 1 
from wliom I liave received not only — ii. 1 
as if I had received them for the liire — ii. 2 
you have received many wounds .... — ii. 3 
wounds received for his country .... — ii. 3 
like liis that hath received an alms 1 — iii. 2 
this we received; and each in either — v. 3 
how he received you, let me be . . Julius Ccesar, iv. 2 
I have here received letters, that young — iv. 3 
how mine received shall hQ. , Antony^ Cleopatra, i. 3 
and have now received his accusations — iii- ti 
since I received command to do ... . Cymbeline, iii. 4 

so soon as I have received it — v. 5 

having received the punishment — v. 5 

received some unrecuring wound . . Titus And. iii. 1 
and be received for the emperor's heir — iv. 2 
I have received letters from great.. .. — v. 1 

received the danger of tl;e task Pericles, i. 1 

who hath received you at fortune's alms. . Lear,i. 1 
and received this hurt you see, striving. . — ii. 1 

I have received a letter this night — j;;. 3 

I have received a hurt — iii. 7 

and of liim, that ever ear received — v. 3 

but how hath she received his love?. . . . Hamlet, ii. 2 
but it was, (as I received it, and others. . — ii. 2 
he received tliern of him that brought . . — iv. 7 
I believe, received, from him that fled. . Olliello, ii. 3 
I thought you had received some bodily — ii. 3 

I pray, let Cassio be received again — iii. 4 

she has received them, and returned me — iv. 2 
RECEIVER— make him the receiver.. Cwn6c//u?, i. 1 
RECEIVEST thy full petition ....JuUusCa!sar,i\. 1 

RECEIVETH as the sea Tu-elllhNi^'hi, i. 1 

RECEIVING them from such . . Two Gen. of Ver. i. 1 

to one of your receiving, enough. Twelfh \ii;hl, iii. 1 

so receiving a dishonoured lite.. Meas.forMe^is. iv. 4 

such receiving as shall become , . IVir.ier's Tale, iv. 3 

hoofs i' the receiving earth .... Henry V. \. (chorus) 

mv lips, and receiving the bad vliy. Julius Ccesar, i. 2 

RECEPTACLE of my joys ... . Titus Andronicus, i. 2 

out of this fell devouring receptacle.. — ii. 4 

empty old receptacles, common e&wtrs. Pericles, iv. 6 

an ancient receptacle, where .. Romeo SrJutiet, iv. 3 

RECHEAT winded in my forehead.... WiifA.J((o. i. ! 

RECIfKOOAL vows be remembered. I-rar, iv.G(let.) 

KECIPKOCALLY-yea, reciprocally.Hen) r/F///. i. 1 

KECITEKAI— jereciterai a vous Henry V. iii. 4 

je reciterai line autre fois — iii. 4 

RECK— and little recks, to find As you Lit<e il, ii. 4 

I reck not though I eud my,. Troilus * Cressida, v. 6 

Cloten: that's all I reck Cymbeline, iv. 2 

and recks not his own read llamlel, i. 3 

RECKING as little what . . Two Gen. of Verona, iv. 3 

RECKLESS— the love of reckless Silvia — v. 2 

careless, reckless, and fearless ..Meas. for. Mens. iv. 2 

that I am reckless what I do Maclielh, iii. I 

so flies tlie reckless shepherd from . .SHenry VI. y. 6 
you grave, but reckless senators . . Coriolonus, iii. 1 
like a puffed and recldese libertine .... Hamlet, i. 3 
RECKON— I reckon this always. TwoGen. of Ver. ii. 5 
whereof I reckon the casting forth. Winter^ s Tale, iii.2 
before we reckon with your several ,, Macbeth, v. 7 

if .you could tell liow to reckon HenryV.iv. 1 

I irave no more to reckon Timon of Athens, iii. 4 

whom we reckon ourselves to be . . Cymbeline, iii. I 
liave not art to reckon my groans. Ha/nie^ ii. 2 (let.) 

RECKONED it at her life's rate All's Well, v. 3 

as you have reckoned up .. TamingofSh. 2 (indue.) 
was reckoned one the wisest prince. He?i/'i/r/i/. ii. 4 
in the love tliat can be reci^oned.. Antony 4'Cleo. i. 1 

as 'tis no better reckoned Cymbelme, iii, B 

RECKONING, he is more s\v:avi..Taming of Sh. iv. 1 
to the end of the reckoning .... Meas.for Mens. v. 1 
to call youn" Claudio to a reckoning. Much Ado, v. 4 

here come otlier reckonings — v. 4 

I am ill at reckoning, it fitteth.... Love'4'L./.os^ i. 2 
get your living by reckoning, sir .... — v. 2 
brought about their annual reckoning — v. 2 
a great reckoning in a little room..4si/ouL!tei(,iii.3 
the confirmers of false reckonings .. — iii. 4 

called her to a reckoning XHenrylV. i. 2 

the parcel of a reckoning. I am not yet — ii. 4 
in reckoning up the several devils* .. — iii. 1 
or I will tear the reckoning from.... — iii.2 
in thy pocket but tavern reckonings — iii. 3 
a trim reckoning! who hath it? .... — v. 1 
wit wasted in giving reckonings ..,.2 Henry IV. i. 2 
hath a lieavy reckoning to mate ....HenryV.iv. 1 
the sense of reckoning, if opposed. . . . — iv. 1 
arc all one reckonings, save the phrase — iv. 7 
to set down her reckcming .. Troilus ^-Cressida, iii. 3 

how goes our reckoning? Timonof Athens, ii. 2 

a heavy reckoning for you, sir Cymbellnr, v. 4 

of honourable reckoning are you.Rnmeo fyjnliei, i. 2 
in number, though in reckoning none — i. 2 
no reckoning made, but sent to my .. — i. 5 

O weary reckoning! Pardon me Othello, iii. i 

RECLAIM -the tyrant oft reclaims. .2 Wen;, r/K/. v. 2 

RECLAIMED to your obedience 1 Heniy VI. iii. 4 

wayward girl is so reclaimed ..Komeo SrJuliel, iv. 2 



RECLUSIVE and religious life MuchAdo.iv. 1 

RECOGNIZANCE and pledge of love ..Othello, v. 2 
Ilia recognizances, his fines, his double.. f/a»«;e/, v. I 

RECOIL twenty-three years Winler'sTale, i. 2 

that way recoil upon me — ii. 3 

nature may recoil, in an imperious ..Macbeth, iv. 3 

senses to recoil, and start, wlien — v. 2 

or like an overcharged gun, recoil. .SHcnri/ry. iii. 2 

you recoil from your great stock .... Cymbetine, i. 7 

RECOILING to her better judgment ..Othello, iii. 3 

RECOLLECT all that may men approve. Pericles, ii.l 

RECOLLECTED terms Tieelfth Night, ii. 4 

RECO.MFORTED through the gates.. Coriolanus, v. 4 
RECOMFORTURE. Shall I go vin.Richard III. iv. 4 

RECOMMENDS itself unto our Macbeth, i. 6 

we recommend to you, tribunes .... Coriolanus, ii, 2 
with his free duty, recom mends you thus. O^Ae//o, i. 3 

RECOMMENDED to his use Tu-elfthNight, v. 1 

RECOMPENSE— present recompense. ;V(?rrj/ W. iv. G 
not myself, lacks recompense .... Twelfth Night, i. 5 
it were a bad recompense for your love — ii. 1 
and, in recompense, desire my dog again — v. 1 
in recompense whereof, lie hath .... — v. I 
compel liim to her recompense. . Meas.for Meas. iii. I 
do not recompense me, in making me — v. 1 
no, truly, but in friendly recompense — v. 4 
the hearing double recompense .Mid. N. Dream, iii. 2 
that is study's god-like recompense.. Looe's L.L. i. I 
cannot recompense me better .... AsyouLike il, ii. 3 
do not look for further recompense.. — iii. 5 

labour to rccomjiense your love All's Well, iv. 4 

as recompense of our dear services. Winter's Tale, ii. 3 

recompense is slow to overtake Macbeth, i. 4 

he means to recompense the pains ..KingJohn, v. 4 
thy true love's recompense (rep.l . . Richard II. ii. 3 
will I think upon a recompense .... 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

my body shall pay recompense — v. 3 

alond to call for recompense. Troilus ^Cressida, iii. 3 
we for recompense have praised .. Timonof Ath. i. I 
our dinner will not recompense this — iii. 6 
togetherwitharecompensemorefruitful — v. 2 
the corn was not our recompense . . Coriolanus, iii. 1 

your recompense is still that Cymbeline, ii. 3 

my recompense is thanks, that's all ..Pericles, iii. 4 
RECOMPENSED as thought on. .Winler'sTale, iv. 3 
love could be but recompensed .. . Tieelfih Night, i. 5 
his father's wrongs be recompensed.! Henjyr/. iii. 1 
RECONCILE me to Polixenes.... Winter' sTale, iii. 2 
'tis hard to reconcile. Well, more. . . . Macbeth, iv. 3 
nor reconcile tliis lowerin" tempest.. i?(cAo>d //. i. 3 
to reconcile you all unto tlie king. .'IHenryVI. iv. 8 
I hope, shall reconcile them all .... 3 Henry VI. i. 1 
I desire to reconcile me to his .... Richard III. ii. 1 
our suit is, that you reconcile them.. Con'otanus, v. 3 
reconciles theiu to his entreaty.. -.^n/o?*?/ SfCleo. ii. 7 
unto your eyes I'll reconcile . . Pericles, iv. 4 (Gow.) 
just proof, repeals, and reconciles thee ..Lear, iii. 6 

reconcile your friends Romeo ^Juliet, iii. 3 

RECONCILED to the prince your .... Much Ado. i. 1 

we are reconciled, and the first view ..All's Well, v. 3 

and reconciled king, my brother. Winler'sTale, iv. 1 

scruples, reconciled my thoughts . . . , Macbeth, iv. 3 

king John hath reconciled liimself. .i^'n^Jo/i», v. 2 

York and Lancaster are reconciled.. 3 Henry ^/. i. 1 

I shall be reconciled to him again.. Wi'Wiord ///. i. 4 

reconciled your friends and you.. Titus Andron. i. 2 

RECONCILEMENT, till by some elder.Hnm(e(, v. 2 

RECONCILER— your reconciler !.4n(ony.$C';eo. iii. 4 

RECONCILIATION take; for, if he ..Olhello, iii. 3 

RECORD— and record my woes ..TwoGen.nf Ver. v. 4 

that record is lively in my soul!.. Twelfth Night, v. 1 

wliose fine stands in record .... Meas for Meas. ii. 2 

my villany they have upon record ..Much.ido. v. 1 

record it with your high and worthy — v. I 

that he do record a gift Mercliant of Venice, iv. 1 

heaven be the record to my speech!.. /C/c/iar'i //. i. 1 
if thy offences were upon record .... — iv. 1 

acountryraan of ours, records IHenry VI. i. 2 

burn all the records of the realm ..iHenryVI. iv. 7 

is it upon record? (rep.) Richard III. iii. 1 

abstract and record of tedious days . . — iv. 4 
and, on record, left them the heirs . . — v. 3 
whereof we have record, trial . . Troilus ^Cress, i. 3 
manifold record not nniXe\\es'i . .Timon of Athens, i. 1 

cannot be ! we have record Coriolanus, iv. G 

shall upon record bear hateful ...Antony^-Cleo. iv. 9 
got upon me a nobleness in record .. — iv. 12 

the record of what injuries — v.!! 

as record of fair act Cymbeline, iii. J 

Rome shall record; and, when Titus Andron. i. 2 

that still records with moan . . Pericles, iv. (Gower) 
all trivial fond records, all saws of .... Hamlet, i. I- 

RECORDATION to my noble -IHenry IV. ii. 3 

make a recordation to my soul.. Troilus ff Cress, v. 2 
RECORDED— the recorded law..iVfcas./or M«is. ii. 4 
that are recorded in this schedule. Love's L.Lost, i. 1 
'twill be recordedforaprecedent.Wer.o/P'ewice, iv. 1 
to the last syllable of recorded time ..Macbeth, v. & 
my soul recorded tlie history ....Richard III. iii. a 
be recorded by the righteous gods. Timon of Ath. iv. 2 
and have our two wagers recorded . . Cymbeline, i. h 
RECORDER— a child on a recorder. .Viii.A'.'«i)r. v. 1 

spoke to, but by the recorder Richard 1 1 1, iii. T 

come, the recorders. For if the king ..Hom(e(,iii. 2 

the recorders [K;i^-reeorder.T — iii. 2 

RECOUNT what thou hast been Tempest, i. 2 

you shall recount their particular .. Much Ado, \v. I 
let us recount our dreams . ...Mid. N.'s Dream, iv. 1 
by tlie world I recount no fable . . Love'sL.Lost, v. 1 
that some plain man recount their .. — v. 2 

1 pr'ytliee, recount some of them. As you Like it, iii. 2 
should recount our baleful news . . . .3 Henry VI. ii. I 
bid him recount the fore-recited.... He;irj/r;//. i. 2 

I sliall recount hereafter JuliusCiesar, i. 2 

recounts most horrid sights seen by . . — ii. 2 
yon recount your sorrows to a stone. Titus And. iii. 1 

sit, sir, I will recount it; but see Pericles, \. I 

recount, I do beseech thee — v. 1 

recount the occasion of my Hamlet, iv. 7 (letter) 

RECOUNTED-dcscrt recounted ..ZHenryVl. iiL 3 




RECOUNTING— which in recounting ....Lear, v. 3 
llECOUNTMENTS had most kindly yij»ouLi7t«,iv. 3 
KECOUKSE— recourse to her ..TwoGen.o/rer. iii. 1 

to give me recourse to him Merry (fives, ii. 1 

any time, recouriie unto the princes. /(ic/iard;/;. iii. 5 

o'ergalled with recourse of tears. TroHus ^- Cress, v. 3 

EECOVEK tliat, we are sure. . TicoGen.ofVerona,y. 1 

if I can recover him (j-ep..) Tempest, ii. 2 

the wine in mj' bottle will recover hira — ii. 2 

ere I could recover the shore -~ iii. 2 

if I cannot recover your niece .... TirelfthNight, ii. 3 
he miglit yet recover, and prove ..Mid.N.'sDr. v. 1 
loolt, lie recovers. I would I were.^s youLike ii, iv. 3 
who then recover; say, tliou art miiie..-IU's Well, iv. 2 
she will recover; I have too .... Winter' sTah; iii. 2 

to recover his hair Oep-) Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

and, perad venture, may recover .... King.lohn, v. 6 
speak; recover breath; tell us how.. Richard 1 1, v. 3 
lower, princes, forthe king recovers. 2He;irj//r.iv.4 

he will recover without pnysic — iv. 4 

might recover what was lost 1 Henry VI. ii. 5 

yet, to recover them, would lose. . ..'IHemy I'l. iv. 7 

we might recover all our loss ZHenryVI. v. 2 

will soon recover his accustomed . . Richard III. i. 3 
are in great danger, I recover tiiexa.JuliusCtesar, i. 1 
come on tlien; he may recover ...iyitony ^Cleo. iv. 9 

do seldom or never recover — v. 2 

to nature, that can recover him Pericles, iii. 2 

but to recover of us, by strong hand .... Hamlet, i. 1 

you go about to recover the wind of me.. iii. 2 

he shall recover his wits there v, 1 

are ways to recover the general again . . Othello, ii. 3 
a little while, he will recover straight .. — iv. I 

R ECOVERABLE. I fear Timon of.ilhens, iii. 4 

RECOVERED the most dangerous ..MuchAdo, iii. 3 
kill hira whom you have recovered .. TwelfihN. ii. 1 
brief, I recovered him; bound up. As youLikeit, iv. 3 
recovered the king, and naiione. All's Well,in.2 (}et.) 

not to be recovered (rep.) — iii. 6 

it is to be recovered — iii. 6 

I would swear, I recovered it — iv. 1 

recovered again with aqus-vitEe.. Winter'sTale.iv. 3 
recovered is the town of Orleans ....\ Henry (^ I. i. 6 
lost, and recovered in a day againl .. — iii. 2 
nor grieve that Rouen is so recovered — iii. 3 
recovered your ancient freedom ....'iHenryVI. iv. 8 

the crown may be recovered %Henry VI. iv. 7 

by good appliance was recovered Periolei, iii. 2 

recovered her, and placed her here . . — v. 3 

look! Thaisa is recovered — v. 3 

liow came you thus recovered? Oi/ie/^o, ii. 3 

I have here recovered from the Moor .... — v. 2 
RECOVERIES— his recoveries irep.)....Hamlel,y. 1 

RECOVERY of the king All's Well, ii. 3 

tindertake the recovery of this drum — iv. 1 

with fine and recovery Merry Wives, iv. 2 

do it bj' fine and recovery?.... Comedy o/£r»-ors, ii. 2 

bear him home for his recovery — v. 1 

grief that they are past recovery i Henry VI. i. 1 

use means for her recovery ZHenryVI. v. 5 

death tokens of it cry-no recovery. Trail. •S- Cress, ii. 3 

omit that bears recovery's name Pericles, v. 1 

my utmost skill in his recovery — v. 1 

and the recovery of his recoveries Hamlet, v. 1 

RECREANT; come, thou child. -Wd. N.'sDream, iii. 2 
a calf's skin on those recreant (rfp.).K/)igVo/in, iii. 1 
recreant and most degenerate traitor. K/c/iaj-d il. i. I 
a caitiff recreant to my cousin Hereford! — i. 2 

to be found false and recreant (rep.) .. — i. 3 
in thy teeth, most recreant coward ..IHenrylV. v. 3 

I say, distrustful recceantsl I Henry VI. i. 2 

you are all recreants, 'and dastards. .2He/:)!/r/. iv. 8 

a mere recreant prove Troilus ^Cressida, i. 3 

as a foreign recreant, he led with Cnriolanus, v. 3 

[C'oi.J O vassall recreant! iea;-, i. 1 

hear me, recreant! on thine allegiance . , — i, 1 

RECREATE— recreate yourselves. Jufzw.iCfTsar, iii. 2 

Rt;CREATION-a common recreation. ra-ei/TA jV. ii. 3 

is there no quick recreation granted?. Lore'aL.L. i. 1 

and we will to our recreation — iv. 2 

shed there, shall be my recreation . . Winter's r. iii. 2 

sweet recreation barred Comedy of Errors, v. I 

true prince may ( for recreation sake).\ Henry I V. i. 2 
for your best health and recreation. il/cAard ///. iii. I 

it is a recreation to be by Cymbeline, i, 7 

RECTIFIf— rectify our knowledge Tempest, v. 1 

as to rectify what is unsettled Henry Vlll. ii. 4 

I meant to rectify my conscience.... — ii. 4 

RECTOR of the place All's Well, iv. 3 

RECTORSHIP of judgment Coriolanus, ii. 3 

RECURE, we heartily solicit Richard III. iii. 7 

RED— the red plague rid you Tempest, i. 2 

he in the red face had it Merry Wives, i. 1 

red and white Nature's own Twelfth Night, i. 5 

two lips inditfereut red — 1.5 

to see thi ne eyes so red .... Measure for Measure, iv. 3 
like the red rose on triumphant . . Mid. /V'.'s Dr. iii. 1 

white and red (rep.) Love' sK. Lost, i. 2 

and therefore red, that would avoid — iv. 3 

my red dominical, my "olden letter.. — v. 2 
Marian's nose looks red and raw . . — v. 2 (song) 
than there is between red w'u\e. . Mer. of t^enice, iii. 1 
the red glow of scorn and proud .As you. Lilce it, iii. 4 

more lusty red than that — iii. 5 

betwixt the constant red — iii. 5 

gartered with a red and blue . Taming of Shrew, iii. 2 
such war of white and red within .... — iv. 5 
for the red blood reigns . . Winter's Tale, iv. 2 (song) 

and let's be red with mirth — iv. 3 

looked he or red, or pale Comedy of Errors, i v. 2 

making the green— one red Macbeth, ii. 2 

and white, red spirits, and grey .. — iv. 1 (song) 
eyes as red as new-enkindled fixe . . King John, iv. 2 

to make mine eyes look red 1 Henry I v. ii. 4 

I warrant you, is as red as any rosQ.2HenryIV. ii. 4 

with red wheat, Davy v. 1 

sometimes blue, and sometimes red. .Henryf. iii. 6 
tawny ground with your red blood .. — iii. 6 

pUick a red rose (rep.) 1 Henry II. ii. 4 

paint the white rose red (rep.) — ii. 4 



RED-the red rose and the white .... 1 Henry VI. ii. 4 REDRESS-lend redress. . liomeo ^Juliet, iv. h (song) 

red, master; red as blood 2HeHr!, VI. ii. 4 REDRESSED-it is not redressed ...Merry Wives, i. 1 

Beaufort 8 red sparkling eyes iii. 1 — :„iv ..u-n 1.. ._.-ii. j, _ , •> ... ."■ ! 

book in his pocket, with red letters in't — iv. 2 
that will malte 'em red again . 



tlie red rose and the wliite ZHenryVI. ii. 5 

as red as fire! iii. 2 

his red colour hath forsook Richard III. ii.' 1 

lips were four red roses on a stalk — iv. 3 



griefs shall be with speed redressed.2 Henry/ f. Iv. 2 
REDRESSES— word f6r these redresses — iv. 2 

not 'scape censure, nor the redresses sleep.. Lear, i. 4 
RED-TAILED bumblebee I speak of . . All's Well, iv. 5 
REDUCE into our former favour Henry V. v. 2 

all springs reduce their currents ..Richard III. ii. 2 

tliat would reduce these bloody days v. 4 



t e white rose and the red - v. 4 REECHY-in the reechy painting '..Much Ado, iii. 3 

the led wine first must rise HenryVlII.t. i , lockram 'bout lier reechy neck...... Conoiamw il. 1 

redmurraino thy jade s tricks! froiYus 4 Cress, ii. 1 1 let liim, for a pair of reechy kisses ... Ham(e(, iii. 4 

•n characters as red as Mars _ v. 2 REED-thenlikereeds, nothair Tempest, i.2 

' ' winter's drops from eaves of reeds — v. 1 

man and boy, with a reed voice. Mer.o/Teni'ce, iii. 4 
among the trembling reeds 1 Henry 1 r. i. 3 



backs red, and faces pale Coriolanus, i. 4 

now the red pestilence strike — iv. 1 

his eye red a» 'twould burn Rome — v. I 

waving our red weapons o'er our .. JuliusCmsar, iii. 1 
his eyes are red as fire with weeping — iii. 2 
as in thy red rays thou dost sink (n-p.) — v. 3 
cheeks look red as Titan's face . . Titus Andron. ii. 5 

wliite and red, you sliall see a rose Pericles, iv. 6 

to have a thousand with red burning Lear, iii. 6 

pale, or red? Nay, very pale Hamlet, i. 2 

looks raw and red after the Danish — iv. 3 

REDBREAST teacher I Henry/r. iii. 1 

love-song like a Robin redbreast. Tu-oGen.of Ver. ii. 1 

REDDER— turn to redder drops JuliusCvsnr, v. 1 

REDDEST— whose blood is reddest.A/er.o/;'e»n'ee,'ii. 1 
REDEEM-unless you do redeem it. TwelfthNight, iii. 2 

and foamy mouth did I redeem — v. I 

to redeem him, give up {rep.) Meas.forMeas. ii. 4 

redeem your brother from the angry — iii. 1 

it shall redeem you from your gyves iv. 2 

did redeem tlie virgin tribute . . iVer. of Venice, iii. 2 
so far, that the rarity redeems him . . All's Welt, i v. 3 
from him dear life redeems you.. Winter'sTale, v. 3 
wanting gilders to redeem their. . Comedy of Err. i. 1 

sent you money to redeem you — iv. 4 

could so redeem my son, as they King John, iii. 4 

broken wing, redeem from broking .. /i/c/iord //. ii. 1 

to redeem a traitor home? \ Henry IV, i. 3 

wlierein you may redeem your — i. 3 

so he, that doth redeem her thence .. i. 3 

I will redeem all this on Percy's head — iii. 2 
but my going, nothing can redeem it.2Henry/r. ii. 3 

weening to redeem, and have 1 Henry VI. ii. 5 

but redeem the passage of your age! — ii. 5 
from my Redeemer to redeem me . . Richard ///. ii. 1 
redeem my brothers both from death. Titus And. iii. 1 
who redeems nature from the general ..Lear, iv. 6 

a cliance that does redeem all sorrows — v. 3 

Romeo come to redeem me? Romeo i^ Juliet, iv. 3 

REDEEMED— have not redeemed . Winter's Tale, v. 1 
tliou liast redeemed thy lost opinion.! Henry/F. v. 4 

in fine, redeemed I was as I I Henry VI. i. 4 

day have you redeemed your lives. .2Hcmy VI. iv. 9 
whom he redeemed from prison.. Timon ofAlh. iii. 3 

five times redeemed from death Cymbeline, i. 6 

se.alsand symbols of redeemed sin Othello, ii. 3 

REDEEMER— from my Redeemer.. Ric/iard ///. ii. 1 

precious image of our dear Redeemer — ii. 1 

REDEEMING him, should die . . A/eas./ori»/eas. ii. 4 

redeeming time, when men think ... 1 Henry / F. i. 2 

and redeeming of himself .... Trnilus & Cressida, v. 6 

REDEEMST thyself Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

RE-DELIVER our authorities ..il/ea.!.>riV/»as. iv. 4 

I liave longed long to re-deliver Hamlet, iii. 1 

REDEMPTION-foul redemption Meas.for Meas. ii. 4 

you bid me seek redemption v. 1 

into everlasting redemption MuchAdo, \v. 2 

send him, mistress, redemption.. Comedy o/£rr. iv. 2 

damned without redemption ! Richard II. iii. 2 

year of our redemption four hundred . . Henry r. i. 2 
as his soul's redemption is by the ..ZHenryVI. ii, ] 

ICol.'] hope to have redemption Richard III. i. 4 

of my redemption thence, and portance. . Othello, i. 3 
RED-FACED; by the means whereof-.Henry r. iii. 2 

RED-HIPPED bumblebee Mid.N.'sDream.iv. 1 

RED-HOT with drinking Tempest, iv. 1 

though heat red-hot, approaching ..King John, iv. I 

were red-hot steel, to sear me to ..Richard III. iv. 1 

REDIME te captum quam qneas... Taming- ofSh. i. 1 

RED- LATTICE plirases, and your. A/erry (rities, ii. 2 

through a red-lattice, and I could ..iHenrylV. ii. 2 

RED- LOOKED anger be tlie Winter'sTale, ii. 2 

REDNESS-pretty redness in his lip ./Is you Li/re, iii. 5 
RED-NOSE innkeeper of Daintry ..\HenryIV. iv. 2 

REDOUBLED strokes upon the foe Macbeth, i. 2 

thy blows, doubly redoubled, fall . . Richard II. i.z 

on my head my shames redoubled.. IHenry/F. iii. 2 

REDOUBTED father, it is most meet.. Henry F. ii. 4 

to render tliem redoubted Merch.of Venice, iii. 2 

be mine, my most redoubted lord . . Richard II. iii. 3 
lord recent, and redoubted Burgundy .1 Henry Vl.ii.i 

Oxford, redoubted Pembroke Richardlll. iv. 5 

REDOUiyD unto your good 2 Henry VI. iv. 9 

REDRESS of injustice Measure for Measure, iv. 4 

or wring redress from you v. 1 

good night to your redress \. \ 

and, wliat I can, redress Macbeth, iv. 3 

redress, but tliat which ends all irep.) King John, iii. 4 

tilings past redress, are now Richard II. ii. 3 

means of succour and redress iii. 2 

I beseech you, 1 may have redress.. 2 Henry rr. ii. 1 

no need of any such redress jv. i 

I promised you redress of these same iv! 2 

but with honour to redress IHenryVI. ii. 5 

no way canst tliou turn thee forredress — iv. 2 

no hope to have redress ? v. 3 

not a man comes for redress of thee.3Henry VI. iii. I 

seek Iiow to redress their harms — v. 4 

use the wars as thy redress Timon of Athens, v. 5 

you would thus violently redress . . Coriolanus, iii. I 
be factious for redress of all these.. JuliusCcesar, i. 3 

speak, strike, redress! (rep.) ii, 1 

if the redress will follow ii. ) 

to prick us to redress? what otiier — ii! 1 

that Cffisai-, and his senate, must redress?— iii. 1 
writes to heaven for his redress.. TitnsAndron. iv. 4 
to have found a safe redress teor, i. 4 



I had as lief have a reed that ^n'ony* Cteo. ii, 

to tliee the reed is as the oak . Ci/mbeline, iv. 2 (song) 

RE-EDiriED. Is it upon record? .. llchard III. iii. \ 

which I have sumptuously re-edified.. ri7!«^nd. i.2 

REEK— as tlie reek of a lime-kiln.. Merry Wives,iii.Z 

saw sighs reek from you Love'sL. Lost. iv. 3 

under my oppression I did reek Henry VI II. ii. 4 

as reek 0' the rotten fens Coriolanus, iii. 3 

purple hands do reek and smoke .JuliusCcesar, iii. 1 

hath made you reek as a sacrifice Cymbeline, i. 3 

REEKING— to bathe in reeking wounds. A/ac6e(A, i. 2 
tlieir honours reeking up to heaven .. Henry V. iv. 3 
in your faces your reeking viUany.. Timon of Ath. iii. 6 

where he did run reeking o'er Coriolanus, ii. 2 

came there a reeking post, stewed Lear, ii. 4 

REEKY shanks, and yellow Rojneo 4- Juliet, iv. I 

REEL— make them reel before them. Henry r//i. iv. 1 
make my very house reel to-night.. Cono/onw, ii. I 

to reel the streets at noon Antony ^ Cleo. i. 4 

drink thou; increase tlie reels ii, 7 

like a drunkard reels from Romeo ^Juliet, ii! 3 

and the swaggering up-spring reels Ha)n(e(, i. 4 

REELING— Trinculo is reeling ripe Tempest, v. I 

is a reeling world, indeed, my lorA.Richard III. iii. 2 

depart reelin" with too much drink. . Cymbeline, v. 4 

RE-ENTORCE-let's re-enforce or flv _ v. 1 

RE-ENFORCEMENT3truckCoriol!'.ConVan«s,ii.2 

REFELLEDme, and how I replied. A/eas. /or A/eas. v.l 

REFER yourself to this advantage.... iii. 1 

I do refer me to the oracle Win'er's Tale, iii. 2 

I'll refer me to all things of sense Othello, i. 2 

REFERENCE to my state As you Like it,i. 3 

all tliat he is hath reference to your... All's Well, v. 3 

having full reference to one concent Henry r. i. 2 

make your full reference freely . . Antony <^ Cleo. v. 2 

due reference of place, and exhibition ..Othello, i. 3 

REFERRED me to the coming. .A/nc6e'A, i. 5 (letter) 

hath referred herself unto a poor Cymbeline, i 1 

REFINED— with a refined traveller./,oI•e'sL.Lo.«^i. 1 
to gild refined gold, to paint the Vily.KingJohn, iv. 2 
souls refined should sliowsoheinous.«ic/iord //.iv. 1 
REFLECT I not on thy baseness . . Winter's Tale, iv. 3 
reflect upon him accordingly .Cymbeline, i. 7 (letter) 
reflect on Rome, as Titan s rays .. TitusAndron. i 2 
REFLECTING gems, tliat wooed. . . . Richard III. i 4 

REFLECTION shipwrecking storms Macbeth, i. 2 

what he owes, but by reflection. Troilus t,- Cress, iii. 3 

sees not itself, but by reflection Julius Cwsar, i. 2 

so well as by reflection, I, your glass. . i. 2 

small reflection of her wit(rep.) Cymbeline, i. 3 

REFLEX— sun reflex his beams upon. I Henry VI. v. 4 
pale reflex of Cynthia's brow . . . Romeo 4- Juliet, iii. 5 

R EFORM some certain edicts \Henrylv.iv. z 

we hear you do reform yourselves ..iHenrylV. v. 5 

O, reform it altogether Hamlet, iii 2 

REFORMATION-your reformation.Loi.e'sI,.t. v. 2 
reformation, glittering o'er my fault.l //enry/r. i. 2 

never came reformation in a flood Henry v. i, \ 

is brave, and vows reformation 2 Henry VI. iv. 2 

reformation of our travelled gallants.Henry r///. i. 3 

which reformation must be sudden ... v => ' 

REFORMED— they are reformed. TwoGen.of Ver. v. 4 

hath reformed signiorLeonato MuchAdo, v. 1 

departed thy penitent reformed ..Winter'sTale, i. 2 

wliat you would have reformed King John, iv. 2 

not reformed, may prove pernicious. //enry ('///. v. 2 

reformed that indifferently with us Hamlet, iii. 2 

REFRACTORY- and refractory. TroiiHs * Cress, ii. 2 

REFRAIN— who could refrain Macbtlh, ii. 3 

ask me if I can refrain from love KingJohn, ii. 2 

scarce I can refrain the execution ..ZHenryVI. ii. 2 
refrain to-niglit; and that shall lend ..Ham(f(, iii. 4 
refrain from the excess of laughter. . . . Othello, iv. I 

REFRESH my labours Tetnpest, iii. 1 

to refresh the mind of man ..Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 
you weary tho.'ie that refresli us.. Wintir'sTale, iv. 3 
labour shall refresh itself with hope . . Henry V. ii. 2 

shall we refresh us, sir, upon your Pericles, v. 2 

REFRESH ED, new-added, and . . Julius Cwsar, iv. 3 

REFRESHING showers Tempest, iv. 1 

REFT me so much of friends Much Ado, iv. I 

and would have reft the fishers .. Comedy or £rr. i. 1 
for his case was like, reft of his brother — 1. 1 

of sails and tackling reft Richard III. iv. 4 

washy the rough seas reft of ships .... Pericles, ii. 3 

REFT'ST me of my lands Cymbeline, iii. 3 

REFUGE— I'll for refuge straiglit. . . . Richard II. ii. 2 

in the stocks, refuge their shame — v. h 

o'er the walls for refuge in the field .1 Henry VI. ii. 2 
imagine what would be her refuge . . — v. 4 

must I be his last refuge? Timon of Athens, iii! 3 

their latest refuge was to send him .Coriolanus, v. 3 
REFUSAL-in a rage with their refusal — ii. 3 

REFUSE it not, it hath no TwelfthNight, iii. 4 

as to refuse so rare a gentleman Much .4do, iii. l 

refuse me, hate me, torture me iv. 1 

if I refuse to wed Demetrius Mid. N.'sDream, i. I 

nor refuse whom I dislike ..Merchant of Venice, i. 2 
cannot choose one, nor refuse none?. . — i. 2 
refuse to perform your father's will (rep.)— j. z 
did refuse three thousand ducats of me — v.l 

if you do refuse to marry me As you Like II, v. i 

that you'll marry her, if slie refuse nie — v. 4 
if thou refuse, and wilt encounter. Winter's Tale, ii. 3 



REF 



REFUSE— own doors refuse . . Comedy of Errors, iii. 1 
that would refuse so fair an offered.. — iii. 2 

being none of iiis, refuse him Kh)ffJohn,\. 1 

lieaveii's offer we refuse Hichard lU iii. 2 

that yon liad ratlier refuse the — iv. I 

for my suretj; will refuse the boys ..iHemijyi. v. I 

refuse not, miglity lord, tliis liichard i//. iii. 7 

if you refuse it, as \\\ love and zeal.. — iii. 7 
refuse you for my judge (rep.) .... Henry VIIl, ii. 4 

I do refuse it; and stand upon Coriolanus, i. 9 

if you refuse your aid in this — v. 1 

which tliey did refuse, and cannot now — v. 3 
crown, which he did thrice reiuie.JidiusCwsar, iii. 2 

love this fellow, and refuse me! Cymbeline, i. 3 

refuse to drink my dear sons' .. Titits Andron, iii. 1 

whicli if 3'on sliall refuse, when I Pfricles, ii. I 

deny thy fatlier, and refuse .... Komeo^Jiiliel, ii. 2 
he niifflit not butrefuseyou 0//ie/(o, iii. 1 

REFUSED it in tlie open comt.Merch. or I'mice, iv. 1 
wliich I would iiave refused . . TwoGen. of Ver. i v. I 

in tliisvery manner refused MuchAdo, iv. 2 

one man refused.sliould, of another .Mid. N.Dr.W. 3 
but l)e refused, let the white death. . . . AlVsWell, ii. 3 
vaulting sea refused to drown me ..2HenryVI. iii. 2 
since you refused tire Grecians'. Troilus^Creis. iv. 5 
1 that now refused most princely. . . . Coriolamis, i. 9 

and still as he reftised it.tlie Julius Ccesar, i. 2 

refused the crown (re;i.) — i. 2 

can make her be refused Pericles, iv. 3 

REFUSING lier grand 'bests Tempest, i. 2 

or else, refusing me, to wed this . . As you Like it, v. 4 
sliall fall you for refusing him . . Aiilony^Cleo. iii. 7 

REGAL— I'll ascend the regal throne.fiicAard//. iv. 1 
have shook off tlie regal tliouglits .... — iv. 1 

still enjoy thy regal dignity 1 Henry I'l. v. 4 

point-blank of our jurisdiction regal.2 Henry ;';. iv. 7 

and this the regal seat ZHenry VI. i. 1 

usurps tlie regal title — iii. 3 

impale him witli the regal crown? .. — iii. 3 
see him seated in the regal throne.... — iv. 3 
shaken Edward from the regal seat . . — i v. 6 

in time, to bless a regal throne — i v. 6 

state for Henry's regal crown — iv. 

wore their crownets regal. . Troilus Sj Cressida, fprol, 

BEGAN, wife to Cornwall? Lear, i. 

and Regan, his duchess, will be herewith — ii. 

i' the haste, and Regan with him — ii. 

nor I, assure thee, Regan — ii. 

Regan. I think you are — ii. 

beloved Regan, "thy sister's naught (rep.) — ii. 

never, Regan (rep.) — ii. 

Regan, I have good hope (rep.) — ii. 

I can stay with Regan, I, and my — . ii. 

with five and twenty, Regan? — ii. 

my Regan counsels well — ii. 

O Regan, Goneril! your old kind father.. — iii. 
Regan, I bleed apace — iii. 

REGARD-have I eyed with best regard. Tempest, iii. 
and regard of such a father. '/'wo Gen. of Ferona, ii. 

regard tliy danger, and along — iii. 

after a demure travel of regard .. Twelfth Night, ii. 
with an austere regard of con tronl .. — ii. 
you throw a strange regard upon me — v. 
vail your regard upon a wronged. /i/eas. /or Mcas. v. 
your niece regards me with an eye . . MuchAdo, v. 

tire duello he regards not '. ..Love's L. Lost, i. 

is very dear in my vegari .... Merchant of Venice, i. 
showed a tender fatherly regard. . Taming ofSh. ii. 
no attendance? no regard? no duty?.. — iv, i 
better by my regard, but killed. . . . Winter's Tale, i. 2 
remedy, should be without regSiTd .... Macbeth, iii. 2 

feed, and regard him not — iii. 4 

in regard of me, he shortens Richard H.i.i 

doth mutiny with wit's regard — ii. 1 

in the streets, and no man regards it .1 Henry IV. i. 2 
sick in tlie world's regard, wretclied — iv. 3 

so little regard in these costermonger.2Henry/r. i. 2 

full of grace, and fair regard Henry V.\. \ 

and in regard of causes now in hand — i. i 
slight regard, contempt and any thing — ii. 4 

that regards nor God nor king \ Henry VI. i. 3 

ere we go, regard tliis dying prince .. — iii. 2 
a thing of no regard. Icing Henry's .. — iv. 1 

so your regard sliould be — iv. 5 

in regard king Henry gives — v. 4 

tills way, Henry, and regard them not. SHenrt/ VI. \. 1 
wlien did he regard the stamp .... Henry Flit. iii. 2 
nay, but regard him well .... Troilus Sf Cressida, ii . I 
lay negligent and loose regard upon him — iii. 3 
most abject in regard, and dear in .. — iii. 3 
bites his lip with a politic regard .... — iii. 3 

not to give regard to you Timon of Athens, i. 2 

regard me as I do not flatter Coriolanus, i ii. 1 

to awaken his regard for his — v. 1 

reasons are so full of good regard. /li/m^Ctesar, iii. 1 

full of regard, and honour — iv. 2 

regard 'Titinius, and tell me what.... — v. 3 

is still that I regard it not Cymbeline, ii. 3 

as he regards his aged father's life. TilusAndron. v. 2 
[Kn(.] when it is mingled with regards .... Lear, i. I 

in the most exact regard support — i. 4 

such regards of safety, and allowance ..Hamlet, u. 2 
with this regard, their currents turn awry — iii. 1 
and that, in my regard, of the unworthiest — iv. 7 
in which regard thougii I do hate him ..Othello, i. ] 
and the aerial blue, an indistinct regard — ii. 1 

REGARDED in her snnbright-.rwoGoi. q/Ter. iii. 1 
but I regarded him not; and yet he..life»ir;/7r. i. 2 
heard, not regarded; seen, but with — iii. 2 

small curs are not regarded IHenryVl. iii, 1 

is not regarded in handycraftsmcn .. — iv. 2 

let him be regarded as the most Coriolanus, v. 5 

see how I regarded Caius Cusa'iws,. J uH us C<esar, v. 3 

REGARDFULLY? ArH\\o\x..ri,non of Athens, iv. 3 

REGARDING that she is my .. TwoGen. of Ver. iii. 1 

REGENERATE— in me regenerate ..Richard II. i. 3 

REGENT— regent of love-rhymes. LolIe'«L.Los^ iii. 1 

wert thou regent of the world Richard II. \\. I 

the most glorious regent of this land — ii. 3 
regent I am of France 1 Henry VI. i. I 



[ G31 ] 

REGENT, and redoubted Burgundy .\HenryVI. ii. I 

to he our regent in these parts — iv. 1 

the regent hath with Talliot — iv. 6 

the regent conquers, and the Frenchmen — v. 3 

lord regent, I do greet your — v. 4 

from being regent in the parts iHenryVI. i. 1 

when thou wert regent for our — i. I 

let York he regent, I will yield to him — i. 3 
to be your regent in the realm of France — i. 3 

regent o'er the French (rep.) _ i. 3 

Somerset be sent as regent thither .. — iii. 1 
had been the regent there (?ep.) .... — iii. 1 

here is the regent, sir, of Mitylene Pericles, v. 1 

the regent made in Mitylene.... — v. 2 (Gower) 

REGENTSHIP. If Somerset 2HenryVI.i.3 

REGIA— Priami regia celsa senis. Taming of Sh. iii. I 

regia, bearing my port (rep.) — iii.) 

REGIMENT— find in the regiment.. ../i«'ji»re«, ii. 1 
I know you are the Muskos' regiment — iv. 1 
appointments, all our regiments .... King John, ii. 1 

Pembroke keeps his regiment Richard III. v. 3 

his regiment lies half a mile at least — v. 3 
to Stanley's regiment; bid him bring — v. 3 
conduct him to his regiment; I'll strive — v. 3 

REGINA— regina serenissima Henry VIIl. iii. I 

REGION— 'twixt which regions there.. Tempest, ii. 1 

she is a region in Guiana Merry Wives, i. 3 

he is of too high a region — iii. 2 

regions of thick-ribbed ice Meas.forMeas. iii. I 

every region near seemed all one.ii//d. N.'s Dr. iv. 1 

to other regions! France is All'sWell,n.-i 

and a region loved as he loves. . . . Winter's Tale, i. 2 

from every region, apes of 2 Henry IK iv. 4 

tlie regions of Artois, Walloon 1 Henry VI. ii. I 

out of the powerful regions under .... — v. 3 
to tremble tlie region of my breast .Henry VIII. ii. 4 
all the regions do smilingly revolt.. Coriotonus, iv. 6 
keep the hills and upper regions ..JuUusCeesar, v. 1 
through the regions of tlie earth .... Cymbeline, i. 1 

you petty spirits of region low — v. 4 

when you come to Pluto's region . . Titus And. iv. 3 
yravished the regions round . . Pericles, iii. (Gower) 
bourn to bourn, region to region — iv. 4 (Gower) 

invade the region of my heart Lear, i. 1 

the airy region stream bo briglit.Komeo ^Juliet, ii. 2 

thunder doth rend the region Hamlet, ii. 2 

should have fatted all the region kites .. — ii. 2 
that dwel 1 in every region of his face . . Othello, iv. I 

REGISTER of yoiur own Merry Wives, ii. 2 

me in register a master-leaver... 4n(on!/ fyCleo. iv. 9 
REGISTERED upon our brazen ..Love's L.Lost, i. 1 
your pains are registered where every.. il/af6e(/i, i. 3 
it were not registered; methinks. . Richard III. iii. 1 
those many registered in promise Troilus fy Cress, iii. 3 
REGREET-sensible regreets..l/erc/ian(o/reH)ce, ii. 9 
this seizure, and this kind regreet?../Cmg'JoA;i, iii. 1 

so I regreet the daintiest last Richard II. i. 3 

shall not regreet our fair dominions .. — i. 3 
nor never write, regreet, nor reconcile — i. 3 
REGRESS— have egress and regress. iVerru (('/ties, ii. 1 
REGUERDON of that duty done ..\ Henry VI. iii. 1 
REGUEBDONED with so much as . . — iii. 4 
REGULAR— of regular justice.. Timoii of J/Aens, v. 5 

REHEARSAL of my morning's iHenryVl. i. 2 

convenient place for our rehearsal. il/id.iV.'sOr. iii. 1 
REHEARSE that once more. Two Gen.of Verona, iii.l 

torments me to rehearse — iv. 1 

there will we rehearse {rep.') . . Mid. N.'s Dream, i. 2 
every mother's son, and rehearse your — iii. 1 
were met together to rehearse a play — iii. 2 

first, rehearse this song by rote — v. 2 

will have matter to rehearse Winter's Tale, v. 2 

may move thee pardon to rehearse. . Richard II. v. 3 
veibatim to rehearse the method . . 1 Henry VI. iii.l 
REHEARSED, I must confess. .M!d.M'sDrea?n, v. 1 
danger formerly by me rehearsed. JV/cr. of Venice, iv. 1 
defects I have before rehearsed . . Taming ofSh. i. 2 
REIGN— what folly reigns in us! Tuo Gen. of Ver. i. 2 
but a fever she reigns in my .... Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 

fortune reigns in gifts of As you Lilie tt, i. 2 

have I politicly begun my leJgn.Taming of Sh. iv. 1 

happy star, reign now ! Winter's Tale, L 2 

there's some ill planet reigns — ii. 1 

red blood reigns in the winter's pale — iv, 2(song) 

conduit of many king's reigns — v. 2 

in his royalty of nature reigus that ..Macbeth, iii. 1 

ever reign in this kingdom? — iv. 1 

than such a one to reign — iv. 3 

where we do reign, we will alone ..King John, iii. 1 

to check his reign, but they — iii. 4 

and civil tumult reigns between — iv. 2 

one England brook a double reign..! Henry Af". v. 4 

Cain reign in all bosoms 2HcnryIV. i. ! 

for all my reign hath been — iv. 4 

year o* the last king's reign was Henry V. i. 1 

thought reigns solely in the breast — ii. (chorus) 
the time Edward the third did reign.! Henry ;'/. i.2 
Monmouth fli'st began to reign Oep.) — ii. .'5 

during whose reign, the Pereies — ii. 5 

should reign among professors of one . — v.! 

in tlie reign of Bolingbroke 2 Henry VI. ii. 2 

issue fails, he should not reign — ii. 2 

in time to come, I hope to reign .... — iv. 2 
I am content he shall reign; but I'll — iv. 2 

wine this first year of our reign — iv. 6 

England curse my wretched reign .. — iv. 9 
uncurable discomfit reigns in the .. .. — v. 2 

and reign as king (rep.) SHenryVI.i. 1 

next heir should succeed and reign.. i. ! 

slialt reign in quiet while thon livest — i. 1 
to put me down, and reign tliyself . . — i. 1 

as thou slialt reign but liy their — i. 1 

that he should quietly reign — i.2 

a thousand oaths, to reign one year — i. 2 

what is pomp, rule, reigUj but — v. 2 

Edward stil 1 lives, and reigns Richard III. i. ! 

good grace his son shall reign — ii. 3 

no doubt, us happy by his reign .... — iii. 7 

son shall never reign our king — iii. 7 

that reigns in galled eyes of weeping — iv. 4 



REL 



REIGN— now reign in's nose Henry Fill. v. 3 

Tinion hath done his reign Timon ofAtheni, v. 2 

you may reign in them now I Cymbeline, v. 5 

eliow j'oii those in troubles reign . PeriWej, ii, (Gow.) 

for liis peaceable reign, and good — ii. i 

to rule, and how to reign, we thus submit ii. 4 

son and daughter shall in Tyrus reign — v. 3 
there golden sleep doth reign . . Homeo f^ Juliet, ii. 3 
where the infectious pestilence did reign — v. 2 
now reigns here a very, very— peacock. HamW, iii. 2 

REIGNED? r hardly yet have Richard II. iv. 1 

death, reigned as king 2HenryFI.\i. 2 

of tlie next sou should have reigned — ii. 2 

a springhalt reigned among them ..HenryFIII. i. 3 

that there had reigned by many — ii. 4 

our Jovial star reigned at his birth . . Cymbeline, v. 4 
(till ]>iicina reigned) nature this io^ry .Pericles, i. I 
REIGNIER, duke of Anjou, doth .. ..\HenryFl.\. 1 
to try her skill, Reignier stand thou as — i. 2 

Reignier is't thou that think'st to .. — i.2 

Alengon, Reignier, compass him .... iv. 4 

see, Reignier, see, thy daughter — v. 3 

thanks, Reignier, happy for so — v. 3 

Reignier of France, I give thee — v. 3 

farewell, Reiguier! set this diamond — v. 3 

but Reignier, king of Naples v. 4 

while Reignier sooner will receive .. — v. 5 

daughter unto Reignier king ..iHenryVI. i. 1 (art.) 

the poor king Reignier whose large.. — i. 1 

Reignier, her father, to the king of . .3Henry VI. v. 7 

REIGNING-atthis hour reigning tliere.rejnpcs/, iii. 3 

freshest things now reigning. «'m(er'sra/e,i v. (cho.) 

REIGNOLD[Co;.-Reginald], lord....i?ic/.ord//. ii. 1 

REIN— dalliance too much the rein . . Tempest, iv. 1 

for pills to cool the reins Merry Wives, iii. 5 

bear you easily, and reins well ..Twelllh Night, iii. 4 
give my sensual race the rein . . Meas. forMeas. ii. 4 
rein thy tongue. I must Crep.') . . Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

when she will take the rein Winter'tTale, ii. 3 

giving reins and spurs to my free Richard II. i. \ 

what rein can hold licentious Henry V. iii. 3 

horse bears his commanding rein . . Richard III. ii. 2 
bears his head in such a rein . . Troilus 4- Cressida, i. 3 

work, rein them from ruth — v. 3 

give your disposition the reins Coriolanus, ii. 1 

or the hard rein which both of them Lear, iii.l 

REINED-he cannot be reined again .Coriolanus, iii. 3 
REINFORCED their scattered men . . Henry V. iv. 6 
REINFORCEMENT, or we perish. Troil. ^ Cress, v. ;, 
REITERATE, were sin as deep as.Winter'sTule,\. 2 
REJECT-thia you will reject her.. Love's L.Lost, v. 2 
REJOICE tohear the solemn curfew. ...renipes(,v. 1 

rejoice bej'ond a common joy ....;. — v. 1 
rejoice in the boy's correction.. TwoGen. of Ver.in. 1 
my husband will not rejoice so. . . . Merry Wives, v. 3 
professed to make him rejoice ..Meas.forMeas. iii. 2 
and all Europa shall rejoice at thee.. J»/ucA Ado, v. 4 
as to rejoice at friends but newly.. Loi'e'sL.£os(, v. 2 
of my estate, to rejoice in yours . . Asyou Lilie it, i. 2 

it rejoices me, that I hope I shall All's Well, iv. 5 

rejoice, the Ibrmer queen is well.. Winter'sTale, v. 1 
brother there, rejoice with him . . Comedy of Err. v. 1 
rejoice, you men of Anglers, ring ....KingJohn, ii. 2 

rejoice now at this happy news 2HenryIV. iv. 4 

more rejoice at the discovery of Henry r. ii. 2 

rejoice therefore. Certainly (;ep.) .. — iii. 6 
rabble, that rejoice to see my tears.. 2 Henry r/.ii. 4 
they last, and we rejoice in tliem?.B(c/iard //;. iv. 2 

not one that rejoices in 7'«mon of Athens, v. 2 

freelier rejoice in that absence Coriolanus, i. 3 

you'll rejoice that he is thus cut off . . — v. 5 
and to rejoice in his triumph (rep. ).JuliusCcesar. i. 1 
ashe was fortunate, I rejoice at it.... — iii. 2 
rejoice in splendour of mine own- Romeo ^Juliet, i. 2 
but one thing to rejoice and solace in — iv. 5 

REJOICED deliverance more Cymbeline, v. .'i 

REJOICETH my intellect: true wit .Love'sL.L. v. I 

REJOICING at nothing can be more.. Tempest, iii. 1 

rejoicing to see another merry. .il/eas. for Meas. iii. 2 

our company piece the rejoicing? . Winter'sTale, v. 2 

lose the dues of rejoicing Macbeth, i. 5 (letter) 

with rejoicing fires bright Cymbeline, iii. 1 

REJOICINGLY, and I'll be merry .. - iii..'i 
REJOINDUBE, forcibly prevents. TroWns,?- Cre.w. iv.4 

REJOURN the controversy of Coriolanus, i\. 1 

RELAPSE of mortality Hmry r. i v. 3 

looked to, for her relapse is mortal .... Pericles, iii. 2 

RELATE your wrongs: in what?.. i!/eas./or Mens. v. 1 

shall relate, in high-born words . . Love'sL. Lost, i. I 

to relate the manner, were, on the. . . . Macbeth, iv. 3 

their unsure hopes relate — v. 4 

special pardon, dare not relate iHenryVI. iv. I 

of his master he shall again relate . . Hemy Vlll.i. 2 

with bold spirit relate what you — i.2 

relates in purpose only to Achilles. Troi;. ^ Crejj. i. 3 

1 will relate; action may Pericles, iii. (Gower I 

shall these unlucky deeds relate Othello, v. 2 

this heavy act with heavy heart relate.... — v. 2 

RELATING tales of others' griefs Pericles, i. 4 

RELATION for a breakfast Tempest, v. 1 

hath full relation to the penalty. Mer. of Venice, iv. ! 
were you pret-ent at this re\at\on?winier'sTale, v. 2 
when at the relation of the queen's death — v. 2 
troubleyour joys with like relation .. — v. 3 
augurs, and understood relations .. ..Macbeth, iii. 4 
O relation, too nice, and yet too true! — iv. 3 
with whom relation durst never. Troilus i- Cress, iii. 3 
might from relation likewise reap . . Cymbeline, ii. 4 

my senses credit thy relation I'ericles, v. I 

RELATIVE— more relative than this .. Hamlet, ii. 2 
RELEASE— budge, till your release.. .. Tempest, v. I 

fo, release them Ariel — y. 1 
ut release nie from my bands .... — (epilogue) 

release my brother Measure/or Measure, v. 1 

her charmed eye release from. Mid. N.'s Dream, iii. 2 

but first I will release the fairy queen — iv. I 

breath release all duteous oatlis. . . . Richard II. iv. 1 

RELEASED him, Isabel .. Measure for Measure, iv. 3 

got'st thou to be released? \ Henry V I. i.4 

be released and delivered ..2Henryry. i. 1 rarticles) 



REL 



[ 622 ] 

RELISH— but we shall relish of it Hamlel, iii. 

that haa no relish of salvation in't.. — iii. 

you may relish liim more in the soldier. 0//ie//o, ii. 
RELISU'ED— not have relislied .... H'mter's Tale, v. 

that never relished of a base descent . . Pericles, ii. 
RE-LIVE— this dead queen re-lives?..,. — v. 
RELUME— that can thy light relume. . . . Othello, v. 
RELY upon it till my lale be heard.Mea. for Mea. v. 

Calient, on thee still rely All'sWell, ii. 
ade me rely on him, as on Rklmrd III. ii. 

he dotli rely on none Troilus if CressiUa, i i. 

them from, if tl\ereon you rely ..Aniony^Cleo. v. 
RELYING on your lordship's . . Two Gen. of Ver. i. 
REMAIN a dozen years Tempest, i. 

if you remain upon this island — i. 

remain thou still in darkness.... Twelf/li Ni^'ht, iv. 

then no more remains, but that.. Meas.forMeas, i. 

being gone, comfort should remain ..MuchAdo, i. 

and but one visor remains — ii. 

thou slialt remain here whether ..MidtNJ's Dr. iii. 

for a while I will remain — iii. 

it is home returned, there to remain — iii. 

while here they do remain. I wonder — v. 

there remains unpaid a hundred.. Loue'sL. tos(,ii. 

nothing remains, but that I kii^dle. As youLike it, i. 

where remains he? how parted he ,. — iii. 

and there remains some scar of it. . . . — iii. 

remain tliere but an hour, nor spea'k. AW siVell, iv. 

let his nobility remain in his — iv. 

by his autliority he remains here .... — iv. 

to remain with me till they meet — iv. 

nouiiht remains but so; redime te- Taming ofS/i. i. 

and I remain a pinched thing. . . . Winter's Tale, ii. 

and remain, as he says, your pawn .. — iv. 

our poor malice remains in danger ..Macbeth, iii. 

since my here-remain in England .. — iv. 

what else remains to do, according .. — v. 

Norfolk, for thee remains a heavier. . Richard II. i. 

from where you do remain, let paper — i. 

I do remain as neutre; so fare you .. — ii. 

of sunshine days! What more remains? — iv. 

where now remains a sweet re version. IHeniyZr.iv. 

then this remains; that we divide .. — v. 

there remain, and fortify it strongly. . Henry V. iii. 

for 3'ou shall remain with us — iii. 

for me nothing remains, but long. . . . 1 Henry VI. i. 

but there remains a scruple in — v. 

and there it doth remain the saddest.3 Henry VI. ii. 

in tills country, where we now remain — iii. 

what now remains (jep. iv. 7) — iv. 

peremptory Warwick now remains.. — iv. 

and thou shalt still remain the duke — v. 

to Ki mbolton, where slie remains . . Henry VIII. iv. 

there to reiuain, till the king's further — v. 

made ye one, lords, one remain — v. 

what remains will hardly stop. Timon of Athens, ii. 

I hope, it remains not unkindly .... — iii. 

and remain a beast with the beasts? — iv. 

yet remain assured that he's — v. 

it did remain i' the midst o' the body. Corio/a7ius, i. 

fetch him off, or make remain alike — i. 

it remains, as tlie main point of .... — ii. 

it then remains, that yon do speak . . — ii. 

remains, that, in the official marks.. — ii. 

should still malignantly remain fast foe — ii. 

tliat shall remain a poison (rep.) .... — iii. 

you so remain. And so are like to do — iii. 

here remain with your uncertainty ! , . — iii. 

while I remain above the ground .... — iv. 

only that name remains — iv. 

and his name remains to the ensuing — v. 

the people will remain uncertain — v. 

constant do remain to keep him so.JuliusCcesar, iii. 

poor remains of friends, rest ou this.. — v. 

heart remains in use with you Antony SrCleo. i. 

hence fleeting, here remain with thee — i. 

cannot be, we shall remain in friendship — ii. 

remain in't, as thou may'st — ii. 

that we remain your friend — v. 

Dolabella, I shall remain your debtor — v. 

remain, remain thou here while Cyrribeline, i. 

mine honour, he will remain so — i. 

if slic remain unseduced — i. 

let her remain; but I'll never give o'er — ii. 

bold, her honour will remain hers .. — ii. 

all the remain is, welcome — iii. 

that remains loyal to his vow. ... — iii. 2(Iettei 

are not well; remain here in the cave — iv. 

I nothing know where she remains .. — iv. 

behold the poor remains TilusAndronicus, i. 

shall this hair of mine remain Pericles, iii. 

if she remain, whom they have ravished — iv. 

remain this ample third of our fair Lear, i. 

and let me still remain the true blank .. — i. 

not in this land shall he remain uncaught — ii. 

if both remain alive — v. 

tlie jest may remain, after Romeo ^- Julie!, ii. 

tliou shalt remain full two and forty — iv. 

dost remain [Co/. Kti^-by moans] .... — v. 

bend you to remain here in the cheer ..Hamlet, i. 

and now remains, that we find out — ii. 

remains, and the remainder thus — ii. 

words fly up, my thoughts remain below — iii. 

bad begins, and worse remains behind .. — iii. 

of myself, and what remains is bestial . . Othello, ii. 

if Cassio do remain, he hath a daily — v. 

to you, lord governor, remains the censure — v. 
REMAINDER mourning over them ..Tempest, v. 

as dry as the remainder biscuit ..As you Like it, ii. 

repent out the remainder of nature ..AWsWell, iv. 

cut the entail from all remainders .. — iv. 

upon remainder of a dear account . . Richard II. i. 

you see the poor remainder Henry VIII. v. 

the remainder viands we do not . rro/iws ,<r Cress, ii. 

slender ort of his remainder .. Timonof Athens, W. 

the good remainders of the court! Cymbelirie, i. 

poor reniainder of Andronici will. TitusAndron. v. 

and the remainder, tliat shall still depend, tear, i. 

itremains, and the remainder thus ....Hamlel, ii. 
REMAINED until this time . . Comedy of Errors, iv. 



REM 



RELEASED from giving aid 3 We.iry VI. iii. 3 

lELENT; what wouldst Merry Wives, ii. 2 

may be, he will relent {.rep.) .... Meas.fur.Meas. ii. 2 
is washed with them, but relents not — iii. 1 

relent, sweet Hermia Mid. N.'s Dream, \. 1 

shake the head, relent, and sigh .Mer. of Venice, iii. 3 

tears, and will not once relent? 1 Henry r/. iii. 1 

>ny lord of Wincliester. relent — iii. 1 

or nature makes mc suddenly relent — iii. 3 
oould it not enforce them to relent.. 2 He>iry;'/. iv. 4 
and therefore yet relent, and save my life — iv. 7 
will ye relent, and yield to mercy (.rep.) — iv. 8 
relent, and save your souls (rep.) ..Richard III. i. 4 
fierce Andronicus woiUd not relent Titus Andron. ii 3 
and not relent, or not compassion him? — iv. 1 

RELENTING passengers 2HcnryVl. iii. 1 

refuting tool, and shallow Richard lll.;iv. 4 

RELIANCES on his fraeted dates., rimon nfAtii. u. . 

RELIC— must sanctify his relics AlCslVcll, i. 1 

we do bury tile incensing relics of it — y. .1 
stainsLrelics, and cognizance JulinsCwsar, ii. 2 

liELIEF- 1 will give liim some relief .. rempes(,ii. 2 
agentleraan you send relief. iUerc/t«n( or Te/u'ce, iii. 4 
wlierever sorrow is, relief would. /Is i/ou Like it, iii. 5 
in the relief of this oppressed child.. Ki'/ig' John, ii. 1 
and to relief of lazars, and weak age . . Henry V.i. 1 

awav, for your relief! and we iHenryVI. v. 2 

if France can yield relief SHenryVI. iii. 3 

and my relief must not be tossed. . Timon ofAlli. ii. 1 
neither want my means for thy relief Cym^e/Z/ie, iii. 5 
relief among Rome's enemies. Titus Andronicus, v. 3 

for this relief much thanks Hamlet, i. 1 

and my relief must be— to loathe her , . Othello, iii. 3 

RELIEVE— stooping to relieve him.... Tempest, ii. 1 

a doit to relieve a lame beggar — ii. 2 

it did relieve my passion much.. 7'ife!/7A Kight, ii. 4 
were more able to relieve her ....As you Like it, ii, 4 

by this token I would relieve her All's Well, v. 3 

helpless patience wouldst relieve. Comerfy of Err. ii.l 

tears, that might relieve you ! King John, v. 7 

witli purpose to relieve and follow . . 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

ere thou relieve the beggar Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

surfeits on, would relieve us Coriolanus, i. I 

and did relieve me, to see this Cymbcline, v. b 

if any one relieves orpitieshim.. Titus ^Indron. v. 3 

little comfort to relieve them Pericles, i. 2 

to relieve them of their heavy load .... — i. 4 
such kindness must relieve me. . — v. 2 (Gower) 
seek him, and privily relieve him Lear, iii. 3 

RELIEVED by prayer Tempest, (epilogue) 

relieved him with such sanctity.. 7'«'e///AiV/g'/i/, iii. 4 

they relieved us liumancly Coriolanus, i. 1 

U' we be not relieved within ....Antony <$■ Cleo. iv. 9 
who are in this relieved, but not .... — v. 2 
where they should be relieved ....CymheUne,\\i. 6 
the common body, by you relieved ..Pericles, iii. 3 
neighboured, pitied, and relieved, as thon. Le«>-, i. 1 
the Icing my old master must be relieved — iii. 3 
who hath relieved you? Bernardo hath .Hamlel, i. 1 
by desperate appliance are relieved — iv. 3 

RELIEVING of the sentinels \ Henry VI. ii. I 

RELIGION— or in any religion . . Mens. forMeas. i. 2 
it is religion, to be thus forsworn . Love' sL. Lost, iv. 3 
in religion, what damned error .i\/er. of Venice, iii. 2 
with no less religion, than if thou. /Is you Like it, iv. 1 

their hearts are severed in religion All's Well, i. 3 

it is religion, that doth make (.rep.).. King John, iii. 1 

turns insurrection to religion 2 Henry IV, i. 1 

name not religion, for thou lovest. . . . 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

seeks to overthrow religion — i. 3 

religion groans at it Timonof Athens, iii. 2 

religion to the gods, peace, justice.... — iv. 1 

willknit and break religions — iv. 3 

my love makes religion to obey . . Antony fSf Cleo. v. 2 

you have some religion in you Cymbeline, i. 5 

the devout religion of mine eye . . Romeo ^Juliet, i. 2 
and sweet religion makes a rhapsody.. Hoin/e(. iii. 4 

RELIGIOUS uncle of mine As youLike JMii. 2 

meeting with an old religious man .. — v. 4 

hath put on a religious life — v. 4 

devout coward, religious in it TwelfthKight, iii. 4 

in some reclusive and religious life. . Much Ado, iv. i 
Indian-like, religions in mine error ..All'sWell, i. 3 

thy love's to me religious — ii. 3 

religious strength of sacred vows. . . . King John, iii. I 
cloister thee in some religious house. /JiVAard II- v. 1 

seem they religious? Henry V. ii. 2 

God, or religious churchmen, may . . 1 Henry VI. i. 1 
my lord should be religious, and know — iii. I 
when holy and devout religious men — iii. 7 
thy religious truth, and modesty . . Henry VIII, iv. 2 

I know you wise, religious — v. 1 

only good and wise, but most reliiiions — v. 2 
religious canons, civil laws are. . Timon ofAth. iv. 3 
for I know thou art religious. . TilusAndronicus, v. I 
most holv and religious fear it is Hamlet, iii. 3 

RELIGIOUSLY; and, as a certain. Love's L. Lost, iv. 2 

kiss not more reli.^iously Asyou Like it, iii. 4 

oppressed child, religiously provokes. A'ing'./oftn, ii. 1 

in nis name, religiously demand — iii. I 

our souls religiously confirm thy words — iv. 3 

and justly and religiously unfold HenryV. i. 2 

religiously thev ask a sacr'i&CQ. TilusAndronicus, i. 2 

RELlNQlilSlIED of the artists All's Well, u. 3 

HELIQUES of this town? Twelfth Nighl, iii. 3 

lilsLICiUIT- terras A3tra:areliquit..r;<as/Irirf. iv, 3 

liELISH- that relish all as sharply Tempest, v. 1 

to relish a love-song Tivo Gen. nfVerona, ii. 1 

what relish is in this? Twelfth Night, iv. 1 

I do not relish well their loud. . . . Meas.forMeas. i. 1 
relish it with a good ohsevvancc. As you Like it, \\\. 2 

or will not, relish as truth Winter' sTale, ii. 1 

I have no relish of them Macbeth, iv. 3 

some relish of the saltness of time....2Hem-i/7f. i. 2 

be of the same relish as ours are Henry V.'w. 1 

now I begin to relish thy advice. Troilus 1/ Cress, i. 3 

the imaginary relish is so sweet « ^ iii. 2 

will not be grafted to your relish ..Coriqtanua.u. 1 

here contained relish of love Cymbeline, iii. 2 

till our oldness cannot relish them. Lear, i. 2 (letter) 



REMAINED unscorched JutiusCarsar, i. 3 

REMAINETII none, but mad-brained.l Henry ri.i.2 
remaineth naught, but to inter .. Ti us Andron. i 2 

REM.'i.INING in the coffer Meas..for.M:is. i.3 

spark of life be yet remaining ZHenry VI. v. 6 

nothing remaining? Alack .... Timon of Athens, iv. 2 

remaining now in Gallia? Cymbeline, iii. 7 

remaining so long a poor unknown . . — iv. 4 

REMARKABLE in single oppositions — iv. I 
nothi ng left remarkable beneath. ^n/o»iy<S-C/eD.iv. 13 

REMARKED i' the kingdom Hemy VIII. v. 1 

REMEDIATE, in the good man's Lear, iv. 4 

REMEDIED, to your public laws Timon of Athens, v. 6 
tliiiiOT that are not to be remedied.. I Henry VI. iii. 3 

REMEDIES oft in ourselves do lie All's Well, i. 1 

to liersome remedies for life .... Wintej'sTale, iii. 2 

but want their remedies Richard It. iii. 3 

his remedies are tame Coriolanus, iv. tl 

certainties either are past remedies .. Cymbeline, i. 7 

seeking to give losses their remedies Lear, ii. i 

our remedies within thy help. . . . Romeo ^-Juliet, ii. 3 
when remedies are past, the griefs are ..Othello, i. 3 

REMEDY— where is no remedy. Taio Gen. of Ver. ii. 2 

there is no remedy Merry Wives, i. 3 

must send her your page, no remed.y — ii. 2 
stand not amazed: here is no remedy — v. 5 

well, what remedy ? Fenton — \.!t 

if it will not, what remedy? Twefth Night, i. 5 

there's no remedy, sir (jep.) — iii. 4 

but there's no remedy (rep.) ....Meas.for Meas. ii. I 

maiden, no remedy — ii. 2 

found out the remedy — ii. 2 

no remedy? None, but such a reinedy — iii. 1 
in doing good; a remedy presents itself — iii. 1 
nay, if there be no remedy for it ... . — iii. 2 

I will fit thee with the remedy MuchAdo, i. I 

if not a present remedy, yet a patient — i. 3 

be by, beg of her for remedy ..Mid.N.'s-.Dream, iii. 2 

or absence, soon shall remedy — iii. 2 

apply, to your eye, gentle lover, remedy — iii. 2 
no reinedy, my lord, when walls are — v. 1 
tliough yet I know no wise remedy.. .4s youLi/ie, i. I 

I pray you, tell me your remedy — iii. 2 

the reason, but they sought the remedy — v. 2 
amongst the remedy, thereisaremedy./^H'sTci;, i. 3 

set up your rest 'gainst remedy — ii. 1 

there is no remedy, sir, hut you; — iv, 3 

shall cease without your remedy .... — v. 3 
I know my remedy .... Taming of Shreta, 1 (indue.) 
my remedy is then, to pluck it out .. — ii.l 

no remedy (rep. v. I) Winter' sTale, iv- 3 

things without remedy should be .... Macbeth, iii. 2 

is there no remedy. None, but King John, iv. I 

I can get no remedy against this ....'iHenrylV. i. 2 
since there's no remedy, I mean to . . 1 Henry VI. ii. 2 

this Rome shall remedy — iii. I 

Suffolk, what remedy? — v. 3 

yes, tliere is reinedy enough, my lord — v. 3 
1 willremedy this gear ere long ....2HenryVI. iii. 1 
I did steer toward tills reinedy .... Henry VIII. ii. 4 
entreaties will render you no remedy — v. 1 
Ulysses, what is the remedy? . Troilus <$■ Cressida, i. 3 
must then to the Grecians? No remedy — iv. 4 
there's no remedy; unless, by not. . Coriolanus, iii. 2 

knowing, the remedy then born Cymbeline, i. 7 

the harder Jieart! alack, no remedy I — iii. 4 

careful remedy (rep.) TilusAndronicus, iv. 3 

shame itself doth speakfor instant remedy tear,!, 4 
to tire friar, to know his remedy. /Borneo ^Juliet, iii. 5 
what thou speak'st speak not of remedy — iv. I 

darest, I'll give thee remedy — iv. 1 

opened, lies within our remedy Hamlel, ii. 2 

hut there's no remedy, 'tis the curse of . . Othello, i. 1 

REMEMBER whom thou hast aboard.. Tempest, i. 1 

canst thou remember a time — i. 2 

let me remember thee what thou — i. 2 

I pray thee, remember, I have — i. 2 

tlie ditty does remember my drowned — i. 2 
I remember, you did supplant your .. — ii.l 

no woman's face remember — iii. I 

remember first to possess his books.... — iii. 2 

I remember the story — iii. 2 

but, remember, for that's my business — iii. 3 

tiiat you remember not — v. I 

remember the trick you served. TwoGen.ofVer. iv. 4 

to remember my good will — iv. 4 

though I cannot remember what .. Merry Wives, i. 1 

I should remember him — i. 4 

mistress Page, remember you your cue — iii. 3 
I pray you, remember in your prain — iv. 1 
remember, William; focative is .... — iv. 1 
remember, son Slender, my daughter — v. 2 

and remember your parts — v. 4 

remember, .love, thou wast a bull for — v. 5 
sweet pangs of it, remember me..Twel.flhNight, ii. 4 
remember who commended (rep. iii. 4) — ii. 5 (let.) 

I do remember — iii. 3 

that face of his I do remember well — v. 1 
and yet, alas, now I remember me . . — v. I 

but do you remember? — v. 1 

enriched any that we remember.. il/eas./or Meas. i- 1 

remember now my brother — iv. 1 

I remember you, sir, by the sound of — v. 1 
and do you remember what you said — v. I 
daughter, remember, what I told j-ou. MuchAdo, ii.l 
to Hero. I remember. I can, ot any — ii. 2 
I remember a pretty jest your daughter — ii. 3 

I remember his name — iii, 3 

but, masters, remember, that I am .. — iv. 2 
I remember. Tiiat very time I sa.w. Mid. N.'sDr. ii, 2 
which, as I remember .... Love's L. Lost, i. 1 (letter) 
deceived, but I remember the style.. — iv. 1 
beseech thee remember thy courtesy — v. 1 
do you not remember, lady.. Mercha7it of Venice, i. 2 
I remember him well; and I remember — i. 2 

as I remember, Adam, it was As you Like it, i. 1 

must not learn me how to remember — i.-i 
I remember, when I was in love Oep.^ — ii. i 

which I can hardly remember — iii. i 

can you remember any of tlie principal — iii. 3 



HEMEMBER a saying: the fool ..AsynuLike il^M. 1 
1 do leiuoiuliev in this ghephord boy — v. 4 
if I can remcmher thee, I will think .. .I/Z's /»'o«, i. 1 
wlien tliou luvst none, remember thy . . — i. 1 
■you remember tlie claugliter of tliis lord? — v. 3 
this fellow I remember.. 7'u»iiHg'o/S/ire!ii, 1 (indnc.) 
signior Baytista may remember me — iv. 4 

I'll not remember you of mine .. lyinter'sTale, iii. 2 
and vemenibcr well, I mentioned — iv. (chorus) 
remember, stoned, and flayed alive.. — iv. 3 
whilst I remember lier, and her virtues — v. 1 
that followed should be, remember mine — v, 1 
beseech you, sir, remember since you — v. 1 

you remember me (rep.) Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

I pray you, remember the porter Macbeth, ii. 3 

threescore and teu 1 can remember well — ii. 4 

but I remember now I am in this — i v. 2 

I cannot but remember such things were — iv. 3 

if ever I remember to be holy King John, iii. 3 

■what I intend for thee, remember .. — iii. 3 
remembers me of all his gracious — — iii. 4 
yet I remember, when I was in France — iv. 1 
on this Asceusion-day, remember well — v. 1 
not so quickly go; I shall remend)er.«i'c/ia»rf //. i. 2 
will but remember me, what a deal.. — i. 3 

which ne'er 1 did remember — ii. 3 

my liege, remember who you are — iii. 2 

or not remember what I must be now! — iii. 3 

it doth remember me the more — iii. 4 

1 do remember well, the very time .. — iv. 1 
yet I well remember the favour of these — iv. 1 
remember, as thou read'st, thy promise — v. 3 
1 remember, when the fight was done.l Henryll'A. 3 
and now I remember me, his name is — ii. 4 
and yet I must remember you, my lord — v. 1 
to remember so weak a composition.2i/cnr!//r. ii. 2 
I do now rejnember the poor creature — ii. 2 

to me, to remember thy name? — ii. 2 

do not bid me remember mine end .. — ii. 4 
you, cousin Nevil, as X may remember — iii. 1 
sir John, do you remember since we lay — iii. 2 

I remember at Mile-end Green — iii. 2 

I do remember lum at Clement's-inn — iii. 2 
we do remember; but our argument — v. 2 
not to remember, not to have patience — v. 5 
do yoa not remember, a' saw a flea . . Henry K, ii. 3 
I remember him now, a bawd, a cutpurse — iii. e 
but he'll remember, witli advantages — iv. 3 

remember, lords, your oaths 1 Henry Vl.i. I 

I do remember it; and here take leave — i. 1 
remember to avenge me on the French — i. 4 

forter, remember what I gave in charge — _'}}■ 3 
do remember how my father said.. — iii. 4 
my lords, remember where we are .. — iv. 1 
fond man ! remember that thou hast — v. 3 
remember what the Lord hath Aom.iHenryVI.n. 1 
remember it, and let it make thee . . — iv. 1 

I remember it to my grief ZHennjVl.i. 1 

I remember them too well Richard III. i. 3 

but remember this another day — i. 3 

remember our reward, when the deed's — _i. 4 

1 will never more remember our former — ii. 1 

remember, God (; ep. v. 3) — iii. 3 

1 do remember me; Henry, the sixth — iv, 2 
remember Margaret was a prophetess — v. 1 
remember whom you are to cope withal — v. 3 
I remember of such a time Henry I'lII.i. 2 

fou remember how under my — ii. 4 
yet remember some of these articles — iii. 2 
something over to remember me by . . — iv. 2 
remember me in all humility unto . . — Iv. 2 
and in thy prayers remember the estate — v. 1 
my good mistress will remember in.. — v. 1 
I shall remember this bold (rep.) — — y. 2 
remember yom- brother's excuse. Troilas <5- Cress, in. 1 
will you remember? Remember? yes — v. 2 
■what should she remember? Listl .. — v. 2 

pleased the gods remember Thnon of Athens, i. 2 

and now I remember me, my lord — — i. 2 

but if you do remember, I send C'uriotamis, i. 1 

and to remember with honours like — ii. 2 

if he remember a kinder value of — ii. 2 

remember, my name is Menenius. . . , — v. 2 
if you'd ask, remember this before .. — v. 3 
noble man still to remember wrongs? — v. 3 
he no more remembers his mother now — v. .4 

I shall remember: when Caesar Julius Ccesar, i. 2 

more foolery yet, if I could remember it — i. 2 
but all remember what you have said — ii. I 
remember that you call on me (rep.) — ii. 2 

I remember the first time ever — iii. 2 

remember March, the ides of March (r»p 1 — iv. 3 

to remember tliat the present Ai^'.ZT-y^ Cleo. ii. 2 

remember if e'er thou look'dst on majesty — iii. 3 
I remember now how he's employed — v. 1 
we shall remember as things but done — v. 2 

you do remember this stain Cytnheline, ii. 4 

remember, sir, my liejfe, the kings your — iii. 1 
one thing; I'll rememoer 't anon .... — iii..') 
though he came our enem.v, remember — iv. 2 
and my fiilse spirits quail to remember — v. 5 
well mav you, sir, remember me at.. — v. .^ 
remember boys, I poured forth, . Titus Andron. ii. 3 
lest we remember still, that we have — iii. 2 

to remember what he does I'ericles. ii. (Gower) 

remember earthly man Is but a substance — ii. 1 
you'll remember from ■whence yon had it — ii. 1 
I well remember, even on my yearning — iii. 4 
thine oatli, remember; thou hast sworn — iv. 1 

remember wluvt I have said — iv. 1 

now, as I can remember, by my troth — iv. 1 

ever since I can remember — iv.fi 

just belief, I'll well remember you — — v. 1 
can you remember what I called the man? — ■v. 3 

remember him hereafter as my Lear, i. 1 

remember what I have said — _i-3 

I never rememlier to have heard — iii. 2 

remembers what we are come about .... — iv. 3 
I do remember now: henceforth I'll .... — iv. B 
trick of that voice I do well remember . . — iv. 6 



REMEMBER thine eyes well enough ....Lear, iv. i; 
bricily thyself remember; the sword .... — iv. 6 
all the skill I have remembers not these — iv. 6 

as I do remember, done me wrong — iv. C 

remember thy swashing blow .... Romeo ^Juliet, i. I 

I remember it well: 'tis since — i. 3 

stand here till thou remember it .... — ii. 2 

I do remember an apothecary — v. 1 

as I remember, this should be the house — v. I 
must I remember? why, she would .... Hamlet, i. 2 
and remember ■B'ell what I have said.... — i. 3 
adieu, adieu, adieu 1 remember me trc/>.) — i. ^ 
remember thee? Ay, thou poor ghost (rep.) — i. 5 

Iremember, one said, there were no — ii. 2 

pray you, love, remember: and there is.. — iv. 5 
do remember all the circumstance? (rep.) — v. 2 

I beseech you, remember— Nay, good — v. 2 

I remember a mass of things Othello, ii. 3 

on my bed my ■wedding sheets, rememlier — iv. 2 

REMEMBERED by don Pedro Much Ado, i. I 

let it be remembered in his punishment — v. 1 
if you be remembered (rep.) ....Meas.forMeas. ii. I 

and will remembered be Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 

marry, well remembered . . Merchant of Venice, ii. 8 
as friend remembered noi.Asyou Lihett, ii. 7 (song) 
now I am remembered, scorned at me — iii. 5 
but if you be remembei'ed . . . Tami-nf; of Shrew, iv. 3 
to my good use, I remembered . . Winter's Tale, iv. 3 
but not rememberediu thy epitaph!. IHcnry/r. v. 4 
a sullen bell, remembered V.\\o\\'m^..2HenrylV. i. 1 
my humble duty remembered, I will not — ii- 1 
as I before remembered, all our state.. — v. 2 
their flowing cups freshly rememberedHen?-?/ F. iv. 3 

■B'e in it shall be remembered — i v. 3 

if your majesties is remembered of it — iy. 7 
if I had been remembered, I cowXA. Richard III. ii. 4 
if I could have remembered . Troilus % Cressida, ii. 3 
which craves to be remembered rimoii of Athens, ii. 2 
smart to hear themselves reniemheredCoriolanus, i. 9 
be you remembered, Marcus .... Titus Andron. iv. 3 
for death remembered, should be like . . Pericles, i. 1 
reciprocal vows be remembered. . Lear, iv. 6 (letter) 

I have remembered me Romeo Sf Juliet, i. 3 

thy orisons be all my sins rememberedHam^e^ iii. 1 

REMEMBERING how I cried Tempest, i. 2 

remembering that my love to . . Two Gen. ofVer. ii. 6 
a soul remembering my good friends. Bic/iard //. ii. 3 
by remembering you, 'tis past. . Henry y. v. (chorus) 
remembering how I love thy .... Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 2 

REMEMBER'ST aught ere thou earnest. Tempest, i.2 
thou remember'st smce once I s&t..Mid.N.'sDr.\i.i 
remember'st not the sliglitest folly. .4s yow Lihett, ii.4 
remember'st thou any that have biieA.Anl. fy Cleo. v. 2 
remember'st me of mine own conception .. Lear,\. 4 

REMEMBRANCE. 'Tis far off (rep.) ..Tempest, i.i 

which is froni my remembrance! — _i. 2 

this lord of weak remembrance — ii. 1 

how sharp the point of this remembrance — v. 1 
let us not burden our remembrances .... — v. 1 
keep this remembrance for thy. Two Gen. of I'er. li. 2 
so the remembrance of my former love — ii. 4 
remembrance to-morrow on the lousy. /i/t^ri/ fV. iii. 3 
I pray you, have your remembrance — iv. 1 
an abstract for the remembrance of . . — iv. 2 
lasting, in her sad remembrance . . TwelflhSigld, i. 1 
I seem to drown her remembrance . . — ii. 1 
my remembrance is free and clear from — iii. 4 
from my remembrance clearly banished — v. 1 
as the remembrance of an idle gawd.jUid.A^.Dj'. iv. 1 
that lies in woe, in remembrance of.. — v. 2 
remembrance of my father's death. Love'sL. Lost.v. 2 
take some remembrance of us ..Mer.nf yenice,\v. \ 
for your father's remembrance ....AsyouLike it, i. 1 

the remembrance of her father All's Well, i. 1 

grace his remembrance more than those — i. I 
his good remembrance, sir, lies richer in — i.2 
by our remembrances of days foregone — i. 3 
from the time of his remembrance ., — iv. 3 
out of a self-gracious remembrance . . — iv. 5 
what is lost, makes the remembrance — v. 3 
punishes me with the remembrance. Winter'sT. iv. 1 
grace, and remembrance, be to you both — iv. 3 
nor the remembrance of his most .... — v. 1 
my evils conjured to remembrance .. — y. 3 

my young remembrance cannot Macbeth, ii. 3 

let your remembrance apply to Banqiio.. — iii. 2 
satisfy my remembrance the more strongly — v. 1 
keet; it safe for our remembrance .... King John, v. 2 
unkind remembrance! thou, and eyeless — v. 6 
writ in remembrance, more than. . . . Richard M. ii. 1 
in the remembrance of a weeping queen — iii. 4 
to rain upon remembrance with ....2HenryIV. ii. 3 
history his loss to new remembrance — iv. 1 
with this remembrance,— that you use — v. 2 
awake remembrance of these valiant . . Henry V, i. 2 
with no remembrance over them .... — .i.2 
all tliis from my remembrance ....Richard III. \\. 1 
the sad remembrance of those wrongs — iv. 4 
ay,if your self's remembrance wrong — iv. 4 
in the remembrance of so fair a dream — ."^-3 
remembrance of my father-in-law. //en ryT/^f. iii. 2 
call me to your remembrances. Timon of Athens, i i i. 5 
not cumber your better remembrance — iii. 6 
commend to your remembrances.. .. Coi-io/anus, ii. 3 
his remembrance lay in Egypt ..Antony ^Cteo. i. 5 
lest my remembrance suffer ill report — ii. 2 
wear tne print of his remembrance.. Cyni6f/i»e, ii. 3 
whose remembrance is yet fresh in their — ii. 4 

S raise be given to your remembrance — ii. 4 
uliusCa;sar, (whose remembrance yet — iii. 1 
not wore hiiu trom my remembrance — iv. 4 
remembrance of my fatiier's death.. 7'/7u.« And. iii. 1 
by her own most clear remembrance . . Pericles, v. 3 
together with remembrance of ourselves. //«m/tf^ i. 2 
such thanks as fits a king's remembrance — ii. 2 
my lord, I have remembrances of yours — iii. 1 
there's rosemary, that's for remembrance — iv. 5 

thoughts and remembrance fitted — i v. 5 

some remembrance; no, in good troth. . Othello, iii. 4 
KEMEMBRANCElll Now.good Macbeth, iii. 4 



REMEMBRANCER of her Cymheline, i. fi 

REMERCIMENS; et je m'estime ....HenryF. iv. 4 

REMISS in mine office Meas.for Meas. iv. 2 

my lord, that we are too remiss ....Richard II. iii. 2 
we die, while remiss traitors sleep . . 1 Henry /'/. iv. 3 
must think me tardy and remiss. Troi/ws ^ Cress, iv.4 
being remiss, most generous, and free . .Hamlet, iv. 7 
REMISSION for my folly past . . TwoGen.of Ver. i. 2 
find an apt remission in myself.. .J*/eas. /or Meas.v. I 
a ragged, and forestalled Tertiission. .2 Henry I y. v. 2 
remission lies in Volscian breasts. . . . Coriolanus, v. 2 
REMISSNESS new-conceived.... il/eas./or Meas. ii. 2 

REMIT their saucy sweetness — ii 4 

and therewithal remit thy other forfeits — v. 1 

of either; Iremitboth tw'ain Lnve'sL.Losl, v. 2 

remit these young men's heinous. TiVus Andron. i. 2 
REMNANT of mine age.. . . Two Gen. of yerona, iii. 1 
someodd quirks and remnants of wit.;U«f/i Ado, ii. 3 
tliou quantity, thou reninant.'/'oTrti'ng'o/S/ireir, iv. 3 
think the remnant of my thoughts . . King John, v. 4 

to you the remnant northward \Hetiryiy. iii. 1 

thou bloodless remnant of that royaXRichardlll. i. 2 

leave these remnants of fool Henry yill. i. 3 

remnants of packthread Romeo ^ Juliet, v. I 

REMONSTRANCE of my hidden.Meas./or Meas.v. 1 

REMORSE— remorse and nature Tempest, v. 1 

as little remorse as they would ..Merry Wives, iii. ft 
mitigation or remorse of voice? .. Twelfth Night, ii. 3 
touched with that remorse as ..Meas.for Meas. ii. 2 

my sisterly remorse confutes — v. 1 

behalf change slander to remorse. . . . Much Ado, iv. 1 
and remorse, more strange .... Merch. ofyenice, iv. 1 
pleasure, and your own remorse ...4s you Like it, i. 3 

access and passage to remorse Macbeth, i. 5 

pity, and remorse, cool and congeal.. King John, ii. 2 
presented to the tears of soft remorse — iv. 3 
like rivers of rem.orse and innoceney — iv. 3 

■what says monsieur Remorse? I Henry I y. i. 2 

moved with remorse of 1 Henry yi. v. 4 

move rage, and not remorse, in me..2Henryyi. iv. I 

I feel remorse in myself with — iv. 7 

Nero will be tainted with remorse. .SHemyn. iii. 1 
of them would have stirred up remorse — v. !> 

bred a kind of remorse in me Richard III. i. 4 

kind, effeminate remorse, which we.. — iii. 7 

■with conscience and remorse — iv. 3 

wo.-k some touches of remorse?. . Tmilus ^ Cress, ii. 2 
and mince it sana remorse . ... Timon of Athens, iv. 3 
it disjoins remorse from power ....JuliusCipsar, ii. I 
with remorse, opposed against the act. . . . Lear, iv. 2 
less remorse than Pyrrhus bleeding ....Hamlet, ii. 2 

abandon all remorse; on horror's Othello, iii. 3 

and to obey, shall be in me remorse.. — iii. 3 

REMORSEFUL pardon slowly All'sWell,v. 3 

remorseful, well accomplished. TwoGen. of yer. iv. 3 

gaudy, blabbing, and remorseful day-S/fenri//'/. iv. 1 

which never shed remorseful tear ..Richard lll.i. 2 

REMORSELESS, have they borne ..2Ht"rv''/. iii. 1 

obdiu'ate, flinty, rough, remorseless.. 3 fJejiri/ '7. i. 4 

REMOTE [Kn/.-reraoved] seven...Mid.N.'s Dream, i. I 

remote from all the pleasures .... Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

to some remote and desert place .. Winter'sTate, ii, 3 

places remote enough are in Boliemia — iii. 3 

grace the gentry of a land remote.... A7ngJo/i»?, v. 2 

commenced in stronds afar remote . . I Henry ly. i. 1 

rudely visit them in parts remote . . Coriolamts, iv. 5 

REMOTION-safety were remotion.TjmoK ofAth. iv. 3 

remotion of the duke and her is practise. . Lear, ii. 4 

REMOVE— go near to remove his fit. . . , Tempest, ii. 2 

I must remove some thousands of . . . . — iii. 1 

in our remove, be thou at full . . Meas.for Meas. i. 1 

deceived by these removes Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

O come, let us remove AsyouLike it, iii. 4 

four or five removes, come short All's Well, v. 3 

or not removes, at least, affection's. 7'a7n>»g-o/S/i i. 2 
moved you hither, remove you hence — ii. 1 
by oath, remove, or counsel, shake. Winter'sTate, i 2 
once remove the root of his opinion . . — ii. 3 

betimes remove the means that Macbeth, iv. 3 

remove from Iier the means of — v. 1 

till Birnam wood remove to Dunsinane — v. 3 
O nation, that tliou couldst remove! .King John, v. 2 

upon advantage did remove — v. 7 

remove these tedious atumbling-blooUsZ Henry Tl. i . 2 
are only to remove from thee the duke — iv. 9 

to remove proud Somerset from — v. I 

your ill-will, and so remove it Richard lll.i. 3 

to remove these thoughts from jou.llenry yill. ii. 4 
the remove bring up your army .... Coriolanus, i. 2 
requiresour quick remove from... 4n/o)iy<5Ufo. i. 2 
come on then, and remove him .... Cymbeline, iv. 2 

no purpose in them of this remove Lear, ii. 4 

end, naught could remove Romeo ^Juliet, (prol.) 

good counsel may the cause remove — i. 1 

remove the court-cupboard; look to.. — i. 5 
to remove that siege of grief from her — v. 3 

once more remove, good friends Hamlet, i . 5 

author of his own just remove — iv. 5 

if you think other, remove your thought. OfAeWo, iv. 2 
cannot remove, nor choke, the strong.... — v. 2 

REMOVED— from Italy removed Tempest, ii. 1 

a twenty years removed thing. . . . Twelfth Night, v. 1 
have ever loved the life removed. J>/cas./or Meas. i. 4 
see you the fornicatress be removed.. — ii 2 

[Knt.'] is her house removed Mid.N.'sDream, i. I 

Lysauderl what removed? I>ysanderl — ii. 3 
(those clouds removed) upon our .Love's L.Lost, v. 2 
mountains may be removed ....AsyouLike it, iii. 2 
could purchase in so removed a dwelling — iii. 2 

upon a lie seven times removed — v. 4 

your inclining cannot be removed ..All'sWell, iii, 6 

he hence removed lastnight — v. I 

when he's removed, your highness. Winter'sTate,!. 2 
to him, though removed fifty times.. — i.2 

visited that removed house — v. 2 

the second generation removed King John, ii. 1 

on this removed issue, plagued for .. — ii. 1 
that is removed by a staff of France.. — ii. 2 
be removed from him, and answer well — iii. I 
removed Falstaff's horse (rep.) i Henry I y. ii. 2 



REM 



REMOVED— on any soul removed . . 1 Hinryir. iv. 1 

Voung king Richard thus removed. \ Henry I'l. ii. 5 

lilce a mountain, not to be removed.. — ii. 5 

wlio removed, earl Surrey, was eent. Henry Fill. ii. 1 

she was removed to Kimbolton, wliere — iv. I 

with blood removed butV\ttle..Homeo/rJi'UeL iii. 3 

it waves you to a more removed ground. Hamte(,i. 4 

Imiiediment most profitably removed . . OUiello, ii. 1 

REMOVEDNESS; from whom I .»f.M/er'»7'a(e, iv. 1 

REMOVING-thy uncle is removing A Henry VI. ii. 5 

removing of Cassio. How do you [,rep.).. Olhetto, iv. 2 

REMUNERATE. So Bassianus ..lUusAndron. i. 2 

REMUNERATION; for the best ..Love's L.L. iii. 1 

look to his remuneration (rep.) — iii. 1 

remuneration? Wliat is a remuneration? — iii. 1 
better tlian remuneration (re^.) .... — iii. 1 
hold tliere is the very remuneration — v. I 
not virtue seek remuneration .. TroUusffCress.in. 3 

REND an oak, and peg Tempest, i. 2 

thou didst then rend thy faith. .TwoGen. of I'er. v. i 
and snore, and rend apparel out.. Mer. of I'enice, ii. 5 

and to rend our own soldiers AlCs Well. iii. 6 

I could rend bars of steel \HenryVI.\. i 

thy burgonet I'll rend tliy bear iHenryl'I. v. I 

to rend his limbs asunder SHenryVI. i. 3 

these nails should rend tliat beauty. Richard lit. i. 2 

we must not rend our subjects Henry VIII. i. 2 

rend and deracinate the unity .. TroilusSf Cress, i. 3 

whose rage doth rend like Coriolanus, iii. 1 

let not a leaner action rend us .. Antony Sr Cleo. ii. 2 
tlie very principals did secra to rend . . I'erictes, iii. 2 

tlrnnder dotli rend the region Hamlet, ii. 2 

RENDER— shall I render you Meas.for Meas. i. 4 

nothing unless you render her agaia.itfucA^do, iv. 1 

shall render me a dear account — iv. 1 

my love shall render liim Mid. N.'sDream, i. I 

I'll make her render up her page to me — ii. 2 

speech render we no grace Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

excrement, to render them .... Merch. of Venice, iii. 2 

see thou render tliis i n to my — iii. 4 

dotli teacli us all to render the deeds — iv. 1 
what mercy can you render him .... — iv. 1 
to render it, upon his death, unto .... — iv. 1 

I will render thee again in As you Like it, i. 2 

and he renders me beggarly thanks.. — ii. 5 

and he did render him the most — iv. 3 

shall render you no blame All's Well, v. 1 

shall render vengeance and revenge. i?i'c/iard //. iv. 1 

tlie nearest grace it renders you 1 Henry I r. iii. 1 

that he shall render every glory up. . — iii. 2 
give us leave freely to render what .... Henry V. i. 2 

if rav father render fair reply — ii. 4 

which renders good for bad Richard III. i. 2 

lean notliing render but allegiant. Henry Fii7. iii. 2 
to render upthe great seal presently — iii. 2 
if entreaties will render you no remedy — v. 1 
and renders back liis figure.. 'i'ro(7(is SfCressida, iii. 3 
and tliere to render hira, for the enfreed — iv. 1 
in kissing, do you render, or receive? — iv. 5 
I could render one. Do it t\\en.Timonof Athens, ii. 2 
rather than render back, out with .. — iv, 1 

to make their sorrowed render — v. 2 

and city, we render you the tenth . . Coriolanus, i. 9 
devotion than they can remler it him — ii. 2 
render me worthy of this noble . . Julius Cwsar, ii. 1 
let each man render me his bloody hand — iii- 1 
Caesar will I render my \ez\ons. .inlony ^-Cleo. iii. 8 
render to me some corporal sign .... Cymbeline, ii. 4 
report should render liim hourly to — iii. 4 

may drive us to a render where — iv. 4 

take no stricter render of me — v. 4 

that this gentleman may render of . . — v. .^ 
wilt never render to me more?. ...Titus Andron. i. 2 

my tributary tears I render — i. 2 

flames must render up myself Hamlet, i. 5 

RENDERED up this woel Much.ido,v. 3 

to be rendered by our assistance ..Love'sL.Losl, v. 1 
no firm reason to be rendered.. il/erc/t.o/r^n/ce, iv. 1 

whereofthe king is rendered lost '.All'sWell, i. 3 

the castle's gently rendered Macbeth, v. 7 

rendered such aspect as cloudy . ...\ Henry IV. iii. 2 

the word of peace is rendered iUenrylV. iv. 2 

a fearful battle rendered you in Henry r.i. 1 

be rendered to their owners.. Troilus^ Cressida, ii. 2 

a mock apt to be rendered Julius Ccesar, ii. 2 

public reasons shall be rendered of .. — iii. 2 

when severally we hear them rendered — iii. 2 

she rendered life, thy name so.. Antony ^Cleo. iv. 12 

RENDERING— rendering none? Mer. of Venice, iv. 1 

rendering faint quittance iHenrylV.i. I 

RENDEZVOUS, a home to fly nnto.\HenryIV. iv. 1 
my rest, that is the rendezvous of it . .Henry V ii. I 
there my rendezvous is quite cut off. . — v. 1 

you know the rendezvous; if that Hamlet, iv. 4 

R'ENEGADO; for there is no TwelflhNight, iii. 2 

RENEGE, affirm, and turn tlieir halycon.. Lear, ii. 2 

reneses [A'n^.-reneagues] all temper.,4n(. ^-C/eo. i. 1 

RENliW— did renew old S^ion.Merch. of I'enice, v. 1 

puissant arm renew their feats Henry V. i. 2 

either renew the fight, or tear 1 Henry VI. i. 5 

his image, and renew liis "lories! ..SHenryVI. v. 4 
doth renew swifter than mood. .Troilus^ Cress, iii. 2 
renew, renew] the fierce Folydamus — v. 5 
but then renew I could not . . Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

and I'll renew me in his fall Coriolanus, v. 5 

would not even renew me .. Cymbeline, iii. 2 (letter) 
renew thy strength ; I had rather .... — v. 5 
presence still renew his sorrows .. TitusAndron. v. 3 
RENEWED fire to our extincted spirits. O/AeHo, ii. 1 
our old acquaintance be renewed ..iHenrylV. iii. 2 
part, shame, part, spirit renewed. . . . Cymbeline, v. 3 

RENOUNCE all confidence IHen yVI. i.t 

renounce your soil, give sheep — i. 5 

I here renounce him, and return to .SHenryVI. iii. 3 
this world I do renounce; and, in your.. Lear, iv. 6 

were't to renounce his baptism Othello, ii. 3 

RENOUNCEMENT, an immortal. .Weas./brjl/cos.i. 5 

RENOUNCING clean the faith they. Henry VIU. i. 3 

RENO WN— often I have lieard renown. Tempest, v. I 

that do renown this city? Twe{fthNighl, iii. 3 



[ 624 ] 



RENOWN, to Hymen Asyou Likeil,v. i (song) 

of a most cliaste renown; and this ..All'sWell, iv. 3 
the course, the end is the renown.. .. — iy. 4 
all is but toys; renown, and grace ....Macbeth, ii. 2 
to win renown even in the jaws .... King John, v. 2 

child of honour and renown IHenrylV. iii. 2 

as your renown, let menomore....2Hei».v/r. iv. 4 

admiring thy renown, by me \ Henry VI. ii. 2 

thou never hadst renown — iv. 5 

by breath of her renown — v. .^ 

tiie characters of your renown 2HenryVI.i. 1 

like men born to renown, by life . . . .ZHenry VI. i. 4 

no longer dreaming of renown — ii. 1 

a theme of honour and renown., Troilus ff Cress, ii. 2 

if renown made it not stir Coriolanus, i. 3 

quick accumulation oi renown.. Antony ^- Cteo. iii. 1 
wounding his belief in her renown.. Cymte/iiie, v. 5 
every virtue fjives renown to men! .... Fericles, i. 1 
so princes their renown, if not respected — ii. 2 
such strong renown as time shall never — iii. 2 
that dignifies the renown of a bawd .. — iv- 6 
he was a wight of high renown.. O/Ae/Zo, ii. 3 (song) 
RENOWNED French physician.. ;>/eM!/"Vres, iii. 1 
a noble and renowned brotlier.. ^/eas. /or ^/eas. iii. 1 
in marrying the renowned Claudio. . Much Ado, ii. 2 
be Theseus, our renowned dukel ..Mid.N.'sDr. i. 1 

renowned Pompey I Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

from every coast renowned auitota. .Mer. of Ven, i. 1 

yourself, renowned prince — ii. I 

renowned for grave citizens . .Taming of Shrew, i. 1 
KatharinaMinola, renowned in Padua — i. 2 
Pisa, renowned for grave citizens.... — iv. 2 
your most renowned uncle . . Comedy of Errors, v. 1 
renowned duke, vouchsafe to take .... — _ v, I 
thou do, renowned Faulconbridge?..Kfn5'yo/m, iv. 3 
lift up thy brow, renowned Salisbury — v. 2 
their birth, renowned for their deeds. Ri'c/iard //. ii. I 
he got against renowned Douglas..! Henry/ r. iii. 2 
most renowned, hatlieat thy bearer .2Heii/i/7r.iv. 4 
and courage, that renowned them .... Henry V.i.i 
renowned Talbot doth expect my. . 1 Henry VI. iv- 3 
while he, renowned noble gentleman — iv. 4 
yes, your renowned name; sliall flight — iv. 5 
the title of this most renownedduke.2Hem!/r/. v. ! 
or die renowned by attempting it ..SHenryVI. ii. 1 
renowned queen, with patience calm — iii. 3 
renowned prince, how shall poor Henry — iii- 3 
renowned for liardy and undoubted — v. 7 
father-in-law, renowned Warwick. fltc/iard ///. i. 4 
sir Walter Herbert, a renowned soldier — iv. 5 
upon him, Ajax renowned.. Troilus ^Cressida, iii. 3 
renowned Coriolanus! Welcome {rep.).. Coriol. ii. 1 
that our reuowned Rome, whose gratitude — iii. 1 
your own renowned knowledge.Autony^ Cleo. iii. 7 

thus then, thou most renowned — iii. 1! 

and renowned be tliy grave. . Cymbeline, iv. 2 (song) 
renowned Titus (rep. i. 2) .... Titus Andronicus, i. 1 
renowned Lucius, from our troops.... — v. 1 
knight of Sparta, my renowned father Pericles, ii. 2 
that is renowned for faith? .... Romeo ^Juliet, iii. 5 
RENT the fairest house in it. Measure for Measure.ii. \ 
will you rent our ancient love.... Wid.A'.'sDr. iii. 2 
what, did these rent lines show. . Love's L.Losl, iv. 3 
lean, rent, and beggared hy.. Merchant of Venice, ii. 6 

and shrieks that rent the air Macbeth, iv. 3 

manors, rents, revenues, I forego ..Richard II. iv. I 
what are thy rents? what are thy .... Henry V. iv. 1 

torn and rent my very heart 2 Henry VI. ;. 1 

that rents the tliorns, and is rent.... — iii. 2 

see, what a rent the envious JuliusCeeaar, iii. 2 

rent off tliy silver hair Tilus.indronicus, iii. 1 

the rent of his land comes to Lear, i. 4 

REPAID a liundred thousand .... Love'sL. Lost, ii. 1 

poorest service is repaid with. Taming of Shrew, iv. 3 

and many blows repaid, have robbed.3 Henry VI. ii. 3 

ill art thou repaid for that good. ITiVus .indron. iii. I 

REPAIR-her eyes repair . TwoGen. ofVer. iv. 2 (song) 

repair me with tliy presence — .v. 4 

only a repair i' the dark . . Measure forMeasure, iv. 1 
signior Benedick, repair to Leonato's . /'/ncA Ado,i. 1 
all to Athens back again tepair. tyiid.N. Dream, iv. 1 
to that sense did make their repair . Love'sL. Z.os(, ii. 1 
and when they repair, blow like sweet — _ y. 2 
repair thy wit, good youth, or it.Mer. of Venice, iv. 1 

it much repairs me to talk of All's (Veil, i. 2 

for royalty's repair, for present .. Winter's Tale, y. 1 
look of his would soon lepaXv.... Comedy of Err. i\. I 

bid her repair to our solemnity KingJohn,\\. -i 

in the instant repair and health .... — iii. 4 
bid him repair to us to Ely-house . . Richard II. ii. 1 
with direction to repair to Ravenspurg — ii. 3 
and new repair, our towns of war .... Henry r. ii. 4 
repair to your several dwelling-places. 1 Henry VI. i. 3 

repairs him with occasion? 2 Henry VI. v. 3 

to repair ray honour lost for him ..SHenryVI. iii. 3 
hither will our friends repair to us .. — iii. 7 
hear no news of his repair? Now.... — v. 1 
repair to Crosby-place irep. i.Z).... Richard 1 1 1, i. 2 
times to repair our nature with. . . . Henry VIII. v. I 

the foragers shall all repair Troilus Sr Cress. 'i. 3 

repair to me next morning Timon ofAthem, ii. 2 

to repair some other hour, I should.. — iii. 4 
again, repair to the senate-house . . Coriolanus, ii. 3 
your number, repair to the Capitol . . — ii. 3 
bid them repair to the market-place.. — v. 5 

repair to Pompey's porch (rep.) JulittsCtesar, i. 3 

to the ports the discontents repair. ^n/ony SfCleo. i. 4 

that shouldst repair my youth Cymbeline i. 2 

sense repairs itself by rest — li. 2 

whose repair, and franchise^ shall .. — iii. 1 
bid him repair to me, and brnig. Tilus.indronicus, v. 2 
that I repair to Rome, I am content — v. 3 

givest me somewhat to repair \nyie\f .. Pericles, ii. 1 
here he does but repair it. Ikiiow.. — iv. 3 
I'll repair the misery thou dost bear ....Lear,iv. 1 
let this kiss reiiair those violent harms.. — iv. 7 
repair thou to me with as much . Ham/e/, iv. 6 (left.) 

I will forestal tlieir repair hither — v. 2 

plies Desdemona to repair his fortunes.. 0//ie/^o,ii. 3 
walking on tlie works, repair there to me — iii. 2 



REP 



REPAIRED with knots Taming of Shrew, iii. 2 

times repaired with double Richard III. iv. 

REPAIRING; ever out of frame.. Lone' j;../.o»/, iii. 
opposites of such repairing nature ..2HenryVl. v. 

REPASSED the seas 3 Henry ;/. i v. 

REPAST— before the repast Love'sL. Loit,iv. 

go, and get me some repast . . Taming of Shrew, iv. 
so, if I prove a good repast to the. . , , Cymbeline, v. 
pelican, repast them with my blood . . Hamlet, iv. 

REPASTURE for his den Love'sL.Losl, iv. 

REPAY that money wil 1 be Merry Wives, y. 

I'll repay it back, or yield up. . . . Love's L. Lost, ii. 
if you repay me not on such a day.Me>.o/reniee, i. 
unwillingness to repay a debt ....Richard III. ii. 

and is it thus? repays he my — iv. 

but he repays sevenfold above.. Timon of Athens, i. 
a kiss; even this repays me .... Antony ir Cleo. iii. 

REPAYING what we took from. . TwelphNight, iii. 

REPEAL was suppliant .... TwoGen. of Verona, iii. 

repeal thee home again — v. 

the banislied Bolingbroke repeals ..Richard II. ii. 
I will repeal thee.or, bewellassured.2HenryF/. iii. 
repeal daily any wholesome act .... Coriolanus, i. 
thrust forth a cause for thy repeal..,, — iv. 

will be as rash in the repeal — iv. 

repeal him with the welcome of his.. — v. 
an immediate freedom of repeal. .Jufms Ccesar, iii. 
in thy just proof, repeals, and reconciles.. Lear, iii. 6 
that she repeals him for her body's lust. Othello, ii. 3 

REPEALED— thou hast repealed All's Well, ii. 3 

my banishment repealed, and lands. Richard II. iii. 3 
till Norfolk be repealed; repealed he — iv. I 
that act of parliament be repealed ..SHenryVI.i. 1 

REPEALING of my banished ....Julius Ccesar, iii. I 

REPEAT— kneel, and repeat it Tempest, iii. 2 

please you, repeat their names.. ruioGen.o/Cer. i. 2 

than repeat over to my shame MnchAdo, v. 1 

if you repeat them (» ep.l tone's L. Lost, v. I 

for I the ballad will repeat All's Well, i. 3 (song) 

his pretty looks, repeats his words. . King John, iii. 4 

I need not to repeat Richard //. iii. 4 

may repeat and history his loss . . ..2HenryIV. iv. 1 

repeat their semblance 1 Henry VI. v. 3 

ere I can repeat this curse again ..Richard III. iv. I 

repeat your will, and take it Henry VIII. i. 2 

am right sorr.y to repeat what follows — v. 1 

of help grew odious to repeat Pericles, i. 4 

like him's untutored to repeat — i. 4 

sir, it would be too tedious to repeat — v. 1 

REPEATED vexations of it! Cymbeline. i. 7 

too mean to have her name repeated- .4;/'s'''e//, iii. 5 
for vice repeated, is like the wandering.. Pericto, i. 1 

REPEATING, troublesome King John, i v. 2 

REPE AT'ST upon thyself .Macbeth, iv. 3 

REPEL his letters.and denied his Hamlet, ii. 1 

REPENT— death I much repent. TwoGen. q/Ter.iv. 1 

why ne'er repent it, if it — iv. 1 

say my prayers, I would repent . . Merry Wives, iv. 5 
repent you, fair one, of the sin . . Meas.for Meas. ii. 3 
confess it, and repent it, father (rep.) — ii. 3 

repent me, as it is an evil — ii. 3 

yet did repent me after more advice.. — y. 1 
do repent the tedious minutes. . Mid.N.'sDream, ii. 3 
that you should liere repent you . . — v. 1 (prol.) 
never did repent for doing good.. Mer. of Venice, iii. 4 
then I'll repent, and wish, for all that — iii. 4 
repent not you that you shall lose (rep.) — iv. I 

I do marry, that I may repent All's Well, i. 3 

cannot yet find in my heart to repent — ii. 5 
I would repent out the remainder of — iv, 3 

do not repent these things Winter'sTale, iii. 2 

to know them, 1 do repent — iii. 2 

yet I do repent me of my fury Macbeth, li. 3 

then we shall repent each drop King John, ii. 1 

lest that France repent — iii. 1 

they burn in indignation; I repent .. — iv. 2 
1 do repent me ; read not my name . . Richard II. v. 3 
well, I'll repent, and that suddenly.! Henry /F. iii. 3 
then I shall have no strength to repent — iii. 3 

and the young lion repents 2 Henry IV. i. 2 

repent at idle times as — ii. 2 (letter) 

and I repent my fault, more than Henry V. ii. 2 

England shall repeut his folly — iii. 6 

that vice in me; I must repent — iii. 6 

Clifford, repent in bootless penitence.3 Henry VI. ii. 6 

and I repent my part thereof Richard III. i. 3 

I repent me that tlie duke is slain .. — i. 4 
I now repent I told the pursuivant . . — iii. 4 
after-hours give leisure to repent .... — iv. 4 

intend to prosper, and repent! — iv. 4 

speak the thing Pshall repent ..Troilus^ Cress, iii. 2 

yes. Tlien I repent not Timon of Athens, i. 1 

almost all repent in their election ..Coriolanus, ii. 3 

repent what you have spoke — iii. 2 

repent, that e'er thy tongue Antony Sf Cleopatra, ii. 7 
I repent me much, that so I harried him — iii. 3 

let him repent thou wast not — iii. 11 

Enobarbus did before thy face repent! — iv. 9 
saved the noble Imogen to repent . . Cymbeline, v. 1 
must I repent? I cannot do it better — v. 4 

thy faction shall repent this rape .. TitusAndron. 1. 2 
should repent the evils I have done . . — v. 3 
I do repent it from my very soul .... — v. 3 

he will repent the breadth of his Pericles, iv. 1 

woe, that too late repents lear, i. 4 

that I must repent to be just! — iii. 5 

shall all repent the loss of mine. Romeo ^Juliet, iii. \ 

to repent the sin of disobedient — , iv. 2 

when one can not repent? HamW, iii. 3 

to heaven; repent what's past — iji. 4 

for this same lord, I do repent — iii. 4 

country forms, and (happily) repent . . Othello, iii. 3 

1 do repent me, that I put it to you — iii. 3 

and repent my unlawful solicitation .... — iv. 2 
thy former light restore, sliould I repent — v. 3 

EEPENTANCE is not satisfied.. TuoGen. of Ver. v. 4 

and then comes repentance Much Ado, ii. 1 

and set forth a deep repentance Macbeth, i. 4 

the other with current'repentance ..2HenrylV. i|. 1 
and true repentance of all your dear. . Henry V. ii. 2 



REP 

llEPENTANCE— of repentance Henry I', iv. 3 li 

repentance, contiuncil meditations. Hfnrf/ 1'///, iv. 2 

try what repentance can Hamlet, iii. 3 

KEPENTANT aslics on his liead King John. iv. 1 

liis grave with my repentant tears.. fli'cAard ///. i. 2 

I EEPENTED o'er liis doom .Measure/or Measure, i\. 2 

too dear, liowe'er repented after .... AWs Well, iii. 7 

repented tlie evils slie Imtchcd CymbeUne, v. 5 

KEPENTING, is as a Scotch ji;; Much Ado, ii. 1 

KEPETITION— lull all repetition ....AlVsirelt^y. 3 

tlie repetition, in a woman's ear Mncbelh, ii. 3 

cry aim to tliese ill-tuned repetitionsA'iH4'.fo/i», ii. 1 

je m'en faitz la repetition de tons Henri/ r. iii. 4 

repetition of what tlion hast marred. iVtc/iarti ///. i. 3 
with surplus, to tire in repetition. ...Coriolanus, i. 1 
whose repetition will be dogged with — v. 3 
and give them repetition to the life .... Pericles, v. 2 
repetition of my Uomeo's name.. Itomeo 4- Juliet, ii. i 
REPINE— and all tlie world repine . . Henry I'l. v. 2 

REPINED— gratis, you repined Coriolanus, iii. 1 

KEPLANT Henry iu his former SlIenryFI. iii. 3 

REPLENISHED villain in the .... mnter'sTale, i. 2 
his intellect is not replenished ..Ln<t\L.Lost, iv. 2 
replenished sweet work of nature. . Richardlll iv. 3 

REPLETE with moeks Love'sL.Lo!.t,v. 2 

tliy estate, a balance more replete.... /IW's '»'<•», ii. 3 

eves replete with wrathful fire XHenryVl.i. 1 

all France will be replete v/ith — i. Ii 

so full replete with choice — v. 5 

lend me a lieart replete with iHenry VI. i. I 

do arijue her replete with modesty .SHenryl'I. iii. 2 

REPLICATION, or rather, ostentare. Love's L. L. iy. 2 

hear the replication of your souuds.yu(/"sC«"sa;-, i. 1 

wluit replication should be made Hamlet, iv. 2 

REPLIED-the boy replied Lnve\ L.Losl,v. 2 

lie refelled me, and how I replied. Meas.forMeas.v. 1 
roundly replied. Mistress ....Tamingof Shrew, v.i 
1 replied, men feared, tlie French . . Henry fill. i. 2 
tauntingly replied to the discontentedCoj-iofa/ius, i. 1 
he replied it was a bare petition .... — v. 1 
she replied it should be Xoiiter..., Antony ^Cleo. ii. 2 
he replied, thou unpossessiui,' bastardi . . Lear, ii. I 
REPLIES-tuo thieatningly replies.... /i»'sl''eH, ii. 3 
he replies, tlianks, Agamemnon Troilus^- Cress, iii. 3 
nor make replies of ioatiinesi. ... Antony Sf Cleo. ii|. 9 

pregnant sometimes his replies are! Hamlet, ii. 2 

the Moor replies, that he, you hurt, is. .Othello, iii. 1 
REPLY-could not again reply .TiroGen.of I'er.'u. I 
what reply, ha? what say'st ..Meas.forMeas. iii. 2 
my lord, I shall reply amazedly..il/<rf. N.'s Dr.iv. 1 
thus, expectin" thy reply. Loue'sL. //<«(, iv. 1 (letter) 

the reply churlish {?ep.) As you Like it, v. 4 

for a reply, at least, if you make. . IVinier's Tale, iv. 3 
and raalce reply without a tongue . . Kin^Johu, iii. 3 

before I make reply to aught Richard II. ii. 3 

not now be troubled wi th reply \ Henry IK v. 1 

not undergo this sneap without Teply..2Hen.If. ii. I 
reply not tome with a fool-born jest — v. 5 

render fair reply, it is against Henry y. ii. 4 

give me hearing wliat I shall reply .\ Henry I'l. iii. 1 

and stand not to reply ZHemyl'I. iv. 8 

but looked for no reply Richard HI. i. 3 

reply not in how many fathoms . TroilusSr Cress, i. 1 
I pause for a reply. None, 3vntns. Julius Ccesar, iii. 2 
I could reply: if we should serve. Antony SrCleo. iii. 7 
reply not, do not answer me .... Romeo <$- Juliet, iii. 5 

why, 'tis a loving and a fair reply Handel, i. 2 

of our demands, most free in liis reply .. — iii. 1 

REPLYING, yielded to bear the ..Richard III. iii. 7 

replying shrilly to the well-tuned. TitusAndron. ii. 3 

REPLY'ST— oddly thou reply'st!. /Jomeo /^Juliet, ii. 5 

REPORT— falsely pocket up his report. Tempesf, ii. 1 

if in Naples I should report this now. . — iii. 3 

we know, on Valentine's report. r«Jo^en,o/rer. iii. -2 

by your own report, a linguist — iv. 1 

now, the report goes Merry Wives, i. 3 

unless it be to report your lord's.. TwelflhNight, ii. 2 

report of valour (rep. iii. 4) — iii. 2 

get themselves a good report after..'. . — iv. 1 
hath blistered her report .. Measure for Measure, ii. 3 

shall stifle in your own report — ii. -1 

some report, a sea-maid spawned him — iii. 2 

if I may live to report you — iii. 2 

volumes of report run with these .... — Iv. 1 
marvellous little beholden to your reports — iv. 3 
not better than he, by her own report — v. 1 

ere you make tliat my report — v. 1 

foremost in report through It^j ....Much Ado, iii. I 
they have committed false report.... — v. 1 
anil cawing at the gun's report. Mid. N.'s Dream, iii. 2 

nor his heart to report, what my — iv. 1 

is my report, to his great worthiness. Love's L.L. ii. 1 
ifmygossipreport be an honest. ./Wee. o/Feiu'ce, iii. 1 
report speaks goldenly of his profit.^syouLi/ceiV, i. 1 
if you like, upon report, the soil .... — ii, 4 
whom he reports to be a great magician — v. 4 

and observe his reports forme All'sWell,ii. 1 

1 shall report it so — ii. 4 

know it, before the report come . . — iii. 2 (letter) 

rumour may report my flight — iii. 2 

suffice ourselves with tire report of it — iii. 5 
serves the count, reports but coarsely — iii. .i 
not daring the reports of my tongue.. — iv. 1 

sucli pestiferous reports of men — iv. 3 

from the report that goes upon — v. 1 

report whicli I so oft have heard. . Tamingo/Sh. ii. I 

by report I know him well — ii. I 

and now I find report a very liar .... — ii. 1 
wliy does the world report, that Kate — ii. I 

for the good report I hear of you — iv. 4 

I shall report, tor most it caught, irinter's Tale, iii. 1 

I shall be hated to report it — iii. 2 

the report of her is extended more.... — iv. 1 
upon his own report, and I believe it — iv. 3 
tliough I report it, tiiat sliould be silent — iv. 3 
by their own report, air, hatli danced — iv. 3 
wiiich I shall report, will bear no credit — v. 1 

which lames report to follow it — v. 2 

your good report to the prince my.. ., — v.'.' 
and mine host's report Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 



[ 025 



REP 



;EP01tT-dost report to us. . . . Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

he can report, as seemeth by his Macbeth, i. 2 

I must report they were as cannons — i. 2 

who did report tluit very frankly — i. 4 

learned Iiy the perfectest report .. — i. 5 (letter) 

this rc[)ort hath so exasperate the — iii. 6 

but can perceive no trutli in your report — v, 1 

whirli I will not reiiort after her — v. I 

bring me no more reports — v. 3 

make discovery err in report of us — v. 4 

I should rejjort that wliicli I say I saw .. — y .') 

for ei'c tliou etmst report I will KingJolin, i. 1 

thesL- doL^L'url spies witii false reports — iv. 1 

tbi-<'W tlii^ i\ [inrt on their incen.'^ed .. — iv. 2 
rt'poi r ni'i.i^hions in proud Italy .... Richard II. ii. 1 

{;rievc ymi to rejioi-t the rest — ii. 2 

[Knt.'] north, and tlius it did repurt. . 1 Henry If. i. I 

let not his report come current — 13 

as ancient writers do report — ii. 1 

such ns fear the report of a caliver .. — iv. 2 
ears of men with false reports ..iHenrylf. (indue.) 
oiFends not, tli;it reports his death .... — i. 1 

lord, 'priy, in your mod report — iv. 3 

fills the world with loud report .... 1 Henry VI. ii. 2 
their censure of these rare reports.... — li. 3 
I see. report is fabulous and false .... — ii. 3 

thro' force of your report — v. .'i 

report what speech forbears 2 Henry VI. iv. 10 

of Salisbury, who can report of him. . — v. 3 
whether 'twas report of her success.. 3 tfenri/r/.ii. 1 

BO near as men report — iy. 3 

if she be accused on true report .... Richard IU. i. 3 
[Cof./CHi!.] as grieves me to report .... — ii. 4 
the clamorous report of war thus .... — iv. 4 
flatter my sorrows with report of it . . — iv. 4 
you can report, and prove it too.. ..Henry VIII. ii. 4 

that I am free of j'our report — ii. 4 

who shall report he has a better wife — ii. 4 
lie under this report— bring. . Troilns (5' Cressida.ii. 3 
men report, th.ou dost afl'ect . . Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

certain: Alcibiades reports it — v. 1 

a j ust and true report that goes — v. 1 

are his fi les as full as thy report? .... — y. 3 

to gi ve him good report for't Coriolanus, i. I 

then Ills good report should have been — i. 3 
half an hour since brought my report — i. 6 

fear lesser his person than an ill report — i. 6 

but I'll report it, where senators shall — i. 9 

more cruel to your good report — J. 9 

of no better report than a horsedrench — ii. I 
into tlieir estimation and report .... — ii. 2 
to report otherwise, were a malice. . .. — ii. 2 
to report a little of that worthy work — ii. 2 
his clothes made a false report of him — iv. !> 
whom we have put in prison, reports — iv. 6 

notiiing but his report! (rep.) — iv. 6 

you must report to the Volseian lords — v. 3 
yes, mercy, if you report him truly . . — v. 4 
thrusting this report into his ears. Julius Cresar, v. 3 
than almanacks can report. . Antony 4- Cleopatra, i. 2 

if in mirth, report that I am — i. 3 

liave report how 'tis abroad.. — i. 4 

men's reports give him much wronged — i. 4 
my learning from some true reports — ii. 2 

lest my remembrance suffer ill report — ii. 2 
triumphant lady, if report be sqtiare — ii. 2 
my blemislies in the world's report.. — ii. 3 
I made no such report; he's bound.. - — ii. ^ 
bid him report the feature of Octavia — ii. i 
let me report to him your sweet .... — v. 2 

this I'll report, dear lady — v. 2 

makes a very good report o' the worm — v. 2 

a thing too bad for bad report Cymbeline, i. 1 

I honour him, even out of your report — i. 1 

without contradiction, suffer the report — i. .^ 

by history, report, or his own — i. 7 

my tongue, charms this report out . . — i. 7 

who is as far from thy report — i . 7 

to try your taking a false report .... — i. 7 
your good report. How! mygood(irp.) — ii. 3 

"so likely to report themselves — ii. 1 

and my report was once first with .. — iii. 3 
yet report sliould render liim hourly — iii. 4 
that I must report ye my master's .. — iii. 5 
exx^erience, O thou disjirovest report! — iv. 2 
son to tlie c(ueen, after his own report — iv. 2 
as men report, thou orphan's father art — v. 4 
ask of wlience you are: report it .... — v.,") 

I must report the queen is dead. — v. 5 

a physician would this report become? — v. 5 

what she confessed, I will report — v. 6 

that my report is just, and full of. TitusAndron. v. 3 
drawn by report, adventurous by desire. /Vric/es, i 1 
our paragon to all reports, thus blasted — iv. 1 

report what a st)journer we have — iv. 3 

harvest out of tliine own report — iv. 3 

gives a good report to a number — iv. 6 

report thy parentage — v. 1 

making just report of how unnatural.... Lear, iii. 1 

I would not take this from report — iv. 6 

all my reports go with the modest truth — iv. 7 
report is cliangeable: 'tis time to look .. — iv. 7 
more than tears, with that re[:)Ort. Romeo 4- Jul. iv. 1 

of your own reportagainst yourself Handel, i. 2 

than their ill report while you live — ii. 2 

gave you such a masterly report — iv. 7 

sir, tills report of his did Hamlet so .... — iv. 7 

report me and my cause aright — v. 2 

where the aim reports, 'tis oft with .... Othello, i. 3 
so was I bid report here to the state .... — i. 3 

if you do find me foul in her report — _i. 3 

more of this matter can I not report .. .. — ii. 3 
enquire him out, and he edified by report? — iii. 4 

I must needs report the truth — v. 2 

and your reports have set the murder on — v. 2 
REPORTED by this gentleman ..Meas.forMeas. v. 1 

as you then reported him to be? — v. 1 

80 tis reported, sir. Nay, 'tis most AlVsli'ell,\. 2 

it is reportetl tluit he has taken 'rep.) — iii. b 
so hot a shrew as she's reiiorted?. 7ammo'o/S/i. iv. 1 



REl'OBTIsD-which was reported .... Macbeth, v 3 

I have III inl licr ropurtcd to be 2HcnryVl. i. 4 

it is lei'ix I'll, ini^'litv sovereign .... — iii. 2 

wept ulini it wiii rejiorted Richard III. i. 3 

or else repoitid successively from .. — iii. 1 
none so bad, but well may be reported — iv. 4 

it is reported, thou didst cat Antony^-Cleo. i. 4 

gave audience as 'tis reported — iii. 6 

so 'tis reported: but none of them ..('ymheline, v. 3 

RKPi IRTEIl devised well for \kv.. Antony f.Cten. ii. 2 

llEl'DRTING. Pr'ythee, speak I'cridcs.v. I 

nor C(nK;ern me the reporting Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

REPOIITINGLY— than ri-imXuvAy..Mnrh,ulo, iii. 1 

REPORT'ST-as thou report'st tli.v-elf.. Tcnpesl, i. 2 
as thou rciiort'st him to he..Tnn (ien.nl Verona, ii. 
Pcrcv's death, ere thou report'st it ..■Jllfiinili'. i. 1 

REPiVSAL— would the reposal of any trnst.7rar, ii. 1 

ItEPiJSl']— this is a strange repose 7'e?rt;;e47, ii, 1 

we stood here securing your repose .... — ii. 1' 

my cell, and there repose — iv. 1 

faith and honour I repose .. Two Gen. of Verona, iv.3 
to repose him liere .... Taming of Sliretr, I (indue.) 
that nature gives way to in repose! ..Macbeth, ii. I 

good repose, the while! — ii. 1 

and there repose you for this nii^ht.. Richard II. ii. 3 
give thy repose to the wet sea-boy. .2 Henri/ /F. iii. 1 

so subtly with a king's repose Henry V. iv. 1 

we will repose us here; to-morrow.. 2 He7i?i/r7. ii. I 
on thy fortune I repose myself ....SHenryl'I. iv.fi 
shall repose you at the Tower .... Richard ill. iii. 1 
our nature with comforting vepose.. Henry VIII. v. 1 
ere we do repose us, we will write . . Cnnnl'inus,^ i. 9 

good-night, and good repose JuliusC'rsar, \v. 3 

do please to doff't for our repose. .4i/(o«i/ r<- Cleo. iv. 4 
readiest champions, repose you here. .Tilus.lnd. i. 2 
and Rome s servitors, repose in fame — i. 2 
so repose, sweet gold, for their unrest — ii. 3 
shake off the golden slnmherof repose. PenV/e.s, iii. 2 
'gainst the tenipest; repose you there.... Lear, iii. 2 

our foster-nurse of nature is repose — iv. i 

as sweet repose and rest come to./?o?«eo Sf-JuVet, ii. 2 
sport and repose lock from me, day . . Hmnlet. iii. 2 

REPOSETH all his confidence Richard II. u. i 

REPOSING too far in his virtue All's irell, V.\ i, 

breaks seasons, and reposing liours Richard III. i. 4 
his right cheek reposing on Ci/nileliiw. i v. 2 

REPOSSICSS— repossess tliose lands.. 3/;fHr;/;7. iii. 2 
repossess the crown (rep. iv. 6 -Sc v. 7) — iv. [) 

REPREHEND-do not reprehend. .1/W N.Dr. (epil.) 
I myself reprehend his own person.. Lnve'sL.L. i. 1 
come to reprelienil my ignorance.. Richard III. iii. 7 

REPREHENDED hirh Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

she never reprehended him but mildly — v. 1 
I reprehended them Richard III. iii. 7 

REPREHENDING thee TiiusAndronicvs, iii. 2 

REPRESENT my master's blushing .1 Henry VI. iv. 1 

great shadow I did represent iHenryl'l. i. 1 

would you represent our queen .. 'I'ilusAiairun. v. 2 

REPRIEVE-for three reprieves ..MerrylVives, ii. 2 

that in his reprieve, longer Meas.forMeas. ii. 4 

my bending down reprieve thee from — iii. i 

soine pardon, or reprieve — iv. 2 

his friends still wrought reprieves .. — iv. 2 
loves to grant, reprieve him irora. ... All' s Well, iii. 4 

out of reprieve and pardon Coriolanus, v. 2 

send tlry token of reprieve Lear, v. 3 

REPRISAL-rich reprisal is so nigh.l HenrylV. iv. 1 

REPROACH your life, and choke..1/e/js../()r.Ue'7.<. v. 1 
that name with any just reproach .. Much Ado, iv. I 
master doth expect your reproach. Mer. nf Venice, i i . 5 
reproach, and dissolution, hangeth../f/c7iarrf//. ii. 1 
edge of penny cord, and vile reproach. Hcdry/'. iii. B 
reproach and everlasting shame sits.. — iv. .'i 

fly from this reproach? 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

or else reproach be Talbot's greatest — iii. 2 

in confutation of which rude reproach — iv. I 
deface your honour with reproach? .. — y. 5 
rescue thee from this reproach? ....'IHenryVI. ii. 4 

for I am but reproach — ii. 4 

courts be filled with my reproach — iii. 2 

to conclude, reproach, and beggary .. — iv. 1 
faced reproach, attend the sequel.. /(/■•/Kir/? III. iii. 7 
writing their own reproach .. Troilns '-fCrcssifla. i. 1 

or die witli this reproach Titus Andronicns, iv. I 

even thus all guiltless meet reproach . . Oihclln, iv. 1 

REPROACHES most bitterly on you. Henry rill. i. 2 
on the rearward of reproaches Much Ado, iv. I 

REPROACHFUL words are these?. Tihis Andron.i 2 
thrust these reproachful speeches down — ii- 1 

REPROACHFULLY? Like toaduchcs'>2;r,.», r;.ii.l 

REPROBATE-omittliisreprobate.jVefi.v. /(ir.Wras. iv.3 
me from the reprobate thouErht Love'sL. Lost, i. 2 

REPKOB.ITION CK'i'.-repiohance] 'Tis.n'htllo. v. 2 

REPROOF to all uncomelincKS .. . . ,Uerri/»Vi'es, ii. 1 

pass with a reproof the easier ^ ii. 2 

that it but mocks reproof Ta-elfihSlght.\i\. 1 

defends the deceit from reproof. il/ein. /.a Meus. iii. I 
called the reproof valiant (rep.) . . As yon Like it, \. 4 

betray me to my own reproof Comedy of Err. v. 1 

and in the reproof of this, lies I Henry IV. i. 2 

the taste of danger and reproof — iii. 1 

as, in reproof of many tales — iii. 2 

your reproof is something too round. . Henry V, iy. 1 

to speak in your reproof Richard III. iii. 7 

cannot brook the accent of reproof .. — iv. 4 
in tlie reproof of chance 1 ies . . Troila: S,' Cressida, i. 3 

shall set out for reproof, fall Timon of A'hens, v. 5 

pluck reproof and rebuke from every. Con'o/anu.f, ii. 2 
your reproof were well deserved.. /In'o";/'^ ''''<'". i'- 2 
whereas reproof, obedient, and in order. . I'ericles, i. 2 
no longer grieve, without reproof — ii. 4 

REPROVE-do nothing but reprove. Twelfth Night, i, .'i 
something in me, that reproves my fault — iii, 4 
thus to reprove these wormsfor ..Love'sL. Lost, iv. 3 
reprove my allegation, if you can ..-JHenryVl. iii. i 
reprove you for this suit of yours. . Richard III. iii. 7 
the white reprove the lirowii Anlony^Cleo. iii, il 

REPROVE ADLE badness in himself /.e<ir, iii. 'i 

REPROVED tlic duke about Henry Vlll. i. 2 

REPROVST me fur it I'ericles, i. 2 

SS 



S^SJIRS^tIS,^^ T^IIVS" '!"= truths I Henry VI. iv. 1 REQUEST-hav 

make I 
let the 



REPUGNANCY? ICtliere he such.Ti/non n/AiU. iii. 5 make 

let th( 
I reguest you to give iny poor host . . Coriolanus, i. 9 RKQXJITED-it'must be rei 



REPUGNANT to command Hamlet, ii. 2 

R EPULSE, forego the purpose Tempest, iii. 3 

tiike no repulse, whatever she.. Two Ge«. o/Ter. iii. 1 

with obstinate repulse, to sla.v 1 H^mi/r/. iii. 1 

received in the repulse of Tarquin'..Co)iD/(iiii«. ii. 1 , 

a repulse; thougli your attempt Cijmbeline, i. 5 

REPUr,SED, (a short tale to make) Hamlet.ii. 2 

REPURCHASED with the blood .. ..iHenri/yi. v. 7 

REPUTATION was disvaluerl . . . . .Ucas/or Meas. v. I 

other men,of slender reputation. TwoWcn.o/rer.i. 3 

my goods, my lands, my reputation. . — ii. 7 

keep the 'haviour of reputation MerryWivea, i. 3 

her purity, her reputation, her marriage — ii. 2 

my reputation gnawn at — ii. 2 

defend your reputation, or bid farewell — iii. 3 

and his friend's reputation MuchAdo, ii. 2 

as best befits her wounded reputation — iv. 1 : 
wrong the reputation of your name. . Love'iL.L. ii. 1 I 

you will lose your reputation — v. 2 

your reputation therefore shall not..Js!/ni(;,t/[e il, i. 2 \ 
seeking the buhble reputatitm even .. — ii. 7 ' 
would not put my reputation now in.AU'sWell, iii. 7 j 

upon ray reputation and credit iv 3 

reputation is with the duke (rep.) — iv. 3 (note) 

your reputation comes too short v. 3 > 

turn then ray freshest reputation.. IVinler'sTate, i, 



— V. 3 



we do request your kindest ears 

he's to make his requests by particulars — 
custom of request you have disciiarged — 
we did request it; we are the greater — 
whether my old wit be in request with — 

to both it stands in like request? — 

being now in no request of his country — 

till he be dieted to my request — 

if you fail in our request (rep.) .... 

that our request did tend to save . . 
say, my request's unjust, iind spurn.. — v. 3 
what ill requestdid Hrutu6make.../u;('«sC«ps<i?-, v. ri 
let me request you off: our pr:iver..l«(o;ii/ ^Cleo. ii. 7 
but, as you request, yourself sluiU .. — iii. i 
he leseushis requests; and to tliee sues — iii. 10 

I have no ears to his request — iii. 10 

your grace but in a small request Cymbeline, i. 7 

let his virtue join with my request.. — v. 5 
the emperor lequests a parley .. TilusAmhmi. iv. 4 

before thou didst request it Romeo i^- Juliet, ii. 2 

gi ve me one poor request Hamlet, i. 5 

or came it by req nest, and such fair Othello, i. 3 

tisdone, at your request: but let herlive — iii. 3 
REQUESTED— what he requested ..CnrManus, ii. 2 
not to do more than she is requested . ..otiiello, ii. 3 



war agamst your reputation .. Cunifdi/ o/firrors, iii. I 

this touches me iu reputation _ iv. 1 REQUESTING Vom-lord'ship'r? 

pi very reverent reputation, sir _ v. 1 REQ UEST'ST but moon-shine love'sl I o,t v •- 

,.s spotless reputation; that away. . . . Richard II. i. 1 i at once, what is if ttou reqnest';L\ R,",aH ///' U. t 

RE-QUICKENED what in flesh vas.Coriolanus, ii. 2 
11. 1 ; REQUIEM, and such rest to her Hamlet, v. 1 

REQUIRE my dukedom of thee Tempest, v. \ 



for her reputation through the world 

wherein thou Hest in reputation sick 

in the etfect of your reputation 2HenryIV. ii. I 

his reputation is as arrant r villain .. Henry T. iv. 7 
fellow, that respects his reputation . . Richard Ill.i.i 
case thy reputation in thy tent. '/'roiVus ^ Cress, iii. 3 

I see, my reputation is at stake — iii. 3 

his reputation touched to death.. Timoh ofAth. iii. 5 
I have offended reputation .intony ^ Cleopatra, iii. 9 
your confidence, than lier reputation. Cirmiciinf, i. .'j 

would not in reputation change I'ericles, iv. B 

reputation stained with Tybalt's, flomeo ^Juliet, iii. 1 

in reputation and profit, was better Hamlet, ii. 2 

[Co/.J make head against my reputation. 0/Ae«o,i. 3 

that you unlace your reputation thus ii. 3 

reptutation, reputation, reputation! (rep.) ii. 3 

reputation. Reputation is an idle ii. 3 

you have lost no reputation at all, unless — ii. 3 

REPUTE you ever tlie patron Taming of Sh. iv. 2 

)iow will the world repute me ..TiroGen.ofl'er. ii. 7 
of good repute C?-ep. i. 2) .. Loi'e'sL.Losl,i. \ (letter) 
he reputes me a cannon: and the bullet — iii. I 
all in England did repute him dead .1 Henry I r. v. I 
do repute his grace the rightful heir..2 Henry F/. v. 1 

our dearest repute with their Troilus ^ Cress, i. 3 

to repute himself a son of Rome. . . . JuUusCcnsar, i. 2 
foes I do repute you every one . Tilus A ndronicus, i. 2 
which Rome reputes to be a heinous sin — i. 2 
unless you repute yourself such a loser.. OMeJ/o, ii 3 

REPirTED— so reputed in dignity Tempest, i. z 

without desert so well reputed. TtroGen. of P'er. ii. 4 

I am not so reputed: it is the Much Ado, ii. I 

therefore only are reputed wise . . Mer.of yenice, i. 1 
yet his brother is reputed one of .... All's Welt, iv. 3 

the reputed son of Coeur-de-lion King John, i. 1 

the earl of Hereford was reputed. . ..2HenryIf. iv. 1 

was reputed for a prince most Henni yjll. ii. 4 

REPUTELESS banishment IHenryll'. i\i. 2 

REPUTING of his high descent 3Henryri. iii. 1 

REQUEST— my prime request Tempest, i. 2 

at thy request, monster, I will iii. 2 

request me, to importune you .. TwoGen. of I'cr. i. 3 

you writ them, sir, at my request. ... ii. 1 

so far from granting thy request .... iv. 2 

upon your request, cousin Merry Wives, i. 1 

I will marry her, sir, at your request — i. I 

and requests your company iii 3 

at your request? Twelfth Night, iii. 4 

grant me another request v. 1 

tell him yet of -Angelo's request. A/eat./orA/eas. ii." 4 

novel ty is only in request _ iii. 2 

then ginger was not much in request iv. 3 

upon liis mere request, (being corae to — v. 1 
I am to entreat you, request you . . Mid. N.'sDr. i. 2 

or I would request you, or I would .. iii. 1 

were not his request so far from . Love's L. Lost, ii. 1 
abroad with him at his request.. il^er.o/Ten/ce, iii. 3 

to fill up your grace's request — iv. 1 (letter) 

more at your request than to As yon Like' it, ii. 6 

answer tne time of request All's Well, i. 1 

liberty is all that Irequest Taming of aiirew, ii. 1 

did you not request to have it cut? . . — iv. 3 

there necessity in your request tVinlir'sTale, i. 2 

at my request he would not. Hermione — ' i. 2 
tills your request is altogether just .. — iii. 2 

'tis in request, I can tell you iv! 3 

at your request, my father will grant — v! 1 

and I'll request your presence Macbeth, iii. 1 

hear and grant you your requests . . King John, iv. 2 

heartily request the enfrancniseraent iv. 2 

by me, requests your present straight iv. 3 

at whose request the king hath _ v. 6 

countenance at his friend s request.. 2 Henry//', v. 1 

at my desires, and my requests Henri/ 1', v. 1 

but your request shall make me — ' v. 2 

wilt say, ay. to my request AHenry I'l. iii. 2 

at our request, to stand aside iii. 3 

at my request, see that forthwith — iv. 3 

not easily won to our requests Richard ///. iii. 7 

what says your lord to my request? — iii. 7 
lend favourable ear to our requests .. — iii. 7 

shuns your high request iii. 7 

r ^'T?'.] late req uest that you did sound me — iv. 2 
says your higlmess to my j ust request — iv. 2 

the king's request that I would Henry VI II. iv. 2 

for request's sake only, he makes Troilus ^ Cress, ii. 3 

at .vour request, a little from ■-' _ ii. 3 

request do these men play? (rep.).... _ iii.) 



to desire and require her Merry »',„„ .. ^ 

the satisfaction I would require. Meas. /or /if ras. iii. 1 
my poor body, madam, requires it .... All's Well, i. 3 
it requires haste of your lordship .... _ iv. 3 

you see, my plight requires it Winter'sTale, ii. 1 

more than this deed does require! — ii. 3 

and to be so still, requires nothing but — iii. 3 

that I require a clearness ,..Mac6eM, iii. 1 

we will require her welcome — iii. 4 

that your estate requires, and mine.3Hcnr?/ I'l. iii. 3 

for it requires the royal debt Richard III. ii. 2 

only, which your disease requires ..Henry Till. i. I 

requires slow pace at first _ i. i 

'twill require a strong faith to conceal it — ii. 1 
1 require your highness that it shall — ii. 4 

did require a respite ii. 4 

nature does require her times of .... — iii. 2 

which will require your answer v. 1 

the gods require our thanks ..Timon of Athens, iii. 6 

It requires swift foot y. 2 

he will require them, as if he Coriolanus, ii. 2 

once, if he do require our voices ii. 3 

requires nor child nor woman's face — v. 3 

requires our quick remove from . . Antony ^ Cleo. i. 2 

and requires to live in Eg.ypt — iii. 10 

in our name, what she requires iii. 10 

shall I say to Cajsar, what you require — iii. 1 1 
the quality of her passion shall require — v. 1 
all the service I require of them.. i'i/Ms/Indron. iii. I 

kind nature doth require it so — v. 3 

if you require a little space for Pericles, iv. I 

will you requi re in present dower Leor, i. I 

we do require them of you v. 3 

and her father, requires a fitter place .... v. 3 

and he requires your haste poft-haste . . Othello, i. 2 
this hand of yours requires a sequester .. — iii. 4 
REQUIRED— I have required some.... Tempes/, v. I 
the ministration and required oflSoe ..All's Well, ii. 5 
restraining from course required .. Winter'sTale, i. 2 
I loved him, as in honour he required — iii. 2 

it is required, you do awake your .... v. 3 

he owes, will be required of me. . Comedy of Err. iv. 4 

better opportunity to be required Henry F. iii. 2 

he sent me to peruse, as I required. Hturyrz//. iii. 2 
at stake, required, I should do so ..Coriolanus, iii. 2 
arms, and aid, when I required .. Antony fy Cleo. ii. 2 
return was most required, and necessary . Lear, iv. 3 
for want of these required conveniences. 0/Ae;/o, ii. 1 
REQUIRETH— case requireth liaste.SHenr!/;'/. iv. 5 
REQUIRING with a plausible ..ilfeas./orMeas. iii. 1 
nor fetch in firing, at requiring. Tempest, ii. 2 (song) 

that, if requiring fail, he will Hem-y V. ii. 4 

REQUISITE-a good nose is requisite. Winter'sT. iv. 3 

hath all those requisites in him Othello, ii.1 

REQUIT— which hath requit it Tempest, iii. 3 

REQUITAL whereof, henceforth. jTu'oGen. or Ter. i. 1 

requital to a hair's breadtli Merry Wives, iv. 2 

and, in requital of your prophecy. Jl/eos.ybr Meas. ii. I 

fore- running more requital — v.] 

you do so grow in my requital Alt's Well, v. 1 

to make a more requital to your love. KingJoim, ii. 1 
our state's defective for requital .... Coriolanus, ii. 2 

REQUITE- 1 will requite you with Tempest, v. 1 

which to requite, command me. 7'«io (Jen. o//'er. iii. 1 

fool, I'll requite it in the Tu-etfthNigid, iv. 2 

Benedick, loveon.I will requite thee. A/Mc/i.Jdo, iii. 1 

I do with an eye of love requite her. . y. 4 

I shall never requite him Merchant of Venice, i. 2 

find I will most kindly requite . . As you Like it, i. I 
and, to requite you further, I will ..All'sWell, iii. 6 
for his life, and I will thee requite ..Henry V. iii. 6 
I'll requite it with sweet rehearsal ..iHenryVI. i. 2 

I will requite thy Ibrwardness SHenryVJ. iv. 5 

I'll well requite thy kindness (rep. iv. 7) — iv. ti 

and, see, how he requites me! Richard III. i. 4 

no doubt, he will requite it Henry I' J 1 1, ii. I 

could my studied purposes requite .. — iii. 2 

that I'll requite it last? Timon of Athens, iii. 3 

and wealth to requite me, by making ' iv. 3 

why, how shall 1 requite you? _ v. I 

the gods requite your love Coriolanus, iv. 2 

with deeds requite thy gentleness.. Titus Andron. i. 2 

he will requite your wrongs 

Rome requites with foul contempt .. — v. 1 



,h v'. ,m f '^^ requests ■/roUus^Cress. iu.3 REQUITE your loves; so, fare you Hamlel, i. 2 

thy requests to thy friend ..TmionofAth. ,. I 1 of practise, requite hm /or yoir father.. _ v 7 

I request be fifty talents. _ - ii. 2 _ let heaven requite it with the serpent's.O(Ae«o, iv! 2 

EQUITED— it must be requited MuchAdo, ii. 3 

but I requited him for his lie Macbeth, ii. 3 

with the like I had requited him ..1 Henry VI. ii. 5 

a work, and how ill requited!.. Troilus ^ Cress, v. 1 1 

are requited butwith that surname. Corio(anu»,iv.5 

.... . RE-SALUTE his country with his.TilusAndron. i. 2 

'."■ '•^ I T.J,*'!' "0' re-salute the streets of Rome — i. 2 

IV. 3 RESCUE— rescue you from him. . TuoGen.of Ver. v. 4 

■" ' ' than have false Proteus rescue me — v. 4 

sir, that did rescue me Twelfth Nighl, v. 1 

how well this yielding rescues thee. . Love'sL.L. i. 1 
without rescue, in the first assawlt.... All'sWell, i. 3 
rescue thy mistress if thou be. Taming of Shrew, iii. 2 
suffer them to make a rescue'/ Comedy of Errors, iv. 4 
rescue those breathing lives to die ..King John, ii. 2 
where honourable rescue, and defence — v. 2 

in this fair rescue that thou \ Henry IV. v. 4 

a rescue! a rescue! (rep.) 2Henry/;'. ii. 1 

spur to the rescue of the noble I Henry VI. iv 3 

looks for rescue, you, his false hopes — iv. 4 
too late comes rescue ; he is ta'en .... _ iv. 4 

to destroy, came in strong rescue — iv. 6 

and Somerset brought rescue in — iv. 7 

wouldst have me rescue thee 2HenryVI. ii! 4 

unless thou rescue him from foul ..3 Henry VI. iii. 3 
rescue, my lord of Norfolk (rep.) ..Richard III. v. 4 

have holp to malce this rescue? Coriolanus, iii. I 

your comfort makes the rescue.. .^n^ony ^Cln. iii. 9 

m the rescue of Lavinia Titua.^ndronicus, i 2 

to rescue my two brothers from their — iii. I 
no rescue? what, a prisoner? I am even . . Lear, iv. B 

RESCUED— you he rescued? AsyouLikeit, iv 3 

my lord, I rescued her King John, iii 2 

myself, rescued the Black Prince ..Richard II. ii 3 
rescued is Orleans from the English..! Henry VI. i. 6 

and rescued thee from death — iv 6 

from the pride of Gallia rescued thee — iv! 6 

perhaps, I shall be rescued by _ y. 3 

in the end being rescued,I have ..iHenryVI. iii. 1 
the bishop's huntsmen rescued him.3HenryVI. iv. 6 

had me down, he rescued me Richard III. ii. 1 

pirates came and rescued me Pericles, v. 1 

RESCUING— slain in rescuing me SHenryVI. i. 4 

RESEMBLANCE, butacertaiuty..n/eas. forMeas. iv.2 

in resemblance of the mother Winter'sTale, v. 2 

and his resemblance, being not . . Richard III. iii. 7 

RESEMBLE something in me TwelfthNight, ii. 5 

we will resemble you m t)int..Merch. of Venice, iii. 1 
somewhat doth resemble you.Taming of Shrew, iv. 2 

m speech he doth resemble illenryVI. iii. 1 

how well resembles it the prime of. .SHeniy VI. ii. 1 
his purple blood right well resembles — ii. 5 
sand another not more resembles . . Cymbeline, v. 5 
up and down she doth resemble thee. titnsAnd. v. 2 
nor the inward man resembles tliat it. . Hamlet, ii. 2 

did the night resemble wJien he lay — ii. 2 

RESEMBLED my father as he slept ..Macbeth, ii. 2 

was said she much resembled me. Twelfth Night, ii. 1 

RESEMBLETH the uncertain ..TwoGen. of Ver. i 3 

RESEMBLING spirits of light. . . . Love'sL.Lost, iv. 3 

a counterfeit resembling majest.y ..King John, iii. 1 

RE-SEND— which she did re-send Alls Well. iii. 6 

RESERVATION to bestow _ i. 3 

to make some reservation of your wrongs — ii. 3 
making not reservation of yourselves Conoionws, iii.3 

with reservation of a hundred knights iear, i. 1 

kept a reservation to be followed with .. — ii. 4 
RESERVE-not yours to reserve. . Twelfth Night, i. 6 

re6er\'e them till a merrier Comedy of Errors, i. 2 

and yet reserve an ability that. TrotYus fyCress. iii. 2 
but reserve still to give. Timoii of Athens, iii. 6 (grace) 

if he covetously reserve it iv. 3 

sliould reserve my cracked one .... Cymbeline, iv 4 

reserve that excellent complexion Pericles, iv. 1 

[A'k/.] reserve thy state; and, in thy best. . Lear, i. 1 

censure, but reserve thy judgment Hamlet, i 3 

that she reserves it evermore about her.OWe«o, iii. 3 
RESERVED— have reserved alive.Weas./bril/eos. v. 1 
her deserving is a reserved honesty.. .4/;'s«'e;(, iii. 5 
here is a place reserved, sir. Where?., .Vac6e(/i, iii. 4 
the other part reserved I by consent.. /iiWiard//. i. 1 

only reserved, you claim no 1 Henry VI. v. 4 

only reserved their factor Richard III. iv. 4 

have reserved to myself nothing.^n/oiii/ ^-Cieo. v. 2 

some lady trifles have reserved v. 2 

not what you have reserved, nor what — v, 2 

always reserved my holy duty Cymbeline, i. 2 

wiiich you imagine so reserved — i. ,5 

tlius lovingly reserved the cordial. Titus Andron. i. 2 

nay, he reserved a blanket, else we Lear, iii. 4 

it reserved some quantity of choice . . Hamlet, iii. 4 

RESIDE— there reside, to make me Tempest, iii. 1 

or to reside in thrilling regions. ii;cas. /or A/eas. iii. I 
at the moated grange resides this.... — iii.) 
cogitation resides not in that man Winter'sTale, i. 2 

and where she resides Troilus <S- Cressida, i. I 

endless jar justice resides — 1.3 

a kind of self resides with you — iii. 2 

if thou wouldst not reside Timon of Athens, v. 1 

I would not there reside, to put my Oihello, i. 3 

RESIDENCE— a forted residence. Jl/eai./or Meas. v. I 

suffer question for your residence Alt's Well, ii. 5 

that to their everlasting residence . . King John, ii. 1 

from his native residence Richard II. ii. 1 

wliose procreation, residence.. Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

my residence in Rome, at one Cymbeline, i. 2 

haply, near the residence of Posthumus — iii. 4 

poison hath residence Romeo ^- Juliet, ii. 3 

their residence, both in reputation Hamlet, ii. 2 

RESIDENT— resident in France? ..\Henry VI. iii. 4 
be resident in men like one another. 3//enr!//'/. v. 6 

RESIDING— and there residing All's Well, iv. 3 

that thou residing here, goest yet. Antony ^ Cleo. i. 3 
no more than my residing here at.... ii. 2 

— iii. I RESIDUE ofyour fortune As youLike it, ii. 7 

— " ' I RESIGfN- thy dukedom I resign Tempest, v. 1 



the gods requite his charity !.. Y'er.Wes, iii. 2 (scroll) wilt thou resign them and lay dov/ri.'kingJohn',ii. i 



RES 



[ «27 ] 

Ki;SOLVK itself into a ilew I Hnmlet, i. L' 

KESOLVKD-purpose tliiit you resolved. Tempesi, iii. a 
I am resolved tlmt tlioii shalt .. TuoOeii.nf ler. i. 3 

that wiuita resolved will — ii, 6 

full resolved to take a wife — iii. 1 

but I am resolved on two pointa ..Twelfth Nighty i. 5 
and now is lie resolved to die ..Meas.forMcas. iii. 2 
I am resolved: 'tis but a three ....Loae'sL.Lost, i. 1 

for I, thy resolved patient Att's (CcW, ii. 1 

firmly am resolved you know (it'p.). Taming oJ'Sli. i 1 

I am thus resolved — ii. 1 

irremovable, resolved for flight .. Winier's Tale, iv. 3 

we are resolved, my lord Mm-belh, iii. 1 

until 3'our tears, resolved, be by some.KiitgJoUn, ii. 2 
from a resolved and iionourable war — ii. 2 
a resolved villain, whose bowels .... — v. 6 
he was not so resolved, when last . . Richard II. ii. 3 

aud luuigs resolved correction in 2110111/1 f. iv. 1 

we would be resolved, before we hear.. Ileiiry r. i. i 

now are we well resolved — i. 2 

since we were resolved of your truth. I Hennj yi. iii. 4 
are we certainly resolved to draw . . . . — v. 1 
I anr resolved for death, or dignity ..iHenryVI.y. I 
I am resolved to bear a greater storm — v. 1 

I be resolved whether our right ZHennjVI. ii. 1 

by him that made us all, I am resolved — ii. 2 

I firmly am resolved, you shall — iii. 3 

that thj' father had been so resolved! — v. 6 

hardy, stout, resolved rriates? Richard III.i.3 

you are resolved rather to die l^rep.).. Cnriolanus, i. I 
are 3'on all resolved to give your voices? — ii. 3 
be so resolved, I can o'ersway \\im. J uliusCasar, ii. 1 
be resolved how Ctesar hath deserved — iii. 1 
to be resolved if Brutus so unkindly — iii. 2 

received you, let me be resolved — iv. 2 

resolved to meet all perils — v. I 

myself resolved upon a course ..Anlnii;/ SCleo. iii. 9 

then, madam, stand resolved TiimAndron. i. 2 

resolved withal, to do myself tliis reason — i. 2 

I am prepared and full rt-solved — ii. 1 

and be resolved, he lives to govern ms.. Pericles, ii. 4 
thou art resolved? I am resolved.... — iv. I 

indoubt,is, once to be resolved Othetto,m.Z 

RESOLVEDLY more leisure All'slFell,v. 3 

RESOLVETH from his figure King John, v. 4 

RESORT of gentlemen TwoGen.ofl'erona, i. 2 

kept severely from resort of men .... — iii. 1 

why tlien I would resort to her — iii. 1 

often resort unto this gentlewoman? — iv. 2 
but sliall all our houses of resort., Meas.forMeas. i. 2 
cause of my son's resort thither .. IVinter'sTale, iv. 1 
where any honest men resort? . . Comedy nf Err. v. 1 
what men of name resort to him?. . Richard III, iv. 6 
with me to forbid him her resort. Timon of Athens, i. 1 

Irave had resort to you Julius Casar, ii. 1 

to be a place of such resort Pericles, iv. 6 

hours in the night spirits resort. fionieo ^Juliet, iv. 3 
she should lock herself from his resort.. ifamie(, ii. 2 

RESORTED to this forest .is youLtke it, v. 4 

RKSORTERS stand upon sound Pericles, iv. 6 

RESOUNDS as if it felt with Macbeth, iv. 3 

RE-SPEAKING earthly thunder Hamlet, i. 2 

RESPECT— if you respect them. . TwoGen. ofVer. i. 2 

if she respect not words — iii. 1 

in respect of her breatli — iii. 1 

since slie respects my mistress' love .. — iv. 4 
what sliould it be, that he respects in her — iv. 4 

thougli you respect not aught — v. 4 

in love, who respects friends? — v. 4 

were not for one trifling respect ..Merry ^Vives, ii. I 

so wide of his own respect — iii.; 

that, in some respects, makes — v. 5 

is there no respect of place TwelflhNight, ii. 3 

she uses me with more exalted respect — ii. ."i 

with less respect tlian we do Meas.forMeas. ii. 2 

more respect than a perpetual honour — iii. 1 
pei'suade yourself that I respect you? — iv. 1 

respect to your jjreat place! — v. 1 

would liave dafled all other respects.. MucA Ado, ii. 3 
it's but a nightgown in respect of yours — iii. 4 
else misgraffed, iu respect of years.. .Uii/. A'. 'sDr. i. 1 
and she respects me as her only son . , — i. 1 
yet a place of high respect witn me .. — ii. 2 

for you, in my respect, are all — ii. 2 

noble respect takes it in might — v. 1 

the passado he respects not Love'sL. Lost, i. 2 

than all the world I did respect her.. — v. 2 
was but a Trojan, in respect of this . . — v. 2 
in our respects, have we not been .... — v. 2 
you liave too much respect upon. >Ier. of Ven,ice, i. 1 
talk with respect, and swear but now — ii. 2 
without respect; methinks, it sounds ^ v. 1 
attend tiiem with respect and duty. . As youLike, i. 2 
in respect of itself it is a good life (j«P') — iii. 2 

in respect of a good piece of flesh — iii. 2 

'fore me, I speak in respect All's Welt, ii. 3 

for ray respects are better than they — ii. 5 
hold me no more iu your respect .... — iii. 6 
he is not for your lordship's respect.. — iii. 6 
whose high respect, and rich validity — v. 3 
respice fiuem, respect your end.. Comfrfr/o/ Err. iv. 4 

takes from his high respect Madieih, iii. 6 

ray uncle's will, in this respect King John, ii. 2 

to tread down fair respect iii. 1 

such profound respects do pull you on — iii. 1 

what good respect I have of thee .... iii. 3 

too heinous a respect of grief iii. 4 

liumour than advised respect iv. 2 

compulsion, and a brave respect! .... — v. 2 
and this respect besides, for that ray — v. 4 
with lionour and respect raay take .. — v. 7 

there's no respect how vile Richard II. ii. 1 

throw away respect, tradition, form — iii. 2 

lost that title of respect, which 1 Henry IV. i. 3 

in respect of the love I bear — ii. 3 (letter) 

your temper in a high respect — iii. 1 

vouchsafe me hearing, and respect .. — iv. 3 

I do respect thee as my soul — v. 4 

therespectof likely peril feared illenn/ir. i. 1 

in respect of poverty; but how I .... — 1.2 



RES 



RESIGN-and I resign my gage Richardll. i. 1 

you had been willing to resign — iv. 1 

contented to resign the crown? — iy. 1 

he bids you then resign your crown . . Henry V. ii. 4 

will resign my place. Resign it iHenryl'I. i. 3 

as willingly do I the same resign — Ji. 3 

or what tliou art resign to death .... — iii. I 

to resign his crown (rep.) 'iHenry VI. i. 1 

I Iiere resign ray government to thee — iv. 6 
i-esign thy eliair, and, where 1 stand — v. !> 
for my part, I'll resign unto your../(ic7mrii III. ii. 4 
tlmt you resign the supreme seat .... — iii. 7 
yield up rule, resign my life .. Titus Andronicus, i. 2 

we will resign, during the life of Lear, v. 3 

vile earth, to earth resign Romeo S,- Juliet, iii. 2 

RESIGNATION of thy state and . . Richard II. iv. 1 

RESIGNED— resigned his stewardship — ii. 2 

resigned the crown to Henry 3 Henry Vl. i. I 

I have resigned to you my charge . . Richard III. i.i 

RESIST— will resist such entertainment. Tempest, i. 2 
what! resists he? \\e\pb.im.MesasureJorMeasure, v. 1 
if she had not a soirit to resist . . Taming of ah, iii. 2 
prevent, resist it, let it not be so.... Richard II. iv. 1 

my lord, shall we resist it now? Henry V. i. 1 

it boots not to resist both 3 Henry VI. iv. 3 

tienumbed wills, resist tlie same. Troilus ^J- Cress, ii. 2 
and, who resist, are only mocked ..Curiolanus, iv. 6 

that would die, or ere resist Cymbeline, v. 3 

on death's net, whom none resist Pericles, i. 1 

vanciuislied, ere tliey do resist — i. 2 

if wars, we are unable to resist — i. 4 

these cates resist me, she not thought — ii. 3 

if he do resist, subdue him at his peril ..Olhello, i. 2 

RESISTANCE of her youth Much Ado, iv. I 

unfold to us some warlike resistance.. ^(/'s'Cc//,!. 1 
turn back in any show of resistance. 2 He?i7-?//r. ii.4 

RESISTED- hust resisted me iHenryVl. ii. 5 

he hath resisted law, and therefore. Corio/aniis, iii. 1 
our jEtliles smote? ourselves resisted? — iii. 1 
than could liis war resisted. . AntonySr Cleopatra, i. 4 
look for furv not to be resisted .... Cymbeline, iii. 1 

RESISTING— of this resisting town.. KiiigJohn, ii. 1 

RESOLUTE— are resolute then? ..Tu-elfih,\'ig/U,i. 5 
th.at the resolute acting of your.. jWeas./b?-.V/eas. ii. 1 

most resolute Porapeyl Lore's L. Lost, v. 2 

but he is resolute: I'll tell thee. . . . As youLike it, i. 1 

be bloody, bold, and resolute Macbeth, iv. 1 

do what ye dare, we areas resolute. 1 Henrys/, iii. 1 

but always resolute in most — iv. 1 

not resolute, unless so much iHenryVl. iii. 1 

and therefore am I bold aud resolute — iv. 4 

be resolute; I mean to take ZHenryVI.i.l 

ready to light; therefore be resolute .. — v. 4 
I thought thou hadst been resolute. /iic/iard ///. i. 4 
sharked up a list of landless resolutes ..Hamlet.i. 1 

RESOLUTELY; his meaning is good ..Merry IV. \. 1 

a purse of gold most resolutely 1 Henry IV. i. 2 

thrice-noble Sutrolk,'tis resolutely. .2H(>nry J'/, iii. 1 

RESOLUTION iete\\irom.Meas-ure for Measure, n\. 1 
do not satisfy your resolution with hopes — iii. 1 
in resolution as I swore before . . Taming ofSh.iv.2 
your resolution cannot hold .... IVinter'sTale, iv. 3 

I pull in resolution Macbeth, v. 6 

lest resolution drop out at mine eyes. King John, iv. 1 
the dauntless spirit of resolution .... — y. 1 
how hi^h a pitch his resolution soars! Richard II. i. 1 

resolution thus fobbed as it is \ Henry IV. i. 2 

how terrible in constant resolution. . . . Henry V. ii. 4 
that no want of resolution in me ..2HenryVI. iv. 8 
be it with resolution then to fight . .ZHenryVI. ii. 2 
and, in this resolution,! defy thee .. — ii. 2 
with resolution, wheresoe'er I meet tliee — v. 1 
in this resolution, here we leave . . Richard III. iii. 7 

ere a determinate resolution Henry Vlll. ii. 4 

I propend to yon in resolution .. Troilus ^ Cress, ii. 2 
breaking his oath aud resolution. . . . Coriolanus, v. 5 

and let us swear our resolution Julius Caesar, ii. I 

my resolution, and my hands .. AntonySr Cleo. iv. 13 
Dofriend, but resolution, and the briefest — iv. 13 
my resolution's placed, and I have . . — v. 2 
but that ray resolution helps me .... Cymbeline, iii. 6 
sports, thy resolution mocked .... Titus Andron. iii. 1 

myself, to be in a due resolution Lear, i. 2 

but call my resolution wise ... .Romeo fy Juliet, iv. 1 
native hue of resolution is sicklied o'er. Hamlef, iii. 1 
and fix most firm thy resolution Othello, v. I 

RESOLVE— single I'll resolve you Tempest, v. 1 

I am now going to resolve him . . Meas.for Meas. iii. I 
but this shall absolutely resolve you — iv. 2 
suddenly resolve me iu my suit ..Love'sL.Lost, ii. 1 
shall we resolve to woo these girls.... — iv. 3 
resolve the propositions of a lover. As you Like it, iii. 2 
resolves [Coi. -Tesolved] to carry her . . All's Well, iii. 7 
continue your resolve, to suck the ..Taming of Sh. i. I 
nor is your firm resolve unknown ,, — ii. 1 

first, resolve me that — iv. 2 

resolve you for more amazement.. Winler'sTale, v. 3 

resolve yourselves apart Macbeth, iii. 1 

I will resolve for Scotland i Henry IV. ii. 3 

how yet resolves the governor of Henry V. iii. 3 

resolve on this 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

let us resolve to scale their — ii.l 

a lady of so high resolve — v. 5 

resolve thee, Kicliard SHenryVI. i. 1 

raay it please your highness to resolve — iii. 2 

let us hear your firm resolve — iii. 3 

and Montague, resolve my doubt .... — i v. 1 

I will resolve your grace Richard III. iv. 2 

darest thou resolve to kill a friend of — iv. 9. 
then resolve me whe'r you will, or no — iv. 2 

will resolve him of ray raind — iv. 5 

liquid surge resolves the moon. Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

and 80 must you resolve Titus Andronicus, ii. 1 

resolve me this; was it well done — v. 3 

as you will live, resolve it you .Pericles, i. 1 (riddle) 

resolve your angry father — ii. 5 

he can resolve you (rep.) — v. 1 

from first to last resolve you — v. 3 

resolve me, with all modest haste Lear, ii.4 

and prosperous iu this resolve,. . Romeo 4^ Juliet, iv. I 



RESPECT-respects, I grant, I cannot .2HenryIV. i. 'i 

dLlivered witli good Inspect — ii. 2 

bcgim ii[ion an honourable respect .. — v. I 
til s, in respect, a child; and men ne'er — v. b 

iiotliini; tliat I respect Richard 111. i. 3 

tall fellow, that respects his reputation — i. 4 

but the respects thereof are nice .... — iii. 7 
out of the great respect they bear ..Henry I'm. i. 4 
for pure respect; no other obligation — ii. 3 
as you respect the common good .... — iii. 2 
yet should find respect for what .... — v. 2 

out of dear respect, his royal self — v. 2 

well, well, my lords, respect him — v. 2 

reason and resjiect make livers. Troilus ^ Cress, ii. 2 

observance or respect of any — ii. 3 

let me not shame respect — v. 3 

deny him, in respect of his Timon of Athens, iii. 2 

tlie icy precepts of respect — iv. 3 

on both sides more respect Coriolanus, iii. 1 

with a respect more tender — iii. 3 

our necks, they respect not us — v. 4 

sir, iu respect of a fine workman ..JuliusCasar, i. 1 
many of the best respect in Rome.... — i. 2 
and have respect to mine honour .... — iii. 2 
with courtesy, and with respect enough — iv. 2 
as the idle wind, which I respect not — iv. 3 
thou art a fellow of good respect .... — v. .^ 
with all respect and rites of burial. ... — v. 5 
a daughter whom he not respects .... Cymbeline, i. 7 
is dearer, in my respect, than all .... — ii.3 

in more respect than my noble — iii. 5 

in tliat respect then, like a loving. TitusAndron. v. 3 

has respect with hira but he Pericles, ii. 4 

shall not be more dear to my respect . . — iii. 3 
it is mingled with respects [Kjii. -regards]. Lear, i. 1 

since tliat respects of fortune are — i. I 

should kindle to infiamed respect — i. 1 

but, in respect of that, I would fain — i. 2 

you shall do small respect, show too .... — ii. 2 
to do upon respect such violent outrage. . — ii. 4 

nature's above art in that resjiect — iv. 6 

the which if thou respect Romeo ^Juliet, i. .5 

in one respect I'll thy assistant be .. — ii. .i 
she will be ruled in all respects by me — iii. 4 
are base respects of thrift, but none of .Hamlet, iii. 2 

both do learn me how to respect you Othello, i. 3 

such things else of quality and respect .. — i. 3 
ills worthiness does challenge much respect — ii. 1 
I may say so in this respect, for that he.. — ii.3 
comforts of sudden respect and acquittance— iv. 2 
RESPECTED house; next (rep.) .Meas.forMeas. ii. 1 
a more respected person than any .. — ii.l 
respected with man, woman, or child — ii.l 
she was respected with hiin before .. — ii. 1 

I respected with her (rep.) — ii.l 

is not then respected for what Coriolanus, iii. i 

only their ends you liave respected. . — v. 3 

banished him, we respected not them — v. 1 

princes tlieir lenown, if not respected. . Pericles, ii. 2 

RESPECTING her tliat's gone .... Winter's Tale, v. I 

I am mean, indeed, respecting . . laming of Sh. v. 2 

respecting what a rancorous mind..2He;i)!/r/. iii. 1 

respecting this our marriage witli. . Henry Vlll. ii. 4 

RESPECTIVE in myself ..Two Gen. of Verona, iv. 4 

vou should have been respective. i)/er. of Venice, v. 1 

''tis too respective, and too sociable . . king John, i. 1 

away to heaven respective lenitv .Romeo &Jul. iii. 1 

RESPECTIVELY welcome.. .. 7Vmono/-.j//ie<..v, iii. 1 

RESPECT'ST not spilling Edward's .Richardll. ii. 1 

RESPICE finem, respect your Comedy ofErr. iv. 4 

RESPITE of my wrongs Richard III. v. 1 

that respites me a life Meas.forMeas. ii. 3 

I crave but fourdays' respite ' — iv. 2 

after some respite, will return \ Henry VI. iv. 1 

did require a respite; wherein ....Henry VIII. ii. i 

this respite shook the bosom — ii.4 

forty days longer we do respite you ....Pericles, i. 1 

RESPONSIVE to the hilts Hamlet, v. 2 

REST o' the fleet? i,rep.) Tempest, i. 2 

keep from me the rest of the island .... — i. 2 

while you take your rest — ii.l 

for all the rest they'll take suggestion — ii. 1 

set it down, and rest you (je/).) — iii. 1 

I needs must rest me — iii. 3 

sit down, and rest iii. 3 

and away with the rest — iv. I 

and rest myself content v. 1 

every man shift for all the rest — v. 1 

where you sliall take your rest for this — v. 1 
Proteus, as of all the rest? ..TwoGen. of Verona, i. 2 

he of all the rest (rep.) — i . 2 

and there I'll rest ii. 7 

in thy pure bosom rest them — iii. 1 

above the rest, we parley i v. 1 

all rest at thy dispose iv. 1 

and so, good rest — iv. 2 

to steal at a minute's rest Merry Wives, i. 3 

him and the rest of their company .. — iv. 2 

now thus it rests (rep.) — iv. 6 

O yon should not rest between ....Twelfh Sight, i. 5 

let all the rest give place — ii.4 

I'll eat the rest of the anatomy — iii. 2 

to do you rest, a thousand — v. 1 

a woman as the rest goes even — v. i 

all the rest from their functions.. Meas.forMeas. i. 2 

having eaten the rest, as I said " — ii. 1 

there rest; your partner, as I hear .. — ii.3 

for his soul's rest — ii, 4 

thy best of rest is sleep — iii. 1 

fairer than honest: rest you well .... — iv. 3 
presently call the rest of the watch. . Much Ado, iii. 3 
the rest I'll give to be to you . .Mid. N.'s Dream, i. 1 
to the rest: yet my chief humour.... — i. 2 
now name the rest of the players .... — i. 2 

set your heart at rest, the fairy — ii. 2 

then to your offices, and let rae rest.. — ii.3 
we'll rest u , Hermia, if you think .. — ii.3 
upon this bank will rest my head .. — ii.3 

sleep give thee all his rest! ii.3 

and here will rest me (rep.) iii. 2 



aI^s 



REST, let lion, moon-sUine ....Mid.K.'sDream, v. 1 

tills is the greatest error of all tlie rest — v. 1 

e'er shall it in siiliety rest — v. 2 

swore to that, Biron, and to tlie n^st.. Love'sL.L,. i. 1 

who are the reaty Tlie youn;; Dunuiin — i\- 1 

bv tlie rest that have no heads — iv. 1 

for the rest of the v.ortliies? — v. 1 

t6 interrupt mv purposed rest — v. 2 

the rest will ne'er eoniu in — v. 2 

flitter up tlie-e powers of mine with rest -- v. 2 

and never rest, hut .eek the weary . . — v. 2 
and tlumkfuliy rest debtor (or.. ..Mcr.of fenice,}. 1 

rest you fair, gfjod sii;uiiir — 1.3 

is mv boy (.God re>t liis soul!) alive.. — ii. 2 

my rest to run away, so I will not rest — n. 2 

and I must to Lorenzo, and the i-est — li. 2 

s.mie ill a brewing towards my rest. . — ii. 5 

where are all the rest? 'tis nine — ii. u 

if we are like you in the rest — iii- 1 

the rest, stand all aloof — ]\\-- 

no rest be interposer'twixt U3 — in. 2 

I rest rauch bonnden to you .^s you Like il.i. 2 

brin" us where we may rest ourselves — li. 4 

I'll rest. Wilt thou rest damned? .. — iii. 2 

God rest you merry, sir — v. 1 

therest of the eonutry copulatives .. — y. 4 

the rest have worn me out with All s IFell, i. 2 

amonust the rest there is a remedy — _i. 3 

set up^vour rest 'gainst remedy — n. I 

but rest unquestioned welcome — ji. 1 

thanks, sir, all the rest is mute — ii. 3 

I can create tlie rest; virtue — Ji. 3 

let the rest go. My honour's at — ii. 3 

rest will cmnfort, for thy counsel's. Taming afSli. i. 1 

one thing more rests, that thyself — i. 1 

and me among the rest; an' if you .. — i. 2 

to whom we all rest generally beholden — i. 2 

be jest, then all the rest was so — ii. 1 

the rest that woo, and free access (rep.) — ii. 1 

but let it rest; now, Lieio, to you — iii. 1 

Walter, Susarsop. and the rest — iv. 1 

the rest were rairged, old, and beggarly — iv. 1 

and let the mustard rest — iv. 3 

but I'll in among therest — v. 1 

give rest to the minds of others .. iVinler'sTale, ii. 1 

nor night, nor day, no rest — ii. 3 

a moiety of my rest might come — ii. 3 

he took' good rest to-night — ii. 3 

breed thee, pretty, and still rest thine — in. 3 

or that youth would sleep out the rest — iii- 3 

wipe not out the vest of thy services — iv. 1 

so drew the rest of the herd to me — iv. 3 

he that sets up his rest to do — iv. 3 

God give you good rest I Well, sir (rsp.) — iv. 3 
life-preserving rest to be disturbed. Com. o/' -Err. y. 1 

in viewing o'er the rest o' the Macbeth, i. 3 

the rest is labour, which is not used .. — i. 4 

leave all the rest to me — — ;• 6 

heaped up to them, we rest your hermits — _i. 6 

what, sir, not yet at rest? — ii 1 

or else worth all the rest — ii. 1 

the rest that are within the note — iii. 3 

heaven rest Ihem now! — iv. 3 

that keep her from her rest — v. 3 

command the rest to stand King John, ii. 1 

and all the rest, so grossly led — in. 1 

one quiet breath of rest: a sceptre — in. 4 

if, what in rest you have — iv. 2 

humour rests by you only to be — v. 1 

and body to their lasting rest — v. 7 

cardinal Paiidulph is within at rest .. — v. 7 

to rest u ithout a spot for evermore — v. 7 

to Itself do rest but true — v. 7 

as for the rest appealed Richard II. i. 1 

and ail the rest of the revolting — ii. 2 

giieve you to report tlie rest — ii. 2 

Bhall ail rest under gam — j'^- ' 

myself a traitor with the rest — iv. 1 

here let us rest, if tliis rebellious — v. 1 

the rest let sorrow say — v. 1 

you would tell the rest, when — v. 2 

the rest rests sound; this, let alone (rep.) — v. 3 

rest of that consorted crew — v. 3 

take hence the rest, and give — v. 5 

the rest, demanded my prisoners \ Henry IF. i. 3 

with all the rest retold, may — _i. 3 

sirrah, Fal stuff and the rest — ii. 4 

and unbound the rest, and then .... — ii. 4 

him keep with, the rest banish — ii. 4 

the rest walk up above — .ji- 4 

and rest your gentle head upon .... — iii- 1 

better part of ours are full of rest.... — iv. 3 

and all the rest to whom they are. . . . — iv. 4 

fled with the rest; and, falling from — v. s 

all the rest turned on themselves IHenryll'.i. 1 

an old man, you should give me rest — i. 2 

at hand; the rest the paper tells — ii. 1 

because tlie rest of thy low — ii. 2 

booked with the rest of this day's — iv. 3 

to all the rest of this little kingdom.. — iv. 3 

lest rest, and lying still, might make — iv. 4 

as I have done the rest of ray — y. 5 

that is my rest, that is the rendezvous.Hciiry f.ii. 1 

gets him to rest, crammed with — iv. 1 

the rest are, princes, barons, lords .... — iv. 8 

let that one article rank with the rest — v. 2 

and rest your minds in peace! \HenryVI.i. 1 

most of the rest slaughtered, or took — i. 1 

naught rests for me in this tumultuous — J. 3 

and now there rests no other shift . . — ii. 1 

let dying Mortimer here rest himself — ii. li 

but, as the rest, so fell that noble .... — ii. 5 

the rest, I wish thee gather — ii. 5 

what I do imagine let that rest — ii. 5 

as will the rest, so wllleth — iii. 1 

but unto thee, Aleneon, and the rest — iii. 2 

Dauphin, and the rest, will be but ruled — iii. 3 

Charles, and the rest (rep. V. 4) — iii. 3 

pardon me, princely Henry, and therest — iv. 1 

nay, let it rest where it began , — iv. 1 



BEST— lord protector, and the rest ..\Henryl'l.\\. 1 

but let it rest; other affairs — iv. 1 

for lucre of the rest uiivanqnished — v. 4 

I rest periilexed with a thousand .... — x.b 

60, let her rest; and, madam, list illenryVl. i. 3 

well, to the rest (re//, ii. 2) — i. 4 

a pitch she flew above the rest — ii. I 

sovereign lady, with the rest — iii. 1 

that no mail should disturb your rest — iii. 2 
I cannot rest, until the white rose ..iUenryri. i. 2 

and the rest, whom we have left — i. '■! 

or, with the rest, where is your darling — i. 1 

the rest stand all aloof, and bark — ii- I 

in the ground be closed up hi rest.... — ii- I 

for all tlie rest is held at such — ii- 2 

needs must I rest awhile — ij- 3 

hours must I take my rest — ii- 5 

Kicliard, Warwick, and the rest .... — ii-8 

that rests in me to do — iii- 2 

but for therest, you tell — iii. 3 

against your majesty than all the rest — iv. I 
of all the rest, are near to Warwick.. — iv. 1 

to rest mistrustful where — iv. 2 

and now what rests, but, in night's .. — iv. 2 

lie and take his natural rest — iv. 3 

guess thou the rest — iv. 4 

there shall I rest secure from force .. — iv. 4 
lord Hastings, and the rest {lep. iv. 7) — iv. 5 
Richmond with the rest shall down.. — iv. 6 

till God please to send the rest — iv. 7 

shall rest in London, till we — iv- 8 

here at the palace will I rest awhile.. — iv. 8 

tliat he will seduce the rest — iv. 8 

sweet rest his soul! — v. 2 

if the rest be true which I have heard — v. 6 
for this, amongst the rest, was I ordained — v. 6 
thy turn is next; and then the rest .. — v. 6 
and now what rests, but that we .... — v- 7 

rest you, whiles I lament king Richard III, i. 2 

ill rest betide the chamber — i. 2 

God give your grace good rest! — i. 4 

so pale, lord Dorset, as the rest? — ii- 1 

perpetual rest rCr)(.Kn(. ne'er changing night] - ii. 2 
at Northampton they do rest to-night — ii. 4 

well, let them rest — iii- 1 

the rest, that love me, rise — iii. 4 

ever since hath lield mine eyes from rest — iv. 1 
■where peace and rest lie with me!-... — iv- 1 
foes to my rest, and my sweet sleep's — iv. 2 
well, let that rest; Dorset i- fled — — iv- 2 
rest thy unrest on England's lawful.. — iv. 4 
hide my bones, not rest them here! . . — iv. 4 

nor, night, thy rest! — iv. 4 

the rest march on with me — iv. 4 

God give you quiet rest to-night! .... — v. 3 

banquet ere they rest, I think" Henry Till. i. 4 

in ail the rest showed a most noble . . — . ii. 1 

you may read the i-est — iv- 1 

and all the rest are countesses — iv. 1 

her grace sat down to rest awhile .... — iv. I 

so may he rest — i v. 2 

I rest vour servant — y- I 

and all the rest are his sons . . Troilus Sf Cres^ida, i. 2 

and all the rest so laughed — j. 2 

but mark Troilus above the rest .... — i. 2 

my rest and negligence befriend .... — v. ti 

rest, sword; thou hast thy fill — v. 9 

beckoned from the rest below . . Timon of A/hens, i. 1 
argument of laughter to the rest .... _.— iii. 3 

the rest of your tees, O gods — iii. 6 (grace) 

'would all the rest were so! Coriolanus, i- 1 

like labour with the rest — i- 1 

the rest shall bear the business — 16 

the rest will serve for a short holding — _ i. 7 
devise witli thee where thou shalt rest — iv. 1 
forsook me, hath devoured the rest . . — iv. 5 
all tlie rest look like a chidden train .JuliusCasar.i. 2 

we are too bold u])on your rest — .ij. 1 

under leave of Brutus, and the rest . . — iii. 2 
are full of rest, defence, and nimbleness — iv- 3 
we will niggard with a little rest .... — iv- 3 
young bloods look for a time of rest-. — iv. 3 
the affairs of men rest still uncertain — v. 1 

that I may rest assured — v. 3 

remains of' friends, rest on this rock.. — v. 5 
my bones would rest, that have but.. — v. 5 

so, call the field to rest — v. 6 

better deeds to-morrow; teat you.. Antony SfCleo. i. 1 

grown sick of rest, would purge — i. 3 

witli the armed rest, courtiers of ... . — ii. 6 

and, with the rest full-manned — iii. 7 

and the rest that fell away — iy. 6 

is warmed by the rest, and takes .... Cymbellne, i- 7 
the factor for the rest, have done .... — i. 7 

sense repairs itself by rest — ii^t 

go in, and rest — iv. 2 

when all the rest do nothing — v. 3 

to the shining synod of the rest — v. 4 

and rest upon your never-withering — y. 4 

Alarbus goes to rest 7V///.S- Andronicus, i. 2 

in peace and honour, rest you here [rep.) — i, 2 

rest on my word, and let not discontent — i. 2 

he rests not in this tomb — i- 2 

if all the rest will speed — i- 2 

hopes more heaven than rests in thee — ii. 3 

culled it from among the rest — iv. 1 

but let her rest in her unrest — iv. 2 

well, (jrod give her good rest — iv. 2 

ou:' law, as dangerous as the rest Pericles, i. 1 

the rest, (hark in thine ear) — i. 2 

shall we rest us here, and by relating . . — i. 4 

for him to make his rest — ii. (Gower) 

till then, rest your debtor — ii. 1 

marshal the rest, as they deserve — ii. 3 

each one betake him to nis rest — ii. 3 

if in his grave he rest — ii- 4 

conveniently the rest convey .. — iii. (Gower) 
the gods make up the rest upon you! .. — iii. 3 

and make tlie rest malleable — iv. 6 

as in tlie rest thou hast been godlike . . — v. 1 



REST— on mine eyelids; let me rest .... fericles, v. I 

stav to hear the rest untold — v. 3 

and thought to set my rest on her Lear,\. i 

execution of the rest, beloved sons — i- 1 

sleep out, the rest I'll whistle — ii. 2 

IiL- hath put himself from rest — ii. 4 

all the rest of his body cold — iii. -I 

lie down and rest upon the cushions?.... — iii. i> 
lie here, and rest awhile. Make no noise — iii- B 

this rest might vet have balmed — iii- li 

above the rest, be gone — iv. 1 

sit vou down, father; rest you — iv. 6 

where they sliall rest f ir ever — v. 3 

this time all the rest depart away. Borneo (,- Juliet, i. I 

rest you merr\'I (7rp.) — i. 2 

God rest all christian soulsl — J- 3 

it waxes late; I'll to my rest — _i. 5 

as sweet repose and rest come to — ii- 2 

sleep and peace, so sweet to rest! .... — ii. 2 

true, the sweeter rest was mine — ii. 3 

rests me his minim rest — ii.4 

dry-beat the rest of the eight — iii. 1 

get thee to bed, and rest — iv. 3 

set up his rest, that you shall rest .... — iv. 5 
here will I set up ray everlasting rest — v. 3 
calls our person from our morning's rest? — v. 3 

rest, rest, perturbed spirit! Hamlet, i. 5 

vouchsafe your rest here in our court .... — ii- 2 

fo to your rest; at night we'll feast — ii- 2 
will not sort you with the rest of — ii- 2 

speak out the rest of this soon., — ii. 2 

the rest shall keep as they are — iii 1 

confound the rest! such love must .... — iii. 2 
if the rest of my fortunes turn Turk .... — iii. 2 
weal depend and rest the lives of many .. — iii- 3 

wh.at then? what rests? try what — iii. 3 

aie all the rest come back? — iv. 7 

woman, sir; but, rest her soul, she's dead — v. 1 
such rest to her as to peace-parted souls.. — v. 1 

in rest of his quick sail — v. 2 

therest is silence — v. 2 

flights of angels sing thee to thy resti .... — v. 2 
both you of my inclining, and the rest ..Othello, i. 2 
my lord shall never rest; I'll watch Mm — iii. 3 
you shall close prisoner rest, till — v. 2 

'BESTS them; he, sir, that takes. Cimedi/o/Err. iv. 3 
RESTED in your grace to unloose.. iWea.«. /or il/e(j.<. i. 4 

in whom the title rested IHenryVI. ii. 5 

'BESTED— 'rested on the ease. . Comedy of Errors, iv. 2 
which 'rested him, that can I tell .... — iv. 2 
to warrant tliee, as I am 'rested for .. — iv. 4 

RF.-STEM their backward course Othello, i- 3 

RESTETH in ray choice Taming of Slireir,\\\. 1 

thus employed, what resteth more ..ZHenry f'l. i. 2 

here resteth in his tent? — " iv. 3 

RESTFUL English court Richard II. iv. 1 

RESTING, for lier true king's — iv. 1 

resting well assured they ne'er .... Coriolanus, iii. 1 
true-fixed, and resting quality ..Julius Cefsnr, iii. 1 
not resting here, accuses him .. Antony ^ Cleo. iii. ."> 

BESTITirilON large of gold OlheUo, v. 1 

conscience; he makes restitution ..Merry Wires, v. 5 

and never asked for restitution ....2HenryVI.\\\. 1 

his fortunes to hopeless restitution.. Coriolanus, iii- 1 

RESTIVE [CoZ.K»!(.-resty]sIothflnds.C!/m6e/;)!e, iii. H 

RESTLESS violence round Meas. for Mens. iii. 1 

the mind to lie in restless ecstacy .... Macheih, iii. 2 

a world of restless cares Riclmrd III. i. 4 

RiCSTORATION, hang thy medicine on.. Lear, iv. 7 

RESTORATlVE-for restoratives. PerWes, i. (Gow.) 

to make me die with a restorative. Romeo <S-Ju/i>/, v. 3 

RESTORE— their senses I'll restore .... Tempest, v. 1 

1 know thou must restore — v. I 

heaven restore thee? TwelflhNight, iii. 4 

thy wits the heavens restore! — iv. 2 

you wronged, look you restore ..Meas.forMeas. v. 1 

and restore them to the owner Much Ado, ii. 1 

God restore you to health — v. 1 

and Robin shall restore amenis. Mid. N.'s Dr. (epil.) 

will restore but that one half Love^sL.tost, ii- 1 

and restore yourselves into .. IHennjlV. i. 3 

restore this cripple to his legs again?. 2 Henry I' I. ii. 1 
it made me once restore a purse .. ..Ricliard III. i. 4 
out of all tliese to restore the king..Henr?/r//7. ii. 2 
captain's brain restores his heart. /4nioH!/<§-C(eo. iii. 11 
heaven restore me ! would I were .... Cymbetine, i. 2 
restore to thee the people's hearts.. 7'/ii/sy4»idron. i. 2 
traitor, restore Lavinia to the emperor — i. 2 

heavenly powers, restore him ! Hamlet, iii. 1 

I can again thy former tight restore Othello, v. 2 

RESTORED the king to healtli ...;..AlVsWell,\i. 3 
that you are well restored, my lord, . — ii. 3 
0.11 their lands restored to them . ?As yoit Like ft, v. 4 
noble lord restored to health., raumig- of S/i. 1 (ind.) 
■we joy to see your wit restored! .... — 2 (indue) 
and lands restoi'cd again, be freely .Ricliard II, iii. 3 

restored again to all his land — iv. 1 

former strength may be restored ..iHemylV. iii. 1 
were you not restored to all the duke — iv. 1 

of our restored love, and amity — iv. 2 

thou be restored, thou art a yeoman. 1 Henri/ K/. ii. 4 
either to be restored to my blood .... — ii. 5 
that Richard be restored to his blood — iii. 1 
been long blind, and now restored?. .2Kenr!/rf. ii. 1 

restored me to my honours Henry VllL ii. 1 

who bv vou have been restored Pericles, iii. 2 

RESTOB,^NG his bereaved sense? Lear. iv. 4 

RESTRAIN in me the cursed thoughts. iWaete/A, ii. 1 
when men restrain their breatli ....^ Henry IV. ii. 3 
could restrain the stiff-borne action. .2Henryff. i. I 

would restrain the one, distain Richard III. v. 3 

love to me, restrains you thus .. Troilus^ Cress, iii. 3 
fo chain up and restrain the poor Corititanus, i. 1 

RESTRAINED means, to make-./1/ea.v. rorMeus. ii. 4 
immured, restrained, captivated.. Z.ot'eV/..jtos/, iii. 1 

have restrained yourself within AlVsWell, ii. 1 

being restrained to keep him Taming afSh. iii. 2 

by the cormorant belly be restrained. Cor/o/a;t«Sji. \ 
my lawful pleasure she restrained ..Cymbeliue, ii. a 
should have him thus restrained Lear, ii.2 



RES 



[ 029 J 



RET 



liESTKAlNKD the riotsot your lu lowers.. '.<•«' ..ii- ; 
sliouUl Imve kept, sliort, i;c=irume(l .... """*'• " ■ I 

KESTRAl-NUXU aid loTimon.. I inwno Alliens, v. . 

restniiii'ni" IVum course required .. Ilinur sliUe, i. . 

RESTU\1N'ST iiiu from tlie duly ..Coi:aliiiiiis, v. . 

illiSTllAUN'T, .ill his in dedication .. 7•»■«';';'.^• v. . 

wheiieu comes this restramti' .... ;Ucos../u/- Meus. i. • 

the immoderate use turns to restraint — |. ' 

wisliing a more strict restraint iipoD — . 

tt restraint, though all the world s . . ,- ' • 
putsitott'hy a eoinpelled restraint ..AUi.lltU,n 
my eagerness with her restraint...... - v. 

reason of this strange restraint .Comedy of tr. in. 

whose restraint doth move tiie AyiffJo iii, v. 

plucks the muzzle of restramt -llleuiyU . iv. 

that lock up your rcstrai n.t '^''"'.'iZhn ' 

put upon YOU what restramt and UlhuUo, i. 

tlirowmg 'restiaint upon us; or say ..... . — >v- 

IlESUMli; -nor resumes no care, iimmi.-/- .I/Ac". ,11. 

nay. mother, resume tliat spirit Cni iWdoi/.s, i\ . 

to resume we have again ....... .■■tj/Mbeinie, h ■ 

resume the shape which tliou dost think . u ,u i. 
RESUMED again the part I.. ...... . .C,jinbe,,,t, v. 

KESITKK ECTIONS! give when she.Mcnj il -I'o, i. 
lU;-SURVEY-betterTieed to re-survcy._//c<ir!/ * . v. 
liETAlLS his wares at wakes.. ....Loi'es L.Losi, v. 

more ttian he liaply may retail.. .. ..iH^"'!/'' -i- 

to whom I will retail my couqueat .Rtdiaid III.^'V. 
RETAlLEDtoallposterity ........... - '.''• 

UETAIN-thy shape invisible retain.. Twipe.if, n. 
longer did we not retam much.Co/»(;< j/o/ hnnrs,i. 

retain but privilege of 1 H""V// i- v- 

only we still retain the name i^eai , i. 

so oft have boasted to retain .'•...• V , 7„, ,■; 

retain that dear pertection . . ... . Romeo g^," 'V 'i ' 

be pardoned, and retain the otlenee? Hamlet, ui. 

KET.VINED his name Comedy oj i" "". ■ 

the duke retained him his Henry f'iii-\- 

RETAINERS; and your w;ord3 ...... — "• 

RETAINING but a quantity of life. . hmgJoan, v. 
RE-TELL thee again and again ....... • • • 'J'/'™;'.V 

itt'TENXION-they lack retention. 3 weyv/iAiff"'. "■ 
without retention, or restraint . . . ... — v. 

kin" to some retention and appointed . . . • 'f ""^'..X- 

RETENTIVE enemy, my gaol? . . 1 monoJAUi. ii . 

can be retentive to tlie strength. ...J«;.i«C<*.<ar,i. 

IIETINUE, doth any detd iHenryiy. if,. 

but other of your insolent retinue ...-■.•• ^™'''. '■ 

RETIRE into my cell.. lemi,es'., iv. 

thence retire me to my Milan........ — _ .X,- 

colours of my love, and not retire. M'''^' !/ 'f '" 
did make their retire to the ..... -l^ove sL 

retire yourself into some covert., tytnlerj, lute, iv. 

retire we to our chamber. .MacbeA, . 

with a blessed and unvexed retire . . King John, u. 
onset and retire of both your armies — ii- 

fi.'ht coldly, and retire themselves .. — v. 
tlieir own ground in faint retire ... — v. 

of sallies, and retires; of treiiches ..\Henujiy. u. 
our soldiers, we'll retire to Calais ... Henry y. in. 
he is enforced to retire, and the duke — m. 
a peaceful and a sweet retire from . — 'X- 

our English troops retire 1 Henry VI. \. 

retire into your trenches — J- 

if thou retire, the Dauphin........ .. - iv. 

gracious lord, retire to Kemlworth.-iHe'iri/rf. iv. 
the hardiest warriors did retire.. iHe.,ry yi.i. 

i...t;ii .. Kin ^noiiil.il 1-1+ r|.r.irft .. — 11. 



me iiaruicau wrtmv.o «.« *"~ — 

ne'er till now, his scandal of retire .. — 

that cries, retire, if 'Warwick bid .... — ;;• ■ 

forced to retire by fury of.tlie wind . . - i ■ ^ 
when he retires, the Grecian . ...IrodusljCiehs.i. j 

with fiery truncheon my retire ...... — v. j 

thou dost miscall retire : I do not fly - v. 4 
ICol.li a retire upon our Grecian part .— \- » 

give me leave to retire myself Coriolanus, i. 3 

he that retires, I'll take him for ... . — i- < 
uorcowardly in retire: believe me .. — }• ^ 
and did retire, to win our purpose .. — . '• ° 
retire to your chamber? ....Antony^ Cleopatra, iv. 4 
retire, we haveengagedourselves.... — jv. / 

they do retire. •We'll beat 'em — iv- 7 

a retire; anon, a rout, confusion .... Cymhebne, v. 3 

retire with ine to my lodging. ■ ^«f '.|- - 

goodMercutio; let's retire .•••'?,<'".'«° */"/",' 'V i 
retire tliee; go where thou art bdle.ted..0//.dlo, i ■ 3 
against Othello's breast, and he retires .. - v. 2 
RE'riRED-being so retired o'erprized.. {emppt, i. , 
he is of late much retired from.. Winters Tale, iv. 1 

you are retired, as if you were — i*'- •> 

like a bated and retired flood King John v. ■ 

mi>'ht have retired his power llickard Ii. \\. i 

retiredhimself to Italy - Y;] 

whereupon he is retired, to n'i)<i....ilijnry I. n. 1 
oris he but retired to make \mxi....iHen,yyi. iv. H 
1 liave retired me to a wasteful .. limonoj .idi. ii. - 

hearing yon were retired . — ..Y- [ 

he is retired to An ti urn Coriolanus, ui. 

most retired hath her life been .... Cyinbeluie, in. . 

RETIREMENT lives in this I Henryl I . iV. ] 

lest your retirement do amaze your .. — , „ 1 
vour grace in your retirement .. .ileas./orMe.is. v. 
any retirement, any seiiueslration ..Henry ■}■ I 
his rL-tireineiit, marvellous distempered. Ha/ii!'^', 111.. 
RETIRING from the siege of Orleans.l Hi-nry I l.i 1 

course ne'er feels retirmg ebb uilietin.ju. , 

RETOLD— retold or spoken of IHemyll . i. 

with all the rest retold.. — '• ; 

RE rORT the sum in equipage ....Merryiy,ves. i . 
thus to retort your maiiiteat. . . . Mean. far.Veas. v. 
called the retort courteous irep.)..AsyoiiLil<e il,v. 
I do retort the solus in thy bowels . Henry r.i, 
and they retort that heat again, rroiliu ^Cresi uu 

whose (lextcritv retorts it Uo.neoj- Jul.et l; . 

KETOURNE-Ie ehien est retouriie ■■""•'•■yl- >"• 
RETR AOT- should ne'er retract. 7 rodiis 4- C; <.;».,. u. 
RETREAT-honourable retreat ..''»!'';'','-",';''• '.''' 

in a reti eat, he outrun.* any All 1 II ell,:v. 

tie trumpet sound^ retreat :,\^'""-K'/\ iV 

and. for a retreat, how swilUy .. ..illenryiy. 111. 
retieat is made and execution stayed — iv. 



RETREAT-sound the retreat Henry V.ui. i 

here sound retreat, and cease 'r '"'■',,■,/ t 

bold to sound retreat or parley . . ..'itlenry yi;i\- f 

ears could never brook retreat 'iHenry VI. 1. 1 

a retreat [Co(.-retire] upon our. . TroiliaiCrm. v. 9 
RETROGRADE-he was letrogratle ..AUsH'ell,}. I 

it is most retrograde to our desire Hamlet,!, i 

RETURN-prosiicr well in our return.. 7'™i))fs(, 11. 
and return or e'er your puUo.......... — v- } 

orel>-c letuni 1.0 more TnoGen. of Verona, i. i 

wheiipossibly lean, I will return .. - W- i 

you will return the sooner — ;!• ; 

till I'roteus make return — .i'- .'^ 

return, return, and make thy..... ... — P'. - 

or ne'er return again into my sight.. — . ly- 
haudauud do reliini this answer.. 7'«'e(/(/i ^lg'lt, \. 

than make mun-olited return : - .\- ^ 

she reinnis this ring to you, sir — .!!' J 

1 will return again into — !!!•■; 

by this gentleman till my return.... — l\\- | 
it e\cr he return (lep) ..Measure/or Measure, in. J 

but if ever the duke return — '.'.l-'j 

you liope the duke will return no more — in. - 
contents of this is the return of the duke — iv. . 

make a swift return — !^- :^ 

'tis he that sent me of the duke's return — iv. ; 
happy return be to your royal grace! — v. 
consummate, return liiin here again — v- 1 
and return again, asfrom avoyage..Wui.A. si"-..!!. . 

we will return to Fiance Uwe s L.Lost, iv. i 

but to return to the verses - — i^'- : 

■will they return? They will, they will — v. . 
if they return in their own shapes .. — . 'Y- ; 
to return to their lioine, and to . . Mer. of I enice, 1. . 

I ilo exiieet return of thrice — .!■ ; 

return in haste, for I do feast — \\- ■ 

andreturnallinanhour. ........... — "■ ; 

perhaps, I will return immediately.. — !!• ; 

make some speed of his return — ,\\- ■ 

until my lord's return (jcp) — . •!!• 

nothing waste tiU you return ....AsyouLikeU,u. 

he left a promise to return again ,„— „, „'^' 

which never returns us thanks Allsirell, 1. 

I will return perfect courtier — \- 

till their own scorn return to them .• — .!• 
to return and find your grace in health — .v.- 

return you hither? Ay, madam — i.^i' 

4 he will return; and hope I may — !!!• 

1 come, let's return again, and suffice — .1.1.1. 

1 but retm-n with an invention — 1.". 

and then to return and swear the lies — i.v- 

Lm) ii. i or return again into France? — ;'''• 

' 3 your son was upon liis return home — iv. 

1 will return it home, and give — .v. 

1 and thou return unexperienced. Taming of i>'i. iv. 
will we return unto thy father's house — iv. 
for our home return ; unwilling.. CoiiieJi/ oJ Err. i. 
and then return, and sleep within mine — 1. 

if I return, I shall be post indeed — .'. 

tin lu didst return from him - — "• 

till thou return to me; if every one 

or else you may return without 

home with it, when I return 

still to return your own ...;.... 

which, being taught, return to plague — 

adieu, till you retm-n at night — ; 

ay madam; but returns again to-night — 1 
may soon return to this our sutfering — : 

and again return to bed; yet all — 

to my home I will no more return ..King John, 

if that war return from France — 

hither return all gilt with Frenchmen s — 
our colours do return in those same — 

fair return of banished majesty! .. — 

and return, for I must use thee — 

would not my lords return to me _ — 

return the precedent to these lords again — 

1 will not return till my attempt .... — 
and instantly return with me again — 



RETURN and tell his grace Riclinrd III. ill. / 

in submission will return tons — .v. 4 

at his return, no doubt Heniyl Ill.\\. 1 

and wishes, are all 1 can return — \\-''> 

wlicn you are called, return — m 4 

pr'y thee return ! w i th thy approach . . — 
but my lord, when returns Cian—""' — 



iii.a 
ACressidfi, i. 3 
n of Athens, \. 1 



_ iv. I 



.Macbeth, i. 6 
■ 7 



o— - ^.-J 

botti return 6aok to their chairs' Richard II. i. 3 

while we return these dukes — }■ ■i 

never to return breathe I against. ... — !• ^ 

return again, and take an oath — \- ^ 

spent, return with welcome home .. — .1.3 
but none returns: for us to levy power — .11. - 
bid time return, and thou shalt have — Ji.'- - 

.say, thus the king returns — V'- f 

than Bolingbroke's return to England — »Y- ' 

did return to be deposed .\ Henry I V i- 3 

shall I return this answer to the king? — iv. i 

surety for a safe return again "~,,/-^'': 

myself handsome till thy return ..■■illenrylV.u. . 

as you return, visit my house — !!V ;^ 

as 'I return, I will fetch off these — ;.'.'.- 

acquainted with hiin, if I return — i!!- : 

lie might return to vasty Tartar Henry!-. 11. - 

and return your mock in second .... — }},■ 
succour we entreated, returns us .... — ni. 

at his return into London ..._. — \"- 

. and quickly will return an injury .. - ly.- 

tell her, I return great thanks \HenryVI. _i\- 

return thee, therefore, with a flood of — i|n 
come, come; return; return, thou .. — i.n- 

respite, will return to Calais — "v 

flies so, will ne'er return again — iv 

for, till yon do return, I rest „ ., ~ ,,,"■ 

St. Alban's we do make return itlenryl i.\ 

but now return ^^ e to the false — V! 

with the rude multitude, till I return — in 

when I return with victory from ZHenryl l.\ 

renounce him, and return to Henry — 1.!! 

messenger, return in post — !!! 

but I return his s.vorn and mortal loe — in 
stay till Warwick made return? .... — i.v 
to return from France with speed.... — ■■* 
path tliul thou shalt ne'er return ..llichard III. 
and then return lamenting to my love — 

go, return unto thy lord •.,•:•■.• — ?! 

I shall return before your lord.sliip .. — !) 
return, good Cutesby, to the gracious — n 



_ 1.2 

— V. !i 

. Pericles, i. 1 



„„. ...J .„... "ler? 

returns to chiding fm'tune _ 
returns in peace most rch in.... 7 

the giver a return exceeding all — 1.1 

I do return those talents — .!• - 

yon have bid me return so much .... — ]]■ '- 
and I am here no richer in return.. — .11. ;.i 

but now return, and with their faint — ]]]■■> 
honour to you, upon his good returns — 1.1 1- ■' 

then the rot returns to thine own — iv. 3 

expecting in return twenty forone!.. — iv. -i 

please tli'ee to return witli us — v. 1. 

1 like this well, he will return again — v. ■■. 
let us return, and strain what means — v. 2 
till my lord return from the wars . . Coriolanus, t. 3 
fourth would return for conscience sake — .11. 3 

hence, before the tag return? — !H- ,', 

you must return, and mend it ...... — ;!!■ - 

what must I do? Return to the tribuuee — in. '^ 
I'll return consul; ornever trust to.. — m- '^ 

say that Marcins return me — '^■\ 

you must reliirn : om- general will . . — v. - 
but he returns, splitting the air with — v. .. 
so return to you, and nothing else .'../«/msCrt's.rr, 11. 1 

quick, and return Inlony Sr Cleopatra, 1. 3 

words of Fompey, return it again — .n.- - 

whoreon, I begged his pardon lor return — .1.11 '1 

I shall return once more to kiss .. — ".'•'' 

we must return to the court of guard — iv. ^ 
lend my diamond till your return — Cymbelme, 1. ,; 
return he cannot, nor continue where — .1. '' 
made the speediness of your return .. — .1;. •_ 

our hence-going, and our return — i(;' ■; 

whereunto I never purpose return? . . — lu- 1 
may'st thou wander, safe return again! — 111. •> 
I'll stay till hastv Polydore return .. — iv. - 
his body's hostage for his return .... — iv. ■- 
why gone, nor wlien she purposes return — iv. .i 

a leg of Rome shall not return — v. 3 

yoinl never return to tell one — y. ' 

returns the good Andronicu? IitusAndron. ;. I 

returns with precious lading to the bay — 1. ^ 

truejoy for his return to Home irej'.) — i-'^ 

and return, captive to thee, and to thy 
this will I do, and soon return again 
so thou ne'er return, unless thou say . 

till you return to us, peaceful — ;■ - 

in our haven, and then return to us — J. - 

ray message must return from whence .. — .1. -i 

return them, we are ready ..^ — !!• - 

he not return, I shall with aged. — \\- 

find, and win unto return, you shall .... — !!■ « 

calls me traitor, I return the lie — .!!•■; 

your master will be dtad ere you return — lu. • 
there's no hope she'll return ............ — ly. 2 

I return those duties back as are right fit. . Lear, i. 1 

when he returns from hunting — !• 3 

get you gone; and hasten your return .. — .1.4 
to our sister you do make return {rep.'i .. — 11. 1 

return to her? and fifty men trfp.) — .!;■'' 

return, and fone their scanted courtesy — i". i 

the worst returns to laughter ....•.•• — y- ] 

his personal return was most required .. — iv. .s 

if he return the conqueror .— iv. b ( letter; 

if ever I return to you again, I'll bring .. -- y. ■- 
in iheir spheres till they return .Romeo f Juliet,}}, z 
in half an hour she promised to return — .11. 5 
how shall that faith return again.... — 1.1 1 ■ .^ 

ready to go, but never to return — iv. a 

dost return to pry in what X further — v 3 

leave and favour to return to France .... Hamlet, } ■ 2 
most fair return of greetings, and desires — .11.2 
from whose bourn no traveller returns .. — in. 1 
and my return, shall be the end of my ... — m. '2 
my suildeu and more strange return — iv. 7 Uet.) 

to what base uses we may return •„ ,~„ ^!■ i 

a little more wit, return to Venice. . ....Othello,\i. j 

bade him anon return, and here speak .. — iv. 
sir, I obev the mandate, and will return — iv. 1 

if she will return me my jewels — — iv. 2 

Othello and Desdemona return again .. — iv. 2 

hesiivs, he will return incontinent .. — iv. 3 

RETU'RNED-minion is returned again Tfrnpesf, iv. 1 
see it be returned; or else. . . . TwoGen.of Verona,], 'i 

it should be so returned Ta■elflh^lghl,n. - 

of the count Orsino's is returned .... — ni- 4 
we talk of, were returned again. tfeoi./oriVeas. 111. i 

would he were returned! „~L.j"'''f 

is signiorMoutanto returned MuchAdo,}- 

he is returned; and as pleasant as ever — 1. 
1 (Ion Pedro is returned to seek you.... — 1. 

1 am returned, and that war-thoughts — ..)• I 
it is home returned, there n,..Mid.N.sDream, 111. 1 

my herald is retuineil Love s L Losl,\u. 

is my master vet returned? .... Merch.of Venice, v. 1 

for our words: are thev returned? .. — v. 1 
andbuteveunowrelnmed; Ihavenot — v. 1 
thcood of our returned fortune. . /l.<!/oi' /■''«■ i', V. 4 
are they returiu'd to the court? .Wiii>er\r..le, v. i 
thou art returned so soon? i.r, ■p.).. Comedy of Err. } •-' 
nor the slave returned, that in such — .11. I 

to that end am I returned .......... — iv. 1 

he with none returned: then fairly.. — v. 1 
not those in commission vet returned?. il/ndWi, 1. 1 
until it luid returned these terms .... Richard II. 1. I 

when he's returned, against Aumerle — iv. 1 
my uncle is returned: deliver up . . I Henry IV. y. -J 

is returned with some di-comfort i Henry IV. 1 2 

here is returned my lord of Westmoreland - ly 1 
ray life, my joy, again returned? ....\Henryl I. \. I 
andanwer was returned tliiit he .. . — ir ■ 
are not the speedy scouts returned again -- 1 \ . : 
lie is retiirneil in his opinions .. ..Henry HII. ii: : 
that Cianmer is returned with welcome — m. . 



RETURNED her thanks in Henry Fill. v. 

that Paris is returned home .. Tnutus 4- Cresslda, \. 

to have her back returjied — ii. 

tlie best lialf shouUl have returiie'.7Vmono///(A. iii. 
1 retiirneU you an empty messenger — iii. 

from wlienee he returned Coriolanus^ i. 

as Cominius is returned, unlieard .. — v. 
hail, lords, I am returned your soldier — v. 
tliat I returned witli simular proof.. Cijmbeline, v. 
five times he hatli returned .. Ti/uj Andronicus, i. 
honour and with fortune i-s returned — i. 

these miscliiefs be rcturneda.-aiu.... — iii- 

Boult's returneil. Now, sir, luist Pericles, iv. 

tlieoldmaii lortliL lie is retorned Lear, ii. 

was this before the king returned? — iv. 

yesternight returned my letter. . Homeo Sr-lnliet, v. 
which had returned to the inheritance.. Ham(rt, i. 

my good lord, are joyfully returned — ii. 

if lie he now returned, as clieclcing at.... — |v. 
Hamlet, returned sluiU know you are .. — iv. 

and I returned the rather for that Othello, li. 

returned me expectations and coniforts.. — Iv. 

t will be returned fortliwith: dismiss — iv. 

RETURNETH toblushand beautit.) .illenry I'l. iii. 

Alexander rcturneth to dust Hamlet, v. 

RETURNING-I am returning All's IVell, iy. 

returning were as tedious as go o'er . . Mricheth, iii. 

he returning to break our necks ..I'lirUilanus, y. 

are done, and Ctesar is returning. .Jh^'hs Ciesar, i. 

RETURN'ST no greeting to thv . . . . Riclmrd II. i. 

REUNtTEO to the crown of France Henry V. i. 

REVEAL yourself to h\m.. Measure for Measure, v. 

now reveals before 'tis ripe Twelflh A'i^/il, v. 

we still see them reveal tliemselves.. J/Csire/;, iv. 

madam, I have a secret to reveal 1 Henry ri.v. 

till the heavens reveal the damned.. Tiius And. iv. 

reveal liow thou at sea didst lose Pericles, v. 

no; you will reveal it. Not I Hamlet, i. 

REVEALED— she revealed herself ..XHeuryl^l. i. 

hath revealed to us the truth i Henri/ I'l. ii. 

revealed myself unto him, until some . . Lear, v. 

REVEL— our revels now are ended Tempest, iv. 

wl> V, that liour of fairy revel Merry ll'irrs, i v. 

I delight in masques and revels.. Tiof//(/i iVij/ii, 1. 
shall we set about some revels? ..... — i. 
dotli keep his revels here to-night.. Mid. K.'s Dr. ii. 

and see our moonlight revels — ii- 

what revels are in hand?, — v- 

in niglitly revels, and new jollity .. — _v. 

for revels, dances, masks Love'sL. Lnst,iv. 

to the feast, revel and domineer. Taming of SA. iii. 
and revel it as bravely as the best . . — iv. 
the saffron face revel and feast. . Comedy of Err. iv. 
and unadvised revel, this unhaired.-KingVo/i/i, v. 

drink, dance, revel the night 2 Henry 1 1', iv. 

yon cannot revel into dukedoms Henry r. i. 

to revel it with him {rep. iv. I) ZftenryVI. iii. 

revel in the entrails of my lambs.. /iir/iaid ;//. iv. 
entreat an hour of revels witli them. Henry Vlll. i. 
after rain, and revel all with him.. CoWotoniis, iv. 

that revels long 0' nights JuliusCmsar, ii. 

the lamps of night in revel. ..4ii(on!/^Cicopa(ra, i. 
present our Alexandrian revels — y. 

and revel in Lavinia's treasury.. TilusAndron. ii. 

which looks for other revels Pericles, \\. 

date with this night's revels Romeo ^Juliet, i. 

being our kinsman, if we revel much — iii. 

this heavy-headed revel, east and vtest .Hamlet, \. 

where joy most revels, grief doth most .. — iii. 

and revels his addiction leads him Olhello, ii. 

what, man! 'tis a night of revels — ii. 

with joy, revel, pleasure, and applause.. — ii. 
REVELLED-revelled in the mgM.liicliard IT. iii. 

that revelled in our parliament ^Henryf'I. i. 

father revelled in the heart of France — ii. 
REVELLER— moonshine revellers. Merry Wires, y. 

the revellers are entering MucliAdo, ii. 

with a masker and a reveller JnlinsCtPsar, y. 

he is called the Briton reveller Cymbeline, i. 

REVELLING-have revelling to-night. .Wijcft.Wo, i. 

with triiimph, and with revelling.. Mid. iV.'jDr. i. 

still revelling, like lords, till all ....iHenryFI. i. 

REVELRY— our rustic revelry Asyov Like it, v. 

REVENGE— will revenge it on him .. Tempest, iii. 

as in revenge of thy Ingratitude. rwoGcM.o/Ter.i. 

in revenge of my contempt — ii. 

which be humours of revenge Merry Wires, i 

wilt thou revenge? — ..i. 

to he revenge on this same — iii. 

pursue him witli any further revenge? — iv. 

my revenge find notable cause .. Tirelfth^iight, ii. 

rather pluck on laughter than revenge — v. 

time brings in his revenges — ^. 

revenges to your heart. . . . Measure for Measure, iv. 

have ta'eu revenge, by so receiving.. — iv. 

choose your revenge yourself Much Ado, v 

and so dies my revenge ^ — y 

as in revenge, have sucked up...Wd..V.'sD)<am, ii 

I'll find Demetrius, and revenge this — ii' 

it will feed my revenge Merchant of I'enice, ii 

wrong us, shall we not revenge? — — ii 

what is his humility? revenge — jj 

by christian example? why, revenge — 11 

and no satisfaction, no revenge — ij 

absent argument of my revenge. .^s youLike it, ii 

nobler ever than revenge, and nature — iy. 

both my revenge and hate.. Ali'sWell,U. 

thonglrinv revenges were high bent.. — y. 

till I can find occasion of revenge. TnmlngofSh. ii, 

why, his revenges must in that be.Winler'sI'ate,i. 

the very thought of my revenges — _ii. 

with eves of pity, not revenge! — iii. 

to bloody thoughts, and to revenge.. — iii. 

thou mav'st revenge:— O slave! Macbeth, iii. 

medicines of our great revenge, to cure — iv, 

revenges burn in them; for their.... — y. 

justice, and revenge on you KingJuhn, ii. 

where revenge did paint the fearful. . — iii 

lay it open, to urge on revenge — iv, 

giving it the worsliip of revenge .... — iv 



[ 630 ] 

REVl-^NGE-ofiicefor thee of revenge. .Kmg-Jo/in, v. 7 
let heaven revenge; for I may never. «ic/m>d //. i. 'i 

but not revenge thee dead — . '■ ■* 

shall render vengeance and revenge.. — iy. 1 
revenge the jeering, and disdained . . 1 Henry IF. i. 3 
a king that will revenge lord Stafford's — y. 3 
aptest way for safety, and revenge ..2HenryII'. i. 1 
he will drive you out of your revenue — ii.4 
ro\ise up revenge from ebon deu with — y- 5 

our person, seek we no revenge Henry F. ii. 2 

1 will most horribly revenge — v. 1 

thy groat, in earnest of revenge — y. 1 

would strike a strol.-e in his revenge..! Henry Fl.i, 5 

liapiiened in revenge of him — ii. 2 

now shine it likea comet of revenge — V]\'^ 

but deeds, revenge this treason! — iii. 2 

fly to revenge my death (ifp. iv. 6) .. — jv. .5 

my death's revenge, thy youth iv. 6 

not who they sting in his revenge ..IHenryFI. iii. 2 
therefore, to revenge it, shalt thou die — iv. 1 
wlien merchantlike I sell revenge — — iv. 1 
if he revenge it not, yet will his friends — iv. 1 
tliiuk therefore on revenge, and cease — iy. 4 
both have vowed revenge ou him ....ZHenryFI. i 1 

as shall revenge his death — i. 1 

they seek revenge, and therefore will — i. 1 
were not revenge sufficient for me . . — i. 3 
lest in revenge thereof, sith God is . . — i. 3 
a bird that will revenge upon you all — _j. 4 

blows, and revenge for me! — ii. 1 

withhold revenge, dear God! — ii. 2 

revenge! brother, revenge my death! — ii. 3 

given me measure of revenge — ii. 3 

both bound to revenge, wert thou — ii. 4 

I will revenge his wrong to lady Bona — iii. 3 
but seek revenge on Edward's mockery — iii. 3 
nor forward of revenge, though they — iy. 8 

revenge his death! (rep.) .Richard III. i. 2 

no man but prophesied revenge for it — i. 3 

God will revenge it (rep. ii. 2) — ii. 1 

hungry for revenge, and now I cloy.. — iv. 4 
even for revenge mock my destruction? — v. 1 
I revenge. What? Myself on myself? — v. 3 
menaced revenge upon the cardinal. Henry /'/J/, i. 2 
merely to revenge him on the emperor — ii. 1 
pleasure, and revenge, liave ears. 3Voi7H5 ^ Cress, ii. 2 

hope of reveuge shall hide our — y. 1 1 

and that's revenge enough Timon of Athens, iii. 4 

to revenge is no valour, but to bear .. — iii. 5 

if thy revenges hunger for that — v. 6 

let US revenge this with our pikes ..Coriolanus, i. 1 
for bread, not in thirst for revenge .. — i. 1 
for thy revenge, wrench up thy power — _ i. 8 
revenge thine own particular wrongs — iv. 5 

the leading of thine own revenges — iv. 5 

vows revenge as spacious, as between — iv. 6 

think to front his revenges with — v. 2 

though I owe my revenge properly . . — v. 2 

my exile, sweet as my revenge! — v. 3 

to allay my rages and revenges — y. 3 

Csesar's spirit, rangin^for revenge. ./«/msCfl'sar,m. 1 
revenge; about, seek, burn, fire, kill — iii. 2 

we'll revenge his death — iii. 2 

revenge yourselves alone on Cassius,. — iv. 3 

revenge it: I dedicate myself Cymbeline, i. 7 

revenges, hers; ambitions, covetingg — ii. 5 
as certain as I expect my revenge — iii. 4 (letter) 
and I'll be merry in my revenge .... — iii. 5 

my revenge is now at Milford — iii. 5 

so the revenge alone pursued me ! . . . . — i v. 2 
I would, revenges, that possible strength — iv. 2 
thy adulteries rates and revenges .... — y. 4 
opportunity of sharp revenge upon. TilusAndron. i. 2 
basely put it up without revenge?. . . . — _i. 2 
controlment, justice, or revenge? .... — ii. 1 
blood and revenge are hammering in — ii. 3 
revenge it, as you love your mother's — ii. 3 
which way shall I find revenge's cave? — iii. 1 
as will revenge these bitter woes .... — iii. 2 
to heaven she heaves them for revenge — iv. 1 

will have discovered for revenge — iv. 1 

revenge upon these traitorous Goths — iv. ! 

will not revenge: revenge the heavens — iv. ! 
if you will have revenge from hell .. — iv. 3 

in course of this revenge, to do — iv. 4 

1 am Revenge, sent from below (rep.) — v. 2 
Revenge, which makes the foul (rep.) — v. 2 
some 'surance that thou art Revenge — v. 2 

sweet Revenge, now do I come .... — v. 2 

he firmly takes me for Revenge — v. 2 

and cleave to no revenge but Lucius — v. 2 
Revenge now goes to lay a complot (rep.) — v. 2 
calls herself Revenge, and thinks me mad— v. 2 
cause had Titus to revenge these wrongs — y. 3 
the gods revenge it upon me and mine. Pericles, 111. 3 

1 will have such revenges on you both. . . . Lear, ii. 4 
I will have my revenge, ere I depart .... — iii. .^ 

the revenges we are bound to take — iii. 7 

the king, anil to revenge tliine eyes — iy. 2 

but newly entertained revenge, .flimco ^.'uliel, iii. 1 
tliou to revenge, when thou shalt hear . . Hamlet, i. 5 
revenge his foul and most unnatural .... — i. 5 

may sweep to my revenge — i. ■'' 

promiited to my revenge by heaven and — ii. 2 
croaking raven doth bellow for revenge.. — iii. 2 

this is hire and salary, not revenge — iii. 3 

and spur my dull revenge! — iv, 4 

is't writ in your revenge, that, sweepstake — iv. 5 
persuade revenge, it could not move thus — iv. 5 

but my revenge will come — iv. 7 

revenge should have no bounds — iv. 7 

should stir me most to my revenge — v. 2 

let us be conjunctive in our revenge Olhello, i. 3 

revenge being nigh, bade her wrong stay — ii. 1 

but partly led to diet my revenge — ii. 1 

too lioor, too weak for my revenge ! — iii. 3 

a capable and wide revenge swallow them — iii. 3 
some grace, yet have we some I'evenge . . — iv. 3 
great revenge had stomach for them all . . — v. 2 
and sweet revenge grows harsh — v. 2 



REVENGED on Eglaraour. . TwoGen. ofFerona, y. 2 
how shall 1 be revenged (rep.) ....Merry Wives, ii. I 

let's be revenged on him — ii. I 

detect my wife, be revenged on Falstaff — ii. 2 
on whom to-night I will be revenged — v. I 
revenged on the whole pack of you. TivelfihSif^ht, v. I 

well, I'll be revenged as I may MuchAdo, ii. I 

flouts me, and I'll be revenged . . Taming of Sh. ii. 1 

to be revenged for this villany — y. 1 

he does; we'll be revenged on him ..1 Henry IF. i. 3 
tear her; I'll be revenged on her.... 2 Henry;'', ii. 4 
but we will be revenged sufficiently. . 1 Henry Fl. i. 4 
it irks his heart, he cannot be revenged — i. 4 

not, lieavens, be revenged on me! 'i Henry F I, i. I 

revenged may she be on that hateful — i. 1 
be thou revenged on men, and let me live — i. 3 

how shall Bona be revenged — iii. 3 

I would I were, to be revenged Richard III. i. 2 

to be revenged on him that (re/).) .... — i. 2 

revenged on Rivers, Vaughan, Grey.. — __i. 3 

to be revenged on him Henry Fill. iii. 2 

we will be revenged ; revenge .... Julius Civsar, iii. 2 
when I am revenged upon my ..AnIonyfCleo. iv. 10 

be revenged; or she, that bore you Cymbeline, i. 7 

revenged! how should I be revenged? — i. 7 
I'll be revenged: his meanest garment? — ii. 3 
nay, indeed, to be revenged upon her — iii. 5 

I fear, 'twill be revenged — iv. 2 

revenged ou Rome and Saturnine. 7'i(Hs.4ndron. iii. I 

I am sent to be revenged on him — v. 2 

worse than Progne I will be revenged — v. 2 
the king now bears will be revenged ....Lear, iii. 3 

and so am I revenged? (rep.) Hamlet, iii. 3 

only I'll be revenged most througlily .... — iv. 5 

REVENGEFUL-revengeful steel ..RicliardU. iv. 1 

stay thy revengeful hand — v. 3 

our devotion with revengeful arms?.3ffe7ir7/r/. ii. 1 
tliy revengeful heart cannot forgive. /'/cAard ///. i. 2 
his nature, that he's revengeful .... Henry Fill. i. 1 
my revengeful services may prove. . Coriolanus, iv. .5 
witli revengeful war take wreak . Tilus Andron. iv. 3 
I am very proud, revengeful, ambitious. Hamlet, iii. 1 

REVENGEiVlENT and a scourge . . 1 Henry IF. iii. 2 

REVENGERS want Antony^ Cleopatra.ii. 6 

death make me revenger — iii. I 

REVENGING fire 2HenryVI. iv. 1 

the revenging gods 'gainst parricides Lear, ii. I 

REVENGINGLY enfeebles me Cymbeline, v. 2 

REVENUE— what my revenue yielded.. ^eJnpes^ i. 2 
withering out a young man's revenue. il/id. iV. Dr. i. 1 

a dowager of great revenue — i. 1 

whose lands and revenues enrich. ..4s you Likeit, i. 1 
in beard is a younger brother's revenue — iii. 2 
the revenue that was old sir Rowland's — v. 2 

my revenue is the silly cheat Winter' sTale, iv. 2 

witchcraft with revenue cherish — KingJohn, iii. 1 
the revenue whereof shall furnish . . Richard II- i. i 

coin, revenues, and moveables — ii. 1 

barely in title, not in revenue — ii. 1 

manors, rents, revenues, I forego .... — iv. 1 
bears a duke's revenues on her back..2He?ir!/r/. i.3 
the ripe revenue and due of birth.. flicAard///. iii. 7 
for the wide world's revenue. . Troilus ^-Crcssida, ii. 2 
ignorance, be thine in great revenue! — ii. 3 
that we detain all his revenue . . Antony <S- Cleo. iii. G 
a revenue of any king's in Europe .. Cymbeline, ii. 3 
tlie sway, revenue, execution of the rest . . Lear, i. 1 
enjoy half his revenue for ever (rep.) — i. 2 (letter) 

and the son manage his revenue — i. 2 

the waste and spoil of his revenues — ii. 1 

fiom thee, that no revenue hast Hamlet, iii. 2 

REVERBS no hollownese Lear, i. 1 

REVERBERATE hills Twelfth Night, i. 5 

tliat shall reverberate all as loud ....King Joint, v. 2 
like an arch, reverberates .. Troilus SfCressida, iii. 3 

REVERENCE— by thy reverence. . TwelfthMghi, v. I 
saving your honour's reverence..Meas./or M eas. ii. 1 

hide himself in such reverence MuchAdo, i i. 3 

saving your reverence, a husband .... — iii. 4 
trust not my age, my reverence, calling — iv. 1 
I am forced to lay my reverence by . . — y. 1 
do them reverence, as they ^y. Merchant of Fenice,i. 1 
wlio, saving your reverence (rep.). ... — ii. 2 

is nearer to his reverence As you Like it, i. 1 

alow submis-sive reverence.. ramjig-rt/AVi. I (indue.) 
reverence of the grave wearers .. WintersTale, iii. 1 
without he say, sir reverence.... Comedy o//irr. iii. 2 

reverence set apart, to him King John, iii. 1 

the fair reverence of your highness ..Richard //. i. I 
not reverence, makes thee to except. . — i. 1 
what reverence he did throw away .. — _i. 4 
flesh and blood with solemn reverence — iii. 2 
of holy reverence, who, I cannot learn — iii. 3 
that lie is (saving your reverence) ..\HenryIF. ii. 4 
hear with reverence your exposition.2 Henry IF. iv. 2 
but you misuse the reverence of your — iy. 2 
of what your reverence shall incite .. .. Henry F. i. 2 

that with reverence I did not I Henry /'/. ii. 3 

with reverence may I say 2HenryFI. iii. 2 

and, in thy reverence, and thy chair-days — ..Y*^ 

for reverence to some alive Richard III. iii. 7 

deserve we no more reverence? Henry Fill. iv. 2 

but reverence to your calling makes — v. 2 
admired reverence in a slave . . Timon of Athens, y. 1 
love, good thoughts, and reverence. Jw//usCrt7sa;-, iii. I 
none so poor to do him reverence .... — iii. 2 

saving reverence of the word Cymbeline, iv. I 

tliose that I revereuce, those I fear . . — iv. 2 
yet reverence, (that angel of the world) — iv. 2 
adorest and hast in reverence .... Tilus Andron. v. 1 
do not look for reverence, but for love . . Pericles, i. 4 

the sun, for them to reverence — ii. 3 

this policj', and reverence of age . . Lear, i. 2 (letter) 

knave, know you no reverence? — ii. 2 

reverence the head-lugged liear would lick — iv. 2 

sisters have in thy reverence made! — iv. 7 

of this (save reverence) love Romeo^ Juliet, i. 4 

play and trifle with your reverence Olhello, i, 1 

in the due re\'ereuce of a sacred vow .... — iii. 3 

REVERENCED likea blessed sain t.l Henry f'/. iii. 3 



REV 



[ 031 ] 



REVERENCED for their lawful 1 Uenrj/ \'l. v. 4 

Rr.VKRlCND geiitleinnii Mernjiyives, iii. 1 

a Slid fttce, a reverend carriage . . Tmelltli NigM, iii. 4 
anuist tliiinkt'ul and reverend youth .MuchAdo, v. I 
tlitre is no start' more reverend tlian one — v. 4 
to let liim lack a reverend .Mer.ofl'eiik-e, iv. 1 (let.) 

here 'tis, most reverend doctor — iv. 1 

all isdone in reverend care of herTaming o/S/i.iv. 1 
I perceive, thnu art a reverend father — iv. b 

by law, a3 well as reverend age , — iv. 5 

flowers tliere, Dorcas; reverend.. Whiler'sTale, iv. 3 
to see areverend Syracusan.. ComcJi/ 0/ Errors, v. 1 
she is virtuous and a reverend lady.. — v. 1 

good reverend father (re;j.) KingJohn. m. 1 

some revereud room, more than .... Richard U. y. 6 

tluit reverend vice, that grey \ Henry If. \]. 4 

ancient lords and reverend bishops.. — "i. 2 

to have a reverend care of yonr iHenrylF.]. 2 

lam bound to thee, reverend Feeble — in. li 
reverend father, and these noble lords — ly. 1 

and their most reverend heads Hfnnj I', lii. 3 

and twenty reverend bishops •iHenr!/l'l.\. I 

reverend fathers, and well-learned. lUchmd III.}}}. 5 
within, with two right reverend fathers — iii. 7 
reverend looker-on of two fair queens — ly. 1 

revereud cardiuaHjfp.) Henry fill, i 1 

welcome, most learned reverend sir.. — ]>.'i 

these reverend fathers (rep.") — ]]■ i 

I leftno reverend person in this court — _ii. 4 
your pleasures with me, revereud lords? — in. 1 

two reverend cardinal virtues — HJ. 1 

come, reverend fathers, Ijestow your — "n. 1 
other learned and reverend fathers .. — iv. 1 
what two reverend bishops were those — iv. 1 
•where the reverend abbot, with all his — iv. 2 

and thou most reverend Troilus <§- Cress, i. 3 

most reverend Nestor, 1 am glad to . . — .iv. 5 
your reverend ages love security . Timon ofAlh. in. 5 
by two of their most reverend senate — v- 2 
say you are reverend grave men .... Coriotmtus, ii. 1 
therefore, please you, most reverend — ii. 2 

bv my father's reverend tomb TitusAndron.h. 4 

d reverend tribunes! gentle aged men! — lii. 1 
come, tliou reverend man of Rome . . — v. 3 
hail, reverend sir! the gorts preserve ..Pericles, -v. 1 

reverend appearei-, no; I threw her — v. 3 

reverend sir, the gods can have no ... . — v. 3 
in reverend Cerimon there well — v. 3 (Gowerl 

old and reverend, you should be wise Lear, i. 4 

you reverend braggart, we'll teach yon . . — n. 'i 

tliis reverend holy friar Komeo^Juliet, iv. 2 

on the milky head of reverend Priam .. Ham/ei, li. 2 
most reverend signior, do you know — Oilwllo, j. I 

the Ottoraites, reverend and gracious — 1.3 

most potent, grave, and reverend signiors — i. 3 

REVEREND'ST throat in Timonof Athens, y. 2 

REVERENT— very reverent BpoTt.Love'sL.Losi,\v.'> 

a very reverent body ...' Comedy of Errors, iii. 2 

of very reverent reputation, sir — v. 1 

touch thee but with reverent hands.l Henry VI. v. 3 
the reverent care, I bear unto my . .2Hc/«!/ )'/. iii. 1 
if ancient sorrow be most reverent. /dcftarii ///. iv. i 
REVERENTLY— do it reverently. .2Heiiri//;'. iv. 4 
how may I reverently worship thee..l Henry I'l. i. 2 

I hold thee reverently ZHenryVI. ii. 2 

REVERSE— thy stock, thy reverse. /l/e«i/ Wives, li. 3 

reverse the doom of death rHusAndronicus, iii. 1 

reverse thy doom [K>t(. -reserve thy state]. i.«ir,i. 1 

reverse a prince's doom Romeo Sr Juliet, iii. 3 

REVERSED— order was reversed ..Richard III. ii. 1 

REVERSION— in reversion his Richardll.i. \ 

'tis in reversion that I do possess .... — ii. 2 

now remains a sweet reversion XHenrylV. iv. 1 

no perfection in reversion iii^W.Troilus tr Cress, iii. 2 
REVERSO— the punto reverso 1.. Ro/iwo ^Juliet, ii. 4 
REVERTED -armed and reverted. Come'*!/ o/Brr.iii.2 
would have reverted to my bow again. Ham(e(, iv. 7 
REVIEW— I shall review Sicilia.. IVinler'sTale, iv. 3 
REVILE— revile me there? . . Comedy of Errors, iv. 4 
REVILED— she herself reviled you .. — iv. 4 

and his eve reviled me, as his Henry fill. i. 1 

REVISIT ST thus the glimpses of the ..Hamlet, i. 4 

REVIVE, look up, or I will die.. Romeo % Juliet, iv. h 

air by which -he should revive., il/eas. /or iv/eas.ii. 4 

is prepared, and time revives us .... AlVs fVell, iv. 4 

with my breatli I can revive it, boy. KingJohn, iv. 1 

by death, revives two greater 'iHenrylV. iv. 1 

and never shall revive \Henryyi.\. I 

I should revive tlie soldiers' hearts.. — iii. 2 

he doth revive again; madam iHemyfl. iii. 2 

how thy words revive my heart! . ...ZHenryV l.\. 1 
words revive ray drooping thoughts — iii. 3 
shall after revive (.rep. v. 5). . Cymbeline, V. 4 (fcroU) 

yet he revives; what are you, sir? Lear, iv. 6 

REVIVED-that need to be revived.2f/enr!/;r. iv 1 
name might be in thee revived ....\Henryfl. iv. 5 
is not this boy revived from death?.. C)/m6eKne, v. 5 

are now revived, to the majestic — ..Y* -^ 

my comfort is revived by t\\\-a\. Romeo S^ Julii:t, iii. 3 

that I revived, and was dn emperor .. — v. 1 

REVIVING— suck reviving WoQi.. J uliusCivmr, ii. 2 

to be more fresh, reviving Ct/mbeline, i. 6 

REVOKE that doom of mercy ZHenryVI. ii.6 

all revoke your ignorant election ..Coriolunus,\i 3 
and revoke your sudden approbation — ii. 3 
revoke thy gift; or, whilst I can vent ....Lear.i. 1 

REVOKED— this shall not he revoked — i. I 

REVOKEMENT and pardon comes. Henry Fill. i. 2 

REVOLTandcliangeyourraind.V'KioGcH.o/rer. iii. 2 

for the revolt of mien is dangerous. A/e;)!/ iVives, i. 3 

surfeit, cloyment, and revolt .... TmetfihNiglU, ii. 4 

as gravity's revolt to wantonness.. Lovers I.. Lost, v. 2 

to corrupt him to a revolt Alt'sffelt, iv. 3 (note) 

of tlie revolt of the newest state Macbeth, i. 2 

how minutely revolts upbraid hia .... — v. 2 
and less have given him the revolt .... — v. 4 
that doth revolt from liis allegiance. Kins' Jo/m, iii. 1 
O foul revolt of French inconstanc}' I — iii. 1 
rU liis people shall revolt from him — iii. 4 
matter of revolt, and wrath — iii. 4 



REVOLT— ne'er stained with revolt.. KingJohn, iv. 2 
our discontented lOiinties do rev<dt.. — v. 1 
seek a plaster of contemned revolt .. — V. 2 

you ingratc revolts, yon liloody — v. 2 

lead me to tlie revolts of England here — v. 4 

I fear, revolt on Hereford's side Richard II. i'l. 2 

revolt our sidiject.s? that we cannot — iii- 2 

not be ahindei'ed with revolt 1 Henry 1 1', i. :i 

quickly nature falls into revolt ...,'iHenry If. iv. 1 

for this revolt of thine, methinks Hemy r. ii. 2 

doth my uncle Burgundy revolt? ..1 Henry I'l. iv. I 

the stout Parisians do revolt — v. 2 

the king is merciful, if you revolt. .2Jfe»r!/F/. iv. 2 
all will revolt from me, and turn. . . .3 Henry I'l. i. I 
thou wilt revolt, and fly to him . . Richard III. iv. 4 
if I revolt, off goes young George's .. — iv. :> 
can revolt without perdition (rep.)Troil..ir Cress, v. 2 
doth daily make revolt in my. Timonof Athens, iv. 3 
I'd revolt, to make onl.y my wars ..Coriolanus, i. 1 
their mutinies and revolts, wherein — iii. I 

all the regions do smilingly revolt .. — iv. G 
and flush youth revolt: no vessel.. ^ii'oni/i^CTco. i. 4 

Alcxas did revolt; and went to — iv. C 

nobler than my revolt is infamous . . — iy. 9 
at one time encounter such revolt . . Cymbeline, i. 7 
by thy revolt, O husband, shall he .. — iii. 4 
for barbarous and unnatural revolts — iv. ) 

and will revolt from me Titus Andronicns, iv. 4 

now, ray thoughts revolt; for he's Pericles,]. 1 

the images of revolt and flying off! Lear, ii . 4 

revolts from true birth Romeo 4- Juliet, u. 3 

with treacherous revolt turn to anotlier — iy. 1 

hath made a gross revolt Othello, i. 1 

fear, or doubt of her revolt — iii. 3 

REVOLTED— our revolted wives.. Wcrri/ Wives, iii. 2 

that have revolted wives whiter'sTal,; i. 2 

home revolted Mortimer (rep.) 1 Henry 1 1', i. 3 

to younger brothers, revolted tapsters — iy. 2 

France is revolted from the ] Henry I'l. i. 1 

the towns each day revolted 2He>i)t/r;. iii. 1 

farewell, revolted fair! Troilus SfCressida, v. 2 

the kings that have revolted Antony SfCleo. iv. 5 

plant those that have revolted in.... — iv. 6 
when men revolted shall upon record — iv. 9 

REVOLTING— on her revolting son. King John, iii. 1 
the revolting [Cof.-revolted] faction. Ri'c/iarrf //. ii. 2 
make a dearth in this revolting land — iii. 3 

scourge the bad revolting stars 1 Henry I'l. i. 1 

the false revolting Normans 2 Henry I'l. iv. I 

REVOLUTION of the times make..2Henn//F. iii. 1 
revolutions; these are begot .... Love^sL. Lost, iv. 2 
pleasure, by revolution lowering./lri(on!/>5'Cteo. i. 2 
here's fine revolution, an' we had Hamlet, v. 1 

REVOLVE what tales Cymbeline, in. 3 

fall into thy baud, ievolve..Tu>elfthXight, ii. 5 (let.) 

I may revolve and ruminate 1 Henry VI. v. 5 

save such as do revolve and .... Troilus f/- Cress, ii. 3 

REVOLVING this will teach thee.. BicAard 111. iv. 4 

REWARD with plagues ....TmiGen.of Verona, iv. 3 
nothing but the reward of a villain . . Much Ado, v. 1 
is old dog my reward? most true .. AsynuLike it, i. 1 

reap thanks for their reward All's Well, ii. 1 

reward, did threaten and encourage. (Fi/i/er's 7'. iii. 2 

heaven reward me for it! \ Henry IV. iii. 3 

let them, that should reward valour. . — v. 4 
reward: he that rewards me, God ()-ep.) — v. 4 
and check was the reward of valour.2 Henry; r.iy. 3 
never have you tasted our reward. . 1 Henry VI. iii. 4 

take tills reward; malte merry 2 Henry VI. i. 2 

the post, in hop': of his reward — i. 4 

follow us for thy reward — ii. 3 

I will reward you for this venturous — iii. 2 
therefore thus will I reward thee .... — iv. 3 
have a thousand crowns for his reward — iv. 8 
we give thee for reward a thousand . . — v. I 

of high pay, and great rewards SHenryVI. ii. 1 

promise tliem such rewards as victors — ii. 3 

there's thy reward; begone — iii. 3 

have a high reward, and he his life? — v. 5 

reward, when the deed's done (rep.). Richard 111. i. 4 
opens his purse, to give us our reward — i. 4 

who shall reward you better for — i . 4 

proclaimed reward to him that brings — iv. 4 
in time will find their fit rewards.. Henri/T///. iii. 2 
honesty rewards him in itself .. Timon of .-ithena, i. I 
be received, not without fair reward — i. 2 

you gods, reward them ! — ii. 2 

not to reward what you have done . . Coriolanus, i. 9 
rewards his deeds with doing them .. — ii. 2 
a fellow tliat will take rewards. .4H/on!/ <S-Cieo. iii. 1 1 

I will reward thee once for thy — iv. 7 

I am the heir of his reward Cymbeline, v. 6 

let Rome reward with love.. .. Titus Andronicns, i. 2 
for thy reward among the nettles — ii. 4 (letter) 

and then look for your reward — iv. 3 

lieaven's shaft, but sin had his reward.. Per/c/e.?, ii. 4 
lust the due and just reward .... — v. .i (Gower) 

take thy reward; five days we do Lear. i. 1 

the godsreward your kiiidness! — iii. 6 

fortune's buffets and rewards hast ....Hamlet, iii. 2 
countenance, his rewards, his authorities — iv. 2 

thank me. love me, and reward me Othello, ii. 1 

REWARDED-but lightly rewarded. Loire's/,. Lost, i. 2 

and am I thus rewarded? Henry I'lll. iii. I 

REWARDIOR of his friends Richard III. i. 3 

RKWAHOING my dependants ..l.ove'sL. Lc^si ,V\\. 1 
RE-WOKD— I the matter will re-word.. ffowifc/, iii. 4 

REX Anglije, et hajres Francioe HenryV, v. 2 

Egoet Rex mens was still inscribed. Henry /''//. iii. 2 

REYNALDO. I will (rep) Hamltt,u. \ 

di» you mark this, Reynaldo? — ii. 1 

RHAPSODY of words — iii. 4 

RIIEIJIS— studying at K\t&\ms.Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 
C'hampaigne, Rheiins, Orleans .... ..\HenryV l.'\. 1 

Charles is crowned king in Rheims .. — i- 1 

RIIENlSII-glaas of Rhenish mne.Mer.o/Venlee, i. 2 
theie is between red wine and Rhenish — iii. 1 
he drains his draughts of Rhenish down.//'mi/e/, i. 4 
he poured a flagon of Rhenish on inv head — v. 1 
RIlESUS-stole to Rhesus' tents ...'.illenryVI. iv. 2 



IlIC 



RHETORIC, disclosed with eyes ..toi'e'i/,./,o5(,.ii. I 

sweet smoke of rhetoric! — _ iii. I 

the heavenly rhetoric of thine eye — iv. 3'(vcr»ee) 

fie, painted rhetoric! — iv. 3 

for it is a figure in rhetoric Asyou Llheit, v. I 

practise rlntoric in your common. TamingofSh i. 1 
KIIEUM-6eri)igo, and the rheum. Weat./or;Vea». iii. 1 

and n. <iuarter in rheum Much Ado, v. 2 

did void your rheura upon my .. Merch. or Venice, 1.3 
with age, and altering rheums? .. ^linter^sTnle, iv. 3 
the salt rheum that ran between. Comef/yo/K/r. iii. 2 
thine eye that lamentable rheum .. KiugJolm, iii. 1 

how now, foolish rheum! — iv. I 

villany is not without such a rheum — iv.3 

awaked tlie sleeping rlicum Richard 11. 1.4 

doth spit and void his rheum upon .. HenryV. iii. .s 
I iia\'e a rheum in mine ej'es too. Troilus ^ Cress, v. 3 
at a few drops of women's" rheum . . Coriolanus, v. 3 
he was troubled with a rheum . . Antony ^- Cleo. iii. 2 

the flames with bisson rheum Hamlet, ii. 2 

I have a salt and sullen rheum offends. OM(-/(o, iii. 4 

RHEtJMATIC-raw rlieumatic day ?.)/err!/ Wires, iii. I 

rheumatic diseases do ahowud. . Mid.N.'s Dream, ii. 2 

as rheumatic as two dry toasts illenry I V. li. 4 

but then he was rheumatic HenryV. ii. 3 

RHEUMY and unpurged air luliusCcpsar. i i. 1 

RHINOCEROS, or the Hyrcan tiger ..Macbnh. iii. 4 

RHODES— the proof, at Rhodes Othdh:, i. I 

preparation makes for Rhodes (rep.) — i. 3 

due course toward the isle of Rhodes — i. 3 

RHODOPE'S, or Memphis', ever 1 Henry VI. i. 

RHUBARB, senua, or what purgative ..Macbeth, v. 3 

RHYME— writ to you in rhyme.. TuoGen.of I'er. i. 2 

whose composed rhymes should .... — iii. 2 

sing a scornful rhyme Mer^-y Wives, v. 5 

the teeth of all rhyme and reason .... — v.b 

I cannot sliow it in rhyme Much Ado, v. 2 

no rhyme to lady but baby (rep.) .... — v. 2 
a hard rhyme; for school fool (rep.) — v. 2 

thou hast given Iier rhymes ....Mid.N.^s Dream, i. 1 

something then in rhyme Love''s L.Lost,\. 1 

a dangerous rhyme, master, against .. — i. 2 
assistme.someexteinporalgodofrhyme — i. 2 

taught me to rhyme (rep.) — iv.3 

rhymes are guards on wanton Cupid's — iv. 3 

I heard your guilty rhymes — iv.3 

see me write a thing in rhyme? — iv.3 

yes, as much love in rhyme, as would — v. 2 
his prodigal wits in bootless rhyme .. — v. 2 

nor woo in rhyme, like a blind — v. 2 

I'll rhyme you so, eight years . . As youLike it, iii. 2 
as your rhymes speak? neither rhyme — iii. 2 

■with his rhyme in his forehead — iv.3 

is neither rhyme nor reason , .Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 
in rude harsh-sounding rhymes ....KmgJohn, 'iv. 2 
that can rhyme themselves into ladies'. Henri/ ''■ v. 2 

a rhyme is but a ballad — v. 2 

when their rhymes,full of protest. T'roZ/.^Cress.iii. 2 

there never was a truer rliyrae — iv. 4 

how vilely doth this cynic rhyme. .JuliusCcesar, iv. 3 
will you rhyme upon't, and vent it. . Cymbeline, v. 3 

you have put me into rhyme — ; v. 3 

wit's more ripe, accept my rhyme. .Perides. i. (Gow.) 
post on the lame feet of my rhyme — iv. (Gow.) 

a rhyme 1 learned even now Romeo ^Juliet, i. .■> 

speak but one rhyme, and I am satisfied — ii. \ 
RHYMED-you might have rhymed ..Hamlet, iii. 2 
RHYMERS ballad us out 0' tune. . Antony ff Cleo. v. 2 
RHYMING-I was rhyming.... TwoGen.ofVer. ii, 1 

not born under a rhvming planet MuchAdo, v. 2 

RIALTO— upon the Rialto Merchantof Venice, i.3 

what news on the Rialto? (rep. iii. 1) .. — i. 3 

in the Rialto you have rated me .... — i.3 
dare scarce show his head on the Rialto — iii. I 
RIB— barred up with ribs of ironi .... MuchAdo, iv. I 
daint;y bits make rich the ribs .... Love's L. Lost, i. I 
her high-top lower thiin her ribs..i>/er. of Venice, i. I 

every finger I have with ray ribs — ii. 2 

with over-weathered ribs, and ragged — ii. 6 
to rib her cerceeloth in the obscure . — ii. 7 

broke three of his ribs As you Like il, i. 2 

breaking of ribs was sport for ladies. . — i. 2 

my seated heart knock at my ribs Macbeth, i. 3 

flint.v ribs of his contemptuous city. . KingJolm, ii. 3 I 
the fat ribs of peace must by the .... — iii. 3 ' 

go to the rude ribs of that Richard II. iii. 3 

througli the flinty ribs of this — v. 5 

call in ribs, call in tallow 1 Henry IV. ii, 4 

unless j'ou call tliree fingers on the ribs — iv. 2 

like a rib of steel iHenrylV. ii. 3 

or give me ribs of steel! Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 3 

to have yerked him here under the ribs. . Othello, i. 2 

what ribs of oak, when mountains .. — ii. 1 

RIBALD- the ribald crows ..Troilus ^ Cressida. iv. 2 

RIBALD-RID nag of Egypt ....Antony &-Cleo. iii. 8 

RIBBANDS pendant, flaring Merry Wives, iv. a 

new ribbands to your pumps..il//(/.A'.'sI>ream, jy. 2 
how much carnation ribband.. ..i.07)e'sL.i.os^ iii. 1 
hath ribbands of all the colours.. Winler'sTale, iv. 3 
bondage of certain ribbands and gloves — iv.3 
not a rdiband, glass, pomander, brooch — iv.3 
new shoes with old ribband? .. Romeo ^Juliet, iii. 1 
a very ribband in the cap of youth .... Hamlet, iv. 7 
RIB-BREAKING? shall we see ..As you Like U.\. 2 

RIBBED and paled in Ci/mf-eiine. iii. 1 

RICE ap Thomas Richard 111. iv. 5 

currants; rice— what will (rep.).. Winler'sTale, iv. 2 

RICH— with ricli garments Tempest, i. 2 

into sometiiing rich and strange .. — i. 2 (song) 
most poor matters point to ricii ends ., — iii. i 

1 ratify this my rich gift — iv. I 

thy rich leas of wheat, rye — iv. 1 

approach, rich Ceres, her to entertain.. — iv. 1 

rich scarf to my proud earth — iv. 1 

thou of the rich Jlercatio? . . TwoGen.of Verona, i. 2 

and I as rich in having — ii. 4 

the match were rich and — iii. 1 

the rich and poor (rep. ii. 1 ) Merry Wives, J. 3 

sapphire, pearl, and rich embroidery — v. 5 
when the rich golden shaft Twelfth .'^'ighl, i, ' 



KICH— love-thoughts lie nch,v/hea.Twel/hMglu, i. I 

or play witli some rich jewel — ii. .0 

rates are either rich, or poor Meas.forMeas. ii. i 

if thou art rich, tlioii art poor — iii. 1 

and when tliou art old, ami rich — iii. I 

ricli slie shall be, that's certain MudiAdo, ii. 3 

villany should be so rich; for when rich — iii. 3 
may countcrjinise tliis rich and precious — iv. 1 

and a rich ft!l low enough, go to — iv. 2 

rich with my young stjuire Miil.X.'s Dream, ii. 2 

from a voyage, ricli with merchandize — ii. 2 
with the rich worth of your virginity — ii. 2 
deny your love, so rich'within his soul — iii. 2 

dainty bits make rich the ribs Love's L.Losl, i. 1 

we shall be rich ere we depart — v. 2 

BO richer than ricli tafteta — v. 2 

our duty is so ricli, so iulinite — v. 2 

and rich things but poor yen.) — v. 2 

vouchsafe in your rich wistlora — v. 2 

and rich bur^>ers of the flood Mer.]pfytmce,-\. 1 

but the rich Jew's man (jep.) — ii. 2 

never so ricli a gem was set — ii. 7 

two rich and precious stones — ii. 8 

cil'ts of rich value; yet I have — ii. 

Imth a ship of rich lading wrecked on — iii. 1 

ten thousand times more rich — iii. 2 

from the rich Jew, a special deed — \-. I 

and a rich man that hath not AsijouLiki' il, iii. 2 

is to have rich eyes, and poor hands — iv. i 

art ricliV Faith, sir, so, so — v. 1 

rich honesty dwells like a miser .... — v. 4 
though many of tlie ricli are damned . . All's irell, i. 3 

no legacy is so rich as lionesty — iii. .5 

tills ring lie holds most rich in choice — iii. 7 

high respect, and rich validity — v. 3 

though her father be very Tich.Taiiiingof Shrew, l. I 

she snail be rich, and very rich — i. 2 

if thou know one rich enough to be .. — i. 2 

■within rich Pisa's walls, as any one — ii. 1 

the mind that makes the body ricli. . — iv. 3 

yet standing in rich place IVhiler'sTale, i. 2 

the rich stake drawn, and takest .... — i. 2 

I should be rich by tlie fairies — iii. 3 

then make your garden rich in — iv. 3 

his garments are rich, but he wears.. — iv. 3 
aud left them more rich for what.... — v. 1 

is not so rich in worth as beauty — v. 1 

declining their rich aspect to. Comedy of Errors , iii. 2 

and the rich East to boot Macbelh, iv. 3 

when the rich blood of kings KingJohu, ii. 2 

make lier rich in titles, honours .... — ii. 2 
and this rich fair town we make .... — ii. 2 

raileth on the rich — ii. 2 

but to be ricli; and being rich — ii. 2 

a title that was rich before — iv. 2 

the rich advantage of good — iv. 2 

into the purse of rich prosperity .... — v. 2 

shall know w»hat men are rich Richard II. I. 1 

your presence makes us rich — ii. 3 

rich men look sad, and ruffians — ii. 4 

to Canterbury with rich offerings 

and thy precious rich crown 

to rob ineofso rich a b:)ttoin liere.... 
what call you rich? let them coin .. 

to set so rich a main on the nice 

to hear this ricli reprisal is 

and make thee rich for doing me. . . .2ffi 

sucli are the rich, that have 

like a rich armour worn 

a goodly d\velling, and a rich 

your chronicle as rich with praise 
of gallant youth in our rich fields 
seek a queen to make him rich. . . . 

from the rich cardinal 2 Henry VI. i. 2 

and, like rich hangings in — v. 3 

than doth a rich embroidered 3 Henry I' I. ii. 5 

treasure, rich stuffs, and ornamentsHeHC!/ VIII. iii. 



.XHcnrtjIV. 



iv. 1 
rylV. i. I 



— IV. 4 

— V. 3 
.. Henry V. i. 2 

— iii. .') 
\ Henry VI. v. 5 



iv. I 

— iv. 1 

s^Cress.\. 2 

1.3 



— iii. 3 

— iv. 4 
of Alliens, i. 1 



— i. 2 (grace) 



vels 



iii. 5 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 



the rich stream of lords, aud ladies 

in a rich chair of state 

if lie <lo the rich shall have more. TroU: 
lies, ricli in virtue, and unmiugled . . 

aud doth think it rich to hear 

would not lose so rich advantage 

not worth in me such rich beholding 

crams his ricli thievery up 

'tis a good form. And rich .... Ti 

most rich in Timon's nod 

happj', and has left me rich 

faults that are rich are fair 

rich men sin, and I eat root 

a soldier, therefore seldom rich . . . 
as if your lord should wear rich je 
I myself, rich only in large hurts. . , . 

thus part we rich in sorrow 

ricli, only to be wretched 

and as rich men deal gifts, expecting 
retiuite me, by making rich yourself 
go, live rich, and happy; but thus .. — iv. 3 

yet rich conceit taught thee — v. o 

act established against the rich Coriolamis, i. 1 

sent not corn for the rich men only.. — i. 1 

were not so rich a jewel — i. 4 

made rich with tlie most noble ..JuliusCresar, iii. 1 

bequeathing it, as a rich legacy — iii. 2 

rich in his father's honour . . Antony^- Cleopatra, i. 3 

and hail rich pearls upon thee — ii. 5 

that is out of door, most rich! Cymbeline, i. 7 

and the ricli crop of sea and land .... — i. 7 

jewels, of rich and exquisite form..., — i. 7 

with admirable rich words to it — ii. 3 

so bravely done, so rich, that it — ii. 4 

your means abroad you have me, rich — iii. I 

no wonder when rich ones scarce — iii. 6 

distinction slionld be rich in. Where? — v. .5 
Lavinia, Rome's ricli ornament .. Titus Androu. \. I 

I can compare our rich misers to Pericles, ii. 1 

having rich tire about you — iii. 2 

appear, to make the world twice rich.. — iii. 2 

with rich and constant pen — iv. (GowciO 

trimmed with rich cxpence — v. tUowcr) 



HIGH— you make more rich to owe? I'erides, v. 1 

and found there rich jewels — v. 3 

beyond what can be valued, rich or rare ..Lear, i. 1 

most rich, being poor; .most choice — i. 1 

with sonietliitig rich about rae — iv. 1 

she is ricli in beauty Romeo k Juliet, i. I 

my master is the great rich Capulet — i. 2 

a rich jewel in an lOthiop's ear (rep.) — i. 6 

on the fair daughter of rich Cainilet — ii. 3 

and let rich music's tongue unfold .. — ii. b 

conceit, more rich in matter than .. — ii. 6 

but love's shadows are so rich in joy? — v. 1 

affords no law to make tlue rich .... — v. 1 

as rich shall Komco by his ladv lie..' — v. 3 

rich, not gaudy; for the apparel oft Hamlet, i. 3 

as made the tilings more rich — iii. 1 

rich "ifts wax poor, when givers prove.. — iii. I 
spend your rich opinion for the name. . Othello, ii. 3 

and content, is rich, and rich enough .. - iii 3 

RlClIAHD-came in with Richard. '/'aiH.f)/-.';/! 1 (iiid.) 

and finds them perfect Richard Kini;.lolin, i. 1 

arise sir Richard, and Plautagenet .. — i. 1 

1 am thy giaudam, Richard, call — i. 1 

and enme, Richard; we must speed.. — i. 1 

good den, sir Richard; God-a-mercy — i. 1 

king Richard Cceur-de-Iion was thy — i. 1 

shall say, when Richard me begot .. — i. 1 

of thy blood, Richard, that robbed .. — ii. 1 

sir Richard, what think .you? have you — iv. .1 

was brought to Ricliard but ever, now — v. 3 
before king Richard, in his royal. :..fl(cA<ir<i ;/. i. 3 

of heaven, king Richard, and to me — i. 3 

true to kin» Ricliard's throne — i. 3 

though Richard my life's counsel .. — ii. I 

Richard! York is too far gone .... — ii. 1 
the son of Richard earl of Arundel.. — ii. I 
as my sweet Richard; yet, again.. .. — ii. 2 

Richard their king is dead (?-ep.) — ii. 4 

God for his Richard hath in heavenly — iii. 2 

Richard, not far from hence — iii. 3 

king Richard lies within the limits.. — iii. 3 

doth kiss king Richard's hand — iii. 3 

lap of fair king Richard's land — iii. 3 

king Richard and myself should meet — iii. 3 

murk king Richard how he looks (.rep.) — iii. 3 

Richard leave to live till Richard die? — iii. 3 

upright judge of noble Richard — iv. 1 

that IS not Richard's subject? — iv. 1 

fetch hither Richard, that in common — iv. I 

tlion king Richard's tomb (;(?p.) .... — v. I 

what is ray Ricliard both in shape .. — v. 1 

and rubbish on king Richard's head — v. 2 

alas, poor Richard! where rides .... — v. 2 

did scowl on Richard; no man cried — v. 'J 

that is lost, for being Richard's friend — v. 2 

and love to Richard is a strange brooch — v. 5 

enemies, Richard of Bourdeaux, by me — v. fi 

did king Richard then proclaim 1 Henry IV, i. 3 

to put down Richard, that sweet lovely — i. 3 

ill Richard's time (>vp. v. I ) — i. 3 

was Richard then when I from France — iii. 2 

must not know, sir Richard, the liberal ; — v. 2 

the blood of fair king Richard 'iHe'nrylV. i. 1 

thy glutton bosom of the royal Richard — i. 3 

Ricliard lived, would have him die — i. 3 
since Richard, and Northumberland — 
even to the eyes of Richard, gave him — 
wlieii Richard, with his eyes brim full — 
king Richard might create a perfect — 
our late king, Richard, being infected — 

Richard earl of (rep. ii. 2) Henry V. ii. (clic 

1 Richard's body have interred new — 

sing still for Richard's soul — 

sir Richard Ketlej^, Davy Gam — 

was not thy father, Richard, earlof.lHe/iry/'/. 

farewell, ambitious Richard — 

Richard Plantagenet (rep.) — 

since then hath Richard been obscured — 
nephew, late despised Richard (rep.) — 
young king Richard thus reiiioved . . — 
in the right of Richard Plantagenet — 
great reason to do Richard right .... — 
that Richard be rest(ned to liis vep.) — 
if Richard will be true, not that alone — 
rise Richard, like a true Plantagenet — 
and so thrive Richard, as thj^ foes .. — 
well didst thou R.icliard, to suppress — 

that Richard, duke of York iHenryVI. i. 3 

left behind him Richard, his only son — ii. 2 

Richard was murdered traitorously — ii. 2 

for liichard, the first son's heir — ii. 2 

married Richaxd, earl of Cambridge — ii. 2 

long live our sovereign Richard .... — ii. 2 

Richard shall live to make the earl. . — ii. 2 

I thank you, Richard: God knows.. — v. 3 
Richard, hath best deserved of all ..ZHonryVI. i. 1 

resolve thee, Richard; claim the English — i. 1 

and that's Richard, duke of York .. — i. 1 

for Uicluud, in the view of many lords — i. 1 

Edward and Richard (rep. ii. 5) — i. 2 

did Ricliard make a lane to me — i. 4 

did retire, Richard cried, charge! — i. 4 

Richard, I bear thy name, I'll venge — ii. I 

nor now my scandal, Richard, dost.. — ii. 1 

valiant Richard, Montague, stay we — ii. I 

now, Richard, 1 am with' thee here alone — ii. 4 

come York, and Richard, Warwick — ii. 

your brother Richard marked him .. _ ii. 6 

Richard, I will create thee duke (><"p.) — ii. G 

there is no kingdom then for Richard — iii. 2 

yea, brother Richard (lyp.) — i 

fly there? Richard and H.astinas .... — i 

coiive.ved by Richard (hike of Gliister — i 

now, brother Richard, lord Hastings — i 
and, Richard, do not frown upon my — 

and Richard, but a rag.ged fatal — 

hold, Richard, hold, f tr we have done — 
hard-favoured Richard? Richard.... — 
Where's Richard gone? To London.. — 
yea, Richard, when 1 know liichard III. 



RICHARD-trust of Richard Gloster./{ic/i««////. i 

Richard! Ha? I call thee not — i 

Richard of York! how fares our loving — 
till Richard wear the garland of the — 

give my voice on Richard's side .... 

princely Richard, and to Buckingham — 
sir Richard Ratcliff, let me tell thee — 
Richard the second licre was hacked — 

standing by when Richard stabbed., 

then cursed she Richard: O remember — 
O bloody Richard! miserable England! — 
God save Kichaid, England's (rep.) — 

your wisdom, aud your love to Richard — 

crowned Richard's ro.val queen — . 

when, I say, I looked'on Richard's face — 

go thou to Richard, and good angels 

is kin" Richard seated: but shall we 

till a Richard killed him (rep.) 

Richard yet lives, hell's black — 

for mv daughters, Richard, they shall — 
not be Richard that hath done all this — 

as long as hell, and Richard, likes of it 

will not king Richard let me speak.. 

in Richard's bosom (rep.) v. 3 

Richard, thy wife, tlial wretched.... — v. 3 

and Richard falls in hei.ijht of all.... v. 3 

Richard loves Richard; that is, I am I — v. 3 
whose bodies Ricliard murdered .... — v. 3 
Richard except, those, whom we fight — v. 3 
to act upon the usurper Ricliard . . Henry VIII. i. 2 

head against usurping' Richard — ii. 1 

good friend— Ricluird du Champ ..Cymbeline, iv. 2 

RrCHED-withchampainsriched Lear.i. 1 

RICHER than innoceucy Meas.for Meas. ill. 2 

beauties no richer than rich taffeta. Love's L. Lost, v. 2 
lies richer in your thoughts, than on.. All's IVell, i. 2 

no richer than his honour Il'inter's Tale, iii. 2 

whose veins boiuid richer blood ....Kin^John, ii. 2 
had nobles richer, and more loyal .... Henry V.\.2 

yet I am richer than ray base Henry VIII. ii. 1 

and more, and richer, when he strains — iv. 1 
poor chin! many a wart is richer. J>oi7us ^ Cress i. 2 
which you pi'ized richer than sea.... — ii. 2 
and I am here no richer in return, Timon o/Alh. ii. 2 
than Plutus' mine, richer than gold. Jw/. Cesar, iv. 3 
richer, than doing nothing foralJabe.Ci/mdeKjie, iii. 3 

for I am riclier than to hang — iii. 4 

richer [K'»/.-pondcrous] than my tongue ..Lear, i. 1 

want of that, for which I am richer — i. I 

wisdom should show itself more richer. Hamlet, iii. 2 
richer than that which foursuccessive.. — v. 2 
threw a pearl away, richer than all his.. Othello, v. 2 

RICHES— of riches, or of povert.y Tempest, ii. I 

and show riches ready to — iii. 2 

honour, riches, marria.ge blessing .. — iv. I (song) 
riches are these poor habiliments. /"(TO Gen. o/Ter. ivfl 
and 'tis the very riches of thyself.. We/ri/W7ce.v, iii.4 
thou bear'st thy heavy riches . . Meas.forMeas. iii. 1 

to make thy riches pleasant — iii. 1 

belike, you fancy riches more Taming of Sh.W. 1 

with too much riches it confound.. A'l'cAorrf //. iii. 4 

that's all the riches I got in his Henry V. ii. 3 

because full of riches IHenrtiVI. iv. 7 

with double riches of content Richard III. iv. 4 

not for all the riches under heaven. Henry r;/;. ii. 3 
as place, riches, favour, prizes.. Troilns ^ Cress, iii. 3 
than the riches of our friends?.. Timonof Athens, \. 2 
riches point to misery aud contempt? — iv. 2 
who was, indeed the riches of it .,Cymbeline,\\\. i 

my riches to the earth from Pericles, i . 1 

for riches, strewed herself even in — i. 4 

greater than nobleness and riches — iii. 2 

the ricl'.es of the ship is come on shorel.. OWeWo, ii. 1 

but riches, fineless, is as poor as winter — iii. 3 

RICHEST— in love's richest book ..Mid.IX.'sDr. ii. 3 

the richest beauties on the earth! . Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

astonish the survey of richest eyes.. ..All'siVell, v. 3 

will hang upon mv richest mbes .. ..iHenryVL ii.4 

pins her richest lockram 'bout her.. Cor/o/aims, ii. 1 

li)<e richest alehem.y will change ...Julias C'csar, i. 3 

RICM-JE WELLED coffer of Darius. . I Henry Vl.i.ii 

RICH-LEFT— those ricli-left heirs .. C!/m6e/(He, iv. 2 

RICHLY for the practice Much.ido, v. 1 

in Belmont is a lady richly left. Merck, of Venice, i. 1 
a vessel of our country, richly fraught — ii. 8 
are richly come to harbnur suddenly — v. 1 

richly siuted, but unsuitable All's IVell, i. 1 

riclil.y furnished with plate .. Taming of .Slirew, ii. 1 

and honesty, is richly noted Winter'sTale, v. 3 

richly in both, if justice had liichard II. ii. 1 

see away their shilling richly ..He;ir!/f7ff.(prol.) 

does pay thy labour richly Antony tj- Cleo. iv. 12 

bound to load thy merit richly Cymbeline, i. 6 

poor soldier, that so richly fniight .. — v. 5 

jewel-like, and cased as riclilv Pericles, v. 1 

RICHMOND with the rest shall . . ..SHenry VI. iv. 6 

Bretagne and earl of Richmond King-John, ii. 2 

countess Richmond, good my \ord.. Richard III. i. 3 

and live with Richmond (rep.) — iv. 1 

is fled to Richmond (rep.) — iv. 2 

if she conve.v letters to Richmond .. — iv. 2 
Richmond should be king, when (rep.) — iv. 2 
not live long after I saw Richmond.. — iv. 2 
the Bretagne Richmond aims at young — iv. 3 

Morton is Hed to Richmond — iv. 3 

Ely with Richmond troubles me .... — iv. 3 
that Richmond is their admiral .... — iv. 4 

Riehinond is on the seas — iv. 4 

woiildst be gone til join with Richmond — iv. 4 
Richmond, in Dorsetshire, sent out.. — iv 4 
the earl of Richmond is with a mighty — iv. 4 
tell Richmond this from me; that .. — iv. 5 
where is princely Richmond now? .. — iv. 5 
continnall.v for Richmond's good .. .. — v. 3 

be cheerful, Richmond (rep.) — v. 3 

sleeiJ, iiiclimond, sleep in peace — v. 3 

good angels fight on Richmond's side — v. 3 
111 proof, and led by shallow Richmond — v. 3 
good-morrow, Richmond. 'Cry you mercy — v. 3 
Richmond, and victory! (rep.) — v. 3 



KICHMOND-than to Kiclimniia?. . HMar I lit. v. 3 
seekiii;; fur Rlfhmoiul in tlic tliruat . . — v. 4 

I think, there be six KiclimoiiUs — v. l 

eminigeous Riclunond, well hnst thou — v. 1 

noiv , let Richmond and Elizabeth — v. 1 
KID— the red plugue rid you Tcmpesl. i. 2 

wcl I rid (if this knavery Twelfth Night, iv. 2 

ttiat I will s>ie to be rid of it ..Meas.Jor Meas. iii. 1 
thiink eiod vou lue lid of a knave ..Much Ado, iii. 3 
lie luitll rid his I'lolui^ue, like. . Mid. N.'tDream, v. 1 
ai.d rid the huiise of lier; come oa.. Taming of Sh. i. 1 

till the futlier rid Ills liands — .1.1 

then vreareridnf l.ioio ,.. ,- iv. 2 

to be so rid o' tlie business II inter sTale, ni. i 

to mend it or be rid (in't Macbeth, ni. I 

what loss is it, to he rid of care? Itichardll. in. - 

to rid the realm of this pernicious .. — iv. I 

no friend, will rid me ot this — v. 4 

kinK'sfriend, and will rid his foe — v. 4 

1 cannot rid my hands 2Henr,jir.i.-^ 

60 we be rid of them ]Hen,yri. ly. 7 

quieklv rid the wiu-ld, to rid us ....iHeniyl l.ni. 1 

for willingness rids way 3 Henri/ VI. v. 3 

you have rid this sweet young prince I — v. 5 
iiodoubt, shortly be rid of me ....Itichardlll.iv. I 
and soon I'll rid" you from the fear .. — iv. 2 

that would be rid of snch Troilus <5- Cress, iv. 5 

beasts, to be rid of tlie men .... Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

ridme these villains from — _ v. 1 

blessed, that Rome is rid of him ..JuUusCcesar, ui. 2 

ai-e rid like madmen throuudi — in. 2 

and I must rid all the sea of .... Antony Sf Cleo. u. b 

that rids our do-s of kmiinish? — v. a 

get her ravished, or be rid ut her Pericles, iv. 

faith, there's no way to be rid on 't .... — iv. G 

let her, who would be rid ot him Lear, v. 1 

to rid lier from this second marriage. Uomeo 4- Jul. v. 3 

RIDDANCE— a gentle riddance ..Mer.ofrenice,U. 7 
a good riddance Troilus SrCresstda, n. 1 

RIDDEN with a Welch goattooV ...Merri/n'ires. v. .-j 
I saw well-chosen, ridden. .i/eHij/ri/i. 11. i Uetter) 

RIDDLE— book of riddles l.rep.) Mcrrijllives, 1. 1 

a fustian riddlel TuWh Mgl'l, n- i 

raucli upon this riddle runs Meas.Jnr Mens. ni. - 

Lysander riddles very prettily. .A/jci.AVsD/eim, 11 3 

some riddle: come (rep.) Lave sL. Losi. in. 1 

so there's my riddle, one that s dead ..All s II ell, v. S 

in riddles, and aliiiirs of death Macbeth, iii. 5 

hi'' currish riddles sort not with ZHenryl'l. v, 6 

hevday, a riddlel neither good .... Richard 111. iv. 4 
his riddle told not, lost his life ..Pericles, i. (Gowei ) 
Oho! I know the riddle: I will go Lear, v. \ 

RIDDLE-LIKE, lives sweetly where . . AW s ll'ell, 1. 3 

RIDDLING merchant for \ Henry yi. ii. 3 

riddling confession finds (rep.) . . Romeo ^ Juliet, ii. 3 

RIDE- toride on the ourl'd clouds Tempest, i. -i 

and ride upon their backs — ii- I 

I'll ride home to-morrow 'Twelflh Atghl, 1.3 

ride your horse as well as I ride you — iii. 1 

whereon the governor dotli ride ..Meas.farMeas. 1. 3 

scorn ride spiirkling in her eyes Much Ado, iii. 1 

two men ride of a horse, one must ride — iii. 5 

that ride upou the violent ill's Well, iii. 2 

or wilt thou ride? Taming of Shrew, 2 (indue.) 

you may ride us with one soft Winter s Tale, 1. 2 

I have a vessel rides fast by — iv. 3 

true; she rides me, and I long.Comedi/ of Errors, 11. 2 

but he rides well Macbeth,!. Ii 

ride you tliis afternoon? — lii- ' 

is't far you ride? — m- 1 

infected be the air whereon they ride — iv. 1 

for I will ride, as far as land Richard II. 1. 3 

wheie rides [Co(.-rode] he the while? — v. 2 

I doubt not but to ride as fast — V. 2 

honey lord, ride with us to-morrow. . 1 HenrylV. 1. 2 

for they ride up and down on her — ii. I 

come, wilt thou see me ride? — n- 3 

he that rides at high speed — u- 4 

the devil rides upon a fiddlestick — 11. 1 

thirty miles to ride yet ere dinner-time — in- 3 

if life did ride upon a dial's point — v. 2 

tongues continual slanders ride.2Hc/ir!//F. (indue.) 

or I'll ride thee o' nights, like — ii. 1 

and rides the wild mare witli the boys — 11. 4 
get on thy boots, we'll ride all night — v 3 

as it were, to ride day and night — v. 5 

a sovereiau's sovereign to ride on Henry V. iii. 7 

they thafride so, and ride not warily — iii. 7 

ride thou unto the horsemen — iv. 7 

prepare to ride unto St. Alban's iHenryVI.i. t 

Nell, hou wilt ride with us? — i. 2 

thou didst ride in triumph through. . — ii. 4 

tiiou dost ride on afoot-cloth — iv. 7 

will we ride through the streets — iv- 7 

still riile in triumph overall ZHenryVl. iii. 3 

horses hard, and nde in blood Richard 1 11. v. 3 

axletrce on which lieaven rides ..Troilus ^Cress. i. 3 
Bwore to ride before liiin to tile field.. — iv. 4 
the venoini-d vengeance ride upon our — v. 3 

ride, ride, Messala, ride (np.) luliusC/esar, v. 2 

ride on the pants triumphing Antony ijrCleo. iv. 8 

of miles may we well ride 'twixt . . Cymbelme, iii. 2 
whose breatli rides on tlie posting winds — iii. 4 
tears, and yet he rid s it out. . Pericles, iv. 4 (Gower) 
seeiiiL: this goodly vessel ride before us — v. 1 

mv practises ride easy! Lear, i. 2 

liiinest counsel, ride, run, mar a curious.. — i. 4 

ride more than thou goest — i. 4 

to ride 00 a bay trotting horse over — iii. 4 

horse to ride, and weapon to wear — iii. 4 

RlDlOK-leave tiie rider iu the niiie.Love'sL.Lost, ii. I 

the tired horse his ri<ler — iv. 2 

to tlfat end riders dearly hired . . . . Jj yow Like it, i. 1 

tliroiv the rider heaiilong in Richard U. i . 2 

wliieh Ilia aspiring rider seemed to know — v. 2 

while his rider mounts him Henry V. iii. 7 

that had a rider like myself- Cymheline,W. 1 

RIDEST thou triumphing. Lope'»t.Lo«/, iv. 3 i verses) 

KIDETlla puissant navy Uicluird llt.iv.4 

RLDUE of the gallows Mieniyll'.'v.i 



11 1 1 )i i i;- frozen ridges of the Alps .... Richard / /. i. 1 
and ridges horsed with variable ....Coriolanus, ii. 1 

RIDICULOUS monster! Tempest, ii. 2 

with this ridicnhms lioldness Ttcelfih Night,\\i.i 

provok''s me Hi ridiculous ^m\\\n<^. Lovc^sL. Lost, iW. 1 
vain, ridicukuis, and tlirasonieal .... — V. I 
in this spleen ridiculous apiiears .... — v. 2 
and their rough carriage so ridiculous — v. 2 
what in us liath seemed ridicuions .. — v. 2 
how many actions most ridiculous..-Isyo«L//cej7, ii. 4 

are as ridiculous in the country — iii. 2 

so slight, nnwi.rthy.and ridiculous. . King" Jo/iH, iii. 1 
is wasuiiit. and ridiculous excels.. .. — iv. 2 

in brawl ridiculous llenryV. iv. (chorus) 

they be never so ridiculous Henry flll.i.3 

ridiculous and awkward action . . Troilus ^- Cress, i. 3 

encounter such ridiculous subjects.. Coriolanus, ii. I 

RIDING on the balls of mine . . Merch. ofl'enice, iii. 2 

my master riding behind .... Taming ofSlirew, iv. 1 

in such haste, in riding robes? King John, i. 1 

and traders ridin" to London \ Henry IT. i. 2 

was riding from Alcibiades Timon of Athens, y. 3 

were you but riding forth to air Cymbetine,\. 2 

I have heard of riding wagers — iii. 2 

provide me, presently, a riding suit .. — iii. 2 
against whose shore riding, her fortunes. Pen'cte, v. 3 

RIDING-KODS, my arms such KingJohn.i. 1 

RI EN puis? I'air et le feu Henri/ T.iv. 2 

RIFE- [/i;i(.] sports are rife ....Mid.N.'sDream,v. 1 

RIELE—sit, and rifle you ..Two Gen.of Teroi!a,iv. 1 

RIFT— between which rift imprisoned .. Tempest, i. 2 

your ears should rift to hear me. . IVinter'sTale, v. 1 

slain men should solder up the x'lH.Ant.^Clto. iii. 4 

RIFTED Jove's stout oak Tempest, v. 1 

RIG— hath made me rig my navy . . .inlony rS Ctco. ii. 6 

RIGGED— not rigged, nor tackle Tempest, i. 2 

bravely rigged as when we — y.\ 

our great navy's riu'ged .... Ayitony ^Cleopatra, iii. 
RIGG'lSH-ble'ss her, when she is riggish — ii. 2 

RIGG'ST the bark Tiuwn uf.ithens, v. 1 

RIGHT— I am right glad that he's so. . Tempest, iii. 3 

and be a boy right out — iv. 1 

when one's right hand is..., TwoGen. of Verona, v. 4 

heaven prosper the right! MerryWives,\\\. 1 

thou hast the riglit arched bent — iii. 3 

it is riglit; indeed he is full — v. 5 

who hath got the right Anne? — v. 5 

thy constellation is right apt Twelfth Night,_i. 4 

thou'rt in the right — ii. 3 

then think you right — iii. 1 

right noble is his blood — v. 1 

read i' tliy right wits (re/).) — v. I 

but to do myself nincii right — v. 1 (letter) 

in tlie right (rep.) Measure for Measure, ii. 1 

and do him right, that, answering .. — ii. 2 

thou'rt in the rigid, girl — ii. 2 

do me the common right to let — ii. 3 

hooking both right aud wrong to .... — ii. 4 

it is the right of it — iii. 2 

be the due of a bawd, why, 'tis his right — iii. 2 

notliing goes right — iv. 4 

right. It may be right — v. 1 

company of the right noble Claudio . . Much Ado, i. 1 
I will do myself the right to trust none — i. 1 

marry, it is your brother's right baud — i. 3 

plague right well prevented! — iii. 2 

call up tlie right master constiible .. — iii. 3 
the right husband, and the right wife — iii. 4 
deserve of me that would right her .. — iv. 1 
if he could right himself with quarrelling — v. 1 

you say not right, old man — v. 1 

do me riglit, or I will protest your .. — v. 1 

right, says she, a great gross one — v. 1 

give her the riglit you should have .. — v. 1 
frighted the word out of his right sense — v. 2 
thy crazed title to my certain right . Mid. N.'sDr. i. I 

all my right of her I do estate — i. 1 

should not I then prosecute my right? — . i. 1 

1 am a right maid for my cowardice — iii. 2 
to try whose right, or thine or mine — iii. 2 

every thing right as it fell out — iv- 2 

this the cranny is, right and sinister — v. 1 

whom right and wrong have chose. Love'sL.Lost, i. 1 

and God defend the right! — i. 1 

we will give up our right in Aqnitain — ii. 1 
watched that it may still go right? .. — lii. 1 
sparkle still the right Promethean fire — iv. 3 

a right description of our sport — v. 2 

for it stands too right — v. 2 

most true, 'tis right; vou were so — v. 2 

I will ritrht myself like a soldier .... — V. 2 
of that tanlt.ri^'ht.ioyfid ufyour .... — v. 2 

the right casket (ii'y/.ii.9) Merchant of Venice, i. 2 

bars me tlie right of voluntary choosing — ii. 1 

turn U|i on your right hand — ii. 2 

I am riglit loath to go — ii. 6 

if I do choose the right? — ii. 7 

how to choose right, hut then I nm .. — iii. 2 
between the owners and their rights — iii. 2 

to do a great right, do a little wrong — iv. I 

seasoned are to their right praise — v- 1 

't 6 right, ((uotli he As youLiheit,\i. I 

buy it with your gold right suddenly — ii- 4 

if it do him right, then he hath — ii. 7 

thou art riL'lit welcome as thy — ii. 7 

it i.* the riirlit butter- woman's rate .. — iii. 2 

and that's the ri.'-dit virtue of the — iii. 2 

I answer von right painted cloth .... — iii. 2 
:io end of' his goods: right, many .... — iii. 3 
I would not have my right Rosalind — iv. 1 

left on your right hand — iv. 3 

I should have ueen a woman by right — iv. 3 

and it was his great right to be so All's ll'ell, i. 1 

lamentation is the right of the dead.. — _i. 1 

right, so I say (>pp.) — ii- 3 

thine own fortunes that; obedient right — 11. 3 
a right [roi.-I write] good creature .. — iii. S 

ever do thee all rights of service — iv. 2 

which are their own right by the law — iv- 5 
but liis right cheek is worn bare — iv. i 



RIGUT-do me this right, hear me.Tamhigof Sh. !. 2 

the base is right; 'tis tlie base — iii. 1 

the rightViiicentio(rtp. iv. 4and v. 1) — iv. 2 

yon are i' the right, sir — iv. 3 

right true it is, your son Luceptio.... — iv. 4 

right son unto the right — v. I 

awful rule, aud right supremacy .... — v. 2 
scarce can right me thoroughly . . Winter' sTale , ii. 1 

upon the earth of its right lather — iii. 3 

I then do most go right — iv. 2 (song) 

go on the riiiht hand — iv. 3 

live to see like right bereft . . Comedy of Errors, ii. 1 

right, sir, I'll teli yon when — iii. 1 

denied yon had in liim no right — iv. 2 

here be!,'ins hisniorning store right.. — v. I 
the right valiant Baiiqno walked ....il/acde/ft, iii. 6 

would he hands uplifted in my right — iv. 3 

your right noble son, lead onr — v. B 

Philip of France, in right and true . . King John, i. 1 

thy nephew, and right royal sovereign — i. 1 

enforce tliese rights so forcibly withheld — i. 1 

upon the right and party of her son? — i. 1 

our right, for us. Your strong (;c;).) — j. I 

a little from the right — i. 1 

shadowing tlieir right under your.... — ii. 1 

who would not do thee right? — ii. I 

and the right thou luist in France .. — ii. I 

bring that right in pcffce — ii. I 

England was Geffrey's right, and this — ii. 1 

to look into the blots and stains of right — ii. 1 

an' I catch you right; sirrah — ii. 1 

in right of Arthur do I claim of thee — ii. 1 

and rights of this oppressed boy .... — ii. I 

lo, in this right hand, whose — ii. 1 

and iu his right, we hold this town .. — ii. 1 

shall the current of our right run on? — ii. 2 

that here hold up his right — ii. 2 

in her right we came — ii. 2 

hath power to curse him right — iii.l 

when law can do no right.. — iii.l 

you, in the right of lady Blanch .... — iii. 4 

in right you hold, why then — iv. 2 

the life, the right, and truth of all . . — iv. 3 

for the health aud physic of our right — v. 2 

on our actions set the name of right.. — v. 2 

how to know the face of right — v. 2 

of death right in thine eye — v. 4 

newness, that intends old right — v. 4 

that move in your right spheres — v. 7 

as thy cause is right, so be Richard //. i . 3 

thy lance; and God defend the right! — _i. 3 

by my seat's right royal majesty .... — ii. 1 

right; yon say true; as Hereford's .. — ii. I 

royalties and rights (7ep. ii. 3) — ii. 1 

rights away, and take from time (rep.) — ii. 1 

if justice had her right — ii. 1 

and my kindred bids to right ii. 2 

stands your grace niion, to do him right — ii. 3 

to find out right with wrong — ii. 3 

for the right of that, we all — ii. 3 

for heaven still guards the right .... — iii- 2 

cousin is right welcome hither — iii. 3 

will add right worthy gains — v. 6 

right noble is thy merit, well I wot. . — y. 6 
my treasures, and my rights of thee.l HenrylV. ii. 3 

shall we divide our right, according — iii.l 

of no right, nor colour like to right.. — iii. 2 

no further than your new-fallen right — v. 1 

this is the right fencing grace iHenrylV. ii. I 

he doth not do it right — iii. 2 

your noble and right well-remembered — iv. 1 

our most just and right desires — iv. 2 

therefore let me have right, and let.. — iv. 3 

then plain and right, must my — iv. 4 

you are right, justice, and you weigh — v. 2 

done me right. Do me right — V. 3 (.sougl 

that right should thus overcome .. _ v. 4 

almshouses, right well snpjilied HenryV. i. 1 

whoic right suits not in native — i. 2 

to liold in right and title of the female — i. 2 

may I with right and conscier.ce, make — i. 2 

and fire to will your right — i. 2 

in the right of your great predecessor — i. 2 

Nvm, tliou hast spoke the right — ii. I 

right ill disposed, in brawl — iv. (chorus) 

being in his right wits and hisgoot .. — iv. 7 

nav, that's right; but why wear .... — v. 1 

right joyous are we to behold ,. — T. 2 

fiir he perforce must do thee right — v. 2 

for thee and for the right of Engl ish.l Henry >'/. ii. 1 

ifall things fall out right — ii.3 

1 think he held the right — ii. 4 

vield the other in the rij-'ht opinion.. — ii. 4 

'in the right of Richard Plnntagenet.. — iii.l 

great reason to do Richard right .... — iii.l 

Talbot, and Engbind's right I — iv. 2 

mean and right iioor; for that — iv. 6 

prouci Lancaster usurp my right ....iHenryVl.\. I 

by force, and not bv right — ii. 2 

aiid God defend the right! — ii.3 

thou hast prevailed in right! — _ii- 3 

came he right now to sing — iii. 2 

comes York, to claim his right — v. 1 

the widow from her 'customed right.. — v. 1 

in justice and true right express It! .. — v. 2 

here let us win onr right ....3Hc;iiy;'/. 1. I 

I mean to take possession of my right — 1. 1 

is the right, and therefore pardou me — i. I 

be thy title right or wrong — i. 1 

do right unto this princely dulte .... — i. 1 

your right deiiends not on his life. . . . — i. 2 

tell'st the heavy story right — i. 4 

here's to right our gentle-hearted king — i. 4 

whether our riLdit valiant father — ii. 1 

this strong right hand of mine — ii. I 

draw thy sword in right — ii. 2 

shall I have my right, or no? — ii. 2 

if that he right, which Warwick (rep.) — 11- 2 

purple blood right well resembles — ii. .■) 

if this right hand would buy two hours' — ii.G 



RIG 



[ 634 ] 



RIP 



KIGHT— press to speak for right Mlenry i'l. iii. 1 

on Ills right, asking a wife fur Edward — iii. 1 

riglit gracious lord, I cannot bruok .. — iii. 2 

tlial (lid ever fence tlie riglit — iii. 3 

Henry from l\is native riglit — iii. 3 

me but right, and you must all confc:-s — iv. 1 

Edward's right (rf/). iv. 7) — iv. 4 

for 'tis my right, and iienry but usurps — iv. 7 

an upright zeal to right prevails .... — v. I 

usiu-ii'si m,\' lather's ligiit and mine — v. & 

tlieir ruin that usurped our rigiiti*.,.. — v. ti 

and, no doubt, ri-ht royal Richard III. i. 2 

sorrow that 1 lia\ e. by riglit is yours — 



kt till 



— i. 3 



— iii. '6 

— V.2 
nfAlkem, i. 1 

~ i. 1 

— ii. 1 

— ii. 2 

— iii. I 



decked in tliy riglits, as tliou art stalled — i.'i 

riglit, as snosv in luirvest — 1.4 

I'll win our ancient right In Fruiiee? — iii. 1 
I do not doubt, right nublc tJrinccs both — iii. 5 
being the right idea of your father .. — iii. 7 

with two right reverend fatiieis — iii. 7 

tliy devotion, anil right i.Ouihtiaii zeal — iii. 7 

your right of birth, your enipery — iii. 7 

the right and lortune of his liappy .. — lii. 7 

right well, dear madam — iv. 1 

Bay, that right for right hath dimmed — iv. 4 
if that right were right, the shiugluer — iv. 4 
ill the name of Uod, and all tliese rights — v. 3 

he was i' the right — v. 3 

the right reverend cardinal of York. Heiirj/ ;'///. i. 1 

do me right and justice — ii. 4 

if it take right in spite of fortune .... — iii. 2 

has made that right u,-e of it — iii. 2 

Btill in thy right iiand carry gentle . . — iii. 2 

as, let them have their rights — iv. I 

a right good liushand, let him — iv. 2 

to do me this last right — iv. 2 

am I'ight sorry to repeat what follows — v. 1 
and am right glad to catch this good — v. 1 

'tis the right ring, by heaven — v.2 

force should be right {lep.) . . Trodut % Ciessida, i. 3 
'tis Nestor right I now play him me.. — i. 3 

'twixt right and wrong — ii. 2 

when right with right wars (rep. J.... — iii. 2 
my Cressid in right great exchange .. 

the time right deadly 

right, if doing nothing be death. Tiino 
right welcome, sir; ere we depart .... 
tlie cap plays in the right hand, thus 
you'll suit, in giving him his right .. 

why, this hits right 

I am right glad that his health — in. i 

his right noble mind, illustrious virtue — iii, 2 
though his right arm might purchase — iii. 5 
wrong, right; base, noble; old, young — iv. 3 
I will make thee do thy right nature — iv. 3 

riglit worthy you priority Coriolanus^ i. 1 

ever riglit. Menenius, ever, ever .... — ii. 1 

'tis right. It was his word — ii. 1 

he's right noble: let him be called for — ii. 2 

sir, you are not right — ii. 3 

i' the right and strength o' the commons — iii. 3 

rights by rights fouler — iv. 7 

come on my right hand Jutiuu Ccesar^ i. 2 

you have right well coueeited — i. 3 

by the right and virtue of my place.. — ii. 1 
Bqnadrons, and right form of war .... — ii. 2 

1 only speak right on — iii, 2 

upon the right hand 1, keep thou — v. 1 

1 think, I am i' the right ., Antony ^ Cieopatra^ in. 7 

go on; right royal — iii. II 

and knows what is most right — iii. 1 1 

like a right gipsy, hath — iv. 10 

lies a mole, riglit proud of that Ci/mbeline, ii, 4 

and am right sorry, that i must .... — iii, 5 
his right cheek reposing on a cushion — iv. 2 

right, with honour to maintain — v. 4 

and am right glad, he is not — v. 5 

fiatronsofmy rlglu, defend the justice TilusAnd.i. 1 

in tue Capitol and senate's right — i. 1 

been thus forward in my right — i. 1 

right and service of their iioble country — i. 2 

Komans, do me right — i. 2 

to do myself this reason and this right — i. 2 

to jut upon a prince's right! — ii. 1 

hand shall right ^ our mother's wrong — ii. 3 

my soul to right your wrongs — iii. 1 

this poor right hand of mine — iii. 2 

in liorace; right, you have it — iv. 2 

and right ills heinous wrongs — v.2 

daughter with his own right hand .. — v. 3 
like a poor man's right in the law .... Aficies, ii. \ 

you are right courteous knights — ii. 3 

l^A'iif.] even right for marriage light — iv. (Gow.) 
i return those duties back as are right fit.. i.e«r, i. 1 
right noble iiurgundy, when she was .... — i. I 

bold in the iiuarrel's right — ii. 1 

your graces are right welcome — ii. 1 

when every case in law is right — iii. 2 

gave her dear rights to his — iv. 3 

dear love, and our aged father's right .... — iv. 4 

pray that the right may thrive — v.2 

iu my rights, by him invested — v. 3 

thou hast spoken right; 'tis true — v. 3 

you, to your rights; with boot — v. 3 

right glad I am, he was not Hiumo ^Juliel, i. I 

a right good marksmaiil and she's fair — i. 1 

then here i hit It right — ii. 3 

pink for flower. Kight. Why — ii. 4 

why, right; 3'ou are in the right Hamlet., i. a 

that ever I was burn' to set it right! .... — 1-5 
by the rights of our fellowship, by the.. — ii. 2 
you say ri^iit, sir: o' Monday morning — ii. 2 

am I not i the right, old Jephtha? — ii. 2 

you know right well, you did — iii. I 

this courtesy is not of the right breed .. — iii. 2 
with your grief, or you deny me right .. — iv. 5 
it lalls right: you have been talkeu of.. — iv. 7 

your lordship IS right welcome back — v.2 

your bonnet to his right use; 'tis for.... — v.2 
1 have some rights ol memory — v. 2 



KIt.UT-[A>i(.] Moor III the right garb.. 0(/ie«o, ii. I KlNG-that ring, I'll lend it th 

andyet,methinks, right modest — ii. 3 mine honour's such a ring ... 

my right liaiid, and this is my left hand — ii. 3 

you are in the right; good night — ii. 3 

doyourself a profit, and a right — iv. 2 

mid you might quicklv make it rlKht .. — iv. 3 
RIGIIT-DK AWN sword may provl ..IUrh„rd II. i. 1 
UlljIllTEOUS fashion as I do Merryllives, iii. 4 

so help you righteous God! ) Henn/I 1. iv. I 

attairs as righteous: but all hoods.Hetmjyi II. iii. 1 

recorded by the righteous gods Timou ofAth. iv. 2 

Koine and the righteous heavens ..'liiusAndron. i. 2 

seal with a righteous kiss Romeo ^Juliet, v. 3 

RIGHTE(1US1>Y tempered asmine..4s you Lilceit, i. 2 
KIGHTFUL, judge! And you must..iiyfr.o/'/''e»i.iv. ! 

the deposing of a rightful king Richard II. v. 1 

to put forth my rightful hand HeimjV. i. 2 

laboured to plant the rightful heir ..1 Henri/ f'/.ii. 5 

Charles, the rightful king of France — iv. 1 (lett.) 

rightful heir unto the English crown. 2He)ir!/K/. i.3 

"■' ''■'■ • ijrevails — ii. 1 



ee Aa')U'eU,iv. i 



whose rightful can 

deposed the rightful kins — ii- » 

that shall salute our rightful sovereign — ii. 2 
for I am rijihtful heir unto the crown — Iv. 2 
rightful heir to England's royal seat — v. 1 

RIGHTFULLY maintain illnnrvIV.iv. 4 

KlGHT-IIANDtilei" Coriolanu-^ii. 1 

KIGHTLY— to be Englished rightly. ^l/eni/ IVires, i. 3 
to be sa\'ed liy believing rightly.. Twelfth Night, iii. 2 

rightly reasoned, and in his own Much Ado, v. 1 

that might rightly say ..Love'sL.Lost,\v. I (letter) 

by any rightly, but one (?vp.) Mcr. of Venice, i. 2 

it I heard yon rightly, the duke . . As vou Like it, v. 4 
to our rose of youth rightly belong.. .'..4»'.s»rt'/(, i. 3 
you may be rightly just, whatever ..Macbeth, iv. 3 
rightly gazed upon, show nothing . . Richard II. ii. 2 
if rightly taken. No, if rightly taken. 1 He/iji/;/'. ii. 4 

if I be measured riglitly iHemyiy. v. 2 

thy name isGualtier, being rightly .2Henryf'/.iv. 1 

i'uvi men rightly temper with — iv. B 

he tells you rightly. Ye tell me . . Henry I'lfl. iii. 1 

digest things rightly, touching Coriolmms, i. 1 

if thou consider rightly of the .... Judus Ca!!.ar, iii. 2 
to inform you rightly both wliat..-4n(oiiy <S- Cleo. i. 4 

thou hast been rightly honest — iv. 2 

by the holy gods, I cannot rightly nay. Pericles, iii. 4 

think'st, and hast most rightly said Lear, i. I 

transform you from what you riglitly are — i. 4 

rightly to be great, is, not to stir Hamlet, iv. 4 

perlect soul, shall manifest me rightly. . Othello, i. 2 

RIGHT-VALIANT lord mustnot.Troil.^-Cress. ii.3 

KIGUL— from this golden rigol hath.2Hfjii!/7/'. iv. 4 

RIGOROUS— his rigorous course. Wn-.o./'/'ra'cc, iv. 1 

have sealed his rigorous statutes.. CoTncrfj/o/fijr. i. 1 

Tarpeian rock with rigorous hands. Cm/o(aims. iii. 1 

RIGOROUSLY effused, will cry 1 Henni II. v. 4 

RiGOUR-the rigour of the statute. Mens. /br Meas. i. 5 
I tell you, 'tis rigour, and not law K'i7iler'sTale, iii. 2 

as rigour of tempestuous gusts I Weiiri/ /'/. v. 5 

let him have all the rigour of the law.2 Henry VI. i. 3 

common fear of Clitford's rigour iHenry VI. ii. 1 

whom the rigour of our state forced Lear, v. 1 

unto the rigour of severest \a,vf..Romeof,Jnliet. v. 3 

RIM—for I will fetch thy rim out Henri/ 1: iv. 4 

RINALDO, you did never lack Alt's li'ell, iii. 4 

write, write, Rinaldo, to this unworthy — iii. 4 

KIND— hath sourest rind. As you Like it, iii. 2 (verses) 

within the infant rind of this .. Romeo fy Juliet, ii. 2 

RING— hourly ring his knell .... Tempest, i. 2 (song) 

and take this ring with thee ..TwoGenof I'er. iv. 4 

well, give her that ring — iv. 4 

this ring I gave him — iv. 4 

he sends your ladyship this ring .... — iv. 4 

hath profaned the ring — iv. 4 

a ring to madam Silvia (rep.) — v. 4 

give my sweet Nan tliis ring Merry Wives, iii. 4 

like to the Garter's compass, in a ring — v. 5 

he left this ring behind him I'u-elfth Night, i. ."j 

she returns this ring to you, sir — ii. 2 

she took the ring ot me — ii. 2 

I left no ring with her — ii. j 

none of my lord's ring! — ii. 2 

a ring in chase of you — iii.] 

by interchangement of your rings .. — v. 1 
than the bell rings, and the widow ..Much Ado, v. 2 
with bracelets of thy hair, rings .. Mid.i\.\ Ih. i. I 

a death's face in a ring l.nrc'sl..l.oxi,v. 2 

one of them showed me aring.il/erc/i.n/;'ciiict', iii. 1 

let us all ring fancy's knell — ' iii. 2 (song) 

I give them with this ring, which when — iii. 2 

but when this ring parts from ~ iii. 2 

I'll take this ring from you (rep.).... — iv. 1 
the dearest ring in Venice will 1 give — iv. 1 

f food sir, this ring was given me .... — iv. 1 
low well I have deserved this ring .. — iv. 1 

let him have the rin" (>ep.) — iv. 1 

hath sent you here this rinfj (rep.) .. — iv. 2 

if X can gel my husband's ring — iv. 2 

that they did give the rings awny.... — iv. 2 
a jialtry ring that she did give me .. — v. I 
I gave my love a ring, and made .... — v. 1 

lost tlie ring defending it (rep.) v. 1 

but the two rings. What ring gave you — v. I 
hath not the ring upon it, it is gone. . — v. 1 
in your bed, until 1 see the ring .... — v. 1 

to whom 1 gave the ring (rep.) — v. I 

the virtue of the ring (7ep.) v.] 

but some woman had the ring v. 1 

and begged the ring (rep.) — v. 1 

for him that had your husband's ring _ v, 1 

swear to keep this ring — y. 1 

for by this ring the doctor lay with me — v. 1 

as keeping safe Nerissa's ring y. 1 

conned them out of rings? As you Like it, i\i. 2 

[6'o(.A;i.(.] the only pretty ring time — v. 3 (song) 
their fiery torcher his diurnal ring .. All's ll'eil, ii. 1 

canst get the ring (rep. v. 3) — iii. 2 (letter) 

a ring ihe county wears iii. 7 

this ring he holds in most rich — iii. 7 

dcbires this ring; appoints him — iii. 7 



le honour's such a r 
here, take my ring: mine house ... 

when back again this ring shall be . . — 

I'll put another ring; that, what — 

he hath given her his monumental ring — 

such a ring as this, the last 

this ring was mine; and, when I — 

the ring was never hers 

and would never receive the ring again 

than I have in this ring: 'twas mine 

more than to see this ring 

if yon shall prove this ring was 

behold this ring, whose high 

that ring's a thousand proofs _ 

she hath that ring (rep.) _ 

send for your ring (rep.) 

this ring, you say, was yours'i' (rep.) — 

the jeweller that owes the ring .. 

there is your ring, and look you 



— 1 2 



sweet clothes, rings put upoii. Taming (^ Sh. 1 (ind.) 

runsfastest, gets the ring _ i 1 

we will have rings, and things, and fine — ii! I 
and caps, and golden rings, with rnffs — iv. 3 
rings, of his, that Paulina knows. Winter's Tnle, v. 2 

do you not hear it ring'? Comedy 0/ Errors, iv. 2 

give me the ring of mine (rep.) _ iv. 3 

took perforce my ring away iv. 3 

my ring, (the ring I saw upon his. ... — iv. 4 

bearing thence rings, jewels v. 1 

snatched that ring. "Tis true (rep.) .. — v.' 1 

ring the alarum-bell (rep. v. 5) Macbeth, ii. 3 

[Co;. A'jii,] this horror! ring the bell .. — ii.3 

like elves and fairies in a ring iv. 1 

you men of Anglers, ring your bells. Kijifl-Jo/m, ii'. 2 

and ring these fingers witli thy _ iii. 4 

hold, take my ring. My lord Richard II. u 2 

that ring was copper (rep.) Mtenryiv. iii. 3 

that thy friends shall ring for thee.2Henr!/ir. iii. 2 

the merry bells ring to thine ear — iv. 4 

why ring not out the bells 1 Henry VI. i. 6 

and mine shall ring thy dire — iv. 2 

ring, bells, aloud; burn, bonfires 2HenryVI.v. I 

vouchsafe to weor this ring Richard III. i. 2 

look, how this ring encompasseth .... — i. 2 

this ring deliver them Henry VIII. v. 1 

by virtue of that ring, I take — v.2 

this is the king's ring! (rep.) _ v. 2 

when that a ring of Greeks have. Troilus^ Cress, iv. b 

then make a ring about the Jtilitit Cccsar, iii. 2 

a ring; stand round _ iii, 2 

your ring may be stolen too Cymbeline, i. 5 

notwithstanding, I fear not my ring ' _ i. 5 

the moiety of my estate to your ring _ i. 5 

you ten thousand ducats to your ring i. i 

my ring I hold dear as my finger — i. ,5 

to this match: here's my ring — i. 5 

for the ring is won ii. 4 

her honour, together with your ring _ ii. 4 

my hand, and ring, is yours li. 4 

take your ring again (rep. ) ii. 4 

nay keep the ring; 'tis true _ ii. 4 

may render of whom he had this ring — v. 5 

by villany I got this ring v. 5 

win this ring by hers and mine adultery — v. .•) 

truly find her, stakes this ring v. 5 

but, your ring first; and here — via 

and ring a hunter's peal, that all. TilusAndron. ii. 2 

doth wear a precious ring ii 4 

no mournful bell shall ring her _ v.' 3 

my father, gave you such a ring Pericles, v. 3 

show her this ring; and she will tell ....Lear, iii. I 

my father with his bleeding rings — v. 3 

thy old groans ring yet in my .. Rotneo 4- Juliet, ii. 3 

give this ring to my true knight — iii. 2 

here, sir, a ring she bid me give you iii. 3 

a precious ring; a ring, that I must — v! 3 

be not cracked within the ring tiamlel, ii. 2 

is this a prologue, or the posy of a ring? — iii. 2 

who's that thntrings the bell? othetln ii 3 

RING-CARRIER! The troop is past.. /<«'s(n.H iii ', 

RI NG ED about witk bold 1 Henry VI. i v ' 4 

RINGING in the king's affairs 2HemyIV. iii ■> 

RINGLEADER and head of nil this.. 2 WenryT/. ii. 1 

RINGLET— green-sour ringlets Tempest, v. I 

dance our ringlets to the wliistling.,W(<.A'.',Dr. ii. 2 

RING-WOOD at thy heels Merry Wives, ii. 1 

RINSING-did break i' the rinsing. .Henny /-"///. i. 1 

RIOT— it is a riot (rep.) Merry Wive, i. 1 

no fear of Gut in a riot (rep.) i. 1 

my riots past, m.y wild iii. 4 

riot of the tips.y Bucohanals Mid. N.'sDreani, v'. I 

and make a riot on the gentle brov/ . King Jnhn,'ui'. 1 

fierce blaze of riot cannot last Richard II. ii. ) 

see riot and dishonour stain the i Henry IV. i. 1 

his headstrong riot hath no curb ..'IHenry IV. iv. 4 
withhold thy riots, what wilt thou (rep.) ~ iv. 4 

and the feeder of my riots v. 5 

Ills hours filled up with riots Henry V. \. 1 

nor cease his flow of riot Timon of Athens, ii. 2 

and drown them.selves in riot! 'ii\ 1 

plunged thyself in general riot — iv." 3 

with their superfluous riots, hear Pericles, i. 4 

in rank and not to be endured riots Lear, i. 4 

restrained the riots of your followers — ii. 4 

RIOTi;R-he is a sworn rioter. Timon of .ithens, iii, 5 

RIOTING in Alexandria Antony S, Cleopatra. i'\. 2 

RIOTOUS youth Measure for Mrasure. iv. 4 

shall it charm thy riotous tongue ..iHetiry VI. iv. I 
slew to day a riotous gentleman ..Richard III. ii. 1 
with riotous feeders; when our. rimoii ofAthens,i\.2 
riotous madness, to be entangled. ,4ii(nny /^ Cleo. i. 3 
his knights giow riotous, anahimself ....Lear, i. 3 

shows like a riotous inn 1.4 

with the riotous knights that tend ii. 1 

goes to't with a more riotous appetite — iv. 6 

young Laertes, in a riotous bead Hamlet, iv. 5 

RII'— or rip thy lieart to find it Cymbeline. iii. 5 

we'd rip their hearts iear, iv. 6 

RIPE— Trinculo is reeling ripe Tempest, w. \ 



RIP 



RIPE-liiit Ills juilKilUMit ripe TiioGen. ofl'erona, ii. 4 
the doctni-fipics his viiiituse ripe.. Werrv'^Vres. iv. 6 
mv tlioughts are ripe in miscliief . Tivcljlh.\ighi, v. 1 

now reveals before 'tis ripe — v. 1 

not ripe until tlieir season irep.^.Mid. N. Dream, ii. 3 

C) how ripe in sliow tliy lipn — iii. 2 

how many sports are ripe [K^l^-rife] — v. 1 
ripe as a pomewater, who now ,. Lnve^sL.Lost, iv. 2 
to supply the ripe wants of. . . . ilnrch. of Venice, i. .1 

we ripe iiud ripe, and tlien AsyouLike it, ii. 7 

you'll be rotten ere you be half ripe — iii. 2 

bestows himself like a ripe sister .... — iv. 3 
a ripe age: is thy name William?.... — v. 1 

without ripe nuiviu'; to't? IVinler'sTale, i. 2 

Macbeth is ripe for shaking Macbeth, iv. 3 

to ripe the bloom that promiseth .... KiugJnlin, ii. 2 
his passion is so ripe, it needs must.. — iv. 2 

whe1\ he sees the hours ripe Richard //. i. 2 

unborn sorrow, ripe in fortune's .... — ii. 2 

when time is ripe MlenriilV. i. 3 

to ripe his growing fortunes iHeiinjIi'. iv. I 

before thy hour be ripe? ', — iv. 4 

of his youth, ripe for exploits Henry V. i. 2 

an injiiry, till it were full ripe — iii. 6 

till thy sins be ripe, and then hurl .Richard III. i. 3 
as the ripe revenue and due of birth — iii. 7 
scholar, and a ripe, and a good one. Henry VI [I. iv. 2 
the strawy Greeks, ripe for his. . Troilus /y- Cress, v, 5 
on Athens, ripe for strokei .... Timon ofAthens, iv. 1 
that they are ni a ripe aptness .... Coriolanus, iv, 3 

his face sours ripe grapes — v. 4 

are brimfuU, our cause is ripe .. ..JuUusCivmr, iv. 3 
when wit's more ripe, accept. . . . Pericles, i. (Gower) 
ripe [Kn/.-right!]for marriage fight — iv. (Gower) 

smiles, that played on her ripe lip Lenr, iv. 3 

ere we may think her ripe to be.. Romeo ^Juliet, i. 2 
an exploit, now ripe in my device .,,, Hamlet, \v. 7 

blossom first, will first be ripe OtheUo,\\. 3 

RU'EIjY— it fits us therefore, ripely. .Ci/mdc/me, iii. 5 

KIPEN— whicli elder days shall ripen. Richard II. ii. 3 

as my fortune ripens with thy love .. — ii. 3 

ripens in tlie simshiiiC of 2 Henry IV. iv. 2 

berries thrive, and ripen best Henry V.'i. 1 

it ripens towards it Antony^- Cleopatra, li, 7 

ripen justice in this commonweal.- TUus .indron. i. 2 

RIPENKD-with ripened time ..Meas.Jhr Mens. v. 1 

honeysuckles, ripened bj' the sun ..Much Ado, iii. 1 

time once ripened to my will I Henry V I. ii. 4 

in his full and ripened years Richard III. ii. 3 

RIPENESS — ripeness is all; come on Lear, v. 2 

which tiine shall bring to ripeness. . Henry VIII. v. 4 

RIFENING,nips his root — iii. 2 

by summer's ripening breath .... /;om(7o r^ Juliet, ii. 2 

RIPER and more lustj'red AsynuLil<eit, iii. 5 

RIPEST— the ripest fruit first falls . . Uiclinrd II. ii. I 

now humble as the ripest mnlherry. Coriolanus, iii. 2 

RIPING— very ripingof the time.. Mer. of Venice, i\. 8 

RIPPED— womb untnnely ripped Macbeth, v. 7 

I must be ripptd: to pieces with mel.Ci/MMiiif, iii. 4 

from me was I'osthinnus ripped — v. 4 

RIPPING up the womb King John, v. 2 

RISE— the humour rises Merry Wives, i. 3 

goto lied when she list, rise when she list — ii. 2 
some rise by sin, and some by ... . Meas.jbr.Meas. ii. 1 
you must rise and be hanged (re/).) .. — iv. 3 

desire her to rise Much Ado, iii. 4 

rise, Grumio, rise Taming of Shrew, i. 2 

with him rises weeping Winter'sTale, iv. 3 

never rise until my tears Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

as from your graves rise up Macbeth, ii. 3 

gentlemen, rise, his highness is — iii. 4 
ut now, they rise again, with twenty — iii. 4 

that rises like the issue of — iv. 1 

rise never, till the wood of Birnam rise — iv. 1 

I have seen her rise from her bed — v. 1 

that rise thus nimbly by a true .... Richard II. iv. 1 

never will I rise up from — v.'i 

a pardon, ere I rise, or speak — v. 3 

rise up, good aunt — v. 3 

would gladly rise, I know — v. 3 

never rise to do him wrong \ Henry IV. i. 3 

gallantly armed,— rise from — iv. 1 

counterteit too, and rise? — v. 4 

why may not he rise as well as I? ,... — v. 4 
no more from this obedience rise ..iHcvrylV. iv. 4 

but I will rise there with so full Henry V. i. 2 

like a lacquey from the rise to set.. . . — iv. I 
doth rise, and help Hyperion to his .. — iv. I 
burst his lead, and rise from death . . 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

the other yet may rise against — ii. 1 

rise, Richard, like a true ifp.) — iii. I 

commons haply rise to save his life..'i Henry VI. iii. 1 

rise up sir John Mortimer — iv. 2 

rise up a knight — v. 1 

the Kentishmen will willingly rise ..ZHenryVI. i. 2 

eeek occasion how to rise — i. 2 

rise from the earth's cold face — ii. 3 

that hopes to rise again — ii. 6 

begins a second storm to rise — iii. 3 

I will not rise, unless your highness. /(/c'mr'i ///. ii. 1 

bid thy master rise and come — iii. 2 

the rest, that love me, rise, and follow — iii. 4 

rise, and lend an ear — iv. 2 

first must rise in their fair Henry VIII, i. 4 

fearing he would rise, he was so virtuous — ii. 2 

out of his wreck, to rise in — iii. 2 

ehall star-like rise, as great — v. 4 

he rises on the toe Troilus ^- Cressida, iv. 5 

{rou bid them rise and live — v. 3 
et Titan rise as early as he dare .... — v. 11 
all pleased from thy table rise .. Timon ofAthens, i. 2 

who's like to rise, who thrives Coriolanus, i. 1 

'twas ver3' faintly he said, rise — v. I 

wherefure rise you now? Intlus Caisir, ii. 1 

the stones of Rome to rise and mutiny — iii. 2 

early to-morrow will we rise — iv. 3 

whose fortunes shall rise hig,het . . Antony^- Cteo. ii. 3 

rise from thy stool — ii. 7 

we rise betiine, and go lo it with .,.. — iv. 4 
I pray you, rise; rise, Egypt — v.'i 



[ 635 J 



RISE, nnd fade 1 he shall be lord of ..Cymbeline,vi 

rise, Marcus, rise fre;;.) Titus Andronicua, i. 2 

doth rise and fall between thy — ii. .'> 

rise, pr'y thee, rise (rep. i.4) Pericles, i. 2 

being topped, they higher rise — i. 

this day I'll rise, or else add ill to ill .... — ii. 

now, blessing on thee, rise — V. 

the yoiniL'er rises, when the old doth fall. Lear, iii. 

for her sake, rise and stand Rmnto ^Juliet, iii. 

foul deeds will rise, though all the earth. JJnmW, i. 

the king rises. What! frighted with .... — iii. 

my gorge rises at it — v. 

lo, here I lie, never to rise again — v. 

rise to play, and go to bed to work Othello, ii. 

Diablo, ho! the town will rise — ii. 

do not rise yet: witness, you ever-burning — iii. 
RISEN — prophetess, new risen up .... 1 Henry VI. i. 

the other side 0' t'ne city is risen ....Coriolanus, i. 

our griefs are risen to tne top Pericles, ii. 

ere I was risen from the place Lear, ii. 

RISETII from a feast,with.. i»//?rc/ian< or Venice, ii. 
RISING— their rising senses begin Tempest, v. 

the rising of the mountain-foot. TwoGen. of Ver. v. 

rising and cawing at the gun's. it//d.iV.'s Dream, iii. 

strew the footsteps of ray rising KingJohn, i. 

and, rising so again, when 1 shall .. — iii. 

shall see us rising in our throne.. .. Richard II. iii. 

and, with arising sigh, he wislietli.lHfjny/f. iii. 

enlarge his rising with tlie blood ....2HenryIV. i. 

from the rising of the lark to the .... Henry V, iii. 

hating thee, are rising up in arms . .ijlenry VI. iv. 

and stop tlie rising of blood-sucking. 3 Henry VI. iv. 

excellent in art, and still so rising .Henry VIII. iv. 

they are rising, they are rising Coriolanus, iv. 

me, my heart, my rising heart I Lear, ii. 

RITE— and lioly rite be ministered .... Tempest,iv. 

till love have all liis rites..... Much Ado, ii. 

and do all rites that appertain unto.. — iv. 

yearly will I do this rite — v. 

after that the holy rites are ended .. — v. 

to observe the rite of May Mid. K.'s Dream, iv. 

our nuptial rites be solemnized . . Mer. of Venice, ii. 

we will begin these rites As you LUce it, v. 

the great prerogative and rite of love .Alt'slVell, ii. 

to speak tlie ceremonial rites of.. Taming of. ^h. iii. 

tile rites of marriage shall be. King John, ii. 

and all the rites of knighthood else. . Ricliard II. i. 

fCo;.] release all duties, rites — iv. 

these fair rites of tenderness \ Henry IV. v. 

do we all holy rites; let tliere Henry V.iv. 

yield to any rites of love 1 Henry VI. i. 

give us leisure for these rites of lovel/i'cAa?-*/ ///. v. 

Csesar shall have all true rites ,,JuliusCa^sar, iii. 

all respect and rites of burial — v. 

gracious to tlie rites that we intend. 7'i^«s^7idron.j. 

now we have performed our Roman rites — i. 

shall we consummate our spousal rites — i. 

no funeral rite, nor man in — v. 

time thou wilt perform the rite .Romeo i^- Juliet, ii. 

see to do their amorous rites — iii. 

my obsequies, and true love's rites?.. — _v. 

no noble rite, nor formal ostentation . . Hamlet, iv. 

follow? and with such maimed rites!.... — v. 

[K)i(.] she is allowed her virgin rites .... — v. 

and the rites of war, speak loudly — v. 

the ri tes. for which I love him Othello, i . 

R IV AGE, and behold a city ..Henry V. iii. (chorus 
RIVAL-my foolish rival ..TwoGen. of Verona, ii. 

for 'tis thy rival — iv. 

are rivals, and love Hermia (i-ep.).Mid.y.'sDr. iii. 

and lead these testy rivals so astray — iii. 

1 know, you two are rival enemies .. — iv. 
to hold a rival place with one of .Mer. of Venice, i. 
be happy rivals in Bianca's love.. Taming of Hh. i. 

and rivals in my love (rep.) — i. 

servants translates his rivals . . Timon ofAthens, i. 
great rivals in our youngest daughter's . . Lear, i. 
Horatio andMarcellus, the rivals Haoilet, i. 

RIVALITY, would not let... 411/0111/ ■^■Cleopatra, iii. 

RIVALLED fee-simple of the .... troilus ii- Cress, v. 
hath rivalled for our daughter Lear, i. 

RIVAL-HATING envy, set you dn. . Richard ll.i.: 

KIVK their dangerous artillery \ Henry VI. iv. 

witli a sigh, would rive in tw ain. Troilus ff Cress, i. 

blunt wedges rive hard knots — i. 3 

a bolt that should but rive an oak . . Coriolanus, v. 3 
soul and body rive not more . . Antony f,-Clro. iv. 1 1 
rive your concealing continents Lear, iii, 2 

RIVED the knotty oaks Julius Ca-sar, i. 3 

Brutus hath rived my heart — iv. 3 

RIVER-if the river were dry ..Tu-oGen.ofVer. ii. 3 

to shallow rivers (lep.) Merry H'ives, iii, I (songj 

slighted me into the river with as little — iii. 5 
he hath been thrown into the rivers. . — iv. 4 
for trouts in a peculiar river . , . . Meas. for Mens. i. 2 
have every pelting river made..il/it/,.'V.'sOreairt, ii. 2 

the Pyrenean.and the river Po KingJohti,i. 1 

like a proud river peering o'er his.. .. — iii. 1 
like rivers of remorse and innocency — iv. 3 
let my kingdom's rivers take their .. — v. 7 
the silver rivers drown their shores. WicAarrf //. iii. 2 

see, how this river comes me I Henry I V. iii. 1 

the river hath tlirice flowed 'IHenrylV. iv. 4 

beyond the river Sala, in the Henry V.i. 2 

he hath passed the river Somme .. .. — iii. 5 

beyond the river we'll encamp ourselves — iii. 6 
there is ariver in Macedon (rep.) .... — iv. 7 

the name of the other river — iv. 7 

why, brother Rivers, are you yet.. . .ZHcnrt/ VI. iv. 4 
being sutfeied, rivers cannot quench — iv. 8 

she may, lord Rivers? Richardlll. i. 3 

and. Rivers, so were you — j. 3 

drew'st rivers from hi- eyes — ;• 3 

Rivers, and Dorset, you were standers-by — i. 3 
Rivers, Vaughan (rep. iii. 2 and iv. 4) — i. 3 

Rivers, and Ilnsting.s take each other's ~ ii. 1 
lord River.s, and lord Grey {,rep. ii. i) — ii. 1 

my uncle Rivers talked how 1 — ii- 4 

her uncle Clarence, her uncle Rivers — iv. 4 
Kivers, Grey, holy king Henry — v. 1 



ROA 

RIVERS, that died at Pomfrct! ....Richard III. v. 3 
approach of tliis wild river hresik.. Henry VIII. iii. 2 

for all the ducks i' the river Troilus ^ Cress, iii. 2 

shoiildst thou lake the river Stvx .... v. 4 

I send it tliroiigli the rivers of .vniir..Corio(anM», i. 1 
upon the river of Cydnus ..Antony tj- Cleopatra, ii. 2 
we'll to the river: tlicrc, my music .. — ii. 3 
poor tributary rivers as sweet (ish . . Cymbeline, iv. 2 
a crimson river of warm liloorl.7V.'t<!t.4iii/ro>iicu«, ii..') 
plenteous rivers and wide-skirted meads.. Lear, i. I 
nor the fruitful river in the eye Hamlet, i. 2 

RIVET— closing rivets up Henry V. iv. (chorus) 

shake in andout the rivet .... Troilus ^Cressida, i. 3 

and unlock the rivets all — v. 6 

I mine eves will rivet to his face Hamlet, iii. 2 

RIVETED so with faith unto Mer. of Venice, v, I 

have on their riveted trim Antony t, Vleo, iv.4 

riveted, screwed to my memory? ....Cymbeline, ii 2 

RIVO says the drunkard 1 Henry I v. ii. 4 

ROAD- father at the road expects. Two Gen. of Ver. i . 1 

I must unto the road ii. 4 

in the even road of a blank verse Much Ado, v. 2 

piers, and roads; and every objcct.il/er. D//'e>iicf,i. 1 

the force and road of casualty — ii.g 

my ships are safely come to road .... — v. 1 

living on the common road? AsyouLike It, ii. 3 

now is lying in Marseilles' road ..Taming of Sh, ii. 1 
post to the road, and if the wind. C'omcdi/o/Krr. iii. 2 

in all London Road for fleas \HenryIV. ii. 1 

Doll Tearsheet should be some road.2l/e>i)-v/;'. ii. 2 

who will make road upon us Henry V. i. 2 

at last, with easy roads, he Henry V III, iv. 2 

t'l make road upon's again Coriolanus, iii. I 

know the very roiid into his kindness — v. I 
I am out of the road of rutting Pericles, iv. 5 

ROAD-WAY better than thine 'iHenrylV. ii. 2 

ROAM thither then XHmryVl. iii. 1 

[Col. Knt.'] of our right roam on King John, i\. 2 

lusty l.ids roam here and there.2Heiiri//;'.v. 3(song) 

ROAMING through a thorny. rammg-o/S/i. 2 (indue.) 
where are you roaming? .. Tirellth Night, ii. 3 (song) 
Greece, roaming clean through. Coiiierfi/o/firroM.i. 1 
[A'it(.] the poor plirase, roaming it thus. .Hamlet, i. 3 

ROAN— rode on roan Barbary! Richard II. v. 6 

aroan, acrop-ear, is it not? (rep.) ..\HenryIV. ii. 3 

give iny roan horse a drencli — ii. 4 
AR-tlie wild waters in this roar ....7' mpest, i. 2 

make thee roar, that beasts — i. 2 

the roar of a whole herd of lions .... — ii. 1 

hark, tliev roar — iv. I 

1 will roar, that I will (rep.).. ...Mid.IV.'sDream,i, 2 
let him roar iigain, let him roar again — i. 2 

roar you us gently as any (rep.) — i. 2 

grunt, and roar, and burn, like horse — iii. 1 

in wildest rage doth roar — v. 1 

now the hungry lion roars — v. 2 

the Nemean lion roar 'gainst thee, tore's /-. toW, iv, 1 
mock the lion when he roars .... Mer, of Venice, ii. 1 
in my time heard lions roar? .. Taming of Shrew, i. 2 

make our grids and clamour roar Macbeth, i. 7 

for you hear the lion roar '. ..King John,i\. 1 

if tlie devil come and roar for them . . 1 HenrylV. i. 3 

and let the welkin roar 2HenrylV. ii. 4 

till he roar again (rep.) _ iii. 2 

makes him roar these accusations . . 1 Henry VI. iii. 1 

tremble when tlie lion roars 2 Henry VI. iii. 1 

fiends roar, saints pray, to liave.. ..Rir/iardllll iv. 4 
you rogue, is this a place to roar in?. W<reri/f/i/. v. 3 

hark, how Troy roars ! Troilus 4- Cress, v. 3 

but, 1 fear tliey'll roar him in Ccriolanus, iv. 6 

and roars as doth the lion in JuliusCwsar, i. 3 

the sea, if it could so roar to me Cymbeline, v. 5 

could X rage and roar as doth the sea . . Pericles, ii i. 3 
to the sea, and hears it roar beneath .... Hamlet, i. 4 

ah me, what net, that roars so loud — iii. 4 

that were wont to set the table on a roar? — v. I 
nay, lay thee down, and roar Othello, v. 2 

ROAUED— to cry to the sea that roared.. 7'einpo-/, i. 2- 

well roared, lion. Well run Mid..\.'sl>r. v. I 

the ravin lion when he roared All's Well, iii. 2 

roared, and the sea mocked (rep.). ll'inler'sTale.iVi. 3 

how the rogue roared I \ Henry IV. ii. 2 

roared for mercy, and still ran and roared — ii. 4 
roared the sea, and trumpet-clangor. 2Henr!//r. v. 5 
the forest tremble when they roared.3//eiiryr/. v. 7 

certain of your brethren roared Coriolanus, ii. 3 

whined and roared iiway your victory — v. 5 
torrent roared, and we did buffet ..JuliusCirsar, i. 2 
should be roared in dismal \\e\\.. Romeo ^Juliet, iii. 2 

ROARER— what care these roarers ....Tempest,}. 1 

ROARING— cracks of sulphurous roaring — i. 2 

even to roaring: come — iv. .1 

and the azure vault set roaring war .. — v.i 

of roaring, shrieking, howling — v.i 

for it is nothing but roaring.. ..il/W. A'. 'iDream, i. 2 
enrobe the roaring waters with.. /)Verc/i.o/*/'*-io'ce, i. 1 
both roaring loiuler than the sea. iVinter'sTale, iii. 3 
spurns back theocean's roaring tides.Ki/ig^Jo/in, ii. 1 
talks as familiarly of roaring lions .. — ii. 2 
so, by a roaring tempest on the flood — iii. 4 

a current, roaring loud \HenrylV.\. 3 

as I fear the roaring of the lion's .... — iii. 3 

this roaring devil i the old play Henry V. iv. 4 

me like a roaring cannon-shot MIenryVI, iii. 3 

the tongue of roiiriiig Typhon .. Troilus ^ Cress, i. 3 

and at it, roaring for Troilus — v. ."> 

and, in roaring lor a chamber-pot . . Coriolanus, ii. I 
he cried almost to roaring.. Anfony<^Cteopatra, iii. 2 

miBCaleable, and roaring waters Cymbeline, iii. 1 

had not apprehension ot roaring terrors — iv. 2 

who, with roaring voices, strike Lear, ii. 3 

such groans of roaring wind and rain .. — iii. 2 

[Cof.Kii/.] lay toward the roaring sea — iii. 4 

cliain me wi'th roaring bears Romeo 6r Juliet, iv. 1 

cm ptv tigers or the roaring sea — v. 3 

ROAS'l? — you may roast your goose .... Macbeth, ii. 3 

nothing but roast malt-worms 'iHrmylV. ii. 4 

duke tliat rules the roast iHenryVI. i. I 

roast me in sulphur: wash me in Othello, v.'i 

ROASTED— of a roasted crab . . Mid. A'.'i Dream, ii. I 



ROASTED crabs hisa Love' s L. Lost, v. -i (song) 

tiiat roasted Manning-tree ox IHennjtr. ii. 4 

roasted in wratli, and fire, and thu3 lla.nkt, ii. i 

KUAST-MEAT for worms PerUli-s, i v. 3 

ICOJi -a earriajje to rob \o\'Q from any.. Mtir/tAdn, i. 3 
didst rob it ot some taste o^..MeicfiaTtt of fftiice^ ii. 3 

she robs thee of tliy name As ijou Line tf, i. 3 

lie, tliut perforce robs iious of KingJfjkn^ i. 1 

must 1 rolj tlie lawi; Your suord .... — iv. 3 
robs my tongue from breatliing ,. ..Richard II. i. 3 
and rob me of a happy motliers nameV — v. 2 
beat our wateh, and rob our passengers — v. 3 

who, I rob? I a tl\iefy I Henry IK i. 2 

sliall rob tliose men tliat — i. 2 

il',>'ou and X do not rob tiieiu — i. 2 

I am accurst to rob in tliat — ii. 2 

ere I'll rob a foot further — ii. 2 

zoundsl will they not rob usi? — ii. 2 

now, could tliou and I rob the tlueves — ii. 2 
wilt thuu roil this leatlicrn-jerkiu .. — ii. 4 
to rob me of so rich a bottom here .. — iii. 1 

rob me tile exchequer the first — iii. 3 

i*evel the night, rob, murder 2l1enrijiy. iv. 4 

to rob my earuest-gaping sight .. ..'IHenrt/yi. iii. 2 
I should rob the death^^Luau of his fee — iii. 2 
not eagles' blood, but rob beehives .. — iv. 1 

to come to rob ray grounds — iv. 10 

to rob a man, to force a spotless — v. 1 

and rob his temples of the diadem ..ZHenryVI. i. 4 
should rob my bed-mate of my. 'y/oiiusiij- Cress, iv. 1 

and rob iu the behalf of charity — v. 3 

he slays more than you rob .. Tiinon of Athens, iv. 3 

attraction robs the vast sea — iv. 3 

away; rob one another — iv. 3 

of his demerits rob Cominius Coriolanus, i. 1 

will rob you of a great deal of patience — ii. 1 

they rob the Hybla bees JuliusCcPsar, v. 1 

I'll rob none but myself Cijinbeline, iv. 2 

than rob me of the people's hearts. 'I'ilusAndron. i. 2 
so should I rob my sweet sons of their — ii. 3 

that rob the bee of her honey Pericles, ii. 1 

no, no, I will rob Xellus of her weed .. — iv. 1 

that robs thee of thy goodness! — iv. 6 

how conceit may rob the treasury Lear, iv. 6 

he robs himself, that spends a bootless.. t);Ae(;o, i. 3 
robs me of that, which not enriches him — iii. 3 

ROiiBEU— tliese three liave robbed me.. Tempest, v. 1 

the kuight may be robbed Merry Urines, iv. 5 

I am robbed, sir, and beaten .... Wmter'sTale, iv. 2 

fellow was he that robbed you? — iv. 2 

that robbed the lion of iris heart ....King John, ii. 1 

■was robbed and ta'en away — v. 1 

if ue have robbed these men 1 Henry IT. ii. 4 

Harry, thou hast robbed me — v. 4 

1 never robbed the soldiers of their 2Henry n. iii. 1 
that robbed my soldiers of their ....SffejtjyF/.ii. 1 
liave rubbed ray strong-knit sinews .. — ii. 3 
for where I am robbed aufl bound . . Henry Fill. ii. 4 
robbed this bewailing land of noble — iii. 2 
hath robbed many beasts of.. Troilus <S- Cressida, i. 2 
she has robbed me of my Bwoid. Antony 4' Cleo. iv. 12 

I robbed his wound of it — v. 1 

thou hast robbed me of this deed . . Cymbeline, iv. 2 
that robbed Audrouieus of his . . Tilus Andron. v. 1 
zouLids, sir, you are robbed; for shame. Othello, i. 1 
the robbed, that smiles, steals something — i. 3 
he that is robbed, not wanting {i-ep.) .... — iii. 3 

ROBBERS range abroad unseen .,.. Richard II. iii. 2 
be assailed by robbers, and die in ... . Henry /'. iv. 1 

with robbers so o'er-raatched 3Henryf'I. i. 4 

and what makes robbers bold — ii. 6 

with a robber's haste, crams liis. Troilus tj- Cress, iv. 4 
large-handed robbers yonv si:a.vQ..Tiinono/Alh. iv. 1 
for supporting robbers; shall \vq.. Julius Ccesar. iv. 3 
thou art a robber, a law-breaker ..Cymbeline, iv. 2 
with robbers' hands, my hospitable Lear, iii. 7 

ROBBERY have authority ileas./orilcas. ii. 2 

have in tiiis robbery lost three i Henry 11^. ii. 4 

for the robbery, lad, how is — iii. 3 

was in question for the robbery? ....2Henryiy. i. 2 
of peace with pillage and robbery .... Henry F. iv. 1 
I'll grace thee with that robbery.... Cm/o/uijus, v. 6 
a storm, or robbery, call it what. . . . Cymbeline, iii. 3 

ROBBIA'G— that fears robbing. 7'wo Gen. of I'er. ii. 1 
but by the robbing of the banished. .ific/mri/ //. ii. I 
to be executed for robbing a church. . Henry V. iii. 6 
unless by robbing of your friends ..iHenryVl. iv. 8 
wiiat tell'st thou me of robbing? uihello, i. 1 

ROBB'ST— robb'st me of a moiety ..AlfslVell, iii. 2 

ROBE— attired in a robe of white... Wer;!//ra>es, iv. 4 
nor the j udge's robe, become .....Meas. for Mens. ii. 2 
excliange for rags? robes.. towe'sL.Losi, iv. 1 (letter) 
disguised in sober robes, to old. Taming of Shrew, i. 2 

iu these unreverent robes — iii. 2 

in pure white rubes, like very .. Winter' s Tale, iii. 3 
sure, this robe of mine does change.. — iv. 3 
these robes are not gentleman born .. — v. 2 

dress me in borrowed robes? Macbeth, i. 3 

lest our old robes sit easier — ii. 4 

liK.e a giant's robe upon a dwarfish.... — v. 2 
comes in such haste, in riding robes? King John, i. 1 
that lion's robe, that did disrobe (jcp.) — ii. | 
putting on so new a fasliioued robe .. — iv. 2 
a buff jerkin a most sueet robe ot'....lHenryiy. i. 2 
my presence, like a robe pontifical .. — iii. 2 
for there he is ui his rolJes, burning.. — iii. 3 
appellez-vouB le pieds et la robe?....HeHri/r. iii. 4 

the entertissueil robe of gold — iv. 1 

tliey'll be in fresiier rolies — iv. 3 

tliese disgraceful wailing robesl \Henryyi.i. I 

thy scarlet robes, as a child's — i. 3 

wdl hang upon my richest robes iHenryVI. ii. 4 

my robe, and my integrity Henryl-'III. iii. 2 

give me ray robe, for i will go . luliusCiPsar, ii. 2 

when old robes are worn out .... Antony ij- Cleo. i. 2 
give me my robe, put on m.v crown .. — v. 2 
what! should X don tliis robe.. Titus/iudronicus, i. 2 
give me my robes; X am wild in my ..Pericles, v. 1 

robes, and furred gowns, hide all Lear, iv. 6 

child, that hath new robes ....Romeo fy Juliet, iii. 2 



ROBES uncovered on the bier Romeo^-Julct, iv. 1 

and for a robe, about her lank and aW.. Hamlet, ii. 2 

K')BED— thou robed man of justice Lrar.iW. 6 

ROBERT Shallow, esquire tjep.) Merry Hives, i. 1 

what John! what Robert! (re;^.) — iii. 3 

X suppose, to Robert X'aulconbridge .. AV/i.'JoAii, i. 1 

if old sir Xloburt did bL'get {rf/9.) — i. I 

and X had his, sir Xiohert Ids, like him — i. 1 
good old sir Xiobert'e wife's eldest son — i. 1 
when 1 was got, sir Robert was away — i. I 

BU- Robert VVaterton, and Francis. . Richard II. ii. 1 

X am Rnbert Shallow, sir {rep.) ■IHenrylf. iii. 2 

there will X visit master Robert Shallow — iv. 3 
e-xcuse me, master Robert Shallow i_rep.) — v. 1 

master Robert Shallow (rqo. v. 5) — v. 3 

sir Robert Brakenbury, and sir Ridiard III. v. 4 

ROBIN, Xsay Merry IVlves, iii. 3 

here comes little Robin — iii. 3 

love-song like a robin-redbreast. Tu<o Gen. ofVer. ii. 1 
bare scalp of Robin Hood's fat friar. . — iv. 1 

hey Robin, jolly Robin Twelfth Night, iv. 2 

Robin Starveling, the tailortrep.) ..Mid.N.'sDr. i. 2 

called Robin Uood-fellow — ii. 1 

hie therefore, Robin, overcast the night — iii. 2 

welcome, good Robin iv 1 

silence awhile: Robin, take off this .. — iv. 1 

and Robin shall restore araends — (epil.) 

live like the old Robin Hood AsyouLikeil, i. I 

upside down, since Robin ostler died.l Henry IV. ii. 1 
and had Robin Night-work by old.2Hi;«ri/ ly. iii. 2 
Robin Hood, Scarlet, and John — v. 3 (song) 

here, liobin, an' if X die, I give 2 Henry yi. ii. 3 

bonny sweet Robin is all my joy. Hamlet, iv. 5(song) 

ROBUSTIOUS and rough coming on . . Henry y. iii. 7 

hear a robustious periwig-pated fellow Hnm(e?, iii. 2 

ROCHKSTER-to-night in Rochester... I Henry IV. i. 2 

ROCHi"OKD,oneof her highness' Henry y III. i. 4 

ROCK— sty me in this hard rock Tempest, i. 2 

deservedly confined into this rock i. 2 

my cellar is in a rock by the sea-side .... — ii, 2 

young sea-mells from the rock — ii. 2 

a ragged, fearful, hanging rock.. TwoGen.ofyer. i. 2 

and the rocks pure gold — ii. 4 

and wild as haggards of the rock Much Ado, iii. 1 

the raging rocks, with shivering.,l/id. A'.'sOceam, i. 2 
and rock the ground whereon these.. — iv. 1 
me straiglit of dangerous rocks . . Mer. of Venice, i. 1 

waters, winds, and rocks — i. 3 

touch of merchant-marring roclts.. ., — iii. 2 
quicken a rock, and make you Aanee.All'stVell, ii. 1 
encountered by a mighty rock. Comedy of Errors, i. I 

founded as the rock Macbeth, iii. 4 

mountains and rocks (rep.) King John, ii. 2 

then death rock me asleep 2Henry IV. ii. 4 

and rock his brains in cradle of iii. 1 

as doth a galled rock o'erliang Henry V. iii. 1 

our stern upon a dreadful rock? ....2Henryyi. iii. 2 

the splitting rocks cowered in — iii. 2 

X could hew up rocks, and fight — v.! 

ay, as the rocks cheer them that 3 Henry VI. ii. 2 

the ship splits on the rock — v. 4 

from shelves and rocks that — v. 4 

Richard, but a ragged fatal rock?.... — v. 4 

bestride the rock, the tide will v. 4 

waves, witli sands, and rocks — . v. 4 

lo, where comes that rock, that X.... Henry VIII, i. 1 

as strong as shore of rock — i. I 

as doth a rock against the chiding flood — iii. 2 

eat rocks, tame tigers Trouus t^Cressidn, iii. 2 

bear him to the rock (rep.) Coriolanus, iii. 1 

the Tarpeian rook (rep. iii. 2) — iii. 1 

to the rock with him; to the rock.... — iii. 3 
precipitation from off the rock Tarpeian — iii. 3 
he is the rock, the oak not to be .... CorioUinns, v. 2 

of friends, rest on this rock JuliusCiesar, v. 5 

a pendant rock, a forked Antony ff Cleo. iv. 1 2 

paled in witli rocks uuscaleable .... Cymbeline, iii. 1 
cracked as easily 'gainst our rocks .. — iii. 1 
we house i' the rock, yet use thee .... — iii. 3 

this rock, and these demesnes — iii. 3 

into the creek beliind our rock — iv. 2 

I pr'y thee, to our rock — iv. 2 

think, that you are upon a rock — v. 5 

I stand as one upon a rock.. Titus Andronicus, iii. 1 

sea hath cast me on the rocks Pericles, ii. 1 

run on the dashing rocks thy . . . . Romeo ^Juliet, v. 3 

sleep rock thy brain Hamlet, iii. 2 

rough quarries, rocks, and hills whose . . Olliello, i. 3 
guttered rocks, and congregated sands — ii. 1 

if drink rock not his cradle — ii. 3 

ROCK Y— steril, and rocky hard Tempest, iv. 1 

whose rocky shore beats back Richard II. ii. 1 

stand as firm as rocky mountains ..iHenryll'. iv. 1 

all to pieces on thy rocky bosom ..Richard III. iv. 4 

ROD— all humbled, kiss the rod!. 7'«-o Gen. of Ver. i. 2 

in time tlie rod becomes more .... jUeas. /or .U«is. i. 4 

or to bind him up a rod Much Ado, ii. 1 

the rod liad been made (rep.) — ii. 1 

I'll whip tliee with a rod Mid.Df.'-i Dream, iii. 2 

kiss the rod; and fawn on rage .. ..Richard II. v. 1 
whipped and scourged with rods .... 1 Henry I V. i. 3 

vengeance and the rod of lieaveu — iii. 2 

wasted all his rods on late 2Henryiy. iv. 1 

the earl of Surrey, with the rod. . . . Henry yill. iv. 1 

the rod, and bird of peace — iv. 1 

would X had a rod in my mouth ..TimonofAth. ii. 2 
you have been a rod to her friends. . Coriolanus, ii. 3 

he hath whipped with rods Antony^t:leo, iv. 1 

when thou gavcst them the rod Lenr, i. 4 

RODE on roan Barbary (rep.) Ridiard II. v. 6 

learned in AVorccstcr, as X rode .... 1 Henry I y. iv. 1 
iwiiy should the gentleinati. that rijd<i.-i Henry 1 V. i. 1 

«iad stolen the horse he rode on _ i. 1 

helter-skelter have 1 rode to thee — v. 3 

and you r^de, like a kerne of Ireland. Henri/ f. iii. 7 
king himself is rode to view their battle — iv. 3 

as I rode from Calais 1 Henry yi. iv. 1 

when they rode from Ijondon .... Iticliard UI. iii. 2 
of tliis action rode on his tide . . Troilus i^Cress. ii. 3 
of a bay courser I roilj on Timon of Athens, i. 2 



RODE-one that rode to his execution. <Vm6e//;ie, iii. •; 
(li<l not atten<l him as we rodei . . Romeo ^- J uliet , v. a 

RODERIGO. were I the iVIoor Otiiello, i. 1 

my name is Roderigo (ref .) — i. 1 

have you not read, Roderigo, of some .... — i. I 
on. good Roderigo; I'll deserve your pains — i. 1 
.you, lloderigo! come, sir, I am for you .. — i. 2 
do you hear, Roderigo? What say you? ., — i. 3 

villa)iou3 thonglits, Roderigo! — ii. I 

now, my sick fool, Roderigo, whom love — ii. 3 

how now, Roderigo? (rep.) — ii. 3 

I Roderigo! I do not find (rep.) — iv. 2 

■ give me thy hand Roderigo (rep.) — iv. 2 

I live Roderigo, lie calls me to a restitution — v. 1 

Roderigo? no; yes sure (rep.) — v. 1 

set on in the dark by Roderigo {rep.) .... — v. 1 

called lloderigo. Roderigo killed! — v. 2 

the pocket of the slain Roderigo (rep.) .. — v. 2 

i Roderigo meant to have sent — v. 2 

' there is, besides, in Roderigo's letter .... — v. 2 

RODORXGO; myfatherwas 'l'vetfihKighl,\]. I 

ROE— as roes run over land Lout's L. Lost. v. 2 

1 ay,fleeter than the roe .. Taming of shrru\-> (indue) 

or a herring without a roe Troilus 4- Cress, v. 1 

' without his roe, like a dried ....Itomeo4'Jnlict,]i.i 
ROGER Bolinfjhroke, the conjurer? ..2Henryyi.i.2 

Roger, earl ot JNIarch (rep.) — ii. 2 

I thy grandfather, Roger Mortimer . .iHenryVI. i. \ 
ROGERO? Nothing but bonfires .. Winter's Tale, v. 2 
ROGUE— rogues, hence, avaimt I.... fl/erry (fines, i. 3 

French thrift, you rogues — i. 3 

such a drawling, affecting rogue .... — ii. 1 

very rogiies, now they be out — ii. 1 

reason, you rogue (rep.) — ii. 2 

the key of the cuckoldly rogue's coffer — ii. 2 
hang him, meclianical salt-butter rogue! — ii. 2 
the rogues slighted me into the river — iii. 5 
peace, you rogue, no more 0' tliat. TwelfthNigId, i. 5 

here's an over- weening rogue! — ii. 5 

I could so beat the rogue I (rep.) .... — ii. .5 
thou killest me like a rogue.. — iii. 4 (challenge) 

then he's a rogue — v. 1 

I hate a drunken rogue — v. 1 

away, you rogue, away {rep.) ..Meas.forMeas. iv. 3 

once to behold, rogue {rep.) Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

very poor rogues (rep.) All'sWell, iv. 3 

damnable, both sides rogue! — iv. 3 

you rogue! y' are (rep.) TamingofSh. 1 (indue.) 

here comes the rogue: sirrah, where — i. 1 

off with my boots, you rogues {rep.) — iv. 1 

come hither, you rogue; what, have you — v. 1 
he settled only in rogue; some call. IVinler'sTale,\v. 2 

that's the rogue that put me — iv.2 

not a more cowardly rogue in all ... . — iv. 2 

an old sheep-whistling rogue — iv. 3 

let him call me rogue, for bein" so far — iv. 3 
that tliis same fat rogue will tell us..)HenryIV. i. 2 

hanging for killing that rogue — ii. 2 

bewitched with the rogue's company — ii. 2 

and to leave these rogues, X am — ii. 2 

give me my horse you rogues, give . . — ii. 2 
out, you rogue, shall I be your ostler? — ii. 2 
you lie, you rogue; 'tis going to .... — ii. 2 

how the rogue roared! — ii. 2 

what a frosty-spirited rogue is this? — ii. 3 

away you rogue; dost thou not hear — ii. 4 

five me a cup of sack, rogue (rep.) ,. — ii. 4 
am a rogue, if X (rep.) — ii. 4 

you rogue, they were bound — ii. 4 

two rogues in buckram (rep.) — ii. 4 

out, you rogue! play out the play .. — ii. 4 
plays the rogue with my great toe . . iHenrylV. i. 2 

thou bastardly rogue! (rep.) — ii. I 

the foul-mouth'dst rogue in England — ii. 4 
away , you mouldy rogue, away ! . . , , — ii. 4 
hang him, rogue! he lives upon .... — ii. 4 
ah, you sweet little rogue, yon! (rep.) — ii. 4 
I will toss the rogue in a blanket..., — ii. 4 
you blue-bottle rogue! you filthy.... — v. 4 
come, you rogue, come! bring me to — v. 4 

away, you rogue. By my troth Henry V. ii. 1 

why, tis a gull, a fool, a rogue — iii. 6 

and be hanged, you rogue: is this.. Henj-j/ ('///. v. 3 
male varlet, you rogue! what's .Troilus '^- Cress, v. 1 

Dioraed's a false-hearted rogue — v. 1 

would X could meet that rogue Diomedl — v. 2 
railing knave; a very filthy rogue .. — v. 4 
what's become of the wenching rogues? — v. 4 
poor rogues, and usurers' men! .. Timon of .ith. ii. 2 

compounded thee, poor rogue — iv. 3 

thou tedious rogue! I am sorry — iv. 3 

toad! Rogue, rogue, rogue ! I am sick — iv. 3 

you dissen tious rogues, that Coriolanus, i. 1 

go to hell among the rogues Julius Ca!sar,i. 2 

rogue, thou hast lived too long . . Antony Sf Cleo. ii. 5 
fisting of each rogue thy ear is liable., i'ejv'cte.!, iv. 6 

superserviceable, finical rogue Lear, ii. 2 

draw, you rogue (rep.) — ii. 2 

stand, rogue, stand; you neat slave — ii. 2 

such smiling rogues as these, like rats .. — ii. 2 

none of these rogues, and cowards — ii. 2 

with swine, and rogues forlorn — iv. 7 

and liear poor rogues talk of court news — v. S 
a braggart, a rogue, a villain ..Romeo SfJuliet,\\\. 1 

for the satirical rogue says liere Hamlet, ii. 2 

what a rogue and peasant slave am X! .. — ii. 2 
a pestilence on him for a mad rogue!.... — v. 1 

you rogue! you rascal! what's 0^/(e//o, ii. 3 

dost thou prate, rogue! Nay, good — ii. 3 

poor rogue! I think, i' faith, she loves me — iv. 1 

some busy and insinuatiug rogue — iv.2 

ROGUERY to be found XHenrylV.ii.l 

roguery! Nay, then,— I'll tell .. Troilus^ Cress, v. 2 

RO(iUISlI madness, allows itself to Lear, iii. 7 

ROISTING challenge sent Troilus ^-Cressida, ii. 2 

ROLL— make his eyeballs roll...1/irf.jV.'s Dream, iii. 2 

as the eye doth roll toevery Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

I am not in the roll of common ....IHenrylV. iii, 1 
the roll? Where's the roll? (rep.) ..2Henryiy. iii. 2 
which rolls, and rolls, and rolls Henry V. iii. U 



11. 2 
iii. 1 
iii. 1 
iv. 3 



iv. 6 
iv. 7 
V. 2 
V. 3 
V. 3 
V. 3 
V. 4 



ROLL— he's raaile master o' the vo\U.lImri/VlII. v. 1 

put we i' the roll of conquest AntouijfrVlen. v. 2 

are fatal tlu'ii, whi'U vour eyes roll so ..Oihetlo,v. 2 

EOLLKDio a fl.iui'iin;; bank -illeiin/n. in. 1 

lies rolled in the oliLurful sun ....TUnsAiiilroa.u. 3 

ROLLlNG-noila, uilli rolling eyes.. King Jolm, iv. 2 
in a Hue frenzy rolling, cloth ..MiJ. .V. .< Ore,tm, v. 1 
put this dangerous stone a rolling ../JpiiJ!/' /'/. v. 2 

ROiM.\GE iutlie hind ............. HamW,i. 1 

ROMAN— the sweet Roman hand.T'»'tr(///iAiK'"'. '". 4 

the faee of an old Roman coin Ln'f'i L. Lost, v. 2 

ancient Koman honour moTe.Me>chantqryenice,ni.2 

likea Roman conqueror AsyouLikeil, iv. 2 

Roman Lncrece for her chastity.. TammnnfSh. ii. 1 

why should I play the Roman fool Mmbelh,\. 7 

imitate the honourable Koman.2/7i!jiri//r. ii. 2 (let.) 
hut the outside of the Roman Brutus. .HtHrj/r.ii. 4 
look you, of the Roman disciplines .. — iii- 2 

the pristine wars of the Romans — in. 2 

a Roman sworder, andabanditto ..iHenn/Vl. iv. 1 
as lift them against tlie Roman state. Cunfj(a?ius, i. 1 
Lartiuj, a most valiant Roman — i. 2 UetterJ 

Aufidius, pieroinf» our Romans — }• 5 

we are come off like Romans — !• 6 

the Roman gods, lead their successes — i. 6 

to the Roman camp conduct us — i. 7 

I would, I were a Roman; for I cannot 
he bcstrid an o'erpressed Roman — 

not Romans, as they are not 

and sack great Rome with Romans.. 
I am a Roman; and my services are 
I would not be a Doman, of all nations 
I hope to see Romans as cheap as .... 
are entered in the Roman territories 

do they still fly to the Romau? 

you are a Roman, are you? — 

do not sav for that, forgive our Romans — 

did tend to save tlie Romans — 

the Romans, this we received — 

Roman ladies bring not comfort home — 
shoutins Romans, make the sun dance — 

than shiime to the Romans — 

that bade the Romans mark him ..JuUusCaisar, 
he is a nobla Roman, and well given — 

who's there? A Roman — 

that should he in a Roman, you do want — 
for Romans now liave thewes and limbs — 

the Romans are but sheep (rfp.) — 

certain of the noblest-minded Romans — 
which every noble Roman bears of you — 
what other bond, than secret Romans — 
drop of blood, tliat every Roman bears — 
and show youi'selves true Romans .. — 

bear it as our Roman actors do — 

by all the gods that Romans bow before — 
lusty Romans came smiling (rpp.) .. — 

nor to no Romau else — 

stoop, Romans, stoop, and let us bathe — 
thy master is a wise and valiant Roman — 
Romans, countrymen, and lovers! hear — 
so rude, that would not be a Roman? — 
vou gentle Romans,— Peace, ho! (rep.) — 
to every Roman citizen he gives — — 
and bay the moon, than sucii a Roman — 
if that thou be'st a Roman, take it forth — 

now, as you are a Roman (,rep.) — 

think not, thou noble Roman, tliat ever — 
where never Roman shall take note.. — 

this is a Roman's part: come — 

two Romans living such as these? {rep.') — 

Romans, yet ere night we shall — 

this was the noblest Roman of them all — 

on tlie sudden a Roman thought . . AiUony Sr Cleo. 1. 1 

say, the firm Roman to great ... 

the all-honoured, honest, Roman Biutus — 

tlie hearts of Romans serve your endsl — 

to tlie Roman boy she hath sold me . . — 

a Roman, bv a Roman valiantly .... — 

let's do it after the high Roman fashion — 

join his honour, against the Romans. Ci/mteii 

some dozen Romans of us, and your lord — 

to employ you towards this Roman — 

or look upon our Romans, whose — 

when she met her Roman, and Cydnus — 
till the injurious Romans did extort — 

my body's marked with Roman swords — 
I was confederate with the Romans.. — 

some Roman courtezan — 

the embassador, Lucius the Roman. . — 
Bhe hatli not appeared before the Roman — 
I saw Jove's bird, the Roman eagle . . — 

success to the Roman host — 

the Roman emperor's letters — 

the Roman legions, all from Gallia . . — 
with a supply of lioman gentlemen .. 

the Romans must or for Britons 

when they hear the Roman horses neigh — 
fall on me, by the hands of Romans! — 

or we are Roman-i, and will ^ive you — 



ill. I 



— i. 5 



iv. 2 



— IV. 4 



v. 3 



the Britons, was the Roman s bane 
favourer to the Roman [Co/. K;i(. -Briton] — 

tlie slaughter here made by the Roman — 

a Roman; who had not now been — 

desire to live, for ail he be a Roman.. — 

you look like Romans — 

a R'lnan with a Roman's heart can.. — 

harm, though he have served a Roman — 

he is a Roman; no more kin to me . . — 

came you to serve our Roman captive? — 

to Cajsar, and to the Roman empire. . — 

the Roman eagle, from south to west — 

let a Roman and a British ensign — 

Romans, friends, followers (jep.)..TUusAmh 

in election for the lioman empery .. — 

Romans, make way (rep.) — 

stay Romau brethren; gracious conqueror- 

to thee, and to thy Roman yoke — 

we have performed our lioman rites — 

Romans, do me right (rep.) — 

suum cuique is our Roman j ustice . . — 



V. 5 

V. 5 
v. ,5 



. 2 (letter) 



i. 2 



ROMAN— by all the Roman n(A»..TitutAndron. \. 2 
thou art a Romnn, be not barbarous — ;■ 2 

a Roman now adopted happily — .!• 2 

will the lovely Roman ladies troop . . — ii. 1 
now shall ye see our Roman hunting — .H' 2 
what Roman lord it was durst do .... — iv. 1 

the Roman Hector's hope — ?v. 1 

pray the Roman gods, confound you both — iv. 2 
a tbousand Roman dames at sncli .... — iv.i 
with my knife carved in Roman letters — v. 1 
the Roman emperor greets you all .. — v. ' 

what say you, Romans? (rep.) — v. 3 

thanks, gentle Romans; may I govern so— v. 3 
squeak and gibber in tlic Roman streets. Hamief, i. 1 
I am more an antique Roman than a Dane — y. 2 
you triumph, Roman? do you triumph?0(/ic/io, iv. 1 

ROM ANO— .Julio Romano Winter's Tale, v. 2 

.^acida, Romanos viucere posse 2 Henri/ 1 l.\. 4 

ROME— other some, hois in Rome. tleas.forMem. ni. 2 
enjoined him in Rome for want . . Love's L. Los!, v. 2 
a young doctor of Rome . . Mer. of Venice, iv. 1 (left.) 
asfaras Rome; andso toTripulis.7'ami;ir "/^/i. iv.2 
that I have room with Rome to curse. KinifJohn,iu. 1 

do submit himself to Rome — !(!• j 

of a heavy curse from Rome — m- ' 

hath reconciled himself to Rome .... — v- 2 
the great metropolis and see of Rome — v. 2 

hath made his peace \vith Rome? — v. 2 

am I Rome's slave? What penny (.rep.) — _v. 2 
the hook-nosed fellow of Rome ....•iHenryiy. ly- 3 

the nine sibyls of old Rome I Henry VI. \. 2 

tlii s Rome slial 1 remedy — n !• 1 

and carry him to Rome, and set 2Henryl'l.i. 3 

Rome, the nurse of judgment Henry I' HI. u- 2 

by whose virtue (the court of Rome — ii- 2 
o&r commission from Rome is read.. — n- * 

the whole consistory of Rome — ;!• 4 

sloth, and tricks of Rome — _}]. ^ 

is stolen away to Rome — in- 2 

speedily I wish to hear from Rome.. — in 2 

and fee my friends in Rome — !"• 2 

in all you writ to Rome — }!!• ^ 

to furnish Rome, and to prepare — — m.- 2 
Rome and her rats are at the point . . Coriolanus, i. 1 

that they of Rome are entered — J- -^ 

brought to bodily act ere Rome had 
is of Rome worse hated than of you — 
but Rome was ready to answer us .. 

it seemed, appeared to Rome 

ere, almost, Rome should know we.. 
in fear, though you were born in Rome 
you shames of Rome I you herd of . . 
this will I carry to Rome. And I this 
holding Corioli in the name of Rome 
Rome must know the value of her own 
we will Nvrite to Rome of our success 

send us to Rome the best 

that must be hostages for Rome .... 

(alias, fools) as any in Rome 

know, Rome, that all alone 

welcome to Rome, renowned (rep.) .. 
are three, that Rome should dote on 
but our Rome will cast upon thee .. 
when 'rarquin made head for Rome 
this palterin" becomes not Rome .... — 
as they are, tliough in Rome littered — 
our renowned Rome, whose gratitude — 
what has he done to Rome, that's worthy — 
and sack great Rome with Romans.. — 

beloved of all the trades in Rome — 

the honoured gods keep Rome in safety — 
to take from Rome all seasoned office — 
but since he hath served well for Rome — 
never more to enter our Rome gates — 

and can show from Rome, her enemies' — 
all trades in Rome, and occupations — 

and for Rome's good: I'll tell thee what — 
the wounds that he does bear for Roniel — 
exceed the meanest house in Rome . . — 

what's the news in Rome? — 

there hath been in Rome strange — 

tell you most strange things from Rome — 

to be whooped out of Rome — 

had we no quarrel else to Rome .... — 

the bowels of ungrateful Rome — 

though not for Rome itself — 

to kiiook against the gates of Rome — 

and sowle the porter of Rome gates. . — 
and Rome sits safe and still without him — 

when Marcius stood for Rome — 

leads a power 'gainst Rome; and vows — 
will shake your Rome about your ears — 
be good to Rome, they charged him — 

have broiiglit a trembling upon Rome — 
tliat Rome can make against them .. — 

think you, he'll carry Rome? — 

and the nobility of Rome are his — 

I tliink, he'll be to Rome, as is the .. — 
when, Cains, Rome is thine, thou .... — 
i' the fire of burning Rome. Why, so — 
racked for Rome, to make coals cheap — 
your love can do for Rome, towards — 

must have that thanks from Rome .. — 
his eye red as 'twould burn Rome .. — 
from Rome. You may not pass, you — 
you'll see your Rome embraced with — 
lieard your general talk of Rome .... — 
then you should hate Rome, as he does — 
therefore, back to Rome, and prepare — 
and conj lire thee to pardon Rome . ... — 
waa my beloved in Rome; yet thou.. — 
before the walls of Rome to-morrow — 
a cracked heart I have sent to Rome 
the Volsces plough Rome, and harrow 
eyes are not the same I wore in Rome — 
the moon of Rome; chaste as the icicle — 
capitulate again with Rome's mcehanics — 
we'll hear naught from Rome in private — 
if thou conquer Rome, the benefit. . ,, — 
so we will home to Rome — 



i. 5 



_ ii. 2 



iii. 1 





1 








2 


iii 


3 




3 




3 




3 




3 


IV. 


1 


IV 


2 


IV 


2 


IV. 


2 


iv 


3 


iv 


3 


IV 


3 


IV 


.•) 


IV 


5 



V. 6 



ROME-a happy victory to Rome. 
I'll not to Rome, I'll back with y 



— V.3 

— V. 3 



ii. I 
ii. I 
ii.2 



T. 1 



, Coriolun 

, .. you — 

our patroness, the life of Rome — 

■when he had carried Rome; and that we — 

even to the gates of Rome — 

your city Rome (I say, your city) to hm — 

tributaries follow him to Rome JnhusCresa 

you cruel men of Rome, knew you not — 
great I'ompev pass the streets of Rome — 
many of the "best respect in Rome . . — 

Rome, thou hast lost the breed of — 

talked of Rome, that her wide walk — 

is it Rome indeed, and room enough — 
to keep h is state in Rome, as easi ly . . — 
to repute himself a son of Rome under — 
opinion that Rome holds of his name — 
what trash is Rome, what rubbish .. — 
shall Rome, etc. Speak, strike, redress! — 
shall Rome stand under one man s (rrp.) — 
from the streets of Rome the Tarquin — 

Rome ! I make thee promise — 

soul of Rome! brave son, derived from — 
from you great Rome shall suck — — 
most boldest and best hearts of Rome — 
pity to the general wrong of Rome . . — 
did write for him, to come to Rome — 
to-night within seven leagues of Rome — 

here is a mourning Rome (rep.) — 

less, but that I loved Rome more. ... — 
slew my best lover for the good of Rome — 
we are blessed, that Rome is rid of him — 
brought many cnptives home to Rome — 
there^s not a nobler man in Rome .. — 

should move the stones of Rome — 

Octavius is already come to Rome .. — 
like madmen through the gates of Rome — 
in triumph through the streets of Rome — 
ever Brutus will go bound to Rome — v. i 

the sun of Rome is set! •,■■■;•,•, ~ ^' i 

that ever Rome should breed thy fellow — y. 3 
news, my good lord, from ii.ome.. Antony ffCleo. i. 1 

let Rome in Tiber melt! — J- ) 

who thus speaks of him at Rome — — !• ' 
name Cleopatra as she's called in Rome — 1.2 

our contriving friends in Rome — ?• 2 

his approaches to the port of Rome . . — !• 3 
quickly drive him to Rome — J- [ 

1 know, they are in Rome together. . — n. 
is every hour in Rome expected .... — ;!• 1 

■welcome to Rome (rep. iii. B) — n. - 

than mv residing here at Rome — n- j 

despiteful Rome cast on my noble .. — ii- 6 
to send measures of wheat to Rome. . — Ji- o 
Octavia weeps to part from Rome . . — in- ^ 
where? Madam, in Rome I looked .. — in. 3 
contemning Rome, he has done all this — ii). fa 

let Rome be thus informed — !;!■ » 

yon are come a market-maid to Rome — in. b 
each heart in Rome does love and pity — Jn- 6 

'tis said in Rome, that Pho tin us — ni- 7 

sink Rome; and their tongues rot .. — in.' 
while he was yet in Rome, his power — ..V'-^ 
I mv pillow left unpressed in Rome — i.n- 1 ' 

woiilffst thou be windowed in great Rome — iv. 12 
for her life in Rome would be eternal — v. 1 
shouting varletry of censuring Rome — v. 2 
Shalt be shown in Rome, as well as I — v. 2 
and then to Rome: come, Dolabella — , y. 2 

my residence in Rome, at one Cymbelme, i. 2 

madam, a noble gentleman of Rome — .;■ 7 
so like you, sir, embassadors from Rome — _n- 3 

granted Rome a tribute, yearly — !.n- ! 

though Rome be therefore angry — — ]\\. i 
when was she missed? he is in Rome? — in. a 
but what from Rome? The senate .. — 
a leg of Rome shall not return to .... — 
it was in Rome (accursed the mansion — 

good my lord of Rome call forth — 

ware the imperial diadem of RomcTilusAnd 

fracious in the eyes of royal Rome .. — 
now, that the people of Rome — 

good and great deserts to Rome — 

undertook this cause of Rome — 

returned bleeding to Rome (rep.) — 

Lavinia, Rome's rich ornament — 

Rome, be as just and gracious unto me — 
Rome's best champion, successful in — 
brought to yoke, the enemies of Rorne — 
hail, Rome, victorious in thy mourning — 
true joy for his return to Rome (rep.) — 

let Rome reward with love — 

we are brought to Rome, to beautify — 
oppose not Scythia to ambitious Rome — 
loud 'larums welcome them to Rome — 
Rome's readiest champions, repose . . — 
Rome's best citizens applaud (rep.).. — 

triumpher in the eyes of Rome! — 

the people of Rome, whose friend in — 

to set a hciid on hoa.Ucss Rome — 

Satuniiniis hf Home's fnipcror ( ;■<■;>■) — 
people of Roiric, iiii.l pcoiile's tribunes — 
rcflecton Koine, us Titun's rays ... - 
Rome's royal mistress, mistress of my — 

in sight of Rome, to Saturnine — 

well worthy Rome's imperial lord . . — 
Rome shall record; and when I do forget — 
comest not to be made a scorn in Rome — 
barr'st me mv way in Rome? ...... . . — 

none else in Rome to make a stale ot — 
ruffle in the eommonwealtli of Rome — 
overshine the gallant'st dames of Rome — 
and will create thee empress of Rome — 
I will not re-siliite the streets of Rome — 
to Rome I swear, if Saturnine advance — 
but soldiers, and Rome's servitors .. — 
dishonoured by my sons in Rome! .. — 
of a sudden thus advanced in Rome? — 

traitor, if Rome have law, or we — 

but let the laws of Rome determine all — 
a friend to thee, and Rome — 



IV. 2 
v.3 
V. 5 



ROME and the righteous heavens .. TiiusAiutrou. i. 2 
the goda of Rome forefend, I should be — i. 2 

which Rome reputes to be a lieinous sin — i. 2 

Titus, 1 am incorporate in Rome.... — i. 2 

that will charm Rome's Saturnine . . — ii. 1 
be so dislionom-ed in the court of Rome — ii. 1 
or know ye not, in Rome liow furious — ii, 1 
Rome's royal empress, unfurnished of — ii. 3 

in Rome's great quarrel slicd — . iil. 1 

Rome could afford no tribune like .. — iii. 1 
Rome is but a wilderness of tigersl'Cri';j.)— iii. I 

for they liave fought for Home — iii. 1 

to do Rome service, are but vain — iii. 1 

of your liands hath not defended Rome — iii. 1 

lived in Rome! farewell, proud Roniel — iii. 1 

when my father was iu Rome — Iv. 1 

bad bondmen to the yoke of Rome .. — iv. 1 

youtli. the hope of Rome — iv. 2 

a liuppy star led us to Rome — iv. 2 

and stately Rome's disgrace — iv. 2 

shall smoke for it in liome — iv. 2 

Roiue will despise her for this foul .. — iv. 2 
in ungrateful Koine: all, Rome! .... — iv. 3 

take wreiik on Rome for tills — iv. 3 

an emperor of Rome thus overborne — iv. 4 

to fly about the streets of Rome! .... — iv. 4 

as wlio would say in Home no justice — iv. i 

thj'selfsliould govern Rome and me — iv. 4 

Rome never liad more cause ! — iv. 4 

60 may 'st tliou the giddy men of Rome — iv. 4 
letters from great Rome, which signify — v. 1 

Rome liath done you any scath — v. 1 

ingniteful Rome requites witli foul.. — v.! 
tliere is a messenger from Boine .... — v. 1 

wluit's tlie news from Rome? — v. I 

round about tlie wicked streets of Rome — v. 2 
leads towards Rome a band of warlike — v, 2 
that I repair to Rome, I am content — v. 3 
Rome's emperor, and nephew, break — v. 3 
for league, and good to Rome — v. 3 

f)eople, and sons of Rome, by uproar — v. 3 
est Rome herself be bane uuto herself — v. 3 
speak, Rome's dear friend; as erst .. — v. 3 
our Troy, our Rome, the civil wounds — v. 3 

that fought Rome's quarrel out — v. 3 

to beg relief amojig Rome's enemies — v. 3 

thou reverend man of Rome — v. 3 

all hail; Rome's royal emperor! (»rp.) — v. 3 
may I govern so, to ileal Home's harms — v. 3 
must high and palmy state of Rome .... Hamlet^ i. 1 

when Hoicius was an actor in Rome — ii. 2 

RO.MEO— O wliere is Romeo! liomeo ^Juliet, i. 1 

what sadness lengthens Romeo's hours? — i. 1 

this is not Romeo, he's some other where — i. 1 

wiiy, Romeo, art thou mad? — i.2 

nay, gentle Romeo, we must Iiave you — i. 4 
young Romeo is't? 'Tis he (.rep.) .... — i. 5 

his name is Romeo, and a Montague — i. o 

now Romeo is beloved, and loves — i. 5 (chorus) 

Romeo! My cousin Romeo! — ii. 1 

Romeo! liumours! madman! passion! — ii. i 

r Co(.] Romeo! that she were — ii. I 

Romeo, good-night; I'll to my — ii. i 

O Romeo, Romeo! wherefore (rep.).. — ii, 2 

so Roineo would, were he not Romeo — ii. 2 

Romeo, doff thy name; and for that — ii. 2 

henceforth I never will be Romeo ., — ii. 2 

art thou not Romeo, and a Montague? — ii. 2 

gentle Romeo, if thou dost love — ii. 2 

three words, dear Romeo — ii. 2 

hist, Romeo, hist! O for a falconer's — ii. 2 

of iny Romeo's name ( Knl. -lioxnao] ii. 2 

Romeo! my sweet! At what o'clock ii. 2 

Romeo hath not been iu bed to-night — ii. 3 

where tlie devil should this Romeo be? — ii. 4 

Romeo will answer it ii. 4 

alas, poor Romeo, he is already dead! — ii. 4 

here comes Romeo, here comes Romeo ii. 4 

signior Romeo, boil jour! tliere's.... — ii, 4 

now art thou Komeo; now art thou — ii. 4 

the young Romeo? I can tell you (re«.) _ ii. 4 

Romeo, win you come to your father 8? — ii. 4 

dotli not rosemary and Roineo begin ii. ^ 

Romeo! no, not he; though his face ii. 5 

come, what says Romeo? Have you — ii. 5 

Romeo sliall thank thee, daughter .. — ii. g 

Mercutio, thou consort'st with Romeo — iii. 1 

Romeo, the hate I bear thee, can afford iii. 1 

Romeo, Romeo, brave Mercutio's dead iii. 1 

Romeo, away, be gone! the citizens — iii. 1 

the man, slain by youii" Romeo .... iii. 1 

whom Romeo's hand did slay; Romeo iii! 1 

Romeo he cries aloud, hold friends! — iii. 1 

by and by comes back to Romeo .... iii. 1 

as he fell, did Romeo turn and fly . . iii. 1 

Romeo slew Tybalt, Romeo must not — iii. 1 

not Romeo, prince, he was Mercutio's — iii. i 

let Romeo heuce in haste, else — iii. 1 

Romeo leap to tliese arms, untalked of — iii. 2 

come, Romeo! come, thou day in iiightl — iii. 2 

black-browed night, give me my Roineo — iii. 2 

that speaks but Romeo's name — iii. 2 

Romeo can, tliough heaven cannot {rep.) — iii. 2 

hath Komeo slain himself? — iii. 2 

thou and Romeo press one heavy bier] — iii. 2 

Romeo banished; Romeo (rep.) .... — iii. 2 

did Romeo's hand shed Tybalt's blood? — iii. 2 

shame come to Romeo! Blistered be — iii. 2 

Romeo, Juliet, all slain, all dead (rep.) — iii. 2 

theirs are dry, for Romeo's banishment — iii. 2 

for Romeo is exiled: he made you for — iii. 2 

not Komeo, take my maidenlieadl .. — iii. 2 

I'll find Romeo to comfort you iii. 2 

your Romeo will be here at night ., — iii. 2 

Romeo, come forth; come forth — iii. 3 

look on her, but Romeo may not (rep.) — iii. 3 

in carrion flies, than Romeo — iii. 3 

one knocks; good Romeo, hide thyself — iii. 3 

who's there? Romeo, arise! thou wilt — iii. 3 

my lady's lord? where is Romeo? .. — iii. 3 



ROMEO cries, and then down . . Borneo ^Julitl, iii. 3 
Romeo is coming. O Lord, I could have — iii. 3 

ere I again behold my Romeo — iii. .'j 

that same villain, Romeo — iii. 5 

I never shall be satisfied with Romeo — iii. 5 
tliat Romeo should, upon receipt thereof — iii. a 
it shall be Romeo, whom you know — iii. 5 

'faith, here 'tis: Romeo is banished — iii. 5 

Romeo's a dishclout to him iii. 5 

(iod joined my heart and Romeo's . . — iv. 1 
this hand, by thee to Romeo sealed.. — iv. 1 

shall Romeo by m.v letters know — iv. 1 

Roineo bear thee hence to Mantua .. — iv. I 
because he married me before to Romeo? — iv. 3 
the time that Romeo come to redeem — iv. 3 
die strangled ere my Romeo conies? — iv. 3 
my cousin's ghost seeking out Ri>meo — iv. 3 
Romeo, I come [Co/.Kn^-Romeo! Romeo!] — iv. 3 
what says Roineo? or, if his mind .. — v. 2 
wlio bare my letter tlien to Romeo?.. — v. 2 

that Romeo hath had no notice of .. v. 2 

who is it? Romeo. How long hath he — v. 3 
that my master slew him. Romeo?.. — v. 3 
Romeo! O pale! what else? what, Paris _ v. 3 
where is my Romeo? I hear some noise — v. 3 

here's Romeo's man (rep,) — v. 3 

the people in the street cry— Romeo — v. 3 
the county Paris slain ; and Romeo dead — v. 3 
Romeo, there dead, was husband (rep.) _ v. 3 
meantime I writ to Romeo, that he.. — v. 3 
till I conveniently could send to Romeo — v. 3 
noble Paris, and true Romeo, dead .. — v. 3 
as rich shall Romeo bv his lady lie .. — v. 3 

than this of Juliet and her Romeo .. v. 3 

ROMISH— mart as in a Romish stiirw„Cr/mheline, i. 7 
Ron YON"— polecat, you ronyoni . . Merry IVives, iv. 2 

witch! the rump-fed ronyon cries Macbeth, i. 3 

ROOD— an early stirrer, by tlie iood.2 Henry 1 1', iii. 2 

but by the holy rood (rep.) Richard III. iii. 2 

by the rood, she could have run .Romeo fy Juliet, i. 3 

no, by the rood, not so; you are Ham/e(, iii. 4 

ROOF-tlmt consecrated roof Twelfth Night, iv. 3 

as many diseases under her root.. Meas forMeas. i. 2 

my visor is Philemon's roof Much Ado, ii. I 

the roof of this court is too high .. Love'sL. Lost, ii. 1 
till my v«ry roof was ivy .. Merchant of I'enice, iii. 2 

within tills roof the enemy of AsyouLikeit, ii. 3 

my tongue to the roof of my.. Taming of Shrew, iv. 1 

under his household roof did Hichardll. iv. 1 

cleave to my roof within my _ v. 3 

masons building roofs of gold Henry V. i. 2 

your roof were not sufficient I Hmry Vi. ii, 3 

thatch your poor thin roofs with,. Timon ofAlh. iv. 3 
to bring the roof to the foundation, Coriolanus, iii. 1 
ascended to the roof of heaven.. ^n(07i!/ ^-Cleo. iii, 6 

the roof o' the chamber Cynibeline, ii. 4 

wi til such whose roof's as low as — iii. 3 

their thoughts do hit the roofs of palaces — iii. 3 

he is entered his radiant roof — v. 4 

goodly buildings left without a roof , . Pericles, ii, 4 

rather I abj ure all roofs Lear, ii. 4 

this raaiestical roof fretted with golden. HamW, ii. 2 
ROOFED-our country's honour lOofcd.Macbeth, iii. 4 
ROOK— and rooks, and daws, tone's /..Los(, v. 2 (song) 
and rooks, brought forth the secretest. A/ae6e^/i, iii. 4 
ROOKED her on the chimney's top. .ZHenry FI. v, 6 
ROOKY— wing to the rooky wood ....Macbeth, iii. 2 

ROOM— if room enough Tempest, i . 1 

on every sacred room Merry Wives, v. 6 

him in a dark room and houttd .. Twelfth Night, iii. 4 
because it is an open room.. Measure for Measure, ii. 1 
iu their rooms come thronging soft.... Much Ado, i. 1 

as I was smoking a musty room — i. 3 

brother, make good room ii. 1 

room, Faery, here comes Oberon.il/irf, iV,'sDrcam,ii.l 
room for the incensed worthies. . . . Love'sL. Lost, v. 2 
make room, and let him stand . . Mer.of Venice, iv. 1 
a great reckoning in a little xoom.AsyouLikeil.iW.f. 

to give some labourers room AlVs Well, i. 2 

let Bianca talce her sister's room. Taming o/Sh. iii. 2 

to visit the next room Winter's Tale, ii. 2 

and laid iu some dark room , . Comedy of Errors, iv. 4 

room for him in my husband's KingJolm, i. I 

that I have room with Rome to — iii. 1 

grief fills the room up of my — iii, 4 

and fill anotlier room in hell Richard II. v. 5 

some reverend room, more than — v. 6 

come out of that fat room \ Henry IV. ii. 4 

but sirrah, there's no room for faith.. — iii. 3 

to fill up the rooms of them — iv. 2 

paces of the vilest earth is room enough — v. 4 

the room wliere they supped 'i Henry I V.ii. 4 

music in the other room (rep.) — iv. 4 

1 found the prince in the next room.. — iv. 4 
in little room confining mighty WenryT.v. 2 (chorus) 

let this supply the room 3 Henry VI. ii. K 

to take their rooms, ere I can — iii. 2 

I'll throw tliy body iu another room — v. 6 

Malmsey-butt, in the ne.xt room Richard III. i. i 

we shall liave great store of room . . Henri/ VIII. v. 3 
when every room hath blazed .. 7'imoiio/'/)l//iens,ii. 2 
room enough, when there is in it . . Julius Ccesar, i. 2 
room for Antony; most noble Antony — iii. 2 
stand backl room! bear back!... .yuiiusCwsar, iii. 2 
give way and room to your rash choler? — iv. 3 
room, hoi tell Antony, Brutus is ta'en — v, 4 
I have .yet room for six scotches.. y4i!(on.y <S-c;m. iv. 7 

give room, and foot it girls Romeo />/ Juliet, i. 5 

the room is grown too hot — i. 5 

withdrew to mine own room again Hamlet, v. 2 

must forsake this room, and go withus..O(/ie//o, v. 2 

ROOT— withered roots, and husks Tempest, i, 2 

root thesummer-swellingflower.7'«'ofien.o/rer. ii. 4 

with perjury cleft the root — v. 4 

and that's a good root Merry Wives, iv. 1 

impossible youshould take true root. .MuchAdo.i. 3 
whose antique root peeps out .... As you Like it, ii. 1 
remove the root of his opinion.... Winter' sTate, ii. 3 

have we eaten of theinsane root Macbeth, i, 3 

but that myself should be the root .. — iii. 1 



ROOT of hemlock, digged i' the dark . . Macbetit, iv. 1 

unfix his earth-bound root ? — i v. 1 

mnre pernicious root than iv. 3 

springing from one root Hichardll. i. 2 

branch of his most royal root i.2 

I will go root away the noisome .... iii. 4 

are plucked up, root and all — iii. 4 

not find a ground to root ujion 'iHertrylV. iii. 1 

hide those roots that shall first Henry V. ii. 4 

and rank fumitory', dotli root upon .. v. 2 

yeomen from so deep a root? 1 Henry VI. ii, 4 

root him up who dares ZHenry VI. i. 1 

and till I root out their accursed .... i. 3 

the axe to thy usurping root ii. 2 

unto the root from whence ii. g 

whereof the root was fixed in iii. 3 

must by the roots be iiewn up — v. 4 

branches, wlien the root is gone? ..Richard III. ii. 2 

we should take root here where Henry VIII. i. 2 

though we leave it with a root i.2 

nips his root, and then he falls, as I do — iii. 2 

and we must root him out v. 1 

will be blown u|) by the root! . . Troilus ^ Cress, iv. 4 
rich men sin, and I eat root.rii«on o/v^M. i.2 (grace) 

shows to a little oil, and root i, 2 

earth, yield me roots I (rep.) iy. 3 

thy plenteous bosom one poor root! .. iv. 3 

a root— dear thanks! jy, 3 

behold, the earth hath roots,. _ iv. 3 

can you eat roots, and drink cold water? — v. 1 

caut'rizing to the root 0' the tongue.. v. 2 

doth root up his country's peace v, 2 

begin at very root of his heart Coriolanus, ii. 1 

aroot of ancient envy iv. 5 

shoots my very heart at root Antony SrCleo. v. 2 

I cannot delve him to the root Cymbeline, i. 1 

he cut our roots in characters iv. 2 

untwine his perishing root iv, 2 

nothing roots us, but the villany .... v. 2 

1 fear, was root of thine annoy. . Titus Anilron. iv. 1 
on berries, and on roots, and feed .... — iv. 2 
wliieh fence the roots they grow by .... Pericles, i. 2 

she that sets seeds and roots of shame.. iv. 6 

[Coi,] weed that roots itself in ease Hamlet, i. 5 

as if he plucked upkisses by the roots. . Othello, iii. 3 

ROOTED— her a more rooted love All's Welt, iv. 5 

and there rooted betwixt them Winter'sTale, i. 1 

from the memory a rooted sorrow Macbeth, v. 3 

is rooted in us, thy friend, give me . Henry VIII. v. 1 

affiance were deeply rooted Cymbeline, i. 7 

and ijatience, rooted in him both iv. 2 

but time hath rooted out my Pericles, v. I 

ROOTEDLY— hate him, as rootedly ..Tempest, iii. 2 
ROOTETH from the city's side . . Romeo i^- Juliet, i. 1 
ROOTING— abortive, rooting hog! ..Richard III. i, 3 
ROPE— we will not hand a rope more . . Tempest, i. 1 

make the rope of his destiny — i. i 

\Col.Knt.']l see, that men make ropes. All's Well, i v. 2 

he'll rail in his rope tricks Taming of Shrew i. 2 

and buy a rope's end tjep.) ..Comedy of Errors, iv. 1 

I sent thee for a rope (rep.) — iv. 1 

money for the rope (rep.) iv. 4 

beware the rope's end iv. 4 

sent for nothing but a rope! iv. 4 

Icry- arope! a rope! now beat . . . . 1 Henry f/, i. 3 

with hauling of the ropes Pericles, iv. 1 

poor ropes, you are beguiled Romeo Sr Juliet, iii. 2 

ROPE-MAKER, bear me witness. Comedj/ .j/A'rr. iv. 4 
ROPERY— so full of h is ropery ?,./(omeo.^J«/;e(,ii. 4 
ROPING— not hang like roping icicles. Henj-i/ V. iii. 5 
ROSALIND- if Rosalind, the duke's^s you Like it, i. 1 
I pray thee, Rosalind, sweet my coz — i. 2 

but heavenly Rosalind! i.2 

why Rosalind; Cupid have mercy ., i. 3 

O my poor Rosalind! whither wilt .. — i. 3 

hath not? Rosalind lacks then the love i. 3 

O Rosalind! these trees shall be my — iii. 2 
no jewel is like Rosalind (rep.).. — iii. 2 (verses) 
let him seek out Rosalind (rep.) — iii. 2 (verses) 
thus Rosalind of many parts. . . . — iii. 2 (verses) 

Rosalind is your love's name? — iii. 2 

with carving Rosalind on their barks — iii. 2 

deifying the name of Rosalind iii. 2 

Rosalind is so admired? I swear (rep.) — iii. 2 
if .you would but call me Rosalind (rep.) — iii. 2 
and happiness, dear Rosalind! (rep.) 



0.) 



hath a Rosalind of a better leer than — 

an' I were your very very Rosalind.. 

not have my right Rosalind of this mind — 

be your Rosalind in a more coming-on — 

then love me, Rosalind. Yes, faith .. 

have to wife this Rosalind? (rep.).... — 

but will my Rosalind do so? By my life 

for these two hours, Rosalind, I will 

ay, sweet Rosalind, By my troth.. . — 
most unwortliy of her you call Rosalind — 

thou wert indeed my Rosalind 

youtli, he calls his Rosalind (rep.) .. 

cried, in fainting, upon Rosalind .... — 

how you excuse my brother, Rosalind — 

look you, here comes my Rosalind .. — 

cannot serve your turn tor Rosalind? 

if ycu do love Rosalind so near the.. 

and to Rosalind, if you will 

and I for Rosalind. And I for no O'ep-") 

as you love Rosalind meet 

if I bring in your Rosalind, you will 

sight, you are my Rosalind 

AlylNDA write .. 
ROSALINE her name 



— iv. 1 



IV. I 

iv. 1 

iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 

iv." 1 



ROSALINDA write As youLike it, iii. 2 (versesi 

ROSALINE her name Love'sL.Losl, ii. I 

and Rosaline they call her iii. 1 

monsieur Biron, to one lady Rosaline iv. I 

hand of the most beauteous lady Rosaline — iv. 2 

who sees the heavenly Rosaline — iv. 3 

but Rosaline, you have a favour ijcp.) — v. 2 
so shall Biron take me for Rosaline.. — v. 2 
Rosaline, what did the Russian whisper — v. 2 

my fair niece Rosaline Romeo ^Juliet, i. 2(nots) 

sups the fair Rosaliue - i.2 



ROS AI.TNE'S bright eyes Romeo 4- Juliet, ii. 1 

wust tliou with ilosalme? (rep.) — ii. 3 

RosttliiiC, wlioiii tliou didst love so deiir — ii. 3 
tliy sallow cheeks for Itosiiliue (.rep.) — ii 3 
thou ehidd'st me ot't for loving Kosoline — ii. 3 
that Rosaline torments him 80 — ii. 4 

i;OSUIUSnow toaet? 3Hennin. v. 6 

when Roseins was an actor in Rome .. HmnM, ii. 2 

KOSKS in her cheeks TwoGen-o/reioiia, [v. 4 

we make our peds of roses.. .Vi'rry'iiw.iii. I (song) 

for women are as roses TmelfthNiglu, ii. 4 

by the roses of the spring — iii. 1 

tlian a rose iu his grace Much Ado, i. 3 

carthlier happy is the rose distilled . . Mid. N. Ur. i. 1 
how chance the roses there do fade .. — i. 1 
in the fresh lap of the crimson rose . . — ii. 2 



like the red rose on trianipliant brier — iii. 1 

. ey . . . ' 

at Christmas I no more dcbirc a rose. Li 



no doubt, they rose up 



inipiio 
eai-ly, 



to observe 



iv. 1 



fresh morning drops upon the rose — iv. 3 (verses) 
blow like sweet roses in the summer. . — v. 2 
masked are roses in their bud........ — v. 2 

angels vailing clouds, or roses blown — v. 2 

my sweet Rose, my dear Rose As yoii, Likeit,\.'i 

slept togetliei", rose at an instant — i. 3 

he that sweetest rose will find .. — iii. 2(verses) 
to our rose of youth rightly belong .... All's Well, i. 3 

but when you have our roses — iy. " 

as morning roses newly washed.. T'amin^' of Sli. ii. 
as sweet as damask roses.. iVinter's Tale, iv. 3 (sonj 
in mine ear I durst not stick a rose .^KingJohn, i, 

with the half-blown rose — iii. 

do not see, my fair rose witlier Richard II. v. 

that sweet lovely rose, and plant 1 Henry I T. ii. 

since the price of oats rose — ii. 

but we rose both at au instant — v. 

is as red as any rose 2 Hejirj/ / ''. ii. 

pluck a white rose ^rep.) \ Henry VI. ii. 

rose, with I'lantagenet (rep.) — ii. 

the fewest roses are cropped — ii. 

verdict on the white rose side — ii. 

do paint the white rose red — ii. 

rose in a bloody red (icp.) — ii. 

rose a canker, Somerset? (r«p.) — ii. 

friends to wear my bleeding roses — — ii. 
this pale and angry rose, as cognizance — ij. 

upon thy party wear tills rose — ii. 

between the red rose and the white . . — ii. 

upbraided me about the rose — iv. 

if I wear this rose, that any — iv. 

raise aloft the milk-white rose i Henry VI. i. 

he rose against him, being his Zllenry VI. i. 

until the wliite rose, that I wear .... — i. 

the red 1 ose and the wliite are — ii. 5 

witlier one rose and let the other .... — ii. 5 
were four red roses on a stalk .... lUchard III. iv. 3 
unite the white rose and the red .... — v. 4 

the duke being ut the R')se Henry VIII. i. 2 

at length her grace rose (rep.) — iv. 1 

before the sun ruse Troilu: fy Cressida,\. 2 

why Brutus rose against Ca3sar ..Julina Cresar, iii. 2 

he wears the rose of youth Antony ^Cleo. iii. II 

against tile blown rose may they .... — iii. II 

you shall see a rose (rep.) Pericles, iv. 6 

her art sisters the natural roses.... — v. (Govver) 

tliat which we call a rose Romeo Sf Juliet, ii. 2 

the roses in thy lips and cheeks shall — iv. 1 
of packthread, and old cakes of roses — y. 1 
expectancy and rose of the fair state ..Hamlet, iii. I 
two Provencial roses on my razed shoes.. — iii. 2 

takes oif the rose from the fair — iii. 4 

up he rose, and donned his clothes — iv. 5 (song) 

rose of May 1 dear maid, kind — iv. 5 

when I have plucked thy rose Olhello, v. 2 

ROSE-CUEEKliD youth to ....Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

KOSED over with the virgin crimson . . Henry V. v. 2 

and fall between thy rosed lips .. Titus Andron. ii, 5 

ROSE-LIFPED cherubim Othello, iv. 2 

ROSEMARY and rue mnl^r'sTale,iv. 3 

my dish of chastity with rosemary .... Pericles, iv. 6 

sprigs of rosemary Lear, ii. 3 

rosemary aud Romeo begin both. /f&?neo ^Juliet, ii. 4 
sententious of it, of you and rosemary — ii. 4 
stick your rosemary on this fair corse — iv. 5 
rosemary, that's for remembrance .... Hamlet, iv. 5 
ROSENCKANTZ_[see GUILDENSTERISTJ 
ROSEWATER, and bestrewed. raramg-o/S/i. 1 (ind.) 

ROSSE— the worthy thane of Rosse Macbeth, i. 2 

the lords of Rosse, Beaumond Richard II. ii. 2 

Rosse and Willoughby (rep.) — ii. 3 

ROSY— did it with a pudency so rosy . . Cymbetine, ii. 5 

that sweet rosy lad, who died — v. 6 

ROT-cold obstruction, and to rot. Mean, for Meas. iii. I 
rot and rot, and thereby hangs.... /Is !/oui.//i«!«, ii. 7 
raake't thy question, and go rot! . . tyinler's Tale, i. 2 

thy love-springs rot? Comedy of Errors, iii. 1 

maj' my hands rot off and never . . Richard II. iv. I 

members rot but by degrees 1 Henry VI. iii. I 

are like to rot untasted Troitus ^ Cressida, ii. 3 

tliy lips rot off! (.rep.) Timon nf Athens, iv. i 

1 would, ray tongue could rot them off! — iv. 3 

to rot itself with motion Antony ^-Cleopatra, i. 4 

and tlieir tongues rot, tliat speak .... — iii. 7 

the south-fog rot him! CymbeUne,i\. 3 

but vengeance rot you all ! ... . Titus Andranicus, v. I 

a man may rot even here Lear, v. 2 

fat weed that rots [Co/. -roots] itself .... Hamlet, i. ^ 
will a man lie i' the earth ere he rot?.... — v. I 
let her rot, and perish, and be damned. . Othello, iv. I 
may his pernicious soul rot half a grain .. — v. 2 

ROTE— rehearse this song by rote ..Mid. N.'s Dr. v. 2 

and they will learn you by rote Henry K. iii. f, 

conned by rote, to cast into JuliusCtesar, iv. 3 

thy love did read by rote Romeo if Juliet, ii. 3 

ROTED— words that are but roted . . Coriolanm, iii. 2 
ROTH ER -[Co/.] lards the rotlier's. Timon ofAth. iv. 3 
ROTTED— green corn hath rotted .. A/iW. N.'sUr. ii. 2 
the otlier rotted with delicious feed. Titnt And. iv. 4 
ROTTEN— a rotten carcass of a boat .. .. Tempest, i. 2 
as it it had lungs, and rotten ones — ii. I 



ROTTEN liell-wcther Merry Wives, iii. 5 

married me to the rotten medlar. A/ca-f. for Mens. iv. 3 

give not this rotten orange to Much Ado, iv. I 

ewcct war-man is dead and rotten. /-ot'c'* /j. Lo;{/, v. 2 
a goodly apple rotten at the heart. A/er. of Venice, i. 3 

thou prunest a rotten tree A-,you Lxkeii, ii. 3 

you'll be rotten ere you be half — iii. 2 

the muster tile, rotten and sound ....All's Well, iv. 3 
small choice in rotten apples .. Taming of Shrew, i. 1 

wiiich is rotten, as ever oak Winter'sTate, ii. 3 

wlien thou art dead and rotten — iii. 3 

that shakes the rotten carcass King John, ii. 2 

rottcu parchment bonds liivltard II. i i. 1 

never did bare and rotten policy 1 Henry IV. i. 3 

the unguided days, and rotten UmeB.2HenryIV. iv. 4 

to raze out rotten opinion — v. 2 

their heads crushed like rotten apples. Hc/iryF. iii." 

hung their rotten coffins up in SHenryl'I. i. 3 

drop into the rotten mouth of death. Richard 1 1 1, iv. 4 
rotten diseases of the south . . Troitus ^ Cressida, v. 1 
from the earth rotten hum.idity.. riwOM ofAth.iw. 3 
sliall lift up their rotten privilege ..Coriotanus, i. 10 

melted away witli rotten dews — ii. 3 

hence, rotten thing, or I shall shake — iii. I 

as reek o' tlie rotten fens — iii. 3 

like a twist of rotten silk — v. 5 

trust not to rotten yilauiza., Antony ^ Cleopatra, iii. 7 

are even as good as rotten Pericles, iv. 3 

he's dead aud rotten. No, my good lord . . Lear, v. 3 
enforce thy rotten jaws to open . . liomeo ^Juliet, v. 3 

something is rotten in the state of Hamlet, i. 4 

'faith, if he be not rotten before he die .. — v. 1 

ROTTENNESS— sound rottenness! . . King John, iii. 4 

which rottenness can lend nature! ..Cymbetine, i. 7 

ROTTING-mighty, rotting together — iv. 2 

ROTUNDITY o' the world! Lear, iii. 2 

ROUEN bring him our prisoner Henry V. iii. 5 

you shall stay with us in Rouen .... — iii. 5 
is Paris lost? is Rouen yielded up?.. \ Henry VI. i. 1 
the gates of Rouen, through which our — iii. 2 
and we be lords and rulers over Rouen — iii. 2 
now Rouen, I'll shake tiiy bulwarks .. — iii. 2 
once again we'll sleep secure in Rjuea — iii. 2 

that joineth Rouen unto her — iii. 2 

sit belbre the walls of Rouen — iii. 2 

wiiat, all amort? Rouen hangs Iier .. — iii. 2 
see his exequies fulfilled in Rouen . . — iii. 2 
nor grieve tliat Rouen is so recovered — iii. 3 
ROUGEMONT: at which name ..Richard III. iv. 2 
ROUGH— cliins be rough and razorable. Tempest, ii. 1 
but this rough magic 1 here abjure ... — v. i 
rough winter everlasting.... TwoGen.ofVerona, ii. 4 
are very ill-favoured rough things ..l/ori/ Wives, i. 1 
prove rougli and unhospitable ..TwetfthNight, iii. 3 

the flend is rough, and will — iii. 4 

like a rough colt; lieknowsnot-.Ut't/.iV.'sDream, v. 1 

when lion rough ill wildest rage — v. 1 

their rough carriage so ridiculous. iot'e'sL.Los/, v. 2 
and rough liearts of flint ..Merctiant of Venice, iv. 1 
my father's rough and envious.... As youLike it, i. 2 
but winter and rough weather .. — ii. 5 (song) 
aud by what rou^h enforcement jon.AlVs Well, v. 3 

she's too rough for me Taming of Sh. i. 1 

were she as rough as are the — ' i.2 

for I am rough, and woo not like.... — ii. 1 
you were rough, and coy, and sullen — ii. 1 

thou want'st a rough pash Winter's Tale, i , 2 

like to have a lullaby too rough .... — iii. 3 
if it be not too rough for some, that. . — iv. 3 

a lie; you are rough and hairy — iv. 3 

a fairy, pitiless and rough Comedy of Err. iv. 2 

ay, but not rough enough — v. 1 

demeaned himself rougii, rude — v. 1 

'twas a rough night Macbeth, ii. 3 

vigour and rougli frown of war .... King John, iii. 1 
what need j'ou be so boisterous rough? — iv. 1 
for justice, and rough chastisement. . Richard II. i. 1 

those rough rug-iieaded kerns — ii. 1 

wild liiils, aud rough uneven ways .. — ii. 3 
all the water in the rough rude sea . . — iii. 2 

to so rough a course to come 2HenryIV. ii. I 

even way unto my rougli affairs .... — ii.'3 
by tlie rougli torrent of occasion .... — iv. 1 
we shall be winnowed with so rough — iv. I 

soldier, rough and hard of heart Henry.V. iii. 3 

in robustious and rough coming on., — .^ iii. 7 

hateful docks, rough thistles — ' v. 2 

our tongue is rough, coz — v. 2 

with rough, and all unable pen.. — v. 2 (chorus) 

did commence rough deeds of. 1 Henry VI. iv. 7 

aud makes the senses rough — v. 3 

beard made rougli and rugged iHenry VI. iii. 2 

tongue is stern and rough, used to ... — iv. 1 
be not too rougli in terms: for he is.. — iv. 9 

Clifford, rougli Northumberland ZHenryVI. i. 4 

flinty, rough, remorseless; bidst thou — i. 4 

Rutland, by rough Clifford slain .... — ii. I 

though the rougli wind say, no — v. 4 

rough cradle for such little preiiy. Richard III. iv. 1 
and the rougli brake that virtue.. ..Henn/F7//. i. 2 

1 have in this rough work Timon of At/tens, i. 1 

in their rough power have unchecked — iv. 3 
come, you have been toorough(fcp.)Cor/o/fln«i, iii. 2 
but to be rough, unswayable, and free — v. ^ 
a little angry for my so rough usage. Cr/mfceZ/ne, i v. I 
and yet as rough, their royal blood . . — iv. 2 

till tlie rough seas, that spare not Pericles, ii. 1 

through the rougli seams of the waters — ii. I 
was by the rough seas reft of ships .. — ii. 3 
they were too rough, tliat threw lier — iii. 2 
the rough and woeful music that.... — iii. 2 

it follows, I am rough and lecherous Lear, i. 2 

too rough for nature to endure — iii. 4 

so tyrannous and rough in proof! Romeo ^Juliet, i. 1 
it is too rough, too rude, too boisterous — i. 4 

if love be rougli with you, be rough .. — i. 4 

to smooth that rough touch with — i. .") 

deserts idle, rougli quarries, rocks Othello, i. 3 

ROUGU-C AST about him .... MiU. N.'s Dream, iii. 1 
and rough-cast, doth present wall..., — v. 1 



ROUGH-CAST, and this stone. . Mid.N.'s Dream, v. I 

ROUGIIEli-a rougher task iu hand ..MuchAdo, i. 1 

do not take his riMigher accents for.Corio/a/iu*, iii. 3 

ROUGHEST-tlirouL'h the roughest day. Macbeth, i. 3 

did deign ttie i-ougliest berry Antony fyCleo. i. 4 

ROIKJH-HEW them how we will Hamlet, v. 2 

ROUGIILY-not be roughly used. 7'we//!!/i Night, iii. 4 
as roughly as my modesty .... Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

and roughly send to prison 'iHenrylV, v. 2 

justles roughly by all time of.. Troitus ^ Cress, iv. 4 

of heaven visit her lace too roughly ....Hamlet, i. 2 

rouglily awake, I here proclaim was .... — v. 2 

ROU(}HNESS— affect a saucy roughness. . Lear, ii. 2 

ROUND— a round hose, madam. TwoGen. of Vcr. ii. 7 

wear agreat round beard Merry Wives, i. 4 

walk round about an oak (rep. v. 5)., — iv. 4 
with rounds of waxen tapers on .... — iv. 4 
round with eye-otfending brine .. Tn'elfth Night, i. 1 
sir Toby, I must be round with 3'ou. . — ii. 3 

zodiacks have gone round Meas.for Meas. i. 3 

with restless violence round about .. — iii. I 
proclaim it, pi'ovost, round about .. — v. I 
and skirts round, underborne viUh... MuchAdo, iii. 4 

round about her tomb they go — v. 3 (song) 

the wheels of Plioebus, round about .. — v. 3 
patiently dance in our round. . Mid.N.'sDream, ii. 2 
I'll put a girdle round about the earth — ii.2 

I'll lead you about a round — iii. 1 

like round and orient pearls — iv. I 

his round hose in France . . Merchant nf Venice, i. 2 
'tis a good round sum; three moiitlis — i. 3 

have their round haunches gored. . As youLikeil, ii. 1 
the big round tears coursed one auotlier — ii. 1 
in fair round belly, with good capon — ii. 7 
many-coloured Iris, rounds thine eye..4//'s Well,i. 3 
round with all my wanton .. Taming of Sh. 1 (ind.) 
giddy, thinks the world turns round — v. 2 
queen your mother, rounds apace. Winter's Tale, ii. 1 
am I so round witli you, as you. Comedy of Err. ii. 1 
from the golden round, which fate .... Macbeth, i. ft 
we'll drink a measure the table round — iii. 4 

round about the cauldron go — iv. 1 

the round aud top of sovereignty? .... — iv. 1 
while you perform your antique round — iv. \ 

skirr the country round; hang — v. 3 

that rounds the mortal temples.... flic/iard II. iii. 2 
why.you whoreson round man! ,...\ HenrylV. ii. 4 

and something a round belly 2HenryIV. i. 2 

at tlie round table, by a sea-coal fire — ii. 1 

these six dry, round, old, withered .. — ii. 4 
your reproof is something too round. . Henry V. iv. I 

was round encompassed and set 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

my body round engirt with misery .2 Henry V I. iii. I 
that gold must round engirt these.... — v. 1 

encompassed round with dogs ZHenryVI. ii. 1 

be round impaled with a glorious.. .. — iii. 2 

tliat must round my brow Richard III. iv. 1 

health, gentlemen, let it go round. . Henry VIII. i. 4 

on your heads clap round fines — v. 3 

expectation whirls me round. Troilus ^ Cressida. iW. 2 

with your weapons round about — v. 7 

and let the health go round Timon nf Athens, i. 2 

I must be round with him, now he . . — ii.2 
once attains tlie utmost round . . ..JuliusCa?sar, ii. 1 

a ring; stand round — iii. 2 

time is come round, and, where I did — v. 3 
is enclosed round about with horsemen — v. 3 
the world go round! (rep.). Antony ^Cleo. ii. 7(6ong) 
or round? Round even to faultiness — iii. 3 
the round world should have shook — v. 1 

the noise is round about us Cymbetine, iv. 4 

does tlie world go round? — v. 5 

a scroll; and written round about?.. T!7us.4nd. iv. 2 
look round about the wicked streets.. — v. 2 

we'll live so round and safe Pericles, i. 2 

yravished the regions round .... — iii. (Gower) 
not half so big as a round little.. Romeo Sr Juliet, i. 4 
I went round to work, and my youug. Hamlet, ii. 2 

and bowl the round nave down — ii.2 

let her be round with him (rep. iii. 4) .. — iii. 1 

cart gone round Neptune's salt wash. . .. — iii. 2 

bein» tlius benetted round with villanies — v. 2 

I will a round unvarnished tale deliver .Othello, i. 3 

and on every hand, enwheel tliee round! — ii. I 

you elements that clip us round about! — iii. 3 

ROUNDED— is rounded with a sleep ..Tempest, iv. 1 

had rounded with coronet of.-Ui'd. N.'s Dream, iv. I 

own soldier) rounded in the ear .... KingJohn, ii. 2 

soever rounded in with danger .. Troitus ^Cress. i. 3 

ROUNDEL— come, now a roundel. .JV/irf.A'.'.» Dr. ii. 3 

ROUNDER- somewliat rounder. Two Gen. ofVer. v. 2 

ROUNDEST- in the roundest manner ....I.ear, i. 4 

ROUNDING— rounding, Sicilia is. Winter'sTale, i. 2 

ROUNDLY-we clap into't roundly. .J» you Likeit.v. 3 

shall I then come roundly to t\\ee.Taming of Sh. i. 2 

at the first so roundly — iii. 2 

I'll roundly go about her — iv. 4 

turns round. Roundly replied — v. 2 

that runs so roundly in thy head ..Richard II. ii. I 

well, how then? roundly, roundly ..\ Henry IV. i.2 

any thing, indeed, and roundly too.iHenrylV. iii. 2 

and fell so roundly to a large ..Troilus ^ Cress, iii. 2 

ROUNDURE [Kn/.-roimder] of your.. iCms-./0/m, ii. 1 

ROUND-WOMBED— grew round-worabed.. Lear, i. 1 

ROUSE the night-owl m a catch . . Tn-etfthSight, li. 3 

rouse up a brave mind Merchant of Venice, ii. 2 

black agents to their prey do rouse. . . . Macbeth, iii. 2 

would at a dismal treatise rouse — v. 5 

and rouse from sleep that fell KingJohn, iii. i 

rouse up thy youthful blood Richard II. i. 3 

to rouse his wrongs, and chase — ii. 3 

to rouse a lion, than to stai't \ Henry IV. i. 3 

rouse up fear and trembling iHemylV. iv. 3 

rouse up revenge from ebon den — v. 5 

expect that you should rouse yourself. .HejiryT. i. 2 
when 1 do rouse me in my throne.... — i.2 

Nym, rouse thy vaunting veins — ii. 3 

and rouse him at the name of Crispian — iv. 3 

we'll quickly rouse the traitors ZHenryVI. v. I 

to rouse a Grecian that is true .. Troilus ^ Crest, i. 3 



ROU 



[ G40 ] 



ROUSE— sweet, rouse yourself ..Trollus i-Cress. iii. 3 

rouse him, and give him uote of — iv. I 

I see liiui rouse iiimself Atilony^Cleopnlrn,v. 'i 

and rouse the prince TilusA ndronictis, ii. i 

will rouse the proudest panther — _ii.2 

wliat, rouse thee, man I Romeo ^JiUtel, lii. 3 

on Thursday early will I rouse you.. — iv. 1 

to rouse thee from thy bed — iv. 1 

the king's rouse the heaven shall bruit.. HnrnW,;. 2 

there o'ertook in his rouse — ii. 1 

call upher fiither; rouse him OlheUo,\. I 

they have given me a rouse already — n. 3 

ROUSICI) up with boisterous Uichard II. i. 3 

and both roused in their seats ■iHemnlt^.iv. 1 

begun, roused on t:ie sudden from . . 1 Henij/ I'l. ii. 2 
roused with raue, with niiie doth. Troilm <5- Cress, i. 3 
by the lark, hath roused the ribald .. — iv. 2 

have roused liis drowsv blood — v. .5 

hark! the same is roused! Cymbeline, iii. 3 

roused to the encounter, or whether Lear, ii. 1 

a roused vengeance sets him new Hamlet, ii. 2 

ROUSILLON. my good lord AWslVeU,\.-2 

the count RousiUon cannot be my .. — j. 3 

you companion to tlie count RousiUon? — ii. 3 

thou shalt liave none, Rousillon — iii. 2 

no, come thou home, Rinisillon — ?!!• 2 

count Rousillon; know you such a one? — iii. 5 
tell the count Rousillon and my brother — iv. 1 
what will count Rousillon do then?. . — iv. 3 
the allurement of one count Rousillon — iv. 3 
the captain of his horse, count Rousillon — iv. 3 

inbehalfof the count Rousillon? — iv. 3 

as I take it, to Rousillon — v. 1 

is the count Rousillon a widower — v. 3 (petit.l 
ROUSSI and F.auconberg {rep. iv. 8) . . Hennj I', iii. 5 
ROUT— the rout is coming .... Taming of Shreir, iii. 2 
the common rout against your. . Cumedij of En: iii. I 
in base and abject routs, led on by ..2 Hen nj[ I', iv. 1 
cheerinsr a rout of rebels witli your .. — iv. 2 
Alencon, and that traitorous rout . . I Hi-rny VI. iv. 1 
ringleader and head of all this rout..2Hcn»yr/.ii. 1 

all 13 on the rout — .v. 2 

odds among the rout of nations . . Timon n/AUi. iv. 3 

in banqueting to all the rout JuUusCrrsar, i. 2 

anon, a rout, confusion thick Ci/iiiljeliite, v. 3 

now sleep vslaked hath the rout. I'erides, iii. (Gow.) 

to know how this foul rout besan Olhello,]]. 3 

ROUTED— whitlior the routed fly...Ii//oji.v*C7fo. iii 1 

ROVE with one that's yet Coriolanus, iv. 1 

ROVER— and ray young rover Winter'sTale, i. 2 

ROVING tliieves serve the great Pericles, iv. 2 

ROW— unto a row of pins Richard II. iii. 1 

the first row of tlie pious chanson Hamtel,u. 2 

ROWEL- who ne'er wore rowel Cijmheline, iv. 4 

liOWEli-HEAD; and. starting so IHeiirijlV.i. I 

ROWLAND and to Crassus Meas.furMcas. iv. ^ 

sir Ro.iland de Bois (rep. i. 21^ AsyouLikeit, i. 1 

more proud to be sir Rowland's son.. — i. 2 

my father loved sir Rowland as his soul — i. 2 

with old sir Rowland's youngest son — i. 3 

O you memory of old sir Rowland!.. — ii. 3 
the good sir Rowland's son, as you .. — ii. 7 
the revenue that was old sir Rowland's — v. 2 
the second son of old sir Rowland .. — v. -1 

all Olivers and Rowlands bred \ Henry VI. i. a 

Rowland to the dark tower came.. /.rar, iii. 4 (song) 

ROY— shout out, Vive le roy! KingJohn.v. -^ 

as it shall please de roy mon pSre Henry V. v. 2 

notre tres cher fllz Henry roy d'Angleterre — v. 2 

ROYAL, good, and gallant ship Tempest, v. I 

shall catch your royal fleet — v. 1 

the emperor in hi.s royal court.. Fn'oGen. ofVer.\. 3 

to leave our royal court — iii. I 

sport royal, I warrant you Tmelfth Night, ii. 3 

your royal grace! {rep.') ..Measure/or Measure, v. \ 

lustice, O royal Duke! — v. 1 

"believe it, royal prince, if ire be — v.] 

and I have heard your royal ear abused — v. 1 

wait on your royal walks Mid. N.'s Dream, v. 1 

into the royal liand of tlie king . .Love's L. Lost, iv. 2 

royal finger (rep. V. 2) — v. 1 

of thy royal sweet breath as will .... — v. 2 
peace of mind, most royal complement! — v. 2 
how doth tliat royal merchant. . Mer. of Venice, iii. 2 
enough to press a royal merchant .. .. — iv. 1 
for 'tis the royal disposition of ..AsyouLikeit, iv. 3 

as in your royal speech All's Well, i. 2 

cat no grapes, my royal fox? (rep.).. — ii. I 
entreating from your royal thoughts — ii. 1 
to choose from forth the royal blood of — ii. 1 

stay, royal sir, the jeweller — v. 3 

dignities, and royal necessities .. Winter' sTale, i. 1 
of your royal presence I'll adventure — i. 2 
for ever earned a royal husband .... — i. 2 
hail, most royal sir! what is the .... — i. 2 

we can: my royal liege, he is not — ii. 3 

the king, thy royal husband.... — iii. 2 (indict.) 
a fellow of the royal bed, which owe — iii. 2 

sir, roval sir. forgive a foolish — iii. 2 

must know the royal fool thou — iv. 3 

print j'our royal father off — v. 1 

most royal sir, from thence — Y. 1 

O royal piece, there's magic in thy .. — v. 3 
and of royal hope, that lie seems rapt . . Macbeth, i. 3 

from our royal master, thanks — ■ i. 3 

our royal master's murdered! (rep.) — ii. 3 
most royal sir, Fleance is 'scaped.... — iii. 4 

my royal lord, you do not give — iii. 4 

grace us with your royal company?.. — iii. 4 

thy royal father was a most — iv. 3 

your royal preparation makes us ... , — v. 3 
uephew, and right roya4 sovereign '.. King John, i. 1 
before this town our royal bones .... — ii. I 
or add a royal number to the dead .. — ii. 2 
why stand these royal fronts amazed — ii. 2 
your royal presences be ruled by me — ii. 2 
this royal hand and mine are newly knit — iii. 1 
our kingdoms, aud our royal selves.. — iii. I 
to clap th.s royal bar-^ain up of peace — iii. 1 
but that your royal pleasure — iv. 2 



ROYAL-of his most royal root liicluird II. i. 2 

before king Richard, in his royal lists? — i. 3 

thy fortune in this royal fight! — i 3 

lay on our royal sword your — i- 3 

enforced to farm our royal realm. . . . — i- 4 

this roj'al throne of kings — ii. 1 

this teeming womb of royal kings — ii. 1 

chasing the royal blood, with fury .. — ii. 1 

by my seat's right royal majesty.... — ii. 1 

are borne, in him a royal prince .... — ii. 1 

a prince, a royal king — iii. 1 

the possession of a royal bed — iij- I 

do thee favour with my royal hands — iii. 2 

to his most royal person: hither .... — iii. 3 

upon thy royal grandeire's bones ... . — iii. 3 

which on thy royal party granted .. — iii. 3 

the possession of tliy royal hand .... — iv. 1 

worst in this royal piesence may .... — iv. I 

hail, royal prince! Thanks — v. 5 

hath eat bread from my royal liand. . — v. a 

of valour, as of royal blood — v. .5 

earnest not of the blood royal \HenryIV.\. 2 

as much as will make him a royal man — ii. 4 
between that royal field oi..'2.HenryIV. (induction) 

bosom of the royal Ricliard — ^ i. 3 

were our royal faith's martyrs — iv. 1 

O my royal father! My sovereign .. — iv. 4 

up, vanity! down, royal state! — iv. 4 

thus, ray most royal liege, accusing it — iv. 4 

and liappiness to my royal father! .. — iv. 4 

to spurn at your most royal image .. — v. 2 

question your royal thoughts — v. 2 

myroyalHal! (?-ep.) — , y. 6 

and me, my royal sovereign Henry V. ii. 2 

eonsiiired against our royal person .. — ii. 2 

the royal captain of this ruined . . — iv. (chorus) 

upon his royal face — iv. 3 

ref7(. Knt.! help, could fight tliis royal — i v. 3 

here was a royal fellowship of deatlil — iv. 8 

this bar and royal interview — v. 2 

face to face, and royal eye to eye .... — v. 2 

before this royal view, what rub...... — v. 2 

my royal cousin, teach you our princess — y. 2 

aud, for your royal birth \HenryVI.'\\\. I 

to Paris, royal Charles of France — v. 2 

if hniipy England's royal king be free — v. 3 

in llonVy's royal name, as deputy — v. 3 

may be England's royal queen — v. 6 

Jesu maintain your royal excellence 1.2 Henry F/.i. 1 

Jesu preserve your royal majesty! .. — i. 2 

beseech your royal majesty (lep.) .... — i. 3 

come about j'our royal person (rep.).. — iii. 1 

find no harbour in a royal heart .... — iii. 1 

is slander to yourroyal dignity — iii. 2 

in care of your most royal person — iii. 2 

to spoil tlie city, and your royal court — iv. 4 

heir to England's royal seat — v. I 

England's royal throne (rep. v. 7) ..ZHenryVI. ii. 1 

royal commanders be in readiness .. — ii. 2 

my royal father, cheer these noble .. — ii. 2 

be crowned England's royal king.... — ii. 6 

greetings to thy royal person — iii. 3 

waft tliem over witli our royal fleet. . — iii. 3 

wherefore else guard we his royal tent — iv. 3 

loss of his own royal person -.. — iv.4 

over-much consumed his royal ....Richard III. i. 1 

remnant of that royal blood! — i. 2 

and, no doubt, right royal — i. 2 

unto your royal grace! irep.) — i. 3 

warn them to his royal presence — i. 3 

the king, of his own royal disposition — i. 3 

but not, as I am, royal — i. 4 

to be so flouted in tills royal presence? — ii. I 

it requires the royal debt it lent you — ii. 2 

seems best unto your royal self — iii. 1 

in the seat royal of this famous isle? — iii. I 

speak, when is the royal day (rep.) .. _ iii. 4 

Ricliard, England's royal kin"? — iii. 7 

the lineal glory of yourroyal liouse.. — iii. 7 

her royal stock graft with ignoble — — iii. 7 

the royal tree hath left us royal fruit — ii i. 7 

take to your royal self this proffered _ iii. 7 

then I salute you with this royal title — iii. 7 

to be crowned Richard's royal queen — iv. I 

no more sons of the royal blood — iv.4 

fair, lOyal and gracious — iv.4 

lier birth, she is of royal blood — iv.4 

a royal battle might be won and lost — iv. 4 

succeeders of each royal house — v. 4 

all was roj'al; to the disposing of ..Henry VIII. i. I 

here I'll make my royal choice — i. 4 

like a most royal prince, restored me — ii. 1 

we come to know your royal pleasure — ;;■ 2 

it's fit this royal session do — ii. 4 

thanks to God for such a royal lady.. — ii. 4 

your royal graces, showered on me .. — !!!• 2 

toward the king, my ever royal master — iii. 2 

shown at full their royal minds — iv. I 

a royal train, believe me — iv. 1 

she iiad all tlie royal makings of .... — iv. 1 

my royal nephew, and your name.... — iv. 2 

angels fly o'er thy royal head — v. 1 

his royal self in judgment comes .... — v. 2 

to yoiir roval grace, and the good queen — v. 4 

tills royal infant, (heaven stUl move — v. 4 
at Priam's royal table do I sit ..TroilusS^ Cress, i. 1 

here forbid me, royal Priam — v. 3 

noble, worthy, royal Tiinon.... Timon of Alliens, \\. 2 

royal eiieer, I warrant you — iii. 6 

a most royal one Coriolanus, iv. 3 

minded him, how royal 'twas to pardon — _y. 1 
mighty, bold, ro^^al, and loving ..JidiusCtrsar, iii. ! 

O royal Caesar! Hear me with patience — iii. 2 

royal wench! she made great Antony ^Clen. ii. 2 

eo on ; right royal — iii. 11 

knew'st tiie royal occupation? — iv.4 

which promises royal peril — iv. 8 

madam! Royal Egypt! Empress! .. — iv. 13 

royal queen! O Cleopatra! — v. 2 

beheld of eyes again so royal! — v. 2 



RUD 



ROYAL— of so many royal kings.. Antony ^Cleo.v. 2 

being royal, took her own way — y.2 

thauKS, royal sir (rep.) Cymbefine, iii. 5 

for she's fair and royal — iii. 5 

as rough, their royal blood enchafed — iv. 2 
his royal bird prunes the immortal wing — v. 4 

and one tliat had a royal lover — v. 5 

the lofty cedar, royal Cymbeline .... — v. 5 
gracious in the eyes of royal Rome .. Titus And. i. 1 
Rome's royal mistress (rep. ii. 3) .... — i. 2 

the boy, he is of royal blood — v. 1 

all hail; Pvome's royal emperor! — v. 3 

royal Antiochnslon what cause Pericles, i. 3 

a prince of jMacedon, my royal father — ii. 2 

who can be other, in this royal iiresence? — ii. 3 

preserve you! hail, hail, royal sir! — v. 1 

you are, you are— O ro3-al Pericles! — v. 3 

royal Lear, whom I have ever (rep.) Lear, i. 1 

most royal majesty, I crave no — i. 1 

pardon me, royal sir — _ i. 1 

you are a roj'al one, and we obey you — — iv. G 

ihow does my royal lord? — iv. 7 

very gait did prophecy a royal nobleness — v. 3 

Hamlet, king, father, royal Dane Hamlet, i. 4 

let not the royal bed of Denmark — i.b 

found, Horatio, a royal knavery — y.2 

from men of royal siege Othello, i. 2 

the ear-piercing fife, tile royal banner .. — iii. a 

ROYALIZE his blood, I spilt Richard III. i. 3 

ROYALLY entertained by Lconato . . Much Ado, i. 3 

have been royally attornied Winter'sTaie,\ 1 

to have you roy al ly appointed — iv. 3 

the castle royally is manned (rep.). Richard II. iii. 3 
sorrow so royally in you appears.... 2 He7?rj//r. v. 2 
to answer royally in our defences .... Henry V. ii. 4 

and let us banquet royally \HenryVI. i. 6 

to have proved most royally Hamlet, v. 2 

ROYALTIES— of temporal royalties. ... Tempest, i. 2 
dominations, royalties, and rights .. KingJohit, ii. 1 
the royalties and rights of banished . /?/i;/tard 11. ii. I 
my rights and royalties plucked from — ii. 3 
by the royalties of both your bloods — iii. 3 

than for his lineal royalties, and to beg — iii. 3 
ROYALTY— outward face of royal ty . . . . Tempest, i. 2 

sweet royalty, bestow on me Love's L.Lost, v. 2 

I have stayed to tire your royalty. (ftK(er's7'o(e, i. 2 

for royalty's repair, for present — v. 1 

and in his royalty of nature reigns ..Macbeth, iii. 1 
to the succeecling royalty he leaves.... — iv. 3 
high royalty was ne er plucked oS,, King John, iv. 2 
forth this morsel of dead royalty .... — iv. 3 
stranger blood, to foreign royalty.... — v. 1 

for thus his royalty dotli speak — v. 2 

and module of confounded royalty .. — v. 7 

his high blood's rnj'alty (rep.) Richard II. i. 1 

mingled his royalty with capering..! HenrylV. iii. 2 

that same royalty he wears — iv. 3 

Hampton pier embark his royalty Henry r. iii.(cho.) 
and member of this royaltj', by whom — v. 2 
the royalty of England's throne . . Uichard III. iii. 4 
long-usurped royalty [Knt. -royalties] — v. 4 
health, and royalty, I pray for ... . Henry J'lII. ii. 3 
that your royalty holds idleness. ./fn(oji)/ %Cleo. i. 3 
frame them to royalty unlearned ..Cymbeline, iv. 2 
married your royalty, was wife to your — v. 5 

against the royalty of lier father Lear, ii. 2 

ROYNISH— the roynish clown.... ^.tj/oii Lilie II, ii. 2 

RUB— you rub tlie sore, when you Tempest, ii. I 

rub your chain with crums Tieelfth Night, ii. 3 

nay, he rubs himself witli civet .... SluchAdo, iii. 2 

to leave no rubs, nor botches Macbeth, iii. 1 

look how she rubs her hands — v. 1 

each little rub, out of the path King John, iii. 4 

tlie world is full of riib.s and that.. Richard II. iii. 4 

which gape, and rub the elbow I Henry W. v. I 

every rub is smoothed on Henry V. ii. 2 

what rub, or what impediment — y.2 

the least rub in your fortunes Henry I'll I. ii. 1 

he rubs tlie vein of him Troilus^Cressida, ii. 3 

so, so, rub on, and kiss the — iii. 2 

deserved this so dishonoured rub ..Coriolanus, iii. 1 
ay, there's the rub; for in that sleep . . Hamlet, iii. 1 

take my napkin, rub thy brows — v. 2 

rub him about the temples Othello, iv. 1 

RUBBED-one rubbed his elbow ..Love'sL.Lost, v. 2 

will not be nibbed, nor stopped Lear, ii. 2 

I have rubbed this young quat almost. . Othello, v. i 

RUBBING— I fear too much rubbing. Love'sL.L. iv. I 

tliat rubbing the poor itch of your .. Coriolanus, i. 1 

RUBBISH-threw dust and rubbish. . Richard II. v. 2 

what rubbish, and what offal Julius Ca-sar, i. 3 

RUBIED— with the rubied cherry . PenWes, v. (Gow.) 

RUBIES— I'd wear as rubies ....Meas.lor Meas. ii. 4 

those be rubies, fairy favours. . Mid. N.'sDream, ii. 1 

embellislied with rubies . . . Comedy of Errors, iii. 2 

rubies unpariigoned, how dearly Cymbeline, ii. 2 

RUBIOUS— smooth, and rubious .. Twelfth Nighi, i. 4 
RUBY— natural ruby of your cheeks .. Macbeth, iii. 4 

do ope their rubv lips Julius Civsar,ni. 1 

RUDDER-and turn the rudder.. /l«(ony <S-C(eo. iii. S 
inv heart was to tliy rudder tied .... — iii. 9 
RUDDINESS upon her lip is wet.. tVinter'sTale, v. 3 
RUDDOCK would, with charitable ..Cymde/me, iv. 2 
RUDDY-the ruddy drops that \\s\t.JuiiusCiesnr, ii. I 
RUDE— that rude uncivil touch. Two Gen. of Ver. v. 4 

from the rude sea's enraged Twelfth Night, y. 1 

ere this rude beast will profit . . Meas. for Meas. iii. 2 
whiles I persuade that rude wretch.. — iy. 3 
that the rude sea grew civil at.. Mid. N.'sDream, ii. 2 
a crew of patches, rude mechanicals — iii. 2 

why are you grown so rude? — iij. 2 

most rude melancholy, valour .. Love's L. Lost, \\\. \ 
that, like a rude and savage man of — iv. 3 

which the rude multitude call — v. 1 

for our rude transgression some .... — y.2 
too rude, and bold of voice. . Merchant of Venice, ii. 2 
for the poor rude world hath not her — iii. 5 
a rude despiser of good miLnners..As you Lil<eil, ii. 7 

although thy breatli be rude — ii.7(song) 

that twcuty such rude boys might . . .4ll's Well, iii, 2 



RtlDK, and wiliUy Ceimdy of Knors, v. 1 

by aiKl by, riiilo fishermen of Corinth — v. I 

oiit on tliec, nnle nianl thou dost Khr^John, i. i 

harhoiireil ill tluor riiikM-ircuiiiluieiice — ii. I 
innuWhui-sh-soiiniliiii; rhviiios .... - iv. 2 

thy ruiU' hiiud tottct the dued — iv. 2 

liows.irvui- rude t.xterioi'ly, is yet.... — iv. 'J 
uiitliii.;ul (he rude eye of rclwUion .. — v. 4 

Iclt o slia|iL-U'SS and sorude — v, 7 

nil llie wiHiT ill the roiiqh rude sea..liu-hanl TI. iii. 2 
L'o to tl;e rude ribs ■ilthutiuieient .. — iii. 3 

IHuv dares lliv liursh rude tnimue — iii. 4 

where rude iiiis-overuedliaiids _ v. 2 

what means desitli in this rude assault? — v. 5 

was by the rude hands of tliat \Hcniyll'. i. 1 

Bueh barren plea^inres, rude soeiety.. — iii. '2 

the rude scene maj' end ..., IHenrylV.i. I 

he gave it like a rude prince — i. 2 

in cradle of the rude imperious surge — iii. 1 
to the wet seaboy in an hour so rude — iii. 1 

unlettered, r\ide, and shallow Ih-nry I', i. I 

confutation of wbieh rude reproacli.l Henry I'l. iv. 1 

with the ryde niuUilude 2 //c ii/j/ /-'/. iii. i 

the commons, rude unpolished hinds — iii. 2 

and jieasants, rude and merciless — .'*'•' 

wliy, rude companion, whatsoe''er .. — iv. 10 

if one so rude, and of so mean — v. I 

this scene of rude impatience? ....Richard III. ii. 2 

rude ragged nurse! old sullen — iv. I 

to the mercy of a rude stream Henry I'l 1 1, iii. 2 

to use so rude behaviour: go to — iv. 2 

ye rude slaves, leave your "aping. ... — v. 3 
ale and cakes here, you ruile rascals? — v. 3 
peace, rude sounds! fools on both. Traltus fifCresfi. i. 1 
and the rude son should strike his .. — i. 3 
rude, in sooth: in good sooth, very rude — iii. 1 
with the rude brevity and discharge — iy. 4 
who 18 here so rude, tliat would ..JidiusCtemr., iii. 2 

by this rude place we live in Cymbeline, iii. (i 

the dust which the rude wind blows Leai, iv. i 

too rough, too rude, too boisterous.. Rom«o<S-./u(. i. 4 

make happy my rude hand — \.^i 

us well as herbs, grace, and rude will — ii, 3 
my blood for your rude brawls doth — iii. I 

rude unthankfnlness! thy fault our — iii. 3 

in noise so rude asaiust me? Hamlet^ iii. \ 

suffer this rude knave now to knock .. — v. 1 

rude am I in raj' speech, and little Otlielto, i. 3 

whose rude throats the immortal Jove's — iii, ,1 

I^UDE-GROWING briers ....TilusAndronlcu!, ii. 4 

KUDELIEST welcomed to ;VmV;,-.«, iii. i 

lirDELY— yet you began rudely .. rMW/f/iAV^'/i;. i. :, 

in council thou hast rudely lost 1 UenrylV. iii, 2 

I, that am rudely stamped Hichnrd II I. i. i 

rndelv beguiles our lips of all ..Troilns ,^ Cress, iv. 4 
or rudely visit them in parts Coriotanus^ iv. ,^ 

KUDICNESS that hath appeared ..Tn-elflh Night, i, ^ 
do rudeness; do camel, do, do ,, Troilus^ Cress, ii. 1 
rudeness is a sauce to his good ^■\t,..JuliusCfPsur. i, 2 
wliose rudeness answered my steps.. Ci/mhetine, iv, 2 

RUDER— my king with ruder terms, ,2He)ir;/r/.i, 1 
the caiiacitvof my ruder powers. rroi(«,s.S-CjT,is, iii. 2 

KUDESBY.begone! I pr'ythee.. .. '/■"•^(/(/i.ViVAi, iv. 1 
unto a mad-brain rudesby Taming of Sh. iii. 2 

ItirDEST-berry on the rudest hedge.. 4ii/o'ii/.S-«f". i. 4 
as the rudest wind, that by tlie iop..Ci/inbeliiie. iv, 2 

JIUUIMENTS of art Taming nf Shrew, iii, 1 

been tutored in the rudiments of. ./Is you Li/:e //, v. 4 

KUlO the time that clogs Machelli, iii. t; 

for you there's rosemary, and rue. iVinter^sTaie, iv. 3 

France thou shalt rue (rep) KingJohn, iii. 1 

nought shall make us rue — v. 7 

1 fear tlie king shall rue Richard II. i. 3 

I'll set a bank of rue Cr*?/?. J — iii. 4 

France, thou shalt rue this 1 Henry VI. iii, 2 

pent up, rue my shame ^HenryVl. ii. 4 

thou and thy house shall rue it 'illenryn. i. 1 

shall rue the hour that ever — v. ti 

you and him to rue at the other ..Richard III. iii. 2 

all the land will rue it — iii, 7 

Titus, rue the tears I shed Titus.indrrtnictcs, i, 2 

rue for you; and here's some for me ..Ha)nlet, iv. .'> 
mav wear your me with a difference .... — i v. 5 

ItUEO a father's death? ilJenry VI. ii. .', 

HUFF, and sing; ask questions All's li'ell, iii. 2 

ruffs and cuffs, and farthingales.. Taming afSh. iv. 3 

I will murder your ruff for this ....2 Henry IV. ii. 

for tearing a poor whore's ruff' — ii. 

here to-morrow with his best ruff on . . Pericles, iv. 
RUFFIAN, let go that rude ....TnoGen. of Ver. v. 

this rutfian hath botched up ....TieelfihNiglil, iv. 

a rutlian at her ehainber-window ..Much .-Ido, iv. 

ruffian, and a swearing J^ack ..Taming o/Shrew, ii. 

rntHan lust shouhl be contaminate?. Com, o/'iiV;-. ii, 

well, riifiiaii, I must pocket up thy.. King John, iii. 

and riillians dance and leap Rirhardll. ii, 

tliat fatoer ruffian, that vanity I llenryll'. ii. 

who take the rnftian billows by ■illenrylV. iii. 

have you a rufliaii, that will swear .. — iv. 

swear like a rutiiun.and demean ....iUenryVl. i. 

on thy deatlibed iilav the ruffian .... — v. 

thus to die ill nirtiail battle? — v. 

but let the luttiiii l!<. leas once ..Tmihis f,-Cren. i. 

make curl'd-imie inilians bald. 7'imn/i nf Allien i, iv. 

let the old rutfian know ....Anlony^-Cteopnlra, iv. 

this ancient ruiHiin, sir, who,e life I Lear, ii. 

service, vou tliink we are ruffians OIkello, i, 

RUFFIANEDs" uiion thesea — ii, 

RUFFLE up your spirits I nUnsC<r$nr, in. 

ruttl.; in the commonwealth of Rome. 7'(7u.< And. i. 

and the bleak winds do sorely ruflle Lear, ii, 

hospitable favoin-8 you should not ruffle — iii. 

RUFFLING treasure Taming afShrcir, iv. 

RUGBY-John Ru;^by! {rep.') Merry IVive!i,\. 

vcre is dat knave Kngby — i. 

John Rugby, and you are Jock Rugby — i, 

Rugby, my rapier — i, 

Rugby, baiUei! ine some paper — i, 

Ru"by, come to the court! (rep,) ,, ,. — i. 

Jack Rugby! (rsp.) — ii. 



[«41] 

RUGBY— diable! Jack Rugby /l/tni/iriwj, iii. 

go home, John Rugby — iii. 

RUGGED— o'er your rugged looka ....Macbeth, iii. 

like the rugged Russian bear — iii. 

beard made rough and rugged .... 2 Henry VI. iii. 

the rugged Pyrrhus, like (/op.) Hamlet, ii, 

miG-HKADED kerns; which live .. K<c/ia»(i //. ii. 
RUIN of the times Merchanlqf Venice, ii. 

jiresuge the ruin of your love — iii. 

or it will fall to cureless ruin — iv. 

as heavens forfendl your ruin ..Winlcr^$Tale,\\'. 

what ruins are in me, that can ., Comedy of Krr. ii. 

for ruin's wasteful entrance Macbidh, ii. 

before this ruin of sweet life KingJnhn, iv. 

destruction, ruin, loss, decay Richard It. iii. 

bawl out the ruins of thy linen ....'illinryl V. ii. 

wl:ose ruin you three sought Henry V. ii. 

what ruin happened in revenge .... 1 Henry VI. ii. 

by wasting ruin of the cruel foe! .... — iii. 

there comes the ruin — iv. 

tendering my ruin, and assailed .... — iv. 

else, ruin combat with their — v. 

come, thou new ruin of old illemiil'I. v. 

and utter ruin of the house of York ..Zllenry VI. i. 

are broke, and ruin follows us — ii. 

and seek their ruin that usurped .... — v. 

ah me, I see the niin of my house 1 . /i/cAani ///. ii. 

and all the ruins of distressful — i v, 

desolation, ruin, and decay — iv, 

and weigh thee down to ruin, shame — v, 

out of ruins, made my name once.. Hfiiri/T///. ii. 

what ye wish for both, my ruin — iii. 

as if ruin leaped from his eyes — iii. 

in every thing may bring my ruin!.. — iii 

aspect of princes, and their ruin .... — iii. 

but where he meant to ruin, pitiful,. — iv, 

and formless ruin of oblivion — iv, 

stop my way, but b3' my ruin — v, 

fed the ruin of t!ie state Coriotanus, iii, 

in heaps and piles of ruin — iii, 

of what that want might ruin — iii, 

come all toruin — iii, 

tread on thy country's ruin — v. 

thou art the ruins of the nohiest... tulivsC<rsar, iii. 

the noble ruin of her ma^ic. Antnny t$-CU'opalra, Mi. 

this mortal house I'll ruin — v, 

the ruin speaks, that sometime , . , . Cymbeline, iv, 

bow this feeble ruin to the earth. TilusAndron. iii. 

willsoon to ruin fall rericles,\i. 

attends the boisterous ruin Hamlet, iii. 

RUINATE my father's house ZHenry VI. v. 

so ruinate? ZCal.Knl. ruinous] ..Comedy of lirr. iii. 

like events may ne'er it ruinate . . TilusAndron, v. 
RUINED-by hira not ruined?. Comerfi/ of Errors, ii. 

his ruined ears, and thus deliver ..Richard II. iii, 

her hedges ruined, her knots — iii. 

expectation of thy time is ruined ..MlenrylV. iii. 

captain of this ruined band . . Henry V. iv. (chorus- 
noble ruined man you speak oi ....Henry VIII. ii. 

these ruined pillars, out of pity — iii. 

but my fall, and that that ruined me — iii. 

implements of a ruined house.. 7'tinonn/.4(Aen.5, iv. 

ruined piece of nature! this great world.. /.snr, iv. 
RUINOUS, the building fall..'. . Tn-oGen. of Ver. V. 

wily, no, you ruinous butt .. Troilus ^Cressirla, v. 

despised and ruinous man .... Timon of Athens, iv. 

to gaze upon a ruinous monastery . . TititsA nd. v, 

treachery, and all ruinous disorders Lear, i. 

RULE— there be, that can rule Naples,. Tempest, ii. 

she has all the rule of her Merry Hires, i , 

means for this uncivil rule Tiretfih.\ight, ii. 

your drunken cousin rule over mo — v. 1 (letter 

yet in such rule, that Merchant of Venice, iv. 

tis against the rule of nature '.All's Well, i. 

true rules for odd inventions ....TamingofSh. iii. 

rule, and right supremaey (rep.) .... — v. 

what, canst not rule her? Winter'sTale, ii. 

trust it; he shall not rule rac — ii. 

by what rule, sir? {.rep.) Comedy of Error.':, ii. 

out of limit, and true rule I lienryiv. iv. 

in military rules, humours of illenrylV, ii. 

if your own rule be true — iv. 

that, by a rule in nature Henry V. i. 

let senses rule; the word is — ii. 

by your rule, should be imposed upon — iv. 

madness rules in brainsick men . . ..\ Henry VI. iv. 

rule the king; but I will rule both .. — v. 

new-made duke that rules the roa,»t..'iHenryVI. i. 

whose bookish rule hath pulled — i. 

obey, that ktiow not how to rule .... — v. 

and rule multitudes (fpp.) v. 

thou shalt rule no more o'er him .... — v. 

usurpers away the rule awhile ZHenryVl. iii. 

scrupulous wit! now arms must rule — iv, 

riomp, rule, reign, but earth — v, 

lady, you know no rules of charity,. /((c/mKf Ill.i. 

auti not to rule, this sickly land — ii, 

his rule were true, he slioulil be gracious — ii, 

and loving, may his rule be! Henry VIII. ii, 

an army cannot rule them — v, 

the specialty of rule hath been . . Troilut ^-Cress. i. 

the general se.x by Cressid's rule — v, 

if there be rule in unity itself v, 

viiiy rule you not their teeth? Coriotanus, iii. 

live with such as cannot rule — iii. 

thy leather apron, and thy rule? ..JulinsCtesar, i. 

even by the rule of that philosophy ,. — v, 

shall all be done by the rule Antony fiClco. ii. 

with greasy aprons, rules, and hammers — v. 

ambitiously for rule and empery.. TilusAndron. i. 

yield up rule, resign my life — i. 

your rule direct to any I'ericles, i. 

best know'st how to rule — ii. 

we will divest ns, both of rule Lear, i. 

delay by rule of knighthood — v. 

you twain rule in this realm v. 

cutpurse of the empire and the rule Hamlet, iii. 

against all rules of nature OtlieUo,i. 

begins my safer guides to rule — ii. 

from the heart, that passion cannot rule — iii. 



RUN 



RULE— and Cassio rules in Cyprus Olhelln, v 

RULED— and be ruled by thee . Two Gen. of Ver. iv 

be ruled by your well-vvillers Merry IVirrs, i 

would thou'dst be ruled by me! . . Twelfth Mght, i v 

be ruled by him Meas.,l'orMe,is. iv 

trust you will be ruled by your fathcr.A/i/r/i, /./.,, ii 
to be ruled by my conscience .... Mer. of Venice, ii 

I should be ruled by the fiend — ii. 

against ynu, be ruled by me. .Comcdg of Errors, iii. 
your royal presences be ruled by me .l<in\'.lr,iin, ii. 

gentlemen, be ruled by me Richard II. i. 

liad they been ruled by me 'illenrylV. iv. 

be thou ruled by me 1 Henry 11. i. 

and the rest will be but ruled — iii. 

he ruled, and such a prince he v;ii3..2HenryVI. ii. 

hath this lovely face ruled — iv, 

if you'll be ruled by him SHenryVI. iii. 

when men are ruled by women Richard III. i. 

were they to be ruled, and not to rule — ii. 
be ruled by hiin, lord Ajax .... Troilus 4 Cre3%. ii, 
cannot rule, nor ever will be ruled.. Coriotanus, iii. 

prythee now, go and be ruled — iii. 

his judgment ruled our hands .... ./u/i'iis Ciesar, ii. 

if Cassius might have ruled — v. 

my lord, be ruled by me, be won .. 'TilusAndron. i. 

either be ruled by me Pericles, ii. 

be ruled, and led by some discretion Lear, ii. 

ruled by me, forget to think ot\\&r..Rnmeo^Jul. i. 
I think, she will be ruled in all respects — iii. 
henceforward I am ever ruled by j'ou — iv. 

be ruled, you shall not go Hamlet, i. 

will you be ruled by me? Ay, my lord .. — iv. 

my lord, I will be ruled — iv. 

but, sir, be you ruled by me Otlielto, ii. 

RULER— and rulers over Rouen ....i Henry VI. iii. 

as doth a ruler with unlawful — v. 

unlike the ruler of a common-weal.. 2Henrj/f''. i, 

a prince, and ruler of the land — ii, 

that lucky ruler be employed — iii. 

on any ground that I am ruler of, ... — iii. 
whom heaven created for thy ruler . — v. 

RULING— or there we'll sit, ruling ....HenryV. i. 

HUMBLE-rumble thy belly-full 1 Leur, iii. 

UUjMINAT— sum umbrl ruminat, Loi)e'.ii,.Lo,t', iv. 

RUMINATE-you may ruminate. 7'</'i)Gi!n.oA;V;, i, 

then she ruminates, then she Merry IVires. ii, 

ruminate the morning's danger,. Hem;/ r. iv. (cdio. 
revolve and ruminate my grief ....\ Henry Vi. v. 

to ruminate on this so far Henry I'm. i. 

revolve and ruminate liimse\l'.Troilusi^C>essida,'n. 
ruminates, like a hostess, that hath no — iii. 
to ruminate strange plots of dire . Titus Andron. v. 
thy thinkings, as thou dost ruminate,, Othello, iii 

RUMINATED, plotted, and sot down. 1 Hi/my//', i. 
thought, by duty ruminated .... Antony Sf Vleo. ii. 

RUMINATION wraps me AsyouLikeit, iv, 

KUjMOUR— rumour may report my ..All's II' ell, iii, 

rumour cannot be mute Winler'sTale, i. 

when we hold rumour from what Macbeth, iv. 

there ran a rumour of many worthy — iv. 

from rumour's tongue I idly heard.. King- Jo/m, iv. 

possessed with rumours, full of — iv. 

the noise ancT rumour of the field — v. 

when loud Rumour speaks? 'iHenrylV. (indue 

and who but Rumour, who but only 1 — (indue 
Rumour is a pipe blown by surmises — (indue 
why is Rumour here? I run before .. — (indue 
from Rumour's tongues they bring .. — undue, 
my lord; Rumour doth double .... — iii. 

great is the rumour of this dreadful. 1 Henry VI. ii. 

with such dissentious rumours Richardlll. i. 

rumour it abroad, that Anne my wife — iv, 

straight to stop the rumour Henry VIII. ii, 

hear from common rumours,. Timon of.4tlu;ns, iii. 

does the rumour hold for true — v. 

let every feeble rumour shake you. Coriotanus, iii. 

I heard a bustling rumour JulinsCa^sar, ii, 

belike, 'tis but a rumour ..Antony «5 Cleopatra, iv, 

HUMOURED through the peasant, 2Hraiy/r. (ind. 
and it is rumoured, Cominius.. C'oWo/aHUi-, i. 2 (let, 

RUAKJURER — tliis rumourer whipped — iv. 

RUMP- with his fat rump Troilus ^ Cressida, v. 

RUMP-FED-the rump-fed ronyon cries. :\lacbeih, i. 

RUN— to run upon the sharp wind 'Tempest, i. 

do so near the bottom run — ii. 

we'll not run, monsieur monster — iii. 

Trinculo, run into no further danger., — iii, 

the tears run down his beard — v, 

run, boy, run, run, and seek .. TwoUen.ofVer. iii, 

thou must run to him — iii, 

makes him run throujih all — v 

if you run the nuthook's \\\\mo\\T . . M erry H'ives, i, 

I will run no base humour — i, 

run in here, good young man — i. 

a woman would run through fire .... — iii. 

mulfler too: run up, sir John — iw 

run away with the cozeners — iv. 

fly, run, hue and cry, villain! — iv. 

when night-dogs run, all sorts _ v. 

run after that sunie peevish Twrtjlh A'ighi, i. 

he must run mail — ii. 

how runs the stream? — iv, 

for long, run \iy the hideous inw. Meas./br Mens, i, 

some run IVoiii brakes of vice — ii. 

much upon this riddle runs the wisdom — iii. 

of report run with these false — iv. 

and the taker runs presently mad Much Ado, i. 

you will never run mad, niece — i. 

Margaret, run thee into the parlour — iii. 

like a lapwing, runs close by the — iii, 

runs not this speech like iron tlirougli — v, 
whose names yet run smoothly in ,, — v, 
true love never did run smooth. il/i<i.\'.'«Dreom, i. 

I'll run from thee, and hide me — ii, 

run when you will, the story — ii. 

beasts that meet me, run away for fear — ii, 
and run through fire I will, for thy.. — ii, 

why ilo they run away? this is — iii, 

are longer thinigh to run away — iii. 

well nni, Thisbe, Well shone, moon — v, 
TT 



RUN 

RUN by the triple Hecate's ....Mid.N.'sDream.v. 2 

well run, dice! there's half Love's L.Lost, v. 2 

as roes run over land — v. 2 

this career, been run — v. 2 

run away for shame, Alisander — v. 2 

for it runs aganist Hector — v. 2 

see the sandy liour-glass run ..Merch.af Venice,!. 1 

to ran from tills Jew (i-<7p.) — ii. 2 

take the start, run away — ii. 2 

do not run; scorn running — ii. 2 

I will run, fiend: my heels are (ifp.) — ii. 2 
to run a'.vay, so I will not rest (rep.) — ii. 2 

for ever run before the clock — ii. G 

go, Gratiano, run and overtake him — iv. 1 

did run from Venice, as far as — v. 1 

disgrace well as he sl\all run into. .Asyou Like it, i. 1 
that ever love did make thee run into — ii. 4 
■we tliat are true lovers, run into strange — ii- 4 
run, run, Orlando; carve, on every.. — iii. 2 
man runs his erring pilgrimage — iii. 2 (verses) 

a woman's thought runs before — iv. 1 

pour alfection in, it runs out — iv. I 

run into my lord's displeasure (iep.)..AU's1VeU, ii. 5 

out of it you'll run again..... — ii. 5 

jrou shall hear, I am run away.. — iii. 2 (letter) 

if he run away (r/*/?.) — iii. 2 

have I run into this danger — iv. 3 

no pace, but runs where he will — iy. 5 

he that runs fastest, gets the ring. Taming of Sh. i. I 
■witli no greater a run but my head . . — iv. 1 
thus the Dowl should run, and not .. — iv, 5 
which runs himself, and catches for — v. 2 

take the rein, I let her run IVinlers Tale, ii. 3 

and then run mad, indeed; stark mad! — iii. 2 

and spit at him, he'd have run — iv. 2 

since mv desires run not before — iv. 3 

run from her bv lier own light. . Comedij of Err. iii. 2 

a man would run for life — iii. 2 

now you run this humour — iv. 1 

a lioiind that runs counter — iv. 2 

run, master, run; for God's sake .. .. — v. 1 
the hour runs through the roughest ..Macbeth, i. 3 

flight so runs against all reason — iv. 2 

run away, I pray you — iv. 2 

our right run [^Col.Knt.-toaml on? ..KingJohn, ii. 2 

made to run even, upon even — ii. 2 

else, runs tickling up and down .... — iii. 3 

wlien we have run so ill? — iii. 4 

but slowlj'; run more fast — iv. 2 

forage, and run to meet displeasure.. — v. 1 

calmly run on in obedience — v. 4 

even so must I run on — v. 7 

were I tied to run afoot even Richard II. i. I 

that runs so roundly in thy head (re;).) — ii. 1 
and that my fortune runs agivinst .. — iii. 4 
but my time runs posting on in .... — v. 5 

heels, and run from it? \ Henry IF. ii. 4 

I could run as fast as thou canst? .. — ii. 4 

I ran when I saw others run — ii. 4 

that runs o'horseback up a hill .... — ii. 4 
good mettle in him; he will not run — ii. 4 
tlie smug and silver Trent shall run — iii. 1 
and ruus me up with like advantage — iii. I 
and then he runs straight and even — iii. 1 

my daughter will run mad (;-ep.) — iii. I 

I run before king Harry's ..'IHenrylV. (induction) 
O run, Doll, run; run, "ood Doll.... — ii. 4 
this Feeble, the woman s tailor, run off? — iii. 2 
which way the stream of time doth run — iv. I 

by the year: tlius runs the bill Henry V. i. 1 

that renowned them runs in your.... — i. 2 
streams run [Coi.A'ti*. meet] in one .. — i. 2 

that run before our business — i. 2 

I'll run liim up to the hilts — ii. 1 

the king hath run bad humours .... — ii. 1 
seem to threaten, runs far before them — ii. 4 
an.v apprehension, they would run away — iii. 7 
foolish curs! that run winking into.. — iii. 7 
O meschantc fortune! do not run away — iv. 5 
if thou spy'st any, run, and bring ..\HenryVI, i. 4 

we crying run away — i. 5 

sheep run not half so timorous — i. 5 

and run a tilt at death within — iii. 2 

trusty squire, did run away — iv. 1 

flass, that now begins to run — iv. 2 
shrink, and run away — iv. 5 

commonwealth hath daily run iHemyVI. i. 3 

over this stool, and run awa.y — ii. 1 

made me laugh to see the villain run — ii. 1 

smooth runs "the water, where — iii. 1 

and as the dam runs lowing — iii. 1 

run to my lord of Suffolk; let him .. — iii. 2 

run, go, help, help! Henry — iii. 2 

run nothing but claret wine this .... — iv. 6 

cur run back and bite — v. 1 

mounted, run their horse to death ..ZHenryVI. i. 4 

6wiftl.y as the posts could run — ii. 1 

to seethe minutes how they run .... — ii. 5 

but yet I run before my horse Richard III. i. 1 

what need'st thou run so many — iv. 4 

that which we run at, and lose by ..Henry VIII, i. \ 
mounts the liquor till it run o'er .... — i. I 

Buckingham IS run in your displeasure — i. 2 

(for so run the conditions,) leave .... — i.3 
when he has run his course, and sleeps ■ — iii. 2 

did lier eyes run o'er too? Tritiius 4- Crcuhida, i. 2 

did run? Say so, did not the general run — ii. 1 
my mother's blood runs on the dexter — iv. 5 

these two may run mad; but — v. 1 

to run lead'st first Coriolntius, i. I 

I saw him run after a gilded butterfly — i. 3 

how have you run from slaves — i. 4 

where he did run reeking o'er the lives — ii. 2 

I'll run away till 1 am bigger — v. 3 

run to your houses, fall upon Julius CfPsar, i. 1 

when lie doth run his course — i. 2 

augmented, would run to these — ii. 1 

now bid me rim, and I will strive with — ii. 1 
a hundred spouts, did run pure blood — ii. 2 
I prytliee, hoy, run to the senate-house — ii. 4 



[ 642 ] 



SAC 



— IV. 1 



ii. 4 
ii. 4 
iii. 1 
iv. 6 
— V. 3 



11. 4 
ii. 4 
iii. 3 



V. 3 



KUN to the Capitol, and nothing ..JuliusCipsar, ii. 4 
run, Lucius, and commend me to my lord— ij. 4 

run hence, proclaim, cry it about -^ iii. 1 

cry out, and run, as it were doomsday — 
to wind, to stop, to run directly c 

my life is run his compass — v. o 

from this country shall Pindarus run — v. 3 
that it runs over even at his eyes .. .. — v. 5 
my sword-hilts, whilst I run on it (rep.) — v. 5 
I hehl the sword, and he did run on it — v. 6 
nay, then I'll run: what mean.. ^dfonj/iSC'^o.ii. 6 
and have instructed cowards to run — iii. 9 

run one before, and let the queen. ... — iv. 8 
and run into't as toa lover's bed .... — iv. 12 
broke it, it would have run all out..Cymheliiie, ii. 1 

tliat run i' the clock's behalf — iii. 2 

lads more like to run the country base — v. 3 
let the time run on, to good, or bad.. — y. 5 
run like swallows o'er the plain . . Titus Andron. ii. 2 

may run into that sink — iii. 2 

now our sands are almost tmxi. Pericles, v. 2 (Gower) 

you shall run a certain course Lear, i. 2 

ride, run, mar a curious tale — i. 4 

when a great wheel runs down a hill 
the knave turns fool, that runs away 
unbonneted he runs, and bids what., 
and the creature run from the cur?. . 
run, run, O run— To who my lord? .. 
how? turn thy back, and run? .. Romeo Sf Juliet, i. 1 

she could have run and waddled — i.3 

and slow; they stumble, that run fast — ii. 3 

that he will sure run mad — ii. 4 

nay, if thy wits run the wild-goose. . — 

that runs lolling up and down — 

stand up; run to my study: by and by — 
shall run a cold and drowsy humour — 
mortals, hearing them, run mad .... — 
that you run mad, seeing that she .. ^ 
a madman's mercy bade thee run away — 

now at once run on the dashiiig — 

go, tell the prince, run to the Capulet's — 
aud all run with open outcry, toward — 

run barefoot up and down Hamlet, ii. 2 

and fates, do so contrary run, that — iii. 2 

thus runs the world away — iii. 2 

this lapwing runs away with the shell .. — v. 2 
run from her guardage to the sooty .... Othello, i. 2 
poor lady! she'll run mad, when she .... — iii. 3 
fountain from the which my current runs — iv. 2 
Emilia, run you to the citadel — v. 1 

RUNAGATE, what doth he there? .Richard III. iv. 4 

than that runagate to your bed Cymbeline, i. 7 

find those runagates (j-ep.) — iv. 2 

that same banished runagate . . Romeo f,- Juliet, iii. 6 

RUNAWAY, thou coward art ihoM.Mid.N.'sDr. iii. 2 
close night doth play therunawaj'.jUer.o/ Venice, ii. 6 
bring again these foolish runaways. /Is T/owLi/:et^ ii. 2 

that we are most lofty runaways Henry V. iii. i 

rascals, and runaways, a seum .... Richard III. v. 3 
runaways [CoZ.Kni. unawares] eyes, ftojn. 4-.'"'. iii. 2 

RUNG— since the curfew rung . . Meat.for Meas. iv. 2 

hath rung night's yawning peal Macbeth, iii. 2 

the market-bell is rung I Henry VI. iii. 2 

his knell rung out, his judgment . . Henry VIII. ii. " 
and you have rung it lustily'.. Titus.indrunicus, ii. 
the curfew bell hath rung Romeo ^Juliet, iv. 

RUNNERS with arace iHenryVI. ii. 

'tis sport to maul a runner .^Info/ii/ <S- Cleopatra, iv. 

RUNNING of one glass IVinter'sTate.i. 

I, Costard, running out, that was. Love's L. Los/,iij. 
scorn running with thy heels. Merchant of Venice, ii. 

books in the running brooks As youIJke it, ii. 

so is running awa.y, when fear All's Well, i. 

painted by a running brook, TamingofSh. 'I (indue, 
lost thy breath? by running fast, Comedi/ of Err. iv. 

argument shall be, thy running IHeni-ylV. ii. 

to praise him so for running? — ii. 

he seemed in running to devour ...,'iHenryIV. i. 
makes a stiU-stand, running neither — ii. 

farced title runing 'fore the king Henry V. iv. 

they both came swiftly running ....\HemyVI. ii. 
sliould find a running banquet ere. . Henry VIII. i. 
this course, which you are running here — ii. 
the which you were now running o'er — iii. 
the running banquet of two beadles — v. 

that tub both filled and running Cymbellne, i. 

you shall get it by running Lear, iv. 

RUN'ST toward him still ..Measure for. y ensure, iii. 

thou run'st before me Mid. N.'s Dream, iii. 

where run'st thou so fast? Comedy of Errors, iii. 

if thou art moved, thou run'st away. y>'"men ^Jul. i. 

RUPTURE that you may easily.ilf<;as..ftr Meas. iii. 

the guts-griping, ruptures Troilusi-Cressida, v. 

the rupture [Coi.-rapture] of tlie sea . . Pericles, ii. 

RURAL latches to his entrance . . iVinter's Tale, iv. I 
here is a rural fellow Antony tfCleopatra, v. : 

RUSH— will rush into the state. A/orA. of Venice, iv. 
from forth a saw-pit rush at once. Merry Wires, \v. 

lean but upon a rush Asyou l.itie ii.u'i. i 

as Tib's rusli for Tom's fore-linger . . All's Well, ii. 
l3etter I should rush in thus. . Tamingoj Shrew, iii. 

please to call it a rusli candle — iv. 

even then will rush to knowled.ge. Tm/er's ru/e, iii. 
a rush, a hair, a drop ot blood. ComeJy of Errors, \v. 

may rusji, and seize us Macbeth, i i. 

to rush upon your peace KingJohn, ii. 

the bosom of the ground, rush forth.. — iv. 

a rush will be a beam to hang — iv. 

rush on his host, as doth the HenryJ'. iii. 

we will rush on them IHenryVI. i. 

do rush upon us as their hungry .... — i. 

rush all to pieces on thy rocky Richard II. i v. 

they all rush by, and leave you. Tmiltis .i Cress, iii. 

the rush that lies before him Antony StCleu. iii. 

to rush into the secret house of death — iv. 1 
man but a rush against Oihello's breast. 0(/ie//r,, v. 

RUSHED into my house Comedy of Errors, iv. 

and uncivil arms be rushed upon!..iiicAa)d //. iii. 

and rushed into the bowels of the iHenryVI. i. 

I rushed upon him, surprised,. Titus Andronicus,\. 



RUSH ED aside the law Romeo ^Juliet, iii. 3 

RUSHES— in which cage of rushes. ^sj/ow Like it, iii. 2 
house trimmed, rushes strewed .. Tamingof Sh. iv. 1 

upon the wanton rushes lay 1 Henry IV. iii. 1 

more rushes, more rushes 2 Henry IV.w. 5 

hews down oaks with rusiies Coriolanus, i. 1 

we have but pinned with rushes .... — i. 4 

did softly press the rushes Cymbeline, ii. 2 

tickle the senseless rushes with . . Romeo ^Juliet, i. 4 
fatal points, and twixt them rushes.. — iii. I 

RUSHING in their houses Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

comes rushing on this woeful Rfchard II. ii. 2 

so, rushing in the bowels of the .... 1 Henry VI. iv. 7 
lest that the people, rushing on us../ti/iusC'(Bsar, iii. 1 

as rushing out of doors — iii. 2 

great sea of joys rushing upon me Pericles, v. 1 

RUSHLING.l warrant you MerryfTives, ii. 2 

RUSHY brook, or on the Mid.K.'sDream, ii. 2 

RUSSET— expressed in russet yeas. Lore's L. Lost, v. 2 

the morn in russet mantle clad Hamlet, i. I 

RUSSET-PATED choughs ....Mid.,\.'s Dream, iii. 2 
RUSSIA-last out a night in Russia. il/eas./or.Ueos. ii. 1 

he is with the emperor of Russia — iii. 2 

the emperor of Russia was my .. Winter sTale, iii. 2 
RUSSIAN — Muscovites or Russians. Love's L.Lost, v. 2 
of Russians left us but of late (7ep.).. — v. 2 
confronted were with four in Russian — v. 2 
wliat did the Russian whisper in your — v. 2 

like the rugged Russian bear Macbeth, iii. 4 

into the mouth of a Russian bear ....Henry V. iii. 7 
RUST — adieu, valour I rust, rapier! , . Love'sL.Lost, i. 2 

rust, sword! cool blushes! All's Well, iv. 3 

how he glisters thorough my rust! Winter's Tale, iii. 2 

consume away in rust King John, \\. I 

arms he will commend to rust Richard II. iii. 3 

better to be eaten to death with rust ■ iHenrylV. i. 2 

while that the coulter rusts Henry V. v. 2 

shall rust upon my weapon ZHeni-y VI. i. 3 

but to rust iron, increase tailors .... Coriolanus, iv. 5 

let his armour rust until this day Pericles, ii. 2 

there rust, and let me die Romeo ^JiUiel, v. 3 

swords, for the dew will rust them '. Othello, i. 2 

RUSTED— sword, rusted with ease ..2Hem-yVl. iii. 2 

RUSTIC— our rustic revelry As youLike it, v. 4 

our rustic garden's barren Winter's Tale, i v. 3 

how now, rustics? — iv. 3 

yield, rustic mountaineer Cymbeline, iv. 2 

RUSTICALLY at home Asyou Like it, i. 1 

RUSTLE— I hear his straw rustle.itfeas./orjV/eas. iv. 3 

RUSTLING in unpaid-for silk Cymbeline, iii. 3 

nor the rustling of silks Lear, iii. 4 

RUSTY— an old rusty sviord.. Taming of Shrew, iii. 2 
manage rusty bills against thy ....Richard 1 1, iii. 2 
with the rusty curb of old father ....IHenrylV. i. 2 

through a rusty beaver peeps Henry V. iv. 2 

truce IS rusty grown Troilus ^- Cressida, i 3 

like a rusty mail in monumental.... — iii. 3 

and 'tis turned to a rusty armour Pericles, ii. 1 

for, by his rusty outside, he appears .. — ii.2 

do they grow rusty? Nay, their Hamlet, ii. 2 

RUTH— rue, even for ruth Richard II. iii. 4 

work, rein them from ruth ,. Troilus ^ Cressida, v. 3 

the nobility lay aside their ruth Coriolanus, i. 1 

RUTHFUL-these rutliful deeds! ... .3 Henry VI. ii. 5 

spur them to rutliful work .. Troilus^- Cressida, v. 3 

VI 1 1 allies rutliful to hear ....Titus Andronicus,v. 1 

RUTHLESS thing is tliis in him-Meas.forMeas. iii. 2 

massacre, and ruthless slaughters . . 1 Henry VI. v. 4 

the ruthless flint doth cut my 2Henry VI. ii. i 

as his ruthless arm, with downright. .3iien)i//'/. i. 4 

see, ruthless queen (rep. ii. 1) — i. 4 

Edward but a ruthless sea? — v. 4 

more than with ruthless waves — v. 4 

of ruthless [Coi.-ruthful] butchery. «/cAar'i /;/. iv. 3 
the woods are ruthless, dreadful.. Tiius.indron. ii. I 
forced in the ruthless, vast, and gloomy — iv. 1 
RUTLAND— call him Rutland uo-v .Richard II. v. 2 
by pardoning Rutland, my transgressing — v. 3 
where is your darling Rutland? ....SHenryVI. i. 4 
a tear can fall for Rutland's death?.. — i. 4 

tears are my sweet Rutland's obsequies — i. 4 
of sweet young Rutland, by rough .. — ii. 1 
'twas you that killed young Rutland — ii.2 
didst kill our tender brother Rutland — ii.2 
and this for Rutland; both bound .. — ii. 4 

that slew thy brother Rutland — ii. 4 

in hewing Rutland when his leaves.. — ii. 6 
thou pitied'st Rutland, I will pity thee — ii. 6 
and young Rutland could not satisfy — ii. 6 
piteous moan that Rutland made . . Richard III. i. 2 
the faultless blood of pretty Rutland — i.3 
I had tt Rutland too, thou holp'st to — iv. 4 

steeped in Rutland's blood — iv. 4 

RUT-TIME— me a cool rut-time . . Merry Wires, v. 5 
RUTTING— out of the road of rutting.. /'fr/r(<.5. iv. b 
RUTTISH— for all that, very ruttisli...M's;re(/, iv. 3 
RYE— rich leas of wheat, rye, barley . . Tempest, iv. 1 
between the acres of theryc-^syouL/teii, v. 3 (song) 
RYE-STRAW— your rye-straw hats . . Tempest, iv. 1 



SABBATH- by our holy Sabbath. Jl/er.o^reiifce.i v. 1 
come the next Sabbath Richard III. iii. 2 

SABLE— his banners sable J^ericles, v. (Gower) 

in his life, a sable silvered Hamlet, i. 2 

he, whose sable arms, black as his purpose — ii. 2 

for I'll have a suit of sables — iii. 2 

than settled age his sables, and his weeds — iv. 7 

SABLE-COLO (JRED melancholy Love's L. L.i. I (let.) 

SACK— escaped upon this butt ot sack..7'e»ipcsi, ii. 2 

halh drowned his tongue in sack — iii. 2 

that hath drunk so much sock as — iii. 2 

this can sack, and drinking do — iii. 2 

you love sock, and so do l..Verryll'ives, ii. 1 (letter) 

a pottle of burnt sack to give — ii. 1 

a morning's draught of sack — ii.2 

and let burnt sack be the issue — iii. 1 

go fetch me a quart of sack — iii. 5 

let me pom- in some sack — iii. 5 



SAC 



S ACK— Ro brew me a pottle of sack. Mttrij ICioes, iii. !> 

to taverns, and sack, and wiuc — v. 5 

I'll go bum some sack Twelfth Night, ii. 3 

niiirc sacks to the mill! Love's L.I.nsl, iv. 3 

drink a cup of sack?..,. Taming of Skrew, 2 (iuiluc.) 
I ne'er d; ank sack in mv life , . — 2 (indue.) 

with drinking of old saclc \ Henry 1 1', i. 2 

unless hours were cups of sack — i. 2 

let a cup of sack be my poi.son — ii. 2 

f;ive me a cup of sack (rep.) — ii. 4 
lerc's lime in this suck too (re;>) — ii. ■! 

thou Btolest a cup of sack eighteen .. — )i. 4 

that huge bombard of sack — ii. 4 

but to taste sack, and drink it? — ii. 4 

sack, two gallons, f>s. 8rf. (>e;i.) — ii. 4 

to this intolerable deal of sack I — ii. 4 

but the sack that them hast drunk . . — iii. 3 
fill me a bottle of sack; our soldiers — iv. 2 

there's that will sack a city — v. 3 

and leave sack, and Ii vc cleanly , . . . — v. 4 

new silk, and old sack 2 Henry II'. i. 2 

my lord, I will steep this letter in sack — ii. 2 
ristol, I charge you with a cup of sack — ii. 4 

come, give's some sack (re/?.) — ii. 4 

in the weapon is nothing, without sack — iv. 3 
potations, and addict themselves to sack — iv. 3 
about the sack he lost the other day — v. I 
I have drunk too much sack at supper — v. 3 

they say, be cried out of sack Henry V. ii. 3 

be engraved the sack of Orleans ....1 Htnryl'l. ii. 2 
our sacl<s shall be a mean to sack.... — iii. 2 
or sack this country with a mutiny — v. 1 

1 drink to you in a cup of sack iHenri/l'I. ii. 3 

but if he sack fair Athens Timon of Alliens, v. 2 

sack great Rome with Romans ...,Coriolunus, iii. 1 

niav sack tlie hateful mansion. .fioineo ^-Juliei, iii. 3 

SACK- AND-SUGAR? Jack, how. ... 1 Henry I /'. i. 2 

if Siiitk-and-sugar be afault,God lielp — ii. 4 

SACKB UTS, psalteries, and fifes Cnrhlnnus, v. 4 

SACKCLOTH— ashes, and sackcloth. .SHeun;^''. i. 2 
puts on sackcloth, and to sea,,. I'ericles, iv. 4 (Gow.) 

SACKED-sacked Troy? All's tVell, i. 3 (song) 

SACKKRSON loose twenty times ..Merry ll ires, i. I 
SACRAMENT— the sacrament on't ...AWslVeil, iv. 3 
wherefore we took the saci'ament ..KingJohn, v. 2 
ere I last received the sacrament. . . . Kichard 11. i. 1 
not only take the sacrament to bury — iv. 1 
of them here have ta'en the sacrament — v. 2 
French have ta'en the saciaraent . . 1 Henry VI. iv. 2 
thou didst receive the sacrament ..Richard III. i. 4 

as we have ta'en the sacrament — v. 4 

SACRED— for sacred 9\\\\a.. .TwoGen.of Verona, iii. 1 
in their so sacred paths he ia.KS. . Merry iVices, iv. 4 

on every sacred room — v. b 

I am combined by a sacred vow. Meas.for Meas. iv. 3 
in double violation of sacred chastity — v. I 
l\e liates onr sacred nation . . Merchant of Venice, i. 3 
that sacred pity hath engendered. yl-i/oii/.tV.c /(. ii. 7 
sacred, and sweet, was all I saw ..Taming of Sh. i. I 

O my most sacred lady IVinter's Tale, i. 2 

to siicred Delphos, to Apollo's temple — ii. 1 
for he the sacred honour of himself . . — ii. 3 

their sacred wills be done! — iii. 3 

whose person, so sacred as it is — v. 1 

and from your sacred vials pour your — v. 3 
justice, most sacred duke ... .Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

the sacred storehouse of his .Machelh, ii. 4 

the free breath of a sacred king? KingJolin, iii. 1 

all religious strength of sacred vows — iii. 1 

nearness to our sacred blood Richard 11. i. 1 

full of Edward's sacred blood — i. 2 

when Bucii a sacre<l king should .... — iii. 2 

can gripe the sacred handle of — iii. 3 

mine own tongue deny my sacred state — iv. 1 
dnst was thrown upon his sacred head — v. 2 
first, to thy sacred state wish I all .. — y. 6 
his angels, guard your sacred throne .. Henry V, i. 2 
my profession's sacred from above . . 1 Henry VI. i. 2 
usurp the sacred name of knight .... — iv, 1 
holy saws of sacred writ; his study ..2Henry VI. i. 3 

your sacred person trep. iii. 2) Hem y VIII. ii. 4 

from the sacred ashes of her honour. . — v. 4 
thy motiier, my sacred aunt.... Troitus^- Cress, iv. 5 
make sacred even his stirrup .. Timon of Athens, i. 1 
their napkins in his sacred blood .JuliusCtesar, iii, 2 
see where be the sacred vials ....Antony ^Cleo. i, 3 
the honour's sacred which he talks on — ii. 2 

O sacred receptacle of my joys TilusAndron. i. 2 

and in the sacred Pantlieon her espouse — i. 2 
our empress then, with her sacred wit — ii. 1 

all comfort in your sacred breast! Pericles, i. 2 

tlo' sacred physic shall receive — v. 1 

for, by the sacred radiance of the sun Lear^ i. 1 

unite commutual in most sacred hnuds. Hamlet, ui. 2 

the due reverence of a sacred vow Othello, iii. 3 

SACRIFICE your tears ....ru-oGcn.nr Verona, iii. 2 
sacrifice the lamb that I do love. . Tu-elflh Night, v. 1 
stand for sacrifice, the rest a.\oof.Mer. of Venice, iii. 2 

ay, sacrifice them all, here to this — iv. 1 

the sacrifice! how ceremonious.. Winter's Tale, iii. 1 
here come sacrifice for the field .... King John, ii. 2 

they come like sacrifices 1 HenrylV. iv. 1 

like sacrifices, by their watchful. Henry I', iv. (cho.) 

the back is sacrifice to the load HenryVIII. i. 2 

one sweet sacrifice, and lift my soul — ii. 1 

tears, and love's full sacrifice. . . . Troilus ^ Cress, i. 2 
ere the first sacrifice, within this hour — iv. 2 

spotted livers in the sacrifice — v. 3 

may give you thankful sacrifice! ....Corinlanus^ i. 6 
nor times of sacrifice, embarqucments — i. :ft 
bid the priests do present sacrifice. ./H//u«C<rjrar, ii. 2 
give tlie gods a tliankful sacrifice. .4ii/o?i(/ (^-C/eo. i. 2 
natli made you reek as a sacrifice. . . . Cymbeltne, i. 3 

the temple with our sacrifices — v. 5 

ad manes fratrum sacrifice his flesh.. Tilut And. i. 2 

religiously they ask a sacrifice — i.2 

to save your brother from the sacrifice — ii. 3 

do upon mine altar sacrifice Pericles, v. 2 

till lie had done hissacrifice ,.., — v. 2 tGower) 
upon such sacrifices, my Cordelia Lear, v. 3 



[ 643 ] 

SACRIFICES of our enmity I .... Itomeo ^Juliet, v. 3 
a murder, which I thought a 8aerific<! . . Ulhelln, v. 2 

SACRIFICED his daughter Sllenri/Vl. v. I 

let my old life be saci-ifleed .... liomeo ^- Juliet, v. 3 
SACRIFICERS, but not butchers.. J«(/m,< Cmar, ii. 1 
SACRIFICIALwhisperings in his .. TimmmrAth. i. 1 
SACRIFICING Abel's cries, even ....Itidmrd ll. i. 1 
entrails feed the sacrificing fire .. TilusAndron. i. 2 
SACRILEGIOUS nnu-der liatb broke . . Macbeth, ii. 3 
than myself, a sacrilegious thief ... . Cymheline, v. ;< 
SACRING bell, when the brown ..Henry VIII. \\\. 2 

SAD— his arms in this sad knot Tempest, i. 2 

what sad talk was tliat TwoGen. of Verona, i. 3 

servant, you are sad — ii. 4 

sad sighs, deep groans — iii. 1 

find nie sad and solitary — iv. 4 

in her sad remembrance Twelfth Nii^ht, i. \ 

and in sad cypress let me — ii.4(song) 

where sad true lover ne'er find my — ii. 4 (song) 

he is sad and civil, and suits — iii. 4 

if sad and inerry madness — iii. 4 

upon a sad occasion. Sad, lady? irep) — iii, 4 
as a sad face, a reverend carriage .... — iii. 4 
is it sad, and few words ..Measurefor Measure, iii. 2 

speak you this with a sad brow? Much Ado, i. 1 

why are you thus out of measure sad? — i. 3 
I must be sad when I have cause.... — i. 3 
hand in hand, in sad conference .... — i. 3 
wherefore are you sad? Not sad .... — ii. 1 
the count is neither sad, nor sick., .. — ii. 1 
slie is never sad. but when she {.rep.) — ii. I 

if he be sad, he wants money — iii. 2 

pluck up, my heart, and be sad! .... — v.! 
can labour aught in sad invention .. — v.! 

prince, thou art sad; get thee — v. 4 

counterfeit sad looks, make ..Mid.N.'sDream, iii. 2 

here she comes, curst, and sad — iii. 2 

in silence sad, trip we after the — iv. 1 

would go near to make aman look sad — v. 1 

that he will look sad Love' sL. Lost, i. 2 

he made her melancholy, sad, and heavy — v. 2 

why looks your highness sad? — v. 2 

I know not why I am so sud. Merchant nf Venice, i. 1 
out of doubt, would make me sad (rep.) — i. 1 

Antonio is sad to tliink iipon his — i. 1 

my mercliandize makes me not sad.. — i. 1 
sad, because you are not merry (rep.) — i. 1 

a part, and mine a sad one — i. 1 

like one well studied in a sad ostent — ii. 2 
sad Lucretia's modesty. . As ynu Like it, iii. 2 (verses) 

speak sad brow, and true maid — iii. 2 

good to be sad and say nothing — iv. I 

3^ou have great reason to be sad — iv, I 

3'our experience makes you sad — iv. 1 

that had! how sad a passage 'tis! ..All'sWell.i. I 
sliall sad Apollo weep .... Taming ofSh. 2 (indue.) 

first were we sad, fijaring you — iii. 2 

sad, shan't be? As merry (rep.) .. Winter' sTale,U. I 

3'our sad tires in a mile-a — iv. 2 (song) 

and the gentlemen are in sad talk .. — iv. 3 
sad stories of my own mishaps ..Comedy of Err. i. 1 

you are sad, signior Balthazar — iii. 1 

or sad, or merrily? — iv. 2 

heavy, sour, sad, and much, inuch . . — v. 1 
there weep our sad bosoms empty .... Macbeth, iv. 3 
she is sud and passionate at your.. .. KingJohn, ii. 2 

be these sad signs couflrmers of — iii. I 

cousin, look not sad; thy grandam.. — iii. 3 
you are sad. Indeed, I liave been. ... — iv. 1 

nobody should be sad but I — iv. 1 

would be as sad as night — iv. 1 

why look you sad? be great — v.) 

Bee fear, and sad distrust — v. 1 

to see so sad an hour as this — v. 2 

1 did not think to be so sad to-night — v. 5 

thy sad aspect hath from Richard II. i. 3 

my death's sad tale may yet — ii. 1 

your majesty is too much sad — ii. 2 

cannot but be sad; so heavy sad .... — ii. 2 

rich men look sad, and rufiians — ii. 4 

and tell sad stories of the death .... — iii, 2 

that my sad look should grace — iii. 4 

at that sad stop, my lord, where rude — v. 2 
but that sad dog that brings me food — v. 5 

did spend a sad and bloody hour I Henry IV. i. 1 

yea, tliere thou makest me sad — i. 1 

look how we can, or sad or merrily.. — v. 2 

not meet that I should be sad 2HenrylV. ii. 2 

I could be sad, and sad indeed too .. — ii. 2 

and a jest with a sad brow — v. 1 

yet he sad, good brothers (rep.) — v. 2 

gesture sad, investing lank-lean. .Heniy V. iv. (cho.) 
where the sad and solemn priests sing — \v. 2 

sad tidings bring I to you \ Henry VI. i. 1 

are sad, your elieer appalled — i.2 

dream this night doth make me 6ad..2/Je«r!//'/. i.2 

with sad unlielpful tears — iii. 1 

my brother? why is he so sad? iHennjVI. ii. 1 

our hope but sad despair; our ranks — ii. 3 
sad [Co/.-nian] for the loss of thee .. — ii. 5 

likes it not, for she hioks Had — iii. 2 

the sad story of my father's death .. Richard III. i. 2 
in that sad time, my manly eyes .... - i.2 

leave these sad designs to him — i.2 

in their death's sad story - iv. 3 

and queen of sad mischance — iv. 4 

thou drown the sad remembrance ,. — iv. 4 
my lord of Surrey, why look ve so sad? — v. 3 
sad, high, and working, full of ..Henry Vlll. (prol.) 

be sad, as we would make you — (prol.) 

things to strike honour sad — i.2 

.vou would say something that is sad — ii. 1 
full of sad thoughts and troubles .. .. — ii. 2 

f)Ut the king from tliese sad thoughts — ii. 2 
low sad he look si sure, he is — ii. 2 

my soul grows sad with troubles .... — iii. I 

play me that sad note I named — iv. 2 

and to make a sweet lady sad. . Troilus ej- Cress, iii. 1 
pr'ythee, be not sod, thoii art true,. Timon ofAlh. ii. 2 
tell these sud women Coriolauus.'w. 1 



SAF 



SAD— that Ciesar looks so sad JuliusCtesar, I. t 

after that, he came, thus sad, away? — i.2 

tlie ruddy drops that visit my sad heart — ii. 1 

the charactery of my sad brows — ii, 1 

if you Unil him sad, say I am ....Antony ^ Cleo. i. 3 

was he sad, or merry? (rep.) — i. 5 

Cjesar is sad; and Lepidus, since .... — iii. 2 
pray you, look not sad, nor make.... — iii. 9 

call to me all my sad captains — iii. 11 

look you sad, friends? the gods — v, 1 

I never saw him sad Cymheline, i. 7 

I'll sweeten thy sad grave — iv. 2 

what's thy interest in this Biid wreck? — iv. 2 
wherefore looks't thou sad, when .Titus.lndron. ii. 3 

and my soul's sad tears — iii. I 

and go read with tliee sad stories — iii, 2 

thus in this strange and sad habiliment — v. 2 

tliat so my sad decrees may fly — v. 2 

know tliou, sad man, I am not — v, 2 

'tis sad Titus calls. Go, gentle Marcus — v. 2 
to love-sick Dido's sad attending ear — v. 3 
sad Andronici, have done with woes — v. 3 
sad companion, dull-eved melancholy,. rcMcto, i. 2 

did mock sad fools withal — v. I 

I have followed your sad steps Lear, v. a 

the weight of tliis sad time we — v. 3 

all me! sad hours seem long Romeo^Jutiet,u \ 

louk'st thou sad? though news be sad — ii. 5i 
wedding cheer, to a sad burial feast.. — iv. 5 

more talk of these sad things — v. 3 

SADDER than you were before?7'a'oG'eii.o^re>-. iv. 2 

methinks, you are sadder ..- Much Ado, iii, I 

now sadder, that you come so. Taming of Shrem, iii. 2 
SADDEST- telling the saddest talc.l/irf. A.'sOr. ii. 1 
the saddest spectacle that e'er I .. ..SHenn/l'I. ii. 1 
SADDLE— an old mothy saddle. ..Taming- o./S/i. iii. 2 
out of their saddles into the dirt .... — iv. I 
who is within there? saddle my horseKi'cAajiZ 1 1, v. 2 
beat Cut's saddle, put a few flocks. . . I HenrylV. ii. 1 
your manhoods,) to buy a saddle ..2HenrylV. ii. I 
away Bardolph; saddle my horse .... — v. 3 
or bv vaulting into my saddle with ... Henry V. v. 2 
saddle white Surrey for tlie field ..Richard III. v. 3 

darkness and devils! saddle my horses Lear, i. 4 

SADDLERfor my mistress' trep.'i..ComedyofErr. i. 2 

SAD-EYED Justice, witli his surly Henry V.i. 2 

SAD-FACED men, people and sons.TiiusAn'lion.v. 3 

SAD-HEARTED men 3 Henry Vl.n.b 

SADLY— bound sadly home for Naples. . Terniiest. i. 2 
when you looked sadly, it was.. Two Gen of Ver. ii. 1 

the conference was sadly borne Much Ado, ii. 3 

her heart weighs sadly Alt's Hell, iii. S 

look so sadly on my son? King John, iii. 1 

march sadly after; grace my Richard II. v. 6 

with his spirit sadly I survive 21lenrylV. v. 2 

so part we sadly in this troublous ..'MIenryVI. v. 5 
frowns on me, looks sadly upon liini.Kc/iarJ III. v. 3 
approach sadly, and go away(rep.)T/i»(j)i ofAih. ii. 2 
why so sadly greet you our victory?.. Cj/wiie/ine, v. 5 
sitting sadly, hearing UB praise our ., — v. 5 

but sadly tell me, who Romeo S,- Juliet, i, 1 

but, look, where sadly the poor Hamlet, ii. 2 

yet he looks sadlv, and prays the Moor .Othello, ii. 1 

SADNESS is without limit .Much Ado. i. 3 

ill good sadness, sir (rep. iv. 2) Merry ll'ives, iii. 5 

sadness is one and the self-same... i.oi'e'sL.Loi(, i. 2 

part sadness and melanchol.v — i.2 

a want-wit sadness makes of me.Mer. of Venice, i. I 

so full of unmannerly sadness — i.2 

and there begins my sadness As you Like it, i. I 

is a most humorous sadness — iv. 1 

in good sadness, I do not know ...... All's ll'cll, iv. 3 

seeing too much sadness .. Taming of Sh. 2 (indue.) 
now, in good sadness, son Petruoliio .. — v. 2 
you mix your sadness witlisomeiear.2Henrv/>'. v. 2 

with the sadness of my suit 3Henry VI. iii. 2 

fate turns to sudden sadness.. Troilus t^Cr'essida, i. 1 

he did incline to sadness Cymbeline, i. 7 

which are often the sadness of parting — v. 4 
sadness lengthens Romeo's hours?Komeo<5-7ii(i'e/,i. 1 
tell me in sadness, who she is (rep.)., — i,'l 

bid a sick man in sadness make liis will — i. 1 

fell into a sadness, then into a fast .... Hamlet, ii. 2 

SAFE— but are they, Ariel, safe? TempesI, i. 2 

he's safe for these three hours — i i i , 1 

and keys kept safe TwoGen.orVcrona, iii. 1 

tlie man of safe discretion Meat, for Mens i. 1 

heaven keep your honour safe! ' — ii. 2 

lord Angelo perceives he's safe ^- v. 1 

that you keep Costard safe Love's L.Loii, i, 2 

my ships are safe come to road . . Mer. of Venice, v, 1 

as keeping safe Nerissa's ring " — v. I 

Baptista is safe, talking witli ... 'Taming or Sh. iv. 4 

warm at home, secure and safe — v. 2 

and soon, and safe, arrived Comedy qf Errors, i. I 

in what safe place you ha\e bestowed — i.2 

fear, my money is not safe — i, 2 

is laid up safe at the Centaur — ii. 2 

see him safe con ve.yed home — iv. 4 

I long that we were safe and somid . . — iv. 4 

every thing safe toward your love .Macbeth, i. 4 

Banqno's safe? A.v, my good lord, safe — iii. 4 
at hand, tliat chambers will be safe.. — v. 4 
the friends we miss, were sale arrived — v. J 
hold himself safe in his ]nhai\menl. King John, iii. 4 
and keep it safe for our renicmbraiice — v. 2 

is safe arrived ut Ravenspurg Richard II. i i. 2 

all souls that will be safe, fly — iii. 2 

villain, I'll make thee safe — v. 3 

some surety for a safe return again. IWenri///'. iv. 3 

convey them with safe conduct Henry V, i. 2 

to France shall we convey you safe — ii. (chorusl 

is tlie duke of Exeter sate? — iii. 6 

where they would be safe, they perish — iv. I 
and comes safe home, will stand .... — iv. 3 
heavens keep old Bedford safe I ....] Henry VI. iii. 2 

set this diamond safe in golden v. 3 

yet shalt thou be safe? such safety ..SllenryVI. i. 1 

England is safe, if true within _ iv, 1 

yet will I keep thee safe _ iv, | 



8AF 



[ ()44 ] 



SAFE— what snfe means the crown ..SHciiii/'''- '\- 7 
we are not safe, Clarence {rep.) .... Kichnnl ///. i. I 
who think themselves as safe as thou — iii. 2 
you sleeping safe, they bring you.... — v. 3 

safe in I,eicester town — v. 4 

a sure and safe one. though thy . . Hennj VIII. lii. '-' 

see him safe i' the Tower — y. 2 

dull brainless Ajax come safe oflf. Trnilus ^- Ctrss. i. 3 

to procure safe conduct (re/).) — in. 3 

thy life shall be as safe as Priam — iv- i 

an'd keep your honours safe Corinlanuss i. 2 

Rome sits safe and still — iv. 6 

1 may use with a safe conscience . . Julius Orsar, i. 1 
safe, Antony; Brutus is safe enough — v. 4 

kwp this man safe, give him all — v. 4 

with vou should safe my going ..^"'o«y ,?• Cleo. i. 3 

that thou depart'st hence safe — iv. 12 

sling, or operation, I am safe — '^-.'S 

you think, stands so safe Ci/iiibeliiu; i. 5 

to have them in safe stowage — \. 7 

it shall safe be kept, and truly — ..!■ 7 

Imogen, safe may'st tliou wander — in. 5 

mv horse is tied up safe — P^. ' 

biit, in all safe reason, he must — iv. 2 

and gratulate his safe return ..Tilus .indioninis, i. 2 
with mv sword I'll keep this door safe — i. 2 

salt- out of fiirtune's shot — .ii- ' 

not lie safe for these bad bondmen — iv. 1 

will rkeep snfe.or sonieof you — iv. 2 

so we mav all be safe — jv. 2 

then is all safe, the anchor's in — iv. 4 

the ship sl-.ould house him safe. . Pericles, \\. (Gower) 

to have found a safe redress Lear, 1. 4 

'tis politic, and safe, to let him keep — — _ i. 4 
hap move to-night, safe 'scape the king! — lii. 6 
wliat safe and nicely I might well delay — v. 3 

nor stands it safe with us Hamlet, in. 3 

to keep those many many bodies safe — iii. 3 

looks sadly, and prays the Moor be safe.O(/itHo, ii. 1 
to be direct and honest, is not safe ...... — iii. 3 

are his wits safe? is he not light of brain? — iv. 1 

S \FE-CONDUCTING tlie rebels ..Itirhanl III. iv. 4 

SAFKD the bringer Antony SfCli-opntra, tv. 6 

SAFEGUARD of your honour !Heas.fi,iMras. v. 1 

to safeguard thine own life Richard II. \. 2 

to safeguard necessaries Henry I . i. 2 

in safeguard of their brood 3lleiiri/l I. u. 2 

if you do fight in safeguard of your.i?ic/:a/i/ lll.y. 3 

on safeguai'd he came to me CorioUmus, iii. 1 

safeguard of what that want might . . — in. 2 

SAF KLY— so safely ordered Tcmpesl. i. 2 

safelv in harbour is the — J. 2 

go safely on to seek thy son — n. 1 

that we have safelv found — v. 1 

running out, that was safely within. /.niv's/../-. in. 1 
I'll keep him dark, and safely locked. .J»'s;re/(, iv. 1 

1 might safely be admitted — ly. 5 

is notliing; but to be safely thus M.ichclh. in. 1 

to keep him safely till his day Ilicluird II. iv. 1 

hath safely fought to-day illennj 1 1', iv. 2 

all your quarters been as safely kept.l Henry VI. ii. 1 

and safely brought to Dover — v. I 

waft me safety cross the Channel ..IHenri/Vl. iv. 1 
how can tyrants safely govern home.3 Henry VI. iii. 3 
God safely quit her of her burden.. He»)i//7i/. v. 1 

might go one way, and safely — v. 2 

then reason safely with you Coriotanus, i. 9 

clucked thee to the wars, and safely — v. 3 
that Antony may safely come ..Jnlins Crp':nr, in. 1 
safelv, I think: 'twas a contention ..d/mlieline, i. 5 
and might so safely, had it been — — v. 5 
the gods would safely from this place.. Pericles, iv. 6 
safelv stowed,— But soft, what noise? .. Hamlei, iv. S 

i;K)i(l] go safely on — iv. 4 

placed it safely, the changeling never — — v. 2 
"o safely by the divine Desderaona — Olhello, ii. 1 

SAFER than mine own two 4«'s Well, ii. 1 

'tis safer to avoid what's grown .. Winter's Tale, i. 2 

nor shall you be safer than one — i. 2 

shall keep us both the safer Macbeth, ii. 3 

'tis safer to be that whicb we destroy — im ^ 
.a fasting tiger safer bv the tooth ....Kin^'.lohn, iii. 1 
safely shaUhebe upo'nthesandy (j-ep.)lU'n.ri. i. 4 

but the safer, when 'tis hacked 3HcnnjVI.iv. I 

finds safer footing than blind . . Trnilns 8f Cress, ui. 2 
their meat, and safer for their lives. Tinwn nf.4tli.i. 2 

and on a safer judgment Cnriolanus, n. 3 

safer triumph is this funeral pomp. 7'i7«s.-l;idron. 1.2 

fear too far. Safer than trust Lear,\. 4 

the safer sense will ne'er accommodate .. — iv. 6 

throws a more safer voice on you Othello, i. 3 

my blond begins my safer guides to rule. . — il. 3 

S.\FEST— witb your safest haste AsyouUkeil, i. 3 

the fittest time and safest way to — _i-3 

and, ParoUes, live safest in shame! ..All's Well, ly. 3 

anil our safest way is, to avoid Machein, ii. 3 

where is the best and safest passage.! Henry VI. iii. 2 

her life is safest only in her birth.. «/c/mr.i .■;/. iv. 4 

to talie the safest occasion by the iroM.Othelli,. lii. 1 

SAFETIES-but mine own safeties .. . . Muchelli, ly. 3 

SAFETY— and wateh your safety Tempest, ii. I 

which with as much safety you.. 7>t'(/i!A A7g-/i(, iii. 4 
that I cannot pursue with any safety — iv. 2 

no less, with wit and safety — y- 1 

give safety to your purposes! Mens, for Meas. i. 1 

you shall find your safety manifested — iv. 3 

let me in safety raise me from — v. I 

e'er shall it in safety rest Mid.N.'sDream, v. 2 

than with safety of a pure blush., ^s you Like il, t. 2 
to embrace your own safety, and give — i. 2 

when fear proposes the safety All's II ell, i. 1 

for their better safety . . Winter's Tale, iii. 2 i.indict.) 

in safety here, where we are — v. 1 

the sailors sought for safety by ..Comedi, or Err. 1. 1 

guide his valour to act in safety Mncheth, iii. 1 

IS bv to teach thee safetyl KingJohn, lii. 1 

her'higliness is in safety — iii- 2 

for your fair safety; so I kiss — iii. 3 

steeps his safety in true blood (rep.) — iii. 4 

your safety, for the which myself. ... — iv. 2 



SAFETY-to safety, and return King.lolm, iv. 2 

it is our safety, and we must embrace — iv, 2 
to seek sweet safety out in vaults .... — v. 2 

tendering the precious safety of liichurd II. \. 1 

we pluck this flower, safety IHenrylV.]]. 3 

shake the peace and safety of our — iii- 2 

to seek out this head of safety — iv. 3 

we were enforced, for safety sake. ... — v. 1 
•what I have done, my safiity urged me — _ v. 5 
under the smile of safetv, wouiid8.2//cnr!//f. (ind.) 

aiming at their safety, fly from — i. 1 

the aptest way for safety — . i. ' 

form, to hold our safety up — iv- 2 

that scalds with safety — iv. 4 

the peace and safety of your person.. — y. 2 
but we our kingdom's safety must so..r/ejiri/r. ii. 2 
all my fame for a pot of ale, and safety — iii. 2 
to view tlie field in safetv, and disiiose — iv. 7 
for his safety there I'll best devise . . 1 Henry VI. i. I 
I tender BO the safety of my liege ..illenryVI. iii. 1 
I know, our safety is to follow them — v. 3 
such safety finds the trembling lamb .Zllenry VI.'}. 1 
strength and safety of our country .. — iii. 3 

and in ourselves, our safety lies — iv. 1 

shut the gates for safety of ourselves — iv. 7 
passed in safety thro' the narrow seas — iv. 8 

my person's safety {rep. iii. 5) Richard II 1.^ i. I 

and only in that safety died her — iv. 4 

honour and plenteous safety Henry VIII. '\. 1 

provide for thine own future safety.. — in- 2 
every man shall eat in safety under. . — v. 4 
the gods with safety stand about. Troilus S, Cress, v. 3 
can found his tate in safety .. Timonof Athens, 'I'l. 1 

all thy safety were remotion — j.v. 3 

gods keep Rome in safety Cnriolanus, iii. 3 

no Rome of safety for Octavius . . JuliusCresar, iii. I 
can deny for your own safety . . Antony Sf Cleo. ii. G 
seek your honour, with your safety. . — iv. 13 
the worthy Leonatus is in safety .... Cymbeline, i. 7 
pawn mine honour for their safety . . — _ i. 7 
talk at pleasure of your safety .. TiiusAndron. iv. 2 

stand on hostage for his safety — iy. 4 

thy safety being the motive Lear,'\. 1 

their merits and our safety may equally . . — v. 3 
in safety, till the prince come . . Komeo Sc Juliet, v. 3 
safety [K/if.-sanctity] and the health . . Hamlet, i. 3 
best safety lies in fear; youth to itself.. — ,i. 3 
Btieh regards of safety, and allowance . . — ii. 2 
thine especial safety, which we do tender — iv. 3 
as by your safety, greatness, wisdom .. — iv. 7 

cannot with safety east him Othello, \. 1 

and on tlie court and guard of safety! .. — ii. 3 

SAFFRON— with thy safl:ron wings. . . . Tempest, iv. 1 
whose villanous saffron would have ..All's Well, iv. 5 
I must have saffron to colour .... Winter's Tale, iv. 2 
companion with the saffron ia.ce. Comedy of Err. iy. 4 

SAGE— or two of most sage saws. . TweWii Ninht, iii. 4 
all you sage counsellors, hence! ,...2 Henry I v. iv. 4 

de most sage demoiselle dat is Henry V. y. 2 

and sage, grave men, since you ..Richard III. iii. 7 

how's this? some more; be sage Pericles, iv. 6 

[Kn/.] to sing sage requiem, and such ..Hamlet, v. 1 

SAGG— shall never sagg with doubt Macbeth, v. 3 

SAGITTARY appals our numbers. Troilus tf Cress, y. 5 
lead to tlie Sagittary the raised search ..Othello,\. I 
send for the lady to the Sagittary, and let — i. 3 

SAID— she said thou wast my daughter. J'empes^, i. 2 

what if he had said, widower — ii 1 

widow Dido, said you? — ii- 1 

for it hath been said (rep.) — ii. 2 

why, I said nothing — m. 2 

honest lord, thou hast said well — iii 3 

you said our work should cease — v. 1 

but what said she? irep.) ..Two Gen. of Verona, i. 1 

said she nothing? — j. 1 

he said, that Proteus, your son — _i. 3 

you have said, sir — ii- 4 

to hide what I have said to thee — — ly. 3 

can there be more said? Alcrry Wives, i. I 

said I well (rep. ii. I and ii. 3) — _i. 3 

by gar, 'tis good; veil said — Jj- 3 

nay, said I, will you cast — i". 4 

well said, brazen face (rep. V. 5) — iv. 2 

has thrice her prayers said — v. 5 

what is to be said to him, lady? ..TwelflhNight, i. 5 

and much may be said of it — .;• 5 

though i t was said she much — _ii. 1 

you have said, sir — ij!- I 

what can be said? — !!!■ 4 

I have said too much unto — m. 4 

but to be said, an honest man — iv. 2 

very wittily said to a niece — iv. 2 

well said, master parson — iv. 2 

thou hast said to me a thousand — y. I 

where grace was said Meas. for Meas.i. 2 

longing as I said (rep.) — jj. 1 

ay, well said (»ep.) — .'.'.■2 

sav that I said so; farewell — iii. 2 

I'd fain have said, a maid! — v. 1 

denies all that you have said — v. 1 

remember what you said of the duke? — v. 1 
thou art said to have a stubborn soul — v. 1 

your liighness said even now — y. 1 

I cannot be siiid to be a flattering Much Ada, i. 3 

for it is said, God sends a curst cow. . — ii. I 
this was signior Benedick that said so — ii. 1 
when I said, I would die a bachelor — ii. 3 

well said, i' faith neighbour Verges — iii. 5 

I might have said, no part of it — iv. 1 

this man said, si r, that don .John — iv. 2 

1 said, thou hadst a fine wit (rep.) .. — v. 1 

and said, she careii not — v.] 

for what I have said against it — v. 4 

therefore is love said to be a child .. .WW. iV.'i Dr.]. 1 
then how can it he said, I am alone .. — ii. 2 

as may well be said, becomes — ii* 3 

this is he my master said, despised .._ — ii. 3 

I saiil, the deer was not I.nve's L. Lost, iv. 2 

60 they say, the fool said, and so say I — iv. 3 
'twas treason, he said — 'v. 3 



SAI 



SAID-lord Longaville said, I came. Lotie'n L. Los/, v. 2 
well said, old mocker; I must needs — v. 2 
metbought, you said, you neither./Ver.o/rent're, i. 3 
and well said too; for who shall go.. — ii. 9 
well said; that was laid on with ..As you Like it, i. 2 
but what said Jaqiies? did he not .. — ii. I 
her them again, said with weeiiing .. — ii. 4 

well said! thou look'st cheerly — ii. 8 

you have said; but whether wisely .. .— iii. 2 

what said he? how looked he? — iii. 'i 

may be said, as lovers, they do — iii. 3 

it is said, many a man knows — iii. 3 

he said, mine eyes were black — iii. .^ 

it may be said of him, that Cupid.... — iv. 1 
if I said his beard was not cut well .. — v. 4 

if you said so, then I said so — v. 4 

there's little can be said in't All's Well, i. I 

fortune, she said, was no goddess .... — i. 3 
when I said, a motlier, methought .. — i. 3 

so would I have said (rep.) — ii. 3 

what should be said? if thou canst .. — ii. 3 
you should have said, sir, before aknave — ii. 4 

five or six thousand horse, I said — iv. 3 

methought, you said, you saw one .. — v. 3 
between them, as I said; but more .. — v. 3 

well said, master; muml Taming of Shrew, i. I 

what I have said,- Bianca, get — i. I 

so said, so done, is well — i. 2 

what will be said? what mockery .. — ;ii. 2 

what said the wench, when he — iii. 2 

to satisfy you in what I have said .. — iv. 2 

lies in his throat, if he say I said so — iy. 3 

as I have said, great difference.. .. Winter'sTale, i. I 

have I twice said well? — J- 2 

when you have said, she's goodly.. .. — ii. I 

I have said, she's an adultress (rep.) — ii. I 

when I have said, cry, woe! the queen — iii. 2 

and said, his name was Antigonus . . — iii. 2 

for I have heard it said, tliere is an art — iv. 3 

how often said, my dignity — iv. 3 

so 'tis said, sir; about his son — iv. 3 

has not the divine Apollo said — v. I 

sir, you yourself have said, and writ so — v 1 
have, in vain, said many a prayer .. — v. 3 
and what said he? That love l..Comedy of Err . iy. 2 

may be said to be an eqnivocator Macbeth, ii. 3 

'tis said, they eat each other (rep. iii. 1) — ii. 4 
which, you said, led you to Duncan .. — iii. 1 

I have said. Be comforted — iv. 3 

have I not ever said, bow that Kin^Juhn, i. 1 

if tliou hadstsaid him nay — i. I 

when I have said, make answer .... — ii- I 

let it not be said! (rep.) — v. 1 

on my soul, it never shall be said.... — v. 2 
wlio was he, that said king John.. .. — y.-t 
[Krt(.] what I said my life shall prove. Ric/iarii //. i- I 

what said our cousin, when — i. 4 

all is said; his tongue is now — ii- 1 

thou hast said enough — iii. 2 

all that may be sworn or said — iii.) 

what thou hast said, is false — iv. 1 

as I said, the duke, great Bolingbroke — v. 2 
painted imagery, liad said at once .. — v. 2 

and what said the gallant? — v. 3 

for more is to be said, and to be done. I Henry IV. 'i. 1 

why, that's well said — i. 2 

answered indirectly, as I said — i. 3 

whatever Harry Percy then had said — i. 3 

he said, he would not ransom Mortimer — i. 3 

ay, ay, he said four. These four came — ii. 1 
and said he would swear truth out of — ii. I 

and I said, I heard your grace soy so — iii. 3 

and said, he would cudgel you (rep.) — iii. 3 

you said so. Yea; if he said — iii. 3 

well said, my noble Scot: if speaking — iv. I 
that ever said, I hearkened for your — v. 1 

wellsaid, Hal! toit Hal! — v. 4 

said he, young Harry Percy's spur..2ffe/ir!//F. i. 1 
before you said,— let us make head . . — i. 1 

he said, sir, the water itself was — i. a 

what said master Dumbleton about.. — i. 2 

lied in my throat if I had said so — i. 2 

as I am a gentleman; na3', you said so — ii. 1 

but I never said so — ii. - 

putting off his hat, said, I will — ii. 1 

why, that's well said; a good heart's — ii. 4 
would bless you to hear what he said — ii. 4 

well said, in faith, sir (rep.) . — iii- 2 

wel 1 said, Davy (lep.) — y. 3 

which Salique, as I said, 'twixt Henry V.\. 2 

and said, they were devils incarnate — ii. 3 

a' said once, the devil (rep.) — ii. 3 

ill will never said well — iii. 7 

ay, he said so, to make us fight — iv. i 

they have said their praj'ers — iv. 2 

1 said so, dear Katharine; and I must — v. i 

here, said they, is the terror of 1 Henry VI. i. 4 

and I have heard it said; unbidden — ii. 2 

maintain what I have said is true .. — ii. 1 

lest it be said, speak, sirrah — iii. I 

remember how my father said — iii. 4 

and thus I said, thou maiden yoiitii ; — iv. 7 

'tis said, the stout Parisians — v. a 

that the said Henry shall. .2Heiiri/r7.i. 1 (articles) 

my master said, that he was — i. 3 

I never said nor thonglit any such .. — i. 3 

well said, my masters; and welcome all — 1 4 

that I had said and done! -^ i. 4 

wlio said, Simpcox, come; come, offer — ii- I 
why, that's well said (rev. iii. 2) .. .. — ii. I 

had I but said, I would have kept .. — iii. :i 

true; and yet it is said, labour in — iv. 2 

nay, it shall ne'er be said, while .... — iv. 10 

you said so much before 3 Henry VI. ii. 2 

'tis better said than done, my gracious — iii. 2 

but what said lady Bona (rep.) — iv. 1 

he would have said, the king — v. 1 

said, commend me to my valiant (rep.) — v. 2 

imagine I have said farewell Richard III, i. 2 

look, what I have said I will avouch — i. 3 



SAID, dear brotlitr, live, aiul be llkliard III. ii. I 

vou said, that idle weeils are fast — iii. 1 

'tis said, my lioKe, ill Yorksliire .... — iv. 4 

more tlinn I liave said, loving — v. 3 

what said Nortluimberlaiid — V. 3 

he said the truth: and what said (ifp.l — v. 3 

'twas said, they saw but one Henry I'l 11. i. 1 

it may be said, it reaches Car — i. 1 

as the duke said (rep. i. 2) — i. 1 

well said, lord Sands (ren. i. 4) — i. 3 

a black month, that said other of him — i. 3 

you have said well (rrp.) — iii. 2 

he snid. he did; and with his deed .. — iii. 2 

burnt that tongue, than said so — iii. 2 

so sued her woman; and that her.... — V. 1 
ha! 1 have said. Begone. Whatl .. — v. 1 
nothiiij; what can be said against me — v. 1 
said I tor this, the girl is like to him? — v. I 
who said he came liurt home. Troilus <§■ Crcssida, i. 2 

you have both said well — ii. 2 

I have said my prayers; and devil ., — ii. 3 

'tis said, he holds you well — ii. 3 

■well said, my lordl well, you say so — iii. 1 

when they have said, as false — iii. 2 

1 said, good-morrow, Aj ax — iii. 3 

that I have said to some — iv. S 

well said, adversity I and what need — v. 1 
well said, whetstone. I shall have it — v. 2 

unless she said, my mind is — v. 2 

heavens, have I said, the bounty.. Timon ofAlh. ii. 2 

as you have said (.rep. iii. 2) — ii. 2 

'tis said, he gave unto (rep.) — v. 1 

tliey said, they were an-hungry Coriolanus^ i. 1 

said to be soniething imperfect — ii. 1 

he said, he had wounds, which he could — ii 3 

you sliould have said, that, as his .. — ii. 3 
to have said, as you were fore-advised — ii. 3 

he hath said enough. He has spoken — iii. 1 

let what is meet, be said, it must be.. — iii. 1 

well said, noble woman: before he .. — iii. 2 

there's no more to be said, but he.... — iii. 3 

I have heard it said, the iittest — iv. 3 

may be said to be a ravisher — iv. 5 

when I said banish him, I said — iv. 6 

I ever said, we were i' the wrong .... — iv. 6 

what he hatli said, which was sometime — v. 1 

he said, 'twas folly, for one poor grain — v. 1 

'twas very faintly he said, Kise — v. 1 

I say to you, as I was said to, away I — v. 2 
you have said, you will not grant.... — V. 3 

Ca!sar said to me, darest thou JuUusCcesar, i. 2 

what you have said, I will consider.. — i. 2 

what said he, when he came unto — i. 2 

he said, if he had done, or said, anything — i. 2 

it shall be said, his judgment ruled.. — ii. 1 

but all remember what you have said — ii. I 

I said, an elder soldier, not a better.. — iv. 3 

you said, the enemy would not — v. 1 

I have said (rep. iii. 2) Antony S^ Cleopatra, i. 2 

to say, as 1 said then! but, come .... — i. 5 

well said. And friends with Ciesar .. — ii. 5 

as much as I have said you did — ii. 6 

you have said, sir. "We looked not .. — ii. 6 

and, as I said before, that which is . . — ii. 6 

and 'tis said in Rome, that Pliotinus — iii. 7 

well said; come on (lep. iv. 4) — iv. 2 

'tis said, man ; and farewell — iv. 12 

if you but said so (lep. ) Cyinbeline, ii. 3 

she gave it me, and said, she prized.. — ii. ' 

and, as I said, there is no more — iii, 

she said upon a time, (the bitterness — iii. 

for 'tis said, a woman's fitness — iv. 

he said, he was gentle (rep.) — iv, 

said a century of prayers — iv, 

if Pisanio have, said she, given — v. 

to wait, said I? to wanton with .. Titus Andron. ii. 

to her brother which I said to thee .. — iii 

tell her, this I said: weke, weke! .... — iv. 

O, well said, Lucius! good boy — iv, 

nay, master, said I not as much Pericles, ii 

you said you could not beg — ii. 

well said, well said; the fire and the cloths — iii 
and it is said for certain in our .. — iv. (Gower 

remember what I have said — iv. 

my father, as nurse said, did never fear — iv. 
I said, my lord, if you did know my — v. 
some such thing I said, and said no more — v. 

you said you would believe me — v. 

think'st, and hast most rightly said! Lear, i. 

remember what I have said — i. 

have you nothing said upon his party .. — ii. 

five and twenty, Regan? said you so? .. — ii. 

he said it would be thus — iii. 

thou shouldst have said. Good porter.... — iii. 

to say ay and no to every thing I said! .. — iv. G 

as 'tis said, the bastard son of Oloster — iv. 7 

saying o'er what I have said before .Romeo S/ Jul. i. 2 

but, as I said (rep.) — i. 3 

left crying, and said, ay (7-ep.) — i. 3 

well 8aid,'my hearts (rep. ii. 4) — i. 5 

wlien she said— Tybalt's dead — iii. 2 

and well said; a merry whoreson! .. — iv. 4 

music straight, for so he said he would — iv. 4 
to myself I said, an' if a man did need — v. 1 
what said my man, when my betossed — v. 3 

married .Juliet: said he not BO? — v. 3 

remember what I have said to you Hamlet, I. 3 

hath said to you? So please you — i. 3 

well said, old mole! — i. 5 

marry, well said: very well said — ii. I 

what said he? He took me by the wrist .. — ii. 1 

that I have positively said, 'tis so — ii. 2 

he said 1 was a fishmonger — ii. 2 

when I said, man delights not me? — ii. 2 

I remember, one said, there were no .... — ii. 2 

need not tell us what lord Hamlet said .. — iii. I 

by and by is easily said — iii. 2 

and as you said, and wisely was it said .. — iii. 3 

to breathe what thou hast said to me — iii. 4 

what said she to yon ! Gel more tapers . . Oilulto, i. I 



SAID— and yet said, now I may Othello, i\. 1 

oy, well said, whisper (rep. iv. 1) — ii. 1 

by me that's said or done amiss this night — ii. 3 

what, if I had said, I had seen him — iv. 1 

hath he said any thing? (rep.) — iv. 1 

you have said now (lep.) — iv. 2 

false love; but what said he then? — iv. 3 (song) 
here nor there. 1 have heard it said so .. — iv, 3 

that's well said — v. 1 

she said so; I must needs report the truth — v. 2 
what shall be said to thee? — v. 2 

SAID'ST hut two, even now ]Henrt/ir. ii. 4 

that said'st, I begged the empire ..Vitus Andron. i. 2 

1 think thou said'st thou hadst Pericles, v. I 

said'st,— O it comes o'er my memory ..Olliello, iv. 1 

SAIL— nor tackle, sail, nor mast Tempest,i. 2 

and sail so expeditious — v. 1 

my sails must fill — (epil.) 

sail like my pinnance to Merry IVives. i. 3 

clap on more sails; pursue — ii. 2 

will you hoist sail, sir? Twelfth Night, i. 5 

false Trojan under sail was seen ..Mid. N.'sDr. i. I 
laughed to see the sails conceive; .... — ii. 2 

and sail upon the land — ii. 2 

the ship is under sail Lovers L. Lost, v. 2 

your argosies witli portly sail ,, ..Mer. of l'enice,\. 1 

and ragged sails, lean, rent — ii. G 

than to be under sail — ii. B 

I saw Bassanio under sail (rep.) .... — ii. 8 

been very slow of sail Comedy of Errors, i. 1 

had hoisted sail, and put to sea ..... . — v. 1 

but in a sieve I'll thither sail Macbeth, i. 3 

a whole armado of convicted sail .... — iii. 4 

like a shifted wind unto a sail — iv. 2 

wherewith my life should sail KinxJohn,v. 7 

the wind sit sore upon our sails .... Richard II. ii. 1 
strike sail to spirits of vile sort! .. ..tUennjlF. v. 2 

and show my sail of greatness Henry I', i. 2 

behold the thrcaden sails — iii. (chorus) 

as doth a sail, filled with a fretting. .ZHenry I'l.ii. 6 
now Margaret must strike her sail .. — iii 3 
so low a sail, to strike to thee. Sail how — v. 1 

of sails, and tackling reft Iticltard III. iv. 4 

hoised sail, and made his course again — iv. 4 
dare sail upon her patient breast. Troihis iff Cress, i. 3 
witli full consent belly'd his sails .... — ii. 2 

liglit boats sail swift — ii. 3 

as waves before a vessel under sail . . Coriolanns, \i. 2 
purple the sails, and so perfumed, ^ji/ony,^"'^'^^. ii. 2 
not fear us, Pomjiey, with thy sails .. — ii. 6 
I have sixty sails, Cffisar none better — !!!•'' 

lioists sails, and flies — ^ll* ^ 

forgive my fearful sails! — iii. 9 

built in Cleopatra's sails their nests — iv. 10 

and question 'dst every sail Cymbeline,i. 4 

winds of all the corners kissed your sails — ii. 4 
a portly sail of ships make hitherward . . Pericles, i. 4 
horse, and sail, and high expence — iii. (Gower) 

sail seas in cockles —iv. 4 (Gower) 

toward Ephesus turn our blown sails — v. 2 
in feathered briefness sails are filled— v. 2 (Gower) 
of my course, direct my sail ! .... Ilomeo 4' Juliet, i. 4 
and sails upon the bosom of the air . . — ii. 2 

a sail, a sail, a sail! — ii. 4 

sits in the shoulder of your sail Hamlel, i. 3 

finding ourselves too slow of sail — iv. B (letter) 

in respect of his quick sail — v. 2 

of thirty sail; and now do they K-sX&m. Othello, i, 3 
the heaven and the main, descry a sail .. — ii. I 

a sail, a sail, a sail! (rep.) — ii. I 

and swell his sail with thine own — ii. 1 

but, hark! a sail — ii. 1 

my boat sails freely, both with wind — ii. 3 

very sea-mark of my utmost sail — v. 2 

SAILED into the north of my lady's . . Tvelfih N. iii. 2 
from Epidamnum liad we sailed. Comerfyo/iJrr. i. 1 
how slow his soul sailed on Cymhcline,i. 4 

SAILING— no more sailing by the st&r.Much Ado, iii. 4 

this sailing Paiidar Troihis --S Cressida. i. 1 

sailing in this salt flood Komeo S[ Juliet, iii. 5 

SAIL-BlAKEll in Bergamo Tamingof Slireu',v. 1 

SAILOR— here was left by the sailors Tempest, i. 2 

every day, some sailor's wife — ii. 1 

would cry to a sailor, go hang .... — ii. 2 (song) 
which the sailors heaved over-board .... — ii. 2 

what think you, sailors? Twelfth Nighl_,i. 2 

since before Noah was a sailor — iii. 2 

but boards, sailors but men . . Merchant ofl'enice, i. 3 
I spoke with some of the sailors that — iii. 1 
the sailors sought for safety by our. Comedii of Err. i . 1 

a sailor's wife had ohesnuts Macbeth, i. 3 

I'll drown more sailors than t'\\Q . . . .Zlienry F I. iii. 2 

andhalf our sailors swallowed — v. 4 

like a drunken sailor on a mast . . Richard f U. iii. 4 
as a sailor breaks a biscuit . . Troilns ^ C/essida, ii. I 

with winds that sailors rail at Cr/mheli/te, iv. 2 

cried, good seamen, to the sailors rericles, iv. 1 

sailors, sir; they say, they have letters. . Hamlet, iv. 6 
sailors, my lord, they say: I saw them not — iv. 7 

SAIN— that hath tofore been sain . . Looe's L. Lost, iii. 1 

SAINT-is she not a heavenly saint? Two 6'e».o/rer.ii. 4 

and saint Nicholas be thy — iii. I 

at saint Gregory's well — iv. 2 

yes, by saint Anne Twelfth ISighl, ii. 3 

or the bells of saint Bennet — v. 1 

the votarists of saint Clare., il/easureybr Meaure, i. 5 

as with a saint — i. 5 

great men may jest with saints — ii. 2 

that, to catch a saint, with saints dost — ii. 2 

I will presently to saint Luke's — iii. 1 

by the saint whom I pmfess — iv. 2 

swear down each particular saint .... — v. 1 
away to saint Peter for the heavens.. A/Kc'i.lrfo,ii. I 

saint Valentine is past Mid. iV.'.v Dream, iv. 1 

saint Cupid, then! and, soldiers.. /.ore's L.Losl,iv.3 

saint Denis to saint Cupid! — v. 2 

saint George's half cheek in — v. 2 

if he have the condition of a saint.Jt/er. o/;'e«rce, i. 2 
this shrine, this mortal breathing saint — ii. 7 
she called the saints to surety All's'l'ell, v. 3 



S.4INT— would vex a saint Tamingof f'hrew,iU.2 

the carriage of a holy saint.. Comerfi/ of Errors, iii. 2 

by ail the saints in heaven — iv. 4 

worshipped as a saint tliat takes ....KingJnhn, iii. I 

for a pair of carved saints Itichardll. iii. 3 

able to corrupt a saint \ Henry IV. i. 2 

pray continually to their saints — ii I 

Itt Pueelle shall be France's saint Mlemyl'l. i. 6 

reverenced like a blessed saint — iii. 3 

brazen images of canonized saints.... 2 Heriryf'Z. i. 3 
sweet saint, for charity, be not so . . Richard III. i. 2 
seem most a saint, when most I play — i.3 
tliat dead saint whicli then I weeping — iv. 1 

fiends roar, saints pray — iv, 4 

the prayers of holy saints, and wronged — v. 3 
she must, the saints must have her. Henri/ VIII. v. 4 
thy saints for aye be crowned .. Timon of A'hens. v. 1 
saints have hands that pilgrims'. .iJoiiieo ^ Juliet, i.b 
have not saints lips, and holy — i. 5 

then, dear saint, let lips do — i. 5 

saintsdo not move, though grant .... — i. 5 
my name, dear saint, is hateful to. . . . — ii. 2 
neither, fair saint [Kni.-maid] if either — ii. 2 
a damned saint, an honourable villain! — iii. 2 
saints in vour injuries, devils being .... Othello, ii. 1 

SAINT AXBAN'S, or the red-nose . . 1 Henry IV. iv. 2 
between saint Allian's and LoT\(ion . .i Henry I J', ii. 2 

to ride unto saint Alban's (rep.) IHeniyVl. i. 2 

now in progress towards saint Alban's — i. 4 

a blind man at saint Alban's shrine — ii. I 

my masters of saint Alban's — ii. 1 

the castle in saint Alban's — v. 2 

saint Alban's battle, won bj' famous — v. 3 
marched towards saint Alban's (_rep.).ZHenry VI. ii. I 
you and I met at saint Alban's last .. — ii. 2 
at saint Alban's field this lafly's .... — iii. 2 
Margaret's battle at saint AVoaWs. .Richard III. i. 2 

SAINTED— ensky'd, and sainted.. il/en,«.forii;ens. i. f, 
with sainted vow my faults .. /fW's /»/(, iii. 4 (letlcr) 
her sainted spirit again possess . . IVinler'sTale, v. I 
father, was a most sainted king Macbeth, iv. 3 

SAINT EDMUND'S-BURY; it is ..KingJohn,iv. Z 
upon the altar at saint Edmund's-Bury — v. 4 

SAINT-LIKE— saint-like sorrow. W'in/er's Tale, iv. 3 

thy meekness saint-like Henry VIII. ii. 4 

saint-like, cast her fair eyes to heaven — iv. I 

SAINT-SEDUCING gold Ilomeo 4- Juliet, i. 1 

SAITH— saith, he is wrong'd Mi-rri/llives. i. I 

and as a certain father saitli .... Love's L. Lost, iv. 2 

for society, (saith the text) — iv. 2 

for, saith he, you are in an ill name.2He7iry IV. ii. 4 
death, as the Psalmist saith, is certain — iii. 2 

thus saith the duke, thus hath Richard III. iii. 7 

and, as he saith, so say we all. .TihisAndrunicus, v. I 

SAKE— and, for your sake, am 1 Tempest, iii. 1 

for my sake, read it over TwoGe-n. of Verona, ii. 1 

remembrance for thj' , J idia's sake (>ep.) — ii. 2 

thus, for my duty's sake — iii. 1 

for your friend's sake — iii. 2 

ay Silvia— for your sake — iv. 2 

for thy sweet mistress' sake (re/*.) .... — iv. 4 

for whose dear sake thou didst — v. 4 

the world a stranger for thy sake .... — v. 4 

for your daughter's sake — v. 4 

for yotir sake, mistress Anne Merry Wives, i. I 

pless j'ou from his mercy sake — iii. I 

that lor my sake you liave — iii. 5 

1 have suffered more for their sakes.. — iv. 5 

which, for traffic's sake TwelflhNight, iii. 3 

he will fight with you for his oath sake — iii. 4 
will for his honour's sake, have one — iii. 4 
for his sake, did I expose myself .... — v. 1 
she yet wears for his scike. Measure for Measure, iii. 1 

and are now for the lord's sake — i v. 3 

you must pardon for Mariana's sake — v. 1 
for his sake is he pardoned (rep.) .... — v. 1 
so would not I, for youi' own sake ..MuchAdo, ii. 1 

for his sake! (rep.) — iv. 1 

and will lend nothing for God's sake — v. I 

if you spite it for my sake — v. 2 

for her sake, I do rear up (rep.) ..Mid, N's.Dr. ii. 2 

love, and languish for his sake — ii. 3 

for my sake, my dear, lie further .... — ii. 3 

I will, for thy sweet sake — ii. 3 

tell true, even for my sake — iii. 2 

for my sake but one loving kiss. . . . Love's L. Lost, i i . I 
when, for fame's sake, for praise .... — iv. I 
only for praise' sake, when they .... — iv. I 
never sonnet for her sake compile.... — iv. 3 

for wisdom's sake, a word that — iv. 3 

love's sake, a word that loves all (rep.) — iv. 3 

or women's sake, by whom we — iv. 3 

for your fair sakes have we neglected — v. 2 
of my trust, or for my sake .. Merchant of Venice, i. 1 
it will be for his gentle daughter's sake — ii. 4 
slubber not business for my sake .... — ii. 8 

nothing else, for God's sake — iv. 1 

gloves, I'll wear them for your sake — iv. 1 

for your own sake, to embrace As you Like it, i. 2 

fiity her ibr her good father's sake .. — i- 2 
late him not, for my sake — i.3 

we have staved her for your sake .... — i.3 

wear these for my sake — ii. 4 

and wish for her sake, more than for — ii. 4 

for my sake, he comfortable — ii. 6 

for fashion sake, I thank you too.... — iii. 2 
would, for the king's sake, he were. . . . All's ll'ell, i. I 

I love hiir. for his sake — i. I 

to have friends for my wife's sake. . . . — i.3 

ncN'cr do you wrong for your own sake — ii. 3 
I would it were hell-pains for thy sake — ii. 3 
and, for the contents' sake, are sorry — iii. 2 

to bear it for your worthy sake — iii. 3 

God's sake, a pot of small a\e..Taming of Sh. 2 (ind.) 
not for my sake, but for your master's — i. I 

and he for your good sake — ii. 1 

you are welcome for his sake — ii. 1 

all for my master's sake, Luccntio .. — iii. 2 
this favour will I do you for his sake — iv. a 
ciiibrace her for her beauty's sake.... — iv. 5 



SAKE— sn-eet father, for my sake.. TrTmijig-q/'S/i, v. 1 
for both our sakes, I would that wonl — v. 2 

even for jour son's sake Il'intcr's Tiffin '• - 

the sake of them thou sorrowest .. Come Jy 0/ tVr. i.l 

for God's sake, holil irep- ii. 1) — i. "i 

can you tell for whose sake? — iii. I 

for her wealth's sake, use her with .. — iii. 2 

for God's sake, lie is mad (rep.) — v. 1 

and, for tliat England's sake KingJohn, ii. 1 

for lieaveii's sake, Hubert, let — iy. 1 

for heaven's sake (rep. iii. 1 & iii. 2) ..Richirdll. ii.i 

fur Gild's sake, let nie in — v. 3 

and. for his sake, wear the detested. . 1 UenryW.i. 3 

for snort sake, are content to — (i.l 

for their own credit sake, make .... — ii. 1 
for God's sake, lords imp. iv. 3 and v. i) — ii. 4 

for safetv sake, to fly out of — v. 1 

yet for God's sake, go not (7cp. ii. i).2IIeiiryIF._\\, 3 
Tea, for mv sake, even to the eyes .. — iii. 1 
for mv old dame's sake, stand my friend — iii. 2 

or to dance for yonr sake, Kate Ilenn/I'. v. 2 

for their sake, in your fair minds — V. 2 (chorus) 

for my father's sake, in honour 1 Henry r/. u. h 

and for alliance' sake, declare — ii. 5 

trust thee, but for profit's sake? — iii. 3 

for God's sake, let him have — iv. 7 

for thy sake have I shed many — v. 4 

a little ratsbane for thy sakel — v. 4 

for God's sake, pity my easel i Henry VJ. i. 3 

for liis father's sake, Henry the fifth — iv. 2 

for his sake pity me; lest 3Ue nyVI. i. 3 

my office, for my father's sake — i. 4 

for Goil's sake, lords (rep. V. .5) — ii. 2 

the willow garland for his sake {rep. iv. D— iii. 3 

for God's sake, hence (fp- i. 3) RicltmdlU. i. 2 

it were mortal poison, for thy sake I . . — i. 2 

against my soul, for Edward's sake.. — i. 4 

mIiosc sake did I that indeed? (rep.) — i. 4 
for God's sake, let not us two stay .. — ii. 2 

)ie for his fatlier's sake so loves — iii. 1 

BV, and for her sake, madest quick . . — iv. 4 
and conquer, for fair England's sake! — v. 3 
for goodness' sake {rep. iii. 1) ..Henry rill, (prol.) 

for their poor mistress' sake — iii. 1 

for her suke that I have been — iii. 1 

take iieed, for heaven's sake, take — iii. I 

and do justice for truth's sake — iii. 2 

to love her for her mother's sake .... — iv. 2 
health and yonr digestion sake .Trniliis SfCress. ii. 3 

for request's sake only, he makes — ii. 3 

why then, for Venus' sake, give — iv. .5 

but for my mind's sake; I had. . Timon ofAtk. iii. 3 

in part for his sake moved — v. 3 

for mv wounds' sake, to give Cnrint,mus, ii. 2 

fourth would return for conscience sake — ii. 3 

I writ it for thy sake, and would — v. 2 

for my sake, slay lierc with Julius Ccemr. iii. 2 

for Brntns' sake (/v^p.) — iii. 2 

great .Julius bleed for justice' sakel .. — iv. 3 
It' for the sake of merit thou wilt.//ii/ojit/ f,-ClPO. ii. 7 

for mv sake, wear tliis Cymbeline, i. 2 

take i>ieCL-s for the figure's sake — v. 4 

for thy sake, and thy brother's TitusAndron. i. 2 

even tW his sake am I pitiless — ii. 3 

and, for our fatlier's sake, and mother's — iii, 1 

dearly for thy mother's sake — v. 1 

for his sake, t wish the having of it ....Pericles, ii. 1 
for the sake of it, be manly, and take.. — iii. 1 

if, for mv sake, thou wilt o'ertake Lear, iv. 1 

tlie one tlie other poisoned for my sake . . — v. 3 
though grant for prayer's sake . . Rnmeo /^Juliet, i. 5 
for Juliet's sake, tor her sake, rise .. — iii. 3 
for whose dear sake thou wast but lately — iii. 3 

for your sake, jewel,'! am glad Oihello. i. 3 

the.v were clyster-pipes for your sakel .. — ii, 1 
iCn't.Knl.'l lie desires you, for love's sake — Iii. 1 
here, here: for heaven's sake, help rae .. — v. 1 

S ALA— Sahi and of Elbe {rep.) Hamij V. i. 2 

beyond the river Sala, in the year — i. 2 

S.ALAMANDER of yours with fire. . 1 Henr\,lV. iii. 3 

S \1.,ARY— this is hire and salary Hamlet, i ii. 3 

SALE— not uttered by ha^esale of.. iow'sL. Lost, ii. 1 
lu things of sale a seller's praise .... — iv. 3 

are now on sale, and at our Asi/nuLilieil. ii. 4 

who. in that sale, sells pardon King John, iii. 1 

thy sale of offices, and towns 2Henrj/ yi. i, 3 

the other is not a thing for sale Cymbeline, i. 5 

proclaims you to be a creature of sale .Pericles, iv. 6 

wliose sale" is present death Rnmeo Sr Julie/, v. 1 

I saw him enter such a house of sale . , Hamlet, ii. 1 
SAT.ERIO-LKn'.-SOLANIO: 
Venetian friend, Salerio (rep.)..Mer. of Venice, iii. 2 
but meeting with Salerio by the way — iii. 2 

your hand, Salerio; what's the — iii, 2 

but is it true, Salerio? have all — iii. 2 

SALE-WORK-nature's sale-work. /isi/ou LrteiY,iii.5 
.SAL[C.\M-in terram Salicam mnlieres. He/iryT. i. 2 
SALIQUE— t'ne law Salique (;ep.; .... — i. 2 

in Salique land (rep.) — i. 2 

SALlSBURY-stay yet, lord Salisbury Km^'./oAn, iv. 2 

lord Bigot, and lord Salisbury — iv, 2 

stand liack, lord Salisbur.v, stand back — iv. 3 

better gall the devil, Salisbury — iv. 3 

cries out upon tlie name of Salisbury — v. 2 

thy brow, renowned Salisbury — v. 2 

mv lord of Salisbury, we have staid. /?/e/i.'n(/ //. ii. 4 
and S-ilislmry is gone to meet the king — iii. 3 
lord Sal ishnrv, sir Stephen Scroop .. — iii. 3 
the heads of Salisbury, Spencer, Blunt — v. 6 
farewell, good Salisbury; and 2ood ..Henrt/J'. iv. 3 
and Talbnt, Salisbury and Gloiter .. — iv. 3 
the earl of Salisbury craveth supply. 1 Henry VI. i. I 
none, but mad-brained Salisbury .. — i. 2 

Salisbury is a desperate homicide .. — i. 2 

speak, Salisbury; at least if thou eanst — i. 4 

in thirteen battles Salisbury o'ercame — i. 4 

yet live^t thou, Salisbury? — i. 4 

if Sali6bur.y wants mercy at thy hands! — i. 4 

Salisbury ,' cheer th.y spirit with this — i. 4 

hear, how dying Salisbury doth groan! — i. 4 



SALTSBURY— I'll bo a Salisbury ....1 Hem J//'/, i. 4 
convey me Salisbury into his tent .. — i. 4 

help Salisbury to make his testament — i. 5 

all ctmsented unto Salisbury's death — i. 5 

would I were to die with Salisburj'! — i. 5 

now Salisbury! for thee, and for ... . — ii. 1 
the body of old Salisbury; and here — ii. 2 

Salisbury, and (rep. i. 3 audi. 4) 2HenryVI. i. 1 

brave York, Salisbury, and victorious — i. 1 

Salisbury and Warwick {rep. v. 1) .. — ii. 2 
tlien, father Salisbur.v, kneel we both — ii. 2 
stay, Salisbury, with the rude multitude — iii. 2 
from the king, my lord of Salisbury — iii. 2 
but all the honour Salisbury hath won — iii. 2 
go, Salisbury, and tell them all from me — iii. 2 
old Salisbury, shame to tliy silver hair — v. 1 
of Salisbury, who can report of him — v. 3 

won one foot, if Salisbury be lost. ... — v. 3 

post to Salisbury (rep.) Richard III. iv. 4 

Buokingham be brought to Salisbury — iv. 4 
who, being at Salisbury, made suit. He?»r// /'///. i, 2 
SALLAD— pick a thousand sallads . . All's ll'ell, i v. 5 
the sweet-marjoram of the sallad. . . . — iv. 5 
or pick a sallad anotlier while ....iHenryVI. iv. 10 
sallad was born to do me good (rep.) — iv. 10 

and now the word sallad must serve me — iv. 10 
my sallad days; when I was .... Antony * Cleo. i. 5 

eats cow-dung for sallads Lear, iii. ."j 

there were no sallads in the lines Hamlet, ii. 2 

SALljAD-HEBB-not the sallad-herbs.4H'sire«, iv. 5 

SALLIES— of sallies, and retires ....\HenrylV.\\.3 

SALLOW cheeks for Rosaline! ..Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 3 

SALLY— when you sally upon him . . AlCs fVell, iv. 1 

might with a sally of the very town.l Henry VI. iv. 4 

no notes of sally, for the heavens. Troilns^ Cress, v. 3 

S.\LIMON— there is salmons in both . . Henry V. iv. 7 

the cod's head for the salmon's tail ....Othello, ii. 1 

SALT— with drops full salt Tempest, i. 2 

to tread the ooze of the salt deep — i. 2 

cover of the salt, hides the salt. Two Gen.ofVer. iii. 1 

it is more than tlie salt — iii. 1 

the salt fish is an old coat Merry Wives, i. 1 

we have some salt of our j'outh — ii. 3 

and salt waves fresh in love!.. .. Twelfth Night, iii. 4 
whose salt imagination yet . ...Meas.for Meas. v. 1 
and salt too little, which may season. iifwcA/ldo, iv. 1 

not with salt tears: if so Mid. N.'s Dream, ii. 3 

now, by the salt wave of the Love's L. Lost, v. 1 

and find your salt tears' head All's IVell, i. 3 

by the salt rlieum that ran . , Comedy of Errors, iii. 2 

of the ravined salt sea shark Macbeth, iv. 1 

the salt in them is hot King John, v. 7 

[Coi.Knf.] streams meet in one salt sea.Henj-yF. i. 2 
prings me pread and salt yesterday .. — v. 1 
be made a nourish of salt tears .. ....1 Henry VI. i. I 

with tears as salt as sea {rep.") 2 Henry VI. iii. 2 

from mine have drawn salt tears ..Richard III. i. 2 
the spice and salt that SQu^on.Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 2 
the pride and salt scorn of his eyes .. — i. 3 

with the salt of broken tears — iv. 4 

make use of thy salt hovu'S Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

resolves the moon into salt tears .... — iv. 3 
the beached verge of the salt flood . . — v. 2 
given up, for certain drops of salt , . Coriolanus, v. .5 
charms of love, salt Cleopatra ..Antony '^ Cleo. ii. I 
would make a man, a man of salt, to use. /-fir, iv. 6 

sailing in this salt flood Romeo ^Juliet, iii. 5 

yet the salt of most unrigh teou s tears . . Hamlet, i . 2 

gone round ]>feptuue's salt wash — iii. 2 

tears, seven time salt, burn out — iv, 5 

his salt and most hidden loose affection ?. 0(^cZlo, ii. 1 

as salt as wolves in pride — iii. 3 

I have a salt and sullen rheum offtjnds me — iii. 4 

her salt tears fell from her — iv. 3 (song) 

SALT-BUTTE R rogue ! Merry "ires, ii. 2 

SAIi'TER- thy tears are Salter than. . Cormlanns, iv. 1 

SALT-FISIT on his hook AnlonytfCleopatra, ii. 5 

S ALT-GRE EN streams Mid. X.'s Dream, iii. 2 

SALTIER-call themselves saltiers. Winter' sTale, iv. 3 

SALTNESS— of saltness of time 2llenry IV. i. 2 

SALT-PETRE should be digged .... \ Henry IV. i. 3 

SALT-WATER— with salt-water Tempest, ii. 1 

already sir with salt-water Twelfth Xight, ii. 1 

notable pirate! thou salt-water thief! — v. 1 
and yet salt-water blinds them not. Richard II. iv. 1 
find us in our salt-water girdle ....Cymbeline, iii. 1 
how much salt-water thrown away. Romeo ,S-.'"'.ii. 3 
SALUTATIONandgreetingtoyou..4s!/0HZ.i7iei<, v. 4 
most military sir, salutation ....Lnve'sL.Losl,v. 1 
speak my salutation in their minds . . Macbeth, v. 7 
loud shouts and salutations from ..IHenrylV. iii. 2 

hath twice done salutation Ricfiard III. v. 3 

do you salutation from his n\ViSi&r.J\diusC(Psar, iv. 2 

from Goneril his mistress, salutations.... Lear, ii. 4 

there's a French salutation .... Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 4 

SALUTE— to salute the emperor.ruioGeK of Ver. i. 3 

you salute not at the court AsynuLilteil, iii. 2 

but doth salute me as if I veve.. Comedy of Err. iv. 3 

salute thee for her king King John, ii. 1 

fair angels would salute my palm.... — ii. 2 
dear earth. I do salute thee with . . Richard II. iii. 2 

we do salute you {rep.) Henry V. V. 2 

the bolder to salute my king iHenry VI. i. I 

that shall salute our rightful sovereign — ii. 2 
I salute you with tliis royivl title.. /iit/iard ///. iii. 7 
and I'll salute your grace of York .. — iv. 1 

saw them salute on horseback Henry VIII. i. 1 

welcome from his grace salutes you all — i. 4 

if this salute my blood a jot — ii. 3 

salutes each other with each . . Trnilus <§- Cress, iii. 3 
scarce have leisure to salute you .... — iv. 2 
general doth salute you with a kiss., — iv. 5 
of his fortunes he salutes ti\ee..Aniony ^Clen. iii. 10 
the golden sun salutes the morn., TitusAndron. ii. 1 

let us salute him, or know what Pericles, ii. 4 

SALUTED— sisters saluted me. .Macbeth, i. 5 (letter) 

SALUTETH-feminine saluteth us...LoDe'.'iL.L. iv. 2 

tongue so sweet saluteth mel .... Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 3 

SALVATION body and soul Much Ado, iii. 3 

none of us should see salvation. . Mer. of Venice, iv. 1 



SALVATION— of his salvation All's Well, iv. 3 

take italready upon their salvation. .IHenry//'. ii. 4 

act that has no relish of salvation \n'l.. Hamlet, iii. 3 

that wilfully seeks her own salvation? .. — v. 1 

SALVE — no salve in the mail {rep.).. Love's L.L. iii. 1 

take salve for I'envoy (rep.) — iii. 1 

some salve for perjury iv. 3 

may salve the long-grown wounds., 1 Henry IV. iii. 2 

to provide a salve for any sore ZllenryVI. iv. 6 

.yon may salve so, not what is Coriolanus, iii, 2 

SALVED it with a longer Much Ado, i. 1 

SAMINGO. Is't not so? iHenry IV. v. 3 (song) 

S AiMPIIlRE— one that gathers samphire. . Lear, iv. 6 

SAM PLE to the youngest Cijmbetine, i. I 

SAMPLER, sitting on one cushion. .^l/i'd.A'.'jDr. iii. 2 

tedious sampler sewed her mind ..TitusAndron. ii. 5 

SAMPSON Stockfish, a fruiterer ....IHenry IV. iii. 2 

SAMSON, master; he was a man.... LoDe'sL.i,os(, i. 2 

Samson I strong-jointed Samson! — i. 2 

who was Samson s love, m.y dear Moth? — i. 2 
methinks, Samson had small reason — i. 2 

yet Samson was so tempted — i. 2 

for none but Sarasonsand (Joliassea . . 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

I am not Samson, nor sir Guv ....Henry VI II. v. 3 

SANCTA majestasi who would not ..2//ei'iri/r/. v. 1 

SANCTIFIED and holy triitora ..Asyou Li'Ue it, ii. 3 

out of all sanctified limit All's Well, i. 1 

be sanctified by the luckiest stars in.. — i. 3 
no swords but what are sanctified ..illennilV. iv. 4 

like sanctified and pious bonds Hamlel, i. 3 

so help me every spirit sanctified Othello, iii. 4 

SANCTIFIES himself with's hand.. Coriolnrms. iv. h 

SANCTIFY— fancy must sanctify his . . All's Well, i . 1 

with zealous fervour sanctify..,. — iii. 4 (letter) 

of balm, to sanctify thy head iHenry I v. iv. 4 

and sanctify the numbers ..Troilus&Crrssida, iii. 2 
SANCTIMONIOUS ceremonies may ..Tempest, iv. I 

like the sanctimonious pirate lileas. lor Mens. i. 2 

SANCTIMONY, she accomplished .... All's Well, iv. 3 
be sanctimony, if sanctimony 'be.Troil us ^ Cress, v. 2 

if sanctimony and a frail vow Othello, i. 3 

SANCTITIES of heaven 2Her!r7;/r. jv. I 

SANCTITY, she did approach ..wivter'sTale, iii. 3 
is he, in the name of sanctity? .. Tan'tf/k Night, iii. 4 
relieved him with such sanctity of love — iii. 4 
as full of sanctity as the touch of .As youLikp it, iii. 4 
such sanctity liath heaven given .... Macbeth, i v. 3 
my sanctity will to my sense bend no.. Pericles, v. 3 
\_Knt ] sanctity and health of the whole.. Ha;n(e^ i. 3 
SANCTUARlZE-murdersanctuarize.... — iv. 7 

SANCTUARY, being naked Coriolanus, i. 10 

we desire to raze the sanctuary.. ;l/eas./o>- Mens. ii. 2 
as quiet in hell, as in a sanctuary .... Much Ado, ii. 1 
lie took this place for sanctuary. . Comedy of Err. v. \ 
hence forthwith unto the sanctuary.3 Henry/'/, iv. 4 

my boy, we will to sanctuary Richard III. ii. 4 

I'll conduct you to the sanctuar.y .... — ii. 4 
brother York, have taken sanctuary — iii. 1 
the holy privilege of blessed sanctuary! — iii. 1 
you break not sanctuary in seizing him — iii. 1 
sanctuary men; but sanctuary children — iii. 1 
go thou to sanctuary, and good tlinnghts — iv. 1 
SAND— unto these yellow sands .. Tempest, i. 2 (song) 
that on tlie sands with printless foot . . — v. 1 
if all their sand were pearl ....TwoGen.ofVer. ii. 4 

to dance on sands — iii. 2 

as the sea of sands — iv. 3 

with rae on Neptune's yellow sands. Jl/u(. A'. 's Dr. ii. 2 
docked in sand, vailing her .... Merch. of Venice, i. 1 

are all as false as stairs of sand — iii. 2 

three nights a"o on Goodwin sands . . King John, v. 3 

and sunk on Goodwin sands — v. 5 

is numbering sands, or drinking .. ..Richard II ii. 2 

turn the sands into eloquent Henry V. iii. 7 

even as men wrecked upon a sand.... — iv. 1 
rocks cowered in the sinking sands .2Henr!//'/. iii. 2 

make their ransom on the sand — iv. 1 

the sands are numbered ZHenryVI. i. 4 

tread on the sand — v. 4 

ruthless waves, with sands, and rocks — v. 4 
my lord Sands, you are one {rep.) . . Henry VIII. i. 4 

with sands that will not bear C;/m(ieW?ie, iii. 1 

nimbler than the sands that run .... — iii. 2 
one sand another not more resembles — v. 5 
blow these sands, like Sibyl's leaves.. TOim.Jik/. iv, 1 
now our sands are almost run . Pericles, v. 2 (Gower) 

here in the sands, thee I'll rake up Lear, iv. 6 

guttered rocks, and congregated sands.. 0(/ie«o, ii. 1 

SANDAL— you are come to Sandal.. ..3//enry/'/. i. 2 

and staff, and his sandal shoon.. Hamlel, iv. h (song) 

SAND-BLIND-raore than sand-blind. -l/er.o/Fen. ii. 2 

alack, sir, I am sand-blind — ii. 2 

SANDED— so flowed, so sanded. il/i'd.Af.'sDream. iv. 1 
SANDY-notsee the sandy hour-glass. iV/er.o/ Ten. i. 1 

the process of his sand.y hour 1 Henry VI. iv. 2 

shall he be upon the sandy plains (rep.) 2 Henry VI. i.4 
wind, or sandy earth j as fox to..7'ro/(us^-Cre««. iii. 2 

this sandy plot is plain TitusAudroniciis. iv. 1 

S.\NDY-BOTTOMED Severn I Henry IV. iii. I 

SANGUINE— this 6ang:uine coward..! Henri/;/', ii. 4 
tire sanguine colour of the leaves ..I Henry VI. iv. 1 

a mole, a sanguine star; it was Cymbeline, v. 5 

ye sanguine, shallow-hearted boys!..r(/«s.-lnrf. iv. 2 

SANGUIS— in sanguis,- blood Love'sL.Lost.iv. 2 

SANITY— reason and sanity could not. . Hamlet, ii. 2 

SANS— a confidence sans bound Tempest, i. 2 

I do, sans question Love'sL. Lost, v. \ 

sans crack or flaw. Sans sans, T pray — y. 2 
and I did laugh, sans intermission. As youLike it, ii. 7 
sans teeth, sans eyes, sans taste, sans — ii. 7 
sans fable, she herself reviled . . Comedy of Err. iv. 4 

come, come; sans compliment King John, y. 6 

sans clieck, to good and bad.. Troilus SfCressida,^ i. 3 

and mince it sans remorse Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

smelling sans all, or but a sickly part. . llandct. iii. 4 
lame of sense, sans witchcraft could not. .oihello, i. 3 
SANTRAILLES-de Santrailles ....\ Henry VI. i. 4 
SAP— there is some sap in this .. Wintrr'sTale, iv. 3 
infect thy sap, and live on thy ..Comedy of Err. ii. 2 
over proud with sap and blood . . , . Richard II. iii. 4 



SAP— leaves, llmt want their sap? ..liichaid ill. ii. 2 

did ilruiii the imrple sap from — iv. 4 

it with the sap of reason you would. Henry fill. i. 1 

the air will drink tl\e sap — i. 2 

by the conflux of meeting sap. Troilui ffCressida, i. 3 

tliere'ssap in't yet AiUuiiy ij Cleo. in. II 

disbranch from lier material sap Lear, iv. 2 

SAl'-CONSUMING winter'sdrizzled.Com.o/'iijr. v. 1 

SAPIKNT, sir, sit here: now you Le^r, iii. 6 

S.\1^1T, qui pauca loquitur Lore'sL.Lost, iv. 2 

SAl'LESs-droops his sapless branches. 1 Henr!/ Fl.ii. 5 

when sapless age, and weak unable.. — iv. 5 

SArJ/lIS'Li -like a blasted sapling. . Ilichard lit. iii. 4 

peace, tender sapling ; tbou art made. TitiisAiid, iii. 2 

come, you are a young foolisli sapling. /Vi/c(«, iv. 3 

SAPPUIRK— like sapphire, pearl ...MKrryn'wes,\. b 

earbmicles, sapphires, decliuing.Comw'!/ "/ li'r. iii. 2 

S.iKACliN— Turks, and Saracens ..Richard II. iv. 1 

SAUCENET— snch sarcenet surety. . I Henry 1 1', iii. 1 

green sarcenet flap for a sore eye.. J'ro/(«s /^ Cress, v, 1 

S -VKDIANS— liere of the Sardiaus.../«(/iMCa?sar, iv. 3 

SAKDINIA— of Sicily, Sardinia. ./IJi/o'ii/cj-C/eij. ii. li 

S.VKDIS— in Sardis to be quartered../u/msCt»sar, lv.2 

comingfromSardis, on our former .. — V. 1 

at Sardis, once; and, this last night.. — v. 5 

S VRUM— if 1 had you upon Sarum plain.. Lcai-, ii. 2 

SAT— I have sat in the stocks . . Tno Gen. nf I'er. iv. 4 

when as I sat in Paby Ion . . AieiT)/ n'ives, iii. 1 (.song) 

she sat like patience on TwelfiliNiglu, ii. 4 

I have sat here all day Meas.forMeas. iv. 1 

the shape of Corin sat all day. . Mid.N.'i Dream, ii. 2 

and sat with me on Neptune's — ii. 2 

since once I sat upon a promontory. . — ii. 2 
and you sat smiling at his cruel prey — ii. 3 

patience have I sat, to see Love's L. Lost., iv. 3 

if thou hast not sat as I do now . . As you Like it, ii. 4 
sat at any good man's feast (rf/).) .. — ji- 7 

as if she sat in his heart All's Well, i v. 2 

he lias sat in the stocks all night — iv. 3 

how troublesome it sat upon my . .2 Henry I f. iv. 4 

as if allegiance in their bosoms sat Henri/ /'. ii. 2 

so long, satin tlie council-house 1 Henry y I. i. \ 

methought 1 sat in seat of — i. 2 

my grandsire, and my father, sat? ..3 Henry 1 1, i. 1 
while her grace sat down to rest ..Henry I'd II. iy. 1 

within thine eyes sat twenty Conolanm, iii. 3 

1 have sat too long — v. 3 

there have sat the live-long day JuUusCrpsar.i. 1 

the barge she sat in, like Antony SfCleo. ii. 2 

at tlie feet, sat CiEsarion, whom — in. 6 

PiUicock sat on Pillicoek's hill Lear. in. 4 

sat me down; devised a new commission. ilum/e^, v. 2 

the poor soul sat sighing by otJtello, iv. :i (song) 

SATAN— as slanderous as Satan? . . Merry IVtves, v. 5 
play at cherry-pit with Satan ..TwelfiliAiglU, iii, 4 

tie, thou dislionest Satan 1 — iv. 2 

and talked of Satan, and of limbo Alls IVell, v. 3 

Satan, avoid! 1 charge thee (rep.) -Com. of Err. iv. 3 
I charge thee Satan, lioused withiu.. — iv. 4 

that old white-bearded Satan I Henry I y. ii. 4 

SATCHEL— with his satchel, and.. Js j/oiiLi7fe/(, ii.7 

SATE itself in a celestial bed Hamlet, i. 5 

SATED— when slie is sated with his body.O(/iW(o, i. 3 

S.-VTl ATE yet unsatisfied desire (:y:nbeliiu; i. 7 

SATIETY seeks to quench Tamini; ofSli. i. 1 

a mere satiety of commendations .. TimonofAth. i. 1 

and to give satiety a fresh appetite .... UiliMo, ii. 1 

SATIN— of peach-coloured sa.t,ia..Meas. for Meas. iv. A 

Duinbleton about tlie satin for ray ..iHenryl I', i. 2 

two and twenty yards of satin — ,i. 2 

bring me the satin coftijr Pericles, lu. I 

S.vnKE— think I care foe a satire Much.ido, v. 4 

that is some satire, keen, and critical Mid.N.'sDr. v. I 

a satire against the softness of Timon ofAih. v. 1 

S ATiRICAE rogue says here Hamlet, ii. 2 

S.VTIS quod suthcit Love's L. Lost, v. 1 

SATISI ACTION at her hands? Merry Wives, li. 2 

tliat satisfaction can be none but. TwelflliNiglit, iii. 4 
we may soon our satisfaction have. Meas.forMeas. i. 1 

the satisfaction I would require — iii. 1 

give him promise of satisfaction .... — iii. 1 
for my better satisfaction — iv. 2 (note) | 



SATISFIED-be better satisfied iHenryiy.i.3 

till satisfied that fair queen Isabel . ...Henry F. i. 2 

my soul shall then be satisfied \HenryVI. ii, 5 

yet, so my fancy may be satisfied .... — v. 3 
and old York, and yet not satisfied.. SHcnnyr/. ii.2 

and ne'er be satisfied? (rep.) — ii. 5 

be satisfied, dear God, with our.. ..liichard III. iii. 3 

I am satisfied; give me a bowl of — v, 3 

not there at once and fully satisfied. //enryr///. ii. 4 

to say how far you satisfied me — ii. 4 

have satisfied the king for his divorce — iii. 2 
second voice we'll not he satisfied. Troilus ff Cress, ii. 3 
without cause will he be satisfied .Juims Ccesar, iii. 1 
he shall be satisfied; and, by my honour — iii. I 
the son of Ca3sar you sliould be satisfied — iii. 1 
we w'ill be satisfied; let us be satisfied — iii. 2 
if lie be at hand, I sliall be satisfied .. — iv. 2 
I am satisfied. Coesar sits Aovm.AnlonyS- Clen. iii. 1 1 

if further yet you will be satisfied Pericles, i. 3 

one rhyme, ami I am satisfied. . . . Romeo 4' Juliet, ii. 1 
let me be satisfied, is't good or bud?.. — ii. 3 
as dearly as mine own,— be satisfied — iii. 1 
wilt be satisfied. Indeed, I never (lep.) — iii. 5 
I am satisfied in nature, whose motive. . Hamlet, v. 2 
how may the duke be therewith satisfied.. Olhclln.i. 2 

would, I were satisfied! (rep.) — iii. 3 

reason for this. And you shall be satisfied — iv. 2 

inthe interim, came in, and satisfied him — v. 2 

SATISFIES— most she satisfies ..Antony ^Cleo. ii. 2 

SATISFY me once more Merry H'ivcs, iv. 2 

let us satisfy our eyes TwelfihMghl, iii. 3 

do not satisfy your resolution , . Meas.for Meas. iii. 1 

and satisfy the deputy — iv. 3 

and yet, to satisfy this good old man . Much Ado,y. 1 

satisfy me so Love' sL. Lost, ii. i 

I will satisfy you, if ever I As you Litte it, v. 2 

let it satisfy you, you are too old ....All's IVell, ii. 3 
sir, to satisfy you in what I ..Taming of Shrew, iv. 2 

to satisfy your highness IV inter' sTale, i. 2 

satisfy the entreaties of your (rep.) .. — i. 2 
shall satisfy your tiuther. Happy be you I — iv. 3 

to satisfy my remembrance Macbeth, v. 1 

yet in some measure satisfy her so .. KingJuhn, ii. 2 

and satisfy the poor woman ^Henryll'.iX. I 

partly, to satisfy my opinion Henry I', iii. 2 

to satisfy myself, in craving 2Henryl'I. ii. 2 

young Rutland could not satisfy ..SHenry I'l.ii. 6 
what your pleasure is, shall satisfy me — iii. 2 
tliat is enough to satisfy the SQimtQ.JuliusCfSsar, ii. 2 
my letters before did satisfy you.. /Iri/oni/^-CTeo. ii. 2 

will this description satisfy him? — .?!• 7 

satisfy me home, what is become of .Cymbeline, iii. 5 

to satisfy, if of ray freedom 'tis — y. 4 

let them satisfy their lust on thee. TiiusAndron. ii. 3 

kill me? To satisfy my lady Pericles, iv. 1 

straight satisfy yourself: if she be Othello, i. 1 

SATISFYING reasons — v. 1 

if you seek for further satisfying .... Cymbeline, ii. i 
nothing becoming yon, nor satisfying us — iv. 4 

SATURDAY we will return to Love'sL.Lost,iv. 1 

Fridays, and Saturdays, and all...4si/o!(L(7(c it, iv. 1 

SATURN— born under Saturn Much Ado, i. 3 

Saturn and Venus this year in., i Henry ll'.ii. 4 

wel 1 have warmed old Saturn Cymbeline, ii. 5 

Saturn is dominator over mine .. TiiusAndron. ii. 3 
toSaturn, Caius, not to Saturnine.... — iv. 3 
SAT URNINE-patience, prince Saturnine — i. 2 
proud Saturnine, interrupter of the good — i. 2 

emperor's eldest son, lord Saturnine — i. 2 

long live our emperor Saturnine! .... — i. 2 

in sightof Rome, to Saturnine — i. 2 

to make a stale of, hut Saturnine?.. .. — i. 2 

if Saturnine advance the queen of Goths — i. 2 

sent by the heavens for prince Saturnine — i. 2 



receive him tlien to favour. Saturnine 
I have loved andlionoured Saturnine! 
that will charm Rome's Saturnine ., 

revenged on Rome and Saturnine 

or slunk not Saturnine, as Tarquin erst 
vengeance on the traitor Saturnine .. 
to Saturn, Caius, not to Saturnine...- 
my gracious lord, my lovely Saturnine 



1. . 



andnosatisfaction, no revenge.. A/er.o/rentcf, iii. 1 SATURNINUS be Rome's emperor (rep.) 



she ceased, in heavy satisfaction All's Well, v. 

this satisfaction the by-gone day.. Winter' sTide, i. 2 
present satisfaction, or III atlach.C'omerfy of Err.iv.i 
to give me ample satisfaction for .... — v. 1 

we shall make full satisfaction — v. 1 

make any possible satisfaction iHenryW. (epil.) 

king Lewis his satisfaction, all appear ./Jenrj/Z'.i. 2 
for the satisfaction, look you, of my mind — iii. 2 
but a weak and worthless satisfaction — iii. 6 
how canst tliou make me satisfaction? — iv. 8 

no other satisfaction do I crave \HenryVl. ii. 3 

Edward, what satisfaction canst ■ilicnry in. v. 5 

worthy satisfaction I Troilus Sr Cressida, li. 3 

fiu- your private satisfaction Julius Ccesar, ii. 2 

dogi I give him satisfaction? Cym6e/ine, ii. 1 

still pretending the satisfaction of her — v. 5 
let him malie treble satisfaction., '/'((us ^ndron. v. 1 
auricular assurance have your satisfaction. i-ear, i. 2 
what satisfaction canst thou have. Itomeo Sr Juliet, ii. 2 
tliat we call ours, to you in satisfaction. Harad'f, iv. 5 
ill my distinct and proper satisfaction . .Othello, i. 3 

but for a satisfaction of my thought — iii. 3 

Where's satisfaction? it is impossible you — iii. 3 
give you satisfaction, you may have it .. — ill- 3 
assure yourself, I will seek satisfaction .. — iv. 2 

SATISFIED; your brother dies .. Meas.for Meas. ii. 2 
by repentance is not satisfied. 7'«-oO>».n/re)oiia, v. 4 

1 cannot be thus satisfied Merry Wives, ii. 1 

go uell tatistied to France again. .Loue'jL.Lusi, ii. I 

11 ell satisfied; and 1 irep.) Merch.ofl'eHice,iv. 1 

vou are not satisfied of these events . . — v. 1 

if ever I satisfied man As you Like it, v. 2 

as j'ou shall well be satisfied.. 7'a?nnig'(i/'S/irctt, iii. 2 
though I am satisfied, and need .. W.nter'sTate, ii. I 

1 will be satisfied Macbeth, iv. 1 

be satisfied. They shall be satisfied. /(/WiarJ II. iv. 1 
I will be satisfied, let me see the writing — v. 1 



ay, and as good as Saturninus may .. — ii. I 
make proud Saturninus and his empress — iii. I 
justice lives in Saturninus' health .. — iv. 4 

SATYR— to this, Hyperion to a satyr Hamlet, i. 2 

SAUCE— I'll sauce them (rep.) Merry Wives, iv. 3 

no sauce that can be devised to it.... iViif/i.4rfo, iv. 1 
is to have honey a sauce to sugar. .45 you Likeit, iii. 3 

I'll sauce her with bitter words — iii. 5 

the sauce to meat is ceremony Macbeth, iii. 4 

would be as a sauce to make me — iv. 3 

a capon 2}r. 2 rf. Sauce, -Irf \ Henry IV. ii. 4 

come, there is sauce for it Henry I', v. 1 

more sauce to your leek? — _v. 1 

sauce his palate witli thy Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

to sauce thy dishes — iv. 3 

rudeness is asauce to his good v;'\i. .JuliusCtPsar, i. 2 
sharpen with cloyless savice his ..AntonyfyCleo. ii. 1 
sweeting; it is a most sharp sauce. /(mneo ^-Ju//eMi. 4 

SAUCED— his meat was sauced. Cni/ie((>/ ofliiron,, v. 1 
his lolly sauced with discretion.. Troi^i*-* ^Cress. i. 2 
dieted in praises sauoed with lies .... Coriolnuus^ i. 9 
and sauced our broths, as .Tiino iwid.. Cymbeline, iv. 2 

SAUCERS-let her out in saucers .. Love'sL.Lost, iv. 3 

SAUCILY into the world Lear.i. 1 

displayed so saucily against your .... — ii. 4 

S AUCINESS, and boyish troops King John, y. 2 

he thinks is a patent for his sauciness..4fr.v Well, iy. Ii 
sauciness will jest upon my love.Coj>fe£/i/o//irr. ii. 2 
impudent saiicincss trom you {rep.)..2Henryl r. ii. I 
noble lord be rated for sauciness.. Titus Anttron. ii. 3 

SAUCY— million, are too saucy.. 7'«o Gen. of I'er. i. 2 

yon were saucy at my gates Twel/ih Xight.i. 5 

is't so saucy? — ^'A* ** 

as to remit their saucy sweetness. 3/ eas./rtril/eaj. ii. 4 

a saucy friar, a very scurvy — v. 1 

tongue of saucy and audacious. /l/"/./V.'sDreff»H. v. 1 
not be deep searched with saucy looks. Loce't /../.. i. I 



SAUCY— like a saucy lacqney ....As yon Like it, in. i 

you are more saucy with lords Alt's Well, ii. 3 

when saucy trusting of — iv. 4 

bound in to saucy doubts and fears ..Macbeth, iii. 4 
beldams, as you are, taiicy, and overbold? — iii. 5 

against these saucy walls King John, ii, 2 

3'ou play the saucy cuttle with me ..2Hemyll'. ii. 4 
am I not the protector, saucy priest?.! Henry I' I. iii. 1 

barkingof your saucy tongue — iii. 4 

brave me with these saucy terms?.. 2;/en;7/r/. iv. '0 

3'Ou are a saucy fellow Henry I' I II- iv. 2 

Where's then the saucy boat . . Troilus ^Cressida, i. 3 

thou saucy fellow? irep. iv. 3) JuliusCmsar, i, 1 

too saucy with the gods — i. 3 

should I find them so saucy .... Antony ^ Clco. iii. 11 

hence, saucy eunuch — iv. 12 

saucy lictors will catch at us — y. 2 

a saucy stranger, in his court Cymbeline, i. 7 

answered, saucy, and as quarrellous — iii. 4 

I am too blimt, and saucy — v..*) 

saucy controller of our private ..Titus Andron. ii. 3 

doth affect a saucy roughness Lear, ii. 2 

go to, go to, you are a saucy boy. . Homeo ^Juliet, i. h 

what saucy merchant was this*? — ii. 4 

have done you bold and saucy wrongs . . Othello, i. 1 

SAUF vostre honneur (rep.) Henry V. iii. 4 

vrayment, saufvostre grace (rep.) .. — v. 2 

SAUNDER Simpcox, an' if it {^ie(>.')..2HenryVI. ii. 1 

SAVAGE, know thine own meaning.. .. Tempest, i. 2 

put tricks upon us with savages — ii.2 

a savage jealousy that sometimes. r!('e//77iA"iV,'7i(, v. I 
the savage bull {rep. v. 1 and v. 4) ... . Much Ado, i . 1 

that rage in savage sensuality — iv. I 

a rude and savage man of Inde .. Love'sL.Lost^ iv. 3 
his lines would ravish savage ears .. — iv. 3 

that we, like savages, may — v. 2 

savage eyes turned to a modest ..Mer. of Venice, v. 1 
yield any thing savage, I will ....As i/ou Ld<eit, ii. 6 
that all things had been savage here — ii. 7 
a savage clamour? wellmayl .. H'm/er'sra'e, iii. 3 

methinks, I am too savage Macbeth, iv. 2 

tame the savage spirit of wild KingJahn, v. 2 

savage, and innuman creature Henry F. ii. 2 

Eut in wild and savage stock — iii. 5 
ut grow, like savages, as suldiera .. — v. 2 
savage islanders, Pmnpey the Grcat.2He"ri/r/. iv. 1 
rather tlian made that savage duke .ZHenryl'l. i. I 
to relent, is beastly, savage, devilish.n/cAardiy/. i. 4 
where his raging eye, or savage heart — ^\\'^ 
here tend the savage strangeness. Troilus ^ Cress, ii. 3 
fie, savage, fie! Hector, then 'tis wars — v. 3 
like a boar too savage, doth root . . Timon ofAlh. y. 2 
were this a savage spectacle .. ..Julius drsar, iii, \ 
patience more than savages .Antony ^- Cleopatra,!. 4 

for I liave savage cause — iii..." 

'tis some savage hold : I were best. . Cymbeline, iii. 6 

if savage, take, or lend — iii. 6 

all's savage, but at court — iv. 2 

she should have been, by savage Cleon .Pericles, y. 1 

most savage, and unnatural! Lear, iii. 3 

bvand by, breaks out to savage madness Ot.'ielto.iv. 1 

SA VAGELY-babes, savagely slant!litered..l/f,c/,. iv. 3 

SAVAGENESS in unrechiimed bhiod ..Hamlet, ii. 1 

casting tlieir savageiiess aside u tn'cr's I ate, ii. 3 

she will sing the sa\'agenessoiitofabearIO//ie/^o, iv. I 

SAVAGERY— the wildest siwagery. .KingJohn, iv. 3 
should deracinate such savagery Henry y, v. 2 

SAVAGE-WILD; more fierce.... /Jomeo ^Juliet, v. 3 

SAVE-[see-GOD] 

save for the son that she did Tempest, i. 2 

true; save means to live — ii. 1 

save Ills majest.y! — ii. 1 

save from my glass, mine own — iii. 1 

save our graces! — iii. 2 

sir Proteus, save you Two Gen. of Verona, i. 1 

to save your sliip from wreck — i. 1 

save, the faul' is in tlie 'ort Merry ll'ives,i. I 

by gar, he has save his soul — ii. 3 

save you, mtisfer (rep. iii. 1) — ii. 3 

save, in the constant image of TwelflhNight, ii. 4 

a thousand thousand sighs to save — ii. 4 (song) 

save tl'.ee, friend ()tp.) — iii. I 

mistress of it, save I alone — iii. 1 

she is fast my wife, save that we .Meas.forMeas. i. 3 
this gentleman, whom I would save — ii. 1 

save your honour! (rep.) — ii.2 

to ^ave this brother's life? (rep.) .... — ii. 4 

no earthly mean to save him — ii. 4 

as, to save a head, to cleave — iii. 1 

to save a brothers life (rep.) — ii. 1 

no word to save thee — ^..- * 

cure of it not only saves your brother — iii. I 

to save me from the danger — iv . 3 

save that his riotous youth — iv. 4 

labouring to save his life — v. 1 

all otlier things, save in the oflSee Much.Ido, ii. 1 

save this of hers, framed by thy villany — v. 1 

and partly to save your life — .v. 4 

never wronged you; save that. Mid. y.'sDteam, iii. 2 
ever won, save base authority ....Love'sL.Lost,' 
thus will I save my credit in 
a wild of nothing, save of joy 
many men to save their gifts , 
he saves my labour by his.... 

save you, fair queen 

sense saves another way 

all that is virtuous, (save what thou 
as I would have hud it, save, that he 

save 3'Ou, good madam 

inform something to save thy life.... 
little harm, save to his bed-clothes .. 
shall lia't; save your word 

to save my life (rep.) , „ . 

to save vour life in tills extremity .. — iv. 2 
to save both, farewell, our brother. Winter'sTalt, i. 2 
and save your tlianks: how save you? — i. 2 

to save this bastard's life (rep.) — ii. 3 

to save the innocent: any thinz — ii. 3 

save him from danger, do him love.. — iv. 3 
whom it was their nap io savn. Comedy of Errorst i. \ 



— iv. 1 
.Mer. of Venice, iii. 2 

— iv. 1 

...As you Like it,i\,7 

Ali'sWell,\.\ 

ii. I 



— iii. a 

— iv. 1 

— iv. 3 

— V. 2 
ing of Shrew, i. 



SAVE— to save the money .... Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

that labour may you save iv. 1 

shift and save yourself! v. I 

deep scars to save tliy life v. 1 

I see a friend will save my life — v. I 

to save unseratched your city's h'iiigJohn, ii. I 

like to a muzzled bear, save in aspect — ii. 1 
order orderless, save wliat is opposite — iii. 1 
O save me, Ilnliert, save mel my eyes — iv. I 

stray; save back to England Rkhardll. i. 3 

as grief, save bidding farewell to ... . _ ii. 2 
husband he is gone to save far oti'.. .. — ii. 2 

no sign, iHive men's opinions — iii. I 

bequeath, save our deposed bodies .. — iii. 2 
no, if a Sot would save his soul .... I HenrylV. i. 3 
snlennily defy; save liow to gall .... — i. 3 

to save our hL'uds by raising of — i. b 

save mine, whicii luith desired to.... — iii. 2 

to save tlie blood ou either side — v. 1 

wliicli.if Icausave, so _ v. 3 

save yonr grace! And yours IHennjIV. ii. 2 

save you, sir Jolm! Welcome — ii. 4 

and heaven save your majesty! — v. 2 

save, that there was not tiuieenough.. f/e;ij;/r. i. 1 

so Clirish save me (rep.) — iii. 2 

save ceremony, save general ceremony? — iv. I 

herald, save tnou thy labom- — iv. 3 

he prays you to save his life — iv. 1 

save the phrase is a little variations — iv. 7 

what thou canst to save our honours. 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

to save myself by flight (rt'p.) — iii. 2 

so should we save a valiant iv. 3 

to save a paltry life, and slay iv. 6 

the swan her downv cygnets save.... — v. 3 

to save your subjects from — v. 4 

if you mean to save yourself 2 Henry VI. i i. 1 

to sa\'e his life, the commons {rep.') iii. i 

3'et relent, and save my life — iv. 7 

thy priestliood saves lliy life 3 Henry VI. i. 3 

to save at least the heir iv. 4 

fly, lords, and save yourselves — v. 2 

relent, and save your souls '. Richard III. i. 4 

save that, for reverence to some alive — iii. 7 
to save lier life, I'll say she is not so — iv. 4 
save for a niglit of groans endured .. — iv. 4 

and save me so much talking Henri/ VIII. i. 4 

I'll save you tliat labour, sir '-~ ii. I 

this cannot save you: I thank iii. 2 

save such as do revolve Troilus %Cressida,\i. 3 

save these men's looks iii. 3 

save the thanks this prince expects.. — iv. 4 
save thee, Timon. Now, thieves.. TimonofAih. iv. 3 
but all, save thee, I fell with curses.. — iv. 3 

'tis not to save labour, nor that Coriolanus, i. 3 

not one amongst us, save j'ourself .. — ii. 3 
save you, sir. And you. Direct me . . — iv. 4 

mistake me not, to save my life iv. r> 

did tend to save tlie Romans v. 3 

sir, if you'd save your life, fly to .... v. 4 

every place, save here in Italy Julius Cmsar, i. 3 

not a man depart, save I alone — iii. 2 

all tlie conspirators, save only he. ... — v. 5 

save when command to your Cymbeline, ii. 3 

the true man killed, and saves the thief — ii. 3 
uotliing saves the wager you liave .. — ii. 4 

save that Euriphile must be Fidele.. iv. 2 

never bestrid a horse, save one — i v. 4 

from the troops, and save tliyself v. 2 

may save, but to look back in frown — v. 3 

save him. sir, and spare no blood beside V. 5 

t!;e whole world shall not save him.. — v. ^ 

all o'erjoj'ed, save these in bonds v. 5 

to save your brother from the .... Titus Andron. ii. 3 

shall save my brothers' lives iii, 1 

save thou tlie child (rep. v. 1) — iv. 2 

to save my boy, to nourish, and bring — v. 1 
save yon field of stars, tliey here stand.. PeraiM, i. 1 

save that [Co/. A'(i(.-'say'd yetj (rep.) .. i. 1 

and save poor me, the weaker — iv. 1 

save tlree, Curan. And you, sir Lear,\i. 1 

all feeling else, save what beats there .. iii. 4 

couldst thou save uothinij? didst tliou .. — iii. 4 

save him, save him! This is mere .... v. 3 

this save [A'li/.-sir] revereuec \ove Romeo ^Juliet, i. 4 
good thou, save me a niece of marchiiane — i. .'i 

save wlmt thou must combine ii. 3 

audit stauds, who knows, save heaven?Ha»ite(, iii. 3 

save me, and hover o'er me with your .. iii. 4 

save yourself, my lord ; the ocean iv. 5 

can save the thing from death — iv. 7 

save tliat, they say, the wars must ....Othello, iii. 3 

save you, friend (rep. iv. 1) iii. 4 

that 1 may save my speech: do but iv. 1 

for you, mistress, save you your labour.. — v. I 

SAVED— saved from drowning. Two Gen. of Ver. iv. 4 

that you yom-self are saved Twelfth Night, i. 2 

and that poor number saved with you — i. 2 
you migixt have saved me my pains — ii. 2 
that means to be saved by believing — iii. 2 
that honour, saved, may upon asking — iii. 4 
by this, is your brother saved . . Meas.forlHeas. iii. 1 
this is another prisoner, that I saved — v. 1 

tlien tliere's a partridge wing saved.. ;l/u<!/M(/o, ii. 1 
my beauty will be saved by merit. Love's L. Lost, iv. 1 

1 shall be saved by my husband. jl/er. of Venice, iii. 5 

tlie thrifty hire I saved under As you Like it, ii. 3 

his youthful hose well saved — ii. 7 

if your life be saved, will you All's IVell, iv. 3 

tliou hast not saved one drop King John, ii. 2 

if men were to be saved by merit ....IHenrylV. i. 2 

thou hast saved me a thousand — iii. 3 

and saved the treacherous labour of — y. 4 
better part, I have saved my life .... — v. 4 
aud a many poor men's lives saved .. Henry V. iv. 1 

thy father may be saved in thee \ Henry VI. iv. 5 

all these are saved, if thou iv. 6 

and eomage might have saved? 3Henn/Vl. v. 4 

a labour saved! A wonder!.. Troilus fy Cresiida, iii. 3 

you have saved my longing Timon of Athens, i. 1 

saved your husband so much sweat. Co; lo/aiiKj, iv. 1 



bAVED me a day's journey Coriolanus, iv. 3 

shall never be saved by lialf Antony ^Cleo. v. 2 

so had you saved the noble Imogen.. Ci/m6i?/»ip, v. I 
honours to have saved their carcases? — v. 3 

for that it saved me, keep it Pericles, ii. I 

begged tor him, saved him from despair. . Lear, v. 3 
I might have saved her; now she's gone. . — v. 3 
and there be souls must not be saved . . Othello, ii. 3 

I hope to be saved. And so do I too — i i . 3 

tlie lieutenant is to be saved before — ii. 3 

no, as I shall be saved. Is it possible? .. — iv. 2 
bAVINtx your honour's reverence. .Veres. forMcos. ii. 1 
have me say, saving your reverence.. .WmcA/Ji/o, iii. 4 
who, saving your reverence (rep. liUcr. nf Venice, ii. 2 
saving your tale', Petruchio .. Tamin^'ofShreui, ii. I 
saving your merry 1/mnour. . Comedy nflin ois, iv. 1 
saving in dialogue of compliment ..King John, \. 1 
tliat he is (saving your reverence) ..I Hi-nrylV. ii. 4 
Pye-corner (saving your manhoods). 2 Henri//r. ii. I 

saving your majesty's manhood Henry V. iv. 8 

as I have a saving faith within me .. — v2 
which gifts (saving your mincing) .Henri/Vlll.i\.3 

anil saving those that eye thee! Cnriolanus, v. 3 

I swore thee, saving of thy life JuliusCipsar. v. 3 

saving reverence of the word Cymbeline, iv. 1 

SAVIOUR'S birtli is celebrated Hamlet, i. 1 

8AVORY, marjoram Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

SAVOUR— not the savour of tar. Tempest, ii. 2 (song) 
that sometimes savours nobly? . . Twelfth Night, v. I 

this savours not much of distraction v. 1 

those freckles live their savours Mjrf. A'. 's Dream, ii. 1 

of odious savours sweet (rep.) _ iii. j 

seeking sweet savours from this hateful — iv. I 
I smell sweet savours .. Taming of Sh. 2 (induction) 

a savour that may strike the Winter's Tale, i. 2 

something savours of tyranny ii. 3 

these keep seeming, and savour, all.. — iv. 3 

savours of a slaughter-house King John, iv. 3 

y<m savour too niuch of your youth . . Henry V.\.'i 
his jest will savour but of shallow .. — i. 2 

\_Knt.'] who, not used to hunger's savourPeritVes, i. 1 
tiie very doors and windows savour vilely — iv. 6 

filths savour but themselves Lear,iv 2 

SAVOURING of wit, poetry Love'sL. Lost, iv. 2 

SAVOUBY-what's homely, savoury.Ci/m'je/iVie.iii. 6 

to make the matter savoury '. . Hamlet, ii. 2 

SAVOY— and pull down tlie Savoy ..2HenryVI. iv. 7 

SAW— those that I saw suffer Tempest, i. 2 

supposing that they saw the king's — i. 2 

for nothing natural I ever saw so noble i. 2 

this is the third man that e'er I saw . . — i. 2 

I saw him beat the surges ii. 1 

I saw their weapons drawn 

the very instant that I saw you 

I ne'er saw woman, but 

if X should say, I saw such islanders . . 

never till this day saw I him 

and since I saw thee 

but never saw before 

since I saw you last 

saw you my master? TwoGen.ofVet 

you never saw her since 

I have loved her ever since I saw her 

which of you saw sir Egtamour 

saw you my daughter? 

that my husband saw this letterl .Merry Wi 

avoid him, if you saw him — 

and patience, that ever you saw .... 

for I never saw him so gross in 

I saw your brother most 

I saw him hold acquaintance. . , 

who saw Cesario, ho? 

I saw him put down the other day .. 

for I never saw her 

I saw thee late at the count Orsino's 
X think I saw 3'our wisdom there. . . . 
marry, I saw your niece do more. . . . 

I saw 't i' the orchard 

a couplet or two of most sage saws . . 

that never saw pen and ink — iv. 2 

yet when I saw it last v. 1 

I saw him arrested ; saw him Meas.forMeas. i. 2 

I saw tliem at the prison v. I 

I never spake with her, saw her .... — v. 1 
I saw him not MuchAdo, ii. 1 



ii. 1 
iii. 1 
iii. 2 



ii. 1 
ii. I 

V. 2 

V. 2 



— Hi. 1 
.... — iii. 3 
. TwelfUiNight, i. 2 



111. I 
iii. 1 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 



I never yet saw man, how wise 

by ray master don John, saw afaroff — iii. 3 
shame her with what he saw over-niglit — iii. 3 
I saw the duchess of Milan's gown .. — iii. 4 

God saw him when he was hid v. 1 

and saw me court Margaret in Hero's — v. 1 

that very time I saw Mid.N.'s Dream, ii. 2 

was I betrothed ere I saw Herraia .. — iv. 1 

wdiich, when I saw rehearsed v. 1 

at a beast, my lord, that e'er I saw . . — v. 1 
in Normandy saw I this Low's L. Lorf, ii. 1 



— ii. 1 

— ii. I 

— ii. I 

— ii. 1 
iv. 1 (letter) 
iv. 1 (letter) 

— iv. 3 

— v. 2 
V. 2 (song) 
I'enice, ii. 2 

— ii. 8 



I saw him at the duke Alengon's once 
too little of that good I saw, is my . 

an' you saw her in the light 

that all eyes saw his eyes enchanted 
he came, saw, and overcame (rep.) - 

what saw he? the beggar - 

saw sighs reek fVom you 

my lord Biron, befbre I saw you ... 
coughing drowns the parson's saw 

when I last saw him Merchant of Vi 

I saw Bassanio {rep.) 

you saw the mistress, I beheld the . . — 
and saw the lion's shadow ere himself — v. 1 
before ever he saw those pancakes. . As you Like it, i. 2 
if you saw j'ourself with your eyes .. — i, 2 

possible, that no man saw them? .... ii. 2 

of her chamber, saw her a-bed ii. 2 

swain that you saw here but erewhile — ii. 4 

full of vvise saws and modern ii. 7 

who you saw sitting by me hi. 4 

now I find thy saw of might _ iii. 5 

I saw her hand: she has a leathern. . — iv. 3 

I came, saw, aud overcame v. 2 

the first time that I ever saw him .. — v. 4 



SAW— methought you saw a serpent . . All's Well, i. 3 

I saw upon lier finger _ v 3 

I saw her wear it. You are(»ep.) .. _ v 3 

she never saw it y. 3 

methought, you said, you saw one .. — v. 3 

I saw the man to-day, if man _ v 3 

never were, nor no man ever saw. Tarn. qfSh. 2 (ind.) 

yes, I saw sweet beauty in her — i. 1 

saw you no more? marked you not.. — i. | 

Tranio, I saw her coral lips to move — i. I 

and sweet, was all I saw in her — i. | 

if they saw some wondrous monument — iii " 

1 never saw a better fashioned _ iv, 3 

you saw my master wink and laugh — iv I 

for I never saw you belore in all — v I 

and saw myself unbreeclied Winter' sTale, \. 2 

I saw his heart in his face 'j. 2 

never saw I men scour so on — ii.' i^ 

I never saw a vessel of like sorrow . . — iii! 3 

I never saw the heavens so dim iii 3 

not winked since I saw these — iii'3 

since I saw my country iy] | 

three days since I saw the prince!'. '.'. — iv' 1 
Isawwhosepurse was best in tlie.... — iv! 3 

never saw I wretches so quake ...... — y : 

we saw not that which my daughter — v! 3 
for I saw her, as I thought, dead .... — v! 3 

for wliat she saw must come ..Co)ncdj/o/£rror.« i 1 

I never saw her till this time _ 'ii 2 

faith, I saw it not; but I felt it _ iii 2 

the ring I saw upon his finger _ iv' 4 

you saw, they speak us fair _ iv! 4 

God he knows, I saw not _ y 1 

these people saw the chain about — v' 1 

I never saw the chain, so help — y. \ 

I never saw you in my life _ y. | 

since you saw me last _ y' 1 

I never saw my fatlier in !..! v! 1 

I ne'er saw Syracusa in m.v .'.' y' 1 

spoke with one that saw him die Macbetli, i! 4 

if I stand liere, I saw him _ i,i 4 

saw you the weird sisters? _ iv! 1 

for that I saw the tyrant's power .... — iv" 3 

report that which I say I saw — y! .5 

I saw a smith stand w'ith King John, iv! 2 

tiiey saw we had a purpose of _ y. 1 

that never saw the giant world — y! 2 

two days since I saw the prince Richard II. v 3 

we two saw you four set on XHenrylV. ii. 4 

faith, 1 ran when I saw others run . . — ii. 4 

I saw young Harry, with his _ iy. | 

I saw him hold lonl Percy — y! 4 

I did, I saw him dead, breathless — v! 4 

when he saw the fortune of the — \ ;, 

how is this derived? saw you 2Henri/IV. i! 1 

but these mine eyes saw him in .... i. 1 

I saw him break Skogan's head — iii! 2 

never saw him but once in the iii! 2 

I saw it, and told John of Gaunt — iii! 2 

he saw me, and .yielded _ iy. t 

of Rome, I came, saw, and overcame iv! 3 

who saw the duke of Clarence? iv. 4 

for after I saw him fumble Henry /'. i i! 3 

a' sawaflea stick uponBardolph's.. — ii. 3 

saw his heroical seed jj. 4 

never anybody saw it, but his — iii! 7 

within this hour, I saw him down .. _ iv! 6 

whoever saw the like? ] Henry VI. i 2 

till now we never saw your face _ iii 4 

I never saw but Humphrey duke. . ..2Henry VI. i I 
holy saws of sacred writ; his study . . — 1,3 

I saw not better sport these seven _ ii! 1 

a man, that ne'er saw in his life before — ii! 1 

I never saw a fellow worse bested — ii. 3 

struck those that I never saw iv. 7 

I saw him in the battle range 3Henry VI. ii! 1 

but when we saw our sunshine ii. 2 

queen Margaret saw thy murderous. Richard III. i! 2 
saw you the kin" to-day, my lord of — i. 3 

I saw a thousand fearful wrecks .... _ i. 4 

since last I saw him — ii.4 

I saw good strawberries in your .... iii! 4 

which when I saw, I reprehended .. — iii 7 
not live long after I saw Richmond.. — iv! 2 

who saw the sun to-day? _ y. 3 

since last we saw in France? HenryVIlI. i! 1 

admirer of what I saw there — j. 1 

then present, saw them salute — i! 1 

'twas said, they saw but one — i. 1 

that never saw them pace before .... i. 3 

I saw well chosen, ridden ii. 2 (letter) 

or sorry, as I saw it inclined — ii. 4 

every eye saw them, envy and base.. — iii! 1 

saw .you the cardinal? jji. 2 

you saw the ceremony? iy. | 

such joy I never saw before — iv! 1 

saw ye none enter, since I slept? (rep.) _ iy. 2 
your highness saw this many a day .. — y. 2 
fairer than ever I saw her look . . Troilus ^ Cress, i! 1 

ay, if I ever saw him before j. 2 

he ne'er saw three and twenty i! 2 

we saw him at the opening of^ie ... . — ii. .3 

I never saw till now iy. 5 

since first I saw yourself and Diomed — iv 5 

I saw them speak together Timon of Athens, i. 1 

I saw him run after a gilded Coriolanus, i. 3 

I saw our part.v to their trenches .... — i. o 

I saw him prisoner i. g 

there's a letter for you; I saw it — ii! 1 

and shouts, I never saw the like _ ii. 1 

with all praise I point at, saw him fight — ii. 2 

no; no man saw 'em. He said ii. 3 

saw you Aufidius? On safe-guard he — iii! 1 
more heard, when Ilast saw you .... _ iy. 3 

first my wedded mistress saw bestride iv. 5 

you saw his chariot but appear JuUusCresar, i. 1 

I saw Mark Antony offer him — i. 2 

why, saw you any tiling more — i. 3 

they saw men, all in fire, walk — i. 3 

she dreamt to-night she saw my statua — ii. a 



SAW 

SAW— noble Ctcsar saw liim stub ..JuliusC<Emr, iii. 2 
saw you any thing? No. my lord ^rep.) — iy. 3 
saw you my loril? No, lady. . Anlunu 4- Clcoptitru,]. 2 

I saw the treasons phmtcd — .;• •' 

I saw her once hop forty paces — }}■- 

there saw you labouring tor him .... — ii. B 
since I saw you last, there is a change — .!!•'' 
and saw her led between her brother — lii. 3 
1 never saw au action of such shame — iii. 8 
for when she saw, (wliicli never sluiU — iv. :a 

I do think, I saw't tliis morning Cijmbetmr,u. 3 

never saw I llgurcs so likely — .(i- ■! 

came, and saw, and overcame — in. 1 

1 saw him not tliese many years — J v. 2 

long is it since I saw him — iv. 2 

I saw Jove's bird, the Roman eagle.. — iv. 2 

whose face I never saw? — v. 4 

I never saw one so prone — v. 4 

I never saw such noble fury — v. 5 

Imt we saw him dead — v. ."J 

dismal'st day is this, that e'er I saw ..TilusAiid. 1. 2 
how many women saw this child (.ri'/j.) — iv. 2 

when I saw the porpus _ Pericles, u. 1 

I never saw so huge a billow, sir .... — 111.2 
I saw you lately, when you caught .. — iv. 1 

when saw you my father last? Lenr, i . 2 

when lie saw my best alarumed — ii- 1 

that must approve the coinmou saw 1 — ii'i 

1 stumbled wnen I saw — iv. 1 

storm I such a fellow saw — iv- 1 

liomeo? Saw you him to day? .. . Romeo Sr Juliet, 1. 1 
ne'er saw her match, since first (rep.) — i. 2 

for I ne'er saw true beauty till — i- 5 

for the world, they saw thee here .... — ii- ^ 

1 saw no man use you at his — .ii- 4 

I saw the wound, I saw it with — iii- 2 

that e'er time saw in lasting — iv. i 

I saw her laid low in her kindred's .. — y. 1 
I saw him once, he was a goodly king . . Hamlet, 1. 2 
I think I saw him yesternight. Saw! .... — 1.2 

then saw you not his face — >• 2 

longer, longer. Not when I saw it — i- 2 

wherein we saw thee cjuietly iu-urned .. — 1. 4 

allsawsof books, all forms — i- 5 

I saw him yesterday, or t' other day .... — 11. 1 

I saw him enter such a house of sale — ii. I 

since I saw thee last (rep.) — ii. 2 

when she saw Pyrrhus make — 11.2 

nor do not saw the air too much with ... . — iii. 2 
sailors, my lord, they say: I saw them not — iv. 7 

I saw ( Ithello's visage in his mind Othello, i. 3 

I saw it not, thougirt it not — iij- 3 

I ne'er saw this before — iii. 4 

though I should swear I saw It — iv. I 

but then I saw no harm — i v. 2 

I saw my handkerchief in (rep .) — v. 2 

SAWED into quantities 'IHemylV. V. 1 

SAW-PIT rush at once Merry IVives, ly. 4 

S.VW'ST— which thou saw'st sink Tempest,]. 2 

never saw'st good manners (rep.). As youLikeil, iii. 2 
what did he, when thou saw'st him? — iii. 2 
saw'st thou not, boy, how .. TamingofSh. 1 (indue.) 
saw'st thou the prince Florizel .. Winter's Tale, iv. 1 

saw'st tliou him enter at Comedy o/Errars, v. 1 

since tlwu saw'st thine own knee? ..\ Henry I V.ii. 4 

saw'st thou the melancholy lord Ric/mrd III. v. 3 

and say, thou saw'st me nbt . . Timon 0/ Alliens, iii. 1 

thou saw'st them, when I had — iv. 3 

and trimmed her as thou saw'st .. Titus Andron. v. 1 

SAX(3N— subdued the Saxons (rep.) Henry V. 1. 2 

SAXONY-dukeof Saxony's nephew.71/e»-. o/l'enice, i. 2 

SAY— out of our way, I say 2'einpest,\. 1 

I say or changed or else — 1-2 

say, how thou hast disposed — 1.2 

dull thing, I say so — i. 2 

what shall I do? say what? — 1.2 

come forth, I say ._ — i. 2 

and sav, what thou see'st yond' — 1.2 

what, 1 say, my foot my tutor I — i- 2 

would it not say, he lies? — ii- 1 

what is it thou didst say? — li. 1 

pr'ythee, say on — ii- 1 

what stutr is this? how say you? .... — 11. 1 

say, this were death that now — ii. I 

any business that we say befits the hour — ii. I 

and says, such baseness — iii- 1 

I have broke your 'best to say so!.... — iii. I 

they say, there's but five — iii- 2 

and yet say nothing neither — iii- 2 

I say, by sorcery he got this isle — iii. 2 

didst thou not say, he lied? — iii. 2 

I sav to-night: no more — iii- 3 

if 1 should 'say, I saw such islanders — ).'.'■•* 

in what thou'hadst tosay — iii. 3 

before you can say, come and go — iv. 1 

say again, where didst thou — iv. 1 

wliich, you say, is a harmless fairy . . — iv. 1 

I did say so, when first — v. 1 

say, my spirit, how fares — V- I 

patience says, it is past her cure — v- I 

and say how thou earnest here — v- I 

I say amen, Gonzalo — v. 1 

say, how came you liither? — v- 1 

then say, if they be true — v. 1 

yet wri ters say (rep. ) Two Gen. of I'erona, i. I 

I say slie did nod (rijp.) — i. I 

but say, liuoetta, now wc — i- 2 

say, from whom? (rep.) — i. 2 

since maids, in modesty, say no — i- 2 

vou may say what sights you see .. .. — i. 2 

by a letter, i should say — ii. 1 

what say you to a letter — ii. I 

they say, that love hath not — ii. 1 

I'll die on him tliat says so — ii. 1 

and the hostess say — ii- -"j 

if he say ay, it will (rep.) — Ji. ■'> 

and may I say to thee — iij- I 

whatever she doth say — iii- 1 

say they have angels faces — in- I 

1 say is no man, if — iii-' 



[ 049 ] 



SAY— sirrah, I say, forbear ....Two Gen. o.f Fer. iii. 1 

that's as much as to say (rep.) — 111*' 

but sav, this weed (/-cp.) — iii. 2 

say ay, and be the captain — iv. 1 

say, that she be — iv. 2 

I have heard tliec say — jv. 3 

even as one would say precisely (ri'p.) — iv. 4 

out with the dug, says one ()<;p.) .... — iv. 4 

and wliat says slie to my (rep.) — iv. 4 

away, I say: stay'st thou to — iv. 4 

I have heard him say a tliousand times — iv. 4 

what s.ays Silvia to my suit? (rep.) .. — v- 2 

now I dare not say 1 have — v. 4 

forbear, I say I it is my — v. 4 

1 heard say he was out-run Merry ll'ives, i. I 

slice, I say I pauca pauca — i- 1 

I will say, many trap — i. 1 

what say you. Scarlet and John? .... — i. 1 

for my part, 1 say, tlie gentleman.... — i. 1 

was, as they say, cashiered — i. 1 

but if you say, marry her — i- 1 

what says my bully-rook ? — i- 3 

and, to her boy, say I — i. 3 

you say your name is? — i. 4 

how saj' you? O I should — i. 4 

John, what John, I say I — i. 4 

I will not say, pity me (j-pp) — ii. 1 (letter) 

what should I say to him? — ii. 1 

yet, I say, I could show — ii. 1 

the horn, I say; farewell — ii- 1 

cavalero-j ustice, I say — ii. 1 

well on: Mistress Ford, you say — ii. 2 

your worship says very true — ii. 2 

in any such sort, as they say (rep.)., — ii. 2 

but what says she to me? (rep.) — ji. 'i 

why, you say well — ii- 2 

do what she will, say what she will.. — ii. '2 

let them say, 'tis grossly done — ii. 2 

and that hath taught me to say this.. — ii. 2 

some say, that though she appear. ... — ii. 2 

what say you to't, sir John? — ii. 2 

master Brook, I say you shall — ii. 2 

I say, I shall be with her between ... — ii. 2 

they say, the jealous wittolly — ii. 2 

who says, this is improvident jealousy — ii. 2 

what says my .^Sseulapius? — ii. 3 

peace, I say, Guallia (rep-) — iii. 1 

what say you to youug master Fenton? — iii. 2 

what, Kobin, I say — iii. 3 

thou art a traitor to say so — iii. 3 

and, say thou art this and that — iii. 3 

thou might'st as well say. Hove .... — jii. 3 

that, he says, is here now — ii.!' ^ 

Bardolph, I say— Here, sir — iii. 5 

my husband says, my son profits .... — iv. 1 

because they say, od's nouns — jv. 1 

why, wife I say I — iv. 2 

so say I too, sir — iv. 2 

empty the basket, I say — iv. 2 

let them say of me, as jealous — iv. 2 

you say, he hath been thrown — iv. 4 

knock, I say — iv- 5 

what says she, I pray sir? (rep.) — iv. 5 

go; say the woman told me so — iv. 6 

may I be so bold to say so, sir? — iv. 5 

do not say, tliey be fled — iv. 5 

long enough to say my prayers — jv. 5 

here is a letter will say somewhat .. — iv. 5 

they say, there is divinity in odd.. .. — v. 1 

away, I say, time w^ears — v- 1 

tliey say, she hath abj ured Twelfth Nig/it, i. 2 

fie, tliat you'll say so! — i. 3 

that say so of him. Who are they? .. — i- 3 

say, I do speak with her — i. 4 

that say, thou art a man — i. 4 

that may you be bold to say in — i. 5 

for what says (Juinapalus? — i- 5 

therefore, I say again, take her — i. b 

that's as much as to say, 1 wear — i. -^) 

how say you to tliat, Malvolio? — i- -I 

give me faith, say I — [-5 

and he says he'll stand at — i. 5 

I can say little more than I — i. 5 

have you no more to say ? — i. 5 

faith, so they say — ii. 3 

Marian, 1 say! A stoop of wine! .... — ii. 3 

say, that some lady, as perhaps — ii- 4 

we men say more — ii. 4 

give her this jewel; say, my love .... — ii- 4 

peace, I say! — ij- 5 

excellent wench, say I — ii- -"i 

did not I say, he would work — ii. .5 

I say, remember — ii- & 

nay, but say true, does it — ii- 5 

so thou may'st say the king — iii- 1 

I might say, element — iij- 1 

he says, he'll come — iij- 4 

cast thy humble slough, says she .... — iii- 4 

do you know wliat you say? — iij- 4 

for more than I'll say — jjj- ^ 

get him to say his prayers — jji. 4 

tliey say, lie has been fencer to — iii- 4 

O, say so, and so be! — jv. 1 

as to say, a careful man — iv. 2 

what hoa, I say, peace in this (>'ep.).. — iv. 2 

advise you what you say — jv. 2 

wtiat say you, sir? (rep. iv. 3 and v. 1) — iv. 2 

but as you say, let your — v. I 

and say— thrice welcome — v. 1 

tliey say, poor gentleman, he's mad.. — v- 1 

or say, 'tis not your seal — ^'- ' 

you can say none of this — y- I 

call hither, I say, bid come Mens, for .Meas. j. 1 

nay, not as one would say, healtliy .. — j. 2 

and yet, to say tlie truth — .j- 3 

was, as they sav. plucked down — ii- 1 

I say, sir, 1 will detest (r.'/).) — jj- 1 

constable what say you to it? — 11- I 

come to pass, say, Pom|)ey told — i|- 1 

you say, seven years together? — 11. I 



SAY 

SAY —to him, I say Measure for Measure, ii. 2 

say you so? then Isliall poze (rep.) .. — ii. 4 

can t^peak against the thing I Buy,. .. — ii, 4 

as for you, say what you can — ii. 4 

what says my hrolber? — iii. 1 

say to thyself.-from their — iii. 2 

go; say 1 sent thee thither — iii. 2 

some say, he is with (»ep.) — iii. 2 

I say to thee again (rep.) — iii. 2 

say that I said so; farewell — iii. 2 

little have you to say — iv. I 

painting sir, I have heard say, is .... — iv- 2 

wliat saj' you to this, sir? — iv. 2 

say, it was tlie desire of tlie penitent — iv. 2 

if you have anything to say to me .. — iv. 3 

mark what I say — iv. 3 

say, l)y this token, I desire his — iv. 3 

but they say, the duke will — iv. 3 

I would say the truth — iv. 6 

he says, to veil full purpose — iv. 6 

what would you say? — v. 1 

and say by whose advice thou — v. I 

no? you say your husband — v. i 

carnally, she says — v.! 

did not'you say, you knew that — v. 1 

say you ? — v. 1 

come hither, Mariana; say, wast thou — v. I 

hold up your hands, say iiotliing .... — v. 1 

they say, best men are moulded — v. 1 

stand up, I say — v. 1 

and say you will be mine — v. 1 

too like an image, and says noih'ins. . MuchAdo, ii. I 

and say, get you to heaven, Beatrice — ii. 1 

make courl'sy, and say, fatlier (rep.) — ii- 1 

look sweetly, and say nothing — ii. 1 

I may say so, when I jilease (rep.) .. — i i , 1 

I say my prayers aloud — ii. 1 

I'll tell him what you say — ii. 1 

by my faith, you say honestly — ii- 1 

your grace may well say I have lost it — ii- I 

and all grace say ameu to it 1 — ii- 1 

if I could say liSw much — ii. I 

for I have lieard my daughter say . . — ii. 1 

so your daughter says: shall I, says she — ii. 3 

this says she now when she is — ii. 3 

I measure him, says she — ii. 3 

my daughter says so — ii. 3 

and hear what he will say — ii. 3 

for she saj's, she will die if he — ii. 3 

you may say rK)i(.-see] he is wise. . . . — ii. 3 

they say, I will bear myself (rep.) .. — ii. 3 

that's as much as to say, any pains.. — ii. 3 

say, that thou overheard'st us — iii. 1 

so says the prince, and my uew-trothed — iii. I 

tell her of it; liear what she will say — iii. 1 

for others say, thou dost deserve .... — iii. 1 

sosay I; methinks (rep.) — iii. 2 

as much as to say, the sweet youth's — iii. 2 

I hear what they say of him — iii. 2 

I could say she were worse; think you — iii. 2 

so will you say, when you have seen — jji. 2 

you may say, they are not the men., — iii. 3 

Conrade, I say! — iii. 3 

tush! I may as well say, the fool's .. — iii. 3 

see'st thou not, I say, what a deformed — jjj- 3 

your cousin will say so — iii. 4 

O, that exceeds, they say — iii. 4 

I think, you would have me say — jji, 4 

it pleases your worship to say so .... — iii. 5 

fain know what you have to say .... — iii - 5 

as they say, when the age is in — iii. -5 

say; if Ihave known her, you'll say — iv. 1 

I know not what to say — iv. I 

it were as possible for me to say — jv. 1 

that says, I love not you — jv. 1 

I must say, she is dead — jv. 1 

marry, sir, we say we are none — iv. 2 

I say' to you, it is thought (rep-) — jv. 2 

what heard you him say else? — iv. 2 

I say, thou hast belied mine innocent — v. 1 

thine I say. You say not right — v. 1 

most curiously, say, my knife's naught — v. I 

true, says slie, a fline (rep.) — v. 1 

did he not say, my brotlier wasfled? — v. 1 

they say be wears a key in his ear .. — v. I 

that the world can say :igainst it — v. 4 

what say you Hermia? lie advised ..MiJ.K.'sDr. j. 1 

ere a man hath power tosay, behold! — i. I 

Peter (iuinee, say what the play — i- 2 

that I will make the duke say — j- 2 

if riermia meant to say, Lysander .. — ii. 3 

amen, to that fair prayer, say I — ii- 3 

do not say so, Lysander, soy not so. . — ii- 3 

and reason says you are the worthier — ji- 3 

and let tlie prologue seem to say (rep.) — iii- I 

for Pyramus and Tliisby, says the story — iji- 1 

what say you. Bottom? — jji. 1 

to say, to swear. Hove thee — iii.' 

and yet, to say the truth — jjj. I 

tliat says I love thee not, I say — iji. 2 

if thou say so, withdraw — 111.2 

in earnest, shall I say? — in. "2 

and know not what to say — 111.2 

or say, sweet love, what thou desirest — iv. 1 

despatch, I say, and find the forester — iv. 1 

I cannot truly say how I — jv. I 

to say what dream it was — iv. 1 

if he will otfcr to say what methought — jv. 1 

you must sav, paragon — iv. 2 

1 do not doubt but to hear them say — iv. 2 

say, what abridgment have you .... — v. 1 

he says, tliev can do nothing — v- 1 

all that I have to say is — v. 1 

I can but say their protestation ..Lave sL.Losl,\. 1 

let me say, no (rep.) — 1. 1 

well, say I am; why -should proud .. — 1.1 

for that angel knowled^ic you can say — i. 1 

wliat say you, lords? why, this was — i- I 

but if he say it is so, lie is — i- 1 

witli this I passion to say wherewith — i. 1 (let.) 



SAY 

SAY— sirrah, what say/ou to this?.. Love's L.Losl, i. 1 

I do say, thou art quiolc ill answers.. i. 2 

I say, sill" _ j. 2 

80 I heard you say — 1,2 

and therefore, I will say nothing .... i. 2 

they say so most, that most his ii. 1 

but say, tliat l\e, or we (.as neitlierliave) — ii. 1 

my pliysic says, I — ii, I 

you are too swift, sir, to say so iii. 1 

I will add tlie I'envoy; say tlie moral — iii. 1 

first praise me, and again, sav, no? . . — iv. I 

he it was that might rightly'say — iv. 1 (letter) 

a mark, says my ladvl — iv. 1 

but. onne bene, say I (rep.) — iv. 2 

soniL- say. a sore; but not a sore — iv. 2 (epitaph) 

as llnnice says in his — iv. 2 

you shall not say me, nay — iv. 2 

so they sny, the fool said, and so say I — iv. .3 

stoup, I say, her shoulder is — jv. 3 

al\ niel says one; O Jove I — iv. 3 

what will Biron say, when iv. 3 

say, can you fast? _ iv. 3 

when lie should say, doubt — v. 1 

Rt the fingers' ends, as they say — v. 1 

I say, none so fit as to present — v. i 

breatli against us? saj', scout, say.... — v. 2 

wliat would they, say they? (rep.) .. — v. 2 

she says yon have it, and you may (rep.) — y. 2 

say you so? fair lord '. ... v. 2 

I say, they shall not come — v. 2 

if your ladyship would say, tlianks.. — v. 2 

your nose says, no, you are not — v. 2 

prepare, I say:— I thank you — v. 2 

shall I say, I thank you v. 2 

no words that smooth-faced wooers say — v. 2 

what says Maria? v. 2 

you say, it wearies you Merchant of fcnice, i, I 

then let's say, you are sad — i. I 

and leap, and say, you are merry.. .. — i. 1 

when shall we laugh? say wheu? .. i. | 

as who should say (rep. i. 2) i. 1 

then do but say to me wliat — i, 1 

how say you by the French lord .... i. 2 

what say you then to Faulconbridge i. 2 

I say nothing to him j. 2 

not, as you would say, directly i. 3 

and you say, Sliylock, we would (rep.) _ j. 3 

what should I say? should I not say i. 3 

■whispering humbleness, say this .... j. 3 

and say, there is much kindness .... i. 3 

I say, to buy his favour, I extend _ i. 3 

my conscience says, no — ii. 2 

via! says the fiend (rep.) ii. 2 

fiend, say I, you counsel well ii. 2 

his fatlier, though I say it ii. 2 

or as you would say, in plain — ii. 2 

as one would say, to serve ii. 2 

and though I say it, though old man ii! 2 

and sigh, and say, amen; use all .... ji. 2 

why, Jessica, I say! ii, 5 

I will not say, you shall see ii. 5 

before me, sirrah; saj', I will come.. — ii. 5 

what says that fool of Hagar's offspring ii. 5 

what says this leaden castet (rep.) .. ii. 7 

what says the golden cliest? hal .... ii. 9 

thou wilt say anon, he is some ii. 9 

as they say, if my gossip report be .. — iii, 1 

let me say amen betimes, lest iii. 1 

I say my daughter is my flesh and blood — iii! 1 

mine own, I would say; but if mine — iii. 2 

then be hold to say, Bassanio's dead iii. 2 

my husband, Launcelot, what you say iii. 5 

and he says, you are no good _ iii. 5 

foodsweet, say thy opinion, how,... iii. 5 

ut, say, it is my humour _ iv! I 

sliall I say to you, let them he free .. iv! 1 

ay, so he says. Do you confess iv. I 

ay, his breast; so says the bond — iv! 1 

merchant, have you any thing to say? iv. 1 

say, how I loved you, speak me .. .". _ iv! 1 

a Daniel still say I; a second iv. 1 

in which predicament, I say, thou .. iv! I 

what dost thou say? I am content .. _ iv. 1 

what should I say, sweet lady? _ v. 1 

that says, such a father begot As you Like it, i! I 

let me go, I say i. 1 

they say, he is already (rep.) i! 1 

can I not say, I thank you? i! 2 

say wliat thou canst, I'll go i! 3 

I smile, and say, this is no flatterv.. ii! 1 

peace, I say; good even to you, friend _ ii. 4 

witli a lack-lustre eye, says (rep.) .. ii! 7 

wheu that I say, the city-woman.. .. ii! 7 

come in, and say, that I mean her .. ii! 7 

that says, his bravery is not on ii" 7 

but forbear, I say; he dies ii! 7 

a better instance, I say; come iii! 2 

to say ; ay, and no, to these iii! 2 

sweet, say on iii! 2 

begone, I say, I will not to iii! 3 

and you shall say I'll prove iii! 4 

saj', that you love me not; but say not — iii. 5 

to say mine eyes are murderers iii, 5 

they say you are a melancholy iv! 1 

good to be sti4, and say notlii ng i v. 1 

what would you say to me now iv! 1 

I take some joy to say you are _ iv! 1 

in her person, I say— Iwill not iv! 1 

say, sister? Pray thee, marry us (rep.') — iv' 1 

then you must say, I take thee — iv. 1 

say a day, without the ever iv! 1 

he might say, wit wliither wilt? _ iv! 1 

marry, to say, slie came to seek iv 1 

how say you now? is it not past _ iv! 3 

she says, I am not fair iv. 3 

I say, she never did invent _ iv' 3 

and say this to her; tliat if she _ iv' 3 

being asked, to sa.y, we are iv' 3 

but say with me, t love Aliena; say — v! 2 

insomuch, I say, I know you are .... — v! 2 



[ 650 ] 



SAY 



SAY-thougli I say I am a magician .Asyou Like it, v. 2 

you say, if I bring in your Rosalind — v. 4 

he would say, I lie: tliis is called _ v. 4 

how oft did you say, his beard — v. 4 

hast leisure, say thy prayers All's Well, i. 1 

lie would always say, (methinks, I hear — i. 2 

what say you of this gentlewoman? — i. 3 

for they say, beams are blessings .... i. 3 

I say, I am your mother (rep.) _ i. 3 

to say, thou dost not; thereiore tell.. — i. 3 

cry you loud, I say, farewell _ ii. 1 

they sav, our French lack language — ii. 1 

say to him, I live — ji. 1 

this is his majesty; say your mind .. — ii. 1 

1 say, we must not so stain ji, | 

kiss his hand, and say nothing _ ii. 2 

to say precisely, were not for _ ii. 2 

have you, I say, an answer _ ii. 2 

they say, miracles are past — ii. 3 

60 I say. That gave him out (rep.) .. _ ii, 3 

you saj- well; so would I have {jep.) — ii. 3 

I dare not say, I take you _ ji, 3 

that I may say in the default — ii. 3 

as you say, why, I say nothing {.rep.') _ ii. 4 

well, what would you say? _ ii, 5 

nor dare I say, 'tis mine ii. .'j 

therefore dare not say what 1 think.. — iii. 1 

for ever gone. Do not say so — iii. 2 

they say, the French count has — iii. 5 

he says, he has a stratagem for't .... — iii. 6 

but, you say, she's honest _- iii 6 

what shall I say I have done? _ iv. 1 

and say, I got them in exploit iv. 1 

they will say, came you off _ iv. 1 

and to say, it was in stratagem iv. 1 

my clothes, and say I was stripped .. iv. 1 

then recover: say, thou art mine .... iv. 2 

she says, all men have the like iv. 2 

could not be her office to say, is come — iv. 3 

he can say nothing of me iv. 3 

what will you say without 'em? iv! 3 

like a past}', I can say no more iv 3 

the duke is strong. What say you .. — iv. 3 

I will say true, or thereabouts iv. 3 

poor rogues I pray you say _ iv. 3 

what a.iy you to that? iv. 3 

a dumb innocent that could not say .. — iv! 3 

and say, a soldier, Dian, told thee — iv. 3 (letter) 

but little more to say, sir, to his honesty — iv. 3 

what say you to his expertness in _ iv. 3 

the general says, you, that have so .. — iv. 3 

and, as he says, is mudded witlial.... — v. 2 

this I must say,— but first I v. 3 

what says he to your daughter? — v. 3 

I blush to say it, he won me . . — v. 3 (petition) 

unless thou can'st say they are v. 3 

this ring, you say was yours? v. 3 

this it says, when from my v. 3 

go by, says {_Col. S.Z Jeronimy , . Taming of Sh. 1 (ind.) 
say, what is it yourlionour (rep.) .. — 1 (indue.) 

when he says he is, say, that he — 1 (indue.) 

if she say I am not fourteen pence.. — 2 (indue.) 

say, thou wilt walk (rep.) _ 2 (indue.) 

yet would you say, ye were beaten.. — 2 (indue.) 

and say, .you would present her — 2 (indue.) 

they say, that I have dreamed _ 2 (indue.) 

I say a husliand. I say, a devil _ j, 1 

faith, as you sa.y; tliere's small clioice — i. 1 

how sav 3'ou, signor Gremio? i, 1 

knock I say (rep. ) i. 2 

bene trovato, may I say i! 2 

sir, you say well, and well do (rep.)., _ i! 2 

when she comes; say, that she rail (rep.) — ii. 1 

she says she'll see thee hanged first .. — ii. 1 

I know not what to say _ ii. 1 

amen, sa.y we; we will be witnesses .. ii. 1 

say, signer Gremio, what ii. i 

what says Lucentio to this (rep.) — iii. 2 

didst thou not say he comes? — iii, 2 

I sav his horse comes with iii. 2 

let all the world say no, I'll keep iii. 2 

a bridegroom, say you? — iii. 2 

why, when I say? nay, good sweet .. — iv. 1 

and sooth to say, in countenance .... — iv. 2 

as who should say, if I should sleep . . — iv. 3 

what say you to a neat's foot? — iv. 3 

how say 3'ou to a fat tripe — iv. 3 

have endured me say my mind — iv. 3 

she says, your worship means _ iv. 3 

I say unto thee. Ibid thy master — iv. 3 

this is true that I say iv, 3 

Hortensio, saj' thou wilt see _ iv. 3 

it shall be what o' clock I say it is .. iv. 3 

pardon me in what I have to say .... — iv. 4 

if you say no more (rep.) _ iv. 4 

I say, it is the moon that iv. 5 

say as he says, or we shall never go . . iv. 5 

it is not, when you say it is not iv. 5 

so his motlier says, and I may believe v. 1 

I say, he sliall go to prison v. 1 

then thou wert best say, that I v. 1 

my widow says, thus she , x. 2 

a hasty-witted body would say — v. 2 

well, I sa.v, no v. 2 

'she says, you have some goodly v. 2 

to your mistress; say (rep.) v. 2 

I know not what to say H'inlei's Tate, i. 1 

to make us say, this is put fortli .... — i. 2 

say this to him, he's beat from _ 1.2 

but let him say so then i. 2 

should yet say, sir no going — i! 2 

lest you sa.y, 5'our queen and I i. 2 

they say, it's a copy out of mine (ref i, 2 

are to this business purblind: say .... i. 2 

then say, my wife's a hobby-horse .. — i. 2 

troth-plight: say it, aud justify it — i. 2 

say, it be: 'tis true _ 1.2 

cannot say, you dare not — i. 2 

yet black brows, they say, become .. — ii. I 

' ■ — ii. 1 



yet niacK orows, inQy sa 
but I'd say, he had not ', 



SAY— be but about to say (rep.) Winter'sTale, ii. I 

should a villain say so ii, 1 

to say you did mistake _ ii! 1 

much comfort in't, says, m.v poor.... ii. 2 

I say, I come from your good queen — ii. 3 
encounter with my wrath, say so .... — ji. 3 
wolves and bears, they say, casting .. — ii. 3 

since what I am to say, must iii, 2 

scarce boot me to say not guilty .... _ iii. 2 

I say, she's dead; I'll swear't _ iii, 2 

say no more; howe'er the business .. — iii. a 

patience to yon, and I'll say nothing — iii. 2 

but I am not to sa.y, it is a sea _ iii. 3 

tliat Time himself doth say _ iy, (chorus) 

say to me, when saws't thou _ jv. 1 

a man they say that from _ iv. 1 

his vices, you would say (rep.) jv, 2 

what would he say? or how should I iv. 3 

most constant, though destiny say, uo iv 3 

say there be; yet nature is made .... _ jv. 3 

w hich, you say, adds to nature _ iv. 3 

this youth should say, 'twere well ... — iv. 3 

he says, he loves my daughter! iv. 3 

then, whither goest? say, whither? — iv. 3(Bong) 
which the wenches say is a eallimawfry — iv 3 

but, my daughter, say you the like . . — iv 3 

what you must say; that he — iv 3 

yea, say you so? there shall not _ iv! 3 

I cannot sa.y, 'tis pity she lacks _ iv. 3 

who, I may say, is no honest man .. iv. 3 

for a pheasant; say you have none .. — iv s 

some say he shall be stoned _ iv. 3 

and remain, as he says, your pawn .. — iv. 3 

as I may say, even blessed _ iv' 3 

sorely, to say I did y 1 

hisprincess, say you, with him? _ y! 1 

to say, you have seen a better v 1 

whom he loves, (he bade me say so). . — v! I 

could not say, if the importance _ v! 2 

I would fain say, bleed tears v. 2 

to say, one would speak to her _ t! 2 

you were best say, these robes _ v' 2 

you may say it, but not swear it _ v' 2 

and franklins say it, I'll y' 2 

behold; and say, 'tis well v! 3 

that I may say, indeed, thou art — v! 3 

and do not say, 'tis superstition _ v! 3 

well, Syraeusan, say, in \>riei..ComedyofF.rrors, i! 1 

O let me say no more! j 1 

they say, this town is full of _ i! 2 

say, is your tardy master _ ii i 

they say, every why hath a wherefore — ii! 2 

but s.a.y, sir, is it dinner-time? _ ii 2 

for your master, say he dines forth . . — ii! 2 

I'll say as they say; and persevere .. — ii. 2 

not hours: say that I lingered — iii. 1 

say what .you will, sir — iii! 1 

you would say so, master iii! 1 

you wrong me much to say so _ iv' I 

think him better than I say _ iv. 2 

have you not heard men say _ iv. 2 

and says, God give you good rest I .. — iv. 3 

the wenches say, God damn me — iv. 3 

fly pride, says the peacock _ iv. 3 

how say you now? is not _ iv, 4 

sir, sooth to say, you did not iv 4 

say, wherefore thou didst lock (rep.) — iv! 4 

say, woman, didst thou so? _ v. 1 

I am advised what I say y. j 

you say, he dined at home _ v! 1 

no, I say nay to that y! 1 

brave friend! say to the king Slacbelli, i. 2 

if I say sooth, I must report _ i. 2 

and say, which grain will grow — i. 3 

say from whence you owe i. 3 

only I have left to say _ i 4 

thou'rt mad to say it i! 5 

foolish thought, to say a sorry sight !! — ii! 2 

but they did say their prayers — ii, 2 

I could not say, amen, when they (rep.) _ ii. 2 

as they say, lamentings heard (rep.) ., _ ii. 3 

wliat is't you say? the life? _ ii. 3 

ranlc of manhood, say it iii. 1 

say to the king, I would attend _ iii! 2 

and say how much is done — iii. 3 

thou can'st not say I did it _ iii. 4 

tliey say, blood will have blood — iii. 4 

only, I say, things have been iii. 

•whom you may say, if it please — iii. 6 

as who should say, you'll rue iii. 6 

his speech, but say thou naught iv. 1 

this great king may kindly say iv, I 

to say, I have done no liarm iv 2 

didyousay, all? O hell-kite! — iv. 3 

have you heard her say? y. 1 

out, I say! one; two y! 1 

some sav. he's mad; others v! 2 

pnll't off, I say; what rhubarb — v. 3 

what we shall say we have — v. 1 

which I say I saw, but know not (rep.) y. 5 

they say, he parted well, and paid — v. 7 

now say, Chatillon, what would .... King John, i. 1 

who, as 3'Ou say, took pains _ i. I 

lest men should say, look, where .... — i. 1 

no sir, says question i. 1 

who lives and dares but say i. 1 

■who says it was, he lies; I sav i. I 

what England says, say briefly ii. 1 

I have but this to say, that he's not. . — ii, 1 

say shall the current of our right .... — ii. 2 

let it be SO; sa.v, where will you .... ii. 2 

not complete, to sa.v, he is not she .. ii. 2 

what say these young ones? (rep.) .. _ ii. 2 

in wisdom shall vouchsafe to sa.y.,.. ii. 2 

and say, there is no sin, but to lie rich ii. 2 

thou dost but say, 'tis so iii. 1 

thou darest not say so, villain — iii. 1 

what should he saj', but as the — iii. 1 

know not what to say. What (rep.) — iii. 1 

I had a thing to say _ iii. 3 



SAY 



SAY— to say what good respect I ....Km^JoAn, in. 3 

thou hast no cause to say so yet — \\\- 3 

well, I'll notsiiy what X intend — jii. 3 

I have heard you say, that wo — lii- l 

ay, tl>e king will not say, no — '"•■' 

Ihave to say with you — Iv. 1 

give nie the iron, I say — i^' ' 

which as tliey say (rep.1 — iv. :- 

wlnit says the world to your — iv. . 

whereon, he says, I shall yield . ... . . — iv. . 

stand back, I sayt by heaven, I tlunk — iv. 3 

did not the pro^iliet say, tluit — v. 1 

he flatly says, he'll not lay — v. 2 

tliey say king John, sore siek — v. 4 

I say again, if\Lewis do win .,~. ,,'^'? 

naught at all to say: flrst Richard II. i. 1 

besides I say, and will Irpp) — }• j 

our doctors say, this is no time — '• 1 

what shall I say? to safeguard — i. 2 

and the king's, say who thou art — i. 3 

when some of you sliould say, I was — i. 3 

go say, I sent thee forth to — !• 3 

and say, what store of parting — .1.4 

but, tliey say, the tongues — ii- 1 

he, that no more must say _ — \\- \ 

right, you say true: as Heretoid s — ii. 1 

what says he now? Nay, nothing — u. 1 

CGod forbid, I say true 1) — }}■ \ 

but I dare not say how near — i.!- l 

cousin, I would say; pray, pardon me — ;;. 2 

reply to aught you say — !!• ^ 

which they say , is held by Bushy — u. ^ 

rinele, you say, the queen is at ...... — in.- 1 

how can you say to me, I am a kmg? — in. 2 

say. Scroop, where lies our uncle .... — lu- 2 

hatli but a heavier tale to say — ui. 2 

what say you now? what comtort .. — in. - 

to say, king Richard: alack — ill- 3 

Northumberland, say, tlius the king — in. 3 

what savs king Bolingbroke? — !"• 3 

then 1 must not say, no — iJ!- 3 

why dost thou say king Richard — iii- » 

vet, what I say, is true — \"- * 

1 heard you say— is not my — iv. j 

whilst I say, lie lies, and lies, and lies — iv. 1 

I heard the banished Norfolk say ... . — iv. 1 

the kingi will no man say, amen? .. — iv. 

king Henry, unkinged Richard says — iv. 1 

say that again; the say of my — iv. 

tlie rest let sorrow say — ■*■• ' 

let me see it, I say. Treason ! — v. 2 

for tliere, they say (lep.) — v. 3 

nav, do not say— stand up — v. j 

in'i'rench, king; say, pardonnez moy — v. 3 

as who should say,— 1 would, thou wert — v. 4 

tliat my heart shall say — v. 5 

tlie devil, that told me, I did well, says — v. 5 

majesty, I should say, for grace {llenrylV.i.i 

and let men say, we be men ot — ;• 2 

says monsieur Remorse? what says.. — }■ f 

were, as he says, not with such — 1.3 

therefore, I say,— peace cousin, say no — i- 3 

you say true: why, what a candy — .1.3 

happy man be his dole, say I — ij- 2 

say you so? say you so? I say unto. . — u. 3 

and says to his wife, fie upon — n. | 

a plague of all cowards, I say — !}• ■• 

and theu say, it was in fight? — ]}■ i 

he says, he comes from your father.. — ii. ^ 

but, to say, I know more harm — ]]■ i 

1 have raucli to say in the behalf .... — n. 4 

I say, the eartli did shake when (lep.) — ifi- 1 

who shall say me nay? — })(• ' 

wouldsay, where? whichisBolingbroke?— in- '2 

and what say you to this? Percy — in- 2 

like a dog, it he would say so — in. 3 

and I said, I heard your grace say so — in. 3 

our purposes; what say you to it? .. — iv. I 

and tlie shirt, to say tlie truth — iv- 2 

why say you so? looks he not for.... — iv. 3 

to-night, say I. Come, come — iv. 3 

this is not well: what say you to t? .. — v. 1 

that friendship: say thy prayers .... — v. 1 

deliver what you will, I'll say 'tis so — v. 2 

111 follow, as they say, for reward. ... — y. 4 

what shall I say you are? 2Henrijlf. i. 1 

say, Morton, didst thou come trom .. — i. I 

this thou wouldst say, your son did thus — i. 1 

yet for all this, say not that Percy's — i. 1 

if he be slain, say so; the tongue — i. 1 

which says the dead is notalive — i- 1 

yet did you say,— go forth — !• 1 

what says the doctor to my water? . . — i. 2 

and yet he will not stick to say — J- 2 

why sir, did I say you were — i. ^ 

if you say I am any other than — i. 2 

I heard say, your lordship was sick.. — i. 2 

for you hear not what I say to j'ou .. — ;• 2 

if Ididsay of wax, my grovrth' — 1-2 

if you will needs say, lam — 1.2 

lord marshal, what say you to it? .. — .1.3 

and she says, up and down the town — 11. I 

court'sy, and say nothing, he is virtuous — 11. 1 

I say to you, X do desire deliverance — n. 1 

but the midwives say — li- 2 

the worst that they can say lA me la — 11. 2 

but they say, there is some of — n- 2 

how comes that? says he ..— n- '2 

which is as much as to say — 11. 2 (letter) 

ere one can say, what's this? — ii. 4 

OS they say, the emptier vessel — 11.4 

neighbour Quickly, says he, receive — n. 4 

I am the worse, when one says, swagger — 11. 4 

hold hook and line, say I (rep.) — 11. 4 

they say, Poins has a good wit — 11.4 

what says the almanack to that? — 11.4 

what says your grace? His grace says — 11. 4 

say, the bishop and Nortluiiiibeilaiid — 111 1 

I daresay, my cousin William is .. — iii. 2 

I may say to you, we knew where . . — m. 2 



[G51 ] 

SAY-a man is, as they say illenrylV. iii. 

she would always say, she could not — 111. 

rah, tah, tail, would a' say (rep.) .... — iii. 

say on, my lord of Westmoreland .. — iv. 

I say, if damned commotion — iv. 

and you shall say indeed, it is the time — iv. 

say you not tlien, our offer i.s compelled — iv. 

serves to say thus,— some good — iv. 

that I may justly say with — iv. 

chronicles, say, it did so, a little .... — iv. 

shall have just cause to say, IXeaven — v. 

why, then say, an old man can do .. — v. 

life that late lied, say they — y. 

to say, is of mine own making (ivp.) — (epil 
you would say, it hath been all in aXL-Uenri/y. 1. 

besides, their writers say, king Pepin — i. 

the prince our master says — .1. 

I care not; I say little: but when.... — n. 

and some say, knives have edges .... — 11. 

hear me, hear mo what I say — 11. 

what shalll say to thee; lord Scroop — ii, 

they say, he cried out of sack — 11. 

but unwholesome food, they say .... — ii. 

therefore I say, 'tis meet we all — ii. 

thus savs my king; and, if your .... — 11. 

therefore he scorns to say his prayers — 111. 

I say, gud-day, captain Fluellen .... — iii. 

what say you? will you yield — iii. 

and plainly say, our mettle is — lii. 

and let him say to England — lii. 

thus says my king: say thou to Henry — ill. 

for, to say the sooth (though 'tis no.. — in. 

we sav, we will not shun it — 111. 

I will" not say so. for fear I should .. — iii. 

you may as well say, that's a valiant — in- 

since I may say, now I lie like — iv. 

I dare say, you love him not so ill . . — iv. 

I myself heard the king say — iv. 

if ever tliou come to me and say — iv. 

what's to say? a very little little — iv. 

and say, to-morrow is (,rep.^ — iv. 

he says, his name is— master Fer .... — iv. 

with a feeble gripe, says, dear my lord — iv. 

your majesty says very true — iv. 

you say very true, scald knave — v. 

what says she, fair one? (rep.) — ■^- 

but directly to say, I love you (rep).. — T. 

how say you, lady? Saufvostre — v- 

if not, to say to thee, that I shall die — v. 

and say— Harry of England, lam .. — v- 

before they are married, would she say? — v. 

what should I say? his deeds i Henry ri. 1. 

why no, X say, distrustful recreants! — i. 

what she says, I'll confirm — i. 

as who should say, when I am dead — .1. 

a maid, they say, a maid! and be so — li. 

how say you, madam? Are yon now — ii. 

then say at once, if X maintained .... — ii. 

and say withal, X think he held .... — li. 

for his craven heart, say thus — ii. 

and say you are well warned — ji- 

1 daresay, this quarrel will — ij- 

why didst thou say, of late — .11- 

stay, stay, X say! (rep.) — }})• 

when Gloster says the word — i". 

to say the truth, this fact — iv. 

my lord, how say you? are you — iv. 

say, gentlemen, what makes — iv. 

the World will say (^»ep.) — iv. 

as who should say, had death — iv. 

who art thou? say, that X may honour — v. 

but my heart says, no — v. 

vouchsafe to listen what X say — v. 

how say you, madam; are you — v. 

a virgin, and his servant, say to him — v. 

to sav the truth, it is your — v. 

begone, I say; for, till you do return — y. 

and say, when X am gone 2HeimjFI,i. 

and so says York, for he hath greatest — i. 

I dare not say, from the rich — i. 

they say, a crafty knave does need no — 1. 

did the duke of York say, he was — i. 

my lord of Suffolk say, is this — 1. 

I say, my sovereign, York is meetest — i. 

say, man, were these thy words? — i. 

uncle, what shall we say to this law? — 1. 

I'll say, I am duke Humphrey's .... — .11. 

and say, I wronged the duke — lii. 

well, ray lord, to say so much. X say — lii. 

and 'twixt eneh groan, say—who's .. — iii. 

my lord of Sutfolk, say as you think — 111. 

say but the word, and X will be — lii. 

say, you consent, and censure well .. — iij. 

say, he be taken, racked — lii- 

will make him say, X moved him (rep.) — 111. 

say we intend to try his grace to-day — iii. 

forbear, X say; their touch afiriglits.. — in. 

did seem to say, seek not — nj- 

say, if thou darest, proud lord — in- 

with reverence may X say — ii>- 

and say— it was thy mother — i.n. 

they say, by him the good duke (rep-) — 111. 

no more, X say: if thou dost — i.n- 

well, I say, it was never merry — iv. 

as much as to sav, as, let the — iv. 

some say, the bee stings; but 1 say .. — iv, 

away with him, I sav; hang him — iv 

but, X say 'tis true; the elder — iv, 

we'll have the lord Say's head — iv 

lord Say, Jack Cade (7e;>.) — )v 

here'sthelordSay, which sold — iv 

all, thou say, thon serge, nay — iv 

what say yon of Kent? Nothing .... — iv 

as who should say, I'll be even — iv 

take him away, X say, and strilte .... — iv 

what say ye, countrymen? will ye relent — iv 

hiscap, and say, God save his majesty! — iv 

to say, if that the bastard boys — v 

say, what news with thee? — ^ 

his sons, he says, shall give their — v 



SxlY 



S.\Y— I say, come forth and fight ....ittunry 1 I. v. 2 

what says lord Warwick? — v.) 

I know not what to say iHenryfl. i. 1 

and say, alas, it was a piteous deed!.. — i. 4 

say how he died, for I will hear it all — ii. 1 

and dukedom, throne and kingdom siiy — ii. 1 

if for the last, say— Ay, and to it — ii. I 

hereafter say unto his child — ii. 2 

say, Henry, shall I have my right .. — ii. 2 

which Warwick says is right — ii. 2 

nor hears us what we say — ii.fi 

for wi.se men say, it is the wisest — iii. I 

and says, her lleiiiy is deposed (rep.) — iii. 1 

say, wiiat art thou, that talk'st of. ... — iii. I 

wilt say, a.y, to my request (rep.) .... — iij. 2 

say, that king Edward take — iii. 2 

and so X say. I'll cut the causes — iii. 2 

well, say there is no kingdom — iii. 2 

why, say, fair quten, whence springs — iii. 3 

myself have often heard him say .... — iii. 3 

X hear, yet say not much — iv. 1 

shecouldsay little less — iv. I 

I say not, slaughter him — iv. 2 

and says— that once more I shall .... — iv. 7 

ay, say you 60? — iv. 7 

say, Somerville, what says my — v. I 

say Warwick was our anchor — v. 4 

though the rough wind say no — v. 4 

say, you can swim; alas — v. 4 

what X should say, my tears gainsay — v. 4 

away, X say; X charge ye, bear her .. — v. 5 

my lord, X should say rather — v. 6 

aifd say, X sent thee thither — v. Ij 

X have often heard my mother say .. — v. 6 

to say the truth, so Judas kissed .... — y. 7 
about a prophecy, which says, that.. Richai-d III. i. 1 

and says, a wizard told him — i. 1 

any thing we say (rep.) — i. 1 

we say, that Shore's wife — i. 1 

how say yon, sir? — i. I 

say, X slew them not — i. 2 

why then [Co^Knf.-then say] they .. — i. 2 

say then, my peace is made I — i. 2 

prayer will scarcely say amen — i. 3 

dotii she say, my lord of Buckingham? — i. 3 

and say, poor Margaret was — i. 3 

he'll say, 'twas done cowardly (rep.) — i. 4 

the fee, and tell him what I say — i. 4 

then say at once, what is it thou .... — ii. 1 

therefore X say, with noble (re;>.) .... — ii. 2 

they say, ray son of York — ii. 4 

but say, my lord, it were not registered — iii. I 

so young, they say. do ne'er live long — iii. 1 

what say you, uncle? X say, without — iii. 1 

I must not say so — iii. I 

you'll say a beggar, na.v — iii. I 

so itshoiild seem by that Xliave to say — iii. 2 

besides, he says, there are two — iii. 2 

and tell him what 3'ou sa3' — iii. 2 

pray God, X say, X prove a needless.. — iii. 2 

X say, my lord, they have deserved .. — iii. 4 

yet who so bold, but says, he sees it not? — iii. 6 

how now? what say the citizens? — iii. 7 

are mum, say not a word — iii. 7 

as X can say nay to thee for — iii. 7 

what says your lord (rep.) — iii. 7 

God defend his grace should say us nay — iii. 7 

you say, that Edward (rep.) — iii. 7 

say it. In saying so, you shall but say — iii. 7 

ere men can say^— (iod save the queen! — iv. I 

when, X say, X looked on Richard's face — iv. 1 

say on, m.v loving lord (7-ep.) — iv. 2 

say, have X thy consent, that — iv. 2 

sav, it is done, and X will love — iv. 2 

what saj's your highness to my — iv. 2 

but where, to say the truth — iv. 3 

that X may live to say, the dog — iv. 4 

kneels, and says— God save the queen? — iv. 4 

strike, I say;— either be patient .... — iv. 4 

I say amen to her. Stay, madam — iv. 4 

to save her life, I'll say, she is not so — iv. 4 

which, say to her, did drain the purple — iv. 4 

what where X best to say? — iv. 4 

or shall X say, her uncle? — iv. 4 

to arm me: leave me, I say — v. 3 

what shall I say more than I — v. 3 

what says lord Stanley? will he .... — v. 3 

say, amen, to alU (rep.) -^ v. 4 

can be merry then, I'll say. . Henry VIII. (prologue) 

men might say, till this time — i. I 

I say again, there is no English soul — i. 1 

say not, treasonous. To the king I'll 6a3''t — i. I 

they say, they are devised by you .. — i. 2 

let me say, 'tis but the fate of place. . — i. 2 

that oft, says he, hath sent to me .... — i. 2 

canst thon say further? lean — i. 2 

say, lord Chamberlain, they have.... — i. 4 

what say they? such a one — i. 4 

hear what X say, and then go home. . — ii. 1 

and raust needs sa.v, a noble one .... — ii. 1 

and when you would say something — ii. 1 

who's there, X s,ay? how dare you.... — ii. 2 

they will not stick to say, you — ii. 2 

which, to say sooth, are blessings .... — ii. 3 

I'll to the king. Olid say, I spoke with — ii. 3 

say, are ,vou not stronger than yon were?— ii. 3 

therefore X say again, I ntterl.v abhor — ii. 4 

your speaking, and to sa.v so no more — ii. 4 

that's to sav, I meant to rectify — ii. I 

be pleased yourself to say how far .. ' — ii. 4 

break np the court: I say, set on .... — ii. 4 

tlie3' willed me say so, madam — iii. I 

but say, X warned ye; take heed .... — iii. 1 

(I dale sa.v, without vain-glorv) .... — iii. 1 

a kind of good deed, to say well — iii. 2 

say, withal, if yon are bound irep.).. — iii. 2 

say, X taught thee, say, Wolsey — iii. 2 

their coronets say so; these are stars — iv. I 

no man living could say, this is my wife iv. 1 

i" the presence he would say untruths — iv. 2 



SAY 

>AY, his long trouble now is Henry VI 11. iv. 2 

as they say, spirits do (rfp.) — v. 1 

and yet my conscience says she's .... — v. 1 

I do say, my lord, grievous — v. 1 

is the queen delivered? say, ay — v. 1 

1 cuuUI say more, but reverence — v. 2 

worst of u 11 this table say so — V. 2 

not sound, I say. Would you were half — v. 2 

1 have a little yet to say — v. 2 

I will say tiius mucli for him — v. 2 

of thee, whieii says thus — v. 2 

they'll say. 'tis naught — (epil.) 

if they smile, and say, 'twill do — (epil.) 

wlieii I say— I love her Troilus 4- Cressida, i. 1 

eay I, she IS not fair? — i. 1 

they say, he is a very man {rrp.) .... — i. 2 

so he says here. True, he was so .... — i. 2 

I say, Troilus is Troilus (rep.) — i. 2 

tn sav trutli, brown and not Drown {,rep.) — i. 2 

take't off. who will, as they say — i. 2 

say one of .vour watches — i. 2 

as Ulysses says (rep.) — 1.3 

he'll say in Troy, when he retires — i. 3 

say so,— did not the general run then? — ii. 1 

I say, the proclamation — ii. 1 

what I say of him. What? I say .... — ii. 1 

thus once again says Nestor from .... — ii. 2 

}lector, what say you to't — ii. 2 

then, I say, well may we fight — ii. 2 

and devil, envy, say Amen — ii. 3 

if slie tliat lays thee out, says, thou .. — ii. 3 

I shall say so to liim — ii. 3 

Achilles bids me say,— he is — ii. 3 

if yoxi do say —we think him — ii. 3 

his thought, and say he is? — ii. 3 

what should I say? He is so plaguy — ii. 3 

and say in thunder, Achilles — ii. 3 

■well, you say so in fits — iii. 1 

what says my sweet queen? (rep.).. — iii. 1 

why should you eay— Cressida? — iii. I 

they say, all lovers swear — iii. 2 

as what envy can say worst — iii. 2 

yea, let them say, to stick — iii. 2 

which, you say, live to come in — iii. 3 

what says Achilles? would he aught — iii. 3 

as who should say— there were wit .. — iii. 3 

what say you to't? — iii. 3 

let her say what — iv. 2 

is he here, say you? — iv. 2 

some say, the (Senius so cries, come I — iv. 4 

be thou true, say I, to fashion — iv. 4 

but that you say,— be't so — iv. 4 

tlius says iEneas; one that knows ., — iv. 5 

that thou couldst say,— this hand — iv. 5 

tliey say, he keeps a T'rojan drab .... — v. 1 

no more, I say Cep.) — V. 3 

what says she there? Words, words. . — v. 3 

Troilus, I say I Where's Troilus (rep.) — v. 6 

Fate, hear me what I say 1 — v. 6 

mark what I say - v. 7 

I say, at once let your brief — v. 11 

and say there— Hector's dead — v. 11 

there is no more to say — v. 1 1 

I'll say of it, it tutors nature . . Timon of Athens, i. I 

imprisoned is he, say you? — i. 1 

there's none can truly say, he gives . . — i. 2 

they say, my lords, that u'a furor .... — i. 2 

I have one word to say to you... — i. 2 

Caphis, hoi Caphis, I say! — ii. 1 

I am proud, say, that my occasions . . — ii. 2 

nothing doubting, says he? — iii. I 

and say, thou saw'st me uot — iii. 1 

the more beast, I say — iii. 2 

one of my greatest afflictions, say . . . . — iii. 2 

why, I say, my lords — iii. 5 

what should I say to you? — iv. 2 

and say, as 'twere a knell unto our .. — iv. 2 

and say, this man's a flatterer? — iv. 3 

1 flatter not; but say, thou art — iv. 3 

I'll say, thou hast gold — iv, 3 

what I shall say I have provided .... — v. 1 

even so, sir, as I say — v. 1 

I must needs say, you have a little .. — v. I 

but saj' to Athens, Timon — v. 2 

to say, thou'lt enter friendly — v. 5 

I say unto you, what he hath Coriolanus, i. 1 

can be content to say, it was — i. 1 

you must in no way say, he is — i. 1 

they say, poor suitors have strong. . . . — i. 1 

(this says tlie belly) mark me — i. I 

what say you to't? It was an answer — i. 1 

they say, the city (rep.) _ i. 1 

what says the other troop? — i. 1 

yet, they say, all the yarn she spun.. — i. 3 

say, has our general met the enemy? — i. 4 

shall say, against their hearts — i. 9 

no more, I say; for that I have not .. — i. 9 

I cannot say, your worships have.... — ii. 1 

those that say j'on are reverend — ii. 1 

this, as you say, suggested at some .. — ii. 1 

three, they say; but 'tis thought of every — ii. 2 

than hear say how I got them — ii. 2 

let me say, I cannot speak him — ii. 2 

I say, if he would incline — ii. 3 

what must I say? I pray, sir — ii. 3 

.your good voice, sir; what say you?.. — ii. 3 

but says, he used us scornfully — ii. 3 

I would be consul, says he — ii. 3 

say. you chose him (rep.) _ ii. 3 

I say again (rep.) — iii. 1 

wants not spirit to say, he'll turn.... — iii. 1 

rather say, I play the man I am — iii. 2 

have heard you say, honour and policy — iii. 2 

or, say to them, thou art their soldier — iii. 2 

now, say you will, and go about it ,. — iii. 2 

when tlioy hear me say, it shall — iii. 3 

if I say fine, cry fine — iii. 3 

peace, I say (rep.) — iii. 3 

10, citizens, he says, he is content .... — iii. 3 

but. as I say, such as become a soldier — iii. 3 



[ 652 ] 



S AY then ; 'tis true, I ought so Coriotanus, iii. 

I would say, thou liest, luito thee.... — iii. 

I say, it shall be so. It shall — iii. 

you 'were used to say ()ep.) — iv. 

say, their great enemy is gone — iv. 

tliey say, slie's mad. Tliey have .... — iv. 

power to say so to my husband — iv. 

have you an army ready, say you? .. — iv. 

speak divine things, and say, 'tis true — iv. 

that shall say, yea, to thy desires.... — iv. 

one cannot tell how to say that — iv. 

say, thwack our general? I dolnot say — iv. 

I have heard him say so himself .... — iv. 

directly, to say tlie trutli on't — iv. 

he'll go, he says, and sowle the porter — iv. 

let me have war, say I — iv. 

if they should say, oe good to Rome — iv. 

I have not the face to say, beseech you — iv. 

say not, we brought it — iv. 

and, to say the truth, so did very.... — iv. 

very well : could he say less? — v. 

well, and say that Marcius return me — v. 

with his unkindncss? say 't be so? ., — v. 

his liar (as you say, you have — v. 

must say, you cannot pass — v. 

back, I say, go, lest I let forth — v. 

I'll say an errand for you — v. 

I say to you. as I was said to — v. 

but do not say, for that, forgive our.. — v. 

say, 1115' request's unjust, and spurn — v. 

in my stead, say, would you have .. — v. 

but, I say, there is no hope in't — v. 

move the people with what he would say — v. 

say no more; here come the lords .. — v. 

your city Rome, (I say, your city) .. — v. 

I am but, as you would say JuUusCcBsar, i. 

our elders say, the barren, touched in — i. 

when Csesar says, do this, it is performed — i. 

when could they say, till now — i. 

you and I have heard our fathers say — i. 

what you have to say, I will with .. — i. 

did Cicero say any tiling? — i. 

let not men say, these are their — i. 

indeed, they say, the senators — i. 

awake, I say; what Lucius! — ii. 

he says, he does; being then most .. — ii. 

what say the augurers? — ii. 

and he shall sa.y, 3'ou are not well .. — ii. 

Mark Antony shall say, I am not well — ii. 

when you have heard what I can say — ii. 

for some one to say, break up — ii. 

say, I am merry: come to me (rep.) — ii. 

prostrate, thus he bade me say — iii. 

say, I love Brutus, and I honour (rep.) — iii. 

so says my master Antony — iii. 

alas! what shall I say? — iii. 

the enemies of Cffisar shall say this.. — iii. 

and say, you do't by our permission — iii. 

bid me say to you by word of mouth — iii. 

to him I say, that Brutus' love — iii. 

say of Brutus? He says, for Brutus' sake — iii. 

let us hear what Antony can say ... , — iii. 

Brutus says, he was ambitious (rep.) — iii, 

I heard him say, Brutus and Cassius — iii. 

wisely I say, I am a bachelor (rep.),, — iii. 

I am. I say, you are not — iv. 

did I say, better? If .you did, I care not — iv. 

there is no more to say? No more. ... — iv. 

what says my general ? — v. 

I may say, thrusting it; for piercing — v. 

what says ray lord? Why this — v. 

say to all the world, this was a man I — v. 

Csesar's, I would say? Both? Antony fyCieo.i. 

which, you say, must change his horns — i. 

Antony, thou wouldst say,— O ray lord! — i. 

if you find him sad, say, I am dancing — i. 

what says the married woman? — i. 

let her not say, 'tis I that keep — i. 

and say, the tears belong to Egypt .. — i. 

say, this becomes him, (as his — i. 

all the east, say thou, shall call — i. 

to say. as I said then I — i. 

and my auguring hope says, it will.. — ii. 

I should say myself offended — ii. 

you must but say, I could not help it — ii. 

say not so, Agrippa (7-ep.) — ii. 

say to me, whose fortunes shall rise — ii. 

I say again, thy spirit is all afraid .. — ii. 

get thee gone; say to Ventidius ... — ii. 

and say, ah, ha! you're caught — ii. 

if thou say so, villain (rep.) — ii. 

we use to say, the dead are well .... — ii. 

what say you? hence, horrible — ii. 

say, 'tis not so, a province I — ii. 

if thou again say, yes — ii. 

say in mine ear: what is't? — ii. 

what's else to say? Be jolly, lords .. — ii. 

ho, says a'! there's my cap — ii. 

as Menas says, is troubled with — iii. 

would you praise Cnesar, say,— Cffisar — iii. 

then does lie say, he lent me — iii. 

do not say so, ray lord — iii. 

what is't you say? Your presence .. — iii. 

they say, one Taurus — iii. 

fall not a tear, I say; one of — iii. 

will yield us up. He says so — iii. 

none but friends: say boldly — iii. i 

shall I sav to Cajsar (rep.) — iii. 

and say, God quit you! — iii. 

look, thou say, he makes me — iii. 

peace, I say, what should this mean? — iv. 

irom Cesar's camp say, I am none .. — iv. 

say, that I wish he never find — iv. 

arid, they say, we shall embattle .... — iv. 

say, that the last I spoke was — iv. 

let me say, before I strike this — iv. 

I say, OCaj.^.ar, Antony is dead — v. 

we'll hear him, what he says — v. 

go, and say, we puri)Ose her no shame — v. 

bring us what she says, aud how .... — v. 



SAY 



SAY, I would die Antony ^ Cleopatra, v. 2 

say, good Ca!sar, that I some trifles. . — v. 2 

and say, some nobler token — v. 2 

but he that will all that they say .... — v- 2 

that I m.ay say, the gods themselves — v. 2 

but had most pretty things to say Cymbeline, i. 4 

(it I offend not to say it is mended).. — i. 5 

will my lord say so? ay, madam .... — i. 7 

I was about to saj', enjoy your — i. 7 

happy Leonatus! 1 may say — i. 7 

why, so I say. Did you hear of — ii. 1 

they say, it will penetrate — ii. 3 

but that you shall not sa.y I yield.. .. — ii. 3 

now say, wiiat would Augustus Cffisar — iii. 1 

1 do not say, I am one — iii.) 

we do say then to CiBsar — iii. 1 

say, and speak thick — iii. 2 

say she'll home to her father — iii. 2 

there's no more to say; accessible .. — iii. 2 

son, I say, follow the king _ iii. 5 

which, as I say, to vex her, I will.... — iii. ,5 

if it be sin to say so, sir — iv. 2 

and I have heard you say. Love's..., — iv. 2 

I'd say, my father, not tliis youth . . — iv. 2 

our courtiers say, all's savage — iv. 2 

say, what tliou art; why I should yield — iv. 2 

you say he is so fell — iv. 2 

say, where shall's lay him? — iv. 2 

we'll say our song the whilst — iv. 2 

say his name, good friend — iv. 2 

say you, sir! Thy name? Fidele .... — iv. 2 

I will not say thou shalt be so — iv. 2 

BO say I. Amen. No reason I — iv. 4 

pr'ytliee, say. First, she confessed.... — v. 5 

thou raay'st say, and prove it in tliy — v. 5 

nor wherefore, to say, live, boy — v. 3 

that diamond upon your finger, say — v. 5 

what should I say? he was too good.. — v. 5 

O never say hereafter, but I am truest — v. 6 
crown him, and say— long live our. TitnsAndron. i. 2 

Isay no more, nor wish no less — i. 2 

away, I say; now by the gods — ii. I 

Lavinia, how say you! I s.ay no .... — ii. 2 

the power that some say (rep.) — ii. 3 

though tliy hard lieart say no — ii. 3 

shall I say, 'tis so? O that I knew . . — ii. 5 

and let me say, that never wept before — 

say thou for her, who hath done . . — 
now would she say that to her brother — 
and that you'll sa'y, ere half an hour — 

as for my sons, say, I account — 

hark, Marcus, what she says (rep.) ,, — 

heard my grandsire say full oft — 

boy what say you? I say, my lord .. — 

for so he bade me say — iv. 2 

lacks but your mother for to say amen — iv. 2 

as who should sa.y, old lad, I am .... — iv. 2 

what shall I say unto the empress? . . — iv. 2 

but, say again, how many saw — iv. 2 

what says Jupiter? (rep.) _ iv. 3 

1 could never say grace in all my life — iv. 3 
as who would say, in Rome no justice — 

hatli often overheard them say — 

as he saitli, so say we all with him ., — 

say, wall-eyed slave, whither — 

I say, thy child shall live — 

what 1 canst thou say all this — 

what says our general? — 

and say, I am Revenge, sent from .. — v. 2 

where, they say, he keeps — v. 2 

what says Andronicus to this device? — v. 2 

what say you, boys? (rep.) — v. 2 

what say you, Romans? have we ... . — v. 3 

if you say, we shall, lo, hand in hand — v. 3 

tell you what mine authors say. Pericles, i. (Gower) 

who daresay, Jove doth ill? — i. 1 

say, is it done? ray lord, 'tis done — i, I 

unless thou say. Prince Pericles is dead — i. I 

nor boots it me to say, I honour him .. — i. 2 

and will not say, he wants it — i. 4 

what, Patcli-breech, I say I Wliat say you — ii. I 
they say, they are half fish, half flesh.. — ii. I 
■ ii. 3 



here say, we drink this standing-bowl 
why sir, say if you had, who takes . . . . 

says to thera, if king Pericles — 

whiles I say a priestly farewell to her. . 

mariuer, say what coast this is? 

O, you say well. But I much marvel.. 
gods, I cannot rightly say 



iii, (Gower) 

— iii. 1 

— iii. 1 

— iii. 2 

— iii. 4 



— iv. 3 



v. (Gower) 



ha! says one, wilt thou? 

come, say your prayers speedily 

my masters, you say she's a virgin?.... 
therefore say what a paragon she is. . . , 

wiiat canst thou say, when noble 

she died by night; I'll say so 

as for Pericles, what should he say?. . . . 
thou would'st say. Your lionour (rep.) 
I hear say, you are of honourable parts 

come your ways, I say 

into an honest house, our story says • 

was it not thus? what say yoii — v. 1 

didst thou not say, when I did push .. — v. 1 

than to say, my mother's name — v. I 

you have heard me say, when — v. 3 

shall we say, doth love us most? Lear, i. 1 

wliat says our second daughter — i. I 

what can you say, to draw a third — i. I 

if they say, they love you, all? — i. I 

what say yon to the lady? love is not .... — i. 1 

sister, it is not a little I have to say — i. 1 

and, as I say, retire with me to my — i. 2 

liim that is wise, and says little — i. 4 

what says the fellow there? Call — i. 4 

your face bids me, though you say nothing — i. 4 

how fell you out? say tliat — ii. 2 

no, I say. I say, yea. No, no — ii. 4 

have you no more to say? Few words.... — iii. 1 

of all patience, I will say nothing — iii. 2 

go to; say you nothiug — iii. 3 



SAY 



SAY— he says his name's poor Tom Ijrar, iii. 4 

says siuini» mim, ha no non»y, dolphin ,, — iii. 4 

von will say, tlieyni'c Porsliin attire — iii, 6 

bind liiin, i say. Hard, liard — iii. 7 

I'd say, I Iwitl eyes again! — iv. 1 

gods I wlio is't can say, I ara at — iv. I 

is not. so long as we ca?i say — iv. 1 

often 'twonld say. tlie fiend, tlie iicnd — iv. 6 

to say aj' and no too to every tiling I said I — iv. ti 

none' does offend, none, I say, none — iv. fj 

your wife (so I would say), lind your — iv.60et.) 

1 Itnow not wliat to say; I will not swear — iv. 7 

they say, Edgar liis lmnisl\ed son — iv. 7 

eitlier say tliou'ltdo't, or thrive by — v. 3 

marlt, I say, instantly; and carry it so .. — v. 3 

say tliou, no: tliis sword, this arm — v. 3 

soine say of breeding breatlies — v. :i 

say, if I do; the laws arc mine — v. 3 

yo"u loolc as yon had something more to say — v. 3 

he Icnows not what he says — v. 3 

my master calls, and I must not say, no. . — v. 3 
what we feel, not what we ought to say . . — v. 3 
is the law on our side, if Isay, ay?./i()meo«§-./ufic^i. I 
my sword, I say! old Montague is come — i. 1 

1 will not say, now true — i. 1 

my lord, what say you to my suit? .. — i. 2 

to tliem say. my house and welcome — i. 2 

ye say lionestly: rest you merry! — i. 2 

It sl\c>uld leave" crying, and say, ay .. — i. 3 

I pray tliee, nurse, say I — i. 3 

I'd say, thou hadst sucked — i. 3 

what say you, can you love — i. 3 

and to say truth, Verona brsies of )\im — i. 5 

I say, lie shall; go to: am 1 the — i. fj 

she speaks, yet slie says nothing .... — ii. 2 
I know, thou wilt say, ay; and I will — ii. 2 
thev say, .Jove la\iglis; O gentle Romeo — ii. 2 
and be perverse, and say thee nay . . — ii. 2 

ere one can say, it lightens — ii. 2 

that's as much as to say, such — ii. 4 

you say well. Yea, is the worst well? — ii. 4 
what she bade me say, I will keep to — ii. 4 
as they say, it were a very gross (rep.') — ii. 4 

go to; I say, you shall — ii. 4 

did you ne'er hear say, two may .... — ii . I 

when I say so, she looks as pale — ii. 'I 

breath to say to me, that thou art .. — ii. 5 
say either.and I'll stay the circumstance — ii. 5 
what says he of our marriage? (rep.) — ii. !> 
and says, Godsend me no need of thee! — iii. 1 
say thou but I, and that bare vowel — iii. 2 
if lie be slain, say, I; or, if not, no ., — iii. 2 

be merciful, say— death — iii. 3 

do not say— banishment — iii. 3 

and what says my concealed lady ,. — iii. 3 
she says nothing, sir, but weeps .... — iii. 3 
but what say you to Thursday? .... — iii. 4 
I'll say, yon grey is not the morning's — iii. 5 

some say, the lark (rep.) — iii. 5 

stutiiid (as tliey say) with honourable — iii. 5 
you say, you do not; know tlie lady's — iv. 1 
where, as they say, at some hours in — iv. 3 
why, love, I say 1 madam! sweetheart! — iv. 6 
what say you, Simon Catling? (rep.) — iv. !> 

I know not what to say — iv. .5 

the singer: I will say for you — iv. .'> 

what says llomeo? or, if his mind be — v. 2 
and hereafter say — a madman's mercy — v. 3 
then say at once what thou dost know — v. 3 
Konieo's man? what can he say in this? — v. 3 

Horatio says, 'tis but our fantasy Hfiiitlef, i. I 

they say, you spirits oft walk (/-ep.) — i. 1 

what says Polonius? He hath, my lord .. — i. I 
I would not hear your enemy say so .... — i. 2 

armed, say you? Armed, my lord — 1. 2 

then if lie says, he loves you — i. 3 

carrying, I say, the stamp of one — i. 4 

say, why is this? wlierefore? — i. 4 

I say. away: 20on,—ril follow thee .... — i. I 
how say you tlien; would heart of man.. — i. .0 

but yon may say, not well — ii. t 

about to say? by the mass, I was (_rep.) .. — ii. 1 
and, as yon say, there was he gaming.. .. — ii. 1 
or. rather say, tile cause of this defect.. .. — ii. 2 

how say you by that? still harping — ii. 2 

for the satirical rogue says here — ii. 2 

say you? nay. then I have an eye of you — ii. 2 

by vour smiling, j'ou seem to say so — ii. 2 

aiid the lady shall say her mind freely . . — ii. 2 

will they not say afterwards — ii. 2 

for they say, an old man is twice a child — ii. 2 

pr'y thee, say on (rep.) — ii. 2 

to say we end the heart-ach — iii. 1 

I say, we will have no more marriages .. — iii.! 
(as I may say) whirlwind of your passion — iii. 2 
played once in the university, you say? — iii. 2 

as you saj', my mother (rep.) — iii. 2 

I will say so. By and by is easily said .. — iii. 2 

of your dread command? O say ! — iii. 4 

why yet I live to say, tills thing's to do .. — iv. 4 
says, she hears, tlicre's tricks i' the world — iv. 5 

say yon? nay, pray you, mark — iv. 5 

they say, the owl was a baker's daughter — iv. 4 
ask you, what it mean<, say you this .... — iv. 5 

they say, he made a good end — iv. 5 

they say, they have letters for you — iv. 

sailors, my lord, they say — iv. 7 

in a postscript here, he says, alone — iv. 7 

wherein they say, you shine — iv. 7 

let shame say what it will — iv. 7 

the scripture says, Adam digged — v. I 

now thou dost ill, to suy, the gallows is .. — v. 1 
this question next, say, a graveinaker .. — v. I 
which could say, good-morrow, sweet lord! — v. 1 

to be in't, and say it is tiiine — v. I 

very strangely, they say — v. 1 

a man's lire's no more tlian to say, one ,, — v. 2 
but as 1 say, spacious in the possession .. — v. 2 

and say, you are not fit — v. 2 

come. Anotlier hit; what say you? — v. a 



[ (55a j 

SAY you so? come on Ilmnlel, v. 2 

for, certes, says he, I have already cliose.O'/ieito, i. 1 
hast heard me say, my daughter is not .. — i. I 
I say again, hatli made a gross revolt .... — i. 1 

light, i say! light: Farewell — i. I 

letters say, a hundred and seven gallius.. — i. 3 

liow say you by tills change? — i. 3 

in your own part, can you say to this? .. — i. 3 
say it, Othello. Her fai her loved nie .... — i. 3 
ere I would say, I would drown myself .. — i. 3 

I say, put money in thy purse — i. 3 

what say you? No more of drowning — i. 3 

you have little cause to say so — ii. 1 

how say yon, Cassio? — ii. 1 

you say true; 'tis so, indeed — ii. 1 

as (they say) base men, being in love .... — ii. 1 

to say so to the Atoor — ii. 3 

away, I say! go out, and cry frep.) — ii. 3 

till to-night, I ne'er might say before.... — ii. 3 

1 may say so in this respect — ii. 3 

and what's he then, that says— I play.... — ii. 3 

but, as they say, to hear music — iii. I 

what dost thou say? ((rep.) — iii. 3 

save that, they say, the wars must — iii. 3 

I heard thee say but now — iii. 3 

why, say, they are vile and false — iii. 3 

to say— my wife is fair, feeds well — iii. 3 

dost tliou say so? she did deceive — iii. 3 

like the mines of sulphur. I did say so .. — iii. 3 
what shall I say? where's satisfaction? ,. — iii. 3 

but yet, I say, if imputation — iii. 3 

in sleep I heard him say — iii. 3 

patience, I say; your mind, perhaps — iii. 3 

let me hear thee say that Cassio's uot .. — iii- 3 

I dare not say, he lies any where — iii. 4 

for me to say a soldier lies (re/?.) — iii. 4 

say you? It is not lost; but what (rep.) — iii. 4 
and say, if I shall see you soon at night! — iii. 4 
we say, lie on her, when they belie lier .. — iv. I 
my lord, I say! Othello! How now.... — iv. 1 

I say, but mark his gesture (re/?.) — iv. ! 

pr'ythee, say true — iv. 1 

go to, say no more. How shall I — iv. 1 

hang her! I do but say what she is — iv. 1 

and she's obedient, as you say, obedient — Iv. 1 
slie says enough; yet she's a simple (rep.') — iv. 2 
such as, she says, my lord did say I was — iv. 2 
I cannot saj', whore; it does ablior me ., — iv. 2 
by this hand, I say, it is very scurvy .... — iv. 2 

he says, he will return incontinent — iv. 3 

say, that they slack (rep.) — iv. 3 

if you say so, I hope you will not Icill me — v. 2 
liord have mercy on me ! I saj', amen ., — v. 2 
ay. He'll not say so. No, his mouth .... — v. 2 
but while I say one prayer. It is too late — v. 2 
you heard her say herself, it was not I .. — v. 2 

I say, thy husband (rep.) — v. 2 

my husband say, that she was false? .... — v. 2 
if he say so, may his pernicious soul .... — v. 2 

if thou be'st a man: he says, thou — v. 2 

did you say, with Cassio? — v. 2 

set you down this; and say, besides — v. 2 

'S AY'D— [Cu(. Knl.^ 'say'd yet {rep.') I'ericles, i. I 

SAYING— and the old saying is. Two Uen.of Ver. v. 2 

what mean you by that saying? — v. 4 

for say in" so, there's gold Twel/lkNight, i. 2 

can tell thee where that saying was born — i. !i 
saying, cousin Toby, my fortunes. . . . -~ ii. 5 

aiid the old saying'is — V. 1 

and all those sayings will I — v. 1 

put these sayings upon me? .... Metis, for Meas. it. 2 
saying, I liked her ere I went to wars.MuchAdo, i. 1 
if tlieir singing answer your saying.. — ii. 1 
out at a window? a proper saying! .. — iv. 1 
must speak through, saying thus. .lilid.N.'s Dr. iii. I 

and my saying apt? (rep.) l,rjve'sL.Lost,'\.2 

by saying, that a Costard was broken — iii. 1 
come upon thee with an old saying . — iv. 1 
reputed wise, for saying notliing.7i/er. o/Venice^ i. 1 
my meaning, in saying he is a good — i. 3 

tempts me, saying to liie, Gobbo .... — ii. 2 
and sncli odd sayings, the sisters .... — ii. 2 
while grace is saying, hood mine .. .. — ii. 2 
let's see once more tliis saying graved — ii. 7 

the ancient saying is no lieresy — ii. 9 

entreat me, past all saying nay — iii. 2 

pulled out thy tongue for saying so.. 4s t/ouLifceiV, i. 1 
that shall civil sayings show, some.. " — iii. 2 
for all tlie old gentleman's saying .. — v. 1 

I do now remember a saying — v. I 

or spitting, or saying we are hoarse — v. 3 

you would believe my saying IVinler'sTale, ii. 1 

though 'tis a saying, sir, not due to me — iii. 2 
giildsinith here denies that saying.. Com. q/"Krr. v. I 

not dead, for all your saying Mncbe/h, iv. 2 

to prove my saying true Kin^Jnlin, iii. 1 

the heavy time; saying, what lack you? — iv. 1 
twice sayingpardon, doth not pardoii./(i(/i'ir(///. v. 3 

art an unjust man in saying so 1 Henri/W. iii. 3 

saying, tluit ere long they should ..iHeyiryiy. ii. i 

hut there's a saying, very old Henry V. i. 2 

and swift corantos; saying, our grace — iii..'? 
come, 'tis a foolish saying; your reproof — iv. 1 
but tlie saying is true, the empty .... — iv. 4 

saying— the sanguine ni>li>ur of \UenryVJ. iv. I 

for saying, that tlie duke of York . .2Hei,ni I'l. i. 3 
sayiiig, he'll lade it dry to have.... 3 He?ir!/r/. iii. 2 
tlie saying did not hold in liim . . . . Hichard III. ii. 4 
only for saying—he would make his son — iii. .'i 
in saying it, you shall but say the truth — iii. 7 
doing well with my well saying!.. Ilnirx/Vlll. iii. 2 
but, saying, tlius, instead of oil.. Troilus^ Cress, i. 1 

lie raves in saying nothing — iii. 3 

as the goodly saying is, O heart .... — iv. 4 
deed of saying is quite out of use.. Timon nfAth. v. 1 
yet you must be saying, Marcius i8.C'or(V?/a?iMS, ij. I 
to liave't witti saying, good-morrow — iii 3 

much reason in his sayings jHltusCtes(o\ iii. 2 

liast proved Lncilius' sa>ing true .. .. — \-.i 
a black dog, as the saying is .. TilHs.lii'lyoiiiciis, y. I 



SAY 



SAYING— have excuse, with saying.... Pej-Wes, ii. 3 

cold as a snow-hall; saving liis prayers — iv. 6 

but saying o'er what I have said.«i)i?ieoi5-./«(/e/, i. 2 

mav give Ills saying deed; whicli is .. — i. 2 

SAY'ST— by foul play, as thou sa3''st ..Tempest, i. 2 

what thou say'st? TwoGeu.o/l'erona, ii. 6 

but, Launce, now say'st thou — ii. r? 

wliat say'st thou? (rep. iv. 4) — iv. I 

what say'st thou, bully-rook? .... Merry ll'ires,i\. j 

say'st thou so, old Jack? — ii. 2 

between nine and ten, say'st thou? .. — iii..'? 

what say'st thou? TireiflhNight, iii. 4 

say'st thou, that house is dark? — iv. 2 

say'st thou to tliis tune (rep.) .. Meas.forMeas. iii. 2 
thou being, (as thou say'st thou art)../l/«c/i/lJo, i. 3 

say'st thou, bully Bottom? ttl id. N.'s Dream, iii 1 

ha, ha! what suy'st thou? lovr'sL.Losi.'m. 1 

ha;— what say'st thou? ....Merchant of Venice, iii. I 
as thou say'st, charged my brother. /!» you Lrte it, i. 1 

by my troth thou say'st true — i. 2 

what say'st thou, Silvius? (rep. iv. 1) — iii. 5 
thou say'st well: I do now remember .— v. 1 

what say'st thou to her? AlVs tVelt, v. 3 

no, say'st me so. friend? Taming of Shrew, i. 2 

why, thou say'st true; it is a paltry — iv. 3 

what say'st thou, Biondello? — iv. 4 

a maiden, as thou say'st he is — ii-. 5 

thou villain, what say'st tliou?.. Cmnedy of Err. iv. 4 
thou say'st, his sports were hindered — v. I 

how say'st thou, that Macdufi'denies.;'V/ae6e//i, iii. 4 

what say'st thou, boy? look in KivgJo/ni. ii. 2 

Philip, what say'st thou to the cardinal? — iii. I 
of Norfolk, what say'st thou to this? Itichard II. i. I 
thou, now a dving, say'st— thou flatter'st — ii. I 

thou say'st well (rep.) iHenryW. i. 2 

what say'st thou to a hare — i. 2 

what say'st, my lady? What is it — ii. 3 

what say'st thou to this? (rep.) — ii. 4 

tlie mass, lad, thou say'st true (rep. iii. 3)— ii. 4 
what say'st thou, mistress Quickly? — iii. 3 
mass, thou say'st true: the prince ..'ZHenryW. ii. 4 
set me a weeping, an' thou say'st so — ii. 4 

say'st thou me so? is tliat a ton HenryF.iv. i 

what say'st thou then to mv love! (rep.) — v. 2 
what say'st thou, man, before dead . . 1 He7iry ri.].\ 
what say'st tliou, Charles? (rep. V. 4) — iii. 3 

what say'st tliou, Maiesty! (rep.) 2Henryyi. i. 2 

what say'st thou? did the duke — i. 3 

say'st thou me so? what colour is .. — ii. 1 
what say'st thou, Henry (lep. iv. b).3Henry VI. ii. 2 
what say'st thou now? speak ....Hichard III. iv. 2 
wliat say'st? After— the duke his ..Henry I'll I. i. 2 
what say's thou? ha! to pray for her — v. 1 

what say'st thou to me no« ? fulius Crrsnr, i. 2 

thou say'st; and thou say'st Antony ^Cleo. ii. 5 

what say'st thou? (rep. iv. 5) — ii. 7 

these wars; and sav'st, it is not fit .. — iii. 7 
what is't, thou say"'st? I say, O Caasar — v. 1 

weeps she still, say'st thou? Cymbeline, i. 6 

say'st thou? It is not fit — ii. I 

thou say'st true ; 'tis not the (rep.) .... Pericles, iv. 3 
say'st thou so? I beseech you, pardon nie../.eurj i. 4 

thou say'st, tlie king grows mad — iii. 4 

himself; what say'st thou to him? (rep.) — v. 3 

what say'st tliou (rep. iii. 5) Homeo 4-Jidiel,'u. \ 

and say St thou yet, that exile is not — iii. 3 

ha, ha, boy, say'st thou so? art thou Handei, i. :, 

why, there thou say'st: and the more .. — v. I 

with the Moor, say'st thou? Othello, i. i 

what say'st thou, noble heart? — i. 3 

SCAB— out scabl TwelflhKi'iht. ii. .', 

I thought, there would a scab follow. A/j^e/i .-!i/«, ii i. ;i 

thou'rt agood scab: hold -iHenryll'. iii. 2 

the loathsomest scab in Greece.. Troilns ,s rrcss. ii. I 

opinion, make .yourselves scabs? .... Cm inlnnns, i. I 

SCABB.\RD-scabbard, and all ..TirelfihMghi, iii. i 

it is in my scabbard; shall I draw it?.l/Hi/i.4'/o, v. I 

here in mv scabbard; meditating ..lllenri/ I'l. ii. 4 

SCAFFOLD-unworthy scallbld .. Henry l'. i. (eho.) 

up to some scaffold, there to lt^se.. Itirhnrd III. iv. 4 

SCAFFOLDAtJK; sucli to-he-pitied Troil.^Cess. i. 3 

SCALD— that scalds with safety 2Henryll'. iv. 4 

the rascally, scald, beggarl}', lousy. ...He?"ir!//'. v. 1 

will you be so goot, scald knave (rep.) — v. I 

water to scald such chickens . . Timan of Athens, ii. 2 

add to the number that may scald thee! — iii. 1 

and scald rhymers ballad us ont...4?i'o?i!/.^C/eo. v. 2 

mine own tears do scald like molten lead. /.enr, iv. 7 

.'iC .VLDED— scalded with my violent . King .lohn, v. 7 

Si:ALDING-snnimer's scalding lieat.3He)i?T//7. v. 7 

burning, scaldiiig, stench, consumption.. /.en?-, iv. 6 

SCALE anotlier Ilero's tower ..TwoGen. of I'er. iii. I 

a featlier will turn the scale.... /I/ens. ,/bj' iWeij.s. iv. 2 

put in two scales, will even we'ish.Mid.N.'s Dr. iii. 2 

nay, if the scale do turn but .Mer.of I'enice, iv. 1 

poizing us in her defective scale ....All's li'etl, ii. 3 
in both scales against either scale ....Macbeth, ii. 3 

scale of draL'on, tooth of wolf — iv. I 

in .your lord's scale is nothing Richard If. iii. 4 

will turn the scales between 2Henryll'. ii. 4 

and lord Si'iUcs with him \HenryVl. i. I 

let us resolve to scale their — ii. 1 

the cause in justice' equal scales. ...2We?j?-?//^'/. ii. I 

heir and daughter of lord Scales [illeiui/ I'l. iv. 1 

[Col.Kul.'] and lord Scales, of you. . llir/iuril III. ii. 1 
in a scale of common ounces? .. Troilns Kf'rrss. ii. 2 
I will venture to scale 'talittle more. Coriolanns, i. i 
by certain scales i' the pyramid. ./f?j/o?Ji/.^-(V*'o. ii. " 
in those crystal scales, let there.. Women ^ Julie', i. 2 
in equal scale wcigliing delight and dole.Wam/e/,i. 2 

till our sen lehini the heaiil — iv. .'? 

had lint one scale of reason to poise Othello.'l.3 

SCALi:i)-c.ii-ni|.t ilriii.ty >cii\e(l..yteas./orMeas. iii. 1 
scaled scull.s IkIoic the belching. '/'rorVuj 4- Crc.«. v. 5 
a cistern for scaled snakes!. . 4?i(on.v iJ-CVeonc/ra, ii. i 

SC.\ L I NG his present bearing CorioTaniis, ii. 3 

.SCAI.l..- on this same scall Merry Wives, iii. I 

SCALl*— scalp of l!oliin Hoo<l'8..7'/eoC>ii.o/rer. iv. 1 
take this transformed scalp .. Mid.N.^sDream, iv. I 
tliin and liairless scalt>s against.... /(icAajr///. iii. 2 



SCA 

SCAI-Y— a suilv gauntlet iiuw iHenrylV. i. 1 

SCAMBLE— to tug, ami seamble King John, iv. 3 

SCAMBLING-scambling, oiit-fiicing.j1JucA.Mo, v. 1 

tliat tlie scambling and uiuiuiet l\m&.. Henry V. \. 1 

1 get tliee with sciiinbrmg, and thou., — v. 2 

SCAMEL— [Cof.Kii/.] young scamels ..Tempfnt, ii. 2 

SCAN— that makes us scan tlie outward. i'fjic/es, ii. 2 

to scan this thing no furtlier Ulhello, iii. 3 

SCANDAL once can touch Mens, fm- Meas. iv. 4 

iu a tomb wliere never scandal slept. . Mur/iAdo, v. 1 

do set a scandal on my sex Mid. A'.'j Drenm, ii. 2 

give scandal to the blood o' the .. II inter' stale, i. 2 

not without some scandal Comnli/ i./hrr. v. 1 

would the scandal vanish with Hiduircl II. ii. 1 

w hat a scandal is it to our crown . . I Henry I'l. iii. 1 
thy scandal were not wiped away ..'2 Henri/ VI. ii. 4 

his scandal of retire (rep.) SHennjI'I. ii. 1 

but if black scandal, or foul-faced. iiic/im J III, iii. 7 

und after scandal tliem JuliuxCiPsar, i. 2 

did scandal many a holy tear Cymbeline, iii. 4 

often dout, to his own scandal Hamlet, i. 4 

you must not put another scandal on him — ii. 1 
SCANDALED— scandaled company . . Tempest, iv. 1 

scundaled the suppliants for Corinlamts, iii. 1 

SCANDALIZED, and foully spoken. . 1 He,.;y7F. i. 3 
it will make me scandalized. ru'o Gen. u/;V)ojm,ii. 7 

SCANDALOUS breath Meastne/nrilfensure, v. I 

yea, scandalous to the world.... If'inter'sTule, ii. 3 
SC A J\NED-my wit being scanned. Comcdi/ or Bit. ii. 2 

acted, ere they may be scanned Macbeih, iii. 4 

thatwould be scanned; avillain kills. Haw?ie(, iii. 3 
SCANT— scant this excess .. Merclmnt of Teniae, iii. 2 

therefore, I scant this breathinj; — v. 1 

scants us with a single famished. Troilns & Cress, iv. 4 
scant not my cups; and make .. Antony ^Cieo. iv. 2 

than she to scant her duty Lear, ii. 4 

to scant my sizes, and, in conclusion .... — ii. 4 
and she shall scant show well ..Itomeo & Juliet, i. 2 

he's fat, and scant of breath Hamlet, v. 2 

your serious and great business scant , .Othello, i. 3 
or scant our former having in despite.. .. — iv. 3 
SCANTED— had not scanted me..Mer. of Venice, ii. 1 
he hath scanted men in hair.. Comedi/ of Errors, ii. 2 
you have obedience scanted, and well ....Lear,\. 1 
retiuMi. and force their scanted courtesy — iii. 2 

SCANTER— be somewhat scanter Hamlet. \. 3 

SCANTING— scanting a little cloth . . Henry V. ii. 4 
SCANTIJ NG of good or bad. . Troilns tf Cressida, i. 3 
SCANTLY— spoke scantly of me./lii/oii!/ ^Clen. iii. 4 
'SCAPE— 'scape being drunk, for want. Tempest, ii. 1 

how didst tliou 'scape':' — ii. 2 

he cannot 'scape Two Gen. or Verona, v. 3 

a miracle, to 'scape suflFocation ..MerryWives, iii. 6 

he cannot 'scape me — iii. 5 

in mortality can censure 'scape. Weas./o/-.Veas. iii. 2 

thousand 'scapes of wit make — iv. 1 

'scape a predestinate scratched face' ..MnchAdo, i. 1 
now to 'scape the serpent's tongue. .Wid. A'. Dr. tepil.') 
to 'scape drowning thrice .. Merchant of Venice, ii. 2 

here are simple 'scapes — ii. 2 

and not one vessel 'scape the dreadful — iii. 2 
else how thou shouldst '%cape. . . . AsyouLike it, iii. 2 

in sooth, you 'scape not so Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 

to smile at 'scapes and perils — v. 2 

some 'scape; though I am not . . It'inter'sTale, iii. 3 

if he 'scape, heaven forgive .Macbeth, iv. 3 

no 'scape [Co/. /uif.-scope] of nature. King John , iii. 4 

if I 'scape hanging for Killing ] Henry IV. ii. 2 

if they 'scape from your encounter .. — ii. 2 
how 'scapes he agues, in the devil's.. — iii.! 

though 1 could 'scape shot-free — v. 3 

master Snare, let him not '6Ca|ie....2Henj!/7r. ii. I 
thy despite, shall 'scape mortality..! Henry VI. iv. 7 
but if we haply 'scape, (as well . . ..2Henry VI. v. 2 

fly, to 'scape their hands! ZHem-yVI. i. 3 

wlio 'scapes the lurking serpent's .... — ii. 2 
should he 'scape Hector fair .. Troilus^- Cressida, i. 3 

and so 'scape hanging Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

thou shouldst not 'scape me here ..Coriolanus, i. 8 
some innocents 'scape "noi.. Antony ^-Cleopatra, ii. 5 

and so I shall 'scape wliipping I'ericles, ii. 1 

to 'scape his hands, where I was like .. — iv. 3 
Marina thus tlie brothel 'scapes .. — v. (Gower) 

the fault would not 'scape censure Lear, i. 4 

the villain shall not 'scape — ii. 1 

while I may 'scape, I will preserve — ii. 3 

false just icer, why hast thou let her 'scape?— iii. 6 

safe 'scape the king! Lurk, lurk — iii. 6 

we shall not 'scape a brawl llomeo ^Juliet, iii. 1 

with death himself to 'scane from it — iv. 1 

virtue itself 'scapes not calumnious .... Hamlet, i. 3 

and who shall 'scape whipping? — ii. 2 

and 'scape detecting, I will )iay the theft — iii. 2 

of hair-breath 'scapes i' the iniminent .. 0.'/ie/;o, i. 3 

'SCAPED-I have not 'scaped drowning. Tempest, ii. 2 

two Neapolitans 'scaped! — ii. 2 

what! have I 'scaped love-letters. .il/erj-ytPi'i'es, ii. 1 
not have 'scaped six|)ence a day ..Mid. N.'s Dr. iv. 2 

Fleauce is 'scaped. Then comes Macbeth, iii. 4 

I have 'scaped by miracle Mlenri/IV. ii. 4 

and glad we 'scaped so well 1 Henry VI. W I 

tliat, having 'scaped a tempest ....i Henry VI. iv. 9 
father 'scaped; or whether lie (,rep.).3HeiiryVI. ii. 1 
or, had he 'scaned, methinks, we should — ii. 1 
how 'scaped I killing, when I .. ..Julius Ccrsar, iv. 3 

he 'scapeil tlie hind, to perish on I'eiicles, i. 3 

Roderigo, and fellows that are 'scnped.. O/ZitHo, v. 1 
SCAR— hare-lip, nor scar, nor mark.jl/i</. A'.'sD;-. v. 2 

there remains some scar of it As you Like it, iii. 5 

honour but of danger wins a scar ....All'slVell, iii. 2 
whether there be a scar under it .... — iv. 5 
a scar nobly got, or a noble scar .... — iv. 5 

deep scars to save thy life Comedy of Errom. v. 1 

capable of wounds, and scars iHenrylV. i. 1 

and show his scars, and say Henry V. iv. 3 

patches will I get unto these scars.... — v. 1 

received deep scars in France iHenryVI. i. 1 

show me one scar charactered iii. 1 

defaced with scars of infamy Richard III. iii. 7 

'tis but a scar to scorn Troilus ^- Cressida, i. 1 



[ 654 ] 



SCE 



SCAU-boasting show their scars.. Troilus f,- Cress, iv. ."i 

show tliein the unaehing scars Coriolanus, ii. 2 

soars to move laughter only — iii. 3 

the scars upon your honour Antony ^Cleo. iii. 11 

I'll force the wine i>eep thro' their scars— iii. 1 ! 
thou and those thy scars had once .. — iv. 5 

of Clotens had ever scar for Cymbeline, v. 5 

more scars of sorrow in his heart. 7'//i<s',4ndron. iv. ! 
my scars can witness, dumb although — v. 3 
he jests at scars, that never felt..Wow<?o ^ Juliet, ii. 2 
nor scar that whiter skin of hers than.. ()t/,eUo, v. 2 
SCARCE— and scarce think their eyes. . Tempest, v. I 
he will scarce be pleased withal. 7'«oGeii.o/(-'«-. ii. 7 

going will scarce serve the turn — iii. I 

will scarce iiley this medicine — iii. 3 

liis motlier's milk were scarce out.TuelfthNight, i. 5 

it would scarce be answered — iii. 3 

Fabian can scarce hold him yonder — iii. 4 

now scarce to be worth talking of .. — iii. 4 
scarce confesses that his blood . . Meas. for Meas. i. 4 
there is scarce truth enough alive.... — iii. 2 
I would scarce trust myself, though.. i1/«cA Ado, i. 1 
an attending star, scarce seen.. . . Love^sL.Lost, iv. 3 

Ecaree show a harvest of their — iv. 3 

of an old Roman coin, scarce seen .. — v. 2 
where Phoebus' iire scarce thaws. Wee. o/;'«/ii'c?,ii. 1 
reverence) are scarce cater-cousins.. — ii. 2 

■ft'ho dare scarce show his head — iii.) 

she scarce makes honest As you Like it, i. 2 

I scarce can speak to thank — ii. 7 

or I will scarce think you have — iv. I 

and that thou art scarce worth AlVs IVell, ii. 3 

something: and scarce so much .... — i\. b 
three great oaths would scarce make — iv. 1 
scarce can right me thoroughly .. IVinter'sTale, ii. 1 

it shall scarce boot me to say — iii. 2 

there's scarce a maid westward, but.. — iv. 3 
scarce any joy did ever so long live.. — v. 3 
scarce could understand it (rep.). Comedy of En. ii. 1 

of welcome makes scarce one dainty dish iii. I 

knell is there scarce asked, for who ..Macbeth, iv. 3 
■where words are scarce, they are . . Richard II. ii. I 
villain! thy lips are scarce wiped ..\ Henry I V. ii. 4 

scarce blood enough in all their Henry r. iv. 2 

full scarce six thousand in \HenryVI, i. 1 

of Gloster, scarce himself, that bears. 2 He;i/-^r/. ii. 3 

scarce can I siJeak, my choler v.! 

moisture scarce serves to quench ..ZHenryVI. ii. 1 
scarce I can refrain the execution .. — ii. 2 

scarce half made up Richard III. i. 1 

be quiet scarce a breathing while .... — i. 3 

that scarce, some two days since .... — i. 3 

stamp of honour is scarce current .. .. — i. 3 

when scarce the blood was well washed — iv. I 
you have scarce time to steal from. Henry VIU. iii. 2 
if he live, will scarce be gentlemen ., — iii. 2 
knows is so abundant scarce.. Troilus 4 Cressida, ii. 3 

my lord, I scarce have leisure — iv. 2 

can scarce entreat you to be odd .... — iv. 5 
entertainment. I scarce know how, Timoyi of .ith. i. 2 

and birth, scarce is dividant — iv. 3 

I can scarce think there's any Coriolanus, v. 2 

grants scarce distinction ..Antony ^ Cleopatra, ii\. ! 
tlianks, and scarce can spare them , .Cymbeline, ii. 3 

she can scarce be there yet iii..') 

when ricli ones scarce tell true — iii. 6 

being scarce made up, I mean — iv. 2 

scarce ever looked on blood — i v. 4 

the odds is, that we scarce are men .. — v. 2 

have scarce strength left to Pericles, i. 4 

we could scarce help ourselves — ii. i 

you'll scarce [Co^-you scorn] believe me — v. i 

I am scarce in breath, my lord Lear, ii. 2 

I can scarce speak to thee ii. 4 

for many miles about there's scarce a bush ii. 4 

is fixed, the lesser is scarce felt — iii. 4 

was then scarce friends with him ........ — iv. 1 

show scarce so gross as beetles — iv.6 

he's scarce awake; let him alone — iv. 7 

we scarce thought us blessed Romeo 4- Juliet, iii. 5 

and dare scarce come thither Hamlet, ii. 2 

that will scarce hold the laying in — v. 1 

first, are scarce found to distaste Othello, iii. 3 

she was foul! I scarce did know you ., v. 2 

SCARCE-BEARDED Caasar have. .4n(ony*CTfo. i. ! 
SCARCE-COLD conqueror ! Henry VI. iv. 3 

of this vet scarce-cold battle Cymbeline, v. 5 

SCARCELY believe this without Much Ado, ii. 2 

had scarcely more than would make ..Macbeth, i. 5 

scarcely have coveted what was — iv. 3 

of this forest, scarcely oif a mile ....2I/en!!/J';'. iv. 1 

my eye will scarcely see it Henry V. ii. 2 

good prayer will scarcely say amen./?!c/iard/i/. i. 3 
you scarcely have the hearts to tell.. — i. 4 

1 scarcely know myself — ii. 3 

armour on, which I can scarcely bear ..Cortol. iii. 2 
like me, he'll scarcely look on't ....Cymbeline, iii. 6 
must cast thee, scarcely coffined, in ..Peiicles, iii. I 
of your person it would scarcely allay .... Lear, i. 2 

which scarcely keeps thee warm ii. 4 

we scarcely think our miseries our — iii. 6 

yet glance by, and scarcely bruise — v. 3 

scarcely hears of this his nephew's Hamlet, i. 2 

SCARCITY and want shall shun. Tempest.'iv. 1 (song) 
forbid such scarcity of youth!.. rr<7!'/;«(5-C>«ji'da,i. 3 
in scarcity of friends, I cleared .Timon ofAthens, ii. 2 

SCARE away, or rather did affright. iUi'd. N's.Dr. v. 1 

will scare the herd ZHenryVI. iii. 1 

a word, scare Troy out of itself. Troilus ^ Cress, v. 1 1 
noise did scare me from the tomb, flomeo &Juliet,v. 3 

SCARECRO'W of the law . . Measure for Measure, ii. 1 
no eye hath seen such scarecrows ..\Henry IV. iv. 2 
the scarecrow that affrights our IHenn/VI. i. 4 

SCARED out of him Merry Ifi'ites, iv. 2 

they have scared away two of my. IVinter'sTale, iii. 3 
and scared my choughs from the chaff — iv. 3 
thy jealous fits have scared thy . .Comedi/ of Err. v. 1 
I scared the Dauphin, and his trull..! Henry VI. ii. 2 
the Talbot, so much scared abroad .. — ii. 3 
scared fCol.-acarrcd] the moon Coriolanus, iv. 5 



SCAKICD— been scared out of his good wits. Lear, iv. 1 

SCARF to my proud earth Te7npesi,iv. | 

like a lieutenant's scarf? you must . . Much Ado, ii. 1 

the beauteous scarf veiling Merch. of Venice, iii. 2 

see thee wear thy heart in a scarf .^lsyo« Like .'', v, 2 

yet the scarfs, and the bannerets All'slVell, ii. 3 

if ever thou be'st bound in thy scarf _ ii. 3 

that jack-an-apes with scarfs _ iiii 5 

in the knot of his scarf' iv| 3 

all but your scarf, that has _ iv! 3 

with scarfs, and fans, and double.Tuming of .'!h. iv 3 

scarf up the tender eye of Macbeth, Hi'. 2 

maids their scarfs and handkerchiefs. Coriotanus,\i. I 
pulling scurfs off CiEsar's images ..JidivsCtesar,\ 2 
nil Cupid hood-winked with a scarf.Komeo ^Jut. i. 4 

SCARFED bark puts from her Mer. of Venice, ii. G 

my seo-gown scarfed about me Hamlet, v 2 

SCARING tlie ladies like a crow-..«omco S- Juliet i 4 

SCARLET— you. Scarlet and .lohn?. Merry H'ives, i. 1 

a velvet hose! a scarlet cloakI.7'awi!>ig-o/s/uf;c, v. 1 

peace to scarlet indignation Uichard II 'iii 3 

drinking deep, dying scarlet \HenryIV. ii. 4 

Hood, Scarlet, and John 2Henryl V. v. 3 («ong) 

thy scarlet robes, as a child's \ Henry VI i 3 

out, scarlet hypocrite! _ ;' 3 

scarlet sin, robbed this bewailing.. He«iy VIll. Hi 2 

thus jaded by a piece of scarlet — iii. 2 

mast, the brier's scarlet hips .Timon ofAthens iv' 3 

forehead, and her scarlet lip .'...Ro?neo ^Juliet, ii.' 1 

tliey 11 be in scarlet straight at any news — ii. 5 

IS'tRSE;;'^'^''''*'"'-^ '° ^""^ =1 scarry.. /<«'««W/, iv 2 

bCARRED-mad, and scarred herself. nj'cAairf/// v 4 

oJ,'".'S,''^^P' ''"'^ scarred liis heart. .Titus Andnm. iv. 4 

oCATH in Christendom Kingjohn, ii. | 

could not procure me any scath 2 Henry Vl' ii' 4 

them that have done scath to us ... . Richard 111 i 3 
Rome hath done you any scath .. Titus Andmn. v 1 
trick may chance to scath you .. Romeo 4- Juliet, i 5 
sS . ?..n Ji'^',??''fl^'<' '^'^ ''« make.. TwelfthNighl, v. 1 
sCA i X LR all her spices on . . Merchant of Venice i 1 
such wind as scatters young men..TamingofSh'. i 2 
their letider, scatter up and down ..2Henry'vi. iii' 2 
and there scatters dangers, doubts.. Hemw/'/J/ ii' ■) 
scatter them, as 'tis to make them sleep _ v" i 

and ooze scatters his grain Antony &Cleo ii' 7 

scatter and disperse the giddy Goths.. Titus And v •> 

to scatter his crowns in the sun Perirlei iv ^ 

SCATTERED smile AsyouLike it iii 5 

his plausive words he scattered not in .All'slVell i " 

the troops are all scattered _ J v' 3 

sons lie scattered on the bleeding ....King John ii' 2 

of convicted sail is scattered _ 'iji' 4 

the thieves are scattered 1 Henry IV i i 2 

pursue the scattered stray iHenr'olv' iv 2 

have reinforced their scattered men . Henry V iv B 
our soldiers, scattered and dispersed.! Henri/ vi ii' 1 

shalt not dread the scattered foe SHenryVl ii' 6 

scattered in the bottom of the sea ..Richard HI i' 4 
the dead bones that lay scattered by. . — j' 4 

army is dispersed and scattered _ iv' 4 

ploughed for, sowed and scattered ..Coriolanus iii' 1 
fliglit of fowl scattered by winds .. TilusAndron. v 3 

to knit again this scattered corn _ 'v3 

a power into this scattered kingdom lear Hi 1 

scattered to make up a show ....Romeo^-Juiie't v' 1 
iSA?^;???''-'^'' ^'^^ unsure observance.. OMcZ/o, iii. 3 
|CELERA-leiitus audis scelera?. . TilusAndron. iv. 1 

bCELLRISQUE pilrus _. \y .) 

SCENE-Falstaffhatha gi-eat seerxe'.MerrylVives iv '(, 

that's the scene that I would see HiuchAdo ii 3 

forsook his scene, and entered in. .Mid.N.'s Ur.'iii 2 

a tedious brief scene of young _ v' 1 

what a scene of foolery I have ....Love'sL.Lost iv 3 

the scene begins to cloud 'v2 

than the scene wherein we play .. AsyouLike it ii' 7 

last scene of all, that ends this — ' ii' 7 

give my scene such growing. IVinter'sTale, iv (clio ■) 
as if the_ scene you play, were mine .. — iv 3 
at your industrious scenes and acts.. K^me- John, ii •> 

a little scene to mnnarchize Richard II iii' 2 

our scene is altered, from a serious _ " v ■) 

the rude scene may end 2Henr!/IV i I 

n,s a scene acting that argument _ iv 4 

to behold the swelling scene! . . Henry V. i. (clioru's) 
and the scene is now transported _ ii. (chonis'l 
Southampton do we shift our scene — ii. (choriisl 

our swift scene flies, in motion iii (cliorus) 

so our scene must to the battle fly — iv' (chorus'^ 
what scene of death hath Roscius ..3HenryVl.v H 

what means this scene of rude Richard IU ii' 2 

woe's scene, world's shame _ jy' 4 

in jest, only to to fill tlie scene '. — iv' 4 

scenes as draw the eve to flow . .Henry Vf II (proi •) 
in Troy lies the scene .... Troilus A^ Cressida, (prol'l 

must be the scene of mirth _ i 3 

might act the woman in the scene "..'con'o/anM ii' 2 
and this unnatural scene thev laugh at — v' 3 
this our lofty scene be acted over.. JuliusCa"ar Hi 1 
one scene of excellent dissembling./(ti/o?iv<s-r/(^„ i' 3 
our fast-growing scene must ..PericlM iv (Gower) 
where our scenes seem to live .. — iv. 4 (Gower) 

while our scenes [A'nr.-tears] — iv 4 (Gower) 

where we lay our scene Rnmen fduliet, f pro! ) 

my dismal scene I needs must act ahme — iv 3 

scene undividable, or poem unlimited.. HamW. ii' '2 

well digested m the scenes, set down _ ii •> 

the very cunning of the scene been struck — ii" 2 

-^??"^°V' eomcs near the circumstance — iii' 2 

SCENT- he is now at a cold scent.. TwelithKight ii' 5 

picked out the dullest eeent.TamingofSh. I (indue ) 

methinks, I scent tlie morning air .. Hamlet ! \ 

SCEPTRE shows the force of ...jMe^.ofVeTceiv 1 

ay, by my sceptre, Alfsivd.ii. 1 

tliou a sceptre s heir Winter's Tale, i v. 3 

moie than all the sceptres .. _ v 1 

put a barren sceptre in my srii>e. .'.'.''.Macbeth, iii." 1 
twofold bales and treble sceptres earrv — iv 1 
a sceptre, snatched with an unruly kin" John Hi 4 
now by my sceptre's awe I make .... Richard 11. i. 1 
the dust that hides our sceptre's gilt — ii 1 



SCE 



[ G55 ] 



SCO 



SCEPTRE— handle of our scepti-c ..Itkhard U. im. 3 
my sefutrc, for a vmlinur's wiilking-stiiff — in. 3 
hia high sceptre yicl.li to tlie pos-c- s.oii — >v. 
and this unwiuldl.v sceptic Irom my - i.\. 1 

golden sceptre (or u Icudcu .lusher ■■Uh.:7T/II -u. 4 

now hv my sceptre, and my St.;; — '!l- - 

lier sceptre so lantilstically borne .... UennjI ..n. 4 
not tl\c l)alin, the sceptre, and the ball — iv. 
wlicii sceptres are in children's ...Ah'^nnjVI. iv. 1 
to put ttOTldcn sceptre ill thy hand.. — „ v- ^ 

nor hold the secptrc in his 'iHenryVI. i. 1 

or scei>tre, balance it; a sceptre shall.. — v. 1 
not to grace an aufol princely sceptre — v. 1 
here is a hand to hold a sceptre up . . — \- \ 
a scL-ptre, or an earthy sepulchre!. ...3Hc?iryr/.i. 4 

the awful sceptre from his fist — .!!■ 

thv sceptre wrung from thee — V'-' 

his luiud to wield a sceptre — ,,'^S 

to make the ^ccplre his HenryriU. i. i 

wluVs that, that bears the secptreV . . — iv. 1 
crowns, sceptres, laurels, but by . . Tmhis ^- Cress, i. 3 
a more larger list of sceiitres .... Anlony fj Cteo.u i.b 
to tlirow my sceptre at the injurious — iv. U 

the scei)ti-e, learning, physic. C!/m6<-/;»e, \y.l (song) 
not a sceptre to coutroul the world. lilusAndron. i. i 

SCKPTKliOsway Merchant of yemce.w. 

of kin"s, this sceptred isle Iticlmrd ;;. ii. 1 

sceptred ollice of your ancestors ..Itichard III. in. 7 

SCIIEDULKS of my beautv TwelflhNi^hl i. 5 

are recorded in this scheiiule here.. Loi'i- s(,.Los(,i. 1 
idiot, presenting me a 6clKdule.'...'l/iJ.»/ / mure^n. 9 
tills schedule; for this contains of ..■.'/;,■..;!//;. iv. 
rend tliis schedule. Trebonuis doth../.WiiisC.rsar, lu.i 
SCUOLAR-hear you are a scholar. .Usrri/ n ife-s u. 2 
he is a better scholar, than I ........ — /.V" ' 

art a scholar: let us tlierefore.. .. Iiie/yJ/i t^ighUn. 3 

a careful man, and a great scholar .. — i v. 2 

a scholar, a statesman Meas.fnr Meas. iii. 2 

some scliolar would conjure her Much. Mo,\i. I 

Venetian, a scholar, and a soldier, il/er. u/Ceitice, i. 2 
neitlier the scliolar's melancholy. /is i/oui-i'te '', iv. 1 
nnless you were a scholar, sir. . Taming of Shrew,}. 2 
give uiito you tills young scliolar .... — .ii. 1 
I am no breeching scholar in tlie schools — in. 1 
William is become a good scliolar. .2 Henri/ / r. in. 2 
never was such a sudden scholar made Heini/ 1 . i. \ 

all scholars, lawyers, courtiers 2 HenrijI'I. i_v. 1 

mifhtaskby law, scholars Henry Fill. _u. 2 

was a schohir, and a ripe, and good one — _iv. 2 

thy master dies thy scholar Anlony HCIeo. iv._12 

and you're lier laboured scholar Pericles, u. 3 

the worst of all her scholars — n.. 5 

and slie'U your scholar be — .'i- 5 

populous city will yield many scholars — iv. fa 
thou art a scholar, speak to it, Horatio.. Ham!e(, i. 1 
as you are friends, scholars, and soldiers — _ i. 5 
courtier's, soldier's, scholar's, eye, tougue — iii. 

in the soldier, than in the scholar Othello, n. 1 

SCnOLARLY and wisely .i/erri/ Hives, i. 3 

SCHOOL— my voung man here to school — iv. 1 
how now sir Hugli? No school to-dav? — i v. 1 
keeps a school i' the church. . . . Twelfth Night in. 2 
for school, fool, a babbling rhymo..../Vijc/i.J'io, v. 2 

when she went to school Mid. N.sDream, in. 2 

too see him in a school i-o^e sL. Lost, i v. 2 

and the help of school; and wit's own — y. 2 
I have discontinued school ..Merch.of I enire, lu. 4 
brother Jaques he keeps at school .Asyou Like i(, i. \_ 
creeping like snail unwillingly to school — u. / 

when tlie schools, emboweled of All s'l'-tl. i. 3 

no breeching scholar in the schools. Tarn. o/S'i. in. 1 
as willingly as e'er I came from school — in. 2 

I prav you, school yourself Macbeth, iv. 2 

or, like a scliool broke up 2Hennjir. iv. 2 

I have a whole school of tongues — _ ly. 3 

murderous Machiavel to school ZHenryl I. in. 2 

in scliools, and brotherhoods. . Troilus^ Cressid,i, i. 3 
and schools should fall for private. Timon of Ath. y. ."i 

mettle, when he went to school JuUusCassar, i. 2 

tliat we two went to school together — y. .0 

we'll set thee to school to an aiit Lear, ii. 4 

toward school with lieavv looks .Rnmeo fy Juliet, n. 2 

going back to school in Wittenberg Uamlei.u 2 

his bed shall seem a school, his board. . Othello, in. 3 
SCHOOL-BOY that had lost .... TmoGeri. of Ver. ii. 1 
tlie flat transgression of a school-boy. .l/iic/i.4i/o, n. 1 
motion of a school-boy's tongue. . Love s L.LosI, v. ■-. 
the whining school-boy, with his .AsyouLtke it. n. , 
b'x" enough to bear a school-boy's, lyinter sTale, u. 1 
whom, like a school-boy, you may . . 1 Henry )'/.;. 1 
and school-boys' tears takeup the..Cono(a>i«s,in. 2 
a peevish school-boy, worthless of .JHliusCiTsiir,v. 1 
as echool-bovs from their books. . Romeo ^ Juliet, n. 2 
SCHOOL-DAYS' friendship ...tlid. N.'iDrcam. in. 2 

in my school-davs, when I Merch. of I'enice, i. 1 

school-davs, frightful, desperate ..liicliard Ill.tv. 4 

SCIIOOLEt). and yet learned AsyouLikeit.\. 1 

'twere good, be were schooled. rnmiNs-o/.s/oe'/MV. 4 
well, I am schooled; good manners. 1 HennjIV. in. 1 
is ill schooled in bolted language ..Coriol.inus, hi. 1 
SCHOOI>FELLOWS, whom 1 will .... Hamlet, m. 4 
SCHOOLING- private schooling.il/'rf.JV.'s/Jreuin.i. 1 
SCHOOL-MAIUS change their .. Meas. for Meas. i. 5 
SCHOOLMASTER, made thee more.... Tempest, i. 2 

marry, master schoolmaster Loves L.Losl,iv. 2 

the EChoidmaster is exceeding fantastical — y. 2 
schoolmasters will I keep within .TaimngofSh. i. 1 

to get her cunnins schoolmasters — i. 1 

you will be schoolmaster, and undertake— i. 1 

as a sehoolmaster well seen in music — i. 2 
about a schoolmaster for fair Bianca — i. 2 

my fellow schoolmaster doth watch — iii. 2 

than look upon his schoolmaster Coriolanus.i. 3 

we sent our schoolmaster. .^nfony 4- Ci<;/)jMira, in. 9 

Caesar, 'tis his schoolmaster — iiU " 

unworthy I, to be her schoolmaster I'encles, ii. 5 

pr'ythee, nuncle, keep a schoolmaster Lear, i. 4 

miist lie their schoolmasters: shut your .. — ii. 4 

SCIATICA, cripple our senators ..Timon of Ath. ly. 1 

inis the most profound sciatica?.. A/eaj./o);l/eu». i. 2 



SCIATICAS, limekilns i' the palm Troilus ^ Cress, v. 1 

SCIENCE— your own science Meas. for Mens. i. 1 

more science, than I have in this ring./l«'s»'e«, v. 3 
fully in those sciences, whereof. . 7VimiM? or sh. ii. 1 
the sciences, that should become our . .Henry f. v. 2 
SCIiMlT.VR. tliat slew the .. Merclitnit of I'enice, ii. 1 
which with my scimitar I'll cool. Tmilus/ir Cress, y. 1 
he dies upon my scimitar's sharp. THusAndron. iv. 2 
SCION— marry a gentler scion to. . IV inter' sTali;'\y. 3 
our scions, put in wild and savage . . Henry »'. iii. 5 
that you call— love, to be a sect, or scion. 0//iri/o, i. 3 

SCISSAUS nicks him ComeHy of Errors, v. 1 

SCOFF— beaten with pure 6Coffl....ioi"' rt.io"', v. 2 

with scoffs, and scorns, and )Hevyl'Li. 4 

scoff on, vile fiend, and shameless .. — in. 2 

of late were daring with theirsc.iftg.. — iii. 2 

uphraidings and your bitter scoll's. . Richard III. i. 3 

SCOFFER— foul to be a scoffer . . As i/ou Like ii, iii. ,5 

SCOFFING his state, and griiining.Wc/iard ///. in. 2 

SCOLD-hear them scold than fight. .Uerri/ »»Vi>es, ii. 1 

to assume life, and scold with U^r....Mach.-ldo, n. 1 

how lier sister began to scold . . Tamingof Slireie, i. 1 

she is an irksome brawling scold — i. 2 

thou unadvised scold, I can produce. A'()i^./o/i?i, u. 1 

take away this captive scold. 3 Henry ri. v. 5 

more, or scold it out of him Henry I'll I. v. 1 

the flamen, that scolds against. Tivwn of Athens, iv. 3 

that ever I was forced to scold Cnnolanus, y. 5 

shrill-tonaued Fulvia scolds. /)n(oh!/ tj- Cleopatra.}. I 

SCOLDING quean to a wrangling ....Alls Well, ii. 2 

for her scolding tongue (rep.).. Taming of Shrew, i. 2 

she would think scolding would do . . — i. 2 

away this scolding crook-back ■illenryri. y. 5 

the si'olding winds have rived Julius Ca:sar. i. 3 

SCONCE— merry sconce of yours.. CnmeJi/o/£jT.i. 2 
in vour sconce. Sconce, call you it? — ii. 2 

I nfiust get a sconce for ray head — .li- 2 

at such and such a sconce Henry V. in. 6 

show them my unbarbed sconce?. ..Conoinmn-, in. 2 

to knock him about the sconce with Hamlet, v. 1 

SCONE— gone to Scone to be invested .. il/acije(/i, ij. 4 

will you to Scone? No. cousin — ii. 4 

invite to see us crowned at Scone .... — y. 7 
SCOPE-your scope is as mine own..h'eas./oril/eas. i. 1 
so every scope by the immoderate. . . . — i. 3 
to give the people scope 
to a determined scojie.. 
give me but scope of justice... 



iii. I 



SCORN— will prove an idle scorn . . Love'sL. Lost, i. 1 

I think scorn to sigh, mcthinks — i. 2 

liow will he scorn? how will he — iv. 3 

bruise me with scorn, confound me.. — v. 2 
will bear your idle scorns, continue.. — V. 2 
do not run; scorn running viith. . Mer.of I'enice, ii. 2 
the way to make her scorn you ../lsi/ouLiV«iV,ii.4 

the red glow of scorn and proud — iii. 4 

sweet I'liehe, do not scorn me — iii..') 

take thou no scorn, to wear 

not a thing to laugh to scorn 

if the scorn of your bright eyne . 

till their own scorn return to ... 

that is honour's scorn, which challenges — ii. .i 

but one that scorn to live in .. Taming of shrew.'w. 2 

laugh my woes to scorn Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

if he should scorn me so apparently.. — iv. 1 

rail, taunt, and scorn me? — iv. 4 

a loathsome abject scorn of m.e — iv. 4 

spurn fate, scoin death, and hear . 
lauL;h to scoin the power of man .. 



sky gives us free scope — All sWell.i. I 

rCol.Knt.'] no scope of nature KingJohn, in. 4 

1 do know the scope and warrant limited — y. 2 

no further scope, than for his Hichard II. in. 3 

scope to beat, since foes have scope to — in. 3 

even of his natural scope, when IHeini/Zr. in. I 

give him line and scope; till 2Heiiryl I'. \v. i 

offender granted scope of speech .... 2 Henri/ 1' I. in. 1 

may have some scope to beat Richard III. iv. 1 

let them liave scope : tho' what — ly. 4 

'tis conceived to scope Timon of Athens, i. 1 

making your wills the scope of justice — v. 5 
when you will it shall have sco[ie.JuliusCcesar, ly. 3 

let his disposition have that scope Lear, i. 4 

within her scope of choice Romeo S,- Juliet, i. 2 

in the gross and scope of mine opinion.. HamW, i. I 

more than the scope of these dilated — .1.2 

an anchor's cheer in prison be my scope! — ni. 2 
SCORCH me up like a burning glass.ftfeiri/ Wives, i. 3 

to scorch your face, and to Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

SCORCHED veins of one newburned.K'in'Ju'i", in. 1 

never had scorched the earth 3 Henry r I. ii. G 

SCORE— for a score of kingdoms Tempest, v. 1 

shoot point-blank twelve score . . Merry Wives, in. 2 

after he scores (rep.) All's Welt, iv. 3 (letter) 

strikes some scores away from — _ v. 3 

pence on the score for sheer. Taming ofSh. 2 (indue.) 
call him half a score knaves, or so .. — 1.2 

six score fat oxen standiri!' in — ii. 1 

for she will score your faidt upon.Comerfi/ of Err. i. 2 

he parted well, and paid his score Macbeth, v. 7 

three or four score hogsheads 1 Henry I r. n. 4 

score a pint of bastard in — n- 4 

will be a march of twelve score — n. 4 

an infinitive thing upon my score ..iHennjir.u. 1 

i' the clout at twelve score — in. 2 

how a score of ewes now? (jep.) — lu. 2 

all shall eat and drink on my score. . — iv. 2 

no other books but the score and — ly. 7 

entertain a score or two of Richard III. i. 2 

without a score of villains 7'imoii ofAih. in. G (grace) 

let us score their backs Anlony ^- Cleopatra, iy. 7 

speak, how many score of miles ....Cymbeline, iii. 2 

one score, 'twixt sun and suUi — iii. 2 

more than two tens to a score :.■ !■'"}''< '•* 

is too much for a score . . Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 4 (song) 

eight score eight hours? (.rep.) Othello, in. 4 

strike off this score of absence — iii- 4 

SCORED— have you scored me? Well — iv. I 

SCORING, but upon the pate \ Henry 1 1', v. 3 

SCORN is bought with groans . . Two Gen. of I'er.]. 1 

slie did scorn a present tiiat I — ni. j 

a woman sometimes scorns — iii- I 

for scorn at first makes — jn. 1 

if thou scorn our courtesy — iy- 1 

let me sustain no scorn TwelfthNighl, i . 5 

O, what a deal of scorn looks — ii.i. 1 

the argument of his own scorn Much Ado, n. 3 

have so oft encountered him with scorn — li. 3 

'tis very possible he'll scorn it — .li. 3 

disdain and scorn ride sparkling in.. — iij. 1 
condemned for pride and scorn so much?— iii- 1 

I scorn that with my heels — m- J 

for scorn, horn, a hard rhyme _ — y- 2 

did I deserve this scorn? Mid.N. sDream.u. 3 

that I should woo in acorn? scorn and — \\\. 'i 
in me seem scorn to you, hearing.... — '.'.'.- 
I scorn you not; it seems that (rep.) — in- '- 

as in scorn, to follow me — '.'■'■■ H 

sweet, do not scorn her so — !!!• - 

in her behalf that scorns your services — in 2 
think no scorn to meet at Ninus' tomb — v. 1 



— iv. 2 (so 



. 3 (letter) 
...All'aWell,i. 2 



.Macbeth, iii 



i. 3 



— 111. 4 
<§ Cressida, i. 1 

— i. 3 



.. ill laugh a, siege to scorn 

weapons laugh to scorn — y. 7 

what means this scorn _. KingJolin,\. 1 

which scorns a modern invocation .._ — iii. 4 

your daring tongue scorns to Richard II. \v 1 

name profaned with their scorn.. ..! Heziry/K. iii. 2 
charge me? I scorn you, scurvy ....iHenryl !■'. ii. 4 

how! you fat fool, I scorn you — ii. 4 

with scorn shoved from the court — iv. 2 

cause to curse the Dauphin's scorn .... Henry V.i. 2 

I swear, I scorn the term — ii. 1 

scorn, and defiance; slight regard .... — ii. 4 
therefore he scorns to say his prayers — iii. 2 

takes no scorn to wear the leek — iy. 7 

scoffs and scorns, and contumelious . . I Henry VI. i. 4 

1 scorn thy strength; go, go — _i. 5 

I scorn thee and thy fashion — ii. 4 

thy scorns tliis way, Plantagenet {rep.) — ii. 4 

and take foul scorn, to fawn on — iv. 4 

to be shame's scorn, and subject — iv. 6 

which langliest us here to scorn — iv. 7 

proud, majestical, high scorn — iv. 7 

will scorn the match — y. 3 

in her heart she scorns our poverty ..illenryl'I. i. 3 
the nobility think scorn to go in .... — iv. 2 
how I scorn his worthless threats! ..iHenry VI. \. 1 
and, after many scorns, many foul .. — ii. 1 
presume to scorn us in this manner? — iii. 3 
setting your scorns, and your mislike — iy. I 
my maiily eyes did scorn a humble. /(icAartZ III. i. 2 

teach not thy lip such scorn — i. 2 

and with thy scorns drew'st rivers .. — i. 3 

the wind, and scorns the sun — i. 3 

what dost thou scorn me for my . . 

as 'twere in scorn of eyes 

inj ury , to scorn h is corse 

to mitigate the scorn he gives 

to taunt and scorn you thus 

disdained it, and did scorn to fly . . 

'tis but a sear to scorn Troi: 

this Trojan scorns us 

the pride and salt scorn of his eyes .. — _i. 3 

winged thus swift witli scorn — .II* ^ 

what, does the cuckold scorn me? — — iii. 3 

gall, and theme of all our scorns! — i v. 5 

I scorn thy meat; 'twould choke. . Timon of Ath. i. 2 

the greater scorns the lesser _ — iy- 3 

his hat thus waving it in scorn Coriolanns,'\'\. 3 

shall scorn him further trial than — iii. 1 

Fortune knows, we scorn her .Intony ^ Cteo. iii. 9 

their blood thinks scorn, till it fly . . Cymbeline, iv. 4 

wear mine, are titles but of scorn — v. 2 

geek and scorn o' the other's villany? — v. 4 
but (O scorn!) gone! they went hence — v. 4 

he leaves me, scorns me — y. 5 

not to be made ascorn in Rorae..ri7us.4«rfro7i. i. 2 

in scorn to thee sent back — iii. I 

in that it scorns to bear another hue — iy. 2 

scorn now their hand should give Pericles, ii. 4 

rCoi.] you scorn believe me — y- 1 

hissed him in scorn liomeoSr Juliet, i. 1 

scorn at our solemnity (rep.) — ..!■ ^ 

too untimely here did scorn the earth — iii. 1 
a martial scorn, with one hand beats — iii. 1 

bear the whips and scorns of time Hamlet, iii. 1 

lier own feature, scorn her own image.. — iii. 2 

the gibes, and notable scorns Othello, \v. 1 

for the timeof scorn to point his slow...; — iv. 2 
let nobody blame him, his scorn . . — iv. 3 (song) 

SCORN'DST our brain's flow — v. .5 

SCORNED— hath slandered, scorned. .il/i<f'i.-l'''>, ly. 1 
mocked at my gains, scorned .. il/<r.'>//V>iice, iii. 1 
I am remembered, scorned at me. As you Like it, iii. .'> 

hearts that scorned to serve All's Well, v. 3 

scorned a fair colour, or expressed — v. 3 

the kitchen-vestal scorned you... Comedijof Err. iv. 4 

which I, disdaining, scorned I Henry VI. i. 4 

to be so baited, scorned, and stormed. /(I'c/iard//;. i. 3 
one that scorned at me, now scorned — iy. 4 

lost among ye, laughed at, scorned? Henri/ /7/f. iii. I 

how ill his suit he scorned you Coriolanus. ii. 3 

all poverty was scorned, and pride Pericles, i. 4 

SCORNFUL-sing a scornfurrhyme.-VeiTi/ll'ires, v. 5 
scornful Lysanuer! true, he hath ..Jl/i'rf.A'.'sDr. i. 1 
proud, scornful boy, unworthy this ..AU'sWell, ii. 3 
contempt his scornful perspective..^. — ,„, ^- J 
dart not scornful glances from.. , *" 



thou scornful page, there lie th^ part. Cymbelin 
: flames into her scornful eyes! 



V. 5 



blindii., 

SCORNFULLY— passing scornfully ..HenryV. 
but sny.s, he used ns scornfully Coriolanus, n. j 

SCORN'INCJ wlmte'er you could afflict. 3 Henrii VI. i. 4 
join with men in scorning your . . .Vld.N.'s Dr. iii. 2 
[/vii^] and seen thee scorning .. Troilus «r Cress, iy. 5 
scorning the base degrees by which. Ju/i«sC(Psar,ii. 1 
sharpest blow, Antiochus, scorning Perirles.i. I 

SCORN 'ST thou at sir Robert? KingJohn, i. 1 

SCORPION— full of scorpions is my .Macbilh.u'u 2 

seek not a scorpion's nest illenryPl. iii. 2 



SCORPION-as a scorpion to her Giglit.. Cijmhelini-, v. 5 
SCOT— ever valiant and approved hcot. I HemijW. i. 1 

ten thousand bold Scots — i. 1 

those same noble Scots, tliat are — i. 3 

a Scot of them; no, if a Scot would save — i. 3 
kills me some six or seven dozen of Scots — ii. 4 
tliat spriglitly S;;ot of Scots, Douglas — ii. 4 

well said my noble Scot — iv. 1 

as you, rn.v lord, or any Scot that lives — iv. 3 
I was not born a yielder, thou proud Scot — v. 3 
I never i>ad triumphed upon a Scot . . — v. 3 
liold up thy head, vile Scot, or thou.. — v. 4 
hot termagant Scot liad paid me scot — v. 4 

the noble Scot, lord Douglas — v. 5 

furious Scot, the bloody Douslas ....iHfnrylf.'i. 1 
of Knglish, and of Scots, are by the . . — iv. 4 

against the Scot, who will make HenryV. i. 2 

the main intendment of the Scot .... — i. 2 
but that the Scot on his unfurnished — i. 2 

as a stray, the king of Scots — i. 2 

the weasel Scot comes sneaking. — i. 2 

and the Scots captain, captain Jamy — iii. 2 

the king of Scots is crowned IHenrrjI'I. iv. 1 

SCOTCH— is as a Scotch jig (rep.') ....Much.Mn, ii. 1 
SCOTCHED— have scotched the snak.e.Macbellt, iii. 2 
he scotched and notched him \ike. ..Cnrhlanus, iv. 5 
SCOTCHES-room for six scotches./(n(o7iy .^a^o. iv. 7 
SCOTLAND? I found it by tha.Comedij of Errors, iii. 2 

mark, king of Scotland, mark Macbeth, i. 2 

as if it felt with Scotland, and yelled — iv. 3 

yet do not fear; Scotland hath — iv. 3 

O Scotland! Scotland! Ifsuchaone .... — iv. 3 

have banished me from Scotland — iv. 3 

stands Scotland where it did? — iv. 3 

your eye in Scotland would create — iv. 3 

bring tliou this fiend of Scotland — iv. 3 

hail, king of Scotland! king of Scotland. . — v. 7 

the first that ever Scotland in — v. 7 

mean for powers in Scotland (rep.) ..\HenrtjlV. i. 3 
son in Scotland being thus employed — i. 3 
the banks of England, Scotland, Wales — iii. 1 
lord Mortimer or Scotland hath sent — iii. 2 
spokeof in Scotland, as this term offear — iv. 1 

fly to Scotland, till that the noblcs.2Heri?-i//r. ii.3 

1 will resolve for Scotland — ii.3 

to ripe his growing fortunes, to Scotland — iv. I 

tlien with Scotland first begin Heiuyl'. i. 2 

from Scotland am I stolen Z Henry I' I. iii. 1 

forced to live in Scotland a forlorn .. — iii. 3 

Scotland, hath will to help — iii. 3 

Henry now lives in Scotland — iii. 3 

laid open all your victories in Scotland — iii. 7 

SCOTTISH— of tlie Scottish lord . . Mer. of renk-e. i. 2 
once more to your Scottish prisoners. 1 /Jen^i// r. i. 3 
your father, and the Scottish power.. — iii. 1 

SCOUNDRELS, and subtracters . . Twelflh A'/V/i/, i. 3 

SCOUR— she can wash and scour. TwoGen. of Ver. iii. I 
I wasli, wring, brew, bake, scour . . Merry Wives, i. 4 
look you scour with juice of balm .... — v. 5 

never saw I men scour soon fVinler'sTate, i. 2 

would scour these English hence? Macbelh, v. 3 

shall scour my shame with it \ Henry ly. iii. 2 

I will scour you witli my rapier Henry v. ii. i 

tliis day, to scour it in the dust Pericles, ii. 2 

SCOURED-washed and scoured. TwoGe».of fer. iii. I 
t!ian to be scoured to nothing with ..2HenryI r. i. 2 
shall be scoured in his rancorous.... 2 Hejm/;-'/. iii. 2 

SCOURGE of greatness to be used .... 1 Henry ir.i.3 
revengeraent and a scourge for me .. — iii. 2 

will scourge witli haughty arms — v. 2 

with them scourge the bad revolting.l Henri/ f/. i. 1 

am 1 to be the English scourge — i. 2 

is this the scourge of France? — ii.3 

to scourge you for tills apprehension — ii. 4 
terror, and their bloody scourge! .... — iv. 2 

tlie Frenchmen's only scourge — iv. 7 

Naples, England's bloody scourge! ..IHenryVI. v. 1 
what scourge for perjury can this ..Richard lU. i. 4 
have been a scourge to her enemies.. C(H/o/a«!«, ii. 3 
to scourge the ingratitude that ..Antony ffCleo. ii. 6 
instruments to scourge \_CoL iC»;-plague].. Lear, v. 3 
what a scourge is laid upon your. /fomeo ^-Julii-t,^ v. 3 
I must lie their scourge and minister . . Hamlet, iii. 4 
tlie offender's scourge is weighed — iv. 3 

SCOURG-ED— whipped and scourged.. I HennjIV. i. 3 
vet nature finds itself scourged by the Lear, i. 2 

SCOURING faults Henryf.i. 1 

scouring my lord of York's armour ..2 Henry f/. i. 3 
fearful scouring doth choke .... Timon of Athens, v. 3 

SC(3UT me for him at the Twelfth Night, iii. 4 

against us? say, scout, say Love\ L. Lost, v. 2 

are not the speedy scouts returned. . I Henry f I. iv. 3 

what tidings send our scouts? — v. 2 

for by my scouts I was advertised ..ZHenryVl. ii. 1 
our scouts have found the adventure — iv. 2 
where slept our scouts, or how — v. I 

SCO WL— the scowl of night Love's L. Lost. iv. 3 

men's eyes did scowl on Richard. ...i?icA«fiZ II, v. 2 

glad at the thing they scowl at Ci/uiheline, i. 1 

slie can scowl [C'o/.K/i/.-scrowlJ .. TifusAndron. ii. .'j 

SCRAP— and stolen the scraps Love's L. Lost, v. 1 

tliose scraps are good deeds past. Troilus ^ Cress, iii. 3 

tlie fragments, scraps, the bits — v. 2 

cold dishes, with scraps o' the court. . Cymheltne, ii.3 

SCRAPE trencher, nor wash dish. Tempest, ii. 2 (song) 
if it be but to scrape the figures ..Merry fVires, iv. 2 
a trencher! he scrape a trencher!. //ojneo ^-Jutiet, i. 5 

SCRAPED one out of the table. . . . Meas. forMcas. i. 2 

you will he scraped out of the Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

of fair king Richard, scraped from ..iHenn/ll'.i. 1 

SCRAPING fathers' gold Richard II. v. 3 

SCRATCH— tailor might scratch. Tempest, ii. 2 (song) 

will scratc!\ the nurse TwoGen. of Verona, i. 2 

scratcn my head. Peas-blossom . . Mid.S.'s Dr. iii. 2 
but to help cavaiero Cobweb to scratch — iii. 2 

do but tickle me, I must scratch — iii. 2 

scratch tliee but with a pin AsyonLikeit, iii. .5 

that she should scratch you, who .... Alt's IVetl, v. 2 
will make him scratch his beard. Hunter's Tale, iv. 3 
a shallow scratch should drive I Henry /F. v. 4 



SCRATCH your heads HnnryVllI. v. 3 

and scratch my praised cheeks. . Troilns ^Cress. iv. 2 
have one scratch ray head i' the snn. Coriotanns, ii. 2 
I cannot scratch mine ear ..Antony 'f Cleopatra, i. '2 
scratch it tCo/.A'n(. -search] out of the. . Pericles, ii. 1 
ay, ay, a scratch, a scratch .... Romeo ^Juliet, iii. 1 

to scratch a man to death! — iii. 1 

SCRATCHED out your TwoGen. of ^ti ona, iv. 4 

'scape a predestinate scratched face . . .i/«j/i Ado, i. I 

Priscian a little scratched Love' sL. Lost, v. I 

whom fortune hath cruelly scratched.. ^//'sJ^t'/^ v. 2 
I'll have thy beauty scratched .. Wiritcr's Tale, iv. 3 
then you scratched your head .... JuliusCtesar, ii. I 

from death, that is hut scratched Hamlet, iv. 7 

SCRATCHES with briers, scars Coriolamis, iii. 3 

SCRATCHING could not make it worse.M«c/i/4rfo, i. 1 

scratching her legs Taming of Shrew, 2 (indue.) 

and I had the scratching of thee. Troilus^ Cress, ii. I 

SCREAM— I heard the owl scream Macbeth, ii. 2 

strange screams of death — ii. .1 

SCREECH-OWL aye be called. . Troilus ^-Crcss. v. 1 1 
SCREEN— to have no screen between .. Tempest, i. 2 

your leafv screens thrown down Macbeth, v. 6 

SCREENED and stood between Ha»i;c(, iii. 4 

SCREWS me from my true Twelfth Niglu, v. 1 

we fail! but screw your courage Macbeth, i. 7 

SCREWED to ray memory? Cymbeline, ii. 2 

SCRIBBLED form, drawn with a nen.KingJohn, v. 7 

that parchment, being scribbled oer.2 Henri/ f7. iv. 2 

SCRIBE-my master, being scribe. TwoGen.of I'er. ii. 1 

figures, scribes, bards, poets ....^n(oni/cS-Oeo. iii. 2 

will let thee, play the scribe ....TitmAndron. ii. 5 

SCRIMERS of their nation, he swore ..Hamlet, iv. 7 

SCRIP— according to the scrip. . . . Mid.N.'sDream, i. 2 

yet with scrip and scrippage AsyouLil(eit,iu. 2 

SCRIPPAGE— with scrip and scrippage — iii. 2 

SCRIPTURES of the loyal Leonatus6Vm6cKne, iii. 4 

the devil can cite scripture for Ills. JIfer. of Venice, i. 3 

with a piece of scripture, tell them. . Richard III. i. 3 

understand the scripture? (rep.) Hamlet, v. I 

SCRITCHING-scritch-owI, scritching.Mid.AT.Dr. v.2 

SCRITCII-OWL, scritching loud — v.2 

the time when scritch-owls cry 2HenryFI. i. 4 

boding scritch-owls make the concert — iii. 2 
that fatal scritch-owl to our house ..^Hcnry VI. ii. 6 
SC RI VENER-fetch the scrivener. . Taming ofSh. iv. 4 
SCROLL of every man's name ..Mid.N.'sDream, i. 2 
call forth your actors by the scroll .. — i. 2 
empty eye there is a written scroll?.. il/er.q/"Fen.ii. 7 

here's the scroll, the continent — iii. 2 

a gentle scroll; fair lady, by your .. — iii. 2 

gracing the scroll, that tells of King John, ii. 2 

your name in the scroll of youth ....2HenryIV. i. 2 
accept this scroll, most gracious .... I Henry VI. iii. I 
exceed the prescript of this scroll. ^n/oni/iS-C/eo. iii. 8 
give the king this fatal plotted scroll. Titus And, ii. 3 
what's here? a scroll; and written .. — iv. 2 
sweet scrolls to fly about the streets.. — iv. 4 

SCROOP, where lies our uncle Richard II. iii. 2 

sir Steplien Scroop; besides a clergyman — iii. 3 

the lord Seroop, 1 speak not lHenryIV.i.3 

this to my cousin Scroop — iv. 4 

and the prelate Scroop, who, as we hear — v. 6 

the bishop Scroop, Hastings 2 Henry IV. iv. 4 

lord Scroop of Masham (rep. ii. 2). Henry V. ii. (clio.) 

though Cambridge, Scroop, and Grey — ii. 2 

say to thee, lord Scroop; thou cruel — ii. 2 

SCROYLE— these scrovles of Anglers . K'/ng-./o/m, ii. 2 

SCRUBBED boy, no Higher (rep.).Mer.orVenice, v. 1 

SCRUPLE— without scruple to hell. Merry fVives, v. 5 

if I lose a scruple of this sport. ... Twelfth Niglit, ij. h 

no dram of a S'.Tuple (rep.) — iii. 4 

smallest scruple of herexceUenee.A/eas./or.Weas. i. 1 

have to do with any scruple — i. 1 

even to the utmost scruple Much.4do,v. I 

twentieth part of one poor scruple .Mer. ofVen. iv. 1 
and I will not bate thee a scruple .... All's Well, ii. 3 

fears and scruples shake us Macbeth, ii. 3 

wiped the black scruples, reconciled. . — iv. 3 
former scruple in our strong-barred. .Ki«g'yo/in,ii. 2 

uncleanly scruple! fear not .you — iv. 1 

intermixed with scruples, and do set . Richard Il.v.b 
a scruple, or indeed, a scruple itself.. 2He«rT//F. i. 2 

but tliere remains a scruple in 1 Henry VI. v. 3 

possessed him with a scruple th^t. . Henry VI 1 1, ii. I 
committing freel.y your scruple to the — ii. 2 

laid any scruple in your way — ii. 4 

a tenderness, scruple, and prick — ii. 4 

and the king's late scruple — iv. 1 

not making any scruple .... Troilus <5- Cressida, iv. 1 

for every scruple of her contaminated — iv. 1 

I wretch, made scruple of his praise. .Ct/m6e;ir7e,_v. ^ 

or some craven scruple of thinking too. Hamlet, iv. 4 

SCRUPULOUS-with scrupulous wit!. 3 Henry ('/. iv. 7 

powers breed scrupulous faction... Jn/ony SfCleo.X. 3 

SCUFFLE-in the scufflesof great fights — i. 1 

SCULL-like scaled sculls ....Troilus^- Cressida.y. 5 

and yellow chapless sculls .... Romeo ^Juliet, iv. 1 

his light to grups and eyeless sculls? — v. 3 

that scull had !i tongue in it Hamlet, v. I 

may not that be the scull of a lawyer?.. — v. 1 

a scull now hath lain you i' the earth .. — v. 1 

tills same scull, sir, was Yorick's scull.. — v. I 

SCULLION— away you scullion! ....2Henr!/f F. ii. 1 

like a very drab, a scullion ! Hamlet, ii. 2 

SCUM— froth and scum, tliou liest. . . Merry Wives, i. 1 

puif^e you of your scum 2 Henry IV. iv. 4 

tlie tilth and scum of Kent 2hlenryVI. iv. 2 

a scum of Bretagnes, and base Richard ill. v. 3 

SCURRIL— breaks scurril jests. Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 3 
SCURRILITY-abrogate scurrility. Lore's J[..ios(, iv. 2 

pleasant without scurrility, witty — v. 1 

SCURRILOUS-noscurrilouswords»Vn(»r'sVa/e,iv. 3 
SCURVY— a very scurvy tune (rep.)., .. Tempest, ii, 2 

a most scurvy monster! — ii. 2 

tliou scurvy patch! ^ — iii. 2 

scurvy jack-a-nape priest (rep. ii. 3) Merry Wives, i. 4 

this same seal I, scurvy, cogging — iii. I 

but a scurvy fellow .. 7'«'e;/i'/i/V(4'/i',iii. 4 (challenge) 
a very scurvy fellow Meas.forMeas.y. 1 



SCURVY, nor a temporary meddler.. A/ea./orMea. v. 1 

scurvy, old, fllthyj scurvy lord 1 All's Well, ii.3 

courtesies alone, tliey are scurvy ones — v. 3 
1 scorn you, scurvy companion ....2 Henry IF. ii. 4 
better than I love e'er a scurvy young — ii. 4 

you scurvy, lousy knave (rep.) HenryV. v. 1 

thou scurvy, valiant ass! Troilus ^ Cress, ii. 1 

you scurvy lord! You cur! — ii. I 

that same scurvy doting foolish — y. 4 

I am a rascal, a scurvy railing knave — v. 4 

and, like a scurvy politician, seem Lear, iv. 6 

scurvy knave! I am none of his . . Romeo ^Jul. ii. 4 
spoke such scurvy and provoking terms. .0(/ie/(D, i. 2 
base notorious knave, some scurvy fellow — iv. 2 
by this hand, I say, it is very scurvy .. — iv. 2 
'SCUSE serves many men to..,Uerc/ion(o/renice, iv. I 
and laid good 'sense upon your ecstacy. Othello, iv. 1 
SCUT— my doe with the black scut?.il/err!/ Wives, v. 5 

SCUTCHEON plain declares Love'sL.Lost, v. 2 

honour is a mere scutcheon 1 Henry I V. v. I 

scutcheons, and your signs ofeonquest/ln/. .J- C(eo. v.2 

SCYLLA, your father Merclianl of Venice, Hi. 5 

SCYTHE— bate his scythe's keen ed^e. Love's L.L. i. I 

wanting the scythe, all uncorrected ..HenryV. v. 2 

even with his pestilent scythe. . Antony ^Cleo. iii. 1 1 

SCYTHIA half so barbarous . . Titus Andronicus, i. 2 

SCYTHIAN— as Scythian Thomyris..lHenrt/r/. ii. 3 

the barbarous Scythian, or he that Lear, i. I 

SEA— when the sea is Tempcst,'\. I 

off toseaagain — i. 1 

a thousand furlongs of sea for an acre — i. I 

but that the sea, mounting to — i. 2 

I would have sunk the sea — i. 2 

bore us some leagues to sea — i. 2 

to cry to the sea that roar'd to us — i. 2 

I have deck'd the sea with drops — i. 2 

and bear the last of our sea sorrow .... — i. 2 
your reason for raising this sea storm? — i. z 

like to a nymph o' the sea — i. 2 

but doth suffer a sea change — i. 2 (song) 

sea nymphs hourly ring his knell .. — i. 2 (song) 
being as they were, drenched in the sea — ii. I 
sowing the kernels of it in the sea .... — ii. i 
from whom we were all sea swallowed — ii. 1 

I sliall no more to sea, to sea — ii.2(song) 

then to sea, boys, and let her — ii.2(soiigj 

the sea cannot drown me — iii. 2 

and the sea mocks our — iii. 3 

the never surfeited sea hath — iii. 3 

exposed unto tlie sea — iii. 3 

have incensed the seas and shores .... — iii. 3 

'twixt the green sea and the — v. I 

though the seas threaten — v. I 

as wiien we first put out to sea — v. 1 

and promise you calm seas — v. 1 

theuce into the raging sea! . . TicoGen. of Verona, i. 2 

and drench'd me in tlie sea — i. 3 

as twenty seas, if all — ii. 4 

a sea of melting pearl — iii. i 

why, it is at sea — iii. I 

as the sea of sands — iv. 3 

I'll never to sea again Merry Wives, ii. 1 

thy capacity receiveth as the sea. . TwelfthNight, i. I 

tliat lived upon the sea — i. 2 

you took me from the breach of the sea — ii. 1 
men of such constancy put to sea.... — ii. 4 

is all as hungry as the sea — ii. 4 

from the rude sea's enraged — v. i 

that went to sea with the ten .... Meas. for Meas. i. 2 
the great soldier, who miscarried at sea? — iii. I 
her brother Frederick was wrecked at sea — iii. 1 
onefootinsea,andoneonshore.il/wrA/l[io, ii. 3 (song) 
that the wide sea hath drops too ,... — iv. 1 
on the beached margent of the sea. Mid. N.'s Dr. ii. 2 
have sucked up from the sea contagious — ii. 2 

that the rude sea grew civil at — ii. :r 

the sea will ebb and flow Loi'e'sL. Lo.sV, iv. 3 

the pageants of the sea Merch. of Venice, i. 1 

a wind too great might do at sea .... — i . I 

that all my fortunes are at sea — i. I 

in the narrow seas (re/), iii. 1) — ii. 8 

have had any loss at sea or no? — iii. 1 

gulled shore to a most dangerous sea — iii. 2 

flow as hugely as the sea As you Like it, ii. 7 

great seas nave dried, when miracles.. /)//'s»VH, ii. I 
as are the swelling Adriatic seas . . Taming of Sh.'i.i 
have I not heard the sea, putt'ed .... — i. 2 

gain, or perish on the seas — ii. I 

labour, both by sea and land — v.2 

as well forbid the sea for to Winter' sTnle, i. 2 

by sea, and by land; but I am not (rep.) — iii. 3 
to see how the sea flap-dragoned it (rep.) — iii. 3 

I wish you a wave o' the sea — iv. 3 

or the profound seas hide in — iv. 3 

lam put to sea with her — iv. 3 

the seas waxed calm, and we. . Comedy of Errors, i. I 

in earth, in sea, in sky — ii. I 

and wild watery seas, indued .— ii. I 

for he is bound to sea — iv. 1 

and put to sea to-day — v. I 

by wreck at sea? (rep.) — v. 1 

posters of the sea and land Macbeth, i. 3 

the multitudinous seas incarnardine .. — ii. 2 

the ravined salt sea shark — iv. I 

upon a wild and violent sea — iv. 2 

large lengths of seas and shores KingJohn, i. I 

the sea enraged is not half so — ii. 2 

and mountains, rocks, and seas — ii. 2 

upon this side the sea (except — ii. 2' 

in rage deaf as the sea, hasty Richard /Li, 1 

precious stone set in the silver sea .. — ii. I 
bound in with the triumphant sea .. — ii. I 
after late tossing on the breaking seas? — iii. 2 

in the rough rude sea can wash — iii. 2 

being governed as tlie sea is IHenrylV.i. 2 

clipped in with the sea that - — iii. 1 

we ventured on such dangerous seas..2He7ir!//;'. i. I 

melt itself into the sea! — iii. i 

and ebb back to the sea — v.2 

roared the sea, and trumpet-clangour — v. 5 



SEA 



SEA— the ooze ami bottom of tlie sea,. ...Ilrunji: i. a 

fresh streatns run in one selfeea — i. - 

charmnig the imrrow sens — ii. (.eho.) 

eheerly to sen; the sitfiis of — ii- 2 

holtoins throni,'li the lurrowed sea. . — iii. (cho.) 

it is a theme a>i fluent as the sea — iii- 7 

do sinfully miscarry upon tlie sea — iv. I 

winged thoughts, uthwiu-t the sea — v. (cho.1 

out- voice tlie deep-mouthed sea — v.lcho.') 

to cross the seas, and to be crowned.! UcnnjVI. iii. 1 

you, that were so hot at sea — iii. 1 

crossing the sea from England — jv 1 

nnrt in ihat seaof blood — iv. 7 

to the fortune of the sea — v. 1 

their semblance often on the seas.... — v. 3 

to cross the seas to England — v. 5 

liath prevailed beyond the seas 2 Ih'tinj VI.\. 3 

nigh wrecked upon the sea — iii. 2 

vaulting sea refused to drown me .. — jij- ^ 
with twirs as salt as sea through .... — iii. 2 
the sea received it; and so, I wished — iii. 2 

is crept into the bosom of the sea — iv. 1 

should make a start o'er seas — iv. 8 

and I unto the sea, from whence ....SHenryyi. i. 1 
Fuulconbridge commands the narrow seas — i. 1 
as if a channel should be called the sea — ii. 2 
like a mighty sea forced by tlie tide — ii. 5 

the self-same sea forced to retire — ii. 5 

shed seas of tears, and ne'er — ii. .5 

shall Warwick cut the sea to France — ii. 6 

I'll cross the sea, to effect — _ji.6 

and chides the sea that sunders — iii. 2 

shall cross the seas, and bid false .... — iii. 3 

with God, and with the seas — iv- I 

passed, and now repassed the seas .. — iv. 7 
in safety through the narrow seas . . — i v. 8 

my sea shall suck them dry ' — iv. 8 

adit water to the sea — v. 4 

is Edward, but a ruthless sea? — v. 4 

and thyself, the sea, whose envious .. — v. 6 
all scattered in the bottom of the sea. Richard Ill.'\.i 

barst to belch it in the sea — i. 4 

a bark to brook no mighty sea — iii. 7 

go cross the seas, aud live with — iv. i 

on the seas. 'There let him sink (rep.) — iv. 4 

what makes lie upon the seas? — iv. 4 

these stragglers o er the seas again . . — v. 3 

the wild sea of my conscience Henriil'lU. ii. 4 

even the billows of the sea — iii. 1 {songl 

many summers in a sea of glory .... — iii. 2 

as the shrouds make at sea — iv. 1 

the sea being smooth Troilus ^ Ci-essida, i. 3 

what ragin" of thesea? — i. 3 

the seas and winds (old wranglers) .. — ii. 2 

richer than sea and land? — ii. 2 

when we vow to weep seas — iii. 2 

moves itself in a wide sea of wax.. Timon a/Ath. i. 1 
we must all part into this sea of air.. — iv. 2 
where the liglit foam of the sea may — iv. 3 

attraction robs the vast sea — iv. 3 

the sea's a thief, whose liquid — iv. 3 

entombed upon the very hem 0' the sea — v. 5 

he waxed like a sea; and Ctnwlauus, ii. 2 

that, when the sea was calm — iv. 1 

such as you, a sea and land full — v. 4 

by sea, and land, in every place ..Julius Caisar, i. 3 

on such a full sea are we now — iv. 3 

commands the empire of the sea,.. Aniony ^Cleo. i 2 

Pompey is strong at sea — i. 4 

make the sea serve them — i. 4 

both what by sea and land — i.4 

love me, and the sea is mine — ii. 1 

by sea he is an absolute master — ii. 2 

we'll speak with thee at sea — ii. 6 

I must rid all the seaof pirates — ii. 6 

at sea, I think. We have, sir — ii. 6 

you have been a great thief by sea . . — ii. 6 

"so quickly cut tlie Ionian sea — iii. 7 

will fight with him by sea (rep.) .... — ill. 7 
refusing him at sea, being prepared (.rep.) — iii. 7 

donothght by sea; trust not — iii. 7 

Puhlieola, and Coelius, are for sea .. — iii. 7 

till we have done at sea — iii. « 

our fortune on the sea is out of breath — iii. 8 

the myrtle leaf to his grand sea — iii. 10 

by sea and land I U fight: or I will — iv. 2 

their preparation is to-day by sea .. — iv. 10 

order for sea is given — iv. 10 

aud the rich crop of sea and land. . . . CymbHine, i. 7 

from Gallia I crossed the seas — i. 7 

on our terrible seas, like egg-shells.. — iii. 1 
if you are sick at sea, or stomach- .. — iii. 4 
tliii imi>erious seas breed monsters .. — iv. 2 

and l':t it to the sea, and tell — iv. 2 

after your will, have crossed the sea — iv. 2 

would make me spurn the sea — v.h 

hath added water to the sea? ....TilusAiidron. iii. I 
environed with a wilderness of sea .. — iii. 1 
doth not the sea wax mad, threatening — iii. 1 
I am the sea; hark, how her si'jhs (rtp.) — iii. 1 
happily, you may find her in the sea — iv. 3 
until his very downfal in the sea .... — v. 2 

the land, to perish on the seas Pericles, i. 2 

of iate, earth, sea, and air — i.4 

put forth to seas, where when men — ii, (Gower) 
the sea hath cast me on the rocks (rep.) — ii. I 
I marvel how the fishes live in the sea :— ii. I 
what a drunken knave was the sea.... — ii. I 

till the rough seas, that spare not — ii. 1 

spite of all the rupture of the sea — ii. 1 

was by the rough seas reft of ships .... — ii. 3 
by misfortune of the seas has been .... — ii. 3 

I leap into the seas, Where's — ii. 4 

lier nurse, she takes, and so to sea — iii. (Gower) 

the sea works high, the wind — iii. 1 

with us at sea it still hath been — iii. I 

standing Weak upon the sea — iii. 2 

even now did the sea toss upon — iii. 2 

if the sea's stomach be o'ercharged.... — iii. 2 
did the sea cast it up? — Vu.l 



[ 057 ] 



SEA— that threw her in the sea I'rririrt, iii. a 

as doth the sea she lies in — iii. 3 

for she was born at sea, I have named — iii. 3 

that I was shipped at sea, I well — iii. 4 

wreath of Uuwers, ere the sea mar it .. — iv. 1 

endured a sea that almost burst — iv. I 

and thrown into the sea; but I'll see. . — iv. 2 

sail seas in Cockles — iv. 4 ((iower) 

thwarting the wayward seas .. — iv. 4 (Gower) 
hepiits on sackeloth, and to sea — iv. 4 (Gower) 

serve after a long voyage at sea — iv.fi 

where we left him, on the sea — v. (Gower) 

for I was horn at sea. At sea? — v. I 

lest this great seaof joys rushing — v. I 

at sea, buried at Tliarsus, and found at sea — v. 1 
how thou at sea didst lose thy wife .... — V. 2 

at sea in childbed died she — v. 3 

thy hurden at the sea, and called Marina — v. 3 

wind blow the earth into the sea Lear, iii. 1 

if th.y flight lay toward the raging sea .. — iii. 4 

the sea, with such a storm — iii. 7 

as mail as the vexed sea — iv. 4 

hark, do you hear the sea? — iv. 6 

and waved like the enridged sea — iv. 6 

a sea nourished with lover's .... Romeo ^Juliet, i. I 

the fish lives in the sea — i. 3 

shore washed with the furthest sea.. — ii. 2 
my bounty is as boundless as the sea — ii. 2 

a bark, a sea, a wind: for still — iii. .5 

I may call the sea, doth ebb and flow — iii..') 
empty tijjers, or the roaring sea .... — v. 3 
whether in sea or fire, in earth or air . . llamlef, i. 1 

beetles o'er his base into the sea? — i.4 

looks so many fathoms to the sea — i.4 

or to take arms against a sea of troubles — iii. 1 
haply, the seas, and conn tries ditterent.. — iii. I 
mad a^ the sea, and wind, when both. ... — iv. 1 
ere we were two days old at sea — iv. fi (letter) 

and confine for the sea's worth Othello, i. 2 

from the Cape can you discern at sea? . . — ii. 1 

if it hath ruffianed so upon the sea — ii. 1 

the Moor himself's at sea, and is in full — ii. 1 
for I have lost him on a dangerous seal — ii. i 

high seas, and howling winds — ii. 1 

the great contention ot^ the sea and skies — ii. 1 

let the labouring bark climb hills of seas — ii. I 

like to the Pontick sea, whose icy current — iii. 3 

more fell than anguish, hunger, or the sea!— v. 2 

SEA-BANK-the wild sea-banks.. /l/cr. nfreniee, v. I 

the sea-bank with certain Venetians. .Oihello, iv. I 

SEABOY— wet seaboy in an hour so. 2 Henri///', iii. 1 

SEA-CAP— have no sea-cap on .. Twelflh Niahl, iii. 4 

SEA-COAL— end of a sea-coal fire ..Merry IVives, i. 4 

Oatcake, sir, or George Sea-coal .... Much Ado, iii. 3 

come hither, neighbour Sea-coal .... — iii. 3 

go, get you to Francis Sea-coal — iii. 5 

bv a sea-coal fire, upon Wednesday. 2fre>ir!/ff. ii. 1 

SEA-FARER— this fresh new sea-faier. foic/es. iii. I 

SEA-FARING men provide for .. Comedy of Err. i. 1 

SEA-FIGHT— in a sea-fight .... Tieelflk Nit^ht, iii. 3 

now, the next dav was our sea-fight. . . . liainlet, v. 2 

SEA-GOWN scarfed about me — v. 2 

SEjiX; our happiness with TwoGcn. ofl'erona, i. 3 

and seal the bargain — ii. 2 

break the seal for once , — iii. 1 

with which she uses to seal Tu-elph Nighl, ii. 5 

or say, 'tis not your seal — v. 1 

seals of love, but sealed.. Afpo.?../br Mens. iv. 1 (song) 
liere is the hand and seal of tlie duke — iv. 2 

experimental seal doth warrant "Much Ado, iv. I 

which I had rather seal with my death — v. 1 
pure white, fliia seal of bliss! .Mid. S.'s Dream, iii. 2 

that he was fain to seal on Lovers L. Lost, v. 2 

to a notary, seal me there your ..Mer.of Venice, i. 3 

I'll seal to such a bond (icp.) — i. 3 

you shall not seal to such — i. 3 

to seal love's bonds new made — ii. 6 

till thou can'st rail the seal from off — iv. I 
by him seal np thy ramd.AsyouLikeit, iv. 3 (letter) 

it is the show and seal of nature's All\ Well, i. i 

seal the title with a lovely kiss'i.Taming ofSh. iii. 2 
not dared to break the holy seal. Winter' sTale, iii. 2 

break up the seals, and read — iii. 2 

afterwards seal it, and again return ..Macbeth, v. 1 
OS seal to this imlentureof my love.. KiitgJohn, ii, I 

here is your hand and seal for — iv. 2 

makes, my hand thus seals it Richard I J. ii. 3 

the manual seal of death — iv. 1 

what seal is that, that hangs without — v. 2 
we'll but seal, and then to horse ..1 UenrylV. iii. 1 
giddy mast seal up the shipboy's ..2HcnrylV. iii. 1 
that you should seal this lawless .... — iv. I 

rebellion with a seal divine — iv. 1 

and shortly will I seal with him — iv. 3 

with the broken seals of perjury Uemyl'. iv. 1 

seal up your lips, and give illcnryl'L i. 2 

might St think upon these by tlie seal — iii. 2 

for I did but seal once to a thing — iv. 2 

she seals it with a eurt'sey illenryVl.iii. 2 

and thus I seal my truth — iv. 8 

I seal upon the lips of this — v. 7 

■with my hand I seal my true Richard III. ii. 1 

Buckingham seal thou this — ii. 1 

unto your grace the seal I keep — ii. 4 

under the confession's seal Uenryl'llL i. 2 

I now seal it; and with that blood .. — ii. 1 

under your hands and seals — ii. 4 

render up the great seal presently .. — iii. 2 
that seal, .you ask with such a violence — iii. 2 
to carry into Flanders the great seal — iii. 2 
the giving back the great seal tons.. — iii. 2 

a bargain made; seal it, seal it — iii. 2 

seals a commission to a blank of .. .. — iii. 3 
\Col. KnI.'] the seal of my petition. Troilus ^- Cress, iv. 4 
I will not seal your knowledge .... Coriolamis.U. 3 

seal what lend withal! — iii. I 

together with the seal o' the senate.. — v. 5 

with the seal of Caesar (rep.) Juliw Crrsnr, iii. 2 

this kingly seal, and plighter..y<ii(ony i^- (;!<■•). iii. 11 
seal then, and all is done — iv. 12 



SEA 



SEAL— ratify; seal it with feasts (h/iai,elij,e, v. .•> 

thy stamp, thy seal, anil bids thce.TitusAndron. iv.2 

although my seal he stamped — iv.2 

your hands and lijis must seal it too ..Pericles, ii. .5 

to seal the aceiiscr's lips I.ciir, iv. (5 

seal with n rigliteous kiss Itomeo /^.luliel, v. 3 

seal up the mouth of outrage for .... — v. 3 
to give them seals, never, my soul ....Hamlet, iii. 2 

every god did seem to set his seal — iii. 4 

must your conscience my acquittance seal — iv. 7 

the model of that Danish seal — v. a 

all seals and symbols of redeemed sin ..Oiliclln, ii. 3 

SE.VLED-or sums in sealed bags . , i^h'rrti Wires, iii. 4 

compact sealed in my function.. Twrljiti .\i!;ht, v. 1 

but sealed ill vain, sealed. A/eas./'i/' j;/' ax iv. 1 (song) 

that's sealed in approbation — v. 1 

and sealed under for another ..Merch. of Venice, i. 2 
a sealed hag, two sealed bags of ducats — ii. 8 
and no sealed quarts .. Taoting of sh. 2 (induction) 
b.v Apollo's great divine sealed up. Wiutrr' sTale,\\\.\ 
have sealed his rigorous statutes .Comedy of Krr. i. 1 

have all offence sealed up King John, ii. 1 

which being sealed interchan,geably.l Henry IV. iii. 1 
bear this sealed brief, with winged .. — iv. 4 

hast sealed up my expectation 2 Henry IV. iv. 4 

with blood he sealed a testament .... Henry V. i v. 6 
the conquest fully been sealed up ..\HeiiryVJ. i. 1 

now thou art sealed the son — iv. 6 

that wast sealed in thy ndlivSty.... Richard III. i. 3 
till He have sealed thy full desire. TimnnofAih. v. 5 
I found this paper thus sealed up .JulinsCrpsnr, ii. 1 
written and scaled between ns ..Avtony ^Cleo. ii. S 
their own conscience sealed them . . Cymbeline, iii. ti 

his sealed commission, left in trust Pericles, \. 3 

this hand, by thee to Romeo sealed. /'o/iieot^/K^iv. I 
sealed up the doors, and would not let — v. 2 

who, by a scaled compact, well Hamlet, i. 1 

upon his will I sealed my hard consent.. — i. 2 

she hath sealed thee for herself — iii. 2 

letters sealed: and my two schoolfellows — iii. 4 

for every thing is sealed and done — iv. 3 

how was this sealed? Why, even in — v. 2 

SE.U.ED-UP counsel L->re'sL.I nst.ni. 1 

brou'dit this sealed-up oracle .."iw(('r's7'«/f,iii. 2 
SEA-LIKE— mnstsea-like./(n(ojiy.5-C/™pff(rrr. iii. 11 
SEALING the injury of tongues.. "'iH/er's Tale, i. 2 

the other three are sealing AnlonxiSrCleo. iii. 2 

SEALING-DAY betwixt my love ..Mid.N.'sDr.i. 1 
SEAL-RING of my grandfather's ..\Hiuiyli: iii. 3 
SEAM— with his own seam .. Troilus frCmsida, ii. 3 
through the rough seams of the waters, rcr/cfes, ii. 1 
SEA-MAID spawned him .. MeasMie./br il/ras«re, iii. 2 
to hear the sea-maid's music . . Mid. X.^sDream, ii. 2 

SEAMAN'S whistle is as a whisper Pericles, iii. 1 

SEA-MARGE, steril, and rocky-liard .Tempest, iv. 1 
SEA-MARK— like a great sea-iiiark .Coriolatms, v. 3 
and ver.y sea-mark of my utmost sail . . Oi/iello, v. 2 
SEA-MELLS— [Co(.Kn/.-soamels]from.7-cwipCT/, ii. 2 
SEAMEN fear no wreck ; no bargains. KinnJolm, iii. 1 

cried, good seamen, to the sailors Pericles, iv. 1 

SEA-MONSTER: I stand for ..Mer.of Venice.iu. 2 

in a child, than the sea-monster ! I.rar.i.i 

SEAMY— wit the seamy side without ..Othello, iv. 2 

SEAR— calumny will sear virtue.. Winfer*sTale, ii. I 

thy crown does sear mine eyeballs. . . . Macbeth, iv. 1 

is fallen into the sear, the yellow — v. 3 

red-hot steel, to sear me Riclinrd III. iv. 1 

and sear up my embracements Cymbetine. i. 2 

SEARCH for my poor son Tempest, ii. 1 

the sea mocks our frustrate search — iii. 3 

and thusi search it with .. Tu-o Gen. 0/ Verona, i. 2 
and my assurance bids me search. .Merry Wices, iii, 2 

to search for a gentleman — iii. 3 

to search for such a one — iii. 3 

search, seek, find out — iii. 3 

see the issue of his search — iii. 3 

to search the house for his wife's love — iii. .^ 

and did he search for yon — iii. 5 

well on went he for a search — iii. 5 

1 will search impossible places — iii. i 

help to search my house this — iv.2 

once more search with me — iv.2 

search Windsor castle, elves — v..") 

the.y are not worth thesearch. Merc/iantor Venice,]. 1 
with him to search Bassanio's ship .. — ii. 8 
know not what's spent in the search — iii. 1 

a thing of his own search As you Like it, i. I 

let not search and inquisition quail — ii. 2 
not to find that her search implies ....All's Well. i. 3 

the search, sir, was profitable — ii. 4 

marry, we'll search — iv. 3 

should go in search of virtue Kin^'.Iohn. ii. 2 

they are come to search the house . . I Henry IV. ii. 4 

search his pockets. What hast — ii. 4 

search out thy wit for secret 1 Henry VI. iii. 3 

to search the secret treasons of 3 Henm I'l. v. 2 

Ca;sar's bowels, search tliis bosom .JuliusCre<ar, v. 3 
guarded! and the search so slow .... Cymbetine, i. 1 
go, bid my woman search for a jewel — ii. 3 
go, and search. You have abused .. — ii. 3 
and honour; which dies i' the search — iii. 3 
and my brother search what companies — iv.2 
dost thou search m3' wound.. Titus.-indronicns. ii. 4 
ICol.Knt.] .search out of the calendar ..Pericles, ii. I 
go search like noblemen, like noble (>fp.) — ii. 4 
of Pericles the careful search by . . — iii. (Gower) 
search the market narrowly (rpp.) .... — iv. 3 

search eveiT acre in the high grown I.ear. iv. 4 

infold me fiom the search of eyes. /(n>tt?o ^ Jul. iii. 3 
search about the churchyard (rep.) .. — v. 3 
of woe, or wonder, cea^e your search . . Hamlet, v. 2 
lead to tlie Sngittary the raised search .. Othello, i. 1 

several quests, to search voii out — i. 2 

SEARCHED— have searched It.. ..Merry Wives, iii. 5 
the last time he searched for him.... — iv.2 
that searched a hollow walnut for .. — iv.2 
that will not he deep searched .. .. Lnve'sl..l.nst,\. 1 
who, inward searched, have l\vetB.Ver.ori'enicc, iii. 2 
I have searched, I have inquired ..I Henn/IV. iii. .■« 

he hath been searched among Cymbelltie, v. 6 

VV 



SEA 



G.')8 ] 



SEC 



SEAKCIIERSof thctown Rnmeo ^- Juliet, v. 2 

SE A.UCUES to the bottom of.. . . Troilus &^Cress. ii. 2 

SEARCHING of thy wound As you Like i\ ii. 4 

when the seaichinj; eye of heaven.. /(iWiu/d //. iii. 2 

a marvellous searching wine 2Henryn'. ii. 4 

my own searching eyes shall . . Troilns (r Cress, i v. 5 
searching the window for a flint ..JuliusC<esat; ii. 1 
SEARED— my maideirs name seared.. AU'sli'elt, ii. 1 
['W.] uften read, grown seared., ileus. for Meas. ii. 4 
that seared the wings of my sweet ..iHeuniVI. v. 6 

[Kn/.] in these seared hopes Cijmbeline,\\. i 

Sb;.\-ROOM, an tlie brine and cloudv..iV)tV/cs, iii. 1 

SIOA-S.^l-T tears 'I'ilusAnilrouicus, iii. 2 

SEA-SICK, I think Love's L. LosI, v. 2 

who began to be much sea-sick . . ITinler'sTale, v. 2 
rocks thy sea-sick weary harUl .. Romeo ^-Juliet, v. 3 
SEA-SIDE— in a rock by the sea-side. .rempej<, ii. 2 
'tis by the sea-side, browsing on . Winler'sTale, iii. 3 
we set oil, Camillo, to the sea-side. . . . — iv. 3 

walk bi'fi ire toward the sea-side — iv 3 

he hath despatched to the sea-side ..KiiigJoh7i,v. 7 
to tbe sea-side straightway. .J»/o»y i^Oeopu/ra, iii. 9 
let's to the sen-side, ho! as well tu see ..Olhetto, ii. I 

SEASON" — past the mid season Tempest, i. 2 

and of the season too, it shall Mernj ll'ives, iii. 3 

all this, to season a brother's .... Twelfth yis^ht, i. 1 

we kill the fowl of season Mcas.forMeas. ii. 2 

corrupt with virtuous season — ii. 2 

frame the season for your own harvest. M»cA.Jdo,i. 3 
which may season give toller foul .. — iv. I 

we see the seasons alter Mid. N.'s Dream, ii. 2 

are not ripe until their season — ii. 3 

each thing, that in season grows .. Love'$L.Lost,\. 1 
and wait the season, and oljserve .... — v. 2 
when mercy seasons justice. .V«c/ioH(o/reni'ce,iv. 1 
how many things by season seasoned — v. I 
of Adam, the seasons'difference ,.A> you Like it, ii. 1 
a maiden can season her praise in ...,AU''s}Vell, i. 1 

I am not a day of season — v. 3 

the fairest flowers o* the season . . Winler''s Tale, iv. 3 
tliese jests are out of season . . Comedy of Errors, i. 2 
any man thus beaten out of season? — ii. 2 
more tlian he's worth, to season .... — iv. 2 
you lack the season of all natures ,.., Macbeth, iii. 4 
best knows the fits o' the season .... — iv. 2 
would haye done at the same season. 1 Henjt/jr. iii. 1 
not a soldier of this season's stamp .. — iv. 1 

health in very happy season iHennjIV.iw 2 

the seasons change their manners.... — iv. 4 
and joys abound, as seasons fleet ... 2 Uenrii !'I. ii. 4 
for a season after, could not he\\e\e. Richard III. i. 4 
sorrow breaks seasons, and reposing hoxirs — i. 4 

for so the season bids us be — v. 3 

spice and salt that season a man ?..Troi7us<§-Cre5y.i. 2 

proportion, season, form, oftice — i. 3 

and the season can yield it. . . . Timon of Athens, iii. 6 

season the slaves for tubs — iv. 3 

the youlhfiil season of theyear.....?M;ti<sCn;.«ar, ii. 1 
tell you at some meeter season . . Antony S^Cleo. v. 1 
honest wills, which seasons comfort. . Cymbeliue, i. 7 

with aptness of the season — ii.3 

from youth of such a season — iii. 4 

we'll slip you for a season — iv. 3 

to see this gracious season — v. 5 

thus out ot season ; threading Lear, i i . I 

defend you from seasons siien as these?.. — iii. 4 
season love, that of it doth not taste! .Rom. ft Jul. ii.3 
ever 'gainst that season comes wherein.. Hamlet, i. 1 
season your admiration for a while .... — i. 1 

my blessing season this in theel — i. 3 

it then draws near the season, wherein — i. 4 
as you may season it in the charge .... — ii. I 

directly seasons him his enemy — iii. 2 

confederate season, else no creature — iii. 2 

SE.\SONED withagracious voice. i\Ter.ofreiiice, iii. 2 

be seasoned with such viands? — iv. 1 

many things bj' season seasoned are — v. 1 

so seasoned with your faithful love. Richardlll. iii. 7 

from Rome all seasoned office Coriolanus, iii. 3 

he is fit and seasoned for his passage?.. Handel, iii. 3 

SEAT where Love is throned Twelfth Night, ii. 4 

who newly in the seat, that it. . . . Meas. for Meas. i. 3 
give us some seats; come, cousin .... ' — v. 1 
forbid sleep his seat on thv eyelid.. .Mid.N.'sDr. ii. 3 
which makes her seat of Belmont. Mei-.o/ renice, i. 1 

this castle hath a pleasant seat Macbeth, i. 6 

pray you, keep seat — iii. 4 

the seat of Mars, this other Eden . , Richard II. ii. 1 

now bv my seat's right royal — ii. I 

against iliy seat: b'tth young — iii. 2 

and in this seat of peace, tumultuous — iv. 1 
thou li\'e in Rich;ird's seit to sit .... — iv. I 

my soldi thy seat is up on hiah — v. 5 

that Holmenon and this seat 6rours..lHcHrt(rr. i. 1 
vaulted with such ease into his seat — iv. 1 

the seat of Gaunt, dukedom of — v. 1 

both roused in their seats 2 Henry IT. iv. I 

struck me in my very seat of judgment — v. 2 

BO soon did lose his seat Henry V. i. 1 

to the crown and seat of France — i. 1 

and did seat the French beyond — i. 2 

never valued this poor seat of England — i. 2 

for your great seats, now quit — iii. 5 

whose low vassal seat the Alps — iii..*) 

hoise duke Hnmplirey from his seat..2HenryVl. i. 1 

I sat in seat of majesty — i. 2 

heir to England's royal seat — v. 1 

and this is the regal seat ZHeyij-y VJ. i 1 

shoulder do I build my seat — ii. 6 

like seat unto my fortune (rep.) .... — iii. 3 
and the seat of England's true-anointed — iii. 3 
force the tyrant from his seat by war — iii. 3 
shaken Edward from the regal seat.. — iv. 6 
■ have we swept suspicion from our seat — v. 7 
honour, state, and seat, is due to \r\e. Richard III. i. 3 

in the seat royal of this famous — iii. I 

more slander to thy dismal seat .... — iii. 3 
the supreme seat, the throne raajestical — iii. 7 
well become the seat of majesty .... — iii. 7 
canst yield a melancholy seat — iv. 4 



SEAT— of thy godlike seat Troilus ^Cress.i.S 

ungrateful seat of monstrous. . Timon of Athens, iv. 2 

to tlie seat o' the brain Coriolanus. i. 1 

we debase the nature of our seats.... — iii. 1 

let Ca3.sar seat him sure JuliusCissar, i. 2 

throws before Ihy seat a humble heart — iii. 1 
forsake thy seat, I do beseech thee./J«ii)H!/<5-C/eo. ii.7 

whilst the wheeled seat of — iv- 12 

my throne's a seat for baseness! ....Cymbeline, i. 2 

and thrown from Leonati' seat — v. 4 

for this, from stiller seats we came .. — v. 4 

to approach the imperial seat Tilus.indron. i. 1 

built up for his chiefest seat . ... Pericles, i. (Gowcr) 

while memory holds a seat in this Hamlet, i. 5 

he grew unto his seat — iv. 7 

lusty Moor hath leaped into my scat. ..OlhcUo, ii. I 
SE ATED-seated in tlie mean . . Merch. of Venice, i. 2 

and make my seated heart knock Macbeth, i. 3 

before I see thee seated in that ZHeuryVl. i. 1 

if he were seated as king Edward is — iii. 1 
and see him seated in the regal throne — iv. 3 
now am I seated as my soul delights — v. 7 
beiiig seated, and domestio broils . . Richard III. ii. 4 
assistance, is king Richard seated .. — iv. 2 

so, now you are fairly seated Henry fill. i. 4 

he was seated, his daughter with him.. I'rriries, ii. i 

what a grace was seated on this brow. . Hamlet, iii. 4 

SEA-TOST— the sea- tost prince .. PCTvWfs, iii. (Gow.) 

SEA- WALLED garden Ricliard 1 1, iii. 4 

SEA-WATER shalt thou drink Tempest, i. 2 

of the sea-water green, sir Love'sL. Lost, i. 2 

SEA-WlNG-clapson hissea-wing Antony&Cleo. iii. 8 

SEBASTIAN— my lord Sebastian. .. . Tempest, ii. i 

what might, worthy Sebastian (,rep.) .... — ii. 1 

and let Sebastian wake! — ii. 1 

thou'rt pinched for't now, Sebastian .... — v. 1 

who with Sebastian, (whose inward — v. 1 

Sebastian is thy name? .... Two Gen.nf Verona, iv. 4 
Sebastian, I have entertained thee .. — iv. 4 

my name is Sebastian TwelfthNighl, ii. I 

my father was that Sebastian (rep. V. 1) — ii. 1 
thou hast, Sebastian, done good feature — iii. 4 

he named Sebastian — iii. 4 

Sebastian are you? (»ep.) — v. 1 

and fifty, Sebastian so niany All's Well, iv. ?. 

SECONI)— I'll be thj; second Tempest, iii. 3 

received a second life, and second father — v. I 

I second thee; trooj) on Merry Wives, i. 3 

and these are of the second edition .. — ii. 1 

the second mads him Twelfth Night, i. 5 

the nurse of second woe ..Measure for Measure, ii. i 
thus to second grief against .vourself. . Much Ado, v. 1 
the first and second cause will not. Loi'e'sL. Lost, i. 2 
the second, silver, which this .-.Merch. of Venice, ii. 7 
to be the dowry of a second head .... — iii. 2 

a second Daniel (rep. J — i\'. I 

so he served a second, and so As you Like it, i. 2 

you shall not entreat him to a second — i- 'J 

IS second childisliness, and mere .... — ii. 7 

the second, the quip modest — v. 4 

I am the second son of old — v. 4 

from me, I bury a second husband AWsWell, i. 1 

a second time receive the confirmation — ii. 3 
our widower's second marriage-day.. — v. -l 
she will prove a second Grissel.. .. Tamiv^ofSh. i". I 
the sccon(i,aiy(i t]\e thiTd,nine.. .. Winter state, ii. 1 

good my lords, be second to me — ii. 3 

m.y second joy, and first fruits of my — iii. 2 
urging it the second time to me. . Comedy of Err. ii. 2 
highly beloved, second to none that .. — v. 1 

who lies i' the second chamber? Macbeth, ii. 2 

great Nature's second course — ii. 2 

we were carousing till the second cock ., — ii.3 

our point of second meeting — iii. 1 

being but the second generation King Jolin.Vi. 1 

second a villain, and a murderer?.... — iv. 3 

a second fall of cursed man? Richard II. iii. 4 

or base second means, the cords .... 1 Henry IV. i. 3 

never shall a second time to do — v. 2 

that I am a second brother 2 Henry IV. ii. 2 

second to none, unseconded by you .. — ii.3 

to second our attempt (rep.) — iv. 2 

the second property of your excellent — iv. 3 

your workings in a second body — v. 2 

the second, Henry lord Scroop. . Henry V. ii. (chorus) 

in second accent of his ordnance — ii. 4 

into a setwiid course of mischief — iv. 3 

a second Hector for his grim aspect.. Iffeiiry VI. ii. ?, 
art thou not second woman in the ,.2lIenryVl. i. 2 
the second, William of Hatfield .... — ii. 2 

York in arms, to second him — iv. 9 

now begins a second storm to rise ..ZHenryVI. iii. 3 

Richard the second here was Ricltard I IL iii. 3 

by the second hour in the morning .. — y. 3 
our cardinal, to second all his plot. He?iri/r/i/. iii. 2 
I believe, his second marriage shall.. — iii. 2 
in second voice we'll not be .. Troilus SjCressida, ii. 3 

on him erect a second hope — iv. 5 

I will the second time, as I would buy — iv. 5 
many so arrive at second masters. Timon of Alh. iv. 3 

now prove good seconds Coriolanus, i. 4 

too violent for a second course of fight — i. a 

shamed me in your condemned seconds — i. 8 

three-pence to a second day of audience — ii. 1 

the second name of men — iv. 6 

fond of no second brood — v. 3 

your sword, which we will second.... — v. 5 

what was the second noise for? tuliusCasar, J. 2 

press near, and second him — iii. I 

shall try fortune in a second fight — v. 3 

b.v the second hour i' the morn. . Antony ^Cleo. iv. 9 
Where's Dolabella, to second Prticultius? — v. 1 
opiiortunity of a second conference ..Cymbeline, i. 6 
to enjoy a second ni^rht of siicli sweet — ii. 4 
that IS the second tiling that I have.. — iii. 5 
to second ills with ills, each elder worse — v. I 

if seconds hud answered him — v. 3 

is the second that presents himself?.. ../"er/Wes, ii. 2 
and cursed be he that will not second it.. — ii. 4 
buried a second time within these arms.. — v. 3 



SECOND— what says our second daughter.. Lear, i. 1 
no seconds? all myself? why this would,. — iv. t! 

of the first and second cause Romeo ^- Juliet, ii. 4 

the operation of the second cup — iii. 1 

are happy in this second match — iii..') 

to rid her from this second marriage — v. 3 

occasion smiles upon a second leave .... Hamlet, i. 3 

haply, he's the second time come to — ii. 2 

in second husband let me be accurst (rep.) — iii. 2 
the instances, that second marriage move — iii. 2 
a second time I kill mj' husband dead .. — iii. 2 
so think thou wilt no second husband wed — iii 2 

a back, or second, that might liold — iv. 7 

if Hamlet give the first or second hit .... — v. 2 
where each second stood heir to the first. 0(A«Ho, i. 1 
and compel her to some second choice . . — ii. I 
hazard such a place, as his own second .. — ii.3 
this is his second fit; he had one yesterday — iv. 1 
I will be near to second your attempt .... — iv. 2 

SECONDARILY, they are slanders .. Much Ado, v. 1 

SECONDARY at controul King John, v. 2 

in question, is thy secondary ....Meas. for Meas. i. 1 

SECONDED with the forward child Asyau Like, iii. 3 
so doubly seconded with will.... Troilus ^- Cress, i. 3 
the slave's report is seconded Coriolanus, iv. 6 

SECRECY of thine shall be Merry Wives, iii. 3 

provost, for thy care, and secrecy. il/eas.,/"07jl/eas. v. 1 
do implore secrecy, that the iaing.. Love' s L. Lost, v. 1 

requires nothing but secrecy Winler'sTale, iii. 3 

and for secrecy, no lady closer 1 Henry I V. ii. 3 

the business asketh silent secrecy ... .2Henry I' I . i. 2 
but with advice, and silent secrecy . . — ii. 2 
king hath in secrecy long married. Henri/r/;/. iii. 2 
secrecy, to defend mine honesty . Troilus iS Cn-ss. i. 2 
Nature's infinite book of secrecy. .^w^ony s,- Cleo.i. 2 
her private actions to your secrecy .... Pericles, i. 1 
in dreadful secrecy impart they did .... HanCet, i 2 
secrec.y to the king and queen moult no — ii. 2 
no, in despite of sense, and secrecy, unpeg — iii. 4 

SECRET— wrapt in secret studies Tempest, i. 2 

unto the secret nameless friend. TwoGen. of Ver. ii. 1 

get such a secret from me — ii. 5 

some secrets to confer about — iii. 1 

wherein thou must be secret — iii. i 

that will thrust himself into secrets — iii. 1 

the book even of my secret soul .. Twelfth SigtU, i. 4 

are as secret as maidenhead — i. 5 

to give me secret harbour Mcas.forMeas. i. 4 

'tis a secret must be locked within .. — iii. 2 

put them in secret holds — iv. 3 

what secret hath lield you here Much Ado, i. 1 

I can be secret as a dumb man — i. I 

a thousand times in secret — iv. 1 

other men's secrets, I beseech you. Love's L.Lost, i. 1 
under the left nap; i' faith, secrets .. — iv. 3 
wretched fools secrets heedfuUy o'ereye — iv. 3 

one word in secret — y. 2 

you swore a secret pilgrimage. . . . Mer. of Venice, i. 1 
toward heaven breathed a secret vow — iii. 4 
a secret and villanous contriver ..AsyouLike it, i. 1 

and all the secrets of our camp All's Well, iv. I 

discovered the secrets of your army.. — iv. 3 
art to me as secret and as dear .... Taming ofSh. i. 1 

nor read the secrets in't Winler'sTale, iii. 2 

to whistle off these secrets — iv. 3 

thou to me thy secrets tell — iv. 3 (song) 

those secret things, all but what — iv. 3 

sir, there lies such secrets in this fardel — iv. 3 
will have fulfilled their secret purposes — v. 1 

the finder-out of this secret — v. 2 

how now, you secret, black Macbeth, iv. 1 

deaf pillows will discharge their secrets — v. 1 

his secret murders sticking on — v. 2 

by any secret course thy hateful Mfe.KingJolm, iii. 1 
stay, and be secret, and myself will, ft/c/mj-ci //. ii- 1 

choose out some secret place — y. 6 

I will unclasp a secret book \ Henry IV. i. 3 

that, in his secret doom — iii. 2 

secret whispers of each o^ner's.Henry V. iv. (chorus) 
through a secret gate of iron bars .. ..IHenryVI. i. 4 
search out thy wit for secret policies — iii. 3 

I have a secret to reveal — v. 3 

hast thou by secret means — v. 4 

to pry into the secrets of the state ..2Henry ''?. i. I 

from treason's secret knife — iii. 1 

God's secret judgment — iii. 2 

the secrets of his overcharged soul .. — iii. 2 
and live alone as secret as I may .... — iv. 4 
advertised him by secret means.... SHcnrj/*''/. iv. 5 
if secret powers suggest but truth.... — iv. 6 
in secret ambush on the forest side .. — iv. 6 

to search the secret treasons of — v. 2 

as for another secret close intent ..Richard 111. i. 1 

the secret mischiefs that I set — i. 3 

to gaze upon tlie>e secrets of the deep? — __i. 4 
the history of all her secret thoughts — iii. 5 

tlie secret is so weighty Henry VIII. ii. 1 

to know the secret of your conference — ii.3 

this main secret in the packet — iii. 2 

and durst commend a secret to your ear — _v. 1 
the secrets of nature have not.. Troilus ir Cress, iv. 2 
other bond, than secret Romans ..Jutiusdesar, ii. I 
I should know no secrets that appertain — ji. 1 

then should I know this secret — ii. 1 

and not my husband's secrets? — ii. 1 

shall partake the secrets of my heart — ii. 1 
the secret house of death., .^h/ohi/ ^Cleopatra, iv. 13 

this secret will force him Cynibetine,u_. 2 

nay, the secrets of the grave — iii. 4 

I'll have this secret from thy heart.. — iii. 5 
some marks of secret on her person.. — y. 5 
her husband to some secret ]:ioie. , Titus Andron.ii, 3 

not trust the air with secrets — iv. 2 

by which time our secret be undone .... /'eriWe*, i. 1 
he might know none of his secrete .... — i. 3 
through which secret art, by turning.. — iii. 2 
have secret feet in some of our best ports Leor, iii. 1 
all blessed secrets, all you unpublished — iv. 4 
to himself so secret and so close... Uorneo ^- Juliet , i. 1 
give leave' awhile, we must talk in secret — i. 3 



SEC 



SECRET— ill the secret night ....nnmeo ffJxiiut, ii. 4 
19 your man Bccret? did you ne'er .... — ii. 1 
to tell the secrets of my prison-house . . Haintel^ i. 5 
but you'll be secret,— ay, by liettveu .... — i. 5 

in the secret parts of fortune? — ii. 2 

is now most etill, most secret, and most.. — iii. 4 
her brother is in secret come from Frnju'C — iv. 5 
closet lock and key of vilUinous secrets. OilieUu, iv. 2 
SECRETARY— my new secretary ..lleuyyl'lll. ii. 2 
preferred from the king's secretary . . — iv. 1 
and the king's secretary; furtlier, sir — v. 1 
business, master secretary (rep.) .... — v. 2 

SECRETEST man of blool Machelh, iii. 4 

SECRET-FALSE: wliat need ..ComedijoflirrAW.i 
SECRETLY— comes so secretly? ..MerryWives, iv. 3 
let her awliile be secreily kept in . . Much Ado, iv. 1 
I will deal in this as secretly, and justly — iv. I 
is this morning secretly stolen away — iv. I 
did whisper often very secretly .... Mid. S.Wr. v. 1 
do it secretly, and so farewell.. iWeic/i. of Teniae, ii. 3 
given, sir, secretly to understand.. ^5 i/oui,(/(ei7, i. I 
she secretly o'erheard your daughter — ii. 2 
shall secretly into the bosom creep ..MlenvylV. i. 3 
were best to do it secretly, alone. . . . Riclmrd III. i. 1 
trick, to be— secretly open . . TroUus ^ Cressida, v. 2 
secretly to greet tlie empress' friends. TilusAnd. iv. 2 
SECT— all sects, all'ages smack... Meas. for Meas. ii. 2 

would she begin a sect IVinler's Tale, v. 1 

80 is all her sect; an' they once ....'iHenrj/TT. ii. 4 

a favourer of this new sect? Henry Pill. v. 2 

when sects and factions were.. Timon of Athens, iii. 5 

packs and sects of great ones Lear, v. 'i 

[Kji(.] as he in his peculiar sect Hamlet, i. 3 

tliat vou call— love, to be a sect, or sc\on. Othello, i. 3 

SECTARY— you are a sectary HemyVlll. v. 2 

have you been a sectary astronomical? Lear, i. 2 

SECUNDO— primo, secundo, tertio.Tirelfth Night, v. 1 
SECURE— Page be a secure fool. . . . Merry Wives, ii. 1 

Page is an ass, a secure ass — ii. 2 

for a secure and wilfid Actaeon — iii. 2 

to make societies secure. . Measure for Meastire, iii. 2 
warm at home, secure and safe . . Taming of Sh. v. 2 
secure nnd coniident from foreign .. KingJohn, ii. ) 
sleep doubtless, and secure, that Hubert — iv. 1 
open the door, secure, fool-hardy . . Richard 11. v. 3 

may do it as secure as sleep 1 Henry IV.'i. 2 

numbers, and secure in soul . . Henry I', iv. (chorus) 

they deemed me not secure lUenryl'I. i. 4 

night the Frenchmen are secure .... — ii. 1 

mine wo-s secure. And so — ii. i 

we'll sleep secure in Rouen — iii. 2 

and to secure us by what we can 2HenryVL v. 2 

which secure and sweetly he enioys.SHcnry T L ii. .■) 
there shall I rest secure from force .. — iv. 4 

there is no man secure Rirliard lll.i. 1 

but that I know our state secure .... — ;ii. 2 
I myself secure in grace and favour — iii. 4 

is surety, surety secure Troilus <?- Cressida, ii. 2 

secure thy heart; if I would . . Timon of.i'hens, ii. 2 
to the mountains; there secure \is. .Ci/mlieline, iv. 4 
secure from worldly chances .. Titus Andronicus, i. 2 
sits aloft, secure of thunder's crack ,. — ii. 1 

he's more secure to keep it shut Pericles, i. 1 

our mean secures us; and our mere Lear,\v. 1 

upon my secure hour thy uncle stole .. Hamlet, i. 5 

heaven secure him! So be it! — i. 5 

I do not so secure me in the error Othello, i. 3 

thus, not jealous, nor secure; I would not — iii. 3 

to lip a wnnton in a secure couch — iv. 1 

SECURELY— dwells so securely ..MerryWives, ii. 2 
stand securely on their battlements.. Ki^ig-Jo/m, ii. 2 

my lord; securely I espy virtue Richard II. i. 3 

we strike not, but securely perish .... — ii. 1 
like Hector; but securely done. .Troilus-^ Cress, iv. 5 
wars, whilst you securely slept.. TitusAndron. iii. 1 
SECURINCJ-here securing your repose. Tempest, ii. 1 
SECURITY enough, to make ..Meas.fnr Meas. iii. 2 
all know, security is mortals' cliief'est.A/ac/je//),iii.6 
through our security, grows strong. /dc/iard II. iii. 2 

he liked not the security 'iHenrylV. i. 2 

tlien they stand upon security! (rep.) — i. 2 

mercy, but too much security Henry r. ii. 2 

and made our footstool of security. .3Hfnryr/. v. 7 
fair leave, and large seenrity. .TroilusS^Cressida, i. 3 
friendship, without security . . Timon of.tthens, iii. 1 
your reverend ages love security .... — iii. 5 
and hazard, from firm secwrity.. Antony^ Cleo. iii. 7 
SEDUE— kiss to every sedge. Tu'o Gen. of Verona, ii. 7 

now will he creep into sedges MuctiAdo, ii. 1 

Cythereaall in sedges )\\<l.,Tamingof Sh. 2 (indue.) 

as tlie waving sedges play with . . — 2 (indue.) 

iSEDGED— with your sedged crowns . . Tempest, iv. 1 

SEDGY— gentle Severn's sedgy bank.. 1 Henry/ f". i. 3 

SEDITION— the vulture of sedition. 1 f/enri/ f /. iv. 3 

and heaped sedition on his crown . .3//e«rvr/. ii. 2 

of rebellion, insolence, sedition.. . . Coriotanus, iii. 1 

SEDITIOUS countrymen and us. .Comedyof Err. i. 1 

seditious to his grace, and to the....'.iHe}iry n. v. 1 

SEDUCE— of France did not seduce Henry r. ii. 2 

that he will seduce tlie rest 3 Henry VI. iv. 8 

that have the power so to seducel Hamlet, i. h 

SEDUCED by thy flattery.. •/■icoGeii. nf I'ero/ia, iv. 2 

yet was Solomon so seduced Love'sL. Lost., i. 2 

many a maid hath been seduced ....Alt''sWeU,i\\. h 
I was seduced to make room for .... King John, i. I 

I have seduced a liead-strong 2HenryVI. iii. 1 

or how are they seduced, that we ..^HenryVI. v. I 

seduced the pitch and height of all. /i/c/iard 7//. iii. 7 

so firm, tiiat cannot be seduced? ..Julius Caisar, i. 2 

BEDUCER-a seducer fiourishes./lH'jirfi/, V. 3 (petit.) 

SEDUCING- seducing so my friends. Coiio/miM, v. ;> 

BEE— would I migiit ever see that man . Tempest, i. 2 

I have no ambition to see a goodlier man — i. 2 

I ne'er again shall see her — ii. I 

methiuks, I see it in thy face — ii. 1 

and my strong imagination sees a crown — ii. 1 

ten to see a dead Indian — ii. 2 

when she sees me work — iii. 1 

1 would I could see this laborer — iii. 2 

where I have hope to see the — v. l 



[ 659 ] 



SEE the wonders of the world ..TwoGen.ofrer.i, 1 

there to see me shipiwd — i. 1 

to see what folly reigns — i. 2 

seeit be returned; or else — i. 2 

let's see your song — i. v 

I see, you have a month's mind .... — i. 2 

you may say what sights you see.... — i. 2 

X see things too, although — i. 2 

let mc sec wluit news — i. 3 

let me see («p. iv. 4 and V. 4) — ii 

not an eye that sees you — ii 

and still I see her beautiful — ii 

if you love her, you cannot see her . . — ii 

what should I see then? — ii 

could not see to garter liis hose (re;j.) — ii 

could not see to wipe my siloes ~ ii 

but see how I lay the diist — ii 

how could he see his way — ii 

to see such lovers, Thurio — ii 

let me see thy cloak — iii 

tliou canst not see thy love — iii 

I see a passenger — iv, 

and see tlie geutleman you — iv 

when didst thou see me heave — iv 

didst thou ever see me do such a trick? — iv 

see, wliere she comes — v 

is this I see and hear! — v 

let us see honest master Page Merry Wives, i 

glad to see your worship's well (rep.) — i 

afraid if 3'ou see the bear loose — i 

let me see thee froth and lime — i 

and see if you can see my master.... — i 

well, I shall see her to-day — i 

let me see — ii 

you are come to see my daughter .... — ii 

go in with us, and see — ii 

come and see the picture — ii, 

see the hell of having — Ii. 2 

to see thee fight to see thee (rep.) .... — ii. 3 

if I see a sword out — ii. 3 

see what humour he is in — ii. 3 

now I see, you'll be a courtier — iii. 2 

truly, sir, to see youi' wife — iii. 2 

I am sick, till I see her — iii. 2 

have with you to see this monster — iii. 2 

I see how thine eye would emulate. . — iii. 3 

I see what thou wert, if fortune — iii. 3 

she shall not see me — iii. 3 

let me see't, let me see't! O let me see't! — iii. 3 

3'ou shall see sport anon — iii. a 

see the issue of his search — iii. 3 

1 see 'tis an honest woman — iii. 3 

I see, I cannot get thy — iii. 4 

it would yearn your heart to see it .. — iii. 6 

'tis a playing-da3', I see — iv. i 

I see, you are obsequious in — iv. 2 

now he shall see his own foolery .... — iv. 2 

see but the issue of my jealousy — iv. 2 

you cannot see a white spot — iv. 5 

when Slender sees his time — iv. 6 

Heme's oak_, and you shall see wonders — v. 1 

as you see, like a poor old man — v. I 

till we see the light of our — v- 2 

when you see your time — v. 3 

than all the field to see — v. 5 

see you these, husband? — v. 5 

see now how wit may be — v. 5 

cannot vou see but marry boys? .... — v. 5 

eyes did see Olivia first Tirelfth Night, 1. 1 

so long as I could see — i. 2 

then let mine eyes not see! — i. 2 

when did I see tliee so put down ?. ... — j. 3 

unless you see canary put me — i. 3 

and I hope to see a housewife — i. 3 

let me see thee caper — 1.3 

lie shall see none to fear — i. 5 

now you see, sir, how your fooling .. — i. 5 

let me see your face — i. .^ 

I see what you are — 1.5 

else would I very shortly see thee there — ii. 1 

disguise, I see, thou art a wickedness — ii. 2 

did you never see the picture — ii. 3 

let me see, let me see, let me see .... — ii. 5 

you might see more detraction - ii. .'j 

see thee ever cross-gartered (rep. iii. 4) — ii. S (let.) 
let me see thee a steward (rep. iii. 4) — li. 5 (let.) 

if you will then see the fruits (rep.). . — ii. 5 

to see this age 1 — iii. 1 

did she see thee the while — iii. 2 

as plain as I see you now — iii. 2 

and not all love to see you — iii. 3 

shall we go see the reliquea — iii. 3 

first, go see your lodging — Iii. 3 

do you not see you move him? — iii. 4 

but see, but see — iii. 4 

give ground, if you see him furious.. — iii. 4 

this youth tliat you see here — iii. 4 

come, let's see the event — iii. 4 

he sees thee not — iv. 2 

till I see his brains — iv. 2 

I do feel't and see't — iv. 3 

let me see his letter (rep.) — v. I 

did'st see Dick surgeon, sot? — v. 1 

and let me see thee in thy — v. I 

see him delivered, Fabian — v. 1 

hence shall we see, if power Meas. for Mms. i. 4 

I'll see what I can do — i. .'i 

we see it: but what we do not see.... — ii 1 

see that Claudio be executed — ii. 1 

doth your honour see any harm — ii. 1 

if you live to see this come to — ii. 1 

see you, the fornicatress be — ii. 2 

to let me see them — ii. 3 

and see how he goes about to — iii. 2 

late come from the See, in — iii. 2 

rather rejoicing to see another merry — iii. 2 

yet since I see you fearful — iv. 2 

see, this be done, and sent — iv. 3 

to see thine eyes BO red — iv. 3 

we are glad to see you — v. 1 



SEE 

SEE-let the Bulijcct see, to make ..Meat.furMeas. v. 1 

let's sec thy fuce v. 1 

you shnll see how I'll handle lier ... v. I 

m^hinks, I see a quickening in v. 1 

and see our pleasure herein executed — v. i 

I see, lady, the gentleman is not Much Ado, i. I 

I can see yet wilhout spectacles (rep.) — i. 1 

shall T never see a bachelor of — I. i 

I shall sec thee, ere I die — i. i 

liere you may see Benedick ^- i. 1 

and thou slialt see how apt it is to .. — i. 1 

I never can see him — ii. 1 

I hope to sec you one day fitted — ii. 1 

1 can see a church by daylight — ii. 1 

Where's the count? did you see him? — ii I 

than to see me at her chamber-window — i'. 2 

and bring tliem to see this — ii. 2 

to see a good armour — ii. 3 

and see with these eyes? — ii.3 

see you where Benedick hath hid.... — ii. S 
[A'n^.J of quarrels you may see he is wise — ii. 3 

to see how much he is unworthy .... — ii.3 

that's the scene that I would see .... — ii.3 

to see the fisli cut with her golden .. — iii. 1 

shall see her chamber-window entered — iii. 2 

if you dare not trust that you see.... — iii. 2 

if I see any thing to night why 1 .... — iii. 2 

for I cannot see now sleeping — iii. 3 

all this I see; and see, that the fashion — iii. 3 

you'll see lie shall lack no barns .... — iii. 1 

for you see, 'tis a busy time — iii. 5 

Godhelpus! it is a world to see!.... — iii. 5 

all you that see her — iv. 1 

did see her, hear her, at that I — iv. 1 

see, see; hei-e comes the man we went — v. I 

let me see his eyes — v. 1 

sweet, let me see your face - v. 4 

he no more shall see my face ..Mid. N.^s Dream, i. I 

before the time I did Lysander see .. — i. 1 

as one shall see in a summer's day .. — i. 2 

in their gold coats spots you see .... — ii. 1 

we see the seasons alter — ii. 2 

laughed to see tlie sails conceive .... — ii. 2 

and see our moonlight revels — ii. 2 

but I might see young Cupid's fiery — ii. 2 

next live creature that it sees — ii. 2 

when I do see your face 

makes me see thy heart 

she sees not Heimia 

an actor too, perhaps, if I see cause . 

he goes but to see a noise that 

why do I see on thee? (rep.) 

I see their knavery 

never to see me more (rep.) 

by some illusion see thou bring 

shall we their fond pageant see? ... 

I see yo>i all are bent to set 

never did desire to see thee more . . . 
you see how simple and how fond . 
if ever I thy face by daylight see . . . 

see, as tliou wast wont to see — iv. 

methiuks, I see these things with — iv. 

one sees more devils than vast hell .. — v. 

all as frantic, sees Helen's beauty . . — v. 

of which your highness will see first — v. 

I love not to see wretchedness — v. 

you shall see no such thing — v. 

but what see 1? No Thisby do Isee.. — v. 

through whom 1 see no bliss , — v. 

you shall see. It will fall pat — v. 

I see a voice — v. 

for you see, it is already in snuff .... — v. 

eyes do you see? how can it be? — v. 

will it please you to see the epilogue — v. 
not to see a woman in that terra . . Lovers L. Lost, i. 

not to see ladies, study, fast — i. 

let's see the penalty — i. 

but I would see his own person — i. 

did I see that low-spirited swain — i. 1 (letter 

my lord Biron see him delivered o'er — i. ' 

if ever I do see the merry days — i* 

some shall see — what shall some see? — i. 

1 would be glad to see it — ii. 

impatient to speak and not see — ii. 

what then, do you see? — ii. 

let me see a fat I'envoy — iii. 

to her white hand see thou do commend — iii. 

see, see, my beauty will be saved ... . — iv. 
see; why did he see? to overcome — iv. 1 (lettci 

to see him walk before a lady — iv. 

to see him kiss his handl — iv. 

to see him in a school — iv. 2 

that sees thee without wonder — iv. 2 

for all the wealth that ever I did see — iv. 3 

the king your mote did see — iv. 3 

see a king transformed to a gnat? (rep.) — iv. 3 

wlien shall you see me write — iv»3 

who sees the heavenly Rosaline .... — iv. 3 

my foot, and her face see — iv. 3 

the street should see as she walked . . — iv. 3 

aud to see no woman — iv. 3 

we see in ladies' eyes (rep.) — iv. 3 

an angel shalt thou see — v. 2 

to see a lady's face — v. 2 

see where he comes! — v. 2 

soft, let us see; write. Lord have .... — v. 2 

tokens on you do I see — v. 2 

I see the trick on't — v. 2 

for Alisander, alas, you see, how 'tis — v. 2 

do you not see, Pompey is — v. 2 

not see the sandy hour-glass .Mer.ofVenice, i. 1 

and see my wealthy Andrew docked — i. 1 

and see the holy edifice of stone — i. I 

for aught I see, they are as sick — i. 2 

and, let me sec (rep.) — i. 3 

see to my house, left in — i. 3 

see these letters delivered — ii. 2 

than his fellows: see it done — ii. 2 

well, we shall see your bearing — ii. 2 

at supper shalt thou see Lorenzo.... — ii.3 



— 11. 2 

— ii.3 

— ii. 3 

— iii. 1 

— iii. 1 






SEE 



SEE— not have my father see Tae..Mer. o/yenice, ii. 3 

well, thou Shalt see, tliy eyes — ii. 5 

I will not say, you shall see — ii. 5 

and lovers eaunot see the pretty .... — ii. 6 

blush to see me thus transl'urmed. ... — ii. G 

let me see (rfp. ii. 9) — ii. 7 

let's see once more this saying — ii. 7 

as o'er a brook, to eee fair Portia — ii. 7 

for I long to see quick Cupid's post. . — ii. 9 

I shall never soe my gold again — iii. 1 

see CC'o^/v?l^-fee] me an othcer — iii. 1 

and you shall see 'tis purcliased hy — iii. i 

how could he see to do them? — iii. 2 

whether what I see be true — iii. 2 

you see me, lord Bassanio, where ., — iii. 2 

you slmll see how much I was — iii. 2 

if I mifjht but see — iii. 2 (letter) 

Bassanio come to see me pay — iii. 3 

see tliou render this into ray — iii. 4 

we'll see our husbands before tliey (rep.) — iii. 4 

none of us should see salvation — iv. 1 

thyself Shalt see the act — iv. I 

that thou shalt see the difference ... . — iv. 1 

I see sir, you are liberal in offers .... — iv. 1 

I'll see if"l can get ray husband's .... — iv. i 

did vou see master Lorenzo, and mistress — v. 1 

that" light we see, is burning in — v. 1 

we did not see the candle — v. 1 

nothing is good, I see, without respect — v. I 

but you see my finger hath not — v. 1 

your bed until I see the ring t_rep.) .. — v. I 

I see myself,— Mark you but that! (rep.)— v. 1 
I hoiie, I shall see an end tif him.. As youLike it, i. 1 

herein, I see, thou lovest me not with — i. 2 

let me see; what think you of — i. 2 

your ladyships, you may see the end — i. 2 

longs to see this broken music — i. 2 

sluiU we see this wrestling (rep.) — i. 2 

speak to him, ladies; see if you can.. — i. 2 

I cannot hear of any that did see her — ii. 2 

but what is, come see, and in my.... — ii. 4 

here sliall he see no enemy O'ep.) — ii. 5 (.song) 

thus may we see, quoth he, how .... — ii. 7 

let me see wherein my tongue hath.. — ii. 7 

not see him since? — iii, 1 

shall see thy virtue witnessed every — iii. 2 

to see my ewes graze, and mv lambs — iii. 2 

1 cannot see else how thou snouldst — iii. 2 

and when shalt thou see him again? — iii. 2 

pity to see such a sight — iii. 2 

yoii shall see him. There I shall see — iii. 2 

that you see dwell where she — iii. 2 

I would fain see this meeting — iii. 3 

I am very glad to see you — iii. 3 

if you will see a pageant truly — iii. 4 

I see no more in j'ou than — iii. 5 

of you she sees herself more — iii. 5 

though all the world could.see, none; — i_ii. 5 

your own land, to see other men's .. — iv. 1 

for, I see, love hath made thee — iv. 3 

meat and drink to me to see a clown — v. 1 

how it grieves me to see thee — v. 2 

to see no pastime, I — v. 4 

not the fashion to see the lady — (epil.) 

than to see tlie lord — (epil.) 

to see liim every hour .411' s H'ell, i . 1 

full oft we see cold wisdom — i. I 

let mesee (re/i. iv. 3) — i. 1 

that makes me see, and cannot — i. I 

that mean to see tlie Tuscan service — i. 2 

now I see the mystery of your — i. 3 

and thine eyes see it so grossly shown — i. 3 

the last monarchy), see, that you come — ii. 1 

[Coi. Kh(.] I'll see thee to stand up .. — ii. 1 

if you will see her (rep.) — ii 1 

1 see things may serve long — ii. 2 

and see, who shuns thy love — ii. 3 

two days ere I shall see you — ii. 5 

let me see what he writes — iii. 1 

when you see my son, to tell him .. — iii. 2 

here you shall see a countryman .... — }\\-^ 

when your lordshii) sees — iii. 6 

you sliall see his fall to-night (.rep.) — iii. 6 

a fair creature; will you go see her? — iii. 6 

now I see tiie bottom of your (rep.) — iii. 7 

I see that men make hopes — iv. 2 

we still see them reveal themselves. . — iv. 3 

have liim see his company anatomized — iv. 3 

we'll see what may be done — iv. 3 

or let me see my death ! — iv. 3 

1 hope 1 shall see him ere I die — iv. 5 

let us go see your son , I pray you .... — i v. 5 

since you're like to see the king .... — v. I 

for thou may'st see a sunshine — v. 3 

cries to see what's done — v. 3 

here we'll stay to see our widower's.. — v. 3 

now, pray you, let me see it — v. 3 

more than to see this ring — v. 3 

is 't real, that I see? — v. 3 

the shadow of a wife you see — v. 3 

mj' dear mother, do 1 see you living? — v. 3 
see, doth he breathe? .. Tamingof Shrew, 1 (indue.) 
sirrah, go see what trumpet 'tis .. — 1 (indue.) 

and see him dressed in all suits .. — 1 (indue.) 

to see her noble lord restored — 1 (indue.) 

see this despatched with all — 1 (indue.) 

I see, I hear, I speak — 2(indue.) 

how we joy to see your wit — 2 (indue.) 

well, we'll see 't; come, madam.. — 2 (indue.) 

to see fair Padua, nursery of arts - - i. I 

in the other's silence I do see maids' — i. 1 

but seel while idly I stood — i. 1 

to see my friends in Padua — i. 2 

(for aught I see,) two and thirty — i. 2 

am come abroad to see the world .... — i. 2 

I will not sleep, Hortensio till I see her — i. 2 

no more eyes to see withal — j. 2 

here's no knavery 1 sec; to beguile .. — i. 2 

see that at any hand; and see you read no— i. 2 

good days, and long, to see — i- 2 



[ 660 ] 

SEE— you yet ever see Baptista's .. Taming nf Sh. i. 

whom thou lovest best; see thou .... — ii. 

nay, now I see, she is 3'our treasure., — ii. 

1 see, 3'ou do not mean to — ii. 

you shall go see your pupils presently — ii. 

let me see thee walk _ ii. 

whereby I see thy beauty — ii. 

I'll see thee hanged on Sunday (rep.) — ii. 

'tis a world to see, how tame — ii. 

1 see no reason, but supposed Lncentio — ii. 
now let me see if I can construe it .. — iii. 

where I am, and sees you there — iii. 

see not your bride in these — iii. 

and see the event of this — iii. 

I see, a woman may be made — iii. 

Peter, didst ever see the like? — iv. 

see, how they kiss and courti — iv. 

tailor, let us see these (re;7.) — iv. 

I see she's like to have neither — iv. 

say thou wilt see the tailor paid .... — iv. 

let's see; I think 'tis now — iv. 

and wander we to see thy honest son — iv. 

go along, and see the truth hereof.... — iv. 

nay, faith, I'll see the church o' your — v. 

didst thou never see thy master's .... — v. 

yes, marry, sir; see where he looks .. — v. 

see the end of this controversy (rep.) — v. 

I charge you, see, that he be — v. 

see, where she comes; and brings.... — v. 

but now, I see our lances are — v. 

you shall see, as I have said Winter's Tale, i. 

their life, to see him a man — i. 

belongs to see his son, were strong .. — i. 

at once see good and evil — i. 

to see alike mine honour — i. 

who may'st see plainly, as heaven sees — i. 

for, you see, my plight requires it .. — ii. 

I never wished to see you sorry — ii. 

and see her, no further trust her .... — ii. 

fourteen thej' shall not see — ii. 

I see't, and feel't, as you feel doing (rep.) — ii. 

to see her women? any of them? .... — ii. 

to see his nobleness 1 conceiving .... — ii. 

go, see how he fares: fle, fie I — ii. 

and see it instantly consumed — ii. 

to see this bastard kneel and call .... — ii. 

that he did but see the flatness — iii. 

and see vvliat death is doing — iii. 

go and see; if you can bring — iii. 

thou ne'er shalt see thy wife — iii. 

if tliou'ltsee a thing to talk — iii. 

but see how it cliafes, how it rages (rep.) — iii. 

I'll go see if the bear be gone from .. — iii. 

let me see; every 'leven wether tods — iv. 

blush to see you so attired — iv. 

to see his work, so noble, vilely — iv. 

see, 5'our guests approach; address .. — iv, 

you see, sweet maid, we marry — iv. 

and let's first see more ballads (rep.) — iv. 

that thou no more shalt see tliis knack — iv. 

for all tlie sun sees, or the — iv. 

I mean not to see him any more .... — iv. 

whom I so much thirst to see — iv. 

from the whom, I see, there's no (:rep.) — iv. 

methinks, I see Leontes — iv. 

I see, the play so lies (rep.) — iv. 

to be honest, I see, fortune would.. ., — iv. 

joy to see her in your arms — v. 

sure, when I shall see this gentleman — v. 

the stars, I see will kiss — v. 

that once, I see, by your good fatlier's — v. 

you'll swear, you see, there is such .. — v. 

did you see the meeting of the two .. — v. 

see you these clothes? say, you see .. — v. 

are going to see tlie queen's picture .. — v. 

to see the statue of our queen — v. 

to see the life as lively moeked — v. 

see, ray lord, would you not deem. ... — v. 

until you see her die again — v. 

preserved myself to see the issue .... — v. 
a love to see, I hazarded the loss. Comerfy of Err. i. 

and when they see time, they'll go .. — ii. 

live to see like riglit bereft — ii. 

I see, the jewel, best enameled — ii. 

see, here he comes (lep. iv. 1) — ii. 

I did not see you since you — ii. 

I am glad to see you in this — ii. 

and therefore, see thou do it — ii. 

to see the making of her carcanet. . . . — iii. 

to see if they'll disdain niel — iii. 

for fear you ne'er see chain — iii. 

I see, a man here needs not — iii. 

but soft, I see the goldsmith — iv. 

I pray you, see him presently — iv. 

chain, I pray you let me see it — iv. 

I see sir, you have found — iv. 

delight to see a wretched man — i v. 

master doctor, see him safe — iv. 

but I did never see it — iv. 

I see, these witches ate afraid — iv. 

to see a reverend Syracusan — v. 

see, where they come; we will — v. 

since I did see it — v. 

I see my son Antipholus — v. 

my liege, as I do see your grace — v. 

I see, a friend will save my life — v. 

1 see thy age and dangers make — v. 

I see two husbands, or mine — v. 

to this fortune that you see me in — v. 

not a dream, I see, and hear — v. 

I see, we still did meet — v. 

I see by you, I am a sweet-faced (rep.) — v. 
I'll see it done. Wh.at he hath lost .... Macbeth, i. 

let not light see my black — i. 

when it is done, to see — i. 

that my keen knife see not — i. 

never shall sun that morrow seel — i. 

a dagger, which I see before me — ii. 

and yet I see thee still (7ep.) — ii. 

see, and then speak yourselves — ii. 



SEE 



SEE— up, up, and see the great doom's ..Alacbeih, ii. 3 

why, see you not? is't known — ii. 4 

well, may you see things well — ii. 4 

Fi'C, tlicy encounter thee — iii. 4 

pr'ythee, see there! behold! look! .... — iii. 4 

loy little spirit, see, sits in — iii. 5 

call them, let me see them — iv. ] 

I'll see no more; and yet — iv. j 

and some I see, that twofold balls .... — iv. I 

ay, now, I see, 'tis true — iv. 1 

when shalt thou see thy — iv. 3 

see, who comes here? — iv. 3 

you see, her eyes arc open — v. 1 

this three may you see it coming — v. 5 

whiles I see lives, the gashes — v. 7 

here may you see the tyrant — v. 7 

and yet, by these I see, so great — v. 7 

whom we invite to see us crowned — v. 7 

see a yielding in the looks of France. K(jiff./o/ii/, ii. 2 

if he see aught in you — ii. 2 

all I see in you is worthy love (rep.) — ii. 2 

shall never see it but — iii. 1 

from that Holy See? — iii. 1 

now shall I see thy love — iii. 1 

ere our coming, see thou shake — iii. 3 

couldst see me without eyes — iii. 3 

now see the issue of your peace! — iii. 4 

shall see and know our friends (?fp.) — iii. 4 

methinks, I see this hurly all on .... — iii- 4 

see else yourself; there is no malice — iv. 1 

well, see to live; I will not touch ..., — iv. 1 

out of my sight, and never see me.... — iv. 2 

although you see, that you do see? .. — iv. 3 

let not the world see fear — v. 1 

to see so sad an hour as this — v. 2 

the great Metropolis and See of Rome — v. 2 

for 1 do see the cruel pangs — v. 4 

of speed to see your majesty — v. 7 

when he sees ourselves well — v. 7 

we shall see justice design Richard II. i. 1 

who when he sees the hours — i. 2 

shall good old York there see — 1.2 

of thine eyes see thy grieved heart .. — i. 3 

death not let me see my son — i. 3 

our kinsman come to see his friends — i. 4 

and see thee ill. Now, He that (rip.) — ii. 1 

to see this business: to-morrow — ii. 1 

we see the wind sit sore — ii. 1 

we see the very wreck — ii. 1 

in you I see old Gaunt alive — ii. 3 

ne'er see joy, that breaks that oath (rep.) — ii. 3 

I see thy glory, like a shooting — ii. 4 

see them delivered over to — iii. 1 

my lord Northumberland, see them — iii. I 

shall see us rising in our throne .... — iii. 2 

sweet love, I see, changing his — iii. 2 

well, well, I see I talk but idly — iii. 3 

my unpleased eye see your courtesy — iii. 3 

coward, live to see that day — iv. 1 

full of tears, I cannot see — iv. 1 

but they can see a sort of traitors. ... — iv. 1 

when I do see the very book — iv. 1 

ha! let's see: 'tis very true, my grief — iv. 1 

I see your brows are full of discontent — iv. 1 

but soft, but see, or rather do not see — v. I 

pale? let me see the writing — v. 2 

no matter then who sees it — v. 2 

since I did see him last — v. 3 

I see some sparkles of a better hope — v. 3 

and never see day that the happy sees — v. 3 
did sir Walter see on Holmedon's ..\HenrijIV.i. 1 

praise of him, see riot and dishonour — i. 1 

I see no reason why thou shouldst .. — i. 2 

I see a good amendment of life — i. 2 

tut! our horses they shall not see.... — i. 2 

fight longer than he sees reason — i. 2 

for I see danger and disobedience.... — i. 3 

to see him shine so brisk — i. 3 

and see already, how he doth begin.. — i. 3 

thy lantern, to see my gelding in. . . . — ii. 1 

marry, I'll see thee hanged first .... — ii. 1 

let me see some more — ii. 3 

ha! you shall see now, in very — ii. 3 

such as we see when men restrain .. — ii. 3 

come, wilt thou see me ride? — ii. 3 

let me see— about Michaelmas — ii. 4 

didst thou never see Titan kiss — ii. 4 

I'll see thee damned ere I call — ii. 4 

you care not who sees your back — ii. 4 

that thou couldst not see thy hand .. — ii. 4 

my lord, do you see these meteors? .. — ii. 4 

harlotry players, as lever see — ii. 4 

I see virtue in his looks — ii. 4 

let's see what they be — ii. 4 

the earth shook to see the heavens .. — iii. 1 

see, how this river comes me — jjj* ' 

it shall, it must; you see, it doth .... — iii. 1 

which hath desired to see thee more — iii. 2 

I never see thy face — iii. 2 

to see how fortune is disposed to us .. — iv. 1 

I did never see such pitiful rascals .. — iv. 2 

Hal, if thou see me down — v. 1 

why, then I see a very valiant — v. 4 

emboweled will I see thee by and by — v. 4 

but eyes, and nobody sees me — v. 4 

to see what friends are living — v. 4 

see, what a ready tongue suspicion. .2Henry/r. i. 1 

I see a strange confession in — i. 1 

yet cannot he see, though he — j.l 

wait close, I will not see him — i. 2 

I am glad to see yoiu' lordship abroad — i. 2 

we see the appearing buds — i. 3 

and when we see the figure of the . . — .;• 3 

how might we see Falstaff — ii. 2 

to see his father bring up his — ii. 3 

and see if thou canst find out — ii. 4 

and whether I shall ever see thee again — ii. 4 

I'll see her damned first — ii. 4 

see now, whether pure fear — ii. 4 

you see, my good wenches — ii. 4 



V. 2 
V. 2 
V. 3 
V. 3 
V. 6 
V.5 
(chorus) 
(chorus) 



— II. i 



— 111. B 

— iii.6 

— iii. 7 
iv. (clio.) 
iv. (clio.) 

— iv. 1 

— iv. 1 

— iv. 1 

— iv. 1 

— iv. 1 

— iv.3 

— iv. 7 

— iv. 7 

— iv. 7 

— iv. 7 

— iv. 7 
. (chorus.) 



SEE 5'ou again cie I go illenrylf. ii. 4 

und see the revolution of the times .. — iii. I 

to see the beachy girdle of the — iii. 1 

niid to see how muuy of mine old .. — iii. 2 

dead ! see, seel he drew a good bow.. — iii. 2 

I um glad to .see you well (rpp.) — iii. 2 

let lue see them, I beseech you ()(■;'.) — iii. 2 

yea, nmrry, let us sie BuU-cair — iii. 2 

you see what a niiriicd apiiearimce .. — iii. 2 

1 sliall never sec such a fellow — iii. 2 

I do see tlie bottom of Justice Sliallnw — iii. 2 

I sec no reason, in the law of — iii. 2 

wjiose See is by acivil [leaee — iv. 1 

we see whiel\ way tlie stream of — iv. I 

than now to sec i'on here — iv. 2 

and see you guard him sure — iv.3 

where is he? let me see him — iv. 4 

see, eons, what things you are! — iv. 4 

let me see, Uavy, let nie see — v. 1 

I am glad to see your worship — v. I 

too see the semblablc coherence — v. 1 

you shall see him laugh, till his . . — v. 1 

und never shall you see, tliat I — v. 2 

60 much profaned, see your most .... 

live to see a son of mine 

nay, you shall see mine orchard .... 

1 hope to sec Ijondon once (,rep.) .... 

zeal I had to see him (rep.) 

to see performed the tenor 

that you see tl\em priutin" ....HenryV. 
but see tliy fault I France liath .. — i 

what see you in those papers 

see you, my princes, and my noble.. 

my eye will scarcely see it 

and smiled to see him mangle 

3'ou see, this chase is hotly followed 

and therein see a siege — i 

I see you stand like greyhounds .... 
look to see the blind and bloody soldier 

when he shall see our army 

but I did see him do gallant service 
as you shall see in a summer's day .. 

liis folly, see his weakness 

but let "me see Ijep. v. 2) 

each battle sees the other's umbered — 

yet sit and see; minding true — 

ve see yonder the beginning of 

therefore when he sees reason of tears 
outlive that day to see his greatness.. 

if I live to see it I rep.) 

never sees horrid night 

and see [Kji/.-live] old age 

if I can see my glove in his cap 

if he be perjured, see you now 

I would fain see the man, that has . . 
see it once; an' please Got t^ep.) .... 
follow; and see there be no harm .... 
and. solemnly, see him set on to.. — i 

till I see him once again 

thou dost see, I eat — v. I 

when you take oceasioti to see leeks — v. 1 

shall see advantageable for — v. 2 

for love of anything he sees there .... — V. 2 

when thej' see not what they do — v. 2 

whe cannot see many a fair French city — v. 2 

you see them perspectively — v. 2 

when he sees me go back one I Henri/ yi. i, 2 

blessed with, which you see — i. 2 

see the coast cleared, and then we ... . — i. 3 

watched, if I could see them — i. 4 

for aught I see, this city must — i. 4 

nay then, I see, our wars will — ii. 2 

1 see, report is fabulous and false .... — ii. 3 

I laugh to see your ladyship so — ii. 3 

for what you see, is but the — ii. 3 

and see wluit cates you have — ii. 3 

will see his burial better tlian — ii. 5 

ay, see the bisliup be not overborne .. — iii. I 

Plantageiiet, I see, must hold his .... — iii. 1 

3'OU see what mischief, and what .... — iii. 1 

or I wouhl see his heart out, ere the.. — iii. 1 

seehere, my friends, and loving — j- iii. i 

and I will see, what physic the — iii. I 

see, noble Charles! the beacon — iii. 2 

but see his exequies fulfilled — iii. 2 

and see the cities and the townsdefaced — iii. 3 

see, see, the pining malady of France — iii. 3 

see then, thou fignt'st against — iii. 3 

when thou Shalt see, I'll meet — iii. 4 

I see no reason, if I wear — iv. 1 

no simple man that sees this — iv. 1 

that see thee now well-coloured («'p.) — iv. 2 

years did not Talbot see his son — iv.3 

see, where he lies inhearsed — iv. 7 

my lord protector, see them guarded — v. i 

see, Beignier, see, thy daughter prisoner — v. 3 
to see her coronation be performed . .2 Henry y I. i. i 

in thy face I see thy fury — i. 1 

we'll see these things effected — i. 2 

let me see them: what is thine — i. 3 

come Somersetlwe'U see thee sent away — i. 3 

I doubt it not, see you well guerdoned — i. 4 

see your trinkets here all forthcoming — i. 4 

let's see the devil's writ — i. 4 

to see how God in all his creatures .. — ii. I 

firotector, see to't well, protect yourself — ii. I 

et me see thine eyes: wink now .... — ii. 1 

jet did he never see — ii. i 

it ma<le me laugh to see the villain.. — ii. i 

Gloster, see here the tninture — ii. 1 

I see no reason, why a king — ii. 3 

to see this quarrel tried (rep.) — ii. 3 

then see thou thump thy — ii. 3 

tear-stained eyes to. "ce her miseries — ii. 4 

to SCO my open shame? — ii. .| 

see, how the giddy multitude — ii. 4 

to see my tears, and hear my — ii. 4 

I long to see my prison — ii. 4 

can you not see? fir will you not .... — iii. I 

yet thou shall not see me blush — iii. l 



SEE— in thy face I see the map of....2He/irj/^'/. iii. I 

that I will see performed {rep.) — iii. I 

that is to see how deep my — iii. 2 

seeing him, 1 see my life in death .... — iii. 2 

see how the blood is settled (,rep.) .... — iii. 2 

and sees fast by a butcher — iii. 2 

sec, how the pdngs of death — iii. 3 

I see them, 1 see them! — iv. 2 

I'll see if his head will stand — iv. 7 

I see them lording it (<cp.) — iv. 8 

to see if I can eat grass — iv. 10 

see if tliou canst outface me — iv. 10 

see Buckingham (7-ep.) — v.! 

we then should see the bottom of .... — v. 2 

and we will live to see their day — v. 2 

before I see thee seated ^Hennjri. \. I 

if once they sec them spread — i. 1 

I'll sec your grace; till then — i. I 

be fee'd, I see, to make me sport — i. 4 

see, ruthless queen, a hapless father's — i. 4 

to see how inly sorrow gripes — i. 4 

see, how the morning opes her — ii. I 

or do I see three suns? — ii. 1 

see, see! they join embrace — ii. 1 

O, never, shall I see more joy — ii. I 

live to see a sunshine da}' — ii. 1 

to see this sight, it irks ray 



— ii. i 

— ii.5 



— 11. 1 



— ii. 6 



— IV. (i 

— V. 1 

— V. 1 

— V. 4 

— V. 4 



thereby to see the minutes how 

but let me see: is this our foeman's .. 

see, see, what showers arise , 

see who it is; and, now the battle's ,. 

and he nor sees, nor hears us 

first will I see the coronation 

to see these honours in 

to hear and see, her plaints 

I see, the lady hath a tiling to grant. . 
see, that he be conveyed unto tlie .... 
and see where comes the breeder of . . 

if he could see his shame 

nay, then I see, that Edward 

see that forthwith duke Edward .... 
and see him seated in the regal throne 

see, where the huntsmen stand 

till I see them here, by doubtful 

see, how the surly Warwick 

O cheerful colours! see where Oxford 
my lieart to see your forwardness .... 

ye see, I drink the water of 

and see our gentle queen how — v. & 

see how my sword weeps for — v. 6 

[Col.Kjil.} unless to see my shadow. /(icAajti ///. i. 1 

gentlemen, see, see! dead Henry's — i. 2 

with all expedient duty see you — i. 2 

to see you are become so penitent .... — i. 2 
that I may see my shadow as I x^ass. . — i. 2 

then present, wept to see it — i. 3 

and see another, as I see thee now .. — i. 3 

and see how he requites me I — i. 4 

let him see our commission — i. 4 

came too lag to see him buried — ii. 1 

when I see iny shame in him — ii. 2 

1 did not see your grace — 

look to see a troublous world — 

we see the water swell before — 

with all my heart to see the prince . . — 
ah me, I see the ruin of my house! .. — 
I see, as in a map, theendofall — 

then, I see, you'll part — 

where, he shall see, tlie boar will use — 

before I'll see the crown so foul — 

but yet, you see, how soon the day , . — 

1 am glad to see your honour — 

I will not dine until I see the same — 

he longs to see your bead — 

he is, and see, he brings the mayor . . — 

your lordship came to see Ills end — 

yet who so bold, but says, he sees it not? — 
cannot see this palpable device? (rep.) — 
see where his grace stands 'tween .... — 

and, see, a bool< of prayer in — 

and you may partly see, how far — 

we see it, and will say it — 

father's mother, I will see them — 

the king is angry; see, he gnaws .... — 

but didst thou see them dead? — 

and see what now thou art — 

the earl to see me in my tent — 

that eome to see only a show Hem 

may see away their shilling richly . . 
or to see a fellow in a long motley . . 
think, ye see the very persons (lep.).. 

see how soon this mightiness 

but I can see his pride peep 

when we see each grain of gravel .... 

under pretence to see the queen 

to see you ta'en from liberty 

yet see, when these so noble 

as far as I see, al 1 tlie good our 

may be wise, and never see tlie Louvre 
let me see then : by all j'our good .... 

and see the noble ruined man 

is coming; see the barge be ready.... 

these alfai rs see this main end 

my Wolsey, see it furnished 

why, this it is; see, seel 

we shall see biin for it, an archbishop 

and no man see me more 

it is, to see a nobleman want manners 
my heart weejis to see him so little .. 

sent from the king to see you 

tliis fellow let ine ne'er see again .... 
and this morning see you do appear 

I see your end, 'tis my undoing 

and see him safe i' the Tower 

now let me see the proudest 

there's some of ye, 1 see, more 

the common voice, I sec, is 

you see the poor remainder 

let me never hope to see a chine again 
when 1 might see trora iiir 



ii. 2 
ii. 3 
ii. 3 
ii. 4 



iii. 4 
iii. 4 
iii. ."j 
iii. 5 
iii. 5 



— in. 7 

— iii. 7 

— iv. 1 

— iv. 2 

— iv. 3 

— iv. 3 

— v. 3 
■yyilI.(pTo\.) 

(prol.) 



Cprol.) 
(inol.) 
(prol.) 



— iv. ; 



V. 2 
V. 2 
v. 2 



SEE— children's children shall see . . Henry I' I II . v 

many days shall see her.and yet .... — v 

I shall desire to see what this child.. — v, 

yc must all see the queen y. 

tell her, the next time I see her. . Troilut ^ Crest, i 

all the vule, to see the battle i 

do you know a man, if you see him? — i, 

see them as they pass toward Iliiiin? — i, 

here we may see most bravely — j. 

mark Troilus; you shall sec anon.... — i. 

if he see me, you shall see him — i. 

you shall see. If he do the rich i, 

look yun yonder, do you see? — i. 

'would I could see Troilus now! — i, 

in Troilus thousand fold I see than .. — i. 

I see them not with my old eyes i. 

I see none now. Thou bitch-wolf's .. — ii. 

you see him there, do you? — ii. 

I will see you hanged, like — ii. 

but I'll see some issue of my — ii. 

no, you see, he is his argument — ii. 

and let's see your picture — iii. 

they never see truly — iii. 

see, we fools! why have I blabbed .. iii. 

see, see, yoursilence,cunning in — iii. 

married there where it may see itself — iii. 

now shall we see to-morrow — iii. 

to see these Grecian lordsl _ iii. 

I see, my reputation is at stake — iii. 

to see us here unarmed — iii. 

to see great Hector in his weeds .... — iii. 

you sliall sec the pageant — iii. 

and I myself see not the bottom of it — iii. 

see, ho! who's that there — iv. 

good uncle, go and see — iv. 

we see it, we see it; how now, lambs? — iv. 

when shall we see again? — iv 

be tliou true, and I will see thee — iv. 

when shall I see yon? I will corrupt — iv. 

doth long to see unarmed the — iv. 

cat with thee, and see your knights . . — iv. 

and see me at my tent — iv. 

let us see you in the field — iv. 

there, where we see the lights — v. 

I will rather leave to see Hector.. .. — v. 

with my heart the other eye doth see — v. 

I would fain see them meet v. 

now do I see thee: ha! — v. 

to pray Achilles see us at — v. 

let me see: full merrily — v. 

O.pray, let's see 't (.rep.) Timon of Athens, i. 

you see this confluence (rep.) — i. 

ay. to see meat fill knaves i. 

and he sees them not! (rep.) i. 

you see my lord, how ample — i. 

see them well entertained _ ii. 

would we could see you at Corinth . . — ii. 

ha! now I see, thou art a fool — iii. 

see, by good hap, yonder's mylord (rep.) — iii. 

O, see the monstrousness of man .... — iii. 

I see no sense for't, but his iii. 

pislil did you see my cap? (.rep.) .... — iii. 

that see I by our faces — iv. 

I see them now; then was a — iv. 

well, I'll never see thee more — iv. 

what else to do, I'll see thee again.... — iv. 

alive; I swoon to see thee — ii- 

let us first see peace in _ iv. 

see thou man, and let me ne'er see tliee iv. 

you shall see liim a palm — v. 

lived to see two honest men? — v. 

men may see't the better — v. 

hear him cog, see him .dissemble — t. 

did see, and hear, devise, instruct. . . . Corintntiu!, i 

see what I do deliver out to each .... — i. 

see, our best elders — i. 

thou shalt see me once more — i. 

see him pluck Anfidius down by — i. 

mcthinks, I see him stamp thus .... — i. 

I am glad to see your ladyship — i. 

he had rather see the swoids — i. 

see, thej' have sliut him in 

see here these movers, that do prize 

wherein you see me smeared — i. 

if you see this in the map of — ii. 

that weep' st to see me triumph? .... — ii. 

that is not glad to see thee! — ii. 

I have lived to see inherited my very — ii. 

sijjhts are spectacled to see him — ii. 

all agreeing in earnestness to see him — ii. 

seen the dumb men tlirong to see him — ii- 

lets them plainly see't — ii. 

when you now see, he had rather .... — ii. 

you see how he intends to use — ii. 

were you ignorant to see't? — ii. 

hardly in our ages see their banners — iii. 

see him out at gates (re'p.) — iii. 

we see, have sided, in his belialf .... — iv. 

do you see,)whom you have banislied — iv. 

but that I see thee here — iv. 

but when tliey shall see, sir — iv. 

I hope to sec ilomans as cheap — iv. 

than see our tradesmen — iv. 

go see this rumourer whipped — iv. 

to see your wives dishonoured — iv. 

you'll see your Rome embraced — v. 

tis a spell, you see, of much — v. 

to see the son, the husband — v. 

nor child nor woman's face to see .... — v. 

see yon .yond' coign o' the capitol — v. 

to see CKsar, and to rejoice in \\\a.. Julius Casar,!. 

to see great Pompey pass i. 

see, wlie'rtlieir basest metal — i. 

before me, let me see his face — i. 

will you go see the order of the course? i. 

can you see your face? (rep.) j. 

that you might see your shadow .... — i. 

since you know you cannot see yourself — i. 

yet. I see, thy honourable metal — -. 

as you see, have bared my bosom — ' 



— 1. 4 



SEE 



[ 662 ] 



SEE 



SEK the strange imiiatieuce JulhisCicxur, i. 

but that he sees, tlic Koiimns — i. 

ere (lay, see Brutus at liis house .... — i. 

11 wake, and see thj-st If — ii. 

■who doth desn-e to see .vou — ii. 

when they shall see tlie face of Cajsar — ii 

to see Iiim pass on to the Capitol — ii. 

you see we do; yet see you but — jji- 

our hearts you see not — iii- 

to see thy Antony making his — iii. 

passion, I see is catching — iii. 

von all did sec, that on tlie Lupercal — iii. 

see, what a rent the envious — iii. 

as vou see, with traitors — iii. 

a friendly eye could never see such . . — iv. 

let me go in to see the generals — i v. 

let me see, let me see — iv. 

Shalt see nie at Philippi (_rfp.) — iv. 

I will sue tlioe at riiiUppi then — iv. 

didst thou sec any tiling? — iv. 

to see my best friend ta en before .... — v 

and see how I regarded Caius Cassius — v. 

than you shall see me pay — v. 

iind see whe'r Brutus be alive or dead — v. 

aud vou shall see in him Anlony^-Cleopatra, i. 

behold and see. If it be love indeed — i. 

to see a handsome man loose-wived.. — i. 

wc see how mortal an unkindness . . — i. 

where is he? 1 did not see hira {.rep.) — i. 3 

see when, and where she died — i. 3 

now I see, I see, in Fulvia's deatli .. — i. 3 

voumay see, Lepidus, and henceforth — i. 4 

wliere we see, the fancy out-work .. — ii. 2 

I see't in my motion, have it not — ii. 3 

till I shall see you in your — ii. l 

you see we have burnt our cheeks . . — ii. 7 

to see't, mine eyes are blasted — iii. 8 

I'll see you by and by — iii. 'J 

see you here, sir — iii-i' 

see, how I convey my shame — iii. 9 

I see, men's judgments are — iii. H 

see, my women! Ciep. iv. 13) — iii. 1 1 

vou see him cringe his face — iii. 11 

and I see still, a diminution in — iii. 11 

see it be done; and feast the army .. — iv. 1 

haply, you shall not see me more — iv. 2 

walk, let's see if other watchmen — iv. 3 

let's see iiow't will give oft' — iv. 3 

that thou couldst see my wars {lep) ,. — iv. 1 

before the sun shall see us — iv. S 

tliy uprise shall I see no more — iv. 10 

sometime, we see a cloud — iv. 12 

when I should see behind me — iv. 12 

see thy master thus with pleached arms — iv. 12 

I would not see't — iv. 12 

ho needs must see himself — v. 1 

where you shall see how hardly — v. 1 

and see what I can show in this — — v. 1 



you see how easily she may. 

let the world see his nobleness — 

1 might see but such another man! .. — 

see. Csesar! O behold, how pomp — 

and I shall see some squeaking — 

I'll never see it; for, I am sure — 

I see him rouse himself to — 

dost thou not see my baby at my — 

to see performed the dreaded act .... — 

I do not see them bleed — 

come, Dolabella, see high order in . . — 
in the world that I may see again . . Cymbelii 

w hen shaU we see again ? — 

go see my lord aboard — 

but, I see, you have some religion . . — 

eyes to see this vaulted arch — 

and on promise to see your grace — 

come, I'll go see this Italian — 

to see the enclosed lights — 

J see her yet; her pretty action — 

who long St, like me, to see thy lord — 

I see before me, man, nor here — 

a profit from all things we see — 

ne'er longed my mother to see me first — 

iiav, be brief; I see into thy end — — 

let's see 't: I will pursue her even to — 

there shall she see my valour — 

I see, a man's life is a tedious one . . — 

I see, you are angry — 

hut see, thy brother. This Cloten — 

stark, as you see: thussmiling — 

irrcat griefs, I see, medicine the less. . — 

let's see the boy's face — 

you see, not wore him from — 

'that I never did see man die? — 

to see the way of blindness! — 

I see a thing bitter to me as death . . — 

peace, peace I see further (rep.) — 

methinks I see hira now — 

see, Posthumus anchors upon Imogen — 

to see till s gracious season — 

see, lord and father (jcp.) .... Titus A ndnnic 

and see his shipwreck, and his — 

see our Roman hunting (rep. ii. 3) 

detested vale, you see, it is — 

yuur glory, to sec her tears — 

sec, that you make her sure — 

more than mine eye can see — 

aiul see a fearful sight of blood — 

I'll see what hole is here — 

tears, which now you see filling — 

see. thy two sun's heads; thy warlike — 

Jet me see what task 1 have — 

doth weep to see his grandsire's heaviness — 

I see, thou art not for my company — 

see how swift she comes (>«p.) — 

there is that she desires to see — 

see hosv busily she turns Mep.) — 

and .see their blood, or die with — 

let's see; integer vitas, scelerisque .. — 

more good to see so great a lord — 

did you see Aaron the Moor? — 



V. 2 
V. 2 
V. 2 



iii. 2 

iii. 3 

iii. 4 

iii. 4 






U. 4 
ii. 4 
ii. 4 
iii. 1 



SEE, tliat I have given her physic. 7'i(rjs/l(i(/TO«. Iv. 2 

see that you take no longer days .... — iv. 2 

Aaron, I see, thou wilt not trust .... — iv. 2 

now let me see your arcliery — iv. 3 

to see thy nolile uncle thus distract':' — iv. 3 

see, see, thou hast sliot oft' one of ... . — iv. 3 

see you do it bravely — iv. 3 

come, let me see it: here, Marcus.... — iv. 3 

the child, that he may see it sprawl.. — v. 1 

live, and I will see it nourished — v. 1 

see here, in bloody lines — v. 2 

see, here he comes, and I must ply . . — v. 2 

and see them ready 'gainst their mother — v. 2 

and see the ambush of our friends be — v. 3 

to see him fastened in the earth .... — v. 3 

see justice done to Aaron — v. 3 

see where she comes, appareled like. . . . Pen'des, i. 1 

see heaven, but feeling woe .— i. I 

and the sore eyes see clear to stop — i. 1 

for wisdom sees, those men — i. 1 

now- do I see he had some reason for it — i. 3 

see if 'twill teach us to forget our — i. 4 

but see what heaven can do! — i. 4 

yet tliose which see them fall — i. 4 

a man, pray see me buried — ii. I 

I pray you, let me see it — i.l 

make the gazer joy to see him tread . . — ii. I 

for men to see, and seeing wonder at . . — ii- 2 

whereby I see that time's the king ... . — ii. 3 

see, not a man in private conference ., — ii. 4 

I'll see you wed; then, with what .... — ii. 5 

see, how she 'gins to blow into life's . . — iii. 2 

my wedded lord, I ne'er shall see again — iii. 4 

but I'll see further; perhaps — iv. 2 

for this piece, you see; if you like her — iv. 3 

and swore he would see her to-morrow — iv. 3 
to see his daughter, all his life's — iv. 4 (Gower) 
shadows see them move awhile — iv. 4 (Gower) 
see how belief may suffer by.... — iv. 4 (Gower) 

I am glad to see your honour — iv. 6 

white and red, you shall see arose — iv. 6 

my authority shall not see thee — iv. 6 

well, I will see what I can do — iv. 6 

may we not see him then? — v. 1 

but see, I am prevented — v. 1 

did come to see you — v. 1 

at Ephesns the temple see — v. 2 (Gower) 

may we see them? Great sir — v. 3 

see better, Lear; and let me still Lear,\. 1 

nor shall ever see that face of hers — i.l 

you see how full of changes his age is . . — i. 1 

let's see: come (rfp. i. 2) — i.l 

1 see the business:— let me, if not — i- 2 

shalt see, thy other daughter will — i. 5 

and received this hurt you see, striving.. — ii. 1 

on any shoulder that I see before — ii. 2 

nothing almost sees miracles — ii. 2 

shall see their children kind — ii. 4 

I am glad to see your highness — ii. 4 

no more see one another — ii. 4 

you see me here, you {^ods — ii. 4 

if you shall see Cordelia, (as fearnot .... — iii. 1 

then comes the time who lives to see't .. — iii. 2 

that sees his son a gentleman before him — iii. 6 

I'll see their trial first — iii. ft 

Regan, see what breeds about her heart — iii. 6 

wlien we our betters see bearing ,. — iii. 

because I would not see thy cruel nails.. — iii. 7 

but I shall see the winged vengeance .... — iii. 7 

see it shalt thou never — iii. 7 

if you see vengeance — iii. 7 

to see some mischief on him (re/j.) — iii. 7 

alack, sir, you cannot see your way — iv. 1 

might I but live to see tliee in my touch — iv. 1 

tliat will not see because he doth not .... — iv. 1 

see thyself, devil I — iv. 2 

by no means yield to see his daughter .. — iv. 3 

soon may I hear, and see him! — iv. 4 

when I do stare, see, how the subject .... — iv. 6 

the letters suns, I could not see one .... — iv. G 

see how this world goes (?cp.) — iv. 6 

see how yon justice rails upon — iv. 6 

seem to see the things thou dost not .... — iv. 6 

let's see his pockets; these letters — iv. 6 

let us see: leave, gentle wax — iv. (i 

with pity, to see another thus — iv. 7 

let's see; I feel this pin prick — iv. 7 

the "reat rage, you see, is cured in him . . — iv. 7 

shall never see nis pardon — v. 1 

shall we not see these daughters — v. 3 

we'll see them starve first — v. 3 

I'll see that straight — v. 3 

O, see, see ! And my poor fool — v. 3 

do you see this? look on her,— look — v. 3 

we that are young, shall never see so much — v. 3 
early walking did I see your son. Romeo ^JuUet, i. 1 

without eyes, see pathways to his will — i.l 

all see, and like her most — i. 2 

can you read anything you can see? — i. 2 

to see it tetchy, and fall out with.... — i. 3 

to see now, how a jest shall — i. 3 

an' I might live to see thee married once — i. 3 

and see how one another lends content — i. 3 

then, I see, queen Mab hath — i. 4 

see, how she leans her clieek upon .. — ii. 2 

if they do see thee they will murder — ii. 2 

if I see oceasion in a good quarrel — ii. 4 

as lief see a toad, a very toad as see him — ii. 4 

do you not see, that I am out of breath? — ii. 5 

1 see, thou know'st me not — iii. 1 

lovers can see to do their amorous rites — iii. 2 

that ever I should live to see thee dead! — iii. 2 

then I see that madmen have no ears — iii. 3 

methinks, I see thee, now thou art below— iii. 5 

see how he will take it at your hands — iii. 5 

but now I see this one is one too — iii. 5 

that sees into the bottom of my grief? — ii i. 5 

let me see the county — iv. 2 

methinks, I see my cousin's ghost . . — iv. 3 

ha! let mc see her: out, alas! — iv. 6 



SEK, there she lies, flower Romeo (f Jul el, iv. .'j 

have I thought long to see this — iv. 5 

let's see for means: O mischief! — v. 1 

I see that thou art poor; hold, there is — v. 1 
sec thou deliver it to my lord and.... — v. 3 
poison, I see, hath been his timeless end — v. 3 
we see the ground whereon these woes — v. 3 
to see thy son and heir more early down — v. 3 

look, and thou shalt see — v. 3 

see, what a scourge is laid upon — v. 3 

I am glad to see you well (rep.) Ilamlel, i. 2 

I came to see your father's funeral — i. 2 

it was to see my mother's wedding — i. 2 

my father,— methinks I see my father .. — i. 2 
sec you now; your bait of falsehood .... — ii. ! 

tliat we much did long to see you — ii. 2 

that great baby, you see there — ii. 2 

I am glad to see thee well: welcome .... — ii. 2 

fly at anything we see — ii. 2 

let me see; let me see (rfp. iv. 7) — ii. 2 

but, as we often see, against some — ii.2 

if the gods themselves did see her then .. — ii.2 
will you see the players well bestowed?.'.. — ii.2 

to hear and see the matter — iii. 1 

see, unseen, we may of their encounter . . — iii. 1 
now see that noble and most sovereign .. — iii. 1 
seen what I have seen, see what I see! .. — iii. 1 
[K«/.] to see a robustious perriwig-pated — iii. 2 

you shall see anon cr(7?.) — iii. 2 

il I could see the pupiiets dallying — iii. 2 

O, the recorders: let me see one — iii. 2 

do you sec yonder cloud, that's almost . . — iii. 2 

where you may see the inmost — iii. 4 

see, what a grace was seated on this brow — iii. 4 
there I see such black and grained spots — iii. 4 

do you see nothing there (>'sp.) — iii. 4 

send thither to see; if your messenger ., — iv. 3 

I see a cherub that sees them — iv. 3 

to my shame, I see the imminent — iv. 4 

do you see this, O God? — iv. 6 

beg leave to see your kingly eyes — iv. 7 (letter) 

and that I see, in passages of proof — iv. 7 

an' we had the trick to see't — v. 1 

[Co;.ifn(.] let me see. Alas poor Yorickl — v. 1 

of quiet shortly shall we see — v. I 

so much for this, sir; now shall you see — v. 2 
I see the portraiture of his; I'll count .. — v. 2 

what part a gentleman would see — v. 2 

this is too heavy, let me see another .... — v. 2 

she swoons to see them bleed — v. 2 

treachery! see it out — v. 2 

what is it, you would see? if aught — v. 2 

Roderigo, where didst thou see Tier .... OiJielln, i. i 

minds, by what you see them act — i.l 

I did not see you; welcome, gentle — i. 3 

a quick eye to see; she has deceived .... — i. 3 

and thou shalt see an answerable — i. 3 

let me see now; to get his place (rep.) .. — i. 3 
as well to see the vessel that's come in .. — ii. 1 
see for the news. Good ancient you are.. — ii. 1 
see suitors following, and not look behind — ii . 1 
as my content, to see you here before me — ii. 1 
didst thou not see her paddle with the .. — ii. I 
you see this fellow, that is gone before .. — ii. 3 

and do but see his vice — .ii. 3 

perhaps he sees it not; or his good — 'ii. 3 

fortification,geutleraen,— shall we see't? — iii. 2 

no, lago, I'll see before I doubt — iii. 3 

they do let heaven see the iiranks — iii. 3 

I see, this hath a little dashed your spirits — iii. 3 

but, I do see you are moved (?f;).) — iii. 3 

we see in all things nature tends — iii. 3 

doubtless, sees and knows more — iii. 3 

make me to see it; or (at the least) so prove— iii. 3 

I see, sir, you are eaten up with — iii. 3 

if ever mortal eyes do see them bolster .. — iii. 3 

it is imix>ssible, you should see this — iii. 3 

yet we see nothing done; she may be .... — iii. 3 
did I to-day, see Cassio wipe his beard .. — iii. 3 
now do I see 'tis true: look here lago .. — iii. 3 
fetch't, let me see it. Why, so I can .... — iii. 4 

to have him see me womaned — iii. 4 

if I shall see you soon (rep.) — iii. 4 

O, I see that nose of yours, but not — iii. 4 

well, 1 may chance to see you — iv. 1 

and did you see the handkerchief? — i v. I 

and to see how he prizes the foolish .... — iv. 1 

f lad to see you, Siguier — iv. I 
am glad to see you mad — iv. 1 

let me see your eyes; look in my face .. — iv. 2 
why, now 1 sec there's mettle in thee.. .. — iv. 2 
see, and smell, and have their palates . . — iv. 3 
I am glad to see you. How do you, Cassio? — v. I 
do you see, gentlemen? Nay, guiltiness — v. I 

let's go see poor Cassio dressed — v. 1 

though you do see me vveaponed — v. 2 

SEED— they shall stand for seed. . Meas.fnr Mcas. i. 2 

he'd sow it with nettle seed Te.mpesi, ii. 1 

from the true seed of honour? ..Mer. ofl-'enice, ii. 9 

slip to us from foreign seeds All'sll'ell, i. 3 

earth together, and mar the seeds. H'inler's Tale, iv. 3 
if you can look into the seeds of time ..Macbeili,U3 
the seed [ (7ij(. -seeds] of Banquo kings! — iii. 1 
in their seeds, and weak beginnings. 2H«irj//r. iii. 1 
would, of that seed, grow to a "reater — iii. 1 
saw his heroical seed, and smiled .... Henry V. ii. 4 

to great Priam's seed Troilus 4" CresMa, iv. 5 

she that sets seeds and roots of shame.. Pf>icfe.<, iv. 6 

bladders, and musty seeds Uomeo ^-Juliet, v. 1 

uuweeded garden, that grows to seed . . Hamlet, i. 2 
SEEDED pride that hath to ..rroilns^CressiJn,\. 3 

SEEDNESS the bare fallow Meas.forHlcas. i. b 

SE EDSM AN upon the slime ..Aniony ^- Cleopalra, ii . 7 

SEEING you are beautified. . . . Tico Gen. of I'er. iv. I 

seeing her go through the streets. .ilVen-i/ WYres, iv. 5 

that one man, seeing how much Much A3o, ii. 3 

it doth impairthe seeing sense. j>//rf.jV.'s£>ream, iii. 2 
adds a precious seeing to the eye.. Love's L. Losl,iv. 3 
with eyes best seeing heaven's fiery eye — v. 2 
but sucldenly seeing Orlaudo is you Like it, iv. 3 



SEE 



SEEING, you should love her? . ...Asyou hike il, V. 2 
seeing too much sadness — 7'(im. q^S/i. 2 (.Hiduc.) 
I, seeing this, came thence for very.. — iii. 2 
seeing, all other circumstances. . Winter's Tale,\\.\ 
knew no n>ore but seeing, could not — v. 2 

to see, and in thee seeing ill Riphard /r. ii, 1 

but, seeing thou fall'st on me \HeunjU'. v. 4 

in her naked seeing selH Uenrtj /'. v. 2 

not seeing wliat is likely to ensue. . I Henry fl. iii. 1 

seeing the deed is meritorious 2Henry f'i. iii. I 

for seeing him, I see my life in death — iii. 2 

well, seeing gentle words will not — iv. 2 

seeing ignorance is the curse of God — iv. 7 

seeing tlioii liast proved so inuiatural.3F/c»?-(//7, i 1 
and seeing tliou dost, I Iiere divorce.. — i. 1 
t!ien, seeing 'twas he tiiat made .... — 1.2 

well worth the seein'' Henryyill.iv. 1 

you must he seeing christenings?.... — _y. 3 
that seeing reason leads, finds. . Troitus ^-Crrss. iii. 2 
seeing his reputation touched. . Timon of Alliens, iii. 5 

than now in first seeing he had Coriolnnus, i. 3 

or, seeing it, of such childish — ii. 3 

know'st me, and seeing me, dost not — iv. 5 
sceiiig that death, a necessary end.JuUusCtPsai-y ii. 2 
seeing those beads of sorrow stand .. — iii. 1 

the seeing these effects will be Cymbelinc, i. G 

for men to see, and seeing wonder at ..Pericles, ii. 2 
seeing this goodly vessel ride before us — v. 1 

but curb it, spite of seeing — v. 3 

sir, in fine, seeing how loathly opposite ..Lear, ii. 1 
weep ye now, seeing she ^rep.).. Romeo S^ Juliet, iv. b 

that you, at sucli times seeing me Hamlet, i. 5 

else no creature seeing; thou mixture — iii. 2 
seeing the worst, whicli late on hopes . . Othello, i. 3 
so gmlty-like, seeing you coming — iii. 3 

SEEK -till thou didst seek to violate.... Tempest, i. 2 

go safely on to seek thy son — ii. 1 

the more it seeks to hide itself — iii. 1 

I'll seek him deeper than e'er — iii. 3 

hereafter, and seek for grace — v. 1 

the sheplierd seeks the slieep . . Tiro Gen. of I'er, i. I 
I seek ray master, and my master seeks — i. 1 

to seek preferment out — i. 3 

see his way to seek out you? — ii. 4 

as seek to quencli the fire (rep.) .... — ii. 7 

run, run, and seek him out — iii. I 

gone to seek his dog — iv. 2 

seek shelter, pack 1 Merry ll'd'es, i. 3 

I will seek out Falstaff — ii. I 

search, seek, find out — iii. 3 

I seek to heal it only — iii. 4 

yet seek my father's love, still seek it — iii. -i 

1 seek you a better husband — iii. 4 

he will seek there on my word — iv. 2 

well, he's not here I seek for — iv. 2 

if I find not what I seek — iv. 2 

that he did seek the love of Tu-eifili Niglii, i. 2 

go thou and seek the coroner — i. 5 

seek him out, and play the tune .... — ii. 4 
he did range the town to seek me out — iv. 3 
doth he so seek his life? .... Measure for Measure, i. 5 

I find, I seek to die '. — iii. 1 

you bid me seek redemption — v. 1 

come you to seek the lamb here .... — v. 1 
don Pedro is returned to seek you .... Much Ado, i. 1 

and seek not to alter me — i. 3 

whom you sent me to seek — ii. 1 

shall we go seek Benedick — ii. 3 

here comes the man we went to seek — v. I 
to seek you both. We have been (rep.) — v. 1 
to seek new friends and stranger . . Mid. N.'s Dr. i. 1 

1 must go seek some dew-drops — ii. 1 

and he shall seek thy love — ii. 2 

and seek through this grove — ii. 2 

these lovers seek a place to fi"ht .... — iii . 2 
that shall seek the squirrel's hoard .. — iv. 1 

to seek tlie light of truth Love's L. Lost, i. 1 

tlian seek a dispensation for his oath — ii. 1 

1 sue, I seek a wifel a woman — iii.) 

now seek to spill the poor deer's blood — iv. 1 

that want itself doth seek — iv. 3 

make hira fawn, and beg, and seek.. — v. 2 

are forfeit, seek not to undo us — v. 2 

but seek the weary beds of people. . . . — v. 2 
you shall seek all day ere you..;Uerc/i. of I'enice, i. I 

the four strangers seek for you — i. 2 

1 Iiave sent twenty out to seek for .. — ii. (J 
we have been up and down to seek him — iii. 1 

be content, and seek no new — iii. 2 (scroll) 

he seeks my life; his reason — iii. 3 

as seek to soften that, (than which .. — iv. 1 

he seek the life of any citizen — iv. 1 

let my father seek another heir As you Like ii, i. 3 

and do not seek to take your change — i. 3 

to seek my uncle — i. 3 

many their fortunes seek — ii. 3 

and I'll go seek the duke — ii. 5 

So. seek him; tell him, I would .... — ii. 7 
should not seek an absent argument — iii. 1 

seek him with candle — iii. I 

to seek a living in our territory — iii. i 

let him seek out Rosalind — iii. 2 (verges) 

ehe came to seek you there — iv. I 

our master and mistress seek you.... — v. 1 

that seeks not to find tliat her All's It'ell, i. 3 

qnestant shrinks, find wliat you seelc — ii. 1 
wi til true observance seek to eke .... — ii.5 
this discovery; seek these suitors .... — v. 3 
witli satiety seeks to quench his. . Tumini; of Sli- i. 1 
to seek their fortunes further than .. — i. 2 

[Co(.3 the ice, to do this seek — i. 2 

tlie gain I seek is— quiet in — ii. 1 

or seek for rule, supremacy — v. 2 

you would seek to unsphere Wintfr'sTale, i. 2 

if you would seek us, we are yours .. — i. 2 

wTuch if ynu seek to prove — i. 2 

wimid frigiit mc with, I seek; to me — iii. 2 
i'll not seek far, (for liim, I partly .. — v. 3 
forced me to seekdclays tVtr them Comedy of Krr . i. 1 
to seek thj' help liy beneficial help .. — i. 1 



[ GG3 ] 



SI: 



SEEK— in the ocean seeks another. Comcrfyo/A'rr. i.2 

to go seek tiiis slave — i.2 

I sent to seek liis mosterl — ii. 1 

in care to seek nie out — ii. 2 

or else I shall seek my wit ill — ii. 2 

I went to seek liini — v. I 

in fulness, seek to liide themselves ....Macbeth,^ i. 4 

seek to know no more — iv. 1 

let us seek out some desolate — iv. 3 

sir Robert's son, tliat you seek so? . . King.li>hn, i. 1 

to seek the beauteous eye of — iv. 2 

do not seek to stuff my head — iv. 2 

foing to seek the grave of Arthur.... — iv. 2 
will seek them out — iv. 2 

shall they seek tlie lion in his den?.. — v. I 
should seek a plaster in contemned.. — v. 2 
to seek sweet safety out in vaults .. .. — v. 2 
seek out king Jolin; and fall before.. ^ v. 4 

straight let us seek, or straiglit — v. 7 

to seek out sorrow that dwells Richard II. i.2 

since tlion dost seek to kill my — ii. I 

seek you to seize, and grijje into — ii- 1 

yet seek no shelter to avoid — ii. 1 

and I am come to seek that name .. — ii. 3 

I'll go seek him I Henry 7 ('. ii. 2 

drove us to seek out this Iiead — iv. 3 

what honour dost thou seelc upon .... — v. 3 

I have two boys, seek Percy — v. 4 

or it will seek me in another p\a.ae..2Heury II'. ii 3 

go, seelc him out: is he so hasty — iv. 4 

with pale policy seek to divert .. Henry F. ii. (elio.) 

our person, seek we no revenge — ii. 2 

and seek some bolter service — iii. 2 

tell tliy king, I do not seek him now — iii. 6 
we would not seek a battle as we are — iii. 6 
ay, or more than we sliould seek alter — iv. I 

absence, seek through your camp — iv. 1 

pray thee, go seek him, and bring .. — iv. 7 
that seeks to overthrow religion .... 1 Henry C/. i. 3 

I seek not to advance — iii. 1 

and seek how we may prejudice .... — iii. 3 
and not to seek a queen to make .... — v. 5 

the golden mark I seek to hit 2Henry VI. \. I 

'tis that they seek; and they, in seeking — ii. 2 

nor never seek prevention of thy — ii. 4 

do seek subversion of tliy harmless life? — iii. I 

seek not a scorpion's nest — iii. 2 

injured, that ye seek my death? — iv. 7 

I seek not to wax great by others' .. — iv. 10 
and seek for sorrow with thy spectacles? — v. I 

seek thee out some other clioce — v. 2 

in cruelty will I seek out my fame . . — v, 2 

unless he seek to thrust you ZHenryVL\. 1 

tiiey seek revenge, and therefore .... — i- 1 

to seek to put me down — i. 1 

that seeks to make them foesi — i. 1 

but that I seek occasion how — i.2 

tlirough these wounds to seek out thee — i- 4 

came to seek you out — ii. 1 

tlie alliance that he seeks with France — iii. 3 
but seek revenue on Edward's mockery — iii. 3 

unless tliey seek for hatred at — iv. 1 

I seek for thee, tliat Warwick's — v. 2 

cheerly seek how to redress their .... — v. 4 

and seek tlieir ruin tliat usurped — v. 6 

to seek [CW. A'n/.-find] the empty ..Rlrhard lit. i. i 
never seek for aid out of himself. . . . Henry VIU. i. 2 

let him not seek't of us — i.2 

if your business seek me out — iii. I 

seek tlie king: that sun, I pray — iii. 2 

the business that seeks despatch .... — v. 1 
men's prayers then would seek you.. — v. 2 

seeks his praise more than he Troilu: <5- Cress, i. 3 

O, let not virtue seek remuneration . . — iii. 3 

tliat doth seek lier (not making — iv. I 

half Hector comes to seek this — iv. 5 

lechery eats itself I'll seek them.... — v. 4 

till when, go seek thy fortune — V. 6 

strike; this is the man I seek — v. 9 

and seek about for eases — v. 11 

who seeks for better of thee. . . . Timon of Athens, iv. 3 
whose pious breath seeks to convert you — iv. 3 
and seek to thrive by that which .... — iv. 3 

why d()st thou seek me out? — iv. 3 

nay, let's seek liim: theu do we — v. 1 

seek not my name — V. 6 (epitaph) 

was pleased to let him seek danger . . Coriolantis, i. 3 

but he seeks their hate with — ii. 2 

I wish I had a cause to seek him — iii. I 

to seek a single man — iv. 1 

tlian seek the end of one — v. 3 

would iiave me seek into myself ...luliusCtesar, i. 2 

gone to seek you at your liouse — i. 3 

seelc none, conspiracy — ii. I 

that's all I seek; and ara moreover .. — iii. 1 

about,— seek,— burn,— fire,— kill — iii. 2 

come, seek the conspirators — iii. 2 

'tis better, tliat the enemy seek us — iv. 3 

seek him, Titinius: whilst I go — v. 3 

I will seek for Pindarus the while.... — v. 3 
seek him, and bring him hither ..Antony ^Cleo. i. 2 

nay, pray you, seek no colour — i. 3 

or else he seeks out us — ii. 2 

who seeks, and will not take — ii. 7 

whieli seeks best to preserve — iii. 4 

I will seek some way to leave him .. — iii. 11 

1 will go seek some ditch — iv. (i 

of Ccesar seek your honour — iv. 13 

but if you seek to lay on me a finger — v. 2 
to seek througli the regions of the. . . . Cymheline, i. 1 
if you seek for further satisfying .... — ii. 4 

which he, to seek of me again — iii. I 

if you seek us afterwards m — iii. I 

only seems to seek out danger — id. 3 

would seek UB through, and put us to — iv. 2 
seek for danger where tiiere's no profit — iv. 2 
and meet the time, as it seeks us .... — iv. 3 
which directed him to seek lier on the — y. a 
hence to seek my lovely yioov. Tilu^Andronicits, ii. 3 
to seek her as a bedfellow 1 1 rules, i. (Oowcr) 



SEEK him out; if in his Pericles, ii. 4 

O, seek not to entrap, my gracious lord . . — ii.5 
Marina's life seeks to take oif .... — iv. (tiowcr) 

your lady seeks my life — iv. I 

overboard thrown nic to seek my mother — iv. 3 

wife, did seek to murder me — v. 1 

why so earnestly seek you to put up Lear, i. 1 

go, sirrah, seek him; I'll apprehend .... — i.2 
Eamund seek him out; wind me into him — i 2 

I will seek him, sir, presently — i.2 

spurs to make tiiee seek it — ii. i 

my fatlier'a godson seek your life? — ii. I 

that, sir, whicii serves and seeks for gain — ii. 4 
fle on tills stoira! I will go seek the king — iii. 1 
I will seek [A'h(. -look] him and privily.. — iii. is 

seek thine own ease; this tempest — iii. I 

who's there? what is't you seoK? — iii. 4 

ventured to come and seek you out — iii. 4 

his daughlers seek his deatli — iii. 1 

disposition made liim seek ills death .... — iii. .^i 

seek out where thy father is — iii..") 

seek out the villain Glosterl'f/?.) — iii. 7 

seek, seek for liim; lest his ungoverned .. — iv. ■! 

seek him out upon llie British party — iv. t, 

not stir one foot to seek a foe ....Romeo ^Juliet, \. 1 

the valiant Paris seeks you — i. 1 

girl, seek happy nights to happy days — i. 3 

vain to seek liim Iiere, that means not — ii. 1 
search, seek, and know how this foul — v. 3 
seek for thy noble fatlier in the dust .... Hamlet, i. 2 

I will go seek the king — ii. I 

you go to seek the lord Hamlet — ii. 2 

old giandsire Priam seeks,— so proceed .. — ii. 2 

fo, seek him out, speak fair — iv. I 
have sent to seek him, and to find — iv. ;i 

seek him i' the other place yourself — iv. 3 

go seek him there. He will stay — iv. 3 

that wilfully seeks her own salvation? .. — v. 1 

which seek out assurance in that — v. 1 

here comes another troop to seek for you — i. 2 

seek thou rather to be hanged in — i. 3 

seek hira, bid him come hither — iii. 4 

I will go seek him; Cassio, walk here.... — iii. i 

and seek to effect it to my uttermost — iii. 4 

I will seek satisfaction of you — iv. 2 

I have been to seek you — v. I 

SEEKINCi-comes with seeking you . Twelfth^, iii. 4 

and, seeking death, find life .Mens foiMeas. iii. 1 

the wood, seeking ssieet savours... WJ. A'.'s Dr. iv. 1 

light seeking light, doth light Love'sL.Losl, i. 1 

seeking the food he eats As you Like it, ii. 5 (song 1 

seeking the bubble reputation — ii. 7 

I was seeking for a fool, when I — iii. 2 

lose none, in seeking to augment it ..Macheih, ii. 1 
ara hot with haste in seeking you ..KingJohn, iv. 3 
and they, in seeking that, shall flnd.2/Je>iri//';. ii.2 
seeking a way, and straying f rom .. 3 He»rj/ /■'/. iii. 2 
seeking for Kiclimond in the throat.i^/c/iard /(/. v.4 
in seeking tales, and informations.. Henry /'///. v. 2 

been seeking you this hour Troilus^ Cress, v. 2 

what's their seeking? For corn at . . Coriolanusj i. 1 
seeking means to pluck away their . . — iii. 3 
wants no diligence in seeking Mm.Crfmbeline, iv. 3 
witliout seeking find (rep. V. 5) .. — . v. 4 (scroll) 
in the park, seeking to hide herself. .TitusAnd. iii. 1 

seeking to give losses their remedies Lear, ii. 2 

cousin s ghost seeking out Romeo. Kr,»(ieo ^Jul. iv. 3 

SEEK'ST thou then to cover Much.ido,iY. 1 

wliy seek'st thou me? Mid. N.'s Dream, iii. 2 

thou seek'st the greatness that ....iHenrylV. iv. 4 

tell me whom thou seek'st \ Henry fl. iv. 7 

not for such an end thou seek'st .... Cijmbeline, i. 7 
SEEL— wise gods seel our eyes ...■tntonySfCleo. iii. 11 

rather seel [Co(. Kn^-seal] my lips — v. 2 

seel [Coi.-foil] with wanton dullness Othello, i. 3 

to seel rCoi.-seal] her father's eves — iii. 3 

SEELING night, scarf up tlie tender . . Macbeth, iii. 2 

SEELY— and sir Bennet Seely Richard IJ. v. 6 

SEEM— the sky, it seems, would pour . . Tempest, i. 2 
though this island seem to be ilesert — ii. 1 

our garments seem now as fresh — ii. 1 

whose every cubit seems to cry out .. — ii. I 

wliicii to you shall seem probable — v. I 

seem eo. Seem you that j'ou ..ru-oGen-o/'/'er. ii. 4 

what seem I, that I am not? — ii. 4 

it seems, you loved her not — iv. 4 

did seem to scorch me up like Merry Wives, i. 3 

his wife seems to me well-favoured .. — ii. 2 
he seems to have a foreknowledge. 'AreW/iAVgAi, i.5 

though I seem to drown her — ii. I 

that danger shall seem sport — ii. 1 

and she, mistaken, seems to dote on me — ii. 2 

than love tliat would seem hid — iii. 1 

wherein Olivia may seem serviceable? — v. 1 

as yet the glass seems true — v. I 

seem in me to affect speech Meas.forMeas. i. 1 

as to your soul seems good — i. I 

with maids to seem the lapwing .... — i.5 
BO then, it seems, your most offenceful — ii. 3 

or seem so, craftily — ii. 4 

which seems a little fouler than it is — \\. 4 

as some would seem to be — iii. 2 

how seems he to be touched? — iv. 2 

that which but seems unlike — v. 1 

raav seem as sliv, as grave — v. 1 

wliere it seems hid (rep.) — v. 1 

do with your injuries as seems you best — v. 1 
my liking might too sudden seem .... Much Ado, i. I 

howsoever it seems nut in hira — ii. 3 

they seem to pity tlie lady; il seems — ii. 3 

1 must not seem proud — ii. 3 

all matter else seems weak — iii. I 

where liis codpiece seems as massy as — iii. 3 

you seem to me as Dian in her — iv. I 

meantime, let wonder seem familiar — v. 4 
let tlie prologue seem to say . . Mid. S.'s Dream, iii. I 
these tilings in me seem scorn to me — iii. 2 

it seems that you scorn me — iii. 2 

lie will seem to break loose — iii. 2 

all this dcribion shall aecm a dream — iii. i 



SEE 



SKKMS to me now as the Mid.N.'tDream,, iv. 1 

ihise thiii^'B secin small — iv. I 

\vliein:VL'iy tliitiB scums double — 'v. 1 

it si'ciila ti. nu-, tlnit ye-t wcslwp .... — iv. I 

tlieiiKin i' the 111. iliisccm to l)e .. — v. I 

iHit tlmt, it aiuinf, lie little /-ni"'« '- '-"«', ".1 

wise tilings seem foolisli, und rieli lliiiiK.i — v. 2 
Bhmild seem tlien, tlmt DuWni'e.Mer.a/rmiccn.'i 

it slmll scein to signify — ,\]- i 

the tiiills of mine, seem they ill motion? — ni. 2 
mmiiteimnce seems to tiike from me..ls i/oul.ike il,t. I 
^e^■m more virtuous, when she is gone — 1^3 

not to seem seiiscleBBof tlic hob — .li. 7 

tlmt it seems the len^tli of — 111.2 

for he seems to hivve the quotidian .. — 111.2 

uothin},' tlmt doth seem as dead — iv. 3 

to seem (lespitefiil uiid unRCiitlo — v. 2 

would seem to have us make denial . . Alt s If I'U.y 2 
shall seem expedient on the niiw-huni — ii. 3 
niy respects are better tlian they seem — ,11. fi 
hiily seems the quarrel upon your .. — id. 1 
so confidently seems to imdertalto .. — in. G 

it would not seem too dear — i;;- 7 

ere she seems as won — 111.7 

for we must not seem to understand — iv. 1 
BO we seem to Itnow, is to know ... — iv. 1 

you must seem very politic — _iv. 1 

only to seem to deserve well — iv. 3 

tliiiugh time seem so adverse — v. 1 

all yet seems well — v. 3 

seem strange unto him.. 7'ain/ii4'q/'S/i««', I (indue.) 
seem to move and wanton with — — 2 (indue.) 

ay. and tlie time seems thirty — 2(iiidue.) 

thou, it seems, that call'st for — iv. 1 

nor a musician, as I seem to he — iv. 2 

I'll make him glad to seem Viucentio — iv. 2 

sir, you seem a sober ancient — ^ v. I 

he sometime seems unsettled iyiii!crsTalt\\. 2 

prince, as we do seem to be of ours .. — . 1.2 
deceived in that which secins so .. 
I will seem fricndlv as thini Imst .. 

than sucli ns most seem yours 

who least will Bcem tiiduso — iii- 2 

nsniy talenow seeuiB toil — iv. (chorus) 

a poor humble swain, as I seem now 



[ 664 ] 



SEE 



i. 2 



iv. 3 



n.ithing she does, or seems, but smacks — iv. 3 
it should seem, hath sometime loved — [V. 3 

the young swain seems to wash — iv. 3 

for she seenis a mistress to most that — iv. 3 
he setms to be the more noble in being — iv. 3 
for you seem to be honest iilain men - iv. 3 

he secins to be of great authority — iv. 3 

in the chase it seems of this fair couple — v. 1 
onlv his innocence, (which seems mucli) — v. 2 

iiotliing so aged, as tills Ecems — v. 3 

the very life seems warm niion — v. 3 

it seems, he (rep. iii. 1 and v. 1) ...Com. nf Err. n. I 

that seems to speak things strange Macbclh, i. 2 

you seem to understand me — 1. 3 

and seem to fear things that do sound — 1.3 

that lie seems rapt withal — ;. 3 

doth seem to have thee crowned .... — .1. S 
one half world nature seems dead — — 11. 1 

for it must seem their guiU — .11. 2 

will seem as pure as snow — iv. 3 

andyet seem eold, the time you — iv. 3 

violent soriow seems a modern — iv. 3 

to seem thus washing her hands .... — v. 1 
one ofgreatcst note seems bruited ..,..-,, y. 7 

not of one mother, then, it seems hiii^John,\. 1 

I muse, voiir majesty dutli seein so •. — iii. I 
intent iiinst needs seem horrible .... — iv. 1 

nmkesit seem like rivers of — iv. 3 

it seems, yon know not then — v. 7 

the ii"lier seem the clouds that in . . Rivhanl 11. i. 1 

shallTlseemcrest-ftillen — j- 1 

iiow he did seem to dive into their .. — 1.4 

shall make their way seem short — ii. 3 

in me, it seems, it will make — v. .'i 

it seems then the tidings MlninjIK 1. 1 

that did seem to strangle him.. — 1.2 

his present want seems more than .. — v. 1 

seems to weep over his country's — iv. 3 

for nothing can seem foul to tliose .. — v. 1 

shall seem the more reasonable iJlcnryll'. 1. 2 

past, and to come, seem best — J. 3 

to abuse, to seem like him — 11.3 

Hotspur's name did seem defensible — 11. 3 
even our corn shall seem as liglit as.. — iv. 1 

he must seem thus to the world — y. 5 

ho seems indifferent: or, rather UennjV.i. 1 

how did this offer seem received — __i. 1 

seem they grave and learned? (re/).) — ii. 2 

lui.l so finely bolted, didst tlioii seem — ii. 2 
the enemy more mighty limn lie seems — ii. 4 

when what they seem to threiiteii — 11. 4 

spirited with wine, seem frosty? .... — 111. 5 

big Miirs seems bankrupt — iv. 2 

seems to prepare his way — v. (chorus) 

cvervtlving that seems unnatural .. — v. 2 

thou'!?h he seem, with forged Mlenriifl.w. 1 

so seems this gorgeous beauty — v. 3 

he seems a knight, and will not — y. 3 

that wliich seems to dim thy sight?. .2/Jcji,y/ /. 1. 2 

seems he a dove? his feathers are — i;i. 1 

but well-fore-warning wind did seem — ni. 2 

slioiild seem to curse and ban — "i. 2 

makes them seem divine .....illennjl /. 1. 4 

they join, embrace, and seem to kiss — .11.1 

the time shall not seem tedious — id. j 

more than I seem, and leas than I .. — in. 1 

Biich it seems, as may beseem — in. 3 

but now may seem as wise — i^- G 

of whom yoii seem to have so tender — iv. C 

and seem a saint, wlien most I IVchtml Ill.u 3 

whcreit seems best unto your royal sell — in I 
so it should seem [^ro/.Kn(.-appears] — in. 2 
tlmt seems disgracious ill the city B eye — i.n. 7 

can make seem pleasing to her — 'V- ' 

strangers, for so they seem livtuyl III. i. 4 



SEEMS, the marriage (rep. v. I) ....tlenryf'lll, ii. 2 
by the hour seems to llow from himi — iii. 2 

seem all iifTincd and kin TroilnsfyCrfsnda^\. 3 

would seem hyperhdles — i. 3 

but when they woiihl seem soldiers.. — i. 3 

it shonlil seem, felhnv, thatthou .... — iii. 1 
that which seems the wound to kill — iii. I (song) 
hard to seem won; but I was won .. — iii. 2 

and they'll seein glorious — v. 2 

that seems a sleeping Timonof Athens i. 2 (grace) 

and it should seem by the sum, your — iii. 4 
as he made it seem in the trial of. ... — iii. fi 

our gates, which yet seem shut Coriolanus. j. 4 

would seem but modest: therefnre .. — i. 9 

now to seem to iillcct the inalire .... — ii. 2 

and this shall seem, as partly 'tis — ii. 3 

be that you sccni; truly your — iii. 1 

ways, that seem like prudent helps.. — iii. 1 

to seem the same you arc not — iii. 2 

let us seem hunibrer after it is done.. — iv. 2 
whose double bosoms seem to wear . . — iv. 4 

true, which they so seem to fear — iv.fi 

although it seems, and so he thinks.. — iv. 7 

he would not seem to know mc — v. 1 

dotant as you seem to be? can you . . — v. 2 
tell me not wherein I seem unnatural — y. 3 
ourcourso will seem too bloody ..JuliusC'fsar, ii. I 

and after seem to eliide them — ii. 1 

it seems to ine most strange that .. .. — ii. 2 
how foolish do your fears seem now.. — .?j'^ 
did tills in Ciusar seem ambitious? .. — iii. 2 

their shadows seem a canopy — y. 1 

I'll seem the fool I am not.. Antony ^- Cleopatra^ j. 1 
seem as the spots of heaven more fiery — i. 4 
jealousies, which now seem great.... — ii- ^ 

wliose wind did seem to glow — ii. 2 

make me do, seems much unegual .. — ii. ■') 

the band that seems to tie their — ii.fi 

for what you seem to fear — ..in. '^ 

for he seems proud and disdainful .. — iii. 11 

tlmt Antony may seem to spend — iv. 6 

still seem, as does the king's Cymljrline,\. I 

that, it seems, much loves .......... — j. 7 

yon do seem to know something .... — _i. 7 

so seem, as if you were inspired — ii. 3 

that I should seem to lack humanity — iii. 2 

only seems to seek out danger — iii. 3 

our Britain seems as of it, but — iii. 4 

as to seem to die, ere sick — iv. 2 

clothes, which, as it seems, make thee — iv. 2 
may seem to those which chance to .. — iv. 2 

for, it seems, they crave to be _. . — iv. 2 

and dost seem so ignorant, we'll enforce — • iv. 3 

the time seems long; their blood — iv. 4 

it seems, come from the filers — v. 3 

why then, it seems, some certain . l^itusAndron.'Xi. 1 
a very fatal place it seems to mc .... — ii. 4 

and seem to weei) with me — ][]• ^ 

heads do seem to speak to me — iii. 1 

how courtesy would seem to cover sinl./'eric/i's, i. 1 

whose arm seems far too short — i. 2 

to fear, when tyrants seem to kiss .... — i. 2 
he seems a stranger: but his present .. — ii- 2 
the viands that 1 eat do seem unsavoury — ii. 3 
to mc he secins like diamond to glass. . — ii- 3 

very principals did seem to rend — iii. 2 

fair creature, rare as you seem to be .. — iii. 2 

mark me; you must seem to do — iv. 3 

where our scenes seem to live .. — iv. 4 (Gower) 
'twould seem like lies disdained in .... — v. 1 

to points that seem impossible — v. 1 

for yet he seems to doiiht — v. 1 

for it seems you have been noble — y. 2 

it did always seem so to us Leur, i. 1 

profess to be no less than I seem — _i. 4 

draw; seem to defend yonriclf — ii. 1 

being weak, seem so; if, till the — ii. 4 

servants, who seem no less — iii- 1 

this seems a fair deserving' — Ml* ^ 

lipht and portable my pain seems now . . — iii. 

dislike, seems pleasant to him — iv. 2 

and goodness to the vile seem vile — jv. 2 

proper deformity seems not in the — iv. 2 

he seems no bigger than his head — iv. 6 

seem to see the things thou dost not .... — iv.fi 
wretched though I seem, I can produce.. — y. 1 
ah mel sad hours seem long .... Komeo ^Juliet, i. I 

[Coi.] it seems she hangs upon — i. .'i 

but (as it seems,) did violence on herself— y. 3 

if it be, why seems it so particular Hamlet, i. 2 

seems, madam! Nay it is (rep.) — i. 2 

these, indeed, seem, for they arc actions — i. 2 
seem to me all the uses of this world I .. — 1.2 
that they may seem the taints of liberty — ii. 1 
as it did seem to shntter all his bulk .... — ii. I 
it seems [Co(.-by heaven! it is as proper.. — ii. I 
the earth, seems to me a steril promontory — 11. 2 
though by vour siniliiig, you seem to say — ii. 2 
and there did seem in him a kind of joy — iii. 1 

you would seem to know my stops — iii. 2 

every god did seem to set his seal — iii. 4 

must seem deliberate pause — iv. 3 

each toy seems prologue to some great .. — iv. .■> 

perhaps, seem much unsinewed — iv. 7 

it secins not meet, nor wholesome Othello, \. 1 

whom now, it seems, your special mandate — i. 3 
tliinks men licmest, that but seem to be so — i. 3 
the cliiding billow seems to pelt the clouds — ii. I 
seems to cast water on the burning bear — ii. 1 
and notion, make the hours seem short.. — ii. 3 

I shall seem to notify unto her — iii. I 

his bed shall seem a school, his board .. — iii. 3 
men sliould be what they seem (rr;).) .. — iii. 3 
that be not, would they might seem none — iii. 3 

and rather las it seems to me now) — iv. 2 

and this, it seems, Hoderigo meant — v. 2 

SEEMED [(.W./C"(.-scem] to besiege Temfiest, \. 2 

yet lielield, seemed lint tameness. ..Vcrn/ ll'ives, iv. 2 
dreadful would have seemed .... Mens. fur, \leiia. i. 4 
you seemed of late to make — ii. 4 



SEEMED— behaviours seemed ever ..AJudiAdo, ii. 3 
and seemed I ever otherwise to you? — iv. 1 
seemed Athens as a paradise to me.Mid.N.'iDr. I. I 
every region near seemed all one .... — iv. I 
in us hath seemed ridiculous .... Love's l.-Lnsi, v. 2 
and seemed to ask him sops as he. Tnmin<^ofRh. iii. 2 
they have seemed to be together .. ll'inier'sTule, i. 1 
they seeme<l almost, with staring .... — v. 2 

that, it seemed, sorrow wept to — v. 2 

whence comfort seemed to come Maclielli, i. 2 

and what seemed corporal, melted .... — i. 3 

as it seemed, had donc't — ii 3 

that words seemed buried UicliarU 1 1. 1 4 

that seemed, in eating him, to hold — iii. 4 

his aspiring rider seemed to know .. — v. 2 
his tasking? seemed it in contempt?. I llenrylV. v. 2 

he seemed in running to devour 'iHenryiy.'i. \ 

their weapons only seemed on our side — i. I 
it seemed in me, but as an honour .. — iv. 4 
mortified in him, seemed to die too .... Henry y. i. I 
though we seemed dead, wc did but sleep — iij. ti 

it seemed, appeared to Home Coriotmius, i. 2 

I seemed Ills follower, not partner.... — y. 5 
the crossed blue lightning seemed.. ./u/iM«C(rjrar,_i. 3 
which seemed too much enkindled .. — ii. 1 
which seemed to tell them .. Antony^ Clcnpalra, i. 5 

yet my mother seemed the Diaii Cymheline, ii. h 

the sinful father seemed not to strike .. Cericles, i. 2 
night, who seemed my good protector — i. 2 

pods for murder seemed so content — v. 3 (Gow.) 

It seemed, she was aqncen over her Lear, iv. 3 

seemed not to know what guests — iv. 3 

this would have seemed a period — v. 3 

he seemed to find his way without ....Hamlet, ii. 1 

Priam, seemed i' the air to stick — ii. 2 

■when she seemed to shake, and fear . . Oilielln, iii. 3 

SEEMER— what our secmcrs be ..Meas. rnrMe„s. i. 4 

SEEMEST— what thou seemest.. rmilus /iCress. v. I 

SEEMETII it a needful course .... Love'sL.LosI, ii. 1 

BO sensible scemetli their conference .. — v. 2 

qnoniain, he scemeth in minority — v. 2 

everything 1 look on scemeth .. Tamimr ofSh. iv. 5 
as scemeth by his plight, of the revolt.. ,i/n./,r//i, i. 2 

ends not when it secincth done iiirii,i,,i ll.\.'i 

me scemeth then, it is no policy.. ..2/i(.'/(r(//7. iii. 1 
vdiat to your wisdoms scemeth best — iii. I 

me scemeth good, that, with 8i>ine../?/e/irtr// ///. ii. 2 
SEEMING-secming mistress I'age.Wwr// 'r/ncs, iii. 2 
wiser souls to thy false seeming?. yi/t'as../b;-j)/t'u.s. ii. 4 
seeming, seeming!— I will |iroelaim thee — ii. 1 

as faults from a-eniing, free! — iii. 2 

showed him a seeming warrant for it — iv. 2 
slmll appear such seeming truth , . . . A/wrA .-Itfo, ii. 2 

out on tfiy seeming! I will write — iv. 1 

to a double cherry, seeming ptuied.Mid.N.'sUi . iii. 2 

so, with two secrning bodies — iii. 2 

in a word, the seeming tmih.. Merch. nfl'eniee. iii. a 
one fault seeming monstrous .... AsyouLikc il, iii. 2 
than seeming the lover of any other — iii. 2 
bear your body more seeming, Audrey — v. 4 

ourselves into seemini; knowledge WsHrtl. ii. .1 

that seeming to be most, which.. Tnmhi^ nf Wi. v. 2 
stiiiiified, or seeming so in skill .. n infei's 't'nU\ ii. 1 

these keep seeming, and savour — i\-. 3 

the truth of your own seeming — iv. 3 

the father ol' this seeming lady — v. I 

poor soul I seeming as burdened. .Cnijie(/;/oA/wr. i 1 
essentially mad, without seeming so.l lle.nriill'. ii. 4 

this seeming brow of justice — iv. 3 

tlic seeming sufieraiutes that you — v. I 

there is no seeming iiieroy in the king — v. 2 
by seeming cold, or careless of his ..'^IlenrylV. iv. 4 
borrow not that face of seeming sorrow — v. 2 

writ me down after my seeming — v. 2 

in seeming to augment it, wastes Wl.lleury I'lll. i. I 

in full seeming, with meekness — ii. 4 

is couched in seeming jiladness .. Troilus Sf Cress. \. I 
and o'er-wrested seeming he acts thy — j. 3 

a seeming mermaid steers Antony <§■ Cleo. ii. 2 

punish it seeming to bear it lightly.. — iv. 12 

more than a mortal seeming Cumleline, i. 7 

all good seeming, by thy revidt — iii. 4 

not seeming 80 worthy as thy birth.. — iv. 2 
that thought her like her seeming .. — v. 6 

this hath some seeming — v. 5 

within that little, seeming substance ....lear.i. 1 

convenient seeming hast practised — iii. 2 

seemiiif! sweet, convert to bitter.. nomen^-Jidiet, i. :> 
a seeming man! or ill-beseeming (rep.) — iii. 3 
seeming to feel this blow, vyitli fluining. HronW, ii.2 

join in censure of his seeming — iii. 2 

not I for love and duty, but seeming eo..Olliello, i. I 
poor likelihoods of modern seeming .... — i. 3 
the thing I am, by seeming otherwise . . — ii. 1 
mere form of civil and humane seeming — ii. 1 
could give out such a seeming, to seel her — iii. 3 
now lie spake, after long seeming dead — v. 2 
SEEMINGEY obedient, likewise ..Merri,iyires\v. B 

SEEMING-VIHTIJUU.S queen H.unler, i. 5 

SEEM r,Y answer to such persons .. Ilenrt/ 11 1 1, i'li. I 

SEEM'ST— thou scem'st so em|ity?..ls!/'iH/.i/.(' //. ii. 7 

at our justice seem'st thou then to ..llicluird II i. 3 

thou art not what thou seem'st ....1 lleuri/ II'. v. 4 

but now thou seem'st a coward ....Cymheliue, iii. 4 

and thou seem'st a palace for the I'ei ieles, v. I 

to what thou justly seem'st Tlnnieo^Jutiei, iii. 2 

SEEN-liaving seen but him and Caliban. 7'empe»/,i. 2 

I have seen thee in her — ii. 2 

nor have I seen more that I — iii. 1 

wept to have seen oiir parting.. Ti/'offen. nfVer.Xi. 3 

mvself have often seen — iii. 1 

if Silvia be not seen? — iii. 1 

I have seen Saekcrson loose Merry If'ives, i I 

I have seen the time — ii. 1 

your niece will not be seen Twelflh Night, \. 3 

you have not seen such a — iii. 2 

I have not seen such a virago — iii. 4 

I'd have si'Cn him damned ere — iii. 4 

when in other habits yon arc seen .. — iii. 4 
honours have seen such dishes ,. Meas. lor Meas. ii. I 



SKKN, wheti. uI'Ut cxii'iition ....Mcm./brHli-m. ii. 2 

Aiificlo Imth sorii thcin both — iv. 2 

wlii'iT r Imvf ■iirn nnrniition boil.... — v. 1 

Imtli nin innii si^.ii liim ut tlic Mueh.iilo, iii. a 

inim luilh hiiMi si'cn with hiul — iii. 2 

wluMi vuM liiivi' sic'ii 1110VI-, unci liciird — iii. a 

wlion ViUi ImvcKrn tlu'Si-cMiel - iii. 2 

it is ii"t seen eiioiij/li; v">i »""i>l'l W'^i'i' — "!• ■* 
false Trojan wilder sail was seen ..il/f(i.A*.'.t Dr. i. I 

tluniiv hedRc-bogs be not seen — ii. SCsong) 

mill ImH bis faec iniist be seen tbrougU — iii. 1 

wbiit visions liave I seen I — iv. I 

tbe ear 111' man luith not seen — iv. 1 

where I have seen tliem abivor and look — v. 1 
nod not be seen to wiuk of all .... l.oi',}\L.Lo.il, i. 1 

if anv man lieseeii to tallt with — j. 1 

J was seen with lar in tlie iminor house — i- I 

d.ivs of desolation that I have seen.. — i. 2 

wliat a seene of foolery I have seen . . — iv. S 

pearee seen a light — iv. 3 

that bath seen the world — v. 1 

a smaller bair than may bo seen .... — v. a 
of an old Iloman eoin, scarce seen .. — v. '2 

I have seen the day of wrong — y. 2 

in a gondola were seen togetlier..i>/t'r. of Venice, ii. 8 

yet 1 have not seen so likely an — ii. 9 

and seen onr wishes prosper, to cry.. — iii. 2 

was not to have seen yon here — iii. 2 

have seen enicl pronf of this man's. . (.i i/oiiLiV.f i7, i. 2 

that we liMve seen helter days — ii. 7 

beeause tlioii art not seen — ii. 7 (song) 

then, to liiivc seen nnuli, and to have — iv. 1 

this seen, Orlando did iipiiroiu-b — iv. 3 

'tis often seen, ado|itioii strives witb .. All's ll'ell.i. 3 

I have seen those wars — ii. 1 

I have seen a medicine tbat's able .... — ii. 1 

sir, I have seen you in tbe court — v. I 

T have seen iier wear it — v. 3 

not vet been seen in any bonsc .. TnmhignfSh. i. I 
as a'seboolmaster well seen in music _ i. 2 

would Kathaiiiie had never seen liiin — iii. 2 
son of mine, wliich long I have not seen — iv. .') 
I have scon them in the cburcb together — v. 1 

have not you seen, Camillo IVinler's Tale, i. 2 

as be had seen 't, or been an — i. 2 

I have seen a lady's nose that — ii. 1 

1 liave drank, and seen the snider .. — ii. I 
I liave seen two such sights, by sea.. — iii. 3 

it bath seen very hot service — iv. 2 

play as I have seen tbem do in — iv. 3 

give way to what's seen now — v. I 

to say, you have seen a better — v. I 

(iewel of children) seen this hour — — v. 1 
whieb was to be seen, cannot be spoken — v. 2 

if all the world e.oidd have seen it — v. 2 

l)e seen at any Syracusan marts.. CnmeiJi/ of Err. i. 1 

and fair a day I have not seen Macbeth, i. 3 

as tliev bad seen me, with these — ii. 2 

I have seen hours dreiidful. and things — ii. •) 

in Kimland, I have seen him do — iv. 3 

is once seen to smile — iv. 3 

I have seen her rise from her bed — v. 1 

that I have seen inhabit in those.. .. Kitif^Jolm, iv. 2 

live moons were seen to-night — iv. 2 

than bad I seen the vaulty top — v. 2 

some apparent danger seen in him . . liichurd II. i. 1 
prophet's eye, seen now his son's son — ii. 1 
more's not seen ; or if it be, 'tis with — ii. 2 
liere shortly shall be seen, in the .... — iii. 4 
that honorable day shall ne'er be seen — iv. I 

apparent guilt be seen in tbem — iv. 1 

for some reasons I would not have seen — v. 2 

of honour in thee have I seen — v. (i 

n. virtue that was never seen in you.l Henry IV. iii. 1 
by being seldom seen, I could not .. — iii. 2 

ne'er seen, hut wondered at — !!'• 2 

so when be had occasion to be seen .. — . iii. 2 
no ej'c hath seen such scare-crows .. — iv. 2 

let it ho seen to-morrow in — iv. 3 

1 would to heaven I bad not seen •illetirylV.i. 1 

and not ourselves be seen? — ii. 2 

you have not seen a hulk better .... — ii. 1 
what! wc have seen the seven stars.. — ii. 4 
(), if this were seen, the happiest.... — iii. 1 
that thou badst seen that this ()cp.) — iii. 2 

the days that we have seeni — iii. 2 

seen before in such an assembly .. — iii. 2 (ciiil.) 
sn|ii"ise, thot von have seen l\\ti.nenixjV. iii. (eJio.) 
there seen, heave him away — v. (ebo.) 

1 have seen von gleeking and galling — v. 1 

well,thoii!,'h never seen before \ Henry VI. i. 2 

I thon^'ht"! should have seen some .. — ii. 3 
false I'hintagenet dare not be seen .. — ii. 4 
I have neii our enemies' overthrow.. — iii. 2 
we should have seen deciphered .... — iv. I 

as are daily seen by our — v. 1 

tlian in women eoinmonly is seen.... — \. h 

ofl have I seen the haughty illeuriiVI. i. I 

well hath yonr highness seen into .. — iii. 1 
in Ireland have I seen this stubborn — iii. 1 

I have seen him caper upright — iii. 1 

oft have I seen a timely parted — iii. 2 

and 'tis well seen he found an enemy — iii. 2 

were there a serpent seen with — iii. 2 

death's aiiproach is seen so terriblel — iii. 3 

for I have scon him whipped — iv. 2 

oft have I seen a hot o'er-« ceiling .. — v. 1 
never seen thee, never borne thee ....ZllenryVI. i. \ 
as I have seen a swan with bootless ,. — i. 4 
and yet he seen to bear a woman's face? — i. 4 

•whobatb not seen tbem — ii. 2 

nor to be seen; my crown is called .. — iii. I 

when clouds are seen Iliduinllll. ii. 3 

ns well as I bad seen, and heard — iii. fi 

had dealing must be seen in thought — iii. fi 

of sorrow have I seen .. — iv. 1 

lest, being seen, thy tender brother .. — v. 3 

the sun will not be seen today — v. 3 

being now seen possible cnmigb UenyijVltl. i. I 

we have seen him set himself — iii. 2 



[ 665 J 

SEKN— you have seen bim opcn't .. tlenryVIII. iii. 1 
there is seen the Imby figure ....TrailuslffCreu.i. 3 

that thou hast not seen Ibo — iii. I 

have you seen my cousin? — iii. 2 

for hiilf Trov have you seen here .... — iv. 2 
thou gallant Trojan, seen thee oft .. — iv. 5 
I have seen tliee, us hot as Perseus .. — iv. 6 
[^■»^Jand seen thee seorning forfeits — iv. 5 

and 1 have seen thee pause — iv. 6 

have I seen, but this thy emmtenance — iv. '•> 

I have seen the time-I wonder — iv. 6 

I have not seen you long Tijnon of Alliens, i. 1 

that mean eves have seen the foot — i. 1 

is not my lord seen yet? Nut yet — iii. 4 

we have seen better days — iv. 2 

make thcin best seen, and known.... — v. 1 

it will be seen to morrow — y. 2 

may be abhorred further than seen . . Coriofanus, i. 4 

I have before- time seen him thus — i. C 

I have seen the dumb men throng . . — ii. 1 
thrice six I have seen and beard of .. — ii. 3 
upon yourselves what yon have seen me — iii. 1 

what you have seen lum do — iii. 3 

I have seen tbce stern, and thou .... — iv. I 

and talked of more than seen — iv. 1 

those maims of sbamo seen through.. — iv. ft 
as we have seen bim in the Capitol. ^iiims Cmsar, i. 2 

I have seen tempests, when the — i. 3 

and I have seen the ambitious ocean — i. 3 

of us have seen strange sights — _i. 3 

that we have heard and seen (rep.) .. — ii. 2 
there are no comets seen; the heavens — ii. 2 
Octavius, I have seen naae days than — iv. 1 
for I have seen more years, I am sure — iv. 3 
you have seen and proved a fiuTQr.Anlony t^-Cleo. i. 2 
I have seen her die twenty times .... — i. 2 

would I bad never seen herl — i. 2 

as soon taken as seen — i. 4 

I have seen thee fight, wdien I — ii.fi 

and not to be seen to move in't — ii. 7 

the man bath seen some majesty (n;).) — iii. 3 

thou bast seen these signs — iv. 12 

hut I have seen small relleetion Cymlieline, i. 3 

I have seen him in Hritiiin In-/).) — i. 5 

if she went before others I have seen — i. 5 

not seen the most preeious diamond . . — i. 5 

let it be granted, you luive seen all this — ii. 4 
we have seen nothing: we are beastly — iii. 3 
not seen of late? (irant heavens, that — iii. 
servant, I have not seen these two days — iii. 5 

civility not seen from other — iv. '2 

into a crutch, than have seen this.. .. — iv. 2 

and but the backs of Britons seen — v. 3 

I have not seen him BO pictured — v. 4 

I have surely seen him — v. 5 

the monster seen tlinse lily hantln.TilnsA nrlron. ii. 5 

bad I but seen thy picture in this — iii. I 

was ever seen emperor of Home thus — iv. 4 

which I have seen thee careful — v. 1 

and seen with mistful eyes Pericles, i. 4 

and seen the desolation of yonr — i. 4 

the which, I hope, shall ne'er be seen — — i. 4 
here have you seen a mighty king — ii. (Gower) 

I may melt and no more be seen — v. 3 

bis queen and daughter, seen — v. 3 (Gower) 

we have seen the best of our time I.ear, i. 2 

told you what I have seen and heard — i. 2 

when they are seen abused — i. 3 

I luive not scon him this two days — _i. 4 

I have seen drunkards do more — ii. 1 

I have seen better faces in my — ii. 2 

what hath been seen, either in enuiFs — iii. 1 

full oft 'tis seen, our mean secures us .... — iv. 1 
you have seen sunshine and rain at once — iv. 3 

so far cannot be seen or heard — iv. Ii 

thou hast seen a fiuiner's dog — iv.fi 

who having seen me i n my worst estate . . — v. 3 
I have seen the (l:iy. with my good biting — v. 3 
morning hath he tliere been seen./.'umeo ^- Juliet, i. I 

she hath not seen tlie change of — i. 2 

I have seen the day, that I have worn — i. .') 
too early seen unknown, and known — i. 5 

never was seen so black a day — iv. I) 

put it out, for I would not be seen .. — v. 3 

[ have seen nothing. Horatio says Ilumlcl, i. 1 

dreaded sight twice seen of lis (r/';j.) — i. 1 

impart what wc have seen to night — i. 1 

or ever I had seen that day, Iloratio .... — i. 2 

it was as I have seen it in his life — i. 2 

never make known what you have seen — i. .^ 
never to speak of this that you have seen — i. 5 
having ever seen in the prenoinimite — — ii. 1 
when I had seen Ibis hot love on the wing — ii. 2 
ah woel had seen the mobled queen .... — ii. 2 

who this bad seen, with tongue in — ii. 2 

thespirit, that I haveBcen,may beadevil — ii.2 
seen wdiat I have seen, see what 1 see! .. — iii. I 
there he players, that I have seen play .. — iii. 2 
it is a damned gliost that wc have seen .. — iii. 2 
and oft 'tis seen, tlie wicked prize itself .. — iii. 3 
my good lord what have I seen to-iiightV — ill. 4 
I liavc seen myself, and served against .. — iv. 7 

'twill not be seen in him there — v. 1 

I have seen you both: hut since he's .... — v. 2 
of whom his eyes bad seen the proof .... Othello, \. I 
seen a grievous wreck and sufferanee .... — ii. 1 
knavery's plain face is never seen, till used — ii. 1 
importunityi much will be seen in that.. — iii. 3 
you not sometimes seen a handkerebief.. — iii. 3 
would to heaven, that I had never seen it — iii. 4 
I have seen the caimon, when it bath.... — iii. 4 
her honour is an essence that's not scon — iv. 1 

I had seen bim do you wrong? — jv. 1 

to speak what I have seen and known .. — iv. I 

you have seen nntbiiig then? — iv. 2 

yes, you have seen Ca: sin and she together — iv. 2 
kneel, and pray. I have seen licr do't .... - iv. 2 

T would von liail never seen birnl — iv. 3 

1 have seen the (lav, that, with tills little — '^- - 
HKKSK— seescisnot good togivc .. Merry ll'ivcs, v. !> 



S ICES ||) and putter I Merry WVacf, v. 5 

Si;|i;'ST— what sce'st thou else? Tempeal, i. 3 

and say, what thou see'st yond* — i. 2 

this gallant whieb thou see'st — i. '^ 

Hce'st thou here, this is — iv. I 

haply, see'st some rare .... Two Gen. of Verona, i. I 

bceaiiBC thou seo'st inc dote — ii. 4 

what see'st thou? — iii. I 

an' if thou see'st my hoy — iii. I 

if thou Bce'st her before me Merry Wires, 1. 4 

for thou see'st, it will not Twelfth Aif^ht, i. 3 

so soon as ever thou see'st him — iii. 4 

tbcni see'st, thou wicked var}et.. Meat, for Meas. ii. I 
see'st thou not w bat a deibrmed (rep. ).i)/uc/i/i(/o, 111.3 

thou see'st, that all the grace — iv. I 

what thou see'st, when tliou doet.. Mid. N.'iDr. ii. 3 

thou see'st, these lovers seek — iii. '2 

see'st thou tills sweet sight? — iv. 1 

beholdest, surveyest, or sca'at. Love'sK. L.l. I (letter) 
thou see'st, we are not all alone ..Asyou Like it, ii. 7 
thou see'st how diligent I am .. Tamiitg of Sh. iv. 3 
or else a fool, that see'st a game .. Winler'tTale, i. 2 
mark, and perftirm it; (see st tliou'O — ii. 3 
see'st thou not the air of the court .. — iv. 3 

thou see'st the heavens » Macliclh, ii. 4 

then all this thou tee'st Kin i* John, v. 7 

in that thou see'st tliy wretched .... Wclianl II. i. 2 

thou see'st, I have more flesh \ Henry IV. iii. 3 

thou see'bt, I am pacified; still? — iii. 3 

thou see'st witb peril I have illrniylV. iv. 4 

true; and thou see'st that I no 1 Henry VI. ii. 5 

what see'st thou there? 'iHenry VI. i. 2 

opinion, yet thou see'st not well .... — ii. I 
OGod, see'st thou this, and hear'st.. — ii. 1 
the law, thou see'st, bath judged tlieo — ii. 3 

what see'st thou in me, York — v. 2 

and, as thou see'st, ourselves in ....ZHenryVI. ill. 3 

thou see'st what's past — iii. 3 

U God, that see'st it, do not Ilichciril III 1.3 

see'st not thy loss in transformation?. 'I'im. ufAili.'w.^ 
wherein thou see'st me masked .. ..('nriolanns, i. 8 
thou see'st the world. Volumnius .Jnliiu Cn'sar, v. h 
of the world, man ; see'st not? . . Antojty «5 Cleo. ii. 7 

see'st thou, my good fellow? — iv. 4 

when thou see'st bim, a little Ct/nitieline, iii. 4 

see'st Ibou this letter? TitnsAndronicns, ii. 3 

what see'st thou in our looks? J'tricles, i. 2 

see'st thou this object, Kent? Lear, v, 3 

mercy, and tliou see'st it not . . Ilomeo ^-Juliet, iii. 3 

wlmte'er thou hear'st or see'st — v. 3 

when thou see'st that act afoot Hawtet, iii. 2 

SEIiTII your blood to froth .... 7'iinr.;i of .iihens, iv.'3 

for my business seeths Troilm ^ Cress, iii. I 

SKETI'lING brains Miil.N.'sIheam,v. 1 

HE(iRKGATIONoftlie Turkish fleet .. Othello, W. I 

SEIGNEUR Dieul (ren.) HenryV. iii. 4 

devant les seigneurs de France — iii. 4 

seigneur I>ieu I O signieur Dew should — iv. 4 
tres (listingue seigneur d'Aiigleterre — iv. 4 

Oseigneur! le jour est perdu — iv. .'> 

laissez, mon seigneur, laissez, laissez — v. 2 
Bupplic, mon tr()s puissant seigneur .. — v. 2 

SEIZE-tlmt justice seizes ..Measure for Measure, ii. 1 

the lady I must seize upon? Much Ado, v. 4 

shall seize one half his goods.. ,.Mer. of Venice, iv. 1 

do we seize into our bands Asyoui.ikiit.iW. 1 

every stale, seize thee, that list... Tinning of aii. iii. 1 
or I'll seize thy life, with what ..IVinier'sVale, ii. 3 
may rush, and seize us? Macbeth, ii. 3 

1 will surprise; Beizc upon Fife — iv. I 

we do seize to us the plate, coin ....llichard II. ii. I 

seek you to seize, and gripe into — ii. I 

if yon do wrongfully seize Hereford's — ii. I 
we seize into our bands, his plate.... — ii. 1 
breathing; seize it, if thou darest .... — iv. 1 

here cousin, seize the crown — iv. I 

let vulturcB vile seize on bis i Henry IV. v. 3 

bad of the soil come to seize me ..'iHenryVl. iv. 10 

king; let's seize upon hiin 3Hfii/i//'J. iii. 1 

and seize himself — iv. '2 

seize on the shame-faced Henry .... — iv. 8 

seize on him, furies, take bim Hicliard III. i. 4 

seize bim, vlCiiiles (rrp.) Coriotanut, iii, 1 

upon his own uppeal, seizes him./i7i/o7ty ^CVeo. iii. G 

and death will seize her — iii. 9 

yet death will seize the doctor too ..Cymbelinr, v. 6 
seize my own, my true hetrothed..Vi/uj/iMi/iuii. i. 2 

shall seize Ibis prey out of his — iv. 2 

face, seize with an eagle's talons Pericles, iv. 4 

Olid thy virtues here I seize upon Lear, i. 1 

you we first seize on — ii. I 

may seize on the white wonder. /ioiaeof^ Jnliet, iii. 3 
wliicli shall seize each vital spirit.. .. — iv. I 
devils theiriBelvcs should fear to seize . . Oihelln, iv. 2 
and seize upon the fortuncB of the Moor — v. 2 

SEIZED by a linngry lion .. TwoOen. of Verona, v. 4 
death that now bath seized tbem ..,, Tempest, ii. 1 

having lirst seized liis 1 ks — iii. 2 

something seized liis wished ability. »fin/i'»'«7'. v. ) 
another ship had seized on us .Comedy, f Krrors. i. 1 

./ohii hath seized Arthur KingJnhn, iii. 4 

hath seized the wasteful king Uicliard II. iii. 4 

Henry the fourth, seized on •iHrnryVI. ii.2 

and seized ujion tlieir towns ZHeniyVI. i. 1 

ills lands then seized on — iii. '2 

<nir treasure seized, our soldiers — iii. 3 

the tiger now bath seized Richard III, ii. 4 

be seized by the leopard Tinion of Athens, iv. 3 

sleep hath seized me wholly Cymbeline, ii. 3 

imply, despair hath seized ncr — iii. ."i 

and they have seized Marina Pericles, iv. 2 

be stood sei/eil of, to the conqueror Hamlet, i. 1 

SKIZETII but liis own Titus.lndronicus.i. '2 

.SKIZIMl hilii; tile heneflt Kicliard III. lli. I 

SEI/,lil:K, do we seize into As you Like ii, iii. I 

unyoke tills seizure, and this kind.. A'i'7j^./o/ia, ill. I 
to whose suit seizure the cygnet's. V'loiVm <5- CrcM. i.l 

SEI-l) 1 hiivr the i-lianeo — iv. a 

SKEDl'.M vi^itiSMirow Tempest, ii. i 

her bushaud is seldom from humc>il'ciii/Mivr<, ii. 2 



SELDOM when the steeled gaoler.. /l/ra. fnr Ufa. iv ■> 

which very seldom lies Lovi'sL. Losl, ii. I 

his majesty seklom fears AU'sll'cU ii I 

merit of service is seldom attributed _ iii' 6 
such lutelligence hath seldom tailed — iv. 5 
that he is seldom from the house. Ifinler'sTale, iv. 1 

good now, say so but seldom _ v. 1 

they are seldom spent in vain RMardir. ii. 1 

but, when they seldom come IHe/irijtl'. i a 



by being seldom seen. I could not 

so my state, seldom, but sure|ituoua _ i!i. 2 

shines seldom in admiring eyes iii. 2 

seldom, when the bee dotli leave . .iHenrylV. iv.' \ 
are often spoke, and seldom nieant.2 Henry T/. iii. 1 
preserved so whole, do seldom win . . — iii. I 

It is, that seldom kin^s enjoy iHenryt'l. iii. 1 

yet hasty marriage seldom proveth well — iv. i 
by'v ladv, seldom comes the better. «ic/iord ///. ii. ;) 

God he knows, seldom, or never .... iii. i 

a soldier, therefore seldom rich.Timon of Athens, i.' 2 

not seldom, nor no slight checks .... ii. 2 

'tis cold, it seldom flows ii' 2 

wliich doth seldom play the reoanter — v 2 

seldom lie smiles Jnlhis Ccemr, 'i. 2 

do seldom or never recover Anlony^cico ' v ■" 

men been, there's seldom ease . . Pericles, ii. (Gowe'r) 

seldom, but that pity begets you _ iv 3 

have seldom sold for sounding.. Romeo ^Juliet iv' 5 
o f.'f'R;,?^'^'^^-'^ flameus do press .... Corinlanus, ii' 1 
bLLECT and generous, chief in that ....Hamlel i 3 
c Ar .i'lVoTT?"'" '" '^"' ' '""^' select .. Co,iota>iKs, i.' 6 
bLLEUCUs— Where's Seleucus? . . Anlony ^ Cleo. v ■' 
speak tlie truth, Seleucns. Madam .. — y 2 

the ingratitude of this Seleucus does v' 2 

forbear, Seleucus, be it known v' 2 

SELF- ABUSE is the initiate fear Macbeth iii' 4 

SELF- ADMISSION. Why will.. 7Vo,7„4cr .. ' 3 
SELF- AFFAIRS, my mind did .Mid..\.\D,ea,i i 1 
SKLF-AFFECTED? Thank ..TroUus-iCessi'l^ii 3 
SELF-AFFRIGHTED, tremble. . . . Ilic/mrd II iii 2 
SELF-ASSUiMPTION greater ..Troilus^-Cm's i 3 

SELF-BLOOD that firs? r,lusAnd,oniciu iv 2 

SELF-BOllN hour to plant . Winter's Tale, iv. (cho ■) 

native peace with self-born arms Richard II ii 3 

SELF-BOUNTY, be abused; look to't ..Othelo in 3 
f^pF-BREATH:imaginedworthr™/;„.^-j":;..'il'J 
Ji'.lii-LUAKIX Y be sometimes a vice.. 0(/if«o ii t 
tv\'l-^^^^i^W9^^ Pi"'"' against ...SS?^,: 2 

SELF-COVERED tiling, for shame Lear v 2 

SF.LF-DANGER, you sliould tread .Ci/mbeline ii 4 
SELF-DRAWING web, he gives. .. . Hmr,, riil \ ? 

SELF-ENDE.\RED-so6elf-endeared..W«c'^Jdo iii' 
SKLF-EXHIBITION which your ....Cymbein"' 7 

SELF-EXPLICATION; put tliyself. '""'"^"\^■ J 
SELF-FIGURED knot yet you ire curbed _ '3 
SELF-GLORIOUS pride ...... Henry Vy. fchorus) 

SELF-GRACIOUS remembrance .... All's Well W I 

SELF-HARMING jealousy L. C«mprfj,„/-i!,.rn" H I 

SE EF-LOVE, Malvolio Twelfth Nilht it 

made of self-love, which is the most ..All's Well (. \ 



SELL— merohantlike I sell reveuge ..2Henri/ri.iv 1 

does buy and sell his honour llenn/'l'lll i 1 

perchance, they'll sell; if not ..Troitns^ Cress, i. 3 
not commend what we intend to sell — iv. I 

must poorly sell ourselves _ iv4 

as those, which sell, would give . . Timon o/Ath. i' I 

if I would sell my horse ii 1 

a mother should not sell him '. Coriolanus, i.' 3 

no. I'll not sell, nor give him _ i 4 



. . . . Henri/ J'. 
..iHenryf'I. v. 2 
■ Coriohmns.iv.Q 
.Henry VII I. i. 1 



self-love, my lie"e is not so vile . 

dedicate to war, hath no self-love 
SELF-LOVING, and affecting ... 
SELF-METTLE tires him ..... 
SELF-MOULD that fashioned .... lUclmrd II \ 

Ipf'l'm ?r?^'i"'' «'<='g'""S--"'V™'- forMeas. iii. 2 
SPji-'i,"^^"^'^'^ ^^'"^'■S"°w we mean. .3 Henri/ r/ iii 1 
i^f'^-^R^r?*^^'^*^' """S "■' constant.. -W,": \ 

M;,1>1' -hAiUL tongue Measure/or Measure ii 4 

111 self-same manner doth accuse v 1 

one and the self-same thing Love'sL Lost i' •> 

self-same flight the self-same.. MercA. of Venice' i 1 
with self-same kindness welcome- Taming of Sh v "> 

tlie self-same sun that shines Winter' sfnle iv' 3 

and in the self-same inn Comedy of Errori i 1 

to the self-same tune, and words Macbeth' i' 3 

o'er the rest o' the self-same day .... _ ' ;' 3 
for self-same wind, that I should ..ZHenryVI ii' 1 
like tlie 6elf-s.ame sea forced to retire — ii 5 

are birds of self-same feather _ jii' 3 

propose the self-same words to thee — v' ', 

stabbed by the self-same hand .... Richard III. i 2 
the self-same name, but one of better — i 2 

for the self-same heaven, that frowns y' 3 

accent tuned in self-same kev ..TroilusSr Cress i' 3 
whose self-same mettle, whereof thy _ iv' 3 
have letters of the self-same tenor,./wff!MC,r.Mr iv' '! 

the self-same gods, that armed TititsAndrou i 2 

this is a fellow of the self-same colour. . . l.enr 'ii' " 
SELF-SLAUGHTER a prohibition. Ci/m6W/«e 'iii' J 
fixed his canon gamst self-slauKhterl Hamlel i 9 
SELF-SOVEREIGNTY only . . .° Uve'\LLn,'\v 
SELF-SUBDUED; and, in the fleshraent '.Lear ii 

SELF-UNABLE motion .4W Well'vi \ 

SELF-WILLED harlotry \Henriiir\\\ 

Ajax isgrown self-willed .... rroi/z/j^fr/jjirf'^; i' a 

a peevish Felf-n-illed harlotry . . Umneo SrJuliei iv' 2 

PEEF-WRONG, I'll stop mine.. ComeJyo/TTrr.' iii' 2 

SELL men and women Measur'' for Measure iii 1 

so they sell bullocks ....Muc/iAdo ii ? 

to sell a bargain well, is as iot-e's L.Lost iii 1 

1 will never buy and sell out of this — ' iii' 1 

and we that sell by gross y' o 

buy with you, sell' with von . . Merch. of Venice i .3 
that I should neither sell, nor give .. — iv 1 
in your ear, sell when yon can ..As you Like it, Hi;, 

he will sell the fee simple of his All's Well i v 3 

I d have you buy and sell so Winter's Tale ' i v ' 3 

you 11 buy 'em to sell again Macbetl' iv' •' 

yet sell your face forfive pence KiwJoh'n i ? 

who, m that sale, sells pardon _ {ii | 

they sell the pasture now Henry V. ii. (chorus') 

so sell his sovereign's life _ i, 2 

hut I will sell my dukedom .'... _ jii' 5 

achieve me. and then sell my bones _ iv' .3 

thatonce did sell the lion's skin _ iv' 3 

that come to sell their corn | Henry VI iii' » 



sell every man his life 

or BCll my title for a glorious ; 



lavQ.-i Henry VI. iii. 1 



to buy and sell with groats; to show _ ui 2 

to sell and mart your offices JutiusCmar, iv. 3 

and sell the miglity space of our _ iv 3 

sell me your good report Cymbetine. ii.' 3 

a caitiflr wretch would sell it him.iSoiweo S- Juliet, v. 1 

this same needy man must sell it me — v. I 

may St not sell; I sell thee poison.. . _ v 1 

c jT'^T\,°i?o"Sed; I'll sell all my land.... OMe^/o, i.' 3 

hELLER'S nraise belongs Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 

SELLING the dukedom of Maine ..2HenryVI. iv. 1 

Ji'L??i^'."fl J^l,"' tlesires, buys herself .... Othello, iv. I 
SEMBLABLE coherence of iHenrylV. v I 

que je suis semblable i les anges? ....Henry v. v. 2 

lus semblable, yea, himself Timon of Alliens, iv. 3 

thousands more of semblable import/li!(.^-c/eo. iii. 4 

his semblable is his mirror Hmnlet v 2 

SEMBLABLY furnished like the ....IHenrylV. v'. 3 

SEMBLANCE— your own semblance.. il/errvfr. iv 2 

another fault, in the semblance of . . — v 5 

induced me to tlie semblance 7"«'e//2/i A'i,§-/i<, v. 1 (let.) 

to be cozened with the semblance Much.4do, ii. 2 

the sign and semblance of her honom' — iv. 1 
in the rare semblance that I loved .. — v. 1 
the semblance of my soul .... Merch. of Venice, iii. 4 
outface it with their sera'olances ..As'ynuLihe\i, i. 3 
one in semblance; besides her ..Comedy of Err. v. I 
shipboy's semblance hath disguised .KingJohn.iv. 3 
from glistering semblances of piety .. tUnryV. ii. 2 

with cheerful semblance iv. (chorus)" 

repeat their semblance often on IHenryVI. v. 3 

of ashy semblance, meagre, pale ..iHenry VI. iii. 2 
mirrors of his princely semblance.. B/c/iard ///. ii! 2 
as he made semblance of his duty.. Henry VIII. i. 2 

path, thy native semblance on JuliusCcesar^ii. 1 

truth, where semblance, love, where.Ci/m6e(me, ii. 4 
speechless tongues, and semblance pale. Pmcies i 1 
by tlie semblance of their white flags . . _ ' i. 4 

a semblance that very dogs disdained Lear, v 3 

an ill-beseeming semblance tor.. Romeo ^Juliet i. b 
SEMBLATIVE a woman's part ..Twelfth Ni^^hl i 4 

SEMICIRCLE, or half-moon Winter's Tale ii 1 

SEMI-CIRCLED farthingale MerryWi,<es iii 3 

SEMIRAMIS. Say .. Tammg- o/S/,rw, 2 (induction) 

this goddess, this Semiramis Titus Andron. ii. I 

come, Semiramis; nay, barbarous Tamora — ii. 3 

SEMPER idem, for aiisque iHem-nlV v 5 

SEMPRONIUS; commend me to. . TimonofAth. ii! 2 

Lucius, LucuUus, Sempronius; all .. ~ iii. 4 

Publius and Sempronius, you . TilusAndronicus iv! 3 

SENATE— nobles of tlie senate . . Timon of.-lthens, i! 2 

health, and compassion to the senate! iii. 6 

usury, that makes the senate ugly .. iii. 5 

that the usuring senate pours iii! 5 

Eluck the grave wrinkled senate from iv! 1 
y two of their most reverend senate v. 2 

is not unknown to the senate Coriolanus, i. 1 

you cry against the noble senate, who — 1. 1 

is the senate possessed of this? ii. i 

the senate has letters from the general ii! i 

the senate, Coriolanus, are well pleased — ii! 2 

yon anon do meet the senate _ ii. 3 

nourish 'gainst our senate (»-ep.) .... iii. 1 

digest the senate's courtesy? jii! 1 

break ope the locks 0' the senate .... iii! 1 

you are sent for to the senate iv! 6 

together witli the seal o' the senate.. v. b 

to call rae to your senate, I'll y.' 5 

that is enough to satisfy the senate./u(msCn?sar, if. 2 

the senate have concluded to give .. ii. 2 

break up the senate till another time — ii! 2 
that Ccesar and his senate, must redress? — iii. 1 

the senate hath stirred up the Cymbeline, iv. 2 

Roman gentlemen by the senate sent — iv. 3 

he by the senate is accited TilusAndronicus, i. 1 

in the Capitol and senate's right .... — i. 1 

but libelling against the senate — iv. 4 

the senate liath sent about three Othciio, i. 2 

[^n(.] do my duties to the senate — iii. 2 

whom our full senate call all in all — iv 1 

SENATE-HOUSE? Tliere Coriolanus, M. 3 

myself again, repair to the senate-liouse — ii. 3 

are going all to the senate-house iv. 6 

Mark Antony to tlie senate-houseytiKus Ciesar, ii. 2 

1 come to fetch you to the senate-house — ii. 2 
run to the senate-house; stay not to — ii. 4 
tlie senate-house of planets all did sit ..Pericles, i 1 

SENATORS of the antique .... Henry V. v. (clinnis) 
senators of Athens (rep. iii. 6 & v. 2).Tim.qfAlh. i. I 
go you, sir, to the senators, (of whom — ii. 2 
cripple our senators, that their limbs — iv. I ' 

the senator shall bear contempt — iv. 3 j 

with senators of the bench — iv. 3 I 

tlie senators, with one consent of love v. 2 I 

beweep these comforts, worthy senators — v. 2 I 

as you malign our senators Coriolanus, i. 1 j 

the senators of Kome are this good belly i. 1 

I heard a senator speak it 1.3 

where senators shall mingle tears with i. 9 ' 

you grave, but reckless senators iii. 1 

you are plebeians, if they be senators iii. 1 I 

your son, these senators, the nobles — iii. 2 

those senators that always favoured him — iii. 3 
the senators, p.Ttricians (rep. iv. 7 & v. 4) _ iv. 3 j 
take our friendly senators by the hands — iv. 5 ' 

asked him by any of the senators — iv. i) 

in conference by some senators lulinsCiPsar, i. 2 

the senators to-morrow mean to establish — i. 3 

bear my greeting to the senators ii. 2 

of senators, of piffitors, common suitors ii. 4 ' 

people, and senators! be not afiriglited — iii. 1 
put to death a hundred senators .... — iv. 3 



SENATORS-seventy senators ....JuliusCa!sar,\v 3 

to you all three, the senators Antony fyCleo ii 6 

.you are-a senator. This thou shalt ....Othello i ■ 
the tyrant custom, most grave senators _ 
the duke and senn tors <,f ~~ 

SEND 



.you are-a senator. This thou shalt .. 

the tyrant custom, most grave senators _ i 3 

.V^?,!.'"'''' '^"'' senators of Venice greet you — iv' 1 

t.ND— and sends me forth Tempest ii' I 

I must go send some better.. T»coGen. of Verona i' I 
whither were I best to send him?.... _ 'i'3 
1 11 send him hither to vou _ a' a 



iii. 1 
iv. 2 
iv. 4 



iv. 2 
iv. 4 
iv. 4 



ither to you 

send her another; never _ 

that send them flying ...'..', _, 

send to me in the morning (rep.) '.'.,', _ 

he sends you for a picture? '" _ 

he sends your ladyship this ring ' _ 
more shame for him that he sends it'me — 
heaven send Anne Page no worse.. il/errv'*'/". 

sir Hugh send-ayou? _ 

to send your little page O'cp'-) ■■'.'. '.'.'.'. — 

send him by your two men _ 

shall we send that foolish carrion — 

now, heaven send thee pood fortune! — 
what honest clothes you send forth. _ 

and did he send you both these — 

howl to send him word they'll _ 

send to Falstnff straight (rep.) .. '.. _ jy 4 

send me a cool rut-time .love ..!! _ y" 5 

God send you, sir, a speedy TwelflhNighL i! b 

Jet him send no more _ j 5 

hadst need send for more money (rep.) — ii'3 
of hair, send thee a beard I ....'.... . _ jji' 1 
I did send, after the last enchantment — iii! 1 

she sends him on purpose _ iii 4 

send ministers to me _ jy" •> 

send one presently to sir Toby _ y' 1 

I would send for certain of my ..Meas. forMeas. i! 3 
send after the duke, and appeal .... _ is 

I II send him certain word of _ ;" 5 

and send the head to Angelo _ iv' 3 

but send me Flavins first _ jy' 5 

he sends a warrant for my poor _ v' 1 

I will send for him, and question ....Much Ado, i! 2 
God sends a curst cow short horns (rep.) _ ii 1 

It he send me no husband _ ji 1 

that .you can devise to send me on ".'." — ii' 1 

let us send her to call him in _ jj' 3 

and send her home again without . . — iii' 3 
but God send every one their heart's _ ill' 4 
and when I send for you, come hither — y' 4 
the km" your father sends (rep.).. Lore's L.iosif, ii. 1 

ana send yon many lovers! _ ii 1 

marry, sir, you must send the ass.... _ iii' 1 

by whom shall I send this? _ iy' 3 

this will I send; and something else — iv' 3 

did he not send you twain? _ y 2 

true a gentleman you send relief. Mer. of Venice, iii'. 4 
I am not well; send the deed after .. — ivl 
1 was enforced to send it after him . . _ y' 1 
send to his brother; fetch that. . . . AsyouLike il, ii! 2 

Why, God will send more iii 2 

he sends this bloody napkin _ iy' 3 

he would send me word, he cut it to — v' 4 

Godsend him well! the court's AWsWell i 1 

lair maid, send forth thine eye _ ii 3 

or I would send them to the Turks.. — ii'3 

111 send her to my house (rep.) _ ii' 3 

(jod send her quickly! (rep.) _ ,;' 4 

thither they send one another _ iii' 5 

send forth your amorous token _ y' 3 

will lose a husband,) send foryour ring — y' 3 
or shall 1 send my daughter Kate. Taming ofSh. ii" I 

Godsend you ioy.Petruchio! _ ii | 

send for .your dauehter by your — iy' 4 

Godsend 'em good shipping! _ y 1 

let s each one send unto his wife _ y' 2 

at first when he doth send for her _ y' 2 

sir, my mistress sends you word _ y' 2 

your wife send you not a worse — y" 2 

will, sir, that you send for me? — y' 2 

if t please the queen to send .... Winter's Tale, ii. 2 
Jove send her a belter guiding spirit! — ii 3 

at friend, can send his brother _ yi 

send some other messenger .. Comedy of Error' '•■ ' 
either send the chain, or send me... — 
a purse of ducats; let her send it .... — 

will you send him, mistress _ 

nor send him forth, tliat we _ , . 

unless you send some present help .. — y' I 

must send those that we bury Macbeth iii' 4 

send to him, sir? I hear it (rep.) _'iii'4 

ICol.Knt;] I'll send my prayers with himi — iii! 6 
1 11 put it on; send out more horses .. _ v 3 
Seyton, send out: doctor, the thanes .. — v' 3 

I'll send his soul to hell KingJohn i 1 

we from tlie west will send destruction — '" ' ~ 

1 11 send those powers o'er to _ 

our land, send fair-plav orders _ 

and send him word by 'me _ yS 

and send them after to supply Richard II. i 4 

hid her send me presently ■•: •> 

tell her, I send to her my kind 

trumpet send the breath of parle 

and sends allegiance, and true faith 

and send defiance to the traitor 

didst send two of thy men to 

and send him many years of 

and send the hearers weeping to their 
banish us uoth, and send the king .. _ y 1 
sends me word, I shall have none ..\ Henry I V i 1 
and counsel, we shall send for you .. — ' i' 3 

sendme.vourprisoners with the _ j" 3 

Come and roar for them, I will not send — i'3 

send dan.ger from the east _ is 

I shall send you written, be assured — i' 3 
and send him back again to my mother — ii! 4 

laith, I II send him packing. Now,sirs ii 4 

send him to answer thee _ ii' 4 

a shorter time shall send me .'.' _ iii' 1 

did we not send grace, pardon _ y' 5 

and send you back again to your 2HennIV i 2 

and he sends mc security _" " j' 2 



iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 2 



iii. 3 



— iii. 1 



iii. 3 
iv. I 
iv. I 



SEN 



SEND— heaven send the prince a ....iHenrylf. ]. 2 

your affairs, and semi us peaeel .... — in- 2 

and send discovers forth, to linow.... — iv. 1 

send Colevile, witli liis confederates. . — iv. 3 

roughly send to prison the immediate — v. 2 

send for liim, good nncle Heinjf. i. 2 

wliom she did send to France — ;• 2 

he therefore sends you, ineeter for .. — .'■2 

he sends you this must raemorahle .. — .ii. 4 

as send precepts to the Leviatlian .. — iij- 3 

that we send to know wliat — '_"■■> 

e\\x\l we go send them dinners — iv. 2 

from Eltham I intend to send ]HenryV!.]. 1 

shall send betweeu the red — .n- 4 

send some succour to tl>c — iv. 3 

1 cannot send tliem now; this — iv. 4 

I did send lor thee, to tutor — iv. 5 

what tidin^;s send our scouts? — v. J 

with love. 1 send t)ie king — v. 3 

to send such peevish tokens — v. 3 

and semi for his master with a •2lle)ir!/l I. i. 3 

then send for one presently — .!;• | 

send succours, lords, and stop the rage — in- 
to send me packing witli a host — }]] 1 

and send thv soul to hell, pernicious — ni- 2 

the commons send you word — in. 2 

could send such message to their — in. 2 

I'll send some holy bishop to — iv. 1 

I will send vou Matthew Gough .... — iv. ■! 

tell him, I'll send duke Edmund — iv. 9 

and sends the poor well-pleased from — iv. 10 

I'll send them all as willing — ,.,X- J 

send tlice Warwick, sucli a messengcr.3/Je;iJj// 7. 1. 1 

of Norfolk sends you word by me — n. 1 

sends me a paper to persuade — in- 3 

aiuUhe ladv Bona, send to him — iv. 3 

we'll send him lieiice to Britany — iv. 6 

till God please to send the rest ~,,,,".-i 

'tis not tlie king that sends you to . . RichariUII. i. I 

that made him send lord Hastings .. — i. I 

1 will siiortly send thy soul — ;. 1 

that holp to send liim tliitlier — i- 2 

makes hira to send; tliat thereby — i- 3 

he sends vou not to murder mc — 1-4 

and I will send you to my hrotlier .. — i. 4 

'tis he that sends U3 to destroy — .1.4 

mav send forth plenteous tears — n. 2 

send straiijht for hira, let him — .n. 2 

persuade tlie queen to send tlie duke — lu. 1 

sends you word C'of.A'jif.-certiftes your] — 111.2 

tlieiefoie he sends to know yom- — mi 

lie sends you this good news — in- 2 

I'll send some packing, that yet .... — iii. 2 

I do beseech vou, send for some of them — 111. 4 

buy souls, and send tliem thither — iv. 4 

send to lier, by tl\e man that slew lier — iv. 4 

send her a letter of thy noble deeds . . — iv. 4 

send out a pursuivant at arms — ^^T-? 

where tliis is questioned, send onr . . Ile/inj Fill. 1. 2 

and by me sends yon his princely — iv. 2 

goodness, send prosperous life, long . . — v. 4 

Blow loud, send tliy brass voice . . rrmlus f,- Cress. 1. 3 

that the gallant Hector sends — ..!■ 3 

to send their smiles before them .... — in. 3 

I'll send the fool to Ajax — m. 3 

might send that Greekish — v. 4 

I will send liis ransom Timon of Alliens, u \ 

bid 'em send 0' tlie instant — .1;. 2 

and does he send tome! Three? — J;.'- 3 

sends now for money (rep.) — ni- 4 

where wouldst tliou send it? — iv. 3 

I thank them; and would 5end tliem — v. 2 

and send forth us, to make their — v. 2 

so thou wilt s§nd thy gentle heart .. — v. o 

I send it through the rivers ot Cortolatms, 1. 1 

if I do send, dispatch those centuries — 1. 7 

send us to Koine the best — .!• 9 

and to send for Titus Lartins — .11.2 

we sliall not send o'er tlie vast — iv. 1 

their latest refuge was to send lum . . — v. 3 
incenses thera to send destruction . . JutiusCwsar, i. 3 

bid Antonius send word to you — i. 3 

send such dreadful lieralds to — _i. 3 

send him but hither, I'll fashion him — 11. 1 

send Mark Antony to the seuate-liouse — n. 2 

shall Caesar send a lie? — !!• "^ 

if you shall send them word — .n. 2 

did send to you for certain suras (rep.) — iv. 3 

wliy didst thou send me forth — v. 3 

and to Thassos send his body — v. 3 

I did not send you; if yon find ..Arilonij ^-Cleo.i. S 

to great Bay pt sends this treasure .. — 1.5 

send so thick? "Who's born (jep.) .. — .1. ■') 

to send measures of wheat to Rome _ — 11.6 

to the young man send humble treaties — 111. 9 

wlien hither he sends so poor a pinion — 111. 10 

the boy Coesar send this grizzled liead — ni. 1 1 

and send to darkness all that — 111. U 

go, Eros, send his treasure after — _iv. 5 

and send him wonl you are dead .... — iv. 1 1 

did she send thee? Now, my lord .. — iv. 12 

Cxsar sends greeting to tlie queen . . — v. 2 

and I send him the greatness he has — v. 2 

with vour children will he send before — v. 2 

I'll drink the words you send Cymbelme.ui 

service, doctor, until I send for thee — i. 6 

I will make bold to send them to you — 1. 7 

send your trunk to me: it shall safe — i. 7 

send tlie arrearages, or look upon — — ii. 4 

may be, she plucked it off, to send it me — 11. 4 

and send him some bloody sign of it — in. 4 

thou, king, send out for torturers — v..') 

send thee by me, their tribune.. 7'i(us/4n'/ioiiicHs. 1. 2 

Bends thee this word, that if — jji- 1 

your hand, and send it to the king (rep.) — in. 1 

I'll send the emperor my liaiid — 111. 1 

presents, tliat I intend to send tliein — iv. 1 

and sends the weapons wrapped about — iv. 2 

basely insinn.ate, and send us gifts .. — iv. 2 

the empress sends it thee — iv. 2 



[ 667 ] 

SEND the midwife presently.. TOus/Ihc/ioh/cih-, iv. 1 

hilt I'liito sends you word — iv. 3 

to !^end down justice for to wreak — iv. 3 

I'll make him send for Lucius (rep.) — v. 2 

sends word of all that haps Pet ides, ii. (Gower) 

for every graft' would send a caterpillar — v. 1 

I will send far and near, that all I.car, ii. 1 

and not send back my messenger — ii. 4 

send down, and take iny part! — ii. 4 

send quickly down to tame — ;v. 2 

a century send forth — iv. 4 

to send the old and miserable king — v. 3 

qiiickl3'send, be brief in it — v. 3 

and on Cordelia; nay, send in time — v. 3 

send th.v token of reprieve — y. 3 

send me word to-w.mraw (rep.). .Romeo Sf Juliet, \\. 2 
shall I send to thee? At the hour of nine — ii. 2 

nine, wlicn I did send the nurse — ii. 5 

send thy man away — ii. 5 

and says, God send me no need of thee! — iii. I 
with the other sends it back to Tybalt — iii. 1 
not keep him long, hut send him b,ack — iii- 5 

I'll send to one in Mantua — iii. 5 

unless that husband send it me — iii. S 

I'll send a friar with speed — iv. 1 

sendfor the county: go tell him — iv. 2 

I could not send it, here it is again . . — v. 2 
till I conveniently could send to Romeo — v. 3 

sends out arrests on Fortinbras Hamlet, ii. 2 

that she sends you to prison hither? — ii. 2 

if she find him not, to England send him — iii. 1 

in heaven; send thither to see — iv. 3 

must send tliee lienee with fiery — iv. 3 

it sends some precious instance of — iv. 5 

he sends to know if your pleasure — y. 2 

I do beseech .you send for tlie lady to — Ot/iello,]. 3 

lago, to send iu to your wife — iii. 1 

I'll send her to you presently — iii. 1 

get you away : I'll send for you anon — iv. I 

nor send you out theway? — iv. 2 

heaven me such usage send, not to pick . . — iv. 3 

send for the man, and ask hira — v. 2 

SENDER-to the great sender All's Well, v. 3 

we hope to make the sender blnsh at it.HennjF.i. 2 
not misbecome the might.y sender — — ii. 4 
a.ceordin" to tlie honour of his sender. Cymhellne, ii. 3 

SENDETH forth to skirmish 1 Hennj I'l. i. 2 

SENDING me a letter? All's Well, iii. 4 

I shall lessen God's sending that \iay. MuchAdo, ii. 1 
lately sending into France, did claim. . Henry i'. i. 2 

to fawn on him by sending 1 Henry V I. iy. 4 

France is sending over {rep.'iv. \^ ..ZHenryVI. iii. 3 
he's ever sending: how shall I . . Timon ofAth. iii. 2 

I was sending to use lord Timon — iii. 2 

for sending me about, to catch ..RomeoSfJuliet, ii. 5 

did provoke our hasty sending Hamlet, ii. 2 

this sudden sending him away must — — iv. 3 
SE NEC A cannot be too heavy, nor PI autus — li. 2 
SENIOR— my tough senior (rep.) ..Love'sL. Lost, i. 2 
we will draw cuts for the senior. . Comedy of Err. v. 1 
SENrOR-JUNIOR,giant-dwarf ..Love'sL. Lost, iii. 1 
SENIORY— the benefit of seniory ..Richard III. iv. 4 

SENIS— celsa senis (rep.) Taming of Shrew, in. I 

S ENNA— what rhubarb, senna, or what . . Macbith, v. 3 
SE'NNIGIIT-be but a se'nnight ...As you Like it, iii. 2 
anticipates our thoughts, a se'nniglit'3..f«AW(o, ii. 1 
SENOYS— the Florentines and Senoys...-IH's»'e//, i. 2 
SENSE— hath such senses as we have .. Tempest, i. 2 

against the stomach of my sense — ii. 1 

tlieir senses I'll restore — v. 1 

work mine end upon their senses — v. 1 

so their rising senses liegin to chase — v. 1 

been justled from your senses — v. 1 

there sense in liis idolatry Tiro Gen. of I'er. iv. 4 

it is his five senses Merry IVwes, 1. 1 

believe it Page; he speaks sense — li 1 

call all your .-enses to you — 111. 3 

denial I would find no sense TirelflhKiyhl, 1. 5 

let fancy still my sense in Lethe steep — iv. 1 

disputes well witii my sense — iv. 3 

vet have I the benefit of my senses — v. 1 (letter) 
and motions of the sense . . Measure for Measure, i. !> 

under wliose heavy sense your — _i. 5 

BO that, in the beastliest sense — 11. I 

and 'tis such sense, that my sense breeds — li. 2 
more betniy our sense tlian woman's — ji. 2 

your sense pursues not mine — .?'.• 4 

the sense of death is most in — iii. 1 

withdangerousscnse, might, in — iv. 4 

she speaks tliis in tlie infirmity of sense — v. I 
madness hath the oddest frame of sense — v. 1 
as there is sense in truth, and truth in — v. 1 
against all sense you do importune .. — v. 1 
out of his right sense, so forcible is . . MnrhAclo, v. 2 
O, take the sense, sweet, of my . Mid. N.'s Dream, ii. 3 

their sense, thus weak, lost with — in. 2 

doth impair the seeing sense — 111.2 

of all these five the sense ^ — iv. 1 

from common sense? (rep.) Love s L. Lost, 1. 1 

all senses to that sense did make their — 11. 1 
all his senses were locked in his eye.. — ii. 1 
make passionate my sense of liearing — 111. 1 
above the sense of sense; so sensible.. — v. 2 
bestow on me the sense of hearing .. — y. 2 
dimensions, senses, affections... l/t'ic/i. a/Venice, in. 1 

you should in all sense be much — y. J 

that weigh their pains in sense All'syVeU,\. 1 

whose apprehensive senses all hut .. — 1. '- 
tliey touched not any stranger sense — 1. 3 

now to all sense 'tis gross, you love.. — _i. 3 

when hell) past sense we deem — 11. [ 

in common sense, sense saves another — ii- ' 

whose banished sense thou hast — .!!■ ^ 

no skill in sense to make distinction — m. 4 

lacked the sense to know her — y- 3 

I think, 'twas in anotlier sense . . Taming of Sh. 1. 1 
and j-et you miss my sense; I mean .. — v. 2 
and in no sense is meet, or amiable . . ."" , ^' , 

that your senses, unintelligent H'inirr sTtile.i. I 

Binell tliis business with a sense as cold — 11. 1 



SEN 



SENSE— surprised my sense Winter'iTatc, 'ni. 

if not, my senses, l)etter pleased .... — iv. 

all their other senses stuck in ears .. — iv. 

work for the other senses — iv. 

no settled senses of the world — y. 

wit'i intellectual sense and souls. Comedy q/Bjr.ii. 

cstahlisli him in his true sense again — iv. 

itself unto our gentle senses Macbeth, i. 

made the fools o' the other senses — ii. 

ay, but their sense is shut — v. 

his pestered senses to recoil — v. 

m.v senses would liave cooled to hear. . — v. 

pail ter with us in a double sense — v. 

annoyance in that precious BCiise! ..King John, iv. 

sweets comfort his ravenous sense. .Richard II. iii. 

steep my senses in forgetfulness? ..iHenrylf. iii. 

in common sense, crowd us — iv. 

as having sense, and thus upbraided it — iv. 

let senses rule; the word is Henry V. ii. 

all his senses have but human — iv. 

whose sense no ir.ore can feel hut .... — iv. 

from tliem now the sense of reckoning — iv. 

and makes the senses rough \HenryVI.v. 

he'll wrest the sense, and nold us ..IHcnry I'l. iii. 

ay, hut, I fear me, in another sense. . — iii. 

spirit of sense hard as the palm.. 7Vo<7«s<S- Cress, i. 

to set his sense on tlie attentive — i. 

this sliape of sense assumes — i. 

dost thou think I have no sense — ii. 

to suck in the sense of fear — ii. 

so sweet that it enchants my sense .. — iii- 

that most pure spirit of sense — iii. 

give as soft attachment to thy senses — iv. 

in a sense as strong as that — iv. 

a woman of quick sense — iv. 

five best senses acknowledge thee.. Timoiiof.Uh.i. 

I see no sense for't, hut his occasions — iii. 

hath sense withal of its own fall .... — y. 

'gau pierce his ready sense Cori>ilanns,n. 

awa'ne your senses, that you may. JuliusCiPsar, iii. 

tile sense of the adjacent wharfs. /(;i(o)i!/ 4- C(eo. ii. 

our sense in soft and delicate Lethe.. — ii. 

you take me in ton dolorous a sense — iy. 

whi le sense can keep it on I Cymbeline, i. 

stupify and dull the sense awhile — j. 

and man's o'er-laboured sense repairs — ii. 

and be her sense but as a monument — ii. 

to the smothering of tlie sense — iii. 

ere wildness vanquish my staider senses — iii. 

not found it murderous to the senses? — iv 

speaking such as sense cannot untie — v. 

is so from sense in hardness — y- 

and your sense the strings Pericles,}. 

it smells most sweetly in my sense — — iii. 

and make my senses credit thy relation — v. 

will to my sense bend no licentious etir — v. 

the most precious square of sense Lear, 

pierce every sense about thee! — 

doth from my senses take all feeling — — iii. 

might yet have balmed thy broken senses — iii. 

in the restoring his bereaved sense? — iv. 

why then, your other senses grow — iv. 

the safiir sense will ne'er accommodate .. — iv. 

how stiff is my vile .sense, that I — iv. 

the untuned and jarring senses, O wind up — iy. 

wliat sense thou wilt (rep.) Romeo ^ Juliet, i. 

slays all senses with the heart — ii. 

your worship, in that sense, may call — iii. 

the most vulgar thing to sense Hamlet, '1. 

be proof and bulwark against sense — iii. 

sense, sure, you have, else, could yon not 

but, sure, that sense is apoplexed 

nor sense to ecstacy was ne'er so thralled 

a sickly part of one true sense could not 

who all sense doth eat of habit's devil .. 

in despite of sense, and secrecy 

power thereof may give thee sense 

that carry but half sense 

burn out the sense and virtue of mine eye! — iv. 

little employment hath the daintier sense — y. 

from the sense of all civility Othello, i. 

I'll refer me to all tilings of sense — i. 

I do approve in fearful sense — i. 

deficient, blind, or lame of sense 

in the bitter letter, after your own sense 

as liaving sense of beauty, do omit their 

have .you forgot all sense of place 

[Kji(.j there is more sense in that than in 

what sense had I of her stolen hours of.. 

have you a soul, or sense? God be wi' you — 

even to that sense of pain — 

so sweet, tliat tlie sense aches at thee .... — 

mine ears, or any sense, delighted them 

their wives have sense like tncni 

this young quat almost to the sense 

such noble sense of thy friend's wrong!. 

for, in my sense, 'ti s happiness to die .... — v. 
SENSELESS tlicy are lying. 7'«oGen.o/rero7ia, iii. 

thou senseless form! — iy. 

and exceeding good senseless .. Twelfth \i:;hi, in. 
to be the most senseless and fit man..Ui/c/i .Ido, iii. 
made senseless things begin to do... ^lid.X.'sDr. ni. 
not to seem senseless of the bob . . As you Lit.'- it,n. 
to esteem a senseless help, wlien help./J"'.< 'I'ell, ii. 
senseless villain! good Ilortcnsio. 7V.j/iiiif,' ofSh. 1 
it was senseless; 'twas notliing ..IVinlcr sT„l,.i\. 
whoreson, senseless villain ! oep.lComedyofr.rr. iy. 
mock not my senseless conjuration. /iic/iuxi //. iii. 

for wliy, tlie senseless brands will — v. 

against the senseless winds shalt ..•Zllenn/I'l. iy. 
so senseless of expense, that he. Timon of Athens, ii. 

outdares his senseless swonl CoriV);<i7iKj, i. 

you worse than senselesa things! ..JiUiusCirtar, i. 

1 am senseless of your wrath Cymbeline, i. 

senseless linen: happier therein than 1! — 1. 
therein you are senseless. Senseless? — ii. 
senseless bauble, art thou a feodary for — iii. 
or senseless speaking, or a speaking — v. 
tickle the senseless rushes with. . Romeo ^Juliet. 1. 
then senseless Ilium, seeming to feel ..Hamlci, ii. 



— i. 4 



— iii. 4 



— iii. 4 



— iv. 5 



— i. 3 

— ii. 1 



— iii. -3 



_ iv. 3 

— v. I 

— v. 1 



PKNSELESS. that sIiouM Rive us llamlel v 2 

SENSELESS-OBSTINATE- 

you are tou setiseless-obstiiittte Itirhniil III. iii. 1 

SENSIBLE and nimble lungs Trmp,-:/, ii. i 

'twasagood sensible fellow Mnrii II ii','s. ii. I 

sensible warm motion to become. ;Vra«, frr.W.vu. iii. 1 

the sensible Benedick (rep. v. I) ii/i/c/i .-Ida. i. 1 

being sensible, should cuise again .Mid.N.'il),-. v. 1 
only sensible in the duller parts.. toc<;'ji./,Ds(, iv. 2 

is more soft, and sensible, tnun are .. iv. 3 

so sensible sccmeth their coufcrenee — v. 2 

witli uffi'Cliun WDUilrous sensible. j'/tj-.o/'/'cnicp, ii. 8 

lie brinuetli sensible rt'grects — ii. 9 

there lure 'tisctilled.u sensible ta]e. Tamitii; o/'Sh. iv. 1 
.vou lire t^eiisihle, and yet you miss .. -1 v. 2 
thiiu art SLUsible in nothing. . Coinedijo/ lirrnrs, iv. 4 

luial visii.ii, sensible to feeling Ilacbeth, ii. 1 

not niaJ, but sensible of grief KingJoh,,, in. 4 

ii tliou wevt sensible of ciiurtesy iHciirijIi: v. i 

you took it like a sensible lord illemyll'. i. 2 

eanil>rio were sensible as your finger. Cocio/anus, i. 3 
sensible, out dares his senseless sword _ 1.4 
yet his hand, not sensible of fire ...lulhuCmar, i. 3 
without tile sensible and true avouch .. Ihiinlpl, i. 1 
now a sensible nian,l>v and by a fool ..Ulheltu, ii. 3 
SIONSlBLY-1 will tell you sensibly. Lr.ct'iL.L. iii. I 

sensibly fed of that self-blood 'i'ilusAndroii. iv. 2 

am most sensibly in grief for it Hamlet, iv. 5 

SENSUAL race the rem Hfens. for Hlms. ii. 4 

sensible as the brutish sting itse]f. /Is you Like il, ii. 7 
SI':N.SUAL1TY, the blood and baseness.. Of/ifHr,, i. 3 

that rage in savage sensuality Much.ido, iv. I 

SKNT— or sent to Naples 7e/ii/)/',</, (epil.) 

and sent. I think, from Proteus. r^-oGt/i.. i/Ter. i. 2 

your lordslii|.>e)it liim tliithcr _ i. 3 

of comnifn.Uiliiin si-nt from Valentine — i. 3 

shall l)e sent alter tliee _ 1.3 

1 was sent to call thee — ii. 3 

sent from his heart ii. 7 

a present that I sent her iii. I 

for they are sent by me — iii. 1 

I was sent to deliver him iv. 4 

the message I am sent on — iv. 4 

the rinu you sent to Silvia v. 4 

and hatli sent your worship Merry ll'ives, ii. 2 

my wife hath sent to him ii. 2 

let him besent for to-niurrow iii. 3 

he sent me word to stay within .... iii. 5 

m.y master Slender, sent to her iv. 6 

were you sent hitherto praise me?. 7'«t«/(/iA'/4'A^ i. 5 

why he sent her none — ii. 2 

I sent thee sixpence for thy ii, 3 

I have sent after him iii. 4 

I sent for thee upon a sad occasion .. — iii. 4 
that I am not sent for .you? (rep.).... — iv. 1 

we have sent to the deputy Meas.for Meas. iii. 2 

go; say I sent thee thither — iii. 2 

my lord hath sent you this note .... — iv. 2 
have Claudio's head sent me by five — iv. 2 (note) 

and sent according to command .... iv. 3 

hath yet the deputy sent my — iv. 3 

his head is off, and sent-to Angelo .. — iv. 3 

'tis he that sent me of the duke's .... iv. 3 

was sent to by my brother — v. 1 

let him be sent for v. I 

whom you sent me to seek MucltAdo,\\. \ 

against my will, I am sent to bid (rep.) — ii. 3 

these gloves the count sent me — iii. 4 

her fairy sent to bear him to my ..Mid.N.'sDr. iv. 1 

have you sent to Bottom's liouse? iv. 2 

I am sent with broom, before v. 2 

have sent to tlicc, to receive. Lokc's L.LosI, i. 1 (let.) 

and sent me from Don Arniatho — iv. 2 

the fool sent it, and tlie lady iv. 3 

who sent it? and what is it? _ v. 2 

but what was sent to you from fair .. v. 2 

these pearls, to me sent Longaville .. — v. 2 

sent twenty out to seek Merchant of Venice, ii. 6 

whom I have sent for to determine .. - iv. 1 

hath sent you here this ring _ iv. 2 

fortune sent in this fool (rep.) Asyoul.il<eil, i. 2 

till lieaven hath sent me fortune .... ii. 7 

lie sent me hither, stranger as I am.. — iv. 3 

he sent me word Vrfp.) v 4 

sent you a daughter-in-law 

.luno, sent him forlh from 

bnl I sent to her, by this same 

I have letters sent me, that set 

or sent it us upon her great 

that owes the ring, is sent for 

and sent you hither so unlike .. Ta 

lam sent before to make a fire 

the foolish knave I sentbefore? 

that would have sent me to the aaol _ 

frrmi those yon sent to tlie oracle . ^'inler'sTale, 

my master, hath sent for me — iv. I 

sent by the king your father to greet — iv. 3 
in such haste I sent to seek his .Comedy of Err. ii. 1 

since at first I sent him from — ii. 2 

your mistress sent to have me ii. 2 

since you sent me hence ii. 2 

she sent for you by Dromio — ii 9 

who sent whole armadas of carracks 

a ship .you sent me to 

I sent thee for a rope 

the gold you sent me for [rep. ) 

have' you that I sent you for? 

alas, I sent you money to redeem. . . , 

that I was sent for nothing 

get him bound, and sent him home.. 

and sent him my peasant home 

I sent you money, sir, to be v. I 

we are sent to give thee Macbelh, i. 3 

and sent fortli great largess to ii. I 

to gain our place, have sent to peace iii. 2 

sent he to Macduff? iij. g 

the king hath sent for you KingJolin, iv. 3 

what munition sent, to imderprop .. v. 2 

liudience; I am sent to speak v 2 

«oeay, Isent thee forth to Rtdtaid //.is 



iii. 2 (letter) 
iii. 4 (letter) 

— iii. 6 

— v. 3 

— V. 3 

— V. 3 
■,'or Sit. iii. 2 

— iv. I 

— iv. 1 
V. I 



iii. 2 



— iv. I 



— IV. 4 

— iv. 4 

— V. 1 



SENT— and hath sent post haste Iliclinrd II. i. 4 

young Harry Percy, sent from my .. — ii, 3 

and sent me o'er by Berkley _ ii 3 

why am I sent for to a king (rp/>.) .. _ iv. 1 

sent back like Hallowmas, or v. 1 

to Loudon sent the heads of (ic;;.) .. _ v. (i 

but I have sent for him to Mlenryll'.i. 1 

and hath sent for you to line _ ii. 3 

have I sent liim bootless home — iii. 1 

Lord Mortimer of Scotland hath sent — iii. 2 

the king hath sent to know _ iv. 3 

Gawsey hath for succour sent, and so — v. 4 

whom I sent on Tuesday last i Henry If. i. I 

and hath sent out a speedy power.... i. | 

I looked he should have sent me — i' 2 

Sir John, I sent for you before _ i. 2 

you woidd not come when I sent for you— i. 2 

I sent for you, wlieu there were i. 2 

if I be not sent away post _ ii. 4 

the letters that I sent you? iii. i 

powers that you already have sent foith — iii! 1 

we have sent forth already _ iv. I 

1 sent your grace the parcels _ iv! 2 

brought here, and foolishly sent henee — iv' 2 

tell him who hath sent me after him v! 2 

I shall be sent for in private (rep.) .. — v. 5 
the messengers sent from the dauphin .Henry F. i. 2 

bitter mock you sent his majesty.... ii. 4 

by his father sent about merchandise — iv. 1 

who hath sent tliee now? The Constable — iv. 3 

is this the king we sent to for _ iv. 5 

hundreds he sent to hell 1 Henry n. i. 1 

a vision sent to Iier from heaven — i; 2 

and sent our sons and husbands .... ii. 3 

we sent imto the Temple ii. 5 

tlie letters sent from our uncle — iv! 1 

whither where you sent? Whither .. — iv. 4 

"york should have sent him aid iv. 4 

he miglit have sent, and had the horse — iv. 4 

submissive message art thou sent? .. — iv. 7 
and shesent over of the king.. 2H(;)ir!/r/. i. 1 (art.) 

we 11 see thee sent awa.y i. 3 

sent his poor queen to France _ ii! 2 

pay in France, and never sent it? iii! ) 

that Somerset be sent as regent thither — iii. I 

sent from a sort of tinkers to the king iii. 2 

and I am sent to tell his majest.y .... iii! 2 

sent the ragged soldiers wounded home — iv. 1 

the king hatli sent him, sure — v. 1 

he was lately sent from your kind ..3Henryri. Ii. 1 

sent from your brother. Marquis .... iii. 3 

be sent for to return from iv. 6 

and say, I sent thee thither _ v. 6 

have they sent it for her ransom? — v. 7 

sentbefore my timeintothis Richardlll.i, 1 

and sent to warn them to his royal , . i. 3 

to be sent to the Tower j. 3 

who sent you hither? Wherefore ..!. — i' 4 

marry, we were sent for to the justices — ii. 3 

I have sent for these strawberries. . . . iii. 4 

the reason we have sent for you _ iii. 5 

yestcrniglit by Catesby was it sent me? — iii! 6 

I in all nastc was sent iv. 1 

in Dorsetshire, sent out a boat — iv! 4 

commissions sent down among .... Henry fill. i. 2 

hath sent to me, wishing me i. 2 

earl Surrey was sent thither _ ii! j 

he sent command to the lord ii! 1 

the horses your lordship sent for — ii. 2 (letter) 

the king hath sent me otherwhere .. _ ii. 2 

hath sent one general tongue ii! 2 

they have sent me such a man ii! 2 

hither sent on tlie debating ij! 4 

papersof state he sent me to peruse.. — iii! 2 

in the packet I sent the king iii! 2 

you sent me deputy for Ireland _ iii! 2 

item, you sent a large commission .. iii. 2 

then that you have sent innumerable — iii. 2 

agentleman,sent from the king .... iv. 2 

caused you write, yet sent away?.... iv! 2 

by her woman I sent your message .. v! 1 

to know wherefore I sent for you _ v. 1 

that was sent to me from the "council v. 2 

to the port of Athens sentTj-o//M.( ^Cress. (prolo"ne) 

a roisting challenge sent amongst .. °ii. 2 

[Co/.] we sent our messengers ii, 3 

let him be sent, great princes _ iii. 3 

I was sent for to the king iv. 1 

let one be sent to pray Achilles — v. 10 

has sent your honour two brace. Timon orA/hens, i. 2 

and I am sent expressly to your lordship— ii. 2 

hath sent to your lordship to _ iii. 1 

mistook him, and sent to me, I should — iii. 2 

sent— ha! what has he sent (rep.).... _ iii. 2 

only sent his present occasion -_ iii. v 

he had sent to me first, but for my .. iii. 3 

he hath sent nie an earnest iii. 6 

when he sent to borrow of me — iii. (i 

he sent to me, .sir,— here he comes iii! 6 

lordship this other day sent to me .. — iii. ti 

if yon had sent but two hours iii. s 

my misery have sent thee treasure .. — iv! 3 

cause of fear, we sent to thee — v. 6 

that the gods sent not corn Cormlanus, i. 1 

to a cruel war I sent him i. 3 

you are sent for to the Capitol _ ii! 1 

you are sent for to the senate _ iv. 6 

he .sent in writing after me — v. I 

for thy sake, and would liave sent it — v! 2 

with a cracked heart I have sent to.. — v! 3 

meet to be sent on errands Julius Crp<nr, iv! I 

have not sent his powerful . . Aniojiy 4- Cleovalru, i'. I 

Antony sent to her, invited lier — ii. 2 

our written purposes before us sent .. ii! c 

how you take the offers we have sent ii! 6 

we sent our schoolmaster iii. 9 

hath after thee sent all thy treasure — iv! 6 

m,y mistress sent me to thee — iv. 12 

she sent you word she was dead (rep.) _ iv. i' 

he hath sent for tliee _ v •' 



SENT too slow a messenger. . Antony Sr Clevjiu / n, v. 2 
there's Dolabulla sent from Cossar .. , — \.2 
letter tliat I have sent lier..C'!/»i6WiHe, iii. 2 (letter) 
1 have sent Clotcn'selotijole down .. — iv. 2 
emperor's letterB,Bent by aconsiil.... _ iv. 2 
Konian gentlemen, by tlie senate sent — iv. 3 

sent by the heavens for prince TiitisAndron. i. 2 

so many enemies shall not be sent .. iii. 1 

in scorn to thee sent back iii. | 

hath sent by me the goodliest iv. 2 

what hath he sent her? A devil — iv.2 

Kevenge, sent from below (rep.) _ v. 2 

ort thou sent to me, to be a torment.. — v. ^ 

I am sent to be revenged on him .... v. 2 

sent her enemies unto the grave — v. 3 

sent him away as cold as a snow-ball.. Penc/es, iv. G 

O, here is the lady that I sent for _ v. 1 

by some incensed god sent hither y. 1 

into the world before he was sent for Lear i. 1 

eiuijloyment I was sent to you _ 'ii. 2 

to whose hands have .vou sent the iii. 7 

where hast thou sent the king?..., _ iii! 7 

with him I sent the queen _ y. 3 

I am sent to find those persons ..Roiiuo iSfJulicL i! I 
hath sent a letter to his father's house — ii 4 
God had sent [C'o/.A'n/.-lcntJ us but this — iii. 5 

but sent to my account with all Hamlet, i. 5 

he sent out to eupjiress his nephew's .... — ii 2 

were you not sent for (rep.) ii 2 

the good king and queen liave sent for you — ii! 2 
whether you were sent for, or no? (rep.).. — ii 2 
wehavecloselysent for Hamlet hither .. _ iii! 1 
affliction of spirit hath sent me to you .. — iii 2 
I have sent to seek him, and to find the.. — iv 3 
the king have the letters I have sent — iv. 6 (letter) 

and sent into England (>-ep.) _ v. 1 

the gallies have sent a dozen sequent. . '.'.OHiello, i! 2 
tlie senate hath sent about three several — i z 
and your noble self, I am sure, is sent for — i" 2 

shall think to he sent after me _ i! 3 

I have sent to bid Cassio come speak — . iii 4 

meant to have sent this damned villain.. — y. 2 

SENTENCE— of his five sentences . . Merry Wives, i 1 

a sentence is but a cheveril glove. Twelfth Ninht, iii. 1 

that gives this sentence Measure for Measure, ii. 2 

under your sentence? yea ji. 4 

pronounce a sentence on your brother's ii! 4 

as cruel as the sentence that you .... _ ii 4 
immediate sentence then, and sequent — v. 1 
shall quips, and sentences, and these. . Much.ido ii. 3 
periods in the midst of sentences . . Mid. N.'s Dr v. 1 
sir, I will pronounce your sentence. Lni!c'sL.Lo.v/,i. 1 
good sentences, and well pronounced. J/eno/'/'eji i 2 
must needs give sentence 'gainst the _ iv. I 

I pray thee, pursue sentence iy! ) 

a sentence; come, prepare iv! 1 

pronounce that sentence then As you Like il i 3 

or at every sentence' end - iii. 2 (verses) 

and gave this sentence then .... All's Well, i. 3 (song) 

this IS a dreadful sentence iii 2 

passed sentence may not be Cnmedi/ nf Errors i 1 

a heavy sentence, my most sovereign. /ii"c/mi</ //' i 3 

wli.at is thy sentence then but _ i'3 

after our sentence, 'plaining comes .. i! 3 

and in the sentence my own life .... i'3 

that laid the sentence of dread _ iii'3 

can give sentence on his king? iy 1 

and sentence of his pride y'g 

cold consideranee, sentence me ......2HenryIV. v. 2 

to steal his sweet and honey'd sentences. Henry f i 1 
hear your sentence; you haveconspired — ii'2 

receive the sentence of the law iHennirr ii' 3 

write in the dust this sentence 3Hent1,ri' v' i 

the bitter sentence of poor Clarence'. /;/r/i„rr( //'/ i' 4 

of what we chance to sentence Cnriolanus iii 3 

black sentence and proscription ..JuliusC'r<,n' iv I 

you leaned unto his sentence Cvmbcline \ •> 

from my lips pluck a hard sentence.. — \"i 
sentence on this execrable wretch. Titus Andron v 3 
expound now, or receive your sentence., fe. ■/(■/«• i' i 
to come betwixt our sentence aud our .. lear'i'i 
sentence of your moved prince . . Romeo & Juliet' i I 

pronounce this sentence then _ 'jj' 3 

but let your sentence even fall upon ....Othello i i 
layasentence, winch asagrise, or step .. _ 'i 3 

he bears the sentence well (rep.) _ i'3 

these sentences, to sugar, or to gall !!!!" _ it 
SENTENCED; 'tis too late ... 1.. Meas. for. Meas. ii. 2 

and he that got It, sentenced _ ii 3 

if he chance to fail, he hath sentenced — iii' » 
than Angelo who hath sentenced him — iy' 2 
he's sentenced; no more hearing ..Coriolanus iii '3 
our throats are sentenced, and stay .. — ' v i 
SENTENTIOUS: pleasant without. £..,«'./.. torf y 1 
he IS ver.y swift and sententious ..Asx/nuUkeil'v'i 

the prettiest sententious of it Romeo &■ J uliel' i\' 4 

SENTINEL— aloof, stand sentinel. ..Vii/. A. 'siii' ii' 3 
alarnnied by his sentinel, the wolf ... . Maetielli. ii! | 
the fixed sentinels almostreceive.Hciiri//- iv (cho 1 

relieving of the sentinels lUenniri ii'i 

watch, clioose trusty sentinels Ricliani III v 3 

o,';?,';;!''^,""^ Grecian sentinels ..Trnilns& Cress 'iv 4 

i^pil?T'^f■?"'■ " "'^ emperor.... 7-,7„,,.4„jro». iM. 1 

SLl ARATE-cau separate yourself. TwirniNishi ii 3 

to separate the husband and. . comedy of Errors v 1 

a man can no more separate age •JHenryll' i" 2 

SEP A n' \ TPT?f^''f ''' • •.• -iV i • ^'"'""" * Cressida.'y'. 9 

bElAliAIEU fortune shall keep us ..Macheth ii 3 

separated with the racking c]ouds ..3 Henr„ri. ii' 1 

dPSVoT-i^r^'^^TP"™'*^** councils. . . . ///r/,„r,y 111. Hi 2 

SEPARATION, as may well hc.,l/,V.,V S Dream ii 3 
made separation of their society .. W inter's Tail i 1 
ot a separation lietween the king ..Henri/'rill 'ii' 1 
our seimrntion so abides ....Aniony ^cinvatra ii 
SEPTENTRION. O, tiger's heart....3//e,"?v//' ' 1 
SEPULCHRE-sepiilchre thine. Two Gen of Veriv 2 
by pangs of death and sepulchre. Tweliv, Ki^^hi '\\i\ 
that bred them, in the sepulchre. il/er.'oC/Vmce iii' 2 

this trail .sepulchre of our flesh riichard l). i;3 

as the sepulchre in stubborn Jewry .. _ ji. i 



— V. 2 

I ff Jul. V. 3 



.IhimM, i 



ISI'XiUIONt'K 



SF.PtlLCIIUKcil' Christ Mlmryiy. i. 1 

bit to miiki; tliv siimlchre Sllenryl'l. 1. 1 

u WLMitre. i>r 11,11 I'urtlily Bopiili'lirel .. — i. ■! 

sWLTt iM.v.Blmll iK'thyseiiiili'liiv.... " ' 

liki'iiLtl nit til kiiifilv scpulcliivs .... 
stony cntruiu'i- of lliis »L'i)uli'l\ieV../(oiiu' 

w liv tlie Vi'imli'lTri.', wliciciii \\ t' siiw . . . 

SIOl'ill.CU'KING nil ttilulticss I.rnr. ii. 4 

Sl-.<4l!EL-l -ucss till' secinul ..r,rnC;,n.,.frfr. ii. 1 
iiiHik tlR> sruiicl, iiiastci- Bniok . . Mnnj Hires, iii. 5 
is 111) cur.suiiuiicv in tlic stliliel ..'inudUhSluht, ii. 5 

wlicii you liiive Wen the sequel MuchAdo, iii. 2 

like tl'ie sequel. I.-Sisnior Costiu-d.tDw'st../.. iii. 1 
tlie se(iuel l)y tliat went before. (.'omfrfj/o/KjTorit, i. i 
iiiul tlien, in secniel, all, ttecoriliiij? to. . Henri/ f. v. 2 
nuiik how well the sequel bniigs. . Itichard 111. iii. 6 
■ "' ' " your iinimsition — iii. 7 

I at the heels of ..Uumlet, iii. 2 
Minenee of posterity ..Kin^John, ii. 1 
:e mill sueeessiony ../(iWrniiJ //. ii. I 

in tlu' SL'iii'ieiiee uf degree Timoii of Alliens, v. 2 

lip her arms in seiineiiee thus?..7'i(us Audruu. iv. 1 

SKUUENT— and Beqiient death ..Mcas.furMens. y. 1 

letter to a sequent of the stranger. Loi)c'.i L, y.n.v^:v. 2 

very sequent to your whipping AU's H'ell, ii. 2 

by testament to the sequent issue .... — v. 3 
ill my sequent protestation.. 7Voiii/s<5-Crc»sidn, iv. 4 

seourged by the sequent effects Lear, i. 2 

what to this was sequent thou know*8t.H«»j/tf/, v. 2 
have sent a dozen sequent messenj^ers ..Olhcllo, i. 2 
Sl^QUESTKH— a sequester from liberty .. — Iii. 4 
SKCiUESTEKED stag, that fium.. As you Llhc II, ii. 1 
why are vou sequestered from all. TUnsAndron. ii. 3 
SlOQUES'i'EKING from me M.-Troilm^ Cress, iii. 3 
SE(iUESTRATI()N from open haunts.. Hem;/ '-.i. I 

loathsome sequestration have I I Henry I'l. ii. 5 

shalt see an answerable sequestration ..(HhMo, i. 3 
SEKE— crooked, old, and mre.. Comedy of Errors, iv. 2 

whose lungs arc tickled o' the sere Uamlel, ii. 2 

S1:REN1SS1MA,-0 good my \oid..He7iryi'lll. iii. 1 

SKRGE-thou serge, nay thou iHenryri. iv, 7 

S;^l{GE.\NT— meet a sergeant Comedy of lirrors, iv. 2 
and theft, and a sergeiint in the way — iv. 2 

ay sir, the sergeant of the hand — iv. 3 

hindered by the sergeant, to tarry .. — iv. 3 

this is the sergeant, who, like Macbeth, \. 2 

sergeant, you shall: thus are poor ..XHenryVt. ij. 1 
vour ofBce, sergeant: execute n, ....Henry fill. i. I 
lis tliis fell sergeant, deatii, is strict in.. Hamlet, v. 2 

i'ilOlMOUS— serious tlum iny custom Tempest, ii. 1 

oil serious business, craving quick. Lowe's/.. Lost,n. 1 
importunate and most serious designs — v. 1 
a very serious business calls on h'ut\...4tl's}I^eU, ii. 4 
trivial price of serious things we have — v. 3 

grafted in my serious trust li'inter^sTate, i. 2 

capable of things serious, tliou must — iv. 3 

a common of my serious hours. Comedy of lirrors, ii. 2 
there's nothing serious in mortality . . .Muehelli, ii. 3 
a serious thing, and now changed ..HiiknnI II. v. 3 

to London on a serious matter '.Ult'uryF'l. v. 5 

a weighty and a serious brow . . Henry yill. Cprol.) 

he did it with a serious mind — iii.'.! 

not worth his serious considering.... — iii. 2 
intending other serious matters . . Timon ofAlh. ii. 2 
. what else more serious imgorteth. '!"''""/ liCleo. i. 2 
to use thee with a serious industry.. Cymte/iKC, iii. 5 
words with that which is so serious.. — iv. 2 
stand aloof for more serious wooing . . Pericles, iv. 6 
what serious contemplation are you inV ..Lear, i. 2 
faith, he is posted lience on serious matter — iy 5 

heavy ligntnessl serious \'ii\\\\.y\.liomeo fif Jtd. \. 1 
but lend thy serious hearing to what . . Hamlet, i. .'> 
your serious and great business scant . . Otiiello, i. 3 

SKRIOUSLY— Ceres whisper seriously. 7V»lpM^ iv. 1 
seriously I may convey my timunhta. AU's IP'ell, ii. ) 
that so seriously he does address .... — iii. 6 
dost thou speak seriously ....Timonof .ilheiii, iii. 2 
would Desuemona seriously incline Oihello, i. 3 

Slill.MUN— sermons in stones As ynuLike il,i\. 1 

making a sermon of continency..ramm4'o/.sVi. iv. 1 
come, sermon me no further . . Timon of Alliens, ii. 2 

SERPENT— a serpent by the tongue. . Much .-tdo, v. I 
to pluck this crawling serpent fmm.Mid.N.Dr. ii. 3 
methought, a serpent eat my heart .. — ii. 3 
tlian thine, thou serpent, never adder — iii. 2 
shake thee from me, like a serpent . . — iii. 2 
now to 'scape the serpent's tongue .. — (epil.) 
thusdid he strangle serpents . ...Lore's L. Lost, v. 2 
wouldst thou have a serpent sting. iUer.oO'enm'.iv. 1 

methought you saw a serpent AU's H'ell, i. 3 

flower, but be the serpent under it .... Macbeth, i. S 

there the grown serpent lies — iii. 4 

moy'si hold a serpent by the tongue. KingJohn, iii. 1 

he la a very serpent in my way — iii. 3 

■what serpent hath suggested tliee. . Itichard 11. iii. 4 

a serpent that will sting thee -- v. 3 

alfrights me, as a serpent's sting ..illenryVL iii. 2 
Were there a serpent seen, with forked — iii. 2 
such fell seriicnts as false Suffolk is — iii. 2 

frightful as the serpent's hiss — iii. '2 

the lurking serpent's mortal sting?..3Hftiri/>';. ii. 2 

1 will a serpent when he hieses.. 7'ioiVui ^ Crest, v. 1 
not Afric owns a serpent, I abhor . . Coriolanui, i. 8 

think him as a seriient's egg JuliusCresar, ii. 1 

life, and not a serpent's poison .. Antony ^ Cleo. i. 2 
wliere's my serpent of old Nile'/ .... — i. 5 
kindly creatures turn all to serpents! — ii. 5 
you have strange serpents there 



your serpent of Egypt is bred now .. — ii. 7 

'tis a strange serpent. 'Tis so — ii. 7 

if knife, drugs, serpents, have edge .. — iv. 13 
both like seriients are, who though ....Pericles, i. 1 
sliarper tlian a serpent's tooth it is.... .... Lear, \. 4 

in thine arrest, this gilded Beri)ent — v. 3 

serpent heart, hid with a flowering. /?o»ieo ^Jul. iii. 2 
or bid me lurk where serpents are .. — iv. 1 
in my orchard, a serpent stung me ....Hamlet, i. 5 
the serpent, that did sting thy father's .. — i. 
requite it with the serpent's curse I ....Othello, iv, 2 



SEHIMON'I'INK craft of thy ..'I'lniliisHf Crcssida, il. 8 
SIOIU'KN'r-lJKI';, upon the verv heart ..Lear, ii. 4 
SEKl'KiO, and the r\Kl\m..Meusure Ihr Measure, iii. 1 
the dry serpigo on the subject 1. . /VikYkk /j-Oos. ij. 3 
SERV.'VN'r— conn: away, servant come.. Tempest, i. 2 

wast tlien her servant — _i. 2 

my brother's servants were then — ii. I 

but I'll be your servant, whether — iii. I 

my industrious servant Ariel I — iv. 1 

sir Valentine and servant.. TwoGen. of I'ernna, ii. I 

I thank you gentle servant — ii. 1 

and so good-morrow, servant — ii. 1 

servant.— Mistress — ji. 4 

servant, you are sad — ii. 4 

who is that, servant? — ii. 4 

for so high a servant — ii.4 

too mean a servant to have a look .. — ii. 4 

entertain him for your servant — ii.4 

servant, you are welcome (re/i.) — ii.4 

all these are servants to deceitful.. .. — i'l. 7 
myself do want my servant's fortune — iii. I 
Proteus, gentle lady, and your servant — iv. 2 

your servant, and your friend — iv. 3 

when a man's servant shall — jv. 4 

would do this for their servant? — iv. 4 

cannot he true servant to my master — iv. 4 
respect not aught your servant doth — v. 4 

as ever servant shai I come in Merry IVives, i. 4 

and make them his servantsl — ii. 2 

I shall be glad tobe yourservant.. .. — ii. 2 

let me be your servant Twelfth Mghl. i. !) 

surly with servants (jpp. iii. 4) .. — ii. .■) (letter) 
tlie fellow of servants and not .. — ii. 5 (letter) 

Ceaario is your si'rvaiit's name — iii 1 

my servant sirl 'twas never merry;.. — iii. I 
you are servant to the count Orsiiio — iii. I 

your servant's servant is .your servant — iii. 1 
so did I abuse, myself, my servant .. — iii. 1 
and suits well for a servant with ..,. — ?!!• ^ 

let me see thee a servantstill — iii. 4 

a servant comes with me along. Meoj. /or Meas. iy. I 
lord, your servant shall do so. .Mid.IV.'s Dream, ii. 2 

iny servant straight was mute Love' sL. Lost, v. 2 

your servant and Costard — ..V* ^ 

master of iny servants Mer. of Venice, iii. 2 

these servants, and this same myself — iii. 2 
give order to my servants, that they — v. 1 

let me be your servant As you Like it, ii. 3 

in .your thoughts be servants to you'. ..All's IVell, i. I 
I h'is servant live, and will his vassal — j. 3 

hose of thy sleevcsV do other servants sol — ii. 3 
I am .your most obedient servant .... — .1!'^ 
a servant only, and a gentleman .... — iji. 2 
you never had a servant, to whose trust — iv. 4 
makes your servants droop. Tamiws'oy .sVi. 2 (indue.) 
how thy servants do attend on thee — 2 (indue.) 

servants, leave rae and lier — 2(indue.) 

most trusty servant, well approved .. — j. 1 

and port, and servants, as I should .. — j. 1 

was It fit for a servant to use his .... — i. 2 

trusty, jileasant servant Grumio .... — _ i. 2 

and I have many servants — iv. 4 

send for your daughter by your servant — iv. 4 

that ofl'cr to heat my servant — v. 1 

my sou and my servant spend all at — v. I 

must be counted a servant, grafted. 'fVn^t';'s7'a/e,i. 2 

if I liad servants true about me — j. 2 

account me not your servant — i- 2 

mvself your loyal servant — ii. 3 

I knew him once a servant of — iv. 2 

both dame and servant; welcomed all — iy. 3 
bid the servants spread for dinner. Co//ip'/?/o/£;r. ii.2 
for servants must their masters' minds .. — iv. I 
let your servants bring my husband — v. 1 

children, and servants; which do but. .Macbeth, i. 4 

your servants ever have theirs — i. f> 

our will became the servant to defect — ii. 1 

I keep a servant fee'd — iii. 4 

wife, children, servants, all that could — iv. 3 
on earth hath been thy servant still. . King John, v. 7 
household servants fled with him ..Itichunlll. ii. 2 

frontier of a servant brow \ Henry 1 1', i. 3 

boy by boy, servant by servant — iii. 3 

look to thy servants, cherish thy guests — iii. 3 

here comes my servant Travers 'iHeiiryW. i. 1 

could better command his servants.. — v. 1 

or if a servant under his master's Henry V, iv. 1 

the author of the servant's damnation — iv. 1 
of his son, nor the master of his servant — iv. 1 
me thy servant, and not sovereign ..MIenryVt.i. 2 
thy humble servant vows obedience — iii. I 

this is my servant; hear him — iv. 1 

calls you forth, servant in arms — iv. 2 

a virgin, and bis servant, say to him — v. 3 
hath witness of his servant's malice. 2HenryVI. i. 3 
the servant of this armourer, my lords — ii. 3 
if thy poor devoted servant may .. Itichard HL'i. 2 

sovereign, of my servant's life — ii. 1 

stretched unto their servants, daughters — iii. b 

being my sworn servant Henry fill. \. 2 

for succour to his servant Bannister — ii. 1 

both fell by our servants — ii. I 

are joined with me their servant .... — ii.2 
learned and well-beloved servant.... — ii.4 
peacemakers, friends, and servants .. — iii. 1 
brought the king to be your servant — iii. 2 

madam, the same, your servant — iv. 2 

I rest your servant — v. I 

were the servants to this chosen infant — y. 4 
proud to be his servant, Paris.. Trnitus ^ Crem. iii. 1 
unworthy to be called her servant .. — iv. 4 
go, go, my servant, take thou Troilus* — y. Ij 
to present slaves and servants.. Timon of Athena, i. I 
thou hast ascrvanc naineii Jjiicilius — j. 1 

one Varro's servant, my good lord ,. — ii. 2 
no usurer but has a fool to his servant — ,ii. 2 

bound servants, steal! — iv. I 

priests and servants from your sides — iv. 3 

an honest noor servant of yours — '.Y* •* 

rather be tlieir servant in my way . . Coriolnnni, ii. I 



SERVANT to the slate Coriolaniis, 

first he was a noble servant to them — iv. 7 

deliver myself your loyal HiTvant.. .. — v. 5 
up their servants to an a<:t of rage JutiusCtrsar, ii. 1 
from lience, thy poldier, servant.. /l/i(o;/i/(^ Cleo. i. 3 
call forth my household servants .. .. — iv. 2 
that mine own servant shnnld parcel — v. 2 
I your servant. Adieu, good queen — v. 2 

here is your servant: how now, air'/.. Cymheline, i. 2 
this hatli been your faithful servant — i. 2 

tliat hath more kings his servants ,. — iii. I 
thou art no servant of thy master's,. — iii. 4 
Pisanio, her old servant, I have not seen — ii!. 5 

will play the cook, and servant — iii. G 

hold me your loyal servant — • iv. 3 

good servant does not all commands — v. 1 

your servant, princes — v. .'» 

as I am son and servant to your will ..Pericles, i. 1 

and servant for a prince (rep.) — i. 2 

I'll not bereave you of vour servant — iv. 1 

make servants of their tetters Lear, i. 4 

give me my servant fortli — ii.4 

who stocked my servant? Regan — ii.4 

those that she calls servants, or from mine? — ii.4 
and set liigh?) servants, who seem no less — iii. 1 
this trusty servant shall pass between us — iv. 2 
slain by his servant, going to put out .... — iv. 2 

a servant that he bred, thrilled with — iv. 2 

and your affectionate servant, Ooneril — iv. 6(let.) 
your servant Kent: where is your servant — y. 3 
the servants of your adversary ..Itomeo ^Juliet, '\. I 
Slime, my lord, and your jioor servant . . Hamlet, i. 2 
go, your servants tend. Farewell, Ophelia — i. 3 
not sort you with the rest of my servants — ii.2 
servants of the duke, and my lieutenant. 0(/ieWo,i. 2 
he's never any thing but your true servant — iii. 3 

SERVANTIOD to nt hers Conolanus, v. 2 

SERVANT-MAID, than a great ..../dc/inr./ ///. i. 3 

SERVANT-M(JNSTER, drink (rep.).. Tempest, iii. 2 

SERVE— and serves in ofliees that profit. Tempest, i. 2 

a plague upon the tyrant that I serve!.. — ii.2 

but the mistress which I serve — iii. 1 

I'll not serve him, he is not valiant — iii. 2 

and I'll serve thee — iii. 2 

less than a pound shall sene rae. TieoGcn.of Ver. i. 1 

would serve to scale another — iii.! 

will serve the turn? (»-fp.) — iii. I 

the time now serves not to — iii. 1 

and serves for wages — iii. I 

will scarce serve tlie turn — iii. I 

that will serve the turn — iii. 2 

on my word, it will serve \\\m....Merryiyives, iv. 2 
one of you does not serve heaven well — iv. 6 
none but Heme the hunter serve your — v. 5 

Sir John Falstoif, serve Got — V. 5 

thy speech serves for authority ..TwelfthKight, i. 2 

I'll serve tills duke — i. 2 

if that this simple syllogism will serve — _i. 5 

I serve her, she is m3' lady — ii. 5 

to serve this noble count — v, 1 

one that serves a had woman .... Mens, for Meas. ii. 1 
in your ward sufficient to serve it.. .. — ii. 1 

shall we serve heaven with less — ii.2 

sir, I will serve him; for I do find .. — iv. 2 

let your reason serve to make — v.! 

look, what will serve, is fit Much.ido, i. 1 

will it serve for any model to build.. — _i. 3 
masters, do you serve God? (rrp.),. .. — iv. 2 
when time and place shall serve, that I — v. 1 

serve God, love me, and mend — v. 2 

and I serve the fairy queen .... Mid.K.'sDream, ii. I 
one turf shall serve as pillow for .... — ii, 3 
I have enongli to serve mine own turn — iii. I 
serve your turn, sir. This (rep.).. Love's L. Lost, i. 1 
it would neither serve for the writing — i. 2 
and second cause will not serve my turn — i. 2 

I am bound to serve — iv. 1 

a little scratched; 'twill serve — v. 1 

doth this man serve God? — v. 2 

I'll serve thee true and faithfully — v. 2 

conscience will serve me to run ..Mer.of Venice, ii.2 

if I serve not him, I will run — ii.2 

if I serve the Jew any longer — ii.2 

as one would say, to serve — ii.2 

I serve the Jew, and I have a — ii 2 

what wmild you? Serve you sir .... — ii.2 
the table, serve in the meat, and we — iii. 5 

let it serve for table-talk — iii. 5 

I am sorry, that your leisure serves.. — iv. I 

that 'sense serves many men to — iv I 

serve them but as enemies? As you Like it, it. 3 

an' you serve me such another trick — iv. 1 
to-morrow I cannot serve your turn — v. 2 

my instruction shall serve to All'sll'ell, i. 1 

it may well serve a nursery to — i. 2 

would God would serve the world so all — i. 3 
at your bidding, serve your majesty .. — ij. I 
of being captives before you serve .... — ii. 1 
an answer will serve all men (rep.) ,. — ij. 2 
may serve long, but not serve ever.... — ii.2 

why, there 't serves well again — ii.2 

whom I serve above, is my master.... — ii. 3 
he's gone to serve the duke of Florence — iii. 2 
we serve you, madain, in that and all — iii. 2 
a gcntleirion that serves the count .... — iii. 5 
of my garments would serve the turn — iv. 1 

hardly serve, though I swore 1 leaped — iv. I 
ay, BO you serve us, till we serve you.. — iv. 2 
can serve the world for no honest .... — iv. 3 
if I cannot serve you, I can serve as great — iv. 5 

talk'Bt of; serve him still — iv. 5 

hearts that scorned to serve humbly .. — v. 3 
to serve all hopes conceived .. Taming of Shrew, i. 1 
as you find your Btomach serves jou — i. 1 
while I pause, serve in your hnrniony — ii. I 
anil serve it thus to me, that love.... — iv, I 
coming down the hill, will serve .... — iv. 2 
when they are bound to fervc, love .. — v. 2 

until a time may serve IFinlerUTale, il. 3 

I'll serve you as I would do the gods — iii. 2 



SER 



[ (570 ] 



SERVE— to serve my turn irinier'sTali; iv. 3 

look, wlicn I serve liini so, lie . . Comedy of Err. ii. 1 
many fond tools serve nmdjealoUBy I — ii. I 

I'll serve you, sir, five Imndred — iy. 4 

cun entreut an lioiir to serve Macbeth, ii. 1 

none serve witli him but constrained — v. i 

will serve to strangle tlieo KingJolm, iv. 3 

must I not serve a long Uichurd II. i. 3 

wliieli serves it in tlie otHoe ofa wall — ii. 1 
liath i)owcr enough to serve our turn — iii. 2 
if he serve God, we'll serve liini to . . — iii. '.' 
wl\ich serves as paste and cover to .. — iii. 2 
tliink'st to serve nie last, that I .... — iii. <1 

not 60 niucli as will serve to be 1 Uenryiy. i. a 

iioj yet time servos wherein — i. 3 

how'long liast thou to serve, Francis? — ii. ■! 
tlie iiowers of iis may serve so great. . — iv. 1 
and made her serve your uses botli ..'ZHenrylV. ii. 1 

it sliall serve among wits of no — ii. a 

for, to serve bravely, is to come — ii. -1 

Shadow will serve well for summer — iii. 2 

no man's too good to serve hia iirince — iii. 2 

when time shall serve, to sliow — iv. I 

sudden sorrow, serves to say tlius — — iv. 2 

tliere is no excuse sliall serve — v. I 

this Davy serves you for good uses ., — v. 3 

but when time shall serve, there Henry I', ii. 1 

and do serve you witli hearts create — ii. 2 
thougli they would serve me, could not — iii. 2 
I warrant you, wlicn time is serve .. — iii. 6 

under wiui't captain serve youi' — iv. 1 

nioy sliall not serve; I will luuefoity — iv. 4 
I pray V"U to serve Uut, and keep you — iv. 8 
it will serve you to mend your shoes — iv. 8 

the crv of Talbot serves me for a 1 Uenry yi. ii. 1 

stomachs always serve them well .... — ii. 3 
break it when your pleasure serves .. — v. 4 

a while, till time do serve i Henry y I. i. 1 

but yet it shall not serve — ii. I 

it serves you well, my lord, to say — iii. 1 

must serve me to feed on — iv. 10 

father, our words will serve — v. i 

scarce serves to quench my iHenryyi. ii. I 

and learn awhile to serve — iii. 3 

and, as occasion serves, this noble queen — iii. 3 
I came to serve a king, and not a duke — iv. 7 

if fortune serve me, I'll requite — iv. 7 

to serve me welK rcn.) Itichard III. i. 3 

your grace's woi-d shal 1 serve — iii. 5 

shame serves thy life, and doth thy . . — iv. 4 
when tliey should serve their sovereign — iv. 4 
and Danger serves among them ....Henryyill. i. 2 
domestics to you, serve your will .... — ii. 4 
serve the king; and,— pr'ythee, lead me — iii. 2 

serves as stiifr for these Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 3 

I serve thee not. Well, go to (rep.) .. — ii. 1 

a fool, to serve such a fool — ii. 3 

nay, that shall not serve your turn .. — iii. 1 

that time serves still Timott of Alliens, i. 1 

I must serve my turn out of — ii. 1 

you three serve three usurers? — ii 2 

will not serve ()cp.) — iii. 4 

I'll ever serve his mind with my — iv. 2 

still serve him with my life — iv. 3 

to serve in meat to villains — iv. 3 

I must serve him so too — iv. 3 

true, when the day serves — v. 1 

but, since it serves ray purpose Coriolanus, i. 1 

will the time serve to tell? ..." — i. 6 

the rest will serve for a short — i. 7 

a little help will serve: for once .... — ii. 3 
]iow youngly he began to serve his .. — ii. 3 

I think, 'twill serve, if he can — iii. 2 

the day serves well for tlvcra now — iv. 3 

no, I serve not thy master — iv. G 

serve with thy trencher; hence! .... — iv. 5 

make my misery serve thy turn — iv. 5 

to destroy the Volsees whom yon serve — v. 3 
when it serves for the base matter. ../lifm* Cessar, i. 3 
yiiu serve Octavius Caisar, do you not? — ' iii. 1 
must take the current when it serves — iv. 3 
outlive the lady whom you serve. Jii/ony <5- Cleo. \. 2 

make the sea serve them — i. 4 

every time serves for the matter .... — ii. 2 
a fame, when him we serve's away .. — iii. 1 
the hearts of Romans serve j'oiir ends! — iii. 2 
if we should serve with liorse and mares — iii. 7 
offers, which serve not for ills vantage — iii. 7 

you'll serve another master — iv 2 

and our advantage serves for a fair .. — iv, 7 

wilt thou serve me (rep.) Cymbelinet iii. 5 

how fit his garments serve me I — iv. 1 

all good, serve truly, never find — iv. 2 

she is served as I would serve a rat .. — v. 5 

to serve our Roman captive? — v. .'j 

will serve our long interrogatories .. — v. 5 
to serve, and to deserve my mistress'. Ti^jisAnrf. ii. 1 
snatch or so would serve your turns — ii. I 

there serve your lust, shadowed from — ii. 1 

my hand will serve the turn — iii. 1 

let it serve to ransom my two — iii. 1 

by turn to serve our lust — iv. 2 

to serve for your oration — iv. 3 

day serves not light more faithful Pericles, i. 2 

serve the great pirate Valdes — iv. 2 

faith, she would serve after a long voyage — iv. 6 

where a man may serve seven years — iv. 6 

serve by indenture to the common — iv. C 

I do serve you in this busine.is Lear, i. 2 

if thou canst serve where thou dost — i. 4 

to serve him truly, that will put — i. 4 

who wouldst thou serve? you — i. 4 

follow me, thou Shalt serve me — i. 4 

I shall serve yon, sir, truly — ii. I 

I serve you, madam: your graces — ii. 1 

I serve the king; on whose employment — ii. 2 

which serves and seeks for gain — it. 4 

when time shall serve, let but — v. I 

I serve us good a man as you Romeo <§ Juliet, i. 1 

what dotliner beauty serve, but as a — i. 1 



n(l,aiid so a ......is you Like it, i. 2 

siti' be served — ii. 7 

ill be served.... .4«'.«(rei(,ii. 1 

(jd you ....ll'inler'sTale, ii. 3 

l.irl/.el — iv.2 



SERVE— wenehj serve God Ilomeo^Juliet,l\. 5 

but 'tis enougli, 'twill serve — iii. I 

all these woes shall seive for sweet .. — iii. 5 
my leisure serves me, pensive daughter — iv. 1 

flowers serve for a buried corse — iv.5 

whereto serves mercy but to confront. . Hamlet, iii. 3 
what form of prayer can serve my turn? — iii. 3 

to serve in such a difference — iii. 4 

our indiscretion sometimes serves us well — v. 2 

I follow him to serve mj; turn Othello, i. 1 

that will not serve God, if the devil bid .. — i. 1 
in hciiven, but what serve for the tliunder — v. 2 

SEliVKD— served without or grudge Tempest, i. 2 

remember the trick you served. J'ujoGch. ofyer.\\. 4 

which served me as tit — iv. 4 

if 1 be served such another U\c\i.. Merry Hives, iii. h 
tell our husbands how we have served — iv.2 

that I served that lady Twelfth Mghl, i. 2 

the prince would have served you . . . . ,M ueh Ado, ii. I 

a venture, sir^ that Jacob served ..Mer.o/yeiiice, i. 3 

the tabic sir. it shall be served in 

so he serv.il a sic 

iiorsluiU l.nt till 

by m.v pi'rr.uiiiiiiH 

have al\\:i\ s iriih 

1 have serVcd pri'i 

welcoinni iill; survcil all — iv. 3 

1 have si'rvccl him tViiui tin:\\ouv. Comedy of Err. \v. 4 
thy luisbaud served me in my wars.. — v. I 

whom tlioii still hast served Machelh,\. 7 

Jiaveyou served with the best 2IIcnryiy. iii. 2 

those precepts cannot be served — v. 1 

I have served your worship truly, sir — v. 1 

it hath served nie instead of a iHenry n. iv. 10 

where you well served, you would. . Iliclwrd III. i. 3 
his master would be served. /If /iii////;. ii. 2 (letter) 
luid I but served my Goil with («v<.) — iii. 2 

hast thou not served thyself Troilus^ Cress, ii. 3 

of mine, hath served me lung . . Timon of Alliens, i. 1 

ay, would they served usHi ('/;.) — ii. 2 

but since he hath served well for . . Coriolanus, iii. 3 
served his designments in mine own — y. 5 

ourself, shall be last served Julius Ceesar, iii. 1 

all that served Brutus, 1 will — v. 5 

hath served me with much faith. /ln(oni/i§Cteo. ii. 7 
of those that served Mark Antony .. — iv. 1 
you have served me well, and kings — iv. 2 

not as you served the cause — iv. 8 

served, who best was worthy to be served — v. 1 

whom he served with glory CymhcUne, i. 1 

though he have served a Roman .... — v. 5 
she is served as I would serve a rat . . — v. 6 
ay, so the turn was served.... Tilus Andrmilcus, ii. 1 
and they have served me to effectless use— iii. 1 
served the lust of my mistress's heart.... Lfa»-, iii. 4 

I have served you ever since 1 was — iii. 7 

supper served up, you called .... Hmneo /j- Juliet, i. 3 
and is it not well served in to a sweet — ii- 4 
I have seen myself, and served against, Hamlet, iv. 7 
lie is justly served; it is a poison .... — v. 2 
for I nave served him, and the man .... Olhclln, ii. 1 

SERVEST thou under? Ilrinyf. iv. 7 

give thy soul to him tliou servest \ Henry I'l. i. 5 

thou servest me, and I'll love thee Lear, i. 4 

SERVETII for aflag or truce IHeunjri. iii. I 

SERVICE— done thee worthy service .. Tempest, i. 2 

whom now I keep in service — _i. 2 

no use of service — ^ii. 1 

did my heart fly to your service .... — iii. 1 
your last service did worthily perform — iv. 1 

follow, and do me service — iv. 1 

all this service have I done — y. 1 

commend their service to his .. TwoGen. of yer. i. 3 
lose thy service: and in losing thy service— ii. 3 
and the master, and the service? .... — ii. 3 

nor to his service, no such — ii. 4 

at thy service — .ii. 5 

love will creep in service where — iv.2 

what service It is your pleasure — iv. 3 

employ thee in some service presently — iv. 4 
madam, this service I have done for you — y. 4 

now they be out of service Merry HHves, \\. 1 

it hath done meritorious service — iv. 2 

allow me very worth his service ..TtvelfthNight, i. 2 

liere, madam, at your service — i. 5 

she that would alter services with — ii. 5 (letfer) 

and most humble service — iii. 1 

I did some service — iii. 3 

might do me golden service — iv. 3 

and, for your service done him — y. I 

eyes almost out in the service ..Meas.fur Mcas, i. 2 

do me this kind service — ..!••* 

he knew the service, and that — iii. 2 

still attorneyed at your service — v. 1 

all my life to do you service — v. 1 

he hath done good service, lady Much Ado, i. 1 

will your grace command me any service. — ii. 1 
behalf that scorns your services . . Mid.N.'sDr. iii. 2 
with cruel pain, to do you service .. — v. 1 
and duty in his service perishing .... — v. 1 
and shape his service wholly to .. Lave'sL.Lost, v. 2 
Dumain was at my service, and his.. — v. 2 

was for mv service born — v. 2 

command me any service to her .... — v. 2 

impose some service on me for — y. 2 

I am famished in his service . . Mercli. of yenice, ii. 2 
to leave a rich Jew's service, to become — ii. 2 

I cannot get a service, no. — ii. 2 

in love and service to you evermore — iv. 1 

have lost my teeth in your service. /Ist/ouL/Zce it, i. 1 
turning these jests out of service, let us — i. 3 

when service should in my old limbs lie — ii. 3 
I'll do the service of a younger man.. — ii. 3 
serviccofthe antique world, when service- ii. 3 
do clioke their service up even with.. — ii. 3 

all made of faith and service — v. i 

that mean to see the Tuscan service ..AlVsU'ell, i. 2 
look far into the service of the time.. — i. 2 
service is no heritage: and I think .. — i. 3 
and my service, ever whilst I live.... — ii. 3 



SER 



SiCRVlClO— most honourable service. /li/'s'('ri(, iii. 5 

that has done worthy service — iii.!) 

be blamed in the command of the service— iii. 6 

but that the merit of service is seldom — iii. 6 

do thee all rights of service — iv 2 

a fool, sir, at a woman's service (rep.) — iv. S 
players thatofler service to. Taming nf Sh. 1 (indue.) 

for me to leave his service, look j'oii — i. 2 

jiray, accept his service. A Ihousand — ii. 1 

the poorest service is rejiaid with thanks — iv. 3 
whereon my services are now on. . lf'inte7-\Tale, i. 1 

I'll put my fortunes to your service — i. 2 

present our services to a fine new.. .. — ii. I 

recompcuseof our dear services, past ^ ii. 3 

and then for the land service, to see — iii. 3 

wipe not out the rest of thy services — iv. I 

with thee the very services thou hast — iv. I 

that I have eyes under my service .. — iv. 1 

but now I am out of service — iv.2 

it hath seen very hot service — iv.2 

■to her service, or to their own perdition — iv. 3 

j'cni have heard of my poor services — iv. 3 

nil my services you have imid home — v. 3 

if I last in this service Comedy of Errorli,\\. 1 

at his hands for my service, but blows — iv. 4 

even for the service tliot long since .. — v. I 

inv service and the loyalty I owe Macbeth, i. 4 

all our service in every point — i. 6 

for 'tis my limited ser\ ice — ii. 3 

at your service, sir, — no, sir King John, \. \ 

at your sick service had a prince .... — iv. 1 

upon your oath of service to the Tope — v. 1 

to offer service to your enemy — v. 1 

do bequeath my faithful services .... — v. 7 
christian service, and true chivalry. fi>c/io;d II. ii. 1 

to offer service to the duke of Hereford — ii. 3 

I tender you my service — ii. 3 

to more approved service and desert — ii. 3 

to faithful service of your majesty .. — iii. 3 

as my true service shall deserve .... — iii. 3 

to do what service am I sent for — iv. I 

some displeasing service I have ....\Henryiy. iii. 2 

they have bought out their services.. — iv.2 

prince put thee into m,y service 'iHcnryW. i. 2 

good service at Shrewsbury (jfp.).... — i. 2 

you are ^ast service — iii. 2 

the service that I trul.y did his life .. — v. 2 

your faith, and services, to this Henry y. i. 2 

so service shall witli steeled sinewa . . — ii. 2 

to do your grace incessant services .. — ii. 2 

all tlie riches Igot in his service .... — ii. 3 

by that piece of service, the men .... — iii. 2 

and seek some better service — iii. 2 

aile dognd sc-vice, or ailc ligge .... — iii. 2 

there is ver.y excellent service committed — iii. (i 

but I did see him do gallant service — iii. 6 

by rote, where services were done. . . . — iii. t> 

when they purpose their services .. .. — iv. I 

our steeds for present service neigh .. — iv.2 

and turn them out of service — iv. 3 

commend my service to my sovereign — iv. 6 

did goot service in a garden — iv. 7 

an honourable padge of the service .. — iv. 7 
vows obedience, and huniblescrvice.l Henry VI. iii. I 

your faithful service, and your toil.. — iii. 4 
some service to duke IIumi)hrey's..2//cnrf/r/. iii. 2 

created knight for his good service .. — v. 1 

and such a piece of service will you do — v. 1 
your legs did better service than....3He)ir!/r/. ii. 2 

your higliness' service. What service — iii. 2 

I'll do thee service for so good — v. 1 

purchase with my duteous service.. Richard III. ii. 1 

my sovereign, for my service donel .. — ii. I 

are at my service, like enforced smiles — iii. 5 

earnest in the service of my God ... . — iii. 7 

repays he my deep service with such — iv, 2 
unnatural and faithless service! . . Henry yill. ii. I 

and service to his n.ajesty and you .. — iii. I 

liis service and his counsel — iii. 1 

our utmost studies in your service ,. — iii. I 

pray, do my service to his majesty .. — iii. I 

weary, and old with service — iii. 2 

tJiy hopeful service perish too — iii. 2 

the king shall have my service — iii. 2 

first, mine own service to your grace — iv.2 

tor his love and service, so to him. ... — v. 2 

when you should do service — v. 3 

your last service was sufferance. J>oi7i«i5- Crt'ss. ii. 1 

to make the servile greater than .... — ii. 2 

took a truce, and did him service. ... — ii. 2 

for the service I have done you — iii. 3 

to do yon service, am become — iii. 3 

strike off all service I have done .... — iii. 3 

desert in service, love, friendship — iii. 3 

commend my service to her beauty.. — x.b 
their services to lord Timon.. . , , Timon of Athens, i. I 

here at your lordship's service — i. I 

with thanks, and service, for whose help — i. 2 

heart is ever at your service, my lord — i. 2 

in vain? his service done at Laoeda;mon — iii. a 

h' as done fair service, and slain in fight — iii. 5 

sooner got another service . — iv. 3 

come to oft'er you our service — v. 1 

can do, we'll do, to do you service .. — v. 1 
consider you what services he has . . Coriolanus, i. I 

to gratify his noble service — ii. 2 

still my life, and services — ii. 2 

I got them ill my coimtry's service .. — ii. 3 

thinking upon his services — ii. 3 

they necr did service liir't — iii. 1 

this kind of service did nut deserve — iii. 1 

service of the foot being i.>nce gangrened — iii. 1 

the warlike service he I'.as thnie — iii. 3 

what do you prate of service? — iii. 3 

and my services are, as you are, against — iv. 3 

I'll do his country service — iv. 4 

what service is here! I think our — iv. .■> 

ay; 'tis an honester service, than to — iv. S 

the painful service, the extreme dangers — iv. 5 

my revengeful services may prove .. — iv. 5 



SER 



[ Wl ] 



SKKVICE— to ilo thee service Con'oliniiis, iv. ft 

tlmt (lid the; latest Bcivico to my. .Julim fV,inr,iv. .'i 
here, imiilimi, at your scrv\ce .... Antony ^ CUo. i. '■! 

communcls our seiviwa a wliilc — i. 3 

tluTe 1 deny ni\' limil service — ii. 

11 rvcil tlmt will ilo me no service .. .. — ir. 7 
ill llu'i', it hml lu'en good service .... — ii. 7 
piTviiil iiiuliT the service of achild., — iii. II 

tliiit I mi^ht iloyou Bervico — iv. 2 

iiiun'iecl to your (,'00(1 service — iv. 2 

Imve iiiiiil mv luutcr service — iv. (» 

or tliy picceilent services me all .... — iv. 12 
tlie Inst service tlmt I sluill coinnmiid — iv. 12 
yoiir service for this time is ended ..Cymbelini:, i. (i 
no further service, doctor, until I .. — 1. (i 

let nie iny service tender on your..., — i. 7 

hut tiike this service I have (lone.... — il. 3 
nmke ileuiiils increase your services — ii. 3 

if it lie so to do Kood service — iii. "2 

this service is not service, so heing done — iii. 3 
desire his service, tell him wherein.. — iii. \ 
not lie a villain, but do me true service — iii. h 
llrst service tliou dost nie (rep.) .... — iii. 
alike conversant in general services — iv. 1 

that promise nohle service — iv. "^ 

eiy out for service, try many, all good — iv. 'i 
luid, leaving so his service, follow you — iv. 2 
the kins luith not deserved my service — iv. t 

lie hruH» his service as if he — v. 3 

the service, tliaty(ni tliree have — v. 5 

I will yet do you service — \.!> 

ill your country's service drew your..ri'«( Aud, i. 2 
in riijht and service of their noble ., — i. 2 
all the service I require of tlicni is ., — iii. i 
to do Rome service, are but vain .... — iii. 1 
can do no service on her sorrowful .. — iii. 1 

do mc some service, ere I come — v. 2 

i n her unholy service I'cricles, iv. 4 (Gowcr) 

but I am for other service first — v. 2 

my services to your lordship Lear, i. I 

to thy law my services are bouiul — i. 2 

if you come slack of former services — i. 3 

what wonUht thou? Service — i. 4 

what services canst thou do? — i. I 

there's earnest of thy service — i I 

wonldst be a bawd, in way of good service — ii. 2 
his cUiiighter speak; command lier service — ii. 4 
but better service have I never done .... — iii. 7 

of the loyal service of his son — iv. 2 

to tlieo a woman's services are duo — iv. 2 

and did him service improper for a slave — v. 3 

the inward service of the mind Haintel, i. 3 

to lay our service freely at your feet .... — ii.2 

coming, to offer you service — ii.2 

here, sweet lord, at your service — iii. 2 

do the king best service in the end - iv. 2 

is but variable service! two dishes — iv.3 

we should profane the service of the dead — v. 1 
it did me yeoman's service; wilt thou ., — v. 2 
'tis the curse of service; preferment goes.OWe((n, i i 
throwing but shows of service on their.. — i. 1 

because we come to do you service — i. 1 

lack init^uity sometimes, to do me service — i. 2 

my services, which I have done — i. 2 

my general will forget mj; love and service — iii. .I 

to wronged Othello 8 servicel — Iii. 3 

that neither service past, nor present.. .. — iii. -I 
I have done the state some service — v. 2 

SUKVICEABLIO vows ....Two Gen.or I'erona/ui. 2 

Olivianmy seem serviceable? TwdfiliNinlu, v. 1 

be serviceable to my son, quoth he. 7'ami)i/,'o/'.S/i. i. ) 
never let me be counted serviceable. C'l/m/jc/ii/e, iii. 2 
a serviceable villain; as duteous fmr, iv. c 

SEIlVILE-serviletoall theskiey.Mpns.ftr.Wrtis. iii. i 

pays death servile breath Hi'chnrd //. iii. 2 

if this servile usage oiiee offend ....1 Henri/ 1' I. v. 3 
these paltry, servile, abject (Iradgcs.'i Henry I'l. iv. 1 
keep us all in servile tearfulness ..JnUmCrrsar, i. 1 
ICol.Ktil.'] and servile thoughts .. Tilua Andron. ii. I 

trot like a servile footman — v. 2 

but vet I call you servile ministers l.enr. iii. 2 

SERVILITY— in base servility lHe>in/ri. v. 3 

SERVILIUSI My lord, my lordl rimon ofAl'imn. ii. 2 
Servllius! you are kindly met, sir .. — iii. 2 
thou speak seriously, Sefvilius? (cc/).) — iii. 2 

here's Servilius; now we shall (rep.) — iii. 4 
SERVING— serving of becks — i. 2 

serving alike in sorrow — iv. 2 

and serving you so hmg? Ihave.Aulnny ffClco. iii. 3 

would you, in their servini? Cymbctine, iii, 4 

SERVi:^G-CREATURE'S dagger.flom/™ /^Jiil. iv. 6 

SERVING-MAN, afresh tapster ..MernyWivrn. i. 3 

good master Blender's serving-man.. — iii. 1 

to the count's serving-man TirelphNiaht, iii. 2 

useful serving-man, and instrument. Ki»g'./o/i?i, v. 2 

into a justice-like serving-man ..,.2HenryIV. v, 1 

he is your serving-man, and your .... — v. 3 

a serving-man, jiroud in heart and mind. /.Mr, iii. 4 

SERVING-MEN in their new.. .. 7'<imi.it'o/-,sVi. iv. 1 

but uniust discarded serving-men.. 1 HenrylV. iv. 2 

SERVllMCrrR-votrescrviteur .. Twelfth NieM.xn. I 

SERVITEURE-indigne Bcrvitcurc.. .. H«i.n/r. v. 2 

SICRVITUR— thus are poor servitors .1 HenryVI. ii. I 

1 nm thy true servitor 3 Henry I'l. iii. 3 

is leaden servitor to didl delay. . . . Kichard III. iv. 3 
soldiers, and Rome's servitors. 7'//u/ri4nrfron/"CH«, i. 2 
vour trustv and most valhint servitor ..oihello, i. 3 

SERVITIIDE-tliis servitude A> yon Like it, i. I 

tills servitude makes you keep. Comedy of Errom, ii. 1 
bis princes and his peers to servitude.. //«»!/ ('. ii. 2 
boimd me in servitude I'eiielei.v. I 

SESSA— the world slide: sesaal.Tnmmff o/S/i. I (iud.) 

sessa; f Kn'.-scsey] let him trot by Lear, in. i 

do de, fie de. Sessa. Come, march to wakes — iii. 6 

SESSION— no longer session hnUl. Meat. /or .^feat, v. 1 
summon a session, that we may.. W inter' iTult, ii. 3 

this sessions (to our great gricl — iii. 2 

the sessions shall pro(^ed; this is mere — iii. 2 
every shop, church, session, banging — iv, 3 
it's tit this royal session do proceed. H«nrj/ /'///. ii. 4 



SESSION-you shiill hold your session .. . . Lear, v. 3 

law, and cunrse cil'diiect session Othello, i. 2 

in session sit witli meditntions lawful?.. — iii. 3 
SESTOS-it was, llcroof Sestos ..Asyoiil.ikeil,iv. 1 

SET— set her two courses Tempeit, i. 1 

set all hearts — j. 2 

nor set iL iniirk so l)loody — i. V 

I'll set thee free for thisl — i. 2 

trifle are thev set iii.nn me — ii.2 

but their hihoiuMleli'dit ill them sets oft" — iii. 1 

pray set it down, iind rest you — iii. I 

thesun uill set, In'foicl - iii. I 

chiefly, tlmt I might set it in my prayers — iii. I 
thy eyes are almost set in thy head..,. — iii. 2 

where should they be set else? — iii. 2 

if they were set in his tail — iii. 2 

and the azure vault set roaring war .. — v. I 

and set it down with gold — v. 1 

set Caliban and his companions free .. — v. i 

let your indulgence set mc free — {epil ) 

set the world at nought .... Two Gen. of Verona, i. I 

tliat set together is (irp.) — i. 1 

your ladyship can set — i. 2 

I would you wore set — ii. i 

then may I set the world — iii.) 

that set tills down among -- iii. i 

here, set it down Merry Wires, iii. 3 

I had ratlier be set qtiiclc ' — iii. I 

if he bid you set it down — iv. 2 

set down the basket, villain — iv. 2 

and set spurs, and away — iv. fi 

the knave eonstalilc had set me — Iv. S 

love set ou thy bonis — v..'; 

that is in me should set hell on Are. . — v. .'i 

yourselves in order set — v..') 

shall we set about some revels Tirclflh Night, i. ■A 

that crow so at these set kind of fools — i. .'i 
in women's waxen hearts to set their — ii. 2 
wilt thou set thy foot o' my neck? .. — ii. .'j 

have yon not set mine honour — iii. i 

act 'em down; go, about it — iii. 2 

set forth in your imrsuit — iii. 3 

and, consequently, sets down the.... — iii. 4 

set iqion Ague-eheekii, iiotahle — iii. 4 

and convey what 1 will set down.... — iv, 2 

1 was set on to do't by — v. 1 

you set nothing by a bloody coxcomb — v. 1 

his eyes were set at eight — v. 1 

myself, and Toby, set this device .... — v. 1 

'tis set down so in heaven Mcas.forMeas. ii. 4 

to-morrow you set on — iii, I 

one fVuitfulmeal would set mc to't.. — iv. 3 

in brief,— to set the matter — v. 1 

some one hath set you on — v. l 

and to set on this wretched woman here — v. 1 
mightier member, that sets them Cicp.) — v. 1 
he set up his bills here in AIeBsintt....il/wc/i/I</o, i. 1 

and set them in my forehead — i. I 

set with pearls, down sleeves — iii. 4 

only get the learned writer to set down — iii. 5 
but wiien sliall we set the savage bull's — v- 1 
but did my brother set thee ou to this? — v. 1 

are set down for Pyramus Mid. N.'s Dream, i. 2 

is, as in mockery, set — ii.2 

set your heart n't rest — ii.2 

your wrongs do set a scandal on .... — ii.2 
who would set liis wit to so foolish .. — iii, I 
you all are bent to set iigainst me . . — iii. 2 

nave you not set Lysatuler — iii. 2 

our purposed hunting sluiU be set aside — iv. I 
thy liberty, set thee from durance. Lore'.* L.io.^^ iii, 1 

king Coplietua set eye upon — iv. 1 (letter) 

and such barren plants are set before — iv. 2 
BO, were there a patch set on learning — iv. 2 

well, set thee down, sorrow! — iv.3 

a set of wit well played — v. 2 

I pray thee, set a decii glass of., Merch. o/l'enice, i. 2 

as I have set up my rest to — ii.2 

was set in worse than gold — ii. 7 

well, I'll set you forth — iii. i 

it is meet, I presently set forth — iv. I 

I set forth as soon as you — v. 1 

in good terms, in good set terms. . Aa i/nu Lil<eil, ii. 7 
welcome; set down your venerable.. — ii. 7 
and I set him every day to woo me.. — iii. 2 
to act her before your eyes to-morrow — v. 2 
if knowledge could be set up against.. /!//'» Crif, i. I 

approved, set down, to cure the — i. 3 

since yon set up your rest 'gainst.... — ii. I 

thou wert best set thy lower — ii. 3 

shoots at him, I set him tliere — iii. 2 

myself embrace, to set liiin free.. — iii. 4 (letter) 

feel it, set down sliarply — iii. i 

BO curiously ho had set this counterfi'it — iv. :i 
shall I set down your answer so? (re/i.) — iv. 3 

that set him in high fame — v. 3 

if not so, until the sun be ect. Tamini; of Sh. 2 (ind.) 

we set bis youngest free for ' — i. 1 

tlic older, set the younger free — i. 2 

and you the set of books; you shall go — ii. i 

age, BCt foot under thy table — ii. I 

fairly set down in studs — iii. 2 

Baptista; set your countenance — iv. 4 

as mine own course have setdown. IVinler'sTale, i. 2 

hastset on thy wife to this — ii. 3 

even so as it is liere set down — iii. 2 

doth set my pugging tooth on ... . — iv. 2 (song) 

in earth to set one slip of them — iv.3 

doleful matter, merrily set down.... — iv.3 

thus wc set on,Ciimillo, to the — iv.3 

with honey, set on the head of a wasp's — iv. 3 
shall he be set against a brick wall . . - iv. 3 

the heaven sets spies upon iis — v. 1 

ere the weary sun set in the wtiat .Comedy of lirr. i. 2 

shall I set in my staff? — iii. 1 

he that sets up iiis rest to do more .. — iv.3 

that will be ere set of sun Macbeth, i. 1 

and set forth a deep repentance — i. 4 

it sets him on, imd it takes — ii- 3 

and set me up in hope? — iii. I 



SET 



SET-tlmt I would set my life on any. .Macbeth, iii. 1 

poor birds they are not set for — Iv. 2 

within my sword's length set him .. — iv.3 

I will set down what eoiiies _ v. I 

I'dsitaii iix-lieiid to your lion's ....King John, W. 1 

where we'll set Inrlll, in heat _ ii. | 

therich hloiidurkiugs isseton flrel — ii.2 

should beset, among the h'fjdi tides.. _ iii. i 

but ere sun-set, set armed discord 'twixt — ill. I 

all reverence set apart, to him — iii. I 

angels set thou at liberty — iii. .3 

as pateliea, set upon a little _ iv, 2 

'twi.vtmndiTiiilliil biitlle.-cset — iv. 2 

no sure fouiiilatiun set on hlood — iv. 2 

be Mercury, set feiitliers — iv. 2 

or. rather then set forward: for iv.3 

till I have set a glory to this hand .. — iv.3 

on our actions set the name — v. 2 

no,v fiiv eo'er the yielded set? — v. 2 

set on toward Swinstead v. 3 

metliought, was loth lo set — v. .'> 

born to set a form iqion — v. 7 

thou art come to set mine eye — v. 7 

Kii;;lishin:i.n durst set his foot Uichnrd 11. i. 1 

dines him to set forward to the flght — i. 3 

envy, set you on to wake our i. 3 

wherein tliou art to set the precious — i. 3 

mocks at it, and sets it light — 1.3 

precious Bt(nie set in the silver sea .. — ii, 1 

strongly hath set footing in — ii. 1 

tliv Sim sets wecjiiiig ill the — ii. 4 

for tiiiie Imlh set a lil.it — iii. 2 

my jewels, Inr 11 srt of heads — iii. 3 

set on towards London — iii. 3 

likeness, set to dress this garden .... — iii. 4 

in this place, I'll set a hank — iii, 4 

then set heftire my face — iii. 4 

■who sets mc else? b.v lieaven — iv. ! 

your cares set lip: do not pluck — iv. 1 

"Wednesday next, wc solemnly set down — iv. I 

interehangeahly set down their himda — v. 2 

ere thy hii ml did set it down — v. 3 

to spi'iik, set tliv tongue there v. 3 

and do set llie word itself Iigainst.... — v. .I 

of tlieehiH[_'e set down hut \Henryir.l. I 

know iftiiMlshill liavc set a match .. — i. 2 

why, we will set forth before )— i. 2 

hut we'll set upon them ' 1— i, 2 

which luith 11.1 foil to set itoff — i. 2 

did sit I'lii 111 iii'iiii his Irisli expedition — i. 3 

you, lliiil : ' I the ei-own iip(m — i. 3 

runiiTt;ikil,|il.iiiril, and set down,. .. — i. 3 

some "I tlnin, si( I'orwaril already .. — ii. 3 

I will set forward to night (/-ep.) .... — ii. .1 

we four set upon some dozen — ii. 1 

or seven fi'csh men set upon us — ii. 4 

saw you four set on four (rep.) — ii. 4 

well, here I am set — ii, 4 

lord of Worcester, will set forth .... — iii. 1 

and that would set my teeth nothing — iii. I 

when I from France set foot at — iii. 2 

the earl of Westmoreland set fortli .. — iii. 2 

Wednesday next, Harry, you shall set — iii. 2 

to set the exact wealth of all our states — iv. 1 

the king himself in person is set forth — iv. I 

this present cnterprize set off his head — v. 1 

on their answer, wc will set on them — v. I 

can honour set to a leg? No — v. I 

Espcrancel Pereyl and set on — v, 2 

each heart beiiiL' set on hlnndy "illenrylF. i. I 

for any other reason llmii to set me off — i. 2 

set [C'o(. -in-set] you neither in gold.. — i, 2 

then set your knighthood and your.. — i. 2 

do you set down your name — i. 2 

kingdom down, and set nuother up.. — i. 3 

go draw our numbers, and set on? .. — i. 3 

I know thoii wast set on to this — ii. 1 

the prince onee set a dish of — it. 1 

wdiy then, cover, and set thcra — ii. 4 

thou'lt set me a weejiing — ii. 4 

and love, were set on Ilerct'ord — iv. I 

every thing set off, that might — iv. I 

in God's name then, set forwanl .... — iv. 1 

what mischiefs might he set abroach — iv. 2 

for that sets it a-work — iv.3 

and seta it in act and use — iv.3 

set me the crown u|)on m.v — iv. 4 

to have a son set your decrees at .... — v. 2 

tenor of our word: set on — v. .S 

play a set, sholl strike his father's .... Henry t'. i. 2 

tlic king is set from London — ii. ((^honts) 

it was excess of wine tluit set him on — ii. 2 

now set the teeth, and stretch the.... — iii. I 

from the rise to set, sweats in — iv, 1 

solemnly, see him set on to London -- v. felioriis) 

etu'Oinpassed and set upon 1 lion y I'l. i. I 

jiikes to set before his archers — i. 1 

their arms are set, like clocks — i. 2 

thinga are set in order here — ii. 2 

wliich obloquy set bars before — ii. .'1 

and set this unaccustomed flght .... — iii. 1 

and act your knee against my — iii. I 

and set upon our boasting enemy.... — iii, 2 

we'll set thv statue in some — iii, 3 

wdien Talbot Inith set fo.iting — iii. 3 

thev set him free, without his — Hi. 3 

lord bishop, set the crown upon — iv, 1 

to set a gloss upon his bold — iv. 1 

York set him on to flght (rrp.) _ iv. 4 

wd 10 with me set from our — iv. 4 

and set a precious crown upon — v. 3 

set ttiis dianumd safe in — v. 3 

on my head did set the diadem SlIenryTl. i. 2 

and set the triple crown upon bis — i. 3 

I'd set my ten commandments — i. 3 

when Trciy was act on fire — i. 4 

were set to guard the chicken — iii. 1 

nor set no footing on this unkind.... — iii, 2 

set all upon mc, mighty sovereign ,. — iii. 2 

like lime-twigs set to catch my — iii. 3 



SET 



SET— ransom we have set, it is our. .'illfiirtjl'l. iv. 1 

anil set a new nap upon it — iv. 2 

go and set London-bridge on fire .... iv. (i 

then, heaven, set ope tliy — iv. ;) 

set lirah to liml), and tliou iirt — iv. 10 

my heart's on future mischiel' set .... — v. 2 

set it on your head ZUpinyl'I. i 1 

can set the dulte up, in despite — i. 1 

let's set our men in order — i. i 

liis liands, whilst I doset it ou — i. 1 

and set it on York gates i. 4 

they set tl\e same; and there it dotli — ii. 1 

not he tliat sets Ins foot upon — ii. 2 

and set thy diadem upon my liead .. — ii. 2 

we set tlie axe to tliy usur^iing root .. — ii. 2 



[072 J 



SEV 



ii. 6 



— iv. 3 

— iv. 4 

— iv. 5 

— V. 1 

— V. I 



but set his murdering l<nife .. 

aiid set the mm-derous Machiavcl to 

all dissembling set aside 

is set iiim down to sleep 

to set tlie crown once more on 

to set him free from liis 

confess who set thee up 

otlier foes n»ay set upon our backs . . 

stones together, and set up Lancaster — v. I 

to set my brother Clarence Richard III. i. 1 

set down, set down, your honourable — i. 2 

hear tlie corse, and set it down — i. 2 

villains, set down the corse — i. 2 

thy heavenly face that set me on — i. 2 

and liell liave set their marks on liim — i. 3 

tiie secret miscliiefs that I set abroach — i. 3 

consider, he tirat set you on — 1.4 

wlien tlie sun sets, who dotli not — ii. 3 

his wit set down, to make his iii. 1 

we have not yet set down this day .. — iii. 4 

which in a set hand fairly is engrossed — iii. 6 

hath he set bounds between — iv. 1 

eun hath made a golden set v. 3 

so, set it down; is ink and paper .... — v. 3 

England's chair, wliere he is falsely set — v. 3 

advance our standards, set upon our — v. 3 

I have set my life upon a cast v. 4 

who set the body and the limbs Hemy VIII. i. 1 

they are set iiere for examples _ i. 3 

were ready to set out for London — ii. 2 (letter) 

break up tlie court: I say, set on _ ii. 4 

envy and base opinion set against me iii. 1 

I was set at work among my maids . . — iii. 1 

when she set footing here iii. 1 

we have seen him set himself _ iii. 2 

tliat sun, I pray, may never set iii. 2 

and set me lower; I nave not long .. iv. 2 

and Greek, sets all on hazard. Troiius ^ Cress, ^prol.) 

grief hath set the jaundice i. 3 

and sets Tliersites (a slave i. 3 

to set his sense on the i. 3 

will you set your wit to a fool's? .... _ ii. 1 

if he do set the very wings — \< •> 

should once set footing in your 

but lier brain to set down her 

eet them down for sluttish spoils .... 

tliat cause sets up with 

they set me up, in policy 

how the sun begins to set 

how earnestly are you set a' work. . . . 

set this in your painted cloths 

to set a gloss on faint deeds Timon of Alliens. 

fair ladies, set a fair fashion ou our . , 

and set me on the proof 

and set mine eyes at flow 

the villanies of man will set him clear 

would set whole realms on fire 

set q uarreUing upon the head of valour 

set them down horrible traitors 

and by tlry virtue set them into 

for he is set so only to himself v. 2 

before proud Athens he's set down .. — v. 4 

set but thy foot aminst our _ v. 5 

whom you yourselves shall set out for — v. 5 

if they set down before us Coriolanus, I. 2 

he did so set his teeth and tear it .... — i. 3 

are set down before their city i. 3 

that you directly set me against i. 6 

duties, as I have set them down i. 7 

set up the bloody flag against all .... — ii. i 

as to set dogs ou sheep iii 1 

to be set high in place , ;; i 

have you not set tliem on? 

the people are abused; set on 

whicli he so sets at naught , 

procured, set down by tlie poll? 

that shall set them in present action 

and set down, as best thou 

as one would set up atop 

Bet at upper end o' the table 

and then I'll set upon him 

to morrow set down our host vl 3 

thou hast set thy mercy and thy .... _ v. 3 

set him before me, let me see JuliusCwsar, i. 2 

set honour in one eye, and death .... i. 2 

and I will set this foot of mine as far — i. 3 

set this up with wax upon old i. 3 

set on your foot; and with a heart .. 

set a huge mountain 'tween my 

his faults observed, set in a note-book 

bid him set on his powers betimes. ... — 

com[ielled to set upon one battle .... 

let them set on at once 

Cassius' day is set; the sun of (re;).)— _ 

and Flavins, set our battles ou — 

I'll set a bourn howfar to he. Anlony if Cleopah 

I'll set thee in a shower of gold 

shall set thee on triumphant chariots 

which is set betwixt us, as the 

set we our squadrons on yon' side. . . . 

but now I'll set my teeth — 

and set thee by Jove's side _ 

such a spacious mirror's set before him — 
had set betwixt two charming words. Cirmi/cf/j, 

we will have these things set down . . — 



ii. 2 
iii. 3 
iv. 5 
V. 2 
V. 4 
V. 9 
T. U 
V. U 



— 111. 5 

— iv. 3 

— iv. 3 



— iii. 1 

— iii! 1 

— iii. 3 

— iv. 3 

— iv. .5 

— iv. 5 

— iv. 5 



11. 1 



V. 2 
V. 3 
v. 3 



■A mini 



SIjIT thee on to this desert ^ --,- 

he hath a kind of honour sets him off — 

place, which lessens and sets off 

and thus I set my foot on his neck . . 
thou that didst set up my disolx'dience 
gates of Lud's town set your (re;;.) .. 

no single soul can we set eye on 

1 lumibly set it at your will 

since on your lives you set so 

set the dogs o' the street to '. . 

set we forward (rep.) 

and help to set a head on Tilu 

and set abroad new business 

liere we set our prisoners free 

as sure a card as ever won the set' 

set deadly enmity between two 

set fire on barns and haystacks 

and set them upright at their 

in bloody lines I have set down 

set him breast-deep inearth 

and on set purpose let his nrmour 
would set ou the crown of Tyre .. 

set 't down, let's look on it 

and set up your fame for ever — iii. 2 

she that sets seeds and roots of shame — iv. 6 
set me free from this unhallowed. ... — iv, G 



. Lear., i. 1 
■, 3 



thought to set ray rest on her 
that sets us all at odds .... 
set less than thou throwest 

my fatlier hath set guard ii. 1 

where may we set our horses? — ii. I 

mistook, to set thee here? — ii. 4 

an' thou hadst been set i' the stocks — ii. 4 

we'll set thee to school to an ant ii. 4 

I set him there, sir ii. 4 

their great stars throned and set high? . . — iii. I 

set ratsbane by his porridge iii. 4 

set not thy sweet heart ou proud array'. . — iii. 4 

merit, set a- work by a reproveable ....".. — iii. 5 

I have a letter guessingly set down — iii. 7 

eyesof thine I'll set my foot — iii. 7 

but are my brother's powers set forth? .. — iv. 5 

our troops set forth to-morrow — iv. 5 

set me where you stand — iv. 6 

carry it so, as I have set it down v. 3 

who set this ancient quarrel ....Romeo ^Juliet, i. 1 

you will set cock-a-hoopi _ i. 5 



.^Cymhetijir, i. 6 SKTTLE— shall on them settle All't IVrU, iii. I 

the fury of his highness settle . . H'inier's Tale, iv. 3 
can settle the heart of Antony ..Antony ^Vlen. ii. 2 
settle your fine joints 'gainst ..linmeo ^-Juliet, iii. b 
SL 1 1'LKD visage and dtliherate.il/eas. for Meat. iii. 1 
upon some settled low content . . As you Like it, ii. 3 

he settled only in rogue Winter's Tale, iv. 2 

more ponderous and settled project.. _ iv. 3 

no settled senses of the world can.... v. 3 

I am settled, and bend up each Macbeth, i 7 

difference of your settled hate Ricliard II. i. 1 

which, before cold .and settled Ullenryir iv 3 

left behind and settled certain French. Ilenrt/V. {. 2 

continuance in a settled place lUenryyi.i'i. 5 

love's settled passions in my heart _ v. 5 

how the blood is settled in his (iice\.2llenryyi. iii. 2 

no, he's settled, not to come off Henry nil. iii. 2 

lier lilood is settled, and her Romeo ^Juliet, iv. 5 

t'lau settled age his sables, and his Hamlet, iv. 7 

SEITLEST admired reverence.. 7'»nono/'y<Wiens v I 
.Pericles, ii. 2 SETTLING-till further settling ....... Tear iv' 7 

- 111. COrOwer) SETT'ST-thou sett'st on thy wife. iVinler's Tal'e, ii". 3 

sett'st oath to oath King John, iii. I 

that sett'st the word itself against . . Richard II. v 3 

c^U"?!; <?"''• tl»ou sett'st me free 3HenryVI. iv. 6 

isiivEJN— by seven o'clock ..Tironen.ori'erona,iii 1 
and seven hundred pounds (rep.).. Merry ll'ives i. 1 
ot seven groats in mill-sixpences .... — 'i 1 

me have stay six or seven ij' 3 

till seven years heat Tmelflh Niirht i! 1 



iv 


2 


IV 


^ 1 


IV 


3 


IV 


4 


V 


h 


V 


h 




2 




2 


V. 


1 


V. 


1 


V. 


1 


V. 


2 


X- 


3 



— ii.3 
iii. 3 
iii. 3 
iii. 5 
iv. 5 
V. 3 
V. 3 
i. 3 



— i. a 



ii. 2 



iii. 4 



my heart's dear love is set on 

on hers, so hers is set on mine 

is set on fire by thine own ignorance 
stay not till the watch be set (rep.)., 
when the sun sets, the air doth drizzle 
the county Paris hath set up his rest 
here will I set up my everlasting rest — 

no figure at such rate be set — 

set your entreatments at a higher rate. . Hamlet 
I do not set my life at a pin's fee . . 

meet it is, I set it down 

tliat ever I was born to set it rightl 

as therein are set down 

not honesty to liave it thus set down — 

set down with as much modesty — 

a roused vengeance sets him new — 

which I would set down, and insert in't — 
thus set it down; he shall with speed.... — 
speak no more than is set down for them — 

to set on some quantity of barren 

nay, then I'll set those to you that can .. 

till I set you up a glass where you — 

and sets a blister there 

every god did seem to set his seal — 

this man shall set me packing _ 

thou may'st not coldly set our sovereign — iv. 3 
I am set naked on your kingdom — iv. 7 (letter) 

and set a double varnish on iv. 7 

t)ie crowner hath set on her v. 1 

that were wont to set the table on a roar — v. 1 

good Gertrude, set some watch over — v. I 

set me the stoops of wine upon _ v. 2 

I'll play this bout first, set it by awhile;.. — v. 2 
that never set a squadron in the field . . Othello, i. 1 

the set [ Kii;.-soft] phrase of peace — i. 3 

set hyssop, and weed up thyme — i. 3 

but I'll --et down the pegs that make .... — i. 3 

come let's set the watch _ ii. a 

he'll watch the horologe a double set — ii.3 

foul rout began, who set it on — ii.3 

I'llsetheron _ ii.3 

thou hast set me on the rack _ iii, 3 

Cassio hath here been set on in the dark — v. 1 
and your reports have set the murder ou — v. 2 

lago hurt him, lago set him on — v. 2 

extenuate, nor set down aught in malice — v. 2 

set you down this _ v. 2 

SETEBOS— my dam's god, Setebos Tempest, i. 2 

Setebos, these be brave spirits — v. 1 

SETTER up and plucker (rep. iii, Z)..3Henryri. ii. 3 
SETTING— the setting of thine eye ... . Tempest, ii. 1 

setting the attraction of ray gooa. . Merry Hives, ii. 2 
setting it up to fear the birds . . Meas. for Meas. ii. 1 
but bj' your setting on, by your ..Miii.N.'sDr. iii. 2 

1 mean, setting thee at liberty . . Love's L. Lost, iii. 1 
disaster of his setting in the stocks ..All's Well, iv. 3 

setting all this chat aside Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 

at a point, was setting forth Macbeth, iv. 3 

and will endure oiu- setting down before't — v. 4 
setting aside his high blood's royalty. /ficAard /;. i. 1 

the setting sun, and music at the close ii. I 

with them in setting forth? XHenrylV. i. 2 

and setting thy knighthood aside.... — iii. 3 

setting thy womanhood aside — iii. 3 

setting my knighthood and my 2HenryIV. i. 2 

setting endeavour in continual motion. Henry V. i. 2 
we took him setting of boys' copiec.2 Henry r/. iv. 2 

setting your scorns, and your ZHenryl'I. iv. I 

I haste now to my setting Henry Vlll. iii. 2 

tlieir doors against a setting aan.TimonnfAlhens, i. 2 

she's e'en setting on water to scald .. ii. 2 

he is a man, setting his fate aside — iii. 5 

O setting sun I as in tliy red rays. .JuliusCtemr, v. 3 



li. 4 
ii. 4 
ii. 4 



seven of my people, with an obedient — 
sevenyear and ahalf, sir ...Weasure/bril/e.isure ii 1 

you say, seven years together? „ _ ' i\ \ 

the names of some six or seven ii' 1 

and six or seven winters more respect — iii 1 
or of the deadly seven it is the least — iii' i 

has been a vile thief this seven year. MuchAdo. iii! 3 
isher houseremotesevenleague3..il/id.A'.'sDr i 1 
fire seven times tried irep.) .Mer. of Fen. ii. 9 (scroll) 

his acts being seven ages As you Like it, ii 7 

I was seven of the nine days out — ii= 2 

it seems the length of seven years .. — iii" 2 

upon a lie seven times removed y 4 

I knew when seven justices could not — v" 4 
for twice seven. years.... raminuo/'S/irew, 1 (indue ) 
J think tis now some seven o'clock.. _ iv 3 

it shall be seven, ere I go to _ iv" 3 

nutmegs, seven ; a race, or two . . Winler's Tale iv 2 
these seven years, be born another such — ' iv" 3 
in seven short years, that here. Comet/i,o/£)Toj-s v' 1 
but seven years since, in Syracusa. ... — v 1 

till seven at night; to make Macbeth, iii! 1 

Edward s seven sons (rep.) Richard II i 2 

every thing is left at six and seven .. — "ii'2 

go by the moon and seven stars 1 Henrii IV i" 2 

kills me some six or seven _ 'ji' 4 

some six or seven fresh men set .' _ ==' ■ 

all their seven points in my target (rep ) — 

seven, by these hilts, or I am _ 

with a thought, seven of the eleven '. '. _ 

that I did not this seven year before 

not above seven times a week _ ,„ 

earl of Westmoreland, seven thousand _ iv" I 

seven groats and two pence iHenrylV i" 2 

what! we have seen the seven stars — "ji" 4 

seven walled towns of strength I Henry fl iii' 4 

this seven years did not Talbot _ ' iv" 3 

AlenSon, seven earls, twelve iHenmVl i 1 

better sport these seven years' day .. _ 'ii' 1 

my lords, had seven sons jj' 2 

in England, seven hall-penny loaves _ iv 2 

six or seven thousand is their Richard III v" 3 

after seven years' siege TroiliisA-Cressida i" 3 

SIX or seven times honoured _ jii 3 

lie was wont to shine at seven, rjmoji of Athens iii' 4 
an estate of seven years' health ....Coriolanus. ii' 1 
pt Tarqum, seven hurts i' the body.. _ ii 1 

if I could shake off but one seven years i v' 1 

some six or seven, who did hide.. JuKim Ctcsar ii' 1 

within seven leagues of Rome _ 'ii; 1 

a gamester at five, or at seven ? Pericles i v" 6 

a man may serve seven years for _ ' iv' 6 

the seven stars are no more than seven . . Lear \ 5 
been Tom's food for seven long year — iii. 4 (son"!") 

tears seven time salt burn out Hamlet iv°5 

my letters say, a hundred and seven Othello i " 3 

these arms of mine had seven years' pith — 'is 

world for four times seven years j' 3 

„ a.^;?^k away? Seven days and nights .".' _ iii! 4 
SEVENFOLD_he repays sevenfold Timon oUlh i 1 
„^(^«<]^0l'l shield of Ajax ..A„lnny4-aeopalra,iv. 12 
SEVENNIGHT— just asevennight ..MuchAdo ii I 

one sevennight longer Winter's Tal- i 2 

weary seveimights nine times nine Macbeth i' 2 

SEVENTEEN years old Atenymljl' i I 

nine score and seventeen pounds . Mea. for Mea i v" 3 
from seventeen years till now ....As you Like it i i' 3 
at seventeen years, many their fortunes — 'ii'3 
seventeen poniards are at thy bosom.. yi«'s»re« iv' 1 
oiK^n vT??,'u ^^"'^.^° battles since ... . Coriolanus, ii." 2 
SEVENTH sweet.adieul since yon.ioue'si.Loj/ v 2 
was upon the seventh cause (rep.).AsyouLikeit'v' 4 

the seventh, the lie direct _ 'v'4 

aseventhi I'll see no more ...Macbeth iv" 1 

William of Windsor was the seventh.2 Henri/ r/ ii' 2 

si¥s'i?^'?^?;^erv'^ K?e1;?i..".".:".&/;Z//">^^ 

SEVER— severs day from night.. .. TwelfthNii'ht v" 1 

at the gun's report sever themsehes.jVid. A' hr "iii' •> 

«p V p ^^AT^^Z , from cl'arity ?. Love's L. Lost', i v." 3 

bEVERAL virtues have 1 liked (.rep.).. Tempest, iii. I 

their several kinds have done _ iii 3 

with strange and several noises _ v" 1 

I'll kiss each several paper TwoGen.ofrer i" 2 

wept a hundred several times J. Jv" 4 

the pangs of three several deaths.. Merry Wives, iii' 5 

tbeseveralchairsof order look — v 5 

instalment, coat, and several crest ..' _ v." 5 



SEV 



[G73 ] 



SUA 



SICVERAL— and iiray to several.. Mras.roi- Mens. u. 4 

•niisters; each his suveiul wily Mm-liMn, v. 3 

RiHli.'ilfhscveralcluuub.Thlc6S....Jl/<i(.A-.'.<»r. y. 2 
11.) oMUiiion thiiiiL:li ffviTiil tliev bc.Loie'sL.L. ii. 1 
scvurul worthi<..siniil.c uueili^MUty .. — iv. 3 

iiiituhisscvc-nil iui:.tri'ss(.i'7'-> — ^'- '] 

tlieir several coiiiu'i Is thi'y iiiiU.jom — v. ^ 

discover tlie several eiisliets to . . HJei: of lenice, ii. 7 
worn me out with suveral applications. .J« xltM. i. I 
severals, of heail-pioee c.x^ruordiuary. WliUcr s V. 1.2 

ut several posterns, clear them — . '• 2 

he siii^s several tunes, faster than .. — iv. 3 
ill tlie division of each several crime ..iVuciieM, iv. 3 
we reckon witli your several loves . . — v. 7 
sways usurpingly these several titles. King John, 1. 1 
to order several powers to Oxford . . Itichard //.v. .5 
reckoning up tlie several devils' — 1 lleiui/ 1 r. in. 1 
draw his several strengths together. .2Ht'n)!//(. i. 3 
each several article herein redressed — iv. 1 
powersunto their several counties .. — 'Y' ? 
the severals, and unhidden passages ..Henrijl . i. 1 
many lU'rows, loosed several ways . . — i. 2 
here you maintain several factions ..Mienryri.i. 1 
to your several dwelling-places .. — i. 3 Qn-uc.) 
make our entrance several ways — — n. 1 
your several suits have heen considered — v. 1 

the several coloxu-s we do wear iHfnnjri.u. 1 

with every several pleasure in — in. 2 

dismiss you to your several countries — }X-9 
I do not like these several councils. ^ficAaxf ;/;. in. 2 
each leader to his several clmige .... — v. 3 
several tongues, and every tungiieCrc/).) — v. 3 

all several sins, all used in each — .v. 3 

the several parcels othis plata Hrnryf'lll. ui. 2 

severals and generals of grace Troilus if Ciess.i. 3 

our several honours all engaged .... — >]• 2 
ui>on our joint and several dignities — ii. 2 

all and your several visitations. VVmrmo/.^/Aeiis,!. 2 
seem in the trial of )iis several friends — in. G 

touch them with several fortunes — iv. 3 

ill these several places of the city Coriolanus, i. 1 

lieat me out twelve several times — iv. 5 

the A'olsees with two several powers — iv. 6 

in sevi;ral hands Irup.) JuliiisCaisai^i. 2 

guiUy of a several bastardy — .i;- ' 

several man, seventy-five draclimas — in. 2 

two several times by night — v. .'j 

twenty several messengers Antony efCleo. i. 5 

have every day a several greeting — ..'-5 

whose several ranges frighted each other — iii. 1 1 

gather their severiiJ virtues Cymbeline, i. 6 

felt several years, and wanting breath . . I'erides, i 4 
knights unto their several lodgings.. — ii. 3 

in each several clime — iv. 4 (Gower) 

to publish our daiiglitcrs' several dowers ..Lrar,i. 1 
the several messengers from hence attend — ii. 1 
[Kni,} tfvery several lineament . . Romeo SrJuliei., i. 3 

with manv several sorts of reasons Hamlet, v. 2 

SEVEHALLY entreat him ..Troilus 4 CresMa, iv. 5 

1 will despatch yon severally., Tiinon ofAiliiins,n. 2 

severally we hear them rendered.. Ju'iusCVp/i-ir, in. 2 

the counterchange is severally in M.Ci/inbetine.v. 5 

SEVERE— lord Angelo is severe... l/eas./or il/e;is. ii. 1 

O just, but severe law! — .ii. 2 

brother justice have I found so severe — iii. 2 

sliould be as holy as severe — iii. 2 

eyes severe, and beard of formal ..AsynuLikeil, u. 7 
such strict and severe covenants — 1 lloiry VI. y . 4 

come, you are too severe a moraler Otheilo, u. 3 

i- EVER ED— here are severed lips.Mej-. ofVenive, in. 2 

tlie goddess that liatli severed us Tempest, y. 1 

howsoe'er their hearts are severed — All's Well, i. 3 
heard me severed from my bliss.. Comedy o/£i'r. i. 1 
the king hath severed you and prince.2 Henri/ 1 K i. 2 

no more can I be severed from 1 Henry 11. iv. 5 

but severed in a pale clear-shining. .SHewci/F/.ii. 1 

that I sliould wish them severed — .iv. 1 

our severed navy too have knit.-JiiiDmy ^Cleo. iii. 1 1 

by uproar severed, like a flight TitusAndron. v. 3 

luv thoughts be severed from my griefs . . Lear, iv. 6 

SEVERELY from resortof men. r/ro Gen.o/I'er. iii. 1 

the king severely prosecute 'gainst us.Iticliarilll. ii. 1 

SEVEREST-rigour of severest law. /iomeo SfJuUet,v. 3 

SEVERING— do lace the severing clouds — iii. 5 

pangiuu'as soul and body'ssevering.Henri/r///. ii. 3 

SEVEHTTY must cure it . . Measurefor Measure, iii. 2 

wliereon to practice your severity ..\ Henry VI. ii. 3 

trial than the severity of the public. Coriolanus, in. 1 

beauty, starved with her severity. «omeo ^Juliet, i. 1 

SEV ERN— gentle Severn's sedgy bank.l Henry 1 V. i. 3 

upim agreement, of swift Severn's flood — 1.3 

of Wye, and sandy-bottomed Severn — iii. 1 

from Trent and Severn hitherto , — — iii. 1 

Wales beyond the Severn shore .... — iii. 1 

till he have crossed the Severn — CymbcUncux. 5 

SIOVV— item, she can sew Tu'oGen-oJt'cronii,\\\. 1 

I said loose-bodied gosvn, sew me. Taming nf sit. iv. 3 

I'll sew nether-stocks, and mend \Henri/iy.u. 4 

I can sing, weave,6ew, and dance Pericles, iv. 6 

SEWED— cut out, and sewed up .. T,j./inii'o/.S/i. ly. 3 

in a tedious sampler sewed her mind. 7'i(us/irtrf. ii 5 

could have better sewed than Philomel — ii. 5 

in lier prophetic fury sewed the woik . . Olliello, lii. 4 

SEWER— sweet sink, sweet sev,-er.TroHm^Creas. v. 1 

old receptacles, common sewers Pericles, iv. 6 

SEWINCr— what, are you sewing here?Cori"tanM, i. 3 

inv lord, as I was sewing in my closet.. //omW, ii. 1 

SES— I do not know one of my sex — Tmipest, iii. 1 

against the mettle of your sex V ictW/i Mglit, y. 1 

tliis testimony of your o v n sc.x. . .Mcas.forlUeas. ii. 4 
being a professed tyrant to their sex. . Much Ado, i. 1 

do set a scandal on my sex Mid.N.'sDream,\:\. 2 

our sex, as well as I, may — 111.2 

generally taxed their whole 6iiX...AsyouLtkeil, 111. 2 
you have simply misused our sex .... — iv. I 

in her sex, her years, profession AU'siyell,\\. 1 

us our sex commonly are tyinler'sTale. ii. 1 

Shalt fliid that I exceed my sex \ Henry VI. 1. 2 

ill-beseeming is it in thy sex iHenryVt. i. 4 

ah, poor our sex! this fault ..TrodiiiffCressida,\,'i 



SEX -to square the general sex ..Troihuff Cress, y. 2 
I am no stronger than my sex .. ..JuliusCresur, 11. 1 

greatest spot of all thv sex Antony ^ Cleo. iv . 10 

have often shamed niirse.v — .v. 2 

I'd change mv sex to be companion. Ci/mMi'iic, 111. 6 
SEXTON— a eiisliion for the sexton!.. Wuc/i /Irfo, iv. 2 

Where's tlie sexton? let him write — iv. 2 

by this time our sexton hath reformed — v. 1 
signior Leonato, and the sextou too.. — _y. 1 
the sops all in the sexton's face.. 'I'amingofSh. iii. 2 
that bald sexton Time, is it as he ..KingJohn, iii. 1 
but, master, if F had been the sexton ..Pericles, 11. 1 

about the nmzzard with a sexton's Hamlet, v. 1 

I luive been sexton here, man, and boy .. — v. 1 
SEXTUS Isee I'omi'EIUSJ 
S E Y MOU H— Berkley, and Seymour. . Kichard ll.w.Z 

SE YTON : I am sick at heart (rep.) Macbeth, v. 3 

give me my staff: Seyton, send out — v. 3 

SlIACKLE-bolts and shackles! .. TwelfiliMglit, li. 5 
in vile misprison shackle up my love...-/;rs)iv//, ii. 3 

shackles accidents, and bolts Antaiii/ S/Cleo. v. 2 

SHADE— revellers, and shades of niglit.-Vcn!/ II'. v. 5 

trip we after the night's shade Mid. A'.'s Dr. iv. 1 

tarrying in mulberry shade , -- .v. 1 

sweet leaves, shade folly Love sL.Losl,iv. 3 

under the cool shade ot a sycamore . . — v. 2 
toward that shade I might behold. . . . — y. 2 
the shade of melancholy bou"hs ..As youLiltetl, 11. 7 
under which bush's shade, a lioness.. — iv. 3 
let us seek out some desolate shade ..Macbeth, ly. 3 
to dwell in solemn sliades of endless. Kic^ioni //. i. 3 
wander through the shade of night .. — y. 6 

gentlemen of the shade, minions i Henry /F. 1. 2 

under tlieeweet sliadeof your Henry V. ii. 2 

and the gloomy shade of death -. 1 Henry VI. v. 4 

for in the shade of death I shall ilienryVl. 111. 2 

their sweetest shade, a grove of — lii. 2 

a sweeter sliade to shepherds SHeury ; /. 11. 5 

sleep under a fresh tree's shade — n. S 

under whose shade the ramping — — y. 2 
tosliade: alas! alas! witness (<p/).^..'f/o/mi-'/ III. 1.2 
shade tliy person under their blessn!. lienrii I H /. v. 1 

and flies fled under shade /'' ■■''"< * Cn-snila,!. 3 

ere in our own house I do shade — Cinni.nius.ii. 1 
to some shade, and fit you to your. . ri/m/.c/i/ic, iii. 4 
under their sweet shade, Aaron .. 'I'lliis Audron. n. 3 
SHADOW the dismissed bachelor lovis. Tnniiest, ly. 1 
upon the shadow of perfection. Tu-a lien, of I'er. lii. 1 

I am but a shadow (jf/i.) — iv. 2 

become you well, to worship shadows — iv. 2 
better fit his chamber, than this shadow — iv. 4 
come, shadow, come, a,nd take this (rc/i.) — iy. 4 

Love like a sliadow flies Merry Wives, 11.2 

behaviour to his own shadow Tu-clfilii\ighl, li. 5 

all shadow and silence in it Meas.fw Mens. iii. ! 

swift as a shadow, short as any Mid. N.\ Dr. 1. I 

believe me, king of shadows, I mistook — lii. 2 
the best in this kind arc but shadows — y. 1 

if we sliadows have offended — (epil.) 

■will fence with his own s\\a.<i.ow .. Mer . nf Venice, i. 2 

that shadows kiss (.rep.) — 11. U (.scroll) 

doth wrong this shadow (rc'p.) — m. 2 

saw the lion's shadow ere himself — — v. 1 
go find a shadow, and sigh till he. .4? you like it. iv. 1 
Vis but tlie shadow of a wife you Eee...)H'.<llW/,y. 3 
that creep like shadows by him . . Il'inler's Tale.n. 3 
horrible shadow! unreal mockery — Macbeth, 111. 4 

come like shadows, so depart — iv. 1 

thereby shall we shadow the numbers — v. 4 

life's but a walking shadow — v. 6 

the shadow of myself formed (rep.). .KingJohn, n. 2 

of a grief hath twenty shadows Ilichardll. li. 2 

is nought but sliadows of what — .in 2 

step into the shadow of these trees . . — in. 4 
the sliadow of your sorrow hath (rep.) — iv. 1 

are merely shadows to the unseen — ly. 1 

than thou the shadow of succession .1 Henry IV. 11 i. 2 
so many of his shadows thou hast . . — v. 4 
but shadows, and the showsof men..iHcn)!//;'. 1. 1 

T am your shadow, my lord — _ii. 2 

let me see; Simon Shadow! — I'l. 2 

Where's Shadowy Here, sir. Sliadow — iii. 2 

father's shadow; so the son (.rep.) — iii. 2 

Shadow will serve for summer — lii. 2 

Bull-calf, Feeble, and Shadow — iii. 2 

this same half-faced fellow, Shadow — in. 2 

in shadow of such greatness) — iv. 2 

thy shadow hath been thrall \HenryVI. ii. 3 

vou have aught but Talbot's shadow — ii. 3 
1 am but shadow of myself (rep.). ... — ii. 3 
must he be then as shadow of himself? — v. 4 
of that great shadow I did represent. .iHenry VI. i. 1 
parted but the shadowwith his hand.S/Itou!/;'/. 1. 4 
trucking indeed: thou but the shadow — iv. 3 
like a double shadow to Henry's body — iy. 6 

spy my shadow in the sun Kichard II I. i 1 

tiiat 1 may see my shadow as I pass — i. 2 
a shadow like an angel, with bright — _ i. 4 

poor shadow, painted queen — iv. 4 

Shadows. By the apostle Paul ()cp.) — v. 3 

the shadow of poor )Buekin"liam Henry VIII. i. 1 

dost dialogue with tliy iliadow? .. Timon of.Uh, ii. 2 

within tlie shadow of your power — y. 5 

the shadow which he treads on Coriolanus,\. 1 

that you might see your sliadow ..JutiusCwsar, i. 2 
their shadows seem a canopy most . . — _v. 1 
a mangled shadow; iierchanoe ..Antony ff Cleo. iv. 2 

condemning shadows quite — v. 2 

poor shadows of Elysium, hence ....Cymbeline, v. 4 
the sliadows be not unappeased .. TiiusAndron. i. 2 
to appease their groaning shadows that — .;• 2 
n checkered shadow on tlie ground . . — i]. 3 
whose circling shadows kings have.. — ij- 5 
takes false shadows for true substances — 111.2 
that with the shadow of his wings . . — iv. 4 
he will come in our shadow, to scatter. Pn ide.t, iv. 3 
like motes and shadows see them move — iy. 4 

Lear's shadow? I would learn that l.ear.i.i 

toconrse his own shadow fora traitor.... — 111. 4 
tiike the sliadow of this tree for — v. 2 



SHADOW over lowering hiHu.... lli.ineo4.luliel, ii. & 
when but love's shadows are so rich — y. I 

tlie shadow of a dream (rep.) Hamlet, il. 2 

tliat it is but a shadow's shadow — ii 2 

outstretched heroes, the beggars' shadows — ii. 2 

fustian with one's own sliadow? Othello, ii. 3 

SlIADOWEDlivery of the burnished. Wcr.o/ Ven. ii. 1 

shadowed from heaven's eye.. Titos Audiiiiiirns. i. I 

SlIADOWING-sucli shadowing puS5iiin,0(A///./,iv. 1 

shadowing their riglit under King John. ii. I 

SIlADOWY-this shadowydesert.'yu'oOVd.o/ /ec. v. 4 

shadowy forests and with chaniiiaiiis ....Lear, i. 1 

SHADY— in shady cloister mewed ..Mid. N's. Dr. i. i 

shadyciirtainsfrom Aurora's bed./(om«o ff Juliet, i. 1 

SHAFALUS to Proems (rep.) ..Mid.A.'slheam.v. 1 

SHAFT— I'll make a shaft Merry Wives, iii. 4 

when the rich golden shaft Twelfth Night, 1. I 

Cupid's fiery shaft quenclied ...Mid.S.'sUream, ii. 2 
when 1 hud lost one shaft, I sUot.-Mer.nf Veiur,-. i. 1 

this murderous shaft tliat'e sliot Mailieil,. li. 3 

and carried you a forehand shaft ..'illennj II . iii. 2 
shaft confounds not . . Troilus i^Viesmiu. iii. 1 (sung I 
shoot all your shafis into the ....Tihisyl'idron. iv. 3 

no guard to bar heaven's shaft Pencles, ii. 4 

your shafts of fortune, thoiigli they.. — iii. 3 

bent and drawn, make from the shaft Lear.i. I 

too sore empierced with his shaft. Ilomeo ^ Juliet, i. 4 

SHAG-EARED villain Macbeth, i v. 2 

SHAG-HAIRED crafty kern, hatn..2H«.r!/r/. iii. 1 
SHAKE— yea, his dread trident shake .. Tempest, i. 2 

shake it off; come on — i. 2 

shake off slumber, and beware — 11. I (song) 

this will shake your shaking — ii. 2 

promontory have I made shake — v. 1 

if he shake his tail Two Gen. of Verona, W. :> 

and shakes a chain in a most Mrrry Wives, i v. 4 

till the pangs of death shake him. . TuetfihXighl,\. S 

go shake your ears — ii. 3 

be pleased that I shake off these — v. 1 

faults may shake our frames . . Meas. for Meas. ii. 4 
come, you shake the head at so long.. Much Ado, ii. 1 
or I will shake thee from me.. il'W.A'.'sfi'tam, iii- 2 

might shake off fifty Love's L.Losi. iv. 3 

to shake the head, relent ..Merchanlnf Venice, iii. 3 

liear how he will shake me up As you Like it, i. I 

I could shake them ofl' my coat — i. 3 

a man's tongue shakes out his All'sWelt.W. 4 

whilst lean shake my sword — ii. .'j 

not shake the snow from oft' their Iff/;.) — iv. 3 
that shake not, though they blow.7a//u«4'o/S/i. ii. I 

as whirlwinds shake fair buds — v. 2 

or counsel shake the fabric of Winter's Tale, i. 2 

as you shake oft' one, to take another — iv. 3 
the devil will sh.ake her chain . . Comedy of Eir. iv. 3 
fantastical, sliakes so my single state . .Macbeth, i. 3 

visitings of nature shake my fell — i. f> 

the earth was feverous, and did shake — ii. 3 
awake! shalce off this downy sleep .. — ii. 3 

fears and scruples shake lis — ii- 3 

that shake US nightly — iii. 2 

never shake thy gory locks at me . . — iii. 4 
never sagg with doubt, nor shake with 
that shakes the rotten carcase of old. i' 

as thou shalt not shake them oft' 

see thou shake the bags of hoarding 

passion would I shake the world 

they shake their heads, and whisper 

to thrill, and shake, even at — v. i 

if then wc shall shakeoft'our Itichard II. ii. 1 

I say, the earth did shake when 1 lleuiylV. iii. 1 

striving, shakes the old beldame earth — iii. 1 
shake tlie peace and safety of our throne — iii. 2 

feel, mosters, how I shake 2HenryIV.}i. 4 

unfasten so, and shake a friend — iv. 1 

witlml sluall make all Gallia shake .... Henry V. 1. 2 
preparation, shake in their fear . . — ii. (chorus) 
make vour Paris Louvre shake for it — ii. 4 
air shakes them passing scornfully .. — iv. 2 
Rouen, I'll shake thy bulwarks .... I Henry VI. in. 2 

shakes his head, and treinbhng •iHemy VI. 1. 1 

shake he his weapon at us — iv. 8 

but 1 must shake fair weather . . 
hoiie to shake king Henry's head 

if Warwick shake his bells — i. • 

have many blasts to shake them Diehard III.]. 3 

look on us, and shake your head — ii. 2 

would shake the press Henry Vlll. iv. 1 

herfoes shake likeafield of beaten.. — y. 4 

shake in and out the rivet IioiiusiCrestida,]. 3 

which shall shake him more than if — iii. 3 

that slightly shakes his parting — iii. 3 

you shtike, my lord, at something .. — v. 2 
to shake off my friend when he . limou of Athens, 1. 1 
but they do shake their Iieads, and I — _i:.2 
let's shake our heads, and say, ;is 'twere — iv. 2 

and shakes his threatening sword ~ v. 2 

thou madest thine enemies shake Coriolanus, 1. 4 

or I shall shake thy bones out ot .... — 111. 1 

feeble rumour shake your hearts! — 111. J 

if I could shake off' but one seven years — n. 1 
he will sliake your Rome about (rep.) — n . i> 
constrains them weep and shake with fear— v. 3 
6hakeofftheir.terileinse...........J«'.u»'-V'sar, 1. 2 

did shake: 'tis true, iliisL'od did shake — _i. 2 

for we will fhalie hiiii 01 worse — 1.2 

when all the s,viiy ovearth shakes .. — '1.3 

1 can shake off at pleasu.e — ..1. 3 

Marcus Bnitiis, will I shako with you — 111. 1 
to shake his ears, and graze in connnons — iv. 1 
swearing shake the throned gods. . 4;i/o;i|/ <S-C/fo. i. 3 

let me shake thy hand; I never -,- ii. (i 

not for his vantage, he sliakes ofl — — .'ii- 7 

no chance may sliake it — ?];• H 

shake thou to look on't — 111. II 

even here do we shake hands — iv. 10 

meant to quail and shake th.e 01b — v. 2 

shakes all our buds from growing Cymbeline, i. 4 

which to shake off, becomes a warlike — iii. I 
that sliakes forage and feebleness .Tilus Andmn. i. 1 
their vessel shakes ou I'ericles, iii. (Gower) 



— >:■ 3 

fJohn, ii. 2 

— iii. 1 

— iii. 3 

— iii. 4 

— i\-. 2 



.3HenryVI.i.\ 



Rl I AKE oft" the golden slumber of repose./'criWM, iii. 2 

to nlialti' all cures and business from Lear,\. 1 

and aluike ill pieces tlie heart of his. — ;• 'J 

jiiiwiT to sluilte my manliood tluis — !■ 4 

caitiff, to piuiTS Khalte, tliat under — iii. 2 

tliat thou nmv'sl shalie tile supcrfliix.... — iii. 1 
upon your cliiii, I'd slialiciton tliiBqunrrcl— iii. 7 

in your siclits, Bluvl<e pntiently my — iv. 6 

and docs hlialtc tlie lieiul to licar of — iv. 6 

alialiC, qnotli tl\c dove-liouse Itomeo fyJtUM, i. 3 

and sliaketlic yolce of inauspicious.. — v. 3 
po horridly to 8lial<c our disposition ....//umW, i. 4 

that we tilmliC luiiids, and part — j. -^ 

otliis infirinitv, will sliakc this island.. 0/Arf(o, ii. 3 

itisnot w.>nlstluitsluikenH: thus — iv. 1 

[K»(.]sOBliakcBandlinllsnH' — iV. 1 



I passion ( 



lid not sliaUc? wiiose solid— iv. I 



though he do sluike me olf to hcpgarly 

do you shake at tliat? ile supped (rep.).. — v. 1 

blooilv possion slmkcs your very frame.. — v. 2 

SI 1 AKIOU you, sir, and cried Trmpesl, ii. 1 

foundation of Ihi' earth shakcil likc.l llfriri/ir. iii I 
lie is so shakcd of a huriiiiiK quotidian, (/cmc;/ »'. ii. 1 
O. wlien dci,'rcc is sliakeii . . ..■Iinilus ACimnhr, i. Ii 
not to lie shakcd; the afcnt for Cijinhriii'-, i, G 

SllAKKN as we are, so Hun with \ llciuyir.i. I 

have sliakcn Jidward from tlic rci^aLillniiii I'l- iv. fi 
shaken witli sorrows in ungrateful niusAinlrnn. iv. 3 

SlIAKi:ST thou BO? Fear not ICinto'sVo/t, iv. 3 

thou slmkest thy head, and hold'st ..2//em!/ir. i. 1 

SIIAKINU— shake your sluiking Trmreit, ii. 2 

for shaking off bo good a wife All's lydl, iv. 3 

IMacbctii is ripe for shaking, and the .Miichrlh, iv. 3 
make a sliaking fever in your walls . King.lohn. ii. 1 
what dost tliou mean by shaking of thy — iii. 1 

shaking the blondv darts ....■illenruVl. ni. 1 

'laki 



ing of their cliains 

th..rioi7«s^ 

shaking tlie bloody fingers of thy.JiiJn 

baking of mine arm ., 



V. i 

, i. 3 

iii. 1 

.Hamlet, ii. 1 

lenry f. iv. 2 



at last a little sb 
SIlAIJCSandhnsksof 
SI lALLOW [see KOBERT] 

this is a very sliallow monster Tempest, n. 2 

some shallow story of deep love. Two Oen. of I 'er. i . I 
according to my shallow, simple skill — i. 2 

think'st thou, I am so shallow; — ly. 2 

your friend, and justice Shallow . . Merry IVives, \. I 
tor my venison, master Sl'.allow (re;). J — i. 1 

as my cousin Shallow says (rp;;.) — J. 2 

master Shallow, you have (rep.) .... — n. 3 
to shallow rivers, to whose i.rep.) — iii. 1 (song) 
there comes my master, master Shallow — iii. 1 
good master Sliallow, let liiin woo (rep.) — iu.4 
the shore was shclvy and shallow — — m. 5 

you are idle shallow things TwelflhNigM, iii. 4 

for shallow draught, and hulk — y. 1 

laughed at such shallow follies Much Ado, n. 3 

these sliallow fools have brought to light — v. 1 

that sliallow vassal l.oee'sL.Lost,i. 1 (letter) 

and to what end their shallow shows — v. 2 
wliicli sliallow laughing hearers give to — V. 2 
tliinkofsliallows and of flats .. Merck, of I'enice, i. 1 
the sound of shallow foppery enter .. — ii. 5 
shallow, sliallow; a better (rep.) .AsyouUkeil,\u.2 

most shulldw uianl (re/i.) — iii- 2 

aiiisli, kIhiUow, inconstant, full of .. — ii). 2 
you are shallow, madam; e'en great ..All'sWM, i. 3 
as he that leaves a shallow plasli.. Tamini;ofSli.i. 1 
feeble, shallow, weak, the folded Comerfi/o/AVr. iii. 2 
you are a shallow cowardly hind ..MlenryW. ii. 3 
amiilcd up and down uith shallow jesters— iii. 2 
a shallow scratch should drive the .. — v. 4 

a good shallow young fellow iHenrylF.n. 4 

good-morrow good cousin Shallow {rep) — iii. 2 
mad Sliallow yet. You were called (rep.) — iii. 2 

which is justice Shallow? — iii. 2 

Shallow; deep, master Shallow (rrp.J — iii. 2 
elic could not abide master Shallow — iii.2 

old, old, master Shallow (rep.) — iii.2 

I do see the bottom of justice Shallow — lii. 2 
too shallow, Hastings, much too shallow — iv. 2 
hermit's-staves as master Shallow .. — v. 1 
if Ihad a suit to master Sliallow .... — v. 1 
I would curry with master Shallow.. — v. 1 
devisematter enough out of this Shallow — v. I 
1 come, master Sliallow, I come (rep.) — v. 1 
master Sliallow, my lord Shallow (rep.) — V. 3 

master Sliallow, I owe yiui (rep.) — v. 5 

unlettered, rude, and shallow Henry V.\. 1 

will savour but of shallow wit — .i. 2 

giddy, shallow, humorous youth — — ii. 4 

some shallowspirit of judgment 1 lhniryl'I.\\. 4 

your judgment, which being shallow:! /leiirj/r/. iv. 1 
incapable, and shallow innocents.. H/c/iani ///. ii. 2 
his fears are shallow, wanting instance — iii. 2 

your reasons are too shallow — iv. 4 

and shallow changing— womani 

and led by shallow Kicliniond ., 

bow many shallow bauble boats, rroidn ,5- Cre.«. i. 3 

of their life is bound in t-\n\.\\o\\s..JuUusCwsar. iv. 3 

base, proud, shallow, hrggarly ;.ear, ii. 2 

SII .VLI>i IWICST Ibifk-skin of that. .WW. A'. 's Dr. m. 2 
Sll AL1,()\V-II lO.VUTEl) boysl ..TilusAndron. iv. 2 
SII VLI.OWLY did von these arms..2f/enri//''. iv. 2 
SII \LI.0W-110llTKI); sutfer tliem.2He"r|/r/. iii. 1 

SilAMBIiES of the parliament SHenryVI. i. 1 

as summer flies are in tlie shambles.... 0(/ieHo, iv. 2 
SHAME— a passing ehame (rep.).Two Gen. of Ver. i. a 

turns me to shame — »v. 4 

the more shame for liim that — iv. 4 

my shame and guilt confounds mo .. — v. 4 

if shame live in a disguise — ..y. 4 

and I fear not mine own shame .. .fl/errj/ Wives, in. 3 

for shame, never stand you — iii. :< 

ill your teeth, for shame .. "" " 

for shame, 'oman 

better shame than murder — 

come by some notable shame? . . TwelflliS 

done good feature shame — 

desperate of shame and state — 



— V. 3 



— iv. 1 



SHAME— much shame ....TwelflhNigM, v. 1 (letter) 
bear the shame most patiently. .^ieas. /or ^/eas. ii. 3 

has brought von to tliis shame — ii. 3 

and take llio sliame with joy — ii. 3 

ere I'd yiilil my lii>ily lip lo shame .. — ii. 4 

why give you nic this shuiiie? — iii. I 

take life from thine own sister's shame? — iii- I 

shame to him, whose cruel striking.. — iii.2 

twice treble shame on Angelo — iii- 2 

but that her tender shame will not .. — iv. 4 

with ransom of siicli shame — iv. 4 

begin with grief and shame to utter — v. 1 

no longer session hold upon my shame — v- 1 
my cunning shall not shame me ....MuchAdo, ii. 2 

I slionld wed, there will I shame her — iii.2 

shame her with wliat lie saw over-night — iii. 3 

the fairest cover for her sliame — iv. I 

every earthly thing crv shame upon her? — iv. 1 

spirits were stronger tlian thy shames — iv. 1 

tliis shanii- derives itself from unknown — iv. 1 

a thousand innocent shames in angel — iv. I 

than repeat over to my shame — v. 1 

so the life, that died with shame.. — v. 3 (scroll) 
how can'st tiiou thus, for tiXioxne. Mid. N. Dream, ii- 2 

maiden shame, no touch of bashfulness? — iii.2 

should look their shames upon — iii.2 

yielding rescues thee from sliamel i.oDe'sL.Los(, i. 1 

such public shame OS the rest — i. 1 

stands in attainder of eternal shame — i. 1 

to desire tliat, were a shame — ii. 1 

Bweet fellowship in shame! — iv. 3 

you were born to do me shame — iv- 3 

well mocked, depart away witli shame — v. 2 

Biron, they will shame us — v, 2 

run awa.y, for shame, Alisander .... — v, 2 

the more shame for you, Judas — v. 2 

forget the shames that you have..Mer.af /'enice, i 3 

hold a candle to my shames? — ii. 6 

yield to such inevitable shame, as to — iv. 1 

I will not shame myself to give — iv. I 

I was beset with shame and courtesy — v. 1 

for sliaine, for shame, lie not . . As you Like it, iii. 5 
some of my shame; if you will know — iv. 3 

1 do not sliame to tell you what .... — iv. 3 
divulged shame— traduced by oAXows. AWsWeU, ii. 1 
be encountered with a shame as ample — iv. 3 
tiiat bad received so much shame.... — iv. 3 
and, FaroUes, live safest in shamel .. — iv. 3 
shame, thou liilding of a devilish. Taming ofSh. ii. 1 
to this shame of ours? No sliame but — iii.2 
doff this habit, shame to your estate — iii.2 

came thence for very shame — iii.2 

if thou account'st it shame, lay it.... — iv. 3 
our entertainment shall shame us. Winlir'sTale, i. I 

what she should shame to know herself — ii. 1 

and fixed the shame on't in himself — ii. 3 

as you were past all shame, (those of — iii. 2 

unto our shame perpetual — iii- 2 

which will shame you to give him again — iv. 3 

and what shame else belongs to't — iv. 3 

and corruption doth it Bhame.Comet/j/Q.'/irtors, ii. 1 

thy own shame's orator — iii.2 

shame hath a bastard fame — iii- 2 

to your notorious shame, I doubt.... — iv. 1 

these slanders, and this open shamel — iv. 4 

it is no shame; the fellow finds — iv. 4 

put me to tills shame and trouble . . — "v. 1 

the charge, the shame, the imprisonment — v. 1 

for these deep shames, and great .... — v. 1 
but I shame to wear a heart so \v\i\te., Macbeth, ii. 2 

or the day's shame, that darkness .... — ii. 4 

shame itself I why do you make sucli faces? — iii. 4 

fie, for sliamel Blood hath been — iii. 4 

tliou dost shame tliy mother King John, i. I 

how he did prevail, I shame to sneak — _i. 1 

his mother shames him so, poor boy — ii. 1 

this day of shame, oppression, pen lu-y — iii- 1 

thou dost shame that bloody spoil .. — iii. I 

dolt' it for shame, and hang — iii. 1 

eould find some pattern of our shame — iii. 4 

sliame hath spoiled tlie sweet (rep.).. — iii. 4 

glow with shame of your proceedings — iv. 1 

and 'tis shame, that greatness should — iv. 2 

to do a deed of shame, this murder . . — iv. 2 

deep shame had struck me dumb .... — iv. 2 

tliis is the bloodiest shame, the wildest — iv. 3 

to do me shame, I'll strike thee dead — iv. 3 
blush for shame; for your own ladies — v. 2 

ami eyeless night have done me shame — v. (i 
destruction and perpetual shame .... — v. 7 

but not my shame; the one Richard II. \. 1 

take but my shame, and 1 resign..,. — j. I 

where shame doth liarbour — _i. 1 

is now bound in with shame — ii. I 

thy reach he would have laid thy shame — ii. 1 

it were o shame, to let this land .... — ii. 1 

more than shame, to shame it BO? .. — ii. 1 
live in thy shame, but die not sliame — ii. 1 
afore heaven, 'tis shame, such wrongs — ii. 1 

would it not shame thee, in so fair .. — iv. I 
spend mine honour with his shame .. — v. 3 
refuge their sliame, that many have — v. ;> 

without much shame retold \ Henry IV. i. 1 

shall it for shame, be spoken — i. 3 

from whom these shames ye underwent? — i. 3 
from this open and apparent shame? — ii. 4 

to shame the devil; by telling (rep.) — iii. 1 

and but for shame, in such a parley — iii. 1 

shall scour my shame with it — iii.2 

on my head my shames redoubled!.. — iii.2 
I may speak it to my sliame, I have — v. 1 
did grace the shame of those tbat....2Jfcnr!/f/-'. i. 1 
a shame to be on any side but one (rep.) — i. 2 
that it is a shame to be ihought on .. — ii. 1 
that argues but the shame of your .. — iv. I 

for shame to talk of mercy Henry F.n. 2 

our too much memorable shame .... — ii. 4 

'tis shame for us all; so God sa' (rep.) — iii.2 

now quit you of great shames — iii. 5 

reproach and everlasting sliame sits — iv. & 



SHAME— O perdurable shame! llenryl'. iv. ft 

shame, and eternal shame (rep-) — iv. 6 

be short; else, shame will be too long — iv. 6 
to hurl at the beholders of my shaine.l Henry VI. i. 4 

the shame hereof will make mc — i. 6 

blush for pure Hhame to counterfeit.. — ii. 4 
for shame, my lord of Winchester! ,. — iii. I 
let Talbot perish with this shame .... — iii.2 

shame to the duke of Burgundy — iv. 1 

and die in shame, that, Talbot dead.. — iv. 4 

in the world, his shame in yiui — iv. 4 

ay, rather than I'll shame my mother's — iv. 5 

l)ut will be shame in me — iv. 5 

was never tainted with such shame .. — iv. s 

bought with such a shame — iv. 6 

to be shame's scorn, and subject — iv. 

as a prey, to law, and shame iUenryVI. ii. I 

looks still laughing at thy shame .... — ii. 4 

to see my open shame? — ii. 4 

rue mv shame, and ban thine enemies — ii. 4 
mailed up in shame, with papers .... — ii. 4 

and blush not at my shame — ii. 4 

hast been conduct of my shame — ii. 4 

my shame will not be shifted — ii. 4 

a shame take all (rep.) — iii, I 

thereby of ten thousand shames — iii 2 

were't not a shame, that, whilst you — iv. 8 
old Salisbury, shame to thy silver hair — v. 1 
and shame thine honourable ago with — v. I 
for shame! in duty bend thy knee (rep.) — v. 1 
ehame and confusion! all is on the.. — v. 2 

for shame, away! Can we outrun — v. 2 

for shame come down; he made ....^UenryVI.'i. I 

I shame to hear thee speak — i. 1 

were shame enough to shame thee .. — i. 4 
for shame, my liege, make them .... — ii. 2 

all what a shame were this! — ii. 2 

for shame, leave Henry, and call .... — iii, 3 

if he could see his shame — iii. 3 

the last with shame? shame on himself — iii. 3 
ah, what a shame! ah, what a fault.. — v. 4 

why, twere perpetual shame — v. 4 

hie thee to bell for shame Richard III. i. 3 

fiml shame upon you! you have .... .— i. 3 

for shame, if not for charity (rep) — i. 3 

life my shame, and in my shame still — i 3 

a.v, and therein my shame — ii. 2 

when I see my shame in him — ii. 2 

worlds shame, grave's due by — iv. 4 

shame serves tliy life, and doth thy .. — iv. 4 
convey me to the block of shame .... — v. 1 
thee down to ruin, shame, and death! — v. 3 

left them the heirs of shame — v. 3 

the more shame for ye; holy men. Henry VIII. iii. 1 

mend tliem for Bhame, my lords — iii. I 

they would shame to make me wait else — v- 2 

forbear, for shame, my lords —» v. 2 

wh.v, what a shame was this? — v- 2 

ibe f'riends, for shame, my lords — v. 2 

the disdain and shame whereof.. Troilus ^ Cress, i. 2 
peace, for Bhame, peace! mark him .. — i. 2 

and think them snamea, which are .. — i. 3 

our honour and our shame, in this .. — i. 3 

for a fool's will shame it — ii. 1 

fie, for godly Bluime! no marvel — ii. 2 

to .your great wortlis, and shame to me — ii. 2 

need you blush! sluime'sababy — iii.2 

to shame the zeal of my petition .... — iv. 4 

let me not shame respect — v. 3 

Ajax arm for shame — v. 5 

ignomy and shame pursue thy life .. — v. II 

1 am e^en siclc of shame Timon of.Hhens, iii. fi 

shame not these woods by putting.... — iv. 3 
shame, that tiiey wanted cunning.. .. — v. 5 
light on you, you shames of Romel . . Coriolanus, i. 4 
never shame to hear what you have.. — ii. 2 
is that a shame? note but this fool .. — iv. 2 
those maims of sha.me seen tliriiugh.. — iv. 5 
and cannot live but to thy shame .... — iv. 5 
the tribunes cannot do't for shame .. — iv. ti 
may'st prove to shame unvulnerable — v. 3 
let us shame him with our knees .... — v. 3 
to the Antiates, than shame to the .. — v. 5 
■which was your shame, by this unholy — v. 5 

the gods do this in shame of JuliusCcasar, ii. 2 

for shame, you generals; what do you — iv. 3 
defend him from so great a shame! .. — v. 4 
else so thycheek pays shame ....Antony fyCleo. I. 1 
let his shames quickly drive him .... — i. 4 
I never saw an action of such shame — iii. 8 
he is unqualitied with very shame .. — iii. 9 
I convey my Bhame out of thine ej'es — iii. 9 
'twas a sliame no loss than was his loss — iii. 1 1 
for shame, transform us not to women — iv. 2 
hisfacesubducd to penetrative shame — iv. 12 
we purpose her no sname — v. 1 

Caisar, wliat a wounding shame is this — v. 2 

with shame (the first that ever Cymbeline, iii. 1 

to shame the guise o' the world — v. 1 

living to die with lengthened shame — v. 3 
for preservation casecl, or shame .... — v. 3 

part, shame, part spirit renewed — v. 3 

for sliame, put up (rep.) Titus Andronlcus, ii. 1 

were't not tor shame, well could I.... — ii. 4 
turn'st away thy face for shamel .... — ii. 5 

will make it shame and blush — iii. I 

our empieas' shame, and stately Rome's — iv. 2 
villains, for shame you could not beg — v. 2 
girl should not survive her shame.... — v. 3 
sliame with thee; and with thy shame — v. 3 

the targets, to put off the shame rericles^ i. 1 

18 it a sliame to get when we are old? .... — iv. 3 
for your bride goes to that with shame .. — iv. 3 

1 do shame to think of what a — iv. 4 

seeds and rootsof shame and iniquity.... — iv. 6 

at last shame them derides Lear, i. I 

which else were shame, that then necessity — i. 4 

the shame itself doth speak for ■ — i. 4 

O lady, lady, shame would have it hid! .. — ii. 1 
makest thou this shame thy pastime?.... — ii. 4 



SHAME ■which here itsufters If or, ii. 4 

let slmmc come when it will — ii. 4 

for Bluiine, bcmonHtur iKit tliv foaturc..*, — iv. !i 

Bistursl sliaiiie ■)t'luan_'s! sistorsi — iv. 3 

a Bovcreiiiii siuiiiK' 8o t'lljnwy liim — iv. 3 

tliat, biirniii)! sliamc (Ictiiius him from .. — iv. 3 

wliy, iincic, tis a Khamc Itomeo ^- Juliet^ i. 5 

more lij^ht, more light, for sliaino. . . . — i. ft 

of lier chceic would shame tliosc stars — ii. 2 
gentlemen, for t^liamc forbear tbin (Uitragc — iii. I 
sliame eoinc to llomeol Blistered be — iii. 'i 
born to shame; upon liis brow (n/'.) — iii. 2 
lilte deatli to cbiife away this shame — iv. I 
pball tree line from this present shame — iv. 1 
for shame, liiin^ Juliet lorlh (r/7< I.. — iv. 5 
todosunie villaiiousslmme to thcMlead — V. 3 
aboard, aboard, for shame; tlicwiml sits. Hamto, i. 3 
iie'll not shame to tell you wluit it means — iii. 2 
sliame, wliere is tliy bhisli? reljollious.. — iii. 4 
proebilm no shame, whuu tlic comiuUsive — iii, 4 
to mv shame, I see tlie inuuineut deatli — iv, 4 
and fye for sliamel young men .... — iv. 5 (song) 

let shame say wluit it will — iv. 7 

1 will gain nothing but my shame , . . . Hmnh'l, v. 2 
zounds, sir, you are robbed; for shame.. OI/iri(o, i. I 
it is my sltame to be so fond ; but it is not — i. 3 
general epeaUs to yon; liold, for simme I — ii. 3 
Christian shame, put by this barbarous — ii. 3 

all kinds of sores, and shames — iv. 2 

net of sliame a tbousand times committed — v. 2 

nil, !ill,ery s!iameas!ninst me — v. 2 

SIIAMICD, you are overtbrov/n ..Mnry H'ives, iii. 3 
wl\y then yon arc utterly sliamed.... — iv. 2 

now sliall tlio ilevil be sliamed — iv. 2 

liave Iwm publicly shamed (rep.) .... — iv. 2 

and shamed life a hateful Meas.for Mea.^. iii. 1 

is but one shamed that was never ..As i/"" '•''''e <l, i. 2 
my shamed life in hisdishononr lies. /''>/i«r</ //. v, 3 

eliamed their aspects with store llichanl III. i. 2 

have sliamed me in j'our condemned. Cor/o/anui-, i. 8 

ay, thou art shamed JuliusCiesar, i. 2 

have often shamed our sex Aitlony ffCln. v. 2 

whose rags shamed gilded arms ....Cijmbcline, v. 5 
our mother is for ever shamed . . 'I'i/usAnrlron. iv. 2 
a blanket, else we had been all shamed. . Lra/-, iii. 4 
will be shamed [K»^-a.hamed] for unc.Oiliell,,, ii.:i 

SMAMK-F ACEU lle.uy Mh,,,:, II. iv. 8 

'tis u blnsbing shame-faced spirit ..llia/mrd III. i. i 

SIIAMKFUL cunning Twelfth N,!t'''.n\. I 

while shameful hate sleeps out All's ll'rlt, v. 3 

behold in me this shameful t^poH.Cnmedi/ o/Iur. iv.4 
it is the sliuraeful work of llnhevt's. Kins; John, iv. 3 
bath made a shamefid einHiuest....yi/r/iu;-(/ //. ii. 1 
England, shameful is this league! ..iHenryyi. i. 1 

can I bear this shiimefnl yoke? — ii. 4 

by shameful murder of a guiltless king — iv. 1 

you do me shameful injury Hichard III. i. 3 

through the sharnelul tield Troitus ^ Cresj. v. II 

wortliy shameful cheek it were../lii(o»!/ ffCleo, iv. 4 
two pasties of your shameful beads ..TilusAud. v. i 
do shameful execution on herself .... — v. 3 

not to beliold this shameful lodging Lear, ii, 2 

SHAMEFULLY surprised I H<^-.r.r/ ('/. ii. I 

have married her most shamefully. .Meni/ ri'ivfs, v. 5 

say, is shamefully bereft of life •^llemi/ri. iii. 2 

shamefully by you my hopes are ..Hichard III. i. 3 

SHAMELESS thrown on me ..Comedy of Krrnrs,v. 1 

beastly, shameless transformation . . . i Uenry IK i. 1 

fiend, and shameless courtezan !....l//<'Kri/K/. iii. 2 

wert thou not shameless ZHenryl'I. i. 4 

to make this sh'imelesscallat know — ii. 2 

and shameless Warwick, peace — iii. 3 

grew shameless dcsjierate Ci/mbelinc, v. 5 

SHAME-PROOF, my lord Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

SHAMIST to acknowledge me Comedyof Err. v. I 

sham'st thou not, knowing whence. . 3 Hoiryr/. ii. 2 
conspiracy! sham'st thou to i!\\ovf..hUiHsCfpsnr, ii. I 
sham'st tne music of sweet new a. Ho meo 4' Juliet, ii. 5 
fie! tln)u sham'st thy sliape, thy love — iii. 3 

SHANK— for his sliruidi shank As you Like il, ii. 7 

more than my shanks, and wrists ..CyiuMine, v. 4 

or I'll so carbonado your shanks Lear, ii. 2 

with reeky shanks, and ye\low..Ili>meo^-Juliel, iv. I 

SHAl'E— with a human shape TempestjS. 2 

go, take this shape — i, 2 

there are no more such shapes as he — i. 2 
nor can imagination firm a shape .. — iii. 1 
though they are of monstrous shape — iii. 3 

such shapes, such gesture — iii. 3 

thy shape invisible retain tliou still.. — iv. I 

as in bis shape — v. 1 

beautified with goodly shape ..TiroGen. ofVer. iv. 1 

and adore false shapes — iv. 2 

women to change their shapes — v. 4 

woidd meet him in this shape .. .. Merry IVives, iv. 2 
to tlie foige with it then, shape it.... — iv. 2 
but he'll come, and in this shape .... — iv.4 
Iiedares to tread, in shape profane .. — iv.4 

in the shape of a woman (rep.) — v. 1 

so full of shapes is fancy Twel/lli Night, i. 1 

only shai)c tliou thy silence — i. 2 

in dimension, and tlie shape of nature — i. 5 
the shape of his leg, the manner .... — ii. 3 

and let it keep one shape Mean, for Meas. ii. 1 

nor take no shape nor project of .... MufhAdo, iii. I 
for shape, for bearing, argument .... — iii. I 
or in the shape of two countries at once — iii. 2 

in better shape than I can lay — iv. 1 

branch, shape, and form — v. 1 

I mistake your shape and making.. W/rf.iV.'t Br. ii. I 
and in the shape of Corin sat all .... — ii. 2 
so is Tniue eye enthralled to thy shape — iii. 1 
the poet's pen turns tliem to shapes.. — v. 1 
to make an ill shape good irep.) .. Love's L. Lost, ii. I 

figures, shapes, objects, ideas — iv. 2 

the shape of love's Tyburn that hangs — iv. 3 

[f/o;.? Jisftgure not his shape — iv. 3 

shortnessof the time can shape' — iv. 3 

and shape his service wholly to — v. 2 

again be here in their own 8hai>c3 (icp.) — v. 2 



SHAPE— full of strange shapes .... Love's L.Loal, v. 2 
tliat did bear tlie sliape of man.. A/er. o/^e«/ce, iii 2 

if sight and shape be true Aayou Likeil,v. 4 

in manners, as in shape! AW t Well, i, 1 

have taken the shapes of beasts.. If'inlei'sTale, iv. 3 
both ill mind, and in my sliape .Comedy ofKrr. ii 2 

take any shape but that Mnvlirlh, iii. 4 

an' if my brother had my shape KiiigJohii, i. 1 

and, to his shape, were I'leir to all this — i. I 

finds shapes of^'ricf, more than Hichard II. ii. 2 

in Khaiieand mind tninsfurnied — v. 1 

and shape. if likelihood the news ....\ Henry IF. i. I 



was full of He 



— iii. 1 



of this age shapes tl 

let time shape, and there iin end... 

native,and most jiroper shape iv. I 

nimble, flery, and delectable shapes.. — iv. 3 
when 1 do shape, in fnrnis imaginary — iv. 4 
suffered under that »li:ipe, I beseeclu, Ilenri/I'. iv. 8 
than may be gathered by thy shnpe.l Henry 11. ii. 3 
my sliape. Changed to a worser shape — v. 3 

no shape but his can please — v. 3 

wlio cannot steal a shape, that 'iIIer>r>iVI. iii. 1 

as crooked in thy manners as thy shape! — v. 1 
to shape my legs of an unequal e'ize.3HeHr!/;7. iii. 2 

change shapes with Proteus iii. 2 

should steal such gentle shapes..., /ii'c/iarii ///. ii. 2 
coiildst put on some other shape .... — iv.4 
pronounce him in that very shape.. Henrt/Flll. i. 1 
good sliajie, discourse, manhood. . Troi/us ^-C/css. i. 2 

that gave't surmised shape — i. 3 

gifts, natures, shajjcs, severals — i. 3 

my time to bring It to some shape .. — i. 3 

this shape of sense assumes i. 3 

but shapes and forms of slaughter .. — v. 3 
in all shapes, that man goes up. Timoncf Alliens, ii. 2 
he looks out in an ungrateful shape! — iii. 2 
that you work not ill holier sliapes .. — iv. 3 

that bear the shapes of men Coriolanus, i. 4 

that shapes man better — iv. 6 

work so miieli iiiioii your shape ..JuliusCa'sar,V\. 1 
that shapes this monstrous apparition — iv. 3 
and destroyed in sneh a shape ..AnlonyfyCleo. iv. 6 

cannot hold this visible shape — iv. 12 

to any shiipe of thy preferment Cymheline, i. B 

I know the shape of his leg — iv. 2 

honour, shall s.'mpc privilege ,. TilusAndron. iv. 4 
nature's own sha|ie, of bud .. ..Pericles, v. (Gower) 
he'll shape his old course in a country. ....leur, i. 1 

as generous, and my shape as true — i. 2 

I'll resume the shape which thou dost .. — i. 4 
take the basest and most poorest shape .. — ii. 3 

a woman's shape doth shield thee — iv. 2 

she comes in shape no bigi,'ertliaii./;omeo<;-./««ipr, i. 4 
thy shape, thy love, thy wit (rej<.) ., — iii. 3 
thy noble pliaiie but a form of wax .. — iii. 3 
that ornament to shape and love .. .. — iii. 3 
com'st in such a (inestionable shape ....llamlel, i. 4 
though lewdness court it in a shape of .. — i. 5 

power to assume a pleasing sliape — ii. 2 

imagination to give them shape — iii.) 

that s almost in shape of a camel? — iii. 2 

in forgery of shapes and tricks — iv. 7 

nmy ht us to our shape _ iv. 7 

a divinity tliat shapes our ends — v. 2 

my hopes doshape him for the governor. 0//ici(r). ii. I 

oft mv jealousy shapes faults that — iii. 3 

SHAPED my body so liHi-nry ri. v. r, 

not shapetl for sportive tricks Hichunl 1 1 1. \. 1 

sliaped out a man, whom this . . Timon nf .lih:-ns, i. I 
it is shaped, sir, like Hse]t'. . Antony ^ Cleniiaira, i\. 7 
the more it shaped unto my end ....Cymtn'tine, v. b 

SHAPELESS idleness riniGen.oll'erona, i. I 

like Mu.soovites, in shapeless gear. /.one'st.LMf, v. 2 
worse bodied, shapeless every ..Comedy n/ lirr. iv. i 

left so shapeless and so rude Kin^'.lnhn, v. 7 

SHAPING fantasies, that .Mid. N.'sDrrum.v. \ 

SMAUD-they are bis shards .. ..Ant„n<, .'iri,;,. iii. - 

for eluirital.le prayers, shards. Hints.... Ihnnlrl, v. I 

SII.\IMJ-li(ll:\|.; beetle, «itli liis .....l/,„-/,w/,, iii. 2 

SIIAUDKO beetle in a safer hold. . . . (■./"''"■/i;,<', iii. 3 

SUAltE— didst thou notsharei' Merry If, ves, ii. 2 

share damnation together — iii. 2 

no one so true did share it. TuielflhPiight, ii. 4 (song) 

I shall have share in this — v. 1 

that heaven shall share with you. Went. ./"orMeas. ii. 2 

shall share the good of our ..*.* yun Like it, v. 4 

goodness share with thy birth-right ..All'sH'cll, i. I 

the advice betwixt you; if both — ii. I 

of all— but my share of the feast.. V'nmi'n"- of Sh. v. 1 
in their piediiess, shares with.... IVinlers'i'iUe, iv. 3 
and every one shall share i' the gulns. Macbeth, iv. 1 

but ill it shares some woe — iv. 3 

nay, let us share thy thoughts Hichard II. ii. 1 

Shalt have a sliaie in our purchase. .ll/eHrv//', •'• 1 

let us share, and then to horse — ii. 2 

to share with me in glory any more — v. 4 

the greater share of honour Henry f. iv. 3 

metliinks, would share from me .... — iv. 3 

Walter Whitmore, is thy share iHenryVI. iv. 1 

thy share thereof is small 3 Henry /'/. i. 4 

shall share his part thereof Hichard III. v. 3 

share [A'n/.-wear] witii him .. Troilus^Cressida, i. 3 

and share the air with us? — ii. 3 

he'd have ten shares — ii. 3 

we'll share a binntei.us time iw. Timon of Alliens, i. I 
of my wealth I'll share amongst you — iv. 2 

one of the three to sliare it? JuUusCwsar, iv. 1 

in many'seyes doth share the ..HomeoSf Juliet, i. 3 

80 shall you share all that ho — i. 3 

ha! fa share. A whole one, I WamW, iii. 2 

SHARED— we two have shared. jWr/.A'.'jDreain, iii. i 
while all is shared, and all is borne..2;;tiiri//'/. i. I 
on your love; shared dangers with yon.o/Aci/o.iii. 4 

SUARINti- as we were sharing I Henry 1 1', ii. 4 

sharing that which you have pilled. /(/c/i<ii(/ III. i. S 
SHARIC-the ravined salt tea shark ..Macbeth, iv. 1 

SHARKED up a list of landless Hamlet, i. 1 

SHARI'— to run upon the sharp wind ,. Temjiesl^ i. 2 
through tooth'd briers, sharp furzes. ... — iv. 1 



SHARP— how sharp the point of this .. Trmiicsi, v. I 
no madam; it is too sharp ..TwoOen.of I'eronn, i. 2 

are not sharp enough _ iii. a 

more of her than sharp words MerryWircs, ii. 1 

more sharp tliaii tiled steel Tu-elfhSiuhl, iii. :i 

with thy sharp and sulphurous.. yi/eri«./orA/eu». ii. 3 
fit tliy eonsenl to my sharii appetite.. — ii. 4 

a good sharp fellow; I will MuchAdo,\. 2 

the sharp Atheuian law cannot Mid.N.'tDr, i. 1 

is a sluiri) wit matched with too.. Love'sL.Lost, ii. 1 
have been sharp and sententious .... — v. 1 
butt yourself in tliese sharp mocks! — v. 2 

thrust tiiy sliari) wit quite tiirongh .. — v. 2 
keenness of thv sharp i^nvy. Merchant of l^mice, iv, 1 
thy sting is not so sharp . . Asijim Like il. ii. ? (song) 
he roared with the sliarii constraint.. /JH'sXW;, iii. 2 
tth, what sharp stings are in her .... — iii. 4 
and be as sweet as sharp: we must .. — iv.4 
goaded with most sharp occasions .. — v. 1 

my fah'oii now is sliar|i Taming of Shrew, \v. 1 

if voluble and sharp discourse be Comedyof Err, ii. 1 

fiery and how sharp he looks! — iv.4 

great love, sharp as his 8|nir Macbeth i. 6 

my sword s as sharp as your'a King John, jv. 3 

tins day as sharp to them as thorn.. /f/c/i«ri///. iv. 1 

his nose was as sharp as a pen Henry r. ii. 3 

greet England with our sharp defiance — iii. 5 

instead wliereof, sharp stakes I Henry I' I. i. I 

in these nice sliar|i (jnillets of — ii. 1 

ay, sharp and iiierenif.', to maintain — ii. 4 

1 feel such sharp dissentinn in — v. 5 

sharp Buckingham unburdens ....'ZHenryVt.Vn. 1 

you i)ut sharp weapons in — iii. I 

almost like a sharp quilled porcupine — iii. I 
thy woes will make them sharp ..Hichard III. iv. 4 

one bloody trial of sharp war — v. 2 

his sword hath a sharp edge llcnryVIlt, i. I 

and alleged many shar|) reasons to .. — ii. 1 

but the sharp thorn.y points of — ii, 4 

sharp enough, Lordi for thy justice! — iii, 2 

by your good favour, too sharp — v. 2 

you bite so shar)) at realms. . Troilus ^ CreiiiUa, ii. 2 

tuned too sbarji in sweetness — iii. 2 

and our sharp wars are ended — v. 10 

strike their sharp shins, and mar..7'/'?)?ono/'/l//i. iv. 3 
do not please sharp fate to. Antony^ Cleopalru, iv. 12 

with thy sharp teeth this knot — v. 2 

in deatli more sliarp than this is ....Cymheline, i. 2 
pointed him as sharp as my needle .. — i. 4 

forbear sharp speeches to her — iii. 5 

from thee by a sharp torture — iv. 3 

oppiirtunity of sharp vav^ngz., Titus Andronicus, i. 2 

we'll be as sharp with you — i. 2 

dies uijoii my sc.ymilar's sharp point — iv. 2 

witness my knife's sharp point — v. 3 

shari) physic is tlie last Pericles, i. I 

BO sharp are hunger's teeth, that man.... — i. 4 
sharp neeld wound the cambric .. — iv. (Uowcr) 

knives sharp, or waters deep — iv 3 

his sharp sword out, mumbling of wicked. Lear, ii. I 

necessity's sharp pinch! — ii. 4 

through the sharp hawthorn blows the .. — iii. 4 

it is a most sharp sauce Itomeo ^Juliet, ii. 4 

harsh discords, and iiniileasing shariis — iii. 5 
sharp misery had worn him to the binics — v. I 
thou.Ldi inclination be as shari) us will.HamW. iii. 3 
SHARPEN— now she sharjiens. Troi ui /\ Crcssidn, v. 2 
sharpen with cloyless sauce bis ..Antony <S l^ifi. ii. I 

and sharpens well the stomach I'eiirirs, iv. 1 

SHARPER— whose sting is sharper. IVinirr's fntc. ii. ;1 

in thee no sharper spur? Hichard II. i. 2 

more sharper tluiii your swords Henry!', iii. 5 

sweeter to yon, that have a sharper. . Cymbtline, iii. 3 
whose edge is sharper than the sword — iii. 1 

how sbarjior than a ser[ient's tooth Lear, i. 4 

SHARPEST-the sharpest tooeasy. IVintrr'sTale, iv.3 
your sharpest deeds of malice on .... King John, ii. 2 
up to the sharpest kind ofjnstice ..Hennii'lll. ii. 4 

I wait the shariiest blow, Autiochus Pericles, i. I 

SHARP-G ROU N U knife Hmneo ^Juliet, iii. 3 

SHARP-LOOKING wretch .... Come Jy o/ i'rror», v. 1 

SHARPLY— that relish all as sharply .. Tempest, v. I 

swaggering accent sharply twanged. Twelfih S. iii. 4 

feel It, set down sharply All'sH'cll, iii. 4 

do feel the treason sharply Ci/miieline. iii. 4 

SHARI'NESS-in his pride or sharpness .AWsWell, i. 2 
not take my former sharpness iW.AniouyfyCleo. iii. 3 

by those that tee I their sharpness Lear, v. 3 

SHARP-l'OlNTKD sword Richardlll i. 2 

SHAHP-PROVIDKD wit he reasons — iii. 1 

SHARP-TOOTH !•:!> unkindiiess Lear, ii. 4 

SHATTER— seem to sluUter all his bnlk.//.iM(rt, ii. I 
SILWE the head and tie the ....Meas. lorMcns. iv. 2 

I'll shave your crown fortius illenryri. ii. 1 

beard, I would not shave to-day. , Antony (^Clcn. ii. 2 
SILVVED—Bardolpli was shaved.... l/leiiri//;'. iii. 3 
SII.VVEN— like the shaven Hercules. .Muc/i.4'/", iii. 3 

SlIAW-Biiced Jo doctor Shaw Hichard III. iii. 5 

SHKAF— sheaf ami bind .. .-<«vuii /,i/<e i7, iii. 2 (verses) 
corn into one nmliml slieaf .. Titus Aadronicus, V. 3 

SliK.\LI';!)-tliats a shealed peaseod Lear, i. 4 

SllE-.\.N(iEL-weic a she-angel.. Ilinter'sTule, iv.3 

SIIEAR— went but a pair of shears. il/eu«./orj1/ca». i. 2 

shore with sliears his thread ..Mid.K.'s Dream, v. I 

and do not shear the fleeces As you Like it, ii. 4 

I bear the shears of destiny? King John, iv 2 

who, with his shears and measure.... — iv. 2 

ere I shall shear the fleece 3 Henry f'l. ii. 5 

SI 1 !■: .\ I! !■; It-nosegays for the shearers. ll'inter'sT. iv. 2 
an<l the shearers prove sheep, let me,. — iv. 2 
SIIi:aI!I \(J — welcome tooiir Bhearing — iv.3 
Sll f;.VIi.M.V.M— a shearman art thou,2Henr!? /'/. iv. 2 
SIlKATIl— you sheath, you bowcase.l Henry II'. ii. 4 

ere thou sleep in thy sheath •IHenryl'I. iv. i|) 

lath glued williiii your sheath TitnsAndron. ii. 1 

this is thy sheath Ilomea^ Juliet, V. 3 

SIIEATHIO thy imiiatience .Merry ll'ives, ii, 3 

edge, I sheathe again imdceded .Macbeth, v. 7 

not till I sheathe it in a murderer's.. King John, iv. 3 
draw out and slieat^ie for luck of sport!. Hmij/ 1', iv.3 



SHE 



SHEATHE thv swovd, I'll pardon. ...Sjrfnri/C/. v. I 

to sheathe his knife inns Henrijflll.X.i 

slieatlie your dagger Julius Cirstr, i v. 3 

"ive me leave to sheathe ray sword .. TUus.luil. i. -' 

ilravv your swoi-ds, and sheathe them ni)t — i. i 

SlIEATHKntlieirswcmlBfor laoknf ..llmryr. iii. I 

till I have sheathed my rapier TilusAndron. ii. 1 

SUEATUING tl>esteel inmy — v. 3 

was not come from slieatliiiig... Tomhinnfi^li. iv. 1 

RIlUBAv/as never more covetous Henrijl'lll. v. i 

SIIKD-that woiihl slied his liquor .... Ti-mpn.; ii. 2 
ciu- slied one tear {ri-p.) .... TwoGrn.nrrriona. ii. 3 
lla^siou of loud laughter never shed./V/rf. /V. Dr. v. 1 
if thnu d.ist shed "ue drop oT ..Meich.o/t'eum; iv. 1 

shed thou i\o blood; nor out — iv. 1 

than those I shed for him AU'slleU. \. I 

like a weni-h that ha<l shed her milk — iv. 3 

hill liim shed toars as being. VV.miHi' or S/i. I (indue.) 
the tcar.s that she liath shed for thee - 2 (indue.) 
would have shed water out of fire. Iliiiicr's '/"((/c, iii. 2 

and tears, shed there, shall he my — iii. 2 

ever we slied. %Yc may live.son (r'V-) — v. 2 

blood hath been shed ere now Mnchrlh, iii. 4 

hot rash haste so indirectly shed KingJnhn, ii. 1 

which if to day thou shed, lament . . Richard 11. i. 3 
■what store of parting tears were shed — i. ■! 

and shed my dear blood drop \HeuryIV. i. 3 

will he a world of watershed — iii. 1 

for he to day that sheds his blood llenr;i V. iv 3 

I qniekly shed some of his \ Henri/ I'l. iv. 6 

have I shed many a tear — v. 4 

my sword should shed hot blood iHenrijVI. i. 1 

while I shed thv blood, if from — iii. 2 

must not he shed by sueh a iaded groom — iv. 1 
will slied tears; yea, even mv i,rep.)..^HenryVI. i. 4 
slied sea< of tears, and ne'er be satisfied? — ii. .5 

shed no blond at :ill, did not — v. 5 

sueh nuriilo tears be always shed from _ v. 6 
whieh nevtr sliol vr imrseful tear ..RIchnrd III. i. 2 
dear blond shod tor our grievous .... — i. 4 

of tears thai von have shed — iv. 4 

the brother blindly shed the — v. 4 

I did not think to shed a tear .... Hfnr;/Viri. iii. 2 
by the blood we have shed together. . Corioluuiis, i. 6 
for my country I have shed my blood — iii. 1 
and the drops 'of blood shed for my .. — iv. 5 
bravely shed thy wife and children's — v. 3 

woe to the hand that shed this ..Julius Cirsar, iii. 1 

prepare to shed them now — iii. 2 

rue the tears I shed, a mother's . . TitusA tidron. i. 2 
with tears of joy shed on the earth . . — i. 2 

no man shed tearsfor noble Muli;!3.. — i. 2 
with tears not lightly shed, that this — ii. 4 
blood in Kome's great quarrel shed . . — iii. 1 

I have not another tear to shed — iii. 1 

to shed olHC'ioious tears upon — v. 3 

like a loviiri .■iviM, shell yet some — v. 3 

maiiv W'lrtliv priiu?-' blood were shed . . f 'w/Wes, i. 2 
of ours.slirdldooil ol'iMoutague.«.imei),5-Ju(;e(, iii. 1 
did Romeo's band shed Tybalt's blood — iii. 2 

yet I'll not shed her blood Othello, v. 2 

SilEDDINUd)uto' my shedding ,1/fr. ii/-;V»ics, iii. 1 
pretty match with shedding tears?. . Richard II. iii. 3 

or, shedding, breed a nursery Tmilus Sr Cress, i. 3 

SHEEN— spangled starlight shecn..J)/W. N.'s Or. ii. 1 
dozen moons, with borrowed sheen.... //amW. iii. 2 

SHEEP— where live nibbling sheep Tempest, iv. 1 

plaved the sheep in losing (rep.).Two Gen.ofVer. i. ! 
a sliepherd, then, and I a sheep? (rep) — i. 1 

shepherd seeks the sheep ()<7)-) — i- 1 

sheeos' guts should hale souls Much Ado, ii. 3 

two hot sheeps, marry 1 Love\L.Losl,\\. \ 

no sheep, sweet lamb, unless — ii. 1 

you sheep, and I pasture — ii. 1 

it kills sheep (rep ) — iv. 3 

ba, most silly sheep, with a horn (riip.) — v. 1 
grazed his uncle Laban's sheep ..liter, of Venice, i, 3 
cood pasture makes fat sheep ....Asi/auLike it, iii. 2 

with the surgery of our sheep — iii. 2 

as clean as a sound fiheoi)'s heart ..,, — iii. 2 
a heiid-stall of sheep's leather .. 7',.-mi"y o/'.S/.. iii. 2 
scared away two of my best sheep.. Ilinlei'sl', iii. 3 

letmvsheepgo — iii. 3 

and the shearers prove Blieep — iv. 2 

whv thou peevish sheep Comedy of Errors, i v. 1 

kept sheep, I should be as merry ..HingJohn, iv. I 

thou wolt in sheep's array \ Hem y I'l. i. 3 

sheep in lions' stead; sheep run not.. — i. 5 

for oxen, sheep, or horse — v. 5 

i' the hand for stealing of sheep illenryJ'I. iv. 2 

fell before thee like sheep and o.xen.. — iv. 3 

on sheep or oxen could 1 spend — v. 1 

looking on their silly sheep illeiiri/ri. ii. 6 

so first the harmless sheep doth — v. B 

had rather be a tick in a sheep.. Troilus ^ Cress, iii. 3 

as easy, as to set dogs on sheep Coriolnnus, ii. 1 

the Romans are but sheep hUiusCirsur, \. 3 

to fish, or honey-stalks to sheep.. 7V/us/l«d/ oh. iv. 4 
the sheep no wool, the eat no jierfume ..Lear, iii. 4 
thy sheep be in the corn irep.t.... — iii- (song) 
are sheep, and calves, whieh seek out ..llnmte', v. 1 
SHEEV-BITER come by some ..TireWJi Siglil, ii. 5 

SmOEP-BITlNG face .W«is»re/i)r Meiimre, v. 1 

SIlEEl'-COTE now, by reason of ..As youLike it,\i. i 

a slieep-cote fenced about with — iy, 3 

draw our throne into a sheep-cote! ll'in>er'sTale,\y.3 

villages, sheep-cotes, and mills I.eor, ii. 3 

SiaOEL'-HOOKI Thou old traitor. (riH/cr's^'a/civ. 3 

SHEEP-SHEARING feast? — iv. 2 

CO buy spices for our slieep-shearing — iv. 2 

I'll be with yon at your sheep-shearing — iv. 2 
vour sheep-shearing is as a meeting of — iv. 3 
hid us welcome to your sheep-shearing" — iv. 3 

8;ii;EP-SK[NS? A'v, my lord II:nnle\v. 1 

.s 1 1 P. |.;p-\V IHSTUNG rogue .... Tin vr's T„l,; iv. 3 

SIliJER- the score of sheer ale. 7Vino"»i"'r' ■''■''• '■^ find.) 

tliou sheer, immaeulate, and silver.. ///i/no'' //. v. 3 

yUEET of paper, although the sheet.. 7 Vc// A A', iii. 2 

have writ a sheet of i)aner (rep.) .... Much Ado, ii. 3 

and Beatrice between tne sheet? .... — ii. 3 



[_67GJ 

SHEET— in a sheet of paper Love\L.Losl,v. 2 

coverlet, another way the sheets. Vaming-o/.S'/t. iv. 1 

and whiteness of my sheets Winter'sTule, i. 2 

the wdiitc sheet bleaching on — iv. 2 (song) 

my traffic is sheets — iv. 2 

thee between apair of sheets iHennilf. ii. I 

imt thy nose between his sheets Henry V. \\. 1 

saw him fumble with the sheets — ii. 3 

will not be shifted with ray sheet ..'iHenryl'l. ii. 4 

look on the sheets — iii. 2 

you think, none but your sheets.. Jiifori!/ fyCteo. i. 2 

when snow the pasture sheets — i. 4 

Diana's priest, betwixt cold sheets . . Cymbeline, i. 7 
fresh lily I and whiter than the sheets! — ii. 2 

Buch sheets of fire Lear, iii. 2 

got 'tween tlie lawful sheets — iv. 6 

tliou there in tliy bloody sheet?.. Romeo ff Juliet, v. 3 
such dexterity to incestuous slieets I ,,.,Hitmlet, i. '_' 

for — and a shrouding sheet — v. 1 (song) 

'twixt my sheets he lias done my office. .Oihcllo, i. ;i 

well, happiness to their sheets! — ii.3 

lay on my bed my wedding sheets — iv. 2 

I have laid those sheets you bade me .... — iv. 3 
shroud me in one of those same sheets .. — iv. 3 

SHEETED dead did squeak Hamlet, \. 1 

SHEFFIELD, the thrice victorious . . 1 Henn/VI. iv. 7 
SHEKELS of the tested gold .... I\Ieas. for Mens. ii. 2 
SHE-L.\.MB of a twelvemonth.. ...-Isi/oiitiV.e/V.ili. 2 

SHELF the precious diadem stole Hamlet, iii. 4 

SHELL— eat chickens i' the shell . rmitus .^■Cress. i. 2 

and kill him in the shell lidiusCirsar, ii. 1 

thy corse, lying with simple shelXG.... I'ericles, iii. 1 

how an oyster makes his shell? Lear,i. 5 

this lapwing runs away with the shell. . Bnmlet, v. 2 

SHELTER hereabout Tempest, ii. 2 

seek shelter, pack ! Merry Wives, i . 3 

under the shelter of your lionour .... — ii. 2 

I will shelter me here — v. 5 

I will bear thee to some shelter . . As you Like it, ii. 6 

yet seek no shelter from Richard II. ii. 1 

his broad-spreading leaves did shelter — iii. 4 
shelter, shelter; I have removed ....I Henryll'. ii. 2 

prove a shelter to thy friends 2 Henry! I', iv. 4 

whose arms gave slielter to iHenryl'l, v. 2 

shelters whither the routed ^y.. Antony SfClro. iii. 1 
be no shelter to these outrages.... TilusAndron, iv.4 

now within the leafy shelter that Pericles, v. 1 

the gods to their dear shelter take thee.... ten;-, i. 1 

SHEI/PERED traitor Richard III. iii. 5 

SHELVES and rooks that threaten ..AHnirnl'I. v. i 

about his shelves a beggarly .... Romeo ^-Juliet, v. 1 

SHELVING— built so shelving. 7«v>(Vc». or fer.iii. 1 

SHELVY and shallow /Verryir/ws, iii. -^ 

SHENT-we shall all be shent — i. 4 

I am shent for speaking to you . . TwelflhSiglU, i v. 2 
he shent ICoL-we sent] our . . Trnilns 4 Cressida, ii. 3 
how we are shent for keeping your .Corioianns, v. 2 
how in my words soever she be shent .Hnmlcl, iii. 2 
SHEPHERD be awhile away .rn'oGen.ofl'crona,\. 1 
that my master is a shepherd (rep.).. — i. 1 
the sheplierd seeks the sheep (rep.) .. — i. 1 
for fodder follow the shepherd (rep.) — i. 1 

to be the shepherd of thy lambs — iv.4 

star calls up the shepherd Mens, for Mens. iv. 2 

than lark to shepherd's ear ....Mid. N.'s Dream, i. 1 
when shepherds pipe on.... Love's L. Lost, v. 2 (song) 
Dick the shepherd blows his nail — v. 2 (song) 
the skilful sheplierd peeled me .Mercli. of Venice, i. 3 
alas, poor flieplierdi searching ..AsyouLilieit,\\.i 
Jovel Jove! this shepherd's passion is — ii. 4 
I pr'ythee, shepherd, if that love, or gold— ii, 4 
I am shepherd to another man (lep.) — ii. 4 
shepherd's life, master Touchstone? (rep.) — iii. 2 
philosophy in thee, shepherd? (rep.) — iii. 2 
thou art in a parlous state, shepherd — iii. 2 

if courtiers were shepherds — iii. 2 

mend the instance, shepherd — iii. 2 

devil himself will have no shepherds — iii. 2 

shepherd, go off a little (rep.) — iii, 2 

enquired after the shepherd that .... — iii. 4 
you foolish shepherd, wherefore do 3'ou — iii. 5 
so, take her to thee, shepherd (rep.).. — iii. 5 

dead shepherd I now I find thy — iii. 5 

well, shepherd, well, this is a letter.. — iv. 3 
art thou god to sheplierd turned — iv. 3 (letter) 
alas, poor shepherd; do you pity him? — iv. 3 
unto the shepherd youth that he in.. — iv. 3 
and here live and die a shepherd .... — v. 2 
followed by a faithful shepherd (rep. v. 4)— v. 2 

good sheplierd, tell this youth — v. 2 

refusing me, to wed this shepherd? .. — v. 4 
in this sheiiherd boy some lively touches — v. 4 
the shepherd's note, since we have. n'inln'sTale, i. 2 
a shepherd's daughter, and what — iv. (ehorns) 
house of a most homely shepherd .... — iv. I 
have some question with the shepherd — iv. 1 
give yon out an unstained shepherd — iv. 3 

pray, good shepherd, what fair (rep.) — iv. 3 

three shepherds, three neatherds — iv. 3 

a shepherd's daughter. If that shepherd — iv. 2 
O, that's the ease of the shepherd's son — iv. 3 

and with a shepherd's daughter — v. 1 

lieard the old shepherd deliver (rep.) — v. 2 
now he thanks the old shepherd, which — v. 2 

this avouches the shepliertf'a son — v. 2 

and in the view of the sheplierd — v. 2 

over-fond of the shepherd s daughter — v. 2 

by birth a shepherd's daughter 1 Henry I'l. i. 2 

begotten of a shepherd swain — v. 4 

till they have snared the shepherd. .S/Jiooi/r/. ii. 2 

thus is the shepherd beaten i'roni — iii. 1 

wdiat time the shepherd, blowing lA'.'AIIenryVI. ii. ;> 
a sweeter shade to shepbcrils, lo'ikiug — ii. 5 
the shepherd's lioinelv curds, his cold — ii. 5 
80 flies the reckless slie)ihcril from .. — v. 6 
like a shepherd apiirn;uli the fold.7V,nnii o/-.-)'/!. v. .'> 
the shepherd knows not thunder ....CoriV./iiaiis, i. 6 

as the wolf does of the sheiihei'ds — iv. (i 

Leonntus our neighbour shepherd's. . Cymbeline, i. 2 
or wak'st thou, jolly shepherd? ..I,eai, iii. (soug) 



SHI 



SHEPHERDS give a grosser name Hamlet, iv. 7 

SHEPHERDESS, my sister AsyauLikcil, iii. 2 

the proud disdainful shepherdess that — iii. 4 
come, sister: shepherdess, look on him — iii. 5 
no shepherdess, but Flora peering. Winter's Tale, iv. 3 
Sheplieidess, (a fair one are youi) well — iv. n 

SHERIFF— like a sheriff's post Tirelflh Ki-;hi. i . ,', 

for getting the slieriff's fool with All's Well, iv. 3 

brought those horses from the sheriffl Henn/Il'. ii. 3 
the sheriff', with a most monstrous (?Tp.) — ii. 4 

if you will deny the sheriff, 80 — ii. 4 

call in the sheriff. Now, master sheriff — ii. 4 
and, sheriff, I will engage my word.. — ii. 4 
are by the sheriff of Yorkshire ....'iHeriryir. iv. 4 

we'll take her from the sheriff — ii. 4 

and, master sheriff, let not her penance — ii. 4 
sheriff', farewell, and better tlian I .. — ii. 4 

SHERRIS-cxcellcnt sbcrrisis _ iv. 3 

but the shcrris warms it, and malces — iv. 3 

and this valour comes of sheiris — iv. 3 

and good store of fertile sherris — iv. 3 

SIIERRIS-SACK hath a two-fold .... — iv. 3 

SHE-AVOLF—shc-woIfofFrance ....'iHenryVI. i. 4 

SHIELD-heaven shield (rep. v. i). Meat, fn- Mens. iii. I 

to bring in, God shield ust .... Mid. N.'s Dream, iii. 1 

heavens shield Ijysander, if they mean — iii. 2 

Jove shield thee well for this! — v. 1 

with targe and shield, did make. . Love'sl.. Lost, v. 2 

God shield, you mean it noti All's iVett, i. 3 

I throw my warlike sliield Marheih, v. 7 

and sword and shield, in bloody fleUl./Ziioi/''- iii. 2 
shield thee from ■Warwick's frown. .:) He;//// ;7. iv. f> 

my council is my shield Richard III. iv. 3 

whose lionour heaven shield from.. Henry VIll. i, 2 
your shields before your hearts (rep.).Corinlanus, i. 4 

Anfidius a shield ashard as his — i. G 

given your enemy your shield — v. 2 

than Telamon for his shield ,, Antony ^Clco. iv. 11 

the sevenfold shield of Ajax ' — iv. 12 

Jove shield your liusband from his.. Tilus And. ii. 3 

marks upon his battered shield — iv. 1 

bath been a shield 'twixt me and iQn,t\\. Pericles, ii. 1 
the device he bears upon liis shield .... — ii. 2 

to shield thee from diseases of Lear, i. I 

a woman's shape doth shield thee — iv. 2 

God shield, I should disturb .. Romeo ffjullrt, iv. 1 

SHIELDED him from this ri,wl,iline, v. 4 

SHIFT-every man shift for all ; I'empes'. v. I 

I must eoney-eateh ; I must shift. . Merry Hires, i . 3 
thy complexion shifts to strange. .Ven.v. /or .l/ni.s-. iii. 1 
thou sing'st well enough for a shift. .il/ioA./i/i.. ii. 3 
I shall make shift to go ....Merchant or Venice, \. 2 

the sixth age shifts into the 4s you Like il, ii. 7 

the cleanliest shift is to kiss — iv. 1 

you have made shift to run All's Well, ii. 5 

do well for such a shift. T'conm^- of Shrew, 1 (indue.) 

I mean to shift my bush — v. 2 

needs not live by shifts Comedy of Errors, iii. 2 

mistress, mistress, shift and save .. — v. I 

yet I made a shift to cast him Macbeth, ii. 3 

of leave-taking, but shift away — ii.3 

I'll find a thousand shifts to ^'et King John, iv. 3 

I'll make other shift; you'll be ....'iHenrylV.'u. 1 

have made a shift to cat — ii. 2 

not to have patience to shift me .... — v. !< 
unto Southampton do we shift ..HenryV. ii. (cho.) 
rests no other shift but this \llenri/VI. ii. 1 

1 will make shift for one IHenryVl. iv, 8 

made a shriver, 'twas for shift 'AllenryVI. iii. 2 

fortune in her shift and change . . Timon of.-ilh. i. 1 
palter in the shifts of lowness ..Aniony^Cteo. iii. 9 
should we shift estates, yours would.. — v. 2 
I would advise you to shift a shirt ..Cymbeline, i. 3 

were bloody, then to shift it — i.3 

to shift his being, is to exchange — 1.6 

that forced us to this shift! .. I'itus.-indronicus, iv. 1 

yon that puts us to our shifts — iv. 2 

taimht me to shift into a madman's rags.. Lear, v. 3 
he sliift a trencher! he scrape.... /iomuo 'i- Juliet, i. 5 
hie et ubique? then we'll shift our .... Ilamlel, i. .'i 

SHlFTED-shiftcd out of thy tale.. ..il/wc/i.li/o. iii. 3 

like a shifted wind unto a sail King John, iv. 2 

my shame will not be shifted with..2Heiiri/r/. ii. 4 
I shifted him away, and laid good Othello, iv. 1 

SHIFTING— shifting every place. .;i;iV/.A-.'s/)r. iii. 2 

SHILLING— cost me two shillings. . Merry Wives i. 1 

I bad ratlier than forty shillings — i. 1 

than forty shillings I had such .. Twelfth Mght, ii. 3 
five shillings to one on't, with anj'.. jViic/i/li/o, iii. 3 

pound and odd sliillings il'inter's'l'ale, iv. 2 

darest not stand for ten shillings.... li/enr!/;r. i. 2 

eiglit shillings and si.xpence — ii. 4 

lioUand of eight shillings an ell .... — iii. 3 
bid mefetcli thee thirty shillings?. .2/1™)-;//;'. ii. 1 

like a shove-groat shilling — ii. 4 

here is four Hairy ten shillings in .. — iii. 2 
you'll pay me tlie eight shillings I.... Hciir!/''. ii. 1 

and one shilling to tlie pound '2Henri/i'l. iv. 7 

sliilling richly m two short Hcnn/Vl'll. (prol.) 

SIIIN-entcrcd their frail shins 'Tempesi, iv. I 

I bruist'd my shin the other day ..Merri/ Wires, i. 1 
backs, shoulders, sides, and shins .. .. — v. 5 
a Costard broken in asliin (rep.).Love'sL.Lost,'u'\. 1 
over the threshold and broke my shin — iii. 1 
till there be more matter in tlieshiu — iii. 1 
till 1 break my shins against .... As yon Like it, ii. 4 

strike their sharii shins Tioion of Athens, iv. 3 

for your broken shin Romeo z^- Juliet, i. 2 

SIIIN^E through like the TwoGen.of Vcr. ii. 1 

because they shine on thee? — iii. I 

then did the sun on dunghill shine Merry Wives, i. 3 
my stars shine darkly over me . . Twelrth Nig/it, ii. I 

it shines every where — iii. I 

and heavens so shine that — iv. 3 

shall shine from far, and maVe.. Mid. N.'s Dreain, i. 2 
doth the moon shine, that night (rep.) — iii. 1 

may shine in at the easement — iii. 1 

let lier shine as gloriously as the Venus — iii. 2 
and 3'onder shines Aurora's harbinger — iii. 2 
shine, comforts, from tlie east — iii. 2 



■illlNE with n good i?race .... 

shines the silver mocm ../.or 



,jut the. 
Uii 



, tluit 



■iirlli dost sliiiic 

n must slvine... 
iHikelli nil thiuK 



Hid.N.'tDtemn,v. 1 
L.LnsI, iv. a (vci-Bes) 
iv. 3 (verses) 



V. 3 
— iv. 3 



— iii. 1 
ml 1 1. \. 3 
I Henry I y. i. 3 



SHIP— ahovc n tliousand ships Trollut^ Cress. it. 2 

your sliips lire not well inaiinc(l./l7i/ojii/i«|C/(0. iii. 7 



shii>> 



iii.7 



(■ Cteo. i. 3 



ii. 3 



iiectheseeloudsvi.uveiUiiiioii — v. 2 

the moon shines Inii^ht: in Buch..iWiv. ri/r.iiice, V. 1 
fo sliineaa sooil 'leeil in n niiii.;;lit.v ., — v. 1 
a suhslitute sliines liri;;htlv as a .. .. — V. 1 
and jtoodlv shines the nwonl. . Tumi iih' of S/irew,iv.i 
shines so bright. I know, it is (rfp.) — iv. 5 
pale moon shines by ni^ht. ll'iniiT's'J'ak; iv. 2 (song) 
the self-same sun, that sluncs upon.. — iv. 3 
when the sun shines, let l'ooUsh..Comerfj/o/ii>r. ii. 2 

simll shine on all deservers Macbelh,\. 4 

upon thee, Maebeth, their speceliea shine 

yom- spirits shine throiiph you 

warms you here, shall shine on ine ..Uic 

•o see Itnn shine so brisk 1H< 

the moon shines fair, you may — iii. 1 

when it shines seldom in admiring eyes — iii. 4 

of his wife shines through it i Henry 11'. i. 2 

shine then. Thine's too thick to shine — iv. 3 
for it shines bright, and never changes, lli-nry I', v. 2 
late, did ho shine upon tlie English.. Uifiiiyr/. i. 2 

to shine on my contemptible — . i. 2 

now sliine it like a comet of revenge — iii. 2 
half-faced sun, striving to shine .... — iv- 1 
and who shines now, but Henry's ..'illeiiryn. ii. 6 
tlie Sim shines iiot, and, if we use .... — iv. 8 
sliine out, fair sun, 'till I have ....Hklmrd lll.i.'i 
disdains to shine; for, by the book .. — v. 3 

not shine to-day I why, what is — v. 3 

shall shine at full upon them Henry nil. i. 4 

bright sun of heaven shall shine — — _v. 4 
lie was wont to shine at seven. I'imon of .aliens, iii. 4 

if, after two days' shine, Athens — iii. 5 

Hyperion's quickening fire doth shine — iv. 3 

fire, and every one doth shine ....Julia 

shines o'er with civil swords ....Anlm 

for he would shine on those that make 

thy lustre thickens, when he shines by 

she shines not upon fools, lest the . . Cymbellne, i. 3 

hath Britain all the sun that shines? — iii. 4 

by this sun that shines, I'll thither .. — iv. 4 

which shines here in the west — v. 5 

let desert in pure election shine .. Titus Andron. i. 1 
bright, and shine in pearl and gold.. — ii. 1 

here never shines the sun — ii. 3 

doth shine upon the dead man's .... — ;;. 4 

so pale did shine the m<ion — ii. I 

tliDU showed'st a subject's shine Vericlrs, i. 2 

though it be night, the moon shines Lear, ii. 2 

wherein, thev say, you shine: your sun. HaiiiW, iv. 7 

SUINKTH in" this face liiehard U. iv. 1 

SHINING now so bright Mid.N.'sDream, v. 1 

profit from their shining nights ... Lure'sl.. LnsI, i. 1 
satchel, and shining morning face..-ls!/o«i^'A£/7, ii. 7 
so clear, so shining, and so evident..! Henry I' I. ii. 4 

with shining checkered slough •IHejiryl'l. iii. 1 

three fair shining suns illenryVl. ii. 1 

tlie dimming of our shining star ..Richard III. ii. 2 

when his virtues shining upon.. Troitnsij- Cress, iii. 3 

cry to the shining synod of the rest. . tyinbrlbie, v. 4 

show you, shining at tliis feast . . Umneo ^Juliet, i. 2 

SlIIN'ST mevery tear that. . /.oue's-i.. Los/, iv.3(ver.) 

SHINY— the night is shiny. . Antony (f Cleopatra, iv. 9 

SII IP— though the ship were no stronger. '/'emyws/, i. 1 

the good ship so have swallowed — i. 2 

I boarded the king's ship liep.) — i. 2 

safely in harbour is the king's ship .... — i. 2 
tlmt they saw the king's ship wreck'd .. — i. 2 

to the king's ship, invisible — v. 1 

the next, our ship — v. 1 

our royal, good, and gallant ship — v. 1 

I'll bring you to your ship — v. 1 

to save your ship from wreck . . Twu (ien.of I'er. i. 1 

with my master s ship? — iii. 1 

after our ship had split Tirelflh Night, i.2 

wherefore not ships? No sheep .. Love's L. Last, ii. i 

the ship is untler sail — v. 2 

but ships arc but boards Mer.nf fenice, i. 3 

my ships coine home a month — i. 3 

and in their ship. I am sure — ii. 8 

with him to search Bassttiiio's ship .. — ii. 8 

the ship was under sail 

not with Bassanio in his sliip 

liatli a sliip of rich lading wrecked on 

many a tall ship lie buried 

the end is, he hatli lost a ship 

mv ships iiavc all iniM'arried .... - 
that my ships are safely cuine to road 
your ships are staid at Venice . . Tarn 
my sbiiis are ready, and my people, ll'i 

1 ej'cd them even to their ships — m. i 

our ship hath touched upon tlie deserts — iii. 3 

now the ship boring tlie moon — '.'".• 3 

but to make an end of the ship — iii. 3 

1 would you had been by the ship side — iii. 3 
gone aboard a new ship to purge .... — iv. 3 
left the sliip. tlien siuking-ripe ..Comedy of Err. i. 1 
twoships rrnin far niuking amain.... — i. I 

but ere tliu sliips could meet by twice — i. I 

our hLlpful ship was splitied in — i. I 

another sliip liad seized on us — i. 1 

if any ship put out, then straight.... — iii. 2 

the snip is ill her trim — iv. I 

what ship of Kpidamiinm — iv. 1 

is there anv .ship puts forth — iv. 3 

with eight tall ships, tlirre llirluird If. ii. 1 

ere he take siiip for I'runi'e llenn/l'. ii. (chorus) 

like that proud insnlling -liip. which. I Henry I I. i.-i 
your ships already are in reacliness.. — iii. 1 

I'll ship them all fur Irehind iUenryVI. iii. 1 

like to a ship, that, having 'scaped .. — iv. U 

like ships before tiie wind iHenryl'I. i. 4 

ond ship from thence to I'landers.... — iv. .'> 

the ship splits cm tlie roi-k — v. 4 

the reliels from llu ir siiip,? Ilirhnrd Ill.iv. t 

sent their ships fraught with. . Troilus ^ Cress, (pro.) 



— 11.8 

— iii. I 

— iii. 1 

— iii. I 
iii. 2 (lett.) 

— v. 1 
!(orSh. iv. 2 
'.-r's Tale, i.2 



iii. 9 



s, heavy 
we'll to our ship; away, my 'riietisl 

the numlier of the sliips liehcdd 

1 have a ship laden with gold 

iiossesB you of that ship and treasure 

his coin, ship, legions, may be — in. ii 

with ships made cities — iv. 12 

soul sailed on, how swift his ship.. . . Ci/Mitc/iHC, i. 4 

with y.pur ships: they aio here — iv. 2 

a portly sail of shi|)S make hiilierward. ./'mc/es, i. 4 
let not our shiiis aiul iiunibur of criT/.) — i. 4 

for oursell', our shijis, and men — i. 4 

the ship should house him safe.... — ii. (Uower) 

rel't of sliiiis and men (j-f/).") — ii. 3 

and down the poor ship drives {rrp.) — iii. (Gow.) 
and will not lie till the sliip be cleared of — iii. 1 
well-sailing ships, and hounteous — iv. 4 tGo\y.) 
Lysimaeluis our Tyrian ship espies — v. (Gow.) 

but we will ship him hence Handel, iv. 1 

they "ot dear of our ship — iv. U lletter) 

a noble ship of Venice hath seen Othello, ii. 1 

the ship is here put in, a Veronese — ii. 1 

bless this bay with his tall ship — ii. 1 

the riches of the ship is come on shore! .. — ii. 1 

SlIII'BOAltU get iindescried ninler'sTnle, iv. 3 

fetch your stuff from shipboard?.Co/ijr^/f/o/' iwr. v. 1 
SHIPBOY-this shipboy's semblance. AniiOo/m, iv. 3 

seal up the shipboy's eyes i Henry W. iii. 1 

hempen tackle, shiphoys climbing Hc)i>!//'. iii.lcho.) 

SHIPMAN— i' the shipman's card Macbeth, i. 3 

puts himself unto the shipman's toil .. Pericles, i. 3 
SHIPMEN do the hurrieauo call .Troihisf,- Cress, v. 2 
SHIPPED— to see me shipped. TwoGen. of Verona, i. 1 

he is shijiped already — i. 1 

thy master is shipped — ii. 3 

the king is not yet shipped for Ilichard II. ii. 2 

would thou wert shipped to hell . . Tilus.indron. i. 2 
emperor may have shipped her hence — iv. 3 

that I was shipped at sea Pericles, iii. 4 

hath shipped me into the \a,n(}^.. Hamlet, v. 1 (song) 

is he well shipped? His bark is stoutly. OWirifo, ii. 1 

SHIPPING— 'em good shipping! ..Taming o.fSli. v. 1 

take, therefore shipping 1 Henry I' I. v. .'» 

me some shipping unrestored ..Anlnny^Cleo. iii B 
our overplus of shipping will we burn — iii.7 
and his sliipping, (poor ignorant . . Cymbeline, iii. 1 
what sliiitiaiig, and what lading's in .. Pericles, i. 2 
SlIU'-TIRIC-hecomes the ship-tire. ,Verr!/»r/t'ps, iii. 3 
SI 1 IPWKECK-to suiter sliipwrcck . . 1 Henry VI. y. 
his shipwreck and his common weal's. 77/ its/tN(/.ji. 1 

my shipwreck's now no ill, since I Pericles, ii. I 

and, after sliipwrcck, driven uiinii tliis — ii. 3 

SHIPWRECKED guests Comedy qflirrorsri. 1 

shipwrecked upon a kingdom llcnrif Vlll. iii. 1 

SHIPWKICCKING storms and direful.. il/ocde//!, i. 2 

SHlPWRIGHT-impress of sliipwrights./iumW, i. 1 

the shipwright, or tlie carpenter? (rep.) .. — v. 1 

SHIRE— writ to every shire Hcnn/Vlll. i. 2 

SHIRLEY— the spirits of Shirley .. ..\ Henry I V. v. 4 
SHIRT— foul shirts and smocks . . Merry Hires, iii. :> 

I'll do it in my shirt Love' sL. Lost, v. 2 

I will not combat in my shirt — v. 2 

truth of it is, I have no shirt — v. 2 

you adozen of shirts to your back.. I HenrylV. iii. 3 
shirt and a half in all my company (.rep.) — iv. 2 

and the shirt, to say the truth — iv. 2 

I take but two shirts out with mo ..illenriilV.i. 2 
to bear the inventory of thy shirts .. — ji. 2 

and work in their shirt too — iv 7 

will put thy shirt on warm? .. Timon of Athens, iv. 3 
the shirt of Nessus is upon nn'.. Antony ^ Cleo. iv 10 
I would advise j'ou to shift a shirt . . Cymbeline, i. 3 

if my shirt were bloody, then to — i. 3 

six shirts to his body.liorse to ride Lear, iii. 4 

two, two; a shirt, and asmock../^o»Jeo^S■./»/ie^ii. 4 
pale as his shirt; his knees knocking .. Hamlet, ii. I 

here's one comes in liis shii t oiltetlo, v. 1 

light, gentlemen; I'll hind it willi my sliirt — v. I 
SIIIVE-ofacut loHltMstcul a sliivc VV/;/<,l,n/. ii. I 



SHIVER-shivc 

cracked in a 

thee into shi 
SIllVEKKD- 
SHIVERlNG-witl 



iile. ..!/(./. A. 'W), 



hvd sh 
,villi lii 



a Ii 



g shucks. <«.'/. A'.'si;,. i.2 
where shivering cold and siidcness .. Hiehard II. v. 1 

SHUAL— tills bank and shoal of time Macbeth i. 7 

the depths and slioals of hoiiimr .. Henri/ VII I. iii. 2 

S1U)CK— witli shiyeriiig shocks .. ..Mid..\'.\Dr. i. 2 
world in arms, and we sIkiII shock .. Kin;,'John,v. 7 
and grating shock of wmtlilul iron.. KiWi,iri(//. i. 3 
when their thinnlcrinL; sif I'li at nieetiug — iii. 3 
in the intestine slunk and furious ..1 HenrylV. I. 1 

but in plain slio.U, and even play UcniV. iv. 8 

in this doubtful sliock of arms .. ..liieluud III. v. 3 
thousand natural sliocks that llesli.. . . //.imW, iii. I 

SHOE— let me lick tiiy shoe Tempest, iii. 2 

more than over shoes in love .. Two Gen. of Ver.i. 1 

sec to wijie my shoes — ii. I 

this shoe is my father {,Tp.) — ii. 3 

this left shoe is my mother — ii. 3 

tbisslioc with thc'iu.le in it — ii. 3 

now shouM not the shoe si)uaU 

being o'er slioes ill blood 

where lur shoe, wliich is baser.. .. /.oi'f ■«/../.<),• 
that he ran shoe him liiiusclf.. .W«t/i. "//Vmr 
your slioc untied, and evervlllillg..-l.s-i/o» /.'■','■ 1/ 
creaking my siloes on the ; /IH'.s»V(;, ii. 1 



■d - 



.Mid.!\\' 



I till 

ny sh 



I feet (;>■('.) ..To 



ingof Shrew, 2 (indue.) 



c, hut licr face ..Comedy of lit 

shoes in the .... — 111.2 
Ts upon an ass. .Kint^Jnhn, ii. 1 
;jh shoos illenrylV. i.2 



Ikissi.i :,:l, :,,.,,: 


id from .. 


Henry V. iv. 1 


aaev.T In- 1 hn'k .Imu 


trod upon 


- iv. 7 


serve v.ui to meiul vm 


r shoes .. 


_ iv.8 


your shoes is not so go 


)t 


— iv.8 


much colli as over shot 


s in snow? 


. Ilichard III. V. 3 



liking, below their cobbled shoes .... Coriolanns, i. 1 



SHOE— a surgeon to old shoes Julius Ccetar. i . I 

to wear out their shoes, to get — i. I 

let not the creaking of shoes tear, iii. 4 

to shoe a troop of horse with felt — iv. Ii 

you have dancing shoes Ilomeo ^Juliet, i. 4 

tying his new shoes with old ribband? — iii I 

or ere tliose shoes were old Hamlet, i. 2 

nor the soles of her shoe?* — ii. 2 

two Proveneial roses on my razed shoes — iii. 2 

SHOEING, and lilongll-irons •JHenrylV. v. 1 

SIIOKING-HOliN in a cluiiii. 7'roi7«»^C-iW.oyri, v. 1 

SlIOKMAKEU should liieddle.. .. /(imra * Ji,/i>(, i. 2 

SHOE-TYE— niastcr Shoc-tve ..Mens.forMens. iv. 3 
tape, glove, shoe-tye, bracelet.. .. Wiutcr'sTule, iv. 3 

SlIUG off? I would liave you solus ....Henry V. ii. I 
shall wc sliog oil'? the king will _ ii. 3 

SHONE nioun; truly, the inocm.WiV/.A'.'s Dream, v. 1 
when the moon shone, we did....JhVr.o/'rejii'ci?, v. 1 
that e'er the sun shone bright on .tVinler'sTate, v. I 
like heathen gods, shone down the. . Henry VIII. i. 1 
that shone so Drigiitly when .... TilvsAndmn. iv. 2 

SHOOK hands, and swore dsyon Likeil.v. i 

trembled and shook; for why ,, Tamingof sh. iii. 2 

shook hands, as over avast tVinter'sTate, i. 1 

ne'er shook hands, nor bade farewell . . Macbeth, i. 2 

had'st thou but shook thy head King John, iv. 2 

before I have shook oft' the regal.... Hiehard II. iv. 1 
with such gentle sorrow he shook oil" — v. 2 
and shook oil' by him, from whom . . 1 HenrylV. i. 3 

as fearing you it shook — iii. I 

O, then the earth shook to see — iii. 1 

this distemperature, in passion shook — iii. I 

hath shook, and trembled at the Henry V. i.i 

your mistress shrewdly shook your back— iii. 7 

liardly tobe shook off — v. 2 

happy when I shook my head? ....illenryVI.iv. I 
king Henry had shook hands with ..ZHenryVI. i. 4 
hideous tempests shook down trees .. — v. 6 
when black-faced Cliil'ord shook ..Ilichard III. i. 2 
this respite shook the bosom of my. Hc»n/ /';/;. ii. 4 
irom the lion's mane, be shook. Troilns SrCress. iii. 3 
I have shook my head, and w'ept . Timon ofAih. ii. 2 
his conquering banner shook ....Antony^ Cleo. i. 2 
should have shook lions into civil streets — v. 1 
sliook down my mellow hangings.. Ci/iHbWfiip, iii. 3 

shook, as the earth did quake Pericles, iii. 2 

there she shook the holj' water from .... Lenr, iv. 3 
let our beard be shook with danger.. .. Hamlet, iv. 7 
fuller blast ne'er shook our battlements. («/ip/((, ii. 1 

SHOON— go in clouted slioon ■IHenri/VI. iv. 2 

, and staff, and his sandal shoon .Hamlet, iv, 5 (song) 

SHOOT— swears he will shoot no more. Tempest, iv. 1 
a cannon will shoot point-blank .Merry tf'ives, iii. 2 

like a cat, and shoot at me Much Ado, i. I 

the little hangman dare not shoot at him- iii. 2 

I shoot thee at the swain Love's L. Lost, iii. I 

you may make the fairest shoot (rep.) — iv. I 
thus will I save my credit in the shoot — iv. I 
indeed, a' must shoot nearer, or he'll — iv. 1 
to shoot another arrow that (rep.).Mer. of Venice, i. 1 

of that, he shoots his wit Asyou Like it, v. 4 

whoever shoots at bim, I set Atl'slVell, i'li. 2 

and watched the time to shoot — v. 3 

pash, and the shoots that I have .. Winter's Tale. i. 2 

they shoot but calm words KingJolm, ii. 1 

Austria and France shoot in each.... — ii. 2 

speak quickly, or I shoot — v. 6 

he shot a fine shoot: John of Gaunt. 2Wf)i>!//r. iii. 2 

ready they were to shoot me to 1 Henry VI. i. 4 

might shoot them at your facesi .... — iv. 7 
to shoot forth thunder upon these. .2 Hetiry VI. iv. 1 
so both may shoot. That cannot bc.3HenryVI. iii. 1 

and so my shoot is lost _— iii. 1 

love's bow shoots buck.. Troilus^ Cress, iii. 1 (song) 
power this eve shoots fortlil .... tivion ofAtliens, i. 1 
which sorrow shoots out of the .Antony (f Cleo. iv. 2 
a griil'lhat sho.its [r,,/. -smites] iny.. — v. 2 
you were as good to shoot against. 7"(YusJri(/ron. iv. 3 

kinsmen, shoot all your shafts — iv. 3 

I do not bid the thunder-bearer shoot ....Lear, ii. 4 
go, bid tlie soldiers shoot Hamlet, v. 2 

SHOOTER-I am the shooter Love's L.Losi, iv. I 

SHOOTING at me Much Ado, ii. 1 

shooting well is tlien accounted. ./.ofe'«/..i,os/, iv. 1 
till now made sore with shooting — iv. 2 (e|iit.) 
I see thy glory like a shooting star .Hiehard II. ii. 4 

SHOP- forfeits in a barber's shop .Mens, for Meas. v. I 

o'er the shop of your eyes Inre'sL.l.oii. iii. 1 

like to a censer in a barber's Bhop.7'r/mt'«i'n7'.s7i. iy.3 
every shop, church, session, hanging" ijtz/'/'i 7'. iv. 3 
lingered with \ou at your shop .Comedy of Err. iii. 1 

metal ill your shop will answer — iy. I 

a tailor calhd nic in his shop — iv. 3 

coniiicllcd to shut our slioiis {Henry VI. iii. 1 

breiik o|icii shops; nothing can .. Timon <^ Ath.iv.% 
and the shoji ol the \vliolc body ....Coriolanus^ i. I 
our tnidesiiicii singing in their shops — IV. 6 
but wherefore ait not in tliv s\\ii\>..JidiusC(Fsar, i. 1 

aslmii oiall the ,|uulities ifiat Cymbeline, v 5 

and in his ikt(!\' sho)) a tortoise .Ifomeo ^Juliet, v. I 
holiday, the hcL'giu's shop is shut.... — V. 1 

SIUlRi; — hioiiLdit to this sliore Tempest, i. 2 

but was not this nigh ^hore — i.2 

good arms in liisly strokes to the shore — ii. 1 

?re I could lecover tlie shore — iii. 2 

have inccuscd the seas and shores — iii. 3 

fill the rciisoiuilde shores — v. I 

were wicked upon this shore — v. 1 

who luosi -liiuivi'ly, upon this shore .. — v. I 

notiio o:,lli on .h.ue? — V. 1 

adiimK;ilh .11 shore TwoGen. of Verona, i. I 

to III. -. ..ihI, o shores Merry II ives,i. 3 

hut tiiat ilii- siioie was shelvy and .. — iii. .'i 
that did luin;; me lirst on shore ..TtrelflliMghl, v. 1 
to tlio cxtivmcst shore of my.. .. Wen»./or Mens. iii. 2 
foot in sea, and one on shore.. iWiicA Ado, ii. 3 (song) 
since you have shore with shears ,.Mid.rii,'sDr. v. t 
is but the gulled shore to a . . Mcrch. of Venice, lii. 2 

how it takes up the shore IVinter't Tale, iii. 3 

whom here I cannot hold on shore .. — iv. 3 



^XSK?^^j;f^^-Sr'-'^"'^'>^? ^^f^;;^r^=?^,^::^•"-:!^--!•' «™T-'-,o.d.ehapped,baUshot...«.,„.,;.i„.^ 



if he tliink it fit to sliore tlicm again 

1 have from yoiir Sieiliau shores — v. 1 i 

blow nny way from shore Comedy oC Errors, iii. 2 i 

large lengths of seas and shores King John, i. 1 

tluit white-faced sliore, whose foot .. — ii. 1 
disturbed even thy confining shores.. — ii. 2 | 
two such shores to two such streams — ii. 2 

grapple tliee unto a pagan sliore — v. 2 

whose rocky shore beats back the . . Rkhard II. ii. 1 
shortly mean to touch our northern.. — ii. 1 
the silver rivers drown their shores .. — iii. 2 

Wales beyond the Severn shore \ Henry II'. iii. 1 

gave him welcome to the shore iv. 3 

upon the uaked shore at Kavenspurg — iv. 3 

beats upon the high shore of this Henryt'. iv. 1 

whose very shores look pale with .,,. v. 2 

110 footing on this unkind shored ..ilUnryFI. iii. 2 
blow towards England's blessed shore — iii. 2 

have me drowned on shore with tears iii. 2 

when from the shore the tempest .... — iii. 2 

blood stain this discoloured shore .... iv. 1 

spies a far-off shore where we would.3 Henry ri. iii. 2 
betwixt the king and mistress Shore. Richard III. i. 1 
that Shore's wife liath a pretty foot .. — i. 1 

naught to do with mistress Shore!.... i. 1 

give mistress Shore one gentle kiss . . — iii. i 

that harlot, strumjiet Shore, that by iii. 4 

hia conversation with Shore's wife .. iii. 5 

after lie once fell in with mistress Shore — iii. 5 

to the shore [Col.Knt.-our shores] .... iv. 4 

not now upon the western shore , . . . _ iv.' 4 

sent out a boat unto the shore iv. 4 

as strong as shore of rock Henry rill. i. 1 

commerce from dividable shores.. Troilusii- Cress, i. 3 

their bosoms higher than the shores. . i. 3 

'twixt the dangerous shores of ii. 2 

apale, a shore, confines thy _ ii. 3 

made in her concave shores? Julius Ccesar, i. 1 

do kiss the most exalted shores of all — i. 1 
Tiber chafing with her shores 
I'll try you 0' the shore 

Meuas, I'll not on shore 

the varying shore o' the world '. _ iv. 13 

grew'st unto the shores 0' the haven.. Ci/mie/me, i. 4 
on the dreadful shore of Styx'i .... Titus A ndron. i. 2 
descried, upon our neighbouring shore. . Pericles, i. 4 

washed me from shore to shore ii. 1 

court distant from this shore? _ ii. 1 

shipwreck, driven upon this shore — ii. 3 

and men, and cast upon this shore ii. 3 

toss upon our shore this chest O'cp.) — iii. 2 

even to the edge o' the shore _ iii. 3 

raging battery upon shores of . . — iv. 4 (Gower) 
being on shore, honouring of Neptune's.. — v. 1 
hereof these shores? no, nor of any shores — v. 1 

o'erbear the shores of my mortalitv _ v. 1 

refresh us, sir, upon your shore . ." — v. 2 

tliis lady was thrown upon this shore — v. 3 

as far as that vast shore washed. Romeo fy Juliet, ii, 2 
do but stand upon the foaming shore . . Olhello, ii 1 
warlike Moor, Othello, is come on shore. . — ii. 1 
the riches of the ship is come on shore! . . — ii 1 
pure grief shore his old thread in twain . . — v 2 
SHORN— fifteen hundred shorn.. Winter's Tale iv 2 

SHOUT and the long (rfp.ii. 2) iMerry Wives, ii. I 

a short knife and a throng ii. 2 

brief, short, quick, snap iv) 5 

came short of composition v] 1 

how short his answer is (,rep.) Much Ado, i. 1 

God sends a curst cow short horns .. — iii 1 

he comes too short of you iii! 5 

as a sliadow, short as any dream. . . . Mid.N.'sDr. i. 1 

for the s'lort and the long is, our .... iv 2 

three years is but sliort Love'sL.Lost,i. 1 

the way is but short; away iii 1 

then praise too short doth blot — iv' 3 

chain were longer, and the letter short? — v.' 2 

coming so short of thanks for _ v. 2 

a time, metliinks, too short to make v.' 2 

the short and the long is, I serve. Men 0/ Venice, ii! 2 
bitter with him, and passing short. .4s j/mi Life tV, iii 5 

come short to tender it lierself All's Well, v 3 

comes too short for my daughter .... v' 3 

and, to be short, what not .... Taming of Shreir, v 2 

he makes a July's day short as Wmier'sTale. i. 2 

in seven short years, that here . . Cojnedi/ of Err. v. 1 

cut sliort all intermission Macbeth, iv' 3 

added years to his short banishment.«ii;/iurd //. i.' 4 
It tliat come short, our substitutes. ... _ i. 4 

but sudden storms are short ii." j 

for our time of stay is sliort ii! 1 

shall make their way seem short — ii" 3 

the way being short, and piece the way — v 1 
word is short, but not so short as sweet — vis 

O, let the Irours be short 1 Henry IV. i" 3 

in short time after, he deposed iv' 3 

but, in short space it rained _ v' 1 

miglit draw fhort breath to-day v' 2 

the time of life is short _ y' 2 

satin for my short cloak, and sIoi)s?..2Hfnrw/;'. i! 2 
your wind short? your chin double? _ i2 

women are shrews, both short and.. _ v. 3 f song) 

take up tlie English short Henry l>. ii 4 

let life tie sliort; else.shame • - 

what, is't too short? I'll lengthen. 

on the cutting short that fraudful _ ^., , 

than bloody war shall cut them short — iv." 4 
short tale to make, we at St. Alba.ns.3HenryVI. ii 1 

short summers liglitly have a Richard III iii 1 

make a short shrift, he longs to _ iii 4 

short a space [Co/. A'rK.-small a time] — iv' 1 

richly in two short hours Henry nil (nro'l ) 

stockings, short blistered breeches.... _ i.'i 

come too short of my desires iii! 2 

and, to be short, for not appearance ".'. iv 1 

we will be short with you _ y* 2 

we come short of our suppose .... TrMns ^ Cress, i. 3 



■will serve for a short holding Coriolanus, i 7 

that so short a time can alter the — v 4 

becomes too short of that i;re-j.t . . Auloiiy ^ Cleo. i! 1 

though it coine too short, the actor .. ii 5 

or I shall short my word Cymbeline.i 7 

we must take a short farewell _ iii. 4 

but, in short time, all offices of _ v' 5 

you are very short with us Titus Andron. i! 2 

far too short to hit me here Pericles, i. 2 

and longest leagues make short — iv. 4 (Goivc'r) 

only she comes too short Lear, i. 1 

all vengeance comes too short _ 'ii 1 

my life will be too short _ iv 7 

forlorn, in short and musty straw? — iv! 7 

which, having, makes them short.Komeo fy Juliet, i. 1 

I would have made it short — ii.4 

that one short minute gives me in .. — iiie 

and we will make short work — ii. e 

the time is very short _ iv. 1 

we shall be short in our provision _ iv' 2 

for iny short date of breath is _ v. 3 

he, repulsed, (a short tale to make) Hamlet, ii. 2 

striking too short at Greeks _ ii. 2 

should have kept short, restrained — iv I 

come short of what he did _ iv. 7 

it will be short: the interim is mine — v. 2 

o^'A'l,m''°"' make the hours seem short . 0//ie/(o, ii. 3 
SHOKT-ARMED ignorance.. 7"ro!7!(s*Cr««"dn. ii. 3 
§HORTCAKE-to Alice Sliortcake .Merry Wives, i. 1 

bHOBTEN up their sinews with lempetl, iv. 1 

but shorten thy life one week Winter' sTale, iv. 3 

shortensfouryearsof my son's Richard II. i. 3 

shorten my days thou canst with — i. 3 

to shorten you, for taking so — iii. 3 

heaven shorten Harry's happv Iife..2Hfn)-i/7r. v. 2 
to be known, shortens my made intent ..Lear, iv. 7 

deatli, shortens not his own life Hamlet, v. 1 

SHORTENED, for she hath MuchAdo, iii. 2 

sober torture may be shortened \HentyfI. v. 4 

V/ : ^, ~. ■'■' t „ ■"'e shall be shortened in our aim Coriolanus, i. 2 

■intomj 4-Cleopatra, 11. 7 SHORTENING of ray life ] Henry VI. iv. 6 

SHORTER— longer, or shorter .. Meas ror Meas. ii.i 
shorter [Co/.-sinaller] is his daughter.yis you Like, i. 2 

a shorter time shall send 1 Henri/ IV. iii, 1 

days are waxed shorter with him. Tinion of Ath. iii. 4 

your way is shorter Antony 4- Cleopatra, ii.4 

unless things be cut shorter Lear, i. 5 

XX shorter journey to your desires Othello, ii. 1 

SHORTEST of day Richard II v 1 

iSRH-?^^SS'='^S'"S«°?" Tempest,iv.\ 

SHORT-LEGGED hens 2HenrvIV. v. I 

SHORT-LIVED wits do wither .. Love's L.LosI, ii. 1 

short-lived pride! not fair? — iv. 1 

SHORTLY shall all my labours end ..Tempest, iv. 1 

tide will shortly fill _ y. 1 

leisure, which shall be shortly _ v. 1 

who shortly also died TwelfthNight, i. 2 

would I very shortly see thee there .. — ii. 1 
to be shortly of the sisterhood . . Meas. forMeas. ii. 2 
if my passion change not shortly ....MuchAdo, i. 1 

thou wilt quake for this shortly — i. I 

it will go near to be thought so shortly — iv. 2 
either I must shortly hear from him — v. 2 
sliall not shortly have a rasher .Mer. of Venice, iii. 5 

1 shall grow jealous of you shortly . . — iii. 5 
of wit will shortly turn into silence.. — iii. 5 
we shall have sliortly discord ia..^s youLikeit, ii. 7 
shortly mean to touch our northern. /iic/iard //. ii. I 

here shortly shall be seen — iii. 4 

be deposed, and, shortly, murdered . . 1 Henry I r. i. 3 

I shall be out of heart shortly — iii. 3 

then to the inns of court shortly 2 Henry IV. iii. 2 

and shortly will I seal with him — iv. 3 

gates, or I'll shut thee out shortly . . 1 Henry VI. i. 3 

as, sure, it shortly will 2HenryVI. ii. 4 

a widower, shortly (rep.iv. 1) SHenry VI. iii. 3 

I shortly mind to leave you — iv. 1 

that I will shortly send thy soul. . . . Richard III. i. 1 
smile at me, who shortly shall be dead — iii. 4 

no doubt, shortly be rid of me — iv. 1 

write to me very shortly iv. 4 

or shortly after this world had Henry I'lII. ii. 4 

shortly, I believe his second marriage — iii. 2 
give away thyself in paper shortly. Timon ofAlh. i. 2 

thou wilt be thronged to shortly — iv. 3 

and shortly must I fell it _ v. 2 

then shortly art thou mine Coriolanus, iv. 7 

and shortly comes to harvest ....Antony^-Cleo. ii. 7 

thou'lt catch cold shortly Lear, i. 4 

I have a journey, sir, sliortly to go — v. 3 

we should have none shortly . . Romeo ^.luliel, iii. 1 
must leave thee, love, and shortly too.. Hamlet, iii. 2 

you shortly shall hear more — iv. 7 

of quiet shortly Q Coi.-thereby] shall we see — y. 1 
It must be shortly known to him from .. — v. 2 
to him shortly as bitter as coloquintida.. OM<?/;o, i. 3 

he s well, and will be shortly here — ii. 1 

but shan't be shortlv? ". — iii. 2 

SHORTNESS of the time can .... Love' sL. Lost, iv. 3 

plainness, and your shortness Taming of Sh. iv. 4 

to spend that shortness basely \ Henry IV. v. 2 

second night of such sweet shortness. Ci/mfeeiine, ii. 4 

SHORT-WINDED accents of new. ... I Henry IV. i. 1 
brevity in breath; short-winded 'illenrylV. ii. 2 

SHOT— and quickly shot off TwoGen. of Ver. ii. 4 

some certain shot be paid ii. 5 

for one shot of five pence _ ii. 5 

certain stars shot madly irom..Mid.N.'s1>ream, ii. 2 

a mark marvellous well shot Love's L. Lost, iv.. 1 

shot by heaven ! iy. 3 

1 shot his fellow of Merchant or Venice, i! I 

that hath shot out in our latter .ill's Well, ii. 3 

where, thou wast shot at by fair eyes — iii. 2 

to all that shot and missed Taming ofSh. v. 2 

this murderous shaft that's shot Macbeth, ii. 3 

well won is still well shot King John ' 



.2 Henry VL i 



hort.asif she were Iraved 

her breatli as short as a uew-ta'en 



who was shot, whodisgraced HenryV. iii. 6 

is soon shot. You have shot over .... ' iii' 7 

a perilous shot out of an elder gun . . — iv! i 

and oft have shot at them \ Henry VI. i' 4 

with shot, or with assault _ j' 4 

a guard of chosen shot I had — {"4 

and I abide your shot iHenry VI. i 4 

the aim of every dangerous shot .. Richard III. iv.' 4 

loose shot, delivered such HenryVIII y 3 

shot their fires into the abysm., ^jifom/ {fCleo. iii.'ll 

the hourly shot of angry eyes Cymbeline, i. 2 

a bolt of nothing, shot at nothing — iy 2 

the dish pays the shot _ y" 4 

safe out of fortune's shot ....TitusAndronicus ii' 1 
thou hast shot off one of Taurus' ... _ iv 3 

when Publius shot, the bull being .. _ iy! 3 

shot from a well-experienced Pericles, i. I 

with sighs shot through iv. 4 (Gower) 

he that shot so trim Romeo fy Juliet, ii. 1 

shot through the ear with a love-song — ii.4 
as if that name, shot from the deadly — iii! 3 

out of the shot and danger of desire Hamlet i ' 3 

transports his poisoned shot _ iv! 1 

that I have shot my arrow o'er y' 2 

at a shot, so bloodily hast struck? ! _ y' 2 

they do discharge their shot of courtesy. OWielto, ii! 1 

the shot of accident, nor dart of chance.. — iv 1 

SitSJJ:*"'^'^-^— s'^o'-fri^e at London..! Henru/^. v. 3 

SljOrrEN-then am I a shotten herring _ ii. 4 

§S,;I^T iVxS""' shoughs, water-rugs.. J»/ac6e(/i, iii. 1 

bHOULDER tomy heel Taming of shrew iv 1 

basket on your shoulders (.rep. iv. 2) .Merry W. iii' 3 
they took me on their shoulders .... _ iii 5 
niy shoulders for the fellow of this . . _ y! ,5 
backs, shoulders, sides, and shins .. -_ y' '5 

by the head and shoulders _ y! 5 

so tickle on thy shoulders . . Measure for Measure, i! 3 
not have his head on her shoulders ..MuchAdo, \. 1 
let Inm be clapped on the shoulder. . . — i 1 

her shoulder is with child Love'sL.Lost, iv' 3 

sometime to lean upon my poor shoulder — v. 1 

and clapped him on the shoulder _ y 2 

but what lights o' my shoulders.71/er.ri/Te7i(Ve iii 1 
of princes on unworthy shouldersv^syouirte//, ii. 7 
Cujiid Iiatb clapped him 0' the shoulder — iv 1 

on his shoulder, and his Winter' sTale iv 3 

marks upon my shoulders .... Comedy of Errors i! 2 

I bare home upon my shoulders _ ii 1 

I shall seek my wit in my shoulders — ii' 2 
as the mark on my shoulder, the mole — iii. 2 
bear it on my shoulders, as a beggar — iv 4 

I have it on my shoulder King John, i' 1 

shall make your shoulders crack .... _ ii i 
laid my knighthood on my shoulder. fl/c/mi-d //. i. 1 

from thy unreverend shoulders _ ii. 1 

cut this head from my shoulders . . . .\ Henry I V. i! 2 

straight enough in the shoulders — ii 4 

thrown over their shoulders like _ iv! 2 

with two points on your slioulder? ..2HenryIV ii. 4 

hm-t him, sir, in the shoulder _ ii 4 

that never had tlie ache in his shoulders — y' 1 
hast drawn my shoulder out of joint — v. 4 

bear them on their shoulders Henry V. iv. 1 

and from my shoulders crack my . . 1 Henry VI. i 5 

weak shoulders, overborne with _ i\. t, 

wear his head on his shoulders 2 Henry VI. iv! 7 

so bear I thee upon my manly shoulders — v. 2 

on thy shoulder will I lean 3 He7ny VI ii 1 

for on thy shoulder do I build my seat — ii. 6 
this shoulder was ordained so thick _ v 7 

upon my guiltless shoulders Richard III. i. 2 

you should bear me on your shoulders — iii. 1 

crown of mine cut from my shoulders — iii. 2 

from tliese shoulders, these ruined .. — iii! 2 

fromCupid'sshoulder pluck his. Tiw/usiS-Cjess. iii! 2 

clap the lubber Ajax on the shoulder — iii. 3 

i theshoulder, audi' the left arm.. Corininnjis, ii I 

his shoulder the old Anehises bear. JuliusCrrsar, i. 2 

to run, and showtheirshoulders./Jn/o?!!/<5-C(eo.iii"9 

now is growing upon thy shouIder6.Cw);ii)t(;;if, iv. 1 

that shall once touch my shoulder .. — v 3 

on any shoulder that I see before me .... Lear, ii! 2 

wind sits m the shoulder of your sail . . Hamlet, i. 3 

with his head over his shoulder turned .. — ii. ! 

heads do grow beneath their shoulders. . Olhello i 3 

SHOULDER-BLADE is out .... Winter's Tale 1 v 2 

SHOULDER-BONE; how he cried .. — iii' 3 

SHOULDER-CLAPPER, one thatComerfy ofErr.iv.i 

SfI'^4i'5^^^^ED in the swallowing./((c/ia)i/ /;/. iii. 7 

SHOULDERING of each other in ..\Henryri v 1 

SHOULDER- SHOTTEN .... Taming olslL,,', iii. 2 

SHOUT— and universal shout ..Merch.of Venire, iii. 2 

heard these islanders shout out King John v! 2 

loud shouts and salutations from . .\ Henry I V.'iii 2 
hark, how they shout! This had ..iHemylV. iv! 2 
whose shouts and claps out-voice.. Hewn/ c. 5 (cho ) 
my lord! what shouts are these? ..3He'nryVI. iv. 8 

applause, and cheerful shout Richard III. iii. 7 

hark! what shout is that? ..Troilus ^-Cressida, v. 10 
what shouts are these? the other ..Coriolanus, i. 1 
you shout me forth in acclamations — i. 9 

with their caps, and shouts; I never ii. 1 

ha! what shout is this? shall I _ y. 3 

younot made a universal sliout .. Julius Casar, i. I 
another general shout! I do believe _ i. 2 

to his iiouse with shouts and clamours iii. 2 

and hark! they shout for joy _ y. 3 

didst thou not hear their shouts?.... — y 3 
SHOUTED-they shouted thrice .... _ i! 2 

mine honest neighbours shouted .... i. 2 

SHOUTING their emulation Coriolanus, i. 1 

and the shouting Romans, make the sun — v. 4 

what means this shouting? JuliusCwsar, i. 2 

and then the people fell a shouting .. — i. 2 
up to the shouting plebeians ..Antony ^Cleo. iv. 10 



,, „ ,, r o- 1- 1 show me to the shouting varletry _ v. 2 

a volley of our needless shot - v. 5 SHOVE-may shove by fustice Hamlei, iii. 3 

at London, I tear the shot here MlenrylV. v. 3 SHOVED-shoved from the com-t ..2Henrv!V iv ■> 

he shot a fine shoot 2HenrylV. iii. 2 her back, that shoved her on . . . .Antony ^Cleo i' 2 



STIOVE-QROAT shilling. ........ . . .2He..rv/ f -H. 4 

SHOVEL— priest shovels in dust.. iVinlcr 1 1 ale, iv- J 

about the sconce with a dirty shovel . . Ha'>>}fl< V- j 

SIIOVEL-BOAHDS, that cost me .. Merry mves, 1. 1 

SllOW— wlio mak'st a show, hut J empesl.i. i 

or fright me with urchin shows — !!• ^ 

I'll show thee every I'eitile inch (rep.) — !'• ^ 

show thee a jay's neat — .V. , 

this visitation shows it — !!! , 

the bigger bulk it sliows — >.;'•' 

I'll not show him where the — >!!• ^ 

show thyself in thy likeness — V.\- ' 

and show liclies ready to drop — "'• ^ 

even sociable to the show of thine .... — v. i 
I'll show my mind according to. '/ iro Gcn.ofVer.}. - 

shows his love but small — !• ^ 

that do not show their love — \- ' 

tliat the contents will show — !• ^ 

I feared to show my father — >• ^ 

which now shows all the beauty .... — _\-% 
nay, I'll show you the manner ot it — n- J 

shows Julia but a swarthy — i>- » 

than I shall show to be — .\\-' 

this discipline shows thou — '.". ^ 

and show thee nil the treasure — i.Y- ' 

to show himself a young gallantI../Uerr!/ » ives, ii. 
I have to show to the contrary ()(?p.) — ;!• } 
give him a show of comfort in his suit — ii- ' 

he is not show his face — .!.'• ^ 

I will show yon a monster 

let the court of France show me .... 

show me now, AVilliam, some 

show no colour for my extremity .... 

■without the show of both 

I'll show you here at large ,„,...,,.. 

and then show you the heart Twelfth Ivi^hu }■ S 

and show you the picture — !• ^ 

Fate, show thy force — .V ' 

his eves do show his days ate — !>■ f 

our shows are more tlum will ........ — }}_■* 

for folly, that he wisely shows, is fit — i}i- ' 
a murderous guilt shows not itself . . — iii. ' 
she did show lavour to the youth.... ...— ni. - 

for I will show thee no reason for t — lu. 4 (chall.) 

make a good show on't — ";■ J 

■why dost thou show meOxas ....Meas.forileas.. i. i 

ii!2 
ii. 2 



iii. 3 
iv. 1 
iv. 2 
iv. 6 
iv. 6 



not sliow your face; or if you show . 

that shows what future evils 

show some pity. I show it most (jep.) 

show it now, by puttin" on 

show me how, good father 

he did sliow me the way twice o'er .. 

it is no other; show your wisdom 

his actions show much like to madness 

he shows his reason for that — 'v. < 

first, let her show her face — '^•\ 

I will not show my face, until — v. 

show your knave's visage (rep.) — v. 1 

■where we'll show wliat's yet behind — \.\ 

that joy could not show itself modest.. S/iic/i.'ldo.i. 1 
a good CON er, they show well outward — ;. 2 
must not make the full show of this .. — i. 3 
he shows me where the bachelors sit.. 

shows it his companion, and he 

show me briefly how 

■why, what effects of passion shows she? 
he doth, indeed, show some sparks — 
which will be merely a dumb show . . 

I'll show thee some attires 

as to show a child his new coat 

I will show you enough 

and let the issue show itself 

to let him show himself what he is . . 

that shows, thou art unconfirmed — 

what outhoritv and show of truth — 

she were a maid, by these exterior shows? — 

that possession would not show us — 

is there any way to show such friendship? — 

and show him their examination — ' 

show outward hideousness, and speak — 

marry, I cannot show it in rhyme — y. ^ 

nature here shows art, that througli.il/id. A'. sDr.n. 3 

O how ripe in show thy lips — in. a 

as men you are in show 

never so little show of love to her — 

for if but once thou show me thy 

to show our simple skill, that is . . - 
by their show, you shall know all - 
you wonder at this show; but ■wonder 

doth show that I am that same 

lovely wall, show me thy chink 

snow in May's new-fangled shows. loi 

then it was to show my skill 

ostentare, to show, as it veve ... ..... . 

thy glory through ray grief will show — iv. 3 

heaven show his face — i^. 3 

did these rent lines show some — iv. 3 

fecarceshowaharvest of their — iv. 3 

that show, contain, and nourish .... — iv 3 

or show, or pageant, or antic — v. 1 

some show in the posterior of this — v. 1 

vouchsafe to show the sunshine of .. — v. 2 

but in visors, show their faces? — v. 2 

their shallow sliows, and prologue .. — v. 2 

to grace it with such show — v. 2 

to show his teeth as white as whale 8 — v. 2 

to have one show worse than — v. 2 

in their first show thrive (rep.) — v. 2 

in the end of our show — . v. 2 

and they'll not show their teeth.. il/fr.o//fKiM, ;. 1 
who can converse with a dumb show? — i. 2 

this kindness will I show: go with .. — i. 3 

there they show something too liberal — ii. 2 

stoops not to shows of dross — ]'■ 7 

that choose by show, not learning . . — ii. 9 
toshowhoweostly summer was at .. — .11.9 
dare scarce show his head on the Kialto — iii. 1 
so may the outward shows be least . . — in. 2 

obscm'es the show of evil? — ■!!• 2 

letter there will show you his estate — m. i 



— IV. 4 



— ii. 1 



— iii. 2 



_ iii. 3 



iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 2 
v. 1 



_ iii. 2 

— iii. 2 

V. 1 (prol.) 

V. 1 (prol.) 

_ v. 1 

_ V. 1 



iv. I 
iv. I 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 2 



SHOW-welcome.ahow a merry cheer. Love sL.L. iii. 2 
if you know to whom you show this 
wilt thou show the whole wealth.... 
thou'lt show thy mercy, and remorse 

his sceptre shows the force of 

power doth then show likest God's .. 
fortune shows herself more kind .... 

I pray you show my youth old 

will you show mc to this house? .... — ,^V i 
dear Celia, I show more mirth — As you Like «(, i. 2 
that wise men have, makes agreat show — 1.2 
thou wilt show more bright, and seem — .i. 3 

show me the place, I love to — u. 1 

hose ought to show itself courageous — u- 4 
hath ta en from me the show ot smooth — ". 7 
that shall civil sayings show.... — in. 2 (verses) 
heaven would in little show .... — i". 2 (verses) 

to it, and I'll show it you — >!!• f 

now show the wound mine eye — }})■■> 

any of her lineaments can show her — in. 5 
and show the world what the bird .. — iv. 1 
to show the letter that I writ to you — -v. 2 
and show what we alone must think.. ^Hsfrai, J. J 

ever strove to show her merit — 

it is the show and seal of nature's truth — 

that square our guess by shows — 

I will show myself highly fed — 

greater than shows itself, at the fli'st _ . — 

and show me a child begotten .. "■ '■ 

60 terrible shows in the wreck of . 

and show you the lass I spoke of. 

the secrets of our camp I'll show .... — y ■ 

humble wife may show. Taming of Sh. 1 (induction) 

we'll show thee lo, as she was . . — 2 (induction) 

master, some show, to welcome — }.• \ 

am bold to show myself a forward . . — \\.\ 
then show it me. Had I a glass, I would — ii. l 
e la mi, show pity, or I die .... — ui. 1 (gamut) 

speak; 'tis charity, to show — iv. j 

but your words show you a madman — v. 1 
and show more sign of her obedience ■— Y- f 

Sicilia cannot show himself Winter s Tale, i. 1 

lovest us, sho^w in our brother's welcome — i. 2 
which shows me mine changed too . . — .;• 2 
I'll show't the king, and undertake.. — }[■ ^ 

to show myself a glass — 

this shows a sound afiection — 

all that you speak shows fair — 

show those things you found about her — 
show the inside of your purse to the — 
to the king, and show our strange sights — 
which nature shows above her breeding — 
silence, it the more shows off your . . — 
I have your hand to show . . Comedy of Errors, in. 1 

with some show of blindness — }}]■ '■ 

the arm, show us the sleeve — ni. a 

you show not, than our earth's — "}. ^ 

look what I have. Show me, show me .Macbeth, i. 2 



i. 3 



iii. 2 (letter) 



iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 
V. 2 
V. 3 



that indeed which outwardly ye show — J- 3 

mock the time with fairest show — .v ' 

and show us to be watchers; be not.. — !'• 2 

to show an unfelt sorrow — ."• 3 

or show the glory of our art? — V'- , 

thyself, and office, deftly show — iv. 1 

show I show! show I show his eyes and — 
filthy hags! why do you show me this? — 
a glass, which shows me many more — 

and show the best of our delights, — 

and show like those you are — 

tyrant, show thy face: if thou — 

to be the show and gaze o' the time .. ^ 

I will show thee to my kin _••••/" 

I shall show you peace, and fair-faced 

most of all show evil ; what have 

does show the mood of a much ...... 

show boldness, and aspiring confidence 

temper dost thou show in this 

further harmful than in show — v. z 

show me the very wound of — v. b 

show nosv your mended faitlis .""jr,^'^ 

do remain, let paper show Rtcharaii.i. i 

which show like grief itself, but ..... 
gazed upon, show nothing but contusion 

show me thy humble heart 

to show the world I am a gentleman 

duty tenderly shall show 

should stain so fair a show ! 

if we be not, show us the hand 

and show fair duty to his majesty . . 

tears, show their love, but want 

fair sun that shows me where 

should show so heinous, black 

that it may show me what a face 

a plot, shall show us all a merry 

what we are shows us but this 

I may not show it. I will be satisfied 
treason tliat my haste forbids me show 

and groans, show minutes, times — v. j 

and never show thy head by day .... — v. 6 

shall show more goodly } Henry n\ i. i 

to show the line, and the predicament — .i. 3 

heshowsin this, he loves his — !!• 3 

and I'll show thee a precedent — i'- ■• 

and show it a fair pair of heels — JJ- 4 

and can show it you here in the — .i;- 4 

courses of my life do show — !!!• | 

though sometimes it show greatness — ii;. 1_ 
to show how much degenerate . 
that shows the ignorant a kind 

not make so dear a sliow of zeal 

and the shows of men, to fight 2Henrijiy._\. l^ 

doth it not show vilely in me — 

turn hack in any show of resistance .. — 
that show a weak mind and an able . . — 
was then sir Uagonet in Arthur's show — 
but, rather, show a while like fearful — 
to show in articles; which, long ere this — 

this will I show the general — 

shall show itself more openly licrcattcr — 
if you do not all show like gilt — 



iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 



— V. 7 

— V.7 
T/g John, i. 1 

_ ii. 2 

— iii. 4 

— iv. 2 

— V. 1 

— V. 2 



ii. 2 
ii. 3 
iii. 1 



iii. 3 
iii. 3 
iii. 3 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 



V. 3 



— iv. 1 



ii. 2 



iii. 2 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 



SHOW— which show like pins' heads .iHenrylV. iv. 3 

never live to show the incredulous .. — iv. 4 

this poor show doth better — v. 5 

it shows my earnestness of affection.. — v. S 

title with some show of truth Henry V. i. 2 

or shall we sparingly show you far off — i. 2 

and show my sail of greatness — i. 2 

good corporal Nym, show the valour — ii. 1 

sir, you show great mercy, if you — — ii. 2 

sliow men dutiful? why, so did'st thou — ii. 2 

do it with no show of fear — ii. 4 

show us here the mettle of — iij. 1 

gladly make show to the 'orld lie is . . — iii. il 

clement shows to him, as it doth to ine — iv. 1 

he may show what outward courage — iv. 1 

ceremony, show me but thy worth? — iv. 1 
and your fair show shall suck away — iv. 2 

so lifeless as it shows itself — iv. 2 

and show his scars, and say — iv. 2 

1 will some mercy show : .... — iv. 4 

shall show me the way to my will — y2 

that will I show you presently MlenryFI.w. 3 

once discerned, shows, that her — ui- 2 

and make a show of love to proud ..2Henryri. i. 1 

to show your highness a spirit — ;• 2 

and show some reason (rep.) — .'• ■* 

and show itself, attire me how — .ii- 4 

shows an angry eye, and passeth .... — Ml* 1 

in his simi>le show he harbours — iii. I 

and Gloster's show beguiles him — iii- 1 

that shows him worthy death — hi- 1 

show me one scar charactered — in. I 

to show how quaint an orator — iii 2 

then show me where he is — '.'i- 3 

soldiers, show what cruelty ye can .. — iv. I 

now show yourselves men, 'tis for liberty — iv. 2 

mountain top the cedar shows — v. 1 

we show our title to the cro^wn SHenryFI.i. 1 

show thy descent by gazing 'gainst .. — .ii. I 

do show her wit incomparable — iii. 2 

body shows, my blood, my want of (.rep.) — v. 2 

mirthful comic shows, such as — v.7 

in your outward action shows itse\{.RichardIII.}.3 

than of his outward show — iii. I 

daubed his vice with show of virtue — iii. 5 

to see only a show or two Henry nil. (prol.) 

with such a show as fool and fight is . . — (prol.) 

only to show his pomp as well in France — i. 1 

would show a worse sin than — i.3 

suoha thing,— you cannot show me.. — . i. 4 

you'll show a little honesty — i.ii. 2 

celebration of this day with shows .. — iv. I 

I'll show your grace the strangest .. — v. 2 

those joyful tears show thy true — v. 2 

I'll show you Troilus anon .. Troilus Sf Cressida, j. 2 

valour's show, and valour's worth .... — ;• 3 

the unworthiest shows as fairly — i.3 

like merchants, show our foulest wares — i. 3 

f A'n<.] yet to show shall show the better — .i. 3 

let him show us a cause — .ij- 3 

I show more craft than love — ;;!• '^ 

whereupon, I will show you a chamber — iii- 2 

no other glass to show itself — }}}.• ^ 

show not their mealy wings — in. 3 

which will not show without knockin, 

what thinks, he shows 

such as boasting show their scars .... 

thou boy-queller, show thy face — v. o 

thou coward Troilus, show thy head 1 — \.6 
the fixe i' the flint shows not. . . . Timon of Athens, i. I 

a thousand moral paintings I can show — i. 1 

to show lord Timon, that mean eyes — i. 1 

when dinner's done, show me this .. — i. I 

as this pomp shows to a little oil .... — ;• 2 

to show them entertainment — >• 2 

to show him what a beggar his — i. 2 

it shows but little love or judgment.. — 111.3 

I'll show you how to observe a — Jii. 4 

mark, how strange it shows, Timnn.. — iii. 4 

all mankind, show me an iron heart — iii. 4 

that which I show, heaven knows . . — iv. 3 

curse all; show charity to none — iv.3 

it will show honestly in us — ■v. 1 

which now we'll sh«w 'em in deeds.. CoriVaiiiis, 1. I 

they needs must show themselves — — i. 3 

where he would show most love — J. 3 

if these shows be not outward — .i. 6 

large cicatrices to show the people .. — ii. 1 

shoV them the unaching scars — \\-- 

for if he show us his wounds — ii- 3 

I have wounds to ?how you, which shall — 11. 3 

which he could show in private — \\- 3 

you show too much of that, for which — 111. 1 

to show bare heads in congregations — iji. 2 

you will rather show our general — iii- 2 

must I go show them my unbarbed . . — 111.2 

large temples with the shows of peace — iii. 3 

■which show like graves i' the holy .. — 111. 3 

and car. show from Rome her enemies — 111. 3 

would show thee but a fool — iv. 5 

durst not (look you, sir) show — iv. S 

go home, and show no sign of fear — iv. 6 

and shows good husbandry for the . . — iv. 7 

more impression show than that of .. — v. 3 

unproperly show duty, as mistaken . . — v. 3 

may show like all yourself — v. 3 

rather to show a noble grace to — v. 3 

that gentleness, and show of love ..JidiusCasar, 1. 2 

forgets the shows of love to other men — i. 2 

but thus much show of flre from — i. 2 

and sufferance show us womanish — 1. 3 

sham'st thou to show thy dangerous — 11. I 

and show yourselves true Romans .. — .ii. 1 

let me a little show it ,•••,••••,• — '.'.!•} 

show the reason of our Cajsar s death — iii. 1 

and let me show you him that made — iii. 2 

show you sweet Cpssar's wounds .... — ill. 2 
niakegallant show and promise of .. — iv. 2 

go, show your slaves, how choleric .. — iv. 3 
much enforced, shows a luisty spark — iv. 3 



iii. 3 
iv. 5 
iv. 5 



fHOW— comes on in pallniit show. .Jnlitcs Ctrsm; v. 1 
why dost thou show to the apt thoii-hts _ v. 3 

show him your hand tiiiom/^CIeoputra, i. 2 

it shows to man the tailors .'.. _ i. s 

did show ourselves i' the field — i. 4 

good purpose thatsofairlv shows.... — ii. 2 

show us the wav, sir |ir/3. ii. 7) ii G 

she shows a body ratlier than a lite.. — iii! 3 
already sliow me the way of vieliliug — iii 8 
to run, and show their shoidi'lers .... — iii. 9 

and to be staged to tlic sliow _ iii. 11 

not the imperious show of _ iv. 13 

and see wliat I can sliow in this — v. 1 

show me to tlie shoutinj; varletiy — v. 2 

sliow me, my women, like a queen .. — v. 2 

in solemn show, attend this _ v. 2 

in what show of death it makes Cymbdine, i. G 

would show the Britons cold _ ;;: 1 

shows mucli more his own conceiving — 
to sliow less sovereignty than they .. — 

to show what coast thy sluggish ' — 

and show them princes born _ 

more valour in me than m^■ habits show — 
show thy spite on mortal tlus.... 
to o'ercome von with her show .. 
with other si>i itelv slujws of mine 
skill 



— -v. i 

V. ,5 
V. 6 
V. 5 



Btruc'k home to show my strength. TitusAndraii. 



ii.3 



ill. 1 
V. 1 
V. 2 
V. 2 



— iii. I 



iii. 7 



iv. 6 



i. 2 



— iii. 2 



entreat her show a woman pity 

and shows the ragged entrails of ...'■. 

in dumb shows pass the remainder . . 

now let me show a brother's love 

I'll show thee wondrous things 

show me a murderer (rep.) 

show me a thousand, that have done 

the trumpets show, tiie emperor — ,. .. 

show us wherein, and from the place — v. 3 

■this mercy shows, we'll joy in such Pericles, i. 1 

to show his sorrow, would correct.... i. 3 

who makes the fairest show 1.4 

bIiow you those in troubles reign.. — ii. (Gower) 

I'll show the virtue I have borne — ii. 1 

which shows that beautv hath his .. — ii. 2 
mean better than his outward show — ii, 2 

every worth in show commends — ii.3 

had not a show might countervail .. — ii.3 
what's dumb in show, I'll plain . . — iii. (Gower) 

though I show will in't _ iii. 3 

beliet may suifer by foul showl — iv. 4 (GoweiO 

{>orn to lionour, show it now — iv. 6 

*hat shows, what minstrelsy .... v. 2 (Gower) 

shows like a riotous inn Lear, i. 4 

how ugly didst thou in Cordelia show .. i. 4 

small respect, sliow too bold malice — ii. 2 

at point to show their open banner — iii. 1 

show her this ring 

to show the heavens more just 

free things, and happy shows, behind 

show him this letter 

tUis shows you are above, you justicers '.'. 
I wonld show what party I do follow. . . . 

show scarce so gross as beetles 

that shows thee a weak sla\e .... Homeo /i- Juliet. 

I will show myself a tyrant 

slfow me a mistress that is passing fair 
her face with some that I shall show 

will show you, shining i,rep.) 

BO shows a snowy dove (rep.) 

show a fair presence, and put ot£ these 
which mannerly devotion shows .... 

substance of divinest show ! 

some grief shows much of love (rr/j.) _ .... „ 

he will s.how thee where tliey are _ iv. 4 

thinly scattered to make up a show — v. 1 

60 Shalt thou show me friendship — v. 3 

sun, for sorrow, will not show his head — v. 3 

to offer it the show of violence Hamlet, i. 1 

and all things will we show our duty — i. 2 

to show my duty in your coronation — i. 2 

all forms, modes, shows of grief — i. 2 

that within, wliicli passeth show _ 1.2 

It shows a will most in(;orrect to heaven — i. 2 

show me the steep and thorny way _ i. 3 

of that die which their investments show — 1.3 
the glowworm shows the matin to be near — i. 5 
to show us so much gentry, and goodwill _ ii. 2 

I tell you, must show fairly outward — ii. 2 

the pious chanson will show you more .. ii. 2 

that slrow of such an exercise may colour iii. 1 

alone entreat him to show his grief — iii 1 

nothing but inexplicable dumb shows .. — iii' 2 

to show virtue her own feature _ iii. 2 

and shows a most pitiful ambition in!... _ ii!.' 2 
belike this show imports the argument .. — iii 2 

this show meant? (/rp.) _ jij. 2 

to show, he'll not shame to tell you .... iii. 2 

wisdom should show itself more richer . . — iii. 2 
mineral of metals base, shows itself pure — iv. 1 

nothing, but to show you how a king — iv. 3 

shows no cause without why the man dies — iv 4 
toshowyourself in deed your father's son — iv. 7 

that shows his hoar leaves in iv. 7 

zounds, show me what thou'lt do — v! I 

the field, but here shows much amiss .... v. 2 

throwing but shows of service on their . . Othello, i. 1 

I must show out a flag and sign — i. 1 

gives me this bold show of courtesy .... _ ii. 1 
one unperfectness shows me another'.... — 5i -» 
at first with heavenly shows, as I do now 
thou dost love me, show me thv thought — 
show the love and duty that I bear you — 
pranks they dare not show theit husbands — 

tis not a year or two shows us a man — 

courage, and valour, this niglit show it . . — 
show you such a necessity in his death .. — iv. 2 

this Dct shows horrible and grim — v, 2 

SHOWED thee all the qualities Tempest, i. 2 

my mistress showed me thee — ii. 2 

v,)u have sliowed yourself a wise., .l/cn-i/ Wives, ii. 3 
kindness you have showed rae . . Twel/tiiKght, iii. 4 



SHOWICDhini a seeming warrant.it/ca.!. for Mens. iv. 2 
his sister, showed biishful sincerity.. ;VHc/i.-ldo, iv. I 

the herb I showed thee once Miil. N. Dream, ii. 2 

he was, he showed a mounting . . Love's L. Lost, iv. 1 

till this man showed thee'? v. 2 

and showed the better face — v. 2 

madam, showed much more than jest — v. 2 
one of them showed me a ring ..Mer.of Venice, iii. 1 
he showed me your handkerchief?./lsi/o!( ;,)'*<■ ,1. v. 2 

for you have showed me that AlVsU'ell, iii. 7 

have showed a tender fatherly .. Taming of Sli . W 1 
alas, I have showed too much ..IV inter's Tale, iii. 2 

is mine, I'd not have shown it v. 3 

showed me silks that he had Comedy of Errors, iv. 3 

smiling, showed like a rebel's Macbeth, i. 2 

to you they have showed some truth .. — ii. 1 
he showed his warrant to a friend ..King John, iv. 2 
new reaped, showed like a stubble ..\Henryir. i. 3 
that have showed themselves humours — ii. 4 

but sumptuous showed like _ iii. 2 

how showed his tasking? Seemed it — v. 2 
and showed, thou mak St some tender — v. 4 

it better showed with you 'iHenrylV. iv. 2 

and showed how well you love your.2//cm!/r/. iv. 9 

payment, showed unto my father iHenrtjI'L i. 4 

yourself, you showed your judgment — iv. I 
any likelihood he showed to-dav ?./(!c/iard ///. iii. 4 

in courtesy showed me the castle — iv. 2 

that stood, showed likeamine HenryVni, i. 1 

hath showed him gold i. i 

in all the rest showed a most noble.. — ii! i 

for such a one we showed them _ (epil.) 

8ho^ved what necessity belonged.. Timon ofAth. iii. 2 
there was very little honour showed in't — iii. 2 
should have showed us his marks . . Coriolanus, ii. 3 



— ii. 3 



iii. 4 



wherein they showed most valour ., _ iii. 1 

if you had not showed them how .... iii. 2 

all boats alike showed mastership .. iv. 1 

and therein showed like enemies iv. 6 

though I showed sourly to him) once v. 3 

this mercy we have showed v. 3 

hast never in thy life sliowed thy dear v. 3 

.you showed your teetli like apes ..JuliusCiesar, v. I 

Statilius showed the torch-liglit _ v. 5 

and when good-will is showed .. Antony SfCleo. ii. 5 

they showed his back above the element v. 2 

the mountain top Pisanio sliowed.. Cj/mdeKnc, iii. 6 
the very gods showed me a vision.... _ iv. 2 

they showed me this abhorred pit. Titus Andron. ii. 3 
good sooth, it showed well in you .... Pericles, iv. 1 

when I have showed the uiifltness ........ Lear, i. 4 

the place that showed my duty kneeling — ii. 4 

so much duty as my mother showed Othello, 1. 3 

SHOWED'ST a subject's shine Pericles, i. 2 

for the love thou showed'st the king Lear, iv. 2 

SHOWEK— refreshing showers Tempest, iv. I 

this shower sing in tne wind! Merry Wives, iii. 2 

and showers of oaths did melt..Mii(.iV.''s Bream, i. 1 
a shower of commanded tears. 7'ammo- o/- iv,. 1 (ind.) 
this shower, blown up by tempest of.KingJohn, v. 2 
small showers last long, but sudden. /iic/iard //. ii. 1 

dust with showers of blood _ iii. 3 

faster than spring-time showers 2HenryfL iii. 1 

sunshine brewed ashower for him.. 3 Henry FJ. ii. 2 

see, see, what showers arise ii. 5 

I shower a welcome on you Henri/ VIII. i. 4 

as sun, and showers, there had .. — iii. 1 (song) 

delivered such a shower of pebbles. . . . v. 3 

one cloud of winter showers .. Timon 0/ Athens, ii! 2 

travelled in the great shower of _ v. 1 

and the coramous made a shower . . Coriolanus, ii. 1 

she makes a shower of rain as Antony ^ Cteo. i. 2 

I'll set thee in a shower of gold ' ii. 5 

and these the showers to bring it on — iii. 2 

April shall with all his showers. '/'iiiw^iirfror/. iii. 1 

learn of us to melt in showers v. 3 

with ti uc-love showers Hamlet, iv. ft (son") 

SHOWERED on me daily Henry VI 1 1. iii. 2 

SHOWERING on your head 1 Henry I V. v. 1 

evermore showering? in one little. Itomeo ^Jul. iii. .i 

SHOWING, we'd not spare Mens, lor Mens. ii. 3 

something showing a more swelling. W<?)-. orVcn. i. 1 

if you will have it in showing All's Well, ii. 3 

showing, as in a model, our firm . . Richard II. iii. 4 
wash your hands, showing an outward — iv. 1 

lest he, by showing it, should Henry V. iv. 1 

by showing [A'li/, -shall show]. Troilus 4- Cressida, i. 3 
for showing me again the eyes. Timon of Athens, iv. 3 
nor, showing (as the manner is) .... Coriolanus, ii. 1 
seal your knowledge with showing them — ii. 3 

soft society, and great showing Hamlet, v. 2 

SHOWN some sign of good..7'H'or7<;n. of Verona, iii. 2 
and sir Hugh hath shown himself..W('rn/ Wires, ii'. 3 
your receiving, enough is shown. Tn-elph Night, iii. 1 
m your waking shall be shown ..Mid.N.'s Dr. iii. 2 

and fears by pale-white shown Love's L. Lost, i. 2 

damask sweet commixture shown — v. 2 

so grossly shown in thy behaviours ..All's Well, i. 3 
in babes hath judgment shown ...... — ii. ) 

his valour, shown upon our crests ..1 Henry IV. v. 5 
which oft our stage liatli shown. Heni'j/r. v. i (cho.) 

but that 'tis shown ignobly 'IHenryVl. v. 2 

as thou hast shown it flinty by 3 Henry VI. ii. 1 

he had shown itin his looks Itichard I II. iii. 4 

shown at full their royal minds .. Henry VI II. iv. 1 
goodness, sorry ere 'tis shown . . Timon of Athens, i. 2 
when I might have shown mvself .. ' — iii. 2 

now we have shown our power Coriolanus, iv. 2 

you have .shown all Hectors Antony (fCleo'. iv! 8 

be sliown for pool,' diminutives iv. 10 

this sword but shown to Gesar _ iv! 12 

have shown to thee such a declining _ v. 1 
Shalt be shown in Rome, as well as I — v. 2 

to keep it shut, than show n Pericles, i. 1 

whom the gods have shown their power — 'v. 3 
where shall be shown you all was found — v. 3 
I hear that you have shown your fiither.. Lear, ii. 1 
sir, you have shown to-day your valiant — v. 3 

no such sight to be shown Homeo ^Juliet, i. 2 

au entreaty, herein furtlier shown Hamlet, ii. 2 



SHOWN-hath my daughter shown Hamlet, i.. ^ 

c-i"k,Jr UV""/!'' too, ludeous to be shown. OMc/to, iii. 3 
SHXwrJ^il^^' f''?'''' "?^y exercise..4ii/.* c/fo. iii. 6 

SHOW ST the naked path- way Itichard II i i 

thou show'st a noble vessel Coriolanus iv" .5 

have more than thou show'st Lear i' 4 

when thou show'st thee in a child " _'i'4 

SHKED— these shreds they ver\ieA. . .'.Coriolanus \' I 

a king of shreds and patches Hamlet [vi 4 

SHREW— bless you, fair shrew! ..TireirihNi'^iii i' 3 
that jest! and beshrewall shrews]. Love's L fosl\' •> 
like a little shrew, slander her. Merch. 0/ Venice' v' I 
can make the curstest shrew.. Taming of Shrew' ii' 1 
a shrew of thy impatient humour .. _ 'iii'2 

is she so hot a shrew as she's jy' 1 

ihe is more shrew than she _ jy' 1 

how to tame a shrew (rep. iv. 2) _ jy' 1 

being troubled with a shrew, measures — v' 2 
thou hast the veriest shrew of them all — v' 2 

thou hast tamed a curst shrew _ y' 2 

but, like a shrew, you first .. Comedy of Errors iv" 1 
-oS'S^^'^-JiT*''? f'"6«'S both shoTt.2HenrylV. v. 3 (son'g) 

SHREW— 'shrew my heart Winter's Tale i •' 

shrewme, if I would lose it for Cymbeline 'ii' 3 

SHREWD construction inaie of her. Merry Wives ii' 2 

prove a shrewd Ca3sar to you Meas.forMeas'u' l 

Jf thou be so shrewd of thy tongue . . Much Ado, ii." 1 
or else you are that shrewd and ..Mid.N.'s Dr i\ 1 

she IS keen and shrewd ill's 

and a shrewd unhappy gallows too'.i'ove'sL. Lost, v 2 
there are some shrewd contents.. iUer.o//'eH,ce iii 2 
that have endured shrewd days ..As you Like it v'4 

might do her a shrewd turn if All's Well iii' 6 

a shrewd knave, and an unhappy _ ' iv' 5 

elder sister is so curst and shrewd . Taming of Sh i' 1 
wish thee to a shrewd ill-favoured wife — ' i' 2 

us curst and shrewd as Socrates' .... i' 2 

and shrewd, and froward _ ;' 2 

ah, foul shrewd newsl. KingJohn.^'. f, 

to lift shrewd steel against our ....nichardll.'m 2 
made a shrewd thrust at your belly..2Henr!;f K. ii' 4 
these women are shrewd tempters . . 1 Henry VI. i 2 

that bears so shrewd a maim iHenry VI ii' 3 

go to. you are too slirewd Itichard III', ii. 4, 

but tlie.y are shrewd ones HenryVIII i 3 

do my lord of Canterbury a shrewd turn — "y" 2 
he has a shrewd wit, I can tell ..Troilus &■ Cress, i! 2 
hnd of him a shrewd contriver. . . . Julius Casar, ii. I 
last day was a shrewd one to us. . Antonys- Cleo. iv 9 
ott'k ^tIIV^A? ''°"'^'i' f'oug'i it be but a.. Othello, iii. 3 
SHREWDLY passed upon thee.... TzceWA ,v,v/,/ y 1 
you apprehend passing shrewdly .... Much. 4do,' ii 1 
he s shrewdly vexed at something . . Alt's Well ii i. 5 
y9U boggle shrewdly, every feather .. — v3 

tis shrewdly ebbed, to say Winter's Tale v" 1 

mistress shrewdly shook your back . . Henry V. 'iii! 7 
these English are shrewdly out of beef — iii 7 
my fame is shrewdly gored. . Troilus 4- Cressida, iii! 3 

talis shrewdly to the purpose JuliusCresar iii, 1 

the air bites shrewdly; it is very cold ..Hamlet i 4 
SHREWDNESS of policy too .... Antony * Cleo ii 2 
§SP^!^^S^''"J' ^'f'' is shrewish. Comedy of Err. iii. 1 
SHREWISHLYr one would th-mk.Tu'elflhNiglu'i & 
SHREWISHNESS; I am a right ..MidN.'sUr ii 2 

SHREWSBURY. My father \HenryIV. iii! 1 

eleventh of this mouth at Shrewsbury iii. 2 

honour had already been at Shrewsliury — iv. 2 
for, sir, at Shrewsbury, as I am truly — iv! 4 

a long hour by Shrewsbury clock — y. 4 

a bloody field by Shrewsbiiry (,rep.)2 Henry I V. (ind.) 

certain news from Shrewsbury (rep.) ' i. 1 

Shrewsbury? I ran from Slirewsbury — i! 1 

since done good service at Shrewsbury — i! 2 
before your expedition to Shrewsbury _ i. 2 

your day's service at Shrewsbury i! 2 

was young Hotspur's case at Shrewsbury — i. 3 

we here create you earl of Shrewsbury iii 4 

lord Talbot earl of Shrewsbury .... I Henry VI. iv! 7 

SHRIEK— that they should shriek . . Mid. N.'s Dr. i 2 

and so, with shrieks, she melted.. Winter'sTale, iii. 3 

then I'd shriek, that even your ears,. v. I 

groans, and shrieks that rent the Macbeth, iv. 3 

for night-owls shriek, where Itichard II. iii. 3 

what noise? what shriek is this?. Troilus 4- Cress, ii. 2 
ghosts did shriek, and squeal about../t/«i!(,5Crt'.<ar,ii. 2 
lady shrieks, and well-a-nearl.. /'frides, iii. (Gower) 
andshrieks like mandrakes torn. /(o?neo<§-Ju;ie/,iv.3 
what should it be, that they so shriek — v. 3 
SHRIEKED— so cried and shrielKd.. Merry Wives, i. I 

it was the owl that shrieked Macbeth, ii. 2 

the owl shrieked at thy birth 3 Henry VI. v. 6 

and he shrieked out aloud Itichard III. i. 4 

SHRIEKING— of roaring, shrieking.. . . Tempest, v. 1 

hooting, and shrieking JntivsCofsar, i.3 

SHRIFT— a present shrift Meas. lorMeas. iv. 2 

father now hath done his slirift SlienryVI. iii. 2 

make a short shrift, he longs to see. Richard III. iii. 4 
by thy stay.to hear true slirift ..Itomeo ^Jiiliel, i. I 
confession finds but riddling shrift .. — ii.3 
means to come to shrift this afternoon — ii. 4 

got leave to go to shrift to-day _ ii. 5 

see, where she comes from shrift with iv. 2 

seem a school, his board a shrift Othello, iii. 3 

SHRILL— organ, shrill and sound.. Tirelfth Night, i. 4 
shrill echoes from the .. Taming ofxhrew, 2 (indue.) 

with this shrill addition '...\He71ry IV. ii. 4 

hear the shrill whistle Henry V. iii.' (chorus) 

poor Andromache shrills her Tmihis .-J- Cress, v. 3 

neighing steed, and the shrill trump . . Othello, iii. 3 

SHRILLER than all the music hillus Cn-snr, i. 2 

SHRILL-GORGED lark so far cannot. . . . Lear, iv. 6 
SHRILL-SHRIEKING daughters.. ..HeHryr. iii. 3 
SHRILL-SOUNDING throat awake ....Hamlet.i. 1 
SHRILI^TONGUEDFulvia ....Anioiiy ^-Cteo.i. 1 
is she shrill-tongued, or low? madam — iii. 3 
SHRILL- VOICED suppliant makes. Richard II. v. 3 
SHRILLY— quillets shrilly. ... VV.h^ui of Athens, iv. 3 
replying shrilly to the well-tuned. Titus Andron. ii. 3 

SHRIMP— a child, a shrimp Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

this weak and writhled shrimp I Henrif VI. iU 3 



SHRINE, this mortal Merchant of Venice, ii. 7 

bliiul inuii lit Saint AMmn's slirino . .illenry f I . ii. I 
Jrofik'V.itioii, to tins Imly slirine? .. — ii. 1 
'.'onic, otiVr at niv shrine, and 1 will., — ii. 1 

■amint; tlic shrine cit' Venus Cijmbethie, v. b 

,in«ortl\v linnd this ii.ilv sUnne.liameo ^- Juliet, i. 5 

6URINK not, hntiluwn \wtli.. V'lro «cn. or/'cr. iv. 1 

even till I slirinlt with e.ihl ....AsyoiiUkeii, ii. 1 

against this fiie tlo I sliriulc nj) Kini;^Johii, v. 7 

heavy notliinL; faint and slirink ....K/t/K/r-ti //. ii. 2 

that lie shall sliriuk under my 1 Henry I'', v. 2 

1 slirinlt, and run away \ Henry f'l. iv. 5 

when he perceived me shrink — iv. 7 

to shrink mine arm up like a :MIenryri. iii. a 

if any mean to shrink from me .... UivlLanl / ; /. v. 3 
ft friend will not shrink from him. Heury VUl. iv. 1 
and liis estate shrinks from liim Tiinon oJ'Mhcns, iii. 2 
cround slirinks before his itaaaXng. .Cinoliums, v. 4 
detected life not slirink thereat.. jri;«sjlH(/ro»,. iii. 1 

SlUvINKIN'G for distress, but \ Henry VI. iv. 1 

Troy shrinking CCoi.-slirieking]7ioi/»ii fi-Cress. iii. 3 
and the shrinking slaves of winter.. Cr/ni&c/mi?, iv. 4 
SIIKIVE me tlian wive me ..Merchant of rcnice, i. 2 
and slmve you of a thousand Idle. Comejy of Err. ii.2 
doubtless lie shrives this woman .... 1 Hini-t/ 1' I. i. 2 

SHRIVED and married Romeo ^.li'diet, ii. ■! 

SHlilVEI/ED up tlu'ir bodies Pericles, ii. 4 

SIIHIVER— he was made a shriver. .SHenryr/. iii. 2 

SHRIVING work in hand Itieluird III. iii. 2 

SHRIVINU-TIME allowed Hamlet, v. 2 

SHROUD, till t!ie dregs of the storm . . Tempest, ii. 2 

my shroud of white Twelfth Night, ii. 4 (song) 

in remembrance ofa shroud Mid.N.^sDream, v. 2 

a smock sliall be your sliroud .... Lovers L. Lost, v. 2 

and all the slirouds wherewith KingJohn, v. 7 

braise we'll shroud ourselves SWeiiiv*'/. iii. 1 

how to shroud yourself from enemies? — iv. 3 
of France our shrouds and tacklings — _v. 4 
as tlie slirouds make at sea in .... Henry VllJ. iv. 1 
put j'ourself under his shroud .Antony SrCleo.\\\. 11 
witli a dead man in ills sliroud. . Komeo ^■Juliet, iv. 1 

lies festering in his shroud — iv. 3 

the mangled Tybalt from his shroud — iv. 3 
shroud as the mountain 3novv..Ha?«/c(, iv. 5 (song) 
eliroud me in one of those same sheets .Othello, iv. 3 

SHROUDED in this bush Lore'sL.Lost, iv. 3 

honour may be shrouded in a \\ea.rse. liiehard 1 1 1, i. 2 

never shrouderl any but lazars. . Troilus ^ Cress, ii. 3 

shrouded in cloth of state; balmed.... /Vr/c/e^.iii. 2 

SHROUDING sheet: O, a pit of.. Hamlet, v. 1 (song) 

SlIROVE-TIDE. Bemerrv ..2 Henri,/;', v. 3 (song) 

SHROVE-TUESDAY, a morris for ..AlCsWell, ii. 2 

SIIRUB-here's neither bush, nor &\\r\\\>. Tempest, ii. 2 

mine arm up like a withered shrub. 3 Henry Fi. iii. 2 

and kept low shrubs from winter's .. — v. 2 

we are but shrubs, no cedars we. . Titus Andron. iv. 3 

SHRUG— with a patient shrug . . .Verch. nf I'rnice, i. 3 

the shrug, the hinn, or ha irep.) .. Winter'sTate, ii. 1 

attend, and shrug, i' the end, admire. Co/io/amis, i. 9 

SHRUG'ST thou, malice? Tempest, \. 2 

SHRUNK— for his shrunk shank .. As you Like it, ii. 7 
oneof you will prove a shrunk pannel — iii. 3 

how much art thou slirunki 1 Henry IV. v. 4 

Timon is shrunk, indeed Timon of Athens, iii. 2 

shrunk to this little measure? JuliusCirsat , iii. 1 

a man shrunk up with cold I'ericles, ii. 1 

borrowed likeness of shrunk death. Komeo f/Jul. iv. 1 

at the sound it shrunk in haste away . . Hamlei, i. 2 

SHUDDER— into strong shudders . Timon nfAth. iv. 3 

SHUDDERING fear, and Merch. of Venice, Wi. 2 

SHUI'FLE, to hedge Merry Wives, ii. 2 

shall likewise sliuffle her away — iv. 6 

food master, must sliufRe for itself . . Cymlielinc, v. 5 
UFFLED off with such uncurrent. TiretnhN. iii. 3 
we have shuffled oft' this mortal coil ..Hnmtet, iii. 1 

SHUFFLING nag \UennjIi: iii. 1 

there is uo shuffling, there the action . . Hamlet, iii. 3 
or with a little shuffling yon may — iv. 7 

SHUN-and want shall shun you.7'empe.t(, iv. 1 (song) 
doth evitate and shun a thoiis!ind..Mc)TV '('ires, v. 5 

by thy flight to shun Measure for Measure, iii. 1 

it not, shun me,and I will spare ..Mid.N.'sDr. ii. 2 
thus when I shun Scylla .. Merchant nl'f'enice, iii. 5 
who doth ambition shun ..As you Like it, ii. 5 (song) 
wlio shuns thy love, shuns all his love. .j;/'s"W;, ii.3 
your kindred shun your house. Taming ofSh. 2 (ind.) 
do not shun her, until you see her. ll'inler'sTate,v. 3 

we sa.v, we will not shun it Henry I', iii. 6 

let him shun castles (rep.) iHenryVI. i. 4 

I would not shun their fury 3 Henry VI. i. 4 

weak we are, and cannot shun pursuit — ii. 3 
to shun the danger that his soul . . Richard III. iii. 2 
my desert unmc'ritalile, shuns your.. — iii. 7 

von cannot shun yourself Troilnsf,- Cress, iii. 2 

like beasts which you shun beastly ..Cymt,eline, v. 3 

by flight I'll sliun the danger Pericles, \. 1 

who shuns not to break one — i. 2 

thou'dst shun a bear Lear, iii. 4 

let me shun that, no more of tliat — iii. 4 

SHUNLESS destiny Corio/ania, ii. 2 

SHUNNED the fire TwoOen. of Verona, i. 3 

that I ever yet have shunned — iii. I 

and my approach be shunned Winter's Tale, \. 2 

the mouse ne'er shunned the cai ....Cn'olanus, i. 6 

shunned to go even with what Cymheline, i. 5 

shunned my abhorred society Lear, v. 3 

shunned who gladly fled from me. Rimvo ff Juliet, i. I 
that she shunned the wealthy curled.... 0^/ieHo, i. 2 

SHUNNING-I advise jour shunning. Heiiri/;;//.i. 1 
a bear, the Volsccs shunning him ..Corioianus, i. 3 

SHUT— shut up my thoughts Tempest, ii. 1 

that I'll keep shut TnoC/en. of Ver. iii. I 

let the garden door be shut ....Twelfth IVight, iii, I 

men shut their gate — v. 1 (song) 

that sometime shuts up Mid.N.'sDrtam, iii. 2 

awny this villain; shut him up .. I.ove't L.Lost,i. i 

till that instant shut my woeful — v. 2 

whiles we shut the gate upon one..l/er.o//'('nice, i. 2 

do as I hid you, shut doors — it. 5 

who sliut tiieir coward gates ii\\....-lsyouLikeit, iii, 5 



SMUT— tlie casement; shull\\a\, ..As i/ou Like it, iv. I 
whose baser stars do shut us up ,...'.. All's n'ell. i. i 
in so just a business, shut his bosom — iii. 1 

which I would fain shut out — v, 3 

so grieving, that heshuts up. Winter'sTale, iv. (cho.) 
own doors being shut against. Comedy (j/'/siro.'-t, iv. 3 
upon me the guilty doors were shut — iv. 4 

locked up, and I shut out? — iv. 4 

the abbess shuts the gates on us v, 1 

she shut the doors upon me v. 1 

against his murderer shut the door Macbeth, i. 7 

tihd shut up in measureless content., — ii, 1 

ay, but their sense is shut — v. I 

shut the door; there comes no illenrylV. ii. 4 

would shut the book, and sit him down — iii. 1 

of mercy shall be all shut up Henry V. iii. 3 

or I'll shut thee out shortly I Henry VI. i. 3 

ilost thou command me to be shut out? — i- 3 

compelled to shut our shops ., — iii.) 

thy comfort shut in Gloster's tomb ., — iii. 1 
halberds did shut up his passage. . . .ZHenry VI. iv. 3 
shut the gates for safety of ourselves — iv, 7 

must not be shut, but in the night ., — iv, 7 

contempt shut door upon me Henry VIII. ii. 4 

minds of all should be shut up ..Troilus'^ Cress, i. 3 

let's shut our gates, and sleep — ii.2 

to those have shut him up Timon of Athens, i, 1 

men shut their doors a"amst a setting — i. 2 

all the wealth I have, siiut up in thee — iv. 3 

our gates, which yet seem shut Corioianus, i. 4 

see, they have shut him in — i. 4 

hence, and shut your gates upon us. . — i. 7 

and shut the spring oi it Cymheline, ii. 2 

the gates shut on me Titus Andronicns, v. 3 

to keep it shut, than shown I'ericles, i, 1 

shut up your doors (jep.) Lear, ii. 4 

in such anight to shut me out I — iii. 4 

shut your mouth, dame, or with — v. 3 

shuts up his windows liomeo ii Juliet, i. 1 

shut up in prison, kept without — i, 2 

or those eyes shut, that make thee .. — iii. 2 

shut the door! — iv. 1 

or shut me nightly in a charnel-honse — iv. 1 
death when he shuts up the day of life — iv. 1 
holiday, the beggar's shop is shut..., — v. 1 

let the doors be shut upon him Hamlet, iii. 1 

as if thou thenhad'st shut up in thy . . t»(/ie(io, iii. 3 
shut myself up in some otlier course ,.,, — iii. 4 
leave procreants alone, and shut the door — Iv. 2 

SHUTTLE— life is a shuttle Merry Wives, v. ) 

SHY— a shy fellow was the duke..jUeas../b;/l/eas, iii. 2 
may seem as shy, as grave ' — v. 1 

SHYLOCK— Shylock, do you hear? Mer.of Venice, i. 3 
Shvlock, albeit I neither lend nor..,. — i. 3 

well, Shylock, shall we be beholden — i. 3 

you say, Shylock, we would have..,. — i. 3 

yes, Shylock, I will seal unto — i. 3 

Shvlock, thy master, spoke with (re/?.) — ii.2 
dilFerence of old Shylock and Bassanio — ii. 5 
how now, Shylock? what news among — iii. 
Shylock, for his part, knew the bird — iii. 

hear me yet, good Shjdock — iii. 

Shylock, the world thinks, and I think — iv. 

and old Shylock ('re^.) — jy. 

Sh3'lock, there's thrice thy money . . — iv. 

have by some surgeon, Shylock — iv. 

show ray youth old Shylock's house — iv. 

SIBYL— the nine sibyls of old illenry VI. i. 

asibvl, that had numbered in the Othello, iii. 

SIBYLLA— to be as old asSibylla.Mei-. of Venice, i. 

SICIL— the kings of France and &mi.-'iHenryVI. i. 
the Sicils, and Jerusalem {rep. v. 7)..3 Henry VI. i. 

SICILIA. I think this (lepj lfV>i;er'sy'a/e, i. 

Sicilia cannot show himself over-kind — i, 

what means Sicilia? He sometliing.. — i. 

rounding, Sicilia is a so-forth — i, 

Leontes, king of Sicilia — iii. 2 (indict, 

of that fatal country Sicilia — iv. 

and lay aside the thoughts of Sicilia — iv. 

the siglit again of dear Sicilia — iv. 

make for Sicilia; and theic present.. — iv. 

1 shall review Sicilia; for whose sight — iv, 

have I here touched Sicilia — v, 

Sicilia, and Jerusalem 2HenryVl.\. 1 (articles 

SICILIAN shores dismissed n'inler'sTale, v. 

SICILIUS— was called Sicilius Cymheline, i 

praise o' the world, as great Sicilius' heir — v 

SICILY— let what is dear in Sicily. IVinter'sTale, i. 2 
nor sliall appear in Sicily,— my lord — iv. 3 
back to Sicily much tall youtli ..Antony^ Cleo. ii. 6 
you have made me otl'er of Sicily .... — ii. 6 
your mother came to Sicily, aiKl did — ii. 6 
having in Sicily Sextus Fomjieius ., — iii. 6 
now let hot iEtna cool in Sicily.. TilusAndron. iii. 1 

SICK— heartsick with thought ..TiroGen.ofVer.i. 1 

when I was sick, you gave me — ii. 4 

I am sick, till 1 see her MerryWivcs, iii. 2 

you are sick of self-love Tweifih \ight, i. .■) 

I am sick or not at home — i. 5 

I told liim you were sick — i. 5 

I am almost sick for one — iii. 1 

that longing I have been sick for..l/ea,s./or Meas. ii. 4 

at this instant he is sick, my lord — v. 1 

how then, sick? Neither {rep.) MuchAdo, ii. 1 

I am sick in displeasure to him — ii.2 

how Benedick is sick in love with .. — iii, 1 

do you s|)eak in the sick tune? — iii. 4 

by my troth, I am sick — iii. 4 

art tliou sick, or angry? — v. I 

that you were alnitist sick for me. ... — v. 4 
sick, when I do look on thee irep.).Mid.K.'sT)r. ii. 2 
to her decrepit, sick, and bed-rid.. Lol>e'sL./.,os^ i. 1 

is the fool siek? Sick at the heart — ii, I 

that the lover, sick to death ,,.. — iv. 3 (verses) 

bear with me, I am sick — v. 2 

the weary beils of people sick — v. 2 

visit the speechless sick, and still — v. 2 

they are as sii-k, that surfeit with..Wer.o/;'eiiire. i. 2 

not sielt, niv I.M(1, unless it be — iii. 2 

they fell sick and died; I could not.. — iii. 4 



SICK— I am very sick , , . . Mer.of Venice, iv, I (letter) 

is but the daylight sicli, it looks — v. 1 

but on those that are sick As you Like it, iii. 2 

who are sick fir breathing '...All's Well, i. 2 

her eye is sick on'tj I ob.sirve her now — i. 3 

five thyself unto my sick desires .... — iv. 2 
am sick at heart, when I behold ....Macbeth, v. 3 

not so sick, my lord, as she ia — v, 3 

for I am sick, and cajiable of fears , . KingJolm, iii. 1 

are you sick, Hubert? you look — iv. 1 

but you at your sick service — iv. I 

makes sound opinion sick, and truth — , iv. 2 
the oliild himself felthe was sick ,,,, — iv, 2 
for the present time's so sick — v, I 

my heart is siek! — v. 3 

king John, sore sick, hath left — v. t 

not sick, although I have to do liiehard II. i. 3 

old John of Gaunt is grievous sick ., — i. 4 

can sick men play so nicely — ii. 1 

liest in reputation sick — ii. I 

now comes tlie sick hour that •— ii.2 

yet am I sick ior fear: speak it — v. 3 

sick and blunted with community,,! /fs?ir!/7f. iii. 2 
grievous sick. Zounds! how has (rep.) — iv. 1 
sick now! Droop now! this sickness — iv. I 

sick in the world's regard — iv, 3 

would have made me sick, being sick,2He»r!//;'.i. I 

1 heard 6a3% your lordshi[) was sick.. — i. 2 
commonweal th is sick of their own., — i. 3 
their fathers being so sick as yours .. — ii. 2 
inwardly, that my father is so sick.. — ii.2 

though tliat be sick, it dies not — ii.2 

sick of a calm; yea, "ood sooth — ii. 4 

rank minds, sick of happiness — iv. 1 

I hear, the king my father is sore sick — iv. 3 
should these good news make me siek? — iv. 4 

if he be sick with joy, he will — iv, 4 

poor kingdom, sick witlr civil — iv. 4 

the young king is sick for me — v, 3 

he is very sick, and would to bed . ... Henry V. ii. 1 
to view the sick and feeble parts of .. — ii. 4 

his soldiers sick, and famished — iii, a 

do as every sick man in his bed — iv. 1 

be sick, great greatness, and bid thy — iv. I 

in his litter,sick, came to I Henry VI. iii. 2 

with weeping, sick with groans. ...2He7i7,v''/- iii- 2 

my sick heart shows, that I 3 Henry VI. v. 2 

my wife is very grievous sick (rep.), liiehard III. iv. 2 
by sick interpreters, once weak ....Henry VI II. i. 2 

1 would not be so sick though — ii.2 

which I then did feel full sick — ii. 4 

put my sick cause into his hands.,.. — iii. 1 
where she remains now, sick — iv. I 

Griffith, sick to death: my legs.. .. — iv. 2 
he fell sick suddenly, and grew so ill — iv. 2 

thanlc ye, she will be sick else — v. 4 

unless they are drunk, sick .. Troilus /yCressida, i. 2 

the enterprize is sick! — i. 3 

that is sick of his superior — i. 3 

whereof all our power is sick — i. 3 

not sick. Yes, lion sick, sick of proud — ii. 3 

come, your disposer is sick (rep.) — iii. 1 

an apjietite that lam sick withal.... — iii. 3 

when he is sick to death I'imon of Athens, iii. I 

keep their chambers, are not sick..., — iii. 4 

1 am sick of that grief too — iii. 6 

I am e'en sick of shame — iii. 6 

hang his poison in the sick air — iv. 3 

that nature being sick of man's — iv. 3 

I am sick of this false world — iv. 3 

your aifections are a sick man's .... Corioianus. i. 1 
nor sanctuary, being naked, sick .... — i. 10 
some drink, 'Titinius, as a sick girl./H/iw.^Crt?jar,i.2 

is Brutus sick? C'ep.) — ii- ' 

j'ou have some sick offence within .. — ii. 1 

liero is a sick man, that would — ii. I 

would you were not sick 1 (?ep.) — ii. 1 

make sick men whole (re;i.) — ii. 1 

6a.y. he is sick. Shall Ca3sar send .... — ji. 2 

Cassius, I am sick of many griefs. . — iv. 3 
report that I am sudden sick .... Antony <§■ Cleo. i. 3 

1 am sick, and sullen. I am sorry .. — i. 3 
tcndquictness, grown sick of rest .... — i. 3 
with pity, that doth make me sick . . Cymbelinc, i. 7 

if you are sick at sea — iii. 4 

I should be sick, but that my resolution — iii. fi 

I am very siek (rep.) — iv. 2 

as to seem to die, ere sick — iv. 2 

I am not very sick since T can reason — iv. 2 
1 am sick still; heart-sick: Pisanio .. — iv. 2 
pray, be not sick, for you must be ... . — iv. 2 
Juno had been sick, and he her dieter — iv. 2 

than one that's sick o' the gout — v- 4 

and as sick men do who know the world. Pericles, i. I 

wlien we are sick in fortune Lear, i, 2 

say, I om sick: if you come slack — i- 3 

they are sick? they are weary? — ii. 4 

sick, O sick! if not. I'll ne'er trust — v. 3 

briglit smoke, cold tire, sick )\cn\t\\i.Iiomco^Jut. i. 1 

bid a sick man in sadness malce — i. I 

who is already sick ami pale with grief — ii.2 
vestal livery is but sick and green .... — ii. 2 
you'll be sick to morrow for this .... — iv. 4 
for lesser cause and ne'er been sick .. — iv. 4 
here in this city visiting the sick .... — v. 2 

bitter cold, and I am sick at heart Hamlet, i. 1 

was sick almost to doom's-day — i. 1 

you are so sick of late, so far from cheer — iii. 2 
to my sick soul, as sin's true nature is .. — iv. 5 
now.'mv sick fool, Roderigo Olhetlo.ii. 3 

SICKED — Ed«arcl, sicked and dicd..2He»r!//r. iv. 4 
SICKION— the aiipctite may sicken.. TirelfthKighlji. 1 

that his soul sicken not Measure.far Steasure.^ii. 4 

tlie more one sickens, the worse../1'yoK Lik^'it, iii. 2 

whose nature sickens, hut to All's Well, v. 3 

even till destruction sicken, answer ..Macbeth, iv. 1 

dying, or ere they sicken — iv. 3 

when' love begins to sicken and ..JuliusCtrsar. iv. 2 

mine eyes did sicken at tliesight..4M/onf/.S-CVe/). iii. 8 

SICKEI^ED their estates ' HenryVtll.'i. 1 



SIC 



[ 682 ] 

SIDE— ||A'h(.] Tarquin's raviehing aides.Macbelh, ii. 1 

botli Bides are even — iii. 4 

oil both sides do figlit — v. 7 

brother by tlie mother's side Kuii;Jolin, i. I 

out of one side her happy minion.. .. — ii. 2 

that we upon this side tlie sea — ii. 2 

strong upon tile stronger side.' — iii. I 

spoke like tliunder on my side? — iii. I 

which ia the side that I must go ... . — iii. I 

on that side shall I lose — iii. 1 

ten thousand English to their side .. — iii. i 

upon our sides it never shall be — v. 2 

draw this metal from ray side to ... . — v. 2 

land will let me, by j'our side Ilidmrd II. i. 3 

revolt on Hereford's side: sirrah .... — ii. 2 

where one on his side fights — ii. 2 

fly from my side; for time — iii. 2 

on tliis side, my hand; on that side.. iv. 1 

from one side to the other turning .. — v. 2 

hadst fire and sword on thy side \HemyII'. ii. 4 

with like advantage on the other side — iii. 1 
and on this north side win this cape — . iii. 1 
we of the oft'ering side must keep.... — iv. 1 

to save the blood on either side — v. 1 

against the panting sides of his poov.i Henry IV, i. 1 
weapons only seemed on our side .... — i. 1 

a shame to be on any side but one — 1. 2 

and by his bloody side, (yoke-fellow.. fJenj-i/F. iv. 6 

of Alenson flieth to his side 1 Henry I'l. i. 1 

did he shine upon the English side.. — j. 2 
five flower-de-luces on each side .... — i. 2 

and thy cheeks' side struck off! — i. 4 

appears so naked on my side — ii. 4 

and ou my side it is so well — ii. 4 

upon whose side the fewest roses .... — ii. 4 
my verdict on the white rose side.... — ii. 4 

on my side so against your will — ii. 4 

keep me on the side where still I am — ii. 4 
witnessing the truth on our side .... — ii. 4 

be severed from your side — iv. 5 

come, side by side together live and die — iv. 5 

fight by thy father's side — iv. 6 

from my side to start into — iv. 7 

and 'stablish quietness on every side — v. I 

gently on thy tender side — v. 3 

on the east side of the grove (rep.). .2Henry VI. ii. 1 
is the shepherd beaten from thy side — iii. 1 
dash me with their ragged sides .... — iii. 2 

were by his side; sometime — iii. 2 

and on our long-boat's side strike off — iv. 1 
God on our side doubt not of victory — iv. 8 

oft came Edward to my side ZHenryVI. i. 4 

and botli sides fiercely fought — ii. 1 

she, on liis left side, craving aid .... — iii. 1 
and sit thee by our side: yield not .. — iii. 3 

ambush on the forest side — iv. 6 

come thou on my side, and entreat.. /J/cAarrf III. i. 4 

give my voice on Kicliard's side — iii. 2 

and pry on every side, tremble and start — iii. 5 
on the other side, I checked my .... — iii. 7 
but on thy side I mav not be too .... — v. 3 
good angels fight on Richmond's side — v. 3 
and our good cause, fight upon our side — v 3 

whose puissance on either side — v. 3 

are slain on either side? — t. 4 

which breaks the sides of loyalty .. Henry VIII. i. 2 
place you that side, I'll take the charge — i. 4 
to the water side I must conduct ... . — ii. 1 
and on all sides the authority allowed — ii. 4 
that went on eacli side of the queen? — iv. 1 
on one and otherside, Trojan. Troilus % Cress, (prol.) 
fools on both sides! Helen must .... — i. 1 
whose weak untimbered sides but .. — i. 3 

wear it on both sides — iii. 3 

expectance here from both the sides — iv. 5 

o' the other side, the policy of — v. 4 

pasture lards the brothers' sides. Kraon of Alliens, iv. 3 
priests and servants from your sides — iv. 3 

the other side o' the city is risen .... Coriolanusy i. 1 

the one side must have bale — i. 1 

side factions, and give out conjectural — i. 1 

know you on which side they — i. 6 

on both sides more respect — iii. 1 

tliese are a side, that would be glad.. — iv. 6 
our wish, which side should win .... — v. 3 
and eacli, in either side give thee .... — v. 3 

be strong upon my side! JutiusCa:sar,i\. 4 

with Ate by his side, come hot — iii. 1 

orchards on this side Tiber — iii. 2 

praying on his side, because I — iv. 3 

one another in tire sides of Caesar .... — v. 1 

the legions on the other side — v. 2 

the sides of nature will not sustam. Anlony^Cleo. i. 3 
thou hast a sister by the mother's side — ii. 2 

on each side her, stood prett/ — ii. 2 

O Antony, stay not by his side — ii. 3 

as loud as his strong sides can — ii. 7 

our squadrons on yon' side o' the hill — iii. 8 
ou our side like the tokened pestilence — iii. 8 

O cleave, my sides! heart — iv. 12 

look out o' tlie other side your — iv. 13 

and set thee by Jove's side — i v. 1 3 

h ad been tabled by his side Cymbeline, i. 5 

can my sides hold to tliink, tliat man — i. 7 

almost stretcli the sides o' the world — iii. 1 
on either side I come to spend my breath — v. 3 

stand by my side, you (re;).) — v. 5 

a dancing-rapier by your side Titus.indron. ii. 1 

upon the north side of this pleasant.. — ii. 4 
he's your brother by the surer side . . — iv. 2 

and by his side his fruit of — v. 1 

lo, by thy side where Rape — v. 2 

abuts against the island's side Pericles, v. I 

pared tliy wit o' both sides Lear, i. 4 

his eyes ou either side his nose — i. 5 

sides, you are too tough! — ii. 4 

your houseless heads, and unfed sides .. — iii. 4 

of equity, bench by his side — iii. 6 

one side will mock another — iii. 7 

1 had turned the wrong side out — iv. 2 



SIG 



SICKER— tliough I the sicker be .... Richnrd 7/. ii. 1 

SICK-FALLEN beast KingJohn, iv 3 

SICKLKMEN— sun burn'd sicklemen.. Tempest, iv. 1 

SICKLIED o'er with tlie pale cast Hnmlet,n\. 1 

SICKLINESS-to wayward sickliness.«,rAnr(( //. ii. 1 

SICKLY— such a sickly creature ..lilerry Wives, iii. 4 

then.if sickly ears, deafed with . .Love'' sL. Lost, v. 2 

she has raised me from my sXcUyheiX. All's Well, ii. 3 

wear our health but sickly iu his life. . Macbeth, iii. 1 

the medicine of the sickly weal — v. 2 

and hence, thou sickly quoif ZHenrylV.x. 1 

but a weak and sickly guard Henry V. iii. 6 

blood enough in all their sickly veins — iv. 2 

the kin" is sicklj', weak, and Richardlll. i. 1 

is this thy vow unto my sickly heart — ii. 1 
tl-.is sickly land might solace as before — ii. 3 

for he went sickly torth Julius Ctesar, ii. 4 

as we were sickly prey — v. 1 

cold and sickly he vented tliem-.^n/oni/iJ-C/eo. iii. 4 

the indisposed and sickly fit for the Lear^ ii. 4 

physic but prolongs thy sickly da3's . . Hamlet, iii. 3 

but a sickly part of one true sense — iii. 4 

SICKNESS— anger, with sickness Much Ado, i. 1 

or sickness did lay siege to it.. ...Vi'd.^.'sDrrajn, i. I 
sickness is catching; O, were favour — i. 1 

but like in sickness, did I loath — iv. 1 

go, sickness as thou art! Love^sL.Lvst, v. 2 

nature and sickness debate it at AlVsH'cll, i. 2 

live free, and sickness freely die.. ... — ii, 1 
'twere diiadly &\Gkuess, or else. Taming of Shrew, iv. 3 
there is a sickness which puts some. Winter'sTale, i. 2 
a sickness caught of me, and yet I well! — i. 2 

'tis lioped, his sickness is discharged.. — ii. 3 
'tis a sickness, denying thee anything — iv. I 
diet his sickness, for it is my . . Comedy nf Errors, v. 1 
we feared, his sickness was past cure. KingJohn, i v. 2 

vanity of sickness! fierce extremes — v. 7 
join with the present sickness tha.t.. Richard II, ii, 1 
cold and sickness pines the clime .... — v. I 
ere he by sickness had been visited. .1 Henry/F. iv. 1 
this sickness doth infect the very .... — iv. 1 
inward sickness — and that his friends — iv. 1 
your father's sickness is a maim to us — iv. 1 
with the sickness of Northumberland — iv. 4 

must add unto your sickness iHenryJV, iii. 1 

till his friend sickness hath determined — iv. 4 
sickness growing upon our soldiers ..HemyV. iii. 3 
are with sickness much enfeebled.... — iii, 6 
fitter for sickness, and for crazy age.l Henry VI. iii. 2 

a grievous sickness took him 2HenryVI. iii. 2 

made me full of sickness and diseases — iv. 7 
proceeds from wayward sickness . . Richard III. i. 3 

1 do lament the sickness of the king — ii. 2 
had the king in his last sickness .... Henry VIII. i. 2 
eagerly his sickness pursued him .... — iv. 2 
contagious sickness, farewell, all physick — v. 2 
the nature of the sickness found. . 'Troilus i Cress, i. 3 
of any power to expel sickness . . Timon ofAth. iii. 1 
which argues a great sickness in his.. — v. 1 
my long sickness of health, and living — v. 2 

air to add unto his sickness? JuliusCtesar, ii. I 

I here discard my sickness — ii. 1 

upon what sickness? Impatient of my — iv. 3 
her length of sickness, with wii&i. Antony ^ Cleo. i. 2 

not sickness should detain me — ii. 2 

bid my woman feign a sickness ....Cymbeline, iii. 2 
the boy Fidele's sickness did make .. — iv. 2 

this sickness grows upon me Leor, v. 3 

that so his sickness, age, and impotence. Hamlet, ii. 2 
it warms the very sickness in my heart . . — iv. 7 

SICYUN how the news? (rep.). Antony ^ Cleopatra, i. i 
where died she? In Sicyon — i. 2 

SICINIUS— Junius Brutus, Sicinius ..Coriolanus,\. 1 
what hoi Sicinius, Brutus, Coriolanus — iii. 1 
speak, good Sicinius. Hear me. people — iii. i 

SIDE— and by my side wear steel? . . Merry Wives, i. 3 

close by the Thames' side — iii. 3 

I will keep my sides to myself — v. 5 

backs, shoulders, sides, and shins .... — v. 5 
Taurus? that's sides and heart . . Twelflh Night, i. 3 

there is no woman's sides — ii. 4 

how quickly the wrong side may be — iii. 1 

o' the windy side of the law — iii. 4 

drew on my side; but in conclusion., — v. 1 

ingrateful boy tliere, by your side — v. 1 

that have on 'both sides past — v. 1 

angel on the outward side! .Meas.forMeas. iii. 2 

whose western side is with a vineyard — iv. 1 

against me on the adverse side — iv. 6 

it keeps on the windy side of care Much Ado, ii. 1 

turns she every man t!ie wrong side out — iii. i 
dost thou wear thy wit by thy side? . . — v. I 
often hath she gossipiicd by my side.Mid.N.Dr. ii. 2 

then by your side no bed-room — ii. 3 

and the Athenian woman by his side — iii. 2 
could press Lysander from my side? — iii. 2 

as if our hands, our sides, voices — iii. 2 

whose side? the ]s.'mg's(,Tep.)..Lr,ve's L.L. iv. 1 (let.) 

Armatho o' the one side — iv. 1 

and his page 0* t'other side — iv. 1 

well proved again on my sidel — iv. 3 

writ on both sides the leaf — v. 2 

this side is Hiems' winter — v. 2 

but my gentle vessel's side . . Merchant of Venice, i. 1 
never shall you lie by Portia's side .. — iii. 2 
see this broken music in his Bides?./ls youLil:e it, i. 2 
and pouch on side; his youtliful ..<., — Ii. 7 

all on one side — iii. 2 

spurs his horse but on one side — iii. 4 

by thy patient's side All's Well, ii. 3 

damnable, both sides rogue — iv. 3 

sit by my side, and let the.. Taming of Sh. 2 (indue.) 

our cake's dough on both sides — i. 1 

cracks his gorge, his sides Winter's Tale, ii. 1 

fight on thy side, poor thing — ii. 3 

sometimes her head on one side .... — iii. 3 

you had been by the ship side — iii. 3 

let nature crush the sides o' the .... — iv. 3 
on his side be the worst, yet hold thee — iv. 3 
to prick the sides of my intent Macbeth, i. 7 



SIDE— hardly shall I carry out my side.... Lrar, v. 1 

the common bosom on his side — v. 3 

take the law of our sides (rep.) ..Romeo fy Juliet, i. I 
westward rooteth from the city's side — i. 1 

a good quarrel, and the law on my side ii. 4 

my back o' tother side: O, my back — ii. 5 
coming from this churchyard side , . — v. 3 
for so this side of our known world .... Hamlet, i. 1 

been much to do on both sides ii. 2 

if we could carry a cannon by oiu: sides v. 2 

laid the odds o' the weaker side — v. 2 

they bleed on both sides : how is it — v. 2 

messengers are here about my side .... Othello, i. 2 
being strong on both sides, are equivocal — i. 3 
turned almost the wrong side outward .. — ii. 3 

she miglit lie by an emperor's side — i v. 1 

turned your wit the seamy side without — iv. 2 
hang my head all at one side, and sins ,. — iv. 3 
yea, curse his better angel from his side — v. 2 
ay, ay j O, lay me by my mistress' side ! . . — v. 2 

SIDED in his behalf Coriolanus, iv. 2 

SIDE-PIERCING sight! Nature's above .Lear, iv. (> 
SIDE-SLEEVES, and skirts round ..Much Ado, iii. 4 
SIDE-STITCHES that shall pen thy . . Tempest, i. 2 

SIEGE of this moon-calf _ ii. 2 

to lay an amiable sie^e to the .... Merry Wives, ii. 2 
upon the very siege ot j ustice . . Meas. forMeas. iv. 2 
or sickness did lay siege to it ..Mid.N.'s Dream, i. 1 
lays down his wanton siege before . . All's Well, iii. 7 

will laugh a siege to scorn Macbtth, v. 5 

from this paltry siege, and stir Ki7ig John, ii. 1 

preparation for a bloody siege — ii. 1 

and his siege is now against the — v. 7 

beats back the envious siege of Richard II. i\. 1 

girding with grievous siege, castles .... Henry V.'i.i 
therein see a siege: behold the.... — iii. (ehorusj 
to whom tlie order of the siege is given — iii. 2 

to raise so great a siege — iii. 3 

retiring from tlie siege of Orleans I Henry VI. i. 1 

let's raise the sie^e (rep.) — i. 2 

tear down, than forsake the siege .... — i. 2 

to raise this tedious siege — i. 2 

the siege assuredly I'll raise — i. 2 

a great power to raise the siege — i. 4 

horsemen, that were levied for this siege — iv. 3 
that lays strong siege unto this . . . .IHenrij VI. iii. 3 
after seven years' siege, yet Troy.Troitics ^Cress.i. 3 
to whom all sores lay siege .. Timon of Athens, iv. 3 
been to me as fearful as a siege .... Cymbeline, iii. 4 
she will not stay the siege of .... Romeo ^Juliet, i. I 
to remove that siege of grief from her — v. 3 
my regard, of the unworthiest siege.. ..Hamlet, iv. 7 
and being from men of royal siege .... Othello, i. 2 
the battles, sieges, fortunes, that I have.. — i. 3 

SIENNA'S brother Cymbeline, iv. 2 

SIEVE— as water in a sieve MuchAdo, v. 1 

this captious and intenible sieve All's Well, i. 3 

but in a sieve I'll thither sail Macbeth, i. 3 

unrespective sieve [Knf.-same].. Troilus^ Cress, ii. 2 

SIFT this matter further All's Well, v. 3 

I could sift him on that argument . . Richard II. i. 1 

well, we shall sift him: welcome Hamlet, u. 2 

SIFTED— thy thought were sifted ..i Henry VI. iii. 1 

SIGEIA tellus frep.) Taming 0/ Shrew, iii. 1 

SIGH— to sigh to the winds Tempest, i. 2 

cooling of the air with sighs — i. 2 

with heart-sore sighs TwoGen.of Verona, i. 1 

to sigh, like a sehool-boy — ii. 1 

wherein I sigh not Julia — ii. 2 

drive the boat with my sighs — ii. 3 

and daily heart-sore sighs — ii. 4 

sad sighs, deep groans — iii. 1 

you sacrifice your tears, your sighs .. — iii- 2 

to that I'll sigh and weep — iv. 2 

with sighs of fire Twelfth Night, i. 5 

what tliriftless sighs shall poor — ii. 2 

a thousand thousand sighs to save — ii. 4 (song) 
thus advises thee, that sighs for.. — ii. 6 (letter) 
if she be in love, may sigh it oS..Meas. forMeas. i. 3 

and sigh away Sund,ay_s MuchAdo, i. 1 

sigh no more, ladies, sigh no more — ii. 3 (fong) 
then sigh not so, but let them go .. — ii. 3 (song) 

cunsume away in sighs, waste — iii. 1 

what? sigh for the tooth-ach? — iii. 2 

she concluded with a sigh, thou wast — v. 1 

help us to sigh and groan — v. 3 (song) 

dreams, and sighs, wishes, and ....Mid.N.'sDr. i. i 

with sighs of love that cost the — iii. 2 

I think scorn to sigh; methinks ..Love'sL.Lost, i. 2 

sigh a note, and sing a note — iii. 1 

sweet welkin, I must sigh in thy face — iii. 1 
a very beadle to a humorous sigh.... — iii. 1 
anointed sovereign of sighs and groans — iii. 1 
and I to sigh for her! to watch for her — iii. 1 
love, write, sigh; pray, sue, and groan — iii. I 

saw sighs reek from you — iv. 3 

of sighs, of groans, ot sorrow — iv. 3 

were tempered with love's sighs — iv. 3 

and sigh, and sa.y, amen; use all .Mer.of Venice, ii. '2 

no sighs but 0' my breathing — iii. I 

relent, and sigh, and yield to christian — iii. 3 
a shadow, ana sigh till he come ..As youLike it, iv. 1 
to be all made of sighs and tears .... — y. 2 

do my sighs stream All's Well, ii. 3 

never have a cause to sigh .... Taming of Shrew, v. 2 
then to sigh, as 'twere the mort .. Winter'sTale, i. 2 
the career of laughter with a sigh? .. — i. 2 

and do sigh at each his needless .... — ii. 3 
thou dost but sigh, that thou no more — iv. 3 
where sighs, and groans, and shrieks.. ii/ac&e//i, iv. 3 

what a sigh is there? — v. I 

my heart will sigh, when I Richard II. i. 3 

our sighs, and they, shall lodge — iii. 3 

go, count thy way with sighs — v. 1 

with sighs, they jar their watches .... — v. 5 
so siglis, and tears, and groans, show — y. 5 

and, with a rising sigh, he MIenrylV. iii. 1 

thou hast a sigh to blow away 2HenryIV.i. 1 

behold my signs and tears 1 Henry VI iii. i 

blood-consmiiing sighs recall (.rep.). 2 Henry VI iii. 3 



SIG 



[ 683 ] 

SIGHT. A foolish thought (i(?7;.) Macbeth ii. 2 

and destroy your sight witli a new .. — ii. 3 

Bwecp liini fro!n my siglit — iii. I 

avaunti and quit my HiL'htl — iil. 4 

you can bcliold sucli eiglits, and keep — iii. 4 

what siglits, my lord? — iii. 4 

horrible siglit! ay, now, I see — iv. 1 

bnt no more sights', where are — iv. 1 

and amazed my siyht; I tirinic — v. 1 

but, on the siffht oi us, your lawful. . KingJohn, ii. 1 

I cannot brooK thy sight — iii.) 

liow oft the sight of means to do .... — iv. 2 

out of my sight, and never see — iv. 2 

crest-fallen in my father's sight .... Ulchard //. i. 1 
anointed iu his sight, hath caused .... — i. 2 
hatii done by sight of what I liave .. — ii. 3 

to endure the sight of day — iii. 2 

you will, so I were from your sights — iv. 1 

never more come in my sight — v. 2 

but is aweary of th3' common sight. 1 Henry IT. iii. 2 

durst not come near your sight — v. 1 

to fly out of your sigiit, and raise.... — v. 1 
liis dimensions to any thick siglit .."iHeimjIV. iii. 2 
sparkling through siglits of steel .... — iv. 1 

in sight of both our battles — iv. 1 

and now my siglit fails, and my brain — iv. 4 

upon thy sight, my worldly — iv. 4 

they do offend our sight H-mv V. iv. 7 

dreadful will not be, as was his sight. IHt^nryf'/. i. 1 
the sight will much delight thee .... — i. 4 

daunted at a woman's sight? — v. 3 

by sight of these our baleful — v. 4 

in siglit of England and her lordly.. 2Hcnr.v r/, i. I 

her siglit did ravish ; but her — i. 1 

that which seems to dim thy sight?.. — i. 2 

abase our sight so low, as to — i. 2 

hath received his sight; a man — ii. I 

although bv his siglit his sin be — ii. 1 

siglit niay (listinguish of coloiu's .... — ii. 1 
in sight of God, and us, your guilt is — ii. 3 
take hence that traitor irom our sight — ii. 3 
balefulmessenger, out of my sight!.. — iii. 2 
kill the innocent gazer with tliy sight — iii. 2 
my earnest-gaping sight of thy laud's — iii. 2 
and in thy siglit to die, what were .. — iii. 2 
where, from tliy si"ht, I should he .. — iii 2 
even in thrir wives and children's sight — iv. 2 
the siglit of me is odious in their eves — iv. 4 
sliall I endure the sight of Somerset? — v. 1 

even at this sight, my lieart — v. 2 

the sight of any of tiie house of York.3HeH;j/r/. i. 3 
to see this sight, it irks my verj' soul — ii. 2 

the fearful flying hare in sight — ii. 5 

mine own land with my wisliful sight — iii. 1 
I here protest, in sight of heaven .... — iii. 3 
out of my sight! thou dost infect . Richard IU. i. 2 
what makest thou in my sight? .... — i. 3 

of ugly sights, that, as 1 am a — i. 4 

what siglits of ugly death — i. 4 

draw the brats of Clarence out of sight — iii. 5 

then bring me to their sights — iv. 1 

blind sight, poor mortal living ghost — iv. 4 
disgracious in your sight [Co(.An(. -eye] — iv. 4 
be executed in his father's sight .... — v. 3 
pageants, and siglits of honour . ...Henry I'll 1. iv. I 
if my sight fail not, you sliould be .. — iv. 2 
I'll show .your grace the strangest sight — v. 2 
Argus, all eyes and no sight . . t'roUus Sf Cressida^ i. 2 
through the'sight I bear in things .. — iii. 3 

sing any man at first sight — v. 2 

I am joyful of your sights Timon of.ilhcns, i. 1 

most hungrily on your sight — i. 1 

nor sight of priests in holy vestments — iv. 3 
and tlie bleared sights are spectacled Coii'oianuj, ii. I 
dowu stretch below the beam of sight — iii. 2 

take up the glasses of my sight! — iii.-' 

thy sight, which should make our eyes — y. 3 

you know him well by sight JuUusCtvsarj i. 3 

three of us have seen strange sights.. — i. 3 
most horrid sights seen by the watch — ii. 2 

O most bloody sight I we will be — iii. 2 

my sight was ever tliick — v. 3 

as tidings of this sight — v. 3 

mine eyes did sicken atthesighty/ji/ojii/ ^Cleo. iii. 8 
a heavy sight! I am dying, Egypt .. — iv. 13 

hence, from my sight! if, after Cymbeline, i. 2 

was as a scorpion to her siglit — v. 5 

O, get thee flora ray siglit — v. 5 

and here, in sight of Rome (rep.) . Til us .Andron. i. 2 

my sight is verj; dull, whate'er — ii. 4 

ever eye, with sight, made heart lament — ii. 4 
and see a fearful siglit of blood and death— ii. 4 

for such a sight will blind — ii. ^ 

made thee liandless in thy father's sight?— iii. 1 
ah, that this sight should make so deep — iii. I 

witli this dear sight struck pole — iii. 1 

and be this dismal sight the closing — iii. I 

go, get thee from my sight — iii. 1 

thy sight is young, and ihou shalt read — iii. 2 
Iiowdesirousof our sight tliey are .. — v. 1 

a sight to vex the father's soul — v. I 

cloud they not their sights perpetually. /'cr/cits, i. I 
to glad tlie siglit, aud not so much ... . — i. 4 
supposing once more put your sight — V. (Gower) 

but bootless is your sight — — v. 1 

hence, and avoid my eightl Lear^ i. 1 

out of my sight! see better, Lear — i. 1 

out, varlet, from my sight! — ii. 4 

abuoy almost too small for sight — iv. 6 

and tlie deficient siglit topple down — iv. 6 

and, in your sights, shake patiently — iv. 6 

O thou side-piercing sight! — iv. 6 

fly does lecher in my sight — iv.C 

a sight most pitiful in tiie meanest — iv.C 

the sight of the death-practised duke .... — i v. 6 
this is a dull sight: are you not Kent? .. — y. 3 

no sucli sight to be shown Jtomen ^ Juliet ^ i. 2 

forswear it siglitl for I ne'er saw .... — i. .'» 

to hide me from their eight [Kfi(.-eycs] — ii. 2 
ont short minute gives me in her siglit — ii. li 



SIG 



SIGHS are breathed for thee! iHenryl'l. iii. 2 

why should you sigh, my lord? ZHentyn. i. 1 

her sighs will make a battery — iii. 1 

blood-sucking sighs, lest with my sighs — iv. 4 

and many an old man's sigh — v. 6 

but then I sigh, and with a piece , . Richard III. i. 3 
with thee, but to make thee sigh .... — i. 4 

as wedged with a sigh Tmilm Sf Ci aaida, i. I 

buried tills sigh in wrinkle of — i. 1 

why sigh you so profoundly? — iv. 2 

witli so many thousand sighs did .... — iv. 4 

and sighs, and tukcs my glove — v. 2 

out of yourL:;itcs witli sighs Con'o/auiM, v. 2 

winds and wiitcrsi, siulis and tears. /(?i(o«!/ ^-Cleo. i.2 

tlien shall the sighs olOctavia — ii. 6 

he furnaces the thick siglis from \\\vi\, Cymbeline, i. 7 

wherefore breaks that sigh from — iii. 4 

emiling with asigli (,i<f/).) — iv. 2 

tlie sraile mocking the sigh — iv. 2 

twice o'er, I'll weep, and sigh — iv. 2 

or with our sighs we'll breathe .. TilusAndron. iii. 1 

hark, how her sighs do blowl — iii. 1 

my sea be moved witli her sighs .... — iii. 1 

thou shalt not sigh, nor hold — iii. 2 

with sighs shot through Vericles, iv. 4 

with a sigh like Tom o' Bedlam Lear, i. S 

more clouds with his deep Q\g\\s.. Romeo ^-Juliet, i. I 
a smoke raised with the fume of sighs — i. 1 
appear thou in the likeness of a sigh — ii. 1 

the sun not yet thy sighs from — Tii. 3 

the winds, thy siglie — iii. 5 

here is a friar, that trerables, sighs . . — v. 3 
he raised a sigh so piteous and profound. Hamlet,\\. 1 

the lover shall not sigh gratis — ii. 2 

never alone did the king sigh — iii. 3 

there's matter in these sighs — iv. 1 

is like a spendtlirift sigh — iv. 7 

for niv pains a world of sighs Othello, i. 3 

SIGHIi'D-the first tliat e'er I sighed for. Tempest,!. 2 
sighed his soul toward the Grecian.. ;Ucr.o//'c«. v. 1 
sighed upon a midnight pillow ..Asyou Like it, ii. 4 
but they sighed; no sooner sighed .. — v. 2 
she sighed as she stoorl (rep."> .... AWs Well, i. 3 (song) 
and sighed ray English breath in ..Richard II. iii. 1 

sighed forth proverbs Coriolanus, i. 1 

never man sighed truer breath — iv. 5 

and sighed, and kissed Othello, iii. 3 

SIGHING back again Tempeil, i. 2 

the lover, sigliing like furnace ....AsyouLiUe it, ii. 7 

else sigliin" every minute — iii. 2 

a plague of sighing and grief! \ Henry IK ii. 4 

became sighing on after the adniired.2H<?ii>i//r. i. 3 

my sighing breast shall be 3 Henry l' I. ii. 5 

and faienell goes out sighing. .Troi/«s<!j-C'rc3j. iii. 3 

and sighing, with your arms JnliusCrfsnr, ii. I 

■wounclit with sighing, girl ..Titus Andronicns, iii. 2 
sat sighing [Kii(.-singiiig] Othello, \v. 3 (song) 

SIGH'ST thou without breaking?. Troiius fy Cress, iv. 4 

SIGHT but raine Tempest, i. 2 

at tlie first sight they have changed eyes — i. 2 

here's a goodly sight — v. 1 

return no more into my sight .. TwoGen. offer, i. 2 
you may say what sights you see .... — i.2 

banished from her sight — iii. 2 

or ne'er return again into my sight .. — iv. 4 
but niggardly give me sight of \\qy, Merry Wives, ii. 2 
upon their sight, we two in great .... — iv. 4 

the company and siglit of men TicetfthNight, i. 2 

favour to the youth in your sight only — iii. 2 
iu my sight she uses thee kindly — iii. 4 (chall.) 

out of my sight! — iv. 1 

stick it in their children's sight .. Meas.forMeas. i. 4 
nature never in tlie sight W'ol. K;i(. -fight] — i. 4 

as bring me to the sight of Isabella . . — i. 5 

you shall not be admitted to his sight — iv. 3 
and God keep him out of my sight . . Jl/uc/i /it/o, ii. 1 

the siglit wliereof, I think — v. 4 

we must starve our sight Mid.N.'sDream,i. 1 

to have his sight thither — i, 1 

come not within his sight — ii. I 

take this charm oil' from her sight .. — ii. 2 
BO, at his sight away his fellows fly .. — iii 2 
the love-juiee on some true-love's sight — iii. 2 
his eyeballs roll with wonted sight .. — iii. 2 
true delight in the sight of thy former — iii. 2 

see'st thou this sweet sight? — iv. 1 

1 trust to taste of truest Thisby's sight — v. 1 
you shall have asight of them.... Love'sL.Losl, ii. I 

wear the favours most in sight — v. 2 

which you have lost the sight of ..AsyouLihe il,i. 2 

be pity to see such a sight — iii. 4 

the sight of lovers feedeth those (rep.) — iii. 4 
the accustomed sight of death makes — iii. 5 
none coiihl be so abused in sight as he — iii. 5 

that loved not at first sight? — iii.,') 

never come in my sight more — iv. 1 

come no more in my sight: I had as — iv. I 

be out of tlie siglit of Orlando — iv. 1 

in Ei»ht, you are my daughter (rep.) — v. 4 
if siglit and shape be true, why then — v. 4 

the city, we shall lose all the sight ..AlVsWell, iii. 5 
and at that sight shall sad .TamhigofSh. 2 (indue.) 
bring our lady hither to our sight.. — 2 (indue.) 
whose sudden sight hath thralled.... — i. I 

what in my sight? Bianca, get — ii. 1 

that lackeil si-'ht only, naught .. Winter' sTale, ii. I 

soften at the sight o' the child — ii. 2 

not winked since I saw these sights.. — iii. 3 
here's a sight for thee; look thee .... — iii. 3 

fetch me to the sight of him — iii. 3 

will he endure your siglit as yet — iv. 3 

purchase the Bight again of dear — iv. 3 

for whose sight I have a woman's longing— iv. 3 

and show our strange sights — iv. 3 

then have you lost a sight, which.... — v. 2 
tlie sight of my poor image would .. — v. 3 
and in our sight, they three were. Comedy o/Iirr. i. 1 

and that will clear your sight — iii. 2 

to herald thee into his ei^iit, not pay ..Macbeth, i 3 
Bcusible to feeling) 08 to eight? — ii. I 



SIGHT [Col.Kiil.-O prince] ......Romeo ^Juliet, iii. 1 

I swoondcd at the sigiit _ jii. 2 

give me such a sight as this? iv. 5 

iiatli catcheil it from my siglit iv. 5 

pitiful sight! here lies the county slain v. 3 

O me! this siglit of death is as abell — v. 3 

touching this dreaded sight, twice seen . . Wam/c(, i. 1 

and vanished from our sifjht i, 2 

have hitherto concealed this sight — i.2 

or looked upon this love with idle sight.. — ii. 2 
feeling without sight, cars without hantla — iii. 4 
'twould be a sight indeed, if one could .. — iv. 7 

where is this sight? v. 2 

tlie siglit is dismal; and our affairs v. 2 

such a sight as this becomes the — v. 2 

out of my sight! I will not stay to Oihello,iv.l 

this sight would make him do a desperate v. 2 

the possession of this heavenly sight! .... v. 2 

the object poisons sight: let it be iiid .... — v 2 

SIGHTED like the basilisk Winier's Tale. i. 2 

SlGlIT-IIOLE-stop all sight-lioles.l Hfnri/ //'. iv. I 

SIGHTLESS— your sightless substances. .Vuc(/e/A, i. 5 

horsed upon the sightless couriers of the — i. 7 

unpleasing blots, and sightless stains. A'ins'./o/in, iii. 1 

SIGHTLY-it lies as sightly on the back — ii. 1 

SIGHT-OUTRUNNING were not ....Tempest, i. 2 

SIGN— some sign of good desert. 7'u'oGen.o/rcr. iii. 2 

sign me a present pardon for.... Meas.forMeas. ii. 4 

for the sign of blind Cupid Much Ado, i. 1 

let them signify under my sign i. 1 

rather die than give any sign of ii. 3 

tiiere is no believing old signs iii. 2 

she's but the si^n and semblance of her — iv. 1 
boy, what sign is it, when a man . . Love's L. Lost, i. 2 

a great sign, sir, that he will — 1,2 

following the signs, wooed bnt the sign v. 2 

until the twelvecelestial signs have.. — v. 2 
deed after me, and I will sign it .;l/ci-. ofl'enice, iv. I 

give him this deed, and let him sign it iv. 2 

in sign whereof, please ye we . . laming of Shrew, i. 2 
or moral of his signs and tokens .... — [v. 4 
and show more sign of her obedience — v. 2 
though he does bear some signs .. Winter'sTale, ii. I 

till, from one sign of dolour to another v. 2 

but signs of nobleness, like stars Macbeth, i. 4 

it were a good sign that I should iv. 2 

be these sad signs confirmers of ....King. John, iii. 1 

prodigies, and signs, abortives iii. 4 

by my signs, and didst in signs again iv. 2 

with signs of war about his ngti. ... Richard II. ii. 2 

these signs forerun the death ii. 4 

leaving me no sign, save men's — iii. 1 

for 'tis a sijin of love; and love to .... — v. 6 
and dials tlie signs of leaping-houses.l Henry/ r. i. 8 

these signs have marked me — iii. I 

smooth, like unto the sign of the ieg.2HenryII'. ii. 4 

the signs of war advance Henry r. ii. 2 

by some apparent sign 1 Henri/ y'l. ii. I 

in sign whereof ()fp. iii. 4) ii. 4 

IMl by a sign give notice — iii. 2 

give me signs of future accidents!.. .. — y, 3 

for sign of plighted faith v. 3 

It's sign she hath been liberal — v. 4 

no kinder sign of love, than iHenryVI. i. 1 

make my iraaire but an alehouse sign — iii. 2 

the least of all these signs were — iii. 2 

with full as many signs of deadly.... — iii. 2 

ah, what a sign it is of evil life — iii. 3 

lie dies, and makes no sign — iii. 3 

no better sign of a brave mind — iy 2 

underneath an alehouse' paltry sign — y. 2 

an open hand in sign of love ZHenri/VI. iv. 2 

in sign of truth, I kiss your — jy. 8 

shrieked at thy birth, an evil sign.... — v. 6 
in sign of league and amity with.... flicAard///. i. 3 
by the sign thereof, was termed so .. — iii. 5 
a sign of dignity, a breath, a bubble — iv. 4 

you sign your place and calling .. Henry Fill. ii. 4 
m a sign of peace, his service and his — iii. 1 

in sign of w hat you are, not to Coriolanus, i 9 

go home, and show no sign of fear.. .. — iv. 6 
without the sign of your profession?Ju;it«f7rt'sar, i. 1 

gave sign for me to leave you — ij. 1 
loody sign of battle (I cp.) — y. 1 

it signs well, does it not? ..Antony if Cleopatra, iv. •? 

thou hast seen these signs — iv. 12 

scutcheons, and 3'our signs of coiuiiiest — v. 2 

she's a good sign, but I have seen Cymbeline, i. 3 

some corjioral sign about her — ii. 4 

and send him some bloody sign of it — iii. 4 

these are no venereal signs. . . . Titus Andronicus, ii. 3 

Bee, how with signs and tokens — ii. 5 

or make some sign how I may do.... iii. I 

I understand her signs — iii. 1 

that thus dost talk in signs! — iii. 2 

I can interpret all her martyred signs — iii. 2 

nor kneel, nor make a sign — iii. 2 

my niece Ijavinia bv these signs? .... — iv. I 
give signs, sweet girl, for liere are none — iv. 1 

ye alehouse painted signs! — iv. 2 

but if mv frosty signs and chajis of age — v. 3 
we should lodge them with this sign ..Pericles, iv. 3 
a flag and sign of love, which is (rep.) . . Othello, i. 1 

SIGNAL— give the signal to our rage. . King John, ii. 1 

attending out the signal to begin Richard II. i. 3 

full trophy, signal, and osteiit.. Weiiri/C. v. (chorus) 

in signal of my love to thee I Henry 11. ii. 4 

thy hand, make signal of thy liopc..2Hc»i»-j/r/. iii. 3 

give signal to the light (rep. v. 4) 3 Henry ri. ii. 2 

stir not until the sij'iial JulinsC'crsar, v. 1 

08 signal that thou licar'st Romeo & Juliet, v. 3 

SIGNICD-until confirmed, signed. .Wfr.o/JVmcc, iii. 2 
(j^uoted, and signed, to do a deeil of. . King John, iv. 2 
signed in thy spoil, and crimsoned. /u/iMCn-iar.iii. I 

SIGNET is not strange to you ..Meas.forMeas. iv. 2 

to them to use your signet Timonof Athens, ii. 2 

I had niv father's signet in my purse .. Hamlet, y. 2 

SIGNIKURDew should be (rep.) HenryV. iv. 4 

and thrice-worthy signieur of England — iv. 4 

SIGNIFICANT to the country . . Lovc'sL.Loti, iii. 1 



SIG 



[ G84] 



SIM 



SniNlFIOANTSpiwlaim Mlrriri/I't. ii. i SILIONCI' 

HKiNIKIKI), tl\at Iflionld snnrl . . ..•.Mlniriil'l. v. I\ 

lllij^llt will llllVr si^niillcil 111!' M\UW.IIirll,l,ll III. ill. ,') 

In ('iiliiliinniii'rt.livMl.i in »i-;iillu.l..'»/Mi,« ■„■»,»-, ii. a 
SKJN ll'l i:S iili.i M./iiili.'S Invr 1/.'/ 



miiih 

Wllill I'l 

SKiM I \ 

to M-nili 
l<'l llirm 



Km 



l.ll'll. .1, 
1 .{'■ I'll. 



/M./r, ii. 3 
Iml. ii. a 



n ,1 ■llilv mul.T niv niHH Ulli-Zi .(i/n, i. I 

■iisi iiliniiUiim, toBignily..W((/ yv.'ii/)r. lii. 1 

ijiiirv Nil iiuicli (,i)iif'» /.. /,os^ ii. I 

Mini tDhi^'iiily MnilmntqtI'enice, ii. •! 

ly till' iipi.nmi-luMf; iil' iiin liiril — ii. 9 
ml Sli|ihaiio, tiiLMiilV, 1 iiriiy you — v. 1 

l.ii.ij'nirv Ihiir uii« — V. 1 

I'v III. I, iiiilv Miv Niii'i'osH .. lyiiilcr'tTiilr, V. I 
ilv iiM luiii-h; wliilii hi:iv,...llirl,„td II. iii. I) 

IV 111 vim Unit I'liitiiiiu ia Ilriir:/r. Iii. Ii 

i'v, lliiil, rolirls there lire u\i..'illfiitu 11. iii. 1 

Iv unlii Ilia nuiii^lv — iii. H 

iv, tli.iii I'lini'st 111 liite WUniniri. v. Ii 

iiilv til lliiil, tliiit tliiiH Iticlmril III. i. 4 

lih Hii iiiiii'h liiitii him HtraiuliC — iii. 7 
ilii liu ill • ink rviciv .. IrmlmliCreiit. iv. ft 

ll III. ir llriisillVH ■/Vmri/l(l//l(/lCIIJ, i. a 

I not tell 



I'll lillin 
\llii|.|l M 
Hhilll m;i\ 



ill. 1 I 

hilt i 



Riluiiucili'iiiliH wp.Troilu)! ^ Creti. II. 3 
yniir Rilimcc, (Miniiiiii' 111 (liiiiilmcsii.. — ill. 2 

but wu ill Hili'iii'ii liiilil tlilH _ iv. 1 

tlic'V riiiz,. nil' 



iiiv '. 

Cli...n 
■ mill. 
or 111 
() li.i 
tliuri. 

l)iitHi 

iiiy iii 



I BU 



iiiiliK. 



•imou nr.Mhcm, ii. '.' 
I'll, 111 tlic siiiru ..Cnriolaiim, i. i) 
., Iniill wiiillilMltlioll — ii. 1 
. |.iil III sik'iii'c.../i//<H.vCV/i»ar, i. 2 

I ii.l. ll : KilfMl.l; ()■(./).) — ill. 2 

"■ iii:l;iilti« t'\inili(li»e,\\\.!> 

ilk liilhoe in Biienou — V. i 
.|., iiH the i\*:wd..'VitutAntlron. 1. 2 

■im: Hk.L-p _ i. 2 

ilimily mi'lanolioly? — ii. 3 



■ lu.iivi.i 



r Hili'nci. Btill .. 

*. IIr. nu-k 

v. iirivy you... 



I I. ' 



1 Kw.Aiilony^Clm. iii. 1 , SIIJ'INI 



lliimlel, i 
. — ii. 2 
- iii. 1 
. — V. 1 

Willi. ii liilvr Kuliriliil,- iln! rcHt in fiiU'llCO — V. 2 
BiU.ni.|. Iluitilriiiiiliil lirll; it IVijrlits. . . . 0(/i(i((r), ii. .') 
unil Kil|.|i|.|. tliiiur « liiiiii tills vile brawl.. — ii. 3 

SIl.|.:N('|.;i)-wnHBili..m.nl /»),.iii /.//,•.. ;7, i. 2 

orliin: Bilfiii.|.il witli timt.lii vlc'will^'../l/.(l■^l.//l, i.;i 
tliorerori. tlici.|iilianHuiliiriBHiloui.i..il?.//i.ii)7//';/;.l.l 
then Bili.iir|.il, when— coinnnjinliuc. 7imrm d/VIZ/i. li.i 
nili'nci.il llii-ir iilinulcrfl Cuiioluiiut, ii. 1 

KI],ION<:iN(i V'.i-ii'.n 2HcH).|/"'. V. 2 



iiilv. whiit Imlu tlK'y boar ..TiliisAiid. v. 1 
iilV rri.iii tiiiio 111 tiuie.;(oHii'o/(../ii(ii!', Hi. 3 

tluH 111 I he il.u't.ir llamlel,'m. 2 

his iniiii'siv liiiili. nii. Bi^iiiily to you — v. 2 

SKiN'll.'VlNMi-Binnilvliig iiiilliiiiK ....Mm-Mh, v. ft 

SIDNIOIt-BiKuiiir, wlK.re'Htlin it?.ii;»i:/i..i*), 11. 1 

liiiv.-SiKiiiiir. In niv clniniber-wiiiilow — ii. 3 

you have uii Htiiliuieli,Hinniiir — Ii. :l 

olil »if,'iiliir, walk asido witli mo .... — iii. 2 
now, HiKiilorl What iicwa? (I'/'/i.) .. — v. 1 

yni, xiKiiioi', and depart wlicii ynu bid — v. 2 
will you Kii bear thin ncwB, siyiiior?.. — v. 2 
to do what, nigniorl' To biiul mu .... — v. 3 
truth it Ih Koiiil Bii!iiior. your nice.o .. — v. 3 

with u liiiiicy-ba^', Bli^nior Miil.N.'sDrmin, iv. 1 

like Bij(iiiiirM and rich burghers. /l/«r/i. (j/TVuia', 1. 1 
Kiiod HiKnioi'D both, wliou hIiuII wo .. — i. I 

ic»t you fair, Rood algnior — i. 3 

but note me, Bignior — i. ;< 

good signior, talte the stranger.. Comn/j/nA/'-n'. iv. 1 

NlKiiior, no. SIgnior, hanj,'! I Ilt'iin/I'l. iii. a 

thin worliiy Bl^iiior, I thank bini.. .. (;i/i/i/i(.///i(., 1. ft 

nlHlilor, i.sall yiinr family withiui' Ollifllii, i. 1 

inimt rcverenii Hlguior, do yoii know my — i. I 
Hlgnior, it Ih the Aloor. Down with him — i. 2 
Kood KlKiiior, yon Hhall more command .. — 1.2 
tlH true, iniiHt worthy Bignior, the duke's — i. 2 
weleome.nentle Bigiiior; we larked your —1.3 
most potent, jjiave, and levereml BlKiiiiirs — i. I! 
iind, niilile BiKuinr, If yirtne no ilellKhtod — 1. 3 

1 Min very ulad to see yiin, BlKiiiiir — 1. 1! 

SI(;N()IH|.:S-thriniKliall the BlKnoricH. VV.m/ics/, 1. 2 
vim have led npim my BigniirieB. . .. K/Wmni //. iil. 1 

to nil his land mill Bit.'niirieM — iv. 1 

all IhednUeiif Niirlulk'BainniirieH..'J/f,.)o.,//r. iv. 1 
SH;NI(>I{Y-I have dime llieB|.;nii.rv ..()lhflln,\. 2 
SKiNtl.M -a hiuid-Baw.eei.e sij.nnin.'.l //itim// r. ii. 1 

Hll.l.;.\t:|.; -Bilinee: (ninhle lis not VViiiyiw/, i. | 

coinm.inil theserlenienta tosilenco.... — i. I 

Hllenee; ime wiiril more will — i. 2 

sweet now, silenee: .luno and Ceres .. — iv. 1 

ill dmnhsil.nee will l VVoCVH.o/VWojm, ill. I 

the iil«ht'Bili.|iilBileiiec will _ iii. a 

liBt yiiiir names; silenee, you ahy.Merripl'lves, v. ft 
pbape thiiii thy silenee to my wit.. Vwcyv/i A'lV'i', i. 2 



till 
were ha: 

BtroiiK n 
tall'etap 



tlioiiKli I. nr silenee he drawn froi 

but Bileiiee, likea Liieieee knICo — ii, f, 

luneall shiiili.w anil silenee in \t.iMi;i,. for Mens. iii. 1 

Hllenee that fellow: I would ho — v. | 

Cor the beiielU of silenec — v. 1 

silenee is the perfeelesl herald Ulnch.ldo, ii. | 

your silenee most oUeiiilH 1110 _ ii. | 

lliKllt anil silenee! who is herey..l//i<.;V.'«/)rTOiii, ii. 3 
silenee, a while: Uohin, lakeoft' .... — iv. 1 

then, my iineen, In silenee sad _ iv. I 

outiif this silenee, vet, I piekeil — v. 1 

but, sili'iieei here Climes Tliishe _ v. I 

for silenee isimlv eimiineiiihihle..;U,.,.. „/7V»/re, i. 1 
and wished in silenee Unit it were not — ii. R 

will sh.irtlv liiin inlu silence _ ill. 5 

so fast in tlie silenee of the ninht? .. — v. I 

silenee bestows that virtue on it .... — v. 1 

lier very silenee.and her piitii.ni.e..,.|.v (/oi((,i7(n7, i. 3 
be cheeked fur silenee, hut never tii veil. .I/Ctd'c/J, i. 1 
but 111 the ollier'a silence I ilii see. V'.iiaiin' "/'*Vi. i. I 
liersilenc,. iImiiIs ,,„., anil Til he .... - ii. 1 
HiesilriM i. .11. n Ml 1.111C innnceneo. lfm(('r'j7'H(c, ii.a for a silke 

'» Pel-^.m le I. Ml e t; sileilOu! . . . . _ iii. a Billceil I 

1 like .M.ui Mil III. , It Ihe iiiiire bIiowb — v. 3 with 

silence, ciiiiil llier; hcurtlic Kivn John,]. \ by silken, sly i 

silenee, no mure; t;iicliiscly in — iv. 1 the silki 

but 11 must hreak with Bilcneo Ilirlmrdll. II. 1 and make I In 

that swells with silenee in the tortured — iv. 1 

there's fur your silenee ■•Ilrnni ir. ii. a 

hinv doth iny ..'oiiil eiiusiu .Sileiieei' .. _ iii. .j 

e {,rrp.) _ iii. ■< 

•c, and then to bed — v. 3 SI 1,1,1 \ |.;ss tu 
e, I'll Kive yon .. — v. a S11,1,IN(I, 1 wn 



silent Tcinjit'sf^ Iv. 1 

cut kind rwoGeii.orreroiia,\U. 1 

if silent, wliy.ahloeU moved MiwhAdo, iii. 1 

for I have only heen silent BO long.. — iv. 1 
to be tun silent in Iheir wordfl .... Love'tL.Lost, i. 2 
no wimmn niiiy iippriiaeh his Bilelit.. — li.i 

tills ilesei t silent he? («t/fj« i.rtc iV, iii. 2 (verses) 

only in yimr silent iniliiniciit »C/)i«e|.'»Va/f, 11. 1 

I reimrt it, that shiinlil he silent .... _ iv. 3 
why are yim si lent? Such weleomc .. Mnchrlh, iv. 3 

mark, silent kin/,', the inuriil IHrlmrd ll.iv. \ 

the nusiness iisketb silent seeieey ..■illriiri/ri. i. 2 
dark iilKlit, the silent of the night .. — i. •! 

but with advice, ami silent secrecy .. — 11,2 
and be you silent and attentive tuo..3//eHr)/f/. i. 1 

let's oil our way in silent sort — iv. 2 

the sweet silent liourMof liidmrd lll.iv. i 

the silent b -s steal on, and Unity , — v. 3 

before bis face; I will be silent.. i'rmlui^Crcii.ii.S 
pr'ythec be silent, boy: I pnillt not.. — v. I 
let my meat make thee silent ..riwnnqrAlhnu, \. 2 

fur their tim.;iies to he silent VorioUwus, ii. 2 

I wuiilil yun rather had heeu silent.. — ii. 2 

sbunlil we he silent, and nut speak .. — v. 3 
and he Bilent, that yun may liear..7?i(m.ir<riwr, iii. 2 
that Irulli shimhl he silent. . /l»(mii/ ffVlfiiimtra, ii. 2 

beiiiK silent, 1 w Id nut speak t'ymMme, ii. 3 

be silent; let's see further _ v. ft 

leave her to her sil(.|it walks Tilm.indron.W. 6 

a stone is silent, anil ulleniletli not .. — iii. I 

Bhall Cnrilelia ill.? luveand he silent Lm,;\. 1 

for my ilnty eiinnut he silent, wlieu I .... — i. ■! 

howsilent IH this tiiwnl liu! mnrderl . . <)l/ir!ln, v. I 

SU,KN'l'l,V-brin- him silently. ,1/,W. A'.'s ;)n.«i«, iii. I 

WIMUS, .Silius, 1 bave dune eniinj,ih...l»(.<5 CVco. ill. 1 

fur learn this, Silius; better leave.... — iii. I 

S I ]Jv — warrant yon, 1 11 Bilk audgold.jUi;ni//)'ii)(.j, ii. 2 

that silk will 1 go buy — iv. 4 

with shears his thread of silk ....Mid. N.'s T)r. v. I 
tbree-l'arthingii-wurth of silk ....l.nrr\L.l.n>.f.\\\. 1 
the roaring waters with my silks .Mrr. nfi'viiier, i. I 

your black silk hair ." As i/tm l.ilir it, iii. ft 

any silk, any thread .... Il'wtn-'s'ni/,;\v.:i (soul') 
showed me silks that he had ...Conn-dt, nf lirr. iv. 3 

but In new silk, ami old sack •iUnirti II'. i. 2 

biiw niiiiiy pail- 111' silk stiiekings ~ ii. 2 

turn not liiiek the silks npun,. .. 7Voi7uj <;■ Cress, ii. 2 

immaterial skein ufsleave silk _ v. I 

tby llattcrers yd weiir silk . . . . 7VmrmoAl"iras, iv. 3 

sot't as the |iara site's si lie, let Voridlanus, i, SI 

like a twist of riillcn silk — y. ft 

with tapisirv uf silk nml silver ....CvmbeUne, ii. \ 

than rnstlini,' in nnp:iiil-fur silk — iii. 3 

wenveil the sleiileil silk with . . .. /Vndfs, iv. (Oow.) 
ber inkle, silk, twin with the rubied — v. (Oow.) 

nor the rnstliiif,' nf silks, hetray I.air, iii. 1 

with a silk thread plucks \lhM-V.Unmvof,Juliel,\\.2 



SlI/ljY— 11 fourth man in a silly babit.C'i/inWiiic, v. 3 
than twenty silly ducking observants.... I.enr, Ii. 'i 

why, tliiin silly gentleman I Othello^ i. 3 

SII,Vl.)lf — would give a jiiecc of Bilver..'/'t'm;w»?, ii. 2 

Silver, theie it giii.s,Silverl — iv. 1 

of nies, and gold, and silver .. . .Mnrymwt.X. I 

with hi.rnulileiiua,iBtheailverBtreaiiui;«i./i ..(.(„, iii. I 

and euls, anil laecil with silver — iii. ■! 

like to a silver buw new bent Mid.S.'sDi. 1. 1 

ber silver visiiL.e in the wiiterv _ i. 1 

nur shines Ihe silver iniiiiu . (.are'»L. /.os', iv. 3 (vcr.) 
ofgiild, silver, ami lead {ir,<. ii. !l)j»/cr. o/;'cnicf, i. 2 
is yunr gold and silver, cwcb and rains'i' — i. 3 

the sccimil, silver, which thiBiiroinisn — ii. 7 

what says tin. silver, with her — 11.7 

shall I think, in silver she's immured — il. 7 
then 111 thee, thou silver Ireasiire-bouFC — ii. U 
Silver made it|,'uiid at the . . 7„miH4'ri/-S/i. 1 (indue.) 
attend hiiii with a, silver bason .... — 1 (indue. 
Bpreail o'er the silver waves thy. r.'mnci/;/ ()A ftVr. iii. 2 
ills silver skin laced with Ilia guidon .. yl/m.'/rt/i, ii. 3 
unless thiin let his silver water keep. K/"/f,/o/m, ii. 2 

(I, twii such silver I'lirrelits — ii. 2 

when giilil and silvcrheeksine to.... — iii. 3 
by chance a silver drop hath fallen.. — iii. 4 

stone set in the silver sea IlichunI II. ii. 1 

wliieli iniikcs the silver riversdrown — iii. 2 
sheer iiiiinaeiilate, and silver fountain — v. 3 
Ihesiniig ami silver Trent shall.. .. I /;™i',// T. iii. 1 

neither in gulil nur in silver illenryiy. i. I 

whuse heaiil the silver hand uf — iv. ' 

fathers taken liv the silver lieiuds.. .. J/cai-j/K. iii. 3 

trouhles the silver spring where •illentyll. iv. 1 

sliainc to thy silver hair, thou mad.. — y. I 

the sliver livery of aiivised age — v. 2 

liateheil in silver, shunld with a.7').|)(7ii«i^.C'ivsi. i. 3 

J'll hide my silver beard in a — 1.3 

white burses, trapped in silver Timoimr Alli, 1. 2 

1 dreamt of a silver biiBuii and ewer — iii. I 

but Tinion's silver treads ii[iuii — lii. 2 

murrain on'tl I touk this for silver .Ciirinlnniis, i. ft 
for Ills silver liairs will purehaic ..hiliinCrsnr, ii. I 
the oars were silver, which to the./»/iii/f/iS e'en. 11. 2 

witli tapestry of silk ami silver Cijmbeiine, ii. .1 

two winking cupids of silver, cucli oil — ii. 4 
all gold and silver rather turn to dirtl — iii. G 
rent off tby silver balr, tby other 7'(7iis Audron. iii. I 

and bo biiiipy, by my Bllver bow I'i:iieli!$,\. 2 

wears ^et tliy silver livery — v. 3 

tips with silver all tbcso iruit ..llmnco^- Juliet, ii. 2 
bow silver sweet sound lovers' tongues — ii. 2 
music, with her silver soiiml(j<./i.) — iv. 5 Csong) 
silver 80111111? why music, with her (lY'p.) — iv. 5 
SILVKR-liUIIJIIl', hither rctniii....;i;iWJo/,>i, ii. 2 
SJLVlOKlilDo'er .... /Uc/e/m »/,./■ /'Mi/of, il. !) (scroll) 
on a trilmnal silvereil. t:ieiipatra.,.»»/o»f/.S«"). lii.U 

seen it in his life, a sable silvered Il.nidrl, i. 2 

Sn,V|.;li,l,V iliith progress un thy . . . . A/ii-.W.a, v. 2 
SII,Vl.;U-Slll.;i)l)lN(i tears ..'rwcOoi.iir l\r. iii. 1 

Sll,\'|.;ii,-V(lic;|.;i); her eyes arc 7'cnetes, v. 1 

SI l,V l.;i;-\V 1 1 lTl.;,aiiil eucUoo./.oiv.'s /,.;-. V ? (song) 

SlhVI.'V ali,Silvial Silvia (»r;i.) 7'H.o6>«.o/rer. ii. 1 

do yon know madam Silvia'? {rrp.) .. _ ii. 1 

a spoUesniau frnin niadani Silvia .... — ii. I 

now, daughter Silvia, you — ii. 4 

Silvia, I speak to you 

to love fair Silvia 

fur .Inlia, Silvia 

and Silvia, witness bcaveu 

alining at .Silvia as a 

to clinili celestial Silvia's 

do Iniihimr with niy Silvia nii/litly.. 

Sllviii,thisiii-ht 1 will _ iii. 1 

ami Silvia is myself _ iii. T 

IfSilvia he nut seen? (».,..).) _ iii. 1 

t I he hy Silvia in the niglit (rcjj.) _ 



ii 
il 


4 
l> 


Ii 


U 


II 


(1 


11 


11 


11 


6 




1 



hnlclieriif a silk hnttoil 

iuweil, tliatiliil breed the Mk..()lliello, iii. 4 

itrings liciilirii.nifntmii, ii. 7 

iiilncss In a silken thread M<ifliAdn,v. I 

rases, silken terms precise. . Lnrr'aL.t.. v. 2 

eu eiiats, anil ea|is .. Tumiiii,' uf H/nein, iv. 3 

thee.... — iv. 3 



et hi 



iillci 



v. 1 



th. 



I till 



u treasury H'm?(')'s7'. iv.3 
rave our .l<iiif(Jn/tji,v. 1 

my •Minin/ii: i. 1 

ilrobe..iica).|/r. ii. (ebo.) 



;.lai.k, 



, (chi 






Sll,K|.;i\-( 
SlI.KMAiN 
SI 1,1,1 |.:s'l' 



VPfiDslavi 
■iniiii.tirs till 
tnirihat ever 



ilive 1 



. Mid. i\: 



(. master Silence hud been — v. Ii 
ler Silence (,,.,,.) _ v. 3 

ilcl.ec tu heil _ V. 3 

iHsilcnce? Ulrn,l,n. ii. -1 

silence. Ami I _ il. 1 

eplu'w.hethiiii pulitic — ii. ft 

ith silenee liver liingl — v. 3 

lee. Silenee! 2fl,.ai 1/ r/. iv. 2 

w, we will euiisiiler..3;;c,i,.«r/. lii. 2 

is wilful silenee ..llii-li,ird 111. iv. 7 
11 to depart ill silence, or hitterly.... _ iii, 7 
shall have Iheiii talk us to silence. . /fciic,/ ;■/;/. i. 4 



hold I 



vhat 1 



Utsile 



to sileuec euvioi 



iinanded... 
I tongues . 



.— Ill, 



SILI,Y 111 



lid III. i. a 

h the..lH/,u/i/ .S ( liii. ii. ■: 
ilelicht //.'as, 1.1,(1,.,,. ii..', 

I hags (■,.,/,./,.,,■, iii. a 

I pa>s ..■niiiiiiill. iv. 2 

Ikiiuin ..■Jllriiii/li: ii. 1 

tiiriiin, V. I 

, . . Utlwllo, i. 3 

Hem II I', iv. f 

J.....TieoGen.nryeinnn, 1. I 
on silly wiiinen, or piiur iiaaseugers .. — iv. I 
it Is silly smith, and dallies witb.. Tirti/y/i A'i-«-/il! ii. 4 
thy silly thmight, my spleen .... Lo»<i'»L.to»(, ill, I 
Ha, most silly sheep, with a horn.... — v. I 
bronght to sneh a silly pass ..Tmmng of Shrew, v. 2 
ami my levenii.. i-i the siih. cheat. l>'i>iMi's7'rt//', Iv. 2 

like. Mlh 1.1 II . « h.i, illing Iliehmd II. v. ft 

this i . :i . Iiilil, I ilK il« III Mlviiiul'I. ii. 3 

berc is ;i -.III .L.irli >! 1 ii. _ iv. 7 

while as the silh i.n mr uf the KOods.2/;,.ii7.i/;';. i. 1 

whiebamasilly w an illcm]/ I'l. i. I 

loiiking on their silly sheep _ ii. ft 

a silly time to make prvseriptlon .... — ill. 3 



is Silvia dead? 


_ 


iii. 1 


for saeieil Silvia! 


_ 


iil. 1 


if Silvia have fursworn me! (re;;.),... 


._ 




asthiin Invest Silvia, tbougb 





Hi. 1 


OlnyilcarSilvial 


_« 


lii. 1 


with Silvia may eiinfer at largo 





iii. 2 


butSihia is toil fairu'.;..) 


_ 


iv. 2 


whu is Silvia? what is she? (i<.;,.).. — 


iv. 2 


(song) 


the hiiiir that ma.lain SiMaentreated 





iv. 3 


as a piesenl tu mistress Silvia 





iv. 4 


touk my leave uf iiiaihim Silvia 





iv. 4 


learrieil mist less Silvia the dug (,r;i.) 





iv. 4 


as yun ilu liivc yunr laily Silvia t-c;..) 





Iv. 4 


thatSilviaat I'atriek's cell 





V. 1 


what says Silvia tinny suit? 





V. 2 


than fur the love uf reckless Sil viatii.;.. 


- 


V. 2 


repair me with thy presence. Silvia .. 





V. 4 


all that was mine in Silvia 





V. 4 


deliver a ring to mailame Silvia {.rip.) 


__ 


V. 1 


what is in Silvia's face 


__ 


V. 4 


yi.lliler is Silvia; ami Silvia's lie;,.) .. 





V. 4 


takethuii thy Silvia, fur thim 





V. 4 


SI l,\'lllS-whats:iv'stlliiill,Silvill3..l«i/iii 


7,/A-f 1 


/.iii.ft 



«, till 



■lill 



Itle 



Wilt till 



was, that 1 hated .. — 
;ilvins, had they.... — 
? riiiehe, Willi all (ir;).) _ 
keepyunr wuril.Silvins, that yuu'll _ 

from Silvius, sir. He (Ire s..,. 1 „/„„„.< ,■/,.„ 

SIMULATION is not as the f.i 1 /,,,;.'. \., '. 

SlMII,|.;-in|iialhuiisand si , 1 . , , 

aguiiil swifl Biinile.lmt si.n.i ihnr. /,.., 

bast the must misavnnrv similes .. 1 /;. . / ' 

want similes, truth tired .... /',,„7.,, , . 

SlWOlS-hae ihat Simi.isir,./..) ../■,., , . 

SllMON -let me see; Simun Sbailuw . , /;,„,.,.. 
whatsav vim, Simun tJatlint'?. . /.'..lec. .^ .liiliH, 

SliMONlhKS were uf my mind |, ■,■,,.) ..rriicles 

goiiiISi lilies, 'J'hegiiud king Sinmniiles — 

we are liuinmreil iiiiicb hy guuil Simi.iiiiies _ 
good mm row In the giiuil Siinunides t,..;i.l — 
tu theei.urtuf kill.,' Silnuniilesoc^..) — iii. (( 

SI, Ml INY was lair play Un„i,IUl. 

SlMl'DlIX— ivlio sttid,Siiniico.\,eoiiie.'J/ie/i)K;';. ii. I 



ii. I 
ii. 3 

iw.) 



SIM 



[ GS5 ] 



.SIN 



SIMI'COX-Siiiiivil.MSiiii|if.ix,iiii' \{..-illfiiif/ri. ii. 1 

SI M 1"K 111 N'( i -liy^ our Ml, i|«'i in;;.. 1.V 1,1. »/.,/..■ /(.(I'liil.) 
luOioia vi.n' siniiK'. in- .lunii^, >vU..«r lui'ii, . Lear, iv. 

Si.Ml'l.K sliiill"w.i.iiu|.li',-4kill.. Tinidiii.nircr. i. 'J 

liir.wiihiiiit ycHi \irii. w.i,iiiiiilc — il. I 

in ]nvi<ini|iUM'.>nnrlnivs Meiiy Ifivi-l, I. 1 

wlR•n••»^<un|.ll■, n.y miMiy (irp.) _ i. 1 

K'nn|ilc' tlnnii^li I slanU luTO — i. 1 

IVI,TSini|)k', .v.in Miyycni- niuiu-.... — i. 1 

.l.'io is wun.'slnii.l.'Min niyi'losc't .... — i. 1 

1 IVi.Mnl Siini.U' li\' y.ini inunc .... — iii. I 

siin|.loc.liI-.,'ir; I'll no |iullut-»i)onii — iii.fj 

in 111.' Mn.|.l.M,nice..nnvc — iv. 2 

wc iiu' sini|iK' nun; «(■ (Id not — iv. ii 

illlnit tlii« yini|ilf H\ lli«i«m Tin'iniiNiuhl, i. .1 

r..i- niv.-iin|ilc liiK'jn.l^niont? Much .Ulti, i. I 

to HiiMC«s>ini|'li- viilnr/ — iv. I 

^ ,.n «■. how hiiiiiilr ami liuw UmA.Mld. N.'i l)i: iii. "2 
io -.liow onr sinii'li' ^Kill, uui' true — V. 1 (pnil.) 

a n.o>t sinn'h'i'lowiil I.ni'i-'sL.l.od.'w. I 

tins IS u I'll'i tliMl I Inivu, slmplu, »ijni>lu — iv. 2 
ni.i.i winii'hr.s; von hiivesiniple wit!!.. — v.!! 
lu'ir'H 11 siiii|.lv'linv ui'riM..Mcrchiiiilu/ I'enicr, ii. i 
is II ^inl|>U! vomiiiK-in lot' Olio man .. — ii. 2 

tliiTc is no \ ii'i' so Hiinplv, but nsstiincH — iii. 2 
tinil is anollun- sinipio sin in Vi>U.Asyou l.ilmit, iii. 1! 
ilolli niv simple liatiir.' conlint von? — iii. 3 

< poiinilvil olnuiiiv siinpl.'M'Xtnictcd — iv. I 

wlioM' simple toii.-h Is i.owcilul li. AU\licU,\i. 1 

Imvullown IromsimnlvsoniCL's — ii. 1 

tia-ro's . I simple pullink'nIV - U- 'i 

I am a simple nmiil; an.l tlu'ivin .... — ii. 11 
lionai-e to lliis simple peaMint. /Vimijii'q/.SVi. Uinil.) 
1 here liestow a simple insti-nnient .. — ii, I 
thill woini'M are so siiii]ile to oiler war — v. 2 

lie's siiii|ile,un.l lellj iiineli irmlrr'sTiili; iv..1 

snorii Inollier.ii \eT V smiijlcnentlcmiinl — iv. 3 
are we. Ileil iiH iiol -iiiiplu Miulil .... — I v. I) 
simple the III I -.riii.own ..( ■iimedi/ ii/ Ktr. ui. 'i 

tells lo N.-in I. .imiile triitlil — v. 1 

mine iron; il in nnplioin; IhinniV. li. 1 

no simple imiii I hut sees \ nriiiy'r I. iv. I 

aiel Wiirwiek are no simple peers.. ..2i/cai-(/;';._i. 3 

ami ill his simple show lie harhmirs.'. — iii. I 
HO in.iiiv simple SI. Ills slumlcl perish.. — iv. ■! 
trust not siini.le lleiirv, nor his oiitlls.3/(c,ir|/ T/. \.'i 
ah, simiile men, yon know not wlmt — iii. I 

Imt attemle.l hyn Minpl ami _ iv.2 

simple, plain tUa i en s' I .1.. love ..Iticharil III. i, 1 

Imtlhnshissimi.:.' Inilli mn I — i. :i 

1 ,l,,heweep tomlln^ ,ii.i|.l,> '.ills. , . . — i. 3 

I (■..(. K,./.J 1 wonilei he's s,,s le to _ iii, 2 

inv loril, I am a sini|ile woiniui .. .. Ilrivi/ I'l II. ii. 4 
are no trieUs in plain ami simple,. ./»//«« Cirsar, iv. 2 
m.ist not think I am so siniiiie . . J iidiHi/ .> C.'/™. v. 2 

II ..i.ui.l.i-onnlrvman, that hron^'lit.. — v. 2 

in simple iiiiil lowthimis VymMiiic W'l. 3 

that harsh, imhie, simjile, nolllillB ,. — iii. 4 

thv M', Iviie-' with simple sllulla., .. /'rric/c«, iii. 1 

are imiiiy simples operative Liar, iv. 4 

rails upon von' simple thief — iv. G 

Jon have made a simple clioico. . /ioiiico <Syuii'»(, ii. 5 
ihe lee-simple'i' O simple! liy niv head — iii. 1 
think true love noted, simple nmilesty — iii. 2 
overwhelming hrows.cmllmn ol' simplea — V. 1 

imderstandiim' simple anil iiiisi'hiiiilea . . //amfcf, i. 2 
eol letted from ull simples that have .... — iv. 7 
ill simple ami pure soul I eonic to you ..OlIiMn, i, ] 
asimple hawil.tliat Cftiinot 8iiy iinmiicli.. — iv.2 

filMl'I.IO-ANSWKRKI); for wc Itnow.... /.mr, iii. 7 

SIAll'I.KNI'.SS and merit piirelmsetli.A/«r/i.fi/o, iii. 1 
simpleiiessand duty tender it. . .W,-/(,A','«/)<n;,H, v. 1 
lire the hetter for their siinplciiesB ....MI'sllill, i. I 
[Kni.] what simpleiiess is thM ..llfn,„„ /i.l„l',t, iii. :! 
in v.nr voiee to assist my simph .i. n"., v, . i. :; 

SI,Ml'i.i.;ii, than the iiifaney of .. /, . . .i 

in thephuma-Mml simpler kind oi / i '. I 

RIMI'LIO-riMi:; I e.ann.it i;, , . ., n ,, , ; ,i ,; 

.«l.\ll'l,l('rl'V 'oiiian — iv. I 

hy the siiiiplieity of Venus' (loves.., WJ. A''».n<-, i. I 
theref.ire, and tongue-tied siiiiplieity — v. 1 
thesiinplieilv of man to lieurkeu.. /.orc'n/,. /,o«/, i. I 

twiiT-sodsiniplieitv, hise.ietn.: — iv, 'J 

love's Tvhnrii Ihat haiejs np simplicity — iv, 3 
vilely e.mipoimd.d, pr.donnd simjilicity - v. i 

l)V wit, worth in simplicity — V. 2 

Kiinplicity he lends out money .. Mrr.nf leiiicr, \. 3 
whose siiiiplicity I think it not .. IfinliiWiili; iv, I 
nmiis true n» truth's simi)liclty.Vroi/n«.J Cfw. iii, J 
eateli mcri! simplicity — iv. 4 

BIMIM.V— let him tiiUc her «lini)ly..Ur)r!/H'iTCi, Iii. 2 

simply as strong nsnny man TwelllhNiifM, i. a 

he hath siiniilv the l)e»t wit ..Mid.N.'sDmim. iv. 2 
for, siiniiiy, yiur liavin;,' in heard. ,<« yoii /.i/fc iV, iii. 2 
you have fliinplv iiiistised oiir sex in — iv. 1 

I protest. I simjily am a maid AU'ilVeU, ii. 3 

simply the IhiiiK I ain shall make ,. — iv. 3 
were siinidv the most active fellow..2ffffHr|/;;'. iv, 3 

he is, siiiipfy, the iieist active l/«n'7/ ''• lli. 7 

a man. tor IsiiiL' t,iin|dv \ntxn.TrnUus\ Crpittrla, iii. 3 
lie i" simply tiie rarest iiiun Coiinlaiim, iv. ft 

SIMIFI.AR jir.of enoii'li CymbMne, v. 

limn ^i miliar man of virtue that art l.mr, lli. 2 

8IN-I slKMilil sill to think Timpciit,\. 2 

yon are Ihrcemcn of sin — iii, 3 

makes him run through all mii9.7'irnfl,'n.n/T«r.v. 4 

now shall I "in in my wish Merry Wivri,\\\. 3 

forgive my sins at the day of — iii. 3 

heaven fornivo our sins! — v. 5 

niid think not on their Bins — v. 6 

lintcheil xvltli sin: ami sin, that ..TicelflhKighl, I. i 
i» the sin of covetoiisncss — v. 1 

■ though 'tis my familiar sin with,.W<r(U forMmt. I, ft 

Borne rise liv Bin, and some — il. I 

femptcr or the tempted, who sins most? — li. 2 
Bond us on to sill in loviiiK virtue.... — ii. 2 
yim, fair one, of the sin yon carry? .. — ii.3 
thou was your sin of heavier kind .. W.i 



SIN-thiitllie sill hnslirim-ht you.yi/c»»./<.i Wciin. II. 3 

onreompellcd sii.siliind more - 11,4 

there not he a idiarily in sin (r™.; , il. 4 

if it he sill, heaven, iel luc (i,.;,.) ... . - 11.4 

Hiire it is no sin ' — ill. I 

wliat sin you do to save ft — lli. I 

thy sin's not HCeidental — 111, I 

have uiveu tlice proofs for sin — iii, 2 

thus together, 'tis no sin — Iv. I 

piniUiased hv suidi sin _ iv, 2 

truly, I li..lilit aslii to match ItlwIiMo, il, I 

and people sin upon purpose — ii, 1 

can eminiiiKsi ver ilself — iv. 1 

and so exleunale the 'forehand sin .. _ Iv, 1 

to her diiminiti.m II sill of perjury — iv. 1 

let all my sins hiek nicrcyl _ Iv. I 

your invenlion eiiii lay upon my slu — v. I 

deadly sin lo keep I hat oath {,iep.).l.niw'iil,.l.niit.\\.\ 

do mil eiill itsin in me — iv. 3 (verses) 

I Unit hold it sin to hrenk — iv. 3 

in itsiM'a sill, thus pmilleflitHcif .... — v. 2 

your sins are rank — v. 2 

It is a sin to he a mocker ,.,. .WcrWw?)/ nr/Viili'c, i, 2 

alack, what heinous sin is it ill _ ii, 3 

you'll imikeme wish a sin _ ill. ^^ 

the sins of the I'lilher lire to — iii. ft 

so 111, ■sins, .fine 1 herslionld .... — iii, ft 

f..iil ill. III .hell in Anynul.ikril, il, 7 

"i.i.'i ' I sin is duinimtiun — iii. 2 

■lie. II..'. 1. Mill _ iii. i 

the iii.,.,t iiiloliil..! ..II in llic canon ..All\ IIWLi. I 
olilysiiiand helli.li ,.l. liiiio-y tie..,. — i, 3 

where hoth not ; ill. Mil, U.I II. sinful — iii. 7 

1 think't no sin toe../., n liim — iv.2 

were sin as deep as that IVinlfr'sTule, i, 2 

if the sins of your youth are — iii. 3 

1 have done sin _ v. 1 

snch like lilierties of sin Cnmcily orlmors, \. i 

tench sin tli..:,iri;i:...ofaludv ' - iii. 2 

asiii.pi.i: i.,,,.'li in vonlhfnl .. _ v. I 

the sin ..I 1. 1., IN iViliiilceven Mitcbrlh, i. 4 

ofeveil Ml. III,. I 1,1., 11 mime _ iv. 3 

some s;iiHil,.li,.iir their privile;,'e KiutlMiii, i. 1 

said him mu', it hail heini sin . _ i. I 

thy sins areVisited in this p.ior _ ii. I 

for her sin, InitC.d h.itli made her Bill — ii. I 

for.-,'ive the sin ol'all those souls — ii. I 

there is no sin, Iml to he rich — ii. 2 

a;..aiii parley with sin _ iv, 2 

I,, Ih,- \el mihr.'..llensinoftimcs,... — iv. 3 
f.ir I 11111 .■nil "il "III. IliisBinellofsin — iv. 3 

ii.i, ...... .1.1. "1- 1" ..Itlionglit — iv. 3 

mi -..111 I1..111 -.11, 'h loiilsin! lilclmd II. i, I 

l.e,M..Mhr,iv',. sins NO heavy — i, 2 

treiisons, and delestcd sins _ iii. 2 

nelf-alfii-htcd, treiulileathisKin .... — ill. 2 

ciimiot vuish away yimr sin — iv. 1 

where all my sins arc writ _ iv. 1 

ere foul sill, Kiilhi.rin;,' head _ v. 1 

slie's come to priiy for V(nir foul sill .. — v. 3 

more sins, lor this forL;iveneB.s — v. 3 

mid niak'st inc sin in envy I Ihtin/ 1 f. i, I 

'tis nosin lora man to laliour — ' i,'J 

I'll heiiohnerer-niltyoftiiiMBin..,. — ii, ■! 

if P, he (,ld and merry lie a sin — ii, I 

hear the sin npim their own heads .. — v. 4 
and hohl'st it fear, or sin, to speak ..2UeiinilV. i. 1 

and he doth sill, that doth hclie _" I.I 

that foul sill, f,oilh,.rin.' head _ iii, 1 

the oldest sins 111.' nine I kind _ iv, 4 

as pure as sin \i illr Impl e m Uniriil'. i. 2 

tliesiii upon mv li.'ii.l, ill, ml — 1.2 

isimtso vilcasin,asself-iie>;leetinK — ii, 1 

desill. I,ecol,de neidttrf;),) - iii, 4 

it were not sin to think _ iv. 1 

onreliil.licn. nnd our sins, lay on.... — Iv, I 

I. ..I. illl I..' :. Ill I .M'l lioiioiir ,.,. — iv. 3 

■ ■ I -' li"i' iii.liil '' I', -.in ...Ulrnnjn. i, 3 

."'.1" ■■'.. :- " I "...'lolissin,. - iii, 1 

: '. . ■ I'l i-il'.il - v,ft 

1.1 i.i 1 '" 111 in 1.,' ii.nlliplied ..■llUiiryVI. ii, 1 

I... .1. ...l. i.'hv (hill's h.iok _ ii, 3 

II.;. I I Il .11, I l.irtnred iihove ,... — iii. I 

111... 1 111 Irn.'l. down like _ iv, 2 

it is 'M',':il sin, lo sueiir (,,'/,.) _ v, I 

for ,.f Mint sin, my mil, I ciitrcalv . .■.Ul,„n, n. iii, I 
to sin's rehnke, and mv ( 'reator'a praise — iv, (1 

'twas sin hef.. re, hilt m'lw 'tia — v. ft 

'tis sin lo llatp-r, ;;,iod wan _ v, 11 

l)()odM',n..!ive my siiiB.and pardon — v, U 

till thy sins he ripe, and tlicn luirl, . fl<c//a,-'/ //;. i. 3 
sin.deiith, and hell have set tlicir .. — 1.3 

hloiul shed lor onr-ricvons sins _ i, I 

for in thill sin lie is as deep _ i, 4 

hennilty ofsodeeiin sin _ iii, I 

in hlood. Unit sill will pinck on sill .. — iv.2 

tti: several sins, all used ill ea.di — v. 3 

would shown worse sin tliiin ill . . . . Ilnin/ II 1 1, i. 3 

tlie wiliine'stsiii 1 ever v.'l _ iii. I 

Imteardimil sins, and la'ilhiw hearts - iii. 1 

sciuU't sin, rohhed thishcvailin.,' land - iii. 2 
piddnee the ^'l■alld Slim of his sins .. - iii, 2 

I.y lliat sin fill the iin-els _ iil. 2 

nil iiii li'.li Hi' ■ I which was sin) — iv, 2 

\..o liill , ii 1.01 dosay,. 7'n»7i(i,5 C'rcii. ii. 3 

cull 11 ml ' 1...1 i. Hikes — iv. 4 

riel.m.n in.ini'l I .;.! root 7'iiaoii (i^/K/i. I. 2 (grace) 
ami linn 111, .11 w mil, 1st slu the faster - i. 2 

nolhiii|'enih.,l(l. nssiii somiich .... - iil. ft 
yon cannot make I'Liss sins look .... _ III. ft 

1 grant, is sill's extieiucst gust — iil. ft 

ir as a sin that often drowns — iii. ft 

when man's worst sin is _ Iv.2 

then do wc sin afminst our — Iv, 3 

I sin in envying his imliiilty Coriniinni, i. I 

as it were sin to doubt — I. fl 

then is it sin, to rush into AiUonu fclfo. iv. 13 

If it lie a sin to make a true clcction.O/wiAc/iKc, i. 3 
in your iniulness, 'twere my sin .... — ii, 3 
yousiii agait.''( 'ihcdieiice - ii.3 



SI^f— If It he sin to say so, sir CiimMhir, Iv. 1! 

unless my sins nhnse my divination — iv. 2 

O a sin ill war, damned In the _ v. 3 

Home ici.nles lo he >. li.en-.iis sin,, 7'r7i(i/l,i,/,'oii, I, 2 

led 111.'.';....], I.. 'I', I, l,,'.'i'('ce' hed'i' _ Iv, 1 

with 1 'I .,1... '...,1 .....in ../'cr/('/c», 1, (Oowcr) 

klloiMii" . Ill 11 illiio, II ill l..nch _ i 1 

few love I,, hear Ihe sin;, Ihcy love - i.| 

how coiirli-y would seem to' cover sini _ i. I 
one rill, I know, aimther ih.tli providse -- I. 1 

nild trcii'.on are Ihe hiinils ,d'»iii _ i, 1 

doth sin in siKdi a loiillu'd imiiuier .... _ I.I 
(latterv is Ihe lii'llows l,l.,ws npsin .... - i. 2 

Tluiliard cnnic full lieid, with sin - ii. ((jowci) 
hcaveirs shiili.lnit sin had Ills reward .- ii. 4 

liliitc sill with .;,,!,: /.,.,!,■, iv. II 

strike him ilend 1 Imlil it not a sin., Hninp« A Jiii. i. ft 
[A-vi/,] holy shrine, the gentle sill in this - i. ft 

my sin is pureed. Then have my (rc/i,) _ I, ft 

sill from my lips'r' trespass II-™,) .. _ i. ft 

(Jod pardon sin: wast thou with — ii, 3 

(Jdeadly siul Orudo uiitluinktulnessl — iii, 3 

as tliinking Uieir own kis.cs sill — iii 3 

is it esii. I.. Ill I. I,.,' Ill lis forsworn — iii. ft 

to repent the 1 li'.l.. .Lent — iv 2 

thou know'; I. 1 ., I.. ; loll of sin _ iv. 3 

hcapiiotanotli, T .,1,1 I v head — v. 3 

Clltod'even in the hlons.ims ol'my sin ..IlawM, I, ft 

and the nalioii holds il no sin — ii. •_- 

honll my sins rememhered — Iii, I 

us sill's true nature is _ iv, ft 

Btaiid aeeinmlant for as great a sin Ollirlh, ii, 1 

forgive lis onrsinsl (ieiitleiiien, let's look — 11,3 

to defend onr.s.'l visit he a sin _ ii.3 

all seals I ;.i iiih.'l ..I' i.'.l.eined sin .. _ ii.3 

devils will 111. 1! !'l... I .' I ...s iiiit on .... _ li. 3 
■wluil i'/noniiil 11. hi. I '..iiimitled?.... — iv.2 
think on llu ;,i I L. ' ..., |,,veH ... — v, 2 

cuf'ss lliee In. Il ,.| Mil '.in _ v 2 

."^IN-.MISni.y ii; 1 ,,,1 li hikI.H,,,,,™/) .;«(i,;Mii.3 

•SINCKHI'; hi I..1. ..... 1. .. />of.'™.„r/V,'«;m, ii. 7 

HilK'ere anil le.ly 111 hi tli. nights .. ..iHrnrvl I', i. 1 

hut from sincere millions Henry t' 1 1 1, i. I 

in sincere verily, niider Ihe allowance.. .. /.car, ii, 2 

.SINCKIM': I. V-inost sincerely MuchAdn.v. 1 

nerceive I s|ieiik sincerely Ilrnri/ I'lll. ii, 3 

licre me (iiofess sincerely; had I 



.Miich.UI,,, iv 



SINCl';illT\',and coinervl 

to he talked willi in sincerity \l,,„.UiiM,:,>. i. ft 

adiiesiiie.'iili ;-.,vi'riied hisilceds..,. — v, 1 

of trii,' liiii, lih ? (1 holy sir A-.ma'./o/iii, iii. I 

in very in,,..!! ,.l f.nr and cnid .. 1 /;c»»|/; T, ii, 3 

Tprolesl, 111 III,' linierilv of love 0//ic«r), ii. 3 

SIN-('n.\(|.,l VliNi; woliih Ki„K.lol,n,l\. I 

.Sli\|.;i,_hy Hind's deidh, I know, I am. Mmhfll,. 1,3 
.SINKW-had nithereriiek my sinews., V•™;>.,■«^ iii, I 

hhorlcn np their sinews with _ iv. 1 

was stimi,;; with p, els' sinew.s. Vrc. I^rn. of Irr. iii. 2 
■we hreak the sinews of our plot ., ■riirlllli Mulil. ii .'. 
and sinew of her f.irlnnc.. .Uciooef..; Mr^ismr iii I 
knit your sinews lo the shengtii .... l<i,i^J„kn, v. 2 
with Ihelii lias a rated sinew too ..\ Ileniyl I', iv. 4 

the nohle sinews (.four power llvuryl'. i. 2 

shall with steeled sinews toil _ ii, 2 

stilfen the sinews, simimim np _ iil. I 

sinews, amis, and streiielh 1 llfnn/l'l. ii. 3 

and llcsii, and sinews, fall away _'. iii. I 

strong-kuit sinews ol Iheir strengtli, S/Zciir;//';. ii, 3 
BO shall thou sinew iiiitli liiese lands — ii. fl 

on foot, not her own sinews .. 'Irnilui^Crfiiiila, i. 3 
the sinew and the iorehaiid of our .. — 1.3 

great deal of yiMir wit lies ill your aIncwB — ii. I 
force of (ireekisli sinews; you shall,. _ iii. I 
get llissini'ws toiinikeciitliiigsoii .. — Iii. 3 

tliesincwHof this leg alKireck - iv. ft 

let grow thy sinews till Iheir knols ., — v. 3 
here lies thy heart, thv sun n .. snd Ihy _ v. !1 
which mv sinews slinll I.. 1.. 1. I.. .\ 1 nrml.nnm, v. ft 
wcdid Inilfet it with lull in. 11 , ,/e//i,« r,c,„i,, i. a 
you, my sinews, groii 11..I ,11 liiil,.|.l , . /;,i,,iW, i. ft 
he soil IIS sine ws,,f 111,, new -I. ..in liiihe ,. — ill. 3 
SI.NI'.WKI) sineiM.I loonr(lcieiiee../wW./oAn, V. 7 

,SI,\|.;\Vy lii.'s Ihe sinewy vigour./., './../.mMv. 3 

hnl lilt.'lv foil the siiicwv Charles,.!,, !,«. Like il.H.i 
to indve ni,,,-t siiiewv swords-men ,... /l/l'iHW/, ii. 1 

yiidd 1,1 sinewy ,\jav ■Ii„il,it'\ (:rei,id„,\i. 3 

SliM'TI, -on sinful fantasy !. .l/ern/ Il7iv.,v, ft (song) 
O. sinful Ihoii'lil! iH'v,'rsoriidi,.,l/r,,-./ r,'„.r.., ii.7 
not sin, ;i III I i,'l ;, -111111; fii.'l !!>■ 11 .',', iii. 7 

sinful .M.I.'. I. .11, (h, 1 11. .. ;.li 1/ ,, /, !i,. iv. 3 

in mann.'i', 11 iili \ m nm I I1...11 ;;.,.,'.,';.(;/. iii. 1 

thou gloh,' ,il sinful eontinelds :■ llin, i/ir, ii. 4 

to keep a sinful oalli illrnrul'l. v. I 

sweet passage to my sinl'iil soldi Mli'iiryl'l. il. 3 

the heiinlv of tliis sinful dame .. I'criilii, i. (tjowcrl 
tlie sinful father seemed not _ 1.2 

SINM'l'Id.V miciniy n the sea.. .. //pnr;/J'. iv. I 

hrnlish wrath sinfnllv pinekcd ....lliihnr.l 1 1, ii. I 

SINd I heiir il hill', i' the wind 7'«»i;«W, il. 2 

scurvy I I.. ;il a man's funeral — ii. 2 

conn , I I I. ' 1 ', I. I iiH sing — iii. 'J 

thewiii.i hi I .ilonie — ill, 3 

.luno sill . h, I 1.1, sings on you .. _ iv. 1 (song) 

that I might sing il 'I'wvOen.qf I'eroim, I. 2 

hest sing it to tlie tunc — I, s 

would you sing it — j, 2 

so you will sing it out _ 1,2 

then to Silvia let us liiliK — iv, 2 (goiigi 

vnt is you sing? Merry ll'ii'n, i. 4 

or ciicKOo-lilrds do sing _ il. 1 

melodious liirds sing mttdrigals(i'f;i.)— iii. I (song) 
hear thisshowcr sing in tlie wliidl .. — iii. 2 

look, you sing, like lo the — v. ft 

sing u scornful rhyme — v. ft 

for lean sing, and spciiU Twel/lli Xiflil , i, 2 

and sing them loud even in the — i. ft 

and so sweet n hrciith to siiu; -. ii.3 

that can sing laith lugh and low .. _ ii.3(»oiigl 
your lordship, that sliouhl sing il .. _ ii. 1 
ay; pr'ythec,»iiig _ ii. 4 



SIN 

SING— decreed not to sing in my cage.. Much Ado, i. 3 

I will but teach them to sins _ ii. i 

I piiY tliee, eing, and let me woo — ii. 3 

I will sing: since many n wooer .... {!.,•} 

sing no more ditties, sing no mo .. — ii. 3(6on<») 

doyqusingit, and I'll dance it _ iiL^j 

sing it to her bones; sing it to-night v. 1 

sound, and sing your solemn hvmn.. — v. 3 
sing me now asleep; then toyour..Mirf.A".'sDr. ii. 3 

sing in our sweet lullaby _ ii. 3 (song) 

and I will sing, that tliey shall hear — iii. 1 

gentle mortal, sing again iii. 1 

and sing, while thou on pressed flowers — iii! 1 
and I will sing it in the latter end irep.) — iv. 1 

Ring, and dance it trippingly _ v. 2 

will we sing and bless this place v. 2 

the birds have any cause to sing Love'sL.L. i. I 

sing, boy; my spirit grows heavy (rep.) — i. 2 

sigh a note, and sing a note — iii. i 

that sings heaven's praise with such — iv.' 2 

nay, he can sing a mean most meanly y. 2 

for thus sings lie, cuckoo, cuckoo. . — v. 2 (song) 

nightly sings the staring owl — v. 2 (son") 

if a throstle sing, he falls straight. i»/(;r.o/;'(;nice,i."2 

when the bagpi iie sings i' the nose ... . iv. l 

jn his motion like an angel sings .... v. I 

the crow doth sing as sweetly as the v. i 

if she should sing uy day, wlien every vl 

I do desire you to sing (rep.) AsyouLiUeU, ii.' 5 

come, sing, and you that will not — ii. .■> 

and I'll sing it. Thus it goes _ ii. 5 

and good cousin, sin» ii] 7 

heigh-hol sing, heigh-ho! unto the — ii. 7 (song) 

I would sing my song without a — iii. 2 

sing it; 'tis no matter how it be _ iv. 2 

then sing him home; take thou .. — iv. 2 (son") 

when birds do sing, hey ding — v. 3 (sonS) 

whiles a wedloek-hvmn we sing — v°4 

your cuckoo sings by kind ....AWsWell, i. 3 (song) 
and sing: mend the ruff, and sing irep.) — iii. 2 

air, that sings with piercing iii.* 2 

tuned his bounty losing happiness.. — iv! 3 

and now she sings in heaven iv. 3 

caged nightingales do sing. Taming of Sli. 2 (indue ) 
try haw you can sol, fa, and sing it .. _ i2 

she sings as sweetly as a nightingale — ii 1 

birds, O how they sing H'nifpr'sra/f, iv. 2(song) 

and he sings psalms to hornpipes — iv. 2 

would sing her snug, and dance her turn — iv. 3 

when you sing, I'd have you buy — iv. 3 

your affairs, to sing them too iv! 3 

he sings several tunes, faster than — iv! 3 

why, he sings them over as tliey iv' 3 

she sings it; 'tis in reguest (rep.) — iv! 3 

of tears; sing. Syren, for t\\ysKAi.Comed>ior Err. iii. 2 

and now about the cauldron sing Macbeth, iv. | 

tis strange that death should sing ..KingJohn,v 7 
of frailty, sings his soul and body.... — v7 
we bear this fearful tempest sing ..Itichard !1. ii' 1 
where mounting larks should sing .. _ iii 3 
madam, I'll sing. 'Tis well, that .. _ iii! 4 
rCo(. Kn/. J and I could sing, would .. — iii. 4 

I could sing psalms or anything IHenryir. ii' 4 

she will sin!| the song that pleaseth you — iii! 1 
— iii. 1 



[ em ] 



SIR 



I'll sit, and bear her sing (rep.) 

peace, she sings. Come, Kate 

come, sing. 1 will not sing. 'Tis the — iii!]' 

come, sing me a bawdy song iii 3 

in the haunch of winter sings 2 Henry IV. iv! 4 

1 beard a bird so sin", whose music. . — v. 5 

as bird doth sing on nough Henry V. iii, 2 

the earth sings when he touches it . .' — ' iii' 7 
solemn priests sing still for Richard's soul— iv! 1 
procession, sing her endless praise ..I Henry VI. i. 6 

6in"s heavy music to thy _ iv. 2 

right now to sing a raven's note "iHenryVI. iii! 2 

and fret, that I may sing anddance.3H«ir!/r/. i. 4 
smg, and disperse them, if thou . . Henry VIII. iii 1 
bow themselves, when he did sing — iii. 1 (song) 
and sing the merry songs of peace .. — v 4 
we 11 hear you sing, certainly.. Troilus fyCress. iii' 1 



111. I 
iii. 3 
iv. 4 
V. 2 
V. II 



1 11 sing you a Sk,..i, .,„„ _ 

Greekish girls shall tripping sing — 

I cannot smg, nor heel tlie high 

she will sing any man at first sight (rep.)— 
full merrily the humble-bee doth sing — 

which aptly sings the good Timon of.Uhei 

pray you, daughter, sing; or express. O.i/oiruius, i. 3 
not now to hear thee sing . . Aniom/ ^Cleopatra, i. 6 
I sing but after you. My salladdays — i 5 

then the boy shall sing: the _ ii' 7 

cast, write, sing, number, ho _ iii 2 

the crickets sing, and man's Cijmbrline, ii! a 

the lark at heavens gate sings.... _ ii. 3 (song) 
bird, and sing our bondage fl-eely.... — iii 3 

how angel-like he sings! _ jy! 2 

sill" him to the ground, as once _ [y 

Cadwal, I cannot sing; I'll weep .... iv' 2 

did ever raven sing eo like alark.riVus/lHi/rcin. iii' 1 

suffers little birds to sing _ iv 4 

to sing a song of old was sung ..Pericles, i. (Gower) 

to hcalran old man sing _ i. (Gower) 

crickets sing at th' oven's mouth — iii. (Gower) 

shall wego hear the vestals sing? _ iv & 

proclaim that I can sing _ iv. e 

she sings like one immortal — v. (Gower) 

we two alone will sing like birds Lear v 3 

and pray, and sing, and tell old tales .... — v' 3 
that birds would sing, and think. Romeo Sr Juliet, ii. 2 
he hghts as you eing prick-song .... _ ii. 4 
nightly she sings on yon pomegranate — iii. 5 
It IS the lark, that sings so out of tune — iii 5 

no longer than they can sing Hamlet, ii. 2 

you must Slug, down a-down iv 5 

Ills business? he sings at grave-making' — v'. 1 

a tongue in it, and could sing once _ v. 1 

to sing a requiem, and such rest to her . . — v. I 
and flights of angels sing thee to thy rest I — v. 2 
tree ot speeeli. sings, plays and dances. OMf//o, iii. 3 
U, slie will sing the savageness out of . . . , _ jy 1 



SING— and sing it I ike poor Barbara Othello, iv. r 

OT^A','!''''^'"'*?;.' «''"o^*'("''-' — iv. 3(8ong 

SING h yourself Henry VIII. i. 

ot'iI!-",",?^!'"'^''"*' singe ray white head! ....Lear, iii. 

SINGED the moth Merchant of Venice, ii. 

ct^!!t'°?? beard they have singed ..Comedy of Err. v. 
oiiixSP"'*^ "'^ '™'® against tbebuining.l/nmW, v. 

hlNGLK— an unskilful singer MerryHives, i. 

an ill singer, my lord Much Ado, ii. 

tearing the Thracian singer . . Mid. N.'sDream v. 
yo" i}:^l'i'^,f"^''li I will say. .Romeo fy Juliet, iv. 

otJNGi/lII all night long Hamlet, i. 

SINGING— pleasure in singing TwelfthNtght, ii. 

If their singing answer your saying. . Much Ado, ii. 

1 mean in singing; but in loving — y. 

swallowed love with singing love. .Loi'c'sL.L. iii. 

and let hira approach singing If'inler'sTate, iv. 3 

suppose the singing birds musicians. /(ic/iard //. i. 3 

holliong, and singing of anthems IHenrylV. i. 2 

surveys the singing masons building . . Henry V. i. 2 
tradesmen singing in their shops . . Corintanus, iv. « 
young, sir, to love a woman for singing . . Lear, i. 4 
singing aloud; crowned with rank fund ter— iv. 4 
her fortune, and she died singing it . . Othello, iv. 3 
^.SliU'AS'^^'^S hy a sycamore tree — iv. .i (sour 

SINGING-MAN of Windsor 2 Henry I V. ii. 

SINGLE thing, as I am now Tempest i 

single I'll resolve you _ 'y! 

a double heart for his single one Much Ado, \i 

cudgelled thee out of thy single life. . — y 

and dies, in single blessedness Mid.N.'sDr. i! 

for aye, austerity and single life (rfp.j _ i. 

two bosoms, and a single troth ii! 3 

we single j'ou as our best-moving. /.one's L.LosL ii! 1 
seal me there your single bond ..Mer. of lenice. i. 3 
single man therefore blessed? ..AsyouLilie it iii" 3 
to the wars; she to her siugle aoTm\i..AWsiyell, ii. 3 

but the plain single vow iv 2 

one single word. You beg a single penny — v' 2 

shakes so my single state of man Macbeth i. 3 

were poor and single business _ 'i 6 

due to some single breast? iv 3 

in single opposition, band to hand ..\HenryIV. i 3 
try fortune with him in single fight .. — v 1 

challenged you to single fight _ v' 2 

your wit single? and every part 2 Henry IV. i. 2 

in single combat thou shalt buckle ..llieiiryVI. i. 2 
single combat, in convenient place ..2Ilenry VI. i! 3 

nay, Warwick, single out some ZHenryVl ii 4 

I challenge him to single fight _ iy 7 

thought to steal the single ten _ v 1 

pomp was single; but now married. .Henrvf/// i' I 

I know but ot a single part _ i, 2 

than by a single voice i! 2 

I speak it with a single heart _ v! 2 

alas, can these my single arms.. Tmilus^ Cress, ii. 2 
scants us with a single famished kiss — iv. 4 
his fair worth, and single chivalry .. _ iv. 4 
thou stand'st single, thou art xiot..Timon or Ath. ii! 2 

some single vantages you took — ii, 2 

apart, all single and alone _ y. j 

actions would grow wondrous single. Corioiantw, ii'. 1 
every one of us has a single honour .. — ii, 3 
were there but this single plot to lose — iii. 2 

to seek a single man; and lose iv 1 

but for my single self JuliusCcesar, i '. 2 

lord dared him to single fight ..Antony &-Cleo. iii. 7 

this great war in single fight! _ iv. 4 

is not a single doom v! 1 

remarkable in single oppositions Cymbeline, iv'. 1 

with his own single hand he'd take . . i v. 2 

no single soul can we set eye on iv' 2 

single you thitlier then TitusyJndnnicus, ii! 1 

equal any single crown o' the earth ..Pericles iv 4 

trust to thy siugle virtue I.car v' 3 

the single sole of it is worn /inmeo ff Juliet] ii! 4 

the single and peculiar life is bound ..Hamlet, iii. 3 

thev come not single spies iv 5 

SINGLED from the barbarous ....Lnre'sL.Loit v' 1 

how he sin"led Clifford forth Zllenry VI. ii 1 

I have singled thee alone _ ii. 4 

singled forth to try experiments . . Titus. -Indron. ii! 3 
§JSi!'J'E''^5^^-:*'^s singleness! . . Romeo & Juliet, ii. 4 
SINGLE-sOLED jest, solely singular _ ii. 4 

SINGLY,canbe manifested Mem/Wives, iv. 6 

demand them singly aU's iVell, iv. 3 

he must fight singly io-moiTOw.Troilus^- Cress, iii 3 

thou singly honest man Timon of. it hens, iv 3 

world be singly counterpoised Coriola?!-- "■ " 

SING'ST well enough for a shift 

thou sing'st sweet music 

SINGULAR and choice epiihet . 

so singular in each particular , 

very singular good! 2HenrylV. iii. 2 

ot singular integrity and learning..Henr!//'/7/. ii. 4 

ay, and singular in his art Cymbeline, iii. 4 

o/,?T^Vrl'^?i'.'S,''i''<'P-> "<""^» ^Juliet, ii. 4 

SINGDLARITER, nominativo .. Merry Wives iv I 
SINGULARITIES; but we saw not., f^tnfer'sr y' 3 
SINGULARITY. She thus.. Twelfth N. ii. 5 (letter) 

into the trick of singularity _ iii, 4 

oT'?T'i''^n5l!,1? '"^ singularity Coriolanus, i. 1 

SINISTE R usage 7'»/'e//i'/i Night, i. 5 

received no sinister measure .. Meas. for Meas. iii 2 
right and sinister, through which.. il/ii/. A'. 's Dr. v. 1 

here on his sinister cbiek All'sWell ii I 

tis no sinister, nor no awkward Henry V ii i 

sinister bounds in my fiither's.. rroi7us*Cress.'iv! 5 

SINK— have you a mind to sink? Tempest i 1 

let's all sink with the king _ i' j 

which thou saw 'st sink _ {' 2 

why doth it not then our eye-lids sink? — ii' 1 

till be sink into his grave MuchAdo.ii. 1 

wherefore sink you down? iv j 

archery, sink in apple of his evel...l/irf.,v.'s Dr. iii •' 

to think that I would sink it here All'slVelt v 3 

be drowned if she sink! Comedy of Errors, iii. 2 

why sinks that cauldron? Macbeth, iv I 

our country sinks beneath the yoke .. — iv! 3 
whilst my gross flesh sinks dowuward.iiic/iord //. v.5 



Much Ado, ii. 3 

..Ilichard III. iv. 2 
..Lore'sL. Lost, v. I 
. Wtnler'sTale, iv. 3 



^INK— or Sink or swim; send danger..! Henri/Zr i a 

hisheart into the sink of fear Henri V i'ii's 

kennel, puddle, sink; whosefllth ..2Hen,uvi iv' I 
sand; w'hy, there you quickly sink..3Hemt,W. v! » 
blood of Lancaster sink in the ground? — v « 
there let him sink, and be the eeae.. Ilichard in. iv! 4 
tet It smk me, even as the axe ....Henry VIII ii 1 

but where they mean to sink ye _ ii' 1 

a load would sink a navy _ iii' 2 

sweet si nk, sweet sewer Triilus A Cress, v! 1 

now, Troy, sink down; here lies .... _ yj 
fortunes 'mong his friends can sink Timon ofAth. ii'. 2 

sink, Athens! henceforth _ iji c 

who IS the sink o' the body Coriolanus i' 1 

sink, my knee i' the earth _ 'y' 3 

help me, Cassius, or I sink Julius Ca>,ar, i. 2 

deceitful lades, sink in the trial _ iv 2 

in thy red rays thou dost sink to-night — v' 3 

keep off them, for you sink Antony * Cleo. ii! 7 

sink Rome; and their tongues rot .. _ ill 7 
out of breath, and sinks most lamentably — iii' a 
I was at point to sink for food .... Cymbeline iii' 6 
my heavy conscience sinks my knee — ' v' 5 

may run into that sink nttis Andron iii' 2 

here many sink, yet those which see....Pen'cfes i' 4 

would sink, and overwhelm you all — iv'o 

sink in it, should you burden Iove../fnmeo & Jul. i' 4 

OTiSIr , ol^'S ^''?" ^'""^ '" ""y rebuke. 0(/,eHo,ii. 3 

oTi?^;i\o ^?- "'"^' '^°^^ 'hou mean.. TveirihN. i. 3 

SINKING sands 2 Henry I' I iii 2 

have a kind of alacrity in Binkin'g.'i/l.rry H'it-es. 111! 5 
sore blows for smlcing under them . . Coriolanus ii 1 

OIJNKING-RIPE, to us Comedy or Prrori i I 

SINN ED-if thou hast sinned ..Two Cen ot Ver 'ii' 6 
yet sinned I not, but in mistaking ..Much Ado. v! 1 

?„"°''^''i™" sinned against his All's tVell, ii. ,5 

if you first sinned with us Winler'sTale, i. 2 

lest that he had erred or sinned Pericles i 3 

c!?:J'i?iii^°^^ sinned against, than sinning. Lear, iii'. 2 
SINNER-such a sinner of his memory.. 7'empe.v( i 2 

so much a sinner, to be a rireWh Nighl, v. I 

1 cross me for a sinner Comedy of Errors ii 2 

mercy on us, wretched sinners! '.iHenryVJ i' 4 

forbear to judie, for we ai-e sinners. 2 Hoiri/ /'; iii' 3 

wliicli is too weak to be a sinner . . Timon of -llh i 2 

guilty deeds to sinners' minds ..Rnmeoti Juliet i'ii' 2 

„.'^oiild st thou he a breeder of sinners?.. /;am/e/, iii. 1 

fJS^i^*-*-^"""^'! "-Sainst, than sinning.. Lenr, iii 2 

SIJvON-a Smon, take another Trov.3Hcnri,rA iii 2 

and bmon's weeping did scandal '..Cyml,eline. iii. 4 

tell us, what Smon hath bewitched. Titus Andron. v. 3 

si-lr— so much as sip on a cup with. . Merry II ires, ii 2 

will deign to sip, or touch one Tammgof Sli v' 2 

she would to each one sip Winter s Tale iv 3 

SIPPING— whereon but sipping Hamtei' iv' 7 

SIR-you are most apt to play the sir in. . O hello, ii! 1 
blRE- her unconi passionate sire.TuoGt-n. of Ver.iii \ 

which do call thee sire Measure I'or Men-<ure iii' I 

honour's born, and is not like tlie sire. Alfs Hell, ii.'s 
a child shall get a sire, if I fail ..'I'aniini; or Sh ii 1 
a gross and foolish sire blemished. «in/er's7a/<' iii' 2 

make their sire stoop with Ilichard II 'iii'4 

whiles that his mountain sire Hcnn/i' ii' 4 

follow thou thy desperate sire of ..] Henry vi iv' 6 

neither like thy sire nor dam illenryVl ii' 2 

and graced thy poor sire with his — ' ii' 2 

that slew thy sire and brother _ i|' 4 

compelled, been butcher to the sire .Richard III v' 4 
crutch from tbyold limping sire.. 7Vmo;(o/,Wi iv 1 

'twixt natural son and sire! _ iv' 3 

like the sire for ever being good . . Titus Andron v' 1 
SIREN— sing, siren, for tliyself .. Comerfi/o/ /irr iii" 2 
SIRRAH— be king of the isle, sirrah? ..' Tempes:. v. 1 

go sirrah, to my cell _ y j 

how now, sirrah? TivoGen.of'verona ii' 1 

but, sirrah, how did thy 'ii".5 

sirrah, I say, forbear (rep.) .'. _ ij,! '1 

go, sirrah, for all you are my man../Verri/;rn-es i" 1 

hold sirrah, bear you these letters _ if 

doyoucallyour knight's name, sirrah? — iii' 2 

come on, sirrah (lep. iv. 2) _ j,. 1 

her husband, sirrah? (rep) Tweinh Nighl, v! 1 

fie, sirrah ; a bawd, wicked Meas. for Meas. 'iii" 2 

come hither, sirrah; can you cut U(7(.'j _ iv S 

sirrah, bring Barnardine (rep.) iv! 3 

sirrah, no more t7-cp.) x'. \ 

you, sirrah, that knew me for a fool. . — v! 1 

sirrah? I am a gentleman (rep.) Much Ado, iv" 2 

sirrah, what say you to this? (rep.).Love'sL.Lost. i. 1 
sirrah Costard I will enfranchise thee — iii 1 

Quare Cliirra, not sirrah? _ y' 1 

sirrah, go before (rep. ii. ,■> ^ iii. b).Mer. of Venice, i 2 

go with liim, sirrah As you like it, \ii. '2 

get you gone, sirrali (rep.) All's Well, i 3 

you corrupt the song, sirrah _ i 3 

I must tell thee, sirrah, I write — ii! 3 

Eirrah,yoiirloid and master's married — ii 3 

1 pray you: ciiine, sirrah _ i; 4 

sirrah, inquire fnrtlicr after me _ y' 2 

tell me but, sirruh, tell me true — v' 3 

go, sirrah, take them to (rep.j.TamingofSh. 1 (indue) 
sirrah, where have you been? (?ep.) .. _ i | 

but, sirrah, not for my sake, but _ i' 1 

faith, sirrah, an' you'll not knock (rep.) _ i! 2 

sirrah, lead these gentlemen to my .. — ii 1 
sirrah, 3'oung gamester, your father.. — ii! 1 
sirrali, I will not bear these braves of — iii 1 



sirrah, get you hence, and bid my , 
sirrah, Biondello, now do (rep. y. 2) . 



iv. I 
iv. 4 



— V. 2 



come, sirrah, let's away 

sirrah, Grumio, go to your mistress . . — 
sirrah, if any ask you for your .. Comedy of Err. 11. a 

help us in, sirrah, we'll pluck a _ iii. | 

but sirrah, you shall buy iy. \ 

sirrah, what say you? y! , 

sirrah, a word: attend those men Macbeth, iii! I 

"■-rah, your father's dead _ iv. 2 



sirrah, speak; wliat doth move (r'e'py.KitigJohn, i. I 
you right; sirrah, look to t (rep.) _ ii. 1 



catch you 1 



SIRRAII— on Hereford's side: eirrali.. Ki'iifc' JoAn, ii. : 
sirnili, I have onses of buckiam ...AUenry IV. i. : 
but, eirmh, heueefortli, let me not .. — _i. ^ 

eirrali, carrier, what time (iv;>.) — ii. 

Birruh Jtteli. thy horse etunds — i|. 

Birrah, 1 am sworn brotlicr to — ii. 

sirrali, Falstatf and tile rest of tlic .. — ii. 
sirrah, do 1 owe you a thousand pound? — iii. 
but, sirrah, tliere's no room for faith — iii. 

but, sirrah, make haste — iv. 

therefore, sirral\, with a new wound — v. 

sirrah, you giant, wliat says ^Hent-ylV.x. 

sirrah, Where's SnareV O lord — ii. 

sirrah, you boy, and Bardolph — ii. 

sirrah, here will be the prince (rep.) — ii. 

pay ihe musicians, sirrah; farewell.. — ii. 

ah, sirrah, quotli-a, we sliall — v. 

keep thy vow, sirrah, when thou ....HtnryV. iv. 
sirrah, thou know'st now Orleans .AtienrtjVI.i. 
siieak, sirrali, when jou should .... — ii;. 
sirrali, thy lord I honour as he is.... — iii. 

sirrah, or you must flght, or else iHenryfl.i. 

tell me, sirrah, what's ray name? ('<?p.) — ii. 
now, sirrali, if you mean to save (rep.) — ii. 
sirrah beadle, whip him till he leap — ii. 

sirrah, what's thy name? Peter — ii. 

come hither, sirrah, I must irf;;.).... — iv. 
sirrah, call in my sons to be ray bail — v. 
sirrali, leave us to ourselves iHenryVI. v. 

how now, sirrah? how goes Itichard III. iii. 

keep the door close, sirrah Henry I'll I. y. 

sirrah, walk off. Have you seen. Troilus <5 Ciess. iii. 

but tell him, sirrah, my uses cry.. Tiinon afMh.u. 
get you gone, sirrah; draw nearer ,. — iii. 

sirrah, it thy captain knew Coriolanus, v 

your knee, sirrah. That's my — v. 

sirrali, give place. What, urge you. /uiiusCtBsor, iii. 

get you hence, sirrah; saucy fellow.. — iv. 

sirrah, ClaudiusI fellow thoul awake — iv. 

siirali, what news? (r<?p.) — v. 

sirrah! you do wish yourself. . . Anlony^rCleo. \i. 

but. sirrah, mark; we use to say .... — ii. 

sirrah, Iras, go: now, noble Charmian — y. 

whatl are you packing, sirrah?.... CyinMm?, iii. 

eirrah, is this letter true? (re;i.) — iii. 

ah, sirrali! yet I do think we are.TilusAndron. iii. 

sirrah, wliat tidhigs? (r;p.) — iv. 

come, sirrah, you must be hanged ., — iv. 

go, sirrah, seelc him; I'll apprehcid Lear, i. 

you, sirrali, Where's my daughter? (.rep.) — i. 

take heed, sirrah; the whip (fcp.) ..... — i. 

wont to be so full of songs, sirrah? .— i. 

peace, sirrah I you beastly knave — ii. 

sirrah, come on; go along with us — iii. 

sirrah, naked fellow. Poor Tom's a-cold — iy. 

go, sirrah, trudge about through. Romeo ^-Juliet, i. 

all, sirrah, this unlooked for sport trep.) — _ i. 

sirrali, go hire me twenty cunning cooks — iv. 

sirrah, fetch drier logs; call Peter .. — iv. 

sirrali, what made your master in this — v. 

whose grave's this, sirrah? Mine, sir . . Hamlet, v. 

do you know, siirah, where lieutenant. 0/Ac((n, iii. 
SISTER— does my bounteous sister? . . Tempest, iy, 

my sister crying TwoOen.of Terona, ii. 

ibis utaff is my sister — ii. 

now come I to my sister — ii. 

brothers and sisters went to it — iv. 

behind liiin, myself, and a sister. Ticelflh Night, ii. 

was my sister drowned — ii. 

but died thy sister of her love — ii. 

I would therefore, my sister had had uo — iii. 

might make my sister wanton — iii. 

I had a sister, whom the blind — v. 

that made ray sister thirteen years .. — v. 

as well a sister as a wife — v. 

a sister? — you are she — v. 

mean time, sweet sister — y. 

tills day ray sister should the. . . . Meas.for Meas, i. 

and the fair sister to her — i. 

I am that Isabella, and his sister .... — i. 

here is the sister of the man — ii. 

hath he a sister? — ii. 

one Isabel, a sister, desires access .... — ii. 

that you, his sister, finding — ii. 

than that a sister, by redeeming him — ^ii. 

before his sister should her body stoop — ii. 

look, signior, here's your sister — iii. 

now, sister, what's the coralort? .... — iii. 

sweet sister, let rae live — iii. 

take life from thine own sister's shame? — iii. 

a word, young sister, but one word . . — iii. 

hath past between you and your sister — iii. 

let rae ask iny sister pardon — iii. 

of .Mariana the sister of Frederick .. — iii. 

perished vessel the dowry of his sister — iii. 

1 am the sister of one Claudio — v. 

the g ntleman should be her sister.. /Vuc/i/(<io, iii. 

but as a brother to his sister — iv. 

to live a barren sister all your life..il/id.A'.'j/Jr. i. 

the sisters' vows, the hours that we.. — iii. 

sisters three, come, come to rae — v. 

he killed your sister Lore^stL.Lmt, y. 

sisters three, and such branches. . Mer.nf I'etiice, ii. 
than the natural bond of sisters ..AsyouLikeU, i. 

here comes my sister, reading — iii. 

with this sheplierdess, my sister .... — iii. 
come, sister, will you go? {rep. iii. 5) — iii. 
come, sister, you shallbe the priest.. — iv. 
what do yon say, sister? Pray thee .. — iv. 
bestowshimself like a riiie sister .... — iv. 

and you, fair sister — v. 

your brother and my sister no sooner — v. 
so I were not his sister; can't no other. ^J/l'sWVii.i, 

sister, content you in ray Tamhig of Shrew, i, 

how her sister began to scold — i. 

her elder sister is so curst and shrewd — i. 

good sister, wrong me not — ii. 

believe me, sister, of all the men .... — ii. 
if you affect hiin, sister, here I — ii. 

1 pr'y thee, sister Kate, untie — ii. 



SlSTEll— of the eldest sister Taming of Sh. ii. 1 

the entertainment her sister Katharine — ii). 1 
help to dress your sister's chamber up — V!' ' 
what's your opinion of your sister? .. — iii. 2 

let Bianca take her sister's room — iii. 2 

the sister to my wife, this pentU'Woman — iv. .^ 
brother Petruchio,— sister Katharina — v. a 
where is your sister, and Ilortensio's wile — y. 2 
it has an elder Fister,or I mistake. IVintvr^sTulc, i. 2 
what will this sister of mine do witli — iv. 2 
have more in 'em than you'd tliink, sister — iv. 3 

nor my sister; we are pone else — iv. 3 

and the iirioeiss, my Bister, called my — v. 2 
my mistress, and her sister.. .. fowei/y of Errors, i. 2 
good sister, let us dine, and never fret — ii. 1 

if so, be patient, sister — ii. I 

sister, you know, lie promised me.... — ii. 1 

wont to use my sister thus? — ii. 1 

come, sister (.rep. iv. 2) — ii. 2 

did wed my sisier for her wealth .... — iii. 2 
let not my sister read it in your eye — id. 2 

comfort my sister, cheer her — !)'• - 

your weeping sister is no wife of mine — iii. 2 
drown me in thy sister's flood of tears — iii. 2 
my sister so. Thy sister's sister (rep.) — iii. 2 
my sister is, or else should be (rep.).. — iii. 2 

I'll fetch my sister, to get her — iii. 2 

but her fair sister, possessed with .... — iii. 2 

go fetch it, sister, this I wonder — iv. 2 

go bear him hence; sister, go you.... — iv. 4 
he, and my sister, to-day did dine .. — v 1 
my wife, her sister, and a rabble .... — v. 1 

fair gentle*voman, her sister here — v. 1 

she now shall be my sister, not — y. 1 

where hast thou been, sister? Macbeth, i. 3 

the weird sisters hand in hand — i. 3 

these weird sisters saluted me.... — i. 5 (letter) 

of the three weird sisters to you — ii. 1 

lie chid tlie sisters, when first they .. — iii. I 
unto the weird sisters; more they.... — iii. 4 

come, sisters, cheer we up his — iv. 1 

saw you the weird sisters? — iv. 1 

sister, farewell; I must to Coventry .Richard II. i. 2 

to Plasl.y, to my sister Gloster — ii. 2 

come, sister, cousin, I would say .... — ii. 2 
art to marry his sister Nell.. 2 Henrj///'. ii. 2 (letter) 
John with my brothers and sisters .. — ii. 'i 

must I marry your sister? — ii. 2 

untwine the sisters three I — ii. 4 

and to our sister, health and fair Henry V. v. 2 

will you, fair sister, go with — v. 2 

marrying ray sister, that thy 1 Henry VI. ii. 5 

his eldest sister, Anne, my mother. .BHejiji//'/. ii. 2 

the French king's sister to wife iHenryl'l. iii. 1 

with promise oi his sister — iii. 1 

thy fair sister, to lOngland's king .... — iii. 3 

of ids love unto our sister Bona — iii. 3 

now sister, let ns hear your firm .... — iii. 3 

our sister shall be Edward's — iii. 3 

to call king Edward's widow, sister. Ilichnrdlll. i. I 
sister, have comfort: all of us have .. — ii. 2 
fCo(.KM(.] ray sister, will you go to give — ii. 2 
tor my sister, and her princely sons.. — iii. 3 
to Bona, sister to the king of France — iii. 7 

as much to you, good sister I — iv. 1 

kind sister, thanks — iv. 1 

the French king's sister (rep. iii. i)..HenryVlI1. ii. 2 
your sister Cassandra's wit .. Troitus 4-Cressida, i. 1 

had I a sister were a grace — i. 2 

'tis our mad sister, I do know her. ... — ii. 2 

peace, sister, peace — ii. 2 

divination in our sister work some .. — ii. 2 
great Hector's sister did Achilles win — iii. 3 

ray father's sister's son — iv. 6 

here, sister; arraed, and bloody in .. — v. 1 

and sisters, of the hold-door trade — v. II 

below thy sister's orb infect .. Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

the noble sister of Publicola Coriolanus, v. 3 

who is your sister's son JuliusC/Psar, iv. ! 

hast a sister by the mother's side. Antony ^ Cleo, ii. 2 

a sister I bequeath you — ii. 2 

invite 3'ou to my sister's view — ii. 2 

Cffisar's sister is called Octavia — ii. 6 

sister, prove sucli a wife as my thoughts — iii. 2 

farewell, my dearest sister — iii. 2 

you come not like CiEsar's sister .... — iii. 6 

no, my most wronged sister — iii. 6 

sister, welcome fep.) .; — iii. (i 

good-morrow, fairest sister Cymbeline, ii. 3 
rotlier, when I was but your sister. . — y. 5 
tendering our sister's honour ....TitnsAndron. i. 2 
gentle sister, who hath martyred tliee? — iii. 1 
the sorrow that their sister makes .. — iii. 1 
see, how my wretched sister sobs .... — iii. 1 
farewell, Lavinia, my noble sister .. — iii. 1 

they cut thy sister's tongue — v. 1 

tliey it were that ravished our sister — v. 3 

that even lier art sisters I'ericles, v. (Gower) 

I am made of that self metal as my sister.. Lear, i. I 
a third more opulent than your sister's? — i. I 

why have my sisters husbands — i. 1 

1 shall never marry like my sisters — i. 1 

bid farewell to your sisters — i. 1 

and, like a sister, ara most loath — i. I 

sister, it is not a little I have to say — i. 1 

he always loved our sister most — i. 1 

let him to my sister — i. 3 

I'll write straight to my sister — i. 3 

I liave writ to ray sister — i. 4 

have you writ that letter to ray sister? .. — _i. 4 

from my sister been well informed — ii. I 

so hath our sister, of ditl'erenccB — ii. I 

messengers from our sister and the king — ii. 2 
self-same colour our sister speaks of .... — ii. 2 
my Bister may receive it much more .... — ii. 2 

beloved Ilegan, tliy sister's naught — ii. I 

to our sister you do make return — ii. 4 

return you to my sister — ii- 4 

I know t, my sisters: tills approves — ii. 4 

return and sojourn with my sister — ii. 4 



SISTER— give car, sir, to my sister Lear, ii. 4 

keep you our sLster company iii. 7 

farewell, dear sister (rep.) iii. 7 

nor thy fierce sister in his anointed iii. 7 

speedy answer; 'tis from your sister .... — i\.2 

cried, sistersi sisters! shame of ladies! (rep.) iv. 3 

your sister is the better soldier iv. 5 

wliat might import my sister's letters .. — iv. 5 

tliat my two sisters have in thy iv. 7 

for your sisters have, as I do remember.. — iv. 7 
our sister's man is certainly miscarried.. — v. I 

do you not love my sister? v. I 

than that sister should loosen him (rep.) — v. 1 

sister, you'll go with us? — v. 1 

to both these sisters have I sworn — v. I 

see these daughters, and these sisters?.. .. — v. 3 
for your claim, fair sister, I bar it in .... — v. 3 

and her sister by her is poisoned — v. 3 

and his beauteous sisters.. Itomeo ^Juliet, !. 2 (note) 
our sometime sister, now our queen ....Hamlet, i. 2 
and, sister, as the winds give benefit .... — i. 3 
fear it, my dear sister; and keep yon in — i. 3 
dear maid, kind sister, sweet Opiielial ,. — iv. .•) 

a sister driven into des])erate terms — iv. 7 

your sister's drowned, Ijaertes — iv. 7 

a ministering anpel shall my Bister be .. — v. I 

SISTEK-IIOOD of holy nims ..../Imneo^Jnliet, v. 3 
restraint upon the sister-hood ..Mcaa. for Meat. i. 5 
and to be shortly of the sister-hood.. — ii. 2 

I, in probation of a sister-hood — v. 1 

a nun of winter's sister-hood ....As you Like it, iii. 4 

SISTERLY remorse confutes Meaa.forMens. v. 1 

SIT— sit down (rep. iii. 3) Tempest, i. 2 

sit still, and hear the last — i. 2 

how well my garments sit upon me.... — ii. I 
if you'll sit down, I'll bear your logs .. — iii. 1 

while I sit lazy by — iii. 1 

sit, then, and talk with her — iv. 1 

as she sits at supiier? Two Oen. of Ferona, ii. 1 

we'll make you sit — iv. 1 

here can I sit alone — v. 4 

they will not sit, till you come .... Merry H'ivet, i. 1 

I sit at ten pounds a week ' — i. 3 

and lethim sit o' mycoz TwelfthSight. i. 5 

hard construction must I sit — iii. 1 

where he sits crowned in — v. I 

you have a delight to sit.. Mensnre for Measure, ii. I 
you lord Escalus, sit with my cousin — v. 1 

sit you down: we'll borrow — v. 1 

I know, sits at your heart — v. 1 

he shows me wliere the bachelors sit... 1/wc/i.-(rf/), ii. 1 

I may sit in a corner — ii. I 

stalk on, stalk on; the fowl sits .... — ii. 3 

is"t possible? sits the wind ill — ii. 3 

she will sit you,— you heard my .... — ii. 3 
and there will she sit ill her smock.. — ii. 3 
go sit here upon tiie cliurch-beneh .. — iii. 3 
the god of love, that sits above .... — v. 2 (song) 
sit down, every mother's son. .Mid. N.'s Dream, iii. 1 
sit thee down upon this flowery bed.. — iv. I 

well, sit you out: go home Love's I.. Lost, i. 1 

sit down to that nourishment .... — i. 1 (letter) 
and till then sit thee down, sorrow!.. — i. 1 

like a demi-god here sit I in the sky — iv. 3 
and birds sit brooding in the snow — v. 2 (song) 

to know where sits the wind Mer.of I'cnive, i. I 

sits like his graiidsire cut in — i. I 

the keen appetite that he sits down.. — ii. 6 
wherein doth sit the dread and fear.. — iv. 1 
here will wc sit: and let the sound .. — v. 1 

sit, Jessica: look, how the floor — v. I 

let us sit and mock the good As you Like tt, i. 2 

sit down and feed (rep.) — ii. 7 

will yon sit down with me? — iii, 2 

come, sit, sit, and a song. We are (rfp.) — v. 3 
to see him every hour; to sit and draWyJU'slFett, i. 1 

yet these fixed evils sit so fit in — i. 1 

coldest, and despair most sits [Co/.-fits] — ii. 1 
sit, my preserver, by thy patient's .. — ii. 3 

let the white death sit on thy — ii. 3 

madam wiie, sit by my Tamingof Sh. 2 (indue.) 

I will go sitaiid weep, till I — ii. 1 

come, sit on rae. Asses are made .. — ii. 1 

here sit we down: take your — iii. I 

sit down, Kate (rep.) — iv. 1 

and sits as one new-risen from — iv. 1 

sit down; for now we sit to chat (rep.) — v. 2 
they sit conferring by the parlour .. — v. 2 
pray you, sit by us, and tell's a .. n'inler'sTale, ii. 1 

come on, sit down (rep.) — ii. 1 

or sit down at the hatch ....Comedy of Errors, Hi. 1 

raised with it, when I sit — iv. 4 

lest our old robes sit easier than Macbeth, ii. 4 

you know your own degrees, sit down — iii. 4 

here I'll sit i' the midst • — iii. 4" 

may it plea.se your highness sit? .... — iii. 4 

sit, wortliy friends; my lord — iii. 4 

then I'll sit down; "ive me — iii. 4 

pray you, sit still You have — iii. 4 

spirit, see, sits in a foggy cloud — iii. 5 

and e'er since, sits on his horseback KingJolm, ii. I 
here I and sorrow sit: liere is my.. .. 

that Imiglit sitall night 

and I will sit as quiet as a lamb 

here once again we sit, once — i 

and in his forehead sits a bare-ribbed — 

O, sit my husband's wrongs on Richard II. 

woe doth the heavier sit — 

flatterers sit within thy crown — i 

we see the wind sit sore iqion — i 

the wind sits fair for news to go 

treasons will sit blushing in — iii. 2 

let us sit upon the ground — iii. 2 

and there the antic sits, scoffing — iii. 2 

and who sits hero that is not Kichard'a — iv. 1 

in llichard's seat to sit — iv. 1 

nights, sit by the fire with good — v. I 

and others must sit there — v. 5 

will you sit down? and uncle 1 HenrylV. iii. I 

sit, cousin Percy; sit, good cousin.... — iii. I 



— iv. I 



ii. 2 



SIT 



[ GS8 ] 



SIT— I'll sit and hear her sing IHenrnW.iW. 1 

Mars shall on his altar sit — iv. 1 

tlie spirits of thewise sit in the .. ..■lllciuyll'. ii. 2 

Bit on my knee, Doll: a rascal — ii. J 

and sit him down and die — iii. 1 

marry, have we sir; will you sit?.. .. — iii. ii 

let me have him to sit under — iii. 2 

tliat man, tliat sits within a — iv. 2 

no, I will sit and watch here by — iv. 4 

tliou dost sit like a rich armour — iv. 4 

lu, Iiere it sits, whicli Heaven — iv. 4 

rnulertook t(} sit and watch by you .. — iv. 4 

Harry, sit thou by my bed — iv. 4 

garment, majesty, sits not 80 easy.... — v. 2 

now, sit down, sit down (re/).) — v. 3 

you si t upon their tlirone Iltnry I', i. 2 

or tliere we'll sit, ruling — i. 2 

for now sits Expectation in the air — ii. (chonis) 
tliero must you sit; and thence .. — ii. (cliorus) 

now sits tlie wind tiiir, and we — ii. 2 

that sits iu heart grief and uneasiness — ii. 2 
by their wateliful fires sit patiently — iv. (cliorus) 
yet, sit and see; minding true. ... — iv. tchorus) 

tlie throne he sits on, nor tlie — iv. 1 

their liorseiuen sit like fixed — iv. 2 

everlasting shame sits mocking — iv. 5 

to sit with us once more — v. 2 

and sit like a jaek-a-napes never off — v. 2 
and sit at cliiefest stern of public ....1 Henry VI, i. 1 

here will I sit before the walls — iii. 2 

S') York must sit, and fret and bite ,,2}ienryyi. i. ] 

madam, sit you, and fear not — i. 4 

then Saunder, sit thou there — ii. 1 

imn'derous tyranny sits, in grim majesty — iii. 2 
to sit and "witch me, as Ascanius did — iii. 2 
look where tlie sturdy rebel sits ....ZHenryVI. i. 1 

he durst not sit tliere, had your — i. 1 

and thou sit in my tliroue? — i. I 

where now he sits, write up — i. 1 

laudis summa sit ista tuiel — i. 3 

on this molehill will I sit Crc;).) .... — ii. 5 
heie sits a king more woeful tliau . . — ii. 5 

where sits deformity to mock — iii. 2 

sit down with us (len.) — iii. 3 

shonlilst stand, while Lewis doth sit — iii. 3 

andsit you fast (T-^p. V. i') — iv. 2 

tosit and weep; but keep — v. 4 

once more we sit in England's royal — v. 7 
\Col.'i pr'ythee; sit by me awhile . . Ilu-hard III. i. 4 
there sits [^Col. Knt.-lies] the duke asleei* — i. 4 
one night as we did sit at supper .... — ii. 4 

to sit about the coronation — iii. 1 

and victory sit on thy helm (re/).) .. — v. 3 
sit heavy on thy soul to-morrow! (rep.) — v. 3 

we sit, or sit state statues only Henry fill. i. 2 

sit by us, you shall hear this was.... — i. 2 
sweet ladies, will it please you sit. . . . ^- i. 4 

pray,sit between these ladies — i. 4 

there sits a judge, that no king — iii. 1 

so ill, he could not sit his mule — iv. 2 

whilst I sit meditating on — iv. 2 

good wench, let's sit down quiet .... — iv. 2 

I am very sorry to sit here at — v. 2 

good man, sit down: now let — v. 2 

at Priam's royal table do I sit .. Truilust, Cress, i. I 

when we sit idly in the sun — iii. 3 

sit, gods upon your thrones — v. 11 

pray, sit; more welcome are ye. Timon of Athens, i. 2 

tlie fellow, that sits next — i. 2 

for policy sits above conscience — iii. 2 

agree upon the first place; sit, sit.... — iii. 6 
if there sit twelve women at .... — iii. 6 (grace) 

shall sit and pant iu your great — v, 5 

they'll sit by tiie fire, and presume . . Coriolanus, i. 1 

sit, Coriolanus(rep.) — ii. 2 

than idly sit to hear my nothings .. _ ii. 2 

and Rome sits safe and still — iv. 6 

yield to him ere he sits down — iv. 7 

I tell you, lie does sit in gold — v. 1 

the glorious gods sit in hourly — v. 2 

Jie sits ill his state, as a thing — v. 4 

tlie bird of night did sit Julius Cwsar.i. 3 

O, he sits high in all the people's .... — i. 3 
let ns presently go sit in council .... — iv. 1 
now sit wc close about this taper here — iv. 3 

Bit thee down, Clitus: slaying — v. 5 

upon your sword sit laureled Antony S,- Cleo. i. 3 

to sit and keeji the turn of tippling.. — i. 4 

stands he, or sits he? or does he walk? — i. 6 

mark Antony in Egypt sits at dinner — ii. 1 

sit. Sit, sir! Nay thfu I learn — ii. 2 

did sit alone, whistling to the air..., — ii, 2 

sit, and some wine: a health to — ii. 7 

though my reason sits in the wind .. — iii. 8 

let mesit down: O Juno! — iii. 9 

C;esar sits down in Alexandria — iii. 11 

he sits 'mongst men, like a descended Ci/mi/f/ijie, i. 7 
when on my three-foot stool I sit .... — iii. 3 
and sits aloft, secure of thunder's.. TtlusAndron. ii. 1 

sit fas aut nefas, till I find — ii. 1 

Aaron, let us sit (^re/>.) — ii, 3 

and I, sit round about some fountain — iii. 1 
so, so, now sit; and look, you cat n J — iii. 2 

sit down, sweet niece (rep.) — iv. 1 

then sit we down, and let us all — iv. 2 

hut yonder sits the emperor — iv. 4 

all did sit to knit in her their Pericles, i, 1 

sit down, sit down — i. 2 

sits here, like beauty's child — ii. 2 

sit, sit, sir; sit (rep. V. 1) — ii. 3 

had [)riiices sit, like stars — ii, 3 

methinks, doth sit too melancholy .. — ii. 3 

we sit too long on trifles — ii. 3 

like diamonds sit about his crown ., — ii, 4 

please yon, sit, and hark — v. (Gower) 

come, sit by me — v. I 

she would sit still and weep — v, I 

[ A'»(.] pray you, let us sit together Lear, i. 1 

canst not smile as the wind sits — i. 4 

tliere shall he sit till iioou — ii. 2 



SIT— wherefore should he sit here? Lear, ii. 4 

sit thou here, most learned justiccr (rep.) — iii. 6 
you are of the enniniission; sit yon too .. — iii. G 

sit you down, father; rest you — iv. 6 

for our judgment sits live Romeo^ Juliet, i. 4 

sit, nay, sit, good cousin Cupulet .... — i, l> 

now will he sit under a medlar tree.. — ii. I 
tlie stains doth sit of an old tear .... — ii. 3 
they cannot sit at ease on the old .... — ii. 4 

let the nurse this night sit up — iv. 3 

bosom's lord sits lightly in his tlirone — v. I 
sit down awiiile; and let us once (rep.)..//am/e«, i. 1 

of Uamlet sits smiling to my heart — i. 2 

till then sit still, my soul — i. 2 

the wind sits in the shoulder of — i. 3 

o'er which his melancholy sits on brood — iii. 1 
come hither, my dear Hamlet, sit by me — iii. 2 
come, come, and sit you down (rep.) .... — iii. 4 

his silence will sit drooping — v. 1 

in session sit with meditations lawful?. OZAe/(o, iii. 3 

SITU so prettily he Tuiofien. of Verona, i. 2 

tlie easier, sitli you yourself know. Merry Wives, ii. 2 
sith 'twas my fault to i^ive. . Measure far'Measure, i. 4 

sith tliat the justice of your title — iv. I 

brief, sir, sith it your pleasure is.. Taming of Sli. i. 1 
of France, sith thou hast lost it all ..ZHenryVI. i. 1 
in revenge tliereof, sith God is just .. — i. 3 

sith every action tliat hath Troilus ^ Cress, i. 3 

sith yet tliere is a credence — v. 2 

not I, my lord, sith true nobility.. I'i(Ms.4ndron. i. 2 

sith priest and holy water are — i. 2 

and, sith there is no justice inearth — iv. 3 

sith that both charge and danger Lear, ii. 4 

sith I have cause, and will Hamlet, iv. 4 

sith you have heard, and with — iv. 7 

but, sith I am entered in this cause Otliello, iii. 3 

SITHENCE, in the loss that may All's H'ell, i. 3 

SIT'ST— when thou sit'st alone \ Henry IV. ii. 3 

a moral fool, sit'st still, and cry'st Lear, iv. 2 

SITTING, his arms in this sad knot .... Tempest, i. 2 

sitting on a bank, weeping — i. 2 

married to her, sitting in my state ..Twelfth N- ii. 5 

he, sir, sitting, as I say Meas.forMcas. ii. 1 

Bitting on one cushion, botli ..Mid.N.'s Dream, iii. 2 
manor house, sitting with her ....Love\L.Lost,\. 1 
holds his poll-ax sitting on a close-stool — v. 2 
fourscore ducats at a s\tt\ng\..,.Mer. of Venice, iii. 1 
who you saw sitting by me on ..AsyouLit<e it, iii. 4 

man, sitting down before us All's WM, i. I 

every sitting, what you must sa.y. l^inter'sTale, iv. 3 
who, sitting in the stocks, refuge . . llichard U.v.b 
for every honour sitting on hia ....\ Henry IV. iii. 2 

Bitting in my Dolphin chamber iHenry I V.ii. 1 

here, sitting upon London-stone . iHemyVI.iv.6 

l9ng sitting to determine poor — iv. 7 

sitting sadly, hearing us praise Cymbeline, v. b 

sitting in the sun under Romeo ^-Juliet, i. 3 

is there no pity sitting in the clouds — iii. 5 
guiltv creatures, sitting at a play Hamlet, ii. 2 

SITUATE-knowwliere it is situate. Love' sL. Lost, i. 2 
nothing, situate under heaven's. Com/*t/t/o/'iirr. ii. 1 

SITUATION, and the model -iHc'nrylV. i. 3 

that the situations, look you, is both.. Henri//', iv. 7 

SIWARO— and warlike Siward Macbeth, iii. 6 

old Siward, witli ten thousand (?e/i.) — iv. 3 

his uncle Siward, and the good — v. 2 

there is Siward's son, and many .... — v. 2 

SIX— the time 'twixt six and now Tempest, i. 2 

me have stay six or seven Merry IVives, ii. 3 

of some six or seven Measure for Measure, ii. ] 

and six or seven winters more — iii. 1 

be written in eight and six. ...Mirf.M'sDream., iii. 1 
at six o' clock i the mon\\tig....Mer. of Venice, ii. o 

pay him six thousand (rep.) — iii. 2 

here is six (rep.) — iv. 1 

poor world is almost six thousand. .4s i/owL*e!(,iv. 1 

some six months since, my lord All's IVell, i. 2 

five or six thousand (?ep.) — iv. 3 

of six preceding ancestors, that gem — v. 3 
to the pail, six score fat oxen .... Taming of Sh. ii. 1 

one girt six times pieced — iii. 2 

five or six honest wives that .... Winter's Tale, iv. 3 
absence was not six months old ..Comedy of Err. i. 1 

six frozen winters spent Ricnard II. i. 3 

for ere the six j'cars, that he — i. 3 

six years we banish him — i. 3 

what is six winters? they are — i3 

every thing is left at six and seven .. — ii. 2 
he that kills me some six or seven . . 1 Henry I V. ii. 4 

some six or seven fresh men set — ii. 4 

when he was not six and twenty strong — iv. 3 

tiike my leave of these six dry iHenry IV. ii. 4 

the wearing out of six fashions — v. 1 

six thousand and two hundred Henry F. i. 1 

full scarce six thousand in 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

I was six thousand strong — iv. 1 

within six hours they will — iv. 4 

some six miles off the duke ZHenry VI. ii. 1 

tliou obey'dst thirty and six years .. — iii. 3 

six or seven thousand is their Riduxrd III. v. 3 

I think, there be six Richmonds .... — v. 4 

Dunstable, six miles off from Henry VIII. iv. 1 

six or seven times honoured. . . . Troilus l( Cress, iii. 3 
on forfeiture, my lord, six weeks. . Timon of Aih. ii. 2 

yet may your pains, six months — iv. 3 

battles thrice six I have seen Coriolanus, ii. 3 

six of his labours you'd have done ,. — iv. I 

worth six of him. Nay, not so — iv. 5 

O that I had him, with six Aufidiuses — v. 5 
Bome six or seven, who did hide ..JuliusCmsar, ii. 1 
six kings already show me the way.Anl.^Cleo. iii. 8 

yet room for six scotches more — iv. 7 

can it be six miles yet? Cymbeline, iv. 2 

come not, in twice six moons ../Vn'cfesiii. (Gower) 

six shirts to his body Lear, iii. 4 

some five or six and thirty of — iii. 7 

six Barbary horses (rep.) Hamlet, v. 2 

as I take it, six French rapiers and — v. 2 

SIX-GATED city, Dardan.... Troilus^ Cress, (prol.) 

SIXPENCE— I sent thee sixjience-.TuelfihiXiaht, ii. 3 



SKI 

SIXPENCE— there is sixpence for you.TifelflhS. ii. 3 
1 will even take sixpence in earnest. . Much Ado, ii. 1 
liath he lost sixpence a day (reii.).Mid. N.'s Dr iv. 2 

O, sixpence, that I liud Comedy of Errors, i. 2 

eight shillings and sixpence \ Henry IV. ii. 4 

shall never earn sixpence out of it ..iHenry IV. i. 2 
well, there is sixpence to preserve thee — ii. 2 
held them sixpence uU too dear.O/AeHo, ii. 3 (song) 

SIXPENNY strikers XHenrylV. ii. 1 

SIXTEEN-some sixteen months. TuoGen. ofVer. iv. 1 
I have to night despatched sixteen . . AlCa Well, iv. 3 
o'er sixteen years {rep. v. 3).. Winter'sT. i v. (chorus) 
wliicli sixteen winters cannot blow away — v. 3 

sixteen, at least, my lord IHenry IV. ii. 4 

but sixteen hundred mercenaries .... Henry V. iv. 8 
I have been begging sixteen years. .Henry VIII. ii. 3 
son of sixteen, ijluck the lined .... Timon ofAth iv. 1 
at sixteen years, when Tarquin .... Coriolanus, ii. 2 
from sixteen years of age to sixty . . Cymbeline, iv. 2 

of some dozen or sixteeu lines Hamlet, ii. 2 

SIXTH— on the sixth hour Tempest, \. 1 

the sixth of July: your loving friend.. i>/uc/i/J(to, i. 1 
sixth and lastly, they have belied (te/j.) — v. 1 
about the sixth hour .... Love's L. Lost, i. 1 (letter) 

the sixth age shifts into the AsyouLikeii, ii. 7 

the sixth, the lie with circumstance.. — v. 4 
Henry the sixth, in infant . .Henry V. v. 2 (chorus) 
Heury, of that name the sixth! . ...\ Henry VI. \w. 1 

mareshal to Henry the sixth — iv. 7 

the sixth was Thomas of Woodstock. 2 Wenri/r/. ii. 2 
how Henry the sixth hath lost . . . .ZHenry VI. iii. 3 
when Henry the sixth (jep. iv. 2) ..liidiard III. ii. 3 
Harry the sixth bids thee despair.... — v. 3 
sixth part of his substance (jep.) .... Henry VI U. i. 2 
at the sixth hour of morn, at noon ,. Cymbeline, i. 4 

a third, a sixth, a tenth — v. 4 

and what's the sixth and last I'ericles, ii. 2 

and, on the sixth, to turn thy hated back. . Lear, i. 1 

SIXTY and nine that wore Troilus ^- Cress, (prol.) 

I have sixtj- sails, Cfesaruone ..Antony Sf Cleo. iii. 7 
with all their sixty, fly, and turn .... — iii. 8 
from sixteen years of age to sixty . . Cymbeline, iv. 2 
SIZE— you may know by my size . .Merry Wives, iii. S 
for any mouth of this age's size.. As youLIke it, iii. 2 
be an answer of most monstrous Bize...4//'s Well, ii. 2 

or woman, of all sizes Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

my legs of an unequal size ZHenryVI. iii. 2 

with a malice of as great size Henry VII I. y. 1 

by his large and portly size. . Troilus <5- Cressida, iv. 5 
ingratitude with any size of . . Timon ofj^thens, v. I 
with all the size that verity would. . Coriolanus, v. 2 
our size of sorrow, proportioned. .4n(ojii/ .J- C/eo. iv. 13 

it's past the size of dreaming — v. 2 

framed of the Cj'clops size Titus Andron. iv. 3 

to scant my sizes, aud, in conclusion .... Lear, ii. 4 

SIZED— and as my love is sized Hamlet, iii. 2 

SKAINS-MATES: and thou Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 4 

SKEIN— with a skein of thread . . Taming of Sh. iv. 3 

thou idle immaterial skein .. Troilus ^ Cre>siila, v. 1 

SKIES— besides thegroves,tIieskies..Vii(.A'.'i Dr. iv. I 

artillery thunder in the skies? Taming of Sli. i. 2 

Bkies look grimly, and threaten.. Winter's Tale, iii. 3 

the skies are painted with Julius Cofsar, iii. I 

the wratliful skies gallow the very Lear, iii. 2 

contention of the sea and skies parted .. Otliello, ii. 1 

SKIEY-toall the skiey influences. J>/eas. forMeas. iii. 1 

SKILFUL— is quick, skilful, anii.Tuelfih Kighl, iii. 4 

he is indeed, sir, the most skilful .... — iii. 4 

the skilful sheplierd peeled me , . Mer.of Venice, i. 3 

he was skilful enough to have lived . . All's Well, i. 1 

allowed the skilful pilot's charge? ..ZHenryVI. v. 4 

and skilful to their strength .... Troilus <S- tress, i . 1 

the skilful conserved of maidens' hearts. ()//i(/(o, iii. 4 

SKILFULLY— speak'st skilfully.. Lore's!.. los/, ii. 1 

SKILL- my shallow, simple sli.'\\\.TwoUen.o/ I er. i, 2 

to compass her I'll use my skill — ii. 4 

the Frenchman hath good skill in.Mnry Wires, ii. 1 
skill, fury, and impetuosity .... Twelfth Night, iii. 4 
youth, strength, skill, and wrath.... — iii. 4 

60 it skills not much when — v. 1 

my ancient skill beguiles me Meas.forMcas. iv. 2 

with me, and I will use your skill Much Ado, i, 2 

would teach my smiles sucli skill!. .jV/ii.A'.'sDr. i. 1 
touching now the point of human skill — ii. 3 
to show our simple skill, our true — v. I (piol.) 
then it was to show my skill .... Love's L. Lost, iv. I 

dart thy skill at me — v. 2 

is better than no skill As you Like »/, iii. 3 

whose skill was almost as great All's Well, i. 1 

more tlian my father's skill — i. 3 

needs must intimate skill infinite . . — ii. 1 
1 have no skill in seuBC to make .... — iii. 4 

I have not much skill in grass — iv. 6 

it skills not much, we'll fit. . Taming of Shrew, iii, 2 
or stupified, or seeming so in skill. Il'f 'vi'sTale.M. 1 
I think, you have as little skill to fear — iv, 3 
confound their skill in covetousuess. Ai'i; .'tt"m, iv. 2 
I would my skill were subject .... Richard II. iii. 4 
so offend, -to make offence a skill .... I Henry 1 V. i. 2 
honour hath no skill in surgery then? — y. 1 

so that skill in the weapon is '2 Henry IV, iv. 3 

first, to try her skill, Keignier IHenry VI. i. 2 

shall we sound what skill she hath , . — i. 2 
had I suflBcient skill to utter them .. — v. 5 
it skills not greatly who impugus..2Henrj/r/. iii. 1 
fierce to their skill, and to their.. Troilus ^ Cress, i. 1 
a casque composed by Vulcan's skill — v. 2 

hath in every fij;ure skill Timon of Alliens, v. 4 

smiled at their hick of skill Cymbeline, ii. 4 

yet 'tis greater skill in a true — ii, 5 

let him show his skill in — v. 5 

with the little skilll have TilusAndronicus, ii. 1 

this Philoten contends in skill., /'er/des, iv. (Gow.) 

my utmost skill in his recovery — v. I 

and all the skill I have remembers not . . Lear, iv. 7 
th3' skill be more to blazon it . .Romeo S,- Juliet, ii. Ii 
1 have not the skill. Why, look you .. Hamlet, iii. 2 

with all our majesty and skill — iv. 1 

your skill shall like a star i' the darkest — v 2 
SKILLED— skilled iu music. Two Gen. of I'er. iii. 2 



SKirj,ED-well skilled in curses . . Ilicliiml 1 1 1 . iv. 1 

iirtdccpevrcnil, mid liottciBkilled. 7'i7u».'l?ii(r')>i. iv. I 

SKIl.I-l'/r— iiiiilic :i skillet of my helm ..OlMlu, i. 3 

SKIJ.li-MCSS-l Hill skill-less of WmpcsV, iii. 1 

being ~kill-les8 in these pavts ..Ttclfih A/«'i'. iii- 3 
skill-leas as unvniu-tised infancy. 7'roi7Hs <?(-■'"'»•''• '• ' 
like powder in a skill- less buldiei's.Komco^Jiif. iii. 3 
SKIM milk; and smnetinies \.i\u,u-:..Mid.N:sDr. ii. 1 
SKIMBLK-SKAMBM; simlus ...AUt-myll'. iii. 1 
SKIM.MED-adish of skimmed milk.. — ii. 3 
SKIN— he'll till our skins with i)iiiehe?.7'fwpps/, iv. I 

your skins are whole Merry If'ives, iii. I 

thatskins the vice o' tlie iitp. Memure I'nr Metnvre.\\.2 

OS the skin between his brows Mitch Adiu iii. b 

throws her enameled skin . . . . Mid. fi'.'s Drenm, ii. 2 
his leather skin, and hmns.ylj you Like il. iv. 2 (song) 

nay, as the pudding to his skin AlVsH'i'll, ii. 2 

because his painted skin contents. TamiuanJ !<h iv. 3 
and tear the stained skin ..If iiiy.C'o»if(/i/<)r7J>T. ii. 2 

if the skin were piircluiicnt — iii. I 

liis silver skin laced with liis golden ..Machelh, ii. 3 
till I sheath it in a niurdcici's skin. KiiiifJnlni, iv. 3 
tlie bark, the skin of ourfruit-trees./(iV/iro<( (/. iii. 4 

why, my skin Inings about \UcnniU'. iii, 2 

that once did sell the lion's skin Henry I', iv. 3 

the skin is goot for your proken — v. 1 

his skin is surely lent him 2Henryl'l.\u. 1 

one scar charactered on thy skin .... — iii. 1 
he shall have the skins of our enemies — iv. 2 
the sliin of an innocent lamb should — iv. 2 

whose skin's a keeper's fee SHruryVI. iii. 1 

and on their skins, as on the bark.7V(us.j)ii/2o». v. 1 

storm invades us to the skin Lear^ iii. 4 

other skins of ill-shaped fishes . . Hoiiieo ^Jidict, v. 1 
it will but skin and trim the ulcerous.. /7um(f(, iii. 4 

tlmt whiter skin of hers than snow Olhello, v. 2 

SKIN-COAT— smoke your skin-coat.. Ki'in'^o/m, ii. 1 

SKINNY— laving upon her skinny lips. .lUucdp/Zi, i. 3 

SKll*— tall fellows skip like rats . . Merry Hives, ii. 1 

skip hence; I have forsworn ..Mid.^^.'.■<Drenm, ii. 2 

to skip o'er the meshes of good . . Mer. of /V'nice, i. 2 

let not thy sword skip one 't'imon of Athens, iv. 3 

and skip when thou point'st outV — iv. 3 

they sk .p from stem to stern Pericles, iv. 1 

I would have made them skip Lear, v. 3 

SKIVPED— skipped from sixteen.... ryinie/fnc, iv. 2 
SKIPPER, stand back; 'tis cige.TamingofShreu; ii. 1 
SKIPPING-Bkipping a dialogue ..Tu-elflliMght, i. b 

as a child, skipping, and vain Lcce'sl.. Last, v. 2 

drops of modesty thy skipping spirit. jV(/.n/rc;i. ii. 2 

compelled these skipping kernes to Miwbeih, i. 2 

the skipuingking, he ambled lllenryW. iii. 2 

SKIRJIISII— there is a skirmish of wit.j)7uc/i/<t/o, i. 1 

it sendeth forth to skirmish 1 Henry II. i. 2 

SKIRMISHES- light skirmishes enfeebled — i. 4 

SKIRR-skirr the country round Machelh, v. 3 

and make them skirr away, as swift. . Hfiuy r. iv. 7 

SKIRT— there is but three skirts Merry Hives, i. 1 

and skirts round, underborne with.. iUHc/i.trfo, iii. 4 
here in the skirts of the forest . . As you Like il, iii. 2 
and to the skirts of this wild wood.... — v. 4 

sew me in the skirts of it Taming of Shrew, iv. 3 

hath in the skirts of Norway Handel, \. 1 

SKIKTED-and skirted page Merry H'ives, i. 3 

SKITTISH in all motions Tu-etfthNight, ii. 4 

tickling skittish spirits. . . . Troitus &■ Cressida, (prol.) 
some men creep in skittish fortune a — iii. 3 
SKOGAN— bleak Skogan's head ....iHenrylf, iii. 2 
SKOUT— and skout 'em (rep.).. Teinpesi, iii. 2 (song) 
SKin.,KING— skulking in comers?. IVinier'sTale, i. 2 
SKULL— with a log batter his skull .. 2'empesi, iii. 2 

boil'd within thy skull — v. 1 

whose skull Jove cram with brains .. Twelfth A', i. b 
the skull that bred them .. Merchant of I'enice, iii, 2 

as quiet as thy father's skull Richard I J, iv. 1 

of Golgotlia, and dead men's skulls,. — iv. 1 

some lay in dead men's skulls Richard III. i. 4 

were to issue out of one skull Corinlanus, ii. 3 

SKY— the sky, it seems Tempest, i. 2 

the queen o' the sky — iv. 1 

begins to gild the western eky .. TiroUen. of Ter. v. 1 

let the sky rain potatoes Merry H'ives, v. 5 

and madly sweep the sky , , . . Mid. N.'sUream, iii. 2 
as gloriously as the Venus of tlie sky — iii, 2 

my soul is in the sky — v. 1 

the sky, the welkin, the heaven.. Love'sL.Lost, iv. 2 
like a demi-god liere sit I in the sky — iv. 3 

freeze, thou bitter sky As you Like il, ii. 7 (song) 

the sky changes when they — iv 1 

the fated sky gives us free All's IVell, i. 1 

be found, be you beneath the sky.. f'iii(ei's7'aic, i. 2 

the covering sky is nothing — i. 2 

for it is now the sky; betwixt — iii. 3 

in earth, in sea, in sky Comedy of lirrors, ii. 1 

the Norweyan banners flout tlie sky .. Macbeth. \. 2 

now, by tiie sky that hangs King John, ii. 2 

devil iuivcrs in the sky, and pours ,. — iii, 2 
no natural exhalation in the sky.,.. — iii 4 

so foul a sky clears not without — iv. 2 

the more fair and crj^stal is the 6ky../fii''iarrf 77. i. 1 

by tlie comidexion of the sky — iii. 2 

in the clear sky of fame iHenryW. iv. 3 

and yet my sky shall not want Henry V. iii. 7 

Crystal tresses in the sky IHenryl'I. i. 1 

winged through the lither sky — iv. 7 

and when the dusky sky began to.. i Henry I' I. iii. 2 

in a pale clear-shining sky iHenryCI. ii. I 

believe hut they ascend the sky Uichard 111. i, 3 

the sky doth frown and lower upon . . — v. 3 
wider than the sky and earth . . Troilns ^C'ress. v. 2 
this disturbed sky is not to walk in. .InliusCtesar, i. 3 
tile ocean pales, or sky inclips ..AninnyAClco. ii. 7 
ne'er Uve(l 'twixt sky and ground . . Cymbt-line, v. 5 
incense, doth perfume the sky . , , . Titns Andron. i. 2 
by the burning tapers of the sky ,... — iv. 2 
the winds, and persecutions of the sky . . Lear, ii. 3 
SKY-ASPIRING and ambitious ....Uichard II. i 3 

SKYISH head of blue Olvmpus Ilamlei. v. 1 

SKY-PLANTED, hatters oil Cymheline, v. 4 

SLAB— make tlic gruel thick and slub.. Macbeth, iv, 1 



.Illcharll II. i. 



.\Henryiy. ii. 3 



, . . Henry r. iv. 8 

..\Henryll.\. 1 

— ii. 3 



SLAOK-whatabcast am I to slack. ;i7(vr!/)ri'M,s iii. 4 

sir, I shall not be slack Tamingof Shreu^, i. 2 

if thon he slack, I'll fight Mlenri/rLi. 1 

I will not he slack to iday 'iHenryri. i. 2 

know how slack you have been ....Uichard III. i. 4 
their iiegoeiations all must slack. Troll. ^- Cress, iii. 3 
slack the bnlins there; thou wilt not.. I'erictes, iii. 1 

aloekl that Leonine was so slack — iv. 3 

if you come slack of former services Lear, i. 3 

if then they chanced to slack you — ii. 4 

I am nothing slow, to slack his haste.... — iv. 1 

say, that they slack their duties Olhello, iv. 3 

SLACKLY— so slacklv guarded Cymheline, i, 1 

SLACKNESS-behind-liand slackness. ;jVi,(c.'s7'. v. 1 

best of men, to taunt at slacltness.. ,<«'. ^Clen. iii. 7 

SLAIN by a fair cruel maid. 7«tOTAA'i>/i(, ii. 4 (song) 

if thou hast slain Lysander in his.A/«/.A'.'iHr. iii. 2 

has! Ihou slain him then? — iii. 2 

fiiids his tnistvThishv's mantle slain — v. 1 

Ihuse (hat Macbeth hath shiin Mnchrlh, ii. 4 

the sw.rd ijfnur slain kings — iv. 3 

if thou lie'st slain, and with no — v. 7 

divers dear friends slain? King John, \\\. 4 

count Meinn is slain; the English 

yet art I lion slain in him 

some slain in war; some haunted 
fear, and lie slain; no worse can .. 
be ta'eii, or slain, we hear not .... 

ransom, and of soldiers slain 

tliree knights upon our party slain.. — V. a 
the noble Percy sl.iin. and all his.... — V, 5 

Prince Harry slain outright iUenrylV. i, I 

if he be slain, say so; the tongue ,... — 1,1 
had three times slain the appear ' ' 

that in the field lie slain 

is Talbot slain? (rep. iv, 7) 

our country, slain our citizens . 

he is ta'en, or slain; for fly — iv. 4 

revenge 1113' death, if I he slain — yi.b 

■witness for me, being slain — iv. 5 

ours, now bloody Talbot's slain — iv. 7 

from France, or else be slain 2Heiiryl'l.'i. 1 

but Jove was never slain, as thou.. .. — iv. 1 
Picaidy hath slain their governors .. — iv. 1 

is Jacli Cade slain? (jep.) — iv. 4 

O I am slain! famine, and no (rep )., — iv. 10 

is't Cade that I have slain? — iv. 10 

tlie swords of common soldiers slain..3i7t';(7'i/7'/. i. 1 
is either slain, or wounded dangerous — i. 1 

but, when the duke is slain — i. 1 

he be as miserably slain as I — i. 3 

both are slain in rescuing me — i. ^ 

had he been slain, we should have ,. — ii. 1 
noble duke of York was slain (rep.),, — ii. 1 
Rutland, by young Cliftbrd slaiu,. ., — ii. 1 
thou hast slain the flower of Europe — ii- 1 

sir Jolin Grey, was slain — iii. 2 

my sovereign slain? C7'ep.) — iv. 4 

his subjects slain, his statutes — v, 4 

ICol.Kitt.i say, they are not slain ..Richard III. i. 2 

and slain by Edward's hand — i. 2 

Margaret's battle at St. Albans slain — i. 3 

repent me that the duke is slain .... — i. 4 

as if that I had slain my cousins — iv. 4 

broken, nor my brother slain — iv. 4 

the tyrant beingslain; if youdo fight — v. 3 
his horse is slain, and all on foot ,,.. — v. 4 

five have I slain to-day, instead — v. 4 

what men of name are slain — v. 4 

a Tiojau hath been slain.... Troilus 6f Cressida, iv. 1 
Polixcnes is slain; Amphimachus .. — v. 5 

Patroclus ta'en, or slain — v. 5 

Achilleshaththemi"lity Hector slain — v. 9 
Hector's slain! Achilles! (rep. v. 11) — v. 10 
and slain in fight many of your.. 7'/i)io)i ofAth. iii. 5 
what is become of Marcius? Slain ..Conolanus, i. 4 

and with his cliarity slain — v. 5 

fools, whose children he hath slain .. — v 5 
he is slain. O Julius Caisar, t\\ou.. Julius Ctesar, v. 3 

he is or ta'en, or slain — v. 5 

at Philijipi he found Brutus e\ain. .Anl.4Clco. iii. 2 
that slain men should solder \ip .... — in. i 

go tell him I have slain myself — iv. 10 

when I have slain thee with my Cymheline, iv. 2 

that here by mountaineers lies slain . — iv. 2 
since I wrote him, Imogen was slaiu — iv, 3 

some, slain before; some, dying — v. 3 

fell bravely, and were slain — v. 4 

slain in your country's wars! ....Titus Andron. i. 2 
and for their brethren slain, religiously — i.2 

in field, slain manfully in arms — i.2 

quarrel you have slain your son (^lep.) — i. 2 

none basely slain in brawls — i. 2 

I was slain, when Biissianus died ,.,. — ii, 3 

why hast thou slain thine only — v. 3 

slain in Cupid's wars Pericles, i. 1 

ravished, must by me be slain — iv. 2 

O I am slain 1 My lord, you have one ....Leiir, iii. 7 
slain by his servant, going to put out ,,., — iv. 2 

O slave, thou hast slain me — iv. 6 

that the duke of Cornwall was so slain .. — iv. 7 
Blereutio slain! away to heaven. ;.'r.(Mffi S/- Juliet, iii. 1 
citizens are up and Tybalt slain (re;;,) — iii, I 
lies the man slain by j'ouug Romeo. . — iii. 1 

hath Romeo slain himself?; — !!.'• ^ 

if he be slain, say, I: or if not, no — !!'.•- 

would have slain; and Tybalt's (rep.) — iii. 2 
hath slain ten thousand 'i'yhalls .... — iii. 2 
Romeo, Juliet, all slain, all dead .... — iii. 2 
hast thou slain Tybalt? wilt thou slay — iii. 3 
Tybalt being slain so late, it may..,. — iii. 4 
divorced, wronged, spited, slain I .... — iv. ,'> 
O I am slain! if thou lie merciful.... — v. 3 

here lies the county slain (»v;».) — v. 3 

O Iain slain. O me w hat hast thou .. Ilawlct,i\i. i 
Hamlet in madness hath Polonius slain — iv. 1 

and contiiieut, to hide the slain? — iv, t 

first, her fallier slain; next, your son .... — iv. 5 
he, which hath your noble father slain .. — iv, 7 
Uumlct, thou art slaiu; no medicine .... — V, 2 



SliAlN— the tinrteof warlhave slain men. 0//itVto, i. 2 
<), I am slain! t am maimed forever .... - v. 1 

he, that lies slain here, Cassio, was — v. I 

he's almost lilaiii, and Roderigo dead ,... — v. 1 
foiiuil in the piHiktt of the slain Koderigo — v. 2 
SLAKE-coiiIil not slake mine ire ....illenri/n. i. s 
SLANDER Valentine kWi. .TimOen. of I'eio'na, iii. 2 
you must tiii'iertakc to slander him.. — iii. 2 
your slander never can endamage him — iii. 2 
is no slander in an allowed fool .. Twelfth Kight, i. b 

in the sight, to do it slander Meat. for Meas. i. 4 

your action of slander too — ii. I 

to slander lord Augelo? — v. 1 

slander to the state! away with — v. 1 

thy slanders I forgive; and therewithal — v. I 
gift is in devising impossible slanders. J/HcA/l(/o,ii. 1 
to slander music any more than once — ii. 3 
I'll devise some honest slanders to stain — iii 1 
did confirm any slander that don John — iii. 3 

change slander to remorse — iv. 1 

uncovered slander, unmitigated .... — iv. 1 

thy slander hath gone through — v 1 

deprave and slander go antickly .... — v. I 

secondarily, they arc slanders — v. 1 

incensed me to slander the lady llftm.MnchAdo, v. 1 
my lord, hilt whiles her slander lived — v. 4 

shrew, slander her lo^e,alld he. iMcrrh. of Venice, v. 1 
iiieveiits the slander ol his wife ..Asyoii l.ilieii, iv. 1 
oetrays to slander, whose stinj,' is.Winter'sTnle.ii.X 
for slander lives upon succession. Comedy of Err. iii. 1 
these slanders, and this open shame! — iv. 4 

told this slander of his blood Richard 11. i. 1 

to the soul with slander's venomcd ,. — i. I 

a partial slander sought I to — i. 3 

a deed of slander, with thy fatal hand — v. 6 
and he slanders thee most grossly ..IHeiirir IV. iii. 3 

do me no slander, Douglas — iv. 3 

continual slanders ride illenryll'. (indue ) 

to know such slanders of the age .... Henry I', iii. 6 
with slander's tongue be wouncled..2f/e«i-y77. iii. 2 
that slanders me with murder's crimson — iii. 2 

is slander to your ro.^al dignity — iii. 2 

tliat slanders him with cowardice., ..ZHenry t'f. i. 4 

tlie envious slanders of her false Richard 111. i. 3 

thou slander of thy mother's heavy . . — i. 3 

O, do not slander him, for he is kind — i. 4 

and, for more slander to thy dismal . . — iii. 3 
slander myself, as false to Edward's.. — iv. 4 
that slander, sir, is found a truth .. Henry I'lll. i\. 1 
gall coins slanders like a mint . . Troilnx .s <i ess. i. 3 
you slander the helms o' the state ..Corinlnniis, i. 1 
no slander; they steal hearts ....Antony A- Cteo. ii. 6 
after the slander of most step-mothers.C'!/m6(;tfiie, i. 2 
nice longings, slanders, mutability ., — ii. ii 
no, 'tis slander; whose edge is sharper — iii. 4 

this viperous slander enters — iii. 4 

slanders so her judgment — iii,.') 

whom not to slander, outsweetcned not — iv, 2 

fear not slander, censure rash — iv. 2 (song) 

when slanders do not live in tongues I.enr, iii. 2 

stained with Tvbalt's slander , . Itonieo 4- Juliet, iii. 1 
that is no slander, sir, that is a truth — iv. 1 

so slander anj' moment's leisure Hamlel, i. 3 

slanders, air; for the satirical rogue says.. — ii 2 

so, haplv, slander, whose whisi-er — iv. I 

if thou dost blander her, and torture me. Othello, iii. 3 
the purest of their wives is foul as slander — iv. 2 
some office, have uot devised this slander — iv. 2 
SLANDERED— have slandered so.Meas.fnrMciu. ii. 4 
hath slandered, scorned, dishonoured, jUuc7i/l*i,iv. I 

she is slandered, she is undone — iv. 1 

and she is dead, slandered to death by — v. 1 
once he slandered me with bastardy. .A'ih^ Jo/01, i. 1 
you have slandered nature in my form — iv. 2 

let him not be slandered with \ Henry I r. i.3 

and thou hast slandered it Romeo &Juliei. iv. I 

SLANDERER— these slanderers , . Meat.foriHeas. v. I 

monstrous slanderer of heaven KingJohn, ii. 1 

call not me slanderer — ii. 1 

which, slaiidiicr, he imitation .. Troilns ^ Cress, i. 3 

O.fieiipiiii line, slanderer! Olhello, ii. I 

SLANDKKIXG a prince deserves. Jl/ras. /"oj jVcn,!. v, I 
SLANDEROUS— slanderous as Satan. ,.Ve)J!/"'. v b 
up in the slanderous tongue? ..Measfor Meas. iii. 2 
death hv slanderous tongues. .il/wc/i.4(/o, v, 3 (scroll) 
O slanderous world! Kate.. .. 7'umi<.4,'or.VireH-, ii. 1 
slanderous to thy mother's v;on\h... KingJohn, iii. I 

call him, a slanderoiis coward Uichard II. i. I 

the attainder of his slanderous lips .. — iv. I 
provoked by her slanderous tong\ie.7Vi't7i'ir(/ ///. i. 2 

ourselves of divers slanderous tuliusCirsur, iv. 1 

hath as oft a slanderous epitaph.... Ci/i/T'/fi'inp, iii. 3 

SLASH— I'll slash; I'll do it with.. toi-i',</,./,M/, v. 2 

and slish, and slash, like to. . Taming of Shreir, iv. 3 

SLAUGHTER— human slaughter.. /l/<?r,p/»>n. iv. 1 

toiigueless, slaughters a thousand,, lyimer's Tale, i. 2 

fell slaughter on their souls Macbeth, iv. 3 

in the (lying slaughter of their foes.. KnisJuA", ii. 2 
with slaughter counted to the name — ii. 2 

overstrained with slaughter's pencil — iii. I 

have sold your king to slaughter Henry V. ii. 2 

have done this slaughter; besides — — iv. 7 
of loss.of slaughter, and diEcomflture.lHeiirj^/V, i. I 
afier the slaughter of so many peers — v. 4 
and ruthless slaughters, as are daily — v, 4 

'twas he that nuvde the slanghtei ?..2/inii!,7'/. iii. 2 
no knife, to slaughter sicepingmcn.. — iii. 2 
my wife, for slauglUer of my .son ...illenryyi. ii. b 
say not, slaughter him: for 1 intend .. — iv. 2 
oy, and for much more slaughter alter — v, i; 
unwortliy slaughter upon others ..Richard 111. i. 2 
provoke lis hither now to slaughter.. — i. 4 

nave done a drunken slauirhter — ii. 1 

from all the shiiiglilers, wretch, that — iv. 1 
the slauichter <.f the jirince that owed — iv, 4 

K(,7.K/,^] lor tlicetoslauijhter — iv. 4 

live niisearred "f bleeding slaughter — iv. 4 
shapes and forms of slauBliler ,. Truilus ^Crest. v. 3 
have added slaughter to the sword. JiWiusC.cjdi, v. I 
than to commit such slaughter ....Cymhetine, v, .J 
•i Y 



SI^ATJGHTER is here made by Cijmheline, v. 3 

with slaughter of you tlifir captives — v 5 
stand peeness hy tliis slanshter. P«nc/es, iv. (Gower) 
a piece of slaugl\ter tlie sum and moon. . — iv. 4 
death l\ath made this shiu.nliter — iv. i (Gower) 

shoidd stire to the slaiiu'lUer, if my cap Lmi,\. i 

wliere he speaics of riium's shLLii.'Utei-..Ha</i/t'^ ii. 2 
casual slaugliters; of deaths put on .... — v. 2 

SLAUGHTiiKED-fiavapely sUui-litered..V«<-/i. iv 3 

be kept with sluughtereii men? KiiifrJo/iii, iii. I 

thus thy brother to be slnnglitered .. Richard 1 1 . i. 2 
woundsof slaughtered Englishmen — iii. 3 
the number of the slaughtered French. Henry I', i v. 8 
most of the rest slauglitered, or took.l He«ri/ r/. i. I 
our bodies slaughtered by thy foes .. — iii. 1 
only slaughtered by the ireful arm. .ZHenryVI. ii. 1 
our slaughtered friends the tackles .. — v. 4 
thy Edward, to thy slaughtered sou. WcAardi/f. i. 2 
whose parents thou hast slaughtered — iv. 4 
slauijhtered those thatwere the means — v. 3 
the father rashly slaughtered his own — v. 4 
be slauglitered in tlie streets. . Titm Andronicus, i. 2 

like to a slaughtered lamb — ii. 4 

is ilomeo slaughtered? Rnmeo fyJuUcl,\l\. 2 

villain lives which slaughtered him — iii. 5 
his body that hath slaughtered himi — iii. .1 

a lantern, slaughtered youth, for — v. 3 

is a friar, and slauglitered Romeo's.. — v, 3 

SLAUGIITBKEK— slaughterer doth.lHfnryF/. ii. 6 

Sr^AUGHTEK-HOUSE; for I am ..KingJuhn. iv. 3 

to the bloody slaughter-liouse 2 Henry VI. iii. 1 

been in thine own slaughter house .. — iv. 3 

his realm a slaughter-house ZllenryVI. v. 4 

to bear me to tlie slaughter- house. /Jif/mrti III. iii. 4 
hie tliee from this slaughter-house .. — iv. I 

SLAUGHTERING hands, and keep.l Henry VI. iii. 1 
some direful slaughtering death.. Titus Andron. v. 3 

SLAUGHTERMAN to all my kin ..SHcjirj/ VI. i. 4 

the slaughterman of twenty Ct/mbeline, v. 3 

I'U be tlty slaughterman Titus Andronicus, iv. 4 

SLAUGHTERMEN. Come, come.. 1 Henry F/. iii. 3 
bloody-hunting slaughtermen Henry V. iii. 3 

SLAUGHT'ROUS thoughts Macbeth, v. 5 

SLAVE— my slave, as thou report'st ....Tempest,!. 2 
we'll visit Caliban my slave (rep.) .... — i. 2 

thou poisonous slave, got by — i. 2 

thou most lying slave — i. 2 

abhorr'd slave ; which any print — i. 2 

so slave; hence 1 — i. 3 

to make me slave to it — iii. I 

and slaves they are tome.. ricoGeu.o/reroHa, iii. 1 

over- weening slave'. — iii. 1 

an unmannerly slave — iii. I 

a slave, that, still an end — iv. 4 

hang 'em, slavesl I do not think., jl/errt/ Wives, ii. 1 

art tliou tlie slave, that with thy Mnch.ido, v. 1 

upon tlie woi'ld's baser slaves .... I.ove'sL.Lost, i. 1 
come, you transgressing slave; away — i. 2 
O stay, slave; I must employ thee .. — iii. 1 

hark, slave, it is but this — iii. 1 

many a purchased slave .... Merchant of Venice, iv. 1 

will answer, the slaves are ours — iv. 1 

to live and die lier sla\e . . As you Like it, iii. 2 (ver.) 
the mere word's a slave, debauelied. . All's Well, ii. 3 
what a past-saving slave is this! .... — iv. 3 
quoted for a most perfidious slave .. — v. 3 
let me be a slave to achieve that.. Taming of Sh. i. 1 

a bondmaid and a slave of me — ii. 1 

jolt-heads, and unmaunered slavesl — iv. 1 

gone, thou false deluding slave — iv. 3 

a gross lout, a mindless sia\e Winter'sTale, i. 2 

l>rotess ourselves to be the slaves of chance — iv. 3 
wliat mistress, slave, hast i\voi\^.. Comedy of Err. i. 2 

to go seek this slave; I greatly — i. 2 

nor the slave returned, that in such — ii. 1 
back again, thou slave, and feteli (rep.) — ii. 1 
the heedful slave is wandered forth. . — ii. 2 

thus grossly with your slave — ii. 2 

tliou drunken slave, I sent thee — iv. 1 

hie tliee, slave, begone — iv. 1 

this pernieiuus slave, forsooth — v. 1 

till lie faced the slave; and ne'er Macbeth, \.i 

O slave! Who did strike out the light? — iii..". 

that were the slaves of drink _ iii. 6 

liar and slave! Let me endure — v. 5 

■where is that slave, tliy brother? King John, i. I 

thou slave, thou wretch, thou coward — iii. 1 
thou cold-blooded slave, hast thou . . — iii. 1 
to be attended by slaves, that take .. — iv. 2 
am I Rome's slave? what penny .... — v. 2 

he did throw away on slaves Richard II, i. 4 

a king, woe's slave, shall kingly — iii. 2 

and sovereignty, a slave; proud majesty — iv. 1 
villain! traitor! slavel What is .... — v. 2 

not the first of fortune's slaves — v. 5 

what a slave art thou, to hack \HenrylV. ii. 4 

such a commodity of warm slaves .. — iv 2 

slaves as ragged as Lazarus — iv. 2 

but thoughts the slave of life — v. 4 

you a captain, you slavel iHenrylF. ii. 4 

a rascally slavel I will toss the — ii. 4 

bragging slavel tile rogue fled — ii. 4 

base IS the slave that pays Henry V.n. 1 

so soundly as the wretched slave .... — iv. 1 
tlie slave, a member of the country's — iv. 1 

ask me tliis slave in French — iv. 4 

wliilst by a slave, no gentler than .. — iv. .5 

for they are hair-brained slaves \ Henry VI. i. 2 

fly from your oft-subdued slaves .... — i. 5 

to make a bastard and a slave of me — iv. 6 

tlian is a slave in base servility — v. 3 

base slave! thy words are h\ui\\,....iHenryVI. iv. I 
a Roman sworder, and banditto slave — iv. 1 
as for these silken-eoated slaves .... — iv. 2 

and, devilisli slave, by thee Richard III. i, 2 

in thy nativity the slave of nature . . — _i. 3 

tongue give pardon to a slave? — ii. 1 

slave, I nave set ray life upon a cast — v. 4 

obedience is a slave to each Henry VIII. i. 2 

ye rude slaves, leave your gaping .... — v. 3 



SL AVE— a slave, whose gal 1 coins. Troilus ^ Cress, i. 3 

any wit, like a barbarian slave — ii. 1 

and the act a slave to limit — iii. 2 

turn, slave, and fight. What art thou? — v. 8 
to present slaves and servants. . 'I'inion of.-ithens, i. 1 
have slaves, and peasants, this night — ii. 2 

this slave unto his honour — iii. 1 

my breath from mc, the slaves — iii. 4 

cap and knee slaves, vapours — iii. 6 

slaves, and fools, pluck the grave — iv. 1 

this yellow slave will knit and break — iv. 3 

season the slaves for tubs — iv. 3 

thou art a slave, whom Fortune's.... — iv. 3 
beast! Slave! Toad! Rogue, rogue . . — iv. 3 

think, thy slave man rebels — iv. 3 

settlest admired reverence in a slave — v. 1 

ye came for gold, ye slaves — v. 1 

thousands of these quartered slaves.. Corio.'aw«», i. 1 
run from slaves that apes would beat? — i. 4 
these base slaves, ere yet the fight . . — i. 5 
where is that slave, wiiich told me ., — i. 6 
first budger die tlie other's slave .... — i. 8 
by the voice of slaves to be whooped — iv. b 

O slaves, I can tell you news — iv. 5 

there is a slave, whom we have — iv. 6 

'tis this slave: go whip him 'fore .... — iv. 6 

the slave's report is seconded — iv. 6 

boy! O slave! pardon me, lords — v. 5 

a common slave, (you know him ..JuliusCcesar, i. 3 

were living, and die all slaves — iii. 2 

go. show your slaves how choleric .. — iv. 3 
the turn of tippling with a slave. ^n^ony ^-Cleo. i. 4 
call the slave again; though I am .. — ii. 5 

slave, of no more trust than — v. 2 

slave, soul- less villain, dogi — v. 2 

mechanic slaves with greasy aprons — v. 2 

note of it with a base slave Cymbeline, ii. 3 

what slave art thou? (rep.) — iv. 2 

and the shrinking slaves of winter .. — iv. 4 
slaves, the strides they victors made — v. 3 
look, how the black slave smiles. TiiusAndron. iv. 2 
come on, you thick-lipped slave .... — iv. 2 
peace, tawny slave; half me, and half — v. 1 
say, M all-eyed slave, whither wouldst — v. 1 

unhallowed slave! sirs, lielp — v. 3 

wdiy came not the slave back to me Lear, i. 4 

you whoreson dog! you slave! you curl — i. 4 

oue-trunk-inheriting slave — ii. 2 

strike, you slave; stand, rogue, stand'(rep.) — ii. 2 
such a slave as this should wear a sword — ii. 2 

this is a slave whose easy-borrowed — ii. 4 

rather to be slave and sumpter to this .. — ii. 4 
here I stand, your slave, a poor, infirm . . — iii. 2 

throw this slave upon the dunghill — iii. 7 

hist-dietedman,thatslave3yourordinance — iv. 1 

let go, slave, or tliou diest — iv. 6 

slave, thou hast slain me — iv. 6 

did him service improper for a slave .... — v. 3 

1 killed the slave that was a hanging thee — v. 3 
that shows thee a weak slave ....Romeo fy Juliet, i, I 

dares the slave come liither — i. .'j 

let mischance be slave to patience .. — v. 3 
what a rogue and peasant slave am I! . . Hamlet, ii. 2 
all tlie region kites with this slave's ofl'al — ii. 2 
that is uot passion's slave, and I will wear — iii. 2 

purpose is but the slave to memory — iii. 2 

a slave, that is not twentieth part — iii. 4 

not bound to that all slaves are free to. Othello, iii. 3 

and has been slave to tliousands — iii. 3 

O that the slave had forty thousand lives! — iii. 3 

some cogging cozening slave — iv. 2 

O murderous slavel O villain! — v. 2 

same villain, for 'tis a damned slave .... — v. 2 

O cursed, cursed slave! (rep.) — v. 2 

for this slave, if there be any cunning. ... — v. 2 

SLAVE-LIKE habit! Timonof Alhetis, iv. 3 

SLAVER with lips as common Cymbeline, i. 

SIjAVERY—tliis wooden slavery Tempest, iii. 

to live in slavery to the nobility. ...27ie7ir(/ri. iv. 

and free us from his slavery Hetiry VIII. ii. 

by the insolent foe, and sold to slavery . . Othello, i. 

SLAVISH parts Merchant of Venice, iv. 

tlie slavish motive of recanting fear.. i!ic/iarti//. i. 
we shall shake off our slavish yoke.. — ii. 

a thing more slavish did I ne'er Cymbeline, iv. 

away with slavish weeds Titus Aridronicus, ii. 

SLAY— the one I'll slay [Knt.-st!iy'\.Mid.N.''sDr. ii. 
what impossibility would slay in .... All's Well, ii. 

then 1 will slay myself 1 Henry VI. i. 

to slay thy brother Abel (rep.) — i. 

to slay your sovereign, and destroy . . — iii. 

and slay briglrt fame — iv. 

stand on quillets, how to slay him..2Henr7/ VI. iii. 

why wilt thou slay me? 3 Henry VI. i. 3 

I'll slay more gazers than the basilisk — iii. 2 

foulest deed, to slay that babe Richard III. i. 3 

to slay the innocent? — i. 4 

and he slays more than you rob. . Timon of Ath. iv. 3 

in puny battle slay me Coriolanus, iv. 4 

if he slay nie, he does fair j ustice .... — ■ iv. 4 

for I will slay myself Julius Carsar, iii. 1 

burn, fire, kill, slay! — iii. 2 

must or for Britons slay us Cymbeline, iv. 4 

their use, and slay us after — iv. 4 

own hand did slay his youngest son .. Titus And. i. 2 
to slay his daughter with liis own right — v. 3 
being tasted, slays all senses v/ith. .. liameo i^ Jul. ii. 3 

wliom Romeo's hand did slay — iii. 1 

thou slay thyself? and slay thy lady — ia. 3 
to another, this shall slay them both — iv. 1 
the strength of will to slay thyself .. — iv. 1 

did slay tills Fortinbras Hamlet, i. 1 

SLAVED— appear as he were stayed. . Coriolanus, i. 6 

SLAYER— thy slayer begins threats ietir, iv. 2 

SLAYETH [Kii;.-stayeth] iaQ....Mid.N.Dream, ii. 2 

SLAYING is the word JuliusCmar, v. 5 

SLEAVE— the- ravelled sleave of care ..Macbeth, ii. 2 
immaterial skein of sleave silk.. Troilus 4 Cress, v. 1 

SLEDDED Polack on the ice Hamlet, i. 1 

SLEEK smooth head .Uid.N.'sDream,'iv. I 



SLEEK— lord, sleek your rugged looks .Maeheth, iii. 

how sleek and wanton ye appear .. Henry VI 1 1. iii, 
SLEEK-HE.VDED men, and such.. Juliiist^mar, i 

SLEEICLY combed Tumingit)' Shrew, iv. 

SLEICl'— thou art inclined to sleep Tempest, i. 

it eats and sleeps, and hath — i. 

go sleep, and hear us — ii. 

1 find not myself disposed to sleep .. — ii. 

and thou speak'st out of thy sleep — ii. 

thou let'st thy fortune sleep— die rather — ii. 

as he that sleeps here, swims — ii. 

as well as he that sleeps — ii. 

a sleep were this for your advancement — ii. 

i' the afternoon to sleep — iii. 

long sleep, will make me sleep again — iir. 

our little life is rounded with a sleep — iv. 

we were dead of sleep — v. 

whether I wake or sleep Tu-oGen. of Verona, i. 

chased sleep from my entliralled eyes — ii. 

dine, sup, and sleep — ii. 

she doth talk in her sleep — iii. 

so she sleep not in her talk — iii. 

sure tliey sleep; he hath no use ..Merry Wives, iii. 

do I sleep? JMaster Ford awake — iii. 

ere she sleep, has thrice her praj'ers.. — v. 

sleep she as sound as careless — v. 

but those as sleep, and think — v. 

thus to dream, still let me sleep!. Twelfth I^'ight, iv. 

endeavour thyself to sleep — iv. 

years we have let sleep [/v;(^-slip] .Mea.forMea. i. 

thy best of rest is sleep — iii. 

an after-dinner's sleep, dreaming — iii. 

as fast locked up in sleep, as guiltless — iv. 

dreadfully, but as a drunken sleep ,. — iv. 

and sleep afterwards — iv. 

may sleep the sounder all — iv. 

sleep when I am drowsy Much Ado, i. 

she IS never sad, but when she sleeps — ii. 

we will rather sleep than talk — iii. 

there sleeps Titauia, some time ..Mid.N.'sDr. ii. 

sleep give thee all his rest! — ii. 

let love forbid sleep his seat on thy.. — ii. 

Hermia sleep thou there — ii 

while thou on pressed flowers dost sleep — iii. 

if thou hast slain Lysander in his sleep — iii. 

that bankrupt sleep doth sorrow owe — iii. 

counterfeiting sleep with leaden legs 

and sleep that sometime shuts up .. — in. 

on the ground, sleep sound — iii. 

'of sleep come upon me. Sleep thou' — iii- 

than common sleep, of all these — iv. 

ho! music; such as charmeth sleep.. — iv. 

to sleep by hate, and fear no eumitj'? — iv. 

half sleep, half waking — iv. 

that yet we sleep, we dream — iv. 

then, to sleep but three hours in .. Love'sL.Lost, i. 

not to see ladies, study, fast, not sleep — i. 

sleep when he wakes? Merchant of Venice, i ■ 

sleep and snore, and rend apparel out — ii- 

and he sleeps by day more than — ii. 

how svveet tlie moon-light sleeps upon — v. 

the moon sleeps with Eudymion .... — v. 

I'll go sleep if I can; if I cannot., ^st/ou Likeil, ii- 

for the one sleeps easily, because — iii. 

for they sleep between term and term — iii. 

and that when thou art inclined to sleep — iv. 

till he come And I'U sleep — iv. 

and is gone forth to sleep: look — iv. 

to beguile two hours in asleep All's Well, iv. 

and in his sleep he does little — iv. 

cat and drink, and sleep as soft as — iv. 

shameful hate sleeps out the afternoon — v. 

but cold to sleep so soundly '/amiw^o/S/i. 1 (indue 

or wilt thou sleep? we'll have — 2(indue 

I do not sleep; I see, I hear — 2 (indue. 

I will not sleep, Ilorteusio, till I see her — i. 

giddy for lack of sleep; with oaths .. — iv. 

if I should sleep, or eat, 'twere — iv. 

therefore, I'll sleep again — v. 

which to preserve, is sleep Winter's Tale, i. 

his appetite, his sleep, and down-right — ii. 

I come to bring him sleep — ii. 

that presses him from sleep — ii. 

or that youth would sleep out the rest — iii. 

I sleep out the thought of it — iv . 

as ever still sleep mocked death .... — v. 

and sleep within mine inn Comedy oj Errors i. 

or sleep I now, and think I hear .... — ii. 

waked with it, when I sleep — iv. 

his sleeps were hindered by thy — v. 

on day, nor sleep on night — v. 

sleep shall neither night nor day Macbeth, i. 

when in swinish sleep their — i 

and yet I would not sleep; merciful — ii. 

wicked dreams abuse the curtained sleep— ii. 

there's one did laugh in his sleep — ii. 

addressed them again to sleep — ii. 

sleep no morel Macbeth does (7-ep ).. — ii. 

nose-painting, sleep, and urine — ii. 

equivocates him in a sleep — ii. 

shake off this downy sleep, death's .. — ii, 

and sleep in the aiiliction of these .. — iii. 

fitful fever, he sleeps well — iii. 

of all natures, sleep. Come we'll to sleep — iii. 

of drink, and tliralls of sleep? — iii. 

meat, and sleep to our nights — iii. 

and sleep in spite of thunder — iv. 

all tills while in a most fast sleep. ... — v. 

the benefit of sleep, and do the effects — v. 

those which have walked in their sleep — v. 

from sleep that fell anatomy King John, iii. 

pretty child, sleep doubtless, and secure — iv. 

infant breath of gentle sleep Richard II. i. 

peace shall go sleep with Turks .... — iv. 

may do it as secure as sleep \Henry I V. 'i. 

to take a cold, to sleep, to drink .... — ii. 

pleasure, and thy golden sleep — ii. 

so bestirr'd thee in thy sleep — ii. 

there let him sleep till day — ii. 

on your eyelids crown the god of sleep — iii. 



. 2 






8LEKP— 'twixt wake ixiul sleep Mleiiiyir. iii. 1 

tliv i^iuimy sleep with thee ill the .. — v. 4 

well, lie iiiuy sleep in Bueurity illeiiryll'. i. 2 

tlie iiiulesenernuiy sleep — ii. 4 

sleep, 1,'eulle sleep, N'lUuie's soft mirse — iii. 1 
why ralher, sleep liest thou ill — iii. I 

purtiiil sleepi uive thy repose — iii. 1 

your father is ilispiiseil to sleep — iv. 1 

sleep with it now! yet not so — iv. 4 

tluM sleep is sound iiiileeil : this is ii sleep — \v. 4 

(loth suppose my sleep my ileullii' — iv. 4 

liiivebrnke their sleep with tliou;;litd ~ iv. 4 
men miiv sleep, mul they may have .. U nnji'. ii. 1 
tliKUL'h we seemed dead, we did but sleep— iii. 6 
can sleep so soundly as the wretched — iv. 1 

uriil all ni;^lit sleeps in Elysium — iv. 1 

days Willi loll, and uit,dit3 with sleep — iv. I 
wlieii others sleep upou their quiet. . 1 tleiinj I'l. ii. 1 
tinee a*.;aiu we'll sleep Becin"e iu Koucu — iii. 2 

while ivmiss traitors sleep — iv. 3 

iu my sleep by good Sttint Alban . . . .'ilium u I'l. ii. I 
j'ourhi;^iiness should intend to sleep — iii, 2 
worm might make the sleep eterual — iii. 2 

the uioro need to sleep now then — i v. i 

ere thou sleep in thy sheath — iv. 10 

his wonted sleep under a ZHeniijI'l. ii 5 

bv tliis, is set lum down to sleep .... — iv. 3 
\vhieh did haunt me in my sleep ..liichardlU. i. 2 
no sleep cloiie up that deadly eje — — i. 3 
is heavy, and 1 fain would sleep .... — i. 4 
stab him as he sleeps? — i. 4 

1 shall not sleep in quiet at the Tower — iii. 1 
from you, Catesby, ere we sleep? .... — iii. 1 
eanuiit thv master sleep the tedioas — iii. 2 
did I enjoy the golden dew of sleep.. — iv. I 

and my sweet sleep's disturbers — iv. 2 

the sons of Edward sleep iu Abraliam'a — iv. 3 
when didst thou sleep, when sueli .. — iv. 4 
forbear to sleep the night, and fast .. — iv, 4 

dotti comfort thee in thy sleep — v. 3 

Kiehmond, sleep in peace, and wake — v. 3 
now tills thv sleep with perturbations — v. 3 
quiet soul, sleep thou 11 quiet sleep ,. — V. 3 

tile sweetest sleep, and fairest boding — v. 3 

you sleep in peace, tlie tyrant — v. 3 

uiid sleeps in blessiiiL^S Henry t' [II. iii. 2 

and sleep in dull cold marble — iii. 2 

and she. sleep in their graves — v. 1 

to make them sleep on May-day.... — v. 3 
nor shall this peace sleep with her .. — v. 4 

and sleep an aet or two — (epil.) 

with wanton Paris sleeps.. Troilus <$■ Ciessida, (prol.) 

tamer than sleep, fonder than — i. 1 

let's shut our gates and sleep — ii. 2 

let Achilles sleeii. Liglit boats — ii. 3 

sleep kill those pretty eyes — iv. 2 

naughty man, let it sleep? — iv. 2 

sleeji upon it, and let the foes. Timon nf Athens, iii. ;> 
for here it sleeps, and does no hired.. — iv. 3 

nor sleep, nor sanctuary Coriolanus, i. 10 

during his power, go sleep — ii. 1 

as patient as the midnight sleep .... — iii. 1 
broke their sleep to take the one .... — iv. 4 

down together ill my sleep — iv. 5 

and such as sleep o'nights JuliusCiBsar, i. 2 

my fault to sleep so soundly — ii. 1 

eat, nor talk, nor sleep — ii. 1 

thrice hath Calphurnia in lier sleep — ii. 2 

I'll have thera sleep on cushions .... — iv. 3 

lie iu my tent, and sleep — iv. 3 

and thou shalt sleep again O'fp.) .... — iv. 3 

so cry out, sirs, in your sleep? — iv. 3 

I might sleep out this graoX gap .. Antony ^ Cleo. i. 6 
tliat'sleep and feeding may prorogue — ii. I 
we did sleep day out of countenance — ii. 2 

sleep a little- No, my chuck — iv. 4 

let's do so: but he sleeps — iv. 9 

task is done, and we must sleep — iv. 12 

which sleeps, and never palates more — y. 2 
I'll not sleep neitiier: this mortal.... — v. 2 
O such another sleep, that I might .. — v. 2 
feed, and sleep: our care and pity is — v. 2 

but slie looks like sleei), as she — v. 2 

sleep hath seized me wholly Cymbeliiie, ii. 2 

sleep, thou ape of death — ii. 2 

if sleep charge nature, to break it.... — iii. 4 
why, he but sleeps: if he be gone .... — iv. 2 

'faith, I'll lie down and sleep — iv. 2 

the defunct, or sleep upon tlie dead.. — iv. 2 
sleep, thou hast been a crandsire .... — v, 4 
he that sleeps feels not tlie (rt'p.) .... — v. 4 
and sleep in peace, slain in your ., TitusAndron. i. 2 

but silence and eternal sleep — i. 2 

and you that sleep in fame — i. 2 

1 have been troubled in my sleep.... — ii. 2 

leave our sport to sleep awhile — ii. 4 

that I may slumber in eternal bleep! — ii. 5 

kings have sou^ilit to sleep in! — ii. 5 

and, when he sleeps, will she do .... — iv. 1 
whom, if she sleep, he'll so awake .. — iv. 4 

the tomb where (jrief should sleep I'eiiclet, i. 2 

drew sleep out o( mine eyes — i. 2 

now sleep yslaked hath tlie rout.. — iii. (Gower) 
dream that e'er dull bleep did mock .. — v. I 

though doubts did ever sleep — v. 1 

would sleep till I waked him (^rep.).. Lear, i. 2 (let.) 
not 'scape censure, nor the redresses sleep — i. 4 

I will not sleep, my lord, till I — i. 6 

some time I shall sleep out — ii. 2 

till it cry, sleep to death — ii i 

and turn his sleep to wake — iii. 2 (song) 

I'll pray, and then I'll sleep — iii 4 

oppressed nature sleeps; this rest might — iii. 6 
madam, sleeps still. you kind gods.... — iv. 7 

in the heaviness of his sleep, we put — iv. 7 

still-waking sleep, that is not llomcn ^Juliet, i. 1 

swears a prayer or two, and sleeps again — i. 4 

if I'M) cold for me to sleep — ii. I 

sleeii dwell upon thine eyes (re/;.) .. — ii. 2 
lodges, sleep will never lie — ii. 3 



SIjKEP— golden sleep doth Tcigw.Jlomeo^ Juliet, ii. 3 
upon receipt thereof, soon sleep in quiet — iii. " 
then awake as from a pleasant sleep — iv. 
pennyworths now: sleep for a week — iv. 

if I may trust the flattering eye of sleep — v. 
her body bleeps in Cupel's niouuiiieut — v. 
as I did sleeii under Ibis yew-tree.... — v. 
deatli, eontugion. :Lnd uniKitural sleep — v. 
do not sleep, but let me lieiir from you. . Hum el, i. 

or a tale ot bawdry, or he sleeps — ii. 

to sleep, no more; — and, by a sleep, to say — iii. 
todie;— to sleep;— to sleepi perchance .. — iii. 

in that Bleep of death what dreams — iii, 

daj; with sleep. Sleep rock thy — iii. 

while some must sleep; thus runs — iii. 

a knavish speech s'eeps iu a foolish ear .. — iv. 

be but to sleep, and feed? a beast — i\'. 

aud let all sleep? while to my shame .. .. — iv. 

break not your sleeps for that — iv. 

of lighting, that would not let me sleep.. — v. 

why, go to-bed, and sleep. I will Othello, i. 

find it still, wlien I liave list to sleep .... — ii. 
'tis evermore the prologue to his sleei^ . . — ii. 3 
shall ever medicine thee to that sweet sleep — iii. 3 

a raging tooth, I could not sleep — iii. 3 

that in their sleeps will mutter tlicir .... — iii. 3 
in sleep I heard him say,— sweet — iii. 3 

SLEEPERS of the house? Mnclmili, ii. 3 

have waked their sleepers Tempest, v. 1 

the ground whereon these sleepers. .1/iV;. A'. 's/3r. iv. 1 
demurely wake the sleepers ....Aninmi f,cleo. iv. 9 

SLEEPIISfa— left Olivia sleeping.. Y'«t/>//uV,-A^ ii. 6 

see how sleeping shoidd offend MucfiAitn, iii. 3 

on sleeping eye-lids laid, will make.il/ui.jV.iJr. ii. 2 
and here the maiden sleeping sound — ii. 3 
tlie moon-beams from ills sleepin" eyes — iii. 1 
she was in her dull and sleeping lunir — iii. 2 
I took him sleeping, that is finished too — iii. 2 
have stolen away from sleeping llermia?— iii. 2 
and hast thou killed him sleeping?.. — iii. 2 

that I sleeping here was found — iv. I 

and sleeping hours excepted AsyouLike it, iii. 2 

la.v sleeping on his back: about his .. — iv. 3 
when that the sleeping maa should stir — iv. 3 

all proofs sleeping else Hinler's Tale, iii. 2 

or in hell? sleeping or waking?. . Comedy of Err. ii. 2 
the sleeping, and tne dead, are but.. ...Uactef/i, ii. 2 

sweltered venom sleeping got — iv. 1 

those sleeping stones, that as King John, ii. 1 

awaked the sleeping rlieura Richard II. i. A 

for sleeping England long time have I — ii. 1 
some sleeping killed; all murdered., — iii. 2 
sleeping upon benches after noon.... 1 Henry /r. i. 2 

a kind of sleeping in the blood ilienryll'. i. 2 

wake not a sleeping wolf — i. 2 

when I am sleeping with my ancestors — iv. 4 

awake the sleeping sword of war Henry V.i.'i 

alike? Sleeping, or waking, must I.. I Henry J'/, ii. 1 

sleeping neglection doth betray — iv. 3 

in sleeping on your bedsl — v, 3 

by Bubtility, sleeping, or waking ..2Henryl'I. iii. I 
no knife, to slaughter sleeping men.. — iii. 2 
he'll say, we stabbed him sleeying.. Richard III. i. 4 
not sleeping, to engross his idle body — iii. 7 
sleeping, and waking, O defend me stilll — v. 3 
you sleeping safe, they bring you , , . . — v. 3 
wished the sleeping ot this business. Henry I'm. ii. 4 
not Agamemnon's sleeping hour.. Troil. ^ Cress, i. 3 

before a sleeiiing giant — ii. 3 

that seems a sleeping . . Timon of Athens, i. 2 (grace) 

pity's sleeping; strange times — iv. 3 

as his was never yet for sleeping. .Jn/oni/cS-CTeo. iv. 9 

or dead, or sleeping on him? Cynibetine, iv. 2 

are letliargied. Sleeping or waking? i-ear, i. 4 

sleeping [Co(.&i/.-in company] ..Honieo (fJal. iii. 5 
60 tutored by my art, a sleeping potion — v. 3 

Bleeping in my orchard (re;?.) Hamlet, i. 5 

thus was I, sleeping, by a brother's hand — i. 5 
as the sleeping soldiers in the alarm .... — iii. 4 

SLEEP'ST: is not tlie king's name.. Ric/mrrf //. iii. 2 
Hector, thou sleeii'st; awake . .Troilus fy Cress, w . 'o 

Brutus, thou sleep'st (rep) JuliusCcBsar, ii. 1 

therefore thou sleep's! so sound — ii. 1 

sleep'st thou, or wak'st thou Lear, iii. 6 (song) 

SLEEPY— it is a sleeiiy language Tempest, ii. 1 

you rogue, away! I am sleepy ..Meas.forMeas. iv. 3 

liath quenched his sleepy lamp All's ll'ell, ii. I 

we will give you sleepy drinks... . IFinter's Tale, I. 1 
those sleepy two of liis own chamber . . Macbeth, i. 7 
and smear the sleepy grooms with blood — ii.2 
mildness of your sleepy thoughts,. A/c/mn^///. iii. 7 
mulled, deaf, sleepy, insensible ....Coriolanus, iv. 5 

this is a sleepy tune JuliusCit:-ar, iv. 3 

'tis not sleepy business Cymbelinc, iii. 5 

SLEEVE unbuttoned, your shoe ..AsyouLike it, iii. 2 
to the tunc of Green sleeves (rep. v. b). Merry IV. ii. 1 
down sleeves, side-sleeves, and s)cirts.i>/wr/i. 4(/o,, iii. i4 
some, sleeves; some, hats Mid.N.'s Dream, iii. 2 

{)ins tiie wcnclies on his sleeve .... Love's L. Lost, v. 2 
ly this jewel on her sleeve — v. 2 

do.st make hose of thy sleeves? All'slf'etl, ii. 3 

what's this? a sleeve? '/■ai/mii'o/.sV/rcai, iv. 3 

with a trunk sleeve (rep.) — i v. 3 (note) 

I coninianded the sleeves should be . . — iv. 3 
will fasten on this sleeve of thine. Cr)inc</i/o/iJrr. ii.2 

the arm, sliow us the sleeve — iii. 2 

like a herald's coat without sleeves. . 1 Henry 1 1', iv. 2 

then will he strip his sleeve IlenryV. iv. 3 

wear this sleeve. And you this. Troitus ^Crcss. iv. 4 

here, Diouied, keep this sleeve — v. 2 

you look upon that sleeve; behold .. — v. 2 
that sleeve is mine, that he'll bear ,. — v. 2 

lose my arm, or win my sleeve — v. 3 

young knave's sleeve of Troy there.. — v. 4 

with the sleeve, back to the — v. 4 

eofti here come sleeve, and t'olhor .. — v. 4 
Trojan! now the sleeve, now the sleeve I — y. 4 

luck Casca by the • leevc /utius Crrsnr.i. 2 

1 mv tleovt -- - 

K/Ki'jV./te, iv, 3 



f; 



SLEEVELESS errand Troihis^Crcaaida, v. t 

SLEIDED-weavedtlic6leidedsilk./vrit(/-j, iv.(Uow.) 

SLICKillT :iiid manhood stole illenryl I. iv.2 

SLENlJKK-of slender reputation. Ti/u Geii.nf I'er.i. 3 
iiy.eoiisin Slender, and cu6t-aloruni:Ueiri/ Wiiiej,i. I 
and here young master Slender (rep.) — i. 1 

Slender, I broke your head — i. i 

did you |)ick master Slender's purse — i. i 

give ear to his motions, master Slender — i. 1 

cousin Abraham Slender (rep.) — 1. i 

and master Slender's your master? .. — i. 4 

and eke cavalero Slender — ii. 3 

good master Slender's serving-man .. — iii. I 
Anne I'age and my cousin Slender .. — iii 2 

3'ou have, master Slender — iii. 2 

master Slender would speak a — iii. 4 

now, master Slender (rep.) — iii. i 

come, son Slender; in (lep.v. 2) — iii. 4 

or I would master Slender had her .. — iii. 4 
master Slender i.i let tlie boys have .. — iv. 1 
shall master Slender steal my Nan ., — iv. 4 
that Slender, though well lauded .... — iv. 4 

from master Slender Oep.) — iv. 5 

that beguiledmaster.Sleuderof luBchain — iv. 5 

to slip away with Slender — iv. li 

when Slender sees his time to — iv. 6 

Slender htttli married her daughter .. — v. 5 
Jeshu! master Slender, cannot you ,. — v. 5 
you went not w ith master Slender? . . — v. 5 
your waist, mistress, were as slender. Lore'sL. /,. iv. 1 
somust slender Rosalind. .4syoiii,iAe/(, iii. 2 (verses) 
hazel-twig is straight and slender. Taming o/.'ih. ii. 1 
so slender warning, you're like to (rep.) — iv. -i 

your means are very slender itlenryW. i. 2 

some slender ort of his remainder. Timon of Ailt.'w. 3 
how would he hang his slender. .ri7us.J>iJr(i)i. iii. 2 

joy grieves, on slender accident Hamlet, iii. 2 

SLENDEKER-my waist slenderer ..iHenryW. i. 2 

SLENDERLY known himself. Lear, i 1 

SLEPT— thou hast slept well, awake! ..Tempest, i. 2 
been dead though it fiatli slept.. jUeos./or Mens. ii. 2 
in a tomb where never scandal slept., .i/ne/i Ado, v. 1 

we still have slept together As you Like il, i. 3 

60 waked as if you slept.... 7'a;mVi4'(,/a7i. 2 [indue.) 
dreamed aud slept above some.. — 2 (indue.) 

last night slie slept not — iv. 1 

he hath not slept to-night lyinter'iTnlc, ii. 3 

trowing, us you had sleiit between — iv. (chorus) 
e sleiit not for my urging it. .Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

hath it slept since! andwakesit .Macbeth, \ 7 

resembled my father as lie slept — ii.2 

where hath il slept? King John, iv. 2 

their eyelids down, slept iu hia faee.l Henry II'. iii. 2 

our title still had slept 3 Henry I'l. ii. 2 

where slept our scouts, or how — v. 1 

shade the ramping lion slept — v. 2 

that never slept a quiet hour Richard III. v. 3 

how have you slept, my lord? — v. 3 

that so long have slept upon Henry fill. ii. 2 

to heaven, and slept in peace — iv. 2 

saw ye none enter, since I slept? .... — iv. 2 

their great general slept Troilus ^Cressida, ii. 2 

hast not slept to night? — iv. 2 

such as slept within the shadow. . Timon vfj-Uh. v. 5 
against Ca!3ar,I have not slept ....JuliusCasur, ii. 1 

I have slept, my lord, ab'eady — iv. 3 

not till you have slept Antony e/- Cleopatra, ii. 7 

where, i confess, I slept not CymUeline, ii. 4 

I have not slept one wink — iii. 4 

I thought, he slept; aud put my clouted — iv. 2 
as I slept, methought, great Jupiter.. — v. h 
wars, whilst you securely 6\ei\t..J'itusAudroii. iii. 1 
one, that slept in the contriving of lust ..Lear, iii. 4 

wake the king? he hath slept long — iv. 7 

I slept the next night well Othello, iii. 3 

SLEW— I slew him manfully. ..THoCeH. ,,rrer. iv. 1 
belike, you slew great number .. Ta-eljli.\ighl, iii. 3 
that slew thy virgin knight . . iVachAdo, v. 3 (song) 
scimitar, that slew the Soply. .Meich. of I'enice, ii. 1 

with his own hand he slew the All's If'elt, iii. 5 

for Gloster's death, I slew hirn not ..Richard II. i. I 
and every where, enraged he slew . . 1 Henry I'l. i. I 
of Cade, whom I in combat slew ....'ilienry I'l. v. I 
art thou the man that slew liim? .... — v. 1 

Clifford slew my steed — v. 2 

he slew thy father (rep.) SHenryl'I.i. I 

to him that slew my father? (re/).) ,. — i. I 

whose f;ither slew mv father — i. 3 

Islew tliv tatlier: eiill'st thou — ii.2 

the hand tlmt slen tliy brother — ii. 4 

that slew tliy sire aucl brother — ii. 4 

hand to hand I slew in light — ii. 5 

say, that I slewlthcm not? Richard 111. i. 2 

who slew to-day a riotous gentleman — ii. I 

and he that slew them, fouler — iv. 4 

the man that slew her brothers (.rep.) — iv. 4 

view slew three opposers Coriolanus, ii.2 

as he was ambitious, I slew liim..yii(r«»t'<rsur, iii. 2 
as I slew my best lover for tlie good — iii. 2 
I slew the coward, and did take it .. — v. 3 

the story ; I slew him there Cymbelinc, v. 5 

better than the man he slew — v. 5 

did bury AjttX that slew himself.. Titus.indron. i. 2 

for my sake, and after slew herself Ltur, v. 3 

that slew thy kinsman Komeo Sf Juliet, iii. 1 

Romeo slew Tybalt, llomeo(?ep.) .. — iii. i 
and that my master slew him — v. 3 

SLEWST— thou slew'st IIirtiu3.../4>i/oiii/ .■; Clco. i.4 
kill thee, and thou slew'st Tybalt. Hnmeo ^Jul. iii. 3 

STJCE— slice, Isay! Pauca (rep.) ..Merry ll'ives.i.\ 

'SLID— 'slid, 'tis but venturing — iii. 4 

'slid, I'll after him again Twel/lhKisht, iii. 4 

SLlUE-let the world slide.. '/•amiii4'<!/A7i. 1 (indue.) 
thou may'st slide from my shoulder — iv. I 
I slide er sixteen years.. H'ln/er'j Ta/e, iv. (chorus) 
the fool slides o'er the iee . . Troilus fyCressida, iii. 3 
let the lamished flesh slide Timon of. iihens, iv. 3 

SLIDING of your brother.. Jl/e/ix«re/orA/ea«ure, ii. i 

SLIGlIT-slight conditions. . TwoOen. ofl'erona, v. I 
fee'd every slight cecusiou Mci^ It ivei, ii. i 



SLT 



[ G92 ] 



SMA 



SLIGHT— some slight measxne.Mid. S.'s Dream, iii. 2 
slight, zany, some nnimhle-news.. Lotp's;,. /.(i.»(, v. 2 
thiin (lust him any slight (lisgrace.^> youLilie it, i. I 

yet slight ones will not carry it ^ll'sU'elt, iv. 1 

init* UTm off, sli!,'lits him Ifintei'sTale. iv. 3 

distilled bv magic sli^htg Macbeth, iii. 5 

devise a name so sliL'ht, unworthy. . KingJiy/iii, iii. 1 

a pretty sliijht drollery, or the 'J Hennjl 1. u. I 

Ton make so slight a question — iv. 1 

every sliglit and false derived cause — iv. I 
wilh'aslight oath, and a.icst with .. — y. I 
slightregard, contempt, and any tiling, ffeiirj/r.ii. 4 
for so sliglit and frivolous a cause ..\ Iltnri/I'l. iv. 1 
no quarrel, but a slight contention ..'i Henri/ 1' I. i. 2 
be not ceased with slight denial . . Timoii ofADi. ii. 1 
not seldom, nor no slight checks — — ii. 2 

there's any, you are so slight Corlolanus,v. 2 

to make what cannot be, slight work — v. 3 
this is a slight unmeritable man .. JuliusCwsar, iv. 1 

away, slight man! Is't possible? — iv. 3 

witli Antonius prized so sliglit?.. /4h(o!I!/ SfCleo. i. 1 

of so slight and trivial a nature Cymbeline, i. 5 

my quarrel was not altogether slight — i. 5 

we liave been too slight m sutterance — iii. 5 

set so slight a valuation — iv. 4 

lachimo, slight thing of Italy — v. 4 

laving these slight sullies on my son ..Hamlet, ii. 1 
so'slisrlit. [Co(.- light] so drunken fiHielln, ii. 3 

'SMGlIT, I could so beat the rogue .. 2'icc(/K/i A', ii. 6 
'slightl will vou make an ass — iii. 2 

SLIGHTED nie into tlieriver .... Merry JVives. iii. 5 
laws so loosely slighted, behold ....•iUemyll'.v. 2 
knew the man, were sliglited o{l..JuliusCn'sar, iv. 3 

SLIGHTEST— slightest errand now ..MuchAdo, ii. 1 

remeniber'st not the slightest AsyouLil;eit, ii. i 

vea, even the slightest worship IHenrylV. iii. 2 

SLiGHTLY-are but slightly basted ..MuchAdo, i. 1 

so slightly with your wife's Merch. of/'enice, v. 1 

or sliglitly handled in discourse ..Richard III. iii. 7 

gone sliglitly o'er low steps Henryl-'III. ii. 4 

slighllv sliakes liis parting. .Tmilus^-Cressida, iii. 3 
some s'li'-htly touched, some faWmg. Cymbeline, v. 3 

so slightly v.ihied in his messenger Lear, ii. 2 

sliixhtlv timbered for so loud a wind . . Hamlet, iv. 7 
if i L'ni I him slightly, it may be death — iv. 7 

SLIGHTNESS— unstable slightness. C'ono(a»!(s, iii. 1 

Sl.ILY— slilv glided towards your ..'illenryVI. iii. 2 
slily stole away, and left his men ..3 Henr,/l'I. i. 1 
deceive more slily than Ulj'sses could — iii. 2 

the king was slily flnmred from — v. 1 

in these confines slily liave I lurked. /J«c/io)d7//. iv.4 
slily crept into his human powers . . Coriotanus, ii. 1 

SLIME— quickens Nilus' slime Antony SrUleo. i. 3 

upon tile slime and ooze scatters .... — ii. 7 
these fig-leaves have slime upon them — v. 2 
with niirv slime left on them. TitnsAndrnnicus, iii. 1 
the slime" that sticks on filthy deeds Othello, v. 2 

SLI5IY— slimy bottom of the deep ..Richard [II. i. i 
pierce their slimy jaws Antony Sr Cleopatra, ii. .5 

SLING— from the old Assyrian slings.. Henri/ ^. iv. 7 
to suffer the slings and arrows Hamlet, iii. I 

SLINK - we will slink away . . . . Merch.of J'enice, ii. 4 
'tis he! slink by, and note him. .Asyoulikeit, iii. 2 
fortunes slink all away Timon of Athens, iv. 2 

SLIP— j'OU might slip away ete.,.. Merry tVives, iv. 2 

to slip away witli Slender — iv. 6 

let him let the matter slip Twelfth l^'ight, iii. 4 

[K'n/.] yearswehave X^i Aip. Measure for Measure, i. 4 
such a warped slip of wilderness .... — iii. 1 

slionUl slip so grossly, both in — v. 1 

tlieii slip I from her bum Mid.N.'s Dream, ii. 1 

witliout any slips of prolixity. il/eicA.n/Tpnw, iii. I 
with intended glides did slip ....As you Like i', iv. 3 
a native slip to us from foreign seed".. All's Il'ell, i. 3 
and let the world slip ..Tamingo/Shreir. 2 (indue.) 
I care not to get slips of them ,. Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

to set one slip of them — iv. 3 

gall of goat, and slips of yew Macbeth, iv. 1 

game's afoot, thou still let'st slip....lHenr!/ If. i. 3 

stand like greyhounds in the slips Henry F. iii. 1 

fair slips of such a stock i Henry y I. ii. 2 

was graft with crab-tree slips — iii. 2 

even here I slip my wearied head./?/c/ir/rrf III. iv. 4 

let him slip down, not one Timon ofA'hens, i. 1 

from it all consideration slips! — iv. 3 

to let him slip at will Coriolanus, i. 6 

crv havock, and let slip the iXogs.. Julius Ccesar, iii. I 

we'll slip you for a season Cymbeline, iy. 3 

tliese slips have made him . . Titits A udronicus, ii. 3 

brave slip, sprung from the — y. 1 

the slip, sir, the slip; can 3'ou . . Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 4 

and usual slips, as are companions Hamlet, ii. 1 

so thev do nothing, 'tis a venial slip ..Othello, iv. I 

SLIPPED me like his greyhound.. TamingofSh. v. 2 
aud that you slipped not with any. IVinter's Tale, i. 2 

I have almost slipped the hour Macbeth, ii. 3 

had slipped our claim until another.SHciri/ yi. ii. 2 
thou wouldst not have slipped.. TroHus Sf Cress, ii. 3 

tile bonds of heaven are sbpped — v. 2 

a thing slipped idly from me . . Timon of Athens, i. \ 

SLIPPER— put me to my slipper Tempest, ii. 1 

I do adore thy sweet grace's slipper. Love's L. L. v. 2 

where are ray slippers? Taming of .Shrew, iv. I 

standing on slippers, (which his. . . . King John, iv. 2 

SLIPPERED-plippered pantaloon.^.<!/o«I,iA<;!(, ii. 7 

SLIPPERY-my wife is slippery?.. tVinter'sTale. i. 2 

that stands upon a slippery place ..KingJohn, iii. 4 

clamours in the slippery clouds iHenryll'. iii. 1 

being slippery slanders (rep.) . . Troitus Si Cress, iii. 3 
of glib and slippery creatures ..Timonof A'hens.i. 1 
O world, thy slippery turns! ..: ..Coriolanus, iv. 4 
stands on such slippery ground ..JulinsCrpsar, iii. 1 
our slippery people (whose love ..Antony ^-Cteo. i. 2 

as slippery, as the Gordian knot Cymbeline, ii. 2 

or so slippery, that the fear's as bad — iii. 3 

slippery [/f>i<.-slipper] and subtle Othello, ii. 1 

SLIPSU'OD— thy wit shall not go slipshod.. Lear, i. 5 

SLIPT like him Measure/or Measure, ii. 2 

SLLSH and slash like to a censer .. TamingofSh. iv. 3 
SLIT the villain's nose — v. 1 



SIjIVER and disbranch from Lear, iv. 2 

an envious sliver broke Hamlet, iv. 7 

SLIVEHEDin the moon's eclipse Macbeth, iv. 1 

SLOBBERY and a dirty farm Hemy r. iii .■) 

SLOP— the waist downward, all slops. JI/hi'/iW(/o, iii. 2 
disfigure not his slop [0,.(. -shape]. Lone'.?;.. i<w/, iv. 3 
satin for my short cloak, and slops?. .i/Jo/cv/r. i. 2 
salutation to yoiu' rrench slop ../tomeo.? ^'li'V/, ii. 4 

SLOPE their heads to their Mm-ljrih. iv. I 

SLOTH- hereditary sloth instructs me .Tempest, ii. I 

by their own fear, or sloth — ii. 1 

let not sloth dim vour i Henri/ r I. i. 1 

I abhor this dilatory sloth Henryflll. ii. 4 

when restive sloth finds the dov!n..Vi/mbelhie, iii. 6 

hog in sloth, fox in stealth Lear, iii. 4 

SLOTHFUL w.atch but weak I Henry 11. iii. 2 

SLOUGH— in a slough of mire ....Merry Wires, iv. a 
thy humble slough (rep. iii. i)..Tir_el,phN. ii. ,'i (let.) 
with casted slough, aud fresh legerity Henry l\ iy. 1 

with shining checkered sloush 'lHr,ny l' Liu. 1 

SLOVENLY unhandsome corse 1 llenn/ ll.i.i 

SLOVENRY— worn us into slovenry.. Henryl-. iv. 3 

SLOW— the man i' the moon's too slow. Tempest, ii. 1 

cannot overtake your slow purse. TwoGcn. o/Ter. i. 1 

last chidden for teing too slow — ii. 1 

she is slow in words (?-e/J.) — !]'• * 

that's writ down she is slow of — iii. 1 

it makes me have a slow heart — iv. 2 

reverend carriage, a slow tongue. Tu-elfthNight, iii. 4 
how slow this old moou wanes! ....Mld.N.'sDr. i. 1 

for I am slow of study — i. 2 

slow in pursuit, but matched in — iy. 1 

a metal, heavy, dull, and slow?..Lore'sL./.ov^ iii 1 

I say, lead is slow — iii. 1 

is that lead slow which is fired from — iii. 1 

other slow arts entirely keep — iv. 3 

backward pull our slow designs All's Well, i. 1 

but slow in speech, yet sweet as . . Taming ofSh. ii. 1 

for being slow in thy hot ofSee — iv. 1 

their bark been very slow of sail. . Comedy nf Err. i. 1 

is slow to overtake thee Macbeth, i. 4 

the swift, the slow, the subtle — iii. I 

and creep time ne'er so slow, yet it,. KingJohn, iii. 3 

with slow, but stately pace, kept Richard II. y. 2 

you are as slow, as hot lord Percy ..1 Henry I f. iii. 1 
drowsy, slow, and flagging wings ..2Henry VI. iv. 1 

away, my lord, you are slow — v. 2 

their suits with slow delays SHenry I'l. iy. 8 

because sweet flowers are slow .... Richard III. i j . 4 

requires slow pace at first Henry I'll I. i. 1 

as the bear, slow as the elephant. T'rof^u.'; ^Cress. i. 2 

thou strikest as slow as another — ii. 1 

hath sent— Too slow a messenger .ylri/n»i;/ * Cleo. v. 2 
search so slow, that could not trace . . Cymbeline, 1. I 

how slow his soul sailed on — i. 4 

but, though slow, are deadly — _ i. 6 

man, could never go so slow — iii. 2 

thou art too slow to do thy master's — iii. 4 

that Leonine was so slack, so slow I . . Pericles, iv. 3 
wisely, and slow; they stumble.. Ko/"c» Sr Juliet, ii. 3 
unwieldy, slow, heavy and pale as lead — ii. 5 

arrives as tardy as too slow — ii. 6 

I am nothing slow, to slack his haste — iy. 1 

wrun" from me my slow leave Hamlet, i. 2 

goes slow and stately by them — i. 2 

finding ourselves too slow of sail — iv. 6 (letter) 

to point his slow unmoving finger at ..Othello, iv. 2 

SLOWED-why it should be slowed. Romeo &Jul. iv, 1 

SLOWER foot came on Mens. fir Meas. v. 1 

somewhat into a slower method Richard III. i. 2 

till the speed of his rage goes slower I.ear. i. 2 

SLOW-GAITED— very slow-giiited.;,f.tv'.i L.L.iii. 1 
SLOWLY— bringing wood in slowly .. Tempest, ii. 2 

for though he comes slowly .■is you Like it. iv. 1 

a remorseful pardon slowly carried ..All's Hell, v. 3 

will come on very slowly Winter's Tale, v. 1 

I conjure thee but slowly KingJohn, iv. 2 

SLOWNESS, that I do not: for, I know. Alt's Well, _i. 3 

speed be crossed with slowness Cymbel/ne, iii. Jj 

SLOW-WINGED turtle! ....Tamingor Shrew, ii. 1 

SLUBBER not business for .. Merchant of I'enice, ii. 8 

slubber the gloss of your new fortunes .. Othello, i. 3 

SLUG — thou snail, thou slug .. Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

fie, what a slug is Hastings! Richard III. i'li. 1 

SLUG-ABED! why, love, I say! Romeo ^Juliet, iv. 5 
SLUGGARD[Co(.-coward] majesty'.. Rirhard II. iii. 2 
have ta'en a tardy sluggard here . . Richard III. v. 3 
SLUGGARDIZED at home ....TwoGen.ofFe,: i. 1 
SLUGGISH crare might easiliest . . . . Ci/mbeline, iv. 2 

SLUICED in his .absence Winter's Tale. i. 2 

sluicedout his innocent soul through. Richard II. i. 1 
SLUMBER-slumber, and beware. Tem/wsf.ii. 1 (song) 
from miserable slumber I awaked. /I > ifuLike it, iv. 3 
but you must not now slumber in it. All'sWell, iii. 6 
thought this was so, and no slumber. Winter'sT. iii. 3 
in thy faint slumbers, I by thee ....'. Hemy 1 1'. ii. 3 
buzzing night-flies to thy slumber.2Henrj//r. iii. I 

the ports of slumber open wide — iv.4 

of mine take themselves to slumber .. Henry V. iii. 2 
suffered in that harmful slumber ..2Henryyi, iii. 2 
but like a pleasant slumber in thy lap? — iii. 2 
the mockery of unquiet slumbers.. K/r/tarii ///. iii. 2 
lest leaden slumber peize me dowu . . — v. 3 

not wake him in his slumber Henry Vlll.i. 1 

are for dreams and slumbers.. 7Vo(7(ts SfCressida.'n. 2 
the honey heavy dewof slumber ..JiiliusCcesar, ii. 1 
O murderous slumber! lay'st tliou .. — iv. 3 

as some fly had tickled slumber Cymbeline, iv. 2 

possess a golden slumber Titus Andronicus, ii. 3 

that I may slumber in eternal sleep! — ii. 5 
when will this fearful slnmber have — iii. 1 

thou dost not slumber; see, thy two sons' — iii. 1 
if heaven slumber, while their creatures. Per/cf(?Sj i.4 
shake off the golden slumber of repose — iii. 2 
thick slumber hangs on mine eyelids — v. 1 
to have their balmy slumbers wakeiX.,.. Othello, 'n.Z 

SLUMBERED here MM.A'.'sDream, (epilogue) 

SIjUMBRY agitation, besides Macbeth, v. 1 

SLUNK not Saturnine, as Tarquin.riVus/liidjnn. iv. 1 
SLUT— radiant queen hates sluts . . Merry Wives, v. 5 



SLUT— honesty upon a, foul iiwt. .AsyouLike it. iii. 3 
I am not a slut, though I thank ...'. — iii. 3 
hold up, you sluts, your aprons. Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

SLUTTIOKY— h.ates sluts, and slutteij'.jVi., r,/ W. v. 5 
slutler\', to sneh neat excellence C'V" beline. i. 7 

SLUTTlSH-dispIeusure is but vlvtthh. .W'sll ell. v. 2 
sllitlish spoils of opportuuit/ ..Troitus •^ Cress, iv. b 
elf-Ioeks in foul sluttish hairs ..Honiea^- Juliel. i. 4 

SLUTTISIINE.SS may come As ynu Like it, iii. 3 

SLY— by some sly trick Tu'oGen. of I'erona, ii. 6 

the Slys are no rosues.. Taming of Shrew, 1 (indue.) 

lamChristopheroSly (rf/..) — 2 (indue.) 

old .sly's son of Burton-heath — 2 (indue.) 

as Stephen Sly, and old .lohn Naps — 2 (indue.) 

that sl3' devil, that broker KingJohn. ii. 2 

[Col.Knt.'i the sly slow lionrs shall . . Richard II. i. 3 
thy sly con^'eya'nce, and thy lord's SHenry I'l. iii. 3 

silken, sly, insinuating Jacks? Richard III. i. 3 

proud, anl)tle, sly, and bloody — iv.4 

the sly whoresons have got a Henry I' II I. i. 3 

a sly and constant knave Ci/mbeline. i. 6 

sly frantic wretch, that holp'st.. Titns Andron. iv. 4 

SMACK of this vice Measurefor Measure, ii. 2 

my father did something smack .Mer.otl'euiee, ii. 2 
to pull at a smack o' tlie contiary ..All'sWell, ii. 3 
now he hath a smack of all iieiglihoni-ing — iv. 1 
with such a clamorous smack . . 'I'amiug of Sh. iii. 2 
but smacks of something greater. wtnier'sTale. iv. 3 

they smack of honour both; go Mi'chetli.i. 2 

doth not smaek of observation (rep.). KingJohn, i. I 
smacks it not something of the policy? — ii. 2 
hath vet some smack of age in \im..:l Henry IT. i. 2 

SMACKING of every sin that has a.. ..Macbeth, iv. 3 

SMALL a pasture TwoGen. of I'erona, i. I 

shows his love hut small — i. 2 

and as small as a wand — ii. 3 

were you banislied for so small a fault? — iv. I 

speaks small like a woman MerryWives, i. 1 

thy small pipe is as the Ticelflh Night, i. 4 

you may speak as small as you v^'ill.Mid.N.'sDr. i. 2 

to make my small elves coats — ii. 3 

things seem small and undistillgui^hable— iv. I 

by his small light of discretion — v. 1 

eiuall have continual plodders Love'sL.Lost, i. 1 

methinks, Sampson had small reason — i. 2 

no, he is best indued in the small.... — v. 2 
here's asmall trifle of wives ..Merch. nft'eniee, ii. 2 

and, after some small space AsyouLikeit, iv. 3 

the small acquaintance, my sudden — v. 2 

a pot of small ale Taming of Shrew, 2 (indue.) 

there's small choice in rotten apples — i. 1 
at home, where small experience grows — i. 2 
this small packet of Greek and Latin — ii. 1 

with a small compassed cape — iv. 3 (note) 

fastened him unto a small, spare.Comedyof Err. i. 1 
small cheer, and great welcome .... — iii. I 
th.at none so small advantage shaW. KingJohn, iii. 4 
then, feeling what small things are.. — iv. I 
small showers last long, but sudden, /?ir.7iard 77. ii. I 

incaged in so small a verge — ii. 1 

and that small model of the barren.. — iii. 2 
by small and small to lengthen out the — iii. 2 
it is a matter of small consequence.. — v. 2 
[Coi.l postern of a small needle's eye — v. 5 
that with our small conjunction .. 1 Henryir. iv. 1 
a kingdom for it was too small a bound — v. 4 

in me, to desire small beer (rep.) IHenrylV. ii. 2 

a night is but small breath, and little. 7/c");//'. ii. 4 
small time, but, in that small .. — v. 2 (chorus) 

all our lives in one small boat 1 Henry J'l. iv. 6 

small curs are not regarded 2 Henry VI. iii. 1 

deaths for small offences done? — iii. 1 

small things make base men proud.. — iv. I 

felony, to drink small beer — iv. 2 

this small inheritance, my father . .. — iv. 10 

thy share thereof is small SHenj-y VI. i. 4 

that makes small brooks to flow .... — iv. 8 
the city being but of small defence . . — v. 1 
small joy have I in being (rep.) .... Richard III. i. 3 

small herbs have grace — ii. 4 

[Co7.K;i/.] within so small a time .... — iv. 1 
m just proportion our small power .. — v. 3 
enemies are many, and not small . . Henry fill. v. 1 
a haberdasher's wife of small wit .... — v. 3 
but small thanks for my labour. Troilus ^- Cress, i. 1 

although small pricks to their — i. 3 

things small as nothing, for requests — ii. 3 
there should be small love 'mon^st. TimoM ofAlh.i. 1 
received some small kindnesses from — iii. 2 
if you'll bestow a small (of what youCoriolatius, i. 1 
and small inferior veins, from me.-.. — i. 1 

a pipe small as an eunuch — iii. 2 

but a small thing would make it flame — iv. 3 
but small to greater matters (rep.) Antony S(Cleo.'\i.2 

but I have seen small reflection Cymbeline, i. 3 

entreat your grace but in small request — i. 7 

as small a drop of pity as a — iv. 2 

grind their bones to powder small TitusAndron. v. 2 

shed yet some small drops from — v. 3 

is great, tliongh the gift small Pericles, iii. 4 

with fingers, long, small, white as — iv. (Gower) 

O, most small iiinlt, how ugly Lear, i. 4 

you shall do small respect — ii. 2 

the king comes with so small a train? ,. — ii. 4 

a small spark, all the rest of his — iii. 4 

mice, and rats, and such small deer — iii. 4 (song) 

almost too small for sight — iv. 6 

and the small gilded tiy does lecher in . . — iv. 6 
through tattered clothes small vices do .. — iv. 6 

a small grey-coated gnat Romeo ^Julief^ i. 4 

rind of tliis small ICol. 7Cn<.-weak] flower — ii. 3 
the tears have got small victory by that — iv. 1 
small annexment, pett.y consequence .Hamlet, iii. 3 
suckle fools, and chronicle small beer. . Othello, ii. 1 
by that small hurt, hast cashiered Cassio — ii. 3 
'tis a^reat price, for a small vice — iv. 3 

SMALLER boon than this I ... . Ttro Gen. of Ver. v. 4 
a smaller hair than may be seen.. Lnve'sL. Lost, v. 2 
ICol.^ the smaller is his daughter. . As you Like it, i. 2 
mnch smaller thau the smallest .,..2HenryIV. i. 3 



SMALLEST scruple of her Mim.rnrMnis. i. 1 

swerve not from the Mn;>lle»t artiele of it— iv. a 

to cross this in the siimlk'St — iv. 2 

the smullest twine iniiN' k-inl ine .,., Mitch Ado^ iv. 1 
the snmllestnionstruus mouse.. .l//./..V.',v /)/ mm, v. 1 

violates the snuiUest biancli lieivhi .( ,••,<;..;.. i. 1 

tliere's not tlicsn\iillestoih, wliieh ,W,; .,.// V„icp. v. 1 
u pot o' the sniiillesl ;ile.... 7',im./ia ../ .VA. ■_' (iiulue.) 
the smallest thivnil tiiat ever bpiik-r./:///t'.'»'i/i, iv. ;i 
the smallest parcel of this vow .. . A Uenni I f. iii. i 
than the smallest of hia thou-ht9....a/lf(o7/"'. i. :t 
you see is but tlie smallest i)art ., .AUfnnjt'l. ii. ."? 

the smallest worm will turn ilU;i,ii n. ii. 2 

if he do break the smallest partiele./;i/"isC«-,v(ir, ii. 1 

of the suvilk'St s|.i(kr's well Hmni-n f,.lnlM, i. 4 

will I draw the smallest leiir, or iloubt.O//iri/o, iii. 3 

that he mii,'ht stick the smallest opinion — iv. 2 

SM.\LL-KNOWIi\G soul..iotie'sL.Lr«(, i. 1 (.letter) 

S.MAI-LNKSSof agnat to air Ci/mbelhie, i. 4 

SAJALUS— the warlike Smalus IViuier'sTale, v. 1 

SM.iRT— some of us will smart for U..Miil-Ii ,1,lf,, v. 1 
althougli he smart, not to seem . . .Is i/on Like il, ii. 7 

hath not made ir.e smart w /."(!///. i v. 6 

as smart as lizards' stingsl -'Hfinii I' I. iii. 2 

she -hould feel the smart of this?. . Heunj rill. ii. I 
thou eavist not ease thy smart .. Tnitif: ij- Cress, iv. 4 
and they smart to hear tliemselves ..Cnriotamis, i. 9 

from this earth-vexing smart CymbeHne, v. 4 

how snuirt a lash that speech doth .... Ihiinlel, iii. I 

S.MARTING, with my wounds \ Henry IV. i. 3 

smartim; in lingering; pickle .... Anlmnj ^Clen. ii. 5 

SM.VRTl'-Yfrom his h .w Mid.X.'sl)ream,u. 2 

S.MATCH— some sniateh of honour. J»(i«s Crrsar, v. 5 
S.M ATTER with your gossips . . llomeo ^Juliel, iii. 5 
SMEAR— and smear the sleepy grooms. .l/acteCi, ii. 2 

S.M EARED with captivi ty I 1 llenrt, I' I. iv. 7 

iny glory smeared m dust and hloodi ^Henryl'l.y.'i 

wherein j'ou see me smeared Coriolanus, i. 6 

dread and black complexion smeared. . llnmlei, ii. 2 

S.M ELL— he smells like a fish Tempest, ii. 2 

a very ancient and fish-like smell .... — ii. 2 

monster, I do smell all horse-piss — iv. 1 

acquainted with the smell. Two Gen. of Vemna, iv. 4 

the smell of hot meatsince Merry Wives, i. 1 

he smells April and May — iii. 2 

and smell like Bncklersbury in — iii. 3 

rankest compound of villanous smell — iii..') 

I smell a man of middle earth — v. 5 

excellent! I smell a device TwelfhNight,V\.i 

report, and STuell of calumny . . Meas. /oriMens. ii. 4 

can you smell him out by that? Much Ado. iii. 2 

I am stuffed, cousin, I cannot smell — iii. 4 

I smell some I'envoy, some goose.Lni'e'jL. /.os', iii. I 
I smell false Latin; dunghill fur .... — v. I 

your nose smells no, in this — v. 2 

yes, to smell pork; to eat ot.Merchantnf yrnice,\. 3 

thou losest thy old smell Ai. you Like il, i. 2 

smell somewhat strong of her strong.. .-lUUJVell, v. 2 

if it-smells so strong as thou — V. 2 

mine eyes smell onions, I sliall — v. 3 

1 smell sweet savours .. Taming of Siirew, i (indue.) 
smell this business with a sense.. Winler^s Tale, ii. 1 

I smell the trick of it — iv. 3 

to smell out work for the other senses — iv. 3 
the heaven's breath, smells wooingly..Muci/(^//i, i. (j 

here's the smell of the blood still — v. 1 

stifled with this smell of sin King John, iv. 3 

shine so brisk, and smell so sweet ..MlenrylV. \. 3 

I smell it; upon my life, it will — i. 3 

is as bad as to smell a fox 'IHenrylV. i. 2 

the violet smells to him, as it doth . . Henry K iv. 1 
the smell whereof shall breed a plague — iv. 3 
I am qualmish at the smell of leek .. — v. 1 
with whose sweet smell the air 6hall.2H<':irj/r/. i. 1 

the ear, taste, toucli, sinell Timon of Alliens, i. 2 

smells from the general weal — iv. 3 

the feast smells well : but I Coriolanus, iv. 5 

this foul deed shall smell above . . JuliusCiesar, iii. 1 
with knaves that smell of 3weat../((i/o»!(4 Cleo. i. 4 
breath was sulphurous to smell .... Cymheline, v. 4 
counsel, lad, smells of no cowardice.. TilusAnd. ii. 1 

soft, soft! it smells most sweetly I'eneles, iii. 2 

do you smell a fault Lear, i. 1 

that what a man cannot smell out — i. 5 

but can smell him that's stinking — ii. 4 

I smell the blood of a Britisli man — iii. 4 (song) 

and let him smell his way to Dover — iii. 7 

it smells of mortality — iv. b 

the first time that we smell the air — iv. fi 

by any other name would smell. Borneo ^ Juliet, ii. 2 

what with loathsome smells — iv. 3 

my offence is rank, it smells to )ieaven.Ha»/ilf?', iii. 3 
foh! one may smell, in sucli, a will .. O'hetlo, iii. 3 
they see, and smell, and have their palates— iv. 3 

must wither: I'll smell it on the tree — v. 2 

T think,— I smell 't;—0 villany! — v. 2 

SMELLINU-smelling so sweetly. .;Wprn/lVit/<-», ii. 2 
snuffed up love by smelling lovc.Loi'e'sL.Loil, iii. 1 
but for smelling out the odoriferous — iv. 2 

dreams he of smelling out a smt. llomeo ^Juliet, i. 4 

hands or eyes, smelling sans all Hamlet, iii. 4 

SMELL'ST— and smell'st so sweet Othello, iv. 2 

SilELT— as they smelt music Tempest, iv. 1 

but all the chamber smelt h\m. TimOin. of I'er. iv. 4 
smelt brown bread and garlick.il/tfnx. /or Meat. iii. 2 
and you are smelt above the moon . . Coriolanus, v. I 

to have smelt like a fool Cymbetine, ii. 1 

I found them, there I smelt them out ..Lear, iv. 6 

for this, being smelt, with that. . Itomeo S[ Juliet, ii. 3 

and smelt so? pah! E'en so, my lord .. Hnmiel, v. I 

SMir/D.ST at good duke IIumplirey'8.2He.i>!/(7. iv. 1 

SMILE— thou didst smile, infused with. Temiiesij i. i 

do nut smile at me, that I — iv. I 

enforced my heart to smile!.... TwoGen.of Ter. i. 2 

bestow thy fawning smiles on — iii. 1 

to make your grace to smile — v. 4 

quenching my familiar smile.... 7'(re(/7/i,%';;,'/i(, ii. .I 

tliy smiles become thee well — W.h 

in my presence still smiie — ii. .i 

I .vlll smile, I will do every — ii. 5 



SMILE— he will smile upon her ..TirelfiliNiglil, ii. 5 

'tis time to smile again — iii. I 

he docs smile his face into more lines — iii. 2 
if shedo, he'll smile.and take't .... — iii. 2 

he does nothing but smile — iii. 4 

why (lost thou smile 80 — iii. 4 

tluit thou thereby niay'st smile at .. — iv. 1 

an' you smile not, he's gagged — v. I 

do you not smile at this .. .Measure for .'ilemure, v. I 

Ididbntsniilu till now _ v. I 

and smile at lui man's jests Much Ado, i. 3 

if such a one will smile, and stroke .. — v. I 

teach my smiles siielr skill! Mid.A'.'sDreaw, i. 1 

and make him smile, when la fat.... — ii. I 
adliction raayoneday smile aini'm, Love' sL. Lost, i. 1 
the flower tliat smiles on every one .. — v. 2 

that smiles his clieek in years — v. 2 

enforce the pained impotent to smile — v. 2 

sliow their teeth in way of smile. ..Ucc.n/'/'em'cc, i. 1 
hears merry tales, and smiles not .... — i. 2 

with cold, I smile, and say AsiionLil<eil,n. I 

tliat for coming a-night to Jane Smile — ii. 4 

full of tears, full of smiles — iii. 2 

a scattered smile, and tliat I'll live.. — iii. 5 
favour of the king, smile upon this ..All'sU'ell, ii. 3 
pity his distress in my smiles of conifnrt — v. 2 
if you should smile, he grows. 'luninigiifSli, 1 (ind.) 
to smile at 'scapes and perils over-hlown — v. 2 
making practised smiles as in .... Winter'sTale, i. 2 

b.y sir Smile, his neighbour — i. 2 

his smiles; the very'mould and frame — ii. 3 

there's daggers in men's smiles Macbeth, ii. 3 

for tlie Mood-bolteredBanquo smiles — iv. I 

is once seen to smile — iv. 3 

but sworiis I smile at, weapons — v. 7 

troops, the king doth smile at KingJnhn, v. 2 

with the craft of smiles Ilichard 11. i. i 

her tears, and smiles in meeting .... — iii. 2 
still combating with tears and smiles — v. 2 

unto tills king of smiles \HenryIV. i. 3 

under the smile of safety i Henry 1 1', (.indue.) 

time shall serve, there shall be smiles. We/oyK. ii. 1 
and sinile upon his fingers' ends .... — ii. 3 
good-morrow with a modest smile.. — iv. (cho.) 

victors, upon us he smiles IHenry I'l. i. 2 

witli his hand, and smiles on me — i 4 

we mourn, France smiles — iv. 3 

valour makes me smile at tliee — iv. 7 

poorboj'l he smiles, metbinks — iv. 7 

whose smile and crown, like to Achilles — v. 1 
smile, gentle heaven I or strike ... .3 Henry VL ii. 3 
smiles, and says, his Edward isinstalled — iii. I 
I can smile, and murder while I smile — iii. 2 
IJeers of France should smile at that — iii. 3 
queen and mistress smiles at her news — iii. 3 
and who durst smile, when Warwick — v. 2 

speak fair, smile in men's faces Richard III. i. 3 

they smile at me, who shortly shall — iii. 4 
at my service, like enforced smiles.. — iii. 5 

sliall make me smile in Fiance — iv. 1 

smile leaven upon this fair conjunction — v. 4 
I stood not in the smile of heaven. .Ht'ioj//'///. ii. 4 
betwixt that srnile we would asjiire to — iii. i 
troops that waned upon m.v smiles.. — iii. 2 
if they smile, and say, 'twill do, I know — (epil.) 
this sigh in wrinkle of a smile . . Troilus ^ Cress, i. 1 
that makes me smile, make Hector.. — i. 2 

O, he smiles valiantly — i. 2 

as smiles upon the forehead — ii- 2 

to send their smiles before them to .. — iii. 3 
welcome ever smiles, and farewell .. — iii. 3 
you smile, and mock nie, as if I .... — iv. 2 
your thrones, and smile at Troy!.... — v. 1 1 

but rather one that smiles Tinvm of Athens, ii. 1 

then they could sinile, and fawn upon — iii. 4 

wliose dimjilcd smiles from — iv. 3 

shall enforce it with thv smile — v. S 

with a kind of smile, whicli ne'er.... Co//o/iiim.«, i. 1 

I may make the belly smile — i. 1 

senators shall mingle tears with smiles — i- 9 

the smiles of knaves tent in my — iii. 2 

bid me farewell, and smile — iv. 1 

seldom he smiles; and smiles in ..Julius C/rsar, i. 2 
could be moved to smile at anything — i. 2 

hide it in .smiles and affability — ii. I 

for, look, he smiles, and Cajsar doth — iii. I 

mothers shall but smile, when they.. — iii. I 
some, that smile, have in their hearts — iv. I 
do meet again, why we shall sinile (rpp.) — v. 1 
summer news, smile to't before .... Cymbetine, iii. 4 
being such a smile; the smile mocking — iv. 2 
in pleasing smiles such murderous. TitusAndron. ii. 4 

tlie black slave smiles upon — iv. 2 

stars that frown, lend us a smile Pericles, i. 4 

canst not smile as the wind sits Lear, i. 4 

smile you my speeches, as I — ii. 2 

Fortune goodnight: smile once more .... — ii. 2 
and rain at once; her smiles and tears .. — iv. 3 

those happy smiles [Coi.Kiif.-smilets] — iv. 3 

the grey-eyed morn smiles on ..llomeo^ Juliet, ii. 3 
60 smile the heavens upon this holy act — ii. 6 

for Venus smiles not in a house — iv. 1 

to move tlie heavens to smile upon my — iv. 3 

occasion smiles upon a second leave Hamlet, 1, 3 

may smile, and smile, and be a villain . — i. 5 
the robbed, that smiles steals something. (W/icHo, i. 3 

lose it not so long as we can smile — i. 3 

ay, smile upon her, do — ii. I 

as he shall smile, Othello shall go mad .. — iv. 1 
poor Cassio's smiles, gestures, and light.. — iv. 1 

SM ILED, and wonden d how .... Meas.forMeas. ii. 2 
whose miseries are to be smiled at. fVinter'sTute, iv. 3 

and still he smiled, and talked \Heuri/ir. i. 3 

fortune would then liave smiled? ..iHenrylK iv. 1 

and smiled to see him mangle Henry i: ii. 4 

he smiled me in the lace — iv. U 

smiled and said, the better for our. . H/c/rnrrf /f /. v. 3 
smiled at one aiiotliL-i-, and .^hnolc ..JuliusCiesar, i. 2 
Julius Ca;.ar smiled at ibeir lack ..Cymlictinr, ii. 4 
hesmiledat it; I told liiin /.<■<»■, iv. 2 



SMILING at grief Tu-elfih Mglu, ii. 1 

let it appear 111 thy smiling — ii. .'> 

bade me come smiling v. I 

then cani'st in smiling, and in such.. — v. 1 

sat smiling at his cruel prey ..Mid. N.\ Dream, ii. 3 
provokes me to ridiculous smiling. /.f3ue'jiL.Z,*>x^ iii. I 
forbid the smiling coirrtesy of love .. — v. 2 
a villain witli a smiling clieek.. ..J/c^-.o/" />«/(■/-, i. 3 

on his damned quarrel smiling Mucheih, i. 2 

I would, while It was smiling in my face — i. 7 
the marriage-bed of smiling ikucq.. King John, iii. I 
so, weeiiing, smiling, greet r thee ..liichurd 11 iii. 2 
by smiling pick-thanks, and base ..XHennj tr. iii. 2 

on a hill stood siniliiig. to behold Ue,.ry r. i. 2 

thon smiling while he knit his iHeniyl'l. ii. 2 

with smiling plenty, and fair Hicliarii III. v. 4 

I think his smiling becomes \\\m. Troilus ^ Cress, i. 2 
most smiling, smooth, detested. Timon of Athens, iii fi 
with smiling fronts encountering.. ..Coriolanus, i. G 
many lusty Romans came ^m\\'u\g.JuliusC(i'sar, ii. 2 
in wliich so many smiling Romans .. — ii. 2 
dimpled boys, like smiling Cupids. .</i/o)i!/4 Cleo. ii. 2 
comest thou smiling from the world's.. — iv. 8 

he yokes a smiling with a sigh Cymbetine, iv. 2 

thus smiling, as some fly had tickled — iv. 2 

and smiling extremity out of act Pericles, \. 1 

such smiling r(igues as these Lear, ii. 2 

of Hamlet sits smiling to my heart Hamlet, i. 2 

villain, villain, smiling, damned villain! — i. 5 
by your smiling, you seera to say so — ii. 2 

SMILINGLY revolt Coriolanus, iv. 6 

ioy and grief, burst smilingly Lear, v. 3 

SJIiL'ST thou? I sent for thee.... ■/■«v(fMAV-/i/, iii. 4 

and I will think thou smil'st kingJohji,\\\.i 

smil'st upon tJie stroke that Itomen^Jnliet, iii. 3 

SlNlIRCll-of umber sniircli my fixCK. Asy/m Lilte it, i. 3 

SMIRCHED worm-eaten tapestry ..Much Ado, iii. 3 
wlio. sinirclied thus, and mired with — iv. 1 
do. with his smirched complexion ....Henry V. iii. 3 

SMIT-have siiiit my credit .... Timon orAil'iens, ii. 1 

SMITE-I will smite his noddles.. ;i/f /)■!/"•,,•«, iii. I 

the next Cajsorion smite! Antony^ Cleo. iii. II 

[Co/.] a grief tliat smites my very .... — v. 2 
It smites me beneath the fall — v. 2 

SMlTU-plaved false with a smith. Jl/er. of I'enice, \. 2 

I saw a smith stand witli his King John, iv. 2 

here is now tlie smitli's note IHenry IT. v. 1 

and Smith the weaver 'ilienniVI. iv. 2 

SMITHFIELD-gone into Smithfield.2H,.;,'ry /;•. i. 2 
the witch in Smithficld shall be ....-.! Henry II. ii. 3 
but get you to Smithfield, and gather — iv. 4 
an army gathered togetlier in Smithfield — iv. 6 

SMOCK— toul shirts and smocks ..Merry Ifiees, iii. 5 

tliere will she sit in her smock Much A do, ii. 3 

a smock shall be your shroud , ...Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

bleach their summer smocks — v. 2 (song) 

tlie forehorse to a smock All's IVell, ii. 1 

a smock were a she-angel Winter's Tate, iv. 3 

shrives this woman to ner smock ....IHenryVi. i. 2 
your old smock brings forth a .... Antony SrClen. i. 2 
two, two; a shirt, and a smock ..Romeo ^-Juliet, ii. 4 
ill-starred wench! pale as thy smock! ..Othello, v. 2 

SMOKE— in the smoke of war TirelfhNighl, v. 1 

sweet smoke of rhetoric! Lore's!. Lm/, iii. 1 

from the smoke into the smother...^ s you /.i*e it, i. 2 

'twill fly with the smoke out at — iv. 1 

they begin to smoke ine All's Well, iv. 1 

in the dunnest smoke of hell! Macbeth, \. 5 

I'll smoke your skin-coat, an' I .. ..King John, ii. 1 

folded up iu smoke, to make a — ii. I 

fire, and smoke, and bounce — ii. 2 

smokes about the burning crest — v. 4 

so bees with smoke, and doves I Henry FI. i. 5 

for smoke, and dusky vapours — ii- 2 

smoke, and lukewarm water.. Timon of.Hhens, iii. 6 
your elosefiie predominate his smoke — iv. 3 
purple hands do reek and smoke. JuliusCirsar, iii. 1 
smoke the temple with our sacrifices. Cymbeline, v. b 
and let our crooked smokes climb to — v. 5 

whose smoke, like incense Titus.-indronicus, i. 2 

some of you shall smoke for it — iv. 2 

as fiame to smoke. Poison and treason. -/'('rtc/c*, i. 1 

that bloody knife? 'Tis hot, it smokes Lear, v. 3 

bright smoke, cold fire, sick health.Womeo fyJul. i. 1 
love is a smoke raised witli the fume — i. I 

SMOKED-smoked by old lord Lafeu. J/;'j «w;, iii. 6 
which smoked with bloody execution... Vac6e//i, i.2 

SMOKING— smoking a musty room . . Much Ado, i. 3 
their fetlocks in his smoking blood..3H**jjri/ yi. ii. 3 

faiilchion smoking in his blood Ilichard II L i. 2 

that we with smoking swords may ..Coriolanus, i. 4 

SMOKY-the mark of smoky muskets? i»'s/»V//, iii. 2 

worse than a smoky house IHenrylT. 'in. I 

to the flre-eyeu maid of smoky war.. — iv. 1 

liest thou in smoky cribs •iHenryW. iii. 1 

unlustrous as the smoky light Cymbeline, i. 7 

SMOLKIN— peace, Sraolkin; peace, thou-t'-ir, iii. 4 

S JIOOTIX— is not more smooth Tutlflh Siglit, i. 4 

with such a smooth, discreet — iv. 3 

true love never did run ^moo\.\\.Mid.N.'sUream, i. I 

in thy sleek smooth head — iv. I 

tlie show oCsnioutli civility Asyou Like it, ii. 7 

politic with iiiv IVieiiil. i-mooth with — v. 4 

smootli, iinaiit to toil and trouble. J'nmiiigr.r-s'Ar. v. 2 
to smooth the ice. or add another ..King John. iv. 2 
to smooth liis fault I should have ..lliiiiard II. i. 3 

snioutli and welcome news I Henry IT. i. 1 

hath been smooth as oil. soft as — i. 3 

bring smooth comforts false .. ..2/// nrylT. (indue.) 
to master Smooth's the silknian .... — ii- 1 

and wears his boot very smooth — ii. 4 

how smooth and even they ilo bear . . Henry I', ii. 2 
ev cry rub is smooth on our way .... — ii. 2 

and my condition is not smooth — v. 2 

and smooth my way upon their 2Henryl'l. i. 2 

smooth runs the water, where the .. — iii. 1 
to light in smooth duke Humphrey.. — iii. 1 

and ,~nio..tb iln- iVowiiBofvar iHenryfl. ii. B 

his tillr. ;.iriooib> the wrinig — iii- 1 

\m,\ luii's it, in this tinuolh diM'.oitrsu — iii. 3 



SltOOTII— in men's fiiocs, smooth ..Riclinrdlll.i. 3 
liis grace looks cheerfully and smooth — ?!!•■* 
so smooth he (laiibcd his vice with .. — iii. 5 
the sea bcin;; sniootli, how many. Tinilus ^Crefs. i. 3 
most jinilin2,smoot!i, detested. Timon nfAil-.ens, iii. e 
swell- with "stuff so fine and smooth — v. 1 

pmootli success he stre" cd before. J;i(nn]/ ^Clen. i. .1 

for 1 can smooth, and fill TiluxA'<ilroulcns,\v. 4 

yield to his humour, sniootli and speak — v. 2 

iiot to strike, but smooth Pericles, \. 2 

smooth every passion, that in tlienatures.Irar, ii. 2 
to smooth tliat rough touch witli. liomeo ^Juliet,]. 5 
■wliut tongue shall sniootb thy name — ui. 2 
loathsome crust, all my smooth body . . Ilamtel, i. 5 
to bear all smootli and even, this sudden — iv. 3 
he hath a person, and a smooth dispose. .0(/ici(o, i. 3 
and smooth as monumental alalmster . . — v. 2 
SMOOTHED brow, it doth appear . . 1 Hemy ri. iii. 1 
hat]\ smoothed his wrinkledfront . . Hichaid III. i. 1 
is smoothed bv tliat below ....Timott qf Athens, iv. 3 

S.MOOTH-FACED wooers say Lme'sL. Lost, v. 2 

tliat smooth-faced gentleman Khig Jo/171, ii. 2 

to come with smooth-faced peace ..Itkhard III. v. 4 

SMOOTHING words bewitch 'iHetiryll.i. 1 

\Col.Kiii.'] sweet smootliing word ..lliclmrd HI. 1. 2 

SMOOTHLY— yet r\m smootldy in ...Miirh.ido.v. 2 

when it comes so smoothly off . . I.nrc's L. I.nxi, i v. 1 

SMOOTHNESS, her very silence ..A^ynuLikeU. i. 3 

that nKT. i;ive it snio.ithueis Handel, iii. 2 

SM'HiTII-PATlCSdo n.uv wear iUninjIV. i. 2 

SMi lOTirST it so with kin;; and iHe,ir!/l'l. ii. I 

sSuhiTH-TOXGUi:, Sinvuifli-pouch.lHf/.r;/;/"". ii.4 

t-MOTE-;hat they smote the- air Tewpesl, iv. 1 

rays have smote the night o( dew . Lorf'sL. Lost, iv. 3 
«;diles smote? ourselves resisted I ..Conolinms.iu. I 
he smote the sledded Polackon tire ice. . Uamlel, i. 1 

dog, and smote him-thus Olhello, v. 2 

SMOTHER her spirits up VuchAdo,\v. 1 

from tlie .= nicke into the smother. .^Isi/ok Like it, 1. 2 

to smother up his beauty from \ lleiiry If. i. 2 

to smother up the English in our Heniy f. iv. 5 

ne'er so cunningly you smother it.. 1H»»i!//7. iv. 1 

let's smotlier my damned son Richard III. iy. 4 

grows worse, tosmother it Pericles, i. 1 

SSlOTHERED in errors Comedynf Errors, m. 2 

that function is smothered in surmise ...'dacbnth, i 3 
smothered it within my iianting ..Uichard III. i. 4 
the vapour of my glory smothered .. — iii. 7 
we smothered the most replenished . . — iv. 3 

smotbered in their dusky graves — iv. 4 

son, that thy two sweet sons smothered — iv. 4 
dream on thv cousins smothered in.. — T. 3 
winihiwf, are smothered up, leads filled.. CnWo/. ii. 1 

s:\loTIlEUIXGofthe6ense Cyyiibeline, in. 2 

SMl't-i-thut used to come sosmug.il/o-. ofl'enice, iii. 1 

here tlie smug and silver Trent .. ..XUetiry II'. iii. 1 

Col. Kn'.t bravely, like a smug bridegroom. Leor, iv. 6 

SilUTCilED tliy nose? they say .. ninin'sTale, i. 2 

SXAiFLE vou may pace easy AnlonyfyCleo, ii. 2 

SNAIL, do no offence Mid.N.'sDream, ii. 3 (song) 

tlie tender horns of cockled snails. '^oi-e'.<i.ios;,iv. 3 
creeping like snail nnwillii. <ly ..As .jouLike it, ii. 7 
ofasnnil. Of a snail? Ay, r a snail — iv. I 
thou snail, thou slug, thou s '! . . Comedy of Bit. ii. 2 

why a snnilhas a house Lear, i. 5 

SNA'ILt-PACED beggary Richard lll.iv.z 

snail-paced Ajax arm for s\\tirae.Truilus ^- Cress, v. 5 

SNAIL-SLOW in profit Merch.ofl'enice. ii. 5 

S?^AKE throws her enamelled ..Mid N.'sDreum, ii. 2 
you sjmtted snakes, with double — ii. 3 (song) 
exitsliall be strangling a snake .. Love'sL.Losl, v. 1 

now thou erushest the snake! — v. 1 

hath made thee a tame snake AsyouLiUeil, iv. 3 

a green and gilded snake had wreathed — iv. 3 
wo ha\'e scotched th ' snake, not killed. jVacdc/A, iii. 2 

fillet of a fenny s-^.*e — iv. 1 

snakes, in my he<trt-blood warmed. flic/iajd II. iii. 2 

with fell Alecto's snake 2 Henry IV.v.b 

as the snake, rolled in a flowering. ..2Hcn);/r/. iii. ! 

Tou but warm the starved snake — iii. 1 

like a fury crowned witlisnakes..iln;ony 4- Cleo. ii. 5 

a cistern for scaled snakes! — ii. .') 

snake lies rolled in the cheerful .. Titus Andron. ii. 3 

a tliousand liissing snakes — ii. 3 

as fnizen water to a starved snake — iii. 1 

SNAKY golden locks Merchant of fenice, iii. 2 

SNAP— brief, sliort. (inick, snap ..Merry 11 ires, iv. S 

"lip, snap, quick and home Love's L. Lost. v. 1 

of nature, but I may snap at him ..iHenryir. iii. 2 

iiTAPPED off with two old men MuchAdo. v. 1 

SNAPPEU-UP of unconsidered ..Winter's I'nle, iv. 2 

SNARE the nimble marmozet Tempest, n. 2 

that fled the snares of watchful Macbeth, v. 7 

Where's Snare. O lord (rep.) 'iHenrylf. ii. 1 

yea, good master Snare (rpp.) — ii. 1 

otHces, master Fang, and master Snare — ii. I 

the snares of war to' tangle thee 1 Henry VI. iv. 2 

■with sorrow snares relenting iHenryVl.'xu. 1 

by snares, by aubtility, sleeping — iii. 1 

weaves tedious snares to trap — iii. 1 

fall, I fear, our foes the snare., r/moii or Athens, v. 3 

world's great snare uncaught? .. Antony >< Cleo. '\v 8 

S.NAKED'— have snared tlie shepherd.2Hcnry;-'/. ii. 2 

until thy foot be snared — ii.4 

SXARL— snarl, and bite, and play....3If6'iinyF/. v. 6 
SXAHLETH in the geutle eves of.... AViis-.fo/m, iv. 3 
SN,\RLING— were you snarling all../(iV/iai'/ III. i. 3 
SNATCH— at their apparel 6Patch..Jl/iy. A'.<Dr. iii. 2 
to snatch words from my tonguc.Iot'i'jL. ;,os(. v. 2 
as now again to snatch our palm ..King John, iii. 1 

snatch at his master that doth — iv. 1 

nay, do not snatch it from me ..TroiliisACress. v. 2 
snatch 'em up, as we take bares. /Iii/oh!/ <S- Cleo. iv. 7 
snatch some hence for little faults ..' vinlieline, v. 1 
certain snsitch or so would serve.. TilusAndron. ii. 1 

and snatch them straJL'lit away? Pericles, iii. I 

fromliuaven, and fiends will siiateh at it.OMc.'/o,v. 2 

S.\". '.■!'•; II ED one h-ilf out of ....TteelfthNight.'in. 4 

ol il -leii, lady, was foully snatehed../IH'.'iHV», v. 3 

Jrori/iiy liugersiiatchcd thatriug.Co/neti!/ of Err. v. 1 



SNATCHED with an unruly hand . . King John, iii. 4 
resolutely snatched on Monday night. I Hcnn// /[. i. 2 
an lionnur snatched with boisterons.2n™ri/;»'. iv. 4 
death liath snatched mv husband.. Wc/iri><( ///. ii. 2 
SNATCHEKS only, but fearthc main. .//'■nit//', i. 2 
SNATCHES— me your snatches. . Meas.forMens. iv. 2 
pale fire she snatches from the sun Timon ofAth. iv. 3 
snatches in his voice, and burst of.. Cymhetine, iv. 2 

she chanted snatches ofold tunes Hamlet, iv. 7 

SNATCHING— they'll be snatching Lear, i. 4 

SNE^VK not away, sir, for the Meas.for Meas. v. 1 

if thou canst fin'd out Sneak's noise.. 2 Henri//'', ii. 4 

SNEAK-ClIP-a sneak-cup IHenii/;;'. iii. 3 

SNEAKING-sneakinghome — iv. 3 

the weasel .Scotcomes sneaking Henry!', i. 2 

sneaking fellow comes yonder?, . Troilns ^ Cress, i. 2 

SNEAP witliont replv 2Henryn'.u. I 

SNEAPING frost, that bites Love's L. Lost, i. I 

no sneaping winds at home H'inirr'sTale, i. 2 

SNECK [Coi.-snick] up! Tuelfih Kighi, ii. 3 

SNIP— tune, but a snijj, and away. Love'sL.Lost, iii. 1 
of\yit; snip snap, quick and home .. — _v. 1 
here's snip, and nip, and cut .... TamingofSh. iv. 3 

SNIPE— with such a snipe, hut for Othello, i. 3 

SNIFT-TAFFETA fellow there All'sWell, iv. 5 

SNORE— thou dost snore distinctly Tempest, ii. I 

there's meaning in thy snores — ii- 1 

tl'.e heavy ploughman snores ..Mid.N.'sDreain, v. 2 
sleep and snore, and rend appareLUcr. of I'enice.ii. b 

do mock their charge with snores Macbeth, 'u. 2 

snore out tlic watcii of n>ght iHenryll'.'yy. 4 

weariness can snore upon the flint.. C7/m(;(-(/«f, iii. 6 

but snores, the liouse about Pericles, iii. (Gowcr) 

SNORING— here do snoring \ie..Tempesi, ii. I (song) 

SNORTING like a horse MlcurylV. ii. 4 

arise; awake the snorting citizens with .Olhello, i. 1 
SNOUT the tinker (jep. iv. \).. ..Mid.N.'sDream, i. 2 

that I, one Snout by name — v. 1 

SNOW 11 pon my heart Tempest, iv. 1 

kindle fire with snow TiroGen.of I'erona, ii. 7 

kissing-comfits, and snow eringoes.il/frj y Wires, v. 5 
high Taurus' snow, fanned with., J/id.A'.'sDr. iii. 2 

melted as doth the snow, seems — iv. 1 

hot ice. and wondrous strange snow — y. 1 

iban wisli a snow in May's Love'sL.Lost, i. I 

and birds sit brooding iu the snow _ v. 2 (song) 
't'.veen snow and fire, as ...Merchant of 7'enice,iii. 2 

dare not sliake the snow from All's Well, iv. 3 

as \vbite as driven snow.. Winter'sTale, iv. 3 (song) 
or the fanned snow, that's bolted — — iv. 3 

winter's drizzled snow Comedy of Errors,v. 1 

will seem as pure as snow Macbeth, iv. 3 

or, as a little snow, tumbled King John, iii. 4 

wallow naked in December snow Ilichardll. i. 3 

O, that I were a mockery king of snow — iy. 1 

as doth the melted snow upon Henry V. iii. 5 

cold snow melts with the sun's ....iHenryl'l. iii. 1 

right, as snow in harvest Richard III. i. 4 

stTmuch cold as over shoes in snow? — i. 4 

doth thaw tlie consecrated snow. TjmoiTo/^'/i. iv. 3 

bv the frost from purest snow Coriolanus, v. 3 

v'hen snow the pasture sheets Antony z^- Cleo. i. i 

as chaste as imsnnned snow Cymhetine, '\\. b 

warm tears I'll melt the !.no\v Titus .-tndTonicvs, iii. 1 

snow to their colder moods Lear, ii. 2 

between her forks presageth snow — iv. 6 

than new snow on a raven's backBo:»eo SrJnVet, iii. 2 
as pure as snow, thou shall not escape. //«>Kif(, iii. 1 

to wash it white as snow? — iii. 3 

his shroud as the mountain snow — iv. 5 (song) 
his beard was as white as snow .. — iv. 5 (song) 

that whiter skin of hers than snow Olhello, v. 2 

SNOW-BALLS for pills to cool . .Merry Wives, iii. 5 

sent him away as cold as a snow-ball .Pericles, iv. 6 

SNOW-BROTil; one wlio never.. il/ens. for Meas. i. 5 

SNOW-WHITE pen the ..Love'sL.Lost, i. 1 (letter) 

snow-white hand of the most beauteous — iy. 2 

from your snow-white goodly steed.. Titus And. ii. 3 

SNOWY dove trooping Romeo ^i- Juliet, i. 5 

SNUFF— it is already in snuff ..Mid.N.'sDream. v. I 

the light, by taking it in snuff Love'sL.Lost. v. 2 

to be Ihe sii'uft' of younger spirits All's Well, i. 2 

took it in snuff': and still he smiled.. 1 Hciiri/M'. i. 3 

'tis I must snuff it; then out it Henry VI 1 1, iii. 2 

and solace i' the dungeon by a gnus'!. Cymbeline, i. 7 

in snuffs and packings of the dukes Lear, iii. 1 

my snuff,-and loathed part of nature — iv. 6 

a kind of wick, or snuff, that will Hamlet, iv. 7 

SNUFFED up love by smelling ..Love'sL.Lost, iii. 1 
SNUG the joiner (ipp. iii. 1 4- v. \).Vid.N.'sDream,i.2 

SOAKS up the king s countenance Hamlet, iv. 2 

SOAKED in mercenary blood Henry V. iv. 7 

SOAKING, will draw in more Winter'sTale,i.2 

sink, and soaking in, drown the. rt'/us ylndroji. iii. 2 

SOAR above the morning lark. Jam. o/S/i. 2 (indue.) 

how high a pitch his resolution soars/('c/ii?i/ //. i. I 

I soar, I am a hawk Henry F. iii. 7 

the kite soar with unbloodied beak ?.2Hfj/>y;'/. iii. 2 
who else would soar above the v'lew.JuliusCrrsar, i. 1 

and soar with them above a Romeo 4r Juliet, i. 4 

to soar with his light feathers — i. 4 

S(5aRING insolence shall teach ....Coriofaiins, ii. 1 

to west on wing soaring aloft Cymbeline, v. 5 

SOB— sobs, beats her lieart MuchAdo, ii. 3 

ICol.i aivcB them a sob, and 'rests. Comei/i/ of Err. iv. 3 

made pause, to sob, and weep Ricliard III. i. 2 

and swore, with sobs that be would labour — i. 4 
crack my clear voice with sobs. Troilus 6-Cress. iv. 2 
wi-etched sister sobs and weeps . . TilusAndron. iii. 1 

SOBBING deer AsyouLikeit, ii. 1 

SOBER judgment MuchAdo. i, 1 

let them alone till they are solier — — iii. 3 
when he is sober; and most . Merchant of Venice, i. 2 

if I do not put on a sober habit — ii. 2 

enter my sober bouse. — ii. b 

but some sober brow will bless it — iii. 2 

speak'st thou in sober meanings .. Js.i/oi;I,i7,fi7, v. 2 

disguised in sober robes, to old TamingofSh. i. 2 

s'r, vou seem a sober ancient gentleman — y.\ 
sober virtue, years, and modesty . Co/iiedy of Err. iii. I 



SOBER- with sober speed will follow.2 Hen n/ 7 T. iv. 3 
Biicli sober and unnoted passion .Timon of Ath. iii. 5 
Brutus, this soiier form ot'yciMr3..Jnliiisi:trstir, iv. 2 
cluistised with the sober eye of ..Antony^f'leo.v.2 

that's but a queen, fair, sober, wise Hamlet, iii. 4 

SOBER-BLOODED boy doth not ..2llenryl r. iv. 3 
SOBERLY did mounta termogant./in'o7ij/ /i Cleo. i. b 

SOBER-SUITED matron Romeo ^Jnlict, iii. 2 

SOBRIETY-behaviour and sobriety Taming of Sh. i. 1 
the sobriety of it, and the modesty ..HeuiyV.'w. 1 

SOCIABLE to the show of tliine Tempest, v. 1 

and too sociable for your eon version. .A'iHg-/o/in, i. 1 
do glue tliemselves in sociable grief — iii. 4 

can be not be sociable? Troilus Sr Ctessida, ii. 3 

is no comfort to one not sociable . . Cymbeline, iv. 2 
now art thou sociable, now a,rt..Potneo 4- Juliet, ii. 4 
SOCIETIES— my wild societies ..Merry If ires, Vu. 4 
to make societies secure . . Measure for Measure, iii. 2 
be abhorred all feasts, societies .. Timon of Ath, iv. 3 
tliat he enchants societies unto h'\m.. Cymbeline, i. 7 
SOCIETY— of her society be not afraid. Tempest, iv. 1 
abjure for ever the society of men.. il//d.iV.'s/)r.i. 1 

I beseech your society cp.) Love's L. Lost, iv. 2 

the corner-cap of society, the shape.. — iv. 3 

in love's grief desir'st society — iv. 3 

tliank you too for your society . . As you Like it, iii. 2 
leave,- the society, which in the boorish — v. 1 
abandon the society of this female.... — v. I 
made separate of their society .... tf'inier'sTale, i. 1 
the societ.v, amity too, of 3'our brave — v. I 
to mnke society the sv eeter welcome. il/ac!<e'A, iii. 1 
ourself will mingle with society .... — iii. 4 

but this is worshipfid society King John, i. ! 

rude society as thou art matched ..I Henryl V. iii. 2 
with the participation of society. ...2;/cnf!/'/'. v. 1 

if sorrow can admit society Richard III. iv. 4 

they are a sweet society of fair ones.HenryVlll. i. 4 
an' 3'ou begin to rail on society.. Timon of.-lihens, i. 2 
our society with thankfidness .. — iii. 6 (grace) 
that their society, as their friendship — iv. 1 

society is no comfort to one not Cymbeline, iv. 2 

shunned my abhorred society Lear, v. 3 

may be put; from her by society. /'ojjieo ^Juliet, iv. I 

of very soft society, and great sho^^'in^.. Hamlet, v. 2 

SOCK-smocks, socks, foul stockings. il/er»i/ Wires, iii. 5 

SOCRATES— as Socrates' Xantippe.'/'amijig-o/S/i.i. 2 

SOD — twice sod simplicity Love'sL.Lost, iv. 2 

SODDEN— can sodden water, a drench. H?«>7/ r. iii. 5 
sodden businessl there's a stewed. rroi/.<5 Cress, iii. 1 

thev are so pitifully sodden Pericles, iv. 3 

SODDEN- AVITTED lordl ....Troilus^Cressida.'u. 1 

SOE'ER— tongue soe'er speaks false ., KingJolm, iv. 3 

how mean soe'er, that have their ....Cymbeline, i. 7 

what villany soe'er I bid thee do .... — iii. 5 

what god soe'er it be Titus Andronicus, v. 1 

how strange or odd soe'er I bear mj'self H/im/f(, i. 5 

SOEVER— what complexion soever.il/errj/'ivrM, iv. 2 

of what validity and pitch soever. .Tu-elflh Night, i. 1 

how low soever the matter, I hope. Lore '.■. L. Lost, i. I 

of what degree soever, with his Richard III. i. I 

whose hands soever lanced their — iv. 4 

liow rank soever rounded in.. Troilus ^Cressida, i. 3 

how in my words soever she be shent. . Ilani/e', iii. 2 

soever rCn/.-soe'tr K;i/. -business ever]. .0//ie//o, iii. 3 

SO- FORTH— Sieilia is a so-forth ..Winler'sfale, i. 2 

a dish of caraways, and so-forth 2llenrylV. v. 3 

(videlicet, a brothel), or so-forth Hamlet, ii. 1 

SOFT— soft, sir; one word more Tempest, i. 2 

of whose soft grace, for the — v. I 

and liis soft couch defile Merry Wires, i. 3 

not too fast: soft! soft! TwelflhNiglit,i. b 

by your leave, wax. Soft! {rep.") .... — ii. 5 
so tar beneath your soft and tender.. — y. 1 

than the soft myrtle Measitre forMcasure, ii. 2 

for we are soft as our complexions ,. — ii 4 
dost fear the soft and tender fork ... . — iii. 1 
but soft and low, remember now .... — iv. 1 
thronging soft and delicate desires,... ilfHc/i.-l(/o, i. 1 

but, soft you, let be — v. I 

solt and fair, friar: which is Beatrice? — V. 4 
but soft; what nymphs are these?. .il/i'd. A'. ".■! Or. iv. 1 

soft; whither away so fast? Love'sL.Lost,'\v.3 

love's feeling is more soft, and sensible — iv. 3 

soft, let us see; write. Lord have — v. 2 

but soft; how many months do . . Mer. of Venice, i. 3 
I'll not be made a soft and dull-eyed — iii. 3 

beds be made as soft as yours — iv. I 

soft! the .Tew shall have all {rep.).... — iv. 1 
soft stillness, and the night, become — v. 1 

soft! comes he not here? AsyouLikeit, 'iii. 2 

and sleep as soft as captain shall .... All's Well, iv. 3 
with soft low tongue . . Taming nfShrexr, 1 (indue.) 
I feel soft things; upon my life .. — 2 (indue.) 
witli gentle conference, soft, and affable — ii. 1 

soft, son! Sir, bj' your leave — iv. 4 

but, soft! what company is — iv. 5 

why are our bodies soft, and weak .. — v. 2 
but tliat our soft conditions, and our — y. 2 
you may ride us, with one soft kiss. Winter's Tale, i. 2 
this hand, as soft as dove's down .... — iv. 3 
soft, swain, a while, 'beseech you .... — iv. 3 

but that death is too soft for him — iv. 3 

but soft! (_rep. iii. 1 and iv. V. Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

O soft, sir, hold you still — iii. 2 

windy breatli of soft petitions KingJohn,'\\. 2 

to tlie tears of soft remorse — iv. 3 

but soft, but see, or rather Richard II. v. 1 

smooth as oil, soft as young \ Henry IV. i. 3 

but, soft, I pray you (r/-/;. ii. 1 and V. 4) — i. 3 
nature's soft nurse, how have I ....2HenrylV. iii. 1 
in your power, soft silencing your.. .. — v. 2 
toiicli her soft mouth, and march .... Henry r. ii. 3 

and lives, to thy soft mercy — iii. 3 

a good soft pillow for that good white — iy. 1 

but, soft! I tliiidc she comes 'IHenryVI. ii. 4 

women are soft, mild, pitiful 3/Jtnry/'/._i. 4 

and this soft coiinige makes your.... — ii. 2 

should not deal in her soft laws — iii. 2 

or Edward's soft and pitiful Richard III. i. 3 

but soft, here come my executioners — i. 3 



SOFT! hewnkes. Strike. No Illcliayd 111. i.i 

m>tt. I ilid but iliTiim — v. » 

tlie caiuicitv nf vonr soil ihovcril ..Uenryl'lU. ii. 3 
wliu.li,- Kurt si'i/.iux- iIk' rvKia't's .. 7Vui7n3 "<!<->''"• >■ 1 
till.' Imul and Mit'l. stem' ull iitniiea .. — i. 3 

siit't iiiliincy, tlmt ii.itliicig i-uiiit — ii. 2 

ami give lis siii't lUtm-liniuiit ti) — iv. '.' 

yet, 8()ft: Ileetor, I tiiku my k'uvi.' .. — v. :l 
soft! Iiure conic slcL'\i.'. and t'otlier .. — v. 1 
Bott. taki' lliv phv.Mi' llrst .. . . /•iinoii q/'.-l//.fii.», iii. U 

niiiko si.l't ihy tiviu'liaiitsword — iv. 3 

whoso i-nlV iu'iiiicssion interprets .... — v. 5 

suit; whoiMmcs liori.'i' Cori'olamu, i. 1 

wlicii sled L'lwvs soft ii3 the parosite's — i. 9 

liast nut thu soft way, which — iii. 2 

but. sull, I plav von (rep. iii. 1) JulhisCrPSar, i. 2 

lur tlic luve ol'T.ovc, and her soft.. .•l)i(o»!/.S-f/<?o. i. I 

til sufi and sicntlc spfuoh — ii. 2 

put't, Cic-iar. Nu, lA'pidiia. let him sycak — ii. 2 

the liL-iIsi' the cast iii-u soft — ii. G 

our smse in soft and delicate I..ethe — ii. 7 

as soft as air. as gentle — v. 2 

soft, soft; we'll no defence Cymheline, iii. ■) 

but, soft! no bedfellow (rep.) — iv. 2 

in fresh cups, soft beds, sweet words — y. 3 

a stone is soft as wax, tribunes.. Titus Andron, iii. I 

soft I sec how Imsily she turns — iv. 1 

soft; wlio comes hercV Good-morrow — iv. 2 
but, soft, methinks, I do digress .... — v. 3 
soft, here lie conies: I must dissemble. /'erii;(e.5,ii. 5 

soft, soft! it smells most sweetly — iii. 2 

so well as soft and tender flattery — iv. ■! (Gow.l 

her voice was ever soft, gentle Lear, v. 3 

soft, I willgo aloniij an ifvou../J»m«o<S-./iii«e', i. I 
but, soft! w-iiat light through yonder — ii. 2 

but, soft: what day is this? — jii. 4 

soft, take me with yon, take me ... . — iii. 5 
stratagems upon so soft a subject.... — iii. 5 

but, soft; bcholdl (rcpA.h) llamUI,\.\ 

soft vou, now! the fair Ophelia — iii. I 

soft;' now to my mother,— O heart — iii. 2 

be suft. as sinews of the new-born — iii. 3 

but soft, what noise? (rep. V. I) — iv. 2 

soft, let me see; we'll make — iv. 7 

of very soft society, and great showing . . — v. 2 

rKIl^Jwitl\ the soft phrase of peace Othello, i. 3 

have not t'nose soft parts of conversation — iii. 3 

O come in, Emilia: soft, by and by — v. 2 

soft you; a word or two, before you go . . — V. 2 
SOFT-CONSCIENCED men can ha ..Cnrmlamis, i. 1 

SOFTEN steel and stones TwoGen.o/Fernnn, iii. 2 

by your fair prayer to soften .... Mea.i.forMeas. i. 5 

as seek to soften that Mer.of Venice, iv. 1 

how he mav soften at the sight . . Winter's Tnle, ii. 2 

that grief softens the mind 2 Henry I' J. iv. 4 

Cleopatra, soften thy waned lipI..-lii/oii!/ .5^ Clen. ii. 1 

SOFXENED valour's steel Romeo tfJuliel. iii. 1 

tears fell from her, and softened. 0(/i(-//o, iv. ;i (song) 

SOFTER and sweeter t\\a.n.. Taming of Sh. i (indue.) 

no lady of more softer bowels . . Ttoiitts <S- Ciesx. ii. 2 

with no softer cushion than Cor iota n us, v. 3 

SOFTEST— the frailest and softest.. Jii/n" Like ;/, iii. 6 

their softest touch, as smart as 2 Henri/ ('/. iii. 2 

softest music to attending earsl .. llomeo Sr Juliet, ii. 2 

SOFT-HEARTED wretch! 'IHennjVL iii. 2 

like soft-hearted women here 3He«;y F/. ii. 3 

SOFTLY— tread softlv [rep.) Tempest, iv. 1 

something in me,— Softly ! Twelfih .Vi^A(, ii. 5 

so you walk softly, and loolt sweetly. .VucA .uto, ii. 1 

bleat softly then, the butcher Love's L. L. v. 2 

though he go as softly as foot can..J-« yon Like it. iii 2 

softly, my masters! if you be TamingofSlt. i. 2 

softlv and swiftly, sir; for the priest — v. 1 

I will tell it softly: yon crickets.. H-'inier'sTafe, ii. I 

O, good sir, softly, good sir — iv. 2 

and pace softly towards my kinsman's — iv. 2 
epeak softly; yonder, as I think.. Comcrfy of Err. v. 1 
some other chamber: softly, pray ..2Heiin/ "'• iv. 4 

speak softly; or the loss i Henry VI. i. 1 

softly, gentle Patience Henry I' III. iv. 2 

speak your griefs softly Julius Ccesar, i v. 2 

Octavius lead your battle softly on .. — v. 1 
speak softly, wake her not . . Ajiloiiy dj- Cleoputra. y. 2 

thus did softly press the rushes Cymbeline, ii. 2 

pray .you walk softly, do not heat .... I'erieles, iv. I 

go softly [A'n/. -safely] on Hamlet, iv. 1 

PiiFTLY-SPRIGHTED man Merry trim r., i. 4 

^' IFTNESS of prosperity Timon of Alliens, v. 1 

y JIIj— free from touch or soil .... Mcas.for.Mens.^ v. 1 

as great a soil in the new gloss Much .icio, iii. 2 

soil of his fair virtue's gloss {rep.^.Love'sL.Losi, ii. 1 
of terra, the soil, the laud, the earth.. — iv. 2 
the soil, the profit and this kind. .Asyou Like it, ii. 4 

flesh his spirit in a warl'ike soil Kirig John, v. 1 

sweet soil, adieu: m^ mother Richard II. i. 3 

suck the soil's fertility from wholesome — iii. 4 

the thirsty Erinnys of tliis soil \HenrylV. i. 1 

of "aoh soil betwixt that Uolmedon.. — i. 1 

the fattest soil to weeds 'ZllenrylV. iv. 4 

for all the soil of the achievement .. — iv. i 

renounce your soil, give sheep llhnryVI. i. 5 

as I have of fertile England's soil iHenryVl. i. I 

Jiere's the lord of the soil come to seize — iv. 10 
discontented steps in foreign soil ..Richard III. iv. 4 

honour heaven shield from soil! Henry VIII. i. 2 

1 would have the soil of lier fair. Troilw, 4 Cress, ii. 2 
done, iiriuce, that can soil our mothers? — v. 2 
nor did he soil the fact with .. Timon of Athens, iii. 5 
which give some soil, perhaps, to . .Julius Ctrsar, i. 2 
no way excuse his soils rCoi.-foils].,-l7i/oriy<S-C/''ff. i. 4 
must not soil [Cul. -foil] the precious. C'ymMiiif, ii. ! 
now no soil, nor cautel, doth besmirch.. Wrti«/ei, i. 3 
with swinish phrase, soil our addition .. — i. 4 
SOILEIJ— earth should not be soiled ..iiioAard //. i. 3 
or have mine honour soiled with .... — iv. 1 

when we have soiled them TroilusSf Cretsidn, ii. 2 

the fitchew, nor the soiled horse /.car, iv.fi 

a thing a little soiled i' the working Hamtel, ii. 1 

S^OU/UllE-.seruple of her 6oilurc.7'roi7ii«<5- Ci "ii. iv. 1 
SOJOUKN till our corouiition? ....llicfiard 11 1, ii'i. 1 



— iv. 7 



SOJOURN— he is to sojourn Cywbeline, i. 5 

court have made their amorous sojourn ..Lear,], 1 
iftliev cume to sujinirn at my house .... — ii. 1 

yuu will return and hujcnini with my — ii- 4 

Bujonrii in Mantua; I'll thidMit.Romro ^ Juliet, '\u.Z 

S(),JOUIi,N El) there? Tmiden.ot Verona, iv. 1 

hut, as guest-wise, sojourned Mid..\.'>l>r. iii. 2 

and in the mean-time sojourned Kin^John i. I 

SD.IOIIRNER— report what a 6ojourner./'c;/c/c.<. iv. 3 

.SOlj— the glorious planet, Sol Troilus ^- Cress, i. 3 

SOLACE - strange pastime solace. . Love'sL. l.oi.l, iv. 3 
sorrow would solace, and miue age,.2iiejir!/r/. ii. 3 

fled all my worldly solace — iii. 2 

sickly land might solace as before. . Richard III. ii. 3 
hazards still have been your solace .Ciiiio/niiKv, iv I 

solace i' the dungeon by a snufl'i' Cymbeline, i. 7 

one thing to rejoice and solace in. Ronieo^- Juliet, iv. 5 

SOLX>— and wives are sold by fate . . Merry tVives, v. 5 

the boy hath sold him a bargain., tone's L. Lost, iii. 1 

the thing is to be sold AsyouLikeit, ii. 4 

you have sold your own lands — iv. I 

sold [/C/i/.-hold] a goodly manor i'or..An'sWell, iii. 2 
1 have sold all my trumpery .... Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

to be so bought and sold Comedy of Errors, iii. 1 

the feast is sold, that is not Uac(yc//i, iii. 4 

have sold their fortunes at their .... KinnJohn, ii. 1 
you are bought and sold — y.i 

foods are all distrained, and sold ..Richard II. ii. 3 
now not how they sold themselves.2Hcji)r/;/'. iy. 3 

you would have sold your king to Henry V. ii. 2 

and sold it for three-halfpence — iii- 2 

think, I had sold my farm to buy — v. 2 

from bought and sold lord Talbot ..IHcnryVI. iv. 4 

and sold their bodies for — y. 4 

lands are bargained for and sold 2 Henry VI. i. 1 

Anjou and Maine were sold to France — iv. I 
pedlar's daughter, and sold many laces — iv. 2 
seven half-penny loaves sold for a penny — 
the lord Say, which sold the towns 

I sold not ilaine, I lost not 

have sold their lives unto the house.3H£iiri/ VI. v. 1 
master is bought and sold . . Richard II I. v. ii (scroll) 
bought and sCiid among those of. Troilus <S Cies^. ii. 1 

let all my land be sold Timon of Athens, li. 2 

he sold the blood and labour of Coriolanas, v. 6 

hast sold me to this novice .... Antony ^Cleu. iv. 10 
to the Roman boy she hath sold me.. — iv. 10 

of things that merchants sold — v. 2 

the one may be sold or given Cywhellne, i. b 

diseases have been sold dearer I'ericles, iv. 6 

and, though 1 am sold, not yet. .Borneo ^ Juliet, iii. 2 
sell thee poison, thou hast sold me none — v. 1 

ranker rate, should it be sold in fee Hamlet, iv, 4 

by the insolent foe, and sold to slavery.. 0(/ip(/o, i. 3 

I'd not have sold her for it — v. 2 

SOLDAT— car cesoldat icy est dispose. Hc7iryr. iv. 4 
SOLDER— solder up the rift.^ ntony ^ Clrupuira, iii. 4 
SDLDER'ST close imiiossibilities.. TimonvfAih. iv. 3 
SULUIER-woo you like a soldier. 7'<coGe;( of I'cr. v. 4 
if the love of a soldier can. .Werri/ Wives, ii. 1 tlettcr) 
you were good soldiers, and tall .... — ii. 2 

money is a good soldier, sir — ii. 2 

as he is a gentleman and a soldier. TwelfthNight, iii. 4 
come, my young soldier, put up .... — iy. 1 
there'snotasoldierof usall.il/«'su?e/oril/ea; - ' " 
I never heard any soldier dislike it.. — 
which in the soldier is flat blasphemy — 

Frederick, the great soldier, who — 

a scholar, a statesman, and a soldier — 

food soldier too, lady. And a (rep.) ..MuchAdo, i. 1 
looked upon her witii a soldier's e.ye - i. 1 

like an honest man, and a soldier — ii. 3 

like Pharaoh's soldiers in the — lii. 3 

as it is base for a soldier to love ..Love's L.Losi, i. 2 

and, soldiers, to the field! — iv. 3 

a soldier, a man of travel, that — v. 1 

centlemeu, and soldiers, pardon me.. — V. 2 
and I will right myself like a soldier — y. 2 
a scholar, and a soldier, that. /l/crcAan(o/'/Vni'cc, i. 2 

a soldier, ftiU of strange oaths AsyouLike it. ii. 7 

nor the soldier's, which is ambitious — iv. I 

you have some stain of soldier in All'sWcll, i. \ 

after well-entered soldiers, to return — u. I 
your lordship thinks not him a soldier 
between two soldiers and ray young 
and to be a soldier? Sucli is his noble 

and to rend our own soldiers 

by thehandof a soldier, I will 

between the fool and the soldier? .... 
and say, a soldier, Dian, told thee — 

and the armipotent soldier 

to talk with the young noble soldier 
she'll sooner prove a soldier ..T 

my parasite, my soldier 

often give us soldiers the lie — 

who, like a good .and hardy soldier Macbeth 

would create soldiers, make our — 

a better soldier, none that Cliristendom — 

fie ! a soldier and afeard? 

geese, villain? Soldiers, sir 

what soldiers, patch? Death of thy 

let every soldier hew him 

my lord, has paid a soldier's debt 

whv then, God's soldier be he! 

a soldier by the honour-giving hand..K 

I am a soldier, and now bound to — i. i 

his forces strong, his soldiers confident — ii. 1 
the swords of soldiers are nis teeth .. — ii. 2 

to the fitld as God's own soldier — ii. 2 

been sworn my soldier? bidding — iii- 1 

brave soldier, pardon me, that any.. — v- 6 

for your highness' soldiers ireo.) Richard II. i. 1 

to (ieek our soldiers for tliese Irish .. — \. 4 



ii. 2 



iii. 2 



II. 5 



— 111.6 



iv. 6 
nnofKhren-, ii. I 
. Winter' sTate, i. 2 



— V. 3 



— V. 4 



■■John 



prove armed soldiers, ere lii 
(whose soldier now, under 
and, as the sohliers huie de 
would himself have liecii a 
ofsoldiers slain, and all tl 
she'll 1 
holds f 



hose... 

d bodies 

loldier .. 

rrents 



.\ Henry IV. i. 1 



r too, she'll to the wars — 
II soldiers chief majority — 



SOLDIER of thin season's 1 Henry 1 V. iv. 1 

our soldiers shall march through .... — iv. 2 

if I be not ashamed of my pohliers .. — iv. 2 

of a hunilred and fifty Biddicts — iv. 2 

such as, indeed, were never soldiers.. — iv. 2 

embrace him witli a soldier's arm.... — v. 2 

fellows, soldiers, friends, better — v. 2 

our soldiers stand full fairly for — v. 3 

than did our soldiers, aimiiigattlieir.2n(H/!///'. i. I 

do not the rebels need soldiers? — i. 2 

to take soldiers up in thccounties.... — ii. 1 

that comes hither anon about foldiers? — iii. 2 

a sohlier is better accommodated than — iii. 2 

he's like to be a cold soldier — iii. 2 

1 cannot put him to a private soldier — iii. 2 

Bardolph, give the soldiers coats .... — iii. 2 

and my little soldier there, bo nieny — v. 3 
others, like soldiers, armed in their..,, i/ci/i//'. i. 2 

as I am a soldier (re/), iii. 3) — ii. 1 

and the fleshed soldier, rough and hard — iii. .1 

npon the enraj(ed soldiers in their .. •■■ iii. 3 

yet my soldiers are in my command — iii. 3 

the blind and bloody soldier with foul — iii. 3 

eickness growing upon our soldiers.. — iii. .( 

his numbers are so few, his soldiers sick — iii..'* 

Bardol|ili, a soldierfiim and sound.. — iii. il 

under the form of a soldier — ii . li 

advantage is a better soldier — iii. n 

the panieulur endings of his soldiers — i\.\ 

try It out witli all unspotted soldiers — iv. I 

therefore should every soldier — iv. I 

steel my soldiers' heal ts! — iv. 1 

and my poor soldiers tell me, vet ere — iv. 3 

new coats o'er the French soldiers .. — iv. ;1 

now, soldiers, march away: and how — iv. 3 

in which array tbrave soMier) doth — iv. i; 

then every soldier kill his prisoners.. — i\'. ti 

hath caused every soldier to cut his. . — iv. 7 

soldier, you must come to the king (rep. J — iv. 7 

as he was a soldier, he wotild wear .. — iv. 7 

is it fit this soldier keep his oath? — iv, " 

call him hither to me, soldier — iv. 7 

it is the soldier's; I, by bargain — iv. 7 

if that the soldier strike him — iv. 7 

give me thy glove, soldier; look — iv.8 

like savages, as soldiers will — v. 2 

to teach a soldier terms, such as — v. 2 

I sjieak to thee plain soldier: if thou ^- \.*l 

take a soldier; take a soldier, take .. — v. 2 
among the soldiers this is muttered.. U/ej;?;/ 17. i. 1 

his soldiers, spying his — i. I 

ten thousand soldiers with me — i. 1 

if any noise, or soldier, you perceive — ii. I 

improvident soldiers! had your watch — ii. 1 

to gather onr soldiers, scattered — ii. 1 

for soldiers' stomachs alwaj'S serve .. — ii. 3 

like soldiers, come and fight it out?.. — iii. 2 

I should revive the soldiers' hearts .. — iii. 2 

a braver soldier never couched lance — iii. 2 

fight, soldiers, light: the regent — iv. 

soldiers, adieu! 1 ha\'e what I would — iv, 7 

I am a soldier; and unnpt to weep .. — v. 3 

gentlemen, and soldiers, that in this — v. 4 
more like a soldier, than a man ....illenryVl. i. 1 

for soldiers' pay ill France (!cp.) — iii. 1 

never robbed the soldiers of their pay — iii. 1 

provide me soldiers, lords, whiles I.. — iii. 1 

at Bristol I expect my soldiers — iii. 1 

bring forth the soldiers of our prize. . — iv. 1 

and sent the ragged soldiers wounded — iv. 1 

come, soldiers, show what cruelty .. — iv. I 

soldiers, defer the spoil of the city.... — iv, 7 

follow me, soldiers; we'll devise a me.an — iv.8 

soldiers, this dav have you redeemed — iv. 9 

soldiers, I thank you all: disperse .. — v. 1 

let no soldier fly; he — v. 2 

the swords of common soldiers slain .^HentyVl. :. I 

soldiers, stay, and lodge by me this.. — i. 1 

and they have troops of soldiers at .. — i. 1 

.and I'll keep London with my soldiers — i. 1 

the soldiers should have tossed me .. — i. 1 

for they are soldiers, witty, courteous — i. 2 

soldiers, away with him — i. 3 

mustered my soldiers, gathered flocks — ii. 1 

that robbed my soldiers of their .... — ii. I 

our soldiers, liKe the night-owl's lazy — ii. I 

the duke is with the soldiers — ii. 1 

with aid of soldiers to this needful .. — ii. 1 

our soldiers put to flight — iii 3 

bunds of chosen soldiers, I'll undertake — id. 3 

these soldiers shall be levied, and thon — iii. 3 

his soldiers lurking in the towns about — iv. 2 

but march to London with oiu- soldiers — i\ . 3 

that Henry is no soldier — iv. 7 

come on, brave soldiers; doubt not .. — iv. 7 
or die a soldier, as I lived a kiw^.. Richard 1 1 1, iii. 1 

lierhert a renowned soldier — iv. 5 

the army, cheering up the soldiers .. — v. 3 

the subs'tanee of ten thousand soldiers — \ . 3 

1 will lead forth my soldiers to the plain — v. 3 

proclaim a pardon to the soldiers fled — v. 4 
when they would seem soldiers.. Troilur^ Cress, i. 3 

but we are soldiers; and may that soldier— i. 3 

he was a soldier good; but, by great — iv. .^ 

that this great scldier may his — iv. 5 

thou art a soldier, tlierefore .... Timon of Alliens, i. 2 

soldiers should brook as little wrongs — " .i.i. S 

there's gold to pay thy soldiers — iv. 3 

soldiers, not tliieves. Both too — iv. 3 

enriched poor straggling soldiers with — y. 1 
the arm our soldier, our steed the .. Cnriohinus, i. 1 

tliou wast a soldier even to Cuto's wish — i. 4 

our Rome hath such a soldier! — i. 9 

nay, my good soldier, up; my gentle — ii. I 

thou art tlieir soldier, and being .... — iii, 2 

my praises made thee lirst a soldier — iii. 2 

you find him like a soldier — iii. 3 

such as become a boUlier, rather .... — ill. 3 

but a greater soldier than lie (np.) .. — iv.j 

not a littir upou tt soldier's head — iv. G 



SOL 



[ 696 ] 



SOI^DIEUS use liim as the sraoe .... Corwh,, 

the tribunes are no soldiers — 

the God 'il' solilieis, with tlie consent — 
di> not liid int dismiss my soldiers .. — 

I !im i-cliiined vonr soldier — 

tliiee o' tin; cliiefest soldiers; I'll be one — 
he's a tried and valiant soldier ..JutiusCevs 
1 am a soldier, I, older in practice .. — 
you say, yon are a better soldier .... — 
I said, an elder soldier, not a better. . — 
weary his soldiers, doinit himselt' offence — 
and feeding from our soldiers' hands — 
his soldiers fell to spoil, whilst we .. — 
most like a soldier, ordered honourably — 



V. 5 



stands up for the main soldier.... /J>i(o/i!/<SC/eo. i. 2 
"■ " — i. 3 



. 3 
— i. 4 



— IV. 3 



IV. 12 

iv. 13 

V. 2 



V. 2 



the greatest soldier of the world 

I go from hence, thy soldier, servant 

was borne so like a soldier 

thou art a soldier only; speak no more 
I shall see you in your soldier's dress — 
how far'st thou, soldier? Well; and well — 

let's ha't. fiotul solilicr. Come — 

ambition, the si^ldicr's virtue, rather — 
tliut witliinit wliicli a soldier, and his ~~ 
good fortune, wort liy soldier; and .. — 
the tnares would bear a soldier, and his — 
liow now, worthy soldierl O noble .. — 
to-morrow, soldier, bj' sea and land . . — 
soldiers, have careful watch. And you 

this is a soldier's kiss — 

and the soldier that has this morning — 
no more a soldier; bruised pieces go — 

the soldier's pole is fallen; young boys — 

ah soldier! how goes it here? — 

Itis father and I were soldiers togetherCt/»i(^t'^ 
and when a soldier was the theme .. — 
this attempt I'm soldier to, and will — 
he shall be interred, as sohliers can.. — 
gave advantage to an ancient soldier — 
that the poor soldier, that so richly .. — 
why, old soldier, wilt thou undo .... — 
the forlorn soldier, that so nobly fought — 
I am, sir, the soldier that did company — 
I have been thy soldier forty years T/VHsJ/idn 
uone but soldiers, aiid Rome's servitors — 

a halter, soldiers; hang him on — 

bid him encamp his soldiers where ,. — 

very well become a soldier's dance .... IWieles, i i. 3 

but be a soldier to thy purpose — iv. 1 

your sister is the better soldier Lear, iv. ft 

to't luxury, pell-mell, for I lack soldiers — iv. 6 

take thou my soldiers, prisoners — v. 3 

for thy soldiers, all levied in my name — v. 3 

driveth o'er a soldier's neck Romeo ^.Tiiliel, i. 4 

like powder in a skill-less soldier's flask — iii. 3 
O, farewell, honest soldier: who hath . . Hamlel, i. 1 
friends, scholars, and soldiers, give me ., — i. 5 
employ those soldiers, so levied as before — ii. 2 
the courtier's, soldier's, scholar's eye .... — iii. 1 
as the sleeping soldiers in the alarm .... — iii. 4 

like a soldier, to the stage; for he was — v. 2 

the soldiers' music, and the rites of war. . — v. 2 

go, bid the soldiers shoot — v. 2 

the man commands like a full soldier . . OHiello.u. 1 
you may relish him more in the soldier.. — ii 1 

not jiast a pint, as lam a soldier — ii. 3 

soldier's a man, a life's but a span (,rep.} ii. 3 (song) 

he is a soldier fit to stand by CiEsax — ii. 3 

or less than truth, thou art no soldier.... — ii. 3 
'tis the soldier's life, to have their balmy — ii. 3 
a soldier, and for me to say a soldier lies — iii. 4 

itself sustain upon a soldier's thigh - v. 2 

Sor.DriCR-BRKEDER: shall not'thou.//,-»iv /'. v. 2 

HOLDIKR-I.IKIO phrase ..Meni/Jrin-s. ii. 1 (letter) 

' be a soldier-like word, and a v.ina..-2IIn,n/U'. iii. 2 

SOLDIERS rilP— tried our soldiership!. .4«'s»'(.'H, i. 2 

to the possibility of thy soldiership.. — iii. 6 

more of his soldiershiii I know not .. — iv. 3 

and put we on industrious S()ldiership../l/aciie//f. v. 4 

knighthood and my soldiership aside.'-' Hfiirj/ir. i. 2 

soldiership is twice the other twain. .4/i(. ■$Cleo. ii. 1 

throw away the absolute soldiership — iii. 7 

without practice, is all his soldiership ..OihMo, i. 1 

Sor.D'SThiraon (Jood Friday last.... I Hoi; !///'. i. 2 

SOLE— the sole drift of my purpose .^..I'cmpest^v. 1 

it hath the worser sole Tu-oGpn.of I'isr. ii. 3 

the crown of his bead to the sole of..MiichAdo, iii. 2 
sole dominator of Navarre. Love'sL. Lost, i. 1 (letter) 
to parley with the sole inheritor .... — ii. 1 
sole imperator, and great general of. . — iii. 1 
not on thy sole, but on thy soul./Uer. of Venire, iv. 1 

his sole chihl, ray lord AlCs Well, i. 1 

my sole earth's lieaven Comedy oflimirs, iii, 2 

whose sole name blisters our MarlieUi, iv. 3 

this so sole, and so unmatchable King.lolin, iv 3 

Sole heir male of the true line (rep.).. .. Henry I', i 2 
married Philippe, sole daughter ....illemyVl. ii. 2 
Henry, sole possessor of my love ..Slleiiryl'I. iii. 3 

and slie shall be sole victress Hicliurd III. iv. 4 

that praise, sole pure Troilus i Ciessida, i. 3 

and affecting one sole throne Connhnins, iv. 6 

indeed, sir, a mender of bad soles.. Ji(///is O'snr, i. I 

sole sir o' the world Antony gf Cleepaira, v. 2 

he purposed to his wife's sole son .... CymOcliue, i. 1 

is she sole child to the king? — i. 1 

have had the sole son of my queen L. — i. 2 

performed to your sole daughter Pericles, iv. 4 

dancing shoes, with nimble soles ., Romeo iff Jul. i. 4 
when the single sole of it is worn .... — ii. 4 
may be crowned sole monarch of .... — iii. 2 

nor the soles of her shoe? Hamlet, ii. 2 

T. his sole son, do this same villain — iii. 3 

SOI/ELY led by nice direction .... Mer. ofVenice, ii. I 

a great way fool, solely a coward AlVs H'ell, i. 1 

lett solely heir to all his lands .. Taming of HU. ii. 1 

leave me solely Winder's Tale, ii. 3 

solely sovereign sway and masterdom. . ."^lucbelh, i. 5 
Solely in the breast of every.. .. Htwrj//'. ii. (chorus) 
or else to him had left it solely .... Coriohmns, iv. 7 
solely singxilar (rep.) Romeo if Juliet, ii. 4 



SOLEMN temples, the great globe .... Tempest, \v. 1 

to hear the stnemn curtew — v. 1 

a solemn air, and the best — v. 1 

a solemn combination shall TifelflliNight, v. 1 

' and si 11" your solemn hymn Much Ado, v. 3 

their folly, passion's solemn tears. LoveUI.. J.osl, v. 2 

and ail old, in solemn talk Asyoul.ike d, ii. 4 

the solemn feast shall more Airsncli,\\.3 

although before the solemn priest.... — ii. 3 
of whom he hath taken a solemn leave — iv. 3 
an eyesore to our solemn festival. 7'«»i/nif()/'.*?/i. iii. 2 
ceremonious, solemn, and unearthly. 'fni/er'i 7'. iii. 1 
in solemn synods been decreed ,, Comedy of Err. i. 1 

I we hold a solemn supper, sir Macbeth, V\\. 1 

bend such solemn brows on me? King John, iv. 2 

I in solemn shades of endless night ..Richard II. i. 3 

j flesh and blood with solemn reverence — iii. 2 

sad and solemn priests solemn still ..UenryV. \w. 1 

here we entertain a solemn peace . . I Htoiri/ /'/. v. 4 

sworn with a solemn tongue! 'IHenryVI. iii. 2 

bound by any sitlemn vow (rep) — v 1 

and broke his solemn oath? ZHenry fl. i. 4 

made a solemn vow never to lie — iv. 3 

our army shall, in solemn shovf.. Antony ^Cleo, v. 2 
solemn things should answer irfp.).Cytnbeline, iv. 2 
a solemn hunting is in hand.. Titus Andronicits, ii. 1 
even at thy solemn feast, I will bring — v, i 
when with his solemn tongue he did — v. 3 
solemn hymns to sullen dirges.. TioHieo ^Juliet, iv. 5 

nor customary suits of solemn black Hamlel, i. 2 

with sttlemu march, goes slow and stately — i. '.^ 

we'll make a solemn wager on — iv. 7 

for often, with a solemn earnestness ....Othello, v. 2 

SOLEMNESS out o'door Coriolanui, i. 3 

SOLEMNITIES. Go, Philostrate ..Mid.N.'sDr. i. 1 
SOLEMNITY. And as we wnik.Tu'oGen.of l^er. v. 4 

and limit of the solemnity Meas.for Aleas. iii, I 

here in grace of our solemnity ..Mid.N. Dream, iv. I 
we'll hold a feast in great solemnity — iv. 1 

a fortnight hold we tnis solemnity .. — v. 1 

bid her repair to our solemnity King John, \i. 2 

won by rareness, such solemnity .. 1 Henry W. iii. 2 
high order in this great solemnity ..Ant. S^Cleo. v. 2 
scorn at our solemnity? (rep.). . . . Romeo ^Juliet, i. 5 
to murder, murder our solemnity? . . — iv. .5 
SOLEMNIZE the bargain of your.ilfer. o/Ten/ce, iii. 2 
solemnize this day, the glorious sun. KingJohti, iii. I 

SOLEMNIZED; and thence retire Tempest, v. 1 

Jaques Faulconbridge solemnized. Lo?)e'sL. Los/, ii, I 
our nuptial rites be solemnized. .iV/er.o/^'e«!ce, ii. 9 

and the day it is solemnized AsyouLikeit, iii. 2 

rites of marriage shall be solemnized.A'!»g-,/o/jM, ii. 2 
this marriage to be solemnized . . . . ! Henri/ t'l. v. 3 

SOLEJMNLY, dance in Mid.N.'sUreiim, iv. 1 

solemnly set down our coronation .. Richard II. \\'. 1 
all studies liere I solemnly defy ....IHennjlV. i. 3 
solemnly, see him set on to' ....Henry V. v. (chorus) 

after I have solemnly interred Richard lit. i. 2 

he solemnly had sworn, that ,...,. Henry /'///. i, 2 

SOLICIT me no more Two Gen. of Ver. v. 4 

to solicit your master's desires Merry iVives, i. 2 

rather hear you to solicit that .. Twelfth Night, iii. 1 
if the prince do solicit you in that ..Much Ado. ii. 1 

the amorous count solicits her AlCsiVelt, iii. 5 

how he solicits heaven, himself best ..Macbeth, iv. 3 
more solicit me, than your exclaims, /?/c/(a;'^ //. i. 2 
solicit Henry with her wondrous.... I Hewryr/. v. 3 
we heartily solicit your gracious. . Richard III. iii. 7 
did solicit you in free contempt .... Coriolauna, ii. 3 

mean to solicit him for mercy — v. 1 

frame yourself to orderly solicits. . . . Cymbeline, ii. 3 

we will solicit heaven Titus Androniciis, iv. 3 

if my tongue did e'er solicit Pericles, ii. 5 

heaven aird grace, solicit for it straight.. 0//ic(to, v. 2 

SOLICITATION; if not, assure — iv. 2 

SOLICITED by a gentleman All's Well, iii . 6 

I am solicited, not by a few Henry I' 111. i. •! 

more and less, whicli have solicited .. .. llamiei, v. 2 

SOLICITING cannot be ill Macbeth, i. 3 

and more above, hath his solicitings ..Hamlet, ii. 2 
he mav CJassio find soliciting his wife .. Othello, ii. 3 

SOLICITOR— fair solicitor Love'sL. Lust, ii. 1 

for thy solicitor shall rather die Othello, iii. 3 

SOLICIT'ST here a lady Cymbeline, i. 7 

SOLID— weary of solid firmness ....iHenryll'. iii. 1 
a sop of all this solid globe. . . . Troilus i§- Cressida, i. 3 
that this too too solid flesh would meXt.. Hamlel, i. 2 
whose solid virtue the shot of accident. 0/Ae^/o, iv. 1 

SOLIDAIRES for thee Timonof Athens, \u. 1 

SOLIDITY and compound mass Hamlel, iii. 4 

SOLINUS, to procure my fall.. Comt-rfvo/ Errors, i. 1 
SOLITAR Y— sad and soli tary . . 7'h'o Gen . of Ver. i v. 4 

in respect that it is solitary AsyouLikeit, iii. 2 

SOLOMON— Solomon so seduced ..Love'sL. Lost, i. 2 

and profound Solomon to tune — iv. 3 

SOLUM— ad imprimendum solum. '/'amin^ of S/i. iv. 4 

SOLUS— solus, egregious dog? Henry V. ii. 1 

the solus in thy most marvellous (I'ep.) — ii. 1 

1 do retort the solus in thy bowels.... — ii. 1 

SOLYMAN— of sultan Solyraau. . Mer. of Venice, ii. 1 

SOMEBODY call my wife Merry Wires, iv. 2 

didst thou not hear somebody? Much Ado, iii. 3 

to cozen somebody in this city . . Taming of ah. v. 1 

this a bloody day to somebody tHenrylV. v. 4 

1 was too hot to do somebody good..Kic/iarrf III. i. 3 
a black da,y will it he to somebody .. — v. 3 
I would somebody had heardher. 7')oi7iM,S-Crfss. i. 1 
go to the gate; soniebodv M.nocks..JulinsCiesar, ii. 1 
SOMERSET- was wrangling Somerset. IHeiiri/r/. ii. 4 

red rose, with young Somerset — ii. 4 

Somerset, where is your argument? (rep') — ii. 4 
I'll prove on better men than Somerset — ii. 4 
proud Somerset, and William Poole — ii. 4 
there grew 'twixt Somerset and me.. — ii. 5 
which Somerset hath offered to my.. — ii. h 
against my lord, the duke of Somerset — iii. 4 
will not this malice, .Somerset, be left? — iv. I 
cousins both, of York and Somerset — iv. 1 

my pledge, accept it, Somerset — iv. 1 

incline to Somerset, than York — iv. I 



SOM 

SOMERSET-lord of Somerset, unite .1 Henry Vl.tv. 1 

he wears the badge of Somerset — iv. 1 

plague upon that villain Somerset (rep.) — iv. 3 
of this vile traitor Somerset (re/).) ., — iv. 3 
noble York and Sfimerset (rep. iv. 7) — iv. 4 

Buckingham, Somerset (re/).) iHcnryVI. i. 1 

cousin of Somerset, join 3'ou with (rep.) — i. I 

the heads of Ednioud duke of Somerset — i. 2 

Somerset, Buckingham, and gi'umbling — i. 3 

or Somerset, or York, all's one to me — i. 3 

if Somerset be unworthy of the place — i.3 
my lord of Somerset will keep '•?;).) — i.3 

let Somerset be regent o'er the French — i. 3 

come, Somerset, we'll see thee sent away — i.3 
befall the duke of Somerset? (rep.) — i. 4 (paper) 
at Somerset's amiiition, at Buckingham — li. 2 

welcome, lord Somerset (rep.) — iii. I 

that Somerset be sent as regent — iii. 1 

sweet Somerset, be still — iii. 1 

the duke of Somerset, whom he terms — iv. 9 
Somerset, we will commit thee thither — iv. 9 
to remove proud Somerset from the king — v. I 
the duke of Somerset is in the Tower — v. 1 

to use, so Somerset may die — v. I 

to heave the traitor Somerset from hence — v. I 
see, Buckingham, Somerset comes with — v. 1 
how now, is Somerset at liberty? .. .. — v. I 
shall I endure the sight of Somerset? — v. I 
Somerset hath made the wizard famous — v. 2 
grace dead, my lord of Somerset?.. ..AHenryVI. i. 1 
and you too, Somerset, and Montague — iv. 1 
Clarence and Somerset (rep. iv. 2) ., — iv. I 
and welcome, Somerset; I hold it .. — iv. 2 

my lord of Somerset (rey). iv. 6) — iv. 3 

Somerset, Somerset, for Lancaster! (rep.) — v. I 
and Somerset, with Oxford, fled to her — v. 3 
and Somerset another goodly mast?.. — v. 4 
thanks, gentle Somerset; sweet 0.vfoid — v. 4 
for Somerset, off with his ''uilty head — v. S 
three dukes of Somerset, tlireefold .. — v. 7 
SOMERVILLE, what savs my loving — v. 1 
SOMETHING rich and s"trange.. Tempest, i. 2 (song) 
but he's something stain'd with grief ., — i. 2 
but Iprattle sometliing too wildly .... — iii. 1 
r the name of something holy, sir .... — iii. 3 

there's something else to do — iv. 1 

my will is sometliing sorted Two Gen- of Ver. i. 3 

he is something peevish that way../l/errt/;(/i'es, i. 4 
which hath something emboldened me — ii. 2 
there's something extraordinary in thee— iii. 3 

good hearts, devise something — iv. 2 

are something rank on foot — iv. 6 

tell us something of him Twelfth Night, ii. 3 

make that resemble something in me — ii. 5 

I do care for something — iii. 1 

there's something in me, that — iii. 4 

it is something of my negligence .... — iii. 4 

I'll lend you something — iii. 4 

there's something in't, that is — iv. 3 

we may bring you something ..Meas.for Mens. i. 1 
it draws something near to the speech — 1.2 

I something do excuse the thing I hate — ii. 4 
something too crabbed that way, friar — iii. 2 

happily, yon sometliing know — iv. 2 

sometliing of that jealous complexion.il/we/i. -fi/o, ii. I 
of something nearly that concerns .Mid. K's. Or. i. 1 
because she's something lower than — iii. 2 

for the morning now is something worn — iv. 1 
grows to something of great constancy — v. 1 

something then in rhyme Love's L. Lost, i. 1 

I will something affect the letter .... — iv. 2 

and something else more plain — iv. 3 

by something showing a moie Mer. of Venice, i. I 

my time, something too prodigal — i. I 

my father did something smack (rep.) — ii. 2 
there they show something too liberal — ii. 2 

there's something tells me — iii. 2 

is sum of something I^Co/.An^. -nothing] — iii. 2 
where every stim, being blent together — iii. 2 
there must "be something else pawned — iii. 5 
tarry a little there is something else — iv. 1 
the something that nature gave ..Asyou Like it, i. 1 
or Charles, or something weaker .... — i. 2 

something that hath a reference to my — i.3 

but it groW'S something stale with me — ii. 4 
and if I bring thee not something to eat — ii. 6 
your accent is something finer than.. — iii. 2 
for every passion something, and for no — iii. 2 
something browner than Judas's .... — iii. 4 

I shall devise something — iv. 3 

it concerns you something to know it. . All's Well, i. 3 
there's something hints, more than my — i. 3 

a good traveller is something at the. . — ii. 5 

something, and scarce so much — ii. 5 

he's shrewdly vexed at something .. — iii. 5 
thou may'st inform something to save — iv. 1 
there is something in't tliat stings his — iv. 3 
yet must suffer something in m3' .... — iv. 4 
but something hard of hearing. 7*(im(Hg'o/.S'/ire;e, ii. 1 

simile, but something currish — v. 2 

may'st co-join with something .... Winter'sTale, i. 2 

he something seems unsettled — i. 2 

something before her time, delivered — ii. 2 
please you come something nearer .. — ii. 2 
weak-hinged fancy), something savours — ii. 3 
discover, something rare, even then-. — iii. 1 
but smacks of something greater than — iv. 3 
he tells her something, that makes her — iv, 3 

your heart is full of something — iv. 3 

a wrong something unfilial: reason.. — i\'- 3 
that I may call thee something more — iv. 3 
wants but something to be a reasonable — iv. 3 
being something gently considered .. — iv. 3 

took something good to make a — v. 1 

of something, wildly by us performed — v. 1 
hath something seized his wished ability — v. I 

comes it not something near? — v. 3 

marrj', sir, for this something . . Comedy of Err. ii. 2 
to give you nothing for something .. — ii. 2 
there is something in the wind — iii. > 



SOM 



[ 097 ] 



SON 



— IV. 

— Iv. 3 
_ V. 3 

■John, i. 1 



dlll.ni. 1 
_ iv. 4 

!/riii. i. I 



iii. 2 



SOMETHING— fetch mc 6omething.('om.f)/-/?ir. iii. 

and eomething I'roni the piihice Mm-Mh, iii. 1 

Bomething wicked this way comes .. . . 
but sometliiug you iiiiiy deserve ot him 
|)rei>!imtion maltes us lieiir sumctliing.. 

wli.it thoiiL-h? sometlihi- lUinut K 

mi.U'ks it not so.nctl.in- ultlu' policy? - \\. 'f 

lit something' it -liovos h>oix> [\xan ..IticlumlU. \\. i 
hutli iH'gut my boinotiiins (iriet'iiri'-) , „ - , ,,'!• f, 

and sometliiug ii round belly •illetin/ll ■ i. . 

oil tlie Buddeii, something ill — i''-- 

let it do something my good lord ... — 'v. .i 
devise something to do lliyself good — y- -^ 

your reproof is something too round.. Hfiiii/' • i^- 
Bomething lean tocutiim-seofniuck — \- \ 
something 1 must do. to procure me .. 1 Hmrt/il.J.i 

the edge hath something hit ^Hninjl 1. ■■ 

[K;i<.] something we will determine. «ic/ii 
if something thou wouldst swear ^rep.) 

he were something in't "<"' 

there's sometliiug more would out of — 
and something spoke in clioler, ill • .. — 
when you would say something that is — 

lie is vexed at something i n-i}. ) — 

niv guests; something I can command — 
soiiiething over to remember me by.. — 
he hangs the Up at something.. rinilnsSfLn 
find out something not wortli in me — 
no: but something may be done .... — 

f on shake, my lord, at something .. — 
'II give yon something else — 

and soiuetliing like thee rimono/Aihetn, 

but soinethiii!,' luitli been amiss — 

that I might love thee something .... — i 

said to be sonietliing iiniierteet Coriolmius, 

but this is something odd — 

too rough, something too rough — i 

by his tiice that there was something — 

and his, find something in him — 

yet something leads me forth Julius t.rsar, i 

and something to be done immediately — 

something it is I would AiUomj ^- Cleu 

yes, something yon can deny for — 

the world should note something — " 

do something mingle with our hrowu — 

but something given to lie — 

a vent of blood, and something blown — 

there would be something failing Cuntbaline 

I something fear my fatlier's wrath.. — 
had been sometliiug too fair, and too — 
in my opinion, o'ervalnes it something — 
you do seem to know somsthiug of me — 

and I am something curious — 

I'll do something— quite besides the.. — 
here's my heart; something's afore't 
your vassal, a: 



SOMETIME a horse I'll be(i<-p.)....Wi(/.iV.'s»/. iii. 1 
sometime fnime thy tongue (ivp.) .. — iii. a 
sleep. Unit sometinio shuts up sorrow's — iii. ^ 
sometiine on the buds was wont to swell — iy. I 
a woman sometimes, an' vou saw .Lnre'sl-.toil, ii. 1 
sonietinie thi-on-h the throat as if you — iii. I 
sometimo throiiLcli the nose, as if you — iii. I 
and so it is, sniiRtinies; glory grows.. — iv. I 
(by the world) sometime to lean upon — v. I 
virtues; sometimes from her i:yee. Mrr.nf l^eu!r.e, i. I 

I sometimes do believe (rep.) AsynuLikeU, v. 4 

how mightily, sometimes, we ma'k.e ..All's n'M, iv. 3 

I have been sonietinies there — v. 1 

sometime I liave hiuglRcl with — v. 3 

sometimes more feet than . . Taming of Sh. 2 (indue.) 
([iiarts; sometime, you woulil call.. — 2 (iiidiic.) 
bonny Kate, and sonietimes Kate the — ii. I 
how sometimes mi t lire will betray, (riii/er'.'; '/'u/c, 1.2 

of the world somelime puts forth — I 'i 

conies a creature, sonietinitB lier head — lii- 3 
|)oor sonis! aoinetimi's to see 'em ., 



iii. 1 
iii. 3 
iv. 4 
V. 2 



111. I 



so kind, but sometli 
1 think I shall iiavi 
O you liave heard s 
but there is somelh 
yon are like sonietl: 
we must do sometli 
that's something 



itifiil. 



t; EJ 



, . Ti/us Aiidron. u. 3 
to <io..l'eiiclis, iv. 3 

thing of my - iv. ti 

glows upon — V.I 

that — \- ' 

di'the heat ....Uur. i. 1 
I nothing am — 



_ iii. 1 



„. something deeper, whereof, perelv.uiei: ... ^ 

lovaltv, something fears me to think of.. — in- J 

with something' rich about me — i^. 1 

sfiinething he left imperfect in the state — iv. J 

belike, something, I know not wliat — iv. 5 

look as you had something more to say .. — .v- 3 

that is something stale and Romeo SrJuUel,}}. i 

couple it with something — '"-J 

that thou hear'st something approach — v. J 

warning, something doth approach.. — X- ■' 
is not this something more than fantasy.(lui;i(f/, i. 1 

so please you, somethiii" touching the .. — !• 3 

something is rotten in the state of — .;• ^ 

I w as abon t to say somethinij' ; . . . — | ! • ' 

somethina have you heard ot Il.aralet's .. — i|- • 

somethin.g in this more than natural — !!• '- 

I'll have these players play Bomething .. — ii. i 

but that the dread of something after .... — ]o- 1 

there's something in his soul, o'er which — in. I 

as I do thee: something too much of this — iii.'- 

jrrou-s— the proverb is something miisty. . — in. 2 

hearing something stir, whips out his — iv. 1 

yet liave I in me something dangerous . . — y. I 
something from Cyprus, as I may divme.(V/i,Ho, i. u 

by parcels she had something heard — i. ■> 



steals som-ihing from tlie thief. 

speech, which something now offends me — ii. 3 

something that's brief; and bid.......... — ni. 1 

thou dost mean something; I heard thee — iii. •) 
'tis something, nothing; 'twas mine .... — in- ■ 

may do something: tlie Moor already .. — ;]i. J 
can he be angry? something, of moment — lu. 4 

do so: something, sure, of state — ju- < 

something from Venice, sure - ;.v. 

SO.MKTIIING-SETTI, ED matter .... H«mW, in. I 

SOMETlME-soinetimes. I'd divide ....Tempes!.]. -i 

sometimes like a^ies, that inoe (r-'p.) .. — n- -' 

and sometimes 1 11 get thee voinig .... — .';■ - 

sometimes a thousand twangling (rep.) — m- 2 

as I was sometime Milan — .;.• 1 

woman sometimes scorns what. '''wo Gen.nfl er. iii. I 
a justice of peace sometime may . . Meny ll'ii-es, i. 1 
Bometimes the beam of her view (rep.) — i. 3 

1, 1 nivself sometimes, leaving — .11-2 

sometime a keeper here in Windsor — iv. 1 

methinks, sometime I have no. ...Twelfth A/j'/i/,!.) 
in maaiines and revels so nctiines.... — i 3 

marry sir, sometimes he is a kind of — ii. 3 

that sometimes savours nobly? — y. I 

whether you had not sometime.. il/eaJ..^/- Mnu.n I 
though sometimes you do blench from — iv. .■) 
let the devil be sometime honoured . . — y. 1 
vour discour.-'e is Bometime guarded ..MuchAJn, i. 1 
inv daughter is sonietime afraid she will — ii. 3 
fooietiine. la-ihi.iiiing them like lr<7).) — in. 3 
Hiinetinies lab.inr in the ( rr/,.)..,l/„/. A'.-.</),,„i;i, n. 1 
sometime lurk I in a gossip's bowl (ic;).' — u. I 



oe loved 



iv. 3 



,i,i: lii. 6 
nil' I. V. 1 
njI'L ii. 4 



iv. I 

.■MleurijVl. ii. 2 



It should seem, hath s 

honest, I am so sometimes by chance 

that I familiarly sometimes .. Comedy of En or s, ii. 2 

follows us, sonietime is our trouble Mueheth,_\. 6 

took up my legs sonietimes, yet I — _ii. 3 

to do good, sometime, ueeounted — iv. 2 

thy sonietimes brother's wife.." llichard II. i. i 

did they not sometime ery, all bail! — iv. 1 

good sometime (lueen, preiiare thee.. — v. I 
none contented: sometimes am I king — v. 6 
to look upon my sometimes master's — v. .5 
I eaniiotehoosJ: sonietimes he ....\ Henry I r. in. 1 
though aometimes it show greatness — in. I 
sometimes |)liie, .iiid sometimes red 

Ilenrv the Fifth did somefiine 

thus sometimes, hath the brightest. 

sometime I'll say, I am 

sometime, he talks as if irep.) 

Jove sonietime went disguised 

which sometime tliey have used ... 

sonietime the flood prevails; and then — .u. 5 

as sometime Margaret did llichard III. iv. 4 

men sliall deal unadvisedly sometimes — iy. 4 

sometimes our brother's wife Henry I'lll. n. 1 

stars, indeed; and, sometimes, falling — ly. 1 
sonietime, great Agamemnon. Tmdns S,- Cnssida. i. 3 
sonietimes we are devils to ourselves — ly. 4 
sometime, it appears like h-ep.) ..'I inu.no/Alh. ii. 2 
woman; sometime, the philosopher.. — ii. 2 

I sometime lav, here in Conoli Coriolauus,!. 9 

as 'twas used sometime ill Greece — ml 

my sometime general I have seen.... — iv. 1 
nay, sometimes, like to a bowl upon — y. 2 

wbieli sometime hath his hour . . Jidlus Crrsar. h. 1 

and talk to you sometimes? — ii- 1 

sir, sometimes, when he is not Antony /rClco._\. 1 

will sometimes divide me from — ii. 3 

sometime, we see a cloud that s (rep.) — ly-. '2 

nay, sometime, hangs both thief Cymbeline, u. 3 

are sometimes like our judgments . . — iv. 2 

that sometime it was a worthy — iv. 2 

Belarius whmn you sometime banislied — v. 5 
with fog, as bonietiine clouds. 7'/i»s/fnrfron/ru.«, iii. I 

you sometime famous princes.... Ferieles,i. 1 

fur it was sonietime target to a king .. — u. I 

as thou my sometime daughter Lear, i. 1 

and, sometime,! am whipped for holding _ • i. 4 
sometime witli lunatic bans, sometime .. - ii. 3 

who sonietime, ill his better tune — iv. 3 

sometime she guUopso'er (_rep.)..liomeo J^- Juliet.], i 
sometimes by action dignified ... .. — ii. 3 
I anger her sometimes, and tell her. . — u. 4 
buried Denmark did sometimes march?. f;«inW, i. 1 

our sonietime sister, now our queen — .i. 2 

you know, sometimes he walks — n. 2 

how pregnant sonietimes his replies are! — ii. 2 
our indiscretion sometimes serves us we" " " 



SON— thee, of thy son, Alonso Tempest, iii. 3 

fheretiire my son i' the ooze is bedded — iii. 3 

ifVenus, orhersimdrp.) - iv. 1 

her wasiiish-headed son has broke his.. — iv. I 
you do look, my son, in a moved sort.. — iv. I 

my dear son Feidinand (rfp.) — v. 1 

one dear .son shall I twice lose — v. 1 

his nephew Proteus, your son ..Tu-nGen.nfl'er. i. 3 
lint forth their sons to seek (rep.). .. — i. 3 

like tile prodigious son — ii. 3 

bath he not a son? (r<'p.) — ii. 4 

for thou art Jleiop's son — iii. 1 

the son of my grandfather (rrp.) .... — iii. 1 

we are the sons of women Merry^yives,\\. ,t 

come, son Slender (rep. V. 2) — iii. 1 

my son profits nothing — iv. 1 

my daughter and my little son — iv. 1 

son I how now? how now, son? (rep.) — y. .'i 

in tlie protection of his son TirelflhNight, i. 2 

as if thy eldest son should be a fool.. — i. 5 

every wise man's son doth know.. — ii. 3 (song) 
or mv son, it should be thus .. Meas.forMeas.}\.'l 
son, I have over-heard what hatli .. — ill. I 
than my son should be unlawfully born — iii. 1 

liatli Leonato any son, my lord MachAdo,]. I 

where is my cousin, your son? — j. 2 

too like my lady's eldest son — ii- 1 

Adam's sons are my brethren — ii. 1 

not till JNIonday, my dear son — _ii. I 

as freely, son, as God did give her me — ly. 1 
she respects me as her only son .Mid.N.'sDream, i. I 
hang us every moilicr's son (rep. iii. 1) — i. 2 

for their sons are well tutored I ore'sL. Losl,iv. 2 

Mehercle, if their sons be ingenious — iy. 2 

son, or lather an honest woman's sou .Uer. nfl'en. ii. 2 

but ajioor man'sson — ii- 2 

I will tell you news of your son — n. 2 

a man's son may; but, in the — ii.2 

your son that is, your child that (rep.) — ii. 2 

iiere's my son, sir, a poor boy — ij- 2 

go, father, with thy son — ii. 2 

unto his son Lorenzo, and his daughter — iv. 1 
son of sir Rowland (rep. i.'2 Sri. 'i).AsyouUkeit,i. 1 

an old man, and bis three sons — i. 2 

been son to some man else — j- 2 

before known this young man bis son — i. 2 

that you should love his son dearly? — 1.3 

yet the son— vet not the son (rep.) .. — ii. 3 
good sir Rowland's son (rep. v. 1).... — ii. 7 

in delivering my son from me All'sH'eU,i. I 

welcome, count; my son's no dearer — i. 2 

her matter was, she loved your son .. — i. 3 

your son, were not my brother — i- 3 

you love my son (rep.) — i- 3 

my lord your son made me to think — i. 3 

be you the sons of worthy Frenchmen — ii. 1 
commend me to my kinsmen, and my son— ii. 2 
an* tliev were sons of mine, I'd have — ii. 3 

to make yourself a son out of my — ii. 3 

well, thou hast a son, shall take .... — ii- 3 
your unfortunate son, Bertram — iii. 2 (letter) 

your son will not be killed so — iii. 2 

1 only hear, your son was run — iii- 2 

where is my son, I pray you? — iii. 2 

he was my son: but I do wash — iii. 2 

my son corrupts a well-derived — jjj- -^ 

when you see my son, to tell him 
your clear sou may hie . 



I lack i 
unless 
the liust ! 



elf- 



ity sonietimes, to do me O'h' llo, i. 2 

■li'arity be sometimes a vice . — li. 3 



es tiirget: Um 



.,,,_..iitof,. id tilings 

vou not sometimes seen a liandkereliict — in. 3 

StiMEWHAT rounder Tn-o (Jcn.nf femna.v. ■> 

here is a letter will say somewhat. A/erryJi /rw, iv.5 

told somewhat of my tale Meas. lor ileus, v. 1 

that's somewhat madly spoken — y. 1 

these foolish drops do somewbat.il/er. o.^' cnfce. ii. 3 
and smell somewhat strong of her.. ../)«'.< If Wi, v. 2 

somewhat doth re.-emblc .... Taming of Shretiwv.i 

are grown somewhat light, we are ..liichurd II. i. 4 
well, someivliat we must do: come .. — ii. 2 
say, an old man can do somewhat ..illemyl r. v. 3 
somewhat too sudden, sirs ....._.....!««"'!/»''- y- 2 

fall somewhat [Co/.-sonietliingJinto.ii!ic/iard ///. i. 2 
somewhat [Kii/.-aometbiugJ we will — iii. 1 

somewhat against our meaning...... — in. .') 

that's somewhat sudden: but he s. Henri/ ; ///. iii. 2 
there is a fellow somewhat near the.. — v. 3 
were not somewhat darker . . Troilns f, Cressida, i. 1 

somewhat too early 7'i(ii!.J«</romcus, u. 2 

somewhat doth she mean: sec, I,iicius — ly. 1 

thou •'iv'st me somewhat to reimir Vencles, u. I 

Ibou'di this knave came somewhat siiucily./.''ir. i. 1 

from this time, he .soinewhai seanti r. . . . //«"i/e(, i. 3 

SI iM ICW 1 1 Elli;— some where else.. Tu'elflh Nighi. iv. 1 

somewliere gone to dinner ..Comedy uf Hrrors, ii. 1 

in heaven, or somewliorc else Titus Amlron. iv. 3 

SOMEWHITHER would she have .. - ly. 1 

SO.MME— passed the river Somme HenryV. iii. 5 

SON— good wombs have borne bad sons.. Ve/iipejf, i. 2 

the king's son, Ferdinand (rep.) — i- '2 

save for the son that she did — ■■ 2 

yes, Caliban her son — !• ^ 

the diike of Milan, and bis brave son .. — .}■ '- 

and give it his son for an aiiplc — ;'.- j 

for coming thence, my son is lost — u. 1 

we have lost your son, I fear — li- 
the king, his son'siilivo - '!■ 

further seaieh lor my poor son (.I'p.) . . — u- i 



the duke's eldest son; that Escalus.. 
from son to son, some four or five. . 

your son was misled (rep.) 

against your sou, there is no 

that my son will be here to-night., 
yoiider's my lord your son (rep.) .. 

but your son, as mad in folly 

come on, my son, in whom mj' .... 
son, on mv life, I have seen her 



— iii. 4 (letter) 



iv. 5 
V. S 
V. 3 
V. 3 



laved a farmer's eldest son Taming cfSh. 1 (indue.) 
Viiicentio his son brought up (rep.) — i. 1 

be serviceable to my son quoth he .. — i. ' 

old Antonio's son (rep. ii. I) 

of I'isa, sir; son to Vincaatio (rep. ii 
witless else her son. Am I not wise 

soft, son! sir by your leave 

my son Lucentio made me (rep.) . . . 
yon son shall have my daughter 



D- 



the deceiving father of a deceitful son 

now, by my mother's son 

there to visit a son of mine 

the happier for thy son, and now by law 

thy son by this hath married 

to "sec thy honest son, who will 

your son was beloved in Padua 

my son and my servant spend all — 

he is mine only son, and heir to 

O, my son, my son 1 tell me, thou 

lives my sweetest son! — 

right son unto the right Vincentio . . 
affords this kindness, son Petrncbio. . 
if the king had no son, they would If niter 
the blood o' the prince my son .--••- 
even for your son's sake; and, thereby 

yourself,' your queen, your son 

his hopefiil son's, his babe's 

the prince your son 

bodies of my queen, and son 

yet I'll tarry till mv son come 

I mentioned a son o' the king's .. — r 
saw'st tlioii the prince Florizel my son? — 
the angle that plneka our son thither (rep )— 

amotionof the prodigal son — 

reason, my son , should choose (rep.) — 

whom son I dare not call — 

nsks thee, the son, forgiveness — 

we are not furnished like Bohemia s son — 
against his daughter and the king's son — 

he w ould not call me son — 

and his son's pranks too .-•;--•• — 

his son that .should have married — — 
has the old man e'er a sou, sir — 



ii. 1 
ii. 3 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 
iii. 3 
, (chorus) 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 2 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 



SON 



[ Gl)8 ] 

SON— of blows, your pen miglit drop . . ■-' lli'iiri/ 1 1', i. 

my lord your son had only Init tlie curps — i. 

that lier eldest son is like you — ii. 

kniglit to tile son of the king .... — ii. 2 (lette 

two honours lost; yonrs and your son's — ii. 

sodid your son; he was so snfi'ered .. — ii. 

hal a bastard son of the kin;;'s? .... — ii. 

whose son art thou? My motlier's son — iii. 

so the son of the female is the shadow — iii. 

whereon this Hydra son of war — i\. 

if I had a thousand sons, the first.... — iv. 

Humphrey, my son of Gloster — iv. 

prince John, yoin- son, dotli kiss .... — iv. 

see, sons, what things you are! — iv. 

to invest their sons with arts — iv. 

my son! Heaven put it in thy .... — iv. 
Heaven knows, my son, by what .... — iv. 
and peace, son John; but health .... — iv. 

to have a son set your decrees — v. 

the father, and propose a eon — v. 

yourself so by a son disdained — v. 

soft silencing your son : after this. ... — v. 

live to see a son of mine offend you.. — v. 

proper sou : and not less happy (rev.) — v. 
the son to Lewis the emperor (rep.)..,. Henry V. i. 

when the son [Co(.A'n(. -man] dies.... — i. 

mock mothers from their sons — i. 

ces sont mots de son niauvais — iii. 

BO, if a son, that is by iiis father — iv. 

the father of his son, nor the master — iv. 

shall the good man teach his son .... — iv. 

take her, fair son, and from her — v. 

and of it left his sou imperial lord — v. 2 (cho 
and sent our sons and husbands ....1 Henry f I. ii. 

third son to the third Edward (rep. ii. 5) — ii. 

Edward's son, the first-begotten .... — ii. 

true subjects, sons of .your progenitors — iv. 

and on his son young' John — iv. 

seven years did not Talbot see his son — iv. 

to bid his young son welcome — iv. 

and am I your son? and shall I fly? — iv. 

my leave of thee, fair son, born to .. — iv. 

twice am I thy son; the life — iv. 

art sealed the sou of chivalry? — iv. 

fly, I am not Talbot's son (re;).) .... — iv. 

lo, where your son is borne! — iv. 

for Henry, son unto a conqueror .. .. — v. 
"Warwick, my valiant son? (rep.) ..ilienryVI.i. 

peace, son ; and show some reason . . — i. 

had seven sons; the first, Edward .. — ii 

Richard, his only son, who — ii. 

the eldest son and heir of ,Tohn — ii. 

the first son's heir, being dead {rep ) — ii. 

the third son, duke of Clarence — ii. 

son to Edmund Langley (re/).) — ii, 

who was the son of Edmund Mortimer — ii. 

if the issue of the elder son succeed . . — ii. 

from John of Gaunt, the fourth son — ii. 

and in thy sons, fair slips of — ii. 

there's Best's son, the tanner — iv. 

his sou am I; deny it, if you can .... — iv. 

is Cade the sou of Henry the Fifth . . — i v. 

my eldest son, nay, all my sous — v. 

call in my sons to be my bail — v. 

the sons of York, thy betters — v. 

his sons, he says, shall give their (rep.) — v. 

mad misleader of thy brainsick son I — v. 

0.war, thou son of hell — v. 

best deserved of all my sons ZliemyVl. i. 

on him, his sons, ills favourites — i. 

and these thy sons, thy kinsmen — i. 

1 am the son of Henry the Fifth .... -^ i. 

sons, peacel Peace, thou! — i. 

wrong is this unto the prince .your son? — i. 

but my son, whom I unnaturally. ... — i. 

and these thy forward sons! — i. 

never borne thee son, seeing — i. 

and disinherited thine only son — i. 

pardon me, sweet son ; the earl — i. 

undone tliysclf, thy son, and me .... — i. 

wliereby my son is disinherited — i. 

come, son. let's away (7-ep.) — i. 

geutle son Edward, thou wilt — i. 

love to me, and to her son. hath .... — i. 

the flesh of me, and of my son — i. 

why, how now, sons, and brother .... — i. 

thou canst not, sou; it is mipossible — i. 

thou hast one son, for his sake — i, 

and this thy son's blood — i. 

my sons, God knows, what hath — i. 

where are yo\ir mess nf sons — i. 

'tis prize enough to be his son — ii. 

the sons of brave Piantagenet — ii 

would have his son a king — ii. 

blessed with a goodly son — ii. 

aud happy always was it for that son — ii. 

I'll leave my son my virtuous — ii. 

knighthood to our forward son — ii. 

and put his own son in — ii. 

should succeed the father, but the son? — ii. 

no, no, it is mine only sou! — ii. 

for slaughter of my son, shed — ii. 

ever sun, so rued a fatlier's death? ()-e;j.) — ii. 

as Priam was lor all his valiant sons — ii. 

love York, and I am son to York .... — ii. 

my queen, aud son, your labour is .. — iii. 

my sons slionld call you father — iii. 

to be the father unto many sons — iii. 

Henry, and his son young Edward .. — iii. 

witli tliis my son, prince iildward (rpp.) — iii. 

of the lord Bonville on yoiu' wife's son — iv. 

and thou, sou Clarence, shalt stir .... — iv. 

what says my loving son? — v. 

I hope, she hath a son for me — v. 

that taught his son the office — v. 

thy son I killed for his presumption — v. 

not lived to kill a son of mine — v. 

men for tlieir sous, wives for — v. 

and the prince liis son, are gone — v. 

as the father and the sou — v. 



SON 



SO>r, who shall be flayed alive.... Winrer'jTo/e, iv. 3 

the case of the shepherd's son — iv. 3 

prince Florizel, son of Polixenes .... — v. 1 

might I a son and daughter, now — v. I 

this avouches the shepherd's son .... — v. 2 

the old man and his son aboard the. — v. "J 

but thy sons and daughters — v.i 

for the king's son took me — v. J 

we may live, son, to shed (rep.) — v. 2 

how if it be false, son? — v.i! 

and son unto the king — v. 3 

mother of two goodly sons .... Comedy o/ Errors, i. 

and brought up to attend my sons .. — i. 

Isee my son Autipholus — v. 

that here my only son knows — v. 

at a burden two fair sons — v. 

where is that son that floated — v. 

took Dromio, and my son from them — v. 

in travail of you, my sons — v. 

sons, kinsmen, thanes, and you whose .Macbeth, i. 

the liing's two sons, are stolen — ii- 

no son of mine succeeding — iii. 

Fleance, his son, that keeps — iii. 

hut one down ; the son is fled — iii. 

for a wayward son, spiteful — iii. 

had he Duncan's sons imder (rep.) .. — iii. 

there is Siward's son, and many .... — v. 

your right noble son (rpp. V. 7) — v. 

had I as many sons as I — v. 

what now, my son 1 have I not KingJohn, i. 

upon the right and party of her sou? — i. 

and eldest son, as I suppose — i. 

the son and heir to that same — i. 

and this son like him — i. 

read some tokens of ray son in — i. 

this my mother's son (7^;;.) — i. 

son, had of your father claimed this son — i. 

old sir Robert's wife's eldest son (rep.) — i. 

his son; England was Geifrey's right — ii. 

thv usurping son. Out, insolent .... — ii. 

my bed was ever to thy son as true .. — ii. 

this is thy eldest son's son — ii. 

that bars the title of thy son — ii. 

son to the elder brother of this man — ii. 

whose sons lie scattered on the — ii. 

son, list to this conjunction — ii. 

thy princely son, can in this — ii. 

and makes your son a shadow — ii. 

command thy sou and daughter .... — ii. 

where is she and her son? tell me.... — ii. 

look so sadly on my son ? — iii. 

a mother's curse, on her revolting son — iii. 

j'onng .tVrthur is ray son, and he .... — iii. 

mad, I should forget my son — iii. 

these hands could' so redeem my son — iii. 

that never had a son — iii. 

my Arthur, my fair son! — iii. 

Geffrey's sou? No, indeed (rep.) .... — iv. 

many a poor man's sou would — iv. 

the sons and children of this isle .... — v. 

Henry Hereford, thy bold son Richard II. i. 

but my father's brother's son — i. 

duke of Norfolk, you your son — i. 

throw down, my son, the duke — i. 

Edward's seven sons, whereof — i. 

in the lusty 'haviour of his son — i. 

four years of my sou's exile — i. 

death not let me see my son — i. 

thy son is banished upon good — i. 

come, come, my son, I'll bring — i. 

world's ransom, blessed Mary's son.. — ii. 

seen how his son's son should (rep.) — ii. 

brother to great Edward's son (re;).) — ii. 

his heir a well-deserving son? — ii. 

for now his son is duke — ii. 

the son of Richard earl of Arundel .. — ii. 

his young son Henry Percy frep. ii. 3) — ii. 9 

your son was gone before i came .. .. — ii. 2 

you have a son, Aumerle — ii. 3 

of mothers' sons shall ill — iii :i 

here comes my son Amnerle (ri'p.) ., — v. 2 

have we more sons? or are we — v. 2 

pluck my fair son from ~- v. 2 

were he twenty times my son — v. 2 

a bastard, not thy sou — v. 2 

tell of my luitlirifty son? — v. 3 

loyal fatlier of a treacherous son I . . . . — v. 3 

blot in thy digressing son — v. 3 

as thriftless sons their scraping — v. 3 

come, my old son; I prav — v. 3 

and eldest son to beaten Douglas .... I He7i7j//r. i. I 

so blest a son; a son, who is — i. 1 

for never a king's son in Christendom — i. 2 

of this fault, and not my son — i. 3 

your departure with your son — i.3 

and make the Douglas' son your .... — i.3 

your son in Scotland being thus .... — i.3 

to my horse; good king's son — ii. 2 

and yet the son of a woman! — ii. 4 

the sweet tale of tlie son [Co/.A'n/.-sim] — ii. 4 

a kind's son! If I do not beat thee .. — ii. 4 

are villains aud the sons of darkness — ii. 4 

that thou art my son, I have — ii. 4 

if then tliou be son to me — ii. 4 

shall the son of England prove — ii. 4 

be hold to tell 3'ou, tlial I am your son — iii. 2 

witli him, my son. lord. Tohn of Lancaster — iii. 2 

the son of utter darkness — iii. 3 

where is his son, the nimble-footed .. — iv. 1 

good houseliolders. yeomen's sons..,, — iv. 2 

younger sons to younger brotliers.. .. — iv. 2 

my brother, and his son, that brought — v. I 

the treacherous labour of your son .. — v. 4 
the fortune of my lord, your son . . ..iUenry IfW. 1 

sir John, is prisoner to your son .... — i. 1 

your son have not the (lay — i. 1 

now doth my son, and brother — i. 1 

wouldst say, your son did thus — i. 1 

brother, son, and all are dead — i. 1 

camiot think, my lord, your sou is dead — i. 1 



SON— Ed ward, to thy slaughtered soR.Richard III. i.2 

have blessed you with a goodly son .. — i. 3 

my poor son, a.t Tewkeslnu'y I — i.3 

a husband, and a son, thou ow'st to me — i.3 

son, that now is prince of 'Wales (je/).) — i.3 

wlien my son was stabbed with — i.3 

of nature, and the son of hell! — i.3 

witness my son, now in the shade.... — i. S 

bowels of thv sovereign's sou — i. 4 

blesFed his three sons with his — i. 4 

if you were a prince's son, being .... — i. 4 

Clarence, iny unhappy son! — ii. 2 

he is my son, ay, and therein my .... — ii. 2 

Edward, my lord, thy sou, our king.. — ii. 2 

of the young prince your son — ii. 2 

to reap the liarvest of his son — ii. S 

good grace his sou shall reign — ii. 3 

and the queen's sons, and brothers ,, — ii. 3 

. up and down my sons were tost — ii. 4 

when Richard stabbed her son — iii. 3 

my sister, and her princely sons — iii. 3 

he would make his son heir to — iii. 5 

that Edward is your brother's son ,. — iii. 7 

mother to a many sons — iii. 7 

the child, your brother's son (rep.)., — iii. 7 

letters from me to m^ son in — iv. 1 

Stanley, he is your wife's son — iv. 2 

the son of Clarence have I penned ., — iv. 3 

the sons of Edward sleep in — iv. 3 

Harry died, aud my sweet son — iv. 4 

where be thy two sous? — iv. 4 

smother my damned son (rep.) — iv. 4 

deathof my poor sons, and brotliers? — iv. 4 

and little Ned Piantagenet, his son? — iv. 4 

art thou my sou ? — i v. 4 

1 have no more sons of the royal .... — iv. 4 
take the kingdom from yoiu- sons. . . . — iv. 4 

is but, a son being king — iv. 4 

Dorset your son, that, with a fearful — iv. 4 

leave behind your son, George Stanley — iv. 4 

my son George Stanley is franked ., — iv. 5 

and thy fair son Edward, Vaughan . . — v. 1 

lest his son George fall into — v. 3 

Edward's unhappy sons do bid thee — v. 3 

slaughtered his own son, the son .... — v. 4 
now his son, Henry the eighth , , . . Henry I'll I. ii. 1 

like the eldest son of fortune — ii. 2 

I her frail son, amongst my brethren — iii. 2 

sperr up the sons of Troy .... Troilus <?- Cress, (prol. ) 

and the rude son should strike his ,, — i.3 

makes many Tlietis' sons , — i.3 

thou bitch- wolf's son, canst thou ..,, — ii. 1 

no more touched than all Priam's sons — ii. 2 

ay, my good son — ii. 3 

or step-dame to her son — iii. 2 

ason ofPriam, in change of him ..,, — iii. 3 

now, great Thetis' son! — iii. 3 

emulation hath a thousand sons ..,, — iii. 3 

the youngest son of Priam — iv. 5 

my father's sister's son, a cousin-german — iv. .'i 

a bastard son of Priani's — v. 8 

if the son of a whore fight for — v. 8 

son of sixteen, pluck Timon of Alliens, iv. 1 

who all thj' human sons doth hate ,. — iv. 3 

twixt natural son and sire! — iv. 3 

both too; and .women's sons — iv. 3 

if my son were my husband Corinlanus, i. 3 

tender-bodied, and the only son of ray — i.3 

good report should have been my son — i. 3 

had I a dozen sons, each in — i.3 

how does your little son? — i.3 

o' my word, the father's son — i.3 

were lie the butcher of my son — i. 9 

wheiein he gives my son the whole . . — ii. 1 

and mothers that luck sons — ii. I 

Numa's daugliter's son, who, after ., — ii. 3 

your son, these senators, the nobles ., — iii. 2 

I pr'ythee now, my son (rp/j.) — iii. 2 

your son will, or exceed tlie common — iv. 1 

my first son, whither wilt thou go? ,, — iv. I 

I would my son were in Arabia — iv. 2 

my son, this lady's husband here .... — iv. 2 

as'if he were son and lieir — iv. b 

cannot office me from my son Coriolnnus — v. 2 

my son! my son! thou art preparing — v. 2 

tlian that of common sons — v. 3 

to your correcled son? then let — v. 3 

the son, the husband, and the father — v. 3 

for mvself. son, I purpose not — v. 3 

thou Icnow'st, great son, the end of ., — v. 3 

speak to me, son; tliou hast affected — v. 3 

but, i'urA'oiu" son, believe it ~ v. 3 

he killed my son; my daughter — v. 5 

to repute himself a son of Rome JuVusCtrsar, i. 2 

brave son, derived from honourable.. — ii. 1 

were you, Antony, the son of Cit'^ar.. — iii. 1 

who is your sister's son. Mark Antony — iv. 1 

1 am the son of Marcus Cato, ho ! (rep.) — v. 4 
may'st be honoured being Cato's son — v. 4 
all his dignities, upon his sou ....Antony ^Cleo. i. 2 

having a son, and friends — ii. 6 

bear the king's son's body before ..,, — iii. 1 

whom they call my father's eon — iii. 6 

his sons he tiiere proclaimed — iii. G 

conquered Egypt for my son — v. 2 

he purposed to his wife's sole sou .... Cymhelinc, i. 1 

in question, two other sons (7-?p.) .... — i. 1 

have had the sole son of ray queen! .. — i.2 

Lennntus our neighbour sheplierd's son ! — i.2 

my l.>rd your soirdrew on my master — i. 2 

your son's my father's friend — i. 2 

his ma^^ter, and euemy to my son — i. 6 

bring me word, she loves my son .... — i. 6 

to boot, my son, who shall take — i. 6 

and this her soncaunot take two .... — ii. 1 

our dear son, when you have given ., — ii. 3 

yes, and a gen tlevvomau's son — ii. 3 

wert thou the son of Jupiter — ii. 3 

sou, let your mother end — iii. I 

they arc sous to the king — iii. 3 



SON, I say, follow the king 

how now, my son? 'Tis certuin 

that tliev had heen my fatlier s sonsl 
'tis Cloten, the son o' the queen (icp.) 

he was a queen's son, boys 

with the noseuco of her son (rep.).... 

now for tlie counsel of my son 

eons, we'll higlicr to the mounlams.. 
the old man and his sons were angels 
since, Jupiter, our son is aood. . . .... . . 

your low-laid sou our goiUieiul will.. 
to work her son into the niloiJtion — 
but her sou is gone, we know not liow 
my sons, I must, for mine own part.. 

for the nursing of thy sons (rfj>.) 

and think they are my sons 

but gracious sir, here are your sons . . 

A. . ..?.!. .. ..»:.- f\4^ iimrrlii^r anus ... 



iv. 2 
iv. 2 

iv. :i 



V. 5 
V. 6 
V. 5 
V. 6 



i. 2 



to wish tt pair of wortliier sons 

Arviragus, your younger princely son — v. < 

point thy two sons forth ••••■•. , " ■ T' V 

lam hisflrst-born son TilwAiidronicus, i. 1 

if ever Bassianus C'oosar's son — i- j 

with his sons, a terror to our foes (rep.) — !• 1 
of live and twenty valiant sons ircp.) — ;. 2 

why suffer'st thou thy sons.... — '• - 

how many sons of mine hast thou . . 
tlie eldest son of this distressed queen 
tears in passion for her son; and (n/i.) 

think my son to be as dear 

but must my sons be slaughtered 

spare ray flrst-born son 

to this your son is marked 

rest vou here, my sons (rep.) 

these oin- late-deceased emperor s sons 

create your emperor's eldest son 

quarrel you have slain your son .... 
are any sons of mine: my sons would 

nor thy traitorous hauglity sons 

to handy witli thy lawless sons 

a virtuous son. No, foolish [rep ) 



_ i. 2 
_ i. 2 



— i. 2 

_ i. 2 



ii. 3 



11. 4 
iii. 1 
iii. 1 



_ iii. 1 



iii. 1 
iii. I 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 
iv. 4 
iv. 4 
iv. 4 
iv. 4 



unworthy brother, and unworthy sons 

wise Laertes' son did graciously plead 

be dishonoured by my sons in Kome! 

own hand aid slay his youngest son 

his traitorous sons, to whom (rep.) . . 

eons, let it be your charge, as it is ours 

tliy sons make pillage of her chastity 

I'll go fetch thy sons to back thy .... 

this is a witness that I am thy son .. 

every raotlier breeds not sons alike .. 

rob mv s« eet sons of their fee . . 

farewell, my sons: see, that you make 

and let mv spleenful sons this trnll. . 

the unhappy sun of old Androuicus.. 

fell fault of "my accursed sons 

fear not thy sons, they shall 

be pitiful to mv condemned sons 

for two and twenty sons 1 never wept 

my son's sweet blood {rep.) 

uiibind my sons, reverse the doom .. 

to death mv wretched sons (rep.) 

if thou love thy sons, let Marcus 

hitlier both thy sons alive — . . 

as for luy sons, say, I account of 

to have tliy sons with thee 

the heads of thy two noble sons (rep. 

thy otiier banished son, struck 

with more care read to her sons 

the lustful sons of Tamora performers 

carry from me to the empress' sons . . 

Demetrius, here's tlieson of Lucius.. 

for joy the emperor hath a son 

this mv flrst-born son and lieirl 

my son and 1 will have the wind 

tlie wilful sons of old Audronicus.... 

of sorrow for his valiant sons 

as if his traitorous sons 

Lucius, son to old Androuicus 

hut he will not entieat liis sou for us 

'twas her two sons (rep.) •,;•••, 

for liis hand, he had liis two sons lieads 
like the empress' sous they a.K\(rep.) 

send for Lucius, his son (rep.) 

can the son's eve behold his father .. 

iieoole, and sons of Kome, by uproar 

last" true duties of thy noble son! .... - ... - 

as I am sou and servant to your will . . / enclet, i. 1 

that would be son to great Anliochus.. . —.,'•' 

he's father, son, and husband mild — i. 1 (nddle) 

shows, we'll joy in such a son — i. ) 

now you're both a father and a son — .i. 1 

where now his son's a glow-wnrin — n. 3 

our son and daughter shall in Tyrus . . 

is not this your son, my lord? 

a son for her cradle, ere she 

hut I have, sir, a son by order of law ... 
our son of Cornwall, and you, our (r //.) 

of the rest, beloved sons be yours 

my eon Edgar (rep. iv. 1) 

that sons at perfect age 

as ward to the son, and the son manage 
bond cracked between son and father.. . 

there's son against father ;•,•.■••,• 

and tlie son and lieir of a mongrel bitch 

your sou and daughter (re;/.) 

1 had a son, now outlawed from 

to his son, for lie's a mad yeoman (rep.) 

Where's my son Edniund? 

mv son came then into my mind 

[To/. K"'.] bless thee, pood man s son . . . 
of tlie loyal service ot liis sou . .... •.•■-. 
where was his son, when they did take . 

Oioster's bastard son (riy). iv. 7) — ;■•" 

they sa.v, Edgar his banished son — iv. 7 

my name is Edgar, and thy father s son — y. 3 
eorly walking did I see your son. Uomeo Sr Juliet, \. 1 
from light steals home my heavy eon — i. 1 
hihson iselder.sir; hisson is tlnrty — i. .'j 

his son was but a word . . — \. ■• 

the son aud lieir of old TJbcrio — >• J 



V. 1 



— v. 3 



v. 3 



— iii. 7 

— iv. 1 

— iv. 1 

— iv. i 

— iv. 2 



SON-onlyson of your great eneiny.Homco^Jnii><,i. 5 

nickname for her purblind poll — ii. I 

young son, it argues a distempered.. — li. 3 

that's my good son (irp.) — .!!• 3 

too familiar is my dear son with — [ii. 3 

acquaint her here of my son Paris' love — iii. 4 
for the sunset of my brother's son .. — lii. .0 
son, the night before thy wedding-day — iv. 5 
to see thy son and heir more ettrl,v .. — v. 3 
grief of my son's exile hath stopped.. — v. 3 

my cousin Hamlet and my son Hamlet, i. 2 

that which dearest father hears hisson .. — i. 2 
chiefest courtier, cousin, and our son .... — i. 2 
that they do know my son, come you.... — ii. 1 

laying these slight sullies on my son — ii. 1 

to visit my too mucli changed son — ii 2 

and source of all your son's distemper .. — ij. 2 

your noble son is mad: mad call I it — ii. 2 

bloodoffatliers, mothers, dauiilitrrs sons — ii. 2 
that I, the son of a dear fattier munk'ied — ii. 2 
O wonderful son, that can so astonish .. _ iii. 2 
I, his sole son, do this same villain send — iii. 3 
do you not come your tardy son to cliide — iii. 4 
O gentle son, upon the heat and flame of — iii. 4 

where is your son? bestow this nliice — iv. 1 

should be made by the son of a king? — iv. 2 

next, your son gone; and he most violent — iv. .5 
show yourself indeed your fatlier's son.. — iv. 7 

my son I what theme! — v. I 

set some watch over your son — v. 1 

our son sliall win. He's fat — v. 2 

tliongh our proper son stood in your Othello, i. 3 

SONG— let's see .vonr song ..TiroGen. of rerona, i. 2 

but a mean to fill .your song — i. 2 

book of songs and sonnets liere Merry Wive.i, i. I 

rush at once with some diifused song — iv. 4 
all is done. Now a song (rep.) . . Twelfth Night, u. 3 

or a song of good life? — ii. 3 

piece of song, that old and antique song — ii. 4 
come, the song we had last night — — .ii- 4 
break oft' tliy song, aud haste ..Meas. for Mens. iv. I 
a man take yon, to go in the song? ..MiicliAdo,\. 1 

we'll hear that song again — ii. S 

by m,v troth a good song — ii. 3 

W'ith 'songs of woe, roun'd about .. — v. 3 (song) 
rude sea grew civil at her song. A/iti.iV.'s Dream,}'}. 2 
now a roundel, and a fairy song .... — ii. 3 

both warbling of one song, both — iii. 2 

first, rehearse this song by rote — v. 2 

like a blind harper's song Love'sL.Lost.v. 2 

are hnrsh after the songs of Apollo — v. 2 (song) 
Slick melancholy out of a song ..As you Like it, U. 6 

well, I'll end the song; sirs, cover — ii. 5 

here was he merry, hearing of a song — ij. 7 

1 would sing my song without a .... — iii. 2 
have you no song, forester, for this . . — iv. 2 

come, sit, sit, and a song — v. 3 

to hear such a foolish song — v. 3 

you corrupt the song, sirrah All's Well, i. 3 

purifying o' the song; would God would — _ i. 3 

sold a goodly manor for a song — iii. 2 

and songs composed to her unwortliiness.— iii. 7 
are summer songs for me. . If inter sTale, Iv. 2 (song) 
would sing her song, and dance her turn — iv. 3 
he hath son^s, for man, or woman .. — iv. 3 
we'll have this song out anon by .... — iv. 3 
grew so in love with the wenches' song — iv. 3 
but my sir's song, and the nothing of it — -.iy. 3 
against the mermaid's song . . Comedy of Errors, iii. 2 

sing the song that pleaseth MlenryW. iii. 1 

come, Kate, I'll have your song too — iii. 1 

come, sing me a bawd.v song — i)j* ^ 

a merry song, come: it grows 2Hrari/fr. ii. 4 

owls! nothing but songs of death?./fiV/mrd ///. iv. 4 

a French song, and a fiddle Henry I'lll.X.Z 

and sing the merry songs of peace to — v. 4 
I'll sing you a song now ....Troilus^Cressida, iii. 1 | 

let tliy song be love — i.ii. 1 ' 

we'll say our song the wliilst Cijmljeline. iy. 2 

as is a nurse's song of lullaby niusAndrofi. ii. 3 

to sing a song of old was sung .. Pericles, i. ((iower) 

wont to be so full of songs, sirrah? I.eir, I. t 

too credent ear vou list his songs Hamlet ji. 3 j 

alas, sweet lad.v, what imports this song? — iv. 5 
your songs? your flashes of merriment .. — v. 1 1 

'fore heaven, an excellent song Othello, ii. 3 

a more exquisite song tlian the other.. .. — ii. 3 

she bad a song of— willow, an old — iv. 3 

that song, tonight, will uot go from — iv. 3 

what (lid thy song liode, lady? — v. 2 

SONG-MEN all, and very good .. iyinler'sTale,\v 3 

SON- 1 .N -LAW , bf yet ■'Uneh Ado, v. 1 

I will buy me a son-in-law in a fair .All's "'ill, v. 3 
we liear not of our son-in-law ..TamingofSh. u'l. 2 
then embraces his son-in-law .... Winter' s'l'ale, v. 2 
this your son-in-law, and son unto the — v. 3 

and his son-in-law, Mortimer I HmryW. ii. 4 

break into his son-in law's house ..i Henry 11. iv. 7 

utter to his son-in-law, lord Henrii ''III. i. 2 

learn our ficeiiess of a son-in-law . . Cymlielitie, v. h 
a valiant son-in-law tliou shalt ..Titus Atidran, i. 2 
death is my son-in-law, death., /foineo ^Juliet, iy. 5 
vour son-in-law is far more fair than ..Othello, i. 3 

S(JNS-1N-LAW, then kill, kill i,<«ir, iv. 6 

SONNET— by wai Ifiil sonnets.. Two Oen. of Ver. iii. 2 

I have a sonnet will serve — iii. 2 

my book of songs and sonnets liere .MerryWires,\. 1 

as the very true sonnet is 'I'leelf/h ,\i^'h', iii. 4 

will you t'iieu write me a sonnet in .. Much Ado, v. 2 
a halting sonnet of Ills own pure hrain — v. 4 
hath one o' my sonnets already .. Love' sL. Lost, '}\\ 3 
did never sonnet for her sake compile — iv. 3 
will you give me a copy of thesonuet./iW'jTcH, iy. 3 
I once writ a sonnet in his praise .... Henri/ y. iii. 7 
I have hoard a sonnet begin so to.... — iii. 7 

SONNICTEER. Devise wit Loi-e'sL.Lost, i. 'i 

SONNETING: but are you not — iv. 3 

SONTI ES, 'twill be a hard . . Merchant of Venice, ii. 2 
SONU ANCE[Coi.-8onnance, Kii/.-sonaunce] and 
tlie note Henry t'. iv. 2 



SOON-BELIEVING adversaries .. ..Uielmrd U.S. 1 

SOON-SPEEDING gear as will ...Komco<S ,/HilV.^ v. I 

SOOTH— drawn, rffmister, in good Sfxilh.'/'cnipM/, ii.2 

in sooth, I would master Feiiton. . Merry Wives, iii. 4 

no, sooth, sir; my determinate,. TttrZ/Wi A'(4'A/, ii. I 

in sooth, thou wast in very — ii. 3 

itis silly sooth, and dalliesfrcp.) — ii. 4 

yes, in good sooth, the vice ia ..Mens, for Mens. iii. 2 
yon do mo wrong, good sooth ..Mid.N.'sDrcum,'ii. 3 

yes, sooth; and so do yon — iii. 2 

good neighbour, in sooth [C'o/.-faitlO- Torr'ifZ../.. v. 2 
m sooth,! know not why I am.Merch. of I'enice,]. 1 

in good snoth, are too too light — ii. G 

but in good sooth, are you be that. /hii/(mIrtp/(, iii. 2 
was I, in sooth? and I was the first ..All's Well, v. 2 
tills of me, in sooth; the youngest. Taming of Hh. i. 2 

in sootli, you 'scape not so — ii. I 

in good sooth, even thus — iii. 2 

and, sooth to say, in countenance.. .. — iv. 2 

very sooth, to-morrow Winter' sTatc, i. 2 

good sooth, she is tlie queen of — iv. 3 

lie looks like sooth — iv. 3 

Bootli, when I was .young, and handed — iv. 3 
sooth to say. you did not dine. Cojnedy of Errors, iv. 4 
good to sooth liim in tliese contraries — iv. 4 

if I say sooth, I must report they Macbeth, i. 2 

if thy speecli be sooth, I care not .... — v. .1 
in sooth, good friend, your father .... King.John, i. 1 
in sooth, 1 would you were a little .. — iv. I 
no, in good sooth; the fire is dead.... — iv. 1 

of!' aga^n with words of sooth ! tlichard ;/. iii. 3 

not mine, in good sooth (117).) \HenrylT.'\'u. 1 

and leave in sooth, and such protest — iii. I 

sicli of a calm; yen, good sooth 2 Henry IF. ii. 4 

for, to say the sooth Henry!', iii. 6 

to sooth your forgery and his 3 Henry I' I. iii, 3 

and sooth the devil that I warn ....lliehard III. i, 3 
which, to say sooth, are blessings .. Henry yill. ii. 3 
yes, good sooth ; to, Achilles! ..Troilus Sf Cress. 'n. 1 
rude, in sooth; in good sooth, very .. — iii. I 

sooth, madam, I hear nothing luliusCeesar, ii. 1 

eooth, la, I'll help AntonySr Cleopatra, iv . 4 

good sooth, I care not for you Pericles, i. I 

when signior Sooth here itoee proclaim — i. 2 
good sooth, it showed well iu you.... — iv. I 

sir, in good sooth, in sincere Leor, ii. 2 

good, my lord, sooth him — iii. 4 

ay, sooth ; so humbled, that he hath . . Othello, iii. 3 

in sooth, you are to blame — iii. 1 

SOOTHED not, therefore hurt not ..Cnriolanus. 'li. 2 

SOOTUEll— the tongues of soothers..! Hfiin/"'.iv. 1 

SOOTHING [Co'. A'n/.-smoothing] word . Hich. Ill.i.-i 

made all of false-faced soothing .... Coriolanus, i . 9 

I say a;;ain, in soothing them, we — iii. I 

SOOT? HSAY— you cannot soothsay.^ji'dni/ <5- Cleo. i. 2 

SOOTHSAYER bids you beware JntiusCresar, i. 2 

the sootlisayer that you praised ..AnIonySfCleo. i. 2 

soothsayer. Your will? — i. 2 

call forth your soothsayer Cymheiine, v. 5 

SOOTII'ST up greatness King John, iii. 1 

SOOTY^ bosom of such 0. thing as thou Othello, i. 2 

SOPS— threw the sops all in .. Taming of Shrew, iii. 2 
to ask him sops as he was drinking. . — iii. 2 

and make a sop of him Richard III. i. i 

and make a sop of all this Troilus ^Cressida,i. 3 

I'll malie a sop o' the moonshine Lear, ii. 2 

SOPHISTEIl-needsnosophister ....ilUnryl'I. v. 1 

SOrillSTICATED: thou art the thing ..Lear, iii. 4 

SOPHY-he paid from the Sophy.. '/«'.;//J/i Highl.ii. 5 

he has been fencer to the Sophy .... — iii. 4 

slew the Sophy, and a Persian Mer.ofVen, ii. 1 

SORCERER, that by his cunning Tempest, iii. 2 

dark-working sorcerers, that .. .Comedy of Err. i.^ 
and Lapland sorcerers inhabit here . . — iv. 3 
conjurers, and sorcerers, that, afraid.! Henryl'I. i. 1 
SORCERESS— are all, a soiceress. Comfrfy of Err. iv. 3 
that witcli, that damned sorceress..! Henryl'I. iii. 2 
bring fortli that sorceress, condemned — v. 4 

SOKCi:RIES terrible to enter Tempest, i. 2 

SORCERY begot this isle — iii. 2 

by art, and baleful sorcery 1 Henryl'I. ii. I 

SORE — rub the sore, when you should.. jr<™pp.5(,ii. I 

upon a sore injunction — iii. 1 

I should liave been a sore one then .. — v. 1 
for to strange sores strangely they . . Much Ado, iv. i 
some say, a sore (rep.).. Love'sL.Lost, iv. 2 (.epitapli) 
put 1 to sore, then sorel (rep.) — iv. 2 (epitaph) 
I'll I'ear no other thing so sore ..Mrr. of I'enice. y. I 
all the embossed sores, and headed. .•!,> you Like it, ii. 7 
your sorrow was too sore laid on"' Hinier's'lnle, v. 3 
this knave would go sore ....Comedynf Errors, '\n. 1 
each day's life, sore labour's bath .... Macbeth, ii. 2 

but tills sore night hath — ii. 4 

such a sore of time should seek King John, v. 2 

they sav. king John, sore sick — v. 4 

but'lanceth not the sore Richard //. i. 3 

see the wind sit sore upon our sails .. — ii. 1 
the glutton's dogs licked his sores..! //fin/ //'. iv. 2 

the king my father is sore sick iHenryll'. iv. 3 

a woe, a sore complaint, 'gainst him . . Henry f. i. 2 

shall stand sore charged for — i. 2 

mass, 'twill be a sore law tlien iHrnry ri. iv. 7 

a salve for any sore that may ZHenryVI. iv. G 

you not with tliis sore agony? Itichard III i. 4 

but tickles still tlie sore. . Treilus 4 Cress, iii. 1 (song) 
thou green sarcenet flap for a >orc eye — v. I 

Palamedes sore hurt and bruised — v.!> 

nature, to whom all sores lay siege. 7Vmon q^/l(A. iv. 3 
ulcerous .sores would cast the gorge at — iv. 3 

and sore blows for sinking Coriolanus, ii. I 

for 'tis a sore upon ns, you cannot .. — iii- 1 

my arm is sore, best play Antony tir Cleo. ii. 5 

out, sword, and to a sore purpose! ..Cymbetine, iv. 1 

and tlie sore eyes eee clear Pericles, i. 1 

besides, the sore terms we stand — iv. 3 

though the conflict be sore between Lear, iii. ,■> 

1 am too sore empierced with. . , . Ilowco ^Juliet, i. 4 

wliose sore task does not divide Hamlet,'. 1 

your water is a sore deoayer of your .... — v. 1 
liow 1 um punished witii a sore distrattiou — v 2 



SOR 



[ 700 ] 



SOR 




full of sorrow and htart'e ihscontciit 
but I shall turn liis jest to sorrow . . 
Willi danger and with sorrow 



ill. 3 
iii. 3 
iv. 1 



SO H III liST fancies your comi)anions..il/ncii(.7/i, iii. 2 

SOliEOW— the last of our sea sonow .. Tempest, i. i '• 

weifrh our sorrow with our comfort.... — ii. 1 [ 

it seldom visits sorrow ii. 1 

is nothing, but heart's sorrow _ iii. 3 

brim full of sorrow, and dismay — v. 1 

let grief and sorrow still embrace v. 1 

mine own heart's sorrow ., TiroGen. of I-'eroim, ii. 4 

a pack of sorrows, which — iii. 1 

a heart as full of sorrows as — iv. 3 

and that's lier cause of sorrow — iv. 4 

if in thouglit I felt not her very sorrow — iv. 4 

if hearty sorrow be a sufficient — v. 4 

your sorrow hath eaten up my . . Merry ll'ires, i v. 2 
be so abandoned to her sorrow .... TireliU Night, \. 4 
wincli sorrow is always towati. . Meas.' for Mea>. ii. 3 

that such sorrow I procure v. \ 

you depai-t from me, sorrow abides ..Much Ado, i. 1 
cry— sorrow wag! and hem, when he — v.) 
those that wring imder the load of sorrow— v. 1 
so sorrow's heaviness doth heavier.. i\IiU. N. Dr. iii. 2 

l)ankrupt sleep doth sorrow owe .... iii. 2 

that sometime shuts up sorrow's eye — iii. 2 
sit thee down, sorrow! (rep, iv. 3),Love'sL-Lost, i. 1 

of groans, of sorrow, and of leenl.... iv. 3 

let not the cloud of sorrow justle it . . — v. 2 

now at our sorrows pale As youLike if, i. 3 

wherever sorrow is, relief would be.. iii. 5 

do sorrow at my grief iu love (re/j.)., — iii. 5 
but the tyranny of her sorrows taM.es.. All' slVelt, i. 1 

a sorrow, tlian to have ^rcjD.) i. 1 

in the most bitter touch of sorrow .. — i. 3 

to the wars, she to her single sorrow ii. 3 

and sorrow bids me speak iii. 4 

sorrow on thee, and all the pack.Tammg-o/S/i. iv. 3 
my liusband's sorrow by his woe .... — v. 2 
make their pastime at my sorrow. Winter's Tale, ii. 3 

and lead me to these sorrows iii. 2 

I never saw a vessel of like sorrow . . — iii. 3 

to whose feeling sorrows 1 miglit iv. 1 

performed a saiut-like sorrow; no fault — v. 1 

were joy, or sorrow; but in tlie v. a 

it seemed, sorrow wept to take leave — v. 2 

'twixt joy and sorrow, was fousht in v. 2 

your sorrow was too sore laid on _ v. 3 

no sorrow, but killed itself much — v. 3 

utter what my sorrow gives me ..Comedy of Err. i. 1 
to delight in, what to sorrow for .... — i. 1 

■whicli of these sorrows is he subject — v. 1 

hide themselves in drops of sorrow Macbeth, i. 4 

nor our strong sorrow on tlie foot ii. 3 

to show an unfelt sorrow ii, 3 

new sorrows strike heaven on the face iv. 3 

where violent sorrow seems a modern.. iv. 3 

give sorrow words: the grief iv. 3 

from the memory a rooted sorrow v. 3 

your cause of sorrow must not be v. 7 

he's worth more sorrow, and that I'll.. v. 7 

to believe this sorrow (rep.} King John, iii. 1 

I will instruct my sorrows to be proud — iii. 1 
hei-e I and sorrow ICul.Knt.-sorrovis} sit — iii. 1 

and not sorrow. Thou art not holy.. iii. 4 

now will canker sorrow eat my iii. 4 

■widow comfort, and my sorrow's cure! — iii. 4 

to all our sorrows, and ere long — iv. 2 

for sorrow ends not when it seemeth.ft/c/mri/ ll.i. 2 

to seek out sorrow that dwells i. 2 

my days thou canst with sullen sorrow — i. 3 
for gnarling sorrow hath less power — i. 3 

fell sorrow's tooth doth never rankle i. 3 

seemed buried in my sorrow's grave i. 4 

Biirae unborn sorrow, ripe in fortune's — ii. 2 

'tis with false sorrow's eye — ii. 2 

Bolingbroke ray sorrow s dismal heir — ii. 2 
woe to woe, and sorrow to sorrow joined — ii, 2 
write sorrow on the bosom of tile .... — iii. 2 
sorrow and grief of heart makes .... — iii. 3 

of sorrow, or of joy y Of either — iii. 4 

remember me the more uf sorrow (,re/).) — iii. 4 

keei> thy sorrow in my breast iii. 4 

give sorrow leave a wiiile to tutor — iv. 1 

hath sorrow struck so many blows (rep.) — iv. 1 
your hearts of sorrow, and your eyes of — iv. I 

in wooing sorrow let's be brief v. I 

adieu; the rest let sorrow say v. t 

witli such "entle sorrow he shook off — v. 2 
from me all ostentation of sorrow ..iHenryll'. ii. 2 

since sudden sorrow, serves to iv. 2 

and heavy sorrows of the blood iv. 4 

deep demeanour in great sorrow .... — iv. 4 
borrow not that face of seeming sorrow — v. 2 

sorrow so royally in yon ajipears .... v. 2 

except thou sorrow for my good \HeuryVI. ii,5 

sorrow and grief have vanqu ished al l.2H<;/i» yl'l. 

tliy head witli sorrow to the ;,'round 

sorrow would solace, and mine age.. — 
with sorrow snares relenting passengers — i 

but to make m.v sorrow greater? i 

niiscliance, and sorrow, go along .... i 

increase, mine for my sorrows? — ii 

and seek fur sorrow witli thy spectacles? — 

to our heart's great sorrow 3 Henry VI. 

and I with grief and sorrow, to tlie court — 
to see how inly sorrow gripes his soul — 
much is your sorrow; mine, is ten .. — i 
my tongue-tied sorrows leave to speak — ii 
on true sorrow: and see (/-e^.) " " 



— IV. 4 

— iv. 4 i 



— IV. 4 



thy sorrow 

I am your sorrow's nurse 

drown desperate sorrow in dead 

let sorrow haunt thy bed 

eighty odd years of sorrow liave I seen 
60 foolish sorrow bids your stones.. .. 
if ancient sorrow be most reverent .. 

if sorrow can admit society 

the just proportion of my sorrow? .. 
flatter my sorrows with rejiort of it .. 

for wliom you bid like sorrow — iv. 4 

and wear a jjolden sorrow Henry nil. ii. S 

our mistress sorrows we were pitying — ii, 3 

to betray you any way to sorrow — iii. 1 

the burden of my sorrows fall upon ye iii. 1 

we are to cure such sorrows iii. 1 

with what a sorrow Cromwell — iii. 2 

but that time offered sorrow iv. I 

meditations, tears, and sorrows, he gave — iv. 2 

and hang their heads with sorrow.... v. 4 

but sorrow, that is couched iu . . Troilus S; Cress, i. 1 

serving alike in sorrow Timon of Athens, iv. 2 

tlius part we rich in sorrow ' — iv. 2 

tlie sorrow that delivers us thus Corialanus, v. 3 

and shake with fear and sorrow — v. 3 

and I am struck with sorrow v. .'i 

seeing those beads of sorrow stand../M(n«C«sar, iii, 1 

no man bears sorrow better iv. 3 

so it is a deadly sorrow to beiw\<i..Anlony if-Cleo. i. 2 

that should water this sorrow 

which sorrow shoots out of the mind 
I do escaiie the sorrow of Antony's death — 
fate to grace it witli .vour sorrows .... — 
our size of sorrow, proportioned . . . . „ _ 

lament nor sorrow at; but please .. .. ... ,„ 

all is outward sorrow Cymbeline, i. 1 

took such sorrow, that he quit being — i, 1 

for notes of sorrow, out of tune iv. 2 

sorrow concealed, like an oven. TitusAndronicus, ii. 5 



— i. 2 



iv. 12 
iv. 12 
iv. 13 



recount your sorrows to a stone, 
bring consuming sorrow to thine age 
witness the sorrow that their sister'.. 

is not my sorrow deep, having no 

but sorrow flouted at is double death 

besides, this sorrow is an enemy 

how now, has sorrow made thee dote 
brewed with her sorrows, meshed upon 

of Troy ran mad through sorrow 

and so beguile thy sorrow, till the 

guide thy pen to print thy sorrows .. 
more scars of sorrow in his heart .... 
shaken with sorrows in ungrateful . . 



kinsmen, his sorrows are past . 
what an' if his sorrows have sc 



sorrows have so — iv. 4 

the effects of sorrow for his valiant .. — iv. 4 

now begin our sorrows to approach .. iv. 4 

even when their sorrows almost were — v. I 

let not your sorrow die, though — v. I 

witness all sorrow, that I know — v. 2 

presence still renew his sorrows — v. 3 

with thy shame, thy father's sorrow die? — v. 3 
as from thence sorrow were ever rased. . Tericles, i. 1 
to show his sorrow would correct himself — i. 3 
our sorrows do sound deep into the air .. — i. 4 
speak out thy sorrows which thou bring'st — i. 4 

one sorrow never comes but brings — i. 4 

nor eome we to add sorrow to 1.4 

Pericles, in sorrow all devoured — iv. 4 

the cause of your king's sorrow v. 1 

and I for sorrow sung Lear, i. 4 (song) 

down, thou climbing sorrow ii, 4 

trade must play the tool to sorrow '. — iv! 1 

patience and sorrow strove who should . . — iv. 3 

111 brief, sorrow would be a rarity — iv. 3 

by the art of known and feeling sorrows — iv. 6 
ingenious feeling of my huge soriows! .. — iv. 6 

let sorrow split m.v heart, if ever — v. 3 

to such as love not sorrow y. 3 

redeem all sorrows that ever I have felt. '. — v. 3 
learn from whence his rjirows ..Romeo ^Jittiet, i. I 

parting is such sweet sorrow ii, 2 

with sorrow cliide us not! (rep.) .... ii. 6 

these sorrows make me old — iii, a 

what sorrow craves .acquaintance — iii, 3 

which heavy sorrow makes them apt — iii. 3 

dry sorrow drinks our blood _ iii, 5 

doth give her sorrow so much sway .. — iv, ] 

the sun, for sorrow, will not show.... v 3 

that we with wisest sorrow tliink Hamlet, i. 2 

for some term to do obsequious sorrow .. — i. 2 

more in sorrow than iu auger — i. 2 

O Gertrude, Gertrude, when sorrows — iv! 5 

or are you like the painting of a sorrow .. — iv 7 

whose phrase of sorrow couiures the — v. 1 

with sorrow 1 embrace my fortune — v. 2 

it engluts and swallows other sorrows ..Othello, i. 3 
bears both the sentence and the sorrow . . — i. 3 

no age, nor known no sorrow — iii, 4 

neither service past, nor present sorrows — iii. 4 

this sorrow's heavenly; it strikes — v. 2 

SORROWED— swooned, all sorrowed. If'irler'sT. v! 2 

to malce their sorrowed render, 'liwon nf^thens. v 2 

SORROWKST-thousorrowestfor.C.mt-,;,/"' AVr i 1 

SORROWFUL water? 4ninnii «,-cleo \ 3 

service on her sorrowful cheeks. . Titus Andron. iii. 1 

black, and sorrowful issue iv 2 

go into old Titus' sorrowful house _ v' 3 

sorrowful drops upon thy blood-stained — v! 3 
SORROWING-blood with sorrowing.. ftWr/e.,, iv 1 
SORROW- WREATHEN knot .. T/to .4 «,;,„„. iii 2 
SORRY— I am sorry I beat thee Temj^t, iii. 2 



my heart is sorry for your daughter's — 
z [ 1 am sorry, madam; lor the news.iow'jL.Los/, v. 2 
2 I am sorry, thou wilt \ea.ve.. Merchant of Venice, li. 3 

1 I am sorry for thee, thou art — i v. 1 

1 I am sorry, that your leisure iv. 1 

I I Iain 80rryforthee,gentleSilvius,.4s!/0MLiV«?i7,iii!6 

sake, are sorry for our pains AWsiyell, iii. 2 

heartily sorry, that he'll be glad _ iv. 3 

sorry am I, that our good-will. V'nmui^ of .S/irew, i. 1 

• I neverwislied to see you sorry.. VVinier'tTule, ii. 1 

I am sorry for't; all faults I make .. — iii. 2 

1 am sorry, that, by hanging thee.... — iv. 3 

I am but sorry, not afcar'd iv. 3 

I am sorry, most sfirry, you have — v. 1 

and as sorry, your clioice is not so rich v 1 

I am sorry, sir, I have thus far stirred — v 3 
I am sorry, sir, that I have (rp;;. ).CoinedyofErr. v. 1 
the place of death and sorry execution — v. I 
a sorry sight. A foolish thouglit (rep.).. Macbeth, ii. 2 

I am sorry I should force you ■ZHenrytV.i. \ 

I would be sorry, m,y lord ' iv. 3 

sorry am J, his numbers are HenryV. iii' ,<; 

for I am sorry, that with reverence..! Henry I'l. ii. 3 

a sorry breakfast for my lord 2 Henry I'l. i. 4 

sorry I am to hear what I have — ii. 1 

I am sorry for't: the man is — iv. 2 

I am so sorry fur my trespass 3 Henry II. v. I 

sorry I am, mv noble cousin Richard III. iii. 7 

I am sorry to hear this of him llenri/ I'lll.i. 1 

I am sorry to see you ta'en from — i. 1 

sorry that the duke of Buckingham — i. 2 

I am sorry for't: so are a number — ii. 1 

glad, or sorry, as I saw it inclined .. — ii. 4 
noble lady, I am sorry, my integrity — iii. 1 
and am right sorry to reiieat what .. — v. 1 
I am very sorry to sit here at this . . — v. 2 
he IS much sorry, if anything. Troilu ^ Cre.isida, ii. 3 
recanting goodness, sorry ere 'tis . . Timon ofAth. i. 2 

are sorry,-you are honourable — ii. 2 

I am sorry, when he sent to borrow — iii. 6 

I am sorry, I shall lose a stone — jv. 3 

forget what we are sorry for ourselves — v. 2 
shall be sorry for. You \ia\re(rep.)..luti}isC.r^ar, iv. 3 
I'm full sorry, that he a|iproves..^lii/o?ij/ ffCteo. i. I 
I am sorry to give breatliing to my.. — i. 3 

I am sorry it is turned to a — ii. 6 

and be thou sorry to follow Cajsar .. _ iii. il 
I am much sorry, sir, you put me , . Cymbeline, ii. 3 

I am sorry, Cymbeline, that I — iii. 1 

and am right sorry, that I must report — iii 5 

I'm sorry for't; not seemiu!.' — iv. 2 

is't enough, I am sorry? so children.. — v. 4 
sorry that you have paid too (rp;;.) .. _ v 4 

I am sorry for't, my lord (?ep.) _ v. 5 

art thou not sorry for these .. TiinsAndronims, v. 1 

I am sorry, then, you have so lost Lear, i 1 

I am sorry for thee, friend — ii. 2 

one part in my heart that's sorry ye; — iii. 2 

only sorry he had no other deatli's-nian — iv. 6 
1 faith, I am sorry that thou art. Ilomeo ■^■.hiliet, ii 5 

I am sorry they offend you ' Hamlet . i. 5 

I am sorry,— what, have you given _ ij 1 

I am sorry, that with better heed — ii 1 

but I am very sorry, good Horatio — v, 2 

we are very sorry for it. What, in your. . Oiliello, i. 3 

I am sorry for your displeasure — iii 1 

lam very sorry that you are not well .. — iii 3 

I am sorry to hear this. I had been — iii. 3 

[Kn/.] I have a salt and sorry rheum.... iii, 4 

I am sorry, that I am deceived in him .. — iv 1 

I am sorry, to find you thus — y 1 

I am not sorry neither; I'd have thee live — v. 2 

SORT some gentlemen TiroGen.oil'emna, iii. 2 

iu a sort. That sort was well fished . . Tenipes!, ii! 1 

my son, iu a moved sort — iv. I 

he doth in some sort confess it .... Merry H'lves, i. I 

(in any such sort, as they s.iy) _ 'ii! 2 

all sorts of deer are chased y, 5 

in many sorts of music Tirelfth Night, i. 2 

It does stink iu some sort, sir ..Meas. lorMcas. iii. 2 
give notice to such men of sort and suit — iv. 4 

but few of any sort (rep.) MuchAdo, i 1 

It it sort not well, you may conceal . . — iv. 1 
I am glad that all things sort so well — v. 4 
thick-skin of that barren sort-Mid. N.'s Dream, iii 2 

many iu sort, rising and eawiue _ iii, 2 

none, of noble sort, would so offend.. — iii 2 

so far am I glad it so did sort _ iii. 2 

but we are spirits of another sort .... iii. 2 

their mind in some other sort Lore's L. Lost, v. 2 

there are a sort of men, whose Mer. q/ Venice, i. I 

by some other sort than your 1.2 

but God sort all! you are welcome .. v! 1 

of all sorts enchaiitingly beloved ...•!.< yow L/Ac rt, i. I 
with mnsiesof all sorts, and songs . .All's ll'elt, iii. 7 
teach you gamut in a briefer sort. Tan.ingofSh. iii. 1 
some sort, sir; but though my ease.. ll'inle'r'sT. iv! 3 

opinions from all sorts of people Macbeth, i. ? 

but they can see a sort of traitors ..Uictiardll iv 1 
tlie better sort, as thoughts of things — y. 5 

and in some sort it jumps with lllenrylV. i! 2 

men of ail sorts take a iSride 'illenrylV. i. 2 

uiJon tliee in a more fairer sort iv' 4 

to spirits of vile sorti — v! 2 

u king and officers of sorts HenryV. i 2 

a' did in some sort, indeed ii! 3 

it sorts well with 3'our fierceness _ jv! 1 

to sort our nobles from our common.. iv. 7 

is a gentleman of great sort _ iv. 7 

wlnit prisoners of good sort are — iv. 8 

his brethren, in best sort _ v. (eliorus> 



SOR 



[701 ] 



SOU 



SORT— I'll sort some other time to ..1 lU-nnj 
chokeil with iiinhiiioii ol'tho moaner sort — 
tulk like the vulL'iir sort til' iimrket-meu — 
that is not fiiniislied in this sort .. 



sort how it will, 1 shall have 

a sortof nanuhty inrMina, lewiUy .. 
1 iirav thee, son lii.v heart tu tiatiei 

Bent iVotn a sort of tinkers to 

wliy then it sorts, hiave warnors . 
anv he the |.r,iu(lesi uf thy sort.... 
ort 



.2lli:unjl'l.i. 'i 



icUlli 



ith 



on sort with pay — v. & 

but I »tU sort a pitehy day — V- 6 

I'll sort o«casion,as index Uichanlltl. i). 2 \ 

hot, if Uoil sort it so, 'tis more — "■ 3 j 

sort of vagabonds, rascals, and run-away— y. .1 
this woman's answer sorts.... TroUmSi-CiessnIii, i. I 

I . raw the sort to fight with — . '• ? 

in such a sort, the thing — 'V- I 

vet, in a sort, lechery eats itself — v. 4 

in heasllv sort, .lni^'i;ed through — v._ 1 1 

and tendance all sorts uf lioarts .Timon of Alliens, i. 1 

and, in some sort, these wants — .li- 2 

1 have heard in some sort of thy — iv. 3 

yourself in a more comfortable sort. . Corwtanus, i. 3 

in some sort, may be said to be — jv. 5 

tlmt tlie weaker sort may wish — iv. 6 



all the poor men of your sort Juliusi 

and smiles iu such a stirt, as if he mocked 



or lii 



itation 



,i. I 

i. 2 
— ii. 1 



.... .V ..ere. in sort^ - . 

voices and applause of every sort .TitusAndron.u 2 
Vut iu some sort they're better than.. — iii. 1 

I'll deceive you in anotlter sort — m. I 

Come, other sorts otfeiid as well as we .Pericles, iv. 3 

especially of tl\e vounger Borfr' — iv. 3 

to help me sort such needful R<imfoS(Julipl,i\. 2 

well mav it sort, that this portentous ..llaiidel,\. 1 
for the j'ounger sort to lack discretioR .. — u. I 

1 will not sort you witli the rest — i». 2 

larded with many several sorts of reasons — v. 2 

SORT.VNCK with his (luality 2Henrylf . iv. 1 

SORTED with his wish TwoGen. of lyiom, i. 3 

sorted and consorted Love'sL.Last. i. I (letter) 

all my pains is sorted to no proof. Taming of Sh. iv. 3 

before it was ill sorted ■iHmrijir.n. 4 

hatli sorted out a sudden day . . Ttomeo Sf Juliet, in. 5 
SORTING with a nuptial ceremony. .>'/./. iV.'s Dr. v. 1 
SOSSIUS,oneofmv place in Syria..4iiionyi5C(eo. 111. 1 

SOT— he's but a sot, as I am rempesl, in. 2 

have you make-a de sot of us! . . Merry Hives, iii. 1 

how now , sot ? Twelfth Niglit, 1 . 5 

sot, did'st see Dick surgeon, sot? — y. I 

thou snail, thou slug, thou sot ! Cnm«(!/ ofF.rrors,\\.2 
description proved us unspeakiii), sots.Cj/'/iMiMe.v. 5 

informed him, then he called me sot l./.n, iv. 2 

SOTO that your honour means. '/'a./i. .)( sh. 1 i indue.) 

SOTTISH; and impatience -Iii/n»v^ '7,,.. iv. l:i 

StJirCED-l am a souced gurnet 1 lli-nn/ 1 1', iv. 2 

SOUGlir her help Tempest, y. 1 

1 have sought to match my. rwoGen. of Veroiia,m. 1 
luve sought is good, but given . . TieelflliNislit, in. I 
ladies sought my love, wliich I .Mer.nr Veniee, in. 4 

but they souglit the remedy As you Like i/, y 2 

the sailors sought for safety by. Comedy (-/Krror.<,i. 1 

hath sought to win ine into liis Mm-.beili, iy 3 

if love ambitious sought a match of . King John, ii. 2 

or straigiit we sliall be sought — v. 7 

a partial slander sought I to avoid.. fli'c/iord //. i. 3 

that sought at Oxfora thy dire — .v. 6 

sought to entrap me by [Henry 11'. iv. 3 

have not sought the day of this (rep.) — v. I 
how men of merit are sought after.. 2 Henry ir. u. i 

whose ruin you three sought Henry 1^. u 2 

have I sought in every country \ Henry I'l. y. i 

that sought to be encompassed ZHenry I'l, ii. 2 

but those, that sought it Henry I'll I. }\. 1 

to those men that sought him... 
■ sought their nialice ..... 



SOirij— the perdition of souls. . . . Twelfth yighr, 

bcshrcw his soul for mc — 

the soul of our grandam (rfp.) — 

I think nobly of the soul — 

for though mv soul ilisputes well — — 

and too douhtful smil inav live at peace — 

my soul the fall ht'iillest oft'erings luith — 

O'that record is lively in my Boull .. — 

kee|i as true in soul us doth — 

shall be nnuU- of ourdrar souls — 

have with special soul elected.. ..il/ra.«./"r.Ue>i: 

as to your soul seems good — 

alas! alas! why. all the souls that were 

prayers from preserved souls 

and tic the wiser souls to thy 

that his soul sicken not 

tliaii my soul. I talk not of your soul 
I'll take it as a peril to my soul (rc/i.) 
fit his mind to death, for his soul's rest 
but grace, being the soul of your .... 
that our soul cannot hut yield you .. 
poor soul, she speaks this in tliC .... 
but O, poor souls, come you to seek 
thou art said to have a stubborn soul 

now is his soul ravished M 

should hale souls out of men's bodies 

sutt'er salvation body and soul — n 

an honest soul, i'faith, sir — ii 

I charge yon, on your souls, to utter — »' 

and unconstrained soul give me .... — i' 

not knit my soul to an approved — i 

O, on my soul, my cousin is belied!.. — i 

into the eve and prospect of his soul — i 

as vonr soul should with your body.. — i 

think you in vour soul, the count .. — ; 

asl have a tlionglit, or a soul — i 

my soul doth tell me, Uero is belied — 

by my soul, nor I (?■<?/'■) , — 

my soul consents not to give Mtd.N. sDream, 

by that wliieh knitteth souls — 

pursue it with the sold of love — ! 

pretty soul! she durst not lie — J 

but von must join, in souls, to mock — ii 

and'extort a poor soul's patience — ii 

so rich within his soul, and tender .. — ii 

my life, my soul, fair Helena! — r 

poor souls, they are content to — 

my soul is in the sky — 



V. 2 

».<, iii. 1 



vet sought the very way to catch . . C. 

here's the book I sought for so Jidiusi.n;ur, iv. o 

Poiniiey presently be sought Antony ^ Cleo. ii. 2 

kings have sought to sleep lu.Titus^nilromcns, ii. b 
1 souglit a husband, in wh\ch.. I'ericles, i. 1 (iidule) 
I sought the purchase of a glorious . . — i. 2 
at fourteen years he souglit to murder — y. 3 
since thou hast sought to make us break .. /.car, i. I 

he sought my life, but lately — in- ■! 

rebel-like, sought to be king o'er her .... — iv. 3 

asked for and sought for Uomeo SrJidieUi. 5 

than he was when you sought him .. — _ii. 4 
the most you sought was— her |iromotion— iv. 5 

SOUGHT'ST to birder Antony ir Cleopatra, v. 2 

SOUL— poor souls, they perished Tempest, i. 2 

the freighting souls within her — i. 2 

thereis no soul, no, not so — >• 2 

not a soul but felt a fever ._ — 1.2 

it goes on as my soul prompts it — i 2 

and the fair soul herself weigh'd — ii. 1 

never any witli so full soul — in- 1 

hear my soul speak .................. — ni. I 

liis looks are my soul s food. Two Gen.of Verona, ii. 7 

a blessed soul doth iu Elysium — ,ii. 7 

whom ray very Boul abhorred — iv. 3 

as tender to me as my soul — y. 4 

I'll endanger my soul gratis Merry" ives,i\. 2 

that tlie lolly of my soul dares not 

by gar, he has save his soul 

he is a eurer of souls 

plessmysoull how full (rep.) 

a« I ain achristians soul 

the book even of my secret soul ..TwelfthNiglU, i. s 
hisBoul is in hell,madimna(irp.) .. — i. 5 

your brother's soul being in heaven — i. .') 

and call upon my soul within - ' "• 

will draw tliree souls outof one weaver 
nature pranks lieriii, attracts my soul 
merey upon one of our souls! 

might bear my soul to lull — ;;;•-• 

souls and bodies hath he divorced three — in. 4 



II. 2 

ii. 3 
ii.3 
iii. I 
iii. I 



— ii. 3 

— ii. 4 
iii. 4 (challenge) 



— 11.2 



— V. 1 
■h.ido, ii. 3 

- ii.3 



SOUli— love of BOul, to stranger blood.. Kmj,' Joh 

it grieves my soul, that I — 

blown up by tempest of the soul — 

and part this body and my soul — 

ttiKl heshrew my soul but 1 do love .. — 
wliich some suppose the soul's frail .. — 

sings his soul and body to their 

now m,v soul hath elbow-room — 

and then my soul shall wait on thee 

1 liave a kind soul, that would — 

or my divine soul answer it in lUchnrd . 

sluiced out his innocent soul through — 

firmness of my nprigiit soul — 

that doth vex my grieved soul — 

pierced to the soul with slander's.. 



1 (letter) 



1 (.letter) 



unlettered small-knowing soul — 
by my sweet soul, I mean 

Eoor soul, what art thou then ? 
y my soul, a swain ! a most 

a soul feminine salnteth us 

what, my soul, verses? 

all ignorant that soul, that sees 

out of a new-sad soul, that you 

mirth cannot move a soul ill agony.. — y. a 
an evil soul, producing holy.. Merchant of I enice,\. 3 
is my boy (God rest his soul!) alive.. — n. '2 
she he placed in my constant soul .. — \]- 6 
by Portia's side with an unquiet soul — in. 2 

whosesoulsdobear an equal — in- ^ 

the semblance of my soul — i"- ' 

hilt on thy soul, harsh Jew — iv. 

that souls of animals infuse — ;v. 1 

from the gallows did his fell soul fieet — iv. I 
shall I lay perjury upon my soul? .. — n'. I 

by my soul I swear, there is no — iv. i 

sighed his soul toward the Grecian .. — v. 1 

stealing her soul with many vows — v. 1 

sweet soul, let's in, and there expect — v. 
such harmony is in immortal souls.. — v. 
by my sou], no woman liad iHrep.).. — v. i 

my soul upon the forfeit — . y. 1 

for my aoul, yet I know not why .. As rjou Lil<e it , i. 1 

loved sir Rowland as his soul ...— , '• ^ 

the souls offriend and friend .. - iii. 2 (verses) 
the soul of this man is his clothes ....Allsyrell.u. 5 
the divine forfeit of his soul upon oath — in. 6 

but fair soul, in your fine frame — iv. 2 

that she, poor soul, knows not. Taming ofSliren; iv. 1 

a gracious innocent soul IVinier s I aie, n. 3 

on thy soul's peril, and thy body s .. — ij. 3 
most piteous cry of the poor souks 1 . . — in. 3 
how the poor souls roared, and the .. — in. 3 

alaok.poor soul! thou hast need .... — iv. 2 
now appear) soul vexed, begin, ond.. — v. 1 
as it is now piercing to my soul — y- 3 

her part, poor sou 1 ! seeming . . Conieily • 

mv soul should sue as advocate tor the 

with intellectual sense and souls 

a wretched soul, bruised with 

against my soul's pure truth 

even my soul doth for a wife 

carries poor souls to hell 

poor distressed soul! 

God help, poor souls 

so befal icy soul, as this is false 

to half a soul, and to a notion 

Banquo, thy soul's flight .... ... ...... 

hath from my soul willed the black... 

a crew of wretched souls, that 

fell slaughter on their souls 

death of thy soul ! those linen cheeks 

my soul is loo much charged 

I'll send his soul to hell 

by my soul, I think, his father 

forgive the sin of all those souls 

while their Bonis are capable of 

by disjoining hands, hell lose a soul 

tlie conjunction of our inward souls 

tlierc IS a soul counts thee 

a grave unto a soul ; holding 

now that their souls are top full 

heaven take my soul, and England.. 

from whose obedience I forbid my so 

our souls religiously confirm thy wor 

all you whose souls abhor the 

upon my soul {rep. v. 1 and v. "2) .... 





i. 1 
ii. 1 
ii. i 




iii. 2 




iv. 2 




iv. 4 


_ 


iv. 4 


_ 


v. 1 


elf I 


iii. 1 


— 


iii. 1 


— 


iv. 3 





iv. 3 


_ 


iv. 3 


— 


V. 3 


— 


V. 7 


Joh 


"'.!• ' 


- 


Ii 2 


- 


Hi' 3 


- 


ivis 


_ 


iv. -t 


_ 


iv. 3 


_ 


iv. 3 


- 


iv. 3 



iv. 1 



V. 3 



— V. 6 



i. 3 



iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 



O God defend my soul from 

more than my dancing soul doth .... 

one of our souls had wandered 

burden of a guilty soul 

look, what thy soul holds dear 

this land of such dear souls 

well-nieaning soul (whom {rep.) 

and my inward soul {rep.) 

now hath my soul brought forth .... 

as in a soul remembering my good .. 

vex your s(nils (since presently (rep.) 

that heaven w ill take our souls ,.., 

all souls tliat will be safe 

their spotted souls for this offencel .. 

again uneurse their souls 

have torn their souls, by turning .... 

now by my soul, I would it were 

his pure soul unto his captain (rep.) 

who with willing soul adopts 

a christian climate, souls refined .... 

the souls of men may deem 

given here my soul's consent 

with silence in the tortured soul .... 

learn, good soul, to think our 

with heart, and soul, and all lieside 

the female to my soul; my soul 

mount, mount, my soul ! thy seat.... 

my soul is full of woe, that blood.... 

about thy soul, that thou sold'st \Hcnryir.i. 2 

which the proud soul ne'er pays .... 

who, on my soul, hath wilfully 

and let my soul want mercy 

W()uld save his soul, be shall not .... 

the soul of every man prophetically 

by m.y sceiitre, and my soul to boot., 

and dear a trust on any soul removed 

the very bottom, and the soul of hope 

Vernon! weleoine, by my soul 

there is many a soul shall pay 

no, b.v m.y soul ; I never i n my 

a fool go'with thy soul, whither 

I do respect thee as my soul 

of tlieir bodies from their souls 2 He 

hut, for their spirits and souls 

and burns, poor soul! [Co(.-souls].... 

Perev was tne man nearest my soul 

[Co/.H upon my soul, my lord 

redressed: upon my soul, thev shall 

impartial conduct of my soul 

of indigent faint souls, past H 

charge your uiiderstaniling soul with 
and his soul shall stand sore charged 
knew'st the very bottom of my soul 
a soul so easy as that Englishman's 
a black soul burning in hell-fire .... 

on the poor souls, for whom 

by my lather's soul, the work 

I'love and honour with my soul .... 
and secure in soul, the confident - 

there is some soul of goodness 

but every subject's soul is his own .. 

our lives, onr souls, our tlebts 

what is the soul of adoration? 

sing still for Richard's soul 

shall suck awav their souls — iv. 2 

I am the most oft'eiiding soul alive .. — iv. 3 

that their souls may make — iv. 3 

my soul shall thine keep company {rep.) — iv. 6 

more glorious star thy soul will \ Henry I'l. i. I 

straightway give thy sonl to him.... — i. 5 

paid m3' vow unto his soul — ii. 2 

and, by my soul, this pale and nn.2ry — ii. 4 
a thousand souls to death and deadly — ii. 4 
enough, m.y soul shall then be satisfied — ii. 5 

no war, beial thy parting soul! — ii. 5 

how this discord doth ufttiet my soul! — iii. I 
now, quiet soul. depart when heaven — iii. 2 
no christian soul but English Talbot — iv. 2 

music to thy timorous soul — iv. 2 

mercy on brave Talbot's soul — iv. 3 

and soul with soul from France — iv. 5 

mv soul; my body, soul, and all — v. 3 

of earthly blessings to my sonl i Henry VI. i. 1 

in merev so deal w ith my soul — i. 3 

that to believin" souls gives light in — ii. 1 

poor soldi God a goodness hath been — ii. I 

and speak it from your souls — iii. 1 

thou.sand souls to heaven, or hell.... — ni. 1 

labour to persuade my soul — iii. 2 

for, with his soul, fled all my — iii. 2 

as surely as my soul intends — iii. 2 

and send thv soul to hell, pernicious — in. 2 
the secrets o'f his over-characd sonl .. 
Suffolk's exile, mv soul's treasure?., 
here could I brcatlie my soul into .. 
thou either turn my flying soul .... 

set to catch my winged soul? 

strong siege unto this wretch's soul.. 

peace to his soul {rep. v. 21 

so many simple souls should iierish.. 

fare with vour departed souls? 

the uncon(|uered soul of Cade is .... 

might thrust thy soul to hell 

a .sceptre shall it have, have I a soul 
it grieves 1113' soul to leave thee 



'!/"'. 



iv. 2 

V. 2 

rylW. 1 

i. 2 



_ ii.2 



ii.3 



— iii. 2 

— iii. 6 
iv. (chorus) 

— iv". 1 

— iv. 1 

— iv. I 

— iv. 1 



— iii. 2 



— iii. 2 



— iii. 3 

— iii. 3 



10 



SOUL and body on the action illeuryrj. v. 2 

by his soul, tlioii and thy liouue ....iUennjI'l. i. 1 

is as a fury to tornient my soul — i. 3 

upon my soul, the hearers will shed — i. -I 

my soul to heaven, my blood — i, 4 

how inly sorrow gripes his soul — i. 4 

my Boul flies through these wouuds. . — i. 4 

now my soul's palace is become — ii. I 

dearly, as his soul's redemption .... — ii. 1 

it irks my very soul — ii. '2 

do cliai[i my soul to thine — ii. 3 

sweet passage to my sinful soul 1 .... — ii. 3 

my body's parting with my soul .... — ii. G 

whose soul is that which takes her .. — ji. ti 

and, by my soul, if this right lumd .. — \\ & 

and tliou, iK>or soul, art tlien forsaken .— iii. 1 

no more than what my soul intends — iii. 2 

and yet, betweeii my soul's desire.. ., — iii. 2 

lips keep in my soul awhile I — v. 2 

sweet rest his soul I fly, lords — v. 2 

now am I seated as my soul delights — v. 7 

to fright tlie souls of fearful liiclmid III. i. 1 

down to my soul! here Clarence comes — i. 1 

sliortly scud thy soul to lieaven — i.'l 

his sold tlum canst not have — i. 2 

in thy soul's [Co/. Kni. -foul] throat.. — i. 2 

and let the soul forth that adoreth .. — i. 2 

from bitterness of soul denounced .. — i. 3 

of conscience still begnaw thy soul? — i. 3 

kept in my soul, and would not let.. — i. 4 

began the tempest to my soul! — i. 4 

tliat there did greet my stranger soul — i. 4 

now give evidence against niy soul .. — i. 4 

my soul is heavy, and I fain would., — i. 4 

charged us frtun iiis soul to love .... — i. 4 

that holy feeling in thy soul — i. 4 

yet to thy owu soul so blind — i. 4 

relent, and save your souls — i. 4 

more in peace my soul shall part .... — ii. 1 

by heaven, my soul is purged from .. — ii. 1 

with whom my soul is any jot — ii. 1 

my soul is full of sorrow — ii. 1 

how the poor soul (lid forsake — ii. 1 

speak unto myself for him, poor soul — ii. I 

black despair against my soul — ii. 2 

our swift-winged souls may catch .. — ii. 2 

tile danger that his soul divines .... — iii. 2 

wliereiu my soul recorded the history — iii. 5 

to enrich his watchful soul — iii. 7 

against my conscience and my soul — iii. 7 

go, go, poor soul (7-ep.) — iv. I 

the subject of nrine own soul's curse — iv. 1 

no more tlian with my soul I mourn — iv. 1 

if yet your gentle souls fly in — iv. 4 

to buy souls, and send them thitlier — iv. 4 

the little souls of Edward's children — iv. 4 

in the I.ethe of thy angry soul thou,. — iv. 4 

from my soul, I love thy Ct'pO — iv. 4 

tliat, with a fearful soul, leads — iv. 4 

and many a christian soul, death .... — iv. 4 

if that your moody discontented souls — v. 1 

tills All-souls day to my fearful soul — v. I 

I do commend my watchful soul ... , — v. 3 

let me sit heavy on thy soul (rep.) ., — v. 3 

for the wronged souls of butcliered .. — v. 3 

and let thy soul despair! — v. 3 

quiet untroubled soul, awake, awake! — v. 3 

tny nephews' souls bid thee despair. , — v. 3 

thou, quiet soul, sleep thou a quiet ., — v. 3 

and, if I die, no soul will pity me — v. 3 

niethought, tlie souls of all that I had — v. 3 

struck more terror to the soul of Richard — v. 3 

methought, their souls, whose bodies — v, 3 

holy saints, and wronged souls — v. 3 

babbling dreams affriglit our souls .. — v. 3 

there is no English soul more Henrij I' III. i. 1 

and spoil your nobler soul! — i. 2 

on my soul, I'll speak but truth .... — 1.2 

and lift my soul to heaven — ii. 1 

and, till my soul forsake me — ii. 1 

he dives into the king's soul _ ii. a 

panging as soul and body's severing — ii. 3 

from my soul refuse you for my judge — ii. 4 

my soul grows sad with troubles .... — iii. 1 

speak this with as free a soul as I dol — iii. 1 

upon my soul, two reverend cardinal — iii. 1 

a soul as even as a calm — iii. 1 

and throw it from their soul — iii. 2 

by my soul, your lung coat, priest ., — iii. 2 

out of a fortitude of soul I feel — iii. 2 

sir, as I liave a soul, she is an angel — iv. 1 

true beauty of tlie soul, for honesty.. — iv. 2 

wish christian peace to souls departed — iv. 2 

and a soul none better in my kingdom — v. I 

win straying souls with modesty .. .. — v. 2 

than this pure soul shall be — v. 4 

joy's soul lies in the doing Troilus ^ Crcsaida^ i. 2 

soul and only spirit, in whom — i. 3 

have soul in such a kind — i. 3 

mutual act of all our souls — i. 3 

every tithe soul, 'mongst many — ii, 2 

love 8 invisible soul,— who — iii. 1 

like a strange soul upon the — iii. 2 

my very soul of counsel — iii. 2 

in the soul of state — iii. 3 

in tlie soul of sound good-fellowship — iv. 1 

no blood, no soul so near me — iv. 2 

by my soul, fair Greek, if e'er — iv. 4 

with private soul, did in great — iv, 5 

a recordation to my soul of every..., — v. 2 

if beauty Iiave a soul, this is not (rep.) — v. 2 

within my soul there doth commence — T. 2 

so eternal and so fixed a soul — v. 2 

he is the very soul of bounty!.. rimono/.lMeiu, i. 2 

upon my soul, 'tis true, sir — iii. 2 

why, this is the world's soul — iii. 2 

for, take it on my soul, my lord — iii. 4 

only speak from vour distracted soul — iii. 4 

corse, of wretched soul bereft . . — v. 5 (epitaph) 
you souls of gccse; that bear the .... Corwtaiius, i, 4 



SOUL— is the man of my soul's hate .. Co? iolanus, i. Ii 

of no more soul, nor fltiiess ibr tile., — ii 1 

and my soul aches to know — iii. 1 

we have suppler souls than in — v. 1 

cried, alas, good soul I and forgave.. Ju(iujC«;«ar, i. 2 

the sufferance of our souls — ii. I 

Biilferiii'' souls that welcome wrongs — ii. 1 

soul of Rome! brave son — ii. 1 

poor soul! his eyes are red as flre .... — iii. 2 

kind souls, what, weep you, v/hen. ... — iii. 2 

come such division 'tween our souls! — iv. 3 

this false soul of Egypt! .... Antony ^ Cleo. \\ . 10 
the Siiul and body rive not more .,., — iv. II 

where suuls do couch on flowers — iv. 12 

how slow his soul sailed on Cijtnbeline, i. 4 

would force the feeler's soul to the .. — i. 7 

to knit their souls (on whom there is no — ii. 3 

no single sniil can we set eye on — iv. 2 

souls that fly backwoxds! stand — v. 3 

their good souls may be appeased .... — v. 5 

latest farewell to their souls Titus Andron. i. 2 

more than half my soul (rfp.) — i. 2 

Tamora, the empress of my soul .... — ii. 3 

for, by my soul, were there worse .... — ii. 4 

whose souls are not corrupted — iii. 1 

languor, and my soul's sad tears ..,, — iii. I 

that which gives my soul the (re-/).).. — iii. 1 

will have his soul black like his — iii. 1 

swear unto my soul to right your .... — iii. I 

to ve-v the father's soul withal {rep.) — v. 1 

1 do repent it from my very soul .... — v. 3 

witli a soul emboldened with the Pi-n'des,\. I 

foLil incest to abuse your soul — i. 1 

my body pine, and soul to languish — i. 2 

alas, poor souls, it grieved mylieart .... — ii, I 

law(\illy deal for—his wife's .'■oul — ii. 1 

some covering for this naked soul Leai\ iv. 1 

thou art a soul in bliss — iv. 7 

friends of my soul, you twain rule ., — v. 3 

God rest all christian souls! Romeo ^ Juliet, i. 3 

his soul! a' was a merry man — 1.3 

I have a soul of lead — i. 4 

God shall mend my soul— you'll malte — i. 5 

so thrive my soul— a thousand — ii. 2 

it is my soul, tliat calls upon — ii. 2 

but she, good soul, had as lief see .... — ii. 4 

for Mercutio's soul is but a little way — iii. 1 

how is't, my soul? let's talk, it is not — iii. 5 

God! I have an ill-divining soul.. — iii. 5 
by my soul, I'll ne'er acknowTedge ., — iii. 5 
from my soul too; or else beshrew ,, — iii. 5 
poor soul, thy face is much abused .. — iv. I 

my soul, and not my cliild! — iv. 6 

worse poison to men's souls — v. I 

when my betossed soul did not attend — v. 3 

till then, sit still my soul ,. ..Hamlet, i. 2 

the inward service of the mind and soul.. — 1.3 

grapple them to thy soul with hooks — i. 3 

now prodigal the soul lends the tongue .. — i. 3 

thouglits beyond the reaches of our souls? — i. 4 

and, for my soul wliat can it do to that .. — i. 4 

lightest word would harrow up thy soul — i. 5 

O, my prophetic soul! my uncle! — i. 5 

nor let thy soul contrive against thy .... — i. 5 

as I hold my soul, both to my God — ii. 2 

since brevity is tlie soul of wit — ii. 2 

to the celestial, and my soul's idol — ii. 2 (letter) 

could force his soul so to his own conceit — ii. 2 

been struck so to tlie soul, that prfesently — ii. 2 

there's something in his soul, o'er which — iii. 1 

O. it otfends ine to the soul, to hear — iii. 2 

since my dear soul was mistress of her .. — iii. 2 

even with the very comment of thy soul — iii. 2 

■we that have free souls, it touches us not — iii. 2 

let not ever the soul of Nero enter — iii. 2 

my tongue and soul in this be hypocrites — iii. 2 

O, limed soul, that, struggling to be free — iii. 3 

to take him in the purging of his soul .. — iii. 3 

and that his soul may be as damned .... — iii. 3 

contraction plucks the very soul — iii. 4 

mine eyes into my very soul — iii. 4 

step between her and her fighting soul .. — iii. 4 

not that flattering unction to your soul ., — iii. 4 

my soul is full of discord, and dismay — iv. 1 

two thousand souls, and twenty thousand — iv. 4 

to my sick soul, as sin's true nature is .. — iv. 5 
God 'a mercy on his soul! (?-tp.) .. — iv. 5 (song) 

jointly labour with your soul to give .... — iv, 5 

so conjunctive to my life and soul — iv. 7 

but, rest her soul, she's dead — v. 1 

to her as to peace-parted souls — v. 1 

the devil take thy soul! — v. 1 

1 take him to be a soul of great article .. — v. 2 

these fellows have some soul Othello, i. I 

you have lost half your soul — i. 1 

in simple and pure soul I come to yon .. — i. 1 

for their souls, another of his fathom .... — i. 1 

my title and my perfect soul, shall — i. 2 

fair question as soul to soul affordeth? .. — i. 3 

I am glad at soul I have no other child .. — i. 3 

did I my soul and fortune consecrate ... , — i. 3 

lieaven defend your good souls — i. 3 

O, ray soul's joy! if after every tempest.. — ii. 1 

my soul hath her content so absolute .... — ii. 1 

finger — thus, and let thy soul be — ii. I 

nothing can or shall content my soul.... — ii. I 

there be souls that must be saved — ii. 3 

for his own rage, holds his soul light ,.., — ii. 3 

liis soul is so enfettered to her love — ii. 3 

I wonder in my soul what you could ask — iii. 3 

perdition catch my soul, but I do love .. — iii. 3 

is the immediate jewel of their souls — iii. 3 

good heaven, the souls of all my tribe .. — iii. 3 

turn the business of my soul to such .... — iii. 3 

or, by the worth of mine eternal soul .... — iii. 3 

have you a soul, or sense? — ill. 3 

a kind of men so loose of soul, that in.. .. — iii. 3 

arraigning his unkindness with my soul — iii. 4 

but jealous souls will not be answered .. — iii. 4 

lay down my soul at stake — iv.2 



SOUL— in some part of my soul a ilmi)..Olhi:'lo, iv. 2 

the piior soul sat sighing by — i v. 3 (song) 

it is the cause, it is the cause, my soul ,, v, 2 

I would not kill tliy soul _ v. 2 

nO! by my life and soul; send for the man — v. 2 

sweet soul, take heed, take heed of perjury v. 2 

may his pernicious soul rot half a grain — v. 2 

upon my soul, a lie; a wicked lie — v. 2 

so come my soul to bliss as I speak true.. — v. 2 

this look of thine will hurl my soul from — v. 2 

why he hath thus ensnared my soul and — v. 2 

SOUL-CO NFIRMI.\'G oMhs.TwoGm.on'erona, ii. 6 

SOUL-CUREli,andbody-curer Merry irives,m. 1 

SOITL -FEARING clamours have KiiigJo/ui, ii.2 

SOUL-KILLING h itches that.. Comcdyof Errors, i. 2 
SOUL-LESS-soul-less villain, dog!.. Jh/.<S-(;/po. v. 2 

SOUND— it soiukL no more Tempest, i. 2 

nor no sound tliat the earth owes .... — i. 2 

bear witness to tills sound — iii. 1 

full of noises, sounds, and sweet airs iii. 2 

the sound is going away; let's follow it — iii. 2 
shapes, such gesture, and such sound — iii. 3 
deeper than did ever plummet sound — v, I 

but O how oddly will it sound _ v. 1 

and mure diversity of sounds — v, 1 

a disguise to soniid Falstaff Merry Hives, ii. I 

Ainaimon sounds well — ii. 2 

let the supposed fairies pinch him sound — iv. 4 

sleep she as sound as careless infancy v. 5 

[/Oi/.J sound that breathes upon .. Tireiflh Night, \. I 
as the maiden's organ; shrill and sonnil — i. 4 

full of error; I am sound ..Meamre for Measure, i. 2 

but so sound, as things that i. 2 

let it not sound a thought upon .... — ii, 2 

if it be sound, or hollowly put on..., ii. 3 

by the sound of your voice v. 1 

converting all your sounds at.. MuchAdo,u. 3 (song) 
he hath alieart as sound as a bell.... — iii. 2 

sound, and sing your solemn hymn.. v. 3 

making it momentary as a sound ., Mid.N.'sDr. i. 1 

tlie maiden, sleeping sound — ii. 3 

gone? no sound, no word? ii, 3 

brought me to thy sound iii. 2 

on the ground, sleep sound — iii, 2 

sound, music. Come, my queen .,,, iv. i 

a sound, but not in government v- 1 

will hear the lowest sound Lnvc'sL, Lost, iv. 3 

the trumpet sounds; be masked — v. 2 

my love to thee is sound v. 2 

the sound of thine own tongue ..Mer. of Venice, i. I 

let not the sound of shallow foppery ii. 5 

let music sound, while he doth — iii. 2 

are those dulcet sounds in break of .. iii. 2 

your exposition hath been most sound — iv. 1 

and let the sounds of music creep v. 1 

but hear perchance, a trumpet sound — v. I 
moved with concord of sweet sounds — v. 1 
methinks. it sounds much sweeter .. — v. I 
pipes and wliistles in his sound ..As you Lilieit, ii. 7 
as clean as a sound sheep's heart .... — iii. 2 

from your sound parts shall fly All'siVell,i\. I 

his powerful sound, within an organ — ii. 1 

rotten and sound, upon my lihi — iv. 3 

a duleetand a heavenly sound. Taming of Sh. 1 (ind.) 
see what trumpet 'tis that sounds . . — I (indue.) 
will comfort, tor thy counsel's sound — i. I 

1, to sound the deptli of tliis knavery — v. I 
as ever oak, or stone, was sound.. Winter'sTale, ii. 3 

this sliows a sound affection — iv. 3 

and sound ones too (jep.) .... Comedy qf Errors, ii. 2 



IV. 4 

— iv. 4 
Macbeth, i. 3 

— iv. 1 



. 5 



I tell you, 'twill sound harshly 

that we were safe and sound aboard 

tilings that do sound so fair? 

1 11 charm the air to give a sound..., 
possess them with the heaviest sound — 
])urge it to a sound and pristine health — 

full of sound and fury — 

that gave the sound of words King John 

sound one unto the drowsy race — 

and harmful sound of words — 

stench! sound rottenness! arise .... — 

makes sound opinion sick 

to sound the purposes of all their .... 

as thine; sound but another 

or sound so base a parle Richard Tl. 

sound truinpets; and set forward (rep.) 

with other nattering sounds i 

to whose venom sound the open ear., i 

tongue sound this unpleasing news? ii 

tlie rest rests sound 

now, sir, the sound, that tells what . 

mads me, let it sound no more — v. 5 

that bears a frosty sound I Henry 1 1', iv. 1 

sound all the lofty instruments — v. 2 

the trumpet sounds retreat — v. 4 

and his tongue sounds ever after i Henry 1 1', i. 1 

and his coiiers sound with hollow. ... i. 3 

where nothing but the sound of ii. 3 

and lulled with sounds of sweetest .. — iii. 1 
to sound the bottom of the after-times — iv. 2 
3'et not so sound, and half so deeply 

this sleep is sound indeed 

my voice shall sound as you do prompt 

the sea. and trumpet-clangor sounds — v. & 

order give to sounds confused .He;iii//'. iii. (chorus) 

the town sounds a parley iii. 2 

firm and sound of heart, of buxom ,, — iii. 

of either army stilly sounds iv. (clioius) 

then let the truinpets sound — iv. 2 

empty vessel makes the greatest sound — iv. 4 

sound, sound iilarura 1 Henry n. i. 2 

shall we sound what skill she hath ., — i. 2 

whilst any trump did sound i. 4 

here suond retreat, and cease — ii. 2 

hark! by the sound of drum iii. 3 

Bound trumpets, alarum to the 2 Henry 1^1. ii. 3 

chase away the first-conceived sound? — iii. 2 

in whose sound is death iv. J 

to sound retreat or parley iv. 8 

the angry trumpet Bounds alarm ,,,. v. 2 



, iii. I 
iii. 3 



iv. 2 



— V.3 



iv. 4 
iv. 4 
V. 2 



sou 



SOUNU-pctty Boumls to cease! iUtm^Vl. v. a 

Bomul, drums nnd trumiJcta — v 3 

found diiM.isniul lniiM|«ts (1-7,. v. 7) 3f/f "«!/ »'. i. 1 
but s.iuiiil llu' tniniiKis w.'/'. ii. -J) .. — ii. 1 
sUip Ids (liMiuil tliriiiltMiiii- 8ouud .. — ii.li 

sound, truin].i'l; i;d\uirdsli.dl be.... — iv. 7 

totlie Willis, und Mnind II piulo — v. I 

tlicir ronrsiTs lit llii.' truniiH't'B sound — v. 7 
far otr. suuiid tlu.u lord Jlustini^s ..liic!un-l ;;;. iii. 1 
demand tliiit von did eoiind nie in .. — iv. '-' 

[Co/. K;i/.] tlic trumpet sounds .. — iv. 4 

call for some men of sound direction — v. 3 

look that my slaves be sound — v. 3 

sound, drums and trumpets, lioldly.. — v. 3 
the trumpets sound {^'fp. v. 3) ...'.lletini I' II I. iv. 1 
pray heaven, be sound not my disgnicu I — v. 2 
ye are not sound. Not sound? Not sound — v. 2 
as mucti as one sound eudjiel of four — v. 3 

|»euee, rude sounds! tools on .. Truitus^-Cirsii'ht^ i. I 
infect the sound pine, and divert .... — i. 3 

dialogue and sound 'twixt Ilia — i. 3 

in our islands sound her trump .... — iii. 3 
in the soul of sound Kood-fellowship — iv. 1 

liol bid my trumpet sound 1 No notes — v. 3 
the Trojaii trumiiets sound the like — v. ii 

keep their sounds to themselves. VVnion of.ilfiens, i. '2 
false hearts should never have sound — i. 'J 

[Col. A'h/.] no reason can sound his state — ii. 1 
BO harshly on the trumpet's sound .. — iii- 6 

nor sounci liis quillets shrilly — iv. 3 

sound to this coward and luscivioua — v..'} 

thunder-like iierciission of thy sounds ..Co; 10/. i.t 

fo, sound thy trnmptt in the — i. ."i 

know the sound of Jlareius' tongue — i. 6 
01 let me clip you in arms as sound — i. (i 
which yon profane, never sound morel — i.9 
five hundred voices of that sound.... — ii. 3 
rougher accents for malicious sounds — iii. 3 

and harsh in sound to thine — iv. 5 

the replication of your sounds ,,,, Julius Ctesar^ i, 1 

sound them, it doth become — i. 2 

what of Cicero? shall we sound liim? — ii. 1 

therefore thou sleep'st so sound — ii. I 

to sound more sweetly in great Caasar's — iij. I 
wlien to sound 3'our name it nnU, Antony ^ Cleo. ii. 2 
sound, and be banged, sound out .... — ii. 7 

may strike their sounds together — iv. 8 

liark,Polydore, it soundsl hut what.Ci/T«6e//?ir, iv. '^ 
wiio ever yet could soiir.d thy bottom! — iv. i 
here's no sound jest I the old.. 'J'iius Aridrotiicus^iv.i 

go sound the ocean, and cast — iv. 3 

our sorrows do sound deep into Periclfs,]. 4 

whicli make a sound, but killed are .. _ _ — ii. 3 
every one with claps 'gan sound.. — iii. CGower) 

cause it to sound, 'beseech you — iii. 2 

she made more sound by hurting it — iv. (.Gow.) 

reporters stand upon sound legs — iv. (i 

rarest soundsl do ve not hear? — v. 1 

sickly fit for the sound man Lear, 11. 4 

bleed'st not; spe-ak'st; art sound — iv. 6 

bears that, which can distinguish sound — iv. (i 

let the trumpet sound (/e;). v. 3) — v. I 

let him appear at the third sound — V. 3 (herald) 

sound. Again. Again. Ask hiin his — v. 3 

utterance yet I know the sound .«omeo Sr Juliet, 11. 2 
how silver sweet sound lovers' tongues — i).2 
brief sounds determine of my weal.. — iii. 2 
trumpet sound the general doom! .. — 111.2 
bow sound is she asleep! 1 needs .... _ — iv. 5 
music, with her silver sound uep.) — iv. 6 (song) 
lieeause silver hath a sweet sound (7ep.) — iv. 5 
if thou hast any sound, or use of voice.. Hamte(, i- 1 
and at the Boun'd ii shrunk in haste away — i. 2 

to sound what stop she please — jji. 2 

you would sound me from my lowest note — 111. 2 
methinkd, it sounds a parley Ulliello, li. 3 

♦lOUNDED— e'er plummet stiunded ..Tempesl. 111. 3 
twice have the trumpets srtunded/1/ea.s./ur jWcas. iv. 6 

but it cannot be sounded AitjouLike il^\\. I 

and thy beauty sounded, yet not. Taming of Sh. 11. 1 
bast thou sounded him. if he appeal ./(/Wi.od //■ i. 1 
have sounded the very base string .A Henry 1 1'. 11. 4 

the trumpets have sounded twice iHemyW.y. 5 

is Gualtier, being rightlv sounded. .iHeii?!//'/. iv. I 
spoke, which sounded like a cannon.3He.iii/rr. y. 2 
I have not sounded him, nor he ..Uichard III. iii. 4 
Catesby bath sounded Hastings in our — iii. 4 
sounded all the depths and shoals. Hciiri/ 1 111. iii. 2 
name he sounded more than yonrs-./ii/iusCVrxn-, i. 2 
heretofore sounded you in this business ..l-ear, i. 2 

twice then the trumpet sounded — v. 3 

do we find him forward to be sounded. H/imW, 111. 1 

SOUNDER all the next day .... Mean.for Mens. iv. 3 

a more sounder instance .-ItyouUkeU. 111. 2 

dare mate 11 sounder man than .. Ileniy till. 111. 2 

SOUNDEST jiidgmcnts in .... Troilus t^- Crrstidu, 1. 2 
the best and soundest of ills time hath /,fiir, 1. 1 

SOUNDING Troilns TrniUa^- Cre.,i-Ja, iy. 2 

so far from sounding and discovery. «om(o4Ju;.i. 1 
hove seldom gold for sounding - iv. 5 

SOUNDLESS too: for you have ....Julinsrm,,,; y. 1 

SOUNDLY— and that soundly liep.) ..Temiwii.n. i 

let them be hunted soundly — ly. 1 

do, cnir bim soundly TwHpIt MkIiI, 111. 4 

I had swinged him soundly. il/raiu)(-A>r.Vf<i»ur«,v, 1 
but cold to sleep so soundly.. Tamini; iifUh. 1 (indue.) 
1 say, knock me here soundly {.rep.) — 1. 2 

and roi) bim soundly, sir — 1-2 

swinge me then soundly forth unto.. — y. 2 
day'shard journey soundly invite \\\m.Macbfth, 1. 7 

have you as soundly swinged 2 Henry If. v. 4 

can sleep so soundly as the wretched . Henry /'. iv. 1 

1 will strike it out sonndlv — iv. 7 

if you will love me soundly with your — y. 2 
to tug it, and to cuff you soundly ..MtenryVI. 1. 3 
'o, eft'ect this business soundly ..Itictinrd III. lii. 1 
■ shediacJijliiiedAufidius soundly. t-'iiriolaiiMi,ii. 1 
were my fault to sleep so soundly. ./iWii«r^«ii>-, ii. 1 
is lie whipped? soundly, my IwAAnlony A Clin. 111. 1 1 
1 have it, and soundly too Komeo 4- Juliet, iii. I 



fia 



[703 j 

SOUNDl,Y-givc it vou soundly. «r.)nfo«.;uiiW,iv. 6 

SOUNDNESifnow, as wlun thy father. ,4H'»H>H, i. 2 

S lUNDPOST-Janics Souiidpost? .Kome; f,Jid. iv. 6 

SOUK— for her sour hreatli .. lii„Gei,.onnnn„, lii. 1 

welcome the sour i-ii|i ,if |ir..-i.crity I .Uin-'sl.. L. 1. 1 

the great sender turns u sour olleiice...-I/('s »Vi/, y. 3 

you must not look so sour (;/•;).).. 'numngitj Sit. ii. 1 

peevish, sullen, sour, and not nlieilieut — v. 2 

lie hath been heavy, sour, sud..(',jmn///o/7j;)Toii!, v. 1 

prove in digestion sour; you urged.. 7(>V/i«ni II. \. 3 

made me sour my patient cheek — n. I 

although thy looks be sour — iif- 2 

of rue, sour herb of grace ! rue — in- 4 

delivered me to m.v sour cross — iv. 1 

oh, my sour husband, iny hard-hearted — v. 3 

liow sour sweet music is, when — v. 5 

of conscience, and sour melancholy.. — .y. G 

discontent, and sour affliction illi'iirtjVJ. iii. 2 

let me embracethese sour adversities. .3//f>i.r/.iii. 1 

farewell, Bonr annoy! for here — v. 7 

ICol.Knt.'] with that sour ferryman.. «iWi<ir'i ///. 1. 4 

lofty, and sour, to them that Henry I'll I. ly. 2 

sweet lady sad, is a sour oftence. Troilus ^ Cress, iii. 1 

lips, let sour words go by Timon af Alliens, v. 2 

tlie tartness of his face sours ripe ,..Cnriol,mus,v. 4 
after bis sour fasliion, tell you ....JuUusl-n-sar. i. 2 

to sour vour happiness, I must Cyinhidme, v. ;> 

nor with sour looks lifllict .... TitusAmlroi.icis, 1. 2 
lilaying it tome w ith so sour a face.fiomco<5-Jui. ii. 6 
if sour woe deliglus ill fellowship.... — iii. 2 
my dear son willi siieli sour eom|iany — 111. 3 
with me in sour niisrortuiie's book .. — v. 3 
their palates both lor sweet and sour . . Olhrllo, iv. 3 
SOURCE— flown from simiile sources .. All's irell, it. 1 

the very source of it is stopped MncUrih, ii. 3 

blow it to the source from whence ..Zlh'unjyi. v. 3 
quell the source of all erection. 7'i»io»<!'.4"iens,.i v. 3 
and poison it in the source. /Infony 4- t'(c6/>o/rn, iii.ll 

the source of this our watch Hamlet, \. 1 

the head and source of all your son's — ii. 2 

SOUR-COLD-this sour-cold habit. 7'imo» or .4/A. iv.3 
SOURED— had soured themselves.. Winter'sTide, ). 2 
SO UREST-sourest rind.. .4s «ou LiAei/, iii. a (verses) 

to the sourest and most deadly Uichard II. iii. 2 

touch you the sourest points ....AntnnySfCleo. ii. 2 
SOUREST-NATURED dog that. TwoGen. nf ;Vi-.ii.3 
St)UR-EYED disdain, and discord ....Tempest, iv. 1 
SOURLY— I showed sourly to him ..Cnriolanus, v. 3 
SOUSE— souse annoyance that Komes.. KingJolin, v. 2 

SOUTH— a south west blow on ye 7V»i))''ii/, i. 2 

like the sweet south [Kn/.-sound].7'«e//rA Aight.u 1 

in the south suburbs, at the — iii. 3 

west, north, and south, I spread .. Love's L. Lost, y. 2 

like foggy south, putHiig with AsyouLikeit, iii. 5 

from east, west, north, and iouW\..IVinter'sTale, i. 2 

a knocking at the south entry Macbeth, ii. 2 

our thunder from the south, sliall ..King John, 11. 2 

from north to south; Austria — ii. 2 

cross it from the north to south 1 HraiyZr. i. 3 

by south and east, is to my part — iii. 1 

like the south borne with black ....illeiirylV. ii. 4 

as is the south to the septentrion '6l!i-nvyl'l. 1. 4 

at least south from the mighty ....Richmd III. v. 3 
the rotten diseases of the soutli. . Troilus ^ Crrss. y. 1 
all the contagion of the south light. . Voriolanus, i. 4 
1 pray you ('tis south the city mills) — i. 10 
east, west, north, south; and their .. — ii. 3 
a great way growing on the south. .JiiiiusOpsar, 1;. 1 
the chimney is south the chamber ..Cymbeline,n. 4 

winged from the spungy south — iv. 2 

from south to west on wing soaring .. — y. 5 

face to the dew-dropping south ..Itomen /j- Juliet, i. 4 

SOOTHAM— at Southam did I leave. 3iJ«'in!//7. v. 1 

here Southam lies; the drum your .. — v. 1 

SO UTH AMPTON linger your. . Henry V. ii. (cliorus) 

gentles, to Smithamptou (rep.) — ii. (chorus) 

the king will be gone from Southampton — ii. 3 

as Bevis of Southampton fell upon..2HeMi!/r;. ii. 3 

SOUTHERLY-the wind is southerly ..Hamlet, ii. 2 

SOUTHERN- southern gentlemen.. /(/Wuix/ //. iii. 2 

tlie southern wind doth play 1 Henn/ll'. v. 1 

with the southern clouds contend ..illnirijn. 111. 2 

'tis not thy southern power 2lleiirnf'l. i. 1 

S(HITri-yi)G rothim! Ci/mljeline. ii. 3 

SOUTII-NOKTII— tlie south-north ..V«e/«/i .V. iv. 2 

Si.U'l'Il-SEA discovery Asyiw l.ilcrii, iii. 2 

SOUXilWAllD-a southward eye. ll'iidei'sTale. iy. 3 

at liberty, 'twould sure, southward. Co;'o(a/ii(.<, ii. 3 

SOUTH WAKK-are in Southwark..2Hciirj/'7. iv. 4 

at the White Hart, in Soiithwark.. . — iv. R 

SOUTHWELL-John Southwell, read.2//eiirt/;';. i. 4 

SOUTIl-WIOST. When I was born I'erirtes, iv. 1 

SOUTH-WIND fiiendlv) mnt'^i's lale,\. 1 

SOUVIENDllAV; les doigts? HeHrf/T. iii. 4 

SOVERElCiN— her sovereign grace .. 7'em;/''j*, iv. 1 

Iliave her sovereign aid — v. 1 

I search it with a sovereign kiss. T")™ Gen. eiA/ er. 1.2 

sovereign to all the creatures — ii- 4 

these sovereign thrones, are all .. Tirel/lhNight.u I 
get thee to yon same sovereign cruelty^ — u. 4 
a man of sovereign parts he is ... . Love'sL. Lust, i'l. 1 

the anointed sovereign of sighs — iii. 1 

dear sovereign, hear me speak ....AsyouLikeit, i. 3 
goddess, and a sovereign, a counsellor. All's ll'eU,\. I 
o'er whom both sovereign power .... — ii- 3 

dear sovereign pardon to me — v. 3 

my gracious sovereign, howe'er (.rep.) — v. 3 
thy head, thy sovereign; one.. Taming of Shrew, y. 2 
to bear my sovereign mistress .... H'inter sTaii-, 1. 2 
our sovereign lord the king .... — iii. 2 tindict.) 
the remembrance of bis most sovereign — v. 1 
what, sovereign sir. I did not well.... — ..y- 3 
such a gentle sovereign grace ..Comedy of Krr. 111. 2 

give solely sovereign sway Macljcth, i. 5 

to dew the sovereign flower — y- 2 

right royal sovereign What follows.. KingJnhn, 1. 1 
your sovereign greatness and authority — v. 1 

to any sovereign state throughout — y. 2 

my gracious Kovereign, my most Uichard II. 1. 1 

(so pleaae my sovereign) ere I move.. — 1. 1 



sov 



SOVEREIGN turn away Uichard II. i. I 

for tiiat inv sovereign liege (.rep. i. 3) — i. I 

J throw, dread sovereign, at thy .... — i. 1 

let inc kiss my sovereign's hand .... — i. 3 

for God, Ilia sovereign, and liimself.. — i. 3 

one wrinkle on my sovereign's face.. — ii. 1 

the one's my sovereign, whom both.. — ii. 3 

in braving arms against thy sovereign — ii. 3 

unto the sovereign mercy of the king — ii. 3 

feed not thy sovereign's ioe, my gentle — 111.2 

death upon thy soverei(;n'» eueinies.. — iii. 2 

train|ile on their sovereign's head .. — iii. 3 
our house, my sovereign liege (le;;.) i Henry 1 1', i. 3 

have charge, and sovereign trust .... — iii. 2 
liealtli t • my sovereign! and new ..'iHenryl I', iv. 4 

my sovereign lord, cheer up yourself — iv. 4 
then hear me, gra<:ious sovereign (rep.)Henryl'. 1. 2 

pin upon my head, dread sovereignl — i. 2 

so sell his sovereign's life to death .. — ii. 2 

let him be punished, sovereign — ii. 2 

and me, my royal sovereign — ii. 2 

but not my body, pardon, sovereign . . — ii. 2 

good my sovereign, take up the English — ii. 1 

for a sovereign to reason on (lep.) ... . — iii. 7 

my sovereign lord, bestow yourself . . — iv.3 

commend my service to my sovereign — iv. G 

kiss her as my sovereign queen — v. 2 

thy servant, and not sovereign \ Henry FL i. 2 

our late sovereign ne'er could brook? — ..!•'* 

the king, thy sovereign, is not quite — iii. 1 

to slay your sovereign, and destroy .. — iii. 1 

this scroll, most gracious sovereign.. — iii. 1 

to do my duty to mi' soverei;3'n — iii. 4 

my gracious sovereign, as I rode (rep.) — iv. I 

hath he forgot he is his sovereign? .. — iv. 1 

call my sovereign yours, and do hira — iv. 2 



should he then protect our sovereign — i. 1 

when thou wert regent for our so\ereign — i. 1 

I say, my sovereign, York is nieetest — i. 3 

salute our riglitful sovereign with .. — ii. 2 
long live our sovereign Kieliard .... — ii. 2 
means to frame our sovereign's fall.. — ]]]' ^ 
no, no, my sovereign; Gloster is a man — iii. 1 
all health unto my gracious sovereign! — iii. 1 
clear from treason to my sovereign.. — iii. 1 
and you, my sovereign lady (rep.) .. — iii. 1 
preserve my sovereign from his foe .. — iii. 1 
comfort, my sovereign! gracious Henry — iii. 2 
mighty sovereigiij that goixl (rc;j.) .. — iii. 2 

come hither, gracious sovereign — iii. 2 

that my sovereign's presence makes — iii. 2 
such message to their sovereign .... — iii. 2 
speak, Beaufort, to thy sovereign (rep.) — iii. 3 
and let iny sovereign, virtuous Henry — v. 1 
we are thy sovereign, Clifl'ord, kneel — v. 1 

at my feet; I am thy sovereign ^Hcnryl'I. i. 1 

being his 8o\'ereigii, and made him to — i 1 

honour me as tliy king and sovereign — i. ! 

before thy sovereign, and tliy lawful — ii. 2 

but far uiifit to be a sovereign — iii. 2 

my lord and sovereign, and thy vowed — iii. 3 
the passion of my sovereign's heart.. — iii. 3 
their true sovereign whom they must — iv. I 

my sovereign liege, no letters — iv. 1 

ay, gracious sovereign: they are so .. — iv. 1 

then is my sovereign slain? — iv. 4 

challenge n<ithing of their sovereig'us — iv. 6 
answers Clarence to bis sovereign s will? — iv. 6 
it shall be done, my sovereign, with all — iv. 6 
but let us hence, my sovereign ...... — iv. 6 

ay, now my sovereign speaketh like — iv, 
my sovereign, with the loving citizcna — jv 
farewell, my sovereign. Farewell.... — iv 

Henry, your sovereign, is prisoner to — v 

\_Col.Knt.'] our sovereign king Uichard III. i, 

the bowels of thy sovereign's son .... — \ 

good-morrow to my sovereign king.. — ii 
blessed lubnur, my most sovereign liege — ii 
my sovereign lord, I do beseech your — ii 
a boon my sovereign, for my service — ii 

the t'orlei't, sovereign, of mv servant's — ii 
my thought's sovereign: the weary way — iii 

command me, as my sovereign — iii 

niv gracious sovereign. Give me .... — iv 

alt health, my sovereign lord! — iv 

soy, I, her sovereign, am her subject low — iv 

most mighty sovereign (rep.) — iv 

when they should serve their sovereign — iv 

my gracious sovereign, now in — iy 

naineof our most sovereign king ..HenryVlll. \. 
whereof my sovereign would have note — i 

and thy parts sovereign and iiious else — Ji 
my sovereign, I confess, your royal .. — iii 
dread sovereign, how much are we (rep.) — y 

on this sovereign lady fixed Timnu nf Athens, i. 

sovereign prescription in Galen .... Corio/ioi lor, ii, 
and, at thy sovereign leisure ....Antony Sr Cleo. i. 3 
sovereign of Egypt, hail I How much — i. 5 

O sovereign mistress of true melancholy — iv. 9 

she is dead too, our sovereign — iv. 13 

with tears as sovereign as the blood.. — v. 1 

most sovereign creature,— his legs — v. 2 

sweet sovereign, leave us Cymbeline, i. 2 

how now, dear sovereign, and our. Tli'/iiit.liK/riin. ii. 3 
guide iiie to vour sovereign's court ....i^eric/ej, ii. 1 
we iluiB suluiiit unto,— our sovereign .. — ii. 4 

a siivircigii sluime so elbows bim Lear, iv. 3 

sovereign, here lies the county . . Romeo A Juliet, v. 3 
by the sovereign power you have of ua.. Hamlet, ii. 2 
that noble ana most sovereign reason .. — iii. 1 

coldly set our sovereign iirocess — iv.3 

a sovereign mistress of effects Othello, i. 3 

SO\' 1: K 1; K; N lA' lieiiig honourable. Winter's Tale, i. 2 
SuVi:i!i;i(;.VST thing on earth was .1 Henry /K. i. 3 

SO\'Ei;i;i(INTY— 110 sovereignty Tempest, \\. 1 

who.-e sovereignty so oft thou ..TwoGen.ofl'er. ii. 6 
your unknown sovereignty. .l/en«irtf, /or A/e«<iir*, v. I 
consents not to give sovereignty. il/i'<i.A'."»l»r»aui i. 1 



sov 



[ 704 ] 



SPE 



SOVEREIGNTY do meet Love'tL.Lo»i,W. 3 

had collected for general sovereignty.. AWsHetl, j, 3 
sovereignty will fall upon Macbeth ..Muctietlt, ii. 4 
the round and top of suvcrcignty? .... — iv. 1 
down fair respect of sovereignty .... King John, iii. 1 

and sovereiirnty, a slave Richard II. iv. I 

or my liege^s sovereignty ^Ilntrijir. v. 2 

been as bondnien to thy soverci.'^nt^-.'J llnu (/ /'/. i. 3 

ferfections challenge sovereignty . .olieni}; I'l. iii. 2 
do but dream on sovereignty — iii. 2 

on himself tlie sovereignty thereof. /i(c/iar(/ ///.iii. 7 
bear the golden yoke of sovereignty., — iii. 7 

flame of golden sovereignty — iv. 4 

your subject, loatlies such sovereignty — iv. 4 
minute with words of sovereignty.. //en* y ^7//. i. 2 

eminence, weal tti, so\eieignty — ii. 3 

takes it by so\erei^nty of nature . . Cnriolanus, iv. 7 
to sliow less sovere"igiit^\' than they^Ci/inbetitie, iii. fi 

for by tlie marlts of sovereignty Lear, i. 4 

deprive vour sovereignty of reason Ihimlet, i. 4 

SOW— lie'd sow it witli nettle-seed .... Tempest, ii. 1 
for yet our tytlie's to sow.. Measure /f>r Measure, iv. I 

pour in sow's blood, that hatli Mnrbeih, iv. 1 

like a sow, tliat liath o\'er-w)iclmed..2/i('j;/y/r. i. 2 

sliall we sow the headland — v. I 

if I had a sow to my n\i stress Henry r. iii. 7 

sucii sorrows, not to sow tliem Henry rtll. iii. I 

sou- all tlie Athenian bosoms.. Timonof Alliens, iv. 1 

consuinutions sow in Iiollow — iv. 3 

if we will plant nettles or sow lettuce . . Olhello, i. 3 

SOWED— hath sowed a grizzle Twelf.hSight, v. 1 

allons! Allons! Sowed cockle ..Love\L.Lost,\v.Z 
harvest which that rascal sowed ..IHenryVI. iii. 1 
pliniglied for, sowed and scattered.. CorioiaHMs, iii. 1 

a cross as if it had been sowed! Ci/mbeline, iv. 2 

SOWING tlie kernels of it in tlie sea .. Tempest, ii. 1 
Si )WLl!; the porter of Home gates . . Corinlanus, iv. 5 

SOW-SKIN budcet n'mler\rale, iv. 2 (song) 

SOWTER— Sowter will cry upon't, 7'Hei/'A AVgAi, ii. 5 

SrACE enough have 1 in sucli a prison . Tempest, i. 2 

'twixtwhicli regions tliere is some space — ii. 1 

a space whose every cubit — ii. 1 

a blank space for different names... Uerry tVives, ii. 1 
court for three years' space (rep.) . . Love's h. Lost, i. I 

after some small space As youLike it, i v. 3 

the raiglitiest space in fortune Alt's H'ell, i. 1 

within what solace hop'st thou my ., — ii. I 

attend upon the coming space — ii 3 

thou art granted space — iv. 1 

for the wTiole space that's iu Macbeth, iv. 3 

within that space, you may 1 Hem yl V. iii. 1 

but in short space, it rained — v. I 

if after three days' space 2 Henry VI. iii. 2 

short a space [^ Co/. Kii/. -small a thno], Rich. 111. iv. I 
world's large spaces cannot . . Troilus fy Cressida, ii. 2 

no space of eartli shall sunder — v 11 

sell tlie mighty space of our JuliusCtesar, iv. 3 

here is my space Antony ^Cteo. i, 1 

'tis a space for further travel — ii. 1 

make space enough betueen you — ii. 3 

tlie diminution of space had pointed.. Cj/mirf/jie, i. 4 
if you requii'e a little space for prayer. Pericles, iv. 1 
dearer tlian eyesiglit, space and liberty. . . . Lear, i. I 
no less in space, validity, and pleasure .. — i. 1 
undistinguished space of woman's Willi — iv. 6 

to-morrow, or at further space — v. 3 

count myself a king of infinite space . . Hamlet, ii. 2 

SPACIOUS ceremony to All's Well, ii. 1 

your pleasures in a spacious plenty . . Macbeth, iv. 3 

of such a spacious lofty pitch ] Henry f'l. ii. 3 

tlie spacious world cannot &gian..., Richard III. i. 2 
thy spacious and dilated parts .. Troilus ^ Cress, ii. 3 
and yet the spacious breadth of this — v. 2 

few words, but spacious in effect.. Timon o/Ath.i\i. 5 

and vows revenge as spacious Coriolanus, iv. 6 

when such a spacious mirror's %tt. Antony <§ Cleo. v. I 
walks are wide and spacious. . TitusAndronicus, ii. 1 

lord of ail this spacious world Pericles, iv. 4 

I sav, spacious iu the possession of dirt. Hamlet, v. 2 

SPADE? tills placeV Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

dig with mattock, and with spade .. Titus And. iv. 3 

and this spade from him Romeo ^Juliet, v. 3 

come; my spade Hamlet, v. 1 

about the raazzard with a sexton's spade — v. 1 

a pick-axe, and a spade, a spade, for — v. 1 (song) 

SPAIN— refined traveller of Spain. .i.oi'e'sL.Los^, i. I 

many a kni"ht from tawny Spain . . — i. 1 

Spain? Faith, I saw it not Comedy of Err. iii. 2 

to tlie liot breath of Spain — iii. 2 

the lady Blanch of Spain King John, ii. I 

that daughter there of Spain — ii. 2 

the fig 01 Spain I Very good Henry V. iii. 6 

subdue the greatest part of Spain ..ZHenryVI. iii. 3 
king of Spain, was reckoned one .. Henry FIIL ii. 4 

by my friends in Spain advised — ii. 4 

had a fever when he was in Spain . . JulinsCcpsar, i. 2 

a sword of Spain, the ice-brook's temper. Otfiello, v. 2 

SPAKE— is tliat, that spake? ..Two Gen. offer, iv. 2 

ay, you spake in Latin then too ..Merry iVives, i. 1 

I spake with the old woman — iv. 5 

tliere spake my brother . . Measure for Measure, iii. 1 
certain words he spake against your — v. 1 

I never spake witli her, saw lier .... — v. 1 
would answer, I spake not true . . As you Like if, v. 4 

I spake but by a metaphor .-Ill's tVelt, v. 2 

spake you not these words .... Taming of Shrew, i. 2 
Cainillo, sir: I spake witli him .. tV'tnter's Tale, v. 1 

spake he so doubtfully Comedy of Errors, ii. 1 

wheu spalte I sucli a word? — ii. 2 

unless I spake, looked, touched — ii. 2 

I never spake with her in all my life — ii. 2 

when I spake darkly what I King John, iv. 2 

there, raethinks, an angel spake .... — v. 2 

wlien last we spake together Uiehard II. ii. 3 

thonght the very window spake — v. 2 

the kuig, what words he spake? — v. 4 

he spake it twice, and urged it twice — v. 4 

one that never spake otlier 1 Henry IV. ii. 4 

I spake with one, ray lord, that iHmiylV. i. 1 

[A'ui.] upon my life, spake at adventure — 1.1 



SPAKE unto the crown, as iiaving ..iHenrylV. iv. 4 

if ever I spake tlie words 'UlenryVI. i. 3 

[A'ji/.] Warwick; who spake aiowd.. Richard III. i. 4 
now I want the priest that spake to rae — iii. 4 
God help me, they spake not a word _ iii. 7 

spake one the least word Heyiry VIII. ii. 4 

about tliat wliicli the bisliop spake .. — v. 1 

ever spake against your liberties Coriolanus, ii. 3 

Ligarius, tliat Metellus spake of ..JuliusCrrsur, ii. 1 

spake you of Cajsar? Antony ^ Cleo. iii. 2 

I spake to you for your comfort ' — iv. 2 

the hist she sjiake was Antony! — iv. l'^ 

she stood, and spake — v. 2 

the last that he spake to thee? Cymbeliue, i. 4 

he spake of her, as Dian had hot — v. .'j 

iu that he spake too far v. 6 

I never spake bad word Pericles, iv. 1 

spake you with him Lear, i .2 

swore as many oaths as I spake words .. — iii. 4 
lord Edmund spake not with your lord. . — iv. 5 
I spake, I spake it to my face . . Homeo ^Juliet, iv. 1 
what he spake, thougli it lacked form../Jnnil(i/, iii. 1 

I spake of most disastrous chances Olhello, i. 3 

upon this hint I spake — i. 3 

slie that I spake of — ii. i 

and even but now he spake — v. 2 

SPAK'ST-vauntingly thou spak'st it.Richard II. iv. 1 
tlie former words tliou spak st. 



.]He 



- -,- ri/VI. iii. 4 

pak St thou of Juliet? Romeo ^Juliet, iii. 3 

SPAN buckles in his sum.. AsyouLil<eit, iii. 2 (ver.ses) 
from spiritual leisure a brief span. Henry ;'///. iii. 2 
spans and inches so diminutive. Tioilns ti Cress, ii. 2 
who hath outstretched his span.. Timon ofAth. v. 4 

a life's but a span Othello, ii. 3 (song) 

SPAN-COUNTER for French 'illenryVI. iv. 2 

SPANGLE heaven with Taming ofSlirew, iv. 5 

SPANGLED starlight sheen . . Mid. N.'s Dream, ii. 1 
who stuck and spangled you with. Timon ofAth. iii. 6 
SPANIARD from the hip upward ..MuchAdo, iii. 2 
too much odds for a Spaniard's rapier. Lo»e'sZ,.i. i. 2 
this Armado is a Spaniard, tliat keeps — iv. 1 
flg me, like the bragging Spaniard ..2Henrt/IV. v. 3 

the Spaniard, tied by blood and Henry VI 1 1, ii. 2 

was a Spaniard's mouth so watered ..Pericles, iv. 3 

SPANIEL— I am your spaniel. . Mid. A^.'s Dream, ii. 2 

use me but as your spaniel, spurn me — ii. 2 

Where's my spaniel Troilus? . Taming of Shrew, iv. I 

mongrels spaniels, curs shoughs Macbeth, iii. I 

you play the spaniel, and think Henn/VIII. v. 2 

curt sies, and base spaniel fawning. ./ii//i/.s'Crt'«rii-. iii. 1 

let me be gelded like a spaniel Pericles, iv, G 

hoimd or spaniel, brach, or hm Lear, iii. 6 

SPANIELED-that spanieled me. Antony ^ Cleo. iv. 10 

SPANIEL-LIKE, the more she. TwoGen. ofVer. iv. 2 

SPANISH— breaking of my Spauish ..AWsWell, iv. 1 

Spanish, piu per dulgura que per fuerta. Pericles, ii. 2 

Spanish blades, of healths Romeo S- Juliet, i. 4 

SPANISH-POUCH, O lord, sir IHenrylV.ii. 4 

SPANNED— my life is spanned He?rry VIII. i. 1 

SPARE— I pr'y thee, spare Tempest, ii. 1 

bid him go, and spare not? TwelfthKight, ii. 3 

spare him, spare him; he's not ,.Meas'..forMeas. ii. 2 

we'd not spare heaven, as we — ii. 3 

spare not to tell him, that he MuchAdo, ii. 2 

we will spare for no wit, I warrant you — iii. 5 

and I will spare your haunts Mid. N.'s Dr. ii. 2 

it should none spare that come ..Love'sL.Lost, ii. 1 
hardly spare a iiound of flesh . . Mer. of Venice, iii. 3 
as it is a spare life, look you ....Jsyou Like it, iii. 2 
he that ears my land, spares my taa.m.All's Well, i. 3 
the rather will I spare my praises .. — ii. 1 

thick, thick, spare not me (rep.) .... ii. y 

is content to spare thee j'et — iv. 1 

thy mete-yard, and spare not me. Taming of Sh. iv. 3 
which I would spare; for honour. Winter's Tale, iii. 2 

sir, spare your threats _ iii. 2 

fastened him unto a small spare.. Comrf?/ of Err. i. 1 

I would not spare ray brother — i v. t 

O, spare mine eyes King John, iv. 1 

spare me not, my brother Edward's., fi/c/iurd /;. ii. 1 

he will spare neither woman 2 Henry IV. ii. 1 

O, give rae the spare men, and spare rae — iii. 2 

or are they spare in diet Henry f'. ii. 2 

spare for no faggots, let there IHettryll. v. 4 

and therefore spare my life 'IHenryVI.iv. 1 

spare none, but such as go in clouted — iv. 2 

such aid as I can spare, you shall .... iv. 4 

spare England, for it is your native .. — iv. 8 

York not our old men spares v. 2 

cannot spare his friends on oath 3 Henry VI. ii. 6 

tell him, and spare not Richard III i. 3 

O, spare my guiltless wife i. 4 

you may then spare that time Henry VIII. ii. 4 

beseech you, sir, to spare me, till I may — ii. 4 
you'd spare your spoons; you shall.. — v. 2 
could distribute, I made no spare, sir — v. 3 
he'll spare none. Good morrow to. Timon ofAth. i. I 
spare not the babe, whose dimpled .. — iv. 3 

spare your oaths, I'll trust to — iv. 3 

spare thy Athenian cradle y. 5 

he will not spare to gird the gods Coriolanus, i. 1 

ay, spare us not; say, we read ii. 3 

avoid so soon as that spare Cufsius. .JuliusCrpsar, i. 2 
tlianks, and scarce can spare them . . Cymbelme, ii. 3 

I pray you, spare me _ ii. 3 

you'll give rae leave to spare — ii. 4 

spare your aritlimetic: never count.. ii 4 

and spare no blood beside y. ,■) 

then, spare not the old father v.' 5 

that I have on you, is to spare you . . — v. 6 

spare my first-born son Titus Andronicus, i. 2 

can better spare my blood tlian iii. 1 

agree between you; I will spare — iii! 1 

war's blow, who spai-es not innocence . . Pericles, i. 2 

the rough seas, that spare not any man .. ii. 1 

siiare my grey beard, you h agtail? Lear, ii. 2 

wear this; spare speech iv. 2 

good Angelica; spare not forcost.. Itomeo SfJul. iv. 4 

while I spare speech, which something. . Othello, ii. 3 

SP^VRED— sliall well be spared . . Mens, lor .Meas. ii. 2 



SPARED— that may best be spared ..KingJohn, v. ; 
I could have better spared a better. . 1 Henry I V. \. i 
but if Ispared any, that hadaliead.Ht'iiii/r///. v. a 
wliat should not then be spared .Antony ^ Cleo. iii. 7 
whose life I liave spared, at suit of Ins.... Lear, ii. 2 
SPARING— more sparing guest .. Comedy ofVrr. iii. 1 

a sparing limit to my tongue Ilirhanl 1 1 1, iii. 7 

in him sparing would show a worse. W.-;irv'7/'. i. 3 
in that sparing makes huge waste. /(omen S-.luliet, i. 1 

SPARINGLY show you far off Hen,,, 1: i. 2 

yet toueli this sparingly Richard III. iii. .'i 

SPARK— some siiarks that are like v/it-Miicl,.l,io, ii. J 

'tis not his fault; the spark All'sll ell, 'li. 1 

good siiarks and lustrous, a word .... — ii. I 

sjmrks of honour in tliee have I Richard II. v. 6 

extract one spark of evil Henry V. ii. 2 

tills spark will prove a raging fire ..2Hc)/ri/r;. iii. I 

blood no siiark of honour lies SHenryVI. i. I 

if any spark of life be vet rumaining — v. 6 
of tears I'll turn to sparks of lire .. Ilenr,/VIII. ii. 4 

that hath one spark of lire I'roilus S,-Cremda, i. :! 

tliose sparks of life that should lutiusCaisar, i. 3 

painted with uniiunibered sparks — iii. j 

shows a hasty spark, and straiglit is. . — iv. 3 

to hide the sparks of nature Cymbeline, iii. 3 

is flattered, but a spark Pericles, i. 2 

[Ani.] that spai-k gives heat — i. 2 

a small spark, all the rest of his Lear, iii. 4 

enkindle all tlie sparks of nature — iii. 7 

time qualifies the spark and fire of it ..Hamlet, iv. 7 

SPARKLE still the right Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 

to sparkle in the spirits of my All's il'ell, v. 3 

perchance, will sparkle in your eyes.Kfjit' "f»'i»,iv. I 

some sparkles [Co/.-sparks] of a Richard II. v. 3 

mine eyes should sparkle like ti\e..'iHeniyVI. iii. 2 
.sparkles this stone as it was wont?. . Cymbeline, ii. 4 

SPARKLING in her eyes MuchAdo, iii. 1 

their eyes of fire sparkling through.2 Heiwi/ / V. iv. I 

his sparkling eyes replete with iHeiiryVI. i. I 

Beaufort's red sparkling eyes blab..2Ht'n)!/'r/. iii. 1 
viands sparkling in a golden cup ..SHenryVI. ii. 
with fiery eyes, sparkling from very — ii. f, 
a fire sparkling in lovers tears . . liotneo ^Juliet, i. 1 
SPARROW—but play with sparrows ..Tempest, iv. 1 
sparrows must not build in his .Meas. for Mcas. iii. 2 
the finch, the sparrow ..ilfzd. A'. 'i'Drtam, iii. 1 (song) 
providently caters for the sparrow. /J . y„uL,kr it, ii. 3 
yes; as sparrows, eagles; or tlie hare ..Ma,-l,eih, i. 2 
Philip? span-owl James, there's toys.Ai'/ii'Jo/ui, i. 1 

pistol kills a sparrow flying \UenryU . ii. 4 

so did he never the sparrow — ii. 4 

the cuckoo's bird, usetli the sparrow _ v. I 
nine sparrows for apenny(r(!p.).7Vo/(us<5-C;-fs.s. ii. I 

as short as a ne\v-ta'en sparrow — iii 2 

now my double-henned siiarrow 1 — v. 8 

the hedge sparrow fed the cuckoo so long. . Lear, i. 4 

providence in the fall of a sparrow Hamlet, v. 2 

SPARTA— witli hounds of Sparta ..Mid.N.'sDr. iv. I 
in Crete, in Sparta, nor iu Thessaly.. — iv. I 

then be wife to Sparta's king Troilus ^ Cress, ii. 2 

a kniglit of Sparta, my renowned Pericles, ii. 2 

SPARTAN kind, so flewed Mid.N.'sDrea,n,iv. 1 

O Spartan dog, more fell than anguish .Othello, v. 2 

SPAVINS, raied with Taming of Sl,re,r,-ui. 2 

before, the spavin, a spring halt H,nryVlU. i. 3 

SPAWN how can he flatter Coriolanus, i i . 2 

SPAWNED him Measure for Measure, iii. 2 

SPAY all the youth in the city — ii. I 

SPE— in hac spe vivo Pericles, ii. 2 

SPEAK to the mariners Tempest, i. I 

speak; tell me — i. 2 

thou earth thou I speak — i. 2 

took pains to make thee speak 12 

the best of them tliat speak this speech i. 2 

to hear thee speak of Naples i. 2 

why speaks my father so ungently? .. — i. 2 

speak not you for him (j-cp) i. 2 

few in millions can speuk like us ii. I 

if but one of his pockets could speak .. — ii. 1 
truth you speak doth lack some gentleness— ii. I 

and time to speak it in — ii. 1 

the occasion speaks thee ii. 1 

do you not liear me speak? ii. 1 

now is to speak well of his friend .... _ ii. 2 

touch me, and speak tome — ii. 2 

hear my soul speak _ iji. 1 

if I speak true; if hollowly — iii. I 

moon-calf, speak once in thy life iii. 2 

therefore speak softly: all's hush'd .... iv. 1 

does now speak to thee _ v. 1 

the devil speaks in him _ v. I 

to speak puling, like a beggar . Two Gen. nfVer. ii. I 

all this I speak in print — ii. 1 

it cannot speak; for truth — ii. 2 

the shoe speak a word for weeping .. — ii. 3 

that she could speak nowl ii. 3 

sheds not a tear, nor speaks a word.. — ii. 3 

Silvia, I speak to you ii. 4 

my lord your father would speak with — ii. 4 

then speak the truth by her _ ii. 4 

can nothing speak? — iii. 1 

by aught that I can sjieak in his dispraise— iii. 2 

but shall I hear him speak? iv. 2 

if I should speak it iv. 2 

to that I'll speak, to that iv. 2 

where to speak with madam Silvia . . iv. 4 

to hear me speak the message , — iv 4 

look up ; speak v.4 

and speaks small, like a woman . . Merry Wives, i. 1 

as a christian ought to speak — i. i 

you must speak possi table i. 1 

speak scholarly and wisely — i. 3 

do intend vat i speak? 1.4 

speak-a your tale i. 4 

to speak a good word to mistress .... i. 4 

alas; he speaks but for his friend .... i. 4 

believe it. Page; bespeaks sense .... ii. I 

1 speak, and I avouch — ii. 1 

a woman would speak with you (rep.) ii. 2 

would you speak with me? _ ii. 2 



SPE 

SPK AK, Rood master Brook Merry ll'i 

for he speak for ttjiick-ii-impe — 

lut a nic speak a woril vit .vmir ear . . — 

for more iiionev tluiii 111 epcak of .. — 

he speaks holiday, he snuUs April . . — 

I'll s|>eak it before the best lord — 

would needs speak witli you presently — 

speak lender (rrp. iv. 2) — 

my kinsman shall sneak for himself — 

master Slender \vo\iUl speak a word — 

speak to mistress Paj^e . ._. — 

iiere'a mistress Quiekly, sir, to speak to — 

speak with the gentlemen ; they speak — 

speak, breathe, discuss; brief — 

I come to speak with sir John FalstafF — 

he'll speak like an Anthropopbauiniau — 

I come to speak with her, indeed .... — 

speak from thy hmc^military — 

speak well of them, Varletto — 

let me speak with you in your — 

yet hear me speak: assist me in — 

speak I like Heme the hunter — 

he that speaks to them shall die — 

and speuk to him in many sorts . . Tvel/ih .V 

and speaks three or four longna^es.. — 

say, I do speak with her, ray lord .. — 

much desires to speak with you — 

he speaks nothing but madman — 

yond voung fellow swears he will speak — 
therefore comes to speak with you [rep.) — 

he shall not speak witli me — 

but he'll speak with you (rep.) — 

and he speaks very shrewishly — 

speak to me, I shall answer for her . . — 

speak your office — 

for sbe'did speak in starts distractedly — 

thou dost speak masterly _. . . — 

I bade you never speak again of him — 

BO let me hear you speak — 

1 speak too loud — 

yet I'll speak to him — 

how hollow the fiend speaks witliin hira — 

la yon, an' yon speak ill of the devil — 

let me speak a little — 

to bill you come speak with her — 

I am here to speak with her — 

my lord would speak, ray duty — 

■wliy do you speak to me? — 

and speak out of my injury — v. 1 

good madam, hear me speak — 

do I speak feelingly now? ..Measure fovMea. 

if I could speak so wisely rmder .... — 

what, but to speak of, would offend.. — 

may your grace speak of it? — 

I speak not as desiring more — 

you must not speak with men — 

if you speak, you must not sl\ow {rep.) — 

why dost tliou not speak, Elbow? — 

I, that do speak a word — 

she speaks, and 'tis such sense — 

that I desire t > hear her speak again — 

for I'can speak against the — 

I'll speak more gross — 

we speak not what we mean 

to speak the former language 

bring them to speak, where I may ., 
and I can speak to him, I will open 

let me hear you speak further 

have you not heard speak of Mariana 
you are pleasant, sir; and speak apace 

therefore you speak unskilfully 

since you know not what you speak 
to speak so indirectly, I am loth .... 
if perad venture he speak against me 

your desert speaks loud — 

now is your time; spenk loud — 

for that which I must speak must either — 

and she will speak most bitterly .... — 

but yet most truly, will I speak .... — 

poor soul, she speaks this in the .... — 

you were not bid to speak — 

m the wrong to speak before your .. — 

friar Lodowlck, that she sneaks of?. . — 

to speak, as from his moutli — 

let her show her face, and after, speak — 

1 would speak witli her: pray you .. — 

speak not you to him, till we — 

should bear me speuk {,rep.) — 

let him speak no more — 

say nothing, I'll speak all — 

have me speak after my custom Much 

I pray thee, speak in sober judgment — 

but, speak you this with a sad brow? — 

you speak this to fetch me in (rep.).. — 

Sjtcak low, if you speak love — 

siie speaks poniards, and every word — 

speak, count, 'tis your cue — 

speak, cousin; or, if you cannot — 

and let not him spedk, neither — 

I was born to speak all mirth — 

he was wont to speak plain — 

these are very crotchets that he speaks — 

that the white-beorded fellow speuks it — 

wliy you speak truth: I never yet .. — 

if I should speak, she'd mock me into — 

his heart thinks, his tongue speaks . . — 
eight or nine wise words to speak to you — 

if your leisure served, I would speak — 
for what I would sjicak of. concern him — 

you speak like an ancient and most — 

never speak ; we charge you, let us . . — 

how now! do you speuk in the sick.. — 

gO'idman Verges, sir, speaks a little.. — 

that be dolli spenk so wide? (r<:;>.) .. — 

I know not: if they speak but truth — 

and bidbim siieak of patience (rep.) — 

I speak not like a dotard, nor a fool — 

Biieak otr half a dozen dangerous words — 

shall I speak a word in your ear?.... — 

yet I must speak: choose your revenge — 



[ 70.5 ] 



SPE 





iii 


4 




III 


.") 




iv 
iv 


3 




iv 


5 




iv 


5 

ft 




IV 


h 




'v 


6 




v 


h 


?'• 


'1l 


■2 



(letter) 



— 11. 4 



— IV. 6 



Sl'KAK— worship speaks like a most .. Mue/i.ldo, v. I 
may speak as small a» voii will. .Ui//. A". 'j/^rrain, i. 2 

I'll speak in a nionslroiis little voii:e — i. 2 

do I speak vou fair? or, rather do I not — ii. i; 

to fiieak troth, I liave forgot our way — ii. 3 

speuk, an' if yon hear; speak, of all loves — ii. 3 

and he himself must speak through — iii. 1 

speak, Pyramus; Thisby, stand forth — iii. 1 

must I speak now? — iii. I 

why, you must not speak that yet ., — iii. 1 

you speak all your part at once .... — iii. 1 

you speak not us you think — iii. 2 

wherefore speaks lie this to her — iii. 2 

speak; bow low am 1? — iii. 2 

let her alone, speak not of Ilelemi .. — iii. 2 

proud Demetrius? .Speak thou now.. — iii. 2 

Lysander, speak again — iii. 2 

art thou fled? Speak, in some bush? — iii. 2 

but, speak, Egeus; is not this — iv. i 

for truly would I speak, and now I do — iv. I 

that these lovers speak of — v. 1 

in least, speak most, to my capacity — v. 1 

not enongli to sneak, but to speak true — v. I 

I wonder if the lion be to speak — v. 1 

desire lime and hair to speak better? — v. 1 

Pyramus, arise, speak, speak — v. I 

with yourself to speak,— a maid ..ioue'si,. tos(, i. 1 

this word shall speak for me, I am . . — i. 1 

it is the manner of a man to speak to — i. 1 

speak you this in my praise, master? — i. 2 

he siieaks the mere eontrory, crosses — _i. 2 

all impatient to speak and'iuit see .. — ii. 1 

but to speak that in words, whicli his — ii. 1 

1 will speak that Ten voy — iii. 1 

when tongues speak sweetly, then they — iii. 1 

I may speak of thee as the traveller doth — iv. 2 

and, when love speaks, the voice of all — iv. 3 

as to speak, dout, fine, when he — v I 

thus must thou speak, and thus thy — v. 2 

fear not thou, but speak audaciously — v. 2 

if they do speak our language — v. 2 

how blow? speak to be understood ., — v. -j 

madam, speak true; it is not so — v. 2 

speak for yourselves, my wit is at — v. 2 

he speaks not like a man of God's ., — v. 2 

a conqueror, and afeard to speak I . . . . — v. 2 

will speak tiieir mind in some other — v. a 

speak, brave Hector; we are — v. 2 

and it is my love that speaks ..Mercb. of Venice^ i. 1 

if they should speak, would almost .. — i. 1 

for Gratiano never lets me speak .... — i. i 

Gratiano speaks an infinite deal .... — i. I 

prest unto it: therefore, speak — i. i 

may I speak with Antonio? — i. 3 

never to speak to lady afterward — ii. i 

one speak for both; what would 3'ou? — ii. 2 

speak it privately, 20 — ii. i 

and desires to speak with you botli . . — iii. i 

I speak too long; but 'tis to peize.. .. — iii. 2 

you speak upon the rack (rep.) — iii, 2 

only my blood speaks to you in my.. — iii. 2 

speak not against my bond — iii. :i 

I pray thee, hear me speak — iii. 3 

not hear thee speak: I'll have (;c/7.) _ ii;. 3 

madam, although I speak it in your — iii. 4 

and speak, between the change of. . .. — iii, 4 

and speak of frays, like a fine — iii. -1 

and so now I speak my agitation .... — iii. 5 

offend'st thy lungs to speak so loud. . — iv. | 

loved you, speak me fair in death — iv. 1 

sir, I would speak with you: I'll see — iv. •_' 

speak not so grossl.y: you are all .... — v. 1 
report speaks goldenly of his profit. ytxT/ojiLZ/fc i7, i, | 

or to speak.more properly, stays me. . — i. 1 

the duke's wrestler, here to speak with — i. 1 

au'i almost with tears I speak it — i. 1 

I speak but brotherly of him — i. 1 

enough! speak no more of him; you'll — i. 2 

that fools may not speak wisely ..,. — i. 2 

why, this that I speak of — i. 2 

speak to him, ladies; see if .vou can.. — i. 2 

he cannot speak, my lord — i. 2 

I cannot speak to lier, yet she urged — i. 2 

you to conceive, than me to speak of — i. 2 

dear sovereign, hear me speak — i. 3 

and her patience, speak to the people — i. 3 

tell him, I would speak with him — ii. 7 

give me leave to speak my mind ,. .. — ii. 7 

speak you so gently? pardon me .... — ii. 7 

1 scarce can sjieak to thank you .... — ii, 7 

quickly, and speak apace: I would.. — iii i' 

speak sad brow, and true maid — iii. 2 

when I think. I must speak — iii. 2 

I will speak to him like a saucy .... — iii 2 

uncle of mine taught me to speak.. .. — iii. 2 

so much in love as your rh.vines speak? — iii. 2 

writes brave verses, speaks brave words — iii. 4 

when be that speaks them pleases .. — iii..') 

yon were better speak first — iv. 1 

nave heard him speak of that same .. — iv. 3 

(for now I speak to some purpose) .. — v. 2 

I speak not this, that yon should bear — v. 2 

who do you speak to, why blame .... — v. 2 
how called you the man^'ou spca.V.ot All's Well, i. 1 

to speak on the part of virginity .... — i. 1 

when exception bid him speak — i. 2 

and I speak the truth the next way.. — i. 3 

to speak. Sirrah, tell my (rep.) — i. 3 

I will speak with you furtlier aiion.. — i. 3 

in their kind they speak it — i. 3 

should be suspected: speuk, is't so? . — i. 3 

speak truly, to go to Paris? (r/y).) — i. 3 

speak, and move under the influence — ii. 1 

in thee some blessed spirit doth speak — ii. 1 

if the learned should speak the truth — ii. 2 

'fore me I speak in respect — ji. 3 

in your fair eyes, before I speak .... — ii. 3 

of pity: speak; thine answer — ii. 3 

is it not a language, I speak? — ii. 3 

that which I durst not speak — i i 3 



SPEAK-und 1 



■ bids 



speak . . AU-t IVM, 



— iii. ti 



iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 2 
iv. 3 



but to speak of him as lav kinsman.. 

the duke shall h«\\\ speak of it 

speak what terrible langimge ,^'f^u.. .. 
to speak to usagain. E\eii suclK/c/y.) 

not to know what we speak to 

let him speak to me, I will discover 
understand thee, and can speak thy 
nay, I'll speak that wliich you will.. 

but an hour, nor speak to me 

set down,— for I'll speak truth 

we sliall speak of you there — iv. 3 

red-tailed hiiniblebec I speak of — iv. 5 

and the master I speak of, ever keep^ — iv. 5 
to speak ill the behalf of my daughter — iv. 5 

to speak a truth: am 1 that (/<'/i.) — v. 3 

is this the man you speak of ? — v. 3 

more than III speak. But wilt (rep.) — v. 3 
ill will to speak of, therefore (rcjp.) .. — v. 3 
and if be chance to speak.. Taming 0/ Sli. 1 (indue.) 
I see, I hear, I speak; I smell .... — 2 (iiidnc.) 

never speak of all that time? — 2 (indue.) 

tliou may 'st hear Minerva sneak .... — i. 1 

and if yon speak me fair, I'll tell.... 

I speak but us I find 

that are poor petitioners, speak too .. 
mute, and will not speak a word .... 

and now, Petrucbio, speak 

to speak the ceremonial rites 

wa.y to stand, to look, to speak 

now let him speak; 'tis charitj' 

leave to speak; and speak I will .... 

look, what I speak, or do, or think . . 

is here at the door to speak with him — v. 1 

verily, I speak it in the freedom .. ll'inier'sTale, i, 1 

believe me, Ispeak asmy understanding — i. 1 

tongue-tied our queen? Speak you .. — i. 2 

now, while I speak this, holds his .. — i. 2 

not speak? Good da.y, Camillo — i. 2 

and speak to me as if I were a bab.y — ii. 1 

speak for lier, is afar off guilty (re/).) — ii. 1 

it is for you we speak, not for — ii. I 

we are to speak in public 



ii. I 
ii. 1 
ii. 1 



— iv. 1 



iv. 3 



— iii. 2 



(chorus) 
iv. 1 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 



— v. 3 

dynfErr.i. 1 

— ii. 1 



even since it could speak, from an .. 

you speak a language that I 

thou canst not speak too much 

I'll speak of her no more, nor of .... 

thou didst speak but well 

to speak of Perdita, now grown . . — 

pr'ythee speak no more 

which then will speuk; that you must 
when you speak, sweet, I'd have .vou 
X cannot speak so well, nothing so .. 
can he speak? hear? know man .... 
I was about to speak, and tell him . . 
speak, ere thou diest. 1 cannot speak 

to speak your deeds, not little 

bosom there, and speak liis very heart 

all, that vou speak, shows fair 

and speak of something, wiloly by .. 

Where's Boliemia? speak 

I speak aniazedly; and it becomes .. 

as often as they speak 

one would speak to her; and stand .. 

but yet speak ; first yon, my liege 

to speak, I am content to hear (rep.) 

pertain to life, let her speak too 

she lives, though .vet she speak not . . 
I to speak my griefs unspeakable.. Comi 

say, didst thou speak with him? 

I could not speak with Dromio — 11 

to me she speaks — ii 

look sweet, speak fair, become — iii 

how to think and speak; lay open .. — iii 
snch a one as a man may not spe:ik of — iii 

didst speak him fair? — iv 

they speak us fair, give us gold — iv 

speak softly; yonder, as I tliink .... — v 
draw near to me, I'll speak to him .. — v 

vouchsafe me speak a word — v 

speak freely. Syrucusun, what — v 

speak, old iEgeon, if thou (rep.) — v 

iie speaks tome; I am your — v 

seems to speak things strange Macbeth, i 

speak, if you can; what are you?.... — i 

to me you speak not 

siieak "then to me, who neither beg .. 

greeting? speak, I charge you 
ere, as we do speak about? 

what, can the devil speak true 

let us speak our free hearts each to . . 

we will speak furilier 

the crickets cry: did not yon speak? 

do not bid ine speak (rep.) 

for you to hear what I can speak .... 

and bade them speak to him 

m.y heart speaks, tlie.v are welcome.. 

if thou canst nod, speak too 

I pray you, speak not 

to move, and trees to speak 

more shall they speak; for now I 

to what I ask you. Speak. Demand 

listen, but speak not 

I dare not speak ranch further 

Ispeak not as in absolute fear — iv. 

he fit to govern, speak — iv. 

that speak him full of grace — iv. 

the grief does not speak, whispers.... — iv. 
hark, she speaks: I will set down .. — v. 

I think, but dure not speak — v. 

make all our trumpets speak — v. 

that speak my Bolntution in — v. 

after greeting, sneaks the king KiugJohn, i. 

sirrah, speak, what doth move j'ou .. — i. 

did prevail, I shame to speak — i. 

1 have heard my father speak himself — i. 

coldly pause for thee; Cbatillon. sjKak — ii. 
let us hear them speak, whose title .. — ii. 

speak, citizens, for England — ii. 

speak on, with favour; we are — ii. 

ZZ 



— i. 3 



. 3 



II. 3 
ii. 3 
iii. I 
iii. 4 



iv. 1 



SPE 



[ 706 ] 

SPEAK with him fjom the pridge Ilennj y. iii. 6 

now we apeak upon our cue, and our — iii. 6 

of Chesliu Clirist, spealc lower (r'-p.) — iv. 1 

for thougli I speiik it to you, I tliink — iv. I 

by my trotli, 1 will speak my conscience — iv. 1 

howsoever you speak this, to feel .. .. — iv. 1 

wliile any speaks, tliat fought witli .. — iv. 3 

let me speak proudly; tell the — iv. 3 

I speak but in tlie figures and — iv. ? 

because he could not speak English in — v. I 

1 cannot speak yoiu" England — v. 2 

thou can'st speak no better English.. — v. 2 

I speak to thee, pla in soldier — v. 2 

speak, my i'air, and fairly, T pray thee — v. 2 

as to speak so much more Fiench. . .. — v. 2 

who, tliougli I sneak it before his face — v. 2 

each other! God speak this amen I .. — v. 2 
speak softly; or the loss of those ...AHeniyVl. i. 1 

speak, shall I call her in? — i. 2 

speak, SiUishury; at least, if thou ('«;>.) — 1.4 

speak unto Talbot; nay, look up — i. 4 

Talbot; who would speak with him? — ii. 2 

and 80 loath to speak, in dumb — ii. 4 

lest it be said, speak, sirrah — iii. 1 

I speak not to that railing — iii. 2 

speak, Pucelle; and enchant — iii. 3 

let thy humble handmaid speak {rep.) — iii. 3 

and give them leave to speak — iv. 1 

speak, thy father's care — iv. 6 

speak to thy father ere tliou — iv. 7 

he speaks with such a proud — iv. 7 

our scouts? I pr'ythee, speak — v. 2 

yet I dare not speak; I'll call — v. 3 

speaks Suffolk as he thinks? — v. 3 

speak, Winchester; for boiling — v. 4 

Warwick, let thy betters speak iUenryVJ. i. 3 

he did speak them to nie in the — i. 3 

till thou speak, thou shall not pass . . — i. 4 

I cannot stay to speak. Art tliou .. .. — ii. 4 

first been put to speak ray mind ... . — iii. 1 

but shall I speak my conscience?. ... — iii. 1 

losers may liave leave to speak — iii. 1 

and speak it from your souls — iii. I 

was dumb, and could not speak a word — iii. 2 

every word, you speak in his behalf — iii. 2 

so, speak not to me; even now — iii. 2 

now fares my lord? Speak, Beaufort — iii. 3 

it is thy sovereign speaks to thee .... — iii- 3 

speak , ca ptain , sh all I stab — iv. 1 

entreat him, speak him fair — iv. 1 

to you, good people, that I speak .... — iv. 2 

that speaks, he knows not wliat? .... — iv. 2 

that he can speak French — iv. 2 

can he, that speaks with the tongue — Jv. 2 

and, to speak truth, thou deservest .. — iv. 3 

away with him I he speaks Latin (7ep.) — iv. 7 

wealth or honour; speak? — iv, 7 

he speaks not o' God's name — iv. 7 

scarce can I speak, my choler — v. 1 

for shame, speak not in spite — v. 1 

I would speak blasphemy ere bid. ... — v. 2 
speak thou for me, and tell them.. ..3Hc)ir!/F7. i. 1 

leave to speak. Plantagenet shall speak — i. 1 

I shame to hear thee speak — i. 1 

gentle Margaret, and hear nie speak — i. 1 

the contrary, if you'll hear me speak? — i. 2 

hear me speak before I die — i. 3 

speak thou, l^ortliumberland — i. 4 

York cannot speak, unless he wear.. — i. 4 

by your leave I speak it — ii. 1 

speak no more! for I have heard.. — ii. 1 
tlrat I should speak withal, is kindly — ii. 1 
bear thy glories, makes me speak.... — ii. 1 

1 hear great Warwick speak — ii. 1 

I cannot speak! Ay, crook-back .. — ii. 2 
long-tongued Warwick? dare you speak? — ii. 2 
my lords, and hear me speak — ii. 2 

1 am a king, and privileged to speak — ii. 2 
deny'st tlie gentle king to speak .... — ii. 2 
before his face I speak the words ... . — ii. 6 

tongue no more shall speak — ii. 6 

speak, Clifford, dost thou know {.rep.) — ii. 6 

press to speak for right — iii. 1 

for grief can speak no more — iii. I 

I speak no more than what my .... — !'!• ^ 

tongue-tied sorrows leave to speak .. — iii. 3 

hear me speak, before you answer .. . — iii. 3 

Warwick, canst thou speak against.. — iii. 3 

Montague, speak freely what you think — iv. 1 

speak suddenly, my lords, are we.... — iv. 2 

to tlie Tower; let him not speak .... — iv. 8 

speak gentle words, and humbly .... — v. 1 

glues my lips, and will not let me speak — v. 2 

chide the waves, as speak them fair.. — v. i 

tliis speak 1 lords, to let you understand — v. 4 

coward heard her speak these words — v. 4 

I speak not this, as doubting — v. 4 

for every word I speak, ye see — v. 4 

hence, i will not hear them speak ., — v. 5 

tlie gallant, let us hear him spealc . . — v. 5 

speak like a subject, proud — v. 5 

sweet Ned ! speak to tliy mother Cfp.) — v. 5 

an' if I speak; and I will speak — v. 5 

we speak no treason, man Richard 111. i. 1 

and prompts my tongue to speak .... — i. 2 

that was in thy rage: speak it again — i. 2 

his grace speaks cheerfully — i. 3 

flatter, and speak [Kn/. -look] fair — i. 3 

in all this presence speaks your grace? — i. 3 

'tis time to speak, my pains are quite — i. 3 

I would speak with Clarence — i. 4 

and how deadly dost thou speak ! . . . . — i. 4 

not a man would speak, nor I {rfp.) — ii. 1 

in God's name, speak, when is tlie royal — iii. 4 

speak, and look back, and pry on every — iii. 5 

had you heard tlie traitor speak (rrp,) — iii. 5 

would they not speak? will not tlie.. — iii. 7 

or bitterly to spciik in 3'our reproof. . — iii. 7 

theref()rc, to speak, anil to avoid tlie first — iii. 7 

O Dorset, speak not to me, get thee gone — iv. 1 



SPE 



SPEAK— speak plain cannon, fire KingJolm, ii. 2 

speak England ftvst, t hat hath — il. 2 

or, ii' you will (to speak more properly) — ii. 2 

speak then, prince Uaupliin — .Vl* "^ 

then speak a^'ain; not all thy — iii. 1 

makes luinuful all that speak of it . . — iii. 1 

that a miin sluiuKl speak tlnise words — iii. 1 

the lady Cou^tuuee speuks not — iii. 1 

speak, with 11 im.phetic s|)iiiHrc;).) — iii. 4 

nor wince, nor speak a word — iv. 1 

anv tongue, speak it of what it will.. — iv. 2 

anil be, Ihut speaks, doth gripe — iv. 2 

not trulv speaks; who speaks not tndy — iv. 3 

I am sent to speak; my holy lord — — v. 2 

thus his royalty doth speak in me .. — v. 2 

me leave to speak. No, I will speak.. — v. 2 

■who's there ? speak ho I speak quickly — v. 6 

the king yet speaks (jep. V. 7) — v. B 

and the accused, freely spesik Iticliard It. 1. 1 

for what I speak, my body shall — i. 1 

what my tongue speaks, my — i. 1 

1 speak [Kni.-said] my life shall prove — i. 1 

speak truly, on the knighthood (.rep.) — i. 3 

nav, speak tliy mind (;■(•;).) — ii. 1 

be confident to speak, Northumberland — ii. 1 

for heaven's sake, speak comfortable — ii- 2 

and bids me speak of nothing but .. — iii. 2 

strive tospeak big, and clap their.... — jil- - 

of comfort no mau speak — iii. 2 

speak sweetly, man, although thy .. — iii. 2 

let no man speak again to alter — iii. 2 

speak to his gentle hearing kind .... — iii. 3 

so poorly, and to speak so fair? — iii. 3 

he doth attend to speak with you.... — iii. 3 

makes him speak fondly — iii. 3 

these ill tidings; speak, thou wretch — iii. 4 

I speak no more than every one .... — iii. 4 

now Bagot, freely speak thy — iv. 1 

presence may I speak (!Tp.) — iv. I 

I speak to subjects, and a subject speaks — iv. 1 

belore I freely speak my mind — iv. 1 

ere I rise, or speak. Intended — v. 3 

for love, speak treason to thy face? .. — v. 3 

speak with me, pity me, opeu — v. 3 

speak it in French, kin" — v. 3 

thine eye begins to speak — v. 3 

sick for fear, speak it again — y. 3 

if a man should speak truly Mleiinjll'.i. 2 

you were about to speak — i. 3 

hear you speak of Mortimer (rep.) .. — i. 3 

shall be taught to speak starling .... — i. 3 

I speak not this in estimation — i. 3 

will strike sooner than speak, and speak — ii. 1 

speak terms of manage to thy bounding — ii. 3 

if you speak in jest, or no? — ii. 3 

let them speak; if they speak more.. — ii. 4 

speak, sirs: how was it? — ii. 4 

hear me speak but this. Mark — ii. 4 

court at door, would speak with you — ii. 4 

for I must speak in passion — ii. 4 

now I do not speak to thee in drink — ii. 4 

then peremptorily I speak it — ii. 4 

dost thou speak like a king? — ii. 4 

as oft as Lancaster doth speak of you — iii. I 

I think, tliere is no man speaks better — iii. 1 

speak it in Welsh. lean speak English — iii. 1 

my wile can speak no English — iii. 1 

the business that I come to speak of — !'!• '^ 

he speaks most vilely of you — iii. 3 

vou speak it out of fear, and cold heart — iv. 3 

1 may speak it to my shame — v. 1 

I pr'ythee, speak; we will not trust . . — v. 4 

when loud Humour speaks? illenryiy. (indue.) 

I speak of peace while covsrt enmity — (indue.) 

to speak so true at first? — (indue.) 

yet, speak, Morton; tell thou thy earl — i. I 

or sin, tospeak a truth (rffp.) — i- 1 

you must speak louder, my master-. — i. 2 

by the elbow; I must speak with him — i. 2 

sir, my lord would speak with you .. — i. 2 

I pray, let me speak with you — i. 2 

your life, to come speak with me .... — j. 2 

I pray you all, speak plainly your .. — .i. 3 

you speak as liaving power to — ii- ! 

given ovei", I will speak no more .... — ii- 3 

for those that could speak low — ii. 3 

below, and would speak with you.... — ii. 4 

nay, if he do nothing but speak nothing — ii. 4 

do "not speak like a death's head .. .. — ij. 4 

how vilely did 3'ou speak of me even — ii. 4 

I cannot speak; if my heart be not.. — ii. 4 

did speak these words, now proved .. — iii. 1 

you speak, lord Mowbray, now you.. — iv. 1 

until they hear you speak — iv. 2 

of them all speaks any other word but — iv. 3 

shall better speak of you than you .. — iv. 3 

speak lower, princes (rep.) — iv. 4 

1 never thought to hear you speak again — iv. 4 

is able to sueak for himself — v. 1 

like men that had forgot to speak.... — v. 2 

well, you must now speak sir John . . — v. 2 

for, tospeak truth, it very well — v. 2 

are a king, speak in your state — v. 2 

live to speak my father's words — v. 2 

I speak of Africa, and golden joys .. — v. 3 

which king, Bezouian, speak or die? — v. 3 

I speak the truth; when Pistol lies ., — v. 3 

the tilings I speak, are just — v. 3 

Pistol speaks nought but truth — v. 5 

chief justice, speak to that vain man — v. 5 

speak? My king! my Jove! I speak — v. 5 

I cannot now speak: I will hear .... — v. 5 

that when he speaks, the air Henry V.'i.X 

before the Frenchman speak a word — i. 1 

epeak, my lord, and we will hear (rep.) — j. 2 

with full mouth, epeak freely of our — i. 2 

more of you: this the Dauphin speaks — . i. 2 

the duke of Gloster would speak with — j.'.'' ^ 

therefore, go speak, the duke will., . . — iii- ti 

ipeak, captain, for his life, and I will — iii. 6 



SPEAK— what I would speak Rk-hurd 111. iv. 2 

speak suddenly, be brief — iv. 2 

before I positively speak in this — iv. 2 

they could not speak; and so I left ,. — iv. 3 

let me speak (rep.) — iv. 4 

you siieak too bitterly (rep-) — iv. 4 

1 must speak [Cni-Kni. -talk] a word — iv. 4 

you speak as if that I had slain — iv. 4 

Kichard let me speak with him? .... — v. 1 

some good means to speak with him — v. 3 

fool.of thyself speak well — v.3 

speak freely. First [rep.) Henry fill. i. 2 

heard liim at any time speak aught? — i. 2 

on my soul, I'll speak but truth .... — i. 2 

you can speak the French tongue. ... — i. 2 

because they speak no English — i- 2 

pray, speak, wliat has happened? .... — ii. 1 

the noble ruined man you speak of .. — ii. 1 

and, if he speak of Buckingham — ii- I 

something that is sad, speak how I fell — ii. 1 

every tongue speaks them, and every true — ii. 2 

not to speak of; I would not be so sick — ii. 2 

perceive I speak sincerely, and high — ii. 3 

vouchsafe to speak my thanks — ii.3 

lord cardinal, to you I apeak — ii. 4 

you speak not like yourself — ii-4 

before his highness shall speak in ... . — ii. 4 

could speak thee out, the queen of .. — ;i- 4 

I speak my good lord cardinal — ii. 4 

would they speak with me? they willed — iii. 1 

speak it here; there's nothing I have — iii. 1 

would all other women could speak this — iii. I 

speak in Eng^lish; here are some (rep.) — iji. I 

ye speak like honest men (pray Cxod — iii. 1 

let nie speak myself, since virtue — iii. I 

my lords, you speak your pleasures — iii. 2 

speak on, sir; I dare your worst .... — iii. 2 

I have no power to speak, sir — iii. 2 

good sir, speak it to us. As well .... — iv. 1 

give me leave to speak him, and yet — jv. 2 

to hear me speak his good now — iv. 2 

Christendom shall ever speak his I'irtue — iv. 2 

now, sir, you speak of two the most.. — v. I 

and who dare speak one syllable — v. 1 

have ventured to speak my mind .... — v. 1 

I grieve at what I speak — v. 1 

speak to the business, master secretary — v. 2 

I speak it with a single heart — v. 2 

let me speak, sir, for Heaven now — v. 4 

I speak no more than truth (rep.). Trnil.^ Cren. i. 1 

pray you, speak no more to me — i- 1 

Troilus above the rest- Speak not so loud— i. 2 

my lord would instantly speak with you — i. 2 

hear what Ulysses speaks (rep.) .... — i. 3 

and when he speaks, 'tis like a chime — i. 3 

then tospeak. Speak frankly as the wind — i- 3 

to this purpose speak: kings, princes — i. 3 

speak then thou unsalted leaven, speak — ii- 1 

I shall speak as much as thou — ii. 1 

Paris, you speak like one — ii. 2 

speak aloud to have her back — ii. 2 

Patroclus, I'll speak with nobody .. — ii.3 

we come to speak with him (rep.) .. — ii- 3 

and speaks not to himself, but with — ii. 3 

Iconic to speak with Paris from .... — iii I 

you speak your fair pleasure — iii. 1 

why do 3'ou not speak to her? — iii-'.! 

what truth can speak truest — iJ! - 

I shall surely speak tlie thing I .... — iii. 2 

what I speak. Well know they (rep.) — iii. 2 

because it shall not speak of your .. — iii. 2 

comes the general to speak with me? — iii. 3 

I as your lover speak; the fool — iii. 3 

since she could speak, she hath not .. — iv. 1 

import him much, to speak with me — iv.2 

I speak not, be thou true, as fearing — iv. 4 

hear why I speak it, love — iv. 4 

I'll speak it in my spirit and honour — iv. 4 

nay, her foot speaks; her — iv. 5 

what are j'ou up here? ho, speak .... — v. 2 

I will not speak a word (rep.) — v. 2 

one cannot speak a word, but — v. 2 

I do not speak of flight, of fear — v. II 

how this grace speak his own .. Timon of Athens, i. I 

I saw them speak together — i. 1 

Lord Timon, hear me speak — i. I 

he speaks the common tongue (re/>.) — i. 1 

than you can with modesty speak .. — i. 2 

that what he speaks is all 10 debt-... — i- 2 

I speak not to thee- No, 'tis to thyself — ii. 2 

epeak to 'em, fool. How do you — ii- 2 

I'll speak with you anon — ii- 2 

use, as I can bid thee speak — ii. 2 

ingeniously I speak, no blame — ii. 2 

neer speak, or think, that Timon 's.. — ii.'i 

your lordship speaks your pleasure .. — iJ!' ' 

dost thou speak seriously, Servilius? — iji. 2 

who can speak broader than he that — !!'■ 4 

you only speak from your distracted — iii. 4 

if I speak like a captain — iii. S 

what art thou there? Speak — iv. 3 

speak not, begone. Hast thou gold yet — iv. 3 

speak truth: you are honest men .... — iv. 3 

you would speak with Timon (rep.).. — v. 2 

look out, and speak to friends — v. 2 

speak to them, noble Timon — v. 2 

speak, and be hanged I for each — v. 2 

Timon speaks it, in pity of — v. 2 

we speak in vain. But yet I — v. 2 

and made us speak like friends — v. 3 

who's here? speak, ho! no answer? -. — v. 4 

hear me speak. Speak, speak Coriolanus,\. 1 

I speak this in hunger for bread .... — i. 1 

nay, but speak not maliciously — i. 1 

the matter? speak, I pray you — i. 1 

make the belly smile as well as speak — i. 1 

'fore me, this fellow speaks! — i. I 

doubt not that; I speak from certainties — i. 2 

I heard a senator speak it — i. 3 

when you speak best unto the purpose — ii. 1 



SPE 



SPEAK— nil tonaucs spcnk of him . . Coriolanus, ii, I 

HTul the blind to Iu<tir tiiiuepeak .... — ii. 1 

siK'iik, goiiil Cominiiis (ir;) ) — ii. 2 

tiic 111:111 I siH'iik oCcumiot in tlie — ii. a 

let me say, 1 eiuinol speak him home — ii. 'i 

thnt yini ili> speiik to the people — ii. 2 

into tlin5o\voimils, lunl speak for them — ii. 3 

tlio Koilt^! ytni must not speak of that — ii. 3 

speak to tluMii. I prav you now — ii. 3 

my speech, ami 1 will speak't again — iii. I 

you speak o' the people, as if — iii. 1 

one, that speiiks tlius, their voice? .. — iii. 1 

I eaniiot speak; you, tribunes of (.''T.) — iii- 1 

Bpeak, speak, speak. You are at point — iii. 1 

could he not speak them fair — iii. 1 

hear me speak: as I do know the. ... — iii. 1 

Bpeak briefly then; for we are peremptory— iii. 1 

stood up to speak of peace, or war . . — iii. 2 

when extremities speak. I have heard — iii. 2 

lilies vou on to speak tothe people.. — iii. 2 

fto with us; speak fair: you may — iii. 2 

even ns she speaks, why, all — iii. 2 

then he siieaks what's in his heart . . — iii. 3 

first, hear me speak (i-cp.)..... — Mi. 3 

when he speaks not like acitizen.... — iii. 3 

and heard him speak, beating your.. — iii. 3 

would speak that— We know (rep.). . — iii. 3 

why speak'st not? Speak, man — iv. 5 

should from yon cloud speak divine — iv. 5 

if he coyed to hear Cominius speak . . — v. 1 

come to speak with Coriolanus (>e().) — v. 2 

I w^ould not speak with him till atter — v. 2 

Menenius, I will not hear thee speak — v. 2 

should we be silent, and not speak .. — v. 3 

speak to me, son (rep.) — v. 3 

epeak you: he cares not for your (rep.) — v. 3 

and then I'll speak a little — v. 3 

peace, both, and hear me speak (rep.) — v. 5 

the drum, that it speak mournfully.. — v. 5 

speak, what trade art thou JtdiusCcesar, i. 1 

peace, hoi Ctesar speaks. Calphurnia — i. 2 

cry, Ccesar, speak; Casar is turned ., — i. 2 

what sav'sl tliou to me now? speak.. — i. 2 

by the cloak; would you speak with — i. 2 

if you please to speak with me — i. 2 

I, perhaps, speak this before — i. 3 

you speak to Casea; and to such .... — i. 3 

to speak truth of Ca;sar, I have not.. — ii. 1 

speak, strike, redress! Brutus (rep.) — ii. 1 

tlint would speak with you. Caius .. — ii. 1 

and there speak to great Cfesar — ii. 4 

Popilius Lena speaks not of our .... — iii. 1 

speak, hands, for ine. Et tu. Brute? — iii. 1 

speak in the order of his funeral .... — iii. I 

do not consent, that Antony speak .. — iii. 1 

what Antony shall speak, i will 0«p.) — iii. 1 

but speak all good you can devise — iii. 1 

and you shall speak in the same pulpit — iii. I 

those that will hear me speak — iii. 2 

I will hear Brutus speak — iii. 2 

if any, speak, for him have I crep.).. — iii. 2 

peace, silence 1 Brutus speaks — iii. 2 

twere best he speaic no harm of Brutus — iii. 2 

come I to speak in Ciesar's funeral .. — iii. 2 

I speak not to disprove what Brutus — iii. 2 

but here I am to speak what I — '.!!• 2 

he begins again to speak — iii. 2 

public leave to speak of him - iii. 2 

I only speak right on — iii. 2 

and bid them speak for me — iii. 2 

me, countrymen; yet hear me speak — iii. 2 

stand, ho! speak the word along .... — iv. 2 

Cassius, be content: speak your griefs — iv. 2 

that you are Brutus that speak this.. — iv. 3 

hear me, for I will speak — iv. 3 

mine speak of seventy senators — iv. 3 

6[»eak to me, what thou art — iv. 3 

last time we shall speak together .... — v. 1 

epeak not to us. Is Caisar intony SfCleopalra, i. 1 

who thus speaks of him at Rome.... — i. 1 

Bpeak to me home, mince not the .. .. — i. 2 

from Sicyon how the news? Speak .. — i. 2 

do strongly speak to us — i. 2 

and speaks as loud as his own state.. — i. 1 

thine honour, thati speak it now.... — i. 4 

and speak as loud !is Mars — ii. 2 

l-epi(lus, let him speak — ii. 2 

tlie present need speaks to atone you — ii. 2 

a soldier only, speak no more (;('p.)., — ii. 2 

give me leave, C'aisar,— speak (rrp.). . — ii. 2 

speak that whicii none else can utter — ii. 2 

the word of no woman heard speak., — ii. 2 

speak this no more. To none but — ii. 3 

to Ventidius, I would speak with him — ii. 3 

pity me, Cliarmian, but do not speak — ii. 5 

we'll speak with thee at sea — ii. 6 

and hear me speak a word — ii. 7 

mine own tongue splits what it speaks — ii. 7 

think, speak, cast, write, sing, number — iii 2 

didst hear her speak? is she (r>"p.) .. — iii. 3 

their tongues rot, that speak against — iii. 7 

Bpeak not against it; I will not stay — iii. 7 

go to him, madam; speak to him.... — iii.il 

approach and speak. Such as I am .. — iii. 10 

his very action speaks in every power — iii. 10 

do so, we'll speak to them — iii. II 

let's speak to him. Let's hear him (rep.) — iv. 9 

awake, awake, sir; speak to us — iv. u 

and dare not speak their knowledge — iv. 10 

and let me speak a little. No, let (rep.) — iv. 13 

I will speak what you shall jilease . . » — v. 2 

let him speak, my lord, upon his peril — v. 2 

speak the truth, Seleucus — v. 2 

to my peril, speak that which is not — v. 2 

U couldst thou speokl that I might.. — v, 2 

f|)eak softly, wake her not — v. 2 

you speak him far. I do extend Cymbctine,i, I 

iiatli charged you should not Biwak.. — i. 2 

I pray you, speak with me , — i. 2 

you apeak of nim when he was less ' — i. S 



I ion ] 

SPEAK— not mine to speak on't Cymbeline, i. 7 

if slie be up, I'll speak with her — ii. 3 

being silent, I would not speak — ii. 3 

let proof speak. I lis majesty bitlfl. ... — iii. I 

say, and speak thick; (hove's — iii. 2 

speak, how many score of miles .... — iii. 2 

out of your proof you speak — iii. 3 

what should we siicak of, when we . . — iii. 3 
how you speak! did you but know .. — iii. 3 

speak, man; thy tongue may _ — iii. 4 

1 speak not out of weak surmises — iii. 4 (letter) 
talk thy tongue weary; speak (lyp.) — iii. 4 
speak, or thy silence on the instant.. — iii. R 

if anything that's civil, speak — iii. li 

BO far as thou wilt speak it — iii. 6 

I dare speak it to myself — iv. 1 

mother it did not speak before — iv. 2 

we'll speak it then — iv. 2 

the rum speaks, that sometime — iv. 2 

Imogen! I'll speak to thee in silence — v. 4 

1 speak against my present profit .... — v. 4 

Bpeak, wilt have him live — v. 5 

walk with me; speak freely — v. 5 

on, speak to him. My boon is — v. 5 

strive, man, and speak — v. 5 

of him that best could speak — v. 5 

wilt thou not speak tome — v. 5 

fear is from me, I'll speak truth .... — v. 5 

that I was he, speak, laoliirao — v. S 

how fair the tribune speaks. . . . TUusAndionicus, i. 1 
speak, queen ofGoths, dost thou applaud — i. 2 
doth nature speak. Speak thou no more — i. 2 
then hear me speak indiiferently for all — i. 2 

not dissembled, speaks his griefs — i. 2 

there speak, and strike, brave boys .. — ii. 1 

I will not hear her speak — ii. 3 

spe:ik, brother, hast thou hurt thee .. — 11- 4 
let them not speak a word, the guilt — ii. 4 

an' if thy tongue can speak — ii. 5 

speak, gentle niece, what stern — ii- 5 

why dost not speak to me — ii. 5 

shall I speak for thee? shall I say . . — ii. 5 

no tribune hears you speak — iii. 1 

speak, my Lavinia (rpp.) — iii. 1 

had she a tongue to speak — iii. 1 

O! brother, speak with possibilities.. — iii. I 
tliese heads do seem to speak to me.. — iii. I 

would'st thou speak with us — iv. 4 

why dost not speak? whati deaf?.... — v. I 
wliat may bcfal, I'll speak no move. . — v. I 
vex thy soiil to hear what I shall sjiealc — v. 1 
his mouth, and let him speak no more — v. 1 
smooth, and speak him fair, and tarry — v. 2 
let them not speak a word (rep.) .... — v. 2 

say.if I should let you speak? — v. 2 

speak, Rome's dear friend — v. 3 

will throb and weep to hear him speak — v. 3 

now is my turn to speak — v. 3 

spe.ak, Romans, speak — v. 3 

I cannot speak to him for weeping .. — v. 3 

leave to speak, freely I'll speak Pericles^ i. 2 

doth speak sufficiently, he's gone — i. 3 

wanting breath to speak, helfi me — i. 4 

speak out thy sorrows which thou bring'st — i. 4 

what need speak I — ii. (Gower) 

can any way speak in his just commend — ii. 2 
sea-tost prince appears to speak .. — iii. (Gov.er) 
and I can speak of the disturbances .... — iii. 2 

you purpose as you speak — iii. 4 

she has a good face, speaks well — iv. 3 

a baboon, could he but speak — iv. 6 

but can you teach all this you speak of .. — iv. 6 

he will not speak to any trep.) — v. 1 

see, she will speak to him — v. 1 

she speaks, my lord, that, may be — v. 1 

mine ear, go not till he speak — v. 1 

pr'ythee speak; falseness cannot (jcp.) .. — v. I 

of Mitylene, speaks nobly of her — v. 1 

like him you speak, like him you are.... — v. 3 

Goneril, our eldest-born, speak first Lear, i. 1 

rCo(.A'n(.] what shall Cordelia speak — i. I 

dearest Regan, wife to Cornwall? speak.. — i. I 

that duty shall liave dread to speak — i. 1 

to speak and purpose not (rep.) — i. I 

that of this I may speak more .... — i. 2 (letter) 

bring you to hear my lord speak — i. 2 

I will not speak with him, say — i. 3 

occasions, and I shall, that I may speak — i. 3 
tell my daughter I would speak witli her ' — i. 4 

speak less than thou knowest '. — i. 1 

if I speak like myself in this .. — i. 4 

does Lear walk tluis? speak thus? — i. 4 

the shame itself doth speak for instant ,. — i. 4 

is it your will? speak, sir — i. 4 

what is your difference? speak (rep.) .... — ii. 2 

he must speak truth — ii. 2 

self-same colour our sister speaks of .... — ii. 2 
no more offence than what you speak of — ii. 4 
deny to speak with me? they are sick? .. — ii. 4 
speak witli the duke of Cornwall (lep.).. — ii. 4 
Id speak with them; now, presently .... — ii. 4 

I can scarce speak to thee — ii. 4 

speak 'gainst so great a number? — ii. 4 

and speak it again, my lord; no more.... — ii. 4 

I'll speak a prophecy ere I go — iii. 2 

neither to speak of him, entreat for him — iii. 3 

she must not speak why she — iii.6(song) 

sent the lunatic king? speak — iii. 7 

this kiss, if it durst speak, would — Iv. 2 

I speak in understanding; yon are — iv. .') 

hear you, sir? speak I thus might — iv.6 

a miracle: speak yet again — iv. G 

that tiling yon speak of, I tOf)k — iv. G 

these letters that he speaks of — iv.fi 

he wakes; speak to him — iv. 7 

but then spi'ak the truth, do you not love — v. 1 

sir, yoii speak nobly — v. 1 

I'll overtake you: speak — v. I 

what's he that speaks for Edmund earl .. — v. 3 
thy heart, whereto I speak, thou Heat — v. 3 



SPE 



I 
I 
I 
I 

. 1 

— i. 1 
1 
I 
I 



SPEAK. O save him, save him 1 1'enclei, v. 

but spcnk yoH on ; you look as you — v. 

what kind of help? speak, man (rep.),,.. — v. 

speak, Edmund, Where's the king? — v. 

speak what we feel, not what we ought .. — v. 
speak, nephew, were you by .... Unnwo ^ Jufiet, i. 
Bjieak briefly, can you like of Paris' love? — i. 
sjieak but one rhyme, and I nm satisfied — ii. 
sjieak to my gossip Vcnna one lair word — ii. 
Blie speaks, yet she says nothing (rep) — ii. 

'tis not to me she speaks — ii. 

O, speak again, bright angel! — ii. 

more, or sliall I speak at this? — ii. 

which thou hast heard me sneak .... — ii. 
is hoarse, and may not speak aloud.. — ii. 
and will speak more in a minute than — ii. 
nn a' speak anything against me .... — ii. 

speak, good, good nurse, speak — ii 

follow mc close, fori will speak to them — iii. 

false, he speaks not true — iii. 

tliat speaks but Romeo's name, speaks — iii. 
Bpeak well of him that killed (rep.).. — iii. 
to speak that word is father, mother — iii. 
speak a word [K7i(. -a little speak] (rep.) — iii. 
thou canst not speak of what thou .. — iii. 

then niight'st tliou speak — i i i ■ 

with patience but to speak a word .. — iii- 
sjieak not, reply not, do not answer me — iii. 

I sneak no treason (rep.) — iii. 

talk not to mc, for I'll not speak a word — iii. 
be not so long to speak : I long to die — iv. 
what thou speak'st, speak not of remedy — iv. 
my tongue, and will not let me speak — iv. 

approve our eyes, and speak to it Hamlet ^ i. 

let us hear Bernardo speak of this — i. 

speak to [Co;. K»i/. -question] it (rep.).... — i. 
by heaven, I charge thee, Bpeak (rep.) .. — i. 
speak to me: if there he any good irep.) — 
foreknowing may avoid, O speak! 

speak of it; stay, and speak — 

it was about to speak when the cock crew — 

dumb to us, will speak to him — 

you cannot speak of reason to the Dane — 

stand dumb and speak not to him — 

did you not sjieak to it? — 

to motion, like as it would speak — 

I'll speak to it, though hell itself should — 

you speok like a green girl — 

tliat I will speak to thee — 

it will not speak; tlieii I will follow it .. — 
speak, I'll go no further. Mark me .... — 

speak, lam bound to hear — 

speak of this that you have seen (rep.) .. — 

if v\ e list to speak ; or, there be — 

loosed out of hell, to speak of horrors .... — 

speak of that; that do I long to hear . . — 
I'll speak to him again: what do you read — 
for to speak to you like an honest man .. — 
come, come, nay speak — 

1 heard tliee speak me a speech once .... — 
where he speaksof Priam s slaughter.... — 

I'll have thee speak out the rest of — 

will speak with most miraculous or^an — 
■what cause he will by no means speak .. — 

speak the speech, I pray you — 

not to speaic it jirofanely, that, neither . . — 
speak no more than is set down for them — 

you think wliat now you speak — 

she desires to speak with you (rep.) — 

yet cannot you make it speak — 

I will speak daggers to her, but use none — 
I'll set those to you that can speak — 

Hamlet, speak no more (repA — 

speak to her, Hamlet. How is it with you — 

to whom do you speak this? 

j'our trespass, but my madness, speaks .. 
go, seek him out; sjieak fair, and bring . 
truly to speak, sir, and with no addition 

1 will not speak with her — iv 

she speaks much of her father — iv 

at straws, speaks things iu doubt — iv 

let him go, Gertrude: speak, man — iv 

why, now you speak like a good child .. — iv 
■what are they, that would speak with me? — iv 
I have words to speak in thine ear — iv. fi (let' 

I will speak to this fellow — v 

we must speak by t)ie card 

indeed, to speak feelingly of him — v 

lordship speaks most infallibly of him ., — v 

if his fitness speaks, mine is ready — v 

let the kettle to the trumpet speak — v 

let me speak, to the yet unknowing — v 

of that 1 shall have also cause to sjieak . . — v 
and the rites of war, speok hiudly for him — v 
my demerits, may speak, unhonneted ,.OifuUo, i 
little of this great world can I speak .... — i 
but, Othello, speak: did you by indirect — i 
let her speak of me before her father (rrp.) — i 

it was my hint to speak — i 

when I did speak of some distressful .... — i 

let mc speak like yourself — i 

same Cassio,— though he speak of comfort — 

he speaks home, madam — 

I cannot speak enough of this content . . — 
when she speaks, is it not an alarm to love? — 
well enougli, and speak well enough .... — 
hold, hold! the general speaks to you .. — 

Biieak, who begnn this? — 

I cannot speak any beginning (rep.) .... — 
to speak the truth shall nothmg wrong.. — 

drunk? and speak parrot? — 

that they speak V the nose thus? — 

and she speaks for you stoutly — 

have time to sneuk your bosom freely .. — 
why, stay, and hear mc speak. Madam — 

I pi-ay thee, spcnk to me as to thy — 

I spcnk not yet of proof — 

in position, distinctly speak of her — 

(Kii^jwliy do you speak sofaiutly? — 

It spcuke against her, with the other ... — 



— iir. t 



— iv- 1 

— iv. 4 



I 

— V- 1 



I 

— ii. 1 

1 



— T. 1 



— V. 2 



— V. 2 

— V. 2 

— V. 2 



SPE 

SPEAK— I cannot speak of this Othello, iii. 

sent to bid Coasio corae speak with you . . — iii 

do 3'ou speak so startingly and rasli? (rep.) — iii, 

I would on great occasion spealc witli you — iv, 

anoii return, and here spealc witli me .... — iv, 

to speak wh:vt I have seen and known .. — jv 

did I but spealc tl>y deeds — iv, 

speak witliin door. O fye upon him!.... — jv, 

it d(ies abhor me, now I speak tlie word.. — iv. 

he spe:iks well. I know a lady in Venice 

guiltiness will speak, though tongues 

1 WDuld spi-ak a word with you (rep.) 

like sIr' comes to speak of Cassio's death 

slie'll sure speak to my wife 

speak again I Sweet Desdemoual (re;;.) .. 

speak, for my heart is full 

I am bound to speak; nfy mistress here.. 

let me liave leave to speak 

no, I will speak as liberal as the air 

cry shame against me, yet I'll speak 

my soul to bliss, as I speak true 

and speak witli me, or, naked as I am.... 

this timefortli I never will speak word .. 

speakof me as lam; nothing extenuate — v. 

tlien must vou speak of one, tliat loved .. — v. 
SPEAKER-kill the speaker's heart ..Lui'e'.tt.t. y. 

stay, you imperfect speakers Macbeth, i. 

doth hiss the speaker — iv. 

the speaker in his parliament iHenrylf^. iv. 

what! a speaker is but a prater Henri/V. v. 

wlio sluiU be tlie speaker? ...MlenryVI. iii. 

and a most rare speaker to nature . . Henry VI 11. i. 

no otlier speaker of my living actions — iv. 

to be a speaker free Troilus cj Cressida, iv. 

hereafter, but I am truest speaker ..Cymbelim; v. 

SPE \KETH like himself ZHem-y VI. iv. 

SrEAKING -standing, sp,-aking Tempes!, ii. 

little speaking shows his love.. Th'o GenofVer.i. 

I am slient for speaking to you .. TicetflhNight, iv. 

if speaking, wliy, a vane blown .. ..Much.ido, iii. 

angry witli me, madam, speaking .. — iii. 

wii'at lady? of speaking honourably — iii. 

do not wrest true speaking, I'll offend — iii. 

sjieaking of her foulness, washed it . . — jv. 

I'll have no speaking; I w'M .. Merch.of Venice, iii. 

mine eye, while I was speaking .■ilVsn'etl, y. 

innocence persuades, when speaking. "I'l^o'.t 7'. ii. 

mv first false speaking was tills Macbeth, iv. 

an"d, speaking so, thy words are hnt.Richard ii.ii. 

to death, tbruugli want of speaking! — iii. 

and, si)eaking it, he wisily looked on me — v. 

if speaking truth, in this fine age ..I HenrylV. iv. 

and speaking thick, which nature ..iHenrylV. ii. 

but thy speaking of my tongue Henn/V. v. 

brave death by speaking, wliether..! Henry V I. iv. 

and tlien, in speaking, not to incur./i;iV/ia?d ///. iij. 

to untliink your speaking, and to. . Henry VIll. ii. 

trusted for speaking false in that .... — ii. 

had men's privilege of speaking. T'coiiMs^fJjess. iii. 

speaking is for beggars: lie wears his — iii. 

bv friendsliip, nor by speaking — iv. 

speaking by deeds, and deedless in liig — iv. 

please me with speaking to me. VhnonofAtliens, iv. 

consuming it witli speaking! — v. 

CiEsar), speaking of Brutus Juliu,sCa!sar,\. 

wlio rated him for speaking well of .. — ii. 

he's speaking now, or murmuring.j^iifori!/ SfCleo i. 

and burst of speaking, were as his ..C.ymbetine, iv. 

or senseless speaking, or a speaking.. — v. 

will think me speaking, though I swear. fericifs, i. 

tiiey'll have me wliipped for speaking — Lear, i. 

strange oeliads, and most speaking looks — iv. 

past speaking of in a king! — iv. 

my cause, in^peaking for myself Othello, i. 

either by speaking too loud, or tainting.. — ii. 

so speaking as I think, I die,— I die — v. 

SPEAK'ST out of thy sleep Tempest, ii. 

next word tiiat thou speak'si-.TwoGen. o/Vtr. iii. 

for thou speak'st well of foolsl .... Twelfth Night, i. 

know'st not wliat thou speak'st. iUeas. /or. il/eas. v. 

there thou speak'st reason; nay Much Ado, y. 

thou speak'st aright; lam that. A/i'ii./V.'s Dream, ii. 

an old l-ive-raonger, and speak'st. Love's L.Lost, ii. 

and tlierenpon thou speak'st, the fairest — iv. 

thou speak'st it well: go, t'nther .. Mer.of Venice, u. 

then, howsoe'er thou speak'st, 'mong — iii. 

thou speak'st wiser, than thou a.rt.AsyouLikeit, ii. 

speak'st thou in sober meanings? .... — v. 

smells so strong as thou speak st of .. All's tVcU, v. 

thou speak'st it falsely, as I love mine — v. 

tlicni speak'st truth: no more such. Ifinler's Tale, v. 

thou speak'st false in both . . Comedy o/ Errors, iv. 

thou speak'st witli all thy wit Macbeth, i v. 

if thou speak'st false, upon tlie next — v. 

I'll prove the lie thou speak'st — v. 

that what thou speak'st may move ..IHenrylV. i. 

thou speak'st asif I would deny — v. 

old heart! thou speak'st cheerfully ..Henry V.iv. 

why speak'st thou not? what \HenryVI. v. 

in vain thou speak'st, poor boy 3 Henry VI. i. 

thou speak'st wonders. She shall .. Henry I'lll. v. 

no leprosy, but what thou speak'st. Timon o/Alh.'w. 

that speak'st with every tongue — iv. 

though thou speak'st truth [rep.) Coriolanus, i. 

why speak'st not? speak, man? — iv. 

what, thou speak'st drowsily? JaliusCirsar, iy. 

strike thee, ere thou speak'st ....Animn/ ^- cien. ii. 

thou weep'st, and speak'st Cymbfline, v. 

if it please me which thou speak'st .. Tims And. v. 

thou speak'st like a physician Pericles, i. 

tliou speak'st like liim's untutored .... — i. 

and thou speak'st in lietter phrase Lear, iv. 

bleed'st not, speak'st; art soiuid — iy. 

speak'st thou from thy heart? ..Romeo 4r Juliet, iii. 
if what thou speak'st, spealc not of .. — iv. 

that handkerchief thou speak'st of Othelto. v. 

SPEAR— slander's venomed spear ....Itichard II. i. 
husband's wrongs on Hereford's spear — i. 

if I be gored with Mowbray's spear . . — i. 

lay by their helmets and their spears — i. 



[ 708 ] 



SPEAR-unsteadfast footing of a spear.l UeyirylV. i. 3 

with a spear into the back \ Henry VL i. 1 

he was thrust in the mouth with a spear — iv. 7 
like to Achilles' spear, is able 'iUenrnVl. v. 1 

SPEAR-GRASS— with spear-grass ..\ Henry IV. ii. 4 

SPECIAL— these special marks.. Two Gen. o/Ver. ii. 1 

with some special favour — ii. 4 

a special virtue, for then — iii. I 

special suspicion of Falstaif' s .... Merry Wines, iii. 3 
though j'ou Iiave ta'eu a special stand — v. 5 

have a special care of him Tirelflh Night, iii. 4 

we have with special soul elected. .Weas. /or Meas. i. 1 
from lord Angelo by special charge.. — _i. 3 
in special business from his holiness — iii. 2 
hold you ever to our special drift .... — iv. 5 

had you a special warrant — V. 1 

not by night mastered, but by special. Love's L. L. i. 1 

from special officers of Charles — ii. 1 

some certain special honours — v. 1 

a special deed of gift, after his . . Me?: of Venice, v. I 

thus he his special nothing ever All's Welt, ii. 1 

what place make you special — ii. 2 

yet beheld that special face . . Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 
ay, when tlie special thing is well,... — ii. 1 
cloud, without our special wonder? ..Macbeth, iii. 4 
take special care my greetings be . . llichard II. iii. 1 
hath drawn the special head of all.. 1 HenrylV. iv. 4 

ordained liis special governor \ Henry VI. i. I 

the special watchmen of our Enijlish — iii. 1 
'tis my special hope, that you will clear — iii. 1 

without your special pardon ?>HenryVI. iv. 1 

have thought on special dignities. 7'/mono/.J//i. y. 2 
for whom we stand a special party. Titns.4iidron. i. I 
though that the queen on special cause . . Lear, iv. 6 
to the earth some special good ..ItomeoSr Juliet, ii. 3 
witli this special observance, that yon. .Hamlet, iii. 2 
O, for two special reasons; which may — iv. 7 
there is a special providence in the fall — y. 2 

raise some special officers of night Othello, i. 1 

your special mandate, for the state affiiirs — i. 3 
he dropned it, for a special purpose — v. 2 

SPECIALLY to be achieved .... Taming of Shrew, i. 1 
to labour and effect one tiling specially — i. 1 

SPECIALTIES are bound Lnve'sL.Lost,'n. 1 

let specialties be therefore drawn. Tamingof Sh. ii. 1 

SPECIALTY of rule hath been . . Troilus Sf Cress, i. 3 

SPECIFY— do not forget to specify Much Ado, v. I 

as my father shall specify (rep.). .Mer. of Venice, ii.2 
how will she specify where is the . . I Henry VI. iii. 2 

SPECIOUSLY for master Fenton ..Merry Wives, iii. 4 
speciously one of tliem — iv. 5 

SPECTACLE-the direful spectacle of..Tempesl, i. 2 

I can see yet without spectacles Much.ido, i. 1 

he not moralize this spectacle? . . As you Lil<e it, ii. 1 
with spectacles on nose, and pouch .. — ii. 7 
exampkd by this heinous spectacle. Jfi'»g-/o/i", iv. 3 

to be a public spectacle to all 1 Henry V I. i. 4 

them blind and dusky spectacles ..IHenry VI. iii. 2 
O barbarous and bloody spectacle! . . — iv. 1 
seek f )r sorrow with thy spectacles? — y. 1 

the saddest spectacle that e'er I . , ..ZHenry VI. ii. 1 
O piteous spectacle! O bloody times! — ii. 5 
what a pair of spectacles is here! 7'ro(7ii,! ^- Cress, i v. 4 
beheld lieart-hardening spectacles. .C')/-/o/'jfmv, jv. I 
else were this a savage spzctac]e. .JnliusCa^sar, iii. 1 

piteous spectacle! O noble C«sarl — iii. 2 
partition make with spectacles so. ...Cymbeline, i. 7 
nothing, I shall not need spectacles Lear, i. 2 

SPECTACLED to see him? Coriolanus, ii. 1 

SPECTANDA-sicspectanda fides I'criclcs, ii. 2 

SPECTATOR— to take spectators.. Winter'sTatc, iii. 2 

imagine me, gentle spectators .... — iv. (chorus) 

prove a good repast to the spectators. Ci/mfceiine, v. 4 

quantity of barren spectators to laugh. Hnm(e(, iii. 2 

SPECTATORS HIP, and crueller .... Coriolanus, v. 2 

SPECULATION in those eyes Macbeth, iii. 4 

took stand for idle speculation Henry V. iv. 2 

speculation turns not to itself.. Troilus ^ Cress, iii. 3 

the '^pies and speculations intelligent.. . . Lear., iii. I 

SPECULATIVE their unsure hopes . . Macbetli, v. 4 

my speculative and .ictive instruments. .OtAeHo, i. 3 

SPED— and how sped you, sir? Merry Wives, iii. 5 

be gone, sir, you are sped. iv/er.o/reri zee, ii.9 (scroll) 
of wind galls, sped with spavins. Taming of Sh. iii. 2 

are married, but you two are sped — v. 2 

who have sped the better by my .. Winter'sTale, i. 2 

howl have sped among the King John, iv. 2 

Charles; I marvel how he sped .... 1 Henry VI. ii. 1 
not long before your higlmess BpQ&..He7try VIII. i. 2 
to hearf^w they sped to-day !.. Troilus fS Cress, iii. I 

1 am sped: is he gone, and hath./?o»ieo ^Juliet, iii. 1 
SPEECH— them that speak this speech. . Tempest, i. 2 

than he appears by sjieecli — i. 2 

whereto thy speech serves for .... Twelfth Night, i. 2 

loath to cast away my speech — i. 5 

that I may proceed in my speech — i. 5 

I will on with my speech in your praise — i. 5 
give me this prerogative of speech .. — ii. 5 

put strange speech upon me — v. I 

to affect speech and discourse ....Meas.forMeas. \. 1 

but I do bend my speech to one — i. 1 

to have free speech with you — i. 1 

most painful feeling of thy speech .. — i. 2 
near to the speech we had to such . . — i. 2 
by and by have some speech with you — iii. 1 
there was some speech of marriage . . — v. I 
runs not this speech like iron through. .Vuc/i.,4rfo, v. 1 
by helping me to the speech of Beatrice — v. 2 
when you havespoken your speech. A/id. A^'sDr. iii. I 
his speech was like a tangled chain .. — v. 1 
a better speecli was never spoke ..Love'st.Lost, v. 2 
nor to their penned speech render we — v. 2 
without more speech, my lord., il/erc/j. of Venice, ii.9 

to the mettle of my speech? Asyonl.ike it, ii. 7 

but never taxed for speech Alt's Well, i. I 

his epitaph, as in your royal speech. . — i. 2 

and common speech gives him a worthy — ii. 5 
desires some private speech with you — ii. 6 
by the fair grace and speech of the piior — ii. 6 
but slow in speech, yet sweet as ..Taming of Sh. ii. 1 



SPE 

SPEECH— all this goodly speech?.. Taming ofSh. ii. 1 
on my faith, deserves high speech. Winfer'syn/e, Ii. I 

1' the boldness of your speech — iii. 2 

gasping to begin some speech, her eyes — iii. 3 
lie will allow no speech; which, I do — iv. 3 
if I may come to tlie speech of him . . — iv. 3 
there was speech in their dumbness. . — v. 2 
my beauty; then my speech.. Comedi/o/ Errors, iv. 2 

hear his speech, but say thou Macbeth, iv. 1 

be not a niggard of your speech — iv, 3 

having no witness to confirm my speech — v. 1 

if thy speech be sooth, I care not — v. 5 

heaven be tlie record of my speech 1 . . Itichard II. i. I 
reins and spurs to my free speech. ... — i. 1 
free speech, and fearless, I to tliee. ... — i. 1 
should be the first word of thy speech — v. 3 

and here is my speecli: stand \ Hen7'yl V. ii. i 

so that, in speech, in gait 2 Henry IV. ii. 3 

address the substance of my speech.. — iv. 1 

out of the speech of peace — iv. 1 

moist impediments unto my speech.. — iv. 4 
strength of speech is utterly denied.. — iv. 4 
my speech; my fear is your (7rp.).... — (epil.) 
if you look for a good speech now .. .. — (epil.) 
and my speech entreats, that I may . . Hem y V. v. 2 

his deeds exceed all speech 1 Henry VI, i. 1 

could he so long protract iiis speech — i. 2 

though thy speech doth fail — i. 4 

with sudden and exiemporal speech — iii. 1 

but lier grace in siieech, her words ..'iHenryVI. i. I 
thy head for this tiiy traitor's speech — i. 3 

and the offender granted scope of speech — iii. 1 
in speech he doth resemble; by this — iii. 1 

beg pardon for thy passed speech.... — iii. 2 

report what speech forbears — iv. 10 

for this one speech, lord Hastings , .iHenry VI. iv. I 

die, prophet, in thy speech — v. 6 

find his hour of speec'li a minute. . . . Henry VIII. i. 2 
every day it would infect his speech . . — i. 2 

wliat was the speech amongst the — i. 2 

speecli fir truce, success, or loss.. Troilus^ Cress, i. 3 

give pardon to my speecli — i. 3 

because your speech liath none — ii. 2 

witness the process of your speech .. — iy. 1 
CO, 'tis his kind of speech, he did .. Coriolanus, ii. 3 
this was my speech, and I will speak't — iii. I 
only fair speech. I tliink, 'twill serve — iii. 2 
in your funeral speech blame us. .JuliusCcesar, iii. 1 

after my speech is ended — iii. 1 

grace Ills speech tending to Csesar's.. — iii. 2 
nor the power of speech, to stir men's — iii. 2 

this speech were else your last — iy. 3 

his speech sticks in my heart Antony ^Clea.i 5 

your captain to soft and gentle speech — ii.2 
your speech is passion: but, pray you — ii.2 

but the manner of his speech — ii.2 

if he mislike my speech, and what is — iii. 11 

strikes life into my speech Cymbeline, iii. 3 

my speech of insultment ended on his — iii. 5 
unfold a dangerous speech, though .. — v. 5 
in show, I'll plain with speech. I'erictes. iii. (Gower.) 
a corrupted mind, thy speech had altered — iv. 6 

the more she gives them speech — v. I 

makes breath poor, and speech unable .... Lear, i. 1 

mend your speech a little, lest it — i. I 

accents borrow, that can my speech diffuse — i. 4 

sirraii, I'll teach thee a speech — i. 4 

with curst speech I threatened to — ii. 1 

wear this; spare speecli; decline — iv. 2 

if e'er your grace had speech with — v. 1 

if my speech offend a noble heart — v. 3 

this speech of yours hath moved me — v. 3 

what, shall this speech be spoke. . Romeo i .luHet, i. 4 
hath given countenance to his speech . . Hamlet, i. 3 

we'll have a speech straight — ii.2 

come, a passionate speech. What speech — ii. 2 
a speech once, but it was never acted .... — ii.2 

one speech in it I chiefly loved — ii.2 

a speech of some dozen or sixteen lines . . — ii.2 
cleave tlie general ear with horrid speech — ii. 2 
how smart a lash that speech doth give .. — iii. 1 

speak the speech, I pray 3'ou, as I — iii. 2 

do not itself unkennel in one speech .... — iii. 2 

should hear the speech, of vantage — iii. 3 

a knavish speech sleeps in a foolish ear .. — iv. 2 
her speech is nothing, yet the unshaped.. — iv. 5 
I have a speech of fire that fain would . . — iv. 7 
your patience in our last night's speech.. — v. 1 

rude am I in my speech, and little Othello, i. 3 

alas, she has no speech — ii. 1 

let me have speech with you — ii. 3 

while I spare speech, which something .. — ii. 3 
being in speech, there comes a fellow .... — ii. 3 

entreats her a little favour of speech — jii. I 

is free of speech, sings, plays, and dances — iii. 3 
not to strain my speech to grosser issues — iii. 3 

my speech should fall into such vile — iii. 3 

speech so faint? [A")i(. -speak so faintly].. — iii. 3 
of his displeasure, for my free speech!.... — iii. 4 

that I may save my speech — iv. I 

my knees, what doth your speech import — iv. 2 

SPEECHES— to litter foul speeches .... Tempest, ii. 2 
villanous speeches of the duke ..Meas. for Meas. v. 1 

by the nose, for thy speeches? — v. I 

construe my speeches better Love'sL.Lost,v. 2 

never will i trust to speeches penned — v 2 

thy speeches will bring me to .... Winter'sTale, v. I 
upon tliee, Macbeth, their speeches . . Macbeth, iii. I 
have you considered of my speeches? .... — iii. 1 
my former speeches have but hit your .. — iii. 6 
not my speeches that you do m\slike.2Henry VI. i. 1 
or certain Speeches uttered by the.. Henry I III. ii. 4 
I give to both your speeches .... Troilus 6r Cress, i. 3 

hours, lives, speeches spent — ii. 2 

write his speeches in their books ..JuliusCtPsar. i. 2 

I am the master of my speeches Cymbeline, i. 5 

forbear sharp speeches to her — iii. 5 

thrust these reproachful speeches. Ti/i/s Andron. ii. 1 
uphold and maintain in your speeches — v. 2 
your large speeches may your deeds Lear, i. 1 



SPE 

SPEECHES-my speeches, as I were n fool?. Lear, ii. 2 
iwstilcnt speeches of l>is lather's deivth . Uamlei, iv. 5 

SrEECIIIiKSS dialect Measure, for Measure, i. 3 

would aft'ord niv speechless visor. . Love's L. Lost, v, 3 

visit tlic speeohlcss sick, and still — v. 2 

receive lair spt-vclilcss messages ..Mer.nf Vfnice, i. 1 

I loft llini nimost sin'cehless hiinJnlui, V. 6 

soiitenco then l)ut siioeehless death ..Uirharil II. i. 3 

tluis, witli his speccliless hand Coriidmius, v. 1 

foamed at moiuli. and was speechless. Jii/. C<fsar, i. 2 
for his fortunes all lie speechless ....Ctrnheline. ]. 6 
speechless coniplainer, I will learn. Titus Aud, iii. 2 

tell tliee with speechless tongues I'eriHes, i . 1 

the hold winds speechless, and the orb. . Hamlei, ii. 2 

SPEED-make speed from hence. 5f'i<'oGcH.o//'ec. iii. 1 

ftaint Nicliolas be tliy speed — iii. 1 

I would not have luiVi speed — iv. 4 

shall know how I speed (rep. iii. b). Merry n'ives, ii. 2 

no, heaven so speed me in my — iii. 4 

fitter place; and tliat with speed. Jl/eds./w Meas. ii. 2 
best appointment make with speed .. — iii. I 

I'll make all speed — iv. 3 

I would my horse had the speed of . . Much Aiin, i. 1 
Hymen,now, with luckier issue speeds — v. 3 

God speed fair Helena Mid. iV.'s Dream, i. 1 

speed to catch the tiger: bootless speed I — ii. 2 

it speeds too fast, 'twill tire Love' sL. Lost, ii 1 

to tlie purpose of his speed — v. 2 

but go with speed to some forlorn..,. — v. 2 
he would make some speed of liis.il/er. o/7'enice,ii. 8 

of a man in speed to Padua — iii. 4 

with imagined speed unto the tranect — iii. 4 
madam, I go witli all convenient speed — iii. 4 
whicli speed, we hope, the better for — v. 1 
Hercules be thy speed, young man. /Is you Like it, i. 2 

with the swiftest wing of speed All's Well, iii. 2 

ride upon the violent speed of fire.... — iii. 2 

will speed her foot again — iii. 4 

if you speed well in It, the duke .... — iii. 6 
which, if it speed, is wicked meaning — iii. 7 
with what good siieed our means .... — v. 4 

in ho|;e to speed alone Taming of Shreu',i 2 

woo, and happy be thy speed! — ii. 1 

how speed you with my daughter? .. — ii, 1 
it were impossible, I should speed amiss — ii. I 
much contempt, speeds from me .. iVinter'sTale, i. 2 

tiieir speed hath been beyond — ii. 3 

'tis good speed; foretels, the great..., — ii. 3 
and'fear of the queen's speed, is gone — iii. 2 

Blossom, speed thee well! — iii. 3 

and with speed so pace to speak . . — iv, (chorus) 
fortune speed us I thus we set on ... . — iv. 3 
by your good father's speed, will .... — v. I 
cjirried with more speed before . . Comedy of Err. i. 1 

my fellows had the speed of him Macbeth, i. 5 

we must speed for France King John, i. 1 

in this action of swift speed — ii. 1 

speed then, to take advantage of ... . 

so hot a speed with such advice 

the copy of your speed is learned .... 
ithhold thy speed, dreadful 



[ 709 ] 



III. 4 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 
time shall teaefi me speed 
that child, and follow me with speed — iv. 3 

and spleen of speed to see your — v. 7 

with all good speed at Plashy Richard II. i. 2 

God speed him well, and had the .... — i. 4 

with all swift speed you must — v. 1 

come yourself witli speed to us again. lHe/irj//r. i. 1 

no little reason bids us speed — i. 3 

he that rides at high speed — ii. 4 

good manners he your speed 1 — iii. 1 

fliy looks are full of speed — iii. 2 

and, with all speed, you shall have.. — iv. 3 
prevent the worst, sir Michael, speed — iv. 4 
arm, arm, with speed: and fellows ,, — v. 2 
bend you, with your dearest speed .. — v. .'j 

almost forspent with speed iHenrylV. i. 1 

flies with greatest speed; so did — i. 1 

and make friends with speed — i. ] 

make good speed: how many — iii. 1 

these griefs shall be with speed redressed — iv. 2 
and we with sober speed will follow you — iv. 3 

despatch us with all speed, lest HeuryV. ii, i 

tlie herald? speed him hence — iii. 5 

bestow yourself with speed — iv. 3 

St. Dennis be my speed!) done vostre — v. 2 

G d speed the parliament! \ Henry VI. Hi. i 

and with all speed provide to see 'i Heart/ rr. i. 1 

stay not to expostulate, make speed. 3 Henry f'/. ii. 5 
your brothers to go speed elsewhere.. — iv. 1 
to return from France with speed (,rep.) — iv. 6 
neighbours. Godspeed! give you.. /i/c/iarJ ///. ii. 3 

and with all speed post with him — iii. 2 

with all speed to doctor Shaw — iii. 5 

ati honest talc sjiceds best — iv. 4 

be valiant, and speed well! — v. 3 

the duvil speed him! no man's Henry I' HI. i. 1 

with great speed of judgment. . . . Troilus ^ Cress, i. 3 

effect your rage with speed! — v. 11 

once denied, will hardly speed. 7'iwon of Athens, Hi. 2 
thy country, speed thee straight.... Corio/am**, iv. 5 
I'll prove him, speed how it will .... — v. 1 
forget not, in your speed, Antonius.Ju/mjCrt'Mr, i. 2 
let the gods so speed me, as I love ,. — i. 2 

O Brutus! the heavens s|ieed thee in — ii. 4 
post back with sneed, and tell him . . — iii. I 

if we draw lots, lie speeds Aniony^Cleo. ii, 3 

this speed of Cajsar's carries beyond — iii. 7 

this tool's speed be crossed witn . . . . Cymbeline, iii. 5 
sliall you speed in your journey's end — v. 4 
no more, if all the rest will speed. . TilutAndron. i. 2 
offend you then that both should speed? — ii. 1 

if this letter speed, and my invention Lear, i. 1 

till the speed ot his rage goes slower .... — i. 2 

to make your speed to Dover — iii. 1 

fir, Sliced yon: what's your will? — iv. 6 

I'll send a friar with speed Romeo /i Juliet, iv. 1 

so that my speed to Mantua was stayed — v. 2 

i-ainl Francis be my speed! — v. 3 

O most wicked speed, to post with such. //um/cf, i. 2 



SPEED-shall with speed to England ..//umW.iii. I 

tempt him with speed aboard — iv. 3 

cries haste, and speed must answer it....O;/ie;/o, i. 3 

most favourable and haiipy speed — ii. I 

our thoughts, a sennight's speed — ii. I 

how quickly should you speed? — iv. 1 

SPEEDl'D— lie speeded well .... Meas. tbrMeus. iv. S 

have speeded hither with the very,. 2 Henry IT. iv. 3 

SPEEDIER course than lingering .. Titus And. ii. 1 

the speedier, that vou may direct ....llandet, iv. 6 

SPEEDIEST expedition TwoGen.offeronn, i. 3 

prisoners with the speediest means . . I Henry It', i. 3 
with your speediest, bring us what. /Inf. s, Cleo. v. I 

SPEEDILY— but speedily Meas. for. Meas. i. 5 

haste you speedily to Angelo — iii. I 

my duty, speedily to acquaint you.. . . All's ll'elt, i. 3 
go, speedily, and bring again the count — v. 3 

follow in yourcouduct speedily \HenryIV. iii. 1 

or hitherwards intended speedily .... — iv. 1 

let us take a muster speedily — iv, 1 

therefore, let's about it speedily ZHenryVI. iv. 6 

speedily I wish to hear from Rome. Henry i'lll. iii. 2 
but must be looked to speedily ....Cymbeline, iii. 6 

come, say your prayers speedily t'ericles, i v. I 

post speedily to my lord your husband.. Lcur, iii. 7 
nether crimes so speedily can verge! .... — iv. 2 

SPEEDINESS ofyour return Cymbeline, ii. 4 

SPEEDING? nay.then Taming of Slireu; ii. 1 

got a speeding trick to lay down.... Henri/////, i.3 

all for speeding do their best Pericles, ii. 3 

SPEEDY infirmity TwelfthNighl, i. 5 

will move us for speedy aid _ All'siVell.i. 2 

rare, pleasant, speedy, the time is.Winter'sTale,i\i. 1 

some speedy messenger bid her King John, ii. 2 

would have been as ^peedy in your .1 Heuryli'. v. 4 
and hath sent out a speedy power ..iHenrylV.i. I 
are not the speedy scouts returned .\ Henry I' I. iv. 3 

you speedy helpers^ tliat are — v. 3 

this speedy and quick appearance .. — v. 3 
your company for speedy counsel ...SHenry VI. ii. I 
make all the speedy haste yo\x.... Richard III. iii. 1 
prays your speedy payment . . Timon of.4lhens, ii. 2 
I will wish herspeedy strength ....Coriolanus, i. 3 
if your diligence be not speedy, I shall be. Lear, i. 5 

craves a speedy answer — iv. 2 

near, and on speedy foot — iv. 6 

devise hisspeedy taking off — v. 1 

with speedy help doth lend. Romeo ^Jul. iv. 5 (song) 

I pray you, to this speedy voyage Hamle', iii. 3 

SPELL— or else our spell is man ed .... Tempest, iv. 1 

untie the spell — v. 1 

this bare island, by your spell — (epilogue) 

she works by charms, by spells . . Merry JVires, iv, 2 
but she would spell him backward . . Much.ido, iii. 1 

never harm, nor spell Mid.N.'slh. ii. 3 (song) 

you hear, my spell is lawful.. ..winter'sTnle, v. 3 

and your spells provide Macbeth, iii. 5 

ye channing spells and periapts ... .1 Henry VI. v. 3 

the spells of France should Henry VIII. i. 3 

his spell ill that is out — iii. 2 

'tis a spell you see of much power . . Coriolanus, v. 2 

ah, thou spell 1 nvaunt.. ..Antony ^Cleopatra, iv. 10 

read by rote, and could not spell .Romeo fi Jul. ii. 3 

and corrupted by spells and medicines.. O/AcWo, i. 3 

SPELLING-with spelling charms ..\HenruVL v. 3 

SPELL-STOPP'D-youaiespell-stopp'd.remp«s/,v. I 

SPELT backward with the horn .. Love' sL. Lost, v. 1 

SPENCER, Blunt, and Kent Richard II. v. 6 

SPEND his youth at home (rep.).. TuoGen.o/Ver. i. 3 

that thou shalt spend some time — i.3 

and spends what he borrows — ii. 4 

if you spend word for word with me — ii. 4 
he meaus to spend his time awhile .. — ii. 4 

I spend in talking to thee — iv. 2 

spend it, spend it; spend (rep.').... Merry Jl'ives, ii. 2 

spend this for me Twelfth Night, i. 5 

you spend 3'our passion on a ..Mid.N.'sDream, iii, 2 

how will he spend his wit? Love's L.Lost, iv. 3 

or spend a minute's time in — iv. 3 

and spend his prodigal wits in bootless — v. 2 
we nuinbernothing thatwespend.... — v. 2 

a twelvemonth shall you spend — v. 2 

and herein spend but time .. Merchant of Venice, i. 1 
with thee may spend our wonder too. . All's Well, ii. 1 

if lie would spend his power — v. 1 

and my servant spend all Taming nfShretr, v. 1 

money that he spends in tiring.. Comerfyn^ Err. ii. 2 
would spend it in some words upon ..Macbeth, ii. 1 
this night I'll spend unto a dismal-fatal — iii. 5 
more sorrow, and that I'll spend for him — v. 7 

we shall not spend a large — v. 7 

six years, that he hath to spend Richardll. i. 3 

did win what he did spend — ii. 1 

and he shall spend mine honour with — v. 3 
they did spend a sad and bloody .. ..1 Henry IV. i. 1 

we may boldly spend upon the — iv. I 

to spend that shortness basely — v. 2 

coward dogs most spend their mouths. Henri//', ii. 4 
we may as bootless spend our vain .. — iii. 3 

in fretting spend his gall \ Henry VI. i. 2 

in his bosom spend my latter — ii. 5 

did my brother Henry spend his ....'2 Henry VI. i. I 

or oxen could I spend my fury ! — v. 1 

and spend her strength with ZHenryVI. i. 4 

in devotion spend my latter days .... — iv. 6 
and men ne'er spend their fury on .. — v. 5 

hilt that we spend the time — v. 7 

I would not spend another such Richard III. i. 4 

he will spend his mouth .... Troilus ^-Crrssidu, v. 1 
and spend our flatteries, to drink.. Timon o/Ath. i. 2 

purpose to have I'.ini spend less — iii. 1 

no more to reckon, he to spend — iii. 4 

and spend my malice in my breath.. Ci)rio/ani(.t, ii. 1 

and is content to spend the time — ii. 2 

than S|)end a fawn upon them — iii. 2 

may seem to spend his fury ....Antony Sf Cleo. iv. 6 

to spend upon his haters — v. I 

spend that kiss, which is my heaven — y. 2 

not spend them at my pleasure Cymbeline, ii- I 

cither side I come to spend my breath — v. 3 



SPI 



SPEND your adventurous worth I'ericles, il. 4 

Boult, spend thou that in the town .... iv. :t 

in that kingdom spend our v. 3 

spenil it at thy will: but now Hamlet, i. 2 

1 will but spend a word here in the Othello, i. 2 

robs himself, that spends a bootless grief i.3 

and direction, to spend with thee i.3 

and siiend your rich opinion, for tlie name ii. 3 

SPENDING your wit in the praife./.o!!c'.i/../,o..(, ii. I 

at homo; spend his manly marrow ir\. All's Well, ii. 3 

SPEND'ST such high-day wit.,il/crc/.. of Venire, ii. 9 

where thou spend st thy time \ Henry I v. ii. 4 

SPENDTHRIFT is he of his tongue ..Tempest, ii. 1 

is like a spendthrift sigh Hamlet, iv. 7 

SPENT— both be spent most preciously. .rem/JM/, i. 2 
and spent our hours together ..TwoGen. of Ver. ii. 4 
lam a gentleman that have spent. Wcrri/»/iv<, ii. 2 

have not spent all his quiver Much Ado. i. 1 

surely, suit ill spent, and labour ill.. — iii. 2 
minutes I with lier have spent .Mid.N.'sDream, ii. 3 

the hours that we have spent — iii. 2 

I never spent an hour's talk Love's L.Lost, ii. 1 

I know not what's spent in the. .il/er. of Venice, iii. I 

your daughter spent in Genoa — iii. i 

what prodigal portion have I spent. Asyou Like it, i. 1 

beg, when that is spent? well, sir — i. I 

ere we have thy 3'oiithful wages spent — ii. 3 
in music we have sjieiit an liour..7'«intno-o/5A. iii, 1 
the fury spent, anon this did .... Winter'sTale, iii. 3 
if ever you have spent time worse — iv. (chorus) 
five summers have I spent . ... Comedy of Errors, i. 1 

as two spent swimmers, that do Macbeth, i. 2 

nought's had, all's spent, where — iii. 2 

vainly shall be spent against the ....KingJohn, ii, 1 
to be spent with such a brabbler .... — v. 2 

or this life be spent. How high Richard II. i. 1 

six frozen winters spent, return — i.3 

they are seldom spent in vain — ij. i 

and all, old Lancaster hath spent.... — ii. 1 
his time is spent, our pilgrimage .... — ii. 1 
spent not that which his triumphant — ii. 1 

more hath he spent in peare — ii. 1 

most dissolutely spent on Tuesday ..IHenryJV. i. 2 

spent with crying— bring in — i. 2 

O the mad days that I have spent.,.. — iii. 2 
it is time you were spent. Spent! .. .. — iii. 2 
like lamps whose wasting oil is spent. 1 Henry f/. ii.5 

hast thou spent a pilgrimage — ii.5 

the day is almost spent: lord Suffolk. 2 Henry/'/, iii. 1 
think it but a minute spent ill sport — iii. 2 

cancelled, and his treasure spent ....SHenryVI. v. 4 
happy, indeed, as we have spent . . Richard 111. ii. I 
though we have spent our harvest .. — ii 1 

the Tower? the day is spent — iii. 2 

eleven hours I have spent to write .. — iii. 6 
lives, speeclies spent, thus once. . Troilus ^ Cress, ii. 2 

spent more in her defence — ii. 2 

how have we spent this morning?.... — iv. 4 

in banqueting must all be spent — v. 1 

when all's spent, he'd be crossed. Timon of.ithens, i. 2 
ray lord hath spent of Timou's wealth — iii. i 

liis anger, ere 'twas spent — iii. 5 

and, thy fury spent, confounded he .. — iv. 3 
our lamp is spent, it's out. .Antony^ Cleopatra, iv. 13 
my youth I spent much under hini.Cyni6e/ine, iii, 1 
almost spent with hunger, I am .... — iii. 6 

his trials well are spent — v. 4 

ten years are spent, since first.. Titus Andronicus, i. I 
whose youth was spent in dangerous — iii. 1 
time that is so briefiv spent.. ..Pej teles, iii. (Gower) 
stale and hoar ere it he spent. ... Rotneo ^-Juliet, ii. 4 

when it hoars ere it be spent — ii, 4 (song) 

mine shall be spent, when theirs are dry — iii, 2 

all his golden words are spent Hamlet, v. 2 

my money is almost spent; 1 have ....Dtliello, ii. 3 

SPERATO mecontenta 2HeMM///'. ii. 4 

SPERMACETI, for an inward brnise.l Henri/IV. i. 3 
SPERR up the sons of Troy ..Troilus^ Cress, (prol.) 
SPHERE— the moon out of her sphere.. V'twipiai/, li. 1 

than music from the spheres Ttrrlfih Sight, iii. 1 

swifter than the moones &p\\ere. Mid.N.'sDream, ii, I 

shot madly from their spheres — ii. 2 

Venus in her glimmering sphere .... — iii. 2 
have shortly discord in thespheres..^tyouLi7iei/, ii. 7 

from thy pale sphere above — iii. 2 

not in his sphere: the ambition All'sWell, i. I 

that move in your right spheres ....King John, v. 7 
keep not their motion in one sphere.. I lletiryl V, v. 4 
most quiet sphere [Co(.-there] Dy ..illentyl V. iv. 1 
on the bosom of this sphere .. ..Timon of Athens, i, I 
to be called into a huge sphere ..Autony^Cleo. ii. 7 
burn the great sphere ihou movcst inl — iv. 13 
■was propertied as all the tuned spheres — v. 2 

the music of the spheres: list, my Pericles, v. 1 

twinkle in their spheres till .... Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 2 

like stars, start from their spheres Hamlet, i. 5 

a i)ri:iee out of thy sphere ^eb/,A'n/. -star] — ii. 2 

as tlie star moves not hut in his sphere .. — iv. 7 

SPHERED amidst the other ..TroihisSrCressida, i. 3 

till thy frphered bias cheek out-swell — iv. 4 

SPHERICAL, like a globe.... Comec/y orErrors, iii. 2 

fixed upim a spherical stcnie Henty V. iii, 6 

and trcachers, by spherical pre<lominance. lenr, i. 2 
SPHERY— Hermia's splierv eyne?...Vid.A'.'«i»r. ii. 3 

SPHINX— subtle as Sphinx I ore'sL.Lost, iv. 3 

SPICE— her snices on the stream ..Mer. of Venice, i I 
by-gone fooleries were but spices. Wmter'sTale, iii. 2 

I must go buy spices for our — iv. 2 

not hot enough to purchase j'our spice — iv. 2 
for all this since ot^your hypocrisy.. Henry Vlll. ii. 3 

the spice and salt that season Troilus i^^ Cress, i. 2 

embalms and spices to the April.. 7Vmono/'//M. iv. 3 

a* he hath spices of them all Coriolanus, iv. 7 

bid Nestor bring me spices Pericles, iii. 1 

and entreasured with bags of spices full! — iii. 2 

and fetch more spices, nurse ....Romeo 4- Juliet, iv. 4 

SPICED- in the spiced Indian air.. Mid N.'sDr. ii. 2 

SPICERY— that nest of spicery ....Richard III. iv. 1 

SriDEH— draw with idle spider'8..Mcn»,/ori1/<?n», iii.2 

weaving spidcra, come not . . Mid.N.'slir. ii. 3 (song) 



SPI 



710 ] 



SPI 



SPIDER— plays the spider Merch. of lenice, iii. 2 

in the cup a spider steeped miUer'sTale/ii. I 

1 have drank, ami seen the spider .... ii. I 

tliread tliat ever spider twisted King John, iv. 3 

but let tliy spiders, tliat suck up ..Richanl II. iii, i 
busy than tlie labouriug spider ..,.'2Henri/yi. iii, 1 

wisli to adders, spiders, toads liichard III. i. 2 

streu'st tliou siiLiar on that bottled spider — i, 3 
to lic'lji iiif ciusL- tliat bottled spider .. — iv. 4 
deliver a fly from a spider.... Troitus^Cressida, ii. 3 

were*t, toad, or adder, spider Cijnibeline, iv. i 

of'tlie smallest spider's web ttomeo •^Juliel, i. 4 

SPIDER-LIKE, out of his self- ....Henry VIII. i. 1 

SPIED-hatli spied him already. ^/irf.JV.'sDifam, v. 1 

spied a blossom, passing fair. .Love^sL.L. iv. 3 (ver.) 

look, lie lias spied us All's irell, iii. 6 

but at last I spied an ancient..,. Taming of Sh. iv. I 

at last, I spiecf his eyes iHenrtjIV. ii. 2 

the white hair tliat Helen spied.. 2Voi7«s ^-Cress. i. 2 

the fire is spied in populous cities Othello, i. 1 

SPIES— if these be true spies which I .. Tempest, v. 1 
I am attended by some spies. TiioGen. of Verona, v. 1 
the doctor spies li is vantage ripe. Merrijtl'h^es, iv. 6 
the heaven sets spies upou us .... IVinler's Tale, v. 1 

I'll fill these dog.sed spies with Kini;John,iv. i 

and spies a far-otf shore where .... 3 Henry VI. iii. 2 

epies of the Volsces held me Coriohnus, i. 6 

as beguiled all spies Antony ffClenpntra, iii. 7 

are to France the spies and speculations. Lear, iii. 1 

as if we were God's spies — v. 3 

they come not single spies, but in .... Hamlet, iv, 5 
SPIGOT-thou the spigot wield? .... Merry Wives, i. .1 
SPILL— to spill the poor deer's.... Looc'sL.tosf, iv. 1 

to spill mine enemies' blood King John, iii. 1 

misbegotton blood I spill of thine ..\HenryVl. iv. 6 

that spills another Timonn/ Athens, iii. 5 

we'll spill the blood that has . . .-intony /j- Cleo. iv. 8 

all germens spill at once Lear, iii. 'i 

it spills itself, in fearing to be spilt.... Hamlet, iv. 5 
SPILLED of my dear kinsman !..flomeoiS-./M(/t/, iii. 1 

SPILLING Edward's blood HicharU U. ii. 1 

SPILT— and all the precious liquor spilt — i. 2 

both have I spilt; O would the deed. . v. 5 

is some of the king's blood spilt . ...'i Henry I V.ii. i 

his blood, I spilt mine own Richard 111. i. 3 

thou know'st, unjustly must be spiltl — iii. 3 

spills itself, in fe.iring to be spilt Hamlet, iv. 5 

SPILTH- wept with drunken spilth. Ti"mono/.4!/i. ii.2 
SPIN— she can spin «?■)■■ ■■TwoGen.ofVerona, iii. I 

and spin it otf TwelflhNighl, i. 3 

iiot blood may spin in English Henry V. iv. 2 

SPINII— the regiment of the Spinii ..All'slVell.ii. 1 

SPINNERS, hence Mid N.'sDream, ii. 3 (song) 

made of long spinners' legs Romeo Sf Juliet, i. 4 

SPINSTERS and the knitters Twelfth Night, ii. 4 

have put off the spinsters, carders ..Heni-yVlI I. i. 2 

of a battle knows more than a spinster. . Othello, i. 1 

SPIRE— the spire and top of praises ..Coriotanus, i. 9 

SPIRIT— hast thou, spirit, perform'd Tempest, i. 2 

my brave spirit ! (rep.) — j.2 

thou wast a spirit too delicate — i. 2 

"what is't? a spirit? (r^ja.) — i. 2 

spirit, fine spirit, I'll free tliee i. 2 

it the ill spirit have so fair a house — i. 2 

my spirits," as in a dream, are all bound up — i. 2 

nor 1; my spirits are nimble ii. I 

his spirits hear me, and yet ii. 2 

here comes a spirit of his — ii. 2 

tlie spirit torments me ii. 2 

nor hath not one spirit to command . . — iii. 2 

to the dulling of my spirits iii. 3 

now 'gins to bite the spirits — iii. 3 

rather than want a spirit iv. 1 

may I be bold to think these spirits? .. _ iv. i 

spirits, which by mine art (.re*/).) iv. 1 

spirit, we must prepare to meet iv. 1 

my spirits obey; and time v. 1 

say my spirit, how fares v, 1 

dost thou think so, spirit? (jep.) v. 1 

my tricksy spirit! (rep.l v. 1 

these be brave spirits indeed! v. 1 

now I want spirits to enforce — (epil.) 

who then? his spirit? TwoGen. of Verona, Hi. 1 

if tlie gentle spirit of moving words ., — v. 4 

I do applaud thy spirit v. 4 

v.hat spirit, what devil Merry Wives, iii, 3 

the spirit of wantonness is iv. 2 

you have heard of such a spirit iv. 4 

dis-horn the spirit, and mock — iv. 4 

light and spirits will become it well — v. 2 

as I am a true spirit, welcome! — v. 5 

O spirit of love, how quick and . . TivelfihKight, i. 1 

thv limbs, actions, and spirit, do give i. 5 

and the spirit of humours intimate .. ii. .5 

let thy blood and spirit embrace.. — ii. 6 (letter) 

if spirits can assume both form — v. 1 

a spirit I am, indeed — v. 1 

spirits are not finely touched Mens. forMeas. i. I 

your renouncement, an immortal spirit — i. 5 

to visit the afflicted spirits here in .. ii. 3 

and the delighted spirit, to bathe in — iii. 1 
spirit to do anything tliat appears (rep.') — iii. 1 
heaven give your spirits comfort! . ... — iv. 2 
and wholsomest spirits of the night.. — iv. 2 
that spirit's possessed with haste .... — iv. 2 
have thought her spirit had been Much Ado, ii. 3 



by my own spirit; for I should flout him 
hath a very contemptible spirit .... 
spirits are as coy and wild as haggards 

nav, but his jesting spirit 

thus to light, smother her spirits up. . 
thought 1 thy spirits were stronger . . 

"ivhose spirits toil in frame of 

tlie pert and nimble spirit of niirtli .;!//-/. A' 
how now, spirit? wliither w ander you? - 

farewell, thou lob of spi .its 

too much the hafred of my spirit 

and woiulersat our quaint spirits .... - 
I nm a spirit of no common rate ..,. - 
that thou shalt like an airy spirit go 



i. 3 



SPIRIT- how now, mad spirit?.Af!d.iV.'»X)rea?n, iii. 2 

damned spirits all, that in cross-ways — iii. 2 

but we are spirits of another sort — iii. 2 

when a man of great spirits grows..Lo»e'»I..i,orf,i, 2 

It tttteth the spirit of a taiJster — j. 2 

my spirit grows heavy in love i! 2 

summon up your dearest spirits _ ii. | 

foolishextiavagant spirit, full of forms — iv. 2 

resembling spirits of light iv. 3 

the nimble spirits in the arteries .... — iv's 

nimble, stirring spirit, she might — v, 2 

heavenly spirits, vouchsafe not to — v. 2 

the liberal opposition of onr spirits .. v. 2 

to choke a gibing spirit, whose influence — v. 2 

throw away tliat spirit _ v. 2 

of modesty thy skipping spirit ..Mer. of Venice, ii. 2 

do somewnat drown my manly spirit — ii. 3 

are with mure spirit chased than _ ii. 6 

is no bar to stop tlie foreign spirits .. ii 7 

I will not jump with common spirits — ii. 9 

giddy in spirit, still gazing, and in doubt— iii. 2 

that her gentle spirit commits itself.. iii. 2 

unwearied spirit in doing coiurtesies iii. 2 

of manners, and of spirit iii. 4 

with a quietness of spirit iv. 1 

thy currish sjiirit governed a wolf .. — iv. 1 

Shalt see the ditference of our spirit.. iv. I 

your spirits are attentive v. 1 

motions of his spirit are dull as night v. I 

the spirit of my father {rep.) AsyonLikeit, i. 1 

your spirits are too bold for your years — i. 2 

how weary are my spirits! (rep.) .... — ii. 4 

an unquestionable spirit jii. 2 

can enlame my spirits to yourj — iii. 5 

to be the snufl? of younger spirits AWsWell, i. 2 

in thee some blessed spirit doth speak ii. 1 

and he is of a most facinorious spirit ii. 3 

must wear your spirits low y. 1 

to sparkle in the spirits of my v. 3 

be infused with so foul aspiritirommg-o/SA. 2(ind.) 

thou hildiii" of a devilish spirit (rep.) — ii. 1 

woo her with some spirit when she . . ii. 1 

if she had not a spirit to resist iii. 2 

pluck up thy spirits, look cheerfully — iv. 3 
and our weak spirits ne'er been .. IVinter'sTale, i. i 

threw offhis spirit, his appetite ii. 3 

send her abetter guiding spirit! .... ii. 3 

some powerful spirit instruct ii. 3 

the spirits of the dead may _ iii. 3 

I would your spirit were easier iv. 3 

would make her sainted spirit again — v. 1 

so be blessed my spirit! v. I 

took the spirits, standing like v. 3 

and which the spirit? ...'.....Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

curbing his lavish spirit Macbeth, i. 2 

that I may pour my spirit in thine .. — i. 5 

come, come, you spirits that tend.... j. 5 

your spirits shine through you iii. 1 

my little spirit, see, sits in iii. .5 

black spirits, and white; red spirits — iv. I (song) 

thou art too like the spirit of Banquo iv. 1 

the spirits that know all mortal .... v. 3 

the very spirit of Plantajjenet ! KingJohn, i. 1 

and fits the mounting spirit j. 1 

a braver clioice of dauntless spirits .. ii. 1 

whose laboured spirits, forwearied in ii. 1 

fier,y kindled spirits! ii. 2 

with my vexed spirits I cannot _ iii. 1 

or if that sm-ly spirit, melancholy .. _ iii. 3 

holding the eternal spirit, against .. iii. 4 

speak, with a prophetic spirit iii. 4 

of heaven hath blown his spirit out.. _ iv. I 

the spirit of tlie time shall teach — iv. 2 

my uncle's spirit is in these stones .. iv. 3 

the dauntless spirit of resolution .... v. 1 

and flesh his spirit in a warlike — v. I 

his spirit is come in, that so v. 2 

tame the savage spirit of wild war .. v. 2 

culled these fiery spirits from — v. 2 

put spirit in the French v. 4 

is, a bold spirit in a loyal breast .... liichard II. i. 1 

whose youthful spirit, in me i. 3 

I have a thousand spirits in — iv. I 

have the spiritof persuasion \HenryIV.i. 2 

full of peril and ad vent'rous spirit .. — i. 3 

thy spirit within thee hath been .... — ii. 3 

that fiend Douglas, that spirit Percy ii. 4 

I can call siiirits from the vasty .... — iii. 1 

asfuU of spirit as themonth of May iv. 1 

mastered there a double spirit — v. 2 

I did not think thee lord of such a spirit 
the spirits of Shirley, Stafford, Blunt 

this body did contain a spirit 

your spirit is too true, your fears . 

"Whose spirit lent a fire even to ..... 

but let one spirit of the first-born.... — 

that his forward spirit would lift .... 

but, for their spirits and their souls.. — 
practised upon the easj; yielding spirit — 

and the spirits of the wise sit in — 

you do draw my spi ri ts from me .... — 

give me the spirit, master Shallow .. iii. 2 

dove and very blessed spirit of peace — iv. 1 

believe me, I am passing light in spirit — iv. 2 

and inland petty spirits, muster me — iv. 3 

whisper music to my weary spirit.... _ iv. 4 

and inward duteous spirit teacheth.. iv. 4 

rebel or vain spirit of mine did iv. 4 

of his men's spiritsand his v. 1 

their spirits are so married in v. 1 

strike sail to spirits of vile sort! — v, 2 

bold, just, and impartial spirit — v. 2 

and with liis spirit sadly I survive .. — v, 2 I 

the flat unraised spirit, that Henry V. i. (chorus) i 

to envelope and contain celestial spirits i. 1 ; 

invoke his warlike spirit, and your ., — i. 2 ! 

meeter for your spirit, this tun of. ... i. 2 j 

thy spirits are most tall ii. I ' 

constant in spirit, not swerving .... — ii. 2 ' 

bend up every spirit to his full — iii. 1 ' 



v. 4 
V. 4 
— V. 4 
.2HenryIV. i. 1 



ii, 3 



SPIRIT— your spirit: and, upon this . . Henry K. iii 1 

and, with spirit of honour edged _ iij 5 

BO the spirit is eased jy | 

ObravespiritI Via! les eaux et ..!! — . iv' 2 
conjure up the spirit of love in her . . _ v 2 

spying his undaunted spirit IHenryVI i' I 

the spirit of deep prophecy she hath — i 2 

balisbiiry, cheer thy spirit with __ i 4 

practise and converse with spirits — ii' 1 

Roine shallow spirit of judgment _ ij' 4 

undaunted spirit in a dying breast .. — iii! 2 

invincible uncoiiquered spirit _ iv' 2 

drench his over-mounting spirit _ ' iv' 7 

my spirit can no longer bear those .. — iv' 7 

6uch a proud commanding spirit _ iv. 7 

may cheer onr drooping spirits v. 2 

and ye choice spirits that admonish.. _ v.' 3 
ye familiar spirits, that are culled.... — v' 3 

unchain j'our spirits now with _ v 3 

had to do with wicked spirits _ v! 4 

and undaunted spirit, (more than — v'.i 

a spirit raised from depth of 2HenryVI.i 2 

a woman of an invincible spirit — i'4 

and spirits walk, and ghosts break up — 14 

raising up wicked spirits from under — ii. 1 

not calm his contumelious spirit _ iii 2 

hast thou not spirit to curse thine ,. — iii 2 
inspired with the spirit of putting down — iv' <> 

possessed with devilish spirits _ iv. 7 

whose haughty spirit, winged with..3i/enri;/'/. i.' 1 

courteous, liberal, full of spirit _ i. 2 

my lord, cheer up thy spirits _ jj' 2 

a woman of this valiant spirit should — v! 4 

of like spirit to himself _ y. 4 

'tis a blushing shame-faced spirit.. Richard 111. i. 4 
bid good-morrow with such spirit .. — iii. 4 
yet so much is my poverty of spirit — iii! 7 

[Coi.Kii/.J match not his haughty spirit — iv. 2 
whisper the spirits of thine enemies.. — iv. 4 

yet much less spirit to curse iv. 4 

I have not that alacrity of spirit .... v! 3 

challenged the noble spirits to arms.HenryVIII. i. 1 

and with bold spirit relate what _ i. 2 

but, to stubborn spirits, they swell . . _ iii. 1 

a noble spirit, as yours was put _ iii. 1 

some spirit put this paper in — iii, 2 

can thy spirit wonder, a great man.. iii. 2 

spirits of peace, where are ye? _ iv. 2 

(as, they say, spirits do,) at midnight — v. 1 
tickling skittish spirits ..Troilnx * Cress, (prologue) 
and spirit of sense hardas the palm.. — i 1 

soul and only spirit, in whom _ j. 3 

the meanest spirit on our partv ii. 2 

amazement to their drowsy spirits .. _ ii. 2 

that most pure spirit of sense — iii. 3 

speak it in my spirit and honour — iv. 4 

that spirit of his in aspiration _ iv. 5 

her wanton spirits look out at every — iv 5 
whereout Hector's great spirit flew .. — iv. 5 

hey-day, spirits and fires! y. 1 

and grieve his spirit, that dares not.. — v. 2 
all these spirits thy power hath. Timon of Athens, i. 1 
a noble spirit. Nay, my lords, ceremony — i. 2 

tis a spirit; sometime, it appears like — ii. 2 

to thirteen, this spirit walks in — ii. 2 

for a towardly prompt spirit, give thee — iii. 1 
every flatterer's spirit [Co(.K/i(.-sport] — iii. 2 
a noble fury, and fair spirit, seeing.. _ iii. 5 
and, not to swell our spirit, he shall _ iii. 5 
O abhorred spirits! not all the whips — v. i 

express in thee thy latter spirits — v. 6 

with those that have the spirit Coriolanus, i. 5 

death, that dark spirit, in's nervy.... ii. j 

straiglit his doubled spirit re-quickened — ii. 2 
had touched his spirit, and tried .... — ii. 3 

are out of, with a gentler spirit _ iii. 1 

wants not spirit to say, he'll turn .. iii. 1 

if he can thereto frame his spirit .... iii. 2 

and possess me some harlot's spiriti — iii. 2 

extremity was the trier of the spirits — iv. 1 

resume that spirit, when vou — iv. I 

some part of that quick spirit JuliusCtesar, i. i 

Brutus will start a spirit as soon — i. 2 

scorned his spirit that could be moved — i. 2 

infused them with these spirits _ i. 3 

governed with ourmother's spirits .. — i. 3 

retentive to the strength of spirit — i. 3 

the melting spirits of women ii. 1 

the insnppressive mettle of our spirits — ii. 1 
the spirit of Csesar; and in (ctp.).... — ii. 1 

with untired spirits, and formal — ii. 1 

liast conjured up my mortified spirit — ii. 1 

and master spirits of this age jii. 1 

if then thy spirit look upon us now — iii. 1 

and Cajsar's spirit, ranging for revenge — iii. I 
an Antony would ruffle up your spirits — iii. 2 

motion governed b.v my spirit iv. i 

I coidd weep my spirit from mine eyes! — iv. 3 
what thou art. Thy evil spirit, Brutus — iv. 3 
ill spirit, I would hold more talk with — iv. 3 

for lam fresh of spirit, and resolved v. 1 

thy spirit walks abroad, and turns our v. 3 

there's a great spirit gone! Antony SfCteo. i. 2 

I would you had her spirit in such .. — ii. 2 
that's thy spirit which keeps thee .. — ii. 3 

thy spirit is all afraid to govern _ ii. 3 

and make thy spirits all of comfort! — iii. 2 

o'er my spirit thy full supremacy .. — iii. i) 

but it would warm his spirits iii. 1 1 

like the spirit of a youth that iv. 4 

now, my spirit is going; I can no more — iv. 13 

of that huge spirit now is cold iv. 13 

a rarer spirit never did steer humanity — v. 1 
show the cinders of my spirits through — v. 2 
I do know her spirit, and will not ..Cymbeline, i. 6 
the locking UD the spirits a time .... — i. 6 

hisspiritsfly out into my story .... _ iii. 3 

most willing spirits that promise — iv. 2 

part, shame, part, spirit renewed _ v. 3 

no more, you petty spirits of region low — v. 4 



SPI 



I 711 J 



. Leart 



— iv. 7 



SPIRIT— spirits quail to remember ,.Cymbelinc,y. 5 
then cheer thv spirit: for kiww . . Tittu^lnilron. iv. 4 
thatcoildingspiiit liaiUhey from.... — v. 1 
neither pleasure's art i-iiii joy my spirits. /VriclM, 1.2 
kindle again the over-pressed spirits — in. 2 

and of how cowed a spirit 

when he saw my best alarumed spirits , 

nuncle, here's a spirit iri-p.) 

it is the cowish terror of his spirit 

would stretch thy spirits up into tlie air 
do not their visible sjiirits send quiclily . 

let not my worscr spirit tempt me 

you are a spirit, I Itiiow 

and mv best spirits are l)cnt to prove — v. .1 

to raise a spirit in liis mistress' . . Ilomeo Sf Juliet, ii. 1 

that sttlbmt spirit hnth aspired — iii. 1 

tliou did'st bower tlie spirit of a fiend — in. 2 

shall seize each vital spirit — jv. 1 

hours in tlie night spirits resort. .. ... — iv. 3 

on unaccustomed spirit litts me above — v. l 
tliey say, you spirits oft wallc in death ..Hnmlet, i. 1 
the extravagant and erring spirit hies .. — i. 1 
they say, no spirit dares stir abroad .... — i. 1 

this spirit dumb to us, will speak — i. 1 

my father's spirit in arms I all is not well — ). 2 
wherein tlie spirit Iield his wont to walk — i. i 

be tliou a spirit of health, or goblin — i. 4 

I am thy fatiier's spirit; doomed — i. 5 

rest, rest, perturbed spirit I — i.S 

the spirit, tliat I have seen, may be — i|-'.i 

(as he is very potent with sucli spirits) . . — 11.2 
but thy good spirits, to feed, and clotlie — 111.2 
my spirits grow dull, and fain I would . . — iii. 2 

in most great affliction of spirit ;... — iii. 2 

tliat spirit, upon wliose weal [A'ji(.-spiritJ — 111. 3 
fortli at your eyes your spirits wildly peep — 111. 4 
wliose spirit, with divine ambition puffed — iv. 4 

with all diligence of spirit — v. 2 

poison quite o'er-crows my spirits — y. 2 

my spirit, and my place, have in them . . Othello, 1. 1 
of spirit so still and quiet, that her motion — 1. i 
give renewed tire to our extiucted spirits — li. 1 
nolile swelling spirits, that hold their — ii. 3 

thou invisible spirit of wine — .ii. 3 

1 bear vou with franker spirit — in. 3 

I see, t)iis hath a little dashed your spirits — 111. 3 
with a learned spirit, of human dealings — 111. 3 
his spirits should bunt after new fancies — 111. 4 

60 help me every spirit sanctified — ni. 4 

liath puddled his clear spirit — m. 4 

I would not kill thy unprepared spirit .. — y. 2 

SPIRITED with wine Henry V. 111. b 

SPIRITING— do my spiriting gently ..Tempest, i. 2 
SPIRITLESS— so spiritless, so duU ..HJenri/ll'.i. 1 

SPIRIT-STIRRING drum Olhella, ni. 3 

SPIKIT0AX. counsel had, shall ..Winler'sTale. 11. 1 

upon our spiritual convocation llenri/f. 1. 1 

touching thv spiritual function \Hemyri. 111. 1 

than your higli profession spiritual. Henr;/' III-}}- 4 

and fixed on spiritual object — lii- 2 

scarce time to steal from spiritual .. — 111.2 

SPIRITUALITY will raise your HemyV.\. 2 

SPIRT up so suddenly into — iii. S 

SPIT— she spit in his face . . Measure for Measure, 11. 1 

made Hercules have turned spit MucliAdo,n. 1 

like a rabbit on a spit Love'sL. Lost, 111. 1 

epit [Kn'.-spet] upon my Jewish. Jl/ercA. of I enice, 1. 3 
spit r A'n(.-spet] on me on Wednesday — 1. 3 
tospit [A'ii(.-spet]ontheeagain...... — .1.3 

whose ambitious head spits in the face — 11.7 
weep for liim, then spit at him ../Isi/ou Likeit,\\\. 2 
when they are out, they will spit .... — i.v. 1 

spit in the hole, man Tarrung of Shrew, 111. 1 

looked big. and spit at him fVmter s 7 tile, ly. 2 

the pig falls from the spit .... Comedy of Errors,!. 2 

would^st thou not spit at me — i}- '^ 

to spit forth tlieir iron indignation ..KingJnlm, 11. 1 
that spits forth death, and mountains — 11. 2 

defy him, and I spit at him Richard U. 1. 1 

and spit it bleeding, in bis high — .1. 1 

and spit upon him, whilst I say — ly. 1 

spit in my face, call me horse IHenrylr.n. 4 

Iwonld I might never spit white....2H<!/ir(//( . 1. 2 

the Alps doth spit and void bis Henri/ f- in. 5 

why do^t thou spit at me? Richard III. 1. 2 

tongues spit their duties out Henry nil. i. 2 

to cough, and siiit, and with . . Troilus ^ Cressida, 1. 3 
clean enough to spit upon ....Timonof.Wiens, ly. 3 

when it spit forth blood Corwlanus, 1. 3 

wives witn spits, and boys with stones — iv. 4 

Bpit. and throw stones, east mire Cymleline, v. ft 

a pis, prepared to the smt,. .. .Titus Androntcus, ly. 2 

wi 1 1 thou spit all thyself ? Pericles, 

thou may'st cut a morsel off the spit . . — 

spit, fire! spout, rain: ....; Lear, 

with red burning spits come bizzmg .... — ni. 6 
spit his body upon a rapier's inmit.UomeoeiJul. iv. 3 

SPIT AI/— no: to the spital go. Henry V. n. \ 

that my Nell isdead in the spital — .v. 1 

SPIT.VL-IIOtJSE, and uleoroiis . . Timon of Ath. iv. 3 
SPITE-changc is the spite ..TwoGen. of Verona, iv. 2 

crowned in his master^s spite TwelfihMght,v. 1 

to spite a raven's heart within -- v. 1 

in spite of your heart, I think MuchAdo,y. 2 

if von spite it for my sake, I will spite — y. 2 
Ospite! tooold{.<-p.iii.2*v.l).JlfiJ.JV.»Dr«am, 1. 1 

this false sport in spite of me — !.'!• 2 

and revenge this spite — »•.• 2 

spite of cormorant devouring LoresL.Lntt, 1. 1 

the more his spite appears . . Taming of Shrew, iv. 3 
that which spites me more than all.. — iv. 3 
O spite of spites! we talk K'Mi.Comedijqf Errors, \i. 2 

iiotliiiig but to spite my wife — in 1 

he did me none; the more my spite.. — .i.y. 2 

what I do, to spite the world Macbeth, iii. 1 

and sleep in spite of thunder — .i.y. 1 

interriiption, spite of France? King John, 111. 4 

Faulcoiibridgc in spile of siiitc, alone — ..y. 4 

keep you king, in spite of all Ilichard II. 111. i 

this is the deadly spite that angers.. I Henry /r. 111. » 



iv. 3 



SPITK— time and spite dare bring ....i Henry IJ. i. 1 

in spite of pope, or dignities 1 Henry VI. 1. 3 

in spite of us, or aught that we — .!• 5 

friends, in si)ite of llice, shall wear .. — .!)■ 4 

in spite of Burgundy, and all his — in. 3 

more rancorous spite, more furious .. — ,'^'1 
the spite of man prevailcth against ..2Henn/'7. i. 3 

walls in spite of me the owner — iv. 10 

keeps bis leaves in spite of any storm — v. 1 

fin- sliamc, speak not in sjiitc — .V. 1 

and, spite uf spite, needs niiKt I SHenryyi.n. 2 

that 1 may coiKiuor fni-tiii.e's spite .. — iv. 6 
O uiibid spite! is spoitCiil Edward .. — ..y. 1 
in spite of fortune will bring me.. Henry riU. 111. 2 
luck, in very spite of cunning. ■/•ro/diKj-C'ressii/u.y.S 
with poisonous spite and en\'y..Timono/Athens, 1. 2 

live in all the spite of wreakful — iv. 3 

who in spite, put stuff to some — iv. 3 

but in mere spite, to be full Coriolanits, iv. 6 

thy spite on mortal flies Cymhelme, y. 4 

and spite of all the rupture of the s&a,..l'ericles, n. I 

but curb it, spite of seeing — .Y- 3 

delivered letters spite of intermission Lear. 11. 4 

flourishes his blade in spiteof me.nomeo4-./ii'ie(, 1. 1 

that is hither come in spite — .!• 5 

that were some spite; my invocation — .11. 1 

bad enough, before their spite — ly. I 

O cursed spite! that ever 1 was born.... Ha;n«e<, 1. 5 

let him do bis spite: my services Othello, 1. 2 

and she— in spite of nature, of yeai's — .1.3 

the spite of hell, the fiend's aich-moek .. — iv. 1 

SPITED— wronged, spited, slain !. Borneo Sf Juliet, iv. 6 

SPITEFUL-son, spiteful, and wrnthfiil..i/o<*c//:,rn. ."i 

as for your spiteful false objections, .a//'"'.'/''/.. 1. 3 

issue of my spiteful execrations. 7Vo./"s /i Viess.ii. 3 

SPITTED— infants spitted upon pikes. f/ciwi/ ''. in. 3 

SPITTING— hawking, or spitting.. /!« ynnUke il, y. 3 

SPLEEN— yon desire the s^Aeen. Twelfth Night, 111. 2 

with our spleens, would ..Measure for Measure, 11. 2 

that in a spleen, unfolds holh... Mid. N.'sDream.x. 1 

tliy silly thought, mv spleen Love'sL.Lost, 111. 1 

that in tills spleen ridiculous appears — .v. 2 

conceived of spleen, and born AsynuLikeil, iv. 1 

the over-merry spleen .. Taming of Shrew, 1 (.indue.) 
a mad-brain rudesby, full of spleeu.. — in. 2 
fierce dragons' spleens; have sold ..KmgJohn, 11. 1 
with swifter spleen than powder can — .11. 2 
or teach thy hasty spleen to do me . . — iv. 3 
and spleen of speed to see your majesty — y. 7 

hath not such a deal of spleen 1 HenrylV.u. 3 

inclination, and the start of spleeu .. — 111.2 

governed by a spleeu :allhis — .v.2 

quickened with youthful spleen.... Iffcuri/' '• ly- « 
my soldiers of their liated spleen. ...3Henr!/r;. 11. 1 
outrage, end thy damned spleen ..Richard 111. 11. 4 
inspire us with the spleen of fiery.... — y. 3 

vou charge not in your spleen HenryVIIl.i. 2 

I have no' spleen against you — ;; • 4 

arrogaucv, spleen, and pride — . i]- 4 

in pleasure of my spleen Troilus Sf Cressida,i. 3 

as might offend the weakest spleen .. — n- 2 
performance of our heaving spleens.. — .11.2 
it is a cause worthy my spleen. VVmoii of Athens, in. 5 
the spleen of all tlie under fiends . . Coriolanus, iv. 6 
digest tlie venom of your spleen ..JuliusC<esar, iv. 3 

create her child of spleen ^""':.\- ■* 

truce with the unruly spleen . . Romeo ^Juliet, 111. 1 

you are all in all in spleen, nothing Othello, ly. 1 

SPLEENFUL sons this trull . . Titus^nJroniciis, 11. 3 
SPLEENY-aspleeny Lutheran ..HenryVlII. iii. 2 
SPLENDID— their splendid mutiny . 2 He»n/r;. in. 2 

SPLENDOR of his precious eye King John, m. 1 

to rejoice in spleudor of mine own.. Komco f/Jul. 1. 2 
SPLENETIVE-not splenetive and rash.Ham/c/, y. I 
SPLINTED— but lately splinted ..Richard III. 11. 2 
SPLINTER— splinter of a lance... 7>oi;«j 4- Crfss. 1. 3 

scared the moon with splinters! Coriolanus, ly. 5 

entreat her to splinter 0(/iri/o, 11. 3 

SPLIT— we split! wespliti (rep.) ... Tempest, 1. 1 

three glasses since, we gave out split .. — y. 1 

after our ship did split TweinhNighl, 1. 2 

to tearacat in, tomake all split ..Mid.ft. sUr.i. 2 

bosoms, split my breast ZHenryU. 11. G 

the ship splitson the rock............. — „, X- * 

when he shall split thy very lieart..«tc/iar'J III. 1. 3 
nuoth she, shall split thy heart with — y. 1 

Ishall split all in pleasure of ..TroilusSr Cress. 1. 3 

and split thy brazen pipe — i'- 5 

of your spleen, tho' it do splityou.Jui'usC«!»ni-, ly. 3 
mine own tongue splits what it. . Antony iCleo. 11. 7 
him safe, is wrecked and split. . Pericles, li. (Gower) 

wilt thou? blow and split thyself — m. 1 

let sorrow split my heart, if ever /.rar.y.s 

to split the ears of the groundlings HaraW, 111. 2 

SPLIT'ST the unwedgeable and. . Meas.forMeas. 11. 2 
dot not, thou split'st thine own .. ll'inter'sTale, i. 2 

SPLITTED in the midst Comedy of Errors, i. 1 

so cracked and splitted my poor tongue — ..y- 1 

even as a splitted bark; so sunder. .2//eiiri/rf. 111. 2 

did lend it, splitted the heart.... J"'on!/<5-f^'''''-..y- ' 

SPLITTING rocks cowered in the . .2 Henry I' I. in. 2 

yea, with a splitting power Henry I III. 11. 4 

when the splitting wind makes.. 7Voiii(.« <S Cress. 1. 3 

returns, splitting the air with noise. Cojiotaiiiu, v. .'i 

SPOIL— st:atagems, and spoils.. A/erc/i. ori enice.y. I 

in the spoil of her honour Alt sll'eU,xv. 3 

only it spoils the pleasure of the Macheth, 111. 4 

thou dost shame that bloody spoil. . KiHS-./0/in, 111. 1 

Is not this an honourable spoil? \Henryly. }. 1 

company, hath been the spoil of me — in. 3 
spoil [Col.-tear, Kn'.-taintJ and Imvock.nfnri// . 1. i 

like a miser, spoil bis coat — .!••■', 

the enraged soldiers in their spoil . . — in.- ;> 
deadly murder, spoil, and villaiiy .. — in.3 
can do no more spoil upon my face . . — .X- 7 

loaden me with many spoils 1 Henry I /. 11. 1 

doth front thee with apiiarent spoil.. — iv. 2 
to spoil the city, and your royal. ...2Heiirtf;'/. iv. 4 
soldiers, defer the spoil of the city .. — iv. 7 
but by the spoil, unless by robbing .. — iv. 8 



SPO 

SPOIL— that spoils her young beforc..3Htnr|/ ri. ii. 2 

the wolf, that makes this spoil — y.* 

love witli such a bloody spoil ....Richard III. iv. 4 

and spoil your nobler soul! Henryl'III- i. 2 

sluttish spoils of opportunity ..Troihii ^Crrsi. iv. 
to the wanton spoil of Phccbus' ....C'on'ofariui, ii. I 

as if'twere a perpetual sjioil — ii. 2 

our spoils he kicked at; and looked 

the spoil, got on the Aiitiates 

we looked for no less spoil, than glory 

our spoils we have bioiight home.. .. 

glories, triumphs, simils... Julii 



Signed in thy spoil, and crimsoned in 
his soldiers I'ell to spoil, whilst we 



— 111. -1 

— v. fl 

— v 5 
sCrFsar, iii. 1 

— iii. 1 

— y. 3 

laden with honour's spoils Ti(i«/4nt/roHic«», i. 1 

bent to the spoil they iiither — iv. 4 

and spoil [Co/.K>i(.-expense and waste] ..Lear, ii. 1 
and these same crosses spoil ine — v. 3 

SPOILED, and-yonder be is .. Taming of Shren; v. I 

in, or we are spoiled Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

hath spoiled the sweet world's KingJohn,ui. 4 

disorder, that hatli spoiled us Henry I', iv. fi 

that spoiled your summer fields ..Richard 1 1 I.y. 2 
Sicily SextusPompeius spoiled.. /4n/ony5 Cleo. iii. 

I airi spoiled, undone by villains! OtheUo,\. I 

SPOKE-methought the billows spoke.Tempest, in. 3 

fairly spoke, sit tlien, and talk — iv. 1 

or should have spoke ere this — v. I 

that it is spoke in bate Two Genof I'erona, iii. 2 

it is spoke as a christian Merry Wives, i. 1 

I have spoke; let him follow — ..i. 3 

as it were, spoke the prologue — m. li 

no better way than that they spoke of — iv. 4 

I have spoke with her — y. 2 

to her sorrow as it is spoke Twelfth Night, 1. 4 

thou hast spoke for us. Madonna — ..i. 5 

if it be Iionest you have siioke ..Meas.forMeas. 111. 2 

and one that hath spoke most — v 1 

liere comes the rascal I spoke of (rep.) — v. 1 

you, indeed, spoke so of fiira — v. 1 

what you have spoke, I pardon — v. 1 

I sjioke it but according to the trick . . — y. I 
in faith, my lord, I spoke mine (rep.)..ViichAdo, i. 1 

not to be spoke of; there is not — iv. 1 

not what she did, when she spoke to me — y. 1 
thought to have spoke thereof ?...Virf.A'.'sDrf am, i. 1 

more tlian ever women spoke — j- 1 

I have for barbarism spoKC more.. f.oi'e"sL.I.oi/, 1. 1 

I spoke it, tender Juvenal — i- J 

was never spoke before — v. 2 

but, while 'tis spoke, each turn away — v. 2 

vice you should have .spoke — .y. 2 

thy master, spoke with me -. Merchant of Teniee, 11. 2 

we have not spoke us yet of — .ii- * 

I spoke with some of the sailors — iij. _• 

after some oration fairly spoke by .. — iii. '2 
I have spoke thus much, to mitigate — .'Y- 
would not have spoke such a word. As youLiUe it, i. I 
the vouth that spoke to me erewhile? — in. * 

1 would kiss before I spoke — iy- 1 

the king very lately spoke of him All'sWell,\. 1 

I have spoke with one, that — ii. [ 

of what I spoke, unpitied let me — n. ' 

from you, spoke with the kin" — .11. 5 

had I spoke with her, I could have .. — 111. 4 
and show you the lass I spoke of .... — iii-6 

1 spoke with her but once — lii- ^ 

have you spoke? All that he is hath — v. 3 

I have spoke the truth — .y. 3 

virtues spoke of, and thy beauty.. TamingofSh. 11 I 

spoke like an officer — y- 2 

I spoke to thepurpose {»vp.l lyinter sTale, 1. 2 

you never spoke what did become .. — ..i- 2 
whose love had spoke, even since it .. — ni- 2 

but I have spoke with one that Mactieth._ 1. t 

wasitnotyestcrday we spoke together?.. — lii. 1 

what yon have spoke, it may be — iv. 3 

she has spoke what she should not — v. 1 

but spoke the harm that is by KingJnhn, in. 1 

hast thou not spoke like thunder — i.n 1 

and ne'er have spoke a loving word .. — iv- ' 

soiike like a spritefnl noble — iv- 3 

whoever spoke it, it is true, my lord.. — y. .■) 

what I have spoke, or thou canst Richard 11. ).\ 

he liears Owen Glcndower spoke of.lHenry IV. iii. 1 
not such a word spoke of in Scotland — iv. I 
spoke your descrvings like a chronicle — v. 2 

spoke CKnr.-spake] at a venture ZHenrylV.)- I 

and spoke it on purpose, to try my .. — .11. 4 

go to ; I have spoke at a word -^ in. 2 

ere you with grief had spoke — iv.4 

why, there spoke a king: lack nothing — .v. 3 

Nym, thou hast spoke the right Henry I.y. I 

what he has spoke to nie, that is well — ni. (> 
far truer spoke than meant (rep.) ..iUenryl'l. in. 1 
'tis resolutely spoke. Not lesulutc .. — iii. 1 
and now we three liave spoke it .... — ni. I 
thou hast spoke too iniieli olready ..ZHenryl'l. i. 1 
and more he spoke, which sounded like — v. 2 

spoke like a tall fellow Richardlll \ 1 

spoke of brotherhood? who spoke — — .11. I 
the people were not 11 ed to be spoke to — iii. 7 
but iiothinK spoke in warrant from .. — ni. 7 

be not you spoke with, but by — in. 7 

the duke will not he spoke witliuL... — 111. 7 

words spoke bv a holy monk Henryl'III. i. 2 

that, what bespoke, my chaplain to no — i. 2 

for I was spoke to, with sir Henry .. — .i.3 

much he spoke, and learnedly — li- 1 

and something spoke in choler — li- I 

niid sav, I spoke with you — ;i. 3 

1 have spoke long: he pleased j'ourself — 11. 4 
means fairly, shall be spoke .. Troilu^ ^- Cressidn, i. 3 
every syllable that here was spoke .. — v.2 

mvself liave spoke in vain Timon of Athens, i. 1 

tbiit's well spoke. Cnmmend me — — v.2 

I have spoke the least — y. 3 

in view; but have not spoke yet ....Coriolanus,}. * 
there's wondrous thinps spoke of him — ii. • 
spoke he of me? lie did, my lord , 



— iii. I 



SPOKE— valour spoke not for them.. Coriolan 

repent what you have spoke — ' iii. 2 

each word thou hast spoke liath — iv. 5 

it is spoke freely out of many mouths — iv. 6 

that I would have Bijoke of — v. 5 

ay, he spoke Greek Julius Ciesar, i. 2 

Romans, that have spoke the word . . — ii. 1 
1 alone, till Antonj' have spoke .... — iii. 2 
not to disprove what Brutus spoke . . — iii. ? 
when I spoke that, I was ill-tempered — iv. 3 

that what I would have spoke Aniomj ^Cieo. i. 5 

worthily spoke, Mecrenas — . ii. 2 

pardon what I have spoke; for 'tis .. — ii. 2 
touched with what is spoke already. . — ii. 2 

'would we had spoke toccther I ii. 2 

she spoke, and panted, tnat she did .. — ii. 2 
havedone, and not have spoke on't! — ii. 7 

spoke scantily of me: when perforce — iii. 4 

say that the last I spoke was _ iv. 1 1 

whilst he stood up and spoke, he was — v. 1 
I have spoke already, and it is provided — v. 2 

approbation of what I have spoke Cymheline, i.5 

I nave spoke this, to know ifyour.... — i. 7 

being, as it is, much spoke of — ii. i 

perchance he spoke not ii. .'i 

those legions wliich I have spoke of. . — iii. 7 

I love thee, I have spoke it — iv. 2 

but she spoke it dying, I would not.. — v. 5 
I am sure he would have spoke to us — v. 5 

which, to be spoke, would torture thee v. 5 

1 have spoke it, and I did it — v. 5 

what villain was it spoke that Titus Andron. i. 2 

he should have striick, not spoke I'ericles, iv. 3 

1 did not think thou could'st have spoke — iv. 6 

too late have spoke and done Lear^ i. 4 

spoke with how manifold and strong .... — ii. 1 

is this well spoke now? — ii. 4 

this is the letter he spoke of — iii. 5 

you spnke not with her since? — iv. 3 

demanded, ere you liad spoke so far .... — v. 3 
speech be spoke for our excuse?. . llomeo ^- Juliet, i. 4 

faintly spoke after the prompter — i. 4 

fain fiiin deny what I have spoke — ii. 2 

I spoke with his man ii. 4 

Romeo, that spoke him fair iii. 1 

more price, being spoke behind your — iv. 1 

it would be spoke to. Speak to it Hamlel, i. 1 

break all the spokes and fellies from — ii. 2 

had as lief the town crier spoke my lines — iii. 2 

to whose hucie spokes ten thousand — iii. 3 

spoke such scurvy and provoking terms. Olhello, i. 2 

the wind hath spoke aloud at hand — ii. 1 

when I have spoke of you dispraisingly.. — iii. 3 

■what is spoke comes from my love — iii 3 

all that's spiike is marred — v. 2 

SPOKEN— were I but where 'tis spoken.. Tempest, i. 2 
you liave spoken truer than you purposed — ii. I 
as of a kniijht well spoken .. TwoGen. of Verona, i. 2 

be spoken by one wliom she ' — iii. a 

spiiken with the woman t.rep.) Mern^lVirhs, iv. 5 

tliat's somewhat msflly spoken. .3/ras. for jl/ms. v. 1 
why, that's spoken like an honest.... Mnc/i/4do, ii. I 

are these thin''s spoken? (rep.) — iv. I 

they have spoken untruths — v. 1 

then is spoken; fare you well now .. — v. 2 
when you have spoken your speech. Jlf id. N.'sDr. iii. 1 
hast spoken no word all this wliile.LoD(?',vt.to.v;, v. 1 

I have spoken better of you, tliau All's Welt, ii. 5 

to your sworn counsel I have spoken — iii. 7 

iviien you have spoken it, 'tis dead .. iv. 3 

thon hast spoken all already — v. 3 

sir, but not to be spoken withal .. Tomingnrsh. v. I 

migiU have spoken a thousand tVinter'sfale. v. 1 

to Be seen, cannot be spoken of — v. 2 

what should be spoken here Macbeth, ii. 3 

I am as I have spoken — iv. 3 

and, 'tis spoken, to the succeeding .. — iv. 3 
out the worst that must be spoVei\. Ilicliard 11. iii. 2 

much shame, retold or spoken of MleiirijlV. i. 1 

scandalized, and foully spoken of — " i. 3 

shame, be spoken in these days — i. 3 

be further spoken, that you a're fooled — i. 3 

by this light, I am well spoken of ..iHenryir. ii. 2 
who hath not heard it spoken how .. — iv. 2 

correction of bragging be it spoken UenryV. v. 2 

well hast thou spoken, cousin iHenry f'l. i. 1 

why, that is spoken like a toward prince — ii. 2 

his grace hatii spoken well Henry VIII. ii. 4 

'tis nobly spoken; take notice, lords iii 2 

fair spoken, and persuading: loftv .. iv. 2 

'tis most noblj' spoken timon of.4lhens, v. 5 

he has spoken like a traitor Cnnotanus, iii. i 

for Rome, than thou hast spoken words — iv. 1 
'tis spoken well; were we hvtcm. Antony ^Cleo. ii. 2 
'tis nobly spoken. If it might please — ii. 2 

art or hap, he hath spoken true ii. 3 

would undergo what s spoken Cymbeline, i. 5 

thinks all is writ he spoken can. Pericles, ii. (Gowerl 

she has here spoken holy words iv. n 

for this three months hath not spoken to — v. I 
have you not spoken 'gainst tlie duke of., tear, ii. 1 

'tis dangerous to be spoken iii. 3 

methinks, you are better spoken iv. 

thou hast spoken riglit, 'tis true v. 3 

to my teen be it spoken Romeo i- Juliet, i. 3 

'fore (Jod, my lord, well spoken Hamlet, ii. 2 

'twere good, she were spoken with — iv. h 

as I have spoken for you all my best .Othello, iii. 4 
SPOKESMAN from madam Silvia rwoRen.o/'/'er.ii.l 

SPOKEST of Pigrogromitus TirelfihNight, ii. 5 

never spokest to better purpose .. il'm'ei's'l'ale, i. 2 
ves, thon spokest well of me . . Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

SPOON— I have no long spoon lemppst, ii. 2 

spoon meat, or bespeak a long spoon. Coin. q/' Err. iv. 3 
a long spoon, that must eat with the devil — i v. 3 

put but a little water in a spoon King John, iv. 3 

you'd spare your spoons Henry yi 1 1, v. 2 

the sijoons will be the bigger, sir — v. 3 

lendei^spoons, irons of a doit Coriotanus, i. 5 

SPORTS— some sports are painful ....Tempest, iii. 1 



ii 


1 


iji 


2 


III 


3 


111 


3 


iv 


2 


IV 


4 


IV. 


B 



— iii. I 



— iii. 2 



SPORT— very place, to come and sport .Tempest, iv. 1 

with willing sport Twoflen.of ferona, ii. 7 

I love the sport well Merry Hives, i. 1 

we have sport in hand >'i i 

I will tell you what our sport shall be — 

you shall have sport 

why then make sport at me 

yon shall see sport anon 

from their sport to make — 

to make us public sport 

while other sports are tasking 

heaven prosper our sport! v. 2 

and laugh this sport o'er by — v. 5 

that danger shall seem sport Twelfth. \ighl, ii. 1 

sport royal, I warrant you — ii. 3 

lose a scruple of this sport (re;;.) _ ii. 5 

then see the fruits of the sport _ ii. 5 

this sport to the upshot — iv. 2 

he had some feeling of the spott.Meas. for Meas. iii. 2 

thou think'st I am in sport '.MuchAdo.i. 1 

he would but make a sport of it — " a 

the sport will be, when they hold.... — 

lest she make sport at it ..' 

thou hast disturbed our sport. .A//d. A'. 'sD, , 

in their sport forsook his scene 

that must needs be sport alone 
patience, all to make you sport 

to fashion this false sport in — iii. 2 

this sport, well carried, shall be .... — iii. 2 
this their janglinglesteem asport.. — iii. 2 
the morning's love have oft made sport — iii. 2 

if our sport had gone forward iv. 2 

how many sports are ripe v. I 

unless you can find sport in their — v. 1 

our sport shall be, to take what _ v. 1 

ew.ain,aud he shall he our sport ..Lnvc'sL.Losl.i. 1 
and one that makes sport to the prince — iv. I 

very reverent sport, truly _ iv. 2 

to our sport, away y. | 

there's no such sport, as sport by sport — v. 2 

forestal our sport, to make us — v. 2 

that sport best pleases, that doth _ v. 2 

a right description of our sport, my lord v. 2 

have made our sport a comedy — v. 2 

in a merry sport, if you repay ..Mer. of Venice, i. 3 

at that sport, and stake down — iii. 2 

and devise sports; let me see As you Like it, i. 2 

I pr'ytliec, do, to make sport withal — i. 2 

nor no further in sport neither i. 2 

what shall be our sport then i. 2 

you have lost much good sport. Sport? — i. 2 

but what is the sport, monsieur i. 2 

breaking of ribs was sport for ladies — i. 2 

that he in sport doth call his — iv. 3 

make you some sport with the fox .. All's ll'elt, iii. 6 
made himself much sport out of him — iv. .'i 

I'll make sport with tliee — v. 3 

for I have some epnrtinimnd.. Tami7ig of Sh. 1 (ind.) 
feast and sport us at thy father's house — iv. 3 

what is this? sport? lVinter\Tale, ii. 1 

and let her sport herself with that . . — ii. 1 
let foolish gnats make sport.. Coinerfi/ of Errors, ii. 2 

'tis holy sport to be a little vain — iii. 2 

shall buy this sport as dear as all _ iv. 1 

beliold in me this shameful sport .... — iv. 4 

thou say'st his sports were hindered v. I 

in food, in sport, and life-preserving — v. 1 

hath used rather for sport than weed. King John, v. 2 

no, misery makes sport to mock Itic/mrd II. ii. 1 

what sport shall we devise here iii. 4 

no dancing, girl; some other sport .. — iii. 4 

the moral of this sport — iv. 1 

to sport would be as tedious 1 Henry IF. i. 2 

blows, and groans applaud our sport! — i. 3 

the which, for sport sake, are content ii. 1 

this is excellent sport, i' faith — ii. 4 

filled up with riots, banquets, sports ..Henry r. i. I 

and sheath for lack of sport iv. 2 

iiiito a peaceful comic sport IHenryTI. ii. 2 

Isaw not better sport these seven ..2Henry yi. ii. 1 
so suddenly, we had had more sport — ii. 1 

think it but a minute spent in sport — iii. 2 

fee'd, I see, to make me sport ZHenryVI. i. 4 

hours must I sport myself — ii. 5 

limbs of this great sport together . . Henry nil. i. 1 
hark! what good sport is out of.. Troiius^ Cress, i. 1 

but, to the sport abroad _ i. | 

and at this sport, sir Valour dies.... — i. 3 

more than your sport and pleasure . . — ii. 3 
like a book of sport thou'lt read me.. — iv. 5 
let's have some .sport with 'em.Timon of Athens, ii. 2 
ICol.Knt.'i piece is every flatterer's sport — 

turn terror into sport Coriolan 1 

he is given to sports, to wildness. . Juifits Cwsa 
many times shall Czesar bleed in sport — 

what sport to-night? Antony 4- CleopaL 

drums liim from his sport 

and, in our sports, my better cunning — 

'tis sport to maul a runner — 

here s sport, indeed! how heavy .... — ....„ 
make not, sir, your loss your sport ..Cymbeline, ii. 4 

now, for our mountain sport iii. 3 

I wish ye sport. Youhealth — iv. 2 

chariots let us have, and to our sport. Titus And. ii. 2 

being intercepted in your sport ii. 3 

well could I leave our sport to ii. 4 

thy griefs their sports, thy resolution — iii! 1 

tills was the sport, my lord iv. 3 

'twas trim sport for them that had . . v. 1 

when I told the empress of this sport — v. 1 

makes my pust miseries sport Pericles, v. 3 

there was good sport at his making Lear, i. I 

drunkards do more than this in sport.... ii. 1 

they kill us for their sjjort iv. 1 

unlooked for sport, comes well . . liomeo ^Juliet, i. 5 
away, begone; the sport is at the best — i. 5 

make malicious sport in mincing with. Hamlet, ii. 2 

sjjort and repose lock from me, day, and iii. 2 

for 'tis the si)ort to have the engineer.. .. — iii. 4 
dost thyself a pleasure, and me a sport ..Othello, i. 3 



ii.a 
iv. 3 

iv. 3 



SPORT---bnt for my sport and profit Othello 

made dull with the act of sport 

each man to what sport and revels his .' 

and she is sport for Jove 

isitsport? I think it is 

o«?^',f>!;i';U .'''"• f™ilty,as men have?".".".'. 

bPOKll'ULmahce it was Twelfth K^'ht v 1 

be chaste, and Dian sportful!.... 'Aiwiwiro/SA Ii' 1 
IS sportful Edward come? HHenryl'} v I 

l?n5^l?rS'^?"^*^.f • Good tidings .2;;er,r.//r. iv. 2 

SPOHTIVE-irora the sportive court.. J«'s/r<.H, iii 2 

not in a sportive humour now. Comedy nf Errors i 2 

c,?:!?r,"°' s'l'^l'eil for sportive tricks ..Richard III' i | 

O-lOl— 3'ou cannot see a white spot./lYe»ri/;(„.« jy ■; 

the drowsy east with spots of grey....il/«c/i/Wo, v. .3 

m their gold coats spots vou see . . Mid. A'.'« ih- i i 1 

not be one spot of love in't As ynuLike it, iii! 2 

with all the spots'o' the world All's H-eli v 3 

yet here's a spot Macbeth, v'.'l 

out, damned spot! out, I say! — y j 

with the crimson spots of blood . . . KiiigJohn. i v' 2 
upon the spot of this enforced cause — v2 

to rest without a spot fur evermore . . — v' 7 

yea, but not change their spots Richard II i \ 

away thy country^s stained spots ..IHenryVl. iii.' 3 
Bijotsof thy kindred were jurors.. 7'imoHoyVi^A. iv 3 

aline spot, in good faith Coriotanus i 3 

angry spot doth glow on Cxsar's ..JidimCmsar. i. 2 

look, with a spot I damn him _ Jy 1 

seem as the spots of heaven Antony * Cleo. i. 4 

like the greatest spot, of all _ jy 10 

OTO^^PT™?,^ black and grained spots .... Hamlet, iii. 4 
i- , •*''"~"'^1"^^" '^^P0tl'iss.«'!nto's7'a(e ii 1 

aHord, IS, spotless reputation Richard // i 1 

be his cause never so spotless Henryl' iv' I 

to force a spotless \iigin's chastity ..2Hemu I'l. v' I 

so rniich fairer, and spotless Henryflll iii •> 

palliament of white and spotless hue . . Titus And ( ■> 

ber spotless eh.astity, inhuman _ v'i 

bPOTXED and inconstant man.. i1/!i/.A".'sCreom i' 1 
you spotted snakes, with double.. — ii Sis.m't;') 

being spotted, is goads, thorns Winter' sTnle i 2 

upon their spotted souls for this. . . . Richard II iii ■> 
tliy gariTients are not spotted with ..Richard III. i 3 
spotted livers in the sacrifice .... 7roi7us* Cress v 3 
spotted die, let die the spotted.. Timon of Athens' v' .•> 
spotted, detested, and abominable. Titus Andron. ii' 3 
handkerchief, spotted with strawberries. OMe/(o,iii. 3 

ctIP-tto Yi"' '"^'^ '^'"O'l be spotted - v 1 

biOUSAL— such a spousal Henry f v •> 

apn?JLS'^5°"^"'"V",^'<' *""' spousal. 7V/,«/l,„;r„„. i'. 2 

teiOUhE of any noble gentleman.. ram.jig-o/'.S/,. iv. i 

kind embracements of myspoiise.Comet/uoy Err. i. 1 

think St thou my spouse to get? Hentyr.ii 1 

dSi^TT^'' °°' "'"' msni's sworn spouse. .../.c'lir, iii 4 
oPOUT— eyes became two spouts.. /iiji/er's7Vi/e iii 3 
came to spout against your town .... King John, i i ' 1 
let thy eyes spout blood .... 7Vo,V7(« ,§■ Cressida, i v. 5 
not the ilreadful spout, which shipmen — v. 2 
a tountain. \yith a hundred spnxits. Jul iusCcesar, ii. 2 
a conduit with three issuing spouts.. 7V/«s. -ind ii 5 
spout till yon have drenched our steeples.Iear iii 2 
spit, fire! spout, rain! nor rain .. _'iii''> 

iSSYn^^^ ^}°°'^ '° """'y 'Juliuiccesar,! I 

SiiS , ^t;tS°°<' syng memory Merry Wives, iv. 1 

CpS'^wR.L'r';' '"°,''^ '"' J",y '^^ fil'S' • • • ■ Coriolanv.s, i. 3 
cDu A^ . 1, "'''^"''<' "'ou s|jrang'st.3KeHrv/'7. v. 7 

llSf wT'f '"* ''■b''*.'' ^P''at you.. ..^«'s Well, iii. S 

bPRAWL-he may see It sprawl. 7'i7«v.:)ji.7.o;//>i;t v 1 

Ip&i^V'^'^.'"""' "^'^'^ W"'' '" <="d. ^HeZ^n'. v. 5 

1 ,, ~}'''"' 'ast-growing sprays ..Richard II. iii. 4 

shall a few sprays of us Henri, V. iii. 5 

this lottj' pine, and hangs his sprays.SWeKr'v ;■/. ii 3 
oT?D,';".''?.""',"'""'<^'''*P''iydidsweetlv ■illenryri ■ 
SI KJiAJJ— the same net spread for her. Much 

masters, spread yourselves 

I spread my 



Adn, i 



11. 2 

iv. 7 

iv. 13 



. Mid. .\. 
a spread my conquering miglit. . . . l.ore'sL I osi 'v' 2 
she IS spread of late into a goodly. (r,„/t.r's vWf'ii' 1 
Old the servants spread for diiiiief.Co)«edi/o/'iiVr. ii 2 
spread o'er the silver waves thy -1 iii '2 

spread his colours, boy, in thy behalf Amg-Zo/,,,, ii'. 1 
the air with colours idly spread .. — v 1 

good air: spread, Davy, spread 'iHenrnir v 3 

his arms spread wider than iHeniuVI i'l 

ot my name 'motigst them was spread — i' 4 
the Talbot, with his colours spread.. — iii' 3 

and with colours spread marched ZHenryl'I i 1 

once they see them spread: and spread — ' i' 1 

another spread on his breast Henryflll i 2 

there s an ill opinion spread then — 'ii' 2 

It 18 spread in general name. . Troilns 6,-Cressida. i' 3 

with tliy banners spread Timon of Alliens v 5 

beingof catching nature, spread ..Cnriotnnns iii' 1 

dust in others' eyes, to spread itself Pericles i 1 

when fame had spread their cursed — 'v' 3 

France spreads his banners in our I ear iv 2 

ere he can spread his sweet leaves. 7foi«eo'*Ji(;,e( i' ] 
spread thy close curtain, love-performin" — iii'2 
do not spread the compost on the weeds. Hamlet, iii' 4 

her clothes spread wide _ iv 7 

SPRE ADlNG-till, by broad spreading. I Henry ri. i. 2 
anL^'^.^'^^^'^'^,''"'"^^ spreading tree ... .3Henryri. v. 2 
SPKIU— nails, sprigs of rosemary. I ear i! 1 

SPRIGHTED with a fool; frighted Cvmbelinc ' 3 
'pRirHTfV'fi'-'''"?'' bold,!tays '.'.vrwiw"//.'!: I 

bJr'ltKjHiL.Y hie and motion AU'sWett ii I 

to entertain them sprightly Winter's Tale iv' 3 

and that sprightly Scot of Scots .. . I Hewn// r". ii' 4 
epSli(f^''V7' 1°'^ f °" *■?'' 'mongst . . Cy„,hei.ne, iii! 6 

OJ- l-ilJN(jr— the fresh springs Tempest i 2 

I'll show thee the best springs .. " _ ' 'ii' 2 

spring come to you at the farthest "— iv. 1 (soii'o) 
this spring of love resembleth.. 7'mio Sen. ofVer i°3 

by the roses of the spring 1 welfih s'i<rhi iii' 1 

the middle summer^ spring . . Mid. N.'sDream, ii! 2 

the spring, the summer _ Hi 

spring is near, when green geese ..Love'sL.Losl, i! 1 
bites the first-born infants of the spring _ i 1 

whence doth spring the true .... _ iv 3 



SPR 



[713 ] 



SPRING— this Vcr, the spring .... Lore sL. Last, v ! 
the spring time, the only . . As you Like it, v. 3 isong) 

eweet lovers love tl>e spring — v. 3 (song) 

had some flowers o" the spring .. Il'inler sTiile, iv. 3 

weleome hither, as is tlie spring — .v. 1 

even in the spring of love Cic)>.) Comedy r,f Err. in. 2 
so from thnt spring whence comfort.... A/ucde"!,.;.'-! 

the spring, the head, the fountain — n. 3 

their first head and spring Richard //. i. I 

and four wanton springs, end in a word — .1.3 

currents that spring from one — in. 3 

he that surtered this disordered spring — m. 4 
the green lap of the new-come spring? — v. 2 
in this new spring of time, lest you .. — v- 2 
farewell, thou latter spring! farewell.) Hemyll'. i. 2 

we, as the spring of all, shall pay — v. 2 

as in an early spring, wc see ^HenrylV.u 3 

congealed in the spring of day — iv. 4 

that shall first spring, and be most Henry V. ii. 4 

spring ciestless yeomen from so deep. 1 He»r!/ '''■.;;■ 4 
from whence you spring by lineal .. — ni. 1 

and as my duly springs, so perish — )n. 1 

now 'tis the spring, and weeds B.K..2lIenryh'I. iii. 1 

the purest spring 18 not so free — iii. 1 

troubles the silver spring — iv. I 

saw our sunshine made tliy spring. .3He»i-y I'l. ii. i 
that tender spray did sweetly spring — _n. 6 

no hopeful branch may spring — n;. 2 

whence springs this deep despair? — ni. 3 

springs not from Edward's well-meant — iii. 3 

now stops thy spring; my sea — iy. 8 

all springs reduce their currents ..liichard /".,n. 2 

lightly have a forward spring — iii. 1 

had made a lasting spring.. Henri/ fill. in. I (song) 
straight, springs outinto fast gait.... — >ii. 2 
and I'll spriug up in his tears Troitus^Cressida, i. 2 
break forth ahundred spriiigs.7'iHioiin/^"ie)is, iv. 3 

and what stock he sprinjjs of. Coriolanus.n. 3 

it is love's spring, and these Antony Si-Cleo. in. 2 

and in his spring became a harvest ..Cymbelinc,i. 1 

and slnit the spring of it — ii. 2 

at t'liose springs on chaliced flowers — n. 3 (song) 
here stands tlie spring vi\mm . .Tilus Andronicus, v. i 
small drops from thy tender spring.. — v. 3 

appareled like the spring, graces Pericles, i. 1 

who withered in her spring — iv. 4 (Gower) 

the main grief of all springs from.... — v. I 
good effects may spriu" from words of love. Lear, i. 1 

never spring a babe to honour her! — i- 4 

of the earth, spring with my tears! — iv. < 

back to your native spring Rnmeo 4- Juliet, iii. 2 

and know their spring, their head 



It springs all from her father s death . 

work like the spring that turnetli wood. . — iv. 7 

and unpolluted flesi^i may violets spring I — v. 1 

SPRINGE— if the springe hold.... IVinler'sTale, iv. 2 

ay, springes, to catell woodcocks Hamlet, i. 3 

as a woodcock to my own springe, Osrick — v. 2 
SPRINGETH-that springeth homComedyarErr. iii. 2 

SPiilNGING from one root Richardll. i. 2 

S PRING-TIiME flowers Taming nf SI, reir, i i . 1 

faster than spring-time showers iHenryl'l. iii. 1 

sliould cut off our spring-time so ..ZHetiryFLVy. 3 
keep eternal spring-time on thy face. TiiusAnd. iii. I 

SPRINKLE— should sprinkle me Ricliard II. v. 6 

sprinkle our society 7V>»on of Athens, iii. 6 (grace) 

and sprinkles in your faces your .... — iii. 6 

thy distemper sprinkle cool patience.. Htm W, iii. 4 

SPRlTE-sweet sprites, the burden. Tempest, i. 2 (song) 

an' if tliey be not sprites — ii. 2 

that shrewd and knavish sprite.Mi'd. AT. '«Difam,ii. 1 

every one lets forth his sprite — v. 2 

and fairy sprite, hop as light as — v. 2 

2uintessence of every sprite. /4s !/owi>'«'', iii. 2 (ver.) 
have one of sprites and goblins.. Winter'sTale, ii. 1 

to fright me with your sprites — ii. 1 

owls, and elvish sprites Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

and walk like sprites, to countenance...l/u<;(/e(/i, ii.3 

shall raise such artificial sprites — iii. ."i 

cheer we up his sprites, and sliow — iv. I 

if she were frayed witli a sprite. IVoiiiis 4- Ci ess. iii. 2 

SPRITEFUL noble gentleman KitigJohn, iv. 2 

SPKITELY brethren Troiiui (rCressida,\i. 2 

it's spritely, waking, audible Coriolnuus, iv. 5 

once for thy spritely comfort. ... /47i/o;i!/ <S-C;eo.iv. 7 
and with our spritely port make — — iv. 12 
withotlier spritely shows of mine ..Cymbeli/ic, v. 5 

SPROUT— grow and sprout as liigh..2/;. nri/ZK. ii. 3 

SPRUCE— t.jo spruce, too aft^cteil.. Love'$L. Lost, v. I 

hyperlioles, spruce affectation — v. 2 

now, my spruce coiyipan\on9. .TnmingqfShrefr, iv. 1 

SPRUNG from tlie rancorous ..Comedy of Errors, i. 1 
with lile he never more sprung up ..•illenryll'. i. 1 

never then had sprung like iHenryll. ii. 6 

and flowers, ever sprung Henry y I II. iii. 1 (song) 

again, tliere is sprung up a heretic .. — iii. 2 
that instant, like a babe sprung up.7Vrnoiio/.4'/i. i. 2 
unmanly melancholy sprung from .. — iv. 3 
brave slip, sprung from the great TitusAndron. v. 1 
love sprung from my only Utite[.. Itomeo ^ Juliet, i. 6 
of his grief sprung from neglected love. Hum/W, iii. 1 

SPUN-tlieir thread of life is spun ..i Henry ri. iv. 2 
all the varn she spun in Ulysses'.... Cort'ofaims, i. 3 

SPUNGE— be married to a 6punge..Wer.o/' Venice, i. 2 
besides, to lie demanded of a 8pun''e!.. HamW, iv. 2 
take you me for a spunge. my lord? .... — iv. 2 
and spunge, you shall be dry again — iv. 2 

SPUNCiY April at thy best betrinis . . Tempest, iv. 1 
what not put upim his spungy officers.. .VurljeM, i. 7 
more spungy to .suck in tlie sense. Troilus rif Creis. ii. 2 
wmged from tlie spungy south to ..'ymlieliue, iv. 2 

SPUR- and by the spurs pluck'd up.... Tempest, v. 1 
they spur their expedition.. 7Vo Gen. or Verona, v. 1 

anil set spurs, and away .Merry H'ivn, iv. 5 

did spur me forth Tvelfih Sight, iii. 3 

lets it straight feel the spur Meas. for Meat. i. 3 

he spurs on his power to qualify — iv. 2 

that spur me with such questions. Lore's L. Lost, ii. 1 
that spurs his horse but on At you Like il, iii. 4 



ii. 4 
..Hamlet, iv. 4 

Rirlmrd ll.v.i 

Alt's frelt,n. 1 

nd fifty — iv. 3 
~" ' oriW.iv.2 



SPUR— boots ond spurs and all Atl't irell,\i. :> 

in usurping his spurs so long — 'v. 3 

ere with spur we heat an acre tyintcr'sTale,\. 2 

counsel had, shall stop, or spur me .. — .n. 1 
■which is another spur to my departure — iv. 1 

sharp as liis spur, liath holp him Macbeth, i. Ii 

I have no spur to prick the sides — ..;■ 7 

now spurs the lated traveller — in. 3 

giving reins and spurs to my free ..Ilichnrd II. i. 1 

in thee no sharper spur? — .1.2 

betimes, that spurs too fast betimes.. — ii. 1 
and spur thee on with full as many — iv. 1 

fondly dost thou spur a forward .... — iv. 1 
upon his horse; spur, post: and get.. — v. 2 
Harry Percy's spur was cold (rep.) . .i Henry IV. i. I 

of Hotspur, cold spur? — . i. 1 

coursers daring of the spur — iv. 1 

from helmet to the spur, all blood .. — iv. 6 

spur to the rescue of the noble \ Henry V I iv. 3 

her fume can need no spurs 2 Henry VI. i. 3 

spur your proud horses hard liichard III, v.^ 

and spur them, till they obey Henry VIII. y. 2 

spur to valiant and magnanimous. 2Voi7.^Cress. ii. 2 

as hot as Perseus, spur thy — iv. 5 

spur them to ruthful work — .y. 3 

with that spur as lie would to. Timon of Athens, iii. G 

I may spur on my journey Coriolanus, i. 10 

what need we any spur, but our ..Julius CiB5ar,i\. I 
they should endure the bloody spiu-. . — iv. 2 

and hide thy spurs in him — v. 3 

make to him on the spur: yet he spurs — y. 3 
spur through Media, Mesopotamia..4ii'. <S-C(en. iii. I 

what both you spur and stop Cymbeline, i. 7 

both, mingle their spurs together — iv. 2 

if to that my nature need a spur Pericles, iii. 3 

spurs to make thee seek it Lear, ii. 1 

switch and spurs (rep.) Romeo &Jnh 

and spur mv dull revenge! .. 

SPUR-GALLED, and tired ... 

SPURIO— one captain Spurio. 

let me see; Spurio a hundred 

SPURN— she spurns my love 

as your spaniel, spurn me M id. N.'s Dream, lu 2 

who even but now did spurn me with — iii. 2 
to strike me, spurn me, nay, to kill.. — iii. 2 
as you spurn a stranger cur . . Merchant of Venice,}. 3 

again, to spurn thee too — i- 3 

do spurn me thus? you spurn me. Comerf;/ of Brr.ii. 1 

spit at me, and spurn at me — ii. 2 

he shall spurn fate, scorn death Macbeth, iii. 3 

whose foot spurus back the KingJolin,n. 1 

so wilfully dost spurn; and, force .. — iii. 1 
to spurn at your most royal image.. 2 Henri/ /r. y. 2 
spurn in pieces posts of adamant ....\ Henry VI. i. 4 

when he might spurn him with iHeuryl'l. i. 4 

and spurn upon tliee, beggar Richard III. i. 2 

wilt thou then spurn at Ins edict .... — i. 4 

spurns down her late-beloved ..Timon of Alliens, i. 1 

dog, or I'll spurn thee hence — ;• I 

that bears not one spurn to tlieir — i. 2 

unjust, and spurn me back ..... Coriolajius, v. 3 

no personal cause to spurn at him. J uliusCePsar,i\. 1 

I spurn thee, like a cur out of — iii. 1 

or I'll spurn tliine eyes like Antony S, Cleo.ii. 5 

and spurns the rush that lies before — iii. 5 

spurn her liome to her father Cymbeline, iv. 1 

would make me spurn the sea — .y- 5 

gives my soul tlie greatest epum. TitusAndron. iii. 1 

of knighthood, I disdain, and spurn Lear, v. 3 

and the spurns that patient merit .... Ham/e(, iii. 1 

spurns enviously ut straws; speaks — iv. 5 

SPURNED me such a day Merchant of Venire, i. 3 

SPURRED— will not be spurred. 7»o Gen. o/^/er. v. 2 
the king that spurred his horse so.. Lore'sL.L. iv. 1 

ne'er spurred their coursers at :i Henry VI. v. 7 

SPURRING— bloody with spurring.. «it/iarJ //. ii. 3 

after him, came, spurring hard 2//eiiri//;'. i. 1 

and mar men's spurring Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

SPY— thyself upon this island as a spy . . Tempest, i. 2 
but I mo.y spy more fresh .. TwoGen. ofVeiona, y. 4 

I spy entertainment in her Merry IVivet, i. 3 

I spy a great peard under — iv. 2 

I spy comfort; I cr.v, bail Meas.fnr Mcas. iii. 2 

I do spy some marks of love Much Ado, ii. 3 

when tliey him spy, as wild geese .Mid.N.'sUr. iii. 2 
and I am to spy her tliroiiL'h the wall — v. I 
to spy an' I can hear my Thishy'sface — y. 1 

with the perfect spy o' the time Maclielh, iii. 1 

ofdeath.Ispy life peering Richardll. ii. I 

trouble you, if I may spy them 1 Henry VI. i. i 

and, when I sp.y advantage i Henry VI. i. I 

I spy a black, suspicious 2llfiini Vt. v. 3 

to spy [Cni.Kni.-see] my shadow ..Richard III. i. 1 

I spy some nity in thy looks — i. 4 

takes upon lier to spy a white . . Troilus f. Cress, i. 2 
I spy. You spy! what do you spy? .. — iii. I 
tliey should sp.v my windpipe's .. TimonofAlh. i. 2 

cannot smell out, he may spy into Le(jr, i. 5 

(for now I spy a danger), I entreat — ii. 4 

would spy out such a quarrel?. . Romeo ^Juliet, iii. I 
I do sp.v a kind of hope, which craves — iy. 1 
my nature's plague to spv into abuses.. 0//i(7/o, iii. 3 

SPRING his undaunted spirit I Henry VI. \. 1 

bv spying, ond avoiding, fortiiue's..3//em!/ /'/. iv. G 
SPY'ST-if thou spy'st any, run and..l Hfiiri/ '7. i. 4 

SQUABBLE? swagger? swear? o//ie/;o, ii. 3 

SyUADllON-arc squadrons pitclicil.l Henry Vl. iy. 2 

in ranks, and>quadrons JulnisCtrsar, ii. 2 

set we our squadrons, on j'on' ..An'ony^Cleo. iii. 8 
that never set a squadron in the field ..Othello, i. I 

SCiUANDEHED abroad Merchant of Venice, i. 3 

StiUA.'^DERlNG glances of the ..A ynu Like it, ii. 7 
SCiUARE-but they do square ..jWi/..Y.',»»r..iiii, |i. 1 

that square our guess bv shows A It's Hell, ii. I 

the work about the square on't .. iriri/-'i'i7'.r/e, iv. 3 
swarm about our squuies of battle.... /'emi//'. iv. 2 
to square tue general sex .... I'roilui 6 Cresnida, v. 2 

it is not square, to take 7 iwioii of Athens, y. 5 

they should square between /jiiloii!/ 4' 'eo. ii- 1 

lady, if report be squore to her — n. 2 



STA 

StJUARE— not kept my square ..Antony ^Cleo. ii. 3 
no practice had in the brave squares — ..'.''•'-* 
mine honesty, and I, begin to square — iii. 1 1 
ench fools, to square for tln8?..7'i7uj/ln(/ionici«, ii. 1 
will not suffer you to square yourselves — ii. 1 

how franticly I square my talk! — iii. 2 

my queen's square brows Pericles, v. 1 

whicn the most precious square of Lear, i. 1 

S(iUARED-be squared by this .. Winter'tTale, iii. 3 

that ever I had squared me to thy — v. I 

SCiUARKR— no young squarer now ..MuchAdo.i. 1 
SQIIAK'ST thy file according .... Mens, for Meas. v. 1 

ScJUASII— as a squash is before Twelfth Sight, i. h 

commend me to mistress Squash.. il/irf.Af.'s Dr. iii. 1 

this kernel, this squash, this Winter' sTale,i. 2 

StiUEAK out your coziers' catches. TweinhNight, ii. 3 

did squeak and gibber in the Roman ., Hamlet, i I 

SQUEAKING rKiU.-squealing] of the. /17er.q/-Ken.ii. 5 

see some squeaking Cleopatra ..Antony SrCleo. v. 2 

SCiUEAL about the streets JtdiusCa-sar, ii. 2 

StiUEEZING you, and spunge, you — Handel, iv. 2 

SQUELK a Cotswold man 2Henry IV.iii.'i 

StiUINTS the eye Lear, iii. 4 

StiUINY at me? no, do thy worst — iv. 6 

SCiUIRE— the degree of a squire .. Merry H'ivet, iii. 4 
a proper squire! and who, and who?..WiicA Ado, i. 3 
then rich with my young squire ..Mid.S.'sOr. ii. 2 
knowniy lady'sfoot by the squire. / ore's /,.i,oj/, v. 2 

60 stands this squire ofiiced IVinter'tTule, i. 2 

a bearing-cloth for a squire's child 1 — iii. 3 

twelve foot and a half by the squire.. — iv. 3 

makes thee a landed squire King John, i. 1 

ns, that are squires of the night's \HenryIV. i. 2 

four foot by the squire further — ii. 2 

this Vice's dagger become a squire. 2Fe?ir.i///'. iii. 2 

and barons, knights, and squires Henry V, iv. 8 

make you to-day a squire of low degree — v. 1 

like to a trusty squire, did I Henry VI. iv. 1 

my queen's a squire more tight .Antony S/Cleo. iv. 4 

a squire's cloth, a pantler Cymbeline, ii. 3 

you keep a hundred knights and squires . . Lear, i. 4 

no squire in debt, nor no poor kniglit — iii. 2 

fve upon him some such squire he was. Olhello, iv. 2 

S(iUIRE-LIKE, pension beg to keep Lear, ii. 4 

SQUIRREL was stolen .... 7-//v.Oeii. or Verona, iv. 4 
that shall seek the squirrel's board .Mid.S.Lr. iv. 1 
made by the joiner squirrel ....llomeo ^Juliet, i. 4 

STAB— with bemock'd-at stabs Tempest, iii. 3 

poniards, and every word stabs .Much Ado, ii. 1 

thy intention stabs the H'inler'sTale, i. 2 

and his gashed stabs looked like .Macbeth, ii. 3 

call me coward, I'll stab thee 1 Henry IV. ii. 4 

our lives, for he will stab iUenryl V.ii. 1 

to stab at half an hour of — iv. 4 

shame! let's stab ourselves Henryr. iv.5 

shall I stab the forlorn swain? (rfp.)2 Hem !/r/.iv. I 

stab poniards in our flesh ZHenryVl.W. 1 

wliat, shall we stab him as Richard III. i. 4 

this sudden stab of rancour — iii. 2 

hang tlieui, or stab them, drown., rimoii o/.J/A. v. 1 

the noble Ciesar saw him stab lulius Ccesar, iii. 2 

that did stab, and not for justice? — iv. 3 

stab them, or tear them on . . Titus Andronicus, v. 2 

slab him, he's a murderer (rep.) — v. 2 

STABBED unto the heart. . Tmo Gen. of Verona, iv. 1 
wild Half-can that stabbed Pots.iWeaj.- for Meas. iv. 3 

I am stabbed with laughter I Lore'sL.Losi,v. 2 

he slabbed me in mine own house. .2//eiir!/"'. ii- ■ 
bastard hand stabbed Julius Ctesar .2 Hem !/»'7. iv. 1 

tha t stabbed thy father York 3 Henry ^7. ii . 4 

I stabbed your fathers' bosoms — ii. 6 

thty that stabbed Caesar, shed no — v. 5 

stabbed by the self-same hand tliat.7(ic/iard/7/. i. 2 
'twas I that stabbed youii" Edward.. — i. 2 

stabbed in my angry mood at — i. 2 

when my son was slabbed with bloody — i. 3 

stabbed me in the field by Tewksbury — i. 4 

he'll sav, we stabbed him sleeping .. — i. 4 

when liichard stabbed her son — iii. 3 

he is dead, that stabbed my Edward — iv. 4 
Cxsar had stabbed their mothers ..Ju/i'us Cwsar, i. 2 
whose daggers have stabbed Caesar .. — iii. 3 

the well-beloved Brutus stabbed — iii. 2 

stabbed with a white wench's ..llomeo K Juliet, ii. 4 

STABBING— not -tabbing steel .. IVintei'sTale, iv. 3 

for me to say a soldier lies, is stabbing . Othello, iii. 4 

ST AB'D.ST me in my prime liichard III. v. 3 

STABLE bearing TwrlnhSisht, iv. 3 

your husband nave stables enough.. 3/ucA /I t/o, iii. 4 

France is a stable; we that dwell Af.'siVell, ii. 3 

keep my stables where I lodge .. ll'inier'sTale, ii. I 

in litier of your stable planks KingJohn,v.2 

his barbed steeds to stables Richard II. iii. 3 

a poor groom of thy stable, king — v. 5 

see mv gelding in the stable (rep.) ..IHenri/IV. u. 1 
S'^r.'VBliENESS, bounty, perseverance.. /Waedert, iv. 3 
'STAKl-ISH quietness on every side.. I Henry VI. v. 1 
'STABLISH.MENT of Egypt. ...Antony 4- Cleo. iii. 6 

STAKE— I'll break my staff tempest, v. 1 

this staff is my sister TnoGen.of Verona, n. 3 

my staff understands mc (rep.) — .ii. 5 

hope is a lover's staff — ni. 1 

give him another staff; this last Much.iJo, v. 1 

there is no staff more reverend _ — v. 4 

let me hear a staff', a stanza Lore's L. Lost, iy. 2 

the boy was the very staff of my .Mer. o/Venice, ii. 2 

or a hovel-post, or a staff — ii. 2 

by Jacob's staff. I swear, I have — n. 6 

breaks his start" like a noble AiyouLikeit,i\\. 4 

shall I set in mv stafl? Comedy of Errors, in. 1 

give me my staff; Seyton Macbeth, v. 3 

removed bv a staff ot France King John, ii. 2 

broke bis staff, and resigned his ....Richard II. li. 2 
broken his start' of office, and dispersed — n. 3 

no long stuff, sixneniiv strikers MienrylV. u. I 

for vou, my start of oftice did I — v. 1 

hun'g upon the staff be threw 2HenrylV. iy. 1 

this staff mine oflice-liadge 'i Henry VI. i. 2 

give up thy staff !,«•(>.) — ii. 3 

noble Henry is my start — n. ^ 



STA 



STAFF of honour rauglit 2 Henry VI. ii. 3 

a staft"is quickly found to beat a dog; — iii. 1 

and fain to go with a staff — iv. 2 

is made to grasp a paliTier's stall .... — v. 1 
bear cliained to the ragged stall' .... — v. 1 

we liave no staff, nn stay I : 3 Henry F/. ii. 1 

shouUl make a staff to lean upon .Ant. fyCieo. iii. 11 

give me a staff of honour TitusAntltxinicus, i. •-' 

broken a stuff, or so; so let it pass Pericles^ it. 3 

hv his cockle hat anil staff Hamlet, iv. 6 Csong) 

STAFFORD dear tii-diiiluith bonght.l Henry/;'. V. 3 
will rcven;.'0 lord Stiiffnnrs death.... — v. 3 
tlies|iiritsufSbiilev,Stair.jrd. Blunt — v. 4 

"Westmoreland, and" Stafford, fled iHenrylV. i. 1 

shall with us; Staft'ord, take her •iHennjf'I. i. 4 

sir Huniplirev Stafford and irey. iv. 4) — iv. 2 
and lord Stafford, all a-breast l,iep.).3Henryl'I. i. 1 
Pembroke, and Stafford, vou in our behalf — iv. 1 

Stntlord, and Northampton Henry nil. i. 1 

STAFFORDSHIRE, and black ....iHeviyU: iii. 2 

STAG— 1 am here a "W ndsor stag. . Merry Ifives, y. 5 

a poor sequestered stag, that from. As you Like it, ii. i 

swift OS breathed stags .Taming of Slirew, 2 (indue.) 

and desperate stags, turn on 1 Henry I 'I. i v. 2 

yea, like the stag, when snow.... Jn(o7i!/<S-Cifo. i. 4 
thev should take him for a stag.. Titus Andron. ii. 3 

STAGE— played upon a stage TiretflhKight, iii. 4 

not like to stage me to their eyea.Meas./or Meas. i. 1 
a stage, wdiere every man must . . Mer. of Venice, i. 1 
this green plot shall be our stage ..M((/.A^.'sD7-. iii. 1 
all the world's a stage, and all ... . As youLike it, ii. 7 
on this stage, (where we offenders . Winter's Tale, v. 1 

act, threaten his bloody stage Macbeth, ii. 4 

fre ts his hour upon the stage — v. 5 

a well-graced actor leaves the at&ge.. Richard II. v. 2 

this world no longer be a stage 2 Henry I r. i. 1 

a kingdom for a stage, princes. . Henry I', i. (chorus) 

which oft our stage nath shown — v. 2 

supplying every stage with .... Antony fyCleo. iii. 6 

extemporally will stage us — v. 2 

imagination hold this stage Pericles, iii. (Gower) 

teach you the stages of our story — iv. 4 (Gower) 

com* to this great stage of fools Lear, iv. B 

two hours' traffic of our stage. iiomeo fy Juliet, (prol.) 
and so berattle the common stages .... Hamlet, ii. 2 
lie would drown the stage with tears .... — ii. 2 
high on a stage be placed to the view .... — v. 2 

bear Hamlet, like a soldier, to the stage v. 2 

STAGED to the show Antony Sf Cleopatra, iii. II 

STAGGER-lills it up, I stagger in.Meas.JorMeas. i. 3 

fearful heart, stagger in this As yoilLike it, iii. 3 

into the staggers, and the careless All's Well, ii. 3 

spoiled witli the staggers Taming of Shrew, iii. 2 

fire, that staggers thus my person . . Richard II, v. 5 

did at first so stagger me Henry yill. ii. 4 

how come these staggers on me? .... Cymbeline, v. f> 
STAGGERING, take this bas^ati.. Merry Wives, iii. 3 

STAIDER— my staider senses Cymbeline, iii. 4 

STAIN— no stain to your own . . Meas. for Meas. iii. 1 
honest slanders to stain ray cousin. . Much Ado, iii. 1 
with bloody mouth did stain ..Mid.N.'s Dream, v. 1 

if virtue's gloss will stain with Love' sL. Lost, ii. 1 

you have some stain of soldier in All's Well, i. 1 

we must not so stain our judgment .. — ii. 1 
such ado te make no stain a stain .. Wititer'sT. ii. 2 
stain your own with oily painting .. — v. 3 
lest unadvised you stain your sviMds. King John, ii. 1 

the blots and stains of right — ii. 1 

and sightless stains, lame, foolish .... — iii. 1 

to stain the track of his bright lUchard II. iii. 3 

any harm should stain so fair a show! — iii. 3 
to stain the temper of ray knightly .. — iv. 1 

dishonour stain the brow of my \ Henry IV. i. 1 

leaves behind a stain upon — iii. I 

and stains my favours in — iii. 2 

whose temper I intend to stain — v. 2 

to give each naked curtle-ax a stain.. Hemyr. iv. 2 

stain to thy countrymen ! 1 Henry VI. iv. 1 

flight cannot stain the honour — iv. ."j 

charge shall clear thee from that stain — iv. 5 

or with their blood stain this iHenry Vl.iv. I 

all the impure blots and stains.... iJ/c/wrrf III. iii. 7 
corrupt her manners, stain her beauty — iv. 4 
he carries some stain of it .... Troilus ^Cressida, i. 2 

stains the glory in that happy Timon ofAlh. i. 1 

to the sttiin of con tumelious, beastly — v. 2 

only suffering stain by him Coriotanus, i. 10 

stain all your edges on me — v. 5 

but do not stain the even virtue of JulinsCwsar, ii. 1 
tinctures, stains, relics, and cognizance — ii. 2 
of a war shall stain your brother.^w^ow^ ^Cleo. iii. 4 

this stain upon her (rep.) Cymbeline, ii 4 

stain not thy tomb with blood Titus Ainlron. i. 2 

and stain the sun with fog — iii. 1 

water-drops, stain my man's cheeks .. ,,Lear, iii. 4 
her breath will mist or stain the stone . . — v. 3 
upon thy cheek the stain doth sit. . liomeo 4^ Jul ii. 3 
which stains the stony entrance of this — v. 3 
STAINED— but he's something stained.. 7e)npes(, i. 2 

than stained with salt water — ii. 1 

as she that he hath staXnedJ Measure Tor Measure, ii. 4 

what, stained with blood .Mid. N.'s Dream, v. I 

the shames that you have stsuned.Mer. of Ve7iice, i.3 
this handkerchief was stained. . . . As youLike it, iv. 3 
and tear the stained skin off .... Comedy of Err. ii. 2 

back to the stained field King John, ii. 2 

ne'er stained with revolt — iv. 2 

stained the beauty of a fair Ilichard II. iii. 1 

with the king's blood stained the king's — v. 6 

from his horse, stained with IHenrylV.i. 1 

where stained nobility lies trodden.. — v. 4 
but to stand stained with travel ,...2 Henri/ IV. v. 5 
wash away thy country's stained ..1 Henry VI. iii. 3 
stained with the guiltless blood .... — v. 4 

that my sword be stained with 2HenryVI. ii. 2 

chaps be stained with crimson blood — iii. I 

I stained this napkin with (lep.) SHenryVI. i. 4 

that stained tlieir fetlocks in — ii. 3 

stand by thy stained name Troilus & Cress, v. 2 

behold it stained with his most.. Antony ^ Clco. v. I 



r 714 ] 



STAINED— how they are stained. Titus Andron. iii. 1 
whom you have stained with mud .. — v. 2 
was enforced, stained, and deflowered? — v. 3 
reiiutation stained with Tybalt's . Itomeo 4- Jul. iii. I 
now I have stained the ohildbood of — iii. 3 
n mother stained, excitements of my .. Hamlet, iv. •! 
STAIN ES-let me bring thee to SUiues. Henri/ V. ii. 3 

STAINING -in any staining act All's Hell, iii. 7 

STAINLESS mnidenhoods Itomeu A Juliet, iii. 2 

of fresh and stainless youth Tweifili ISi^ht, i. 5 

STAIR— I ahvaj's keep below stairs? ..MiirliAdo, v. 2 
the stairs, as he treads on them .. Lore's L. Lust, v. 2 
as stairs [A'»i(.-stayersJ of sand ..^yfr.<)//Vi//(<', iii. 2 
have they made a pair of stairs ..As you Like it, v. 2 
this has been some stair work .. Winter' sTale, iii. 3 

when she was gone down stairs 2HenrylV. ii. 1 

thrust him down stairs ii. 4 

as common as the stairs that ..Cymbeline, i. 7 

cords made like a tackle stair . . Rmneo 4- Juliet, ii. 4 

as you go up the stairs into the \ohby.. Hamlet, iv. 3 

STAKE— or paunch him with a stake-Tempest, iii. 2 

set mine honour at the stake. . . . Tu-elflh Mght, iii. 1 

I will die in it at the stake Muchyldo,\. 1 

what, and stake down? (rep.).Merch. of Venice, iii. 2 

my honour's at the stake All's Well, ii. 3 

the rich stake di-awn, and takest .. Winler'sTale, i. 2 

they have tied me to a stake Macbeth, v. 7 

sharp stakes, plucked out of 1 Henry VI. 'i. y 

when thou comest to the stake — v. 3 

pitch upon the fatal stake v. 4 

call hither to the stake my two 2HenryVI. v. 1 

I see, my reputation is at stiike.Troilus 4 Cress, iii. 3 
and my friends, at stake, required.. CoriotontM, iii. 2 

for we are at the stake Julius Ccesar, iv. 1 

truly find her, stakes this ring Cymbeline, v. 5 

the murderous coward to the stake Lear, ii. 1 

I am tied to the stake — iii. 7 

so stakes me to the ground Romeo fy Juliet, i. 4 

when honour's at the stake Hamlet, iv. 4 

lay down my soul at stake Othello, iv. 2 

STALE— for stale to catch these thieves. Tempest, iv. 1 

hal is he dead, bully Stale? Merry Wives, ii. 3 

to a contaminated stale, such a one . . Much Ado, ii. 2 
link my dear friend to a common stale — iv. 1 
a proverb never stale in thrifty . . Mer. of Venice, ii. 5 
but it grows something stale with.AsyouLikeit, ii. 4 
to make a stale of me amongsUTaming of Shrew, i. 1 
thy wandering eyes on every stale .. — iii. 1 
make stale the glistering of.. Winter'sTale, iv. (cho.) 

poor I am but his stale Comedy of Errors, ii. 1 

patience is stale, and I am weary . . Richard tl.v.b 

so stale and cheap to vulgar IHenrylV. iii. 2 

you basket-hilt stale juggler iHennilF. ii. 4 

none else to make a stale, but Tae'i..ZHenryVI. iii. 3 
f A'n(.] makes stale the morning.. Troilus fyCress. ii. 2 

must not so stale his palm - ii. 3 

that stale old mouse-eaten dry — v. 4 

or did use to stale with ordinary ..JuliusCcpsar, i. 2 
didst drink the stale of \\oys&i.,.. Antony ^Cleo. i. 4 

nor custom stale her infinite — ii. 2 

we could not stale together in — v. 1 

poor I am stale, a garment out of . . Cymbeline, iii. 4 
else in Rome to make a stale of. TiiusAndromcus, i. 2 

within a dull, stale, tired bed Lear, i. 2 

that is something stale and hoar. Romeo fy Juliet, ii. 4 

how weary, stale, flat, and unprofitable .Hamlet, i. 2 

STALED— and staled by other men. JuliusCcesar,iv. 1 

STALENESS. O sir! a courtesy Pericles, v. \ 

STALK, on, stalk on ; the fowl sits Much Ado, ii. 3 

and stalk in blood to our possession ?.K!?ig-.'''/in, ii. 1 
lips were four red roses on a stalk. . Richard III. iv. 3 

I stalk about her door Troilus 4 Cressida, iii. 2 

why, he stalks up and down like — iii. 3 

comes that which grows to the stalk.. Peric/ej, iv. 6 

see 1 it stalks away. Stay, speak Hamlel, i. I 

with martial stalk hath he gone by — i. 1 

STALKING-HORSE, and unier..AsyouLikeit, v. 4 

STALL— bread upon Athenian stalls.ilftrf.A'.D)-. iii. 2 

leave me; stall tiiis in your bosom ..All's Well, i. 3 

fat oxen standing in my stalls. Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 

broke their stalls, flung out Macbeth, ii. 4 

like oxen at a stall, the better \ Henry IV. v. 2 

stalls, bulks, windows, are Coriotanus, ii. 1 

STALLED— thou art stalled in mine!/i/c/iarrf ///. i. 3 

STALLING of an ox? As youLike it, i. I 

STAJIFORD-at Stamford fair? ....2HenryIV. iii. 2 
STAMMER— thou couldst stammer./lsi/oii L'Ac.iii. 2 

STAMPS in gold, or sums Merry Wives, ill. 4 

in stamps that are forbid ..Measure for Measure, ii. 4 

as the event stamps them Much Ado. i. 2 

at our stamp, here o'er ando'er.i>/id.A''sD;eam,iii. 2 
without the stamp of merit I .Merchant of Venice, ii. 9 
nor stamp, nor stare, nor fret. Taming of Shrew, iii. 2 

hanging a golden stamp about 'Macbeth, iv. 3 

to brag, and stamp, and swear King John, iii. 1 

a soldier of this season's stamp ....\IlenryI V. iv. 1 

under my feet I stamp thy I Henry VI. i. 3 

your hearts I'll stamp out with — i. 4 

stamp, rave, and fret, that I may sing.3 Henry VI. i. 4 
how Lewis stamps as he were nettled — iii. 3 
your fire-new stamp of honour ....Richard III. i. 3 

when did he regard the stamp Henri/ VIII. iii. 2 

would one day stamp upon me . J'wion of Athens, i. 2 

methinks, I see him stamp thus Coriolanus, i. 3 

O godsl he has the stamp of Marcius — i. 6 
his sword (death's stamp) where it . . — ii. 2 

they weigh not every stamp Cymbeline, t. 4 

hath upou him still that natural stamp — v. 5 
stamp, thy seal, and bids thee .. TitusAndron. iv. 2 

let it stamp wrinkles in her brow Lear, i. 4 

carrying, I say, the stamp of one defect.. Hamlet, i. 4 
use almost can change the stamp of nature — iii. 4 
can stamp and counterfeit advantages.. 0//ie«o, ii. 1 
STAMPED— figure be stamped ..Meas.for Meas. i. I 
figure of an angel stamped in gold..«er. of I'en. ii, 7 
for why, he stamped, and svio\&. Taming ofSh. iii. 2 
them for it with stamped coin .. Winter'sTale, iv. 3 
I, that am rudely stamped, and ....Richard III. i. 1 
to be stamped on the king's coin ..Henry VIII. iii. 2 
have, almost, stomped the leasing ..Coriolanus, v. 2 



STA 



STAMPED with your foot Julius C<esar. ii. I 

not where when I was stamped Cymbeline, ii. 5 

my seal be stamped in his face . . TitusAndmn. iv. 2 

STAND— stand fast, good fate Tempest, i. I 

that stand 'twixt me and Milan .... — ii. 1 

best stand upon our guard ii. 1 

I will stand, and BO shall Trinonlo .. — iii. 2 

pr'ythee stand further off (I (■/).) — iii. 2 

I will stand to, and feed (re/).) iii. 3 

why stand you in this strange Btare? — iii. 3 

there stand, for you are — v. 1 

stand yon affected to his wish?.. 7'uo Gen. o/Tcr. i. 3 

I stand affected to her _ ii. 1 

how stands the matter — ii. ,i 

when it stands well with him (rep.) — ii. 5 

it stands under thee, indeed (rep.) ., — ii. 5 

what Island in need of — ii. 7 

stands in effectual force — iii. I 

fellows stand fast iv. I 

stand, sir, and throw us iv. I 

peace, stand asidel iv. 2 

stand not to discourse — v. 2 

here she stands; take but — v. 4 

simple though 1 stand here MerryWives, i. 1 

you stand on distance — ii. 1 

stands so firmly on his wife's frailty — ii. 1 

you stand upon your lionourl — ii, 2 

but stand under the adoption , — ii. 2 

I stand wliolly for you — iii. 2 

never stand you had rather — iii, 3 

now doth thy honour stand, in him.. — iv. 4 

that it may stand, till the perpetual.. — v. 5 

have I lived to stand at the taunt. . . . — v. i") 

stand not amazed: here is no — v. 5 

ta'en a special stand to strike — v. 5 

stand you awhile aloof Twelfth Night, i. 4 

stand at her doors, and tell — i. 4 

he'll stand at your door like — i. 5 

my house doth stand by the church — iii. 1 

stands by thy tabor, if thy tabor stands — iii. 1 

stand here, make a good show on't .. — iii. 4 

you stand amazed, but be of comfort — iii. 4 

do I stand there? — v. I 

they shall stand for seed . . Measure for Measure, i. 2 

thus stands it with me — i.3 

thy head stands so tickle on — i.3 

which else would stand under grievous — i. 3 

stands at a guard with envy — i. 4 

whose fine stands in record — ii. 2 

but as we stand in fear — ii. 3 

compelled sins, stand more for number — ii. 4 

yet, as the matter now stands — iii. I 

richer than innocency, stands for the — iii. 2 

grace to stand, and virtue go — iii. 2 

then have no power to stand against — iv. 4 

I have found you out a stand most fit — iv. 

his integrity stands without blemish — v. 1 

strong statutes stand like the forfeits — v. 1 

stand up, I say, I have bethought .. — v. I 
stand I condemned for pride and ..MuchAdo. iii, 1 

stand, in the prince's name (rep.).... — iii, 3 

if he will not stand when he is bidden — iii. 3 

stand thee close then under this (rep.) — iii. 3 

staud thee by, friar — iv. I 

I staud dishonoured, that have gone — iv. 1 

Leonato, stand I here? is this tlie prince? — iv. 1 

well, stand aside. 'Fore God, they .. — iv. 2 

here stand a pair of honourable men — v. 1 

your good will may stand with ours — v. 4 
stand forth, Demetrius (rep.) ..Mid.N.'sT>ream,i, 1 

it stands as an edict in destiny — i. 1 

the fold stands empty in the — ii. 2 

one, aloof, stand sentinel — ii. 3 

sijeak, Pyramus: Thisby, stand forth — iii. 1 

stand close; this is the same (rep.) .. — iii. 2 

and darest not stand, nor look me .. — iii. 2 

I pray you all, stand up — iv. 1 

this fellow doth not stand upon points — v. 1 

shall not in their issue stand — v. 2 

edict shall strongly stand in force .Lo-cc'sL.Lost, i. 1 

in the least degree, stands in attainder — i. 1 

must stand and play the murderer in? — iv. I 

a stand, where you may make — iv.\ 

stand aside, good bearer (lep. v. 2) .. — iv. 1 

for so stands the comparison — iv. 1 (tetter ' 

muster your wits; stand in youv own — v. 2 

here stand I, lady: dart thy skill .... — v. 2 

that yon stand forfeit, being those .. — v. 2 

and stand between her back, sir .... — v. 2 

of the worthy ; but I am to stand for him— v. 2 

for it stands too right — v. 2 

if it stand, as you yourself still., il/er.o/r'eni'ee, i. 1 

pray you, sir, stand up; I am sure .. — li. 2 

Lorenzo desired us to make stand .. — ii. 6 

there stand the caskets, noble prince — ii, 9 

many then should cover, tliat stand bare ! — ii, 9 

and the rest, stand all aloof ..: — iii. 2 

that the comparison may stand more — iii. 2 

I stand for sacrifice, the rest aloof. ... — iii. 2 

so, thrice fair lady, stand I, even so — iii. 2 

where I stand, such as I am — iii, 2 

that only to stand high in your — iii, 2 

madam, it is, so you stand pleased .. — iii. 2 

that stand in better place — iii, 5 

but since he stands obdurate — iv, I 

and let him stand before our face. . . . — iv. I 

you may as well go stand upon — iv, 1 

1 stand for judgment (rep.) — iv. 1 

and old Shy lock, both stand forth .. — iv, 1 

you stand within his danger — iv. I 

and stand indebted, over and above — iv. 1 

perceive them make a mutual stand — v. 1 

and here he stands; I dare be sworn — v. 1 
now I'll stand to it, the pancakes .Asyou Like it, i. 2 

stand you both forth now — i. 2 

and that which here stands up, is but — i 2 

I pray thee, if it staud with honesty — ii. 4 

m.v sister, reading; stand aside — iii. 2 

and who he stands still withal — iii. 2 

of this forest, stands a sheep-cote.... — iv. 3 



STA 



. JH". !»'««. i. 1 



— ii. 1 



_ ii. I 



li.3 



STAND for't a little, though . , 

to stuiul on ei tiler part 

an' tliv mi ml staiul to it, l)oy 

to stiuiil up. TluMi litre's a man stands 
at niv liiililing, yon could so Btnnd up 

my ifear futlier's (lift stimds chief 

noble buciieiors stand iit my bestowing 

yet stand oil" in diH'erences 

act tliv lower pure where thy nose stands 

Btand no more ntl", but give thyself .. — iv. a 

foil, pr'vtliei., stiind ttwuy; a paper .. — v. 2 

oostiind tluui forth, the time 19 — v. 3 

in tliv evidence; tlierefore stand aside — v. 3 
Etftiiiis ri>r my excuse (yeii.).Tamingr</Sh. 2 (indue.) 

thus it stands; her elder sister (rep. i. 2) — i. 1 

an' she stand Iiiin but 11 little — i. 2 

Petruchio, stand by awhile — i. 2 

as tor my patron (stand you so assured) — i. 2 

Biaiica, stand aside: poor girl I — ii. I 

Bkip|ier, stand back; tis age — ii. I 

when he stands where I am; and sees — iii. 2 

and here she stands, touch her whoever — iii. 2 

knows not which way to stand — iv. 1 

■what I have said; stand by, and mark — iv. 2 

I pray yon, let it stand — iv. 3 

I pray you. stand good father to me — iv. 4 

witii either part's agreement stand? — iv. 4 

pr'ythee Kate, let's stand aside — y. 1 

60 stands this scinire othced }yinter''sTal€, i. 2 

■what case stand I in? I must be — i. 2 

I dare not stand by ; nor shall — i. 2 

I will stand 'twixt you and danger . . — ii. 2 

for, as tlie case now stands, it is — _ij. 3 

and only that I stand for I appeal.. — iii. 2 

my life stands in the level of your . . — iii. 2 

how now, canst stand? Softly — iv. 2 

I can stand, and walk : I will even . . — iv. 2 

lady fortune, stand you auspicious! — iv. 3 

we stand upon our manners — iv. 3 

as he'll stand, and read, as 'twere.... — iv. 3 

but, O the thorns we stand upon!.... — iv. 3 

then stand till he be three quarters.. — iv. 3 

old shepherd, which stands by, like.. — v. 2 

and stand in hope of answer — v. 2 

as now it coldly stands — v. 3 

60 Ion" could I stand by, a looker-on — v. 3 

then all stand still ; or those — v. 3 

etands on tricks when I am . . Comedij of Errors^ i. 2 

they stand at the door, master — jii. 1 

you stand liere in the cold — iii. 1 

of lier body stands Ireland? — iii. 2 

than I stand debted to this gentleman — iv. I 

how it stands upon my credit — iv. 1 

presently, if thou darest stand — v. I 

come, stand by me. fear nothing .... — V. 1 

Btav, stand apart; I know not — v. 1 

and, to be king, stands notwitliin Macbeth, i. 3 

makes him stand to, and not stand to — ii. 3 

in the great hand of God I stand — ii. 3 

it should not stand in thy posterity.. — iii. 1 

then stand with us: the west — iii. 3 

stand to't. It will be rain to-night .... — iii. 3 

if I stand here, I saw him — iii. 4 

good night: stand not upon the order.. — iii. 4 

But why stands JIacbeth thus — iv. 1 

let this pernicious hour stand aye .... — iv. 1 

by his own interdict stands accursed .. — iv. 3 

6tands Scotland wliere it did? — iv. 3 

observe her, stand close — v. I 

as I did stand my watcli upon — v. 5 

behold where stands the usurper's — v. 7 

it liolds, stands j'oung Plantagenet. . KingJohn, ii. I 

6tand in his face, to contradict his .. — ii. 1 

command the rest to stand — ii. 1 

■why stand these royal fronts — ii. 2 

and stand securely on their battlements — ii- 2 

or, if it must stand still — iii. I 

thou slialt stand cursed — iii. 1 

Lewis, stand fast; the devil tempts.. — iii. 1 

a churchyard where we stand — iii. 3 

and he, that stands upon a slippery.. — iii. 4 

that John may stand, then Arthur . . — iii. 4 

and look thou stand within (rep.).... — iv. I 

1 will stand stone-still: for heaven's — iv. 1 

doth make a stand at what — iv. 2 

I saw a smith stand with his — iv. 2 

all murders past do stand excused .. — iv. 3 

Btandback, lord Salisbury (r<?;>.) .... — iv. 3 
wlio ready here do stand in arms ....Richard 1 1, i. 3 

and Derby, stands here for God — i. 3 

which stand out in Ireland — i. 4 

our uncle Gaunt did stand possessed — ii. I 

wherein the king stands generally .. — ii. 2 

there stands the castle, by yon tuft .. — ii, 3 

comes to years, stands for my bounty — ii. 3 

on what condition stands it — ii. 3 

permit that I shall stand condemned — ii. 3 

It stands your grace upon — ii. 3 

stanil bare and naked, trembling — iii. 2 

that stands upon thy royal — iii. 3 

Hand all apart, and show fair duty, 
cousin, stand forth; and look upon . 
thy valour stand upon sympathies . 

that stand and look upon me 

the raouel where old Troy did stand 

they say, as stand in narrow lanes .. — v. a 

foiKl aunt, stand up. Nay, do not («p.) — v. 3 

do not sue to stand ; pardon — v. 3 

while I stand foolini" here, his Jack.. — v. 5 
that ever cried, stand, to a true man..l Hcnrtjl^. i. 2 

sir John stands to his word — i. 2 

if thou darest not stand for ten shillings — i. 2 

Btand close. Poin<! Poins — ii. 2 

I hale it. Stand. So I do, ogainst — ii. 2 

thy horse stands behind the liedge 
do' thou stand in some by-rooiu. . . 

do thou stand for my father 

ray speech: stand a-iide, nobility . 
do thou stand for me. and I'll play 
ftnd here I stand: judge, my 



r 715 ] 

STAND the push of every beardless ..U/t;in///'. iii. 

and yet you will stand to it — iii- 

I'ercy stands on high ; and either they — iii. 

but stand against us like an enemy .. — iv 

whereby we stand opiMtsed — v. 

our soldiers stand full fairly for the doy — v. 

and then stand upcpii security! 2iifjfj7//r. i. 

a lusty yeoman? will a' stand to't?.. — ii. 

I liesol-c'h Vou, stand to iiic — ii. 

stand IVoin him. fellow; uhcrelore .. — ii. 

go to; I st:iMd tile pu,li of your — ii. 

peiiee. lellow, peaee; stand aside i/r/i.) — iii. 

and the whole frame stands ui>oii pins — iii. 

corporate Banlolph, stand my friend — iii. 

stand, my lords; and send discovers.. — iv. 

60 the question stands, briefly — iv. 

of what conditions we shall stand npon? — iv. 

our peace shall stand as firm as rocky — iv. 

wherefore stands our army still? (rep.) — iv. 

to court, stand my good lord, 'pray.. — iv. 

and when they stand a^'uinst you..., — iv. 

Btand from him, give him air — iv. 

you stand in colilest expectation .... — v. 

stand here by me (?^t'p.) — v. 

but to stand stained with tr.avel — v. 

gracious lord, stand for your own Henry V. i. 

letanother half stand langliing by .. — i. 

and his soul shall stand sore charged — i. 

though the truth of it stands otf .... — ii. 

bade thee stand up, gave thee no — ii. 

for the Dauphin, I stand here for him — ii. 

you stand upon the riva^e — iii. (clioni: 

I see you stand like greyhounds .... — iii. 

'tis shame to stand still — iii. 

that stands upon the rolling restless ^ iii. 

and such another neighbour, stand.. — iii. 

well placed; there stands your friend — iii. 

took stand for idle speculation — iv. 

will stand a tip-toe when this day .. — iv. 

castle called, that stands hard by? .. — iv. 

Btand away, captain Gower — iv. 

French maid that stands in my way — v. 

and none durst stand him \ Henry VI. I. 

Reignier, stand thou as Dauphin.... — i. 

stand back, you lords, and give us leave — i. 

or whose will stands, but mine? — i. 

stand back, thou manifest {rep. ) . . . , — i. 

nortli gate; for there stand lords .... — i. 

and stands upon the honour of his .. — ii. 

torch in yonder turret stands — iii. 

therefore, stand up; and, for these .. — iii. 

stands with tlie snares of war — iv. 

the cowards stand aloof at bay — i v. 

the help of one stands me in little.... — iv. 

shall our condition stand? It shall .. — v. 

stands on a tickle point 2Hetiry VI. i. 

and trembling stands aloof, while all — i. 

well, so it stands; and thus, I fear .. — i. 

let's stand close: my lord — i. 

than where castles mounted stand (rep.) — i. 

standby, my masters, bring him .... — ii. 

I am not able to stand alone (rep.) .. — ii. 

I know not how it stands — ii. 

whose beam stands sure, whose — ii. 

stand forth, dame Eleanor Cobliam.. — ii. 

there let it stand, where it best — ii. 

and do not stand on quillets — iii. 

sirs, stand apart; the king shall .... — iii. 

look, look, it stands upright — iii. 

than stand uncovered to the vulgar.. — iv. 

he should stand in fear of fire — iv. 

stand, villain, stand, or I'll fell thee — iv. 

if his head will stand steadier on — iv. 

tlius stands my state, 'twixt Cade — iv. 

while England stands, that Alexander — iv. I 

boldly stand, and front him to his face — v. 

Bhalll stand, and thou sit in my iHenryVl. i. 

and not stand cavilling thus — i. 

make him stand upon this molehill.. — i. 

the rest stand all aloof — ii. 

here I stand, to answer thee — ii. 

there thy mother stands; for, well I wot — ii. 

why stand we like soft-hearted — ii. 

never stand still, till either death .. — ii. 

if witli thy will it stands — ii. 

pillars, that will stand to us — ii. 

in the place your father's stands .... — ii. 

in this covert will we make our stand — iii. 

where now we mean to stand — iii. 

like one that stands npon a promontory — iii. 

many lives stand between me and home — iii- 

that thou shouldst stand, while Lewis — iii. 

yet here prince Kdward stands — iii. 

to stand aside, while I use furtlier .. — iii. 

that yon stand pensive, as half — iv- 

my will shall stand for law — iv. 

brother Richard, will you stand by us? — iv. 

each man take his stand — iv. 

knew in what estate he stands — iv. 

and see, where stand his guard — iv. 

thus stands the case — iv. 

see, where the huntsmen stand — iv. 

and the rest, stand yon thus close. ... — iv. 

your horse stands ready at the — iv. 

why stand you in a doubt? — iv. 

wherefore stand you on nice jioints? — iv. 

take leave, and stand not to reply.... — iv. 

stand we in good array; for tlicy .... — v. 

yonder stands the thorny wood — v. 

and, where I stand, kneel thou — v. 

my lord, stand back, and let (i ep.). . RicharJ III. i. 

despairing, slialt thou stand excused — j. 

they that stand hi"h, have many.. .. — i- 

my hair doth stand on end to hear .. — ;• 

we will not stand to prate — ..j- 

how he doth stand affected to our .. — iii. 

will never stand upright, till Richard — iii. 

and stand between two chniehmeu.. — lii. 

Bce where his grace stands 'tween two — lii. 

stand all apart: cousin of Jiuckingham — iv. 



STA 



STAND— it stands mo much upon ..UUhard II. i\ . 2 

or else my kingdom stands on — i\. 2 

drops stand rill mv trembling Hesh .. — v. 3 

bulwark:!. Bland hefoie our liii'e« .... _ v. 3 

and I will stand the hazard of the die — v. 4 
if we shall stand still, in fear our ..lUnr„rill. i. 2 

stand forth, and with bold spirit .... — i. 2 

let's >tand close, and behold (rfp. iv. 1) — ii. I 

so I'll stand, if the king please — ii. 2 

how you stand mindiil in the wei-htv — iii. 1 

the e.ndinal eainiot :.l!uid under iheiu — iii. 2 

and stand nn:.luiktii yonrs — iii, 2 

you come to take your stand lieie.... — iv. 1 

stand these punr iieople's friend — iv. 2 

further, sir, :tands in the gap and trade — v. I 

there's none stands under more — v. 1 

Btand uu, good Canterbury (rep.) — v. 1 

the good I stand on is my truth — v. I 

your state stands i' the world — v. I 

and behold that chair stand empty .. — v. 2 

may stand forth face to face — v. 2 

it stands agreed, I take it — v. 2 

ail tliat stand abinit him are — V. 3 

he stands there, like a mortar-piece — v. 3 

you great fellow, stand close up — v. 3 

stand up, lord. With this kiss — v. 4 

as she was, and so stand fixed — V. 4 

a Vi^ry man per se, and stands . . Troilns Sc Cress. 1. 2 

Troilus will stand to the proof — i. 2 

shall we stand up here, and see them — i. 2 

yet Troy walls stand; sith every .... — i. 3 

tents do stand hollow upon — i. 3 

stand in authentic place — i. 3 

in our weakness stands [K;i(. -lives].. — i. 3 

and to stand firm by honour — ii. 2 

must not be, nor goodly Ilion stand. . — ii. 2 

to stand the push and enmity — ii. 2 

the walls will stand till they fall.... — ii. 3 

our main of power stand fast — ii. 3 

Achilles stands i' the entrance of.... — iii. 3 

I stand condemned for this — iii. 3 

a stride and a stand: ruminates .... — iii. 3 

if e'er thou stand at mercy of my .... — iv. 4 

go, gentle knight, stand by our Ajax — iv. S 

now how yonder city stands — iv. 5 

there they stand yet; and modestly — iv. 5 

stand fair, I pray thee (re;;) — iv. 5 

stand where the torch may not — v. 2 

all untruths stand by thy stained name — v. 2 

Dionied. stand fast, and wear a castle — v. 2 

I'll stand, to-day, for thee, and ine . . — v. 3 

and I do stand engaged to inouy Greeks — v. 3 

tlie gods with safety stand about tlieel — v. 3 

and stands colossus-wi^e, waving his — v. 5 

stand, stand, thou Greek (rf/).) — v. 6 

stand, ho! yet are we masters of .... — v. II 

stand on the dying deck, hearing. jTimon ofAth. iv.2 

in purity of manhood stand upright — iv. 3 

gouty keepers of thee cannot stand.. — iv. 3 

all villains, that do stand by thee .. — iv. 3 

must thou needs stand for a villain.. — v. 1 

we stnnd much hazard, if they — v. 3 

feebling such as stand not in Coriolanus, i. I 

if you'll standfast, we'll beat — i, 4 

when it bows, stands up! — i. 4 

neither foolish in our stands — 1.6- 

and stand upon my common part ... . — i. 9 

when he shall stand for his place — ii. 1 

the commoners, for whom we stand.. — ii. 1 

■were he to stand for consul (rep. v. 5) — ii. I 

howmany stand for consulships?.... — ii. 2 

put on the gown, stand naked — ii. 2 

do not stand upon't: we recommend — ii. 2 

but to come by him where he stands — ii- 3 

pray you now, if it may stand with .. — ii. 3 

should I stand here, to beg of nob .. — ii. 3 

the Volsces stand but as at first .... — iii. I 

or let us stand to oiu' authority — iii. I 

stand fast; we have as main friends — iii. 1 

when it stands against a fulling .... — iii. 1 

to both it stands in like request? — iii, 2 

tliev stand in llieir ancient strength — iv. 2 

let me but stand, I will not — iv. 5 

stand I before thee here — iv. 5 

but they stand bald before him — iv. 5 

tlie coiniiiouweaUli doth stand — iv. t> 

staml and go back. You guard — v. 2 

but stand, as if a man were — v. 3 

stand up blessed! — v. 3 

and pray you stand to me in this cause — v. 3 

stand, Aufidins, and trouble not .... — V. 5 
stand you directly in Antouiiis'.....rufiiisCiBJar, i. 2 

6tand close awhile, for here comes. ... — i. 3 

shall Rome stand under one man's .. — ii. 1 

the higli east stands, as the Capitol .. — ii. 1 

he will stand very strong with us ... . — ii. 1 

we all stand un ag'ainst the spirit of. . — ;;. I 

boy, stand aside: Cains Ligurins .... — ii. I 

here will I stand, till C;esar pass along — ii. 3 

1 go to take my stand, to see him — ii. 4 

fly not. stand still; ambition's — iii. 1 

sUind fast together, lest some — iii. 1 

drawing ilays out, that men stand upon — iii. 1 

niv credit now stands on such slippery — iii. I 

aiid here thy hunters stand — iii. 1 

seeing those beads of sorrow stand ill — iii. 1 

Btand round. Stand from (icp.) — iii. 2 

he should stand one of the tlirce — iv. I 

stand here. Give the word (r--/).) _ iv.2 

iimst I stand anil eroneh under your — iv. 3 

do stand but in a loroe.l uir.etioii — iv. 3 

60 iilease you, we will stauil. and watch — iv. 3 

they stand, and would have parley (r>7).) — v. 1 

the gods to day stand friendly — v. 1 

search this bosom: stand not to answer — v. 3 

that nature might stand up, and say — v. 5 

to weet we stand up peerless Anlony^Cleo. i. 1 

stands up for the main soldier — i. 2 

pra^' yon, stand further from me .... — i. 3 

which standeau houuuruble trial .... — L3 



STA 



[ 716] 



STAND the buflfet with knaves ■tnt.niy ^-Cleo. i. 1 

Btftnds he, or 6it8 lie? or does lie walk? — i. 5 

great Pompey would stand, and make — i. 5 

were't not that we stand up against.. — jj. I 

it only stands our lives upon — .1^- ^ 

tliat stands upon the swell at full..., — jii. 2 

ah, stand by. The queen, my lord.. — iii. 9 

Our landmen will stand up — iv. 3 

to stand on more mechanic compliment — iv. 4 

stand close, and list to liim — _iv.9 

where yonder pine doth stand — iv. 10 

darkliu!; stantl the varying shore .... — iv. 13 

the villain would not stand me Cyinbeline^ i. 3 

stand you! you have land enough .. — i. 3 

in constancy, you think, stands so safe — i. 5 

how the case stands with her — i. b 

that thou mayst stand to enjoy thy., — ii. I 

their deer to the stand of the stealer — ii. 3 

which stands as Neptune's park .... — jij* 1 

yet the traitor stands in worse — jjl- '* 

when thou hast ta'en thy stand — iii. 4 

8tand,staudl we have (lep.) — v. 2 

from where they made the stand?.... — v. 3 

souls that fly backwards I stand (jep.) — v. 3 

who dares not stand his foe — v. 3 

that could stand up his parallel -r- v. 4 

stand by my side (re;).) — v. 5 

why stands he so perplexed? — v. 5 

I stand on fire: come to the matter ., — v. 5 
whom we stand a special part3'. Titus Andronicns, i. 1 

stand gracious to the rites that we.... — i. 2 

then, madam, stand resolved — i. 2 

in readiness for Hymeneus stand .... — i. 2 

young men's heinous faults: stand up — i. 2 

or not at all, stand you in hope — ii. 1 

for now I stand as one upon a rock . . — iii. 1 

here stands my other son — iii. 1 

stand by me, Lucius; do not fear .... — iv. 1 

and if he stand on hostage for his ..., — iv. 4 

wliere Rape, and Murder, stands .... — v. 2 

here stands the spring whom you..., — v. 2 

stand all aloof; but, uncle, draw .... — v, 3 

there let him stand, and rave and cry — y. 3 
before thee stands this fair He3perides..Pf77c/es, i. 1 

they here stand martyrs, slain in Cupid's, — i. 1 

here stands a lord, and there a lady — i. 4 

thus knit, a kingdom ever stands — ii. 4 

and Tyrus stands in a litigious peace .. .. — iii. 3 
stand peerless by this slaughter . . — iv. (Gower) 

besides, the sore terms we stand upon.... — iv. 3 
who stand i' the gaps to teach — iv. 4 (Gower) 
passion stands for true old woe? — iv. i (Gower) 

your resorters stand upon sound legs .... — iv. 6 

so stand aloof for more serious wooing ., — iv, 6 

my temple stands in Ephesus — v. 2 

sir, there she stands; if aught within Lear, i. 1 

respects, that stand aloof from the entire — i. 1 

wherefore should I stand in the plague of — i. 2 

now, gods, stand up for bastards! — i. 2 

serve where thou dost stand condemned.. — i. 4 

may stand by tile fire and stink — i. 4 

or do thou for him stand — i. 4 

why one's nose stands in the middle .... — i. 5 

to stand his auspicious nustress — ii. 1 

if I would stancf against thee — ii. 1 

stand, rogue, stand; you neat. slave, strike — ii. 2 

than stands on any shoulder that I see .. — ii. 2 

nature in you stands on the very — ii. 4 

not bjing the worst, stands in some rank — ii. 4 

here I stand, your slave, a poor — iii. 2 

look, where lie stands and glares — i ii. e 

how do you, sir? stand you not so amazed — iii. 6 

to defend him, stand in assured loss — iii. 6 

will not allow, stand in hard cure — iii. (i 

and I must stand the course — iii. 7 

a peasant stand up thus! — iii. 7 

stand still in esiierance — iv. I 

here's the place: stand still — iv. 6 

set me where you stand — iv. 6 

your legs? you stand. Too well, too well — iv. 6 

the main descry stands on the hourly .... — iv. 6 

that I stand up, and have ingenif)us .... — iv. H 

to stand against the deep dread-bolted .. — iv. 7 

for my state stands on me to defend — v. 1 

immediacy may well stand up — v. 3 

to be valiant is— to stand to \t . , , . lioineo ^Juliet, i. 1 

of that house shall move me to stand — i. 1 

feel, while I am able to stand .... — i. 1 

may stand in number, though in .... — i. 2 

for then she could stand alone — i. 3 

Elands your disposition to be married? — i. 3 

I'll watch her place of stand — i. 5 

ready stand to smooth that rougli. ... — i. 5 

letting it there stand till she — ii. 1 

let me stand here till thou — ii. 2 

to have tliee still stand there — ii. 2 

let us hence; X stand on sudden haste — ii. 3 

who stand so much on the new form — ii. 4 

minute than he will stand to in — ii. 4 

and thou must stand by too, and suffer — ii. 4 

stand not amazed: tlie prince will doom — iii. 1 

stand up; run to mj' study {rep.) .... — iii. 3 

rise and stand; why sliould you fall — iii. 3 

and here stands all your state — iii. 3 

jocund day stands tiptoe on — iii. 5 

since the case so stands as now it doth — iii. 5 

this is well; stand up — iv. 2 

hence, and stand aloof f rep.) — v. 3 

I am almost afraid to stand alone.... — v. 3 

and here I stand both to impeach.... — v. 3 

nay, answer me; stand and unfold Hamlet, i. 1 

I think, I hear them: stand, ho! — i. 1 

upon whose influence Neptune stands .. — i. I 

do, if it will not stand — i. 1 

of fear, stand dumb and speak not to him — i. 2 

each particular hair to stand on end .... — i. 5 

the rack stand still, the bold winds — ii. 2 

nor stands it safe with us to let — iii. 3 

I stand in paxise where I shall first begin — iii. 3 

and, how his audit stands, who kuows .. — iii. 3 



STAND— starts up, and stands on end , . Hamtel, iii. 4 
how stand I then, that have a father .... — iv. 4 

sirs, stand you all without — iv. .'i 

to this point I stand,— that both — iv. 5 

here stands the man; good: if the man .. — v. 1 

makes them stand like wonder-wounded v. 1 

and stand a comma 'tween their amities — v. 2 

think thee, stand me now upon? — v. 2 

his crib shall stand at the king's mess.... — .v 2 

in my terms of honour, I stand aloof — v. 2 

which even now stand, in act Othello,]. I 

hola I stand there! signior, it is the Moor — i. 2 
that it stands not in such warlike brace., — i. 3 
do but stand upon the foaming shore .... — ii. 1 

to death, stand in bold cure — ii. 1 

on the brow o' the sea stand ranks — ii. 1 

who stands so eminently in the degree of — ii. 1 
I stand accountant for as great a sin .,., — ii. 1 

stand the putting on, I'll have our — ii. 1 

I can stand well enough, and speak well — ii. 3 
fit to stand by CsBsar and give direction.. — ii. 3 
and the condition of this country stands — ii. 3 
he shall in strangeness stand no further — iii. 3 

ttiat I should deny, or stand so — iii. 3 

stand you awhile, apart — iv. 1 

come, stand not amazed at it — iv. 2 

here, stand behind this bulk v. 1 

rCol.Kni.^ be bold, and take thy stand.... — v. I 

there stand I in much peril — v. 1 

STAND ARD-monster, or my standard Tempest, iii. 2 

if you list; he's no standard — iii. 2 

advance your standards, and upou.Loue's L. L, iv. 3 

if underneath the standard I Henry K/. ii. 1 

in my standard bear the arms of i Henry f'l. i. 1 

you shall bear my standard IticharU III. v. 3 

advance your standards, draw your (rep.) — v. 3 
STANDER-being slippery stauders7Voi7.(!f Cress, iii. 3 

STANDER-BY to hear my Winier'sTale, i. 2 

that all the standers-by had wet. . . . Richard III. i. 2 

you were standers-by, and so wast thou — i. 3 

I said to some my standers-by ..Troilus^ Cress. \\. b 

I it is not for any standers-by .... Cymbeline, ii. I 

STANDETH north north eaat.Love'sL.L. i. 1 (letter) 

here standeth Thomas Mowbray Kichard II. i. A 

lord Hastings, standeth thus iHenry If. i. 3 

STANDING, speaking, moving Tempest, ii. 1 

well; I am standing water — ii. 1 

brooks, standing lakes, and groves — v. I 

'tis with him e'en standing water.. TwelflhKight, i. 5 
and mantle, like a standing pond, jl/er.o/renice, i. I 

the danger is in standing tot AWsWetl, iii. 2 

six score fatoxen standing in mj. Taming of Sli. ii. 1 
standing in rich place, I multiply ..Winter'sTale,\.i 
will continue the standing of his body — i. 2 

here standing, to prate and talk for life — iii. 2 
trespasses, more monstrou-^ standing by — iii. 2 
took the spirits, standing like stone.. — v. 3 
in his hand, standing on slippers.. ..&n^.Wn, iv. 2 

king of snow, standing before Rtckurd //. iv. 1 

shall there be gallows standing in ..IHenryiy. i. 2 
you bow-case, you vile standing tuck — ii. 4 

on m.ountain standing, up in Henry V. ii. 4 

standing naked on a mountain ....iHenryfl. iii. 2 
surmised whilst thou art standing by — iii. 2 
standing by when Richard stabbed. KiWmrd ///. iii 3 
grace speaks his own standing!. 7V)no;ii)/'/J//ie»is, i. 1 
the cause, sir, of my standing hercCorioiaittw, ii. 3 
into love, standing your friendly lord — ii. 3 
standing every flaw, and saving .... — v. 3 
talk not of standing; Publius.... JuKws Ccrsar, iii. 1 
conquer, standing on the earth .Antony I^Clvo. iii. 7 

each on one foot standing , . . Cymbeline, ii. 4 

right glad he is not standing here..., — v. 5 

standing bleak upon the sea Pericles, iii. 2 

things standing thus unknown Hainlei, v. 2 

STANDING-BIOD. and truckle-bed.. il/enyfr. iv. 5 

STANDING-BO WL of wine to him..,, /'erides,ii. 3 

STANDING-POOL; who is whipped .... Lear, iii. 4 

STAND'ST between herfather's.A/id.yv. 'sDieam, v. I 

thou lamb, that stand'st as his ..Lovc^sL.Lost, iv. 1 

predicament, Isay,thoustand'st.A/er.o//''en('ce,iv. 1 

that sliows me where thou stand'st. Jiicltard 11. iv. 1 

stand'st thou still, and hear'st such.lHenry//'. ii. 4 

in tliat very line, Harry, stand'st thou — iii. 2 

what stand'st thou idle here? — v. 3 

though thou stand'st more sure ....iHenrylV. iv. 4 
by his treason, stand'st not thou .... 1 Henry VI. ii. 4 
lo! there thou stand'st, a breathing — iv. 2 

stand'st thou aloof upon comparison? — v. 4 

no, thou stand'st single Timon of Athens, ii. 2 

art tlioii stiff! stand'st out? Coriolanus,\. \ 

if thou stand'st not i' the state of hanging — v. 2 

in what case tliou stand'st .intony ^Cleo. iii. 11 

that stand'st so for Posthumus! ...Cymhetine, iii. 5 
but wherefore stand'st thou v;it\\.TitusAndron, iii. 1 

STANLEY, in the isle of Man 'iHenryl'I. ii. 3 

and sir John Stanley is appointed now — ii. 4 

Stanley, 1 pr'ythee, go (lep.) — ii. 4 

sir William Stanley;, leave off to ..T.HenryVl. iv. 5 
Stanley, I will requite thy forwardness — iv. b 
lords of Buckin^liam and Stanley.. iii'c/iarrfi//. i. 3 

good my lord of Stanley (rep.) — i. 3 

yet, Stanley, notwithstanding she's — i. 3 

to Stanley, Hastings, Buckingham.. — i. 3 
what think'st thou tiien of Stanley? — iii. 1 
one from lord Stanley. What is't o'clock— iii. 2 
\_Col. Knt.'\ cannot my lord Stanley sleep — iii. 2 
Stanley did dream, the boar did rase — iii. 4 

now, lord Stanley? what's the news? — iv. 2 
Stanley, he is your wife's son {rep.) — iv. 2 

changed; Stanley, what news with you? — iv. 4 
your son, George Stanley \rep. iv. 5) — iv. 4 
sir William Stanley; Oxford, redoubted — iv. 6 
our father Stan k-y lines of fair comfort — v. 2 
where is lord Stanley quartered ..., — v. 3 

at arms to Staulev's regiment -^ v. 3 

call up lord Stanley (rep.) — v. 3 

after the battle let George Stanley die — v. 3 
C George Stanley living? .... — v. 4 



ST ANN YEL cliecks' at it I , . 



, TivelJlhNight, ii, b 



STA 

STANZA-a staff, a stanza, a verse . Love'sL. Lost, iv. 2 
stanza; call you them stanzas? ..AsyouLikeit, ii. 5 

STAPLE of his argument Lore'sL.Lost, v. I 

staples, and corresponsive. . . , Trnilns -5- Cress, (prol.) 

STAR — upon a i;nost auspicious star .... Tempest, \. 2 

I did adore a twinkling star .. Two Gen.of l'cr.\i. 6 

truer stars did govern — ii. 7 

wilt thou reach stars — iii. 1 

by welkin, and her star ! Merry Wines, i. 3 

under the star of a galliard Twelfth Mgkl, i. 3 

my stars shine darkly over me — ii. I 

in my stars I am aljove thee — ii. .^ (letter) 

I thank my stars (re/j.) — ii 5 

look the unfolding star calls up. Meas. for Meas. iv. 2 

she would infect to the north star MuchAdo, ii. 1 

but then there was a star danced .... — ii. I 
there's no more sailing bj' the star .. — iii. 4 
certain stars shot madly tvoni..Mid.N.'sDi-eam, ii. 2 

art thou bragging to the stars — iii. 2 

give a name to every fixed star.... Love'sL. Lost, i. 1 

D pardon me, my stars! — iii. 1 

an attending star scarce seen — iv. 3 

and these tliy stars to shine — v. 2 

thus pour the stars down plagues .... — v. 2 
should love a bright particular star ..All'sirell, i. 1 

whose baser stars do shut us up — i. 1 

you were born under a charitable star — i. 1 
woman born but every blazing star — i. 3 

by the luckiest stars in heaven — i.3 

the influence of the most received star — ii. I 
my homely stars have failed to equal — ii. 5 

it shall be moon, or star Taming of Shrew, iv. Ii 

what stars do spangle heaven — iv. 5 

whom favourable stars allot — iv. 5 

nine changes of the watery star . . Winter' sTale, i. 2 
seek to unsphere the stars with oaths — i. 2 

happy star, reign now! — i. 2 

by each particular star in heaven .... — i. 2 
stars, very stars, and all eyes else .... — v. 1 
the stars, I see, will kiss the valleys., — v. 1 

like stars, shall shine on all Macbeth, i. 4 

stars, hide your fires! — i. 4 

upon thy stars, thy fortune King John, iii. 1 

now, now, you stars, that — v. 7 

fright the fixed stars of heaven Richard II. ii. 4 

like a shooting star, fall to — ii. 4 

so much dishonour my fair stars .,,, — iv. 1 

go by the moon and seven stars 1 Henry IV. i. 2 

two stars keep not their motion — v. 4 

what! we have seen the seven stars ."iHenrylC. ii. 4 

stars, or suns, upon it? Stars Henry f. iii. 7 

lived tliis star of England — v. 2 (chorus) 

scourge the bad revolting stars Mlenryl'I. i. I 

a far more glorious star thy — i. 1 

bright star 01 'Venus, fallen down.,.. — i. 2 

O malignant and ill-boding stars! .. — iv. 5 

what lowering star now envies illenryVl.Vu. I 

punished with my thwarting stars. .3Henr!/;';. iv. 6 
few men rightly temper with the stars — iv. 6 
the dimming of our sliining star ..Richard III. ii. 2 

and fortune of his happy stars — iii. 7 

at their births ^ood stars were opposite — iv. 4 

these are stars, indeed HenryVIll. iv. 1 

or like a star dis-oibed? Troilus ^ Cressida, i i. 2 

farewells as be stars in heaven — iv. 4 

on the hungry beach fillip the stars .Coriolanus, v. 3 
is not in our stars, but in ourselves.. JuliuxCcesar, i. 2 

by the progress of the stars — ii. 1 

but I am constant as the nortliern star — iii. 1 
number of the stars give light to. /Intony 4: Cleo.'iii. 2 

moon and stars! whip him — iii. II 

when my good stars, that were — iii. 1 1 

the star is fallen — iv. 12 

that our stars, unreconcilable — v. I 

eastern star! Peace, peace! — v. 2 

that knew the stars Cymbeline, iii. 2 

our Jovial star reigned at his birth .. — v. 4 

to inlay heaven with stars — v. 5 

a mole, a sanguine star — v. 5 

was't not a happy star led us.. Titus Andronicus, iv. 2 

save yon field of stars, they here Pericles, i. 1 

until our stars that frown — i. 4 

ye angry stars of heaven! wind, rain — ii. 1 

like stars, about his throne — ii. 3 

but her better stars brought — v. 3 

heavens make a star of himl — v. 3 

tlie sun, the moon, and the stars Lear, i. 2 

to the charge of a star? [C6/.-stars] — i. 2 

had the maidenliest star in the firmament — i. 2 

the reason why the seven stars are — i. 6 

their great stars throned and set high? ., — iii. 1 
it is the stars, the stars above us .... — iv. 3 

eartli-treading stars Romeo ^Juliet, i. 2 

consequence, yet hanging in the stars — i. 4 
two ot the fairest stars in all the heaven — ii. 2 
of her cheek would shame those stars — ii. 2 

and cut him out in little stars — iii. 2 

then I defy you, stars! thou knowest — v. 1 

the yoke of inauspicious stars , — v. 3 

when yon same star, that's westward ..Hamlet, i. 1 
as, stars with trains of fire and dews .... — i. 1 
the moist star, upon whose influence .... — i. 1 
being nature's livery, or fortune's star .. — i. 4 
make thy two eyes, like stars, start from — i. 5 

doubt thou, the stars are fire — ii. 2 (letter) 

[Co;. K»(.] is a prince out of thy star .... — ii. 2 

as the star moves not but in his — iv. 7 

conjures the wandering stars — v. 1 

like a star i' the darkest night — v. 2 

not name it to you, you chaste stars.... OMeHo, v. 2 

STAR -BLASTING, and taking! Lear, iii. 4 

STAR-CHAMBER matter of it .... Merry Wives, i. 1 
STAR- CROSSED lovers take. . Romeo & Juliet, (prol.) 
STARE— you in this strange stare? ....Tempest, iii. 3 

1 will stare him out of his wits Merry Wives, ii. 2 

nor stamp, nor stare, nor fret. Taming of S/irew, iii. 2 
that he stares and looks so wildly?. -iJie/iard II. v. 3 

gasp, and stare, and catch the air ..iHenryVl. iii. 2 
reathless? and why stare you so? .JuliusCivsar, i. 3 
and childr-eu, stare, cry out, and ruu — iii. 1 



STA 



STARE— when a madman stares? .. /ud'tudviar, iT. 3 
ray Wood cold, and my hair to stare? — iv. 3 

that makes thee stare thus? Cymbeliiie, iii. 4 

when I do stare, see, how Lear, iv. ti 

nay, if you stare [<'o/.-stir], we slmU....O/Ae//o, v. I 

nay, stare not, muster:^; it is true — v. -2 

STARED and were distracted l\I<iclielh,i\. 3 

stared on eaeli other, mid looked. . Il'ihard III. iii. 7 

vou 9tart;d upon nic with ungentle. ./"/lusC/PMf, ii. 1 

STAllING— and stariiiss, pribbles. . MeiTii »r.i-c«, v. 6 

nightly sings tile staring owl. Looe't I,. Lost, v. 2(song) 

Willi staring on one anollier tVinler sTale, v. 2 

or staring rage, presented to the Kiii^'Jnlitt, iv. 3 

staring full gliastly like a strangled.-' Hemi//;. iii.'.' 
STARK— your sword stark nakeii-Tii-einiiMuhl, iii. -1 

that wench is stark mad Taming of Sdrew, i. 1 

stark spoiled with the staggers — iii.i 

run mad, indeed; stark mudl H'inier^sTale^ iii. 2 

all muted, or stark imul Coni'-dy o/Enors, v. 1 

munya nobleman lies stark and stitf.l Ueiij-yW. v. 3 

lay liie stark naked, and let Antony ^ Cteo. v. 2 

stark, as you see: thus smiling Cijmbeline.'w.t 

shall stiti, and stark, and cold ..Roinea^Jiiliel, iv. I 

STARKLY-wlien it lies stark ly.Wfos. /or. Vras. iv. i> 

STARLIGHT, and moonshine .....\Ji-rry Wives, v. .5 

or spangled .-.tailight sheen.... .Vid. ^.'« Dream, ii. 1 

she will find him by starliglit — v. 1 

STAR-LIKK— shall star-like rise ..Henry fill. v. 4 

whose stiir-like nobleness ^^nvcTimonnf Athens, v. 1 

STARLING shall be taught to speiik..! Uemyir. i. 3 

STARRED most unluckily lymiersTale, iii. i 

STARRY welkin cover thou anou..-l//'/.JV.'sD;-. iii. 2 

START— hut if he start, it is Merry Wives, v. 5 

you have the start of me — v. t> 

did speak in starts distractedly ..TuelflhNxght, ii. 2 

with an obedient start, make but — ii. 5 

apparitions start into her lace MuchAdo, iv. 1 

take the start, run away Merchant ci/'femee, ii. 2 

what's 111 motlier, that you start at ilt.All'siyell, i. 3 
on the stait, can woman ine uiito't .. — iii. 2 

every feather starts you — v. 3 

she stirs; start not; her actions .. tVin'er^sTale, v. 3 
if your husband start some u\hQr,Cnmed\i nj'Err. ii. 1 
good sir, why do you start; and seera ..Macbeth, i. 3 
O these flaws, and starts, (impostors .. — iii. 4 

a fourth? Start, eyes! Whatl — iv. 1 

to recoil, and start, when all — v. 2 

thoughts, cannot once start me — v. 5 

do but stait ail echo witli KingJohn, v. 2 

a lion, than to start a hare \ Henry IV. i. 3 

you start awav, and lend no ear .... — i. 3 
and start so often when thou sit'st .. — ii. 2 
inclination, and the start of spleen .. — iii 2 
in the slips, strainin" upon the start.. Henri/ K. iii. 1 

mangling by starts the full — v. 2 (chorus) 

from my side to start into IHenryfl. iv. 7 

when I start, the enviinis people ....illenryfl. ii. 4 

should make a start o'er seas — iv. 8 

and start at wagging of a straw ..Hichard III iii. 5 

he bites his lip.'and starts Henry fill. iii. 2 

but it straight starts yon .... Troilus Sf Ci esaida, v. 2 
than starts i' the way before thee ..Coriotanus, iv. 1 
so get the start of the majestic .. ..JaliusCtpiar, i. 2 

Brutus will start a spirit as soon — i. 2 

kings would start forth ..Amouy ^Cleopatra, iii. II 
and, by starts, his fretted fortunes .. — iv. 10 

such uncoiistaiit starts are we like Lear, i. 1 

at which lie starts, and wakes Romeo ^Juliet, i. 4 

and then starts up, and Tybalt calls — iii. 3 

like stars, start from their spheres Hamlet, i. 5 

and start not so wildly from my afiair .. — iii. 2 

like life in excrements, starts up — iii. 4 

now fear I, this will give it start again .. — iv. 7 

dost thou come to start my quiet Othello, i, 1 

STARTED one poor heart of mine. Twelfth Mght, iv. 1 

at which name, I started Richard III. iv. 2 

then away she started to deal with Lear, iv. 3 

and then it started, like a guilty thing.. Hamlet, i. I 

STARTING— mar all with this starting.MuctwA, v. 1 

starting so, he seemed in running ..2Henrylf. i. I 

starting thence away to what. Tioilus 4 Crest, (prol.) 

time with starting courage — iv, o 

after this -traiige starting from your. Cymbeline, v. 5 
ST.iRTIXG HOLE, canst thou ....\ Henrylf.u. i 

STAIvTI.VGLY and rash? 0//if/ir,, iii. 4 

STARTLE— would startle at this.. AsyouLikeit, iv. 3 
startles and frights consideration ..KingJohn, iv. 2 

of the soul, startles mine eyes — v. 2 

I'll startle you worse thon Henn/flll. iii. 2 

know'st how thou dost startle me I'ericles, v. 1 

this, which startles in our ears? .Itomeo^ Juliet, v. 3 

STARTLED, when he lookeU upoii./i/c/iar<( ///. iii. 4 

START'.ST— why start'st thou? ....iHemyfl. iv. 1 

START-UP— that young start-up ....MuchAdo, i. 3 

STARVE must starve our sight. Mid. N's. Dream, i. 1 

she did starve the general world.. Love's L. Lost, ii. 1 

they that starve with nothing.. Merch. of Venice, i. 2 

at home starve for a merry \qoV. Comedy of Err. ii. 1 

barren mountains let him starve ....1 Henry IV. i. 3 

I'll starve ere I'll rob a foot — ii. 2 

your grace may starve, perhaps \ Henry VI. iii. 2 

ready to starve, and dare not touch..2He/ir(/f/. i. 1 
he had better starve, than but ....Henry fill. v. 2 
here starve we out tlie n\nht. Troilus ^Crettida, v. II 
and starve your supple jointsi .. Timon of Athens, i. I 

better to starve, than crave Coriolanus, ii. 3 

and so sliall starve with feeding .... — iv. 2 

nay, then thou wilt starve sure Peritlet, ii. 1 

who starves the cars she feeds — v. I 

we'll sec them starve first Lear, v. 3 

beg, starve, die i' the streets Romeo ^Juliet, iii. 5 

STARVED the roses TtroCien. of Verona, iv. 4 

bloody, starved [Kn/.-sterved]..W<TcA. o/>'e'/ic«, iv. I 
mannu in the way of starved people.. — v. I 
am starved for nieut, giddy .. Taming nf Shrew, iv. 3 
mountains starved [Co/. -starve] .,..\HenrylV. i. 3 
in my panniers are finite starved .... — ii. 1 
this same starved justice hath done.2//f>ir!//''. iii. 2 
ay, come you starved bloodhound.... — v. 4 
you poor aud starved band Henry V. iv. 2 



[717 ] 

STARVED— in France, and starved . . 2 Henry VI. i. 1 
^ou but warm the starved snake .... — iii- I 

it is too starved a subject Troilut^Crestidti.i. I 

shtnild ciileli cold, ami starved Cymbeline, \. 5 

frozen water to a stur\ed snakQ..TitusAndron. iii. 1 

they are now stiirvcd lor want I'ericles, i. 4 

starved with her severity Itomeo^- Juliet, i. I 

STARVE-!.. \€KY the rapier ....Jl/ra«./or.WM» iv. 3 
STARVELING, the tailor Irep.hMid.N.'sDieam. i. 2 

Starveling! God's my life! — iv. 1 

thou know'st, lie's no starveling..,.! J/cnry /F. ii. I 
awav. von starveling, you elf-skin .. — ii. 4 

STARVbrU ill thy eyes Horn/ o Sf Juliet, v. 1 

.STARVING for a time llleimjir. v. 1 

STATE— the manage of my state Tempest, i. 2 

to my state grew stranger — i. 2 

[Coi.K/i'.] set all hearts i' the state .... — i. 2 

the state totters — iii. '.i 

highest queen of state, great — iv. I 

plead a new state in tliy .. Two Oen. of Verona, v. 4 

my slate being galled with Merry Wives, iii. 4 

in state as wholesome, as in state 'tis tit — v. 5 

do guide the state — v. 5 

yet my state is well (rep.) Twelfth Night, i. b 

my state is desperate for my master's — ii. 2 

that cons state without book — ii. 3 

sitting in my state — ii. 5 

and then to have the humour of state — ii. .'i 
tang arguments of state (rc;^. iii. 4) — ii. 5 (let..) 

desperate of shame and state — v. l 

with the danger of my sKuin. Measure for Measure, i. 3 
those tliat know the very nerves of state — i. 5 

the state, whereon I studied — ii. 4 

and iiiv jilace i' the state — ii. i 

to steal from the state — iii. 2 

my business ill this staie made me .. — v. 1 

slander to the state! away with — v. I 

a measure full of state and ancientry..1/Kf/i.'lrfo, ii. 1 
which maintained so politic a state .. — v. 2 
in the state of honourable marriage.. — V. 4 
still doth tend upon my state..,Ui</. A'.'s Dream, iii. 1 
agait, a state, a urow, a breast .. Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 
'gainst the kingly state of youth .... — iv- 3 
would I o'erswuy his state, that he .. — v. 2 

full of courtship, and of state — v. 2 

our states are forfeit, seek not — v. 2 

keep some state in thy exit — v. 2 

wlnln 1 told you my state was. Merch. of Venice, iii- 2 
doth impeach the freedom of the state — iii. 2 

impeach the justice of the state — iii. 3 

from out tlie state of hellish cruelty? — iii- 4 
pluck commiseration of his state from — iv. 1 

will rush into the state — iv- 1 

confiscate unto the state (rep.) — iv. I 

thou must be hanged at the state's charge— iv. 1 
comes to the general state, whicli .... — iv. i 
ay, for the state, not for Antonio .... — iv. 1 

and then liis state empties itself — v. 1 

that hath a reference to my staf e.. /Is you LiA-eiV, i.3 
thou art in a parlous state, shepherd — iii. 2 

to the measure of tlieir states — v. 4 

disclose the state of your affection Alt's IVell, i. 3 

whose state is such, that cannot choose — i.3 

any brunch or image of tliy state .... — ii. ' 
and my state that way is dangerous — ii. 6 

the reasons of our state I cannot yield — iii. 1 
were my state far wor.er than .Taming of Shrew, i. 2 

exchange my state with Tranio — v. 1 

made more homely than thy state .. — iv. 3 

of your own state take care — iv. 3 

you pity not the state, nor Winter's Tnle, v. I 

he's master of my state: what-Comedy of Errors, ii, 1 

married to thy stronger state — ii. 2 

and to thy state of darkness hie thee — iv. 4 

of the revolt the newest state Macbeth, i. 2 

shakes so my single state of man — i.3 

are to your throne and state, children — i. 4 

we shall have cause of state — iii.' 

our hostess keeps her state — iii. 3 

though in your state of honour — iv. 2 

and the poor state esteem him as — iy. 3 

outfaced infant state, and done KingJohn, ii- 1 

this wild counsel, mighty state? smacks — ii. 2 

and to the state of my great — iii. 1 

longed-for cliange, or better state.... — iv. 2 

and my state is uraved, even at — iv. 2 

interest of proud-swelling state — iv. 3 

to any sovereign state throughout — v. 2 

the lineal state and glory — v. 7 

our state, our subjects, or our land ..llichurd II- \. 3 

as, praises of his state — ii. I 

thy state of law is bondslave — ii- 1 

friends, fortune, and thy state — iii- 2 

yew against thy stale — iii. 2 

scuffing his slate, and grinning at — iii. 2 

the state and inclination of the day.. — iii- 2 

they'll talk of state; forevery — iii- 4 

that thy state might be no worse — iii. 1 

the resignation of tli3' state and crown — iv. 1 

my glories and my state depose — iv. 1 

own tongue deny my sacred state — iv. I 

against tlie state and profit of this — iv. 1 

subject; state, a peasant — iv. 1 

think our former state a linppy — v. I 

whose state and honour I for aye allow — v. 2 
the concord of my state and time .. .. — v, 5 

first, to thy sacred state wish I all — 7.6 

this cliuir shall be my state \ Henry IV. ii. 4 

thy state is taken for a joint-stool .. — ii- ■' 

and so my state, seldom, but — iii- 2 

carded his state; mingled his royalty — iii- '- 
more worthy interest to the state .... — }]]• ' 
as ever offered foul play in a state . . — iii. 2 
in the state of innuceiiey, Adam fell — iii. 3 

1 would the state of time had first .. — iv. I 
the exact wealth of all our states .... — iv. I 

tasked the whole state — 'v. 3 

nothing purpose 'gainst the state .... — v. 1 
mine eyes saw him in bloody state ..illrnry IV.i. 1 
the canopies of costly state — i'i. ' 



STA 



STATE— necessity so bowed the state.2Hrnr!///'. iii. I 

as I he state stood then, was — iv. I 

down, royal state! all you sage — iv. 4 

look too near unto my state — iv. 4 

a king, .sjicuk in your state — v. 2 

mingle with the stale of floods — v. 2 

great body of our slate may po — v. 2 

all our state; and (God consigning to — v. 2 

the state of man in divers functions.... Hfinj/f. i. 2 

I will Iteeii my state; be like — i. 2 

with wliat great state he heard — ii. 4 

whose state so many had — v. 2 (chorus) 

change of times and stales, brandisli .IHcnri/r/- i. 1 

blessed hapdid ne'er uefal our state.. — i 5 

holy state is touched so near. State.. — iii- I 

practises against his state .— iv. I 

my lords, the states of Christendom — v- 4 

pi 1 lars of the state, to you 2 Hen njVl. i - 1 

the state of Normandy stands on .... — i- I 

pry into the secrets of the state — i- 1 

that were u state fit for his lioliness.. — 1.3 

dangerously against your state — ii. I 

used according to >'oiir state (rep.) .. — .!'• * 

false allegations to o'ertlirow his state? — iii. I 

that took our state upon him to free — iii. 2 

mischam-e unto my state by Suffolk's — iii. 2 

thus stands my state, 'twixt Cade .. — iv- 9 

that I have maintains my state — iv- 10 

to his grace, and to the state — v. I 

even in the chair of state! (rep.) ZHenryVl. i. I 

should lament tliy miserable state .. — i. 4 

matched according to his state — ii- 2 

sweet widow, by iiiy state I swear .. — iii. 2 

it ill befits thy state and birth — iii. 3 

replant Henry in liis former state .. — iii. 3 

to raise my state to title of a queen .. — iv. 1 

malice overtlirow my state — iv. 3 

my captive state to liberty — iv- 6 

my waned state for Henry's — iv. 7 

his state usurped, his realm — v. 4 

thy honour, state, and seat, is due . . Richard III i. 3 

so stood the state (rep.) — ii. 3 

what news, in this our tottering state? — iii- 2 

but that I know our state secure .... — iii. 2 

and supposed their states were sure.. — !'!• '^ 

in better state than ere 1 was — iii- 2 

your state of fortune, and your due — iii- 7 

I am unfit for state and majesty .... — iii. 7 

wliat state, what dignity, what honour — iv. 4 

urge the necessity and state of times — iv- 4 
fuU of state and woe, such noble Henry r//i. (prol.) 

your grace, the state takes notice.... — i- 1 

ill aught pertains to the state — i- '- 

or sit state statues only — i. 2 

or Clotharins, they keep state so .... — i- 3 

that trick of state was a deep — ii. 1 

my state now will but mock me - - . . — ii. I 

to the prejudice of her present state — ii. 4 

bearing a state of mighty moment .. — ii. 4 

to wear our mortal state to come .... — ii. 4 

papers of state he sent me to peruse.. — iii. 2 

which I bear i' the state — iii. 2 

the prime man of the state? — iii- 2 

and the profit of the state — iii. 2 

the state of our despised nobility .... — iii. 2 

the king's will, or the state's allowance — iii- '■> 

tills is the state of man — iii- 2 

in a rich chair of state, opiiosing — iv- 1 

with the same full state paced — iv. 1 

broken with the storms of state — iv- 2 

know yon not how your state stands — v- I 

who holds his state at door — v- 2 

a general taint of the wliole state — v. 2 

kindling such a combustion in the state — v- 3 
married calm of states quite.. Iroitus ifCresiida, i. 3 

rails on our state of war — i.3 

and this noble state, to call upon him — ii- 3 

all his state of war — ii- 3 

you are in the state of grace — iii. I 

and mighty states characterless are.. — iii- 2 

providence that's in a watchful state — iii- 3 

ill the soul of state — ii'.3 

by Priam, and the general state of Troy — iv. 2 

hail, all the state of Greece — iv. 5 

the general state, I fear, can — iv. 5 

to propagate their slates Timon of Athens, i. 1 

never may that state or fortune — i. 1 

make thee, and thy state, look ill — i. 2 

fly so beyond his state — j. 2 

no reason can found his state in safety — ji. I 

fully laid my state before me — ii. 2 

even to the state's best health — ii. 2 

and all what state compounds — iv. 2 

when neighbour states, but for thy .. — iv 3 

best state, contentless, hath — iv. 3 

lift them against the Roman state ..Coriolanus, i. 1 

yon slander the helms o' the state .. — i. 1 

hath been thonglit on in this state . . — i. 2 

rather our state 6 defective for requital — 11.2 

a petty servant to the state — ii. 3 

of potency, and sway o' the state .... — ii. 3 

fed the ruin of the state — iii- 1 

even when the navel of the state — iii- 1 

love the fundamental part of stale .. — iii. 1 

bereaves the stale of that integrity .. — iii. 1 

for the whole state, I would put — iii. 2 

1 have a note from the VoUcian state — iv. 3 

our stote thinks not so — iv. 3 

he is, and feasts the nobles of the state — iv. 4 

good husbandry for the Volscian state — iv- 7 

a bare petition of a stute to one — v. 1 

I am an officer of -tate, and come.... — v- 2 

staiid'st not i' the state of hanging .. — v. 2 

nor from the state, nor private Iriends — v. 3 

our raiment, and state of bodies would — v. 5 

he sits in his state, as a thing — v. 4 

yi,u bird-, and luad.-i of the state — v. 5 

to keep his cluie in I'.oine JuliusCatar,\. 2 

unto soiiH- iii"ii>lroii.i state — i.3 

and the state of man, like to — ii. I 



STA 



[718] 



STA 



STATE— in states unborn JuUntCasar, iii. I 

the hazards of this untrod state — iii. 1 

to youn" Octavius of the state of things — iii. 1 
the timers state made friends./4ii(o»i/ S- Cleopatra, i. 2 
business she hatli broached in the state — i. 2 
not thrived npon the present state .. — i. 3 

as ills own state, and ours — i. 4 

tauglit lis IVotu the primal state .... — .!•'*! 

did practise on my state — !!■ '^ ! 

in state of healtli, tliou say'st — ii. 5 j 

qualie in the present winter's state.. Cymfteime.ii. 4 

attends in place of greater state — iii. 3 

kings, queens, and states — iii. 4 

and'thy state, I'll give it — v. 5 

for your honour and your state ..TituaAndron. i. 2 

to order well the state — v. 3 

from the dejected state wherein he is ..Pericles, ii. 2 

not to be a rebel to lier state — ii. 5 

slirouded in elotliof state — iii- 2 

hearing of your melancholy state — — v. 1 
iKii(.] reserve thy state; and, in tliy best. . Lear, i. 1 

divisions in state, menaces and — i. 2 

And time from this enormous state — ii. 2 

death on my state! — ji. 4 

that discerns your state better — ii. 4 

speculations intelligent of our state .... — iii. 1 
something he left imperfect in the state — iv. 3 

whom the rigour of our state forced — v. 1 

for ray state stands on me to defend .... — v. I 
this realm, and the gored state sustain .. — v. 3 
state she gallops nignt by night. . Romeo 4r Juliet, i. 4 

more honourable state — iii. 3 

and here stands all your state — iii. 3 

the lieavens to smile upon my state. . — iv. 3 
hehovef ul for our state to-morrow . . — iv. 3 
bodes some strange eruption to our state. Hamlel, i. 1 
asit doth well appear unto our state .... — i. 1 
in the most higli and palmy state of Rome — i. 1 
imperial jointress of this warlike state .. — i. 2 
our state to be disjoint and out of frame — i. 2 

and the health of the whole state — i. 3 

is rotten in the state of Denmark — _i. 4 

let me be no assistant for a state — ii. 2 

'gainst fortune's state would treason .... — ii. 2 

some confession of his true state — iii. 1 

the expectancy and rose of the fair state — iii. 1 
from your former state, that I distrust you — iii. 2 

wretched state! — iii. 3 

tliy state is the more gracious — v. 2 

tlie justice of the state for thus deluding. OWicJJo, i. 1 
for, I do know, the state, however this . . — i. 1 
upon some present business of the state.. — i. 2 

or any of ray brothers of the state — i. 2 

so was I bid report here to the state — i. 3 

for the state affairs Cteji.) — i. 3 

humbly therefore bending to your state. . — i. 3 
do my duties to the state [il'nf. -senate] .. — iii. 2 

1 pr'ythee, do so: something, sure, of state — iii. 4 

pray heaven, it be state matters — iii. 4 

the business of the state does him offence — iv. 2 
fault be known to the Venetian state .... — v. 2 

I have done the state some service — v. 2 

beat a Venetian, and traduced the state — v. 2 
and, to the state, this heavy act — v. 2 

STATELIER pyramis to her I'll rear .1 Henry VI. i. U 

STATELY pace, kept on liis course . . Richard II. v. -J 

with our stately presence glorify \Henryl'l. i. 1 

your stately and air-braving towers — iv. 2 

here is a stately stile indei-d! — iv. 7 

the time with stately triumphs ZHenryVI. v. 7 

from a stately cedar shall (,rep.v.b')..Cymbeline,v. 4 
like the stately Phcebe 'mongst .. TitusAndron.i. 2 

and stately Rome's disgrace — iv. 2 

goes slow and stately by them Hamlet, i. 2 

STATESMAN, and a Boldier Measure forMeasure, iii. 'i 
parasite, my soldier, statesman .. Ifi titer's Tale, i. 2 

STATESMEI^T— shall our statesmen be ..Othello, i. 2 

STATILI US showed the torcli-light. Jufms Ctesar, v. .■) 

STATION in the file iMoci<e//i, iii. 1 

in the unshrinking station where he — v. 7 

puff to win a vulgar station Coriolanus.n. 1 

take up some other station ; here's no — iv. 5 
and her station are as one .. AnIonyS- Cleopatra, iu. 3 
the best rank and station are most select. Hamlet, i. 3 
a station like the lierald Mercury — iii. 4 

STATIST tho' I am none Cymheline, ii. 4 

I once did liold it, as our statists do Hiunlet, v. '.; 

STATirA-dir,nbstatiia8[;Co;.statuesJ Richardlll. iii. 7 
saw my sta'ua fCo^KfU. -statue] . . JuLnisCtesar, ii. 2 
base of I'ompey s statuaCCo/.A'nf.-statue] — iii. 2 

STATUE in thy stead Twn Gen . of I'eroiia, iv. 4 

witli any man that knows the statues .V/ir/i.l'/o, iii. 3 
of her mother's statue (rep. v. 3) . . H'uiler's Tale, v. 2 

to see the statue of our q_iieen — v. 3 

the statue is but newly hxcd — v. 3 

I'll make the statue move indeed.... — v. 3 

we'll set thy statue in some 1 Henry I'l. iii. 3 

erect bis statue then, and worship .2 Henry I'l. iii. 2 

or sit state statues only Henry I' II I. i. 2 

the primitive statue, andoblique.rro/iiis<J Cress, v. 1 

cold statues of the youth — v.U 

nobles bended, as to Jove's statue . . Coriolanus, ii. 1 
with wax upon old Brutus' slaiui. .JuliusCcesar, i. 3 
statue spouting blood in many pipes — ii. 2 
give him a statue with his ancestors — iii. 2 
a statue, than a breather .. Antony ^- Cleopatra, iii. 3 

gild his statue glorious Pericles, ii. (Gower) 

will raise her statue in pure gold. /Borneo ^■Juliet, v. 3 

STATURE— about my stature . Two Gen. nfVer. iv. 4 
if lie be of any reasonable stature. Merry Wives, iii. 3 
compare between our statures.JV/((i. A'. 'sUream, iii. 2 

what stature is she of? As you Like tt, iii. 2 

the thewes, the stature, bulk iHenrylV. iii. 2 

her stature to an inch Pericles, v. 1 

STATUTE— have strict statutes.. iWeas./orATeas. i. ■! 
fnUows close the rigour of the statute — i. .5 
that the strong statutes stand like .. — v. 1 
and to keep those statutes that are. Love's t. Lost, i. ! 

sealed his rigorous statutes Comedy of Errors^ i . 1 

according to the statute of the town . . — i. S 



STATUTE— the laws and statutes ..Com.ofErr. v. 1 
ere human statute purged the gentle. .A/ac6e(A, iii. 4 

decrees, and statutes, I deny Richard II. iv. 1 

like to have biting statutes 2Henryl'I. iv. 7 

statutes cancelled, and his treasure.. 3 He /irT/T/. v. 4 

provide more piercing statutes daily. Corio(fi<iMs, i. 1 

with his statutes, his recognizances .... Hamlet, v. 1 

STATUTE-CAP— plain statiite-capa. tDi)e's;..i,. v. 2 

STAUNCH— hold us stauncli .... Antony <;- Clco.iu 2 

my tears staunch the ea-Tth's.. Titus Andronicus, iii. 1 

STAUNCHLESS avarice, that, were I.Macbeth, iv. 3 

STAVE-Belzebub at the stave's end. Twetfih Night, v. 1 

hired to bear their staves Macbeth, v. 7 

their armed staves in charge 2HenryII'.iv. 1 

such bearded hermits' staves — v. 1 

look that my staves be sound Richard III. v. 3 

amaze thewelkin with your brokenstaves! — v. 3 
fetch me a dozen crab-tree staves . . Henry I'll I. v. 3 
strike at the heaven with your staves. CoriofoHus, i. 1 

STAY— concluding, stay, not yet Tempest, i. •-' 

and your father stays Twoden. of Verona, i. 2 

no more of stay; to-morrow — i. 3 

my father stays my coming — ii. 2 

that tide will stay me longer — ii. 2 

then stay at home — ii. 7 

tliat stays to bear my — iii. I 

stay with me awhile — iii. 1 

here, if thou stay, thou — iii. 1 

thy master stays for thee — iii. i 

come coz ; we stay for you (rep.) . . Merry Wives, i. 1 

he will not stay long •. — ^i. 4 

that me have stay six or seven — ^ii. 3 

have I not stay for him — iii. 1 

he sent me word to stay within — iii. 5 

come, we stay too long — iv. 1 

I'll be so bold as to stay, sir — iv. .5 

to stay for me at church — iv. 6 

but Slav, I smell a man — v. 6 

I'll stay a month longer Twelfth Night, i. 3 

will you stay no longer? — ii. 1 

stay and hear — ii. 3 (song) 

stay : I pr'ythee, tell me — iii. 1 

I'll not stay a jot longer — iii. 2 

1 could not stay behind you — iii. 3 

signior Fabian, stay you by this .... — iii. 4 

Cesario, husband, stay — v. 1 

stay a little while C(rep. ii.3 &v.l)./VeM. /or A/cas. ii. 2 

my stay must be stolen — iii. 1 

first, that your stay with him may .. — iii. 1 

my most stay can be but brief — iv. 1 

with me along, that stays upon me . . — iv. 1 
there he must stay, until the officer.. — iv. 2 

and tell him where I stay — iv. 5 

shall stay here at the least a month .. ilfudi Ado, i, 1 

I do but stay till your marriage — iii. 2 

in the niglit, you may stay him (rep.) — ]]]• ^ 
an offence to stay a man against his — iii. 3 
ray lord, they stay for you to give.... — iii- 6 

stay but till then ! — v. 2 

there will I stay for thee Mid.N.'sDream,\. 1 

within this wood intend you stay? .- — ii. 2 
shall chide downright, if I longer stay — ii. 2 
[Kri/.] one I'll stay, the other stayeth — ii. 2 

1 will not stay thy questions — ii- 2 

stay, though thou kill me, sweet — ii.3 

stay, on thy peril; I alone will go .. — ii- 3 

stay thou but here a while — iii- 1 

if for his tender here I make some stay — iii. 2 
why should he stay, whom love doth — iii. 2 

stay, gentle Helena; hear my — iii- 2 

nor longer stay in your curst company — iii. 2 

we must stay the time — v. i 

butstay; Ospite! but mark — v. I 

make no stay; meet me all by — v. 2 

and stay here in your court Love'sL.Lost, i. 1 

I have sworn to stay with you — i. 1 

prove perjured, if you make me stay — ii. 1 
I cannot stay thanksgiving — ii. 1 

stay, slave; I must employ thee .. — iii. 1 
stay not thy compliment; I forgive.. — iv. 2 
company 1 stay. All hid, all hid .... — iv. 3 

and let the traitors stay — iv. 3 

so shall we stay, mocking intended.. — v. 2 
nay, why dost thou stay? — v. 2 

1 do beseech you, stay (rep.) — V. 2 

I'll stay with patience — v. 2 

should stay with the Jew (rep.)..Afer. of Venice, ii. 2 

mates by this time for us stay — ii. 6 

our friends all stay for you — ii. 6 

but stay the very riping of — ii. 8 

to stay you from election ^ jlj- 2 

shall e'er be guilty of my stay — iii. 2 

which stays for us at the park gate. . — iii. 4 

my lord here stays without — iv. 1 

I stay here on my bond — iv. 1 

I'll stay no longer question — iv. 1 

till the next night she had rather stay — v. 1 
more properly, stays me at home. . As youLike it, i. I 

or have died to stay behind her — i. 1 

that either you might stay him — i. 1 

you must, if you stay here — i. 2 

let us now stay and see it — i. 2 

then entreat to have her stay, it was — i. 3 

and never stays to greet him — ii. 1 

let me stay the growth of his beard . . — iii. 2 

who stays it still withal? — iii. 2 

stay. Jaques, stay- For no pastime . . — v. 4 

I'll stay to know at your — v. 4 

I'll stay at home, and pray God's .... All's ll'ell, i. 3 

that you will stay behind us! — ii. 1 

I shall stay here the forehorse — ii- 1 

stay; the king— Use a more — ii. 1 

I pray yon, stay not, but in haste.... — ii. 5 

shall I stay here to do't? — iii. 2 

and will stay upon your leisure — iii. b 

and here we'll stay to see our widower's — v. 3 

fetchmy bail; stay, royal sir — v. 3 

to stay witli me to-night?.. T-«m/n4'o/S/i. 1 (indue.) 

my men will stay themselves — 1 (indue.) 

but stay awhile: what company is .. — i. I 



STAY— Katharino, you may stay ..Taming of Sh. i. 1 

bid me stay by her a week — ii. I 

mistress, then I have cause to stay .. — iii, 1 

whatever fortune stays him from .... — iii. 2 

I stay too long from her — iii. 2 

rather go than stay: and, honest .... — iii. 2 

let us entreat you stay (rep.) _ iii. 2 

be tiuiet; he shall stay my — iii. 2 

so shall you stay till you have — iv. 2 

the tailor staj's thy leisure — iv. 3 

to stay him not too long — iv. 4 

stay, officer; he shall not go to — v. 1 

now pray thee love, stay — v. 1 

stay your thanks a while Winter's Tale, i. 2 

no longer stay. One seven-night longer — i, 2 

my stay, to you a charge — i. 2 

oaths from him, not to stay (rep.).... — i. 2 

you'll stay? No, madam (rep.) — i. 2 

good deed was, to entreat his stay. ... — i. 2 

this great sir will yet stay longer .... — i. 2 

he would not stay at your petitions.. — i. 2 

how came it, that he did stay? — i. 2 

Bohemia stays here longer. Ha? Stays — i. 2 

that wilt not stay her tongue — ii.3 

must either stay to execute — iv. 1 

cherish it, to make it stay there — iv. 2 

why, they stay at door, sir — iv. 3 

if tiiej' can hut stay you wliere — iv. 3 

stay there, Dromio, till I come . . Comedy of Err. i . 2 

and her sister, stay for you — i. 2 

my master stays in the street — iii. I 

made me stay thus long — iii. 2 

and there for Dromio stay — iii. 2 

bound to sea, and stays but for — iv. 1 

wind and tide stays for this gentleman — iv. 1 

that stays but till her owner — iv. 1 

what ship of Eindamnum stays for me? — iv. I 

faith, stay here this night — iv. 4 

to stay here still, and turn witch (rep.) — iv. 4 

am Dromio; pray, let me stay — v. 1 

stay, stand apart; I know not — v, I 

stay, you imperfect speakers, tell me ..Macbeth, i. 3 

we stay upon your leisure — i. 3 

and stay there till we call — iii.! 

in a foggy cloud, and stays for me .... — iii. 5 

should 1 stay longer, it would be — iv. a 

a crew of wretched souls, that stay his — iv. 3 
stay for an answer to your embassy. . King John, ii. 1 

vouchsafe a wliile to stay, and 1 shall — ii. 2 

here's a stay, that shakes the rotten — ii.2 

the glorious sun stays in his course.. iii. 1 

your grace shall stay behind — iii. 3 

no vile hold to stay him up — iii. 4 

stay yet, lord Salisbury ; I'll go — iv. 2 

to die, and go, as die, and stay , — iv. 3 

one poor string to stay it by — v. 7 

what hope, what stay, when v. 7 

I do but stay behind, to do — v. 7 

as much good stay with thee Richard II. i. 2 

and bold, stays but the summons w i. 3 

and stay for nothing but his majesty's — i. 3 

stay, the king hath thrown — i. 3 

and cause, I would not stay — i. 3 

for our time of slay is short — ii. I 

but that they stay the first — ii. 1 

fearing to do so, stay, and be secret., ii. 1 

stay yet another day, thou — ii. 4 

we will not stay; the bay-trees — ii. 4 

but stay, here come the gardeners ,. — iii. 4 

yet still with me they stay — iv. 1 

stay thy revengeful hand — v, 3 

here is no longer stay. If thou love me — v. 5 
with choler? stay, and pause awhile. IHenry/r. i. 3 

we'll stay your leisure — i. 3 

and only stays but to behold — i. 3 

pray you, stay a little, ray lord — ii. 4 

I fear, we shall stay too long — iv. 2 

for God's sake, cousin, stay till all .. — iv. 3 

stay and breathe a while: thou hast — v. 4 
persuaded you to stay at home? ....iHenrylV. ii.3 

a dozen captains stay at door — ii. 4 

have a desire to stay with my friends — iii. 2 

for you. Mouldy, stay at home still.. — iii. 2 

where is he that will not stay so long — iv. 4 

I sta.y too long by thee — iv. 4 

stay but a little; for my cloud — jv. 4 

doth the man of war stay all night .. — v. 1 

the cat must stay at home Henry V. i. 2 

if he stay in France. To-morrow.... — ii. 4 

'pray thee, corporal, stay ; the knocks — iii. 2 

you shall stay with us in Rouen .... .— iii. 5 

my friends, and all things stay for me — iv. 1 

why do you stay so long, my lords . . — iv. 2 

their prayers, and they stay for death — iv. 2 

I stay but for my guard — iv. 2 

I niiist stay with tlie lacqueys — iv. 4 

the Icing of England's stay at home — v. (cho.) 

the princes, or stay liere with us?. . . . — v. 2 

stay, stay tliy hands (rep. iii. 1) \HeniyVI. i. 2 

why do you let tliem stay? — i. 3 

for I can stay no longer — i. 4 

troops retire I cannot stay them .... — i. 5 

stay, my lord Talbot; for my — ii.3 

stay, lords and gentlemen; and pluck — ii. 4 

whose strengthless stay is numb .... — ii. 5 

stay, let thy humble handmaid . — iii- 3 

if we both stay, we both are sure (.rep.) — iv. 5 

no hope that ever I will stay — iv. 5 

stay, go, do what you will, the like .. — iv. 5 

an'if I stay, 'tis lint the — iv. 6 

and more, we hazard by thy stay.... — iv. 6 

stay, my lord legate ; you shall — v. 1 

Ostay! I have no power (rep.) — v. 3 

if I longer stay, we shall liegin IHenryVI. i. 1 

stay, Ilumphrey duke of Gloster .... — ii.3 

ray stay, my guide, and lantern .... — ii.3 

here my commission stays; and sir John — ii. 4 

1 cannot stay to speak — ii. 4 

stay, Salisbury, with the rude — iii. 2 

all things, stay my thoughts — iii. 2 



STA 



[719 ] 



STE 



STAY, Whitmore; for thy prisoner .. — iv. 1 

but stay, I'll read it over once ogain — iv. i 

in this city will I stay — iv. t 

I could stay no longer — iv. 10 

the heavens? pioil Margaret stay .... — v. 2 

etav bvme.mv loril^; iinil (rr;;.) illfiiryyi.tA 

let's Slav witliin Ibis liuuse — i. 1 

I ciiim.it stiiv t.i hi^u- the^e artic-los .. — i. 1 

gentle ipu'eii. niiil I will st:iy — i. I 

stay, sieiitle JliUgarct, anil hear — i. 1 

son Kilward, ihou wilt stay with me? — i. I 

but, stay; what news? — i, 2 

and Hichard, you shall stay witli uie — i. 'i 

here must I stay, and here my lite .. — i. 1 

nay, stay; let's hear tlie orisons — i. 4 

we liave no staff, no stay! — ii. 1 

retire, if Warwick bid him stay — ii. I 

stay we no longer dreamin;^ of renown — ii. I 

my fortune too; tlierefore I'll slay .. — ii. ■-' 

that durst make yon stay — ii. 2 

etav, Edward. No, wrangling (;■#/).) — ii. 2 

to rty tluit will not stay — ii. 3 

death would stay these rnthful deeds! — ii. .^ 

nay, stay not to expostulate — ii. 5 

not that I fear to stay, but love — ii. 5 

I'll stay above tlie liill, so both — iii I 

let's stay till lie be past — iii. 1 

but stay thee, 'tis t!\e fruits of — iii,'..' 

the more we stay, tlie stronger (re;).) — iii. 3 

why stay we now? (rep. iv. 5) — iii. 3 

how could he stay, till Warwick made — iv. i 

I stay not for the love of Edward .... — i v. 1 

stay, or tliou diest — iv. 3 

nay, stay, sir John awhile: and we'll — iv. 7 

stay you, that bear the corse UiclinrU III.]. •> 

stay, dog, for tliou shalt hear me .... — i. 3 

struck me, that thought to stay him — i. 4 

gentle keeper, stay [Co/.-sit] by me.. — i. 4 

nay, I nr'ythee, stay a little; I hope — i. 4 

this will out, and then I must not stay — i. 4 

what stay I\ad I (rep ) — ii. 2 

let not \13 two stay at home — ii. 2 

Ludlow then, for we'll not stay behind — ii. 2 

stay, I will go with you — ii. 4 

but long I cannot stay there — iii. 2 

i;ke enough, for I stay dinner there — iii. 2 

to stay him from the fall of — iii. 7 

stay yet; look back, with me — iv. 1 

stay a while, and teach me C''''p.) .... — iv. 4 

you, sir Walter Herbert, stay with me — v. 3 
stay, my lord, and let your reason.. Henrijl'in. i. I 

my barge stays; your lordship shall — i. 3 

stay there, sir, and see the iiiible — ii. 1 

to stay the judgment o' the divorce. . — iii. 2 

stay, wliere's your commission, lords? — iii. 2 

stay, good my lords, I have — v. 2 

for all shall stay, this little one — v. 4 

youmuststay the cooling too TroHusfr Cress, i. I 

she's a fool to stay behind her father — i. I 

no, sir; he stays for j'ou to conduct.. — iii. 2 

with venomous wights she stays .... — iv. 2 

half Hector stays at home — iv. S 

honour, or go, or stay — v. I 

I nr'ythee, stay (rep.) — v, 2 

why stay we tiien? — v. 2 

your guard, stays to conduct you liome — v. 2 

now if thou lose thy stay — v. .1 

no more to say. Stay yet — v. II 

stay for thy good-morrow TImon of Athens, i. 1 

let me stay at thine own peril — i. 2 

stay, stay, here comes the fool with.. — ii. 2 

if Timon stay at homo — ii. 2 

are more valiant, that stay at home — iii. 5 

will not recompense this long stay .. — iii. 6 

stay, I will lentl thee money — iii. 6 

let's make no stay. Lord 'Timon 's .. — iii. 

nay, stay thou out for earnest — iv. 3 

O let me stay, and comfort you (lep.) — iv. 3 

stay not, all's in vain — v. 2 

and stay not here thy gait — v. 5 (epitaph) 

why stay we prating here Coriolanus, i. 1 

ere stay behind this business — i. I 

when blows have made me stay — ii. 2 

we are not to stay altogether — ii. 3 

we stay here for the people — ii. 3 

than stay, past doubt, for greater .... — ii. 3 

peace, peace, peace; stay, hold, peacel — iii. 1 

you shall stay too: I would (rep.) .. — iv. 2 

why stay we to bebaiteil with — iv. 2 

he could not stay to pick them — v. 1 

Btai'; whence are you? — v. 2 

sentenced, and stay upon execution — V. 4 

stay for me in Pompey's porch JuliusC<rsar, i. 3 

if he should stay at home to-ilay for tear — ii. 2 

thy humour, I will stay at home (re;).) — ii. 2 

my wife, stays me at home — ii. 2 

stay not to answer me, but get (rep.) — ii. 4 

yet, stay a while (rep. iii. 2) — iii. 1 

for m.y sake, stay here with Antony — iii. 2 

stay, hoi and let us hear Mark i.rep.) — iii. 2 

stay, counlr3'men. Peace there — iii. 2 

nothing but death shall stay me .... — iv. 3 

to stay the providence of some — v. I 

Strato, stay thou by thy lord — v. .^ 

you must not stay here longer . . Anlony ^ Clen. i. I 

he stays upon your will — i. 2 

Antony, stay not by his side — ii. 3 

1 will not stay behind. Nay, I have — iii. 7 
I must stay his time. To flatter .... — iii. II 
your good service, stay till death .... — iv. 2 

to the city, shall stay with us — iv. 10 

stay f)r me: where souls do — iv. 12 

what should I stay— in this wild world? — v. 2 
nay, stay a little: where you but ....Ctjmlitline. i. 2 

stay, come not in; but that it — iii.G 

and Iliank4, to stay and eat it — iii. li 

brother, stay here: are we not brothers? — iv. 2 

I'll stay till hasty Polvdore return .. — iv. 2 

Btay.sir king: this niiin is better — v.h 

stay, Human brethren, gracious .. 7'i7u> Andron. i. 2 



STAY, madam, here is more heXongi. .Tilut And. ii, ,1 STEAD— so it stead you, I will ..V 



come; slay not to talk with them 

noble tribunes, stav! lor pity 

stay, father; for tliot noble hand ., 

now, stay your strife 

exile, und thou must not stay 

stay, niunlerous villains! 

^■ou luu.st iKf-ls stay a time 

let Ka|ie ami Murder stay witli me 

some stay, to .see him fastened 

stay your coniin.ij to present themselves.'' 



_ 


ii. 4 


« 


iii. 1 


~- 




— 


!!!• J 


_ 


iv. 2 


— 


IV. 3 


— 


V. 2 


— 


V. 3 


Vfiicles 


u. 2 





ii. 2 


. 


V. 3 


... Lear 


, i. 4 


, 


ii. 4 


. _ 


ii. 4 


• — 


u. 4 



o/Ter. ii.l 

can you so steail me, as bring ....Meat. for jWeuv. i. 5 

to stead up your appointment — iij. 1 

may you stead me? Mrrchant o/l'enicf, i. 3 



— iv. I (letter) 

../4;;'ii»'e/;, iii.7 

— v. 3 

'amiiiKifSh.!. 1 



— V. 3 



— i. 2 



iii. 3 



but stay, the kiifglits are eomin 

we do our long! ng stay, to hear , 

let me not stay a jot for dinner 

follow me not: stay here 

the fool will stay and let the wise man 

I can stay with Itegan, I, and my 

entreat him by no means to stay 

thy master; tliou must not stay behind . 
stay with us; the ways are dangerous... 

stay till I have read the letter 

stay yet, hear reason; Edmund, I arrest 

Cordelia, Cordelia, stay a little 

thou wert so hai>|)y by thy stay . . Romeo fy Juliet, 
she will not stay the siege of loving.. — 
welcome ou their pleasure slay 

stay, fellow; [ can read _ 

Juliet, the county stays. Go, girl..., — 
stay but a little, I will come again .. — 
I'll still stay, to have thee still forget — 

and, stay, good nurse, behind — 

Peter, staj' at the gate — 

can you not stay awhile? — 

and I'll stay the circumstance — 

there stays a husband to make j'ou .. — 
you shall not stay alone, till holy church — 

why dost thou stay? — 

stay awhile; stand up — 

btit, look, thou stay not till the watch — 

gone and live, or stay and die — iii. 5 

therefore stay yet, thoti necd'st not .. — iii. 5 
I have more care to stay, than will to go — iii. 5 
stay, Tybalt, stay! Komeo, I cornel — iv. 3 

tarry for the mourners, and stay dinner — iv. & 
stay not, begone; live, and hereafter — v. 3 

I will still stay with thee — v. 3 

stay to look on his intents. Stay tlien — v. 3 
stay not to question, for the wateli .. — v. 3 

I ilare stay no longer — v. 3 

a great suspicion :'stay the friar too — v. 3 

stay, speak; speak (rep.) Hamlet, i. 1 

I pray thee, stay with us, go not — i. 2 

I stay too long; but here my father comes — i. 3 

good madam, stay .awhile — ii. 2 

ay, my lord, they stay upon your patience — iii. 2 
my mother stays: this physic but prolongs — iii, 3 

he will stay till you come — iv. 3 

who shall stay you? my will, not all — iv. 5 

but stay, what uoise? liow now, sweet.... — iv. 7 

not to .stay the grinding of the ase — v. 2 

stay, give me drink: Hamlet — v. 2 

to be produced (as, if I stay, I shall) Ollntto, i. 1 

either for iier stay, or going — i. 3 

her wrong stay, and her displeasure fly .. — ii. 1 

I will not stay to offend you — iv. 1 

the great messengers of Venice stay — iv. 2 

stay von, good gentlemen; look you pale — v. 1 

ST.VYED— you are stayed for ..Tu-o Gen.ofVer. ii. 2 

he hath stayed for a better man .... — iii. 1 

thou hast sta,yed so long — iii. 1 

and longer might have stayed — iv. 1 

thine eye hath stayed upon Ttcelfih Nighl, ii. 4 

you have stayed me in a liappy howi:. Much Ado, iv. I 
stayed the odds by adding four ..Love's L.Lost, iii. 1 

here they stayed an liour — v. 2 

would have stayed till I had made./l/er.o/'/eiiice, i. 1 
we are stayed for at Bassanio's feast — ii. (i 

your ships are stayed at Venice — iv. 2 

we staj'ed her for your sake As i/on Like il, i. 3 

besides, I have stayed to tire your. n'inirr'sTate, i. 2 

would they had stayed ! Vnclielh, i. 3 

whose leisure I have stayed King John, ii. I 

but stayed, and made the western .. — v. 5 

we have stayed ten days Itirhard II, ii. 4 

there was nothing could have stayed. 2 Henry /r. iv. 1 

is made, and execution stayed — iv. 3 

thro' the chamber where we stayed .. — iv. 4 
she should have stayed in France.... 2 Henry/'/, i. 1 

that I have stayed so long — iii. I 

protector, stayed the soldier's pay .. — iii. 1 
never would nave stayed in France. — iii. 1 
I have stayed for thee, (iod knows. /'iV/inrrf III. iv. 4 

an untimely ague stayed me Henry y III. i. I 

an' he had sta.\'ed by liim Cnrinlanns, ii. 1 

am I not stayed for. Ciiina? irep.) . ..luUusCtpsar, i. 3 
you stayed well by it in Egypt ..Antony ^Cleo. ii. 2 

whilst in the womb he stayed Cymbeline, v. 4 

hast stayed us here too long .. Ti'/«.< Andronicns, ii. 3 
Helicane hath stayed at home., /'eiie/ei, ii. (Ciowcr) 

I could have stayed here Rnmeo «5 Juliet, iii. 3 

my speed to Mantua there was stayed — v. 2 
friar John, was stayed by accident .. — v. 3 

very like; stayed it long? Ham(e(, i. 2 

of your sail, and you are stayed for — i. 3 

long stayed lie BO — ii. 1 

STAYKKS-[Kii(.]stayer9 of sand.. Mer.of t'enlre. iii. 2 
STA Y E'l'H— r Km.) the otiier 6ta\etli. Wi</. .v.'j Or. i i. 2 
ST.WINC; will abridge .... /'(to «e.j.o^ (ero'.n, iii. I 
no longer staying but to give .... .Wenjr for Mens. i. h 
staying the odds by adding four.. Lnre'sL.Lost.'nX. I 
for staying on onr controversy. Comedy of Errors, v. I 
the way, staying no longer <iiiestion.. 2 //enrj; //"[.;. I 

by staying there so long 2 Henry 1^1. iii. 1 

for me, for here is no staying — iv. 8 

there is staying a gentleinan.sent.. Heiirj/ ''/'/. iy. 2 
Stygian banks staying for waftuge. Troit.^- Cress, iii. 2 
when you sued staving, then wos. /■"'""?/ ■^C(eo. i. 3 
stavine lor thine to keep him .. Itomeo ■sJulii-i. iii. 1 
STA Y'ST thou to vex me here? Tico<irn.oJI-er.\w.\ 
stay'st thou here, andgoest not. .../'ic/iard///. iv. 4 



reijiiest in my stead 
it nothing Ktcuiis us, to eliide him. 
of what should stead her most? ... 
Tranio, in my stead, ki-cp hou.se .. 
you are the nian must stead us all 

in their stead, curses, not loud Maclie/h, v. 3 

give sheep in lions' stead I Henry I' I. i. 5 

of one stands me ill little stead — iv.6 

and minister in their steads! . ...Timon of Aih.lv. I 
were you in my stead, say, would you ..Coriol. v. 3 

and, III their steads, do ravens Julius Cwsar, v. I 

high e.xpence, can stead the quest. /'cric/es, iii. (Gow.) 

the sooner her vile tlioiights to stead — iv. (Gow.) 

my intercession likewise steads.. /fomeo i^ Juliet, ii.3 

iii. 6 could never better stead thee than miw. .Ol'iello, j. 3 

iv. 5 STEADED— since have steaded much ...Temjies',]. 2 

v. I STEADlERonapole, or no 2Henry 11. iv. 7 

V. 3 STEAL by line and level (rep.) Tempest, iv. I 



2 



as the morning steals upon the night. 

clianee to steal a kiss TwoGen. of I'erona, ii. 4 

intends to steal away your daughter — iii. I 

pr.aetising to steal away a lady — iv. I 

and steals her capon's leg — iv. 4 

to steal at a minute's rest Merry H'ii^es, i. 3 

steal! Foil; a fico for the iihrase!.... — i. 3 

shall master Slender steal my Nan .. — iv. 4 

thou Shalt not steal? Meas.for Meas. i. 2 

0, they put forth to steal — i. 2 

5 I when judges steal themselves — ii. 2 

to steal from tlie state, and usurp,... — iii. 2 

his companion, and he steals it Much Ado, ii. I 

bid her steal into the pleached bower — iii. I 

and steal out of your company — iii. 3 

if thou lovest me then, steal forth . . Mid.N.'sDr. i. 1 
through Athens' gates have we devised — i 1 

the honey-bttgs steal from — iii. 1 

steal me a while from mine own .... — iii. 2 
is blessing, if men steal it not . . Merch. of I'enice, i. 3 

except to steal your thoughts — ii. 1 

it should have power to steal botli his — iii. 2 
that steal the colour from Bassanio's — iii. 2 
did Jessica steol from the wealthy Jew — v. I 
if we assayed to steal the i:\o\miih.As youLikeil.i. 3 

and myself, did steal behind him _ li. 1 

on us both did liaL-gish age steal on ..All's Hell, i. 2 

steal away hiavel.y (rep.') — ii. 1 

most fain would steal wluit law does — ii. 5 

poor thief, I'll steal away — iii. 2 

he will steal himself into a man's .. — iii. 6 

lie will steal, sir, an egg out of — iv. 3 

foot of time steals ere we can — v. 3 

methinks, to steal our marriage... I'amingofSh. iii. 2 
nobody will steal that from thee.. H'inier'sTale, iv. 3 

strange he thus should steal upon us v. 1 

the hour steals on Comedy nf Errors, iv. 1 

which steals itself, when there's '. Macheili, ii. 3 

unless he do profane, steal, or usurp. Itirtutrdll. iii. 3 
under whose countenance we steal ..1 Henryll'. i. 2 
I'll steal to Glendower, and lord .... — i. 3 

we steal as in a castle, cock-sure .... — ii. 1 
from whom you now must steal .... — iii. 1 

find one that can steal well? — iii. 3 

as a cat to steal cream. I tiiink, to steal — iv. 2 

shall we steal upon them, Ned iHenryll'. ii. 2 

steal his sweet aud honey'd sentences.. He/oi//'. i. 1 
they will steal any thing, and call it — iii. 2 
durst steal any thing adventurously — iv. 4 

England will I steal, and there I'll steal — v. I 
when he would steal the lamb ....iHemyVI. iii. I 

who cannot steal a shape — iii. 1 

I'll steal away. Exeter, so will I iHenryVl. i. I 

stand you thus clnse, to steal — ' iv. .^ 

thought to steal the single ten — v. 1 

a man cannot steal, but it Richard III. i. 4 

deceit should steal such gentle shapes — ii. 2 

the silent hours steal on — v. 3 

scarce time to steal from spiritual .Henry fill. iii. 2 
want "old, steal but a beggar's iXog.TimonofAih. ii. 1 

bountl servants, steal! — iv, I 

nothing can you steal (rep.) _. iv. 3 

will he steal out of his wholesome. JuJi'ujCri'mi. ii. I 

to steal away your hearts — iii. 2 

no slander; tliey steal hearts ....Antony^ Clen. ii. 

they induced to steal ii! <'ymbeline, ii 4 

how we may steal from hence — iii. 2 

of a cut loaf to steal a shive Titus Andron. ii. I 

which did steal the eyes of young ... /Vnr/ei, iv. I 

away from lightsteals home Romeo /^ Juliet, i. I 

she steal love 8 sweet bait from .. — i. Atchuriisl 
and steal immortal blessing from.... — iii. 3 

well, my lord: if he steal aught HiiinW, iii. 2 

look, how it steals away ! — iii. 4 

smiles, steals something from the thief. . Othello, i. 3 
their mouths, to steal away their brainsl — ii. 8 
that he would steal away so giiilty-likc. — iii. 3 

who steals 1113' i>urse. steals trash — iii. 3 

hundred times ivooed me to steal it (.rep.) — iii 3 

he begged of ine to steal it — v. 2 

STEALEIt— isin the stealer MuchAdn, ii. 1 

deer to the stand of the stealer Cymbeline, it. 3 

do still, by these pickers and stealers ..Hamlet, iii. i 
STE.\LIN(J, and giving odour ....Tuelflh.\ii!ht, i. 1 
stealing her soul with many ....Mer. of Venice, v. I 
ancientry, stealing, and lighting H'inter'sTale, iii. 3 
a piece of iniquity; stealing away .. — iv. 3 
that tune comes stealing on.. Comrdyqf Etrors, iv. 2 

for stealing out of a French hose Mnebrih, ii. 3 

he guilty of the stealing that sweet. . KingJnhu, iv. 3 

of ^tla^nll.' a cade of herrings :: Henry I' I. iv. 8 

' ' ' 1 for stealing uf sheep — 



bv 111 
let 111 



ML! hours of time.. 

I.'aling so poorly .. 

I C.I slealiiig them 
IMahii. of stealing; Mod... .it mil 
but age, with his sfaliiig steps . 
STE.VLTH-aud subtle stealth.. 



.Richard III. iii. 7 
...Cvml>eline. iv. 2 

— V. 5 

•iler ....Lear. iv. I 
lliimlet. V. 1 I sung) 
..TirrlflhMglit i. S 



STEALTH of our mutual Meas.fur M. as. i. 3 

I told him ofj'our stealth Mid.N.'sUream, iil. 2 

fuir Helen told me of their stealth .. — iv. 1 
like elsewhere, do it by itvaXih.. Comedy <if Err. iii. 2 
maltes it worse than stealth . . Timon of Athens, iii. 4 

in the lusty stealth of nature Lear, i. 2 

fox in stealth, wolf in greediness — iii. 4 

it needs must be by stealth .. . .Romeo S[ Juliet, iii. 5 

STEALTHY pace, with Tarquin's Macbeth, u. 1 

STEDFAST-GAZIN'G eyes to mine.'.' Henn///. iv. 10 

ST£EDS-f hoebu^' s:eids are foundered, rempesi, iv. 1 

headstrong steeds [(.'o(. -weeds] ..Mens. lurMeas. i. 4 

high curvet of Mars' fiery steed All'sireU,ii. 3 

steeds, and trumpets' clang? .. Taming ot Shrew, i. 2 

his barbed steeds to stables likhard II. iii. 3 

mounted upon a hot and fiery steed.. — v. 2 
lower than his proud steed's neck.... — v. 2 
of mnniige to thy bounding steed ..)HenryIK ii.'3 

steed threatens steed Henry V, iv. (chorus) 

how ovu* steeds for present service.. .. — iv. 2 
and tlieir wounded steeds fret fetlock — iv. 7 

Clifford slew my steed •lUenryVl. v. 'i 

again bestride our foaming steeds ..iHenryyi. ii. I 
uuderneatli tlie belly of their aieeds — ii. 3 

sliould clieck thy fiery steeds — ii 6 

from thence tlie Thracian fatal steeds — iv. 2 
instead of mounting barbed steeds., yii'c/iarrf It J. i. 1 
spur tliy Plirygian steed .... Vroilus ^ Oestida, iv. 5 
present the fair steed to my lady Cressid — v. 6 
our steed ti \e leg Coriolanus, i. I 

general, here is the steed — i. 9 

my noble steed, known to the camp — i. 9 

1 mean to stride your steed — i. 9 

did mount a termagant steid .... Antony fjj-Cleo, i. 5 
steeds to water at those springs ..Cyinb ii. 3 (song) 
yoin' snow-white goodly ateeii.Tilu^- Andranicus, ii. 3 

you flery-footed steeds linmeo SfJuUei, iii. 2 

farewell tiie neigliing steed tiihello, id. 3 

STEKL-witli this obedient steel Tempest, ii. 1 

for she's as hard as steel Two Gen. ofl'ernna, i. 1 

could soften steel and stones — iii. 2 

and by my side wear steel? Merry Wives, i. 3 

with wit or steel? — i. 3 

more sharp than tiled steel Twelfth Kighl, iii. 3 

for my lieart is true as steel, . . . Mid. li.'sDrtim, ii. 2 

or in bastinado, or in steel As you Like it, v. 1 

and pokinp-sticks of steel. IVinter's'lale, iv. 3 (song) 
witli stamped coin, not stabbing steel — iv. 3 

and my heart of steel Comedy of Errors, iii. 2 

heart is buttoned up witli steel — iv. 2 

with his braudislied steel Macbeth, i. 2 

nor steel, nor poison, malice — iii. 2 

line his dead chaps with steel King John, ii. 2 

■with thy blessings steel my lance's ..Richard II. i. 3 

to lift shrewd steel against our — iii. 2 

steel, and hearts liaruer tlian steel .. — iii. 2 
never brandish more revengeful steel — iv. 1 
crush our old limbs in ungentle steel. I Henry IV. v. 1 

with joints of steel, must glove iHenryiy. i. 1 

like a rib of steel, to make — ii. 3 

sparkling through sights of steel .... — iv. 1 
iron and steel, they will eat like .... Henry V. iii. 7 
God of battlesl steel my soldiers' hearts! — iv. I 

I could rend bars of steel 1 Henry I'l. i. 4 

quartering steel, and climbing fire .. — iv. 2 

bloody liounds with heads of steel — iv. 2 

or never, steel thy fearful thouglits .2HenryVI.\\\. 1 

though locked up in steel — iii. 2 

steel, if thou turn the edge — iv. 10 

makes Clifford mourn in steel ZHenryyi. i. 1 

throw away our coats of steel — ii. 1 

were thy heart as hard as steel — ii. 1 

fortune, steel thy melting heart .... — ii. 2 
and bloody steel grasped in their .. .. — ii. 5 
hot steel, to sear me to the hrainV../i'ii'/irtrrZ III. iv. 1 

as the long divorce of steel falls Henry VIII. ii. 1 

or give me ribs of steel! Troilus if Cress, i. 3 

to steel a strong opinion to themselves? — i. 3 

more obey, than to the edge of steel.. — iii. 1 

as true as steel, as plantage — iii. 2 

or like a gate of steel fronting — iii. 3 

tl\y countenance, still locked in steel — iv. ."i 

wlien steel grows soft as Coriolanus, i 9 

trail your steel pikes — v. 5 

to steel witl\ valour the melting ..JuliusCasar, ii. 1 
as he plucked his cursed steel away.. — iii. 2 
piercing steel, and darts envenomed — v. 3 
leave thee now, like a man of steel. vJh(. SrCleo. iv. 4 

a tliorouglifare for steel (rep) Cymbeline, i. 3 

with a gad of steel will write. Tiius Andronicus, iv, 1 

Marcus, steel to the very back — iv. 3 

not compact of flint, nor steel — v. 3 

slieatliing the steel in my adventurous — v. 3 

furtherance, I am clothed in steel Pericles, ii. 1 

of this neighbour-stained steel .. Romeo ^Juliet, i. 1 

my man's as true as steel — ii. 4 

in my temper softened valour's steel — iii. i 
with piercing steel at bold Mercutio's — iii. 1 

to thy soul with hooks of steel Hamlet, i. 3 

in complete steel, revisit'st th us — i . 4 

and heart with strings of steel, be soft as — iii. 3 
tlie ilintv and steel couch of war Othello, i. 3 

STEELED— the steeled gaoler ..Meas.for.Meas. iv. 2 
strong purpose, steeled the hearts .. Richard II. v. 2 
from nis metal was his party steeled. 2 /icHry IF. i. 1 

ahall with steeled sinews toll HenryV. ii. 2 

give me my steeled coat 1 HennjVl. i. 1 

steeled with weighty arguments.... flic/i«rf////. i. 1 

STEELY— when virtue's steely bones .. Alt' s Well, i. 1 
broached with the steely point SHenryVI. ii. 3 

STEEP— my sense in Lethe steep.. Twelfth Kighl, iv. 1 
quickly steep themselves in night's. Mid. ff.'sDr. i. 1 
come from tlie farthest steep of India? — ii. 1 

against the steep uprising of Lure's L. Lost, \v. 1 

for he, that steeps his safety King John, iii. 4 

my lord, I will steep this letter iHenrylV. ii. 2 

steep my senses in forgetfulness? — iii. 1 

to climb steep hills, requires Henry VIII. i. 1 

Eronounce the steep Tarpeian Coriolanus, iii. 3 
orrible steep; hark, do you hear the sea?. Lear, iv. G 



STEEP and thorny way to heaven Hamlet, i. 3 

STEEP-DOWN gulfs of liquid fire! Othello, v. 2 

BTEEl"ED-iD the cup a spider steeped. Winter's T. ii. 1 
tlie murderers steeped in the colours . . Macbeth, ii. 3 
have steeped their galls in honey . ...Henry V. ii. 2 
a napkin steeped in the havmlesa. ...SHenry I'l. ii. 1 

steeped in the faultless blood Ricliardlll i. 3 

thy father, steeped in Rutland's blood — iv. 4 
wine hath steeped our sense in . .Antony ^Cleo. ii. 7 

and yet are steeped in favours Cymbeline, v. 4 

Paris too? and steeped in hXooil.Romeo^- Juliet, v. 3 

with tongue in venom steeped Hnmie', ii. i 

steeped me in poverty to the very lips..O//«/Ho, iv. 2 

STEEPLE— topples down steeples ..\Henryn'.\u. I 

or a weather-cock on a steeple!. TwoGen. oj I'tr. ii. 1 

churcli, steeple, bells, and all ^rep.) I'ericles, ii. 1 

till vou have drenclied our steeples I. ear, iii. 2 

STEEPY mount to climb Timon or Aihens, \. 1 

STEER, the heifer, and the calf .... Wifier'sT.iie. \. t 

like youthful steers unyoked tHenryll'. iv. t 

yourself shall steer the hapijy \\Ava..ilIenr\iVl. i. 3 

I did steer toward this remedy Henry VIII. ii. 4 

a seeming mermaid steers Antony ^ C'leo, ii. 2 

never did steer humanity — v. 1 

STEERAGE-with his steerage, ftr/des, iv. 4 (Gower) 

hatn tlie steerage of my course ..Romeo ^Juliet, i. 4 

STEERED-boats that are not steertd-Cymbvlinr, iv.3 

STE EKING with due course toward Othello, i. 3 

STEELED- quenched the stelled fires .... Lear, iii. 7 
STEM— berries moulded on one stara.Mid.N.Dr. iii. 2 



an ar"osy to stem the waves 3 Henry VI. ii. 6 

they sliip fiora stem to stern Pericles, iv. 1 

STEMMING it with hearts of InliusCtesar, i. 2 

STENCH— thou odoriferous stench! . King John, iii. 4 

doves with noisome stencil ! Henry VI. i. 5 

burning, scalding, stench, consumption . . Lear, iv. 6 

STEP — step by step attend you Tempest, iii. ;) 

with his feeble steps Two Gen.of Veiona, ii. 7 

each weary step, till the last step .... — ii. 7 

but he steps me to her trencher — iv.4 

step into the chamber, sir John . . Merry Wives, i v. 2 

hit the ground you step on Twelflli Night, iii. 4 

now step I forth to whip Love' sL. Lost, iv. 3 

by weary steps (rtp.) — v. 2 

turn two mincing steps into. Merchant of Venice, iii. 4 
hath many a weary step limped ..A^ yuuLdu it, ii. 7 

deadly divorce step between nie All's Well, v. 3 

watch Bianca's steps so narrowly. Taming ofSh. iii. 2 
leave you to your graver steps .... Winter's Tale, i. 2 

step forth mine advocate — v. 1 

that is a step, on which I must Macbeth, i. 4 

hear not my steps, whicli way — ii. 1 

small advantage sliall step forth.... A'mg-Jo/in, iii. 4 

attend the steps of wrong — iv. 2 

wherein we step after a stranger march — v. 2 
we will untread the steps of damned — v. 4 

of tliy weary steps esteem a foil Richard II. i. 3 

and thy steps, no more than a delightful — i. 3 

which with usurping steps do — iii. 2 

confines witli sucli peaceful steps? .. — . iii. 2 
let's step into the shadow of these. ... — iii. 4 

twice for one step I'll groan — v. 1 

step aside, and I'll show tliee 1 Henry IV. ii. 4 

steps me a little higher than — iv.3 

we should not step too far till we 2HenryIV. i. 3 

vengeance tend upon your steps! . .illfnry VI. iii. 2 

children, but one step below Richard III. iv. 4 

leads discontented steps in foreign .. — iv.4 
where others tell steps with me ....Henry VIII. i. 2 

gone slightly o'er low steps — ii. 4 

one step below Oep.) Troilus fyCressida, i. 3 

we'll consecrate the steps that Ajax.. — ii. 3 
whose rudeness answered my steps.. Cymbeline, iv. 2 

sir, step you forth; give answer — v. 5 

my lord, to step out of these dreary . . Titus And. \. 2 
controuller of our private steps! .... — ii. 3 
whose delightful steps shall make ....Pericles, ii. 1 

actiou, or dishonoured step Lear, i. I 

one step I have advanced thee — v. 3 

have followed your sad steps — v. 3 

so please you, step aside Romeo ^-Juliet, i. 1 

would step from this to this? Hamlet, iii. 4 

step between her and lier fighting soul — iii. 4 
but age, with his stealing steps .... — v. 1 (song) 

which as a grise, or step, may help Ot/tello, i. 3 

sir, tills gentleman steps in to Cassio .... — ii. 3 

STEP-DAME, or a dowager .. ..Mid. N.'s Dream, i. 1 

or step-dame to her son .... Troilus <§- Cressida, iii. 2 

cruel, and a step-dame false Cymbeline, i. 7 

a father bv thy step-dame governed.. — ii. 1 
STEPHANO-wliile Stephano bmathes.Tempest, ii. 2 

Stephanol (rep.) — ii. 2 

but art thou not drowned, Stephano? (rep.) — ii. 2 

O Stephano, two Neapolitans (?ep.) — ii. 2 

wilt come? I'll follow, Stephano — iii. 2 

O king Stephano! O peer 1 (icp.) — iv. 1 

is not this Stephano, my drunken (»■*?/?.).. — v. 1 

not Stephano, but a cramp — v. I 

Stephano is my name (rep.) .Merchant of Venice, v. 1 

STEPHEN Sly, andold John.7'ammg-o/-.s/.. 2 (indue.) 

Stephen Langton.choseu archbishop. AV/ig-Jo/jH, iii. 1 

sir Stephen Scroop Richard II. iii. 3 

God, and saint Stephen, give. Tilus Andronicus, iv. 4 

king Stephen was a worthy \ieer. Othello, ii. 3 (.song) 

ST E P-MOTHE RS, evil-eyed uuto you. Cymbeline, i. 2 

STEPPED thus far in Taming or Slirew, i. 2 

the prince of Wales stepped fortli ..\HenryIV. v. 2 

if well, he stepped before me Henry VIII. iv. 2 

by who^e deatli, he's stepped into . Timon ofAth. ii. 2 

blood, liatli stepped into the law .... — iii. 5 

whose naked breast stepped before ..Cymbeline, v. 5 

STEPPING o'er tlie bounds of ..Romeo S, Juliet, iv. 2 

STEPT— I am in blood ste|>t in so far..il/ac(;e(/i, iii. 4 

STERIL— sea-marge, steril, and rocky . Tempest, iv. 1 

he hath like lean, steril, and bare ..IHenrylV. iv.3 

shake off their steril curse Julius Cwsar, i. 2 

seems to me a steril promontory Hamlet, ii. 2 

either to have it steril with idleness .... Othello, i. 3 



STERILITY— her womb convey sterility! Lear, i. 4 

STERLING yet in England Richard II. iv. 1 

you may do with sterling money ... .i Henry I V. ii. 1 

for true pay, which are not sterling Hamlet, \ 3 

STERN— not liave been so stern. .Meas. for Meas. ii. 2 
through the heartwith your itetn.Mid.N.'sUr. iii. 2 

the countenance of stern AtyouLihe it, ii. 7 

by the stern brow, and waspish action — iv. 3 

for you are cold and stern All's Well, iv. 2 

he hath a stern look, but a gentle . . KingJohn, iv. 1 

the very hand of stern injustice — v. 2 

teaching stern murder liow to butcher. Iliehnrdll. i. 2 
with cliild by the stern tyrant, .2/Je;ii-y/r. (indue.) 

to swearing, and stern looks Henry V. v. 2 

sit at chiefest stern of public IHenryVl.i.l 

let tliy looks be stern — i. 2 

why look you still so stern and tragical? — iii 1 
deeds of.rage, and stern impatience .. — iv 7 
turn ourst'ern upon a dreadful roek?.2He;i)y VI. iii. 2 

some stern untutored churl — iii. 2 

Suttblk's imperial tongue is stern.... — iv. 1 

stern i'aulconbridge commands 3 Henry VI. i. I 

thou stern, obdurate, flinty, rough .. — i. 4 

is by the stern lord Clifford done .... — ii. 1 

our stern alarums changed Richard II I. 'i 1 

am stern, and love them not? — 1.3 

murder, stern murder, in the direst .. — v. 3 
I have seen thee stern, and tliou ..Coriolanus, iv. 1 

the door of our stern daughter? Cymbeline, ii. 3 

what stern ungenile hands .. Titus^ndronicus, ii. 5 

more stern and bloody than — v. 2 

they skip from stem to stern Pericles, iv. 1 

at tliy gate howled that stern time Lear, iii. 7 

STERNAGE of this navy Henry V. iii. (chorus) 

STERNER be tliau he tliat Asyou Liken, iii. 5 

sliould be made of sterner stuff ..JuliusCwsar, iii. 2 
STERNEST— the sternest eyes.. ;l/eic/i.q/r<;;i/ce, ii. 1 
which gives tlie sternest good-niglit ...llm-beiti, ii. 2 
STERNNESS of his presence? .... Winter'sTale, iv. 3 
STERVED, [A'n/.] andravenous../1/er. oZ/Vnice, iv. 1 
STETERAT-hic steterat (rep. ).. Taming of Sh. iii. 1 
STEW— o'er-run the stew ..Measure for Measure, v. I 

he would unto the stews liichard II. v. 3 

could but get me a wife in theBtews,.2H<oin//''. i.2 

to mart as in a Romish stew Ci/mbeline, i. 7 

STE WARD-called up her steward. TweljthNight, ii. 3 

art any more tlian a steward? — ii. 3 

let me see thee a steward still .... — ii. 5 (letter) 
comes tlie lady Paulina'ssteward. Win/cr'sTrt/e, v.2 
his captain, steward, deputy elect ..Richard II. iv. 1 

I am fortune's steward IHenrylV. v. 3 

as protector, steward, substitute ..Richard III. iii 7 
claims to be high steward irep.) ..Henry VIII. iv. 1 
the god of gold, is but his steward.. 7'wn(mo//!l(/i. i. 1 
go to my steward. Please it your .. ,. — ii. 2 
your steward puts me oft', my lord .. — ii. 2 
ha! is not that his steward inufHed so? — iii. 4 

ray steward! Here, my lord — iii. 4 

hear you, master steward, Where's .. — iv. 2 
have gold, I'll be his steward still.... — iv. 2 
ne'er did poor steward wear a truer grief — iv. 3 
as your ste« aid still. Had I a steward — iv. 3 
and he is a steward. How fain would — iv. 3 
gave unto his steward a mighty sum — v. 1 

It is the false steward, that stole his . . Hamlet, iv. 5 

STEWARDSHIP, and all the Richard II. li. 2 

dismissed us from our stewardship .. — iii. 3 

STEWED-a disli of stewed prunes .Merry Wives, i. 1 

I was more than half stewed in grease — iii. 5 

for stewed prunes Measure /orMeasure,ii. 1 

faith in thee than in a stewed prune. 1 Henry I V. iii. 3 
he lives upon mouldy stewed prunes. 2Heiiii//r. ii. 4 
there's a stewed plirase, indeed! Troilus ^ Cress, iii. I 
and stewed in brine, smarting ..Antony 6,- Cleo. ii. 5 

a reeking post, stewed in his haste Lear, ii. 4 

an enseamedbed; stewed in corruption. Ham/W, iii. 4 
STICK— disarm thee with this stick .... Tempest, i. 2 

I'll bear Iiim no more sticks — ii. 2 

on whose nature nature can never stick — iv. I 

you were best stick lier TwoGen. of J'erona, i. 1 

a cod-piece to stick pins on — ii. 7 

only to stick it in their children's, .l/eas./orjl/ras. i. 4 
I am a kind of burr, I shall stick .... — iv. 3 

and so deep sticks it in my — v. 1 

stick musk-roses in thy sleek. .iV/iti.iV.'5 Dream, iv. I 
disposition sticks me at heart ....As you Like it, i. 2 

this drum sticks sorely in your All's Well, iii. 6 

our fears in Banquo stick deep Macbeth, iii. I 

this avarice sticks deeper — iv.3 

I durst not stick a rose KingJohn, i. 1 

and vet he will not stick to say... ...-IHenrylV. i. 2 

tlie knave will stick by thee — v. 3 

saw a flea stick upon Bardolph's Henry r. ii. 3 

and stick it in tliy cap — iv. 7 

that breaks a stick of Gloster's 'iHenryVI. i. 2 

thy leg a stick, compared with — iv. 10 

and stick them in our will Henry VII I. i. 2 

thev will not stick to say, you — ii. 2 

stick where tliey are thrown. Troilus ^Cressida, iii. 2 

to stick the heart of falsehood — iii. 2 

feather sticks in his own wing..7'imon of.ithens, ii. 1 
opinion, that so sticks on Marcins .. Coriolanus, i. 1 
and stick i' the wars like a great .... — v. 3 
hie speech sticks in my heart. .-t///07iy ^- Cleopatra, i. 5 

stick to your journal course Cymbeline, iv. 2 

rapped 'em on the coxcomb with a stick. . Lear, ii. 4 

flesh stick [Co/.-rasli] bearish fangs — iii. 7 

and stick your rosemary on iWis.Romeo ^-Juliet, iv. 5 

seemed i' the air to stick Hamlet, ii. 2 

like fruit unripe, sticks on the tree — iii. 2 

will notliing stick our person to arraign — iv. 5 
i' the darkest night, stick fiery off indeed — v.2 
he miglit stick the smallest opinion.... O/Ae/fo, iv. 2 
the slime that sticks on filthy deeds .... — v.2 
STICKING— murders sticking on \\\s... Macbeth, v. 2 

faithful loves, sticking together KingJohn, iii. 4 

his hair, vou see, is sticking 2 Henry VI. iii. 2 

STICKING-PLACE, and we'll not fa.i\..^Iacbeih, i. J 
STICKLER-LIKE, the armies. Troilus 4- Cressida, v.9 
STICK'ST a dagger in me ..Merchant 01 Venice, iii. I 



STI 



STICK'ST up to llio cars Itomeo AJiiliel, i. 4 

STIFF— I nm stiff unil weary ..Comeily of Knars, i. U 
ill stitf unwii'Uliy arms ttj»ainst ....Itirlninl II. iii. 2 
a nobleman lies stark and stitf ....I Hmri/Il'. v. 3 

with stitfunbfiweil knee •iltrmiil'l. iii. 1 

at sea in a alitt'ttmpest ns loud.... Hem j/ (77 /. iv. I 

ready your siill'li;it< luul rlubs CuiioUmut, i. I 

wluit, art tliou >till7 .stiuid'stout? .. — i. 1 

(this is stiti'iiowsi hath.wilh. tlnlonu A-Cleopntra.i. 2 
correspniidinj! witli your stiff age ..Cymbethic, iii. 3 

how stitl' is inv vile sense /.«ir, iv. (i 

shall stitl', and sturk, and cold.. Konifo ^Juliet, iv. 1 

settled, and lier joints are stiff — iv. 5 

STIFF-DDKNE action itleiirtilK i. 1 

STIl Fi:\ the sinews, summon up ....llrimjl'. iii. 1 

STll FLY— bear me stiffly upl Hamlel,t. S 

STU'I.I'. in vour own rejrort Meas.forMeas. ii. 4 

enoiiL.h t.i stilK' such a villain up....KingJoh!i, iv. 3 

blond stillc Ilu' villain SHennjII. ii. 6 

STIFI.ICD with tliis smell of sin ....Kin^'Mm, iv. 3 

stitliil witli llie mere ranknesa HenrijI'Ill. iv. 1 

not then be stifled in the vault. .Ilomeo^Juliet, iv. 3 

STIG:M.VTICAIiinmakinf;,worseCom«/!/ii/i>>-. iv.2 

STIGM.VTICK, that's more tban....'iHfiiryr/. v. 1 

like afoul misshapen stismatick ..3Henryl^l. ii. 2 

STILIv- to still mv boating mind Tnnpesl, iv. 1 

still swine eat lUi the dratf Merry iVives,\\.'i 

at still midniirht, walk round — iv. 4 

how still the eveuini; is, as hushed ..MuchAdo, ii. 3 
call to the nurse, and bid her still it — iii. 3 

Academe, still and contemplative .Love'sL.Lost,\. 1 

rust, rapier! be still, druml — i. 2 

by the heart's still rhetoric — ii. 1 

who he stands still withal (rep.) .AsynnLikeil, iii. 2 
as ever still sleep mocked death . . 'I'hiin-'sTate, v. 3 

foor man's son would have lain sl'M. King John, iv. 1 
ie still, ye thief, and hear (ri-p.) ..I Henryir. iii. 1 
lying still, miKbt make them look..2)(e>ii v"'. iv. 4 

a"ir, a chartered libertine, is still Henrys, i. 1 

England, as dead midnight still.. — iii. (chorus) 
with chewed grass, still and motionless — iv. 2 
Willi his name mothers still their . . I Henry Vt. ii. 3 

let your drums lie still — v. 4 

then, York, be still awhile iHenryVI. i. 1 

eweet Somerset, be still — iii. I 

madam, be still; with reverence — iii. 2 

given thee peace, for thou art still . . — v. 2 
cured by words; therefore, he still ..ZUenryVI. ii. 2 
wearied tongue is still and mute ..liichnr-l III. iv. 4 
if they be still, and willing .Uenryl'lll. (prologue) 

a still and quiet conseience — iii. 2 

the still and mental parts Troilus f, Cress, i. 3 

lurks a still and dumb-discoursive .. — iv. 4 

to yawn, be still, and wonder Coriolanm, iii. 2 

bid every noise be still JuliusCaisar, i. 2 

wluUt we, lying still, are full — iv. 3 

CaBsar, now be still; I killed not .... — v. 5 
when our quick winds lie still ..Antony ffCleo. i. 2 
holy, cold, and still conversation .... — ii. 6 
modest eyes, and still conclusion.... — iv. 13 

dost thou lie still? if thus thou — v. 2 

if not, let her lie still, and i^vewm.. ..Cymbeline, ii. 3 
whv art thou still? ha, ha, hal .. TilusAndron. iii. 1 

etri'ke it thus to make it slill — iii. 2 

by still practice, learn to know — iii. 2 

still tliy deaieuing, thy dreadful Pericles, iii. I 

is now most still, most secret HamW. iii. 4 

spirit so still and quiet, that her motion. Othello, i. 3 

peace, and be still! I will so — v. 2 

no more moving? still as the grave — v. 2 

STILI.,-BOKN— should be still-born.. 2 Wenn//r. i. 3 

STILI^CLOSIN'O waters Tempest, iii. 3 

STILLED my brawling discontent. JV/eiu./orit/raj. iv.l 

STILLER seats we came Cymheline, v. 4 

STILLICST— and most stillest night.2Heniy/»'. iii. 1 

STILLNESS entertain Merchant of Venice, \. 1 

soft stillness, and the night, become.. — v. I 
as modest stillness, and humility ....HmryV. iii. I 

but only in patient stiUness — iii. 7 

and stillness of vour j'outh the world . . Oihetlo, ii. 3 
STir,L-PIECINGrC.K.-peering]air../4H'sWW(, iii. 2 

!<TILL-S(1LICITINGeye, and such Uar, i. 1 

STILL-STAND, running neither. ...2Heiiny/>'. ii. 3 

ST1I,L-V1-:XEI) Bermoothes Tempest, i. 2 

SriLL-WAKIXti sleep, that is ..Romeo ^ Juliet, \. 1 

STILLY— aniiv siillv sounds ..HenryV. iv. (chorus) 

STING-yield it, with your stings!. 7'«-o6'oi.o/rer. i. 2 

the wanton stings, and motions . . Mcas. for Mem. i. .'> 

have a serpent sting thee twice?. /Vei-.o/ Venice, iv. I 

oensiial as the brutish sting \lsi\i.AsyouLikeit, ii. 7 

thy sting is not .so sharp — ii. 7 (song) 

what sharp stings are in ber All's Wtll, i'n. 4 

something in't tliat stings his nature — iv. 3 

best beware my sting Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 

not where a wasp doth wear his sting? — ii. 1 

whose sting is sharper than lyinler'sTale, ii. 3 

and blind-worm's sting, lizard's leg ..Macbeth, iv. 1 

warmed, that sting my heart! Richard II. iii. 2 

that will sting thee to the lieart — v. 3 

have but their stings and teeth i Henry IV. iv. 4 

armed in their stings, make boot Henry V. \. i 

doth sting achild,tliat ZHenryfl. iii. 1 

breasts, will stiug your hearts — iii. 1 

affrights me, as a scrjient'a sting .... — iii. 2 

care not who they stiiie in hiB — iii. 2 

from whose envenomed and fatal sting — iii. 2 

as smart as lizard's stings! — iii. 2 

Bomc say, the beestings, but I say .. — iv. 2 
the lurking serpent's mortal sting?. .3/ffnryr/. ii. 2 

toads, or lizards' dreadful stings — ii. 2 

they cannot greatly sting to hurt.... — ii. 6 
will make this sting the sooner .. Henry fill. iii. 2 
lost bis honei' and his sting.. 7'roi/Ms ^Cresiida, y. II 

we put a sting in him JutitttCtetar, ii. 1 

very wisely, threat licfore you sting .. — v. I 
edge, sting, or o|icr.ition ..Antony i^ Cleopatra, iv. 13 
wasp outlive, us both to sting.. 'A/tu/lnrfronicuf, ii. 3 

these things sting his minil so I.enr, iv. 3 

seriient that did sting thy father's life . Hamlet, i. .■> 
bosom lodge, to prick and sting her — i. S 



[ 721 ] 



STO 



iv. 3 

v. 1 
V. 3 

v. 3 



ii. I 
ii. 1 
ii. 2 



STIXUl.'Vd tliau bees that made llicm..r<-m;<i-»f, i. 2 

yield stinging nettles to mine Kichard II. iii. 2 

like «tiiii;iiig bees in hottest .. •/•ilu../ln'irn«i<-i«, v. 1 

P.TlN(ILKSS_iiot stinglesstoo 1ulius(:ti^sm-,v. 1 

STL\ K-din's stink in some sort.A/cai. rnr Mens. iii. 2 
iry.iur mi'liiphoi- stink, I will slop .'.AU'sllM, v. 2 
they would but stink, and putriry..l//fnrv ''/. iv. 7 
for his breath stinks with eating.... 2Hdin///. iv. 7 
profession as it were to stink afore .... Pericles, iv. G 

may stand by the fire and stink I.tar, i. 4 

STIliKING— pour down stinking pi teh.. 7Vm;)cs(, i. 2 
with stinking clothes that fretted. /l/crri/ "'"''•«, iii. 5 
now as cheap as stinking mackarel..U/cnr!//r. ii. 4 
stinking, and fl.y-blown, lies here ..I Henry VI. iv. 7 
nay, John; it will be stinking ]B.V!..2IienryVl. iv. 7 
people, lieg their stinking Ineaths . . Coriolanus, ii. 1 
when you cast .vour stinking, greasy — iv. 6 
such a deal of stinking breath . . ..JulinsCa>sar, i. 2 

that's fed with stinkinjj tallow Cymbeline, i. 7 

and let the stinking ehlcr, grief — iv. 2 

bill; can smell him that's stinking Lear, ii. 4 

STINKINGLY depending?A/<asure/or Measure, iii. 2 

STINT— not stint our necessary ....Henry VIII. i.i I 

half stints their strife before . . Troilus tf Cress, iv. 5 j 

make peace stint war Tiinon of Alliens, v. 5 ] 

at pleasure stint their melody. . . . TilusAndron. iv. 4 , 
[Km(.] with the stint of war will look ..Pericles, i. 2 
and swears she'll never stint.... — iv. 4 (Gower) 
and stint thou too, I pray thee . . Romeo ^-Juliet, i. 3 
S'I'INTED— it stinted, and said ay (rep.) — i. 3 
STIK— what stir is this to-day?.. ru'o (Jen. ofVer. V. 4 

wonUl I miglit never stir Merry IVives, v. 5 

by all means stir on the youth .. TiccW/i A'i's-/i(, iii. 2 

once stir my temper Measure for Measure, ii. '2 

but stir not you, till you have — v. 1 

peace, stir not MuchAdo, iii. 3 

riiihistrate, stir up the Athenian ..Mid.N.'sDr. i. 1 
but I will not stir from tliis place.... — iii. I 
then stir Demetrius up with bitter .. — iii. 2 

let none of your people stir me — iv.l 

stir them on! stir them on! I.ove'sL.Lost,v.2 

now will I stir this gamester As you Like it, i. 1 

and never stir assailants — i. 3 

when that the sleeping man should stir — iv. 3 

would stir it up where it wanted All's tVell, i. 1 

time to stir him from his trance.. Taming of Sh. i. 1 
wliat wisdom stirs amongst you?.. Winter's Tale, ii. 1 

than all thy woes can stir 

that he would not stir bis pettitoes . 

done thee, stir afresh within me ... 

no foot shall stir. Music, awake her 

I'll fill your grave up; stir; nay ... 

you perceive, she stirs; start not .... — v. 3 

for I will not let him stir .... Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

will determine this before I stir — v. 1 

crown me, without my stir Macbeth, i. 3 

and stir as life were in't — v. 6 

might never stir from off this place . . King John, i. 1 

who dares not stir by day — 

stir them up against a mightier task — 

tliat stirs good thoughts in any — 

I'll stir them to it; come, away, away! — 

I will not stir, nor wince — iv.l 

or stir thy foot or teach thy — iv. 3 

to stir against the butchers of Richard II. i. 2 

and what stir keeps good old York .. — ii. 3 
unapt to stir at these indignities ....IHenrylV. i. 2 

o' the blood more stirs, to rouse — 1.3 

Mortimer doth stir about his title .. — ii. 3 

I could not stir, but, like a comet — iii. 2 

be advised; stir not to-night — iv. 3 

a downy feather, whicli stirs not ..'iHenrylV. iv. 4 

all hell shall stir for this HenryV. v. I 

and if I did but stir out of my bed. . 1 Henry I' I. i. 4 
what stir is this? what tumidt's .... — _i. 4 
no, stir not. for your lives; let her ..iHenryVI. ii. 4 

nor stir at nothing, till the axe — ii- 4 

I will stir up in England some — iii. 1 

daresstirawing, if Warwick SHenryVI. i. 1 

revenge his death, before I stir — i. 1 

Shalt stir, in SutTulk, Norfolk — iv. 8 

meet thee, if thou stir abroad — v. 1 

that stir the king against the duke..n"c/iar(i ///. i. 3 

stir with the lark to-morrow — v. 3 

I know, 'twill stir him strongly ..IhnryVlU. iii. 2 
some little memory of me will stir hiin — iii. 2 

morestirsagainst, both inhis — v. 2 

as well push against Paul's, as stir them — v. 3 
the eye, than what not stirs.... Trailus^Cress, iii. 3 

but wrong to stir me up Timon of Athens, iii. 4 

if renown made it not stir Coriolanus, i. 3 

of that, for which the iieople stir .... — iii. 1 

there is no stir, or walking in JullnsCtesar,i. 3 

etir up their servants to an act of — ii. 1 

not stir out of vour house to-day (rpp.) — ii. 2 
if I were disposed to stir your hearts — iii. 2 

let me not stir you up to such — iii. '2 

stir not until the signal -- y- I 

know meantime of stirs abroad ..Anlony 1$ C(eo. i. 4 

but, pray you, stir no embers up — ii. 2 

as the tits and stirsof bis mind could. Cj/ml/sdnc, i. 4 

I could not stir him: he said — JV. 2 

impatience, lest you stir up mine — .v. 4 

stir a mutiny in the mildest.. 7V(t(»Wrtrfron,oH.t, iv. 1 
gentlemen, why do you stir so early?../' ^' " 



feed vou, men must stir you up 

her beauty stir up the lewdly-inclined 

fortune did malign my stir 

who stirs? call Burgundy. Cornwall.. 

if you do stir abroad, go armed 

if It be you that stir these daughters' .. 

this feather stirs: she lives! 

to move, i.s- to stir; and to be llonu 

tboii shalt not stir one I'liot to seek .. 
tush! I will stirabout, and all tilings 
come, stir, stir, stir! tlie sii-oiul cock 
the lailv stirs. O eomrortubic Irioi! .. 
no spirit dares Btir[hM/.-eaii walk] ....H 
Lethe's wharf, wouldst Ibou not stir . . . . 
behind the orraa hearing something stir.. 



— iv. 3 

— iv. 3 

— v. 1 
, . Lear, i. 1 



— u. I 
. — v. 3 

^Juliet, i. 1 



STI It without great argument Hamlel, iv. 4 

in this case, Bliuuld stir me most — v. 2 

thatstirs next to carve for his own rai^c.Olhello, ii. S 
if I once stir, or do but lift this arm .... — ii. 3 

if she will stir liithur, I shall flcem — ill. I 

look, he stirs; do vou withdraw vonrself — iv. 1 

[(■n/.] nay, if .you Vtir. we shall hear _ v. 1 

I think, she stir.s again: no; what's the best— v. 2 

STIRRED- thus far stirred you . . 11 inier'sTale, v. 3 

subject speaks, stirred up by heaven. /(ic/iar^i//. iv. I 

have stirred up my liefest liege ....illcnryl'l, iii. I 

would have stirrea up remorse SHenryVI. v. S 

Btirred up by Dorset, Buckingham. Wo/iaji/ ;;/. iv. 4 
he was stirred with such an agony .Henry VIII. ii. 1 

never desired it to be stirred...-. — ii. 4 

troubled, like a fountain stirred. 7'ro<7u.i 4 Cicm. iii. 3 
Brutus, are you stirred so early ...JulintCtrinr, ii. 2 
but stirred by Cleopatra ,.,, Anlony fi Cleopatra, i. 1 

the senate hath stirred up Cymbeline, iv. 2 

fountain stirred with wind . .Titus Andronicns, ii. 5 

else, you mainly were stirred up Hamlet, iv. 7 

STIRRER— an early stirrer illenrylV. iii. 2 

bad neighbour makes us early stirrers. Hc7irvf. iv. I 
STIRREST-bow thou stirrest <,rep.\\\.-i1.rericle,,i\. \ 

STIRRETII not Romeo^ Juliet, ii. 1 

STIRRING— in stirring love ..Mid. IM.'sDream, ii. 3 
merry, nimble, stirring spirit ....Lore'sL.Loit, v, 2 
nor no ill luck stirring .. ..Merchant of Venice, iii. 1 
now in the stirring passoge . .Comedy of Errors, iii. 1 
is thj' master stirring? our knocking.. iJ/ac(^e//i, ii. 3 
is the king stirring, worthj' thane? ^... — ii. 3 

an Ate, stirring him to blood KingJohn, ii 1 

be stirring as tlie time — v. I 

cowards, there's no equity stirring..! Henry IV. ii. •• 

for stirring up my sulijects 3 Henry VI. v. .") 

you are early stirring: what ncvt. Richard III. iii. 2 
Hector was stirring early .... Troilus 4 Cretiida, i. 2 
where there is wit stirring, and leave — ii. I 
a stirring dwarf we do allowance give — ii. 3 

we shall have a stirring world Coriolanus, iv. i 

that our stirring can Antony ^Cleopatra, ii. I 

is the mad blood stirring Romeo ^JuUid.ui. i 

quiet guard? Not a mouse stirring Handel. \. 1 

attends the general's wife, be slirriii"..o;/iW(», iii. 1 

she is stirring, sir; if she will stir hither — iii. 1 

STIRRUPS of no kindred .... 7'amiiij' ofShrem, iii. 2 

to hold ray stirrup, nor to take — iv.l 

thy hand, and held my stirrup? 'IHenryVI. iv. 1 

make sacred even his stirrup. . . . 7iTno)i ofAlbens, i. 1 

who bowed but in my stirrup Coriolanus, iii. 2 

STITCIIERY— lay aside your stitcheiy — i. 3 
STITCIIES-yourselves into stitches. TwelflhN. iii. 2 
STITHY- "^^ulcan's stithy [Knf.-stithe]. Ilamtei, iii. 2 
STITHY'D Mars his helm.. .. 7'roi'(uj4-CrPs<iiia, iv. r, 
STOCCADDES, and I know not..... Mfr<yirii-p», ii. 1 
STOCCATA carries it away ....Romeo ^Juliet. i\i. 1 
STOCK with a wench (rep)..TwoGen. of Verona, iii. 1 

1 have sat in the stocks — iv. 4 

thy punto, thy stock, thy reverse.. A/crryTirps, ii. 3 

had set me i' tlie stocks (rr/j.) — iv. .'j 

well in aflame-coloured stock TtreWhNighl, i. 3 

any of the stock of Barabba8..il/«cA.n/;Viiicc, iv. 1 

sat in the stocks all night Alt's Hell, iv. 3 

already, the stocks carry him — iv. 3 

hisdisaster of setting in the stocks .. — iv. 3 
i' the stocks, or any where, so I may — iv. 3 
a pair of stocks, you rogue!. Taming ofSh. 1 (indue.) 
nor no stocks, I pray; or so devote .. — i. 1 

with a linen stock on one leg — iii. 2 

and in the stocks avouch.. IVinler'sTale, iv. 2 (song) 
a gentler scion to the wildest stock .. .. iv. 3 
a pair of stocks in the tnwa't.. Comedy of Errors, iii. I 

who, sitting in the stocks Richard II. v. i 

the true line and stock of Charles HenryV. i. 2 

a stem of that victorious stock — ii. 4 

put in wiUI and savage stock — ''.'.••'• 

sweet stem from York's great stock.. 1 Henry VI. ii. ;> 

fair slips of such a stock iHenryVL ii. 2 

noble stock was graft with erabtrce .. — iii. 2 
corruption of a blemished stock ..Richard III. iii. 7 
her roval stock graft with ignoble .. — iii. 7 

though from a humble stock Henry VIII. iv. 2 

but for the stock, sir Thomas, I wish — v. 1 

and what stock he springs of Coriolanus, ii. 3 

like one i' tlic stocks — v. 3 

and you recoil from your great stock. C!/in6p'i'"<', i. 7 
be jointed to the old stock (rep. v. 5) — v. 4 (scroll) 
nor thee, nor any of thy stock . 7'i7in /tndroni'rtu, i. 2 
noble stock, I'd wish no better choice ..Pericles, v. I 

fetch forth the stocks, ho! (rep.) Lear, il. 2 

call not your stocks for me — ii. 2 

bring away the stocks — ii. 2 

an' tliou liadst been set i' the stocks for .. — ii. 4 

not i' the stocks, fool — ii. 4 

who put my man i' the stocks? (rep.) .... — ii.4 
now, by the stock and hontiur of Itomeo »$• Jutiei.i. b 

cannot so inoculate our old stock Hamlet, iii. I 

STOCKED— who stocked my servant? Lenr.ii. i 

stocked, iinnislied, and imprisoned — iii. 4 

STOCK-FISlI-make a stoek-tlsli of .. Tempesl. iii. 2 
you stock-lisb— O for breath to utter.. I /ffm!//;' ii.4 
one Sanii>soii Stnckfish. a fruiterer.. 2 Hmryr/. iii 2 

STllCK-ri-l ! I ^: I Ml it is Meat, for Meus. 'I'li. 2 

STIKKP ^ i I !.\ nttpkin8..iUerr)/'*'ir«, iii.5 
tl.vvill. ' ,,,.)..Tu-elfihX.n.b{,\elier) 

he'siii M 11 ■ h ri.;i,jMr>-p.iii.4fi V.I) _ iii. 2 
no more smkin-s than legs.. 7'rim.nff n/A'A. 2 (ind.) 
their white stockings, and every officer — iv.l 
how many pair of silk stockings ....'iHenrylV. ii. 2 

tall stockings, short blistered Henry VIII. 1.3 

of mv master, stocking bis messenger ....Lcnr, ii. 2 

his stockings fouled, ungartered, and ..Hamlet, ii. I 

STOCKISIl-nanglil sostockish...l/''rfA<)f;'t.iirf,v. 1 

STOIt;-let'8 be no stoics, nor llo.7'n>mM^o/.'-'Ar<-ir, i. 1 

STOKIOSIA' and Gardiner llrnryVlll. iv. I 

STOLE-or stole it, rather lempcti.v. 1 

how my I'ather stole two geese Merry I'ires, iii. 4 

i 'twas the boy that stole your meat ..MuchAdo, ii. I 
warilv I stole intoa iieii;liboiir .. /.opr'jL.l.i)i(, v. 2 
the Keutleinan that lately stole.. «'r.n//>nicf, iv. 1 
I 3A 



STO 



STOLE from France as 'tis .Ill's ll'ell, iii. S 

he stole from Florence — v. 3 tpetitionl 

stole ther.ce the life o' the Mactielh, ii. 3 

then I stole all courtesy 1 llfun/ll'. iii. 2 

Bardoljjh stole a lute-case Hfiiryl'. iii. 2 

in Calais they stole a fire-shovel — iii. 2 

he slily stole away, anj left his meu .iUennjf'I. i. 1 

manliood stole to Khesus' tents — Iv. 2 

Brutns, stole from my bed Julius Cwmr,ii. 1 

two years old, I stole these babes ..Cymbcline, iii. 3 

stole these children upon my — v. 5 

stole into the covert of the wood.. /(!)»ieo<V./"'iW, i. I 

upon my secure hour thy uncle stole Hamlet, i. 5 

from a shelf the precious diadem stole .. — iii. -l 
that stole liis master's dau{!hter — iv. 5 

STOLEN— thus be stolen away .2'iroGen. o/rer. iii. I 

for puddings he hath stolen iv. 4 

the other squirrel was stolen from .. — iv. 4 
hath from nature stolen a ma]i..Meas. for Meas. ii. 4 

my stay must be stolen out of — iii. 1 

luive stolen his bird's nest Much Ado, ii. 1 

have a oare that your bills be not stolen — iii. 3 
in this morning secretly stolen .aw;iy — iv. 2 
writ in my cousin's hand, stolen from — v. 4 
stolen tlic impression of licr fantasy .JJid.iX. Dr. i. 1 
a lovely buy, stolen from an Indian.. — ii. 1 

when thou hast stolen away from.,., ii, 2 

they were stolen into this wood ii. 2 

would he have stolen awa3' from sleeping iii. 2 

stolen my love's heart from him?. . . . iii. 2 

they would have stolen away jv. 1 

God's my life! stolen hence, and left — iv. I 

stolen the scraps Lnve'sl..Lost,v. 1 

of double ducats stolen from mcUcr. of Venice, ii. 8 
rich and precious stones stolen by my ' — ii. 8 
a fair colour, or expressed it stolen . . All's Well. v. 3 
Tranio stolen your clothe3?(;ei).).ramnit' n/'iVi. i. I 
or, how stolen from the dead? IVinier's fuU\ v. 3 

villain, thon hast stolen \>ul\\, Comedy ol Err. iii. 1 

are stolen away and fled niacbeUi, ii. 4 

Worcester is stolen away to-night. . I Hetin/ / F. ii. 4 
to say the truth, stolen from ray host — iv. 2 
that had stolen the horse he rode .,..2//enj!//r. i. I 
thou Itast stolen that, which after.... — iv. 4 

he liath stolen apix, and hanged Henry F. iii. 6 

was by a beggar-woman stolen away.2 Henry ri. iv. 2 

from Scotland am I stolen a/Jen;;/;/, iii. 1 

ne'er have stolen the breech from — v. 6 

odd ends, stolen forth of holy writ. . Richard III. i. 3 
Cardinal Canipcins is stolen away. Henry n II. iii. 2 
stolen what we do fear to ^rep.) .Truilus%- Cress, ii. 2 
a eompobture stolen from general. Timon nfAlh. iv. 3 
stolen name Coriolanus in Corioli?.. Co) /o/aiiws, v. i 
for you have stolen their hmz'mg. . JidiusCrpsar, v. 1 
why liave you stolen upon us .. Antony ^Cleo. iii. i; 

till they had stolen our jewel — iv. 13 

from their nursery were stolen Cymbcline, i. 1 

your ring may be stolen too — i. 6 

being corrupted, hath stolen it from her — ii. 4 

for this was stolen ii. 4 

good troth, I have stolen naught .... — iii. 6 

you shall not now be stolen v. 4 

nv Belarius stolen, for many years., — v. S 

and wnen I have stolen upon "these Lenr, iv. 6 

hath stolen him home to bed . . Romeo ^ .hiliet, ii. 1 
their stolen marringe-day was Tybalt's — v. 3 
is abused, stolen from me, and corrupted. 0(/ic/io,i. 3 

ha*t stolen it from her? No, faith _ jii. s 

senfe had I of bcr stolen hours of lust? . . — iii. 3 
robbed, not wanting what is stolen — iii. 3 

STOLEST a cup of sack eighteen 1 Henry I]', ii. 4 

and stolest away the ladies' hearts ..iHenryl'I. i. 3 

STOIM ACH— an imdergoing stomach. . . . Tempest, i. 2 

against the stomach of ray sense — ii. 1 

my stomacli is not constant ii. 2 

for we have stomachs _ iii. 3 

kill your stomach on your meat. TwoGen.of Ver. i. 2 

he hath an excellent stomach Much Ado, i. I 

eat when I have stomach _ i. 3 

of his quick wit and his queasy stomach — ii. 1 

you have no stomach, signior _ ii. 3 

loathiu" to the stomacli brings. i)/(d.A'.'»Dira)P, ii. 3 

1 sliall do it on a full stomach Love's L.I.ost.i. 2 

your stomachs are too young _ iv. 3 

done, sir; they have all stomach. jUer. ofl'enice, iii. 5 

while I liave a stomach iii. 6 

it goes much against my stomach. /is you J./ZteiV, iii. 2 
80 dies with feeding his own stomach .All'slVelt, i. 1 
old man loves money with no stomach — iii. 2 

why, if you have a stomach to't — iii. 6 

you find your stomach serves you. Tamm^o/SA. i. 1 

but if you have a stomach i. 2 

I know you have a stomach iv. I 

is to close our stomachs up v. 2 

then vail your stomachs — v. 2 

stomach: you have no stomach. . Cmnrdii nf F.rr. i. 2 
when my nightly stomach is sufficed, hi'ng.lohn, i. 1 
stomach, pleasure, and tliy golden.. 1 Henn/I I', ii. 3 
'gan vail his stomach, and did grace .illenryl i: i. 1 
Blie either gives a stomach, and no food — iv. 4 
not offend one stomach with our. Henry V. ii. (cho.) 
villany goes again.-t mv weak stomach — iii. 2 

they have only stomachs to eat iii. 7 

which hath no stomach to this fight _ iv. 3 

nobles should such stomaihs boar! ..\ Henry Vl. i. 3 
for soldiers' stiim.'.chs always 6er\e.. — ii. 3 
how will their grudging stomachs be — iv. 1 

BO do your stomachs, lords iHenryVI. ii. 1 

to cool a man's stomach this hot .... — iv. 10 
goodness is poison to thy stomach. Hmri/;';//. iii. 2 

he was a man of unbounded stomach iv. 2 

to arms, that hath a stomach . . Troilns fy Cress, ii. 1 

my little stomach to the war _ iii. 3 

enough of Hector, if you have stomach — iv. ."i 
where my stomach finds meat. Timon nr Athens, iv. 3 

gjvesmen stomach to digest his luliusVccsar, i. 2 

if not, when you have stomachs v. 1 

wars alike against my stomach.. .4H'onf/<S- Cleo. ii. 2 
it you must believe, stomach not all _ iii. 4 
stomachswill make what's homely. Cymbcline, iii. G 



[ 72-2 ] 



STO 



STOMACH— ay, or a stomach Cymheline, v. 4 

their stomachs with their bitter.. TitusA/idron. iii. I 
cheer be poor, 'twill fill your stomachs — v. 3 
Btomach be o'ereharged with gold .... Pericles, iii. 3 

and sharpens well the stomach — iv. 1 

answer from a full-flowing stomach Lear, v. 3 

enterprize that hath a stomach iu't ....Hamlet, i. 1 

they are all but stomachs Othello, iii. 4 

great revenge had stomach for them all — v. 2 

STOiUACHEKS, for my llinier'sTale,iv. 3 (song) 

more be stoinacbers to mv heart! ..Cymbcline, iii. 4 
STOMACHING. Every time serves..4/,/. *C7eo.ii. 2 
STOMACH-tiUALMED at land.. ..Cymbcline, iii. 4 

STONE— no token but stones TwoGen. of I'er. i. 1 

against the bruising stones — i. 2 

he is a stone, a very pebble stone .... ii. 3 

with the enameled stones _ ii. 7 

could soften steel and stones iii. 2 

all his two stones {_rcp.) Merry tVives, i. 4 

a stone. And wliat is a stone, William? ' iv. 1 

has no more brain tliaii a stone .. Tu-elftUKight, i. 5 

too much unto a heart of stone ...... iii. 4 

clear stones [Co/. A'H(.-storics] towards — iv. 2 

is more to bread tlian stone Meus.forMeas. i. 4 

cracking the stones of the foresaid ,, — ii. I 

or stones, whose rates are either — ii. 2 

and this stone, doth show thati ..Mid.N.'sDr. v, 1 

curst be thy stoues for thus — v. 1 

kissed thy stones; thy stones with .. — t. I 
and see the holy edifice of stone ..Mer. ofrenice, i. 1 

two stimes, two rich and precious {rep.)' ii. 8 

she hath the stones upon her ii. 8 

his stones, his daughter, and his ducats — ii. 8 
Orpheus drew tre(;s, stones, and floods — v. 1 
sermons in stoneS, and good in ..AsyouLike it, ii. 1 

I broke my sword upon a stone — ii. 4 

able to breathe life into a stone All's ll'ell, ii. 1 

shebrought stone jugs Taming of Sh. 2 (iuduc.> 

brass, nor stone, nor parchment ,, It'inter'sTale, i. 2 
as ever oak, or stone, was sound , , . , — ii. 3 
not a counterfeit stone, not a riband — iv. 3 
chide me, dear stone; that I may .,.. — v. 3 
does not the stone rebuke me (.rep.) .. — v. 3 

standing like stone with thee! — v. 3 

wrought you, (for the stone is mine) — v. 3 

be stone no more: approach — v 3 

for fear thy very stones prate of .Macbeth, ii. 1 

toad, that under coldest stone _ iv. I 

those sleeping stoues, that as a -n'aist.KingJohn, ii. 1 
mj' uncle's spirit is in these stones .. — iv. 3 
unpeopled offices, untrodden stones?. fli'cAaj-d //. i. 2 
this precious stone set in the silver ., — ii. I 
and these stones prove armed soldiers — iii. 2 

limits of yon lime and stone — iii. 3 

hold of ragged stones iHenrylf. (indue.) 

scraped from Pomfret stones i. i 

make him a philosoplier's two stonea iii. 2 

and they were as cold as any stone , . Henry V. ii. 3 
stands upon the rolling restless stone — iii. 6 

is fixed upon a spherical stone — iii. 6 

as swift as stones enforced from — iv. 7 

digged stones out of the ground IHenryl'I. i. 4 

stones! stoues! my good lords .... — iii. I 
their pockets full of pebble stones .. — iii. 1 

nay, if we be forbidden stones — iii. 1 

my lieart is turned to stone iHenryl'I. v. 2 

and Indian stones, nor to be seen ..ZHenry I'l. iii. 1 

to lime the stones together v. 1 

beat the stones about thine ears? .... — v, 1 
inestimable stones, unvalued jewels.iiicAard ///. i. 4 
like dumb statuas, or breathless stones — iii. 7 

I am not made of stone iii. 7 

jAiy, you ancient stones, those tender iv. 1 

toolish sorrow bids your stoues farewell — iv. I 
a base foul stone, made precious by . . — v. 3 
put this dangerous stone a loWiag,.. Henry rl II. v. 2 
have worn the stones of Troy. Troilus ^ Cressida, iii. 2 
tUefallof every Phrygian stone will _ iv. 5 
a word will Priam turn to stone .... — v. 1 1 
with two stones more than his.. Timon of Athens, ii. 2 

fives us diamonds, next day stones. . iii, b 
am sorry, I shall lose a stone by thee — iv. 3 

that, hunger broke stone walls Coriolanus, i. 1 

thy knee bussing the stones iii. 2 

and boys with stones, in puny battle — iv. 4 
you blocks, you stones, you wovse..Julitis Casar, i. 1 

you are not stones, but men _ iii. 2 

that should move the stones of Rome — iii. 2 

your considerate stone Antony ii Cleo. ii. 2 

and the first stone drop in my neck — iii. 1 1 

so do I my stone. Wliat do you Cymheline, i. 6 

and the twinned stones upon i. 7 

sparkles this stone as it was wont.... ii. 4 

the stone's too hard to come bv ii. 4 

spit, and throw stones, cast mire v. 6 

the gods throw stones of sulphur .... v. 5 

your sorrows to a stone (_rep.) . . Titus Andron. iii. 1 

a stone is soft as wax (ri?/).) iii. 1 

and on the ragged stones beat forth. . — v. 3 

ill vegetives, in metals, stones Pericles, iii. 2 

more hard than is the stone wliereof Lear, iii. 2 

their precious stones new lost v. 3 

you are men of stones; had I your v. 3 

her breath will mist or stain the stone — v. 3 

as big as a young cockrel's stone.. Kowieo i^ Juliet, i. 3 

in herb.-;, plants, stones, and their ii. 3 

ICol.Knt.} tliy canopy is dust and stones — v. 3 
preaching to stones, would make them. HamW, iii. 4 
grass-green turf, at his heels a stone — iv. 5 (song) 

the spring that turneth wood to stone ,. iv. 7 

no, my heart is tm-ned to stone Othello, iv. 1 

from her, and softened the stones — iv, 3 (suiui) 

thou dost stone my lieart, and makest . . v."2 

are tliere no stones in heaven, but what. , — v, 2 
STONE-BO W-0, for a stone-bow . Ttcelfth Night, ii. 5 

STONE-CUTTEK, or a painter Leu,-, ii. 2 

STONED -he shall be stoned Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

remember, stoned, and flayed alive — iv. 3 

STONE-HARD heart Itichard III. iv. 4 

STONE-STILL- stand stone-still , , KingJohn, iv. 1 



STONY— a stony luXynsary ..M erchatii oj yenice, iv. 1 

hast whetted on thy stony heart illeniyiy.iv. 1 

while 'tis mine, it shall be ston.y -iHenryl'I. v. 2 

nor stony tower, nor walls of hdiusCiesur, i. 3 

even like a stony image, cold Titus Andron. iii. I 

for stony limits cannot hold Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 2 

which stains the stony entrance of .. — v. 3 

STONY-HEARTED villains IHemnir. ii. 2 

STONY-STRATFORD; and at .. ..Richard III. ii. 4 
STOOD— whiles we stood here securing. V'emptsi, ii. 1 

whose heads stood in their breasts?..., iii. 3 

and thou hast strangely stood the test — iv. 1 
I have stood on the pillory. TwoGen. of Verona, iv. 4 

stood it next to death '. — v. 4 

only myself stood out TnetfthNight, iii. 3 

distant time stood, as it were . . Meus.for Mens. ii. 1 
I liave stood by, my loitl, and I have — v. 1 

you have of late stood out against MuchAdo, i. 3 

that I stood like a man at a mark — ii. 1 

or else it stood upon the choice of. ..Mid. K.'sDr. i. 1 

stood now within the pretty flouret's iv. 1 

then stood as fair, as any cumer.. Mer. of Venice, ii. 1 
that have stood by, and seen our .... — iii. 2 

in such a night, stood Dido with — v. 1 

stood on the extremest verge of ..Asyou Like it, ii. I 
and therefore stood lamely in the verse — iii. 2 

as she stood, with that (rep. ) .m's Well, i. 3 (song) 

if her fortunes ever stood uecessitied to v, 3 

and thought I stood engaged: but when — v. 3 
while idly I stood idly looking on.TamingofSh. i. 1 
and there I stood amazed for awhile — ii. I 
might thus have stood, begetting., H'm/ej's Tate, v. 1 

thus she stood, even with such v. 3 

I guess, it stood in her cliin..C'o>«<'i/i/ of Errors, iii. 2 
where stood Belgia, the Netlierlands? — iii. 2 

doubtfully it stood; as two Macbeth,i.2 

whiles I stood rapt in the wonder — i. 5 (letter) 

I stood and heard them; but they .,,, ii. 2 

why, it stood by lier: she has light — v. 1 

tliat so stood out against the holy ,. Kin:' John, v. 2 
thus long have we stood to watch ..Richard II. iii. 3 
ol sweat liave stood upon thy brow,. 1 Henru/r. ii. 3 

on bridges, stood in lanes — iv. 3 

as the state stood then, was iHenrylV. iv. 1 

father on a hill stood smiling Henry V. i. 2 

what terms the enemy stood on iii. 6 

too nicely urged, be stood upon _ v. 2 

that stood in the way for my wish . , v. 2 

tlie whole army stood agazed I Henry VI. i, 1 

fled, when noble Talbot stood Iv. 5 

niy angry guardant stood alone — iv. 7 

as he stood by, whilst I, his forlorn. .2Henj-y VI. ii. 4 

I stood upon the hatches in the — iii. 2 

in our voiding lobby hast thou stood — iv. 1 
and stood against them as the hope..3 Henry VI. ii. I 
should not blemish it, if I stood by.. Hichard 111. i. 2 

so stood the state (jrp.) _ ji. 3 

every man that stood, showed like.. HenryVIII. i. 1 
I stood i' the level of a full-charged — i. 2 

who ever yet have stood to chn-ri ty . . — ii. 4 
methought, I stood not in the sm'ile — ii. 4 

which my realms stood in by this.,,, — ii.4 
we have stood here observing him .. — iii. 2 
that hath thus stood for his country. Cori'o/anus, ii. 2 

he never stood to ease his breast .... ii. 2 

when we stood up about the corn .,,, — ii. 3 

you have stood your limitation — ii. 3 

no less than what he stood for ii. 3 

stood up to speak of peace, or war ,, iii. 2 

we stood to't in good time iv. 6 

when Marcius stood for Rome — iv. 6 

franchises, whereon you stood iv. 6 

you that stood so much upon iv. 6 

tlireeorfourwenches,wherelBtoodJu(ms Cwsar. i. 2 

I never stood on ceremonies ii. 2 

might have stood against the world — iii, 2 
on each side her, stood pretty . . Antony 4- Cleo. ii. 2 

ne'er stood between, praying for .... iii. 4 

whilst he stood up and spoke, he was — v. I 

she stood, and spake; I found her .. v. 2 

tremblingly she stood, and on — v. 2 

five hundred years hath stood TitusAndron. i. 2 

this minion stood upon hei chastity — ii. 3 
then fresh tears stood on iier cheeks — iii. 1 
and stood between her and her fortunes — iv, 4 
who stood equivalent with mighty ....Pericles, v. I 

alas! stood I witliin his grace Lear,i.l 

here stood he in the dark ii. 1 

opiiosite I stood to his unnatural _ ii. 1 

as I stood here below, methought iv. 6 

should haw stood that niglit against — iv. 7 

his lands, which he stood seised of. Hamlet, i. 1 

as a painted tyrant, Pyrrhus stood — ii. 2 

where late the diadem stood _ ii. 2 

hath screened aud stood between much.. — 111.4 
stood challenger on mount of all the age — iv. 7 
where each second stood heir to the &vst. Othello, i. 1 
thongli our proper son stood in your action — i. 3 
stood within the blank of his displeasure — iii. 4 
STOOL and a cushion for the sexton!.,V«cA/4do, iv. 2 
for three-foot stool mistaketh me. .Mid.N.'sDr. ii 1 
noddle with a three-legged stool .Taining of Sh. i. 1 
all s done, you look but on a stool. , . . Macbeth, iii, 4 

and push us from our stools iii. 4 

now fetch me a stool hither iHenryVI.ii. 1 

leap rae over this stool, and run away ii. i 

till he leap over that same stool _ ii. 1 

thou stool for a witchl TroilusSi Cressida,'\i. 1 

each man to his stool Timonof Athens, iii. 6 

wilt hear me, rise from thy stool. .•/iiloni/ <S- Cleo. ii' 7 

when on my three-foot stool I sit . . Ci/mbeline, iii. 3 

STOOP-why didst thou stoop . . Twotjen. or Ver. i. 2 

I say ! A stoop of wine (rep ) TwelfihNighl, ii. 3 

we stoop and take it, because Meas'.forMeas. ii, 1 

her body stoop to such abhorred pollution — ii. 4 

Btoop,Isay; her shoulder is LoTC'sZ-.ios(, iv. 3 

a golden mind stoops not to .... Mer. of Venice, ii. 7 

and, till she stoop, she must Taming of Sh, iv. 1 

[CoZ. A"n(.] makes his owner stoop ..KingJohn, iii. 1 
Course, stoop low within those _ v 4 



STO 



STOOP— honour's pawn, then stoop . . llii-hiinl II. i. 1 

ond make you stoop unto — .»• 3 

make their sire stoop with ..._....... i"- J 

Btoop tamely to the foot of majesty .2Heiii|///'. iv. i 

I will stoop and humble ray ~ ,, • ^* ? 

when they atoop, tlicy stoop with Henry f .\v. \ 

a straiglit back will stoop - .» 2 

on the King eomnmnds me stoop .Atlenrt/I I. in. 1 

stoop then, and set your knee — 'U. 1 

I'll either make thee stoop — v. 1 

wilt thou not stoop? —,.,•''•, 

duiMitcd now? now will yo stoop? ..2Hcnryl I. iv. 1 
raUier let mv head stoop to the block — iv. 1 
voii shiinldstoiip unto II Frenchman's — iv. 8 
and tlic Fiviicli to stooplirp. ii. 2) ..illeiiry TI. i. 1 
nor 1, but stoop witli patience to .... — . v. S 
he should thussto-ip to tlie herd ..CorwLmus, iii. 2 
stoop, Komans, stoop and \cHiep.).Jtilius Ct-mr, in. I 
honovir to stoop in such a case ..Anlmnj ^Clio.]]. 2 
«t.)op, boys: this gate instructs ....Cyiiibeliiie,in. 3 

and make him stoop to the vale — i.y. 2 

virtue stoops and trembles . . Ti'iisAndioHicus, u. I 
at thy mercy shall they stoop aiul kneel — y. i 
wlien majesty stoops QKn'.-falls] to tolly . . Leitr.i. 1 
with flamin;? t'P stoops to his base ....Hainlel, ii. 2 

fetch me a stoop of liquor — v. 1 

set roe the stoops of wnie upon that — v. 2 

I have a stoop of w ine, and liere Othello, u. 3 

STOOPED to death WerKu? c/or Measiire.y. 1 

as he stooped again to take it up. Tdinnig of Sh. in. 2 
have stooped my neck uinler yonr.-Kir/i'in/ /;. in. I 
ta.!!,e stooped his anointed head..i//fm.v/r. undue.) 
tlie way which they stooped eagles . . Ci/mbelme, v. 3 
the holv eagle stooped, as to foot us .. — v. 4 

STOOPI^fG— to most ignoble stooping ..Tempest,]. 2 

as stooping to relieve him — ii. 1 

if it be worth stooping for Twelflh Ntf:lil, ii. 2 

my stooping duty tenderly shall ..Itidmrd II. iii. 3 
wliich he lost by lack of stooping . . CorManus, v. b 
here stooping to your clemency. HamW, in. 2(prol.) 

STOP— there sir, stop Tempnt, y. I 

dost thou stop my mouth?.. 7'KioGen.<!/';'eioaa,ii. 3 

stop there; I'll have her — iii. I 

let ine stop this way first — iii- 3 

and so stop the air Measure forUenmre, 11.4 

or, if you cannot, stop his mouth ....iMudiAJo.u. 1 

and now governed by stops — iii. 2 

peace. I will stop your mouth — v. 4 

lie knows not the stop Mid.S. sDream.Y. 1 

tlie.ic bu the stops that hinder Lave' sL. Lost, i. 1 

to stop all gouil proceeding! — _i. 1 

but stop my house's ears Merchant of Venice, ii. 5 

is no bar to stop the foreign — ii. 7 

come, the full stop — >". I 

to stop his wound.*, lest he do — iv. I 

the keyhole; stop that, 'twill fiy ...-IsyouLike ,l,n. 1 

and to stop up the displeasure Alts WHl, iv. 5 

vou need not stop your nose (I cp.) .. — .v. 2 
that stops my way in VciA\ii>. .Taming of Shrew, in. 2 

cannot, best j'ou stop your ears — iv. 3 

counsel had, shall stop, or spur me. l('iti/<;r s Tale, ii. 1 
Uolieraia stops his ears, and threatens — v. 1 
stop in your wind, sir; tell me.Comedy qf Errors,]. 2 

I'll stop mine ears against — iii. 2 

you stop our way with sneh Macbeth, i. 3 

stop up the access and passage — .;. 5 

that we shall stop her exclamation.. King- Jo/m, ii. 2 

John, to stop Arthur's title — ..n. 2 

will not a calf 's-skin stop that — i|i. 1 

and stop this gap of breath — iii. 4 

yea, without stop, didst let — iv. 2 

to stop their marches, 'fore we are — v. 1 

BO run on, and even so stop — v. 7 

but stop no wrinkle in his Richard II. i. 3 

one kiss shall stop our mouths — v. 1 

at that sad stop, my lord — v. 2 

for tears do stop the flood-gates \ Henry IK i\. 4 

and stop all sight-holes, every loop .. — iv. 1 
of all the world, must have a stop — — v. 4 
which of you will stop the \eDt..i Henry IT. (indue.) 

so easy and so plain a stop — Ciudnc.) 

to stop mine ear indeed — i. 1 

as offer to stop it with security — _ i. 2 

whicli beghi to stop our very veios .. — iv. 1 

and sir, do you mean to stop any — y. 1 

turn head, and stop pursuit Henry I', ii. 4 

stops the mouths of all find-faults .. — .v. 2 

heart doth stop my cornets I Henry VI. iv. 3 

vexation almost stops my breath — iv. 3 

to stop effusion of onr Ciiristian blood — v. I 

and stop the rage betime 'i Henry VI. iii. 1 

that craves a quick expedient stop?.. — lii- 1 

with thy lips to stop m^ month — iii. 2 

now death shall stop hiB dismal 3HenryVI.\\. 6 

why stops my lord? shall I not hear — iii. 2 
and stops my tongue, while heart is — lii. 3 

and stop the ri»inj{ of blood-sucking — iv. 4 

now stops thy siiring — ly. 8 

to stop devoted charitable deeds? ..Richard III.\. 2 
then again begin, and stop again .... — iii. .5 
untireu, and stops he now for breath — iv. 2 

to stop all hopes, whose growth — iv. 2 

straight to stop the rumour HemyVIlI.u. 1 

stops on a sudden, looks upon — iii. 2 

then, stops again, strikes his — lii. 2 

but stop their mouths with stubborn — v. 2 
will stop the eye of Helen's . . Troilut ^ Creiuda,\i. 1 

of coiniBCl: stop my mouth — in. 2 

to stop his ears against admonisliracnt? — v. 3 

hinder me, should stop mv way — v. 3 

no care, no stop! so senseless .. Timon of Athens, ii. 2 

will hardly 8to|) the mouth — ii. 2 

whoso please to stoi) atlliction — v. 2 

stop, or all will fall in broil Coriolaiiui, iii. 1 

and st"P tlnwe maims of shame — iv. 2 

might stop our countryman — v. 1 

to stop, to run directly on JnliusCii'iar.w, I 

mav they stop their none .. Antony ^ Cleopalra, iii. 11 
and sent! to darkness all that slop me — iii. 1 1 
what both you spur and stop Cymbeline, i. 7 



[ 723 ] 

STOP— began a stop i' the chaser Cymbi-line, v. 3 

nay then, I'll stop yonr nii.ulli .. 7'i(ii« .Indron. ii. 3 

sirs, stop his incnilli, und let him — v. I 

and stop their nuiullis (rr'p.) — v.:' 

to stop the air would hurt tlain I'ericlcs, i. 1 

he'll stop the course by which — i. - 

how 1 might stop this tempest — . i. 2 

what! do you stop your ears? — iv. 3 

stop there a little! — v. I 

father! fatherl stop, stop! noliclp?frf;).)./.rai-, ii. 1 
Btoi> her there! arms, arms, sword, fire!.. — iii. 6 

or with tliia paper shall I stop it — v. 3 

[A'»i'.] thy kinsmen are no siiip.. Romeo ^Juliet, ij. 2 

slop there, stop there (rep.) — ii. 4 

to stop the inundation of her tears .. — iv. I 

stop thy unhallowed toil, vile — v. .1 

stay aiid S|jeak : stop it, Maicellus Hamlet, \. 1 

to sound wliat stop she please — j'j- - 

look you, these are the stops — iii. 2 

you would seem to know my stops — iii. 2 

might tliey not stop a beer-barrel? — v. I 

might stop a hole to keep the wind away -- v. I 
enough of this content, it stops mc liere.O//ic//o, ii. I 
let's teach ourselves that honourable stop — ii. 3 
such an answer would stop thcni all .... — ii. 3 
therefore tliese stops of thine fright me .. — iji- 3 

heaven stops tlie nose at it — iv. 2 

impediments than twenty times your stop — v. 2 

STOPPED— but stopped and left me .... Tempest, i. 2 
being stopped, impatiently .... TuoGen.of Ver.n. 7 

m\' ears are stopped — iii. 1 

then to be stopped in like Merry Wives, iii. 5 

suspicious head of theft is stopped. Love's I.. Lost, i v. 3 
is stopped; the very source of it (rfp.)...'^^"r'"''/i..ii. 3 

her ear is stopped with dust King John, iv. 2 

it is stopped with other flattering ..Richard II. \\. I 

that stopped by me to breathe his ■illcnriilV. i. 1 

which I would have stopped Henry V. iv. (i 

mav readily be stopped IHenryVl. v. 2 

liatli stopped the passage where thy. .Sl/eary ;'/. i. 3 

1 have not stopped mine ears — iv. 8 

{Col. Knl.'] flood stopped in my soul . . Richard Ill.i. i 

there the villain stopped — iv. 3 

now civil wounds arc stopped — v. 4 

which stopped our mouths.. Hchi'i/;'///. ii. 2 (letter) 

he stopped the fliers Coriulanus, ii. i 

stopped your ears against the general — v. 3 
like an oven stopped, doth burn.. Tilus Andron. ii. 5 

which now are midway stopped Pericles, v. I 

will not be rubbed, nor stojiped I.ear, ii. 2 

of iny son's exile hath stopped ..llomeo^-lnliet, v. 3 
no, his month is stopped, honest lago . . Othello, v. 2 
indeed, these hands have newly stopped — v. 2 

STOPPING tlie career of laughter .. »l'i/i/cr'sTa/e, i. 2 
stopping my greedy ear with their ..illenrylV. i. 1 
till he flnd it stopping a bung-hole? Hamlet, v. I 

STORE— such a store of muttons. TwoGen. of Ver. i. 1 

and yonr store I think TwelflhNighl, iii. 3 

tliat to your huge store wise Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

debating of my present store. Merchant of Venice, i. 3 
I have better news in store for you .. — y. 1 
I did store, to be my foster-nnrse../4s!/ow/.''(ciV, ii. 3 
he btide me store up, as a triple eye ...iU'slVetl, ii. 1 

aid me with that store of power — v. 1 

great store of wedding cheer .... Taming of Sh. iii. 2 
that thou eall'st for siicli store. . Comedy of Err. iii. I 

and say, what store of parting liichardll. i. 4 

I would, your store were herel 1 Henry IV. ii. 2 

good store of fertile sherris 2Henry I V. iv. 3 

a pound of mine own proper store ..iHenryVI. iii. 1 
nor store of treasons to augment .... — iii- 1 

some store of crowns SHenryVI. ii. 5 

with store of childish drops Richard III. i. 2 

have any grievous plague in store.... — i.3 

we shall have great store of room . . Henry VIII. y. 3 
we have ta'en good, and good store.. Curiotanna, i. 9 

an hour's talk in store for you JidiusCiesar, ii. 2 

I do appoint him store of provender. . — i v. 1 
we have store to do't, and they..-4>i'oiit/<S-CTeo. iv. 1 
notliing doubt, yon have store of .... Cymbeline, i. 5 

sons of mine hast thou in store Titus Andron. i. 2 

the vengeance that they had in store ..l'ericles,y\. 4 
proclaim what store her heart is made of. lenr, iii. G 

with beauty dies her store Romeo ^Juliel, i. 1 

and you among the store, one more .. — i. 2 

would store the world they pla3ed for. . Othello, iv. 3 

STORED-king so stored with friends. K.'m' John,\. 4 

they say, the city is well stored Corwlnnus, i. 1 

no one fault, but stored with all .... — ii. 1 

this glorious casket stored with ill I'ericles, i. 1 

tlieir tables were stored full — i. 4 

are stored with corn, to make — i. 4 

a cup that's stored unto the brim — ji. 3 

all the stored vengeances of heaven Lear, ii. 4 

STOREHOUSE of his predecessors Macbeth, ii. 4 

storehouses crammed with grain .... Coriolanus, i. 1 
because I am the storehouse, and the — _ i. I 
to give forth tlie corn o' the storehouse — iii. 1 

STORIES-rCoi. Kn(.] clear stories. . Twd/"iA'''=rA(, iy. 2 
where I oerlook love's stories .. Mid. N.'s Dream, ii. 3 
tell sad stories of my own mishaps. CunnJyo/frr. i. 1 

sttd stories of the death of kings Rirhatdll. iii. 2 

with telling of discreet stories 2 Henri/ T. ii. 4 

go read with thee sad stories. . Titus, indronicus, iii. 2 

STOHM— you do assist the storm Tempest, i. 1 

for raisin" this sea storm? — j. 2 

and another storm brewing — li. 2 

the storm is come again? — ii. 2 

till the dregs of the storm be past? — ii. 2 

is the storm over-blown? — '!• 2 

for fear of the storm — ".2 

full of frost, of storm, and cloudiness?. WucA Ado, v. 4 
I will move storms, I will condole .. iVW N.'sDr. i. 2 
why, look you, how you storm! ..Mer.of Venice, i. 3 
ana roise up such a storm, that ..Taming of Sh.i. 1 
carousing to his mates after a storm — lii. 2 
to watch the night in storms, Ibe day _— y. 2 
Btill winter in storm perpetual . . Winter sTale, iii. 2 
the Btorm begins; poor wretch ^.... — iii. 3 
seafaring men provide for stormB . Comedy of Err. i. 1 



STO 



.STORM— shiliwiveking storms Maebelh.^\. 2 

clears not witlimit a storm KingJoim, iv. 2 

shall hush again tliis storm of war .. — V.I 
a great heart heave away this storm — y. 2 

lint sudden storms arc short Richard II. ii. 1 

seek no shelter to avoid the stiiiiTi .. — ii. 1 

witnessing storiiiB to come, woe — ii. 4 

in England some Ijlaek storm 'Jllcnry VI. iii. 1 

Btood niioii the hatches in the storm — iii. 2 

resolved to bear a greater storm — v. 1 

his leaves in spite of any storm — v. I 

witli patience calm the storm 3HenryVI. iii. 3 

begins a second Btorra to rise — iii. 3 

'gainst foreign storms than any — iv. 1 

till storms be past of civil enmity — iv.6 

king Edward 111 his time of stcriii.... — Iv. 7 
every cloud engeiiderB not a slorm .. — v, 3 
untimely storms make men expect. Richard ill. ii. 3 

swell before a boisterous storm — ii. 3 

after the hideous storm that Henry VIII. i. 1 

grow as terrible as Btorms — iii. 1 

dn old man, broken with the storms of — iv. 2 
when tlic sun doth light a storm. 7'r»i7M«,5- Cress, i. 1 

divide ill storms of fortune .., — i 3 

bare for every storm that blows . . Timon ofAth. iv. 3 

the storm is up, and all is on hitinsCrrsar, v. I 

are greater storms and tein\^sts..Anlony ^Cteo. i. 2 
the discandj'ing of tliis pelleted storm — iii. II 
for onr repose, shall hear a storm.. .. — iv. 4 

a storm, or robbery, call it what Cymbeline, iii. 3 

here are no storms, no noise, but.. Titus Andron. i. 2 

holla! what storm is this? — ii. I 

with a happy storm they were surprised — ii. 3 

one hour's storm will drown — ii. .^ 

now is a time to storm, why art .... — iii. 1 

swells not so as Aaron storms — iv. 2 

or grass beat down with storms — iv. 4 

what ensues in this fell storm ..I'ericles, iii. (Gow ) 
thou, storm, tlioii! venomously wilt .. — iii. 1 

do not assist tlie slorm: here's all — iii. 1 

is like a lasting storm, whirring — iv. 1 

to rain, and leave thee in the storm l.cnr, ii. 4 

let^us withdraw, 'twill be a ftonn — ii. i 

counsels well: c<iine out o' the storin .. .. — ii. 1 

fie on this storm! I will go seek — iii. 1 

contentious storm invade.? us to the skin — iii. 1 

bide the pelting of this pitiless storm — iii. 4 

the sea, with such a storm as his bare.... — iii. 7 
the last night's storm I such a fellow saw — iv. I 

what? i' tiie storm? i" the night? — iv. 3 

kinsman? wberelbre storm yon so?, fftmico .^Jk/. i b 
what storm is this, that blows so .... — iii. 2 

against some storm, a silence Hamlet, ii. 2 

violence and storin of fortunes Othello, i. 3 

STORMKD [Coi.-baited] at Richard 1 11. i.3 

STORMY— unseasonable stormy day. WiWiairf//. iii. 2 
if you give o'er to stormy passion.... 'iHoirj///'. i. 1 

cloudy brow his stormy hate iHenry VI. iii. 1 

a turbulent and stormy night ;'f!ic/«. iri. 2 

STORY— story were most impertinent.. Tempest, i. 2 

the strangeness of your story put — i. 2 

I remember the story — iii. 2 

a most strange story — v. 1 

the story of my life, and the — v. I 

I long to hear the story of your life — v. 1 

shallow story of deep love lrep.).TvoGcn.of Ver. i 1 
the stor3' of your loves discovered .... — v. 4 
painted about witli the story of ..Merry Hives, iv. 6 
sir, make me not your story .... Mens. Cor Meas. i. 5 
who hath a story ready for your ear — iv. 1 

to twist so fine a story? Much Ado, i. I 

she here deny the story that is printi d — iv. I 
the story shall be changed ....M/d.^W'sUream, ii. '.! 
says the story, did talk through .... — iii. I 

but all the story of the night — v. I 

to tell this story, that you AsyouLiUe it, iv. 3 

which makes her story true All's Hell, iv. 3 

tlie story then goes false, you threw .. — v. 3 
from point to point this story know .. — v. 3 
here must end the story of niy Mfe.Comedyof Err. i. I 

begins his morning story right — _y. I 

a woman's story, at a winter's fire. . . . Macbeth, iii. 4 
thy story quickly. Gracious my lord.. — v. .'> 
made you break the story oS ot ovr.Richiird II. v. 2 

it appears, so by the story I Henry IV. iii. 3 

or the story of the prodigal 2;j<riiry//'. ii. I 

author will continue the story — (epil.) 

this story shall the good man Henry V. iv. 3 

that have not read the .story — v. (clio.) 

author hath pursued the story.... — v. 2 (clio.) 

tell'st the h.ciivy Btorv right 3HemyVl. i. 1 

some dreailful story hanging on — ii. I 

the sad story of my father's death. .Ki'i'/iord III. i. 2 

as index to the story we late — ii.2 

in their death's sad story — iv. 3 

very persons of our noble story.. Henry VI II. (prol.) 
that former fabulous story, being .... — i. I 
('tis an old story,) that would not be — ii. 3 

I fear, the story of Ilia anger — iii. 2 

honour is the subject of my story . .yii/iiisr<r«<i/, i. 2 
and earns a place i' the ftory ..Anlony^ Cleo. iii. II 

and their story is no less 111 pity — v. 2 

rather than story him in Ilia ovin ... .Cymbeline, i. 5 

and the contents o' the story — ii.2 

the story proud Cleopatra — ii. 4 

O boys, tills story the world may.... — iii. 3 

his spirits fly out into my Btor>' — iii. 3 

demand thee of thy Btory, so fiir — iii. U 

let mc end the story; I slew — v. 5 

the story of that baleful burning.. V'l/iii.liirfi-on. v. 3 

for certain in our story, she Ttridrs, iv. 'Gow ) 

teach you the stages of our story — iv. (Gow.) 
into an lioiicBl house, our story saj'S — v. (Gow.) 
tell thy story; if thine considered ...'. — v. I 

to the bottom of your story — v. 1 

clasps locks in the golden story . . Itumeo ^ Juliet, i. 3 
for never was a story of more woe .... — v. 3 

BO fortified against our story Hamlet, i. 1 

the story is extant, and written in very.. — iii. 2 
thy breath in pain, to tell my story .... — v. 2 



STO 



[ 721. ] 



STR 



STORY— stiU questioned me the story. . . . Olhello i. 3 
my stoi-y being done, she gave rae .. —is 

but teiich liim how to tell my story ' _ l' 3 

cnivi'?^'^''"''"';^ iiie; now lie begins the story _ iv. 1 
biOUl— and riftedJove's stout oak.... rempM/ v 1 
sti-auge, stout, in yellow stockings. Ticelfih Si-'ht ii 5 



he huJs thee in the stout Noi-weyiui .'. MacM 
his owner stout [Co(. A'n/.-stoop] .... KingJolm. iii. I 
dreadful pomp of stout invasion! .... _ iv " 
bears not alive so stout a gentleman. 1 Hcncu?/' v' 4 

betwixt the stout lord Talbot 1 Henry vi. i 1 

that stout Pendragon, in his litter .. _ iii 2 

the stout Parisians do revolt _ v2 

as atout, and proud, as he were \oi(X..'!,Henryyi. (. \ 
of Uallowglasses, nnd stout Kernes.. — iv 9 
that lis Ulysses, and stout Diomede.SffeHiyr/. iv! 2 

a wise stout eaptain, and persuaded.. iv' 7 

my liardy, stout, resolved mates? ..Hichard III. i! 3 
the stout earl of Northumberland. Hchji/ Vlll. iv. 2 
pluck stout men's pillowsfrom.7Vnw;io/'.J/Ae;is,'iv'. 3 
tlius, correcting thy stout heart....C'nrVo(oniis, 'iii" 2 
hit tiie life of stout Mercutio .. Romeo &■ Juliet iii". I 
part them, was stout Tvlialt slain .. _ iii 1 

STOUTER cliampiouneVer \Hr,u„ri i ij 

STOUTLY hast resisted "lllsH^U^ n!]l. 5 

his bark IS stoutly timbered Oliictlo ii I 

and she speaks for you stoutly _ iii' j 

SroUTNESS-dangerous stoutness. Cotialanus, iii." 2 

<n-, lus stoutness, wlien he did stand _ v5 

5 nliX,''-.'^.-;,""^'?'^'' thatched with stover. rempes(, iv. 1 

b low AUE-tliem m safe stowage Cijmbeline i 7 

broWED— all under hatches stowed Tempesl' i 2 

safely stowed, but soft, what noise? Hamlet W •> 

^J^"{'Tj\'kl^ 'l''"," stowed my daughter? . . Ofhelio, i." 2 
ol,!;.)",^, J ™''''t ?'™°'iy '"''''"e'l- ''''wW'i /%'!>/,(, ii. 5 

tf.; ,x'^f'R?;;^*''\'P."^^^«''''''f?giers./f!r/mrd in. v. 3 

Si HAGGLING soldiers with ..Timonnf Athens v 1 
STRAIGHT-will answer it straight. Af erry^fu'es i." ) 

we II come dress you straight jy 9 

I'll bring iinen for him straight .... _ iv' 2 

go, send for Falstaff straight iv" 4 

where a priest attends, straight marry _ iv' 6 
wit enougli to lie straight in my bed. TioelfthN. ii! 3 

tins will I tell my lady straight — iv 1 

lets It straiglit feel the spm- Meas. for Meas \ 3 

1 will about it straight _ i 5 

to be most straight in virtue _ ij' 1 

he will come straight il' 2 

I will be with thee straight Mid.N.'sDream iii' 2 

which straight she gave me _ ' iv' 1 

my servant straiglit was mute .... Love's L. Lost, v! 2 

lo, he IS tilting straightl _ y 2 

bethink me straight of dangerous. Afer.o/ Venice i' 1 

he falls straight a capering '22 

I will go and purse the ducats straight — i" 3 

I'll be gone about it straight ii' 4 

more ducats, and be with "you straigiit — ii" 6 

di-aw the curtain straight _ .-j'q 

straight shall our nuptial rites be..".'. — ii' 9 
rU bring you to him straight ....AsijouLilceiLn'. 1 

1 11 write it straight _ in 5 

ill to what straighi;3 of fortune she 'is'.'. _ v' 2 

I'll send her straight away All's IVell lis 

is to know straight our purpose _ 'iv' 1 

straight, and with a low. Taming of Shrew 1 (indue ■) 
we will fetch thee straight, Adonis — 2 (indue') 
like the hazel-twig is straight .. •• " 

grumble? I'll be with you straight ! 

1 am for thee straight 

and lut us straight to hira.. ..!!!!!!! 

bid Bianca mafte her ready straight! 

and bring them hither straight .. ' _ ,, 

straight the shrug, the hum, or ha. IVinler'sTale. ii" 

he straight declined, drooped, took it _ ii 

take it up straight . 



^TJ^ii^n'-.V' *'?"^"; ?°i' • • •, ZUenry I' I. iv. 1 

will tliither straight, for willingness. . — v. 3 
Oxford to ilarames' castle straight .. — v 5 
about your business straight Hichard III. i. 3 



II. 2 
iii. 4 
iii. 7 
iv. I 



fi'rfa, i. 



— V. 2 



! Cwsar. 



iv. 1 
iv. 3 
V. 4 



ii. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 4 



you straight are on your tne'e's 
send straight for him, let him be 
that straight shall post to Ludlow .. 
r'.n y '"'^ straight shall you know 

1 11 signify 80 much unto him straight 
you must straight to "Westminster . 
marry straight to Clarence' daugliter 

I will despatch it straight _ iv 'j 

bid him levy straight the greatest — iv! 4 

straight to stop the rumour Henni yill ii' -1 

straight, sjirings out into fast gait — iii 2 

go we to him straight Troilus^-Cr 

the orchard: I'll bring her straight.. - 

she II come straight 

travels in a straight so narrow .!.!!! 
Shalt bear a letter to him straight .. 

let lis make ready straight 

a word, but it straight starts you 

his creditors most straight Timon of Athens, 

It foals me, straight, and able horses — ii 1 

then straight his doubled spirit .... Coriotajius, ii. 2 
that 1 11 straight do; and. knowing.. _ ii 3 
and straight disclaim their tongues? — iii' 1 

put him to choler straight — ;;: n 

speed thee straight, and make my 

will I straight to visit him 

we must straight make head 

a hasty spark, and straight is cold again 

that thou wilt kill me straight _ . , 

whither straight I will lead you.Antonu&Cleo. ii! 2 

I 11 bring thee word straight — iv. 10 

and straight away for Britain Cymheline.i h 

but. to owe such straight arms ...,. — iii 1 
all flying through a straight lane.... — v' 3 
tliat the straight pass was dammed — v' 3 

rnake a fire straight; and with .... TiiusAniran. i 2 
should straight fall mad, or else die — ii 3 

straight will I bring you to the _ ii" 4 

horaeenough, and His there straight — iv! 3 

and snatch them straight away? Pericles iii 1 

for she must overboard straight —'iii" 1 

but straight must east thee scarcely .. — iii" 1 
wrench it open straight; if the sea's .. — iii. 2 
as wand-like straight; as silver-voiced — v! 1 

I'll write straight to my sister Lear 13 

their meiny, straight took horse _ 'ii"4 

I will arraign them straight _ iji" g 

none o' the best: I'll tell you straight .. — v' 3 

I'll see that straight. That from _ v. 3 

I beseech you, follow straight. . . . Romeo \ Juliet, i 3 
on court'sies straight: o'er lawyers' (rep.)— i 4 

er ladies' lips, who straight on kisses — i 4 

by her fine foot, straight leg — ii 1 

they'll be in scarlet straight at any news — ii" 5 
county will be here with music straight — iv 4 
those horses; I'll be with thee straight _ v 1 

it would dispatch you straiglit _ y' 1 

and bring it straight unto my cell .. — v' 2 

we'll have a speeoli straight Hamlet ii' •> 

he will come straight; look, you lay home — iii 4 

1 will be witli you straight _ iv' 4 

therefore, make her grave straight _ v' I 

straight satisfy yourself: if she be in. ...Othello, i! 1 
valiant Othello, we must straight employ — i 3 
I will come to thee straight. Emilia, come — iii' 3 

a little while, he will recover straight — iv. 1 

straight will he come: wear thy good rapier — v. 1 
heaven and grace, solicit for it straight .. — v 2 
will straight aboard; and, to the state .. _ v' 2 

STRAIGHTED for a reply Winter's Tale ' 

STRAIGHTER 'gainst ou"i- uncle " ■• 



?maTn^l!inheest?aig?rr.!!!!!!!!:!: Z JIJ' ? i?gif8S?fe^ir^"h'? '='^'^^="^ . ! ! ! iU«' f/ //. i, 

bear it st,aij.Ut; and Bring !!!!! _ Z'. l?St gg?.^'^^-lT?^'j;i,;:.-.:-^^--i''^^/™'- *" 



IV. 2 

— iv. 4 

— iv. 4 
Macbeth, iii, 1 



'bf darkness hie thee straight .... 
straiglit after, did I meetliira.... 

I'll call upon you straight 

did he not straight, in pious rage 

determine what wo shall do straighL'K-m"- Jo/m 'ii" T 

requests your presence straight — iv ? 

to ray litter straight _ y 3 

and you are so straight _ y ■, 

straight let us seek, or straight we shall - v! 7 
to tlie earl of Wiltshire straight .... Hichard II. ii. 1 

I II ior refuge straight to Bristol — ii 2 

command a mirror hither str.aight — iv" 1 

destruction straight shall dog them " — v' 3 

Bolingbroke, and straight am nothin" — v" 5 
ransom straight his brother-in-law. . 1 HenrylV. \. 3 
I will after straight, and tell him so — is 

v-itlinut their ransom straight .... _ i" •) 

I will back him straight !! ij" 3 

you are straiglit enough in the "sliouiders — ii' 4 
tlien he runs straight and even .... _ iii 1 

yet straight they shall be here _ iii' | 

and some straight decrees, that lie — iv" 1 

I'll to Clifton straight. _ y J 

tliey'il come in straight '.•illenryir. ii! 4 

give him air; he II straight be well . . _ iv. 4 

1 11 be with you straight _ y 3 

we keep a bawdy-house straight ..'.'.'. .Henri/ V ii" 1 
nutliug It straight in expedition .... _ " ii" 2 
hose oft. and in your straight trossers — iii 7 

£ti-;tigiit to horsel _ iv 2 

after your thoughts, straight back ' " '- v. (clioru's) 

a straight back will stoop _ vg 

and inarch unto him straight MIenruVI.iv. I 

1 Will despatch the horsemen straight -- iv 4 
judge It straight a tiling impossible .. — v 4 
g > fetch the beadle hither straight ..IHenrtiVI. ii! 1 
our uncle to our presence straight .. — iii 2 
unless false Suffolk straight be done to — iii' 2 
notwithstanding such a straight edict — iii 2 

and write home for it straight _ iv 1 

and bid them battle straight ZHenryFl i' 2 



STRAIGHT- PIGHT Minerva CywhHine. 

STRAIGHT"WAY at liberty Tempest, v. 1 

waked, and straightway loved an msMid.N.Dr. iii. 2 
at Nmny s tomb meet me straightway? — y 1 

and straightway give thy soul to 1 Heiiry VI. i. b 

IS straightway calmed, and boarded.2 ff ejiry ry. iv 9 
like friends, will straightway go . . JuliitsCiPsar ii. 2 

to the sea-side straightwav Antonjj ^Cleo.'iii 9 

c-Sr,' .st/aightway with the fiends ... . Cymheline, iii. 5 

Sril.ilN of strutting Chantielere. rcmpest, i. 2 (son») 

unless he knew some strain in me.Merry frives,U°\ 

I would, all of the same strain were in iii 3 

that strain again: it had TwelfihNight, i. 1 

he is of a noble strain, of approved . iiachAdoA'u 1 

strangely they strain the cure — iy. 1 

let it answer every strain for strain.. — y" 1 
love is full of unbefitting strains.. Louf'sL.Los/, v! 2 

play false strains upon thee! AsyouLikeit, iv 3 

and strain their cheeks to idle King John iii 3 

you strain too far; I, rather XHennilV.iv 1 

my thoughts to any strain of pride ■■IHenr'yW. iv" 4 

bredout of that bloody strain Henry/', ii 4 

when he strains that lady Henruriir iv' 1 

make no strain, but that Achilles Troilus 4- Cress, i" 3 
do not these high strains of divination — ii 2 

so degenerate a strain as this _ ii' 9 

I do not strain at the position iii' 3 

I will strain a little, for Timon of. Mens, i. 1 

the strain of man s bred out i 1 

praise his most vicious strain !!.. _ iy' 3 

and strain what other means is left .. — v' ■> 
affected the fine strains of honour ..Coriolanus v 3 

touch thy instrument a strain JuliusCrvsar iv 3 

wert the noblest of thy strain — y' 1 

sweats, strains his young nerves Cymbeline, iii' 3 

but a strain of rareness ii, 4 

O noble strain! O worthiness of nature! — iv2 

of what a noble strain you are Pericles iv 4 

have shown to day your valiant strain . . Lear, v! 3 
nan may strain courtesy Romeo ^Juliet, W. 4 



it strains me past the compass of — 

strain my speech to grosser issues Olhello, 



&.f R'MJ^A'.^ entertainment Othello, iii. 3 (note) 

SI UAINED-mercy is not strained. Wcr. nj: revice,iv. 1 
I have strained, to appear thus. . Winter's Tale, iii. 2 

strained passion doth you wrong iHenri/ IF. i. 

love thee in so strained a puri ty. Troilus 6- Cress, iv. 
liuth and troth, strained imrely from — iv. 
and with strained pride, to come betwixt., tpnr, i! 

t rained from that fair use l!oinro<S- Juliet ii 

STRAINING— more straining on. Ilintrr'a Tule'.iv. 
in the slips, straining upon the start. . Henry r.' iii! 

with straining of my courage 1 Ilemyri. i." 

straining harsh discords Romeo ^ Juliet, iii. , 

STRAND— Colchos' strand ..Merchant of fen ice i 

knees be kissed the Cretan strand.. Tamiu'' or Sit i , 

which v/ere the hope of the Strand. . Henry I'III.'y'. 3 

STRANGE— by accident most strange ..Tempest i. 2 

into something rich and strange .. — i. 2 (sonE) 

wliat strange hsh hath made _ ii. I 

what a strange drowsiness possesses them ii! I 

this is a strange repose, to be asleep — ii! 1 

and tliat a strange one too jj" 1 

astrangefish! !!! __ ij! 2 

any strange beast there makes a man..!! — ii!2 
misery acquaints a man with strange .... — ii i 

good life, and observation strange — iii. 3 

why stand you in this strange stare? — iii. 3 

this is most strange: your father's in .... — iv 1 

make us strange stuff _ {y. 1 

a most strange story '..'.[ y! | 

they strengthen from strange to stranger' — v! I 

with strange and several noises _ v 1 

this is as strange a maze as e'er _ v' I 

as strange a thing as e'er I looked on ... ! _ v' 1 

she makes it strange Tu-o Gen. of I'erona i 2 

I'll tell you strange things of this..iV/«Ti/H'ijiej 'v' I 
strange things in hand, master Brook I — ' y 1 

this is strange! who hath got — y' 5 

1 will be strange, stout TwelfthNight ii' 5 

but in strange manner _ iii' 4 

this is as uncivil as strange _ iij'4 

put strange speech upon me _ y' 1 

you throw a strange regard upon me — y' 1 
thy complexion shifts to stranEre.Areas./(j;-.fl/eas iii 1 
upon hiin, sir, a strange pick-lock .. _ iii. 2 

the signet is not strange to you _ iv 2 

receives letters of strange tenor _ iv' 2 

I slionld not think it strange _ iv 6 

niost bitterly, and strange. IMost strange — v' I 
IS it not strange? that Angelo's a Irep.) — v! 1 

nay, it is ten times strange _ y! 1 

this is all as true as it is strange .... _ v' 1 
he is sick, my lord, of a strange fever — v! 1 

this is a sti-ange abuse y \ 

I can tell you strange news that you. . Much Ado i! 2 

just so many strange dislies _ ii 3 

toput a strange face on his own _ ii' 3 

IS It not strange that sheep's guts should — ii. 3 
fancy that he liath to strange disguises — iii. 2 
there is some strange misprision .... _ iv' I 

dream I on tliis strange course _ iv! I 

for to strange sores strangely they .. _ iv' 1 
is not that strange? As strange as the — iv' 1 
some such strange bull leaped your .. _ y. 4 
[Co/.] new friends, and strange. . Mid. N.'s Dream i. 1 

O monstrous! O strange! _ i"ii 1 

'tis strange, my Theseus, that these.. — y! 1 

more strange than true y.i 

but, howsoever, strange, and admirable — v! 1 

and wondrous strange snow _ y 1 

one of the strange queen's lords . . Love'sL.Losl, iv! 2 
moon-like men, of strange inconstancy — iv. 3 

with some strange pastime solace .... iv. 3 

opinion, and strange without heresy _ y! 1 

this begging is not strange y. 2 

strange [Co(.-straying A'n(.-8trayJ shapes — v! 2 
liath framed sUanfx kUows. . Merchant of Venice, i. 1 

you grow exceeding strange i. 1 

so strange, outrageous, and so variable ii! 8 

more strange than is thy strange ... . — iv. 1 

of a strange nature is the suit you.... iv! 1 

by what strange accident I chanced. . — v! 1 

run into strange capers AsyouLikeit, ii. 4 

lie hath strange places crammed with _ ii 7 
full of strange oaths, and bearded like — ii. 7 

that ends this strange eventful 11,7 

yoK lisp and wear strange suits _ iv! 1 

what strange effect would they work — iv. 3 (let.) 

that I can do strange things _ y. 2 

a pair of very strange beasts _ v! 4 

of these most strange events y. 4 

impossible be strange attempts All'sWell, i. 1 

nay 'tis strange, 'tis very strange .... — ii 3 

strange is it, that our bloods _ ii'3 

is not this a strange fellow _ iii!6 

but, O strange men ! that can _ iv! 4 

why do you look so strange upon .... 

it would seem strange unto. Taming i " 
beaten hence by your strange lunacy — .. 
will you be so strange? sorry am I .. _ 

wi th such a wife, were strange i. z 

that with your strange encounter .... _ iy' 5 

this IS strange! Winter'tTale,i. 2 

as by strange fortune it came _ ii. 3 

BO without bawdry, wliich is strauge — iv' 3 

and show our strange sights iv 3 

stiirtis strange, he thus should steal — v' 1 
and, which was strange, the one . . Comedy of Err. i! 1 

look strange, and frown _ ii 2 

being strange to me, that undividable — ii! 2 

as strange unto your town, as _ ii. 2 

the reason of this strange restraint .. — iii' I 

why, this is strange; go call _ y' 1 

why look you strange on me? _ y 1 

have written strange defeatures in .. — v' 1 

seems to speak things strange Macbeth, i! 2 

you owe this strange intelligence? — is 

did st make strange images of death .... — i. 3 
but tis strange; and oftentimes, to win.. — i 3 

upon hiin like our strange garments — i 3 

where men may read strange matters — i 5 



ro/SA. 1 (indue.) 
2 (indue.) 



STRANf iE screams of death Machelh, ii. 3 

liours dreadful, iiiul tluiii'^ strange — ji- 4 

n tiling most struiige ftiHlcriTtain — ii. < 

tlicir lieurers witli stniii^'c invention — Hi. 1 

tills isi more striinf^c tliiin sueli — iii. 1 

I liiive ivfitiaiiKe nilliinity — ;ii. I 

you make me stnin^'c L'ven to the — lii. ' 

etrange things 1 lutve in hoiiil, tlmt — iii. • 

my strange and selt'-iihuse ia the initiate — iii. 1 

with this strange virtue, he hath — iv. 11 

a strange beginning KingJohiijl. 1 

'tis striingo to think how inueh — m. i 

rOi/. Knt.Z strong reasons make strange — lii. i 
inany legions of strange fantasies .... — v. 7 
'lis slrangc, that death should sing .. — v. 7 

is a strange brooch in this all Richard 11. v. 5 

in thv face strange motions \ Henry IV. ii. 3 

brealis forth in strange eruptions .... — iii. 1 
profited in strangeeonecalnunts .... — lu. 1 
see a strange confession in tliine cye.iHcnrj/ iy._\. 1 
is it not strange tliat desire sliould .. — ii. 4 
his companions, like a strange tongue — iv. 4 
cankered heaps of strange achieved gold — iv. 4 
'tis sostraiigL'.tlmt, tliough tlie truth.. HeHi-yJ'. ii. 2 

lordStran-: -tt^la !.t>.erc \Htnr,jVl.\w.7 

devisestva:, \ •n.rcp.) ....•iHenryn.m. \ 

'tisWOndnM :, , Hl' like yet ..ZlienrrjVl. u. 1 

yoti'd think It -iiai^'rit I sliould marry — iii. 2 

juggle men into such strange Uetiryllll. i. 3 

lis strange; a threepence bowed .... — ii. 3 
this is strange to me. How tastes it?.. — ii. 3 
a strange tongue makes my cause (rp;j.) — iii. I 
somi- strange cnuniiition is in his brain — iii. 2 
ill most strange iiustuics we have seen — iii. 2 
or have we soiin; stiangc Indian, with — v. 3 
dogged witli two striinijc followers. Troilus^ Cress, i. 3 
yet lie loves himself: is it not strange? — ii. 3 

or strange, or self-affected? — ii. 3 

like a strange soul upon — iii. 2 

into the world, strange, unacquainted — lii. 3 

a strange fellow here writes me — iii. 3 

this is not strange, Ulysses — iii. 3 

may see itself: this is not strange at all — iii. 3 

a fight of this strange nature — v. 2 

what strange, which manifold.. Timono/Atheyis.i. 1 

wliat a strange case was that? — jii. 2 

how to observe a strange event — ijj. 4 

mark, how strange it shows — iii. 4 

strange, unusual blood, when man's — iv. 2 
fortunes am unlearned and strange.. — iv. 3 
strange times, that weep with laugliing — iv. 3 
petition granted tliem, a strange one. Coriolanust i. 1 

this is strange (ivp. ii. 1) — i. 1 

you are a pair of strange ones — ii. 1 

hath .jeeu in Rome strange insurrei-tion — iv. 3 
tell you most strange things from Rome — iv. 3 
a strange one as ever I lool<ed on .... — iv. .'i 
tell my master what a strange guest — iv. 5 

here's a strange alteration: — iv. 5 

stubborn and too strange a Iiand ..JuliusCiPsar^ i. 2 

to see the strange impatience — i. 3 

as these strange eruptions are — i. 3 

have seen strange sights — ,i. 3 

it seems to me most strange that men — Ji. 2 

that, inethinks, is strange — iv. 3 

she is dead, and by strange manner.. — iv. 3 
tliou didst eat strange flesh . . Anlony ^ Cleopatra, i. 4 
for he hath laid strange courtesies .. — ii. 2 
from the barge a strange invisible .. — ii. 2 
you have strange serpeuts there (lep.) — ii. 7 

there's strange news come, sir — iii. 5 

is't not strange, Canidiua, that from — iii. 7 
strange, that liis power should be ... . — ii i. 7 
of nothing strange about the streets? — iv. 3 
ay; is't not strange? Do you hear..., — iv. 3 

give off: Content: 'tis strange — iv. 3 

all strange and terrible events are .. — iv. 13 
and strange it is, that nature must .. — v. 1 

to vie strange forms with fancy — v. 2 

howsoc'er 'tis stranee, or that Cymbeline, i. 1 

you know, strange fowl light upon .. — i. 5 

doth think, she has strange lingering — i. 6 

he is strange and peevisii — i. 7 

I am something curious, being strange — i. 7 

he's a strange fellow himself — ii. 1 

wliat a strani-'e infection is fallen.. .. — iii. 2 
yet still it's strange, what Cloten's being — iv. 2 

tis strange: nor hear I from my — iv. 3 

this was strange chance- a narrow lane — v. 3 
being an ugly monster, 'tis strange .. — v. 3 
failing of lier end by his strange absence — v. 5 
after this strange starting from your orbs — v. 5 
why mak'st thou it so stranj-'e? .. 'I'iius Amiron. ii. 1 
thus in tills strange and sad liabiliment — v. 2 

to ruminate strange plots of dire. — y. 2 

'twos very strange. And yet hut just ..Pericles, ii. 4 
it is most stronge. Nature should (.rfp. J — iii. 2 

is not this strange? iMost rare — iii. 2 

this is most strange! that she (rep.) Lear, i. 1 

his offence, honesty I strangel Btrangel .. — i. 2 

i/Cri*.] O strange and fastened villain I .. — ii. 1 
liave heard strange news. Ifitbetruc — ii. 1 

thou art a strange leliow; a tailor — ii. 2 

'tis strange, that they should so depart .. — ii. 4 

the arl of our necessities is strange — iii. 2 

there is some strange thing toward — iii. 3 

but that thy strange mutations — iv. I 

slie gave strange cciliadfl, and most — iv. 5 

circle of some strange nature.... Ilomeo ^Juliet, ii. 1 
morecunning to 1)C strangecrrp.).... — ii. 2 

afflicted with these strange flies — ii. 4 

till strange love, grown bold, think true — iii. 2 
strange dream! that gives a dead man — v. I 

'tis strange. Thus, twice Iwfore Itainlel,]. I 

bodes some strange eruption to our state — i. 1 

'tis very stranjfe. .Vs I do live — i. 2 

but this most foul, "trangc, and unnatural — i. 5 

but this is wondrous strange! — i. !> 

how strange or o<ld soe'er I licar myself — i. .'> 
it is uol very strange: for my uncle is .. — ii. 2 



[72.5 ] 

STRANGE, that even our loves HainW, iii. 2 

my sudden and mure strange return — iv. 7 (let.) 
'twas strange, 'twas pussini,^ strange ....Olhelln,\. 3 
some strange indiL-iiity, wliit-h patience.. — ii. 3 
strange! every in.ndiiuUe eii|i is unhlessed — ii. 3 
and, I'citainly, in Btriiiige un(|iiietne.<» .. — iii. 4 
thill's Strang'.'. I durst, my lord, to wager — iv. 2 
it U tnic inilced. "I'i. a strange trntli — v. 2 

STKAiXdlO-DISl'DSIOl) time JuliusCri-sar,\. 3 

S'l'ltANGELY— vanished strangely ..Tempesl, iii. 3 
and thou hast strangely stood the test — iv. 1 
who most strangely, upon tliis sliore .. — v. I 
which must take the ear strangely .... — v. I 
tlie duke is very strangely gown.. Meas.firMeas. i. h 
methinks, strangely; for lie hath not — iv. 2 
O mischief strangely thwarting! ....MuchAdo,\\\. 2 
to strange soies, strangely they strain — iv. 1 
commend it strangely to some.... iVinlerWale, ii. 3 
things have been strangely boiiio ....Macbi-.lh, iii. 

but strangely visited people — iv. 3 

find tlie iieople strangely fantasied..7rtn4'/o/in, iv. 2 
the herds were strangely clamorous.l llenrylV. iii. 1 

yon all look strangely on me illetiry I y. v, 2 

or at least strangely neglected? ..Henry I' III. iii. 2 

most strangely. O how, how ? — iii. 2 

woven so strangily in one piece — iv. 1 

now are altered strangely with me .. — iv. 2 

you are strangely troublesome — v. 2 

to pass strangely by him {rep.). Troitus fr Cress, iii. 3 

it is a day turned strangely Cymbeline, v. 2 

tliat we meet here BO strangely — y. !> 

triumph, strangely furnished Pericles, ii. 2 

very strangely, they say ircp.) Hamlet, v. 1 

STRANGENESS of yonrstory put .... Tempest, i. 2 

on the strangeness of this business — v. 1 

nngird thy strangeness Tweinii Kighl, iv. 1 

than at the strangeness of it .. .. Meas.forMeas. v. 1 

the strangeness of his altered iHenryVI. iii. 1 

the savage strangeness he puts. . Troitus ^Cress. ii. 3 
between your strangeness and his pride — iii. 3 
and put on a form of strangeness .... — iii. 3 

this IS above all strangeness Lear, iv. 6 

shall in strangeness stand no further ..Othello, iii. 3 

STRANGER— my state grew stranger . . Tempest, i. 2 
they strengthen from strange to stranger — v. I 
world a stranger for thy sake . . TwoGen. ofVer. v. 4 
and already you are no stranger .. TteelfthXight, i. 4 

which to a stranger, unguided — iii. 3 

stranger [Co(.-strange] companies.. /l/itf.iV.'sDr. i. 1 
a stranger Fyramus than e'er played — iii. 1 
a sequent of the stranger queen's. Lnrp'sL.tos^, iv. 2 
what would these strangers? know their — v. 2 
since you are strangers, and come here — v. 2 
the four strangers seek for you ..Aler. o/l'enice, i. 2 
as you spurn a stranger cur over .... — i. 3 
Nerissa, cheer yon stranger; bid lier — iii. 2 
the commotlity that strangers have with — iii. 3 

we may be better strangers As you Like it, iii. 2 

sent me hither, stranger as I am .... — iv. 3 
they touched not any stranger sense .. All's fVell, i. 3 
faitn, yes: strangers, and foes, do sunder — ii. 6 
band of strangers i' the adversary's . . — iv. 1 
let liim approach, a stranger, no offender — v. 3 

you walk like a stranger Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 

being a stranger in this city here .... — ii. 1 
thus strangers may be haled and abused — v. 1 

we being strangers here Comedy of Errors, i. 2 

take the stranger to my house — iv. 1 

that he was a stranger here — iv. 3 

for strangers to my nature Macbeth, iv. 3 

the means that make ua strangers! .... — iv. 3 
to stranger blood, to foreign royalty . . — v. 1 
after a stranger march upon her .,,.KingJohn,v. 2 
the stranger paths of banishment , . Richard II. i. 3 

had it been a stranger, not my child — _i. 3 

1 am a stranger here, in Glostershire — ii. 3 
to make us strangers to his looks .... 1 Henry IV. i. 3 
strangers in court do take her for . . ..2 Henry Vl. i. 3 
there did greet my stranger soul ..Richard HI. i. 4 
a noble troop of strangers, for so ..Henry I'lII. i. 4 
needs deserve all strangers' loves — — ii. 2 
poor lady I she's a stranger now again — ii. 3 
a stranger, born out of your dominions — ii. 4 
to be acquainted with this stranger.. — v. 1 
how may a stranger to those.. Troilns^-Crefsida, i. 3 
we are but strangers to him .. Timon of Athens, iii. 2 

to a stranger of his quality Cymbeline, i. 5 

I thank hiin, makes no stranger of me — i. 5 

none a stranger there so merry — i. 7 

a saucy stranger, in his court — _i. 7 

of a stranger, that's come (rfp.) — ji. I 

who told you of this stranger? — ii. 1 

by a stranger? no; he hath enjoyed her — ii. 4 
star led us to Rome, stroiigers. . Titus A ndron. iv. 2 

and strangers ne'er beheld Pericles, \. 4 

he seems a stranger; but his pic cnt .. — ii. 2 

he well may be a stranger — ii. 2 

undo a stranger knight to be so bold .. — ii. 3 
slie'Il wed the stranger knight, or never — ii. 5 
a stranger and distressed gentleman .. — ii. .^ 

and your affections on a stranger — ii. 5 

where I am but a stranger — v. I 

and as a stranger to my heart and mc ....Lear, j. 1 
my child is yet a stranger in the world .. — i. 2 

the strangers all are gone Romeo frJnUfI, i. S 

as a stranger give it welcome Hamlet, i b 

an extravagant and wheeling stranger ..Othello, i. 1 
mak'st his ear a stranger to thy thoughts — iii. 3 

,STRAN(JKRKD with oiu: oath, take her ..Lear, i. 1 

STR.\NG liST mind Tirelfth Sight, i. 3 

here is the strangest controversy KingJohn, i. 1 

strangest tale that e'er I heard (rcp.).l Henry W. v. i 
show vour grace tlie strangest sight. Henry nil. v. 2 

STKANGhE thy propriety Tu-em Sight, v. 1 

thus did lie strangle serpents Lore's L. Lost, v. 2 

gentle; strangle such thoughts ..IVi7tter'sTale,iv.3 
dark night strangles the travelling.... .>/'i<'"">. ii. 4 

will serve to strangle thee KiuKJnhn. ly 3 

that did seem to strangle him I Henry 1 1', i. 2 

strangles our dear vows cveu in. Troitiu A Cress, iv. 4 



STRANGLE her in her bed Olhello.iv. 

STRANGLED with a halter ^Henryl^'.i\. 

shall be strangled on the gallows.... 2(/c;ir|/r/. ii. 
full ghastly like a strangled man.. .. — iii. 
he lias strangled his language in ..Henry nil. v. 
strangled ere mv Romeo comes? Itnmeo fy Juliet, iv. 

STRANGLER of their amity ....Anioni/ if leo.V,. 

STRANGLING a snake Love's L. Lost. v. 

bv strangling thee in her accursed. /(iV/inn; ///. iv. 

ST'KAl'—in their own straps TiretflhMgUt.'i. 

STKAl'l'ADO. or all the racks in .. ..\ lieuiyl r. ii. 

STIi ATAGEMS, and spoils Mer.n/rmice, v. 

he says, he has a strnliigem for't All's H'ell, iii. 

think your mystery in stratagem can — iii. 

and to" say, it was in stratagem — iv. 

the father of some stratagem IHenryW. i. 

it will be an excellent stratagem — — ii 4 
when without stratagem, hut in ]>]a.\tt.Henryl'. iv. 8 
Dennis bless this happy stratagem ! I Henry 11. iii. 2 
to tutor thee in stratagems of war — — iv..') 
stratagems, how fell, how butcherly.3/r»'iiri/ »7. ii. .') 
any time, to grace my stratagems.. /(ic/i«r'/ ///. iii. i 
policy and stratagem must do that. . 7'itus A nd. ii. I 

this gold must coin a stratagem — ii. 3 

it were a delicate stratagem, to shoe.. Lear, iv. li 

should iiraetise stratagems upon. Kojneo4i-.'«''«',iii. 5 

STRATL), thnu iinst been all {rep.).JiUiusCiesar, v. .'> 

wilt thou, Strato? (rc>/.) — v. 6 

Strato, where is thy master? (lep.) .. — v. .i 

STRAW to the fire i' the blood Tempest, iv. 1 

I hear his straw rustle .... Measure for .Measure, iv. 3 

pipe on oaten straws Love's L. Lost, v. 2 (song) 

ills conditions and lay him in straw .AU'slfell, iv. 3 
1 see our lances are but straws . . Taming of Sh, v. 2 
no! life, I prize it not a straw .. lyinier'sTale, 'ni. -i 

each straw, each little rub KingJohn, \\\. 4 

and stuff me out with straw v Henry 1 1', v. .') 

for oaths are straws He-.n-y I', ii. 3 

a wisp of straw were worth : 3f/f7ir!/K;. ii. 2 

and start at wagging of a straw ..llichard til, iii. .1 

besin it with weak straws JuliusCmtar. i. ■') 

corn, then after burn the straw ..Titus Andron.Vy. 3 

where is this straw, my fellow? Lear, jii. 2 

that dost grumble there i' the straw? .... — iii. 4 

a pigmy's straw doth pierce it — iv.ii 

in snort and musty straw? — iv. 7 

not debate the question of this straw ..Hamlet, iv. 4 

greatly to find quarrel in a straw — iv. 4 

spurns enviouslv at straws — iv. .^ 

STRAWBERRIES in your garden. Hic/iord ///. iij. 4 
I have sent for these strawberries — — iii. 4 
handkerchief, spotted withstrawberrie3.0«e«o,iii.S 

STR.WVBERRY glows underneath Henry V. i. I 

STRAW-COLOURED beard ..)lid. N.'sDream, i. 2 

STRAWY Greeks, ripe for ... . Troilus^Cressida, v. 5 

STRAYS about to find them Tempest,'i. 2 

whom thus we stray to find — "i. 3 

a sheep doth very often stray ..TuoGen.nfFer.i. I 
by many winding nooks he strays .. — li. 7 
thiou^h this house each fairy stray. /IM. A'. '« Dr. v. 2 

[K/i(.J full of stray shapes Love'sL.Lost, v. 2 

she doth stray about by holy ....Mer.of Venice, y. 1 

now, no way can I stray Richard //. i. 3 

pursue the scattered stray iHenrytr.iv. 2 

and impounded as astray Henry I', i. 2 

and beats it when it strays 2Henrj/*J. iii. 1 

comes to seize me for a stray — iv. 10 

lie down, and stray no further. ./lii/ony<S-CVeo. iv. 12 

and if Jove stray, who dares say Pcncles, i. I 

from vour love make such a stray Lear. i. 1 

STRAYED no further Merchant of Venice, ii. 7 

his eye strayed his affection ..Comedy of Errors, v. I 
from our troops I strayed .... Titus Andronictu, y. I 

STRAYING from the way 3HenryH. in. 2 

[Co/.] full of straying shapes Love'sL. Lost, v. 2 

win straying souls with modesty ..Henry I'lll. v. 2 
I found her, straying in the park. 7'i(MJ>4nrfron. ni. 1 

STREAK her eves Mid.S.'s Dream, u. 2 

some streaks of day Macbeth, in. 3 

clouds with streaks of light Uomeo Sr Juliet, u. 3 

what envious streaks do lace — in. 5 

STREAKED, and pied Merchant of Venice, i. 3 

and streaked gilliflowers Winter' sTale. iv. 3 

STREAINI— as a gentle stream ..TteoGen.of Ver. ii- 7 

how runs the stream? TwelflhSigM.xy. I 

the verv stream of his life Meas.fbr Meas.m. 'i 

with her colden oars the silver stream .J/hcA.4((o, jii. 1 
gold his salt-green streams.. ..jUW.A.'sDrenm, iii. 2 
golden, glittering streams. I trust to — y. I 

all her spices on the stream Merch. of Venice, \ I 

my eye shall be the stream — •;;■ 2 

weepin2 in the needless stream .,/4»i/outiAei', n. 1 

to forswear the full stream of — m. '■* 

by the mui-muriiig stream left on your — ly. 3 

most high, do my sighs stream ..AliiiyeU,\i.3 

in his proper stream o'erflows himself — iv. 3 
obedient to the stream, were ..ComedynfKrrnis.x. I 
honours in these flattering streams ..Macbeth, in. 2 

to two such streams made one KmgJalin, ii. 2 

soul tliroiigli streams of blood Richard //. i. i 

from whence this stream through — >;. 3 

bubbles in a late disturbed stream ..\HenrylV. n. 3 
way the stream of time doth run ..iHenrylV. iv 1 
against your stream of quality ...... - v. 2 

as many fresh strcums run in one self. . Henry ; . i. 2 
more tlian streams of foieign gore ..[Henry I I. iii. 3 

the sun upon the gla.ssy streams — v. 3 

England weep in streams of bloodI./(>f'iiri//(/.y. 4 

to the mercy of a rude stream UmiyVIIl. iii. 2 

the rich strcom of lords, and ladies .. — ly. I 

on the stream of his dispose Troilus ^ Cress, ii. 3 

'gainst the stream of virtue they.. 7'.iiioii ofA'h. iv. I 
or offend the stream of regular justice — v. 5 
before the stream o' the people — Cnnotaniis, ii. 3 

till the lowest stream do kiss JuliUfCirsinw. 1 

as fast as they stream forth thy blood — ni. I 
a vagabond flag noon tli.- streiim./ln'on!/ Sr Clen. i 1 
Cloten's clotpole down tlic stream ..Cyininline, iv. 2 
Ihc stream to co-d this heat .. 7i(i...4..(lro.iirii», ji. I 
the airy region stream so bright. /(u»tt»*Ju/irf, ii. 2 



STREAM— leaves in the glassy stream. . Hnmlel, iv. 7 
sails freely, buth with wind and stream. 0(/iW(o, ii. 3 
poison, or lire, or suffocating streams .... — iii. 3 
streams ran by her, and murmured — iv. 3 (song) 

STREAMRKS the young HcnivF. iii. (chorus) 

S'l'RKAMINO the ensign of Hirhnnl H. iv. 1 

STIIEIST— hard l)y, at street end ..Merry Wives, iv. 2 

seeing her ^'o ihron:.'l\ tlie streets — iv. 5 

danger w:ii i; tliese f trcots Tu-elflh Niglil, iii. 3 

here in the street?, desjierate of — v. 1 

tlicir petitions in the street? Meas.forMeas. iv. 4 

also malie no noise in tlie streets MuchAdo, iii. 3 

if the streets were paved Love'sL.Losl, iv. 3 

the street slionld see as she walked .. — iv. 3 
vour head into the public street .Wc'.o/renice, ii. 5 

Jew did utter in the streets — ii. 8 

he met the duke in the street All's Well, iv. 3 

are not the streets as free for me.. Taming nJ'Sh. i. 2 

what, in the midst of the street? — v. 1 

my masterstays in tlie steest-Comedi/ of Errors, iii. 1 

when in tlie streets he meets — iii. 2 

tell her, I am arrested in the street .. — iv. 1 

he hurried througli the street — v. 1 

in the street I met him — v. 1 

from forth the streets of Pomfret King John, iv. 2 

in the streets do prophesy upon — iv. 2 

dead, and cnst into the streets — v. 1 

when 1 beheld in London streets Richard II. v. 5 

the other diiy in the street Micnryiy. i. 2 

talked wisely, and in the streets yrep.) — i. 2 

a companion to the connnon streets — iii. 2 

he l\ath done about Turnbnll street — iii. 2 

and banquet in the open streets 1 IlennjI'l. i. 6 

are broke down in every street — iii. 1 

slie endure the flinty streets illenrijVI. ii. 4 

ride in triumph tlironsli the streets.. — ii. 4 

will we ride tlirough the streets — iv. 7 

up Fish streetl down saint Mafrnus' — iv. 8 
lording it in London streets, crying.. — iv. 8 

not our streets with war! Coriolanus, iii. 3 

dissentious numbers pestering streets — iv. 6 
tliose fellows ran about the streets — — iv. 6 
with manacles through our streets .. — v. 3 
lead these men about the siKeW! . .JuliusCcesar, i. 1 
great Pompey pass the streets of Rome — i. 1 

drive away the vulgar from the streets — i. 1 

walk uj) and down the streets — i. 3 

I have walked aliout the streets .... — i. 3 

no stir, or walking in tlie streets .... — i. 3 

from tlie streets of Rome the Tarquin — ii. 1 
a lioness hath whelped in the streets — ii. 2 
did shriek, and squeal about the streets — ii. 2 

here the street is narrow — ii. 4 

urge you your petitions in the street? — iii. 1 

proclaim.'cry it about the streets — iii. 1 

go you into the other street, and part — iii. 2 

through the streets of Rome? — v. 1 

we'll wander thro' the streets Antony ^-Cleo.i. 1 

to reel the streets at noon — i. 4 

forty paces tlirougli the public street — _ii. 2 
nothing stranire about the streets? .. — iv. 3 
shouldhave shook lionsinto civil streets — v. 1 
set the dogs o' tl\e street to bay me ..Cyinbeline, v. 5 
be slaughtered in tlie streets .. TiJnsAndroiiicus, i. 2 
the streets of Rome (rep. iv. 4 and V. 2) — i. 2 

to let a queen kneel in the streets.... — i. 2 

strewed herself even in the streets Pericles, i. 4 

seen the desolation of your streets .... — i. 4 

the quiet ot our streets {rep.) /iomeo SrJuliel, i. 1 

with a man for coughing in the street — iii. I 
forbid this bandying in Verona streets — iii. I 
beg, starve, die i* the streets, for .... — iii. .5 
the people in the street cry— Romeo — v. 3 
squeak and gibber in the Homan streets. Hnm!f(, i. 1 
and impasted with the parching streets. . — ii. 2 

proclaim him in the streets; incense Othello, i. 1 

faith I must, she'll rail in the stieet else — iv. 1 

STRENGTH-massy for your strengths. 7Vmpes(, iii. 3 

what strength I have's mine own.. — (epilogue) 

by strength drives out another . TwoGen.of I'er. ii. 4 

what youth, strength, skill Twelfih Sight, iii. 4 

advice my strength can give yon. ileas. for Meas.S. I 

but of what strength and nature — i. 1 

it is excellent to liave a giant's strength — ii. 2 

both strength of limb, and policy Much Ado, iv. 1 

thy threats have no more strength. Mid. N.'sDr. iii. 2 
and he had an excellent strength. Love's L. Lost, i. 2 
the streTigth of your displeasure .Mer.nf Venice,v. 1 
to try with him tlie strength of ..As youLike it, i. 2 
cruel proof of this man's strengtii.... — i. 2 

tlie little strength that I have — i. 2 

a eliarge too heavy for my strength.. /UCsircH, iii. 3 
of what strength they are a-font . . — iv. 3 (note) 
strength as weak, our weakness .. Taming of Sh. v. 2 

I have got strength of limit . H'i'iler'sTale, iii. 2 

behold bright Phoebus in his strength — iv. 3 
and ampler strength than most have — iv. 3 
thy strength to communicate .Cowedijof Errors, ii. 2 
even in tlie strength and height of .. — v. 1 
yon do unbend ycnir noble strength ..Macbeth.u. 2 

by the strength 'of their illusion — iii..') 

our castle's strength will laugh — v. 5 

shall help to give him strength King John, ii. 1 

strength matched with strength — ii. 2 

dissever your united strengths — .ii. 2 

thy firtune, and thy strength — iij. 1 

with all religious strength of sacred — iii. 1 

your sinews to the strength of mine.. — v. 2 
had the strength, even at your door. . — v. 2 

hath left thee so much strength Richard II. i. I 

strength, gives,inyourweakness,stren2th — iii. 2 

not with such strength denied XHenrylV.S. 3 

I shall have no strength to repent .. — id. 3 
draw Ills several strengths together. .2f7t'i(ry/r.i. 3 

to make strength stronger — .ii. 3 

to his former strength may be restored — iii. 1 
we want a little personal strength .. — iv. 4 
put the world's whole strength intoone — iv. 4 
that strength of speech is utterly .... — iv. 4 
according to your strength — v. 5 



STRENGTH— and not our strength... Henry r. iv. 7 

no strength in measure (rc;>. I — v. 2 

with their chief assembled strength..! Henri/ F/. i. 1 
wliere is my strength, my valour .... — i. .'J 

I scorn thy strength — i- 5 

sinews, arms, and strength, with which — ii. 3 
what is the trust or strength of foolish — iii. 2 

seven walled towns of strength — iii. 4 

then gather strength, and march unto — iv. I 
princely leader ot our English strength — iv. 3 
to try his strength, forsaketh yet .... — .v. 5 
Ireland come I with my strength ..■iHenryl'l. iii. 1 

and was by strength subdued — iii. 2 

fight with all the strength thou hast — iv. 10 

aud spend her strength against SHenry )'/.;. 4 

my strong-knit sinews of their strengtli — ii. 3 

nor strength to hold out flight — ii. 6 

arguments of mighty strength — iii. 1 

unless my hand and strength could.. — iii. 2 
or than for strength and safety of our — iii. 3 
my want of strength, my sick heart.. — v. 2 

our strength will be augmented — v. 3 

give more strength to that which hath — v. 4 
assistance, and j'our strength, must by — v. 4 

and his rash-levied strength Richard III. iv. 3 

the greatest strength and power he .. — iv- 4 
the king's name is a tower of strength — v. 3 
skilful to their strength, fierce to. Troilus <§ Cress, j. ! 
strength should be lord of imbecility — i. 3 

stands, not in her strength — i. 3 

the holy strength of their command.. — ii. 3 
a proof of strength she could not publish — y. 2 

I will wish her speedy .'strength Coriolanus, i. 3 

i' the right and strength o' the commons — iii. 3 
they stand in their ancient strength.. — iv- 2 

as ever in ambitious strength I — iv. 5 

thy country's strength and weakness — iv. 5 
is all the policy, strength, and defence — iv. 6 

strengths by strengths, do fail — iv. 7 

with more strength than thou hast .. — v. 3 
retentive to the strengtli of spirit ..JuliusCtPsar,'\. 3 

our arms, ill strength of malice — iii. 1 

the hated, grown to strength Antony^ Cleo.]. 3 

a mighty strength they carry — ii. I 

whars his strength by land? — .ii. 2 

wrestle with you in my strength of love — iii. 2 

entangles itself with strength — iv. 12 

our strength is all gone into heaviness — iv. 13 
whose strength I will confirm with..(7!/)n6ef;ne,.ii. 4 
that possible strength might meet. ... — iv. 2 
put the strength o the Leonati in mel — v. 1 

renew thy strength — y. 5 

and abate your strength Titus A iidronkus, i, I 

led my country's strength successfully — i. 2 

struck home to show my strength.... — ii. 3 
or, wanting strength to do thee so. . .. — ii. 4 
nor I no strength to climb without .. — ii. 4 
so much strength in us as will revenge — iii. 2 

whose wisdom's strength can bear it Pericles, i. 2 

scarce strength left to give them burial .. — i. 4 
conferring tliem on younger strengths .... Lear, i. 1 

bow in my strength you please — ii. 1 

to descry the strength o' the enemy — iv. 5 

friendly hand put strength enough to it.. — iv. 6 
here is the guess of their true strengtli .. — v. 1 

maugre thy strength, youth, place — y. 3 

gives strength to make it fly .... Romeo ^-Juliet, i. 3 
fall, wlien there's no strength in men — ii. 3 
hast the strength of will to slay thyself — iv. 1 
love, give me strength, and strength — iv. 1 

if you had the strength of twenty men — v. 1 
with all the strength and armour of ..Hamlet, iii. 3 

and strength, and means, to do't — iv. 4 

STRENGTHEN from strange to Tempest, v_. 1 

in arms you strengthen it with yours KingJnhn, iu. 1 

policy strengthen themselves i Henry f I. i. 2 

strengthen and support king Edward's — iii. 1 

to strengthen that holy duty Henry VIII. y, 2 

to strengthen that impatience hdiusCa-sar, ii. 1 

my faction if thou strengthen Titus Andnn. i. 2 

and the gods strengthen thee ! Pericles, iv. 6 

strengthen your patience in our last Hnmlel, v. 1 

STRENGTHENED with whatapology.^i;'s;reH,ii. 4 

strengthened by interchangement ..Twelfth N. v. 1 

kindreds are mightily strengthened. 2 Henry If. ii. 2 

would more have strengthened this .2 Henry Vl. iv. 1 

STRENGTHENING mis-proud York — ii. 6 

STRENGTHLESS hinges, buckle .. ..-2 Henry IK i. 1 

whose strengthless stay is numb .... I Henry VI. ii. 5 

STRETCH-dare no more stretch ..l/ea.!. /or iSIcas. v. 1 

did stretcli his leathern coat is you Like it, ii. 1 

the gift doth stretch itself as 'tis All's Well, ii. 1 

wliati will the line stretch out Macbeth, \v. 1 

90 far as my coin would stretch \HenrylV. i. 2 

how shall we stretch our eye Henry F.ii. 2 

stretch the nostril wide — iii. 1 

if you might please to stretch it Henry VII I. ii. 3 

come, stretch thy chest, and let. Troilus Sr Cress, iv. 5 
requital, than we to stretch it out . . Coriolanus, ii. 2 
the precipitation might down stretch — iii. 2 

may well stretch so far, as to JuliusCtBsar, ii. 1 

stretch without some pleasure..... 4ii(on?/ 4- Clco. i. 1 
almost stretch the sides 0' the world. CymieZ/He, iii. 1 

that stretch their duties nicely Lear, ii 2 

would stretch th.v spirits up into the air — iv. 2 
of this tough world stretch him out longer — v. 3 
I stretch it out for that word. . . . Romeo * Juliet, ii. 4 

STRETCHE D his yoke Mid.N.'sDream, ii. 2 

extremely stretched, and conned — v. 1 

there lay he, stretched along .... As you Like it, iii. 2 

had it stretclied so far All's Well, i. 1 

nostrils stretched with struggling ..2IlenryVl. iii 2 

stretched unto their servants Richard III. iii. 5 

ptretched him, and, with one hand. . Henry VIII. i. 2 
'twixt his stretched footing and.. Troilus 4r Cress. i. 3 

and thus far having stretched it Coriolanus, iii. 2 

my sinews shall be stretched upon him — v. 5 
I in conquest stretched mine arm ..JultusCcesar, ii. 2 
and our best means stretched out .... — iv. 1 
kindness we have stretched thus far ..Pericles, v. I 



STRETCHED-OUT life Troilus * Cr.ssida, i. 3 

STRETCHES itself beyond iHenri/IV. iv. 4 

and it stretches beyond you IlenryVIII. i. 2 

stretches from an inch narrow . . Romeo <5 Juliet, ii. 4 

STRETCHINGofa8pan..4syoi(Lrte'/, iii. 2 (verses) 

upon uneasy pallets stretching tbee.2'/eHrv^''- iii- ' 

STRETCH-MOUTHED rascal .. Wintcr'sTale, iv. 3 

STREW good luck,ouphcs, on Merry Wives, v. 5 

sweet friend, to strew him o'er . . Winter a Tale, iv. 3 

for it shall strew the footsteps King Jo/in, i. 1 

that strew the green lap of Itirland If. v. 2 

strew me over with maiden llnuii i'iiLiv.2 

strew flowers before them Ci<riiil,iiiiis, v. 4 

.you now strew flowers in his wa.y..JHhiisC'e^,it, i. 1 
shall, which we upon you strew ....Cymhetine, iv. 2 

to strew thy green with flowers Pericles, Iv. I 

with flowers I strew thy bridal bed. Romeo ^-Jul. v. 3 
[Co(.Kn(.] to strew thy grave and weep — v. 3 
strew this hungry churchyard with.. — v. 3 
he came with flowers to strew his lady's — v. 3 
she may strew dangerous conjectures. . Hamlet, iv. 5 
STREWED-I have strewed it \n.Mcas for Meas. i. 4 
whose delay, is strewed with sweets ..Af'sWeli, ii. 4 
rushes strewed, cobwebs swept. Tajuing of Shrew, iv. 1 
strewed repentant ashes on his henCi.kingJohn, iv. 1 

the presence strewed Richard //. i. 3 

strewed wi tli husks and formless. Troil. ^ Cress, iv. 5 
smooth success be strewed before .Antony (^ Cieo..i. 3 
liad found gold strewed o' the floor.. Ci/i/iiefi'ne, iii. 6 
and weeds I have strewed his grave.. — iv. 2 

for riches, strewed herself even in I'erirtes, i. 4 

and not Iiave strewed thy grave llnmicr, v. 1 

STREWING her way witb Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 

are strewings fittest for gra\'eR Cyinbeline, iv. 2 

STKEWMGNTS, and the bringing Hamlet, v. 1 

STREWST thou sugar on that Richard ///. i. 3 

STRICKEN down Richard II. v. 1 

the clock hath stricken three .... Julius Ccpsar,\\. I 

like a deer, stricken by many princes — iii. 1 

STRICT— to the strict deputy .... .Meas.forMeas. i. 3 

we have strict statutes — i. 4 

wishing a more strict restraint — i. 5 

there are other strict observances.. /-ove's L.Lost, i. 1 

me, with what strict patience — iv. 3 

this strict court of Venice must.. i»/er./irren/cf, iv. 1 

1 was too strict, to make mine Richard II. i. 3 

is my strict fast, I mean — ii. I 

keep aloof from strict arbitremeut..! HenrylV. iv. 1 

is all your strict preciseness 1 Henry VI. v. I 

such strict and severe covenants — v. 4 

.you undergo too strict a (laradox. Timon of Alh. iii. 5 
for law is strict, and war is nothing.. — iii. 5 

by the tenor of our strict edict Pericles, i. 1 

with this strict charge — ii. 1 

t'nat the strict fates had pleased — iii. 3 

this same strict and most observant ....Hamlet, i. I 
death, is strict in his arrest — v. 2 

STRICTER render of me Cytnbeline, v. 4 

STRICTEST degrees I'll write .... Lnve'sL.Lost, i. 1 
STRICTLY charged the contrary ..Richard III. iv. 1 

she hath so strictly tied herself Pericles, ii. ^ 

STRICTURE, andflrm abstinence. .il/ea./or.Vea. i. 4 

STRIDE— into a manly stride Mer.of i'enice, iii. 4 

Tarquin's ravishing strides [/fii(.-sides]/V(ic(ie//i, ii. 1 
every tedious stride I make will ....Richard II. i. 3 

every stride he makes upon my — iii. 3 

a stride, and a stand Troilus A- Cressida, i ii. 3 

on the moment follow his strides . . Timon o/Ath. i. 1 

I mean to stride your steed Coriolanus, i. 9 

not dares to stride a limit Cymbeline, iii. 3 

slaves, the strides they victors made.. — v. 3 

STRIDl NG the blast, or heaven's Macbeth, i. 7 

STRIFE— yet a barful strife 1 Tirelfih Kighi. i. 4 

above all other strifes Measure for Mensure, iii. 2 

come in strife into this place . . Mid. A'.'i- Dream, v. 1 

I shall end this strife Merchant of I enice, ii. 3 

war is no strife to the dark house ....All's Well, ii. 3 

wit'n strife to please you — (epil.) 

I'll compound this strife Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 

and to cut off all strife, here sit we .. — iii. 1 
breath of flattery conquers strife. Co/ne/Zy o//'7rr.iii. 2 

stirring him to blood andstrife KingJohn, ii. 1 

ill peace, die free from strife Richard II. v. 6 

rests for me in this tumultuous strife.! Hemyr/. i. 3 
uncle Gloster, mitigate this strife.... — iii.! 

confounded be your strifi. I — iv. 1 

let me be umpire of this doubtful strife — iv. I 
betrayed to fortune by your strife.... — iv. 4 
such inmanity and bloody strife .... — v. I 

of discord and continual strife? — v. 5 

my lords, let me compound this strife. 2 Henry VI. ii. 1 

sons, and brother, at a strife? 3 Henry VI. i. 2 

all strifes were well compounded .. Richard III. ii. ! 
half stints their strife before.. 7'ro('/i(.s<5 Cressida, iv. !> 
strife lives in these touches .. ..Timon of .Hhens, i. I 

there is a civil strife in heaven JultusCiesar, i. 3 

and fierce civil strife, shall cumber . . — iii. I 
be nothing of our strife ....Antony f,- Cleopatra, ii. 2 

now, stay your strife TitusAndronicus, iii. 1 

that future strife may lie prevented now ..Lear, i. 1 

the opposites of this day's strife — v. 3 

bury their parents' strife . . Romeo Z^- Juliet (prologue) 
[Co(.K?i(.] to cease thy strife, aud leave — ii. 2 
twenty of them fought in this black strife — iii.! 

pursue me lasting strife, if, once Hamlet, iii, 2 

STRIKE— as fast as mill-wheels strike.. Tempest, i. 2 

but darest not strike — i. 2 

by and b.y it will strike — ii. 1 

strikes poor lovers dumb .. Tivo Gen. of Verona, ii. 2 
strike? whom wouldst thou strike?.. — iii.! 

why sir, I'll strike nothing — iii. 1 

let him not strike the old woman. Merry Wives, iv. 2 
ta'en a special stand to strike at me.. -^ v. .5 
I know ray lady will strike hhn. Twelfth Xighf., iii. 2 
to strike, and gall them .... Measure for Measure, i. 4 
in the ambush of my name, strike home — i. 4 

the whitest virtue strikes — iii. 2 

or not laughed at, strikes him Much.ido, ii. ! 

hoi now you strike like the blind.... -:- Ji. I 
of reproaches, tti ike at thy life — iv. 1 



STRIKE up, pipers ''"'«* ''''"..y- J 

Bimrii me strike me (.rep. il.3)...W.<I.W. lOiram, ii. 8 
BluiiiUl I luirt her, Btriku her, kill her — !»■ f 

let htr not strike me — !"• '- 

mul strike more ilcud tliaii common _ — iv. I 
httiul may strike liia lioiiour (low ii.louc »t. Los/, i. 1 

and slie strikes at ti.e l)ro\v - iv. 1 

it strikes ii man moroacml thn.\x.. As ijon Like il, ill. 3 
flelits. where noble lellows striltc ....AlfaiyM. ii. 3 
did'st lovelier, strikes some scores .. — v- 3 
I'll euff von, if you strike uj;ciin../nininj,'o/iA. ij. 
if you strike me, you lire no jientlemnn — ij. 1 
will strike where 'tis predoniimuit. /Ii,i(fr « lair, i. i 
that may strike the dullest nostril .. — . i- - 

heavens themselves do strike — V'- : 

come on, strike lip (rfp.) ■ ; — '\- ^ 

nwiike her; strike; 'tis time; descend — v. 3 
auprottch; strike all that look upon.. — v. 3 
Btrike yon home witliout a messeiiger.Com.o//i>i;. i. i 

iliid now tlie clock strikes one - 'v-i 

Blie strike upon the licll MafMh,n. 1 

who did strike out the light? — i"- 3 

UBW sorrows strike hciiveu — 'V- ^ 

I cannot strike ut wretched kernes — v. 7 

met with foes that strike beside us ... . — .v. 7 
when 1 strike my foot upim .-•■.■•• King John, iv. 1 
to do me shame, I'll strike thee dead — iv. 3 

strike up the drums («/>.) .■•■•• 

and yet we strike not, hut securely., fl^ 

a puny subject strikes lit tliy — .•;:•- 

and thev shall strike ymir children — ui. 3 

strike li'im, Aumcrle. I'oor lioy — v. ^ 

groans, that strike upon my heart ••„ — ,„ X- ^ 
such as will strike sooner tliau spe.ik.l Hc"; i/ZK. u. i^ 

now cannot I strike him 

strike; down with thciu 

strike up our drum-', pursue 

that must strike sail to spirits .... 
shall strike his father's crown into 

vea. strike the Dauphin blind 

lie that strikes the flrst stroke .... 

God's iirin strike with usl — ;»• j 

I will strike it out soundly — (V. 7 

if that the soldier strike lum — iv. 7 

I promised to strike him — iv. 8 

I, indeed, thou proraised'st to strike — 'v. 8 

like clocks, still to strike on 1 Hcnrij VI. i. i 

for none would strike a stroke — .!• J 

should strike such terror to his enemies — ii- 3 

strike those that hurt, and hurt not.. — ,"'••* 

slie shall not strike dame Eleanor ..iUcnryl I. 

on our long-boat's side strike off his he: 

strike off his head presently l^rep.) 

strike up, drums {rep. iv. 7 & v. 3) 

since we have begun to strike. .... 

heaven 1 or strike, ungentle death! 

now Margaret must strike her sail .. — iii-J 

strike now, or else the iron cools — v. i 

so low a sail, to strike to thee ,—,,,, X' ' 

I'll strike thee to my foot Uidimd /' '• |- ^ 

witli lightning strike the murderer .. — !■ ^ 

basilisks to strike thee deadl — \- ' 

soft! he wakes. Strike. No — . i- J 

well.let itstrike. Why. let It strilcel — iv. i 
trumpets! strike alarum, drumsl yep-') — iv. i 
of hiin things to strike honour SML-Hennjl >'';},■ >■ 
stops again, strikes his breast hard . . — w- \ 
rude son should strike his fatiier. (roi/uK c^- Cress, i. i 

how many hands shall strike — .!• ^ 

thou catist strike, canst thoui" — ;!• 

thou shouldst strike hira ...., — !!• ^ 

will strike amazement to their — 

shall quite strike off all service. ..... — 

strike not a stroke, but keep yourselves — 



rd II. ii. 1 



— ii. 2 



...Ihnnjy. i. 2 

— i. 2 

— ii. 1 



id— iv. 1 

_ iv. 7 

.•iUennjVI. ii. 1 



ii. 3 



iii. 3 



STRIKE— did my father strike .....Uar. i. 3 

you strike my lieoplc. and your disordered — i. 4 
strike, you slave; stand, rogue, stand (>•(■;).)— ii. i 

he dies, that strikes again ' — W-'^ 

very late, to strike at ine — !■• - 

striVc in their iiumlitd and mortified — ii. 3 

strike her young linncs, yon tiiUnig airs — i|. ■! 
strike flat the tliirk rotuii.lilyo'ti.e ...» - in. 2 
strike the sight of the dealli-piucli.sid .. — iv. 6 
let the drum strike, and prove inv title .. — v. 3 
he'll strike, and quickly too: lie s dead.. - v. 3 
I strike quickly, being (i"/).) ....Itninco^ Juliet, i. 1 
eliibs, bills, and parlizaiis! strike! .. — i. 1 

on lusty gentlemen. .Strike, drum .. — 1.4 

tostrike himdead I hold itiiot asin — 1.5 
shall I strike at it with niv partizan ..Ilamlel,\. 1 

then no planets strikes no fairy takes — i. 1 

in rage, strikes wide; but with the — ii. 2 

Btrike on the tinder, ho! give me a taper Otiiclla, i. 1 
with his truncheon may strike at yon .. — ii. 1 

as men in rage strike those that wish — ii. I 

time, strike off this score of absence — in. 4 

I strike it, and it hurts my hand — iv. 1 

what, strike his wife? Faith, that was .. — iv. 1 
or, sav, they strike us, or scant our toriner — iv. 3 
it strikes where it doth love — y. 2 

STRIKER— sixpenny strikers Mlenn/ll . ii. 1 

STUIKEST me sorely to say I did.. miUei'sTale.y. 1 
no sense, thou strikest me Ihusl.rroUus ^ Cress, ii. 1 

thou strikest as slow as another — .n 1 

thou strikest not me, 'tis Ciesar. /("(on;/* C/co. iv. 12 

STRIKING kills for {aunst.Measiire for Measure, in. 2 
for striking him about Bardolph ....'illenrijir. i. 2 
as he is striking, holds his infant up — iv. 1 
his sword did ne'er leave striking.. ..1 rr.-iuv' '• i- 4 
striking in our country's cause ....ri/mhelme, v. 4 
he finds him striking too short H„mlel, ii. 2 

STRING— up in silken strings ..Tn-vGen.o/ ler.u. 7 

out of tune on tlie strings? — .> v. 2 

with idle spider's strings most .Mens.for Meas. in. 2 

good strings to your beards Mtd.N'sDrrani, iv. 2 

hath one poor string to stay it liy ..Km^Jnlw, v. 7 
time broke in a disordered string . . Richard II. v. 5 

the very base string of humility lllenri/II'. n. 4 

when such strings jar, what liope....2H«"r.v»'/..n. 1 
harp not on that string, mmlam ..Hichard III. iv. 4 
fret the string, the master-cord.... Hciri/r///. iii. 2 
untune that string, and, hark . . TrniUs Sr Cress, i. 3 

the strings, my lord, are false Julim Cmsar, iv. ,■) 

to thy rudder tied by the stiings/ln'ony S/ Cleo. iii. 9 
make the silken strings deliglit ..TilmAmlrnn. ii. 5 

fair viol, and your sense the strings Pericles, i. I 

and the strings of life began to crack .... I.ear,v. 3 
heart with strings of steel, be soft as . . H'./»W. in. 3 
mv purse, as if the strings were thine ..Uihciin, i. I 

STlilNGI.ESS instnimeTit lUchnrd II. n. 1 

STRIP your sword stark naked ..TirArth.Sr.:hi, in. 4 
and strip myself to death. . Measitrefnr Menmire, i_i. I 
the church, would they strip from us. . lleuiyl'. i. 1 

then will he strip liissleeve — ;v. 3 

strip thine own back Lear, iv. 6 

such tricks as these strip you out of Olhello, ii. 1 

STRIPE— whom stripes may move Teinvesi, i. 2 

more thon the stripes I have .. .. IViuter sTale, iv. 2 

who wears mv stripes impressed Conolauiis, v. 6 

hence with thy stripes, begone.. /Infoni/* Of o. in. II 
STRIPLING— a proper stripling ..Taming of Sh. i. 2 

a handsome stripling too: I wis Hic.hnrdlll i. 3 

he, with two striplings, (lads more ..Ciimhcbue. y. 3 
STRIPPED-there strippedhimself..4s!/i«/.'A''i(, iv. 3 

and say, I was stripped -i/Cs Well, iv. 1 

she stripped it from her arm (:yml>cline,u. 4 

that stripped her from his benediction 



— iv. 1 

— V. 3 

— V. 5 
CfPtar. ii. 1 

— ii. 1 



strike not a stroKe, uui Kceji iouiocv, 
strike, fellows, strike; this is the man 
strike a free march to Troy .......... — 

that I may strike at Athens .. limonofAihe 
Btrike rne the counterfeit matron I . . — 
Btrike their sharp shins, and mar .... — 

strike up the drum towards Athens. . — 

we but offend him. Strike • — 

each other's leech: let our drums strike — 

may as well strike at the heaven Corwla 

once more strike at Tiillus' face .... — 

we shall ever strike till one can — 

Btrike all trades in Rome — 

let the mutinous winds strike...... .. — 

I know it: and my pretext to strike at 

speak, strike redress! (rep.) ..Jiili: 

entreated tlien to speak, and striked 

Btrike, as thou didst at CiEsar — .•.•" 

for Pomiiey's name strikes more .Aiilony^(-lca.i. 4 

I have a iriiiid tostrike thee — !!• 5 

that they strike a meaner than myself — Ji. a 
Btrike the vessels, hoi here is to Uesar — _\\- 7 

Btrike not by land; keep whole — ni- a 

rilstrike, and cry. take all... — !^-^ 

may strike their sounds together .... — .iv.B 
beforelstrike this bloody stroke.... — ;v. J 
shall I strike now? Now, Eros ..... — >v. l^ 
let him that loves me, Btrike me deail — iv. u 
high events as these strike those .... — v- ' 
your cause doth strike my heart .. .Cymbeline,i. 7 
he, that strikes the venison hrst .... — !!!• 3 

strikes life into my speech ...— '"• ^ 

where, if thou fear to strike — in. Ulettcr 

do his bidding; strike. Thou may St - in. 4 
it strikes me, past the hope of comtort — iv. .1 

fairness, which strikes the eye — v. j 

the gods do mean to strike me to ... . — X- ^ 
and strike her home by force .. .. 7i(ui Andron. n. 
there siKttk. and strike, brave boys .. — iJ- ' 

some planet strike me down — .!!• » 

thou canst not strike It thtri to — ">■ ;i 

what dost thou strike at, Marcus.... — hi. i 

or strike ine, 1 f you please ' enrics, i. . 

doyoubut strike the blow — !• - 

seemed not to strike, but smooth — i. ^ 

Helicauiis, strike me, honoured sir .... — v. i 
there to strike the inhospitable tleou — \. ' 



Tempest, ii. I 



V. 7 STRIPPiNG-iu stripping it ., .lenipei 

. 9 ' STRIVE— good things will strive to dwell — 
hat I must strive to do 



i. 2 



— iv. 1 

— V. 2 
. All's IVell, 1.3 

— i. 3 



; ofSh. 



— 111. I 

I'd strive to tell you — v. 1 

we'll strive to please \o\i.. TweinhNi^M. v. 1 (songl 
when they strive to be lords o't:T..Love'sL.Losl, iv. 1 

but if thou strive, poor soul.... 

where zeal strives to content 

adoption strives with nature 

so strive upon your pulse 

I love in vain, strive against hope .. 

nor will strive to do't (rep.) 

we'll strive to bear it for your 

I pr'ythee, do not strive against 

strive mightily, but cat and ilrink./'ui 
tostrivefor that which resteth 111 my _ . 

discontenting father strive to .... »'i »'«■'• slnle, iv. 3 

when workmen strive to do Km:; John. ly. 2 

nor strive not with your breath ....lltchardll.n. 1 
of care? Strives Bofiiighroke to be .. — in. 2 
with women's voices, strive to speak — m. 2 

that I may strive to kill it „ „ — „, ^- 1 

av, ay, so strives the woodcock ^ Henry I I. i. 1 

often did I strive to yield Hichard lll.ui 

I'll strive, with troubled thoughts.... -- v. .i 
bid him strive to gain the love .... Henry t III:,}. ^ 
this lord strives to appear foul ..Tiinonn/.ilh. in. 3 

stream of virtue thev may strive — iv. 1 

I will strive with things impossible. ../»;. (-'"nr. n. 1 

fully strives to make itself /)»/oii!/,SC'<-i>..i. 1 

that it did strive in workmanship ..Cymbcline,i\. 4 

strive, man, and speak •• — X- » 

princes, that strive by factions .. I iius Andrnn. \. I 
sirs, strive no more; such withered.. _— in. 1 
forth he strive to killeii bad .... I'enelet, ii. (Gower) 

Burgundy, strive to be interested '-""■.•.!• ' 

strives in his little world of man ;■,.—, '"•, I 

our toil shall strive to mend. . Ilomeo fj-Juhet, (prol.) 
how much she strives to do him good ..Ulhello, ii 3 
nay. if you stiive.-Bul half an hour.... — v. i 
STRI VI;D God Neptune's annual. /V/ir/c<. v. (Gow.) 
STRIVINO-enlaigemcntstriviiig..ll/."i//;' . in. 
half-faced sun, striving to shine.... 2 //f ">!/'/• iv. 1 

colonrsof our striving houses 3llrnri,l '..ii- » 

striving to make an ugly deed TimonofAihcns, in. o 

with striving less to be so Cnriolamu, ni. / 

Btriving to better; oft wc mar lMr,\. 4 



STRIVING to apprehend him Lear,\\. I 

STRIV'ST toget Measure forMeasure,iil. 1 

STR<)K'D.ST— thou Btrok'dst me Tempest, i. 2 

STltlJKE— in lusty stroke to the shore.. — Ii. 1 

one stroke shall i'ree thee from — ii. I 

with bloodless stroke, mv huixrl. .rtorlphyiifhl, ii. .'> 
even with the stroke and line of..W<Mf./«rii;<-<is. iv. 2 
the unsisting postern with these strokes — iv. 2 

smile, and stroke his heard MuchAdn,\. 1 

forth now: stroke your chins Asymi l.iUe it, 1. 2 

OS yon love strokes, so jest . . Cumedi/ of Errors, i 1. 2 
doubly redoubled strokes upon the lue..Uacti"//i, i. 2 

but certain issue strokes must — v. i 

and with no stroke of mine — v. 7 

this city without stroke, or wound.. King- JoAii, ii. 2 
the vilest stroke, that ever wall-eyed — iv. 3 
welc line is the stroke of death .... Hichard II. iii. 1 

you may stroke him as gently 2 llennjl V.ii. 4 

enraged him on to offer strokes — iv. I 

he that strikes the first strolie Henry I', ii. 1 

not having struck one stroke Mlenryl'l. i. I 

none would strike a stroke in his .... — i. .^ 

or that a stroke was given — iv- 1 

oppression, or the stroke of war — v. 3 

and many strokes, though with illenryl'l. ii. I 

for strokes received, and many blows — ii. 3 
I lay it naked to the deadly stroke.. /f/cAori/ '//.I. 2 
upon the stroke of four (rc/i. v. 3).... — Iii. 2 
upon the stroke often. Well, let it .. — iv. 2 
thou keep'st the stroke betwixt thy.. — iv. 2 

the arbitrement of bloody strokes — v. 3 

at one stroke has taken for e\er . . Henry fill. ii. 1 
when the greatest stroke of fortune falls — ii. 2 
hem, and stroke thy beard.... TroiluslfCrestida. i. 3 
their strife before their strokes begin — iv. i 

she strokes his cheek I — v. 2 

strike not a stroke, but keep yourselves — .v. 7 

on Athens, ripe for stroke! Timon nf Athens, iv. 1 

their fears of hostile strokes, their aches — v. 'i 

the common stroke of war — v. 5 

fierce and terrible only in strokes CoriVinut, i. I 

opposing laws witli strokes — iii. 3 

given hostile strokes, and that not in — iii. 3 
tis fund to wail inevitable strokes .. — iv. 1 

better than bad strokes (repi JnliuiCtrsnr, v. I 

to the tune of flutes kept stroke.. Jii(on[/ ,5- C(fO. ii. 2 

as amorous of their strokes — ii. 2 

before I strike tills bloody stroke .... — iv. 1 2 
and give me suflieing stroke- for death — iv. I'i 
by some mortal stroke she do defeat us — v. 1 
the stroke of death is as a lover's pinch — _v 2 
that words are strokes, and strokes.. Ct/<»''e/in«, iii. .1 
tliou art luiBt the tyrant's stroke.. — iv. 2l8ong) 
the stroke of this yet scarce-cold battle — v. i 
no stroke of mischief in it? ..TitmAndTonicus,v. 1 

have lininbled to all strokes Lear, iv. 1 

but not without that harmful stroke .... — ;v 2 

the most terrible and nimble stroke — iy. 7 

the stroke that murders me ....UoiiieoSrJ"lie'. iii. 3 

'scapes not calumnious strokes Hamlet, i. 3 

speak of some distressful stroke Othello, i. 3 

I knew, that stroke would prove the worst — iv. I 
ST|{().\D-in stronds afar remote ....MlenrylV. i. 1 

so looks the strond whereon iHenryll'.'i. I 

STRONG-to thy strong bidding Tempest, i. 2 

and my strong iiimgiiuition sees — ii. 1 

pinches therefore, are most strong .. — v. 1 

and one BO strong that could — v. 1 

like a strong distillation ilerry Wires, iii. 5 

even strong against that match — iy. 6 

to a strong mast, that lived Ttretflh .Vif/if, i. 2 

simply as strong as any man — j. 3 

ay, 'tis stron", audit does — i. 3 

the beating of so strong a passion — ji. I 

some two thousand strong, or so .... — iii. 2 
whose strong corruption inhabits .... — iii. I 
the strong and swelling evil of ..Meas.for.^teai.W. I 

what king so strong, can tie — iii. 3 

that the strong statutes stand like .. — v. 1 
with the force and strong encounter ..Much.iJa, 1. I 

fetter strong madness in — v. I 

messengers of strong prevailment ..Mid.S. sDr. 1. I 

lost witli their fears, tiiiis strong — iii. 3 

such tricks hath strong imagination — v. 1 

hears not so strong a note Lore's L. Lust. v. 2 

of my father grows strong in me . . As you Like il,'\. 1 
to ciitcli the strong fellow by the leg — i. 2 

you sliciiild fall into so strong a liking — \. 3 

wherefore are yon gentle, strimg — ii. 3 

look old. yet I am strong end lusty.. — ii- 3 
let gentleness mv strong enforcement be — .ii- 7 
being strong at heart, he sent me .... — i\. 3 

love ii strong pn-ssion is impressed Att'siycU, 1. 3 

my reasons arc most strong .— iv. 3 

how many horse the duke is strong — iv. 3(note) 

strong of lier strong displeasure — v. 2 

if it smells as strong as thou siieak'st of — v. 3 

too strong for reason's force — v. 3 

he longs to see his son, were strong. H inter sTale, i. J 
the verity of it is in strong susiiicion — y. 3 
if by strong hand yon offer ..Comedy rtf Errors, 111. I 

the fiend is strong within him — iv. 4 

I wot not by what strong escape — v. 1 

and his subject, strong both against.. ..JI/.icW/i. 1. 7 

being too strong for linn — 11. 3 

nor our strong sorrow on the foot .... — 11. 3 

make strong themselves by ill — in. 2 

those strong knots of love — iv. 3 

strong possession, and our right (rrp.).htngJohn,] 

till your strong hand shall help — 

his forces strong, his soldiers confident — 
in any breast of strong authority .... — 
thou ever strong upon the stronger sidel — 

in love, so strong in both — 

b fore the curing of a strong disease — 

and iiiek strong matter of revolt .... — 
strong reasons make strong [to/. hnl.strongcj- In. 4 

and think them strong (re/).) — iv. 2 

wecaniiot hold mnrlttlity's strong hand — iv. 2 
strong as u tower in hope IlichaiJ II. i. 3 



Ii. 
ii. 
.ii. 




i'i'i 




III 


4 



STR 



[ 728 ] 



STRONG and grcnt, in substance . . Richard II. iii. 2 

tie theo tci inv strong correction — ;v. 1 

cracking the strong warrant of an oath — iv. I 

ibr sonic strong piii-pose, steeled — V. 2 

heinous, strong, luui bold conspiracy I — v. 3 

makes one pardon strong — v. 3 

our tbrtunes in our own strong arms . I Henryll'. i. 3 
seven thousand strong, ia marching.. — iv. I 
with strong and mighty preparation — iv. I 
when lie was not six and twenty strong — iv. 3 
but wisdom to make strong against liira — iv. 4 
nothing so strong and fortunate as I — v. I 

we arc a body strong enough iHenryll'.i. 3 

and the archbishop, are strong — ii. 3 

are fifty thousand strong — iii. 1 

young, stronir, and of good friends . . — iii. 2 

our armour all as strong — iv. 1 

thouzh it do worli as strong as aconitum — iv. i 

tliinic we king Harry strong Henry V. u. i 

my pains, and strong endeavours .... — v. 2 
in ail I was six thousand strong ....iHetiryVI.iv. 1 

and strong enough to issue out — iv. 2 

came in strong rescue — iv. 6 

and hell too stron" for me to buckle — v. 3 
the strong poison tliat 1 buught . . . .ilienry VI. iii. 3 
lays strong siege unto this wretch's soul — iii. 3 
Bixrgulus, the strong Illyriau pirate.. — iv. 1 

you are strong and manly — iv. 8 

or is he but retired to make him strong? — iv. 9 

be more weak, and I more strong — v. 1 

1 have reasons stron" and forci lile ..ZHen ry VI. i . 2 
strong, I would not sliuii their fury.. — i. 4 

this strong right hand of mine — ii 1 

is thirty thousand strong {rep. v. 3).. — ii. 1 

will be full as strong as ours — v. 3 

and their power grows strong Richard III. iv. 4 

to keep the strong in awe (rep.) — v. 3 

make my vouch as strong as shore ..f/eHrj/r///. i. 1 

a strong faith to conceal it — ii. 1 

the strong course of my autliority . . . . — v. 2 
crab-treestaves, and strong ones .... — v. 3 
within whose strong immures. Troilus ^- Cress, (prol.) 

the Greeks are strong — i. I 

strong as the axletree on which heaven — i. 3 
good arms, strong joints, true swords — i. 3 

to steel a strong opinion to themselves — i. 3 

but it was a strong comnosuie — ii. 3 

you are as strong, as valiant — ii. 3 

my privacy, I have strong reasons .. — iii. 3 
but the strong base and building .... — iv. 2 
in a sense as strong as that which .. — iv. 1 
an esperance so obstinately strong .. — v. ^ 

instance! strong as Pluto's (rep.).. — v. 2 

that makes strong the vow — v. 3 

till their knots be strong — v. 3 

thou'lt go, strong thief Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

terribly swear into strong shudders .. — iv. 3 

be strong iu whore, allure him — iv. 3 

marrow, in the bearer strong, cries .. — v. 5 
strong breaths, they shall know ijep.).Coriolamis, i. 1 

of more strong link asunder — i. 1 

making parties strong, and feebling — i. I 

'tis fit you make strong party — iii. 3 

more strong than are upon you yet.. — iii. 2 
make them be strong, and ready .... — iii. 3 
you make the weak most strong . . J^dius Cresar, i. 3 

nor strong links of iron, can be — i. 3 

he will stand very strong with us.... — ii. 1 

1 have made strong proof of my — ii. I 

O constancy, be strong upon my side! — ii. 4 
your voiceshall be as strong as any man's — iii. 1 

more strong than traitors' arms — iii. 2 

for I am armed so strong in honesty — iv. 3 
have made themselves so strong .... — iv. 3 

that I held Kpicurus strong — v. I 

these strong Egyptian (ett^rs.AntonySc Cleopatra, i. 2 
the strong necessity of time commands — i. 3 

Pompey is strong at sea — i. 4 

there's a strong fellow, Menas. Why? — ii. 7 
as loud as his strong sides can volley — ii. 7 

strong Enobarbe is weaker than — ii. 7 

o'er your content these strong necessities — iii. (i 
not, in their best fortunes, strong.... — iii. 10 

in her strong toil of grace — v. 2 

not strong enough to be believed.... Ci/Hifccffiic ii. 4 
but from proof as strong as my grief — iii. 4 (let.) 
weak with toil, yet strong in appetite — iii. 6 

more strong, not beneath him — iv. 1 

hath yoked a nation strong .. TilusAndroniciis, i. 1 

is not j'our city strong'/ — iv. 4 

tlic ambush of our friends be strong. . — v. 3 
a reason, mighty, strong, and effectual — v. 3 

the most strong enguire Pericles, in. (Gower) 

and we are strong in earnest — iii. I 

such strong renown as time shall never — iii. 2 
a strong wind will blow it to pieces.. — iv. 3 
will be strong with us ftir giving over — iv 3 
manifold and strong a bond the cliild ....Lenr,\i. I 
strong [A'h/. -strange] and fastened villain — ii. I 

and the strong lance of justice — iv. 6 

with his strong arras he fastened — v. 3 

in strong proof of chastity Homeo^Juliet, i, 1 

I'll amerce you witli so strong a fine — iii. 1 
be strong and prosperous in this resolve — iv. 1 
strong hand, and terms compulsatory . . liamlel, i. 1 
stronger guilt defeats my strong intent.. — iii. 3 
must not we put the stron" law on him.. — iv. 3 
unsinewed, but yet to me they are strong — iv. 7 

being strong on both sides Othello, i. 3 

ft jealousy so strong that judgment cannot — ii. 1 
witli any strong or veliement importunity — iii. 3 
confirmationB strong as proofs of PlulyWrit — iii. 3 
if imputation, and strong circumstances — iii. 3 
the strong conception, tliat I do groan .. — v. 2 

STRONG-BARRED gates King John. u. 2 

STRONG-BASED promontory have \.. Tempest, v. I 

STRONGER— the ship were no stronger — i. 1 

made to lie no stronger.... Measure /brilfrasioc. ii. 4 

thought I thy spirits were stronger.. il/uWi/li/o, iv. I 

that is strouger made, which was — iv. 1 



STRONGER than the word of..../(s;/™ LiUeil, iii. 4 
natiu'e. stronger tliau his just occasion — iv. 3 
the stronger part by her own \e\.taB. . AW slVell, iv. 3 

he is stronger thannerculea — iv. 3 

higher reared with stronger blood. Winter'' s Tale, i. 2 
or stronger for your need. Hark .... — iv. 3 
married to thy stronger state .Comerfyo/iJrrois,_ii. 2 

but on a stronger thing — }.Y' '^ 

fiver strong upon the stronger side... King John, iii. 1 
what motive may be stronger with thee — in. 1 

to make strength stronger ._. illenrylV. i'l. 3 

grow stronger for the breaking — i_v. I 

what stronger breastplate than iUenryVI. iii. 2 

the more we st:iy, the stronger grows.S //eiirj/r/. iii. 3 
when we grow stronger, tlien we'll .. — iv. 7 
more stronger to direct you than. . . . Henry VIII. i. 1 
are von not stronger than you were? — ii.3 
I grow stronger, you more honour gain — v. 2 
surety stronger than Achilles'. Troilu: <5- C'essida, i. 3 
ears against your suits are stronger.. Con'o/anus, v. 2 
am not of stronger earth than otliers — v. 3 
1 am no stronger than my sex .... JuUtisCresar, ii. 1 
be stronger than thy continent.yfn/O)!!/^ C(eo. iv. 12 
my nails are stronger than my eyes. . — v. 2 
a vouclier, stronger than ever law . . Cyinheline,yi, 2 
our kingdom is stronger than it was — iii. 1 

may make some stronger head — iv. 2 

gives heat and stronger glowing Pericles, \. 2 

stronger guilt defeats my strong intent. HamW, iii. 3 
stronger than either the mason (rep.).. — v. 1 
gallows is built stronger than the church — v. I 

your love shall gi'ow stronger Othello, ii. 3 

STRONGEST suggestion our worser ..Tempest, iv. 1 

the strongest oaths nre straw — iv. 1 

by Cupid's strongest bow Mid.N.'sDream, i. 1 

the fit is strouges't; evils, that take .. King John, iii. 4 
know the strongest and surest way. Ilichard II. iij. 3 
strongest nerves, and small inferior.. Corjolanus.i. 1 
to use our strongest hunda.. Antony ^Cleopatra, ii. 1 

the strongest in our censure Pericles, ji. 4 

in weakest bodies strongest works .... Hamlet, iii. 4 

STRONG-FIXED is the house MlennjVI. ii. 5 

STRONG-FRAMED, he cannot ....Ilichard III. i. 4 

STRONG- JOINTED Samson Lore's!. Lost, i. 2 

STRONG-KNIT limbs 1 Hairy VI. ii. 3 

have rnhbed my strong-lcnit sinews .3 Henry VI. ii. 3 
STRONGLY— that works him strongly. Tempcs/, iv. 1 
your charm so strongly works them .. — v. 1 
now are too strongly embattled ..MerryWitics, ii. 2 
strongly as words could make ..Meas.for Meas. v. 1 

shaU'strongly stand in force Love' sL. Last, i. 1 

each to other hath so strongly sworn — i. 1 
appears most strongly in bearing. Mer.o/Teni'ce, iii. 4 
my remembrance tlie more strongly ..Macbeth, v. I 
great Dunsinane he strongly fortifies .. — v. 2 

which was so strongly urged King John, i. 1 

so strongly guarded; cousin, look not — iii. 3 

who strongly hath sot footing Richard II. i\. 2 

we all have strongly sworn — ii.3 

with fear so strongly, that they ....1 Henry IV. ii. 2 

though strongly apprehended iHenrylV. i. 1 

look, you strongly arm to meet him . . Henry T. ii. 4 
fortify it strongly 'gainst the French — iii. 3 
strongly through my fixed teeth ..iBenryVI. iii. 2 

all these accused him strongly Henry VIII. ii. 1 

I know, 'twill stir him strongly — iii. 2 

strongly wedged up in a blockhead. Cor/oiniMM, ii. 3 

do strongly speak to us Antnny ^- Cleo. i. 2 

as strongly as the conscience does ..Cymbeline, ii. 2 
be looked to speedily, and strongly .. — iii. 5 
for him pleads strongly to the Moor. . . . Othello, ii. 3 
suspects, yet strongly [Kn'.-fondly] loves! — iii. 3 
STRONG-RIBBED bark through. Troilus * Cress, i. 3 
STRONG-WINGED Mercury.. /fji/oni/ ^Cleo. iv. 13 

STROVE to show her merit All's Well, i. ' 

have I not strove to love Henry VIII. ii. 

patience and sorrow strove who should . . Lear, iv. 
STROWN— there be stTov/n.ru-elfthNight, ii. 4 (song 
'STROYED in dishonour . . Antony 4' Cleopatra, iii. ' 

STRUCK mine ear most terribly Tempest, ii. 

I am struck to the quick — v. 

it hath struck ten o clock Merry Wives, v. 

the Windsor bell hath struck twelve — v. 

though I struck him first Tuelflh Night, iv. 

she struck me on the head Taming of Shretc, ii. 

myself am struck in years — ii. 

that had struck anointed kings . . Winter'sTale, i. 
nay, he struck so plainly .... Comedy of Errors, ii, 

so, come, help; well struck — iii. 

whom I myself struck down Macbeth, iii. 

they were all struck for thee ! — iv. 

deep shame liad struck me dumb ..King John, iv. 
hath sorrow struck so many blows .Rlcitard II. iv. 

who struck this heat up after 1 Henry I V. i. 

worse than a struck fowl — iv. 

death hatli not struck so fat — v. 

forward, struck his armed heels .,..2HenryIF. i. 

How cold it struck my heart! — iv. 

and struck me in my very seat of. ... — v. 
better thou hadst struck tliy mother — v. 

Cressv battle fatally was struck Heiirjr r. ii. 

lias struck the glove which your majesty — iv. 

not having struck one stroke \Hen7yVl. i. 

and thy cheek's side struck off! — i. 

did sound, or drum struck up — i. 

crest tliy sword struck fire — iv. 

hath struck me at the heart IHenryVI. i. 

then is sin .struck down like an ox.. — iv. 
oft have I struck those that (rep.) . . — iv. 

as if they struck their friends SHenryVI. ii. 

queen well struck in years Richai-d III. i. 

in falling, struck me, that thought ., — i. 

novice, was struck dead by thee? .... — i. 

have struck nutrc terror to the soul of — v. 3 
it hath struck. These should be. . . . Henry VIII. v. 1 
chid .Andionioclie, and struck ..Troilus^- Cress, i. 2 
coped IKctor iu tlic battle, and struck — i. 2 

shall be struck off; Hector — ii. 2 

shows not, till it be struck .... Timon of Alliens, i. 1 
we have struck, by interims Cortolanusy i. 



STU 



STRUCK— the nlarum were struck ..Coriolanus, ii. 2 

and struck iiiin oil bis knee — ii. 2 

a sudden rc-enforccmeut struck Corioli — ii. 2 
fortune's blows, when most struck home — iv. 1 
him that struck more blows for.. .... — iv. 2 

you shall have the drum struck up.. — iv. ft 

and I am struck with sorrow — v, 

struck but thus much sliow of f\r& . . JuliusC(esar , i. 2 
that did love Caesar when I struck him — iii. 1 
tliat struck the foremost man of all.. — iv. 3 
behind, struck Caisar on the neck,... — v. 1 
a Roman thought hath struck WimAntonyfyCleo. i. 2 
now, darting Parthia, art thou struck — iii. I 
while I struck the lean and wrinkled — iii. 9 

mine ear, therein false struck Cymbeline, iii. 4 

of the world struck the main-top! .. — iv. 2 
and struck me, wretch, more worth — v. I 

struck down some mortally — v. 3 

nor feel him, where he struck — v. 3 

the clock that struck the hour! — v. Ij 

thou hast struck upon my crest.. Titua Andron. i. 2 
hast thou not full often struck a doe — ii. 1 
and tliis for me, struck home to show — ii.3 

sight struck pale and bloodless — iii. 1 

iie should liave struck, not spoke Pericles, iv. 3 

I'll not be struck, my lord Lear, i. 4 

struck me with her tongue — ii. 4 

but new struck nine Romeo 4- Juliet, i. 1 

the clock struck nine, when I did send — ii. ,'5 
'tis now struck twelve: get thee to bed .Hamlet, i. 1 
no, it is struck. Indeed? I heard it not — i. 4 
been struck so to the soul, that presently — ii. 2 
your behaviour hath struck her into .... — iii. 2 

my head should be struck off — v. 2 

at a shot, so bloodily hast struck? — v. 2 

STRUCKEN blind, kisses the base. Love's £.. Los(, iv. 3 
the clock hath strucken ivfv\\e. Comedy of Errors, \. 2 
thought to liave strucken him with.Corio/am«, iv. 5 

Caisar,'tis strucken eight Julius Crvsar, ii. 2 

he, that is strucken blind, cannot. Borneo 4 Juliet, i. I 
why, let the strucken deer go weep Hamlet, iii. 2 

STRUCK'ST thou one blow m iHenryVI. iv. 7 

STRUGGLE-I will not struggle .... King John, iv. 1 
so doth the coney struggle in the net.3He„ri/)7. i. 4 

STRUGGLING— with struggling ..-IHenryVI. iii. 2 
O limed soul, that, struggling to be free. Hnmto, iii. 3 

STRUMPET, with all her ..il/ea.!u/e/or.We./.«oe, ii. 2 
by the strumpet wind (rep.) ..Merch. ofl'enire. ii. 6 
a strumpet's boldness, a divulged ....All'sWell.i'i. I 

great king, I am no strumpet — v. 3 

on every post proclaimed a strumpet. Winter's 7". i ii. 2 

most unhappy strumpetl — iv 4 

that strumpet Fortune King John, iii. 1 

chastise this high-minded strumiiet. . I Henry VI. i. b 
strumpet, thy words condemn thy .. — " v. 4 

that harlot, strumpet Shore Richard III. iii, 4 

thou protector of this damned strumpet — iii. 4 
transformed intoastrumpet'sfooI./)n/o>ij/ .J- C/eo. i. 1 

will catch at us, like strumpets — v. 2 

hath played the strumpet . . Cymbeline, iii. 4 (letter) 

1 have heard, I am a strumpet — iii. 4 

and bid that strumpet, your.. Titus Andronicus, v. 2 

O most true; she is a strumpet Hamlet, W. 2 

out, out, thou strumpet, Fortune! — ii. 2 

as 'tis the strumpet's plague, to beguile. O^AeHo, iv. 1 

impudent strumpet! (7-ep.) — iv. 2 

be— not to be a strumpet, I am none .... — iv. 2 
strumpet, I come: forth of my heart .... — v. I 

notable strumpet! Cassio, may you.... — v. 1 
fye upon thee, strumpet! I am no strumpet — v. I 
out strumpetl w'eep'st thou for him (rep.) — v. 2 

STRUMPETED by thy contagion. Comerfi/ nf Err. i i 2 

STRUNG-lute was strung with. TwoGen. of Ver. iii. 2 
Apollo's lute, strung with his hair..iore'.</.. L. iv. 3 

STRUT— and strut in his gait? Merry Wivet, i. 4 

that struts and frets his hour Macbeth, v. 5 

to strut before a wanton ambling ..Richard III. i. 1 
while we strut to our confusion. Jn/oiiy 4 Vteo. iii. II 
Britons strut with courage Cymbeline, iii. 1 

STRU.TTED-have so strutted, and.... Hamlet, iii. 2 

STRUTTING Chanticlere Tempest, i. 2 (song) 

and, like a strutting player . . Troilus 4 Cressidn, i. 3 

STUBBLE- like a BtulAle land \Henryll . i. S 

to kindle their dry stubble Coriolmius, ii. 1 

STUBBORN, lacking dnty..ru'oGeii. 0/ leronn, iii. 1 

that I may appear stubborn Twelfth A'ight, iii. 4 

upon some stubborn and uncourteous — v. 1 
art said to have a stubborn soul.. Meas.forMeas. v. ! 
due to me, to stubborn harshness . . Mid. A'.'.s- Dr. i. 1 

1 fear, these stubborn lines lack. .Lore's l.y.os/, iv. 3 
stubborn Turks, and Tartars. il/erc/m>i( of Venice, iv. I 
a stubborn will to please ..A,yiiuLil<eii, ii. 6 (song) 

authority be a stubborn bear Winter'sTale, iv. 3 

more stubborn hard than hammered. fk77i^Jo/i«,i v. 1 
upon your stubborn usage of the pope — v. 1 
as the sepulchre in stubborn Jewry ../?/c/iairf //. ii. 1 

created with a stubborn outside Henry V. v. 2 

have I seen this stubborn Cade .. ..IHenryVI, iii. 1 
free from a stubborn opposite intent — iii. 2 

is obstinate, stubborn to justice Henry VIII. ii. I 

but, to stubborn spirits, they swell .. — iii. 1 
for your stubborn answer about the., — iii. 2 
stop their mouths with stubborn bits — v. 2 
his stubborn buckles, with these. 7'ro(7ws (5" Greys, iii, 1 
give advantage to stubborn critics .. — v. 2 
too stubborn and too strange a hand.JuliusCa'sar.i. 2 

you stubborn ancient knave Lcur, ii. 2 

bow, stubborn knees! and, heart Hamlet, iii, 3 

with this more stubborn and boisterous. O^/ze/Zo, i. 3 

STUBB0RN-CHASTEagainstall.7iwVi(j*Cre,<s. i. 1 
STUBBORNEST young fellow ....^si,ouLil<eit,i. 1 
STUBBORNLY he did repugn the ..I ihnryVl. iv. 1 
STUBBORNNESS of fortune into...-lsi/nn /.//i,- iV, ii. 1 

a course of impious stubbornness Ihnnlrt. i. 2 

even his stubbornness, his checks, awd. .(Itlictlo. iv. 3 

STUCK all with yew TirelfiliSmht, ii. 1 (song) 

false eyes are stuck upon thee ! . . Meas.for Mas. i v . 1 
two pitch balls stuck in her face.. Love's L. Lost, iii. 1 

a lemon. Stuck witli cloves — v. 2 

stuck them up before the tulsome. Mer. of Venice, i.i 



STUCK on with onths upon iter, of I'enict, v. 1 

at first 1 stuck my cliiucc «i)on her . . All'i Ifrll, v. 3 
their other sensis stui-ls in ears .. Wintfr'iTiile, iv. 3 

ami nnien stuck in my tlirmit Macbeth, ii. 2 

tl\crc atuck no phnnoiu nnv English. A.Vin'Jo'i?!, ii. 2 

shall he all stuck full of eyes Ml>->,ni'l: v. 2 

it stuck upon him, as the iHenryiy. ii. 3 

who stuck and spuniilcil yon .. Timon of Alliens, iii. 

that nnmberles'! upon nte stuck — iv. 3 

he himself stuck not t" cull us Coiio/jhikj, ii. 3 

therein st\iek a snu, and moon . . Antony •x Cleo. v. 2 

hast stuck to tlie bare fortune Ci/mlieihie, iii. 5 

bv chance escape your venomed stnclt . Hamlet, iv. 7 

STlTCK-IN-!!ivc3 me the stuck-in.7V,7M AiV/./, iii. 4 

STUD-fairlv set down in stmU .. Taming of SI,, iii. 2 

.s'lnillDEU-stuilded all willi i-'old .. — a {indue. ) 

tiTl'DKN'T-a i-'ood student tirm.. Merry Hires, iii I 

to lie thou^'ht Vi L'ood studunt ....rwelpUNiaht, iv. 2 

on. 't her of tlK?e' students :>t tlmt.. tofe'sL. Lo5(, ii. I 

ne dijeni ftudeni! leiini her liv heart — iii. 1 

PTl'Dll'-D-iiutll studied her well ..MerryWivcs, i. 3 

little more than 1 lune stmlied ..TnelftU Kiglil, i. 5 

tile state, whereon I >tiidie<l. MinnircforMeamre,\i.i 

have stinlied einht or nine wise words. .Uiir/i.^i/o, iii. 2 

here is three studied, ere you'll.. .. /,oiV.I,.to»(, i. 2 

like one well studied in a s,\(\. . . , Mer. nf I'enice, ii. 2 

yon have studied .\our (juestions..Jj j/nu Like it, iii. 2 

us slie lind studied to misuse me.. 'I'amingofSh. ii. 1 

what studied torments, tyrant . . Ilinler'sTale, iii. 2 

OS one tliat liatli been studied in his Maebelh, i. 4 

should not be so loosely studied 2Henryll'. ii. 2 

studied so long, sat in the illenryl'l. i. 1 

my studied purposes requite Henryl'lll. iii. 2 

a studied, not n present thought.>4n'o»y Sf Cleo. ii. S 

am well studied for a liberal — ii. 6 

I ever liave studied pliysic, through ..Pericles, iii. 2 

STUDIES— wrapt in secret studies Tempest, i. 2 

made me neglect my studies. 7'H'o(Ven.Q/^/>ro«a, i. 1 

for interim to onr studies Love' sL. Lost, i. I 

studies my lady? mistress, look on .. — v. 2 
of many desperate studies by his . . As you Like it, v. 4 
learning, and ingenious studies .. Taming q/SU. i. 1 
after his studies, or his usual pain? .. — iii. 1 

and them bend their best studies KingJolw.iv. 2 

wlio studies, day and night \ Henry 1 1', i. 3 

all studies here I solemnly defy — i. 3 

prince but studies his companions ..iUenrylV. iv. 4 
all your studies make me a curse.. Henry f 7//. iii. 1 
to use our utmost studies in your service — iii. I 

STIIDlllUS universities TaoGen.of Verona, i. 3 

vol In- unrv in tliy studious care ....\Henryl'L ii. 5 

STiniOUSLY devised — iii. I 

STUDY -tliosc being all my study Tempest, i. 2 

yon make me study of that — ii. 1 

mv father is hard at study — iii. 1 

arid study help for that ....TuoGen.nn'erona.nX. I 

do you study tliem both Merry II ires, iii. 1 

I took great pains to study it TicelfthtSight, i. 5 

profits of the mind, study and .Meas.forMeas. i. 5 

an' he were, I would burn my study. .3/uc/i Ado. i. 1 

into his study of imagination — iv. 1 

for I am slow of study Mid. N.'s Dream, i. 2 

study here three years ()fp. i. 2) ..Lore'sL. Lost.i. 1 
not to see ladies, study, fast (rep. iv. 3) — i. 1 

I onlv swore to study with your grace — i. 1 

wliat'is the end of study? — i. 1 

is study's godlike recompense (rep.) — i. 1 

to stnclv wliere I well may dine (rep.) — i. 1 

itstudv's gain be thus (rep.) — i. I 

the stops that liinder study quite (rep.) — i. 1 

study is like the heaven's glorious sun — i. 1 

to study now it is too late — i. 1 

so study evermore is overshot (rep.) .. — i. I 

so to study, three years is short — i. 1 

wliy, sir, is this such a piece of study? — i. 2 

till painful study shall outwear tliree — ii. I 
studv his bias leaves, and makes his — iv. i 

yon have vowed to study, lords (rivi.) — iv. 3 
found the ground of study's excellence — iv. 3 

and study too, the causer of your — . iv. 3 

because hecannot study Asyoti Likeii. iii. 2 

then I'll study how to die — iv. 3 Uetter) 

it is my studv to seem despiteful — v. 2 

for the time I study, virtue Taming of Shrew, \. 1 

in brief, sir, study what yon most.... — i. 1 

■»here didyou stiidy all thisgoodly., — ii. I 

to thee, shall he my study Winter's Tale, iv. 1 

from studv, and perturbation of ....2//<')iry II'. i. 2 

it hath bi'en all in nil his study fifHii,;'. i. 1 

never noted in him any study — i. I 

unless mv study and my books bo ..IHenryl'l. ii. 4 
or who should study to prefer a peace — iii. 1 

fitter is my study and my books — v. 1 

his study, is his tilt-vard iUenryVl. i. 3 

nor how to study for the people's . .3 Henry I' I . iv. 3 

to study fashions to adorn Itichard III. i. i 

and with no little study, that my ..Henry I III. v. 2 

gel me a taper in my study JuliusCo-iar, ii. I 
ids thee study on what fair Antony.f Cleo. v. 2 

knock at his studv, where, they say . . Titus And. v. 2 

all my study he to no ett'eet? — v. 2 

sir, I shall study deserving Lear, i. 1 

Ictyour study lie, to content your lord .. — i. 1 

learned Thetian: what is your study? — iii. 4 

run to my stuily : by and by . . Itomeo fif Juliet, iii. .\ 
vou coula, for a need study a six:ccli ai.Hamlrt. ii. 2 

Sl'UDYING at Kheiins Taming or Stireie, ii. 1 

been studviug how I may compare.. «ic/i<irJ II. y. !, 
in studying good for England 1 'iHenryyi. iii. I 

S'TUFF— linens, stntfs,aiid iiceeesarics.. lempesi, i. 2 
what stuff is thiN?_liow soy you? .... — ii. I 

wc arc such stuif OS dreams are — iv. I 

make us strange stuff — iv. I 

ttstulfwill not endure nre^flhMghl.u. 3 (song) 

heavensl what slutf is here? ..Meas..ror.Meas. iii 2 
prouder stuff than that id' Ueatricc. . MuchAdo, iii. I 
this is the silliest stulVthot ever ...Mid.N.'tDr. v. I 

man hold vile stuff so dcor t/.rr'«t./o»(, iy. 3 

what stuff 'tis made of Mercliattlnl Venice, i. 1 

pleasing stuff (r<-;>.) . . . . Taminu nf S/ireiP, 2 (.indue.) 



.Cymbeline.i. 



..Pericles, iv. 
..../.Mr, iii. 
, ..Hamlet, ii. 



STUFF— my household stuff .. Taming cif Shrew, \\\. i 

what masking stuff is here? — iv. 3 

no order, I gave him the stuff — iv. 3 

for parsley to stuff a rabbit — iv. 

fcteli iHir stuff' from lluncc . . Comedy uf Errors, iv. 

awav. to get our stiilf aboard — iv. 

your stillffnini shipliiiurd'l' (rep.).... _ v. 

() pn.per sinlf! Ihi^ is llie very .l/«c4e(A, iii. 

bosom ol tliiit |.(_ril.i|js slulf — v. 

stud's out Ilis vueaiit ^rurnients KingJohn, iii. 

do not seek to stull'my heiid with .. — iv. 

traitor's name stud' I tliv throat ....Itichard II. \. 

will stuff your purses full of erowns..! llenrylf. i. 

eiieh a deal of skinihle-skaiuble stuff' — iii. 

venture of lioiudiviux stuff in liim..2//ei/r!//r. ii. 

here's goodly stiiir toward! — ii. 

wiuitstulf wilt h.ive a kiltie of? .... — ii. 

doulilet, unci stiiir me out with straw — v. 

there's in him stiilftliat puts llrnryrUI. i. 

rich stuil's.aiulcunuMieuts of household — iii. 

you are fidl of heavenly stuff' — iii. 

at this fusty stuff', the large . .Troilns ^- Cresaida, i. 

serves as stuff' for these two — i. 

put stuff to some she beggar . . Timon of Athens, iv. 

swells with stuff' so fine and smooth .. — v. 

OS to stuff a hotelier's cushion Coriolamis, ii. 

bIiouUI he made of sterner stuff' ...UdinsCasar, iii. 

nature wants stuff to vie.. ../Jn/oiii/ c5-(.'/>'(,j™/)(i, v, 

and such stuff within, endows 

such lioilcd stuff, as well might 

moulded the stuff so fair 

or else sneli stuff as madmen tongue 

did compound for her a certain stuff 

the stuff we hcne, a strong wind .... 

it will stntVliis suspicion more fully 

was no such s hi If in niy thoughts... 

if it l)e made of peuetrable stuff" — iii. 

that we are made of stuff so Hat and dull — iv. 

do I hold it very stuff o' the conscience.. O'Ae'in, i. 
STUFI'KJJ with'iiioti stations ..TieoGen.offer. iv. 

stuffed witll all honourable virtues .. MuchAdo, i. 

he is no less than a stuffed man — u 

hath already stuffed tennis-balls .... — iii. 

I am fitidf'eii. cousin, I cannot (rep.) — iii. 

in ivory coffers I have stuff'ed mv. TnmingnfSh. ii. 

you know of stull'ed snfheieuey. . lyinter'sTale, ii. 

cleanse the stuff'ed bosom of that Macbeth, v. 

my arms such eel skins stull'ed KingJohn, i. 

that stuff'ed clouk-ha^' of gilts \Henryiy. ii. 

not seen a hulk lieltcr stMH'cd illenrylV. ii. 

when we have stiilli.il these pipes . . Coriolanus, v. 

hath stuffed these hollow vessels Pericles, i. 

stuffed (as theysiiy) with Itomeo ^Juliet, iii. 

an alligator stuff'ed, and other skins .. — v. 

horrihlv stuffed with epithets of war Othello, i. 

STUFFING,- well, we are all mortal. .Jl/iicA.-IJi), i. 

stuffing the ears of men witll . ."illenryl I', (indue, 
STTJMBf^E notunlieeilfully..rwoGe«.o/rcrona, i. 

stumble with haste in his eyesight.. Lot)«'«L.JLos(,ii. 

it grows dark, he may stumble — v. 2 

her run; but she'll not stumble .. Winter' sTale, ii. 3 

would he not stumble? would he ..llivliard II. v. 5 

my tongue should stumble in mine.2 Henri/ /'/. iii. 2 

tliat stumble at the threshold iHenryl'l. iv. " 

my footoloth horse did stumble ..Richard III. iii. 

tliey stumble, that run fast lionvo ^■Juliet, ii. 

STUMBLED-her horse stumbled. 2'uiiiMig-n./'.s'/i. iv. 

Gloster stumbled; and, in falling ..Hichard III. i. 

I stumbled when Isaw; full oft Ltai.iv. 

mv old feet stumbled at graves?.. i?omco(5''^"'**.''i v- 

STCTMBLEST on my counsel? — ii. 

STUiMBLIiN'G-fri.ni ,-tiiinlilin.j. . •/■.ira-ii-..r.';/i. iii. 

before the stumliliii- niu'lit iliil part. . K/iia'.'"'i", v. 

in his flight, stiinil.liii? in fear ■•H,;,,,,ll . i. 

blind reason stuiuliling without. 7'ro:Vi(.i .S-f'ii.n. iii. 

true birth. stninliliiiL.' on ahufti .. Ilmneo ^Juliet, ii. 
STi:.\ll'.J>ING-Bl.'.it-KS, and smooth. 2Heriri/;'/. i. 
STU.MP- while 1 luiieastump Henryl'lll. i. 

anil.if thy stumps will let iUe\:. TilmAndronicus.'u. 

nor hold thy ^tiunps to heaven — iii. 

witness tliis wretehed stump — v. 

l,avinia 'tween iier stniups doth hold — v. 
STUNG— never adder slung ..Mid.N.'a Dream, iii. 

nettled, and stung with pismires IHenryU'. i. 

lam stung like a tench — ii. 

as the stung are of the adder Lenr, v. 

in mv orchard, a serpent stung me ....Hamlet, i 

STUNK— for they so stunk, that all Pericles, ii. 

STUPID— not stupid with age .... H'i'ji(er'»';'ate, iv. 
STUI'IFIKD, or seeming so in skill .. — ii. 

SJ'UI'IFY and dull the sense Cymheline.i. 

STUriiU.M, Chiron 7'.'/i« J.n/ioiiicnj, iv. 

STIfllDY— where the sturdy rebel 6its.3He>iii/; 7. i. 
STY— and here vou sty me in Tempest, i. 

in the sty of this most bloody Hichard III. iv. 

absence Is no better lliiin a stvl.Anlony «fCleo. iv. 1 

here within this loathsome sty I'ericlet.Xv. 

making love over the nasty sly Hamlet, iii. 

STYG.V — per Stvga, per manes velior..7'i/i<«.4ni(. ii. 
STYfilAN banlis staying .... 7')i.i/k< 4 C'cs.ida, iii. 
STYLE-action of her familiar style. lUerrj/H'i'uM, i. 

ond I will aggravate his style — ii. 

over the style, this way — iii. 

they have writ the style of gods .... Much Ado, v. 

in so high a style, Margaret — v. 

OS the si vie shall give us cause.... Loce'iL./.oif, i. 

hut I reiiiember the sty le — iv. 

into so quiet and so sweet a »tyW. ■A%yonLilic it, ii. 

u cruel style, a style for ehalleiiKers.. — iv. ; 

count's matter isof another style AU'iWell.ii. i 

merrily hent the style-o .. Winler'sTnte, iv. 2 (song 

thot he hath changed his style? IHenryl'l. iv. 

here is a silly stately style indecdl .. — iv. 

not so tedious style as this — iv. 

whose large style agrees not illenryl'l. i. 

a queen in title and in style — i. 

not honest, is too harsh a stylo.... Itichard III. iv. 

both stvle and gate, horseway l.ear, iv. 

STYLED the un.ler-hangmnn of lymtieline, ii. 3 

STYX— thou take llic river Slyi-.Tioi/iu^ t'i«», v. 4 



STYX-dreadful shore ofStyx?.... 7'i'In> Andron. i. 2 

SUB CONTRACTED to this lord ;.ear,v.3 

SUHDUF my worthiest self ....Antony A Cleo. iv. 10 
virliioiiB maid subdues me iimU-.Meas.furMeus. ii. 2 
with holy abstinence siihdne that in — iv. 2 

but his glory is, to subline UKn .... Love's L. Lost, i. 2 

toimy lailv tluitsubiluesalord _ iv. 1 

utlliction nuiv subdue the cheek.. /I'i'n/er'i7'.i/c, iv. 3 
whii'h did subdue the greatest vo.H.3 Henry II. iii. 3 
subdues and proiierties to his lovc.J'imon oTAth. i. I 

wliose ofl'euee subdues him Coriolanus, i. 1 

a touch more rare subdues all pangs.. Cj/iii'ieliiif, i. 2 

resist, subdue him at Ins peril Othello, i. 2 

courses subdue and pnisoii this young .. — i. 3 

and suhiliie mv father entirely to her love — iii. 4 

SUBDt:EI)-to"whoiii I am subdued.... 7'fmpMM. 2 

is the greater, that I am subdued MuchAdo.i.3 

I her modern grace, subdued me to \ier. Alt's Well, v. 3 
I both parties nobly are subdued .,..2 Henry 1 1', iv. 2 

liaviiig subdued the Saxons lln.ryl'. i. 2 

hands thou hast at once subdued ....\Henryl'l. i. 2 

and was by strength subdued iHcnryl'l. iii. 2 

hands your fatlicr was subdued ....ZHenryVI.'n. 1 
once subdued in armed tuil.7'joi'(Mi<S Cw'n/n, v. II 
Cocsar, thou hast subdued K\a.. Antony Sf Cleo. iii. 11 
his face subdued to iicnctrativc shome — iv. 12 
have subdued ine, in my profession?. CyMite/i'iie, v. 2 

could have sidtdiied nature to such Lear, iii. 4 

my heart's subdued even to the very.... O/ZiW/o, i. 3 

of one, whose subdued eyes, albiet unused — v. 2 

SUBDUKMENTS, when thou.7'roih«4-Cje.»ii/a,iv. ."> 

SUB.IECT his coronet to his crown .... Tempest, i. 2 

be subject to no sight but mine — i. 2 

all the subjects that yon have — i. 2 

no marrying 'mong his subjects? — ii. 1 

to be thy true subject — ii.2 

I'll swear myself thy subject — ii.2 

the poor monster's my subject — iii. 2 

I am subject to a tyrant — iii. 2 

and subjects none abroad — v. I 

teach me thy tempted subject .TwoGfn.of I'er. ii. C 
and am I now o subject for thcni? Merry Wives,\\. ! 
and am as subject to lieat, OS butter.. — Ml* •** 
and pray to several subjects . . . . Meas. for Meas. ii. 4 

subject to a well-wished king — ii. 4 

the greater file of the subject held .. — iii. 2 
and let the subject see. to make .... — V. 1 
liis subject am I not, nor here provincial — v. I 

thouglits are no subjects _. — ^v, I 

is none of the prince's subjects (?-ep.).il/uc/i-4t/o, iii. 3 
I pray you. choose another subject . . — v. I 
have tlie subject newly writ o'er . . Love'sL. Lost, i. 2 
varying in subjects as the eye doth . . — y. 2 
subject to the same diseases Merchantof I'enice.'u't. I 
true subjects bow to a new-crowned — iii. 2 

I am the unhappy subject of these .. — v. 1 
will subject me to the malice ....AsyouLikelt, ii. 3 
such duty as the subject owes ....'I'amingofSh. y. 2 

fihysics the subject Win'er'sTale, i. 1 
eave yourself hardly onesubject.... — ii. 3 
allegiance of a true subject .... — iii. 2 (indict.) 

Camillo a true subject — iii. 2 (Oracle) 

are their males' subject Comedy of Errors, ii. I 

which ot these sorrows is he subject to? — v. I 

it was the subject of my theme — v. I 

his kinsman, and his subject Macbeth, i. 7 

approaclies the subject ot our watch — iii. 3 

your faithful subject I KingJohn,'\. 1 

we will make it subject to this boy . . — ii- I 

loving subjects (rep.) — ii. 1 

we arc the king of England's subjects — ii. 1 

husband leas, subject to fears — iii. 1 

let me have no subject enemies — iv. 2 

or worthily, as a good subject shotild.Bi'cAarcJ //. i. I 

the devotion of a subject's love — j. ' 

he is our subject, Mowbray — i. I 

our state, our subjects, or onr land .. — i. 3 

and be our subjects" next degree in .. — i. 4 

I am a subject, and clittllenge law .. — ii. 3 
a puny subject strikes Ot thy great .. — iii. 2 
revolt our subjects? that we cannot.. — iii. 2 
my subjects, lor a pair of carved .... — iii. 3 
subjects' feet may hourly trample .. — iii. 3 
my skill were subject to thy curse .. — iii. 4 
wliat subject cull give sentence ir<-p.) — iv. I 
1 speak to subjects, and o subject speaks — iv. I 

Iiroud niujesly.a subject — iv. 1 
lut subjects; being now a subject — iv. I 

to Bolingbroke are we sworn subjects — y. 2 
drive all thy subjects afore thee ....Mienryll'.'u. 4 

doth not the king luck subjectn? illenryll'. i. 2 

a naked subject to the weeping clouds — i. 3 
we ore time s subjects, and time bids — i. 3 
very hardly, upon siieli a subject .... — ii. 2 

careful friend, and a true subject — ii- 4 

thousand of mv poorest subjects are — iii. 1 
lord.how subieet we old men ure .... — iii. 2 

the subjects of bis siibstitnte — iv. 2 

ond u lamous true subject took him.. — iv. 3 
most subject is the fullest soil to .... — iv. 4 

r'.clier, and more loyal subjects Henry I', i. 2 

our pussii'ii is as suliject — t. 2 

there's not, I think, u subject, that sits — ii.2 

never did faithful subject more — ji. 2 

his subjects to oppression and contempt — ii. 2 
we, his subjects, have in wonder found — ii. 4 

the subjects we huvc lost — iii. 

a subject for o sovereign to rcamni on — lii. 7 
if we know we ore the king's subjects — iv. 1 
every subject's duty is the king's (rep.) — iv. 1 
desired in the hearts uf his subjects.. — Iv. S 
his subjects, and his loyal friends ..IHenryl'l. lii. I 

like true subjects — iv. I 

do him bninoftc as obedient subjects — iv. 2 

scorn, and subject of niischanrel .... — iv. 

to save your subjcTis from such — v. 4 

must he mode a subject to a duke? ..iHenryVI. i. 3 
the Nevils ore thy subjects to command — ii. 2 
neither subject, wealth, nor diadein.. — iv. 1 
ucver subject longed to be a king (rep.) — iv. 9 



SUB 



730 ] 



SUBJECT— being a subject as I a.m..iHenri/II. v. I 

I am too mean a subject for thy ZHennjVl. i. 3 

tbat fear tlieir subjects' treachery? .. — ii. 5 

so t'rieved for subjects' woe? — ii. 5 

we Ilia subjects, sworu in all (re/).) .. — iii. ! 
3'ou were sworn true subjects unto me — iii. 1 
soon performed, because I am a subject — iii. 2 

I am a subject fit to jest withal — iii. 2 

subjects may challenge notliing of their — iv. 6 
asevery loyal subject ouglit to do .... — iv. 7 
is my l<iiig, Warwick his subject .... — v. 1 

his subjects slain — v. 4 

for stirring up my subjects — v. 5 

speak hlte a subject — v. 5 

you bow like subjects -..Uichard III. i. 3 

your queen, and you my subjects.... — i. 3 
live each of you the subjects to bis hate — i. 3 
or, like obedient subjects, follow ... — ii. 2 
tile subject traitor tliis day liad plotted — iii. 5 
and proved tlie subject of mine own — iv. 1 

Tyrrel, and your most obedient subject — iv. 2 
am hc-r subject. But she, your subject — iv. 4 

the subject will deserve it Henry I' 1 11. (prul.) 

that your subjects are in great grievance — i. 2 
tlie subject's grief conies through .... — i. 2 

most lilie a careful subject — i. 2 

would be served before a subject — ii. 2 (letter) 
yea, subject to your countenance .. .. — ii. 4 

to be liducst, aiid live a subject? — iii. 1 

outspeaks possession of a subject .. -. — iii. 2 

a Io3'al and obedient suliject — iii. 2 

if a prince may be belinbjen to a subject — iii. 2 
a poor and humble subject to you? .. — iii. 2 
it is too starved a suliject for my. Troilus ^Ciess. i. I 
commands as subject all the vale .... — i. 2 

where Helen is the subject — ii. 2 

now tlie dry serpigo on the subject I.. — ii. 3 
cliarity. are subjects all to envious . . — iii. 3 
that poor rag, must be tliy subject. Timon ofAlh. iv. 3 
tluit were not subject to a beast? .... — iv. 3 
sucli ridiculous subjects as you are.. Corio^anus, ii. I 
honour is ttie subject of my story . . Julius Ceesar. i. 2 

holds idleness your subject Antony ^Clen. i. 3 

coramands I should be subject to ... . Cymbeline. i. 2 
our subjects, sir, will not endure .... — iii. 5 
hadst great king, a subject, who .... — v. 5 

we this peace to all our subjects — v. s 

grjzces lier subjects Pericles, i. 1 

resist, and subjects punislied — i. 2 

to princes, and to subjects joys — i. 2 

I had and have of subjects good .... — i. 2 

thou sliowd'st a subject's shine — i. 2 

how from the finny subject of tlie sea — ii. 1 

since from liis subjects he gains — ii. 1 

like noble subjects, and in your searcli — ii. 4 

if thou be as poor for a subject, as he Lear, i, 4 

see liow the subject quakes — iv. 6 

I hold you but a subject of this war — v. 'i 

rebellious subjects, enemies to peace. /?omeo (§-./»'. i. I 
upon so soft subject as myself! .... — iii. 5 
so nightly toils the subject of the land.. Hamtcl, i. I 

are all made out of his subject — i. 2 

he himself is subject to his birth — i. 3 

SXIB.JECTED thus, howcan yousa.y. Richard ir. iii. 2 
subjected tribute to commanding \ovef<i>igjofin, i. 1 
greatness, subjected [Co/. A'ji(. -subject]. Ho/ ri/ A', i v. 1 

SUBJECTION— evermore in subjection.. -IH'shw;,!. 1 
and true subjection everlastingly ., A'l/iy.Ao/m, v. 7 
against all proportion of sulijection .. HenrijV. iv. 1 
all parts of his subjection loyally ..Cymhrline. iv. 3 
I'll bring you in subjection I'crictrs, ii. 5 

RUBMERGED-were suhmerged..-(?i/oii!/ 4- C/eo. ii. b 

SUBMISSION, as in otfence /Wern/ HVres, iv. 4 

to whom, with all submission Kim; John. v. 7 

to tutor me to this submission Hidmrd II. iv. 1 

pardon on my true submission .... 1 Henry tV. iii, 2 
m submission will attend on her.. ..1 Ileui y f'l. ii. 2 
submission, Dauphin? 'tis a mere Frencli — iv. 7 

admired him for submission 'illenry I'l.'in. I 

commend this kind submission — v. 1 

in all submission and humility — v. 1 

that in submission will return .... Richard III. v. 4 
vile submission! a la stoccata ../?omTO,S- ,'"'«', iii. I 

SUBMISSIVE fall his princely .. Love' sL. Lost. iv. 1 
a low submissive reverence. Tamiuf^ ofsh. 1 (indue.) 

and with submissive loyalty 1 Henry yi. iii. 4 

on what submissive message art .... — iv. 7 

SUBMIT ourselves to an unknown.. ../i;rs(f'ri/, ii. 3 

for I submit my fancy to your — ii. 3 

France can win: submit thee, boy .. KingJnhn. ii. 1 
unless he do submit himself to Rome — iii. I 

must he submit? the king shall Ilichnrd II. iii. 3 

do submit me to your highness' Henry F. ii. 2 

he shall submit, or 1 wiUnever ....lllenry TI, iii. 1 
now Winchester will not submit .... — v. i 
and submit thyself, thou shalt be. . . . — v. 4 
if you submit you to the people's ..Corinlanus, iii. 3 
submits her to thy might . Aniony ^- Cleupntra, iii. 10 

we submit to Cfflsar, and to tlie Cymbeline. v. 5 

we thus submit unto, our sovereign . . I'rricles ii. 4 

SUBMITTING me unto the perilous...;/,/ Cwsur. i. 3 

SUBORN to do this piece of rutliless./(/W/./7f(//;. iv. 3 

SUBORN-'VTION; shall it be Mienryir. i. 3 

by liis subornation, upon my life ..iHeniyt'I. iii. 1 
foul subornation is predominant .... — iii. 1 

SUBORNED against Measure for Measure, v. 1 

tliou hast suborned these women — v. 1 

hast suborned the goldsmitli Comedi/ nf Rrr. iv. 4 

they were suborned: Blalcolm Maehelli.W. 4 

what peer hath been suborned to ..2Henryir, iv. 1 

you have suborned this man I Henry VI. v. 4 

she had suborned some to swear 2Heini/ t'l. iii. i 

1 ha<l suborned the witness, and he's . . Othello, iii. 4 

SUBSCRIBE that, nor any other. .1//>as.//)r Mens. ii. 4 
to which I thus subscribe .. TiroGen.ofl'erona, v. 4 

or I will subscribe him a coward Much Ado, v. '.' 

and now subscribe your names.. .. Love' sL. Lost, i. 1 

subscribe to your deep oath — i. 1 

thy soldiership, will subscribe for ..AU'slVcll, iii. 6 
I will subscribe for thee J thou art both — iv. 5 



SUBSCKIBE-hnmbly I subscribe .7'u7n/j/j.'f//-.S//. i. 1 
they shall subscribe them for large. . Richard II. i. 4 

I subscribe ill silence. And I \Henryl'I.'\\. 4 

I will subscribe, and say, I wronged.2Hci/ri/''/. iii. 1 
will you subscribe Ids tlionght .Trnilus stress. V\. 3 
his blaze of wrath, subscribes to tender — iv. 5 
write to him (I will subscribe).. /J//(o?/// ,5 Cleo. iv. 5 
all subscribe to thy advice . . TitusAmtronicus, iv. 2 
or my hand subscribe to any syllable.. I'encles, ii. 5 

SUB.SCRIBED for Cupid MuchAdo, i. 1 

but when I had subFcribed to mine . . Alt' s H'ell, v. 3 

he hath not yet subscribed this Henry F. v. 2 

deliver, subscribed by the consuls . . Coriolanus, v. 5 
subscribed rK»l^-prescri bed] his power! ..Lear. i. 2 

all cruels else subscribed — iii. 7 

subscribed it; gave't the impression .... — v. 2 

SUBSCKIPTION; why tbenletfall _ iii. 2 

SUBSEQUENT volumes Troilus e,- Cressida, i. 3 

SUBSIDIES— with great subsidies ..iUemyVI. iv. 8 

SUBSIDY-the last sub.-idy illenryfl. iv. 7 

SUBSISTING under your great .... Coriolanus, v. 5 

SUBSTANCE that I have ..TwoGen.ofl'erona, iv. 1 

the substance of your perfect self (rep.) — iv. 2 

my substance should be statue in .. — iv. 4 

he is of substance good Merry Wives, i. 3 

when substance love pursues — ii. 2 

with the finger of my substance .... — iii. 2 
far tlie substance of my praise .. Mer.o/ Venice, i'n. 2 

doth limp behind the substance — iii. 2 

in the substance, or the division of the — iv. 1 
substance valued at the highest. . Comedy 0/ Err. i. 1 

in your sightless substances you Macbeth, i. 6 

each substance of a grief liath Richard II, ii. 2 

and great, in substance, and in friends — iii. 2 
there lies the substance; and I thank — iv. 1 

of one substance bred, did lately IHenrylV.i. 1 

hath put all my substanceinto tha,t.'2HenryIV. ii. 1 
but not much of the father's substance — iii. 2 
tenor and substance, thus— here doth he — iv. 1 
address the substance of my speech.. — iv. I 
but noiv the substance shall endure.} Henry n. ii. 3 
then have I substance too. No, no, I am — ii. 3 
deceived, my substance is not here .. — ii. 3 
these are his substance, sinews, arms — ii. 3 
and yet, in substance and authority — v. 4 
that are the substance of that great..2Wcn(?/r/. i. 1 
can the substance often thousand .Richard III. v. 3 
each the sixth part of his substance. Hf/irj//'^//. i. 2 
you have sent innumerable substance — iii. 2 
perspicuous even as substance . . Troilus t? Crcfs. i. 3 
soul and substance of us all .. Titus Andronicus, i. 2 
takes false shadows for true substances — iii. 2 

earthly man is but a substance Pericles, ii. 1 

witliiu that little, seeming substance Lear, i. 1 

hast heavy substance, bleed'st not — iv. 6 

as thin substance as the air Romeo 4- Juliet, i. 4 

brags of his substance, not of ornament — ii. 6 
despised substance of divinest show — iii. 2 
doth all the noble substance often dont.. Ham/eM. 4 
for the very substance of the ambitious. . — ii. 2 

SUBSTANTIAL things! Meas. Im-Meas. iii. 2 

your reason wasnot subtantialC/)mt'//!/()/'Bj-;/)rs, ii. 2 

acquitted by a true substantial i'HenrylV. iv. 1 

flattering sweet to be substantial . , Rowen fcJul. ii. 2 
SUBSTITUTE-thissnbstitute.il/fas./M-il/eos. iii. I 

to him, and to his substitutes — iv. 2 

woman here against our substitute!.. — v. 1 
most wrongfully accused your substitute- v I 
a substitute shines brightly as. Merc/i. of Venice, v. I 

substitute, his deputy anointed Richard II. i. 2 

our substitutCR at home shall have . . — i. 4 

the subjects of his substitute iHenrylV.iv. 2 

our substitutes in absence well invested — iv. 4 

that are substitutes under the 1 Henry VI. v. 3 

devil here shall be my substitute ..'iHenryVI. iii. 1 
as protector, steward, substitute.. /fic/iarrf'ji/. iii. 7 
afterwards by substitute betrothed .. — iii. 7 

I left behind an ancient substitute Pericles, v, 3 

and though we have there a substitute.. Othello, i. 3 

SUBSTITUTED 'gainst the French . .2 Henry I V. i. 3 

substituted in the place of mine .. r/(us.4//d/on. iv. 2 

SUBSTITUTION and executing Tempest, i. 2 

SUBTILTIES o" the isle Tempest, v. 1 

SUBTILTY, sleeping, or waking ..IHenryVI. iii. 1 

the king's subtilty, to have my life Pericles, ii. 5 

SUBTLE— needs be of subtle (rep.) Tempesl,'\\. 1 

thou subtle, perjured, false. ... 7V'o Gen. of Ver. iv. 2 

am I politic? am I subtle? A/erri/W'/i/es, iii. I 

an invisible and subtle stealth TwetfthNight.'t. 5 

subtle as sphinx; as sweet Love'sL.Lost, iv. 3 

she is too subtle for thee As you Like it, i. 3 

the slow, the subtle, the housekeeper.. ii/acie///, iii. 1 

range under this subtle king I Henry I V. i. 3 

a subtle knave! but yet it iHenryVI. ii. 1 

a subtle traitor needs no sophister .. — v. 1 

for Warwick is a subtle orator 3/r/!i/ri/r/. iii. I 

I am subtle, false, and treacherous.. WcZ/ardn/. i. 1 
not incensed by liis subtle mother .. — iii. 1 

proud, subtle, sly, and bloody — iv. 4 

equal ravenous, as he is subtle Henry VIII. \. 1 

too fine, too subtle potent Troilus 4- Cress- iii. 2 

nor play at subtle games — iv. 4 

as subtle as is Aracline's broken woof — v. 2 
the subtle blood of the grape... Timon of Athens, iv. 3 
is not thy kindness subtle, covetous — iv. 3 

bolder, though not so subtle Coriolanus, i. JO 

like to a bowl upon a subtle ground v. 2 

as subtle masters do, stir up tiieir.../?/(/'i/,'iC/r'.>nr,ii. I 

subtle as the fox, for prey Cyndjcline, iii. 3 

tliat the sniHie queen of Goths . 7V/ii.«..i//iiro/i/cus, i. 2 
what subtle hole is this, who^■c nioutli — ii. 4 
when subtle Greeks surprised king .. — v. 3 

a slippery and subtle knave Othello, ii. 1 

this is a subtle whore, a closet lock — iv. 2 

SITBTLE-WITTED French conjurers.! Henry VI. i.l 

SUBTLY with a king's repose Henn/V. iv. 1 

like an ague, subtly taints Troilus .«:■(>/'.«. iii. 3 

friar subtly hath ministered Rnmeo^- Juliet, W. 3 

SUBTR/VCTOKS. that say so of him. Ttreljlh Sight, i. 3 
SUBURBS— in the Boutli suburbs .... — iii. 3 



sue 



SUBURBS of "Vienna (jep.) Meas.. for Meat. i. 2 

plucked down in the suburbs — ii. I 

the English have the suburbs won ..\ Henry VI. i. 4 

in the siiburhs close intrenched — i. 4 

faithful friends o' the suburbs? ....Henry vni.y. 3 

dwi'll I hut in the suburbs of your.. y/i//w/;C/7'5ar, ii. 1 

SUBVERSION of tliy harmless ....'i Henry VI. iii. 1 

SUBVEKT-nnd subverts your towns.l Henri VI. ii.3 

SUCCEDANT-mnlieres ne succedant.. ///■// ry/'. i. 2 

SUCCEED by weakness Meas.for Meas. ii. 4 

and sneceed thy father in manners. ...All's Well, i. 1 
than ever, by him that shall succeed...Wnctc///,iv.3 
not Amurath an Amurath succeeds .2 He/iri///'. v. 2 
no woman sliall succeed in Saliqne . ... Henry V. i.2 
did this king succeed; whose state .. — v. 2 
issue of the eld' r son succeed before.2I/eMr//^7. ii. 2. 
evermore succeeds barren winter .. .. — ii. 4 
next heir should succeed and reign ..ZllenryVI. i. 1 
be king, why should not I succeed?.. — i.l 

who should succeed the father — ii. 2 

and all that shall succeed: Sheba ..Henry VII I. v. 4 
you would have now succeed. . Titns.Aitdronicus, i. I 
what was past, what might succeed .... Pericles,!. 2 
that may succeed as his inheritor.... — i. 4 

curse of heaven and men succeed .... — i. 4 
effects he writes of, succeed unbapjiily .... Lear, i. 2 
like to this succeeds in unknown fate ..Othello, ii. 1 
fortunes of the Moor, for they succeed. . — v. 2 

SUCCEEDED in his house All's Well. iii. 7 

SUCCEEDERS of intestate joys .... Richard III. iv. 4 
the true succeeders of each royal liouse — v. 4 
SUCCEEDING-bloody succeeding... All'sWell,\\.3 
no son of mine succeeding: if it be so.. Mactc(/i, iii. 1 
to the succeeding royalty lie leaves . . — iv. 3 
my king, and my succeeding issue ..Richard II.\. 3 
succeeding his fatlier Bolingbroke . . 1 Henry VI. ii. 5 
succeeding ages have re-edified ..Richard III. iii. 1 
Henry the seventh succeeding ....Henry VIII. \\. 1 

succeeding from so fair a tree Pericles, i. I 

SUCCESS— pra^ for my success.. Two Gen. of Ver. i. 1 

of thy success in love — i.l 

certain word of my success. Measure for Measitre, i. 5 

and doubt not but success will '. .Much Ado, i v. 1 

will be glad of our success. .Mt'rcAani of Venice, iii. 2 

give me leave to try success All's Well, i. 3 

the bottom of his success iii't ; — iii. 6 

cannot greatly condemn our success — iii. 6 
I know not what the success will be — iii- 6 

by an abstract of success — iv. 3 

in whose success we are gentle .. Winter'sTule, i. 2 

not only my success in Lybia — v. 1 

the news of thy success: and when he. .Macbeth, i. 3 

given me earnest of success — i. 3 

they met me in the day of success .. — i. 5 (let ) 

catch, with his surcease, success — i. 7 

and so, success of mischief shall ....iHenrylV. iv. 2 
doth not wish success and conquest .. Henry V. ii. 2 
she promised, and assured success. . ..lH«/r!(/7. i. 2 
how shall I honour thee for this success? — i. 6 

for his rare success in arms — iv. 7 

success unto our valiant general .... — v. 2 
I not now have the like success? . . . .Zllenry VI. i. 2 
whether 'twas rei)ort of her success . . — ii. 1 
tilings ill-got had ever bad success?.. — ii. 2 

the queen hatli best success — ii. 2 

appear by Edward's good success ... . — iii. 3 
promise tliem success and victory.. i?/cftard ///. iv. i 
and dangerous success of bloody wars — iv. 4 
dream of success and happ}/ victory.. — v. 3 
success, or loss, what is, or is not. Troilus ^ Cress, i. 3 
for the success, although particular.. — i. 3 

nor fear of bad success — ii. 2 

in entreaties find success — iv. 5 

tickled with good success Coriolanus, i. 1 

we will write to Rome of our success — i. 9 

ere long have knowledge of my success — v. I 
bring me their opinions of success. ./■/i//'usCrt?s/ir, ii. 2 
my success hath done this deed (rep.") — v. 3 
smooth success be strewed . . Antony ^ Cleopatra, i. 3 

sir, good success! Farewell — ii. 4 

what is the success? Caesar, having.. — iii. 5 

never o'ertake pursued success — v. 2 

with glory and admired success Cymbeline, i. I 

success to the Roman host ' — iv. 2 

tliough hoping, of this good success Lear, v. 3 

should fall into such vile success 0.'//W/o, iii. 3 

SUCCESSES— lead their successes ....Coriolanus, i. 6 

in our well-found successes — i i . 2 

SUCCESSFtrL words than you.Taming of Shmr. i. 2 
prove as successful to the queen.. Wiuier'sTale, iii. 1 
give successful end to this debate ..2lhnruiv. iv. 4 
which promiseth successful fortune .iUenryVI. ii. 2 

successful in the battles TiiusAndronicus, i. 2 

welcome, nephews, from successful wars — i.2 
SUCCESSFOLLY-looks successfully.^si/oii L/V,-<>, i. 2 
'tis my hope to end successfully. 7'a»i!i/'ro/".'f/i. iv. 1 
ray coutitrj^'s strength successfully. TitusAndron. i. 2 
go successtnlly [A'n^.-sucressantly] .. — iv. 4 
SUCCESSIONS— eontiacts, successions, rempei*, ii. 1 

for all that dissuade succession All's Well, iii. 2 

and a perpetual succession for it .... — iv. 3 

we'll bar thee from succession Winter'sTule, iv. 3 

from my succession wipe me, father! — iv. 3 

by fair sequence and succession? Richardll. ii. 1 

thou, tlie shadow of siiecession .... 1 Henry I v. iii. 2 
Henry's oath, and your succession. .3Hfi/r.vr/. ii. 1 
he swore consent to your succession.. — ii. 1 
and that succession be determined .. — iv. 6 
to tlie succession of new days.. Tiwon of.-Uhcna, ii. 2 
for him, and his succession, granted. Cj/?/i6e////e, iii. 1 
tlnnking to bar thee of succession .. — iii. 3 
exclaim against Mieir own succession?.. Ha/;//e/, ii. 2 

the Iting himself for your succession — iii. 2 

SUCCESSIVE degrees Measurefor Measure, ii 2 

the king, he was successive heir 'IHenry II. iii. 1 

my suoeessive title with your swords. 7"f///.v-4wrf. i. 1 

that which four successive kings in Hamlet, v. 2 

SUCCESSIVELY from age to age.. Uichard ill. iii. 1 
but as successively, from blood to blood — iii. 7 
tlie garland wear'st successively ..■illenrylV. iv. .4 



SUCCESSOB-his successors, Bone...Wf>n/lF.i.M,i. 1 SUDDKN misli Riyea tlicm..... 



80 his Mieocssor wns like to Ihj . . . . tfotfr ilntr v. 

snicc ctmlks siicecs-iois tlieii' way ..Henry I lll.\. 1 

sOcCOUR-aml liiints I'm- succour./JjvniiLi'if i(, ii. 4 

mi!ftin of succour anil niliens Hichnid II. in. 2 

Oiiwsey hutli for succour acnt Mlnnyir.y. i 

wlioin of succour wc cutrciited llenijil . iii. 3 

disMiuycil, for succour is i\t luii\(l \lleiinjl I. i. 2 

O aeml some succour to tlic distrcsscU — iv. 3 

the levied succours tluit should — ."v. 4 

scud succours, lords, iiud sUip 2Henrijri. in. I 

God our li.'pe, will succour us — iv. 4 

Btuy, tlie luo-c ril succour tliee ....3(Jfiirvf7. in. 3 
his ncw-nimlc bride shall succour him — in. 3 

thiit come to succour you ",,, '•^" ? 

Hying for succour to his servant ..Henry I III.,]}. I 
fur from his succour, from the king.. — in. 2 
truucheoueers draw to her succour . . — v. 3 
revolt from me, to succour him ..TilusAwlron. iv. 4 

can lend no suecnur to my head I'encles, i. 1 

SUCH-A-ONIO, that praised (i/p.) Hamlet, y. I 

Sl'CK-the sun sucks up from bogs .... Tempttl, n. 2 
where the bee sucks, there suck I. . — v. I (song) 
suck melancholy out ofa song (rei).).ts you Like, n.b 
my ewes graze, and my lambs suck.. — ni. Z 
to suck the sweets of sweet... .r<.miiig-o/SArw,_i. 1 
they'll suck our breath, or pinch. Comeili/ or lin: ii.2 

i have given suck, and know how .Maebelh, i. 7 

why then I suck my teeth Kin^John, i. 1 

spiders, that suck up thy venom ..ItidmrU II. in. 2 

that without proflt suck — ni. 4 

and 80 sucks her princely eggs Ihnry r.i. 1 

to suck, to suck, the very blood to suck! — n. 3 

fair show shall suck away — iv. 2 

as I suck blood, I will some — „ 'Y- J 

moist eyes babes shall suck \Henriiyl. i. 1 

drones suck not eagles' blood •lllenryl'l. iv. I 

my sea shall suck them dry Zllennji I. iv. 8 

more spungy to suck in .... Troilus Sr Crrmda, ii. 2 

she tliat gave thee suck — .n. 3 

go, suck the subtle blood ot . . Ttmon ofAlhens, iv. 3 

and suck up the humours luliusdesar, n. 1 

from you great Rome shall suck — ii. 2 

that sucks the nurse asleep? Antony ^Cleo.y. 2 

but suck them up to the to])-nm3t..CV"il)f/iiif, in. I 

and suck the goat, and cabin iu. . TUus.indron. iv. 2 

SUCK'DST-thou suck'dst her breast. l//fnri/ »'/. v. 4 

thousuck'd^t it from mc Conofunus, iii. 2 

the milk, thou suck'ilst from \\sr..TUuiAmlron. u. 3 

SUCKED niv verdure on t oll't Tempest,}. 2 

have sucked up from tlie sea ..Mid. N. iDream, ii. 2 
to the sucked and hun^^y lioneRS?yl»yo«/.i((e it, iv. 3 
when Hector's grandsire sucked.. Troilus ^- Crese. i. 3 

thou hudst sucked wisdom Romeo ^Juliet, i. 3 

death that hath sucked the honey .... — .v. 3 
sucked the honey of his music vows . . Hamlet, in. 1 
comply with his dug before he sucked it — y. 2 

SUCKlNG-as any sucking dove Mid.N. sDr. \. 2 

the young suckinir cubs from. ..WercA.o/'''e)iicvp, n. 1 

as waters to ihe sucliiug ofa gulf Ucum/)'. ii. 4 

in the moulli of every siu-king babe. I Henri/ 1' I. in. 1 
as is the sucking dove, or liarinless.-J//(7)u!/''/. iii. 1 
we sucking on her natural husom..«o"ic<i.5-,7»;. n. 3 

SUCKLE— she did suckle Hector Cmiolanus, i. 3 

to suckle fools atul chronicle small beer.O»i««n, ii.l 

SUDDEX— then let us both be sudden.. Tempest, ii. 1 

all her sudden quips .... .TwoGe,, of lerona, \v.2 

upon a sudden, as Falstaff Merry Wices, iv. 4 

the sudden surprise of my powers — — v. 5 
to-morrow? O that's sudden! .. Meas. for Mens. m.I 
mv liking might too sudden seem ....MmhAdo, i. 1 
and sudden breaking out of mirlh./.ooe'sL./.os(, v. I 

the sudden hand of death close — v- 3 

on such a sudden, you should fall./lj you Like it, i. 3 
in hon.mr, sudden and quick in quarrel — ii. 7 
mv sudden wooing, nor licr sudden.. — v. 2 
there was never anything so sudden — v. 2 
should of a sudileu take such hold ?. Taming o/Sh. i . I 

whose sudden sight hath thralled — i. I 

and sudden, tells us, 'tis not mmer sTale,y. 1 

false, deceitful, sudden, malicious Macbeth, iv. 3 

therefore I will be sudden KingJohn, iv. 1 

belter arm vou to this sudden time .. — , , ^- ? 

to make mv end too suildcn Hichnrd 7^ v. 1 

on some great sudileu haste MlenrylT. u. .1 

on the sudden, something ill •iHemytl . iv. 2 

since sudden sorrow, serves to say .. — iv. i 

and as sudden as flaws congealed — iv. 4 

never was siicli a sudden schidar made.//c'"r/> . i. 1 

some sudden mischief may arise — i\. 7 

for fear of sudden death [Henry I /. i. 4 

this sudden mischief never could .... — n- 1 

roused on the sudden from their 

as I with sudden ond extemporal 

one sudden foil shall never breed .... 
thou Shalt escape by sudden flight . . 

somewhat too sudden, sirs .. 

this sudden execiuion of my will 

some sudden qualm hath struck . . . .2 /If 
comment then ujion his sudden death .... - 

makes vou in this sudden change?..:!l/pnr!/7 7. iv. 4 
he's sudden, if a thing comes in ..•.•• 7,,,X'* 

Birs, lie sudden in the execution liichard 77 7. i. 3 

this' sudden stab of rancour. — in. 2 

in mv judgment, 13 too sudden - in. 4 

by sudden florals and lul ot waters .. -.,, '\'- J 
abotled the suilden hreach on t ....Henry I III. t. I 

Slops on a sudden, lo<)k>i uixin — '"2 

what sudden anger's this? how have 1 

that's somewhat sudden: but lies .. 

h»r grace is altered on the sudden? .. 

icformntion must lie sudden tin. .... 

ever good at suiMen commcndationB 

fate turns to sudden sadness. .•7roi7«i*Cr-t.;.;n,i. 1 

who. upon the sudden, clapped to . . Cuiiofuuiif, i. 4 

on the sudden, I warnint liim consul — n. I 

with a suilden rc-eiiforcemeut struck — n. 2 

and revoke vour sudden approbation 

he sudden, f«r wc fear prevention. Jii/n 

to such a sudden flood of mutiny .... 



that I 111 
a 

1' 



'IJl'ji^ piiHii given viieiii ,#i»,«i.»,y..'..,.' , 

the sudden a Uomau thought.. /i'Wont/ ^Cleo. 

'' -" sudden sick: quick — 

.- sudden dropped — V 

th Ihis mv sudden choice.. Tittu And. i 

den thus advanced in Home? 

then thev for sudden .j.iv <lid wiv\t.. Lei 
too sudden; too like llie liglilnii g.7(o»i 
on a sudden, one hath wonndi (I mc — n. » 

let us hence; 1 -tan. I (in sudden liaste — ii. -I 
no sudden mean iif death, though ne'er — iii. 3 
halh sorted oiil a Midd.'ii il.iv of j»y — jii. S 

wilhont a sudden calm, will overset — in. 5 

full all. in this S.I sudden businos .. — iv. 3 

and, with a sudden vigour, it doth Hamlet, i. 6 

this sudden sendiui: him away must — iv. 3 

mv sudden and more strange letiirn — iv. 7 (let.) 
biit wi^h anil h.'g your sudden eoinins o'er 



i. 4 (song) 
4 Jul, ii 2 



iii. I 
iii. 3 

iv. .■) 



SUFFBR-they should siift'er salvation. A/ucTi/d/o, iii. 3 
make those, that do otfeiid you, suffer — V. 1 
flr.^t suffer love for -Me? suflxu- lovccr./i.) — v. 2 
why will vou sillier her to flout ..Mid.S.'tDr. iii. 2 

I sillier for tlie truth, sir Lore's I.. Lo>t,i. 1 

and am armed to sutler ,17rr<-/i«ii(../- Onicf, iv. 1 

lllr her poor knight ....AITtllell, i. 3 



•y'''.: 



— iii 



— V. 2 



— ii. 3 



— iii. 2 



„,.,.uUl the bearers imt to sudden death .. — v. 2 

he is ra-.h, and verv sudden in elioler ..OtlielUi, ii. I 

coml'oi ts of siiililen respect and aei|uittanee — iv 2 

SXII)I)1C-V-B01,1); to teach a teueher. tone's /.. 7.. ii. 1 

SU DDKNl A' iHoeeed Tno Gen. ofl'eroiia,i. 3 

and when T suddenlv eidlyon . . .. Werri/lf/iw, in. 3 
Ford desires you to come suddenly .. — iv. 1 
upon the grief of tliis, suddenly died. iVucA Ado, ly. 2, 
suddenly resolve nie in my (rep.). Love's L. Lost, n. 1 
yet do not suddenly. for it niay..iUer. of I'ernce, ii.8 

richly come to harbour suddenly — y. 1 

'gainst the ladv will suddenly .... .hijou Like it, i. 2 
do this snildeniv; and let not search - ;;. 2 

buy it with your gold riu'litsnddeuly - n. 4 
suddenly seeing Orlando, it unlinked _— „ .i.y- 3 
Florentines, will suddenly surprise ../li( s II ell, in. 6 
match clapped up so suddenly? ..Taming nfs/i. il. 1 
the great Apollo suddenly will .. irinler'sTale, ii. 3 

whose bowels suddenly burst out KingJohn, v. 6 

sick, niv lord, suddenly taken UirlimU II. i. 4 

time is ripe, (whicli w ill be suddenly.! 77c/i»!//r.i. 3 
well, £'11 repent, and tliat suddenly.. — in. 2 
spirt up so suddenly into the clouds .. Weniy /'. iii. 5 
we will. Buddenlv, pass our accept .. — v. 2 

that suddenly hath crossed us? \HenryTI.}. 4 

do it without invention suddenly — in. I 

or nature makes me suddenly relent — in- 3 

suddenly made him from my side.... — iv. 7 
both be suddenly surprised by bloody — y. 3 
man put U|> tlie fowl so suddenly . .iUenry 1 1, u. 1 
but suddenly to nominate them all .. — ij. 1 
that's not suddenly to be performed.. — n. 2 
for siiddenlv a grievous sickness took — in. 2 
speak sudde'nly, my lords, are we all.:! Henry ri. iv. 2 
have it suddenly performed {rep.) .liichard III. iv. I 

to liave him suddenly conveyed — iv. 4 

meet me suddenly at Salisbury — ^ \y- \ 

to make ve suddenly an answer .. Henry VIll. in. 1 
he fell sick suddenly, and grew so ill — iv. 2 
wlicnsuddenly aflleof boysbelund — v. 3 

lay ye all by tlie heels, and suddenly — v. 3 
aiid suddenly; where injury oi'.Troilus <?• Cress, iv. 4 

like a prophet suddenly enrapt — y. 3 

at supper, you suddenly arose JuliusC/psnr, n. 1 

it came in too suddenlv ; let it die . . Cymbeline.i. 5 
fall mad, or else die suddenly. Tiliis Andromeus, n. .) 
suddenly I heard a eliild cry underneath — v. 
surprised him suddenly; and brouglit — .v. I 
farewell to her; suddenly, woman ....Pericles, in. 
come, let's have licr aboard suddenly - ... — 'Y.' ] 

full suddenly lie fled Lear, ii. 1 

is so suddenly gone back know you.. .. — ly. 2 

suddenly contrive the meansof meeting.HumZeMi. i 

SUE— my master sues to lier. Tieo Gen. of I erona, n. 1 

good sir .lohn, I sue for yours .... Merry "'■"■'. '!• 2 

when maidens sue, men give Meas.jur .Meas.i. S 

that banish what they SIP for — .'.!•< 1 

to sue to live, I find, I seek — ;.';■' i 

that I will sue to be rid of it ......... in. 

Isue! Iseekawife! Love sL. Lost, ni. \ 

sigh, pray, sue, and "roan............ — in- i 

stand forfeit, being tliose tliat sue? .. - y. 2 
soul should sue as advocate tor . . Comrdy of hrr. i. 

we were not born to sue, but to liic/iard //. i. 1 

attorn ies-general to sue his livery .... — ii. ' 

denied to sue ray livery here — n-3 

I do not sue to stand ~ ... -^ 'i 

to sue his livery, and beg Ins peace. . 1 Henry II . iv. 3 
humbly sue unto your excellence ■■ ' ''r'"!'' ' X- ' 

suits anew, and sue to him 2 lienri, I 7. i. 3 

tliink'st thou, 1 sue so much to getV.3;;c>ir;/ / 7. ill./ 
my proud heart sues, and prompts. . llmharJ 111. i. 2 

wliosues, and kneels, and says — iv- 4 

being sued to, one that hunildv sues -,,"{ * 

nor will I sue. altliougli tlie king ..Henry I III. ii. I 
so sweet, as when desire <lid me..Troilns*rCres..}.i 
sue, and be denied such common. 7 iinnn ofAlh. in. S 

decays the thing «e sue for Antony iiUeo.iu} 

to tliec sues to let him breathe — in. l" 

she shall not sue unheard — ni. lo 

sue to know you better. . . ■;■}'"''•.'.• ' 

sue to him again, and he's yours (,<-p.) ..Othello, ii. 3 
or sue to you to do iwciiliar prolit. . . .... . . - ni. J 

SUED-neversued to friend, nor ....Richard 111. i. Z 

' who sued to me for hiin? — ."■ [ 

for one being sued to, one that — .'.y- J 

such a writ be sued against you ..Henry I III. in. 2 

wlien vou sued stayim.'. tlieii .... Antony i>,(leo. i. 3 

I sued" for my dear son's life . . Tiius An-tioni,iis.\. 2 

SUED- FOR— vour sned-for tongues?. rori/./.KiiK. n. •) 

SUE'ril-Dauphin sueth to thee lUus-UlennjI I. 1.2 

SUFFER- tliose that I saw sutl'erl TtmpesI, i. 2 

hut dolli sillier a sea-change — i. 2 (.song) 

than I wool. 1 suffer tlie flesh-fly — '.n. I 

and lie shall not siilVer indignity ., ,. - ni- « 

would suiter him to s;icnd .. Tieotirn.of I erona, 1.3 

1 do as truly sutVer - y.- \ 

Isuflerforlt. You siiftcr for ^'"fl'^'^'t^-^'l 

that sutVer surfeit, eloyinent ....lirelflh Aight, i . 4 

that anircrs under probation — !!• » 

and he. iliatMitt'ers Mentiii e Tor Meainre, u. i 

or clue let him Biiirer — "• ' 



rather iluii 
yet mn.Ht si 
ujio 



life I 



will 



• II gi- 



ition Ii 
ingin my 



ur — 



— iv. 4 



- both BUller 
. VVii 



ider 

ignrSlir 
. Hinler' 



iT. i 



will v 

in tlie wliieh three great ones siiff. 

settled iMoject may sillier alteration.. — iv. 3 

not he alone shall sutVer what wit can — iv. 3 

fortune would not suffer me -- ly. J 

by tlio wrongs I suiter, and thc.Comedy of hrr. in. 1 

wilt thou sutfer them to make — ly. 4 

that ButTcr in exposure, let us Macbeth, i\. 3 

both tlie worlds softer, ere wc — iii. 2 

more suffer, and more sundry ways — ly. 3 

us well as haste will suffer us KingJolm, ii. 2 

tender duty make me sulfcr wrong?. 7(ic7i«rd II. ii. I 
tlie very wreck that wc must suffer .. — n. I 

detraction will not sutler it MIenrylf.v. 1 

what wrongs we sulVer, and find i Henry 11^. iv. 1 

and suffer the condition of lliese times — iv. I 

can you sutfer liell so to prevail \ Henry I'l.j.b 

ere tliat we will sufl'er such a prince — ill. ' 

and sutVer you to breathe in — v. 4 

eillier to sutfer shipwreck — .v. S 

suffer them now, and they'll i Henry ri. in. I 

what, shall we sufler this? iHenryri.i. 1 

tliat see'st it, do not suffer it Itichard lit. 1.3 

I may not suffer you to visit tliem .. — ly. 1 
you suffer too hard an exclamation. //em i/7'i//. i. 2 

to suffer a man of his place — v. 2 

if we snflVr (out of our easiness — v. 2 

the king will sutler hut the little finger — v. 2 
never sullirs inatterof the w<irld. troiliuSf Cress. ii.3 
you'll ne'er be good, nor Slitter others — iv. 2 
valiant that can wisely suffer. 7'iwio« of Athens, iii. 5 

sufl'er us to famish (.oriofauuj, i I 

suffer't. and live with such ascannot rule — in. I 
that do't, and suffer it. a brand to the end— iii. 1 
to suffer lawful cinsure for such .... — in. 3 
thougli thev tliemselves did suffer by't — iv. 6 
that'veritv would without lapsing suffer — y. i 

suffers then tlie nature of an Juliu<Ciriar, ii. 1 

if tliey snfter our departure../4n(oii!/<l(-CV<;upu/rn, i. Z 
lest my remembrance suffer ill report — . _ii. 2 

to suffer all alike T .■"'•• .1 

he would not suffer me to bring him.Cymbeline, i. 2 
without contradiction suffer the report — i. 5 

whv did vou suffer lacliimo — v. 4 

with a Roman's lienrt can sutler .... — v. .^ 
suffer thy brother Marcus to inter. Titus .indron.i. 2 

that wilt not suffer you to square — .n. ' 

the eagle suffers little birds — "'.4 

see how belief may suffer — iv. 4 (Gower) 

tlie shame which here it suffers Lear, ii. 4 

tlie mind to sufler with tlie holly — ,]>■ * 

my duty cannot suffer to obey — !!!• ^ 

who alone suffers, suffers most i tlie mind — in. b 
my good brother suffer you to do it? ■ • ■ • — '.K- ^ 
and suffer every knave to use me. Romeo tf Juliet, ii. 4 

love, or no, that thus he suffers for llamirt, in. 1 

suffer the slings and arrows of outrageous — in. 1 
one. in suffering all, tliat suft'ers nothing — iii. 2 
or else shall he suffer not thinking on .. — in. 2 

why does he suffer this rude knave — v. 1 

sir, his deflnement suffers no perdition . . — .y. 2 

grief with me; I suft'er witli him Othello, in. 3 

no weapon, and perfoce must suffer .... — .v. "2 

SUFFERANCE-up iny sufferance. A/crryiripM, ly. 2 

draw out to lingering sufferance. .Uf(M..7br.Uea«.ii. 4 

in eorjioral sufferance flnds a pang .. — ni- I 

Kiiiedy, yet a patient siitt' ranee Miich.Ado, i. 3 

suflerance is the badge of all ..Merch.ofl'eniee,\. 3 

what should his sufferance lie -- .'!!•' 

are of consent and sufferance .tsyoul.ikeil, ii. 2 

the seeming snfferonces that you....l <7f'ir!/7' . v. 1 

well; of "iift'erance comes ease •iHeiiryir.y. 4 

breed, bv his suflerance, more of Biicli.i7"iri/7 . ii. 2 
I in sufferance heartily will rejoice.. — \\- 2 
weakness, and admire our sufferance — in- b 
Shalt reiau but by their sufferance •■3W«"';.v"-.!- ' 
'tisa sufferance, panging as Boul ..Henryi III. ii. 3 
blench at snffemnce tlian I do. Troilus 4 Cresiula,}. 1 

your last service was sufferance -- .n- ' 

did commence in sufferance . . 7iinoii of Athens, iv. 3 
and breathed our sufl'erance vainly .. -- y. ti 

our sufferance is a pain to them Coi-io/aniu, i. 1 

in autlioritv against all noble eufferoncc — ni. I 
our yoke and sufferance show us ..JultiisCirsar,\. .» 

the Biifferauce of our souls — .'.'.•' 

we have been too slight insiifterancc.Cpii(if7iMf,iii.j 

the mind much sufferance doth o'erskip.. Lear, iii. 6 

seen a "rievous wreck and sufferance ..'"A'Wo.i.i » 

SUFFERED wilh tliosc that I saw .... Tempest, i. 3 

join, d to tlieirsnft'ered labour — .". » 

lately sutV.red bv a thunilerlwit — .". 2 

he hod suflered for't irep.\..T,eoGen.ofl'ero„a,xy.* 
wliat I have suftercil to bring . . . .Mrrrii » ires, ill. j 

. suffered the Jiangs of three several deatlis - in. 5 
for my sake vou liave suflered all this — in. s 
I have suflered more for tlieir sokes .. — iv. » 
and liave not they sufterejl? .......... - iv- * 

over and almve that you have suffered - v. S 
why liove vou suffered inctobc.. I irel/lh,\iKhl,v. 1 
suffered hinl to go displeased . . . .Mer. ofl eniee.v. I 

Hermione liath suffered death . . " iiK" « late. in. 3 
have suffered wrong, go, kee|i m.Comedyofhrr.y. 1 
he Unit liath suffered tliisdiiiordercd./tirTi.irJ 71. ii. 4 

suffered his k insman JIarch '.''.""■" '■ .• -x ? 

he was so suffered ..................2i/r"ri/7» . li. 3 

what vour highness suffered under ..Henry If. ly. 8 
lest, lieing suflered in that hormfiil 2 llrnrv' i. in. 2 
lieing siillerul with the Iwnr's fell imw _ v. 1 
being suflered, tivcr« cuiinut iiueucli.J//fHry » /. iv. 8 



SUF 



[ T62 ] 



'^S?STro^ZL^l!^'S./??Sr'['-^^-? I S^y!?;^^'^^'^^-'-".^""^' inaU.2//.„.,r/,i 



Greeks and Trojiui 9 suffered. 'jfroiVus 4- Cr^.,.^.., ... . 

your jewel hath suffered Timott o/Alhens, i. 1 

tlie oue part suffered, the other \vi\\.Coriolanits,'l'i. 3 
and suffered mo hy the voice of slaves — iv. 5 

for wliich he suffered death Julim Crrsar, iii. 2 

and suffered my command .Anlnny^Cleopalra, iv. 2 

that I suffered, was all the harm Cymheline.v. 5 

be suffered to come near him Pericles, v. 1 

and I have suffered like a girl _ v. 1 

hatli power, but as it is suffered . . Lear, i. 2 (letter) 

I suffered much extremity for love Hamlet, ii. 2 

tliat my youth suffered Ollwllo, i. 3 

what already I have foolislily sullored . . — iv. 2 

SUFFERING— such a suffering.. .. Tu-elWiNight, i. 5 

return to this our sufferinji country ..Macbeth, iii. 6 

in suffering thus thy brother to be . . Richard II. i. 2 

suffering so the causes of our wreck.. ii. 1 

for suffering flesh to be eaten iHeyiryir. ii. •! 

that her sufferings made almost Henry VIll. v. 1 

if wisdom be in suffering Timon o/.ithens, iii. 5 

your suffering^ in this dearth Coriolaiius, i. I 

with only suffering stain by him .... — i. 10 

and crueller in suffering _ v. 2 

such suffering souls that welcome. JuliiisCresar, ii. I 
undertaking, or they so suffering ..Cymbeline, iv. 2 

thine honour from thy suffering Lear, iv. 2 

in suffering all, that suffers notliing . . Hamlet, iii. 2 

SUFFER'ST more of mortal griefs Henry V. iv. I 

why sufter'st thou tliy sons Titus Andronicus, i. 2 

SUFFICE thee, miatTesslrep.^. Merry IVives, ii. \ (let.) 

it shall suffice me: at which Love'sL.Lost,\i. 1 

to know thee shall suffice iv. 2 

if that will not suffice Q-ep."). Merchant of Venice, iv. 1 

let it suffice thee, that I trust As you Like it, i. 3 

and suffice ourselves with the report...-i(l'sW'c«, iii. 6 
few words suffice: and, therefore. . TamingnrSh. i. 2 

let that suffice: I have trusted Winler'sTale, i. 2 

suffice, most forcible Feeble \rep.)..iHenryIv. iii. 2 

this reason may suffice ZHenn/ I'l. iVi.S 

it suffices me, thou art Trdilus .?- Cressida, ii. 3 

let it suffice the greatness of your Pericles, ii. 1 

may suffice to give my tongue that heat — ii. 1 

myself I dare: let that suffice you? Othello, iii. 4 

SUFFICED-tillhe be first sufficed. /Is i/ouLrte 27, ii. 7 

my knightly stomach is sufficed King John, i. 1 

SUFFICETH, my reasons are .. Taming of Shrew, i. 1 
harsli to hear; sufflceth, lam come.. — iii. 2 
sufficeth, that I have maintains ..•IHenryf'I. iv. 10 
but it sufficeth, that Brutus \ea(is..JuliusCcesar, ii. 1 

sufficeth, that the day will end _ v. 1 

sufficeth, a Roman with a Roman's.. Ci/mfteZme, v. 5 

sufficeth not, that we are brought.. Titus Andron. i. 2 

SUFFICIENCY, as your worth ..Meas.for Meas. i. 1 

nor sufficiency, to be so moral Much Ado, v. 1 

you know of stuffed sufficiency .. tVinter'sTale, ii. 1 
a substitute of most allowed sufficiency.. 0(AeHo, i. 3 

SUFFICIENT ransom TwoGm.of ferona'v. 4 

in your ward sufficient Measure for Measure, ii. 1 

the most sufficient of your p.arish.... ii. 1 

understand me that he is suificient.il/er. of Venice, i.3 
the man is, notwithstanding, sufficient — i. 3 
my daughter a sufficient dower. Taming ofShreu',iv.4 

and some sufficient honest witnesses iv. 4 

here half a dozen sufficient men? ..iHenrylV. iii. 2 

shall be a wall sufficient to defend Henry V. i. 2 

theconcavitiesof it is not sufficient — iii. 2 

were not sufficient to contain it \ Henry VI. ii. 3 

(had I sufficient skill to utter them) — v. 5 

expenses and sufficient charge — . v. 5 

were not revenge sufficient for me ..SHenryVI. i. 3 
a sufficient briber for his life. . Ttmon of Atltens, iii. 5 
if I brmg you no sufficient testimony. C'l/mde/ine, i. 5 

never meet a more sufficient man Othello, iii. 4 

our full senate call all in all sufficient? — iv. 1 

SUFFICIENTLY manage Winler'sTale, iv. 1 

but we will be revenged sufficiently..! Henri/;'/, i. 4 

„ 'i?.'i!^*^?J^™®'=''^""y' he's gone Pericles, i. 3 

SUFFICING strokes for ..Antont/ ^Cleopatra, iv. 12 

SUFFICIT— satis quod sufficit Love'sL.Losl.v. I 

SUFFIGANCE-it shall be suffigance.jV/HcA/Irfo, iii. i> 

° o I- '^^~'"S windpipe suffocate. Wen ri/''. iii. 6 

Suffolksduke, may he be suffocate. .vHeiirVr/. i. 1 

BIV■i'F?^^^^S??^V'r,^"f'"^'''^ TroHus^-Cressida. i. 3 

SUFFOCATING streams Olhelto iii 3 

SlJFFOCATION-'scape suffocation.. 3/errv'>'.' iii. •■) 
b UFl OLK also lies; Suffolk first died..Heni?/ r. iv. 6 

tarry, dear cousin Suffolk I _ iv 6 

and over Suffolk's neck he threw his — iv' 6 
the earl of Suff.ilk, sir Richard Ketley — iv 8 
earl I am, and Suffolk am I called.. l/Zenri/;'/. v. 3 

free again, as Suffolk's friend _ v. 3 

say, earl of Suffolk, if thy name .... v! 3 

Suffolk, what remedy? I am v! 3 

speaks Sirffblk as he thinks? _ v' 3 

that Suffnlk doth not flatter _ v! 3 

sliall Suffolk ever have of Margaret. . _ v! 3 
but, Suffolk, stay; thou raay'st not .. — v.' 3 

niy noble lord of Suffolk _ v5 

thus Suffolk hath prevailed _ v. i 

Suffolk, arise; welcome, queen iHenryVI. i. I 

rnarquess of Suffolk, embassador — i. 1 (articles) 
the first duke of Sufclk {rep. i. 2) . . - = ■ 

Suffolk, the new-made duke (rep. i. 2) 



ii 
ii 

iii 

ii 

ii 
ii 


2 
2 
2 


II 


2 


!! 


2 


IJ 


2 


11 


2 


II 


2 


ii 
ii. 


2 
2 



for Suffolk's duke, may he be — 

tliat Suffolk should demand a whole i' 1 

with the duke of Suffolk (rep.) _ j' | 

the pride of Suffolk, and the cardinal _ i' 1 

buftolk concluded on the articles — j. 1 

yet am I Suffolk and the cardinal's.. _ i, 2 

tliis is the duke of Suffolk, and not my — i j 
against the duke of Suffolk .... — i. 3 (petition) 

kisecuUions! Suffolk, let them go .. _ 13 

"''■VT 1°'''^ °*' Suffolk, say, is this the guise — ii 3 

„ill Suffolk gave t"o dukedoms for .. — i 3 

!!'U tell thee, Suffolk, why I am unmeet — i! 3 

,vl\at meau'st thou, Suffolk? tell me — i 3 
awaits the duke of Suffolk (rep.).. _ i. 4 fnaner) 

why, Suttblk, England knows thine - "i 1 

wiiuk at the duke of Suffolk's iusoleuce — ii. 2 



my lord of Suffolk, Buckingham .... 
well, Suffolk [A-«(.-Sutfolk'sduke].. — 

and Suffolk's cloudy brow his _ 

and you, my lord of Suffolk (rep.) .. _ 
thrice-noble Suffolk, 'tis resolutely . . _ 
run to my lord of Suffolk; let him know — 

what is the matter, Suffolk? _ 

doth my lord of Suffolk comfort me? _ 
why do you rate my lord of Suffolk thus? — 

nave I tempted Sutt'olk's tongue — 

by Suffolk and the cardinal Beaufort's — 

are you the butcher, Suffolk? _ 

if false Suffolk dares him? (rep.') .... _ 
Suffolk dare him twenty thousand .. — 
unto my state hy Suffblk's means .. — 
for gentle Suttblkl Ungentle (re;;.).. _ 
and let thy Suttblk take his heavy leave — 

enough, sweet Suttblk (rep.) _ iii.' 2 

thus 18 poor Suffolk ten times iii.' 2 

so Suffolk had tliy heavenly company — iii.' 2 
omitting Suffolk's exile, my soul's .. _ iii. 2 
thedukeof Suffolk, William (rep.).. _ iv 1 

come, Suffolk, I must waft thee _ iv. 1 

Suffolk's imperial tongue is stern..,. iv 1 

and Suffolk dies by pirates _ ir 1 

and mourning for Suffolk's death? . . — iv. 4 
ah, were the duke of Suffolk now alive — iv. 4 

13 gone, now Suffolk is deceased — iv 4 

Suffolk, nor of Kent (rep. iv. 8) SHenryVI. i. 1 

duke of Suffolk is the first (rep.) ..Henry VIII. iv. 1 
sit iii'iraero with the duke of Suffolk .. — v. 1 
bUFi BxlGE— to give their suffrage.. Con'oZam/s, ii. 2 
I ask your voices, and your suffrages. Titus And. i. 2 
I tlirew the people's suffrages on him — iv. 3 

forbear your suffrages; if tliat you Pericles, ii. 4 

SUGAR— and sugar of the best .... Merry Wives, ii. 2 
milk, and sugar; there is three ..Love'sL. Lost, v. 2 
parted with sugar breath ..Merchant of Venice, iii. 2 
to have honey a sauce to sugar ..^s youLikeit, iii. 3 

three pound of sugar Winter's Tale, i v. 2 

fair discourse hath been as sugar ..Itichard II. ii. 3 
give thee this pennyworth o{sugai..i Henry IV. ii. 4 
to what end he gave me the sugar. ... — ii. 4 

for the sugar thou gavest me — ii 4 

more eloquence in a sugar touch Henry V.y.'i 

why strew'st thou sugar on that Richard III. i. 3 

we do sugar o'er the devil himself .... Hamlet, iii. 1 

these sentences, to sugar, or to gall Othello, i. 3 

gKR^S;?^^^'^ '° ™'^''^ 'hee ....\HenryIV. iii. 3 

SUGARED— with sugared words \HenryVI. iii. 3 

thy poison with such sugared words.2//enryF/. iii. 2 
attended to their sugared words ..Richard III. iii. 1 
Bu'/oHowed the sugared game. Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

SUGARhOP, and the rest Taming of Slirew, iv. 1 

SUGGESTS this imagination? Merry Wives, iii. 3 

to suggest thee from thy master All's Well, iv. 6 

suggest his soon-believing Richard II. i. \ 

devils, that suggest bv treasons Henry V. ii •> 

if secret powers suggest but truth ..ZHenryVl. iv. 6 

suggests the king our master Henry nil. i. 1 

we must suggest the people Cm-i'olanus, ii. 1 

c!-i??,?V,°,=.?^i,'ii*''^' '**'''h heavenly shows. 0/Ae»o, ii. 3 

SUGGEhTED-is soon suggested. TwoGen.ofVer. iii. 1 

these faults, suggested us to make. Love'sL. Lost, v. 2 

hath suggested thee to make Itichard II. iii 4 

- ";?,y°" say, suggested at some time.. Cor/o/onMs, ii. 1 

SUGGEbTION as a cat laps milk Tempest, ii. I 

the strongest suggestion our worserCJeuius — iv. 1 
^estions are toothers, as tome. Love'sL.Lost, i. 1 



those suggestions for the young ea,Tl..AU'sWell, iii. 

wh^ do I yield to that suggestion Macbeth, i. 

against these giddy loose suggestions. King- JoAn, iii.l 

killed to-night on your suggestion . . iv 2 

herein misled by your suggestion ..I HenrylV. iv. 3 
mingled with venom of suggestion. .2 Henri/ /F. iv. 4 
by the suggestion of tlie queen's . . Richard III. iii. 2 
one, that by suggestion tied all. . . . Henry VIII. iv. 2 

oTTr.S'^,°"Sgestion, plot, and damned Lear, ii. 1 

SUir— how to grant suits Tempest i 2 

hearkens my brother's suit , _ ' i' 2 

once again the suit I made thee? — iii' 2 

for thy wrongful suit Two Gen.of Verona, iv. 2 

my master's suit will be but cold.... — iv. 4 

what says Silvia to my suit? — v 2 

shall I not lose my suit? Blerry Wives, i. 4 

give him a show of comfort in his suit — ii i 

hast thou no suit against ii 1 

and humblest suit cannot attain it.. — iii! 4 I 

my suit then is desperate — iii 

she will admit no kind of suit .... Twelfth Night, i.' 2 
thou hast a mind that suits with tins — i. 2 

if it be a suit from the count _ i' 5 I 

would you undertake another suit .. — iii' 1 ' 

and suits well for a servant _ iii 4 | 

I arrest thee at the suit of count Orsino — iii 4 ' 

can assume both form and suit _ v. 1 

at JVlalvolio's suit, a gentleman v' 1 

well, what's your suit? Measure forMemure, ii 2 

you, granting of my suit _ ii. 4 

at the suit of master Three-pile — iv' 3 

for some four suits of peach-coloured — iv' 3 
give notice to such men of sort and suit — iv' 4 
your suit's unprofitable; stand up .. — v 1 

the first suit is hot and hasty MuchAdo, ii' 1 

she mocks all her lovers out of suit.. — ii 1 

doth commence his suit to her — ii' 3 

surely, suit ill spent, and labour .... — iii' 2 

whose wrongs do suit with mine — v' I 

■ suddenly resolve me in my suit . . Love's L. Lost, ii. 1 

despite of suit, to see a lady's face — v 2 

Biron did swear himself out of all suit — v.' 2 

for my great suit so easily obtained .. v' 2 

the holy suit which fain it would — y' j 

what humble suit attends thy _ v' 2 

trouble ,you with no more suit. .il/ercA. of Venice, i. ■• 
monies IS your suit: wliat should I say — is 

and my suit is,— In very brief, the suit — ii 2 

thou hast obtained thy suit ij ■> 

I have a suit to you a 2 



SUI 

SUIT— put on your boldest suit ..Mer. of Venice ii 2 
what page's suit she hath in readiness — ' ii" 1 
l.are yoii well; your suit is cold .. — ii. 7 (scrol'l) 

a losing suit against him _ iv 1 

of a strange nature is the suit you follow — iv 1 
■•"■ —ll make it our suit to As you Like it, i. 2 



— i. 2 

— i.3 

— ii. 7 

— ii.7 

— iv. 1 

— iv. 1 
All's Well, i.3 

— ii. 3 

— (epi'i./ 



one out of suits with fortune 

rnore suits you to conceive, than me" 

that I did suit me all points like 

It IS my only suit; provided that you 

but therein suits his folly to the .... 

you lisp, and wear strange suits 

ot my suit? Not out of your i7ep.) .. 

by any token of presumptuous suit . 

sir, will you hear my suit? 

that can in sueli a suit corrupt 

if this suit he won 

be ready with a costly suit.. Tam'in'g'ofSh. 1 (ind' 

dressed m all suits like a lady.... — 1 (indue ) 

IS not this suit of mine that Winler'sTale, 1.2 

to etti;ct your suits, here is man — iv 3 

arrest him at my suit Comedy of Err. J v'. 1 

you hear tlie suit _ iy j 

that in an honest suit might niove"'.'.' — iv' 2 
at whose suit. I know not at whose suit — iv 2 

but he's in a suit of buff' _ iv 2 

andgives 'emsuitsof durance....!!!! — iv' 3 

whose suit is he arrested at? _ iv 4 

which now suits with it Macbeth ii \ 

longand vehement suit Iwas seduced. A-iHi'./o/oi,i! I 
let It be our suit, that you have bid . . — iv. 2 
the suit which you demand isgone .. — iv 2 
lords, to grant the commons' sxiitt.. Richard II. iv. I 
IS all the suit I have in hand .. - " 

forobtainingof suits? (rep.) .. 
two rogues in buckram suits .. 
at the suit of mistress Quickly . 
and he is arrested at my suit . . 

by no suit gain our audience — iv 1 

If I had a suit to master Shallow .... — vl 

whose right suits not in native HenruV i. 2 

a horrid suit of the camp _ * iij 6 

description cannot suit itself in words — iv! 2 



...I Henry IV. i. 2 
— ii. 4 

..2HenryIV. ii. 1 



— iv. 2 

— V. 2 
.] Henry VI. ii. 2 

— V.I 
V. 3 
V. 3 



suits, and give their fasting horses 

1 wear out my suit 

my lord, despise her gentle 'suit " " 
your several suits have been . , 

if you will grant my suit — 

she willderiy thy suit _ 

answer makes your grace unto my 's'u'it? — 

begin your suits anew iHenrv VI 

surfi as these with humble suit _ i 

I have a suit unto your lordship — i 

her suit is now, to repossess SHenryVI. i 

do well, to grant her suit _ i 

the king will grant her humble suit _ i 

widow, we will consider of your suit — i 

with the sadness of my suit — i^ 

then no, my lord: my suit is at an end — i 

her suit is granted for her husband's — i 

to make void my suit i^ 

norpostedofftheir suits with'.'! '.'.'.'." _ i 

to back my suit withal' ' Richard III 

notyouspokewith, but by mighty suit — ii 

m no worldly suit would he be moved — ii 

sui t [Co/, /f ji<.-cause] come I to move = ■ 
It to reprove you for this suit of yours 

joyful, grant their lawful suit 

w he r you accept our suit, or no .... 
sweet prince, accept their suit 



iii. 7 



.. - iii. 7 
.Henry VIII. i. 2 



half your suit never name to us .. 

made suit to come in his presence _ . . 

as suits the greatness of his person .. — ii 1 

for any suit of pounds _ jj ■ 

have a suit which you must not deny me — v! i 
stubborn-chaste against all suit.. Troilus A Creii i. 1 
other noble parts you'll suit . . Timon of Athens, ii. S 

but by the suit 0' the gentry Corialanus, ii. 1 

how m his suit he scorned you — ii. 3 

mine ears against your suits are _ v •' 

against the general suit of Koine — v. 3 

fresh embassies, and suits v 3 

our suit is, that you reconcile them . . — v! 3 

thou hast some suit to Ca;sar JuliusCa-sar, ii. 4 

Brutus hath a suit, that Cffisar — ii 4 

humble suit (rep) _ ij,' 1 

presently prefer his suit to Cass'ar. !!.' — iii! 1 
as suits, with gentlemen of your .... Cymlielim:. i. 5 

presently, a riding suit — iii •> 

contempt the suits of princely fellows — iii' 4 
the same suit he wore when he took — iii 5 

fetch that suit hither iij. 5 

with that suit upon my back — iii' 5 

suit myself as does a iriton peasant — v! I 

whose kinsmen have made suit _ v 5 

to attain in suit the place of his bed — v 5 

and this suit I make that you Titus Andron. i. ■> 

and at my suit, sweet, pardon (>ep.) — i. 2 

ashore, I have another suit Pericles, v. 2 

at suit of his gray beard leur ' it' 2 

who hath had th'ree suits to his back ...!' — 'iii' 4 

what say you to my suit? Uojneo ~S Julie', i. 3 

dreams he of smelling out a suit — i 4 

thy suit [Co/. /Cii/.-strifeJ and leave me — ii. 2 

you told us of some suit Ilnmlel, i. 2 

nor customary suits of solenvn black — 'i.i 

but the trappings and the suits of woe .. — i. 2 

but mere implorators of unholy suits — i 3 

suit the action to the word — iii' 2 

for I'll have a suit of sables !! -_ iii! o 

personal suit to make me liis lieutenant.O//ie/fe, i! i! 

my suit to her is, that she will _ iii.l 

every thing he does with Cassio's suit — iii 3 

nay, when I have a suit, wherein I mean — iii 3 

a trick, to put me from my suit — iii 4 

madam,my former suit !! iii 4 

by their own importunnte suit .'. — iv! 1 

"ow;. if this suit lay ill Bianca's power .. — iv! 1 

I will give over my suit — iv 2 

SUITABLE for destruction '/'imono/.Ji/i. iii. 6 ("race) 



SUI 



[ 7:3J3 ] 



SUN 



SUITED to h'lB watery tomb T^ncffthMirht, v. 1 

there's oiicnienniii;; well suited MuchJldo, v. 1 

hiiw odiUy lie is muUimII Mrrchantof Venice, \. 'i 

how Ui8 wonls lire -^iiitiill ..,,, — iii. 

rielil.v suUe.l.liiit uiisnitiible //«'»»>//, i. 1 

b\it siiiteil ill lilic v\im\i\.\M\a .Tnilus fyCrcsi. (prol.) 

he lioltcr siiiliil: llie»u weeds ara Lent, w. 7 

Sl'lTlNli witli l.irnia /;,i»i/c/, ii. 2 

SUITOK — haihliuiglithcrsuitor.7VoGeii.o/»Vr. ii. I 
a woeful suitor to your honoiU'.JI/raj./br Heat. ii. 2 I 

she Iittth becu a 3iutor to inc — v. I 1 

troubled with ii iieniieioug suitor ,,..Mticl\Aiio,\. 1 I 

like humble- vii^tiL'ed t>uitora Love* sL, Lost, ii. I ; 

who is the suitor? who is the suitor? — iv. 1 i 

every coast renowned suitors Mer.n/reuice, i. 1 I 

princely suitoes that me alrenily come? — i. 2 
that I urave my suitor from his. . Ai you Like it, iii. 2 

seek these suitors; so, speedily All's II ell, v. 3 

shall not be annoyed with suitors. Tam/H^'o/S/i. i. 1 ' 
nnd other more suitors to her, unii rivals— i. 2 

are you a suitor to the maid — 1.2 

she may more suitors have, and mo — i. 2 

she keeps from nil access of suitors .. — i. 2 

you do profess to be a suitor — i. i 

of all thy suitors, here 1 charge thee — ii. 1 
make myself a suitor to your ilausUter — ii. 1 
your neighbour, and was suitor lirst — ''• ' 
m age, is she become the suitor .. ll'inler'sTale, v. 3 

I will not be your suitor iHcnnjW. ii. 1 

no humble suitors press to speak ..SHciir!//'/. iii. 1 I 
not provokeil I'V any suitor else ....Uiclmid lU. i. 3 

longer kneel, I am a suitor Henri/I'm. i. 2 

hun\l>le suitor to your virtues. 7'imono/.-lMciis, iii. 5 
they say, poor suitore have strong ..Coiiatanus, i. 1 

and myself arc suitors to you — v. 3 

and as a suitor will I give him.,,, Julius Cafsar, ii. 3 
what Qcsar doth, what suitors press — ii. 4 
conunon suitors, will crowd a feeble — ii. 4 
and am moreover suitor, that I may — iii. 1 
we arc suitors to their throne ..Antony ^ Cleo, ii. 1 

a foolish suitor to a wedded lady djmbeline, i. 7 

suitors should, plead your deserts. Tiius Andron. i. 1 
no heretics burned, but wenches' suitors. Leur, iii. 2 
suitors following, and not look behind. OWetVo, ii. 1 
aud neetls no other suitor but his likings — iii. 1 
I have been talking with a suitor here .. — iii. 3 

Sir I VEZ- VOUS le grand capitaine Uenrii V. iv. 4 

BULIjEN-peevisb, sullen, frow.ardT'u'oGpji.o^rfr. iii. 1 
to cope him in these sullen fits ..Asyou Likeil, ii. 1 
were rough, and coy, and sullen . Taming o/Sh. ii. 1 
froward, peevish, sullen, sour, and not — v. 2 
sullen presage of your own decay ....King John, i. 1 

thou canst with sullen sorrow Richard II. i. 3 

the sullen passai^e of thy weary steps — i. 3 

tliat age aud suUens have — ii. 1 

and jput on sullen black incontinent — v. C 

bright metal on a sullen ground ,..,\HcnryIV. i. 1 
Bounds ever after as a sullen bell ....2HenryIf'. i. I 

eyes fixed to the sullen earth iHenryVU i. 2 

old sullen playfellow for tender ..liichard III. iv. 1 
if thou wert not sullen, I'd be ..TimonofAlhem, i. 2 

lam sick, and sullen Antony ^-Cleoi>,ilra, i. 3 

mis-behaved and sullen wench .llomeo 4' Juliet, iii. 3 

solemn hymns to sullen dirges change — iv. 5 

a salt and sullen [Kji^.-sorry] rheum ..Othello, iii. 4 

Sl'LLIED-Talbot hath sullied ....\Henryl'I. iv. 4 

SULI.IKS on my son Hamlet, ii. 1 

SLTLLY-may not sully the chariness/V7eny)rioe»,ii. 1 
sully the purity and whiteness of. . IVinier'sTale, i. 2 
white canvas doublet will sully ....I Henry I y. ii. 4 

SULPHUR with a bolt Coriolanut,\. 3 

the gods throw stones of sulphiu: Cymbeb'ne, v. b 

burn like mines of sulphur Othello, iii. 3 

roustmeinsulphurl washmeinsteep-dowu — v. 2 

SULPHUROUS roaring Tempest, i. 2 

thy sharp and sulphurous bolt ..Meas.for Ateas, ii. 2 
his celestial breath was suliihurou8..rj^iM4ffiMff, v. 4 
thv nimble, thy sulphurous flashes! ..Pericles, iii. I 
sulpimrous and lliougbt-executing fires., f-eur, iii. 2 

there is the sulphurous pit, burning — iv.fi 

I to sulphurous and tormenting flames.. Hnm/e/, i. 
SUI/r.V.N— three fields of sultan.. A/cr.o/Ff nice, ii. 1 

SUI/i'RY— very sultry and hot (rep.) Hamlet, v. 2 

SUM— the sum and substance .. I'u'oGen.of Ver. iv. 1 
I will retort the sum in equipage. . Merry IVives,ii. 2 

or sums in sealed bags — iii, 3 

forgive that sum, and so we'll all — v. 5 

this is the sum of all: IvConato MuehAdn,i. I 

the gross sum of deuce ace LoveUL. Lost, i. 2 

on entire sum, disbursed by my father — ii. I 
(as neither have), received that sum.. — ii. 1 
for such a sum, from special ofticiirs. . — ii. I 
quando pecnsomne sum umbra ruminat — iv. 2 

to raise a present sum .Merchant o/l'enice, i. I 

'tis a good round sura — i. 3 

snch sum, or sums, as are expressed.. — i. 3 
had Ijcen the very sum of my confession — iii. 2 
tl-.e full sum of me is sum ot something — iii. 2 
than twenty times the value of the sum — iii. 2 

what sum owes he the .lew? — iii. 2 

yea, twici- the sum; if that will not .. — iv. 1 
givii;g thy sura of more to thot..../4» you /,i*ti7, ii. 1 

buckles ill his sum of uge — iii. :i (verses) 

wcll-wcigldng sums of gold ..AU'strell, iv. 3 (note) 
of greater sums than I have.. T'umijigo/S/ocK!, iii. 2 
to make up the sum, and ii\e..Comedyo/ lirror$, i. 1 
since Pentieost the smn is due . 

even just the sum, that I 

disburse the sum on the receipt . 
consent to pav this sum for me . 

what is the sum he owes? 

will pay the sum for him (rep.) . 

this IS the very sum of all 

the sums I have collected shall . 
subscribe them for large sums ., 
the 8unr*)f all is.— that the king 
for what sum? It is more than . 
what is the gross sum that I owe 
to give a greater sum tlian ever, 
liueli a mighty sum, as never ... 



— iv. I 

— iv. I 

— iv. 1 
.... — iv. 4 

— V. I 
.... King John, ii. 1 

— iv. 2 
....liichard n. i. i 
....•IHejiryiy. i. 1 



SUM— the sum is paid Henry V. il. (c)iorus) 

the sum of all our answer Is — ill. (t 

transporting a sum of money — Iv. 1 

receive the sum of money I Henry I' I. v. 1 

large smnsof gold, and dowries iHenryVI. i. I 

lay great smns of monev through .... — iii. 1 
comiterpiiiscd willi such a petly sum — iv. 1 

the sum of all I lan; I have Ilirlmrd II I. ii. \ 

the grand siun of his sins Henry y III. iii. 2 

little characters sum up Troilui ^- Crettida, i. 3 

will you with counters sum — ii. 2 

worth the sums that are given.. Timon of Alliens, i. 2 
besides my former smn, which makes it — ii. I 
rather than the worth of thrice the sum — iii. 3 

and it should seem by the sum — j!j' '* 

preferred you not your simis and bills — iii. 4 

cut my heart in sums — iii. I 

luito his steward a. mighty sum — v. 1 

heaps and sums of hive ainl wealth . . — v. 2 
for certain snmsol ^'ulil, wliieli yuu.yH/i'iuf'fl'.tnr, iv. 3 

'grates me: the sum Antony ^C'lroiiutra, i. 1 

parerl the sum of my disgraces — v. 2 

overhuya me iihnost tlic sum he pay s. Ci/mdWiVii-, i. 2 

have iningk'd sums, to buy — i. 7 

it sums up thousands in a trice — v. 4 

were the sum of lliese that I Tilui Andrnn. v. 3 

the sum of this, brought hither. Pcr/rics, iii. (Gower) 

1 cannot sum tip halt my sum .. Romeo ^Juliet, ii. a 
your sum of parts did not together ....Hamlet, iv. 7 
of love make ui) my sum — v. I 

SUMLESS treasuries Hetiry y. i. 2 

SU.MMA— laudis summa sit ista tiia;! .'illenryyi. i. 3 

SUMMARY of my fortune.. Wfre/i(m(o//'enic<?, iii. 2 

have the summary of all our griefs.. 2i/c»ri//A'. iv. I 

SUM.AIED the account of chance — i. I 

Sl/MMER-after summer, merrily. 7'«n;)fs(, v. 1 (song) 
ere summer comes, or cuckoo-birds. -l/errw Wives, ii.^l 

let summer bear it out Tteelith Aight,i.b 

since summer ftrst was leafy . . Much Ado, ii. 3 (song) 
as one shall see in a summer's day.. Mid. ri>'.*s Dr. i. 2 
never, since the middle summer's spring — ii. 2 

chaplet of sweet summer buds — ii. 2 

the spring, the summer, the childing — ii. 2 
the summer still doth tend upon my — iii. 1 
why should proud summer boast . . Love'sL.Lost, i. 1 

sweet roses in this summer air — v. 2 

maidens bleach their summer smocks — v. 2 (song) 
to show how costly summer was.-Ver. of Venice, ii. U 
by the same winter and summer as .. — iii. 1 
the mending of highways in summer — v. I 

the time will bring on summer All'slVell, iv. 4 

thiscoming summer, the kin^; of.. iyintt'r\iTale, i. 1 
are summer songs for me ana my — iv. 2 (song) 
not yet on summer's deatli, nor on .. — iv. 3 
these are flowers of middle summer .. — iv. 3 
blow away, so many summers, dry . . — v. 3 
five summers have I spent in. . Comedy of Errors, i, 1 

this guest of summer, tlie temple Macbeth, i. 6 

like a summer's cloud, without our — iii. 4 

there is so hot a summer in my King John, v. 7 

bis summer leaves all faded Richard II, i. 2 

till twice five summers liave enriched — i. 3 

thinking on fantastic summer's heat — i- 3 

lay the summer's dust with showers .. — iii. 3 

shall lodge the summer corn — iii. 3 

farewell, all-hallown summerl iHenrylV. i. 2 

fair queen in a summer's bower .... — iii. I 

shadow will serve for summer iHenrylV. iii. 2 

thou art a summer bird, which ever in — iv. 4 

as clear as is the summer's sun Henry I', i. 2 

make boot upon the summer's velvet — ..?• *^ 
as you shall see in a summer's day .. — iii. 
as you shall desire in a summer's day — iv. 8 

to time, and a iiot summer — v. 2 

expect saint Martin's summer MlenryVl.i. 2 

summer's parching heat, to conquer.. 2HenryJ'/.i. 1 
and. after summer, ever more succeeds — ii. 4 
like to the summer's corn by tempest — iii. 2 
that thy summer bred us no inciease.3Henry r/.ii- 2 

swarm like summer flies (rE/).) — ii. 6 

all afoot in summer's scalding heat .. — v. 7 
made glorious summer by this sun . . liichard III. i. I 
short summers lightly have a forward — iii. 1 
which, in their summer beauty, kissed — iv. 3 
that spoiled your summer Helds .... — v. 2 
many summers in a sea of glory .. llenryl'III. iii. 2 
sweet as summer; and though lie were — iv. 2 
mealy wings, but to the summer. Troihu i Cress, iii. 3 
the swallow follows not summer. 7Vm/)ii o/Alh. iii. 6 
boys pursuing summer butterflies ..Coriolamit, iy. B 
'twas on a summer's evening ..,,JuliuxC{rsar, ijj. 2 

if it be summer news, smile to't Cymbcline, iii. 4 

with fairest flowers, whilst summer lasts — iv. 2 
but to be still hot summer's tanlinps — iv. 4 
trees, though summer, yet forlorn. TitnsAndron.u. 3 
in summer's drought, I'll drop upon — iii. 1 

bees in hottest summer's day — v. 1 

this goodly summer with your winter — v. 2 
summers younger [ Kiif -hunger's savour] /'fricfci, i.4 
as a fair day in summer; wondrous.... — ii- 5 

while summer days do lost — iv. I 

let two more summers wither.... /fomcn.SJii/iX, i. 2 
Verona's summer hath not such a flower — i. 3 
bud of love, by suinmer's ripening breath — ii. 2 

irllc in the wanton summer air — ii. G 

SlTMAIi:i;-l'.nil)S are men .... Timonor.ltheni. iii. 
SliMMCi;- 1 1.1 i;s have blown me..l.<irf'j;- Lost, v. 2 
SI .\l.Mi;U-(, l: ASS, fastest hv night . . . . (l'->rit/ /'. i. 1 
SlMMi;i;-H' M Si; in Chrisiendom..i;/<'iii!/;/'. iii. 1 
Si'M M 1:11 -Si;!-; 1)1. \(i 1 (■<,/.K■■l^-seenling]..l^lrt. iv. 3 
.S I : ,M .\I 10 1 :-S W 101 ,1 , 1 .\ ( ; Ihiwer. I'lroflrn. of ler. ii. 4 
SI AIM I I' -ih.ud Mjiiiiiiit of this chalky ..I.ear.iv. 6 
or t.i llie diciidful summit uf the cliff ..HamUt,i. 4 
fix.d on tlic summit of the highest mount — iii. 3 

SUM.MON— answer your suimnoiis 7VinpM/, iv. I 

nmdani, summon u]) your dearest. /.orr'»/-. /.oil, Ii. I 
and summon him to marriage ..Mer.rtri'rniee, iil. 2 
prepare you, lords; summon a session, "inltr 1 7". ii.3 

a heavy summons lies like lend Macbeth, ii. 1 

tluit suminuns thee to heaven — ii. > 



SUMMON— black Tlecatc's mimmonB. .Maebeth, Iii. » 

some trumpet summon hither King John, 11. I 

what lusty trumpet thus ilotli summon us? — v. 2 
but the summons of the appellant's.. /o'i7iiir</ /;. i. 3 
the sinews, summon up the blood.... //pnri/>'. iii. I 
summon a parley, we will talk ...iHenryVI. iii. 3 
trumpeter, summon their general.... — iv. 2 
Bunimon your grace to his majesty's.2/l.'iir|/I'/. ii. 4 
knock once more, to summon ii\en\.'iHenryyt. iv. 7 
and summon him to-morrow ....Riclmrd III. iii. I 
to make this present summons ....HenryVllI. ii. 4 

sninmon the town. How far off Coriolanut, i. 4 

why you answer this present summons ..Lear, v. 3 
a guilty thing upon a fearful summons.. //ni/i(r(, i. I 
is the reason of this terrible summons?. . (tthcUo, i. 1 
how these instruments summon to suppcrl — Iv. 2 

SUMMONED me hither T.mpest. iv. 1 

and a.c summoned to meet anon Corinlanm, ii.3 

they summoned up their meiny /.car, ii. 4 

SUM.MONERS— these dreadful sunimoners — iii. 2 

SUJIPTER— and sumptcr to this detested — ii. 4 

SUMPTUOUS showed like a feast ..i Henry IV. iii. 2 

with a large and sumptuous dowry..! Henry I' I. v. 1 

thy sumptuous buildings, and thy ..'iHenryVI. i. 3 

is niv apparel sumptuous to behold? — iv. 7 

SUMl'TUi lUSLY re-ediflcd ..Titus Andronicua, i. 2 

SUN— iinlLSS tlie sun were post Tempest, ii. I 

tlie iiilceti'iiis that the sun sucks — ii. 2 

tlie sun « ill set, before — iii. 1 

bedimmed the noon-tide sun — v. 1 

shows all the beauty of the sun./'iioGcn.o/'/Vr. i. 3 

now I worship a celestial sun — ii. 6 

the sun begins to gild — v. 1 

then did tlie sun on dunghill si\ine. Mrrry ll'ives, i. 3 

suspect the sun with cold — iv. 4 

have I laid my brain in the sun .... — v. 5 

and the knitters in the sun Tve(/th Kighl, ii. 4 

he has been yonder i' the sun — ii. 5 

about the orl>, like the sun — iii. I 

that is the glorious sun — iv. 3 

lying by the violet, in the sun ..Meas.forMeas. ii. 2 

ere twice the sun hath made — iv. 3 

ripened by tlie sun, forbid the sun ..MurhAdo, iii. I 

the sun was not so true Mid. t\.'sDream, iii. 2 

from the presence of tlie sun — v. 2 

is like the heaven's glorious sun ..Loi'e'sL.Lost,i. i 
the golden sun gives not to those .. — iv. 3(ver.) 
then thou, fair sun, which on my.. — iv. 3 (ver.) 

but then no sun must shine — iv. 3 

O 'tis the sun, tliat maketli all — iv. 3 

that you get the sun of them — iv. 3 

livery of the burnisiied eun.. Merchant of Venice, ii. 1 
as tlie day is when the sun is hid .... — v. I 
if you would walk in absence of the sun — v. I 
and loves to live i' the 8un../)»!/ouLi7iei7, ii. 5(song) 
him down and basked him in the sun — ii. 7 

of the night is lack of the sun — iii. 2 

I adore the sun, that looks upon his ..All'slVell, i. 3 
ere twice the horses of the sun shall .. — ii. I 

until the sun be set Taming of Shrew, 2 (indue.) 

an(l as the sun breaks through — iv. 3 

this gallant will command the sun .. — iv. 3 

the moon! the sun; it is not — iv. .'i 

I know, it is the sun that shines .... — iv. ^ 

and be it moon, or sun, or what — iv. 5 

blessed sun. Then God be blessed (rep.) — iv. h 
have been so bedazzled with the sun — iv. 3 
lambs, that did frisk i' the sun.... Winter'sTale^ i. 2 
and a.s many of raisins o* the sun .... — iv. 2 

that goes to bed with the sun — iv. 3 

the self-same sun, that shines upon.. — iv. 3 

for all the sun sees, or the close — iv. 3 

the sun looking with a southward .. — iv. 3 
tliat e'er the sun shone bright on .... — v. I 
likewise with the evening ^un. Comedy 0/ Errors, i. I 

at length the sun, gazing upon — i. I 

ere the weary sun set in the west ... , — i. 2 

when the sun shines, let foolish — ii. 2 

your beams, fair sun, being by — iii. 2 

that will be ere set of sun Macbeth, i. 1 

as whence the sun 'gins his reflection.. — i. 2 

never shall sun that morrow see I — i. S 

I 'gi n to be a-weary of the sun — v. 4 

shall have no sun to ripe the bloom.. Ki'ii^yoAii, ii. 2 

becomes a sun, and makes your — ii. 2 

the glorious sun stays in his course.. — iii. 1 

the sun's o'ercast with blood — iii. 1 

the sun is in the heaven — iii. 3 

feeble, and day wearied sun — v. 4 

the sun of heaven, methought — \. h 

the sun, that warms you here Richatd II. i. 3 

the setting sun, and music at the close — ii. 1 
thy sun sets weeping in the lowly.... — ii. 4 

discontented sun from out — iii. S 

by that fair sun that shows — iv. I 

treacherous ear from sun to sun .... — iv. 1 
standing before the sun (ifBolingliryke — iv. I 

that like the sun, did make — iv. I 

and the blessed sun himself a fair . . I HenrylV. i. 1 

herein will I imitate tlie sun — i. 2 

[Cnl. KnI.} at the sw eet talc of the sun? — ii. 4 
shall the blessed sun of heaven prove — ji. 4 
ond gorgeous as the sun at Midsummer — iv. 1 

worse than the sun in tiarcli — iv. I 

how bloodily the sun livgins to peer.. — v. I 

ns the sun in the grey vault •illenrylV. ii. 3 

clear as is the smminr's sun Henry V. i. 2 

crowned with the golden sun — il. 4 

OS in despite, the sun looks pole .... — . iii. .'> 

are those stars, or suns upon it? — iii. 7 

like the sun. his libcrol eye — iv. (chorus) 

to turn the sun to ice — iv. I 

the sun doth gild our armour — iv. 2 

the sun is high, and we outwear — iv. 2 

for there the sun shall greet — Iv. 3 

is the sun and nKxin; or rother, the sun — v. 2 

than mid-day sun, fierce lient llrnryFU.i 

and to sun's parching heat — i. 2 

the sun with one eye viewclh — i. 4 

OS idays the suu U|wn the gloMy .... — v. :i 



SUN— may never Rlorioiis sun reflex..! Hivirt/T/. v. ) 
tlicm happy, timt enjoy the snuV ..iHini i/l'l. ii. 4 

melts with the sun's hot bennis — iii. 1 

like to tlie glorious sun's transparent — iii 1 

like the sun 'gainst gloss — iii- 2 

advance with our halt-faced sun — iv. I 

her farewell of the glorious sun I.... 3 Htnrj/r/. ii. 1 
three suns? Three glorious siuis {rep.) — ii. 1 

one lamp, one light, one sun — ii- 1 

npon my target three fair shining suns — ii. 1 
tin ik'^cent by gazing 'gainst the sun — ii. 1 

and Eilward's sun is clouded — ii- 3 

tile i!iin:s, iiut to thesun? — .ii. 6 

fruit maintained with beauty's suu — iii- 3 

when the morning sun shall raise ,, — iv. 7 

the sun shines hot — iv. 8 

as piercing as the mid-day sun — v. 2 

t!ie sun, that seared the wings — v. 6 

glorious suninier hy this flLin of ....fticharJ HI. i. 1 

to spv my sliadow in tl\e sun — i. I 

all the world ischeereil by the sun .. — i. 2 

shine out, fair sun, till I have — J. 2 

and scorns the sun. And turns the sun — i. 3 

when the sun sets, who doth not — ii. 3 

the weary sun hath made a golden set — v. 3 
who saw the sun to-day? Not I .... — v. 3 

the sun will not be seen to-day — v. 3 

tliose suns of glory, those two ilennjl'lll. i. 1 

when these suns (for so they phrase — i. 1 

the rays of the beneficial sun — i. 1 

by darkening my clear sun — i. ) 

so many courses of the sun enthroned — ii. 3 
as sun, and showers, there had .. — iii. 1 (song) 

no sun shall ever usher forth — iii. 2 

tluit sun, I pray, may never set! .... — iii. 2 
thousand beams upon me, like the sun? — iv. 2 
wherever the bright sun of heaven .. — y. 4 
the sun doth liglit the storm.. Troilus^Cressida, i. 1 

before the sun rose, he was — i. 2 

better parch in Afric sun — i. 3 

by the first hour of the sun — ii. 1 

as sun to day, as turtle to — iii. 2 

a gate of steel fronting the sun — iii. 3 

wlien we si t idly in the sun — i ii . 3 

a thousand complete courses of tlie sun I — iv. 1 

the sun borrows of the moon — V. 1 

in mass by the almighty sun — v. 2 

how the sun begins to set — v. 

the vail and darkening of the sun .. — v. 9 
doors against a setting sun .... Timon of Athens, i. 2 
a prodigal course is like the sun's . . — iii. 4 
O blessed breeding sun, draw from .. — iv. 3 

tliere were no suns to borrow of — iv. 3 

the sun's a thief, and with his great.. — iv. 3 

fire she snatches from the sun — iv. 3 

thou sun, that eomfort'st, burni .... — v. 2 

sun, hide thy beamsl — v. 2 

upon the ice, or hailstone in the sna.Coi-iolanus, i, 1 

seratcli my head i* the sun — ii. 2 

the proud cedars 'gainst the fiery sun — v. 3 

as I know tlie sun is fire .' — v. 4 

shouting Romans, make the sun dance — y. 4 
as 1 point my sword, the sun arlsftsJidiusCi^sar, ii. 1 
O setting sun! as in thy red rays .... — v. 3 

the sun of Rome is set! — v. 3 

by the operation of your suu ..,, Antony ^Cleo, ii. 7 

before the sun shall see us — iv. 8 

U sun, thy uprise shall I see no — iv. 10 

O thou sun, l)urn the great sphere .. — iv. 13 

therein stuck a sun, and moon — v. 2 

behold the sun with as firm eyes .... Cymlietiiie, i. 5 
to hide me from tlie radiant sun .... — i. 7 

if Cresar can hide the sun from us .. — iii. 1 
one score, 'twixt sun and sun, madam — iii. 2 

■without good-morrow to the sun — iii. 3 

hath Britain all the sun that shines? — iii. 4 
fear no more the heat o' the sun .. — iv. 2 (song) 

by this sun that shines — iv. 4 

to look upon the holy sun — iv. 4 

and in the beams o' the sun so vanished — v. 5 
as when tl>e golden sun salutes.... Titus Andron. i. 2 

lies rolling in the cheerful sun — ii. 3 

liere never shines tlie sun — ii. 3 

Bweet tidings of the sun's uprise? .... — iii- 1 

and stain the sun with fog — iii. 1 

is the sun dimmed, that gnats — iv. 4 

more sons than one? ()c;j.) — v- 3 

black jEthiop, reaching at the sun rericles,\\. 2 

and he the euu, for tltem to reverence.. — ii. 3 

to scatter his crowns in the sun — iv. 3 

the sun and moon ne'er loolced upon!.. — iv. 4 

by the sacred radiance of the sun Lear^ i. I 

these late eclipses in the sun and moon.. — i. 2 

the sun, the moon, and the stars — i. 2 

benediction comest to the warm sun 1 .... — ii. 2 

drawn by tlie powerful sun, to fall — ii. 4 

■were all the letters suns, I could not see — iv. 6 
liour before the worshipped sun . . limneo ^ Juliet, i. 1 
so soon as the all-cheering suu should — i. 1 
or dedicate his beauty to the sun .... — i. 1 
the all-seeing sun ne'er saw her match — i. 2 
sittiii" in the sun under the dove-house — i. 3 
and Juliet is the sun! arise, fair sun — ii. 2 

now ere the sun advance his — ii.3 

the Bun not yet thy sighs from heaven — ii. 3 

faster glide than the sun's beams — ii. 6 

now is the sun upon the highmost hill — ii. b 
that hath lain asleep in the sun .... ^ iii. 1 
and pay no worship to the garisli sua — iii. 2 
some meteor that the sun exhales . . — iii. 5 
when the sun sets, the air dotli drizzle — iii. 5 
the sun, for sorrow, will not show .. — v. 3 

dews of blood, disasters in tiie sun Nnmlei, i. I 

doubt, that the sun doth move . . — ii. 2 (letter"! 
for if the sun breed maggots in a dead .. — ii. 2 

let her not walk i' the sun — ii. 2 

so many journeys may the sun and moon — iii. 2 
sun no sooner shall the mountains touch — iv. 1 
so would I ha' done, by yonder sun — iv. 5 (song) 
other things grow fair against the sun .. 0(/id/o, ii. 3 



SUN— the sun, where he was born 0(/ic/;o-,iii. 4 

numbered in tlie world the sun tomaketwo— iii. 4 

a hu^'c eclipse iif sun and moon — v. 2 

SUNBEAJI-in the sunbeams Ci/mhe/iuc, iv. 2 

SUNCKAiMEDeves <_rep.) Lore's L. Lost. v. 2 

SUN-BKIGlITeye Two Gen.ori-erona.iu. 1 

SUN-BUKNEDsicklemen' .Tempest, \v. 1 

and I am siui-burned Much Ado, ii. I 

Grecian dames are sun-burned . . Troilus <S- Cress, i. 3 
SUN-BUltNING-notworthsun-buining.W<'».Kv.2 
SUiS'DAY— and sigh away Sundays. . ..il/«e/i^ do, i. 1 
Sunday is the wediliug-day (rep.).TumiiisuJSh.\\. 1 
I will to Venice; Sunday comes apace — ii. 1 
Kate, we will be married o' Sunday — ii. 1 

Sunday next, you know, my daughter — ii. 1 

now, on the Sunday following — ii. ! 

guards, and Sunday citizens MJenrxjlV.in. 1 

as Helen is on Sunday Troilus ff Crcssida, i. 1 

not divide the Sunday from the week ..Humlel,i. 1 

we may call it herb of grace o' Sundays.. — iv. 5 

SUNDER-did these lovers sunder. ■il/Vf/.A'.'.iO;-. v. 1 

sunder such sweet friends .Mer. of I'eiiice, iii. 2 

foes, do sunder, and not kiss All's ll'eU, ii. 5 

my teeth, my IJonds in sunderComedi; nf Errors, v. ! 
as a splitted bark, so sunder we ....'MienryV I. iii. 2 

tlie sea that sunders him ZUenryVI. iii. 2 

to sunder them that yoke so well — iv. 1 

shall sunder our two hates ..Troilus ^Crcssida, v. 11 
sunder his that was thine enemy?.. /io;«eo ^-Jut. v. 3 

SUNDERED? shall we part As youLike if, i. 3 

that sundered friends greet in 1 Ihnry I' I. iv. 3 

long sundered fiiends should dwell. /f/c/iajrf IIL v. 3 
SU i\ DRY eon templations of my . . As you Like it, iy. 1 

for sundry weighty reasons Macbeth, iii. 1 

I'uore sundry ways than ever — iv. 3 

sundrv blessings hang about his throne — iv. 3 
SUN-EXPELLING mask away.7'«.oGen. offer, iv. 4 
SUNG— at her window sung . . . . Mid. N.'sDream, i. 1 

to be sung by an Athenian — v. I 

indeed, and sung lamentably .... H'inter'sTale, iv. 3 

and sung this ballad against — iv. 3 

he sung, in rude harsh- sounding.. ..A'mg-JoAn, iv. 2 

even now he sung , — v. 7 

and sung to filthy tunes 1 Henry IV.ii. 2 

sung by a fair queen in — iii. 1 

sung those tunes to the over-scutched. 2 He7irT//r.iii. 2 

let there be sung Non nobis Henry I', iv. 8 

that nothing sung but death iUenryl'I. ii. 6 

in dismal discords sung — v. 6 

together sung Te deum Henry VIII. iy. 1 

it sung sweet varied notes ,, Titus Andronicus, iii. 1 

sung thee asleep — v. 3 

to sing a song of old was sung ..Pericles, i. (Gower) 

it hath been sung at festivals — i. (Gower) 

or when to the lute she sung .... — iv. (Gower) 

and I for sorrow sung Lear, i. 4 (song) 

SUNK— I would have sunk the sea Tempest, 'i. 2 

and sunk, on Goodwin sauds King John, v. h 

a Grecian's life hath sunk . . Troilus ^-Cressida, iv. 1 

SUNKEN-a blue eye, and sunken. /l.s- youLike it, iii. 2 

sunken wreck, and sumless treasuries.. He/iry r. i, 2 

SUN- LIKE majesty 1 Henry 1 1', iii. 2 

SUNNY— for thy sunny beama. . Mid. N.'s Dream, v. 1 

her sunny locks hang on her Mcr. of Venice, i. 1 

a sunny look of his would .... Comedy of Errors, ii. 1 
SUN-RISE— there ere eun-rise , . Meas. for Meas. ii. 2 
SUN-RISING— before f-un-rising ..Riclmrd 111. v. 3 

SUNSET, set armed discord King John, iii. 1 

ere sunset, I'll make thee curse . . . .3 Henry I' L ii. 2 
sunset of my brother's son .... Romeo ^ Juliet, iii. 5 

SUNSHINE of your face Love's L. Lost, y. 2 

many years of sunshine daysl Richard 11. iv. I 

thou may'st see a sunshine and a hail. All's Well, v. 3 

in the sunshine of his favour 2HenrylV.\v. 2 

he live to see a sunshine day ZHenryVl. ii. 1 

then that sunshine brewed a shower — ii. 2 

when we saw our sunshine made — ii. 2 

you have seen sunshine and rain at once. /-ear, iv. 3 

SUP— dine, sup, and sleep TwoGen. of I'er. p. 4 

I am fain to dine and sup with. Mens. /07- Meas. iv. 3 
in's belly than will sup a flea .... Love'sL.Lost, v. 2 
the Jew to sup to-night with my. Mer. ofVenice, ii- 4 

but sup tliem well Taming of Shrew, 1 (indue.) 

and there they intend to sup? JVinter'sTale, v. 2 

in Eastcheap; there I'll sup IHeriry/F. i. 2 

will you sup with me ; 2Hen7-j//r. ii. 1 

wheresupshe? — ii. 2 

sup any women witl\ him? — ii. 2 

to sup with me to-morrow ni^lit ....2HenryVl. i. 4 
for you shall sup with Jesu Christ .. — v. 1 

you 11 surelj' sup in hell '. — y. 1 

come, let us sup betimes Richardlll.Wi. 1 

I will not sup to-night — v. 3 

wliere sups he to-night? Troilus <§■ Cress, iii. 1 

you must not know where he sups .. — iii. 1 

you'll sup with me? Coriolanus, iv. 2 

will you sup with me to-night ....JuliusCcvsar, i. 2 

we all would sup together Antony ^-Cteo. iv. 8 

Capulet's sups the fair Rosaline. /iojneo ,§■ Juliet, i. 2 

will you sup there? Othello, iv. 1 

I do entreat that we may sup together .. — iv. 1 

he sup^ to-night with a harlot — iv. 2 

SUPER-DAINTY Kate Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 

SUPERFICIAL, Ignorant .MeasureforMeasitre, iii. 2 

this superficial tale is but a preface..! Henry f^ I. v. 5 

SUPERFICIALLY; not mucli unlike. 7V.,S- Cress. ii. 2 

'faith, sir, superficially — iii. 1 

SUPERFLUITY conies sooner. . ..Mer. ofVenice, i. 2 

as, one for superfluity 2 Henry IV. ii. 2 

would yield us but the superfluity . . Coriolanus, i. 1 
means to vent our musty superfluity — i. 1 

SUPERFLUOUS leisure; my stay.^/cas../br;i/cMs.iii.l 
that superfluous ease, that hid.... i.oue'sL.Z-r,s/, v. 2 
wisdom waiting on supei-fluous folly .. Alt's ff'elt, i. 1 
abuTulitnce of superfluous breatli? ..KingJohn, ii. 1 
was once superfluous; you were crowned — }y. 2 
superfluous branches we lop away ..Richard II. iii. 4 
shouldst be superfluous to demand ..\ Henry IV. i. 2 
it were superfluous; for his apparel. 2 Henri// r. iii. 2 
dout them with supei-fluous courage., f/enn/f. iv. 2 



SUPERFLUOUS laciiueys and our.. .. f/«ir,v7'. iv. 2 
purchased at a superfluous rate!.... //enrj/ /'///. i. 1 
Buperflnous kings for messengers. /J w/ojij/ «S-6Veo.iii.lO 
with their superfluous riots, near these.. /^enc/es, i. 4 
to say you are welcome, were superfluous — ii. 3 

in the poorest thing supeitluous Lear, ii. 4 

let the superfluous, and lust-dieted man — iv. 1 

gives me superfluous death! Hamlet, \v. 5 

SUPERFLUOUSLY; and 'twere more. //ejiri//'. iii. 7 
SUPERFLUX— shake the superflux to ..Lear, iii. 4 
SUPICRIOR— sick of his superior. . Troilus ^ Cress, i. 3 

SUPERNALindge, that stirs KingJohn, ii- 1 

SUPERNATURAL and causeless ....All's Well, ii. 3 

supernatural soliciting cannot be ill ..Macbeth, i. 3 

SUPERPRAISE my parts, when ..Mid.N.'s Dr. iii. 2 

SUPERSCRIPT-tb the snow ....Love'sL.Lost, iv. 2 

SUPERSCRIPTION pretend 1 Henry II. i v. 1 

read me the superscription of these. Timon ofAth. ii. 2 

SUPERSERVICEABLE, finical Lear, ii. 2 

SUPERSTITION, that I iiaee\....Winter'sTale, y. 3 

that's your superstition Pericles, iii, 1 

SUPERSTITIOUS idle-headed eld. ;i/erri/ (r/,.e», iv. 4 
of fondness, superstitious to him?. .Henry VI II. iii. I 
dreaming, superstitious girl .... Troilus Sf Cress, v. 3 
he is superstitious grown of late ..Julius Caesar, ii. 1 
SUPERSTITIOUSLY, I will be.. Winier'sTale, iii. 3 
superstitiously doth swear to the sods., I'ericles, iv. 4 

SUPERSUBTLE Venetian Othello, i. 3 

SU PERVISE the canzonet Love's L. Lost, i v. 2 

that, on the supervise, no leisure bated .Hamlet, v. 2 
SUPERVISOR, ICol. /fn/.-supervision]. . Othello, iii. 3 

SUPPED— he has almost supped Macbeth, i. 7 

I have snipped full with horrors — v. 5 

the room where they supped is 1 HenrylV. ii. 4 

when we have supped, we'll Cymbeline, iii. 6 

go know of Cassio where he supped .... Othello, v. 1 

he supped at my house — v- 1 

SUPPE K— as she sits at supper?- Two Gen. of Ver.ii. 1 
wait upon your grace till after supper — iii. 2 

I will not fail him at sujiper Mitch Ado, i. 1 

I came yonder from a great supper . . — i. 3 

let us to the great supper — i. 3 

wasnot count John here at supper?.. — ii. I 
the fool will eat no supper that night — ii. 1 

which is called supper Love's L. Lost, i. 1 (letter) 

supper be ready at the farthest ..Mer. ofVenice, ii. 2 
soon at supper slialt thou see Lorenzo — ii. 3 
I am bid forth to supper, Jessica .... — ii. 5 
dinners, and suppers, and sleeping ^s7/owLifcei7, iii. 2 
supper ready, the house trimmed. Taming ofSh. iv. 1 

go, and fetch my supper in — iv. ! 

to be brought by you to the supper .. — iv. 4 

we hold a solemn supper,sir Macbeth, i'li. 1 

the time, 'twixt this and supper — iii. 1 

draws towards supper in conclusion . . KingJohn, i. 1 

come home with me to supper Richard II. iv. I 

unbuttoning thee after supper \Henry IV. i. 2 

bespoke supper to-morrow night .... — i. 2 
will tell us, when we meet at supper — _i. 2 

company, last night at supper — ii. I 

sack after supper, 2s. 6rf ... — ii. 4 

I hope, you'll come to supper 2 Henry IV.'n. 1 

Doll T'earsheet meet you at supper?.. — ii. 1 
we steal upon them, Ned, at supper. . — ii. 2 
made after supper of a cheese-jiaring — iii. 2 
I have drunk too much sack at supper — v. 3 
our simple supper ended, give me ..iHenry VI. ii. 2 
make a bloody supper in the Tower.. ."1 Henry VI. v. 5 

as we did sit at supper Diehard III. ii. 4 

and supper too, although thou know'st — iii. 2 

Ty rrel , soon at after supper — iv. 3 

this night he makes a supper Henry VIII. i. 3 

if the king call for him at supper. Tro (7. <5 Cress, iii. 1 
come agaiu to supper to him. . Timon of Athens, iii. 1 
I shall, between tliis and supper . . Coriolanus, iv. 3 

and yesternight, at supper JuliusCresar, ii. 1 

invited her to supper Antony /j Cleopatra,\i. 2 

let's to supper; come, and drown .... — iv. 2 

we'll go to supper i' the morning Lenr, iii. 6 

to supper; to our house RomeoSfJuliet.i.'i 

supper served up, you called — i. 3 

supper is done, and ■v^'e shall come .. — i. 4 

she will indite him to some supper .. — ii. 4 

at supper. At supper? Where? JJamW, iv. 3 

being full of supper, and distempering . . Othello, i. 1 

shall't be tonight at supper? — iii. 3 

an' you'll come to supper to-night — iv. 1 

how these instruments summon to supper! — iv. 2 
SUPPER-TIME— ere supper-time .... Tempest, iii. I 
we will visit you at supper-time. jl/er.o//'etiife, ii. 2 
we will slink away in supper-time . . — ii. 4 
and 'twill be supper-time .... Taming of Shrew, iv. 3 
a hundred crowns since supper-time.. — v. 2 
at supper-time I'll visit you.. Comedy of Errors, iii. 2 
we will keep ourself till supper-time.. J!/acte//i, iii. 1 
now it is supper-time in Orleans .... I Henry VI. i. 4 
it's supper-time, my lord; it's nine. /?/c/iard ///. v. 3 

it is now high supper-time Othello, iv. 2 

SUPPING-thou me of supping? Comedy of Err. iv. 3 

SUPPLANT your brother Prospero Tempest, ii. ) 

I will supplant some of your teeth .... — iii. 2 

you did supplant good Prospero — iii. 3 

we must supplant those rough Richard II. ii. 1 

if better reasons can supplant 2 Henry VI, iii. 1 

and so supplant us for ingratitude. 7'>Viis.4n</ro>i. i. 2 
SUPPLE— tribute of hissupple Vn^e.. Richard II. i. 4 

I'll make him supple Troilus ^-Cressida, ii. 3 

for supple knees feed arrogance — iii. 3 

and starve your supple joints! . . Timon of Athens, i. 1 
liaving been supple and courteous .. Coriolanus, ii. 2 
deprived of supple government.. Itomco ^Juliet, iv. I 
SUPPLER— that are of suppler joints.. Tempest, iii. 3 
we liave suppler souls than in our . . Coriolanus, v. I 

SI I PPLIANCE of a minute Hamlet, i. 3 

SUPPLIANT— was suppliant.. TK-oGfii. of Ver. iii. 1 
and speech of the poor suppliant ....Atmwell, v. 3 
what shrill-voiced suppliant makes. Ilichard II. v. 3 

what a humble suppliant lord Richard lU.i. I 

scaudaled the suppliants for Coriolanus, iii. 1 

make it like a humble supT)lia.nt.Tilus Andron. iv. 3 



SUP 



SUPPLICATIONS ill the quill •iHentyyi. i. 3 

lire jour suiiplioaruins to hia lordnhip? — i. 3 

your f;ii\cc to the rebels' ijupplicutiun? — Iv. 4 

tthotilil ill siipplirntioii nod Coriolanusy v. 3 

llclivurttsiippUeiitioil? (,rrn.1 . . . . Tilus Andron. iv. 3 

SIU'PLIE p.iiir I'umourrie Dieii Henry!', iv. i 

jo voiis siipplie, inoti tr^s pui:>tfunt.. .. — v. 2 

SUPPLlKD-me all fiipplinl /•./•c/ffA \iVA(. i. 1 

whicli iiiiiy lie hctler siippliccl As!/riuUketl,i. 2 

Kernes mid Giillin\>.'Iiisscs ie supplied. .-WacAf/A, i. 2 
by tliv yoimner broilier i>< supplied U/fiiri///'. iii. 2 

iiliiisliouses, rinlit well Mipnlieil Ihnrijl'. i. 1 

how well supplied witli iiiilile eoimsellors — ii. 4 
justiee siipiHieil with wortliN- nien.'.<'.<i*o/<iiit(.<, iii. 3 
I beiiij? nhseiit, iiuil luy phu-o i\iwVwA..(tlUrUn, iii. .1 
8111110 mistress, conviueod nr .-iui'iilicd them — iv. I 
Siri'PLli:S-iiiid new supplies oiiueu ..M,i,Mh, i. i 

mid mir supplies live lar^'ely in 2Heiinjn: i. 3 

'ue ha\e supplies to second our attempt — iv. 2 
tis ilnir fresh supplies. It is a day.. CyiMiii', v. i 

Si'l'l'LlKST me with the least Uthelh, iv. 2 

SU I'l'lA'-cnr uhseiiee to sup|dy..;Wraj./or Meaa. i. 1 
1 pr'vthee, supply me with tlie habit — i. 4 

(lid s'lipply thee lit tliy s,'milen-house — v. 1 
yet, to supply the ripe wnuts ot'...\tet\o/ Fenlce^ i. 3 
supply your present wants, and take. — i. 3 
to supplv the plaees at the table.. V'umiHj'ii/'S/i. iii. 2 
you shall supply the bridegroom's place — iii. 2 

"tor the great supply, that was King John, v. 3 

your supply, which you liave wished — v. 5 
send them after to supply our wants. fiiWiarrf // i. 4 
looks he not for supply? So do we. . 1 lieiinjW. iv. 3 
eating the air on promise of supply.. 2 Henri//*', i. 3 
for tlie which supply, admit mcZ/enri/K. i. (elionis) 
craveth supply and liardly keeps his.l Hewiyr/. i. I 
my promised "supply of liorseiucn .... — iv. 3 

let this supply the room iHenryl'l. ii. 

shall follow with a fresh supply — iii. 3 

hidy, and supply his place — iv. 6 

hut Hull supply immediate .... Tinwnnf Alliens, ii. 1 
to use them toward a supply of money — ii. 2 
to entreat your honour to supply.. .. — iii. I 

to supply his instant use with — ' iii. 2 

nor has lie with him to supply his life — iv. 2 

he will supply us easily — iv. 3 

with asnpplv of Roman frentlemeu.Ci/inicime, iv. 3 
supply the place for your labour. . Lear, iv. (letter) 
for the supply and profit of our hope .. Hamlet, ii. 2 

fu|iply it «itli one gender of herbs (jthellu, \. 3 

SUI'I'I A'.VNT— must be supply an t..C't/mfcc//Htr, iii. 7 
SU i'l'l . Y 1 .\i i every stage with . . Aulnay 4 Cieo. iii. 6 
SUl^l'lA'.MENX— nor supplyment ..Ci/aiheline, iii. 4 

SUPPORT him by the arm A-y,mL'k,-ii, ii. 7 

with age, cannot support mj'self liichurd II. ii. 2 

to support so dissolute a crew — v. 3 

unable to support this lump of clay. 1 Henry I'l. ii. 5 
annual support, out of his grace .. Henry f'UI. ii. 3 

luit to support him after TimonofAihens, i. I 

edicts for usury, to support usurers.. Coriolnnus, \. 1 

support the worships of^ their name Lear, i. 4 

darest thou support a published traitor? — iv. 6 
alack, too weaK the conllict to supjjorti . . — v. 3 

1 a lieavv interim shall support Olhello,\. ^ 

SUPPOKTANCE of his voiv .... Tu-elflliNighi, iii. 4 
some siipportance to the bending .. Uichard //. iii. 4 

SUPPOKTEI) his estate Timon of Alliens, iii. 2 

SUPPOllTKR of a bench luetfth.Mghl, i. S 

and good supporters are you Mean, for Meas. v. 1 

that no supporter but the huge firm. Ains- Jo/01, iii. 1 

SUPP01lTi;SG robbers JuliusVmar, iv. 3 

SUPPOSALofour worth Hainlel, i. 2 

SUPPOSE— they suppose is drowned .. Teinpes', iii. 3 

and 80, suppose, am I TwoGen.oi I'tmaa, iv. 2 

yet I suppose him virtuous Tn-el/ih ^ighi, i. 5 

and he supposes me travelled to. . Meas./ur Meis. i. 4 

siuce, I suppose, we are made to — ii. 4 

and do suppose, what hath been All's ll'ell, i. I 

that he shall suppose no other — iii. 6 

whom he supposes to be a friar — iv. 3 

counterfeit supposes bleared thine.i'ami'H^i^S/i. v- 1 
I suppose, to Robert Faulconbridge ..King John, i. 1 
X did suppose, it should be on constraint — v. 1 
suppose the soul's frail dwelling-house — v. 7 
suppose, devouring pestilence hangs. /fi'c/iar^ //. i. 3 
suppose the singing birds, musicians.. — i. 3 

if you suppose, as tearing you 1 Henry I f. iii. J 

doth suppose ray sleep my death? ..'illenryl r. iv. 4 
suiipuse, within the girdle of these. //eio-j//'. i.{eho.> 
suppose, that you have seen (cep.) — iii. (clio.) 
who would e'er suppose they had.. ..\ Henry FI. i. 2 

if he suppose that 1 have pleaded — ii. 4 

would you not suppose your bondage — v. 3 

suppose, my lords, lie dfd it ZHenryVI.i. 1 

supjiose, this arm is tor the duke .... — ii. 4 
suppose, they take offence without .. — iv. 1 

suppose, that I am now my — v. .*> 

OS you suppose you should enjoy . . Richard III. i. 3 
OS little joy you may suppose in me .. — i. 3 
come short of our suppose so far.. /Vo'/iii •S-Crci*. i. 3 
t>id him supixise, some good . . Tnnon of Alhenn, ii. 2 
though they suppose me mad..'/i/Mi.-iiir/;on»ciM, v. 2 
Buppo.se him now at anchor . . . . I'ei ictei, v. ttiower) 
aptfy will suppose what pageantry — v. 2(Gow.) 
secure couch, and toeuppose herena3tc!0//j<'//o, iv. 1 

SUPPOSED fairies pinch Mcr,y IVirei, iv. 4 

I'll be supposed upon a hook..,. Meat, for Meat. ii. I 
treasures of your body to this Bupiwscd — ii. 4 
how easy is a bush supposed . . .U/J. jV.'tDrram, v. I 
upon supi>oscd fairness .... Merchant of I'enice, iii. 2 

should tender your supposed aid AU'tH'eU, i. 3 

I am supposed dead; the army breaking — iv. 4 
supposed Eueentio must get {rep,), 'laming ofRh. ii. 1 
supposed by the comoton rout .. Comedy of Err. iii. 1 

supposed sincere and holy 'illenryHW. 1 

to blo<id-hiil. wounding supposed [leocc — iv. 4 
viiinly 1 siii)p<. -111. the Holy Laud .. — iv. 4 
idl\- supp i>s(,d the fouiuler of this law.. Henry t'. i. 2 
that they Biip|H>.sed, I could rend bars.l Henry k' I. i. 4 

can be imagined or supposed — iv. I 

so termed uf our supposed father ,.2/friir|/ I'l. iv. 2 



[ 7:J5 j 



— iv. 2 



SUPPOSED king.-tluit (<«p. iv. i)..3Henry I'l. iii. 3 
of these supposed evils, to give me.,llicharU III. I. 2 
niid supposed their slates were BUro.. — 111.2 
it is supposed, he, tluil meets.... Ttoilut trCren. i. 3 
in this supposed distress of hi8..7'iinoiM./-/l//ic,i«, v. 1 
such as WHS supposed the wandering. 7'i7uii4ii<l. ii.3 

that Tliuisu mil I, supposed dead l-erielei.v. 3 

supposed eml of i; luster Lear, v. 3 (herald) 

when I supposed you loved Itomeo /i- Juliet, i. 1 

hut to his foe supposed he must.. — 1. /j (chorus) 
it is supposcil, the fair ereatuie died .. — v. 3 

SI'lM'dSKST-whieh thou supiiosest.. /WrAnn/ /// iv. 4 

SUPl'OSlNti thiit thev saw the 7'<-inpr»/, i. 2 

suiiposiii;,' ita tliiu- impossible. ...•/'am/;i;f«/.s7i.i. 2 

supposing tluit 1 hiekwl it Antony tiCleo. ii. 2 

ill \our siipiHKiuu' oiire more put. /VnWf.*, V. (Gow.) 

Si;i'l'i)SI TiON of the Ittdv'sileiith .. ;'l/Mr/i././o, iv. I 
y.l his iii.uns are in supposition. . /l/pi-.n//V/ocf, i. 3 

the siippiisiiiou of that laseivioiis All't ll'ell, 'w. 3 

ill that u'loiious supposition ....Comedy 0/ Krr. iii. i 

SUl'l'KKSS the prince \llenryl'l. i. 3 

Richard, to suppress thy voice — iv. 1 

suppress the pride of Suffolk illenry VI. i. 1 

to suptiress his further gait herein ...... Hamlet, \. 2 

sent out to suppress his nephew's levies.. — ii. 2 

SUPPHIOSSEI) and killed Ilmryl'. ii. 2 

the tiiir lusteil, were suppressed ....I Henry I' I. ii. 5 
or liiiiiscli, I'eoiiite suppressed illenryl'l iv. 3 

SUPPltliS.SETU wrongs — iii. 3 

S U PREMAC Y ; and to be short. Taming of Shrew, v. 2 
seek for rule, supremacy, and sway.. — v. 2 
under hira, that great supremacy .. King John, iii. I 
thy full supremacy thoii \.\\cv!'%l. Antony^- Glen. iii. 9 
dill vail their crowns to his supremaev./V)/V/'-.<, ii. 3 

SUPREMlC-are supreme head kingJohn, iii. 1 

lords I that you, being supreme 1 llcry II. i. 3 

that is the supreme Kingof kings.. //ir/iroi/ 7// ii. 1 
the supreme seat, the throne miijestical — iii. 7 
neither supreme, how soon confusion .. C'orioMii. I 
with the cousent of supreme Jove.... — v. 3 
niv supreme crown of grief 1 Cymbclinc, i. 7 

Slil!-.VI)»iriONLeonatus — i. 1 

'SUKA.NUE that thou art Revenge. 7Y/i<j//Hi/ron. v. 2 

SUKCIC.VSK — witli his surcease, success. .Wui-'w/Zi, i. 7 
lest I surcease to honour mine own. Coriolaiiui, ill. 2 
natural progress, but surcease ..Homeo^-Jnliet, iv. I 

SURE-be sure, to-night thou Tempest, i. 2 

and sure, it waits upon some god — i. 2 

most sure, the goddess on whom — i. 2 

sure, it was the roar of — ii. I 

for he is, sure, i' the island — ii. 1 

nay, sure I think, she TwoGen.offerona,)]. 4 

and sure, the match — iii. 1 

for, I am sure, she is not buried 

you would sure deceive it 

sure as I live, he had 

we are sure enough 

he was not sure of it 

1 am sure vou cannot give 

as sure as his guts are made .V. 

for different names (sure more) 

for sure, unless he knew some strain 
I'll be sure to keep him above deck., 
meed, I am sure, I have received none 

be sure of that,— two other 

hath he any thinking? sure they sleep 
sure he is by this, or will be presently 
fairer things than polecats, sure .... 
but are you sure of your husband now? 

in my house I am sure he is 

is, sure, scared out of him 

all his purpose: sure, he'll come .... 

sure, one of you docs not serve 

are now so sure, that nothing — 1 

1 am sure, care's an enemy to \ife..'Tnelflh Xighl, 

sure, my noble lord, if she be so — 

and 1, that am sure I lack thee — 

sure, you have some hideous matter — 
that, sure mcthought, her eyes had . . — 
she loves me, sure; the cunning .... — 

he is sure possessed — ii 

for sure, the man is tainted in — ii 

I am sure no man hath — ii 

urt thou sure of this? I am too sure. Mea. for Mca 
precise villains they are, that lam sure — i 

sure it is no sin — ii 

have, sure, more lack of reason — ' 

vou are both sure, and will assist me?. .Wiic/i/it/o, 

1 am sure, you know him (re/).) 

sure, my brother is amorous on Hero 
no, sure, my lord, my mother cried., 
knavery cannot, sure, hide himself in 
but are you sure that Benedick loves 

sure, I think so; and therefore 

sure, sure, such carjiing is not ...... 

sure, I do believe your fair cousin is 

yea, as sure as I have a thought 

come, cousin, I am sure you love.... — v. 4 

I am sure, you hate me with Mid.!i.'.Dream,'i\'i. 2 

[Col.'] are you sure that we are awake? — iv. 1 
ills discretion, I am sure, cannot carry — v. 1 
then, I am sure, you know (rep.) .. Love*sL.Lott_, 1.2 
O, nothing so sure; and thereby .... — 

as sure as bark on tree — 

very sure, if they should sfKak.. Merch.qfl'et 
I am sure, vou arc not Ivaiincclot (rep) — 

I am sure, I>orenzo is not — 

why, I am sure, if he forfeit, thou .. — 
for I om sure, you can wish none.... — 
I am fliire, the duke will never grant — 

1 shall, I am well sure of it — 

and yet, I am sure, you are not satisfied — 
yonder, sure, they are coming ....As you Like it,]. 2 
us sure I think did never man love so — it 4 

BO, be sure, will Rosalind. — iii. 2 (verses) 

I am sure, you arc not prisoner 

'tis pretty, sure, and very probable . 
nor, I am sure, there is no force . . , 
but sure, he's proud; and yet bis .. 
and his hand. Sure, it is hers .... 



ryir, 



ii. I 



iv. 2 



iv. 2 



iv 5 



i. 5 



ii. 2 



ii. I 
ii. I 
ii. 1 
ii. 3 
iii. I 
iii. I 
iii. I 
iv. I 
iv. 1 



iv 


3 


y 


2 


''ii 


2 


ii 


H 


iii 


2 


iii 


3 



V. 1 



— ill. 2 



SUR 



SURE, another flood toward AtyouLlktil, v. 4 

you and you are sure together — v. 4 

and, I am sure, as many as have good — (cpij.) 
and pive where she is sure to lose , . ..All's ll'ell, 1. 3 
and be sure of this, what I can hel|) — i. 3 

and think I know most sure, my art — ii. 1 

uncertain life and sure death — ii, 3 

they'll none liave her; sure, they arc — ii. 3 
1 am sure, thy father drank wine.... — ii.3 

hold in thee, art sure? — ii.3 

I am sure, the younger of our nature — iii. I 

whom, I am sure, he knows not — iii. 6 

but sure, he is the prince of the world — iv. .i 

1 am sure, I saw her viear it — v. :i 

but, sure, that part was .... TamingofSh. I (indue.) 

I were as sure of a goml dinner — i. 2 

agift very grateful. I am sure of it .. — ii. I 
I will be sure, my Katharine shall .. — Ii. I 

for sure, iEaeidcs was Ajax — iii. I 

I am sure, sweet Kate, this kindness — iv. 3 

tell him, you arc sure, all in It'inlcr'sTale, i. 2 

hut I am sure, 'tis safer to avoid .... — i. 2 

a bastaril, so sure as this beard's grey — ii.3 

pretty one; sure, some scape — iii. 3 

surc'thifl robe of mine does change .. — iv. 3 
for then we are sure they are true. ... — iv. 3 
sure, the gods do this year connive .. — iv. 3 
sure, when I shall see tills gentleman — v. 1 
for, I am sure, niy heart wept blood — v. 2 

sure, Lueiaiia, it Is two o'clock.. Comedy of Krr. ii. 1 
sure my master is horn-mad (rep.) .. — ii. I 
sure ones then. Nay, not sure, in .... — ii. 2 
until I know this siire uncertainty .. — ii. 2 
sure, these are but imaginary wiles . . — iv. 3 

anon, I am sure, the duKe — v. 1 

and sure, unless you send some — v. 1 

as sure, mj' litge, as I do see — v. 1 

I am sure, you both of you (rep.) .... — v. I 

thou sure a'nd firm-set earth Macbeth, ii. i 

swift, and sure of foot — iii.) 

I'll make assurance double sure .... — iv. I 

lav thou thy basis sure — iv. 3 

what she should not, I am sure of that — v. I 

there is no sure foundation set KinisJohn.'w. 2 

and. he sure, I count myself in Kielmrdll. ii. 3 

as sure [Co/. -surelv] as I live, my lord — iv. 1 

but, he sure, I will from \ Henry If. i. 2 

two, I am sure, I have paid — ii. 4 

the parties sure, and our induction.. — iii. I 

and, as sure as (lay: and givest — iii. 1 

so should I be sure to be heart-burned — iii. 3 

I am sure, they never learned — iv. 2 

Percy, I liave made him sure — v. 3 

but mine, I am sure, thou art — v. 4 

therefore, I'll make liim sure — v. 4 

I am sure he is, to the hearing iHcnry IF. i. 2 

consent upon a sure foundation — i. 3 

flood master Fang, hold him sure.... — ii. I 
le sure means brevity in breath — ii. 2 

certain, 'tis certain; very sure, very sure — iii. 2 

and see .you guard him sure — iv. 3 

Btand'st more sure than I could do .. — iv. 4 

sorrow; it is sure, your own — v. 2 

sure, we thank you, my learned lord ..Henry J', i. 2 

nay, sure, he's riot in hell — ii.3 

for, I am sure, when he shall see ... . — iii. 5 
so should he be sure to be ransomed — iv. I 

which I am sure will hang upon .... — v. 2 

to thy dear co.st, be sure 1 Henry I'l. i. 3 

the heavens, sure, favour him — ii. 1' 

'tis sure they found some place — ii. 1 

am sure, I seared the Dauphin — ii 2 

OS sure as English Henry lives (rpp.) — iii. 2 

so sure I swear, to get the town — iii. 2 

both stay, we both are sure to die.. .. — iv. 5 
he talks at random; sure, the man .. — v. 3 

I'll be the first, sure iHenryVl. I. 3 

whose beam stands sure, whose — ii. I 

as, sure, it shortly will — ii. 4 

the duke, and guard him sure — iii. I 

poor chicken should be sure of death — iij. I 
for, sure, my thoughts do hourly .... — iii. 2 

the king hath sent hira, sure — v. I 

why so; then am I sure of victory. .3//fiir|/r/. iv. I 

take us, we are sure to die — iv. 4 

nay, he thou sure, I'll well — iv 6 

be sure to hear some news — v. 5 

a persecutor, I am sure, thou art .... — v. 6 
supposed their states were i\iri:....llie.hard III. iii. 2 

but siue, I fear, we shall ne'er — iii. 7 

for, 1 um sure, the emiieror Henry I' 1 1 1, i. I 

that, sure, !liey have worn out — i. 3 

for, sure, there's no converting of them — i 3 

sure, he does not, he never was so.... — ii. 1 

lie sure, you be not loose — ii. I 

how sad he looksl sure, he is much.. — ii. ! 

sure, in that I deem yon an ill — iii. 2 

a sure and safe one, though thy — iii. 2 

the citizens, I am sure, have — iv. I 

and, sure, tliose men are happy — iv. 2 

sure, you know me? Yes, my lord .. — v. 2 
I am sure, thou hast a cruel nature.. — v. 2 

than malice; I am sure, in me — v. 2 

I am sure, he is not Hector . . Troilut ^ Crestida, i. 2 

nuv, I nin sure she docs — i. 2 

but. I am sure, none; unless — iii. 3 

Bhc wos not, sure. Blost sure she was — v. 2 
my dreams will sure prove ominous — v. 3 
linger not our sure destructions on 1 — v. 1 1 

now to guard sure their master .. Timon of Alh. iii. 3 
as your waiting, 'twere sure enough — iii. 4 

banishedl 'tis so, lie sure of it — iii. 6 

ever doubt, though ne'er so sure .... — iv. 3 
I am sure, you have; sjieak truth.... — v. I 

dead, sure; and this his grave.. — y. 4 

our good wills; a sure destruction.. Coriolanus, ii. I 
at lilierty, 'twould sure, southward.. — ii.3 

why, so lie did, I am sure — ii.3 

that sure ofd 'alh without it — iii. I 

he shall, sure on't. Sir,— peace — iii. I 



SUR 



[ 73(3 J 



sus 



SURE-thou sure, when he shall ci)me.Corio(«)i«s, iv. 7 
sure, if you would be your country's — v. I 

tliat thought tliera sure of you — v. 3 

but I am sure, Cajsar fel 1 down .... JulimCccsar, i. 2 

let CfEsar seat him sure; for rae — i. 2 

awake him, and be sure of him — i. 3 

and, I am sure, it did not lie tliere .. — ii . 1 

as I am Slue they do, bear tire — ii- I 

sure, the boy heard me — Jj- ■> 

and, sure, he is an lionourable man.. — iii. 2 
seen more years, I am sure, tlum ye. . — iv. 3 
I was sure, your lordship did not give — iv. 3 
nay, I am sure it is, Volumnius — — v. 5 
tliou art sure to lose; and, of that. Antotty 4Cleo. ii. 3 

wliat? thou'rt sure oft? — ii. 5 

if he do, sure lie eannot weep — .!!■'' 

pestilence, where death is sure — iii. 8 

to be sure of tliat, I will ask Antony — iii. 1 1 
for, I am sure, tliongli you can guess — iii. 1 1 
I am siu-e, my nails are stronger .... — v. 2 

you are too sure an uugurer — y. 2 

often luu'ts more than to be sure .... Cijmbeline, i. 7 
to your affection, still close, as sure.. — i. 7 
I would, I were so sure to win tlie king — ii. 4 

you did mistake him, sure — iv. 2 

but, he sure, no less beloved — iv. 2 

tlian be cured by the sure pliysiciau — v. 4 
which lam sure you do not know .. — v. 4 
I am sure, lianginsj's the way of winking — v. 4 
I am sure, lie would have spoke to us — V. 5 

this is sure, Fidcle. AVIiy did — v. 5 

so sure as you your tiitlicr's — v. 5 

sure as death I swore, I would . . . Titus Andron. i. 2 
we will make that sure: come, mistress — ii. 3 

see, that you make Iier sure — ii. 3 

but, sure, some Tereus hath — ii. 5 

'tis sure enough, an' you knew !iow.. — iv. 1 
you are a beauteous blossom, sure.... — iv. 2 
as sure a card as ever won the set ... . — v. 1 

at a banquet hold him sure — v. 2 

is he sure bound? — v. 2 

because I would be sure to have all well — v. 3 
pistol's length, I'll make him sure ....Pericles, i. 1 
to break one, will sure crack one .... — i. 2 

I ara sure to be hanged at home — i. 3 

nay, then thou wilt starve sure — ii. 1 

we'll sure provide — ii. 1 

sure he's a aallan'. gentleman — ii. 3 

sure all's effectless — v. 1 

how sure 3'ou are my daugliter — v. 1 

since, I am sure, my love's more Lear, i. 1 

sure, I shall never marry like — i. 1 

sure, her offence must be of such — i. 1 

orwaking?hal sure, 'tis not so — i. 4 

I am sure, is kind and comfortable — i. 4 

should sure to the slaughter — _i- 4 

I am sure on't, not a word — ii. 1 

not love her husband; I am sure of that — iv. b 

most sure, and vulgar — iv. 6 

not sure, though hoping, of this good .... — v. 3 

that he will sure run mad Rnmeo f,- Juliet, ii. 4 

Uint.'l sure wit. Follow me this jest now — ii. 4 
I am sure, I have in my whole five . . — .jl* * 
so sure a draught [Co/. /t7if. -dram] .. — iii. 5 
so will you, I ara sure, that you love me — iv. 1 
for, I am sure, you have your hands — iv. 3 

I am sure, it may be so in Denmark'.... Ham/e(,_i. 5 
sure I am, two men there are not living — ii. 2 

policy so sure as it hath used to do — ii. 2 

sure, dear friends, my thanks are too ... . — ii. 2 
sure, you have, else could you not (rep.).. — iii. 4 

sure, he, that made us with such — iv. 4 

though nothing sure, yet much unhappily — iv. 5 

but, sure, the bravery of his grief — v. 2 

it is assure as you are Koderigo Othello, \. 1 

but thou must needs be sure — i. 1 

be sure [K»i/.-assured] of this — i. 2 

your nohle self, I am sure, is sent for .... — i. 2 

thou art sure of me — i. 3 

no, sure, I cannot think it — iii. 3 

sure, he fills it up with great ability .... — iii. 3 
be sure tliou prove my love a whore (jep.) — iii. 3 

I am sure, it was your wife's — iii. 3 

sure, there's some wonder in this — iii. 1 

I pr'ythee, do so: something, sure, of state — iii. 4 
ply Dcsdemona well, and you are sure oft — iv. I 

something from Venice, sure — iv, 1 

make all well. Are you sure of that? .. — iv. 1 

I do not know; 1 am sure — iv. 2 

yes, sure; O heaven! — V. 1 

if she come in, she'll sure speak to my wife — v. 2 

sure, he has killed his wife — v. 2 

SURE-CARD, as I think 2Henr<jIV. iii. 2 

SURELY, it is a sleepy language Ternpc$t,\\. 1 

surely, I think you have cliarms. . iMej-rij Wires, ii. 2 

as surely as your feet hit TvetphMi;ht, iii. 4 

'tis surely, for a name Measure for Measure, i. 3 

you do wrong him surely — iii. 2 

surely, sir, a good favour you have .. — iv. 2 

IIcio thinks surely, she will die MuchAdo,i\. 3 

surely, suit ill spent, and labour .... — iii. 2 

surely, a princely testimony — iv. 1 

a sweet gallant, surely! — iv. 1 

surely, as I live, I airi a maid — v. 4 

surely, affected her for her wit .... Love's L. Lost, i. 2 
none are so surely caught, when they — v. 2 
youth is surely in their corapuny.. As you Like it, ii. 2 

ay. surely, mere the truth Alt's Welt, iii. 5 

agood matter,surely..T«7nmyo/S/ire!(', i. 1 (indue.) 
that I may surely keep mine oath .. — iv. 2 
in gate and countenance surely like — iv. 2 

but, surely, master, not a rag vi'.Comedi/ of Err. iv. 4 

they will surely do us no harm — iv. 4 

Shalt so surely tie thy now unsured.. King John, ii. 2 

good phrases are surely ■iHevryll'. iii. 2 

that sal I surely do Henry r. iii. 2 

surely, by all tlie glory you \ Henry I' I. iv. B 

liis skin IS surely lent him 2 Henri/ F/. iii. I 

as surely as my soul intends to live.. — iii. 2 
you'll surely sup in liell — v. 1 



SURELY-he Is, he's surely dead ZHemyVI. ii. 6 

surely, sir, there's in him stuff that. He/i»j//'i//. i. 1 
yes, surely — ii. - 

full surely his greatness is a ripening — iii. 2 
devil was amongst them, I think, surely — v. 3 
I shall surely speak the thing.. rroi7us<^Cre.M. iii. 2 
else, surelv, his had equalled.. Timon of Alliens, iii. 4 
surely, this man was born of woman — iv. 3 

I have surely seen him Cymleline. v. 5 

do, surely [A'ii(. -freely] bar the door ..l!aml':i. iii. 2 

that you shall surely find him Otiieltn, i. 1 

yet, surely, Cassio, I believe, received — ii. 3 

SURER bind, this knot of amily H/enri/r/.v. I 

you are no surer, no, than is Coriolaiius,\. I 

your brother by the surer side . . TitnsAn'.lj-on. iv. 2 

SUREST— strongest and surest va.y..Ilieh,irJ tl. iii. 3 
ojien perils surest answered Julius CfPsar, iv. I 

SURE'L'IES for your days Ricliardll. iv. 1 

SURETY— I'll be bis surety rempesl,}. 2 

in surety of the wliieh, one part of. Love's L. Lost, ii. 1 
the Frenchman became his surety. jl/er. oft'enice, i. 2 

then you shall be his surety — v. 1 

shall De ray surety All'sWcU, iv. 4 

she called tliC saints to surety, that. . — v. 3 

and he shall surety me — v. 3 

inakest an oath tlie surety for thy . . King John, iii. 1 
■what surety of the world, what hope — iv. 7 

giv'st such sarcenet surety for I Henry IK iii. 1 

some surety for a safe i-eturn — iv. 3 

with a double surety binds his iUenrylV.'i. 1 

for surety of our leagues Henry V.v.'i 

shall be the surety for their traitor ..iHenryVl. v. 1 

that for my surety will refuse — v. I 

surety stronger than Aeliilles'. TroifMsiS-Cressi'do, i. 3 

of peace is surety, surety secure — ii. 2 

some token for the surety of it — v. 2 

we'll surety him Coriolanus,\\\. 1 

in that kind, will do, as if for surety Othello, i. 3 

SURFEIT— make me surfeit ..Tu-oGen.ofVer. iii. 1 

that suffer surfeit, cloj-ment Twelfth Niglit, ii. 4 

as surfeit is the father of much ..Meas.for Meas. i. 3 
as a surfeit of the sweetest tKings. . Mid.N.'sDr. ii. 3 
so thou, my surfeit, and my heresy . . — ii. 3 
sick, that surfeit with too mucli..^/er. of Venice, i. 2 

make it less, for fear I surfeit — iii. 2 

that surfeit on their ease, will .. ..All's Well, iii. 1 
the sick hour that his surfeit made. . Richard U. ii. 2 
as one that surfeits thinking on.... I Henri/ f'J. iii. 2 
by surfeit die your king, as ours.. ..Richard 11 L i. 3 
to cure thy o'er-night's surfeit? .. Timon nf Ath. iv. 3 

what authority surfeits on Coriolanus, i. 1 

one voluptuousli' surfeit out of action — ^\.Z 

too full of the wars' surfeits — iv. 1 

full surfeits, and the dryness of .. Antony Sf Cleo. i. 4 
tlie banquet she shall surfeit on .. Titus. indron. v. 2 
often the surfeit of our own behaviour ....Lear, i. 2 

SURFEITED sea hath caused Tempest, iii. 3 

the surfeited grooms do mock Macbeth, ii. 2 

they surfeited with honey \HenryIf. iii. 2 

their over-greedy love hath surfeited.2Heii»-!//f. i. 3 
my hopes, not surfeited to death Otiiello, ii. 1 

SURFEITER— amorous surfeiter.^nioni/ .f- Cfeo. ii. 1 

SURFEITING, the appetite may .. Twelfth Mglit, i. 1 
his purpose surfeiting, he sends . . Meas.for Meas. v. 1 
with our surfeiting, and wanton.... 2 Henri/ IV. iv. 1 
till Henry, surfeiting in joys of love.2Hei»i/ FI. i. 1 

SURFEIT-SWELLED, so old, and.. 2Henry 1 r. v. 5 

SURGE— I saw him beat the surges .... Tempest, ii 1 

and breasted the surge most swoln — ii. 1 

cooled glowing hot, in that surge. Merry Wives, iii. 5 

the blind waves, and surges Twelfth Niglit,_v. \ 

of the rude imperious surge 2 Henry I V. iii. 1 

breasting the lofty surge Henry V. iii. (chorus) 

hearing the surges threat Timon of Alliens, iv. 2 

whose liquid surge resolves — iv. 3 

the turbulent surge shall cover — v. 2 

egg-shells moved upon their surges Cymbeline, iii. 1 
when some envious surge will in. Titus Andron. iii. 1 
rebuke these surges, which waslx both.i-'eji'des, Iii. 1 

the murmuring surge, that on the Lear, iv. 6 

the wind-shaked surge, with high and .Othello, ii. 1 

SURGEON-the love of God, a surgeon. Twelfth N. v. 1 

didst see Dick Surgeon, sot? — v. 1 

with the help of a surgeon ....Mid.N.'sDream,y. 1 
have iby some surgeon. Shy lock. .Mer.of l'enire,\v. 1 

go, get him surgeons Macbeth, i. 2 

some, crying for a surgeon Henry I', iv. 1 

opinion shall be surgeon to my hurt .IHenryfl. ii.4 
I'll to the surgeon's. And so will I. . — iii. 1 
surgeon's box, or the patient's . . Troilus tf Cress, y. 1 
I am indeed, sir, a surgeon to old . . JuliusCcRsar, i. I 
deal withal, and defy the surgeon? .... Pericles, iv. 6 

let me have a surgeon, I am cut to Lear, iv. 6 

go, villain, fetch a surgeon Romeo 4' Juliet, iii. 1 

myself will be your surgeon Otiiello, ii. 3 

O help! hoi light! a surgeon! — v. 1 

I'll fetch the general's surgeon — v, 1 

SURGERE-diluculo surgere .... TwelflhNight, ii. 3 

SURGERY— with the surgery of ,..flsyouLikeit,\n. 2 
the mere despair of surgery, he cures. . Macbeth, iv. 3 
honour hath no skill in surgery ..,.\ Henry II'. v, I 

and to surgery bravely 2HenrylV. ii. 4 

ay, past all surgery Othello, ii. 3 

SURLY with servants (rep. iii. 4). TzvelfthN. ii. 6 (let.) 
you'll prove a jolly surly groom.. TatningofSh. iii. 2 
or if that surly spirit, melancholy .. Kin"- John, iii. 3 

justice, with his surly hum Henry V. i. 2 

the surly Gloster's governance iHenryl'L i. 3 

see, how the surly Warwick mans . .^Henry f^l. v. 1 

ay, or surly borne? Troilus 4 Cressida, ii. 3 

would have galled his surly nature.. Co/ioiaims, ii. 3 
went surly by, without anno\'iiig ..JitUnsCfvsar, i. 3 

SURiVIISE-condemned upon sunnises. ()V)i;er'.<7'.iii.2 
that function is smotheredin surmise.. i^/ac6e/A, i. 3 
blown by surmises, jealousies ..2Henryiy. (indue.) 
expectation, and surmise of aids .... — _i. 3 
or wrong surmise, hold me a foe . . Richard III. ii. \ 
not out of weak surmises .. ..Cymbeline, iii. 4 (let.) 
whereat it trembles by surmise .. Titus Atxdron. ii. 4 
me this: now gather, and surmise .... Hamlet, i\. 2 



SURMISES, matching thy inference Othello, iii. 3 

SURMI.SED whilst tliou art 2Henryl I. iii. 2 

that gave't surmised shape . . Troilus ^rCressida, i, 3 

SURMOUNTS our labour Hiihard II. ii. 3 

on her virtues tliat surmount \ Henry I'l. v. 3 

SURMOUNTED Hannibal Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

SURNAME, Coriolunus (rep. v. 3). .Coriolanus, iv. & 
are requited but with that surname.. — iv. 5 

SURNAMED the big (.rep.) Love'sL. Lost, v. 2 

Andronieus, surnamed Piua .. Titus Andronicus, i. 1 

SUHPASSETH Sycorax Tempest, iii. 2 

SURPASSING the common Winter'sTule, iii. I 

SURPLICE of humility over All'sWell,i. 3 

SURPLUS of your grace Winter's Tale, v. 3 

with surplus, to tire in repetition.... Con'o/n/iujf, i. 1 

SURPRISE of my powers Merry Wives, v. 5 

surprise her with discourse TwelflhNight, i. 4 

will suddenly surprise him All's Well, iii. 6 

the castle of Macduff I will surprise ..Macbeth, iv. 1 
lay their heads together, to surprise. 2 Hexryf/. iv.8 
we may surprise and taKe him ....ZHenryf'I. iv, 2 

I intend but only to surprise him — iv. 2 

surprise me to the very brink .. Timon of Athens, v. 2 
surprise and fear made me to quit .... Pericles, iii. 2 

SURPRISED with all Tempest, iii. 1 

be surprised: muster your wits ., Love'sL. Lost, v. 2 
suffer her poor knight to be surprised.. All's Well, i. 3 
was beguiled and surprised. Taming ofSh. 2 (indue.) 

so surprised my sense, that I Winter's Tale, iii. 1 

your castle is surprised: your wife....Kact/e(/i, iv. 3 
in this adventure hath surprised ....1 Henry 1 1', i. I 
not been thus shamefully surprised. IHtmi/ FY. ii. 1 

were there surprised, and taken — iv. 1 

both be suddenly surprised — v. 3 

their governors, surprised our forts. .2Hcnrj/f/. iv. 1 

is the traitor Cade surprised? — iv. 9 

by his foe surprised at unawares ZHemyVI. iv. 4 

how easily she may be surprised .Antony f/ Cleo. v. 2 
Lavinia is surprised. Surprisedl .. Titus Andron. i.'i 
with a happy storm they were surprised — ii. 3 
I am surprised with an uncouth fear — ii. 4 
wert thou thus surprised, sweet girl.. — iv. 1 
I rushed upon him, surprised him .. — v. 1 
Greeks surprised king Priam's Troy — v. 3 

SUR-REINED jades Henry T. iii. .5 

SURRENDER up of Aquitain ....Love's L.Lost,i. 1 
common view he may surrender ..Richard 11. iv. 1 

and duty I would surrender it Henry fill. i. 4 

this last surrender of his will but offend ..Lear, i. 1 
importing the surrender of those lands ..Hamlet, I. 2 
SURREY, tliou liest. BishonouTaUe.Richard II. iv. 1 
I dare meet Surrey in a wilderness .. — iv. 1 
the earls of Surrey and of Warwick. 2He>irj//r. iii. 1 
lord of Surrey, why look ye so BSidi..RichardIlI. v. 3 
saddle white Surrey for the field .... — v. 3 
Thomas the earl of Surrey (rep.) .... — v. 3 

and what said Surrey then? — v. 3 

earl Surrey was sent thither Henry fill. ii. 1 

forty hours Surrey durst better have — iii. 2 
a sounder man than Surrey can be .. — iii. 2 
and that the earl of Surrey, with the rod — iv. 1 
SURVEY tile inscriptions back .Merch. of Venice, ii. 7 
queen of night, survey with thy .AsyouLike it, iii. 2 
did astonish the survey of richest eye5..4(rsJ('e/;, v. 3 
that takes survey of all the world ..1 Henry IV. v. 4 

we first survey the plot, then 2lleiirylV. i. 3 

in his majesty, surveys the singing Henry /'. i. 8 

I am come to survey the Tower this day — i. 3 

and to survey the bodies of tlie dead. I Henry VI. iv. 7 
survey his dead and earthy image, .2He"7i/ /'/. iii. 2 

let us survey the vantage Itichard ill. v. 3 

make but an interior survey Coriolarnis, ii. 1 

upon a just survey, takeT\tus'. Titus.4ndro7iicus, i. 2 

SURVE'^ED by English eye Richardll.i 1 

SURVEYEST, or see'st .... Lore's L.Los/, i. 1 (letter) 

SURVEYING vantage Macbtlh, i. 2 

SURVEYOR-question surveyors 2HenryIV. i. 3 

make the fox surveyor of the fold? 2HenryVI. iii. 1 
the duke of Buckingham's Burveyot? Henry Vlll. i. 1 
my surveyor is false: the o'er-great — i. 1 

you were the duke's surveyor, and lost — i. 2 
appeared against him, his surveyor . . — ii. 1 
SURVIVE— thy friend, survives. TwoGen. ofVer. iv. 2 
be it that she survive me .... Taming of Shreic, ii. 1 

with his spirit sadly I survive 2HenryIV. v. 2 

if Talbot but survive thy treachery.lHeu?!//'/. iii. 2 
tliat survive, let Rome reward . Titus.-indrouicus, i. 2 
the noblest that survives, the eldest. . — i. 2 
and we survive to tremble under Titus* — i. 2 
you that survive, and you that sleep — i. 2 

should not survive her shame — v. 3 

SU RVIVOR heir of all Coriola n us, v. 5 

tlie survivor bound in filial obligation.. Hamlet, i. 2 

SUSAN and she,— God rest all Romeo 4- Juliet, i. 3 

well, Susan is with God — i. 3 

let the porter let in Susan Grindstone — i. 5 

SUSPECT without cause (rep. iv. •i)Merry Wives, iii. 3 

if you susjject me in any dishonesty — iv. 2 

I rather will suspect the sun — iv. 4 

yon may suspect him, by virtue .... Much Ado, ni. 3 
dost thou not suspect my place? (rep.) — iv. 2 

teaches them suspect the Merchant nf Venice, i. 3 

lest she suspect, as he does, her . . Winter's Tale, ii. 3 
within the compass of suspect. Comedy if Hn ors, i i i . 1 
I do suspect thee very grievously ..Kin-iJohn, iv. 3 
thou dost suspect, that 1 have been ..Hiclmrd II. v. 2 

he will suspect us still, and find I Henry I V. v. 2 

as the suspect is great, would make..2Henr!/r/. i. 3 

clear yourself from all suspects — iii. 1 

that yet suspect iKj peril, will not.... — iii. I 
if my suspect be false, forgive nie .... — iii. 2 
then you, belike, suspect these noblemen — iii. 2 
will suspect, 'twas he that made .... — iii. 2 

never have you in suspect ZHenryVl. iv. 1 

did I but suspect a fearful man — v, 4 

draw me in these vile suspects Richard III. i. 3 

thy friends suspect for traitors — i. 3 

from all attainder of suspect — iii. S 

my iiol)le cousin should suspect me.. — iii. 7 
I do suspect, I have done some offence — iii. 7 



SUSPECT m)' husbandry Timon qfAthent, ii. 2 

the lion wotiW Bueiwct thee — iv. 3 

In whose bi-cnst iIoiiM niul s<is|icct .. — iv. 3 
«u8i>rct (till conies where un estate .. — iv. 3 
did sii^iieot f>hc Imil disposed ^.Aniony ^Cleo, iv, VI 

I do fluspeot yon, nmdiini Cymbrtiue^u 6 

my lieart snspecis nii>ru than ,.,. Tilus Aiidron. ii. 4 
if ne ausiicct I mny dishononr hira . . . , Pericttt, \. 2 

harms, tlint he suspects none I.cur, i. 2 

I do susiJCCt the lusty Aloor hatli lert|>ed.O//ie//o, ii. I 
yet doubts; suspects, yet strongly loves! — iii. 3 
nor ever heard; nor ever did suspect ..,. — iv. !i 

if, haply, yon my lather do suspect — iv. 2 

made you to susiwct nie with the Moor — iv. 2 

may you suspect who they shoidd be ., — v. 1 

pentlemen all, I do 6us|iect this trash .... — v. 1 

SUSPECTED— should be suspected ....AW sir tit, i. 3 

who would have suspected an ambush — iv. 3 

opinion sick, and truth suspected .. Kins John. iv. 2 

I give cause to Iw suspected of move. .Cymbeline, i. 2 

euspcctedof yonrcarriu"efrom thecourt — iii. 4 

yet most susiH'Cted, as the time../'omto fr Ji'liel, v. 3 

and a smooth dispose, to be suspected , . Olhelto, i. 3 

SUSPIX'TING that we both v/ete-Iiomeo^Juliel, v. 2 

SUSPEND— to suspend your indignation . . Lear, i. 2 

susjwnd thy purpose, if thou didst — i. 4 

SUSPICIOlSf of the deed ^fac^elh, ii. 4 

such cause of suspicion! (rrp.) Merry ll'ivet, iii. 3 

some special suspicion of FalstaiTs ., — iii. 3 
another experiment of his suspicion — iv. 2 

he will wear his cap with suspicion?.. A/uc/i .4 i/o, i. 1 
ond out of all suspicion, she is virtuous — ii. 3 
nothing of his ill-ta'en suspicionl. IVinler'sTale, i. 2 
her honour true, than your suspicion — ii. 1 
too much believed mine own suspicion — iii. 2 
the verity of it is in strong suspicion — v. 2 
between yo\ir holy looks my ill suspicion — v. 3 
we shall proceed without suspicion., Wtc/iarrf //. iv. 1 
suspicion shall be all stuck full of ..I HenryW. v. 1 
what a ready tongue suspicion hath! iUennjU'. i. 1 
and liest indued, with some suspicion.. Hfiuy/'. ii. 2 

in York this breeds suspicion tlienryl'I. i. 3 

he may acnuit him of suspicionl .... — iii. 2 
suspicion always haunts tlie guilty ..S/ffJii-y/'/. v. 6 

swept suspicion from our seat — v. 7 

yet go current from suspicion! ....Hichard III. ii. 1 
intending deep suspicion: ghastly looks — iii. 5 
deep suspicion, where all iiuth.... Henry VIII. iii. I 
never yet branded with suspicion? .. — iii. 1 
to answer their suspicion with their. ri/us And. ii. 4 
it will stuff his suspicion more fully ....Lear, iii. 5 
a greot suspicion; stay the friar. fioineo ^Juliet, v. 3 
bring forth the parties of suspicion ., — v. 3 

for mere suspicion in that kind Othello, i. 3 

of the moon with fresh suspicions? — iii. 3 

nor to larger reach, than to suspicion.... — iii. 3 
and vour suspicion is not without wit..., — iv. 2 

SUSPtCIOtJS head of theft Lore's L. losl. iv. 3 

should therefore be suspicious 1 Henry I' I. iv. 1 

even so suspicious is this tragedy ..tUenryl'l. iii. 2 
spy a black, suspicious, threatening. 3//e'iri/r/. v. 3 
my cause more strange, suspicious. //<r;irt/ fill. iii. 1 

SU.<PlRATION of forced breath Hamlel, i. 2 

SUSPIRE— but yesterday suspire.. ../iin^./o/i«, iii. 4 

did he suspire, that light ilienrylV. iv. 4 

SUSTAIN-let me sustain no eeotn-Twelfi/iKi^'hi, i. 5 

you need to sustain — iv. 2 (song) 

that doth sustain my house. il/erc/ian( ofl'eniee, iv. I 
should sustain the bound and high ..AWsU'etl, ii. 3 
good, I would sustain some harm..3Wf«rt/r/. iii. 2 
shall sustain more new disgraces.. //enryF///. iii. 2 
doth sustain in life's uncertain. Timon of Athens, v. 2 
sides of nature will not sustain it. Antony ^Cleo. i. 3 

well then, sustain me — iii. 9 

and I doubt not you sustain what . . Cymheline, i. 5 

if she sustain him and his himdred Lear, i. 4 

entreat for hira, nor any way sustain him — iii. 3 
this realm, and the gored state sustain .. — y. 3 
what loss your honour may sustain .... Hamlet, i. 3 
a tietter never did sustain itself upon . . Othello, v. 2 

SUSTAINED in France \ Henry VI. iii. 2 

bv vnu to he sustained, shall our abode . . Lear, i. 1 

StrsTAINING garments not Tempest, i. 2 

SUSTEN/VKCE- no sustenance .. Titus Andron. v. 3 
nor taken sustenance, but to prorogue.. iVrjV/e*, v. I 

SUTLKIl-for I shall sutler be llenryV. ii. 1 

SUTTOX-COLFIELD iKnt. Cop-hill] I Hen. 1 1', iv. 2 
SUU.M — savs suum, muii, lia no nonny ..Lear, iii. 4 
SUUAICUKiUE is our Roman.. 7V/iM.4n(/roniciM, i. 2 
SWABBER, the boatswain and I. Tempest, ii. 2 (song) 
no, good swabber; I am to hull . . Ta-elJ'thNisht, i. 5 
SWAODI.ING-rCo/.K;i(.-8wathin"-] 

CLOUTS. Ifniilv. he's a second time. HninW, ii. 2 

SWAG-BEIXIED Hollander Otiiello, ii. 3 

S\VAG(iER-if he swagger, let him..2Hfri>!///'. ii. 4 
I am the worse, when one says— swagger — ii. 4 
will he swagger himself out .... Troilui A Cress, v. 2 
swagger? swear? and discourse fustian .Othello, ii. 3 

SWAGGERED with me last Henri/ V. iv. 7 

SWAGGEKER-play the swaggerer. /l>!/'.iitiV<f it, iv. 3 

comes no swaggerers here (iT-p.) ....'^ Henry IV. ii. 4 

SWAGGEKI.VG accent sharply.. Tnel/ihMnlit, iii. 4 

by swaggering could I never thrive — v. 1 (song) 

have we Bwaggerini; here Mid.K.'sDrenm,i'n. I 

hang him, swuggermg rascal I 2HenrylV. ii. 4 

while, to have swaggering now {rep.) — ii. 4 

and the swaggering up-spring reels Hamlet, \. 4 

SWAINS conunend her?. Tiro Gen. of Ver iv. 2 (song) 

cherish thy forlorn swain! — v. 4 

the hea<l of this Athenian swain ..Mi'L.V.'tnr. iv. I 
the swain, andhe sliall heuursport. LotViL. /.oi(, i. 1 
ihat low-spirited swain (rpp.) .... — i. I Uetter) 

give enlargement to the Bwoin — iii. I 

fetch hither the swain; he must .... — iii. 1 

I shoot thee at the swain — iii. 1 

by my soul, a swoin I a most simple — iv. 1 

this swain, because of his great limb — v. 1 

the swain, Poni|)ey the (ireat — v. 2 

that young swam that you saw ..AsyouLikeil, ii. 4 
too light for such a swuiu as 3'ou. Taming of Sh. ii. 1 



8WATN— you peasant swain I . . Taminn ofshreip, Iv. I 
obscured with a swain's wearing. IVintet'sTale, iv. 3 
a poor humble swoin, as I seem now — iv. 3 
wuut fair swain is this, which dances — iv. 3 
how prettily the yoinig swttiii seems — iv. 3 
soft, swain, awhile, 'beseech you .... — iv. 3 

like a hedge-born swain that \UenryVI.\v. 1 

begotten of a shepherd swain — v. 4 

ob.scnre and lowly swain 'illenryVI.'w. I 

shall I stab the forlorn swain? — iv. 1 

no better than a homelv swain 'iHenryVI. ii. 6 

true swains in love shall .... Troilus ^ Cressiila, iii. 2 

SWALLOW— before the swallow.. "in'fr'j ;•«(<•, iv. 3 

confound and swallow navigation up.. Macbetti, iv. 1 

now swallow down that lie ItichardU. i. 1 

do you think me a swallow i Henry 1 1'. iv. 3 

and swallow my sword like a gTeat.2Henryl'I. iv. 10 

and swallow me alive, where I 3HenryVl. i. I 

did swallow up his life — v. (i 

as thou dost swallow up this good., ttichard III, i. 2 
true hope is swift, and flies with swallow's — v. 2 
the swallow follows not summer . rimon o/^(/i. iii. 6 

let prisons swallow them, debts — iv. 3 

swallows liave built in Cleopatra's. .4n'. "S-Cieo. iv. 10 
run like swallows o'er the plain.. 7'i7«5.4Hd;oFi. ii. 2 
will in his brinish bowels swallow him — iii. 1 

as swift as swallow Hies — iv. 2 

swallow her own increase — v. 2 

swallows the old rat, and the ditch-dog.. Lear, iii. 4 
it engluts and swallows other sorrows ..Othello, i. 3 
and wide revenge swallow them up — iii. 3 

SWALLOWED, and the freighting .... Tempest, i. 2 
from whom we were all sea swallowed — ii. 1 
as if I had swallowed siiow-balls..il/err;/'f'ife«, iii. 5 

swallowed his vows whole Meas. forMeas. iii. 1 

you swallowed love with einging.Lovc'sL. Lost, iii. 1 

thou art easier swallowed than — v. 1 

swallowed with yest and frotli .. IVinter'sTale, iii. 3 
daily swallowed bv men's eyes ....\HenryII'. iii. 2 
chewed, swallowed, and digested .... Henry I', ii 2 
shall be swallo^^■ed in this controversy — ii. 4 
our sailors swallowed in the flood?..3(feiirt/ 1' J. v. 4 
that swallowed so mucli treasure ..Henry I'll/, i. 1 
oblivion swallowed cities up. Troitiu ^- Cressida, iii. 2 

they have swallowed one another — v. 4 

attendants absent, swallowed Hie.Julins Cirsar, iv. 3 

if they had swallowed poison Antony ^-Cteo. v. 2 

by the queen's dram she swallowed.. Cyi/ite/ine, v. 5 
they've swallowed the whole parish ..I'ericles, ii. 1 
because lie should have swallowed me too — ii. I 
swallowed some part o' the earth — iv. 4 (Gower) 
hath swallowed all my hopes ....Romeo^Juliet^ i. 2 
first mouthed, to be last swallowed Hamlet, iv. 2 

SWALLOWING a tailor's news ....KingJohn.iv. 2 
your sight, for fear of swallowing ..I Henry IV. v. 1 

for swallowing the treasure 2Henry f'l. iy. I 

shouldered in tlie swallowing gulf.Wic/i<ird ;//. iii. 7 

proceed by swallowing that Cymheline. iii. 5 

plucked into the swallowing womb.. Tid/J .J wrf. ii. 4 

SWaM ashore, man. like a duck 7'empesl, ii. 2 

I swam, ere I could recover the shore.. — iii. 2 
never swam the Hellespont.. 7m'o Gen. of/Vrona, i. I 
scarce think you have swam in ..As youLikeit, iv. 1 

SWAN— were also, Jupiter, a ivan, . Merry IVives, v. 5 
like Juno's swans, still we went ..Asyon Like it, i. 3 
to this pale faint swan, who chants . . Kins John, v. 7 

so doth the swan her downy I Henry VI. v. 3 

as I have seen a swan with bootless. .3He;jryr/. i. 4 
the swan's down feather .. Antony SrCleopatra, iii. 2 

in a great pool, a swan's nest CymOeline, iii. 4 

never turn a swan's legs to white. Titus Andron. iv. 2 
make thee think thy swan a.erow.ltomeo^- Juliet, i. 2 
I will plav the swan, and die in music. . Othello, v. 2 

SWAN-LIKE end, fading in ..Merch. or Venice, iii. 2 

SWARE they were his fancies 2 Henry IV. iii. 2 

Brutus sware for Lncrece* rape .. TitnsAndron. iv. 1 

SWARM— nature do swarm upon him.. Macbeth, i. 2 
from tliis swarm of fair advantages..! Henry I V. v. 1 
swarm about our squares of battle. . . . Henry V. iy. 2 
people swarm like summer flies ....ZHenryVI. ii. 6 i 
people by number swarm to us — iv. 2 ' 

SWARMING with caterpillars ....Richard II. iii. 4 
plebeians swarming at their heels. Henri/ r. v. (cho.) j 

SWART, like my shoe, but her.. Comedy nf Err. iii. 2 
crooked, swart, prodigious, patched. K/>n'J»/i>i, iii. 1 
I was black and swart before 1 Henry VI. i. 2 I 

SWARTII Cimmerian doth ma\ie.. TitiuAnd'ron. ii. 3 '. 
bv great Rwartlis [C'ol.-swathe] .. Tii-einhXi/rht, ii. 3 i 

SWARTflY-a swarthy Etliiope.TuoGpH. <./;>,-. ii.6 

SWASHER— these three swashers Henry V. iii. 2 

SAV ASHING and a martial ontside.As yon Like it, i.3 ' 
remember thy swusliing blow.... /fomeix^-yii/iW, i. 1 ' 

SWATH— the mower's swath.. TroHus ^ Cressida, v. b 
from our first swath, proceeded. Timon of, Miens, iv. 3 ' 

SWATHING— in swathing clothes. .l/Jfnry//'. iii. 2 
i' tlie swathing clothes the other .... Cymheline, i. 1 

SWAY— so dry he was for sway Tempest, i. 2 

sways slie level in her husband's. T'lrW/z/LVr^'A/, ii. 4 | 
M, (), A, I, doth sway my life (r<7).) — ii. 5 I 

not thy passion, sway in this uncivil — iv. 1 i 

she could not sway her house — iv. 3 

and to behold his sway .... Measure.for Measure, i. 4 

and let my counsel sway you in Much ,4do, iv. 1 

and with what art you sway ...Mid.K.'sOream, i. I 
sways [Col.-sway] ittothemood.iUej-.ii/Tenic?, iv. I 
is above this sceptred sway, it is .... — iv. I 

that ray full life doth swiiy At you Like it, iii. 2 

supremacy, and sway, when they.7'amiii^n/s/i. v. 2 
you would bear some sway ,, Comedy of Errors, ii. I 

sovereign sway and masterdom Macbeth, i. 5 

the mind I sway by, and the heart .... — v. 3 

sways usurpingly tliese several King John, i. I 

that sways the earth this climate.... — ii. 2 
this sway of motion, this commodity — il. 2 
kingly sway from out my heart.,../bV-'inrJ It. iy. I 

to gripe Ihe general sway \ Henry IV. v. I 

shall lose his sway — v..") 

let us sway on, and face them iHemylV. iv. I 

because no one should sway but he.l Henry VI, iii. I 
a gentler heart did never sway in — iii. 2 . 



SWA V— now sways It this woy {rep.).3Henri/Ft. il. 8 

usurpers sway the rule awhile — lit. 3 

thou art wortliy of the sway iv. 

mighty for thy place and sway. Troilui ^ Cressida, i. 3 

bear the great sway of his — li. 2 

naught but humour sways him . . 7'imon ofAth. iii. fl 

than sway with them in theirs Coriolanus, ii. I 

potency, and sway o' the state — ii. 3 

when all the sway of earth shahce.. Julius Cirinr, i. 3 
ond sway our great designs! Antony ^Cleopatra, ii. 2 

made me man, and sway in lo\'e I'enrtrs, i. I 

the sway, revenue, execution of the rest ..Lear, i. I 
who sways, not as it hath power.. — i. 2 (letter) 

if your sweet sway allow obedience — ii. 4 

and proceed i' the sway of jour own will iv. 7 

doth give hersorrowBomiich eway.Romeo^JiU.iv.] 

SW.\YED— his reason swayed. . .ViJ.A.'j Dream, ii. 3 
but swayed, and fashioned ..Merchant of Venice, i. 3 

swayed in the back Tamini^ of Shren-, Iii. 2 

much have swayed your majesty's.. iHciuk/c. iii. 2 
hadst thou swayed as kings should ..i //cnri/r/. ii. « 
minds swayed by eyes, are fiill..'/"rni/K»4 Cress, v. 2 
when his affections swayed more.. Ju/ii/»Ca'«ar, ii. 1 
but was, indeed, swayed, from the point — iii. I 

SWAYING more upon our part Henry V. i. 1 

S WEAK— every drop of water swear .... Tempest, i. I 

swear by this bottle (rep.) — ii. 2 

swear to that; kiss the book (rep.) .... — ii. 2 
I'll swear myself thy subject (rep.) .... — ii. 2 

swears he will shoot no more — iv. I 

or be not, I'll not swear — v I 

love bade me swear TwoGen. qfl'erona, ii. G 

by this pale queen of night I swear.. — iv. 2 

flatter, for I swear I do not — iv. 3 

and yet he would not swear Merry IVivei, ii. I 

for he swears, he'll turn me away .. — iii. 3 

and swears, he was carried out — iv 2 

he swears, she's a witch — iv. 2 

I have heard her swear it Twelfth \isht, i. 3 

yond' young fellow swears he will speak — i .5 

I swear I am not that I play — i. 5 

we men say more, swear more — ii. 4 

by innocence I swear, and by my.... — iii. I 
and as thou draw'st, swear horri1>le,, — iii. I 
by heaven I swear I tender dearly .. — v. 1 

do not swear — v. i 

would make mercy swear. jl/eojure/or Measure, iii. 2 

1 swear, I will not die to-day — iv. 3 

though they would swear down each — v. 1 

as I nave heard Jiim swear himself .. v. I 

than a man swear he loves me A/uc/i Ado, i. I 

I dare swear he is no hypocrite — i. 1 

if you swear, my lord, you shall .... — i. 1 

I heard him swear his affection ii. 1 

yet will he swear, he loves — ii. 3 

no, and swears she never will — ii. :) 

she'd swear, the gentleman sliould be — iii. i 
would you not swear, all you that see — iv. I 
do swear by it, and eat it. I will swear — iv. 1 
that only tells a lie and swears it .... — iv I 

before this friar, and swear to marry her v. 4 

for they did swear you did — v. 4 

Lysander! I swear to thee Mid.A'.'sDream.i. I 

and neeze, and swear a merrier hour — ii I 

to say, to swear, I love thee — iii 1 

to vow, and swear, and sniierpraise .. — iii. 2 
swear by that wliich I will lose for thee — iii. 2 

but as yet, I swear, I cannot — i\-. i 

I will swear to study so Love' sL. Lost, i. 1 

swear me to this, and I will ne'er say, no — i. 1 

we will read it, I swear — iv. 1 

and how most sweetly a' will swear! — iv. 1 

how shall I swear to love? — iv. 2 

even Jove would swear, ,Iuno but — iv. 3 (verses) 

which such a zeal did swear? — iv. 3 

that I may swear, beauty doth — iv. 3 

what you first did swear unto — iv, 3 

Birou did swear himself out of all suit — v. 2 
it is not so, I swear; we have had.... — v. 2 
yet, swear not, lest you be forsworn . , — y. 2 
though Nestor swear the jest. iVerrAan(o/;'enice, i. I 
swear, that I have a poor pennyworth — i. 2 
by my love, I swear, the best regarded — ii. I 

or swear before you choose — ii. i 

doth offer to swe.ir upon a book — ii. 2 

and swear but now and then — ii. 2 

I swear, I have no mind of feasting — ii. .i 

albeit I'll swear that I do know ii. t; 

every one doth swear, that conies to — ii. y 
that swear he cannot choose but break — iii. 1 
I have heard him swear, to Tubal .. — iii. 2 
men shall swear, I have discontinued — iii. 4 
by my soul I swear, there is no power — iv. 1 
which I did make him swear to keep — iv. 2 
did young Lorenzo swear he loved her — v. 1 
by yonder moon, I swear, you do.... — v. I 
and made him swear never to part .. — v. I 
and swear, I lost the ring defending it — y. I 
and that which you did swear to keep — v. 1 
I swear to thee, even by thine own .. — v. i 
swear by your double self, and there's — v. 1 
and by my soul I swear, I never .... — v. 1 
liere, lord Bassanio, swear to keep this — v. 1 
swear by your beards that I am ..As you Like it, i. 2 
but if yon swear by that that is not. . — i. 2 

and in thot kind, swears you do more — ii. 1 
I swear to thee, youth, by the white — iii. 2 

and what they swear in poetry — iii. 3 

but why did he B^car he would come — ii. 4 
you have heard linn sweor downright — iii. 4 
Biieaks brave words, swears brave oaths — iii. 4 
he hath been a courtier, he swears .. — v. 4 

to swear, and to forswear — v. 4 

by grace itself, I swear All's ll'ell, i. 3 

ah idle lord, I swear. I think so .... — il. a 
to return and swear the lies he furges — iv. I 

I would swear, I recovered it — iv. 1 

that we swear not by, but take — iv. a 

if I should swear by Jove's great .... — iv. 2 
to swear by him whom I protest .... — iv 2 

SB 



SVVE 



SWEAR-wlieii lie swears oatlw. .(/('« nv.H.iv. 3 (lettci') 

and lie'U swear to't; I'll swcai' — v. 3 

one shall swear she bleeds.. TamingofSh, 2 (indnc.) 
here I swear, I'll plead for you myself — ii. I 
Iswear I'll cuff you, if you strike.... — ii. 1 

and rails, and swears, alid rates — iv. I 

you tluit durst swear that your — iv. 2 

swear, this is the right Viucentio. Swear — v. 1 

I dare not swear it. Then thou — v. 1 

but let him swear so, and he shaW.iyinler'sTalet j. 2 

with ail contidcnee he swears — i. 2 

swear his thouglit over by each — J. 2 

swear by this sword (jvp. iii. "2) — ii. 3 

I swear to do this; thou'di a present — ii. 3 

all this, we swear. Break up — iii. 2 

I'll swear't; if word, nor oath — iii. 2 

I'll swear for 'em. This is the prettiest — iv. 3 

will you swear never to marry — v. 1 

you hear, you'll swear you see, there is — v. 2 
1 will swear to the prince thou art .. — v. 2 
not swear it. Not swear it (rep.) .... — v. 2 
this perjured goldsmith s\veo.\:Come<ly of Errors, v. 1 

an cquivocator, that could swear Macbeth, ii. 3 

why, one that swears and lies — iv. 2 

all De hanged, that swear and lie? .. — iv. 2 
and by this hand I swear, that s\\ays.KingJolin,'ii. 2 

gone to swear a peace I — iii. 1 

to brag, and stamp, and swear, upon — iii. 1 
to swear, swear [Co/. Kh^. -swears] (rep.) — iii.! 
albeit we swear a voluntary zeal .... — v. 2 
by that sword Iswear, wliieli gently. /ii'c/iariZ //. i. I 
to swear liim in the justice of his .... — i. 3 

swear by the duty that you owe — i. 3 

I swear, and I, to keep all this — i. 3 

liy the honourable tomb he swep.rs .. — iii. 3 

this swears he, as he is a prince — iii. 3 

[Co/.] vows unbroke tliat swear to thee — iv. 1 

within tills world, I swear ..,* — v. 3 

I will swear I love thee infinitely ..1 Henry IT, ii. 3 
and swear it was the blood of true men — ii. 4 
you swear like a eomfort-maUer's ., — iii. 1 

swear me, Kate, like a lady — iii. I 

I would swear by thy face — ii i. 3 

when he heard him swear, and vow.. — iv. 3 
you did swear that oath at Uoncaster — v. 1 

yea, anil I'll swear I killed him — v. •! 

tliou didst swear to me upon tlleiirylV. ii. i 

lie swears, thou art to marry — ii. 2 (letter) 

and swears witli a good grace — ii. 4 

and swear here by the honour of .... — iv. -2 

tliat will swear, drink, dance — iv. 4 

and I dare swear, you borrow not.... — v. 2 
now, by tliis hand I swear, I scorn .... Henry V. ii. 1 

let us swear that you are worth — iii. 1 

swear by lier foot, that she may tread — iii. 7 
tliey shall have none, I swear, but these — iv. 3 
I cat, and eat, I swear. Eat, I pray you — v. 1 

not enough leek to swear by — v. 1 

and swear, I got thera in the Gallia wars — v. I 
I dare not swear, thou lovest me .... — v. 2 

then shall I swear to Kate — v. 2 

so sure I swear, to get the town .... 1 Henry VL iii. 2 

vantage, every one will swear — iv. 5 

thou wilt swear to pay him — v. 4 

then swear allegiance to his — v. 4 

swear like arufttan, and demean ..iHenryVI.'i. 1 
to swear false allegations to o'ertlirow — iii. i 
l)y his majesty I swear, whose far .. — iii. 2 
hut wlien I swear, it is irrevocable .. — iii. 2 

and they jointly swear, to spoil — iv. 4 

to swear unto a sin, but greater sill .. — v. I 

over him that swears ZHeyiryVI, i. 2 

Cliffordl swear as thou wast wont .. — ii. G 
but did you never swear, and break — iii. 1 

you know not what you swear — iii. 1 

by my state I swear to thee — iii. 2 

heard him say, and swear, tliat — iii. 3 

didst thou not hear me swear — v. 5 

a man cannot swear, but it Richard 111. i. 4 

not your hatred, swear your love .... — ii. 1 

as I truly swear the like 1 — ii. 1 

as I swear perfect love I — ii. 1 

80 swear I. Now, princely Buckingham — ii. 1 
now by saint Paul I swear, I will not — iii. 4 
1 swear. By nothin"; for this is no oath — iv. 4 
wouldst swear to be Delieved, swear then — iv. 4 

what canst thou swear by now? — iv. 4 

swear not by time to come — iv. 4 

you would swear directly, their very. HcHryr///. i.3 
verily, I swear, 'tis better to be lowly — ii. 3 
I swear again, I would not be a queen — ii. 3 
as corrupt to swear against you? .... — v. 1 

I swear, he is true-hearted — v. 1 

I swear to you, I think, Helen .. Troilus <§- Cress, i. 2 

swear the oaths now to her — iii. 2 

all lovers swear more perforniaiiee .. — iii. 2 
by Venus' hand I swear, no man .... — iv. 1 
your quondam wife swears still by .. — iv. 5 
what did you swear you would be'stosv — v. 2 
I did swear patience. You shall not — v. 2 

the gods have heard me swear — v. 3 

swear against objects; put armour rimono/'.J//i.i v. 3 
I know you'll swear, terribly swear — iv. 3 
I'll swear, 'tis a very pretty boy .... Coriolanus, i. 3 
I heard him swear, were he to stand — ii. I 
and let as swear our resolution.. ..JtdiusCtesar, ii. 1 
swear priests, and cowards, and men — ii. \ 
unto bad causes swear such creatures — ii. 1 
or I c<juld make liim swear the slies. . Cymbcline, i. 4 
would undergo what's spoken I swear — i. 5 
when a gentleman is disposed to swear — ii. 1 

still, I swear, I love you — ii. 3 

if you swear still, your recompense .. — ii. 3 
he swears; by Jupiter he swears .... — ii. 4 
if you will swear you have not done't — ii. 4 

and swear he'd fetch us in — iv. 2 

I swear by all the Konian gods ..TitnaAudrnn. i. 2 
to Rome I swear, if Saturnine advance — i. 2 

and swear unto my soul to right your — iii. I 
and swear with me, as with tlie woful — iv. 1 



[ 738 ] 



SWEAR— unless thou swear to me . TilusAnJron. v. 1 
swear that he shall, and then I (jep.) — v. 1 

which by that god he swears — v. 1 

even by my ginl, I Bwear'to thee .... — v. 1 

tliouu'h I swear to silence I'crides, i. 2 

I'll swear she's dead, and thrown — iv. 2 

snijcrstitiously doth swear to the gods — iv. 4 
he swears never to wash his face — iv. 4 (Gowcr) 
and .swears she'll never stint .. — iv. 4 (Gower) 

I durst swear it were his Lear, i. 2 

by Jupiter, I swear, no. By Jnno, I swear — ii. 4 

swear not; commit not with man's — iii. 4 

I will not swear, these are my hands — iv. 7 

frighted, swears a prayer or two. /fomeo «§- Juliet, i. 4 

she, I'll swear, bath corns — i. 5 

vows as lovers use to swear — i. 5 (chorus) 

lady by yonder blessed moon I swear. . — ii. 2 

swear not by the moon, the inconstant — ii. 2 
ewear by? do not swear at all (re;).).. — ii. 2 
and when I do, I swear, it shall be Romeo — iii. 5 
but swear't. In faith, my lord, not I.... Hamlet, i. 5 
upon my sword, indeed. Swear (rep.).... — i. 5 

madam, I swear, I use no art at all — ii. 2 

swagger? swear? and discourse fustian. 0//ie//o, ii. 3 

1 swear, 'tis better to be ranch abused. . . . — iii. 3 
beds, which they dare swear peculiar.... — iv. 1 
believed in Venice, though I should swear — iv. 1 
come, swear it, damn thyself (re;3.) — iv. 2 

SWEARER— believe the swearer . . Merry Wives, ii. 2 
tlie liars and swearers are fools (rep.) .Macbeth, iv. 2 
and make all our swearers priests Pericles, iv. 6 

SWEARING to gentlemen Merry ll'ives, ii. 2 

drinkings, and swearings, and starings — v. 5 
nay, let rao alone for swearing .. TwelfthNighl, iii. 

and all those swearings keep as — v. 

some other way than swearing by ii.Mnch.4do, iv. 
swearing, till my very roof was.il/cr. of Venice, iii. 
we shall have old swearing, that they — iv. 
knight, swearing by his honour ..Asyou Like it, i. 
swearing, that we are mere usurpers — ii. 
ruffian, and a swearing Jack.. Taming of Slirew, ii. 
swearing allegiance aud the love .... King John, v. 

got with swearing— lay by 1 Henry IV. i. 

some, swearing; some, crying for ....Henry V.iv. 
to swearing, and stern looks, diffused — v. 
swearing, that you withhold his .... 1 Henry VI. iv. 
swearing both, they prosper best ....ZHenryVI. ii. 
those crafty swearing rascals . . Troilus <5- Cress, v. 
all swearing, if the Roman ladies . . Coriolanus, v. 
though you in swearing shake the. Antony ^ Cleo. i, 
vows, which break themselves in swearing! — i. 

must take me up for swearing Cymbeline, ii. 

no swearing. If you will swear you,. — ii. 
fencing, swearing, quarrelling, drabbingHaw//e/, ii. 
at gaming swearing; or about some act — iii. 

SWEAR'S'T grace o'erboard Tempest, v. 

for thou swear'st to me, thou art .As you Like it, iii. 
what thou swear'st, against (rep.) ..King John, iii. 

swear'st thou, ungracious boy? \HenryIV. ii. 

thou swear'st thy gods in vain Lear, i. 

yet, if thouswear'st,thoumay'st. /Borneo .S-7u(ie/,ii. 2 

SWEAT — without sweat or endeavour. Tempest, ii. 1 
what witli the sweat, what with .Meas.Jor Meas. i. 2 
the ploughman lost his awtaX. . Mid.N.'sDream, ii. 2 

did make my foe to sweat Love'sL.LosI, v. 2 

for wooing here, until I sweat. il/erc/i.o/;'e;»/ce, iii. 2 
why sweat they under burdens? .... — iv. 1 

when service sweat for duty As youLike it, ii. 3 

where none will sweat, but for promotion — ii. 3 
do not your courtier's hands sweat? .. — iii. 2 
as wliolesome as the sweat of a man . . — iii. 2 
an angry boar, chafed with sweat. Taming of Sh. i. 2 
she sweats, a man may go. . . . Comedy of Errors, iii. 2 

liere you'll sweat for't Macbeth, ii. 3 

of our armour here we sweat King Jolin, ii. 1 

are liable, sweat in this business — v. 2 

Ealstaff sweats to death, and lards. .l//enr)//K. ii. 2 

that beads of sweat have stood — ii. 3 

I mean not to sweat extraordinarily.? Heuryrr. i. 2 
or shall I sweat for you? If I do sweat — iv. 3 

Falstaff shall die of a sweat — (epilogue) 

more frosty people sweat drops Henry V. iii. 5 

sweats in the eye of Phojbus — iv. " 

drops bloody sweat from his 1 Henry VI. iv. 

if you do sweat to put a tyrant ....Richard III. v. 
and sweat of tliousand friends ..Henry Vlll. (prol. 

did almost sweat to bear — i. 

such an agony, he sweat extremely — ii. 

then I' U sweat, and seek about. Troilus 4' Cress, v. 1 
I have sweat to see his honour Timon of Athens, iii. 
wliieh makes me sweat with wrath. . Coriolanus, i. 
and saved your Inisband so much sweat — iv. 
to make mine eyes to sweat compassion — v. 

and sweat under the business tuliusCtesar, iv. 

if arguing make us sweat, the proof . . — v. 
with knaves tliat smell of sweat. . Antony * Cleo. i. 
lie sweats, strains his youn» nevv&s.Cymbcline, iii. 
the sweat of industry would dry .... — iii. 
a chilling sweat o'er-runs my. Titus Andronicus, ii. 

at this time, we sweat, and bleed Lear, v. 

to grunt and sweat under a weary life. Ham/e/, iii. 
in the rank sweatof an enseamedbed .. — iii. 
he sweats not to overtlirow your Othello, ii. 

SWEATEN— grease, that's sweaten Macbeth, iv. 

SWEATING, and blowing Merry mves, iii. 

bareheaded, sweating, knocking at.. 2 Henry IV. ii. 
and sweating with desire to see him — v. 

here coines the sweating lord Richard III. iii. 

'tis sweating labour, to bear such .Antony^-Cleo. i, 
here's a young and sweating devil here. 6/Ac((o, iii. 

SWEAT'ST— how thou sweat'st! ■lUennill'. ii. 

SWEATY night-caps hUmsCaar, i. 

this sweaty haste doth make the nislit.. Hamlet, i. 

SWEEP— madly sweep the sky. Mid. N.'s Dreum, iii. 
ears that sweep away the morning .. — iv. 
to sweep tlie dust behind the door. ... — v. 
quoth Jaques. sweep on, you fat ..As you Like it, ii. 

power sweep liim from my sight Macbeth, iii. 

Harry England, that sweeps through. Henn/ ''. iii. 5 
like a peacoelt sweep along his tail..lHe;iri/r/. iii. 3 



SWE 



SWEEPS it through tlie court illenryVI. i. 3 

kissed the queen, shall swec'ii the ground — iv. 1 

that must sweep the court clean .... — iv. 7 
George of Clarence sweeps along ....SHenryVI. v. 1 
unless we sweep tlieni from the aoov.IIenryVIU.v. 3 
what a sweep of \imity comes . . Timon nf.ahens, i. 2 
that will sweep your way for you. Antony <S- Cleo. iii. 9 

of love, may sweep to ni'y reienge Hamlet, \. 5 

they must sweep my way, and marshal .. — iii. 4 

SWEEPSTAKE, you will draw both . . Hamlet, i v. 5 
SWEET sprites, the burden bear.. Tempest, i. 2 (song) 

with its sweet air — i. 2 

'twas a sweet marriage — ii. 1 

my sweet mistress weeps — iii. 1 

but these sweet thoughts — iii. 1 

full of noises, sounds, and sweet airs — iii. 2 

marvellous sweet musiel — iii. 3 

no sweet aspersion shall the heavens — iv. i 

sweet now, silence: Juno and Ceres., — iv. 1 

eweet lord, you pi ay me false — v. I 

sweet glances of thy honoured.. TwoGen. of I'er. i. 1 

sweet Valentine adieu! — i. I 

sweet Proteus, no (rep. iii. 2) — i. 1 

to feed on such sweet honey — i. 2 

passionate Proteus, to the sweet Julia — i. 2 

hear sweet discourse, converse — i.3 

sweet love! sweet lines! sweet life!.. — i.3 

sweet ornament th.at decks — ii. 1 

yourself, sweet lady (7ep.) — ii. 4 

the sweet benefit of time — ii. 4 

sweet, except not any — ii. 4 

forswear not thyself, sweet youth .... — ii. ."j 

makes sweet music with the — ii. 7 

a sweet virtue in a maid — iii. 1 

she hath a sweet mouth — iii. 1 

with some sweet concert — iii. 2 

Bueli sweet complaining grievance ., — iii. 2 

I grant, sweet love, that — iv. 2 

Bweet lady, let me rake it — iv. 2 

for thy sweet mistress' sake — iv. 4 

despatch, sweet gentlemen — v. 2 

conceive me, conceive me, sweet coz.i)/efri/(n't'e.5,i. I 

how now, sweet Frank? — ii. 1 

the sweet woman leads an ill life .... — ii. 2 

ah, sweet Anne Page! (rep.) — iii. 1 

O sweet sir John! (rep. iv. 2) — iii. 3 

to him, sweet Nan (rep.) — iii. 4 

nay, good sweet husband — iv. 2 

must my sweet Nan present — iv. 6 

o'er my ear like the sweet south .. Twelfth IS'ighl, i. 1 

'tis not so sweet now — i. 1 

and filled, (her sweet perfections) .... — i. I 

to sweet beds of flowers — i. I 

sweet sir Andrew! — i.3 

for your giant, sweet lady (re/;.) .... — i. 5 

Nature's own sweet and cunning liand — i. 5 

and so sweet a breath to sing — ii. 3 

come kiss me sweet and twenty.... — ii. 3 (song) 

very sweet and contagious, i' faith .. — ii. 3 

sweet sir Toby, be patient for — ii. 3 

in the sweet pangs of it, remember me — ii. 4 

not a flower, not a flower sweet ... . — ii. 4 (song) 

still smile, dear my sweet, I pr'ythee — ii. f) 

sweet lady, ho, ho — ill. 4 

we do know the sweet Roman hand — iii. 4 

pardon me, sweet one, even for — v. 1 

meantime, sweet sister, we will not .. — v. 1 
give up your body to sucii sn'eet.Meaa.for Mcas. ii. 4 

sweet sister, let me live — iii. 1 

that's bitter to sweet end — iv. 6 

sweet Isabel, take my part (rep.) .... — v. 1 
O sweet Benedick! God give me ....MuchAdo,\\. 3 

she's an excellent sweet lady — ii. 3 

of the false sweet bait that we — iii. 1 

the sweet youth's in love — iii. 2 

sweet Hero (rep. iv. 1 & V. 1) — iii. 4 

sweet prince, you learn me (rep,).... — iv. 1 

if this sweet lady lie not guiltless here — iv. 1 

what offence, sweet Beatrice? (rep.) .. — iv. 1 

a sweet gallant, surely! — iv. 1 

you have killed a sweet lady (rep.) ., — v. I 

sweet prince, let me go no further to — v. 1 

pray thee, sweet mistress Margaret .. — v. 2 

sweet Beatrice, wouldst thou come , . — v. 2 

why then she's mine: sweet, let me see — v. 4 

relent sweet Herraia Mid. iV.'s Dream, i. 1 

and she, sweet lady, dotes — i. 1 

your tongue's sweet air more tuneable — i- I 

catch your tongue's sweet melody .. — i. 1 

of their council sweet fCo/.-swelled] — i. I 

farewell, sweet playfellow — i. 1 

she never had so sweet a changeling — ii. 1 

hobgoblin call you, and sweet Puck — ii. 1 

chaplet of sweet summer buds is .... — ii. 2 

sweet mnsk-roses, and with eglantine — ii. 2 

a sweet Athenian lady is in love .... — ii. 2 

sing in our sweet lullaby — ii. 3 (song) 

take tlie sense, sweet, of my innocence — ii. 3 

sweet friend; thy love ne'er alter (rep.) — ii. 3 

though tliou kill me, sweet Demetrius — ii. 3 

through Are I will, for thy sweet sake — ii. 3 

deserve a sweet look frmn Demetrius' — ii. 3 

odious savours sweet (rep.) — iii. 1 

left sweet Pyramus translated theie — iii. 2 

hold the sweet jest up — iii. 2 

sweet, do not scorn her so — iii. 2 

what change is this.'sweet love? — iii. 2 

some music, my sweet love? (rep.) .. — iv. I 

good hay, sweet hay, hath no fellow — iv. 1 

the woodbine, the sweet honey-suckle — iv. 1 

sce'st thou this sweet sight? — iv. 1 

seeking sweet savours for this hateful — iv. 1 

wake you, my sweet queen — iV. 1 

he is a very paramour, for a sweet voice — iv. 2 

O sweet bully Bottom! (rep.) — iv. 2 

for we are to utter sweet breath — iv. 2 

to hear them say, it is a sweet comedy — iv. 2 

why, gentle sweet, you shall see .... — v. 1 

trust me, sweet, out of this silence .. — v. 1 

anon comes Pyramus, sweet youth .. — v. 1 



SWE 



SWEKT, O lovely wnll (rrp,) . . Hid. N.'t Dream, v. 
BWivt mo,m, 1 Ihiuik tliec lor tliy .. .. — V. 

witli th.>si><>v.v.toycst.rp.) — V. 

8»vct I'liclld^ t.llKll — V. 

thniuali ilii> imliuc. witli swccl pciice — v. 
Bwccl liinl, mill why? Lore't L.I.oil, i 



for thy more sweet uni\erstanding — 

by thy sweet crace's oHieer — 

ut the least of thv sweet notice .... — 

most sweet Ilereulcs! 

ami sweet my eliild, let them be 

sweet invocation of a ehild 

so sweet tinil voliilile is his discourse 
sweet heallli niul lair desires consort 

slie is a most sweet lu.ly (ny>.) 

sweet airl go, tenderness ot years.... 

sweet smoke of rhetor iel ._ 

bv tliy favour, sweet welkin 

by my sweet soul, I mean, setting .. 

iiiy sweet oimcc of man's flesh I 

1 1 sweet guenion I (rep.) 

here sweet, put np liiis 

o' my trotli most sweet jests! 

in music, and sweet Arc 

trip and go, my sweet 

sweet clown, sweeter fool, sweetest .. 

proceed sweet Cupid 

sweet a kiss the golden sun gives not - 

sweet leaves, shade folly 

in love, I hoiie; sweet fellowship in .. 
O sweet Maria, empress of my love!.. 
let her out in saucers: sweet misprision! 



1 (letter 
1 (.letter 
1 Uetter 



— 111. 



— iv. 3 



— V. 2 



— V. 2 



— V. 2 



IV. 3 
youth so apt to pluck a sweet.. .." — iv. 3 (verses) 

sweet lords, sweet lovers — iv. 3 

and Ethiops of tlicir sweet complexion — iv. 3 
as sweet, and musical, as bright .... — iv. 3 
a sweet toucli, a quick venew of wit.. — v. 1 

at your sweet pleasure (rep.) — v. 1 

well culled, chose; sweet and apt — v. 1 

but sweet heart, let tliat pass (re/;.) .. — v. 1 

the princess, sweet eluick — v. 1 

that the curate, and your sweet self .. — v. 1 
sweet hearts, we shall be rich (rc/i.).. — v. 2 

hold, take thou this, my sweet — v. 2 

one sweet word with tliec — V. 2 

there's lialf a dozen sweets (.rep.) 

let it not be sweet 

with your sweet breaths puffed out .. 
blow like sweet roses in this summer 
their damask sweet commixture shown 

the ladies call him, sweet 

a blister on his sweet tongue 

all hail, sweet raadum (rep.) 

fair gentle sweet, your wit makes.. .. 

of thy royal sweet breath as will 

my fair, sweet, honey monarch 

the legs of this sweet lass of France . . 

and so, adieu, sweet Judel 

sweet lord Longaville 

the sweet war-man is de-ad (rep.) .... 

sweet royalty, bestow on me 

adore thy sweet grace's slipper 

sweet bloods, I both may and will . . 

ay, sweet my lord 

sweet majesty, vouchsafe me 

for her sweet love three years' 

you would be, sweet madam . . .)Irrch.of Venice, i. 2 
—most beautiful Pagan, most sweet Jew! — ii. 3 

sweet friends, your patience for — ii. 6 

80 are you, sweet, even in the lovely — ii. 6 

SAveet, adieu! I'll keep my oath .... — ii. 9 

in April never came so sweet — ii. 9 

so sweet a bar, should sunder (rep.),, 

sweet Portia, welcome (rep.) 

sweet Uossanio, my sliips have 

good sweet, say thji' opinion 

when the sweet wind did gently kiss 

sweet soul, let's in 

how sweet tlie inoonlii^ht sleeps upon 
become the touches of sweet harmony 
never merry, when I hear sweet music 

by the sweet power of music — v i 

not moved with concord of sweet sounds — v. 1 
sweet Portia, if you did know to whom — v. 1 
what sliould I say, sweet lady? (rep.) — v. 1 

sweet doctor, j'ou shall be my — v. 1 

sweet masters, be patient At you Like il, i. I 

I pray thee, Rosalind, sweet my coz — i.2 

therefore, my sweet Kose — i.2 

shall we part, sweet girl? — i. 3 

made this life more sweet tlian that 

sweet are the uses of adversity 

into so quiet and so sweet a style .... 

O my sweet master! 

unto the sweet bird's throat 

Imu5tB|M:ak. Swcet,sayon 

eome, sweet Audrey 

not — O sweet Oliver 

sweet Phoclie, do not scorn me (rep.). 

sweet youth, I pray you chide 

ay, sweet Kosalinil 

tlic food of sweet and bitter fancy... 
Ganymede? sweet (janymede? .. 

sweet lovers love the spring 

good faces, or sweet breaths, will 
line and trick of his sweet favour 

Ills faith, his sweet disaster 

O ray sweet lord, that you will 

sweet monsieur Parollcs! 

sweet practiser, thy physic I will try 

is strewed with sweets — ii. 4 

when your sweet self was got — iv. 2 

by love's own sweet c^mstraiut — iv. 2 

a wife, and so sweet a lody — iv. .1 

tliey cannot be too sweet f<ir the king's — iv. 3 
tliat can sueli sweet use make of .... — iv. 4 

and be as sweet OS sharp — iv. 4 

be this sweet llelen's knell — v. 3 

lleleu that's dkad, was a sweet creature — v. 3 
slic told me in a sweet verbal brief .. — v, 3 



V. 2 



iii. 2 



V. 1 



ii. I 



— ii. 1 

— ii. 3 

ii. 5 (song) 



— iv. 3 

— iv. 3 

— V. 3 (song) 

— (epilogue) 
.../JU'»"VH,i. 1 

— i. 1 

— ii. 1 
ii. I 
ii. I 



[ 739 ] 

SW ro lOT— more welcome is the sweet . . /Ilt't IVell, v. 3 
wrapped in sweet elotliea.. TamiuK of Shrew, I (iiid.) 

sweet wood to make tlic lodging sweet — 1 (ind.) 

I smell sweet savours — 2<ind.) 

to Biuk the sweets of sweet jihilosopliy — 1. I 

the love I bear luy sweet IJmiiea (rr/>.) — i, I 

I saw sweet beauty in licr face — i. 1 

and sweet was all I saw in lier — i. 1 

and tell me now, sweet friend — i.2 

yet sweet as spring-time tl'iwers .... — ii. 1 

marry, so I mean, sweet iviitliarinc. — ii. 1 

farewell, sweet masters, botli — iii. 1 

anil marry sweet IJianca (/e/j.) — "ii. ^ 

must piitient, sweet, and virtuous wife — iii. i 

fear not, KW'ei't wencli, tliey sluill .... — iii. 2 

go. id sweet Kate, be merry (r^'/j.) .... — iv. I 

wliileyou,8weet dear, prove mistress — iv. 2 

sure, sweet Kate (rep. iv. 5 and v. 1 ) — iv. 3 

fair, and fresh, and sweet, whitlier away — iv. 

pardon, sweet father (rc/j.) — v. 1 

[C'oi. Kn(.] lives my sweet son? — v. 1 

what not, that's sweet and happy .... — t. 2 

sweet villain! most dearest! Winler'sTale, i. 2 

wiiy, my sweet lord? You'll kiss me — ii. 1 

tlic air most sweet; fertile t)ie isle .. — iii. i 

tlicn comes in the sweet o' tlie year — iv. 2(song) 

the sweet birds, O how tliey — iv.2(soiig) 

a foot-man, sweet sir (>t7i.) — iv. 2 

you see, sweet maid, we marry — iv. a 

and, my sweet friend, to strew- liim . . — iv. 3 

wlien you speak, sweet, I'd liave .... — iv. 3 

gloves, as sweet as damask roses .... — iv. 3 

tawdry lace, and a pair of sweet gloves — iv. 3 

witli a sweet fellow to't? — v. 1 

sweet Paulina, make me to think.. — v. 3 

has a taste as sweet as any — v. 3 

mistress hath tliy sweet aspects ..Comcily or Err. ii. 2 

look sweet, speak fair, become — iii. 2 

sweet breatli of flattery conquers (rep.) — iii. 2 

train me lint, sweet meriuaiu — iii- 2 

as good to wink, sweet love — iii. 2 

and my sweet liope's aim — iii. 2 

call tliysclf, sister, sweet, for I — iii. 2 

the purse; sweet now, make haste . . — iv. 2 

sweet recreation barred, what — v. 1 

justice, sweet prince, against — v.! 

sweet remembrancer! now, good ....,l/<ii-(if(A, iii. 4 

sweet bodemcnts! good! reliellious .. — iv. 1 

1 should pour the sweet mi Ik of ... . — iv. 3 

some sweet oblivious antidote — v. 3 

I, sweet sir, at yours Ki^i^John, i. 1 

to deliver sweet, sweet, sweet poison — ^ i. 1 

but a calf's skin, most sweet lout .... — iii. 1 

hath spoiled the sweet world's taste — iii. 4 

corruption of a sweet child's deutli . . — iv. 2 

before this ruin of sweet life — iv. 3 

for his sweet life's loss — iv. 3 

stealing that sweet breath which .... — iv. 3 

to seek sweet safety out in vaults ... . — v. 2 

mv sweet sir, news fitting — v. 6 

happily may your sweet self — v. 7 

to make the end most sweet Ilicliui-J II. i. 3 

draws the sweet infant breath — i. 3 

tilings sweet to taste, prove in — i. 3 

England's ground, farewell, sweet soil — i- 3 

as 1;lie last taste of sweets, is — ii. I 

so sweet a guest as my sweet Richard — ii. 2 

so your sweet majesty, looking awry — ii. 2 

the liard way sweet and delectable .. — ii. 3 

nor with thy sweets comfort his .... — iii. 2 

sweet love, I see, changing his — iii. 2 

of that sweet way I was in to — iii. 2 

sweet peace coiuluct his sweet soul .. — iv. 1 

1 am sworn, brother, sweet, to grim .. — v. 1 
she came adorned hitlier like sweet May — v. 1 
sweet York, sweet husband (rep. v. 3) — v. 2 
is short, but not so short as sweet .... — v. 3 

how sour sweet music is, when — y. 5 

wlio is sweet fortune's minion MlennjIF. i. I 

I pray thee, sweet wag (rep.) — i.2 

of the tavern a most sweet wench? . . — i.2 

a iuo.-.t sweet rolic of durance? — i.2 

rascalliest,— sweet young prince — i.2 

good-morrow, sweet Hal; wliat says — i.2 

now, my good sweet honey lord — i.2 

and smell so sweet, and talk so like — i. 3 

Richard, that sweet lovely rose — i. 3 

tell me, sweet lord, what is't that.... — ii. 3 

but, sweet Ned,— to sweeten wliich .. — ii. 4 

O my sweet Harry, says she, how.... — ii. 1 

that melted at tlie sweet tale — ii. 4 

how now my sweet creature of bombast? — ii. 4 

weep not, sweet queen, for tricliling — ii. i 

but for sweet Jack Falstatf, kind ... . — ii. 4 

makes Welsli as sweet as ditties — iii. 1 

my sweet beef, I must still be .... — iii. 3 

now remains a sweet reversion — iv. 1 

England did never owe so sweet a hope — v. 2 

1 will take it asasweetdisprace lUeurijll'. i. I 

sweet earl, divorce not wisdom — i. I 

I thank your pretty sweet wit for it — i. 2 

alas, sweet wife, my honour — ii- 3 

had my sweet Harry had but — ii. 3 

captain Pistol; not liere, sweet captain — ii. 4 

sweet knight, I kiss thy neif (re;;, v- 3) — ii. 1 

ah, you sweet little rogue, you! — ii. 4 

the Lord bless that sweet foce of thine! — ii. 4 

well, sweet Jack, have a care of tliyself — ii. 4 

my lords: sweet prince, speak low .. — iv. 4 

half so deeply sweet, as lie — iv. 4 

from every flower the virtuous sweets — iv. 4 

sweet princes, what I did, I did in .. — v. 2 

sweet sir, sit; I'll be with you anon.. — v. 3 

now comes in the sweet of the niglit — v. 3 

O sweet Pistol: away, Hardolidi .... — v. 3 

Goil save thee, my sweet boy! — v.h 

steal his sweet and honeyed sentences. ./Ifinyr.i. I 

sweet men, come to him — ii- I 

the sweet shade of your government — .ii. 2 

use lenity, sweet chuck! — iii.* 



SWE 



8'WEET-aud sweet majesty Ilenrvf. iv. (elm.) 

iusteiul of homage sweet, hilt poisoned iv. I 

a peaceful and a sweet retire Irom .. iv. 3 

tarry, sweet soul, for mine iv.fi 

the pretty and sweet manner of it..., iv. (i 

Christian-like accord in tlieir sweet .. — v. 2 
sweet enlargement doth dismiss ,...\llenrul't.\\. b 

declare, sweet stem from York's .... — ii. .^ 

sweet king! the bishop hatli — iii. 1 

for, sweet prince (rr/). iv. 1) — iii. i 

employ thee tlicn, sweet virgin — iii. 3 

forj'ive me, country, and sweet — iii. .i 

and this is mine; sweet Henry — iv. I 

tliy life to me is sweet; iftliou — iv r, 

sweet madam, give me hearing (rep.) — v. ;1 

happy for so sweet a child — v. :i 

all, Joan, sweet daugliter Joan — v. i 

with whose sweet smell the air iUennjVI. i. I 

O Nell, sweet Nell (_rc/;.ii. 4) _ i.2 

with sweet rehearsal of my morning's — i.2 

my Humphrey, mj' sweet duke — i.2 

sweet aunt, be quiet; 'twas against.. — i. 3 

sweet York, begin; and if thy claim — ii. 2 

good York; sweet Somerset, be still.. — iii. I 

enough, sweet Sulfolk (rep.) — iii, 2 

ond tlien it lived in sweet Elysium.. — iii. 2 

slave, murdered sweet Tully — iv. I 

sweet is the country, because full.... — iv. 7 

sweet Warwick (rcf<. ii.ii) ziLnrijI'l. i. I 

sweet father, do so; set it on your.... — i. 1 

fmrdon me, sweet son; the earl of. ... — i. 1 

low sweet a thing it is to wear — i.2 

sweet ClilTord, hear me (re/).) — i. 3 

tears are my sweet Rutland's obsequies — i- t 

dipp'st in blood of my sweet boy .... — i. ; 

blood of sweet young Rutland — ii. I 

sweet duke of York, our prop to lean — ii. I 

give sweet passage to my sinful soul — ii. 3 

sweet lords, farewell! (>fp. iv. 8) .... — ii. 3 

how sweet! how lovely! gives not .. — ii. .'i 

sweet l)oy, shall be thy sepulchre .. ., — ii. .0 

with thee, good sweet Exeter — ii. a 

sweet widow, by m,v state I swear .. — iii. 2 

and wi tell sweet ladies with my .... — iii. 2 

sweet Oxford (rep. v. -1) — iv. 8 

if tliou be there, sweet brother — v. 2 

sweet rest his soul! fly, lords — v. 2 

meet with joy in sweet Jerusalem ., — v. f, 

O Ned, sweet Ned 1 speak to thy — v. 5 

how sweet a plant have you — v..') 

you have rid this sweet young prince — v. .'t 

sweet Clarence, do thou do it — v..') 

hapless male to one sweet bird — v. (j 

seared the wings of my sweet boy .... — v. li 

upon the lips of this sweet babe — v. 7 

sweet saint, for cliarity, be not .,.. Richard III. i. 2 

live one hour in your sweet bosom .. — i.2 

never came poison from so sweet a place — i.2 

tliine e.ves, sweet lady, have infected — i. 2 

could never learn sweet soothing word — i. 2 

the golden prime of this sweet prince — i.2 

because sweet flowers are slow — ii. 4 

welcome, sweet prince (rep.) — iii. | 

so sweet is zealous contemplation .. — iii. 7 

call them again, sweet prince, accept — iii. 7 

and my sweet sleep's disturbers — iv. 2 

thou sing'st sweet music; hark — iv. 3 

the most replenished sweet work .... — iv. 3 

flowers, new-appearing sweets! — iv. 4 

holy Harry died, and my sweet son . . — iv. 4 

tliat thy two sweet sons smothered .. — iv 4 

sap from her sweet brother's body .. — iv. 4 

acquaint the princess with the sweet — iv. 4 

how long fairly shall her sweet life last? — iv. 4 

sweet Blunt, make some good means — v. S 

ample iutercliange of sweet discourse — v. 3 
they are a sweet society of fair oncs./fcwrj/ I'llt. i. 4 

sweet ladies, will it please you sit? (rep.) — i. 4 

sweet partner, I must not yet forsake — i. 4 

make of your prayers one sweet saeriflcc — ii. I 

to leave so sweet a bedfellow? — ii. 2 

than 'tis sweet at first to acquire .... — ii. 3 

rare qualities, sweet gentleuess — ii. 4 

in sweet music is such art — iii. I (song) 

that sweet a,spect of princes — iii. 2 

that sought him, sweet as summer .. — iv. 2 

sweet Inily, does deserve our lietter . . — v. 1 
sweet Paridarus,— pray yon, speak Troilus iCrett. i. I 

good niece, do; sweet niece Cressida — i. 2 

ever knew love got so sweet, as when — i.2 

besotted on your sweet delights — ii. 2 

thou art of sweet composure — ii. 3 

your fair pleasure, sweet queen (rfp.) — iii. I 

"make a sweet lady sad is a sour ofl'eiicc — iii. 1 

by my trntli, sweet lord (rrp.) — iii. I 

sweet Helen, I must woo you — iii. 1 

sweet, above thought I love you .... — iii. I 

the imaginary relish is so sweet — iii. 2 

build there, carpenter; the air is sweet — iii. i 

espies my sweet lady in — iii. 2 

sweet, bid me hold my tongue — iii. 2 

albeit sweet music issues thence .... — iii. 2 

your leave, sweet Cressid? — iii. 2 

sweet, rouse yourself — iii. 3 

sweet Patroclns (r<-B. v. 1) — iii. 3 

then, sweet my lord, I'll call — iv. 2 

tell inc, sweet uncle, wliat'fl — iv. 2 

so near me, as the sweet Troilus — iv. 2 

ah, sweet ducks! — iv. 4 

welcome to the Greeks, sweet lady (rep.) — i\-. S 

shall I, sweet lord, be bound to you.. — iv. .^ 

but still, sweet love is fooil for — iv. 5 

sweet Meuelans. Sweet draught (rep.) — v. I 

sweet sir, you honour me — v. 1 

now, my sweet guardian! — v. 2 

sweet honey Greek (rep.) — v. 2 

of sally, for the heavens, sweet brother — v. S 

unarm, sweet Hector — v. 3 

sweet honey and sweet notes together — v. II 
'inongsl these sweet knaves .... Tiinon 0/ Athens, L I 



ii. I 
ii. 3 
iii. 1 
iii. 2 
iv. 1 
V. 3 



iii. 7 

iv. 10 

iv. 13 

V. 2 

V. 2 



— ii.4 



iv. 2 
V. 3 
V. 4 
V. 4 
V. 5 



SWEICT— resemble sweet inatrumeuts.7'im.'i/.J//i. i. - 

pardon him, sweet Tjmandra — "V. 3 

proceeded the sweet degrees — jv. 3 

O tlion sweet king-killer — '\- •' 

good-day to you. Sweet madam .... Conolanus, i. 6 
come, good sweet lady — ' ■ 

my sweet lady, pardon - 

most sweet voices! (lep.) ... — 

not lick the sweet wliioh is their poison — 

1 pv'ythee now, sweet son — 

come, my sweet wife, my dearest .■•• — 
li>ng as my exile, sweet as my revenge! — 
sweet words, low-crooked curt sies..Jul.Ca:sar, iii. i 
good friends, sweet friends, let me not — i.m. ^ 
show you sweet CiBsar's wounds .... — "i- ^ 
sweet' Alcxas, most any thin" ....Anlony^-Ueo. i. 2 
that cannot go, sweet Isis, I beseech — ;. ^ 
most sweet queen,— Nay, pray you .. — .J. 3 
no, sweet Octa via, you shall hear.... — '" — 

you have heard on't, sweet? •-..■ 

melt their sweets on blossoming Caisar 

_ one word, sweet queen 

report to him your sweet dependaucy 

as sweet as balin, as soft as air .. -.- - 

sweet sovereign, leave us to ourselves. Cymieiine, i. i 

of leigers for lier sweet •.■• — !• ^ 

I dedicate myself to your sweet pleasure — .i. 7 
a wonderful sweet air, with admirable — n- 3 

my lady sweet, arise .— ". 3 (song) 

your sweet hand. Good-morrow, sir — "-3 
a second night of such sweet shortness 
the sweet view on't miglit well ...... — 

poor tributary rivers as sweet fish. ... — 

not wagging his sweet head? .... — 

in fresh cups, soft beds, sweet words. . — 
from her his dearest one. sweet Imogen? — 
more sweet than our blessed fields .. — 

tliat sweet rosy lad who died — ■.■ - 

sweet cell of virtue and nobility . . TUusAndron. i. 2 
sweet mercy is nobility's true badge — •• 2 

thanks, sweet Lavinia — ■• ^ 

tliere lie thy bones, sweet Mutius.... — i. ^ 

and at my suit, sweet, pardon what.. — i. ^ 
come, come, sweet emperor (rep.).... — 1-2 

not be denied: sweet heart, look back — .i. ^ 
and so, repose, sweet gold, for their .. — n. 3 
under their sweet shade, Aaron...... — ii- 3 

and lioriis, and sweet melodious birds — ii. 3 
all my sweet Moor, sweeter tome .... — ;.'• 3 

sweet lords, entreat her liear me .... — '■■ 3 

so sliould 1 rob my sweet sons of .... 

sweet huntsman, Bassiauus 'tis . . — 
call for ssveet water, wash thy hands 

those sweet ornaments, whose 

which that sweet tongue hath made.. 

my sons' sweet blood will make 

like a sewet melodious bird (,rep.) 

sweet father, cease your tears (rep.) .. 

that gives sweet tidings of 

bear thou my hand, sweet wench .... 

alas, sweet aunt 

sweet poetry, and Tnlly's Orator .... 

thus surprised, sweet girl (,rep.) 

sit down, sweet niece 

eweet boy, the woman Hector s hope 
sweet blowse, you are a beauteous . . 

sweet scrolls to fly about 

with words more sweet, and yet 

now, sweet emperor, be blithe again 
so sweet a death as hanging presently 
O sweet Revenge, now do 1 come (rep.) 
botli her sweetliands, her tongue .... 

to make's entrance more sweet .^, ........... ~ 

for your sweet music this last night — _ii. 5 

O yuur sweet queen! that the strict — — in. 3 

I'llleaveyou, ray sweet lady — iv. 1 

withher sweet harmony and otlier — v. 1 

bitter fool and a sweet fooll (rep.) Leor, i. 4 

if your sweet sway allow obedience - — "■■1 

set not thy sweet heart on proud array . 
broke them in the sweet face of heaven . 

farewell, sweet lord, and sister 

bless thy sweet eyes, they bleed 

give the word. Sweet marjoram 

now, sweet lord, you know the goodness 
ere he can spread his sweet leaves, liomeo Si Juliet,}. 1 
a choking gall, and a preserving sweet — ;• 1 
seeming sweet, convert to bitter gall — i- 5 
steal love's sweet bait from .... — i. .'> (fihorns) 
extremities with extremes sweet — i. 5 (chorus) 
by any other name would smell as sweet — " ' 
look thou but sweet, and I am proof — 
sweet, good-night! tliisbudof love .. — 
as sweet repose and rest come to thy — 

sweet Montague, be true — 

too flattering sweet to be substantial — 
how silver sweet sound lovers' tongues — 
ray sweet rCo;.-dear, A'n/.-madaraJ . . — 
sweet, so would I: yet I should kill.. — 
parting is such sweet sorrow, tliat I .. — 

Bleep aud peace, so sweet to rest! — 

early tongue BO sweet saluteth me? .. — 

well served in to a sweet goose? — 

would bandy her to my sweet love .. 

now, dood sweet nurse (rep.) 

thou shamest the music of sweet news 
O sweet Juliet, thy beauty hath made 
mortal paradise oi siicli sweet flesh?., 
adversity's sweet milk, philosophy .. 

bid my sweet prepare to chide 

say, the lark makes sweet division .. 
shall serve for sweet discourses m our — 
sweet my mother, east me not away! — 
live an unstained wife to ray sweet love — 

because silver hath a sweet sound — 

how sweet is love itself possessed .... — 

sweet flower with flowers I strew .... — 

Bweet tomb iCal. Knl.-O woe] . . . .... . . — v. a 

rCol.Knf.j sweet water nightly I will dew — v. 3 
"■tie sweet and commendable in your .... Hamlci, i. 2 



iv. 3 

V. 1 
V. 2 
V. 2 



— ii.3 
,i. 1 (letter) 



_ ii. 5 

— ii. 5 

— iii. 1 



iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. ) 
iv. 2 
iv. 4 
iv. 4 
iv. 4 
V. I 
v. 2 
V. 2 
Pericles, ii. 3 



iii. 4 
iii. 4 
iii. 7 
iv. 1 
iv. 6 
V. 1 



ii. 2 



— ii. 5 



— iii. 3 



iv. 5 

V. 1 
V. 3 



SWEET— permanent, sweet, not lasting. .Hamlel,]. 3 
as wholesome as sweet, and by very much — 11.2 

sweet Gertrude, leave us too — 1;;. J 

words of so sweet breath composed — iii- j 

O, help him, von sweet heavens! — in.} 

like sweet bells jangled, out of tunc — iii. ■ 

here, sweet lord, at your service — i;;- 2 

sweet, leave me liere awhile — !!!• 2 

rain enough in the sweet heavens.. — !!!■ 3 

Bweet religion makes a rhapsody oi — in. 4 

in mine ears; no more, sweet Hamlet. ... — ifi. 4 

O 'tis most sweet, when in one line — i". 4 

alas, sweet lady, what imports tins song? — iv. 5 

larded all with sweet flowers - iv. .^ (song) 

good-night, sweet ladies ............ — iv. 5 

dear maid, kind sister, sweet Opheha I .. — iv. s 
for bonny sweet Robin is all my joy — iv. 5 (song) 
what noise? how now, sweet queen? .... — iv. 7 

methought it was very sweet — v. 1 (song) 

good-morrow, sweet lord! how dost thou — v. 

sweets to the sweet: farewell! — v. 1 

thy bride-bed to have decked, sweet maid — v. 1 
Bweetlord,if yoiirlordsliipwereatleisnre — v. 2 
good-night, sweet prince; and flights ot.. — y. 2 

my sweet, I prattle out of fashion .... Othello, 11. 1 

do you justice. O sweet England! — .ii- 3 

not now, sweet Desdemona (rep.) — ' ;!;■ 3 

the sooner, sweet, for you — !!!■ 3 

ever medicine thee to that sweet sleep .. — iii. 3 
tasted her sweet body, so I had nothing.. — in. 3 
cry, O sweet creature! and then kiss me — i|i- 3 

i' faith, sweet love, I was coming — }]]. i 

sweet Bianca, take me this (rep. iv.l).. .. — in. 4 

1 know not, sweet [A'n(.-iieitherJ — in. 4 

a fair woman! a sweet woman! — iv. 1 

how, sweet Othello? Devil! — iv. 1 

smell'st so sweet, that tlie sense aches at — iv. 2 
he that is yours, sweet lady. I have none 

their palates both for sweet and sour 

O my dear Cassiol my sweet Cassio! 

so sweet was ne'er so fatal 

sweet soul, take heed, take heed of perjury 

and sweet revenge grows harsli — v. 2 

sweet Desdemona! O sweet mistress ...,.■— y- f 

SWEETEN— the face to sweeten. . frinter s Tale, 11. I 
of Arabia will not sweeten this little . . Macbelh, v. 1 

to sweeten which name of Ned 1 Henry 11^. 11. 4 

sweeten the bitter mock you sent — Henry v. 11. 4 
nor sweeten talk, nor play at . . Trolhts •Sr Cress, iv. 4 

I'll sweeten thy sad grave Cymbelme, iv. 2 

to sweeten my imagination Lear, ly. 6 

sweeten with thy breath this. .. .Romeo ^Juhel, 11.6 

SWEETENED with the hope lUchard II. 11. 3 

SAVEETEH-as a sweeter friend. TwoGen. of fer. u. 6 
shall thereby be the sweeter.-lieasure/nr.VeasMre, 111. 1 

sweet clown, sweeter fool Lnve's L. Lost, iv. 3 

it sounds much sweeter than by..Mer.o/yenice,v. 1 

softer and sweeter than Taming of Sh. i (indue.) 

for she is sweeter than perfume itself — .J. 2 

and sweeter than the kernels -; u- 1 

sweeter than the lids of Juno's eyes. Winter s T. iv. 3 
to make society the sweeter welcome.. MacteM, 111. j 
tlie hawthorn bushasweeter shade. .SHewri/F/. 11. 6 
a sweeter and a lovelier gentleman., flic/iard/;/. i. 2 
sweeter to you, that ha\e a sharper . Cymdeiine, 111. 3 
Moor, sweeter tome than life! .. Titus Andron. 11. 3 
last is true, the sweeter rest was .Romeo S,- Juliet, 11. 3 
O the world hath not a sweeter creature — iv. 1 
SWEETEST— the sweetest bud. . TwoGen. of I'cr. 1. 1 
she is the sweetest lady tliat ever I ..MuchAdo, i. 1 
as a surfeit of the sweetest things.. Mid. N. s Dr. .11. 3 

sweeter fool, sweetest lady! Love's L.Losl,iv. 3 

with sweetest touches pierce ..Merch. ofl'emi-e, v. I 
sweetest iiut hath sourest.. /4s i/om Likeit, 111. 2 (ver.) 
he that sweetest rose will find — 111. 2 (ver.) 
my sweetest [Co(. Kri/.-sweet] son?. Taming ofsii. v. I 
the queen, the sweetest, dearest.. irinlei'sTale, 111. 2 
destroyed the sweetest companion. . . . — .y. 1 

of sweets, is sweetest last Richard J J. 11. 1 

now comes in the sweetest morsel ..'iHenryir. 11. 4 
lulled with sounds of sweetest melody? — in. 1 

their sweetest shade, a grove of iHcnryVI. 111. 2 

the sweetest sleep, and fairest Richard III. v. 3 

thou hast the sweetest face I ever.. Henry I'lII. ly. 1 
sourest points with sweetest teyni3..Ant.SrClen. 11. 3 
aud sweetest, fairest, as I my poor ..Cymbelme, 1. 2 

sweetest, fairest lily! my brother.. — iv. 2 
two of the sweetest companions in .. — y. 6 
though tliey feed on sweetest flowers .. Pericles, \. 1 
the fairest, sweetest, and best .. — iv. 4 (Go\yer) 
my mistress is the sweetest lady Romeo Sr Juliet, 11. 4 
the sweetest honey is loathsome in his — ii- 6 
upon the sweetest flower of all the field — iv. 5 
thou hast killed the sweetest innocent.. O/AeHo, v. 2 

SWEET-FACED man Mid. N.'sDream, 1. 2 

1 am a sweet-faced vouth Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

SWKETHEART? Who's at home. Merry If'ives, iv. 2 

Vage is come witli me, sweetheart — — v. 5 

wlierefore, sweetlieart? Twelfth Night, 1. 3 

ay, sweetheart, and I'll come to thee — m. 4 
w'hat is the matter sweetheart? (rep.). All s lVell,u. 3 

take your sweetheart's hat ll'inier'sTale, iv. 3 

i'faitii, sweetheart, raethiiiks now ..'IHenrylV. 11. 4 

and, sweetheart, lie thou there — n. 4 

sweetheo'-t, I were unmannerly Henry I III. 1. 4 

Tray. Blanch, and Sweetheart Lear, 111. 6 

sweetheart! why, bride! Romeo 4- Juliet, iv. 5 

SWEETING— pretty sveel'mg.. Twelfth K. 11 3 (song) 
fares my Kate? what, sweeting. . Taming ofSh. iy. 3 
ay, marry, sweeting, if we could . . 1 Henry I'l. 111. 3 
thy wit is a very bitter sweeting, fiomeo ^Juliet, ii. 4 
all's well now, sweeting; come away ..Othello, ii. 3 

SWEETLY-upon us here most sweetly. 7"cmp«/, 11. 1 
smelling so sweetly, (all musk) .. Merry I'ives, 11. 2 
BO sweetly were forsworn. il/enj. /or A/eos-. iv. I (song) 
how sweetly do you minister to love..iV/iic/i.-ldo. i. 1 
andlooksweetly, and say nothing .. — .ii. 1 

shall sweetly creep into his _ -- ly. 1 

when tongues speak sweetl.v ....Love sL.Lost,ni. I 
and how most sweetly a' will swear! — iv. 1 



SV/EETLY— are sweetly varied . . ioi'e sL.LosI, iv. 2 
the crow doth sing as sweetly. . Merch. of Venice, y. I 
my conversion so sweetly tastes,. /4s you Ltke ii, ly. 3 

lives sweetly where she dies All's irell,i. 3 

sings as sweetly as a nightingale.. Turning nf Sh.ii. 1 
air nimbly and sweetly recommends .. Macbeth, 1. 6 
speak sweetly, man, although thy..*Jc/ior:Z //. 111. 2 

that erst brough t sweetly forth Henry K v. 2 

■words sweetly placed, and modestly. 1 Henri/;'/, y. 3 
which secure and sweetly he erjoys.SHenri/ VI. 11. 5 
that tender spray did sweetly spring — .11. 6 
sweetly in force unto her fair ht'e'a. Richard in. iv. 4 

sweetly, in all the rest showed Henry I' 1 1 1. 11. 1 

your gifts, and sweetly felt it .. Timon of Athens, y. 1 
more sweetly in great Coesar's ea.r.JuliusCa'sur, 111. 1 
it smells most sweetly in my seuBe . . Pericles, in. 2 

O trespass sweetly urged! Romeo SrJuhet, 1. b 

SWEET-MARJORAM of the 6allad../]H'sHV/^ iv. .'i 

SWEET-MEATS; messengers of iliU.S.'sllr. 1. I 

with sweet-meats tainted are Romeo ^Juliet, i. i 

SWEETNESS— sancy sweetness.,/t/C!K. ./or jVeas. 11. 4 

to loathe the taste of sweetness \ Henry IV. \u. 2 

infected the sweetness of affiance! — HmryV.n. 2 
tuned too sharp in sweetness . . Troilus ff Cress. 111. 2 

and drown me with tlieir sweetness I'ericles, v. 1 

our lives sweetness! that with the pain . . Lear, y. 3 
SWEET-SAVOURED in thy.. Comed.v nf Errors, n. 2 
SWEET-SUGGESTING love.. Two Gen. of Ver. 11. 6 
SWELL-understanding begins to swell. 7'empes(,y. 1 

for tlie water swells a man Merry Wives, ui. 5 

was wont to swell, like round. .UW. N.'s Dream, iv. 1 
the tears that swell in me.. Love' sL. Lost, iv. 3 (ver.) 

where great additions swell All's Well, 11. 3 

Polixenes has made thee swell .. Winter' sTale, u. 1 

seemed to come, discomfort swells Macbeth, 1. 2 

above his limits swells the rage — Richard II. lu. 2 
that swells with silence in the tortured — iv. 1 
or swell my thoughts to any strain-.'J Henry IV. iv. 4 

and swell so mueh the higher 3 Henry VI. ly. 8 

the water swell before a boisterous.. BicAord ///. 11. 3 
they swell, and grow as terrible . . Henri/ Vlll. in. I 
unless it swell past hiding. . . . Troilus Sf Cre.<sida, 1. 2 

not to swell our spirit Tiinon of Athens, 111. a 

why, thy verse swells with stuff so .. — y. 1 

seen the ambitious ocean swell JuUusCrrsar, i. 3 

swell, billow; and swim, bark! — y. 1 

the silken tackle swell with Antony f( Cleo. 11. 2 

the higher Nilus swells, the more.... — .11. 7 
stands upon the swell at full of tide — in- 2 

here no envy swells, here grow no. Titus Andron. 1. 2 
the ocean swells not so as Aaron — — ly. 2 

how this mother swells up toward ^<""\V. • ^ 

or swell the curled waters 'hove ........ — ".i- 

swell his sail with thine own powerful.. OWieilo, 11. 1 
swell, bosom, with thy fraught, for 'tis of — in. 3 
SWELEED— I had been swelled! Merry Ittves, i». 5 
rCoi.]of their counsel swelled ..Mid.N.'sDream, 1. 1 
the tide swelled up into its height ..2Henr!//r. 11. 3 
and Cydnns swelled above the banks. Cj/mte/mcii. 4 
which swelled so much, that it did .. — m. I 
made barren the swelled boast of liim — y. ■■) 
SWELLING evil of my ....Measure for Measure, 11. 4 

Bhowing a more swelling port./Uerc/ian/o/Tenice,.!. I 
as are the swelling Adriatic eeas.. Taming ot .sA. 1. 2 
to the swelling act of tlie imperial .... Macbeth,}. 3 

did never float upon the swelling tide. KnigJohn, 11. 1 
the swelling diiference of your settled. /Jic/iard //. i.l 
down from these swelling heavens..! Henrj//r. 111. 1 
to behold the swelling scene! .. HenryT. 1. (chonis) 
comes swelling like a turkey-cock (rep.) — y. 1 
malice of thy swelling heart ......) Henry VI. 111. 1 

hath allayed their swelling griefs ..SHenryVI. ly 8 

swelling wrong-incensed peers Richard III. 11. I 

swelling o'er with arts and exercise Troil.^r Cress, iv.4 

appear by external swelling Antony 4' Cleo. y. 2 

ten thousand swelling toads .. Titus Androntcus, 11. 3 
malice of my swelling heart ! . . ... .... - y. .) 

noble swelling spirits, that hold their ..Othillo,}}. 3 

SWELL'ST thou, proud heart? Richard II. 111. 3 

SWELTERED venom sleeping got Macbeth, ly. 1 

SWENO, the Norway's king ■,•■••,„, ~ ■ '' 'f 

SWEPT— cobwebs swept 1 ammg of Shrew, iv. 1 

thus have we swept suspicion from.. 3 Henry) l.y. 7 
SWERVE not from the smallest.. Meas. tor.Vras. iv. 2 

that ever made eye swerve Wmler slae, ly. 3 

or swerve a liair from truth.. Troi/us .^-Crei-.Mda, in. ■- 
but alas, I swerve; many dream ....Cywbeline v 4 

SWERVING with the blood Henry V. 11. 2 

a most unnoble swerving . . .4)i(ony <S-C(enpa(ra, 111. 9 

SWIFT— this swift business I must .. .. 7empes(, 1. i 

by the swift course of time ..TwoGen.ofJ erona,i. 3 

to make my purpose swift — .?!• 6 

you for his swift embassador . . Jl/eas./or iVieas. 111. 1 
make a swift return ................. — iv. 3 

it was the swift celerity of his death — .y . 

havin" so swift and excellent a wit.. Wuo'i Ado, 111. 
Bwift as a shadow, short as any. Mid.N. sDream,]. 1 

for night's swift dragons cut , — >!!• ^ 

as swift as lead, sir Love sL.Losi,u\. 1 

you are too swift, sir, to say so — i"- ' 

courses as swift as thought m every. . — ly. 6 
can look as swift as yours. . Merchant of J enicc, 111. 2 
extremest verge of the swift brook..4s you Like i(, 1.1. 1 
and why not the swift foot of time?.. — in- 2 
he is very swift and sententious .•••■„, — ,. ,^'- ^ 
thy greyhounds are as swift. Tammg-o/SA. 2 (indue.) 
a good swift simile, but something.... -- y. 2 

wishing clocks more swift? Winter slate,]. 2 

Camillo tardied my swift command . — in. 2 
to me, or my swift passage, that I — iv. (cliorus) 
beauteous and swift, the minionsof ..iUac6e//i, 11. 1 
I wish your horses swift, and sure oi — ni. { 
distinguishes the swift, the slow .... — i.!!- ' 

that a swift blessing may soon — ".}° 

in this action of swift speed King John, i . 1 

be swift like lightning 111 the Richard 11. 1.3 

with all swift speed you must. — v. 1 

upon agreement, of swilt Severn s . .IHcnryn. 1. 3 

whose swift wrath beat down iHcnrylV.i. 1 

with all swift despatch to line Henry V.u.i 



SWI 

SWIFT— our swift dncne flics .. Ilrnnji: iii. (choniB) 
luvollns high, imil swift corantos.... — Iii. 5 

as pwift as stones enforced from — iv. 7 

60 swift It |>acv linth tlioiiglit — v. (chorus) 

niiiitlicrwouUi rtv swift, hut wantctli.l Hriirj///. i. I 

take nil the swift lulvmitiige lln/iaiJ III. iv. 1 

true hope is swift, ami flies with .... — v. 2 
thither? In oUswift haste.... 7Voi7iij 4-Ci«iiWa, i. 1 

wingcil tlius snift with scorn — ii. 3 

li^ht hoats sail swift, though — .!!* ^ 

give me swift transportancc — iii. 2 

wings more monieutary swift than .. — iv. 2 
gohlins swift as frcur.y tlioughts .... — v. II 

It requires swift f.Kit TniKin rifAlheni.v. 2 

people ingrosseil by swift imprcss/lfi/onj/ 4' Cleo. iii. 7 

if swift thought break it not — iv.O 

his soul sailed on. how swift his ship.CymMiiif, i. i 
swift, swift, you dragons of the niBht 1 — ii. 2 

see how switt she comes 1 7i(hi/lHi/ionici«, iv. I 

ns swift us swallow flies — iv. 2 

thy vengeful waggon swift away — v. 2 

make swift the iiangs of my ijueen's . . Pericles, iii. 1 
our posts shall be swift, and iiitelli.v;eiit.. Lc/jr, iii, 7 

she'd 1>C as swift in motion Komeo ^Juliet, ii. S 

too swift arrives as tardy as too slow — ii. G 

mischief I thou art swift to enter .. — v. 1 

with wings as swift as meditation Hamlet, i. 5 

tliat, switt as quicksilver, it courses — i. 5 

he, swift of foot, outran my purpose OlhcUo, ii, 3 

some swift means of death for — iii. 3 

SWii TEll than the moones....jUi<l.;V.'» Dream, ii. 1 
about the wood go swifter than the wind — iii. 2 
swifter than arrow from the Tartar's bow — iii. 2 

swifter than the wandering moon — iv. 1 

wind, thought, swifter things.... Lors'i L. Lost, v. 2 
with swifter spleen than powder ....KingJnhn, ii. 2 
that arrows fled not swifter toward. .2H(?Hry/A'. i. 1 
come off and on, swifter than he .... — iii. 2 
swifter than blood decays . . Troilus /jr Cressida, iii. 2 
caused our swifter composition ....Coriolatitu, iii. 1 
a swifter moan shall outstrike., yln'OHi/ <S' Cleo. iv. 6 
ond, swifter than his tongue Itomen ^Juliet, iii. 1 

S\V IFTEST expedition. . . . Tiro Ueji. nf feronn. iii. 1 

with tlie swiftest wing of speed AU'sll'ell, iii. 2 

that swiftest wing of recompense is Macbeih, i. 4 

mount on my swiftest horse \ Henry y I, iv. 5 

the swiftest harts have posted you . . Cymbeline, ii. 4 

SWIFTLY— follow them swiftly Tempest, i\i. 3 

your praise is come too swiftly. ...As you Like il, ii. 3 

softly and swiftly, sir Taming nf .'ihreir, v. I 

must be even as swiftly followed. . lymler'sTnle. i. 2 

how swiftly will tliis Feeble 2lletiryll'. iii. 2 

they both came swiftly running 1 Henry n. ii. 2 

ti<iing9, as swiftly as the posts 3 Henry VI. ii. 1 

SWIFTNESS of putting on TieeinhNighl, ii. 5 

with reasonable swiftness, add more . . Henry I', i. 2 
by violent swiftness, that whicli we. Henry I'll I. \. I 
tlie harm of unscanned swiftness .. Coriolanns, iii. 1 

SWIFT- WINGED with desire to seU Henry ri. ii. .5 
our swift-winged souls may catch.. i?ic/ia/ti ///. ii. 2 

SWILLS your warm blood like — v. 2 

SWILLED with the wild and wasteful. Htm i//'. iii. 1 

SWIM-be'tto fly, to swim TempesI, i. 2 

as he that sleeps here, swims — ii. I 

1 can swim like a duck (rep.') — ii. 2 

the leviathan can swim a l&ague. Mid. N.'s Dream, ii.2 

or sink or swim, send danger \ Henry 1 1', i. 3 

which swims against your stream ..iHenryir. v. 2 

labour swim against the tide 3Henry CI. i. 4 

say, you can swim; alas — v. 4 

wanton hoys that swim on bladders. Henry VIII.Wi.'l 
the river Styx, I would swim. Troilui f; Cressida, v. 4 

swims with fins of lead Coriolanui, i. 1 

flood, and swim to .vonder point? ..JulittsCiBsitr,i. 2 
this is a naughty night to swim in Lear, iii. 4 

SWI.MMliR-the good swimmer SluchAdo, v. 2 

ns two spent swimmers, that do Macbeih, i. 2 

SWIMMING-with swimming gait...Mia. N.'sD. ii. 2 
poor Tom; that cats the swimming frog. .Lear, iii. 4 

SVVINE eat all the draff Merry irivei,\v. i 

nearl enough for a swine Love^sL.Losf.,iv. 2 

now like a swine he lies I raining o/SArei", 1 (indue.) 

killing swine. Sister, where thou? MacMli,i. 3 

to hug with swine; to seek sweet .... King John, v. 2 

tliis foul swine lies now even in..,. liicltnrd III. v. 2 

a baser temple than where swine.. 7'im<m n/Aih. v. 1 

hovel thee with swine, and rogues forlorn, z-e'ir, iv. 7 

SWI.N'E-DKUNK; and in his sleep ..AU'siyell,iv. 3 

SWINE-FIERDS, that have made. lyin'er'sTale, iv.3 

SWINE-Ki;El'I.N(J, from eating ..1 Henryiy. iv. 2 

SWING and rudeness rroilus^Crei,idn,i. 3 

SWIN(iE-UUCKLERSinall theinns.2Hf>i.;r. iii.2 
SWINGED me for my love.. 7'k'o Gen. <}^ Verona, ii. 1 

now will he be swinged for — iii. I 

I would have swinged him {rep.).. Merry Wives, v. 5 
I had swinged him ^ownClXy. Measure for Measure, v.l 
St. George, that swinged the dragon. /vini,'Jo/in, ii. 1 

have you as soundly swinged i Henry IV. v. 4 

if you be not swinged, I'll forswear .. — v. 4 
SWINISH sleep their drenched natures.. W<ic6e/A, i. 7 
with swinish plirane, soil our adilition ..Hamlel, i. 4 
SWINSTEAD-toward Swinstead {rep.).K.John, v. 3 
SWITCH nnil fpurs.switcli and 8pur8./(om(;D*Jii(.ii.4 
SWrrcilKS-tnit switches to them. .Henri/ VI 1 1, v. 3 
S W ITl II )LDf A M'.j footed thrice ..Uar, iii. 4 (song) 

SWITZE II -where are my Switzcrs? Hamlel. iv. !, 

SWuLN-breaated the surge most swoln.yfmpn/, ii. I 
swoln rc'o/.K>i(.-woolleiiJ bag-pipe.Wfr.n//'tii. iv. 1 

oil swolu and ulcerous Marbrlli, iv. 3 

that swoln porcel of dronsics XHenrylV. ii. 4 

whilst the big veor, swoln with.2HfMri//('. (indue.) 

«iich swoln and hot discourse. 7>i)i/Hi^t'rfnir/rt, ii. 3 

SWi)ON— with one that »v;oona. .Meas. for Meas. ii. 4 

I Bwoon almost with fear Mid. N.'sDream, ii. 3 

hold hisbrowsl he'll swoon I Lnrr'sL.LosI, v. 2 

own counterfeit to swoon At you Likeil, iii. 5 

inanv will swoon when they do look — iv. 3 
how I ccmnterfeitcil to swoon when he — v. 2 

no woman, I'll not swoon at it KingJnhn. v. & 

lodging where 1 flrst did swoon?... .2 Henri//*', iv. 4 



[ 741 1 



swo 



SAVOON— whati doth she swoon? . . . .3 Henry V 1. V. 5 

I swoon with this deud-killing Richard III. iv. I 

olive; Iswocm to see tliee Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

swoon for what's to come upon i\\ee.Cnrintanut, v. 2 
cause, do you think, I have to swoon? — \.'i 
whuti dill Cassar swoon? lie i'eW. ..JuliusCwsar, i. 2 
swoons rather; for so bad a prayer, ^n/oni/ fifCleo. iv.'J 

she swiioiiB to see them bleed Hamlet, v. 2 

SWdONDED at the sight Itnmeo S, Juliet, iii. 2 

SWOONED, all sorrowed ll'inter'sTale,v. 2 

for lie swooned, and fell down at it. J uliusCiesar, i. 2 
SWOONING destruction ....Troilus ^Cressida, lil. 2 
SWOOl'-their dam, at one fell swoopi. Macbeih, iv. 3 

S WORD— put thy sword up, traitor Tempest, i. 2 

felony, sword, pike, knife — ii. 1 

draw ttiy sword: one stroke — ii. 1 

of whom your swords arc tempered .... — ?.'!• 3 

your swords are now too massy — iii 3 

the sword should end it Merry Wives, i. I 

it is petter that friends is the sword.. — i. 1 
with playing at sword and dagper .. — i. I 

but I have a sword, and it shall — ii. 1 

with my long sword, I would — ii. I 

which I with sword will open — ii.2 

if I see a sword out — ii. 3 

what, the sword and the word I — iii. 1 

lay their swords to pawn — iii. I 

never draw sword again Oep-) . . .. TwelfthNighl, i. 3 
or strip your sword stark naked .... — iii. 4 

Eut up your sword (j-ep.) — iii 4 
ut never draw thy sword — iii. 4 

tempt me furtlier, draw thy sword ,. — iv. 1 

you drew your sword upon me — v.l 

nor the deputed sword .... Measure for Measure, ii. 2 
lie, who the sword of heaven will bear — iji. 2 

by my sword, Beatrice, thou Much.-ido, iv. 1 

never lay thy hand upon thy sword.. — v. 1 
my hand meant nothing to my sword — v. I 

five lis the swords, we have bucklers — v. 2 
^f ooed thee with my sword . . Mid. N.'sDream, i. 1 
must draw a sword to kill himself .. — iii. 1 
we will do no harm with our swords — iii- I 
defiled that draws a sword on thee .. — iii. 2 

out, sword, aud wound the pap — v. 1 

come, trusty sword; come. Blade .... — v.l 

if drawing my sword against Love's L.LosI, i- 2 

at my service, and his sword — V. 2 

an c.ve, wounds like a wooden sword — v. 2 

I'll (lo it by the sword — v. 2 

with a base and boisterous sword .As you Like it, ii. 3 

I broke my sword upon a stone — ii. 4 

I blush, and hide my sword — ii. 7 

we measured swords, and parted .... — v. 4 

and put him to the sword — v. *! 

no sword worn, but one to dance ....Atl'siyell,i\. 1 

my sword and yonrs are kin — ii. I 

it was this very sword entrenched it — ii. 1 

wliilst I can shake my Bword — .}'}• ^ 

that his sword can never win — iii. 2 

the breaking of my Spanish sword .. — iv. 1 

rust, sword! cool, blushesl — iv.3 

an old rusty sword ta'en out of ..Taming- or.?/i. iii. 2 
sting is sharper than the sword's.. IViiUer'sTale, ii. 3 

swear by this sword, thou wilt — ii. 3 

shall swear upon this sword of justice — iii. 2 
and come witli naked swords .Comerfyo/Brrorj, iv. 4 
these witches are afraid of swords.... — iv. 4 

take his sword away: bind — v. 1 

with drawn swords, met us again .... — v. 1 

I drew my sword on you — v.l 

never didst thou draw thy sword on — y. 1 
takemy sword; there's husbandry .... Macbeth, ii.i 

give me my sword; who's there — .ii. ■ 

dare me to the desert with thy sword . . — iii. 4 
give to the edge o' the sword his wife .. — iv. 1 

hold fast the mortal sword — i v. 3 

or wear it on my sword, yet — iv.3 

the sword of our slain kings — iv.3 

be this the whetstone of your sword.... — iv.3 
within my sword's lengtli set him .... — iv.3 

with my sword I'll prove the lie — v. 7 

but swords I smile at, weapons — v. 7 

or else my sword, with — v. 7 

and die on mine own sword? — v. 7 

my voice is in my sword — v. 7 

witli thy keen sword impress — v. 7 

desiring thee to lay aside the sword ..KingJolin.i. 1 

that lilt their Bwords in such a just — ii- I 

you stain your swords with blood — ii. 1 

with unbacked swords, and helmets .. — ii. I 
the swords of soldiers orchis teeth .... — ii.2 

your sword is bright, sir; put it up — iv.3 

I think, my sword's OS sharp OS yours.. — iv. 3 

put up thy sword betime — iv.3 

my right-drawn sword shall prove ..Uichard Jl. i. 1 
hv that sword I swear, which gently — i. 1 
there shall your swords and lances . . — i. 1 

ploughed up with neighbours' swords — i. 3 

lav on our royal sword your — 1.3 

arid friends their helpful swords — in. 3 

stain tlie temper of my knightly sword — iv. 1 

lie so heavy on my sword, that — iv. I 

leaning upon my sword, came MIcnrylV.i. 3 

my sword hacked like a hand-saw .. — ii. 4 
to hack tliv sword as thou host done — ii. 4 
how came Falstaff"s sword BO hacked? — ii- l 
thou hadst Are and sword on thy side — ii. 4 
and here ilraw I a sword, w hose .... — v. 2 

this sword hath ended him — V. 3 

now, by my sword, I will kill all .... — v..) 

pr'ythec. lind thy sword. O Hal — v. 3 

thou gct'st not my sword; but take.. — v. 3 

worse than thy sword my flesh — v. 4 

hast thou fleshed thy maiden sword — v. 4 

make him cat a piece of my Bword .. — v. 4 
wroth of noble Hotspur's sword.'.' /frnry/r. (indue.) 
whose wcU-laboiiring sword had three — \. I 

five me my sword, and cloak — .n- 4 
will maintain the word with my sword — ni. 'i 
by dint of sword, have since — >v. I 



SWORDS which must decide it iHcnryUWv. I 

turning the word to sword, and life.. — iv. 2 

draw no swords but what arc — iv. 4 

not now a rebel's sword iiiislieathed.. — iv. 4 

blunt the sword that guards — v. 2 

still bear tlie balance and the sword — v. 2 

tlie unstained sword that ,V"U have used — v. 2 

we bear our uivil swcirds, and native — v. 5 
should famine, sword, and \\i:e..HeniyV. i. (chorus) 

awakes the sleeping sword of war — i. 2 

give edge unto the swords that — i. 2 

with blood, and sword. Olid Arc, to win — i. 2 

hides a i-wrn-d, from hilts unto .. .. — ii. (chorus) 

endure cold as another man's sword — ii. I 

valour ofa man. and put up thy sword — ii. I 

by this sword I will. Sword is on oath — ii. I 

sheuthed their swords for lack of ... . — iii. I 

Olid sword and shield, in bloody field — iii. 2 

a killing tongue, and a quiet sword .. — iii. 2 

more sharper than 3'our swords — iii. 5 

come to the orbitrement of swords .. — iv. I 

the sword, the mace, the crown — iv. 1 

mangled shalt thou be by this my sword — iv. 4 

helmet, and his bruised sword .... — v. (chorus) 

rebellion broached on his sword .. — v. (ehoru3) 

advance his bleeding sword 'twixt — v. 2 

fortune made his sword .. — v. 2 (chorus) 

his brandished sword did blind iUenryVJ. i. 1 

wonders with his sword and lance .. — i. 1 

here is my keen-edged sword — i. 2 

fightest with the sword of Deborah .. — i. 2 

any sword, weapon, or dogger .... — i. 3 (procl.) 

hia sword did ne'er leave striking.... — i. 4 

of Talbot serves me f.jr a sword — ii. 1 

with the valiant sword of York — iii. 1 

O turn thy edged sword another way — iii. 3 

lets fall his sword before your highness — iii. 4 

stouter champion never handled sword — iii. 4 

that, who so draws a sword, 'tis — iii. 4 

to the rage of France his sword — iv. G 

till with thy warlike sword — iv. 6 

crest thy sword struck fire — iv. G 

the sword of Orleans hath not — iv. G 

his bloody sword he brandished — iv. 7 

flesh his puny sword in Frenchmen's — iv. 7 

and girt thee with the sword iHenryVI.i. I 

my Bword should Bhed hot blood .... — i. 1 

proud protector, with my swordi .... — ii. I 

come witli tliy two-hand sword .... — ii. 1 

and that my sword be stained with .. — ii.2 

Eut the Englishmen unto the sword — iii. I 

ut here's a vengeful sword, rusted .. — iii. 2 

but with our sword we wiped away . , — iv. 1 

broke he ra.v sword, my arms torn .. — iv. I 

whose dreadful swords were never .. — iv. 1 

come, and get thee a sword — iv. 2 

neither sword nor fire (rep.) — iv. 2 

we will have the mayor's sword borne — iv.3 

BOuls should perish by the sword!.... — iv. 4 

hath ray sword therefore broke through — iv. 8 

my sword make way for me — iv. 8 

that have a sword, and yet am ready — iv. in 

swallow my sword like a great pin .. — iv. 10 

let tills my sword report wliat — iv. in 

sword, 1 will hallow tliee for this .... — iv. lo 

thy body in with my sword — iv. 1(1 

except a Bword, or sceptre to balance it — v.l 

their swords for my enfranchisement — v. 1 

so let it help me now against thy sword — v. 2 

sword, hold thy temper — v. 2 

now, by my sword, well hast tliou . . — v. 3 
by the swords of common soldiers ..ZHenryVl. i. I 

our swords shall plead it in -~ i. 1 

a.y, with my sword; what! think'st.. — i. 2 

kill me with thy sword, and not .... — i. 3 

unseath your sword, and dub {rep.) — ii. 2 

draw thv sword in right — ii.i 

the third, if this sword hold — v.l 

here sheath thy sword, I'll pardon .. — v. 5 

see, how mj' sword weeps for — v. G 

Clifford shook his sword at him ....Uichard III. i. 2 

I lend thee this sharp-pointed sword — i. 2 

take up the sword again (rf;i.) — i. 2 

witli the hilts of thy sword — i. -t 

O that's the sword to it? — iii. I 

is the sword uoswoved? is the king dead?— iv. 4 

is thousand swords [Co/. An'. -men] — v. 2 

and fall thy edgelcss sword (rep.) .... — v. 3 

free your children from the sword .. — v. 3 

draw your willing swords — v. 3 

our conscience, swords our law — v. 3 

his sword hatli a shorn edge HenryVllI. i. 1 

my swordi' the life-blood of thee else — iii. 2 
starved a subject for my sword .. Troilus^- Cress, i. I 

those with swords? Swords? anything — i. 2 

his sword is bloodied, and his helm.. — 1.2 

Hector's sword had lacked a master — i. 3 

strong joints, true swords — i. 3 

than are swords and bows directive.. — i. 3 

since the first sword was drawn — ii.2 

o sword employed is perilous — ii.2 

beholds a Grecian and a sword — ii.2 

a heart to dare, or sword to draw .... — ii.2 

he should cot swords first — ii. 3 

if to my sword his fate be not — iv. I 

stand lit mercy of my sword — iv. 4 

wherein my sword hod not inipressnre — iv. 5 

should by my mortal sword be drained! — iv. ."> 

liuiig th.v advanced sword i' the air .. — iv. 5 

my sword should bite it — v. 2 

than shall inv prompted sword falling — v. 2 

the fan and wind of your fair sword — v. 3 

vengeance ride uiMin oiir swords .... — v. 3 

with your true sword drawn — v. 3 

rest, sword; thoii hast thy fill — v. 9 

niv hnlf-supneil sword, that frankly — v. 9 
what lieart, tiead, sword , force . 7'imon i^/yl/Aeni, ii. 2 

more deslruetiou than thy sword .... — iv.3 

but for thv sword and fortune — iv.3 

let not thy Bwoixl skip one — iv. a 



swo 



SWORD— thy tronclmiit sv,-or(\..Timono/Jlhcns, iv. S 
nnd shakes his tlireateniug Bword.... — v. 2 

than hew to't with thy sword — v. f. 

use the olive with my sword — v. .'> 

let me use my sword, I'd mnkc Cunulitiiiii, i. I 

at Grecian swords' contending — j- 3 

lie luid rather sec the swords, and hear — ;• 3 

that we witli smoking s^vords may . . — i. 4 

outdares his senseless sword — }• ^ 

charms misauide tliynpposers' swords! — i. 5 

lining the air \vi til swords advanced — i. 6 

make you a sword of me? . — !• 6 

a bribe, to pay my sword; I do refuse it — _i. 9 
equal force, (true sword to sword) .. — i. 10 
he lurched all swords o' the garland — n. 2 
his sword ideatli'a stamp) where it .. — _ii. 2 
often he liad met you, sword to sword — ijj. 1 

down witli that sword; tribunes — ill. 1 

since he could draw a sword — iii. 1 

his good swoi-d in his hand — iv. 2 

here I clip the anvil of my sword — iv. 5 

achieve as soon as draw his sword .. — iv. 7 

all the swords in Italy could not — v. 3 

let him feel your sword, which we .. — v. 5 

to use my lawful sword! — v. 5 

be quiet, put up your swords — v. 5 

I have not since put up my sword .JulittsCtenar^]. 3 
here, as I point my sword, the sun . . — _ii. 1 
to the elbows, and besmear our swords — iii- 1 
as tliose your swords, made rich _. ... — 111-' 
to you our swords liave leaden points — iii. 1 
draw a sword against conspirators (jcp.) — v. 1 
slaughter to the sword of traitors .. — v. 1 
not born to die on Brutus' sword .... — v. 1 

witli this good sword, that ran . . — v. 3 

guide thou tlie sword: Ca!3ar ircp,).. — v. 3 
come, Cassiiis' sword, and find Titinius' — v. 3 
and turns our swords in our proi)er.. — V. 3 
hold then my sword, and turn away — v. 5 
I held the sword, and he did run on it — v. 5 
shines o'er with civil s'xoids. An/oinj^Cleoiialra, i. 3 
now, by my sword,— And target .... — i. 3 

iipon your sword sit laureled victory ! — i. 3 
cause enough to draw their swords .. — ii. 1 

tliat drew their swords with you — ii. 2 

I did not think to draw my sword .. — ii. 2 
great C'EEsar lay his sword to bed ... . — ii. 2 
whilst I wore his sword Philippau .. — ii- 5 
if 'twill tie up tliy discontented sword — ii. 6 
■with Parthian blood tliy sword is warm — iii- 1 
his sword, grants scarce distinction — iii. 1 

do you misdoubt this sword, and these — iii- 7 

kept his sword even like a daneer — iii. 9 

and that my sword, made weak — ..V'-^ 

sword against sword, ourselves alone — iii. 11 
1 and my sword will earn our cluonide — iii, II 

pile has robbed me of my sword — iv. 12 

I, tliat with my sword quartered o... — iv. 12 
draw that tliy honest sword (rep.) .. — iv. 12 
my sword is drawn. Tlien let it .... — iv. 12 

tins sword but shown to Cscsar — iv. 1 2 

this is his sword, I robbed his wound — v. 1 

died witli their swords in hand Ojmhclme^ r. 1 

to be put to the arbitrement of swords — i. 5 
you shall answer me with your sword — _i. 5 
gains, or loses, your sword, or mine.. — .?!•'* 

to master Caesar's sword (rep.) — iii. 1 

my body's marked with Roman swords — iii- 3 
what shall I need to draw my sword? — iii. 4 
whose edge is sliarper than the sword — iii. 4 

look ! I draw the sword myself — iii. 4 

best dr.aw my sword; and if (rep.) .. — iii. 6 

out sword . and to a sore purpose ! — iv. 1 

witli his own sword, which he did wave — iv. 2 
threatened our prisoners with the sword — v. 5 
came to me with his sword drawn .. — y. 5 
successive title wtli your swords ..TilicsAndron. i. 1 
where he circumscribed with his sword — i. 2 

given me leave to sheathe my sword — i. 2 

and, with our swords, upon a pile of — i. 2 

your country's service drew your swords — i. 2 

draw j'our swords, and sheathe them not — i. 2 

do I consecrate my sword — i. 2 

and with my sword I'll keep this.... — i. 2 

flourished for lier with his sword .... — i. 2 

and that my sword upon thee shall. . — ii. 1 

give me a sword, I'll chop off my — iii. 1 

my sword shall soon despatch it {rep.) — iv. 2 
this sword shall prove, he's honour's .. PeyidfSy ii. 5 

liis sharp sword out, mumbling Lem-j ii. 1 

with his prepared sword, he charges — ii. 1 

such a slave as this should wear a sword — ii. 2 
arnis,arms, sword, tire! Corruption .... — iii. 6 

give me thy sword; aiieasaut — iii. 7 

bending his sword to his great master — iv. 2 

the sword is out tliat must destroy thee.. — iv. 6 
tender-minded does not become a sword — v. 3 

draw thy sword; that, if my siJcech — v. 3 

despite thy victor sword, and fire-new .. — v. 3 
this sword, this arm, and my best spirits — v. 3 
this sword of mine shall give them instant — v. 3 

take my sword, give it tlie captain — y. 3 

put up your swords (rep.) Rojneo ^Jullet^ i. 1 

long sword, ho! A crutch, a crutchl {rep.) — i. 1 

fiery Tybalt, with his sword prepared — i. 1 

than twenty of their swords — ii. 2 

claps me his sword upon the table .. — iii. 1 

will you pluck your sword out — iii. 1 

these niastevless and gory swords to lie — v. 3 
upon my sword. We have sworn {rep.)..Hamlel,\. 5 
his antique sword, rebellious to his arm — ii. 2 
the whiff and wind of his fell sword .... — ii. 2 
for, lo! his sword which was declining .. — ii- 2 
than Pyrrhus' bleeding sword now falls.. — ii. 2 
ill mincing with his sword her husband's — Ji. 2 

si;holar's eye, tongue sword — iii. I 

up, sword: and know thou a more iiornd — iii. 3 
looks raw and red after the Danish sword — iv. 3 

no trophy, sword, iior hatchment — iv. 6 

you may choose a sword uubatcd — iv. 7 



[ 742 ] 

SWO HD— purpose, I'll anoint ray sword. /IdmZ*/, iv. 7 

six Freucli swords, their assigns — y. 2 

keep up your bright swords, for the dew.o;/ie//o,_i. 2 
swords out, and tilting one at otlier's.... — ii. 3 
followint; him with detennined sword .. — ii. 3 

I heard the clink and fall of swords — ii- 3 

he that you followed with your sword? . . — ii. 3 
and take thy sword [Cof.A'n^.-stand] .... — v. 1 

forth, my sword; he dies — v. 1 

persuade justice to break her swordi .... — v. 2 
I care not for thy sword; I'll make thee — v, 2 

fyel your sword upon a woman? — v. 2 

every puny whipster gets my sword — v. 2 

it is a sword of Spain, the ice"brook's — v. 2 

and this ^ood sword, I have made my way — v. 2 

wrench his sword from him — v. 2 

SWORD-AND-BUCKLER prince . . 1 Henry IV. i. 3 

SWORDER, and banditto slave ..,.'ine7}ryyi.\y. 1 

to the show, against a sworder .Aniony SfCleo, iii. 11 

SWORD-HILTS, whilst I run on it.JidntuCwsaiw. 5 

SWORDSMEN— sinewy swordsmen ..AlCsn'ell.W, 1 

SWORE he would marry her to-night. 3/Tic/t Ado, ii. 1 

swore he would meet her as he was,. — iij. 3 

he swore he would never marry .... — iii. 4 

for he swore a thing to me on — v. 1 

for they swore you did — v. 4 

swore that you were almost sick (rep) — v. 4 

no judgment, when to her I swore. iVit/. A'. '« Dr. iii. 2 
swore, to study with your grace ,. Love's L.Lostt i- 1 
you swore to that, Biron. and tp the rest — i. 1 

sir, then I swore in jest — wliat is — i. 1 

keep what I have swore [ Co/. -s worn e] — i- I 

and swore, a better speecn was never — v. 2 
madam, he swore, that he did hold me — v. 2 

I never swore this lady such an oath — v. 2 
you swore a secret pilgrimage.. 3/crc/i. o/FigHice, i. 1 
and swore he would pay him agaiu.. — i. 2 

you sw^ore to me, when I did give. . . . — v. 1 
that swore by his honour (rpp.) ..Asyou Liheil^ i. 2 
shook hands, and swore brothers .... — v. 4 

though I swore I leaped from AlVslVell^ iv. 1 

6wore BO loud, that, all ix\x\tiZe6.,.Tavnns of Sh. iii. 2 
he stamped, and swore, as if the vicar — iit. 2 

how he swore; how she prayed — iv. 1 

in resolution as I swore before — iv. 2 

Droraio; swore, I was assured . . Comedy of Err. iii. 2 
swore he» that he was a stranger (rep.) — iv. 2 
where we swore to you dear umity . . Kin^John, v. 4 
swore the devil his true liegeman .AHejtrylK ii. 4 

swore little, diced, not above — iii. 3 

and pity moved, swore him assistance — iv. 3 
you swore to us, and you did swear.. — v. 1 

to this we swore our aid — v. 1 

which he swore, as he was a soldier . . Uevry r. iv. 7 
he swore consent to your succession.SWeit??/!''/. ii. 1 
and swore, with sobs, that he v^owld. liichard III. i. 4 
Helen herself swore the other day. Troilus Sf Cress, i. 2 

that swore to ride before him — iv. 4 

swore, they saw men, all in fire ..JxdiusCfesar^ i. 3 
then I swore thee, saving of thy life . . — v. 3 

swore to Cymbeline, I was Cymbeline, iii. 3 

and swore, with his own single hand — iv. 2 
but, that he swore to take our lives? — iv, 2 

and swore, if I discovered not — v, 5 

truest princess, that ever awore her faith — v. 5 
sure as death I swore [/vn(.-sware]. Titus Andron. i. 2 
Bwore he would see her to-morrow .... Pericles, iv. 3 
swore as many oaths as I spake words . . Lear, iii. 4 
he swore, had neither motion, guard . . llmnlei, iv. 7 

she swore, in faith, 'twas strange Othello, i. 3 

SWORN— like a duck, I'll be ^v^Qxn....Tempes(, ii. 2 

and I'll be sworn, 'tis true — • iii. 3 

nay, I'll be sworn I have ..TwoGen. of Verona,\v, 4 
I'll be sworn (rep. ii. 2 and iii. 3) .. Merry Wives, \. 4 
that I would have sworn his disposition — ii. 1 

I am sworn of the pea ce — i i . 3 

sir Toby will be sworn, that I TwelflhMght, i. 5 

I'll be sworn thou art — i. 5 

and thy sworn enemy — iii. 4 (challenge) 

and having sworn truth — iy, 3 

may, in the sworn twelve Meas.for Meas.ii. 1 

were you sworn to the duke — iv. 2 

everj' montli a new sworn brother.. ..Much Ado, i. 1 
though I had sworn the contrary.. ., — _i. 1 

though, I'll be sworn (rep. v. 4) — ii. 1 

I will not be sworn, but love may .. — ii. 3 
I would have sworn it had, my lord — ii. 3 

have sworn for three years' teTm.. Love' iL. Lost, i. 1 

armed to do, as sworn to do — j. 1 

I have already sworn, that is, to live — i. 1 

having sworn too hard-a-keeping oath — i. 1 

I have sworn to stay with you — i. I 

each to other hath so strongly sworn — i. 1 

dear lady, 1 have sworn an oath ..., _— ii. 1 
my hand is sworn, ne'er to pluck.. — iv. 3 (yer.) 
or, keeping what is sworn, you will. , — iv. 3 

the king is my love sworn — v. 2 

since when, I'll be sworn, he wore .. — v. 2 
be sworn, if tliou be 'LaM^^ celot. . Mer. of re7uce,n. 2 
I have sworn an oath, that I will.. .. — iii. 3 

have I sworn, to have the due — iv. 1 

I dare be sworn for Iiira, he would not — v. I 
that ray Nerissa shall be sworn ou .. — v. 1 
he had sworn it away, before evev..AsyoiiL7keit, i. 2 

I have sworn, I will not bed her AWsWdl, ii. 3 

and sworn to make the not eternal — iii. 2 (let.) 
and, what to your sworn counsel .... — iii. 7 

how have I sworn? 'Tis not — iv. 2 

he had sworn to marry me — i v. 2 

now my sworn friend, and then .. PVuiler'sTale,'!. 2 

thereon his execution sworn — j. 2 

I'll be sworn, you would believe ray — ii, 1 
I dare be swoj-n : tliese dangerous .... — ii. 2 
so attired: sworn, I think, to show .. — iv. 3 
whicii we two have sworn shall come ^ — iv. 3 
hast eworn my love to be (rep.) .. — iv. 3 fsong) 
trust his sworn brother, a very simple — iv. 3 
I will be sworn, these ears of. . Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

had I so sworn, as you have done Machet/i^ i. 7 

been sworn my soldier? King John, iii. 1 



SWO 



SWORN— unswear faith sworn ff/jis- ./o/m. iii. 1 

is sworn against thyself, and may not be — iii. 1 
but thou hast sworn against reli'doii — iii. 1 
I have sworn to do it; and with not — iv. 1 

yet am I sworn, and I did purpose .. — iv. I 
thus hath he sworn, and I with him — v. 2 

neglected my sworn duty in that case. ni'cAard /;. i. I 

the noble duke hath sworn ii. 3 

we all have strongly sworn to — ii. 3 

which I have sworn to weed — ii. 3 

all that may be sworn or said — iii. 3 

I am sworn brother, sweet, to grim.. — v. 1 
to Bolingbroke are we sworn subjects — v. 2 

sirrah, I am sworn brother to I Ih-urtjIV. ii. 3 

Olord.sirl I'll be sworn upon — ii. i 

110, I'll be sworn; I make C'^p.) .... — iii. 3 
no, I'll be sworn; unless you call.... — iv. 2 
faith and truth sworn to us in your.. — v. 1 
whom I have weekly sworn to xnsaTy.iHenrylV. i. 2 
as if he had been sworn brother (rpp.; — iii. 2 

all three sworn brothers to France HenryV. ii, 1 

and sworn unto the practises of France — ii. 3 
hath likewise sworn. But O, what shall — ii. 2 
as two yoke-devils sworn to cither's — ii. 2 

Bardolph are sworn brothers in filching — iii. 2 
have sworn to take him a box o' the ear — iv. 7 

your oaths to Henry sworn \ Henry i'l. i. 1 

a dreadful oath, sworn with i Henry I' 1. iii. 2 

Jack Cade hath sworn to have thy head — iv. 4 

true allegiance sworn (rep.) — v. 1 

his subjects, sworn in all {rep.) iHenryVl. iii. I 

but I return his sworn and mortal foe — iii. 3 
■whom tliou wast sworn to cherisli ..liiclmrd III. i. 4 
thou art sworn as deeply to effect.... — iii. 1 

he solemnly had sworn Henry 1^1 II. i. 2 

being my sworn servant, the duke — i. 2 

I'll be sworn, 'tis true; he will .. Troilus ^ Cress, i. 2 

I'll be sworn and sworn upon't — ii. 3 

now to her, that you have sworn to me — iii. 2 
than I know, I'll be sworn irep. iv. 6) — iv. 2 
to keep an oath that I have sworn .. — v. I 

you have sworn patience — v. 2 

I am sworn, not to give regard. . Timon of Alliens, i. 2 

he is a sworn rioter: li'as a sin — iii. .5 

'tis sworn between us, we shall ever.. Corioionus, i. 2 
true? I'll be sworn they are true .... — ii. 1 
I will, sir, flatter my sworn brother.. — ii. 3 
what may be sworn by, both divine.. — iii. 1 

friends now fast sworu, whose — iv. 4 

so did I, I'll be sworn — iv. 5 

our general has sworn you out of ... . — v. 2 

I dare be sworn, you were — v. 3 

thou art sworn, Eros, that Aniony f^Cleo. iv. 12 

madam, as thereto sworn by your.... — v. 2 

her attendants are all sworn Cymbeline, ii 4 

I'll be sworn,— no swearing — ii. 4 

thou hast sworn to do it Perifles, iv. I 

quick of ear, and I am sworn (rep.) — iv. 1 

nothing, I have sworn; lam firm Lear,\. 1 

commit not witli man's sworn spouse — iii. 4 

to both these sisters have I sworn my love — v. 1 

then she hath sworn, that she Itomeo ij Juliet, i. 1 

be but sworn my love, and I'll no longer — ii. 2 
thy dear love, sworn, but hollow jierjury — iii. 3 

I have sworn't. My lord, my Jord Hamlet, i. 5 

■we have sworn, my lord, akeacly i. a 

'tis deeply sworn — iii. 2 

I dare be sworn, I think that he is Olhello, iii. 3 

SWORN-OUT house-keeping Love'sL.Lost, ii. 1 

SWOK'ST— once thou swor'st Meas.for Meas. v. I 

what since thou swor'st, is sworn ..King John, iii. 1 

swor'st thou not then to do this.^?i<oiii/ ^-Clen. iv. 12 

SWOUNDED almost at my pleasing. .rims^nrf. v. 1 

SWUNG— swung about his head . . liomeo /!r Juliet, i. 1 

SYBIL, and as curst and shrewd. Tam/'iii'n/S/irfw', i. 2 

like sybil's leaves, abroad Titus Ajidronicns, iv. 1 

SYCAMORE— shade of a sycamore. lore',,- L./.os/, v. 2 

underneath the grove of sycamore .. A'oHifo * ./Mi. i. I 

sat sighing by a sycamore tree . . Othello, iv. 3 (song) 

SYCOKAX— foul witch Sycorax (rep.) ..Tempest, i. 2 

which Sycorax could not agaiu undo .... — i. 2 

by Sycorax my mother — i. 2 

all the charms of Sycorax — i. 2 

but only Sycorax my dam, and she — iii. 2 

but she as far Burpassetli Sycorax — iii. 2 

SYLL/A—like ambitious Sylla Henry I' I. iv. 1 

SYLLABLE— to the syllable Tempest, i. 2 

you shall find bj' every syllable.A/eoj./oril/en.'j. iv. 3 

to the utmost syllable of your All's Well, iii. 6 

yelled out like syllable of dolour Macbelh, iv. 3 

to the last syllable of recorded time — v. .5 

no, not a syllable; I do pronounce. . Henry I'lII- i. 1 
dare speak one syllable against him? — v. 1 
of every syllable that here was . . Troilus &■ Cress, v. 2 
with the major part of your syllables. Co)'i(i/anus,ii. 1 

syllables of no allowance — iii. i 

subscribe to any syllable that made.... /"encies, ii. 5 

I will believe you by the syllable — v. I 

if thou deny 'st the least syllable of Lear, ii. 2 

each syllable, tliat breath made up Oiliello, iv. 2 

SYLLOGISM will serve Tu-elfih Night, i. 5 

SYMBOL— symbols of redeemed sin Olhello, ii. 3 

SYMPATHIES, tliere is my gage. . . . Richard li. iv. 1 
SYBIPATHISE-brands will sympathise — v. I 

with the losers let it sympathise \IIenrylV. v. 1 

the men do sympathise with Hcnni r. iii. 7 

with rage doth sympathise Troilus ^-Cressida, i. 3 

we sympathise: Jove, let .^neas live — iv. 1 

SYSIPATHISED-well sympathised, tntie's L.L. iii. 1 

sympathised one day's eitoT .. Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

SYMPATHY— sympathy in choice ..il/id. N.'sDr. i.l 

there's sympathy (j-fp.) Merry (fives, ii. 1 (letter) 

would you desire better sympathy? — ii. 1 tletter) 

if sympathy of love unite our 2 Henri/ 1' J. i. 1 

■ndiich I'll keep, if but for sympathy . Cj/mdcK/ie, v. 4 
■what a sympathy of woe is thisl. Tilus Andron. iii. 1 

O woeful sy mpatliy ! Romeo ^Juliet, iii. 3 

sympathy in years, manners, and Othello, ii. 1 

SYTSrAGOGUE;go,goodTubal(rfp.).l/f,-.o/Tfn. iii. 1 
SYNOD was devised As youLihe it, iii. 2 (verses) 



SYNODS been Uterced Comrdy of Krr. I. I 

Bit in hourly sviuul nboiit tliy Corio/finii*. v. 2 

all tlio wliuU- synoiloftlvcMiil ..Aulo'iv '^dro. iii. H 
crv lo tin' sluiiini; e.vmiil ofllie rt'5t..(V"'"''iMC, v. t 
ill •-■cm'nvl sviioil, tukc iiway licr imwor.. //.im/,/, ii. 2 

SYH.VCrSA, pltiid no moK....Viwi,'ly or linon, i. I 

in Svracusa una I born — i. 1 

I ne'er saw Symcusn in nw life — v. 1 

SYRACUSAN^S nnd onrsclvce — i. I 

at nny Syrncuiinn marts and t'liira (rr;>.) — i. I 

well, Syrncnsan, say, in brief, the cause — i. 1 
aSvraeusan merchant (rr;).v. I) .,.. — i. 2 

sjn'uk freely, Svracusan (rf;).) _ v. 1 

SYUACUSK— I eamo from Syracuse. — v. I 

SYREN, tluit will elmrni Home's .. 7V/iis/<.ii/r(iH. ii. 1 

SYRIA to Lj'dia, and Ionia . . Antony ^ C'leopalra, i. 2 
Sossiu9, one of my place in Syria .... — iii. 1 
made her of lower Syria, Cyprus .... — iii. 6 
to Ptolemy he assigned Syria, Cilicia — iii. 6 
Cicsor through Syria intends iiis journey — v. 2 
the fuii-est in nil Syria J'ericlea, i. (.Gower) 

SYRUP— with wholesome eyrups. . Comedy of A'li . v. I 
uuT all the drowsy syrups of tlie world . Olhelio, iii. 3 

T. 

T.VBER-the knight with my taber.jVciry Wives, iv. 4 
TAULK-the tabic wherein nil.. Tuoacn.o/lcr. ii. 7 

under the duke's table — iv. 4 

the dinner is on the table Merry il'ives, i. 1 

but scraped one out of the tabic, . Meas.J'or Meus. i. 2 
to gratify the table with a. crace.. Love'sL, Lost, iv. 2 
that, when he plays at tables, chides — v. 2 

have a fairer table, which doth ..Jl/fr.o/TtHice.ii. 2 

bid them cover the table, serve — iii. 5 

for the table, sir, it shall be served .. — iii. 5 

and welcome to our table AnyoiiLike il,u, 7 

in our heart's table; heart, too capahlc. AW s)rell, i. 1 

set foot luider thy table Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 

to supply the places at the table — iii. 2 

at upper end o' the table, now .. Wiuter'aTale, iv. 3 

n table full of welcome Comedy of Errors, iii. I 

drink a measure the table round ....ilachelh, iii. 1 
the table's full, llere is a place .... — iii. 4 

general joy of the whole table — iii. 4 

pive to our tables meat — iii. 6 

in the flattering table of her eye ....KingJohn, ii. 2 
at the roimd taole, by a sea-coal hre^'2 Henry n\ ii. 1 

wait upon him at his table — ii. 2 

lisping to his master's old tables .... — ii. 4 

will he wipe his tables clcau — iv. I 

IxUh from thy table, Henry SHenrt/f/.i. 1 

hath in the table of his law Richard III. i. 4 

worst of all this table, say so Uenryl'lII. v. 2 

at Priam's royal taole do I sit ..Troiliis ^-Cress. i. 1 

to my table so many meals — ii. 3 

unelas]) the tables of their thoughts — iv. S 

let him have a table by himself. '/Vmoiio/.4//ieM, i. 2 

all pleased from thy table rise — i. 2 

twelve women at the table — iii. 6 (grace) 

a perfeeter giber for the table Coriolanus, ii. 1 

set at upper end o' the table — iv. 6 

aiul grant of the whole table — . iv. 5 

their talk at table, and their thanks — iv. 7 
yet you clasp young Cupid's tables. Cymifd'/ic, iii. 2 

their tables were stored full Pericles, i. 4 

and turn the tables up Romeo ^- Juliet, i. 6 

claps nie his Bword upon the table .. — iii. 1 
coldly furnish forth the marriage tables. Wawfe/, i. 2 

from the table of my memory — i. 5 

my tables, meet it is, I set it down .. — i. 5 

but to one table; that's t!»c end — iv. 3 

God be at your table! Conceit upon — iv. 5 
were wont to set the table in a roar? — v. 1 
set me the stoops of wine upon thiit table — v. 2 
TABLE-1300K, ballad, knife .... trinter'tTulc, iv. 3 
if I had played the desk, or table-book. Hnmto, ii. 2 

TABLED bv his side Cymheline. i. 5 

'I'ABLE-SPOltX-your table-sport. Merry lyives, iv. 2 

T.ABLET lav upon his breast Cymheline. v. 4 

TABLE-T.VLK-serve for table-talk.iV/cr.o/reii. iii. 5 

TABOR— then I beat my tabor Tempest, iv. 1 

dost thou live by thytabor? T-irelfihNight,'\\\. I 

stands by thy tabor, if thy tabor stands — iii. I 
rather hear tlie tabor and the piiie. . . . Much Ado, ii. 3 

or I will play on the tal)or l.oveUL.Loit, v. 1 

dance again after a tabor H'inler^sTale,iv. 3 

knows not thunder from a tabor ,,.,Coriolantu, i. 6 

and fifes, tabors, and cymbals — v. 4 

T.VBOKER— I could see this taborer ..Tempest, iii. 2 
TABOURINE-loud thetabourincs.rroiV.^CrMJ. iv.5 

with our rattling tabourines Antony ^Cleo. iv. 8 

TACITURNITY. Is't possible?.. Tror/Kj <?■ frcM. iv. 2 

TACKED together, and thrown \ Henry If. iv. 2 

TACKLE, sail, nor mast Tempest, i. 2 

the tackle of my heart is cracked.... Kin^John, v. 7 

upon the hempen tackle Henry I', iii. (chorus) 

our slaughtered friends the tackles.. SHc'jri//-'/. v. 4 
though tiiy tackle's torn, thou ....Corioliiniii,iv. 5 

the silken tackle swell with Antony ^Clco. ii. 2 

and from the ladder tackle washed off./'eric/ri, iv. 1 
TACKLED-like a tackled stair. . Ilomeo ^Juliet, ii. 4 
TACKLING- shrondsand taeklings?.3//enr(//'/. v. 4 

of sails and tackling reft itichard itt. iv. 4 

T-VX>POLE -broach the tailpolc .. Titus. tndron. iv. 2 

tadpole, the wall-newt, and (he water ../.mr,iii. 4 

TA'EN-if lie be ta'en. mu^t die.TiroOen.of f^cr. iii. 1 

and cannot be ta'cn from her — iii. I 

I'll have my brains ta'cn out .... Merry lyira, iii. .'> 
though you have ta'cn a 8i>ecial stand — v. 6 

tliat were I ta'cn here Twelfth Xight, iii. 3 

be now ta'en for you — iii. 4 

littve ta'en a due and wary note..Meiii./orMeas. iv. I 
have ta'en revenge, by so receiving .. — iv. 4 
and he hath to'en you newly into ....Much.ido, i. 3 

lie hath ta'en the infection — ii. 3 

rA>i/.l she's ta'en, 1 warrant you .... — iii. I 

Iui\'e ta'en a couple of as arrant — iii. 5 

your brother John is ta'cn ill flight .. — v. 4 
liatli ta'vu his oath, and coines.jUric/i.ei/' 'Vhi'ci', ii. 9 



TA'EN— hath ta'en great painB.jVi-ir/i. of I'enice, iv. I 
till he hath ta'cn thy life bv BOine./(» v" Like it, i. 1 
Imth ta'cn dispkusurc'giiiiist his.... — 1.2 

fioni the liiMiter's aim luid ta'cn a hurt — Ii. 1 

hathtii'cii IVuiii iiicilic.-lu.wof _ ii. 7 

he hutli tu'cu his lidw and iirrows — iv. 3 

and hnw was that ta'en up? — v. 4 

where is no plia'iure ta'en Taming of Shrew, i. 1 

this oilier hath lluptiata ta'cn _ i. 2 

well ta'en, and like a buzzard — ii. I 

an old rusty sword ta'cn out of — iii. 2 

nay, I have ta'en you napping — iv. 2 

and such assurance ta'en, as shall .. — iv. 4 

and apparel ta'en from me tVintrr's Tnle, i v. 2 

1 thought to have ta'en you Comtily i^r Err. iii. 2 

and I was ta'en for him, and he for me — v. 1 
assailed in our tent, and ta'en I fQar. King John, iii. 2 
Arthur ta'en prisoner? divers dear .. — iii. 4 
hand was robbed and ta'en away .... — v. 1 
madam, there is order ta'en for you.. Iliclmrd II. v. 1 
a dozen of them here have ta'cn .... — v. 2 

be ta'cn, or slain, wc hear not — v. 

iff be ta'cn, I'll 'peach fortius ....I Ilmnjir. ii. 2 
four of us here have ta'en a thousand — ii. 4 
according to our tlireefold order ta'cn — iii. I 

fjreat Douglas; ta'en him once — iii. 2 
lis corruption being ta'en from us .. — v. 2 
Worcester too soon ta'en prisoner. ...aj/cnii//;'. i. I 

the prince hath ta'en it hence — iv. 4 

their stings ond teeth newly ta'en out — iv. 4 
French have ta'en the sacrament ..\ Henry I'l. iv. 2 

he is ta'cn. or slain — iv. 4 

to know wliat prisoners thou liast ta'en — iv. 7 

allotted to be ta'en by me — v. 3 

if you be ta'en, wc then should sea..2IIcnryI'I. v. 2 
had he been ta en, we should have ..SlIenryFI. ii. 1 

be not ta'en tardy by unwise Itichard III. iv. I 

you have ta'en a tardy slugj^ard here — v. 3 

as we have ta'en the sacrament — v. 4 

to see you ta'en from liberty Henry I'm. i. I 

high note's ta'cn of your many virtues — ii. 3 

to Rome, hath ta'en no leave — iii. 2 

and hath ta'en much pain in — iii. 2 

I should have ta'en some pains to bring — v. 1 
Patroclus ta'cn, or slain .... Troilus ^- Cressida, V. 5 

Ajax hath ta'en .flilneas — v. 6 

whereof we have ta'en good Corioiaiitu, i. 9 

to be ta'en forth, belbrc the common — i. 9 

the town is ta'en! — i. 10 

you should have ta'cn tlie advantage — ii. 3 

they have ta'en note of us .". . — iv. 2 

he's ta'en; and, hark! they Bhovt .JuliusCa!sar, v. 3 
my hest friend ta'en before my face! — v. 3 
is ta'cn. I'll tell the news (re/).) .... — v. 4 

he is, or ta'en, or slain — v. 5 

ta'en the treasure of her honour ....CymOellne, ii. 2 

when thou hast ta'en thy stand — iii. 4 

I have ta'en his head from him — iv. 2 

home art gone, and ta'en thy wages — iv. 2 (song) 
if you should have ta'en vengeance on — v. 1 

she had ta'en off by poison — v. 5 

a prisoner, the noblest ta'en — v. 6 

I having ta'en the forfeit — v. .■) 

which, nein" ta'en, would cease — v. 5 

have you ta en of it? — v. 5 

because the law hath ta'cn revenge.. T'lVus^ind. iii. 1 

we have ta'en no care to your Pericles, iv. 1 

I have ta'en too little care of this! Lear, iii. 4 

he and his daughter ta'en! — v. 2 

let me be ta'en, let me be put.. Romeo ,5- Juliri, iii. 5 
that you have ta'en these tenders for . . Hamlet, i. 3 
rewards hast ta'en with equal thanks .. — iii. 2 
if Hamlet from himself be ta'en away .. — v. 2 
tliat I have ta'en away this old man s ..Othello, i. 3 
of you disnraisingly hath ta'en your part — iii. 3 

I'll have the work ta'en out — iii, 3 

honest lago hath ta'en order for't — v. 2 

TAFFETA— of changeable tall'eta.r«vW/iA-,V/i/, ii. 4 
beauties no richer than rich tafteta.. /.<ji'c'si,.L. v. 2 
taffeta phrases, silken terms precise. . — v. 2 
French crown for your taft'eta punk . .All's If'elt, ii. 2 
liot wench in a flame-coloured tafl'uta.l Henry 1 1'. i. 2 
TAG— hence, before the tag return':. .Coriolnnns, iii. 1 
TAG-RAG people did not clap h'lm. Julius Cicsar, i. 2 

TAIh — if they were tet in his tail 'I'empest, iii. 2 

in thy tail? 7Vo Cen.of I'erona, ii. 3 

if he shake his tail — ii. 5 

on his tail (_rcp.) Merchant (if I'enice, ii. 2 

more hair on his tail, than I — ii. 2 

his tail. In his tongue(rrp.).7'omi)i4'ti/'S/irfK', ii. 1 

in your tail? nay, come again — ii. I 

thorns, nettles, tails of wasps?.... U'inler'sTale, i. 2 
and, like a rat without a tail, I'll do ..Macbeth, i. 3 
like'a peacock sweeji along his tail..l Henry I' t. iii. 3 

hath clapned his tail between '2He)iryri. v. I 

tie his body to my horse's tai I . . Troilus <j- Cress, v. 9 
and at the murderer's horse's tail .. — v. 11 

once subdued in armed tail — v. 11 

fear this body hath a tail more .... Cymbetine, iv. 2 
with my mother under the dragon's tail.. I.enr, i. 2 
comes she with a tithe-pig's tail. /(oinco ,5- Juliet, i. 4 
the cod's head for the salmon's tail .... Othello, ii. I 

thereby hangs a tail — ill- I 

TAILOR miglit scratch Tempest, ii. 2 (song) 

secresy of tliiiie shall be a tailor. .Merri/il'ives, iii. 3 
and the tailor make thydoublet.. TuelfihMnht, ii. 4 
Robin Starveling, the tailor ....JI/i(/.iV.'«D»cawi, i. 2 
tailor cries, and falls into a cough .. — ii. I 
knew the tailor that niade..,,JUcrc/i.o/ Venice, iii. I 

I have undone three tailors As yon Like it, v. 4 

sir, who's his tailor? Sir? AU'tll'ell, ii. 5 

n very good taihir. Isshegone — ii. 6 

the tailor stoys thy leisure .. Turning of Shrew, iv. 3 

come, tailor, let us see (re;;.) — iv. 3 

what, u' devil's name, tailor, eall'st .. — iv. 3 
say thou wilt sec the tailor paid .... — iv. 3 
toilor, I'll pay thee for thy gown .... — iv 3 
even now a tailor called me. . Comedy nf Errors, iv. 3 

an English tailor come hither Mactwth, ii. 3 

swallowing a tailor's news King John, iv. 2 



TAILOR'S yard, you sheath llIenrylK il. 4 

the next way to turn tailor _ iii. 1 

a woman's tailor, sir (rc/i.) jii] a 

if he hud been a man's tailor (rep.) .. _ iii. ^ 
entertain a score or two of tailors ..Itirhatd III. i. 2 
with quarrels, talk, and tailors ....Uenryl'lII. i. 3 
increase tailors, and breed ballad-.. CoriofMnwi, iv. 5 

to man the tailors of the earth Antony/iCleo. I. 2 

whose tailors arc as dear os yours ..CymbeUne, ii. 3 
made by him that made the tailor .. — iv. 1 
no, nor thy tailor, rascal, who is yiy — iv. 2 

my tailor made them not _ iv. 2 

disclaims in thee; a tailor made thee I.enr, ii. 2 

a tailor make a man? Av, a tailor, sir .. ii. 2 

when nobles are their tailors' tutors — iii. 2 

and the tailor with his last Itnmeo f,- Juliet, i. 2 

didst thou not fall out with a tailor — iii. 1 

he called the tailor— lown 0//ic»o, ii. 3 (song) 

TAINT— quite taint their wit.. .. 7hW/«/i Mghl, iii. 1 
lest thedevice take air, and taint.... — iii. 4 
or any taint of vice, whr 



— 111. 4 



or any brawl to come, taint — .. . 

here abjure the taints and blames ....Macbeth, iv. 3 

I cannot taint with fear v. 3 

[Knt.'] to taint and havock more than.. Ilrmyl'. i. 2 

never yet taint with love 1 Henry I'l. v. 3 

to taint that honour every good ..Uenryl'lII. iii. I 

I will not taint my mouth with .... iii. 2 

a general taint of the whole state — v. 2 

in taint of our best man Troilus ^Cressida. i. 3 

subtly taints even then when we .... — iii. 3 

ever taints the happy man Coriolanus. iv. 7 

his taints and honours waged Antony ^Cleo. v. I 

to taint his nobler heart and brain ..CymbeUne, v. 4 

vouched aficction fall into taint Unr,\. \ 

taint not tliy mind, nor let thy soul Hamlet, i. 5 

that they may seem the taints of liberty — ii. 1 

corrupt and taint ray business Othello, \. 3 

mv life, but never taint my love iv. 2 

TAINTED in desire! Merry llives,v. b 

the man is tainted in his wits .. Twelfth Ai;.'ht, iii. 4 
whether thou art tainted, or free. Wens, for Meas. i. 2 
pray heaven, his wisdom be not tainted 1 — iv. 4 
give to her foul tainted flesh! Much Ado, iv. I 

J lea so tainted and corrupt .... Mer. of I'enice, iii. 2 
am a tainted wether of the flock .. — iy I 

a very tainted fellow, and full of All'sWell, iii. 2 

though your heart he tainted. ComeJi/ of Errors, iii. 2 
my age was never tainted with ....I Henry I'l. iv. S 

corrupt and tainted witli v. 4 

Nero will be tainted with remorse .3HenryVI. iii. 1 

as a man sorely tainted Henry I'l 1 1, iv. 2 

if tliy faith he not tainted ..CymbeUne, iii. 4 (letter) 
breaths with sweetmeats tainted .Homeo A-Juliet, i- 4 

TAINTING of ray love! I'wrtflhKinht, v. I 

you cannot preserve it from tainting. Cywi!ie//iie, i. 5 

speaking too loud, or tainting his Othello, ii. 1 

TAINTUKEnfthvnest 2He,iryl'l. U. I 

TAKE-[j,Y-lIAND, HEED, LEAVE, and MOTE] 

lake in the tup-sail Tempest, i. I 

they would not take her life i. 2 

go, take this shape j. u 

any print of goodness will not take .... i. 2 

good lord, how you take it! _ ii. 1 

while you take your rest — ii. 1 

conspiracy his time doth take .... — ii. l(foiii:i 

as I take it, an ague — ii. 2 

1 will not take too much for him _ ii. 2 

and much less take, what iii. I 

and take his bottle from him — iii. 2 

do I so? take thou that iii. 2 

and the devil take your fingers! iii. 2 

if thou heest a devil, take't as thou list iii. 2 

next advantage will we take thoroughly — iii. 3 

take my daugliter: but if — iv. 1 

to take away the edge of that iv. I 

if I should take a displeasure — iv. 1 

'gainst ray fury do I take part — v. I 

let no raan take care for himself — v. I 

had plotted with them to take my life — v. I 

take with you your companions v. I 

to take this drunkard for a god v. 1 

where you shall take your rest v. 1 

which must take the ear strangely .... v. 1 

take it for your pains (rep.) 7'iro Oen. of I'er. i. I 

there toke the paper (rfp.) j. a 

best to take them up j. 2 

lest he should take e-teeptions j. 3 

a cloud takes all away! i. 3 

like one that takes diet _ ii. 1 

and yet take tills again (rep.) ii. 1 

take it for your labour, ii. | 

here take you this — ii. 2 

resolved to take a wife ill. 1 

to who will take her in _ iii. 1 

take no repulse, whatever iii. 1 

my daughter takes his going _ iii. 2 

you take the sum and substance .... — iv. 1 

have you anything to take to? _ iv. 1 

I take your ofter, and will iv, I 

sir Proteus, as I take it iv. 2 

one that takes upon him to be a (log iv, 4 

to take a fault upon me iv. 4 

and take this ring with thee iv. 4 

and take this shallow up iv. 4 

and yet she takes exceptions v. 2 

take but jiossessioii of Jier with y. 4 

take thou thy Silvia _ v. 4 

take your vizanients in that lilerry lyivct, \. I 

then Lucifer take all! i. 3 

here, take the humour letter 1.3 

take-a your nipier (rep. ii. 3) 1.4 

tukc the honour; what is it? ii. 1 

say what she will, take all, pay all .. _ ii. 2 

take all, or half, for casing me — ii. 2 

well, I will take him jii. 2 

if he take her, let him take lier simply iii. 2 

take this basket on your (r«*p. iv. 2).. iii. 3 

to take an ill advantage of — iii. 3 

go, take up these clolUes here — iii. 3 



TAK 



TiVJCE away these chalicea USernj IVioes, iii. 

she does 30 take on with her men.... — iii. 

I will now take the lecher — iii. 

he 60 takes on yonder with — iv. 

come, come, take it up — iv. 

will you take up your wife's clothes? — iv. 

wliere we may take liira ,,, — jv. 

and takes tl\e cattle — iv. 

the devil take one party — iv. 

come, will this wood take fire? — v. 

I will never take you for my love.... — v. 

did vou take her in green? — V. 

take the death of her brother thus? Twelfth Nighl, i. 

takes great exceptions to your — i. 

to see a housewife take thee between — i. 

are they like to take dust — i. 

take the fool away (.rep.) — i. 

take away tlie lady (jtp.) — i. 

1 marvel your ladyship takes delight — i. 

I protest, 'I take these wise men — i. 

is to take those things for bird-bolts — i. 

he takes on him to understand — i. 

to tell rae how he takes it — .i. 

take it how you will — ii- 

let still the woman take an elder .... — u. 

I take pleasure in singing, sir — ii. 

does not Toby take you a blow — ii. 

and take't for a great favour — iii. 

how he takes it at heart! — iii. 

lest the device take air and taint — — iii. 

hob nob, is his word, give't, or take't — iii. 

I have his horse to take up the quarrel — iii. 

I take the faidt on me — iii. 

take him away ; he knows — iii. 

take, and give back, atfiiirs — iv, 

let your bounty take a nap — v. 

take him aside — v. 

take thy fortunes up — v. 

farewell, and take her — v. 

take thy commission Measure/or Measure, i. 

tlierefore take your honours — .;. 

we stoop and take it — ii. 

will take order for the drabs — ii- 

and take the shame with ioy — ii. 

(.let no man liear me) I take pride .. — ii. 

to take away a life true — ii. 

I'll tal?e it as a peril to ray soul — _ii. 

to take life from thine own — iii. 

take my defiance: die; perish! — iii. 

to talte this poor maid from the world! — iii. 

and sir, we take him to be a thief too — iii. 

take him to prison, oflicer — iii- 

if you take it not patiently — iii. 

to take away the life of a man? _ — iii. 

take, oh take those lips away .... — iv. 1 (song 

take then this your companion — iv. 

she'll take the enterprize upon , — iv. 

if you will take it on you to assist him — iv. 

for, as I take it, it is almost day .... — iv. 

take him hence; to the rack — v. 

go take her hence (rfp ) — v. 

sweet Isabel, take my part — v. 

and pray thee, take this mercy — v. 

take him to prison; and see our — v. 

in wliat key shall a man take you ..MucliAdo, i. 

and take her hearing prisoner with., — i. 

he meant to take tlie present time .. — i. 

impossible you sliould take true root — i. 

therefore I will even take sixpence .. — ii. 

who, as I take it, have stolen liis .... — ii. 

count, take of me my daughter — ii. 

but I'll take my oath on it — ii. 3 

and I take him to be valiant — ii. 3 

tlian you take pains to thank me.... — ii. 3 

you talie pleasure then — ii.3 

as you may take upon a knife's point — ii. 3 

any pains that I take for you — ii.3 

if i do not take pity on her — ii. 3 

nor take no shape nor project — iii- 1 

if you do take a thief — iii. 3 

take their examination yourself .... — iii 5 

tliere, Leonato, take her back again — iv. I 

fate, take not away thy heavy — iv. 1 

as I dare take a serpent by the tongue — v. 1 

no, that you shall not, till you take her — v- 4 

1 take thee for pity — v. 4 

take time to pause: and, by thenext.Mj'ii.JV.'jI'r. i. 1 

taice comfort; he no more shall — i. I 

you must take Thisby on you — i. 2 

take pains: be perfect, adieu — i. 2 

take tliis cnarm off from her sight (rep.) — ii. 2 

take thou some of it, and seek — ii. 2 

do it for thy true love take — ii.3 

take the sense, sweet ^rep.) — ii.3 

when I did him at this advantage take — iii. 2 

from the eye liis function takes — iii. 2 

take on, as you would follow — iii. 2 

though you take her part (rep.) — iii. 2 

to take from thence all error — iii- 2 

that every man sliould take his own . — iii. 2 

gentle Puck, take tliis transformed.. — iv. 1 

Kobin, take ofl' this head — iv. 1 

and take your places, ladies — v. 1 

to take what they mistake — v. 1 

noble respect takes it iu might — v. I 

moon, take thy flightl — v. I 

every fairy take his gait! — y. 2 

1 woidd take desire prisoner Love'sL.Lost, i. 2 

you must let him take no delight.... — i. 2 

take away this villain — _i. 2 

to take him at his word — ii- 1 

take tliis key, give enlargement .... — iii. 1 

doth the inconsiderate takesalve for — iii. 1 

good my glass, take this for telling .. — iv. 1 

hold, take thou tliis my sweet — v. 2 

so shall Birun take me for Rosaline. . — v. 2 

(uii- lord— take that for your fair lady — v. 2 

take all and w^;an it: it may prove .. — v. 2 

but that you t;ike uhat doth to you.. — v. 2 

but take it, sir, again — v. 2 



[744] 



TAKE— we will take some care ... . Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

take eacli one in his vein — v. 2 

take away the conqueror, take away — v. 2 

master, let me take you a button-hole — T. 2 
I take it, your own business .... Merck. ofVe^nce, i. 1 

I think, I may take his bond — i. 3 

he take interest? No, not take interest — i. 3 

for when did friendship take — i. 3 

and take no doit of usance for my .. — i. 3 

if he will take it so; if not, adieu .... — i.3 

you must take your chance — ii. 1 

use your legs, take the start — ii. 2 

fjray thee, take pain to allay with .. — ii. 2 

lold, here, take this, tell gentle — ii. 4 

how I shall take her from her father's — ii. 4 

there, take it, prince, and if my form — ii. 7 

take what wife you will to bed — ii. 9 (scroll) 

thou wilt not take his flesh — iii. 1 

he would not take it — iii, 2 

take this same letter, and use thou all — iii. 4 

here, I take it, is the doctor come. ... — iv. 1 

you are welcome, take your place. . . . — iv. 1 

him that gives, and liim that takes . . — iv. I 

be merciful; take thrice thy — iv. 1 

take then thy bond, take tliou thy .. — iv. 1 

I take this oiTer then — iv. 1 

doth the Jew pause? take thy forfeiture — iv. I 

take my life, and all, pardon not .... — iv. 1 

take my house, when you do take (; ep.) — iv. 1 

take some remembrance of us — iv. 1 

I'll take this ring from you {rep.) .... — iv. 1 

since you do take it, love, so much . . — v. 1 

would take aught but the two rings.. — v. 1 

let not me take him then — v. 1 

countenance seems to take from me. .4a you Like it, i. 1 

but the same tradition takes not .... — i. 1 

taught my love to take thy father - . — i. 2 

that all the beholders take his part., — i. 2 

you will take little delight in it — i. 2 

they take the part of a better — i.3 

do not seek to take your change .... — i.3 

in corners thrown ; take that — ii.3 

and bid him take that for coming.... — ii. 4 

aud take upon command what help . . — ii. 7 

I pr'ythee take tlie cork out — iii. 2 

nay, but the devil take mocking .... — iii. 2 

but take a taste of my finding him . . — iii. 2 

which I take to be either a fool — iii. 2 

will I take upon me to wash — iii. 2 

I will not take her on gift of any ... . — iii. 3 

lore him; take liis offer — iii. 5 

60, take her to thee, shepherd — iii. 5 

you might take occasion to kiss — iv. 1 

I take some joy to say you are — iv. 1 

I take thee Kosalind, for wife (rep.)., — iv. 1 

I do take thee, Orlando, for my — iv. 1 

never take her without her {rep.} .... — iv. 1 

take thou no scorn, to wear — iv. 2 (song) 

will the faitlrful offer take of me. . — iv. 3 (letter) 

will you take him by the arm? — iv. 3 

well then, take a good heart — iv. 3 

therefore take the present time.... — v. 3 (song) 

to take that that no man else — v. 4 

seven j ustices could not take up — v. 4 

purposely to take his brother — v. 4 

the tyranny of her sorrows takes all .. All's IVell, i. 1 

that they take place, when virtue's .. — i. 1 

and take a more dilated farewell .... — ii. 1 

our wonder too, or take off thine .... — ii. 1 

I dare not say I take you, but I — ii.3 

young Bertram, take her, she is .... — ii.3 

a son shall take this disgrace off .... — ii.3 

that you will take your instant — ii. 4 

I should take possession of the bride — ii. 5 

Presently you take your way for .... — ii. 5 

take my young lord to be a very .. — iii. 2 

and would you take the letter of her? — iii. 4 

we'll take your offer kindly — iii. 5 

take this purse of gold, and let me .. — iii. 7 

but take the Highest to witness — iv. 2 

here, take my ring; mine house .... — iv. 2 

I'll order take my mother shall not. . — iv. 2 

that he might take a measure of .... — iv. 3 

I'll take the sacrament on't — iv. 3 

bid him drop gold, and take it . . — iv. 3 (letter) 

after debts, take it before — iv. 3 (letter) 

which I take to be too little for — iv. 5 

marry, as I take it, to Rousillon .... — v. 1 

let's take the instant by the forward — v. 3 

pleases you to take it so — v. 3 

to see this ring; take him away — V. 3 

take her away, I do not like her {rep.) — v. 3 

lend us, and take our hearts — (epil.) 

I take him for the better dog-. Taming ofSh. 1 find.) 

then take him up, and manage {rep.') — 1 (ind.) 

go, sirrah, take them to the buttery — 1 (ind.) 

and take a lodging, fit to entertain .. — i. 1 

I knew not what to take, and wliat. . — i. I 

would take her with all faults — i. 1 

I had as lief take her dowry with.... — i. 1 

of a sudden take such hold? — i. 1 

uncase thee; take my coloured hat . . — i. 1 

take your papers too, and let me .... — i. 2 

take you the lute, and you the set . . — ii. 1 

therefore Kate, take this of me — ii. 1 

a buzzard take thee? (rep.) — ii. I 

take you your instrument, play .... — iii. 1 

good masters, take it not unkindly.. — iii. 1 
Bianca, take him for thy lord .. — iii. I (gamut) 

stooped again to take it up — iii. 2 

now take them up, quoth he — iii. 2 

that take it on you at the first — iii. 2 

and let Bianca take her sister's — iii. 2 

a taller man than I will take cold .• — iv. 1 

my stirrup, nor to take my horse? .. — iv. 1 

you pluck my foot awry: take that.. — iv. 1 

there take it to you, trenchers — iv. 1 

and here I take tlie like unfeigned . . — iv. 2 

take in your love, and then let me alone — iv. 2 

that you take upon you as you — iv. 2 



TAK 

TAKE away this dish Taming o/Slirew, iv. 3 

take thou the bill, give me — iv. 3 

take it up unto thy master's use I .... — iv. 3 

take no unkindness of his hasty .... — iv. 3 

take you assurance of her — iv. 4 

to the church; take the priest — iv. 4 

to take upon you another man's .... — v. 1 
you take my lord, I'll give him .. H'iuler'sTale, i. 2 

will you take eggs for money? — i. 2 

will take again your queen — i. 2 

to take the urgent liour — i. 2 

take the boy to you; he so troubles .. — ii. 1 

to laughter as 1 take it — ii. I 

I'll take't upon me: if I prove — ii. 2 

for present vengeance, take it on her — ii-3 

unless he take the course that you .. — ii.3 

when she will take the rein — ii.3 

take up the bastard; take 't up {rep.) — ii. 3 

once more, take her hence (»ep.) .... — ii.3 

go. take it to the fire; for thou — ii.3 

to take away the life of our .... — iii. 2 (.indict.) 

and played, to take spectators — iii. 2 

take her hence; herlieartis — iii. 2 

take your patience to you — iii. 2 

I'll take it up for pity — iii. 3 

how it takes up the shore — iii. 3 

look thee there; take up, take up, boy — iii. 3 

now take upon me, in the — iv. (chorus) 

or take away with thee — iv. I 

I should take on me the hostess-ship — iv. 3 

and take the winds of March — iv. 3 

come, take yotu' flowers; methinks .. — iv. 3 

thou shouldst take no money of me.. — iv. 3 

that does take your mind from — iv. 3 

of your own state take care — iv. S 

shake oft' one, to take another — iv. 3 

the cheek, but not take in the mind — iv. 3 

I cannot with conscience take it ... . — iv. 3 

some covert; take your sweetheart's hat — iv. 3 

should take joy to see her in your arms — v. I 

to take off so much grief from you . . — v. 3 

a husband take by my consent — v. 3 

gaoler, take him to thy custody..Comcd'jofF.rr. i. 1 

many a man would take you — i 2 

there, take you that (j-fp. ii. 2) — i. 2 

will, not, sir, I'll take my heels — i. 2 

serve him 60, he takes it ill — ii. 1 

and take unmingled thence that .... — ii. 2 

as take from me thyself, and not .... — ii. 2 

be mean, take them in good part .... — iii. 1 

and as a bed I'll take thee — iii- 2 

take the stranger to my house {rep.) — i\. i 

that takes pity on decayed men — iv. 3 

get within him, take his sword — v. 1 

lor God's sake, take a house — v. 1 

and take perforce my husband — v. I 

whilst to take order for — v. 1 

if he can take you, to scorch — v. 1 

there, take it; and much thanks .... — y. 1 

vouchsafe to take the pains to — v. 1 

that takes the reason prisoner? Macbeth, i. 3 

and take my milk for gall — i. 5 

I take 't, 'tis later, sir. Hold, take my — ii, 1 

aud take the present horror from — ii. 1 

but it takes away t)ie performance .... — ii. 3 

it sets him on, and it takes him off .... — ii.3 

but we'll take to-morrow — iii. 1 

whose execution takes your enemy.... — iii. 1 

take any shape but that — iii. 4 

nothing takes from his high respect .. — iii. 6 

and take a bond of fate — iv. 1 

and take no care who chafes — iv. 1 

if you will take a liomely man's — iv. 2 

to take upon you what is yours — iv. 3 

and would not take their part? — iv. 3 

unlock her closet, take forth paper .... — v. 1 

take thy face hence — v. 3 

and we, shall take upon us what — v. 6 

then take my king's defiance KiiigJolm, i. I 

brother, take you my land, I'll take my — i. I 

that will take pains to blow — i. 1 

take his mother's thanks — ii. 1 

I'll take that burden from your back — ii. 1 

heaven shall take in nature of a fee — ii. I 

to take advantage of the field — ii. 1 

makes it take head from all — ii. 2 

with my vexed spirits I cannot take — jii. 1 

that takes away by any secret — iii. 1 

his words do take possession of — iv. 1 

that take their humours for — iv. 2 

heaven take my soul, and England.. — iv. 3 

how easy dost t'hou take all England up! — iv. 3 

take again from this my hand — v. I 

and make you take the hatch — v. 2 

to recompense the pains you take.... — v. 4 

who did he take it? who did — v. 6 

let my kingdom's rivers take their ,. — v. 7 

with honour and respect may take .. — v. 7 
as to take up mine honour's pawn ..liichard II. i. 1 

1 take it up and by that sword — i 1 

their spots; take but my shame — i. 1 

take honour from me, and my life .. — i. I 

take from ray mouth — i.3 

and take an oath with thee — i.3 

take Hereford's rights away, and take — ii. 1 

hold, take my ring — ii. 2 

to take advantage of the absent — ii.3 

that heaven will take our souls — iii. 1 

take special care my greetings ^- i i i . 1 

take not, good cousin, further — iii. 3 

should take it off again with words.. — iii. 3 

forbear, thou Shalt not take it up .... — iv. I 

I take [Coi.A'ni. -task] the earth .... — iv. 1 

you shall not only take the sacrament — iv. 1 

pupil-like, take thy correction — v. I 

mine, and thus I take thy heart .... — v. I 

to take on me to keep, and kill — v. 1 

take effeminate boy, takes on the point — v. 3 

the devil take Henry of Lancaster .. — v. 5 

take hence the rest, aud give them . . — v. 5 



TAK 



[ 745 ] 

TAKE— therefore take this compact ..IHenryl'l, v. 

take, theret'ure, Bhipping; post — v. 

therefore I will take tlicNevils' piiTte.illeurt/I'l. i. 

liere, llunic, tukc tliifl reward — i. 

take thin fellow ill. anil «eml for .... — i. 

in court ill) take her for the queen ., — i. 

shall he ilie. and take his 011(1 (rr;).)., — i. 

Stutforil, tiike her to thee; we'll see.. — i. 

niid tuke thia druh away — ii. 

and here, Tom, take all the money .. — ii. 

will take my death, I never meant .. — ii. 

take iiwiiy his weapon — ii. 

go, take hence that traitor — ii. 

we'll take her from the nheritr — ii. 

to take her witli him to the isle .... — ii. 

I pr'ythee so, and take me hence .. ., — ii. 

sirs, take away the duke, and guard — iii. 

and as the butcher takes away — iii. 

ere you can take due orders — iii. 

nay, then a shame take all I — iii. 

noble York, take thou this task .... — iii. 

whiles I take order for mine — iii. 

I take it kindly; yet, be well — iii. 

lords, take your places; and, I pray — iii- 

let thy Sufiollc take his heavy — iii. 

and take my heart with thee — iii. 

be not so rash: take ransom — iv. 

dare not), take our parts — iv. 

away, take horse. Come, Margaret .. — iv. 

take him away, and behead him {r/ p,) — iv. 

and take up commodities upon our bills — iy. 

I mean to take possession of ZUenryVl. i. 

that here tliou take an oath — i. 

this oath I willingly talce, and will.. — i. 

pray before I take my death — i. 

prize to take all vantages — i. 

take time to do him dead — i. 

there, take the crown — i. 

Clifford, take me from the world .... — _i. 

and takes her farewell of the glorious — ii. 

so many hours must I take my rest.. — ii. 

that haply take them from him now — ii. 

death, take on with me, and ne'er .. — ii. 

nay, take me with thee, good — ii. 

whose soul is that whicli takes her heavy— ii. 

for he'll take vantages — iii. 

but you will take exceptions — iii. 

that king Edward take thee — iii. 

to take their rooms, ere I — iii. 

like a Sinon, take another Troy .... — iii. 

where I must take like .seat — iii. 

that they'll take no otfence (r/-;).)..., — iv. 

surprise and take him at our pleasure — iv. 

each man take liis stand — iv. 

never to lie, and take his natural rest — iv. 

if Warwick take us, we are — iv. 

and take the great-grown traitor .... — iv. 

Warwick takes his gift again — v. 

come, Warwick, take the time — v. 

and take his thanks, that yet — v, 

take away this captive scold (rep.) .. — v. 

take that, the likeness of this (rep-).. — v. 

if heaven will take the Uichard 111, i. 

God take king Edward — i. 

take up the sword again, or take up me — i. 

to take is not to give — i. 

take up the corse, sirs — i. 

to take her in her heart's extremest.. — i. 

and take deep traitors for thy dearest — i. 

furies, take him to your torments! .. — i. 

take the devil in thy mind — ;. 

take him over the costard — i. 

take not tlie quarrel from his — i. 

take that, and that; if all this — i. 

take thou the fee, and tell him — _i. 

to take our brotlier Clarence — ii. 

I fear thy justice will take hold .... — ii. 

that you take with unthankfulness.. — ii. 

if presently you will take iiorse — iii. 

I presume, he'll take in gentle part.. — iii. 

to take some privy order to draw.... — iii- 

still answer nay, and take it — iii- 

this virtuous prince take on himself — iii- 

to take on you the charge and kingly — ■ iii- 

take to your royal self this protfeved — iii- 

beseeeh you, tuke it not amisa — iii. 

and take thy office from thee — iv. 

take all the swift advantage — iv. 

I will take order for her keeping .... — iv. 

therefore, take witli thee my most heavy — iv. 

if I did take the kingdom — iv. 

there, take thou that, till thou — iv. 

some one take order, Buckingham .. — iv. 

we must both give and take — v. 

troubled thoughts, to take a nnp .... — v. 
take up the raya of the beneficial ..Henry fill. i. 

tlie state takes notice of the private . . — 

and take it from a heart tiiat — 

this follows (which, as I take it, is a kind- 
arise, and take place by us — i 

repeat your will, and take it — i 

we should take root here where we sit — i 

why, we take from every tree — \ 

one would take it, that never saw.... — i 

tliere, I take it, they may — i 

I'll take the chari^e of this: his grace — j 

and pray them taite their pleasures.. — i 

find out, and he will take it — i 

to take you out, and not to kiss you.. — i 

I can't take iieace with — ii 

to take your good grace from me?.... — ii 

take thy lute, wench; my soul — iii 

your gr^iefs, and take my counsel .... — iii 

for if it did take place, I do — iii 

take notice, lords^ he has a loyal .... — iii 

a way, if it take right, in spite — iii 

now, who'll take it? The king — iii 

there take an inventory of all — iii 

you come to take your stand here — i v 

I take it,8hc thatcurriea up — iv 



TAK 



T.A.KE— guilt of conscience take thou. RiV/ioirf It. v. 6 

did take horse, uncertain of lllenryll'. i. 1 

for we that take purses — i. 'J 

where shall we take « purse to-morrow — i. '.! 

the devil take such eozenersl — i. 3 

each takes his fellow for — ii. 2 

'tis dtmgcrous to take a cold — ii. 3 

what is't that takes from thee — ii. 3 

they take it already upon their — ii I 

prove a thief, and take pursesi? — ii- 4 

I would, your gnice would take me — ii- 4 

as on (he other side it takes t'roiu you — iii. 1 

shall I not take luine ease in — iii. 3 

come, let me take [Co/, taste] my horse — iv. I 

come, let us take a muster speedily.. — iv. 1 

take it for thy labour; and if it (ri-p.) — iv. 2 

now forsooth, takes on him to reform — iv. 3 

that he shall take the odds of his ... . — v. I 

will they take the olfer of our grace — v. I 

we otfer fair, take it advisedly — v. 1 

or take away the grief of a wound? .. — v. 1 

but take my pistol, if thou wilt — v. 3 

that takes survey of all the world.... — v. 1 

adieu, and take Ihy praise with thee — v- 4 

I'll take it upon my death — v. 4 

I will take it as a sweet disgrace ....•IHcinylV. i. I 

men of all sorts take a pride to gird.. — i. 2 

he would not take liis bond and yours — i. 2 

this apoplexy is, as I take it — i. 2 

will tuke me without weighing — i. 2 

I take but two shirts out with — i. 2 

a third must take up us — i. 3 

that king again, and take thou this 1 — i. 3 

to take soldiers up in counties — ii. 1 

or to take not how many pair — ii. 2 

that takes upon him not to concei\'e — ii. 2 

merriment, if you take not the heat — ii. 4 

who take the ruffian billows by .... — iii. 1 

I will take your counsel — iii. 1 

and I will tuke such order, that thy — iii. 2 

1 take not on me here as a physiciaa — iv. I 

you overween, to take itso — iv. 1 

then take my lord of Westmoreland — iv. 1 

I tuke your princely word for — iv. 2 

they take their courses east — iv. 2 

or else a feast, and takes away — iv. 4 

I pray you. take me up, and bear me — iv. 4 

but wherefore did he take aw'ay .... — iv. 4 

put it in thy mind, to take it hence .. — iv. 4 

as men take diseases, one of another — v. 1 

I take it there is but two ways — v. 3 

1 would not take a knighthood for .. — v. 3 

let us take any man's horses — v. 3 

to the Fleet: take all his company .. — v. 5 

hear you s ion ; take them away — v, 5 

whereof take you one quarter Ucni-y V. i- 2 

ere he take ship for France — ii, (chorus) 

for I can take, and Pistol's cock is .. — ii- 1 

take up the English short — ii. 4 

and to take mercy on the poor souls — ii. 4 

if I should take from another's pocket — iii. 2 

eyes of mine take themselves to slumber — iii. 2 

look you, if you take the matter — iii- 2 

men of Ilurflcur, take pity of your town — iii. 3 

and I will take up that with — iii. 7 

will take the pains but to examine .. — iv. 1 

I will take thee a box on the ear .... — iv. 1 

I take thee in tlie king's company .. — iv. 1 

take from them now the sense — iv. 1 

the banner from a trumpet take .... — iv. 2 

take it, brave York, now, soldiers.... — iv. 3 

and I the crowns will take — iv. 4 

the devil take order now! — iv. 5 

and takes him by the beard — iv. 6 

Philip of Maeedon, OS I take it — iv. 7 

to take the tales out of my mouth .. — iv. 7 

take a trumpet, herald; ride tliou .. — }^'^ 

not a man of them, that we shall take — iv. 7 

your majesty takes no scorn to — iv. 7 

have sworn to take him a box o' the ear — iv. 7 

which your mojesty is take out of .. — iv. 8 

X beseecli you. take it for your own fault — iv. 8 

take it (iod, for it is only thine! .... — iv. 8 

or take that praise from God — iv. 8 

when you take occasion to see leeks.. — v. I 

in truth, you shall take it — v. 1 

I take thy groat, in earnest of — v. 1 

and take with you free power — v. 2 

Cttn^it love me for this, take me (rep) — v. 2 

dear Kate, take a fellow of ploin .... — v. 2 

take a soldier; take a soldier, take .. — v. 2 

and tuke the I'urk by the heiird? .... — v. 2 

moiety, tuke the word of a king and — v. 2 

take her. fair son; and from her .... — v. 2 

we'll take your oath, and all the peers' — v. 2 

let this uiceptunce take — v. 2 (chorus) 

of Aiijou. doth take his part IHenryFl.'i. 1 

soldiers with me I will take — i. 1 

she takes upon her bravely — i. 2 

take you no care; I'll never — i. 4 

sirs, take your places, and be vigilant — ii. I 

laid'st a trap to tuke my life — iii. I 

ehiii'climcn take delight in broils? ., — iii. I 

your lonlslii;) takes us then iijr fools — iii. 2 

and dure not take ii|i arms like .... — iii. 2 

now will we take some order — iii. 2 

and take uwuy his train, if Dauphin — iii. 3 

the rest, will take thee in their arms — iii. 3 

and ill our coronation take your place — iii- 4 

ill witness, take ye that — iii. 1 

governor of Paris, take your oath .... — iv. 1 

much less to take occasion from .... — iv. I 

persuiuJe yon take a better course .. — iv. 1 

then. GikI tuke mercy on bruvc — iv. 3 

and take foul scorn, to fawn — iv. 4 

liause. and take thy breath — iv. (i 

go, lake their bfxlics hence — iv- 7 

then tuke iny soul: my bo<ly, soul .. — v. 3 

kneel down and take my blessing.... — v. 4 

take her away; for she liuth lived — v. i 



3 
3 
1 
I 
— i. 1 

1 



TAKE-you take good comfort ....Henryyill. Iv. 2 

tiike't of me, till Cianmer, Cromwell — v. I 

you must take your patience to you.. — v. I 

you take a precijiicc for no leap — v. I 

I tuke it, by all voices, that forthwith — v. 2 

1 take my cause out of the gripes — v. ^ 

tuke him, and use him well, he's worthy — v. 2 

do you tuke the court for Paris-garden? — v. 3 

with this kisH take my blessing — v. 4 

some come to take their ease — (cpil.) 

and she takes upon her to spy . . 'I'roilui <(• Cren. i. i 

takc't ofl'who will, as tlicy say, — i. 2 

goddess, he should tuke his choice .. — i. 2 

take but degree uwuy — i 3 

he bade me take a trumpet — i. 3 

for whosoever you take nim to be, he — ii- I 

I take to-day a wife, and ray election — ii- 2 

if vc take not that little little — ii- 3 

take the instant way — iii. 3 

that takes me for tlie general? — iii- 3 

a bugbear tuke him! — iv. 2 

the devil take Antenor! — iv. 2 

deities, — take thee from me — iv. 4 

I'll lake tliut winter from your — iv. & 

both take and give — iv.5 

the kiss you tuke is better than — iv. .'> 

seen thee pause, and take thy breath — iv. i 

take and take aguin such preposterous — v. 1 

if he can take her clift' — v. 2 

and siglis, and lakes my glove — v. 2 

he, that takes that, must take my heart — v- 2 

but now you liave it, take it — v. '^ 

a burning devil take them — v- 2 

to take that course by your consent.. — v- 3 

shouldst thou take the river Styx .... — v. 4 

my servant, take thou Troilus' horse — v 5 

the devil take thee, coward! — v. 8 

I'll take good breath: rest, sword .... — v. 9 

take it for th.y lubour Timon o/Alhent^ i. 1 

my lord, you' take us even at the best — i. 2 

.you may take my word, my lord - - - . — i. 2 

I take all and your several visitations — i. 2 

I go, sir: take the bonds along — ii. I 

takes no account how things gi) — ii. 2 

no counsel, take no warning liy my.. — iii. 1 

must I take the cure upon me? — iii. 3 

takes virtuous copies to be wicked .. — iii- 3 

take down th' interest into their .... — iii. 4 

for, take it on my soul, my lord .... — iii. 4 

we cannot take this for an answer .. — iii. 4 

tear me, take me, and tlie gods — iii. 4 

takes liis valour prisoner — iii..') 

take my deserts to his, and join — iii. S 

soft, take thy physic first — iii- 6 

take thou that too, with multiplying — iv. 1 

to take his fortune by the arm — iv-2 

let each take some; nay^ put — i\'. 2 

I'll take the g'old tliougivcst me — iv. 3 

take the brid"e quite away — iv. 3 

take thj' beagles with thee — iv. 3 

mend my company, take away thyself — iv- 3 

here, take: the gods out of my misery — iv. 3 

wish I, 3'ou take much pains to mend — v- I 

you'll take it ill. Most thankfully .. — v. 1 

to take the captainship, thou Shalt .. — v. 2 

take our goodly aged men — v. 2 

let him takc't at worst — v. 2 

let him take his haste — v. 3 

the character I'll take with wax .... — v. 4 

take thou the destined tenth — v. a 

it is not square, to take, on those .... — v. a 
wliose course will on the way it ia\i.QS. Cori'ilanus. i. 1 

take these rats thither, to gnaw — i- 1 

to take in many towns — i. 2 

take j'our commission — i- 2 

I'll take him for a Volscc — i- 4 

take convenient numbers to make .. — i. a 

tuke your clioice of those that — i- 6 

mv heart consent to take a bribe .... — i. 'J 

take it; 'tis yours: what is't? — i. 9 

if you take it as a pleasure to you.... — ii. 1 

take my cap, Jupiter, and I tliunk thee — ii. I 

take to you, as your predecessors have — ii. 2 

will from them take tueir liberties .. — ii. 3 

take tlie one by t'other — iii. 1 

no; take more: what may be sworn by — iii. I 

that would take from you all your ., — iii. I 

I could m.vself take up u brace — iii. I 

than to take in a town with — iii- 2 

schoolboys* tears take up the glasses — iii. 2 

do not take his rougher uccenis — iii. 3 

you take it oif again? — iii- 3 

contrived to take from Kome — iii. 3 

take good Coinini us with thee — iv. I 

take my prayers with you — iv. 2 

to take all power from the people .... — iv. 3 

you take niy part from you, sir — iv. 3 

to take the one the other — ■ iv. 4 

take up some other station — iv. a 

take our friendly scnutors by — iv.5 

take the one half of my commission — iv.5 

lint I tuke him to be the greoter .... — iv. a 

who takes it bv sovereignty of — iv. 7 

for I loved tluV, take this along — v. 2 

his own impatiLiiee takes from Aufldius — v. 5 

take him up: licli> three o'the — v. 5 

good Cinnu, tuke this puper JutiusCtvtar, i. 3 

take thought, and ilie for Ca!sar — ii. 1 

I go to take my stand, to see him .... — ii. 4 

Antony, here take you Cnisur's body — iii. I 

how the people tuke the cruel issue.. — iii. 1 

he would not take the crown — . iii. 2 

traitors' houses: take up the body .. — iii. 2 

take thou what course thou wiltt .. — iii. 2 

then take we down his loud — iv. 1 

bc'stu Koninn, take it forth — iv. 3 

and we must take the current when — iv. 3 

I'll tuke it from thee; and. good boy — iv. 3 

our everlasting farewell take — v. t 

and did tuke it from him — v. 3 



TAK 



TAKE— did I take thee prisoner . . JuliusCtrsar, v. 3 

here, talce tliou the hilts; and, when — v. 3 

tiil<e tills garlnnd on thy brow — v. 3 

Bliall ever take alive the noble Brutus — v. 4 

Oetavius, then take him to follow thee — v. 5 

take in that kingdom Anlouy ^ Clcapalra, i. 1 

to take the wile of a man — i. 2 

I should take you for idleness itself. . — i. 3 

I take no pleasure in aught — i- 5 

I learn, you take things ill — ii- 2 

take Antony Ootavia to his wife .... — ii. 2 

take no offence, that I would not .... — ii. .5 

take your time. Thou caust not — ii. B 

how you take the otfers — >!• 

a m ai i pre pored totalcethis offer .... — i i . 6 

no, Antony, take the lot — ii. 6 

here they might take two thieves — ii. 6 

I shall take it, sir; we have used — ii. 

they take the flow o' the Nile by — ii. 7 

who seeks, and will not take when . . — ii. 7 

you take from me a great part — ii i - 2 

thou must not take my former — iii. 3 

take from his heart, take from his .. — iii. 7 

the Ionian sea, and take in Toryne? — iii. 7 

laden with gold; take that (rep.) .... — iii. 9 

take the hint whieh my despair — iii- 9 

friend, or take his life there — iii. 10 

take hence this Jack (rep.) — iii. 1 1 

to let a fellow that will take rewards — iii. 11 

I'll strike; and cry, take all — iv. 2 

now the witch take me, if I — iv. 2 

y.u take me in too dolorous — iv. 2 

snatch 'em up, as we take hares .... — iv. 7 

which, as I take 't, we shall — iv. 10 

let liim take thee, and hoist thee — iv. 10 

and bring me how he takes my death — iv. 11 

take me up; I have led you oft — iv. la 

good sirs, take heart — iv. 13 

and make death proud to take US.... — iv. 13 

if thou please to take me to thee .... — v. 1 

and take a queen worth many babes — V. 2 

I'll take her to my guard — v. 2 

take to you no hard thoughts — v. 2 

take thou no care, it shall he heeded — v. 2 

and take the last warmth of — v. 2 

nay, I will take thee too — v. 2 

take up her bed; and bear her women — v. 2 

the king, he takes the babe djinbeline, i. 1 

take it,Tieart; but keep it till — i. 2 

takes his part: to draw upon an esilel — i. 2 

is ended; take your own way — i. 6 

but take it for thy labour — i. 6 

take it: it is an earnest — i. 6 

who shall take notice of thee — i. 6 

which, if he take shall quite unpeople — i. 6 

and takes it thankfully — j. 7 

which takes prisoner the wild motion — 1.7 

take my power i' the court for yours — i. 7 

to take them in protection? — .i- 7 

must take me up for swearing — ii. 1 

cannot take two from twenty — ii. 1 

take not away the taper — ii. 2 

he cannot choose but take this service — ii. 3 

here, take this too; it is a basilisk . . — ii. 4 

and take your ring again; 'tis uot .. — ii. 4 

there, take thy hire; and all the fiends — ii. 4 

which then they had to take from us — iii. 1 

as would take in some virtue — iii. 2 

take me in hie dominion - iii. 2 (letter) 

take notice, that I am in Cambria — iii. 2 (letter) 

they take for natural father — iii. 3 

may take off some extremity — iii. 4 

thine own hands take away her life — iii. 4 (lett.) 

take it, and hit the innocent mansion — iii. 4 

can take no greater wound — iii. 4 

madam, we must take a short farewell — iii. 4 

if savage, take, or lend: hoi — iii. (i 

single hand he'd take us in — iv. 2 

swore to take, our lives? — iv. 2 

by the top doth take the mountain pine — iv. 2 

wilt take thy chance with me? — iv. 2 

I'll take the better care — iv. 4 

if eaeli of you would take this course — v. 1 

within my bosom takes off my manhood — v. 2 

great the answer be Britons must take — v. 3 

take no stricter render of me — v. 4 

of their broken debtors take a third.. — v. 4 

for Imogen's dear life take mine — v. 4 

take pieces for the figure's sake — v. 4 

if you will take this audit, take this life — v. 4 

our son is good, take off his miseries — v. 4 

that take upon them to know; or take — v. 4 

and take him from our presence — v. 6 

take him hence; the whole world.... — V. .'i 

take that life, beseech you — v. 5 

take 'Titus' part, and so supplant. . Titus. indroii. i. 2 

take up this good old man — i. 2 

take this of me, Luerece was not — ii. 1 

brave boys, and take your turns .... — ii. 1 

this letter? take it up, I pray thee .. — ii. 3 

they should take him for a stag — ii. 3 

Andionicus himself did take it up .. — ii. 4 

come, brother, take a head — iii. 1 

he takes false shadows for true ()('p.) — iii. 2 

and take choice of all my library — iv. 1 

see that you take no longer days — iv. 2 

sir, take you to your tools — iv. 3 

take wreak on Koine for this — iv. 3 

to take up a matter of br.awl — iv. 3 

'cause tliey take vengeance of such .. — v. 2 

he firmly takes me for Uevenge — v. 2 

take my ministers along with me — v. 2 

I take them, Chiron, and Demetrius — v. 2 

good uncle, take you in this barbarous — v. 3 

draw nigh, and take your places .... — v. 3 

O take this warm kiss on thy pale cold — v. 3 

power to take thy life Pericles, i. 2 

treason, will take away your life .. .. — i. 2 

I'll take thy word for faith ~ i. 2 

why, do yc take it, and the gods give — ii. 1 



[ 74G 



T .VICE— here take your place Verides, ii. 3 

since men take women s gifts for — ii. 3 

take I your wish, I leap into the seas — ii. 4 

who takes offence at that worUd make — ii. .^) 
their doom, will take the crown .. — iii. (Gower) 
Lvchorida, her nurse, she takes .. — iii. (Gower) 

talce in your arms this piece of — iii. 1 

be manly, and take comfort — iij. I 

take from my heart all thankfulnessi — iii. 3 

livery will I take me to, and never .. — iii. 4 
to take oft' by treason's knife .... — iv. (Gower) 

Leonine, take her by the arm — iv. 1 

Boult, take you the marks of her .... — iv. 3 

take her home, mistress, take her. . — iv. 3 
(to take your imagination) .... — i v. 4 (Gower) 

you must take some pains — iv. 6 

how's this? we must take another course — iv. 6 

Boult, take her away — iv. 6 

to take from you the jewel you . . — iv. 6 

prove that I cannot, take me home again — iv. C 

whose hand must take my plight Lcar,\. 1 

take thy reward: five days we do — i. 1 

to their dear shelter take thee, maid .... — i. 1 

1 take up what's cast away — i. 1 

take more composition and fierce quality — i. 2 

you were best take my coxcomb (rep.) .. — 1. 4 

else will take the thing she begs — i. 4 

tarry, and take the fool with thee — i. 4 

let me still take away the harms — i. 4 

take you some company, and away — i. 4 

to take it again perforce ! — i. 5 

set guard to take my brother — ii. I 

and take vanity the puppet's part — ii. 2 

an' they will take it, so — ii. 2 

take vantage, heavy eyes — ii. 2 

to take the basest and most poorest shape — ii. 3 

to take the indisposed and sickly — ii. 4 

I pray you, sir, take patience — ii. 4 

send down, and take my parti — ii. 4 

and bids wiiat will take all — iii. I 

and take what it contains — iii. 1 

from my senses take all feeling else — iii. 4 

take physic, pomp, expose thyself — iii. 4 

let this tyrannous night take hold — iii. 4 

good, my lord, take this offer — iii. 4 

let him take the fellow. Take him you on — iii. 4 

that tlie open air; ttike it thankfully .... — iii. 6 

man of justice, take thy place — iii. 6 

thy sheep shall take no harm .... — iii. 6 (song) 

I here take my oath before this — iii. 6 

my tears begin to take his part — iii. fi 

I pr'ythee take him in thy arras — iii. 6 

take up thy master (rep.) — iii. 6 

revenges we are bound to take upon .... — iii. 7 

and take the chance of anger — iii. 7 

here, take this purse, thou whom — iv. 1 

when they did take his eyes? — iv. 2 

helps him, take all my outward worth .. — iv. 4 

I would not take this from report — iv. 6 

take my breath from me — i v. 6 

of his fortune take like hold on thee .... — i v. 6 

villain, take my purse — iv. 6 

wrong, to take me out o' the grave — iv. 7 

which of them shall I take? — v. I 

to take the widow, exasperates — v. 1 

here, father, take the shadow of this .... — v. 2 

some officers take them away (rep.) — v. 3 

take upon us the mystery of things — v. 3 

general, take thou my soldiers — v. 3 

take my sword, give it the captain — v. 3 

star-crossed lovers take their life. /I'omeo S,-JiU. (prol.) 

I will take the wall of any man or . . — i. 1 

take it in what sense tliou wilt (rep.) — i. 1 

let us take the law of our sides — i. 1 

and let them take it as they list .... — i. 1 

take thou some new infection to .... — i. 2 

take our good meaning — i. 4 

that he helps not to take away? .... — i. 6 

and the longer liver take all I — i. 5 

while my prayer's effect I take — i. 5 

take all myself. Itakethee — ii.2 

and I will take thy word — ii.2 

I'll take him down an a' were lustier — ii. 4 

as I take it, is a gentlemanlike offer — ii. 4 

Peter, take my fan, and go before — ii. 4 

not take some occasion without giving? — iii. 1 

now, Tybalt, take tlie villain back again — iii. 1 

could not take truce with the unruly — iii. 1 

take him and cut him out in little stars — iii. 2 

take up those cords — iii. 2 

death, not Romeo, take my maidenhead! — iii. 2 

bid him come to take his last farewell — iii. 2 

see how lie will take it at your hands — iii. 5 

take me with you, take me with you — iii. 5 

take thou this phial, being then in bed — iv. 1 

hold, take these keys — iv. 4 

you take your pennyworths now .... — iv. 5 

ay, let the county take you in your bed — iv. 5 

but break it, and take this. My poverty — v. 1 

hold, take this letter; early in — v. 3 

but, chiefly, to take thence from her — v. 3 

take thou tliat: live, and be prosperous — v. 3 

arms, take your last embrace! — v. 3 

take her from her borrowed grave (rep) — v. 3 
will not let belief take hold of him .... Hamlet^ i. I 

and this, I take it, is the main motive .. — i. 1 

no fairy takes, nor witch hath power to — i. 1 

take thy fair hour, Laertes — i. 2 

{icevish opposition take it to heart? — i. 2 

le was a man, take him for all ill all .... — i. 2 

take each man's censure, but reserve .... — i. 3 

you must not take for fire — i. 3 

doth wake to-night, and takes his rouse — i. 4 

indeed, it takes fi-om our achievements . . — i. 4 

take corruption from that particular fault — i. 4 

take you as 'twere, some distant — ii. 1 

of falsehood takes his carp of truth — ii. 1 

take this from this, if this be otherwise. . — ii. 2 

you cannot, sir, take anything that I will — ii.2 

wont to take such deligiit in — ii. 2 



TAK 



TAKES prisoner Pynhus' ear Hamlet, ii. 2 

in general synod, take away her power.. — ii.2 

is in your bounty; take them in — ii.2 

why, I should take it; for it cannot he .. — ii. 2 
or to take arms against a sea of troubles — iii. I 
patient merit of the unworthy takes .... — iii. 1 
their perfume lost, take these again .... — iii. 1 

a groaning to take oft" my edge — iii. 2 

[Co^ A'?i/.JfiO you must take liusbands ., — iii. 2 
good Horatio, I'll take the ghost's word — iii. 2 
to take him in the purging of his soul .. — iii. 3 

for thy better; take thy fortune — iii. 4 

takes off the rose from the fair — iii. 4 

that we may take it thence — iv. 2 

take you me for a spunge, my lord? .... — iv. 2 

the devil take thy soul I — v. I 

I pr'ythee, take thy fingers from my — v. 1 

I take him to be a soul of great article .. — v. 2 

he has impawned, as I take it — v. 2 

or that you will take longer time — v. 2 

here, Hamlet, take my napkin, rub thy . . — v. 2 

take up the bodies: Buch a sight — v. 2 

I take it much unkindly, tliat thou .... Othello, i. 1 
nor doth the general care take hold on me — i. 3 

Dot only take away, but let your — i. 3 

good Brabantio, take up this mingled .. — i- 3 
cannot be preserved when fortune takes — i- 3 
whereof I take this, that you call— love.. — i. 3 
he takes her by the palm: ay, well said.. — ii. I 
take thine auld cloak about thee . . — ii. 3 (song) 
to take the safest occasion by the front .. — iii. I 

his present reconciliation take — iii. 3 

you'd take no notice; nor build — iii. 3 

God be wi' you; take mine office — iii. 3 

sweet Bianca, take me this work out .... — iii. 4 
take it, and do 't: and leave me for this — iii. 4 
to take it; I must take out the whole.... — iv. 1 

I must take out the work? (rep.) — iv. 1 

take me from this world with treachery — iv. 2 
takes away witli him the fair Desdemona — iv. 2 

you may take him at your pleasure — iv. 2 

be bold, and take thy sword — v. 1 

this is Othello's ancient, as I take it .... — v. 1 
take you this weapon, which I have here — v. 2 

TAKEN— you have taken it wiselier .. Tempest, ii. 1 
ou whom my pains humanely taken .. — iv. I 
now you have taken the pains. . TwoGen. of Ver. i. 1 

I was taken up for layin» — i. 2 

and have taken him by tlie chain. . Mer^-y Wives, i. 1 

I have taken great pains TwelflhNight, i. 5 

to have taken it away yourself — ii.2 

his very genius hath taken — iii. 4 

there will be pity taken on you ,. Meas. for Meas. i. 2 
being taken up of these men's bills., ^/wc/i^i/o, iii. 3 
I was taken with the manner .... Loi'e'sL./os/, i. I 
and taken following her into the park — i. 1 

to be taken with a wench (rep.) — i. 1 

I was taken with Jaquenetta — i. I 

o'erheard, and taken napping so .... — iv. 3 
to be cut off and taken in v/hat.. Mercli. ofl'enice, i. 3 

man's flesh, taken from a man — i. 3 

to be so taken at thy peril, Jew — iv. 1 

for what he hath taken away.. AsyouLiUeit, i. 2 

being taken with the cramp — iv. 1 

his taken labours bid him ..AWslf'ell, iii. 4 (letter) 
that he has taken their greatest .... — i'u.A 
he's bravely taken here; he stole .... — iii. 5 
of whom he hath taken a solemn .... — iv. 3 
his confession is taken, and it shall. . — iv. 3 

an ambush where I was taken ? — iv. 3 

this taken by any understanding. . U inter sTate, i. 2 
without my present vengeance taken — i. 2 

have taken the shapes of beasts — iv. 3 

if you had not taken yourself with .. — iv. 3 
have taken treasure from her lips .. — v. 1 
three were taken up by fishei-men. Cumethj of Err. i. 1 
all were taken up; but, by and by. . .. — v. 1 
are taken by the tide, these Lincoln.. King.fnhv, v. 

sick, my lord; suddenly taken Itic/uinl ll.l. i 

hands of that Welshman taken \Heuryli'. i. 1 

where is it? taken from us it is — ii. 4 

and wert taken with the manner .... — ii. 4 
if rightly taken. No, if riglitly taken — ii. 4 
thy state is taken for a joint-stool . . — ii. 4 

hath in reason taken from me i Henry If. ii. 2 

you liave taken up, under — iv. 2 

valour, taken sir John Colevile — iv. 3 

but taken, and impounded as a stray. . Henry V. i. 2 
your fathers taken by the silver .... — iii. 3 

nothing taken but imid for — iii. 6 

of good sort are taken, uncle? — iv. 8 

Talbot is taken, whom we wont .... 1 Henry VI. i. 2 
there surprised, and taken prisoners — iv. 1 

I have taken my last draught '2 Henry I' I. ii. 3 

say, lie be taken, racked, and tortured — iii. 1 

Henry your foe is taken ZHenryVI. iii. 2 

for he is taken prisoner — iv. 4 

taken from Paul's to be interred ..lUcMarU III. i. 2 
your brother York, liave taken sanctuary — iii. 1 
the duke of Buckuigham is taken .. " — iv. 4 

at one stroke has taken for ever Henry fill. ii. 1 

out of pity, taken a load would sink — iii. 2 

I'll assure you, better taken, sir — iv. 1 

if Troy be not taken till these . . Troilus .5 Cress, ii. 3 

since I have taken such pains — iii. 2 

I'll be taken too, or bring him off — V. G 

might well be taken from the people.Cortoi.-im<s, ii. 2 
he was not taken well; he had not.. .. — v. I 

not liave taken him at a word . luliusCtesar, i. 2 

but there's no heed to be taken of them — i. 2 
which, taken at the flood, leads on .. — iv. 3 
now I have taken heart, thou vanishest — iv. 3 
but 'tis as soon taken as seen ....Autony ^Cko. i. 4 

Cffisar has taken Toryne — iii. 7 

I dare not, lest I be taken — iv. 13 

O Cleopatra! thou art taken, queen I — v. 2 

be praised! Lucius is taken! Cymbeline, v. 3 

till the fresh taste be taken from. Titus Anilron. iii. 1 
that he hath taken them down again — iv. 3 
must have your maideuhead taken oS.I'ericles, iv. 6 



TAK 



TAKICN siistenaiicr, liiit to prorogue.! .. I'erirlei, v. I 
nor IViir »till til be taken Lear, i. 4 

if 111' U' taken, lie sliuU never more — ii. I 

to hlanie in tlii>; 'twill lie ill tnken: — ii. a 

tli.ni wilt he taken: Bluv iiwhile.Woiwo .^-Vu/iW, iii. 3 

aelij;hlan(l vlule— taken to wile llanitel, i. 2 

I have taken note of it ; the a^'e is grown — v. I 

of being taken by the insolent foe Othrllo, i. 3 

thon btut taken against nie a nioHt just. , — iv. 2 

TAKER— the taker runs presently mad.iWiie/i/IJo, i. I 
tile life-weurv tuker nuiy fall ..Romeo ^Juliet, v. 1 

TAKKTll most ilelisht in music ..lamitigo/Sh. i. 1 

TAKING-what a, taking; was he in. IHeirtj It irei, iii. 3 
to ivptirt your lord's taking of..,. TtreifthNight, it. t 

by takinj; it in snuti' Lore's L.l.nsl, v. 2 

by taking, nor by giving of excess, .tier, of f >iiiVf , i. 3 

(rood for nothing but taking up All'sll'ell, li. 3 

from Florence, taking no leave — v. 3 (i)etition) 
the heavens, taking angry note .. lyintn't TaU, v. 1 
taking note of thy abhorred a.spcct. . King John, i v. 2 
for taking so the head, yotir whole. . Hiduinl 1 1, iii. 3 
the manner of their taking nniv appear — v. (i 
thon.ngh with them in honest takincJ/Zoiii/Z/'. i. 2 
for taking their names npon you before — ii. t 

imagine me taking your part — v. 2 

then, taking him U'om thence . . . . Itichurd / 1 1, iii. 1 
would not hold taking. 1 doubt me. Vnii'mo/.i/A. i. 2 

tuking their leaves of me Corintanux, iv. 5 

taking bribes here of the Sardians.J'udiisC'icjur, iv. 3 
when l\e hath mused of taking .4uIoh!/ 4' Cleo. iii. 1 1 

by taking Antony's course — v. 2 

sliould we lie taking leave as long....C!/ml/fiiiif, i. 2 

for taking a beggar without — 1.5 

to try your taking a false report — i. 7 

taking atl vantage of our misery Pericles, i. 4 

for taking one's part that is out of Lem; i. 4 

vigilance, docs not attend my taking .... — ii.3 

you taking airs, with lameness! — ii. 4 

whirlwinds, star-bliisting, and taking! .. — iii. 4 

well worth a poor man's taking — iv.6 

the kind prince, taking thy part, lioweo ^Juliet, iii. 3 
taking the measure of an unmade grave — iii. 3 

TAKING-OFK-his speedy taking-otf ....Lear, v. 1 
the deep damnation of his taking-ott" ..Macbilh.'i. 7 

TAK'ST— which tboii tuk'st from me. ...Tempest, i. 2 
than thou tak'st him for . . Measure Tor Measure, iv. 3 
thou tak'st true delight in the sight.iUit/.iV. Or. iii. 2 
if thou tak'st more, or less... Werc/iarii't/'/Viiicf, iv. 1 

tak'st it all for jest iri>iUr'sTule,i. 2 

if thou tuk'st up the princess — ii.3 

a travel that thou tak'st for pleasure. 7iic/ia7-(i //. i. 3 
that even here thou tak'st, as from .. — v. 1 

if thou tak'st leave, thou wert 2 Henry I r; i. 2 

poor soul, that tak'st thy leave of itl/dWiuriJ ;//. iv. 1 

whatsoe'er thou tak'st me for Henry I' I if. v. 2 

thou tak'st up thou know'st not .... Cumbeline, i. fi 

TALBOT, Salisbury, and Gloster Henry I', iv. 3 

lord Talbot and the French (>e;>.) . . \ Henry ri. i. I 
where valiant Talbot, above human — i. 1 

a Talbot! aTalbotI cried out amain — i. 1 

thrust Talbot with a 8[)ear into — i. I 

is Talbot slain? (r*?p.iv. 7) — i. 1 

TallKit is taken, whom we wont .... — i. 2 

Talbot, my life, my joy, again — i. 4 

speak unto Talbot; iiay, look up ...^ — i. 4 

•Talbot, farewell; thy hour is not yet — i. 

ascend, bnive Talbot; we will follow — ii. 1 
here will Talbot mount, or make his — ii. 1 
'tis thought, lord Talbot, when thefi.qlit — ii. 2 
call ye the warlike Talbot, for his .. — ii. 2 
here is the Tnlbot; wlio would speak — li. 8 

so is lord Tnlhot come — ii.3 

is this the Talhot, 80 much (rep. iii. 4) — ii.3 
stay, my h^rd Talbot; for my lady .. — ii.3 

to certify her, Talbot's here — ii.3 

aught hut Talbot's shadow (»•'■;>.) .... — ii. .T 
victorious Talbot! pardon my abuse — ii. 3 

nor misconstrue tlie mind of Tallwt — li. 3 

if Talbot hut survive thy treacliery .. — lip. 2 

or else let Talbot perish with — iii. 2 

if Talbot do but thunder — iii. 2 

for Talbot means no goodness — iii. 2 

else reproach be Talbot's greatest fame — iii. 2 
lord Talbot, do not so dishonour me — iii. 2 

will von fly, and leave lordTalbotyfrfp.) — iii. 2 
warlike and martial Talbot, Burgundy — iii. 2 
wliat wills lord Talbot, iilca.seth .... — iii. 2 
let frantic Talbot trimnjih for awhile — iii. 3 
to leave the Tolbot, and to folbiw us — iii. 3 
there goes the Talbot, with his colours — iii. 3 
when Talbot bath set footing once .. — iii. 3 
so lap well, Talbot: I'll no longer trust — iii. 3 
lord Talbot there shall talk witli .... — iv. 1 

English .John Talh'.tirrn.) _ iv. 2 

Talhot, and England's right! — iv. 2 

to flglit with Talbot; os he marched — iv. 3 

renowned Talbot doth expect — iv. 3 

to tiie rescue of the noble Talbot — iv. 3 

fiircwell Talbot, France, and Enghind'o — iv, 3 
take mercy on brave Tulbot'flsuul ! .. — iv. 3 
eeven years did nrit Talbot see his son — iv. :i 
what joy shall noble Talbot have.... — iv. 3 
bv Vork and Talbot too rashly plmted — iv. 4 
the over-daring Talbot hath sullied — iv. 4 

that. Talbot dead, great Vork might — iv. 1 
from li*iuglit and sold lord Talbot.... — Iv. 4 
Talbot iierishcth by your default .... — iv. 4 
entraiiix.<l the noble-minded Talbot — iv. 4 

would I'alliot never, though he (rrp.) — iv. 4 

O young .lolin Talbot! — iv. i 

that TaltKit's name might lie in tliee — iv. & 

is inv name Talbot? and am I yrmr son? — iv. 5 
not 'ralliot's bliKKl, that basclv llid(r(7).) — iv. .'> 
the regent hath with Talbot (iroke his — iv. II 
whore is.John Talhot? (rrp.iv.7) .... — iv. (i 
didst force from Talbot, my brave boy — iv. li 
before young Talbot from old Talbot fly — iv.6 

an' if I flv, I am not TallKit's sriii — iv. li 

if son to Talbot, die at Talbot's foot.. — iv.6 
young Talbot's valour makeii me.... — iv. 7 



[747 ] 

TALBOT— two Talbots winged I Henri/ II. iv. 7 

arms are young .loliii Talbot's grave — iv. 7 
how the yoiiin; wlielpofTalbot's.... — Iv. 7 

young 'rulbiit WAS not biHii lo be — iv. 7 

valiant lunl Tallw.t, earl i.f Sbrewsbiirvl — iv. 7 
lord Talbot of Oonilrig and Urchinlleld - Iv. 7 
this upstart Isold Talbot's ghost .... — iv. 7 
will be ours, now bloodv Talbot's slain — iv. 7 
1 trust, the ghost of Talbot is not there — v. 2 
air (Jilhert Talbot, sir William.... «ic/inn( III. iv. !, 
TAl.liOTITKS. See, noble Charles.. U/ewri/ /'/. iii. 2 

T.Vl.K— yniir talc, sir, would cure Tempest, i. 2 

my In le prtivokes that question — i. 2 

trouble liiin any more in his tale — iii. 2 

now forward with your tale — iii. 2 

I'll tell no tales , — v. I 

in thy tale Tieoden.ofl'trona, ii. 3 

my talcs of love, were wont — ii. 4 

shall tell you another tale ;l/cir!//rii'eii, i. 1 

speak-tt your talc — 1.4 

well, thereby hangs a tale — i. 4 

there is an old tale goes — iv. 4 

this tale of Ilcrnc tlie hunter — iv. 4 

mine eyes will tell tales of me.. .. Ticelfllu\ii;hi, ii. 1 
pretty tales of the duke ..Measure/or Measure, \v. 3 

told somewhat of my tale — v. I 

rely upon it till my tale he heard .. .. — v. I 

like the old tale, my lord MurhAdo,\. I 

strong encounter of my amorous tale — i. I 
good wit out of the hundred merry tales — ii. I 

that tells a heavy talc for biin — iii. 2 

and now forward with thy tale — iii. 3 

that thou hast shifted out of thy tale — iii. 3 

I tell this tale vilely — iii. 3 

'fore God, they are both in a tale .... — iv. 2 
could ever hear by talc or history ..VnLA'.'s Dr. i. 1 
telling the saddest tale, sometime.... — ii. 1 

and both as light as tales — iii. 2 

aged ears play truant at his tales . Love' sL. Lost, ii. 1 

even 80; my tale ia told — v. 2 

hears merry talcs, and smiles not.:Ver. of Venice, i. 2 

and when the talc is told, bid her — iv. 1 

this beginning with an old tale. ...ylsyouLikeit, i. 2 
and rot, and tliereby hangs a tale. . . . — ii. 7 
saving your tale, Petruchio ..Taming a/Slirew, ii. 1 

thereby hangs a tale. Let's ha't — .iv. 1 

feel a tale, not to hear a tale {rep.) ., — iv. I 
tell thou the tale; but hadst thou.... — iv. 1 

credulous, and trust my tale — iv. 2 

says, thus she conceives her tale .... — v. 2 
and tell's a tale. Merry, or sad .. IVinier'sTale, ii. I 

a sad tale's best for winter — ii. 1 

as my tale now seems to it — i v. (chorus) 

is so like an old tale (rc/i. V. 3) — v. 2 

is ainad tale, he told to-day .Comedy of Errors, iv. 3 

thick as tale, thy praises in his Macbeth, i. 3 

it is a tale told by an idiot — v. 5 

your tale must be, liow he employed. Kiii^' John, i. 1 

tell o'er tliy tale again — iii. 1 

not all thy former tale — iii. 1 

tell him this talc; and from — iii. 1 

life is us tedious as a twice-told tale.. — iii. 4 

as an ancient tale new told — iv. 2 

cuts oil' his tale, and talks of — iv. 2 

as bid me tell my tale in — iv. 2 

my death's sad tale may yet iindeaf./iic/inii; II. ii. I 

thou tell'st a tale so ill — iii. 2 

hath hut a heavier tale to say — iii. 2 

madam, we'll tell tales — iii. 4 

and let them tell thee talcs of woful — v. 1 

[^Cot.'i tell thou the lamentable talec>f me — v. I 
no man enter till my tale be done... . — v. 3 

tell your tale, for I nave done [Hcniyll'.i. 3 

murmur tales of iron wars — ii. 2 

that his tale to me may be — ii. 4 

melted at the sweet talc of — ii. I 

how a plain talc shall put — ii. 4 

in reproof of many tales devised .... — iii. 2 

that he cuts me from my tale — v. 2 

this is the strangest tale that e'er.... — v. 4 
to take the tales out of my mouth .... Henry I', iv. 7 
approacli not ere my tale be done . . I Henry VI. ii. .5 

this superficial tale is but — v. 5 

I should have told your grace's tale.srffnri/'''. iii. I 
tale to make, we at St. Alban's ....iHenryVI. ii. 1 
he was urged to tell my tale again. /i/c/iurt/ ///. iii. 7 

to hear a wooer's tale — iv. 4 

an honest talc speeds best (r'v>.) — iv. 4 

may'st tell thy tale the nearest — iv. 4 

a several tale, and every talc condcnins — v. 3 
in seeking tales, and informations .llenryl'IIt.v. 2 
you shall tell me another tale .. Troilus ^ Cress, i. 2 

to end a tale of length — i. 3 

I shall tell you a pretty tale Coriolanus, i. 1 

to fob offour di.sgrace with a tale .... — i. I 

his tale jironounced shall bury — v. 5 

though in his tale lie death.. .-iH/onr/ ^- Cleopatra, i. 2 

truths would be hilt tales (!/•/).) — ii. 2 

thou wouldst have told this tale .... Cymheline, i. 7 

the taleof Tereus — ii. 2 

revolve what tales I have told you . . — iii. 3 

to tell this tale of mine — v. 5 

they told me this hellish tale. 7'iYi« .Indronicus, ii. 3 

they will not intercept my talc — iii. I 

to bid .<Encas tell the tale twice o'er — iii. 2 

merry with some plcasiiig tale — iii. 2 

this is the tragic taleof Piiiloinel .... — iv. I 

let hiin tell the talc — v. 3 

by relating talcs of others' griefs I'eiiclet, i. 4 

mar a curious tale in telling it Z.«ir, i. 4 

nor tell tales of thee to high-judging .... — ii. 4 

nnil tell old tales, and laugh — v. 3 

list a brief tale; and, when 'tis told — v. 3 

told the most liiteous tale of Lear — v. 3 

could tell a whispering tale Itomcui^ Juliet, !. a 

my talc against the hair (rrp.) — ii. 4 

come to the whole depth of my tide.. — ii. 4 
longer than the tale thou dost excuse — ii. !> 
ia not so long ns ia a tedious talc .... — v. 3 
I could u tale iiufold, whose lightest.. .. llamUl, i. b 



TAL 



TALE— (a short tale to make) fell into .. Hamlet, ii. 2 

'twas i'Encaa' tale to Dido — il. 2 

lie's for a jig, or a tale of bawdry — ii. 2 

a round unvaniiiihed tale deliver Othello, \ 3 

I think, this tale would win my daughter — i. 3 
whereby hangs a tale, sir? Marry, sir.. .. — lit. 1 

I will make him tell Ibe talc anew — iv. 1 

mistress, you must tell us another tale .. — v. 1 

T^VLENT-use their taUnts TiretfthSii;ht, i. 

a rare talenti If a talent lie aclaw../,oce'iL. JL. iv. 2 

he claws him with a talent — iv. 2 

Ave talents is his debt Timonof Athens, i. I 

three talents on the present — i. 1 

I do return those talents, doubled.... — i. 2 

lot the request be fifty talents — ii. 2 

o' the instant a thousand talents to me — ii. 2 
I cleared him with five talents trep.) — ii. 2 
and instant occasion to use fifty talenta — iii. 1 
to borrow 80 many talents (rep.) .... — iii. 2 
cannot want fifty-five hundred talents — iii. 2 
mine, fifty talents. Tell out my blood — iii. 4 
1 count his, beyond all talents Cymbeline, i. 7 

TALE-POHTEK; and five or six.. Winler'sTale, iv. 3 

TALK— dost talk nothing tome Tempest, ii. 1 

and does not talk after the wisest — ii. 2 

sit then, and talk with her — iv. I 

v^■hat sad talk was that TiroOen. of Verona, i. 3 

she doth talk in her sleep (rp/j.) — iii. I 

this sir Proteus, that we talk on .... — iv. 2 

when you talk of war — v. 2 

we liad an hour's talk of that v;a.vi, Me^ry tt'ives, i. 4 
we have an hour's talk with you .... — ii. I 
break their talk, mistress Quickly .. — iii. 4 

why, does he talk of him? — iv. 2 

and talks of the basket too — . iv. 2 

master Fenton, talk not to me — iv.6 

my lady talk of it yesterday ....Twelfth Sight, i. 3 
I talk not of your soul .... Measure for Measure, ii. 4 
love talks with better knowledge .... — iii. 2 

I would the duke, we talk of — iii. 2 

it bawdy talk ofl"end you — iv. 3 

come, talk not of her; you shall Much Ado, ii. I 

they would talk themselves mad..... — ii. I 

because you talk of wooing — ii.3 

now you talk of a sheet of ijaper .... — ii, 3 
our talk must only be of Benedick ,, — iii. I 

my talk to thee must be — iii. I 

for the watch to babble and to talk.. — iii. 3 

we will rather sleep than talk — iii. 3 

last night, talk with a ruffian — iv. I 

talk with a man out at a window? .. — iv. I 
the watch heard them talk of one.. .. — v. 1 

we'll talk with Jlargaret — v. I 

talk through the chink of a wall..jWd.A'.'j Dr. iii. I 
if any man be seen to talk witli .. Love's L.Lost, i. 1 
I never spent an hour's talk withal.. — ii. 1 

we will talk no more of this — iii. I 

come, come, you talk greasily — iv. I 

or talk till doomsday here — iv. 3 

with visages displayed, to talk, and greet — v. 2 
nothina but talk of his horse ..Meich. of Venice, i. 2 

sell with you, talk with you — i. 3 

talk you of young master Launcelot Oep.)~ ii. 2 

talk with ri_spect, and swear — ii. 2 

my father see me talk with thee .... — ii.3 
crossing the plain highway of talk .. — iii. I 

wliat talk you of the posy — v. I 

let us talk in good earnest As ynu Lihe it, i. 3 

a 3'oung man, and an old, in solemn talk — ii. 4 

never talk to me, I will weep — iii. 4 

but what talk we of fathers — iii. 4 

thou canst talk of love so well — iii..') 

a peevish boy: yet he talks well .... — iii. ."i 

to talk of your good father All's IVell,\. 2 

I'll lalk w'ith you more anon — i. 3 

I long to talk with the young noble.. — iv. 5 

I had talk of yon last night — v. 2 

talk [/vii(.-balk] logicwith irep.)..-lanun^'ofSh. i. I 

or talk not, I advise you — i. 2 

to the maid you talk of, yea, or no? . — i. 2 
talk not to me; I will go sit and weep — ii. 1 

Katharine, that do talk of me — ii. I 

yours, if you talk of tails — ii. 1 

pleasure to l)e cross in talk — ii. I 

biitwhat talk I of this? — iv. 1 

talk not, signior Gremio — v. I 

if you talk of a wonder — v. 2 

to prate and talk for life ll'inter'sTale, iii. 2 

all tongues to talk their bitterest .... — iii. 2 
see a thing to talk on when thou .... — jii. 3 
and the gentlemen arc in sad talk .. — iv. 3 
but what talk we of these traitorly .. — iv. 3 

I heard them talk of a fardel — v. 2 

your town, as to your talk .... Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

we talk with goblins, owls — ii. 2 

who talks within there? — iii. I 

wilt thou still talk? — iv. 4 

how idly do they talk! — iv. 4 

hung those that talk of fear Macbeth, v. 3 

talks as familiarly of roaring KingJohn.ii. 2 

he talks to me, that never had — iii. 4 

if I talk to him, with his — iv. 1 

and when they tolk of him — iv. 2 

cut's ofl'his tale, end talks of Arthur's — iv. 2 

let's talk of graves, of worms ItichardU. iii. 2 

executors, and talk of wills — iii. 2 

well, well, I see 1 lalk but idly — iii. 3 

theyWl talk of state — iii. 4 

amongst much other talk — iv. I 

Aumerle and you did talk — iv. 1 

talk so like a waiting-gentlewoman..! Urnry jr. i.3 

1 will talk to you. when — i.3 

and bavehim tnlk to nie, in any .... — iii. I 
talk not of dying; I om out of fear .. — iv. I 

my barony; never talk of it iUenrylV. I. 1 

I tolk not of his miijesty — i. 2 

so liani, you should talk so idly? .... — ii. 2 
tliev wilt talk of mad Shallow yet .. — iii. 2 
talks ns familiarly of John of CiaiinC — iii. 2 
is all loo heavy to admit much talk. . — v. 2 



TAL 



TALK— when we talk of horses.. Henri/ F. i. (chorus) 

for shame, to talk of mercy _ H. 2 

and we talk, and by Chrisli, do nothing — iii! 2 

who talks of my natio]i? iii. 2 

constable, you talk of horse and armour iii. 7 

60 the maiden cities vnu talk of. — v. 2 

in tirivate will I talk' with thee IHenry I'l. i. 2 

metlunks, is very long in talk — i. 2 

boM verdict enter talk with lords? .. — iii. 1 
talk like the vulgar sort of market-men — iii. 2 

a parley, we will talk with him _ iii. 3 

lord Talbot there shall talk with — jv. 1 

then talk no more of flight iv. 6 

he talks at random v. 3 

he talks of wood v. 3 

lady, wherefore talk you so? _ v. 3 

to talk of commonwealth affairs 2Henryl'I. i. 3 

pleasure is to talk with hitn ii. I 

you and I must talk of that event .. iii. 1 

sometime, he talks as if duke iii. 2 

and let him talk no more _ iv. 1 

that usually talk of a noun _ iv. 7 

talk not of France, sith thou hast....3Heji)!/r/. i. 1 
men may talk of kings, and why .... _ iii. 1 

till with my talk and tears iii. 3 

my lords, forbear this talk — iv. 1 

'tis no time to talk iv. 5 

what talk you of debating? _ iv! 7 

our commission; talk no more ,, ..Ilk-hard III. i. i 

will still be cross iu talk iii. 1 

and so break off the talk — iii. 1 

to-day the lords you talk of are — iii. 2 

I'll talk with this good fellow _ iii. 2 

the men you talk of came into — iii. 2 

[Co/. A'«(.] I must talk a word with you iv. 4 

with quarrels, taki, and tailors Henry I'l II, i. 3 

if I chance to talk a little wild i. 4 

we shall have them talk us to silence i. 4 

your grace, they would talk anon.... — i. 4 
let me have it; I do not talk much .. — ii. I 

how you do talk 1 I swear again — ii. 3 

somebody had heard her talk. . Troilus 4-Cressid,i,\. I 
what do you talk of? Good-morrow — i. 2 

nay, if we talk of reason _ ii 2 

to talk with him, and to behold his.. — iii. 3 

nor sweeten talk, nor play at — iv. 4 

own selves bend we our needful talk — iv. 4 

I profit not by thy talk _ v. 1 

no talk of Timou nothing of him.. Timon of .4lh. v. 3 

you talk of pride now tre/i.) Coraianus, ii. 1 

what do ye talk? have we not _ iii. 1 

I talk of you; why did you wish .... — iii. 2 

I talk of that, that know it — iii 3 

come, what talk you of MarcUis? .... _ iv. 6 
their talk at table, aud their thanks — iv. 7 

heard your general talk of Rome — v. 2 

talks like a knell, and his hum is.... — v. 4 
not let you eat, nor talk, nor sleep.JuliusCatsar, ii. 1 

and talk j'ou sometimes? ii. I 

I have an hour's talk in store for you — ii. 2 

talk not of standing iii. 1 

do not talk of him, but as a property — iv 1 

of night is crept upon our talk _ iv 3 

I would hold more talk with thee — iv. 3 

we must out and talk. Mark Antony — v. 1 
sacred, which he talks on now ..Antony S-Cleo. ii. 2 

and we shall talk before we fight — ii. 6 

if idle talk wiU once be necessary — v 2 

never talkon't: she hath been Cymbeline, ii. 4 

we II talk of that hereafter _ iji. 2 

talk thy tongue weary; speak — iii' 4 

away, aud talk not TitmAndranicns, i! 2 

stay not to talk with them _ ii 4 

that thus dost talk in signsl _ iii" 2 

to talk of hands; lest we remember.. — iii' 2 
liow franticly I square my talk! .... _ jii 2 
now talk at pleasure of your safety .. — iv. 2 

for I must talk of murders, rapes .... vi | 

I am come to talk with tliee — v2 

how can I grace my talk _ y.' 2 

thou wouldst talk with me — y! 2 

too late to talk of love Pericles^ ii*. 3 

I will talk further with you Lear, iii ' 1 

and raamtain talk with the duke — iii' 3 

first let me talk with this philosopher .. _ iii 4 

1 11 talk a word with this same — id 4 

poor rogues talk of court news (rep.1 _ v. 3 

what, drawn, and talk of peace?.. Komeo S-Jidiet, i. I 
leave awhile, we must talk in secret — i 3 

the very theme I came to talk of — j 3 

true, I talk of dreams; which are.... — i' 4 

this wind you talk of blows us _ j' 4 

loves to hear himself talk _ ji' 4 

talk here in the public haunt of men — iii' 1 

It prevails not, talk no more iii' 3 

let's talk, it is not day _ jii' 5 

talk not to me, for I'll not siieak — iii" 5 

he.-i.ringhim talk of Juliet, to think — v' 3 

to have more talk of these sad things — v 3 
as to give words or talk with the lord . . Hamlet, ( 3 

upon the talk of the poisoning _ iii 2 

and talk him out of patience Othello iii. 3 

about her, to kiss, and talk to _ iii 3 

Ipray, talk me ofCassio _ iii.' 4 

do not talk to me, Emilia; I cannot weep — iv' 2 
come, come, you talk, my mother had — iv. 3 

taikyou of killing? Ay, I do _ v. 2 

TALKED— I heard them talked of. . Merry Wives, i 1 
and to be talked with in sincerity.Mra.!./or;»/eas. i. 5 
such a tellow is not to be talked withal — v 1 
what man was he talked with you ..Much.ido, iv. I 
1 talked with no man nt that hour .. _ iv I 
stayed an hour, and talked apace. Lome's L. Lost, v. 2 
?",i H"^?<1 of Satan, and of limbo .... All's iVell, v 3 
talked of her, have talked amiss. .Tam/x^-o/S/i. ii. I 
dies to me agaiu, when talked of..Wi,i!er'sTali!,v. \ 

and yet he talked very wisely ) Henry! V. i. 2 

and still he smiled, and talk-d — i 3 

thou hast talked of sallies, and retires _ ii' 3 
have talked of Monmouth'seiave..2/f™)y /;'. ii' 3 



[ 748 ] TAR 

^fo'Sor°y we Ia't'e°Jalked o'j-^^°" ' m^^l^ni "•' I ''^t^^^ ''"•?•""'=' f'^'"'"" *» ' ' ^™''"' ^ ^'"""'^ "i- » 
HI lue story we late tn.iKea ot Ilinhard lil.u.2 ins remedies are tame Coriolanus \v a 

Rivers talked how I did grow _ ii. 3 , I'll t.ame you; FU brin-Vyou in ' TerfcS i^' 5 

^'ifhM fvn?'^r,vV'''^?,.''^" '^'"■''■'''"'"' iv- J to tame tfieseVile oSe^s . " . :::'.:„ i'/ir 'iv I 

t i row ? ?„f >,'. w^ ^f » "■"°" ■■■•;■,■;: '^- ^ !""'« """« by fortune's blows ...... . f. ' v 6 

he buXliess we ave ^aIk?3'of " ' "a ("''"f ;7'"-'.!' ^ \'- not too tame neither, but let your. . Hamlet, "{. 2 

|&ij^ili?;^,Sl^'fi^^?^'::^s;;;°"i-^: l^^i^^^^:^^^-^- -v^\ 

TAT KPR f,f S •"""^'^ of since your travel - iv. 7 ' dregs of aflat tamed pfece.7\„V«| c'"L^i-iv- f 

tnit^r^^.l^^ '*^iT Meri-hanlofrenice,\. 1 TAMELY to the foot of majesty ....iHcnr fvlV '1 

^^^ T hf" Tf^°°'^, ''°'=';^ «"•■'""■'' '"• '• 3 j if we live thus tamely, to be thus ife"r7/ F///' ill" 2 

TAi Irirs^p tf '^^""'1,'^ '"'f^^. Henry nil. ii. 2 ! so much to bear it tamely .....?. ^w' 4 

TALKESr thou nothing but .... TwetflhKiahl, iv. 2 TAMENESS-seemed but to neness MeVrvmtes'iv •] 

from thy master thou talkest of AlfsH'ell, iv. b that trusts in the laments of a wolf jI/,\mV <■ 

thou talkest of an admirable .... lI'inter-sTal,-: iv. 3 TAME R ?hal"slcep fbn to tlmn ^^^^^^^ '' 



talkest thou to me of ifs? thou art.. Richardlll. iii. 4 
without those means thou talkest. Timon ofAlh. iv. 3 
peace; thou talkest of nothing ..Itomeo^Juliet, i. 4 

TALKING— he will be talking Tempest, ii. 1 

we were talking, that our garments.... — ii. 1 

without any more talking _ ii, 2 

I spend in talking to thee Two Gen. of Ver. iv. 2 

scarce to be worth talking of TwelfthNighl,ui.i 

I wonder that you will still be talking. AfucA^do, i. 1 
for she hath been too long a talking of — iii. 2 

he will be talking; as they say — iii. 5 

because I would be talkiugof her.-^si/oulf/fett.iv. I 

no longer with idle talking v. 2 

Baptista is safe, talking with.. Taming of Hhreir, iv. 4 
talking of the Alps, and Apennines . . king John, i. I 

for I profess not talking i Henry IV.v.i 

talking of hawking; nothing else ..2Heiif!/r/. ii'. i 

what, talking with a priest Riclmrd III. iii. 2 

and save me so much talking Henry nil. i. 4 

this, and all else this talking lord can — iii. 2 
what were you talking of (.rep.).. Troilus & Cress, i. 2 

have you not done talking yet? — iii. 2 

no more talking on't; let it be done.. CoWoJajiMs.i. 1 
the general, aud his wife, are talking . . Othello, iii. I 
I have been talking with a suitor here — iii. 3 
the other day, talking on the sea-bank — iv. 1 

TALL— how tall was she? ..Two Gen. of Verona, iv. 4 

but he is as tall a man Merry Wives, i. 4 

four tall fellows skip ji, i 

goodsoldiers, and tall fellows ".'. — ii*. 2 

as tall a man as any 's in lUyria.. Twelfth Night, i. 3 

if tall, a lance ill-headed Much Ado, hi. 1 

cowslips tall her pensioners be..Mid.N.'sDream, ii. 1 



her personage, her tall person 

sweet youth, and tall, and finds liis. . — v. 1 

of many a tall ship lie buried . ;i/erc/i. of Venice, iii. 1 

I am more than common tall As youLike it, i. 3 

he IS not tall; yet for his years he's tail — iii. a 
thou'rt a tall fellow; hold thee ..Taming of Sh.iv.i 
a tall fellow of thy hands (rep.) . . Winter's Tale, v. 2 

with eight tall ships, three Richard III. ii. 1 

which many a good tall fellow \ Henry IV. i.3 

a tall gentleman, by heaven iHenrylV. iii. 2 

and welcome, my tall fellow: come v. I 

are shrews, both short aud tall .... — v. 3 (song) 

thy spirits are most tall Henry V.ii 1 

spoke like a tall fellow Richard III. i. 4 

iu tennis, and tall stockings Henry VIII. i. 3 

bring me word, how tall she is ..Antony ^Cleo. ii. 5 
carry back to Sicily much tall youth — ii. 6 
is she as tall as me? She is not, madam — iii. 3 

yon tall anchoring bark Lear, iv. 6 

very tall man I a very good whore I . Romeo ^Jul. ii. 4 

bless this bay with his tall ship Olhelto, ii. 1 

TALLER— few taller are so young.. Love'sL. Lost, v. 2 

a taller man than I will take.Tamiiigo/Slireic, iv. 1 

TALLEST— and the tallest (rep.). .Lnve'sL. Lost, iv. 1 

TALLOW— to piss my tallow? Merry Wives, v. 5 

her ragSj and the tallow in them. Comedy of Err. iii. 2 

call in ribs; call in tallow \ Henry IV. ii. 4 

wassail candle, my lord; all tallow. .2He)iri//F. i. 2 

that's fed with stinking tallow Cymbeline, i. 7 

you baggage! you tallow face !.. fiumeo *yuKc'(, iii. 5 
TALLOW-KE£CH[A'n<.-keteh.] ..1 H«iry/r. ii. 4 
TALLY— but the score and the tally .2 Henry VI. iv. 7 
TALON— eagle's talon in the waist ..I Henry IV. ii. 4 

akite? where are his talons? iHettryVI.iii. 2 

do peck the falcon's piercing talons.. 3 /7e7irwK/. i. 4 

seize with an eagle's talons Pericles, iv. 4 

TAM— the tevil and his tam I Merry Wives, i. I 

TAME— and keep him tame (rep.) Tempest, ii. 2 

make tigers tame TwoGen. of Verona, Hi. 2 

shall not make me tame Merry Wives, iii. 5 

not with more tame a tongue . . Meas. for Meas. ii. 2 

if J ustiee cannot tame you Much Ado, v. 1 

you are a tame man, go! Mid.N.'sDream, iii. 2 

hath made thee a tame snake . . As you Like it, iv. 3 
1 have kept of them tame, and know. All's Well, 
I am he am born to tame yon .... '" 
how tame when men and women. 

winter tames man, woman 

how to tame a shrew (.re/), iv. 2) ., 
ay, aud he'll tame her. He says so 

make us as fat as tame things 

and make thera tame to their A'.. .„.„., 

and tame the savage spirit of wild. ... v. 2 

of such tame patience boast Richard II. i. 

not of such tame patience boast i. 

lions make leopards tame 

with hard labour tame and dull 

who, ne'er so tame, so cherished _ ... 

hostess; a tame cheater, he 2If«iri/7r. ii. 4 

makes wild grief tame, my tongue. Wc/iocii III. iv. 4 

those, that tame wild horses Henry VIII. v. 2 

two curs shall tame each other.. rroi(«tii(- Cress, i. 3 
ere you be made tame, must you? .. — iii. 2 
eat rocks, tame tigers.. — ill. 2 



and therefore, lovely Tamora, queen of — 

I choose thee, Tamora, for my bride — i. 2 

if ever Tamora were gracious in i 2 

this day shall be a love-day, Tamora — i. 2 

now climbeth Tamora Olvmpus' top _ ii. i 

highest-peering hills; so tamora.... _ ii 1 

hark, Tamora, the empress of my soul — ii. 3 

Semiramis, nay, barbarous Tamora! — ii. 3 

O Tamora! tliou bear'st (rep.) _ ii 3 

here, Tamora, though grieved with.. — ii 4 

O Tamora! was ever heard the like? — ii 4 

this letter? Tamora, was it you? .... — ii 4 

for thyself, and that's for Tamora .. — iii! 2 

the lustful sons of Tamora performers — iv I 

for this care of Tamora, herself — iv 2 

high-witted Tamora to gloze with all — iv' i 

II Tamora entreat him then he will. . _ iv. 4 
and be avenged on cursed Tamora . . — v. 1 
our proud empress, mighty Tamora. . — v' 2 

sad man, I am not Tamora _ yi 2 

of this was Tamora delivered _ v. 3 

as for that heinous tiger, Tamora — v. 3 

TAMWORTH thither, is but one . . liiclmrd III. v. 2 
i ANG— a tongue with a tang . . Tempest, ii. 2 (song) 

rr,'<''^T?-,?''.^H"^'=",'^ ^^"P- iii- i'l-TwelfthMghl, ii. 5 (let.) 

TANGLE her desires TwoGen. of Verona iii 2 

she means to tangle my eyes ....As you Like it, iii. 5 

tJie snares of war to tangle thee 1 Henry VI. ' 



m'f'S'.^'-J'?,'k'^'';V,*'' tliey'll tangle t'lide. 2 Henri/ r/. ii! 4 
1 ANGLED— like a tangled chain. . Mid. N.'s Dr. v. 1 
rr,'J'i?ri5^'"S IS tauglcd in affection. . . . Henri/ vjii. iii. 2 
rf A S?-^;^^^ '"-"i^ yo" fO' <i"'' (rep.). Merry Wives, ii. 3 
n, . S-Tt '^~''°t summer's tanlings..Ct/m6e//7ie, iv. 4 
1 ANNLD-his hide is so tanned with his.Hamlet, v. 1 
TANNER- the tanner of Wingham.2Heiir!/;7. iv 2 

m^ i?J^JJ?^ y,i',i i'^^t >'0U "ine year Hamlet, v. 1 

m . iJ^^^^i-'™'"'"^"! tanquam te.Lot'e'sI-.Los/, v. 1 

S A S^^^'^^t ^""S^ '<^ '"entis Henry VI 1 1. Hi. I 

rANT^NEanimi8Ccelestibusira;?..2Henr!/r/. ii. I 

J-AF— he shall draw; he shall tap ..Merry Hives, i. 3 

mtoany room in a tap house .. iUeas. /or Meas. ii. 1 

n,*."--}j4or tap, and so part fair 2HenryIV.ii. 1 

■*-■ ,,*'T^ou buy any tape.. Winter'sTale, iv. 3 (song) 
ballad, knife, tape, glove, shoe-tye .. — iv. 3 

TAPERS on their heads MerryWives, iv. 4 

and burn him with their tapers — iv. 4 

and for night tapers, crop their ..Mid.N.'sDr. iii. 1 

tapers they are, with your Love'sL. Lost, v. 2 

my inch of taper will be burnt Richard II. i.3 

and tapers bm-ned to bedward Coriolanus, i. 6 

get me a taper in my study JuliusCa^sar, ii. 1 

the taper burneth iu your closet — ii. 1 

now sit we close about this taper here — iv. 3 

how ill this taper burns! _ iv. 3 

take not away the taper Cymbeline, i\. 2 

the flame o' the taper bows — ii. 2 

and tapers burn so bright TitusAndronicus, i. 2 

like a taper in some monument — ii 4 

by the burniug tapers of the sky ... . — iv. 2 
give me a taper; call up all my people. . Othello, i. 1 
get more tapers; raise all my kindred.... — i. 1 

TAPER-LIGHf to seek .King John.iv. 2 

^^f.^i"^ Jt tor you, like taper-light.Peric/es, i. (Gower) 
TAVESTRIES-fty-bittentapestries.2He..ri///'. ii. i 
TAPESTRY— worm-eaten tapestry ..;>/t(rtJi/o, iii. 3 
hangings all of Tyrian tapestry.. T-anun^oZ-S/i. ii. 1 
covered o'er with Turkish tapestry. Com.of'iirr. iv. 1 
the tapestry of my dining-chainbers.2 Henryfr. ii, I 
it was hanged with tapestry of silk ..Ci/mbeline, ii, 4 

TAPPED out, and drunkenly Richard II. ii. 1 

TAPSTER is a good trade Merry Hives, i. 3 

withered serving-man, a fresh tapster — i.3 

III be your tapster still Measure Jbr Measure, i. 2 

what's to do here, Thomas Tapster? — i. 2 

he sir? a tapster, sir (rep.) „ |i_ j 

not have you acquainted with tapsters — ii! 1 
to me, master tapster; what's (rep.) — ii. I 

colour it in being a tapster — ii 1 

itfitteth the spirit of a tapster toi'e's L.Lost i 2 

than the word of a tapster .^si/oiiLrte//, iii 4 

revolted tapsters and ostlers 1 Henry IV. iv. 2 

pregnancy is made a tapster iHenn/IV. i. 2 

indeed, a tapster's arithmetic. Troilus ^ Cressidn, i. 2 

like tapsters, that bid welcome. Thnon of Athens, iv. 3 

TAR— savour of tar nor of pitch.. Tempest, ii. 2 (song) 

and would you have us kiss tavl.Asyou Lilce it, iii. 2 

ol a baser birth than tar _ iii 2 

TARDIED— Camillo tardied (Fin/er'sra/e iii 2 

— 1. 1 I TARDILY— speak low, and tardily. .2Heiirw/;'. ii. 3 

1 IT "7 r, • '• i ! ,l'^,?J^iN^^?-'^ tardiness in nature tear, i. 1 

IHeiiri/Zr. IV. 3 TARDY-an' you be so tardy ......Isyou Likeit.iv. 1 

sa.v, is your tardy master now.Comeifi/ of Errors, ii. 1 
still our tardy auish nation limps ..Richard II. ii. 1 

these tardy tricks of yours will i Henry IV. iv. 3 

some tardy cripple bure Richard III. ii. 1 

be not ta'en tardy by unwise i v. 1 

that you have ta'en a tardy sluggard — v! 3 
O my lord, you are tardy Henry VII I. i. i 



ofSh.ii. 1 
ii. I 
iv. I 
iv. 1 
iv. 2 
. .. Winter'sTale, i. 2 
'" igJolm, iv. 2 



TAR 



TAUDY— miist think mo tnrdy.. n-oiViu .$ Cms. iv. 4 
liowever he puts on this tardy toTm.JulliiiCietur, I. 8 
ftrrivoa an tartly hh ttH> hIow .... Hoiiieo ^- Juliet, ii. G 

this, nvorilonc. or tMiiio tixrdy o(V Hamiet, iii. '2 

do vnii not CfMiu* viiur ti\rdy son to cliido — iii. 4 

TAl<"l)Y-(;.Vll'r.l'> niv'ht Ileiiri/I'. iv. (chorus) 

TAIIKNTrM. iiiul l!iiindnsiuin...4ii^oii(^*afo. iii. 7 



TAHor: i.ini fhiiid. did I 



ted 1/1(0(1!/.^ CTio. ii. Ii 

• ul'|.l'ool'..Ci/mM/;l.-. V. .'i 
rnv I:ir).'i-I.l ll.-nniir. ii. i 



hn iHt >te|i|ii'd Ik'I'o 

TAK(;i-:r-scvoii [« 

upon niv tiir-et throe t'uirahininf; SUMS, :U/';:.i,/-;.ii. I 

n noise of tur-ets Hcui/ II I H prolojiue) 

to lieH- tl>y tilraut from Coriolatius, iv. !> 

now hy my sword,— and target ..Autonym Cleo. i. 3 
N'ur our hacked targets like tlic men — iv. 8 
nUt. t.ic targets, to put tilf the sl»ame..,.rfric/M, i. I 

it was sometime ttT'iet 'o a king — ii. 1 

kniuht shall use his Ibu and target llnmlel, ii. a 

TAHl'l-^IAN'. ami from thenee Corialanus, iii. 1 

down the 'I'arpeian rock (f/J. iii. 2) — iii. I 

the steep Turpeian deatli — iii. 3 

|n\eipi'iuiun from otr the rock Tiirpeian — iii. 3 

T.VlUil'lXS ravishing strides Mtichelh.ii. 1 

he received in the repulse of Tarquin. CoWo/anus, ii.I 
■wlien Tarquin made a head for Kome — ii. 2 



Tttrquin's self he met, ami struck 
[iniuini 
streets of Home the Tar<iiiiu drive, JuliusCwsar, ii. I 



ornui 

01 the 



expulsion of the Taniuii 



— V. 4 



- Tarquin thus did softly press , . Cymbeli 
like Tarquin aud his queen.. TilusAtidrotiicus, iii. 1 
as slunk not Saturnine, as Tarquin erst — iv. 1 

T.VKKE-that doth tarre liimon Kiti;: John, iv. 1 

alone must tarre the mastitt'. . 7>oi7us <S- Cicwrfa, i. 3 
no sin, to tarre them on to controversy. Ham/(?^ ii. 2 

T.VRHED over with the surgery ..AiynuLikeil, iii. 2 

TAKHIANCE— of my tarriauce.ricoO'en.o/rcr. ii. 7 

TAHHIED-1 not tarried? Oep.) ..Troihis^ Cress, i. 1 
and tiien you would have tarried — iv. 2 

TARRIES "the coming down Merry If'ires, iv. 5 

old Nestor tallies; and vou too. Trnilut ^Cress. v. I 

TARRY-if you tarry any" louger.ru-oOVn.o/rcr. ii. 3 

tarry I here. I hut atteud — iii. 1 

by my trot, I tarry too long Merry Wives, i. 4 

tarry you a little-a while — i. 4 

it is not good you tarry here — i. 4 

if you tarry longer, I shall TwelfthNighl,iv. 1 

nay, tarry; I'll go along .. Measure for Measure, iv. 3 

tarry, sweet Beatrice (,rep.) Much J do, iv. 1 

tarry, rash wanton: am not I.. Mid. N.'sDream, ii. 2 
and tarry for the comfort of the day — ii. 3 
I pray you tarry; pause a day .. .Ver. of Fenice, iii. 2 
tarry a little; there is something else — iv. 1 
tarry, Jew: the law hath yet another — iv. 1 

thou know st where I will tarry — iv. 2 

I'll tarry no longer with you ....AsyouLike it, iii. 2 

if you will tarry, holy pilgrim All's Well, iii. 5 

hardly tarry so long Tamiug of Shrew, 2 (indue.) 

■will therefore tarry, in despite .... — 2 (indue.) 
tarry, Petruchio, I must go with thec — i- 2 

I chafe you, if I tarry; let me go .... — ii.I 
I cannot tarry: I knew a wench .... — iv. 1 
yet I'll tarry till my son come .. Winter'sTale, iii. 3 
to tarry for the hoy. Delay . . Comedy of Errors, iv. 3 
tarry at home, and be hanged {rep.). .\ Henry I V . i. 2 

but I cannot tarry dinner — iii. 2 

tarry, dear cousin Sufl'olkl Ilertry r. iv. 6 

leave me, or turry, Edward will ZUenryyi. iv. 1 

better do so, than tarry and be hanged — iv. 5 

I will not tarry; no Henry fill. ii. 4 

tarry tlie grinding {rep.) Troiius S^Cressida, i. t 

but "you must tarry the leavening.... — i. i 

tarry; you men will never tarry .... — iv. 2 

both to those that go, or tarry — v. 1 

than tarry till they push us JutiusCtcsar, v. 5 

tarry witii him, till I come .. Titus Andronicus, v. 2 

your lubber's length a"ain, tarry Lear,i. 4 

nuncle Lear, tarry, and take the fool .... — i. 4 

but I will tarry, the fool will stay — ii. 4 

here: tarrv for the mfuimcrs ..liomeo^ Juliet, iv. 5 

TARRYING in mulberry ehade.A/i(i.iV.'.«fi;enm, v. 1 
nor flying hence; nor tarrying here ..Macbnh, v. 5 
there U no tarrying here .... Troiius ^-CresMa, ii. 3 
lord, fly; there is no tarrying herc.JuliusCiesar, v. 5 

T.VRT— why so tart a tavum.Aniony ^Cleopalra, ii. 
another way, the news is not so tart .... Lear, iv. 

TAKTAR-a Bohemian Tartar.... ;»/<-rn/'»''i'e>, iv. 

to the gates of Tartar Twelfth Mglit, ii. 

than arrow from the Tartar's bow. Mid.N.'sDr. iii. 

out, tawnv Tartar, out! — iii. 

stubborn Turks, aud Tartars.. jUejc/i. or rc/iicf, iv. 

thrtnigh flinty Tartar's bosom All's ll'ell, iv. 

no, he's in Tartar limbo Comedy nf liirors, iv. 

nose of Turk, and Tartar's lips Macbeth, iv. 

return to vast v Tartar buck Ilenn/ 1', ii. 

a Tartar's painted bow of lath ..UnmeoH- Juliet, i. 

TARTLY that gentleman looksl MuchAdo, ii. 

T.\RTNESS-for the king's tartness . . Alts Welt, iv. 
tartness of his face sours riiie grapes. Corto'afjrt.*, v. 

T.VSK Ariel, and oil his quality Tempest, i. 

this my mean task would be — iii. 

hut haJil a rougher task in hand Much Ado, i. 

all with weary task fordone.... WiJ.iV.'i/^rcaiii, v. 

these are barren tasks, too \\tit<i..Lotie'sL.Losi, i. 

but now to task the taskcr — ii. 

and your task shall be, with all — v. 

a heavier tjisk could not Iiave.. C'omcdv of Errors, i. 

against a mightier task Kint; John, ii. 

task the free breath of a sacred king? — iii. 

the task he undertakes is Iticliard II. ii. 

on easy task it is, to win — iii. 

l(ol. Kn/.] I task the earth to the like — iv. 

nay, task me to my woni I Henry IK iv. 

that task our thoughts (rep.) Henry!', i. 

to my la.sk will 1 \Hrnryll. i. 

1 have performed my task illenryyi. i. 

take tliou this task in hand — iii. 

tlic trunqiets, and about our task ..ZHenryl'I. ii. 

shall I not hear my task? (r<-p.) — iii. 

the long day's task is doi\e. Antuny ^Cleopatra, iv. I 



i; 749 ] 

TA.SK- worldly task hast done.Cymbeline, iv. « (sohk) 
let me see what tusk I have.. TilusAmlronieus, iii, I 
day by day I'll do this heavy task .. — v. 2 
for nature puts me to 11 lieavv task .. — v. 3 
thedanger of the tusk you undertake ..Pericles, i. 1 

and dare not task my weakness Othello, ii. 3 

emperor's aide, and eonunand him tasks — iv. I 

with gentle means, and easy tasks — iv. 2 

TASKED-gullanIs shall be tasked. iori-'j L.l.oU,v. i 

neck ot'tliut, tusked the whole \ Ilenn/ 1 r, iv. 3 

t hut's tusked to mow or all Conoinnus, i. 3 

T.VSKEU-now to task the tasker.. (.orf'j;,./,o,vMi. I 

T.VSK I NG of tlieir minds Mem/ Win,-,, iv. fi 

how showed his tasking? \ Henry I r. v. 2 

T.VSSEL of a iirodigal's purse.. Troiius l>r Crestidn, v. 1 
TASSEL-GIONTLE back agam\..l<omeofyJulei, ii. 2 

T.VSTE-shall taste of my bottle Tempest, ii. 2 

will't please you taste of what is here? .. — iii. 3 

you do yet taste some subtilties — v. I 

taste with a distempered appetite. V'lref/r/i Kight, i. 5 

taste your legs, sir (»vp.) — (ii. i 

to taste their valour — iii. 4 

mind of any judgment taste ...Mid. N.'s Dream, i. 1 

come to my natural taste, now — iv. 1 

man's hand is not able to tnste — iv. 1 

I trust to taste [C'o(.-take] of truest .. — v. 1 
which we of ta.ite and feeling are. Love'sL. Lost, iv. 2 

fjroves dainty Bacchus gross in taste — iv. 3 

le had a kind of taste Merciumt of I'enice, ii. 2 

rob it of some taste of tediousncss.... — ii. 3 
sans eyes, sans taste, sans every ..AsyouUkeit, ii. 7 

out, fool! Foratoste — iii. 2 

take a taste of my finding him — iii. 2 

my conversion so sweetly tastes — Iv. 3 

taste of these conserves.. Taming o/S/irew, 2 (indue.) 

I know not how it tastes Winter'sTale, iii. 2 

to taste of thy most worst? — iii. 2 

has a taste as sweet as any cordial . . — v. 3 
Bweet-savoured in thy taste .. Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

1 have almost forgot the taste of Macbeth, v. 5 

spoiled the sweet world's taste King John, iii. i 

never to taste the pleasures of — iv. 3 

take it? who did taste to him? — v. G 

things sweet to taste, prove in Richard 11. i. 3 

as the last taste of sweets, is sweetest — ii.I 
feel want, taste grief, need friends .. — iii. 2 
and he to taste their fruits of duty .. — iii. 4 
taste of it first, as thou art wont .... — v. 5 

but to taste sack and drink it? \ Henry II'. ii. 4 

without the taste of danger — iii. 1 

began to loathe the taste of sweetness — iii. 2 

[Coi.] come, let me taste my horse — iv. 1 

of their puissance made a little taste. 2Hf>i>y/r. ii. 3 
shall to the king taste of this action.. — iv. 1 

taste the due meet for rebellion — iv. 2 

this bitter taste yield his — iv. 4 

after the taste of much correction .... Henry T. ii. 2 
the taste whereof, God, of his mercy — ii. 2 
shall take, shall taste our mercy .... — iv. 7 
that we may taste of your wine .. ..I Henry n. ii. 3 
of darnel; do you like the taste? .... — iii. 2 

gall, the daintiest that they taste! — iii. 2 

let them not live to taste this Richard III. v. 4 

how tastes it? is it bitter? Hem y I'll I. ii. 3 

the Trojans taste our dearest .... Troiius ■^ Cress, i. 3 
1 will give a taste of it fortliwitli .... — i. 3 
when that the watery palate tastes .. — iii. 2 

as in way of taste, to give me — iii. 3 

not palating the taste of her dishonour — iv. 1 

full, perfect, that I taste — iv. 4 

hath no taste of madness — v. 2 

taste lord Timon's bounty? Timon of Athens, i. 1 

to all that of his bounties taste! — i. 2 

the car, taste, touch, smell, all pleased — i. 2 
caudle thy morning taste, to cure .... — iv. 3 
greatest taste most palates theirs ..Coriolanus, iii. 1 

have \ve not had a taste of his — iii. 1 

the valiant never taste of death.... Ju(msC<rsar, ii. 2 
go in, and taste some wine with me .. — ii. 2 
and, in some taste, is Lepidus but so — iv. 1 

shall be assured to taste of too Cymbeline, i. 6 

I'isanio, I'll now taste of thy drug .. — iv. 2 

for they shall taste our comfort — v. 5 

till tlie fresh taste be taken from.TitusAndron. iii. 1 

to taste the fruit of yon celestial Vencles, i. I 

inventions to delight the taste — i. 4 

prosperities so largely taste — i. 4 

and taste gentlemen of all fashions — iv. 3 

as an essay or taste of my virtue Lear, i. 2 

she will taste as like this — i. 5 

must neeils taste his lolly — ii. 4 

ere I taste bread, thou art in — v. 3 

all friends shall taste the wages — v. 3 

when it did taste the wormwood. .yiomeo^-Ju/itf/, i. 3 

love, tliat of it doth not taste — ii. 3 

in the taste confounds the appetite .. — ii. 6 
come, give us a taste of your quality ..Hamlet, ii. 2 
shall come into no true taste again ....Othello, ii. 1 

TASTEIJ— never have you tasted . . I Henry I'l. iii. 4 
praise us as we are tasted.. .. Vroihts ^ Cressida, iii. 2 
I never tasted Timon in my life . Timon ofAlh. iii. 2 
often of your open bounty tasted .... — v. 1 
that you have tasted her in lied .. ..Cymbeline, ii. 4 
being tasted, Slavs all senses with.ffomfo^-Jii/iV/, ii. 3 
pioneers and all, had tasted her sweet .Othello, iii. 3 

T^VSTI NG it, their counsel MuchAdo, v. I 

umiaid for, by tastiuj; of our wrathi. Cymbeline. v. 5 

T.'V'ITIOR— tear a passion to tatters ....Hamlet. in. 2 

TATTERED prodigals MlenryW. iv. 2 

tattered [ < '"/.-tattering A'ji/.-tottcringjK7in'./o/in, v. .', 
[Co/.jeiistles tuttered battlements .Kichard II. iii. 3 

through tattered clothes small vices Lear, iv. U 

late I notel in tuttered weeds Homroti Juliet, v. 1 

TATTIjE— let the Indies tattle. 7'i/ui /lnc/roiiicu5, iv. 2 

TATTl.lNG-shc's a very tattling. /VA-rry»'ii>«, iii. 3 

peace your tattlings — iv. 1 

lady's eldest son, evermore tattling.. JI/«rA/(rfo, ii. 1 

TAUGHT— taught thee each hour Tempest, i. 2 

you taught me language — i, 2 

the eaten you tauglit me but whilc-ere? — iii, 2 



TEA 



TAUGHT my brow to frown.. TVoCeii. ofl'erona, i. ! 

aud she hath taught her suitor — ii.I 

herself hath taught her lovo — ii.I 

I have taught him Iv. 4 

that hath taught me to say this .. Merry Wives. Ii. 2 
one that hath taught me more wit .. — iv. 5 

taught him to face me out of Tu-einhMgh',v. 1 

and it hath taught me to rhyme .Lnve'sL.Losl, iv. 3 
you taught me nrst to \k:'A .. Merchant of I'enice, iv. I 

they arc taught their maimge As you Like it, 'i. I 

I am not taught to miike any thing — i. I 

I could have taught my love to take i. 2 

uncle of mine taught me to sjieak.. .. iii. 2 

he taught me hovv'to know a man .. — iii. 2 

highly tVd.and lowly taught Atl'sWeU,'\\.'i 

or were you taught to find me? ii. 4 

than hath been taught hy any .. Taming of Sh. iii. 1 

then hast thou tuuglit Ilortensio — iv. 5 

who taught you this? I learned it. Winter'sTale. ii. I 
which, being taught, return to plague.. WacteM, i. 7 
you taught me liow to know the facc.KingJohn, v. 2 
that taught me craft to counterfeit . . Ilichmdll. i. 4 
whom youth and ease have taught to gloze — ii. I 
have a starling shall be taught to. ... I Hehryl I', i. 3 

hath taught us how to cherish v. 5 

what foolish master taught you ....i Henry 1 1', ii. 1 
he was a fool that taiiglit them me .. — ii.I 
the duke of York hath taught you iHentyl'I. iv. 2 
poor monarch taught tlice to in8ult?.3//fnri/;7. i. 4 

that taught his son the office — v. li 

you would be taught your duty llichardlll. i. 3 

you are not to be taught that you. .Henry /';//. ii. 4 

say, I taught thee, say, Wolsey — iii. 2 

rich conceit taught thee to make . Timon ifAlh. v. 5 
he must be taught, and trained ..JuUusCiesar, iv. I 

it hath been taught usfrom Aniony & I'leo. i. \ 

learn, being taught, forbearance Cymbeline, ii. 3 

the boy hath taught us manly duties — iv. 2 

where I was taught of your chaste .. v. 5 

her wrath, she taught it ti\ce. Titus Andronicm, ii. 3 
who hath taught my frail mortality. . . . Pericles, i I 
taught me to shift into a madman's rags .Lear, v. 3 

TAUNT-at the taunt of one Merry Wives, v. 5 

taunt him with the licence of ink. Twelfth Mght, iii. 2 
rail, taunt, and scorn me? .. Comedy of Errors, iv. 4 

scorns, and contumelious taunts \HenryVL i. 4 

tlree to taunt his valiant age — iii. 2 

many foul taunts, they took ZHcnryVl. ii. I 

would avoid such bitter taunts — ii. 6 

of those gross taunts I often have . . Richard III. i. 3 
he prettily and aptly taunts himself .. — iii. 1 
to taunt and scorn you so opprobriously — iii. 1 
nay, but his taunts. Being moved. . Coriolanus, i. 1 
and taunt my faults with such ..Antony^ Cleo. i. 2 
and with taunts did gibe my missive — ii. 2 
the best of men to taunt at slackness — iii. 7 

TAUNTED-taunted her Mid.N.'sDream.iv. 1 

[Col.] taunted, scorned and baited.. AiWiurii ///. i. 3 

TAUNTING letter As you Like it, iii. 5 

TAUNTINGLY replied to Coriolanus. i. I 

TAURirs? Taurus? That's sides ..Twetfihfiiuht. i. 3 
high Taurus' snow, fanned v!it\\..Mid.N.'sl>r. iii. 2 
they say, one Taurus. Well I know./l/i(..S-CVfo. iii. 7 
TauruB,—my lord. Strike not by land — iii. H 
shot off one of Taurus' horns,... 3'i7Mj/JndroM. iv. 3 

TAVERN— me to the tavern .Merry Wives, i. ' 

and to taverns, and sack — v. 6 

'mongst the taverns there Richard II. v. 3 

is not my hostess of the tavern {rep.).\ Henry li: i. 1 

'tis going to the king's tavern — ii. 2 

in the night betwixt tavern and tavern — iii. 3 
in thy pocket but tavern reckonings — iii. 3 

wish, this tavern were my drum! .... iii. 3 

knocking at the taverns, and asking.2WeniT//;'. ii. 1 

what physic the tavern affords IHenryl I. iii. 1 

fear no more tavern bills Cymljeline. v. 4 

make it more like a tavern Lear. i. 4 

enters the confines of a tavern. .Romeo ^Juliet, iii. 1 

TAVY— upon saint Tavy's day Hmtyl'. iv. 7 

TAWDRY— me a tawdry lace Winter's late, iv. i 

TAWNY-the ground, indeed, is tawny. Tewpesi, ii 1 

out, tawny Tartar, out! Mid. ^"s. Dream, iii. 2 

many a knight from tawny Spain, Lore'i L.l.ost, i. \ 

we shall your tawny ground Henryl'. iii. 6 

bine coats to tawny coats (rep.) \ Henry i'l. i. 3 

d.iwn with the tawn.y coats! — ' iii. | 

their view upon a tawnv front ..Antony^- Cleo. i. \ 

peace, tawny slave; half me.. ri(i«.4ii<yromcin, v. 1 

TAWNY-FINNED fishes ...4n/OMj/<5afop.i(ru, ii. 5 

TAX— when it doth tu.x itself Meas.forMeas. ii. 4 

to tax hiin with injustice? — v. I 

faith, nieoe, you tax signior Benedick. i)fue/i.<4i/o, i. I 
good my lord, tax not so bad a voice.. — ii. 3 
that can therein tax any private.. j^s!/oti/.fi^ei7, ii. 7 

tax of inipudciice, a strumpet's AU'sWell, ii. 1 

shall tax my fears of little — v. 3 

because I would not tux the needy .2 Henry r/. iii. I 
they tax our policy, and call it.. Troiius d, Cress, i. 3 

I tax not you, you elements Lear, iii. 2 

I'll warrant, she'll tax him home ....Hamlet, iii. 3 

T.VXATIGN of homage Tueljlh \,ght, i. 5 

you'll be whipped for ta.xation..../4s!/'>ii/LiAr >(, i. 2 

ilia burdenous taxations Itiehardll. ii. 1 

upon these tnxutione, the c\ot\\ier».. Henry I' 1 1 1. 1. 2 
taxation I wherein? and what taxation? — i. 2 
know you of this taxation? Please you — i. 2 

TAXED their whole sex AsyouLike it, iii. 2 

silence, but never taxed for si>eech . . . . /4/('» H V/i, i. 1 

spots o' the world taxed and deboshed — v. 3 

traduced, and taxed of other nations ..Hamlet, i. 4 

T.VXES— pilled with grievous taxes. . nicAorJ ;/. ii. 1 

TAXING like a wihl goose flies ..As you Like it, ii. 7 

both taxing me, and gaging mcTVoiIiu^Crrx. v. 1 

TEACH— and teach me how to name .. Tempest, i. j 

I'll teuch you how to flow _ ii. | 

teach nie tliv teii;pted subject.. TwoGen.<t/ I'er. •'■ <1 

thus I would teach a dog — iv. 4 

and I vill teach a scurvy Merry Wires, i. 4 

we'll teach him to know turtles — iii. j 

yuu do ill to teach fne child such..., - iv. I 



TEA 



TE ACn-I win teaeli the children .Mernj 'Vives, iv. 4 
I'll teacli yoii liow 3-ou s\\ii\l.,..Meas./or Meus. ii. 3 

teach lier tlie way — ii. 4 

my Invc is tliine to teach; teach it MiuUAdo, i. 1 

1 will hilt teach them to sing — ii. I 

teacli you how to liumoiu' yuur cousin — ii. 1 
then let lis teach our trial patience. jU/'i. A'. 'sB<. i. I 

teach me how you look — i. 1 

would teach my smiles such skill .... _— i. I 
to teach a teacher ill beseeracth n\e..l-ove'sl..L.\\. 1 

shall I teach you to know? — iv. 1 

did tlicy teacli bim there — v. 2 

teach us, sweet madam, for our — v. 2 

1 can easier teach twenty what . . Her. of Venice, i. 2 

than the fond eye doth teach — ii. 9 

tlie villany you teacli me, I will .... — iii. 1 
Iciiuld tciieh you iiow to choose .... — iii. 2 
doth teach me answers for deliverance — iii. 2 

dotii teach us all to render — iv. 1 

you teach me how a he^igar should .. — iv. 1 

you could teach me to forget AnynuLiUp il, i. 2 

teach her that wherein slie delights. Taiiiing ofSh. i. I 
bowed her liand, to teach lier fingering — ii. 1 

to teacfl you gamut in a briefer — iii. 1 

mistress to most that teach ll'iriter'x Tale, iv. 3 

teacli sin the carriage of a. holy. Cumedij of Err. iii. 2 

teacli me, dear creature, how to — iii. 2 

and teach your ears to listen with .. — iv. 1 

herein I teach you, how you Maeheth, i. 6 

that ivc but tea'eli bloody instructions . — i. 7 
at mine hostess' door, teach us some.K'mg John. ii. 1 

if thou teach me to believe (rep.) — iii. 1 

is bv to teach thee safety! — iii. 1 

of the time shall teach me speed .... — iv. 2 

or teach thy hasty spleen to do — iv. 3 

teach thy necessity to reason thus ../lichrird II. i. 3 
thy tongue to teach, pardou should . . — v. 3 

let pity teach thee how — v. 3 

dost thou teach pardon iiardon to — _ v. 3 

why, I can teach you, cousin 1 Henry I r. iii. i 

priuciplel would teach them 2Heiiryir. iv. 3 

in nature, teach the act of order Henry V.i.2 

as provident as fear may teach us.... — ii. 4 

and teach them how to war! — iii. 1 

and teach lavoltas high, and swift .. — iii. 5 
to teach others how they should prepare — iv. 1 
shall the good man teach his son .... — iv. 3 
correction teach you a good Engl isli — v. 1 
will you vouchsafe to teach a soldier — v. 2 
cousin, teach you our princess English — v. 2 
my lord, teach your cousin to consent — v. 2 
if you will teach her to know my .... — y. 2 

maintain tlie thing you teach 1 Henry VI. iii. 1 

I am able to instruct or teach — iv. 1 

ah, Gloster, teach me to forget iHenryVI. ii. 4 

teach not thy lip sucli scorn Richard lll.i. 2 

since you teach nie how to flatter. ... — i. 2 

teacli me to be your queeu (rep.) .... — i. 3 

and teach me how to curse (rep.) .... — iv 4 

jou, that best should teach us Henry VIll. v. 2 

out of love I teach Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 2 

I'll teach them to prevent wild. Timon of Athens, y. 2 
insolence shall teach the people ....Coriolanus, ii. 1 
by my body's action, teach my mind — iii. 2 
a creature that I teach to fight ..Julius Ccesar, iv. 1 
teach me, Aleides, thou mine .. Antony f, dm. iv. 10 
the tiger's youn" ones teach the As.ra'iTitusAnd. ii. 3 

let me leach tliee: for my father's — ii. 3 

teach her not thus to lay such — iii. 2 

I'll teach thee another course — iv. 1 

let me teach you how to knit again,. — v. 3 
if 'twill teach us to forget our own 'i .... Pericles, i. 4 
and your goodness teach me credit .... — iii. 3 
who stand i" the gaps to teach you — iv. 4 (Gow.) 

1 will undertake all these to teach — iv. 6 

but can you teach all this you speak of? — iv. 6 

I'll teach you differences - ..Lear, i. 4 

sirrah, I'll teach thee a speech — i. 4 

nn, lad; teach me. Tliat lord — i. 4 

that can teach thy fool to lie — i. 4 

we'll teach you— sir, I am too old to .... — ii. 2 

to teach thee there's no labouring in — ii. 4 

teacli mc liow I should forget Hoineo ^- Juliet, i. 1 

thou canst not teach me to forget .... — i. 1 

she doth teach the torches to burn — i. 5 

we'll teach you to drink deep, ere you.. Hamlel, i. 2 
marry, I'll teach you: think yourself .. — i. 3 

that you must teach me — ii. 2 

will teach you to imagine — iv. 7 

that should teach us, there's a divinity.. — v. 2 

but teach him how to tell my story Othello, i. 3 

for tliy escape would teach me tyranny.. — i. 3 
let's teach ourselves that honourable stop — ii. 3 

aknave! teach me my dutj' ! — ii. 3 

be it as your fancies teach you — iii. 3 

those, that do teach young babes — iv. 2 

TEACUKR-to teach a teacher ill.. Lorr'sL. Lost, ii. 1 
turn tailor, or be redbreast teaclier..! Henry W. iii. 1 

and instruct great teachers Hem ii I'lII. i. 2 

poor fools believe false teachers .... Cnutbetlne, iii. 4 

TEACHES him to hick and to hack Herry ll'ives, iv.l 
in the world, teaches such beauty. Lare'tL. Lost, iv. 3 
yes, yes, he teaches boys the horn-book — v. I 
hard dealings teaches tliera..3/erc/ia«( of Venice, i. 3 
Nerissa teaches me what to believe . . — v. 1 

and teaches me to kill or hang Kin'^John, iii. 4 

nature teaches beasts to know Corintnnus, ii. i 

want teaches me to think on Verictes,u. i 

TEACH EST me the way how Uichard II. iv. 1 

thou teachest like a fool Antony ^Cleopalra, i. 3 

thou teaehest me, O valiant Eros .... — iv. 12 
thou teachest me,— minion, your dear ..Othello, v. 1 

TEACHETH thee that thou Asyou Likeit, i. 3 

tiuit teaclieth tricks Taming of Shrew, iv. 2 

inward duteous spirit teacheth .,..2HenrylV. iv. 4 

TEACHING him the practice Tu-elflh Mghl, i. 2 

to follow mine own teaching. A7ercAa>i/o/^'e»ice, i. 2 

f'u- teacliing me that word — iv. 1 

tenchiug all that read ..AsyouLike it, iii. 2 (verses) 
ui-.dertake the teaching Taming of Shrew, i. 1 



[ 750 J 



TEACHING-mannerof his teaching. 7'am. afSh. iv. 2 

teaching stern murder how Richard II. i. 2 

tliis is his uncle's teaching \HcnryIV. i. 1 

teaching his duteous land audacious — iv. 3 
of teaching and of learning instantly — . v. 2 
your teaching, and your chaplains. Henri/ r///. v. 2 
that my teaching, and the strong — v. 2 

TEAM of horse shall nut.. ..TwoGen. of Veronn,\\\. 1 

by the triple Hecate's team Alid.,\.'slhr„iJi, v. 2 

spares my team, and gives me leave . . .('/".s-n w/. i 3 
before the lieavenly-harnessed teani.l Ihn. n : r. iii. I 
with a team of little atomies ....Uomm \ Jnii,'!, i. 4 

TEAKS run down his beard Tempest, v. 1 

to tear such loving words! . . Two Gen. of Verona, i. 2 

that I'll tear away — i. 2 

nay, not the tide of tears — ii. 2 

cur shed one tear (rep.) — ii. 3 

I lay the dust with my tears — ii. 3 

fill it with my tears — ii. 3 

with nightly tears — ii. 4 

an ocean of liis tears — ii. 7 

his tears, pure messengers — ii. 7 

which some call tears — iii. 1 

nor silver-shedding tears — iii. 1 

you sacrifice your tears — iii. 2 

and with your tears moist it again . . — iii. 2 

as easily as I do tear his paper — iv. 4 

which I so lively acted with my tears — iv. 4 
with fertile tears, with groans .... Twelfth Night, i. 5 
my master's tears to you deplore .... — iii. 1 

him will I tear out of that — v. 1 

I should my tears let fall — v. 1 

left lier in her tears, and dried. .A/eas. /or Meas. iii. 1 

and he, a marble to her tears — iii. 1 

did he break out into tears? Much Ado, i. 1 

beats her heart, tears her hair — ii. 3 

her foulness, washed it with tears? .. — iv. I 

these hands shall tear her — iv. 1 

your over-kindness doth wring tears — v. 1 
wishes, and tears, poor fancy's ..M id. N.^Dream, i. 1 
that will ask some tears in the true. . — i. 2 

or a part to tear a cat iu — i. 2 

not with salt tears: if so, my eyes .. — ii. 3 
and derision never come in tears .... — iii. 2 

to conjure tears up in a poor — iii. 2 

■will you tear impatient answers .... — iii. 2 

like tears, that did their own — iv. 1 

but more merry tears the passion .... — v. 1 
come, tears, eonfouud; out, sword .. — v. 1 
through tears of mine ... . Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 (verses) 
do but behold the tears that swell — iv. 3 (verses) 
thou wilt keepmytearsforglasses — iv. 3 (verses) 
these numbers will I tear, and write — iv. 3 
in your tears, there is no certain .... — iv. 3 

why dost thou tear it? — iv. 3 

their folly, passion's solemn tears. . . . — v. 2 

raining the tears of lamentation — v. 2 

tears exhibit my tongue .... Merchant of Venice, ii. 3 

his eye being big with tears — ii. 8 

bid me tear the bond — iv. 1 

and almost with tears I speak it ..AsyouLike it, i. 1 

I should have given him tears — i. 2 

and the big round tears coursed .... — ii. 1 

augmenting it with tears — ii. 1 

said with weeping tears, wear — ii. 4 

from your eyelids wiped a tear — ii. 7 

full of tears, full of smiles — iii. 2 

that tears do not become a man — iii. 4 

tears our recountments had most kindly — iv. 3 

all made of sighs and tears — v. 2 

madam, get from her tears AlVsWell, i. 1 

tliese great tears grace his remembrance — i. 1 

and find your sale tears' head — i. 3 

grief would liave tears, and sorrow . . — iii. 4 

we drown our gain in tears! — iv. 3 

bid him shed tears Taming of Shrew, 1 (indue.) 

a shower of commanded tears — 1 (indue.) 

the blood and tears are drawn — 2 (indue.) 

and till the tears, that she hath shed — 2 (indue.) 
burns worse than tears drown .... Winter's Tale, ii. 1 

then abound in tears — ii. 1 

and tears, shed there, shall be my .. — iii. 2 
whose daughter his tears proclaimed — v, 1 

to tear the cases of their eyes — v. 2 

for their joy waded in tears — v. 2 

would fain say, bleed tears — v. 2 

the first gentleman-iike tears — v. 2 

ah, do not tear away t\\yi,Q\f . .Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

and tear the stained skin ofif — ii. 2 

in thy sister's flood of tears — iii. 2 

until my tears and prayers have .... — v. 1 

that tears shall drown the wind Macbeth, i. 7 

our tears are not yet bre^ved — ii. 3 

cancel, and tear to pieces — iii. 2 

the two delinquents tear — iii. 6 

much work for tears in many King John, ii. 2 

this hair I tear, is mine — iii. 4 

in tender womanish tears — iv.l 

would drink my tears, and quench his — iv. 1 
presented to the tears of soft remorse — iv. 3 

hath melted at a lady's tears — v. 2 

some virtue in my tears — v. 7 

knows not how to do it, but with tears — v. 7 

my teetli shall tear Richard 11. i. ! 

profane a tear for me, if I be — i. 3 

store of parting tears were shed? .... — _ i. 4 

our hollow parting witli a tear — 1.4 

glazed with blinding tears, divides .. — ii. 2 

to tear us all to pieces — ii, 2 

with tears drawn from her eyes — iii. 1 

plays fondly with her tears — iii. 2 

were all dissolved to tears — iii. 2 

at meeting tears the cloudy — iii. 3 

foul weather with despised tears .... — iii. 3 
some pretty match with shedding tears? — iii. 3 

tears show their love, but want — iii. 3 

never borrow any tear of thee — iii. i 

here did slie drop a tear — iii. 4 

and full of tears, am I, drinking .... — iv.l 
with mine own tears I wash — iv. 1 



TEA 



TEARS— mine eyes are full of tears. .if/c/mrd //. iv. 1 

of Burrow, and your eyes of tears .... — iv.l 

fresh again witli true-love tears — v. I 

still comliating with tears and smiles — v. 2 

his eyes do drop no tears, his prayers — v. 3 

may tear a passage through — v. 5 

in cleansing them from tears — v. 5 

so sighs, and tears, and groans — v. 6 

for trickling tears are vain 1 Henry IV. ii. 4 

for tears do stop the flood-gates — ii. 4 

not in tlrink, but in tears — ii. 4 

or I will tear the reclconing from.... — iii. 2 

with tears of innocency — iv. 3 

1 could tear her; I'll be revenged ..illcnryiv. ii. 4 

with his eye brim-full of tears — iii. 1 

he hath a tear for pity — iv. 4 

thy due from me, is tears, and heavy — iv. 4 

washing witli kindly tears his — iv. 4 

let all the tears that should bedew . . — iv. 4 

but for my tears, the moist — iv. 4 

shall convert those tears, by number — v. 2 

iCol.'] to tear and havock more than . . Henry V. i. 2 

turns he the widows' tears — ii. 4 

more contrite tears, than from it — iv.l 

behold their natural tears? — iv. 2 

and gave me up to tears — iv. 6 

be made a nourish of salt tears 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

were our tears wantin" to this — i. 1 

the walls tliey'll tear down — 3.2 

or tear the lions out of England's — i. 5 

my sighs and tears, and will not once — iii. 1 

shalt rue this treason with thy tears — iii. 2 

with a flood of tears, and wash away — iii. 3 

to tear the garter from thy — iv. 1 

have I shed many a tear — v. 4 

hot blood, mine eyes no tears iHenryVI. i. 1 

mine ej^es are full of tears — ii. 3 

rejoice to see my tears, and hear my — ii. 4 

witness my tears, I cannot stay — ii. 4 

for I should melt at an ofiisnder's tears — iii. J 

with sad unhelpful tears — iii. I 

might liquid tears, or heart-offending — iii. 2 

with tears as salt as sea through .... — iii. 2 

an ocean of salt tears — iii. 2 

by violence tear him from your — iii. 2 

dew it with my mournful tears — iii. 2 

the southern clouds contend in tears — iii. 2 

prayers and tears have moved me. . . . — iv. 7 

tears virginal shall be to me — v. 2 

father, tear the crown from ZHenry VI. i. I 

that not a tear can fall for — i. 4 

these tears are my sweet Rutland's . . — i. 4 

hardly can I check my eyes from tears — i. 4 

a hapless father's tears — i. 4 

and I with tears do wash the blood .. — i. 4 

shed tears; yea, even my foes (j-ep.) .. — i. 4 

will quickly dry thy melting tears .. — i. 4 

flames, that tears would quench .... — ii. 1 

tears, then for babes; blows — ii. 1 

I drowned these news in tears — ii. 1 

my tears shall wipe away these — ii. 5 

I'll aid thee tear for tear — ii. 5 

be blind with tears, and break — ii. 5 

shed seas of tears, and ne'er be — ii. 5 

her tears will pierce into — iii. I 

her plaints, her brinish tears — iii. 1 

wet my cheeks with artificial tears .. — iii. 2 

cause as fills mine eyes with tears .. — iii. 3 

till with my talk and tears — iii. 3 

for this I draw in many a tear — iv. 4 

with my sighs or tears I blast — iv. 4 

thy tears would wash this congealed — v- 2 

my tears gainsay; for every word .... — i". 4 

may such purple tears be alway shed — v. 6 
from mine have drawn salt tears . . Richard HI. i. 2 

which never shed remorseful tear..., — i. 2 

eyes did scorn a humble tear — i. 2 

wet his grave with my repentant tears — i. 2 

in her mouth, tears in her eyes — i. 2 

millstones, wlien fools' eyes drop tears — i. 3 

aid you with our kindred tears? .... — ii. 2 

send forth plenteous tears to di'own . . — ii. 2 

pour all your tears, I am — ii. 2 

liquid drops of tears that you — iv. 4 

myself have many tears to wash .... — iv. 4 

I would, these dewy tears were from — v. 3 
thinkit well, let fiill a tear ....Henry VIII. (prol.) 

my drops of tears I'll turn to — ii. 4 

a tomb of orphans' tears wept on 'em! — iii. 2 

I did not think to shed a tear — iii. 2 

meditations, tears, and sorrows — iv. 2 

strangled his language in his tears .. — v. 1 

those joyful tears show his true — v. 2 

weaker than a woman's tear.. Troilus fyCrcssida, i. 1 

and I'll spring up in his tears — i. 2 

vows, gifts, tears, and love's full sacrifice — i. 2 

fill them with prophetic tears — ii.2 

practise your eyes with tears! — ii.2 

tear my bright hair, and scratch .... — iv. 2 

with the salt of broken tears — iv. 4 

where are my tears? rain to lay .... — iv. 4 

o'ergalled with recourse of tears .... — v. 3 
tear me, take me, and the gods fall Timon ofAlh. iii. 4 

resolves the moon into salt tears .... — iv. 3 

to the very brink of tears _ v. 2 

set his teeth, and tear it ('nrio/nmis, i. 3 

senators shall mingle tears with smiles — i. B 

behind him he leaves tears — ii. I 

and schoolboys' tears take up — iii. 2 

come, leave your tears; a brief — iv.l 

thy tears are Salter than a .-vounger . . — iv. 1 

to tear with thunder the wide — v. 3 

tlieir Irase throats tear, with giving .. — v. 5 

but at his nurse's teai-s lie whined.... — v. 

name him not, thou boy of tears .... — v. 5 

tear him to pieces, do it presently.... — v. 5 
weep your tears into the channel.. /i<//«s Cirsar, i. i 

there is tears, for his love — iii. 2 

if youhave tears, prepare to slied.... — iii. 2 

tear him to pieees, he's a conspirator — iii. 3 



TEA 



[ 751 ] 



n: AK him fur hU bad vcrsce irfp.).jHliutCii>sar, iii. 3 
frii'iuls, I owe more tears to this dead — v. 3 
61^110 iiiid Ictirs; tliey arc i;reatcr../lH(oii!/<SC/M. i.'i 
and iiideiil, tlic tears live ill an onion — i. 2 

luid SUV, tlic liiuslielDnL' to Kgypt .. — i. 3 

nnd tlKtiiirs..l'itait!\\et — ii. 7 

fall n.)t a tear, I siiy; m-.oi'f tlicni .. — in. !> 
Willi jiiy'i'l tears wash tlic ecingCttlmcnt — iv. 8 

lament, with tears as sovereign — v. 1 

had lier liere, to tearlier linir)-ineal!.C!/"ibt"/i'M*«,ji. -1 

did seandiil many a lioly tear — iii. I 

mv tears, that fall, prove holy water — y. 5 
wftli his tears; tears of true joy .. lilusAndron. i.'i 
the tears I shed, a mother's tears .... — ;■ 2 

mv trilnilary tears I render — i- -' 

with tears of joy shed on tlic eartli .. — i. 'J 
no man slied tears for iiohle MutiiisI — i. ■-' 

voiir glorv, to see her tears — ii. 3 

1 nourcu forth tears in vain — ii. 3 

with tears not lightly shed — ii. 4 

whole months ol tears tliy father's eyes? — ii. .■> 
these hitter tears, which now j-ou see — iii. 1 
my soul's sad tears; let my tears .... — iii. 1 
with worm tears I'll melt the snow. . — iii. I 
my tears arc now prevailing orators — iii. 1 
receive my tears, and seem to weep .. — iii. 1 
no hands, to wipe away thy tears.... — iii. 1 
ft brine-pit with our bitter tears? .... — iii- 1 

sweet fiUlier, cease your tears — iii. 1 

thv impUiii i-.innot drink a tear of mine — iii. 1 

with Ills true tears all bewet — iii. 1 

if anv power pities wretched tears .. — iii. 1 
witli her eoiitiinial tears become .... — iii. 1 

1 liuve not another tear to shed — iii. 1 

make tliein blind with tributary tears — iii. 1 
tluit all the tears that thy poor eyes — iii. 2 

the lamenting fool in sea-salt tears .. — iii. 2 
slie drinks no other drink but tears.. — iii. 2 
made of tears, and tears will quickly — iii. 2 
lielield his tears, and laughed so heartily — v. 1 
owners qucncli them with their tears — V. 1 

or tear tliem on thy chariot — v. 2 

for whom my tears have made me blind — v. 3 

but floods of tears will drown — v. 3 

our father's tears despised — v. 3 

their enmity in my true tears — v. 3 

to shed obsequious tears upon this trunk — v. 3 
tear for tear, and loving kiss for kiss — v. 3 

my tears will choke me, if I ope — v. 3 

to sjieak, help me witli tears Pn kUs, i. 4 

supertiuoiis riots, hear tliese tears! — i. 4 

to add sorrow to your tears — i. 4 

(), no tears, Lychorida, no tears — iii. 3 

ond biggest tears o'ershowered .. — iv. 4 (Gower) 
wliich his mortal vessel tears .. — iv. 4 (Ouwer) 
IKiil.] while our tears must play — iv. 4 (Gower) 
wlien we with tears parted rentapolis .. — v. 3 

with cadent tears fret ehaniiels in l.enr, i. 4 

that these hot tears, which break — i. 4 

tears his white hair — iii. 1 

as tills mouth should tear this hand .... — iii. 4 

my tears liegin to take his part — iii. 6 

to dislocate ond tear thy flesh and bones — iv. 2 

an ample tear trilled down her — iv. 3 

her smiles and tears were like — iv. 3 

of the earth, spring with my tears! — iv. 4 

mv mourning, and important tears — iv. 4 

that mine own tears do scald — iv. 7 

l)e j'our tears wet? yes, 'faith — iv. 7 

with tears augmenting the fresh..Iiomeo^JuUety i. 1 
a sea nourished with lover's tears .... — i. 1 

then. turn tears to fires! — i. 2 

■written, I would tear the word — ii.2 

else would I tear the cave where — ii.2 

stain doth sit of an old tear that is not — ii. 3 
nor tears, nor prayers, sliall purchase — iii. I 
back, foolish tears, hack to your native — iii. 2 
wash they his wounds with tears? .. — iii. 2 

then mightst thou tear thy hair — iii. 3 

with his own tears made drunk — iii. 3 

thy tears are womanish — iii. 3 

wasli him from his grave with tears? — iii. h 

wliat. still in tears? — iii. S 

do ebb and flow with tears? — iii..") 

raging with tliy tears, and they with — iii. 5 
tor Venus smiles not in a house of tears — iv. 1 
to stop the inundation of her tears .. — iv. 1 
is much abused with tears! The tears — iv. I 
more than tears, with that report .... — iv. 1 

dry up your tears, and stick — . iv. 5 

yet nature's tears are reason's — iv. 5 

rO'l./iii/.] with tears distilled by moaus — v. 3 

bv heaven, I will tear thee joint — v. 3 

like Niobe, all tears IIcinlel,i. 2 

the solt of most unrighteous tears had .. — i. 2 
colour, and has tears ill's eyes (rep.) .... — ii.2 
he would drown the stage with tears .... — ii.2 
perriwig-pated fellow tear a passion .... — iii. 2 

tears, perchance, for blood — iii. 4 

tears, seven times salt, burn out — iv. 5 

in his grave rained many a tear .. — iv. 5(song) 

therefore I forbid my tears — iv. 7 

woul't tear thyself? woiil't drink up — v. 1 

often did beguile her of her tears Otiu-Un, i. 3 

I'll tear her all to pieces — iii.3 

the earth could teem with women's tears — iv. I 

proceed you in your tcors — iv. I 

am I the occasion of these tears, my lord — iv. 2 

her salt tears full from her — iv.3(3ong) 

I must weep, but they arc cruel tears .... — v. 2 

drop tears as fast as the Arabian trees. ... — v. 2 

TKAR-FALLING pity dwells not../(ic/inrrf III. iv. 2 

TKAKFUI. eyes odd water 3Hrnrvri.v. t 

TEAKINO theThracian MiJ.M.'iUream,v. I 

for teoring a poor whore's riift' iUrnrylf. ii. 4 

tearing his couiintry'a bowels out ..Coriolnmit, v. 3 
in the miiUt a tearing groan ..Aulnni/<^ Cli-n. iv. 12 
no tearing, ladv; I iK'rceive you know it. .Liar, v. 3 

Ti;AK-snKEr"f«-<' boijj- 

miatress Xcar-aliect would CMn(rrp.)i Henry II'. ii. 4 



TKAIl-STAINKD eyes to see iter. ...iUenryri. ii. 4 
'i'KAT-oven at thy teat thou hadsl.TOiu .4ii</ron. ii. 3 
sucked wisdom from thy tcftt .... It^men f,- Jiiliiit, i. 3 
TK DEUftr-togcther sungTe Deum.i/.'.iiK /'///. iv. I 
TKIllOl'S- weary, tedious nights, riroden.or ler.i. I 
eouu', .>'ou are a tedious fool ....Mfai./orMcaa. ii. 1 

grown fcarcil and tedious — ii. 4 

neii'lihours, you arc tedious l/iic/i <4</<(, iii. 5 

if 1 were as tedious as a king — Iii. .^ 

I do repent the-tcdious minutes. jUi(/.A*.'*Dieawi,H. 3 

long and tedious ni;ilit, abate .... — iii. 2 
a tedious brief scene of young (ir/).).. — v. 1 

which makes it tedious — v. I 

his tedious measures with the.. Alerch.tifJ'enicet ii. G 

to take a tedious leave — ii. 7 

not in the court, it is tedious ,.../Jsi/o»Li7.-e i7, iii. 2 

what tedious homily of love — iii. 2 

no Iiurden of heavy tedious penury .. — iii. 2 
that is the brief and the tedious of it.. ^H'j II'cU. ii. 3 
tedious were it to tell, and harsh. Tmniitu nf.sii. iij. 2 
returning were us tedious as go o'er . . Muclicih, iii. 4 

life is as tedious as a twice told Ki>ii'./o'iri,iii, 4 

every tedious stride I make will .... lUcimrd ll.i.'i 

grief hath kept a tedious last — ii. 1 

m winter's tedious niglits, sit by .... — v. 1 

thinking his prattle to be tedious — v. 2 

sport would be as tedious as to work.l Ucut-tj ll'.i. 2 
con trace me in the tedious ways .... — iii. 1 

he's as tedious as a tired horse — iii. 1 

to raise this tedious siege I Henry V I. i. 2 

writes not so tedious a style — iv. 7 

these tedious stumbling-blocks 2I!enryl'l. ].2 

weaves tedious snares to trap — iii. 1 

the time shall not seem tedious ....ilUnryl'l. iii. I 

better to be brief, than tedious Itichavd lll.i. 4 

have made it tedious, wearisome .... — !!)* * 
cannot tliv master sleep the tedious.. — iii. 2 
and record of tedious days, rest thy.. — iv. 4 
away, tliou tedious rogue! .... Timon nf A'hcns.iv. 3 

1 see, a man's life is a lediousone ..Cymhcline. iii. 6 
in a tedious sampler sewed her ..TiVuf/4»i/™ii. ii. 5 

pray ; but be not tedious Pericles, iv. 1 

sir, it would be too tedious to repeat .... — v. 1 

so tedious is this day, as is Itonieo ^Juliet, iii. 1 

is not so long as is a tedious talc .... — v. 3 

these tedious old fools! Uamlet, ii. 2 

beguile the tedious day with sleep — iii. 2 

it were a tedious difBoulty, I think Oilullo, iii. 3 

more tedious than tlie dial eight — iii. 4 

TEDIOUSLY— as tediously as hell. TrniU<i- Cress, iv. 2 
doth limp so tediously away .. Henry I', iv. (chorus) 

TiSDIOUSNESS— all thy tediousncss..Wi/c/i Ado, iii. 5 
rob it of some taste of tediousness . ^Ifr-nf I'enire, ii, 3 

much beguiled tlie tediousness Jiii-imrd 11. ii. 3 

tediousness the limbs and outward .... Ihimtrt, ji. 2 

TEEM— eacli minute teems a new one. .Mudieth, iv. 3 

nothing teems but hateful docks Hoiryl'. v. I 

infinite breast, teems, and feeds. .7'imono//4M. iv. 3 

teem with new monsters — iv. 3 

if she must teem, create her child Lenr, i. 4 

earth could teem with woman's tears ..niUclh, iv. 1 

TEEMING foison Measure for Measure, i. h 

tills teeming womb of royal kings . . Itiehard II. ii. 1 

is not my teeming date (Irmik up — v. 2 

oft the teeming earth is with a kind.l Henry JK iii. 1 

TEEN— to think o' the teen that I Teaipesl,i. 2 

of groans, of sorrow, and of teen I. i-orf"* L.l.osi, iv. 3 

wrecked with a week of teen Ilichard III. iv. I 

and yet to my teen be it spoken., /foi/ipo ^.luliel, i. 3 

TEETH— supplant some of your teeth. Tempest, iii. 2 
item, she iiath no teeth {rep.) .Twotien.nl Per. iii. 1 

in your teeth, for shame Merry ll'ives, iii. 3 

in despite of the teeth of all — v.h 

within the teeth and the lips ..Meas. far Mens. iii. 2 
with two old men without teeth .... .Vuc/t Ado, v, 1 

to show his teeth as white as Love'sL.Lost, v. 2 

riot show their teeth in way of. . Mereh.af Venice, i. 1 
have lost my teeth in your servicers you LZ/re i7,_i. ! 

sans teeth, sans eyes, sans taste — .?.'* ^ 

pick his teetii, ond sing AlVslVcll, iii. 2 

lips might freeze to my teeth. Tamim; of Shrew, iv. 1 

by the picking on's teeth ll'hiler^sTate, iv. 3 

and flout me in the teeth?. . . . Comedy of Errors, ii.2 
till gnawing with my teeth my bonds — v. 1 

no teeth for the present Machelh, iii. 4 

wliy then I suck my teeth King John, i. 1 

of soldiers are his teeth, his fangs.... — ii. 2 

to part by the teetli the unowed — iv. 3 

my teeth shall tear the slavish Richard II. i. 1 

with my teeth, and lips — i.3 

set my teeth nothing on edge MlenrylV.iii. 1 

defiance in king Henry's teeth — v. 2 

Btin"s and teeth newly ta'en out .,'iHenry IP. iv. 4 

Puff in th^ teeth, most recreant — v. 3 

the solus in thy teeth, and in thy ....HenryV. il. 1 

now set the teeth, and stretch — iii. 1 

rather with their teeth the walls ....\llenryPI. i. 2 

we'll fall to it with our teeth — iii. 1 

strongly througli my fixed teeth ..2IIcnryPI. iii. 2 

unles his teeth be pulled out — iv. 7 

thrust his hand between his teeth ..SHenryPI. i. 4 

teeth iLidst thou in thy head — V. 6 

Jesu bless us, he is born with teeth!.. — v. 6 
that had his teetli before his eyca.. Ilichard III. iv. 4 

daring the event to the teeth Henry Pill. i. 2 

he did so set bis teeth, and tear it. . . . Coriolanus, i. 3 

and keep their teeth clean — ii. 3 

why rule you not their teeth? — iii. 1 

out of the teeth of emulation Julius Cusar, ii. 3 

to east into my teeth — iv. 3 

you showed your teeth like apes .... — v. 1 
dcflance, traitor.s, hurl we in your teeth — v. I 
I will give thee bloody tcetit. Anionj/ ^ Cl/'opalra, i. h 

tnnk't, or did it from his teetli — iii. 4 

but now, I'll set my teeth, and send — iii. 11 

with thy shori) teeth this knot — v. 2 

hand gnawing with thy teeth.. .. 7V/m«/Iiii/i-om. iii. 1 
hand, sweet wench, between thy teeth — iii. 1 
some little knife between thy teeth .. — iii. 2 
so sharp are hunger's teeth, that man . . I'niclet, i. 4 



TEL 



TEETII-ch'ill pick your teeth, zlr /.^or.Iv.O 

I'll lay fourteen of my teeth ....Homen^Jntiei, i. 3 
to the teeth and forehead of our faults .i/amW, iii. 3 

tell him to his teeth, thus liidih^tllioii .. — iv. 7 
your vile gnisBCS in the devil's tielh ..0//.f«o, iii. 4 
Ti'.irSUM; I'rotector, see to't well ..illnnyPI ii. 1 

TELA .M( IN for his shield Aniuny /ic.len. iv. 11 

TKEAMDNIUS, on sheep or oxen ..•iHenryPl.v. 1 

TELl/— tell your piteous heart Tempeti, i. 2 

you have ollon begun to tell me .... — i. 2 

of any tiling the image tell me — i. 2 

then tell me if this might be — i. 2 

speak; till me (rrp. ii. 1 and iv. 1) ,. — i. 2 

one:-tell — ii. I 

they'll tell the clock to any — ii. I 

lean tell you, and that — ii.2 

you cannot tell who's your friend .. — ii.2 

tell not me — iii. 2 

wilt thou tell a monstrous lie — iii. 2 

this will I tell my master — iii. 2 

I'll tell no tales — v. 1 

I'd strive to Icll you — v. I 

tell inc, Paiithiiio (t-f/p.) .... TnoGrn.of Perona, i. 3 

tell me, do you know (^rrp.) — ii. 1 

now tell me, how do all — ii. 4 

but tell me true — ii.& 

I tell thee, my master (If/).) — ii. .'> 

and tell me some good — ii. 7 

tell me, good my lord («■/).) — ii. 7 

now tell me, Proteus (rep.) _ iii. I 

I will not tell myself — iii. I 

tell me this; who begot thee? — iii. 1 

why, then I will tell thee — iii. I 

why didst not tell me sooner? — iii. 1 

tell us this — iv. 1 

I tell you what Launce — iv. 2 

and tells you, currish thanks — iv. 4 

tell my ladj', I claim — iv. 4 

tell him from me, one .lulia — iv. 4 

I'll tell you as we pass along — v. 4 

shall I tell you a lie? Merry iPirei, i. 1 

shall tell you another tale — i. I 

can voxi tell, cousin? — i. 1 

I will tell you what I am about .... — i.3 

tell master parson Evans — i. I 

to tell you in your ear (i*n. ii. 2) .... — i. 1 

do not you tell-a me dat 1 — i. 4 

I can tell you that by the way — i. 4 

tell your worship more of the wart .. — i. 4 

tell him, cavalero-justice; tell him.. — ii. I 

1 will tell you what our sport — ii. I 

and tell him my name is Brook .... — ii. 1 

and one (I tell you) that will — ii, 2 

and she bade me tell .^'our worsliip .. — ii. 2 

but, I pray tlice, tell me this — ii.2 

I will tell yon, sir, if you — ii.2 

I shall be with her (I miiv tell you) — ii.2 

I viU tell youhow I vill kill him .. — ii. 3 

you would tell me of a mess of iiorridgc — iii. I 

I cannot tell what the dickens — iii. 2 

my nursh-a Quickly tell me so mush — iii. 2 

everlasting liberty, if I tell you of it — iii.3 

go tell thy master, I am alone — iii.3 

nay, I must tell you, so you do — iii, 3 

I c'ome before to tell you — iii. -l 

I'll tell you my dream — iii.3 

and tells me 'tis a thing — iii. 4 

may be, he tells you true — iii. 4 

can tell you good jests of him (iv-/>.) — iii. i 

they can tell j*ou now things go .... — iii. 4 

well, I will visit her; tell her bo {rep.) — iii. 5 

shall we tell our husbands — iv. 2 

and till he tell the truth — iv. 4 

tells me, there is three — iv. .■> 

I tell you for a good will (rtp.) — iv. 6 

I cannot tell vat is dat but it is tell-a me — iv. i 

I will tell you: he beat me — v. I 

I'll tell you all, master Brook — v. 1 

I'll tell you strange things — v. I 

tell her, master SFender hatli — v. 5 

what need you tell me that? — v. .1 

did not I tell you, how you — v. r> 

and tell them, tlicre thy fixed font. Tneinh Sij^hl, i. 4 

either tell me where thou hast been — i. 5 

I can tell thee where that saying .... — i. .') 

tell him, he shall not speak with me — i. 5 

I pray you, tell nie {rep. iii. 1) — j. .'» 

tell me your mind — i. .'> 

to tell me how he takes it — i. i 

tell him, I'll none of it — i. .^ 

mine eyes will tell tales of me — ii. 1 

my lady bade me tell you — ii. 3 

teil lis something of him — ii.3 

tell her my love (irp.) — ii. 4 

you cannot love her, you tell her so.. — ii. 4 

by my troth, I'll tell thee — iii. 1 

tell me that — iii 2 

did not I tell you? — iii. 4 

would make me tell tliein — iii. 4 

and tell me wliat I sliall vent — iv. 1 

this will 1 tell my lady straiglit — iv. 1 

tell me how thy lady does — iv. 2 

I tell thee, I am as well — iv. 2 

but tell me true (rep.) — iv. 2 

now my foes tell me plainly — v. 1 

anil tell nic, in the modesty — v. I 

tcUmewhy — v. I 

but rather tell me, when I Meat, for Mcas. ii. I 

come, tell me true — ii. I 

pretty orders beginning, I can tell you — ii. I 

I'll tell him of voii — ii.2 

did I not tell thee, .vea? — ii.2 

I would tell what 'twere to be — ii- 2 

Olid you telt me that he shall — ii. 4 

I'll tell the world aloud, what — ii. 4 

did I tell this, who would believe me? — ii. i 

I'll tell him yet of AiiL'elo's request — ii. i 

can you tell me of any? — iii. 2 

can'st thou tell, if Cluiidio die — iii. 2 

that he halh forced me tu tell him ,, — iii. 2 



TELL— I pray you, tell me Meiis.JhiMeas. iv. 

tell him, he must awake — iv. 

I can tell tliee pretty tales — iv. 

and tell him where I stay — iv. 

besides, he tells me. that if — iv. 

the man that you did tell us of? .... — v. 
than you must expect of me to tell . . Much Ado, i. 

I tell him, we shall stay here at — i. 

I pray tliec, tell me truly how thou.. — i. 

to tell us Cupid is a good hare-fiuder — i. 

your grace would constrain me to tell — i. 

and tell iiim I will not fail hira — i. 

and tell fair Hero I am Claudio — i- 

1 can tell .you strange news tliat yon — i. 

go you, and tell her of it — i. 

be too important, tell liim, there is .. — ii. 

to tell you true, I counterfeit liim .. — ii. 

will you not tell me who told you so? — ii. 

nor will you not tell me who you are? — ii. 

I'll tell him what you say — ii. 

my cousin tells him in Ins ear — ij. 

cannot endure to hear tell of a husband — ii. 

and I will tell you m3' drift — ii. 

spare not to tell hira, tliat he hath . . — ii. 

tell tliem, that you know — ii. 

I cannot tell; I think not (rep.) .... — ii. 

you heard my daughter tell you how — ii. 

my daughter tells us all — ii. 

tell Benedick of it — ii. 

tell him of her love? Never tell him — ii. 

and tell her, I and Ursula walk in .. — iii 

did they bid you tell her of it, madnm? — iii. 

but who dare tell lier so? if I should — iii. 

yet tell her of it; hear what she — iii. 

indeed that tells a heavy tale for him — iii. 

I came hitiier to tell you — iii. 

I tell this tale vilely: I should first tell — iii. 

that only tells a lie, and swears it .. — iv. 

my soul doth tell me. Hero is belied — v. 

I'll tell thee how Beatrice praised thy — v. 

but I must tell thee plainly — v. 

I pray thee now, tell me (rep.) — v. 

did I not tell you she was innocent? — v. 

I'll tell you largely of fair Hero's. . . . — v. 

I'll tell thee what, ^)rince — v. 

I will go tell him ot fair Hermia's ..Mid.N.'sDr. i. 

do I not in plainest truth tell you .. — ii. 

for more better assiirauce, tell them — iii. 

anotlier prologue must tell, he is not — iii. 

once tell triie, tell true, even for .... — iii. 

for auglit that I can tell (rep.) — iii. 

did not you tell me, I should know.. — iii. 

and in our flight, tell me how — iv. 

there is no man can tell what — iv. 

for, if I tell you, I am no — iv. 

I will tell you every thing — iv. 

all that I will tell you, is, that — iv. 

to tell you, that the lantern is — v. 

this letter will tell you more Love' sL. Lost, i. 

the dancing horse will tell you — i. 

tell me precisely of what complexion — i. 

I will tell thee wonders — i. 

I am less proud to hear you tell my — ii. 

tell him, the daughter ot the king .. — ii. 

but tell me; how was there a Costard — iii. 

I will tell you sensibly — iii. 

can you tell by your wit — iv. 

sir, tell not me of the father _ — iv. 

nor tongue of mortal tell — iv. 3 (verse 

O, tell me, good Dumain? — iv. 

and I shall tell you more — iv. 

for sir, to tell you plain — iv 

for I must tell thee, it will please — v. 

shall I tell you a thing? — v. 

the princess bids you tell, how many — v. 

tell her, wo measure them by weary — v. 
but tell not me; I know ....Merchant of Venice, \. 

I tell thee what, Antonio, I love thee — i. 

I'll tell tliee more of this another.... — i. 

well, tell me now, what lady — i. 

to-day ijromised to tell me of? — i. 

I cannot tell; I make it — i. 

? ray you, tell me this; if he — i. 

tell thee lady, this aspect of mine .. — ii. 

can you tell me whether one (.rej).) .. — ii. 

I will tell you news of your son .... — ii. 

you may tell every finger I have .... — ii. 

take tills, tell gentle Jessica — ii. 

I must nei'ds tell thee all — ii. 

who are you? Tell me, for more .... — ii. 

you were best to tell Antonio what.. — ii. 

tell me once more what title thou .. — ii. 

tell us, do you hear, whether Antonio — iii. 

there's something tells me (but it is not — iii. 

tell me, where is fancy bred — iii. 2 (son; 

I pray you, tell me how my good.... — iii. 

tell not me of mercy — iii. 

and tell quaint lies (rep.) — iii. 

I'll tell thee all ray wliole — iii. 

I'll tell my husbaud, Launcelot .... — iii. 

he tells me flatly, there is no — iii. 

on what compulsion must II tell me — iv. 

tell her the process of Antonio's end — iv. 

and so, I pray you, tell him — iv. 

tell him, there's a post come from — y. 

can you tell, if Rosalind AsyauLikeU, i. 

I'll tell thee, Charles, it is — i. 

tell us the manner of the wrestling (rep.) — i. 

little delight in it, I can tell you — i. 

I can tell who should down — i. 

I pray you, tell me this {rep. iv. 3) . . — i. 

but I can tell you, that of late — i- 

tell men, whereon the likelihood .... — i. 

fo, seek him; tell him, I would speak — ii. 

e on thee 1 I can tell what thou .... — ii. 

go to my cave and tell me — _ii. 

vehemence, tell me who it is (rep.) .. — iii. 

I'll tell you who time ambles — ii;- 

I pray you, tell me your remedy .... — iii- 

and I tell you, deserves as well — iii. 



— iv. 3 



[ 752 ] 

TELL— tell me where it is {rep.^.. AsyauLikeU, iii. 2 

tliat can tell you what marriage .... — iii. 3 

for I must tell you friendly — iii. 5 

DOW tell me, how long you would.... — iv. 1 

I'll tell thee, Aliena, I cannot — iv. 1 

I do not shame to tell you what I..., — iv. 3 

to tell this story, that you might .... — iv. 3 

I pray you, tell your brother how.... — iv. 3 

did your brother tell you how — v. 2 

good shepherd, tell this youth what — v. 2 
tell me thy reason W'hy thou wilt ....AWs^Vell, i. 3 

sirrah, tell my gentlewoman, I would — i. 3 

therefore tell me true, but tell {rep.) — i. 3 

by the hand, and tell her, she is thine — ii. 3 

I must tell thee, sirrah — ii. 3 

I would not tell you what I would .. — ii. 5 

here they come, will tell you more .. — iii. 2 

to tell him, that his sword can — ill' ^ 

and he is parted, tell me what — iii. 6 

go tell the count Roussillon and my — iv. 1 
then, pray you, tell me, if I should 
I will tell you a thing, but you.... 
and 1 tell thee so before, because .. 

and I was about to tell you — iv. s 

tell mc, but, sirrah, tell me true .... — %'. 3 

I'll never tell you — v. 3 

tell him of his hounds . . Taming of Shrew, 1 (indue.) 

I tell you, sirs, if you should smile — 1 (indue.) 

tell him from me, (if he will win .. — 1 (indue.) 

tell me thy mind: for I have — i. 1 

I cannot tell (rep. iv. 3 and iv. ■)).... — i. 1 

I pray sir, tell me, is it possible — i. 1 

tell me thine first — i. 1 

and tell me now, sweet friend — i. 2 

he tells you flatly what his mind is.. — i. 2 

tell me her father's name — i. 2 

I'll tell you what, sir,— an' she — i. 2 

I'll tell you news indifferent — i. 2 

and do you tell me of a woman's .... — i. 2 

if I may be bold, tell me — i. 2 

here I charge thee, tell whom thou .. — ii. 1 

and tell them both, these are their tutors — ii. 1 

then tell me, if I get your daughter's — ii. 1 

for I tell you, father, I am — ii. 1 

I did but tell her, she mistook — ii. 1 

why then, I'll tell her plain — ii. 1 

I tell you, 'tis incredible — ii. I 

and tell us, what occasion of — iii. 2 

tedious it were to tell, and harsh .... — iii. 2 

I'll tell you, sir Lucentio — iii. i 

good Grumio, tell me, how goes .... — iv. 1 

tell thou the tale; but hadst — iv. 1 

I tell thee, Kate, 'twas burnt — iv. 1 

I tell you sir, she bears me — iv. 2 

now tell me, I pray (r^)'.) — \v.i 

I tell thee, Lioio, this is wonderful .. — iv. 2 

my tongue will tell the anger — iv. 3 

I tell thee, I, that thou hast — iv. 3 

if you will, tell what hath — iv. 4 

tell me, sweet Kate, and tell me truly — iv. 5 

I pray you, tell signior Lucentio .... — v. I 

my son I tell me, thou villain (7-ep.).. — v. 1 

I pray you, tell me what you meant — v. 2 

I charge you, tell these headstrong .. — v. 2 

tell him, you are sure Winter's Tale, i. 2 

to tell he lon^s to see his son — i. 2 

I pr'y thee, tell me; cram us — i. 2 

sir, I'll tell you; since lam — i. 2 

sit by us, and tell 's a tale — ii. 1 

I will tell it softly; yon crickets .... — ii. 1 

tell her, Emilia, I'll use — ii. 2 

now, my liege, tell me what blessings — iii. 2 

I tell you, 'tis rigour, and not law .. — iii. 2 

I cannot tell, good sir, for which of .. — iv. 2 

he tells her something, that makes .. — iv. 3 

faster than you'll tell money — iv. 3 

'tis in request, I can tell you — iv. 3 

thou to me thy secrets tell — iv. 3 (song) 

he's simple, and tells much — iv. 3 

and tell him plainly, the selfsame .. — iv. 3 

to tell the king of this escape — iv. 3 

but to tell the king she's a changeling — iv. 3 

I will tell the king all, every word .. — iv. 3 

tell me, (for you seem to be honest . . — iv. 3 

and tell me, for what dull part — v. 1 

and sudden, tells us, 'tis not a visitation — v. 1 

tell me, mine own, where hast — v. 3 

to tell sad stories of my own . . Comedy of Errors, i. 1 

tell me this, I pray (rep.) — i. 2 

this jest? I pray you, master, tell me? — ii. 2 

shall I tell you, why? Ay, sir — ii. 2 

would tell you what I think — iii. 1 

right, sir, I'll tell you when (rep.) .. — iii. 1 

and so tell your master — iii. 1 

can you tell for whose sake? — iii. I 

think of this, I cannot tell — iii. 2 

and tell her, in the desk (?ep.) — iv. 1 

arrested? tell me, at whose suit? .... — iv. 2 

and tell his wife, that, being — iv. 3 

I tell you, 'twill sound harshly — iv. 4 

still did I tell him it was vile — v. 1 

upon my life, I tell you true — v. 1 

but she tells to your highness — v. 1 

but tell me yet, dost thou (rep.) — v. 1 

I tell thee, Syracu.san, twenty _ v. 1 

I cannot tell; I, to this fortune — v. 1 

I cannot tell; but I am faint Macbelli. i. 2 

you imperfect speakers, tell mc — i. 3 

of darkness tell us truths — i. 3 

sir, can you tell where he — iii. 6 

tell me, thou unknown power — iv. 1 

that I may tell pale-hearted — iv. 1 

tell me, (if your art can tell so iv. 1 

I tell yon yet again, Banqno's — v. 1 

whom thou still hast served, tell thee.. — v. 7 

tongue that tells me so, for it — v. 7 

tell me, how if my brother KinaJohn, i. 1 

anon I'll tell thee more — i. 1 

then, tell us, shall your city call .... — ii. 1 

that tells of this war's loss — ii. 2 



TELL— her son? tell me, who knows.A'i«f/uAw, ii. 2 

well advised, tell o'er thy tale — iii. 1 

tell me, thou fellow (rep.) — iii. I 

the pope; tell him this tale frep.)..,. — iii. I 

I'll tell thee what, my friend — iii. 3 

he fells us, Arthur is deceased — iv. 2 

as bid rae tell my tale in — iv. 2 

return, and tell him so; we know .. — iv. 3 

there, tell the king, he may — iv. 3 

hal I'll tell thee what: thou art — iv. 3 

and come you now to tell me, John.. — v. 2 

tell me, Hubert. Badly; I fear — v. 3 

tell him, toward Swinsteod — v. 3 

a monk, I tell you; a resolved — v. 6 

I'll tell thee, Hubert; half my power — v. 6 

tell me, moreover, hast thou Richard //. i. \ 

there's none can tell; but by — ii. 1 

1 had forgot to tell your lordship.... — ii. 2 
let me tell you this; I have had .... — ii. 3 

tell her, I send to her my kind — iii. 1 

worse than I have power to tell — iii. 2 

and tell sad stories of the death — iii. 2 

tell Bolmgbroke, (for yond' — iii. 3 

madam, we'll tell tales — iii. 1 

that tell black tidings — iii. 4 

and let them tell thee tales of — v. I 

quit their grief, tell thou the lamentable — v. 1 

you would tell the rest, when weeping — v. 2 

can no man tell of mj' unthrifty son? — v. 3 

recover breath; tell us how near — V. 3 

now, sir, the sound, that tells what hour — v. .i 

tell me, gentle friend, how went .... — v. .5 
bootless tis to tell you, we will go .. 1 Henry ?/'. i. 1 

in the court, I can tell you — i . 2 

lies this same fat rogue will tell us .. — i. 2 

I tell thee, he durst as well have .... — i. 3 

after straight, and tell him so — i. 3 

good uncle, tell your tale — i. 3 

ay, when, canst tell? Lend me — ii. 1 

heard him tell it to one of his company — ii. I 

but I tell you, my lord fool — ii. 3 

hang himl let him tell the king .... — ii. 3 

tell me, sweet lord, what is't that.... — ii. :* 

an' if thou wilt not tell me all — ii. 3 

nay, tell me, if you speak in jest .... — ii. 3 

and tell me flatly I am no — ii. 4 

I tell thee, Ned, thou hast lost — ii. 4 

I tell thee what (rep. iii. 1) — ii. 4 

come, tell us your reason — ii. 4 

I would not tell you on compulsion — ii. 4 

tell me now in earnest — ii. 4 

but, tell me, Hal (rep.) — ii. 4 

give me leave to tell you once again — iii. 1 

tell truth, and shame the devil — iii. 1 

shall I tell you, cousin? — iii. 1 

good father, tell her, that she — iii. 1 

tell me else, could such inordinate .. — iii. 2 

than men would tell their children.. — iii. 2 

I tell these news to thee? (rep ) — iii. 2 

be bold to tell you, that I am your son — iii. 2 

I have heard the prince tell him — iii. 3 

pr'ythee, tell me, doth he keep his bed? — iv. 1 

the king, I can tell you, looks for.. .. — iv. 2 

but tell me. Jack, whose fellows are — iv. 2 

tell your nephew, the Prince of Wales — v. 1 

so tell your cousin, and bring me — v. 1 

lord Douglas, go you and tell him so — v. 2 

tell me, tell me, how showed — v. 2 

but let me tell the world — v. 2 

because some tell me that thou (rep.) — v. 3 

why didst thou tell me that thou.... — v. 3 

find no boy's play here, lean tell you — v. 4 

did you not tell me, this fat man .... — v. 4 

tell thou the earl, that the lord iHeinylC. i I 

my lord, I'll tell you what — i. 1 

than thy tongue to tell thy errand .. — i. 1 

tell thou thy earl, his divination .... — i. 1 

tells them he doth bestride — i. 1 

boy, tell him I am deaf — i. 2 

rebellion can tell how to make it .. .. — i. 2 

and give me leave to tell you — i. 2 

what tell you me of it? — i. 2 

I cannot go, I cannot tell — i. 2 

the rest the paper tells — ii. 1 

tell me, how many good young — i i . 2 

shall I tell thee one thing, Poins? .. — ii. 2 

never tell me; your ancient swaggerer — ii. 4 

now he said so, I can tell whereupon — ii. 4 

I tell thee what, corporal Bardolph.. — ii. 4 

will you tell me, master Shallow .... — iii. 2 

to tell you from his grace, that he .. — iv. 1 

within ray bosom tells me, that no .. — iv. 1 

canst thou tell that? "With Poins.... — iv. 4 

as those that I am come to tell you of I — iv. 4 

the good news yet? Tell it him — iv. 4 

tiny kickshaws, tell William Cook.. — v. I 

and tell him who hath sent me — v. 2 

I'll tell thee what, thou (rep.) — v. 4 

my lord, I'll tell you that self bill HeurylW. 1 

plainness, tell us the Dauphin's mind — i. 2 

tell him, he hath made a match .... — i. 2 

but tell the Dauphin, I will keep — i- 2 

I cannot tell; things must be . as .... — ii. I 

and tell the legions, I can never .... — ii. 2 

tells Harry that the king — iii. (chorus) 

to the mines! tell you the duke — iii. 2 

I will be so bold as to tell you — iii. 2 

I tell you what, captain Gower — iii. 6 

I will tell him my mind — iii 6 

I can tell your majesty, he is — iii. 6 

tell him, we could have rebuked {rep.) — iii. 6 

and tell thy king, I do not seek (rep.) — iii. 6 

1 tell thee, constable, my mistress .. — iii. 7 

tell him, I'll knock his leek — iv. 1 

if you could tell how to reckon — i v. 1 

tell the constable, we are but — iv, 3 

and my poor soldiers tell me — iv. 3 

tell him, my fury shall abate — iv. 4 

I tell yon, captain (rep.) — iv. 7 

our mercy; go, and tell them so — iv. 7 



TEL 



[753] 



TEL 



TEIiT, thee truly, hcrnld, I know not . . Ihmy »'. iv. 7 

out of your poUy , I can tell you that — "v. 7 

I canU.llyou.it will serve you — jv- 8 

this note (loth tell nic of ten - v. h 

to tell how many 19 kiUeilr — '»• » 

I will tell yoii. lis my fricnil ........ - v- 

and tlun I will tell luiu a little piece — v. 1^ 

1 cannot tell vat is urp-) — ^- - 

Iwill telltlueinlMcnch...... - v. a 

can any of your iiciglilMurs tell. ... . . — v. • 

have a saving faith within nic, tell.< me — v. J 

therefore tell me. most fair Ktillmriiie - v. . 

but I will tell thee aloml-Liigliuul.. — \- - 

I'll tell vou more lU large \Ueiinji i.t. i 

therefore tell her. 1 return great .... — !!• ^ 

1 tell vou. mudum, were — >!■ ^ 

hut tell me, keeper (/<•/<.) — !!• ^ 

I'll tell thee my disease — . !■ » 

inv tender years can tell — '.!!• i 

biit to tell you, that we are hero .... — in-; 

but tell me whom thou seek st — iv- ' 

how canst thou tell, she will deny.... — v. J 

llrst, let me tell you whom — ^-J 

1 cannot tell; hut this I am — X- ^ 

tell me, and 111 reauite it 'i "<■"'!/ ' I- ]■ \ 

Itell thee, Poole (r^p.) ....•.■•• - -^ 

what mean'st thou, Sntfolk? tell mo - 1-3 

I tell you, expects performance — !• J 

tell me. what fate awaits — .}• \ 

and tell him wluit miracle — >!• * 

good fellow, tell us here (ri-p.) — .!!■ 

inv conscience tells me — !!!■ J 

to tell my love unto his dumb — ;!!• j 

CO, Salisbury, and tell them all — J!!- j 

anil I am sent to tell his majesty .... — !!!• ^ 

CO, tell this heavy message — ; — V- ^ 

I tell thee. Jack Cade the clothier .. — iv- ^ 

CO to. tell the kiii^ from me ......... — iv. 2 

Fellow kings, I a-fl you, that thnt.. . . - v. 2 

tell me. whereiu I have otlended most I — iv. 7 

can wish, or tongue can tell — ...... — iv. 7 

tell him, I'll send dnkc Edmund.... — .iv.a 

tell Kent from me she hath — 'v. lo 

tell me, my friend, art thou.... — v. i 

that's more than thou canst tell — „,\-; 

and tell them what I did ZlUnnjU.i. 

tell me, may not a king adopt — ;• | 

iny conscience tells me, he is — •• j 

let us tell the queen these news — !• i 

and tell him privily of our intent — — i- ' 

to tell thee whence thou camest — ,}■ * 

I come to tell you things since . . — !■• 

tell our devotion with revengeful.... — !•• ■ 

Clifford, tell me, didst thou — .!!■ f 

I'll tell thee what befell me — l!!- J 

whiles Warwicktells his title — >•!• } 

tell nie then, have you not — !(!• ' 

children hast thou, widow? tell mo (.rep.^ — ui. f 

I'll tell yon how these lands are .... — iii- ^ 

to tell thee plain, I am to lie with (rep.) — ui. i 

I can tell you both, her suit is granted — ui. i 

queen Margaret, and tell thy grief . . — in- % 

with my tongue to tell the passion .. — iii. ^ 

vou tell a pedigree of — !!!• ° 

iiow, Warwick, tell me (rep.) — J)!- J 

as mv letters tell me — '.!!• J 

and tell false Edward (rep. iv. 1) . . . . — i"- J 

now tell me, brother Clarence — fv- j 

I mind to tell him plainly — [V- 

tell me some reason, why — }V. j 

in brief, tell me their words — iv. 

tell mc, if you love Warwick more . . — Jv. i 

and tell what answer Lewis, and.... — iv. J 

and tell me who is victor, York — v. 1 

I tell ye all, I am ynur better - v- ■> 

I'll tell vou what, I thmk lt,ch„,d til. i. \ 

I tell thee, fellow, he that — ;• ' 

when devils tell the truth 1 — !■ - 

I tell thee, homicide, these nails ... — \- ^ 

I cannot tell; the world is — !■ ^ 

tell him, and spare not v;"' "" '' o 

and tell them, lis the queen and her — }. •> 

with a piece of scripture tell them .. — '■ ■> 

mv lord? I pray you, tell me........ — }■ * 

afraid, methinks, to hear vou tell it — \- i 

dnkeofGlosler, and tell him so .... — ;• j 

but while one would tell twenty .... — i- 4 

the hearts to tell me so — }■ * 

tell him, when that our princely — >• ■• 

take thou the fee, and tell luni what I — .1.4 

eooil Griindam, tell us, is our father — ii- j 

not she, I cannot tell who told me . . — .!!■ f 

that ho comes not to tell us — !!■• [ 

I'll tell you what, my cousin • — ;!!• 

tell him all our reasons (rrp.) — ni- ' 

tell him his fears arc shallow (rrp.).. — in- ; 

I tell thee, man (rfp.) — !.'!• f 

I pray you all, tell me what ;... — !!!■ J 

great preservation we live to tell ityou — ui. 5 

tell them, how Edward (r<rp.) — in. s 

he was urged to tell my talc — !.')• 7 

tell him, myself, the mayor and .... — in- 7 

once more return and tell his grace. — ni. 7 

Icannot tell, if to depart in — "i- 7 

thoushalt tell the processor ......... — (v.s 

tell o'er your woes again by viewing — iv. i 

tell me, tlioii villain-slave (rrp.) .... — iv- 1 

tell her, thou madest away (r.-p.).... — iv. 1 

tell me your highness' pleasure — \v. i 

when thou mav'st tell thy tale — Jv. •[ 

then, tell me. what makes he — >v. -J 

the news I have to tell your majesty — iv. 4 

tell Richmond this from me — >.v. o 

tell mc, where is princely Richmond — iv. 5 

tell hiin the (lueen hath heartily .... — '".b 

tell mc, how fares our loving mother? — v. J 

tell the clock there — v. 3 

but, tell me first, is voung — .....X-) 

I cannot tell, what deavcn Hennj I III i.\ 

where others tell steps with me — '-2 



TFAAj you the duke. 



...Umrynil.i.i 



thus tlu'v nraved to tell your grace. — 
irav. tell Iheni tlnis ninch f 



1.4 



froii'i me . . — U i 

r, I'll tully. Ill, ciinlinul, I should .. — i. 4 

I'll tell vim ill a little — ". 1 

pruv, tell liiMi.y.m met him half .... — n. 1 

than I luivetiiiK' to tellliisycarBl .. — ii. I 

I must tell you. vou tender more — li. 4 

he tells yon ri^litlv. Ye tell me what — m- I 

I pray vou, tell uie, if what I — '<i'i 

I should tell vou, you liaveas little.. — in- '^ 

that 1 can tell yoii too — jv. 1 

as I walk thither. I'll tell ye more .. — iv. 1 

didst thou not tell me, Gnflith — iv. 'J 

tell me how he died — iv. 'J 

tell him, in death 1 hlesscd him .... — iv. 2 

let mc tell you. it will ne'er be well.. — v. 1 

this dav. sir, (I may tell it you) — v. 1 

I have news to tell you — v. 1 

to tell you, fair beholders .... Troiliu ^- Cress, (prol.) 

I was about to tell thee (rep.) — i. I 

and so I'll tell her — i- 1 

tell me, Apollo, for thy Daphne's — — i. ' 

to-day, I can tell them that (rep.) .. — i. 'i 

vou shall tell me another tale — i. 2 

I'll tell you them all by their names — i- '^ 

flowers of Troy, I can tell you (rep.) — i. 2 

good hoy, tell Tiim I come — !• '- 

he tells thee 60 himself — ;• 3 

tell him of Nestor, one that was .... — i. 3 

tell him from me, I'll hide my — i. 3 

will tell him, that my lady — •■ 3 

and tell what thou art by inches — i). 1 

I'll tell you what I say of him — ii. ' 

hath none, that tells him so? — ii, 2 

then, tell me. PatrocluB (rep.) — ii- 3 

go and tell him. we come (rep.) — .ij. 3 

they are burs, I can tell you — iij- 8 

to hira.ratroclus; tell him — in. 3 

and tell me, noble Diomed (>ep.) — iv. 1 

did not I tell you? would he were . . — iv. 2 

tell me, sweet uncle, what's — iv. 2 

tell you the lady what she is — iv. 3 

why tell you me of moderation? .... — iv. 4 

but I can tell, that in each grace — jv. 4 

I tell thee, lord of Greece (rep.) — iv. 4 

tell me name liy name — Jv. 5 

tell me, you heavens, in which (rep.) — iv. 5 

I tell thee, yea (rep.) — ;v. S 

as gentle tell me, of what honour — — iv. 5 

I'll tell vou what (rep.) — v. 'J 

come, tell me whose it was — v. 2 

by herself, I will not tell you — v. 2 

if I tell how these two did co-act — v. 2 

to tell thee— that this day is — v. 3 

and tell you them at niijht — v. 3 

I cannot tell what to think on't — v. 3 

tell her, I have chastised — v. 5 

understand me not, that tell me so .. — v. 1 1 

who shall tell Priam so, or Heculia? — v. II 

else I should tell him Timon of Athens, i. 2 



— i|. 1 

von tell me true — .!!■ 2 

but I can tell you one thing, my lord — iii. i 

I tell yon, denied, my lord — iji. 2 

and tell him this from me, I count . . — in. 2 

I need not tell him that; he knows. . — iii. 4 

tell out my blood — !!!■ 4 

I'll tell you more anon — m- " 

if thou wilt, tell them there 1 — iv. 3 

but, tell me true, for I mustever doubt — iv. 3 

tell hhn of an intent that's coming .. — v. I 

and, tell him, Timon speaks it — v. 2 

I cannot choose but tell him — v. 2 

and tell them, that, to ease them of. . — v. 2 

tell my friends, tell Athens — v. 2 

I tell you, friends, the most Coriulnnus, i. 1 

I shall tell you a pretty tale — ;• 1 

sir, I shall tell you (rep.) — J- ' 

I tell thee, daughter, I sprang not . . — i. 3 

tell Valeria, we are fit to — ;• 3 

I'll tell you excellent news — i- 3 

will the time serve to tell? — i- 6 

if I should tell tliee o'er this thy day's — .i. 9 

the augnrer tells me, we shall — ii. 1 

tell me one thing that I shall ask you — li. I 

that tell, you have good faces — ij. 1 

tell us his deeds (rep.) — !■• 3 

also tell him our noble acceptance .. — ij. 3 

we do, sir; tell iis what hath brought — ii. 3 

tell those friends, they have cliose — .ij. 3 

tell me of corn I this was my speech — in. 1 

grant that, and tell me, in peace — iii- 2 

tell these sad women, 'tis fond — iv. 1 

I'll tell thee what; yet go — \v.'\ 

this lies glowing, I can tell you — iv- ■• 

tell you most strange things — iv. 3 

Jr'ythee, tell my master what — iv. 5 

tell thee, we have a power — ! v. 'i 

I cannot tell how to term it (rep.) — iv. 5 

slaves, I can tell yon news — Jv. 

tell not me: I know, this cannot be .. — iv. B 

1 tell you, he does sit in gold — v. 1 

I tell thee, fellow, the general is my.. — v. 2 

haahcdineil.iyin'st thou tell? — v. 2 

tell me not wherein I seem unnatural — v. 3 

that cannot tell what he would have — v. 3 

go tell the Umla of the city — v. i 

sir, I cannot tell, we must proceed .. — v. i 

but tell the traitor, in the highest.... — v. .^ 
tell me. gmid Brutus (rep. ii. 1) .... Juliin C<p»ar, i. 2 

I cannot tell, what you and other men — i. 2 

tell you what hath proceeded — •• 2 

Casea will tell us what the matter (>ep.) — i. 2 

I rather tell thee what is to be feared — \. 2 

tell me truly what thou think'st — >• "•' 

as well he hanged ns tell the manner — i. 2 

nay. an" I tell you that. I'll ne'er — ;• 2 

I could tell you more news to — '• - 



TEI/L-not staid for. Cinna? tell me..'i//iiiiC<r«ar, I. 3 
but when 1 Icll him, he hates nattcrers — ii. I 

tell me vonr counsels — ii. 1 

IXriu.H linitus, he shall tell them (rep.) — ii. S 

tell tlieiii. that I will not come — ii- 2 

afeanl to tell grcyliLurils the truth .. - ii. 2 

lestl he huiglii-dat.when I tell - n. 2 

to your proceeding bills me tell you this — ii. 2 
ercl can tell thee what thou sliouldst — ii. 4 
so tell them, Piihliiis. And leave us — ill. 1 

tell hiin, so pleii^e him come (.ep.) .. - iii. I 

o'ershot my^elf, to tell you of It — 111.2 

I tell yon that, which you (rep.) — iii. 2 

lot me tell yoii.Cussins - Jv. 3 

tell me true. Then like a Roman (rep.) — Iv. 3 

to tell thee, thou shalt see nie — iv. 3 

tell me what thou notcst — v. 3 

tell Antony. Brutus is ta'en. I'll tell — y. 4 
if it he love indeed, tell me \\ovi..Anlon\i ffClto. 1. 1 

nay, come, tell Iras hers — 1-2 

tell her but a worky-day fortune — 1.2 

who tells me true, though in — 1-2 

seemed to tell them, his remembranco — .1. 5 
I will tell you: the barge she sat in.. — u. 2 
but let ill tidiuL's tell themselves .... — ii- S 

be pleased to tell us, (for this — ii- H 

hang! tell me of that? away! — >\-1 

I'll tell you in your ear — ;;;• 2 

of horse to tell of her approach — .111.6 

to him again: tell him, he wears (I ep.) — 111. II 

I tell vou true; best that you — iv. 6 

your friends, tell them your feats — — iv. S 

they cannot tell; look grimly — iv. in 

go tell him I have slain myself — iv. 11 

our Coesar tells, I am conqueror — iv. 12 

to tell them, that this world — iv. 13 

but I will tell you at some meetcr — v. 1 

Antony did tell me of you, bade — v. 2 

you must tell him (rep.) — v. '2 

Icannot tell. Assuredly, you know me — v. 2 
■when bovs, or women, tell their dreams — v. 2 
lam loath to tell you what I would — v. 2 

I tell yon this: Ca^Bar through Syria — v. 2 

for her physician tells me — y. 2 

but pray vou, tell me, is she sole Cijmbclme, i. 1 

ere 1 coufd tell him, how I would think — 1.4 

I'll tell ihee, on the instant — ■• •"> 

tell thy mistress how the case — .!• •■ 

to tell my lord that I kiss aught but he — .!)• 3 
read, and tell me how far 'tis thither — in. 2 
tell me how Wales was made so happy — iji- 2 

and tell the warlike feats — HI- 3 

tell him wherein you are happy — iii- 4 

when rich ones scarce tell true — in- 

I cannot tell: long is it since — Jv. 2 

to the sea, and tell the fishes — iv- 2 

shall not return to tell what crows .. — v. 3 
you'll never return to tell one. I tell — v. 4 

I'll tell vou, sir, in private — v.!) 

to tell this tale of mine — v- .5 

ambitious tribune, can'st thou tell?. TilusAudmn.i. 2 
tell me, Andronicus, doth this motion — 1.2 

or no, the heavens can tell — .!• 2 

I tell you, lords, you do but plot — 11. I 

womanhood denies my tongue to tell — 11 • 3 

tell me how it is — )!• 4 

so now go tell, an' if thy tongue — .>!• 5 

therefore I tell my sorrows — m- 1 

nor tongue, to tell me who hath 

tell him it was a hand that 

to bid ..Eiieas tell the tale twice — iii- 2 

tell me, did yon see Aaron — iv. 2 

1 tell you, younglings, not — iv. 2 

tell the empress from me (rep.) — iv. 2 

and tell them both the circumstance — iv. 2 

tell him, it is for justice — jv. 3 

tell me, canyon deliver — iv. 3 

and tell me what he says — iv. 3 

tell on thv mind; I say, thy child .. — v. 1 

tell him, Uevenge is come (rep.) — v. 2 

tell them my dreadful name — v. 2 

whiles I go tell my lord the emperor — v. 2 
tell ns. old man, how shall we he .... — v. 2 
ravished? tell, who did the deed?.... — v. 3 

tell us, what Sinon hath — v. 3 

let him tell the tale — ^ v. 3 

tell you what mine authors say . /"enV/es, 1. (Gower) 

tell thee with speechless tongues — >• 1 

who tells us. lite's but breath — i. I 

but, I must tell you, now my thoughts — 1. I 

too near for me to tell it — 1 1 

to tell, the earth is wronged — !• ' 

nor tell the world. Antiochus doth — — 1. 1 

go tell their general, we attend — .1.4 

these fi-hers tell the infirmities — n. I 

why, I'll tell you; this is called (rep) — n. I 

which tells me. in that glory once he was — 11 3 

and further tell him, we desire — ■'• * 

she tells mc here, she'll wed — .11. 5 

'pothcciirv, and tell me how it works.. — 111.2 

1 pi'vtluetellmeiiep. iv. li) — iv. 3 

should I tell mv history, 'twould seem — v. I 

tell thy story; if thine considered — v. 1 

tell me, if llioii ciinst, what this maid is — v. 1 
she would never tell her parentage — — v. 1 

tell mc but that, lor truth can — v. 1 

but tell me now (as in the rest — v. I 

she shall tell thee all — v. I 

tell llelicanus, my Marina, tell him .. — v. I 

awake, and tell lliy dream _ v. 2 

cftsoous. I'll tell tlico why — v. 2 

tell me, mv daughters, (since now ie.n, 1. 1 

I'll tell tliec, tliou dost evil — i- I 

I tell vou all her wealth — 1. 1 

go yoii, and tell my daughter I would .. — i. 4 

pr'ythcc, tell him, so much — i. 4 

who is it that cjin tell mc who I am? — — 1. 4 

I'll tell thee; life and death! — 1.4 

far your eyes may pierce, Icannot tell .. — i. 4 

can tell wliot I can tell (wy-) ••••• ~ '• * 

SC 



— iii. 1 



TEL 



TETiL— thou canst tell, why one's nose Lear, i. 4 

canst tell how an oyster makes — i. i 

I can tell why a snail has a house — i. 4 

pr'ythee, if thou love nie, tell me — ii. -' 

daughters, as thou canst tell in a year .. — ii. 4 

tell the hot duke (re;).) — ii- 4 

nor tell tales of thee to higli-jndijiug — ii. 4 

she will tell who yonr fellow is — iii. 1 

when usurers tell tlieii' gold i'the — iii. 2 

I'll tell thee, friend, I am almost — iii- 4 

true to tell thee, the grief hath — iii. 4 

and tells me, Nero is an angler in — iii. 6 

iiunele, tell me, whether a madman — iii. G 

tell me what more thou know'st — iv. 2 

of thy death and business lean tell — iv. 6 

tell me— but truly— but then speak — v. 1 

tell old tales, and laugh at — v. 3 

I'll tell you straight — v. 3 

he's a good fellow; I can tell you that .. — v. 3 
yet tellrae not, for I have heard. Jionieo <S- Juliet, i. 1 

tell me in sadness, who she is — i. I 

and tell thee? Groan? why, no (.rep.) — i. I 

that live to tell it now — i. I 

now I'll tell you without asking — — i. 2 

faith I can tell her age unto an hour — i. 2 

tell me, daughter Juliet, how stands — i. 3 

could tell a whispering tale in — i. 5 

will'you tell me that? his son was .. — i.h 

I tell you, he that can lay hold - i. 5 

I know not how to tell thee who I am — ii. 2 

liow earnest thou hither, tell me? .... — ii. 2 

to crave, and mj' dear hap to tell .... — ii. 2 

I'll tell thee, ere thou ask (rep.) — ii. 3 

than prince of cats, I can tell you (rep.) — ii. 4 

can any of you tell me where I may — ii. 4 

but first let me tell ye, if ye should . . — ii. 4 

i'faith I will teil her as much — ii 4 

wliat wilt thou tell her, nurse? — ii. 4 

I will tell her, sir, that you do protest — ii. 4 

tell her that Paris is the properer mau — ii. 4 

news be sad, yet tell them merrily .. — ii.5 

sweet, sweet, sweet nurse, tell me .... — ii.5 

tell me, holv friar (rep.) — iii. 3 

I'll tell my lady you will come — iii. 3 

tell her, she shall be married — iii. 4 

I pray you, tell my lord and father.. — iii. 5 

tell him so yourself and see how he.. — iii. 5 

I tell thee what, get thee to — iii. 5 

go in, and tell my lady I am gone .. — iii. o 

tell me not, friar, that thou (rep.) . . — iv. 1 

Ogive me! tell me not of fear — iv. ! 

go tell him of this; I'll have this .... — iv. 2 

took post to tell it you — v. 1 

tell me, good my friend, what torch. . — v. 3 

go, tell the prince, run to the Capulet's — v. 3 

good now, sit down, and tell me Uam]el,\. I 

cannon to the clouds shall tell — i. 1 

moderate haste might tell a hundred .... — i. 2 

I must tell you, you do not understand.. — i. 3 

but tell, why thy canonized bones — i. 4 

to tell the secrets of my prison-house — i. .'i 

good my lord, tell it. No; you will — i. .5 

from the grave, to tell us this — i. 5 

an honest ghost, that let me tell you .... — i. 5 

he tells me, my dear Gertrude — ii. 2 

I must tell you that, before my daughter — ii. 2 

1 will tell you why ; so shall my — ii. 2 

which, I tell you, must show fairly — ii. 2 

I prophecy, he comes to tell me — ii 2 

to tell you. My lord, I have news to tell — ii. 2 

you need not tell us what lord Hamlet. . — iii. 1 

they'll tell all. Will he tell us what — iii. 2 

he'll not shame to tell you what it means — iii. 2 

and tell you what I know — iii. 3 

tell him, his pranks have been too — iii. 4 

tell us where 'tis (rep.) — iv. 2 

tell him, that, by his licence — iv. 4 

tell me, Laertes, why thou art thus — iv. 5 

of them I have much to tell thee — i v. 6 (letter) 

but tell me, why you proceeded not — iv. 7 

that I shall live and tell him to his teeth — iv. 7 

1 tell thee, she is, therefore, make — v. 1 

tell me that, and unyoke (rep.) — v. 1 

and will not tell him of his action of — v. I 

cannot you tell that? every fool can tell — t. I 

and tell her, let her paint an inch thick — v. 1 

pr'ythee, Horatio, tell me one thing — v. I 

I tell thee, churlish priest, a ministering — v- 1 

as 'twere,— I cannot tell how — v. 2 

I could tell you,— but let it be — v. 2 

in pain, to tell my story — v. 2 

so tell him, with the occurrents (7ep.).... — v. 2 

tush, never tell me, I take it much Oihello, i. 1 

I am one sir, that comes to tell you — ;. 1 

my manners tell me, we have — i. 1 

very moment that he bade me tell it — — i. 3 

but teach him how to tell my story — i. 3 

what tidings can you tell me of my lord? — ii. 1 

first, I must tell tliee this - Desdemona . . — ii. 1 

he shall tell me, I am adrunkardl — ii. 3 

I'll tell you what you shall do — ii. 3 

tell lier, there's one Cassio entreats her .. — iii. 1 

wlien shall he come? tell me, Othello .. — iii. 3 

what damned minutes tells he o'er.... — iii. 3 

tell me but this, have you not — iii. 3 

to tell you where he lodges, is to tell you — iii. 4 

tell him, I have moved my lord in his .. — iii. 4 

for I will make him tell the tale — iv. I 

now he importunes him to tell it o'er. ... — iv. 1 

now he tells, how she plucked him to. . . . — iv. 1 

1 cannot tell : those, that do teach - iv. 2 

I tell you, 'tis not very well -- iv. 2 

in conscience think, tell me, Emilia .... ■- iv. 3 

mistress, you must tell us another talc .- — v. 1 

tell my lord and lady what has happed;. — v. I 

but did you ever tell him, she was falser -- v. 2 

TELLER— infects the teller .. Antony ^Cleoimh a, i. 2 

TELLING— by telling of it Tempest, i. 2 

to you in telhng her mind.. Tiro Gen. of Verona, i. 1 
telling them, I know my place . . Twelflti Nighl, ii.5 



[ 754 ] 



TELLING you then, if you be ..Meas./nr Meas. ii. 1 

into telling me of the fashion? !iliicli.4tin, iii. 3 

the wisest aunt, telling the saddust. .W/J. N.'sD. ii. 1 
telling the bushes that thou loult'st.. — iii. 2 
lie is, in telling true, but so so .... Love\L.Losl., i. 1 
my glass, take this for telling true .. — iv. 1 
we will have no telling. Come ou.Taniingnf^h. v. 2 

gardener, for telling me this Knhmiltl. iii. 4 

telling me, the sovereign'st tK\ng....\ Henry IV. i. 3 

with telling me of the moldwarp — iii. 1 

a mess of vinegar; telling us, she had.2He>ir!//r. ii. 1 
breeds no bate with telling of discreet — ii. 4 

foi- telling but her dream? i Henry J' I. i. 2 

vou me with telling of the king? ..Richard J 11. i. 3 
last longer telling than thy kindness — iv. 4 
for telling how I took the blow. . Trnilus ^- Cress- i. 2 
one, tliat telling true under him ....Cnrinlnnns, v. 2 
the praise of it by telling ...inlony ^-ClenptUra, ii. G 
telling you that I am poor of tliaiiks. CviW/iie, ii.3 

cool yourself, telling your haste i^ci ides, i. I 

mar a curious tale in telling it Leur, i. 4 

and telling her fantastical lies O/tieUo, ii. 1 

TELL'ST thou me of black Merry ll'ives, iv. 6 

thou tell'st me, there is murder.. /Is i/ou/.j'Ae it, iii. 5 

unless thou tell'st me where Alt's Well, v. 3 

what tell'st thou me of suijping?Co»ie(/!/ nfErr. iv. 3 

thou tell'st a tale so ill Bieliardll. iii. 2 

yet tell'st thou not, how thou 1 Henry I' I. i. 

if thon tell'st the heavy story iHenryVI. i. 

this thou tell'st me {rep.) Troilus (iCressida, i. 

thou tell'st the world it is not ..Antony Sr Cleo, v. 
more unlike than this thou tell'st ..Cymbeline, v. 
what tell'st thou me of robbing? Othello, i. 

TELL-TALE, nor no breed-bate . . Merry Wives, i. 

lie like tell-tales here? Tun Gen. ofFerona, i. 

we are no tell-t.iles, madam ..Merch. ofVenv'e, v. 
keep no tell-tale to his memory.. ..2Henr!//F. iv. 
hear these tell-tale women rail ..Richard III, iv- 
there is no fleering tell-tale JulixisCiesar, i 

TELLUS-Sigeiatellus (rep.) .... Taminaor Sh. iii. 
no, no, I will rnb Tellus of her weed . . Pericles, iv. 
salt wash, and Tellus' orbed ground .. Hamlet, iii. 2 

TEMPER— you may temper her. TwoGen.ofVer. iii. 2 
once stir my temper; but this ..Meas. for Mens. ii. 2 
poison of that lies in you to temper.. A/7^cA.4do, ii. 2 
but a hot temper leaps over acolti. Mer. of i'enice, i. 2 
you know your father's temper . . Winter's Tale, i v. 3 
to that dauntless temper of his mind.. /V/ac6e//i, iii. 1 
noble temper dost tiiou show in i\\ls.KingJohn, v. 2 
the temper of my knightly sword.. /Jic/iord //. iv. 1 
he holds your temper in a high .. ..IHeiuylV, iii. 1 

whose temper I intend to stain — v. 2 

what man of good temper -would ... ,2Henryl V. ii. 1 
his temper, therefore, must be well .. — iv. 4 
the living Harry had the temper of.. — v. 2 

a fellow of this temper, Kate Henry V. v. 2 

which bears the better temper I Henry J' I. ii. 4 

and temper clay with the blood of. .t Henry f'l. iii. I 

sword, hold th>" temper; heart — v. 2 

few men rightly temper with 3 Henry Fl. iv. 6 

tempers [Co(. -temptsj him to this ..Richard III. i. 1 
hearts of most hard temper melt . . Henry fill. ii. 3 
a gentle, noble temper, a soul as .... — iii. 1 
whom the tempers and the minds. Troilus «§- Cress, i. 3 
his comfortable temper has. . . . Timon of Athens, iii. 4 

you keep a constant temper Coriolanus, v. 2 

a man of such a feeble temper JuliusCcesar, \. 2 

of brother's temper do receive you .. — iii. 1 
reneges all temper; and is become. .rl^i/o"?/ ^-Cleo. i. 1 

patient after the noble temper Cymbeline, ii. 3 

to temper poisous for her — v. 6 

and temper him, with all the art . Titus .indron. iv. 4 

With this hateful liquor temper it — v. 2 

that you lose, to temper clay Lear, i. 4 

keep me in temper; I would not be mad! — i. 6 
temper softened valour's steel. . Romeo ^-Juliet, iii. 1 
to bear a poison, I would temper it .. — iii. 6 
sword of Spain, the ice-brook's temper.. Othello, v. 2 

TEMPERALITY; your pulsidge....2Henn/if'. ii. 4 

TEMPERANCE, stableness Macbeth, iv. 3 

temperance. Temperance was Tempest, ii. 1 

a gentleman of all temperance. .il/eas./orWeas. iii. 2 

ask God for temperance Henryl'III. i. 1 

be reined again to temperance. ..... Coriolanus, iii. 3 

guess what temperance should hQ..Ant.^-Cleo. iii. 11 
temperance, lady! Sir, I will eat no — v. 2 

I doubt not of his temperance Lear, iv. 7 

must acquire and beget a temperance.. Hamlet,\\\. 2 

TEMPE RATE nymphs Tempest, iv. 1 

but temperate as the morn Taming of !^hrew, ii. 1 

amazed, temperate, and furious, loyal.. Mac^e//i, ii. 3 

pause, or be more temperate KingJohn,\\. 1 

such temperate order m so fierce .... — iii. 4 
hath been too cold and temperate.. ..1 Henri/ IF. i. 3 
cool and temperate wind of^grace .... Henry I', iii. 3 
there was a more temperate tire.. Troilus f^ Cress, i. 2 

TEMPE RATELY keep time Hamlet, iii. 4 

he cannot temperately transport. . . . Coriolanus, ii. I 
and temperately proceed to wliat you — iii. 1 
nay, temperately; your promise .... — iii. 3 

TEMPERED— swords are tempered .. Tempest, iii. 3 
lack of tempered judgment niiftv, Meas. for Meas. v. 1 
were tempered with love's %vx\\s. , Love'sL- Lost , iv. 3 
60 righteously tempered as mine ..As you Like it, i. 2 

are better tempered to attend \HenrylV. i. 3 

from the best tempered courage iHenrylV.i. I 

but he, that tempered thee, bade Henry V. ii. 2 

and your brain so tempered . . Troilus Sf Cressida, ii.3 
when was my lord so ungently tempered — v. 3 
thy disposition better tempered.. J?omeo ^Juliet, in. 3 
it IS a poison tempered by himself Hamlet, v. 2 

TEMPERING between ray finger ..iHenryiy. iv. 3 
tempering extremities.. /?o7/jeo ^Juliet, i. 5 (chorus) 

TEMPEST that I bade thee Tempest, i. 2 

when first I raised the tempest — v. 1 

in this last tempest — v. 1 

tempest, I trow, threw this Vfhale.. Merry Wives, ii. 1 
let there come a tempest of provocation — v. 5 
if it prove, tempests are kind .... TwetfthNight, iii. 4 
from the tempest of mine eyes ..Mid.N.IJream,^. 1 



TEM 

TEMPEST on the flood King John, in. 4 

cincture can hold out this tempest . . — iv. 3 
my breath that blew this tempest up — v. I 
blown up by tempest of the soul .... — v. 2 

this lowering tempest Richard II. i. 3 

wehear this fearful tempest sing .... — ii. 1 
such crimson tempest should be .... — iii. 3 

atempest, and ablusterin"day \HenrylV. v. I 

endure this tempest of exclamation ?.2//«?r!//>'.ii. 1 

when tempest of commotion — ii. 4 

in fierce tempest is he coming Henry V. ii. I 

this fell tempest shall not cease .... 2 Henry VI. iii. 1 
from the shore the tempest beat us buck — iii. 2 
summer's corn by tempfest lodged .. — iii. 2 

having 'scaped a tempest — iv. 9 

keep thee from the tempest of the field — v. 1 

the windy tempest of my heart iHenryVI. ii. 5 

and hideous tempests shook down trees — v. 6 
then began the tempest to my soul! Richard III. i. 4 

navy is dispersed by tempest — iv. 4 

this tempest, dashing the garment ..HcHji/r///. i. 1 
make at sea in a stiff tempest as loud — iv. I 
wind and tempest of her frown . . Troilus ^ Cress, i. 3 
seen tempests, when the scolding.. Jii/insCtesar, i. 3 
go through a tempest dropping fire . . — i. 3 
greater storms and tempests .. ..Antony ^-Cleo. i. 2 
dies in tempest of thy angry frown. Titus.indron. i. 2 
to calm this tempest whirling in .... — iv. 2 

howl might stop this tempest Pericles, i. 2 

disgorges such a tempest forth.... — iii, (Gower) 
born in a tempest, wlien mj^ mother — iv. 1 
bears a tempest, which his mortal — iv. 4 (Gower) 
did you not name a tempest, a birth — v. 3 

■will it lend yon 'gainst the tempest Lear, iii. 2 

the tempi'st in my mind doth from my , . — iii. 4 

this tempest "will not give me leave — iii. 4 

for in the very torrent, tempest Hamlet.in.i 

the desperate tempest hath so banged ..Othello, ii. I 

with foul and violent tempest — ii. I 

tempests themselves, high seas — ii. 1 

if after every tempest come such calms — ii. 1 

TEMPEST-TOST-shallbe tempest-tost. TlfacteM, i. 3 
overset thy tempest-tost body ..Romeo ^Juliet, iii. 5 

TEMPESTUtJUS gusts provokes .... 1 Henry I' I. v. 5 
and high tempestuous gusts . . TitnsAndroniciis, v. 3 

TEMPLE— can dwell in such a temple.. Tempest, i. 2 
gorgeous palaces, the solemn temples ., — iv. I 

ne.xt monung at the temple MnchAdo, iii. 3 

ay, in the temple, in the town .Mid.N.'s Dream, ii. 2 
for she his hairy temples then had .. — iv. 1 
for in the temple, by and by with us — iv. 1 
and he did bid us follow to the temple — iv. ! 
the duke is coming from the temple — iv. 2 

Iiang on her temples like Merchant of Venice, i. 1 

first, forward to the temple — ii. 1 

for here we have no temple As you Like it, iii. 3 

to Apollo's temple, Cleomenes.... Winler'sTale, ii. 1 

the temple much surpassing — iii. 1 

the temjjie haunting martlet Macbeth, i. 6 

the lord's anointed temple, and stole . . — ii.3 

blood doth in these temples beat KingJohn, ii. 1 

rounds the mortal templesof aking.J?Wior!( //. iii. 2 

witliin their ehiefest temple 1 Henry VI.u.2 

we sent unto the Temple, to his — ii.5 

adorn his temples with a coronet .... — v. 4 
and rob his temples of the diadem . .ZHenry VI. i. 4 

the tender temples of my child Richard III. iv. 4 

from the dead temples of this bloody — v. 4 

lays his finger on his temple Henry VI II. iii. 2 

worshipped in a baser temple.. Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

throng our large temi^les with Coriolanus, iii. 3 

your temples burned in their cement — iv. B 

and hangs on Dian's temple — v. 3 

deserve to have a temple built you .. — v. 3 

that temple, thy fair mind Cymbeline, ii. 1 

that it would fly from so divine a temple — iv. 2 
and in our temple was he married . . — v. 4 

the temple of virtue was she — v. 5 

and smoke the temple with our sacrifices — v. 5 
and in the temple of great Jupiter . . — v. 5 
thy temples should be planted.. .. TitusAndron. ii. 3 

Diana's temple is not distant far Pericles, iii. 4 

my temple stands in Ephesus — v. 2 

at Ephesus, the temple see — v. 2 (Gower) 

E laced her here in Diana's temple (.rep.) — v. 3 
ut, as this temple waxes, the inward ..Hamlet, i. 3 

rub !iim about tlie temples Othello, iv. I 

TEBIPLE-GARDEN, shtill send .... I Henry VI. ii. 4 

TEMPLE-HALL at two o'clock ....IHenrylV. iii. 3 

within the Temple-hall we were ....1 Henry /7. ii.4 

TEMPORAL royalties he tliinks Tempest, i. 2 

dedicate to nothing temporal . . Meas. for Meas. ii. 2 
the force of temporal power ..Merch. of Venice, iv. 1 

for all the temporal lauds Henry v. \. \ 

is this an hour for temporal affairs?He7iry ;'///. ii. 2 
though it be temporal, yet, if that .. — ii.3 
children temporal fathers do appease. Ci/"ite//«e, v. 4 

TEMPORARY meddler Measure for Measure, v. 1 

TEMPORIZE with the hours Much.4do,i. I 

will not temporize with, my entveatlea. King John, v. 2 
temporize withmv aSection.Troilus^Cressida, iv. 4 

TEMPORIZED. Where is he? Coriolanus, iv. 6 

TEMPORIZER, that canst Winter's Tale, i. 2 

TEMPS— de Dieu; et en pen de temps.. Henry F. iii. 4 
TEMPT— do not temipt my misery. TuelftliKiglil, iii. 4 

if thou darest tempt me further — iv. 1 

nor doth she tempt Measure forMeasure, ii. 2 

tempt not too much the hatred.. Wti. N.'sDream, ii. 2 
devils soonest tempt, resembling.. Lone'sL./.os/, iv. 3 
at mine elbow; and tempts me. Merch. of Venice, ii. 2 
but durst not tempt a nunister .. Winler'sTale, ii. 2 

you tempt him over-much — v. 1 

did he tempt thee so? Comedy of Errors, iv. 2 

persuasion did he tempt thy love? .. — iv. 2 

I charge thee, tempt me not! — iv. 3 

the devil tempts thee here KingJohn, iii. 1 

nor tempt the danger of my true .... — iv. 3 
and tempt us not to bear above our . . — v. 6 

you tempt the fury of my three 1 Henry VI. iv. 2 

would tempt imto a close exploit. , Richard ill. iv. 2 



TEMPT him to anythiiii! niehard III. iv. 

oy, if the ilcviltcmpt thee todogood — iv. 

that ti'mpta must iMiniiin!!ly.r">rVi<5*Crf»rirf.i, iv. 

we will tempt the tViiilty of our powers — iv. 

Bweet luiney tireek, tempt me no more — V. 

iiiid tempt not vet the linishes — v. 

for a wluue, he temnts judgment — v. 

BO nmeh tempt the heavens? JuliutCiPsar^ i, 

tempt llie rliemuy and unpurged air — ii. 

upon your lieulth, tempt me no further — iv. 

wliat.durst nut tempt him? — iv. 

tempt Itim not bo too far AiUnny f^- Cleopnlra^^ i. 

Biiirit tempt ine again to die before l^m; iv. 

tempt not ii desperate man Hmneo ^- Juliet, v. 

what, if it tempt you toward the flootl ..Hamlet, i. 

tile hioat Itinu' tempt you again to l)ed .. — lii. 

tempt him with speed aboard — iv. 

the devil their virtue tempts {rep.) Oltiello, iv. 

TK.Ml'TATION where prayers ...Vcas./or Mens. ii. 

most dangerous is that temptation .. — ii. 

and that temptation without. it/cic/iaK/o/rcHiVc, i. 

temptations have since then been .. Il'inlei's Tale, i. 
TE.MPTKD-thy tempted subject. Tu-of.'iK.o/rir.ii. 

the tempter of the tempted Meas.fny Mens ii. 

I never tempted her with word too. . Much .J'/o, iv. 

vet Samson was so tempted Love's L. Lost, i. 

he had tempted Eve: he can carve too — v. 

might so have tempted him as yon .1 Uenrt/ir. iii. 

how often have I tempted Suffolk's .'iHiuryri.in. 

mine ear hath tempted judgment ..illemyl'l. iii. 

from mv cnhni tempted rae to walk./iiV/inrd ///. 1. 

shall I be tempted of the devil thus? _ iv. 

but be not tempted Troilus ^ Cressida, iv. 

shall I be tempted to infringe Con'olauus, v. 

von durst not so haveteinpted him. JuliusCcrsar, iv. 
TEStPTER or the tempted .Measure/or Measure, ii. 

these women are shrewd tempters....! Henry I' I. i, 

aiul the tempters of the night Cymbeline, ii. 

TEJIPTING— cherries, tempting.Wi((.A'.D, pom. iii. 

tempting kisses Tamins <^Shr€ti\ i. (indue 

in temptingof your patience Henryl'lll. i. 

TENT— the washing often tidesi Tempest, i. 

dwells ten leagues beyoud — ii. 

they will lay out ten to see a dead Indian — ii. 

she is ten times more gentle — iii. 

if tliere be ten, slirink not.. TwoGen. of Verona, iv. 

a dog as big as ten of yours — i v. 

i sit at ten pounds a week Merry tf'ives, i. 

between ten and eleven. Ten (r<rp.).. — ii. 
between nine and ten, say'st thou?.. — iii. 

it hath struck ten o'clock — v. 

sea with the ten commandments. .Ueus./or.Vcaj. i. 

l)ut for ten year together — i i . 

hold out in Vienua ten year — ii. 

ten times louder tlian — ii. 

nay, call us ten times frail — ii. 

nay, it is ten times strange {rep.) .... — v. 

it cost me ten inghts' watchings Much Ado, ii. 

he would have walked ten mile afoot — ii. 
and now will he lie ten nights awake — ii. 

we have ten proofs to one — ii. 

yours is worth ten on't — iii. 

some ten words long (rep.) ....Mid.N.'sDream,v. 
ten times faster Venus' .... Merchant of Venice, ii. 

Iwing ten times undervalued to — ii. 

more fair, ten. thousand times more.. — iii. 
to give ten thousand ducats — iv. 

1 will be bound to pay it ten times o'er — iv. 
thou shouldst have had ten more .. .. — iv. 
within these ten days if that thou ..-is you Like it, i. 
it is ten o'clock; thus may we see.... — ii. 

may be ten times found All's IVetl, i. 

ten years it will make itself ten [KH(.-twoj — i. 
tliere's yet one good in ten (r<?p.).. — i. 3 (sonj 
OS (it as ten groats is for the hand..,. — ii. 

ten o'clock; witliin these three — iv. 

love her ten times more than e'er.. Taming of Sh. ii. 

faced it with a card of ten — ii. 

'tis teit to one it maimed you — v. 

a thousand knees, ten thousand .. fVinter'sTale, iii. 
no ajje between ten and three and twenty — iii. 
ten thousand dollars to our general ..Macbeth, i. 
threescore and ten I can remember . 



vlth ten thousand warlike men {rep.) 
there is ten thousand— Geese, villain? 



iv. 3 
V. 3 



to that drop ten thousand wiry ....King John, \\\. 

train ten thousand English to — iii. 4 

ajewel in a ten times barred-up ....Richard U. i. 1 

but grief makes one hour ten — . i. 3 

we have staid ten daj's, and hardly.. — ii. 4 
in neace. ten thousand bloody crowns — iii. 3 

did keep ten thousand men? — iv. 1 

cheapest of us is ten groats too dear. . — v. 

ten thousand bold Scots \Ilenryll'. i. 1 

darest not stand for ten shillings .... — i. 'i 
threescore and ten miles afoot with me — ii. 'i 

some eight, or ten. Zonndsl — W.i 

ten times more dishonourable ragged — iv. 2 
wherein the fortime of ten thousand — iv. I 
wrought out life, 'twos ten to one.... 2 Hrnry/*'. i. 1 
let it lie ten pound, if thou canst ,... — ii. I 
and ten times better than the nine .. — ii. -1 

'tis not ten years giHie, since — iii. 1 

good ewes may be worth ten pounds — iii. 2 
and here is four Harry ten shillings — iii. 2 

near our person by ten mile — v. 5 

by ten we shall have each Henry V. iii. 7 

l)Ut one ten thousand of those ...... — iv. 3 

and Nym hod ten times more valour — iv. 4 
doth tell me often thousand French — iv. 8 
in these ten thousand they have lost — iv. 8 

ten thousand soldiers with me \ Henry V I . \, 1 

onetoteni lean raw-boned — i. 2 

were almost ten to one — iv. I 

ten thousand French have — iv. 2 

lie neglected, ten to one — v. 4 

I'd set my commandments in 'illenryl'l. i. 3 

by these ten bones, my lords — i. 3 

and ten to one, old Joan had not .... — ii. I 
ten, my lord. Ten is the hour — ii. 4 



TEN— blow ten thousand souls iHenryVt. iii, I 

thereby of ten thousand shames .... — iii. 2 

and liike ten thousand leaves — lii. 2 

thus is po.ir Snitolk ten times — iii. 2 

jiotshul! have l,n hoops — iv. 2 

siuill Ih' lull, n.lLMl lor it tin times.... — iv. 7 
hetler ten thousand hase-horu Cades — iv. H 

let trn thou-aml devils come — iv. 10 

and i-'ive me lint tlie ten meals — iv. 10 

the enemy hatli bejn ten to one ....Sl/cm j/T/. i. 2 

and ten to one is no impeach of — i. 4 

ten times more, than tigers — i. 4 

ten days ago I tlrowned thvse news.. — ii. I 
will cost ten thousand lives to-duy.. — ii. 2 

mine, ten times so mueli — ii. 6 

I, and ten thousand in this luckless — ii. 6 

that would be a ten days' wonder .. — iii. 2 

to steal the single ten — v. 1 

ten to one. j'ou'll meet — v. I 

and ten times more beloved — v. 1 

and some ten voices cried, God..../(irA(jn( ///. iii. 7 

upon the stroke of 'ten — iv. 2 

of ten times double gain of — iv. 4 

my heart is ten times lighter than .. — v. 3 

the substance of ten thousand — v. 3 

forms, ten times more ugly Henryl'lll. i.i 

wish him ten fathom deep — ii. 1 

'tis ten to one, this play can — (epilogue) 

the value of one ten Troilus (j- Cressida, ii. 2 

lend nie ten thousand eyes — ii. 2 

he'd have ten shares — ii. 3 

more than tlie perfection of ten — iii. 2 

cracking ten thousand curbs Coriolamis,'i. I 

or pile ten hills on the Tarpeian .... — iii. 2 
ten thousand harms, more.. .4 «<ony<j|-6'/f</pa(ra, i. 2 

being barbered ten times o'er — ii. 2 

well deserved ten times as — ii. 6 

for in every ten that they make .... — v. 2 

I will lay you ten thousand Cymbeline, i. S 

my ten thousand ducats are yours .. — i. .^ 

above ten thousand meaner — ii.2 

ten, chased by one, are now — v. 3 

ten years are spent, since, first.... jri(Hj.dHrfron. i. I 
ten thousand swelling toads, as many — ii. 3 
that I cannot do ten thousand more — v. I 

ten thousand, worse than ever — v. 3 

more than two tena. to a score Lear,\.\ 

five and twcntj', ten, or five — ii. 4 

ten masts at each make not — iv. 6 

ten times faster glide than .... Romeo (f Juliet, ii. Ii 

hath slain ten thousand Tybalts — iii. 2 

picked out often [iC?/(.-twul thousand .HamW, ii. 2 
we shall obey, were she ten times our.. .. — iii 2 

to whose iiuge spokes ten thousand — iii. 3 

fall ten times treble on that cursed head — v. 1 
nine or ten times I had thought to have.OWieHo, i. 2 
'tis nrit ^'et ten o'clock: our general cast — ii. 3 

TENABLE [AVi<. -treble] in your silence.. /Mmfcf, i. 2 

TENANTS, fnends, and neighbouring.! Hen.l r. iii. 1 
be thy tenants, and thy followers?. /('c/iij-ri ///. iv. 4 
on the complaint o' the tenants .. . . Henry I'lll. i. 2 

I have beeu your tenaut (rep.) Lear, iv. 1 

that frame oiitlives a thousand tenants. Hnm/ef, v. 1 

TENANTIUS-titles by Tenantius ..Cymbeline, i. 1 
our fealty, and Teuantius' right .... — v. 4 

TENANTLESS— long tenantless. TwoGen. o/rer. v. 4 
the graves stood tenantless Hamlet, i. I 

TENCU. Like a tench? 1 Henry//', ii. ! 

TEND— tend to the master's whistle Tempest^ i. 1 

and good disposition 'tend your . Twel/ihKighi, tii. 1 

and tend on no man's business Much.-ido, i. 3 

the summer still doth tend upon.. Mid. N.'t Dr. iii. ! 
Lysander, whereto tendsall tnis?.... — iii. 2 
such rude boys might tend upon ....All'slVelt, iii. 2 

you spirits that tend on mortal Macbtth, i. b 

where doing tends to ill King- Jo/m, iii. I 

who didst tliou leave to tend his .... — v. 6 

tends that thou'dst speak Richard 1 1. '\\. I 

tliey tend the crown — iv. 1 

any thing that tends to lau"hter ....'illemyll'. i. 2 
any choice, tends to God's glory ....XUenryTI. v. I 

do tend tlie profit of the land 'iHenryl'l. i. 1 

vengeance tend upon your steps! .... — iii. 2 
so many lio;:r- luu r I tend my &ock..'^HenryVl.i'\.b 

and good aiiji 1. Ii ml tNue! Richard III. iv. 1 

tend the sam^f -iian-uiiess Troilus^ Crest, ii. 3 

let ue addiess to lend uu — iv. 4 

C'immauds the guard to tend on you — v. 1 

that our request did tend to . . Coriolanus, v. 3 

tend me to-night (.rep.) . ... Antony ^ Cleopatra, i v. 2 
command to your dismission tciMXs ..Cymbeline, ii. 3 

that tends to vice in man — ii. 5 

tend the emperor's person carefully.. T'l/iw.^nd. ii. 2 

knights that teiul upon my father? Lear, ii. I 

[A'h(.] eonunands, tends, service — ii. 4 

so many liave a command to tend you? — ii. 4 

go, your servan ts tend Hamlet, i. 3 

his affections do not tliat way tend — iii. I 

hitherto doth love on fortmie tend — iii. 2 

the associates tend, and every thiug is . . — iv. 3 
in all things nature tends 0///.(to, iii. 3 

TENDANCE-give my tendance ..Hennjllll. iii. 2 
to his love and tendance all sorts.. I'l'/iio'i qf.ith. i. I 

his lobbies till with tendance — i. ! 

teitdance, kissing, to o'ereome Cynitieline.v. 'j 

TENUED-once, thut tended me? Tempest, i. 2 

this youth liuth tended upon me.. Twelfth Mi;h/, y. 1 
bow tended on, but rest uinmcstioncii. All's H'ell,'i'i. 1 
mermaids, tende<l her i' the eyes .Antonyi^ Cleo. ii. 2 

TENDER, and delicate temperance Tempeit, ii. 1 

content tender your own good fortune? — ii. I 
whom once again I teinler to thy hand — iv. I 
your atfections would hecome tender — V. 1 
aff'eetion ehaiits thy tender days. 7'ira6'fii.(i^ fVr.i. 1 

the young and tender wit is — ,,!• I 

knowing that tender youth. TieoGen.ofl'erona, iii. I 

that you tender her — iv. < 

whose life's a« tender to me as - v. 4 

1 tender it here — v. 4 

08 'twere, a tender, a kind oftciHler.J/CTri//F'irM,i. I 



TENDEH-swear I tender i\car]y. .TireifthKighl, v. I 
beneath your soft and tender breeding — v 1 
twenty iieads to tender down ... Meat, for Meas. ii. * 
soft and tender fork of a poor worm — iii. I 

hut that her tender shame «ill not .. — iv. 4 

combating in so temler a hoiiy Much Ado, ii, 3 

if she should make tender of her love — ii. 3 
ii for his tender here I make W/i/. A'.'j Uream, iii. 2 
and tender me, forsooth, affection .. — iii. 2 
I am such u tender ass, if my hair .. — iv. I 
when simplencss and duty tender it — v. ! 

my tender Juvenal? (rfp.) Lorc'tl, l.oit,i. i 

which we may nominate tender .... — i. 2 
may make tender of to thy true .... — ii. I 
than are the tender horns of cockled — iv. 3 
to offices of tender courtesy ,, Merck, of Venice, Iv. I 

ves, here I tender it for him in — iv. I 

brother is but young and tender ..yItyouLikcit, i. ! 
which I tender dearly, thotigh I say — v. 2 

you should tender your supposed aul.AU'i ll'cll, i. 3 
I come to tender it, and my appliance — ii. ! 
and e-xpose those tender limbs of thine — iii. 2 

corrupt the tender honour of — iii. .'> 

will be too chill and tender — iv. .'> 

come short to tender it he:-self — v. 3 

ti imU I \',rll my hounds .Tawinn of Shrew, I (indue) 
p!i : ' : ' ii r fatherly regard .... — ii. I 
]i I luiy hath noriie .... »'iii(ci'<7'n(f, ii. 2 

tliii-. In' r u'er his follies — ii. 3 

hast a lieart BO tender o'er it — ii. 3 

thoughts high for one so tender — iii. 2 

where he is aboard, tender your persons — iv. 3 
she was as tender, as infancy, and grace — v. 3 
some tender money to mo . . Comedy of Errors, iv. 3 
shall not die so raueli we tender him — v. I 

and know how tender 'tis, to love Macbeth, i. 7 

scarf up the tender eye of pitiful .... — iii. 2 
mine eyes, in tender womanish tear8.Ki';i|,'yo/i>i,iv. I 
to mew up your tender kinsman .... — iv. 2 
and the hke tenderof our love we.... — v. 7 
how long shall tender duty make ..Richard II. ii. I 

and prick my tender patience — ii. I 

I tender you my service (rc^.) — ii. 3 

thou makest some tender of my life.l HrurylV. v. 4 
sir John, thy tender lambkin now ..IHeurylv. v. 3 
and tender preser\ ation of our person. /if 7iri/ V. ii. 2 
our kingdom's safety must so tender — ii.2 

I waited on my tender lambs \ Henry VI. i. 2 

my tender years can tell — iii. 1 

doth close Ids tender dying eyes .... — iii. 3 

my tender years, and let us not — iv. 1 

lay them gently on thy tender side .. — v. 3 
a virgin from her tender iniimcy .... — v. 4 

my tender youth was never yet — v. .I 

doth cut my tender feet illenryVl. i i . 4 

I tender so the safety of my liege .... — iii. I 

for their tender loving care — iii. 2 

in protection of their tender ones ..SHenryVl. ii. 2 
as thou didst kill our tender brother — ii. 2 

from whence that tender spray — ii. 6 

whom you seem to have so tender care? — iv. ti 
as well I tender yon. and all of.... Richard III. ii. 4 
the tender prince would fain (rep. iv. !) — iii. 1 
the tender love I bear your grace ... . — iii. 4 
those tender babes, whom envy hath — iv. 1 
old sullen playfellow for tender princes — iv. 1 
ah, my tender babes! my unblown .. — iv. 4 
soever lanced their tender hearts .... — iv. 4 
put in her tender heart the aspiring — iv. i 

seem pleasing to her tender years? .. — iv. 4 
graced the tender temples of my .... — iv. 4 

two tender bedfellows for dust — iv. 4 

I tender not thj' beauteous princely.. — iv. 4 
thy brother tender George be executed — v. 3 
hand I tender my commission .... Henry I'll I. ii. 2 
kind of my obedience I should tender — ii. 3 
you tender more j'our person's honour — ii. 4 
the tender leaves of hope, to-morrow — iii. 2 

subscribes to tender objects — iv. 5 

tender down their services to lord.. Timon ofAlh. i. ! 
whom Fortune's tender arm witli.... — iv. 3 

we tender our loves to him — v.! 

with a respect more tender Coriolanus, iii. 3 

let me my service tender on your lips.Ci/mWi'ne, i. 7 

to the tender of our p.'esent — i. 7 

those duties which you tender to her — ii. 3 
she's a lady so tender of rebukes .... — iii. 5 
preferment shall tender itself to thee — iii. 5 

then why should we be tender — iv. 2 

by apiece of tender air (np.v.i).. — v. 4 (scroll) 

80 tender over his occasions — v. 5 

violent hands upon her tender ..Titus Andron. iii. 2 

alas, the tender boy, in passion — iii. 2 

peace, tender sapling; thou art made — iii. 2 
thy brotlier Marcus tenders on thy lips — v. 3 
some small drops from thy tender spring — v 3 
as soft and tenaer flattery ....Pericles, iv. 4 (Gower) 

nor will you tender less Lear, i. i 

in tile tendiT of a wholesome weal — i. 4 

a tender tiling. Is love a tender.. /foinfo iS- Jii/iW, i. 4 
tliat roni,'li touch with a tender kiss.. — i. 5 

witli tender Juliet matched — i. 5 (chorus) 

which name I tender as dearly as mine — iii. 1 
a (lesperate tender of my child's love — iii. 4 
in her fortune's tender, to answer ..,. — iii. .i 
made many tenders of his aflection .... Hamlet, i. 3 
believe his tenders, as you call them?. ... — i. 3 

ta'en these tenders for true pay — i.3 

tender yourself moredearly — i.3 

you'll tender me a fool — i.3 

thine especial safety, which we do tender — iv. 3 

led by a delicate and tender prince — iv. 4 

80 tender, fair, and happy Othello, i. 2 

TENDEK-nODIED, and the only Bon.Conotaniu, i.3 

TENDERF.D-devotion tenderKf!.rirWn/iAi/,'/i/, v. I 

churlish feet she tendered. . TieoGen. of Verona, iii. 1 

nor to us hath tendered tlie duty ..Cymbeline, iii. .'• 

TENDER-FEELING feet IHenryll.n. I 

TENDER-HEARTED cousinl .... Richard II. iii. 3 
TENDEll-llEFTEU nature shall not give.irar.ii. 4 



TEN 

TENDERING their own worth.. .. Lore's;,. Los/, ii. 1 
subject's love, tendering tlie pteiiious.lllchariil. i. 1 
stooil iilone, tendering my ruin ...AHenryl'l. iv. 7 
his majesty, tendering my pcrson^e.. Ihchard III. i. 1 
tendermg our sister's honour. . Tilus Amlronicna, i. 2 
TENDEKtiY-80 tenderly officious. Wm^ec's Tafe, ii. 3 
'i)eseecl» you, tenderly apply to lier.. — iii. 2 
O good sir, tenderly, ohi Alas, poor.. — iv. 2 
stooping duty tenderly shall sn<rw..ltichard II. iii 3 

so tenderly and entirely loves him Lear, i. 2 

and will as tenderly be led lij' the nose..O;'ic»o, i. 3 
TENDER- ISriNDED does not become ....Lenr.v.3 

TENDERNESS of years Loce'sL, LosMii. 1 

fetch from flowery tenderness?. ;i/fas./or Mims. iii. 1 
the tenderness of her nature became. yil(('s»'w(, iv. 3 

betray its folly, its tenderness Winter^s Tale, i. 2 

blind" itself with foolish tenderness. IHenjy/;'. iii. 2 

these fair rites of tenderness — v. 4 

love, and filial tenderness, shall il-lenryll'.iv. i 

we know your tenderness of heart. /f/Marii III. iii." 
with tenderness and mild compassion — iy. 3 

first received a tenderness Henry VI II. ii. 4 

not of a woman's tenderness to be ..Corwtanus, v. 3 

more tenderness than doth become . . Cymbeline, i. 2 

her delicate tenderness will find itself , . Oilielln, ii. 1 

TES'DER-SMELLING knight.. ..Lore'sL.ios/, v. 2 

TENDER'ST thou that paper to me.Cymbeline, iii 4 

TENDING— give him tending Maclje/h, i. 6 

thoughts tending to ambition {rep.). Richard II, v. 5 
all tending to the good of their ....Cnriolanus, iv. 3 

all tending to the great opinion JutiusCcosar, i. 2 

his speech tending to Ca!sar's glories — iii. 2 

TENEDOS they come Troilus l^Cressida, (prol.l 

TENEMENT, or pelting farm Richard II. ii. 1 

goods, lands, tenements Henry fill. in. 2 

TENFOLD for thy good valour.. /fri/ou!/ * Cleo. iv. 7 
cannot passionate our tenfold grief.. Titus And. iii. 2 

TENNIS-court keeper knows 2 Henry 1 1', ii. 2 

tlie faith they have in tennis Henry I'll!, i. 3 

there falling out at tennis Hamlet, ii. 1 

TENNIS-BALL-stuffed tennis-balls. Wwc/i.-ftZo, iii. 2 
what treasure, uncle? Tennis-balls.... Htn;-!//'. i. 2 

TENNIS-COURT, hath made Pericles, ii. 1 

TiiNOR-the tenor of them doth. TvoGen. of I'er. iii. 1 
receives letters of strange tenor.. Meas. for Mens. iv. 2 
doth warrant the tenor of my hook. .Much.ido, iv. 1 
it is paid according to the tenor.. Jl/er. off'enice, iv. 1 

it bears an angry tenor As you Like it, iv. 3 

is 't not the tenor of his oracle Winter\Tale, v. 1 

my good lord, I guess their tenor ..\Henryiy. iv. 4 

misuse the tenor of thy kinsman's — v. 5 

cold intent, tenor and sut)stance ....'IHenrylV.'w. 1 

performed the tenor of our word — v. 5 

whose tenors and particular effects. . . . Henry V. v. 2 
whose tenor was, — were he evil .... Henry VI 11. i. 2 
the tenor of the proclamation ..TroihuiiCress.W. 1 
letters of the self-same tenor ....JidiusCasar, iv. 3 

their tenor good, I trust Cymbeline, ii. 4 

this is the tenor of the emperor's writ — iii. 7 

though, by the tenor of our strict Perichs, \. 1 

letters brought; the tenor these .. — iii. (Gower) 

TENT— beat you to your tent Meas. for Meas. ii. 1 

for them in their tents Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 

should be presented at our tent to us. . — v. 2 

whip to our tents, as roes run — v. 2 

gone to her tent: please it your — V. 2 

toward the Grecian tents Merchant of Venice, v. 1 

when we bring him to our tents ....Alt'sWell, iii. 6 

other letters, in my tent — iv. 3 

costly apparel, tents, and canopies. T'ammg-o/S/i. ii. 1 
passionate at your highness' tent.. .. King John, ii. 2 
my mother is assailed in our tent.... — iii. 2 
of trenches, tents, of pallisadoes ....1 HenrylV. ii. 3 
lead hira to his tent. Come, my lord — v. 4 

at my tent tlie Douglas is — v. 5 

that i saw in your tent to-niglit Henry V. iii. 7 

fifteen himdred paces of your tent .. — iii. 7 
and from the tents, the armourers — iv. Cchorus) 
from tent to tent, let him cry .... — iv. (chorus) 

all together at my tent — iv. 1 

away all that was in the king's tent — iv. 7 

and bring him to my tent , — iy. 7 

convey me Salisbury into his tent . . 1 Henry VI. \. i 
conduct me to the Dauphin's tent .. — iv. 7 

will go into his highness' tent iHenryVI. v. 1 

manhood stole to Kliesus' tents 3 Henry VI, iv. 2 

with the king here resteth in his tent? — iv. 3 

guard we his royal tent, but to — iv. 3 

this is his tent; and see, wliere stand — iv. 3 
here pitch our tents, even here in . . Richard 111. v. 3 
up with my tent; here will I lie (.rep.) — v. 3 

some i nk and paper in my tent — v. 3 

tlie earl to see me in my tent — v. 3 

in to my tent, tlie air is raw and cold — v. 3 
all my armour laid into my tent? .... — v. 3 
come to my tent and help to arm me — v. 3 

under our tents I'll play — v. 3 

came to my tent and cried— on! victory! — v. 3 
this found I on my tent this morning — v. 3 
many Grecian tents do stand. Troilus <5- Cressida, i. 3 

and in his tent lies mocking — i. 3 

keeps his tent like him — i. 3 

ti-'tity Is this great Agamemnon's tent — i. 3 
voice tlirougii all these lazy tents..., — i. 3 

bL'Lwcen your tents and walls — i. 3 

lord of Greece, from tent to tent .... — i. 3 

ere I come any more to your tents?. . — ii. 1 
'twixt our tents and Troy, to-morrow — ii. I 

the tent that searches to — ii. 2 

where is Achilles? Within his tent.. — ii. 3 
wc saw him at the opening of his tent — ii. 3 

go you and greet him in his tent — ii. 3 

stands i' the entrance of his tent .... — iii. 3 

thy reputation in thy tent — iii. 3 

to come unarmed to my tent — iii. 3 

to invite Hector to his tent — iii. 3 

my famous cousin to our Grecian tents — iv. 5 

warrior, welcome to our tents — iv. 5 

and see me at my tent — iv. .^ 

peersof Greece, go to my tent - iv. 5 



[756 ] 



TENT— at IMenelaus' tent Troilus ^- Cressida, iv. 6 

after we part from Agamemnon's tent — iv. 5 

who keeps the tent now? — v. I 

come, Tliersites, help to trim my tent — v. I 

he goes to Calchas' tent C»ep.) — v. 1 

come, come, enter my tent — v. I 

Achilles see us at our tent — v. 10 

you vile abominable tents — v. 11 

and tent tliemselves with death Coriolamis, i. 9 

so, to our tent: where, ere we (rep.).. — i. H 

you cannot tent yourself: begone — iii. I 

the smiles of knaves tent in my cheeks — iii. 2 

a mile before his tent fall down — v. 1 

a summer's evening, in his tent ..JuliusCcesar, iii. 2 
then in my tent, Cassi us, enlarge .... — iv. 2 

let no man come to our tent — iv. 2 

here in the tent. What, thou speak 'st — iv. 3 
sleep on cushions in my tent (.rep.) .. — iv. 3 
Malic Antony is in your tents, my lord! — v. 3 
are those my tents, where I perceive — v. 3 
briu§ us word unto Octavius tent. ... — v. 4 
within my tent his bones to-night .. — y.b 
at thy tent is now, unloading ..Antony 4 Cleo. iv. ii 

go with me to my tent — v. i 

wound, nor tent to bottom that Cymbeline, iii. 4 

the Thracian tyrant in his tent .. Titus .-Indron. i. 2 
1 shall attend you presently at your tent. . Leai', v. 1 
convey her to my tent: come hither — v. 3 

I'll tent him to the quick Hamlet, ii. 2 

TENTED-action in the tented field .... Othello, i. 3 
TENTH of mankind would hang ..Winter\Tale, i. 2 
also king Lewis the tenth, who was . . Henry /'. i. 2 
tenth of August last, this dreadful . . 1 Henry VI. i. I 
among the people gather up a tenth — v. 6 

lost so many tenths of ours .. Troilus ^Cressida, ii. 2 

less than the tenth part of one — iii. 2 

take thou the destined tenth ., Timon of Athens, v. 5 
and city, we render you the tenth . . Coriolanus, i. 9 

a sixth, a tenth, letting them C'jv)beline, v. 4 

if on tlie tenth day following Lear, i. 1 

TENT- ROYAL of their emperor Henry V. i. 2 

TENURES, and his tricks? Hamlet, v. 1 

TERCEL— falcon as the tercel ..Troilus^ Cress, iii. 2 

TE REUS— the tale of Tereus Cymbeline, ii. 2 

some Tereus hath deflowered thee. TitusAndron. ii. b 

a craftier Tereus hast thou met — ii. 5 

treats of Tereus' treason, and his rape — iv. I 
TERM— the terms of my honour . . Merry Wives, ii. 2 

and in such alligant terras — ii. 2 

the adoption of abominable terms .. — ii. 2 
terms! Names! Amaimon sounds.. — ii.2 
and recollected terms, of these . .. Tu'elfthNighi, ii. 4 
I call thee by the most modest terms — iv. 2 

in terms so bk)Ody — v, 1 

and the terms for common justice. yi/eas./oril/eos, i.l 
were I under the terms of death .... — ii. 4 
hear Margaret term me Borachio ....il/iic/iyit/o, ii. 2 
nor I cannot woo in festival terms . . — v. 2 
and she, in mild terms, begged. M/d.Af.'.i-Dr/am,i v. 1 
for three years'term to live (rep.).. Love' sL. Lost, \. 1 
as, not to see a woman in that term. . — i.l 

chides the dice in honourable terms.. — v. 2 
silken terms precise, three-piled .... — v. 2 
this twelvemonth term from day .... — y. 2 

I like not fair terms Merchant of Venice, i. 3 

in terms of choice I am not solely .. — ii. 1 

in plain terras, gone to heaven — ii.2 

which to term in gross, is an unlessoned — iii. 2 
defended it with any terms of zeal . . — v 1 
in gootl terms, in good set terms .Asynu Like it, ii. 7 
they sleep between term and term .. — iii. 2 

without all terms of pity A IPs IVell, ii. :i 

with twenty such vile terras.. Taming of Shrew, ii. I 

thus in plain terms: your father — ii. I 

(methinks, I so should term them) Winier'sT. iii. 1 
villain than terms can give thee out . . Macbeth, v. 7 
these terms of treason doubled dovin.Rtchard II. i. 1 

on equal terms to give hira — iv. 1 

many holiday and lady terms \ Henry IV. i.3 

speak terms of manage to thy — ii. 3 

in Scotland, as this terra of fear — iv. ! 

of innocency, aud terms of zeal — iv. 3 

I should raeet upon such terms as now — v. 1 

with the happiest terms I have — v. 4 

pardon, and terms of love to all of you? — v. 5 

upon such large terms, and so ^HenrylV, iv. 1 

so, like gross terms, the prince will.. — iv. 4 
(which is four terms, or two actions) — v. I 

I scorn the term ; nor shall my Henry f. ii. 1 

as I may, in fair terms (rep.) — ii. I 

what terms the enemy stood on — iii. 6 

thou liast given me most bitter terras — iv. 8 
vouchsafe to teach a soldier terms .. — v. 2 
we have consented to all terms of ... . — v. 2 
astonished me with thy high terms. . 1 Heiiry VI. i. 2 
Pucelle, whom they term so pure? .. — ii. 1 
among which terms, he used his .... — ii. 5 

other vile and ignominious terms — iv. 1 

salute my king with ruder terms 2 Henry VI. i. 1 

till term of eighteen months — i. 1 (articles) 

invent as bitter-searching terms — iii. 2 

of Somerset, whom he terms a traitor — iv. 9 

be not too rough in terms — iv. 9 

brave me with these saucy terms? .. — iv. 10 

so angry at these abject terms — v. 1 

break out into terras of rage! 3Heiiryl'l.{. i 

to be thus bold in terms — ii.2 

child, as worshipfully he terms it .Richard III. iii. 4 
in plain terras [CoLA'n(. -plainly to her] — iv. 4 

I would not as they terra it Troilus <5 Cress, i. 1 

with terras unsquaied, which, from.. — i. 3 

on terms of bae compulsion? — ii.2 

should enlarge itself to wrathful terms — v. 2 

I cannot tell how to term it Coriolanus, iv. 5 

show themselves, (as we term it) ... . — iv. 5 

to close ill term^ of friendship IvliusC<rsar, iii. I 

sourest points with sweetest ternis.J/i/o)ij/<5-C/eo. ii. 2 

but pay me terms of honour — iii. 4 

as long a term as yet we have Cymbeline, i. 2 

or loss of that, you term her frail.... — i. 5 



TER 



TERM— afterwards in other terms . . Cymbeline, iii. 1 
and mollis aer we terra it mulier .... — v. 5 
and all the bitterest terras that .. Tititi Andron. ii. 3 
besides, the sore terms we stand upon .Pericles, iv. 3 

parted you in good terms? Lear, i. 2 

finds, and dotage terms so — ii. 4 

not stay the siege of loving terras, Homeo ^Juliet, i. I 
and expire the term of a despised life — i. 4 
no better terra than this— thou art . . — iii. 1 
by strong hand, and terms compulsatory.Ha7nZe/, i. I 
for some term to do obsequious sorrow . , — i. 2 
I would not in plain terms, from this.... — i.3 

doomed for a certain term to walk — i. ."i 

the terms of our estate may not endure.. — iii. 3 

a sister driven into desperate terms — iv. 7 

but in my terras of honour, I stand aloof — v. 2 

whether I in any just term am Othello, i. I 

such scurvy and provoking terms against — i. 2 

and in terms like bride and groom ^ ii. 3 

Bucli despite and heavy terms upon her. . — iv. 2 
could not have laid such terras upon his — iv. 2 

TERMAGANT Scot had paid ] Henry IV. v. 4 

termagant [Co/. X«^-arm-gaunt] steed Ant. '^Cleo.i.b 
whipped for o'erdoing Termagant ....Hamlet, iii. 2 

TERMED, sir, the good Tempest, v. 1 

termed them merciless to usl, . Comedy ofErrors. i. 1 

is Beaufort termed a kite? 2 Henry VI. iii. 2 

John Cade, so termed of our supposed — iv. 2 

is termed the civilest place of all — iv. 7 

bv the sign thereof, was termed so.Richard III. iii. 5 
TERMINATIONS, there were no ... . Much.-ldo, ii. 1 
TERRA- the face of terra, tlie soil. Love'sL. Lost, iv. 2 

'tis bona terra, mala gens 2 Henry VI. iv. 7 

TERRAM Salicam mulieres ne Heury V.\.2 

TE RRAS Astra;a reliquit TitusAndron. iv. 3 

TERRE— vial les eaux et la terre ....HenryV.iv.2 
TERRENE— our terrene moon ../Oniony <5-C(eo. iii. 11 
TERRESTRIAL ball Richard II. iii. 2 

five me thy hand, ten'estrial .... Merry Wives, iii. 1 
RRIBLE to enter human hearing . . Tempest, i. 2 
terrible oath, with a swaggering. Twelnh Aight, iii. 4 
were as terrible as her terminations.. /l/iic/i Ado, ii. I 
that so terrible shows in the wreck . . All's Well, iii. 5 
speak what terrible language you will — iv. 1 
Norway himself, with terrible Diinibers, Macbeth, i. 2 
corporal agent to this terrible feat .. — i. 7 
accents terrible, of dire combustion.. — ii. 3 
the affliction of these terrible dreams — iii. 2 

too terrible for the ear — iii. '4 

terrible hell make war upon Richard II. iii. 2 

my name were not so terrible to ....2 Henry IV. i. 2 
how terrible in constant resolution ..Henry V. ii. 4 

lend the eye a terrible aspect — iii. 1 

a terrible and unavoided danger 1 Henry VI. iv. 5 

death's approach is seen so terrible!. 2Henri/ /'L iii. 3 

such terrible impression made Richard III. i. i 

and grow as terrible as storms .... Henry VIII. iii. 1 
town our terrible approach .... Timon of Athens, v. 5 
not fierce and terrible onlj' in strokes. Coriola?ius, i. 4 
bloody, fiery, and most terrible .... Julius Casar, i. 3 
and I the elder and more terrible .... — ii. 2 
all strange snd terrible events.. /Im/owi/ ^C(eo. iv. 13 
on our terrible seas, like egg-shells . Cymbeline, iii. 1 
a terrible childbed liast thou had . ...Pericles, iii. 1 

that terrible despatch of it into your Lear, i. 2 

in the most terrible and nimble stroke .. — iv. 7 
is the reason of this terrible summons?.. 0//iei;o, i. 1 
[Co/.] act shows terrible and grim — v. 2 

TERRIBLY— mine ear most terribly . . Tempest, ii. 1 
an' you should do it too terribly .ViVi. A'. 's Dream, i. 2 
you 11 swear, terribly swear .. Timon ofAthens, iv. 3 

TERRITORIES-my territories. TuoGen. ofVer. iii. 1 
this fair island, and the territories . . KingJohn, i. 1 

the circle of his territories — v. 2 

we banish you our territories Richard II. i. 3 

brave earl, into our territories ...... 1 Henry VI. v. 3 

more than half the Gallian territories — v. 4 

interest in those territories is 2HenryVl. iii, 1 

or banished fair England's territories — iii. 2 
prepared against your territories . . Coriolanus, iv. 5 
aie entered in the Roman territories — iv. 6 
rages upon our territories — iv. 6 

TERRITORY— in our territory . . As you Like it, iii. 1 
i n terest of territory, cares of state Lear, i. 1 

TERROR— be terrors in him Merry Wires, iv. 4 

breed no terror in the youth .... Tuclfth Night, iii. 4 

lent him our terror Measure for Measure, i. 1 

for terror, not to use — i. 4 

their perch, and not their terror .... — ii. 1 
to our perjury to .add more terror. Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

that we make trifles of terrors All's Well, ii. 3 

both joy, aud terror, of good. Winter's Tale, iv. (oho.) 

and hanging, are terrors to me — iv. 2 

thou hate and terror to prosperity.. KingJohn. iii. 4 

with no less terror than Richard II. iii. 3 

divorce this terror from my heart? . . — v. 4 

doth with awe and terror kneel iHmry IV. iv. 4 

said they, is the terror of the French.! Weiiri/rL. i. 4 
and what a terror he had been to .... — ii.2 
strike such terror to his enemies .... — ii. 3 
our nation's terror, and their bloody — iv. 2 

your kingdom's terror and black .... — iv. 7 
all the foul terrors in dark-seated ..illenryVl. iii. 2 

so full of dismal terror was Richard III. i. 4 

wert distraught, and mad with terror? — iii. 5 
and die in terror of thy guiltiness! ., — v. 3 
have struck more terror to tlie soul . . — v. 3 

'tis his aspect of terror Ileiiry VIII, v. 1 

peace, plenty, love, truth, terror .... — t. 4 
the coward turn terror into sport . . Coriolanus, ii. 2 
unaccustomed terror of this night .JuliusCcesar, ii. 1 
there is no terror, Cassius, in your .. — iv. 3 
not apprehension of roaring terrors. Cj/m/ie/wie, iv. 2 
his sons, a terror to our foes .. TilusAndronicus, i. 1 
whose name was once our terror .... — v. 1 
but they shall be the terrors of the earth ..Lear, ii. 4 

it is the cowish terror of his spirit ^ iv. 2 

hath more terror in his \ook.... Romeo ^-Juliet, iii. 3 
together with the terror of the place — iv. 3 

TERTIAN— burning quotidian tertian.L/eH?i/ V. ii. 1 



TER 



[757 ] 



THA 



TERTK^-primo, secinido, teH\o..Tirel/lh Kiifhi,v. I 
TKST— liust Btriuisielv stood lliu test .,Tempps(, iv. 1 

Bonic more test imulool'niy Ateas. ftn-Meiii. i. I 

l)rini; nic to tlie li'st, ami I the irmttcr.;/(im/f/, iii. 4 

inr.i-c'ierl.'iin nii.l more overt test 0(Ac«<i, i 3 

TKSTA.MKNT-let'ciiieliv t(;8tiulient..-/>!/(.M/-i(ic/(,i. 1 
thoM iimke-t 11 t<smment us worlilliiij-'sdo - li. 1 
conferred liv t.stiiment to tliesefiuent .^ll'sll'ell,v.3 

Inirple testument ol'blecdini; w:ir .. Kielmnlll. iii. 3 
)y lestiinieiit line f;iveii to the eliurcli.//rii>!//'. i. I 
B testament of Moble-endiiig love .... — iv.fi 
Salishury to niuke his testument .. ..I Henry t' I. i. 5 

a kind of will, or testament TimonnfAliipm, v. 1 

thec«»ninion8 lieur this tcBtunientV»/it» CtPiar, iii. 2 
the will! the testnnienti they were.. — iii. 2 
lienrkened to iiioir father's testament .Pericles, iv. 3 

TlOSTKD-ofthe tested pold Meat, fhr Mens. ii. 2 

TESTEll I'll have in pouch Me.nj Ififea.i. 3 

hold, there's a tester for thee i Henry If. iii. 2 

TESTEIINED me; in requital .. TwoGen.orycr. i. 1 

TESTIFY your bounty — i. 1 

the note of the fashion to U:st.\(y .Taming af Sh. iv. 3 

can testify she was the first 1 lleiiryl'I. v. 1 

ore alive at this day to testify it . .2 Heitnj I'l. iv. 2 

would testify, to cnrieh mine Ciimbeiine, ii. 2 

as von 2rim looks do testify ....Pericles, i. (Gower) 
hreutli, shiill testify thou livest.Ilomeo^Jnliel, iv. I 

TIOSTI.MiiXlEl) in his own .... Meas./orMeas. iii. 2 

TESTIAIONIIOS nsainst his worth — v. I 

the testimonies whereof lie .Cijmheline, iii. 4 (letter) 

TESTIMUNY— by my testimony.. rieetfihSii;UI, v. 1 
this testimony of your own nex. Meat. for Meas. ii. 4 

for testimony whereof, one in — v. 1 

a prineely testimony, and goodly. ...A/ucA/t-fn, iv. 1 
the testimony of a good conscienec .Love's I,. I,, iv. 2 
there is too great testimony in ..AsyouLike it, iv. 3 
and by otiier warranted testimony . . All's Well, \'\.f> 
'tis done, (and by good testimonvi iVinter's Tale, ii. 3 
the testimony on my part, no ot>ier.. — iii. 2 
vour majesty is pear me testimony . . »ch>i/ r. iv. 8 
if I bring you no sniticient testimony C!/iH6e;iiic, i. 5 
testimony of her foul proceedings 7'iit/;»/lwrfroH. v. 3 
derive from him better testimony Lenv, i. 2 

TESTINESS— i»wer of his testiness..Cviiif)<''iiic, iv. 1 

TESTRiryofmetoo TieeWhNi';hl,\\.Z 

TESTY— like a testy babe.... rirniTfii. nfrerona, i. 2 
lead these testy rivals so astray.il/j'fi. A'.'x Dream, iii. 2 
flnds the testy gentleman so hot ..Richard III. iii. 4 

* proud, violent, testy magistrates Cnriniauus, ii. 1 

crouch under your testy humour?. /u/iiisC'Cinr, iv. 3 
and test v wrath could never be her .... Pericles, i. 1 

TETCUl Y niul wayward was thy . . Richanl III. iv. 4 
and he's ns tetchy to be vfoonii. Troilus ^ CmsiUa, i. 1 
to see it tetchy, and full out Romeo &■ Juliet, i. 3 

TETHEIl may he walk Hamlet, i. 3 

TETTER-fee-simple of the tetter. 7-rmVM«,SC'™- v. I 
which we disdain should tetter us..C'oriVj/a/i».v. iii. 1 
and a most instant tetter barked H'unle', i. 5 

TEVIL— tl>e tcvil and his tanil .\lerr:j II ires, i 1 

as goot a i:entleman as the tevil is .. Henry I', iv. 7 

TEWKSBURY mustard •lllenrijl r. ii. 4 

hold theircoursetowardTewksbury.3Hc»)y;7. v. 3 
in my angry mood at Tewksbury ..Richard III. i. 2 

my poor son, at Tewksbury — i. 3 

in the tield by Tewksbury (j-M. ii. 1) — i. 4 
in my prime of youth at Tewksbury — v. 3 

TEXT— what is your text? (rep.) ..Twelflh Night, i. 5 

you are now out of your text — i. 5 

yea, and text underneath, heredwells..l/jir/i.Mo,v. 1 

for society (saith the text) is Love'sL. loU, iv. 2 

and certes. the text most infallibly .. — iv. 2 

fair as a text B in a copy-book — v. 2 

and approve it with a text. Merchant of Venice, iii. 2 

your exposition on the holy text iHenryll'. iv. 2 

this 'longs the text Pericles, ii. (Gower) 

no more, the text is foolish Lear, iv. 2 

that's a certain text Romeo ^Juliet, iv. I 

THAISA— note it not you. Thaisa? Pericles, ii. 3 

my mother's name was Tliaisa? Thaisa — v. 1 
did wed the fair Thaisa, at Pentapolis — v. 3 

look! Thaisa is recovered _ v 3 

the voice of dead Thaisa. Tliat Thaisa — v. 3 

flesh of thy flesh, Thaisa — v. 3 

embrace him dearThaisa, this is he.... — v. 3 
Thaisa, this prince, the fair-betrothed — v. 3 

THALIARD, you're of onr chamber (rr/!.) _ i. i 
T'haliard, adieu! till Pericles be dead.. — i. 1 
Lord Tlialiard from Antioehus is welcome — i. 3 
how Thaliard came full bent .... — ii. (Gower) 

THAMES— by the Tliames' side ..Merry Wives, iii. 3 
to be llirown into the Thames? (rep.) — iii. 5 
pour in some sack to the Thames water — iii. h 

as I have been into the Thames — iii. 5 

wish himself in the Thames Henry l^. iv. I 

throw them into Thames! 2 Henry I'l. iv. 8 

THANE— earnest thou, worthy thane?... Vac6(r//i, i. 2 
most worthy thane (rep. ii. 2 and ii. 3) — i. 3 

who was the thane, live.'! yet — i. 3 

sons, kinsmen, thanes, and von — i. 4 

our thane is coming- one of my — i. ,^ 

your face, my thane, is as u i>ofik — i. 5 

then fly, false thanes, and mingle — v. 3 

doctor, the thanes fly from mc — v..* 

the noble thanes do bravely in — v. 7 

my thanes and kinsmen, henceforth .. — v. 7 
THANK— give thanks you have lived ..Tempest, i. I 

heavens thank you for't I — i. 2 

I thank thee, master — i. 2 

may thank yourself for this great loss — ii. 1 

thank you ; wondrous heavy — ii. I 

I thank my noble lord — iii. 2 

come with a thought: I thank you .... — iv. 1 

I thank thee for that je-'t — iv. 1 

your bounty, I thank yon .. TtroGen.ofl'eronn, i. 1 

I thank yon, you swinged me — ii. I 

I thank vou gentle servant (rep.) .... — ii. 1 

we thanfe the giver — ii. 4 

I thank thee for thine honest — iii. I 

thank mc for this more than - iii. I 

I tliank you for your own — iv. 2 



Til AN K you for your music. TiroUen. ufVeruntt, i v. 2 

currish thanks is good enough — iv. 4 

she thanks you — iv. 4 

J thiink yoii, madam — iv. 4 

ond she ^liail lliank you for't — iv. 4 

I Ihank ymir-raec - v. 4 

I tliank vou for inv venison Merry Wives, I. I 

[Col. Kill.'] and I iliuiik vou always .. — i. I 

sir I thank yon. Sir I tlnmk yoii — i. I 

no, I tluiiik vou, forsooth, heartily (ic;).) — i. 1 

I thank you as nineli as thou'-'h I did — i. I 

I liad rather walk here, I thank yon — i. I 

I'lleat nothing; I Ihank vou, sir.... — i. 1 

I thank thee for that hiunciiir — i. 3 

tlian I do with her. I thank heaven.. — i. I 

for the \\'hieb she tliatdcs you — ii. 2 

food body, I thnnk thee — ii. 2 

thank you for it: I thank you iitr that — iii. -1 

ne'er made my will yet, I thank heaven — iii. 4 

I thank thee; and I pray thee, once — iii. 4 

I thank your worship — iv. 5 

I thank thee: lead me on Tarlfih Xighi, i. 2 

I thank j'ou. Here comes the count.. — i. 4 

I thank you for 3*our pains — i. 5 

I thank my stars, lam happy — ii. .'j 

Jove, I tliank thee — ii. .^i 

but thanks, atitl thanks, and ever thanks — iii. 3 

both tlianke and use Meanire fin- Measure, i. I 

I tliank you: fare you well ((rep. i. 3) — i. I 

receive his punishment in tlianks.. .. — i. .'> 

I humbly thank you {rep. ii. I & iii. 1) — i. fj 

ay sir, wnom, I tliank heaven — ii. 1 

I thank your worship for it (7'ep.).... — ii. 1 

thank you, good Pompey — ii. I 

most holy sir, I thank you — iii. I 

thanks, dear Isabel — iii. 1 

I thank you for this comfort — iii. 1 

more than thanks and good fortune — iv. 2 

I thank thee, Varrins; thou luut .... — iv. 5 

but yield you forth to public thanks — v. I 

tlianks, good friend Escalus — v. I 

thanks, provost, for thy care — v. 1 

I thank God, and my cold blood Much Ado, i. 1 

I thank yon; I am not of many (;v7».) — i. I 

a woman conceived me, I thank her — i. 1 

I likewise give her most humble thanks — i. 1 

I thank it, poor fool, it keeps on .... — ii. 1 

fair Beatrice, I thank you — ii. 3 

for those thanks, than you take (rep.) — ii. 3 

is as e.isy as thanks — ii. 3 

why, give God thanks, and make no — iii. 3 

and thank (Jod you arerid of a Imave — iii. 3 

.yes, I thank God, I am as honest .... — iii. !> 

I'faith, I thank him; he hath bid me — v. 1 

your many courtesies, I thank you (rep.) — v. 1 

I thank thee for tliy care (rp/j.) — v. 1 

thanks to you all, and leave us — v. 3 

thanks, good Egens Mid.K.'snrcam,i. 1 

if 1 have thanks, it is a dear expence — i. I 

mine ear. I thank it, brougtit me .. ., — iii. 2 

to give them tlianks for nothing .... — v. I 

thanks courteous wall — v. 1 

I thank thee for thy sunny beams trep ) — v. 1 
thank God, I have as little patience . .Lore's L.L.i. 2 

I tliank your worship — iii. 1 

I thank my beautj', I amfair — iv. 1 

and thank you too; for society — iv. 2 

nay, I have verses too, I thank Biron — v. 2 

I thank him, is my dear — v. 2 

thanks,'Pompey, I had done great thanks — v. 2 

i thank you, gracious lords, for all .. — v. 2 

coming so short of thanks for my — v. 2 

shall I say, I thank you, gentle wife? — v. 2 

I tliank my fortune for it Merchant of Vt nice, i. 1 

thanks, i'faith; for silence is only.... — i. 1 

even for that I thank you — ii. 1 

I thank God, I thank God: is it true? — iii. 1 

I thank thee, good Tubal; good news — iii. I 

I thank your lordsliip (7T/).) — !!}• -^ 

I thank you for yonr wish, and am well — iii. 4 

would give yon little thanks for that — iv. 1 

I thank thee, Jew, for teaching me .. — iv. 1 
Charles, I thank tliee for thy love. .4.< i/"" Like it, i. 1 

let ns go thank him, and encourage Him — i. 2 

can I not say, 1 thank you? (rf/).).... — i. 2 

I thank it; more, I pr'ythee — ii. .'> 

if ever I thank any man, I'll thank 3'ou — ii. 5 

when a man thanks me heartily .... — ii. 5 

he renders me the beggarly thanks .. — ii. 5 

but I give heaven thanks, and make no — ii. 5 

I tliaiik ye, and he blessed (rc;i.) .... — ii. 7 

fjieak to thank you for myself — ii. 7 

I thank you for your company (rep.) — iii. 2 

and I thank (iod (>e;j. v. 1) — iii. 2 

tliongh I thank the gods, I am foul .. — iii. 3 

and thank heaven; fasting — iii, .5 

which never returns us thanks AlftWell, i 1 

my thanks and duly are vour majesty's — i. 2 

my son's no dearer. Thank your majesty — i. 2 

I thank you fiir your honest care — ii. 3 

we thank yon, maiden; but may not — ii- 1 

such thanks I give, as one near — ii. I 

reai> thanks for their reward — ii. 1 

thank heaven for you — ii. 3 

thanks, sir; all the rest is mute — ii. 3 

but thanks be given, she's very — ii. 4 

I thank you, and will stay — iii..'. 

I hnmbly thank yon lirp.iv. 3) — iii. 5 

to thank hotli heaven and mel — iv. 2 

but I con him no thanks lor it — iv. 3 

nothing, but let him have thanks.... — iv. 3 

and answer, thai. ks: I ilulv am — iv. 1 

hut I thank my (iorl. it holilsyet.... — iv. i 

rather make von tba?ik your pains .. — v. I 

so, I thank thee; wait on mc home .. — v. 3 
we thunk ymir honour.. TnminK nf Shreif,\ (indue.) 
I thank tliee; thou shult not lose — 2 (indue.) 

thou'dst thank me but a little — J. 2 

a thousand thanks, signior (Ji-cmio .. — ii. I 

I'll give her thanks, us though she bid — ii. I 



TUANK— and thank you both.ramirig-o/S/ircM', ii. I 

I thank you for your pains — iii. 2 

honest company. I thank you all .... — iii. 2 

will vou give thanks, sweet Kate? — iv. 1 

this Kindness merits thanks iv. 3 

noorc-t service is repaid with thanks — iv. 3 

1 thank you, sir (rf";). iv. 4) — iv. 3 

I thank my good father, I am able .. — v. I 

I thank thee for that gird — v. 2 

with our thanks: and yet we .. ..Win'rr'tTalc'i.i 

with one we thank you, many thousands — i, 2 

stay your thanks awhile (rpp.) — i. 2 

I'll blush vou thanks _ iv. 3 

now he tlmnks the old sheiiherd — v. 2 

I thank him, I bare home . ... Comedy of Errors, W. 1 

well, sir, I thank you. Thank me, sir? — ii. 2 

my bond, and thank you too — iv. I 

give me thanks for kindnesses — iv. 3 

lint he, I thank him, gnawed in — v. 1 

much thanks for my good cheer — v. 1 

from our royal master thanks Marhrth, i. 3 

thanks for yonr pains: do you not — i. 3 

I thank you, gentlemen — i. 3 

proiiortion both of thanks and payment — i. 4 

and thank us for yftur trouble — i.ti 

tlianks, sir; the like to you! — ii. 1 

tlianks to your majesty — iii. 4 

with their hearts' tlianks — iii. t 

thanks for that — iii. 4 

for thy good caution, thanks — iv. I 

I thank you, doctor — iv. 3 

so thanks to all at once — v. 7 

1 give heaven tlianks, I was not like.. Kins' ./o/iii, i. I 

with all my heart I thank thee for .. _ i. I 

<) take his mother's thanks (rrp.).... — ii. 1 

OheavenI I thank you, Hubert .... — iv. 1 

that would give vou thanks — v. 7 

wo thank you both Richard 11.]. 1 

I thank my liege, that, in regard .... — i. 3 

with, thanks my countrymen — i. 4 

I thank thee, gentle Percy (rep. v. 6) — ii. 3 

is yet but unfelt thanks — ii. 3 

evermore thanks, the exchequer .... — ii.3 

thanks, gentle uncle — iii. 1 

and I tliank thee, king, for thy — iv. I 

I thank yon, countrymen — v. 2 

thanks, noble peer — v. 5 

Exton, T thank thee not — v. 6 

to thank God on (rep.) I Henry I T. iii. 3 

I enn lint thank you ^ iv. 1 

1 thank him, that he cuts — v. 2 

I'll thank myself for doing these .... — v. 4 
you may thank the unquiet time.. ..2nirnri/7r. i. 2 

yea; I thank your pretty sweet wit.. — i. 2 

I thank yon, good sir John — ii. 1 

thy father is to give me thanks for it — ii. 4 

I thank you; I must a dozen mile .. — iii. 2 

and I thank thee — iv. 3 

I thank thee with all my heart — v. 1 

I tliank thee: the knave will stick .. — v. 3 
sure, we thank you, my learned lord . . Henry J', i. 2 

and your pains, we thank you for .. — i. 2 

deliver so: thanks to your highness — iii. 6 

1 thank you: God be with yo^i! — iv. I 

upon his knees, a thousand thanks .. — iv. 4 

thanks, good my countryman — iv. 7 

foil thank love for my blindness .... — v. 2 

return great thanks 1 Henry 11. ii . 2 

thanks, gentle sir (rep. ii! 2) — ii. 4 

regnerdoned with so much as thanks — iii. 4 

thanks, Reignier, happy for so sweet — v. 3 

I give thee kin"ly thanks — v. 3 

we thank you all (rep.) 2 Henry I'l. i. 1 

thanks, uncle AVinchester — i. I 

I humbly thank your royal majesty — i. 3 

I thank God, and saint Alban — ii. 1 

we thank you, lords — ii. 2 

I thank you all (prp. V. 1) — ii.3 

fellow, thank God, and the good wine — ii. 3 

I thank thee, Margaret — iii. 2 

I thank you, good people — iv. 2 

sir, I thank God, Inave been so well — iv. 2 

my vows of thanks and praise! — iv. 9 

with thanks, and pardon to you all.. — iv. 9 

I thank thee, Clifford — v. 1 

I thank you, Richard — v. 3 

thanks, gentle Norfolk, stay by me.. 3;f<-jii!/r/. i. 1 

my leave, with many thousand thanks — iii. 2 

my humble thanks (rfp. iii. 3) — iii. 2 

I agree, and thank you for your motion — iii. 3 

chiefly therefore I tliank God, and thee — iv. ft 

thanks, good Montgomery (icp.) .... — iv. 7 

thanks, gentle Somerset (rep.) — v. 4 

with paj- and thanks, and let s away — v. .'1 

thanks, noble Clarence (rep.) — v. 7 

to give them thanks that were Richard III. i. I 

let him thank me, that hoi]) — i. 2 

1 thank God for my humility — ii. I 

1 thank you, good my lord (rep.) ... — iii. I 

I thank you, gentle uncle — iii. 1 

inijiht thank you as you call me .... — iii. 1 

1 thank your honour — iii. 2 

I thank thee, good sir John — iii. 2 

I thank his grace, I know he loves .. — iii. 4 

thanks, gentle citizens, and friends.. — iii. 7 

\ our love deserves my thanks — iii. 7 

kind sisler. thanks — iv. I 

how do I thank thee, that this carnal — iv. 4 

I thank tiod, mv father, and yourself — iv. 4 

my heart's love, I do thank thee for it — iv. 4 

I (hank your grace, healthful Hentyl'lll. i. 1 

thanks you fur this great care — i. 2 

and <j;ive thanks to you that choked it — i. 2 

tliank your majesty — i. 2 

and thank your lordship — i. 4 

a bowl may hold my thanks _ i. 4 

I pay them a thousand thanks — i. I 

thanks, my pood lord chamberlain ., — ii 2 

untl thank tiie holy conclave fi.ir .... — ii. 2 

vuuclibafe to B|>eak my thanks — ii.3 



TIIANK-but with thanks to God . . Henry I III. ii. 4 

here lire some will thank you — iii. 1 

my lords, I thank yo>i both for your — iii. 1 
nothing reiuler but ftllegiant thanks — iii. 2 

nnd. no doubt, shull tliank vou — iii. 2 

cured me, 1 Immhly thank liis grace — iii. 2 
I thank you, sir; had I not kuown ,. — iv. 1 

I thank you, honest lord — iv. 2 

who returned her thanks in — v. 1 

I humbly thank your highness — v. 1 

I thank you, you are always my .... — v. 2 

in daily thanks, that gave us — v. 2 

thank you, good hird archbishop .... — v. 4 

I tliauk ye heartily (rc/i.) — V. 4 

slie must thank ye, she will be sick else — v. 4 
but small thanks for my labour.. 7'j-OT'iiM ■^■Cress. i. 1 

thank the heavens, lord, thou art — ii. 3 

I thank you for that; if my lord .... — iii. 2 
often have you thanks therefore .... — iii. 3 
and he replies, thanks, Agamemnon — iii. 3 
save tile thanks this prince expects .. — iv. 4 

I thank thee, Ilect.ir ^rc/).) — iv. .0 

by Mars his gamitlet, tlianksl — iv 5 

thanks, and good-night, to the Greeks' — v. 1 

accept distracted thanks — v. 2 

I thank your lordship (r/?p.) .. Tivionof Alhens, i. 1 
doubled, with thanks, and service.... — ;• 2 
too proud to give thanks to the gods — i. 2 

own device; I am to thank you for it — i. 2 

with more than common thanks I will — i. 2 

I thank you, sir. Here's my lord — iii. 1 

how sliail I thank him, think'st thou? — iii. 2 

the gods require o\ir thanks — iii. 6 

aroot,— dear thanks I — iv. 3 

yet thanks I must you con — i\'. 3 

I thank them; and would send them — v. 2 

thou shalt be met with thanks — v. 2 

hail, noble Marcins I Thanks Coriolanus,\. I 

I thank your ladyship — i. 3 

a eertaimiumher, though thanks to all — i. 6 
we thank the gods, our Rome hath .. — i. 9 
I thank you, general; but cannot.... — i. 9 

howheit, I thank you: I mean to .... — i. 9 
take my cap, Jiipiter, and I thank thee — '■• ' 
he is wounded, I thank the gods for't — ii. 1 
both to thank, and to remember .... — ii. 2 
I tliank you for your voices, thank you — ii. 3 
thank you, sir, farewell. O world. ... — iv. 4 
at table, and their thanks at end .... — iv. 7 
must have that thanks from Rome .. — v. 1 

treat cause to give great thanks — v. 4 
thank you for your pains. ....... JuUusCcFsary ii . 2 

now, Brutus, thank yourself. — v. 1 

I thank thee, Brutus, that thou hast — v. 5 

welcome to Rome. Thank you..yli!(o)ij/ fyCtea, ii. 2 
I must thank him only, lest my .... — ii. 2 

humbly, sir, I thank you — ii. 2 

well studied for a liberal thanks .... — ii. H 
and thanks to you, that called me . . — ii. 6 
thanks to my lord: the Jove of power — iii. 4 
the hangman thank for being yare .. — iii. 1 1 
I thank you all; for donghty-handed — iv. 8 

make her thanks bless thee — iv. 8 

good fi-iends, and have my thanks for all — iv. 12 
as I will kneel to him with thanks .. — v. 2 

I thank j'ou, sir: know you — v. 2 

farewell, and thanks: now, Iras — v. 2 

thank jour higlmess {rep. v. 5) Cymbeline, i. 2 

this worthy signior, I thank him .... — i. .'i 

thanks, good sir; you are kindly — i. 7 

thanks, fairest lady (r*?p.) — i. 7 

my humble thanks. I had almost forgot — i. 7 

I tliank you for your pains — i. 7 

the thanks I give, is telling you {rep.") — ii. 3 
sir, CI thank her,! that: she stripped — ii. 4 
thus defied, I thank thee for myself — iii. 1 

to the best! Amen: I thank thee — iii. 4 

thanks, royal sir: my emperor hath — iii. 5 

and thanks to stay and eat it — iii. 6 

to the lark, less welcome. Thanks, sir — iii. 6 
thank the man that gave them thee — iv. 2 

where, (thank the gods!) they grow — iv. 2 
I thank you: by yon bush? (rep. iv. 3) — iv. 2 
tlianks, Jupiter! The marble pavement — v. 4 

ne'er thank thy master; live — v. .5 

1 thank you all, and here disTniss. TitusAniirori. i. 1 

thanks, gentle tribune (;ep.) — i. 2 

and thanks, to men of noble minds.. — i. 2 
I give tliee thanks in part of thy deserts — i. 2 

thanks, noble Titus, father of my life! — i. 2 

thanks, sweet Lavinia: Romans — i. 2 

I tluink your majesty, and her, my lord — i. 2 
I humbly thank him, and I thank you — v. I 
thanks, gentle Romans; may I govern — v. 3 
Antiocluis, I thank thee, who hath .... Pericles, i. 1 

1 ihank thee for it (rp/). li. 1) — i. 2 

I thank you, sir. Hark yoti, my friend — ii. I 

tlianks, fortune, yet, that after all — ii. 1 

we thank your grace. Yet pause a while — ii. 3 
I thank him. "Wishing it so much i_rep.) — ii. 3 
he thanks your grace; names himself. . — ii. 3 
thanks, gentlemen, to all; all have done — ii. 3 
I thank thee; Manner, say what coast — iii. 1 
madam, my thanks and prayers ...... — iii. 1 | 

my recompense is thanks, tliat's all .. — iii. 4 . 
thanks, sweet madam; is this wind.. .. — iv. 1 j 

tliank the holy gods, as loud as thunder — v. 1 
and whom to thank, besides the gods ,. — v. 3 
I thank thee, fellow; thou servest me ....Lear, i. 4 

now my friendly knave, I thank thee .. — i. 4 

snail deserve our thanks, bringing — ii. 1 

for him I thank your grace — ii. 1 I 

you shall find some that will thank you — iii. 1 
Gloster, I live to thank thee for the love — iv. 2 

I thank you, sir: that's all (rep.) — iv. 6 

hearty thanks: the bounty and benison — iv. 6 
pray you undo this button : thank you, sir! — v. 3 
wily then I thank you all (rep.)..Knuieo ^Juliet, i. 5 
shall thank thee, daugliter, for us {rep.) — ii. 6 
she gives you thanks irep.) — iii. 5 1 



THANK you, and I thank you not.liomeo^-Jul. iii. 5 
thank me no thankings, nor proud .. — iii. 5 
for this relief much thanks: 'tis bitter. . Jiamfc/, i. 1 
this aftairiilong: for all, our thanks .... — i. 2 
shall receive such thanks as fits a king's — ii. 2 

thanks, Ko.^eiicrantz, and gentle — ii. 2 

meantime, wo thank you tor yoin* — ii. 2 

I am even poor in thanks; but I thank.. — ii. 2 

my thanks are too dear, a halfpenny — ii. 2 

I humbly thank you (rep. iv. 4 and v. 2) — iii. 1 

hast ta'en with equal thanks — iii. 2 

thanks, dear my lord. O my offence .... — iii. 3 
and so I thank you for your good counsel — iv. 5 

I thank you: keep the door — iv. 5 

I thank your lordship, 'tis very hot — v. 2 

where should we have our thanks? — v. 2 

the ability of life to thank you — v. 2 

humbly'' I thank your grace: here is .... Othello, i. 3 
thanks to the valiant of this warlike isle — ii. 1 

I thank you, valiant Cassio — ii. 1 

make the JMoor thank nie, love me — ii. 1 

1 lunnbl3' thank you for't: I never knew — iii. 1 

sir, I thank you: you do love my lord — iii. 3 

1 thank you for this profit — iii. 3 

not with vain thanks, but with acceptance — iii 3 
I humbly thank your ladysliip (rep. iv. 3) — iii. 4 
I thank vou; iiow does lieutenant Cassio? — iv. I 

THANKED— he is to be thanked.. Tu-elfi/iMf;/'!, iii- 4 

which, God be tlianked, hurt not AJnch Alio, v. 1 

and, God be thanked, well to Wye.iler. off'enice, ii. 2 
I thank you,madam; give welcome.. — v. 1 

find yourself to be well thanked AW s 11' ell, v. 1 

now, Lord be thanked for ..Taming of Sh. 2 (indue.) 

but, heaven be thanked, it is King Jolm, v. 1 

God be thanked for these rebels.... 1 Henry 1 1', iii. 3 
but God be thanked for prevention.... HennjV. ii. 2 
God he thanked, there is no need . . RiVAarrf III. iii. 7 

till I have thanked you Timon of Alliens, i. 1 

she thanked me; and bade me, if I had .. O/AtHo, i. 3 

THANKFUL-I will be thankful. Two (?f)..o/r«-. ii. 4 
and Jove make me thankful!.... TwelflliNiglil, iii. 4 
1 will live to be th.ankful to thee for't — iv. 2 
a most thankful and reverend youth. J1/mc/i Ado, v. 1 

that we thankful should be Love'sL. Lost, iv. 2 

I am thankful for it — iv. 2 

if the man will be thankful As youtike it , iii. 2 

generally thankful. I would have said.^Ki's IVell, ii. 3 

yet am I thankful; if my heart — iv. 3 

for the which I shall continue thankful — v. 1 
and thankful for good turns . . Taming of Slirew, ii. 1 

to be more thankful to thee iV inter's 'I'ule, iv. 1 

sir, I am thankful to you Henry I' lU. i. 1 

and ye shall find me thankful — v. 4 

may give you thankful sacrifice! .... Coriolnnus, i. 6 
gi\e the gods a thankful sacrifice. ^)i'n/!,i/ ^ Cleo. i. 2 

I will most thankful be ' Tilns .■indronicns, i. 2 

by your fancy's thankful boon. Pericles, v. 2 (Gower) 

but thankful that you have Romeo 4 Juliet, iii. 5 

thankful e\'en for hate, that is meant — iii. 5 

THANKFULLY rest debtor for.Merdi. of Venice, i. 1 
this ring I do accept most thankfullv — iv. 2 
most tliankf ully, m.y lord (rep. v. i ) Timon ofAtli. i. 2 
by the rest, and takes it thankfully. . Cyjnlieline, i. 7 

might be used more thankfully — i. 7 

graciously, I will thankfully receive ..Pericles, iv, (j 
take it thankfully Lear, iii. & 

THANKFULNESS-nobletlmnkfulnessM,ic/i.J.to,iv.l 
have great cause of thankfulness ....Henry I', ii. 2 
aheart replete with thankfulness! ..iHeniyl'l. i. 1 
society with thankfulness. 7"/mo;iq/'.-l(/i. iii. ii (grace) 

next, accept my thankfulness Corinlanns, v. 4 

take from my heart all thankfulness! Peiicles, iii. 3 

THANKINGS to you both.. Measure fur Measure, v. I 
the charge, and thanking, sliall be . . All's Hell, iii. b 

graced the thankings of a king Cymbeline, v. 5 

thank me no thankings, nor ..Borneo^ Juliet, iii. 5 

THANKLESS natures— (.) abhorred. 7Vmon ofAili. v. 1 
shed for my tiiankless country . . ..Coriolanus, iv. 6 
it is to have a thankless child! Lear, i. 4 

THANKSGIVING before meat . . Meas. for Meas- i. 1 
I cannot stay thanksgiving Love sL.Losl, ii. 1 

TlIARBOROUGH-grace's tharborough — i. 1 

THARSUS— Tharsus intend my travel .. Pen'des, i. 2 
Tharsus, o'er which I have ffovernment — i. 4 
the misery of Tharsus may Be theirs .... — i. 4 

is still at Tharsus t?f;i.') — ii. (Gower) 

we aie near Tharsus. Thither, gentle .. — iii. 1 
O, make for Tharsus; there will I visit.. — iii. 1 
at Tharsus, and by Cleon (rep. v. 3) — iv. (Gower) 
that think the petty wrens of Tharsus.. — iv. 4 
brought this king to Tharsus (rep.) — iv. 4 (Gower) 

my father, did in Tharsus leave me — v. I 

biu'ied at Tharsus, and found at sea again! — v. 1 
not dead at Tharsus, as slie should have. . — v. 1 
my purpose was for Tharsus — v. 2 

TH ASSOS send his body JuliusCasar, v. 3 

THATCH— upon our houses' thatch . . Henry I', iii. 6 
thatch your poor thin roofs . . Timon of Alliens, iv. 3 

THATCHED-thatchedwith stover ..Tempest, iv. 1 
then your visor should be thatched ..MucliAdo, ii. 1 
than Jove in a thatched housel ..AsyouLilie it, iii. 3 

THAW— dissolution and thaw Merry Hives, iii. 5 

that I was duller than a great thaw. . Much Ado, ii. 1 
fire scarce thaws the icicles. . Merclianl of I'enice, ii. 1 
come by a fire to thaw me .... Tmning of Shrew, iv. 1 
doth thaw the consecrated . . Timon of Athens, iv. 3 
thaw, and resolve itself into a dew! .... Hamlet, i. 2 

THxVWED— my love is thawed. . Tu-oGen. of I'er. ii. 4 
be thawed from the true quality.. ./u/msCi^.-ar, iii. I 

TH A.W ING cold fear Henry !■: iv. (chorus) 

THEATRE— and universal theatre. ^» youLike it, ii. 7 
as in a theatre, whence they gape.... KingJohn, ii. 2 

as in a theatre, the eyes of men lUchard II. v. 2 

to do the players in the theatre.. Troilus 4 Cress, i. 2 
that done, reijair to Pompey's theatre — i. 3 
o'erweigh a whole theatre of others . . Hamlet, iii. 2 

THEBAN-witli thissame learned Theban. Lear, in. i 

THEBES-from Thebes came last. . .Ui'd.A'.'sD;-. v. I 

THEFT— his tliefts wei-e too open . . .Merry ivives. i. a 
the suspicious head of theft Love'sL. Losl, iv. 3 



THEFT— there's honour in the theft ..All'siVell, ii. 1 
in debt, and theft, anda sergeant. Coinet/i/ oflirr. iv. 2 
there's warrant in that theft which ..htacheih, ii. 3 

for thy theft hath already 1 Henry 1 1', iv. 2 

nseth it to patronage his theft 1 Henrijl'l. iii. 1 

theft most base Troilus l^Cresiidu, ii. 2 

to use violent thefts, and rob — v. 3 

for tliere is boinidless theft in . Timon ofAlhens, iv. 3 
rough power have unchecked theft . . — iv. 3 
a concealment worse than a theft .. Coriolanus, i. I) 

wdien life itself yields to the theft Lear, iv. B 

'scape detectinc, I will pay the theft .. Hnmlei, iii. i 

THEAIE— have just our theme of woe.. Tempest, ii. 1 

well, I am your theme , Merry Wives, v. S 

ay, that's the theme Twelfth Nii^ht, ii. 4 

and this weak and idle theme ..Mid.iW'sbr. (epil.) 

part of his theme, but nothing H'inter's 2'ale, i. 2 

is colder than that theme — v. 1 

she moves me for her theme. . Comedy qf Errors, ii. 2 

it was the subject of my theme — v. 1 

of the imperial theme: I thank you Macbeth, i. 3 

the theme of honour's tongue lllenrt/l I', i 1 

in a theme so bloody-faced aa this ..'iHein'iil V. i. 3 

it is a theme as fluent as Henry I', iii. 7 

wi th your theme, I could o'ermount./Jfiiri/ (-7/7. ii. 3 
is a theme of honour and renown. Troilus tf Cress, i i. 2 

and theme of all our scorns! — iv. 5 

not now, sir; she's a deadly theme .. — iv. 5 
apt, without a theme, for depravation — v. 2 
greater themes for insurrection's .... Coriolanus, i. 1 
attvance the theme of our assembly.. — ii. 2 
contestation was theme for you .Antony ^ Cleo. ii. 2 
this gentleman, our theme, deceased. Cymif/tHt;, i. 1 

be theme, and hearing ever _ iii. i 

and when a soldier was the theme .. — iii. 3 
handle not the theme, to talk ..Titus Andron. iii. 2 
he comes, and I must ply my theme — v. 2 
that marry is the very theme... 7(o7h<;o & Juliet, i. 3 
whose common theme is death Handel, i. 2 

1 will fight with him upon this theme .. — v. 1 
O my son! what theme? I loved Ophelia — v. 1 

THEORICK of war in the knot of ... . All's Well, iv. 3 
must be the mistress to this tlieorick ..Henn/I'. i. 1 
unless tho bookish tlieorluk, wherein Othello, i. 1 

THEKSITES opea his mastiff Troilus^ Cress, i. 3 

and sets Thersites, (a slave, whose gall — i. 3 
Tliersites— Agamemnon— how if he (?fp.)— ii. 1 
mistress Thersites! thou sliouldst strike — ii. 1 

how now, Thersites? (rep. ii. 3) — ii. 1 

good words, Thersites. What's the .. — ii. I 

what, with me too, Thersites? — ii. i 

no more words, Thersites, peace .... — ii. I 
who's there? Thersites? Good Thersites — ii. 3 
Thersites, my lord. Where, where?.. — ii. 3 
thy lord, Thersites; then tell me .... — ii. 3 
proceed, Thersites. Agamemnon (rep.) — )i.3 
Thersites is a fool, to serve such a fool — ii. 3 

come in with me, Thersites — ii. 3 

who? Thersites? He. Then will Ajax — ii. 3 
go call Thersites hither, sweet Patroclus — iii. 3 
my embassador to him, Thersites .. — iii. 3 
here comes Thersites. How now, thou — v. 1 
come, come, Tliersites, help to trim — v. 1 

what I would be, if I were not Thersites — v 1 
Thersites' body is as good as Ajax. .Cyiobeline, iv. 2 

THESEUS-for Theseus' perjury. Tuoden. of ler.'w. 4 
h'.ippy be Theseus, our renowned.. il/ui.A'.'s Dr. i. 1 

to Theseug must be wedded — i i . 2 

knowing I know thy love to Theseus? — ii. 2 

till after Theseus' wedding-day — ii. 2 

intended for great Theseus' nuptial-day — iii. 2 

dance in duke Theseus' house — iv. I 

be wedded, with Theseus, all in jollity — iv. 1 
strange, my Theseus, that these lovers — v. 1 
here, mighty Theseus — v. i 

THESSALIAN bulls Mid.N.'sDream,iv. 1 

THESSALY— in Sparta, nor in Tlressaly — iv. 1 
the boar of Thessaly was never. /In/o/ii/ <?- Cleo. iv. 1 1 

THETIS-the gentle Thetis . . Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 3 
Achilles' horse makes many Thetis' sons— i. 3 

now, great Thetis' son? — iii. 3 

to our ship; aw.ay, my Thetis!... Jh(o7i!/ <S-Cieo. iii. 7 
Thetis, being proud (rep.'\ ..Pericles, iv. 4 cGower) 

THEWES, the stature, bulk 2Henri/ir. iii. 2 

have thewes and limbs like to . . ..JuliusCiemr, i. 3 
does not grow alone in thewes, and \iwW..Hamlel, i 3 

THICK— as thick as honeycombs Tempest, i. 2 

floor of heaven is thick inlaid ..Mer. of Venice, v. I 

thick, thick, spare not me All's Hell, ii. 2 

thick, bereft of beauty Taming iif Shrew, v. 2 

thoughts that would thick my .... Winler'sTate, 1. 2 

as thick as tale, thy praises in Macbeth, i. 3 

make thick my blood, stop up — i. 5 

come, thick nirfit, and pall thee — i. 5 

make the gruel thick and slab — iv. 1 

and made it heavy, thick KingJohn, iii. 3 

and speakin" thick, which nature ..'iHenryll . ii. 3 
wit is as thick as Tewksbnry mustard — ii. 4 
his dimensions to any thick sight were — iii. 2 

thine's too thick to sliine — iv. 3 

was ordained so thick, to heave ....^Henryl'l, v. 7 
thick as thought could make them.Hc/wi/ Vlll. in. 2 
his blushing honours thick upon him — iii. 2 

fall thick in blessings on her! — iv. 2 

where you perceive them thick luliusCrrsar. i. 1 

my si"ht was ever thick v. 3 

why do you send so thick . . Antony if Cleopatra, i. 5 

their thick breaths, ranlc of gross diet v. 2 

dissolve thick cloud, and rain — v, 2 

he furnaces the thick sighs Cymbeline. i. 7 

say, and speak thick (love's counsellor — iii. 2 

anon, a rout, confusion thick _ v. 3 

thick slumber hangs on mine eyelids . . Pericles, v. I 

strike flat the thick rotundity Lear, iii. 2 

their eyes purging thick amber Hamlet, ii. 2 

thick and unwholesome in theii- thoughts — iv. 5 
let her paint an inch thick v. 1 

THICK-COMING fancies Macbeth, v. 3 

TUICKEN—light thickens; and the crow — iii. 2 
lustre thickens, when he shmes.. Antony ^-Clco. ii. 3 



V. 1 



iii. 3 
iii. 3 
iii. 3 



Till 

TniCKEN other proofs OMr7/o. iii.3 

TIIICKKR— cycRlaai is thicker ....irinlei'sT,,!,; i. 2 
my heart bcmts tliiekor tliiiii. YVoidu <^ C'i>'«>ii/.i, iii. 2 
tliickcrthttii itself with l)rothcr'abloiHl?//(iiiiW,iii.3 
THICKEST iiiul till- talli--t Or;i.)..l-ori-'iL. t..i(, iv. 1 
chief woman? you lire tlie tliickcst here — iv. 1 
lie bore him in the tliiekest troop ..3llenri/l'l. ii. I 
TIlICKET-the thiekit is beset.. 7Vof.>.i. <)/»«■. v. 3 
Borel jumps frt>m thiekct../.ore*« L.Lost^ iv. 2 (epit.) 

into a neighbour thieket by — v. 2 

this eliiefest tliieket of the park ....Sllrnnjl'l. iv. 5 

tlie hurt Ac'hille^i keeps thieket..7Vo/7rij ^ (»,■,<». ii. 3 

TllU'K-i:YKl)nui>iii>;, anil cursed.. I//. "'!///'. ii. -' 

TllICK-C. KOW.N limke we'll shroud. 3 //ciur//;. iii 1 

THirK-l.irs-.loes tlie tl\ick-lips owe ..OMcHo, i. 1 

TlllC'K-l.ll'l'F.I) slave TilutAiiihonnus, iv. 2 

TlllL'K-l'l.i; ACIIIOU allev in my ....;i/iiWi.l(/o. i. 2 

TllICK-UIUUEl) ice Mfmtireror Measure, iii. I 

TllICK-SKI-V— what, thick-skinif..M«T!/iC.r«, iv. 5 

shallowest thiek-skin of that... Wii/. A. '.Wrram, iii. 2 

THIEF to walk mv ani\)lins gelding. .lAciri/ » Vivs, ii. 2 

thou salt-water tlvicf I Tirclflli Aifi-'i', v. 1 

Antonionever yet was thief — v. 1 

like to the Egyptian thief — v. 1 

'iiainst knuve and thief men shut — v. 1 (song) 
have a thief or two, guiltier .... Meas./or.tfeaa. ii. 1 

we take him to be a thief too' — iii. 2 

true man's apparel fits your thief (rrp.) — iv. 2 
too big for your thief, your thief thinks — iv. 2 
that Angulo is an adulterous thief .. — 
if you meet a thief, you may su'ipcct. Much A do. 

if we know him to be a thief — 

if you do take o tliief, is, to let — 

a deformed thief this f:ishion is! (.rep.) — 
he has been a vile thief this seven year — 
you thief of love! what, have./Wiii. !\"s. Dream, iii. 2 

a true man, or a thief, that Lot<i'.<l..Lnsi,iv.Z . 

thief gone with so much (.rep.") ., Mer. of fenke, iii. 1 I 

with a thief to tlie gallows /lj!/oi(/.i/.ci7, iii. 2 ; 

like a timorous thief, most fain AU's ll'eil, ii. 5 ' 

with the dark, poor thief, I'll steal .. — iii. 2 
what simple thief brags of liis. Comct/i/o/^rrorj, iii. 2 
nay, lie's a thief too, have you not .. — iv. 2 
a giant's robe upon a dwarfish tliief.... il/flrbc/A, v. 2 
eo when this tluef, this traitor .... Richard 1 1 . iii. 2 
when thou art king, hang a thief.... IHc/iry/r. i. 2 

as you are a false thief — ii. I 

to rob in that thiers company — ii. 2 

of England prove a thief, and take .. — ii. 4 

lie8till,ve tnief. and hear — iii. I 

O for a fine thief, of the age — iii. 3 

welcome, my little tiny thief? 2 Henry IV. v. 3 

or foul felonious thief, that fleeced..2Hfnn/A'/. iii. 1 

and, like a thief, to come to rob — iv. 10 

the thief doth fear each bush 3 Henr,, VI. v. 6 

08 ever hangman served thief.. Thnon of Athena, ii. 2 
go, strong thief, when gouty keepers — iv. 3 

the sun's a thief (re;).) — iv. 3 

each thing's a thief — iv.3 

for a very little thief of occasion.. .. Coriolantts. ii. 1 
have been atjreat thief by sea .. Antony S/Cleo. ii. 6 

a cunning thief, or a that way Cymlietinc, i. S 

and saves the thief; nay {rep.1 — ii. 3 

a villain; yield thee, thief — iv. 2 

thou injurious thief, hear but my name — iv. 2 
egregious murderer, thief, anytliing — v. 5 

than myself, a sacrilegious thief .... — v. 5 

die he like a thief, that robs Pericles, iv. 6 

pinion him like a thief, bring him Lear, iii 7 

yon' justice rails upon yon' simple thief — iv. 6 
Sown with him, thief! You, Roderigo!. .0/Ac;(o, i. 2 
O thou foul thief, where hast thou stowed — i. 2 

steals soinethin" from the thief — i. 3 

TIUEF-STOLEN, as my two brothers. Cv'nde/ijiff, i. 7 
TIIIEVES— stale to catch these thieves. Tempeal, i v. I 

for thieves do foot by night Merry Hives, ii. I 

that tliieves do pass on thieves?.iVea*./or Meas. ii. 1 

thieves for their robbery have — ii. 2 

to play the thieves for wives.. l//'rc/mn(o/"/VH/ce, ii. 6 
provoketh thieves sooner than gold.yJji/oiitiVteiV, i.3 

we're beset with thieves Taming of Shrew, iii. 2 

then thieves and robbers range .... Richard 11. iii. 2 

tliieves are not judged, but they — iv. 1 

be called thieves of the day's 1 HenrylV. i. 2 

Shalt have the hanging of the thieves — i. 2 

when thieves cannot be true — ii. 2 

the thieves have bound — ii. 2 

rob the thieves, and go merrily — ii. 2 

the thieves arc scattered — ii. 2 

and the rest of the thieves are at ... . — ii. 4 

do you think I keep thieves — iii. 3 

pretty traps to catch the netty thieves. . Henry V. i. 2 
so desperate thieves, all liopeless ....SllenryVl. i. 4 
BO triumph thieves upon their conquered — i. 4 
but, thieves, unwnrthy of a thing. Troflus 4 Creis. ii. 2 
place thieves, and give them title. Timon ofAlh. iv. 3 
thieves. Soldiers, not thieves (rtp.).. — iv.3 

that vou arc thieves professed — iv.3 

rascol thieves; here's gold; go, suck — iv. S 

all that you meet are tliieves — iv.3 

steal, but thieves do lone it — iv.3 

as thieves to keciwrs — v. 2 

here they might lake two thieves. /ln/<iiii/,^nco. ii. 6 

you have store of thieves C'l/mMinc, i. i 

these roving thieves serve the great ..I'eiiclet, iv. 2 

knaves, thieves, and treachcrs Lear,\. 2 

dealt with me, like thieves Hnmlel, iv. B (letter) 

IJrabantio! thievesi thieves! thievcs!(rfp.)o/Ac.Vo, i.l 

where be these bloody thieves! — v. I 

TIIIEVERY-rich thievery .... TroKuKjCr^M. iv. 4 
an honourable kind of thievery. 7'i™6Vn.ol';Vr.iv. 1 

example vou with thievery 7'imon 0/ Athens, \v. 3 

TIlIEvrslI living on the common ..A-vnOln-ii, i\.3 

hath told the tliievisb minutes J»"«nVH,ii. I 

or walk in thievish ways Roinro^Jiiliel, iv. I 

THIGH— it is legs and thighs TireinhM-jhl, i. 3 

crop their wa.Ten thighs, and light. .Vi(i.A'.'i/>r. iii. 1 

{;allant eurtle-ax upon my thigh ..Asyou l.ikeil, i. 3 
liscuisseson his thighs, gallantly ..I Heiirjr/r. iv. I 
a uew wound iu yuur thigh (r<-p.).,,. — v. t 



[ 759 ] 



THI 



THIGHS packed with wax 2;fcni|/;/'. iv. 4 

till that his thik'lis with darts •iUeuryl'l. iii. 1 

in the neck, iin.l Iwo in the thigh ..roriol.inus. ii. I 
voluntary Wduiid hei-o in the i\ua'\\.jHliusCrpsar,\\. \ 

his iiiHi-liul thi};li; the brawns of Cymlieline, iv. 2 

struii-'lit leg, uml <iuive:'iiig thigh. /(ompo (S- ./!!/*>(, ii. 1 

then liiiil hi< le;; uver mv thigli Ulhello,u\. 3 

itseirBiislniii iip'in a soldier's thigh — v. 2 

Tiril.l,-lloHSl^(o/ A,i(.-phill-hor8e].Mrr.<i/T. ii.2 

TniMl!l,i;, till. II yard Taming qf Shrew, iv. 3 

thi-er lieiiniuil i'liathimble — iv.3 

thinililes iiilii armed gauntlets KingJohn, v. 2 

TIlIN-iiito thill air Tempest, iv. 1 

your thin belly-douhlet Lore^sL.Lost, iii. I 

liard lodging.', and thin weeds, nip not — v. 2 
beard grew thin and luingerly .. TamingofSh. iii. 2 

like to have a (hill niid slender — iv. 4 

if your guniients were thin .. Comedy of Errors, iii. 1 

my face so thin, that in mine KtngJohtij i. 1 

we will not line his thin liChtiiined .. — iv. 3 
have armed their thin and hairless.. /(iWian/ //.iii. 2 

thin drink doth so over-eool 2 Henry IV. iv. 3 

to forswear thin potations — iv.3 

so thin, that life looks through — iv. 4 

thou thin man in a censer! — v. 4 

eome, you thin thing; conic — v. 4 

his cold thin drink out of his SHenryl'I. ii. 5 

give liimself, all thin and naked ..Richard III. ii. 1 
they are too thin and base to hk\c.. Henry Vll I. v. 2 

thatch your poor thin roofs Timon of Athens, \v. 3 

( poor iierdn 1 ) with this thin helm? Lear, iv. 7 

which is as thin of substance .... Romeo ^Juliet, i. 4 

the thin and wholesome blood Hamlet, i. 5 

thill habits, and poor likelihoods Othello, i. 3 

THIN-FACED knave, a gull? .... Twelfth Night, v. 1 

TH ING— brown furze, any thing Tempest, i. 1 

of any tiling the image — i. 2 

thou liest, malignant thing! — i. 2 

for one thing she did — i. 2 

dull thing, I say so — i. 2 

one thing or other — i. 2 

fabblo like a thing more brutish — i. 2 
might call him a thing divine — i. 2 

a single thing, as I am now — i. 2 

good things will strive to dwell with't — i. 2 
here is every thing advantageous to life — ii. 1 
I would by contraries execute all things — ii. 1 
all things'in common nature should .. — ii. I 

these be line things, an' if — ii. 2 

but this thing dare not — iii. 2 

let you believe things certain — v. I 

I will requite you with as good a thing — v. 1 

and think of each thing well — v. 1 

what things are these^ m.v lord Antonio? — v. 1 

this is as strange a thing as e'er — v. 1 

I see things too, although TieoGen.of Verona, i. 2 

that decks a thing divine! — ii. 1 

are all these things perceived in me? — ii. I 

should I have wish'd a thing — ii 4 

no impression of the thing it was .... — ii. 4 

longs for every thing that he — iii. 1 

for good things sliould be praised.. .. — iii. I 

of anotlier thing she may — iii. I 

three things that women highly .... — iii. 2 

have you any tiling to take to? — iv. I 

excels each mortal thing — iv. 2 (song) 

always play but one thing? (re/).).... — iv. 2 

"tis a foul thing wheu a cur — iv. 4 

— iv. 4 



ado" at all tilings 

I did the thing you wot of . 



I will do a greater thing than that..il/c)-ry'f'rt>es, i. 1 

very ill-favoured rough things — i.l 

never need to understand any thing — ii. 2 

I shall discover a thing to you — ii. 2 

there's no such thing in me — iii. 3 

shall it be so? Anything — iii. 3 

tells me, 'tis a thing impossible — iii. I 

how things go (rfp. iv. 5) — iii. 4 

and what a thing should I have been — iii. 5 

there are f;urer things than polecats — iv. I 

I would not have things cool — iv. 2 

I had other things to have spoken .. — iv. 5 

I'll tell you strange thiugs (ipp.) — v. 1 

wherefore are these things hid? ..TwelfihMghl, i. 3 

any thing that's mended, is but patched — i. 5 

is to take tliose things for bird-bolts — i. 5 

and one thing more; that you be — ii. 2 

my lady's favour at any thing more — ii. 3 

any thing constantly but a tiiiie-pleaser — ii. 3 

their business might be every thing.. — ii. 4 

I will do every thing that thou wilt — ii. 5 

honour, truth, and every thing — iii. 

you have not seen such a thing as 'tis — iii. 

hardly forbear hurling things at him — iii. 

and the things of fame — iii. 

why, every thing adheres together .. — iii. 

yon are idle shallow things — iii. 

a little thing would make me tell.... — iii. 

anything — v, 

a twenty years removed thing — v. 

these things further thought on — v. 

a foolish thing it was but a toy — v. I (song! 

as things that are hollow Meas. for Meas- j. ' 

1 hold you as a thing ensky'd — i. 

one thing to he tempted, Rscalus (rep.) — ii. 

past cure <>f the thing von wot of .... — ii. 

worst thing about him (rep.) — ii. 

is the greatest thing about .vou — ii. 

for those things that make her — ii. 

is like a good thing, being often .... — ii. 

fiir I can speak against tlie thing I say — ii. 

I something do excuse the thing I hate — ii. 

I do lose a thing that none but — iii- 

death is a fearful thing — iii. 

spirit to do any thing that appears not — iii. 

what a ruthless tiling is Ibis ill him.. — iii. 

merrv at any tliiny. which professed — iii. 'i 

puud'roiiliand substantial things!.!.. — "'.2 

if any thingfall to you upon tills.... — iv. 2 

this IS a thing, that Aiigelu knows nut — iv. 2 



TIIING-tliesc things should hc.Meas.Jtir Meas. iv. t 

if you have any thing to say to me .. — iv.3 

coinmtine with vou of such things .. — iv.3 

did yon siii-li a thiiif? — iv.3 

such u (lepenilencv of thing on thing — v. 

in thai he did the thing for which he — v. 
there is a measure in every thing ....MuchAiln, ii. 

in every gooil tiling — ii. 

in all other things, save in the ofTice — ii. 

you look to those things I told you of? — ii. 

to have all things answer my mind .. — ii. 

will I endeavour any thing — ii.l 

to one thing constant never — ii. 3 (song 

in every thing, but in loving Benedick — ii 

any flung to-nij<ht why I sliould not — iii. 

it is the only thing for a qualm — iii. 

are these things spoken? — iv. 

ond these things are true — iv. 

these things, come thus to light — iv. 

doth not every earthly thing cry shiimc — iv. 

as strange us the thing I know not .. — iv. 

come, bid me do any tiling for thee .. — iv, 

and every thing handsome about him — iv. 

for he swore a tiling to me on Monday — v. 

what a pretty thing niaii is — v. 

tliey have verified unjust things .... — v. 

in any thing that I do know by her.. — v. 

I am glad that all things eort so well — v. 

for man is a giddy thing — v. 

bright things come to confusion. ,VrVy.A'.'» lirtnm, i. 

things base and vile, holding no .... — i. 

the next thing when she uaking {rep.) — ii. 

wake when some vile thing is near .. — ii. 

things growing are not ripe until .... — ii. 

as a suii'eit of the sweetest things .... — ii. 

there are things in this comedy of .. — iii. 

among ladies, is a most dreadful thing — iii. 

no, I am no such thing — iii. 

but there is two hard things — iii. 

then there is another thing — iii. 

made senseless things begin to do .. — iii. 

from yieldei-8 all things ciitch — iii. 

and those things do best please me .. — iii. 

how can these things iu me seem — iii. 

vile thing, let loose — iii. 

and all tilings shall be peace — iii. 

how came these things to pass? — iv. 

these things seem small — iv. 

I see these things with parted eye (rfp.) — iv. 

is, (Jdd bless us! a thing of nought .. — iv 

I will tell you every thing — iv. 

the forms of things unknown — v. 

for never any thing can he amiss .... — v. 

gentle sweet, you shall see no such thing — v. 

till truth make all things plain — v. 

things hid and barred, you mean.. Love' sL. Lost, i. 

to know the thing I am forbid to know — i. 

but like of each tiling, that in season — i. 

firget to do the thing it should (rfp.) — i. 

one and the self-same thing, dear imp — i. 

do one thing for me that I shall .... — iii. 

not be perjured, 'tis a hateful thing., — iv. 

when shall you see me write a thing — iv. 3 

to things of sale a seller's praise .... — iv.3 

that makcth all things shine! — iv.3 

shall I tell you a thiiig? — v. 1 

any thing like? — v. 2 

wind, thought, swifter things — v. 2 

makes wise things foolish (rep.) — v. 2 

when great things labouring perish.. — v. 2 
that such a thing, bechanced . . Merch. of Venice, i. 1 

is that any thing now? — i.l 

I uill do any thing, i>feriS6a, ere I .. — i. 2 

a thing not in his power to bring — i. 3 

these things being bought, and orderly — ii. 2 

all things that are, are with more ., — ii. 6 

to observe three thing's: first, never — ii 9 

men enforced do siKok any thing..., — iii. 2 

the half of any thing that this same — iii. 2 

hear other things: llorenzo — iii. 4 

'mong other things I shall — iii. 5 

the things they do not love? (rep.) .. — iv. I 

as well uo any thing most hard — iv. 1 

merchant, have you any thing to say ? — iv. 1 

two things provided more — . iv. 1 

grant me two things. I pray you .... — iv. 1 

liow many things by season — v. 1 

a thing stuck on with oaths — v. 1 

to urge the thing held as a ceremony? — v. I 

I'll not deny him any thing I have.. — v. 1 

and we will answer all things faithfully — v. I 

I'll fear no other thing so sore — v. 1 

am not taught to make any tliing./lsi/ou/.iil;(ri7, i. I 

in that it is a thing of his own search — i I 

so fair and excellent ladies any thing — 12 

and good in every thing — ii. 1 

little cares for buying any thing .... — u i 

assuredly, the thing is to be sold ,, .. — ii. 4 

yield any thing savage, I will — ii. G 

if there live any thing in this desert — ii. 6 

that all things had iK'cn savage here — ii. 7 

eans eyes, sails taste, sans every thing — ii. 7 

thy lands, and all things that thou.. — iii. I 

every thiiij; alKiut you demonstrating — iii. 2 

for no passion trulv any thing — iii. 2 

is it a true thing? No. truly — iii. 3 

are the frailest and softest things .... — iii. b 

the best thing in him is his — iii. 5 

can one desire too much of a good thing? — iv. I 

is not a thing to laugh to scorn . . — iv. 2 (song) 

being the thing I am — iv.3 

never any thing so sudden — v. 2 

how bitter a tluiig it is to look — v. 2 

that I can do strange things — v. 2 

have her and death were both one thing — v. i 

an ill-favoured thing, sir, but mine own — v. 4 

he's Oil u'nod at any thing, and yet n fool — v. 4 

when earthly things made eveii .. — v. 4 (verse) 

wc met, iiiid these things finish . .... — v. t 

will you any thing with it? UVsH'ell,i. 1 



THING— and kiss like native tliiiigB . . A 11' s irM^ i. ) 

all but new things disdain — .!• J 

with liim that all tilings knows .... — ii. ' 

1 see things may serve long, Vnit not — ]\- 2 

anil familiar thing siniematural - ij. 3 

wiien virtuous things proceed — !!■ 3 

hut for two things. What two things? — n. 4 

in every thin" I wait upon his will.. — \\- j 

these things shall be done, sir — .!!■ - 

are not the things they go under .... — ni- > 

never trust my judgment in any thing — in. t 

I will tell you a tiling, but you must let — iv. ; 

as we are ourselves, what things we are! — iv. , 

every thing in him by wearing — ]V. t 

I could endure any thing before — iv. , 

every thing that an honest man should — iv. . 

simply the thing I am — iv- ; 

price of serious things we have — '^ • ; 

that -will speak any thing? . ... . . ... . — v. . 

tilings that would derive me ill will — v. , 

the name, and not the thing „, T,- ,^'' '^ 

I feel soft things; upon my.TamingofSli. 2 (indue.) 

andeflfeotone thing specially........ — V 

one thing more rests, that thyself — — i- _i 

snpposingit a thing impossible — !■ ^ 

learning! whatathingitisl ........ — .»■ f 

when the special thing is well obtained — i\. 1 

consume the thing that feeds tlieir iury ~ ii. J 

riiifs, and things, and fine array — Ji. j 

and all things that belong to house.. — n- 

andall things answerable to this — .n. I 

my ass, my any thing: and here — in. - 

oridevery thing in Older? — 'v. 

with many things of worthy — iv. 

and all things neat? All things is ready — jv- 1 

or any thing thou wilt ••;,■:•• — }"■ i 

and cuffs, and farthingales, and things — iv. i 

thou hast faced many things .... — iv. 3 

that every thing I look on seemeth.. - ly. 5 
make us as fat as tame things .... IVinler slale, i. 2 

women say so, that will say any thing — ]. i 

make possible, things not so held.... — >• ^ 

■with all the nearest things to my heart — i. ^ 

to do a thing, where I the issue doubted — .i. j 

and I remain a pinched thing — ;;■ [ 

thon thing, which I'll not call ...... — ii- ' 

any thing, my lord, that ray (rfj),).. — ii. 3 

pniir thing, condemned to loss! — .". ^ 

dnnot repent of these things — ;];. 2 

if such thing be, thy mother appeared — in. 3 

tliiin the poor thing is here — ]}\-^ 

if thou'lt see a thing to talkon...... — iii- .J 

met'st with things dying, I with things — m. -i 

IV. (cho.l 



.IHcmyrr. i. 2 



iv. 2 



iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 
v. 1 
V. 1 



.Macheih, i. 2 



— ii. 1 



to tlie freshest things now reignm^ 

denying thee any thing; a death 

and these detestable things put upon me — 

have money, or any thing I want — 

nor any thing to any, if I be not — 

with any thing that you behold .... — 
and the thing she took to quench it — 

so she does any thing, though I — 

or a very pleasant thing indeed — 

we'll bnv the other things anon — 

deliver, things known betwixt us — 

and we may do any thing extempore ^ — 
those things you found about her (rep./ — 
any thing that is fitting to he known — 
a thousand things, that would have done — 
looked on, such goodly things as you? — 
will "rant precious things, as trifles.. — 

me to the thing I cannot Comedy of lir 

there's a time ibr all things — 

sure, in a thing falsing — 

but on a stronger thing; a chain — 

any tiling his rage did like 

tliat seems to speak things strange 

and seem to fear things that do 

were such things here, as we 

was wrought with things forgotten 

the dearest thing he owed 

bv doing every thing safe toward .. 

there's no such thing; it is 

to think so brainsicldy of things — 

of three things. What three things — 

hours dreadful, and things strange _ — 

horses, (a thing most strange and certain — 

may you see things well done — 

and all things else, that might — 

things without remedy, should be — 

tlie frame of things disjoint — 

good things of day begin to — 

things, bad begun, make strong — 

but as a thing of custom — 

can such things be, and overcome — 

Btiange things I have in liead — 

your cliarxns, and every thing beside . . — 

only, I say, things have been — 

he has borne all things well — 

yet my heart throbs to know one thing — 

things at the worst will cease — 

though all things foul would wear .... - 

and unwelcome things at once — 

cannot hut remember such things were — 

but constrained things, whose — 

that any thing he sees, which moves. Knig-Jo/in 
having no external thing to lose ... 
all things begun come to ill end . . . 

against tlie thing thou swear st 

I had a thing to say; but Iwill 

feeling what small things are 

all things, that you should use . ,, • , 

things sweet to taste, prove Rtchard ll.\. 6 

more than things long past — !!• ' 

divides one thing entire to many — ii- ^ 

which, for things true, weeps things — ii. i 
and every thing is left at six and seven — \\. i 

thingspast redress, are now with — .ii 3 

thou little better thing than earth .. — m- 4 
from a serious thing, and now changed — v. 3 
as thoughts of thiugs divine — v. s 



iii. 6 
iii. 6 
iv. 1 
iv. 2 
iv. 3 



iii. I 
iii. 1 
iii. 3 



iv. 1 



TFITNG— provide ns all things 

the sovcreigu'st thing on earth — i. ■> 

thou wilt not tell me all things true — ii- 3 

I could sing psalms or any thing — ii- 4 

there is a thing, Uarry, which thou — ii- 4 

wherein villanous, but in all things? — ij. 4 

for any thing he shall be charged — ji- 4 

lor some things true, wherein my .. — in- 2 
go, you thing, go. Say, what thing? — m. 3 
if there were any thing in thy pocket — jii. 3 
may do any thing. Rod me the (rfp.) — in. 3 
things, indeed, you have articulated — v. 1 
fears the thing he would not know ..iltcnrylV. i. 1 
and as the thing that's heavy in itself — i. 1 
not able to invent any thing that tends — i. 2 

to the hearing of any thing good — 1-2 

I brandish any thing but my bottle.. — J. 2 
if they have a good thing to make it — i. 2 

wit will make use of any thing — i- 2 

seem best; things present, worst .... — i. 3 
he's an infinitive thing upon my score — n. 1 
one thing, Poins? Yes; and let it {rep.) 

and those two things, I confess 

for in every thing, the purpose — 

of the main chance of things as yet. . — 

such things become the hatch — 

are these things then necessities? — 

I was called any thing; and 1 would — 

which is an excellent thine — 

things that are mouldy lack use .... — 
to do any thing about her, when I . . — 

what thing in honour, had my — 

every thing set off, that might — 

there is a thing within my bosom — — 
some good thing comes to-morrow .. — 

when every thing is ended, then — 

and every thing lies level to our wish — 

see, sons, what things you are! — 

it is a wonderful thing to see — 

as things acquainted and familiar to us — 
if thou'want*st any thing, and will not 

the things I speak, are just 

you thin thing; come, you rascal! . . — 
presume not, that I am the thing I was — 
where, for any thing I know, Falstalf. . — _ _ 

how things are perfected Ilemyl'. i. 1 

of some things of weight, that task . . — 

that many things having full — 

and all tilings thought upon — 

things must be as they may — 

and any thing that may not misbecome — 
they will steal any thing, and call it — 

it is not a thing to rejoice at 

thoumakestuseof any thing 

minding true things, by what 

some soul of goodness in things evil. . — 

charitably dispose of any thing — 

my friends, and all things stay for me — 

such outward things dwell not in — 

all things are ready, if our minds be so — 
if he durst steal any thing adventurously— 

for there is figures in all things 

due course of things, wliicli cannot — 

why and wherefore in all things 

if I owe you any thing, I will pay . . 
and every thing that seems unnatural 
any thing in, or out of, our demands 
his glass for the love of any thing he 
after that things are set in order ....1 

if all things fall out right 

maintain the thing you teach 

for things that are not to be remedied — )_ii. 3 
that, ibr a toy, a thing of no regard . . — iv. 1 

tush! that's a wooden thing — v. 3 

straight a thing impossible — Y- J 

we'll see these things eflFected -2 Henry J I. i. 2 

wouldst any thing with me? — .;• 3 

and things called whips? — }\- \ 

see the lists and all things fit — .i;- 3 

for things are often spoke — iii- 1 

sirs, have you despatched this thing? — }]]■ f 

are all things well, according as "" ' 

judgest all things, stay my thoughts 

ever did contain a thing of worth 

small things make base men proud . . 

the first thing we do, let's kill all 

is not this a lamentable thing 

I did but seal once to a thing 

ami henceforward all things shall .. 

as all things shall redound 

pay. and every thing you wish 

any thing I have is his to use 

how sweet a thing it is to wear . . . 
that things ill-got had ever bad . 
no wrong, but every thing is right 
never will I undertake the thing . 

hath a thing to grant, before the — ! 

why, 'tis aiiappy thing to be the .... — i 
ay, that's the first thing that we — — ] 

yet in this one thing let me — i 

if a thing comes in his head — 

partake of any thing we say Ilichard III. 

creeping venomed thing that lives! . . — 
now going to despatch this thing? .. — 
1 have done these things, that now . . — 

it is a dangerous thing [rep.) — 

in common worldly things — 

he was the wretehedest thing — 

in weiglitier things you'll say a beggar — 
'tis a vile thing to die, my gracious lord — 
are all things ready for the royal time? — 
no doubt, tempt him to any thing?.. — 
if to have done the thing yon gave in — iv. 2 

yet one thing more, good captain — v. 3 

all things are in readiness — v- 3 

a thing devised by the enemy ~ , ^; ^ 

things now, that bear a weighty. Henry h'lll. (prol.) 
the tract of every thing would by a . . — i. 1 

order gave each thing view — '• ' 

that followed was a thing inspired .. — i- 1 



THING— done in this, and all things! fffiiri/r///. i. 1 
but yon frame things that are known — i. 2 

things done well, and with a care — i. 2 

tilings done without example — i. 2 

of him things to strike honour — i. 2 

pledge it, madam, for 'tis to such a thing — i. 4 
every thing that heard him play.. — iii. 1 (song) 
if ye be any thing but churchmen's.. — iii. 1 
never attempt any thing on him .... — !'.!• ^ 

ye appear in every thing may — iii. 2 

because all those things, you have done — in. 2 

such things have been done — v. 1 

tliis happy child, did I get any thing — y. 4 
the joints of every thing (rep.) ..TroUits^- Cress, i. 2 

well, cousin, I told you a thing — i. 2 

swords? any thing, he cares not. 



— ii. 2 
_ ii. 2 

— iii. 1 



iv. I 
iv. 1 
iv. 2 
iv. 3 
iv. 4 



— V. 3 



v. b 
(epil.) 



_ iii. 6 

— iii. 7 
iv. (chorus) 

_ iv. 1 
_ iv. 1 

— iv. 1 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 4 
iv. 7 

v. (chorus) 



_ iii. 1 



iii. 2 
iii. 2 

iv. 1 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 



— iv. 9 



— V. 1 
.SHenryf'I. i. 2 



ii. 6 



iii. 1 



iv. 2 



i. 2 
i. 2 
i. 3 
i. 3 
i. 3 
i. 3 



iii. 1 
iii. 3 
iii. 3 
iii. 3 
iii. 3 
iii. 3 
iii. 3 



i. 1 
— i. 1 



iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 
- V. 2 

CoriolanuSt u 1 



things won are done— joy's soul lies., 
men prize the thing ungained more.. 

why, then, the thing of courage 

each thing meets in mere 

then every thing includes 

of things to come at large 

thou thing of no bowels, thou! — ii. ] 

to guard a thing not ours — n. ! 

unworthy of a tiling so stolen — in! 

such things as might ofl'end — ii. ! 

if any thing more than your sport .. — n.'- 

things small as nothing, for — ij. ; 

in love with a thing you have 

speak the thing I shall repent 

through the sight I hear in tilings , 

no man is the lord of any thing 

nature, what things there are 

what things again most dear 

remuneration for the thing it was . 
made and' moulded of thingspast... 
since things in motion sooner catch.. — iii. 3 

the thing he means to kill — iv. 1 

dispraise the thing that you desire .. — iv. 1 
deceived, I think of no such thing .... — iv. 2 

drawing all things to it — iv. 2 

bid me do anything but that — v. 2 

that a thing inseparate divides — v. 2 

Patroclus will give me any thing for — v. 2 

and what one thing, what another .. — v. 3 

in every thing illegitimate! — v. 8 

a thing slipped idly from me . . Timon of Athens, i. 1 
that few things loves better .. 
know, things of like value .. 

how things go from him — 

but I can tell you one thing, my lord — 
as I understand how all things go . . — 
believe't, that we'll do anything for gold — 

what things in the world canst — 

but men, men are the things themselves — 

more things like men? eat — 

each thing^s a thief, the laws — 

what viler thing upon the earth .... — 
and nothing brings me all things 
digest things rightly touching the 
were I any thing but what I am .... — 
besides, if things go well, opinion .. .. — 
tell me one thing that I shall ask you — 
neither me, yourselves, nor any thing — 
in troth, there's wondrous things spoKe — 

only there is one thing wanting — 

he was a thing of blood, whose every — 
and looked upon things precious .... — 
if we give yon anything, we hope to.. — 
in all things should we do't, the dust — 
have done many things, some less .. — 

of all things upon the earth — 

it is a purposed thing, and grows — 

hence, rotten thing, or I shall shake — 
things created to buy and sell with .. — 
but a small thing would make it — — 
tell you most strange things from PLOme — 
from yon cloud speak divine things . . — 
thou noble thing! more dances my . . — 
between the youngest and oldest thing — 
he leads them like a thing made by . . — 
you are goodly things, you voices! .. — 

that he bears all things fairly — 

Dot to be other than one thing — 

for such things as you, I can scarce . . — 
the tilings, I have forsworn to grant — 

you will not grant us any thing — 

It is no little thing, to make — 

he's more than a creeping thing — 

as a thing made for Alexander 

you worse than senseless things! . . Ml 
by reflection, by some other things .. 
in awe of such a thing as I myself .. 
to hear, and answer such high things 
coidd be moved to smile at any thing 
or said any thing amiss, he desired .. 

did Cicero say any thing? 

shakes like a thing unfirm? 

saw you anything more wonderful? 
they are portentous things unto the., 
construe things after their fashion (rep.) 
why all these things change, from . . 

so vile a thing as C&sar? 

no colour for the thing he is 

between the acting of a dreadful thing 
will never follow any thing that .... 
I will strive with things impossible.. 

the things that, threatened me 

besides tlie things that we have 

these things are beyond all use 

ah me, how weak a thing the heart . . 
to young Octavius of the state of things 
pluck down forms, windows, any thing 
in this mood will give us any thing., 
things unluckily charge my fantasy^ 
listen great things: Brutus and Cassius 

to wish things done, undone 

every thing is well. Good-night 

art thou any thing? art thou some god 
didst thou see any thing? 



— V. 3 
_ V. 4 

— T- ^ 

CtPsar, i. 1 



ii. 1 
ii. 1 
ii. 2 




TIIINQ— cretlit thiiiKS thntdo ....JutimC<iitar,v. I 

of men the lliinKs tiint are not? — v. a 

alus, thou linst iniKOoniitniiMl every thinp - V. 3 

liow cvcrv thiiii; is clmiH'cil — v. •! 

wlwim cv'crv thiiii^ lH'c»im'<. . .4}iloiiy ^ Clenpnira, 1. 1 

iM..-it aiiv lliin^'. AlfX.is, iilmiiht — i. a 

is't v<iii,^ir, tliiit kiH)\v tliiin,'-? — i- » 

tlii?!!,"', tliiit ;iri- |in-t. an' (lone — i- '- 

in c.u-li thini; -•ivcliim win- - i. 3 

whom tliCM' tluMs,'s cnmi..t blemish .. — i. 4 

lB.-t thing lie dill, ileiir (lueen — .!■•'' 

(Icoavs tlic thin^ we sill' for — ii- 1 

1 lenrn. von take thimis ill — ".2 

for vilCft thin(!s l)ecoine themselves.. — 11.2 

pvramiaesare verv gooiUy thhifis — — n- " 

w'hnt manner o" tiling is your crocodile? — ]'■ 7 

this creature's no »uch thing — in- ^ 

1 have one tiling more to nsk him .. — m. 3 

hut let determined things to destiny — .>;'• 6 

and things outward do draw — 111. 11 

for the thitiga he speaks nuiy concern — iv. 9 

the thing whv thou hiist drawn it — iv. la 

the breakini! of s.i L-reat a thing should — v 1 

to do that thins that ends all — v. 2 

a< things but done hv cliance — v. 2 

not petty things admitted — v. 2 

tilings of such difjnity as we — v. 2 

for things that otiieis do — v. 2 

of things that merchants sold — v. a 

clad at the thing they scowl at Cj/mdi/i/ic, i. I 

IS a thing too bad for bad report — j- 1 

thou basest thing, avoid! — i- 2 

O, disloyal thing, thou shouldst repair — ;. 2 

thou foolish thing! they were a^'aiu — i. 2 

hut had most pretty things to say — — ;• 4 

tiiose things I bid you do, get them.. — 1. ■• 

the other is not a tiling for sale — i- 5 

we will have these things set down .. — i. a 

depender on a tiling that leans — i. 6 

it is a thing I made, which hath — i. 6 

since doubting things go ill, often . . — i. 7 

more vexed at any thing in the earth — ii. 1 

a very excellent good-c-'iiceited thing — ii. 3 
witii everv thing that prettv bin .. — ii. Strong) 

this is a thing which you might from — ii 1 

a prnfit from all t'Hn;,'s wc see — iii 3 

in simple and low thini:s, to prince it — iii. 3 

Wi)Mlii be interpreted a thing perplexed — iii. 4 

a thing the most disdained of fortune — iii. 4 

'tis emptv of all tilings, but grief — — iii. 4 

a thing more made of nmliie — iii. 5 

believes it is a thing most prccions .. — iii. 5 

I forgot to ask him one thing — iii- 5 

this is t le sccnnd thin" that I have .. — iii. 5 

if auv thing that's civil, speak — iii. 6 

yet tliis impiTseveraiit tiling loves .. — jv. 1 

and base things sire base — iv. 2 

thing more slavish did I ne'er — iv. 2 

from one bad thing to worse — "v. 2 

all solemn things should answer — iv. 2 

thou hlessetl tiling! Jove knows .... — iv. 2 

what thing is it, that I never — iv. 4 

rather to wonder at the things you hear — v 3 

'mongsthisfoes, a thingof pityl — v. 4 

lachimo. slight tiling of Italy — v. 4 

such noble fury in so poor a thing .. — v. 5 

thisone thin" only I will entreat .... — v. 5 

1 see a thing bitter to me as death .. — v. 5 

the same dead tiling alive — v. 5 

anv thing that's due to all — v. .5 

all the abhorred tliingi o' the earth .. — v. h 

was not thought by rae a precious thing — v. :> 

O gods, I left out one thing which . . — v. 5 
and every thing in readiness .. Tiiusilnlionku<,\. 2 

when evcrv thing doth make a gleeful — ii- 3 

and one thiuj; more, that womanhood — ii. 3 

once to behold the tiling — ii- 4 

wondrous thing: how easily — ii. 4 

tliou Shalt be employed in these things — iii. I 

now, what a thing it is to be an ass! — iv. 2 

ni show thee wonilrons things — v. 1 

and hast a thing within thee, called. . — v. 1 

have done a thousand dreadful things — v. 1 

the thing the which is flattered I'criclei.i. 2 

Osir, tilings must bo as they may .... — ii. I 

let me ask one thing. What do you .. - ii. S 
who thought of such a thing? .... — iii. (Gower) 

here is a tiling too young for — iii. I 

canst not do a thing i' the world — iv. 1 

tiich a maidenhead were no cheap thing — iv. 3 

did voii ever dream of such a thing? — iv. 5 

I'll do any thing now that is virtuous — iv. 5 

tell inc one thing first. Come (rep.) — iv. 6 

do any tiling but this thou doest .... — iv. 6 

some such thing indeed I said — v. I 

no needful thing omitted — y. 3 

commit a thing so monstrous l-fir, i. 1 

to dote on her for aiiv thing — i. 4 

1 had rather be anv kind of thing — i. 4 

cHc will take tiic thing she begs — i. 4 

no further with any thing you know — i. ii 

unless things be cut shorter — i. .') 

I liaveone thing, ofa (lucttS.vnnestion .. — ii. I 

arc in the iKiorest thing supcrtiiioiis .... — ii. 4 

I will do such things— what they arc — ii- 4 

that things might change, or cease — iii. I 

commend a dear thing to you — iii. I 

things that love night, love not — iii. "2 

that can make vile things precious .... — iii. 2 

there is komc strange thing toward — iii. 3 

to imnder on things woiilu hurt mc more — iii. 4 

thou art the thing itself — iii. 4 

leaving free things, and happy shows .... — iii. 6 

ollows Itself to any thing — iii. 7 

lowest, and most dejected thing of fortune — iv. I 

thou changcil and self-covered thing — iv. V 

these things sting his mind so venomously — iv. 3 

what thing was tlial which parted from. . — iv. B 

that thing vou speak of,! took it — iv. a 

tosay ay aiiduo, locvcry thing I saidi .. — iv. 6 



— i. I 



[7GT^] 

THING— they told mc I was every thing.. /.mr.lv- 

take upim us the mystery of things — v 

groat thing of nsnii|.M,tl — v, 

and low. an iMxIlcnt tiling in woman .. — v 
Oany thing, of nuthing (irst ....Homeo^ Juliet, \ 

can .Villi read any thing you sec? — i 

and Vverv thill',' ill extremity — i 

a tender Ihiiig. Is love a tender thing? — i, 

wlule thev do dri'um things true .... — i 

unwashed too. 'tis a foul thing — i 

wish but for the thing I have — ii 

why, is not this n lainiMit:ilile thing.. — ii. 
tho'u wast never with me for any thing — ii. 
an' a' speak any thing against me .. — ii- 

it Were an ill thing to be ottered — ii. 

a little prating tiling, O there's — ii. 

every unworthy thing, live here in .. — iii. 

things liuvu fuTlcn out, sir, so — iii. 

wilt undertakea thing like death,... — iv. 

things, that to hear them told — iv. 

all things shall be well, I warrant thee — iv. 

things for the cook, sir — iv. 

but one thing to rejoice and solace in — iv. 
all things, that we ordained festival — iv. 

and all things change them — iv. 

and do the thing I bid thee do — v. 

put this in any licinid thing yon will — v. 
imieh I fear some ill unUieky thing — v. 

to have more talk of these sad things — v. 

whot, has this thing appeared again llnnilcl, i 

if there beany good thing to be done ... 

a guilty thing upon a fearful summons .. — 

in that, and all things, will we show .... — 

the most \nilgar thing to sense — 

things rank and gross in nature — 

firm of the thing, each word mode true — 

being a thing immortal as itself? — 

there are more things in heaven and earth — 
as 'twere a thing a little soiled i' the .... — 

take from me any thing that I will — 

any thing— but to the purpose — 

it appears no other thing to me — 

fly at any thing we see — 

unless things mortal move them not — 

not more ugly to the thing that helps it.. — i 

as made the things more rich — i 

I could accuse me of such things — i 

for any thing so overdone is from — i 

how unworthy a thing you make of me? — i 
ten thousand lesser things are mortised — i 
the king is a thing— a thing, my lord? .. — i 
and every thing is bent for England ,... — i 

for every thing is sealed and done — i 

live to say, this thing's to do — i 

speaks things in doiiDt, that carry — i 

of itself after the thing it loves — i 

wisdom, all things else, you mainly — i 

or is it some abll^e? and no such thing? — i 

can save the thing from death — i 

pr'ythee, Horatio, tell me one thing — — 
impart a thing to you from his majesty .. — 

if yonr mind dislike any thing — 

things standing thus unknown — 

how these things came about? — 

sir, I will answer any thing Olliello, 

Koderigo, of some such thing? — 

I'll refer me to all things of sense — 

the sooty bosom of such a thing as thon.. — 
of country, credit, every thing, to fall .. — 
these things to hear, would Desdemona.. — 
such things else of quality and respect .. — 

but I do beguile the thing I am 

which thing to do— if this poor trash ... 

of his place, that does those things — 

I remember a mass of things, but nothing — 

though other things grow fair — 

two tilings are to be done, m.v wife must — 
never any thing but your true servant . . — 
I'll intermingle every thing he does .... — 
for such things, in a false disloyal knave — 
whereinto foul things sometimes intrude — 

we see, in all things nature tends — 

to scan this thing no further 

than keep a corner in the tiling I love .. — i 
a thing for you. A thing for me? O'fp-) • • — i 

can any thing be made of this? — i 

men's natures wrangle with inferiorthings — i 
hath he said any thing? He hath, my lord — i 
and weep not; all things shall be well .. — 

an old thing 'twas, but it expressed — 

the world is a huge thing: 'tis a great price— iv. 

marry, I would not do such a thing — iv. 

wliv any thing: an honourable murderer — v. 

TIIINK-I do not think thou canst .... Tfin;"!.!/, i. 

my heart bleeds to think — i. 

he thinks me now incapable 

I should fin to think but nobly 

I think, he will carry this island home 
I do think, a king; 1 would, not so! .. 
when I shall think, or Phoebus' steeds 
may I he bold to think these spirits? .. 

dost thou think so, spirit? 

I rather think you have not sought 

scarce think their e.vcs do oflices 

if I (lid think, sir, I were well awake ., 

and think of each thing well 

think on thy Proteus, when . TiroGcn. of t\ 

I think you 11 hardly win her 

of many good I think liim best 

I think him so, because I think him so - 
of al 1 the rest, 1 1 h i 11 k , liest loves ye . . 

Olid sent, 1 think, from Proteus 

I think, your lordship is not (r<'/i.) .. 
I can hafilly think you my master .. 
you think too much of so much pains? 

I think. Crab my dog be 

and. I think, no other treasure 

I think 'tis no unwelcome news .... 

nay, sure I think, she holds 

if you think, so, then 



— ii. I 

— ii. 1 



— iii. 3 

— iii. 3 



— iv. 3 



— i. 2 

— i. 2 






_ v. 1 

— V. I 

— V. 1 

— V. 1 
•roFin, i.:i 



THINK my patience more.. T'uioftfn. 0/ /' 

to think that she is by — In. 1 

I have the wit to think — iii. 1 

but Thiirio thinks so — iii. 2 

and also, I think, thou art not — iii.* 

ay, but she'll think, that — iii. 2 

she bids me think, how 1 — iv. 'i 

I think 'tis almost day — iv. 2 

think n. t 1 (latter, for I swear I do not — iv. 3 

but think ii|ion my grief — jv. 3 

I think verily he liiid been — »v. 4 

not so, I think she lives — iv, 4 

to think upon her woes — iv. 4 

she thinks that Proteus (rr;).) — iv. 4 

when she did think my master — iv. 4 

to think upon thy words — iv. 4 

I think, if I had such a tire — iv. 4 

and think thee worthy — v. 4 

what think you of this page (r,-p.).... — v, 4 
ay, I think my cousin meant viM.. Merry Wivei, i. I 

l|think there are, sir — i- I 

I sliall think the worse of flit men ,, — ii. 1 

I think, the best way were to — ii. 1 

what diith he think of us? — ii. 1 

do vou think there is truth in them? — ii. 1 

I do not think the knight — ii. I 

and I think he bath appointed — ii. 1 

surely, I think you have charms .... — li. 2 

Ithinkmvself in better plight — ii. '2 

and what they think in their hearts — _ii. 2 

I think you know him — iii. I 

I think, if vour linsbaiids were dead — iii. 2 

I think, I shall drink in pipe-wine .. — iii. 2 

I think, my husband has some — i)i- 3 

and bid her think what a man is — iii- 5 

tliiiik of that, a man of my kidney (rep.)— iii- 5 

1 think you have killed — iv. 2 

by yea and no, I think the 'oman — iv. 2 

what think you? — iv. 2 

he will never. I think, in the way — iv. 2 

BO think I too — iv. 4 

think on't Jove, afoul fault — v. 5 

tlicfiittest, I tliink, i' the forest — v. 5 

1 think, tlie devil will not have — v. 5 

and think not on their sins — v. 5 

I think, we have watched you — v. .5 

do vou think, though we would — v. 5 

I think, to repav that money — v. 5 

if 1 did not think it had been — v. 5 

1 think so. when I took a boy — v. .5 

what think you, sailors? T,celfihyij;!il,\. 2 

do yon think you have fools in hand? — 1.3 

why I think so; I am not such — .i. 3 

never in your l.fe. I think — i. 3 

and X think, I have the back trick .. — 1.3 

I did tliink, by the excellent — i. 3 

I think not so, my lord- — i. 4 

those wits, that think thev have thee — i. 5 

what think vou of this fool, Miilvolio? — i. 5 

one would think bis mother's milk .. — i. .■> 

but I think, it rather consists of — ii. 3 

dost thou think, because thmi — ii. 3 

do not think I have wit enough — ii. 3 

so crammed, as he thinks, with — ii. 3 

he shall think, by the letters — n- 3 

I think it well, my lord — ii- 4 

what should I think on't — .n- 5 

I think I saw your wisdom there .... — lii- ' 

for him, I think not on him — jii- 1 

what might you think? — iii- 1 

that tyrannous heart can think? ---- — ij}- 1 

that you do think, you are not — iii- 1 

if I think so, I think the same of you — lii. 1 

then think you right; I am not — iii. 1 

I think, oxen and wainropes cannot — .'j.'- 2 

and your store. I think, is not for.... — iii. 3 

I think we do know the sweet 

do not think I am mad 

I think nobly of the soul 

but I would hot have yon to think .. 

I think you set nothing by 

think of me as you please — V. 

to think me as well a sister as a wife 
what figure of us think you he ..Meas./or 
what think you of it? (r<-p. iii. 1) .... 

nor do I think the man of 

for. I think, thou never wast where.. 

I think, or in any religion 

I think thou tlost 

I think, I have done myself wrong ,. 

and never think of it 

which, I think, is a very ill house .. 

I think no less 

let not your worship think mc 

whiit'so'clock, thiiiK you? - 

I do think that you might pardon .. 

think on that; and mercy 

hail to you, provost! so I think you are - 

as I do think, to-morrow 

prav and think, I think and pray.... 

Itliinkitwell 

think vou I can a resolution fetch .. - 

do't tlioii think, Chiudio — m. 1 

what shinilil I think? heaven shield — iii. 1 

if vou think well to carry this — iii. 1 

do tliuu but think what tis to cram — 111.2 

but where is he, think you? — iii- 2 

is it true, think yon? — 111-2 

if von think it meet, compound — iv, 2 

vo"ur true nmn thinks it big enough-. — iv. 2 

your thief thinks it little eiimigh — jv. 2 

you will think you have mode no..., — iv, 2 

think, it were mistress Overdonc's .. — iv. 3 

and I think, fortv more — iv. 3 

do we jest now, think vou? — iv. 3 

1 should not think it strange — iv. 6 

who thinks, he knows, that he (r.-i) ) — v, I 

marrv, sir. I think, if .vou handled .. — v- 1 

to thmk I can Ik- iindisccrnablc — v. 1 

which I did think with slower foot .. — v. 1 



111. 4 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 
v. 1 
V. 1 
1 (letter) 
v. 1 
Meat. i. 1 
i. 1 
i- I 
i.2 
i. 2 
i.2 
i.2 



ii. 3 

ii. 3 

ii. 4 

ii. 4 




THINK, a due sincerity Measure for Meamre, v. 1 

I think, tliis is your uaugliter Much Ado, i. 1 

I would liave J'ou think so — 1.1 

come, come; do you think I do not know — ii. \ 

but did you think, ttie prince would — ii. 1 

and I tliink I told liim true — ii. 1 

i' faith, lady, I think your blazon.... — ii. 1 

I think, I told your lordship, a year — ii. 2 

I cannot tell; 1 think not: I will not — ii. 3 

his suit to her he tliinks not worthy — ii. 3 

I did never think tliat lady would have — ii. 3 

I cannot tell what to think of it .... — ii. 3 

I should think this a gull, but that.. — ii. 3 

were it good, think you? Hero thinks — ii. 3 

I did never think to marry — ii. 3 

I did not think I should live till I were — ii. 3 

sure, I think so; and therefore, certainly — iii. 1 

for what his heart thinks, his tongue — iii. 2 

you may think, I love you not — iii. 2 

my brother, I think he holds .you well — iii. 2 

think you of a worse title, and I will — iii. 2 

may this be so? I will not think it .. — iii. 2 

first, who think you the most desartless — iii. 3 

but I think they that touch pitch.... — iii. 3 

nay, by'r lady, that I think trep.) .. — iii. 3 

troth, I think, your other rabato .... — iii. 4 

I think, you would have me say .... — iii. 4 

none, I think, an' it be the right .... — iii. 4 

you may think, perchance, that I think — iii. 4 

to think what I list (rep.) — iii. 4 

I cannot think, if I would think my — iii. 4 

dead, I think; help uncle; Hero! — iv. I 

for did I think thou wouldst not qiiiokly — iv. 1 

think you in your soul, the count .... — iv. 1 

as you hear oif me, so think of me.... — iv. 1 

I think he be angry indeed — v. 1 

Beatrice to you, who, I think, hath legs — v. 2 

in spite of your heart, I think; alas! — v. 2 

liow long is that, think you? — v. 2 

I must entreat your pains, I think .. — v. 4 

the sight whereof, I think, you had . . — v. 4 

I think, he thinks upon the savage bull — v. 4 

dost tliou think, I care for a satire . . — v. 4 

I will think nothin" to any purpose — V. 4 

I did tliink to have beaten thee — v. 4 

think not on him till to-morrow .... — v. 4 

Demetrius thinks not so Mid. N.'s Dream, i . I 

therefore I think I am not in the niglit — ii. 2 

we'll rest us, Herraia, if you think it — ii. 3 

if you think I come hither as a lion — iii. I 

why should you think that I should — iii. 2 

you speak not as you think, it cannot be — iii. 2 

you, perhaps, may think, because.... — iii. 2 

think no more of this night's accidents — iv. 1 

but, as I think (.for truly would I speak — iv. 1 

do not you think, the duke was here — iv. 1 

that you should think, we come not — v. I (prol.) 

did these lovers think no scorn to ... . — v. 1 

as I would have you think, that hod — v. 1 

thou art my love, I think. Think what — v. 1 

think but this (and all is mended) . . — (epil.) 
wlien I was wont to think no harm. Lojie'sX.. Loii, i. 1 

I think scorn to sigh — i. 2 

but I think, now 'tis not to be fouud — i. 2 

doth the wise think them other? — iii. 1 

I know not, but I think, it was not he — iv. 1 
no thought can think, nor tongue — iv. 3 (verses) 

I tliink no less; dost tiiou not wish .. — v. 2 

will they not, think you, hang — v. 2 

but this, I think, when they are — v. 2 

sea-sick, I think, coming from Muscovy — v. 2 

to think me worthy of Pompion — v. 2 

I think, Hector w.as not so clean .... — v. 2 
but I should think of sho.llows..A/e)c/i.o//>H;'c?, i. 1 

the thouglit to think on this — i. 1 

sad to thuik upon his merchandise .. — i. 1 

I think, he bought his doublet — i. 2 

what think you of the Scottish lord.. — i. 2 

I th ink the Frenchman became — i . 2 

as I think, so was he called — i. 2 

I think, I may take bis bond — i. 3 

think, you are my son (lep.) — ii. 2 

good l/conardo, think on this — ii. 2 

to think so base a th(night — ii. 7 

or shall I think, in silver she's — ii. 7 

I think he only loves the world...... — ii. 8 

I think they call the place — iii. 1 

that thinks he hath done well in .... — iii. 2 

makes me think, that this Antouio . . — iii. 4 

our husbands before they think of us — iii. 4 

they shall think we are acooraplislied — iii. 4 

for truly, I think, you are damned .. — iii. .5 

I think the best grace of wit — iii. 5 

the world thinks, and I think so too — iv. I 

I pray .you, think you question with — iv. I 

and, I think, the nightingale, if she.. — v. 1 

had you been there, I tliink, you would — v. I 

which I think is within me As you Like it, i, I 

wluit think you of falling in love? .. — i. 2 

to think mj' poverty is treacherous . . — i. 3 

for I think, you have no money in your — ii. 4 

as sure I think did never man love so — ii. 4 

I think of as many matters as he .... — ii. 5 

I think he be transformed into a beast — ii. 7 

ofwhat we think against thee — iii. I 

dost thou think though I ara — iii. 2 

when I tliink, I must speak — iii. 2 

I think it was made of Atalanta's .. — iii. 2 

he thinks liimself too soon there .... — iii. 2 

do you think so? yes: I think he is.. — iii. 4 

I do think him as concave as ,. — iii. 4 

but I think he is not in — iii. 4 

I think, she means to tangle my ... . — iii. 5 

that I shall think it a most plenteous — iii. 5 

think not I love him, though I ask.. — iii. 5 

scarce think you have swam — iv. I 

abetter jointure, I think, than you .. — iv. 1 

or I should think my honesty ranker — iv. 1 

I will think you the most pathetieal — iv. 1 

I verily did think that her old gloves — iv. 3 



THINK-would think this was well. As you Like il, iv. 3 

the fool doth think he is wise — v. I 

1 shall think my brother happy — v. 2 

I think, it would be the death of the ..Alt's iVcll, i. 

I think not on my fatlier — i. 

star, and think to wed it, he is so ... . — i. 

notorious liar, tliink him a great way — 1. 

show what we alone must think .... — i. 

I will think of thee at court — i. 

I especially think under Mars — i. 

when he was retrograde, I think irep.) — i. 

and, I think, I shall never have the.. — i. 3 

than, I think; she wished me — i. 3 

made me to think of this; else Paris — i. 3 

but, tliink you, Helen, if .you should — i. 3 

know 1 tliink, and think I know most — ii. 1 

I think, sir, you can eat none — ii. 2 

lately whipped, sir, I think — ii,2 

'fore God, I think so — ii. 3 

fair one, I think not so — ii. 3 

I did think thee, for two ordinaries. . — ii. 3 

I think, tliou wast created for men .. — ii. 3 

with what apolo,£:y you think ma.y . . — ii. 4 

your lordship thinks not him a soldier — ii. 5 

I think so. AVliy, do you not know him? — ii. 5 

dare not say what I think of it — iii. 1 

tliink upon patience; pray you — iii. 2 

fur, I think, I know your hostess .... — iii. 5 

you came, I think, from France? — iii. 5 

against his liking; think you it is so? — iii. 5 

do you think, I am so far deceived . . — iii. 6 

if .you think your mystery in — iii. 6 

why, do you think, be will make uo — iii. 6 

he must think us some band of — iv. 1 

in this disguise, I think 't no sin .... — iv. 2 

and thinks himself made — iv. 3 

and what think you he hath confessed? — iv. 3 

or whether he thinks, it were not .... — i v. 3 

I think, I have his letter — iv. 3 

that you would think truth were .... — iy. 3 

which he thinks is a patent for his .. — iv. 5 

than for to think that I would — v. 3 

if he does think he had not — v. 3 

I tliink she has: certain it is — v. 3 

I tliink thee now some common .... — v. 3 
what think you, if he were. rajmng-o/SA. I (indue.) 

I think he cannot choose — 1 (indue.) 

as he shall think, by our true.... — 1 (i]iduc.) 
I think, 'twas Soto that your .... — I (indue.) 

although, I think, 'twas in another. . — i. 1 

she would think scolding would do little — i. 2 

think you, a little din can — i. 2 

so I pray you all to think yourselves — ii. I 

I think, she'll sooner prove a soldier — ii. 1 

that thinks with oaths to face — ii. I 

I know, you think to dine with — iii. 2 

and think it not the worst of all your — iv. 2 

as thou shalt think on prating — iv. 3 

conceit is deeper than you think for — iv. 3 

let's see, I think, 'tis now some — iv. 3 

or do, or think to do, you are still.... — iv. 3 

I think, I shall command your — v. 1 

pray, what do you think is his name? — v. 1 

fiddy, thinks the world turns — v. 2 

think thou hast the veriest shrev/.. — v. 2 
I think, this coming summer ....Winter\Tale,\. 1 

I think, there is not in the world .... — i. 1 

and little thinks she has been sluiced — i. 2 

and 'tis powerful, think it, from east — 1.2 

I think, most understand Bohemia.. — i. 2 

that man, that does not think it ... . — i. 2 

dost think, I am so muddy — i. 2 

who, I do think, is mine, and love as — i. 2 

by him that I think honourable .... — i. 2 

he thinks, nay, with all — i. 2 

leave me; and think upon my bidding — ii. 3 

which not to have done, I think .... — iii. 2 

think, what they have done — iii. 2 

or I o'erween to think so — iv. 1 

I think it not uneasy to get — iv. 1 

sworn, I think, to show myself a glass — iv. 3 

I tremble to think, your father — iv. 3 

I think, they are given to men of. ... — iv. 3 

I think, you have as little skill — Iv. 3 

I think so too; for never gazed — iv. 3 

I think, there is not half a kiss — iv. 3 

}'0u would think, a smock were — iv. 3 

you'd tliink, sister. Ay, good (i-ep.) .. — iv. 3 

IS it true, think you? — iv. 3 

I cannot speak, nor think, nor dare — iv. 3 

I not purpose it. I think, Camillo .. — iv. 3 

I needs must think it honesty — iv. 3 

sir, I think, you have heard — iv. 3 

please to think I love the king — iv. 3 

I think, affliction may subdue the cheek — iv. 3 

I think, .you know, my fortunes do all — iv. 3 

thou must think, there's necessity in't — iv. 3 

think you so, sir? Not he alone — iv. 3 

if he think it fltto shore them again — iv. 3 

and so still think if the wrong I .... — v. 1 

the most peerless piece of earth, I tliink — v. 1 

and think me still no gentleman horn — v. 2 

fancy ma.y tliink anon it moves (!(?p.) — v. 3 

make me to think so twenty years . , — v. 3 

but then you'll think, (wliicli I protest — v. 3 

or those, that think it is unlawful .. — v. 3 

I think, the meat wants t]iat..Comedij of Errors, ii. 2 

and think I hear all this — ii. 2 

I think, thou art, in mind — ii, ^ 

would tell you what I think. 1 think — iii. 1 

teach me, dear creature, how to think — iii. 2 

in that glorious supposition, think he — iii. 2 

and, I think, if my breast had not .. — iii. 2 

time. I think, to trudge — iii. 2 

thinic of this, 1 cannot tell (rep.'i .... — iii. 2 

ah! but I think him better — iv. 2 

one that thinks a man always — iv. 3 

I tjiink, he brings the money — iv, 4 

and, I think, when he hath lamed me — iv. 4 

youder, as I think, he walks — v. 1 



THINK— I think, I had; I never.Com<'rf.y of Err. v. 1 

by this, I think, the dial _ v. 1 

from whence, I think, you are come — v, 1 

I think, you all have drank of Circe's — v. 1 

I think it be, sir; I deny it not — v. 1 

by Dromio; but I think he brought.. — v. 1 

think upon what hath chanced Macbeth, i. 3 

I think not of them; yet, when we .... ii I 

to think so brainsickly of things — ii. 2 

I am afraid to think what I ii. 2 

and, I think, being too strong for him — ii. 3 

have died with them they think on? ., — iii. 2 

thinkof this, good peers,'but as — iii. 4 

when now I think you can behold .... — iii. 4 
and I do think, that had he Duncan's — iii. 6 
rightly just; wliatever I shall tliink .. — iv. 3 
I think, our country sinks beneath.... — iv. 3 

I think, but dare not speak v. I 

and, as I think, one father KingJohn, i. 1 

his will to get me, as I think i. 1 

! will I not tniiik of home — ii. i 

by my soul, I think, his father never — ii. 1 

I believe, j'ou tliink them false — iii. 1 

by ray troth, I think, thou lovest — iii. 3 

audi will think thou smilest — iii. 4 

or madly think, a babe of clouts — iii. 4 

'tis strange, to think how much king — iii. 4 

nay, you may think, my love — iv. 1 

and think them strong; and more .. — iv. 2 

think you, I bear the shears of — iv. 2 

whate'er you think, good words, I think _ iv. 3 
sir Richard, what think you? Have you — iv. 3 

by heaven, I think, my sword's — iv. 3 

.you shall think the devil is come — iv. 3 

I did not think the king so stored. ... — v. 4 
where I may think the remnant .... — v. 4 

I did not think to be so sad v..') 

Hubert, I think. Thou hast a perfect — v. 6 

as to think I come one way of — v. 6 

and other lords, if you think meet .. — v. 7 
and for we think the eagle-winged ../(a-/iaiiZ //. i. 3 

think not, the king did banish — i. 3 

honour and allegiance cannot think (rep.)— ii. 1 

on no thought I think, makes — ii. 2 

and though you think, that all — iii. 3 

'twill make me think, the world .... iii. 4 

what, think you then, the king — iii. 4 

amen, if heaven do think him me .. — iv. 1 
to think our former state a happy .. — v. 1 

for France: think, I am dead y. 1 

though shalt think, though he divide — v. I 
by and by, think that I am unkinged — v. 5 
what think you, coz, of this young ..\HenryIV. i. 1 

when men think least I will — i. 2 

but that I think his father loves .... i. 3 

as what I think might be, but — i. 3 

always think him in our debt (rep.) — i. 3 

I think, this be the most villanous .. — ii. 1 
I think, it be two o'clock. I pr'ythee — ii. 1 
I think, you are more beholden to .. — ii. 1 
I shall think the better of myself. ... — ii. 4 

what think you they portend? — ii. 4 

and, as I think, his age some fifty .. — ii. 4 

I think it is good-morrow — ii. 4 

I think, there is no man speaks — iii. 1 

our book, I think, be drawn iii. 1 

do not think so, you shall not — iii. 2 

never see thy face, but I think on .. — iii. 3 
if I did not think thou hadst been .. — iii. 3 
do you think, sir John? do you think — iii. 3 
dost thou think, I'll fear thee as I .. — iii. 3 

nor did he think it meet, to lay — iv. 1 

and think how such an apprehension iv. 1 

for men must think, if we — iv. 1 

our joints are whole. As heart can think— iv. 1 
that you would think, that I had a.. — iv. 2 

I think, to steal cream, indeed — iv. 2 

1 do not think, a braver gentleman .. v. 1 

cousin, I think, thou art enamoured — v. 2 
I did not think thee lord of such .... — v. 4 
and, think not, Percy, to share with me — v. 4 
I cannot think, my lord, your son ..'iHenrylV. i. 1 

I think, you are fallen into the — i. 2 

I think, we are a body strong enough — i. 3 
I think, I am as like to ride the mare — ii. I 

what would'st thou think of me ii. 2 

fellow to think as every man thinks — ii. 2 
do .you think I would deny her? (rep.) — ii. 4 
I did not think, thou wast within .. — ii. 4 
no, I think thou art not; I think.... — ii. 4 
for the which, I think, thou wilt howl — ii. i 
where, I think, they will talk of mad — iii. 2 
two of sir John FalBtafrs men, as Ithink — iii. 2 

master Sure-card, as I think — iii. 2 

what think you, sir John? a good .. — iii, 2 
I think, it is my lord of Westmoreland — iv. 1 
might so much as think you enemies — iv. 1 
I tliink, you are sir John Falstaif. ... — iv. 3 
do you think me a swallow, an arrow — iv. 3 
I tliink he's gone to hunt, my lord.. — iv. 4 
almost, my liege, to think you were — iv. 4 
and hear, I think, the very latest. ... — iv. 4 
indeed, I think, the young king loves — v. 2 
sits not so easy on me as you thmk .. — v. 2 
you are, I think, assured I love 3'ou not — v. 2 

I did not think, master Silence — v. 3 

by 'r lady, I think a' be ; but goodman — v. 3 
puissance: think, when we talk .. Henry V. 1 (cho.) 

and the hour, I think, is come — i. I 

give me your thoughts; think you not — ii. 2 
there's not, I think, a subject, th.at sits — ii. 2 
bid him, a' should not think of God — ii. 3 
but though we think so, it is no matter — ii. 4 

think we king Harry strong — ii. 4 

do but think you stand upon .... — iii. (chorus) 

by Cheshu, I think (rep.) — iii. 2 

captain Macmorris. I think, look you — iii. 2 
I shiill think you do not use me .... — iii. 2 

I think, in my very conscience — iii. 6 

for my part, I think the duke — iii. 6 



THINK, he will ont nil he kills Henry f'. ill 

is it meet, think you, thnt wc should — iv 

I think it Ik-; Imt wo Imvc no grcttt — iv 

hilt, I tliiiik. woslmll novirsii — iv. 1 

H 1ml tliinka lie Kt'i.nr estate? — iv. I 

t.. von. I think, the kiiiii is hut — iv. 1 

I tliink, lie w.Mikl m.t wish hinii^clliiiiy — iv. 1 

it were ndt sill tH Iliiiik, thiit — iv. 1 

Milt In-ihiv. think 11.. t iiiH.ii the luiilt — iv. I 

shall tliink theiiisthfsueciii>ecl .... — iv. :i 

into the hainls of I lis he thinks) — iv. 4 

1 think it is in .Maec.l.in, where .... — iv. 7 

wliat thinkyon.eaptiiiii FlueUcn? .. _ iv. 7 

do von think I'll \k loisworn? — iv. H 

thou wouUlst think, I had sola — v.'.' 

or shall we think the subtle-witted . . I tlenri/ 11. i. 1 

a tliiid man thinks, without — i. I 

I think, hv some fxld ^inimals — i. 2 

tlun will 1 think upon a reeompenso — i. 2 

I think, lit the north gate — i. 4 

to think tliat vou have aught hut — ii. 3 

and think ine'honoured to least .... — ii. 3 

witlial, Ithink heheldtherij/ht .... — ii. 4 

liiiiik not. altho' in writinj; I — iii. 1 

I think, the d.uke of Burgundy — iii. 2 

1 think her oldfamiliiir is asleep — iii. 2 

think upon tlic eoiuiucst of — iv. I 

1 lliiiik. this upstart Isold Talhot'a.. — iv. 7 

I think, 1 have you fast; unehain.... — v. 3 

Bjieaks Suft'olk as he th.inks? — v. .1 

1 think, she knows not well — v. i 

as I think, it was by the eardinal ..ilitiirijl'l. 1. 2 

I'll tliink upon the (piestions — i. 2 

beldame, I think, we wntehed you .. — i. 4 

how iliink you by that? were it .... — ii. I 

and yet, I think, jet did he never see — ii. 1 

and would ye not think that cunning — ii. 1 

this news, I think, hath turned — ii. 1 

for, I think, I have taken my last .. — ii. 3 

but, soft I I think she comes — ii. 4 

for whilst I think I am thy married wife— ii. 4 

to think uiion niv pomp, shall be.... — ii. 4 

I think, I slioiihl have told voiir .... — iii. 1 

what are they, that tliink it? — iii. I 

for the beauty, tliinks it excellent .. — iii. 1 

say as von think, and sneak it from — iii. 1 

not a thought, but thinks on dignity — iii. I 

and thinks he, that the chirping of.. — iii. 2 

and think it but a minute spent .... — iii. 2 

that thou mightst think upon these — iii. 2 

what, think you much to pay — iv 1 

the nobility think scorn to go in — iv. 2 

I think, he hath a very fair warning — iv. G 

aud, I think, this word sal let — iv, 10 ' 

raistak'st me inueh, 1 1 think I do .. — v. 1 

but little thinks, we shall he of Zlh-nn/VI. i. 1 

think you, 'twere prejiidieial to — i. I 

think not, that Henry shall he so .. — i. I 

do but think, how sweet a thing .... — i. 2 

think hut upon the wrong he did — i. 4 

I think, it cites us, brother to the — ii. I 

their power. I think, is thirtv tlionsand — ii. I 

but think you, lords, that Clifford fled — ii. 6 

I think his understanding is bereft.. — ii. 6 

for, as we think, yon are the king .. — iii. 1 

I think, he means to beg a child of her — iii. 2 

you'll think it strange — iii. 2 

what think ^on of this new marriiige — iv. 1 

tell him plainly what I think 7.. — iv. 1 

speak freely what you tliink — iv. I 

say not much, but think the more ., — iv. I 

belike, he thinks me Henry _ iv. I 

else might I think, that Clarence — iv. 2 

if Kxeter, what thinks your lordship? — iv. 9 

had I not reason, think ye — v. ti 

by heaven, I think, there is no ....Iticlian! III. i. I 

I think, it is our way, if we — i. 1 

fouler than heart can think thee .... — 12 

which, I think, proceeds from wayward — i. 3 

and think no liarm, hilt thus his — i. 3 

for I did think, that Ihoiihadst called — i. 3 

'.Col. Kill.'} will not think hut they ascend — i. 3 

nid Gloster think on this — i. 1 

think you my uncle did dissemble .. — ii. 2 

I cannot think it — ii. 2 

and so, I think, in all — ii. 2 

he thinks that vou Bhoiild hear me .. — iii. 1 

think you. mv lord, this little — iii. 1 

that jet think not ou't — i'i. 2 

who think themselves as safe — iii 3 

think you, but that I know our — iii. 2 

your grace, we think, should soonest — iii. 4 

I think, there's ne'er a man in — iii. 4 

what! think ynu we are Turks — iii. .^ 

I think, the duke will not be spoke .. _ iii. 7 

yon might haply think, tongue-tied — iii. 7 

think now what I would speak — iv. 2 

let me think on Hastings — iv. 2 

meantime, hut think how r may do.. — iv. 3 

think that thy hahes were fairer — iv. 4 

my daughter s mother thinks it (rfp.l — iv t 

what think ynu of it madiiin? _ iv. -I 

think, how thou stab'dst me in my .. — v. 3 

think on the Tower, and me '. . . . — v. 3 

tfi-morrow in the battle tliink on (r>';i.) — v. 3 

think upon Orey (rep.) _ v. 3 

and think our wrongs in Hichard's .. — v. 3 

think on lord Hastings; and despair — v. 3 

in the battle think on ISuckingham.. — v. 3 

1 think, there lie six Uiehinonus .... — v. 4 

may. if they think it well Ilrnnjl'lir. (pr-A.) 

think, ye see the very [Mjrsons of our — (priil.) 

think, you see them great, and followed — (pro!.) 

grievingly I think, the iieiice — i. 1 

to think an English courtier _ 1.3 

I think, would better please them.... — i. 1 

I do not think, he fears death _ ii. 1 

aa all think, for this business - ii. 1 

I think, .vou have bit the mark — ii. 1 

let's think ill private more — ii. I 



THINK-he will have ail, I think .. Ileiiruftll. ii. 2 

eoiiveiiient place that I can think of — ii. 2 
I prav you, what think vou of a dncliess?— Ii. 3 

it faints me to think what follows _ ii. a 

heard, to her. Wind do you think ine? — ii. 3 
id think not at all a friend to truth — ii. 4 



tin 



1 th 



can you think, lords, that any — 

in-.iv. think us those we profess — 

Iliink, hv this he is _ 

if we did think his eoi.templation.. .. — 

to think upon llie part of business .. — 

when he thinks; ^'ood easy man .... — 

Cromwell, 1 did not think to shed .. — 

Idouhlets, I think) ilew up — 

lint, 1 think, your grace — 

I think, I have incensed — 

for 1 must think of that — 

I think, your highness saw this — 

do von think, my lords, the king .... — 

and think with wagging of your .... — 

once think his place becomes — 

the devil was amongst them, I think — 

let none think flattery — 

this (lay, no man think he has business — 

I think", Helen loves him better.. 7'; 01(11,! ^C. 
I Lliiiik, his smiling becomes him 

to think how she tickled his chin .... — 

I told vou a thing yesterday; think ou't — 

I think he went not forth to day .... — 

and think [Co/. -call] them shames .. — 

and doth think it rich to hear — 

and wake him to the answer, think 3'ou? — 



— iii. 1 



ii. I 



— 1. ; 



i. 3 



ii. 3 



— 1. 2 



. tliy horse will sooner .. 
(lost tiiou tiiiiik, Ihavc no sense .... 
thou art proclaimed a fool, I think .. 
we may not think the justness of .... 
lest, perchanee. he think we dare not 

we think him over-proud 

what he thinks he is (rc/j.) 

they think, my little stomach to .... 

what think you of this man — 111. J 

as heart can think, or courage — iv. I 

I constantly do think — iv. I 

deceived, I think of no such thing — iv. 2 

^vhen I deliver her, think it an altar — iv. :] 

do you think, I will? — iv. 4 

the prince must think me tardy — iv. j 

what thinks, he shows — iv. .'1 

and modestl.y, I think, the fall of every — iv. 5 

Calchas, I think — v. 2 

think, we had mothers — v. 2 

rather think this not Cressid — v. 2 

I cannot tell what to think on't — v, 3 

I think, thev have swallowed — v. -i 

what dost thoii think 'tis worth? ..Timonn/Alh. i, 1 

should think ourselves forever perfect — i. 2 

you gods, think I, what need — 1.2 

1 laugh to think that babe a bastard 
I think, no usurer but has a fool .... — 

to think I shall lack friends? — 

ne'er speak, or think, that Timon'a .. — 

I could not think it ()(?;).) — 

does he think so baekwardly of me . . — 

and I cannot think, but in the end .. — 

a.v, and I think, one business does .. — 

what do you think the hour? — 

I cannot think, but your age has — 

I think, this honourable lord did hut — 

I should think so — 

think not on't, sir — 

think it a bastard, whom the oracle.. — 

think, thy slave man rebels — 

but they think, we are too dear Corioln 

you must not think to fob off — 

what do you think? — 

these are tlie words: T think, I have — 

nor did you think it folly — 

but, I think, von'll find they have not — 

in troth, I think, she would — 

I do not think— where is the enemy? — 

if any think, brave death outweighs — 

woui'dst do so, I think, should we.... — 

what I think, I utter; and spend my — 

I think, there's one at home for you — 

make us think, rather our state's .... — 

truly I think, if all our wits were.. .. — 

think you so? which way, do yon judge — 

desire them to think upon .you. Think — 

yon must think, if we give yon — 

would think upon you for .your voices — 
do you think, tiiat his eon tempt .... 

I think, 'twill serve, if he can 

think on the wounds his body bears 

your name. I think, is Adrian 

our state thinks not so 

am the man, I think, that shall 

I think, our fellows are asleep 

dost not think me for the man 1 am 

more in him than I could think 

I think, he is: but a greater 

I think not so. We should by this . . 
so he thinks, and is no less apiiarent 

think you he'll carry Home? 

1 think, he'll be to Uome, as is the .. 
I think, he'll hear me: yet to bite his 

think to front his revenges with 

can yon think to blow out the 

cause, do you think, I have to swoon? 

I can scarce think there's anj' — v. 2 

thus changed, makes you think so .. — v. 3 

think witii thyself, bow more — v. 3 

I think, might have fouml easy flues — v. i 

dost thou think I'll griiee thee with . — v. 5 
then must I think von would not.. Ju/iiiiC<rior, i. 2 

and other men, thiiik of this life — j. 2 

he thinks too much: such men are .. — i. 2 

desired their worships to think it was — i. 2 

till then, think of the world — i. 2 



iv. 3 



i.6 



— ii.3 



— V. 2 






THINK him as a seriient's egg ....JuUutCiriar, ii. I 

I think, we are too hold upon your .. ii. 1 

to think, that or our cause — ii. 1 

I think, he will stand verv strong.. .. — ii. I 

I think, it is not meet, Mark Antony — ii. 1 

Murk Antony, think not of him ;>r7),) ii. 1 

think you, I am no stronger than — ii. 1 

think you to wolk forth? _ Ii. 2 

of Uriitus yearns to think upon 1 — ii. Z 

be not fund, to think that Cicsar bears — iii. I 

he'll think ymir mother chides — iv. 3 

I did not tliink. you conid have been — iv. 3 

think of marching to Philippi (re/).) — iv. 3 

left reading? Here it is, I think — iv. 3 

I think, it IS the weakness of mine .. — iv. 3 

he thinks he still is at his instniiiient — iv. 3 

when think you that the sword — v. 1 

think not, thou noble Hoinnn — v. I 

you think, none hut your sheets, ./l/i/ony 4- C/eo. i. 2 

I do think, there is mettle in death .. — i.'i 

wli.y should 1 think, you can be mine — i. 3 

vouchsafed to think he had partners — i. 4 

I must not think, there are evils — i. 1 

lack blood to think on't. and flush .. — i. 4 

you think of him too much — i. ."j 

and think, what Vinus did with Mara — i. .') 

think on me, that am with Phoibiis' — i. 't 

Menas, I did not think, this amorous — ii. I 

I think, not moved by Antony — ii. 1 

did not think to draw my sw(jid 'gaiiitt — ii. 2 

I'll think them ever.y one an Antmiy — ii. 5 

I did not think, fir, to have met .... — ii 6 

at sea, I think. We have, sir _ ii. 6 

I think, the policy of that purpose .. — ii. 6 

J think so too: hut you shall hnd — ii. 6 

I think, thou'rt mad: the mutter? .. — ii. 7 

although thou think me [loor, I am.. — ii. 7 

cannot think, speak, cast, write — iii. 2 

I think so, Cliarmian: dull of tongue — iii. 3 

by Hercules, I think, I am i" the right — iii. 7 

think, and die. Is Antony, or we .... — iii. 1 1 

Ca3sar must think, when one so — iv. 1 

he thinks, being twenty times — iv. 2 

think 3'(iu. there was, or might be.... — v. 2 

you must think this, look you — v 2 

you must not think, I am so simple .. — v. 2 
tliough, I think, the king be touched. Cy.iite/me, i. I 

I do not think, so fair an outward — i. 1 

1 would think on him, at certain hours — i. 4 

safely, I think: 'twas a contention .. — i. 5 

in constancy, you think, stands so safe — i. .^ 

will this hold, think you? — i. 5 

she doth tliink, she has strange — i. li 

dost tlioii think, in time she — i. ti 

think what a chance thou ffp.) .... — i.6 

think on my words (;cf).) _ i. B 

can my sides hold to think, that man — i. 7 

if he shall think it tit. a saucy stranger — i, 7 

not easily. I think. You are a fool '.. — ii. 1 

will force fiim think I have picked the — ii. 2 

what I shall think is good? — ii.3 

I do think I saw 't this morning — ii.3 

and, I think, he'll grant the trihute.. — ii. 4 

they think, they are mine — iii. 3 

watch there, and to think on him? .. — iii. 4 

I grie\e m.\'self, to think, when — iii 4 

pr'j'thee, think there's livers out .... — iii. 4 

glad you think of other place — iii. 4 

letter true? Sir, as I think — iii. 5 

I would think thee an honest man .. — iii. ft 

OJovel I think: foundations fly — iii. 6 

now, I think cm thee, my hunger's .. — iii. (> 

I should think here were a fairy .... — iii. 6 

fair youth, think us no churls — iii. ti 

their blood thinks scorn, till — iv. 4 

thou art a wav, I think, to liberty .. — v. 4 

I think, he would change places with — v. 4 

I think, you'll never return to tell one — v. 4 

so, think of your estate — v. 5 

Augustus lives to think on't — v. .^ 

think more and more what's best to ask — v. 5 

what think you? The same dead tiling — v. 6 

that he could not but think her bond — v. s 

think, that yon ore upon a rock — v. 5 

think they are my sons, are none — v. 5 

think my son to be as dear .... TttusAniii'.tiicus^ i. 2 

think you not how dangerous — ii. I 

wit, would think that 1 had none — ii.3 

that thinks of me so abjectly — ii.3 

have I not reason, think you, to look — ii.3 

that woe is me to think upon thy woes — iii. 1 

love me. as I think you do _ iii. 1 

I do think we are not brought so low — iii. 2 

I think, she means, that there — iv. 1 

I blush to think upon this ignoiny .. — iv. 2 

lie thinks, with .Jove in heaven — iv. 3 

to use as you think needful _ v. 1 

that bloody mind. I think — v. 1 

and yet. 1 think, few come within .. — v. 1 

calls'herselfHevenge, and thinks me mad — v. 2 

think death no hazard Pericles,!. 1 

will think me speiiking tho' I swear .. — i. 2 

and justly too. 1 think, you feor — i. 2 

happily may think are — \. i 

each nian tliinks all is writ — ii. (Gnwcr) 

nothing to think on. but ensuing death — ii. I 

want teaches me to think on — ii. I 

what do von think, sir, of my daughter? — ii. 5 

my daii.uOiter, sir, thinks ver^y well of you — ii. .5 

she thinks not so: peruse this — ii. ,^ 

or think, may be as great in blood .... — ii. 5 

he it as you tliink meet — iii. 1 

as I think, I have brought up _ iv. 3 

I think, I shall have something — iv. 3 

I think, yinill turn aehibl nj!oin — iv. 4 

that think the petty wrens ot Tharsus — iv. 4 

to think of what a noble strain — iv. 4 

think his pilot thought — iv. 4 (Gowcr) 

and think you no« are all _ iv.4(Go«er) 

I did nut think thou eouldst have siwkc — iv. 6 



THINK this the bark Peiiclfs,v. (Gower) 

and tliink me rarely wed v. 1 

I do think so: 1 pray you, turn — v. 1 

I think thou saidst thoxi liadst — v. 1 

it may be, you thinlt me an impostor . . — v. 1 
I tliiuk our father will hence to-niglit .... Unr, i. 1 

we shall further think of it _ i. 1 

I would fain think it were not i. 2 

think you so? If your honour judge — i. 2 

"wlien i think your highness is wronged., — i. 4 
the shape which tliou dost think I iiave — i. 4 

dost tlwu think, if I would stand — ii. 1 

Kegau, I think you are (rep.) _ ii. 4 

I cannot think, ray sister in the least .... — ii. 4 

must be content to think you old — ii. 4 

you tiiink, I'll weep; no, I'll not weep .. — ii. 4 

Bomcthin" fears me to think of — iii. h 

■we scarcely think o\ir miseries our foes.. — iii. 6 

he. that will think to live till he — iii. 7 

wliieli made me think aman a worm.... — iv. 1 

JEdmund, I think, is gone — iv, 5 

tliinli that the clearest gods — iv. 6 

till time and I think meet — iv. 7 

I think this lady to be ray child Cordelia — iv. 7 

aj-, so I think. He knows not what — v. 3 

forget to think of her (jep.) Romeo i^ Juliet, i. I 

and 'tis not hard, I think, for men . . — i. 2 
ere we may think her ripe to be a bride — i. 2 
and I will make thee think thy swan — i. 2 

to think it should leave crying — i. 3 

well, think of marriage now i. 3 

marry, that, I think, beyoungPetruehio— i. 5 
would sing, and think it were not night — ii. ■}, 
tliou may st tliink my 'haviour light — ii. 2 
think true love acted, simple mocfesty — iii. 2 

dotli she not think me an old murderer iii. 3 

I tliink, she will be ruled in all respects — iii. 4 
look to't, think ou't, I do not use to jest — iii. 5 

I think it best you married with — iii. 5 

I think you are happy in this second — iii. 5 

as you think fit to furnish me — iv. 2 

gives a dead man leave to think .... — v. 1 
think upon tliese gone; let them .... — v. 3 
I think, he told me, Paris should have — v. 3 

of Juliet, to think it was so? — v. 3 

I think, I hear them: stand, hoi Hamlet, i. 1 

what tliink you of it? Before my God .. — i. 1 

I think, it be no other, but even so — i. I 

with wisest sorrow think on him i. 2 

and think of us as of a father — i. 2 

let me not think on't; frailty, thy name — i. 2 
I think it was to see my mother's wedding — i. 2 
my lord, I think I saw him yesternight.. — i. 2 

and we did think it writ down in our duty i. 2 

think it no more: for nature, crescent .. — 1.3 

what I should think. Marry, I'll (rep.). . i. 3 

I think, it lacks of twelve i. 4 

draw you into madness? think of it — i. 4 

would heart of man once think it? i.6 

hereafter shall think meet to put an .... — i. 5 
and I do think (or else this brain of mine — ii. 2 

answer, and tliink upon this business.... ii. 2 

what do you think of me? As of a man.. — ii. 2 

what might you think (rep.) ii. 2 

your queen here, think, if I had played.. — ii. 2 

do you think 'tis this? It may be ii. 2 

we think not so, ray lord ii. 2 

to think, my lord, if you delight not — ii. 2 

I think, their inhibition comes by the .. — ii. 2 

and, as I think, they have already iii. 1 

what think you on't? It shall do well .. — iii, 1 
where your wisdom best shall think .... — iii. 1 

nay, do not think I flatter iii. 2 

do you think, I meant country (rep.) — iii. 2 

do believe, you think what now you speak — iii, 2 
so think thou wilt no second husband wed — iii, 2 

'sblood; do you think, I am easier to be iii. 2 

Indeed, would make one tliink iv, 5 

I cannot choose hut weep, to think — iv, 5 

you must not think, that we are made .. — iv, 7 
shook with danger, and think it pastime — iv. 7 

not that I think you did not love your .. iv. 7 

let's further think of this iv, 7 

mine ache to think on't v. 1 

I think it be thine; indeed; for thou .... — v. 1 

whose do you think it was? , v. 1 

dost thou think, Alexander looked — v. 1 

does it not, think thee, stand me v. 2 

I do not think SO; since he went v. 2 

but thou wouldst not think, how ill v. 2 

I'll hit him now. I do not think it v. 2 

service, you think we are rulBans Othello, i. 1 

are they married, think .you? (rep.) i. 1 

I think I can discover him i, 1 

by Janus, I think, no. The servants .... i. 2 

what is tlie matter, think you? i. 2 

we must not think the Turk is so unskilful— i. 3 
I tliink this tale would win my daughter — i, 3 

that you think I will your serious — i. 3 

grace shall think to he sent after me — i. 3 

tluit thinks men honest, that but seem .. — i. 3 
she that could think, and ne'er disclose, . — ii, 1 

let not thy discreet heart think it — ii, 1 

I dare tliink, he'll prove to Desderaona.. — ii. I 
do not think, gentlemen, I am drunk (icp.) — ii. 3 

I think, you think I love you ii. 3 

I think it freely; and, betimes — ii, 3 

and I think, the issue will be— I shall .. — ii, 3 
if you think fit, or that it mav be done.. — iii. 1 
no. sure, I cannot think it, that he would — iii. 3 
I did not think, he had been acquainted — iii. 3 

what dost thou think? (rep.) — iii, 3 

you know I love you. I think, thou dost — iii, 3 

I think, that he is honest (rep.) _ iii. 3 

I do not tliink, but Desdemona's honest — iii, 3 

and long live you to think so! — iii, 3 

I think my wife be honest (rep.) — iii, 3 

it were a tedious difficulty, I think — iii. 3 

who.hc? I think, the sun, where he — iii, 4 

uay, we must think, men are not gods . . — iii. 1 



THINK- state matters, aa you think Othello, 

and think it no addition, nor m.y wish .. — 111.4 

will yon think so? Think so, lago? — iv. I 

she may, I think, hestow't on any man.. iv. 1 

think, every bearded fellow iv. 1 

alas, poor rogue 1 I tliink, i'faith iv, 1 

do not think it so unwholesome: ha, ha.. — iv. 1 
for, as I think, they do command him .. — iv. 1 
if you think other, remove your thought — iv. 2 

[A'n/.] nay, I think, it is scurvy iv. 2 

you shall think yourself bound to put .. — iv. 2 
dost thou ill conscience think, tell me.,.. — iv. 3 

I think thou wouldst not (rejo.) iv. 3 

I do not think, there is any such woman — iv. 3 
Ido think, it is their husbands' faults .. — iv, 3 
I think it is; and duth affection (rep.) .. — iv. 3 
think on that, and fix most firm thy .... — v. 1 

let's think, 't unsafe to come in to v. 1 

I think, that one of them is hereabout .. v. I 

think on thy sins. They are loves — v. 2 

I think upon't;— I tliink,— I sraell't .... v. 2 

so speaking as I think, I die v. 2 

which, as I think, you know not — v. 2 

THINKING on it, makes me .. TieoGen.of VerAv. 4 

liutli he any thinking? Mem/ Wives, iii. 2 

thinking me remiss in mine Meas.for Mens. iv. 2 

not thinkinjr I had been myself Much Ado, ii. 1 

an' bad thinking do not wrest true ,. — iii. 4 
I would think my heart out of thinking — iii. 4 
cost (thinking that I mean him). ..4s youLikeit, ii. 7 

I can live no longer by thinking — v. 2 

madam, I was thinking with what . . AlCs ll'ell, iv. 5 
I am wrapped in dismal thinkings .. — v. 3 

nation's crow, thinking his voice KhigJohn, v. 2 

by thinking on the frosty Caucasus?, Ilichard //. i. 3 
thinking on fantastic summer's heat? — i. 3 

though, in thinking, on no thought, . — ii. 2 
enters next, thinking his prattle to .. — v. 2 
to look on you, thinking you dead.,2Wc;!ry7r. iv. 4 

to see him; thinking of nothing else v. 5 

whose music, to my thinking, pleased — v. 5 

he was thinking of civil wars Henry V. v. 2 

that surfeits thinking on a want ..iHenryl'l. iii. 2 

too cold in thinking of it now Richard 111. i. 3 

with a heavy heart, thinking on them — iii, 1 
but, thinking that we are a queen., Hcjiri/F///. ii. 4 
I am afraid his tiiinkings are below — iii. 2 

thinking it harder for our .. TroilusfyCressida, iii, 2 

thy master now lies thinking _ v, 2 

not worth my thinking Timon of Athens, \. 1 

I am thinking, what I shall say I have — v, 1 

thinking upon his services Coriolanus, ii. 3 

ambitious past all thinking, self-loving — iv. 6 
to my thinking, he would (rep.) ...Julius Caisar, i. 2 
thinking, by this face, to fasten in our — v. 1 
shall not out-go my thinking .. Antony SrCleo. iii. 2 

of your unworthy thinking Cymbeline,\. 5 

thinking to bar thee of succession — iii. 3 

master, I am thinking of the poor Pericles, ii. 1 

lam tliinking brother, of a prediction Lear,i. i 

as thinking their own kisses s,m. Romeo ^ Juliet, Vn. 3 
or thinking, by our late dear brother's.. HamW, i. 2 
good or bad, but thinking makes it so .. — ii. 2 

or else shall he suffer not thinking on .. iii. 2 

scruple of thinking too precisely — iv, 4 

probable, and palpable to thinking Oihello,\. 2 

in her heart, and chides with thinking. . — ii. I 
probal to thinking, and (indeed) the course — ii. 3 

speak to me as to thy thinkings — iii. 3 

enougli to put him to ill thinking — iii. 4 

THINK'ST— and think'st it much Tempest, i. 2 

thou think'st, there are no more i. 2 

think'st thou of the fair (rep.').. TwoGen.ofFer. i. 2 

what thou think'st meet ii. 7 

think'st tliou, I am so shallow iv. 2 j 

thou think'st not of this now! iv. 4 j 

shall I do any good, think'st thou?.il/erri/ Wives, i. 4 
think'st thou I U endanger my soul — ii. 2 

at master Ford's already, think'st thou? — iv. 1 I 
tell me what thou think'st of me. Twelfth Kight, iii. I 

what think'st thou of his opinion? .. iv. 2 

think'st thou, thy oatlis, tliough they — v. 1 

thou think'st, I am in snort MnchAdo, i. 1 

what think'st thou? had we fought , . v. 1 

I say, a devil: think'st thou ..TammgofShreir, i. I 
think'st thou, for that I insinuate,, Winler'sT. iv. 3 
think'st thou, I jest? Hold, take,C>jme</;/o/7irr. ii. 2 

be the villain that thou think'st .Macbeth, iv, 3 

thou think'st to serve me last Richard]/, iii, 4 

thou think'st me as far in the devir8,2 Henry ir.n.2 
O hound of Crete, think'st thou my ..Henry I', ii. 1 
think'st thou, the fiery fever will go — iv. 1 

thou that think'st to fceguile me? 1 Henry ri. i. 2 

if thou think'st on heaven's bliss ..iHcnryl'I. iii, 3 

think'st thou, thatlwill leave iUenryl'I. i. 1 

what! tliink'st thou, that we fear them? — i. 2 

if so thou think'st, vex him with ii. 6 

what love, thuik'st thou, I sue so much — iii. 2 
think'st thou, I am an executioner? — v. 6 

what think'st thou? is it not {rep.). Richard ///.iii. 1 
what think'st thou? will our (rep.) .. _ v. 3 
think'st thou to catch my life.. Troilus ^-Cn-ss. iv. 5 
shall I thank him, think'st tliou?/'iiH(m or .ilh. iii. 2 
what, think'st that the bleak air .... — iv. 3 

think'st thou it lionourable Curiolniins. v, 3 

truly what thou think'st of him ..Julius Cn-sar. i. 2 
where think'st thou he is now? ..Antony ^Cleo. i. 5 

what thou think'st his very action .. iii, 10 

now, Iras, what think'st thou? v. 2 

unless thou think'st me devilish ...Ct/mhelirie i 6 
think'st thou, that duty shall have dread., /.ear, i. 1 
maid, that justly thinl<'st, and hast .... — i. I 

thou tliink'st 'tis much, that this — iii. 4 

think'st I am too quicklv won .. Romeo ^ Juliet, ii, a 
think'st thou, we shall ever meet again? — iii, 5 

what will I do, think'st thou? '. Othello,!. 3 

if thou but think'st him wronged — iii. 3 

think'st thou, I'd make a life of jealousy iii. 3 

tlian thou think'.st [Co/. A'?i(.-kiiow'slJ .. — v. 1 

THINLY scattered to make up . . Romeo ^Juliet, v. 1 



THINLY— that do demonstrate thinly.. Othello, iii. 3 
rillRD— the third man that e'er I saw. 7'emjoe«/, i. 2 

where every third thought shall — y. 1 

whiji him out, says the third,. TwoGen.of Ver. iy. 4 

this is the third time Merry Wives, v. 1 

and a third drowns him Tu-eljth Night, i. S 

for he's in the third degree of drink.. — i. 5 

and let the fool make a third ii, 3 

the tliiid pays for all y. 1 

a third is fled, that had a hand Much Ado, v. 1 

then, for the third part of a minute. AM. A', 's Dr. ii. 3 
the third of the five vowels, if you. Lome's L./,i)s(, v. 1 

the third he capered, and cried y. 2 

he hath a third at Mexico . . Merchant of I'enice, i. 3 
the third possessor; ay, he was the third — 1. 3 
this third, dull lead, with warning .. — ii. 7 
wept for the death of a third husband — iii. 1 

a third cannot be matched — iii. i 

served tlie second, and so the third. /lsj/oM/,!7tci<,i. 2 
the third, reply churlish; the fourth — v. 4 

one that lies three thirds, and uses . . AW s Well ,'n. 5 
third, or fourth, or Mth.. Taming of ShreU; I (indue.) 

the third a diaper, and say — I (indue.) 

and the third, nine, and some five. Winter'sTale, ii. 1 

my third comfort, starred most — iii. 2 

a third is like the former Macbeth, iv. 1 

the third, if he fight longer \ Henry 1 1-', i. 2 

perforce a third must take iHenrylF. i. 3 

and every third word a lie _ iii. 2 

Edward the third (rep. ii.4) Henry F. i. 2 

and the third sir Thomas Grey — ii, (chorus) 

third hour of drowsy morning — iv. (chorus) 

a third man tliinks, without 1 Henry FI. i. 1 

time Edward the third did reign — i. 2 

third son to the third Edward (rep. ii. 6) — ii.4 

the third of that descent — ii, 5 

Edward the third, my lords (rep.) ..-iHenryFI. ii, 2 
third, Lionel, duke of Clarence (re/).) — ii. 2 

York claims it from the third — ii. 2 

two of you; the devil make third I — iii. 2 

and thou shalt be the third, if this ..oHenryVI.x. 1 
dishonoured, and the tliirdusurped./dcAar//;//. iv. 4 

the third day, comes a frost Henry Fill. iii. 2 

he comes the third time home Coriolanus, ii. 1 

a full third part, the charges v. 5 

he offered it the third time (rep.) . . Jnlnis Cresar, i. 2 
the third o' the world (rep. ii. 7). .Antony {fCleo. ii, 2 

the third part then is drunk — ii 7 

so the poor third is up, till death — iii. 5 

the third is, that thou wilt be Cymbeline, iii, 5 

of their broken debtors take a third , , — v. 4 
counscd, when the third's away . . TilusAndron. iv, 2 

and what's the third ? The third Pei ides, i i, 2 

remain this ample third Lear, i. 1 

to draw a third more opulent i. 1 

two daughters' dowers digest this third. . — i. 1 
and did the third a blessing against .... — i, 4 
let liini appear at the third sound — v. 3 (herald) 
one, two, and the third in your .Romeo 4-Jtdiet, ii. 4 

the third night, kept the watch Hamlet, \. 2 

in answer of the third exchange v. 2 

come, for the third, Laertes; you do but — y. 2 
THIKDBOROUGH[Co«.-headhoiougliJ7',o/,SV,,l(in,) 
UHIRDLY, they have verified (rep.)..il/i,c/i.^<io, v. 1 

aillKST— and more thirrts after AlfsWetl, iii. 1 

satiety seeks to quench his thirst.. 'I'aming o/Sh. i. 1 
whom I so much thirst to see . . Winter'sTale, iv. 3 

and him, we thirst, and all to all Mncbeih, iii. 4 

doptthou thirst, base Trojan HenryF. v. 1 

except ye thirst for blood 1 Henry VI. iii. 1 

whose uustaunehed thirst York iHenryFI. ii. 6 

for bread, not in thirst for revenge . . Coriolanus, i. 1 
THIRSTING-thirsting after pxey..iHenry Fl. iv. 4 

THIRSTY evil ; and when we Mens, for Mens. i. 3 

when they are thirsty, fools would. . , Love'sL. L. v. 2 
none so dry or thirsty will deign. 7a»i<>i^ ofSh. v. 2 
no more the thirsty Erinnj's of this.,1 Henrj//)', i. I 
blood the thirsty earth hath drunk .AllennjFl. ii, 3 
my heart is tliirsty for that •no\>\f..JuliusCaisar, iv. 3 
to be thirsty after tottering honour . . Pericles, iii. 2 

THIRTEEN years (rep.) Tu-elfihMght, v. 1 

maids of tliirteen do of puppy dogs . . King John, ii. 2 

in thirteen battles Salisbury 1 Henn/ FI. i. 4 

from fourscore to thirteen Timon of Alliens, ii. 2 

TIIfRTIES-twelve thirties been 'Hajnlei, iii, 2 

THIRTIETH of May iHenry FJ.i. 1 

THIRTY leagues, off and on Tempest, iii, 2 

between fourteen and five andtlurty. MnchAdo, iii. 3 

how deep? Thirtyfathom All'sWell,i\'. 1 

as when he numbered thirty — iv. 5 

time seems thirty unto me . TamingofSh. 2 (indue.) 

two and thirty,— a pip out ., — i, 2 

full thirty thousand marks of King John, ii. 2 

how thirty, at least he fought \ Henry I F. i. 2 

any time this two and thirty years . , — iii, 3 
thou, and I, have thirty miles to ride yet— iii, 3 
to thirty thousand. Forty let it be .. — iv. I 
bid me fetch thee thirty s'hiUings? ..'iHenrylF. ii, 1 
which cannot gobut thirty miles .... — ii.4 
or near, the rale of thirty thousand. . — iv, 1 
thirty thousand strong (rep. v. 3) ..ZHenryFJ. ii. 1 

a band of thirty thousand men — ii. 2 

obeyd'st thirty and six years — iii. 3 

{Col.Knt.j Cassar's three and thirtv.,/u((iisC<Psor, v. 1 
and I do think she's thirty.^ii/oiit/ <5-aeopa(ra, iii. 3 

five or sixand thirty of his knights ienr, iii. 7 

by'r lady, thirty years Romeo & .luliet,i. 5 

his son is thirty. Will vou tell me that? — i. 5 
full thirty times hiith Phoebus' cart ..Hamlet, iii. 2 
thirty dozen moons, with borrowed sheen — iii. 2 
sexton here, man and hoy, thirty years. . — v. I 
of thirty sail, and now do they re-stem.. 0//ie'fe, i. 3 

THIRTY-ONE sweltered venom Macbeth, iv. 1 

THISBE must be answered Mid.N.'sDream, iii. 2 

of young Pyramus, and his love Thisbe — v. 1 

but silence; herecomes Thisbe v. 1 

well run, Thisbe. Well shone — v. 1 

before Thisbe comes back and finds her — v. 1 
which Pyramus, which Thisbe, is the — v. 1 
and hanged himself in Thisbe's garter — v. I 



Tin 



[7G5 ] 



TinSBE fenrfully o'ortrip Mereh. of Vrnirr, V. 1 

Tliisbe. a (trfv eve or no Uomro/iJiilirf, il. 4 

TlIISBY-of Pyrnmu8nnclTlii»l).v..,l/.,/.,V.'ii»r. \. 1 
tnke Tliisbv on voii. Wluil in Tliinbyy — i. a 

let me play" Tliisbv too (K-ji.) — i. 2 

and rtiitc, you Tiiisby. Well, pnweeil — i. '.' 

you must play Tiiisby'H mntbcr (fv/i.) — i. 2 

eomeily of l'vranui*ianilTIU!.bv (x-p.) — iii. 1 

Tbisby, standfortb. Tiiisby — iii. 1 

m,v dearest Tliisbv (fciir (>rp.) — iii. 1 

in nuv case, let Thi^bv, have clean linen — iv. i 
tbis l)euutcou3 ladr, 'lliinby is eeituiu — v. 1 
tlie trusty Ti\isby. eoniinK llrst (rip.) — v. I 
Tiiisby tarry inn i" mulberry shade.. — v. I 
Pyrainusaiid 'tbisby, did whisper often — V. 1 
1 fear my Thisby's promise is forgot! — v. 1 
but what sec I? "No Tiiisby do I see — v. 1 

deceiving me, is Tliisby's cue; slie is — v. 1 
hear my Thisby's face. Thisby! .... — v. I 

to taste of truest Thisby's siglit — v. I 

thus Thishy ends; adieu, adieu, adieu — v. I 

TllISNE, Tliisue, ah, Py ramus M'd.N.'snr. i. 2 

TIIISTI,E-lier with a thistle WniA,l,/n, iii. 4 

humble-bee on the top of u thistle.. iViii.iV.'s Dr. iv, 1 

rtiimh thistles, kecksies, burs Uen>\iV. v. 2 

TltlTIlKUWAUD; for thence we iWsireH, iii. 2 

TlldVS. il.uJlv hurt TroUui.fiC,nsidi,v 5 

TIKIM.VS r.ip'>ter! Mcm.for.Mfas.i.i 

of NuitiilU. Tliomns Mowbray {rfp.).Uichard II. i. I 

Thomas of Norfolk, what say'st — i. 1 

but Thomas, my dear lord, my life ., — i. 2 
my name is Thomas Slowbray {rrp.) — i. 3 

sir Tlionias Erpinglmm — ii. I 

pii^e to Thomas Sfowbray 2 Henry I V. iii. 2 

Thomas Wart! Where's lie? Here, sir — iii. 2 
his hi. ither, Tliomasof Clarence (rc/i.) — iv. 1 
thou dost neglect him, Thomas (rep.) — iv. 4 
not at Windsor with him, Thomas'if.. — iv. 4 

sir Thomas Grey kniglit of hIenryV. ii. (chorus) 

lend me thy cloak, sir Thomas — iv. 1 

under sir Thomas Eipingbam — iv. 1 

sir 'riiomas Gargrave (rep.) 1 UenrijI'I. i. 4 

against my master, Thomas norncr..2H>'Hi!/;'Z. i. 3 
the sixth, "was Tliomas of Woodstock — ii. 2 
with tliem sir Thomas Vauiihan . . Richard IlL ii. 4 
sir Thomas Lovel, and lord mar(iuis — iv. 4 
Kice ap Thomas, with a valiant crew — iv. 5 
Thomas the earl of Surrey (ri'p.) .... — v. 3 

and sir Thomas level's heads Henry I'lII. i. 2 

Tliomas whither were you going? (.r'-p.) — i. 3 

sir Thomas Ijovel (lep. ii. 1 and V. 1) — i. 

sir Thomas Bullen's daughter — i, 

next is, that sir Thomas More is chosen — iii 
Thi'nias Cromwell: a man in much . — iv, 
ffiuiil hour of niglit, sir Thomas! (icp.) — v. 

Till i.MYKIS by Cyrus' death 1 Hcriry ('/. ii 

T 1 1* >KN— pricking goss, and thorns.. .. Tempcut. iv, 
wilheiing on the" virgin thorn .. Mid. i^W Dream, i, 
\vi[h a bush of thorns and a lantern — iii. 

lor briers and thorns at their apparel — iii. : 
dog, and bush of thorn, preseuteth .. — v. 
pluck thee from thy thorn.. Loi!c'»L./.oj(, iv. 3 (ver. 

this thorn doth to our rose of All's IVell, i. ; 

you barely leave our thorns — iv. ; 

shall have leaves as well as thorns .. — iv. 
is goads, thorns, nettles, tails of .. If'inler'sTale, i. 
but, O the thorns we stand upon! .... — iv. 
among the thorns and dangers of this. KhigJohn, iv. 
this day as sharp to tliem as thorn .Kichaid It. iv. 
and plant this thorn, this canker ....1 Henry 1 1', i. 
a red rose from ott'this thorn with ..1 Henry VI. ii. 
hath not thy rosea thorn, Plantagenet? — ii. 
doivn thorns that would annoy ....'iHenryVl. iii. 
so young a thorn begin to prick? .. ..^Henryl'I. v. 

and it pricks like thorn Hamen ^Juliei, i. 

and to tho.ie thorns tliat in her bosom . . Handel, i. 
TIIOllX-BUSII.mv th r.rn-lnish.....Ui'i.A'.'iDr. v. 

TIliHt.MKU piiceof'jround ferictes, iv. 

TUDK.NY bed;;e-hoj;s .. .l/../.,V.'j/),-.-«m. ii. 3 (song 

the thorny point ot bare distress.. /4«i/ou Like it, ii. 

tlirough a tliorny wood I'aming of Sh. 2 (indue. 

like one lost in a thorny wood illenryVI. iii. 

yonder stands the thorny wood — v. 

but the sharp thorny points a( my ..Henry Vlll. ii. 

the steep una thornv way to heaven Hamlet, i. 

TI10U<JL'G I lFARi;"for steel CymUeline. i. 

TIIDHOUGIILY— wetakc thoroughly. 7empe»(, iii. 

wound lie thoroughly healed . . Tuuflen. of Ver. i. 

if he had licen thoroughly moved. . Merry iVives, i. 

my lord, we'll do it thoroughly.. A/eaj.yiJr.Vcax.v, 

to quit me of them thoroughly Much.ido, iv. 

informed thoroughly of the cause. .Ufr.o//'fTiiM, iv. 

that would thorougldy woo her .. Taming of Sh. i. 

now do your duty thoroughly — iv. 

scarce can right me tlioroiigbly .. Ifinter'sTnle, ii. 

look into this business thoroughly.. 2 Hiriiri/f/. ii. 

we shall Iwat you thoroughly anon .. — y. 

are almost thoronghlv persuaded Carlotanut, i. 

THDUGHT-meddle with my thoughts. 'yfi"/"-*', i. 

shut up my thoughts — ii. 

but thc^ sweet thoughts do even — iii. 

thought is free — iii. 2 (song 

here tlumght they to have done — iv. 

come with a tliooght — iv. 

thy thoughts I cleave to — iv. 

I thought to have told thee of it — iv. 

I do begin to have bloody thoughts.... — Iv. 

nor tliouglit 1 had one — v. 

where every third thought shall be .... — v. 

heartsick with thought Ttroden, of Verona, i. 

if you thought your love not cast away — i. 

whose high iiu|ierious thoughts — ii. 

all my thiiughts arc visibly — ii. 

his thoughts immaculate — ii. 

and where I thought — iii. 

inv thoughts do harbour with — iii. 

my heraiil thoughts in thy pure bosom — ill. 

against despairing thoughts — iii. 

will melt her frozen thoughts — iii. 

that his changing thoughts forget.... — iv. 



THOUGHT felt not her very ..Twoflen. of Ver. ly. 
trust me, \ thought on her MerryWivn, ii. 

would anv inun have th.Mi^dit this?.. — ii. 

moke vnn hitler lluin y<iur tinnijhis — iii. 

I thought there Im.l I.e.-n ,.nu nuinlier — iv. 

a better sehular, tlmn I tliouL-ht he was — iv. 

that likewise have we thonglit upon — iv. 

OS thoughts do blow them — v. .'i (song 

1 was three or four times iu tlie thought — v. ; 
'tis tlumght uni.nig the iirudent .. In eillh Night, i. ; 

now sir, tlioiiL-ht is free: I pray you — i. 

nu' I thouL'ht thai (<<-p. ii. 31 — i. 

she pined ill tlmn^lit; and, with — ii. 

for bis thoughts, wouhl they were blanks — iii. 

whet your gentle thoughts on his behalf — iii. 

baited it with all the unmuzzled thoughts— iii. 

an' I thought he had been so valiant — iii. 

to be thougiit a good student — iv. 

my thoughts are ripe in mischief .... — v. 

tliese things further thought on — v. 

from whom we thought it meel. . Meas.forMeas. i. ; 

throw aw'ay that thought — i. ' 

I thought, by your readiness in — ii. 

let it not sound a thougiit upon vour — ij. 

inccrtaiii thouglits imagine howling! — iii. 

with a thought, that ir.orc depends — iv. 2 (note 

I tliought your marriage fit — 

thoughts are no subjects (r^-p.) — 

I thought it was a fault, but knew .. — 

by my trotli.I speak my tliought .... .1/ur/i Ado, _ 

it is past the iiifiiiiie oftliuiiL'ht — ii. 3 

I would have thi.u-lit her spirit hud been— ii. 3 

you are thought here to 'oe the most — iii. 3 

I thought, there would a scab follow — iii. 3 

and thought they, Margaret was Hero? — iii. 3 

if the hair were a thought browner . . — iii. 4 

been placeil about tiiy thoughts — iv. 1 

all beauty into thoughts of harm .. .. — iv. I 

tliought 1 thy siiirits were stronger . . — iv. 1 

though lie thougiit his accusation true — iv. 1 

as sure as 1 have a thougiit, or a soul — iv. I 

it will go near to be thought so shortly — iv. 2 

it is thought you are false knaves.. .. — iv. 2 
to plead my thoughts: but 1 beseech. :l/ii/. A. 'sDr. i. 1 

and with fiemetrius thought to have — i. I 

as thoughts, and dreams, and sighs .. — i. 1 

through Athens I am thought as fair — i. 1 

which is thought fit, through all Athens — i. 2 

I thought you lord of more true .... — ii. 3 
from tlie reprobate thought of it. .Love's L. Lost, i. 2 

most maculate thoughts, master — i. 2 

your own good thoughts excuse me . . — ii. 1 

thy silly thought, my spleen — iii. I 

those thoughts to me were oaks — iv. 2 

no thought can think — iv. 3 (verses) 

courses us swift as thought in every. . — iv. 3 

I thougiit to close mine eyes some half — v. 2 

bullets, wind, thougiit, swifter — v. 2 

wlieu I thought what liarm.. il/*'rf/i«?i/q/'/'cnice, i. 1 

shall I have tlie thought to think (rep.) — i. 1 

suspect the thoughts of othersl — i. 3 

except to steal your thoughts — ii I 

heaven, and thy thoughts, are witness — ii 6 

to think so base a thought — ii. 7 

sinful thought I never so rich a gera — ii. 7 

1 thought upon Antonio, wheu he .. — ii. 8 
and employ your chiefest thoughts .. — ii. 8 
a maiden hath no tongue but thought — iii. 2 
as doubtful thoughts, and rash-cinhraced — iii. 2 

fair tlioughts, and happy hours — iii- 4 

Olid then, 'tis thought, thou'lt show — iv. I 

would be thought no better a musician — v. 1 

not with your liard tlioughts 4s yon tike it, i. 2 

so much as in a thought unborn .... — i. 3 

I tiiou^ht, that all things had been.. — ii. 7 

my thoughts I'll cliaracter — iii. 2 

there was no thought of pleasing you — iii. 2 

woman's tliought runs before (?ep.)., — iv. 1 

and I thought no less — iv. 1 

that was begot of thought, conceived — iv. 1 

I thought, thy heart had been wounded — v. 2 

one of them thought but of an if — v. 4 

forged in your thoughts, be servants . . All's IVell, i. 1 

lies richer in your thoughts, than on — i. 2 

she thought, I dare vow fur her — i. 3 

from the conversation of my tlioughts — i. 3 

I may convey my thoughts in this .. — ii. 1 

from your royal thoughts a modest one — ii. I 

was in iny nobler thoughts most base — ii. 3 

so soon as I thought he would — iii. 2 

make ine but like my thoughts — iii. 3 

whose thoughts more truly hibour to — iv. 4 

trusting of tlie cozened thoughts defiles — iv. 4 

thought I stood ingaged — v. 3 

the heavens have liiought well on thee — v. 3 

a more noble thought upon mine .... — V. 3 

sir, for my thoughts, you have — v. 3 

your honour, than in my thought it liesl — v. 3 
thy ancient thoughts from.. 7Vimmi,-n/i;A. 2 (indue.) 
they tliought it jjood you hear a .. — 2 (indue.) 

I never thought It possible, or likely — i. 1 

bend thoughts and wits to achieve her — i. I 

or your thoughts can guess — ii. 1 

yet if thy thoughts, Bittnca, be so.. .. — iii. 1 

tis thought, your deer does hold you — v. 2 
I bad thought, sir, to have held .. IVinler'sTale, i. 2 

that thougiit there was no more Iwhiud — i. 2 

cures in me thoughts that would thick — i. 2 

or thought, for cogitation resides not — i. 2 

nor eyes, nor ears, nor thought — i. 2 

witli thoughts so qualified OS your .. — ii. 1 

sf) Imvc we thought it good — ii. 1 

fie, no thought of him; the very thought — ii. 3 

to bloody thoughts, and to reven;,'e .. — iii. 2 

honourable thoughts (thimglUs high for — iii. 2 

thought this was so, and no slumber — iii. 2 

than can he thought to bei^in from ., — iv. 1 

lay aside the thoughts of Siciliu — iv, 1 

I sleep out the thought of it — iv. 2 

with these forced thoughts, I pr'y thee — iv. 3 



TIIO 



THOUGTIT-strongIc such thoughts. irinter'iT. Iv. 3 

It was thought, she was a woman .... — iv. 3 

by the pattern of mine own thoughts I — iv. 3 

that thought to fill his grave in (luiet — iv, 3 

recompensed IIS thought on — iv. 3 

have you thought on a place — iv. 3 

faster than thought, or time — iv. 3 

if I thought it were not a piece of .... _ iv. 3 

thy tongue, as in my thought — v. 1 

with thought of sucn atfections — v. 1 

I thought of her, even in these looks — v. I 

I thought she had some great matter — v. 2 

if 1 hud thought the sight of my poor — V. 3 

I saw her, as I thought, dead — v. 3 

Corintli, as we thought {rep.). .Comedy of Errori, i. 1 

1 thought to have asked you — iii. i 

1 thought to have ta'eii you at the .. — iii. 2 

belike you thought our love — iv. I 

past thought of human reason — v. I 

my thought, whose murder yet is Macbeth, '\.S 

tills have ( thought good to deliver thee — i. !> 

thut tend on mortal thoughts — i. .') 

restrain in me the cursed thoughts — ii. 1 

a foolish thought, to say a sorry sight.... — ii. 2 

these deeds must not he thought after.... — ii. 2 

be not lost so poorly in your thoughts.... — ii. 2 

I bad thought t" have let in some — ii. 3 

which, you thought, hud been our — iii. 1 

alwoys thought, that I rccpiire — iii. I 

using those thoughts, w'hich should — iii. 2 

upon a thought he will again be well .... — iii. 4 

speeches have but hit your thoughts .... — iii. 6 

who cannot want the thought — iii. G 

he knows thy thought: hear his — iv. 1 

to crown my thoughts with acts (rep.).... — iv. 1 

was once thought honest — iv. 3 

my thoughts cannot transpose — iv. 3 

reconciled my thoughts to thy good — iv. 3 

who would have thought the old man.... — v. 1 

thoughts speculative tiieir unsure — v. 4 

familiar to my slaught'rous thoughts .... — v. & 

who, as 'tis thought, by self — v. 7 

stirs good thoughts in any breast of. King John, ii. 1 

though churlish thoughts themselves — ii. 2 

into thy bosom pour my thoughts.... — iii. 3 

it makes the course of thoughts to fetch — iv. 2 

fly, like thought, from them to me .. — iv. 2 

motion of a murderous thougiit — iv. 2 

could thought, without this object ,. — iv. 3 

consent, or sin of thought, be guiltj'.. — iv. 3 

as you have been in thought — v. 1 

the remnant of my tlioughtj in peace — v. 4 

thou hast a perfect thought — v. 6 

as of a thought of ill in him Richard II. i. 1 

ambitious tlioughts, with rival-hating — i. 3 

with him go these thoughts — i. 4 

to tlio^-e thoughts which honour — ii. 1 

nay, let us sluire tliv thoughts — ii. 1 

thy Winds :iie 1 lilt us thouglits _ ii. 1 

on no tlioii.iiht I tiiink.makes — ii. 2 

I should belie my thoughts — ii. 2 

I had thought, my lord, to have learned — ii. 3 

'tis thought, tlie king is dead — ii. 4 

high be our thoughts; I know — iii. 2 

because we thou"ht ourself thy — iii. '3 

the heavy tliought of care? — iii. 4 

shook off the regal thoughts wherewith — iv. 1 

I thought, you had been willing — iv. 1 

would liave thought the ver3' window — ■ v. 2 

still breeding thoughts (rep.) — v. 5 

but let him trom my thoughts! \ Henry IV. i. I 

t)ie good thoughts of the world again — i. 3 

with a thought, seven of the eleven . . — ii. 4 

that it may DC thought I have wept.. — ii. 4 

majesty's good thoughts away from me! — iii. 2 

were not thought flattery — iv. 1 

it will he thought by some that know — iv. I 

I thought your honour had already been — iv. 2 

they wound my thoughts, worse than — v. 4 
is thought with child by the stern. 2Henr!//r. (ind.) 

sincere and holy in his thoughts — i, 1 

without him we be thought too feeble — i. 3 

smaller than the smallest of liis thoughts — i. 3 

thoughts of ineii accurst! _ i. 3 

that it is a shuuie to lie thought on . . — ii. I 

1 had thought, weariness durst not.. — ii. 2 
it w.nild he every man's thoiij;ht {rep.) — ii. 2 
an linnest wutiKiii. and well thought on — ii. 4 
he niuv be tliuiiL'liC to he uceommodateil — iii. 2 

admittiineeto a tliiiu^ht of fear — iv. 1 

yulstiifl', and in that thought, yield inc — iv. 3 

motion, the expedition of thought?.. — iv. 3 

broke tiieir sleep with thoughts — iv. 4 

I never thought to hear you speak .. — iv. 4 

wish was father, Harry, to that thongbt — iv. 4 

a thousand daggers iu thy thoughts.. — iv. 4 

or swell my thoughts to any strain .. — iv. 4 

questitin your royal thoughts — v. 2 

and Helen of thy noble thoughts .... — v. i 
imperfections with your thoughts. Henry >'. i. (cho.) 

for 'tis your thoughts that now — i. (cho.) 

it must he thought on; if it pass .... — i. 1 

that task our thoughts, concerning .. — i. 2 

for we have now no tliought in us — i. 2 

and oil things thought upon, that mny — I. 2 

let every man now task fiis thought — i. 2 
ami honour's thought reigns solely — ii. (cho.) 

but it will lie thought we keep — ii. I 

gi\'e me your thoughts: think you not — ii. 2 

liimself with any such thouglits yet — ii. 3 
of no less celerity than thought .. — iii. (cho.) 

work, work, your thoughts — iii, (cho.) 

lest a' should be thought a coward .. — iii. 2 

name, that, in my thoughts, becomes — ill. 3 

wonderful to be thought on! — iii, 6 

but that we thought not good — iii. 6 

1 thought, upon one pair of English — iii. (> 
not told his thought to the king? .... — iv. 1 

if order might be thought upon — iv. .'> 

uiKin your winged thoughts — v. (cho.) 



THO 



[ 7G6 J 



THO 



THOUGHT— a ptice hath thought. Henry I', v. (cho.) 
forge and working house of tliouRht — v. (clio.) 
youreyes advance after your thouglits — v. (clio.) 

you thought, because he could not speak — v. 1 

avoucli the thoughts of your lieart . . — v. 2 
have I mustered ni ray thouglits ....\Heiiryl'l.\, I 

Talbot, above human thought — i. 1 

my thoughts are wliirled — i. ,'> 

'tis thougbt, lord Talbot, when — ii. 2 

I thought, I should have seen some.. — ii. 3 

proclaim your thoughts; let him .... — ii. 4 

if thy tlioughts were sifted — iii. 1 

grudge one thought against your .... — iii. I 

sweet prince, he thought no harm .. — iv. 1 

for I always tliouglit, it was both.. .. — v. 1 

chaste and immaculate in very thought — v. 4 

sick with working of my thoughts .. — v. 6 

of love unite our thoughts 2 Henry I' 1. i. 1 

canker of ambitious thoughts (re;9.) — i. 2 

or compass of thv thought? — i. 2 

I thouglit, king Henry had resembled — i. 3 

never said nor tliought any such matter — i. 3 

bears his tliouglits above Ills falcon's — ii. I 

I thougbt as much; he'd be above .. — ii. 1 

and thoughts beat on a crown — ii. 1 

lie had thouglit to have murdered ., — ii. 3 

'tis tliought, my lord, that you took — iii. i 

is it but tliouglit soV what are they .. — iii. l 

steel thy fearful thouglits, and change — iii. I 

comes thought on thought (jep.) .... — iii. 1 

stay ray thouglits, ray thoughts — iii. 2 

as being thought to contradict your.. — iii. 2 

my thoughts do hourly propliecy . ... — iii. 2 

and tliought thee happy when I shook — iv. 1 

1 have thought upon it, it shall be so — iv. 7 

from harbouring foul deceitful thoughts — iv. 7 

I thought, you would never have given — iv. 8 

more kingly in my thoughts — v. 1 

unloose tliy lon"-imprisoned thoughts — v. 1 

far be the thought of this from 3 Henry VI. i. 1 

and in thy thought o'er-run my ... . — i. 4 

and very well-appointed, as I thought — ii. 1 

mean not as I thought you did — iii. 2 

miserable thought! and more unlikely — iii. 2 

fault, to harbour sucli a thought! — iii. 2 

revive my drooping thoughts — iii. 3 

not I: ray thoughts aim at a furtlier — iv. 1 

after many moody thoughts, at last — iv. 6 

truth to my divining tliouglits — iv. 6 

I thought, at least, he would have said — v. 1 

whiles he thouglit to steal _ v. l 

I thought no less: it Is his policy — v. 4 

the thought of them would have stirred — v. 5 

I thought, it would have mounted .. — v. 6 
dive thoughts, down to my soul ! . . liichnrd III. \: 1 

it follows in his thought, that I — i. 1 

'tisvery grievous to be thought upon — i. 1 

if I thought that, I tell thee, homicide — i. 2 

from my heart the thought thereof I . . — i. 3 

well thought upon, I have it here . . — i. 3 

struck me, that thought to stay him — i. 4 

I thought, thou hadst been resolute.. — i. 4 

he little thought of this divided .... — i. 4 

nearer in bloody tlioughts, and not in — ii. 1 

his fault was thought, and yet his .. — ii. 1 

my thoughts' sovereign; tire weary way — iii. 1 

I thought, my mother, and my brother — iii. I 

and shall be thouglit most fit — iii. 1 

tlie history of all her secret thoughts — iii. 5 

bad dealing must be seen in thought — iii. 6 

tlie mildness of your sleepy thouglits — iii. 7 

of all his thoughts [Coi.An^-degiee] — iii. 7 

and good thoughts possess thee I — iv. 1 

having no more tliought of what thou — iv. 4 

devotion, holy thoughts, I tender not — iv. 4 

'tis thought, that Richmond is — i^-. 4 

with troubled thoughts, to take a nap — v. 3 
perform beyond tliouglit's compass . Henry nil. i. 1 

I tliouglit, I would have played the part — i. 2 

the very thought of this fair company — i. 4 

full of sad thoughts and troubles .... ii. 2 

put the king from these sad thoughts — ii. 2 

to reraove these thoughts from you.. — ii. 4 

hence I took a thought, this was a .. ii. 4 

holy men I thought ye, upon my soul — iii. 1 

she now begs, that little thought, when — iii. 1 

as thick as thought could make them — iii. 2 

I had thought, they had parted ( rep.) — v. 2 

holy and heavenly thoughts still .... — v. 4 

Cressid comes .into ray thouglits. Troilus <$- Cress, i, 1 

iiaure of the thought that gave't — i. 3 

would they but fat their thoughts with — ii. 2 

it was thought meet, Paris should .. ii. 2 

whom Aristotle thought unfit to .... — ii. 2 

will you subscribe his thought, and say — ii. 3 

matter of the world enter his thoughts — ii. 3 

fair thoughts be your fair pillow!.... — iii. I 

hot thoughts, and hot thoughts (rep.) — iii. 1 

sweet above thought I love thee — iii. 1 

thoughts were like unbridled children — iii. 2 

to angle for your thoughts — iii. 2 

that I thought it could be in a woman — iii, 2 

keeps place with thought (rep.) — iii, 3 

call my thought a certain knowledge — iv. 1 

who, in your thoughts, merits fair .. — iv. 1 

as infants empty of all thought iv. 2 

more momentary swift than thought — iv. 2 

unclasp tlie tables of their thoughts.. — iv. 5 

nor dignifies an impair thought with — iv. 5 

a thought of added honour torn .... — iv. 5 

thou art thought to be Achilles' male — v. 1 

goblins swift as frenzy thoughts .... — v. 11 
assurance bless your thoughts?. Timon of.Hliens, ii. 8 

that thought is bounty's foe — ii. 2 

amongst the lords be thought a fool — iii. 3 

upon that were ray thoughts tiring.. — iii. 6 

what's to be thought of hira? _ v. 1 

who have tliought on special dignities — v. 2 
hath been thought on in this state ..Corinlanus, i. 2 

disdain as much beyond our thoughts — i. 4 



THOUGnT-1 thought to crusli him.. CnHolanus, i. 10 
'tis tluiught that Marcius shall be consul— ii. 1 
but 'tis thought of every one, Coriolanus— ii. 2 

and to make us no better thought of ii. 3 

I Iiad thought to have strucken him — iv. A 

but I thouglit there was more in him — iv. .') 

to my person, than I thought he would Iv. 7 

that thought tliem sure of you v. 3 

tluit thought he could do more — v. 3 

inform thy thoughts with nobleness — v. 3 

buried thoughts of great value hib'usCcpsar, i. 2 

how I have thought of this, and of these — i. 2 

take thought, and die for Cajsar .... ii. 1 

none of you hove thought of him .... — ii. 1 

I never thought hira worse — iii. 1 

love, good thoughts, and reverence .. — iii. 1 

so you thought him; and took bis voice — iv. 1 
to fasten in our thoughts that they have — v. 1 

here again, even with a thought .... — v. 3 

show to the apt thoughts of men .... — v. 3 

in a general honest thought, and common— v. 5 
worser thoughts heavens mend!... 4n;o»!/i5-C/eo. i. 2 
a Koman thought hatli struck him .. — i. 2 
slie is cunning past man's thought .. — i. 2 

thy freer thouglits may not fly forth — i. 5 

very necessity of this thought, that T — ii. 2 

not apresentthought.by duti'ruminated- ii. 2 

sueli a wife as my thoughts make thee — iii. 2 

will their good thoughts call from him — iii. 6 

abused beyond tlie mark of thought — iii. 6 

little thought you would have followed — iii. 9 

1 had thought, to have held it poor.. ' — iii. 1! 

if swift thought break it not — iv. (i 

thought: but thought will do't, I feel — iv. G 

and finish all foul thoughts — iv. 9 

even with a thought the rack dislimns — iv. 12 

whose heart, I tliought I had — iv. 12 

but please your thoughts, in feeding — iv. 13 

wliere mine his thoughts did kindle — v. I 

you do extend these thoughts of horror — v. 2 

take to you no hard thoughts — v. 2 

make not your thoughts your prisons — v. 2 

Ca!sar, thy thoughts touch their effects — v. 2 
such thoughts, and such : or I could ..Cynibeline, i. 4 

'tis tliought, one of Leonatus' friends — ii. 1 

that I thought her as chaste — ii. 5 

lust and rank thoughts, hers, hers . . — ii. 5 

thoughts do hit the roofs of palaces.. ^ iii. 3 

shall be thought put on for villany . . — iii. 4 

were, in his time, thought false — iii. 4 

I thought you would not back again — iii. 4 

and thought to have begged, or bought — iii. a 

thought, he slept; and put ray clouted — iv. 2 

I thought I was a cave-keeper — iv. 2 

out of thought, and thereto so o'ergrowii — iv. 4 

'tis thought, tlie old man and his sons — v. 3 

that thought her like her seeming . . — v. 5 

was not thought by me a precious tiling — v. 5 

that headless man I thought had been — v. 5 

until we thought he died — v. o 

for many years thouglit dead — v. 6 

speaks to calm my thoughts!.. TilusAndronicus, i. 1 

to whom my thoughts are humbled.. — i. 1 

and fit thy thoughts to mount aloft.. — ii. 1 

with slavish weeds, and idle thoughts! — ii. 1 

'tis thought you have a goodly gift . . — ii. 3 

are not corrupted as 'tis thought!.... — iii. i 

delightful engine of her thoughts.... — iii. 1 

if I should be thought thy son — iii. 1 

fat me with the very thoughts of itl — iii. 1 

I will learn thy thought; in thy .... — iii. 2 

a mutiny in the mildest thoughts. ... — iv. 1 

commander of my thoughts, calm thee — iv. 4 

king, be thy thoughts imperious .... — iv. 4 

being credulous in this mad thought — v. 2 
her thoughts the king of every virtue ..Terieles, i. 1 

of any other thought but faithfulness.... — i. 1 

now, my thoughts revolt _ i. i 

why this charge of thoughts? the sad.... — i. 2 

punished, that ne'er thought oflfeuce .... — i. 2 

I thought it princely charity — i. 2 

thought naught too curious — i. 4 

I tliought as much. One sorrow — i. 4 

pay you with unthankfulness in thought — i. 4 

king of thoughts, these cates resist (rep.) — ii. 3 

never did thought of mine levy offence ., — ii. 5 

my actions are as noble as m.y thoughts — ii. 5 
who thought of such a thing? .... — iii. (Gower) 

must in your child be thought on — iii, 3 

sooner her vile thouglits to stead — iv. (Gower) 
unless your thoughts went on ray — iv. (Gower) 
think his pilot thought (I'ep.) .. — iv. 4 (Gower) 

that thought you worthy of it — iv. G 

her father turn our thoughts again — v. (Gower) 

no more but what ray thoughts did — v. 1 

I thougbt, the king had more affected . ...Lear, i. 1 

and thought to set my rest on her — i. I 

great patron thought on in my prayers . . — i. 1 

hail thought, by making this well known — i. 4 

if they not thought the profits — ii. i 

which I best thought it fit to answer .... — ii. 1 

whose wrong thought defiles thee — iii. 6 

since his coming forth is thought of — iv. 3 

he thought, by this, had thought been past — iv. 6 

bear free and patient thoughts — iv. 6 

stands on the hourly thought — iv. 6 

so should my thoughts be severed — iv. 6 

that thought abuses you — v. 1 

what, in ill thoughts again? v. 2 

sir, I thought it fit to send the old — v. 3 

well thought on; take ray sword — v. 3 

love's heralds should be thoughts.. iJomeo ^ Jul. ii. b 

I thought thy disposition better .... — iii. 3 

it may be thought we held him carelessly — iii. 4 

wife, we scarce thought us blessed .. — iii. 5 

[Col.'] one's thought would wish a man — iii. 5 

I will not entertain so bad a thought — iv. 3 

1 thought long to see this morning's face — iv. 5 

above the ground with cheerful thoughts — v. 1 

enter in the thoughts of desperate men 1 — v. 1 



THOUGHT-thought did but forerun. flomco 4- /hI.v.i 
in what particular thought to work ....Humlel, i. 1 
my thouglits and wishes bend again .... — i. 2 

thy thoughts no tongue (rep.) i, 3 

With thoughts beyond the reaches of ... . — 1.4 

as meditation, or the thoughts of love.... I R 

there was no such stuff in my thoughts . . — ii. 2 
sicklied o'er with the pale cast of thought — iii. 1 

than I have thoughts to put them in — iii. 1 

thought some of nature's journeymen .. — iii. 2 

tliat's a fair thought to lie between — iii. 2 

our thouglits aire ours, their ends none .. iii. 2 

but die thy thoughts, when thy first lord — iii. 2 

thoughts black, hands apt, drugs fit — iii. 2 

in our circumstance and course of thought — iii. 3 

my thoughts remain below (rep.) — iii. 3 

a thought, whicli, quartered, hath but one — iv. 4 

thoughts be bloody, or be nothing worth 1 iv. 4 

the words up fit to their own thoughts .. — iv. .'i 

might be thought, though nothing sure .. iv. 5 

tliick and unwholesome in their thoughts — iv. 5 

thoughts. A document in madness (rep.) iv. 5 

thought and affliction, passion, hell itself iv. .5 

60 far he topped my thought, that I — iv. 7 

I thought, thy bride-bed to have decked — v. 1 
so far in your most generous tlioughts.... — v. 2 

thou decei vest me past thouglit I Othello, i . 1 

1 had thought to have yerked him here.. i. 2 

if we ma,ke thought of this, we must not — i.3 

ay, BO I thought i.3 

to put my father in impatient thoughts.. — i.3 

and it is thought abroad, that 'twixt my i.3 

anticipates our thoughts ii. ) 

to the history of lust and foul thoughts . . — i i . 1 

villanous thoughts, Roderigo! ii. 1 

thought whereof doth, like a poisonous .. ii. 1 

I thought you had received some bodily — ii. 3 
of my thought; no further harm (rep.) .. — iii. 3 
some monster in his thought too hideous — iii. 3 

dost love me, show me thy thought iii. 3 

thy worst of thoughts the worst of words — iii. 3 

utter ra.y thoughts? — iii. 3 

mak'st his ear a stranger to thy thoughts — iii. 3 
or wisdom, to let you know my thoughts — iii. 3 

by heaven, I'll know thy thought — iii. 3 

he thought, 'twas witchcraft — iii. 3 

vile success as my thoughts aim not at .. iii. 3 

foul disproportion, thoughts unnatural .. — • iii. 3 
Jet me be thought too bus.y in my fears . , — iii. 3 

I saw it not, thought it not _ iii. 3 

even so mj' bloody thoughts — iii. 3 

could almost read the thoughts of people iii. 4 

with leaden thoughts been pressed _ iii. 4 

if j'ou think other, remove your thought — iv. 2 
in discourse of thought, or actual deed .. — iv. 2 

a murder, which I thought a sacrifice. . . . v. 2 

I told him wliat I thought v. 2 

villany! I thought so then — v. 2 

but thought he had no weapon — v. 2 

THOTJGHTEN that I came with no ill. Pericles, iv. 6 

THOUGHT- EXECUTING fires Lear, iii. 2 

THOUGHTFUL, to invest tlieir ....iHenrylK iv. 4 

THOUGHT-SICK at the act Hamlel, iii 4 

THOUGHT'ST to help me All's Well, ii. 1 

thought'st thy griefs might equal Pericles, v. 1 

THOUSAND furlongs of sea for Tempest,\. 1 

remove some thousands of these logs iii. I 

a thousand! thousand! iii. 1 

a thousand twangling instruments .. iii. 2 

a tliousand times it answers. Tuo Gen. of Verona, i. 3 

a thousand good-morrows ii. 1 

to you two thousand _ ii. 1 

command a thousand times as much — ii. I 
Shalt have five thousand welcomes .. — ii. ."j 
twenty thousand soul-couflrmiug oaths — ii. 6 

a thousand oaths, an ocean — ii. 7 

a thousand times good-morrow — iv. 3 

heard him say a thousand times .... — iv, 4 

a thousand more mischances — v. 3 

rend thy faith into a thousand oaths — v. 4 
he hatli a thousand of these letters, ilferri/ Wives, ii. 1 

two thousand, fair woman — ii. 2 

she thanks you a thousand tiraes .... — ii. 2 
and a thousand other her defences ., — ii. 2 
a thousand fragrant posies (rep.).. — iii, 1 (song) 

1 had rather than a thousand pound — iii. 3 
as I will desire among five thousand — iii. 3 
though twenty thousand worthier come — iv. 4 
a thousand irreligious cursed hours.. — v. 5 
three thousand ducats a year .... Twelfth Kighl, i. 3 
a thousand thousand sighs to save — ii. 4 vsong) 
for a pension of thousands to be paid — ii. 6 
some two thousand strong, or so .... — iii. 2 

a thousand deaths would die — v. I 

thou hast said to me a thousand times — v. 1 
to three thousand dollars a year.il/eas. /or Meas. i. 2 
was worth five thousand of you all .. — i. 2 
exist'st on many a thousand grains.. — iii. 1 

lie hid more thousand deaths — iii. 1 

pray a thousand prayers for thy death — iii. I 
have paid for the nursing a thousand — iii. 2 
thousand 'scapes of wit make thee .. — iv. 1 
it will cost him a thousand pound ....MnchAdo, i. 1 
and thy fee is a thousand ducats ... — ii. 2 
tore the letter into a thousand halfpence — ii. 3 
Don John, a thousand ducats (,rep. iv. 2) — iii. 3 
bids me a thousand times good-night — iii. 3 
yea, and 'twere a thousand times more — iii. r> 

a thousand times in secret — iv. 1 

1 have marked a thousand blushing — iv. 1 
a thousand innocent shames in angel — iv. 1 
pierce a hundred thousand hearts. A/jrf. N.'s Dr. ii. 2 
three thousand times within tlii8..LoDe'si..I.oi(, i. 1 
a hundred thousand crowns (rep.) .. — ii. 1 
remains unpaid a hundred thousand — ii. 1 
hath been five thousand years a boy — v. 2 
compared to twenty thousand fairs .. — v. 2 
some thousand verses of a faithful .. — v. 2 
three thousand ducats (rep.) .... Mer. of Venice, i . 3 
cost me two thousand ducats (rep.) .. — iii. 1 



TltCUTSAND times more fair Irrp.'I.Mer. ofPm. lii. 2 

the first liov, fur n tliousiuul (Iticaur — iii. D 

for mc tliriH- tliousnml iluents — iii. 2 

six thoustiiul, anit lU-fucc the boiul t.r'-;».) — iii. 2 

n thousand riLW ti'ick:* of tltobc hi-ug^mg — iii, -1 

to receive tlirt'O tliuutiand ducuts — iv. I 

to (^ive ten thousand dvicutti to have.. — iv. 1 

tixree tlionsund ducat:} hero ia six tr«'/>.) — iv. 1 

In lieu wliereof, tliree tliousand diututs — iv. I 

did refuse three ttiousaiid ducat:} of nic — v. 1 
but a l>ot>r tliousand crowne (fe/j.).-44 you Like i/, i. 1 

yes, into a thousand similes — ii. I 

into a tliousand tlnit I Imve for^rotteci — ii. 4 

vou arc a thousand times a proiierer — iii. 5 

divide a minute into a thousand parts — iv. 1 

is almost si.\ tliousand years old — iv. 1 

your iniiatcr have a thousand loves AU'tll'i^ll, i. I 

to imss a thonsiind nc. tilings with — ii. a 

I'll :ul(l thrcL' thousand crowns to what — iii. 7 

tiveor six tli.nisanil (K'p.) — iv. 3 

amounts not to lifleen thousand poll — iv. 3 

M-e may pick a tlunisand salads — iv. & 

that ring's a thousand proofs — v. 3 

bars a tliousand harms.. 7iimi'nji!/"SA/(-H', ■> (indue.) 

dau^iituer had a thousand wooers .... — i. 2 

a tliousand thanks, eiguior Gremio.. — ii. 1 

tweiitv thousand crowns (rf/). v. 2).. — ii. 1 

tw.i thousand ducats by the year (,rep.) — ii. 1 

he'll woo a thousand, 'point the day — iii. 2 
thousands more that go before it .. II iiUer'sTak, i. 2 

slaughters a thousaiin, waiting upon — i. 2 

a thousand furlongs, ere with spur .. — i. 2 

mmiy a thousand of us have — i. 2 

if I could example of thousands .... — i. 2 

1 have looked on thousands — i. 2 

a thousand knees ten thousand years — iii. 2 

forty thousand fathom above water.. — iv. 3 

spoken a thousand things, that would — v. 1 
a thousand marks Irrp. i.2, ii.l 6; ii i. I) Com. n/'/irr. i.l 

shrive you of a thousand idle pranks — ii. 2 

I huy a thousand pound a year! .... — iv. 1 
ten thousand dollars to our general usc.Macbtlli, i. 2 

have I offer of goodly thousands .... — iv. 3 

ten thousand warlike men (rep.) .... — iv. 3 

there is tefl thousand— Geese, villain? — v. 3 

twice tii'teen thousand hearts KingJohn^ ii. 1 

full thirty thousand marks of English — ii. 3 

possessed with a thousand wrongs ., — iii. 3 

ten thousand wiry friends do glue .. — iii. 4 

train ten thousand English — iii. 4 

told of a many tliousand warlike .... — iv. 2 

I'll Hod a thousand shi Its to get — iv. 3 

a thousand bUMiiesses are brief in hand — iv. 3 

feast upon wlmle iliousaudsof the French— v. 2 

received eiqht tliuusaud nohles tlirliard II. i. I 

thousand dattereis sit within thy crown — ii. I 

you pluck a thousand dangers (rep.) — ii. 1 

three thousand men of war — ii.l 

send me presently a thousand pound — ii. 2 

on his side fights, thousands will fly — ii. 2 

the ranks of many thousand Frenc'li — ii. 3 

have twelve thousand fighting men I — iii. 2 

tlie blood of twenty thousand men .. — iii. 2 

ten thousand bloody crowns — iii. 3 

of a hundred thousand crowns — iv. 1 

a thousand spirits in one bieast(rfp.) — iv. 1 

I, in twelve thousand, none — iv. 1 

did keep ten thousand men? — iv. 1 

and a thousand of his people 1 llennjl l\ i. I 

ten thousand bold Scots — i. 1 

give thee for it a thousand pound (rep.) — ii. 4 

nave ta'en a thousand pound — ii. 4 

and a thousand blue-caps more — ii. 4 

hang in the air a thousand leagues.. — iii. 1 

a hundred thousand rebels die in this — iii. 2 

thou hast saved me a thousand marks — iii. 3 

thousand pound. .Sirrah, do I owe (rr/j.) — iii. 3 

the earl of Westmoreland seven thousand — iv. I 

to thirty thousand. Forty let it be .. — iv. 1 

the fortune of ten thousand men .... — iv. 4 
caper with me for a thousand marks. 2Heiiry/r. i.2 

your lordship lend me thousand pound — i. 2 

to five and twenty thousand men (r»;;.) — i. 3 

worth a thousand of these bed-hangings — ii. 1 

but many thousand reasons hold me — ii. 3 

many thousand of my poorest subjects — iii. 1 

and Jforthumlierlana are fifty thousand — iii. 1 

that is the leader of so many thousands — iii. 2 

or mar, the rate of thirty thousand .. — iv. I 

if I had a thousand sous, the first — iv. 3 

thou hid'st a thousand daggers in.... — iv. 4 

I would have bestowed the thousand — v. 5 

I owe you a thousand pound — v. 5 

let me have live hundred of my thousand — v. 5 
into a thousand parts divide ..llemyl'. i. (chorus) 

eix thousand and two hundred good — i. I 

a thousaiiil pounds by the year — i. 1 

so may a thousand actiims, once afoot — i. 2 

for a many thousand widows shall .. — i.2 

thousands weep, more than did laugh — i. 2 

they have full threescore thousand .. — iv. 3 

but one ten thousand of those men .. — iv. 3 

thou hast unwished five thousand meu — iv. 3 

upon his knees, a ttiousanil thanks .. — . iv. 4 

of ten thousand French, that in the.. — iv. 8 

eight thousand and four hundred., .. — iv. 8 

in tliese ten thousaml they have lost — iv. 8 

scarce six thousand in his troop 1 /frnry VI. i. I 

ten tliousand soldiers with me — i.l 

a thousand souls to death — ii. 4 

I was six thousaml strong — iv. 1 

ten tliousand French have ta'en .... _ iv. 2 

and tainted with a thousand vices .. — v. 4 

on' if it liiul a thousand lives — v. 4 

perplexed with a thousand cares .... — v. 5 
lortliousandsinore, that yet siHpcct.2;/eiiri/r/. iii. 1 

shall lilow ten thousand souls to .... — iii. I 

with twenty thousand kis-es, and to — iii. 2 

dare him twenty thouaantl times .... — iii. 2 

thereby of teu tuuusaiid shames .... — iii. 2 



— ii. I 

— ii. 2 
ii. 2 



— ii. 3 



ii. 2 



TlIOlI.SAND-o thousand sighs ore. 2 Htnrvf/. iii. 2 

and take ten thousand leaves — iii. 2 

I'll give a thousand i>ouud to look .. — iii. 3 
a thousand crowns (rep. iv. 8 and iv. 10) — iv. 1 
much to pay two thousand crowns .. — iv. 1 
better ten thousand base-born Cades — iv. 8 

of my life for a thousand years — Iv. 1(1 

let ten thousand devils come — iv. 10 

give thee for rc«ard a thousand murks — v. 1 
for thousand Yorks he shall not hide — V. I 
I'd break a tlumsund oaths, to reign.3//eHry f/. i. 2 
she is hard hy with twenty thousand — i.2 

what, with five thousand men? — i. 2 

for a thousand causes, I would prolong — i. 4 

thirty tlnnisand strong (rep. V. 3).... 
amount to five and twenty thousand 
with a hand of thirty thousand men — 
a thousand men have broke their fasts — 
were worih a tliousand crowns, to make — ii. 2 
will cost tun thousand lives to day .. — ii. 2 
yes, it iloth ; a thousand fold it doth — ii. 6 

a thousand lives must wither — ii. .5 

I, and ten thousand in this luckless — ii. 6 

my leave, with many thousand thanks — iii. 2 
with five thousand men, shall cross — iii. 3 

many a thousand, which now mistrust — v. 
cited up a thousand heavy times ..liielmrd HI. i. 4 
a thousand fearful wrecks; a thousand — i. 4 

conscience is a thousand swords .... — V. 2 
si.x or seven thousand is their utmost — V. 3 
conscience hath a thousand several.. — v. 3 
the substance of ten thousand soldiers — v. 3 
a thousand hearts are great within .. — v. 3 
sweat of thousand friends ..IlenryVllI. (prologue) 
for which I pay them a thousand thanks — i 4 

a thousand pound a year (rep.), 
that promises more thousands . 
whose bright faces cast thousand beams — i 
one christening will beget a thousand — 
a thousand thousand blessings, which — 
I lie, at a thousand watches.. TroUus ^ Cressida^ 
more in Troilus thousand fold 1 see — 

'mon^st many thousand dismes .... — ' 
hath launched above a thousand ships — 

lend me ten thousand eyes — 11.2 

emulation hath a thousand sons .... — iii. 3 
thousand complete courses of the sun I — iv. 1 
with so many thousand sighs did buy — iv. 4 
there is a tliousand Hectors in the field — v. 5 
'tis common: a thousand moral ■/'im<mo/"/t(Ae>w, i. 1 
that charitable title from thousands — i.2 

thousand to Varro; and to Isidore (rep.) — ii. J 
o' the instant a thousand talents to me — ii. 2 

three thousand crowns (lep.) — iii. 4 

live thousand crowns, my lord (re;i.) — iii. 4 
a thousand pieces. A thousand pieces I — iii. 6 
ten thousand curbs of more strong . . Cnriolanus^ i. I 
with thousands of these quartered slaves — 

a hundred thousand welcomes — 

(that's thousand to one good one) .. — 

thine eyes sat twenty thousand deatlis — 

a thousand welcomes I and more a friend— 

for ten thousand of your throats I'd not — 

live a thousand years, I shall iwt.JutimCiria 

ten thousand harms, more than..^;i/o;:!/,^ C/eo. i. 2 

and thousands more of semblable.... — 

by land, and our twelve thousand horse — 

a thousand, sir, early though it be . . — 

until of many thousand kisses the poor — 

lay you ten thousand ducats (rep.) . . Cymbeh 

above ten thousand meaner moveables — 

3'early three thousand pounds — 

three thousand confident in act — 

it sums up thousands in a trice — 

a thousand deaths would i;proposey'i/i(s.(»rfr 
a thousand fiends, a thousand (rep.) — 
warded him frcmi thousand dangers — 

we had a thousand Roman dames .. — 
would she for twenty thousand more — 
that I bad not done a thousand more — 
I have done a thousand dreadful things — 
that I cannot do ten thousand more — 
show me a thousand, that have done thee— 
and have a thousand times more cause — 
ten thousand, worse than ever yet .. 

a thousand doubts how I might 

three or four thousand chequins 

bated one doit of a thousand pieces.. . 
break into a hundred thousand flaws 
to have a thousand with red burning. 

he had a thousand noses, horns — iv. ti 

an' I should live a thousand year8/(omeo<5-J«/iW,i. 3 
thousand times good niglitl a thousand — li. 2 



ii. 1 
ii. 2 
iii. 3 
iv. 5 
V. 4 
, iii. 1 



V. 1 



V. 3 
clest i. 2 



r, ii. 4 



to thy lady. Ay. a thousand times .. — 
hath slain ten tliousand Tybalts.... 



ii. 4 
i. 2 



twenty hundred thousand times more — 

above compare so many thousand times?— iii. 5 

gives him three thousand crowns Hamlet^ ii. 2 

one man picked out of ten thousand — ii. 2 

and the thousand natural shocks that flesh— iii. I 
the ghost's word for a thousand pound ., — iii. 2 
ten thousand lesser things are mortised — iii. 3 
two thousand souls, and twenty thousand — iv. 4 
imminent death of twenty thousand men — iv. 4 
for that frame outlives a thousand tenants — v. 1 
borne me on his back a thousand times — v. 1 

forty thousand brothers could not — v. 1 

and has been slave to thousands OlheUo, iii. 3 

thot the slave had forty thousand lives! — iii. 3 
a thousand, a thuiisand times: and then — iv. I 
act of shame a thousand times committed — v. 2 

TIIOUSAND-FOI.D more care to....:w/.u,.r/r/. ii. 2 
is a thousand-fold more bitter .... Uem-yt'tli. ii. 3 

TIIOIISA NDTH part of Ai youl.ike it, iv. 1 

the thousandth part of mv cnduronce../Vru7ei, v. 1 

TIIRACIAN singer in their rage .... .MiV/. \.'iU. v. 1 
from thence the Thraeian fatal ....3 Henry VI, iv, 2 
the Thraeian king, Adalla8..47i(ony ■^tVeopn/iyi, iii. 6 
Tiiracian tyrant in his tent .. 7'.7m« Ajidrouicui, i. 2 
Cerberus ut the Thra<:iau poet's feet — ii. i 



THRAT.nOM-this earth's thraldom. ff.r/.-.r-f ///, i. 4 

Til ItAI ,1,S of sleep? Afm-heih. iii. 6 

look gracicnis on thy prostrate thrall. l//eriry/V. i. 2 
thy sliadow hath been thrall to me .. — ii. 3 
die the thrall of Margaret's curse. fiirAnrrf ///. iv. I 
TIIK.VI/lJCUmy wounded ... Taming of Shrew. \. I 
sense to cestacy was ne'er so thralled .. Hamlrt, iii. 4 

THKASII Tnijans rmilut^ Crenida, ii. I 

first, thrash the corn TltiitAndrniiieut.ii. Z 

THKA.SO.NICAL-ttiid thrasonical. /-ope'i/,./.o»(, v. 1 
and Cresar's thrasonical brag of ..As you Like il, v. 2 

TlIREAUof mineowii life Temjyett. iv. I 

weave their thread with bones .. Ttcel/ik.\ig>ii, ii. 4 

strong madness in a silken thread Muc.lt Ado, v. \ 

cut thread and thrum Mid. N.U Dream, v. 1 

with shears his threadof silk — v. 1 

hedrawelh out the thread of I.ovc'mL.LoiI,v. I 

liest, thou Ihieiid, tliou thimble.. Tawiui-of Sh. iv. 3 
mine own linnse with a skein of thread! — iv. 3 
marrj', sir, with needle and thread .. — iv. 3 

with "a bottom of brown thread — iv. 3 

any silk, any thread H'inler'iT'tle, iv. 3 (song) 

smallest thread that ever spider King John, iv. 3 

are turned to ime thread — v. 7 

a camel to thread the postern Richard II. v. 5 

ISardolph's vital ihreod be cut Hemyl'. iii. 6 

his thread of life had not so soon .... I llennj yi. i. 1 

tlieir thread of life is spun illeiiniVI. iv. 2 

they would not thread the gates.... CoriolmiuM, iii. I 

destinies do cut his thread of life Pericles, i. 2 

and with a silk thread plucks ..liomeo <5- Juliei, ii. 2 

grief shore his old thread in twain! ....OIhello,\. 2 

TUREAD-BARE juggler .... Comedy 0/ Error,, v. 1 

so he had need, for tis thread-bare..2 Henry K/. iv. 2 

TIIREADEN sails HenryV. iii. (chorus) 

THREADING dark-eyed night i.enr, ii. 1 

THREAT— or this man's threats Tempetl, i. 2 

many bitter threats of ru-oGeii.o/Cerona, iii. 1 

threats have no more strength .. ..Mid.N.UDr. iii. 2 

her head, nimble in threats Aiyou LiLeit, iv. 3 

sir, spare your threats Winter'tTale, iii. 2 

whiles I threat, he lives Macbeth.W. 1 

no more than he that threats King John, iii. I 

threat the glory of my precious .... Itichnrd 1 1, iii. 3 
frowns, words, and threats, shall . ...^ Henry yi. i. 1 
how I scorn his worthless threats! .. — i.l 

what! threat you me with telling ..Richard III, i. 3 
every one did threat to-morrow's .... — v. 3 

let these threats alone Troilus ^ Cressida. iv. 5 

hearing the surges threat Timono/Alhent, iv. 2 

no terror, Cassius, in your threats../«/ii«C'rt'«ar, iv. 3 
very wisely, threat before you sting . . — v. 1 
threats the throat o< (\\!i.i.. Antony /<f Cleopatra, iii. ."i 
an arrogant piece of flesh threat us..CymbeUne, iv. 2 
grown, to threat your friends? .... Titus Andron. ii. I 

and threat me, I shall never — iii. I 

who threats, in course of this — iv. 4 

helm thy slayer begins threats Lear, iv. 2 

his liberty is full of threats to all Hamlet, iv. ) 

THREATEN— though the seas threaten. 7'empcji, v. I 

this casket threatens Merchant of Venice, ii. 7 

with the twigs that threaten them . . Alt's ll'ell, iii. .^ 
did threaten and encourage him.. I('in(er'«7'a/e, iii. 2 

and threaten present blusters — iii. 3 

and threatens them with divers deaths — v. 1 
man's act, threaten his bloody stage ..Macbeth, ii. 4 

threaten the threatener King John, v. 1 

prince of Wales, that threatens thee .1 Henry IV. v. 4 
when what they seem to threaten ,.,, HenryV, ii. 1 
steed threatens steed, in high — — iv. (chorus) 

threatens more than Eargulus "iHcniyVl. iv. 1 

that tlireaten us with wreck 3HenryVI. v. 4 

to threaten me with death, is most.. Wic/mrd ///. i. 4 
state, whose numbers threaten . . Antony Sf Cleo. i. 3 
each minute threatens life or death ...,1'ericles, i. 3 

as loud as thunder threatens us — v. I 

like Mars, to threaten and command.. H«m(e/, iii. 4 
THREATENED to put me into . . Merry Hives, iii. 3 

and hath threatened to beat her — iv. 2 

threatened me to strike me Mid.N.'sVream, iii. 2 

your city's threatened cheeks King John, ii. I 

treaty of our tlircatened town? — ii. 2 

that threatened me, ne'er looked. . Julius Cersar, ii. 2 
have threatened our prisoners with..t't/m6e/ine, v. 5 
curst speech I threatened to discover him. /.ear, ii. 1 

as no less is threatened me, the king — iii. 3 

the law, that threatened death../(omfo4-Ju/i>(, iii. 3 

ond threatened me with death — v. 3 

THREATENER, and outface KingJohn, v. I 

THRE.\TENEST, than dost.... .Ver. of Venice, iii. 2 
THREATENING twigs of birch.., Veni./oril/e'u. i. 4 
unknit that threatening unkind.. 7'cimiHffo/SA. v. 2 
pity from our threatening looks. .Coinerfyo/Ti'rr. i. 1 
upon them with a threatening eye. KingJohn, iii. 4 
therefore thy threatening colours now — v. 2 

the noise of threatening: ilrum Richard II. iii. 3 

his claim, his threatening, and my HenryV, ii. 4 

with such acruel threatening look ..iHenryVI. i. 3 
stop his dismal threatening sound ,. — ii. 6 
o hlaek, suspicious, threatening eloiid — v. 3 
not endure all threatinings?.. yiinn;io/.:4(Aen», iii. h 
shakes his threatening sword against — v. 2 

or pitying, threatening the other Coriolnnus, i. 6 

exalted with the threatening clouds. Ju(<u>tVr«,i>-,i. 3 

threatening most sea-like Antony/iCteo. iii. II 

niuler Titus' threatening look 7i/ii»/4Mrfron. i. 2 

above pule envy's threatening reach — ii. I 
threatening the welkin with his .... — iii. I 
with all his threatening band of .... — iv. 2 
threatening the flames with bisson ....//nin/e/, ii. 2 

TMUIO-VTKNI.VGLY replies jllfsH'ell. ii. 3 

TI1I'E.\T'ST where is no cause 2 Henry VI. i. 4 

THREE— thou wast not out three years. Tempnf, i. 2 
this olicdient steel, three inches of it .. — ii.l 

he's safe for these three hours — iii. 1 

we are three of them — iii- 2 

you are three men of sin — iii. 3 

that you three from Milan did — iii. 3 

oil three of them are desperate — iii. 3 

who three hours since were wrecked .. — v. 1 



THR 



[ 7C8 ] 



rilfiEE—eannot be three hours Tempest, v. 1 

wliicU but three glasses since — v. 1 

these three have robbed me — .v. 1 

three things that women .. TwoOen.oJ Verona, iii. 2 

three orfour of his blind brothers.... — iv. 4 

tlie company of tliree or four — iv. 4 

the forest is not three leagues off ... . — v. 1 

these three hundred years Merry Wives, i. 1 

there is but three skirts for yourself — i. 1 

tliere is three umpires in this matter — i. I 

and the three party Is — j- I 

■we three, to hear it — ;• ' 

I keep but three men and a boy .... — i. 1 

tliree veney s for a dish of — .}. 1 

for three reprieves for 3'ou — ii. 2 

better three hours too soon — Ji. Si 

in three hundred pounds a year I — — lii. 4 

I will do wlmt I can for them all three — i;i. 4 

the pangs of tliree several deaths .... — iii. 5 

alas, three of master Ford's brotliers — iv. 2 

and three or four more of their — iv. 4 

like three German devils, three doctor — iv. 5 

there is three cousin Germans — iv. 5 

I was three or four times in — v. 5 

not three hours travel from Ticelfth Nigld, i. 2 

he has three thousand ducats a year — i. 3 
and speaks three or four languages .. — i. 3 

he liath known you but three days . . — i. 4 
did 3'ou never see the picture of we three? — ii. 3 

will draw three souls out of one weaver — ii. 3 

and tliree merry men we be — ii. 3 

get ye all three into the box-tree — ii. 5 

having been three months married .. — ii. 5 

I'll get 'era all three ready — iii. 

souls and bodies liatli he divorced three — iii. 
put you in mind, one, two, three .... — v. 
and for three months before (.7 ep.) .. — v. 
to three tliousand dollars a year.il/sas. /or ileas. i. 
within these three days his head's .. — i. 

let me bail these gentle three — v. 

he was not three leagues off when I ..Much Ado, i. 

rather than hold three words' conference — ii. 

if you three will but minister — ii. 

they have conjoined, all three.. .Ui'ti. A'. 'sDream, iii. 

yet but three! come, one more — iii. 

three and tliree, we'll hold a feast .. — iv. 

two or tliree lords and ladies more . . — iv. 

this long age of three hours — v. 

tlie thrice three Muses mourning .... — v. 

sisters tliree, come, come to me .... — v. 
so shall all the couples three ever true — v. 
have sworn for three years' (rep.).. Love^sL. Lost, i. 
to sleep but three hours in the night — i. 
here in your court for three years^ space — 1. 
penance of each three years' day ij-ep.) — i. 
three thousand times witliin this three — i. 
so to study, tliree years is but short.. — i. 
all those three; 1 was seen with her.. — i. 

1 have promised to st'-idy three years — i. 2 
which the base vulgar do call, three — i. 2 

now here is three studied (repO — i- 2 

or tlie three or the two; or one — i. 2 

of such a ballad some three ages since — i. 2 
but a' must fast three days a week . . — 1 

shall out-wear three years, no woman — i 

all those three I will prove — ii 

I am all these three. And tliree times — ii 

still at odds, being but three — ii 

for tliree farthings: three farthings.. — ii 

among three, to love the worst of all — iii 

saw, two; overcame, three — iv. 1 (letter 

care a pin if the other three were in — iv. 3 

all three of you, to be thus much .... — iv. 3 

a beam do find in eacii of three — iv. 3 

that you three fools lacked me fool . . — iv. 3 

I will play three myself — v. 1 

and sugar; there is three — v. 2 

on those three; they are infected .... — v. 2 

the three wortliies shall come in (rep.) — v. 2 

and three times thrice irep.) — v. 2 

I always took three threes for nine . . — v. 2 

I wish you all these three — v. 2 

for her sweet love three years — v. 2 

devised in these three chests.. il/e?'c/ia/i/ of Venice, i. 2 
three thousand ducats, well (rep.).,.. — i. 3 

for tliree months. For three (rep.) ., — i. 3 

of thrice three times the value — i. 3 

that won three fields of sultan — ii. 1 

the sisters three, and such branches — ii. 2 

one of these three contains her — ii. 7 

by oatli to observe three things — ii. 9 

three thousand ducats {rep. iv. 1 & v. 1) — iii. 2 

some three or four of you, go give him — iv. I 

there you shall find, tliree of your . . — v. I 
an old man, and his three sous.... ^syouLike it, i. 2 
three proper young men, of excellent — i. 2 

the eldest of the three wrestled with — i. 2 
and broke three of his ribs, that there — i. 2 

is without three good friends........ — iii. 2 

since I was three years old — v. 2 

I have undone three tailors — v. 4 

one that lies three thirds, and uses . .All's IVell, ii. 5 

two or three probable lies — iii. 6 

I'll add three thousand crowns — iii. 7 

within these three hours 'twill be.... — iv. 1 

three great oaths would scarce make — iv. 1 
no less than three great argosies.. 7'amm^o/SA. ii. 1 

make no music in tliree parts — iii. 1 

am I but tliree inches? why, thy .... — iv. 1 

widow, ere tliree days pass — i v. 2 

thou yard, three quarters, half yard — iv. 3 

ever since he was three years old — v. 1 

we three are married, but you two .. — v. 2 
vras when three crabbed months . . Winter's Tale, i. 2 

by twos, and threes, at several — i. 2 

in the which three great ones suffer.. — ii. 1 

I have three daughters; the eldest .. — ii. 1 

between ten and three and twenty .. — iii. 3 

sir, it is three days since I saw — iv. 1 

three pound of sugar; five pound — iv. 2 



TIIREE-past throe quarters of a mile. Winter's T. iv. 2 
'tis in three parts. We had the tune.. — iv. 3 
three carters, three shepherds, three — iv. 3 
these four threes of herdsmen (rep.) — iv. 3 

not the worst of the three, but jumps — iv. 3 
a man of fourscore three, that thought — iv. 3 

things known betwixt us three — iv. 3 

till he be tliree quarters and a dram dead — iv. 3 

they three were taken up Comedy of Errors, i. 1 

tliree quarters, that is, an ell and (rep.) — iii. 2 
amount to three odd ducats more. . . . — iv. I 

when shall we three meet again Mucbelli, i. 1 

I dreamt lastnightofthethree weird.. — ii. I 
provoker of three things. What three.. — ii. 3 

had I three ears, I'd hear thee — iv. 1 

'tis two or three, my lord — iv. 1 

within this three mile may you — v. 5 

look, where three farthings goesi .... King John, i, 1 

in a frenzy died" three days — iv. 2 

are wrecked three nights ago — v. 3 

come the three corners of tiie world. . — v. 7 
three parts of that receipt I had .... Richard II, i. 1 
we three are thy self; and, speaking — ii I 

three thousand men of war — ii. 1 

be not vain, we three here part — .i. 2 

manned with three hundred men. . . . — i. 3 

three Judases, each one thrice — iii. 2 

'tis full thee months, since I did see.. — v. 3 
three times they breathed (7 e/>.) ....I Henry IV. i. 3 

brought three hundred marks — ii. 1 

tliree or four loggerheads, amongst tliree — ii. 4 

there live not three good men — ii. 4 

if there were not two or three and fifty — ii. 4 
would have it, three misbegotten knaves — ii. 4 
in this robbery, lost three hundred . . — ii . 4 
three times hatli Henry Bolingbroke — iii, 1 
divided it into three limits, very equally — iii. 1 
that I borrowed, three or four times — iii. 3 
three or four Ijonds of forty pound . . — iii. 3 
soldiers, three hundred and odd pounds — iv. 2 

unless you call three fingers on — iv. 2 

there's but three of my hundred — v. 3 

three knights upon our party — v. 5 

three times slain the ajipearance ....2HenryIV. i. 1 
I was born about three of the clock .. — i. 2 

do brawl, are in three heads — i. 3 

king in three divided — i. 3 

untwine the sisters three I — ii. 4 

I have three pound to free Mouldy . . — iii. 2 
the worst of these three gentlemen! .. — v. 2 

and three corrupted men Henry V. ii. (chorus) 

and we'll be all three sworn brothers — ii. 1 
ruin you three [CW.Kii/. -have] sought — ii. 2 

God, God I three or four times — ii. 3 

three swashers (?'ep.) — iii. 2 

three such anticks do not amount .... — iii. 2 

and sold it for tliree halfpence — iii. 2 

legs did march three Frenchmen .. .. — iii. 6 

by three and twenty thousand 1 Henry VI, i. 1 

more than three hours — i. 1 

these three days have I watched .... — i. 4 

the fury of my three attendants — iv. 2 

and now we three have spoke it ....2 Henri/ VI. iii. 1 
but three days longer, on the pain .. — iii. 2 

if after three days' space — iii. 2 

and three times thrice by thee — iii. 2 

seen him whipped three market days — iv. 2 

the three hooped pot shall have — iv. 2 

three times to-day (rep.) — v. 3 

the loss of those three lords torments. 3 /Jeji7-i/r/. i. i 

three times did Richard make — i. 4 

or do I see three suns? Three (.rep.) — ii. 1 

nay, bear three daugliters — ii.l 

three, my most gracious lord — iii. 2 

three dukes of Somerset, threefold .. — v. 7 
whom I, some three months since. . Richard III. i. 2 

blessed his three sons with — i. 4 

alas ; you three, on me, your — ii. 2 

three times to-day my foot-cloth horse — iii. 4 

towards three or four o'clock — iii. 5 

kinsmen of mine, three at the least.. Henry F///. i, 1 

and, three nights after this — iv. 2 

did I liit three times on the head (re/>.) — v. 3 

like to dance these three days — v. 3 

within three pound, lift as much. Troilus ^ Cress, i. 2 

he ne'er saw three and twenty — i. 2 

with my three drops of blood — i. 3 

may make them three — iii. 1 

I'll give you three for one — iv. 5 

three talents on the present .... Timon of Athens, i. 1 
you three serve three usurers? {rep.) — ii. 2 

here's tliree solidares for thee — iii. 1 

all these three owe their estates — iii. 3 

three? Humph! it shows but little .. — iii. 3 
yes, mine's three thousand crowus .. — iii. 4 

these three lead on this Coriolanus, i. 2 (letter) 

to wheel three or four miles about .. — i. 6 
within these three hours, Tullua .... — i. 8 
are three, that Rome should dote on — ii. 1 
three, tliey say; but 'tis thought of .. — ii. 2 
i' the consul's view, slew three opposers — ii. 2 
where being tluee parts melted away — ii. 3 

by ones, by twos, and by threes — ii. 3 

three examples of the like — iv. 6 

help, three o' the chiefest soldiers.... — v.h 
tliree or four wenches, where I . . . . Julius Ccosar, i. 2 
there's two or three of us have seen . . — i. 3 

three parts of him is ours already .... — i. 3 

the clock hath stricken three — ii. I 

stand one of the three to share it? — iv. 1 

till Cesar's three and twenty wounds — v. 1 
'tis three o'clock; and, Romans, yet — v. 3 

let me be married to three V\ngs.. Antony ^Cleo. i. 2 
then three kings I had newlj' feasted — ii. 2 
to yon all three, the senators alone . . — ii. 6 

tliese three world-sharers, these — ii. 7 

gone; the other three are sealing .... — iii. 2 
tliree in Egypt cannot make better note — iii. 3 
within three days, you with your .... — v. 2 
the eldest of them at three years old..Ci/ini/e;!jie, i. 1 



THR 



THREE— I have read three hours Cymbeline, ii. 2 

one, two, three,— time, time! — ii. 2 

j'carly three thousand pounds — iii. I 

at three, and two years old — iii. 3 

these three, three thousand confident — v. 3 

for three performers are the file — v. 3 

we will die all three; but I will — v. 5 

the service, that you three have done — v. 5 

a mother to the birth of three? — v. 5 

your three motives to the battle .... — v. 5 

did company these three in poor — v. 5 

conduit with three issuing spouts. Tilus Andron. ii. 5 
we have but poor three, and they can . . Pericles, iv. 3 

three or four thousand chequins — iv. 3 

who for this three months hath not — v. 1 

divided, in three, our kingdom Lear. i. I 

ha! here's three of us are Eopliisticatedl — iii. 4 
who hath had three suits to my back .... — iii. 4 

all three now marry in an instant — v. 3 

three civil brawls bred of an airy, llomeo ^Juliet, i. I 
tliree words, dear Romeo, and good.. — ii. 2 

till twelve is three long hours — ii. 5 

when I, tliy three hours wife, have .. — iii. 2 
all three do meet in thee at once .... — iii. 3 
bell hath rung, 'tis three o' clock .... — iv. 4 

within this three hours will fair — v. 2 

three thousand crowns in annual fee ..Hamlet, ii. 2 

and, ever, three parts coward _ iv. 4 

and an act hath three branches — v. 1 

these three years I have taken note of it — v. 1 
i' the earth three and twenty years ....; — v. 1 

three liberal-conceited carriages — v. 2 

he shall not exceed you three hits — v. 2 

tliree great ones of the city Othello, i. I 

hath sent about three several quests — i, 1 

not kissed your three fingers so oft — ii.l 

three lads of Cyprns,— noble swelliug .... — ii. 2 

but let it not exceed three days — iii. 3 

within these three days let me hear thee — iii. 3 
two or three groans; it is a heavy night — v, 1 
THREE-FARTHINGS-WORTH.. Lome's L.L. iii. 1 
THREEFOLD too liltle for ....TwoOen.of Ver. i. 1 
provokes me to this threefold perjury — ii. 6 
with threfold love I wish you .... Love'sL. Lost, v. 2 
according to our threefold order. ... 1 Hen7-y / »'. iii. I 
threefold vengeance tend upon ...,'iHenryVI. iii. 2 

famish, that's a threefold death 'iHenryVI. v. 4 

Somerset, threefold renowned for . , , . — v. 7 

on me, threefold distressed Richard III. ii. 2 

is it fit, the threefold world shouii. JuliusCmsai , iv. 1 

THREE-FOOT stool mistaketh mt.Mid.N.'s Dr. ii. 1 

when on my tliree-foot stool I sit . . Cymbeline, iii. S 

THREE-HEADED canus Love'sL. Lost, y. 2 

THREE-INCH— three-inch fooll .7'omma-o/-S/i. iv. I 

THREE-LEGGED stool — i. 1 

THREE-MAN song-men all Winler'sTale,\v. i 

fillip me with a three-man beetle! ..iHenrylV. i. 2 

THREE-NOOKED world shall bear. AnL ACleo. iv. 6 

THREE-PENCE bowed would hire.HenryVIII. ii. 3 

a dish of some three-pence. i4/easure/or Measure, ii. I 

I could not give you three-pence again — ii. 1 

after three-pence a bay — ii.l 

the controversy of three-pence to a. . Coriolanus, ii. 1 
THREE-PILE the meratr .. Measure for Measure, iv.3 

in my time, wore three-pile Winter's Tale, iv 2 

THREE-PILED piece I warrant., jtfeas. /or Meas. i. 2 
precise, three-piled hyperboles . . Love's L. Lost, v. 2 
THREESCORE and ten lean remember.il/(ic6e(/i,ii.4 
never see a bachelor of threescore .... Much Ado, i. 1 
is threescore and ten miles afoot .... 1 Henry lV.i\.> 
or, by'r lady, inclining to threescore — ii. 4 

fighting men they have full tlireescore. Henry V. iv. 3 
pedigree of threescore and two years. SHenri/ VI. iii. 3 

THREE-SUITED, hundred-pound Lear, ii. 2 

THRESHER with a flail SHenryVl. ii. 1 

THRESHOLD— over tlie threshold.. Lore's L. L. iii. 1 
cur over your threshold .... Merchant of Venice, i. 3 

that stumble at the tlireshold iHenryVI. iv 7 

I will not over the threshold Coriolanus, i. 3 

mistress saw bestride my threshold .. — iv. 5 

THREW her sun-expelling mask. TwoGen.of Ver. iv. 4 

threw tills whale, with so many . . Meri-y Wives, ii, 1 

they threw me off; from behind — iv. 5 

you peevishly threw it to her . . Twelfth Night, ii. 2 
which Charles in a moment threw. Asyau Like it, i. 2 
he threw his eye aside, and, mark.... — iv.3 
contained the name of her tliat threw. All's Well, v. 3 

goes false, you threw it him out — v. 3 

the sops all in the sexton's face . . Taming ofSh. iii. 2 
threw off Ilia spirit, his appetite .. Winler'sTale, ii. 3 
tliey threw on him great pails. Comedi/ or' Errors, v. I 

from windows' tops threw dust Richard II. v. 2 

Harry, threw many a north ward.... 2Hcnf ?//*'. ii. 3 
upon tlie staff he threw: then threw — iv. 1 

he threw his wounded arm Henry V. iv. 6 

threw it towards thy land iHenryVI. iii. 2 

they threw their caps as they would.. Coriolanus, i. 1 
as many coxcombs as you threw caps — iv. 6 
threw up their sweaty night-caps.. /ii/msCn'sar, i. 2 
what time I threw the people's . . Titus Andron. iv. 3 

threw him ashore, to give Pericles, ii. (Gower) 

that threw her in tlie sea — iii. 2 

I threw her o'er-board, with these — v. 3 

threw him on my father Lear, v. 3 

like the base Judean, threw a pearl away. Otltelh, v. 2 

THREW'ST dust upon his goodly 'iHenrylV. i. 3 

THRICE double ass was I Tcmjust, v. 1 

twice or thrice was Proteus .... Two Gen. of Ver. i. 2 
twice or thrice in that last article.. .. — iii. 1 
not been thrice in my company! ..Merry Wives, ii. 1 

has thrice her prayers said — v. .'> 

if thou thou'st him some thrice ..TwelflhNiglu, iii. 2 

thrice welcome, drowned Viola! — v. 1 

he hath twice or thrice cut Cupid's . . Much Ado, iii. 2 
thrice blessed they, that master..... WiV^.iV.'s Dr. i. 1 
the thrice tliree Muses mourning .... — v. 1 
how many is one thrice told? .... Love'sL. Lost, i. 2 
three studied, ere jjou'U thrice wink — i. 2 

three times thrice is nine (_rep.) — v. 2 

I do expect return of thrice three . . .Vfer. of Ven. i. 3 



THR 



THRICK— 'scape ilrownlni; l\\r\ce. Mer.(tfrmice, ii. S 

80, thrioc fair iKily, Htiiiul I — iii. 2 

there's thrice tliy money offered (irp.) — iv. 1 

pa^ the boiul Ihriee, nml let the — iv. 1 

Tic is thriee a villiiii). ttitit ku3'S .,,.^«!/nii/.i'Art7, i. I 

once hearil. nml tlirice heatcii Atl'tiyell, ii. & 

ft pair of ol<i liroeelieM, thrice turned — iii. 'i 

tlirice bowett liet'ore iiic Wmter^tTaU^ iti. 3 

firivately, twice or tlirice a diiv — v. 2 
lirice to thine, ntul tlirice to iiiine(rr/i.).Wur6e/A,i. 3 
thrice the briinle<l cut Until iiicwed (ip/j ) — iv. 1 
then thrice ^nicivms ((uccn. more . . Uicliard II, ii. 2 
each one thrice worse than . I lulttsi .. — iii. 2 

tlirii-o from the banks of Wye Mlennj II'. iii. I 

I'll Rive tlirice so iimch land — iii. 1 

I shall hcrenflcr. my thrice gracioiia — iii. 2 
thrice hatli this Hotspur Mars in .... — iii. 2 
witli grief, are thrioc themselves ....ilUnrylF. i. I 

the river hiitli tlirice It. iwed — iv. 4 

ga|ie for thcc thriic wilier than for .. — v. 5 

and my thrice puissant liege UentyV. i. 2 

with thrice that power left at home.. — i. 2 
not all these, thnccgorircous ceremony — iv. 1 
thrice within this hour, I saw him (rtp.) — iv. fl 
at this gentleman twice or thrice .... — v. I 
of Orleans, thrice welcome to us ....I Henry I' I. \. 2 

the thrice victorious lord of — iv. 7 

thrice is he armed, that hath his .,"2Henry I'l. iii. 2 

and three times thrice by tliee — iii. 2 

thrice I led him otr — v. 3 

and tlirice cried, courape, father! ^^UenryVI. i. 4 

than the worth of thrice the sum.rimn/i oJAtli. iii. 3 

battles thrice six I have seen Cmiolauui, ii. 3 

shoutcil thrice: what was the laet.../u/it«(;(P#(ir,i. 2 
offered him thrice? Ay, marry (rep.) — i. 2 

thrice hath Culnhurnia in her sleep., — ii. 2 
tlirice preeentea him a kindly {rep.) — iii. 2 

thrice nobler tlian myself I ....Autonym Cleo. iv. 12 
thv thrice valiant son, who leads. 7'i7iij Amlnm. v. 2 
Withold footed thrice the wold . . Lear, iii. 1 (song) 
have thriee disturbed the quiet . . linmeo i^ Juliet, i. 1 
thrice he walked, by their oppressed ..,, Hamlet, i. 2 

and thrice his head thus waving up — ii. 1 

thrice blasted, thrice infected — iii. 2 

TnRICE-CI{OWNED<iiieenof..Jjyoi< Lifce i(, iii. 2 

TltlilCE-DRIVENbedofdown Othello, i. 3 

THRlCK-FAMEDdiike 2He7ir!/F/. iii. 2 

thrice-famed bevond all .... Troilut^Cressida, ii. 3 

TIIKICE-GENTLE Cassio. my OlMlo, iii. 4 

TilKICE-NOBLE lord, \ct..TnmingorSh. 2 (indue.) 
thy thrice-noble cousin, Harry ....Huhard II. iii. 3 
thrice-noble Suffolk, 'tis resolutely .2 //ciiri/;'/. iii. 1 
thrice-noble Titus, spare my first. . Titus Audron. i. 2 

TlIRtCE-RENOWNEDIicge lUrhanl III. iv. 2 

THRICE-REPUTED-[Co(. repured]. 7V(i,7. ^ C. iii. 2 

THRICE-VALIANT countrvmen ....Henryy. iv. 6 

TURICE-WORTIIY gentleman!. .Lot-c'sL. Los/, v. 1 

valorous, and thrice-wortliy signieur..H«)i>;/»'. iv. 4 

thrice-worthy and right-valiant '/Voi/hs 4- Cress, ii. 3 

THRIFT— r am about thrift Merry Wivet, i. 3 

French thrift, you rogues — i. 3 

presages me such thrift Merchant nf Venice, i. I 

my well-won thrift, wliich he calls .. — i. 3 

thrift is blessing, if men steal — i. 3 

their own particular thrifts IVin/er'sTale, i. 2 

how, i' the name of thrift, does he.. Hfiiri/r/;/. iii. 2 

dread it to the doer's thrift . . Cymbeline, v. I 

thrift, thrift, Horatio! the funeral baked. Hamfc/, i. 2 

where thrift may follow fawning — iii. 2 

are? base respects of thrift — iii. 2 

THRIFTLESS sighs shall poor .. Twelfth Mght, ii. 9 

thriftless ambition \lacljeth, ii. 4 

OS thriftless sons their scraping Hichardll. v. 3 

THRIFTY— a thrifty goddess ... Meai.for Meas- i. 1 

never stale iu thrifty mind Mer. of I'enice, ii. 5 

thrifty hire I saved under your ..Atyou Ukeit, ii. 3 

for they are thrifty honest men '2 Henry Fl. iv. 2 

a thrifty shoeing-norn in a .. Troilus tfCressida, v. I 

THRILL-to thrill, and shake King John, v. 2 

doth not thy blood thrill at it? ....\ Henry IF. ii. 4 
a faint cold fear thrills through. Romeo ^Juliet, iv. 3 

THRILLED-thrilled with remorse Lenr, iv. 2 

THRILLING regions of thick . . Meat, for Meas. iii. 1 
THRIVE therein even as I would. TieoGen. of Fer. i. I 

ond how thrives your love? — ii. 4 

I will thrive Merry H'ivei, i. 3 

we will thrive, lads, we will thrive .. — i. 3 

could Inever thrive TireinhNighl,v. I 

in their first show thrive, these. ... Love's I.. Lost, v. 2 
this was a way to thrive .... Merchant o/Venitu!, i. 3 
here do I choose, and thrive I as I may ! — ii. 7 

honours best thrive, when our AU'tll'ell, ii. 3 

he cannot thrive, unless her — iii- 4 

being fooled, by foolery thrive! — iv 3 

would not have knaves thrive long ., _ v. 2 

thrive, as best I may Taming of Shrrir, i. 2 

that the unjust man doth thrive.. Il'iiiler's'fale. iv. 3 
I will not wish thy wishes thrive ..KingJohn, iii. I 

eo thrive it in your game! — iv. 2 

and -a'.nt George to thrive! ttichard II. i. 3 

that's as York thrives to beat — ii. 2 

as I intend to thrive in this new — iv. I 

ill mav'st thou thrive, if thou — v. 3 

we shall thrive. 1 trust \ Henry I F. i. 3 

for if lord I'ercy thrive not - iv. 4 

wholesome berries tlirii'C, and ripen . . Henri/ F. i. 1 

now thrive the armourers — ii. (chorus) 

BO thrive Richard, a.i thv foes I Henry I I. iii. I 

say that he thrive, las, tis great illenryFI. iii. I 

if wc mean to thrive and <lo pnod .... — iv. 3 
1 intend, Clifford, to thrive to-day .. — v. 2 
ond. if we thrive, promise them ....illenryFI. ii. 3 

so thrive I, as I truly swear llichard III. ii. I 

hatred, so thrive I, and mine! — ii. I 

if you thrive well, bring them lo .... — iii. 6 
madam, so thrive I in my enterprise — iv. 4 

no thrive I in my dangerous — iv. 4 

but if I thrive, the gain of my attempt — v. 3 
why should it thrive and turn lo.Timnno/.illi. ill. I 
like physicians thrive [''u(.Xii!.-tliriecj — iii. 3 



r 769 ] 

THRIVE well, I'll visit thee ..Timoii 0/ Athens, iv. 3 
and seek to thrive by that which has — iv. 3 

not to liavc us thrive in our — iv. 3 

who's like to rise, who thrives Coriolanus, i. I 

live, and thrive! Farewell, kind .... — iv. (1 
entcrprize to-day niiiv thrive Or;).)..;H/iu.<;,ri<ir,iii.l 
I'oiniiey thrives in mir kIKiicss ..Antony /i flen. i. 4 

if to morrow our nav\ thiive — iv. 3 

well, well, we shall thrive now — iv. 4 

letting them thrive again on Cyinbeliue,v. 4 

his comforts thrive, ills trials — v. 4 

1 hope, sir, if you tlirive, 5'ou'll I'erirlcs, ii. 1 

speed, and my invention thrive, Edmund . I.enr, i. 2 

let copulation tiirive, for Gloster's — iv. G 

if ever thou wilt thrive, burj' my body .. — iv. G 

pray that the right may thrive — v. 2 

or thrive by other means — v. 3 

80 thrive m^ soul,- a thousand.. Ilomeo fr Juliet, ii. 2 
do well thrive liy them, and, when they.. 0(/iW/o, i. 1 
how I did thrive in this fair lady's love . . — i. 3 

THRIVED- ashavenot^thrived ..Antony ^Clen. i. 3 
so he has thrived, that he is . . I^erirtes, v. 2 (Gower) 

THRIVING-miss a thriving issue. ll'intrr'sTale, ii. 'j 

fo I, a jolly thriving wooer Uicliard III. iv. 3 
I ROAT— a pox o' your throat I Tempest, i. 1 

whose throats had hanging at — iii. 3 

as there's a passage in my throat. . Twelfth l^'ighl, i. 3 
but thou liest in thy throat .. — iii. 1 (cliullcnge) 
with an out-stretched throat .... Meat, for Meas. ii. 4 

a pox o' your tliroats! — iv. 3 

eoraetime through the throat.. ..Love's L.Lost, iii. I 

but lie, and lie in my throat — iv. 3 

laughter in the throat of death? — v. 2 

not take this bond from tiiy throat. /Is you Like it, i. 1 

unto the sweet bird's throat — ii. 5 (song) 

the note lies in his throat Taming of tihrew, iv. 3 

that it did, sir, i'the very throat o'nie. .Macbeth, ii. 3 

my lord, his throat is cut — iii. 4 

of treason doubled down his throat .. fi/cAaid //. i. I 
passage of thy throat, thou liestl .... — i. I 

cut the villains' throats; ah! 1 Henri/f r. ii. 2 

I had lied in my throat if I had ■illei.rylF. i. 2 

may have their throats about them . . Hem-y F. ii. 1 

in thy teeth, and in thy throat — ii. 1 

I will cut thy throat, one time — ii. I 

knives to cut one another's throats? — ii. 1 
there is throats to be cut, and works — iii. 2 

fetch thy rim out at thy throat — iv. 4 

for I will cut his throat — iv. 4 

every soldier to cut his prisoner's throat — iv. 7 
we'll cut the throats of those we have — iv. 7 

that's a lie in tliy throat — iv. 8 

but to our enemies' throats 1 Henry F I. i. 1 

my part thereof into thy throat — ii. 4 

cut both the villains' throats 2Henry FI. iv. I 

and iniquity's throat cut like a calf. . — iv. 2 
next his throat unto the butchcr'a ..ZHenry Fl. v. 6 

in thy soul's throat thou liest llichard III. i. 2 

to catch each other by the throat .... — i. 3 
seeking for Richmond in the throat of — v. 4 
thy guard, I'll cut thy throat .. Tmilus'^ Cress, iv. 4 
with harness on their throats . . Timon of Alliens, i. 2 
quietly cut their throats, without.... — iii. 5 

cut your trusters' throats! — iv. 1 

pronounced thy throat shall cut .... — iv. 3 

cut throats; break open shops — iv. 3 

while you have throats to answer — v. 2 

before the reverend'st throat iu Athens — v. 2 

my throat of war be turned Coriolajius, iii. 2 

and present my throat to thee — iv. 5 

fisting each other's throat — iv. o 

our throats are sentenced, and stay . . — v. 4 
for ten thousand of your throats .... — v. 4 
presented to my knife his throat .... — v. 5 
their base throats tear, with giving .. — v. 3 
and offered them his throat to cut.. JuliitsCresar, i. 2 

down thy ill-uttering throat Antony ^ Cleo. ii. 5 

we have used our throats in Egypt .. — ii. 6 
when we are put off, fall to their throats — ii. 7 
threats the throat of that his officer — iii. .5 

hath cut her throat already Cymbeline, iii. 4 

which he did wave against my throat — iv. 2 
reproachful speeches down his throat. Titus.4nd. ii. 1 
in their throats that have committed — iii. I 
one hand yet is left to cut your throats — v. 2 

and now prepare your throats — v. 2 

even in his throat, unless it be Pericles, ii. 3 

I can vent clamour from my throat Lear, i. 1 

of cutting foreign throats Itonieo^ Juliet, i. 4 

his lofty and shrill-sounding tlimat Hamlet, i. 1 

gives me the lie i" the throat, as deep — ii. 2 

to cut his throat i' the church — iv. 7 

take thy fingers from my throat — v. I 

who.se rude throats the immortal Jove's. OthcHo, iii. 3 
he lies there, were to lie in my own throat — iii. 1 
I took by the throat the eirciimciscd dog — v. 2 

THRl>H-niy heartthrobs to kiunv .... Macbeth, iv. I 
vonr hearts will throh and weip. . Tiiu, Audron. v. 3 

TIIROUHING-my tliiol.liinghrcast.2;;,vi,v/;. iv. 4 

TllRDES thee much to viclil V,„,;,.-s/, ii. I 

gave to me many a groaning' Ihrue.lleniy I III. ii. 1 
with other incident throes that .. Tioion of Ath. v. 2 
and throes fortii, each minute.. /di'oni/ <S- i:teo. iii. 7 
but toiik me in my throes Cymbelme, v. 4 

TIIRONE-the Phuinix' throne Tempest, iii. 3 

these fi(iVereigii thrones Tu-rlfth Sight, i. I 

honoured t\>r his burning thione.il/nn./cr.Uc.is. v. 1 

'fore wliose throne, 'tis needfiil All'sH'ell, iv. 4 

we have left our throne without .. H'inter's'l'ale, i. 2 

a moiety of the throne, a great — iii. 2 

draw our throne into a shet'p-cotel .. — iv. 3 
'twixt your throne and his measured — v. 1 

are to vour throne and state Macbeth^ i. 4 

of the happy throne, and fall of — iv. 3 

truest issue of thy throne — iv. 3 

hang about his throne — iv. 3 

here is mv throne, bid kings come.. KingJohn, iii. I 
lead thy foot to Englanii's throne .. — iii. 4 

true to king Richard's throne llichard II. i. 3 

this royal throuuuf kings — ii. I 



TIIR 



THRONE— rising in our throne ....Richard II. iii. 2 

ascend his throne (rr;>. I _ |v. I 

Bolingbrokc ascends my throne — v. 1 

headlimg from the usurped throne .. — v. 1 

that roan shall be my Ihninc 1 Henry IF. ii. 3 

shake the peace and mtHy of our throne — iii. 2 

Holingbroke asiwnds my throne lllcnriilF. iii. I 

his angels, guard your sacred throne .. Henry F. i. 2 

and services, to this imperial throne i. 2 

heir, you sit upon their throne _ i. a 

do rouse me in the throne of Fiance — i. 2 

the throne he sits on. nor the tide — iv. 1 

headlong from his throne \ Henry F I. i. 1 

my advancement to the throne — ii. .'1 

imperious in anotlier's throne? iii. I 

honorable peace attend thy throne!. 2/fc)iri/r/. ii. 3 

that joyeil an earthly throne — iv.9 

that throne which now the house ot..3HenryFl. i. 1 

descend my throne, and kneel for .. i. I 

1 stand, and thou sit in my throne?.. — i. I 

that I will leave my kinciy throne .. — i. I 

and dukedom, throne and kingdom say — ii. 1 

England's throne (rep. V. 7; — ii. I 

see him seated in the regal ilironc .. iv. 3 

likely, in time to bless a regal throne — iv. fi 

joys in living Edward's tlirone llichard III. ii. 2 

the innocent and awless throne — ii. 4 

lose the royalty of England's throne — iii. 4 
the throne majestical, the seciitred office — iii. 7 
sit, gods upon your thrones., l roilns tt Cressida, v. II 
tills throne, thisFortune, and thi8..7V;/ioii uf.tih. i. I 

and atl'eeting one sole throne Corioimus, iv. Ii 

and a heaven to throne in — v. 4 

opulent throne with kingdoms . . Arxton]/ ^- Cleo. i. 5 
whiles we are suitors to tlieir throne.. — ii. I 
like a burnished throne, burned on .. — ii. 2 

have made my tlirone a seat Cymbeline. i. 2 

pursue her even to Augustus' throne — iii. S 

have made preservers of my throne.. v. 5 

but newly planted in your throne. 77(us/<ndron. i. 2 
like stars, about his throne, and \\e....l'ericles, ii. 3 

bronglit to knee his throne I.car. ii, 4 

'tis a throne where honour may. fiomco^JulrW, iii. 2 
bosom's lord sits lightly in his throne — v. 1 

than is the throne of Denmark Hamlet, i. 2 

the most immediate to our throne — i. 2 

and hearted throne, to tyrannous hate!. O/AWte, iii. 3 

THRONED— Love is throned Tirelfh .Sight, ii. t 

fair vestal, throned by the west . . Mid. A'.'j Dr. ii. 2 
it becomes the throned monarch. ;>/er. of ;>Hirf, iv. 1 
what four throned ones could have.. Hfioi/r///. i. I 
feigned Fortune to be throned .. limon of Athens, i. 1 
swearing shake tiie throned gods...4)i(oMi/ ^CVco. i. .1 
their great stars throned and set high? .. l.ear, iii. 1 

TIIKONG—knile and a throng ,i/frri/<r,i.,s, ii 2 

BO iilay the foolish throngs Mens, for Meas. ii. 4 

they throng who shall buy first.. Hmier'sTah; iv. 3 
wherefore throng you hitlier?..rom<.(/!,orBrroij, v. 1 
ill their throng and press to that Unt. KingJohn, v. 7 

nor the throng of words that 'iHenrylF. ii. 1 

ill the throngs of military men — iv. I 

up the English in our throngs Henry F. iv. f, 

I'll to the throng; let life be short .. — iv. 5 
to the shore throng many rioubtnU./iicAnrrf ril. iv. 4 

in each degree, throng to the bar — v. 3 

followed with the general thriuig./;fnii//'///. (pro.) 
did throng, and pressed in with this — ii. 4 

Eocieties, and throngs of men!.. 7 iinDiio/'.4;/if »i, iv. 3 

do press among popular throngs Coriolanus, ii. I 

thedumb men throng to see him .... — ii. I 

throng our large temples with — iii. 3 

fellow, come from the throng JuliusCasar, i. 2 

the throng that follows Caisur — ii. 4 

nor ciitiniifies come not to throngs Lear, iii. 2 

THRONGED to shortly (rep.) .. Timon of Athens, iv. 3 
[Cot. Kilt] thronged by man's oppression. /"i^nWcs, i. I 

THRONGING soft and delicate Much.4,t„. i. I 

where he the thronging troops that llichard 1 1 1, iv. t 

THUOSTLE witli his n"te..,i//./. \s.l)r. iii. I (song) 
if a thn.stle sing, he fulls straii;ht..Ver. oflewce.i. 2 

THHDTTl.lO their pnictised .uvent ..Wd..V.'sOr. v. 1 

TIlKOlKill-AND-THKOUGIl; ....\ Henryl F. ii. 4 

TIIKOlUill-F.VRESnow Merchant of Femce, li. 7 

TIIKDI'GIILY to be winnowed Henryl'lll. v. 1 

will lio his commission throughly ..Cymbeline, ii. 4 

I urn throughly weary _ jii. e 

and period will be throughlv wrought Lear.iv. 7 

most tlir.iiighly for my liither Hamlet, iv. 5 

THROW thy name against .. Viro Gen. ofFerona, i. 2 
throw it tlicnce into the raging sea .. — i. 2 

and throw us that you liave — iv. I 

throw cold water oil thy clioler .llerrylFives. ii. 3 

and throw foul linen iipttii him — iii. 3 

come, throw it o'er my face TwelfihXighl, i. 5 

or I'll throw your dagger o'er _ iv. 1 

no more money out of ine at this throw v. I 

you throw a strange regard upon mo — v I 
throw away that thought .. Mmtare for Measure, i. 4 
I'd throw it down for yonr delivernnce — iii. 1 
the snake throws her eMuiiieled..l/ii(..v.'»;jirnin, ii. 2 
upon thy eyes I throw all the power — ii :i 

he throws upon the gross world's.. Lore's L. Lost, i. 1 

abate a llirow at novum — v. 2 

but if they will not, throw away .... — v. 2 

the greater throw may turn Merch.ofFenice,n. 1 

far that little candle throws his — v. 1 

not one to throw at a dng A-youL<krii,i. 3 

u|ion eiirs, tliiDW some of them at mc — i. 3 

principles do not throw from you .... — ii. I 

than throw aines-ace for my life AU'tH'eli, ii. 3 

or I will throw thee from my care .. — ii. 3 
he will throw a figure in her luce.. romiii^t/iA. i. 2 

that bauble, throw it under foot — v. 2 

to throw away the dearest tiling Macbeth, 1. 4 

in tlie poisoned entrails throw — iv. I 

giblicl, throw into tlie flame — iv. I 

from her bed, throw her nightgown .. — v. I 
throw physic to the dogs, I'll none .. — v. 3 

your leafy screens throw down _ v. li 

uefore my body I throw my warlike.. v. 7 

3D 



THROW tbiiie eye on yon King John, iii. 3 

to throw a perfume on the violet — iv. 2 

throw this report on their incensed .. — iv. 2 

there I throw my gage (.rep.) Bichard II. i. 1 

and throw tlie rider headlong in .... — i. 2 
what reverence lie did throw away .. — i. 4 
with a mortal touch throw death .... — iii. 2 

throw nway respect, tradition — iii. 2 

there I throw my gage, to prove — iv. 1 

by heaven, I'll throw at all — iv. 1 

here do I throw down this — iv. I 

beliaviour I throw off, and pay I Hetir;/IV. i. 2 

throw the q^uean into (re;).) iHennjll'.n. I 

when the kmg did throw his warder — iv. 1 

nay, pray yoii, tlu-ow none away Henry V. y. 1 

and tlirow tlieir eyes on thee! ^Henryl'I. ii. 4 

your penance done, throw off this sheet — ii. 4 
king Henry tlirows away his crutch — iii. 1 

throw them into Thames! — iv. 8 

throw in the frozen bosoms of — v. 2 

I tlirow mine eyes to heaven 'iHenry VI. i. 4 

shall we go throw away our coats of — ii. 1 
he, that throws not up his cap for joy — i|. 1 

throw up thine eye — ii. 5 

I throw my infamy at thee — v. 1 

I'll throw tliy body in another — v. 6 

throw liim into the malmsey-butt. . Richard III. i. 4 

and throw tliem in the entrails — iv. 4 

throw over lier the vail of infamy.... — iv. 4 

and throw it from tlieir soul Henry VII I. iii. 2 

we do not throw in unrespective. Troilus <$ Cress, ii. 2 
very chance doth throw upon him .. — iii. 3 

to tlirow down Hector — iii. 3 

for I will throw my glove to — iv. 4 

you would tlirow them off Timon of.ithens, ii. 2 

our masters may throw their caps . . — iii. 4 

I'd throw away myself — iv. 3 

throw thy glove, or any token — v. 5 

throw forth greater themes for Coriolanus. i. 1 

and throw their power i' the dust .... — iii. 1 
together he throws without distinction — iii. 1 

and throw it against the wind — iii. 2 

I liave tumbled past the throw — y. 2 

in at his windows tiirow JuliusCtvsar, i. 2 

and throw this in at his window .... — i. 3 

Metellus Ciniber throws before thy seat — iii. 1 
begin to throw Pompey the Great./(ri'on!/<S-CTeo. i. 2 

and throw between them all — .'.')• ^ 

you tlierein tlirow away — iii. 7 

throw my heart against — iv. 9 

to thi-ow my sceptre at the iniurious — iv. 13 
I'll throw 't into the creek behind.. Ci/mbdinc, iv. 2 

spit, and throw stones, cast mire — v-a 

lady, the gods tlirow stones of sulphur — v. 5 
why did you throw your wedded lady — v. 5 

and now, throw me again — v. 5 

throws her eye on him, her brothers.. — v. a 
made me down to throw my books.. TitvsAnd. iv. 1 

but throw her forth to beasts — v. 3 

throws down one mountain Periclen^i. 4 

throw their best eyes upon it! — iii. 1 

Tom will tlirow his head at them Lear, jii. 6 

throw this slave upon the dunghill — iii. 7 

the gods themselves throw incense — y. 3 

throw your mistempered weapons, fiomeo ^Juliet, i. 1 

we pray you throw to earth this — _ i. 2 

throw away the worser part of it Hamlet, iii. 4 

or throw him out witli wondrous potency — iii. 4 
let them throw millions of acres on us .. — v. 1 

in the cup an union sliall he tlirow — v. 2 

yet throw such changes of vexation .... Oikello. i. 1 

throws a more safer voice on you — i. 3 

as to throw out our eyes for brave Otliello — ii. ! 
throw your vile guesses in tlie devil's teeth — iii. 4 

but not that doii I shall tlirow it to — iv 1 

THROWER-OUT of my poor babe.. Winter'sT. iii. 3 

THROWEST— less than thou throwest Lear, i. 4 

THROWING him into (rep.) .... Merry Wives, iii. 3 
about his throwing into the water .. — iv. 1 
by throwing it on any other .... Meas. for Meas. v. 1 
throwing it aside and stemming it. . Julius Ccesar, i. 2 

throwing favours on the low Cymbeline, iii. 5 

for, with throwing thus my head Lear. iii. 6 

been much throwing about of brains . . Hamlet, ii. 2 

throwing Ijut shows of service on Othello, i. I 

jealousies, throwing restraint upon us .. — iv. 3 
THROWN into the Thames? irep.). Merry (Fiyej, iii. 5 

I was thrown into the ford — iii. 6 

1 will be thrown into .^tna, as I .... — iii. .'i 
he has been thrown in the rivers .... — iv. 4 
my bones shall be throvf a. Tu-el/th Night, ii. 4 (song) 
some liave greatness thrown upon them — v. I 
better parts are all thrown down.. A:i you Like it, i. 2 
cousin, tlirown upon thee in lioliday — ^i. 3 
unregarded age in corners thrown .. — ii. 3 
and thrown into neglect the pompous — v. 4 

from a casement thrown me All's Well, v. 3 

hath shameless thrown on me ..Comedy of Err. v. 1 
the king liath thrown his warder.... Richard II. i. 3 

hours hath quite thrown down — iii. 1 

but dust was thrown upon his sacred — v. 2 
tacked together, and thrown over ..IHenrylV. iv. 2 
for I have thrown a brave defiance .. •- v. 2 
stick where they are thrown .. Troitu: ^- Cress, ni 2 
our companion, tlirown into his.. Timon ofAih. iv. 2 
shall be thrown down the Tarpeian. Coiiotanus, iii. 1 

and thrown from Leonati' seat Cymtietine, v. 4 

hath thrown down so many enemies, ri'/us^rif/. iii. I 
and having thrown him from your. ...Pericles, ii. 1 

dead, and thrown into the sea — iv. 2 

overboard thrown me, to seek — iv. 3 

this lady was thrown on this shore .... — v. 3 

thrown to my chance, is queen of us Lear, i. 1 

I found it thrown in at the casement .... — i. 2 
raueli salt-water thrown a.wa.y ..Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 3 
and pebbles, should be thrown on her . . Hamlet, v. I 
thrown out his angle for my proper life.. — v. 2 
thrown such despite and heavy terms. .Othello, iv. 2 
TIIRUM-cut thread and thrum. Mid. N.'s Dream, v. I 
THRUMSIED-lier tliruminedhat.Merry Wives, iv. 2 



[770] 

THRUSH and the jay Winler'sTah; iv. 2 (song) 

I THRUST forth of Milan (rep.) Tempest, v. I 

will thrust himself into secrets. 7'woGen.of Ver. iii. 1 

tlirust from the company of — iv. 1 

he thrusts me himself into — iv. 4 

we would have thrust our virtue . . Merry Wives, v. 5 

I thrust upon them (rep. iii. 4) ..Tn-elflliN. ii. 5 (let.) 

an' thou wilt needs thrust thy neck . . Much Ado, i. 1 

tlirust thy sharp wit quite Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

nor thrust your head into . . Merchant of Venice, ii. 5 
what advice shall thrust upon thee ..AlVsWell, i. 1 
I have thrust myself into t\\\e.. Taming of Shrew, i. 2 
cannot thrust a bodkin's point . . Winter's Tale, iii. 3 

as you'd thrust a cork into — iii. 3 

minute of his being thrusts against ..Maclielh, iii. 1 

thrust but these men away King John, iv. 1 

and thrust thyself into their compaiiies — iv. 2 
liad falsely thrust upon contrarj' .... — iv. 2 
thou Shalt thrust thy hand as deep .. — v. 2 
3'ea, thrust this enterprise into my ., — v. 2 

to thrust his icy fingers in my — v. 7 

the world thrust forth a vanity .... Richard II. ii. 1 
thus thrust disorderly into my hands — ii. 2 

I am eight times tiirust through MIenrylV. ii. 4 

all a-front, and mainly thrust at me — ii. 4 

but I am thrust upon it 2 Henry IV. i. 2 

I care not for his thrust — ii. I 

can thrust me from a level consideration — ii. 1 

I'll thrust my knife in your — ii. 4 

thrust him down stairs; 1 cannot endure — ii. 4 
he made a shrewd thrust at your belly — ii ■ 4 
[CoLj you might have thrust him .... — iii. 2 

lie that makes the first thrust Henry V. ii. 1 

thrust in between the paction of — v. 2 

thrust Talbot with a spear 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

and thou be thrust out, like a fugitive? — iii. 3 

York, thrust from the crown — iv. 1 

for he was thrust in the mouth — iv. 7 

thrust thy body in with my sword (rep.) — iv. 10 

seek to thrust you out by force ZHenryVI. i. I 

to thrust his hand between his — _i. 4 

dare you thrust yourselves into. . . . Henry VIII. ii. 2 
have thee thrust me out of doors. 7'/mon of Alliens, \. 2 
if the time thrust forth a cause .... Coriolanus, iv. 1 

thrusts forth his liorns again — iv. C 

shall join to thrust the lie unto him — v. 5 

withal, thrust these reproachful.. Titus Andron. ii. 1 

go, thrust him out at gates Lear, iii. 7 

are ever thrust to the wall Romeo ^ Juliet, \. 1 

and thrust his maids to the wall .... — i. 1 
were interchanging thrusts and blows — i. 1 

an envious thrust from Tybalt — iii. 1 

close together, at blow, and thrust . . . .Othello, ii. 3 
that thrust had been enemy indeed — v. 1 

THRUSTETH forth his paw Richard II. v. 1 

THRUSTING out a torch from .... 1 Henry VI. iii. 2 
thrusting this report into {rep.) ..JidiusCrr.mr, v. 3 
we are evil in, by a divine thrusting on .. Lear, i. 2 

THUMB— that worthy's thumb.... Loue'si. Lost, v. I 
with his finger and his thumb, cried.. — v. 2 

here I have a pilot's thumb Macbeth, i. 3 

by the pricking of my thumbs — iv. 1 

'twixt his finger and iiis thumb 1 Henry IV. i. 3 

between my finger and my th\imh..'i Henry I V. iv. 3 
with his finger and his thumb ....Coriolanus, iv. 5 
bite my thumb at them (7-ep.) ..Romeo ^Juliet, i. 1 
with your fingers and thumb Hamlet, iii. 2 

THUMB-RING; aplague of sighing..! Hejui///''. ii.4 

THUMP then, and I flee Lore's L. Los/, iii. 1 

jump her and thump her Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

thump. Thump! then see (rep.) ...iHenry VI. ii. 3 
then thus I thump it down.. Titus Andronicus, iii. 2 

THUMPED, and, on record, \e.it ....Richard III. v. 3 
thumped him with thy bird-bolt. Loue'sL. Lost, iv. 3 

THUNDER as it did before Tempest, ii. 2 

and the tliuuder, that deep and dreadful — iii. 3 
the dread rattling thunder liave I given — v. 1 

let it thunder to the tune of Merry Wives, v. 5 

with groans that thunder love.... TweinhNiglu, i, 5 

great men thunder as Jove Meas. for Meas. ii. 2 

use his heaven for thunder (rep.) — ii. 2 

a discord, such sweet thunder. ..Wzd.A'.'sDream, iv. 1 
thy voice his dreadful thunder.. Love's L.Lost, iv. 2 

chide as loud as thunder Taming of Shrew, i. 2 

and heaven's artillery thunder — i. 2 

kin to Jove's tliunder Winter's Tale, iii. 1 

in thunder, lightning, or in rain? Macbeth, i. 1 

storms and direful thunders break — i. 2 

and sleep in spite of thunder — iv. 1 

the thunder of my cannon shall be ..King John, i. 1 

our thunder from the south — ii. 2 

spoke like thunder on my side? .... — iii. 1 
my tongue were in the thunder's mouth I — iii. 4 
and mock the deep-mouthed thunder — v. 2 

fall like amazing thunder on Richard II. 1. 3 

in thunder, and in earthquake Henry I', ii. 4 

engenders thunder in his breast....! Henri// 7. iii. 1 
if Talbot do but thunder, rain will .. — iii. 2 
to shoot forth tfiunder upon these . .iHenry VI. iv. 1 

wlio thunders to his captives SHenri/VI. ii. 1 

thy voice is thunder, but thy looks.. /(ic/ia;ii II!. i. 4 
these are the youths that thunder.. Henry J' III. v. 3 
and say in thunder— Achilles ..Troilus^- Cress, ii. 3 
by him that thunders, thou hast .... — iv. 5 
knows not thunder from a tabor .... Coriolanus, i. 6 
a shower, and thunder, with their caps — ii. 1 
or Jove for his power to thunder .... — iii. 1 
to tear witli thunder the wide cheeks — v. 3 
that thunders, lightens, opens graves.^ui Ciesar, i. 3 
favours, by Jove that thunders I y4M(oiii/ ^-Cieo. iii. II 

he was as rattling thunder — v- 2 

he came in thunder; his celestial.... Ci/i/iiie/fne, v. 4 

secure of thunder's crack Titus A ndynuicut. ii I 

thunder above, and deeps below .I'ericles, ii. (Gow.) 
wind, rain, and thunder, remember.. .. — ii. 1 

deafi;ning, thy dreadful thunders — iii. 1 

thunder shall not so awake — iv. 3 

as loud as tliuuder threatens us — v. I 

their thunders \_Knt.-t\\Q thunder] bend .. Lear, ii. 1 
and thou, all-sliaking thunder, strike flat — iii. 2 



THUNDER— rain, wind, thunder, fiire.. ..Lear, iii. 2 

such bursts of horrid thunder — iii. 2 

what is the cause of thunder? — iii. 4 

when the thunder would not peace at my — iv. 6 
against the deep dread-bolted thunder?.. — iv. 7 
bruit again, respeaking earthly thunder. Hamief, i. 2 
dreadful thunder dotli rend the region .. — ii. 2 

60 loud, and thunders in the index? — iii. 4 

in heaven, but what serve for thunder?.. 0//ie//o, v. 2 
THUNDE R-BEARER shoot, nor tell tales. Lear, ii.4 

THUNDER-BOLT in mine eye is you Like it, i. 2 

hath lately suffered by a thunder-bolt. /'em/jes/, ii. 2 
a thunder-bolt, against the bosom ..! Henry IV. iv. I 
gods, with all your thund^:r-ho\ts. JuliusCt^sar, iv. 3 
scape not the thunder-bolt. ^7i/o«?/^C'/eo/)a/ra, ii. 5 
couriers to oak-cleaving thunder-bolts ..Lear, iii. 2 
THUNDER-CLAPS, more momentary . Tempest, i. 2 
THUNDER-DARTERof Olympus Troil.^Cress. ii.3 

THUNDERER, whose bolt Cymbeline, v. i 

THUNDERING sliock at meeting ../(/c/wrrf //. iii. 3 
THUNDER-LIKE percussion of thy .Coriolanus, i. 4 
THUNDEK-MASTER show thy spile Cymbeline, v.4 
THUNDER'ST with thy tongue.. 7'i««svl wrfrow. ii. 1 
THUNDER-STONE: and, when ..JidiusCaisar,i.i 
the all-dreaded thunder-stone. Cy(»/>eiene,iv.2(60ng) 
THUNDER-STROKE. What might ..Tempest, ii. I 
to be killed with a thunder-stroke .... — ii. 2 
THURIO frowns on you (rep.)..Two Gen. of Ver. ii. 4 

sir Tliurio borrows his wit — ii.4 

and you, sir Thurio (rep.) — ii.4 

for Thurio, he intends, shall wed .... — ii. 6 

blunt Thurio's dull proceeding — ii. 6 

sir Thurio, give us leave — iii. 1 

to bestow her on Thurio — iii. 1 

to match my friend, sir Thurio — iii. 1 

sir Thurio, fear not (rep. iv. 2) — iii. 2 

between sir Tliurio and my daughter — iii. 2 

and love sir Thurio? (rep.) — iii. 2 

you, sir Thurio, are not sharp enough — iii. 2 
I must be unjust to Thurio (rep.).... — iv. 2 

ay, gentle Thurio — iv. 2 

would enforce me marry vain Thurio — iv. 3 

Jiow now Thurio? — v. 2 

Thurio give back, or else — v.4 

THURSDAY; or indeed, Francis .. ..1 Hexr;,/;-. ii. 4 
on Thursday, we ourselves will march — iii. 2 
I shall receive money on Thursday .iHenrylV. ii, 4 

o' Thursday let it be Crep.) Romeo ^Juliet, ii i. 4 

say you to Thursday? My lord trep.) — iii. 4 
early next Thursday morn (rep.) .... — iii. 5 

get thee to church o' Thursday — iii. 5 

1 do not use to jest; Thursday is near — iii. 5 

on Thursday, sir? (rep.) — iv. 1 

no, not till Thursday; there is time — iv. 2 

THWACK him hence with distaffs.. Winler'sTale, i. 2 

wont to thwack our general (rep.)..Cono(a)ms, iv. 5 

THWART me in ray mood? . . Comedy of Errors, ii. 2 

did draw bias and thwart Troilus ^ Cresslda, i. 3. 

and be a thwart disnatured torment Lear, i, 4 

THWARTED-had not thwarted. Tu^o Gen. ofVer. iv.l 
nation, thwarted my ha,rgs.ms.Merch.of Venice, iii. 1 
I am thwarted ^uite from my. Troilus ^ Cressida, v. 1 
we can contradict hath thwarted. Tiomeo f^- Juliet, v. 3 
THWARTING-straugely thwarting! Wuc/i.4(/o,iii. 2 
punished with ray thwarting Btars..3Hejir!/r/. iv. 6 

lesser had been the thwartings Coriolanus, iii. 2 

thwarting the wayward seas.. Pericles, iv. 4 (Gower) 
THYME— the wild thyme b\ows..Mid.N.'sDream,il.2 

set hyssop, and weed up thyme Othello, i. 3 

THYREUS; make thine own edict. Atil. ^Cleo. iii. 10 

my name is Tliyreus. Most kind .. — iii. 11 

TIB— as Tib's rush for Tom's forefinger. ^»'s»'e/i, ii.2 

comes enquiring for his tib I'ericles, iv. 6 

TIBER-adrop of allaying Tiber in't .CorioiaiiMs, ii. 1 

1 would they were in Tiber! — iii. 1 

that Tiber trembled underneath . . JuliusCeesar, i. I 
draw them to Tiber banks; and weep — i. 1 

the troubled Tiber chafing with — i. 2 

from the waves of Tiber did I the. ... — i. 2 

orchards, on this side Tiber — iii. 2 

let Rome in Tiber melt! .... Antony S- Cleopatra, i 1 
TIBERIO-heir of old Tiberio.. ..liomeo^ Juliet, i. 5 
'TICED— have 'ticed me hither. TitusAndronicus, ii. 3 
TICK in a sheep, than such a..Troilu> 4 Cressida, iii. 3 
TICKLE— head stands so tickle . .Meas. Jor Meas. i. 3 

if my hair do but tickle me Mid.S'.'sDteam, iv. I 

if you tickle us, do we not langli?J»/er.o/;'e/iice, iii.l 

tickle our noses with spear-grass \HemylV. ii. 4 

nay, I'll tickle ye for a youiig prince — ii. 4 

I'll tickle your catastrophe iHenrylV. ii. 1 

stands on a tickle point iHenry VI. i. 1 

tickles still the sore . . Troilus <^ Cressida, iii. 1 (song) 
potatoe finger, tickles these together! — v. 2 

he'll tickle it for his concupy — v. 2 

can tickle where she wounds! Cymbeline, i. 2 

ticlde the senseless rushes Rojneo A Juliet, i. 4 

TICKLE-BRAIN; Harry, 1 do IHentylV.ii.i 

TICKLED you othergates Twelfth Aight, v. ! 

slie's tickled now; her fume can 2Lfenr!/»'/. i. 3 

how she tickled his chin T7cilus ^ Cressida, i. 2 

a nature, tickled with good success.. Cono/ajius, i. 1 

as some fly had tickled slumber .... Cymbeline, iv. 2 

wliose lungs are tickled o' the sere ....Hamlet, ii. 2 

TICKLING— caught with tickling. Twelfth iMght, ii. 5 

as bad as die with tickling Much Ado. iii. 1 

gentleman, tickling commodity King John, ii. 2 

runs tickling up and down the veins — iii. 3 
tickling skittish spirits . . Troilus 4- Cress, (prologue) 

tickling a narson's nose liomeo ^Juliet, i. 4 

TICKHSHj:CoLJi:»i(. -tickling] reader! 7ro//.* C>.iv..s 
TICK-TACK-a game of tick-tack. jl/ea,«. for.Meas. i. .3 
TIDDLE-TADDLE, norpibble-pabble.He).;;/;'. iv.l 

TIDE — the washing of ten tides Tempest, i. 1 

and the approaching tide will — v. 1 

tide is now; nay, not the tide . .TwoGen.of Ver. ii. 2 

that tide will stay me — ii.2 

you will lose the tide (rep.) — ii.3 

what's the unkindest tide? — ii.3 

tide life, tide death, I come without Mid. N.'sDr.y . 1 
both wind and tide stays .... Comedy qf Errors iv. 1 



TID 



[771 ] 

TIl.0— rudder tied by the strinRa. Autony tfCiea. i!!. 9 
luni most infliiitely tied ....Vymbeline, i. 7 (Icttm) 

my horKO it) tied up Rufc — iv, J 

I'lometlieuB tied ti) Caucaaus. '/"Kkj /^n</TOHiirn, ii. i 

ulie liutlKO Ktriclly tied licr lo I'triclet, ii. :, 

linrses luc tiud 1)V tlic iieads Lear, ii. -I 

() llcj;:u\. bIu- luilli tied slmrp-tootlicd .. — ii. 1 
I Kill licil t.i tl\c stnke — iii. 7 

TIlOD-lir this tied-up justice.... il/raj./hrit/ffn. i. 4 

TKiKll— iniike tigers tame ..Tu'oGrn.nrl'erona, iii. 2 

tliat did tlie Tiger board Ttidnh Kighl, v. I 

malics speed to catcli tlie t\ger. . Mid. N.'t Drrum, ii. '.' 
let us to tlie Tiger all to dinner. Co//ie(/.V(?/*i?;T. iii. i 
to Aleppo Koiie, master o' tiie Tiger ,...Maclietfi. i. 3 
or the llyrcau tiger, take any shape .... — iii. 4 

add tliereto a tiger's chiiudron — iv. 1 

a fasting tiger safer by the tooth., .. /ii'nff./o/in. iii. I 

imitate the action of the tiger Ilemyl'. iii. 1 

O, tiger's heart, wrapped in a 3 Henry I' I. i. 4 

than tigers of Hyrcania — i. 4 

the tiger will be mild, while — iii. 1 

the tiger now hath seized the /Ji'cA.irrf ;//. ii. 4 

by the brize than by the tiger Troilus ^ Ciets. i. 3 

tame tigers: thinking it harder — iii. 1! 

go great with timers, dragons . . Timon ofAthrus, iv. 3 
than tiiero is milk in a male tiger ,. CuriulauHx, v. 4 
when did the tiger's j'oung ones.. Tilus Aiviron. ii. 3 
a wilderness of tigers? tigers must .. — iii. I 
this ravenous tiger, this accursed .... — v. 3 
as for that heinous tiger, Tamora. ... — v. 3 

tigers, not daughters, what have Lear, iv. 2 

empty tigers, or the roaring eea../2o»«co^./H/it/, v. 3 

TIGKIt-FOOTED rage, when it ... . CorMamis, iii. 1 

TIGHT-twelve tight galleys. . Tamm','o/ S/irew, ii. 1 
a sqiiive more tight at IhU.. Anlony 4' Cleopalra, iv. 4 

TIGHTLY— these letters tightly.. ..iUtrr|/;rii.cj,i. 3 
he will clapper-claw thee tightly .... — li. 3 

TIKE— ay, sir Tike; who moreV — iv. 3 

base tike, call'st thou me host? Henry V. ii. 1 

or bobtail tike, or trundle-tail Lear, iii. 6 

TILIC- the next tile that falls 4n's Well, iv. 3 

TILLED-husbanded, and tilled ....'i Henry 1 1', iv. 3 

TILLY-FALLY, sir John, never tell me — ii.4 

TILLY- VALLEY, lady ! TwelJlhNight, ii. 3 

TILTS— tilts and toulnaments .. Tiro Gen.q) ler. i. 3 
mamniets, and to tilt with lips ....\ Henry IV. ii. 3 

run a tilt at death within \ Henry t'L iii. 2 

ran'st a tilt in honour of 2 Henry VL i. 3 

he tilts with piercing steel Romeo ft Jnliel.Vu. 1 

TILTER— Fortli-right the i\Ue.v. Mens, lor Mens. iv. 3 
as a puny tilter, that spurs 4s ynii Like i7, iii. 4 

TILTH— bound of land, tilth, vineyard. 7cm/)f.</, ii. 1 
expresseth his full tilth Cin(\. Measure rnr Measure, i. 5 

TILTING-he is tilting straight!.. I,oii«'sZ..X,os(, v. 2 
of ids heart's meteors tilting. . Comcdi/ <)/ ii'n orj, iv. 2 
tilting one at other's breast Othello, ii. 3 

TILT-YAHD-once in the tilt-yard.2He«iy /»'. iii. 2 
his study is his tilt-yard, and his loves.. 2 Hen. ('/. i.3 

TIMBER— like green timber, warp. /is .i/oMf.tAei7, iii. 3 
bark, anduart o' the timber Henry I'll I. i. 2 

TIMBERED— too slightly timbered for..H«mW, iv. 7 
his bark is stoutly timbered, and his.... Othello, ii. 1 

TIME— 'tis time I should inform thee .. Tempest, i 2 

can'st thou remember a time before — i. 2 

in the dark backward and abysm of time? — i. 2 

as, at that time, through all — i. 2 

that have more time for vainer hours . . — i. 2 

what is the time o' the day? — i. 2 

the time 'twixt six and uow — i. 2 

before the time be out? — i. 2 

within which time she died — i. 2 

not since widow Dido's time — ii. 1 

why, in good time — ii. 1 

and time to speak it in — ii. i 

conspiracy his time doth take .... — ii. I (song) 

in the moon, when time was — ii. 2 

she is ten times more gentle — iii. 1 

and many a time the harmony — iii. I 

for yet, ere supper time, must I — iii. 1 

give me the lie another time — iii. 2 

after a little time, I'll beat — iii. 3 

but one fiend at a time — iii. 3 

given to work a great time after — iii. 3 

we sliall lose our time — iv. I 

and time goes iiprii^ht — v. I 

at which time, my lord — v, 1 

nt this time I'll tell no tales — v. 1 

wherefore waste I time tocounsel.7'woG»n.o/;'«'r. i. 1 
neplect my studies, lose my time .... — i. I 

is It near dinner time? — i. 2 

to let him spend his time no inor^.... — i.3 

considered well his loss of time — i.3 

by the swift course of time — i.3 

and in good time — i.3 

that thou shalt spend some time .... — i.3 

a thousand times it answers, no — i.3 

a tliousand timesas much — ii. I 

or else for want of idle time — it. 1 

why muse you, sir? 'tis dinner time — ii. i 

and done too, for this time — ii.4 

the sweet benefit of time — ii. i 

he means to s|)end his time awhile .. — ii.4 

for that food so long a time — ii. 7 

of greater time than I shall show to be — ii. 7 
the fashion of the time is ciiangcd .. — iii. 1 

will ^ive thee time to leave — iii. 1 

time IS the nurse and breeder — iii. t 

the time now serves not to — iii- 1 

a little time will melt her I rcfi.) — iii. 2 

for this time I spend in talking — iv. 1! 

a thousand times good-morrow — iv. 3 

Bav a thnnsund times — iv. 4 

a hundred several times — iv. 4 

and at that time, 1 made her weep .. — iv. 4 

to come tiefore their time — v. 1 

O time most cursti — v. 4 

and have done any time these Merry H'ivrt,\. 1 

seen Sackenion loose twenty times .. — i. 1 

he kept not time — i-3 

the next time we have confidence .... — it 



TIM 



TIDE— the ocean's roaring tides King John, ii. 1 

float uiMMi the swelling tide — ii. 1 

iiinong the high tiiKs. in the — iii. I 

I was ama/ed under the tide — iv. 2 

ore taken by the tide — y. ti 

what a tide" of woes comes niehard It. ii. 2 

nmy turn the tide of fearful 1 Henryll'. iv. i 

ns with the tide swelled up iUenrylV. ii. 3 

the tide ot hloiid in me hath — v. 2 

like the tide iutoa breach UenryV. i. 2 

e'en at tuniiiiv o' the tide — ii. 3 

to l>c washed I'd" the next tide — iv. I 

nor the tide of pomp that beats — iv. I 

would call forth her flowing tides lUrnryl'l. i. I 

raightiest hulk against the tide — v. 5 

labour swim a.gaiiist the tide SHenryl'l. i. i 

forced by the tide to combat — ii. It 

both wind and tide (rep. iv. 3 and v. 1) — iii. 3 

the tide will wash you otf — v. 4 

how gets tlie tide in? 08 much as .. Henry I'l II. v. ;, 
of this action rode on his tide . . Troitus Sf Cress, ii. 3 

business, the tide whereof is now — v. I 

he keeps his tides well Timon of. 4lhens, i. 2 

let in tlie tide of knaves once more .. — iii. 4 
an arch so hurried the blown tide . . Corlolanus, v. 4 
ever lived in the tide of times ....JuliusCasar, iii. I 
there is a tide in the affairs of men .. — iv. 3 

laciiueying the varying tide Antony Sf Cleo. i. 4 

upon the swell at full of tide — iii. i 

marks the waxing tide grow wave'ri7ns/lii</io)i. iii. 1 
[Col. ^'1'.] dnv. night, hour, tide .Itomeo <S Jul. iii. a 

TIDINGS— glad with these tidings.Meiri/ Wives, iv. :, 
that I may drink thy tidings ....AsyouLikeit, iii. 2 

bring these tidings to this fair — v. 4 

lor me and for my tidings All'<ll'ell, ii. I 

■what is vour tidings? The king Macbeth, i. !> 

came hither til transport the tidings .. — iv. 3 
the tiding- e.iine, that they are all ..KingJohn, iv. 2 

giddy with these ill tidings — iv. 2 

now near the tidings of our comfort. /Jic/iucd II. ii. I 
we hear no tidings from the king.... — ii.4 

to bear the tidings of calamity — iii. 2 

York's, that tell black tidings — iii. 4 

cara'st thou bv these ill tidings? — iii. 4 

the tidings of this broil brake off ....1 Hem y/T. i. 1 
that's the worst tidings that I hear .. — iv. 1 
what good tidings come with you? ..IHenryU'.i 1 
turned me back with joyful tidings.. — i. 1 

good tidings, my lord Ilastings — iv. 2 

and tidings do I bring, and lucky joys — v. 3 

sad tidings bring I to you out of I Henry VI. i. 1 

these tidings would call forth — i. 1 

what tidings send our scouts? — v. 2 

what tidings with our cousin illenryVI.ii. 1 

health and glad tidings, to your majesty ! — iv. 9 
the happy tidings of his good escape. 3 Henri/ '•7. ii. I 
tidings, as swiftly as the posts could run — ii. I 
Edward will for tidings of my death fiiV/mrd III. i. 4 
despiteful tidingsl O unpleasing newsl — iv. 1 
to bear this tidings to the. bloody king — iv. 3 
the tidings that 1 bring will maka. .HenryVlIl. v. 1 
the gods Idess you for your tidings. . Coriotauus, v. 4 
with her death that tidings came. .Julius Cicaar, iv. 3 
these tidings will well comfort Cassius — v. 3 

as tidings of this sight — v. 3 

ram thou thy fruittul tidings ..Antony ^Cleo. ii. 5 

to trumpet such good tidings? — ii. 5 

but let ill tidings tell themselves .... — ii. .0 
with this tidings, shall enter me .... — iv. 12 
but it is a tidings to wash the eyes .. — v. 1 
have tidings of any penny tribute ...Cymbetine, ii. 1 

promise to yield me often tidings — iv. 3 

no tidings of him? He hath been.... — v. 5 
gives sweet tidings of tlie sun's .. Titus Andron. iii. 1 

sirrah, what tidings? have you — iv. 3 

these tidings nip me — iv. 4 

ond, for my tidings, gave me twenty — v. 1 

but tidings to the contrary Pericles, ii. (Gowcrl 

tidings of the prince's tloom .... Romeo Sf Juliet, iii. 3 

I'll tell thee joyful tidings, girl — iii, S 

the tidings of her death: and here..,. — v. 3 
tidings can you tell me of my lordl ...,OlheUo,\\.\ 
upon certain tidings now arrived — ii. 2 

TIDY Bartholomew boar-pig illenri/ IV. ii. 4 

TIE-tie the wiser souls to thy Mcas..for.Meas. ii. 4 

can tie the gall up in the — iii. 2 

shave the head, and tie the biard — iv. 2 

tie up niv love's t'jiigne.uncl [niug.Mid.N.'sDr- iii. I 

hellish oli«liiuiev ti./ lliv tongue All'ill'elt,i 3 

withainost indissoluble tii- lor Macbeth,iii. 1 

thou shalt 60 surely tie thy now .... Kini;John, ii. 2 
to tie thee to my strong correction .. WiWiiirrf //. iv. 1 

I'll tie them in the wood \ Henry IV. i. 2 

this moral ties me over to Henry V. v. 2 

come, tie his bmly to my horse'". 7'roiViii ^ Cress, v. 9 
buttle liim not Ui be their beilfcllow.Cori'o/aiiiu, ii.2 
too late, tie leaden pounds to his heels — iii. I 
tie up the liliertine in a field ....Antony ffCleo. ii. I 

if 'twill tie up thy discontented — ii. fi 

that seems to tic their friendship — ii.fi 

with one that ties his points? — iii. II 

Words of your commission will tie . . Cymbeline, iii. 7 
or tic my trea-sure up in silken bags . . I'ericlei, iii. 2 

which tic him to an answer Lear, iv. 2 

ties up tnv tongue, and will not. /(ompo ^Juliet, iv. .') 

TIEI)-if tlie tied were lost TuoUen.u/Ver. ii. 3 

iiiikindest tied thot c'.er any man tied — ii. 3 

why, he that's tied here — ii. 3 

I am tied to be obedient Taming nf Shrew, 1. I 

I'll not be tied t'> hours nor 'pointed — iii. 1 

where you were tied in duty Winler*sTale, v. I 

they have tied me to a stake Maebeih, v. 7 

were I tied to run o-fo^it even Itichard II. \. I 

tied him I know not where \ Henry IV. ii. i 

their provender tied to their moiithi.l Henry VI. i. 2 
and not lie tied unto his brother's ..illenryVl. iv. I 

the Spaniard, tied by bloiHl Henry VIII. 11.2 

to confirm his i;oo<liu-ss, tied it by..., — iii.!! 
by suggestion tied all the kingdom .. — iv. 'J 
tied with the bonds of heaven ..Troiluif/Creu. v. 2 



TIME— holiday time of my beauty. .W*rri/iri»f«, il. 1 

in these times you stand on distance — ii. 1 

I have seen the time — ii. 1 

she thanks you a thousand times .... — ii. 2 

she hopes there will come a time .... ii 2 

BO much of your time in exchange.... — li. 2 

for at that time the jealous — ii. 2 

tise your patience: in good time .... — iii. I 

so sneed me in my time to come I ... — iii. 4 

the last time he searched for him _ iv. 2 

as they did las*, time — iv. 2 

help to search my house this one time — iv. 2 

doth all the winter time — iv. 4 

and in that time, shall master _ iv. 4 

from time to time I have ucquaintcd — iv. 6 

when Slender sees his time to take .. — iv. 6 

this is the third time — v. I 

Bwiiy I suy, time wears — v. I 

when, you see your time — v. 3 

still pinch him to your time — v. .^ 

I was three or four times in the thought — v, S 

'tis time I were choked with a piece. . — v. h 

to time, I will commit Tveinh Night, i. 2 

would I had bestowed that time in .. — i, 3 

'tis not tliat time of moon — i. 6 

O time, thou must untangle this .... — ii. 2 

'tis not the first time I have ii. 3 

like tinkers at this time of night?.... — ii. 3 

nor time, in you? We did keep time, sir — ii. 3 

out o' time? [C'of. -tune] Sir, ye lie .. — ii. 3 

most brisk and giddy-paced times .. — ii.4 

one time or another — ii.4 

you waste the treasure of your time — ii. 5 

the quality of iiersons, and the time — iii. I 

'tis time to smile again — iii. 1 

upbraids me with the waste of time iii'. 1 

you let time wash oft' _ ■ iii. 2 

albeit the quality of the time — iii. 3 

wliiles you beguile the time , — iii. 3 

at which time, we will bring — iii. 4 

the time goes by; away — iii. 4 

what time we will our celebration keep — iv. 3 

what wilt thou be, when time hath .. — v. I 

of place, time, fortune, do cohere .... — v. 1 

thou hast said to me a thousand times — v. I 

.you shall from this time be — v. 1 

and golden time convents — v. I 

time and our concernings shall . , Meas. for Meas. i. 1 

no? a dozen times at least ' i. 2 

till time had made them for us — i.3 

in time the rod becomes more mocked — i. 4 

as blossoming time, that from — i 5 

had time cohered with place — ii. t 

which at that very distant time stood — ii. I 

the time is .vet to come — ii. 1 

so, for this time, Pompey ii. 1 

you had continued in it some time .. — ii. 1 

at any time 'forenoon _ ii. 2 

ten times louder than beauty could .. — ii.4 

nay, call us ten times frail ii.4 

this night's tlie time that I should do — iii. I 

in good time (i(';i. V. 1) — iii. i 

between which time of the contract.. — iii. 1 

that the time may have all shadow.. — iii. 1 

by him in the duke's time — iii. 2 

to use it for my time — iii. 2 

making practice on the times iii. 2 

much upon this time have I promised — iv. I 

the time is come, even now — iv. 1 

you shall have your full time of iv. 2 

an unlawful bawd, time out of mind — iv. 2 

neither in time, matter, or other ,... — iv. 2 

drunk many times a-day — iv. 2 

and I will have more time to prepare — iv. 3 

might, in the times to come — i\. 4 

these letters at fit time deliver me .. — iv. .'> 

'gainst the tooth of time, and razure — v. I 

now is your time, speak loud — v. I 

nay, it IS ten times strange (rep.) .... — v. 1 

to speak before your time — v. 1 

and with ripened time, unfold — v. 1 

well, he in time may come to clear .. — v. 1 

with such a time when I'll depose .. — v. I 

since which time, of five years — v, I 

for better times to coine — v. I 

but fitter time for that — v. I 

her mother hath many times told me.MuehAdo, i. I 

well, as time shall try: in time the.. — i. 1 

to take the present time by the top .. — i. 2 

have a care this busy time — i. 2 

if you be not wooed in good time .... — ii. I 

Time goes on crutches, till love .... — ii. I 

and a time too brief too, to have all.. — ii. I 

the time shall not go dully by us — ii. 1 

for she'll he up twenty times a night — ii. i 

bids me a thousand times good-night — iii. 3 

'tis time .vou were ready — iii. 4 

for you see, 'tie a busy time with me — iii 5 

'twere a thousand times [C'd(. -pound] — iii. & 

a thousand times in secret — iv. 1 

time batli not yet so dried this blooil — iv. 1 

by this time our sexton hath reformed — v. I 

w"lien time and place shall serve — v. 1 

that lived in the timeof good neighbours— v. 2 
will quickly dream away the time..Wid.iV.'j/5r. i. I 

take time to pause: and by the — i. 1 

before the time I did Lysander see .. — i I 

a time tliot lovers' flights doth — i. I 

that very time I saw (but thou — ii. 2 

some time of the night — ii. 2 

chid the hasty-footed time for parting — iii. 2 

how shall we beguile the lazy time.. — v. I 

in all reason, we must stay the time — v. I 

'tis almost fairy time. I fear, we shoU — v. I 

now it is the lime of night — v. 2 

Miite of cormorant devouring time. l.ai>r'<L. Loir, i. I 

fit in his place and time — i. I 

three thousand times within this — i. I 

the time when? (irp.) — i. 1 (letter: 

title to your old time — \.i 



TIM 



TIME-at that time was tliere ....Lot<e'sl..l.nst,u. 1 

wliat time o' day? — ii. I 

and tiuee times as mucli more — iii. 1 

or spend a minute's time in pruniiij? — iv. 3 

and, since lier time, are colliers — iv. 3 

tiie sliortness of tlie time can slrape .. — iv. 3 

no time sliall be omitted, tliat Oep.) — iv. 3 

some entertainment of time — v. 1 

and observe tlie times, and spend liis — v. 2 

and fair time of dayl — v. 2 

tliree times tlu'ice is nine uep.) — v. 2 

the extreme parts of time extremely — v. 2 

5al<cs liave we neglected time — v. 2 

and as lining to tlie time — v. 2 

a time, metliinks, too short to make — v. 2 

liul the time is long — v. 2 

strange fellows in her time .. AJerclmnt nf I'enice, i. 1 

mine of tliis another time — i. 1 

wlnrein mv time, something too .. .. — i. 1 

and liereinspend but time, to wind.. — i. 1 

in your fatlier's time, a Venetian — i. 2 

did in caning time fall party-coloured — i. 3 

many a time and oft. in the Kialto . . — i. 3 

another time you called me dog — i. 3 

of tlirice three times the value — i. 3 

O ten times faster Venus' pigeons .. — ii. 6 

mates by tliis time for us stay — ii. 6 

being ten times undervalued — ii. 7 

stay tlie ver.v riping of the time — ii- 8 

the eliaff and ruin of the times __— ii. 9 

tlie fire seven times tried (rep.) . . — ii. 9 (scroll) 

by tlie time I linger here — ii. 9 

these nauglity times put bars — iii. 2 

but 'tis to peize the time — iii. 2 

which cunning times put on to entrap — iii. 2 

twenty times myself ; a thousand (.rep.) — iii. 2 

it is now our time, that have stood .. — iii. 2 

even at that time I may be — iii. 2 

than twenty times the value — iii. 2 

tlie petty debt twenty times over .... — iii. 2 

many that have at times made — iii. 3 

do converse, and waste the time together — iii. 4 

waste no time in words, but get — iii. 4 

to pay it ten times o'er, on forfeit. . . . — iv. I 

we triiie time? I pray thee, pursue .. — iv. 1 

but music for the tirne doth change .. — v. 1 

and fleet the time carelessly Asyoul.ikeit,i. 1 

it is tlie first time that ever I heard.. — i. 2 

you will try in time, in despite — i. 3 

too young that time to value her .... — i. 3 

if you out-stay the time, upon — i. 3 

devise the fittest time, and safest way — i. 3 

thou art not fi>r the fashion of these times — ii. 3 

willingly could waste my time in it — ii. 4 

thus moral on the time, my lungs . , — ii. 7 

and neglect the creeping hours of time — ii. 7 

and one man in his time plays — ii. 7 

BO be-rhj'med since Pytliagoras' time — iii. 2 

ask me, what time o' day — iii. 2 

of time, as well as a cloclf. And (if;;.) — iii. 2 

time travels in divers paces C'cp.) — iii. 2 

then tliey perceive not how time moves — iii. 2 

at which time would I, being but — iii. 2 

that time, come not near me irep.) .. — iii. 5 

«,s, till that time, I shall not — iii. 5 

a thousand times a properer man — iii. 5 

the time was, that 1 hated thee — iii. .i 

and in all this time there was not.... — iv. 1 

men liave died .from time to time .... — iv. I 

time is the old justice tliat examines — iv. 1 

we shall find a time, Audrey — v.) 

time, the only pretty rank time.... — v. 3tsong") 

and therefore take the present time -,- v. 3 (song) 

we kept time, we lost not our time .. — v. 3 

1 count it but time lost to hear — y. 3 

the first time that I ever saw — v. 4 

upon a lie seven times removed — v. 4 

generally is at all times good AU'slf^ell^i. I 

he liatli persecuted time with hope .. — i. 1 

only the losing of hope by time — i. 1 

may be ten times found — i. 1 

answer the time of request — i. 1 

far into the service of tlie time — i. 2 

and at this time, liis tongue obeyed. . — i. 2 

might be a copy to these younger times — i. 2 

wear themselves in the cap of the time — ii. 1 

or four and twenty times the pilot's — ii. I 

if I break time, or flinch in — ii. I 

the choice of tliy own time; for I . . . . — ii. 1 
I play the noble housewife with the time — ii. 2 

that hath shot out in our latter times — ii. 3 

H second time receive the confirmatitin — ii. 3 

love made your fortunes twenty times — ii, 3 

whicli, as your due, time claims .... — ii. 4 

distil now in the curbed time — ii. 4 

holds not colour with the time, nor does — ii. 5 

which I have some time known .... — iii. 2 

delivers me to fill the time — iii. 7 

the time and place, with this deceit.. — iii. 7 

'twill be time enough to go home — iv. 1 

that, what in time proceeds — iv. a 

some other times, we drown our gain — iv. 3 

from the time of his remembrance .. — iv. 3 

time was, I did him a desired office . . — iv. 4 

the time will bring on summer — iv. 4 

ii prepared, and timerevives ug r— iv. 4 

in happy time,— this man may — v. 1 

tliongh time seems so adverse — v. 1 

and watched the time to shoot — v. 3 

tlie time is fair again — v. 3 

not one word more of the consumed time — v 3 

and noiseless foot of time steals — v. 3 

credit with them at that time — v. 3 

and at that time he got his wife — v. 3 

come to me in happy time.. Taming o/Sh, I (indue. ) 
never speak of all that time? .... — 2 (indue.) 

the time seems thirty unto me (rep.) — 2 (indue.) 

for the time I study, virtue — i. 1 

such friends as time in Podua — i. I 

It is no time to chide you now — i. l 



[ 772 ] 



TIME— 'tis time to stir him from ..TamingofSh. i. 

'tis no time to jest; and therefore (rep.) — i. 

'tis iiow no time to vent our love .... — i. 

have I not in my time heard — i. 

I love her ten times more than e'er.. — ii. 

moved! in good time: let him — ii. 

to hours, nor 'pointed times, but learn — iii. 

in time I may believe, yet I — iii. 

one {jirt six times pieced — iii. 2 

'tis time we were at church — iii. 2 

this doth fil; the time — iv. 3 

to the fashion, and the time — iv. 3 

bid you mar it to the time ^ — iv. 3 

and time it is, when raging war — v. 2 

but twenty times so much — v. 2 

time as long again would be filled. H'inter'sTale, i. 2 

we'll part the time botweeu's then .. — i. 2 

good time encounter herl — ii. I 

something before her time, delivered — ii. 2 

until a time may serve — ii. 3 

whom, for this time, we pardon — ii. 3 

the time is worth the use on't — iii. 1 

we have landed in ill time; the skies — iii. 3 

I did in time collect myself. — iii, 3 

in the name of Time, to use — iv. (clio.) 

I witness to the times that (i-ep.) — iv. (clio.) 

and in my time, wore three-pile .... — iv, 2 

I bless the time, when my good falcon — iv. 3 

that might become your time of day — iv. 3 

now, in good time! Not a word — iv. 3 

'tis time to part them — iv. 3 

for this time, though full of our .... — iv. 3 

at this time he will allow no — iv. 3 

tug for the time to come — iv. 3 

faster than thought, or time — iv. 3 

60 that in this time of lethargy — iv. 3 

this is the time that the unjust man — iv. 3 

though removed fifty times — iv. 3 

wouffl have done the tim.e more benefit — v. 1 

as every present time doth boast .... — v. 1 

which waits upon worn times — v. 1 

since you owed no more to time — v. 1 

but lie at that time, over-fond — v. 2 

been so any time these fmir hours.... — v. 2 

'tis time; descend; be stone no more — v. 3 

there's time enough for that — v. 3 

in this wide gap of time — v. 3 

time is tlieir'master Oep.) .... Comedy n/Ejrors^ ii. 1 

urging it the second time to me — ii. 2 

in good time, sir, what's that? — ii. 2 

to jest in good time; there's atime (rep.) — ii. 2 

the time was once, when thou unurged — ■ ii. 2 

I never saw her till this time — ii. 2 

the porter for this time, sir — iii. 1 

why at this time the doors are — iii. 1 

'tis time, I think, to trudge — iii. 2 

'tis high time that I were hence .... — iii. 2 

but twenty times you have — iii. 2 

lest I come not time enough — iv. 1 

'tis time, that I were gone — iv. 2 

as if time were in debt! — iv. 2 

that time comes stealing on — iv. 2 

remaineduntil this time, free — iv. 4 

bear my wealth at any time — v. 1 

with Time's deformed hand have. . .. — v. 1 

know my voice! O Time's extremity I — v. 1 

during which time he ne'er saw .... — v. 1 
weary sevennights, nine times nine ..Macbeth, i. 3 

can look into the seeds of time — i. 3 

come may; time and the hour runs.... — i. 3 

and at more time, the interim having _ — i. 3 

the eoming-on of time — i. 5 (letter) 

to beguile the time, look like the time — i. 5 

upon this bank and shoal of time — i. 7 

from this time, such I account thy love — i. 7 

nor time, nor place, did then adhere .. — i. 7 

and mock the time with fairest — J. 7 

if you would grant the time — ii. I 

take the present horror from the time — ii. 1 

come in time; have napkins — ii. 3 

new hatched to the woeful time ...... — ii. 3 

I had lived a blessed time — ii. 3 

within the volume of which time — ii. 4 

as will fill uji the time 'twixt — iii. 1 

our time does call upon us — iii. I 

let every man be master of his time till — iii. 1 

in the times past, which held — iii. 1 

with the perfect spy o' the time — iii. 1 

but, in best time, we will — iii. 4 

nature that in time will breed — iii. 4 

i' the olden time, ere human — iii. 4 

the times have been, that — iii. 4 

only it spoils the pleasure of the time.. — iii. 4 

you'll rue the time that clogs me — iii. 6 

Harper cries: 'tis time; 'tis time — iv. 1 

pay his breath to time, and mortal .... — iv. 1 

time, thoii anticipat'st my — iv. 1 

but cruel are the times — iv. 2 

find the time to friend — iv. 3 

the time you may 60 hood-wink ..... ~ iv. 3 

at no time broke my faith — iv. 3 

now is the time of help — iv. 3 

this time goes manly — iv. 3 

what, at any time, have you heard .... — v. I 

why, then 'tis time 1 1 do't — v. 1 

the time approaches, that will — v. 4 

the time has been, my senses — v. 6 

would have been a time for such a word — v. 5 

the last syllable of recorded time — v. 5 

to be the show and gaze o' the time.... — v. 7 

the time is free: I see thee — v. 7 

large expence of time, before we — v. 7 

jilaiited newly with the time — v. 7 

m measure, time, and place , — v. 7 

high afi'airs touching that time King John, i. 1 

fourteen weeks before the course of time — i. 1 

he is but a bastard to the time — i. 1 

have given him time to land — ii. I 

and the hand of time shall draw .... — ii. 1 

by this time from their fixed beds .. — ii. I 



TIM 

TIME— that time, have we rammed . . King John, ii. I , 

which till this time my tongue — iii. I 

old Time the clock -setter (rf/j.) _ iii. l 

fit it with some better time [Aii^-tune] — iii. 3 

and creep time ne'er so slow — iii. 3 

the times conspire wltli you — iii. 4 

cheered up the heavy time — iv. 1 

being urged at atime unseasonable.. — iv. 2 

that the time's enemies may — iv. 2 

the spirit of the time shall teach .... — iv. 2 

gentle offer of the perilous time — iv. 3 

the j'et unbegotten sin of times — iv. 3 

for the present time's so sick — v. 1 

be stirring as the time; be fire — v. 1 

thou the ordering of this present time — v. 1 

that such a sore of time should seek — v. 2 

such is the infection of the time — v. 2 

we hold our time too precious — v. 2 

arm you to the sudden time — v. 6 

O, let us pay the time but — v. 7 

say, this is no time to bleed Richard II. i. 1 

purest treasure mortal times afford .. — i. 1 

in a ten times barred-up — i. 1 

bj' this time, had the king — i. 3 

how long a time lies in one — i. 3 

bring their times about, my oil-dried — i. 3 

thou canst help time to furrow — i. 3 

for a time. Joy absent, grief (rep.) .. — i. 3 

when time shall call him — i. 4 

long time have I watched — ii. 1 

his time is spent, our pilMimage .... — ii. I 

and take from time his cliartere .... — ii. 1 

and 'tis time, I trow — ii. 1 

for our time of stay is short — ii. I 

but time will not permit — ii. 2 

advantage of the absent time — ii. 3 

before the expiration of thy time ... . — ii.3 

bid time return, and thou ehalt iii. 2 

for time hath set a blot — iii. 2 

the time hath been, would you — iii. 3 

till time lend friends, and friends .. — iii. 3 

we at time of year do wound — iii. 4 

in that dead time when Gloster's .... — iv. 1 

that very time, I heard you say — iv. 1 

twenty times thou liest — iv. 1 

the very time Aumerle and you .... — iv. 1 

many a time hath banished Norfolk — iv. 1 

the time shall not be many hours. ... — v. 1 

in this new spring of time — v. 2 

my teeming date drunk up with time? — v. 2 

were he twenty times ray son — v. 2 

keep time: how sour sweet music (rep.) — v. 5 

*tis time thou wert away — v. 5 

find we a time for frighted peace ....] Henry IV. i. 1 

what time of day is it, lad? (rep.).... — i. 2 

reckoning many a time and oft — i. 2 

abuses of the time want countenance — i. 2 

redeeming time, when men — i. 2 

at such a time, with all the rest — i. 3 

times they breathed, and three times — i. 3 

fill up chronicles in time to come .... — i. 3 

yet time serves, wherein you — i. 3 

in Richard's time, what do you call. . — i. 3 

till he hath found a time to pay .... — i. 3 

when time is ripe (which will be .... — i. 3 

eirrah carrier, what time do you mean — ii. 1 

time enough to go to bed with a candle — ii. 1 

any time tliis two and twenty years — ii. 2 

the time itself unsorted — ii. 3 (letter) 

to drive away the time till — ii. 4 

I am eight times thrust through .... — ii. 4 

marvel where thou spend'st thy time — ii. 4 

for I myself at this time, have — ii . 4 

three times hath Henry Bolingbroke — iii. I 

a shorter time shall send me to you — iii. I 

by that time will our book — iii. 1 

expectation of thy time is ruined .... — iii. 2 

for the time will come, that I shall.. — iii. 2 

the slightest worship of his time .... — iii. 2 

not above seven times a week — iii. 3 

that I borrowed, three or four times — iii. 3 

any time this two and thirty years ., — iii. 3 

to "lie sick, in such a justling time? .. — iv. 1 

and at the time of my departure thence — iv. 1 

I would the state of time had first been — iv. I 

ten times more dishonourable nigged — iv. 2 

faith, sir John, 'tis more than time .. — iv. 2 

knows at what time to promise — iv. 3 

in short time after, he deposed — iv. 3 

mischief to the unborn times? — v. 1 

did I break in Richard's time — V. 1 

the dangers of the time; j'ou swore .. — v. I 

what with the injuries of a wanton time — v. 1 

starving for a time of pell-mell havock — v. 1 

and find a time to punish this offence — v. 2 

O gentlemen, the time of life ie short — v. 2 

never shall a second time to do — v. 2 

what, is't a time to jest and dally now? — v. 3 

life time's fool; and time, that takes — v. 4 

'sblood, 'twas time to counterfeit .... — v. 4 

the times are wild; coutention iHenrylV. i. I 

to dignify the times, since CoBsar's .. — i. 1 

had tliree times slain the appearance — i. 1 

this I shall have time enough to mourn — i. 1 

that time and spite dare bring — i. 1 

'tis more than time: and, my most .. — i. 1 

lordship good time of day: I am glad — i. 2 

some relish of the saltness of time .. — i. 2 

the unquiet time for your quiet .... — i. 2 

little regard in these coster-monger times — i. 2 

as the times do brawl — i. 3 

what trust is in these times? — i. 3 

we are time's subjects, and time bids — i. 3 

your place, your time, and business? — ii. 1 

60 sick as yours at this time is? — ii. 2 

repent at idle times as thou may'st — ii. 2 (lett.) 

play the fool with the time — ii.2 

the visage of the times, and be — ii.3 

the time was, father, that you — ii.3 

till time and vantage crave my — ii.3 



TIME-tcn times bettor than the n\ue.illcnri/lf'. ii. 4 

to profttno the prooiouti time — ii. 4 

tv\'ciity-niuo yciirn, come ^loascod time — ii. 4 

Boe tlic rcvoliitiiiii of the times tnul<u — lii. I 

vtlier times, to see tlie lieuehy (jii-ille — iii. 1 

llic time Bhiill come, tlius did lie (if;i.) — iii. 1 

foretelling this same time's coiulitiou — iii. 1 

the nature of the times dcecaseil .... — iii. 1 

become the hatch and hrood of time — iij. I 

'tis the more time thou wert used.. .. — iii. 2 

Mouldy, it is time you were 8|)ent.... — iii. 2 

let time 3hai>c, aim there an end .... — iii. li 

which way the stream of time doth run — iv. 1 

when time shall serve, to show in — — iv. I 

the condition of these times to lay .. — iv. 1 

the times to their necessities ffp.) .. — iv. I 

tlio time misonlered doth — iv. 2 

one time or other break some gallowa — iv. 3 

rotten times, that you shall look upon — iv. 4 

will, in the perfcctness of time, cast.. — iv. 4 

time's doting chronicles, say (rf>i.) .. — iv. 4 

for now a time is come to moiHt — iv- 4 

to welcome the condition of the time — v. 2 

and golden times, and happy news of — v. 3 

if 1 liad had time to have made — — v. 5 

j iimpin;; o'er times Henry V. i. (.chorus) 

the scambling and unquiet time did.. — i. I 

than ever at one time the clergy .... — i. 1 

there was not time enough to hear .. — i. 1 

at one time bring in to any of — i. 2 

but when time shall serve — ii. 1 

their throats about them at thattime — ii. 1 

1 will cut your throat, one time or other — ii. 1 

Uutl.God! three or four times — ii. 3 

by custom, and the ordinance of times — ii. 4 

now he weighs time, eveu to — ii. 4 

it is no time to discourse — iii. 2 

I warrant you, when time is served.. — iii. 6 

'tis not the first time you were — iii. 7 

now is it time to arm — iii. 7 

entertain conjecture of a time.... — iv. (chorus) 

the time was blessedly lost — iv. 1 

if the time were convenient — iv. 1 

and time hath worn us into slovenry — iv. 3 

had ten times more valour — iv. 4 

tiie excuse of time.of numbers .... — v. (chorus) 

as in good time he may — V. Cchorns) 

health and fair time of day — v. 2 

or do not learn, for want of time .... — v. 2 

this moral ties me over to time — v. 2 

small time, but, in that small.... — v. 2 (chorus) 

change of times and states MUnryVLi. 1 

a king, until this time — i. 1 

during tlie time Edward the Third .. — i. 2 

some other time to visit you — ii. 3 

were growing time once ripened — ii. 4 

which in the time of Henry, named.. — ii. I 

may finish ere that hapless time .... — iii. 1 

defer no time, delays have — jll* - 

may starve, perhaps, before that time — iii. 2 

to my determined time thou gavest.. — iv. G 

now the time is come, that France .. — v. .■) 

now cursed be the time of thy — v. 4 

be still a while, till time do serve ....illennjl'l. i. 1 

next time, I'll keep ray dreams unto — i. 2 

look to't in time — i. 3 

last time. I danced attendance on.... — i. 3 

wizards know their times (rep.) — i. 4 

that time best fits the work we — i. 4 

being called a hundred times — ii. 1 

and many time and oft myself have — ii. 1 

twenty times so many foes (rep.) .... — ii. 4 

we know the time, since he was — iii. I 

every one will give the time of day .. — iii. 1 

which time will bring to light — iii. 1 

until your further time of trial — iii. 1 

dare him twenty thousand times .... — iii. 2 

twenty times his worth, they say .... — iii. 2 

loather a hundred times to part — iii. 2 

ten times banished (if/i.) — iii. 2 

o'er whom, in time to come, I hope .. — iv. 2 

ill whose time boys went to span-counter — iv. 2 

shall be belieaded for it ten tunes — iv. 7 

for, many a time (rc-p.) — iv. 10 

of one or both of us the time is come — v. 2 

contusions and all brush of time .... — v. 3 

three times to-day I holp him (rep ) _ v. 3 

not enough our foes this time are fled — v. 3 

into it far before thy time? ZlUnr\iVI. i. I 

three times did Kietiard make — i. 4 

oVrruii my former time — i. 4 

take time to do him dead — i. 4 

t) ten times more, than tigers — i. 4 

in this troublous time, what's to be done? — ii 1 

what time the shepherd, blowing .... — ii. 6 

then tu divide the times — ii. 5 

O heavy times, begetting such (rep.) — ii. 5 

mine, ten limes so much — ii. 5 

which in the time of death he gave.. — ii. ti 

for the time slull not seem tedious .. — iii. I 

and come some other time, to know — iii. 2 

from the golden time I look for! .... — iii. 2 

and time suppresscth wrongs — iii. 3 

tt ^illy time to make prescription .... — iii. 3 

b.-oilier, the time and case — iv. 6 

'tis no time to talk — iv. 5 

likely in time, to bless a regal — iv. c 

night, nr in the time of war — iv. 7 

king Edward in his time of storm.... — iv. 7 

take the time, kneel down — v. I 

and ten times more beloved — v. 1 

if she have time to breathe — v. 3 

cried, aboding luckless time — v. r> 

but that we s|ieiid the time with — v, 7 

sent Ix'fore my time into this Ilichanl III. i. I 

time of peace, have nodelight (rf;/.).. — i. i 

good time of day unto (rep. i. 3) .... — i. I 

and twenty times made pause — i. 2 

in that sail time, my manly eyea .... — i.'i 

'tin time to speak, my pains are — i. 3 



TIME-all which time, you, oiid your. /(ic/iurd ;//. i. 3 

full of dismal terror was the time.... — i. 4 

cited ii|) a thonsuud heavy times .... — j. 4 

Biieh leisure in the time of death .... — _i. 4 

and in good time (rep. iii. 1 and iv. 1) — ii. I 

a hapiiy time of day (>^p. iv. U — ii. I 

are all thing.s ready for that royal time? — iii. 4 

my noble loid, may iiunie the lime .. — iii. 4 

in happy time, here comes — iii. 4 

three times to-day my foot-cloth horse — I!!** 

I prophecy the fearful'st time to thee — iii. * 

at any time, to grace my stratagems — iii. & 

at your mcetest vantage of the time. . — iii. 6 

by just computation ot the time — iii. 

have, any time, recourse unto — iii. •'i 

mellowed by the stealing hoursof time — iii. 7 1 

the corruption of abusing time — iii. 7 

[Co(.K<i(.J within so small a time .... — iv. I 

could not at that time, have told me — iv. 2 

prophecy, the time would come — iv. 4 

left thee but a very prey to time — iv. 4 

the ruins of distressful times repaired — iv. 4 

ten times double gain of — iv. 4 

by the time to come (rep.) — iv. 4 

hereafter time, for time past — iv. 4 

not by time to come (rep.) — iv. 4 

the necessity, and state of times — iv. 4 

where and wliat time your majesty .. — iv. 4 

which, in king Edward's time, I wished — v. 1 

my heart is ten times lighter than .. — v. 3 

much about cock-shut time, from.... — v. 3 

advantage will deceive the time — v. 3 

and the fearful time cuts off — v.3 

why, then 'tis time to arm, and give — v. 3 

enforcement of the time forbids to . . — v. 3 

enrich the time to come with — v. 4 

whole time I was my chamber's .... Henri/ VIU. i. 1 

till this time, pomp was single — i. 1 

ten times more ugly than ever — i. 2 

heard him at any time speak aught 1 — i. 2 

I remember of such a time — i. 2 

'tis time to give them physic — i- 3 

along time out of play — i. 3 

longer than I have time to tell his years! — ii. 1 

when old time shall lead him to .... — ii. 1 

a most unlit time to disturb him .... — ii. 2 

I'll make you know your times of . . — ii. 2 

by this time, I know your bark — ii. 3 

you may then sjiare that time — ii- 4 

at all times to your will conformable — ii. 4 

course and process of this time — ii. 4 

I will be bold with time, and your .. — ii. 4 

let inc have time, and counsel, for .. — iii. 1 

the offer of this time, I cannot promise — iii. 2 

though now the time gives way to us — iii. 2 

vou have scarce time to steal — iii. 2 

for holy offices I have a time; a time to — iii. 2 

nature does require her times of .... — iii. 2 

but that time offered sorrow — iv. 1 

like rams in the old time of war — iv. 1 

the times, and titles, now are — iv. 2 

given in time had cured me — iv. 2 

times to repair our nature with (rep.) — v. I 

may find good time, and live — v. 1 

with which the time will load him .. — v. 1 

we trifle time away ;Ilong — v. 2 

hit three times on the head, three times — v. 3 

which time siiail bring to ripeness .. — v. 4 

for this play at this time, is only .... — (epil.) 

the next time I see her Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 1 

time must friend or end — i. 2 

be you my time to bring it to — i. 3 

loss of time, travel, expence — ii. 2 

fame, in time to come — ii. 2 

instructed by the antiquary times ,. — ii. 3 

for this time will 1 take my leave..., — iii. 2 

when time is old and hath forgot .... — iii. 2 

the advantage of the time prompts .. — iii. 3 

all that time, acquaintance — iii. 3 

time hath, my lord, a wallet — iii. 3 

for time is like a fashionable — iii. 3 

to envious and calumniating time .. — iii. 3 

an effeminate man in time of action — iii. 3 

six or seven times honoured — iii. 3 

bitter disposition of the time will .. .. — iv. 1 

time, force, and death, do to this body - iv. 2 

justles roughly by all time of pause.. — iv. 4 

injurious time now, with a robber's.. — iv. 4 

anticipating time with starting — iv. 5 

walked hand in hand with tiiiie .... — iv. a 

I have seen the time — I wonder now — iv. 5 

arbitrator, time, will one day end it — iv. 5 

I will the second time, as I would .. — iv. 5 

the time right deadly — V. 2 

when many times the captive — v.3 

and, at that time, bciiueath you — V. 11 

we'll share a bounteous time in . . Timon ofAth. i. 1 

what time o' day is' t — i. I 

time to be honest. Thattime — i. 1 

near? why then another time I'll hear — i. 2 

his days and times are past — ii. 1 

the time is unagreeable to this — ii. 2 

wherefore, ere this time, had you not — ii. 2 

at many times I brought in my .... — ii. 2 

fret now's a time, the greatest — ii. '-' 

lave found time to use them — ii. 2 

many a time and often 1 have — iii- 1 

Cttn'at use the time well, if the time. . — iii. I 

that this is no time to lend money .. — iii. I 

myself against such a good time .... — iii. 2 

it pleases time, and fortune, to lie .. — iii. A 

might purchase his own time — '.',!• ^ 

the giMid time of day to yon, sir — }.'!• "^ 

it (hies: but time will— and so — 111**' 

trencher-friends, time's flies, cap and — iii. 

then was a blessed time — iv. 3 

time hath made thee hard in't — iv. 3 

there is no time so miserable -~ iv. 3 

meet with tills time's guise — iv. 3 

strange times, that weep with laughing — iv. 3 



TIME— have feared false times. Timon u/Athem, iv. 3 

nothing at this time but my vi»itatioii — v. I 

promising is the very air o' the time — v. 1 

at all times alike men arc not (;rp.) — v.3 

time, with his fairer hand — v. 2 

filled t!ie time with all licentious .... — \.!> 

now the time is flush, when — v. 5 

there was a time, when all the Coriolanni, i. I 

it will in time win upon power — I. 1 

will the time serve to tell? — i. 6 

and, from this time, for what he did — i. 9 

and, at all times, to underciest — i. B 

'tis time it should he looked to — 1.9 

five times, Marcins, I have — i. in 

nor times of sacrifice — i. 10 

in which time, I will make a lip — ii. 1 

he comes the third time home — ii. I 

and 'twas time for him too, I'll warrant — ii. 1 

at some time when his soaring (rep.) — ii. 1 

ears and eyes for the time, but hearts — ii. 1 

is content to spend the time, to end it — ii. 2 

the dust on antique time would lie .. — ii. 3 

ready, when time shall prompt them — iii. 1 

which will in time break ope the .... — jii. 1 

one time will owe another — iii. 1 

than so much loss of time — iii. I 

the violent fit o' the time craves — iii. 8 

and when such time they have — iii. 3 

from time to time envied against .... — iii. 3 

so, if the time thrust forth a — iv. I 

the fittest time to corruiit a — iv. 3 

a hundred times hath broke — iv. 5 

beat me out twelve several times .. .. — iv. 5 

we stood to't in good time — iv. U 

a happier and more comely time .... — iv. u 

in the interpretation of the time .... — iv. 7 

yet one time he did call me — v. I 

111 the same time 'tis made? — v.3 

tlie interpretation of full time may . . — v.3 

keep your name living to time — v.3 

that so short a time can alter — V. 4 

'tis the first time that ever I wos .... — v. 5 
many a time and oft have you .... JulituCtetar, i. I 

men at some time are masters — i. 2 

and of these times. I shall recount .. — i. 2 

and find a time both meet to hear.... — i. 2 

as this time is like to lay upon us.... — i. 2 

every time gentler than other — i. 2 

then he offered it the third time (rep.) — i. 2 

for this time I will leave you — i. 2 

indeed, it is a strange-disposed time — i. 3 

of our souls, the time's abuse — ii. 1 

'tis time to part. But it is — ii. 1 

what a time have you chose out .. — ii. 1 

cowards die many times before — ii. 2 

yon are come in very happy time.... — ii. 2 

break up the senate till another time — ii. 2 

Tieboiiius knows his time ; for look — iii. I 

'tis but the time, and drawing days.. — iii. 1 

abridged ills time of fearing lieatli .. — ' iii. I 

how many times shall Caisar bleed in — iii. I 

that ever lived in the tide of times .. — iii. I 

1 remember the first time ever Ciesar — iii. 2 

iu such a time as this, it is nut — jv. 3 

his humour, wlien he knows his time — iv. 3 

young bloods look for a timeof rest.. — iv. 3 

the very last time we shall — v. I 

BO to prevent the time of life — v. 1 

time is come round, and, where I did — v.3 

I shall find time, Cassius, I shall (lep.) — v. 3 

two several times by night — v. 5 

wilt thou bestow tliy time with nn?.. — y. 
let's not conlound the time with A ntony 4 Cteo. i. 1 

and the time's state made friends of — i- 2 

I have seen lier die twenty times .... — i. 2 

in time we hate that which we oftcu — i. 3 

then was the time for words — i. 3 

strong necessity of time commands . . — i. 3 

to confound such time, that drums — i. 4 

'tis time we twain did show — i. i 

to front this present time — i. 4 

sleep out this great gap of time, my.. — i. 5 

and wrinkled deep in time? — i. 5 

like to the time o the year between.. — i. S 

a time for private stomaching (rep.) — ii.2 

you shall nave time to wrangle in .. — ii.2 

time calls upon us : of us must — ii.2 

being barbered ten times o'er — ii.2 

all which time, before the goils my .. — ii. 3 

that timel O times! I laughed him — ii. 6 

that long time have been barren .... — ii. 5 

muiij' times, madam. I urn paid.... — ii. 5 

take your time. Thou can'st not.... — ii. t> 

well deserved ten times as much .... — ii. li 

be a child o' the time — ii. 7 

the time shall not out-go my thinking — iii. 2 

be you not troubled with the lime .. — iii.fi 

from his time, what should not then — iii. 7 

with news the time's with labour..,. — iii. 7 

to try thy cloqneme, now 'tis time .. — iii. lO 

and at this time most easy 'tis — iii. II 

I must slay his time — iii. 1 1 

the next time I do fight — iii. II 

being twenty times of better fortune — iv. 2 

the time of universal peace is near .. — iv. G 

the time is come : thou strik'bt — iv. 12 

and time is at his period — iv. 12 

he shall in time be ready — v. 1 

who in the wars o' the time, died....Cti»il<eIin«, i. 1 

all the learnings that his time — i. I 

for this time, leave me — i. 2 

this gentleman at that time vouching -,. i b 

with five times so much conversation — i. .'i 

your service for this time is ended .. — i ti 

locking up the spirits a time — i. li 

in time she will not queueh — i. ti 

five times redeemed Iroiu death — i. U 

should at one time encounter such . . — i. 7 

I have outstood my time — i. 7 

one, two, tlirce,— time, timel — ii 2 



TIM 



TIME— some more time must wear . . Cymheline, ii. 3 

but abide the cliange of time — ii. 4 

Beemed the Dian ot that time — ii. 5 

stronger than it was at that time ..,• — !!'• ' 
the gap tliat we should make in time — iii. 2 
nay, many times, doth ill deserve..., — iii. 3 
than in all the fore-end of my time .. — ijj. 3 

were, in his time, thonglit false — iii. 4 

tlie time inviting thee? the perturbed — jji. 4 

but to win time to lose so bad — iii. 4 

all that good time will give us — in. 4 

but from this time fortli — ;;!• 5 

cure whereof, ray lord, 'tis time must — ii;. 5 
she said upon a time, (the bitterness — iii. 5 

and the time of their despatch — in. 7 

in tlie advantage of the time — iv. 1 

we'll leave you for this time — iv. 2 

hut time hath nothing blurred — iv. 2 

make good time with him — iv. 2 

»nd in time may make some* — iv. 2 

have turned my leaping time into — iv. 2 
and in a time when fearful wars .... — iv. 3 
the time's troublesome; we'll slip you — iv. 3 

and meet the time, as it seeks us — iv. 3 

by time let them be cleared ~ iv. 3 

in such a time, nothing becoming you — iv. 4 

wnste their time upon our note — iv. 4 

the time seems long; their blood — iv. 4 

'tis now the time to ask of whence . . — v 5 

in which time she purposed, by — v. 5 

and in time (when she had fitted you — v. 5 

let the time run on, to good — v. 5 

upon a time (unhappy was — v. 5 

but in short time, all offices — V. 5 

but nor the time, nor place — y- 5 

five times he hath returned Titus Andron.i. 1 

at dead time of the night — .ii. 3 

make us wondered at in time to come — i;;. 1 
now is a time to storm; why art .... — iii I 

chanced in the times of old — iii. 2 

what time I threw the people's .... — iv. 3 

till time beget some careful — iv. 3 

you must needs stay a time — iv. 3 

a thousand times more cause — v, 3 

even i' the time when it should move — v. 3 

many a time he danced thee on — v. 3 

born in these latter times Pericles, i. (Gower) 

played upon before your time — i. i 

your time's expired; either expound .. — i. 1 

'tis time to fear, when tyrants — i. 2 

that time of both this tr\ith — _i. 2 

1 see that time's the king of men — ii. 3 

and waste the time, which looks for .. — ii. 3 

if in whicli time expired ___ — ii. 4 

and time that is so briefly spent. . — m. (Gower) 
nor have I time to give ihee hallowed — iii. 1 
strong renown as time shall never .... — jii. 2 

even on my j'earning time — iii. 4 

I carry winged time post on — iv. (Gower) 

not worth the time of day — iv. 4 

thus time we waste, and longest — iv. 4 (Gower) 

advanced in time to great — iv. 4 (Gower) 

but time hath rooted out my — v. I 

a second time within these arms — y. 3 

should in this trice of time commit Lear, i . 1 

time shall unfold what plaited cunning — i. 1 
the best and soundest of his time hath .. — i. 1 
world bitter to the best of our times — i. 2 (let.) 

we have seen the best of our time — i. 2 

till some little time hath qualified — ;. 2 

for being old before thy time — .j. 5 

you may then in time ~ n. 1 

better faces in my time — n.2 

some time I shall sleep out, the rest — ii.2 

and shall find time from this enormous. . — ii. 2 

some other time for that — ii. 4 

and in good time you gave it — li. 4 

then comes the time, who lives — Jji- 2 

for I live before his time — iii. 2 

had at thy gate howled that stern time . . — iii. 7 

'tis the times' plague, when madmen — iv. 1 

time and place will be fruitfully — iv. 6 (letter) 

and, in the mature time, with this — iv. 6 

till time and I think meet — iv. 7 

even o'er tlie time he has lost — iv. 7 

'tistime to look about; the powers — iv. 7 

when time shall serve, let but — v. 1 

we will greet the time — v. 1 

that men are as the time is — v. 3 

at this time, we sweat, and bleed — v. 3 

the time will bring it out — v. 3 

the time will not allow the compliment.. — v. 3 

nay, send in time. Run, run — v. 3 

the weight of this sad time we must — — y. 3 
for this time all the rest depart ..liomeo ^Juliet, i. 1 

to the learned: in good time — i- 2 

since that time it is eleven years .... — i- 3 

time out of mind the fairies' — i. 4 

marry, 'tis time,— well said _— i. 5 

power, time means to meet — i. 6 (chorus) 

a tlionsand times good night! (?'cp.).. — ii.2 
keeps time, distance, and proportion — ii. 4 

av, a thousand times. Peterl — li. 4 

w'hich ten times faster glide than .... — _]]■!> 

till we can find a time to blaze — iji. 3 

hundred thousand times more joy .. — iij. 3 
he sliall signify from time to time . . — iii- 3 
not had time to move our daughter.. — iii. 4 
tliese times of woe afford no time to woo — iii. i 
Bweet discourses in our time to come — iii- 5 
comes well in such a needful time .. — ij|. S 
madam, in happy time, whatday.... — iii. 5 
[;Co(.K7i(.]day, night, hour, tide, time — lii. & 
coinpare, so many thousand times .. — ill. 5 
on Thursday, sir? the time is very short — iv. 1 

we must entreat the time alone — iv. 1 

out of thy long-experienced time .... — iv. 1 
shall be much unfurnished for this time — iv. 2 
till Thursday; there is time enough — iv. 2 

I wake before the time that Romeo.. — iv. 3 



— i. 2 



— 11. 2 

— ii. 2 

— ii. 2 



— iii. i 
1 



— iii. 2 

— iii. 2 

— iii. 2 



— iii. 4 



— IV. 7 



[_274] 

TIME— mouse-hunt in your time. Romeo^ Juliet, iv 

accursed time I (?-ep.) — iv. 

most miserable hour, that e'er time saw — iv. 

'tis no time to play now — iv, 

the time and my intents are savage-wild — v, 
as the time and place doth make .... — v, 
being the time the potion's force .... — v, 

ere the ti me of her awakening — v, 

some liour before his time — v. 

that usurp'st this time of night Hamlet, i. 

60 hallowed and so gracious is the time . . — i. 
and for this time of meeting, thus much — i. 

time be thine, and thy best graces 

both in time, form of the thing — 

given private time to you — 

trora tnis time, be somewhat scanter (rep.) — 
at such times seeing me, never shall .... — 
the time is out of joint; O cursed spite!.. — 

here in our court some little time — 

as to expend your time with us a while. . — 
and time is time, were nothing but (rep.) — 

as they fell out by time, by means _ — 

hath there been such a time ^I'd fain 

at such a time I'll loose my 

haply, he's the second time come .... 
abstract, and brief chronicles, of the time — 

bear the whips and scorns of time ._ 

some time a paradox, but now the time. . 

or time to act them in 

and tlie very age and body of the time .. 

full thirty times hath Phoebus' cart 

have times twelve thirties been 

a second time I kill ray husband dead ,, 

drugs fit, and tirae agreeing 

we shall obey, were she ten times 

'tis now the very witching tirae of night 
lapsed in time and passion, lets go by . . . . 
doth temperately keep time, and makes 

in the fatness of these pursy times 

chief good, and market of his time — iv, 

O, from this time forth, my thoughts... — iv 

tears, seven times salt, burn out — iv 

love is begun by time; and that I see.... — iv 
time qualifies the spark and fire of it ... , — iv 
convenience, both of time and means .... — 
which time, she chanted snatches .... 

the time, for, ah, my behove, O — 
in's time a great buyer of land ........ 

borne me on his back a thousand times . . — 
fall ten times treble on tliat cursed 
it is the breathing time of day .... 

only got the tune of the time — 

or that you will take longer tirae — 

in happy tirae. The queen desires you .. — 

but till that tirae, I do receive your — 

had I but time (as this fell sergeant — 

in good tirae, must his lieutenant be . , , . Othello. 

wears out his time, much like his — 

what's to come of my despised time 

nine or ten times I had thought 

till fit time of law, and course of direct .. 

in council! in this time of night? 

with thee : we must obey the time 

looked upon the world for four times .... — 

many events in the womb of time — 

if I would time expend with such a snipe — 
after some tirae, to abuse Othello's ear .. 
which the time shall more favourably . , 

on some odd time of liis infirmity 

as the time, the place, and the condition 
man living, may be drunk at some time 

and wit depends on dilatory time 

in happy time, lago. You have not been 

where you shall have time to speak 

some other tirae. But shall't be shortly? 

1 pray thee, name the time ; but let 

aud many a time, when I have spoken . . 
leave it to tirae: and though it be fit .... 

hath a hundred tiraes wooed me 

a raan, that all his tirae, hath founded .. 

than tlie dial eight score times? 

in a more continuate time, strike off .... 

and leave me for tliis time 

but yet keep time in all 

O a thousand, a thousand tiraes 

for the time of scorn to point his slow .... 
what place? what time? what form? .... 

the act of shame a thousand times 

more impediments than twenty times . . 

from this tirae forth I never will speak ,, — v. 

the tirae, the place, the torture — v. 

TIME-BEWASTED light, shall be ..Richard II. i. 

TIMED with dying cries Coriolanus, ii. 

TIME-HONOURED Lancaster Richard 11. i. 

■riMELESS-your tiraeless grave. TuioGen.of t'er. iii. 

bloody office of his timeless er\d.... Richard 11. iv. 

behold thy tiraeless cruel death?. ... 1 Henry VI. v. 

duke Huraphrey's timeless death ..2Henryf'I. iii. 

for tlieir parents' timeless death ... .3 Henry VI. v. 

the causer of the timeless deaths of. Richard III. i. 

complot of this timeless tragedy. .TitusAndron. ii. 

hath been his timeless end Romeo ^Juliet, v. 

TIMELIER than ray purpose .... Antony ScCleo. ii. 
TIMELY— in ray timely death. Comei/i/ of Errors, i. 

command me to call timely on him ..Macbeth, ii. 

to gain the timely inn — iii. 

or, timely knowing, the remedy ....Cymheline, i. 

TIMELY-PARTED ghost 2 Henni VI. iii. 

TIME-PLEASER; an affectioned.7'«'f///AA';s'A(, ii. 

called them time-pleasers Coriolanus, iii. 

TIMON lau"h at idle toysl Love's L. Lost, iy. 

for the lord Timon, sir? {rep.) ..Tijnon of Athens, i, 

raost rich in Timon'e nod — i. 

personate of lord Timon's frame (rep.) — i. 

most noble Timon, call the (rep.).... — i. 

when thou art Timon's dog (.rep.) .... — i. 

art going to lord Timon's feast (rep.) — i. 

most honoured Timon, 't hath (rep.) — i. 

what a number of men eat Tiraon .. — i. 

Timon, those healths will make (rep.) — i. 



TIR 



— V. 1 

1 
I 

— V. 2 



1 

— i. 1 

— i. 2 

— i. 2 

— i. 2 

3 



— i. 3 



— i. 3 
_ ii. 1 

— ii. 3 



— 11.3 

— iii. 1 

— iii. 1 

— iii. 3 



— lii, 3 



— iv. 2 

— V. 2 



TIMON-thee, worthy Timon (rep.).TimonofAth. i. 2 
thou giv'st so long, Timon, I fear me — i. 2 

dog, and give it Tiraon frep.) — ii. 1 

and haste you to lord Tiraon (i-fp.).. — ii. 1 

this is to lord Tiraon (rep.) — ii.2 

aside, aside; here coraes lord Timon — ii.2 

who is not Timon's? (rep.) — ii.2 

that Timon's fortunes 'raong his friends — ii. 2 
one of lord Tiraon's men? (rep, iii. 4) — iii. 1 

who, the lord Tiraon? (rep.) — iii. 2 

I was sending to use lord Timon rayself — iii. 2 
as you said, 'JTimon is shrunk, indeed — iii. 2 
Timon has been tliis lord's father (7-ep.) — iii. 2 
I never tasted Timon in ray life .... — iii. 2 

winter in lord Timon's purse — iii. 4 

wears jewels now of Tiraon's "ift (rep.) — iii. 4 

this is Timon's last; who stuck — iii. 6 

hated be of Timon , man , and all ... . — i i i . 6 
the quality of lord Timon's fury?.... — iii. (i 
lord Tiraon's mad. I feel 't upon .... — iii. B 

Timon will to the woods — iv. I 

and grant, as Timon grows, his hate — iv. 1 
yet do our hearts wear Timon's livery — iv. 2 
for Tiraon's sake, let's yet be fellows — iv. 2 

yea, himself, Timon disdains — iv. 3 

the noble Timon to this change? (rep.) — iv. 3 
little gold of late, brave Timon (rep.) — iv. 3 

ay, Timon, and have cause — iv. 3 

why me, Timon? That, by killing .. — iv. 3 

give us some gold, good Tiraon — iv. 3 

farewell Timon; ii I thrive well .... — iv. 3 
and have forgot that ever Timon was — iv. 3 

where liest o nights, Timon? — iv. 3 

Willi the beasts? Ay, Timon — iv. 3 

then, Timon, presently prepare — iv. 3 

eat, Timon, and abhor them — iv. 3 

save thee, Tiraon. Now, thieves? .... — iv. 3 

hail, worthy Timon! Our late — v. I 

would speaic with Tiraon (rep.) — v. 2 

lord Timon! Tiraon! look out (lep.) — v. 2 
worthy Timon,— Of none but such (rep.) — v. 2 
lack of Timon's aid, hath sense (rep.) — v. 2 
know this of Timon, that — Tiraon (rep.) — v. 2 
Tiraon hath made his everlasting (>ep.) — v. 2 
much hazard, if they bring not "Timon — v. 3 
from Alcibiades to Timon 6 cave .... — v. 3 
no talk of Timon, nothing of him.... — v. 3 

Tiraon is dead (rep. v. 6) — v. 4 

so did we woo transformed Timon .. — v. 5 
those enemies of Timon's, and mine own — v. a 
here lie I, Timon; who, alive .. — v. 5 (epitaph) 
d(^ad is noble Timon; of whose memory — v. 5 
TIMOR— gelidus timer occupat artus.2Herir!/ /'/. iv. 1 
TIMOROUS— like a timorous thief.... .4«'s »'eH, ii. 5 
half so timorous [Co^-treacherous] . . I Henry VI. i. 5 

music to thy tiraorous soul — iv. 2 

of England's timorous deer — iv. 2 

ah, timorous wretch! thou hast ....ZllenryVI.i.l 

but with his timorous dreams Richard 111. i\. I 

with like timorous accent, and dire yell.O//ieHo, i. ] 

TIMOROUSLY confess the manner. Richard til. iii. 5 

TINCT— the tinet and multiplying .... All's Well, v. 3 

with his tinct gilded thee ..Antony ^Cleopatra, i. 5 

with blue of heaven's own tinct .... Cymbeline, ii. 2 

as will not leave their tinct Hamlet, iii. 4 

TINCTURE of her face ....TwoGen.nf Verona, iv. i 

if you can bring tincture Winter's Tale, iii. 2 

shall press for tinctures, stains.... Julius Ciesar, ii. 2 

TINDER-strike on the tinder Othello, i. 1 

TINDER-BOX— of this tinder-box.. iVerry Wives, i. 3 
TINDER-LIKE upon too trivial .... Coriolanus, ii. 1 

TINGLING-a whoreson tingling ^HenrylV. i. 2 

TINKER— to gabble like tinkers.. rii-elfihNight, ii. 3 
Tom Snout, the tinker (rep. iv. ])..Mid.N.'sDr. i. 2 
present profession a tinker? .. TamivgofSh. 2 (ind.) 
and not a tinker, nor Christophero Sly — 2 (ind.) 
if tinkers may have ieave.Winter'sTate, iv. 2 (song) 
and married a tinker's wife within .. — iv. 2 

drink with any tinker \ Henry IV. ii. 4 

sent from a sort of tinkers 2 Henry >'/. iii. 2 

TINSEL— with a blueish tinsel Much Ado, iii. 4 

TINY-and a little tiny hoy.Tu:elflh Niglu, v. 1 (song) 
any pretty little tiny kick-shaws ..iHenrylV. v. 1 

welcome, my little tiny thief — v. 3 

lie that has a little tiny wit Lear, iii. 2 (song) 

TIP— we'll tip thy horns with gold .... Much Ado, v. 4 

to the very tip of the nose . . Troilus ^ Cressida, iii. 1 

that tips with silver all these . . Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 2 

TIPPED— than one tipped with horn.. Much Ado, v. 4 

TIPPLING with a slave Antony i- Cleopatra, i. 4 

TIPSY— of the tipsy Bacchanals.il/irf.iV.'sCjeain, v. 1 
TIP-TOE— will stand a tip- toe when .. Henry V. iv. 3 
stands tip-toe on the misty ....Romeo z^- Juliet, iii. 5 
TIRE— if I had such a tire ..TwoGen.o/Verona,iv. 4 
any tire of Venetian admittance.. ,^/erri//r'»i'es, iii. 3 
tire the hearer with a book of words. .ii/wcA/lrfo, i. I 
I like the new tire within excellently — iii. 4 
that yet would never tire (rep.). Mid. N. Dream, iii. I 

it speeds too fast, 'twill tire Love's L. Lost, ii. 1 

long-during action, tires the sinewy — iv. 3 
have stayed to tire your royalty., Winter'sTale, i. 2 

your sad tires in a mile-a — iv. 2 (song) 

lie tires betimes, that spurs Richard II. ii. I 

tire on the flesh of me, and of my .... 3 Hmry I' I. i. 1 
in the day of battle, tire thee more. Richard III. iv. 4 

his way, self-raettle tires him Henry I' 1 1 1. i. 1 

with surplus, to tire in repetition.... Corj'o/artus, i. 1 
then put my tires and mantles . .Antony SrCleo. ii. 6 
having rich tire about you, should at..Periclfs, iii. 2 

[_Kni.'} creation does tire the ingener Othello, ii. 1 

TIRED out of breath TwelfthNight, iii. 4 

the tired horse his rider Love'sL. Lost, iv. 2 

fie, fie on all tired jades ! Taming of Shrew, iv. 1 

my horse is tired; my master — iv. \ 

when gentlemen are tired.. . .Comedy of Errors, iv. 3 
tired raajestj' did make thee offer . . Ricltard II. iv. 1 
spur-galled, aud tired, by jauncing .. — v. 5 
and when thou hast tired thyself . . 1 Henry I I^.ii. 4 

as tedious as is a tired horse — iii. I 

though patience be a tired mare Henry V. ii. I 



TIllED-trnth tired witli iteration. froiV. trCreit. iii. 2 
yt'U, mv inemorv is lirert Coriofcjniii, i. 9 

tliciii fti't tircil. l)nn, in 11 wonl — iv. 5 

of Tilivvdiil 1 tliu tiail Ciesur JuUmCo'tar, i. 2 

I liiivi' tiriil iiiv^il'; "">' 'or two ..C<jtnMine, iii. B 
wo not lie tinil witli tliis mlo .... 7V(iij.liii(i-oii. ii. 1 
till I'lirtinii'. tinil witli (loiiiK bad. I'eiiclei, ii. iGow.) 

within II .lull, sliiio, tireillwd Leur, i. 2 

TIKK-VAl.l.VN' l". or UMV t\Te of.. Merry ll'ivri. ill. 3 
TIltING— lit siwnds in tiling., Comedij of Errors, u. 2 

tlie posts come tirinc on 2Hf)ir!//<'. (iiKiiie.) 

tliut were mv tlioiiclits tiring 7Vnioii qr Alh. iii. U 

witness tile tirinn day Tilia .4mlronlcin, v. 2 

TlKlt.V-1-Utli.V eliunts Winter iTalr, iv. 2 (song) 

TUtlUl'— tlu^e tirritsand frigl>t9....'-Hfiir!/"-.ii. < 

1 IK'S r_i>iuv tliou tir'st on Cymbetlne, iii. 4 

TIMCK, tlic deputv -' UenryW. u. 4 

TtSSl'K— (.ciotli or gold, of tissue) /("'ojiycS- Cleo. ii. 2 

TIT.VN Itiss a dish of butter? (rep.) Ulfiiry/r. ii. 4 

let Titan rise as early as he. Troilm ff Cresxtda, y. 1 1 

toueli of common-kissing Titan Cymbeline, iii. 4 

on Koine, as Titan's rays Tiliis .Indrumcui, 1.2 

thy clveelis look red as Titan's face .. — ii. S 
pathway, made liy Titan's wlieels.ft»mco * Jul. ii. 3 

TlTANrA— proud Titania Mid.y's. Dream. i\.-I 

for shame. 'ritania, glance at my — ii. 2 

should Titania cross her Oberon?.... — u. 2 

watch Titania when she is asleep — u. 2 

there sleeps Titania, some time of .. — ".2 

I wonder, if Titania 1)0 awaked — iij. 2 

t«o it came to pass) Titania waked .. — m. 2 

now, mv Titania; wuke you — iv. 1 

TITHE of a hair was never lost \ Henry If. iii. 3 

every tithe soul, 'monest matiy. Troilus ^ Cress li. 2 
TITH'KD— anda titlied'death ..Tiinonof Alhens,v. 5 
TlTllE-PIU— a titlie-pig's tail ..Romeo ^ Juliet, i. 4 

TITINIUS, aaa sick girl JiUiux Cwsar, i. 2 

Lucius and TitininsRuard our door.. — iv. 2 

LueiliusandTitinius, bidthe — iv. 3 

come in, Titiniiis: welcome good .... — iv. 3 
guod-night, Titinins: noble, noble .. — iv. 3 

stand fast, Titinius: we must out — v. 1 

O, look, Titinius, look (irp.) — v. 3 

Titinius, if tlioulovest me (rep.) — v. 3 

Titinius is enclosed round about (rep.) — v. 3 
it is but change, Titinius; for Octavius — v. 3 
seek him, Titinius; whilst I go to .. — v. 3 
Cassius'sword.andflnd Titinius' heart — v. 3 
Titinius mourning it. Titinius' face — v. 3 
brave Titinius; look, whe'r he have — v. 3 

thou diest as bravely as Titinius — — v. 4 

TITLE— or unduteous title litcrry irives, v. 5 

tlie justice of your title to him. Meas./orMeas. iv. 1 
his dressings, cliaraets, titles, forms.. — v. 1 

I go under that title, because I Much Ado. ii. I 

think you of a worse title, and I will — iii. 2 
yield thy crazed title to my certain ..Mid. N. Dr. i. 1 
as an appertinent title to your ... Love'sL.Loti, i. 2 

to liave his title live in Aquitain — ii. I 

for tittles? titles; for thyself, me — iv. 1 (let.) 

a title to Plioebe, to Luna, to the — — iv. 2 
once more what title thou dost . . Mer. of Venice ii. 9 
that I had a title good enough to .... — iii. 1 

may lawfully make title to as /(H's KW;, i . 3 

'tis nnly title thou disdain'st in her .. — ii. 3 

should go, not by the title — ii. 3 

to which title, age cannot bring thee .. — ;;. 3 

is to be a great part of your title — ii. 4 

a title for a muid.of all titles. Taming of Shrew, i. 2 
and seal the title with a lovely kiss? — iii. 2 
that vulgars give bold titles .... Winter' sTale, ii. 1 

1 am proof against that title — iv. 3 

with his former title greet Macbeth ...Macbeth, i. 2 

by which title, before, these weird — i. v (let ) 

his mansion, and his titles, in a — iv. 2 

thy title is affeered 1 fare thee — iv. 3 

now does he feel his title hang — v. 2 

himself could not pronounce a title .. — y. 7 

usurpingly these several titles KingJohn, i. I 

that bars the title of thy son — ii. 1 

wliosc title they aflniit, Arthur's or .. — li. I 
to verify our title with their lives .... — ii. i 
and make her rich in titles, honours .. — ii. 2 

to stop Arthur's title in the whole — ii. 2 

(having so great a title to be more prince) — iv. 1 

to guard a title that was rich — iv. 2 

aild an immortal title to your crown I WicAorrf //. i. 1 

barely in title: not in revenue — ii. 1 

must find that title in your tongue — ii. 3 

to raze one title of your honour — ii. 3 

to be brief, left I his title out — iii. 3 

I have no name, no title, no — Iv. 1 

lost that title of rcsiiect which the ...\ Henry W.i. 3 
Jloitimcr doth stir about his title .. — ii. 3 

oil the titles of good fellowship — ii. 4 

military, title capital — iii. 2 

to |)ry into his title, the which — iv. 3 

a lx)rmwed title hant thou bought ... — v. 3 

than those proud titles thou — v. 4 

of his true titles to some certain .... Henry V. i. 1 

with oiwning titles miscreate — i. 2 

make claim and title to the crown .. — i. 2 

to fine his title with some show — i. 2 

king Pepin's title, and Hugh Capet's — i. 2 

in right and title of the female — i. 2 

tiieir crooked titles usiiriK'd from .... — i. 2 

with titles lilown from axlulation? .. — iv. 1 
the farced title running 'fore the king — iv. I 
Mnrtiiners, in whom the title rested. W/<r)ir[/»7. ii i 
and not have title of an earldom here — iii. 3 

magiiify'st with ail these titles — iv. 7 

cither accept the title thou usurp'st., — v. 4 
although in glorious titles he excel .. — v..') 

deliver up my title in the qiieon iHenryfl. i. 1 

}oor grace's title sliall tie multiplied — i. 2 
Bin I a queen in title and in style.... — i. 3 
craving your opinion of my title .... — ii. 2 
or pell my title for a glorious grave .. — iii. 1 
under the title of John Mortimer.... — iii. I 
■ tlic title of this most rciiowDcd duke — v. 1 



[ 775 J_ 

TITLE to the crown? (n-p.) iUenryyU. I 

my title'" good, and better — }• • 

my title'- weak; tell me — '•• ' 

be thy title riglit or wrong — !• 1 

write'up his title with usurping — >• ' 

bears the title of a king — 1-2 

our title still had slept — ii. 2 

whiles Warwick tells liis title — m- 1 

the lustful Edward's title buried .... — iii. 2 
niischaiiee liutii trod my title down.. — in. 3 

usurps the regal title — "!■ 3 

but if your title to the crown — 1". 3 

raise my state to title of a queen — iv. I 

but as this title honours me — jv. I 

forget our title to the crown — iv. 7 

fight, if you pretend no title? — iv. 7 

princes nave but their titles for — Richard III. i. 4 
between their titles, and low name .. — i. 4 
as I had title in thy noble husband 1 — .ji. 2 

that miglit have kept that title — ii). 1 

salute you with this royal title — iii- 7 

from that kingly titlel — iv- 1 

than is tlie doting title of a mother .. — iv. 4 

under what title shall I woo — iv. 1 

to wail the title as her mother doth . . — iv. 4 
but how hmg shall that title, ever, last — iv. 4 

a proper title of a peaoe Heurijl'lll. i. 1 

how grounded he his title to the .... — '■ 2 

to bear that load of title? — !;• 3 

to which title, a thousand pound a year — _ii. 3 
willingly that noble title your master — iii. 1 
since the cardinal fell, that title's lost — iv. 1 
tlie times, and titles, now are altered — iv. 2 

fewof you deserve that title — .v. 2 

Olid lordship are my titles .. TroilusfyCresMa, in. I 
charitable title from thousands.... 7'imo)io/yl(A. i. 2 
give them title, knee, and approbation — iv. 3 
where gentry, title, wisdom cannot. Corio/mim, iii. I 
name my courage, prove my titlel. /«/i(o»!/ <^C/po.y. 2 

but had his titles by Tenantius Cymbeline, i. 1 

you may wear her in title yours .... — i. 6 

are titles but of scorn — v. 2 

plead my successive title with your .. Titus And. 1. 1 
be, as your titles witness, imperious.. — v. 1 
first, sir, I pray, what is your title? ... . rericles, v. 1 

all thy other titles thou hast given Lear, i. 4 

charms in it, whose title more — v. 3 

strike, and prove my title thine — v. 3 

which he owes without that title.fiomfo 4r Juliet, ii. 2 

my title, and my perfect soul, shall OihMo, i. 2 

TITLED goddess; and worth it, with../4i('s(»'eH, iv. 2 

as amply titled as Achilles is ..TroilnsSrCrcss. ii. 3 

TITLE-LEAF, foretels the nature ..illenryll'. i. 1 

TITLELESS, till he had forged ConVanus, v. 1 

TITLE-PAGE— as in a title-page I'ericlis, n. 3 

TITTLES? titles; for thyself?.. Low's L.L. iv. 1 (let.) 

TITTLE-TATTLING before all our. Winter'sT.iw. 3 

TITUS isec ANDRONICUS and LARTIUS] 

your young nephew Titus lost . . Tirelflh Mght, v. 1 

good-morrow, Titus and Hortensius. Tim. ofAth. iii.4 

put in now, Titus. My lord — iii.4 

odvance, brave Titus Coriotanus, \. 4 

then, valiant Titus, take convenient — ;• 5 
as is the wind: deliver him, Titus .. — 1.9 

renowned Titus (rep. i.2) Titus Andronicus, i. 1 

thy noble brother Titus, and his sons — i. 1 
Titus, unkind, and careless of thine — j- 2 

gracious conqueror, victorious Titus — i. 2 

thrice-noble Titus, spare my flrst-born — i. 2 

to tremble under Titus' threatening look — i. 2 
honour live lord Titus longi (rep.) .. — i. 2 

Titus thou shalt obtain and ask — i. 2 

that noble-minded Titue means to thee! — i. 2 

for an onset, Titus, to advance — i. 2 

thanks, noble Titus (rep.) — >. "^ 

lord Titus, by your leave, this maid is — i. 2 
no, Titus, no; the emperor needs — — i. 2 
Titus, when wert thou wont to walk — i. 2 

Titus, see. O see, what thou hast donel — i. 2' 

noble gentleman, lord Titus here — i. 2 

fur good lord Titus' innocence in all — j. 2 

take Titus' part, and so supplant .... — i. 2 

rise, Titus, rise; my empress hath.... — 1.2 

Titus, I am incorporate in Home — i. 2 

be it so, 'Titus, and gramercy too — __i. 2 

Titus, prepare thy iioljle eyes to — — iii 1 

good Titus, dry thine eyes — iii. I 

or thyself, idd Titus, or any one of you — iii. I 

becomes not Titus' brother — iii. 2 

bear the faults of Titus' age — iv. 4 

but, Titus, I have touched thee — iv- 4 

Titus, I am come to talk with — v. 2 

my brothcrl 'tis sad Titus calls — v. 2 

which the careful Titus hath ordained — v. 3 
the villain is alive in Titus' house .. — v. 3 
what cause liad Titus to revenge .... — v. 3 

80, go into old Titus' sorrowful house — v. 3 
AD-toads, beetles, bats Trmpeit,}. 2 

like the toad, ugly, and venomous. y4»!/oi( Life if.ii. 1 

adders' heads, and toads .'. n'inler'i Tale, iv. 3 

toad that under coldest stone Macbflh, iy. 1 

heavy-Baited toads, lie in Richard II. iii. 2 

as venom toads, or lizards' dreadful. . 3 //<'iirj/ ;'/. ii. 2 
can wisli to adders, spiders, toads . . Richard 111. i. 2 
never hung poison on a fouler toad. . — i. 2 
poisonous hunch-backed toad (rrp. iv. 4) — i. 3 

thou toad, thou toad, where is thy .. — ly. 4 

1 hate the engendering of toads. 7Voi(iu ^ Cress, ii. 3 

a toad, a lizaril, an 3wl — v. I 

engenders the black toad 7'i»ioiiit/'.4'/i«ii, iv. 3 

sliivel ToodI Kogiie, rogue, rogue! .. — iv. 3 

were't toad, or adilcr, spider Cynibrllne, ly. 2 

ten thousand swelling toads .. TOui.4rirfrofiicu», ii. 3 

as loathsome as a toad amongst — }\- '^ 

thetoail, the tadpole, the wall-newt /.rar, iii. 4 

had as 1 ief sec a toad ( r,p. ) Romro <S- Juliet, i i . 4 

the lark ond loathed toad change eyes — in. 5 
I had rother be o toad, and live iiimn ..OlhcUo. in. 3 
for foul toiids to knot and gender in! .... — iv. 2 

TO.VD-bPOTTED traitor Lear, v. 3 



TOAD'S-STOOL, learn me.... 7roilu,^Creiiidi, ii. I 

TO-AND-FRO, as this mullitudc.. ..2(lfi.r|//;. iv. 8 

to out-scorn tile to-aiid-fro conllicting ..l.ear,\\i. 1 

T(J.\ST— put a toast in't Merry llim, iii. .'j 

none but such toasts and butter ....I Henry 1 1', iv. 2 

lis rlieumatic as two dry toa.sts *Ztleuryir, 11. 4 

it will toast cheese; and it will /l<-iii|;r. ii. 1 

or made a toost for Neptune. . Trollus 4 Crestida, i. 3 

TOASTED— piece of toasted cheese.. Jl/cirj/ " irei, v. ^ 

(.tiiikfl with eating toasted cheese ..'iHeuryl'l. iv. 7 

tills piece of toasted cheese will do't Lear, iv. 6 

TOASTING-IRON, that you shall ..KingJohn, iv. 3 

TOBY-by my troth, sir 'Toby TtrelfthNighl, i. 3 

sir Toby Belch 1 how now, sir Toliy — i. 3 

ride home to-morrow, sir Toby Iri-p.) — i. 3 

if sir Toby would leave drinking — i. :> 

sir 'Poby will be sworn, that I — 16 

sir Toby, madam, your kinsman .... — i. .^ 

good hirToby (rep. ii. 3 and iii. 4).... — i. .'• 

sir Toby, I must be round witli you — ii.3 

sir Toljy, there you lie — ii.3 

sweet sir Toby, be patient for — ii.3 

to ask for my kinsman Toby — Ii. .'j 

Toby approaches; court'sies there to me — ii. 5 
and does not Toby take you a blow.. — ii. 5 

cousin Toby (rra. iii. 4) — ii. 

I will baffle sir Toby, I will — ii. S 

thisis a dear maiiakin to you, sir Toby — iii. 2 
no worse man than sir Touy to look — iii.4 

sir Toby, my lady prays you to — iii.4 

hold Toby ; on thy life — iv. I 

I'll call sir Toby the whilst — iv. 2 

Bonos dies, sir 'foby — iv. 2 

send one pre.'iently to sir Toby — v. 1 

Olid has given sir Toby a bkmdy — v. 1 

I was set on to do't by sir Toby — v. 1 

here comes sir Toby halting — V. 1 

he's drunk, sir Toby, an hour — v. I 

I'll help you, sir Toby — v. I 

and to frown upon sir Toby — v. I 

myself, and Toby, set this device {rep.) — v. 1 

TODS; every tod yields llinter'sTale,iv.2 

TO-DAY- so much sock as I to-day? .. Tempest, iii. 2 
what stir is this to-day? .... TuoCen.of I'erona, v. 4 

well, I shall see her to-day Merry Hives, i. 4 

no school to-day? No — iv. I 

was to-day with my lady Twdtlh Kight, ii. 3 

to-day, my lord — v. 1 

hove given it you to-day morning .. — v. 1 
inquired for me here to-day?. . ..Meas.forMeas. iv. I 

1 will not die to-doy for any man's .. — iv. 3 

for thence will not 1 to-day — iv. 3 

what was it you told me of to-doy?. . Much Ado, ii. 3 

as, to be a Dutchman to-day — iii. 2 

ore you yet determined to-day to marry — v. 4 
well, lords, to-day we shall have. Lore's L. Lost, iv. I 

I do dine to-day at the father's — iv. 2 

a fairer face not washed to-day — iv. 3 

that you to-day promised to tell..il/er.()/'/'e«ice. i. I 
must measure twenty miles to-duy .. — iii.4 
to determine this, come liere to-day — iv. 1 

to-da3', my lord of Amiens .4syouLihe it, ii. I 

can well observe to-day in our youug.. All'siretl, i. 2 

I saw the man to-day, if man — v. 3 

to-day picked out the dullest.. 7'aminyo/SA. 1 (ind.) 
will your honour wear to-day? .... — 2 (indue.) 
you think to dine with me to-day .. — iii. 2 
I must away to-day, before niglit.... — iii. 2 

I will not go to-day (rep. iv. 3) — iii. 2 

she cat no meat to-day — iv. 1 

such a day to-morrow as to-doy .. Winter'sTale, i. 2 
who, but to-day, hammered of this .. — ii. 2 
penitent for your default to-day.. Comedy of Err. i. 2 

I'll dine above with you to-dny — ii. 2 

not dined to-day. Nor to-day here .. — iii. 1 
been Diomio to-day in my place .... — iii. I 
tlie chain, you promised me to-day?! — iv. 3 

he told to-day at dinner — iv. 3 

is in a wayward mood to-day — iv. 4 

lock me forth to-daj', and why dost.. — iv. 4 

all in rage, to-doy came to my — iv. 4 

and put to sea to-day — v. 1 

and my sister, to-day did dine ti'gether — v. I 
of you two did dine witli me to-day? — v. 1 

kitehened mcfor you to. day at — v. 1 

goes the king from hence to-day? .... Macbeth, ii. 3 

you look pale to-day KingJohn, iv. I 

"once more to-doy well met — iv. 3 

which if to-day thou shed, lament ..Richard It. i. 3 
let not to-morrow then ensue to-day — ii. I 
your lordship: to-day, as I came by — ii. 2 

to-day, to-day, unhappy day — iii. 2 

to-day will I set forth, 'Wi-morrow ..MlemylF. ii. 3 
how many liast thou killed to-diiy?.. — ii. 4 

1 am a rogue, if I drunk to-day — ii. 4 

earl of Westmoreland set forth to-doy — iii. 2 
Worcester's horse come but to-day .. — iv. 3 
no man might ilrow short breath to-day — v. 2 

Staftbrd dear to-day hath liouglit — v. 3 

not struck so fat odccr to-day ]Henryll'. v. 4 

if thou embowel me to-day — v. 4 

upon our party slain to-duy — v..') 

shown U|Kin our crests to-doy — v. 5 

to-day might I, hanging on ilUnrylV. ii.3 

not we, hath safely fought to-day — iv. 2 

he is not tliere to-day — iv. 4 

bade inc ask for it to-day HeuryV. ii. 2 

not to-day, O Ixird, O not to-day — iv. 1 

French gallants, shall to-day draw out — iv. 2 

and light valiantly to-doy — iv. 3 

in England, that do no work to-doy! — iv. 3 

for he, to-<lay that sheds his hlooil — iv. 3 

why wear you your leek to-day? .... — v. I 
I will moke you to-doy o squire of .. — v. I 
tills brawl to-doy grown to this ....Mlcnryt'l.ii. 4 
French, then death hod died to-day.. — iv. 7 

lios done a miracle to-day iHenry I' I. ii. 1 

intend to try his grace to-day — iii. 2 

any thou const conjure up to-day.... — v. 1 
to thrive to-doy, it grieves ray soul . . — v. a 



— in. 4 



TO-DAY I holp him (repO i Henry V I. v. 3 

well liast thou foiiglit to-day — v. 3 

have broke their fasts to-day SHenry VI, ii. 2 

will cost tell thousand lives to-day .. — ii. 2 
enAv you the king to-day, my lord. . IlicharU lU. i- 3 
M-liy Kinks your grace so heavily to-d;iy? — i. 4 
who slew to-day a riotous Beiitleinan — ii. 1 
to-diiy the lords you talk of ore beheaded — iii. 2 
to-day Shalt thou behold a subject die 

any likelihooil lie showed to-day 

tliree times to-day my foot-clotli horse 
how mine enemies, to-day at Pomfrct — iii. 4 
that it may be to-day read o'er in .. — iii. 6 
I am not ill the giving vein to-day .. — iv. 2 

who saw the sun to-day? Not I — v. 3 

the sun will not be seen to-day — v. 3 

not shine to-day? why, what is that — v. 3 
five have I slain to-day, instead of him — v. 4 
to-day, the French, all clinquant ..Heitryl'III. i. I 
to-day he puts forth the tender leaves — iii. 2 
-aCueas, from the field to-day? . . Troilus i- Cress, i. 1 
pood sport is out of town to-day I . . . . — i. 1 
fixed, to-day was moved: he chid .. — i. 2 

he'll lay about him to-day — i. 2 

who said he came hurt liome to-day ? — i. 2 

I think he went not forth to-day — i. 2 

I take to-day a wife, and my — ii. 2 

who's a-field to-day? Hect jr — iii. I 

I would tain have armed to-day . . . 
I long to hear how they sped to-day 

and do not fight to-day (rep.) — 

I am to-day i' the vein of chivalry . . — 
I'll stand, to-day, for thee, and me.. — 
I would not have you fight to-day .. — 
and will not arm to-day; whereiipon — 
who hath done to-day mad and fantastic— 

though I end my life to-day — 

hunted with his honour to-day. Timnn of. Alliens. 

to-morrow, to-day; presently Coriolanus, 

you have prayed well to-day — 

art not in thy shop to-day? JuliiisCrsar 

proceeded, worthy note, to-day — 

tell us what hath chanced to-day 

V ill come forth to-day, or no 

hold him from the Capitol to-day. . . . 
stir out of your house to-day (rep.).. 
stay at home to-day for fear frep.) .. 
lie "shall say, you are not well to-day 



— iii. 1 



V. 4 



IV. S 



i. 2 
ii. I 
ii. I 



ii. 2 

ii. 2 

ii. 2 

iii. I 



— V. 1 
ii. 2 



that I will not come to-day (rep-l 
remember that you call on me to-day 
your euterprize to-day may thriie (.rep.) 
tongue had not offended so to-day . . 
if you dare fight to-day, come to .... 

the gods to-day stand friendly 

I would not shave 't to-day.Antu7i!/^Cleopal. 

if fortune be not ours to-day — iv. 4 

that thou couldsl see my wars to-day — iv. 4 

the blood that has to-day escaped — iv. 8 

he hath fought to-day, is if a god — — iv. 8 
their preparation is to-day by sea .. — iv. 10 

I will from hence to-day Cyinbeline. i. 2 

what I have lost to-day at bowls .... — ii. 1 
we'll hunt no more to-day, nor seek — iv. 2 
to-day, how many would have given — v. 3 
chosen witli proclamations to-day. 7'i(us.4ii'Jioh. i. 2 

must lose her tongue to-day — ii. 3 

your liusband from his hounds to-day I — ii. 3 
you have sliowii to-day your valiant .... Lcnr, y. 3 

saw you him to-day? Hameo «$- Juliet^ i. 1 

got leave to go to shrift to-day? I have — ii. 5 

first corse, till he that died to-day Hamlet, i. 2 

that Denmark drinks to-day — i. 2 

did I to-day, see Cassio wipe his beard. 0.'/ir((o, iii 3 

TOE— each one trippin" on his toe Tempest, iv. 1 

from toe to crown lieTl fill — iv. 1 

out o' the toe like a parish top ..Twel/thNight, i. 3 

the fourth turned on the toe Lnve'sL.LosI, v. 2 

as my toes look through. Taming of Shrew, 2 (indue.) 

from the crown to the toe Macbeth, 1. 5 

eye of new t, and toe of frog — iv. 1 

plays the rogue with my great toe ..2 Henry W. i. 2 
the mother's, from the top to toe.. liichard III. iii. 1 

firandsires had nails on their toes. Troilus 4' Cress, ii. 1 
ie rises oil the toe: that spirit — iv. 5 

the great toe of this assembly? (rep.).Coriolaruis, i. 1 
tlie man that makes his toe what.. tear, iii. 2 (song) 
that have tbeir toes uuplagued ..Romeo ^Juliet, i. 5 
from top to toe? My lord, from head.. ..Hamlet, i. 2 

the toe of the peasant comes so near — v. J 

TOFORE— hath tofore been sain. . Love'sL. Lost, iii. 1 
thou wert as thou tofore hast heeul. vv/us.Jn'i. iii. 1 

TOGE— [Co!.] this woolvish toge Coriolamis, ii. 3 

TOGED [ivHi.-tongued] consuls can Oi/wlio, i. 1 

TOIL— is there more toil? Tempest, i. 2 

whose spirits toil in frame of Much. Ado, iv. 1 

they have pitched a toil; lam ../,oi)e'si..Los(, iv. 3 
show a harvest of their heavy toil — — iv. 3 
to toil and trouble in the world .. Tamina of Sh. v. 2 
double, double toil and trouble (rep.).M<tcl>elli, iv. 1 
this toil of ours should be a work of..KingJohn, ii. I 
after such bloody toil, we bid "ood-night — v. 5 

dry with rage, and extreme toil IHeuryW. i. 3 

past corporal toil, a hundred HemyV.X. 1 

shall with steeled sinews toil — H. 2 

winding up days with toil — j.v. 1 

service, and your toil in war 1 Henry VI. iii. 4 

mv brother Bedford toil his wits 2HenryVl. i. 1 

forspent with toil, as runners 3 Henry Vl. ii. 3 

honour for au inward toil Iticlmrd III. i. 4 

not used to toil, did almost ...HeinyV lll.i. 1 

their observant toil Troilus^- Cressida, i. 3 

lions with toils, and men with laliuiCiesur, ii. 1 

in her strong toil of grace ..Antony ^-Cteoptifra, v. 2 

tlie toil of the war, a pain Cymbeline, iii. 3 

I ara weak with toil, yet strong — iii. 6 

putshimself unto the shipmau's toil . IVricles.i.3 
our toil shall strive to mend, .ifomeo /)■ Juliet, (prol.) 
tlio drudcc, and toil in your delight — ii. 5 

stop thy 'imhallowed toil — . v. 3 

so nightly toils the subject llamlet, i. 1 



TOIIy— would drive me into a toil? Hamlet, iii. 2 

TOIJyED their unbreathed Mid.N.'sDream, v. 1 

toiled with works of war Kichajd ll.iv. 1 

like a brother toiled in my aflRi.irs..2llenrj//f'. iii. 1 

TOirjING- ara toiling in a \ntc\i. . Loi'e's I.. Lost, iv. 3 

toil in" desperately to find it out ..'MIenri/ 1 I. iii. 2 

TOKEN— 110 token but stoues. TuoGen. q/ Verona, i. 1 

to leave her token — iv. 4 

and, on that token, the maid .... Merry ll'iees, iv. 6 
there no other tokens between. . Meas.far Meas. iv. 1 

say, by this token, I desire his — Iv. 3 

Lord's tokens on you dolsee (rep.).Li)iie'sL.Los(,v.2 

I follow him not by any token of .ill's ll'ell, i. 3 

enticements, oaths, tokens, and all .. — iii. 5 
tokens and letters which she did re-send — iii. G 
may token to the future our past .... — iv.i 

send forth your amorous token — v. 3 

by this token I would relieve her .... — v, 3 
or moral of his signs and tokens. Taming of Sli. iv. 4 
in token of which duty, if he please .. — v. 2 
or send me hy some token . . Comedy of Errors, i v. I 

do you not read some tokens of King John, i. 1 

may bear those tokens home 2 Henry IV. iv. 2 

this token serveth for a flag i Henry VI. iii. 1 

no loving token to his majesty? — v. 3 

such peevish ttikeus to a king — v. 3 

go, by this token; rise, and lend .. Richard III. iv. 2 
gives token of a goodly day to-morrow — v. 3 
u token from Troilus (.rep.) .. Troilus ^'Cessida, i. 2 

that the death-tokens of it cry — ii. 3 

a token from her daughter — v. 1 

give me some token for the surety .. — v. 2 
or any token of thine honour .. Timon of Alliens, v. & 
in token of the which, my noble .... Coriolanus, i. 9 
by tokens, send such dreadful .. ..JuliusCtvsar, i. 3 
some uobler token I have kept ..Antony ^Cleo. v. 2 

with tokens, thus, and thus Cymbeline, v. 5 

with signs and tokens she can scowl. Titus And. ii. b 

send thy token of reprieve Lear, v. 3 

no messeiiaers, receive no tokens Hamlet, ii. 2 

but she so loves the token, (for he Othello, iii. 3 

this is some token from a newer friend ., — iii. 4 
this is some minx's token, and 1 must ,. — iv. 1 

I never gave him token — v. 2 

an antique token my father gave my .... — v. 2 

TOKENED pestilence Antony .^Cleopatra, iii. 8 

TOLD thee no lies Tempest, i. 2 

as I told thee before (rep.) — iii. 2 

and told me of it — iii. 3 

I thought to have told thee of it — iv. 1 

I told you, sir, they were — iv. 1 

I told your ladyship TwoGen. of Verona, ii. 4 

Launce, his man, told me — iv. 2 

what this knave told me (rep.) .... Merry Wives, ii. 1 

I could have told you more — ii. 1 

when I have told you that, I have told — ii. 2 

marry, as I told you before — iii. 3 

I have told tliem over and over — iii. 3 

I told you, sir, my daughter — iii, 4 

say the woman told me so — iv. 5 

as you told me you had appointed? .. — v. 1 
I told him you were sick [rep.) .. Twelfth Night, i. 5 

he has been told so — i. 5 

she never told her love — ii. 4 

Maria once told me, she did — ii. 5 

my watch hath told me towaid — v. 1 

she first told me, thou wast mad ... , — v. I 
he hath not told us of the captain .... — v. 1 
very good diet, as I told you. . . . Meas. for Meas. ii. 1 

say, Pompey told you so — ii. 1 

I told you: lord Angelo, belike — iv. 2 

you have told me too many — iv. 3 

this gentleman told somewhat — v. 1 

there was a friar told me of this man — v. 1 
her mother hath many times told ....Much Ado, i. 1 

any wit, that told you this? — i. 2 

daughter, remember, what I told you — ii. I 
will you not tell me who told you so? — ii. I 
I told him, and I think, I told him true — ii. I 
that danced with her, told her, she is — ii. 1 
she told me, not thinking I had .... — ii. 1 
will you look to those things I told you — ii. 1 
I told your lordship, a year since .. .. — ii. 2 
what was it you told me of to-day?.. — ii. 3 
a pretty jest your daughter told us of — ii. 3 
the old man's daughter told us all .. — v. I 
I was told you were in a consumption — v. 4 
I told him of your stealth unto Mid.N.'sDrea7n,iii. 2 

my lord, fair Helen told me — iv. 1 

but all the story of the night told over — v. 1 
that have I told my love, in glory .. — v. 1 

it will fall pat as I told you — v. I 

of midnight hath told twelve — v. I 

how many is one thrice told? ....Lave'sL.Lost,i. 2 

I told you; my lord — iv. 1 

then of one is easily told — v. 2 

told our intents before, which once .. — V. 2 

even so; my tale is told — v. 2 

for the which, as I told you. .Merchant of Venice, i. 3 
three months, you told 



I have you heard that told .. — 
who told me,— in the narrow seas.... 
I thought upon Antonio, when he told 
Bassanio told him, he would make .. 
I freely told you, all the wealth .... 

and then I told you true 

wlien I told you my state (rep.) 

when the tale is told, bid her be 

have told you of good wrestling ...-isyo 
tliou liadst told me of another father 
yon told me, you salute not at tlie . . 

I have been told so of many 

I told him, of as good as he 

my friends told me as much 

hath told the thievish minutes .. 

I have told my neighbour 

they told me that your name was 
my nioLlier told me j ust how .... 
I have told your lordshix) already 



— ii. 1 

li. 7 (scroll) 



— iii. 4 

— iv. 1 
AlfslVetl, i'l. 1 



TOLD— Dian, told thee this . . All's Well, iv. 3 (letter) 
and she told me iu a sweet verbal .... — v. 3 

have yon told him all Taming (if Shrew, i. 2 

'twas told me, you were rough — ii. I 

as I told you before, Simoia — iii. 1 

I told you, I, he was u frantic — iii. 2 

I told liim, that j'our father — iv. 4 

this is the gentleman I told you of . . — iv. 4 
nay, I told you, your sou was beloved — v, 1 
he must be told on't, and he shall, ll'inler's Tale, ii. i 

1 told her so, my lord, on your ii. 3 

it was told me, I should be rich — iii. 3 

have I not told thee, how I was cozened — iv. 3 
I told you what would come of this . . — iv. S 

how often have I told you — iv. 3 

aboard the prince; told him, I heard — v. 3 

were it but told you, should be — v. 3 

ay, ay, he told his mind upon . Comecii/ o/^rrors, ii. 1 
assured to her; told me what privy., — iii. 3 

and told thee to what purpose — iv. I 

a inad tale, he told to-day at — iv. 3 

what I told you then, I hope — v. I 

two truths are told, as happy Macbeth, i. 3 

it is a tale told by an idiot — v. 5 

life ie as tedious as a twice told iaXe.KingJohn, iii. 4 
and told me, Hubert should put out — iv. 1 

as an ancient tale new told — iv. 2 

when you should be told they do prepare — iv. 2 

told of a many thousand — iv. 2 

that villain Hubert told me — v. 1 

till I have told this slander of hia ..Richard II. i. I 

you told me, you would tell — v. 2 

and told him of these triumphs — v. 3 

the devil that told me, I did well .... — v. 5 

of likelihood the news was told MlenrylV. i. I 

that I told you yesternight — ii. 1 

four, Hal ; I told thee four — ii. 4 

these nine iu buckram, that I told thee — ii. 4 
60 I told him, my lord; and I said .. — iii. 3 
and told me, I had unloaded all ... . — iv. 2 
I told him gently of our grievances.. — v. 2 
he told me, that rebellion had bad ..iHenrylV. i. 1 
would have told him, half his Troy — i. 1 

whereby I told thee, they were ill .. — ii. I 

and told him, there were five — ii. 4 

and told John of Gaunt, he beat — iii. 2 

but, as I told my lord of Westmoreland — iv. 2 
I was told that by one that knows . . Henry V. iii. 7 

he hath not told his thought — iv. 1 

Eltliam Place I told your majesty ..1 Henry VI. iii. 1 

thou couldst have better told 2HenryVI.\\. 1 

the duke hath told the truth — ii. 2 

I think, I should have told your grace's — iii. 1 
and told me, that by Water I should die — iv. I 
till all were told, the words would ..SHenry VI. ii. 1 
you told not, how Henry the sixth ,. — iii. 3 

I told your majesty as much — iii. 3 

'tis true, that Henry told me — v. 6 

a wizard told him, that by G his ..llicliard III. i. 1 
told the sad story of my father's death — i. 2 
who told me, how the poor soul (rep.) — ii. I 
good uncle Gloster told me (rep.).... — ii. 2 

pretty York, who told thee this? — ii. 4 

I cannot tell wlio told me — ii. 4 

my grandam told me, he was — iii. I 

I now repent I told the pursuivant.. — iii. 4 
have told me, I being by, that I should — iv. 2 
because a bard of Ireland told me once — iv. 2 

when Dightou thus told on — iv. 3 

speeds best, being plainly told — iv. 4 

your highness told me, I should post — iv. 4 
colder news, but yet they must be told — iv. 4 

1 told ray lord the duke Henry Fill. i. 2 

I told your grace, they would talk auon — i. 4 
I have told him what, and how true — iii. 2 

I told ye all, when we first — v, 2 

well, I have to\d you enousrh.. Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 1 

well, cousin, I told you a thing — i. 2 

this shall be told our lovers — i. 3 

let him be told so; lest, perchance .. — ii. 3 

wherein you told, how Diomed — iv. I 

I have told more of j'ou to myself.. TiHiono/.-IM. i. 2 

I have told my master of you — iii. I 

dined with him, and told him (rep.) — iii. I 
while they have told their money.... — iii. 5 

thou wast told thus — iv. 3 

true, that you have lately told us. . . . Coriolanus, i. I 
which told me they had beat you.... — i. 6 
could you not have told him as you — ii. 3 

vou have told them home — iv. 2 

'faith, sir, if you had told as many .. — v. 2 
as I told yon. he put it by once ....JutifisCwsar, i. 2 

forgot the will I told you of — iii. 2 

our ills, told us, is as our earing . . Antony <5- Cleo. i. 2 

so Fulvia told me: Ipr'ythee — i. 3 

next day, I told him of myself — ii. 2 

my news I might have told hereafter — iii. 5 

I have told him, Lt'pidus was — iii. ti 

sir, as I told vou always, her beauty. Cymbeline. i. 3 
thou would'st have told this talc for — i. 7 

who told you of this stranger? — ii. 1 

revolve what tales I have told you .. — iii. 3 
(as I have told you oft,) but that .... — iii. 3 

two beggars told me, I could not — iii. 6 

they told me, here, at dead time . 7'iluj Andron. ii. 3 
no sooner had they told this (rep.) .. — ii, 3 

she laughed, and told the Moor — iv. 3 

and when I told the empress — v. 1 

many a matter hath he told to thee.. — v. 3 

his ridille told not, lost Vericles, i. (Oower) 

which might not, what by rae is told — iii. (Gower) 
if you have told Diana's altar true .. — y. 3 

T have told you what I have seen Lear, i. 2 

but that I told him, the revenging — ii. 1 

I told him of the army (rep.) — iv. 2 

and told me, I had turned the wrong .... — iv. 2 

aud told me I had white hairs — iv, 

thev told nie I was every thing — iv. 6 

that eye, that told you so — v. :i 

aud, whcu 'tis told, U that my heart .... — v. 3 



TOL 



f 777 ] 



TON 



TOLD-flMt to Iiwt toUl lilm my pilgrlinoKc. Uar, v. S 

told tliu inoBt iiitC'iiuH laic of rA:ur — v. 3 I 

aa I tolil yim, my ymiiiK Imly . . . . Uomeo JjtJuliel.ii- * 
m lii'ur tliL'in told, Imvi' luiiire iiiu .... — iv. I 
Ithiiik.lic lolil me, l'iiri»»ln>uia .... — v. 3 

voii told iiH of ik)lnc Hint Uamtet^ i. 2 

'lis lold ini;. hi; liiitli vury oft — 1.3 

iKlort my dttiiKlitir toUfinc) — ii. 2 

uf ilifw wc told him; ttiiU thcredid.... — ill. 1 
I Imvc told tli(jc olMiy lutlici-'a dentil .. — iii. i 
I Imve told tliw ot'tcii, uiid I rv-tvll thce.Othtllo i. 3 

till tlielKdl liiilli told eleven — ii. 2 

uiid. wlieii I told thee, lie WM of my .. — iii. 3 

Bhe toM her. while she kept it — iii. 4 

yoii httve told inc—ihe huH received.... — iv. a 

av, 'twas he that tolil me flrst — v. i! 

I'told him what I thnim'ht; and told no — v. 2 
yoti told a lie; an odious, damned lie .. — v. 2 

T()1.D'ST inc. they were Btoleii.. .Vi/..V'«.D)c,iin, ii.2 
told'iitiiie of tt miBtrcBS and u dinnei <V)m. o/ Krr. ii.2 

thou toldVt nie, when we cuine Cymlii-line, iii. 4 

thou told'Rt inc, thou didst hold liini .. Olhcllo, I. 1 
thou tolilVt hiiii that his wife W09 fiilso — v. 2 

Tor.KOO. thia is purpoaeil tiennj I'll I. ii. 1 

TOI.KK.VUhK, und not to be endured .Wh./i.-Wi), iii. 3 
thou dlilbt make toleralile vent of tliy./IM'»)»VH, ii. 3 

TOLL— in a fair, and toll him — v. 3 

nluill tythe or toll in our dominions. KinjfJo/iM, Iii. I 
clocks do toll. and the third haar.lli-nryr. iv. (oho.) 

'ri)I.LIN(i f Kii/.-eulling] from every •illrnriiW. iv. 4 

TD.M Snout, the tinker md.N.'tDream/l.i 

Torn hears Icpks into the hall/,ot)c'ii,.i,o«/.v.2 (song) 
OS Tib's rush for Tom's fore-flnger . . AU't irell, ii. 2 

good Tom Drum, lend me — v. 3 

I pr'ythee, Tom, beut Cut's saddle. . 1 //fnri//*'. ii. 1 

christian names, as Tom. Dick — ii. 1 

and here. Tom, take all th.c money. .2/;cjir|/»'/.ii. 3 

with a sigh like Tom o' liedluin Lear, i. 2 

poor Turlygood! iioorToml — ii. 3 

lie says his name's poor Tom frep.) — iii. 4 

bless thy five witsl Tom's a-cold {rep.) — iii. 4 
do poor Tom Bome charity, whom the. — iii. 4 
poor Tom, that eats the swimming frog — iii. 4 
nave lieeii Tom's food for seven long — iii. 4 (song) 
liaunts poor Tom in the voice of ir>-/).) — iii. G 
'Tom will throw his head at tliein (re/).) — iii. 6 

poor 'l"om, thy horn is dry — iii. B 

Tom, away, mark the high noises .... — iii. 6 

'tis poor mad Tom. And worse — iv. 1 

poor Tom's a-cold: I cannot daub .... — iv. 1 
poor Tom hath been scared out of (rr/;.) — iv. I 
thy arm; poor Ti)m shall lead thee — iv. 1 

TjilB— suited to his watery Uiinb.Twelflh Mi;M, v. 1 

in a tomb where never scandal MuLhAUo,v. 1 

hang her an epitaph on her tomb .... — v. 1 

his own tomb ere lie dies — v. 2 

hang thou there upon the tomb.. — V. 3 (scroll) 
round about her tomb they go .. — v. 3 (song) 
Ninny's tomb. Ninus' tomb(rp;;. v. \)Mid.N.Ui:iiu> 

o tomb must cover thy sweet eyes — v. 1 

registered upon our brazen tomhe.. LoveU L. Lo%t^ i. I 
gilded tombs do worms ..il/cr. <)/»'« mc/, ii. 7 (fcroll) 
»n your thoughts, than nn his tomb ..AlVtWell, i. '.; 

debauched on every tomb — ii. 3 

is the tomb of honoured bones indeed — ii. 3 
by the honoiirable tomb he swears. . UiclutrU II. iii. 3 
thou king Richard's tomb, and not .. — v. 1 

in his tomb lie mjj att'ections iHctinjIV. v. 2 

your great grandaire's tomb, from .... Henry V. i.'i 

I'll erect a tomb wherein his [Henry y I. ii. 2 

mother's holies lie in one tomb? — iv. 5 

comfort shut in Oloster's tomb?....2HeHrv/'/. iii. a 

hang thee o'er my tomb — iv. 10 

a crown, or else a glorious tombl illennjt'l. i. 4 

may have a tomb of orphans' tears. //tfioi/ /'///. iii, 2 
what's on this tomb I cannot read. Timon n/Alh. v. 4 

liath not a tomb so evident CorMiutut, iv. 7 

with female fairies will his tomb ..Cymbeliiie, iv. 2 
stain not thy tomb with blood. 7'i7uf AnUroniciu. i. 2 
In! at this tomb my tributary tears .. — i. 2 

he rests not in this tomb — i. 2 

till we with trophies do adorn thy tomb! — i. 2 

by mv father's reverend tomb. I vow — ii. 4 

the tiimb where grief should sleep Periclet, i. 2 

divorce me from thv mother's tomb I.rur, ii. 4 

that's nature's niutlier, ie her UtinU. Itoineo ^ Jut. ii. 3 
tts one dead in the bottom of a tomb — iii. b 

when I am laid into the tomb — iv. 3 

closed in a dead man's tombl — v. 2 

BWeet tomb! [(X.A'ii(.-() woe] — V. 3 

with funeral praises do ailorn thy tomb — v. 3 
oiien the tomb, lay ine with Juliet .. — v. 3 
fit to open these dead men's tomha . . — v. 3 

noiw dill scare me from the tomb .. — v. 3 

one witii light to o|>e the toiilb — v. 3 

winch is not loinb enough, and llnmlrt, iv. 4 

TO.MliK-iiue je suis tombe entrc Henry l\ iv. 4 

TO^Ilil.K^S. with no remembrance ....Henry/', i. 2 
TO.MBUY— partnered with tomboys ..Cymbeline, i. 7 

TO-.MDllKOW, may it jilcaiic liniCtn.oller. \.i 

to-morrow lie in reuiliness to go (rc/j.) — i. 3 

to-inorrow by his master's comrnand — Iv. 2 
let liim lie Bent for to-morrow Merry U'icei, iii. 3 

1 do invite you to-morrow morning.. — iii. 3 
reniembrance to-morrow on the lousy — iii. 3 

will lie to-raorrow at court — iv. 3 

I'll ride home to-morrow (rep.) ..Tmel/lh Niifhl, i. 3 

will eoine tluB way ti>-inorrow — i. 6 

to-morrow, sir; llest, first, go see .... — hi. 3 
it shall lie done to-inorrow morning — ill. 4 

you, come atfain to-morrow (r/*;!.) .. — ill. 4 
b<; evciileil liy nine to-morrow. . Mem. /or .Meat. ii. 1 
Claudio shall die lo-morrowV (ri-;;.).. — ii.2 

to-morrowMJ that's sudden! — ii.2 

come again to-inorrow (r«p.) — ii.2 

ut what hour to-morrow, shall I attend — ii.2 

as I do think, to-inorrow — ii. 3 

OS I hear, must die to-morrow (rrp.) — ii. 3 

uiiswer me t^i-niorrow. or by the .... — ii. 4 
lu-muriuw you get uu — Iii. I 



1 
I 
I 
I 
4 

1 
1 
I 
I 

— i. 2 

— iv. I 
sL.Loil, ii. I 

— ii. 1 

— iii. I 



TO-MDIillOW-diest to-morrow. Wpai./br Meai. 111. 1 

ready Claiidio, for your death to-morrow — iii. i 

to-morrow you must die; go to your — ill. I 

if Claudio ifie to-morrow, or no? (i''/i.) — iii. 2 

to-morrow morning are to die Clnnilio — iv. 2 

lielp you to-morrow in your execution — Iv. 2 

anil your a.\e, to-morrow four o'clock — Iv. 2 

by eight to-inorrow thou must be made — iv. 2 

but he must die to-morrow? — jv. 2 

the duke comes home to-morrow (ifji.) — iv. 3 
to-morrow, my lord ; time goes on .. A/uc/i.4do, i|. I 

to-morrow night we would have it at — Ji. 3 

why, every day; to-morrow; come .. — iii. ' 

the best to furnish me to-inorrow — iii. 1 

a Krcnchnmn to-morrow — iii. 2 

your lordship to Ik; married to-morrow? — iii. 2 

if you love her then, to-morrow wed her — iii. 2 

why I Bhould not marry her to-morrow — iii. 2 

for the wedding being there to-morrow — iii. " 

to-morrow morning come you to my — v. 

to-morrow then I will exjiect your .. — v. 

until to-morrow morning, lords .... — v. 

we look for you to-morrow — v. 

think not on liim till to-morrow .... — v. 
forth thy father's house to-morrow. /l/i'/./V.'« Dr. i. 

appointed mo, to-morrow truly will I — i. 

to-morrow night when Phtebc doth .. — i. 
to the wood will he, to-morrow night 

to con them by to-morrow night 

will, to-morrow midnight, Bolemnly 
to-morrow you shall have a sight. Lou 
to-morrow shall we visit you again . . 

Will come to your worship to-morrow — ij_i_. 
sjiare a pound of flesh to-morrow. Mer. of Venice, iii. 
und to- morrow the wrestling ib.....rJiyoul.ilieit, i. 

what, you wrestle to-morrow before the — i. 

to-morrow, sir, I wrestle for my credit — i. 

let your wedding be to morrow — v. 

they shall be married to-morrow .... — v. 

BO much the more shall I to-morrow be — v. 

why then, to-inorrow I cannot serve — V. 

to set her before your eyes to-morrow — v. 

if you will be married to-morrow..., — v. 

to-morrow meet me all together .... — v. 

I'll be married to-morrow (rt'/i.) .... — v. 

to-morrow is the joyful day, Audrey — v. 
begone to-morrow: and be sure of tlii3..4/i'sffc//,_i. 

to-morrow I'll to the wars, she to her — ii. 

they fell: to-morrow to the field .... — iii. 

lie will be here to-morrow, or I — iv. 

to-morrow I intend to hunt, ram i7ij.'o/S/i. I (iiidiie. 

and if I die to-morrow, thia is hers .. — ii. 

know, to-raorrow is the wedding-day — iii. 

no, nor to-morrow, nor till I please,. — iii. 

be patient; to-morrow it shall be .... — iv. 

pay thee for thy gown to-morrow.... — iv. 

sir, that'e to-morrow It^iuter't Tatc,i. 

very sooth, to-morrow. We'll part .. — i. 

but such a day to-morrow as to-day — i. 
tluit to-morrow you will bring. . Comedyof llrr. iii. 

to-morrow,— as fie purposes Macbel/tji. 

but we'll take to-morrow: is't far — iii. 

but of that to-morrow: when, therewithal — iii. 

get thee gone; to morrow we'll hear .... — iii. 

I will to-inoiTOw, (betimes I will.) unto — iii. 

to-morrow, and to-morrow, and (re/j ) .. — v. 
to-morrow morning let us meet liim. King John, iv. 

try the fair adventure of to-morrow — v. 

let not to-morrow then ensue Kichard II. ii. 

to-morrow next we will for Ireland.. — ii. 

our queen: to-morrow must we part — ii. 

shall we take a purse to-morrow I Henrylf.i. 

my lads, tij-morrow morning by four — i. 

to-morrow night in JKastcheap irep.) — i. 

ride witli us to-morrow; I have a jest — i. 

will I set fortli, to-morrow you...... — ii._ 

but to-morrow. Francis; or Francis — ii. 

watch to-night, pray to-morrow .... — ii. 

tliou wilt be horribly chid to-morrow — ii. 

I will by to-morrow dinner-time .... — ii. 

to morrow, cousin Percy, you and I — iii. 

Jock, meet me to-morrow i' the Tciniilc — iii. 

let it be seen to-morrow in the battle — iv. 

like enough, you do; to-morrow, good — iv. 

powder me, and eat me too, to-inorrow — v. 
or to know thy face to-morrow? ....'iHenrylV. ii. 

thou Bhalt liave a cap to-inorrow — u. 

Bome good thing comes to-morrow .. — iv. 
to-morrow Bhallyou know our inind..He/ir!/r. ii. 

to-morrow for the march are we — iii. 

on to-morrow bid them march away — iii. 

some of them will fall to-morrow..., — iii. 

I will trot to-morrow a mile — ni. 

nor will do none to-morrow — iii. 

we shall Bud to-murrow they have only' — iii. 

after to-morrow, this is ray glove .... — iv. 

to-inorrow, the king liimself will be.. — iv. 

and hay, to-morrow is saint Crispian — iv. 
to sup with me to-inorrow night ....iHetuyVLx. 

to-morrow, toward London, back a^iiin — ii. 

meet me to-morrow in saint George 8 — v. 
to-morrow then, belike, shall \k... ."iHenryll. iv. 
to-morrow, or next day, they will.. HiWiuni //;. ii. 

summon him to-morrow to the Tower — iii. 

for we to-morrow hold divided coimseU — id. 

ailverBaries to-morrow are let blood.. — iii. 

to-morrow then i judge a happy day — iii. 

to-morrow in my judgment is too suddcu — iii. 

tf> visit him to-morrow, or next day.. — iii. 

to-morrow may it itleaw; you to be .. — jji- 

to-morrow then we will attend your — iii. 

I lie to-night; but where, to-inorrow? — v. 

for. lords, to-morrow is a busy day . . — v. 

gives token of a goiKlly day to-morrow — v. 

let us consult u|>on to-morrow's biisineHs — v. 

with the lark to-morrow, gentle Norfolk — V. 

white Surrey for the field Ui-morrow — v. 

Bit heavy on thy Boul to-moirow! (rrp.) — v. 

Ui-inorrow iu the battle think on (rc/i.) _ v. 

did tliieat to-iuorrow's vengeance .... — v. 



TO-MOltllOW, they made Uritoln..H«nri/('i;;. i. I 

tO' morrow blossoms, and bears his ^.. ~ iii. 2 

Imtli commanded, to-morrow iporning — v. I 
to-morrow with his Irumiiet call./iOT/iii ^Cr«i. i. 3 

to-morrow morning call some knight — ii. I 

Achilles will not lo the Held to-morrow — ii. 3 

to-morrow, we must with all our main — ii. 3 

an' you take leave till to-morrow.... — ill. 2 

if Hector will lo-inorrow lie answered — iii. ^ 

now shall we see t4i-inorrow, an act.. — iii. 3 

iniist fight singly to-morrow with llector— iii. 3 

a Wound; and that to-morrowl — iv. 1 

I'd fight with thee to-morrow — \v.i> 

to-morrow, do I meet thee, fell as death — iv. 5 

with my scimitar I'll cool to-morrow — v. I 
my great purpose in to-morrow's buttle 



not meet with you to-morrow night.. — 



to-morro 



with y 
w will 



I wear it on my licln 



V. I 
V. S 
v. 2 



to-morrow; to-day; presently Corio/amu, iv. 4 

before the walls of Home to-morrow — v. 3 

will you dine with me to-morrow?. ./u/iui Cwtar, i. 2 
to-morrow, if you please to Bjieak .... — i. 2 

to you, he would be there to-morrow — |. 3 

senators to-morrow mean to establi-h — i. 3 

is not to-morrow, boy, the ides of March?— ii. 1 
early to-morrow will we rise, and hence — iv. 3 
liojic of better deeds to-morrow .. Antony 'i Cleo.\. I 
to-morrow, Ca;sar, I shall be furnished — i. 4 

that to-morrow the last of many buttles — iv. I 
to-inorrow, soldier, by sea and land.. — iv. 2 

to-morrow you'll serve another — iv. 2 

I hope well of to-morrow — iv. 2 

to-morrow is the day — iv. 3 

and if to-morrow our navy thrive .. — jv. 3 
to-morrow, belbre tlie sun shall sec us — iv. 8 
this night; I must aboard t<j-inorrow.Ci/in(ie/inf, i. 7 
but not away to-morrow? U I must — i. 7 

comes to Milford Haven to-morrow — iii. 4 

to-inorrow, yield up rule TitusAndronicus, i. 2 

to-morrow, an' it oleaBe your majesty — i. 2 

and to-morrow is lier birthday Periclet, ii. I 

to-morrow, all for sjieeding do their best — ii. 3 
to-morrow, with his best ruff on .... — iv. 3 
and swore he would see her to-morrow — iv. 3 

our troops Bet forth to-morrow Lear, iv. 5 

and they ore ready to-morrow — y. 3 

send me word to-morrow Itomco 4" Juliet, ii.2 

ii. 2 
ii. 2 
iii. I 
iii. 4 
iii. 4 
iv. 1 
iv. 2 



_ iv. 2 



Uaitilel.W. 2 

iv. 7 llutter) 
Ollietto, i. 3 



...Teinpett, ii. I 

— ii. 2 

— ii. 2 (song) 



my grief: to-morrow will I send 
at what o'clock to-inorrow shall I send — 
ask for me to-rnorrow, and you shall — 
and know her mind early to-inorrow — 
I Would that Thursday were to-morrow — 

Wednesday is to-morrow (re;/.) — 

this knot knit up ti-morrow morning — 
think fit to furnish me to-morrow? .. — 

we'll to church to-morrow 

to prepare him up against to-morrow 
bchoveful for our state to-morrow .. 
[toJ.K>i(.J married then to-morrow .. 
you'll he sick to-morrow for this .... 

we'll have it to-rnorrow night 

to-morrow shall I beg leave to see — 
we will have more of tliis to-morrow, 
to-morrow, with our earliest, let me have 

to-morrow dinner then? I shall not dine — iii. 3 

why then, to-morrow night — iii. 3 

kill iiie to-morrow, let nie live to-night.. — v. 2 

TON— is that a ton of moys? Henry I', iv. 4 

TONti.^ and the bones Mid.N.'tUream, iv. 1 

'TONtiUIi blubs, then let mine eyes. J'tcWyJAAi^/if, i. 2 

I hud bestowed that time in the tongues — i. 3 

thy tongue, thy face, thy limbs — i. 5 

her eyes hud lost her tongue — ii.2 

tongue tang arguments (rep. iii. 4) — ii. 5 (letter) 

a reverend carriage, a slow tongue .. — iii. 4 

it hutli no tongue to vex you — iii. 4 

and tlie tongue of hiss 

Bpendthrift is he of his tongue 

who. with cloven tongues 

for she hud a tongue with a tang.. 

the harmony of their tongues luith 

hath drowned his tongue in sack .... — iii. 2 

keep a good tongue in your head (tep.) — iii. 2 

altliougli they want the use of tongue — iii. 3 

no tongue, all eyes; 1)6 Bileut — iv. I 

lose thy tongue (r<;i.) TuoGen.qf retona, ii. 3 

fle, fie, uiirevcrend tonguel — ii. 6 

that man that huth a tongue (rrp.) ., — iii. I 

liberal. Uf her tongue siie cannot .. — iii. I 

have you the tongues? — iv. 1 

neace-ayour tongue .Merry It'ivet, i. 4 

111 our Lnglith tongue, is valour — ij. 3 

live in thy tongue and heart .... Meat, for Meat. \. I 

tongue far from heart — i. S 

with more tame a tongue desire it .. — ii.2 

not sound a thought upon your tongue — ii. 2 

hearing not iny tongue, anchors on .. — ii. 4 

I have no tongue but one — ii. 4 

one and the self-same tongue — ii. 4 

tie the gull uii in the slaiidv-rouB tongue? — iii. 2 

the tongue ofi^alH-l — iv. 3 

how might she tongue me? — iv. 3 

even from his liroiicr tongue — v. 1 

a bird of my tongue, is lielter than . . . . A/iirA .4iia, i. I 

hud the Sliced of your toiiLue — i. I 

then hull signior lienedick's tongue.. — ii. I 

if thou be so shrewd of thy tongue .. — ii. I 

all hearts in love use their own tongues — ii. I 

I cannot endure my lady Tongue.. .. — ii. 1 

tongue is the clapiKT (irp.) — iii. 2 

whut |>acc is this that thy tongue keeps? — iii. 4 

all eyes, tongues, niiiids, and injuries — iv. I 

men are only luriied into tongue — iv. 1 

take tt serpent by the tongue — v. I 

nay, said I, lie huth the tongues .... — v. I 

a double tongue, there's two tongues — v. 1 
todeuth by Blanderous tonguCB .. — v. 3 (scroll) 
your tongue's sweet uir more ..Mid.N.'t Dream, i. I 



TON 

TONGUE should catch Oep^....Hid.N:sD,eim, i. 1 

spotted snakes, with double tongue — ii. o (song) 

tie up my love's tongue, and bring .. — iii."! 

for "ritJx doiibler tongue than thine .. — iii. 2 

ensv/ers troni my gentle tongue? .... — iii. 2 

sometime frame tl>y tongue — iii. 2 

Ills tongue to conceive, nor liis heart — iv. 1 

as from tlie rattling tongue of saucy — v. i 

tongue, lose thy liglit I — v. 1 

tongue, not a worcT: come, trusty .... ^ v. 1 

the iron tongue of midnight liatli told — v. 1 
now to 'scape the serpent's tongue — (epilogue) 

on pain of losing her tongue Lovers L. Lout, i. I 

tlie music of his own vain tongue.... — i. 1 

and my motlier's tongue assist me! .. — i. 2 

by base sale of chapmen's tongues .. — ii. 1 

iiis fair tongue (conceit's exiiositor)., — ii, 1 

his tongue, all impatient to speak ., — ii. 1 

by adding a tongue vvliich I know ., — ii. 1 

ji" oif a tune at the tongue's end .... — iii. 1 

when tongues speak sweetly, tlien .. — iii. 1 

well learned is that tongue, that well — iv. 2 

praise witli such an earthly tonguel — iv. 2 

nor tongue of mortal tell — iv, 3 (verses) 

me tlie flourish of all gentle tongues — iv. 3 

love's tongue proves dainty Bacclius — iv. 3 

)iis tongue iiled, his eye ambitious .. — v. 1 

visor made without a tongue? — v. 2 

you have a double tongue within .... — v. 2 

the tongues of mocking wenches are — v. 2 

a blister on his sweet tongue, with ., — v. 2 

to snatch words from my tongue .... — v. 2 

the motion of a school-boy's tongue — v. 2 

lord Longaville, reign thy tongue.... — v. 2 

news I bring, is heavy in my tongue — v. 2 

bears not a humble tongue : excuse . . — v. 2 

and the world's large tongue proclaims — v. 2 

never in the tongue of him that — v. 2 

tlie sound of thine own tongue ..Mer. of Venice, i. 1 

in a neat's tongue dried — i. 1 

I have ne'er a tongue in my head.... — ii. 2 

tears exhibit my tongue: most — ii. 3 

I'll swear that I do know your tongue — ii. 6 

a maiden hath no tongue, but thought — iii. 2 

no power in the tongue of man to .. .. — iv. 1 

liad pulled out thy tongue As you Like it, i. 1 

hangs these weights upon my tongue? — i. 2 

finds tongues in trees, books in the .. — ii. 1 

that will not, hold your tongues .... — ii. 5 

wherein my tongue hath wronged him — ii. 7 
tongues I'll hang on every tree. . — iii. 2 (verses) 

cry, holla! to thy tongue — iii. 2 (verses) 

faster than his tongue did make .... — iii. 6 

unless you take her without her tongue — iv. 1 

that flattering toiijiue of yours won me — iv. 1 

an eye may profit by a tongue — iv. 3 

which in all tongues are called fools — v. 4 

his tongue obeyed his hand All's IVeU,\. 2 

and hellish obstinacy tie thy tongue .. — i. 3 

a man's tongue shakes out his — ii. 4 

my tongue is too fool-hardy (re/).) .... — iv. 1 

tongue, I must put you into a — iv. 1 

and can speak thy tongue — iv. I 

too bold a herald of my tongue — v. 3 

low tongue, and lowly Taming ofSh. 1 (indue.) 

bear the penance of her tongue? .... — i. 1 

chiirm him. first to keep his tongue . . — i. 1 

in Padua for her scolding tongue (_rep.) — i. 2 

do you tell me of a woman's tongue — i. 2 

in his tongue. Wliose tongue? Yours — ii. I 

what, with my tongue in your tail?.. — ii. I 

my tongue to the roof of my mouth — iv 1 

and charm her chattering tongue.... — iv. 2 

my tongue will tell the anger — iv. 3 

there is no tongue that moves .... Winter'sTale, i. 2 

for sealing the injury of tongues .... — i. 2 

let my tongue blister; and never to my — ii. 2 

I'll use that tongue I have: if wit .. — ii. 2 

a callat, of boundless tongue — ii. 3 

that wilt not stay her tongue — ii. 3 

all tongues to talk their bitterest .... — iii. 2 

clamour your tongues, and not a word — iv. 3 

it is as bitter upon thy tongue — v. 1 

your eye, will have your tongue too — v. I 

due unto my tongue, I thank Comedy ofEir. ii. 1 

be not tliy tongue thy owu sliame's.. — iii. 2 

my tongue, though not my heart .... — iv. 2 

tliough my tongue do curse — iv. 2 

good now, hold thy tong\ie — iv.4 

80 cracked and splitted ray poor tongue — v. I 

with the valour of my tongue Macbeth, i. 5 

your hand, your tongue , — i. 5 

horror! tongue, nor heart, cannot.. .. — ii. 3 

why do we hold our tongues — ii. 3 

both with eye and tongue — iii. 2 

wool of bat, and tongue of dog — iv. 1 

whose sole name blisters our tongues — iv. 3 

let not your ears despise my tongue — iv. 3 

and braggart with my tonguel — iv. 3 

thou com St to use thy tongue — v. 5 

accursed be that tongue that tells.... — v. 7 
the accent of his tongue aflfecteth ....KingJohn,\. 1 

gives the bastinado with his tongue.. — ii. 2 

there is no tongue hath power — iii. I 

the law forbid my tongue to curse! .. — iii. 1 

may'st hold a serpent by the tongue — iii. 1 

thy tongue against thy tongue — iii. I 

which till this time niy tongue did ne'er — iii. 1 

witli his iron tongue and brazen .... — iii, 3 

without a tongue, using conceit alone — iii. 3 

O that my tongue were in — iii. 4 

presages, and tongues of heaven .... — iii. 4 

believed no tongue, but Hubert's .... — iv. 1 

hold your tongue (re/j.) — iv. 1 

the utterance of a brace of tongues . . — i v. 1 

cut out my tongue, so I may keep .. — iv. I 

then I (as one that am the tongue .. — iv. 2 

but this from rumour's tongue — iv. 2 

can give audience to any tongue .... — iv. 2 

which both our tongues held vile — iv. 2 



[ 778] 



TONGUE shall hufh again this KingJohn, v. 1 

warrant limited unto iny tongue .... — v. 2 

and let tlie tongue of war plead v. 2 

that know'st my tongue BO well .... v. 6 

breaking from thy tongue, should 'scape — v. 6 
my tongue speaks, my right-drawn.. Aic/iard // i. I 

clamour of two eager tongues — i. 1 

ere my tongue shall wound — i. I 

and now my tongue's use is to me '.. — i. 3 

which robs my tongue from breathing — i. 3 

whereto thy tongue a party verdict.. — i. 3 

gave leave to my unwilling tongue .. — i. 3 

when the tongue's office should be .. — i. 3 

that my tongue should so profane .. — i. 4 

the tongues of dying men "enforce .. — . ii. I 

this tongue that runs so roundly .... — ii. 1 

his tongue is nowastringless instrument — ii. I 

disburdened with a liberal tongue .. — ii. I 

must find that title in your tongue .. — ii. 3 

whose double tongue may with iii. 2 

discomfort guides my tongue — iii. 2 

than can my care-tuned tongue deliver — iii. 2 

my tongue hath but a heavier — iii. 2 

me with the flatteries of his tongue.. — iii. 2 

that e'er this tongue of mine — iii. 3 

how dares thy harsh rude tongue. . . . — iii. 4 

your daring tongue scorns to unsay — iv. 1 

with mine own tongue deny my .... — iv. 1 

heavy accent of tliy moving tongue. . — v. 1 

wliile all tongues cried— God save thee — v. 2 

no joyful tongue gave him his welcome — v. 2 

thy nurse, thy tongue to teach — 

to speak, set thy tongue there — 

what my tongue dares not 



V. 3 



. - V. 5 

who is the theme of honour's tongue. IHcnry/f. i. 1 

and clocks the tongues of bawds .... — i. 2 

whose tongue shall ask me for one .. — i. 3 

no more but one tongue for all — i. 3 

forbade my tongue to speak of Mortimer — i. 3 

thine ear to no tongue but thine own? — i. 3 

gave the tongue a helpful ornament — iii. 1 

for thy tongue makes Welsh as sweet — iii. I 

I defy the tongues of sootliers — iv. 1 

your praises with a princely tongue.. — v. 2 

that have not well the gift of tongue — v. 2 

hand of death lies on my tongue .... — v. 4 
my tongues continual slanders. .2Hc»iryir. (indue.) 
from Kumour's tongues tliey bring.. — (indue.) 

is apter than th^ tongue to tell — i. 1 

the fire, ere he his tongue — i. 1 

see what a ready tongue suspicion hath! — i. 1 

the tongue offends not, that reports.. — i. 1 

and his tongue sounds ever after ... . — i. I 

may his tongue be hotter! — i. 2 

I have no tongue, sir — ii. 2 

the harsh and boisterous tongue of war? — iv. 1 

and your tongue divine to a loud .... — iv. 1 

of tongues in this belly of mine (rep.) — iv. 3 

delivered o'er to the voice (the tongue) — iv. 3 

like a strange tongue; wherein — iv.4 

if my tongue cannot entreat you .... — (epil.) 

ray tongue is weary; when my legs are — (epil.) 
he hath a killing tongue, and a quiet.iim^j; V. iii. 2 

turn the sands into eloquent tongues — iii. 7 

brokenly with your English tongue — v. 2 

the tongues of men are full of deceits? — v. 2 

these fellows of infinite tongue — v. 2 

will hang upon my tongue like .... — v. 2 

but thy speaking of my tongue — v. 2 

than in the tongues of the French , , — v. 2 

our tongue is rough, coz; and my ., — v. 2 
shrewd tempters with their tongues..! Henry F/. i. 2 

— ,, — 111,.,. ,_:ii — » .■ — — jj_ 4 



iii. 1 
iii. 4 
iv. 1 



iii. 2 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 
iv. I 
iv. 2 
iv. 7 



— iv. 7 



and yet thy tongue will not confess 
he used his lavish tongue, and did 

set bars before my tongue , 

I see, must hold his tongue , 

barking of your saucy tongue .... 

with envious carping tongue 

enchantress, hold thy tongtie 

hast not a tongue? is she not — v. 3 

confounds the tongue, and makes.... — v. 3 

and fret, and bite his tongue iHenryVI.i. 1 

this knave's tongue begins to double — ii. 3 

unburdens with nis tongue the envious — iii. 1 

my heart accordeth with my tongue — iii. 1 

with slander's tongue be wounded . . — iii. 2 

tempted Suffolk's tongue (rep. iv. I) — 

sworn with a solemn tongue ! — 

a serpent seen, with forked tongue .. — 

my tongue should stumble in mine. . — 

shall it charm thy riotous tongue .... — 
that speaks witli the tongue of an enemy — 

this tongue hath parleyed unto foreign — 
he has a familiar imder his tongue 

can wish, or tongue can tell 

and let thy tongue be equal with thy — v. i 
and bite thy tongue, that slanders ..ZHenryVI. i. 4 

whose tongue more poisons than .... — i. 4 

story hanging on thy tongue? — ii. I 

nor can my tongue unload my heart's — ii. 1 

give no limits to my tongue — ii. 2 

manhood lies upon his tongue — ii. 2 

thou hast thy mother's tongue — ii, 2 

to let thy tongue detect thy — ii. 2 

and his ill-boding tongue no more .. — ii. 6 

and stops my tongue, while heart is — iii. 3 

and with my tongue to tell ~- iii. 3 

or I will charm your tongue — v. 5 

a passing pleasing tongue Richard III. i. I 

fairer than tongue can name thee.... — i. 2 

was provoked by her slanderous tongue — i. 2 

my tongue could never learn sweet .. — i. 2 

and prompts my tongue to speak.... — i. 2 

'tis figured in iny tongue — i. 2 

to use our hands, and not our tongues — i. 3 
Iiave I a tongue to doom my (jep.) .. 

a sparing liiriit to my tongue 

woe-wearied tongue is still and mute 

my tongue should to thy ears 

several tongues, and every tongue .. 



— Iii. 7 



— v. 3 



TON 

TONGUE- wag his tongue in censure. Henry r/i/. i. 1 

which action^s self was tongue to .... i. j 

tongues spit tlieir duties out i* 2 

if I am traduced by tongues i.' 2 

you can speak the French tongue .... — i' 4 

allay those tongues that durst — ii] 1 

every tongue sijcaks them, and every — ii! 2 

one general tongue unto us ii. 2 

that no tongue could ever pronounce ii.' 3 

were tried by every tongue, every .. iii. 1 

a strange tongue makes my cause .. iii" I 

every good tongue blesses — iji. 1 

over the king in his tongue iii. 2 

better have burnt that tongue iiii 2 

to silence envious tongues: be jutt .. — iii! 2 

IS the king's hand, and tongue v. I 

stands under more calumnious tongues v! 1 

wagging of your tongue to win nie . . — v, 2 

to let my tongue excuse all _ v. 2 

golden tongue had commended.. Troilus ^ Cress, i. 2 
Greekishears to his experienced tongue — i 3 
from the tongue of roaring Typhon.. — i. 3 

I shall cut out your tongue ii I 

sweet, bid me hold my tongue iii. 2 

he wears his tongue in his arms _ iii. 3 

Boglibof tongue, that give a coasting — iv. 5 

and deedless m his tongue iv. a 

he speaks the common tongue. . Timon of Athens, i. 1 

the mouths, the tongues, the eyes — iv. 3 

I would, my tongue could rot tliem off! — iv. 3 

that speak'st with ever.y tongue iv. 3 

to the root o' tlie tongue — v. 2 

the tongue our trumpeter Coriolanus, i. 1 

the sound of Maicius' tongue from .. i. 6 

all tongues speak of him _ ii. 1 

that for their tongues to be silent ii. 2 

to put our tongues into those wounds — ii. 3 

our owu voices with our own tongues ii. 3 

cannot bring my tongue to such a pace — ii. 3 

or had you tongues, to cry against . . — ii. 3 

but mock, bestow your sued-for tongues? — ii. 3 

the tongues o' the common mouth .. — iii. i 

straight disclaim their tongues? _ iii. 1 

pluck out the multitudinous tongue — iii. 1 

.your worthy rage into your tongue.. — iii. I 

forges, that his tongue must vent.... iii. 1 

words that are but roted in your tongue — iii. 2 

must I with my base tongue iii. 2 

a beggar's tongue make motion iii. 2 

never trust to what mj' tongue iii. 2 

in thy lying tongue both numbers .. iii. 3 

is well appeared by your tongue .... iv. 3 

four good tongue, more than v. 1 
hear a tongue, shriller than all ..JuUusCwsar, i. 2 

and that tongue of his, that bade .... i. 2 

good-morrow from a feeble tongue . . — ii. 1 

mountain, 'tween my heart and tonguel — ii. 4 

the voice and utterance of my tongue iii. I 

put a tongue in every wound of Csesar — iii. 2 

this tongue had not offended so to-day — v. 1 

for Brutus' tongue hath almost ended — v. 5 

mince not the general tongue Antony ^ Cleo. i. 2 

never have tongue to charge me .... ii.2 

liave it not in my tongue ii, 3 

a host of tongues; but let ill _ ii. 5 

repent, that e'er thy tongue hath so — ii. 7 

mine own tongue splits what ii. 7 

hearts, tongues, figures, scribes, bards iii. 2 

lier tongue will not obey her heart (>ep.) — iii. 2 

dull of tongue and dwarfish! jii. 3 

their tongues rot. that speak against — iii. 7 
this is but a custom in your tongue ..CymMine, i, .■> 

to my tongue, charms this report out i. 7 

we'll try with tongue too ii. 3 

will to ears, and tongues, be theme .. — iii. I 

tliy tongue may take off some — iii. 4 

whose tongue outvenoms all the worms iii. 4 

talk thy tongue weary; speak iii. 4 

lolling the tongue with slaughtering — v. 3 

or else such stuff as madmen tongue v. 4 

which by his tongue being made .... v. 5 

by thine own tongue thou art v. a 

that thunder'st with thy tongue.. Titus Andron. ii. 1 

the palace full of tongues, ofeyes.... ii. 1 

must lose her tongue to-day ii. 3 

tliat womanhood denies my tongue.. — ii 3 

if thy tongue can speak, who 'twas (rep.) — ii. 5 

she hath no tongue to call ii. 5 

detect him, cut tliy tongue ii. .5 

she but lost her tongue, and in a .... — ii. 5 

which that sweet tongue hath made — ii. 5 

with their tongues doom men to death — iii. 1 

nor tongue to tell me wlio hath — iii. 1 

or shall we bite our tongues — iii. 1 

let us, that have our tongues — iii. 1 

had she a tongue to speak iii. 1 

their stomachs witlr their bitter tongues — iii. 1 

both ear and heart obey my tongue. . — iv. 4 

they cut thy sister's tongue — v. I 

torment you with my bitter tonguel — v. 1 

her tongue, and tliat, more dear irep.) — v. 2 

that my tongue may utter forth .... — v. 3 

cut away her tongue, and they, 'twas — v. 3 

with his solemn tongue he did discourse — v. 3 

tell thee witli speechless tongues Pericles, i. I 

then give my tongue like leave to love .. — i. I 

give experience tongue; they do abuse .. — i. 2 

how durst thy tongue move anger — i. 2 

our tongues and sorrows do sound — i. 4 

iCol. Kni.2 till tongues fetch breath that. . — i. 4 

to give my tongue that heat — ii. I 

if my tongue did e'er solicit, or — ii.5 

more richer than my tongue Lear, i. I 

such a tongue that I am glad — i. 1 

I will hold m.y tongue ; so your face .... — 1. 4 

struck me with her tongue — ii. 4 

when slanders do not live in tongues .... — iii. 2 

that thy tongue some say of breeding .... — v. 3 

had I your tongues and eyes, I'd use .... — v. 3 
words of that tongue's utterance .Romeo 4- Juliet, ii. 2 



TONGUE tCoJ.-voiciO more hoarte..llomeo ^Jal. il. 2 

how silver-dwcct aoiiiul lovers' ton^^ucs — ii. 2 
wlmtfuiiv tuMKUc t.u nwii't Hiiliitclli — ii. ;i 

let rioli music's ti>ii(!ue iinf.ilil the .. — ii. U 
Bwini.T Iliaii liis ltin;;iu'. Ills iiv'ik' arm — ili. I 
every toiitfiie, tluit spunks lint Konico'a — jii. 2 
biisteretl Ito thy toiii^iie ti>r sncU a wislil — iii. 2 
wliat toiiRuc shall smoiilh tliy name — iii. 'i 

hold your tuiiRuc, good prxiilence .. .. — !'!••* 
with that gniue tongue wliicU 8he hutli — iii. 6 
tics up my tongue, aiul will not let nie — iv. 5 

for I must hokl my tongue I Ilumlei, i. 2 

give it an understaniling, but no tongue — i. 2 

Rive thy tlioughts no tongue, nor any — i. 3 

lends the tonpue vows — i. 3 

witli tongue m venom steeped — ii. 2 

lor murder, though it have no tongue — ii. 2 

scholar's, eye, toi\gue, sword — iii. 1 

to you, trippingly on tlie tongue — iii. 2 

let the candied tongue lick absurd pomp — iii. 2 
my tongue and soul in this be liypocrites — iii. 2 
an idle tongue. Go, go, you question {rep.) — iii, i 
dnrcst wag thy tongue in noise 60 rude .. — iii. 4 
caps, lianas, and tongues, applaud it to .. — iv. 5 

as there arc tongues, are liaiuU — iv. 7 

that seull had u tongue in it, and could.. — v. I 
possible to understand in another tongue — v. 2 

there ai-e no tongues else for's turn — v. 2 

ua of her tongue she oft bestows on me..Othetto, ii. I 
ehc puts her tongue a little in her heart — ii. I 
tongue at will, and yet was never loud .. — ii. 1 
I liivil lal her have this tongue cut from .. — ii. 3 
tliv fraught, for 'tis of aspicks' tongues . . — iii. 3 
will s|ieak, though tongues were out of use — v. 1 

charm your tongue (rep.) — v. 2 

TOXGUED— 09 poisonous tongued ..Cymbrliui-.'iW.i 

T )NGUKIvi;SS, slaughters H'inter'sTate. i. 2 

even from the tongueless caveru8..../(iWiiiii/ II. i. 1 

shall have a tongueless mouth Henry I', i. 2 

what tongueless Dloeks were they . Itichard III. iii. 7 
TONGUE-TIED simplicity .....Mul.^'.'sDream, v. 1 

tongue-tied our queen? It'intcr'sTttle, \. 2 

since you arc tongue-tied I Hennj II. ii. 4 

f[ive my tongue-tied sorrows leave..3f/f»rf/ /'/. iii. 3 
laply think, tongue-tied ambition. flic/iarJ ///. iii. 7 

if so. then be not tongue-tied — iv. 4 

grant all tongue-tied maidens.. Truilus^ Cress, iii. 2 
thev vanish tongue-tied in their ..JuUusCtesar, i. 1 

TO•^fIGHT thou slialt have cramps Tempett. i. 2 

let it be to-night; for now they irep.).. — iii. 3 

I have dreamed to-night Merry tVives, iii. 3 

once to-night, give ray sweet — iii. 4 

to-night at Heme's oak — iv. 6 

the matter will be known to-night .. — v. 1 
on whom to-night I will be revenged — v. 1 
thou shalt eat a posset to-night at my — v. 

for he, to-night, shall lie with — v. 5 

be patient for to-night Twelfth Kiffhl , ii. 3 

with Angelo to-night shall lie...Veus. /or Aleas. iii. 2 

at .Mariana's house to-night — iv. 3 

we shall have revelling to-night MuchAdo, i. 1 

he swore lie would marry her to-night .— ii. I 
go but with me to-night, you shall see — iii. 2 
if I see anything to-night why I slioidd — iii. 2 

there is a great coil to-night — iii. 3 

that I have to-night wooed Margaret — jii. 3 
our watch to-night, excepting your.. — iii. .'i 
sing it to-night: to-morrow morning — v. I 

to-iiight, I take ray leave — v. 1 

to-night I'll raoum with Hero — v. 1 

dolli keep his revels here to-night.. WW. JV.'.! Dr. ii. I 

hang themselves to-night ? Love's L. Losl, v. 2 

Boyet, prepare; I will awaj; to-night — v. 2 
his master will be here to-ni^;ht..iVer. ofl'enke^ i. 2 
I do feast to-night mv best-esteemed — ii. 2 
I bar to-night; you snail not gage (.rep.) — ii. 2 
to sup to-night with my new master — ii. 4 
will you prepare for this mask to-night? — ii. 4 
I did dream of money bags to-night — ii. 5 

no mind of feasting forth to-night .. — \\. :> 
no masque to-night; the wind is .... — ii. r, 
to be under sail, and gone to-night .. — ii. fi 
we'll away to-night, ond be a day before — iv. 2 
performed to-niglit: the solemn feast. /JU'jJFeU, ii. 3 

my lord will go away to-night — ii. 4 

will she away to-night? As you'll have — ii. h 
and to-night, when I should take.. .. — ii. .*> 
to eat with us to-night, the charge .. — iii. Ii 

you shall see his fall to-night — iii. fi 

why then, to-night let us assay our plot — iii. 7 

have his coinpanv to-nightif — iv. 3 

I have to-niglit (icspatched sixteen .. — iv. 3 
that my son will be here to-night.... — iv. 5 
to stay with me to-night?.. 7«miiiffo/SArjui, 1 (ind.) 
a lord will hear you play to-night.. — 1 (ind.) 
is't (wssible, you will away to-night? — iii. 2 
slept not, nor to-night she shall not — iv. I 
along impawned, away to-night .. iVinter'sTale^ i. 2 
he t<K)k goo<l rest to-n'ight; 'tis hoped — ii. 3 
madam, he hath not slept to-night .. — ii. 3 
harbour in this town to-night . . Comedy o/Err. iii. 2 

any ship puts forth to-night? — iv. 3 

I will not stay t'l-night for all the town — iv. 4 
the king comes here to-night (rrn.) .... Macbeth^ i. It 
hostess, we are your guest to-nignt .... — i. C 
to-night we hold a solemn supper .... — iii. 1 

for't must be done to-night — iii. 1 

must find it out to-night — iii. 1 

hut returns again to-night — iii. 2 

jovial 'mong your guests to-night .... — iii. 2 

It will l>e rain to-night — iii. 3 

find the tyrant's |x>wer to-nigiit — v. 6 

Arthur is deceased to-night King John, iv. 2 

is killed to-night on your suggestinu — iv. 2 

five moons were seen to-night — iv. 2 

whose to-night soe'cr speaks false .. — iv. 3 
Idiil notthink tolic sosad tu-night — v. .'i 

ko(k1 quarter, and goo<l care to-night — v. !> 

lies to-night in R<tchcstcr I UenrtjIV. i. 2 

I will set forward to-uight — ii. 3 



[ 770 ] 

TO-NIGIIT pray to-inorrow iHenryiy. ii. 4 

Worcester is stolen away to-night ., — ii. 4 
we'll to. Sutton-Collleld to-night .... — Iv. 2 
[A'li'. J we must away all to-night.... — iv. 2 

we'll tlnlit with him to-night.. — iv. 3 

beadvisicl; stir not to-iiight — iv. 3 

yea, or to-iiii;lit. Content. To-nlfht — Iv. 3 
bestow himsi-ll to-niglit in his tr«e..2H«nr|//r. Ii. 2 

I must a dozen mile to-night iii. 2 

we shall lie to-night together — iv. 2 

sir, you shall not awav to-night .... — v. 1 

we will aboard to-night Henry I', ii. 2 

to-night in Ilarfleur will we be your — iii. 3 
that 1 Hiiw in your tent to-night .... — iii. 7 
least live Frei'ichmen died to-night.. I /ir/iri/r/. ii. 2 

I did dream to-niijlit, the duke •illmiyl'I. iii. 2 

you shall Bup with Jesu Christ to-night — v. 1 
the infant that is born to-night. . . . Idvhard III. ii. 1 
at Nortliainpton they do rest to-night — ii. 4 
to-night the boar had rasetl offiiis helm — iii. 2 
here will I lie to-night; hut where .. — v. 3 
God give you quiet rest to-night! .. — v. 3 
I will not sui; to-night; give me some — v. 3 
shadows to-night have struck more.. — v. 3 

I will play no more to-night Henryrill. v. 1 

where sups he to-night? Troilus 4- Cretsida, iii. 1 

Troilus lodges there to-night — iv. 1 

hnst not slept to-night? would he not — iv. 2 
fell as death, to-night, all frieiuls, ... — iv. 5 
Diomed doth feust with him to-night — iv. 5 
blood with Grcekisli wine to-uigirt .. — v. 1 
silver bason and ewerto-niglit. Timon nf Athens, iii. i 

we shall have news to-night Coriolanits, ii. 1 

I will make my very house reel to-night — ii. 1 

it is decreed, he dies to-night — iii. 1 

will you sup with me to-night ....Julius Ccesar, i. 2 
but never till to-night, never till now — i. 3 

and what men to-niglit have had resort — ii. 1 
nor earth, have been at pence to-night — ii.2 
she dreamt to-night she saw my statua — ii. 2 
he lies to-night within seven leagues — iii. I 
I dreamt to-night, that I did feast .. — iii. 3 
to lodge their companies to-night.... — iv. 3 
red rays thou dost sink to-night .... — v. 3 
ray tent his bones to-ni^ht shall lie.. — v. 5 
what sport to-night? llear. . Antony Sj Cleopatra, i. 1 

to-night, we'll wander through — i. I 

fortunes, to-night, shall be drunk to bed — i. 2 

and to-night 1 11 force the wine peep — iii. II 
let's to-night be bounteous at our meat — iv. 2 
ray good fellows, wait on me to-night — iv. 2 

tend me to-night: may be (r/'p.) — iv. 2 

your lord with writing, do't to-n\g\\i.CymheUne, i. 7 
stranger, that's come to court to-night? — ii. 1 
I'll win to-niglit of him: come, go .. — ii. 1 
this chanced to-night. Most \W.e\y.... Pericles, iii. 2 

nay, certainly to-night; for look — iii. 2 

to-night, to-night: but, mistress do you — iv. 3 

I'll bring home some to-iiiglit — iv. 3 

I think our father will hence to-night ....Lear, i. 1 

and the king gone to-nightl — i. 2 

will be here with him to-night (rpp.) .... — ii. 1 
worthy arch and patron, comes to-night — ii. 1 

they have travelled hard to-night? — ii. 4 

what will liap more to-night — iii. 6 

I dreamt a dream to-night Romeo Sf Juliet, i. 4 

thou hast heard me speak to-night .. — ii.2 
I have no joy of this contract to-iii';ht — ii.2 
satisfaction canst thou have to-niglit? — ii. 2 
Romeo hath not been in bed to-night — ii. 3 

came he not home to-night? — ii. 4 

she'll not come down to-night — iii. 4 

to-night she's mewed up to her heaviness — iii. 4 

I'll not to bed to-night — iv. 2 

leave me to myself to-night — i v. 3 

I will hence to-night — v. I 

Juliet, I will lie with thee to-night .. — v. 1 

foot wanders this way to-night — v. 3 

how oft to-night have my old feet.... — v. 3 
my liege, my wife is dead to-night .. — v. 3 
has this thing appeared again to-night?.iya»"/c/, i. I 
what we have seen to-night unto young — i. 1 

hold vou the watch to-night? — 1,2 

I will watch to-night; perhaps 'twill walk — i. 2 

whatsoever else shall hap to-night — i. 2 

the king doth wake to-night — i. 4 

known what you have seen to-night .... — i. 5 
there is a play to-night before the king .. — iii. 2 

refrain to-night; and that shall lend — iii. 4 

mv good lord, what have I seen to-night? — iv. 1 

I'll have him hence to-night — iv. 3 

he to-night, hath boarded a land carack, OMri/o, i. 2 
your counsel and your help to-night .... — i. 3 
you must hence to-night. To-night .... — i. 3 
lieutenant to-night watches on the coiut — ii. 1 
watch you to-night; for the command .. — ii. 1 
Michael, look you to the guard to-night — ii. 3 

not to-night, good lago — ii. 3 

I have drunk but mie cup to-ni^ht — ii. 3 

that which he hath drunk to-night — ii. 3 

to Desdeinona hath to-night caroused .. — ii. 3 
have I to-night flustered with flowing cups — ii. 3 
till to-night, I ne'er might say before .. .. — ii. 3 
been to-night exceeilingly well cudgeled — ii. 3 
to-night at supper? No, not to-night .... — iii. 3 

an' you'll come to supper to-night — iv. 1 

rot, and perish, and be damned to-night — iv. I 
sir, to-night, I do entreat that we may .. — iv. I 
to-night lay on my bed my wedding sheets — iv. 2 

he sups to-night with a harlot — iv. 2 

song, to-night, will not go from my mind — iv. 3 
know of Cassio where he supped to-night — v. 1 
have you prayed to-night, Uesdcmona?.. — v. 2 
kill me to-morrow, let me live to-night.. — v. 2 

TOOK pains to make thee speak Temprsl, i. 2 

I took him to be killed witii — ii.2 

is't you took up so gingerly?. 7''roCFr«. of Verona, i. 2 

when I took my leave — iv. 4 

that I have took upon me — v. 4 

I took't upon mine houour Merry lyivet, ii. 2 



TOOK mo on their shoulders Merry If trei, iii. S 

upon my life then you took the wrong — v. 5 

wiieii i took a boy for a girl — v. 5 

I took great pains to study it .... Twelfth, \lghl, i. 5 

lie might have took his answer — j. ."i 

some hour before you tiHjkmc from.. — ii. I 

she took the ring of me — Ii.2 

father took much delight in — ii. 4 

in repaying what we took from them — iii 3 

that took the Phoenix — v. I 

we took him for a coward — v. 1 

if he took you a box o' the car . . Meas.fi>r Meal. ii. 1 
might the vantage best have took.. .. — ii.2 

now took your brother's life — ii. 4 

this is the body that took away — v. I 

1 took no more pains for those (rep.) .MuchAdo, ii. 3 
they are not the men you took them for — iii. 3 
charitable hand, took up a beggar's.. — iv. 1 
a certain aim he took at a fair ....Mid.lV.'aDr. ii. 2 

I took him sleeping, that is — iii. 2 

that I took in the jiark with Love'sL.Loil, i. 2 

you took the moon at full — v. 2 

I always took three threes for nine .. — v. 2 
indeed, more than I took her ftir.Mer.o/fenice, iii. 5 

that took some pains in writing — v. 1 

your highness took his dukedom . . As you Like il, i. 3 
from whom I took two cods — ii.4 

yrotfers not took, reap thanks for ....All's Hell, ii. I 
took this lark for a bunting — ii. .5 

though I took liim at his prayers .... — ii.4 
whose words all ears took captive.... — v. 3 
the last that ere I took her leave .... — v. 3 
took some care to get her cunning. rominj,'o/S/i. i. I 
the mad-brained bridegroom took him — " iii. 2 
he took the bride about the neck .... — iii. 2 

he took good rest to-nightl Winler'tTale, ii. 3 

declined, drooped, took it deeply .... — ii. 3 

the thing she took to quench it — iv. 3 

all that are, took something good .. .. — v. 1 
(so he then took her to be) who began — v. 2 
for the king's son took me by the hand — v. 2 
from thy admiring daughter took the — v. 3 
alluring beauty took from my. Contedy of Errors, ii. I 
and there withal, took measure of my — iv. 3 
took perforce my ring away (rep. iv. 4) — iv. 3 

neither; he took this place — v. 1 

flt of madness took him _ v. 1 

and took deep scars to save thy life .. — v. I 
forsooth, took on him as a conjurer.. — v. 1 
by force took Dromio and ray son .. — v. 1 
though he took up my le"s s(mietime..il/(iWW/i, ii. 3 
and violent hands took off her life .. — v. 7 
fair fall the bones that took the pains.. KinnJohn, i. I 
advantage of his absence took tlie king — i. 1 

and took it, on his death, that this .. — i. I 

as you say, took pains to get — i. 1 

may know wherefore we took the.... — v. 2 
Hotspur took Mordake the earl .... 1 Henry 1 1', i. 1 

Percy here at Holmedon took — i. 3 

his nose, and took 't away ogain .... — i. 3 

came there, took it in snuff — i. 3 

wounds, which valiantly he took .... — i. 3 

but took all their seven points in .... — ii. 4 
you took occasion to be quickly .... — v. 1 
so bruised that the pursuers took him — v. h 
being bruited once, took fire and heat.2/;eiiry/r. i. 1 

etumbling in fear was took — i. I 

and j'ou took it like a sensible lord .. — i. 2 
and a famous true subject took him — iv. 3 

who took it from my pillow? _ iv. 4 

basis bv took stand for idle Henry V. i v. 2 

for had you been as I took you for . . — iv. 8 

he lives; but is took prisoner \Henryri. i. I 

the rest slaughtered or took, likewise — i. j 

and he first took exceptions at — iv. 1 

I took ye for my lord protector 'iHcnn/I'l. i, 3 

that vou took bribes or France — ' iii. I 

1 took a costly jewel from my neck.. — iii. 2 

that took our state upon him — iii. 2 

thy mother took into her blameful .. — iii. 2 
suddenly a grievous sickness took him — iii. 2 
we took him setting of boy's copies .. — iv. 2 
took odds to combat a poor famished — iv. In 
I took an oath that he shouldquietly.3HtHij/r;. i. 2 

being not took l)efore a true — i.i 

this IS he that took king Henry's chair — i. 4 
they took his head, and on the gates — ii. I 
when he took a beggar to his bed .... — ii.2 

to the man tlint took him — iii. 2 

I took him for the plainest Richard III. iii. .'i 

thus I to<5k the vantage of — ili. 7 

took he upon him, without the ....Henry I'lll.i. I 
took 'em from me, with this reason — ii. 2 (letter) 

hence I took a thought — ii.4 

for telling how I took the blow.. 7'roi/m ^ Crew. i. 2 

(old wranglers,) took a truce — Ii.2 

culled Amenor; yesterday took .... — iii. 3 
some single vantages you took. Timon qf.Hhens, i i 2 
your wtirds have took such pains .... — iii. 5 

as I took not of the place — v. I 

a murrain on't! I took this for silver. Corio/aniij, i. !> 

where it did mark, it took — ii. 2 

took from you the apprehension .... — ii. 3 

and took what lay before them — iv. ti 

I ti>ok him; made him j<iint-servnnt — v. :> 
and took some jiride to do myself this — v. .'1 

where I have took them up JuliiuCtvsar , ii. I 

that lord Brutus took to wife — ii. 1 

therefore I took your hands — iii. 1 

took his voice who should l>e pricked — iv. I 

took It too eagerly; bis soldiers t. 3 

he not took't [Kfit.-lookeil J . Antony i^ Cleopatra, iii. 4 
our will is, Antony be took alive .... — iv. 6 

lieing royul, took her own way — v. 2 

took such sorrow, that he quit Cymbeline, i. \ 

which he took, as we do air — 1. 1 

they took thee for their mother — iii. 3 

took pity from most true wrt-tchednesa — iii. 4 

when he took leave of my ludy — iii. 5 

or bought, what I have took iii. C 



TOO 

TOOK— you tonk his life Ci/mbeline, iv. 2 

took Ireel to do't, and yet died too? .. — v. 3 

but took me ill my throea — v. 4 

which, being took, aliould by the minute - v. 6 

a, royal iover), took liis hint — v. 5 

froin her bosom took the enemy's. TiiusAndron. v. H 
king unto him took a plieere . . Pericles, i. (Gowert 
with whom the father liking took — i. (Gower) 

took some displeasure at him i. 3 

your lord has took himself to i. 3 

took it in rage, though calmed ii. 1 

straight took horse; commanded Lear, ii. 4 

that dowerless took our youngest born .. — ii. 4 

tliey took from me the use of mine — iii. 3 

I took you for a joint-stool — iii. 6 

ay, sir; she took them, read them — iv. 3 

1 took it for a man ; often — iv. 6 

in my name took their discharge — v. 3 

took up the child llomeo^JiUiel, i. 3 

the sin that they have took i. 5 

very well took, i faith; wisely, wisely — ii. 4 

presently took post to tell it you — v. I 

we took this mattock and this spade — v. 3 
which so took effect as I intended .. — v. 3 

lie took me by the wrist, and lield Hamlet, ii. 1 

she took the fruits of my advice — ii. 2 

he took my father grossly, full of bread Iii. 3 

I took tliee for tliy better; take tliy — iii. 4 

whicli I observing, took once a pliant ..Othello, \. 3 
I, being here, took 't up: look, here it is — iii. 3 
took you for that cunning whore of Venice — iv. 2 
I took by the throat the circumcised dog — v 2 

TOOK'ST— how thou took'st it AU's ll'ell.n. i 

Ihou took'st a beggar; wouldst liave Cymbeline, i. 2 

TOOL— the great tool come to court . HfHry ('///. v. 3 

some coiner with his tools made .... Cymbeline, ii. 5 

work more plentiful than tools to do't v. 3 

take you to your tools Tilus Andronicut, iv. 3 

draw thy tool ; here comes two . . llomeo ^Juliet, i. 1 

T( lO-MUCH— dies in his own too-much. Hamlet, iv. 7 

TOOTH— 'gainst the tooth of time, il/eas./oril/ras. v. 1 

thy tooth is not so keen ..As you Like it, ii. 7 tson") 

whilst I have a tooth in my head All's tVell, iif3 

with ne'er a tooth in her hea.d.TamingofShreu:, i. 2 
set my pugging tooth on edge Winter' sT. iv. 2 (song) 

or Ethiopian's tooth, or the fanned snow iv. 3 

than a mad dog's tooth Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

in danger of her former tooth Macbeth, iii. 2 

scale of dragon, tooth of wolf iv. 1 

poison for the age's tooth King John, i! 1 

a fasting tiger safer by the tooth .... _ iii. 1 
fell sorrow's tooth doth never rankle. ffiiTiard //. i, 3 

that ever chewed with a tooth \HenryIV. ii. 2 

sliall flesh his tooth in every iHenrylV. iv. 4 

more poisons than the adder's tooth.. 3 Henry r/. ii 4 

his venom tooth will rankle Richard 111. i. 3 

full two j'ears ere I could get a tooth — ii. 4 
your colt's tooth is not cast yet ....HenryVlll. \. 3 

is food for fortune's tooth TroilusfyCressida, iv. 5 

how sharper than a serpent's tooth Lear, i. 4 

tooth that poisons if it bite iii. 6 

by treason's tooth bare-gnawn _ y." 3 

being troubled with a raging tooth Othello, iii. 3 

TOOTH-ACH— I have the tooih-aah.MuchAdo, iii. 2 

wliat? sigh for the tooth-ach? _ iii. 2 

yet is this no charm for the tooth-ach — iii. 2 

could endure tlie tooth-acli patiently y| 1 

he tliat sleeps feels not tlie iooth-ach.Ciimbeline v 4 
TOOTH-DRAWER: and, now ..Love's L.L<,st,v. 2 

TOOTHED briers, sharp furzes Tempest 'iv 1 

TOOTH-PICK— and the tooth-picli.... A if sIFell, i. 1 
his tooth-pick at my worship's mess.. Ki'iia-Jo/'m i I 

TOOTHPICKEK now from the MuchAdo,'ii. I 

TOP— indeed the top of admiration Tempesl,'ui. 1 

played truant, and whipped top . . Merry Wives, v. 1 

out o' the toe like a parish top 'I'welhhNi/fht, i. 3 

which is the top of judgment Meas.jbrMeas. ii. 2 

that skins the vice o' the top — ij. 2 

to take the present time by the top ..Much Ado, i. 2 
red-hipped humblebee on the top..Wrf. N.'sDr. iv. 1 
up to tlie mountain's top, and mark — iv. I 

on the top of the mountain? Love'sL.Lost, v. 1 

to wag their high tops Merchant of Tenice, iv. I 

and high top bald with dry AsyouLtkeit, iv. 3 

bowed Ills eminent top to their All's Well, i. 2 

take the instant by the forward top. . v. 3 

to bear a schoolboy's top Winter's Tale, iii 1 

the round and top of sovereignty ?...., Uac6e/A, iv. 1 
more damned in evils, to top Macbeth _ iv. 3 

tills is the very top, the height King John, iv. 3 

had I seen the vaulty top of heaven v. 2 

the proud tops of the eastern Richard U. iii. 2 

from windows' tops threw v. 2 

he is walked up to the top \Henryiy. iii 2 

take the ruffian billows by the top..2HeH/-i//r. iii. 1 

picture on the top of it iv. 3 

I pr'ythee, on this turret's top 1 Henry rr. i. i 

from top of honour tHenryFI. i, 2 

standing naked on a mountain top.. __ iii! 2 
they use to write it on the top of letters — iv. 2 

as on a mountain top the cedar v. 1 

whose top branch overpeered Jove's. 3 Henry VI. v. 2 

rooked lier on the chimney's top .... v. 6 

ill tops of all their pride? v. 7 

biiildeth in the cedar's top Richard IH. i. 3 

all the mother's, from the top to toe iii. 1 

mountain tops, that freeze .Henry VIII. iii. 1 (song) 
whose wanton tops do buss. . TroilusifCressida. iv. 5 
after him to the mountain's top. Timon of Athens, i. 1 
whicli to the spite and top of praises .Co; io;anu.v, i. 9 

as one would set up a top iv. 5 

yea, to cliiraney tops, your infants.. /u(/usC«.tar, i! I 
competitor in top of all design ..Antonxi ^ CU-o. v. 1 

whose top to climb is certain Cymbeline, iii. 3 

when from the mountain top Pisanio — iii. 6 

by the top doth take iv. 2 

wliat trunk is here, without his top? — iv. 2 
climbeth Tamora Olympus' top .. TiiusAndron. ii. I 

climb tlie highest promontory top .. ii. 2 

no more but as the tops of trees Pericles, i. 2 



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TOU 



TOP-branch that's only green at top . . Pe,icles, ii. 2 TOKN to pieces with a bear. 

our griefs are risen to the top — ij 4 - 

Edmund the base sliall top the legitimate. icar, i. 2 

fall on her ingrateful top! _ ji. 4 

to the top of that same hill? iv.6 

make much more, and top extremity .... — v! 3 
silver all these fruit-tree tops . . Homeo ^Juliet, ii. 2 
tiptoe on the mistv mountain tops .. _ iii. 5 
from top to toe? My lord, from head. . . . Hamlet, i. 2 



cry out on the top of the question — ii. 2 

cried in the top of mine _ ji. 2 

with flamiu" top stoops to his base — ii! 2 

to the top of my compass iii, 2 

they fool me to the top of my bent — iii 2 

on tlie house's top, let the birds fly _ iii. 4 

TOP AS— sir Topas the curate ijep.) Twelfth Night, iv. 2 

to him, sir Topas _ iv. 2 

sir Topas, sir Topas, good (re;>.) .... _ iv! 2 

dark? As hell, sii- Topas (rep.) _ iv. 2 

God b' wi' you, good sir Topas _ jy. 2 

one sir Topas, sir; but thaf s all one — v 1 

TOP-FULL of direst cruelty! Macbeth, i.b 

their souls are top- full of offence King John iii. 4 

Sl^^Si^J^"^'^''-^ of my joy must. Rojneo 4- Julie), ii.4 

10-1 INCH the unclean knight Mem/ Wives, iv. 4 

TOPLESS deputation he puts on ..rroi/iis* Cress, i. 3 
TOP-MAST— down with the top-mast. .Tempest, i. 1 

on the top -mast, the yards — i. 2 

and Montague our top-mast 3 Henry VI. v. 4 

suck tliem up to the top-mast Cymbeline, iii . 1 

TOPPED, they higher rise Pericles i 4 

-r,Jll>$i',H.lJ5j' [^'^''-Passed] my thought . . Hamlet, iv. 7 

lOPPING all others in boasting Coriolanus, ii. I 

TOPPLE— down topples she Mid.N.'sDreum, ii. I 

though castles topple on their Macbeth, i v. I 

and topples down steeples I Henry IV. iii. 1 

seem to rend, and all to topple Pericles, iii. 2 

the defloient sight topple down headlong. £eor, iv, 6 
TOP-PHOUD fellow (Whom from .. Henry Vlil i 1 

TOP-SAIL— take in the top-sail Tempest, i. 1 

TOPSY-TURVY down IHenrylV. iv. 1 

TORCH— Hymen's torch be lighted . . Tempest, iv. 1 
dies the dusky torch of Mortimer ..\ Henry r I. ii. 5 

by thrusting out a torch from _ iii. 2 

this is the happy wedding torch _ iii. 2 

the burning torch in yonder turret .. iii. 2 

follow his torch, he goes to . . Troilns^Cressida, v. 1 
stand where the torch may not discover — v. 2 

since the torch is out Antony ^ Cleopatra, iv. 12 

a burning torch, that's turned Pericles, ii. 2 

give me a torch (reo.) Romeo S,- Juliet, i. 4 

give me thy torch, boy: hence _ v. 3 

what, with a torch I muffle me _ v. 3 

what torch is yond'. that vainly lends — v. 3 

there, where the torch doth burn — v. 3 

TORCIIBEARER-of torclibearers..jUcr. of Ven. ii. 4 

I am provided of a torohbearer _ ii.4 

fair Jessica shall be my torchbearer ., ii. 4 

for you must be ray torohbearer — ii. 6 

to thee this night a torohbearer. . Romeo fy Juliet, iii. 5 

TOKCHER his diurnal ring All's Well, ii. 1 

TORCHES-as we with torches Ao.Meas.for Mens. i. 1 

put your torches out Much Ado, v. 3 

marks in links and torches \ Henri/ 1 V. iii. 3 

burn like twenty torches joined JuliusCtrsar, i. 3 

to burn this night with tovehes.. Antony &-Cli-o. iv. 2 

fly, brother; torches! torches! Leaj, ii. 1 

doth teach the torches to burn . . Romeo fy Juliet, i. 5 

good-night: more torches there! _ i. 5 

TORCHLIGHT; but, my lord ....JuliusCasar, v. 5 
TORCH-STAVES in tlieir hands .... Henry r. iv. 2 

TORE— she tore the letter into Much Ado, ii. 3 

to see how the bear tore out his.. Winter'sTale, iii. 3 

I tore them from their bonds KingJnhn, iii. 4 

I tore it from the traitor's bosom ..Richard II. v. 3 

TORMENT I did free thee? (rep.) Tempest, i. 2 

it was a torment to lay upon the damned — i. 2 

and to torment me, for bringing ii. 2 

do not torment me (rep.) ii! 2 

the spirit torments me ii! 2 

all torment, trouble, wonder — v. 1 

foul mischance torment me. Two Gen. of Verona, ii. 2 

rather than living torment? _ iii. 1 

that which now torments me to rehearse iv. 1 

she never will; that's her torment ..il/uc/i^rfo, ii. 3 

and torment the poor lady worse — ii. 3 

till I torment thee for this injury..jUiy./V's.Dr, ii. 2 

a world of torments though I Love'sL. Lost, v. 2 

O happy torment, when iny ..Merch. of Venice, iii. 2 
wliat studied torments, tyrant . . Winter'sTale, iii. 2 
whatever torment you do put me to.A'ingJohn, iv. I 
to hear what torments you endured. . 1 Henry VI. i. 4 
those three lords torment my heart. .3Henri/r/. i. 1 

as a fury to torment my soul i. 3 

torment myself to catch (rep.) — iii. 2 

furies, take him to your torments!.. n/cAard ///. i. 4 
chide my fortune, and torment myself? — ii. 2 
in torment and in agony. And came — iv. 4 
by hell, and all helPs torments.. Troilus ff Crfss. v. 2 
thy dullness would torment thee.. Timon ofAth. iv. 3 
then be a torment to her contempt.. Ci/mbi-ime, iii. 5 

to utter that which torments me v. 5 

to torment you with my bitter TiiusAndron. v. 1 

to be a torment to mine enemies? — v. 2 

a thwart disnatured torment to her! Lear, i. 4 

that Rosaline, torments him so. .Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 4 
art thou, that dost torment me thus? — iii. 2 

to live, when to live is a torment Othello, i. 3 

torments will ope your lips _ y. 2 

cunning cruelty, that can torment him. . — v. 2 
TORMENT A-si fortuna me tormenta.2Heim//r. ii. 4 
TORMENTED, and-good e'en ..Romeo & Juliet, i. 2 
TORMENTING dream affrights . ...Riclmrd 111. i. 3 
to sulphurous and tormenting flames . . Hamlet, i. 5 
TORMENTOR- thy tormentors tel../iic/iari/ II. ii. I 
TORMENT'ST me ere I come to hell — iv. 1 

Suffolk, thou torment'st thyself 'iHenryVI. iii. 2 

TORN— and torn with briers ..Mid.N.'sDream, iii. 2 

and our faith not torn Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 

the liouess had toru some flesh ...Js you Like it, iv. 3 



,-. Winter'sTale, V. 2 

from my own windows toru my Richard II iii 1 

have torn their souls _ jij' 3 

France should have torn and rent .'.iHenryVI i I 

my arms torn and defaced, and I _ iv' 1 

not being torn a pieces HenryVlll v' 3 

added honour torn from Hector. Troilus ^ Cress', iv 5 

though thy tackle's torn Coriolanus, iv'. 5 

is torn from forth that pretty.... 7V(!(sJ)idro;i. iii. 1 
^.'?^V,'V;^T^*' i°™ °"' "^ *e eavt\\..Rnmen^Jul. iv. 3 

TORRENT of occasion 'IHentylV iv I 

the torrent roared; and we did ....JuliusCwsar i 2 

'rnn^"T-^P ^'^l torrent, tempest Hamlet, iii. 2 

'}^nR??>Tii'""^ ^™"t f™'» h's .. Troilus merest- i. 3 
XUliiUISL— come forth, thou tortoise!. 7'empe«(, i. 2 
rr.,'IVj.nTJl???y ^.^'"P ^ tortoise hung.flomeo fy Juliet, v. 1 
lORl URE—then torture my wife. ;Werry Wives iii 2 

hate me, torture me to death Much Ado' iv 1 

Biron I'll torture ere I go Love'sL. Lost, v 2 

1 11 torture him; lam glad of it.Mer.of Venice iii I 

with vilest torture let my life Alt's Well, ii,' 1 

hecallsfor the tortures; what will .. — iv 3 
and thy body's torture, that thou. Winter's Tale, ii! 3 
what old, or newer torture must I .. — iii 2 
the tortures he shall feel, will break — iv' 3 

than on the torture of the mind Macbeth iii' 2 

turning dispiteous torture out of door! KingJohn,iv 1 
want pains enough to torture me! . . _ iv '3 
with Erebus and tortures vile also.. 2 Henry AT. ii' 4 

that so her torture may be 1 Hemy VI. v 4 

you go about to torture me in vain..2He(irv/'y' ii' 1 

strange tortures for offenders — 'ii j ' 1 

and torture him with grievous lingering — iii' 2 

were torture more than death _ iii 2 

O torture me no more, I will confess — iii' 3 

while we devise fell tortures for 3 Henry VI. ii 6 

to torture thee the more Richard III iv 4 

or hang, or torture, as he 8hall.^7i(oiiw ^Cleo. iii. 11 

for now all length is torture — iv 12 

from thee by a sharp torture Cymbeline, i v. 3 

would be death drawn on with torture — iv 4 

bitter torture shall winnow y' 5 

thou'lt torture me to leave (rep.) _ v' 5 

on pain of torture, from those . . Romeo ^Juliet, i! I 
this torture should be roared in dismal — iii 2 

l3ut purgatory, torture, hell itself _ iii! 3 

tis torture, and not mercy; heaven is — iii' 3 
thou dost slander her, and torture me.. Othello, iii! 3 

the place, the torture,— O enforce it! — y. 2 

TORTURED— and tortured me .. Twelfth Ni^hl v' 1 
and our parting is a tortured body . . All's Welt, ii 1 
with silence in the tortured soul ..Richard II. iv. 1 

I tortured above the felon IHenryVI iii 1 

say he he taken, racked, and tortured — ' iii' I 

TORTURER doth teach .... Merchant of Venice, iii! 2 

I play the torturer by small and . . Richard ;;. iii. 2 

send out for torturers ingenious Cymbeline v A 

T(3RTUREST me, Tubaf . . Merchant rf "en ice' 'in'. 1 

TORTURING— a torturing hour? ..jVid N.'sDr. v. I 

some never heard of torturing pain .Titu<And ii 4 

TORYNE— and take in Toryne?. Antony t/Cleu. iii 7 

he is descried; Cffisar has taken Toryne — iii 7 

TO-SPEND it so unneighbourly! King John, v. 2 

TOSS— tut, tut, good enough to toss. . 1 HenrylV. iv. 2 
I will toss the rogue in a blanket ..IHenrylV. ii! 4 
I'll toss the flower-de-luce of France.2He»)v (7. v! 1 
now did the sea toss upon our shore . . Pericles, iii 2 

back do I toss these treasons Lear, v! 3 

TOSSED— as you are tossed with 1 Henry I v] ii! 3 

have tossed me on their pikes iHenryVI, j ' 1 

must not be tossed and turned. 7'(mo)! ofAlhens,'ii. 1 
billow, sir, as tossed it upon shore .... i*enc/es,'iii. 2 

thou hadst been tossed from wrong .... ' y' | 

TOSSETH— that she tosseth so? .. Titus.indron. iv! 1 

lOSSING on the ocean Merchant of Venice, i. 1 

after late tossing on the breaking. . Richard II. i'ii' 2 
TOSS-POTS still had drunken.. TweWhN. v. 1 (song) 

TOST— my sons were tost Richard Til. ii. 4 

from coast to coast is tost Pericles, ii. (Gower) 

f CoZ.] on the sea, tumbled and tost — v. (Gower) 
TOTAL— therein to a total .... Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 2 
now is he total gules; horridly tricked .Ha;nW, ii. 2 
TOTALLY— mistake the truth totally.. Tempest ii 1 
TOTTER-like us, the state totters .'... _ iii 2 
TOTTERED [CoZ.-tattered]battlementsfiiVA.//. iii 3 

TOTTERING in the balance All's Well, i. 3 

[^Knt.'i wound our tottering colours .. King John,' v. 5 

in this our tottering state? Richard Ill.'iii. 2 

thirsty after tottering honour ...Pericles, iii! 2 

TOUCH me, and speak to me Tempest, ii! 2 

a touch, a feeling of their afflictions.. _ v" 1 
O touch me not; I am not Stephano. . — 

the inly touch of love TwoGen.ofVero. 

that touch me near 

whose golden touch could soften _ 

let go that rude uncivil touch 

take but possession of her with a touch — 

touch me his finger-end Merry Wives, v. 5 

BO excellent a touch of modesty .. TuelJ'thNi"hl ii. 1 

to touch fortune's fingers ii. 6'(le'tter) 

ay, touch him: there's the vein..Meas.for Meas. ii. 2 
no loss shall touch her by my company — iii. | 

particular scandal once can touch — iv! 4 

as free from touch or soil with her .. _ v. I 
they that touch pitch will be deii\ed.Much,4do iii! 3 

brave touch! could not a worm. Mid. N.'sDr. iii. 2 
maiden shame, no touch of baihfulness? — ' iii! 2 
one day in a week to touch no food . . Love's L.L. i . 1 

durst poet touch a pen to write iv. 3 

a sweet touch, a quick venew of wit. . — v! 1 
'scape tlie dreadful touch oi'. Merchant nf Venice, iii'. 2 
or any air of music touch their — ' v! 1 

1 will not touch a bit Asyau Like it, ii! 7 

as the touch of holy bread iii. 4 

in the most bitter touch of sorrow All's Welt, i. 3 

whose simple touch is powerful to. . .. ii. 1 

do not touch my lord! iii! 2 

madam, before you touch Taming of Shrew, iii! 1 

here she stands, touch her wlnjever .. _ iii 2 
they shall not touch thee, Kate — iii 2 



I, 11. 7 
iii. i 
iii. 2 
V. 4 



TOU 



[ 781 ] 



T()\\^ 



Tl)l'Cll-rirc9ninetiPtmioli ahair of. 7'aniiiiK iirSA. Iv. 1 

cxiiressly am fiiihiil til toiicli it — iv. I 

Iwforc you t.niLli tlie niciit — iv. 3 

tiisip, or touclioiu- ilr.>|Mif it — v. 2 

othcin toUL'li, yut often Umch'mi^.ComeJi/ i^r Hit. ii. I 

fliat never toucli wcll-wilciimo — ii. 2 

how (Icarlv wotiUl it toiicli tliee — ii. 2 

iiotliiiij; Clin toticli him fiirtherl Macbeth, iil. "i 

he wants tlic nntnnil tnucl< — iv. 2 

tint at Ills l()>ic-li, Mioli sunctity — iv. 3 

« ill n.it t.Muh vi.iini; Artlmr's life ..KingJohn, iii. 4 

I will not tiHicli thine eyes — iv. 1 

OS to touch the lists Ilivhard II. i. 3 

knows no toucli to ttme — ,i. 3 

shortly mean to touch our northern — ii . 1 

(Inrcd once to touch a (lust of EnglaniVe — .''••' 

may with a mortal touch throw — iii. 2 

could never touch the ground I HiuiijI r, \. 3 

lion will not touch the true prince Irrp.) — ii. 4 
ten thousand mei\ must hide the touch — iv. i 
ho|>e.i we have in him touch E;nunu!.2H(-iirr/ //'. iy. 1 

touch her soft mouth, and march ItrmvV. ii. 3 

touch of Harry in tlie night — iv. (.chorus) 

more eloquence in a sugar touch of them — v. 2 
when mv lips do touch nisehecitg ..Wlfjii-yVl. ii. 5 

for I will touch thee hut wi til — v. 3 

and dare not touch his own iHenj-yl'l. i. 1 

their touch atfrights me, as a serpent's — iii. 2 
tiieir softest touch, as smart as lizard's — iii. 2 

but knows some touch of pity lUchaid III. i. 2 

will touch us all too near, if God .... — ii. 3 

to touch his prowth, nearer — ii. 4 

yet touch this sparingly — iii. 5 

riow do I play tne touch, to try if — iv. 2 

madam. I have a touch of your condition — iv. 4 
and Ills blessings touch mc alike.... iit^i'ty /'///. ii 2 

or touch of her good person? — ii. 4 

some touch of your late business .... — v. 1 

let me touch your hand Troilus fi Crestida,]. 3 

one touch of nature makes — iii. 3 

if he will touch the estimate ....Timon <^Athens,i. I 

here is a touch: is't good? — i. 1 

the ear, taste, touch, smell, all pleased — i. 2 
touch them with several fortunes .... — iv. 3 

thou touch of hearts! — iv. 3 

toucli my palate adversely CorManus,\\. 1 

and my friends of noble toucli — iv. 1 

to touch Calphurnia JuliusCrssar, i. 2 

and touch thy instrument a strain .. — iv. 3 
touch you the sourest points. /Jn/o»i/ ^- Cleopatra ,ii. 2 
tluit should desire you to touch him — v. 2 

th>' thoughts touch their effects — _ v. 2 

a touch more rare subdues all pangs. .Cf/»i6(?/i'hc, i. 2 
"whose touch, whose every touch, would — i. 7 

that I might touch; — ii. 2 

to the greedy touch of common-kissing — iii. 4 
how deeply you at once do touch me I — iv. 3 
that shall once touch my shoulder . . — v. 3 
touch not the boy, he is of royal.. TitmAndron. v. I 

sin within, will touch the gate ferkles, i. 1 

prince Pericles, touch not, ujion thy life — ^i. 1 

touch me with noble anger! Lenr^u. 4 

but live to sec thee in my toucli — iv. 1 

no, they cannot touch me for coining .. .. — _ iv. 6 
to smootli that rough touch witli. Itomeo 4' Juliet, i. 5 
liands that pilgrims' hands do touch — i. 5 

hand, that I might touch that cheek! — ii. 2 
your particular demands will touch it.. namlet,_Y\. 1 

1 know no touch of it, mi' lord — iii. 2 

Eiin no sooner shall the mountains touch — iv. I 
I'll touch my point w th this contagion . . — iv. 7 

a touch, a touch, I do confess — v. 2 

and hills whose heads touch heaven .... Olliello,\. 3 

touch me not 60 near — ii. 3 

wherein I mean to touch your love indeed — iii. 3 
if it touch not you, it comes near nobody — iv. 1 
from any other foul unlawful touch .... — iv. 2 
to Palestine for a touch of his nether lip — iv. 3 

TOUCHED the very virtue of compassion 7i;in|)i?i',i. 2 

saw I him touched with anger so — iv. 1 

spirits are not finely touched Meat, for Meas.i. 1 

if so your heart were touched with .. — ii. 2 

how seems lie to be touched? — iv. 2 

that I am touched with madness .... — v. 1 

my iraticnce here is touched — v. I 

to he truly touched with love Much Ado, iii. 2 

but toucliid with human ..Merchnntn/ I'euice, iv. 1 

you touched ray vein at first A .vul-i !"■•', ii. 7 

to be touched with so mail}' giddy .. — iii. 2 
they touched not any stranger sense . . All's ^etl, i. 3 

hearing your liigh majesty is touched — ii. 1 

if love have touched you Taming nf &t\rcv, i. 1 

that you have touched liisq^ncen.. W inter' tTale,'\. 2 
as gross as ever touched conjecture .. — ii. I 

he is t)uehed to the noble heart — iii. 2 

our shii) hath touche<l upon the deserts — iii. 3 

have 1 lierc touched Sicilia — v. 1 

looked. toiiched.'or carved tothce.CoinrJt/ "/"rr. ii. 2 

he iioth not t'>uclied you yet .Varljelti, iv. 3 

which, being touche<i. and tried .... Kim^'JoAm, iii. 1 
of all his blood is touched corruptibly — v. 7 

hand of peace hath touched 2;icnry II'. iv. 1 

and, touched with cholcr, hot as lleuryl'. iv. 7 

his holv state is touched so near.... Wl'iiri/;'/. iii. I 
cannibals would not have touched ..illeuryl'l. i. 4 

nearer than he touched mine Ilicltard ///. ii. 4 

touched vou the bastardy of Edward's — iii. 7 

the fairest hand I ever tiniehed! Henry I'll I. i. 4 

1 have touched the highest point of. . — iii. 2 

ic touched the ports ilcdi red Troilut 4- Creis, i i. 2 

I ain no more touched than all — ii. 2 

there you touched the life of our .... — 11. 2 
your white enchanting fliiKcrstoiiccd — iii. I 
I know no touch of consaiiguinity .. — iv. 2 
lliey have all been touched . . Tiinon >' iltieni, iii. 3 
seeing his reputation touched to deaf' — iii. 5 
hud touclie<l his stiirit.and tried ....t^/rio/o/itu. ii. 3 
when the navel of the ^tllte was touched — iii. I 
my name hath touched your cars.. .. — v. 2 
barren, touched in this holy chu8C..JuiiuiC<i>Kir,i. 3 



Tt)UCIIEI)-uo man else be touched..'ii(ii"On'i'ii-. ii. 1 

wluit villiiin touched his body — iv. 3 

hears how Antony in tonclieif Antony ^ Cleo. ii. 2 

Ciesar is toui:lieil. When such a spacious — v.' 

the king he toiiclicd at very heart Cymlelinej i. 

shainc ^tlic first that ever touched him) - iii 
some slightiv touched, some falling — v. 

have touched them for his life. ... 7 i/i/i/4h(Ii(»i. ii. 
I have touched thee to the quick .... — iv. 

dangerous to be touched Periclet, i. 

this fourteen years no razor touched .. — v. 
hand they find us touched, wc will Uamti'l, iv. 

TOUCHES— and beastly toyKhcs.Mms. for Meat. iii. 
the touches of sweet harmony ..Mcr.nf I'cnice, v. 
with sweetest touches pierce your.... — y. 

that touches any of this fruit As you Like it, ii. ! 

to have the touches dearest prized — iii. 2 (verses 
some lively touches of my daughter's — v. 
one of theprettiest touches of all . If'inler'sTaIr, v. 
this touches me in reputotion. Cnmcih/ oflirmrs, iv. 
the devilish cannon touches . .Henry t'. iii. (.chorui 
the earth sings when he touches it .. — iii. 

touches me deeper than you Ricltard III. i . 

it touches you, my lord, as mucli .... — i. 
worlt some touches of remorse? . Troitus ^- Cress, ii. 
strife lives in these touclies .. ..Timon of Alliens, i. 
some good necessity touches his friend — ii. 

touches Cajsar nearer (i-c;).) lulinsCirsar, iii. 

with more urgent touches ..Antony SfClenpatra, i. 

swell with the touches of those — ii- 2 

that touches this my first-born ..TilusAmlron. iv. 2 

tremble, touches us not with pity Lear, v. 3 

we that have free souls it touches us not.Hnwi(e', iii. 2 

TOUCIIETH us botb Taming of Stireu'^ i. I 

the quarrel toucheth none but I Henry y I. iv. 1 

nothing can proceed, that toucheth. Ilichard III. iii. 2 
far as toucheth mv particular .. TroilusSf Cress, ii. 2 
it toucheth us as rraiice invodes Lear, v. 1 

TOUCHING that point ....ileaturefor Measure,}. 1 
touching now the point of liuman .Mid.N.'slir. ii. 3 
contempts thereof are as touching. Lore'* i.. Lost, i. I 
little boy, as touching the hit it? irep.) — iv. I 
touching but my gentle vessel's. Mercti. of Venice, i. 1 
yet often touoiiing will wear gold. Comedy of Err. ii. 1 

iiigh affairs touching that time KmgJoliu, i. I 

his grace at large, as touching France .Henryt'.], 1 
touching our person, seek we no reveuge — ii. 2 
as partly touching or concerning the — iii. 2 
as touching the direction of the military — iii. 2 
thou art reverent touching thy ....1 Hcmi/ ''/. iii. 1 

and touching the duke of Ifork illenryl'l. ii. 3 

decree in parliament, touching \i\ng.zHenry I'l. ii. 1 
orticles be drawn touching the jointure — iii. 3 

as touching Richmond Ilichard III. v. 3 

touching tlie weal 0' the common ..Coriolanns.i. 1 
insupportable and touching loss! .JtiliusCffsar, iv. 3 
history of my knowledge touching .Cymbeline, iii. 6 

that on the touching of her lips Periclrs, v. 3 

touching hers, niake happy Romeo ^Juliet, i. 5 

touching this dreaded sight, twice seen. . Hamlet, i. 1 
sometliing touching the lord Hamlet .... — i. 3 

touching tills vision here,— it is — i. 5 

siieak of comfort, touching the Turkish. OM.Ho, ii. 1 

TOUCHSTONE: look you As you Like if, ii. 4 

this shepherd's life, master Touchstone? — iii. 2 

not a whit, Touchstone — iii. 2 

gold, that's by the touchstone tried Pericles, ii. 2 

TOUGH senior. Why tough (.rep.')..Love'sL.Losl, i. 2 

which we may name tough — _i. 2 

thy tough commixtures melt ZHenryVI. ii. D 

sides, you are too tough! Lear, ii. 4 

u|ion the rack of this tough w<. rid — v. 3 

TOUGH Kl!, brother, than you can. Winter'sTale, i. 2 
TOiroHNKSS-of perdurable toughness.. 0//ic«o, i. 3 
TOUllAINE, Maine {rep. ii. 1 and li. i!). KingJolm, i. 1 

ai Tonraine, in St. Katharine's Mlenn/I'l. i. 2 

TOUllN AMIiNTS, hear sweet ..TuoGen.of I'er. i. 3 

TOUKNEY for her love Pericles, ii. 1 

why, wilt thou tourney for the lady? — ii. 1 

TOURS, are won away 1 Henry VI. iv. 3 

famous ancient city. Tours 2HenryVl. i. 1 

when in the city Tours thoxi ran'st .. — i. 3 

TOUZE you joint by joint ...We(7»i(re/"ri1/cMsi/re, v. 1 

TOW me after Antony i, Cleopatra, iii. 9 

TOWARD— a play toward? Mid.N.'sUream,\\\. 1 

sure, another flood toward As you Like it, y. 4 

here is some gofid pastime toward.. Turning ofSh, i. 1 
some cheer is toward — v. I 

f;ood hearing, when children are toward — v. 2 
lere's goodlj' stuff toward! 2 Henry IV. ii. 4 

spoken like a toward prince Sllenryl'l. ii. 2 

here's a noble feast toward. . . . Timon of Athens, iii. 6 

1 iiereeive, four feasts are toward. . -inlony ^Cleo. i'l. 6 
have you heard of no likely wars toward .Lear, ii. 1 

there is some stranire thing toward — iii. 3 

aught, sir, of a battle toward? — iv. 6 

trifling foolish banquet towards. . Ilomeo /I Juliet, i. .^ 
what might be toward, that this sweaty .Hamlet, i. I 
what feast is toward, in thine eternal cell — v. 2 

TOWARDLY prompt spirit . . 7Vmoii of Athens, iii. 1 

TOW ER— cloud-capp'd towers Tempest, iy. I 

lodge her in an upper tower .. TwoGen.ofVer. iii. 1 

scale another Hero's tower — iii. 1 

from off our towers we might behold. Kinff./oAii, ii. 2 

how higli thy glory towers — ii. 2 

like an eagle o'er his airy towers .... — y. 2 

strong as a tower in hope Richard II. i. 3 

convey him to the Tower — iv. 1 

to Julius Ca:sar's ill-erected tower .. — v. 1 

to Pomfret, not unto the Tower — v. 1 

steeples, and moss-grown towers ..MIrnrylV. in. 1 
I'll to the Tower with all the haste ..l/ltnri//'/. i. 1 

to survey the Tower this day — i. 3 

hath here distrained the Tower to his — j. 3 

iiavc armour here out of the Tower.. — i. 3 

in yonder tower, to overpccr — i. 4 

occursed tower! accursed fatal hand — __i. 4 
at I^tndon-bridge, as at the Tower? — !!!■ ' 

thrusting out a torch from yonder tower — iii. 2 
your stately and air-braving lowers — iv. 2 



TOWEU— hawks do tower so wcll..,.2H/'iir|/»';. ii. 1 
aid of your honour from the tower .. — iv. 5 

liave assayed to win the Tower — iv. 6 

if vou can burn down ilie Tower loo — iv. G 
I'll send dnke Kclinuncl to ilieToMcr — iv. 9 
the duke of Somerset is in the Tower — v. I 
let him to the Tower, anil chop away — v. I 
he be conveyed unto the Tower ....ZHenryVI. iii. 2 

hence with him to the Tower — iv. 8 

you'll meet him in tlie Tower — v. I 

the Tower, the Tower! O Ned — v. 4 

to make a bloody snnner in the 'J'ower — v. h 

to convey me to the Tower Ilichard III. '\. 1 

shall he lien christened in the Tower — i. I 

the king that sends you to the Tower — i. 1 

send Lord Hostings to the Tower — i. I 

dare adventure to be sent to the Tower — i. 3 

my husband Henry in the Tower.... — 1.3 

I had broken from the Tower — i. 4 

shall repose you at the Tower — iii. I 

I do not like the Tower, of any place — iii. 1 
at the Tower, and welcome you (rr;).) — iii. I 
shall not sleep in quiet at the Tower — iii. 1 

on tliem, go I unto the Tower — iii. I 

summon him to-morrow to the Tower — iii. 1 

both together to the Tower — iii. 2 

toward the Tower? (rep.) — iii. 2 

then was I going prisoner to the Tower — iii. 2 
startle, when he looked upon the Tower — iii. 4 

she's wandering to the Tower — iv. 1 

no further than the Tower — iv. 1 

back, with me, unto the Tower — iv. 1 

1 mean those bastards in the Tower — iv. 2 
the chaplain of the Tower hath buried — iv. 3 
the king's nome is a tower of strength — v. 3 

think on the Tower, and me — v. 3 

thy cousins smothered in the Tower — v. 3 

you shall to the Tower (rep.) Henry I' III. i. I 

to the Tower, I thought, I would have — i. 2 

to make your house our Tower — v. 1 

you be committed to the Tower — v. 2 

conveyed to the Tower a prisoner.... — v. 2 
must needs to the Tower, my lords? — v. 2 

and see him safe i' the Tower Henry VIU. v. 2 

u p to the eostern tower Trnilus ^ Cressida, i . 2 

yon towers, whose wanton tops — iv. 5 

these great towers, trophies. . . . Timon of Athens, v. 5 

to towers and windows Julius Ctt'sar, i. I 

nor stony tower, nor walls of beaten — i. 3 

whose towers bore heads so high Pericles, i. 4 

Child Rowland to the dark tower.7.ear, iii. 4 (song) 

off the battlements of yonder tower Romeo ^Jul. iv. I 

TOWERED citadel, a pendant rock. Ant.^Clen. iv.l2 

TOWER-HILL, or the limbs Henry II II. v. 3 

Tt)WERING in her pride of place Macb^ili, ii. 4 

did put me into a towering passion ....Hamlet, v. 2 

TOWN— peopled towns Tu-oGen.of Verona, v. 4 

be there bears i' the town? Meriylf'ives, i. 1 

which of you know Ford of this town? — i- 3 

the priest 0' the town commended .. — ii. 1 
there is a gentlewoman in this town — ii. 2 

go you through the town to Frogmore — ii. 3 
and every way but the town way — — iii. 1 
there is a friend of mine come to town — iv. 5 

the forest better than the town? — v. 5 

go see the reliques of this town?.. TwetfthKighl, iii. 3 

with viewing (if the town — iii. 3 

range the town to seek me out — iv. 3 

when came he to this town? — v. 1 

to a captain in this town — v. I 

and all the gallants of the town ....Much Ado, iii. 4 
league without the town t,rep. i. 2)..Mid.A'.'sVr. i. 1 
in tlie town, the field, you do me .... — ii. 2 

1 am feared in field and town — iii. 2 

'tis won, as towns with fire Love's L.Lost, i. 1 

a walled town is more worthier.. /(> you 7.i<rpi(, iii. 3 
Hymen peoples every town (rep.) — v. 4 (song) 

to welcome us to town Taming qf Shrew, i. 1 

thy mildness praised in every town.. — ii. 1 

ta en out of the town armoury — iii. 2 

bear my countenance in the tow*n .. — v. 1 
no traffic to our adverse iov:ns.Comcdy <tf Errors, i. 1 
to the statute of the town, dies ere .. — i. 2 
I'll view the manners of the town .. — i. 2 

walk with me about the town — 1.2 

this town is full of cozenage — i. 2 

strange unto yonr town, as to your .. — ii. 2 
ond a pair of stocks in the town? .. .. — iii. 1 
j'our town is troubled with unruly .. — iii. I 
not harbour in this town to-night .. — iii. 2 
I have some business in the town .. .. — iv. 1 
I will not stay to-night for all the town — iv. 4 
the laws and statutesof this town.... — v. 1 
brought to this town by that most .. — v. I 

the brows of this resisting town King John.'n. 1 

we'll lay befi'>re this town our royal — ii. I 

ore expedient to this town, his forces — ii. I 
the eye and prospect of your town .. — ii. 1 
marcli these greens before your town — ii. I 
we came to spout against your town — ii. I 
and in his right, we hold this town.. — ii. 1 

we hold our town for neither — ii. 2 

deedsofnmlice on this town — ii 2 

by this peevish town, turn thou .... — ii. 2 

driftofliullets on this town — ii. 2 

friendly treaty of our threatened town? — ii. 2 

and tins rich fair town — ii. 2 

ofiright mv towns with dreodful .... — iv. 2 

ttH I have banked their towns? — v. 2 

onr town ofCiiestor in Glostershire. Kic'inrd //. v. fl 

I'eto iiicet nie at the town'send MlemylV. iv. 2 

thev arc lor llic town's end — v 3 

through the pensaut t<iwn8 illenrylV. (indue.) 

up and down the town, that her eldest — ii. 1 
he heard of j'oiir grace's aiming to town — ii. ! 
09 the parish heifers arc to the town bull — ii 2 

that I nm vet come to town — ii. 2 

is old Doulile of your town living yet? — iii. 2 
with griev(ui9 siege castles, anil towns.. /Inn y/'. i. i 
ecverul ways meet iu one town — i. 'i 



TOWN— new repair, our towns of war. 
I would have blowed up the town . . 

the town is beseeched 

the town sounds a parley 

resolves the governor of the town? .. 

take pity of your town 

we yield our town, and lives 

what call you the town's name . 



or the loss of those great towns 1 Henry VI, i. 1 

some petty towns of no import — i. 1 

what towns of any moment — i, 2 

let's leave this town — \i 

master-gunner am T of this town .... — j. 4 
on the lute, beholding the towns burn — i- 4 

recovered is the town of Orleans .... — i. 5 

the bells throughout the town? — i. 6 

centre of this cursed town — ij. !! 

and subverts your towns — ii- 3 

eitlier to get the town again, or die . . — !!!• ^ 

in this late betrayed town — iij. 2 

talce some order in the town — iii. 2 

and the towns defaced by wasting ruin — iii. 3 
and seven walled towns of strength.. — iii. 4 

most part of all the towns — v. 4 

in atiy of our towns of garrison — v. 4 

iif offices, and towns in Trance i Henry VI. i. 3 

beadles in your town, and things — ii. 1 

be wliipped througli every market town — ii. 1 

my lord, whole towns to fly — ii. 1 

the towns eacli day revolted — iii. 1 

and, throughout every town, proclaim — iv. 2 

sold tlie towns in France (rep.) — iv. 7 

and seized upon tlieir towns 'iHenryVI.X. 1 

overlooli the town of York (rep. ii. 2) — i. 4 

in the towns as tliey do march along — ii. 2 

lurking in tlie towns about — iv. 2 

lodge in towns about him — iv. 3 

for Edward will defend the town .... — iv. 7 
wilt thou leave the town, and fight? — v. 1 
turned out of all towns and cities . . Richard HI, i. 4 
near to the town of Leicester (rep. v. 4) — v. 2 
and happiest hearersot the town. Henry F///. (prol.) 
what good sport is out of town. Troilus <§- Cressida^ i. 1 

that pertly front your town — iv. 5 

go in, and cheer the town — v. 3 

thou detestable town! take . . Timon of Athens, iv. 1 
to this coward and lascivious town ., — v. 5 
shall make their harbour in our town — v. 5 

to take in many towns, ere Coriolanus, i, 2 

summon the town. How far off — i. 4 

call thither all the officers of the town — i. 5 
the field, we cannot keep the town .. — i. 7 
the town is ta'eni 'Twill be delivered — i. 10 
for they iiad so vilely yielded the town — iii. 1 
than to take in a town with gentle .. — iii. 2 
my love's upon this enemy town .... — iv. 4 

for the defence of a town — iv. 5 

your native town you entered — v. 5 ^ 

it went the backside the town Cymbeline, i. 3 

made Lud's town with rejoicing .... — iii. 1 
on the gates of Lud's town set (rep.) — iv. 2 ! 

BO through Lud's town march — y. 5 

is welcome to our town and us Pericles, i. 4 

Boult, spend thou that in the town .... — iv. 3 j 

wakes and fairs, and market towns Lear, iii. 6 

the poor distressed Lear is i' the town — Iv. 3 

for the wealth of all this town . . Romeo S[ Juliet, i. 5 
there's a nobleman in town, one Paris — ii. 4 i 
displant a town, reverse a prince's doom — iii. 3 j 
the searchers of the town, suspecting — v. a 
as lief the town crier spoke my lines;.. Hnm(e(, iii. 2 ! 
Marcus Lucchese, is he not in town?....0(/ie;(o, i. 3 
the town is empty; on the brow o' the .. — ii. I 

diablo, ho! the town will rise — ii. 3 ; 

what! in a town of war, yet wild — ii. 3 

the town might fall in fright — ii. 3 

look with care about the town — ii. 3 

how silent is this town! ho! — v. 1 

TOWN'-GATES on his back Love'sL.Lost. i. 2 

TOWNSHIP— of our whole township..2 Henri//'/, i. 3 

TOWNSMEN yet admit? King John, ii. 2 

cnme the townsmen on procession ..2HenryVI. ii. I 
TOYS- as little by such toys.. TwoGen.of Verona, i. 2 

I do not like deae toi's Merry Wives, i . 4 

silence you airy toys — v. 5 i 

li;?l\t upon some toy Twelflh Night, iii. 3 

a foolish thing was but a toy — v. 1 (song) 

antique fables, nor these fairy toys. Mid.N.'sDr. v. 1 
critic Timon laugh at idle toys!.. Lovers L^ Lost, iv. 3 

a toy, my liege, a toy — iv. 3 

even a toy in hand here, sir As you Like it, iii. 3 

tut! atoyi an old Italian ....rammg-o/S/ireu', ii. 1 } 

a knack, a toy, a trick — iv. 3 

dreams are toys tVinter^sTale, iii. 3 

any toys for your head — iv. 3 (song) 

all is but toys; renown, and grace ....Macbeth, ii. 3 

James, there's toys abroad King John, i. I I 

shall we fall foul for toys? 2 Henry IV. ii. 4 

for a toy, a thing of no regard I Henri/ K/. iv. I 

and sucli like toys as these Richard III. i. I 

being but a toy, which is no grief .... — iii. 1 
immoment toys, things of such ..Antony &Cleo. v. 2 
lamenting toys, is jollity for apes . . Cymbeltve, iv. 2 

if no unconstant toy Romeo SfJulird.W. 1 

a fashion, and a toy in blood Hamlet, i. 3 

the very place puts toys of desperation .. — ^* '* 
toy seems prologue to some great amiss .. — iv. 5 
light-winged toys of feathered Cupid.... OWieWo, i. 3 

nor no jealous toy, concerning you — iii. 4 

TOZR from thee thy business .... Winler'sTale,\v. 3 

TRACE tills alley up and down Much Ado, iii. 1 

to trace the forests wild Mid.N.^s Dream, ii. 1 ■ 

souls that trace his line Macbeth, iv. I ; 

can trace me in the tedious ........ 1 Henri//r. iii. I i 

all my joy trace the conjunction I.. Henrj/ /-'///. iii. 2 
so slow, that could not trace them! -.Cymbeline, i. I 
dead and living, but no trace of him — v. 5 

the traces, of the smallest Borneo Sr Juliet, i. 4 

why may not imagination trace Hamlet, v. 1 

and, who else would trace him — v. 2 



TRACE— [Co/. Kn^] Venice, whom I trace. 0(Aciio, ii. 1 

TRACK of his bright passage Richard II. iii. 3 

by the bright track of his fiery car../(icAar£i ///. v. 3 
TRACT of every thing would by .... Henri/ VIII. i. I 

leaving no tract behind Timon of.ithens, i. I 

TRACTABLE to any honest reason. .IHenry/K. iii. 3 

dost find him tractable to us Richard III. iii. 1 

that tractable obedience is a slave ..Henry VIII. i. 2 
and altogether more tractable. Troilus ^ Cressida, ii. 3 
will be more mild and tractable .. 'I'ititsAndron. i. 2 
but I shall find them tractable enougli.f'en'cfej,-, iv. 6 
TRADE —a tapster is a good trade ..Merry IVives, i. 3 

and I will trade to them both — i. 3 

i f y our trade be to her Tirelfth Sight, ii i . 1 

you need not change your tinie.. Mens, for Meas. i. 2 

what trade are 3'ou of, sir? — ii. 1 

the trade, Pompey? is it a lawful trade? — ii. 1 

not whipt out of his tradel — ii I 

not accidental, but a trade — iii. i 

your hangman is a more penitent trade — iv. 2 

I will instruct thee in my trade — iv. 2 

all great doers in our trade — iv. 3 

since that the trade and profit of.Mer. ofVenice, iii. 3 
common ferry that trades to Venice — iii. 4 

been taught by any of my trade.. Taming o/SA. ill. I 
steeped in the colours of their trade . . Macbeth, ii. 3 
to trade and traffic with Macbeth.... — iii. 5 

some way of common trade Richard H. iii. 3 

where most trade of danger ranged ..iHenrylV. i. I 

what trade art thou. Feeble? — ill. 2 

venture trade abroad Henry V.i.'i 

stands in the gap and trade of more. Henri/ r///. v. 1 
sisters, of the hold-door trade . . Troilus <§• Cress, v. 1 1 
mysteries, and trades, degrees . Timon of Athens, iv. I 
to make a whore forswear her trade.. — iv. 3 
an enemy, and give over my trade .. — iv. 3 
beloved of all the trades in Rome ..Coriolanus, iii. 2 
pestilence strike all trades in Rome.. — iv. I 
speak, what trade art thou? (rep.) . . JidiusCresar, i . 1 
a trade, sir, that I hope I may use . . — i. 1 

food of us that trade in love ....Antony ^ Cleo. ii. a 

to be used in every trade Pericles, iv. 3 

any trade: it's no calling — iv. 3- 

been at this trade? What trade, sir? — iv. 6 
I cannot be offended with my trade.. — iv. 6 

but two hours at the trade iear, ii. 2 

bad is the trade must play the fool — iv. I 

that gathers samphire: dreadful tradel .. — iv. 6 
liave you any further trade with us? ..Hamlet, iii. 2 

iiis hide is so tanned with his trade — v. 1 

thougli in the trade of war I have slain.. OWeHo, i. 2 

TRADED in it, makes it seem King John, iv. 3 

two traded pilots 'twixt Troilus Sf Cressida, ii. 2 

TRADE-FALLEN; the cankers of.. I Henri/ /K. iv. 2 

TRADERS-on the flood Mid.N.'s Dream, ii. 2 

peruse the traders, gaze upon . . Comedy of Errors, i. 2 

and traders riding to London 1 Henry IV. i. 2 

good traders in the flesh .... Troilus Sf Cressida, v. 1 1 

TRADESMAN'S matters JuliusCtesar,!. I 

TRADESMEN, and they often .. Wiriter's Tale, iv. 3 
than see our tradesmen singing in.. Coriolanus, iv. 6 

TRADING that way IHenryJV.Vi. 4 

TRADITION takes not away mj ..As youLike it, i. 1 
throw away respect, tradition, toim. Richard II. iii. 2 

mock at an ancient tradition Henry V. v. 1 

TRADITIONAL: weigh it Richard III. \\i. 1 

TRADUCED by odious ballads AWsWell, ii. 1 

if I am traduced by tongues Henry VIII. i. 2 

he is already traduced for levity. /lii^onji ^Cieo. iii. 7 
makes us traduced, and taxed of other .. Hamlet, i. 4 
beat a Venetian, and traduced the state. 0;/ie/;o, v. 2 

TR ADUCEMENT, to hide your Coriolanus, i. 9 

TRAFFIC— no kind of traffic would I. . Tempest, ii. 1 
which, for traffic's sake, most of .Twelfth Niglit, iii. 3 
a merchant of great traffic through. Taming ofSh, i. I 

my trafiic is sheets : when Winter's Tale, iv. 2 

no traffic to our adverse towns . .Comedy of Err. i. 1 
to trade and traffic with Macbeth .... Macbeth, iii. 5 

this is in traffic of a king 1 Henry VI. v. 3 

dishonour trafiics with man's .. Timon of Atliens, i. 1 

traffic confound thee irep.'l — i. 1 

the two hours' trafiic of . . Romeo fy Juliet, (prologue) 

TRAFFICKERS-petty traflSckers.il/er. ofVemce, i. I 

TRAGEDIAN-theEnglishtragedians./4«'s(Ce«, iv. 3 

I can counterfeit the deep tragedian /^ic/iar^////. iii. 5 

the tragedians of the city Hamlet, ii. 2 

TRAGEDIES-delightin tragedies! TitusAndron. iv. 1 

TRAGEDY— been a fine tragedy ..Mid.N.'s Dr. v. 1 

on tlie French ground played a tragedy. Henry r. i. 2 

contrived this woeful tragedy? 1 Henry VI. i. 4 

not conclude their plotted tragedy .2HenryVI. iii. 1 
even so suspicious is this tragedy .... — iii. 2 
as if the tragedy were played in jest. 3 Henry VI. ii. 3 
I live to look upon their tragedy.. /Jic/iord ///. iii. 2 
complot of this timeless tragedy. T/7iis Andron. ii. 4 
for tragedy, comedy, history, pastoral. . Hamlet, ii. 2 
for us and for our tragedy .... — iii. 2 (prologue) 
TRAGIC instance of our harm .Comedy of Errors, i. 1 

the nature of a tragic volume 2HenrylV. i. 1 

drag the tragic melancholy 2HenryVI. iv. I 

than can my ears that tragic history. 3 Henry ;'/. v. 6 
to make an act of tragic violence . . Richard III. ii. 2 
of this tragic [Co/.A'n/. -frantic] play.. — iv. 4 

is the tragic tale of Philomel Titus Andron. iv. 1 

look on the tragic loading of this bed . .Oi hello, \ 2 

TRAGICAL mirth. Merry and (rep.),U/i(.,v.'sOr. v. 1 

and tragical, my noble lord, it is ... . — v. 1 

look you still so stern and tragical?.! Henry n. iii. 1 

as bitter, black, and tragical Richard. III. iv. 4 

tragical-historical, tragical-comical Hnmlel, ii. 2 

TRAIL— cry out thus upon no tvixWMerry Wives, iv. 2 
the field I will the Trojan trail.. rrotVus^ Cress, v. 9 

trail your steel pikes Coriolanus, v. 5 

this is an aspick s trail Antony ^ Cleopatra, v. 2 

hunts not the trail of policy so Hamlet, ii. 2 

how cheerfully on the false trail they cry! — iv. 6 
TIIAIL'ST thou the puissant |iike?.. ..Henri/ C. iv. 1 

TRAIN— your train to my poor cell Tempest, v. 1 

to bear my lady'.-s train .... Two Gen. of Verona, ii. 4 
knight of his train, to trace . . .. Mid.N.'s Dream, ii. 1 



TRAIN our intellects to vain Love's L. Lost, i. 1 

and in her train there is a gentle lady — iii. 1 

his train? Camillo with him? Winter'sTale, ii. I 

what train ? but few, and those — v. 1 

my best train I have from your — v. 1 

train me not, sweet mermaid. Comedi/ o/"Krror J, iii. 2 

by many of these trains hath Macbeth, iv. 3 

to train ten thousand Euglisii King John, iii. 4 

we did train him on 1 Henry IV. v. 2 

let our trains march by us iHenrylV. iv. 2 

which of this princely train call ....IHeuryVI. ii. 2 

and take away his train — iii. 3 

the Dauphin, and his train — v. 4 

the very train of her worst wearing. .2Henri/r/. i. 3 

with some little train (rev.) Richard III. ii. 2 

honour's train is longer than his ..Henry VIII. ii. 3 

a royal train, believe me — iv. I 

she that carries up the train — iv. 1 

you train me to offend you . . Troilus <S- Cressida, v. 3 
the rest look like a chidden train.. Julius Ccesar, i. 2 
sequestered from all your train? . Titus Andron. ii. 3 

call my train together; degenerate Lear, i. 4 

my train are men of choice — i. 4 

comes with so small a train [iCn(. -number] — ii. 4 

abated me of half my train — ii. 4 

to cut off my train, to bandy hasty — ii. 4 

dismissinghalf your train, come then .. — ii. 4 

attended with a desperate train — ii. 4 

as, stars with trains of fire and dews ....Hamlet, i. I 

TRAINED me like a peasant As youLike it, i. 1 

they were trained together in their. Winter'sTale, i. 1 
I was trained up in the English....! HenrylV. iii. 1 

he first trained to the wars 1 Henry VI. i. i 

for that cause I trained thee — ii. 3 

he was never trained up in arms ..Richard III. v. 3 
he must be taught, and trained ..JutiusCrpsar, iv. 1 
though trained up thus meanly .... Cymbeline, iii. 3 
these twenty years have I trained up — v. 5 

strong, trained up in arras Titus Andronicus, i. 1 

I trained thy brethren to that guileful — v. 1 
and by Cleon trained in music. PenWes, iv. (Gower) 

youthful, and nobly trained Romeo <^ Juliet, iii. 5 

TRAINING— his training such Henry VIII. i. 2 

to give her princely training Pericles, iii. 3 

I doubt not but thy training hath been — iv. 6 

TRAITOR— he's a traitor— come Tempest, i. 2 

put thy sword up, traitor — i. 2 

and justify you traitors — v. I 

prove false traitor to myself ..TwoGen.of Ver.iv. 4 
thou art a traitor [^Col.Knt.-tyrai\t]Mer7y 'tires, iii. .1 
our doubts are traitors .... Measure for Measure, i . 5 

and let the traitors stay Love'sL.Lost, iv. 3 

a kissing traitor: how art thou — v. 2 

thus do all traitors; if tlieir AsyouIAIteit, i. 3 

mistrust cannot make me a traitor .. — i. 3 

my father was no traitor — i.3 

if she be a traitor, why so am I — i.3 

are sanctified and holy traitors to you — ii. 3 

they are virtues and traitors too All's Well, i. 1 

a traitor you do look like (rep.) — ii. I 

merely our own traitors — iv. 3 

traitor to her loving lord? .... Taming of Shreio, v. 2 

more, she's a traitor Winter's Tale, ii. I 

traitors! will you not push her — ii. 3 

a nest of traitors! I am none — ii. 3 

thou, traitor, hast set on thy wife ... . — ii. 3 
almost made me traitor to myself.. Com. o/^rr. iii. 2 
by tliat most disloyal traitor the thane. il/af(/e.'/i, i. 2 

our fears do make us traitors — iv. 2 

when we are traitors, and do not — iv. 2 

a traitor, mother? Ay, that he (rep.) .. — iv. 2 

all traitors, that do so? (rep.) — iv. 2 

he is a traitor. Thou liest, thou — iv. 2 

doth espy himself love's traitor KingJohn, ii. 2 

thou art a traitor and a miscreant ..Richard II. i. I 
with a foul traitor's name stuff I .... — i. 1 

if I be traitor or unjustly fight! .... — i. I 

like a false traitor, and injurious .... — i. 1 

consequently, like a traitor coward.. — i. 1 

a recreant and most degenerate traitor — i. 1 
upon this overweening traitor's foot — i.l 

a traitor to my God, my king (rep.). . — i.3 

that he's a traitor, foul and dangerous — i.3 

if ever I were traitor, my name — i.3 

the rest of the revolting faction traitors? — ii. 2 
your lordship was proclaimed traitor — ii. 3 
your love pursues a banished traitor — ii. 3 
I am no traitor's uncle; and that word — ii. 3 
this thief, this traitor, Boliugbroke.. — iii. 2 
defiance to the traitor, and so die? .. — iii. 3 
to come at traitors' calls, and do them — iii. 3 
is a foul traitor to proud Hereford's.. — iv. I 

can see a sort of traitors here — iv. I 

find myself a traitor with the rest .. — iv. 1 
villain! traitor! slave! Wliat is .... — v. 2 
thou hast a traitor in thy presence .. — v. 3 
I tore it from tlie traitor's bosom .... — v. 3 

the traitor lives, the true man — v. 3 

old dugs once more a traitor rear? .. — v. 3 
to Oxford, or wliere'er these traitors are — v. 3 
the dangerous consorted traitors .... — v. 6 
I'll be a traitor then, when thou ,. ..i Henry IV. i. 2 

to redeem a traitor Jiome? — i.3 

he calls us rebels, traitors, and will . . — v. 2 
I do arrest thee, traitor, of high ....2HenryIV. iv. 2 

some guard these traitors to — iv. 2 

your name, a traitor your degree .... — iv. 3 
the traitors are agreed: the king.. Henry r. ii. (cho.) 

is bold, to trust tiiese traitors — ii. 2 

to dub thee with the name of traitor — ii. 2 
'sblud, an arrant traitor, as any .... — iv. 8 

I am no traitor. That's a lie — iv. 8 

here is a villain and a traitor — iv. 8 

what traitors have we here? \ Henry VI. i. 3 

traitors have never other company .. — ii. 1 
to die for treason, but no traitor .... — ii. 4 

I am looted by a traitor villain — iv. 3 

by forfeiting a traitor and a coward — iv. 3 

we die, while remiss traitors sleep .. — iv. 3 
all 'long of this vile traitor Somerset — iv. 3 



TRA 



TRAITOB In the Inntl commit tHenryyi.i. 3 

ony one lU'Cuso York for a traitor? .. — i. 3 

tliy licuil for lliia tliy traitor's siicccli — i. 3 

lav littmla upon tlicse traitors, and tlieir — i. 1 

take licrec tluit traitor from our .... — ii. 3 

BCrrot knife, ami tniilor's rage — iii. I 

wlio's a traitor, tilostor lie is nono .. — iii. I 

he's a villain, and a traitor — iv. '.i 

and tlicrcforc he is ft traitor — iv. '2 

proclaim them traitors that arc up .. — iv. 2 

lorxl Sav. the traitors Imte tlicc — iv. -1 

join with the traitor; and they jointly — iv. 1 

18 the traitor Cade surprised? — iv. 9 

of Somerset, whom he terms a traitor — iv. 9 

elain, that monstrous traitor? — iv. 10 

to heave the traitor Somerset from .. — v. I 
present your crace a traitor's head ., — v. 1 

no, nor canst not rule a traitor — v. 1 

O monstrous traitor! 1 arrest theo .. — v. I 

obey, audacious tniitur; kneel — v. 1 

the surety for their traitor father .... — v. 1 
he is a traitor, let him to the Tower — v. I 

why, wliat a brood of traitors have we — v. 1 
thy king, and thou a false-heart traitor — v. I 
a subtle traitor nec<l9 no sophister .. — v. 1 

a traitor to the crown (rep.) ZHenryVI. i. 1 

what title httst thou, traitor — i. I 

prolonK a while the traitor's life .... — i. 4 

off with the traitor's head, and rear it — ii. G 
hal durst the traitor breathe out so.. — iv. I 
that Edward be pronounced a traitor — iv. Ii 
take the sreat-grown traitor unawares — iv. 8 

we'll quickly rouse the traitors in — v. 1 

O passmg traitor, perjured, and unjust! — v. 1 
which, traitor, thou wouldst have me — v. .'i 

Sour better, traitors as ye are — v. 5 
traitorsl murderers! they, that.... — v. 5 
for traitors wliile thou livest (rep.).. Richard III. 1. 3 
and, like a traitor to the name of God — i. 4 
thou art a traitor: oS' with his head — iii. 4 

the head of that ignoble traitor — iii. a 

the covert'st sheltered traitor that ever — iii. 5 
the subtle traitor this day had plotted — iii. .5 
to warn false traitors from the like.. — iii. 5 
would have had you heard tlie traitor — iii. 5 
be brief, when traitors brave the field — iv. 3 

to him, that brings the traitor in? — iv. 4 

hatli descried the number of the traitors? — v. 3 
what traitor hears me, and says not.. — v. 4 
abate the edge of traitors, gracious Ix)rd — v. 4 

a giant traitor! Now, madam Hennjl'lll.\.2 

day and night, he's traitor to the height — i. 2 
this day received a traitor's judgment — ii. 1 

thou art a proud traitor, priest — iii. 2 

must I go like a traitor thither? .... — v. 2 
so traitor! when she comes!.. Troilut^Cressidaj i. 1 

incurred a traitor's name — iii. 3 

and uses the traitor Calchas' tent.... — v. 1 
O traitor Diomt'd I turn thy false f rep.) — V. 6 
O traitors and bawds, how earnestly — v. 11 
set them down horrible traitors. . Timon ofAOi. iv. 3 
he has spoken like a traitor l^rep.) . .CorioUinut., iii. 1 

to despatch this viperous traitor — iii. 1 

a traitor to the people. How! Traitor? — iii. 3 
call me tlieir traitor! thou injurious — iii. 3 
tell the traitor, in the highest (rep.). . — v. 5 
the fates with traitors do contrive. ../HdujCa-saj', ii. 3 
they were traitors: honourable men! — iii. 2 
iugratitude, more strong than traitor's — iii. 2 
marred, as you see, with traitors .... — iii. 2 

traitors, villains! O most bloody .. — iii. 2 

let not a traitor live — iii. 2 

witli the brands Arc the traitors' liouses — iii. 2 
the sword of traitors. Cxsar (jv;j.) .. — v. 1 

defiance, traitors, hurl we in - v. 1 

men's vows are women's traitors! ..Cymbeline, iii. 4 

yet the traitor stands in worse — iii. 4 

who called me traitor, mountaineer.. — iv. 2 
what of him? he is abanislied traitor — v. 5 

1 know not how, a traitor — v. 5 

traitors, avaunt! (rep.) Tiiut.in(lromcut,\. 2 

traitor, restore I/avinia to the emperor — i. 2 

traitor, if Rome have law _ i. 2 

that we may know the traitors _ iv. 1 

and vengeance on the traitor Saturnine — iv. 3 
inhuman traitors, you constrained .. — v. 2 

traitor, thou liest. Traitor! (rep.) Periclet,\\.b 

that calls me traitor, I return the lie .. — ii. .*> 
to course his own shadow for a traitor .. Lecir^ iii. 4 
traitor! nutliiug could liavc subdued .... — iii. 4 
rCo/.K'i'.)out the traitor Gloster(rp«.) .. _ iii. 7 
who's there? the traitor? Ingrateful fo.x! — iii. 7 

O filthy traitor! Unmerciful lady — iii. 7 

»o wliite, and such a traitor! — iii. 7 

do chance to hear of that blind traitor .. — iv. 5 

thou old unliappy traitor _ iv. ti 

diarest thou support a publislied traitor? — iv. 6 
he is that names me traitor, villain-like — v. 3 

thou art a traitor: false to thy gods — v. 3 

thy feet, a most toad-^iiotted traitor .... — v. 3 

murderers, traitors all! I might have — v. 3 

the traitor murderer lives Ilomea^ Juliet, iii. .') 

traitors ensteeiwd to clog the guiltless ..Olhello, ii. I 

TKAITOKLY rasf'als Uinler'iT,i(e, iv. 3 

TRAITOUOUS-that traitorous rout. I J/rnri/C/. iv. 1 
traitorous Warwick, with the men .illmryl'l. iii. 2 
attach thee as a traitorous innovatorC'ortof<i>iiu,iii. I 
nor thy traitorous haughty sons (rep.yniutAnd. i. 2 
7evcnge upon these traitorous Gotha — iv. 1 
as if his traitoroui sons, that died.... — iv. 4 

to take ui>on your traitorous father l.enr, iii. 7 

with traitorous gifts, (O wicked wit Ihimlel, i. .'i 

TRAITOROUSLY discovered the ....MfMllell. iv. 3 
Richard was murdered traitiirously.2/Jr/ir|/l'/. ii. 2 
Iluniplirey traitoroiuly is murdcrc<l — iii. 2 
thou liast most traitorously corrupted — iv. 7 

TR.VITKESS, andadear Ml'iirell,i. I 

TRAM.MKL up the consequence Machelli, i. 7 

TRA.MI'I.E-steps do trample theo ..Hirhard II. iii. 2 
hourly trample on tlieir sovereign's head — iii. 3 



[783 j 



TRAMPLKD-and trampled cin.Troitni^Crm. ill. 3 
TRAMPLING contcinptuou^Iv on7'iroCirii.<i/Tn-. 1.2 
TR.\NCE-«tir him irom liis tnmw.ramiiiiiofSh. i. I 
TKANICCT, the coiiim..ii iiViY..)lercli.o/ reiiice. iii. 4 
TRANIO, Sllice-lor the t-rnit Inp ).lumiiii,' rilSh.i.X 
grameiTics, Truiii", will (lo-t thou .. — i. 1 

pence, Tniniol Will KMi.iir,,,. I _ i. I 

O Tranio, till I f mud it to be true (rep.) — i. I 

Tranio, I saw her coral lips to move — i. 1 

be master, Trnnio, in my stead (rep.) — i. 1 

Tranio stolen your clothes? (re;).) .. — i. 1 

not a jot of 'rriLiiio in your moutJi (rep.) — i. I 

iTiio (rep.) — i. 1 

). Sir, a word .... — i. 2 

iami, is my man Triuiio, regia — iii. 1 

Trauio, vou jest (rc/».) — iv. 2 

years old. aiul his name is— Tranio ,. — v. 1 
where is that damned villain, Tranio — v. 1 
exchange my state witli Tranio (rep.) — 



not a jot ol 
wliv tlieii I 
well beg 



signior Tranio, this bird you 

Tranio hits you now. I thank thee (rep.) — v. 2 

TItANQUIL— the tranquil mind 1 0(/i,Ho, iii. 3 

TR.VNtiUlLLITY; burgomasters ..] IIei>ryI f. ii. 1 
TRiVNSCEND-sole pure, transcends 7'roi7. ^-OrMj. i.3 
TRANSCliNDENCE; which should ..^«'s«'c/(, ii. 3 
TRANSFIGURED so together.. /WiV(.,V.".«ream, v. I 
TRANSFORM me to a piece of clieescA/prri/ If. v. 5 
love may transform me to an oyster.. MuchAdo, ii. 3 

transform me then Comedy of Errors, iii, 2 

transform us not to women Aii'ony ^Cleo. iv. 2 

wliich of late transform you from what . . Lear, i. 4 
beauty will sooner transform honesty .Ha>nW, iii. 1 

and applause, transform ourselves Olhello, ii. 3 

TRANSFORMATION hath been..A/frr!/»*'if<-j, iv. b 
tlieir transformations were never. »('in(fr'j7'a/<', iv. 3 
beastly, shameless transformation ,. 1 Henry I r. i. I 
a low transformation I that shall . .iHeiinj If. ii. '2 
goodly transformation of Jupiter. rro/Viis 4 Crpss. v. I 
not thy loss in transformation? . . Timoii o/Alh. iv. 3 
you heard of Ilamlet's transformation.. Hamtel 



„- „ - , — ted iousness and process of mv travel n j 

TRANSFORJIED scalp from off ..Mid N.SDr. iv. 1 if^ if I travel but four foot by . ... ..1 Henrnir Ii' 2 

howl have been transformed ....MerryWwes, iv. i but to stand stained with travel iHeiiryir.v. b 



transformed: four woodcocks.... LoBe'st.i.os(, iv. 3 
to see a king transformed to a gnat! — iv. 3 
see me thus transformed toaboy.;Wer. o/f'eiM'ce,ii.6 
he be transformed into a beast. ...As you Ul<e it, ii. 7 

I am transformed, master Comedy o/ Errors, ii. 2 

she had transformed me to a curtail-dog — iii. 2 
both in shape and mind transformed. HicAard //. v. 1 
fat villain have not transformed liira.2 Henri/ ff.ii. 2 
come again transformed to orient;. /(ic/iarJ ///. iv. 4 
did we woo transformed Timon . . Timon ofAth. v. 5 
women transformed with their iear.JuliusCasar, i. 3 
pillar of the world transformed .. Antony ^Cleo. i. 1 

TRANSGRESSED against his valour .AlfslVell, ii. 5 
had left him before he transgressed.. WucA Ado, ii. 1 

TRANSGRESSES, is but patched Twelfth Night, i. 5 

TRANSGRESSING slave; away .. Lore'sL.Lost,i.-i 
Rutland, my transgressing boy .... Hichard II. v. 3 

TRANSGRESSION^to't ..Meiisurefor.)Iensme. iii. 2 
or my false transgression .. TwoGen. of Verona, ii. 4 
flat transgression of a school-boy.. ..il/ucA ^(/o,ii. 1 
make a trust a transgression? (rep.) — ii. 1 
for our rude transgression some fair. Lovers L. L. v. 2 
not my transgression to my charge .. Ki^i^.lohu, i. 1 
such is love's tro-nsgression ttomen A- Juliet, i. I 

TRANSILVANIANisdead yo-dcs, iv. 3 

TRANSLATE the stubbornness of Js you L/ieiV, ii. I 
make thee away, translate thy life .. — v. I 
can with ease translate it to my will.A:/ii.^Jr)/in, ii. 2 

so ill translate yourself, out of 2Henryll'. iv. 1 

thus translate him to me .... Trail ns^Cres>idii, iv. 6 
and servants translates his rivals .Timonof Alh. i. 1 
translate his malice towards you . . Vorinlanus, ii. 3 
force of honesty can translate beauty. .HamW, iii. 1 
you must translate: 'tis fit we understand — iv. I 

TRANSLATED her well Alen-yW, 



— iii. 1,^ 



to be to you translated; O teach 

bless thee ! thou art translated 

left sweet Pyram us translated there 

TRANSLATION of hvpocrisy .... Love' sL. Lost. v. 2 

TRANSMIGRATES. What eolour.ylw/. t, Cleo. ii. 7 

TRANS.MUTATION a bear-herd Taw.ofSh. 2 (ind.l 

TRANSPARENT as barricadoes . Tweirih Mght, iv. 2 

transparent Ililenal Nature . ..Mid. l\.'s Dream, ii. 3 

through the transparent bosom Lore's t.L. iv. 3 (ver.) 

glorious sun's transparent beams ..I'/feiiri/ //. iii. 1 

transparent heretics, be burnt . . Romeo ^ Juliet, i. 2 

TRANSPORT him in the miiid.,il/e«i./or.U,(ij. iv. 3 

when I came hither to transport .tlachelh, iv. 3 

shall not need transport my words .Richard II. ii, 3 
cannot temperately transport his .. Cono/nnin, ii. 1 

miglit not you transport her purposes Lear, iv. .'> 

to Ills blank, transports his poisoned shot f/um/e/.iv.l 
TR.V.NSl'Dltr.VN'CE to those fields. Vrort. 4-C'r. iii. 2 , 
TR.VX.SI'DK'L'IOI), and wrapt in secret.. Tempest, i. 2 I 
luit ..f .loiiht, In- is transported. 3/i(/.JV.'j Bream, iv 2 I 
tran-.portud liy my jealousies to.. f^inter'sTale, iii. 2 j 
almost so far transported, that he'll think — v. 3 I 
thy letters have transporteil me 



TRE 

TRASH for over-topping Tempest, I, 2 

thou fool; it la hut trash _ |v | 

upon tlieae traitors, and tlieir trash ..iHenry t'l. \. 4 
1 know not what; 'tis trash ..Troilns ^Cressida, Ii. I 
what trash in Rome, what rubbish. yu/iuf Ctesar, i. 3 

for so much trash, as may iv. 3 

hard hands of peasants tlieir vile trash — iv 3 
trash of Venice, whom I trash [C'./f.-tracej.l»A. il! 1 

wlio steals my purse, steals trash _ Jii. 3 

I do suspect this trash to he a party in .. _ v. 1 

TRAVAIL look for greater birth MuchAdo.iv. I 

our will which travails in thy good .. All'sHell. ii. 3 
have I but gone in travail of you.Com«/i,o/-A'rr. v. 1 

is all our travail turned to itlenrt/l'I v \ 

with gentle travail, to the gladding. ;/e»ri/r///, v! 1 
doth fall in travail with her fear.;vrir/e>, iii. (Gow.) 
swift the liangs of my oiu-en's travails! — iii.) 

TRAVEL— are oppressed with travel .. Tempest, iii. 3 

object in thy travel TwoGen. of V'eroKa, i. I 

known no travel in his youth _ i.3 

whither travel you iv. 1 

my youthful travel therein .'. — iv! I 

not three hours travel from this .. Tuelflh Night, i. 2 

and after a demure travel of regard.. ii. .', 

what might befall your travel — iii. 3 

n man of travel, that liath seen .. Love's L.Losl, v. 1 

in the travel of one mile? _ v. 2 

maids as we are, to travel forth. .../(jf/oiiLrteiV, i.3 
would he not be a comfort to our travel? — i. 3 

maid witli travel ranch oppressed.... ii. 4 

time travels in divers paces jii. 2 

sundry contemplation of my travels — iv. 1 

sod, and to travel for it too — iv. I 

make tolerable vent of thy travel All's It'ell, ii! 3 

will he travel higher, or return iv. 3 

travel you far on TamirigofUhrew, iv. 2 

could all my travels warrant ma .Comedy of Err. i. 1 
for with long travel I am stiff and weary — i. 2 
atravel that thou takest for pleasure. ftic/iord //. i 



I met in travel toward his I Henry ri. iv. 3 

to travel with her furred pack illetiryVI. iv. 2 

tliose types of travel Henry fill, i.3 

had rny labour for my travel Troilus ^ Cress, i, 1 

loss of time, travel, expence ii. 2 

for honour travels in a strait so — iii. 3 

with what they travel for 7'imoM of Athens, v. I 

have discredited your travel../lM(07i!/<5 'C(eo;)a/ra. i.2 

tis a space for further travel _ ii. I 

prove his travel, not her danger Cymbeline, iii. 5 

go travel for a while I'ericUs, i. 2 

to Tharsus intend my travel — 12 

sufficiently, he's gone to travel — i! 4 

took himself to unknown travels — i. 4 

we with our travels will endeavour it — ii. 4 

how chances it they travel? //am(e/, ii. 2 

talked of since your travel much — iv. 7 

in mv travel's [Knf.-traveller's] history. .OMe//o, i. 3 

TRAVELLED but two hours Tieetfh .Mght, v. 1 

supposes me travelled to Poland.. Mea«.ybrjl/eui. i 4 
as I have travelled hither through.. King- Jo/in. iv. 2 

of our travelled gallants Henry rill. i. 3 

till it hath travelled, and is.. Troilus SCre'ssida, iii. 3 
he, and myself, liave travelled.. 7'imono//i;Aeii>, v. I 

I have watched and travelled hard Lear, ii. 2 

they have travelled hard to-night? — ii 4 

TRAVELLER of Spain ..Love'sL.Losl.i. 1 

I may speak of thee as the traveller doth — i v. 2 
the sinewy vigour of the traveller ... — iv 3 

travellers ne'er did lie Tempest, iii. 3 

the travellers do fear so much.. TuoGeu.on'tr. iv. 1 
starkly in the traveller's bones. .Meas. ror Meus. iv. 2 
master Shoe-tye the great traveller..' — iv. 3 
but travellers must be content ..As you Like it, ii. 4 
a traveller! by my faith, vou have .. — iv. I 



Mid.N.'sDr.i. \ ■' farewell, monsieur traveller 



and no true traveller: von are more.All's Ifell, ii. 3 

a "ood traveller is something _ ii. 5 

like pleasant travellers Taming of Shreie, iv. 5 

now spurs the lated traveller apace ..Macbeth, iii. 3 

now your traveller, he and his Kin:; John, i. I 

canst hear the tread of travellers I Henn/Ii . ii. 2 

I was then a young traveller Cumbelinr. i. .5 

of every nation a traveller IWicles. iv. 3 

froni whose bourn no traveller returns Hamlet', iii. I 
TR.VVELLEST: if along ....Tamingnrsi,re,r,iv.i 
TRAVELLING along this coast . . Lore's L. Lost. v. 2 

travelling some journey TamingofSh. 1 (indm-.) 

the travelling [CoJ.-travailing] li^mp.. .Macbeth, ii. 4 

who travellnig towards York liichardll. v. 5 

travelling a-lieil: a prison for Cv"i''eii>ie, iii. 3 

TRAVEL-TAINTED as I am iHenryiy. iv. 3 

TKAVERS, whom I sent (rr;, ) Z i. 1 

the gentleman, that rode by Travers — i 1 

TRAVERSE— to see thee tra verse... VerryKVrei, ii. 3 

quite traverse, athwart the i\ea.n.As you Like ii. iii. 4 

hold. Wart, traverse; thus, thus ..illennili: iii. 2 



thy letters have transported me Machelh,i.i\ traverse, go: provide thy money ,. . Othello i 3 

tlie scene is now transported . . Hrnry /'. ii. (chorus) ' TRAVERSED arms Timonof ithens 'v 5 

transported shall beat high festivals. I Heiiry/'/.i.B ' TRAY, Blanch, and Sweetheart . Lear hi'o 

shall be transported presently to France — v. 1 1 TR.\Y-TRIP-freedom at tray, trip Tireinh\ ii 5 



you are transported by calamity Coriolanus, i. 1 

transported, with no worse nor better.. ..O/AeHo, i. 1 

TRANSPORTING a sura of money ..Henryl'.w. 1 
costs and charges in transporting her! illcnrt/l'l. i.l 

TR.'VNSPOSE to form and dignity ..Mid..\:',l>r. i. 1 
my thoughts cannot transpose Marlieih, iv. 3 

TRANS-Sil.VPE thy p.articular MuchAdo, v. 1 

TRAP— I will say, marry traji Merry If'ives, i. 1 

kills with arrows, some with traps, .lUiie'i/lilo, iii. 1 

pretty traps to ciitcli the i>etty Henry!', i. 2 

luiil'st a trap to take iny life i Henry II. iii. I 

snares to (rap mine enemies •illenryl'l. iii. 1 

or I full into the trap is laid for me.. ///-nri/ /'///. V. 1 

TRAPl'EO-horses, trapped in silver. 7imoiio/ /(/A, i 2 
thy horses shall be trapped. y'liiiiiiij'ij/'.VA. 2 (indue.) 

TIlAPPING-some of her trapiiinos. . TuelfihN. v. 1 
but the trappings and the suits of woe., ilamtoi, i. 2 



By.trip..._ 

TRE.VCHKKS, by spherical predominance.; 

TREACHEROUS army levied Tempest.i. S 

trcaclierous man! TiroCen.of I'erona, v. 4 

devour the treacherous bait .Vii<:/i.4rfo, iii! 1 

thee by some treacherous device ..AsyouLil<eil,'\. 1 
to think my poverty is treacherous .. — i, 3 
1 am not treacherous. But Miichcth is Macbeth, iv.3 
even with a treaeheroua fine of all . . KingJohn, v. 4 
annoyance to the treaiherous feet. . liichardll. iii. 2 

be hollaed in thy treacherous ear.... iv. 1 

loyal father of a trencheroiis Bonl.... v! 3 

the treacherous labour of your son ..Mlrnrull'. v. 4 
he fills with treaei:cr<>u8 crowns.. Henri/;' ii. (clio.) 

but, O! the treaeherous Fostolfc illenryl'l. i. t 

[Co/.j run not half so treacherous from — i. 5 
the treocherous manner of his inouriifnl — ii. 2 
a dastard, and a treacherous coward.3 Henri/ /'/. il. 2 



TRE 



[ 784 ] 

TREASON'S true lied 2 Hem;/ 1 V. iv. 2 

and treason hold their promises.. Hp/iij/r. ii. (cho.) 
treason and murder ever kept togetlier — ii. 2 
to wait on treason, and on murder .. — ii. 2 
other devils, that suggest by treasons — ii. 2 
why thou shouldst do no treason .. .. — ii. 2 
I arrest thee of high treason (/ep.) .. — ii. 2 
of most dangerous treason (7-ep.) .... — \\.2 
but it is no English treason, to cut .. — iv. I 

I will give his treason payment — iv. 8 

a most contagious treason come to light — iv. 8 
treason executed in our late irep.) . . 1 Henry VI. ii. 4 

condemned to die for treason — ii. 4 

rue this treason with thy tears — iii. 2 

but deeds, revenge this treason! .... — iii. 2 

liow ill we brook his treason — iv. I 

and ugly treasons, lurk — v. 3 

treason, falsehood, and by treachery — v. 4 
here is a man accused of treason ... .2 Henry VI. i. 3 
doth accuse his master of higli treason — _i. 3 
hold! I confess, I confess treason ... . — it. 3 
in his simple show he harbours treason — iii. 1 
meaning treason to our royal person — iii. 1 

arrest thee of high treason liere — iii. 1 

clear from treason to my sovereign . , — iij. I 
nor store of treasons to augment .... — ill* ^ 
royal person from treason^ secret knife — iii. 1 
henceforward, it shall be treason for any — iv. 6 
base and ignominious treasons, makes — iv. 8 
of capital treason 'gainst the king ., — v. 1 
'tis shown ignobly, and in treason .. — v. 2 
neither by treason, nor hostility ....iHenryVI.i. 1 
mistrust, and treason wait on iiim ,. — ii. 5 
bewray thy treason with a blush? .. — iii. 3 
both shall buy this treason even .... — v. 1 
search the secret treasons of the world — v. 2 

we speak no treason, man Richard III. i. 1 

manner and the purpose of his treasons — iii. 5 
that would with treason wound this fair — v. 4 

puppy to the old dam, treason Henry V III. i. 1 

I arrest thee of high treason — i. 1 

the treasons of his master he shall .. — i. 2 
found him guilty of high treason .... — ii. 1 
treason were it to the ransacked. TroHus Sr Cress, ii. 2 
manifest treason. Tliis a consul? . . Coriolanns, iii. 1 
whilst bloody treason flourished. .Ji<imsC«'.«ar,iii. 2 
first, I saw the treasons plauted ..Antony SfCleo. i. 3 
O treason! madam, I trust, not 80 ... — ..^' ^ 

do feel the treason sharply Cymbeline^ iii. 4 

punishment itself, and all my treason — v. 5 
beaten for loyalty excited me to treason — v. 5 
lurks no treason, here no envy .... Titus Andron. i. 2 
treason, my lord; Lavinia is surprised — i. 2 
treats of Tereus' treason, and his rape — iv. 1 

that I may this treason nnd 1 — iv. 1 

complotsof mischief, treason; villaniee — y. 1 
poison and treason are the hands of sin. Pericles, i. 1 
or private treason, will take away .... — i.2 
seeks to take off by treason's knife — iv. (Gow.) 
in palaces, treason; and the bond 'cracked .Lear, i. 2 

heavens! that this treason were not .. — iii. .5 

the overture of thy treasons to us — iii. 7 

Edmund, I arrest thee on capital treason — v. 3 
thy heinous, manifest, and many treasons — v. 3 

by treason's tooth bare-gnawn — v. 3 

back do I toss these treasons to thy head — y. 3 

1 speak no treason Romeo SjJidict, iii. 5 

state would treason have pronounced . . Hamtet.yi. 2 

needs be treason in my breast — iii. 3 

treason can but peep to wliat it would . . — iv. 5 
venom, to thy work. Treason 1 treason! — v. 3 
treason of the blood! fathers, from hence. 0//ie/io,i. 1 

TREASONABLE abuses ..Measure for Measure, v. 1 
TREASONOUS— of treasonous malice.. WacosM, ii. 3 

corrupt and treasonous {rep.') Henry V III. i. 1 

TREASURE— no other treasure. TieoGen. of Ver. ii. 4 
sliow thee all the treasure we have got — iv. 1 
waste the treasure of your time... Tu'etfthNight,n. 5 

the treasures of your body Meas. for Meas.ii. 4 

buys no better treasure Love*sL. Lost, iv, 3 

cas'keted my treasure, given order . ...All's fVelt,n.b 
in Baptista's keep my treasure is..TamingofSh. i. 2 
she is your treasure, she must have.. — ii. 1 
thy body with his ruffling treasure .- — iv. 3 
have taken treasure from her lips. Winter's Tale, v. 1 

though the treasure of nature's Macbeth, iv. I 

for all the treasure that thine unale. King John, iv. 1 
the purest treasure mortal times ....Richard ll.\. 1 
given my treasures, and my rights ..\ Henry IV. ii.3 

your spirit, this tun of treasure Henry V. i. 2 

what treasure, uncle? Tennis-balls — i. 2 
a crown, the treasure of thy heart ..2HenryVl. ii. I 
Suffolk's exile, my soul's treasure? .. — J!!' ^ 
I'll give tliee England's treasure .... — iii. 3 
BwaRowing tlie treasure of tlie realm — iv. 1 
our treasure seized, our Gold'iere. ...ZHenry VI, iii. 3 

cancelled, and his treasure spent — y. 4 

thither bear your treasure liichard III. ii. 4 

tliat swallowed so much treasure ..Henryl'lll. i. 1 
his treasure, rich stuffs, and ornaments — iii. 2 
want treasure, cannot do what .. 7 imon of Athens, ii. 2 
it is noised, he hath a mass of ireasure — iv. 3 

misery have sent thee treasure — iv. 3 

the treasure, in this field achieved ..Coriolanus, i. 9 
increase, and treasure of my loins .. — iii. 3 
brought our treasure where we ..Julius Ccesar, iv. 1 
this treasure of an oyster.... /f»i(ony ^-Cleopatra, i. 5 
my treasure's in the harbour, take it — iii. 9 
possess you of tliat ship and treasure — iii. 9 
sir, his chests and treasure he has not — iv. .5 

go. Eros, send his treasure after — iv. 5 

after thee sent all thy treasiu-e — iv. 6 

and ta'cu the treasure of her honour. Gymdt/me.ii- 2 
that rarest treasure of your cheek .. — iii. 4 
dispose this treasure in mine.. . . Titus Andron. iv. 2 
or tie ray treasure up in silken bags . . I'ericles, iii. 2 
besides this treasure for a fee ... . — iii. 2 (scroll) 

forget the precious treasure Romeo ^-Juliet, i. V 

in thy life extorted treasure in Handtl,i. 1 

or your chaste treasure opeu to his — i. 3 



TRE 



TREACHEROUS, this day should .. Richard 1 U. i. 

and, wilh thy treacherous blade — i. 

hollow, treacherous, and full of guile — ii. 
read, be henceforth treaeherousl . . . . Cymbeline, iv. 
fye, treacherous hue! that will .. Titus Andron. iy. 
out, treacherous villainl thou call'st — Lear.'iu. 
witli treacherous revolt turn to. Romeo ^Juliet, iv. 
remorseless, treacherous, lecherous .... Hamlet, ii. 
the treaelierous instrument is in thy hand — v. 
O treacherous villains! what are you ..Othello, v. 

TREACHEROUSLY hast thou .... 3 Henry VI. ii. 

TREACHERY used to Valentine. r«oGen.o/Tcr.ii. 

false vantage, or base treachery — iv. 

that betray them do no treacliery-./l/errt/ffiwes, v. 
is composed and framed of tre&chery. Mitch Ado, v. 
lest that the treachery of tlie two. Winter'sTale, ii. 
Otreacheryl fly, good Fleance, fly .. il/ac6c//i, iii. 

young fry of treacliery? — iv. 

paying the fine of rated treachery . . King John, y. 
known ground of treacliery in him?. /f/c/mrd 11. i. 
what treachery is here! Wliy, what is it — v. 

life to death and treachery! Henry V. ii. 

what treachery was used? {rep.) .... 1 Henry 11. i. 
and for thy treachery, what's more.. — iii. 
if Talbot but survive thy treachery. . — iii. 
O monstrous treachery! can this be so — iv. 

falsehood, and by treachery — v. 

still be hammering treachery i Henry VI. i. 2 

that fear their subjects' treachery?.. 3 Hem'!//'/, ii. 5 
hollowness, treacliery, and all ruinous.... Lear, i. 2 
of Gloster's treachery, and of the loyal .. — iv. 2 
justly killed with mine own treachery.. Ham(c(, v. 2 

let the door be locked: treachery! — v. 2 

from this world witli treachery Othello, iv. 2 

TRE AD— to tread tlie ooze of the salt . . Tempest^ i. 2 

pray you, tread softly — iv. I 

dares to tread, in shape profane ..Merry Wives, iy. 4 
we tread upon, and never think. Meas. forMeas. ii. 1 
the poor beetle, that we tread upon. . — iii. I 

for lack of tread Mid.N.'sDream, ii. 2 

the groves may tread, even till — iii. 2 

whicli is basest, dotli tread Love's L. Lost, i. 2 

were much too dainty for such tread ! — iv. 3 
to tread a measure witli her (rfp.) ., — v. 2 
as he treads on them, kiss his feet. ... — v. 2 
when turtles tread, and rooks .... — v. 2 (song) 
a kinder gentleman treads not ,.Mer. of Venice, ii. 8 

the tread of a man's foot All's Well, ii. 3 

when I shall tread upon the tyrant's.. Macbeth, iv. 3 
we tread in warlike march these ....Ki7igJohn, ii. 1 
to tread down fair respect of — iii. 1 

then, tread down my need, and faith — iii. 1 

this foot of mine doth tread — iii. 3 

but tread tlie stranger paths of Richard 11. i, Z 

for on my lieart they tread — iii. 3 

you tread upon my patience \HenrylV. i. 2 

canst hear the tread of travellers — ii. 2 

we live to tread on kings — v. 2 

by this heavenly ground I tread on..iHenrylV. ii. 1 
with any tliat treads but on four .... Henry V. iii. 7 
tliat she may tread out the oath .... — iii. 7 
tread them with her tender-feeling..2He»ryr/. ij. 4 

bid me be advised how I tread — ii. 4 

tread it under foot with all contempt — v. 1 
far-offshore where he would tread..3Heni!/>'/. iii. 2 

tread on the sand — v. 4 

go, tread the path that thou Richard 111. i. 1 

Timon's silver treads upon his lip. rimo?in//l(/i. iii. 2 
shadow which he treads on at noon.. Coriolanus, i. 1 
his knee, and tread upon his neck .. — i, 3 
or else triumpliantly tread on thy .. — v. 3 

than to tread, (.trust to't, thou — v. 3 

he shall not tread on me — v. 3 

tread not upon him; masters all .... ■ — v. 5 
bids me tread no more iipon't ..Antony %Cleo. iii. 9 
are young; I'll tread these flats ....Cymbeline, iii. 3 
you should tread a course pretty and full — iii. 4 
make the gazer joy to see him tread ..Pericles, ii. 1 

1 will tread this unbolted villain into.... Lear, ii. 2 
heel of limping winter treads — Romeo ^-Juliet, i. 2 
no foot upon the churchyard tread . . — y . 3 
the primrose path of dalliance treads . . Uamlel, i. 3 
one woe doth tread upon another's heel.. — iv. 7 

TREADING on his heels King John, iv. 2 

ground shrinks before his treading. . Coriolanus, v. 4 
TREAD'ST— whereon thou tread'st . . Richard IL i. 3 

TREASON, felony, sword, pike Tempest, ii. 1 

treason, masters; yet stand close MuchAdo, iii. 3 

certain treason. What makes (rep.).Love'sL.L. iv. 3 
the treason, and you, go in peace .... — iv. 3 

'twas treason, he said — iv. 3 

flat treason 'gainst the kingly — iv. 3 

confess what treason there is Mer. of Venice, iii. 2 

that ugly treason of mistrust — iii. 2 

'tween snow and fire, as treason — iii. 2 

fit for treasons, stratagems, and spoils — v. 1 
treason is not inherited, my lord .. As you Like it, i. 3 
tlie common course of all treasons . . All's Well, iv. 3 
arraigned of high treason .. Winter'sT. ii. 2 (indict.) 
treason's capital, confessed, and proved. iUar6rf/i, i. 3 
very frankly he confessed his treasons — i. 4 
wlio committed treason enough for .... — ii.3 

murder! and treason! Banquo — ii.3 

treason has done liis worst — iii. 2 

to appeal eacli other of liigh treason.. /i/c/ia?*d 11. i. 1 

such terms of treason doubled — i. 1 

that all the treasons, for these — i. ! 

confess thy treasons, ere thou fly ... . — _i. 3 

rebellion, and detested treason — .!!■ 3 

murders, treasons, and detested sins — iii. 2 

his treasons will sit blusliing — iii. 2 

upon m.v land, is dangerous treason — iii. 3 

of capital treason we arrest you — iv. I 

treason! foul treason! villain! traitor! — v. 2 

speak treason to tliy face? — v. 3 

the treason that my haste forbids — v. 3 

then treason maltes me wish nii'seif — v. 5 
shall we buy treason? and indent ..MlcnrylV. i. 3 

for treason is but trusted like — v. 2 

treason: and you, lord (re/;.) 2HenryIV.i\, 2 



TREASURE hadst thou! (re^.') Uamlel,ii. 2 

pour our treasures into foreign laps .... Othello, iv. 3 
TREASURE-HOUSE; tell me once Mer. ofVen. ii. 9 
TREASURER; let him speak.. ..^In'onj/ * Cteo. v. 2 
TREASURIES— Bumless treasuries ....llenryV. i. 2 



the pedler's silken treasury Winter' sTale, iv. 3 

cost a mass of public treasury iHenryVJ. i. 3 

the treasury of everlasting joy! — ii. I 

and revel in Lavinia's treasury .. TitusAndron. ii. 1 
how conceit may rob the treasury of life .Lear, iv 6 

TREAT— what tlie play treats on ..Mid.K.'sDr. i. 2 
treats of happiness by virtue.. Taming of Shrew, i. 1 

to treat of high affairs touching KingJohn, i. 1 

and treats of Tereus' treason .'Titus Andronicu9,.iv. I 

TBEATIES-send humble treati«s.4»i/onv * Cteo. iii. 9 

TREATISE-with a longer treotise ..MuchAdo, i. I 
would at a dismal treatise rouse Macbeth, v. b 

TREATY of our threatened town? ..KingJohn, ii. 2 

to this last costly treaty HenryVJIl. i. 1 

good condition can a treaty find Coriolanus, i. 10 

we are convented upon a pleasing treaty — ij. 2 
mailing a treaty, where there was..,. — v. 5 
ne'er have made this treaty .... Antony 4rCleo. ii. 6 

TREBLE-trebles thee o'er. Tempest, ii. ■ 

double and treble admonition .Meas. for Meas. iii. 
twice treble shame on Angelo ...;.. — iii. 
six thousand, and then treble . . Mer. of Venice, iii. 

again toward childish treble As you Like it, ii. 

Ofie! the treble jars To7iii?ig-q/'S/ir<'«', iii. 

twofold balls and treble sceptres Macbeth, iv. 

the case of a treble hautboy 2 Henry IV. iii. 

shall double gild his treble guilt .. .. — iv. 
our battalia trebles that account . . Richard III. v. 
let him make treble satisfaction.. 7"i(us.Jin/)oji. v. 

calls and trebles their confusion rerictes,iv. 

IKnt.] let it be treble in your silence.... Ha7/i/e/, i. 
treble woe fall ten times treble on — v. 

TREBLED twenty times. . . . Merchant or Venice, iii. 

TREBLE-SINEWED, hearted .^n(o>iy*aeo. iii. I 

TREBONIUS, there? JuliusCcesar, i. 

this is Trebonius. He is welcome .... — ii. 
what, Trebonius! I have an hour's.. — ii. 
trust not Trebonius; mark well.. — ii. 3 (paper 
Trebonius doth desire you to o'er-read — iii. 

Trebonius knows his time — iii. 

not least in love, yours, good Trebonius — iii. 

TREE— made of the bark of a tree .... Tempest, ii. 

a mutineer, the next tree — iii. 

there is one tree, the Phoenix' throne.. — iii. 
ono, two, tree, four, come for? ....Merry Wives, ii. 

six or seven, two, tree hours for — ii. 

and there he blasts the tree...' — iv. 

our measure round about the tree .. — y. 

my company to a willow tree Much Ado, ii. 

climbing trees in the Hesperides?.. Love's L.L. iv. 

as sure as bark on tree — v. 

on every tree, mocks married men — v. 2 (song 
wind did gently kiss the trees .Merch.of Venice, v. 
Orpheus drew trees, stones, and floods — y. 

find tongues in trees, books in As youLike it, ij. 

thou prunest a rotten tree, tlrat canuot ~ <ii. : 

under the greenwood tree — ii. 5 (song 

the duke will drink under this tree.. — ii. ' 

these trees shall be my books — i" 

carve on every tree, the fair — iii.: 

on a tree. Truly, the tree yields bad — iii.! 
tongues I'll hang on every tree — iii. 2 (verses 
hanged and carved upon these trees? — iii. 2 

I found him under a tree — iii. 2 

well be called Jove's tree — iii. 2 

mar no more trees with writing — iii. 2 

hangs the verses on the trees — iii. 2 

despatch us here under this tree .... — ijj- ** 

to move, and trees to speak Macbeth, iii. 

and trees blown down — iv. 

bid the tree unfix his earth-bound .. — iv. 

upon the next tree shalt thou — y. 

the castle, by yon tuft of trees Richard /L_ ii. 

into the shadow of these trees — iii. 

if then the tree may be known ....! HenrylV. ii. 

roses are cropped from the tree I Henry VI. i i . 

afall off of a tree. A plum-tree. ...2He>iry VI. ii. 
what, and wouldst climb a tree? .... — )]■ 

a grove of c.ypress trees ! — *'.'.* ^ 

sleep under a fresh tree's shade ....ZHenry VI. ii. 5 
overpeered Jove's spreading tree .... — v. 2 
hideous tempests shook down trees .. — v. 6 

the fruit of such a goodly tree — v. 6 

that I love the tree from whence ..... — y. 7 

like trees bedashed with rain R'lchardlll. i. 2 

tlie royal tree hath left lis royal .... — iii. 7 
from every tree, lop, bark, and paTt.HenryVIll. i. 2 
made trees, and the mountain tops — iii. 1 (song) 
will these mossed trees, that Imve. Timon ufAth. iv. 3 
I have a tree, which grows here in .. — v. 2 

ere my tree hath felt the axe — y . 2 

may be betrayed wi th trees Julius Cresar, ii. I 

barks of trees thou browsed'st. . . . Antony <5" Cteo. i. 4 
the trees by the way should have borne — iii. « 
or blue promontory with trees upon't — iv. 12 

then was I at a tree, whose Cymbeline, iii. 3 

my soul, till the tree die! — v. 5 

bury so much gold under a tree .Titns Andron. ii. 3 
the trees, though summer, yet forlorn — ii.3 
among tlie nettles at the elder tree — ii. 4 (letter) 

the pit, and this the elder tree — ii. 4 

hang him on this tree — v. 1 

skins, as on the bark of trees — v. 1 

the fruit of yon celestial tree Pericles,!. I 

from so fair a tree as your fair self .... — i. 1 

no more but as the tops of frees — _i. 2 

by the happy hoUowof a tree Lear, ii. 3 

take the shadow of this tree for — v. 2 

hidhimself among those trees .. Romeo^ Juliet, ii. I 
now will he sit under a medlar tree,. — ii. I 
she sings on yon pomegranate tree .. — iii. 5 

like fruit unripe, sticks on the tree Hamlet, iii. 2 

sat sighing by a sycamore tree , .Othello, iv. 3 (»ong' 
r.ll smell it ou the tree — v.'i 



THE 



[785] 



TR[ 




ilia tiviMtiio \tyiirijii: iii. 1 

n« my Will t. loth Hvnil.k' t.> unfold .:'HfM<i/ '■'•.)!• j 

but "iviit nuMi tcinblt'. wlic'ii — iii, I 

tluiAromlilcs uuilcr liis .levouring ..iHcmyn. i. 3 
luiuli' tlic forest tremble when they .. — v. 7 

wlik-li i.t'vou trei.ibles not, that looks — ..i. 3 

treiubk' iiiiil st'.irt at washing of — iii- '•> 

nriilc to truiuble the re^iiu nf my.. Ileiiiij I'll I. ii. 4 
w.irl.l were feverous, uii-1 (lid tremble. ronVWuiiiK,!. 4 
imrt of men to leur ;uul treiiihle. . . .JuUusLWmr. i. 3 

hear but luv niiiue. iiml tremble Ci/mbvliiu; iv. 2 

1 eiiunot trc'-Milile iit it; were 't toad.. — iv. 2 

I tremble still with fear - iv. 2 

to tremble uiubr Tilua' threatening ..TitusAnd.i. i 
stoop-^ auil trembles at lierfrown .... — ii. I 

whereat it trembles by surmise — ]\- * 

seen those lilv liauds tremble — ij- » 

thit thou woiiblst tremble to receive ..Peride!. i. 2 
tremble, thou wreteh. that liast within ..Lear, iii. 2 

makes ux tremble, but touches us not — v. 3 

nn\Ue» my tlesh tren\ble in their.. «""ito ^- Juliet, i. 5 
hear theiii told, have maile ine tremble — iv. I 
a IViar, that treuibU's, sishs, and weeps 



di 


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I trial! 
Uintrdom's king! Kiit^'John, ii.l 
re than we of Froncc — ii. 2 
woman's war ..Hichard II. i. 1 



ill I 
nssiiru to 



tlietiiiil, 
rce liiHtriiil. 



that look i>ale 



,. jhe I'HV me tribute 

lie'll grnnt tlic trilmie . 



....2lli-nit,i'l. 
....<:pwMi„e 



ii. t 
ii. 4 



V. 3 

nliil look pale ..HaiiUeLi. I 

1 tiei'nbleat tliisebanee — V. 2 

^s I tvemble at it ....OllieUo. iv. 1 

TUEMm.Kl) and shook TammgofSlneir.yn. 2 

trembled at the ill neiphhourhood Hctiryl. i. 2 

trembled underneath her banks Julius Cir mi, i. 1 

have lipped, and trembled kissing. v4n(oii!/'Sf/vo. ii.a 

TltE.Ml!LI'>T; and the whiteness 'lUenryW. \. I 

name am! pouer thmi treinblest at ..iUennjl'l. i. 4 
whv trembli'^t thou? where's our unclc? — iii. 2 

TUIC.MUI.IXti-by thy trembling ■J'"''P<-f' W- 1 

a uiiarrel with fear and treinblmg .. ,Viic/i-4!/'i, n. 3 
on the birth of tremhlins; winter . /r,»(,-,'sr,,/^, iv. 3 
if treinblinj; I inhibit thee, protest .../«rtw/, iii.. 4 
pale trembling coward, there I throw, lliclianl //. 1. 1 
and naked, tremhlim.' at themselves? — ui. 2 
fearfully among the trembling reeds..! Henry /r. i. 3 

trembling even at the name of — i- 3 

rouse up tear and trembling 2HcMr!/( ' . iv, 3 

his head, and trembling stands aloof .illrinijl I. i. 1 
sucli safety fluds thetremblinj; Hmb.3lleiuij I '. i- 1 
with trembling wings inisdoubteth .. — v- 6 
I trembling waked, and for a season. nir/iacrf ///. i. 4 

stanil on my trembling tlesh — v. 3 

a trembling contributioiil Henn/I III. i. 2 

liroir'ht a trembling upon Kome . . Coriohiiiiis, iv. 6 
oVrnmsmv trembling joints .... J'lVui .-Indmn. n. 4 

'J'UKMHI.INULY she stood Ati'oni, ^ Cli'n. v. 2 

THEM 111 cordis on me IIiii'i' s I'nlr, ;. 2 

TUEMI'I.IXGof mind! .Merru fives, m. 1 

TliEN'CII him here.and on this north. 1 Hem;//) .lu. 1 

T HENC I r A XT sword rimott of Athens, iv. 3 

TRENCHED iu ice ■nroGen.o.rreron'i, in. 2 

with twenty tr,;nched gashes on Macbetli, ni. 4 

TltENCHEll, nor wash dish .... Tempest, ii. i (song) 
hut lie steps me to her trencher. VVoGpii.o/Cer. iv. 4 
linlding a trencher, jesting merrily? Life* l-.l-.y. 2 
there take it to you, trenchers. Taming o/Shrew, iv. 1 

fed from my trencher, kneeled iHemi/ri. iv. 1 

tlian one which holds a trencher. TVmon ofAlhms, i.,l 

serve with thv trencher, hence! Cnnn/duiK, iv. 5 

upon dead Oc-ar's trencher Antonti&-Cli'n. iii. 11 

he shift a treiicliL-r! irc;i.) nnm<-n ^Juliet, i. 6 

TliEXCIIKK-rKIEXDS, time's flies 7Vm.o/.l'/i.iii.6 
TKE.VCllEK-KNIGUT, some l)ick./-oiv'« /,./,. v. 2 

TKE.NCUEK-.M.VN, lie bath in ,Vi»/i.4.M,_;. 1 

TKEXCIIES, tents, of pallisadoes ..1 Henri///', ii. 3 

retire into your trenches — !• 5 

as they us to our trenches followed.. Corio/uimn, i. 4 
our yarty to their trenches driven .. — 1.6 

tliey had Ifcat vou to your trenches? — i. 
witness tliese t'renclics. made.. 2'i(u».-(n''ro«icu«. v. 2 

TKEXCIIING war cliannel \ Henry If. i. 1 

TRENT and Severn hitherto — iii. i 

northward.lyingofffrom Trent .... — in. 1 

here the smug and silver Trent shall run— in. 1 

come, vou shall have Trent turned .. — ni. 1 

TKESl'XSS -it did bass my trespass ..Tcmfinl, in. 3 

let rae know my trespass If inter 'Tale, i. 2 

if any be, the trespass of the queen .. — ii. 2 
more penitence than done treMpass .. — v. 1 
a trespass that doth vex my grieved .Richard II. i. 1 

hide the trespass of thine own? — v. 2 

my ncplievv's tresiiass may well — \Henriill . v. 2 
shall chide your trespass, and return. . Ilenn/ r. ii. 4 

his trespass yet live guilty l/lsiiri///. ii. 4 

the felon, or what trespass else 2Henryl I. in. 1 

dorry for my trespass made iHennjI'I. v. I 

found this trespass worth the shame Unr, ii. 4 

O trespass sweetly urged I Romeo ^ Juliet, i. 5 

not your tresiiass. but my madness. ..llamUl, iii. 4 
his trespass, in our common reason ....Othello, iii. 3 
e'er mv will did trespass 'gainst hi,i love — iv. 2 
TllESr.VSSE>, more monstrous .. (IVii/rr'i 'Ai/c, iii. 2 
did trespasses to Ciesar .... Anloim ^- Cln.riair'i, ii. 1 
TKESSEI-, and B,;rklev, go along ..Hirhnrd III. i. 2 

TRESSES-bind up those tresses KnxJuhn, iii. 4 

brandish your crystal tresses I Henry I' I. I. I 

TtlEY-nay, then,t.vo ti-evs Lore'tL.l.ott.v. 2 

TUIAL-uot too roaU a triol of him . . . .Temjtelt, 1, 2 



.>o.,.i, ...of trial — IV. 

eafelv till his day of trial — , jv- ' 

wage an instant trial with the king.lHc7ir!/;/ .iv. 4 

if once they join in trial — v. 1 

before thou make a trial of her love? \IIemyl I. v. 3 
until voiir tiirtber time of trial .. ■.iHeiiiyl'l. ill. 1 
hriii'iiic to mv trial when you will.. — in. 3 

blooilv trial ofsharp war Richard III. v. 2 

call him to present trial Henry rill. \. 2 

and without trial fell — !.'• 1 

I had mv trial, and, must needs say — n. 1 

the trial'j list and noble — .!!■ f 

for if the trial of the law o'ertake — in, I 

duki' orUiu kiii^ham came from his trial — iv. 1 
till further trial, in thosecharges.... — v. I 

for better trial of you — v, 2 

meant for his trial, and fair — . , X- 2 

trial did draw liias and thwart. 7Vo//iis Sf Cressida,\. 3 
the protractive trials of great Jove .. — ;• 3 

yet in the trial much opinion — ..}■ J 

the trial of his several triends. 7V»i.o< nf.lihens, iii. 6 
law shall scorn him further trial ..Corwlmius, iii. 1 
only make trial what yuur love — — .v- 1 
deceitful jades, sink in the trial ..JulinsC'Psnr, iv. 2 
which stands an honourable tria.\. Anioiiy SfClen. i. 3 
knowii.g 'tis a punishment, or tnsLX.CymbMue, in. G 

ills trials well are spent — ..v, 4 

waiitest tliou eyes at trial, madam? Lear, in. 6 

I'll see their trial first — "1-6 

and it would come to immediate trial ..Bamlel, v. 2 

opposition of your iierson in trial — v. 2 

do but blow them to their trial — ..'V-? 

THIAL-DAY-assigu our trial-day ..Richardll. i. I 
broii'-ht iiL'ainstmeatmy trial-day !.'2//c'iri/r/. ill. I 

TKI.\L-F1RK touch me his Merryll'ives, v. 5 

TKlB,trib,f.iiries; come (rep.) — . V. 4 

TUIBK-eursed he mv trilie ...VerchantofFemce, i. 3 

a wealthy Hebrew of iny tribe — '• S 

is the badge ofall our tribe ~ .."• 3 

here comes another of the tribe — I'l^ 1 

have youi'ollei'tea tlu-in by tribes?.f'urio/««i(S, in. 3 
and Iby tribe lufoie him, his good .. — iv. 2 

call nil your tribes together..... - v. 4 

more, his tribe, to use inv lawful swordl — v. 5 

the creating a whole tribe of fops L 

my wits, and all the tribe of hell .. 

the souls of all my tribe defend — . 

a pearl awav, richer than all his tri^ 

TRIIiULATION of Tower-hill ....I 

TRIliUNAL silvered, Cleoj)atra../lH/o".i/ *'.■'<■" 

with ray pigeons to the tribunal.. r(7i«H"rf' on. .... ■■ 
TRIBUNE— Ave tribunes, to defend.. Cono/'oms, i. I 

when wo were chosen tribunes — !• 1 

plague! tribunes for them! 



.Ulhello. i. 
. — iii. 
. — v. 
. H<n, !/)'/;/. V. 



Au'lrii 
.Hiimlei, ii 



— iv. 4 



. .l/u<-/i/l(/o, i 



ii. 2 



, ii. 2 
iii. I 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 
V. 1 



the diill tribunes, that, with tlie fusty — 

tribunes of the people {rep. iii. 1) — 

and the tribunes endue you with — 

lav a fault on us, your tribunes — 

tribunes, give way; heshallto — 

and make me your fellow tribune .. — 

nor yoke with him for tribune — 

the people do with these bald tribunes? — 

triluines, patricians, citizens! what ho! — 

let's hear our triluiiie; peace ......... — 

tribunes, hear me but a word ^rep.^.. — 

yea, tlie two tribunes, but now 'tis .. — 

yiui will thy tribunes (rep. iv. 6) .... — 

the noble tribunes are the people's .. — 

if liv the tribunes' leave, and yours.. — 

noble tribimis, it is the liunmue way — 

retuiu to tile tribunes — 

awav, tlie tribunes do attend you — — 

list to voiir tribunes; audience — 

thou injurious tribune! — 

in the power of us the tribunes — 

the gods preserve our noble tribunes! — 

plnelt fro:n them their tribunes for ever — 

the tribunes cannot do't for shame .. — 

tlie triiimiei are no soldiers — 

a pair of trilmues that have racked .. — 

of tribunes such as you, a sea and land — 

and to you the tribunes, for this Cymhelin 

how fair the triliime speaks to..7'i7u«.4ni/roiii 

trihimesl and me a poor competitor — 

thanks, gentle tribune, noble brother — 
send thee liy nic, their tribune, and their — 
proud and ambitions tribune, canst thou — 

and people's tribunes here, I ask your — 

trilniues, I tliank you; and this suit I — 

no. fiwilisli tribune, no; no son of mine — 

the tribune and his nephews kneel .. — 

noble tribunes, slay I for pity (rfp.).. — 

the tribunes hear you not (rep.) — 

tlu'y 're better than the tribunes .... — 

afford no tribune like to these (re.n.) — 

tribunes with their tongues doom mo — 



ii. 2 



iii. 1 
iii. I 
iii. I 



tribute paid.... — 
lite, yearly three — 
e tribute to be paid — 
wliy't'ribiite? «liy slionld «c pay (r./i.) — 
tril'uito for liglit; cl.se, sir, no more Ufp-J — 

did extort this trdmte from US — 

comestunl, Cains, now for tribute .. — 

rromising to pay our wonted triliute 

them then, the tribute that I owc.Tii 

his majesty shall have tribute of me 

for the ileiiiand of our neglected tribute — in. 1 

TRlCE-ou a trice, so please you Tempest, v. 1 

in a triee, like to the TneirihKigli', iv. •> (song) 

it sums up Ihuusauds in a trice Cymbelnie, v. 4 

should in this triee of time commit /.e.ir, i. 1 

TiaCK-aud played some tricks of .... Tempest, i. 2 

do you put tricks upon us — _"-'^ 

tise vou in such another trick — iv. l 

by some sly trick TwoGen.of I'erona, 

nay, I remember the trick you .. 

ever see me do such a trick? — 

godly company, for this trick ilerry » 

that were a trick, indeed!............- — 

and we will yet have more tricks with — 
if I he servcil such another trick — — ••'.■" 
I have the back trick, simply as..Twel/:h Niidil, i. 3 
the trick of singularity (re;/. 111. 41 — ii. j (letterl^ 

plays such fantastic tricks Mens. for. II 

would he for the momentary trick be — 

or how? the trick of it? — 

it was a mad fantastical trick of liim — 
1 spoke it but according to the trick 
yon always end with a jade's trick 

this can be no trick V, _. ,TT „ "' V 

tricks hath strong imagination ....;Virf. A. nOr. v. I 

some tricks, some qui Uets Loves L.Lott, iv. 6 

yet I have a trick of the old rage .... — v. 2 

I see the trick on't — v. 2 

andknows the trick to make my .... — ..v. 2 
a thousand raw tricks of these. . >ltr. of I enice, in. 4 

BTve me such another trick Asynul.ihr ii.tv. I 

too callable of every line and trick of. . All s » ell,\. I 
a man had this trick of melancholy.. — in. 'i 

without any tricks (ren.) — iv. 5 

tricks he hath had in him — . v. J 

or atinnbling trick? No .. 7omi»i.iro./-S/i. 2 (mdiic.) 

he'll rail in his rope tricks — .■•2 

that teacheth tricks eleven and — iv. ;J 

a knack, a toy, a trick 

of mv lord's tricks, and yours .. 

a very trick for them to jilay at ..... . — 1 1. ■ 

the trick of his frown, his forehead , . — .11-3 

Ismell the trickofit — >\'- 3 

on tricks when I am undispo.«ed.. (.nMe./.i/ o/hrr. i. J 
he hath a trick of Cauir-de-Liou s face/vi.ii'J"/i"..i. 
I know a trick worth two of that ..\ Henry 1 1 . m. 1 

what trick, wliat device (rev.).. — )!• 4 

but chiefly, a villauons tick of — ii. 4 

will have a wild trick of his ancestors — \' £ 
always yet the trick of our Knglisli. . 2 //enry/» . i. 2 
thesetardy tricksofyours wiir...... - i.v. 3 

they trick up with new-tuned oaths.. Jfenri//'. ■•• <■■ 

not shaped for sportive tricks n.-..i...,j n 

he bores me with some trick . . ... . . 

a speeding trick to lay down ladies 

that trick of slate was a deep 

sloth, and tricks of Rome — .•'.■' 

in this iioint all his tricks founder .. — ni. 2 
red murrain o' thy jade's tricks I .rro/to ^ Cress, i. 3 

and what need these tricks? — v. 1 

a jii'"'ling trick, tube— secretly open — .v. 2 
as "iiod a trick asever hangman.. rimono/VI 'A. n. 3 
you are never without j'our tricks ..C'oiio/on««, i' ■• 
some trick not worth an egg . 

the verv trick on't 

there are no tricks in plain . . . 
'tis one of those odd tricks .... 

is't lint your trick 

of princes, of the tricks in war 



tTale, i. 2 



rd III. i. 1 
.Henry rut. i. I 

— i. 3 

— ii. I 



popis 



iv. 


7 


V 




V 




»"i 




i 




i 


2 


1 


2 


i 


2 


i 


2 
2 


iii 




Iii 





_ iv. 4 

— iv. 6 

..Julius CvMr, iv. 8 
.Antony^ Clro. iv. 2 

— V. 2 

, t'ynibetinc, \\\. 'i 

mtiohhov'ondthe trick of others .... - iii. » 
)ish tricks and ceremonies. 7 itnj /I nrfronic/M, v. I 

t your trick, to make me ope — .v. 2 

these are unsightly tricks Lear, n. 4 

the trick of that voice 1 do well... --. i\.b 

trick may chance to seath you ..Romeo ^Juliet, i. 5 
forafantasv, and trick of fame... >•....,., ... ., 

she hears, there's tricks i' the worh 
in forgery of shapes and tricks ... 

but vet it Isiuir trick 

an" ive had the trick to see t 

his tenures, and his tricks? ... 

if such tricks as these strip you 

disloyal knave, are tricks of custom .... — in. 

this is a trick, to put me from my suit . . — in 

how comes Ibis trick upon him? — i.v 

TK1IKI'1> w th Idood of fathers H.imW, ii 

TKK KlX'i for our fairies .l/er> ,/ Jl .re«, ly 

TitlCKlJXti tears arc vain ilhnn/ll . ii 

TltiCKSV-inv tricksy sniriti Iempe*t,v 

that for a tric'ksy word defy..Urrc/ian/n/-< - n-ee. in 
TRlDENT-liis tlread tridoul shake .... Tempest, i 



. Hnmlit 



— v. 1 

t of ..Othello, u. 1 
— iii. 3 



rniUEXT- Neptune for his trident.. Coriota 

TKIED-uot beinj; tried TwoGen.nr lerona.i. 3 

I have tried; I can find out no Much Ado, v. 3 

undervalued to tried gold?.. Merchant ofi'euice, ii. 7 

seven times tried this w'c.) — ii. 9 (scroll) 

first tried our soldiersliip! .-li/'sKXi, i. 2 

in your silent indgnient tried it.. Winlnr's Tale, ii. I 

tile party tried, ilie daughter — iii. 'i 

being touched, and tried, proves .. ..A'/nj'./o/i'i, iii. 1 

first be tried hv (iyht MlfnnjVl. iv. 1 

court, to see this (innrrcl tried iHi'iinjI'l. ii. 3 

disdainful to be tried bv it Henry rill. ii. 4 

were tried by evLMT tongue — iii. 1 

he might have tried h.rd Lucius.. Vm.oiio/.Jrt. iii. 3 
Iris spirit, and tried liis inclination.. Cor/o/aii»s, ii. 3 

he's a tried and valiant soldier JuUusCasar, iv. 1 

tliat we liave tried tiie utmost — iv. 3 

gold, that's by the touchstone tried Pericles, ii. 2 

still been tried a holy man Komen Sf.luliet, iv. 3 

their adoption tried, grapple them to .. H-imlei, i. 3 

TillER— was the trier of spirits Corinlajius, iv. 1 

TRIFLE are they set upon me Tempest, ii. 2 

some enclianted trifle to abuse me — v. 1 

how love can trifle with itselfl TiroGen.'of I'er iy. -1 

hau2 the trifle. wi>nian Merry iVives, ii. I 

dispense vitl\ trifles — ii. 1 

knneks, trifles, nnse:,';ivs Mid.N.'sDream, i. 1 

to fetch me trifles, and return — ii. 2 

here's a small trifle of wives .. Merch. of Venice, ii. 2 
we trifle time; I pray thee, pursue .. — iv. 1 

alas, it is a trifle; I will not — iv. 1 

but a trifle neither, in good AWslVell, ii. 2 

thnt we make trifles of terrors — ii. 3 

tliat makes but trifles of his eyes.. ll'inler'sTale, ii. 3 
a snapper-up of luteonsidered trifles — iv. 2 

she iirizes not such trifles as tliese are — iv. 3 

grant precio\is tilings, as trifles — v. 1 

which he counts but a trifle — v. 1 

win us with honest trifles Macbeth, i, 3 

as 'twere a careless trifle , — i. 4 

an hour after: a trifle, a trifle \HeiirylV. ii. 4 

a trifle, some eightpeniiy matter .... — iii. 3 

for a trifle, that was bought 1 Henry VI. iv. 1 

his tyranny for trifles liicltard 111. iii. 7 

tliese oarilinals trifle with me Henry Vlll. ii. 4 

come, lords, we trifle time away — v. 2 

my lord, a trifle of our love ....Timon of Athens, i. 2 
and sueh like trifles, nothing comparing — iii. 2 
some lady trifles liavc reserved . .Antony S^Cleo. v. 2 

so, in our trifles I still win of you Cyinbeline, i. 2 

or she's ontprized by a trifle — i. 5 

we sit too long on trifles Pericles, ii. 3 

himself upbraids us on every trifle Lear, i. 3 

why I do trifle thus with his despair .... — iv. 6 

that's but a trifle here — v. 3 

I feared he did but trifle Hamlet, ii. 1 

plav and trifle with your reverence Othello, \. 1 

trifles, litrlit as air, are, to the jealous .... — iii. 3 
than, intleed, belonged to such a trifle .. — v. 2 

'I'KIFLED former knowings Machelh,n. 4 

TFUFLER— away, away, you triflerl .1 Hciin/i r. ii. 3 

TRIFLING-but this is trifling Tempest, iii. 1 

fia-oiie trifling respect Merry Wives, ii. 1 

for some trifling present, you.. Timon of Athens, ii. 2 
we have a trifling foolish banquet., liomeo SrJut. i. 5 
Hamlet, and tlie trifling of his favour . . Handel, i. 3 

TllIGON, his man, lie not lisping iHcnrylV. ii. 4 

TRILLED— an ample tear trilled down . . Lear, iv. 3 

TRIM— where we, in all her trim Tempest, v. 1 

trim it handsomely — v. 1 

turned into tongue, and trim ones . . Much Ado, iv. I 
a trimexploit.a manly enterprize.-.U/V/.,V. O;-. iii. 2 

trim gallants, full of courtship Lovers L. Lost, v. 2 

the ship is in her trim Comedy of terrors, iv. I 

come like sacrillees in their trim ..\HenryIV. iv. 1 

air. A trim reckoning! who hath — v. 1 

our hearts are in the trim Henry r, iv. 3 

will have of these trim vanities!.... He/in//'///, i. 3 

there's a trim rabble let in — v. 3 

U this is trim! Paris, and L.Troilus ^ Cressida, iv. 5 

'T.iersites, lielp to trim my tent — v. I 

I give him, with all his trim Coriolanu^, i. 9 

have on their riveted trim.. Antony ^Cleopatra, iv. 4 
your laboursome and dainty tr'uns.. Cipni'eiine, iii. 4 
'twas trim sport for them .... Titus Andmnicus, v. 1 

another's glass to trim them by Tericles,\. 4 

Cupid, he that shot so trim .... Romeo ff Juliet, ii. 1 
(JO and trim her np; I'll go and chat — iv. 4 

TRLMLY dressed, fresh as \HenrylV. i. 3 

fitlilMED in inailam Julia's gown TwoGen.ofV. iv. 4 
trimmed up for Semiramis.7V/m/H^'-t;/>7i. '2 Undue.) 
tlie house trimmed, rushes strewed .. — iv. 1 
had not so trimmed and dressed ..Richard II. iii. 4 

trimmed up your praises v/itli 1 Henry II'. v. 2 

and being now trimmed in thine own. 2 Henry I V. i. 3 
trimmed like a younker, prancing ..^Henry I'l. ii. 1 
a vessel follow that is new trimmed. Henry VIII. i. 2 
and trimmed her as thou sawest .. TiinsAndron. v. I 
she was wa-iied, and cut, and trimmed — v. 1 
banners sable, trnninedwith rich. ftriWes, v. (Gow.) 
trimmed in forms and visages of duty ..Othello, i. 1 
I'HI.MMING up the diadem.. .-Iri/oii,/ ^•C/t-n/M/ro, v. 2 
eall'st thou that trimming? .. TitnsAudronicus, V. 1 
TRINICETS had been lialluwcd ..Hinltr'sTute, iv. 3 

we'll see your trinkets here all ■iHenn/ll. i. 4 

THIi^JCULO-for I am Trinculo irep.).. Tempest, ii. 2 

if any be Trincnlo's legs f^/^') — ii- 2 

canhe vent Trinculosi' — ii. 2 

Trinculo, the king and all (rep. "I — ii. 2 

Trinculo keep a good tongue in your head — iii. 2 
I will stand, and so shall Trinculo .... — iii. 2 

Trinculo, if you trouble him trfp.) — iii. 2 

and Trinculo and thyself shall be (.rep.) — iii. 2 

come on, Trinculo, let us sing — iii. 2 

put off that gown, Trinculo — iv. 1 

and Trinculo is reeling ri.^e — v. 1 

TRIP— and. as you trip, still pinch. Merry Wives, v. 5 
tii p no further, pretty .... Twelfth i\ii;ht, ii. 3 (song) 

that thiue own trip shall be — v. I 

ill silence sad, trip we attei,... Mid.N.'sDream, iv. I 



TRIP away, make no stay Mid. N.'s Dream, v. 2 

trip and go, my sweet Love's L. Lost, iv. 2 

trip, Audrey, trip, Audrey ylsyouLilceit, v. 1 

to trip the course of law 2 Henry I V. v. 2 

tliese her women can tri p me Cymlwline, v. 5 

excellent in making ladies trip Pericles, ii. 3 

then trip him, that liis heels maj^ Hamlet, iii. 3 

TRIPARTITE are drawn \HenryIV.\\\. 1 

i TRIPE— say you to a fat tripe. Tamin«;oi Sliren<, iv. 3 
1 TRIPE- VISAGED rascal; an' the ..■ihenrylV. v. 4 

I TRIPLE Hecate's team Mid.N.'sDream. v. i 

bade me store up, as a tri pie eye All's Well, iii 

set the triple crown upon his head ..iHenryVI.i. 3 

the triple pillarof the world. Antony^ Cteopatm, i. 1 

TRIPLE-TURNED whore I 'tis thou — iv. 10 

TRI PlyEX, sir, is a good tnpyimg. . Tirel/thNiuhl, v. 1 

TRIPOLIS-bound to Tripolis..i)f«'c/i.o/;'fn/ce, i. 3 

cast away, coming from 'Tripolis , ... — iii. 1 

Tripolis.'from Mexico, and England — iii. 2 

and so to Tripolis, if God lend .. Tamin^ofSh. iv. 2 

TRIPPED up the wrestler's \Kids..AsyouLiheit. iii. 2 

we gather, you have tripped since . lllnter'sTale, i. 2 

nor trippped neither; you base football ..Lsar, i. 4 

since I tripped up thy heels — ii. 2 

his displeasure, tripped me behind — ii. 2 

TRIPPING— each one tripping Tempest, iv. 1 

is a good tripping measure TtcelfthNii^ht, v. I 

come tripping after drums King.Iotm, v. 2 

the Greekish girls shall tripping. Troilus^ Cress, iii. 3 

TRIPPINGLY— dance it trippingly. A/«.A'.'s Dr. v. 2 

as I pronounced it to you, trippingly .. /Iam(e(, iii. 2 

TRISTFUL-my tristful queen \HenrylV. ii. 4 

tristful visage, as against the doom Hamlet, iii. 4 

TRI'i'ON of the minnows? Coriolanus, iii. 1 

TRIUMPH-with triumphs.. ru'oGM.o/'Ferona, v 4 
art thou led in triumph?.. Measu7-e for Measure, iii, 2 

witli pomp, with triumph Mid.N.'sDream, i. 1 

would I might triumph solLove'sL.Lost, iv. 3 (ver.) 
Iiow will he triumph, leap, and laugh — iv. 3 
triumph thus upon my misery! .Taming ofSh. iv. 3 

men did triumph in my face Richard II. iii. 2 

should grace the triumph of great .. — iii. 4 
when triumph is become an alehouse — V. 1 

hold those justs and triumphs? — v. 2 

'gainst the triumpli day — v. 2 

of these triumphs lielil at Oxford.... — v. 3 
O thou art a perpetual triun^h .... 1 lienrylV. iii. 3 
rebels' arms triumph in massacres!.. — v. 4 
France, triumph in thy glorious ....]HenryVl. i. 6 

Talbot triumph for a while — iii. 3 

one, that at a triumph having vowed — v. 6 
ride in triumph through the streets.. 2Henr!/r/. ii. 4 

bear in triumph to the king — iv. 10 

triumph tliieves uiion their conquered. 3 Ht'nr?/ /'/. i.4 
to triumph, like an Amazonian trull — i.4 

the heart, that triumphs in their death — ii. 4 
still ride in triumph over all mischance — iii. 3 
triumph, Henry, in thy day of doom — v. 6 
witli stately triumphs, mirthful .... — v. 7 
yet set down this day of triumph .RicliardllJ. iii. 4 
Harry's wife, triumph not in my woes — iv. 4 

will triumph o'er my person Henry Vlll. v. 1 

that weep'st to see me triumph?.... Cono/nni/s, ii. I 

and to rejoice in his triumph JuUusCa:sar,i. 1 

that comes in triumph over Pompcy's — i. 1 

thy conquests, glories, triumphs, spoils — iii. 1 
with triumph home unto his house.. — iii. 2 
to be led in triumph through the.. .. — v. 1 
to follow Caesar in his tr\\\m\i\\. Antony ^ Cteo. iii. 11 

and blemish CaBsar's triumph — iv. 10 

my glory nnto an enemy's triumph.. — iv. 12 
would be eternal in nur'trinmph .... — v. 1 

he'll lead me then in triumph'/ — v. 2 

the matter? triumphs for nothing., ri/wiie/in^, iv. 2 
beautify thy triumphs, and return. TitusAndron. i. 2 
but safer triumi^h is tills funeral .... — i. 2 
and triumphs over chance, in honour's — i. 2 
thou in triumph long hath prisoner.. — ii. 1 
knights ready to begin the triumph? ..Pericles, ii. 2 
in honour of whose birth these triumphs — ii. 2 
he comes to an liononred triumph .... — ii. 2 

honouring of Neptune's triumph — v. 1 

triumph die; like Are and powder. /I'oi/i/'o Sf Jul. ii. 6 
alive! intriumph! and Mercntio slain? — iii. 1 

bray out the triumph of his pledge Handel, i. 4 

every man put himself into triiimpli ..Othello, ii. 2 
do yon triumph, Roman? do j'ou triumph? — iv. 1 

TRIUMPHANT brier Mid.N.'s Dream, iii. 1 

bound in with the triumphant sea,. .Richard 11. ii. 1 
which his triuinpliant father's hand — ii. I 

cajitives bound to a trium]ihant car .1 He?i7-t/r/. i. 1 
triumphant death, smeared with .... — iv. 7 
to London with triumphant marcb.3He/ii'*/r/. ii. 6 
would be so triumiihant us I am? .Richard III. iii. 2 

bound with triumphant garlands — iv. 4 

the gods, and make triumpliant ^res.Coriolaints. v. 4 
sh.e's a most triumphant lady ...inlony ^Cleo. ii. 2 
sliall set thee on triumphant chariots — iii. I 
bury thee in a triumphant grave, ftomeo* Juliet, v. 3 
TRIUMPHANTLY tread on thy ... . Coriolanus, v, 3 
duke Theseus' bouse triumphantly ^//d.iV.'sDr.iv. 1 
arc at hand triumphantly displayed. King John, ii. 2 

TRIUMPHED upon a Scot \ Henry IV. v. 3 

Antonv's hath triumphed on ..Antony ^ Cteo. iv. 13 

TRIUMPHER in the eyes of Rome! . . Titus And. i. 2 

like great trinmphers in their. . Timon of Athens, v. 2 

TRIUMPHING in my woe.Love'sL.Lost, iv. 3 (ver.) 

triumphing, how mine enemies ..Richard III. iii. 4 

ride on the pants triumphing ...4nlony &Cleo. iv. 3 

TRIUMVIRATE shtmld be deposed — iii. 6 

TRIUMVIRY, the corner-cap ....Loi'e'.!):,. Lost, iv. 3 

TRIVIAL price of serious things All's Well, v. 3 

we yet have but trivial argument. .2f7i!)i)-!/r/. iii. 1 

thereof are nice and trivial Richard III. iii. 7 

tinder-like, upon too trivial Coriolanus, ii. I 

we debate our trivial dUterence.. Anton y ^ Cteo. ii. 2 

of BO slight and trivial a nature Cymbeline. i. 5 

all trivial fond records, all saws of Hamlet, i. 5 

TliO.VT— cut his troat in de park ..Merry Wires, i. 4 
TROD the water, whose enmity Tempest, ii. 1 



TROD oil neat's leather Tempest, ii. 2 

here's a maze trod, indeed (rep. v. 1) .. — iii. 3 

I have trod a measure Asynu Like it, v. 4 

and he been thus trod down Richard II. ii. 3 

as ever his pluck shoe trod upon Hem-y V. iv. 7 

mischance hath trod my title down. 3 He/iri/ri. iii. 3 
I had never trod this Euglish .. ..Henry Vlll. iii. 1 
that once trod the ways of glory .... — iii. 2 
and fortune, trod upon them.. Timon ofAthent, iv. 3 
as proper men as ever trod upon ..Julius Cevsar, i. 1 
I trod upon a worm against my will. . Pericles, iv. 1 
TRODDEN-in the tr<iclden paths.. AsyouLikeil, i. 3 

and faith is trodden dowu King John, iii. I 

the more it is trodden on 1 Henry IV. ii. 4 

stained nobility lies trodden on — v. 4 

worm wiU turn, being trodden on ..SHenryVl. ii. 2 
a little Are is quickly trodden out .. — iv. 8 
TROILUS-Cressida to thisTroilusT'H'rf/'rtA'i'g'/i^.iii. 1 
Troilus tiie first employer of panders. Much. 4do, v, 2 
in such a night, Troilus, methink6..'l/cr.o//>?i. v. 1 
Troilus had his brains dashed oiit.Asyon Like, iv. 1 
Where's my spaniel Troilus?.. Taming of Shrew, iv. I 
Troilus, alasl bath none .... Troilus <^Cressida,i. 1 
how now, prince Troilus? (rep.) .... — i. 1 

Troilus will not come far behind (/fp.) — i. 2 

Troilus? Troilus is the better man (,rep.) — i. 2 
Troilus, for a brown favour (rep.) ,. — i. 2 

commended Troilus for a copper nose — i. 2 
Helen loves Troilus, — Troilus will irep.) — i. 2 
hair that Helen spied on Troilus' chin — i. 2 

but mark Troilus above the rest (re'p.) — i. 2 

Troilus? I'll show you Troilus (rep.) — i. 2 

I marvel, where Troilus is (»ep.) .... — 1.2 

brave Troilus! (r/-;/.) — i. 2 

live and die i' the eyes of 'Troilus (r^p.) — 1.2 

ay, a token from Troilus — i. 2 

more in Troilus thousand fold I see — i. 2 

now, youthful Troilus, do not — ii. 2 

Paris, and Troilus, you have both .. — ii. 2 
with Paris from tiie prince "Troilus.. — iii. 1 

yourbrother Troilus,— My lord — iii. 1 

now chance my brother "Troilus went not— iii. 1 
Troilus shall be such to Cressid (rep.) — iii. 2 
prince Troilus, I have loved you .... — iii. 2 
approve their truths by Troilus .... — iii. 2 
my brother Troilus lodges there .... — iv. I 
Troilus had rather Troy were borne to — iv. 1 

is not prince Troilus here? — iv. 2 

thy father, and be gone from Troilus — iv. 2 
so near me, as the sweet Troilus (rep.) — iv. 2 
break my heart with sounding Troilus — iv. 2 
good my brother Troilus. tell you (jcp.) — iv. 3 
O Troilus! Troilus! Wliat a pair of _ iv. 4 
from Troilus too? From Troy and Troilns — iv. 4 
brother TroilnsI Good brother, come you — iv. 4 

be not moved, prince Troilus — iv. 4 

'tis Troilus' fault: come, come — iv. 4 

they call him Troilns; and on him.. — iv. 5 

call my brother Troilus to me i — iv. 5 

most princely Troilns: tliere Diomed — iv. 6 
Troilus, farewell! one eye yet looks — v. 2 

may worthy Troilns be lialf attached — v. 2 

no, 'faith, young Troilus C»sp.) — v. 3 

Troilns, I would not have you fight — v. 3 

take thou Troilus' horse, present .... — v. 5 
and at it, roaringfor Troilus (rf-p.).. — v. 6 
Troilus, thou coward Troilus (rep.).. — v. fi 

yea, Troilus? O well fought — v. 6 

TROILUSES-cimstant men be Troilnses — iii. 2 
TROJAN-false Trojan under sai}. Mid. S.'sDream, i. 1 

was hut a Trojan in respect Love'sL.Lost, v. 2 

unless you play the honest Trojan . . — v. 2 

mounted the Trojon walls Merch. of Venice, v. 1 

tut! there are other Trojans than ..I Henry r. ii. 1 
with Cannibals, and Trojan Greeks?.2Ht';ui//r. ii. 4 
dost tliou thirst base Trojan (rep.) .. — y. 1 

better than the Trojan did I Henry VI. v. 5 

Trojan, and Antenorides. Troilus^ Cress, (prologue) 
and other side, Trojan and Greek — (prologue) 
each Trojan, that is master of his .. — i. I 
a lord of Trojan blood, nephew to .. — i. 2 
this Trojan scorns us; or the men .. — i. 3 

peace, Trojan, lay thy finger on thy lips! — i. 3 

thou siialt know, Trojan, he is awake — i. 3 

in view of Trojans and of Greeks — i. 3 

for here the Trojans tarte our _ i. 3 

art here put to thrash Trojans — ii. 1 

cry, Trojans, cry I (rep.) _ ii. 2 

not wish a drop of Trojan blood .... — ii. 2 

I would, he were a Trojan! — ii. 3 

of US, Trojan? make demand (rep.).. — iii. 3 

weight, a Trojan hath been slain — iv. 1 

Greeks and Trojans suffered death .. — iv. 1 

the Trojans' trumpet. Yonder — iv, .'j 

half Trojan, and h.alf Greek — iv. 5 

what Trojan is that same that — iv. 5 

thy commixtion Greek and Trojan.. — iv 5 

Grecian all, and this is Trojan — iv. 5 

the expecters of our Trojan part — iv.b 

I Iiave, thou gallant Trojan, seen — iv. ii 

there's many a Greek and Trojan dead — iv.b 
they say, he keeps a Trojan drab .... — v. 1 
how now, Trojan? Diomed— no, no — v. 2 

I cannot conjure, Trojan — v. 2 

that that same young Trojan ass .... — v. 4 
now for thy wliorc, 'Trojan! now. ... — v. 4 
I have chastised the amorous Trojan — v. 5 
I do disdain thy courtesy, proud 'Trojan — v. B 
the Trojan trumpets sound the like — v. " 

along tlie field I will the Trojnn trail — v. 9 

like the Trojan horse, war-stuffed Pericles, i. 4 

TROLL-will yon troll the catch Tempest, iii. 2 

TR,OL-MY- DAMES. I knew him. Winter'sTale, iv. 2 
TROMPERIES-pleines des tromperies.. Henry V. v. 2 
TROOP— jn troops I have dispersed .... Tempest, i. 2 

I second thee; troop on Merry Wives, i, 3 

and her troop of fairies? v. 3 

troop home to churchyards ..Mii.V.'s Dream, tli. 2 

but till the troops come by All's Well, iii. 5 

the troop is past; come, pilgrim .... — iii. 5 



TRO 



'CROOPof Florentinos ilH'»l»>«,lii. 6 

tin' tmops nrc nil scattered — iv. S 

a lu.uc intVrtioil? trooj) of liftlo .,Comcit\t nf Err. V, \ 

'.« ►\'t'. ohcdicnfc. troopa of triCDds M>icbfth, v. 3 

\ikc It jolh trviop of luilltsint'll King John^ ii. 2 

IS not tin- liiily ConstiiiHT in this troopV — il. 2 
«iiiiciin'S<, aiul l)mi»li troops, tliu kill),' — v. 2 
in so fnir il tio..p, to nii I il loctuii'.Wii/i'ird il. iv. 1 
yonng llotipnr. iiml liis troop*, .id,-,!;!// J', (inline.) 

topou-e. troop in till- tlnongsof — iv. 1 

BCiMTC six tliou a:nl in lii.i tump \Ilenryyi. i, I 

drives buck onr troops — i. 5 

■inion^'st tlif troops olurnicd men .. — ii. 2 

tnd nil llie troop. ..fEn-Iisli _ iii. 3 

unito vonr tro'ips of liorsi'Mion — iv. 1 

two niislilitr troops llnin tlint — iv. 3 

llironsli tliuoonrt witli troops of •iHenryVI. i. .3 

»i;uin^t u troitp of Kernes — iii. I 

s'nil tlicv Inne troops of soldiers .TJ/i- ~rijl'l. i. 1 

lie bore 1iini in tlie titickcst troop..., — ii. i 

all t'l^'Ctlier t.i onr troops — i). ;i 

some trooiis pursne tlic bloody-minded — ii U 
and witli liis tniopsdotli niarcb iiniain — iv. 8 

lit Oaiiitry, Willi 11 pnissant tronp — v. i 

sueli troops of citizens to come lo../fJc/i(ir<i ///. iii. 7 

wliere be tile thronging troops — iv 4 

IVoiii troop to troop, went throngll .. — v. .1 

II noble troop of strangers Htnryl'Ill. i. 1 

tlie noble troops that waited — iii. 2 

a blessed troop invite me to a banquet — iv. 2 

to let tlie troop pa-ss fairly — v. 3 

yonder comes tlie troop .... Troilm ^- Cresxida, iv. 5 
rlieer up my discontented troops. 7YiH(mo/".JM. iii, 5 

wliftt says the other troop Cnriol iiuis, i. I 

to yonder troops, and here i.rep,) ..JuUu-silwmr, v. 3 
raised by your populous troops.. /l;i/oay(!i-t7/eo. iii. 6 
Dido and her .iEiieas shall wunt troops — iv. 12 

nvnv. boy, from the troo|m CijmhrUne, v, ■> 

will tile lovely Koman ladies troop. '/Vdis/lin/ron. ii.l 

of her well-beseeming troop? — ii. 3 

from our troops I strayed — v. I 

effects that troop with majesty Lear, i. I 

our troops set fiirtli to-morrow — iv. 5 

here c unes another troop to seek for you.OWpHn.i. 2 
farewell tlie plumed troop[Kn(.-troops].. — iii. 3 

TliOiiriNti with crows Itoweo ^ Juliet, i. 5 

TROPHIES, and ^ellOols Timmt of Athens, v. 5 

be huii.-i with Cicsar's trophies .. ..JuJins C(Psiir, i. 1 
with tropliiesdo adorn thy tombl.T'ifK.i/lnrfro;/. i. t 
when do^vn her weedy trophies liamtft, iv. 7 

TROl'HY-every grave, a lying trophy. .JWsire/i. ii. 3 

fc'iving full trophy, signal — v. (chorus) 

and worn as a memoi able trophy .... — v. I 

a man, than gilt his trophy Coriftl-inns, i. 3 

no trophy, sword, nor hatchment Hamlet, iv. 5 

TUOl'IC.VLLY. Tills play is the image .. — iii. 2 

l'l!O.S.>i;ii_in your straight trossers .. Henry r. iii. 7 

TlioT-let them wagj trot, trot ....Merry inves,i. 3 

by my trot, I tarry (rep. iv. 5) — i 4 

hair what say'st thou, trot?....i>/ea*. /or Mens. iii. 2 

who time trots withal (rep.) AsyoiiLike il, iii. 2 

he trots hard with a youii.g maid .. .. — iii. 2 
or an old trot witli ne'er a tooth .. Tamiu!;nrsh. i. 2 

he trots the air; tiie earth sings Henry!', iii. 7 

would trot as well, were some of your — iii. 7 

I will trot to-morrow a mile — iii. 7 

and by ttie wag'^on wheel iYoi. Titus ..indroniem, v. 2 
scssa ; let him trot by Lenr, i ii. 4 

TROTlI-t 1 speak trotli, I \\B.vii.Mid.N:sDream, ii. 3 
two bo?oins. and one tnjth (rfy.) .,., — ii. 3 
one man holding troth, a million.... — iii. 2 

and not break my troth Love^tL Lo.if,i. 1 

never break men a troth — v. 2 

violation of all faith and troth sworn. I Hrnri///''. v. I 
faith and troth, strained purely. Truilut fr Ci'i-ss. iv. 5 
hii.-bmid that did e'er plight Irotli ..Ci/mlyilfn; i. 2 
bid lieraliLditand her trotli plight. Lwr. iii. lisoiig) 

TKOTIl-l'l,U;UT to her Ih-nnif. ii. 1 

[lilts to before her troth-pligllt Winter's Tale, \ 2 

IS troth-plight to your dangliter — v. 3 

TRUTTIN(>-of trotting paritor8..ioBe'»t.I.o./. iii. 1 
to ride on a bay trotting horse Lear, iii. i 

TROUBM:— trouble us not Teminsl. i. 1 

what t oiible wa-i I then toyou — i. 2 

if yon trouble him any more — iii. 2 

oil torment, trouble, wonder — v. 1 

eliall not henceforth trouble me.TimGen.ofVer. i.2 
henceforth to trouble you no more .. — ii.l 
a bag of mone.v here troubles \nQ.. Merry tVtves, ii. 2 

come, trouble not yourself — iii. 4 

for 'ive me your trouble Tineirh Sight, ii.l 

being prompted by your present trouble — iii. 4 
you are come to meet your trouble ..MuchAih, i. 1 

never came trouble to my houHC — i. 1 

for, trouble Iwing gone, comfort should — i. I 
to trouble voii witli no more fluit..tft'r. of Venice, i. 2 

friend, that is thus in tnjuble? — iii. 2 

I will not trouble you us yet ....Atynul.iUe it, ii. 7 
to toil and trouble in the world .. Tnmiugofsh. v. 2 

to you a charge, and trouble lyitUer'tTtite, 1. 2 

he so troubles me. 'tis pa't enduring — ii.l 
nail talk, anil we'll not trouble them — iv. 3 

wc honour you with trouble — v. 3 

to trouble your joys with like relation — v. 3 
but troubles of the marriage \n^ii. Comedy o/ISrr. ii. 1 
lie gone. sir. and not trouble you .... — iv. 3 
would put me to this shame and trouble — v. I 
follows iM, s^nnetime is our trouble .. ..Macbeth, \. fi 

and thank lis for your trouble — i. 

this is a joyful trouble toyou — ii. 3 

double, double toil and trouble (r>-p.).. — iv. 1 

for a charm of iHiwenul trouble — iv. I 

unnatural deeils breed unnatural troubles — v. I 

raze out the written tioubles of — v. 3 

begone, and tnnible you no more ..Uichahl II. iv. I 

I pr'ythec, trouble me no more MIenrull'. I. 2 

he will trouble you no more i Henry 1 1', iv. 4 

no need to trouble himself with Henry l'. ii. 3 

which troubles oft the bed of blessed. . — v. 2 
I'll never trouble you, if I inay .... 1 Henry Tl. i. 4 



[ 787 3 

THOUBLE-been bold to trouble you .1 Henry f/. il, 
I would his troubles likewise were .. — ii. 
awav, niv niasti'is! trouble us no more — iii. 
to trouble and disturb tlie king and us? — iv. 

I must trouble I'on again — v. 

my piu>,iiee thai dotii trouble you ..iHenryVL i. 

nevi-r wi it to Irouble you again .. — i. 

luiu'erortli. lie shall trouble us no more — iii. 
wbosr tilth and dirt troubles the silver — iv. 
wrought nil' Mich exi'fclin;; trouble.. — v. 
I'll noi Irouble thee with words ....-iHenryVL V. 
and ail llic trouble tbon hast turned.. — v. 

hence, and tr.nihle lis not Iliclianl I II. i, 

but \ niii^l Iroiiblc biiii with lewd — i. 

Ehwitli R.ciiiiiond tiouliKs me more — iv. 
full olsiid tboii-lils and troubles . . Henry f 1 1 1, ii. 
mv soul grows iad Willi troubles .... — iii. 

I iiavc not long to trouble thee — iv. 

his long trouble now is passing out .. — iv. 
dear, trouble not voiliself . . Tioilns ^Crcaida, iv. 

tniiilde hiiii not; to bed, to bed — iv. 

I troMhle ymi. No, not awliit — V. 

rascally plisiok so troubles me — v. 

must he needs trouhle me in't?7'iiaori of Athcns.Vn. 

O sir, let it not trouble you — iii. 

pity him. wboni tlioii dlist trouble? .. — iv. 
trouble him no further, thus you .... — v. 
to Irouble the iioor with begging Coriolaniii, ii. 



TRLJ 



nd.le y. 



1 further. 



Autidius, and trouble not the peace.. — v. 
the trouble of my countenance JiiliusCa-sar,'!. 

food-morrow, Brutus; dowetrouble you? — ii. 
trouble thee loo much — iv. 

trouble yourselves no further ..Antony ^-Cleo. ii. 

jiaini for purchasing but trouble.... C'ym(w(iH<>, ii. 

doll tills robe, and trouble you? .. Titus .-tndron. i. 

80 trouble me no more Irep.) — i. 

show you those in troubles reign. Pericles, ii. (Gow 

hourly trouble, for a minute's ease .. — ii. 

is the cause we trouble you so early.. — id. 

I'll not trouble thee Lear, i. 

I will not tiouble thee, my child — ii. 

here, sir; but trouble him not, his wits .. — iii. 

trouble hiin no mure, till further settling — iv. 

never trouble Peter for tlie matter. Kumeo ^Jul. iv. 

I will be gone, sir, an*l not trouble you — v. 

a mote it is, to trouble the mind's eye ...Hamlet, i, 

indeed, sirs, but this troubles me — i. 

to take arms ugainsjt a sea of troubles .... — iii. 

as would, periuips, trouble a woman ,,,. — v, 

nor build yourself a trouble out of hi8..0(A(!'/o, iii. 

you, sir. trouble yourself no further — iv. 

TROUBLED-my old brain is troubled. -/•.■r..p«(,iv. 

by m.y will, have troubled you . . Twelfth \i^ht, iii. 

would else have been troubled with .. MnrhAdn, i. 

what if my house be troubled.. Jt/frc/i.Qr/'emcf, iv. 

not long be troubled with you ....Asyuu Litie it, i. 

with pure love, and troubled brain .. — iv. 

troubled with the lanipass .. Tamimiof Shreiv, iii. 

being trouliled witli a shrew, measures — v. 

is like a fountain tronbleil, muddy .. — v. 

town is troubled with unruly. ('omcrfj? o/Error,!, iii. 

as troubled with man's set Macbeth, ii, 

as she i^ triuhhd with thick-coming — v. 

frcsli expel tution troubled not KingJohn, iv. 

fever, tluil hath troubled me so long .. — v. 

like the nietiurs of a troubled heaven. 1 J/ewry/r. i. 

will not now be troubled with reply.. — v. 

marking, that I am troubled withal.. affmry/r. i. 

but I am troubled here with them..2Hc/i>-^'7. iv. 

my mind was troubled witli deep .... — v. 

vou troubled him than France ....SHcnryVI. iii. 

I'll strive, with troubled thoughts.. /(/cAai-.i III. v. 

my mind is troubled Troilus ^Cressida, iii. 

troubled Tiber chafing with her shores. ./h(. C^psor, i. 

troubled with the green-sickness.Jnfony ^CVeo. iii, 

he was troubled with a rheum — iii. 

be you not troubled with the time .. — iii. 

I have been troubled in my sleep. Titus Andron. ii. 

overborne, troubled, confronted thus — iv. 

a troubled mind ilrave me to walk.,/io?n<'f> ^Jut. i. 

being troubled with a raging tooth ....Olhelln, iii. 
TROUBLEllof tbepoor lliclmrdl ll.i. 

not to be a troiibler of your peace Pericles, v. 

TROliBliESOME, being urmd at.. .. AVii^'J„/i„, iv. 

be unmannerly tliaii troublesome.. il/''r;t/ir/?vjf, i. 

like them, to Perc.v troublesome ..,.'2 Henry IV. ii. 

being so troublesome a bedfellow?.... — iv. 

liow troublesome it sat upon my head — iv. 

you are strangely troublesome .... HenryVlU. v, 

now tlioii art troublesome.... Coriolanus, iv. 

the time's troublesome Cymbeline, iv. 

TROUBl.lCST me; I am not in ....Richard III. iv. 
TllOO'Bl.OUS dream tliis night i Henry VI. i. 

but, in this iioublous time 3 Henry VI. Ii. 

sadly in this troublous world — v. 

look to see a troublous world Richard III. ii. 

TROUGH-makcs his trough in your — v. 

TROUT that must be caught witli. r«v;rt/i Sight, ii. 

groning for trouts ill a peculiar .. Meus. tor Mens. i. 

TllOVATO. may I say Taming of Shrew, i. 

TROW— a stone to trow at his dog ..Merry Hives, i. 

who's there, I trow? — i. 

what tempest, I trow, threw this whale — ii. 

what means the fool, trow? Much.ddo, iii. 

trow you, what he called me? .... Love's L. Lost, v. 

trow vou, wdio liiitli done this? ..As you Like il, iii. 

and, t trow, this is bis bouse .. 'Taming nf Shrew, i. 

trow you vvbitlier I am going? — i. 

and 'tis time, I trow Richard II. ii. 

will not submit, I trow I Henry I' I. v. 

and, as I trow, which I do well ,... Henry Vlll. i. 

what is the matter, trow? Cymbeline, i. 

for you trow, nuncle, the hedge sparrow . . Lenr, i. 

'twas no need, I trow, to bid iiic.."'i"iffo + y«/if(, i. 

marry, come up, I trow — ii. 

TROWEIj-laid on with a trowel ..As you Likeil, 1. 
TROW'ST thou, thate'er I'll look ..•illenryVl. ii. 

why, trow'st thou, Warwick 3HenryVI. v. 

learn more than thou trow'st Lear, i. 



TltOY-Pandariisof Troy become ..Merry Hires, i. 3 

he presents Hector of Troy Love' sL. Lost, v. 2 

the worthy knight of Troy — v. 2 

paid by bowling Troy Merchant or Venice, i\i. 2 

why the Grecians sacked Troy ?./!«'• "V«, i. ;i (song) 
the model where old Troy did stand. Hir/i'iri/ //. v. I 

half his Troy was burnetl 'illenrylV. i. 1 

as valorous as Hector of Troy — ii. 4 

of night when Troy was set on ftre...2H<oif!/;'/. i. 4 

Comincnced in burning Troy? _ iii. 2 

of Troy against the Greeks {rrp.'s ..illenryVl. ii. I 
like a Sinon, take another Troy .... — iii. 2 

and my Troy's true hope — iv. 8 

ill Troy there lies the scene .. 'I'roilns^Crcss. (prnl.) 
their vow is made to ransack Troy.. — (iirol ) 

sperr up the sons of Troy — (prol.) 

war without the walls of Troy — i. 1 

he's one of the flowers of Troy — i.2 

one o' the soundest judgments in 'Troy — i.2 

vet Troy walls stand — i. 3 

Troy, yet upon his basis — i. 3 

this fever that keeps Troy on foot .. — i. 3 

Troy ill our weakness stands — i. 3 

from Troy. What would you 'fore our — i. » 

or tlie men of Troy are coremoiiions _ i. 3 

you of Troy, call j'oii yourself -dieas? — i 3 

from Troy. Nor I from Troy come not — i. 3 

what Troy means fairly (rep.) — i. 3 

'twixtour tents and Troy, to-morrow — ii. 1 

cr.v, cry! Troy burns, or else — ii. 2 

if Troy be not taken till — ii. 3 

fresh kings arc come to Troy — ii. 3 

Antcnor, and all the gallantry of Troy — iii. I 
to Jove I have abandoned Troy .... — iii 3 
Troy holds him very dear (rp/i.) .... — iii. 3 

I'll flgbt no more 'gainst Troy — iii. 3 

and great 'Tro.v shrinking — iii. 3 

commerce that you have had with "Troy — iii. 3 
humane gentleness, welcome to Troy I — iv. 1 
rather Troy wera borne to Greece (lep.) — iv. I 

and the general state of Troy — iv. 2 

I will not go from Troy — iv. 2 

from Troy .' A hateful truth (rep.) .. — iv. 4 

the glory of our Troy doth this — iv. 4 

a loud note to Troy, thou — iv. .^ 

all (Jreek. and this all Troy — iv. 5 

my well-famed lord of Troy — iv. 5 

what honour was this Cressida in Troy? — iv. S 
why, thou full dish of fool, from Troy — v. I 

60 now, fair prince of Trov — v. I 

by this, is arming him in Troy v. 2 

to-day, for thee, and me, and Troy .. — ;. 3 

leaning, and all Troy on thee — v. 3 

hark, bow Troy rnnrsi — v. 3 

thyself and all our Troy deceive .... — v. 3 
young knave's sleeve of Troy there .. — v. 4 
now, Troy, sink down; here lies .... — v. 9 
great Troy is ours, and our sharp wars — v. 10 
upon your thrones, and smile at Troy 1 — v. 1 1 

go in to Troy, and say there — v. II 

m a word, scare Troy out of itself. ... — v. 1 1 

strike a free march to Troy I — v. 1 1 

fiom the flumes of Troy iiiKUi JulinaCrrsar, i. 2 

that armed the queen of Troy _ i.2 

a fagot to briglit-burnin"Troy? — iii. 1 

how Troy was burnt, and be made .. — iii. 2 

that Hecuba of Troy ran mad — iv. 1 

surprised king Priam's 'Troy v. 3 

onr Troy, our Rome, the civil wound — v. 3 

TRlTAN'r— been an idle {.mnni. .TwoGen. of rer. ii. 4 
have plucked geese, played truant. iVpiii/'fi'i-M, v. 1 
hanghini, truant; there's no true ...yuchAdo, ill. 2 
ngea years play truant at his tales. Lore's L.Loj', ii. 1 

to truant with your bed Comedy of Errors, '\'\i. 2 

but 1 will never be a truant, love -.1 Uenryiv. iii. 1 
I have a truant been tochivaliT .... — v. I 

and chid his truant youth with v. 2 

'faith, I have been a truant in \ Henry VI. ii. 4 

not such a truant since my coming. H<-Hr!/<7;/. iii. I 

truant vows to her own lips Iroiiiu -V Cress, i. 3 

a truant disposition, good my lord Hamlet, \, 2 

I know, you arc no truant .r — i.2 

TRl'CE with thy true bed ....Comedy of Rrrors, ii. 2 

spirits I cannot take a truce King John, iii. 1 

even before this truce, but new — iii. I 

and base truce, to anus invasive? .... — v. 1 
called for the truce of Winchester ..IHenriiFl. ii. 4 

sericth for a flag of truce — iii. I 

given truce unto my wars — iii. 4 

peaceful truce shall be v. 4 

take this compact of a truce — v. 4 

or speech for truce, success . . Trnilus <5 Cressida, i. 3 
long-continued truce is rusty grown — i. 3 
took a trui'C, and did him service .... — ii. 3 

all (inestiiin uf the gentle truce — iv. 1 

not take truce with the unruly ../foniro*J«/i>/, iii. I 

THUCIvl.I'MiED; 'tis painted ....MerryH'lres,i\: i 
I'll t.luv trucldc-bed llomen H Jnliet, li. I 

Tl'a'l)!;i;, plod, away o' the hoof . . .Uciry irives, 1.3 
that done, trudge with it ill all haste — iii. 3 
t • trudge, pack, and be gone. . Comedy o/ Errors, iii. 2 

that trudje betwixt the king RIchaid III. i. I 

trudu'C about through fair Verona.. Romeo A JuL i. 2 
I trow, to bid me trudge — i. 3 

TlUFE-is not this true? » Tempesl, i, 2 

true; save means to live — ii, I 

'tis true my bn. tiler's dauglitec's — ii.l 

true: and, look, how well my — ii.l 

to be thy true subject — ii. 2 

if 1 siicak true; if hollowly — iii. I 

and I'll be sworn 'tis true — iii. 3 

look, thou be true — iv. I 

a contract of true love to celebrate (rep.) — iv. 1 

my true pieservcr — v. 1 

if these be true spies which I — v. 1 

then say, if they lie true — v. I 

now 'tis true I must he here — (epil.) 

'tis true; for you are over boots. .ru-or/tn. o./Tn. i. 1 
true; and thy master ashcplicrd .... — i. I 
true, sir; I was iu love - ii.l 



TRUE— for my true constancy. . Timncn. ofVer. ii. 2 

ay, 60 true love should do — ii.3 

her true perfection, or my — ii. 1 

but tell me true — ii. 5 

a true devoted pilgrim is — ii. 7 

too (air, too true, too liolv — iv. 2 

when I protest true loyalty to her .. — iv. 2 

I will make true love — iv. 2 

and thy true love died — iv. 3 

my master's true confirmed love — — iv. 4 

biit cannot be true servant — iv. 4 

'tis true, such pearls as put (ri77.) — — v. 2 

thou counterfeit to thy true friend ! . . — v. 4 

'tis true; O heaven! were man — v. 4 

as I despise one that is not tvwe. ...Mernj Hives, i. I 

is this trne, Pistol? — i. 1 

that is my true humour — i. 3 

by me, tliine own true knight .... — ii. I (letter) 

aiicl tliis is true. I like not (icp.) .... — ii. I 

comiaended luni for a true man .... — ii. 1 

your worsliip says very true — ii. 2 

is it not true, master I'age? ()fp.) — ii.3 

have vim bueu trne to us? — iii. 3 

true, "master Page (icp. iv. 2) — iii. 3 

may be, lie tells you true — iii 4 

'tis old but true, still swine eat — iv. 2 

my intelligence is true — iv. 2 

as" I am a true spirit, welcome I — v. 6 

true, niudani: and to comfort .. .. Tn^clflhl^i^ht, i. 2 

as there is no true cuckold but calamity — i. 6 

yotu- trne love's coming that can — ii. 3 (song) 

incliilioons voice, as I am a true knight — ii. 3 

Bueli as I am, all true lovers are .... — ii. 4 

no one so true did sliare it — ii. 4 (song) 

where sad true lover ne'er And .... — ii. 4 (song) 

tliey are as true of heart as we — ii. 4 

nay, l>nt say true; does it work — ii. 5 

it is with ine as tlie very trne sonnet is — iii. 4 

nothing but this, your true love — iii. 4 

prove true, imagination, O prove true ~ iii. 4 

tell me true, are you not mad (rep.). . — iv. 2 

ever will be true — iv. 3 

from uiy true place in your favour . . — v. 1 

as yet the glass seems true — v. 1 

keep as true in soul, as doth — v. 1 

upon a true contract, I goi.. Measure for Measure, i. 3 

boar me like a trne friar — i. 4 

it is true. I would not— thougli — i. .'j 

from his true meant design — i. 5 

all this is true — ii. 1 

is this trne? (/<?;). iii. 2) — ii. 1 

come, tell me true — ii. I 

but with true prayers — ii. 2 

to take away a life true made — ii. 4 

to the law upon that pain. True .... — ii. 4 

my false o'erweighs your true — ii. 4 

and I know this to be true (rep. iii. 2) — iii. 1 

true man's apparel fits your thief (rep.) — iv. 2 

your true man tliinks it big enough — iv. 2 

if they be true, if not true, none .... — iv. 3 

have beard me in my true complaint — v. 1 

as true as it is strange (rep.) — v. 1 

and hide the false, seems true — v. 1 

tliat it were as like as it is true! .. — v. 1 
wliat lie doth know is true, and false — v. 1 

as tl\is is true, let me in safety — v. 1 

my simple true judgment? (jep. iii. \).MuchAdo, i. 1 

if perad venture this be true — i. 2 

impossible you should take true root — i. 3 

to tell you true, I counterfeit him .. — ii. 1 

and I think I told him true, that your — ii. 1 

1 tliink yonr blazon to lie true — ii. 1 

'tie true indeed; so your daughter (rep ) — ii. 3 

can this be true.' stand I condemned — iii. 1 

there's no true drop of blood in hinr — iii. 2 

areyouraod men and true? — iii. 3 

true, and they are to meddle with none — iii. 3 

virtue of your office, to be uo true man — iii. 3 

'tis very true — iii. 3 

and I will, like a true drunkard .... — iii. 3 

do not wrest true speaking — iii. 4 

and tliese things are true (rep.) — iv. 1 

though he thought his accusation true — iv. 1 

nothing but what was true — v. I 

in a false CLuarrel there is no true valour — v. 1 

true, says she, a fine little one — v. I 

as it appears in the true course — v. 4 

'tis most true. And I do with an ej'e — v. 4 
scornful Ijysanderl true, he hath ..Mitl.X.'sDr. i. 1 

the course of true love never did run — i. 1 

if then true lovers have been ever.... — i. 1 

in the true performing of it — i. 2 

my heart is true as steel — ii. 2 

do it for thy true love take — ii.3 

I thought you lord of more true .... — ii.3 

as true as truest horse (rep.) — iii. 1 

the throstle with his note so true — iii. 1 (song) 

the sun was not so true unto the day — iii. 2 

once tell true, tell true — iii. 2 

some true love turned, and not (rep.) — iii. 2 

to prove them true? — iii. 2 

thou takest true delight in — iii. 2 

and will for evermore be true to it .. — iv. 1 

I am no true Atlienian, I will — iv. 2 

more strange than true — v. 1 

that is the true beginning of our end — v. I (prol.) 

to content you, our true intent is. . — v. I (prol.) 

not enough to speak, but to speak true — v. 1 

not Shafiilus to Procrus was so true,. — v. 1 

true; and a goose for his discretion .. — v. 1 

ever true in loving be — V. 2 

he is, in tellitig true, btit so so .... Lovc^sL.Lost,i. 1 

for true it is, "I was taken with (rep.) — L 1 

base vulgar do call, three. True .... — i. 2 

and how can that l)e true love — i. 2 

make tender of to thy true worthiness — ii. 1 

true, .and I for a plantain (rep.) .. — iii. 1 

my glass, take this for telling true ,, — iv. I 

true, that thou art beauteous .... — iv. 1 (letter) 

'tis true indeed; the coUusiou — iv. 2 



TRUE love's fasting pain Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 

a true man, or a thief, that — iv. 3 

true, true; we are four — iv. 3 

walk aside the true folk, and let — iv. 3 

as true we are, as flesh and blood .... — iv. 3 

doth spring the true Promethean.... — iv. 3 

it rejoiccth my intellect; true wit.... — v. 1 

tlie numbers true; and, were — v. 2 

true; out, indeed — v. 2 

niadam, speak trne; it is not so — v. 2 

for how can this be trne, that you — v. 2 

most true, 'tis right; you were so.... — v. 2 

true, and it was enjoined him in — v. 2 

for ever to be true to those that make — v. 2 

I'll serve thee true and faithfully — v. 2 

true, madam ; he, of all the men .Mer. of I'ndce, i. 2 

this is ray true begntten father! — ii. 2 

if that mine eyes be true; and true slie — ii. 6 

wise, fair, and true, shall slie be — ii. b 

be gleaned from the true seed of .... — ii. 9 

but it is true, without any slips .... — iii. I 

I thank God; is it true? is it true? .. — iii. 1 

nay, that's true, that's very true .... — iii. 1 

true subjects bow to a new-crowned — iii. 2 
chance as fair, and choose as true! — iii. 2 (scroll) 

whether what I see be true — iii. 2 

is this true, Nerissa? — iii. 2 

and then I told you true — iii. 2 

but is it true, Salerio? have all — iii. 2 

bring your true friend along — iii. 2 

you have a noble and a true conceit of — iii. 4 

now true a gentleman you send relief — iii. 4 

found thee honest, true, so let mc — iii. 4 

'tis very true; O wise and upright judgel — iv. 1 

and ne'er a true one — v. I 

to their right praise, and true perfection I — y. 1 
most true, I have lost my teeth . . .-U you Like it, i. 1 

'tis true: for those, that she makes (rep.) — i. 2 

high commendation, true applause . . — i. 2 

wast as true a lover as ever sighed . . — ii. 4 

we tliat arc true lovers, run into .... — ii. 4 

true it is tliat we have seen better.. .. — ii. 7 

sir, I am a true labourer — iii. 2 

speak sad brow, and true maid — iii. 2 

then there is no true lover in — iii. 2 

is it a true thing? «.J' — iii. 3 

not true in love? — iii. 4 

the pale complexion of true love .... — iii. 4 

if you be a true lover, hence — iv. 3 

naj', 'tis true: there was never — v. 2 

I spake not true: this is called — v. 4 

In sight and shape be trne, why then — v. 4 

if truth liolds true contents — v. 4 

this to be true, I do engage — v. 4 

that your true faith doth merit — v. 4 

as we do trust tliey'U end, in true delights — v. 4 

if it be true, that good wine (rep.) — (epilogijc) 

knew the true minute when AWslVell, i. 2 

which men full true shall find. . . . — i. 3 (song) 

therefore tell me true (7-ep.) — i. 3 

did ever, in so true a flame of — i. 3 

there do muster true gait — ii. 1 

a vagabond, and no true traveller ., — ii.3 

then my dial goes not true — ii. .'J 

and ever shall with true observance seek — ii. 5 

to the true and exact performer — iii. 6 

single vow, that is vowed true — iy. 2 

which makes her story true, even.... — iv. 3 

1 will say true (re;).) — iv. 3 

tell me true, I charge you — v. 3 

by our true diligence ...Taming of SU. 1 (induction) 

'tis very true; tliondid'stitexcellent — 1 (iuduc. ) 

till I found it to be true, I never .... — i 1 

to change true rules for odd — iii. 2 

why, thou say'flt true ()ep.) — iv. 3 

this is true, that I say; an' I had.... — iv. 3 

right true it is, your son — iv. 4 

but is tliis true? or is it else — iv. 5 

I would that word were true — v. 2 

fair looks, and true obedience — v. 2 

yet were it trne to say, this boy .. H'inter'sTate, i. 2 

sin as deep as that, though true — i. 2 

say it be, 'tis true. No, no, my lord.. — i. 2 

if I had servants true about me — i. 2 

censure? in my true opinion? — ii. ) 

all's true, that is mistrusted — ii. 1 

if this prove true, they'll pay for't .. — ii. I 

to have her honour true, than your.. — ii. 1 

with words as med'cinal as true .... — ii.3 
and allegiance of a true subject — iii. 2 (indict.) 

as chaste, as true, as I am now — iii. 2 

tliat's true enough; though 'tis — iii. 2 

Camillo a true subject, Leontes — iii. 2 (oracle) 

very true, sir; he, sir, he; that's — iv. 2 

your youth, and the true blood — iv. 3 

for then we are sure they are true — iv. 3 

is it true, think you? very trne (rep.) — iv. 3 

one of these is true; I think, affliction — iv. 3 

true, too true, my lord; if. one by one •- V. 1 

my true Pauliuti, we shall not niarry — v. 1 

your mother was most true to wedlock — v. 1 

this news, which is called true — v. 2 

most true; if ever truth were pregnant — V. 2 

as honest a true fellow as any is .... — v. 2 

ne'er so false, a true gentleman may — v. 2 
the almanack of my true date .. Comedy of Err. i. 2 

and truce with thy true bed — ii. 2 

'tis true (rep. V. I ) — ii. 2 

and true he swore, though yet — iv. 2 

establish him in his true sense again — iv. 4 

upon my life, I tell you true — v. 1 

what, can the devil speak true? Macbeth, i. 3 

true, worthy Banq no — i. 4 

so please yon it is true — i. 5 

true, my lord — iii. 1 

impostors to true fear — iii. 4 

ay, now, f see, 'tis true — iv. 1 

too nice, and yet too true! — iv. 3 

attend the true event — v. 4 

right and true behalf of thj' deceased. ./w;(^'./o/iTi,i. 1 



TRUE— OS true begot (rep. ii. 1) Kijtg John,\. \ 

as true, as thine was to thy husband — ii. I 

whether thy tale be true. As true as — iii. I 

to prove my faying true — Hi. 1 

'tis true, lair daughter — iii. I 

amity, true love, between our — iii. I 

gentle brow of trne sincerity? — iii. 1 

attend on you with all true duty .... — iii. 3 

eiitls all coinisel, true redress — iii. 4 

like true, inseparable, faithful — iii. 4 

if that be true, I sliall see my., — iii. 4 

steeps his saiety in true bloo'd — iii. 4 

if true, or false, I know not — iv. 2 

'tis true; to liurt his master — iv. 3 

the danger of my trne defence — iv. s 

be possible! may this be true! — v. 4 

since it is true that I must — v. 4 

spoke it, it is true, my lord ; — v. 5 

should 'scape the true acquaintance — V. 6 

and true subjection everlastingly .... — v. 7 

if England to itself do rest but true .. — v. 7 

my life shall prove it true Jiiehurd II. i. I 

speak like a true knight — i. 3 

there lives, or dies, true to king — i. 3 

Christian service, and true chivalry — ii. 1 

Gaunt just? andis not Ilany true?.. — ii. I 

God forbid, I say true! — ii, 1 

for things true, weeps things — ii. 2 

madam, 'tis too true — ii, 2 

be still thy true love's recompense .. — ii.3 

allegiance, and true faith of heart .. — iii. 3 

as ray true service shall deserve — iii. 3 

yet wliat I say, is true — iii. 4 

his honour is as true in this appeal .. — iv. 1 

my lord, 'tis true (rep.) — iv. I 

Aumerle is guilty 01 my true appeal — iv. I 

then true nobleness would learn .... — iv. 1 

'tis very true, my grief lies all — iv. 1 

thus nimbly by a true king's fall .... — iv. 1 

any resting for her true king's queen — v. I 

the true man's put to death — v. 3 

against them both, my true joints bended — v. 3 

ours of true zeal and deep integrity .. — v. 3 

mercy, wliich true prayers ought to have — v. 3 

hath prayed, and prove you true .... — v. 3 

to hear my true time broke — v. 5 

here is a tlear and true industrious ..Mlnryir. i. 1 

tliou say'st true, lad — i. 2 

that ever cried, stand, to a true man — i. 2 

the true prince may, (for recreation.. — i. 2 

to prove that trne, needs no — i. 3 

you say true (rep.) — i. 3 

purchase, as , I ara a true man — ii. I 

to turn true man. and to leave — ii. 2 

■wiieu thieves cannot be true — ii.2 

the thieves have bound the true men — ii. 2 

cur friends true and constant — ii.3 

will not tell me all things true — ii.3 

turn upon the true prince? [rep.) .... — ii. 4 

swear it was the blood of true men .. — ii. 4 

swore the devil his trne liegeman .... — ii. 4 

thou sayest true (rep. iii. 3) r- ii. 4 

kind Jack Palstaif, true Jack FalstafF — ii. 4 

never call a trne piece of gold — ii. 4 

for a true face, and good conscience .. — ii. 4 

and as true as 1 live — iii. t 

for some things true, wherein — iii. 2 

find pardon on in}' true submission .. — iii. 2 

now as I am a true woman — iii. 3 

out of limit, and true rule — iv. 3 

they tell thee true — v. 3 

but the true and perfect ima»e — v. 4 

betwixt our armies true intelligence — v. 5 

to speak bo true at first? 'illeuryll'. (indue.) 

false, worse than true wrongs — (indue.) 

rendered me these news for true .... — i. 1 

your spirit is too true, your fears .... — i. I 

as I am a true knight, and he sends. . — i. 2 

that true valour is turned bear-herd — i. 2 

'tis very true (rep. iv. 1) — i. 3 

wrencliing the true cause the false way — ii. 1 

himself to-night in his true colours.. — ii.2 

mass, thou sayest true — ii. 4 

very true^ sir; and I come to draw .. — ii. 4 

careful friend, and a true subject.... — ii. 4 

in his true, native, and most proper.. — iv. 1 

acquitted by a true substantial form — iv. 1 

trueobedience, of this madness cured — iv. 2 

worse, if your own rule be true — iv. 2 

treason's true bed, and yielder up .... — iv. 2 

and a famous true subject took him.. — iv. 3 

the manner and true order of the fight — iv. 4 

my most true and inward duteous .. — iv. 4 

the quarrel of a true inheritor — iv. 4 

it may with thee in true peace live!.. — iv. 4 

and a true lover of the holy church. . . . Henry V. i. 1 

of his true titles to some certain — i. 1 

of the true line and stock of Charles — i. 2 

very old and true, if that you will .. — i. 2 

true; therefore doth heaven divide .. — i. 2 

and true repentance of all your — ii.2 

from him the native and true challenger — ii 4 

in the true disciplines of the wars .. — iii. 2 

1 could make as true a boast as that — iii. 7 
minding true things, by what .... — iv. (chorus) 
(Jloster, 'tis true, tliat we are in great — iv. 1 
when the true and ancient prerogatifes — iv. I 
but the saying is true; the empty.... — iv. 4 

your majesty says very true — iv. 7 

you say very true, scald knave — v. 1 

that I shall die, is trne — v. 2 

in true English, I love thee, Kate — — v. 2 

appear in his true likeness (rep.) .... — v. 2 

Mars his trne moving I Henry VI, \. 2 

vanquishest, thy words are true — i. 2 

maintain what I have said is true .. — ii. 4 

a true Plantagenet (>ep. iii. 1) — ii. 5 

true; and thou see'st, that I no issue — ii. 5 

if Richard will be true, not that — iii. 1 

and, like true subjects, sons of — iv. 1 



— iv. 1 

— iv. 1 

— iv. I 

— iv. 1 

— iv. 3 



TllU 

TUnE -'tis true, I (five n iiolile to. ...lllenn/ri. v. 

you slmll Ik'<miiic ti lie liiKi'iimii .... — v. 
coiiiiiiirl' '■"'ii'i'. '''•■ ' ">•' uilit;ritttiicf?.2l/i'ii. /'/. i. 

ti-iic, MlailiU.MM-,' iii. II — .|. 

true, (iMilc. .Vii you mlviscd? (ir;i.) — ii. 

i«> liiiij! as I uui liiyiil, true, iiud crmn;lcS8 — ii. 

tlmn fiiim true evidence, of good .... — ii;. 

good Wurwiek, 'tis too true — iii- 

true uoMlity is cxeitiiit froui fciu'.. .. — iv. 

true; and yet it is wiiil (ir;i.) — iv. 

Bgniust tliy oiitli aud true iilIeK nuee — v. 

never live but true uiito Ills lie;^e!..., — v. 

If dreams iirove true — v. 

justiee and true riniit express iti — v. 

tlmt tl\i» is truf, fntlier, l)eliolil :t lien <,'''■ i- 

true, Cliffud; and that's Kielmnl .. — i. 

Iwforc a true and lawful mn^'istrule.. — j- 

EC true nieu yield, with roliliers so .. — . >• 

if tills news lie true, poor qiieeu — i]i. 

we are truesulijeots 10 the king — iii. 

how true he keeps the wiudV — )!!• 

ininatience w;Uteth on true sorrow .. — );;. 

is Edward your t:ue kiu.j'? — iii. 

licnccfortli I am tliv true servitor .. — iii. 

is safe, if true witliiu itself? — iv. 

ond their true sovereign, whom they 

to hold your true obedience 

God help Sloutague, as he proves truel 

and be true king indeed 

true heir to the English erowu — iv. 

true, mv good loril: I know you — iv. 

and uivTioy's true hope — iv. 

if the rest be true whieli I — v. 

indeed, 'tis true, thut Henry told — v. 

if king Edward be as tiue and j ust.. Ki'c/iai d III. i. 

please to hide in this true breast .... — i. 

then man w:is never true — i. 

if she be accused on true report — i. 

I s«al my true heart's love — ii- 

I entreat true peace of you — ii. 

charity, ohedietice, and true duty .. — ii. 

is firm, and true in me — ii- 

av, sir, it is too true; God help — ii. 

if his rule were true, he should he.... — ii. 

ray master's heirs in triie descent.... — ii'. 

dear Gixl, with our true bloods — iii. 

[Col.Kii/.i true computation of the time — iii. 

true ornaments to know a holy man — iii. 

true, noble prince. () bitter (re;?.).... — iv, 

true, when avoided griccc makes .... — iv. 

bear her mv true love's kiss — iv. 

true, good Catesby; bid liim — iv. 

with him, as I prove true to you — iv. 

true hope is swift, and flics — V. 

will our friends pvove all true? — v. 

the true suceeeders of each royal — v. 

to make tliat only true we now.. Ilrnnjl'l 1 1, (prul 

aid those of true condition — i. 

'tis true; this night he makes — i. 

true, they are so; but few now — i. 

most true, the.ie news arc everywhere — ii. 

and every true heart weeps I'or't — ii. 

been to you a true and humble wife.. — ii. 

and, like her true nobility, she has .. — ii. 

a wife, a true one? a woman — iii. 

believe it, this is true — iii. 

pronounce, you have found true .... — iii. 

and how true thou art: lie will — iii. 

Bonoble, and so true a master? — iii. 

'tis very true (rep. v. i; — iv. 

and true beauty of the soul — iv. 

with a true hearf, and brother-love (rrp.1 — v. 

as true thou tell'st me Troilu. ^Cressida, j. 

true, he was so; I know the cause .. — i. 

to say the truth, true and not true .. — i. 

that's true; make no question — i. 

I'll be sworn, 'tis true; he will weep — i. 

lies the true proof of men — i. 

strong joints, true swords — i. 

a Grecian that is true in love — i. 

to the voice of anv true dceision .... — ii. 

be true to my lord: if he flinch — iii. 

who shall l)c true to us — iii. 

but, olas. I am true as truth's — iii. 

true swains ill love shall — iii. 

as true as steel, as plantage to — iii. 

as true as Troilus shall crown — iii. 

'faith, tell me true: even in — iv. 

you'll lie so true to him, to be — iv. 

and is it true, that I must go from Troy? — iv. 

Im; th..n but true of hcart,-I true! .. — iv. 

1 s|>eak not, be tlion true (re/).) — iv 

but, I'll be true I rf/).) — iv. 

plain and true, there's all the reach.. — iv. 

'lis true, that yon are mid, and he .. — iv. 

son of Priam, a true knight — iv. 

it is true. Ho! bid mv trumpet — v 

with your true sword drawn — v. 

where there is true friendship .. Timonnf Alheiii, i. 

I'll tell you true. I'll call on you — i. 

you tell me true. If von suspect — ii. 

is't true? can it be? They answer .. — ii. 

thou art true, and honest — ii 

upon my soul, 'tis true, sir — iii. 

true, as you said, Timon is shrunk ,. — iii. 

most true, he does (r<7i. iii. 51 — iii. 

true, for he bears it not about him .. — iv. 

m miserable, but a man nniy be trne — iv. 

iiaxl 1 a steward so true, so just, and now — iv. 

but tell me true, (for I must ever doubt — iv. 

di>cs the rumour hold for true — v. 

if it l)e tt just aiKl true rci>ort — V. 

true; when the day serves — v, 

for each true word a hiistcrl — v. 

care for us! true, iiuleed '.... Coriolnnm, i. 

true is it, mv incoriMirntc friends .... — i. 

Murcins, 'tis true, that you have .... — i. 

O true bred! your company — i. 

in earnest, it's true Iri-;/.) — i 

in au ciiuttl force ttruc sword lo uword) — i. 



[ 7S9 ] 



TRU 



TIlUE-'tistrnc Look, here's o lettcr.Cor/o/Mjim, ii. I 

true pulehll^i^g. TliegiKis gram (riT).) — Ii. 1 

nianifesls the true know leilge — ii. 2 

guiileil by >oor own true atiections .. — .!.'•■* 

m true fear thev gave us onr deiniinds — iii. 1 

dishonour niiiii'gles true judgment .. — iii. I 

true, the people :ire tlie eity — iii. I 

sav then: 'ti.s true {.e/j. iv. 5) — iii. 3 

thou old iinil true Mencnius — iv. 1 

true, .so I am. I'mv you, poor gentleman — iv 5 

but is this true, siiV — iv. « 

'tis true; if he were putting — iv. 

would be glad to have this trne, which — iv. 

telling true under liim, must say .... — v. a 

and mv true 111) luith virgined it — v. 3 

though I eniinot nialte true wars — v. 3 

art thou certain this is true? — v. I 

if you have writ your annuls true — ■v.b 

'tis true, this god did shake Julius Cnar, i. 2 

in the theatre, I am no true man .... — i. 2 

would consider tile true cause — j. 3 

I can give his humour tlie true bent — ii. I 

and show yourselves true Uoniims .. — ii. I 

you are my true and honouiable wife — ii. I 

if tills were true, then should 1 kuow — ii. 1 

tliawed from the true qiiality — iii. 1 

of this untrod stale, with all true faith — iii. I 

did love thee, Cfesar, O 'tis true — iii. 1 

Cicsar shall have all true rites — iii. 1 

most true, the will; let's stay — iii. 2 

make your vaunting true — iv. 3 

as you are a Koman; tell me true — iv. 3 

'tis true, this parting was well made — v. 1 

no man, but he was true to me — v. 6 

hast proved Lucilius' saying true — v. 5 

who tells me true, though . . AulonySf Cleopulra, j. 2 

you can be mine, and trne — i. 3 

and give true evidence to his love .. — i. 3 

my learning from some true reports — ii. 2 

but twelve persons there; is this true? — ii. 2 

he hath spoken true — ii. 3 

all men's faces are true (rer-) — ''-6 

true, sir; she was the wife (rep.) .... — ii. 

the news is true, my lord — iii. 7 

I tell you true: best that you safed .. — iv. 6 

sovereign mistress of'true melancholy — iv. 9 

to wear all your true followers out .. — iv. 12 

yet is it true, sir. I do well ._....Cyml,Mni:,\. 1 

if it he a sin to make a true election — i. 3 

if this be true Crep.) _ i. 7 

which makes the trne man killed.... — ii. 3 

hangs both thief and true man — ii. 3 

since the true life on't was irep.) .... — ii. 4 

no, no, no; 'tis true (icp.) — ii. 1 

greater skill in a true hate — ii. 5 

then, true I'isanio, (who long'st — iii. 2 

true lionest men being heard — iii. 4 

took pity IVoiii most true wretchedness — iii. 4 

sirrah, is this letter true? — iii h 

not be a villain, but do me true service — iii. 5 

and true preferment shall tender itself — iii. S 

and be true. Thou biddest me {rep.) — iii. .■) 

to him that is most true — iii. 5 

when rich ones scarce tell true — iii. G 

'tis true. Come on then, and remove — iv. 2 

1 dare be bound he's true — iv. 3 

I am honest; not true, to be trne — iv. 3 

you have no true debitor and creditor — v. 4 

to boast were neither true nor modest — v. 6 

true, so feat, so nurse-like — v. 5 

he, true knight, no lesser of her — v. 5 

prince, as yours, is true Guiderius .. — v. 
tears of true joy for his return. Titus Andyonicus^ \. 2 

mercy is nobility's true badge — i. 2 

sith true nobility warrants these — i. 2 

my true beti'othed love, and now .... — i. 2 

'tis true; the raven dotli not {.ri-p. v. 3) — ii. 3 

with his true tears all be-wet — iii. I 

false shadows for true substances.... — iii. 2 

as true a dog as ever fought at head.. — v. I 

grave witnesses of true experience .. — v. 3 

asely cozened of that true hand .... — v. 3 

drowned their enmity in my true tears — v. 3 

damned as he is, to witness this is true — v. 3 
the last true duties of tliy noble son! — v. 3 
be true, which makes me pale irep.).. ..I'l-riflet, i. 1 

a subject's shine, I a true prince — i. 2 

O 'tis too true. But see what heaven .. — i 4 
is not this true? Our cheeks and hollow — i. 4 

in course of true delight than — iii. 2 

say'st true; 'tis not the bringing (r(?p.) — iv. 3 

stands for trne old wiiel — iv. 4 (Gower) 

if you have told Diana's altar trne .... — v. 3 

in my true heart I fiid. she names /.'vu-, i. 1 

so young, mv lord, and true — i. 1 

tlie true blank of thine eye — i. I 

shape as true, as honest madam's issue . . — i. 2 

have me whipped for speaking true — ;• 4 

if it be true, all vengeance comes — ii. I 

but, for true need,— you heavens — ii. 4 

but, true it is, from France there .... — iii. 1 

true, mv good boy: come, bring us .. — iii. 2 

true to tell thee, the grief hath — iii 4 

triic.orfalse, it hath made tlice earl — iii. .'« 

hoMsit true, sir, that the duke — iv. 7 

here is the guess of their trne strength — v. 1 

come on. And that's true too — v. 2 

thou hnst spoken right, 'tis true (iff/i.) — v. 3 

true: and therefore women Itoineo^ .ln/iei, i. 1 

bv thy stay, to hear true shrift — i. I 

while they do dream things true .... — i. 4 

true, 1 talk of dreams — i. I 

for I ne'er saw true beauty till — i.S 

I'll prave more true than those that — ji. 2 

my true love's pa siiui — ii. 2 

sweet Montague, l)e true: stay but .. — ii. 'i 
plants, stones, and their trne qualities — ii 3 
revolts from trne birth, stumbling .. — il. 3 
that last is true, the sweeter rest .... — ii. 3 
my man's OS true lui steel — ii. 4 



TUUE— my true love is grown ..liumrufi Juliri, ii. 6 
orinee, as tliou art true, for blood.. .. — iii. I 
lie speaks not true: some twenty .. .. — iii. I 
think trne love acted, simple modesty — iii. 2 
give this ring to my true knight .... — iii S 
usest none in that true use Indeed .. — iii. 3 
my true heart with treacherous revolt — iv. i 

to no issue of true honour bring — iv. I 

mv ob»e<iuie.s, and true lov(»'- rites?,. — v. 3 

O'true apotlieciryl thy drugs — v. 3 

a cup, eloseil In my true love B hand — v. 3 

but the true ground of all thee — v. 3 

spring, their liead. their true descent — v. 3 
the noble I'aris, and true Romeo, dead — v.:: 
as thatof trueaiul faithriiUnliet .. — v 3 
without tlic sensible and trne avouch .. Ihimlri, i. I 

each word made true and good — 1. a 

my honoured lord, 'lis true — i. 2 

to thine owiiself be true; and it must — — i. 3 
you have ta'en these tenders for true pay — i. 3 

to define true madness, what is't — ii. 2 

'tis true: 'lis true, 'tis pity (irp.) — ii. 2 

out of ten thousand. That's very true .. — ii. 2 

most true, she is a strumpet — ii. 2 

but your news is not true .' — ..'!• -^ 

to some confession of his true state — iii. I 

'tis most triie;;ind he besecchcd me to .. — iii. I 

O 'tis too true! how smart a lush — iii. I 

there the action lies in his true nature .. — iii. 3 
what 1 have to do will want true colour — iii. 4 

as sin's true nature is, each toy — iv. fj 

how should I your true lo\e kiiow — iv. .'< (soiiu) 

nnsinirched blow of my true mother — iv. 5 

like a good child, and a trne gentleman — iv. S 
to make true diction of him, his seinblable — v. 2 

itis too true an evil: gone she is Oihellut i. I 

'tis true most worthy sigiiior, the duke's — i. 2 
it is most true; true, I have married her — i. 3 
I know not, if't be true; but 1, for mere — i. 3 
how! is this true? 'riieship is here put in — ii. I 

nay, it is true, or else I om a Turk — ii I 

you say true; 'tis so, indeed — ii. I 

though true advantage never present itself— ii. I 

shall come into no true taste again — ii. 1 

it's true, good lieutenant — ii 3 

looks not oil his evils? is not this true? — ii. 3 
he's never anv thing but your true servant— iii. 3 

now do I see *tis true; look here — iii. 3 

my noble Moor is true of mind — iii. 4 

His true; there's magic in the web of it.. — iii. 4 

indeed! is't true? most veritable — iii. 4 

pr'ythee, say true. I am a very villain .. — iv. I 

if she be not honest, chaste, and trne — iv. 2 

your true and loyal wife. Come, swear it — iv. 2 

as true liearts cannot bear — iv. 2 

is that true? why, then Othello — iv. 2 

she was hea^'Cllly true! — v. 2 

what he found liimself was apt and true — v. 2 
it is true, indeed, 'tis a strange truth .... — v. 2 

my soul to bliss, as I speak true — v. 2 

TKlTIC-ANOINTED lawful k\ns....iUenryVI. iii. 3 

TKUE-UOliN Englishman HicUardll. i. 3 

that is a true-born gentleman 1 lli-tnyll. ii. 4 

THUE-BKED-a beagle, true-bred. ru.e//'/i .Yii,./i(,ii. 3 
tliem to be as true-bred cowartls ....i Ht-iiryl r, i. 2 
he will not out; he is true-bred ....'iHenryl I', v.3 

THUE-DKRIVEI) course lUcltard III.SW. 7 

TRUE-niSl'OSlNG God — iv. 4 

TKUE-1)1 VI NING heart .... TiluaAuhonicus, ii. 4 
■rRUE-FlXEI).aiidrestingqualitv./"/u«C«-ja., iii. I 

TRUE-HEARTED friends '...3ll,-un, I I. ir. 8 

I swear, he is true-hearted Hvmyrui. v. I 

noble and true-hearted Kent banished ! . . t,eai, i. 2 

TRUE-LOVE knots Tiro G.n.nr rnoua, li. 7 

love-juice on some true-love's. .ViJ.jV.'jf/irfum, iii. 2 

fresh again with true-love tears Hulmr-I II. v. I 

did go, with true love showers.. H«mfe/, iv. 5 (song) 

TRUE-l'ENNY? cineon — i. 5 

TRUER than yon purposed Tempetl. ii. 1 

but truer star's did govern.. TvoGeu. n/ Itruna, ii. 7 

it is not truer he is Angelo Mmt./nr Mens. v. 1 

are no faces truer than those that .... Much.tdo, i. t 

be certain, nothing truer il/i{i. iV.'</>rrfim, iii, 2 

truer than truth itself Lore's I., l.nsl. iv. 1 

beguiles the truer oftice of mine All's If ell, v. 3 

far truer spoke, than meant illmryl I. iii. I 

kill a far truer love; to both Uiclmrdlll. i. 2 

fairer, truer, than ever Greek ..Troilus ^ Cress, i. 3 

truest, not truer than Troilus — iii. 2 

there never was a truer rhyme — iv. 4 

poor steward wear a truer grief.. Timon r^fAth. iv. 3 
never man sighed truer breath ....Coriolanus, iv. h 

and I the truer, so to be false Ciimbeliue, i. 6 

TRIIER-HKARTEDman illeuryli: ii. 4 

TRlli;.><T horse, that ( irp. ) . . . . A/iVi. A.-j^rrain, iii. I 
trust to taste of truest Thisby's sight — v. 1 

for the truest poetrv is the Asyoul.lkeil.'ui. 3 

sinee tliat llie truest isMie of thy Miubrlh, iv. 3 

what truth can speak truest.... 7roi(i«.\ Creis. Iii. 2 
the best, and triie-t: for here.. 7'iiiio» o/Alhens, iv. 3 
yiuir truest [C.i.Kii/. trust].. Ci/mtdinf, i. 7 (letter) 

he is one the truest mannered — i. 7 

but I am truest speaker — v. .1 

the bracelet of tlie truest princess.... — v. 5 

TKUIE lavee an bonrhier Hcnryi: iii. 7 

TRUEl.-naiiphln.and bis trull ....\ llrnry ri. ii. 2 

like an Ainuzouian trull ■Mhuryll. i. 4 

bis potent regiment to a trull .. .4ii'r.ii>/ ACIen. iii. B 

were Clucked of kiichen trulls Cfimbeline, v. 5 

spleenful sons this trull deflower.. .. 7'i>iu/lii(J. ii. 3 
TUl I,Y-I do as truly 8Uffer.7'iroCrii.f>C ('troii.i,v. 4 

'tis heanly truly blent TiirlnhNi^hl. i. ."> 

if I read it ni>t truly Measttre/orMriisurc,'is.^ 

vet most truly Willi speok — v. I 

tell mo truly 'how thou likest her ....Much.Uo. i. 1 

to be truly touched with love — iii. 2 

bid her answer truly (irp.) — iv. 1 

never «o truly turned over and over — v. 2 

to-morrow truly will I meet thee.. WiJ. IV. '» Dr. i. 1 
I euniiot li uly say how I cuinc (rrp.) — iv. I 



TRU 



TKULYany thing Ai you Like it, in. 2 

a ijiigeant fnilv plaved between .... — iii 4 

for thii}e avail, to tell inc truly Ml'sll'eU, i. 3 

spc:ik truly, to go to Paris? — J. 3 

1 may truly say it is a novelty — ii. 3 

whose thoughts more truly labour .. — iv. 4 

and tell me truly too '. Tamin;; of Shrew, v. 5 

this is|)ut forth too truly I (Fm/o's'iu/e, i. 2 

we have alwavs truly served you.... — ii- 3 
his innoeeut babe truly begotten — iii. 2 (orncle) 

what I nm truly, is thine Machelli, iv. 3 

to give obedience where 'tis truly owed — y. 3 
thiit duty, which you truly owe ....KingJohii, ii. I 

not amiss, when it is truly done — iii. 1 

truiv speaks; who Bpenks not truly lies — iv. 3 
spcak truly, on thv kniulithood ....Itinhurd //. i. 3 

and.as I iVulvfiu'iit, ilellnrt me — i. 3 

dcnmnd Hint Uulv whicli Ihou (>cp.).l BcnryW. i. 2 

ifa man should spcuk truly — i. 2 

as truly a^ n man uffulscliood may.. — ii. I 
as I ani truly given to understand .. — iv. 4 

tliou badst truly borne betwixt — v. ."> 

I have served j'our worship truly . .illenryiy. v. 1 

service that I truly did his life — y. 2 

in every branch truly demonstrative., lletiryf, ii. 4 

as dulv, but not as truly, as bird — iii. 2 

I tfU fhee truly, herald, I know not — iv. 7 

but keeps his course truly — v. 2 

and I tliiue, most truly falsely — v. 2 

more triilv now may this be 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

I'll see it truly done, my lord of York — iii. 1 
he that is tridy dedicate to war ....2Hetiri/I'I.v. 2 

as I truly swenr the like! lUdmrd lll.v. 1 

succeeding, truly pitying my HenryVlU. ii. 1 

as you are truly noble, as you respect — iii. 2 
never so truly liappv, mv good Cromwell — iii. 2 

G.id shall be truly known — v. 4 

they never see truly Troilus ^CresMa, iii. 2 

and there's none can truly say. .Timonof Athens, i. 2 
he's truly valiant that can wisely .. — iii. 6 
grateful to us that give you truly ..Corioiaiius, i. 9 
you seem, truly yom' country's friend — iii. I 
yes, mercy, if you report bira truly.. — v. 4 

ay, and truly, you were best JtdiusCfPsar,n\. 3 

and briefly, wisely, and truly — iii. 3 

by her election may be truly read....C!/m6rfme, i. 1 

kept, and truly yielded you — _ i. 7 

to yoiu" car, as tridy as he moves — iii. 4 

or.'more truly, woman its pretty self — iii. 4 
to perform it, directly and truly .... — iii. 5 

if Pisanio have maiiped it truly — iv. 1 

serve truly, never find such another — iv. 2 

than I did truly find her . — y. 5 

to serve him truly, that will put me Lear, i. 4 

I shall serve you, sir, truly, however else — ii. 1 
tell m.e,— but truly,— but then speak .... — v. I 

not truly in their hearts Itomeo^- Juliet, ii. 3 

shows of grief, that can denote me truly. Hamlet, i. 2 
truly to speak, sir, and with no addition — iv. 4 

all this can I truly delivLT — v. 2 

all masters cannot be truly followed ..Othello, i. 1 
as truly as to heaven I do confess the vices — i. 3 
if he be not one that truly loves you .... — iii. 3 

heavi-n doth truly know it (rep.1 — iv. 2 

TRUMP— any trump did sound \ Henry VL i. 4 

in our islands sound her trump. 7'ro!7i/s ^i-Cress. iii. 3 

what means that trump? Timou urMliens, i. 2 

lords, with trump and drum.. Tit/isAmliniucu^, i. 2 
the shrill trump, the spirit-stirring .. , . irhrih, iii. 3 

TRUMPKHYiu my hou-e 7V;„,im7, iv. 1 

I have sold all my trumperv Win-er'sTnle, iv. 3 

TRUMPETS to the gate ..Measure for Measure, iv. 6 

twice have the truriipets sounded — iv. 15 

to be the trumpet of his own virtues.. Mnch Adn, v. 2 
the trrmii-.et sounds; be masked .. Love's I.. Lost, v. 2 
hear percnauce a trumpet sonnd..Vc)'.o/;>ii/c(;, v. I 

is at hand; I hear bis trumpet — y. 1 

you may know by their tnmipets! .. All'stVetl, iii. ,'j 
I know by his trumpets: sirrah, enquire — v. 2 
what trumpet 'tis that sounds. 7'n?niiij,''o/S/i. 1 (ind.) 
neighing steeds, and trumpet's clang? — i. 2 

anger be the trumpet any more — ii. 2 

thiit such a hideous truniprt calls to .. Macbeth, ii. 3 

make all our trumpets speak — v. 6 

be thou the trumpet of our wrath KingJohn, \. 1 

some trumpet summon hither — ii. 1 

our trmnpet called you to this gentle — ii- I 

shall braying triunpets, and loud — iii. 1 

what lusty trumpet thus doth siTmmon — v. 2 
summons of the appellant's trumpet liicliard 11. i. 3 
sound trumpets; and set forward (jc/j.) — i. 3 

harsh-resouiuling trumpets' dreadful — i. 3 

through brazen trumpet send — iii. 3 

play the trumpet to his purposes..,.! Henryll'. v. 1 

the trumpet sounds retreat — v. 4 

tongue divine to a loud trumpet ..iHeuryll'. iv. 1 
the loud trumpet blowing them together — iv. 1 

the trumpets have sounded twice — v. 5 

the trumpet sound the retreat Henry V. )ii. 2 

and the trumpet calls us to the breach — iii. 2 
trumpets sound the tucket sonuance — iv. 2 
tlie banner from a trumpet take .... — iv. 2 

take a trumpet, herald — iv. 7 

sound trumpets, alarum to the iHenryVI. ii. 3 

the angry trumpet sounds alarm .... — V. 2 

now let the general trumpet blow — v. 2 

sound, drums and trumpets — y- 3 

sound drums and tnunpets {rep. v. 'J).^HenryVl. i. 1 
but sound the trumpets Ijcp. ii. 2&iv. 7) — ii. 1 
go, trumpet, to the wnlls, and sound — v. 1 
their coursers at the trumpet's sound — v. 7 

\_Cul.Knt ] the trunnict sounds lUchardTIL iv. 4 

a flourisi;, trunipctsl strike alarum.. —^ iv. 4 

sound, drums and trumpets — v. 3 

the trumpets sound («/). v. 3) Henry I'll I. \v. 1 

we have frii;hteil with our trumpets.. — (cpil.l 
what trumpet? look, Meneluus.. Troilus .J-C; ,->... i. :i 
T briuLT a trumpet to awake his ear .. — i. 3 

trumpet, blow loud, send thy brass .. — i 3 

he bade me take a trumpet — i. 3 



[790 ] 



TRU 



TRUMPET-his trumpet (rep. ii. \).Troil./i- Cress, i. 3 
his own trumpet, his own chronicle — ii. 3 

hark! Hector's tnmipet. How have — iv. 4 

five with tliy truiuiict a loud note .. — iv. 6 
bou trumpet, there's my purse — \v,t> 

no trumpet answers. 'Tis but early.. — iv. 5 

the Trojans' trumpet (rep. V. 9) — iv. 6 

let the trumpets blow, that this — iv. 5 

it is true. Ho! bid my trumpet sound! — y. 3 

what trumpet's that? Timon n/.-UhenSj i. 1 

so harshly on the trumpet's sound .. — iii. 6 
thy trumpet in the market-place. . . . Coriolanus, i. 5 

wlien drnins and trumpets shall — i. 9 

tlie trump( ti. These are the ushers.. — ii. 1 
tnmipets stickbufs. psiilteries, and fifes — y. 4 
trumpet such gor^d tidings?. .Jufo/if/ ^Cleopatra, ii. 5 

tliese trumpets', flutes! what! — ii. 7 

emperor's trumpets flourish thus?. 7'i7us.4iirfroH. iv. 2 
the trumpet B show, the emperor .... — v. 3 

to tnmipet forth my infamy Pericles, i. 1 

hark, the duke's trumpets! Lear, ii. 1 

what trumpet's that? I know't, my sister's — ii. 4 

let the trumpet sound (rep. V. 3) — v. 1 

call by thy trumpet: be that dares — v. 3 

at the third sound of the trumpet — v. 3 (herald) 

upon this call o' the trumpet — v. 3 

rest for ever: tnunpets, siieak — V. 3 

twice then the trumpet sounded — v. 3 

then, dreadful trumpet, sound,. A'omeo ^Juliet, iii. 2 

tluit is the trumpet to the morn Hamlet, i, 1 

kettle-drum and trumpet thus bray out — i. 4 

lodged till the last trumpet — V. 1 

to the trumpet speak, the trumpet to .... — v. 2 
of fortunes may trumpet to the world .. Othello, \. 3 

the Moor, I know his trumpet — ii. 1 

what trmnpet is that same? — iv. 1 

TKUMPET-CLANGOR sounds iHenrtjir. v. 5 

TRUMPETER, summon their I Henry 11. iv. 2 

trumpeters of our unlawful intents? .All'sWell, iv. 3 

the tongue our trumpeter Coriolanus, i. 1 

trumpeters, with brazen dia Antony ^Cleo. iv. 8 

TRUMPET-TONGUED, against Macbeth, i. 7 

TitUNCIIEON, nor the judge's ..il/ea.<./orJ»/eo.<. ii. 2 

they would truncheon you out iHemyll'. ii. 4 

compared with this truncheon IHenryl'I. iv. 10 

with fiery truncheon my retire.. Troilus ^Cress. v. 3 

within his truncheon's length Hamlet, i. 2 

with bis trunobeou may strike at you ..Othello, ii. 1 

TRUNCHEONEERS draw to Henry fill. v. 3 

TRUNDLE-TAIL; Tom will make Lear, iii. 6 

TRUNK— had hid my princely trunk . . Tempest, i. 2 
neither press, coffer, chest, trunk. . Men y u iees,\\\ 2 
beauteous-evil are empty trunks. 7';/-6////j A'/V/)/, iii. 4 
your honour from that trunk ..Meas.for Mens. iii. I 
into the trunks of men .... Merchant of 1 'enice, iv. 1 

with a trunk sleeve Taming of Shrew, i-v. 3 (note) 

that lies enclosed in tliis trunk irintei'sTale,], 2 

trunk work, some behind'door work — iii. 3 

locked up in chests and trunks KingJohn, v. 2 

with that trunk of humours IHenrylV. ii. 4 

from this bare withered trunk IHenrylV. iv. 4 

is this t'rail and worthless trunk Henry F. iii. 6 

unto his dumb deaf trunk iHem-yFI.in. 2 

leaving thy trunk for crows — ^.y*. '^ 

my luissbaiied trunk that bears ZHenryVL iii. 2 

whose bare unhoused trunks . . Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

wherein this trunk was framed Coriolanus, v. 3 

they are in a trunk, attended by ....Cymbeline, i. 7 

send your trunk to me — ,i. 7 

to the trunk again, and shut — ii. 2 

soft, ho! what trunk is here — iv. 2 

make his dead trunk pillow .. Titus. 4ndronicus, ii. 3 
shed obsequious tears upon this trunk — v. 3 

thy banished trunk be found iu our Lear, i. 1 

trunlc may be discharged of ....Rojneo ^Juliet, v. 1 

TRUSSICD'cCoZ.-thrustJ him i Henry II'. iii. 2 

TRUST-and my trust, like a good Tempest, i. 2 

as great as my trust was — i. 2 

trust me (jv-p. ii. l,iii. 1,& iv. 2).r«oGfK.()/'/'er. i. 2 

we dare trust you in this kind — iii. 2 

I must never trust tliee more — v. 4 

trust me. I was going (rep.) Merry Wives, ii. 1 

he will trust his wife .. . — ii. 2 

I will rather trust a Fleming — ii. 2 

trust me (rep. iii. 2, iii. 3, and iv. 2) — iii. 1 

never trust me when I open — iv. 2 

out of doors, never trust me (rep.). Twelfth Night, i'\. 3 
never trust me, then, and by all .... — iii. 2 
to any other trust, but that I am .... — jv. 3 
I trust, it will grow to a most ..Meas.JbrMeas. iii. 1 

trust not my holy order — iv. 3 

and on my trust, a man that never . . — y. I 
I would scarce trust myself, though .,Much.ido, i. 1 
I will do myself the right to trust none — i. 1 

well, niece. I trust, yoii will be ruled — ii. I 
negociate for itself, and trust no agent — ii. 1 
wilt thou make a trust a transgression? — ii. 1 
I will never trust my expectation.... — ii. 3 
if you dare not trust that you see . . . — iii. 2 
call me a fool; trust not my reading — iv. I 

trust not my age, my reverence — iy. 1 

to trust the oxiportuuity of night . . A/td. A'.'s Dr. ii. 2 

I'll not trust your word (irp.) — iii. 2 

trust me, sweet, out of this silence .. — v. 1 
trustto tasteoftruestThisby'ssight .. — v. 1 
01 never will I trust to speeches.. Loi'e'sL.Losf, v. 2 

j'oiir oath I will not trust — v. 2 

to have it of my trust Merch. of Venice, \. 1 

to please his grandani, nc\'er trust me — ii. 2 
not frantic (as I d,, trn»l I am noD-.J.^ you Likeit, i. 3 
siitKce thei;, that Mrust tine nut .... — i. 3 

as we do tni^t tliei'll eial, in true.... — v. 4 

love all, trust a few. do wrong to .ill'sWell, i. 1 

could not be mure to trust; from whence — ii. 1 
trust liim not in matter of heavy .... — ii. 5 
never trust my judgment iu any thing — iii. 6 
first, give luc trust, the count he .... — iii. 7 

I will never trust a man again — iv. 3 

to wbose trust your business — iv. 4 

trust me, I take him for . . Taming of Shrew, 1 (ind.) 



TRUST, I may go too, may I not?.. 7'ammt'o/S/,. i. 1 

sigcia tcllns, I trustyonnot — iii. I 

but thus, I trust ovp. iv. S) — iii. 2 

if he be credulous, and trust my tale — iv. 2 

then never trust me if I be afeard — v. 2 

grafted in my serious trust IVinler'sTale, i. 2 

if therefore you dare trust my honesty — i. 2 

to see you sorry; now, I trust, I sliall — ii. I 
and see her. no further trust her .... — ii. 1 

if she dares trust me with her — ii. 2 

trust it. he shall not rule me — ii. 3 

and, after that, trust to thee — iv. 3 

and trust, liis sworn brother, a very.. — iv. 3 
I will tru,~t you: walk before toward — iv. 3 
not being a tall fellow, trust me not' — v 2 
trust me, were it not (rep. v. I) ..Comedy of Err. i. I 

how darest thou trust so great — i. 2 

well holp up, that trusts "to you — iv. ! 

will not lightly trust the messenger — iv. 4 

skipping Kernes to trust their heels. . . . Macbeth, i. 2 

I built an absolute trust — i. 4 

he's here in double trust — i. 7 

and damned, all those that trust them — iv. I 

trust accordingly, ki nd citizens .... KingJohn, ii. 1 

I trust we shall,' if not fill up — ii. 2 

I trust I may not trust thee — iii. 1 

trust not those cunning waters of — iv. 3 

some honest Christian trust me ....Hit hard II. iv. I 

we shall thrive. I trust \ Henry IV. i. 3 

and so far will I trust thee — ii. 3 

have charge, and sovereign trust, herein — iii. 2 
so dangerous and dear a trust on any — iv. I 

you have deceived our trust — v. I 

we will not trust our eyes — v. 4 

the tenor of thy kinsman's trust? .... — v. 5 

what trust is in these times? ilUnrylV, i. 3 

trust me, I am exceeding weary .... — ii. 2 
I trust, lords, we shall lie to-night .. — iv. 2 
is bold, to trust these traitors Henry V. ii. 2 

? itch and pay; trust none: for oaths.. — ii. 3 
will never trust his word after — iv. 1 

the which, I trust, shall witness live.. — iv. 3 
prophet will I trust, if she prove false.lHeny't/F/. i. 2 

ne'er trust me then; for, when — ii. 2 

1 trust, ere long to choke thee with .. — iii. 2 

what is the trust or strength of — iii. 2 

not trust thee, but for profit's sake .. — iii. 3 
Talbot; I'll no longer trust thee .... — iii. 3 

the trust of England's honour — iv. 4 

I trust, the ghost of Talbot is — v. 2 

trust not the Kentish rebels (rep.) . .2 Henry V I. iv. 4 
in them I trust; for they are soldiers. . 3 He7(ry/'/. i. 2 

and trust not simple Henry — . ^* ^ 

trust me, my lord, all hitherto — iv. 2 

for trust not him that hath once .... — iv. 4 
unto the trust of Richard Gloster ^.Richard Ill.'y 3 

endeavours to trust to himself — i. i 

trust the mockery of unquiet slumbers — J!!* ^ 

but, I trust, my absence doth — iii. 4 

I will not trust you, sir — iv. 4 

this was his gentleman in trust .,..Heni-yVllI. i. 2 
they that my trust must grow to .... — iii. I 

if you please to trust us in your — iii. 1 

trust to me, Ulysses Troilus Sf Cressida, i . 3 

I will no more trust him when he leers — v. 1 

I will, la; never trust me else — v. 2 

men dare trust themselves Timonof Athens, i. 2 

to trust man on his oath or bond .. — i. 2 (grace) 

I'll trust to your conditions — iv. 3 

trust not the physician; his antidotes — iv. 3 
ne'er a one of^you but trusts a kna\"e — y. I 

he that tru: ts to you, where he Coriolanus, i. 1 

hang ye! trust ye? with everj' — i. 1 

have placed their men of trust ? — i. 6 

are the Autiates, of their best trust . . — _ i. ti 
or never trustto what my tongue.... — iii. 2 
to tread (trust to 't, thou slialt lut) . . — v. 3 

trust not Trebonius JuliusCasar, ii. 3 (paper) 

madam, I trust, not so intony&Cleu. i. 5 

trust not to rotten planks — iii. 7 

entertainment, but no honourable trust — iv. (i 

trust, but Proouleius (rep.) — iv. 13 

bade me trust you; but I do not — v. 2 

of 110 more trust than love that's hired! — v. 2 

ha! no !'.arm,I trust, isdoue? Cymbeline, i. 2 

in such honour as you ha\e trust iu — i. 5 

and will not trust one of her malice — i. (> 

[Co(.Kn(.] as you value your trust — i. 7(Ietier) 

of thee, deserves thy trust — i. 7 

their tenor good, I trust — ii. 4 

pray you. trust me here — iv. 2 

their tribune, and their trust .. TitusAndronicus, i. 2 

a goodly lady, trust me — i. 2 

I'll trust, bj' leisure, him that — i. 2 

thou wilt not trust the air — iy. 2 

to trust it, error; I'll make my Pericles, i. I 

left in trust with me, doth speak — i. 3 

truly, that will put me in trust Lear, i. 4 

safer than trust; let me still — i. 4 

the reiiosal of any trust, virtue — ii. 1 

deep trust we shall much need — ii. 1 

I will lay trust upon thee — iii. 5 

he's mad, that trusts in the tameness .... — iii. G 

if not, I'll ne'er trust poison — v. 3 

trust to tliy single virtue — v. 3 

trust me, gentleman, I'll prove ..Romeo ^ Juliet, ii. 2 
there's no trust, no faith, no honesty — JM* -^ 
and trust me. love, in rny eye so do you — iii. 5 
trust to't, bethink you, I'll not be . . — iii. 5 
if I may trust tlie flattering eye of sleep — y. I 
to desperation turn my trust and hope!. Ham/e/, iii. 2 
I will trust, as I will adders fanged .. — iii. 4 
from hence trust not your daughters' ..Othello, i. 1 
the trust, the office, I do hold of you .... — i. 3 

a man he is of bo!;e?tv, and trust — i. 3 

Ifear, the trust Otbeflo puts him in — ii. 3 

trust ine, I could do much ((rep.) — iii. 3 

TRUSTED-be trusted now.. TuoGen. of Verona, V. 4 

I am trusted with a muzzle Much Ado, '\. 3 

not iu one bottom trusted ..Merchant of Venice, i. 1 



I'llUSTED-no eucli nmn be trusted .Mtr. nf fen. v. 1 

I Imvc IriHleil tluo. t'limilln iyinirr'tTnlr,\. 2 

Ini-Uil liome, mUlit vet I'likiiiillo Wiiitf//i, i. 3 

ii.uiwM's lilo Mas to lur tnistLil with tliuin — ii. 3 
ti Oils. in is but tiii>toil like the fox ..\ llrniyt I', v. 2 

,.t him ttliuinmo,! 1 tiiiBted /(.;■/.,...(/;/. v. 1 

lei liiiii in mui(!bt be tiusled llennillll. Ii. I 

the « 111 ni is not t.> be tnuteil ....Animiti /iCIrn. v. 8 

TlUSfKlt-voiir trusters' tlironls!./V..inii nf ,J//i. iv. 1 
til niiike it truster of vour own rci>ort .. Ilnmlel, i. 2 

TKlsriNCJ to von fuMish lout. 7>o«i-h. o/fe,. iv. 1 
wlien snnov trusting' iit'llie en/.eneil.. .IH'iXVH, iv. 4 
u.it ti ii^lliiL,' to t!iis hiiltini; leuilte .. KingJohn, v. 2 
in ,,,,; •, i 1, .! lu-nt. iruiiliiij,' ueilher?;i'ni!;''. "■ 2 
1, ■' :. M, 1 I ino-.'.thlin trusting. .3;;r;ir!(/'/.IV. 1 
1, 11 I . i,.r IrnstinR ...4ii'"iiv<S(.Vcu;w/)«, V 2 

Tl; I > 1 \ I I I II tni>tv VomiKy.Meai./oi Meas. iii. 2 

t'le tinstv ■rili.shv (.■.•/'•) ,((/./. iV.'.U.ram, V. 1 

unil like "Linmiuferiini I tnist.v Still.. — V.I 
eonie, trusty swoiil; coine, bliule .... — v. 1 

at Miiiiegrcut iind trusty buainess AU'iU'ell, iii. 6 

trustv servunt. well ii|)i)rove(1..7'.imoit' i/S/ircu!, j. I 
your'ftocient, trusty, pleasant serva"t — 1.2 

a trusty vil liiiii, sir Com,-bj nf Errors, i. 2 

another (lav, thou trusty Welshmuii./dt/ian/ It. u. 4 

but lor our trustv brotlicr-in-luw — v. 3 

like to tt trusty sijuire \ Henry I'l. iv. I 

trustv friend, unless I be deceived.. 3 fltr'H!/''- iv. 7 

choose trusty sentinels Ilichnrdlll v. 3 

bear thee to a trustv <i.,th.. . . VV'iw .indrmnciu, v. I 

this trusty servant shiiU piiss between Li-or, iv. 2 

lie trustv, and I'll cjuit thy piiins./iome " ' 
voiir trustv an.l most vulinnt servitor 

XUl'TlI-nnt 1 truth bv tdlin- ... 
he ibnh but mistake the Irntli totally., 
tho trutli v.in sneak ditli hiek some .. 

their eves'do o.'Kees of trutii 

for truth liatli better deeds.. TVoG^n. o//'i 

tiicn speak the truth by her 

a luinl opinion of his truth 

if you knew his pure heart's truth .. — 
iro'iiil brioHiiig up, fortune, and truth — 

hear the truth of it Merry » 

ill truth sir. slie is pretty 

pone to the truth of his words 

do von think tliere is trutli in tlicmV 
villi have eharn-.s, la; yes, in truth ., 
tale of Heme the liunter for a truth 

and till he tell the trutii 

the trutli beiui; known, we'll 

hear the tnitli of it (I'p.) — 

honour, truth, and every thing. . Tuel/Ui.\igl'i, 
one truth, and tiiat no woman has 
and Imvini; sworn tnil'n. evei 
let's no h-nrn the truth of it 

and vet, to sav the trutli 

fewness and truth 'tis thus 

I hope here be truths (rep.) 

she, naviui! the truth of honour in lier 

that upiiears not foul in the truth 

there is scarce trutli enough alive .. 
I would say the truth; but to accuse 

for truth is truth to the end 

to make the trutli appear 

confess the truth, and say by whose.. 

as there is sense in trnth, and truth.. 

Beeming truth in Hero's disloyalty 

they have the truth of this from Hero — i 

'tis a trnth, I can bear tliem witness — i 

why, you speak trutli — ii 

auunsver gives to truth and virtue.. — ii 

yes, in trutli it is, sir — ii 

and show of trutli can cunning sin .. — ii 

hold against her maiden trutli — ii 

if they siieak but trnth of her — ii 

in niosi comely truth, tliou deservest it — \ 

eignior Leonato, trutli it is — 1 

in plainest trutli tell you Mid.X.'tDream, i 

yet, to say the truth, reason and love — 



o.5/uii>,ii.l 

..(Phetlo, j. 3 

. Tempest, i. 2 

— ii. I 



- ii.7 



— ii. 1 



iv. 4 



— iv. 3 



... Meat, far Mca 



.Mm-hAdo.W. 



Ml tlieir nativity all truth appears 
I truth kills trutli .... 



— iii. 2 



when 

till truth make all things plain — v. 1 

the truth is so: and this the cranny is — v. 1 

no, ill truth sir, he should not — v 1 

the rt,'lit of trutli; while truth Lovt\L.Lf,sl,\ 1 

I sn.fr for the truth, sir — i. 1 

if I have heard a trnth — ii. 1 

it is so; trutli i* truth. An' your waist — iv. I 
truth itself, that tUou art (>pp.) — iv. I(lettei1 
ay. ill tnitli, mv hud; trim gallants., — v. 2 

the naked tniti of it is, I have 111 — y. 2 

ill truth. [ know it is a sin ., Merchant o/ Tettice. i. 2 

ii. 2 



truth will come to light (r-'ii.) 

the very trutli is, that he Jew having — 



ii. 2 



— iii. 2 



promise me life, and I'll confess 

the seeming truth which cunning times — 

tlint malice bears down truth 

so void is vour false heart of truth 

if the truth of thy love tome were./iii/<m Uk. 

1 1 the but gasp, with truth and loyolty — ii. 3 

there is no truth ill him — iii. 4 

be truth in sight, you are my (rep.).. — v. 4 

if trutli holds true contents — v. 4 

and I "peak the truth the next way ..AU'slfell, i. 3 

the sl.ow and seal of nntiire's truth- • — i. 3 

that truth should be su.si>ccted — i. 3 

I will tell truth — i.3 

if the learned should siicak truth of it — ii. 2 

this had lieeu truth, sir — 

uses a kno'vii truth to pass a thousand — 

oy siirelj'. mere the truth — 

thi* is the llrst trnth that e'er thine . . — 
not the many ontlis, that innke tlic trnlli — 

cliaru'e vou in the band of truth — 

siK-ak truth. He's very near the trnth — 

a truth's a truth, the nigiies arc — 

you would think truth were a fuul .. — 

Dut to speak a truth — 

I have spoke the truth 

to uuilce the even truth in pleasure 



— v. 1 



ii. 4 



— v. 3 



ii 


1 


iii. 




iv 


:i 


V. 


1 


y 


5 

1 
1 


Iii 


1 
I 
1 


iv 


2 


iv 


2 



TBUTII-see tlie truth hereof . ...'/•«>«(«>,• o/'M. iv. J 

I have littered truth /rdi fr'»7'a(f, i. 2 ; 

irlisli as truth, like us — ii- ' 

will not come up til the truth — ii. I 

ifthe good trutli >veri- known — Ii. I 

will have the trnlh i.fthisiipprar.... — ii. 3 

BO puHt all truth; wliieh ludi-nv .... — iii. 2 

bust tliuu rend truth'? Av. mv Imil .. — iii- 2 

there is no trnth lit nil i' the oraile .. — iii- 2 

Iirnchiim a man of truth, ofmerey .. — id. 3 

when ino^t tile truth; which I receive — iii. 2 i 

disliken llie trnth of yourown seeming — iv. 3 

thou sperik'st truth — v. I . 

if ever triilli were pi'Cgnant by — v. 2 : 

against mv poiiI'.' imre triilli.ro»ir'/(/ o/'/i'>Tor», iii. 2 

I long to kiiiiw llie trntli hereof at large - iv. 4 I 

tells to your liiu-hness.imiile truthl — V. I I 

mv lord, in tintli, thus fur - v. I i 

i' the inniie of trutli, are ye M,a-Mli,i.X \ 

ofclarkness till us truths — 1.3; 

two truths are told — i.3 

conuneneiiig in a trnth? — i. 3 j 

to yon tliey have showed .some truth 

if there come trnth Iruni tliein — 

to thy go d triitli and honour....: .. — 

no less in tinth. tluiii life — 

perceive no trutli in vour report .... — 

thefiend.tluit lies like truth — 

the certain knowledge of that truth. . Kins;J<,h 

but trutli is truth — 

but not by truth: what though? .... — 

the truth is then most done — 

thy truth against an oath: the truth — 
opinion siek, and truth suspected .... — 

that lluiu fur trutli givest out — 

that tlie truth will I'iill out so — iv. 3 

the riiiht, and truth of all this realm — iv. 3 

die here, and live lience by truth? — v. 4 

both to lU-renil my loyally and truth. /i('f/i«i(i //. i. 3 

truth luilh a quiet breast — i.3 

so help villi trutli and iieavenl — i.3 

for they bre:i the truth, that breathe — .ii. 1 

bijseeniiiiL' nn- tn speak tlie truth .... — iv. I 

found trmli in all, but one — iv, 1 

the truth of what we are shows — v. 1 

in parliament pledge for his truth.... — v. 2 
if they speak more or less than trutli. 1 (ffiiry/r. ii. 4 

isnot the trnth, the truth? — ii- 4 

he would swear truth out of England — ii. 4 

telling truth; tell truth, and shame — iii. I 

neither faith, truth. nor womanhood — iii. 3 

truth in thee, than ill a drawn fox .. — iii. 3 

no room for faith, truth, nor honesty — iii. 3 

if speaking truth, in tills fine age — iv. 1 

to say the triitli, stolen from my — iv. 2 

or sin, to speak a trulli •lUenrylV. i. 1 

certain, and do speak the truth [rep.) — i. 1 

well, the truth is, sir John (i-fp.l ..,. — j. 2 

my growth would approve the truth — i. 2 

the trutli is. poverty hath distracted — ii. I 

ill very truth, do I dtp. iii. 2) — ii. 4 

if trnth and upright iniioceney fail me — V. 2 

to speak truth, it very well becomes 3'iui — v. 2 

king Cophetua know the truth tlieieuf — v. 3 

I speakt he truth — v. 3 

I'istid speaks naught but truth — v. 5 

in native colours with the trutli Henry f. i. 2 

his title with some show of truth (rep.) — _i. 2 

though the truth of it stands off — it. 2 

in good truth, the poet is make — iii. 6 

framed of the firm truth of valour.... — iv. 3 
verily, and in truth, you sliall take it — _ y. 1 
no man answer in a case of truth? ..\HeiiryVI. ii. 4 

if I maintained the trutli — ii. 4 

the truth npiieurs so naked on — ii. 4 

suppose that I have pleaded truth ,, — ii. 4 

maintain the party of tlie trutli .... — ii. 4 

then, for the truth and plainness of. . — ii. 4 

witnessing the truth on our side .... — ii. 4 

we were resnl veil of vour trutli — iii. 4 

to sav the truth (;.-p. v. 4) — iv. 1 

slubbnriilv he did repugn the truth.. — iv. 1 

the diike bath told the truth illenryri. ii. 2 

the truth and innocence of tills poor — ii. 3 

I siv no more than truth — iii. 1 

tbeiinipof honour, truth, and loyally — jii- I 

to speak truth, thou deservest no less — iv. 3 

but, tocoiielnde with trnth ZUrnryn.W. I | 

tell me fur triifh the measure of — iii. 3 1 

both full i.r truth, I make king — iii. 3 

snanest but truth to niv divining .... — iv. <i I 

in sign of trnth, I kiss vour — iv. 8 

I seal mv trulli, and bill adieu — iv. 8 

to say the trutli, so Jiiiliis kissed .... — v. 7 

when de.ils tell the truth) IIM;:,I lll.i. i ', 



f; 



St be alni-ed — 
lb should live fr.iin - 
It better wear — 



i.3 



thus his sinipl 

meth' 

they, for their trnth, might better ' 

for truth, for dntv, and for loyalty 

you shall but rnv ibe truth 

to sny the truth, I do not know 

he Htiiil the truth: and what said 

may here )lnd truth too .. ..Uenrulllt. (prologue; 
to rank our ehoseii trutli with such — (prologue 
on my soul, I'll speak but trnth ,.,. 
that never knew r.luit truth meant .. 

slander, sir, is found a trutli now 

in truth. Then yon are weaklv mad 
think not at all a friend to trutli .... 
a4 much us you have done my truth 

truth loves open ileiiliiig 

if vou speak truth, for tlicir poor .... 

both of his truth and him — 

in truth, I know not — 

in the way of lo> ally and truth toward — 

when the king knows mv truth — 

and do justice for truth's sake, and his — 
out of thy honest truth to play the . . — 
thy Goirs, and truth's: then if thou — 
with thy religious truth, and modesty — 



iii. I 
iii. 2 , 
iii. 3 
iii. 7 : 
iv. 3 
3 I 



— ii. 1 

— ii. 1 



— ii. 4 



— iii. 1 



iii 

iii 


I 

2 


id 


2 




2 


iii 


2 


iii 


i 


iv 


2 



TnUTH.nnd thy integrity. Is rooted. Hfiiryr/*/. v. 1 
stand on is mv truth, and honesty .. — V. I 
the insiice nuil the truth o" the qucstiou — V. I 

(lull's the phiiii trntli — V. 8 

for they'll Iind them truth — V. 4 

trnth slnill nurse her — V4 

iicace. pleutv, love, truth, terror .... — v. 4 
I speak no more than trnth ..Iroilnt^ fi "ni'/a, i. 1 

Tuitb. tosav truth (icp.) — i. 2 

I'll imive this trnth with my three .. — i.3 

is this in way of truth — ii.'-' 

that shall it not ill truth, la — iii. 1 

n, mock for his truth; and what trnth — ill. ■-' 
mv integrity and truth to yon mieht — ii . 2 
triith's simplicity, and simpler (rrp.) — ii . 'i 
approve their truths by Troilus .... — i i. '^ 

truth tired with iteration — iii 2 

after all eompnrisons of truth, as truth's — iii. 2 

or swerve a hair from trnth — iii. 'i 

a botefid troth. AVIiat. Olid from.... — iv. 4 

I with great truth, eatch mere — iv. 4 

with truth and plainness I do wear irep.) — iv. 4 

grieve tliee? O withered truth! — v. 2 

lie in publishing a truth? — v. 2 

justice, truth, domestic awe ,. 7'iino)i o/AHient. iv. 1 

Fpeuk truth, yon are honest men — v.) 

in truth, la, go with me Conolauiit. i. 3 

tliongh thou sjieak'st truth, methinks — i. B 

let hini alone; he did inform the trnth — i C 

for trutli to over-iiecr — ii. 3 

no allowance', to your bosom's truth — iii 2 

to honour mine ewn truth — iii. 2 

and (lower i' the trnth o' the cause .. — iii. ."i 

to say the trnth on'K/vp. iv. G) — iv. 5 

will vonchthc truthofit — v. .1 

liiiwneil mine honour fiir his truth .. — V. 5 

and tosp.ak trutli of Ctcsar JutiutCietar, ii. 1 

afeard to tell greybeards the truth? — ii. 2 

like a Roman bear the truth I tell .. — iv. 3 
as both truth and malice have . . Antony S/Clco. i. 2 
trutli is, that Fiilvia, to have me out — ii. 2 

that truth should he silent, I had — ii. i 

truths Would he but talcs (rfu.) ... — _ ji. 2 

eeut me to pniclaini the truth — iv. 12 

speak the truth Seleucus — v. 2 

by the very trutli of it, I care not ..Cymbeline, ii. 3 
being so near the tnilli, as I will .. .. — ii. 4 
(ruth, where sendihince; love, where — ii. 4 
)iii: she's ininishert for her truth .... — iii. 2 
upon the love, and truth, and vows.. — iii. 2 

oil the truth of girls and boys — v. 5 

shall winnow the truth from fill .ebood — v. 5 
now fear is from me, I'll speak ti nth — v. 5 
know the traitors, and the trutli!.7'iVuj Jiirfron. iv. 1 

isjust, andfnUoftruth — v. 3 

now you have heard the trnth — v. 3 

time of both this trnth shall ne'er Periclet, i, 2 

for the crowned trnth to ilwcll in — v. I 

for truth can never be emilirmed enough — v. I 

nfigureof truth, of faith — v, 3 (Gowerl 

tliv truth then be thy dower l.eur, i. 1 

trutii's tt dog that must to kennel — i 4 

he must speak truth; ail' they will — ii. 2 

be simple-answered, for we know the (ruth — iii. ', 
all my rep nts go with the modest truth — iv. 7 
but then speak t!ie truth, do you not love — v. I 
maintain m^' trnth and honour (irnilv .. — v. 3 
to say truth', Verona brags of him. . 7(ninco,5-,/M;. i. 6 
in truth, fair Montague, I am too find — ii. 2 
this is the truth, or let Beiivolio die — iii 1 

that is a truth: and what I spake — iv. 1 

[Cof.Kii/.] tlic flattering trulh of sleep — v. 1 
of the truth lieieiii this (ireseiit object ..H-nnlet. i. I 

give me up the truth — i.3 

of falsehood takes his carp of truth — ii 1 

doubt trutli to be a lior; but never — ii. 2 (letler) 

I will find where trnth is hid - ii. 2 

will you ha' the trnth on't'Mf this bad.. — v. 1 
give us truth who 'tis that is arrived ..Oiheltn. ii. I 
more or less than truth, tlioii art no soldier — ii. 3 
speak the triuh shall nothing wionc him — ii. 3 
which lead directly to the door of trnth — iii. 3 
with naught but trnth: I have wasted .. — iv. 2 

and let bun coiiless a trutli — v. 2 

she said so; I must needs rciiort the truth — v. 2 
'tis a strange truth. O monslrous acti .. — v. 2 

TKY— to trv with main-course Tempes:, i. I 

to trv their fortune there.... T'rroGfn.o/r.ioin, i 3 

I will try thee : — iii. I 

trv me in thy (laiier — iii. I 

I 'will lav a (.lot to try that ilerryWiueu. iii. 3 

we'll Iry that; for I'll appoint — iv. 2 

gniltiir than him they try Mens, fnr .Mens, ii I 

and try vour penitence, if it be — ii. 3 

to trv liergraeious fortune — v. I 

well, as time sbal! try "iirA Ado. i. 1 

trv whose right, or thine or minc...Vi'd.A'.'»Br. iii. 2 

we'll try no manhood here — iii. 3 

go fortli; trv what my credit can.. Mer. o/l'en!ee. i. I 

to trv my fortune — ii 1 

I will try coiii-lusions with him — ii. 2 

disguiseu agniusl me to t.y a fall.. Atyout-ikeit. i. 1 

to try with him the streng'th of — i 2 

yon shall trv but one fall — i. 2 

I wmild try', if I could cry hem — i.3 

you will tiv in time, in despite — i.3 

and let tiiiie try; iidieiil — iv. I 

living. I wonM try him yet All'tlfell, i. I 

give me leave to try success — i.3 

can clo no hurt to try, since yon set.. — ii. 1 
thy physic I will try; that mini^te^9 — ii. I 
ill what particular action to try liim — iii. 6 

I'll trv how vou can sol, fa Taming of Shreir. i. 2 

that I'll try ."I swear I'll cutr you ... _ ii. I 

be dished fir me to try bow iVinttr'tTale, iii. 2 

I, that ideose some, try all — iv. (chorus) 

try v^■lletllcr I am not now a gentleman — v. 2 
try all llie friends thou hast .,Coniedy<if Errors, i. I 

I will mury one day, but to try — ii. I 

that's a tiuestion; bow shall we try it? — v. 1 



TKY~yct I will try the last Utacbdh, v. 

try the fair adventure oi' to-morrow.* Kin<r John, v. 

mine lioiioiir let me try Hichard II. i. 

now sliall he try his friends — ii. 

he reiiealed to try Ills honour — iv. 

tr.\' fortune witli Iiim in u, single ....1 iJenrijlV. y. 

h^l tlie end trj' tlie man 'Zlleniyl f\ ii. 

first let tliem try themselves — ii. 

on imrpose, to try my patience — ii. 

we ready are to try our ft)rtune3 .... — iv. 
to try with it, as with an enemy .... — iv. 
(Mu try it out witli all unspotted ....Henry J', iv 

11 -St, to try her skill, lleiguier \ Henry VI. j. 

m\' ciiui'a^e try by coitibat — i. 

presently we'll try: coine, let's away — i. 

and tlieu we'll try what tiicse — i. 

to trv if that our own he ours — iii. 

and trv if lliev can gain your — v. 

vowed to try his strength — v. 

my lord of York, try what your ..•! Henry VI. iii. 
anil try your imp ai;ainst tlie Irishmen? — iii. 

sav, we intend to trv Ills grace — iii. 2 

I'll trv this widi.w's wit V. Henry r I. iii. 2 

to trv'if tli.ni be current gold Itichard III. iv. 2 

as a conn »el I or to try him Henry VIII. v. 2 



V. 2 
Cressirfa, iii. 2 
of Alliens, ii. 2 



v. I 



to the utmost 

let nie ao and try: I have . . Trolli 
and trv tlie ari-'urnent of hearts. 7'/ 

for bv'tliese shall I trv fiiends — 

did but try us this other dav _ 

has been but a try for his friends? . . — 

come, tr}^ upon yourselves Coriolanus. iii. 1 

]iray .you, be gone; I'll try whetlier.. — iii. 1 
those whose great power must try him — iii. 3 
there shall I try, in my oration . .JuUnsCtcsar, iii. I 
we shall try fortune in a second fight — v. 3 

to try a larger fortune Antony ^-Cleopatra, ii. 6 

I'll try you o' the shore — ii. 7 

to trv thy eloquence, now 'tis time . . — iii. 10 

try thy cunning, Thyreus — iii. 10 

I will try the forces of these Cymheline, i. 6 

to try the vigour of them, and apply — i. 6 
to try your taking a false reiMrt .... — i. 7 

we'll try with tongue too — ii. 3 

try many, all good, serve truly — iv. 2 

singled forth to try experiments.. TOMs.Jrti/coji. ii. 3 

try honour's cause; forbear Pericles, ii. 4 

or ise try whether your costard I. car, iv. G 

try if tlie.v can lick their (_rep.). . Romeo ^-Juliel, iv. 2 

how may we try it further? Hamlet, ii. 2 

we will try it. But, look — ii. 2 

and who in want a hollow friend doth try — iii. 2 
what rests? try what repentance can .... — iii. 3 
to try conclusions, in the basket creep .. — iii. 4 

numbers cannot try the cause — iv. 4 

to try me with afBictiou Othello, iv. 2 

TUB-she is herself in the tub . . lUeas. for Mens. iii. 2 

from the powdering tub of infamv Henry I', ii. 1 

season the slaves for tubs 'I'inion nf.iihens, iv. 3 

tliat tub both filkd and ruuninir .... Ciinihvlbie, i 7 

TUBAL, a wealthy Hebrew .. M'erchanl of Venice, i. 3 
how noAV. Tubal, what news from .. — iii. 1 

I thank thee, good Tubal — iii. 1 

thou torturest me. Tubal; it was .... ^- iii. I 
go. Tubal, see me an officer (.'•'??.) .. — iii. I 

at our svnajogue, Tubal — iii. 1 

beard him swear, to Tubal, and lo Chug — iii. 2 

TUB-FAST, and the diet ThnonorAihe^i!:, iv. 3 

TUCK-dismount thy tuck TuelflhM^hl, iii. 4 

TOU vile staudins tiick 1 Henn/I I', ii. 4 

TUCKIDT-sound the tneltet sonu;iuce.;/'ooi; r. iv. 2 

TUESDAY ni:;htla3t -.ne Mens. Ihr M,;n. V. ) 

whicli he forswore on Tuesday MuchA'lo. v. I 

on Tuesday last, a faleou, tow'eriug ..Machdh, ii. 4 

dissolutely spent on Tuesday 1 Henri/ 1 1'. i. 2 

I sent on 'Tuesday last to listen 2 Henry IV. i. 1 

or Tuesday morn; or Tiu;sdu,y noon ..Othctto, iii. 3 

TU I'T-in emerald tufts, flowers . . Merni H'ires, v. 6 

'tis at the tutt of olives isi/ou Like it. iii. 5 

behind the tuft of pines ilniicr'sTule, ii. 1 

hv von tuft of trees, manned with ..Kichnrd II. ii. 3 

TUG for the time to come irinier'sTale, iv. 3 

is left to tug auft seamhle Kini,' .loltn, iv. 3 

tug him away: being vWiiipQi. Antony i-Clea. iii. U 

TUGGED with f.rtune Maclieili, iii. 1 

tUL'geil for life, and was by strength. 2 Hen;;/ I'l. iii. 2 

TUGGIXG to be victors \Henryn. ii. 5 

TUITK^N of Goil: from my lioiise ....MuchAdo, i. I 

TUELUS [jw AUlTDIUSl- 
once more strike at Tullns' face .... Coriolanus, i. 1 
within these three hours, Tullus, alone — . *■ 8 
if TuUus, not yet thou know'st nie., — iv. 5 
OTidlus,— thou hast done a deed — v. 5 

TUELY— murdered sweet Tully .. ..•'Henry VI. iv. I 
sweet poetrv. and Tullv'sOrator. '/■i//M/i«rfroi<. iv. I 

TUMBLE-did tumble oil tlie ground. ioi'c'sL. /,. v. 2 
nature's germins tumble all together.. il/ucte'/i, iv. 1 

to tumble down thy husband -iHennjI'I. i. 2 

tumble down into the fatal bowels. /f'c/i'iiii/;/. iii. 4 
will he tumble down, and pay you. Coriolanus, iv. G 
not amiss to tumble on the bed .. Antony ^-Cteo. i. 4 
tumble me into some loatbsome pit.. Titus And. ii. 3 
and tumbles, drivin* the poor fry .. ..Pericles, ii. 1 

TUMBLED-snow, tumbled about.. K/>!4' John, iii. 4 
now Phaeton hath tumbled from .. ..ZHeuryVI. \. 4 

I have tumbled past the throw Coriolanus, v. 2 

porpue, how he bounced and tumbled?./'«7'c/e.?, ii. 1 

iCol.^ sea, tumbled and tost — v. (Gower) 

.quoth she, before you tumbled.. Hamlet, iv. 5 (song) 

TU.MBLER— like a tumbler's hoop]. Love's L.L. iii. I 

TU.MBLING in my barefoot way Tempest, ii. 2 

or a tumbling trick? Taming nf Shrew, 2 (indue.) 

we lie tumbling in thehav. 'Cm'er'sTafe, iv. 2 (songj 
the tumbling billows of the main .. Richard III. i. 4 

TU.MULT-aod civil tumult reigns.. Kmyjo/oi, iv. 2 

here's a goodlv tumult! IHinruH'. ii. 4 

M'hat tumult's in the heavens? IHcnryVI. i. 4 

M'hat tumult's this? An uproar — iii. 1 

f )r what hath broached this tu mult.^ Henry T/. ii. 2 

TUiMULTUOUS wars shall kin with. Hichard II. iv. 1 



[ 792 ] 

TUMULTUOUS strife \ Henry VI. i. 

Avliy what tumultuous clamour 2HenrifVI. iii. 

a period of tumultuous broils ZHenryVI. v, 

TUN^— with so many tuns of oil Merry iVives, ii. 

a tun of mail is thy eoiniianion ....\HeiirylV. ii. 

your spirit, this tun of treasure Henry V. i. 

drawn tuns of blood out Coriolanus, iv. 

TUNDISH-with a tundish ....Meas.forMeas. iii. 
TUNE— to what tune pleased his ear Tempest, i. 

a very scurvy tune to sing (rep.) — ii. 

tliat's not the tune — iii. 

this is the tune of our catch — iii. 

sing it, madam, to a tune TwoGen. o/Verona, i. 

to the tune of ]>ight o' Love — i. 

too heavy for so light a tune — i. 

keep tune there still — i. 

I do not like this tune — i. 

tune a deploring dump — iii. 

let's tune, and to it lustily — iv. 

out of tune on the strin.gs? — iv. 

tune my distresses, and record — v. 

tune of Green Sleeves (,rep. v. 5) ..Merry Wives, ii. 

ICol.'i out o' tune? TwelflhNighl, ii. 

and iilay the tune the while — ii. 

how dost thou like this tune? — ii. 

if it be aiiglit to the old tune — v. 

what say'st thou to this tune ..Meas.for Meas. iii. 

speak in the sick tune? Oep.) Much Ado, iii. 

serve for the writing, nor the tune . Love's L. Lost, i. 

to jijj oflfa tune at the tongtie'e end.. — iii. 

and Keep not too long in one tune .. — iii. 

and profound Solomon to lune a jig — iv. 

tune [Co/. A'M/.-turnJ bismerry/J, youLike, ii.5 (son; 

thou bring'st me out of tune — iii. 

no matter how it be in tune ,. — iv. 

and both in a tune, like two gipsies.. — v. 

in tune? tliat will be never irep.)Taming ofSh. iii. 

he sings several tunes, faster ^^inter s Tale, iv. 

and all men's ears grew to his tunes.. — iv. 

use no scurrilous words in his tunes — iv. 

liere's one, to a very doleful tune .... — iv. 

and goes to the tune of, two maids .. — iv. 

we had the tune on't a month ago..., — iv. 

till he had botli tune and words — iv. 

to the self-same tune, and words Macbeth, i. 

this time [A'n/.-time] goes manly — iv. 

IKni.'i fit it with some better tune ..KingJohn, iii. 

knows no touch to tune the harmony. Hichard II. i. 

and sung to filthy tunes .. I HenrylV. ii. 

and sung those tunes to the 2 Henry IV. iii. 

whose dismal tune bereft 2HenryVI. iii, 

as loud, and to as many tunes Henry I' 1 1 1, iv. 

in this tune, is lie? (rep.'),...TroilusSrCressida,i\\. 

stand with the tune of your voices ..Coriolanus, ii. 

this is a sleepy tune JxdiusCcesar, iv. 

to the tune of flutes kept .. Antony ^ Cleopatra , ii. 

ballad us out o' tune — v. 

come on, tune; if you can penetrate .Cymbeline, ii. 

for notes of sorrow, out of tune — iv. 

the tune of Imo.gen ! — v. 

do tune the liarmony of this peace .. — v. 

doth tune us otherwise Pericles, i. 

sometime, in his better tune, remembers.. /-rar, iv. 

lark that sings so out of tune. ../fomeo <§JM(i>/, iii. 

like sweet bells jangled, out of tune .. Hamlet, iii. 

chanted snatches of old tunes [Co/. -lauds] — iv. 

only got the tune of the time — v. 

my advocation is not now in tune Othello, iii. 

then murder's out of tune — v. 

TUN E A BLE than I ark to shepherd's. WW. A"s. Dr. i. 

a cr\ more tuneable was never hollaed — iv. 
TUNEDhis bounty to sing All'sWell, iv. 

w 11 be done, ere you have tuned TaTn/n^'-o./'S/i. iii. 

tuned in the self-same key . . Troilus 4' Cressida, i. 

tiiued too sharp in sweetness — iii. 

as all the tuned spheres Antony ^■Cleo. v. 

yon are well tuned now! but I'll set ..Othello, ii. 
TUNER— new tuners of accents!, flomeo ^ Juliet, ii. 
TUNIS-Claribel to the king of Tunis.. r™pes<, ii. 

Tunis was never graced before — ii. 

she was of Carthage, not of Tunis (,rep.) — ii. 

as when we were at Tunis — ii. 

she that is cinceu of Tunis (rep.) .... — ii. 

keep in Tunis, and let Sebastian .... — ii. 

her hn5band find at Tunis — v. 

TUP-Cassio did tup her Othello, v. 

TUPPED-gnpecm? behold her tupped? — iii. 
TUPPI NG— ram is tupping your white ewe — i. 
TTniBAND-iinpious turb'ands on. .Cymbeline, iii. 
TUKB.VNEDTurk beat a Venetian ....Othello, v. 
TUllBULENCE-bloodv turbulence. 7'roiY. 4Cr. v. 
TURBULENT surge shall cover ..Timon of Alh. v. 

been a turbulent and stormy night .. Perictis, iii. 

with turbulent and dangerous lunacy?. H-fw/tV, ii. 
TURD -I shall make-a de turd . . Merry I'ives, iii 
TUIIF shall serve as pillow ....Mid.N.'sDream, ii. 

of conceit in a turf of earth Love' sh. Lost, iv. 

sitting by me on tlie turf AsyouLikeit, iii. 

Peter Ttirf, and Hemy. .Taming of Shreir, 2 (indue. 

better than a churlish turf of France .Henri/ V. jv. 

and walled with turf, which gave . . Cymbeline, v. 

at his head a grass-green turf . . Ha7n/e/, iv. 5 (song 

TURFY mountains, where live Tempest, iv." 

TURK— base Phrygian 'Turk ! Merry Wives, i. 

welhitn' you be not turned Turk ..MuchAdo, iii. 

stubborn Turks, and Tartars ..Mer. of Venice, iv. 

defies me, like Turk to Christian. /Is youLikeil, iv. 

or send them to the Turks to All's Well, ii. 

nose of Turk, and Tartar's lips Macbeth, iv. 

pag.ans, Turks, and Saracens Richard II. iv. 

go sleep with Turks and infidels .... — iv. 

Turk Gregor.v never did such deeds. I HenrylV. v. 

to the hearer than the Turk's iHenrylV. iii. 

and take the Turk by the beard? .... Henry V. y. 

the Turk, that two and fifty 1 Henry VI. iv. 

think vou we are Turks or infidels?. 7?ic/i. ///. iii. 

out-pararaouicd the Turk : false of Lear, iii. 

rest of inv fortunes turn Turk with me. HriniW, iii. 

importancy ol'C.\iirus to the Turk {rep.).Othello,i. 

must not tiiink, the Turk is so unskilful — i. 



TURK of Cyprus us beguile Othello, i. 3 

the Turk with a n'.ost mighty preparation — i. 3 

tempest hath so banged the Turks — ii. 1 

nay, it is true, or else I am a Turk — ii. I 

the Turks are drowned, liow do our old — ii. I 

are we turned 'I'urks; and to ourselves do — ii. 3 

a malignant and a turbaued Turk beat — v. 2 

TUKKE Y cushions bossed with. 7'a»u'»i' or Mre»',ii.l 

TURKEY'-COCK of him Twelfth Mght, ii. i 

a tnrkev-coek. 'Tis no matter Crep.') . . Henry V. v. 1 

TURKIES in my pannier 1 Henn/'ir. ii. 1 

TURKISH tapestrv Comedy of Errors, iv. 1 

the English, not the Turkish court .iHenrylV. v. 2 

like Turkish mute, shall liave HenryV.i. 2 

Turkish fleet {rep. ii. 1 ond ii. 2) Othello, i. 3 

Turkish preparation makes for Rhodes.. — i. 3 
touching the Turkish loss, — yet lie looks — ii. 1 

TURLYGOOD-poorTurlvgoodl Lear, ii. 3 

TUR .MOIL— after much turmoil. ricoecn. o/Ver. ii. 7 

TUIiMOILED in the court 2HenryVI.iv. 10 

TURN— do not turn me about Tempest, ii. 2 

I'll turn my mercy out of doors — iii. 2 

a turn or two I'll walk — iv. I 

or I'll turn you out of my kingdom .... — iv. I 
if you turn not, you will . . Two Oen. of Verona, ii. 2 

and turn her out to who — iii. 1 

as thine will serve the turn? (rep.).. — iii. 1 

going will scarce serve the turn — iii. I 

a Bouuet that will serve the turn .... — iii. 2 

turns me to shame — iv. 4 

I must turn away some Merry Wives, i. 3 

I shall turn your head out — i. 4 

I would turn her loose to him — ii. 1 

but I W(nild be loth to turn them..., . — ii. 1 

turn another into the register — ii. 2 

for he swears, he'll turn me away.... — iii. 3 

no more turn me to him — iii. 4 

and turn him to no pain — v. 5 

and turn him about — v. 5 (song) 

but Heme tlie hunter serve y ur turn? — v. 5 
till liis brains turn out o' the toe. .Twelfth Kghl, i. 3 
and bid him turn you out of doors .. — ii. 3 
that it cannot but turn him into .... — ii.5 

often good turns are shufiled off — iii. 3 

immoderate use turns to restraint Jl/eas.. /"or .1/eas. i.3 
turn you the key, and know his .... — i.5 
gentle, my lord, turn back (re;).) .... — ii. 2 
you will turn good husband now .... — iii. 2 

a feather will turn the scale — iv. 2 

to use me for your own turn — iv. 2 

I owe you a good turn — iv. 2 

you have no intent to turn husband. . Miir/i .4i/o, i. I 
so turns she every man the wrong .. — iii. I 

how giddily lie turns about — iii. 3 

to turn all beaut.v into thoughts .... — iv. 1 

their counsel turns to passion — v. 1 

if he be he knows liow to turn his girdle — v. 1 
turn melancholy forth to funerals. .Jl/f(£.A'.'iDr. i. 1 
from Athens, turn awa}' our eyes. .. . — i. I 

liog, bear, fire, at every turn .". — iii. 1 

I have enough to serve mine own turn — iii. 1 

eastern wind, turns to a crow — iii. 2 

mows upon me, when I turn my back — iii. 2 
turns into yellow gold his salt-green — iii. 2 
the poet's pen turns them to shapes.. — v. i 

a mote will turn the balance — v. 1 

not serve your turn, sir (rep. ) Love's L. Losl,i. 1 

and second cause will not serve my turn — i. 2 

for I am sure, I siiall turn sonneteer — i. 2 

the other turns to a mirth-moving jest — ii.l 

day would turn tonight! _ iv. 3 

her favour turns the fashion — iv. 3 

each turn away her face — v. 2 

and turn it to a jest — v. 2 

we will turn it finely off, sir — v. 2 

purifies itself, and turns to gi ace — v. 2 

this Hebrew will turn Christian.. ;l/er. of Venice, i. 3 
may turn by fortune from the w eaker — ii.l 

turn up on your right band — ii. 2 

next turning, turn of no haiul. but turn — ii. 2 
unless the devil himself turn Jew.. .. — iii. 1 

turn you where your lady is — iii. 2 (scroll) 

being blent together, turns to a wild — iii. 2 
could turn so much the constitution — iii. 2 
and turn two mincing steps into .... — iii. 4 

wlij', shall we turn to men? — iii. 4 

of wit will shortl.v turn into silence., — iii. 5 

nay, if the scale do turn but in _ iv. 1 

that oath, let me turn monster.. ..As yon Like it, i. 2 
[Col. Knt.} and turn his merry note — ii. 5 (song) 

that any man turn ass — ii. 5 (song) 

or turn thou no more to seek — iii I 

and turn him going — iii. I 

twice did he turn his back — iv. 3 

I cannot serve your turn for Rosalind? — v. 2 
might do her a shrewd turn if she ..All'sWell, iii. 5 
of my garments would serve the turu — iv. I 

to turn him out o' the baud — iv. 3 

to the great sender turns a sour — v 3 

for her turn; well-read in poetry.. Tamiiig-o/SA. i. 2 
she is not for your turn, the mure my — ii. 1 

and thankful fir good turns — ii.l 

1 am a husband for your turn — ii.l 

we'll fit him to our turn, and he .... — iii. 2 
down the hill, will serve the turn .. — iv. 2 

thinks the world turns round — v. 2 

my best blood turn to an infected. Winter'sTale, i. 2 
turn then my fresh reputation to ... . — i. 2 

great Apollo, turn all to tlie best! .. — iii. 1 
this allowing, I turu my glass..., — iv. (chorus) 
sing her song, and dance her turn.... — iv. 3 

I could frame to serve my turn — iv. 3 

t'liat may turn back to my advancement? — iv. 3 
turn, good ladv; our Perdita is found — v. 3 

we in your motion turn Comedy of Errors, iii. 2 

and made mc turn i' the wlieel — iii. 2 

a' turns liack for very fear — iv. 2 

hath he not reason to turn back .... — iv. 2 

stay here still, and turn witch — iv. 4 

every day I turn the leaf to read them .Macbeth, i. 3 



TUR 



f 71):^ ] 



TTTR 



'ITRN— messenger turns me liis hxck . . Machelh,\n. 
turn, huU-honiiil, turn. Ofall men.. .. — v. 7 

tlion turn yniir I'. reus t'nim this King John, \i. I 

turn fu-e toCiico. :iiul M.vKly iioiut .. — it.! 

turn thnu tlRMnontlinCUiy — ii. 2 

puy, riitlKT turn this day out of — iii. I 

null tlinu !>hult turn to tUlics — iii. I 

nud turn tliv fiKV in iK-nec — v. 2 

TliouiHS MoMbriiy.do I turn to thQCRMnitl II. i. I 

lot uiy siivcrii>;n turn iiwny — i. 1 

tiien tliiia I turn mc fmm iny — i. 3 

Initli pi"* ercnougli to serve mir turn — iii. 2 
his property, turns to tlic eourcst .... — iii. 2 
and I will turn tliy falsehood to thy — iv. I 

imy, if 1 turn mine eyes npon — iv. 1 

null hate turns one, or both — v. 1 

Iciive that I nniy turn the key — v. .1 

to turn true man, nud t> leave 1 lUtiryll', ii. 2 

should I turn upon the true prince? — ii. 4 

'tis the next w:iy to turn tailor — iii. 1 

in the realm; tiirns head usainst .... — iii. 2 
may turi\ the tide oft'earful faction.. — iv. 1 

to turn and wind a tierji' I'ej-'a-sus — iv. 1 

it pleased your majesty to turn your — v. 1 
wouldst thou turn our offers contrary? — v. 5 
now tlic bishop turns insuirection ..illmriilf. i. I 
I will turn diseases to commodity .. — i. 2 

would turn their own perfection to abuse — ii. 3 

if her feathers turn hack in any — ii. 4 

will turn the scales between — ii. 4 

and turn all to amerriuiLiit — ii. 4 

now doth it turn, and ebb back — v. 2 

turn him to any cause of Ihnry r. i. 1 

your own reasons turn into your bosoms — ii. 2 

turn head, and stop pursuit — ii. 4 

and on your head turns he — ii. 4 

turn thee back, and tell thy — iii. 8 

turn the sands into eloquent tongues — iii. 7 
to ttnn tlie sun to ice, with fanning.. — iv. I 

nud turn them out of service — iv. 3 

so did he turn, and over Sntfulk's — iv. C 

is turn away the fat kni^'lit with — iv. 7 

well,bawd will I turn, and something — v. 1 

a black beard will turn white — v. 2 

otir wars will turn unto a peaccfid..! llniri/VI, ii. 2 

thy mirth shall turn to moan — ii. 3 

turn not thy scorns this way — ii. 4 

I'll turn my part thereof into — ii. 4 

turn thy edued sword anotlier — iii. 3 

dor.e like aVrcnchman; turn, and turn — iii. 3 

canst thou turn thee fir redress — iv. 2 

turn on the bloody hounds — iv. 2 

and turn at'aiu unto tlic warlike .... — v. 2 
amon^'st them, if they turn to us .... — v. 2 
will nothing turn your unrelentinir.. — v. 4 
thou turn away, and hde thy face?.'-'/J'/'ijyr/. iii. 2 
or turn our stjrn upon a dreailfui rocU? — iii. 2 
and turn the force of tlicm upon tiivself — iii. 2 

either turn into my flviiis soul ".. _ iii. 2 

and tin-n it, and sot a nuw nap upon it — iv. 2 

steel, if thou turn the ed-_'e — iv. 10 

revolt from me, and turn to him ....Sllenry I'l. \. 1 
turn this way, Ilenry, and regard them — i. 1 

to the eager foe turn back — i. 4 

never once again turn back — ii. 1 

the smallest worm will turn — ii. 2 

then 'twas my turn to fly — ii. 2 

none but I sliall turn his jest — iii. 3 

to my brother turn my blushing cheeks — v. I 

Clarence, thy turn is next — v. C 

I'll turn yoii fellow in his grave llirlianl 1 1 1, i. 2 

villain, di) not turn away! — i. 3 

and turn you all your hatred nmv .. — i. 3 

and turns the Sim to shade — i. 3 

doth turn his hate upon your grace.. — ii. 1 

this war thou turn a conqueror — iv. 4 

to turn their own points on their .... — v. I 

but his friends will turn to us — v. 2 

they turn to vicious forms Ileunj I'lll. i. 2 

son of fortune, turns what he list.... — ii. 2 

in Gcxl's name, turn me away _ ii. 4 

tears I'll turn to sparks of fire — ii. 4 

you turn the good we offer (rep.) — iii. I 

3'ou and I must walk a turn together — v. 1 
God turn their hearts! I never soiiiilit — v. 2 
do my lord of Canterbury a shrewd turn — v. 2 

fate turns 1 1 sudden sadness Troilut 4 Crest, i. 1 

we turn not back the silks — ii. 2 

, 1 



doth turn oh! oh! to ha! ha! he! — iii. 1 (song) 

fir speculation turns not to itself — iii. 3 

forced with wit. turn him to? _ v. 1 

look, how thy eye turns pulel — v. 3 

there turn and change together — v. 3 

O traitor Diomed! turn lliv false face — v. 6 

turn, slave, and ti^'ht What art thou? — v. 8 

word will I'riam turn to stone — v. II 

1 must serve my turn out of.. Thnoii uf.4theni, ii. 1 

it turns in less than two nights? — iii. I 

uliould it thrive, and turn to nutriment — iii. I 

I wil! look you out a good turn — iii. 2 

matrons, turn incontinent — ii". 1 

as we do turn our backs from our.,.. — iv. 2 

'tis mo'.tjn-t, tliat thou turn rascal.. — iv. 3 

it almost turns mv dangerous nature — iv. 3 

I'll meet you at the turn — v. I 

Virgilia. turn thy solemnncss O.nof.inm, i.3 

that you could turn your eyes — li. I 

1 know not where to turn — ii, 1 

mode the coward turn terror into sport — ii. 2 

he'll turn your current in — iii. I 

the wliich shall turn you to no further — iii. 1 

thus I turn mv back: there is — iii. 3 

O world, thy slippery turnsi — iv. t 

make my misery serve thv turn .... — iv. 5 

and turns up the white o the eye.... — iv. 5 

Borne news is come, that turns their. , — iv. 6 

and turn the dregs of il uimii this.... — v. 2 

he turns nwav; down, ladies — v. 3 

turu tlie troubleofray countcnauce.JudiuCiKiar, i. 2 



TURN your hidden worthiness ....JuUiitCaiar, I. 2 
the ellnilKr-iiiiward turns his face .. — II. I 

nut. tlU' hH!der torus his back — ii. I 

or Cii'sar never sliall turn back — iii. I 

turn pre-iinlinani'e, and first degree — iii. I 

out ol his hiMirt. and turn him going — iii. 3 
turn him ulf, like to tlie empty ass .. — iv. I 
proof of it will turn to redder drops.. — v. I 
turns our i-w.irds in our own proper.. — v. 3 
mv swonl, and turn awav thy face .. — V. i 
now (urn the cifli r'e and iiev(ition../4ii(on!/<j-C(ei). i. I 
I pi'\thie. turn asiili'.and w,ep .... — i. 3 

and keep the turn of tippliui; with .. — i. 4 

for wliat g.ind turn? For the best turn — ii. 5 

cretiturcs turn all to serpents! — ii. 5 

tin n viinr displeasure tliat way — iii. 4 

in Ills' ah.nniruitions, turns you off .. — iii. 6 
Hv, and turu the rudder; to sec 't.... — iii. 8 

frienrls, I turn you not awav — iv. 2 

turn tVoiu me then tliat noble — iv. 12 

I'll letch a turn ahout the garden.... Ci/rndf/iHi', i. 2 

never count the turns — ii. 4 

all gold and silver rather turn to dirti — iii. 6 
slial I turn all into my commendations — iv. 1 
brought her for this high good turn. Tiliis.iiidion. i. 2 

woidd serve your turns (re;).) — ii. I 

brave boys, and take your turns .... — ii. I 
Buck'dst from her, did turn to marble — ii. 3 

my hand will serve the turn — iii. I 

tliat I may turu me to each one of you — iii. 1 
how busily she turns the leaves! .... — iv. I 

by turu to serve our lust — iv. 2 

can never turn a swon's black legs .. — iv. 2 
ICol. KnI.} with him, till I turn again — v. 2 

now is my turn to sjieak — y. 3 

then I'll turn craver too Periclfs, ii. 1 

nor did ill turn to any living creature.. — iv. 1 

she meant thee a good turn — iv. 3 

I think, you'll tuTu a cliild again — iv. 4 

to her father turn our tlioughts — v. (Gower) 

1 pray you, turn your eyes again — v. 1 

toward Jiphesus turn our blown sails .. — v. 2 

to rage the city turn — v. 3 (Gower) 

make with you by due turns Lenr, i. 1 

to turn thy hated back upon — i. 1 

turn all her mother's pains — i. 4 

I'd turn it all to thy suggestion — ii. 1 

and turn their halcyon beaks with every — ii.2 

smile once more; turn thy wheel! — ii.2 

ne'er turns the key to the poor — ii. 4 

the knave turns foul, that runs away — ii. 4 

and turn his sleep to wake — iii. 2 (song) 

my wits begin to tiirn — iii. 2 

this cold night will turn us all to fools .. — iii. 4 

good porter, turn tlie key — iii. 7 

turn out that eyeless villain — iii. 7 

women wil! all turn monsters — iii. 7 

lest my brain turn, and tlie deficient .... — iv. 6 
turn our impressed lances in our eyes.... — v. 3 
how? turn thy back, and run? ..liomeoSf Juliet, i. 1 

turu thee, Benvolio, look upon — i. 1 

turu giddy, and be holp by backward — i. 2 

then turn tears to fires! — i. 2 

turn tlie tables up, and quench the flre — i. 5 

le^t faitli turn to despair — i. 5 

turn back, dull earth, and find thy .. — ii. 1 
virtue itself turns vice, being misapplied— ii. 3 
to turn your household's rancour.... — ii. 3 

therefore turn, and draw — iii. I 

turns deadly point to point — iii. 1 

as he fell, diil Konieo turn and fly .. — iii. I 

and turns it to exile — iii. 3 

with treacherous revolt turn to another — iv. 1 
turu from their (.iffice to black funeral — iv. 5 
their currents turn awry, and lose .... Hamlet, iii. 1 
to desperation turn mv'trust and hope!.. — iii. 2 
if the rest of my f.irtuiics turn Turk .... — iii. 2 

form of prayer can serve my turn? — iii. 3 

till our scale turn the beam — iv. S 

the turns to favour, and to prettiness.... — iv. 5 
I am to do a good turn for them — iv. 6 (letter 1 

no tongues else for's turn — v. 2 

I follow him to serve my turn upon him.OMcWo, i. 1 

80 will I turn her virtue into pitch — ii. 3 

when I shall turn the business of my soul — iii. 3 
make lier turn: sir, she can turn (rrp.) .. — iv. 1 

turn thy complexion there! — iv. 2 

I pray you, turn the key, and keep — iv. 2 

would make him do a desperate turn .... — v. 2 

TTIUNBiri.L-about Turnbull strect.2i/c,ir!//r. iii. 2 

TUHNCD.VT— is courtesy a turncoat ...W»rA.4(/o. i. 1 

smoke, and be no turncoats ,. Timon ofA'hens. iv. 3 

TU KN r,l>— I have turned you to Tempeil, i. 2 

and all be turned to barniicles — iv. 1 

tender wit is turned to folly.. '/'foGpn.o/TMinu, i. 1 
I have turned away my other ....Menyll'iret, iv. 3 

turned my daughter into green — v.!) 

instant was I turned into u hart .. Tiret/!li\ighl, i. I 

or to be turned away — i. 5 

the wrong side may be turned outward! — iii. I 
yon gull JMalvolio is turned heathen — iii. 2 
nave made Hercules have turned spit..Uiic'i/<(<i>, ii. 1 
and now is he turned orthographcr .. — ii. 3 

O day untowardly turned! — iii. 2 

well, an' you be not turned Turk .... — iii. 4 
and men are only tuined into tongue — iv, 1 
never sii trill v tiiriieii over and over.. — v, 2 
turned her oliediiuce, which is due .iUiW. A'.'»Dr. i. 1 
that he hatli turned a heaven unto .. — i. I 

true love turned, U111I not a false turned — iii. 2 
far-otfinouiitaius turned into clouds — iv. I 
as wit turned timl: f..llv, in wisdom.. Lorc'it./.. v. 2 

the fourth tumid oil the toe — v. 2 

that ever turned their hacks ^> (re;).") — v. 2 
of autumn turned to the rams ..Mer. ofl'euice, i. 3 
we turned o'er ma-iy books together — iv. 1 (letteri 
their savage eyes turned to a modest gaze — v. I 

though Hero had turned nun As you Like it, iv. 1 

and turned into the extremity of love — iv. 3 
art tiiuu KoU to shepherd turued? — iv. 3 (letter) 



TURNED off a firi>t so noble wife All's ;»>«, v. 3 

old breeches, thrice turned ..TiimitiitofShriir, iii. 2 

was turned iiil.i a c.ild Ibh llniter'sTule, iv. 3 

turned wild in nulnre Mucheih, ii. 4 

have turned another way KingJohn, ii. 2 

or turned an eve of doubt upon — iv. 2 

arc turned to line thread, one little .. — v. 7 
true-bred cowards as ever turned....! Henru/;'. i. 2 

he turned an eye of death - i. 3 

tliis house is turned np~ide down .... _ ii. I 
thv father's heard is tiinud « bite .. — ii. 4 

hear a brazen candlestick turned — iii. 1 

come, you shall have Trent turned.. — iii. 1 
this house is turned bawdy-house .. — iii. 3 
of the day quite turned from him .. — v. 5 
sir John Umfrevile turned me hack .illeuryll'. i. 1 
oil the rest tnrneil on tlieinselvcs .... — i. 1 

of those that turned their hacks — i. I 

true valour is turned bear-herd — i. 2 

have yon turnecl him out of doors? .. — ii. 4 
is turned into a justice-like serving-man— v. 1 
that 1 have tinned owoy my former self — v. 6 
hath turned his balls to gun-stones.... Henry V. i. 2 

the cities turned into a maid — v. 2 

mine eyeballs into bullets turned ..^Henryt'l. iv. 7 

travail turned to this effect? — v. 4 

hath turned your weapon's eih^e . . . .iHenry V 1 . ii. 1 
tliou mayst l)e turned to hobnails.... — iv. 10 

my heart is turned to stone — v. 2 

these words have turned my hate ..iHenryVl. iii 3 
and turned mv captive state to liberty — iv. 5 
all tlie trouble thou hast turned me to? — v. i 

it is tinned out of all towns Hichard III. i. 4 

hatli turned my feigned prayer — v. I 

and turned crowned kin's to TruilusSr Cress, ii. 2 

ore bent, wliy turned on liira — iii. 3 

my mind is now turned whore — v. 2 

must not be tossed and turned.. Timon of Alhent,Vr. I 
nutriment, when he is turned to poison? — iii. 1 

my throat of war be turned Coriulanus, iii. 2 

he turned me about with his — iv. 5 

sjieak, Cicsnr is turned to hear . . ..Julius Cceiar, i. 2 
is not the leaf turned down, where I — iv. 3 
liave to mine own turned enemy .... — v. 3 
art turned the greatest War.. Antony ^Cleopatra, i. 3 
I am sorry it i» turned to a drinking — ii. 6 

and then have turned mine eye Cymleline,\. 4 

here the leaf's turned down — ii.2 

most Coldest that ever turned ui> ace — ii. 3 
all turned to heicsi? away, away .. — iii. 4 
turned my leaping time into a crutch — iv. 2 
it is a day turned strangely: or betimes — v. 2 

which could have tuined a distaff — v. 3 

some, turned coward but by example — v. 3 

being oU to dolours turned? — v. 4 

and turned weeping out TilusAmlronieus, v. 3 

and 'tis turned to a rusty armour reticles, ii. 1 

torch, that's turned upside down .... — ii. 2 

I had turned the wrong side out Lear,\\. i 

turned her to foreign casualties — iv. 3 

turned that black word death . . Ilomeo ^Juliet, iii. 3 
with his head over his shoulder turned. Hamlet, ii. 1 
look, whether he has not turned his colour — ii. 2 
imperious Cajsar, dead, and turned to clay — v. 1 
the foul practice hath turned itself on me — v. 2 
love has turned almost the wrong side..O.'Ae/(o, ii. 3 

are we turned Turks? — ii. 3 

no, my heart is turned to stone — iv. 1 

turned your wit the seamy side without — iv. 2 

she turned to foUv, and she was a whore — v. 2 

TUKNED-FORTfl, be it known.. 7'i(u« .4>idron. v. 3 

Tt'H.\F/riI wood to stone Hamlet, iv. 7 

TITRNI NG away, let summer Twelftit Siglil, i. 5 

I will leave them at the next turning. iV/iic/i.4rfo, ii. 1 
with turning up your eyelids .... Lore'jL.Lo*/, iii. I 
Jove, turning mortal for thy love — iv. 3 (verses) 
at tin- next turning {rep.) .. Merclxant of Venice, ii. 2 
turning.' ills face, he put his hand .... — ii. 8 
turning these jests out of service ..Asyou Like it, i. 3 
turning again toward childish treble — ii. 7 
he should have old turning the key .. Macbeth, ii. 3 

turning, with splendour of his Aiii^JoAn, iii. 1 

rheum! turning dispiteous torture .. — iv. I 
souls by turning them from us .... Hichard II. iii. 3 
from one side to the other turuing .. — v. 2 

turning your books to graves 2Kc7iry /T. iv. I 

turuing the word to sword — iv. 2 

turning past evils to advantages — iv. 4 

turning the accomplishment oS.HenryF. i. (chorus) 

e'en lit turning o' the tide — ii. 3 

that slic is turning, anil inconstant .. — iii. 6 
ensign hi re of mine was turning ..JultusCtPsar, v. 3 
by lurning o'er authorities, I have ....Pericles, iii. 2 

he liol|i liv backwaiil turning Ilomeo ^Juliet, i. 2 

tiiniiiur hi> face to the dew-dropping > — i. 4 

TI'ltN'lT— todeath with turnips ..Merryirires,u\. 4 

TUl!.\'sTaway thy face T'idu j4H</riiiii(-ut, ii. ."i 

tiirii'jt mine eves into iny very soul ..Hamlet, iii. 4 

Tl'Ul'l ri'Di: ' full of turpitude. /Voi7i(«.^rrcfj. v. 2 

invinr|iitii'lc thou dost m crown. Antony ^ Cleo. iv.O 

TirlHirolSK; r had itof I,eah...Vfr.or/>Miw,iii. I 

TrUltl.T on this turret's top IHemyri. i. 4 

in voiuler turret stands _ iii. 2 

Tl'ltri.K-twenty lascivious tnrtles.A/frry IIVrM. ii. 1 
tencli him to know turtles from javB — iii. 3 

will these turtles be gone? lA>Te'sL.Losl, iv. 3 

when turtles tread, and rooks .... — v. 2 (song) 
tinlle! shall a bu/./.ard irep.). . Taming <if Shrnr, ii. 1 

so turtles pair, that never H'iniei'sTale, iv. 3 

I, an old turtle, will wing me — v. 3 

as turtle to her mote Tmilus f/ Cressidn, iii. 2 

TIIH'l'I.K-DDVKS, that could not ..\Henryll. ii.2 

TlI,St'.\.\-to see the Tuscan service.... /IH'i«>«, i. 2 

to the Tuscan wars, and never bed her — ii. 3 

TlTTOR-ond I ulors not so careful Tempest,! 2 

what, I soy, my foot my tutor! — i. 2 

to become her tutor Tiro (ien. <)/■ /Vcona. ii. I 

would 1 have thee to my tutor — iii. I 

beauteous tutors hove enriched.. Lore's L.Lost, iv. 3 
these arc their tutors: bid them . . Tumittg 0/ .^'A. ii. I 



TUTOR— a while to tutor me to l\\\s.Richard II. iv. 1 

tlie tutor and the feeder of my -ll^mriiir.y. 5 

to tutor thee in stratiigems Mlcmiil'l. iv. 5 

ah. tutor, look, where bloody ■illein i/V I. i. 3 

an assinego may tutor tiiee .. Troiius <^- Cfcf^f-ida, i. 3 

heaven bless thee from a tutor — ii, 3 

famed be thy tutor, and thy — ii. 3 

I'll say of it, it tutors mvture ..Timou ofAth-m, i. 1 

I was tlieir tutor to iui-truet TUusAndmii. y. I 

when nobles are tlieir tailors' tutors Lfn , iii. 2 

tntor me from quarreUinp! UrtmeoSfJuU'i, iii. I 

let V"ur own diseretiou be your tutor. . Hamlel. iii. 2 

TUTORED in tlie world ....riroden.r,/ rvmna, i. 3 

their sons are well tutored by you. Liff'..;,. Lo</, iv. 2 

been tutored in the rudiments !s ;/«» LiV.v i7, v. i 

good litters peace hath tutored -iHe ityiy. iv. 1 

tutored hv my art, a sleeping .. Romeo 4-Juliel, v. ?, 
TU-WlllT, to-who,amerry.i.o!'e'sL.LosJ,v. 2Csong) 

TW.VIN— and his son, being twain Tempfsi, i. 2 

go with me to bles.< this tviain — iv. 1 

to eleave a heart in twain Meas.forMens. iii. 1 

lover's twain, at largo discourse Miil.S.'sDrenm^v. I 

did he not send you twain? Love'sL.Lnst, v. 2 

I remit botli twain. I see v. 2 

be interposer 'twixt us twain .iMernli. ofVeiiii-e, iii. 2 
'tis bargained 'twi.xt ns twain. I'mnnvj :■!' s\i-rii\ ii. : 

what have we twain forgot? ll'hiiir's r.ile. i v. 'i 

for a dark hour, or twain Mucbi-ih, iii. 1 

tliis cause betwixt us twain Ricliard 11. i. I 

doth not pardon twain, but makes .. — v. 3 
yourself yonr.<elf in twain divide ..i Henry y I. iv. 5 

was broke in twain; by whom 2lienrijVl. i. 2 

we twain will ao into his higliness' .. — v. 1 
you twain of all the rest, are near. .3 ffoir!/ I'l. iv. 1 
with a sigh, would rive in twain. Troiliis 6Ciess. i. I 

imitation of these twain — i. 3 

divide eternity in twain — ii. 3 

none of him; tliey two are twain — iii. I 

a gory emulation 't^vixt IIS twain — iv. 5 

such a twain can do't, in whicli .Antony 4r Cleo. i. 1 
'tis time we twain did sh.ow ourselves — i. 4 

his soldiership is twice tlie other twain — ii. 1 
wars 'twixt j'ou twain would be as if — iii. 4 

could not out-peer these twain — iii. 6 

and us twain, that, striking in our ..Ci/mbeline, v. 4 
bite the holy cords in twain whieli are . . Lear, ii. 2 
hence a mile or twain, i' the way to Dover — iv. 1 

which twain have brought lier to — iv. 6 

you twain rule in this realm — v. 3 

bosom henceforth shall be twain flomeo Sr Juliet, iii. 5 
that hand that cut thy youth in twain — y. 3 

mischance between us twainl Hamlet, iii. 2 

thou hast cleft my heart in twain .. — iii. 4 

pure grief shore liis old thread in twain. 0//i(?(to, v. 2 

TWANGEl>-sharply twanged oS.Tu'elfliNi;;hl, iii. 4 

TWANULING instrinnents Tempesf, iii. 2 

rascal tiddler, and twangling Jack rawmg-o/SA. ii. 1 
TWAY— questicm 'tween you tway.... Henri/ r. iii. 2 

TWE.-VKS nie by the nose? gives me Hamlet, W.i 

TWKLFTIl day of December Twetrih XiX'/ii, ii. 3 

TWKl.VE years sinee, Jlirauda ^rep.^..^empest, i. 2 
till fcliou hast howded away twelve winters — i. 2 
elmot point-blank twelve score ..Merry Wives, iii. 2 

just 'twixt twelve and one (jep.) — iv. 6 

the Windsor bell hath struck twelve — v. 5 

may, in the sworn twelve Mens, for Mens, ii, I 

betwixt twelve and one? Mac.hAda, iv. 1 

of midnight hath told twelve. .il/irf.A'.'sDreain, v. 1 
until tlie twelve celestial signs ..LoveW.Los', v. 2 
three months from twelve . . Merchnnt of I'enice, i. 3 
let it be more than Alcides' twelve.. I'am.ofSli. i. 2 
and twelve tight galleys: these I .... — , ii. 1 
but jumps twelve foot and a half. H'inler'sTale, iv. 3 
tlie clock hath strnckeu v.^-elve. . Comedy orErr. I. 2 

and she goes down at twelve Macbeth, ii. 1 

thou Shalt have twelve thousand ., Ilichard II iii. 2 
in twelve, found truth in all, but {rep.) — iv. 1 

this present twelve o'clock XUenrylf. ii. 4 

will be a niarcli of twelve score — ii. 1 

some twelve days hence our general — iii. i 

clapped i' the clout at twelve score.. — iii. 2 

even just between twelve and one HenryV. ii. 3 

bore it twelve loaL'Ues, and sold it for — iii. '2 

flftv fortresses, twelve cities 1 Henry VI. iii. 4 

we lost twelve hundred men — iv. 1 

seven earls, twelve barons 2 Henry I'l. i. 1 

if there sit twelve women. Tinmn ofAih. iii. b (grace) 
beat me out twelve several times.. C'/iii'ula'ms, iv. 6 
would muster all from twelve to seventy — iv. b 
and but twelve persons there .. ..Aninny S-Cleo. ii. 2 
by land, and our twelve thousand horse — iii. 7 

one twelve moons more she'll wear l'ericles,u. .', 

my twelve months are expired — iii. 3 

some twelve or fourteen moonshines Lear, i. 2 

at twelve year old, I bade lier Romeo Sf Juliet, i. 3 

from nine till twelve is three long .. — W.i 
'tis now struck twelve; get thee to bed. .Hamfe(, 1 I 
'twixt eleven and twelve, I'll visit you .. — i. 2 

I think it lacks of twelve — i. 4 

about the world have times twelve thirties — iii. 2 

he liath laid, on twelve fur nine — v. 2 

to fall out hetweeu twelve and one .... Oihetlo, iv. 2 

TWELVE.Mi )NTH since TireWh M\'/ir, i. ■.' 

twelvemonth been her bedfellow MiirliAdr,, iv. 1 

a twelvemonth shall you spend .. Lnve'sL- Lost, v. 2 
a twelvemonth and a day I'll mark — v. 2 

at the twelvemonth's end, I'll change — v. 2 
you shall this twelvemonth term from — v. 2 
a twelvemonth? well liefal what (n'p.) — v. 2 
sir, it wants a twelvemonth and a day — v. 2 
school above a twelvemonth ..Mer. ot' Venice, iii. 4 
within l\\\i t.velvemonlh, or turn..-ls!/oiiL//te i/,iii. I 
betray a she-lamb of a twelvemonth — iii. 2 

our purpose is a twelvemonth old 1 HenrylV. i. 1 

laushat thisa twelvemonth lienceK'c/K(i.//;Mii. 2 

a twelvemonth longer, let me then Pericles, ii. 4 

that for this twelvemonth, she'll not .. — ii. 5 

TWELVIO-PENCI'; for vou Henry V.iv. 8 

TWl^NTIErU pait ofonepoor..l/«'r. o/r,-,/.cp, iv. I 
that is not twentieth part the tythe of. Hamlet, iii. 4 



TWENTY consciences, that .stand Tempest, ii. 1 

with twenty watchful, weary ..Tu-oGen.ofl'er. i. 1 

twenty to one then, he is — i. 1 

love hath twenty pair of eyes — ii. 4 

as twenty seas, if all their — ii. 4 

twenty thousand soul-confirming oaths — ii. 6 

with twenty odd-conceited — ii. 7 

if he were twenty sir .John Fal6tafi's.i1/cn-!/»f7i!p»,i. 1 
seen Sackerson loose twenty times .. — 1.1 

find you twenty lasciviuos turtles.... — ii. 1 

food even, and tweuty, good master — ii. I 
had myself twenty an^elsgiven.... — iii. 2 

carry a letter twenty miles — iii. 2 

though twenty thousand worthier come — iv. 4 
and twenty glowworms shall our .... — v. 5 

and cwenty "pounds of money — v. 5 

kiss me sweet and twenty.. Twelfllti^'iultt, ii. 3 fsong) 
and grew a twenty years removed tiling — v. 1 
twenty heads to tender irep.).... Meas.fnrilh"js. ii. 4 
for she'll be up twenty times a niglit. MuchAdo, ii. 3 
there's not one wise man among twenty — v. 2 
am compared to twenty thouaand. Loi?(?'s/.. Los^ v. 2 
twenty adieus, my frozen iVIuscovites — v. 2 
twenty what were good ii-ep.) ....Mer.of Venice, i. 2 
I should marr3' twenty husbands .... — i. 2 

I have sent tweuty out to seek for .. — ii. 6 

he trebled twenty times myself — iii. 2 

twenty merchants, the duke himself — iii. 2 

than t\\'enty times the value of — iii. 2 

the petty debt twenty times over — — iii. 2 

twenty of these puny lies I'll tell — iii. 4 

must measure twenty miles to-day .. — iii. 4 
there twenty brothers betwixt us.. AsyrtLike it, i. 1 
80 near our public court as twenty miles — i. 3 

and twenty such. What say'st thou? — iv. 1 

five and twenty, sir — y. 1 

or four and twenty times the pilot's ..All^sfVell, ii. 1 
love made your fortunes twenty times — ii. 3 
that twenty such rude boys might . . — iii. 2 

the dog for twenty pound laming af Sli. Kind.) 

tweuty caged nightingales do sing.. — 2 (indue.) 
twenty more such names and men.. — 2 (indue.) 
in possession, twenty thousand crowns — ii. 1 

with twenty such vile terras — ii. 1 

tricks eleven and twenty long — iv. 2 

near twenty years ago, in Genoa .... — iv. 4 
twenty crowns. Twenty crowns!.... — v. 2 
but twenty times so much upon my.. — v. 2 
their losses twenty thousand crowns — v. 2 

between ten and three ai d tw.enty Winter'sT. iii. 3 
two and twenty, hunt this weather? — iii. 3 

made me four and twenty nosegays for — iv. 2 
brought to bed of twenty money-bags — iv. 3 
make me to think so twenty years .. — v. 3 

no, not these twenty years — v. 3 

but twenty times you have . . Comedy of Errors, Iii. 2 
twenty years have I been patron .... — v. 1 

with twenty trenched gashes on Macbeth, iii. 4 

with twenty mortal murders on .... — iii. 4 

I can buy me twenty at any — iv. 2 

of a grief hath twenty shadows Richard II. ii. 2 

the blood of twent3' thousand men .. — iii. 2 
[Co^] name twenty thousand names? — iii. 2 
deny'st it, twenty times thou liest .. — iv. 1 
to answer twenty thousand such .... — iv. 1 
were he twenty times iny son, I would — v. 2 
two and twenty knights, ijalked in ..1 HenrylV. i. 1 
any time these two and twenty years — ii. 2 
leiit you, four and twenty pound .... — iii. 3 
thief, of the age of two and twenty .. — iii. 3 
and if it make twentj', take them all — iv. 2 
when he was not six and twenty strong — iv. 3 
have sent me two and twenty yards .'IHenrylV. i. 2 
to five and twenty thousand men (re;;.) — i. 3 

let it be but twenty nobles — ii. I 

tliat's to make hi ni eat twenty of .. .. — ii. 2 
are twenty weak and wearied posts .. — ii. 4 

four hundred one and twenty years HenryV. i. 2 

had twenty years been made — ii. 4 

with me for twenty English prisoners? — iii. 7 
French may l.av twenty French crowns — iv. 1 

other men, hut five and twenty — iv. 8 

by three and twenty thousand of I Henry VI. i. 1 

barons, and tweiit,^' reverend blshojis.'i/it'nrj/A'/. i. 1 
had I twenty' times so many foes (?t:7/.> — ii. 4 

with twenty thonsaiid kisses — iii. 2 

dare him twenty thousand times — iii. 2 

your loving uncle, twenty times his — iii. 2 

made us pay one and twenty fifteens — iv. 7 
hard by with twenty thousand miiu..ZHenryVI. i. 2 

five men to twent,^'^ — i. 2 

amount to five and twenty tliousand — ii- 1 
than to accomplish twenty gulden, .. — iii. 2 

and twenty times made pause Richard III. i. 2 

but while one would tell twenty — i. 4 

gold were as good as twenty orators.. — iv. 2 

kiss you twenty with a breath Henry VIII. i. 4 

has hung twenty years aboiic his iieek — ii- 2 
this obertience, upwards of twenty years — ii. 1 
o' my conscience, twenty of the dog-days — v. 3 
he ne'er saw three and twenty. 7'io/(ii-.<|C'' <•«"'•', i. 2 
Aleibiades, and some twenty horse. 7'!™o» ofAth. i. 1 

■which makes it five and twenty — ii. 1 

my horse, and buy twenty' more better — ii. 1 
no assembly of twenty be without — iii. 6 (grace) 
exp'.'Cting in return twenty for one? — iv. 3 

eves snt tuinty thousand doatlis ..Cnriolanuv, iii. 3 

burn like twuiitv torches juined luliuxCtesnr,]. 3 

he that eius oif twenty years of life.. — iii. I 
and twent\' [Oi/.A'u/. -thirty] wounds — v. I 

I have K'L'ii liL-r die t wen ty times. /iH/oiiy .J- Cieo. i. •> 
ay, madam, twenty several messengers — i. ."j 

were't twenty of the greatest tributaries — iii. II 
twenty times of better fortune (rep.) — iv. 2 

ago? ^ome f.venty years Cymbeline, i. 1 

take two from twenty for his heart .. — ii. 1 

and, this twenty years, this rock — iii. 3 

eacli one the slaughierman of twenty — v. 3 
these twenty years hiive I trained up — v. 5 
oltive aud twenty valiant sons .. Titus Andron. i. 2 



TWENTY"— buried one and twenty- 7'i7«t.-lnrfron. i. 2 
for two and twenty sons I never v.ept — iii. 1 
would she for t« enty thousand more — iv. 2 
twenty Popish tricks and ceremonies — v. 1 
my tidings gave me twenty kisses.. .. — v. I 

than twenty silly ducking observants Lear, ii. 2 

there's not a nose among twenty — ii. 4 

to biing but five anil twenty (re;;.) _ ji. 4 

doth double ti\e and twenty ijep.) — ii. 4 

some five and twenty years Romeo ^Juliet, i. 5 

thine eye, than twenty of tlieir Bwords — ii. 2 

'tis twenty years till then — ii. 2 

and twenty such Jacks — ii. 4 

[ it beats as it would fall in twenty pieces — ii. 5 

some twenty of them fought (rep.) .. — iii. 1 

I with twenty hundred thousand limes — iii. .^ 

I go hire me twenty cunning cooks .... — iv. 2 

j the strength of twenty men — v. 1 

I give twenty.fui-ty, fifty, a hundred Hamlel,M. 2 

I twenty thousand ducats, will not debate — iv. 4 
I imininent death of twenty thousand men — iv. 4 
you i' the earth three and twenty years.. — v. I 
I thee known, though I lost twenty lives .Othello, v. 2 
t impediments than twenty times vour stop — v. 2 
TWENTY-FIVE years hive I . .Comedy or Rrr. v. 1 

twenty-five wounds upon him Crninlanus,ii. 1 

TWENT'Y-NINE years 2 Henry IV. ii. 4 

TWE\TY-ONE, your father's .... IIV.,/,.,-'.,/Vj/e, v. I 
TWENTY-SEVEN: every gash was.c,,,-,,,/,,,.,,,, ii. | 

TWENTY-SIX; and Cliarles lirniyi: i. i 

lie dead one hundrt'd twenty-si.x — i\'. s 

TWENTY-TUIiEE years ir„Uc;'sTnlr,\. 2 

twenty-three days they have been absent — ii. 3 

TWICE, and cry so, so 3>m;)es/, iv. I 

or e'er your pulse twice beat — v. 1 

one dear son, shall I twice lose — v. 1 

twice, or thrice [rep. iii. I) .. TuoCen. of Verona, i. 2 
in one line is liis name twice writ.... — i. 2 
who askerl them once or Wice. ... Merry IVit^es, iii. 3 
.twice treble shame on Angelo ..Mens, for Mens. iii. 2 
did show me the way twice o'er ...... — iv. 1 

ere twice the sun hath made — iv. 3 

twice have the trumiiets sounded .... — iv. 6 

a victory is twice itself, when Much.ido,\. 1 

he hath twice or thrice cut Cupid's .. — iii. 2 
twice sod simplicity, bis coctus!.. Aoue's I,. J.os(, iv. 2 

offending twice as much — iv. 3 

and so adieu; twice to your visor .... — v. 2 
have a serpent sting thee t'vtci'i.. Mer.of Venice, iv 1 

it is twice blessed — iv. 1 

yea, twice the sum — iv. I 

twice did he turn his back As you Like it, iv. 3 

ere twice the horses of the sun shall .. All's IVell, ii. 1 
ere twice in murk and occidental.. .- — ii. I 
twice to-day picked out the. Taming of Sh. 1 (indue.) 
who, for twice seven years, hath.... — 1 (indue.) 
and twice as much, whate er thou.. ., — ii. 1 

what? have I twice said well? fVintcr'sTak, i.i 

I have spoke to the purpose twice .... — i. 2 
bolted by the northern blasts twice o'er — iv. 3 
for once, or tu ice, I was about to speak — iv. 3 

privately, twice or thrice a day — v. 2 

meet by twice five leagues ,.,, Comedy of Errors, \. 1 

nor twice, but twenty times — iii. 2 

in every point twice done : Macbeth, i. 6 

witnesses, twice fifteen thousand ....KingJohn, ii. 1 
life is as tedious as a twice told tale — iii. 4 

till twice five summers have enriched. Ri'cAard II. i. 3 

much more than twice all this — iii. 1 

twice for one step I'll groan — v. 1 

twice saying pardon, doth not pardon — v. 3 
spake it twice, and urged it twice .. — v. 3 

such as had been asked twice MIenrylV.iv. 2 

cannot once or twice a quarter 2 Henry I V. v. 1 

I have been merry twice and once .. — v. 3 
the trumpets have sounded twice .... — v. 5 
who twice a day their withered hande.Henry V. iv I 
killing them twice. O give us leave.. — ' iv. 7 

at this gentleman twice or thrice — v. 1 

twice m^' father! twiceami \ Hetiry VI. ly. ^ 

and twice by awkward wind from. .'^Henry VI. iii. 2 

blows, twice two for one Ziienry V I. i. 4 

hath twice done salutation liiclmrd'l 11. v. 3 

a fool, to bid me farewell twice.. Timon ni Alliens, i. 1 

twice five liiindred, and their Coriolanus, ii. a 

being censor t-v ice, was his great — ii. 3 

his soldiership is twice the other. /ln(o)iy<^-C/fo. ii. 1 
that's twice. How should that be? .. — ii. 7 
I'll make a journey twice as far .. ..Cyntbeline, ii. 4 

from ott' our coast, twi{?s be:iten — iii. I 

such as I can, twice o'er, I'll weep .. — iv. 2 

an old man twice a hoy — v. 3 

iEneas tell the tale twice o'er .. Tiins .Andron. iii. 2 
come not, in twice six moons . . Pericles, iii. (Gower) 

to make the world twice rich — iii. 2 

I ha<l rather than tw-ice the worth .... — jv. 6 

and thou art twice her love Lenr, ii. 4 

where t^viee so man3- have a command .. — ii 1 

'faith, once or twice she heaved — iv. 3 

twice then the trumpet sounded — v. 3 

this dreaded sight, twice seen of us Hnmlel, i. 1 

thus, tw^iee before, and jump at this .... — i. 1 

an vdil man is twice a child — ii. 2 

nay, 'tis twice twu months, my lord .... — iii. 2 

TWiG— the threatening twigs Meas. forMens. i. 4 

are limed with the twigs All's'l'ell, iii. f> 

I must go look my twigs — iii. 6 

snpportance to the bending twigs ..Ric'nnd II. iii. i 

put forth disordered twifjs HenryV. v. 2 

TWIGGEN [Coi.-wickerJ bottle o//..,-Hn, ii. 3 

TWlLLED-[ro/.K)i(.] twilled brims.. '.".->»;.-•.«(, iv 1 

TWIN brotiier of thy letter Meiiyllires, ii. 1 

is not moie twin tlian these Tn-elf:h.\ij;hi,v. 1 

male twins, both alike Comedy of Errors, i. 1 

one of the other twins was bound.... — i. 1 

and the twin Dromio, all were — v. I 

those twins of learning Henry VIII. iv. 2 

who twin, as 'twere, in love Coriolnnu\. iv. 4 

like a ixiir of t-vins appeared An inn y <^cien iii. 3 

silk, twin with the ruby cherry. Ptfriclcj, v. (Gower) 



— ii. 1 



— iii. 1 



'I'WIN-BOllN with gieiitiicss Ilennii: iv. 

TWI.N'K iimv loiul me Mmli.Un, iv. 

i> kt me (Willi.' mine arms Coriolmuu, iv 

TWI.\I\-iiv. witlia twliik Ifmi„'ti. iv. 

tliiit in » twinlt she won mc .. Taiiiini; (!/"S/ir<-H', ii. 

TWIXICI,!'; ill llicir splieica Uomeo^Juliel, ii. 

TWI.VKI.I'.l) "II my bii.itiinliziiiR ti-oi-, i. 

TWlNi;i.lN(i-a l\x\nklins»Uir.riro(ien. offer, ii. 

ill llie twiiililini,' orun eye . . MerchnnI nf I'niice, ii. 

twiiilcliii): niiotlier counterfeited ....l//piiii//i. v. 
TWINNKDIiimlw. tliat did ir.n/fr'j/Vid', i. 

twinned lirotliera of one Komb.Timon of Allirn%, iv. 

and tlie twinned >toiies ujion CymMlnr, i. 

tliiiiiKli lie Imd twinned witli ino tithelio, ii. 

TWIST so fine a story? Mueh.Ulo, i. 

lilicn twist of rotten silk ConVidimn, v. 

TWISTED from lier womb Kin^'Jnhn. iv. 

iirisoiicr in iiis tw i jted ny vcs . . Iloineo ^- Jiiliei. ii. 
TWIT-slie twits me witli ..TiroGeii.o/ leiotia, iv. 

and twit with cowiirdieen man ....I HeiirijI'l. iii. 

Iiiitli In; not twit our sovereign lai\y.'2lleniyyi. iii. 

TWIlTlNtl iiic witli perjury 3Hnii|//7. v. 

TWO -Sit liei- tun courses Tempest, i. 

Bt U-iisI tw.' ^'hisses — i. 

nfier two dii.vs I will di^cliarge tliee 

Wf two. iiiv lord, will ^'imrd 

four leu's, and two voiirs 

two Xeiiliolitans 'sciipLdl 

cin'oiiiuei- of two most rare nffectionB 

if tin- otiier two lie liniin'd like us .... — iii. 

a tion or two I'll walk — iv. 

two<iftlie.<i- fellows you — v. 

word or two of c immendation . . TiroGen.q/Ter. i. 

deliberate a day or two — i. 

to you tMO thousand — ii. 

where liave von Iwen tliese two days — iv. 

unless thou Iiiidst two — v. 

pitv two siioli iVieuds should — v. 

anil two E'lwiud shovel-boards .. ..lUerrj/ »»'/»<■«, i. 

cost nic two shillings and two pence — i« 

two yards, and more — i. 

ill tlie wai.-t two yards about — i. 

I vill nut all his two stones — i. 

when he would put us two — ii. 

a word or two? Two thousand, fair.. — ii. 

one, two, tree, four, come for? — ii. 

six or seven, two, tree hours — ii. 

vou two would marry — iii. 

lie sure of that, two other husbands.. — iii. 

send hi ra by your two men — iii. 

I shall make two in the company.... — iii. 

if tliere he one or two — iii. 

how my father stole two geese out .. — Iii. 

sir John lalstafF from my two mistresses — iii. 

how many numbers is in nouns? Tw o — iv. 

we 1 10 will still be the ministers .. .. — iv. 

let us two devise to bring him — iv 

we two in great aniazedness — iv. 

from the two parties, forsooth — iv. 

we two must go together — v. 

I am resolved nn two points TwelfiliKighl, i. 

two faults, Miidonna, that drink .... — i. 

item, two lips indilfurent red (rep.) .. — i. 

I will plant you two, and let — ii. 

some two thousand strong, or so .... — iii. 

a couplet or two of most sa^e saws .. — iii. 

an ounce or two of this malapert blood — iv. 

make your two affirmatives — v. 

put you in mind; one. two, three .... — v. 

I have travelled but two hours — v. 

one habit, and two persons — v. 

an apple cleft in two — v- 

than tiie>e two creatures — v. 

proiuis'-'(l to meet me two liours . . Mens, for Meat. i. 

within two liours — i. 

have a thief or two, guiltier — ii. 

two notorious benefactors — ii. 

sir, we liave but two in the lioiise .... — ii. 

and having but two in the dish — ii. 

and free jiardon, are of two houses .. — ii. 

a word or two with Claudio — iii. 

wince, of two usuries, the merriest.... — iii. 

beL'ot between two stock-fishes — iii. 

witliin these two doys he will be here — iv. 

and by my two faiths and troths MiichA:lo, i. 

but break a comparison or two on me — ii. 

and I, with your two lieliis — ii. 

in tlie shape of two coumnes at once — iii. 

and then the two bears will not bite — iii. 

liere uixin the church-bench till two — iii. 

two of them did, the prince and Claudio — iii. 

on' two men ride of a horse — iii. 

comprehended two as|)iciou8 persons — iii, 

would the tw^o princes lie? — iv. 

twoof them have the very bent — iv. 

ond one that hath two gowns — iv. 

he shall kill twoof us — v, 

two nows simpiied oH' with two old men — v. 

there's a double tongue, there's two.. — v. 

two of my brotiier's men Iwuiid — v, 

one lied, two iKisoras (rep.) ....Mid.\.'tDrcamt ii. 

no, make it two more — iii 

but there is two liard thing* — iii, 

then will two at once, wixj one — iii. 

put in two scales, will even weigh .. — iii 

the counsel tliat we two have shared — iii 

like two artilleial K'kIs — iii. 

two lovely berries, inoiildedon one (.rep.) — iii 

two of the Hrst. like coats — iii 

twoof both kinds makes lip four .... — iii 
I had rather havea Imnilfiil.or two.. — iv 
I know, you two are rival enemies .. — iv 

and there is two or three lorils — iv 

down lietivcen the two neighbours .. — v 

here eoine two noble beasts in — v 

dance, between two of our company — v 

amount to one more than two ....Lore'iL.Loil, i 
anil study three years ill two words.. — i 

or the three, or tlie two; or one of .. — i 

with two pilcli balls stuck iu her face — iii 



TWDi overcame, three LnvrsL.Loil, iv. I Ueller) 

luiieii: can you — iv. 'J 



. for 111 



not In 

the other iwoeonelniles iti o. u — 

nay then, iwo ireys, (and if you grow — 

she is two nionlh* on her way ...... — 

that the two leaiind men have — 

we two will leave you ,Ve, chant of I'e 

me coinpjuiy hot two years more — 

two gniiiH of wheat hid in tw<i bushels — 

Uodilefendniefii.in llicse twol — 

ui till II the.se two months — 

we have two hours to furnish us .,.. — 

a sealed bug, two sealed bags — 

two stones, two rich and precious, , . — 

but I go away with two — 

cost me two tiiousand ducats (»^*;>,) .. — 

pause a day or two, before you hazard — 

some month or two, before you — 

like one of two contending — 

there is a monastery two miles off .. — 

the prettier fellow of the two — 

and turn two mincing steps into , . .. — 

why, if two :;..ils ^hciild play some .. — 
lay two 



two thi 






iilril 1 



.re , . . 





1 




n 




3 




5 




2 




G 


IV 


1 



1 christenin;,' thou shalt have two .. — iv. 1 

grant me two things, I pray you .... — iv. 1 

take aught but the two rings — v, 1 

being two hours to day _ v, 1 

never two ladies loved as they do. , .is tjnu Like it, i. 1 

which of the two was daughter — i, 2 

then there were two cousins laid up — i. 3 

from whom I took two cods — ii. 4 

like tlie encounter of two dog-apes .. — Ii. ,^ 

oppressed with two weak evils — ii. 7 

and we two will rail against our .... — iii. 2 

for these two hours, Kosalitid (I'e;).).. — iv. 1 

by two o'clock I will be with thee {.lep.) — iv. I 

is it not past two o'clock? — iv, 3 

betwixt us two, tears our recountinents — iv. 3 

but the fight of two rams — v, 2 

come two of the banished duke's pa:-es — v. 3 

like two gipsies on a horse — v. 3 

audience for a word, or two — v. ■! 

is but for two months victualed — v, -i 

CA'n(.] it will make itself two Air s Well, i. I 

such difference betwixt their two estates — i. 3 

tliat dare leave two together — ii. 1 

safer than mine own two, more dear — 

think thee, for two ordinaries — 

if 1 were but two hours younger .... — 

but for two things. What two things? _ 

'twill be two days ere I shall see you — 
between two soldiers and my young lady — 
claji upon you two or three probable lies — 

to beguile two hours in a sleep — 

sir. Ins wife, some two months sineo — iv. 3 

and Gratii, two hundred and fifty each — iv, 3 

a cheek of two pile and a half — iv, 5 

yet for a nigiit or two ., Taming of .•ilnpir, 2 (.iuducl 

(for aught I see,) two and thirty .... — i. 2 

as many diseases as two and lifty i, 2 

he that has the two fair daughters .. — i. 2 

hear 1 do, that he hath two — i. 2 

where two raging fires meet togetiier — ii. I 

two thousand ducats by the year (re;;.) — ii. I 

besides two galliasses, and twelve.... — ii. 1 

one clift', two notes have I — iii. 1 (gamut) 

with two broken points iii, j 

which hath two letters for her — iii. 2 

at the furthest for a week or two .... — iv, 2 

I confess two sleeves iv. 3 

I dare luisnre you, sir, 'tis almost two — iv. 3 

as those two eyes become that — iv.h 

a hundred pound or two, to make.... v. I 

have at you for a bitter jest or two .. — v. 2 

it maimed you two outright — v. 2 

but you two are sped: 'twas I _ v. 2 

we were, fair queen, two lads Ifinler's Tnle, i. 2 

my lord the verier wag o' the two? . . — i. 2 

we two will walk, my lord _ i. 2 

aiui will, by twos, and threes, at several — i. 2 

my hence departure two davs ago.... — i, 2 

lest that the treachery of the two — ii. 1 

her eyes became two spouls; the fury — iii, 3 

of iiiiieteeii, and two and twenty .... iii. 3 

they have scared away twoof niy.... — iii, 3 

I have seen two such sights — iii, 3 

a race, or two, of ginger; but that.... — iv, 2 

one of these two inu t be necessities. . iv. 3 

which we two have sworn shall come — iv. 3 

the tune of, Two Maids Wooing a iMaii iv. 3 

I will bring these two moles iv, 3 

meeting of the two kings? (rrp.) — v. 2 

joyful mother of two goodly aous.Cowcih/vfUrr. i, I 

not meaiil.v proud of two such bovB.. ' — i, I 

we di.^cove"|■ed two ships from far'..,. — i, 1 

sure, I.iiciana, it is two o'clock ii. i 

at two hands with me, and that my two — ii. I 

for til o; and sound ones too "... — ii. ^ 

for, if we two be one. and thou — ii. 2 

in Gphcsus, 1 am but two hours old — ii. 2 

it was two ere 1 left him _ iv. 3 

he owes? Two hundred ducats — iv. 4 

gnawed in two my cords _ v. 1 

I see two huKbanits. or mine eyes .... v. 1 

bore thee at a hurilen two fair sons .. — v. I 

these two Antipholus' these two (.rep.) v. 1 

wiiicli of you two did dine with — v. 1 

06 two spent swimmers, that do Marbelh, i. 2 

two truths are told 

his two cbanilierluins will I with 

those sleepy two of his own clianiher . 

there are two lodged together 

tile king's two sons, are stolen 

the twodelimiuents tear 

'lis two or three, my loid 

I liuvu two uights watched with 



TWO! why, then 'tis time Mnrl,eth,v. I 

the nianngc nf two kingdoms must ..KingJolm,'}. I 

if my legs were two such — i. 1 

two such silver euireiits (rc/j.) _. ii. 2 

the fury of two desperate men _ Iii. I 

like heralds 'twixt two dreoiiful battles — Iv, 2 

for 'twill be two long days journey .. iv. 3 

wheii; these two Christian armies.... v, 2 

an hour or two before — v. 5 

clamour of two eager tongues Ilichard 11. i. 1 

are like two men that vow _ i. 3 

there lies two kinsmen, digged — iii. 3 

didst send two of thy men iv. I 

that owes two buckets filling one ,... — iv 1 

so two, together weeping, make one woe — v, 1 

of our two cousins coming into — v, a 

my lord, some two days since I saw.. — v, 3 

and these two beget a generation .... — v. 5 

two of the dangen us consorted Irnitors — v. 6 
bold Scots, two and twenty knight.s .1 lleiiryjy. i. I 

well, for twoof them, I know... — i, 2 

and two razes of ginger, to be — ii, t 

I think, it he two o'clock — ii, I 

I know a trick worth two of that , , . . — ii, I 

any time these two and twenty years — ii, 2 

be not two arrant cowards — ii. 2 

leave you within tliese two liours,.,. — ii. 3 

O lord, sir! I would it had been two — ii. 4 

dozen of them two hours together.. ii. 4 

if there were not two or three — ii, 4 

1 have pciipered twoof them; two .. — ij. 4 

thou saidst but two, even now — ii. 4 

FO, two more already ii. 4 

eleven buckram men grown out of two! — ii. 4 

we two saw you four set on four (rep.) — ji. 4 

there are two gentlemen have ii, 4 

I think it be two o'clock ii. 4 

sack, two gallons, 5*. 8(/ ii. 4 

I'll nwny within these two hour? ,... iii. I 

any time this two and thirtv years .. iii. 3 

yea, two and two, Newgate'fa'shiou.. — iii, 3 

of the age of two and twenty iii. 3 

at two o'clock i' the afternoon iii. 3 

and the half shirt is two napkins — iv. 2 

I have two boys, seek Percy, and thvself — v. 4 

two Ftiirs keep not their motion .". _ v. 4 

but now, two paces of the vilest cai th — v. 4 

sent me two and twenty yards illcnryll'. i. 2 

I take but two shirts out _ i. 2 

seven groats and two, I can get no,. _ i. 2 

brine a rescue or two: tliou wo't ii. I 

and those two things. I confess — ii, 2 

and metliou»ht he had made two holes — ii. 2 

put on two leather jerkins (i-fp. ii, 4) _ ii. 2 

there were two honours lost ii, 3 

you two never meet, but you fall.... ii. 4 

as rheumatic as two dry toasts ii. 4 

sir .Tolin, with two bullets ii. 4 

what, with two points on your ii. 4 

what's a joint of mutton or two in .. ii. 4 

and, in two years after, were thev .. iii. I 

here come two of sir .John Falstn'fT's men — iii. 2 

here is two more called than your .. iii. 2 

make him a philosopher's two stones — iii. 2 

revives two greater in the heirs iv. I 

which is four terms, or two actions .. v. I 

there is lint two ways, either to utter — v. 3 

there lint h been a man or two lately v. 4 

it will he two o'clock ere they _ v. 5 

ore now confined two mighty .. Henry J'. I. (chorus) 

and two hundred good esquires i. 1 

for never tw'o such" kingdoms 1^2 

come, shall I make you two friends? _ ii. I 

as two yoke devils, sworn to cither's — ii. 2 

it is nw- two o'clock iii. 7 

I have built two chantries iv. 1 

lie will give ynu two hundred _ iv. 4 

the man. that has hut two legs — jv. 7 

being two, are one in love _ v. 2 

between two hawks, which flies (rij).). I Hat. I'l. ii. 4 

that two such noble peers as ye iii. I 

were discovered two mightier troojis — iv. 3 

whom, two hours since, I met in .... iv 3 

two Tnlhots. winged through _ iv. 7 

the Turk, that Iwo and fifty kingdoms — iv. 7 

that divided was into two parts v. 2 

and those two counties, I will y_ 3 

rlianpe twodnkedoms for (r/-/). i.:!i..51/f)oj/;'/. i, 1 

n mnim J two pulls nt once _ ii. 3 

there's two of vin: the devil make ,. — iii. 2 

even tlius two friends Col. demned — iii, 2 

to pity two thousand crowns iv. 1 

tlicv have been up tbc-e two doys. ... iv. 2 

by herheliad twoeluldren _ iv, 2 

both upon two poles hither _ iv, 7 

to the ta I; p my Iwo brave bears .... v, 1 

blows, twice two for one ZIleniuTl. i. 4 

would buv till) hours' life _ ii. « 

lie'U ruilier give her two _ iii. 2 

muse wlnit iluit we two have hod.... — iii. 2 

of three core and two years _ iii. 3 

here some two li. urs hence v. 1 

two of thy name, both dukes _ v. 1 

two Clillords, as the father oiid (rrp.) _ v. 7 

with them, the two brave bears _ v. 7 

entertain a score or twoof tailors ..lltchnril 111. i,2 

some two days since, were woitli _ i. 3 

if two such imirdcrers OS yourselves.. _ i. 4 

but now, two mirrors of his princely _ ii. 2 

ami plucked two crutches from my.. — ii. 2 

let not Us two stay at home Ji! 2 

acrust at two hours old; 'twas f\ill two — ii. 4 

someday, or two, your Irtghness ,... _ Hi. | 

inuraiize two meanings in one word — iii. I 

there ore two councils held _ iii. 2 

stand between two cliurchinen (rfu.) _ iii' 7 

with two right reverend fathers .... — iii. 7 

Mieditating with two deep divines .. _ iii. 7 

looker-oiiof two fair queens _ iv. 1 

kill two enemies. Why, then thou (rep.)— iv. 2 



TWO rem. K„l.-tol chiiaren Ilich.,, dill. 

only motkeil witli two fiiir babes .... — iv. 4 

wliere b- tliy two sons? — iv. •! 

that tliy two sweet 60119 smotlierud .. — iv. 1 

wliich now, two tender bedfellows .. — iv. 4 

to see only a show or two Uenriirill. (|iiol.) 

richly in two short hours — (prol.) 

tho.^e two lights of men, met in — i. 1 

the two kings, equal in lustre — i. I 

a fit or two on the face — i.3 

confessor to one or two of these? .... — i. 4 

two women placed together makes .. — i. 4 

two equal men: tlie queen shall .... — ii. 2 

the two great cardinals wait — iii. 1 

two reverend cardinal virtues — iii. I 

what two reverend bishops — iv. 1 

till Cianiner, Cromwell, her two hands — v. I 

yuu speak of two the most remarked — v. I 

yon shall have two noble partners .. — v. 2 

the running banquet of two beadles.. — v. 3 

eliall hold you play these two months — v. 3 

and sleep an act or two — (epilogue) 

is the better man of the two. . Troilus <S Cresuda, i. 2 

[C'oi.A'n;.] but two and fifty hairscrfp.) — i. 2 

between the two moist elements .... — i.3 

as stntf for these two to make — i.3 

are dogged with two strange followers — i. 3 

two eurs shall tame each other — i.3 

two traded pilots 'twixt the — ii. 2 

not taken till tliese two undermine it — ii. 3 

none of him. they two are twain .... — iii. 1 

we two, that with so many — iv. 4 

these two may run mad — v. I 

Hector company an hour or two .... — v. I 

how these two did co-act — v. 2 

shall sunder our two hates — v. 11 

some two months hence my — v. H 

sent 5^our honour two brace of. . Timon of Athens^ i. 2 

with two stones more than — ii. 2 

it turns in less than two niglits? .... — iii. 1 

if, after two days' shine, Athens .... — iii. 5 

if you had sent but two hours before iii. 6 

once lived to see two honest men?.... — v. 1 

and you this, but two in company . . v. 1 

thou art, two villains shall not be .. — v. 1 

by two of their most reverend senate — v. 2 
you two are old men; tell me one , . Coriolanus, ii. 1 

that you two have not in abundance? — ii, 1 

do yon two know how you are censured ii. 1 

meeting two such weal's-men ii. 1 

in the neck, and two in the thigh.... ii. 1 

by ones, by twos, and by threes _ ii. 3 

there is in all two wortliy voices .... ii. 3 

bear of wounds two dozen odd — ii.3 

when two authorities are up, neither iii. 1 

best of them; yea, the two tribunes.. iii. I 

I'd crave a word or two iii. 1 

tl\e Volsces with two several powers — iv. 6 

grain or two, to leave unburiit (^rep.) — v. I 

there's two or three of us have lulmsCmar, i. 3 

some two months hence _ ii. I 

we were two lions littered — ii. 2 

that one of two bad ways 3'ou — iii. 1 

be friends, as two such men sliould . . — iv. 3 

toucli thy instrument a strain or two? — iv. 3 

two mighty eagles fell — v. I 

are yet two Romans living v. 3 

two several times by night v. 5 

that we two went to school together _ v. 5 
equality of two domestic powers.. ^n/oni/ 4-Cleo. i. 3 

Vfai'lMvin two days upon me — ii, 4 

here they miglit take two thicies — ii. 6 

my heart parted betwixt two friends — iii. 6 

tend me to-niglit two liDurs iv. 2 

in question, two other sons Cymleline, i. 1 

he had two sons (if this be worth — i. 1 

I had set betwixt two charming words — i. 4 

and by such two, that would i. 5 

and have our two wagers recorded .. — \. h 

thief-stolen, as my two brothers .... i. 7 I 

'twixt two such slies, would chatter.. — i. 7 

two creatures, heartily i. 7 

cannot take two from twenty ii. 1 

one, two, three,— time, time! ii. 2 

were two winking Cupids ii. 4 

a day, or two, or longer iii. I 

yet not, that we two are asunder .... iii' 2 

but that two villains, whose false — iii. 3 

to him the other two shall minister.. — iii. 3 

at tliree, and two years old iii. 3 

I have not seen these two days iii! 6 

and for two nights together liave — iii. 6 

two beggars told me, I Could not miss — iii. 6 

blazon 'st in these two princely boys! iv. 2 

he, with two striplings v. 3 

an old man, and two boys! (rep.) .... v. 3 

a mother, and two brotliers v. 4 

that two of us are as good v. .^ 

these two young gentlemen _ vis 

and I must lose two of the sweetest.. — v. 5 

I have got two worlds by't — v. Ij 

point thj' two sons forth _ v. 5 

court can feast two brides Tilus.-lndrunicus, i. 2 

not tlie difference of a year, or two .. — ii. 1 

broad awake two hours and more — ii. 2 

these two liave 'ticed me hither ii.3 

two of thy whelps, fell curs ii. j 

bare of her two branches? _ ii. s 

for two and twenty sons I never wept — iii. I 

shall distil from thesr two ancient urns — iii. 1 

to rescue in3' two brothers from — iii. i 

to ransom my two nephews from ... iii. | 

the heads of thy two noble sons (re;).) — iii. 1 

for these two heads do seem to speak — iii. I 

two may keep counsel, when ~ i v. 2 

'twas lier two sons (irp.) ^_ v. I 

he had his two sons' heads _ v. 1 

set dcaillv enniilv hitween two _ v.: 

rCo/. K-,,/.] provide tliee two proper .. _ v. 2 

know you tlieic two? — v. 2 



TWO of her brothers were Tilu.'i.itidrouims, v. 2 

and make two pasties of your — v. 2 

and yet in two, as you will Vive.l'ericles, i. 1 (riddle) 

two anmmers iA'7i/. -to hunger's] — i. 4 

ma}' tlie two latter darken — iii. 2 

hurt in parting two that fought — iv. 1 

Cornwall, and Albany, with my two Lear,i. 1 

ay, two hours together — i. 2 

I have not seen him this two days — i. 4 

has banished two of his daughters — i. 4 

I had two coxcombs, and two daughters — i. 4 

more than two tens to a score — i. 4 

I'll give thee two crowns. What two.... — i. 4 

the two crowns of the egg — i. 4 

is it two days ago since 1 — ii. 2 

though they had been but two hours .... — ii. 2 

under two commands, hold amity? — ii. 4 

with two perniciousdaughters joined.... — iii. 2 

hast thou given all to thy two daui'hters? — iii. 4 

cries in Tom's belly for two white herring — iii. 

liis eyes were two full moons — iv. G 

harms, that my two sisters have — iv. 7 

we two alone will sing like birds — v. 3 

]twixt two extremes of passion — v. 3 

if fortune brag of two slie loved — v. 3 

two households, both alike . . liomeo SfJuHel, (prol.) 



— (prol.) 

— (pr9l.) 



— II. 4 



— iv. 1 



. Hamlet, i. 1 



the fatal loins of these two foes . . 

is now the two hours' traffic 

two of the house of the Montagues . . 

let two more summers wither 

swears a prayer or two, and sleeps ,. 
lie all in one or two men's bauds .... 

was but a ward two years ago 

my lips, two blushing pilgrims 

two of the fairest stars in all 

two such opposed foes encamp them 
one, two, and the third in your bosom 
a sail I Two, two; a sliirt, and a smock 

her fan's the fairer of the two 

two may keep counsel, putting one., 
holy church incorporate two in one., 
an' there were two such, we sliould . . 
wiiois living if those two are gone?.. 

a friend, or two ; for hark you 

thou Shalt remain full two and forty 

hath lain these two days buried 

wliat we two nights have seen 

but two months dead! nay, not (rep.)., 

two nights together had these gentlem.en — i. 2 

make my two eyes, like stars, start from — i. 4 

two men there are not living — ii, 2 

[A'ji/.] one man picked out of two thousand — ii. 2 

will you two help to hasten them? — iii. 2 

two hours. Nay, 'tis twice two months .. — iii. 2 
die two months ago, and not forgotten yet — iii. 2 

witli two Provencial roses — iii. 2 

presentment of two brothers — iii. 4 

and my two schoolfellows, wliom I will — iii. 4 
when in one line two crafts directly .... — iii. 4 

two dishes, but to one table iv. 3 

two thousand souls, and twenty thousand — iv. 4 
ere we were two days old at sea — iv. 6 (letter) 

O for two special reasons — iv. 7 

two months since, liere was a gentleman — iv. 7 

that's two of his weapons — v. 2 

now making the beast with two backs ..Othello, i. 1 
and mine, two hundred: but though they — i. 3 

two things are to be, done — ii.3 

the sun to make two hundred comp,asses — iii. 4 
'tis not a year or two, shows US a man .. — iii. 4 
two or three groans; it is a heavy night.. — v. 1 

my leg is cut in two v. 1 

a word or two, before vou go — v. 2 

TWOFOLD and treble sceptres Macbeth, iv. I 

dotli witli a twofold vigour lift Richard II. i. 3 

ye violate a twofold marriage — v. 1 

stick hath a twofold operation 2 Henry IV. iv. 3 

but this twofold force, to be forestalled. Hamlet i ii. 3 

TWO-HAND sword ■2He„ri/ri ii. I 

TWO-IIEADED.Ianus Merchant ofl'eime, i. I 

TW()-I,1CGi;ED creature IHenn/ir. ii. 4 

TWO-PENCE-word for two-pence. 7'u'c(/V/iAiVA/, i. 6 
in some of your coats for two-pence.. " — iv. I 
all show like gilt two-penoes to me iHenrnlV. iv. 3 
TYBAT/l', with his sword prepared.. i('omra<5./»/. i. I 
Valentio, and liis cousin Tybalt .. — i. 2 (note) 
Tybalt.tlie kinsman of old Capulet.. — ii. 4 
encounter Tybalt? wliy, what is Tvbalt — ii. 4 
Tybalt, ttie reason that I have to love — iii. I 
Tybalt, you ratratcher, will you walk? — iii. I 
this outrage; Tybalt,— IMercutio (rf;u.) — iii. 1 
Tybalt'ssUnder. Tybalt, that an hi.ur — iii. 1 
here comes the furious Tvbalt baclc again — iii. 1 
Tybalt, take the villain irack again.. - iii. 1 
citizens are up, and Tybalt slain (rep.) — iii. I 
there lies that Tybalt. Up. sir, go .. — iii, 1 
Tybalt, my cousin! O my brother's — iii, I 

spleen of Ts'bait deaf to peace — iii. 1 

with the other sends it back to Tybalt — iii. 1 
Tybalt hit the life of .stout Mercutio (re/<.)_ 
Koiueo slew Tybalt, Romeo mint not — 
the law should end, tlie life of Tybalt — 
Tybalt, Tybalt, the hitst triend ( rr,,.) — 
is Tybalt dead? my de.'ir-loved cousin — 
T,\'baU is gone, and Konieo banislied — 
did Romeo's hand shed Tybalt's blood? — 
tliat Tvbalt would have slain (rep.).. — 

worser" than Tybalt's death — 

Tvbalt is dead", and linmeo-bani.^litd — 
lain ten th<aisaiid T\balts (rep.) — 



iii. I 



vhei: 



i,l-Tvl.jlf, 



ad... 



■arward following Tvl 

father, mother, Tybalt, liomeo, Jnliet — 
weeping and wailing over Tybalt's corse — 

an hour but married, Tybalt murdered — 

then starts up, and Tybalt calls .... — 

bast thou slain Tvbalt? wilt ihou .. _ 

Tylialt would kill thee (rep.) _ 

she loved her kinsman Tybalt dearly — 

hark you, Tybalt being slain so late — 



TYliAI/r keep Tybalt company .Romeo ^i Juliet, iii. 5 
the b>vc 1 h^. re my consul Tybalt.... _ iii. 5 
that dim mcnnuienl where Tybalt lies — iii. 5 

she weeps tin- Tybalt's death — iv. I 

where bloody Tybalt, yet but green (rep.) — iv. 3 
stay, Tybalt, slay! Komeo, 1 come! — iv. 3 

Tybalt, licst thou there in thy bloody — v. 3 
marriage-dnv, was 'Tj'balt's dooms-day — v. 3 

and not for Tybalt, Juliet pined — v. 3 

TYBUHN that hangs up simplicity.. iore'jt.I.. iv. 3 

TYING thine ear to no tongue \He71ryir. i. 3 

not article tying bin^ to aught Coriolanus, ii. 3 

tying his new shoes with old . . liomeo ^- Juliet, iii. I 

tving her duty.beauty, wit, and fortunes. o^/itHo, i. I 

TYMANDRA? Yes. Be a whore.. Titnono/Alh. iv. 3 

pardon him, sweet Tymandra — iv. 3 

Phrynia and Tymaiidra bad gold of him — v. I 
TYjMbRIA, Ilias, Chetas .. 7'ro/V«s.^Cre.«irfa, (pro!.) 

TYPE of king of Naples 3Henn/ll.i. 4 

high imperial type of tills earth's.. /r;i'/inr<Z /;/. iv. 4 
thefc types of travel, and understand //ejiri/ ;'///. i.3 

TYPHON'S brood Titus. indronicus, iv. 2 

TYRANNICAL power(rep.) Coriolanus, iii. 3 

TYRANNICALLY' clapped fiu-'t tt.mW, ii. 2 

TYRANNISE on unreprievable KinixJohn, v. 7 

left to tyrannise upon my breast. T!7«sj47(rfr(j«. iii. 2 

that thus doth tyrannise o'er me — iv. 3 

TYRANNOUS heart can think?. r»<-///A Night, iii. 1 

but it is tyrannous to use it lileas. for Meas. ii, 2 

then were he tyrannous; but this bting — iv. 2 
fear you his tyrannous passion . . If'inter^sTale, ii. 3 
let us be cleared of being tyrannous — iii. 2 

the tyrannous and bloody act Richard III. iv. 3 

the tyrannous breathings ot lhenovl]\Cymlielitie, i. 4 
I knew him tyrannous; and tyrants' ..I'ericles, i. 2 
and let this tyrannous knight take hold .I.ear, iii. 4 
so tyrannous and rough in proof! . . Ittmico ^Jnl. i. 1 
lend a tyrannous and a damned light.. ;/«/ii/e/, ii. 2 
hearted throne, to tyrannous liate! ....Othello, iii. 3 
TYRRANNY be in his place;l/<'nnire/or i\leusure, i. 3 
'twould be my tyranny to strike .... — i. 4 

the very tyranny and rage of his. il/er. ofVeitice, iv. I 
the tyranny of lier sorrows takes all .. All's ll'ell, i. 1 

something savours of tyranny Winter' sTale, ii. 3 

and tyranny tremble at patience .... — iii. 2 
thy tyranny together working with.. — iii. 2 
great tyranny, lay thou thy basis ....Macbeth, iv. 3 
intemperance in nature is a tyranny — iv. 3 
fled the snares of watchful tyranny.. — v. 7 
waste for churlish winter's tyranny. .gWcjiry//'. i. 3 
that tyranny, which never quaffed . . — iv. 4 
hast by tyranny, these nianj' jears.. 1 Henry I' I. ii. 3 
was nothing less than bloody tyranny — ii. 5 
the period of thy tyranny approaclieth — iv. 2 

from thy insulting tyranny — iv. 7 

England was defahied by tyranny .iHenryl'l. iii. 1 
and prove the period of their t\'raniiy — iii. 1 
thy eyeballs murderous tyranny sits — iii. 2 
lofty, proud, encroaching tyranny .. _ iv. I 

insulting tyranny begins to jut Richardlll. ii. 4 

his tyranny for tr.iies — iii. 7 

underneath the yoke of tyranny .... — v. 2 

was I, tliat felt tliy tyranny _ v. 3 

best of my flesh, forgive my tyranny. Con'o'niius, v. 3 

part of tyranny, that I do bear Julius Caisar, i. 3 

so let high-sighted tyranny range on — ii. I 

tyrann.y is dead! — iii. I 

thy teat thou hadst thy tyranny .TitusAudron. ii. 3 

smiles such murdcrons tyranny — ii. 4 

eyes are cloyed with view of tyranny — iii. 2 
in the oppression of aged tyranny .Lear, i. 2 (letter) 

the tyranny of the open niglit's — iii. 4 

thy escape woidd teach me tyranny ....Othello, i. 3 

TY'iiANT th.at I servel Tempest, ii. 2 

I am subject to a tyrant — iii. 2 

there, tyrant, therel — iv. 1 

ICol.Knt.'] art a tyrant to say so ..Merry Wives, iii. 3 
the marble-breasted tyrant, still.. TirelfthSight, v. 1 
of late to make the law a tyrant .Meas.fnrMeus. ii. 1 

I'll prove a tyi-ant to him — ii. 4 

make mercy swear, and play the tyrant — iii. 2 
being a professed tyrant to their sex? .MitchAdo, i. I 
Pyramiis? a lover, or a tyrant?. il//d. A'. 'sDrmm, i. 2 
yet my chief humour is for a tyrant. . — i. 2 

tills is Ercles' vein, a tyrant's vein .. — i. 2 

plant ill tyrants mild humility . . Lore'sL. Lost, iv. 3 
tyrantduite unto a tyrant brother. .4s j/om Like it, i. 2 

are mere usurjiers. tyrants — ii, 1 

called tyrants, butchers, murderers! — iii, 5 

mark !iow the tyrant writes — iv, 3 

I'll not call you tyrant Winter' sTale, ii.3 

were la tyrant where were her life?.. — ii.3 

Leontes a jealous tyrant — iii. 2 (oracle) 

studied torments, tyrant, hast for me? — iii. 2 
but, O thou tyrant! do not repent.... — iii. 2 

bis presence at the tyrant's feast Macbeth, iii. 6 

from whom this tyrant holds — iii. 6 

this tyrant, whose sole name — iv. 3 

snace that's in the tyrant's gr.isp .... — iv. 3 
shall tread upon the tyrant's liead .. — iv. 3 
with an untitled tyrant bloody-sceplrcd — iv. 3 

tlie tyrant has not battered at — iv. 3 

for that I saw the tyrant's iiower .... — iv. 3 

what does the tyrant? — v. 2 

but the confident tyrant keeps — v. 4 

do we bnt find the tyrant's power.. .. — v. 6 

tliou licst, abhorred tyrant — v. 7 

tvraiit, show thy face — v. 7 

the tvrant's people on botli sides — v. 7 

here niav veil see the tyrant _ v. 7 

ah me! this tyrant tever burns King John, v. 3 

cliilil by the stern tyrant war ..'>lleny[ili'. (indue.) 
we are no tyrant, bnt a christian king. . Henry V. i. 2 
beauty, that the tyrant oft reclaims. . 2 /(curi, / /. v. 2 
for how can tyrants safely govern ..iUenryVI. iii. 3 
to prove him tyrant, tliis reason .... — iii. 3 

force tlie tyrant from his seat — iii. 3 

to prevent the tyrant's violence — " iv. 1 

tyrants tlieniselVes wept when it. ...Richard III. i. 3 
e.xcellent grand tyrantuf the eai-th .. — iv. 4 



TYR 



L 7»7 ] 



UNO 



TYUANT. nndii homieido Itichanl lll.v. 3 

topiit 11 tvraiit <InH'n(ir/i.) — v. 3 

you will play llie tyrant 7'i niViij * Crm Wii, iii. 2 

none Imt tynuits n«e itcniolly. 7'imioii>>/.-I/A'ii», iii. b 
yv pcxis, Vim ivran(K do dcrcut ....JiiUusCii'iai, i. 3 
wliv slumld C'iisui- lit- II tyrant tlien? — i. 3 

this CiCfnr «n< 11 ly rant — iii. 2 

u flic to tymnts, and inv country's friend — v. 4 

liiiw line tliii tyrant ran lieltli- Ci/mhelinf. i. 2 

lliun art paj't thr tvranl'M sinil<c .. — iv. 2 (song) 
tlie Tliraiian tyrant in liis tent .. 7V/«>/l>i((ioii. i. 2 
to fear, when tyrants seem to i^iss .... Periclea^ i. 2 

and tyrants' tears ili-crcase not — i. 2 

Von fear tlie tvraiit, Willi eillicr — i. 2 

"niiserv eniild lu-.oiile the tyrant's rase .. l.ear. iv. 6 

I Hill show nivselfa tyrant Unmen ^Julirl, i. I 

lieaiiiifnl tyrant: iieiid ftnpelieal I .. — iii. 2 
so. as » iMiinted t\rant. l*yrrlius stood.. Hnmtri^ ii. 2 
the tyrant eusloni, most era ye senators., 0(/iW(o, i. 3 

TYllK— younu prince of 'ry>e C'rp.) ftrichs, i. 1 

we hate the prince of Tyre — i. I 

Tvic, I now look from tliee then — i. 2 

so; this is T\ re: anil (his is the court.. — i. 3 
here loine the li>rils of Tyre irep.) .... — i. 3 
friends to Aiitioch, we may feast in Tyre — i. 3 

licanl ynm- miseries as far as Tyre — i. 4 

oil that hii|is in 'I'yre — ii. (Gower) 

a t'eiitleinaii of'fvre (rrp.) _ ii. 3 

you Uiii-htsofrvreaieexcellent .... — ii. 3 
that shr loves the liiUL-ht of Tyre? .... — ii. 6 
at last from Tyre (Fame answering _ iii. (Gow.) 
^voll^^ set cm tlie crown of Tyre .. — iii. ((iow.) 

he must hence depart to Tyre — iii. (.Ciow.) 

alter thy coni-se for Tyre — iii. 1 

imagine I'ericles at T'yre, welcomed — iv. (Gow. ) 
sir, our vessel is of Tyre, in it the king — v. I 
I am rericles of 'I'yre: but tell me .... — v. I 
I here confess myself the king of Tyre — v, 3 
when I did fly from Tyre — v. 3 

TYlilAN-nll of Tyrian tapestry. rn.ai/iyo/.W. ii. 1 
i>ur Tyrian ship espies rericles, y. ( (iower) 

TYI{I.\'(i-II()USE; and we will ..MM.X.'KDr. iii. I 

TYltKKI.. I partly know the nian..;(iV/iii«/ ///. iv. 2 
is thy name— T\ rrel? James Tyrrel — iv. 2 
Tyirel, I mean those bastards (»Tf/.) — iv. 2 

kind Tyrrell am I happy in thy irep.) — iv. 3 
come to me, Tvrrel, soon at after 8n|)pcr — iv. 3 

TYKUS-thc men of Tyrus ....;Vr.w«, iii. (Gower) 
for tlie habe e.mnot hold out to Tyrus — iii. 1 
and Tyrus stands in a litiLtious peace.. — iii. 3 
slie was of Tyrus, the kinL''8 .. .. — iv. -I (Gowerl 
our son ami dau^'hter shall in Tyrus reii^n — v. 3 

TYTIlE-onr tytlie's tosow ..V<?,i.<iiii'/!)r .U.'.oior. iv. 1 
find no fault ^vitll the tythc woman . . .IH'.- Ilrll. i. 3 
shall t}'lhe or toll in our dominions. Kin<^ Joint, iii. 1 
not twentieth part the tytlie of Hmnlci, iii. 4 

TYXHING-from ty tiling to tytliiug .... Lear, iii. 4 

U 

TTBrQTIE-hic et ubique? IJnmtel, i. 5 

tII)I)KK-witli udders all drawn ..As you Like il, iv. 3 
'I;I>(;E-so Got 'udiie me, that is..,. Sinry inrc$, i. 1 

lUiLIKIl— his body ualicr grows 'feiupfst, iv. 1 

the ujliersecm the clouds Iticlmrd II. i. 1 

1'GL1K.ST— put on his u^'liest mask ..2Hp,ir,,ir. i. 1 
UGI/Y— I am as ugly as a bear..i)/i'(/.A'.'»D;mm, ii. 3 
l)Ut iliat ugly treason of mistrust.Vcr.o/ /Vniir, iii. 2 
like the loud, ugly and venonious./lji?/ouL?7.t' i7, ii. I 
halb made thee a most ugly man ..kinnJolm, iii. I 
wert grim, ugly, and slanderous ;.,.. — iii. 1 

there is not yet so U'dy a fiend — iv. 3 

through the foul and ugly mists ....1 Heuri/ir. I. 2 

to dress tiie u^ly form of base ilieuryW. iv. I 

like afoul and ugly witch ....Henrijl'. iv. (chorus) 

see, how the ugly witch doth \liemijl'l. v. 3 

there Minotaurs, and tigly treasons, lurk — v. 3 
whose ugly and unnatural aspect ..Hicliaid III. i. 2 

hell of ugly devils! — i. 3 

fearful dreams, of ugly sights — i. 4 

what sightsofu^ly ileatli within .... — i. 4 

ten times more ugly than ever Hem i/ ;'///. i. 2 

how ugly night comes breathing. 7roiV««iiS-C>/'ss. v. 9 
striving to make an ugly deed. Timon of Athens, iii. 5 

that makes the senate ugly — iii.s 

thou wouldst apiiear most ugly.. /lii/nni/^C/fo. ii. 5 
being an ugly monster 'tis strange ..Cymbeline, v. 3 
how ugly didst tliou in Cordelia show! ..Lear, i. 4 
not more ugly to tlie thing that helps.. Hum/ef, iii. I 
lieautv in Ins life, that imilics me ugly — v. I 

Ul.ClOft of my heart Truilm .5 Crrmda^ i. 1 

but. to the quick o' the ulcer Hamlet, iv. 7 

Ul-CEKOUS-all swoln and ulcerous... Wmtf (A, iv. 3 
spital-housc. and ulcerous sores.. Timonof Alh. iv. 3 
but skin and film the ulcerous place .. Ilamfi'i, iii. 4 

UI,I^)RX.\-i C<.(.] Ullorxa, all. YVmoi. or A/hem, iii. 4 

ULY.SSKS-tlian Ulysses could ....ZlienniFI. iii. 2 
thst as Ulysses, and stout Diomcd .. — iv. 2 
hear what Ulysses speaks (rfp.).. VVni'/iu <5-C>Mf. i. 3 
wisely hath I'l^ sses here discovered — i. 3 

of the sickness found, Ulys.tcs — i. 3 

whom, as Uivsses savs, opinion crowns — i. 3 

what says Ulysses? 1 have a young.. — i. 3 
trust to me, Ulysses, our imputation — i. 3 
Ulysses, now I Ijcgin to relish thy .. — i. 3 

there's Ulysses, and old Nestor — ii. I 

to speak w'itli hiin: Ulysses, enter .. — ii. 3 
here is Ulysses; I'll interrupt his (rep.) — iii. 3 
this is not strange, Ulysses; the iK'UUly — iii. 3 

1 know your favour, lord Ulysses (rrp.) — iv. S 
my lord Ulysses, tell me, I beseech you — iv. 5 
and that same dog-fox, Ulysses,— is not — y, 4 
yarn she spun in Ulysses' abse:>cc . . Corwlanu», i. 3 

UAlliKK— of uml)er smirch ray facc./(«|//mti/ieit, i. 3 

UMUKKKOface Ilemyi: iv.(choru8) 

f.MHlt.V-omne sum umbri Ruminat./.oi'c'i/,.i. iv. 2 
U.MBIt.\(!E-bis uinbrugc, nothing more.H/ii/iW, v. 2 

U.MKKKVII/E turned me back •illenryir. i. I 

UMI'IKE— there ia three umpires . . nierri/ ICirM, i. I 
chose as umpire of their mutiny ..LoBc'iL.Loii,i. I 



UMl'IHEofm 

let me he unit 

kliify shall pi 

UNAl!i.K--il I 

(li 



■us miseries 



yo 



iit.'h, 



111 IIIU 

III all 



lllniryn. il. .1 

- iv. 1 

, . liimieo * .hiliel, iv. 1 

.. Meat. J'or Meal, ii. 4 

»'...ramiiigni Sh. v. 2 

ahle pen.i/cHii/r. v. 2 (cho.) 



iipire. 



if wars, wc arc 

makes liiriith 
TTNACt'OMMiiDATKI) 
UNAt'l'nM|>AXIf;i), in\ 
UNACCUSTliAIIOl) liLTlit 

uiiaci-n.tuiiieil tenor of t 

yyliat uiiacrnst.mieil cau- 

\_Cot. I<„i.] sncl 



unalilc lo 4ii|M">rt this Ininp nf clay.l Henryll. ii. 
sa|ilc.-s iii,'i', uiiil wi-ak niuihle limbs.. — iv. 5 

o resist Periclei, i. 4 

Ispiri-h nnable,.../.f«r, i. I 
Lin is no more — iii. 4 
St him iinlv..,Wactp»i, i. 4 
side ....r//<->iri/r/. iii. I 
■f this iii2lit.yi//iinr.rwr, ii. 1 
rL\\~Q....'..l!omeo^Jut,el, iii. h 
iiccustomcd dram — iii. 'o 
it lifts me .... — y. I 
UN A(,'il I .\(; scars which I should ..Coriolnnm, ii. 2 

UNACtiUAINTK I) change KingJolia, in. \ 

and liilliiw niuicqnajnted colours liere? — v. 2 

strain:!', iiiiiiciinaintcil Troihu()Cressiila,\\\. 3 

UNAC'in'IC-iillr anil unnctiye Corhhnnu, i. 1 

UNAI)\ ISIODilclivcreilyon. 7V/7,f,>)i.o/;fio;Ki, iv. 4 
lest niiaih iseil >nn stain your swovds. ki7i','Jotui, ii. 1 
thou umiilyisi'il scold, I can produce — ii. 1 

anil iiiuHlvisiil revel, this unhaired.. — v. 2 
althmi.'li luir inotlicr, una.lWhct\. niut Aiiilrot,. ii. I 

too rash, ton iinmlvisvil Iloineo /iJiiliel, ii. 2 

TIN. V1)\'ISK])1.Y sometimes Uirhardlll. iv. 4 

UNAdUKKAlil.E to this Inisincss. yViiion oi Aiti.u.'i 

UNA.\Kl,i;i): no reckoning made li,imlrl,\. ;> 

UNANinVliKED; I will to your.. lI'iMto'sVu^c, v. I 
UNAin'EASED, nor we disturbed.. ViVus.-ZmiinH. i. 2 

UNAl'T to toil and trouble Turning 0/ ShretB, v. 2 

and temperate, unapt to stir 1 Henry t f^. i. 3 

I am a soldier; and unapt to \ieep..l Htnryt'I. v. 3 

are unapt to give or to forgive Corwlamis, v. I 

UN Al'TNESS made your minister . /Vmoii or.Wi. ii. 2 

UNAliM— I'll unarm again .. Troilna^Cretitidu, i. 1 

at your own house, there he unarms — i. 2 

to help unarm our Hector — iii. 1 

unarm, unarm, and do not fight irep.') — v. 3 

Kros. unarm; the long day's ..Aniony/yCleo. iv. 12 

UN.VKMED-leayes his back unarmed.2J/i-)iry/;'. i. 3 

and drop upon our bare unarmed heads — ii. 4 

hollow-hearted friends, unarmed .Uichnrd III. iv. 4 

as debonair, unarmed, as bending. 7Vni/i/.v .5' Cf"- i'3 

after the combat, to see us here unarmed — iii. 3 

Hector to come unarmed to my tent — iii. 3 

doth long to see unarmed the valiant — iv. 5 

I am unarmed; forego this vantage.. — v. 9 

UN.V.S.SA IL A liI.E holds on his. . . .JiilinsCretnr, iii. 1 

UNASSAIl.KD-k-ave thee unassailed.-' Henry ;7. v. 2 

UNA'l"l'AlN'rE»eye, compare.. iiompo .^ Jn/iW, i. 2 

XrXATTK.MI' TED yet, like a poor ..KinaJohn, ii 2 

UNATTIONUED— left vou unattended. i»/(ir6e(/i, ii. 2 

UNAUSPICIOUS altars Tirelfil, .Sight, \. I 

UNAUTHORIZED kiss. Or to benaked.O//iei(o,iv. 1 
UNA VOIDED is the danger now . . . . Hidmrd II. ii. I 
a terrible and unavoided danger ..1 Henry 11. iv. !> 
whose uriavoiikd eye is murderous. /?ic/mni///. iv. 1 
all unavoided is tlic doom of destiny — iv. 4 
UNAWARES-miscbief unawares.. I f/ffwriy/';. iii. 2 
this conflict I unawares have killed. 3//t';i?f/ TV. ii, 5 

at unawares maj' beat down — iv. 2 

or by his foe surprised unawares .... — iv. 4 
take the great-grown traitor unawares — iv. 8 
at unawares encountering . . Troilus ff Cretsida, iii. 2 
[Col. Knl.'i unawares, ej'cs may. Homeo ^Juliet, iii. 2 

UNBACKED— like unbacked colts Tempest, iv. I 

UNB.VKED and doughy youth AU'itlVcll.iv. 5 

UNBANDED— bonnet unhanded.. J.«!/oiii;,(7tci7, iii. 2 
UNBAR— to unbar these locks ..... .Cymbeline, v. 4 

UNBARBED-niy unbarbed 6COnce?.Corio/n>mj, iii. 2 

UNB.VSHFUIi forehead woo A< you Like it, ii. 3 

UNBATED fire that he did paccil/ci-.o/renice, ii. 6 

yon may choose a sword nnliated Hamlet, iv, 7 

in thy hand, unbated, and envenomed .. — v. 2 
UNB.VTTERED— an iinbattered edMe...Waciic//i, v. 7 
UNBECOMING-all thing unbecoming — iii. 1 

UNBEFITTING strains Lov,'$L.Loit, v. 2 

UNBEGOT-and unbegot, that lilt.,«ic/i«>vi //. iii. 3 

UNBEGOTTEN sin oftimes KingJolm, iv. 3 

UNRELIEVED go! Measurefnr Mennire,v. 1 

UNBEND your noble strength Macbeth,\\. 2 

UNBENT— gone so far to be unbent. Ci/mfte/mr, iii. 4 
UNBEWAILED their vmv. Antony ^Cleopatra, iii. (i 
UNBIDspite! is sportful Edward.. ..3;;fiiri/;7. v. 1 

UNBIDDEN guests are often \ Henry I'l. ii. 2 

UNBIND my hands, I'll pull.. 7a»i/ni'o/SArtw, ii. 1 
unbind mv sons, reverse the doom.. TiiusAnd. iii. 1 

UNBITTE'D lusts: whereof OlheUo,\.3 

UNBLESSED, and the ingredient — ii. 3 

[Co/./vii/. J and your unblessed fate hies — y. 1 

U NBLUODIE D beak? 2 Henry I'l. iii. 2 

UNBLOWN flowers. new-appearing/dcAurii 77^ iv. 4 

UNBOI)IEDfl_'nreofthcthoULdit.7>oi7i«4-C>m. i.3 

UNBOLT-hc shall unbolt the gates.. — iv. 2 

I'll iiiihiilt to yon; vou scc liow. 7imono///(/i/'n», i. 1 

UNIiiiLTlCl) villaininto mortar Lear, ii. 2 

UNBONNETED he runs, and bids what — iii. I 

speak, nn bonneted, to as proudafortuiie.O//i("//o. i. 2 

UNBOOKISH jealousy must construe .... — iy. 1 

UNBOliN- in a thouLdit unborn ..At you Like il, i. 3 

nietbinks, some unborn sorrow llirtmrd II. ii. 2 

your children vet unborn, and unbegot — iii- 3 
the chililivn \et inihiirn shall feel.... — iv. 1 

misihief to the unborn times? MIenrytV. v. 1 

uiigotten, and unborn, that shall lia ye. Henri/)'. '. 2 
all cause unborn, could never be . . Corinlnnus, iii. 1 
in states nnhoin. and accents yet. ../ii/nuCV/'Mr, iii. I 
the unburn I do commend to ..I'erielet, iv. (Gower) 
UNBnSO!\l shall to lovesmistook.. /.<yrif'«/,.7,(if(. v. 2 
UNliOUiN'Dtlie rest, and then cornel Hcnrj^/r. ii. 4 
Drooiio. and his mall, unbound.. C'nmeifr/i^/'/^rr. v. 1 
this iiiibi.inid lover, to beautify. .7<oi;ico^-Jii/iW, i. 3 

UNl!i>Ii.\l)i;D stomach Henryllll. iv. 2 

UN Iii I \V i;i)-thc dukedom vet unbowed. Tnnpeil. i. 2 

pas-ithbi wiihastift'imbowedknee.-.';/.-«ri/r7. iii.l 

UNBR.^tED, (Jasca, us you see ....JnlimCaiar, i. 3 



lINBRACED-towalk'unbraccd ..JulimCa'inr,\l I 

With his doublet all unbraced Hamlet, i\. I 

1 1 N 1 1 H .M 1 )1 ; I ) w a 1 es? mnler'i I ale. iv. 3 

I'NIillEA'lllEI) memories Mid.A.'iDream, v. I 

UNIilll-F.CHED. ill mv green velvet., "'iii/cr.7. i. 2 
UNBRIDLED-rusbanil iinbridkd boy/IH'.dV//, iii. 2 
thiiughls were like unhridh il. , 7roiVin /i Viets. iii. 2 
XT NBKoKE- vows nnhroke.aie made. /f'r'i'ir(///.iv. 1 
UN BRUISED, and love mv cousin.... Mur/.,f<io, v. 4 

and helmets all iinl.rnisid King John, i'l. I 

yit niihrnisvd (Jrevks dopitcli 7-roi7io,.?rr<'K. (prol.) 

rove with one that s >et imhruised.. t'nrio/uniij, iv 1 

but while iinbrniMd loiitli with, ((r,..,™ ,<(-./ii;iw, ii. 3 

UNBUCKLE, nnbiickte. Fortunate.. "Vii^-r'.V. iv. 3 

111- that mil luekles 1 his, till we ..Antony ftCteo. iv. 4 

UMtUCKLINt; helms, fisting each. (;„,„Vu,„„,iv. 5 

UNHril.l) tliei-itv.aud tolav all Hat — iii. 1 

UNH|I|!I)E.\EDiriiwl toward death Lear, i. I 

UNIllIlilEl) men that do corrupt ..Coriolnnu>,iii. 3 
Chy sms, iiiihnrieil yet, to hover ..Titut.indron. i. 2 

UNHUIiNT. and still to nose Cnriolanns. v . I 

i;NliUH'JHEN all my iilots .Merchant of Venice, i. 1 
sharji liiirl.iii.L'lunn unburthena ....■illenryyi. iii. 1 

TIN liUTTON-ei line; unhuttou here Lmr, iii. 4 

UNl'.U TTi i.\ED. your shoe Asyou Like it. iii. 2 

Ui\l!UTTiiNlN(i tliee after supper ..\ Henry If. i. 2 

UNCAl'AIU.I'; of pity Merehantofrenire, iv. 1 

why. by making him uneapablc Othello, iv. 2 

UNC.Vl'K— so, now, nncape Merry H'ivei, Hi. 3 

ITNCVSE- at once uncase thcc.Taming of Slireu; i. 1 

U\CASIN(J lor tlie combat? I.ove'i L.I.01I, v. 2 

UNCAUGHT-snure uiieaught?../ln/i;iii/.S C/eo. iv. 8 

not in this land shall he remain uncaught. tfnr, ii. 1 

UNCERTAIN glory of an April. 7Vof,>,i.p/-F/T. i. 3 

uncertain life and sure death All's If ell, ii. 3 

in my uncertain grounds to fail .... — iii. 1 

be not imceitain; for, by the ll'inter'sTnle, i. 2 

take horse, uncertain of the issue MIenryJI'. i. 1 

friends you have named, uncertain — ii. 3 (let.) 
of aids uncertain [f of. A'Hf.-incertain]. 2 /Yenrj//;'. i.3 

uncertain way of gain! Itichard III. iv. 2 

in life's uncertain voyage Timon of Alliens, v. 2 

the end of war's uncertain Coriolanns, v. 3 

tlie peojile will remain uncertain .. .. — v, 5 
all'airs of men rest still uncertain.. ./uKunOtar, v. I 

uncertain favonrl My fault Cyinbeline. iii. 3 

UNCERTAlNTY'-sure uncertainty. fn/n. 0/ Krr. ii 2 
now we bold at much uncertainty ..1 llrnmir. i. 3 

remain with your uncertainty! C'wir./uiiuj, iii. 3 

UNCHAIN your si.irit. now \'vith.... I H,, „!//•/. v. 3 
U.NCHANtiiNG, made impudent .. ..3 H.ioi/ );. i. 4 

UNCHAIiGE the practice Hniiilet,iv. 7 

UN(.'HAii(;El) linrts Timon of Athens, V. b 

UNCIIAKITABLY with me have ..lUctmrd II I. i. 3 
UNC!lAKV-too unchary out.... Tuetfih Sight, iii. 4 

UNCHASTE desire Merry Wives, v. 5 (song) 

made in the uncliaste composition ..All's Hell, iv. 3 

he posts with nnehastc purpose Cymbeline, v. 5 

no unchaste action, or dishonoured step ..Lear.i. 1 

UNCHECKED— there unchecked. .W.r.o/rfn.Vc iii. I 

power have unchecked theft.. 7Vwi(i)i or Athens, iv. 3 

UNCll ILDED many a one Coriolanns, v. 5 

UNCIVIL-from uncivil outrages. 7"ieot»eH ofl'er.v.4 

let go that rude uncivil touch — v. 4 

give means for this uncivil rule ..TuelflliKighl. ii. 3 

this is as uncivil as strange — iii. 4 

in this uncivil and unjust extent .. ., — iv. I' 

you uncivil lady, to wliose .- v. 1 

so with civil and uncivil arms Itirhnrd II. iii. 3 

the uncivil kernes of Ireland 2He»r!/r/. iii. I 

he was a prince. A most uncivil one. Cvm'iWmi?, v. 5 

UNCLAIMED of anv man Asy^uLik,- it, ii. 7 

UNCLASP— I'll unclasp my heart MnchAilo.i 1 

I will unclasp a secret book 1 Henry IT. i. 3 

that wide unclasp the tables. Troilni^Cressidn, iv. b 

unclasp, unclasp; thanks, gentlemen .. I'ericles, ii. 3 

UNCJ>ASPED to thee the book ....Tire(rhMght, i. 4 

kingly guest unclasped my practice '''infiT'i v. iii. 2 

UNCLE, called Antonio Tempest, i. 2 

thy false uncle — i. 2 

uncle can tell you good jests i,rep.) Merry H'ives, iii. 4 

your father, and my uncle ' — iii. 4 

lie hath an uncle here in Messina ....il/nrA.4</o, i. 1 

and my ui.cle's fool, reading — i. 1 

a good foot, uncle, and money (rep.) — ii. 1 

I cry you mercy, uncle — ii. I 

being her uncle and her guardian.... — ii. 3 
help uncle; Hem! why. Hero! Uncle! — iv. I 
madam, you must come to your uncle — v. 2 
I will go with thee to thy uncle's .... — v. 2 
why, then your uncle, and the prince — v. 4 
grazed his uncle Lallan's sheep. il/<>cA.<!/'/'*>ii'rc, i. 3 

no less beloved of her uncle As you Like it, 1. 1 

if my uncle, thy banished fatlier {rep.) — i. 2 

detained by her usurping uncle — i. 2 

me, uncle? you, cousin — i.3 

then, dear uncle, never, so much — L3 

to seek my uncle. Alas, what danger — i. 3 

an old religious uncle of mine taught — iii. 2 
there is none of my uncle's marks .. — iii. 2 
many desperate studies by his uncle — v. 4 

1 am Cressid's uncle All'tll'ell, ii. 1 

your most renowned uncle . .Comedy of Errors, \. I 
uncle Siward, and ibe good Macduff ..iWaclif (A, v. 2 
you, worthy uncle, sliiill, with my .... — v. 6 
thy unnatural niicle, English Jorin..JLi'>i;Jo/m, ii. 1 

my uncle's will, in this resiicct — ii. 2 

hourly with thine uncle ^olin — iii. 1 

go not to arms against mine uncle ., — iii. 1 
and thy uncle will as dear be to thee — iii. 3 

my uncle practises more harm — iv. 1 

all the treasure that thine uncle owes — iv. I 
O me! my uncle's spirit is in these .. — iv. 3 

good uncle, let this end where Richard II. i. I 

uncle, even in the glasses (rrp.) — i.3 

how fares our noble uncle. Lancaster? — ii. 1 
our uncle (iaunt did stand possessed — ii. 1 

our uncle York (ip;>. V. 6) — ii 1 

uncle, for heaven's sake, speak — ii. 2 

Harry, how fares your uncle? — ii. 3 



UNCLE-my noble uncle! (rep.) ....Ithhardll. ii. 3 

nor uncle me no um-le; I am no (rep.) — ii. 3 

my prneioiis uncle, let me know .... — ii. 3 

on offer, nncle. tlint we will — ii. 3 

imcle, .von Fay, the queen is — iii. 1 

tliankfl. ircntte unelc; come, lords.. .. — iii. 1 

where lies our uncle with his power? — iii. 2 

niistokc uitt, uncle, i'uitlier (rcjp,).. .. — iii. 3 

luicle. .give me ycair liund — iii. 3 

as Calais, to my uncle's head? — iv. 1 

what is the matter, uncle? speak — v. 3 

good uncle, help to order several .... — v. 3 

uncle, farewell, and eonsin too, adieu — v. 3 

this is his uncle's teaching \HenryIV.i. 1 

here comes \"our uncle — i. 3 

his uncle kept; his uncle York — 1.3 

good unirle, tell your tale 



nncle, odicn. O let the liours — 

my fatlier, my luiele, and myself? .. — 

your unele Worcester's horse came .. — 

my father, and mj^ uncle, and myself — 

in the morning early shall mine'iuicle — 

unele. -what news? the king will .... — 

send for him. good uncle Henry I' 



i. 3 



iii. 1 



— lii. 1 

— iv. 1 

— V. 1 



— li. 4 

— iii. 1 

— iii. 1 

— iii. 1 

— iii. 1 



imele's, Edward the hlack (ri-p. iv. 7) 

what treasure, unele? Tennis-balls.. — i. !! 

imcle of E.xeter, enlarge (»■(';<. 1 — ii. 2 

for us, dear uncle, the winter coming — iii. 3 

lives he, good micle? thrice — iv. 6 

of good sort are taken, imcle? — iv. 8 

uncle Kxeter, and brother Clarence.. — v. 2 
ay, noble uncle, thus ignobly (rep.)..\ UenryVI. ii. 5 

but now thy uncle is removing — ii. .1 

uncle, would some part of my young 
uncles of Gloster, .and of Winchester 

pra3', uncle Glo«ter (rep. iii. 4) 

lie. uncle Beaufnrt! T liave beard 

lovin" uncle, kind duke of Gloster .. 
and those occasions, luu-le, were of., 
sent from our unele duke of Burgund3' 

ay, marry, uncle ( rrp. ) 

good uncle, bani-Ii all offence 

lincle, how now? Pardon me 2X1enryPI,\. 1 

luicle of Wincliest.or (re;).) _ i. 1 

hath mine uncle Beaufort, and m3'self — i. 1 

ay, micle, we will keep it if we can.. — i. ] 
uncle, what shall we say to this in law? — i. 3 

goofl uncle, hide such nialiee — ii. 1 

faitli holy uncle, would 'twere come to — ii. 1 

true, uncle. Are you advised? — ii. 1 

call our uncle to our presence straight — iii. 2 
where is our uncle? what is the .... — iii. 2 
your loving uncle, twenty times .... — iii. 2 
sir Hugh Mortimer, mine uncles? ..ZUenryJ'l. i. 2 
I duubt not, uncle, of our victory.... — i. 2 

my uncles both are slain in — i. 4 

thine uncles, and myself, have in — v. 7 

the king my uncle is to blame ....Richard III. ii. 2 

and when m.y unele told me so — ii. 2 

think you, niy uncle did dissemble.. — ii. 2 

had virtuous uncles to protect — ii. 3 

I eoukl have given my uncle's grace 

they say. my unele grew so fast 

no. uncle; hut our crosses on the way 
want more uncles here to welcome me 

thoj^e uncles, which you want 

• what say you, uncle? I say 

I thank you, gentle uncle (rep.) .... — iii. 1 
uncle, mj' brother mocks both you .. — iii. I 

the scorn he gives his uncle...," — iii. 1 

I fear no uncles dead — iii. 1 

and by their uncle cozened of comfort — iv. 4 
her iniclc Clarence, her uncle (rrp.) — iv. 4 

slew her brothers, and her uncles? .. — iv. 4 
this morning, uncle. What were. Tnilus (r Cress, i. 2 

can Ilelenns fight, uncle? — i. 2 

adieu, uncle. I'll be with you (re;).) — i. 2 

well, uncle, what folly I commit — iii. 2 

."\-onr uncle's word, and my firm faith — iii. 2 
I'll call mine uncle down; he shall.. — iv. 2 
it is your unele. A pestilence on him! — iv. 2 

you naughty mocking uncle! — iv. 2 

f^ood uncle, go and see — iv. 2 

sweet uncle, what's the matter? (rep.) — iv. 2 

1 will not. uncle: I liavc forgot — iv. 2 

thine uncle, (famous in CajsaV's Ci/mheline, iii. | 

shall thy good nncle, and Ihy ....TitmAmhon. iii. I 

to see thy noble uncle thus — iv. 3 

brawl betwixt nij' nncle and one .... — iv. 3 

good uni'lc, take .you in this — \'. 3 

sirs, help our nncle to convey — v. 3 

but uncle, draw you near, to shed ... — v. 3 

m.y noble uncle, ilo yon know Rmneo(jJiiUel,\. 1 

why, uncle, 'tis a shame. Go to — i. 5 

to Norway, unele of young Fortinbras.. Ham/e/, i. 2 
married with my uncle, my father's .... — i. 2 

my prophetic soul! my uncle! — i. .'j 

upon my secure hour thy uncle stole.. .. — i. -^ 
so, uncle, there .yon are: now to my word — i. 5 

makes vow before his uncle — ii. 2 

for my uncle is king of Denmark — ii. 2 

murder of my father, before mine uncle — ii. 2 
observe mj' uncle: if his occulted guilt.. — iii. 2 
goodnight: but go not to my uncle's bed — iii. 4 

1 scarce did know yon, uncle OlheUo,v. 2 

uncle, I must come forth. If thou attempt — v. 2 

UNCLEAN— the unclean knight.. .l/>'rr!/ Hires, iv. 4 
good meat into an unclean dish .AsyouLikeH. iii. 3 
;in miclean mind carries virtuous ....AWsll'ell,i. I 

fallen into the unclean fishpond — v. 2 

makes civil hands miclean .. Roiuen ^-.hiliet. (prol.) 
UNCI, EANLINESS there.. ii;ensKreftr.Vf«.M/,c ii, 1 
UNCLEANLY-wonld be uncleanly. ^,s!/o!i Uke,u\. 2 

the very uncleanly flux of a cat — iii. 2 

uncleanly scruple! fear not you King John, \w. I 

uncleanly savours of a slan.gliter-house — iv. 3 

but some uncleanly appreh'ensions Othello, iii. 3 

TTNCLEANNESS. as slie that ..Meas. for Mens. ii. 4 

TTNCLE-KATIIER, and my aunt- HamM. ii. 2 

UNCLE W me quite Timon of Athens, i. 1 



I TTNCLOG my heart of what lies Corinlmi<is,\\.2 

XINCOINED constancy He„n,i: v. 2 

UNCOI/IED-thou art uncoiled ....1 llenrnir. ii. 2 
UNCOMELINESS, that I would ..Merry 'fires, ii. 1 
XTNCOiMFrtRTABLE time! ....nomco^.luliel,iv. 5 
UNCOMl'ASSIONATE sire TiroGeu.ofrerona, iii. 1 
UNC(>MI'REIIEN.SIVE deeps .Troilna &Cres,. iii. 3 
UNCONFINEABLE baseness .... MerrV'Vires.n. 2 
UNCONFIU.MED: tho\i knowest ..Mi('ch A>ln, iii 3 
rathcrest, unconfirmed fashion .. Loi'e'sl,. Lost, iv. 2 

XJNCONCiUEKKD spirit \Henriil'I. iv. 2 

tiic nnconciuered sonl of Cade .. ..2;/fi,rv '7. iv. 10 

UNCONSIDERED trifles Winter' sTale, iv. 2 

not unconsidered leave vonr honoiu'//f»;« ry//. i. 2 
UNCONSTANT \yr,m;m\Cm\\. Taminu "fglirew, iv. 2 
such unconsttintcbildren of ourselves /i7)io-7o/ui, iii. 1 
henceforth be no more uncoust.ant..3He/i?'y r/. v. 1 
such unconstant starts are we like to ....Lear, i. I 

if no imconstant toy, nor Romeo ^- Juliet, iy 1 

UNCONSTRAINED sovd give MnchAJn, iv. I 

he did it unconstrained, think you ..Sllenry I'l. i. 1 
UNCONTEMNED gone by him' ..Henry r III. iii. 2 
UNCONTROLLED enfranchifement.i?/o/imi/ //. i. 3 
UNCORRECTED, rank, conceives h\ ..Henri, r. v. 2 

UNCOUNTED heads 2HenryIV. (indue.) 

UNCOUPLE in the western valley. Mid.A'.'sDr. iv. 1 
uncouple here, and let us make .. TitusAndron- ii. 2 
UNCOURTEO US parts we had . . Tn-etflh Mulit, v. 1 
UNCOUTH forest yield any thing. /).st/oii/.!/fcj/, ii. 6 
I am surprised with an uncouth faar. Titns And. ii. 4 
UNCOA'E R, dogs, and lap .... Timon or Athens, iii. 6 

UNCOVERED slander MuchAdo,iv. I 

luicovered to the vulgar groom ....IHenryl'I. iv. I 
to answer with thy uncovered body this .Lear, iii. 4 
best robes uncovered on the biev. Hotneo ^Juliet, iv. 1 

UNO ROPPED flower Alfsiretl, v. 3 

UNCROSSED— his book uncrossed., rvmAc/iw^. iii. 3 

UNCROWN him, ere 't be long 3lle„r,,ii. jii. 3 

UNCTION to your sonl Hamlet, iii. 4 

I bought an tuiction of a mountebank — iv. 7 

UNCTUOUS, greases his pure . . Timon of Alliens, iv. 3 
UNCUCKOLDED; therefore, dear.,4ii/on!/^ Cleo. i. 2 
UNCURABLE-do growuueurable .'i Henry)' J. iii. 1 
uncnrable discomfit reigns in the hearts — v. 2 
UNCURBABLE, her garboiIs..../4n;o>iy ,5- Cleo. ii. 2 

UNCURBED plainness HenryJ'. i. 2 

UNCURI^S, even as an adder ..TilnsAndronicus, ii. 3 

UNCURH.ENT pay TwelfthNighf, iii. 3 

what encounter so uncurrent .... lI'inter'sTule, iii. 2 

like a piece of uncurrent gold Hamlet, ii. 2 

UNCURSE their souls Richard II. iii. 2 

UNDAUNTED mettle should compose. . Macbeth, i. 7 
undaunted spirit (rep. iii. 2 and v. 5). I Henry I' I. i. 1 

UNDE AF his ear Richard 11. ii. 1 

UNDECK the iiompons body — iv. 1 

UNDEEDED— I sheath agam undeeded.il/aetfM.v. 7 
UNDELIVERED. [Coi.] The dn\ieComedy of Err.\. 1 
UNDERBEAR— hound to underbea,r.Kras-7o/i;i, iii. 1 
UNDERBEARING of his fortune.... /rt/imvi //. i. 4 

UNDERBORNE with a bhieish Much Ado, iii. 4 

UNDERCREST your good addition.. Co,iVa«i«, i. 9 

UNDERGO— such dishouour undergo .Tempi-st, iii. 1 

would I not undergo for one . . Two Gen. of f'er. v. 4 

of worth to undergo such ample . . Meas.forMens. i. 1 

undergo such maiden pilgrimage . . Mid.X.'sDr. i. 1 

my ability may undergo IVintcr'sTale, ii. 3 

but undergo this flight — iv. 3 

much danger do I undergo *or t\\ce.. King John, iv. 1 
is't not I, to undergo thischarge? .... — v. 2 

a world of curses undergo \ Henry IV. i. 3 

able such a work to undergo 2 Henry 1 1', i. 3 

I will not undergo this sneap — ii. I 

than for us to rmdergo any . . Troilns (/ Cressida, ii. 3 
imdergo too strict a paradox. . Timon of Athens, iii. 5 
to undergo, with me, an enterprize .JidinsCrvsar, i. 3 
and would undeigo what's spoken . . Cymbelijie, i. 5 

undergo those employments — iii. .'j 

as infinite as man may undergo Hamlet, i. 4 

UNDERGOES my challenge MnchAdo, v. 2 

under'oes more goddess-like than.. Cymbelijie, iii. 2 

UNDERGOING stomach, to bear Tempest, i. 2 

UNDERGONE_are nobly undergone - iii. 1 

UNDERHAND means laboured to .AsyonVkeit, i. 1 

underhand corrupted (bul imnMac. Richard III. v. I 

UNDER-HANGRrANofhiskin2domCv"i!'f//i.e,ii.3 

UNDER-HONEST; in self- . . Troilus /, Cressida, ii. 3 

UNDERLING— we are underlings. .Jk/ZhsC^-.v,,!-, i. 2 

UNDERiSlINE.you.and blow von \\]> ..ATsll'ell, i. 1 

hired me to un'dermine the duchess.. 2f/c)i>i/ ('/. i. 2 

till these two undermine it .. Troilns & Cressida, ii. 3 

UNDEKMINERS, and blowers up!.....^«'s(fV«, i. 1 

UNDER-l'EEP her lids, to see Cwbeline. ii. 2 

UNDERPRIZING it Merchant of renice, iii. 2 

ITNDERPROP this action? kinnJohn.v. 2 

heream I left to miderinop his \auci. Ilntmrd II. ii. 2 
UNDER-SKINKER; one that never.l lle„,„ir. ii. 4 
UNDERSTAND thee unt....TunOen of rcrona, ii. 5 

my ftiiif understands me (r/?p.) — ii. 5 

stand under, and understand, is all one — ii. 5 

do you understand me? Tempest, ii. 1 

now let us understand (rep.) Merry Hires, i. 1 

do you understand me? (rz-p.) i. 1 

never need understand any thing — ii. 2 

for I must let you understand — ii. 2 

imdei stand my drift! — ii. 2 

he takes on him to understand TwelfthNight, i. 5 

1 woidd not understand it — i. 6 

1 understand you, sir, 'tis well begged — iii. 1 
my legs do better understand me irep ) — iii. 1 
this I can let you understand ..Meas. for Meas. iii. 2 
I am made to'understand, that you.. — iii. 2 

to make you understand this — iv. 2 

for you must understand Mid.N.'sDream, iii. I 

I understand not what von mean by this — iii. 2 
I understand you not; my griefs.. Loue'st./.osf, v. 2 
by these badges understand the king — v. 2 
understands not me, nor I him ..Mer. of Venice, i. 2 

to have yon understand me — i. 3 

I nnderstand moreover upon the Rialto — i. 3 

the duke was giveu to understand ,, — ii. 8 



.AU'sWell,i. I 

— i. 1 

— ii. 2 



— IV. 1 



ngofSh.i. 1 

— i. 2 

— iv. 2 



iv. 3 
. ii. I 
ii. 2 



UNDERSTAiND mc well Mcr. of Venice, iii. 2 

I pray thee, nnderslainl a plain man — iii. h 
your grace shall understand, that — iv. 1 (letter) 
given, sir, secretly to understand ...-Is you Like it, i. 1 
let me all your fortunes understand — ii. 7 

what must we understand by this? .. iv. 3 

understand we thai ? Be thou blest , 
understand what advice shall thrust 
you understand mc? IMost fruitfully, 
we understand it, and thank lieaven . 
nnderstand it not yourselves (rrp.) ... 

I understand thee, and can speak 

m^' suit, as I do under.stand 

understand me? (rep. i. 2 and iv- 2). Tan, 

nnderstand you this of me, in sooth.. 

by the way, I let ,von understand .... 

most understand Bohemia stays. . Winter'tTale, i 

speak a language that I imderstand not — 

I imderstand the Inisincss, I hear it.. — 

scarce couhl understand it (rep.) .Comedy ofEr; 

in all one word to understand — 

your liberty. I understiind thee not — 

you seem to understand me, by each ..Macbeth, i. 3 

dost thou understand me? thou art.. KingJohn, iii. 3 

to understand a law; to know — iv. 2 

but thou didst understand me by my — iv. 2 

French we do not understand Richard II. v. 3 

let me not understand you then 1 Henry 1 1', iii. I 

I understand thy looks; that pretty — iii. 1 
I understand thy kisses, and tliou mine — iii. 1 
now I perceive, the devil understands — iii. 1 
I am truly given to understand . ...\ Henry W. iv. 4 

and we understand hiin well HenryV.i.2 

I do partly understand your meaning — iii. 6 
me nnderstand v.'ell. Marry, if you .. — v. 2 
Kate, dost thou understand thus much — v. 2 
at large your grace shall uiiderstanil.2Hen>yr/. ii. 1 
and as I further have to understand — iv. 4 

to let ,yon understand, in case 3 Henry VI. v. 4 

3'ou shall understand from me.. ..Richard III. iv. 4 
understand again like honest men.. Henry Vlll. i. 3 
the king shallunderstand it, presently — v. 2 
to men that understand you, words .. — v. 2 
we understand not one another. 7'jy)i'?Hs ^Cress. iii. 1 
understand more clear, what's past .. — iv. 5 
you understand me not, that tell me so — v. 11 
how shall I understand you? ..Timon of Athens, i. 1 

make his lordship imderstand — ii. 2 

as I understand how all things go .. — iii. 6 
I understand thee; thou hadsi some — iv. 3 

I understand thee well ; and be Coriolanns, iv. 7 

I understand not, madam Antony ^Cleo. v 2 

five me directly to understand you . . Cymbelint; i. 5 
yet not understand the case myself — ii. 3 
I understand her signs: had she. .TitusAndron. iii. 1 
for he understands you are in arms .. — v. 1 

here I give to understand Pericles, iii. 2 (scroll) 

I understand yini not. O take her .. — iv,3 
as in part I underst.and them, are to blame. Lear, i. 2 

to understand my purposes aright — i. 4 

dost thou nnderstand nie, man? — ii. 4 

do not understand yourself so clearly .. Hamlet, i. 3 

I do not well understand that — iii. 2 

you must translate: 'tis fit we understand — iv. 1 
we would not nnder.-tand what was most — iv. 1 

I understand you not my lord — 

how dost thou understand the Scripture? — 
possihle to nnderstand in another tongue? — 

I do not understand. He's married Othello, i. 

let ourselves again but nnderstitnd — i. 3 

I understand a fury in yinn- words — iv. 2 

dost understand the word? my friend — v. 2 

yon shall understand u hat hath befallen — v. 2 
UNDERSTANDETH thee not .. Lores I..lost. iv. 2 
UNDERSTANDING begins to swell ..Tempest, v. J 
hast thou no understandings .... Merry IVives, iv. 1 
conve.\'ed to mj' understandings. .l/£'a.v._/o7-.1/c,/.t. iii. 1 
more sweet understanding. /ore'sL.Z,o5/, i. 1 (letter) 
now, understanding that the curate .. — v. 1 
the forward child, understanding..^.* yonl.ihe it, iii. 3 
or to thy better understanding, diest.. — v. 1 
my understanding instructs me . . Winter'' sTule, i. 1 
by any understanding ])ate but thine? — i. 2 
old in judgment and understanding. .2HCTii!//r. i. 2 
nicely charge your nuderstanding fOu\. HeiiryV. i. 2 
my wooing is fit for thy understanding — v. 2 
1 think his understanding is bereft. .SHetji-i/r/. ii. 6 
never an understanding friend.. Henry VIII. (prol.) 
men of some understanding and wisdom — v. 2 

I speak in understanding; you are Lenr,i\.h 

understanding simple and unschooled ..Hamlet, i. 2 

gii'e it an understanding, but no tongue.. — i. 2 

so much from the imdeislandingof himself — ii. 2 

UNDEHSTAND'ST. Why Atist. Troilns S,- Cress, iv. b 

UNDERSTOOD none neither, Bir..Lore'sL./,o)(,v. 1 

speak to be understood — v. 2 

is too cimning to be understood MnchAdo, v. 1 

verses cannot be untler-tood .4s yon Like it. iii. 3 

not to be understood without bloody. ..)//'s »'(•«, ii. 3 
answer j'oii as yeni wonhl be understood — iv. 3 

augurs, and understood relations Mnclieih, iii. 4 

by bad courses may be understood.. K/c/iajrf ;/. ii. I 

aiid hardly understood 2Henryl'L i. 4 

you are well understood to be Coriolatius, ii. 1 

those that understood him smiled. ../^//wsC^vir, i. 2 

I bale understood .your lord has took .. I'ertctes. i. 3 

UNDERTA'EN to do in his absence. Wi-iter'sT. iii. 2 

UNDERTAKE a journey .. TwoCen. of Verona, ii. - 

you must inidertake to slander liim — iii. 3 

you'll undei'takc her no more MerrriWires, iii. 5 

I would not undertake her in this. 7'ictW/i AVi'/i/, i. 3 
would .^'ou undertake another suit .. — iii. 1 
unless you undertake that with me.. — iii. 4 
in the interim, tnidertake one of ....MuchAdo, ii. I 

or undertakes them with a most — ii. 3 

well, I will undertake it ."./-■i/..V.'.«Dieam, i. 2 

undertake 3*our ben venuto Love'sL. Lost, iv. 2 

so confidently undertake to do A It's Well, iii. 6 

hand of a sol'dier, I will undertake it — iii. 6 
seems to undertake this busiucES ... . — iii. 6 



iv. 2 
v. 1 
V. 2 



UNDEnTAKE the recovery AlVttreU, iv. I 

Tiiii iiiiiUTInl<c t.> iH'tniv tlie FloiTntinc? — iv. 3 
"ondermke IIk' t<-!icli.n; iifth.- iiuiiil.. yam.(t/-SA. i. I 

Kill iimlcrtiiki' lo w. irsl K'ltlmrine — i. 2 

uninc ami nvilit slmH vciii iin.liTtiikc _ iv. 2 
ami muk'rluki.' to lie iur aiUimitc. llwlrr'tTah, ii. 2 

Ic. uiiiU-iliiki' ll'.i; Im-iiH'ss for 119 — iv. 3 

wli:it von liiil lOL' iiiiilcrlulie KiiiiJ"hn, iii. 3 

liisk li.- iniiliTtiiko.< is-mimbi'riii(i.. KiWi.in/ //. ii. S 
vnii niuUi f.iko is iliintrvi.ms.l /|p,i.i;/r. ii. 3 (letter) 

I'll iinilerluke to innkv {rrp.) Mleiinill. v. 3 

will tli.-v niiclirtike to ilo me s-muXI. .'I llr,in, fl. i. 2 
never will I iin leiluke the lh\iifi....Mlrm!/ri. ii. (i 
I'll umleitiike lo liiml tlieiii on our count — iii. 3 

to umlerl.ikc llie .leiuli ofull nieharU III. i. 2 

till' ileeil von iinileriiike isihimnulilc — i. 4 

iTo.n mv life, my loid, I'll nnilcrtiikc it — v. 3 
I'll MM.Iirtnko. limy see away ..llenrijl'lll. (prol.) 

« ho unileituke? you to your end — ii. 1 

tliwslmll I uiiderlake Trnitm ^ Cressida, iii. 3 

iird uiulertiike to bring him where. CoiiVoiiiii, iii. I 
111 nn lert.ike it: I think, he'll hear ine — v. 1 
Khoiinl iindertiikc every eoiniwiiioii Cymfcfd'iif, ii. 1 
wlieici'ore then didst undertake it? .. — iii. 4 

full «enk to uiidertnkc onr wni-! — iii. 7 

dare I nnderr.iUe for !;ocul lord Titn9.TOi«.4trf. i. 2 
the daniiei- of ihe t:i-U vuu nndertiike ..I'eiicles, i. I 
she'll not uiiderliike a innrried life .... — ii. 5 
and I will nndcrtiikc uU these to teiicll — iv.fi 
of his spirit, that dares not nndertiike. . . . Lear, iv. '-' 
undertake a thing like deiith . . Ilnmeo ^Juliet, iv. 1 
that he nieiins no more to undertake it. Hrt»i/f(, iv. 7 

what M-onlil von undertake, to show — iv. 7 

tr. im.kTtuke'tliei.- present wars aj,'aiiist.O.'Ae»o, i. 3 

the virtu. .in Desdi-niiiini to undertake .. — ii. 3 

UNOEKT.VKr.i:, 1 am lor you ..TweinhNighi, iii. 4 

for Caisio, let me lie his undertaker llthrlln, iv. I 

UNDEUT.VKIXGsouiistaid ..ruoGm.nn'tr. ii. 7 
constant in any undertaking ..Mcai./or Mens. iii. 2 
whicli holy undertaking, with miyst..ilU'sll'M, iv. 3 

your free undertaking canuot Hinier'tTnle, ii. 2 

as well my undertnkings....Tro(<iM4't''es«'da, ii. 'i 

nothing, but onr undertakings — iii. 2 

either tie so undertaking, or they ..Cymhetlne, iv. 2 

the will to des|ierate uiulertiikiiigs Unmlfi. ii. 1 

UNDIOKTOOK to sitand watch ....'ineurijll'. iv. 4 
in inv mind, not undertook. -UercAan/ o^' /Vn/c/*, ii. 4 
I undertook it, vaniiuished thereto ..All'sH'fU, v. 3 
since first he undertook this cause. '/'iViij.-lii'/ro/i. i. I 

to he undertook bv Roderigo olhMo, v. 2 

UNUEKV.VLUEli to Cmo's.. Merchnntqfl'cnice, i. I 

ten times u idervalued to tried gold? — ii. 7 

U.VDKllWK-VT— ye underivenl? .. ..1 Hcnri/Zr. i. 3 

lT\»EK\VlilT, liere may yon see Mm-hcih, v. 7 

UNUEKNS'KITE in anobserving Troihis ^-Cress. ii. 3 

ir.N'UERWRUUGHT his lawful king. Kh,;'.lolm, ii. 1 

UN»ESCRIED-i!etundescried..ir,,,/,.r '»•/'../- '" ' 

UNIJESERVED dignity .... Ulnchnulnfrenr 

this is hard and undeserved measure.. .///'sKV/i, 

some undeserved fault I'll fliirl., Tinifif,- nfsi,. 

to he used in nndeserveil extremes.. A'iiii'.'oAn, 

UNDESERVKR may sleep •iUcn,<i II. 

Iie.'iped upon me. poor uiideservcr./(/''irv;7;;. i 

offices for gohl. to uiidescrvers lulius 

U.XDESERVING as I a.m ..TwoGen.of Vermin, in. 1 

gives undeserving praise Lnve^sL.Ln^i, v. 2 

U.N'Di;TEliMINi;U rlifrereneesof....Kmi,'Jo/in, ii. 2 
UNOID-Kiite. wliv vou undid me . ... Henry r. v. 2 
cool, and what tliev undrd. did.. .4>i'nii!/ ^C(eo. ii. 2 
TTM)I.NTi;i)-lmek our targe uiiiliiited — ii. fi 
U.\I)ISCER.\'.\BI,K. when I . . . . Mcas. fnr .^feas. v. I 

UNDISCOVERED eiime to me i llenrii I' I . iii. 1 

niysterv remained undiscovered.. Winler'iTale, v. 2 

the un<1iser»vere»l conntrv. from whose. //'im/c/. iii. 1 

trXDlSIIO.N'Ol'RED. Plead yon. .Com. of Ery. ii. 2 

i;ND!SM()-iKD-when Iain undisposed — i. 2 

UNDISTl.\(i U lSll.VBI,E:t he. ;l/i(/. A'. '«DrM 



, ii. 9 



, IV. .■! 



mill. 



idiuid.Ktii 



slmble 



UNDISTINCJUI.-^UED space of woman's. /e-rr, iv. 

UNDIVID.VREE. incorporate ..rnm,;hj nf lin: ii. 2 
scene niidividahlc, or poem uidiiuited.. Ihimtci, ii. 2 

TJ.VDIVUl.tJEDprtlenee I liglit Marhrih, ii. 3 

hast within thee undiviilged crimes ....hear. iii. 2 

UNDO -could not again undo Temfi-tt, i. 2 

quaffing and drinking will \ini\o..TuelflUKiislu, \. 3 
will not undo what j'oii have done .. — ii. I 
to undo Hero, and kill Leoiiato......MHrA/t'io, ii. 2 

to bind me, or undo me — v. 4 

und'i this hateful imperfectiou.3/''i/..V.*ii Pi^-am, iv. 1 

seek not to undo ut Lore's I.. I.ntl, v. 2 

which sliiill undo the Florentine . . . . A U, irelt, iv. I 
which should undo more doing ..Iliuier'iTfilr. i. j 
mark me how I will undo myself .. Wic/iart/ //. iv. 1 

good speech now, yon undo t'ne ..'illenn/l I', (cjiil.) 
o, or undo, as if oiirself iHenrt/yi. ili. I 

scribbled o'er, should undo a man? .. — iv. 2 
shall do, and undo, as liim pleaselli.3Hi-»ri/l^/. ii. 6 

a 8<!ruple that will undo her llenryi'liLu. I 

this love will undo us all Trnilui>\(,e,„:l,i,u\. 1 

undo a great deal of honour? ..Tnm^u •./■.I'/rriu, iii. 2 

will you undo yoiirsclvei-? t'oriolat/m. i. 1 

undo' that prayer, by crying ....jln'o/ii/ fjrCleo. iii. 4 

what can it not do, and undo? Ci/mbelint,i\. 3 

wilt thou undo the worth — v. 5 

this jietty brabble will undo us .. VilmAniiron. ii. I 
done! that which tliou canst not undo — iv. 2 

I'd give it to undo the deed Pcriclei, iv. 4 

I'rianns, and unilo a whole generation — iv. 8 

shall undo a whole household — iv. U 

she's Imrn to undo in — iv. 6 

■o distribution should undo excess J^rar, iv. I 

pra}' you undo tliis bntt'in; thank you .. — v. 3 

or eiiuivocatioii will undo lis Hamlet, v. \ 

she shall undo her credit with the Moor.t"/ic«o,ll. 3 
I should; and nndo't. when I had done.. — iv. 3 

UNDOES-aiid undoesdescriptiou. Ifinler'iTale, v. 2 
mv womb, my womb undoes me ..2tlriiryiy. iv. 3 

UNDOING-his master's undoing ....All'ilfell, ii. 4 
undoing all, as all had never l>eenl..2npnr|//'/. i. 1 
mere undoing of all the kingdom .. IJniri/ cy//. iii. 2 



UNDOINQ-'tis my imdniiiK Henry nil. v. 2 

bv the undoing of yourself. .An/nuy SrCteotmlrn, v. 2 
UNDO.\ E-inan is never undone, TtooCen. of Ver. ii. 5 

sir, we are undone! — iv. 1 

you are undone for ever (rrp.) ,.!>terryWivei,\'i,\. 3 

I am undone! trrp. iv. .M — iv. 2 

she is slandered, she is undone MuchAUn, iv. 1 

Antonio iseertainly undone Merchanlnf Venirr, iii. I 

I have undone three tailors .itynuLike it. v. 4 

I am undone; there is no living AWtli'eU,\. I 

undone, and forfeited to cares tor evcrl — ii. 3 

the king, and niidone iiic — iii. 2 (letter) 

you are niid. 'lie. captain — iv. 3 

a pi«ir iiniid is undone — v. 3 (petition) ! 

now we are iindone {rrp.t .... Taming of Hhreir, v. I 

I am undone! I aui undone! ^ — ^* ' 

even here niidoiie! I was not .... tVinler'sTtile, iv. 3 
you have undone a man of fourscore — iv. 3 
faith with him: undone! undone! .. — iv. 3 

tlian wishest should be undone Macheth. i. 5 t 

what's done, cannot be undone — v. 1 ' 

estate o' the world were now undone .. — v. 5 

wc are undone (rep. v. 2) 1 Henry 1 1', ii. 2 

arc ye undone? no, ye fat chuffs .... — ii. 2 

I am nnrlone by his going 'iHenryl I', ii. 1 

mv old dame will be undone now ... — iii. 2 
thou hast undone thyself, tliy son ..illrvryrL i. I 

tliis paper liiis undone me Henri, It 1 1, iii. 2 

theniuii'- mil ir I u ever..7'rni7KS<S-(;r<'«>/(/a. iii. 3 

nreweuiii .if? ■rimnnnl Alliens, \v. 2 

byhisr>.\ I, i; .I'lie by goodness! — iv. 2 

by tliat » i;ii h Ii:.^ I'Milone thee — iv. 3 

a truer grief for his undone lord — iv. 3 

we cannot, sir, we are undone Coriotnnns, i. I 

leaves nothing undone — ii. 2 

we are are all undone, unless the noble — iv. 6 

j'et he hatli left undone that — iv. 7 

to wish things done, undone JnlinsCrrsnr, iv. 2 

and be undone by 'em! .... Antony ^Cleopatra, ii. 5 
better leave undone, than by our .... — iii. 1 

we are al 1 undone Cymheline, iv. 2 

we are all undone! now help . '/'(7ux.J;idro»ic(M, iv, 2 

thou ha^t undone our mother — iv. 2 

hellish dog, thoii hast undone — iv. 2 

by which time onr secret be undone.. ../'er/cie*. i. 1 

can it be undone? O Oionyza — iv. 4 

I cannot wish the fault undone Lear, i. 1 

undone, lady, we are undone! . . Itomeo ^ Jnliet, iii. 2 
to leave undone, but keep unknown ..O'lielia, iii. 3 

I am spoiled, undone by villains! .... — v. I 
ala-I he is betrayed, and 1 undone — v. 2 

UNDOUBTED-and undoubted blest.. .^/;'.. »',•;(, ii. I 

till it he inidouVited, we do lock l<in);Jnhn. ii. 2 

nnilnnhted hope of France! Mlinryl'l. iii. 3 

f.ir h:irdv;ind undoubted champions. 3 He/ir?/ /'/. v. 7 
UNDOlIliT;CDLY was fashioned .. Ile,in, II II. iv. 2 
UNUOUHTFIFL proof .. ..Measure fhr Measure, iv. 2 

UNDREAMED slmres IVinter\Tale,iv. 3 

UNDRESS von, andcume.T'aming-of.s-Arcw, 2 (indue.) 

UNDR1;SSi;D. unpolished Love'sL.Lo^iv. 2 

irNDROWNED. as he, that sleeps ()c/).)7'<'m;«;, ii. 1 
irNDUTEUUS-or unduteoiis title .;Ucriy u icm, v. 5 
UNDUTIFUL-areall undutifiil....3;y»',ir.,/7. v. !> 
IIiNEAIlXED luck now Ul.... Mid.N.'sDream. (epil.) 
UNE VliTIlEY it was i' the offering! ir,;i ',.,'» 7'. iii. 1 
U.\'E.\SIXESS— grief and uneasiness ..ilenryt'. ii. 2 
UNE.'V.SY — I must uneasv make T.mpesf, i. 2 

1 think it not uneasy to" get .... winter' sT-ile, iv. 1 

upon uneasy pallets stretcliing 2Henryiy. iii. I 

uneasv lies the head that wears — iii. 1 

UN E ATI! mav she endure tlie RhAs-illenryl'l. ii. 4 

UNEDUCATED, unpriined Lm-e's L. I.on, iv. 2 

UNEFEECTUAL-his niieffectual lire . . llamlei, i. 5 
UNlCLECTED-passed him niielected.Cor-n/.omj, ii.3 
UNEQUAL-a heavy and nneiiiiul..2Hciir!/;/'. iv. I 

dauL'hter is nneqnnl odds I Henry I' 1. v. 5 

my legs of an unequal size Z Henry I' I. iii. 2 

seems much unequal Aritoni/ ^-t'leopatra, ii. 5 

unequal inalcheir, Fyrrhns at Rriam .. Hamlet, ii. 2 

U.\EV'E.\ and distiaeted manner. j)/to«. lor Mean. iv.i 

fallen iiiu I in dark uneven wav .Mid.N.'sDr. iii. 2 

all is niieven, and every tiling i's Uichard II. ii. 2 

and rough uneven ways, draw out .. — ii.3 
more uneven and unwelcome news . . 1 Henry IV. i. I 

eiglit yards of uneven ground — ii. 2 

uneven is the course, llike it not,iio;nro fyJul. iv. 1 
UNEX AMI N ED, free, at liberty . . Uichard III. iii. 6 
UNEXECUTEDyoiuowii renowncd.4n/. A-Cleo. iii? 

UNEXPECTED, by so much Kitii{Jol,n,ii. 1 

devoured In' the unexpected flood .. — v. 7 
XtN K.Xl'Elll E.N'CED to thy grace. rami'n?((rS/i. iv. 1 

UN !•: X P 1 ; loss 1 VE she As yon Like i(, iii. 2 

U.\l' Al rill FL-band of the unfaithful — iv. I I 
UNFAMi;D-nr death unfamed . y'ro-/ii< 4 Cress, ii. 2 
UNF.\.SIll()\.VBLE, that dogs ....Uichard III. i. I 
UXFAS rE.\ so. and shake a friend.2Hfnii///'. iv. I 

VNFAI111;r|;D heirs — iv. 4 

I' NEED -houseless beads, and unfed sides. I-ror, iii. 4 

U.XFI'.E'D-breath of an unfee'd lawyer .. — i. 4 

UNFEEElNG-thnu unfeeling mnn..W<'r.o/;>n. iv. 1 

unfeelinij fools can with such .. Comedy of Krr. ii. I 

dull, unfeeling, barren ignorance Itichard 1 1, i. 3 

mv flngers feel his hand unfeeling .•illemyl'l. iii. 2 

UNFEIGNED oath TaminKofShreiv, iv.i 

in kindness, and unfeigned love ..Sllenryfl. iii. 3 
his irieiid, av his unfeigned friend .. — iii. 3 

UNI EKi.N'KDI.y beseech your All'sli'eU, ii. 3 

for I do love her most unfeignedly../i'inc.'"*", ii. 2 
and wliat von do, do it iinfeignedly.Hic/inr'i ///. ii. 1 

UNIEEEuWED-be'suiifellowed Hamlet, v. 2 

UNFEI/r-to show an unfelt sorrow ..Maelnlh, ii. 3 
Is yet but unftit thanks, which ....Uichard II. ii. 3 

nnd. lor niifelt imaginations Uichard III. i. 4 

TTN FENCED desolation leave KingJnhn, ii. 2 

UNFIEIAE— sometliing uiifllial.. Winter' sTale, iv. .1 

UNFILLED can TtDclfih Sit!hi,i\.i 

the veins iintllled, onr blood is cold.CoriolnMTu, v. 1 

UNFINISHED sent liefore my time. HirAnr</ ///. i. 1 

chain uiiHiiisbeil made ine stay.Coin»i/|/o/A'rr. iii. 2 

though unliuished, yetso famous .Henry I' 11 1. iv, i 



UNFIBM-more giddy and un&rm.Tirelflh Ki;;ht, ii. 4 

so is the unflrin king in three illrnryir. i. » 

shakes, like a thing uiiilrm? JnlinsCipsar, i. 3 

iiiiHrm, with digging iii) llomeo^Jnliei, v. 3 

UNFIT-heiiig most unlit to live ....Tempest, iii. 3 

unlit to live, or die Measure /or. tleasnre.iv. 3 

BO adverse, and means unfit All'sl'ell, v. 1 

but far unfit to be a sovereign 3 Henry I I. iii. 'i 

and thou unfit for any place Uichaid Itl.i.'i 

I am iiiidt fir stale and majesty .... — iii. 7 

who, unlit for other life Henry I'll I. i. 2 

you'll find a most unfit time — ii. 2 

thought iiiifit to hear moral Tioitusti Crest, ii. 2 

iinfi; forinineowii pui']ioses 0;//W/o, iii. 3 

UNI ITNESS-I have showed the iiiifitiie88./-r«r. i. 4 

UNFl.K -image doth iiiiflx my hair ....MacMh, i. 3 

bid the tree unfix his earth-bound .. — iv. ) 

iiliickiiig to unfix an enemy 2 Henry 1 1', iv. I 

UNFLEDGED days was my uife.. Hi-7i/,-r'.7-,i(/>, i. 2 
poor iMiftedged, have never vring<;d..Cymbeline, iii. 3 
ude . . //am/ 
.Merry Ifir 
TuelfthNiglil.i. 4 
— V. 1 
leat. for Meat. i. I 



O iheii unfold the passion 

here to unfold (though lately we 



jiroperties to unfold.. 

doth thy history fully unfold 

with ripened time, unfold the evil.... — v. I 
in tt spleen unfolds both heaven. A/i(/.A'.'iZ)r*arn, i. I 

to you our minds we will unfold — i. I 

never to unfold to any one wliieh..l/cr. o/I'mw, ii.9 
unfold to us some warlike resistance .. All's It'ell, i. I 
that make, and unfold error. tlinier'sTale, iv. (cho.) 

unfold his message ere he come Macbeth, iii. 6 

I will unfold some causes of llichardll. iii. 1 

worldly loss, thoii can'st unfold — iii. 2 

unfold the acts commenced ....2llenrylV. (indue.) 
wronged and would unfold our griefs — iv. I 
justly and religiously unfold, why .... Henry V. i. 2 

mv master's mind. Unfold it — iii. 6 

do'th tremble to unfold 2//riiry;7. ii. 1 

would unfold his father's arts _ iii. 2 

me to unfold [CVy/ A',i/.-report] Uichard III. ii. 4 

that von unfold to me. yourself ..JulinsCwtar, ii. 1 

my Cains. I sliiill unfold to thee — ii. I 

rather than unfold his measure duly .Cymbeline, i. I 
I shall unfold equal discouitesy .... — ii.3 
unfold a dangerous Epeeeli. though .. — v. 5 
time shall untold what plaited cunning ..Lear.i. I 
unfold the iiiuigincd happiness.. /(nmco .J- .'ii/ie/, ii. « 

stand and unfold yourself Hamlet, i. I 

serious hearing to what I shall unfold .. — i. 5 
I could a tale unfold, whose lightest word — i. 5 
[Co/.] unfold their grand coininis>ion .... — v. 2 
more, much more, than he unfolds ....Olhello, iii. 3 
that such companions thoud'st unfold .. — iv. 2 

the Moor may unfold me to hiin _ v. I 

UNFOLDED-hear them unfolded.jVciri/M'.rcj, ii. 2 
purpose have you unfolded this to me? — ii. 2 

proceedings are all unfolded UenryVIII. iii. 1 

must I be nnlolded with one i\\Vit..iniony^Cleo.v. 2 

UNIOFOFTM to mv hope TireinhMghi. i. 2 

UNFOLDING star calls up Vens.for Meat. iv. 2 

to my I infolding lend a gracious ear ....Olhello, i. 3 

UNI ( n IL me again ? Merry Ifires, iv. 2 

UNFi I RCED accord of Hamlet Hamlet, i. 2 

a most iHvgnant and unlorceil iK)sifion..O(/iW/o, ii. I 
UNFORFEl'rED-faithunforfeitedL1/«-.o/-/>H.ii. 6- 
UNFORTIFIED, or miud impatient ... Hamlet, i. 2 

UNFORTUNATE be As yon Like it. Hi. 2 

your unfortunate son, Bertram. .J//'s»'W/, iii. 2 (let.) 
unfortunate souls that trace his Una.. Macbeth, iv. 1 

unfortunate, I missed my aim 1 tienty I'l. i. 4 

that Henry was unfortunate 3 Henry I I. iii. 3 

I was so unfortunate a bepg.ar ..Timon of Aih. iii. 6 
more unfortunate than all living . . C'ono/aiiiis, v. 3 
he was gentle, but unfortunate .... Cymbetme, iv. 2 

a poor unfortunate beggar Lear, iv. 6 

time! unfortunate old man! Komeo^Jufiel, iv. 5 

I am unfortunate in the infirmity UlhtUo, ii.3 

is this rash and most unfortunate man? — v. 2 

UNFlKTGiri' withnl Henrj, r. Hi. b 

UNFREQUENTED woods ..Tu-nGen.orrerona.v. 4 

in tVeiiueuted plots there are.. lilnsAndrnnirus, ii. I 

UNFK HANDED, often prove rough.. tireljthK. iii. 3 

nnlVieliiled. new-adopted to onr hate Lear, i. I 

TTNI- Rl lONDLY element-, forgot thee../VriV'ri, iii. I 

rNFUKNJSH me of reason frinlrr'slale, v. I 

UNH'liNISUED; yet look.,Wffrc/i<iii/ oflenice, iii. 2 
empty lodgings, and iinfiirnished ..Iticlmrd II. 1. 2 
the Se.t on his iinfiirnisbed kingdom ..Henry I', i. 2 
unfllrni^hed of her well-beseeming .. TilnsAnd. ii. 3 
lunch nnfiiiiiielied for this tiine./loi<iro.5-./ii/(V/, iv. 2 
T'NG.VINKI), more than it is.. Troiliu/i Cressida, i. 2 
a. ■iuevein. lit is command; ungained — i. 2 

U.VG.VLLKD estimatiim Comedy of Errors, iii. 1 

go we. p. the heart nngalled plav Hamlet, Hi. 2 

UN(;.\RTI',i;i:n. ami down-gwed _ ii. 1 

Froten r _ .1 :,arteie.i;..7i/oCrM.»!/';>r. ii. 1 

^*oIlrl... .. ■m;:artered.. v4fi/oM /.**■*• i7, iii. 2 

U'N'ttE.M : ' 1 1 i ; iuit's Men's, ror .Meat. Hi. 2 

UNGENlil i;: 1 1 J. nt will unpeople — iii. 2 

UNGi;NTl,E-nii-euile to you .....It you Like it, v. 2 

for this ungentle business, put on.Hj'ri(CT-'»ra/f, iii.3 

fearful usage (at least, ungentle) .... — v. I 

vicious, itngcntle, foolish. hhu-it.Comedyof Err. iv. 2 

our old limbs in ungentle steel? 1 Henrylf. v. I 

as that ungentle gull, the cuckoo's .. — v. 1 
ungentle queen, to call hiin gentle..V//rnr|//7. iii. 2 

or strike ungentle death 1 3 Henry I' I. ii. 3 

upon me with ungentle looks luliu\C(esar, ii. I 

Ciesar cannot live to be ungentle. /4ii<niii/ .^I'/i-o. v. 1 
stern ungentle hands have lopped. 7'i7in.4ii(/ron. ii. j 
though most iin:.'entle fortune hatli .. I'eneles, iv. 6 
ITNGENTLENES.S, to show the ..Asyoul.tkeil, v. 2 
UNGIONTLY— my father so uiigently?.. Tempest, i. 2 
lord so much imgently tcmi)ered.'/'ro<7i«.< Crfii, v. 3 
have nngentlv, firutus, stole from.. J«/n«C<r»or, ii. I 

I'NtiIRD thv strangeness TueifhMghi.iv. 1 

i;.N'(iO|)LY (lav wear out KiuKJohu, iii. I 

UNGOKED— tu keep my uorne ungored.Hamlir/, v. 2 



UNGOT— as she from one ungot . . il/ois. rm-.\f,;,s. v. 1 

IIXGOTTEN, and unborn 'lievn/l-. i. 2 

UNGOVERNF.D youth ...T,roGpii.nrr,-rn,:a, iv. I 
estate is green, and yet ungoverned./iiV/ja/f^i III. ii. :; 
allKood men of tliis nngoverned isle — iii. 7 
ungoverued youtli. to wail it in tlieir age — iv. 4 

lest liis inipoverned rage dissolve Lent; iv. 4 

UN(iRACI(5US wretcli, fit for ....TirelflhNi^ht. iv. I 
an ungraeious moutli, is but profane. Kn-ltnid II. ii. 3 

Bwear'st thou, ungracious boy? 1 tlfin-i/l r. ii. 4 

cut off thy most ungracious head .."^lU'nrii I' I. iv. in 
I (ungracious) sneak unto myself. .///(''miv/ ///. ii. 1 
peace, you imgracions clamours!. 7'j-o/iii.f ^' Cress, i. 1 

with tills ungracious! paper strike Lear, iv. 

as some nni^racious pastors do Hntnlel, i. 3 

UNGK.VTEFULmaidl Mid.N.'sDream/ni. 2 

and damnable ungrateful Winter^Tale, iii. 2 

BO straiglit, and so ungrateful King John, v. 7 

'tis called ungratel'nl, witli dull .... Rclmrd III. ii. 2 
out in nn ungrateful shape! .. Timon of Alliens, iii. 2 
into the bowels of ungrateful Rome. Corinlanns, iv. 5 
ungrateful country done the like. TihisAndron, iv. 1 
shaken with sorrows in xmgrateful Rome — iv. 3 

TTNGILWELY he did fashion Coriotanus, ii. 3 

TNGKOWN warrior Mlenryli'. v. 4 

UNGUARDED Duncan? Macbeth, \. 7 

to her unguarded nest tlie weasel Saot .Henry V. i. 2 

open of tlie imguarded hearts Cyinbeltne, v. 3 

UNGUEM— dunirhill for ungnem.. toff?'.? L.Lnsl, v. 1 
UNGUIDED, and nnfriendecl .. ..TuelflliNight, iii. 3 

the unguided d.avs, and rotten '2 Henry IV. iv. 4 

UNI-IACKED edges Anloni/ f,- Cleopatra, ii. B 

unbacked [Co;. A'jif.unhatehed] rapier. Ti/'W/'A. v. iii. 4 

retire, witli unbacked swords King John, ii. 1 

TjNII.VIR thy head Antony^ Cleopatra, Vu 5 

NIIAIREDrCfi/.-nnbeard]sauciness.Km«-Jo/in, V.2 

UNIIALLOWILD friar! .. ..Measure for Measure, v. I 

lay'st in tby unhallowed dam ..Mer.of I'enice. iv. 1 

or unluil lowed, wlrat of that? \ Henry ri. iii. 1 

never day nor night unhallowed pass. 2 Hciiri/ ''/. ii.l 
this unliallowed and blood-stained . . Titus And. ii. 4 
your unhallowed dam, like to the earth — v. 2 
inhmnan dog! unhallowed slave! .... — v. 2 

free from this unhallowed place Pericles, iv. 6 

stop tby unhallowed toil Romeo ^Juliet, v. 3 

I^NII-IND me, gentlemen Hamlet, i. 4 

UNUxVNnLED colts Merchant of Venice, v. 1 

tiie cause o' the king unhandled ..Henry VI ll. iii. 2 
UISTHANDSOME-were unhandsome.. .fl/up/i/lr/o, i. 1 

it is no more unliandsome As yon LiUe u, (epil.) 

a slovenly unhandsome corse betwixt, 1 Henn/I V. i. 3 
I was (mibandsome warrior as I am) . . Othello, iii. 4 

UNHANGICDin England \ Henri/ 1 V. ii. 4 

UNIIAPPIED and disfigured c\ea.n. Ricliard II. iii. 1 

UNHAPPILY, even so Measure fur. Measure, i. 3 

I should judge now unb.appily .... Henry I'll I. i. 4 

writes of. succeed unhappily Lenr, i. 2 

nothing sure, yet mucli unhappily Hamlet, iv. ,'j 

UNHAPPlNESS, and waked herself.. MwA. -Wo, ii. 1 

be Iieir to his unhappinessi Richard 111. \, 2 

UNHAPPY messenger TwoGen. of Verona, iv. i 

some mihappy passenger in chace .... — v. 4 
O miserable, unhappy that I am! (rc/i.) — v. 4 

imhappy were you, madam — v. 4 

thou niak'st me most unhappy — v. 4 

the fortunate unhappy ..TwelfthNight, ii. b (letter) 

lier unhappy brother (?'ep.) Meas.,for Meas. i ■ ft 

unhappy Claudiol wretched Isabel! — iv. 3 

a shrewd unhappy gallows too.... Love'sL.Lost, v. 2 
am. the unhappy subject of these. M<r>-. of Venice, v. 1 
unhappy youth, come not within. ylj you Like it, ii. 3 

we are not all alone unliappy — ii. 7 

a shrewd knave, and an miliappy .iIVs 'Veil, iv. 5 

armed for some unhappy words.. Taming of Sh. ii. 1 
as true, as I am now unliappy . . Winter^sTale, iii. 2 
kings are no less unliappy, their issue — iv. 1 
anil that unhappy king, my master.. — iv. 3 
of them, unhappy, lose myself . . Comedy of Err. i. 2 
O most unhappy day! O most unhappy — iv. 4 

to-day, to-day, unhappy day Ilichard II. iii. 2 

wlien the unhappy king (wliose ....] Heuryl t'.l. 3 
ah me, unhappy! to be a gueen 2HenryVt. iii. 2 

Clarence, my unhappy son ! . . . . Richard Lll. ii. 2 
Edward's unhappy sons do bid thee .. — v. 3 

1 am the most unhappy woman . . Henrtj VIll. iii. I 

a more unhappy lady, if tills Antony ^Cleo. iii. 4 

unhappi' was tlie clock that struck.. C"j/»ifcf /i/i'', v. 5 
uiihappv son of old Andronicus. . Tilus Andron. ii. 4 
and make a conquest of unhappy me .. Pericles, i. 4 

unliappy that I am, I cannot lieave Lear,\. 1 

tliou old unhappy traitor, briefly — iv. G 

unhappy sight! [Co(. Kji(.-0 prince] Romeo <?■/«(. iii. I 
accursed, unhappy, wretched, hateful — iv. 5 
unhappy fortune! by my brotherliood — v. 2 
O unhappy girl! witli the Moor Othello, i. ] 

foor and unhappy brains for drinking .. — ii. 3 
am most unhappy in the loss of it .... — iii. 4 
a most nnhappv one; I would do much.. — iv. 1 

UNHARDENED youth .Mid.N.'sDream, i. 1 

UNHARMED— lives unharmed ..Romeo ^Juliet, i. 1 

UNII.VTCHED practice Othello, iii. 4 

UNHEARD, fall on your head King John, iv. 2 

as Cominius is returned, unheard ..Coriotanus, v. 1 

she shall not sue unheard. ^n/ojiy ^Cleopatra, iii. 10 

whisper in the ears of deatii, unheard.. I'erietes, iii. 1 

UNHEART— muehunbearts me .. ..Corioianus, v. t 

UNIIEEDFUL, desperate, and wild. I Henry VI. iv. 4 

nnhcedf ll vows may beedfuUy.. r»o Gen. o/;Vr. ii. 6 

UNIlEEDFULLY-notunheedfuUy .. — i. 2 

TI.N'HEKDY haste: and therefore ..Mid.N.'sDr. i. I 

UNHEI.PFUL-sad unhelpful tears.2;fe»)v'''. iii- 1 

UNHIDDEN— and unhidden passages.. Henrj/r. i. 1 

UNHOLY-most unholy match. Tiro Gen. of Ver. iv. 3 

by this unholy braggart Corioianus, v. 5 

in her unholy service Pericles, iv. 4 (Gower) 

mere implorators of unholy suits Hamlet, i. 3 

0NHOPED-witb unhoped joys.... 3 Heiiji/r/. iii. 3 
UNHOPEFULLEST husband tliat I..Much.-ldo, ii. 1 
jJNHORSE the lustiest challenger ..Richard II. v. 3 
SNIIOSPITABLE-aud uiiliospitable. TwelfthN. iii. 3 



TrNIlOir.-<|0l) trunks Timon of Athens, iv. .? 

mv nnh.iiised free condition Olhcllo, \. 2 

UNI loU.-^F. LED, disappointed Ilnmln,;. 6 

UNIIU RTF UL nil opposite .... Meas. for iVeas. iii. 2 
UNICORN— tliat there are unicorns .. Tempest, iii. 3 

wert thou the unicorn Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

that unicorns may lie betrayed JuliusCresar, ii. 1 

UNIMPROVED rnettle liot and full ....Hamlet, i. 1 

UNINHABlTAiBI.E, and almost TemnesI, ii. 1 

UNlN't'ELLIGENTofour iyinier'si;,le. i. I 

UNIUN-bestrew tlie union of your lied. Trmpesl, iv. 1 
but yet a union in iiartitiou... Miil.N.'sltrenin, iii. 2 

this union shall do more King John, ii. 2 

in the cup an union shall he throw .... Hamlet, v. 2 
is the union here? follow my mother.. .. — v. 2 

UNITE your troops of horsemen I Henry VI. i v. I 

of love unite our tlioughts i Hetiry V I . i. I 

we will unite the white rose Richard III. v. 4 

will now unite in your complaints. Hem i/ (7 //.iii. 2 

should again unite his favour Cymbeline, v. 5 

unite commutual in most sacred Hamlet, iii. 2 

UNITED ceremony Merry Wives, iv. 6 

dissever your united strengths King John, ii. 2 

like a broken limb united iHenrylV. iv. 1 

that the united vessel of their — iv. 4 

continue this united league Richard III. ii. 1 

UNITY— such unity in tlie viaofs.-M'inter'sTale, v. 2 

confound all unity on earth Macbeth, iv. 3 

make me happy in your unity Richard III. ii. 1 

the unity, the king thy brother — iv. 4 

the unity and married calm. . Troilus ^ Cressida, i. 3 

if there be rule in unity itself — v. 2 

bound to divine of this unity.... .Jn/o)i)/<5-C/eo. ii. 6 

UNIVERSAL plodding prisons up.Lowe'sL.Los(, iv.3 

applause, and universal shout ..Mer.of Venice, iii. 2 

this wide and universal theatre ..As you Like it, ii. 7 

the woe had been universal IVinler'sTale, v. 2 

uproar the universal peace, confound. il/oc6e//i, iv. 3 
largess universal, like the sxin.HenryV. iv. (chorus) 
in tile universal 'orld (?ep. iv. 8) .... — iv. 1 

an universal wolf (rep.) Troilus & Cressida, i. 3 

you not made an universal Bhoiii. .JuliusCresar, i. 1 

shroud, the universal laudlordl..4nioj!!/iSC/eo. iii. 11 

the time of universal peace is near .. — iv. 6 

monarch of the universal earth. Romeo Sr Juliet, iii. 2 

UNIVKRSE-nf the universe .. Henry V. iv. (chorus) 

UNIVERSITIE.S. For any..7VoGe)i. o/ ;'ero»a, i. 3 

UNIVERSITY— at the university. T'ommg-qAS/i. v. I 

you jilayed once at the university .... Hamlet, iii. 2 

UN.TOINTED chat of his 1 Henry IV. i. 3 

UNJUST to Tliurio TwoGen. of Verona, iv. 2 

for Theseus' perjury, and unjust flight — iv. 4 
uncivil and unjust extent against. Twelfth Night, iv. 1 
his unjust unkindness . . Measure for Measure, iii. 1 
tlie duke's unjust, thus to retort .... — v.! 
kno^v this purpose: what! unjust?.. — V. 1 
they have verified unjust things ....MnckAdo.v. 1 

to ourselves unjust, destroy our AlVsWell, v. 3 

that the unjust man doth thrive. Winler^s Tale, iv. 3 
in this unjust divorce of us . ... Comedy of Errors, i. 1 

quarrels unjust against the good Macbeth, iv. 3 

as thou art all unjust Richard II. iv. 1 

'gage them both in an unjust behalf .1 Henri/ Jf. i. 3 
tlion art an unjust man in saying so — iii. 3 
but discarded unjust servingmen .... — iv. 2 

his usurpation most unjust 1 Henry VI. ii. 5 

passing traitor, perjured, andunjust! ..3Hen.r/. v. 1 
rogue, and most unjust knave ..Troilus^Cress.v. 1 
say, my request's unjust, and spurn. Cor/o/«nn.?, v. 3 

mv lord, YOU are unjust Tilus Andronicus, i. 2 

UNJUSTLY'"— would unjustly win All'sWell, iv. 2 

be traitor, or unjustly 6ght! Richardll.i. 1 

the French unjustly gloze, to be the ..Henry V. i. 2 
and I, unjustly too, must grant it .Richard HI. ii. 1 
as thou know'st, unjustly must be spilt! — iii. 3 
knows, thou didst unjustly banish .Cymle/ine, iii. 3 

you cliarge me most unjustly Othello, iv. 2 

UNKENNEL the fox Merry Wives, iii. 3 

do not itself unkennel in one speech ..Hamlet, iii. 2 

UNKEPT— here at home unkept . . As you Like it, i. 1 

UNKIND-unkind Julia! .... Tu'oGeti.of Verona, i.2 

called deformed, but the unkind. Twelfth Kighl, iii. 4 

my lady is unkind, perdy — iv. 2 

you are unkind, Demetrius ..Mid.N.'sDream, iii. 2 
3'our wife too unkind a cause o( .Mer.of Venice, v. 1 
thou art not so unkind . . As you Like it, ii. 7 (song) 
that threatening unkind brow.... TatningofSh. v. 2 
hast no unkind mate to grieve. . Comedy of Err. ii. ! 
foolish, blunt, unkind stigmatical .. — iv. 2 

unkiiul remembrance! thou King John, v. 6 

by unkind usage, dangerous MIenrylV.v. I 

when envy breeds unkind division. 1 Henry VI. iv. 1 
no footing on this unkind shore? ..tHetiry VI. iii. 2 

will never be unkind: and BO — iv. 9 

but an unkind self, that itself. .7Voi7!is<S-Cie,M. iii. 2 

we were not all unkind Timon of Athens, v. 5 

Titus, unkind, and careless of Titus Andron. i. 2 

hast thou done unnatural and unkind? — v. 3 

farewell, Cordelia, though unkind Lear, i. 1 

such a lowness, but his unkind daughters — iii- 4 
what an unkind hour is gu ilty . . //omeo <§- Juliet, v. 3 
wax poor, when givers prove unkind.. Hamlet, iii. 1 
him and mv lord, an unkind breach ..Othello, iv. 1 
UNKINDEST tied (rep.). . . . TwoGen. of Verona, ii. 3 
heshallfindthennkindestbeost..7VnioKo/////i.iv. 1 
this was tlie most unkindcst cut .JntinsC'Vsar, iii. 2 
UNKINDLY' did'.st thou leave . .Mid.N.'sDream, iii. 2 
take it not unkindly, pray ., Taming of Shreie, iii. 1 
it remains not unkindly with .Timon of Athens, iii. 6 
if Brutus so unkindly knocked ..JnliusCcesar, iii. 2 
lastly, myself unkindly banished. TitusAndron. v. 3 
I take it much unkindly, that thou ....Othello, i. 1 
UNKINDNESS-down all unkindness.Merri/Zr. i. 1 
thy unkindness shall his death .Meas. for Meas. ii. 4 
his unjust unkindness, that in all reason — iii. I 

any unkindness between my lord All's Welt, ii. .^ 

take no unkindness of his hasty .TatningofSh. iv. 3 
'twixt his unkindness and his. , .. Wiu'er'sTate, iv 3 
discourse be marred, unkindness. Cojiiet/// of Krr. ii. I 
uukiudness, than pity for mischance l.iWuctei/i, iii. 4 



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. . Timon nfAlh. 


IV 


» 


due 


S? 


.... Coriotantis, 


V 


1 


ness 




..JnliusCfesar, 


V 


3 


SS 13 




. . Atitony e,- Cleo 


1 


2 



ii. 4 



UNKINDNESS be like crm 
as sea thioiiu'h thv i 
being sick ufniMii'.^ 
grit f-shol with his i 
in this I bury all ui 
how mortal an unki 
pretence ami [nirpose of unkindii 

sharn-tuotlied unkindness, like a vulture 

not you, you elements, with unkindness — iii. 2 
his own unkindness, that stripped her .. — iv.3 

arraiiminghis unkindness with my 0//ie//o,iii. 4 

unkindness mav do much (rep.) iv. 2 

UNK INGED Richard says Richard II. iv. 1 

that I nm unkinged liy ilnlinLrhroke.. v. .'j 

UNKIN(iLIKE-Mppearunkinglike.Cv'/'W/«e,iii.5 

UNKISS I he oaih 'twixt Richard II. v. I 

UNKlSSED-will depart unkissed Much Ado. v. 2 

UNKNIT that threatening .... -Taming of ^hrew, v. 2 

will you again unkiiit this churlisii.l lienrt/l V. v. 1 

and not uiiknit himself the noble . . ('nriolanus, iv. 2 

unknit tliat sorrow-wrcathen ..Tittis^nUron. iii. 3 

UNKNOWING— yet unknowing world .Hamlet, v. 2 

UNKNOWN to thee, that I. TwoGen. of Verona, iii. 1 

to tlie unknown beloved Twelfth Night, ii. 5 

your vnknown sovereignty Meas. jor Meas. v. I 

derives itself from unknown loins ..Much Ado, iv. 1 
the forms of things unknown ..Mid.N.'sDream, v. 1 
not unknown to you, Antonio.. A/erc/i.q/Ten/c^, i. 1 

hatli an unknown bottom Asyoii Likeii, iv. I 

'tis not unknown to you, madam All's Well, 1. 3 

submit ourselves to an unknown fear — ii. 3 
my father is not all uukuuvn.. 'Taming of Shrew, i. 2 
your firm resolve unknown to me.. .. — ii.l 

may be, are to me unknown ll'inter'sTale.iv. I 

bid these unknown friends (rep.) .... — iv, 3 

seas hide in unknown fathoms — iv.3 

some ca.use to you unknown . Comedy of Errors, iii. 1 
to make it wander in an unknown tield — iii. 2 
that he, unknown to me, should be .. — iv. 2 

tell me, thou unknown power Macbeth, iv. I 

I am yet unknown to woman — iv.3 

(familiar to us. and unknown) Henry V. iii. 7 

my worth unknown, no loss is 1 Henry VI. iv, 5 

are petty faults to faults unknown. . 2 Henjy/V. iii. 1 

for divers unknown reasons Richard HI. i. 2 

is all unknown to me, my gracious .. — ii. 4 
immediately the unknown Ajax7'roi7ws .^ Cress, iii. 3 

our business is not unknown Corioianus, i. ) 

the end of it unknown to the beginning — iii. 1 

and accents yet unknown? JuliusCresar, iii. 1 

posture of your blows are yet unknown — v. 1 
being done unknown, I should .. Antony &Cleo. ii. 7 
remaining so long a poor unknown .Cymbeline, iv. 4 
and thus, unknown, pitied, or hated — v. 1 
to himself unknown (rep. V. 5).... — v. 4 (scroll) 

unknown to you, unsought — v. 5 

took himself to nuknowu travels Pericles, i. 3 

wast not bound to answer an unknown ..Lear, v. 3 

too early seen unknown lionteo ^-Juliet, i. 5 

whether avi^ht, to us unknown Hamlet, ii. 2 

things standing tlius unknown — v. 2 

like to this succeeds in unknown fate .. Othello, ii. 1 

UNLACE your reputation thus — ii. 3 

UNLAID forbear thee! Cymbeline, iv. 2 (song) 

his bed of blackness unlaid ope Pericles, i. 2 

UNLAWFUL-an unlawful bawd. il/eas. /or A/eas. iv.2 
solicits her in the unlawful purpose.. All's Well, iii. 5 
be trumpeters of our unlawful intents? — iv.3 
think it is unlawful business .... Winler'sTnle,v. 3 
his affection in unlawful lovel.Comedyof Errors, v. 1 

a ruler with unlawful oaths I Henry VI. v. 5 

with death, is most unlawful Richard III. i. 4 

by her, in his unlawful bed, he got , . — iii. 7 
and all the unlawful issue.. /4n/on;/^C(eopn/ra, iii. 6 
from any other foul unlawful touch ..Othello, iv. 2 

repent my unlawful solicitations — iv.2 

UNLAWFULLY born .... Measure for Measure, iii. 1 

unlawfully made drunk Richard III. iv. 4 

how? unlawfully? Ay. He'll not say . . Othello, v. 2 
UNLEARNED- to be very unlearned. Lotie's L. L.iv.2 

credit a poor unlearned virgin All's Well, i. 3 

in tliy fortunes am unlearned.. 7Vmon of.iihens, iv. 3 

frame tliem to royalty unlearned . . Cymbeline, iv. 2 

UNLESSONED girl, unschooled, il/er. of Venice, iii. 2 

UNLETTERED small-knowing. Lofe'sL./.. i. 1 (let.) 

untrained, or rather unlettered — iv.2 

his companies unlettered, rude HenniV, i. 1 

UNLICENSED of your loves Pericles, i. 3 

UNLICKED bear whelp ZHeniyVI. iii. 2 

UNLIKE— but seems unlike Meas. for .Mens. v. 1 

not unlike, sir; that may be Lore's L.7.ns(, ii. 1 

unlike art tlrou to Portia? ..Merchant of Venice, ii. 9 

sent you hither so unlike Taming of Shrew, iii. 2 

unlike the ruler of a common-weal.. 2 //enrj/r/. i. 1 
howproud, peremptory, and unlike.. — iii. 1 
not much unlike youiig men. Troilus^Crrs.^ida, ii. 2 

not unlike, each way, to better Corioianus, iii. 1 

how niui'h unlike art thou Mark. Antony ^Cleo. i. 5 
made you, unlike all others, chaffless.Cj/m6tiine, i. 7 

to be most unlike our courtiers — v. 4 

is more unlike than this thou tell'st — v. 5 

this accident is not unlike my dream ..Olhcllo, i. 1 
UNLIKELY-plot unlikely wonders. Richard II. v. 5 
more unlikely, tlian to accomplish. 3//enr(/r7. iii. 2 
this is unlikely: he and Aufidius .. Cor/o/«7(ns, iv. 6 

UNLIMITED-or poem unlimited Humlci, ii. 2 

UNLINEAL— an unlineal hand Macbeth, iii. 1 

UNLINKED itself, and with 4s von Like it, iv. 3 

UNLOAD-death unloads thee. .<Veai./,)r,)/eas. iii. 1 
Humphrey must unhiad his grief. . ..2//enr;//7. i. 1 

nor can my tongue unload ^ Henry VI. ii. i 

UNLOADEDall the gibbets ] fl'etirt/IV. iv. 2 

UNLOADING of his mules.. /4n(oni/ * Cleopatra, iv. 6 

UNLOCK thelittlegate Love'sL. Lost,i. 1 

instantly unlock my fortunes .Mcrrh. of Venice, ii. 9 

upon her, unlock her closet Macbeth, iv. 3 

and unlock the rivets all , , . . Troilus ^ Cressida, v. 6 

UNLOCKED to your occasions., /l/ere/i. of Venice, i. 1 

UNLOOKED for is this expedition! ..King John, ii. 1 

this uulooked for unprepared pomp.. __ — ii. 2 



UNL 



[ BOl ] 



UNS 



IINbOOKED for from your Mahixess'. Kielmnl ll.i.3 
if not, honour poiiui iiiili«>kiMl for . . I llciinj If. v. 3 
onil nil Ihe iml.ioUtil isaiit of tlioir. ZHtiuyyi. iii. i 

belike, imltuikcJ for friciuls — v. 1 

bv some iinl.."l;iil mi-uleiit cut otn.nicliarJ III. i. 3 
this uulnokul fur s|u>rt cornea well. Ilomro ,<iJiil. i. !i 
UNl.OOSK tliis titcl-U|ijuB(ico.. .,-«<■<!». /or.VMs. i. 4 
he will uiilciiiM, I'liMiiiiiu- ns bis gitrtcr. Heiin/I'. i. I 
York, tuiloose tliy loiig-iniprisoncil. HHpiiri/C/. v. I 
your Hcck unloose lii» iimoroue. 7Voi/i(j4^Cr«». iii. 3 

arc too iiitrinsc t' unloose Lear, ii. 2 

UNLOVED— to love unloved?. .Mii/.A'.'j/Jrcaiji, iii. 2 

is otto^ lift unloved Auinny ^- Cirapatra, iii. U 

TTXr,iiVI\(;-;i niostuuloviuKfatlier.3Hciiri/A/. ii. 2 
ilN'l.riMvl l.V iiaainst thebias. V'amini'orS/irfU', iv.5 

Btiiried ni'st unluckil.v « i„/f,'»7«/!-, iii. a 

who put unluikily into this bay. CoiiifJvQ/'i'rr. v. I 

to conic unluckily home SHfiirv//'. (epil.) 

how unluckily it happened .. Timon of Alhrns, iii. 2 

unluckily clioigc my fantasy JulitisCirsar, iii. 3 

fiillin onl.sir, so unluckily ....Romeo^Jutiel, iii. 4 

T7NMTCKY— his unlucky Irish wurs.l J/eiiry/r. v. I 

hither in a most unlucky hour .. THusAudron. ii. 4 

the unlucky manage of this .... liomeo /fJulM, iii. I 

some ill unlucky [Cn/.-unthrifty] thing — v. 3 

Vou shall tliesc unlucky deeds relate ..OIhetlo,v. 2 

TTN'LU.-^TKOUS rCol.-illustiousJ as ..Cijmbeline, i. 7 

UN'M.VDE— of an unmade grave. Knmso •^-.lutiel, iii. 3 

UNMAKE— now docs unmake yon ....MncbflK i. 7 

may make, unmake, do what she li.'^t . . Oilielln, ii. 3 

UNMANLY-forthis unmanly deed!.3Hf>i,!/;7. i. 1 

luiy, let tliem be unmanly Henry I'lll. i. 3 

a poor unmanly melancholy.. Timon of Athens, iv. 3 
'tis unmanlv grief: it shows a will .... Uamlel, i. 2 

UN.M.VX>fED in folly? Macheih, iW. 4 

hood mv unmanned blood bating. /(omeo* Jiii. iii. 2 
trNM.V>fNEKED slaves! ....ruining of Shrew, iv. 1 
unmannered do2l stand thou when.flicAarrf ///. i. 2 
UNMANNERLY slave ....TuoGen.of ferona, iii. I 
be unmannerly than troublesome.. jVe»>i/»'iti«, i. 1 
so full of unmannerly sadness . . .Mer. of I'enice, i. 2 
tlieir daggers unmannei ly breeched . . ilacheih, ii. 3 
this apish and unmannerly approach. A'ii'ffJoAfi, v. 2 

untaugh.t knaves, unmannerly I Henry I r. i. 3 

escaiies not language unmannerly.. Henri/ I'lll. i. 2 
sweetlieart, I were unmannerly, to take — i. 4 
if I have used myself unmannerly .. — iii. I 
mv haste made me unmannerly .... — iv. 2 
\nimannerlyintruder as thouartl.TOiis^iu/ron. ii. 3 
be Kent unmannerly when Lear is mad . . Lear, i. # 
he too bold, mv love is too unmannerly. //amW, iii. 2 

UXMAUUIED, ere they can II inter' a Tale, iv. 3 

XJN.MASlv— n <>w I will unmask ..Meas.forMeas. v. 1 
if siie iininnsk her beauty to the moon.. Hamlet, i. 3 

UNMASTEIIED importunity — i. 3 

UNM ATCUABLE beauty TirelflhNight, i. 5 

80 sole, and so unmatclmble King John, iv. 3 

mnstitfi are of unmatclmble courage.. Hejirv /'. iii. 7 
higl\, unmatchalile, where Cx<ar'aAnl07iy ^Cleo. ii.3 
UN.MATCHED force the awless Hon.. King John, i. 1 
Bud unmatched wit and judgment .Henry I'll L ii. 4 
zi'al to your unmatclied mind. Timon of Athene, iv. 3 

that unmatched form and feature Hamlet, iii. 1 

UN.MEASUKABLE ditance Merry IHivs, ii. 1 

whose womb unmcasurable . . Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

UN.MEET for death Measure for Meiisnre. iv. 3 

with uie conversed at hours wrwneei.MtichAdo, iv. 1 

alack, for youth \nimeet. Loi'e'x L.Lost, iv. 3 (verses) 

is most unmeet of anj' man {rep.) ..•illenryl'I. i. 3 

TTNMELLOWED, but his . . TwoGen. ofyerona, ii. 4 

UNME UCIFUL lady as you are Lenr, iii. 7 

UNMERITABLE, sluins your ....IlirharU III. iii. 7 
tills is a slight unmeritable man. .JulinsCiesar, iv. 1 

XTNJIERITfNG, proud Coriolanm, ii. 1 

UNMINDED outlaw i llenryl K iv. 3 

UNMINDFUL villain Richard III. iv. 4 

UNMlNtiLED thence that drop..Cu»ifJy of Bit. ii. 2 
rich in virtue, and immingled ..Troilus^ Cress, i. 3 

UNMITIGABLE rage Tempest, i. 2 

UNMITIGATED rancour MuchAdo,iv. 1 

UNMIXED with baser matter Hamlet, i. 6 

UNMOANED-was left unmoancd.nic/i<i)(/ III. ii. 2 

UNMOVED, no marvel Comedy (^Errors, ii. 1 

UNMOVING [Kll^-and moving] finger . OWc«o, iv. 2 
TrNMUSICAL to the Volscians cars.CoriofaMMt, iv. 5 

UN.MI'ZZLE vour wisdom Asyon Likeil,i. 2 

UN.MUZZLED thoughls TuelfthMght, iii. I 

UNNATURAL though thou artl Tempest, v. 1 

render him the most unnatural. ./l»|^ouZ,iAfiY, iv. 3 

well I know he was unnatural — iv. 3 

unworthy and unnatural lord ll'inler'sTale, ii. 3 

'tis unnatural, even like tlie deed Macbeth, ii. 4 

unnatural deeds breed unnatural troubles — v. 1 

of tliy unnatural uncle KingJohn, ii. I 

every thing that seems unnatural Henry V. v. 2 

most imnauiral wounds Mlcnryyt. iii. 3 

both impious and unnotural — v. 1 

lio-st iiroved so unnatural a father! ..illenryl'l. i. I 
mutinous, and unnatural, tills deadly — ii. 6 
is so liarsli, so blunt, unniitural .... — v. I 
wlio-e utjly and unnatural aspect ..Itichard III, i. 2 
and unnatural, provokes this (rep.) .. _ i. a 

it is a quarrel most unnatural — i. 2 

unnatural and faithless service! .. Henry VII I. ii. I 
like an unnatural dam should now.C'oriufanus, iii. 1 

wherein I may seem unnatural — v. 3 

au'l this unnatural scene tlicy laugh at — v. 3 
for barbarous and ummturai revolts Cymbrline, Iv. 4 
what liast thou done, unnatural.. TilnsA ndrou. v. a 
though you call my course unnatural. />>ic/m, iv, 4 

must be of such unnatural decree Lear,i. I 

unnatural, detested, brutish villain! ,... — i. 2 
opposite I stood to bis unnatural pur|xise — ii. I 
no, you unnatural hags, I will liave such — ii. 4 
of how unnatural and beinailding sorrow — iii. 1 
Edmund. I like not this uiinaturul dealing— iii. 3 

most savage, and unnatural! — iii. 3 

coiilagioii, and unnatural sleep. .flomMcJ-7ii//W, v. 3 
Ills foul and most unnatural niunler... Hamlet, i. .'> 
but this must foul, strange, and unnatural — i.i 



UNNATirRAL-criiel, not unnatural.. Hfim/W, iii. 2 

ofcuiuil, lilo..,lv, and iinimtiinil.ictH .. - v. 2 

foni dispr.'iiortion, tli.ni;;htsiiiiniiiiiial.O(AcHo. iii. 3 

tliiit de.iili's uiMiiitiinil, Hint hills lor loving — v. 2 

UNN.vrui!ALI,V shall disinherit ..dllenry 11. i. ) 

UNNATUR.VLNESS between the child .. tp.ir, i. 2 

UNNECES.«ARILY, as this Oon zalo.. rrmp^.-, ii. I 

UNNECESSAH V action, 6warmabout.H<-n<j/r. iv. 2 

tliou unneccBsary letter! Liar, ii 2 

ai-'e is xinnecessarv; on my knees 1 beg .. — ii. 4 

UNNEIGlIBOUlt"I.YI A noble King John, v. i 

UNNERVED father falls HamW, ii. 2 

UNNOBLE swerving Antony /jr Cleopatra, iii. 9 

UNNOTED— return to them unnoted.. /J//'ii('f«, i. 2 
Biich sober and unnoted passion. 7 imon«/.4rteiii, iii. 6 

UNNUMBERED sparks JutiusCaisar, Hi. 1 

on the unnumbered i<lle pebbles chafes.. Irar, iv. G 
UNOWED interest of proud-swelling. K'liiffyo/ifi, iv.3 

UNPACK my heart witli words Ilnmlel, ii 2 

UNPAID a hundred Love's L. Lost. ii. 1 

than rustling in unpaid silk Cymbeline, iii. 3 

tliat duty leave uniiaid to you — iii. Ij 

the worth thou art unpaid for — v. 5 

UNPARAGONED mistress is dead .. _ i. a 

unparagoned, liow dearly they do't! — ii. 2 

UNPARALLELED. I think so .. ll'inter'sTale, v. 1 

have read his fame imparalleled ....Coriotinus, v. 2 

possession lies alassunpa^alleled./()l^.».!/ ^Cleo. v. 2 

UNPAHDONABLE-too unpaidonal)le!.:U/c,i. ri. i.4 

UNPARTIAL judging of this Henr„IIII. ii. 2 

UNPATH ED waters Il'inter'srale,iv. 3 

UNPAVED eunuch to boot Ci/mbelu,e, ii.3 

UNPAY the villanv you have 1 ilenrt/ 1 f. ii. I 

irNPEACEABLE dog, or I'll spurn. Timon oiMh. i. 1 
UNPEG the basket on the house's top.. //./mW, iii. 4 

UNPEOPLE the province Meat, for Meas. iii. 2 

first shall war unpeople this my ....illemyl't. i. I 
greeting, or I'll unpeople Egypt. ..4ii/(m!/<SC/co. i. 5 

quite unpeople her of leigers Cymbeline, i. 6 

UNPEOPLED-his unpeopled house/-ow'jL.i.o»(, ii. 1 

for it is unpeopled? Asyon Like it, iii. 2 (verses) 

unfurnished walls, unpeopled offices. /(ic/iarrf //. i. 2 
UNPERFECTNEfSS shows me another.. 0(/ieH-i, ii. 3 

UNPICKED-leave it unpicked 'illenryir. ii. 4 

L^NPIN me {rep.) ti(/n;(o, iv. 3 

UNPINKEDi' the heel Taming or Shrcii;\v. ] 

UNPITIED whipping Sleas. for Mens. iv. 2 

unpitied let me die All's n'cll, ii. 1 

his piteous and unpitied end Itichard III. iv. 4 

be deaf to my unpitied folly Antotiy ^ Clen. i. 3 

UNPlTrFULLY-mobt unpitifully.jl/frry lyires, iv. 2 

UNPLAGUED witii corns Itomeo if Juliet, i. 5 

UNPLAUSI VE eves are bent. Troilns z^- Ci essida, iii. 3 
XTNPLEA.SANTEST words ../l/crc/i. o/;'emc<.-. iii. 2 
UNPLEASED eye see yourcourtesv.flic/i«r<( II. iii. 3 
UNPLEASING to a marriedLoiv'/L.Losf, v. 2 (soim) 
uupleasing blots, and sightless ftnlusKingJohn, iii.l 
tongue sound thisunpleasing news?. Itichard II. iii. 4 

unpleasing news! Itichard 111. iv. 1 

discords, and luipleasing sharp.s. /ioj/teo ij- Juliet, iii. 5 

UNPOLICIED-ass unpoliciedl ..Antony 4- Cleo.v. 2 

UNPOLISHED, uneducated Love'sL.Lost, iv. 2 

logger-headed and unpolished 7"ai«/)ij,"i/S/ofw,iv. 1 

rude unpolished hinds 2llniryl'l. iii. 2 

UNPOLLUTED flesh may violets Hamlet, v. 1 

irNPOSSES.SED? what heir Itichard III. iv. 4 

UNPOSSESSING bastard! dost thou think. Lrar, ii. I 

UNPRACTISED infancy Troilns SfCressida, i. 1 

\inschooled, unpractised .. Merchant of Venice, iii. 2 
UNPREGNANT, and dull to ali.Meas.forMeas. iv. 4 

mipregnant of mv cause Hamlet, ii. 2 

UNPREMEDITATED: my courage..! He;iM/;'/. i. 2 

UNPREPARED, unmeet for ....Meas.forMias. iv. 3 

being unprepared, our will became.... jl/iiriicM, ii. 1 

unlookedfor, unprejiared pomp ....KingJohn, ii. 2 

when men are unprepared Richard 111. iii. 2 

1 would not kill thy unprepared spirit. . Othello, v. 2 
UNPRESSED-pillow left unpreBsed./l7i(.<5 6-/<o. iii. 11 
UNPREVAILTNG woe; and think at i\s. Hamlet, i. 2 
irNPREVENTED-unprevcntcil. liroCirn.orrer. iii. 1 
UNPRIZABLE-biilk, unprizable.7'u.c////i;v/-/,;, v. 1 

inyirizahle estimations Cymbeline, i. 6 

UNPRIZED precious maid I.ear, i. I 

UNPROFITABLE; stand np....Meas.for Meas. v. I 
no more of this unprofitable chat ..\HenrylT. Iii. 1 

unprofitable dukedoms Henry!'. Iii. (chorus) 

changed with this unprofitable woe! ../'oic/ej, iv. 1 

flat, and unprofitable seem to me Hnmlet, i. 2 

UNPROFITED return Tire{rth Night, i. 4 

U.NPKOPEH beds, which they Othello, iv. I 

I'Nl'lii H'EHLY show duty Coriolanns,v. 3 

iriN'I'lioi'oKTJONEDtliought hiBact...HainW, i. 3 

U.M'KDVIDE my mind again Othello, iv. 1 

UNPKOVlDED-so unprovided.. Tamtni; of.-ih. iii. 2 

1 am heinously unprovided I Henri/ 1 1', iii. 3 

then if they ilie unprovided Henry T. iv. 1 

thus fast, to find ns unprovided ....Zllenryl'l. v. 4 

and go so unprovided? Itichard ///. iii. 2 

am unprovided of a pair of liases I'ericU's, ii. 1 

he clini'ges home my unprovided body Lear, ii. 1 

TrNPKOVOKE-an(i nnprovokea Maibeth, ii. 3 

UNI'ltlNKD, untrained Lore's L. Lost, iv. 2 

her liuit-trees all unpruned liichatd II. iii. 4 

elicerer if tlie liearl, unpruned dies ..Henryl'. v. 2 
UNITHl,l,'Sili;i> virtues of the earth ....tf'iir.iv. 4 
UN'I'I l!(;i:i)- and nnpurgcd air ..JuliusCtvsar, ii. 1 
I'MTKlMlSICD. Diaw..../lii/on!/*acopa<ra, iv. 12 
U.N'iilAI.ITIED with very shame .. - iii. 9 
I'N'ii' EKNEl), vet like n queen .. Henri/l'l II. iv. 2 
l'.MilE>ll UN Able spirit .....4II/0., V.rt-i;, iii. i 

UN<ilM;sri()\EDluutlers Mcas. ror .liens I. I 

Init rest unquestioned welcome Alt's ll'elt,ii. 1 

UNlil'IET-an unquiet soul ..Merch.qf Venice, iii. 2 
would make else an unquiet house .. — iv. 1 
unquiet mealsmake ill dipestions.Comd/i/ii/'KjT. v.l 

you may tliunk the unquiet time •iHentylV. i. 2 

the Piuiinbling and iiiiquiit time Henry V. i. 1 

accursed iind nniioiet wr:uij.'ling ..Richard I II. ii. 4 
the moekerv ol i.iii|iiitt -li.iiiheis.... — iii. 2 
make eucli umiuiet, tliat llie ship./'criVti-f, i'. (Gow.) 



UNQUTETLY-woather, most unquiclly. /.i?nr. III. 1 
UN(iiriETNESS-to uiqiiictness? ..../l/iii-/i.4i7/., i. 3 
and, I'.rtuinlv, in stiiiiit^i- onquiitness Othello, Hi. 4 
UNIiAI.sil.lJ tpirit. Ihiit Uiilh.. ..lleniyV. i. (chorus) 
rNKAKEU-thou llndsl uniakid. Merryllicei, v. .'. 

1 ' NRI:a 1), the hard Troilus * Creisida, i. 3 

I'NHEADY so? Unreody? ay lllenryVI. ii. I 

UNREAIy thou enuetive art ll'inter'sTale, i. ■> 

horrible slimlow! unreal nuickery MarlutI,, iii. 4 

lINREA.s;o.\.\l!l,KI willyon takc.Vi-rrji 11 fm-j, ii-. 2 

is tliere SI) 111 null nnreasonablc.iVerc/i. o/O/ncf, v. 1 

unreasoimlile civiitures feed their ..VillenryV I. ii. 2 

ikiiote ihf luiri'ii.-ioiable fury ..Itomeo ^Jnliei, iii. 3 

I'.\HE.\M IX Alii, V— most unreasonably. Corinl i. 3 

lAMilOtr^.'VI.MEl) Mood, of general .... Hamlet, ii. 1 

1 .\l!IX(i.\( ILAIJLE, should.. .. /l;.(o;u/.i C'(/n. v. I 

r,\l!E('(i.\(.:iLEDasyet to lieaven .. ..Dth.tin, v. ■.' 

li\'HI.Ciir.\TEI)-earsunreeouiited.;;<-/iri/r//;.iii.j 

I NIIECrKli\'(; wound TitniAnUio:,ini>,\U. I 

rNHEiiAKDED age in corners AniunLikeii, ii. 3 

T'NREGISTERED in vulgar ..Antuny /rCleo. iii. II 

UNRELENTING hearts? \llenti/l I. v. 4 

ireful arm of unrelenting Cliftbrd ..illmriii I. ii. I 
as iiinelLiitiiig flint to drops .. 7'i(uj/l«dronirui, ii. 3 

T'NI!I:M(i\'I:aB1.E ami (i.\ed he is i.<-'ir, ii. 4 

r.N'i;E.'\ln\i:ABl,Y coupled.... 7'i.no»or/((/i«i,,v. 2 
T.\ It la'l; I EA'ABLE ci.i;ikiiined ....KingJohn, v. 7 
r.\llE>ULVi:D to heat lliem back./.'ic/iani 111. iv. 4 
UNRESl'ECTlVEhov^i none arc... — iv. Ii 
we do not throw in unrtspective. Irnilus^ Cress, ii. i: 

ITNREST; lliy friends ure Iliclmid II. ii. i 

thy unrest on England's lawful ..Itichard III. iv. I 

safe, they bring you to unrest — v. 3 

sweet gold, for their unrest. ...TilusAndnnicns, ii. :t 

let her rest in her unrest awhile — ii. 2 

tile more is mv unrest Romeo ^Juliet, i . ,'1 

UNRESTOREb-shipping unrestored..4„'.iS ( Vio. iii.ii 
UNRES'TRAINED loose compan ions. /iiWinrJ; 7. v. :i 
UNREVENGED-nre unreveiiged ..1 lUnryir. v. .1 
not strike dame Eleanor unrevenped,2//i';i; i//7. i. 3 
UNREVEREND tongue! ..Tu'otien. of Ver.ma, ii. G 
unrevereiid and unliallowed ....Mens. for. Mens. v. I 

aj', thou unrevcrend boy KingJohn, i. 1 

head from thy unreveiend shoulders. /(ir/uinn;. ii. I 

UNUEVEHENT robes 'Taming of .-breir. iii. 2 

nnrcvereiit Gloster! Thou ort I Henri/;/, iii. I 

UNREVERSED, stands in. .'VieoOVn. of lerona. iii. I 
TINKEWAiiDlOD-notgo muew aided. 7'em;<e.<', iv. 1 

UNRIGllTEors tears had left Uamlel, i. 2 

UNRIGHTFUL kings, wilt know ..Richard II. v. 1 

UNRIP'DST the bowels Richard III. i.4 

UNRIPE, sticks on the tree //uHi/e(, iii. ■• 

UNRIVALLED merit TiroGeu.ofVetona. v. 4 

IfNROLL to do some Titus Andronicm, ii. 3 

UNROLLED, and my name put.. Ilinter'sTale, iv. 2 

UNROOFED the city f >„/<,;<., 1 .1 .>, i. I 

UNROdSTED by thy dame Winter'sTnle, ii. 3 

UNROOT— nothing can unroot you All's ll'etl.v. 1 

UNROUGU youths, that even Macbeth, v. 2 

UNRUIiY— your unruly base. TuoOen. ofleiona, i. -J 

more violent and unruly Meas.forMeas. iii. 1 

but, too unruly deer, he breaks. .Cbmcdi/ of Err. ii. 1 

is troubled with unruly hoys — iii. 1 

the night has been unruly ". Maiheth, ii. .1 

snatched with an unruly' hand .... KingJ'thn, iii. 4 

the manage of unruly jdiles Richard //. iii. 3 

which, like unruly cliildien, make .. — iii. 4 

make way, unruly woman — v. 2 

imprisoning of unruly wind \HenryIV. iii. i 

whittle in tlie unruly camp.... Timon ofAthins, v. 2 
therewithal, the unruly waywardness .... /.lur, i. I 
truce with the unruly spleen .. Romeo (y Juliet, iii. 1 

UNSAFE circumstance TueinhMghl, iii. 4 

these dangerous unsafe lunes .... Winter's I'nle, ii. 2 
eye and tongue: unsafe the «hile .... .Macbtih. iii. z 

let's ihink't unsafe to come in Othello, v. I 

UNSALTED [tVi/.A'Mi.vinew'dstj leaves 7rcii(.<i C.ii.l 

UNSALUTKD-lcave nusalnted .. ..Coriolanus, v. 3 

UNSANCTIFIED— so unsanctified.. .. jl/acte.'A, iv. 2 

post nnsanctifii.d of muiderons lechers .. I.ear, iv. 6 

she should in u'roiind unsanctified Hamlet, v. I 

UNSATISFIED, we will give >n> .. Love'sL.Lost, ii. 1 
think we think ourselves unsatisfied. I Henryl I', i. 3 

he were unsatisfied in gitting Henry I'lll. iv. 2 

that satiate yet uusatislied ilesire Cymbeline, i. 7 

wilt thou leave nie so unsatisfied? ./(omeoiJ-Jii;. ii. t 
and mv rnusr ai iL:ht to tlie unsatisfied .Hu/i./e/, v. 2 

UNSAVOURY similes Ml.nrylV. i. 2 

unsavoury new.-: but how mode i\e.3Heiiryri. iv. G 

viands that I cat do seem nnsavonrv.. /'eric/ej, ii. i 

UNSAY— that fair again unsay. .^l/iJ.A.'j/Jieum, i. I 

scorns to unsay what once it hath. . Richard II. iv. I 

lie said, so he unsay it now I Henryl V. i. 3 

I will have more, or els'e unsav't ..Heninl III. v. | 
I"NSCAl.!;Alil,E-recks unEcaleable.Cj/././ie/i.ie, iii. 1 

INSCA\Nl;l) swiftness Coriolanus, iii. 1 

I NSt .u;i;i;i)of bleeding Richard III. iv. 4 

the unseiuiuil braggarts of the war7Vmo>i orAth. iv. 3 

UNSLIIOIII.ED, unpractised ...\leich.or Venic. iii. 2 

iinikrsinniliiig simple and unschooled.. //uniM, i. 2 

T:.\SC1SSAI!ED shall this hair fericles, iii. 3 

IXSCi Uil IIED-remaincd un6Corchcd../i</.tVrsi/r, i. 3 

I.NSL'i)1'I;i:D aruiour.hinig Meat, for Mem. i. 3 

I!.\.--CK.\Tl llEDyourcity^i KingJohn, 'li. I 

U NSE AL this letter soon .Merchant of Venice, v. I 

inesently he did unseal them HenryVlll. iii. 2 

let iiic unseal the letter Uar, iv. .1 

to unseal [fo/.-unfold] their grand llatntit, v. 2 

T'NSEALED, at least, in my opinion.. .W. Iivrj. iv. -j 

INSIOA.MICI) him from the nave Macbe h, i. 2 

I'NSE.MHIll D-warunsearched.7V/i;i,i;ii/,oii. iv. 3 

I N^KA.^nN. Mil. E instant of the night. .Wi,rA/l</o,ii.2 

In iio; iiij:eO at a time unsca.'onable. KingJohn, iv. 2 

like an iiiisiasi.nahle stormy day ..Rlchuid II. iii. -i 

I^XSKASONABLY. He was ....As yon Like it iii. 2 

UNsi;.\Sii\ED intrusion Merry Hives, ii. » 

my lord, 'lis an unseasoned courtier .. All's IVell, i. I 
thesi iinseiisoncd hours, perfoicc ..'JHcnrylV. iii. I 

UNSEIOXDED by you to lo(jk 2He,iryIV. ii. 3 

UNSIXRET to ourselves? .. Troilus f> ficida, iii. 2 
3F 



UNSEDUCED-she remain iinse(hice<l.Ct/m()p//)ie, i. 5 

UNSKKINGeves Twodeii.or I'erona, iv. 4 

UNSEEMINU toconfesa rcoeiiit ..U,ve'sL.Losi,\\. 1 
[JNSEEiMLY woman, in a seemini;..ftowj. ffJul. iii. S 

UMSEEiM, inscrutable Tivolien. of Verona, ii. 1 

Ell alone, nnseen of any — v. i 

unseen, \'an passage ^\\(!i. Lore' sL. Lost, iv. 3 Cverses) 
in dfcdolation liere, unseen, xnivisited — v. 2 
v/sars his honour in a box iniseen .... All's Well, ii. .3 
that would unseen be wicked? .... li'hiiei's rule, i. 2 

nis fellow forth, unseen Comedij of En nrs, i. 2 

and robbers range abroad nnseen . . Kichard II. iii. 2 
other down, luiseen, and full of water — iv. 1 

shadows to the unseen i;rief — iv. 1 

Dy night, unseen, yet cicscivc in Ufuiyr. i. 2 

left, nnseen a wonderful .... Anloiiy <$- Clenpaha,\. 2 
arms, untalkcd of, and \\n^QQn\.lioineoSfJnUei, iii. 2 
imseen, we may of their encounter .... Hamlet, iij. 1 
mining all within, infects nnseen..., — iii. 4 

kills the Tmseen good old man — iv. I 

rNSEJItN.\RED, thy freer thoughts. /(n(. ffClro. i.5 
UNSE!'ARABLE-in love nnseparable.. Cor/oL iv. 4 
ITNSERVICEABLE; the troops .... All's Ifell, iv. 3 
IJZ'fSKTTLE-lns wits begin to unsettle Lear, iii. 4 

UNSETTLED fancy TempesI, v. 1 

am I found so much unsettled. All's ii'dl, ii. 5 

he something seems inisettled .... ff'inler's Tale, i. 2 
dost think, 1 am so muddy, so unsettled — i. 2 
and all the unsettled humours of . . . . King John, ii. I 

wl-.at is unsettled in the king Henry I' 1 1 1, ii. 4 

TNSEVERED friends Coriolanns, iii. 2 

UN'SIOX— on mortal thoughts, uusex m&.Maehelh, i. 5 

UisrSIIAKED of motion JuliusCaisar, iii. 1 

keep unshaked that temple Cyinbelhie, ii. 1 

UNSHAKEN yoiirs Henrij I'll I. iii. 2 

fail, unshaken, when they mellow h&.. Hamlet, iii. 2 

XTXSIIAI'ES me quite Meas. for Mens. iv. 4 

"I'TNSU APED use of it doth move Hamlet, iv. 5 

UNSUEATH your sword ijep.'i illenryl'l. ii. 2 

exi.'cutioner, unsheath thy sword — ii. 2 

CNSlIEATIIED-sword unsheathed. . -2 Hoin/;;'. iv. 4 
F^'SIIOUT the noise that banished ..Corlolanus, v. 4 
UNSHOWN is often left miloweH.. Antony ^Cleo. iii. 6 

irNSIIRINKING station 'Macbet/i.v. 7 

T iNSIIRUBBED down Tempest, iv. 1 

(iNSHUNNABLE, like death Ol/,e!lo, iii. 3 

UNSmTNNED consequence Meas./or Meas. iii. 2 

IfNSIFTEDinsuehpL-rilous Hamlei,].3 

UNSIGHTLY tricks: return you Lfn,-, ii. 4 

UNSINEWED— seem much unsinewed.. H./inW, iv. 7 

ir NS ISTIN(i postern with Meas. for Meas. iv . 2 

XWSKILFUL singer Merry Wives, i. 3 

thougli uuskilful, why not Ned ZHenryVI. v. 4 

though it make the unskilful laugh ..Hamlet, iii. 3 

not think, the Turk is ao unskilful OUiello, i. 3 

UNSKILFULLY, or if your. . . . Meas. for Meas. iii. 2 

UNSLIl'PINGknot Antony ^■Cleopatra, ii. 2 

UNSMIRCIIED brow Hamlet, iv. 5 

UNS(J[LED— my nnsoiled name. Meas. for Meas. ii. 4 

UNSOLICITED I left no reverend.. Henry F///. ii. 4 

there's not a god left unsolicited . Titus Andron. iv. 3 

UNSORTBD; and your whole.. 1 Henri/IF. ii. 3 Oet.) 

UNSOUG riT is bet'ter Ta-elftliNigId, iii. 1 

yet loath to leave unsought . . Comedy of Errors, i. 1 

imknown to yon, unsought Cymheline, v. 5 

UNSOUND-so unsound a man ..Tu-eWhSigM, iii. 4 

UNSOUNDED deeps to ....TwoGen. of f'erona, iii. 2 

G loiter is a man unsounded yet.. ..i Henry VI. iii. 1 

XrNSl'EAK mine own detraction .Macbelti.iv. 3 

UNSPEAKABLE comfort of your.. H'inter'sTale, i. 1 
is grown into an unspeakable estate — iv. 1 

tile least of these unspeakable deserts. T'i7us.4H(/. i. 2 
these wrongs, unspeakable, past patience — v. 3 

UNSPEAKl'NGsots Cymheline, -v. & 

UNSPIIEllE the stars Winter' sTale, i. 2 

U.YSl'OKE— leaves tlie history unspoke.... Lear, i. 1 
If NSPOKEN that which, to be spoken. Ci/inSdme, v. 5 
UNSl'OTTED— all unspotted soldiers.. Hen; i/T. iv. 1 

a pure unspotted heart I Henry VI. v. 3 

a heart unspotted is not easily 2HenryVI. iii. I 

a moat unspotted lily shall she pass. Henry VI 11. v. 4 

but my luispotted Arc of love to you....Per!'c(e.?, i. 1 

UNSQUARED-terms nnsquared . . Troil.^ Cress. 1. 3 

UNSTABLE-to unstable slightness.. Cojio/anns, iii. 1 

UNSTAID a journey? Two Gen. of Verona, ii. 7 

nnstaid and skittish in all motions.. Twelfth N. ii. 4 

UNSTAINED shepherd Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

with a heart full of unstained love .. King John, ii. 1 
tlie unstained sword that you have..2Henr!//r._v. 2 
to live an unstained wife to my. /Borneo Sr Juliet, iv. 1 
UNSTATE his happiness.. ^n/oni/ ^Cleopatra, iii. 11 
I would unstate myself, to be in a due ... . Lear, i. 2 

UNSTAUNCHED wench Tempest,]. 1 

whose unstaunched thirst ZHenryVI. ii. u 

UNSTAYED-to his unstayed youth. fiic/mrrf II. ii. I 
UNSTE ADF AST footing of a spear . . 1 Henry IV.i.Z 

UNSTOOPING firmness of my Richard II. i. 1 

UNSTRINGED— than an unstringed vinl _ i. 3 
UNSTUFFED brain doth couch . Ilomeo f,- Juliet, ii. 3 
UNSUBSTANTIAL air, that I embrace.. Lear, iv. I 
unsubstantial death is amorous ../(o^nen^- ./»/;>', v. 3 
UNSUITABLE to her disposition.. Va-elfhMi;i,i. ii. 5 

richly suited, but unsuitable ill's Writ, i. 1 

UNSUITING such a man Othello, iv. 1 

UNSULLIED lily, I protest Lore's L. Lost, v. 2 

UNSUNNED— as unsunned snow CymljeUni-, ii. r, 

UNSURE— is still unsure., ru'ri/w. Mghi, ii. 3 (..ioug) 

their unsure hopes relate ilndieih, v. 1 

the trutl\ thou art unsure to swear. . King John, iii. 1 

giddy and unsure hath he 2 Henry 1 1'. i.:i 

exposing what is mortal, and unsure . . Hamlet, iv. 4 

of his scattering and unsure observance. 0!/:e;(f), iii. 3 

UN8URED assurance to the crown ..King John, ii. 2 

UNSUSPECTED, court her. ...Taming ofsh-eu; i. 2 

•ind unsuspected Hastings llicliard 1 1 1 . iii. 5 

ITNSWAYABLE.and free Coriolnnus,v. 5 

UNSWAYED-the sword unawayed?.«/.7i^«(i 111. iv.4 

UNSWE AR faith sworn? King John, iii. 1 

no more than he'll unswear O/Ac.Vo, iv. 1 

UNS WEPT— and heartlis uns«-ept..iV«j!/ Wmes, v. 5 



UNSWEPT— would lie unswept Coriolanns, ii. 3 

ITNSWOHN-vou are yet unsworn. jl/en,<. Ihr Meas. i, 5 

UNTAINTEb, the poor ..Measurefo Measure, iii. 1 

breastplate than a heart untainted?. ■i//e;f;v'''. 'ii- - 

tile luitainted virtue of your years. /f/e/iaj,-; ///. iii. 1 

initainted. unexamined, free, at liberty — iii. 

UNTALKED of, and unseen I . . Ilomeo 4 Juliet, iii. 2 

UNTANGLE-raust tnitangle this.... Twelfth l\'. ii. 2 

UNTANGLED, much misfortune. /.'f)m,o<S'./H(/e;, i. J 

UNTASTED-like to rot untasted Troilas^-Ciess. ii. 3 

UNTAUGHT love must needs . . Meas. tor Meas. ii. 4 

he called them— untaught knaves ..I Henry W. i. 3 

to command, untaught to plead. . ..2Henry VI. iv. 1 

honour untaught; civility not seen. Cymheline, iv. 2 

thou untanghtl what manners.. 7?onieo .5- Ji//iV(, v. 3 

UNTEMPERING effect of my visage. . Henry V. v. 2 

UNTENDER-alook untender? .... Cymheline, iii. 4 

so yoiuig, and ao untender? Lear, \. 1 

UNl'ENDERED-is left untendered. Cym/je/inc, iii. 1 
UNTENT his person, and share .Troilus^-Cress. ii. 3 

UNTENTEDwoundings of a father's Lear, i. 4 

UNTH ANKFUI- king 1 Henry I V. i. 3 

UNTHANKFULNESS in thought .... reticles, i. 4 

diest in thine unthaukfulness All's Well, i. 1 

you take with unthankfulness ....Richard III. ii. 2 

O rude unthankfulnessl Romeo ^- Juliet, iii. 3 

UNTHINK your speaking Henryl'IU. ii. 4 

UNTIIOUGHT of, and speak.. TwelphN. v. 1 (letter) 
but as the unthought on accident, il'inler's Tale, iv. 3 

and your unthought Harry 1 Henry IV. iii. 2 

UNTHREAD the rude eye of KingJohn, v. 4 

UNTHRIFT love did run from . . Mer. of Venice, v. 1 
given away to upstart im thrifts? . . Richard II. ii. 3 
didst thou ever know unthrift . . Timon ofAth. iv. 3 

UNTHRIFTY knave Merchant of Venice, 1. 3 

us unthrifty to our knowledge .. Winter'sTnle, v. 2 

tell of my uuthrifty son? Riclinrd II. v. 3 

UNTIE-untie the spell Tempest, v. 1 

too hard a knot for me to rnitie. . Tu-elfth Kighl, ii. 2 
sister Kate, untie ray hands.. Taming ofShrcie, ii. 1 

thouglr you untie the winds Macbeth, iv. I 

folly may easily untie: here. Troilus ^Cressida, ii. 3 

of life at once imtie Antony Sr Cleopatra, v. 2 

sucli as sense cannot untie Cymheline, v. 4 

UNTIED, and every thing As youIJIte it, iii. 2 

untied I still my virgin knot will .... I'ericles, iv. 3 
UNTIJMBERED sides but .... Troilus <S- Cressida, i. 3 

UNTIMELY emptying of Macbeth, iv. 3 

from his motlier s womb untimely ripped — v. 7 
weeping after this untimely bier ..Ricltard II. v. 6 
my father came untimely to his.. ..ZHenryVl. iii. 3 
a plant have you untimely cropped 1 — v. .5 
lament the untimel.y fall of virtuons.i?/c/iarrf ///. i. 2 
prodigious, and untimely brought .. — i. 2 
his youth, by like untimely violence! — i. 3 
untimely storms make men expect . . — ii. 3 
untimely smothered in their dusky — iv.4 

an imtimely ague stayed me Henry VIII. i. I 

by your untimely claspings with your .I'ericles. i. 1 

untimely comes this hurt: give me Lear, iii. 7 

O untimely death! I know thee well .... — iv. 6 
vile forfeit of imtimely deatli.. . . Ilomeo ^Juliet, i. 4 
which too untimely here did scorn .. — iii. 1 
like an untimely frost upon the sweetest — iv. 5 
whose untimely death banislied .... — v. 3 
here untimely lay the noble Paris.... — v. 3 
UNTIMELY— wlvit'a untimely done .. Hamlet, iv. 1 
UNTIRABLE and continuate ..Timon of .-it hens, i. 1 

UNTIRED— with me untired Richard III. iv. 2 

with untired spirits, and formal ..JuliusCiesar, ii. 1 
UNTITLED tyrant bloody-sceptred.. >/acJe(A, iv. 3 

UNTOLD— to hear the rest untold I'ericles. v. 3 

UNTOUCHED, or slightly handled.TSic/iarrf///. iii. 7 

by my honour, depart untoiiched.JuliusCcesar, iii. 1 

UNTOWARD— to be untoward ..Taming of Sli. iv. 6 

thou most untoward knave? KingJohn, i. 1 

UNTOWARDLY turned! MuchAdo, iii. 2 

UNTRADED oath Troilus <§• Cressida, iv. .1 

UNTRAINED, or rather unlettered. Love's L. L. iv. 2 

wi t untrained in any kind of art .... 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

UNTREAD again his tedious . . Merck, of Venice, ii. 6 

we will untread the steps of KingJohn, v. 4 

UNTREASURED of their mistress .AsyouLike, ii. 2 
UNTRIED of that wide gap . Winter'sTale, iv. (cho.) 

UNTRIMMED bride KingJohn, iii. 1 

UNTROD-this untrod state JuliusCa:sar, iii. 1 

UNTRODDEN stones? Richard 1 1, i. 2 

UNTROUBLED soul, awake, awake I /iieAajY/ ///. v. 3 

UNTRUE -make us thus untrue? . Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

Ijrove untrue, deadly divorce step .... All's Well, v. 3 

find but bloody safety, and untrue.. A'/H^-'./o/m, iii. 4 

wlien to my good lord I prove untrue. Cyoibeline.i. li 

UNTRUSSING. Farewell. jUeasMre/orMea,!iire, iii. 2 

UNTRUTH— untruths; secondarily ..MuchAdo, v. 1 

my untruth had not provoked hira .Richard II. ii. 2 

the presence he wouldaay untruths. Henry r/i/. iv.2 

let all untruths stand by thy . . . . Troilus Sr Cress, v. 2 

UNTUNABLE.and bad.... TwoGen. of Verona, iii. I 

vet the note was very untunable. . Asyou Like it, v. 3 

UNTUNE thiit string, and, hark . Troilus ^Cress. i. 3 

UNTU.V IC D cares? Comedy 0/ Errors, v. 1 

with boisterous untuned drums Richanl II. i. 3 

tlie untuned and jarring senses Lear, iv. 7 

UNTUTORED churl, and noble.. . .5He»);/r/. iii. 2 
untutored lad, thou art too malapert. .3 //en. 17. v. .'"> 
speak'^t like him's untutored to repeat .Pnicles.i. 4 

UNTWINE the sistera three 2llenryir. ii. 4 

grief, untwine his perishing root Cymheline, iv. 2 

UNUKGED wouldst vow that . . Comedy of lirr. ii. 2 
voluntary zeal, and iinurged faith . . KmgJohn, v. 2 
UNUSED-reasoii to fust in us unuwd . Ihimlri, iv. 4 
albeit nimseil to the melting mood .... (iih.lio, v. 2 
UNUSU,VL-at an uiin,<nal hour?. .Ve.i.<./o) Mr.is. v. 1 
souie comet, or unusual p!(Klic:v?. 'I'mning oish. iii. 2 
these your unusual wced,5 toeach. iriinrr'sTnte, iv. 3 

he hath been in unusual pleasure Mm-lirth, ii. 1 

strange unusual blood, when .... Timon "i mi,, iv. 2 

cuard, and most unusual vigilance i.e>tr, ii. 3 

UN VAIAJED jewels llich.nd III. i, 4 

he may not as luivalued persons do .... llaodet, i. 3 



^la' 



UN VANQUISHED detract so mucb.l Henry VI. v. 4 
UNVARNISHED tale deliver of my .... Othello, i. 3 

UNVEIL in their dumb Troilus ^Cressida, iii. 3 

UNVENERABLE be thy hands .. Winter'sTale, ii. 3 

UN VEXED retire KingJol,n,-n. I 

UNVKJLATED honour of your .Comedy of lirr. iii. 1 
UNVIRTUOUS knight shall be ..Merry Wires, iv. 2 
UNVISITED, mneh to our shame ..Lore's L.L. v. 2 
UNVULNERABLE, and stick ....Coriolanns, v. 3 

UN WARII;Y, devoured King John, v. 7 

UNWASHED— lean unwashed artificer — iv. 2 
do it with unwashed hands too .... 1 Hem y IV. iii. 3 
unwashed too, 'tis a foul thing . . Romeo t^- Juliet, i. ft 
lINAVATCHED-not unwatched go.. ..Hom/e/, iii. 1 
UNAVED-you to keei) unwed.. c;<i»ie(;y of Errors, ii. 1 
UNWEDGEABLE and gnarled .Meas. for Meas. ii. 2 

UNWEEDED garden, that grows Hamlet, i. 2 

UNWEIGHED behaviour Merry Wives, ii. 1 

UN WEIGHING fellow .Meas. for Meas. iii. 2 

UNWELCOME news to you . ...TwoGen. ofVer. ii. 4 
welcome and unwelcome things at....il/aclje'/i, iv. 3 
uneven and unwelcome news came ..IHenryW. i. I 
first bringer of unwelcome news ....'illenryl V.i. 1 
we shall be much unwelcome. T'rm'ins.S'Cressu'rt,! v. I 
UNWEPT— likewise be unwept! ..Richard III. il. 2 

UNWHIPPEDofiustice iear, iii. 2 

UNWHOLESOME fen Tempest,i.2 

use this unwholesome humidity.. Jl/errj/d'nies, iii. 3 
and that is but unwholesome food ....Henry V. ii. 3 
fruit in an unwholesome dish.. Troilus (f Cressida, ii. 3 
that made the air unwholesome .... Corlolanus, iv. 6 
they're too unwholesome o' conscience. /Vnc/es, iv. 3 
and unwholesome in their thoughts ..Hamlet, iv. .'. 

do not think it so unwholesome Othello, iv. I 

UNWIELDY arms against thy ....Richard II. iii. 2 

this unwieldy sceptre from my hand — iv. I 

unwieldy, slow, heavy and palc/iomeo >5-.^n/ie^ii..'j 

UNWILLING to proceed in. TwoGen. of Verona, ii. I 

'twas a fault unwilling Taming of Shrew, iv. 1 

home return: unwilling T Vigreei^.Comi dy of Err. i. I 

gave leave to my unwilling tongue. . Richard II. i. 3 
ut rather because I am unwilling .'IHenrylV. iii. 2 
icy, cold, unwilling, be thou so to6./^c/mK( ///.iii. 1 
unwilling to outlive the good that. Henry r///. iv. 2 

UNWILLINGLY what I command ....Tempest, i. 2 
unwillingly, take them again.. TwoGen. of Ver. ii. 1 
iinwillingly I left the ring .. Merchant of Venice, v. I 
like snail unwillingly to school ..yls you Like it, ii. 7 
not following my leash unwillingly. /('into-'sT. iv. 3 
liave, and most unwillingly otlate. Henry VIII. v. I 

"NWILLINGNESS pronounce Richard II. i. 3 

dull unwillingness to repay a Aeht.Richard III. 11. 2 
and I with oil unwillingness will go — iv. 1 

UNWIND her love from. . . . Two Gen. of Verona, i ii. 2 
unwind your bloody flag Henry v. i. 2 

UNWIPED, we found upon their Macbeth, ii. 3 

UNWISE— tardy by unwise delay.. /(ic/iarrf ;//. iv. I 
never mind was to be so unwise. Timon of Athens, U. 2 
good, but most unwise patricians ..Coriolanus, iii. I 

UNWISELY, not ignobly, have.. Time,, or.Vhens, ii, 2 

UNWISHED yoke'ray soul consents.. U/ii.A'.'sHr. i. I 
hast unwished five thousand men .... Henry V. iv. 3 

UNWITTED-planet had unwitted men. Othello, ii. 3 

UiVWITTINGLY, or in my rage ..Richard II I. ii. 1 
my conscience, put unwittingly?.. Henry////, iii. 2 

UNWONTED, which now came Tempest, i. 2 

awakens me with this unwonted.il/eas. /or^Uea.';. iv. 2 

UNWORTHIER may attain .. .;Ver.o/-Cen/ee, ii. I 

UNWORTHIEST shows as fairly. Troilus ^- Cress, i. 3 
in mv regard, of the unworthiest siese.IIatnlet. iv. 7 

UNWORTHILY'' disgrace the man. Two Gen. ofV. iii. I 
unworthilv, thou wast installed .. ..1 /JcNr)/ '7. iv. 1 

UNWORTHINESS, that dare not .... Teo'.pest, iii. I 
songs composed to her unworthiness...4/rs/(>;/,iii. 7 
as may unwortbiness define ..Henry V. iv. (chorus) 
the court with thy unwortbiness Cymheline, i. i 

UNWORTHY body as I a.m..TiroGen.of Verona, i. i 
much he is unworthy so good a iixdy. .StnchAdo, ii. 3 
give me leave, unworthy as I am ..Mid.N.'sDr. ii. 2 
a poor unworthy brother of yours.. .rlsyowLi7(ei7, i. I 
cost of princes on unworthy slionlders? — ii. 7 
most unworthy of her you call Rosalind — iv. I 
scornful boy, unworthy this good ....All'sWell. ii. 3 
bless this unworthy husband? (re/i.) — ill. 4 

one unworthy all the former.. Taming of Shrea\ iv.2 
unworthy arid unnatural lord . . ilinier's Tale, ii. 3 
for our honour therein unworthy thee — iv. 3 
unworthy, and ridiculous, to chargi^ Ki}tgJohn, iii. I 
on this unworthy scaffold, to bring, l/e/ij I//', i. (cho ) 

their bones in an unworthy urn — i. 2 

left me proudly, as unworthy fight., 1 Henry VI. iv. 7 
I am unworthy to be Henry's wife (re/j.) — v. 3 
if Somerset be unworthy of the place. .2Henj-i/r/. i.3 
unworthy though thou art, I'll cope — iii. 2 
whose far unworthy deriuty I am .... — iii. 2 
were imwortby to behold the same? — iv. 4 

unworthy slaughter upon others . . . Richard III. i. 2 
a poor fallen man, unworthy now.. Henry V III. iii. 2 
thieves, unworthy of a thing. . Troilus oj- fi essiila.ii. 2 
as thou unworthy to be called her,. .. — iv.4 

to my poor unworthy notice Coriolanns. ii. 3 

lips on that unworthy place .... Antony 4- Cleo. iii. 11 

of your unworthy thinking fymbeliue, i. .=> 

unworthy brother, and unworthy.. 'i'iinsAndron. i. 2 
unworthy I to be her schoolmaster .... I'ericles. ii. .5 
imwortli.y [f7./i.-unwortliiest] hand./iowieo ^Jul. i. 5 
unworthy tiling, live here in heaven — iii. 3 

unworthy as she is, that we liave .... — iii. 5 
patient merit of the unworthy takes ..Hamlet, Mi. 1 
how nnworthj^ a thing 3'ou make of me? — iii. 2 
I hold him to be unworthy of li:s nlace .0//ie//i, li. 3 

UNWRUNG-our withers are unwrung. Hnm/e/, iii. 2 

UNYOKE this seizure KingJohn, iii. 1 

av. tell me tiiat, and unv^ike llaodet, v. 1 

UNyOKED humour of your idleness. 1 Henry IV. i. 2 
like yniithful steers unyoked ■IHenrylV. iv. 2 

U1'BKAI1>— uot upbraid our course Tempest, ii. 1 

the clock upbraids me Twelfth Mght, iii. 1 

to iqibraid you with those kindnesses — iii. 4 
I did upbraid her, and fall oat.Mid.N.'sDream, iv. 1 



irrURAI I» -mirmtclv revolts iipliraUI . . Marhrlli, v. 8 

to ii|.liniiil niv i^iiiii'.ifit S//.-iiii;/ (. iv. I 

ili.l uiilinii.l im- with inv lather's.. .. U/<'iirs(/7. ii. 5 

n» woll nmv thov \iphniiil mc — iv. I 

ill iovu. iipliiiiicViiiv fnW-\M<ti:.Tioiliii^i:ir,!i. iii. 3 
cloil.H uiibrnia lis with our di.-tivs.. (,Viii,W.i>iiii, v. 1 

himself iiiiliraiils in mi oveiv trille /.'■.if. i. 3 

how he uphrni.ln Iii;;ii, timt lie itmile oihello.v. 2 

lIlHiK.MDKl) me withul . . . .Cnmr.l,, nriirrnri, iii. I 
liaviiif: nMise. and ttiiis nphrnided it/iltfuri/tt'. iv. 4 

none of tlic Freneti iiplirtiiiicd Henry I', iii. 

iipliniided me iilioiit the rose I wear.: Henry yi. iv. I 

he tluis nphrnided, eliid. and rated, •lllrnni ri. iii. 1 

Uritl!.\Il>L\(; ~th\ iipliniidinKS.Cumn/i/riV/iV.-. v. 1 

vour hliiiit npbrnidinijs Itic/nml III. i. 3 

I'l'-CA.-iT— juok upon un up-east CymMine, ii. 1 

\imi.l. this osier en.ye of ours ..Uomeo^Jutiet, ii. ;i 

lUMIO.VKDICDiii tliy life e.\lorted llmnlei,l. 1 

VIM tOI ,U Ilia word /."iv '> L. Lnsl, v. 2 

ve will nione npholil, without KingJohn, iii. I 

him tliut thee iipliolils, liis liuuour .. — iii. 1 

nloiie upliold.-- the dnv — v. 1 

will a while uphold the unyoked 1 Henry It', i. 2 

while life upholds this arm Sllenryl't. iii. 3 

do vou uphold and maintain. Tilns .4ntlronieus, v. 2 

Xri'Ilol.DlOL'll him that tlice KinirJohn, iii. 1 

iri'llOI.DING the nice fashion Henry r. v. 2 

Ul'I.IiT us to tlio view -Iii/.iiiv .S r/'-np-i/.n, v. 2 

sou our eodhead will uplift fymlielhie.v. 1 

Ul'I,U''Tt;i)-wiU not he niilifted . . . . />"i/.c.«/, iii. 3 
would he hands uplifted in my right.. j1/,ic/w/i, iv. 3 

and with uplifted aims is safe Uichard //. ii. 2 

how were 1 then uplifted! .. Troilus^Cressida, iii. 2 

ITl'r.H— in an iipiK-r lower. '/■/roGVii. o/Tcroiin, iii. 1 

at unjier end o' the tahle, now .. H'inlrr^sTale^ iv. 3 

prieis frown on the upper hand ..lliehurd HI. iv, 4 

, the upper (lerinany .. Henry I'm. v. 2 



fel at upper end o the tahle. 

keep the hills and upper regioi 
II'KEARKD to execution 

upreared and abutting fronts . 

his hair upreared, his nostrils . 
t I'KKilir with his carriage . 

as iipri^'ht as the cedar 

live tin upri 



Hci 



JuiinxCrt'sm; v. I 

.■IHrnryll'. iv. 1 

II I', i. (eliorus) 

...•IHenryVl. iii. 2 j 

'tempest, v. 1 j 

I.ove*sL.Lnsl, iv. 3 

It life Merchant of I'enice, iii. 5 

, Hid upright judgel (r/'p.) .... — iv. 1 

finiiiies.s uf my upright soul liichard //. i. 1 

a loyal, just, and ujiright gentleman — i. 3 
away, you whoreson upright rabbit. illenrylF. ii. 2 

if truth and upright innoceney — v. 2 

to be a man just and upright 1 /fcniyrf. iii. 1 

ca|)cr upright like a wild iMori6C0..2Hsiii!//'y. iii. 1 

look! lookl it stands upright — iii. 3 

with whom an upright zeal to right. iHenryl'I.v. 1 
never stand upright, till Richard, liichard III. iii. 2 
upri:;!!!, just, and true-disposing God — iv. 4 
purity ol mauliood stand upright. y'ii;ion r)/.4M. iv. 3 
or poison, some upright jusiicer!.. . . Cynthcihie, v- 5 

upright he held it, lorils Titus Andronictis, i. 2 

and set them upright at their dear .. — v. 1 

the moon would I not leap upright Lear, iv. 6 

UPHIGIirEDl'SLYdoawrouged./Ven. forMen.in. 1 

UPRIGUTNKS.S and integrity. 7iVuj/l7i.>rojiinM, i. 1 

UPRISK— thy uprise shall I sue .Antony /iCIeo. iv. 10 

sweet tidings of the sun'suprise?. Ti^xj/lnrfioji. iii. 1 

TTRISINGofthehill? l.ovesl..l.nsl,iY. 1 

UPROAR the universal peace iMadieih, iv. 3 

an uproar, I dare warrant \ Henry Ft. iii. 1 

are all in uproar, and danger serves. Heurj/ /'///. i. 2 
commotions, uproars, with a general.. — v, 2 
by uproar severed, like a flight of. Titus Andron. v. 3 

UP-R(JU.SED by some Ilomen ^Juliet, ii. 3 

UPSIIi.)T-this snort to the upshot. 7'Hc(ft/iAVi'/i/, iv. 2 

she get the upshot by cleaving .. Lnve*sL.Lnst, iv. I 

and, in this upshot, purposes mistook .. Hamlet, v. 2 

UPSIDE-DOWN, since Robin ostler. I Hen n/(/'. ii. 1 

torch, that's turned upside-down I'eiicles, ii, 2 

UP-STAIR.S, and down-stairs \llenri/ir. ii. 4 

UP-STARINO tthen like reeds Tempest, i. 2 

UPS TAllT-to upstart nuthrifts?.... /(/c/inji^ ;/. ii. 3 
this upstart is old Talbot's ghost ..\ Henry 11. iv. 7 

UP-S\VAKJIED them 2(lp,iri/;r. iv. 2 

UPWARD-froin the hip upward MuchAdo, iii. 2 

shall be buried with her face upwanls — iii. 2 

fourscore years, and upward Merry It'ires, iii. 1 

what upward lies the street Loee's I,. Lost, iv. 3 

else climb Uiiward to what they were .Macljettt, iv. 2 
and so upward, and upward, and a\l.. Henry F. ii. 3 

fortune keeps an upward course ^ Henry f I. v. 3 

thisoliedience. upward nt twculy.. Henry I 1 1 1, ii. 4 
whom thy upward face hath to. Timon nf Athens, iv. 3 

Titiniiis' face is upward JnliusCo'sar, v. 3 

IKnt.] but the great one thot goes upward. /.rnr, ii, 4 

fond old man. fourscore and ui>ward .... — iv. 7 

fnmi tlic cxtremest upward of thy head.. — v. 3 

URCHINS shall, for tliat vast of night ..remppj/, i. 2 

or fright mc with urchin shows — ii. '2 

we'll dress like urchins, ouplics .. .Merry ll'ives, iv. t 
swelling toads, as many urchins.. Titui.tnilmn. ii. 3 

rUCIIINl'lELD, lord Strange MIenryll. iv. 7 

URGE not my father's anger. Wof.rn. o/-/>ro(i<i, iv. 3 
1 urge this childhood proof .. MrrcAn/i/ nf Venice, i. 1 
the mixlcsty to urge the thing held .. — v. 1 

which here wc urge in war KingJohn, ii. I 

urge them, while their souls arc .... — ii. 2 

lay it oi>eu, to urge on revenge — iv. 3 

to horse! urge doubts to them that../?<'cA>ir(< II. ii. I 

urge it no niore, niy lord — iv. I 

then if you urge me further than HenryV. v. 2 

urge it no more; lest thot 3 Henry fl. \. I 

to iirj?e his hatred more to Clarence. /<ic/i(ir<f /;/. i. I 
which here you urge, to nrove us ... . — j. 3 

how canst thou urge Otxl's dreadful — i 4 

they did urge it still unto the king . . — ii. I 
moreover, urge his hateful luxury .. — iii..') 
urge liie necessity and state of liiiics — iv. 4 
urge the king to do me this lust ..Henry fill. iv. 2 
face til face, and freely urge against nie — v. 2 
not urge it half so faithfully., limonnf Aihen-, iii. 2 
urge it no mure, ou height uf our .... — iii. S 



URGE mc to put off 7'iiiioii nf,UI>ens, iii « 

what I ran urge against Iiini Con'otanus,'iv, 7 

j what, urge you 3'our petitions..,. Jii/iiifC**r*ur, iii. I 
urge me no more, I shall forget — iv. 3 

I I should not urge thy duty past thy — iv. 3 

j never did iirgi- mc ill his act ,,,. Antony ^■('leo.u. '2 

\irge it tluiu: hiiir'c with thy — iii. II 

wherefore dost thou urge the name. Titus And. iii. 2 

I tlieiefori' I urge thy oath _ V.I 

to that I'll iML-e him; therefore — v. 1 

conipliuiciit w liieh very manners urges .. Lear, v. 3 

URtiKD-hath urged her height.. W/<i. A. 'j/Jicnw, iii. 2 

to tier, yet she urged conference ..Asyoiil.it,e it, i. 2 

whiles our compact is urged — v. « 

so strongly urged past my defence . . KingJohn, i. I 
being urged at a time unseasonable .. — iv. 2 

vou urged nic as a judge; but I Richard II. i. 3 

being ne'er so little >irged, another . . — v. I 
and urged it twice together; did he not? — v. 3 
and when I urgert the ransom once.. I Hcnryiy. \. 3 

a challenge urged more modestly — v. 2 

my safely urged me to — v. 5 

that .self bill is urged, which Henry I', i. I 

this bill urged by the commons'i' — i. I 

the peace, which you before so urged — v, 2 
articles, too nicely urged, be stood on — v. 3 
which I never use till urged, nor never — v. 2 
well urged, my lord of Warwick ..MIenryll. iii. I 
revenge, though they much urged. .3Hi)ir.i/ ;/. iv. 8 
by much company might he urged. /(ic/iarii ///. ii. 2 
our reasons urged uiiou the way .... — iii- 1 
then he was urged to tell my tule njrain — iii. 7 

urged on the examinntious Ihnnyllll. ii. I 

nay, urged extremely tor't Timon o/Atlicns, iii. 2 

I urged/our old nc(|iiaintnuce Curitilanus, v. 1 

Dcoiiis, well urged; I think JuliusC(esar,u, \ 

1 urged yon furtliei; then you — ii. 1 

but your haste is now urged on 5'ou I ear, v, 1 

ill urged to one that is so ill! ....llomeo'^Juliet,\. I 

trespass sweetly urged! give me .. — i. .') 
and iirL;ed withal your high displeasure — iii. 1 

UlUi EXrto take the urgent hour . Ifintrr'sTale, \. 2 
with more urgent touches ,. Antony ^- Cleopatra, i. 2 

URGEST— as thou urgest justice .Afei-.o/-;V)iiVc, iv. I 
wh}' urgest thou so oft young K^ng John, iv. 2 

URGING helpless patience Comedy of Bi rors, ii. I 

for urging it the second time to me .. — ii. 2 
for my urging it; at board, he fed irev.) — v. 1 
besides our urging of her wreck .... — v. I 

with too much urging your Uichard II. iii. 1 

nor never break for urging HenryV. v. 2 

the urging of that word, judgment .liichard III. i. 4 
my head, by uigiug me to fury .tiomeo ^Jnliet, v. 3 

URINAL— water in an urinal .. TnoGen.nfTer. ii. 1 
thou art a Castilian king. Urinal \. Merry hives, ii. 3 

1 will kuog his urinals about (fc;y.).. — iii. 1 
URINE is congealed ice ..Measure forMeasure, iii. 2 

cannot contain their urine . Merchant of I'enice, iv. I 
nose-painting, sleep, and urine Macbeth, ii, 3 

URN— bones in an unworthy urn Henry I', i. 2 

in an urn more precious 1 Henry T I. i. 6 

ever herald did follow to his iirn....Corio/nims, v. !> 
distil from these twoaneicut urns. VV/HtjH./rod- iii.l 

TTRSA— my nativity was under ursa major. Lear, i. 2 1 

URt^iri..A, bring my picture. TwoGen. of I'erona, iv. 4 
I and Ursula walfc in the orchard ..Much.ido, iii. 1 
now. Ursula, when Beatrice doth come — iii.l 
no, truly, Ursula, she is too disilainful _ iii. 1 I 
good Ursula, wake my cousin {rep.) — iii. .| 
then my cousin, Margaret, and Ursula — v. i 
and this to old mistress Ursula -.tHrnritlT. i. 2 

USAGE— the least sinister usage . . Tn-elnh Mghi, i. i 
but this most cruel usage of your, iriii'fr'sy'u/r, ii. ;) 
to the fearful usage (at least, ungentle — v. 1 
your stubborn usage of the Pope .... Kim^John, v. I 

by unkind usage, (langernus \ Henry 1 1: v. 1 j 

this servile usage once offend 1 Henry Tl. v. 3 i 

good usage and great liberty tMlenryl'l. iv. S 

cheek, pleads your fair usage... Troitns/i- Cress, iv. 4 
little angry for my so rough usage.. Q/m'/Wiiic,iv. 1 

princely shall be thy usage Titus Andron. i. 2 

this usage, coming from us Lear, ii. 4 

such usaije iCol. Knt. -uses] send Othello, iv. 3 

USANCE here with us in Venice. .l/«r/i.o/;>iiice, i. 3 
about my monies, and my u.'anees .. — i. 3 
and take no doit of usance for my .. — i. 3 

TrSE j'our authority Tempest, i. 1 

the earth let liberty make use of — i. 2 

no use of service, of riches (rep.) — ".I 

they always use to lau^h at nothing .. — ii. I j 

nor cannot, use such vigilance .... — iii. 3 1 

although they want the use of tongue — iii. 3 
I must use vou in such another trick .. — iv. I 

use me, and my daughter — v. 1 | 

made use ami fair advantage.. Tuo Gen. of Ter. ii. 4 I 
necessaries that I needs must use.. .. — ii. 4 
to compass lier I'll use my skill .... — ii. 4 

that use them to so base effect — ii. 7 

wh.'u would von use it? — iii.l 

I'll use thee kindly for thy — iv. 4 

and will not use a woman lawlessly — v. 3 ; 

how use doth breed a habit — v. 4 

love use reason for hia ....JlVerr|/l*'iiif», ii. 1 (letter) 

use your art of wooing — ii. 2 

I will use her as the key — ii. 2 i 

use your patience — iii. ! i 

he hath no use of them — iii. 2 i 

we'll use this unwholesome — iii. 3' 

you use me well, master — iii. 3 

there they always use to discharge .. — iv. 2 

devise but how you'll use him — iv. 4 ' 

fairies use flowers for their — v. 5 i 

use me as you will — v. 5 I 

let them use their talents TtrelflhKight, i. 5 

do use to chauiit it — ii. 4 : 

Uses me with a more exalted respect — ii. 5 I 

with whiidi she uses to seal — il. 6 | 

kept together, anil put to use — iii.l 

my siebt she uses thee kindly! .. — iii. 4 (chall.) 
that will use the devil himself — iv. 2 i 



USE— rci'ommended to his use TneWh Mghl, v i 

both thanks and use Meai.fiir Me.u. i. 1 

by the iniiiioderatu use turns to — i. i 

for terror, not to use — i. 4 

he (to give tear to use — i. B 

do nothing but use their abuses — ii. < 

to use it like a giant — ii. ; 

would use his heaven for thunder.... — ii. Z 

and his use was, to put a ducat — iii 7 

to use it for my time — iii. 3 

if not, use him for the iircseut — iv. V 

occasion to iifC nie for your own turn — iv. J 

and I will use j'luir skill Much Ado, i. - 

use nf your diseoiiteiit? (rep.) — i. 3 

hearts in love use their own tongues — ii. I 

and 1 f^'avc him use for it — ii. I 

use it for my love some other way .. — iv. i 

wilt thou use th.v wit? — v. 1 

if you use them, Margaret — v. 2 

use me but as your spaniel .... .Vi./. A'.'sOr/nai. ii. '.' 

to be used as yon use .vour dog? — ii. 2 

but I should use thee worse — iii. 2 

would not use a gentle lady so — iii.-' 

she should not use a long one — v. I 

will use him for my ininstrelsy ..Lore's L. Lost, i. I 

forsworn the use of eyes — iv. 3 

I do never use it Merch.of I'enice, i. 3 

and all for use of that which is — i. 3 

Ijanncelot Golibo, use your legs — ii. 2 

use all tlie observance of civility — ii. 2 

uotwitlistandin.', use .Vour pleasure — iii. 2(lctt.t 
and use thou all the endeavour of .. — iii. i 

you may as well use question — \\.\ 

no more offers, use no I'urther means — i\'. I 
you use in abject and in slavish jiarts — i\'. I 
it is still her use, to let the wretched — iv. I 
the other half in use, to render it .... — iv. I 

therefore use thy discretion As you Like it, 't. I 

sweet are the uses of adversity — ii. I 

the lodging where you use to lie — ii. 3 

which she did use as she was writing — iv. 3 

he uses his folly like — v. 4 

they do use good bushes — (cpil.) 

rather in power than use AU'sll'ell, i. 1 

and use him as he uses thee — i. I 

tise a more spacious ceremony — ii. I 

give us a further use to be nitt'le .... — ii. 3 

and fiither's voice have I to use — ii. 3 

give me leave to use the help — ii. 3 

and uses a known truth to pass — ii. .') 

serve the world for no honest n>e .. .. — iv. 3 
such sweet use make of what they .. — iv. t 

I put you to the use of your — v. 1 

more liaste than is his use — v.! 

proy you, sir, use the carp as — v. 2 

music and iioesy use Taming of Shretc, i. I 

and use you like a fool — i. 1 

I advise you use your manners — i. 1 

for a servant to use his master so? .. — i. 2 

bid tliem use them well — ii I 

unto th.v master's use! (ren.) — iv. 3 

brands, that calumny doth use .. H'inter's Tale, ii. I 

should a like language use to nil — ii. 1 

I'll use that tongue I lia\"e — ii.2 

the time is worth the use on't — iii.l 

so long I daily vow to use it — iii. Z 

the name of 'Jtime, to use my wings — iv. (choms. 

thnt he use no scurrilous words — iv. '.'• 

to my good use, I remembered — iv. 3 

do use you for my fool Comedi/ of Errors, ii. 2 

an' .vou use these blows long — ii.2 

w-licu were you wont to use — ii.2 

for her wealth's sake, use her with ,, — iii. 2 
kiiow not what use to put her to .... — iii. 2 
good lord, you use this dallinucc .... — iv. 1 
scared thy husband from the use .... — v. I 

deaf ears a little use to hear — v. I 

dollars to our general use Macbeth, i . 2 

against the use of nature? — i 3 

but w itli the aid of use — i. 3 

and such an instrument I was to use .. — ii. I 

fear, that wants hard use — iii. < 

thou com'st to use thy tongue — v..'* 

use our commission KingJohn, iii. 3 

be lUeased that you must use me .... — iv. I 

though to no use lint still to look — iv. I 

you sliould use to do me wrong — iv. I 

of note f.ir mercy-lacking uses — iv. I 

return, for I must use thee — iv. 2 

from his holiness use all your — v. 1 

1 must lose the use of all deceit? .... — v 4 

dark dishonour's use thou liichard II. \. 1 

mv tongue's use is to me no more.... — i. 3 

I'll use the advantage of my — iii. 3 

to his own use he keeps I Henry It', i. I 

when we need your use and counsel.. — i. 3 

but do not u.se It oft — iii.l 

as cloudy nun use to their — iii. 2 

make as good use of it as many — iii. 3 

of his absence make this use — iv. 1 

a good wit will make use of anj- 'lUentylt'. i. 2 

and made her serve your uses both .. — Ii. I 

anil one other for use — ii.2 

but do you use me thus, Ned? — ii.2 

things that arc mouldy lack use .... — iii. 2 
I will not use many words with you — iii. 2 

more perfect in the use of arms — iv. I 

and sets it in act and use — iv. 1 

come to no further use — iv. 4 

I will use him well (re/).) — v. 1 

I then did use the iierson — v. 2 

that you use the same with the like. — v. 2 
this I lavy serves you for gooil uses .. — v. 3 
will you conuuaiid me to use mv lege? — (cpil.) 

not nieusiiring what use we nia^e Ueuryt'. i. 2 

practi-ed oil mc for thy use? — ii. S 

use lenity, tweet chuck I — iii. 2 

do not use me with that affability (lep.) — iii. 2 
the French: use iiienry to them all .. — iii. 3 
to use his goot pleasure — iii. 6 



USE— makest uaeof any thing (rf/..) ..llenryf. in. 7 

take, and use it for m.v haste — iv. i 

oaths wliicli I never use till urged . . — v. a 

I'll use, to carrv thee out of thia \ Henry fi. i. 3 

distrained the Tower to his use _— i- 3 

handle, or use, any sword — i. 3 (prool.) 

use no entreaty, for it is in vain — v. 1 

in that I pray you use her wtU iHenryFI. u. 4 

any groat I hoarded to my use — lii- ' 

thev iise to write it on the top — ;v. 2 

dost thou use to write thy name — iv. 2 

is his to use, so Somerset may — , Y- } 

war that Henry means to use iHenry VI. i. 1 

mnde impudent with use of evil deeds — .i. 4 
in that quarrel use it to the death .. — _!|. 2 
use her honourable. Av, Edward irep.^ — in 2 

wliile I use further conference — in. 3 

know not how to use embassadors .. — iv. 3 
nor how to use your brothers brotherly — iv. 3 

and, if we use delay, cold biting — iv. 8 

use means for her recovery — ^^\-\ 

■we go to use our hands lUcharU //';.;• 3 

the noar will use us kindly — lu. 2 

princes, use my bahiea well! — ;v. 1 

bnt that still use of grief makea — iv. 4 

use careful watch, choose trusty .... — v. 3 

is hilt a word that cowards use — v. 3 

into our kingdom; use us, and it ..Htnryl'III.u. 2 

ready to use our utmost studies — iji- 1 

has made tliat right use of it — 111.2 

make use now, and provide for thine — lu- 2 

to use so rude behaviour — iv. 2 

persuasions to the contrary fail not to use — v. 1 

take him, and use him well — v. 2 

man v hands and no use Troitus Sr Cressida,i. 2 

if thou use to beat me — .!!•' 

to use between your strangeness — ui- 3 

and dear in use what thinsB again .. — in. 3 
nay, we must use expostulation .... — iv. 4 

Grecian, thou dost not use me — iv. 4 

I charge thee, use her well — iv. 4 

and uses the traitor Calchas' tent — v. 1 

to use [Co/. Kiii.-count] violent thefts — v. 3 

that my arms are out of use — v. 8 

exceeding all use of quittance .. VVmoii of Athens, i. 1 
tlittt vou would once use our hearts .. — 1-2 

should we ne'er have use for tliem .. — _i. 2 

my uses cry to me, I must serve — ii- I 

frankly use, aa lean bid — ii- 2 

have found time to use them — ii- 2 

to them to use your signet — .;;■ 2 

instant occasion to use fifty talents . . — iii. 1 

canst use the time well (rfp.) — ui- 1 

supply his instant use with so — i;i. 2 

I was sending to use lord Timon myself — iii. 2 
as to use mine own words to himy .. — iii- 2 
had his necessity made use of me — — iii 2 
and none but tyrants use it cruelly.. — in. 5 

thev love thee not, that use thee — iv. 3 

make use of thy salt hours — iv- 3 

affect my manners, and dost use them — iv. 3 

here is no use for gold — iv. 3 

the deed of saying is quite out of use — v. 1 

for tliy best use and wearing — v. 2 

that mine own use invites me — v. 2 

thou wilt use the wars as tliy — v. 5 

and I will use the olive with — v- 5 

and let me use my sword, I'd make- . Cariolanus.\. 1 
see how he intends to use the people — ii. 2 

le.ids my use of anger, to better — ni. 2 

were iit'for thee to use — iii- 2 

S'l use it, that my revengeful — iv. 5 

hilt yuur soldiers use him as the grace — iv. 7 

he would use me with estimation — v. 2 

to use my lawful sword! — y. 5 

I mav use with a safe conscience ..JuliusCissar, i. 1 

or did use to stale with ordinary — i. 2 

yim do want, or else you use not — _i- 3 

these things are beyond all use — _!!- 2 

blood and destruction shall be so in use — iii- 1 
out of UEcand staled by other men.. — iv- 1 

I'll use you for my mirth — iv. 3 

of your philosophy you make no use — iv. 3 
according to his virtue let us use him — y. S 
heart remains in use with you ..Anlony SrCleo.i. 3 

to use our strongest hands — ii. 1 

we use to say, the dead are well — i). 5 

Antony will use his affection — ii- 6 

part of myself; use me well in it — iii- 2 

Ctesar, having made use of him — iii- 5 

that have no use for trusting — v. 2 

make your best use of this — _v- 2 

wliose use the sword of Cmsar Cymbelhie, iii. 1 

yet use thee not so hardly — iii- 3 

can make good use of either — iii- 5 

wherein I should have cause to use thee — m. 5 
use like note, and words, save that .. — iv. 2 
during their use, and slay us after .. — iv. 4 
such as wink, and will not use them — v. 4 
a man should have the best use of eyes — v. 4 

will use you nobly, and your rilusAudron.}. 2 

away with her, and use her as you will — _ii. 3 

have served me to effectless use — iii- 1 

but I will use the axe — i"- ' 

did vou not use his daughter — iv. 2 

to use as you think needful — v. 1 

with long use, account no sin . . Pericles, i- (Gower) 
as houses are defiled for want of use — i- 4 

to use one language, in each — iv. 4 (Gower) 

will you use hira kindly? — iv. 6 

take her away ; use her at thy pleasure — iv- 6 

sir, I will use my utmost skill — v. 1 

use iCol. Kn(.-loveJ well our father Lear, i. 1 

can vou make no use of nothing — i. 4 

you would make use of that good wisdom — 1.4 
thy other daughter will use thee kindly — i. 5 

wherein we must have use of your — ii- 1 

wliich craves the instant use — }}. 1 

why dost thou use me thus? — ii. 2 

father's dog, you should not use me so . . — li. 2 



USE— from me the use of mine own house. Lfu 

must wither and come to deadly use — iv. 2 

to use her in that kind for which — iv. (i 

use me well; you shall have ransom .... — iv. 
to use his e3'es for garden water-pots .... — iv. B 
now then, we'll use his countenance .... — v. I 

so to use them, as we shall find — v. 3 

I'd use them so that heaven's vault — v. 3 

beauty too rich for use RomeoSfJulifil,i 5 

lips that they must use in prater.... — }.■> 

but, strained from that fair use" — ij. 3 

to use me at his pleasure (rep.) — Vi, A 

as yon shall use nie hereafter — iii- 1 

therefore use none — iii- 1 

the damned use that word in hell.... — iii. 3 
usest none in that true use indeed.... — iii. 3 

think on't, I do not use to jest — iii.-'i 

living here and you no use of him .. — iii. 5 

grave, for there must I use thee — y. 1 

any sound, or use of voice, speak to vciQ,,llamlet, i. 1 

to me all the uses of this world! — i. 2 

the need, we have to use you — ii. 2 

60 sure as it hath use to do — ii. 2 

I swear, I use no art at all (jfp.) — ii. 2 

the adventurous knight shall use his foil — ii. 2 
I will use them according to their desert — ii. 2 

much better: use every man after — ii. 2 

but use all frently — iii 2 

pitiful ambition in the fool that uses it .. — iii. 2 
I will speak daggers to her, but use none — iii- 2 
that to the use of actions fair and good .. — iii. 4 
for use almost can change the stamp .... — iii. 4 
yet the unshaped use of it doth move .... — iv. 5 

to what base uses we may return — v. I 

the reason that you use me thus? — v. I 

your bonnet to his rigiit use — v. 2 

to use some gentle entertainment — v. 2 

do their broken weapons rather use Othello, i. 3 

adieu, brave Moor! use Desdemnna well — i. 3 

the one's for use, t)ie other useth it — ii. I 

corner in the thing I love, for others' uses — iii. 3 

I have use for it; go, leave me — iii- 3 

is it his use? or did the letters — iv, I 

then, let them use us well; else, let — iv. 3 

will speak, though tongues were out of use — v. 1 

USED thee, filth as thou art Tempest, i. 2 

treachery used to Valentine ..Tiro Gen. of Ver. ii. 6 

that used me so — iv. 4 

and will not be roughly used.. .. 2'«'ri/ttA'i>/i(, iii. 4 

the madly used Malvolio — v. 1 (letter) 

for he hath not used it before . . Meas.for Mens. iv. 2 

the which he hath used so long Much Ado, y. 1 

be used as you use your dog. , . . Mid.N.^sDream, ii. 2 
much better used on Navarre .... Love's L. Lost, ii. 1 
that used to come so smug upon. il/er.o/Feni'ce, iii. 1 

he used as creatures of another AWsJi'ell, i- 2 

thy pains, not used, must by — ii- 1 

hath not been used to fear IVinter's Tale, iv. 3 

and better used, would make her .... — v. 1 
till I have used the approved .Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

labour, which is not used for you Macbeth, i- -1 

and used their very daggers — i. 7 

to be used in undeserved King John, \y. 1 

liath used rather for sport than need — v. s 

I have used my credit {rep.) \ Henry W. i 2 

of greatness to be used on it — i. 3 

you used us so as that ungentle .... — v. 1 
tis the more time thou wert used ..2UenrylV. iii. 2 
sword that you have used to bear.... — v. 2 

for disciplines ought to be used Henry V. iii. 6 

what treachery was used? \Hentyl'l. \. 1 

thus ignobly used, your nephew .... — ii. 5 
terms, he used his lavish tongue ..., — ii. 5 
by secret means used intercession .. — v. 4 

there to be used according 2Henry fl. ii. 4 

and shall I then be used reproachfully? — ii. 4 
stern and rough, used to command .. — iv. I 

hast caused printing to be used — iv. 7 

tliey have used with fearful flight ..SHenryl'I. ii. 2 

or foe, let him be gently used — ii. 6 

the people were not used to be. . . . Ricitard III. iii. 7 

misused ere used, by times — iv. 4 

all used in each degree, throng — y. 3 

the madams too, not used to toil ..Henry I'lll. i. 1 
were he evil used, lie would out"o .. — 1-2 

if I have used myself unmannerly .. — iii. l 

let me be used with honour — iv. 2 

they were used to bend Troilus ^ Cressida, iii. 3 

as they used to creep to holy altars .. — iii. 3 
he used me kindly; he cried to me ..Coriolanus,\. 9 

but says he used us scornfully — ii- 3 

as 'twas used sometime in Greece.... — iii. 1 

o'erbear what they are used to bear.. — iii. I 

he hath been used ever to conquer .. — iii 3 

i you were used to say extremity was — iv. 1 

you were used to load me with — iy. 1 

as they used to do tlie players in ..JuliusC<csar, i. 2 
conference as he hath useil of old .. .- — iy. 2 
we have used our throats . . Antony ^- Cleopalra,\\. ti 
we have used to conquer, standing .. — iii. 7 

might be used more thankfully Cymbeline, i. 7 

justice, used in such contempt?.. Tittis.indton. iv. 4 
worse than Philomel you have used — y. 2 

by me so used a guest is Pericles, i. 2 

[A'»(.3 who, not used to hunger's savour — i. 4 
asks of you, tliat never used to beg .... — ii. 1 
conscience to be used in every trade .. — iv. 3 

and must be used with checks Lear, i. 3 

I have used it, nuncle, ever since — i. 4 

that going shall be used with feet — iii- 2 

let tliem he well u^ed; for they are ....Hamlet, ii. ^ 
they have used their dearest action . . ,, Othello, i. 3 
this only is the witchcraft I liave used .. — i. 3 
knavery's plain face is never seen, till used — ii. I 
good familiar creature, if it be well used — ii- 3 

tis meet I should be used so — iv- 2 

he hath— used thee. How? unlawfully .. — v. 2 

USEFUIj-or useful serving-man King John, v. 2 

most useful for thy country.. ..Antony ^Cleo. iv. 12 

USELESS— thy braius, now useless .... Tempest, v. 1 



USER— les dames d'honneur ri'usei' Henn/I'. iii. 4 

USEST— thoii usest him ..Tii-etfih Night, iii. 4 (chal.) 
as to say, as thoxt usest him ..'IHcnryiy. ii. 'i (let.) 

ay, but tiiou usest to forswear 3 Henry f'l. v. 5 

usest none in that true use iudeed. Komeo ^Jul. iii. 3 

USETH the sparrow \ Henry IV. v. 1 

useth it to patronage his theft 1 Henry VI, iii. I 

it useth an enforced ceremon.y. - ..JuliusCwsnr, iv. 2 
the one's for use, the other useth it ... .Othello, ii. I 

USHER forth mine honours Henry VI 11 iii. 2 

these are the ushers of Marciua .... Coriotanus, ii. I 
ha\'e an army for an usher ......tntony firCteo. iii. 6 

USHERING, mend him whocan.. /.otie'.<L.ios/, v. 2 

USING those tlioughts, which should. .jWocteW, iii. 2 
my occupation, using painting .Meas.for Mens. iv. 2 
without a tongue, using conceit ....King Joint, iii- 3 

using the names of men 2HenryI V, i. 3 

using no other weapon but his I Henry VI. ii. 1 

better using France, than trusting .ZHenryVl. iv. 1 

for well using lue? nay, be — iv. 6 

unless, by using means, I lame Coriolnnus, iv. 7 

USUAL manager of mirth? .... Mid. N.'s Dream, v. 1 
main flood bate his usual height. .W(?»-.n/;>)ii'ce, iv. I 

his studies, or his usual pain? Taming of Sh. iii. I 

under the colour of his usual game..3H<f«ii/ /'/. iv. .■> 

first, it was usual with him Henry Vlll. i. 2 

such wanton, wild, and usual slips .... Hnmlet, ii. 1 

USUALLY, so all men do Macbeth, iii. 3 

that usually talk of a noun 2 Henry VI. iv. 7 

USURER— like a usurer's chain? MuciiAdn, ii. 1 

he was wont to call me usurer. , Mev. ojVcuice, iii. 1 
how a usurer's wife was brought . IVinter'sTale, iv. 3 
bless me from marrying a usurer! .. — iv. 3 
thou art a most pernicious usurer ..XHennjI'I. iii. 1 
poor rogues, and usurers' men !.7'iniono/"/4(/ie)!s, ii.2 
you three serve tlu-ee usurers? i.rep.) — ii. 2 
no usurer but has a fool to his servant — ii. 2 

for his wliite beard, he's a usurer — iv. 3 

edicts for usury, to support usurers.. Cor/o/anws, i. 1 
when usurers tell their gold i' the field.. Lear, iii. 2 

the usurer hangs the cozener — iv. 6 

like an usurer, abound'st in aW.liomeo ^.hdiet, iii. 3 

USURIES, the merriest .Vensure/nr.Veutvre. iii. 2 

but know the city's usuries Cymbeline, iii. 3 

USURING senate pours Timon of Alliens, iii. 5 

covetous, if not a usuriiig kindness.. — iv. 3 

USURP a name thou ow'st not Tempest, i. 2 

if I do not usurp myself, I am Tn-eifth Night, i. .0 

if you are she, you do usurp yourself — i. 5 
usurp the beggary he was never .Mea.for Men. iii- 2 

you do more usurp than doth As you LiUe ii, ii- I 

will well usurp the grace.. Taming of Shren-, 1 (ind-) 

alack, thou dost usurp authority King John, ii. 1 

and thine, usurp the dominations — ii- 1 

do profane, steal, or usurp TiichnrdIL iii. 3 

that proud man, that did usurp his back? — v. 5 

doth but usurp the sacred I Henry VI. iv- 1 

Lancaster usurp my right 1Henujl'l.\ 1 

now the house of Lancaster usurps ..3 Hfiiry/'i- i. 1 

but did usurp the place — i. 2 

beast that would usurp their den — ii- 2 

of York, usurps the regal title — iii- 3 

thy father Henry did usurp — iii. 3 

and Henry but usurps the diadem -. — iv. 7 

and all the pleasures 3'ou usurp Richard HI. i. 3 

tliou didst usurp my place (re;y-) .... — iv. 4 
usurp upon my watery eyes.. TitnsAndronicns, iii I 

death may usurp on nature many Tet iclex. iii. 2 

my fool usurps my bed Lear, iv. 2 

on wholesome life usurp immediately Hamlet, iii. 2 

USURPATION of thy unnatural .... King John, ii. I 

hath left a witnessed usurpation 2lteitryl V. i. I 

finding his usurpation most unjust .1 Henry VI. ii 6 

USURPED attire Tuelflh Night, v. I 

to him, and his usurped anlhority.. KingJotnt. iii. 1 

at the font, but 'tis usurped Richard II. iv. 1 

headlong from the usurped throne .. — v. I 

that usurped the crown Henry V. i. 2 

crooked titles usurped from you — i- 2 

his state usurped, his realm 3 Henry VI. v. 1 

their ruin that usurped our right?.. .. — v. 6 

grave's due by life usurped Richard 111. iv. 4 

dishonoured, and the third usurped.. — iv. 4 
thy crown, usurped, disgraced his .. — iv. 4 
endured so long; he but uaurped liis life. . Lear, v. 3 
thy favour with an usurped beard Oflu-tlo, i. 3 

USURPERS, tyrants, and what's. . As youLike it. ii 1 

stands the usurper's cursed head Mactn'tli, v. 7 

thou dost call usurper, France? King John, ii. 1 

sole heir to the usurper Ca]]et Henry V. i. 2 

that your majesty was an iisnrper ..illenryVl. i. 3 
and calls your grace usurper, ('penly — iv. -i 
the crown from the usurper's head ..ZHenryVl. i. 1 
for tho' usurpers sway the rule awhile — iii. 3 
to act upon the usurper Richard Henn/VIll. i. 2 

USURPING hair, should ravish.. i,irc'w.:;ov. iv. 3 
detained by her usurping uncle .. Aspon Lila' it, i. 2 

in usurping his s^urs so long All's li'rit, iv. a 

it is dross, usurping ivy, briar ..Comply ,f Err. ii. 2 

make answer;— thy usurping son KingJohn, ii. 1 

strumpet Fortune, that usurping John — iii. 1 

with usurping steps do trample Uichard II. iii. 2 

I do, thou most usurping proditor ..IHenryVl. i. 3 

in following this usurping Henry ZHenryVl. i. 1 

write up his title in usuriiing blood .. — i. 1 

the axe to thy usurping root — ii.2 

blood}', and usurping boar Richard III. v. 2 

the usurping helmets of our adversaries! — v. 3 
head asainst usurping Richard Henry Vlll. ii. 1 

U-SUUPlNGLY these several titles . . KmuJohn, i. 1 

USURP'ST— the title thou usnrp'st . . 1 Henry VI. v. i 
thou usurp'st my father's right ....ZHenryVl. v. 5 
tliat usurp'st this time of n ight Hamlet, i. 1 

USURY'-hanish usury, that makes. Timon ofAtti. iii. 5 
make edicts for usury, to support. . . . Comdanus, i. I 

UTENSIL— he has brave utensils .... Tempest. \u. 2 
and utensil, labelled to my will .. Twelfth Night, i. 5 

UTILITY— botli beauty midutility.... Henry V, v. 2 

UTIS— here will be old utis iHenrylV. ii. 4 

U TiNIOST of his pilgrimage Meas.for Meas. ii. 1 



UTM 



[ 805 ] 

VACAliON'n, mill iintnic trovcller....,4/('<»V«, ii. ;! 
onnikiiimd n wniiilurini,' vnpaliiiiwl.. KiWi'ir'( //. ii. 3 
VM'.MilioiHis. rnwulB, nt\il riumKiiys. . Ilulinril III. v. 3 
Tuii»Miina.,.tli,v.i-ulii>ii.U'xile"....tv,>-,v,/„iiii., iii. 3 
a vii^'iilniiid llui; upon the 6tnam..Atilniiy tH:leo. i. 4 
VA<iUi)Al-cnniiirihiii(l nil vntjrimi. .il/i«-/i /Wo, ili. 3 
A^MIvyoiir ri-^'uid iiiion iv wroiigc*<l.jUr'/i. /or.Uca*. v. 1 

tlK'ii "vnil vour 8tonia<,'li8 Tamiu^qfShrew.v. 2 

Vim vftil iiis stomoeli 'lUcuryll'. i. 1 

tliat Frnnce must vail her I Unity I'l. v. 3 

with tlie vail and dnrkeninp.. Troitxit d Crcttiila, v. 
power, tl\en vail j'our ignorance ..Corinluum, iii. I 
certain condolcments. certain voils ....I'dicles, ii. 1 
did vail tlicir crowns to his eujireiiincy — ii. 3 
pen veil to hcrmiftrcps Dian .... — iv.(Gower) 

VAI I-EI) li(l6 feek fur tliy Hamlet, i. 2 

VAILING clouds, or roses Lave' 1 1.. Lost, v. 2 

in sand, vailing licr high-top Mur.n/reiiicCji. 1 

VAIN— but in vain Tempiil, iv. 1 

I will not hear thy vainexcusc. J'l/'oGcn.iir/Vi. iii. 1 

enforce mc marry vnin 'JMuirio — iv, 3 

nnd leave tliy vain bihble babble. 7'«'('/rt/iA'i>/i(,iv. 2 
by vnin thoucli apt ntfcction ....Meaa.forMeas. i. 6 

whicli the air bents for vain — ii. 4 

I will open my lips in vain — iii. 1 

but scaled in vain, sealed in vain — iv. I (song) 

liipinjz to us in vnin Mid.N.*g Dream, ii. 2 

linth therefore stretolied his yoke in vain — ii. 2 
intellects to vain dulipht ire'p.).... l.ow'sL.Losl, i. 1 

this article is made in vain — i. I 

the music of his own vain tongue doth — i. I 

ill become me to be vain — iv. 2 

nnd his general behaviour vain — v. 1 

vain petitioner! — v. 2 

too too vain; too ton vain — v. 2 

wanton as a child, skipping, and vain — v. 2 

1 know I love in vain AWstVetl, u y 

pursuit would he but vain — iii. 4 

nsiainst your vain assault — iv. 2 

the want of which vain dew tl'inter'sTale,n. 1 

nnd have, in vnin, said many a prayer — v. a 

to be n little vain when Come'dij of Errors, iii. 2 

there's no man is so vain, that would — iii. 2 
is but the vain breath of acommon.. AVn/g-Zn/in, iii. I 

for all in vain comes counsel Richard II, ii. 1 

thev are seldom spent in vain — ii. 1 

if heart's presages be not vain — ii, 2 

infusing him with self and vain conceit — iii. 2 
to alter this, for counsel is but vain ,. — iii. 2 

how these vain weak rails may — v. .'j 

for trickling tears are vain \lIenryIV, ii. 4 

of every beordless vain comparative — iii. 2 

but he did long in vain iUenryll'. ii. 3 

if any rebel or vain spirit of mine.... — iv. 4 

speak to that vain man — v. ,'i 

his addiction was to courses vain llemyV. i. 1 

by a vain, giddy, shallow, humorous — ii. 4 

spend our vain command upon — iii. 3 

no entreaty, for it is in vain I Henry VI. v. 4 

you go about to torture me in \a.\i\..'ilUtiryVI.\\. 1 

but all in vain are these mean — iii. 2 

the senseless winds shall grin in vain — iv. 1 
swords were never drawn in vain .... — iv. 1 

my lord, is vain and frivolous Zllcnryl'I. i. 2 

in vnin tlion speak'st, poor boy — i. 3 

but all in vain; they had no heart .. — ii. I 
vain flourish of mv fortune i.rep. iv. A^.Itich. III. i. 3 
vain iirophecy of Nicholas Hopkins. Werirf//'///. i. 2 
vnin nomp, and glory of this world .. — iii. 2 

myself have spoke in vain Timon of .-ifhens, i. 1 

feasts, pomps, and vain glories? — i. 2 

you breatlie in vain. In vnin? — iii, .'> 

it is in vain that you would speak. . . . — v. 2 

stay not, all's in vain — v. i 

we speak in vain — v. 2 

so, that all hope is vain Corintani4s,v. 1 

60 noble a friend on vain sxippose .TittisAndron. i. 2 

and hcg for grace in vain — i. 2 

I poiu'ed forth tears in vain — ii. 3 

yon lament in vain — iii. I 

for Kome. and all in vain (rep.) — iii. I 

it is in vain; he will not speak — v. 1 

thou swear'st thy gods in vain Lear, i. I 

vain fool I Thou changed and self-covered — iv, 2 
nnd vain it is that we present us to him.. — v. 3 

wc waste our lights in vain llameo if Juliet, i. 4 

begot of nothing but vain fantasy .. — i. 4 

for 'tis in vain to seek him here — ii. I 

our vain blows malicioxis mockery Unmlet,\. I 

I greet thy love, not with vain thanks.. 0//ie//o, iii. 3 
l)Ut. O vain boast! who can control his — v. 2 

VAINER — time for vainer hours Tempest, i. 2 

VAIN-(j!LOHV-withoutvain-glory.Hfiin//J//. iii. 1 

break it himself in vain-glory.. 7'ro/7i(« <5- Crest, iii. 3 

vnin-glory, for n man and his gloss.. C'l/m^finip, iv. 1 

VAINI.Y comes the ndmired princess iorc'j/../.nj(,i. 1 

having vaiidy feared loo Utile Att'sHrll.v. 3 

cannon's mafice vainly sholl be spent. KivsJotm, ii. 1 
vainly X sujiposed, the Holy Land..2///'»i7-|///'. iv. 4 
no further than vainly longing ....lleiiryl'lll. i. 2 
breathed our sufferance vainly.... Timoti of Alh. v. .■> 

that vainlv lends his light Ilomm ^Juliet, V. A 

VAINNKSS-lying, vainness ....Tirelfth Kight, iii. 4 

being free from vainness lleury t\ v. (chorus) 

VAI.S-je m'en vais .\ la cour MerryH'irei, i. 4 

VALANCE of Venice gold .... Taming or.flireir. it. 1 
VAEANCEI) [A'ri/.-va(iantj since I 8aw.//(im(f(, ii, 2 
VAI,l)ES-the great pirate Vnldcs . . . . Periclei, iv. 2 
VAEE—to the meliiueholy vale .. Comedy of F.rr.\. 1 
his comfort in this earthly vale ....'iltmryVI.W. I 

met in the valcof Arde llrmyrill. i. 1 

commands as subject all the vale. 7Voi;i/j<S-rrrM. i. 2 
to the vales, nnd hold our best ..Antony ^Cteo. I v. 10 
nixl make him stoop to tlic \iile ....Cymbeline, iv. 2 
a barren delcsted vule. yow sec .. TiiutAndron. ii. 3 
or niistv vnlc, where hiiiody murder — v. 2 

dirliu'd ini.. the vale of vears OCiW/o. iii. 3 

VA 1 .i:NC!:- Wnlerfovd, aiid Valence.l llrnry I'l. iv. 7 

VAI.i:.\ TINi: iidicul 7Vo6Vn. o/*Vronn,i. 1 

I will be thy liead'«-inan, A'nlentinc — i. I 



VAL 



UTMOST— even to the utmost scruple. MiirA.4(/n, v. 

even to the ulmnst svllnl.le of All'tllrll, iii. 

weighs lo llie iitinnst curat ..Comedy or Errors, iv, 

even till that utmost corner of King John, ii, 

our comniission in his ntnit>st force.. — iii. 
the very ntinost h .nnd of nil our ..\ Henry 1 1'. I v. 

the utn'iost nnin of i xpoeiatioii illrnrvll'. i. 

seven thousand islhelr utmost . . . . liicliard 1 1 1 . v. 

to use our utmost studies in Henry I'lII. iii. 

would try him lo the utmost — v. 

though he perform to the utmost.... CoWo/iiniii, i. 

(in peace Ho his utmost peril — iii. 

that's the utmost of your having .... — v. 
lie once attains the ulmnst round .JuliusCwsar, ii. 
we have tried the utmost of our friends — iv. 

sir, I will use my utmost skill I'erirtes.v. 

to captivity mc and my utmost hopes., Othello, iv, 
nnd \erv sea-mark of mv utmost sail.. — v. 2 

TIT. HE, S01„ I/A, MI, FA Love's L. Lost, iv. 2 

UTTEll— is to utter foul speeches Tempest, ii. 2 

to utter that which else.... TuoGen.of Verona, iii. 1 
and ntlers it by great swarths.... Tu-elfth Sight, ii. 3 
did utter forth n voice! .. M>nsure for Measure , iii. 1 

with grief and shame to utter — v. I 

liken true drunkard, utter oU MnehAdo, iii, 3 

I charge you, on your souls, to utter it — iv. 1 

without otfence. to utter them — iv. 1 

for we are to utter sweet breath — iv. 2 

and niters It again when God .... Lovc'sL.I.osI, v. 2 

as will utter a brace of words — v. 2 

the dog .Tew did utter in the Mer. offeniee. ii. 8 

for what he'll niter, that will All'slfell.v. 3 

then didst iliou utter, I am yeiurs .tt'inlersTale, i, 2 

followed, as I mean to litter" it — i. 2 

he utters them as he hud eaten — iv. 3 

that doth utter all men's wear-n — iv. 3 (song) 
I'll utter whnt my sorrow gives.. Cor"ef/vo'"/''rr. i. i 
you utter madness, and not sorrow. Ki'^^'jo/j/j. iii. 4 

thou wilt not litter what \ Henry IV. ii. 3 

for breath to utter what is like tlieel .. — ii. 4 
light in thy face, tlicson of utter darkness — iii. 3 
cillur to utter I hem, or to conceal ..'i Henry 1 1', v. 3 

Come. Pistol, utier more to me — v. 3 

the utter loss of oil the realm \ Henry VI. v. 4 

euiricient skill to utter them — v. .5 

and utter ruin of the house of York.. af/eiin/r;. i. 1 
heard him utter to his son-in-law.. H«iii!//7/i. i. 2 
should utter, with demure confidence — i. 2 
the words I utter let none think flattery — v. 4 
modicums of wit he utters! .... Troiliis'^- Cress, ii. 1 

what I think, I litter (•i,rininnus,u. 1 

moved bv that which he will utter. Jii/ri<sCn>sor, iii. 1 
and malice have power to utter . .Antony ^Cleo. i. 2 

that wliich none else can utter — ii. 2 

clad to be constrained to utter that .Cymbelint, v. 5 
near what fearful words I utter .. 7'i(us Andron. v. 2 

my tongue may u'.ter forth — v. 3 

nor can I utter nil our bitter — v. 3 

utter your gravity o'er a gossip's .Homeo^Jut. iii. 5 
death, to any he that utters them .. — v. I 

to hide, than hate to utter love JInmtel,u. 1 

Jitter my thoughts? wliv, sav they Othello, iii. 3 

UTTERANCE-puts it to utterance.. )'m/«'j 7'. i. 1 
nnd champion me to the iitterancel ..Mnctieth, iii. I 
the utterance of a brace of tongues. . King John, iv. 1 
with all the gracious ntternnce ....liichard //. iii. 3 

to choke it in the iitternnce Coriolarms, i v. 7 

to beg the voice and utterance.. ..JuUusCcesar, iii. 1 
action, nor utterance, nor the power — iii. 2 

behoves mc keep at utterance Cymbeline, iii. 1 

anrl break my very ntternnce Titus Ajidrort. v 3 

tongue's utterance CK"'.-uttering]..7<om(0 ^Jul. ii. 2 
command to any utterance of harmony Hnmlet, ii\. 2 

UTTERED-it were so uttered Much Ado, i, 1 

have drunk poison, whiles he uttered it — v. I 

till death be uttered, heavily — v. 3 (song) 

not uttered by base sale of Lore's L. Lost, ii. 1 

I have uttered trtilh; which if IVinter'sTale, i. 2 

holds but till thy news be uttered ..King John, v. 7 

than out of anger can be uttered Mhnryll . i. 1 

a' uttered as prave 'ords at the pridge. IZ/'wri/T. iii. 5 
these were her words, uttered with .f.UrnryVI. iv. 1 
Biwechcs uttered by the bishop .... Henry VI 1 1, ii. 4 
Coriolanus should not be uttered .. Coriolanus, ii. 2 
as you have uttered words in your own — v. 2 
and uttered such a deal of stinking. JuIitijCiriiar. i.2 

what he hath uttered, I have writ Lear, i. 4 

this— uttered with eentle breath.. Womeo .J" •'"'• 'ii- 1 

not madness, that 1 have uttered Hamlet, iii. 4 

IITTERETII piercing eloquence.. Tnming-orSA. ii. 1 

II ri'ERIiN'G such dulcet and .. Mid. N.'s Dream, ii. 2 

UTTERLY- arc utterly shamed .. Merry ff'ives, iv. 2 

a whorcmoster, that I utterly deny .\ Henry I v. ii. 4 

uf speech is utterly denied roe 'iHenrylV. iv, 4 

to quell the Dauphin utterly \ Henry v I. i. 1 

territories utterly bereft you itlrnryl I. iii. I 

I utterly abhor, yea, from my soul. /fcnrj/f///. ii. 4 
ny, utterly grow from the king's .... — iii. I 
Antony must leave her \il\.er\y ...intony ^Cleo. ii. 2 

elements forgot lliec utterly I'ericles, iii. 1 

U TTER.MOST powers Henry f. iii. 

making question of my uttermostJ/er. D/»n/Cf, i. I 
even to the uttermost, to furnish .... — i. 1 
will be free even to the uttermost Tiiiinnffo/SA. iv. 3 
cither to the uttermost, or else ..Trodus/^ Crest, iv. 5 
uUermost? Be that the uttermost .JuliusCirsar, ii. 1 
aud seek to cil'vct it to my uttermost . . Olhello, ill. 4 



V.VCANCY— not a minute's vacancy .. TieelfihN. v. 1 
vacancy with his voluptuousness. /^ndiiiy ^Cleo. i. 4 
which, but for vacancy, had gone .... — ii. 2 
that yon do bend your eve on vacancy. H«m/«(, iii. 4 

VACANT— left their places vacant .. ..MtiehAdo.i. 1 

stufl's out bis vacant garments KingJnhn, iii. 4 

lieingoftlMMC virtues vacant Heni^Vlll.v. 1 

diirnities. which vacant lie for.. 7'imoii of.-iihens. v. 2 

VACATION— in the vacation AsyouLikeil. iii. 2 

V.\DED-[Kn/.] leaves all vadcd Ilietmrd II. i. 2 



VALENTINE-thee, Valentine.. 7Vor,(Ti.o/Tcr. I. 1 
his companion, youthful Vali-ntiiie.. — i. 3 

of comnicnilatioii sent from "N'nlentine — i. 3 

sir Valentine, nnd servant, to j'ou ,, — ii. I 

sir Valentine, your father's in — ii. 4 

for Valentine, I need not cite — ii. 4 

Vnlentine, what braggardism is this? — ii. 4 

my zeal to Valentine IB cold — ii. i 

aud Valentine Hose ()(■;;.) — ii. G 

nnd Vnlentine I'll liolil an enemy .. — ii. u 
some treaclu'ry used 1(1 Vnlentine .. — ii. ti 
ennigid, will hanisli Valentine (> 171.) — ii.6 

sir Valentine, my friend — iii. 1 

to forbid sir Valentine her company — iii. I 

sir Valentine is coming (rr/).) — iii. 1 

but 'tis a Valentine. Valentine? No — iii. 1 

friend Valentine, a word — iii. 1 

no, Valentine. No Valentine (r'/i,) — iii. 1 
Valentine, if he be ta'en, must die .. — iii. I 

come. Valentine (rf;>.) — iii. I 

now Valentine is banished (rf;j.) .... — iii. 2 
forget the love of Valentine (rep.) .. — iii. 2 
in worth dispraise sir Valentine (re;5.) — iii. 2 
already have I been false to Valentine — iv. 2 
Valentine, thy friend, survives irep.) — ii". 2 
unto the banisli'd Vnlentine (re;).) .. — iv. 3 
she's fled unto that peasant Valentine — v. 2 

Valentine, this I endure for thee!.. — v. 3 

withdraw thee, Vnlentine — v, 4 

how I love Valentine — v. 4 

Valentine! Irf/j.) — v. 1 

banished Vnlentine. Sir Valentine? (rs/)) — v. 4 

1 do aiiplaud thy spirit, Valentine (rep.) — v 4 
saint Vnlentine is past; begin ....Mid.K.'sDr. iv. 1 
hither, Cnius, nnd Valentinel (lep.).. Titus And. v. 2 
and his brother Valentine .Romeo 6 Juliet, i. 2 (note) 

'tis saint Valentine's day Hamlet, iv. .^(song) 

window, to be your Valentine .... — iv. 5 (song) 

VALENTINU.S in the emperor's. 'yicoCcii.o//>r. i. 3 

or Valentinus' praise — ii. 4 

Valentinus [6'o/.-Valcntius]Rowland.iV./<iri1/. iv. 5 

VALENTIO, and his cousin . Romeo ^Jul. i. 2 (note) 

VALERIA— lady Valerin is come.....Coriolanui, i. 3 

tell Valeria, we are fit to bid her .... — i. 3 

dear Valeria! This is a poor epitome — v. 3 

VALERIUS follow him ....Tno Gen. nfVerona, v. 3 

VALET! lacguey! ha! HcnryV. iv.i 

VALIANT— he's not valiant Tempest, iii 2 

would my valiant master would destroy — iii. 2 
valiant, wise, remorseful ..TuoGcn. of Verona, iv. 3 

free, learned and vnlinnt 'I'uelflh Kight. i. 5 

good nnd vnlinnt — iii. 4 

nn' I thou.ght he had been valiant .. — iii. 4 
the valiant heart's not wliipt ..Meas.foriMeas.ii. 1 

thou art by no means valiant — iii. 1 

he is a very valiant trencher-mnn....il/«cA.-)rfo, i. 1 

with apiece of valiant dust? — ii. 1 

and I take liim to be valiant — ii. 3 

he is now as ^■aliant as Jlereules .... — iv. 1 
Imth IVnrcil the valiant ... .Merchant of Venice, ii. 1 

penile, strong, nnd vnliant? As yiiuLilte it, ii. 3 

called the n-i>r(>of valiant (rpp.) — v. 4 

thougli valiant in the defence AU'slVell, i. 1 

and of very vnlinnt npproof — ii. 5 

in knowledge, nnd accordingly valiant — ii. 5 

I know thou art valiant — iii.fi 

valiant cousini worthy gentleman!,... Jl/af6e(/i, i. 2 

he is full so valiant — i. 4 

nnd the right vnliant Banquo walked — iii. fi 

do call it valiant fury — v. 2 

little valiant, great in villanyl ....KingJohn, iii. 1 
vour valiant kinsman, Fauleonbridge — v. 3 

thy youthful blood, be valiant Ilichardll. i. 3 

that ever vnlinnt and nppro\ed Scot. 1 llcnryiv. i. I 
blood-stained with these valiant .... — i. 3 

darest thou be so vnliant — ii. 4 

I am as valiant ns Hercules — ii. 4 

I for a valiant lion, and thou, for.... — ii. 4 

valiant Jack Falstatf(rfp.) — ii. 4 

valiant as a lion, and wondrous affable — iii. 1 
a very vnliant rebel of the name .... — v. 4 
beeaiiie the accenls of the vnliant ..'illcnrylV. ii. 3 
vou whoreson little valiant villain .. — ii. 4 
lie as valiant as the wrathful dove .. — iii. 2 
in England the most valiant genllemnn — iv. I 

that prince Harry is valiant — iv. 3 

he is become very hot, and valiant .. — iv. 3 
remembrance ofthcse vnlinnt dead ....Henry v. i. 2 
n very vnlinnt gentleman, i' faith,. .. — iii. 2 
cold blood to such valiant heat? .... — iii. 6 
he is as valiant as Mark Antony .... — iii. fi 

I know him to be valiairt — iii. 7 

n vnlinnt nnd most e.vpcrt genllemnn! — iii. 7 
of Eiiglnnd breeds very vnlinnt erentiircs — iii. 7 
that's a valiant flea, that dare eat .. — iii. 7 

of list most valiant — iv. 1 

leave their valiont bones in France.. — iv. 3 

l)rave,vnliani, el tri'B distingue — iv. 4 

for I do know Flncllen valiant — iv. 7 

where vnliant Talbot (rep. iv. 7) ....\HenryV I. i. 1 
I girt thee with the vnliant sword ,, — iii. I 
becomes it llicc to taunt his valiant ngc — iii 2 

the valiant duke of Bedford — ii:.2 

that such n valimit company nrpflid — iii. 2 
valiant, and virtuous, full of haiit'hty — iv.l 
thou Btaiid'sl, a breathing valiant man — iv 2 
should we save n vnlinnt gentleman.. — iv. 3 

where is vnlinnt .lohn? _ iv. 7 

success niilo our vnlinnt general .... — v. 2 
her valiant courage, nnd undaunted — v. & 

weeps Warwick, my vnlinnt son?.. ,,2//fMr(//7. i. I 
vnlinnt I am. A' must needs (rep.) .. — iv. 2 
the iwople liberal, valiant, active .... — iv. 7 

hold, vnliant Cliflord(,<-p.1 ^ Henry VI. i. 4 

Where's that valiant cioik-lmck prodigy — i. 4 

where our right vnliant fiither is becohi'c — ii. 1 
his name that vnliaiil duke hath left — ii. ! 
O valiant lord, the duke of York .... — ii. I 
belike, when valiant Warwick fled .. — ii I 
king Edward, vnlinnt Kichard — il. t 



VAL 



VALIANT-f.ii- iill his \aUant am^s./illmryri. ii. 5 
post tliat came i'riiMi valiuiit Oxtariiy — v. I 
commuud me to mv valiant Inuthcr.. — v. 2 

a woman of tiiis valiant Euirit — v. 4 

be valiant, and give signal — v. 4 

what valiant foemen — v. 7 

young, valiant, wise liichard III. i. 2 

with a valiant crew; and many — iv. 5 

be valiant, and speed welll — y- 3 

to their fierceness valiant ..,,Troi!us ^Ctessitla^i, I 

less valiant than the virgin — ;• I 

he is as valiant as the lion — _i- 2 

thou scurvy valiant ass! — jj. 1 

so to be valiant, is no praise at all. . .. — ii. 2 
a spur to valiant and magnanimous — ii. 2 

I am yours, you valiant oifspring. ... — ii. 2 

as valiant, as wise, no less noble — ii. 3 

knosv the whole world, he is as valiant — ii. 3 

I humbly desire the valiant Ajax — iii. 3 

a sheep, than such a valiant ignorance — iii. S 
a valiant Greek, ^neas {rep. iv. 3).. — iv. 1 

health to you, valiant sir, during — iv. I 

to see unarmed the valiant Hector {rep.^ — _iy. 5 

he's most truly valiant Timnu of .Uhciis, iii. 5 

why then, women are more valiant — iii. 5 

let the war receive 't in valiant gore — iii. 5 

old, young; coward, valiant — iv. 3 

thou valiant Mars! thou ever young — iv. 3 

too proud to be so valiant Coriolannx, i. 1 

Titus Lartius, a most valiant Roman — i. 2 (let.) 
then, valiant Titus, take convenient — i. 5 

otKcious, and not valiant — i. 8 

are only mocked for valiant ignorance — iv. 6 
tlie valiant never taste of deatli . . JuliusCaisar, ii. 2 

Brutus is noble, wise, valiant — iii. 1 

thy master is a wise and valiant Roman — iii. 1 

■ and, my valiant Casca, yours — iii. 1 

as he was valiant, I honour him .... — iii. 2 

he's a tried and valiant soldier — iv. 1 

tlie valiant Caesarl Antony S; Cleopatra, i. 5 

Antony is valiant and dejected — iv. 10 

thou teacUest me, O valiant Eros — iv. 12 

thou may'st be valiant in a better .. — iii. 4 
your valiant Britons have their wislies — iii. 5 
o'erthrow nature, makes it valiant .. — iii. 6 

a very valiant Briton, and a good — iv. 2 

upon a valiant race, thy harsh — v. 4 

pr'ythee, valiant youth, deny't again — t. 5 
his valiant sons {rep. i. 2 & iv. 4) .. TilusAndron. i. I 
for valiant doings in their country's — i. 2 

a valiant son-in-law thou shalt enjoy — i. 2 

thy thrice valiantson, who leads towards — v. 2 

honest, I never yet was valiant hear, v. 1 

you have shown to-day your valiant strain — v. 3 
to be valiant, is to stand to it .... Romeo ^-Jidiel,i. I 
in brief, the valiant Paris seeks you — i. 3 

in which, our valiant Hamlet Hamlet, i. I 

to our most valiant brother — i. 2 

j'our trusty and most valiant servitor . . Olhello, i. 3 
and the valiant iSIoor. Valiant Othello.. — i. 3 
to his honours, and his valiant parts .... — i. 3 
thanks to the valiant of this warlike isle — ii. 1 
I thank you, valiant Cassio. What tidings — ii. 1 
if thou be'st valiant as (they say) base .. — ii. 1 

our noble and valiant general — ii. 2 

I am not valiant neither, but every pvmy — v. 2 

VALIANTLY he took \ Henry IV. i. 3 

keeps the pridge most valiantly Henry V. iii. 6 

fight valiantly to-day; and yet I do — iv. 3 
he smiles valiantly. Does he not. 'I'roilus &Cress. i. 2 
by a Roman valiantly vanquished.. Jii'. frCleo. iv. 13 

VALIANTNESS was mine Coriolanns, iii. 2 

VALIANT-YOUNG, more daring ..I Henry IV. v. 1 

VALIDITY and pitch soever Twelf.hKighl, \. 1 

whose high respect, and rich vaWUMy .All's n'etl, v. 3 
no less in space, validity, and oleasure . . . . Z-ea;-, i. 1 
more validity, more honourable. /fo/neo ^-Jnllet, iii. 3 
of violent birth, but poor validity Hnmle/, iii. 2 

VALLEY— in the western valley ..MiJ.N.'sDr. iv. I 
nay, the valley, the pretty dimples IVinter's Tale, ii. 3 

1 see, will kiss the valleys first — v. 1 

melted snow upon tlie valleys Henry V. iii. 5 

I'll meet you in the valleys Cymbeline, iii. 3 

this vallev fits the purpose.... Titus Andronicus, ii. 3 

VALOROUSLY as I may Henry V. iii. 2 

VALOROUS as Hector of Troy 2 Henry IV. ii. 4 

furious knight, and valorous enemy — iv. 3 

most brave, valorous, and thrice-worthy — iv. i 
invite tl>e most valorous HcctoT. Troilus ^ Cress, iii. 3 

VALOUR— even with such like valour. 2'cmpes<, iii. 3 

so full of valour, that they — iv. 1 

wliat says she to my valour? . . Tiro Gen. of Ver. v. 2 
in our English tongue, is valour . . Merry Wives, ii. 3 
to awake your dormouse vaXowt .TweljiltMglit, iii. 2 

either by valour or policy irep.) — iii. 2 

fortunes upon the basis of valour — — iii. 2 
with woman, than report of valour .. — iii. 2 

a notable report of valour — iii. 4 

onothers, to taste their valour — iii. 1 

in the proof of his valour — iii. 4 

of approved valour, and confirmed ..MuchAdo, ii. 1 
for hearing, argument, and valour .. — iii. 1 
valour into compliment, and men .. — iv. 1 
in a false quarrel there is no true valour — v. 1 
cowardice pursues, and valour dies. Mid. N.'s Dr. ii. 2 
this lion is a very fox for his valour . . — v. 1 
Jiis valour cannot carry his (rep.) .... — v. 1 

adieu, valour! rust, rapierl Love' sL, Lost. i. 2 

melancholy, valour gives thee place — iii. I 
for valour, is not love a Hercules.... — iv. 3 
assume but v.alour's excrement. Mer. of Venice, iii. 2 

tliat your valour and fear makes AlCsWell.i. 1 

and transgressed against his valour.. — ii. .'> 
the great dignity, tliat his valour hath — iv. 3 
his valoiu-, honesty, and expertness — iv. 3 (note) 
to his valour; what is his honesty?.. — iv. 3 

like valour's minion, carved out Macbeth, i. 1 

had, with valour armed, compelled.. — i. 2 

with the valour of my tongue all.... — i. .') 

in thine own act and valour — i. 7 



[ 806 J 



VALOUR to act in safety Machelh, iii. 1 

whose valoiu" plucks dead lions by ..KingJolin,i\. 1 
defend thee heaven, and thy valour I . /(/c/m/i/ //. i. 3 
and my body's valour, in lists, on..,, — i. :* 

virtue with valour couched in — i. 3 

if that thy valour stand on sympathies — iv. I 
asfullof valour, as of royal blood.... — v. 6 

no more valour iu that Poins \ Henry IV. ii. 2 

the better part of valour is discretion — v. 4 
let them, that should reward valour — v. 4 
his valour, shown upon our crests. ... — v. 5 

true valour is turned bear-herd iHenrylV. i. 2 

and check was the reward of valour — iv. 3 

iu my pure and immaculate valour ., — iv. 3 

and this valour comes of sherris — iy. 3 

show the valour of a man HenryV. ii. I 

of buxom valour, hath, by cruel fate — iii. 6 
'tis a hooded valour; and, when it .. — iii. 7 
much care and valour in this Welsliman — iv. 1 

the vapoiu" of our valour will — iv. 2 

of the firm truth of valour (rep.) .... — iv. 3 
a bounding valour in our English.,.. — iv. 3 
ten times more valour than this .... — iv. 4 

trophy of pre-deceased valour — v. 1 

proof I'll of thy valour make 1 Henry VI. I. 2 

my strength, my valour, and my force? — i. 6 

noble deeds, as valour's monument .. — iii. 2 
young Talbot's valour makes me .... — iv. 7 
valour, coin, and people in the wars?. 2 Hen;!/ VI. i. 1 
by my valour, the most complete .... — iv. 10 

by famine, not by valour — iv. 10 

by circumstance, the name of valour — v. 2 
what valour were it, when a cur ....ZHenryVI. i. 4 
ten to one is no impeach of valour. ... — i. 4 
'twas not your valour, Cliflbrd, drove — ii. 2 
his valour did enrich his wit (rep.). Richard III. iii. 1 
his valour is crushed into folly.. TroilusSr Cress, i. 2 
doth valour's show, and valour's worth — i 3 

at this sport, sir Valour dies — i. 3 

that knows his valour, and knows not — i. 3 
in one man's valour, to stand the push — ii. 2 
valour and pride excel themselves .. — iv. 5 
even in the faith of valour, to appear — v. 3 
bastard in valour, iu every thing .... — v. 8 
upon the head of valour (rep.). Timonof Athens, iii. 5 
to revenge is no valoiu", but to bear ., — iii. 5 

be such valour in the bearing — iii. 5 

how full of valour did he bear — iii. 5 

and takes his valour prisoner — iii. 5 

your valour puts well forth Coriolanits, i. 1 

my valour's poisoned, with only — i. 10 

that valour is the chiefest virtue — ii. 2 

most valour, sijoke not for them .... — iii. 1 

contend against thy valour ..". — iv. 5 

done a deed whereat valour will weep — v. 5 
to steel with valour the melting ..JuliusCaisar, ii. I 

honour, for his valour — iii. 2 

wlien valour preys on reasou ..A/ilonySrCleo. iii. II 

tenfold for thy good valour — iv, 7 

peace : not Caasar's valour hath — iv. 13 

our valour is, to chase what flies. . . . Cymbeline, iii. 3 

there shall she see my valour — iii. .5 

though valour becomes thee well enough — iv. 2 
valour, that wildly grows in them .. — iv. 2 
more valour in me than my habits . . — v. 1 

you have so bestirred your valour Lear, ii. 2 

thy valour, and thy heart, thou art — _v. 3 

temper softened valour's steel , . Rnmeo S^ Juliet, iii. I 
digressing from the valour of a man — iii. 3 

abate thy valour in the acting it — iv. I 

we put on a compelled valour . . liamlel, iv. n (letter) 
purpose, courage, and valour Othello, iv. 2 

VALUATION shall be such 2He»r!/;r. iv. I 

yow set so slight a valuation Cymbeline, iv. 4 

VALUE — found thee of more value. il/er;;/ Wives, iii. 4 
matters of needful value .... Measure for Measure, i. 1 

or poor, as fancy values them — ii. 2 

her wit values itself so highly MuchAdo,iii. 1 

why, then we rack the value — iv. I 

did value me above this world .^..Love'sL.Lost, v. 2 
thrice three times the value of .... Mer.o/ Venice, i. 3 
and weigh thy value with an even .. — ii. 7 

gifts of rich value — ii. 9 

than twenty times the value of — iii. 2 

thou hast not left the value of a cord — iv. 1 
more depends on this, than on the value — iv. 1 
what talk you of the posy, or the value? — v. 1 
too young that time to value her . . .4s i/ou Like it,\. 3 
of much less value is my company. . Richard II. ii. 3 
beauty, and the value of her dower..! IlcurvP'I. v. "I 
and us not values the cost that ....Henry VIII. i. I 

it values not your asking — ii. 3 

more is his life in value with him? . . — v. 2 

the value of one ten Troilus <5 CressiJa, ii. 2 

but value dwells not in . — ii. 2 

some better than his value Timon of Athens, i. 1 

things of like value, differing in...... — i. 1 

must know the value of her own .... Coriolanus, i. 9 

a kinder value of the people — ii. 2 

buried thoughts of great value ....JuliusCfPsar, i. 2 

rather by her value, than his own Cymbeline, i. 5 

as you value your truest Leonatus — i. 7 (letter) 
exquisite form; their values great. .. — i. 7 

it did strive in workmanship, and value — ii. 4 

unto thy value will I mount Pericles, ii. 1 

a chariot of inestimable value — ii. 4 

which of the dukes he values most Lear, i. 1 

yon less know how to value her desert .. — ii. 4 

VALUED to the money's worth.... ioi'e'.!f>.Lo«(,ii. 1 
be valued 'gainst your wife's .... Mer. of Venice, i v. I 
valued at the highest rate .... Comedy of Errors, i . I 

valued file distinguishes the swift Macbeth, iii. 1 

the dearest valued blood, of France. /fi'Hf Jnhn, iii. 1 
our business valued, some twelve .. 1 HenrylV. iii. 2 
dispr.iising praise, valued with you .. — v. 2 
being valued thus, as nuich as woiUd.. HenryV. i. 1 

we never valued till 8. poor seat — i. 2 

the (lueen is valued thirty thousand.SHen?'!/^'/. v. 3 
wliat is aught, but as 'tis valued? VVm7H.5*Cre.<. ii. 2 
'tis exactly valued Antony ^Cleopatra, v. 2 



VAP 



VALUED— can be valued, rich or rare Lear, i. 1 

so slightly valued in his messenger — ii. 2 

VALUELESS— proves valueless ....KimcTohn, iii. 1 

VALUING— not mine, valuing of her.iV/i(c7i/Wo, iv. I 

VAN— have revolted in the van . .Antony ^Cleo. iv. 6 

VANE blown with all winds MuchAdo, iii. 1 

no; 'twas the vane on the house .... — iii. 3 
what vane? what weathercock?.. Loue'sL.Los^ iv. 1 

VANISH like hailstones, go Met ry Wives, i. .■? 

some state in thy exit, and vanisli.iowe'sL. Lost, v. 2 

fne scandal vanish with my life Richard II. ii. 1 

vanish tongue-tied in their guiltiness. Jwi.Crcsni-,!. 1 
vanish; or I shall give thee .. ..Anlony ^ Cleo. iv. 10 
go; vanish into air: awav 0//if//o, iii. I 

VANISHED strangely . .". rempest, iii. 3 

that you are vanished TwoGen. of Verona, iii. 1 

whither are they vanished? Macbeth, i. 3 

air, into which they vanished.,.. — i. 6 (letter) 

and so he vanished Richatd III. i. i 

face of Caesar, they are van i shed.. y«(ms Cicsar, ii. 2 
tliere vanished in tlie sunbeams .... Cymbeline, iv. 2 
iu the beams o' the sun so vanished. . — v. .5 
agentler judgment vanished ..Romeo 4- Juliet, iii- 3 
away, and vanished from our sight Hnnilct, i. 2 

VAJSriSHES— then the moon vanishes iCol Kni. 

Bnthe lion vanislied] Mid.N.'sDieum,v. I 

VANISHEST— thou vanishes! ....JuliusC.esar. iv. 3 
if thus thou vanishest Antony SfCleo. v. 2 

VANITIES that make him light ..Richard II. iii. 4 
I can no longer brook thy vanities ..iHenrylV. v. 4 
you shall find, his vanities forespent . . Henry V. ii. 4 
he to do in these fierce vanities?. . . . Henry VIII. i. I 
will have of these trim vanities! .... — i. 3 
more worth than empty vanities .... — ii. 3 

VANITY— some vanity of mine art ..Tempest, iv. I 
the vanity of wretched fools ! . . Mcas. for iMeas. v. I 

there is no need of such vanity MuchAdo, iii. 3 

tax my fears of too little vanity All's Well, v. 3 

vanity of sickness! fierce King John, v. 7 

thrust forth a vanity, (so it be new .Richard II. ii. 1 
light vanity, insatiate cormorant .... — ii. I 
trouble me no more with vanity ....! HenrylV. i. 2 
that father ruffian, that vanity iu years? — ii. 4 
here's no vauitj'! I am as hot as .... — v. 3 
if I were much in love with vanity .. — v. 4 
up, vanity! down, royal state I ....2He7iryIV.iv. i 

hath proudly flowed in vanity — v. 2 

matching to his youth and vanity Henri/;', ii. 4 

stay him from the fall of vanity.. i?'e/)art( ///. iii. 7 

what did this vanity Henry VIII. i. I 

a sweep of vanity comes this way!. ri>«o»i ofAth. i. 2 

and take vanity the puppet's part Lear, ii. 2 

heavy lightnessl serious vanity !.i?f'7neo Sf Juliet, i. I 

yet not fall, 60 light is vanity — ii. 6 

world's mass of vanity could make.. ..Othello, iv. 2 

VAN(JUISH-and vanquish you? ..2HenryVI. iv. 8 
vanquish mv staider senses Cymbeline, iii. 4 

VANQUISHED the resistance of iier. Much Ado, iv. 1 
else a wit by folly vanquished .. TwoGen. of Ver. i. I 

1 undertook it, vanquished thereto ..All'sWell, v. 3 
Macbeth shall never vanquished be . . Macbeth, iv. I 
the field, and vanquished his foes . . 1 Henry VI. iii. 2 
I am vanejxiished; these haughty words — iii. 3 

be vanquished by a maid — iv. 7 

vanquished all my powers (rep.) 2 Henry VI. ii. 1 

whom you late vanquished, should .. — iv. 8 
vanquished by famine, not bj' valour — iv. 10 
vanquished him, for, hand to (rep.) .ZHenry VI. ii. I 

quite vanquished him JuliusCiPsa?; iii. 2 

a Roman valiantly vanquished. /l?i(o»iy ^Cleo. iv. l3 
our men be vauquighed, ere they do. . . . Pericles, i. 2 
tliou art not vanquished, but cozened .... Lear, v. 3 

VANQUISHER— your vanquisher.. Cor/oteiuM, iii. I 

Fortinbrns, had he been vanqitislier .... Hamlet, i. i 

VANQUISHEST, thy words are true.l Henry VI i. 2 

VANTAGE of mine own excuse .TwoGen.of Ver. i. 3 

without false vantage — iv. 1 

the doctor spies his vantage ripQ. Merry Wires, iv, 6 
and He that miglit the van tage.il/e(i5. /or Meas.ii. 2 
may have such vantage on the duke — iv. 6 
thou wouldst deny, denies thee vantage — v. 1 
if not with vantage, as Demetrius' .Mid.N.'sDr. i. 1 
my vantage to exclaim on yoTi..Mer.of Venice, iii. 2 
watch our vantage in this business .Ta«i.o/SA. iii. 2 
surveyin" vantage, with furbished .... Macbeth, i, 2 

with hidden help and vanttige — i. 3 

nor coigne of vantage, but this bird .. — 1.6 
another way, to our own vantage . . King John, ii. 2 
but little vantage shall I reap Richard II. i. 3 

happy vantage of a kneeling knee! — v. 3 

if I have any vantage of ground iHenrylV. ii. 1 

get ground and vantage of the king . . — ii. 3 
till time and vantage crave my company — ii. 3 

an enemy of craft aiid vantage HenryV, iii. 6 

had the forehand and vantage of a king — iv. I 

you fled for vantage, every one I Henri/ VI. iv. 5 

her that brings no vantages iHenryVl. i. 1 

war's prize to take all vantages iHenryVI.i. 4 

for he'll take vantages — iii. 2 

have all the vAitage of her wrong. . Richard III. i. 3 
at your meetest vaiitoge of the time.. — iii. 5 

1 took the vantage of those few — iii. 7 

all for our vantage; then, in God's name — v. 2 
forego this vantage, Greek . . Troilns 4- Cressida, v. 9 
some single vantages you took . Timon of Athens, ii. 2 

first, to win some vantage Coriolanus, i. 1 

and answer the vantage of his anger — ii 3 
leads my use of anger, to better vantage — iii. 2 
therefore, at your vantage, ere he .. — v. ■'J 
which serve not for his vantage .Antony fit Cleo. iii. 7 
when vantage like a pair of twins .. — iii. 8 

madam, with his next vantage Cymbeline, i. 4 

who lets go by no vantages, tliat may — ii. 3 

for my vantage, excellent — v. 5 

take vantage, heavy e3'es, not to behold.. ienr, ii. 2 
should o'erhear the speech, of vantage. Ham/e/, iii. 3 
to claim my vantage doth invite me .... — v. 2 
as many to the vantage, as would store. Othello, iv. 3 

VANTBUACE put this withered . T,oilvs &Cress. i. 3 
VAPXANS passing the equinoctial. Tu-elJUMght, ii. 3 



VAP 



[ 807 ] 



VAPOROTTS niijlit approaches . .«m«./o'- '•''■"'• ',Y- ' 
liiiuL-i a vuiioniMH (liiip profound Machflli, Hi. S 

VAl'('>'l'lli*: tluu tlum .. J.orc'»L./.oi(, iv. 3 (vcrsfs) 
fximk-it this v.iponr vow.... — W. 3 (verses) 
tiicxo vapours llmt oll'oTiclcil . . Comeilii nf Kiiors, i. 1 

(•ml iiiiil o;;lv iMiBts of vapours Mleiiryll .].'i 

l>..rnu wUM)lu.-U vuponr ■>lleni!/ll'.i\. \ 

unci irmlv viipoura wliieh environ it — iv. 3 

the vupoiir ofoiir valour will Ileunji: ly. 2 

nnilduskv vapours of ttie Mi^ht .. ..H/fiiiyry. ii. 2 
beams will dry those vapoins np.;--^',''""'!'', '".X- * 
the vapour of mv»;lory smothered. n.cAo.<///.jJi. 7 
eni) aud kiue slaves, vapours.. •/Vriioiin/.-l«fiu,.iii. 6 
a vapour, sometime, like a benr./lti(o>i!/ ^Cli-o. iv. 12 
audloreetl to (Iriuk llu'ir vapour .... „— , ..X"?, 
aud pestilent eni^jreuation of va\iour3.. HnmW, ii. i 
and live upou the vapour of a dunneou.();/uH.i, in. 3 

VAKI AlJI.lo, as the do:; .If«- ... !/.■,<■/.. ../ ' ;'M„r. u. 8 
horscil with varinlile eomplexious .. < n'l"''!"'!", ii- I 
whiles he is vaultin.;,' variable ramps- (.'.'/"''"■'"ic,,;. 7 
thv love prove likewise variable. /o"M,.ri .S-^.i/i/-(, ;i. 2 
with varhdile ,>l.ieetH, shall expel Ihis.. /MmW, ui. I 
your lean hetjuar. is hut variable serviee — iv. 3 

V\K1 A.N CI'".— of their variuuee ...Intuiiti ffClro. ii. 6 

V VRlA'l'ION of eaeh soil ] Hem till'. \. 1 

and variation, and mutabilities lUnrijy. m. H 

save the iicirase is a little variations — iV. 7 

V VKIKD— it is so varied too tons'i L. f.o»(, i. 1 

the epithets are sweetly varied — iv. 2 

t.i every varied objcet m liis glaune.. — .v. i 
it suni; sweet varied notes — TiiusAmlronii-.tu^ in. 1 

V \H[KS-mood varies aijain ..Pcriclei, in. (Oower) 

V MltKSlMio nici-c from pieking \ Henry IV. ;i. 1 

V Ml'ICTY— her infinite xancty.^titnmjAVIeo. ii. 2 

V \ l{M)-dat I vil not for the varld. Mernj Hires, i. 4 

V vUI.KT—thcni leave these varlets? . . 7cmpe«/, iv. 1 

iiow I'alstatf, varlet vile Merrij Wives, i. 3 

ban" him, dishonest varlet! — iv. 2 

prove it before these varlets Mem. /or Meas. ii. 1 

thou varlet: O thou wicked (re/;.) .. — .n. 1 

tluiunaujrhty varlet! ,"/,'"■'' '''f^; '•'^- o 

I am the veriest varlet \HenryIV. ii. 2 

tell me now, thom;h naughty vorlet — n. 4 

away, varletsl draw, Bardofph ....iUenryiy. ii. 1 
a aobd varlet, a good varlet {rep.) .... — y. .1 

eall here my varlet Troilm ^- CressiJa, i. 1 

Achilles' male varlet. Jlale varlet .. — v. 1 
but lechery I all incontinent varlets! — v. 1 

abominable varlet, Uiomed — v. 4 

turn the dregs of it upon this varlet. Cono/anus, v. 2 
thou precious varlet, thy tailor ....Cijmbetine, iy. 2 

what a brazen-faced varlet art thou Lear, ii. 2 

out. varlet. from my sij,'ht! — n- J 

"\' VKJyETRY— shouting varlctry. AnInnyfyCleo. V. 2 

V A KI.ETTO— of them, varletto . . ilerrij Wives, ly. 5 
\ VRNISH of a complete man Lore's L. Lost, i. 2 

iK-autvdoth varnish age, as if new-born — iv. 3 
aud set a double varnish ou the tame.. lUimlel, iv. 7 

"\' A IINISUEU faces Merchnnto/ renice, ii. .'> 

of the times, to be new varnished? .. — ii. 9 

like his varnished friends? TimonofAihnis. iv. 2 

■\' VllltlUS; thou hast made (rc;i.).l/cu.<. /nrW/dj. ly. .■> 

bo*- now. Varrius? Antony /i^i'lenpalrn, jl. 1 

^■ V It RO— live thousand to Varro . . Timon o/Allt. li. 1 
■■oiideven,Varro: what, you come.. — ii. 2 
(.ne Varro's servant, my good lord .. — .11.2 

the like to you, kind Varro — in- I 

Varro, and Claudius! Of;..) liUiusCmir, ly. 3 

V.\ itSAIi— in the varsal world ..Komeof,JtUiel,\\. 4 
V.VRV — how love can vary itXt..., Love' sL. Lost, iv. 3 

of the lamb, vary deserved praise Uemy V. iii. 7 

every "ale and vary of their masters .... Lear, 11. 2 

A'ARVfNG in subjects as the eye ..Love'sL.Lost,v. 2 

and, with his varying childness ..IHiilfr iTale, 1. 2 

lackeying the varying tide ..Antony SfCleopaba, 1. 4 

the varying shore o' tlic world — iv. 13 

V \SS Al..— make a vassal of hi m Tempest, 1. 2 

that I. vour vassal, have ..Measure for Measure, v. 1 

that shallow va,ssal Love'sL.Lost. i. 1 (letter) 

oil thy lieroical vassal I — iv. 1 (letter) 

iiows not Ills vassal head — ly. 3 

servant live, and will his vassal die ..All sH ell, \. 3 
but such a one, thy vassal, whom 1.. — jj- 1 

that lift your vassal hands Ilirhard Il.m. 3 

throngh vassal fear, base incliiiation.l Henry 7 f. in. 2 
make me as the poorest vassal is ..illenryl I', iy. 4 

(Jixl's vassals drop and die Henry I', iii. 2 

whose low vassal seat the Alps — _ \n.li 

iiresumptuous voasalsl are you .. ,.\Uenryl't. \v. I 
bv such a lowly vassal as thyself ..'illenryl' I. iv. I 
erronc'iuB vassal! the great king ..lticlmrdlll.\. \ 

to eall them woollen vassals Coriolnnus, in. 2 

;Knt.] leave thy lascivious va88al8.4M'on!/.5-t;ien. i. 4 

to make my heart her vassal — li. 

I ain his fortune's vas.sal, and I send — V. 2 

who, being born your vassal Cymbcline, v. 

Ovassal! miscreant! Dear sir Lear,i. I 

V VSS.VLAtilC at uimwareB ..Troilm ^Cressida, iii. 2 

V VST of night that they may work Tempest, i. 2 

t!ian vast hell can hold Mid.N.'tDream, y. 1 

shook bands, as over o vast Winter' sTale.x. 1 

and vast confusion waits A'(rijf./o'in, ly. 3 

the empty, vast, and wondering nir.Hirt.ml ;//. 1. 4 

robs the vast sea JVmoii o//l(/iem, iv. 3 

to make vast Neptune weep — .v- 5 

send o'er the vast world Coriolanut, iv. I 

vast, and gloomy woods? 7'iVu«.lii(/roH. iv. I 

no vast obscurity, or misty vole — v. 2 

ill that vast tennis-court, iiath Pericles, ii. 1 

th(m(jo<lof this great vast — iii. I 

a' far as tliat vast shore waslied. Itameo 4 Juliet, ii. 2 

[(•<,;.] in the dead vost and midillc Hamlet, i. J 

wherein of anlres vast, and deserts idIc..O(/ie«o, i. 3 

VASTIDITY y.'ll had Mrasiireftir .Measure, \i\. i 

VASTY wiblsof wide Arabia ...Wr..,/i. o/On.re, ii. 7 

eull spirits from the vaxtv deel I HennjW. iii. I 

the vastv Hehls of Fronce? Henry y. i. (chorus) 

Ii.' iiiiLdit return to vasty Tortor — ii. 2 

«arc.|ieiis his va^ty jaws — ii. 4 

VATS oiu cares bcilrowncd./lnfonv 4 (JUo. ii. 7 (song) 



— iii. 3 



VAl'DEMONT, X!eanniont, (iraiidpre./i.-iiii,/'. ui. 4 

and Marie, Vaudemont, and Lcslrale — iv. H 

VAUtJllAN [ K;i(.-l)ois.ll, (irey .... lliclianl til. 1. 3 

with tlieiii sir Thomas Vaughan — 11.4 

Rivers. Vaughan, (ircy (re;i. iv. 4) . 
come, Vttughan, let us here embrace 
and thy fair son Kdward, Voiighan., 

think upon Vaughan — V. 3 

VAUI/r set roaring war Tempest, v. 1 

chest, trunk, well, vault Merry II ires, iv. 2 

a dark and dunkisb vault ....Comedy oJKtrors, v. 1 

is left this vault to brag of Machetl,, li. 3 

safety out in vaiilts and prisons Kim; John, y. 2 

in the groy vault of heaven •iUenryll'. ii. 3 

Bouiuled like a cannon in a vault •illetnyl'l.y. 2 

when our vaults have wept Timon of Alliens, 11. 2 

so that heaven's vault should crack l.rnr, v. 3 

borne to that same ancient vaidt.Kompo<5-./i<«e', iv. 1 
shall I not then be stitle<l in the vault — iv. 3 
as in a vault, an ancient receptacle .. — iv. 3 
In her kindred's vault (rep. v. 3) .... — v. 1 
makes this vault a feasting presence — v. 3 

go with me to the vnnlt — v. 3 

going in the vault, if I departed not.. — v. 3 

came to this vault to die ■" v. 3 

VAULTA(j!ES of France shall Henry I', u. 4 

VAUIiTEl) with sneh ease into ]ll'-ni!ili: ly. 1 

to see this vaulted arch Cynbeline, 1. 7 

VAULTING ambition, which o'erleaps. W(ic/vr»i, 1. 7 

or by vaulting into my saddle Henry r.y. 2 

the pretty vaulting sea refused — •iHennjl'l. 111. 2 

whiles he is vaulting variable mmps.Cymbrline, i. 7 

VAULTY— in thy vanity brows ....King John, in. 4 

seen the vanity top of heaven — . .y. 2 

do beat the vanity heaven itomeo 6- Juliet, in. 5 

VAUMOND, Bentii.two hundred All'sllell.xv. 3 

VAUNTS of his nobility illenry II. ill- 1 

the foe vaunts in the field Ilichard 111. v. 3 

leaps o'er the vaunt Troilus^Crcssida, (pro!.) 

vaunt couriers to oak-cleaving Lear, 111. 2 

VAUNTED 'mongst her minions •iHenryl'l. 1. 3 

VAUNTER— I am no vaimter TiinsAndran. v. 3 

VAUNTING— of vaunting enemies. . I Hcmi//r. v. 3 

Nym, rouse thy vaunting veins Henry T. 11. 3 

make your vaunting true JnUiuiCcesar, iv. 3 

VAUNTINGIjY tliou spakest it Rielmrdll. ly. 1 

VAUX— whither goes Vaux so insil.-i Henry Vt. \\'\. 2 
mv charge up to sir Nicholas Vanx. Henry I'll I. ii. 1 

VAWARD of the day '/"'. l^-'s Dream, iv. 1 

that are in the vaward of our youth .illenryl r.i. 2 

I lieg the leading of the vaward Henry I', ly. 3 

he lu'inir in the vaward, (placed I Henry y I. 1. 1 

their bauds i' the vaward are Cnriolanus, i. 6 

VE Al. quoth the Dutchman (.rep.). l.nve'sL.Losl,y. 2 

VEDE— ehi mm te vede, ei non tepregia — iv. 2 

VE(i ETIVE— that dwell in vegetives .Pericles. 111. 2 

VEHEMENCE, tell me who it ia.Asyou l.ikeil, in. 2 

S'EIIEMENCY of your atii;ction ..Meriyiyives,\\.1 

with such vehemency he should .Mens. for Mens. v. I 

with what vehemency the occasion. Hem'!//'///, y. 1 

VEIlEMENT-and aves vehement. A/caj. /or Meas. 1. 1 

yet for your vehcmeni oaths. il/crc/ian(o/ rem'ccy. I 

by long and vehement suit 1 was Kin^'John, i. 1 

by their vehement instigation Richard III. in. 7 

any strong or vehement importunity . . Uihello, in. 3 

VEllOK— per manes vehor TilnsAndromcns, 11. 1 

VEIIj— borrowed veil of modesty .. il/ei-ri/ W'lt'cs, in. 2 

give me ray veil Twelfth Siglit,_ 1. 5 

he says, to veil full purpose Meas. for Meas. ly. (i 

contemplation under the veil of Henry V. 1. 1 

dimmeil with death's black veil ....SHenryl I. v. 2 
throw over her the veil of infamy .K'c/iarif ///. ly. 4 
VElLED-she will veiled walk ....TietlfihNight.i. 1 
to keep your great pretences veiled.. Cor/ofaHus, 1. 1 
our veiled dames commit the war .. — ii. I 

if I have veiled my look, I turn JuliusCrrsar, 1.2 

VE IIjING an Indian beauty .Merchant of l'enice,'n\. 2 

VEIN— in the veins o' the earth Tempest, i.i 

touch him: there's the vein ....Meas.forMeas. ij. 2 
Ercles' vcin.a tyrant's vein .... Mid. N's. Dream, 1. 2 
no following her in this fierce vein . . — iii. 2 
this is the liver vein, which makes . Love's L. L. jv. 3 

take each one in his vein — y. 2 

blood speaks to you in my veins, ilfer. of Venice, xn.'i 
all the wealth 1 had ran in my veins — 111. 2 

you touched my vein at first AsynuLikeit,n. 7 

that those veins did verily bear.. IViuter'sTale, y. 3 
to see you in this merry vaXa .Comedy of Errors, n. 2 

the fellow finds his vein — iv. 4 

whose veins bound richer King John, \\. 2 

within the scorched veins of one — in. I 

tickling up aud ilown the veins — 11;. 3 

plaVB in that infant's veins — in. 4 

malice in a vein of league — y. 2 

will do it in king Cambyscs' vein ..MlennjlV.y. 4 
begin to stop our very veins of life..2H<riir!//r. iy. 1 

.-enowned them, runs in your veins Henry I'.i. 2 

Nym, rouse thy vaunting veins — .".3 

blood enough in all their sickly veins — iv. 2 
to Paris, in this conquering vein ..{ Henry I't. iv. 7 
of blood were in my fathers veins ..Mlenryl'l. i. ! 

from cold and empty veins Richard IIL i. 2 

not in the giving vein to day (irp.).. — ly. 2 
grow in the veins of actions ..7')oihii<5 Ci««a(i. 1. 3 

rubs the vein of him — ii. 3 

every false drop in her bawdy veins — iv 1 
I arri to-day i' the vein of chivalry .. — y. 3 

the small inferior veins, from Coriolanus, 1. 1 

the veins unfilled, our blooil is cold.. — v. 1 
and liere mv bluest veins to ki6i./4ii(oii(/ <5- Cleo. ii. 5 
thciizur.d harebell, like thy veins .C'l/i/iMi'iif, iy,2 

[Ciil.'j with bloodv veins, expecting ;'e>ic/i-f,_i. 4 

inv veins arc chill, and have no more.. — li.. I 
fountains issuing'from vour veins. Romeo ^Juliet, 1. 1 

through all thy veins shall run — iv. 1 

faint cold fear thrills through my veins — iv. 3 

disp<>rse itself throuL'h all the veins.. — y. I 

VEMiRE-erojiprr ,.f velnre.. T'umiH^ror.Wirw, 111. 2 

VEM ■I'l'S-Slnoiils V. lotus l-ornilann,. 1. 1 

VELVICT-bronehed velvet gown.'/wr'/M A'*A-A<,ii.6 



VEN 

VI'.LVET— lists and the velvet Mmi.forMeas. i. 2 

tlioii the velvet: thou art good velvet — i. !! 

as thou art piled, for a I'rencli velvet — 1.2 

wliilcly wanton with a velvet hrow./.oBc'il. I., iii. I 
through the velvet leaves the wind — iv. 3 (ver.) 
abandoned of his velvet friends ..As you Like ii, ii. I 

with patch of velvet oil's face AU'ill'eU, iv. 8 

the velvet knows: but 'tis a goodly ir^p.) — iv. 5 
a velvet dish; fie, lie! 'tis lewd.. 7<ii/ii7is^o/i7i. iv. 3 

a velvet hose! a scarlet cloak! — y. 1 

in my green velvet coat IVinter'sTnle, i. 2 

and he frets like a gummed velvet..! l/iiiry//'. ii. 2 
to velvet guards, and Sunday citizens — iii. 1 

upon the Hummer's velvet buds Henry V. i. 2 

VEND! iiliE-a maid not vendible. Jl/cr.i/rleiuce, i. I 

otl'vvith 't. while 'tis vendible All's ll'ell, i. 1 

VE N E RA13LE worth Tirelfih Sight, iii. 4 

set down your venerable burden .AsyimLihit, ii. 7 
as veiierahle Nestor, hatched . 7Vo//iu Si Cre„id,i,\. 3 

and that most venerable man Cymlielmr, ii. :, 

VENEREAI/— are no venereal signs.. Ti/m/lmi. ii. 3 

VENETIAN admittance Merry Wires, in. 3 

fullier's time, a Venetian, a Bcholar..Uer. ofVen.}. 2 
a young Venetian, one that comes .. — ji. U 
and my old Venetian friend, Salerio? — iii. 2 
that the Venetian law cannot impugn — iy. I 

ond a super-subtle Venetian Othello, 1. 3 

on the sea-bank with certain Venetians — iv. 1 
my lord, has killed a young Venetian .. — v. 2 
fault be known to the Venetian state — — v. 2 

a turbancd Turk beat a Venetian — V. 2 

VENE W— a quick vcnew of wit . . love'sL. Lost, y. 1 
VENEY— three vencvs for a dish oi.MeiryWives, 1. I 

'VENGE m.y Gloster's death Richard II. i. 2 

to 'venge me as I may, and to put — Henry V.i.i 

have liberty to 'venge this I Henryll. 111. 4 

I'll 'venge thy death, or die illenryVl.w. I 

an ofliee of the gods to 'venge it Cymbeline, 1. 7 

nether crimes so speedily can 'venge! — Lear, iv. 2 

none but I might 'venge my ../(omeo*./ii/ie(, in. .") 

VENGEANCE-than in vengeance .... 7Vnipe«(, y. I 

a vengeance on'tl there 'tis . TaoGen. of Verona, ii. 3 

vengeance of Jenny's easel iVcrn/»rirM, iv. I 

do no vengeance to me . . As you Like il, iv. 3 (letter) 
a vengeance on your crafty . . Taming ofShreir, li. I 

my present vengeance taken Winter s Tale,\. 2 

for present vengeance, take it on her — ii. 3 
vengeance for't not dropped down yet — i.n- 2 
make heavy, and vengeance bitter .. — ;y. 3 
denouncing vengeance upon ,Iohii .. KingJohn, in. 4 
will rain hot vengeance on oftenders'.Wic/mrd //. i. 2 
shall render vengeance and revenge — iy. I 

I say, and a vengeance tool \llcnryiv. ii- 4 

for the hot vengeance and the rod .. — iii. 2 

for the wasteful vengeance that Henry I'.i. 2 

war in his vengeance; so that here .. — iv- 1 

will cry for vengeance at 1 Henryl'l.y. 4 

vengeance tend upon your steps! ..2HenryVl. iii. 2 

hot coals of vengeance! — y- 2 

cries vengeance for his death ..3ffiriir!//7. 1. 4 

away! for vengeance comes along with — ii.'' 
shall feel the vengeance of my wrath — iy. 1 
doing worthy vengeance on thysclf./dc/iard llll 1. 2 
for beholds vengeance in his hand .. — i. 4 
and that same vengeance doth he — — 1. 4 
vengeance on the head of Richard .. — y. 3 
some vengeance on the Greeks.. TroUmSf Cress, ii. 2 
the vengeance on the whole camp! .. — ii. 3 
tlie venomed vengeance ride upon .. — v. 3 



what the vengeance, conid he not speak — iii. I 

vengeance, vengeaneel Cymbeline, ii. 5 

if you should liavc ta'en vengeance on — v. 2 
me, wretch, more worth your vengeance — y. 2 
to villany and vengeance consecrate. 7'i(i(Sy)(iil. li. I 
vengeance is in my heart, death in .. — ii. 3 
this vengeance on me had they exeeiitcd — ii- 3 
and vengeance on the traitor Saturnine — iv. 3 

but vengeance rot yon all! — v. 1 

wreakfiil vengeance on thy foes — v. 2 

take vengeance of such kind of men — v. 2 
withhohl the vengeanee that they i\aci. I'rriites, li. 4 
if it be true all vengeance comes too short- /.''ir,;!. 1 
vengeance! plague! deathi confusion! .. — ii. 4 
oil tlic storeel vengeances of heaven fall.. — ii. 4 

1 shall sec the winged vengeance overtake — iii. 7 
ifyou see vengeance,— Hold your hand.. — in. 7 
we will have vengeance for it . . Romeo ^ Juliet, iii. .*> 

can vengeance be pursued further — y. 3 

roused vengeance sets him new a-woik.H(iwi(f(, 11. 2 
fro;. Kii(. J kindlcss villain ! O vengeance — ii. 2 
arise, black vengeance, from thy hollow.(»//ii/;o. iii. 3 

■VENGEFUL sword, rusted witli....2/'<-'ir!/ /'/. iii. 2 

to hale thy vengeful waggon.. TitnsAndronicut, v. 2 

A' ENI A I/-do nothing, 'tis a venial slip .Othello, iy. 1 

VENICE— all his quiver in A''eniee Much Ado, i. 1 

as the traveller doth of Venice ..;.oi'f'«L.;.oi(, iv. 2 
more than any man in Venice... tlercli.of Venice, 1. 1 
what my credit can in Veniccdo.... — 1. 1 

usance here with US in Venice — 1. 3 

why, all the hoys in Venice follow.. — 11.8 
crcilitors in my compony to Venice.. — iii. I 
for were be out of Venice. 1 can make — iii. I 

■what's the news from Venice? — iii. 2 

and then away to Venice to your friend — iii. 2 

strangers have with lis in Venice — ;;i. 3 

common ferry which trades to Venice — m. 4 

no force in tl:e decrees of Venice — iv. I 

this strict court of Venice must neeils — iv. 1 
tliere is no power in Venice can oltcr — iv. I 

upon mv soul? no, not for Venice — iv. 1 

of Venice, confiscate unto the state {rep.) — iv. I 
it is enacted in the laws of A'enicc. ... — iv. I 
the dearest ring in Venice will I give — iv. 1 

dill run from Venice, as far 08 — v. 1 

I will unto Venice, to buy (r/'p.) .7"niiiiHg<!/'S/i. 11. I 
viilaneeof Venice goKl in needlework — ii. I 

your ships are staid at Venice — iv. 2 

iliot your father wus ut Venice — iv. 4 



VEN 

VENICE— at Venice, gave his hody. Richard 11. iv. I 
tliis is Venice; my house is not a grange. (WicHo, i. 1 

a noble ship of Venice hath seen — ii. 1 

I have brought you from Venice — ii- 1 

if this poor trasli of Venice, whom I — n. 1 

and a little more wit, return to Venice .. — .ii. 3 

in Venice tliey do let heaven see — iji. 3 

either from Venice; or some unhatched — in. 4 

snnietliing from Venice, sure — iv. 1 

tlie iluke and senators of Venice greet you — iv. 1 

for that cunning whore of Venice — iv. 2 

and the great messengers of Venice stay — iv. 2 
especial commission come from Venice .. — iv. 2 
and Desdemona return again to Venice — jv. 3 
I know a ladv in Venice, who would have — iv. 3 
what, of Venice? Even he, sir; did you.. — v. 1 

Vt:NrSON— youfor my venison.. .. /I'orj/ W'lties, i. I 

I wished your venison better — >. I 

a hot venison pasty to dinner — .;■ 1 

shall we go and kill us venison?. ., Js i/mi Lrtf tV, ri. 1 

he, that strikes the venison flrtt Cymheline,\\i. 3 

if coward hares, hot goats, and venison? — iv. 4 

VKNIT— vidcsne quis veiiit? Love'sL.Lost,v. 1 

VIONF, vidi,vici; which to — iv. 1 (letter) 

VENOM— thy reason, dear \enom.Tireinii XiglU, iji. 2 

and yet partake no venom irhiier's'l'itle, Ii. 1 

tlie venom clamours of a, jealous. Comn/i/o/i^rr.. v. 1 

that in time will venoiu breed Muclielh, iii.4 

sweltered venom sleeping got — iv. I 

to whose venom sound tlie open esa-.Richard II. ii. 1 
live like venom, where no venom else — ii- 1 

that suck up thy venorn — iii- 2 

mingled with venom of suggestion.. 2 Hfnrj/ 7 r. iv. 4 

the venom of sucli looks Heyup I', y. 2 

as venom toads, or lizards' dreadful .3 Henri/ r/. ii. 2 

his venom tooth will rankle to Uichard III. i. 3 

nnointcd let mc be with deadly venom — iv. 1 
digest the venom of your spleen ..JuliusCivsar, iv. 3 

with tooL'ue in venom steeped Hamlet, ii. 2 

ciivenoni'ed tool then, venom to thy work — v. 2 

VENOMED spear; the which Richardll. i. 1 

or anv creeping venomed thing Richard III. i. 2 

venoiiied vengeance ride upon . . Tmilus tf Crss. v. 3 
newt, and eyeless venomed worm. Timon ofAlh. iv. 3 
liv cliance escape vouv venomed stuck.. Haiw/e(, iv. 7 

VIONOM-MOUTHED, and I Henrij rill. i. 1 

VENOMOUS, wears yet As you Like it, u- 1 

with venomous wights she stays. Troilns S/ Cress, iv. 2 

and venomous to thine eyes Corinlanus, iv. 1 

poor venomous fool, be angry .... Aniomj 4- Cleo. v. 2 
veiiomniis malice of my swelling.. Tidis/lHrfron. v. 3 

■\'KNO.MOUSLY wilt thou spit all . . . . I'ericli-s. iii. I 
things sting his mind so venomously Lenr, iv. 3 

VENT— thou didst vent thy groans ....Tempest,]. 2 

can he vent Trinculos — ii. 2 

I pr'ythee vent thy folly Twel/lh Night, iv. 1 

vent my folly? he has heard (rep.) .. — iv. 1 

shall vent to my lady (rep.) — iv- 1 

the which he vents in mangled ..As you Like it. u. 7 

thou diilst make tolerable vent of All'sU'ell, ii. 3 

'tis now no time to vent our love . . Taming of sh. i. 2 

will stop the vent of hearing 'ZHenrylF. (indue.) 

vent reproaches most bitterly Henry V III. i. 2 

wounds do bleedat many vents!. rroi/iis .S-Cre.w. v. 3 
we shall have means to vent our .... Coriolarms, i. 1 
breast forges, that his tongue must vent — iii. 1 

waking, audible, and full of vent — iv. 5 

a vent of blood, and something ..Anlot'y ■^Cleo. y,2 

so wholesome as that you vent Cymbeliyic, i. 3 

rlivme upon't, and vent it for a mockery? — v. 3 
1 (-an veil t clamour from my throat Lear. i. I 

"S'ENTACJES with your fingers Hamlet, iii. 2 

A'ENTED their complainings Coriolanus, i. 1 

rold and sickly he vented them../l>!toii!/ ^Cleo. iii. 4 

VENTIDIUS! well; I am not ..TimonofAlhens,\.i 

by no means, honest Ventidius — i. 2 

go to Ventidius, pr'ythee, be not sad — ii- 2 

Ventidius lately buried his father — ii. 2 

now Ventidius is wealthy too — . iii. 3 

Ventidius and LucuUus denied him? — iii. 3 

hark you, Ventidius Antony ^- Cleopatra, ii. 2 

sav to A'^entidius, I would speak trcp.) — ii. 3 
noble Ventidius, whilst yet (rep.) — iii. 1 

VENTIUCLE of memory Lore's L.ioj/,iv. 2 

VENTUIIE to depart alone. TwoGen.nr fcrona, iv. 3 

had I such venture forth Merch. of Venice, i. 1 

misfortune to my ventures — i. 1 

my veiit;ires are not in one bottom .. — i. I 

other ventures he hath squandered .. — i. 3 

this was a venture, sir, that Jacob.. .. — .'-3 
montli or two, before you venture .. — iii. 2 

have all his ventures failed? — iii. 2 

I'd venture the well-lost life of mine .Airsn'cU,\. 3 

wliat darest thou venture? — ii. 1 

venture madly on a desperate mart .. — ii. 1 
venture so mncli on my hawk. Taming o/S/irew, v. 2 
thon darest venture to be drunk . . IVinter'sTnle, v. 2 
tliy personal venture in the rebels' \Jachrih. i. 3 

1 am afraid; and j'et I'll venture it. ICing.lolui, iv. 3 

so dare we venture tliee, albeit 1 Henry 1 1', v. I 

ata veutnre [A'nf.-adventure] illenrylT. i. 1 

since we are o'erset, venture again .. — _i. 1 
to venture upon the charged chambers — ii. 4 
there's a whole merchant 6 veuture.. — ii. 4 

and so to the venture — (epil.) 

like an ill venture, it come — (epil.) 

like merchants, venture trade abroad.. Henry I', i. 2 
plums well, that wouldst venture ..2 Henry VI. ii. 1 
to desperate ventures, and assured. H/c/iirrf /;/. v. 3 

the king will venture at it Henry VI II. ii. 1 

if it do. I'll venture one heave at him — ii. 2 
I would, and venture maidenhead for't — ii- 3 
England, you'd venture an eniballing — ii. 3 

veutnre to scale' t a little more Coriolanus, i. 1 

he had rather venture all his limbs for — ii 2 
when it serves, or lose our ventures .Jul.Ca*snr, iv. 3 

with diseiiFcd ventures, that play Cymbcline. i. 7 

if you ilare venture in your own behalf .. l.mr. iv. j 
T shciuhl venture purgatorv for't Othello, iv. ."1 

V1:;NTUKED— thus have ventured. .is i/oiiirte i(, i.'S 



[808 ] 



VENTURED— we ventured on sucli..2Hen)-y;r. i. I 

I have ventured, likelittle wanton. Heiirj^/'J/i. iii. 2 

I mvself have ventured to speak .... — v. 1 

yet have I ventured to come and seek .. Lear, iii. 4 

VENTURING— 'tis but venturing. .Werrv »7t'es, iii. 4 

VENTUKOUS fairy that shall seek. .U id. A-.'s Dr. iv. 1 

enterprize more venturous IHenryVI. ii. 1 

reward you for this ventvirous deed.2 J/enr;/ f '/. iii. 2 

daring, bold, and venturous Richard 1 1 1, iv. 4 

I am much too venturous HenryVlll. i. 2 

VEN US, or her son, as thou Tempest, iv. 1 

Venus, or those pampered animals ..Much Ado, iv. 1 
the simplicity of Venus' doves. .Mid.N.'sDream, i. 1 
yonder Venus in her glimmering sphere — iii. 2 
as gloriously as the Venus of the sky — iii. 2 
then was Venus like her mother. Love's L. Lost, ii. I 
faster Venus' pigeons ^y .... Merchant of Venice, ii. 6 

wicked bastard of Venus As you Lil:e it, iv. 1 

Saturn and Venus this year 2 Henry IV. ii. 4 

bright star of Venus, fallen down....! Hem y/'i. i. 2 
mo'i-tal Venus, tlie heart-blood . Troilus ^ Cress, iii. I 
by Venus' hand I swear, no man .... — iv. 1 

why then, for Venus' sake, give — iv. 6 

swears still by Venus' glove — iv. 5 

his heart inflamed with Venus — v. 2 

what Venus did with Mars Antony ffCleo. i. 5 

o'er-picturing that Venus — ii. 2 

laming the shrine of Venus..... Cymhetine,^. 5 

madam, though Venus govern . . Titus Andron. ii. 3 

speak to my gossip Venus Romeo Sf Juliet, ii. 1 

Venus smiles not in a house of tears — iv. 1 
VENUTO— bene venuto, mnilo. Taming of Shrew, i. 2 
■ Petruchio, I shall be your ben venuto — i. 2 

VER, the spring Love's L. Lost, V. 2 

by the cuckoo: Ver, begin — v. 2 

VEliB— talk of a noun, and a verb ..iHenryVl. iv. 7 

VE RBA— pauca verba, sir Jolin .... Merry Wives, i. 1 

shall not say me nay, pauca vcrbaioDe'si.Los^.iv. 2 

VEKBAL-me in a sweet verbal brief ../J/i's«'eH, v. 3 

lady's manners, by being so verbal .Cymbeline, ii. 3 

made she no verbal question? Lear, iv. 3 

VERBATIM to rehearse the MIeuryVl. iii. 1 

VERBOSITY finer than Love's I.. Lost, v. 1 

VERD-in my closet un boitier verd..il/ei>!/(r/ties, i. 4 

VERDICT-a party verdict gave .... Itlvtmrd ll.i.Z 

giving my verdict on the white ....IHenryVI. ii. 4 

must your bold verdict enter talk .. — iii. 1 

have given their verdict up unto . . Richard III. i. 4 

carries the due verdict with it HenryVlll. v. I 

is't a verdict? No more talking on't.. Coriolanus, i. 1 
VERDUNof Alton, lord Cromwell.. IJ/enri/ J'/, iv. 7 

VERDURE— suck'd my verdure out Tempest, i. 2 

losinghis verdure even TwoGen of Verona, i. I 

VERE— the lord Aubrey Vere ZHenryVI. iii. 3 

VERGE— goodman Verges Much Ado, iii. 6 

palabras, neighbour Verges (rep.) .. — iii. i 
stood on the extremest verge .... Asyou Lil:e it, ii. 1 
to the furthest verge that ever was . . Richard II. i. 1 

inoaged in so small a verge — ii. 1 

make fast within a hallowed verge ..illentyVI. i. 4 
the inclusive verge of golden metal. /^/c/iart/ tll.iv. I 

upon the beached verge Timon of Athens, v. 2 

stands on the very verge of her confine . . Lear, ii. 4 

witiiin a foot of the extreme verge — iv. 6 

VERIER wag o' the two? winter'sTnle, i. 2 

there are verier knaves desire to \i\&. Cymbeline, v. 4 

VERIEST antic in the ..Taming of Shrew, I (indue.) 

I think thou hast the veriest shrew . . _ v. 2 

I am the veriest varlet I Henry IV. ii. 2 

but yield me to the veriest hind ....Cymbeline, v. 3 

VERIFIED unjust things MuchAdo.v.l 

truly now may this be verified IHenryVI. 1. 2 

I perceive, that will be verified — v. 1 

unless the adage must be verified 3 Henry VI. i. 4 

the common voice, I see, is verified- Henri/ /'/;/. v. 2 
for I have ever verified ray friends.. t'orio/awKs, v. 2 

VERIFYour title with their lives King John, ii. 1 

I will verify as much in his peard Henry V. iii. 2 

VERILY he had been hanged . . TwoGen. orVer. iv. 4 
I verily did think that lier old . . As youLilte it. iv. 3 
verily, I speak it in the freedom.. ifinter'sTale, i. 1 

I may not, verily. Verilyl (rep.) — i. 2 

a lady's verily is as potent — i. 2 

by your dread verily, one of them .. — i. 2 
that those veins did verily bear blood? — v. 3 

yes, verily, and in truth, you shall Henry V. v. 1 

verily, I swear, 'tis better to be lowly Henri/ )'///. ii. 3 

verily, I do not jest with you Coriolanus, i. 3 

VERITABLE; therefore look to't well .Otliello, iii. 4 
V ERITE, vous prononcez les mots .... Henry V. iii. 4 

VERITIliS on thee made good Macbeth, iii. 1 

VERITY— was a noise, that's verity. . . . Tempest, ii. 1 
every syllable, a faithful verity.jWeas./or Meas. iv. 3 

but for his verity in love As you Like if, iii, 4 

to the full arming of the verity All's^ Well. iv. 3 

that the verity of it is in strong .. iVinter'sTalc, v. 2 
in verity, yoii did; my bones .Comedy of Errors, iv. 4 

as justice, verity, temperance Macbeth, iv. 3 

'twould prove the verity of certain .HenryVlll. i. 2 

all the size that verity would Coriolanus, v. i 

in sincere verity, under the allowance. . . Lear, ii. 2 

but, in the verity of extolment Hamlet, v. 2 

VERMIN- the fiend, and kill vermin Lear, iii. 4 

VERNON-cousin Vernon! {lep. iv. 3)i HenrylV. iv. I 

but there is Mordake, Vernon — iv. 4 

to the death, and Vernon too — v. 5 

good master Vernon (rep.) IHenryVI. ii. 4 

VEROLES— who? monsieur Veroles? ..I'cricles. iv. 3 

VERONA— to Verona TuoGen.of Verotia,iv. 1 

from Verona banished — iv. I 

r'^oLj Verona shall not hold thee — v. 4 

Verona, for a while I lake .... Taming of Shrew, i. 2 

liow do you all at Verona? — i. 2 

to Padua here, from old Veronal .... — i. 2 
born in Verona, old Antonio's son .. — i. 2 

I am a gentleman of Verona, sir . . .. — ii. i 
in fair Verona (rep. i. '2)..Ro7neo ^Juliet, (prologue) 

made Verona's ancient citizens — i. 1 

iill the admired beauties of Verona .. — i. 2 

here in Verona, ladies of esteem — i. 3 



VEX 



VERONA'S summer hath not such. . Romeo 4- Jul. i. 3 
to say truth, Verona brags of him . . — i. b 

hath forbid this bandying in Verona — iii. 1 
hence from Verona art thou banished — iii. 3 
there is no world without Verona walls — iii. 3 
news from Veronal how now, Balthazar? — v. 1 
while Verona by tliat mime is Icnown — v. 3 
VERONESE, [/v)!(.-Verone6sa] Michael .Othello, ii. 1 

VERSE— he writes verses Merry I fires, iii. 2 

come, but one verse Twelfth Night, ii. 4 

in the even road of a blank verse ....Much Ado, v. 2 
feigning voice, verses of feigning. il//d. A'. '.sDi earn, i. I 

what, my soul, verses? Love'sL.Lost, iv. 2 

astanza, a verse; lege, Domine — iv. 2 

but, to return to the verses — iv. 2 

where I will prove those verses to be — iv. 2 
nay, I have verses too, I thank Biron — v. 2 
some thousand verses of a faithful .. — v. 2 
I'll give you averse to this note ..As you Like it, ii. 5 
hang there my verse, in witness .... — iii. 2 

the very false gallop of verses — iii. 2 

didst thou hear these verses? — iii. 2 

the verses would bear. That's no (rep.) — iii. 2 
the verse, and therefore stood (rep.).. — iii. 2 

mar no more of my verses — iii. 2 

that hangs the verses on the trees.... — iii. 2 

when a man's verses cannot be — iii. 3 

he writes brave verses, speaks brave — iii.4 

an' you talk in blank verse — iv. I 

your verse flowed with her beauty. Winter'sTale, v.l 

if you would put me to verses Henry V. v. 2 

by magic verses have contrived i Henry 1' I. i. 1 

Troilus shall crown up the verse. Troilus ^ Cress, iii. 2 
live to have need of such a verse .... — iv. 4 
what verse for if? what instance .... — v. II 
that happy verse which aptly. . Timon of Athens, i. 1 

why, thy verse swells with stuff — v.l 

for his bad verses, tear him (rep.^.JutiusCeesar, iii. 3 
'tis averse in Horace (.rep.') .Titus Andrnuicus, iv. 2 

or the blank verse shall halt for't Hamlet, ii. 2 

VERSING love to amoriiusPhillida.il/i'd.A. 'sDr. ii. 2 
VERSON— that fery verson for all . . Merry Hives, i. 1 

VESPER'S pageants Antony ^Cleopatra, iv. 12 

VESSEL— a brave vessel who had Tempest, i. 2 

to any creature in the vessel — i. 2 

and quit the vessel — i. 2 

a bawbling vessel was he captain . TivelfihNight, v. 1 
having in that perished vessel.. .;i/ea.<./briVec«. iii. 1 
so is the weaker vessel called ..Loiie'sL.L. i. 1 (let.) 
I keep her as a vessel of thy law's .. — i. 1 (let.) 
but mj' gentle vessel's side .. Merchant of Venice,i. 1 
there miscarried a vessel of our country — ii. 8 
and not one vessel 'scape the dreadful — iii. 2 
I must comfort the weaker vessel. ^sjiou Lil:e it, ii. 4 

believing thee a vessel of too All's JVelt, ii. 3 

never saw a vessel of like sorrow. Ifinter'sTale, iii. 3 

I have a vessel rides fast by — iv. 3 

rancours in the vessel of my peace Macbeth, iii. 1 

your vessels, and your spells, provide.. — iii. 5 
weaker vessel, as they say (rep.) ....illenrylV. ii. 4 
that the united vessel of their blood . . — iv. 4 
the wide vessel of tlie universe . . Henry /'. iv. (oho.) 
tlie empty vessel makes the greatest — iv. 4 

do a vessel follow that is new Hen7-y VIII. i. 2 

broach the vessels of my love.. 3''iiio;i of Athens, ii. 2 
nature's fragile vessel doth sustain . . — v. 2 
as waves before a vessel under sail. .Coriolanus, ii. 2 

thou show 'st a noble vessel — iv. 5 

now is that noble vessel full of ... . JuliusCmsar, v. 5 
no vessel can peep forth ....Antony ^Cleopatra, i. 4 
these competitors, are in thy vessel .. — ii. 7 
strike the vessels, ho! here is to Coesar — ii. 7 
.Cymbeline, ii. 4 



to make your vessel nimble 
most bravest vessel of the world. . 

stuffed these hollow vessels with Pericles, i. 4 

their vessel shakes on Neptune's — iii (Cower) 
which Ills mortal vessel tears. . . . — iv. 1 (Gower) 
seeing this goodly vessel ride before ns — v. 1 

oiir vessel i s .of Tyre, in it the king — v. 1 

being tiie weaker vessels Romeo ^ Jidiet, i. 1 

as well to see the vessel that's come in. . Otliello, ii. 1 
if to preserve this vessel for my lord .... — iv- 2 

VESTAL— at a fair vestal Mid.N.'sDream, ii. 2 

perjure the ne'er-touched vestal. .Jii/tmi/ <;} Cleo. iii. 10 

a ve:tal livery will I take me to Tericles, iii.4 

shall we go hear the vestals sing? — iv. 5 

her vestal livery is but sick and./ioi»eo ^Juliet, ii. 2 
even in pure and vestal modesty .. .. — iii. 3 

VESTMENTS his affections bait?.Comedy of Err. ii. I 
priests in holy vestments bleeding. Timon ofAlh. iv. 3 

VESTURE— from her vesture. 7'«'oGeii.o./' Verona, ii. 4 
this muddy vesture of dei^ny. Merchant of Venice, v. 1 
put the napless vesture of humility .Curiotanus, ii. I 
our Caesar's vesture wounded?. ....JidiusCfesar, iii. 2 
in the essential vesture of creation .... Othello, ii. 1 

VETCH— and vetch me in my closet. A/eiri/ »'i>es, i. 4 

VETCHES— rye, barley, vetches, oats . Tempest, iv. I 

VEX— thou to vex me here?. TwoGen. of Verona, iv. 4 
it hath no tongue to vex you. . . . Twelfth Night, iii.4 

to vex Claudio, to undo Hero Much Ado, ii. 2 

an injury would vex asaint.. Taming of Shrew, iii. 2 

that doth vex my grieved soul Richardll. \. 1 

vex not yourself, nor strive not — ii. 1 

1 will not vex your souls — iii. I 

they may vex us, with shot 1 Henry VI. \. ^ 

not all these lords do vex me half ..2HenryVl. i. 3 

if so thou thinkst, vex him with iHenryVI. ii. B 

they vex me past my patience! ....HeirryVlll. ii. 4 
to vex thee. Ahvaysa villain's. J'i/iiou o/'.-l(Aeiis,iv. 3 

vex not his prescience Antony S/- Cleopatra, i . 2 

which, as I say, to vex her, I will.. Ci/mtejiiie, iii. 5 
a sight to vex the father's soul .. Titus Andron. v. 1 

'twill vex thy soul to hear what — v. 1 

ve.K not his ghost: Diet him pass! Lear, v. 3 

VEXATION to your age ..TwoGen. of Verona, iii. I 

vexations were but my trials Tempest, iv. 1 

full of vexation come I Mid.N.'sDream, i. 1 

but as the fierce vexation of a dream — iv. 1 
do me most insupportable vvxalion.. All's Well. ii. 3 
appoint myself in this vexation?.. Winter'sTale, i. 2 



VEXATIOM almost etops mv 1 Hcirj/ ri. iv. 3 

■were vexation to your youtfi Itirhanl III. iv. 4 

g vc him (Icscrvcil vcxution CorioUmut, in. 3 

not vmirself willi your vexation Cymbehue, i. 2 

mill tliosc rop'""-'" *<-''^*""""'^'" ••• ~ .^ 

lliH'W "lull i-lmiii;c8 ofvcxntion on't ....OrtcHo, i. I 

VKXIM)— tl.e slill vexed Bcrinootliea .. Vanpett, i. 2 

sir. 1 uni wxeil — '"• I 

I nin vcx.vl at hiait: wluit sliall.. jWuti; IVires, v. 6 
hc'8 shrcwcllv vexed ut somctliing . . Alf>»''ll. iii. '■> 
soul vextil, begin, and wliy to me. Wniler iTale, v. 1 

vexed witli thv imnediiiient Aiiifyo/iii, it. 2 

Willi my vexed spirit'! I cannot — ni. I 

and vexed by the imprisoning \HenrulV. in. 1 

he is vexed at somethiup Henry! III. in. 2 

little finder of tliis man to be vexed? — .v. 2 

the nobility are vexed Corinlauut, iv. 2 

vexed I inn, (if late, with passions .Jii/iii»CVj<i>-, 1. 2 
1 am not more vexed at any thing ..CymbeUiie,U. I 

an mad as tlie vexed sea .Lrnr w. 4 

being vexed, a sea nourislicd .... liomeo fjr Jttiiei,u i 

now, afore God, I am so vexed — n. 4 

mv p<wr heart so for a kinsman vexed — in. 5 

VEXRS-wlioin the foul fiend vexes Lr-ar, iii. 4 

V K X EST tlion tliis man? Iii-elph Mirlil, i v. 2 

VEXKI'II himy When I spoke ..Jii/itijCrt-Mi-, iv. 3 

VICXING tliciluUcar Kin^Jo/m, iji. 4 

Vl.V-goto; via! ;Vfm/ D'lws, ii. 2 

in via, in way, of explication ....Love tL.Losl, iv. 2 

via, Koodinaii Dull! thou — v. 1 

cried, vial we will do't, come — v. 2 

vial says the Hend; awayl. .Merchant of Fenice, ii. 2 

via; les eaux ct la terre Henri/ )'. iv. 2 

ATAL— your sacred vials pour inuler'il'ale, y. 3 

where be tlie sacred vials thou Atiioni/S-Clen. i. 3 

the vial [Kii/.-viol] once more I'ericles, iii. 2 

juice of cursed liebenon in a vial H«iiiW,i.5 

VTAND— Icfi. their viands behind Teinpesi, iii. 3 

be seasoned with such viands? ..Mcr. of Venice, iv. I 

his viands sparkling in a golden ZHenrijI'l. ii. ,■) 

nor ttic remainder viands Troilus tf Cretmla, ii. 2 

still cupbourdine the viand Coriolauus.i. I 

within tliere.aml our viands Anlonijt^Clen. in. 9 

our viands had been poisoned 1 Ci/mheline, v. S 

nil tlie viands tliut I eat do seem /Viiriw, n. 3 

V I CAR— procure the vicar to stay .Merry Hives, iv. 6 

I'll to the vicar — jv. 6 

tlie vicar of the next villoge Asijon I.iliei/. in. 3 

if the vicar meant to cozen him .TamingnfSh. iii. 2 

VICE— yonrold vice still TicaGeii.o/lerona, iii. 1 

licre follow her vices — iii. 1 

that set this down among her vices! — in. 1 

ai'.d on tliatvicc in him Twel/1hKiglil,\u 3 

or any taint of vice, wliose strong — iii. 4 

like to the old vice — iy.2(song) 

bmkes of vice [Co(. Kn(.-ice] Meat, for Meas. n. 1 

nil ages smack of this vice — li. 2 

there is a vice, that most I do ablior — n. 2 

tliat skins tlie vice o' tlie top — n. 2 

hal fie tlieseflltliy vices! — n- 4 

a merriment than a vice — ,;;■ 4 

be made a man out of my vice? — in. I 

clotlic a back, from such a filtliy vice — in. 2 
it is too general a vice, and severity — iii. 2 

the vice is of a great kindred — in. 2 

to weed my vice, and let his grow! .. — m. 2 

craft against vice I must apply — in. 2 

when vice makes mercy, mercy's — iv. 2 

you must nut in tlic pikes with avice.iViif/i^fi/o, v. 2 

vice yiiu snould liave spoke Love's /,. Lost, y. 2 

there is no vice so simple .. Merchant o/ I'enice, iii. 2 

or been an instrument to vice lyitUcr'sTale.i. 2 

these bolder vices wanted less — iii- 2 

his vices vou would say (.rep.) — ly. 2 

apparel vice like virtue's Comedy o/ Errors, iii. 2 

more vices than it had liefore Macbeth, iv. 3 

Blithe particulars of vice so grafted.. — iv. 3 

tliere is no vice, but beggary King John, ii. 2 

sliull my virtue be his vice s bawd../iicAai'( If. v. 3 

tliat reverend vice, that grey \ Henry 1 1', ii. 4 

Bii a' come but within ray vice iHenrylK ii. I 

old men are to this vice of lying! — in. 2 

now is this vice's dagger become a aqiiire— in. 2 

hntli blown that vice in me Henryl'. iii. 6 

tainted with a thousand vices \ Henry ft. y. 4 

virtuous visor hide deep vice! Kichanl 1 1 1. t\. 2 

like tlie formal vice, iniquity — iii. 1 

so smooth bedaulwd liis vice with .. — iii. 5 
what a vice were it in Ajax now. /■ro/(«i<?- Cr«». ii. 3 

who I? alas, it is my vice — iv. 4 

brother, vou have a vice of mercy — v. 3 

what vice is that, good Troilus? — y. 3 

you account a vice in him Corinlnnni, i. 1 

It isavice[K>i/.-voice]in her ears..' .ywi("-/i«<-, n. 3 

that tends to vice in man — ii. .') 

for even to vice thej; arc not constant — ii. 5 

changing still one vice, hut of. — ii. .^ 

for vice repeated, is like tlie I'ericles, i. 1 

in vice their law's their will — _ i. 1 

small vices do appear; robes /.CTr,iv.6 

as duteous to the vices of thy mistress .. — iv. 8 

anil of our pleasant vices make — y. 3 

turns vice. being misapplied (ri-p.).ltoinro AJnI. ii.3 

a vice of kings: a cutpurse of the Hamlet, iii. 4 

virtue itself of vice must pardon beg — iii. 4 

for 'tis a vice to know him — v. 2 

I do confess the vices of my blood Olhelln, i. 3 

and do but see his vice; 'tis to his virtue — ii. 3 
uiilc's self-charity be sometimes avicc .. — ij. 3 
that she holds it a vice in her gooilncss.. — Ji. 3 

livcst to make thine honesty o victi — iii. 3 

vou perceive how he laughed at his vice? — iv. 1 

'lis o great price, for small vice — iv. 3 

VICEliEltKXT, and Mile .. /.nrt'ifc.toi'. i. 1 (letter) 
VICEIIOV— thyself shall be viceroys., r^inpn', iii. 2 

be placed as viceroy under him \ Henry I' I. v. 4 

be culled but viceroy of the whole? .. — v. 4 
VICIOUS, ungentle, foolish ..Comedy of Errors, iv. 2 

to fill the world with vicious \ Henry I' I. y. 4 

they turn to vicious forms Henry I' 1 1 1, i. 2 



[ 8oy ] 

VlCIOUS-most vicious strain . . 7'iwioii nrAlhen; iv. 3 
hail been vicious, to Imve mistrusted. fi/mlK/riir, v. & 
it ii no vicious hint, luurikr, or fouluesa ..Lear, i. 1 

the dink and vicii. us |ilm-e where - y. 3 

for some vicious iimle of imtine Hamlet, \. i 

perchance, am vicious in my guess ixhrlla, in 3 

VICIDUSNESS grow hard. .411/011!/* «--o;iii/ni,iii. 11 
VlCTOK-and give the victors way ..KinnJnhu, ii. 2 

design the victor's chivalry Hirlmrdll. i. 1 

if your father had been victor tlierc.2l/fiir|/;»\ iv. I 

now we are victors \ Henry I'Li. '-' 

ns victors wear at the Olympian ....illenryl'l. n. 3 

both tugging to be victors — n. 6 

and tell inc, who is victor, York — v. 2 

a victor shall be known? Troilus ^ Crestida, iv. :> 

the strides they victors made Cymbeline, v. 3 

although the victor, we submit to Cffisar — v. 4 

desiiilc thv victor sword Lear, v. 3 

VICTOKIliS -in my luimiy victories.! Henry 1 1', iv. 3 

by your victories, with Charles \ Henry I'l. \v. 1 

open all your victories in Stiotlanii. Ilichnrd III. iii. 7 

I'll pawn my victories Timon n/.-liliem, in. 5 

VICTOKIOlJShandbe feeblcd Knii!John,y. 2 

a stem of that victorious stock ;/ciin/ »'. ii. 1 

victorious Talbot! pardon my I Htiiii/r/. n. 3 

brave captain, and victorious lord! .. — in. 1 
thrice victorious lord of Falconbridge — ly. 7 
Salisbury, and victorious Warwick . .iUenry I'l. i. 1 
and so to arms, victorious father .... — y. ' 
victorious prince of York, before — 3H<'»i>!/<'/. i. I 

bound with victorious wreaths Ilicliaid Itl.i. 1 

three sons with his victorious arm .. — i. 4 
your arms, be praised, victorious friends — v. 4 
ratiier I'll expect victorious life..il'i'oii!/ ^-Cleo. ly. 2 
Home, victorious in thy mourniiig.ritm/lHrfion. i. 2 
gracious conqueror, victorious Titus — i. 2 

bless me here with thy victorious hand — i- 2 

VICTORY is twice itself, when MuchAdo, i. 1 

proofs to one. that blood hath the victory — n. 3 
the conclusion is victory. .Lor/''jL. Lo.((, iv. I (letter) 
his head, for a branch of victory., ^si/oii/.*!' iV, iv. 2 

the victory fell on us Macbeth, i. 2 

victor/, with little loss, doth play ..KingJohn, ii. 2 

kiss him with a glorious victory — li. 2 

to reach at victory above my head . . Hichard II. i. 3 
before king Harry's victory .. ..iUenry IV. (indue.) 
this had been cheerful, after victory — iv. 2 

deatii's dishonourable victory we \ Henry I'l. i. 1 

after this golden day of victory — J. 6 

heavens have glory for this victory! . . — in. 2 

St. George and victory! — iv. 6 

desire of bold-faced victory — iv. 6 

monument of the victory will Ibear.2Hi;iir!/;'/.iv. 3 
God on our side doubt not of victory — iv. 8 

and be proud of thy victory — iv. 10 

return with victory from the field •iHenryf'L i. I 

I doubt not, uncle, of our victory .... — i. 2 

and either victory, or else a grave.... — ij. 2 

hope of life, and victory — !'• 3 

to whom God will, there be the victory I — _ii. 5 

tlicn am I sure of victory — iv. 1 

the harder matched, the greater victory — v. I 
to the field; saint George, and victory — v. 1 

graced with wreaths of victory — v. 3 

promise them success and victory.. /ficAard ///. iv. 4 
furtiine and victory sit on thy helm! — v. 3 
should mount with wings of victory — v. 3 

that we may praise thee in my victory 1 — v. 3 
dream of success and happy victory.. — v. 3 

on! victory! I promise you — v. 3 

saint George! Kichmond, and victory — v. 3 
upon them 1 victory sits on our helms — v. 3 

be done to him that victory Troilns^- Cress. ly. 5 

brings a' victory in his pocket? Coriolanus, ii. 1 

together with thy victory — v- 3 

you have won a happy victoiy to Kome — v. 3 
he whined and roared away your victory — v. 5 
on mv brows tins wreatli of vtctnty. JiUinsCn>sar,v.\3 
yoursvvord sit laureled victory L./lii/oiii/^Cieo. i. 3 

serves for a fair victory — iv- 7 

why so sadly greet you our victory! .Cymhelme. v. 6 
to whom this wreath of victory I give..i'<ric(f«,ii. 3 

If you have victory, let the trumpet Lear,v. I 

the tears have got small victory. /iomfi AJnliet, iv. 1 

VICTRESS, Cajsar'e Cxsar Hichard III. iv. 4 

VICTU^VL— by my victuals Twoden.ofrer. ii. 1 

you had musty victual Much.ldo, i. 1 

the meantime, and eat your victuals . . Hemy v. v. 1 

I must go victual Orleans Mlc.ryVl. i. U 

hut lluit it cats our victuals Cymbeline, iii. G 

VK'TlI.\Lr.l)-t\vo months viclunXid. As you Like, v. 4 

^'1C I'UALI.EKSdoso iHenrylf. ii. 1 

VlDl^l.H'KT— she moans, videlicet .Jl/irf.iV.'jOr.v. 1 
videlicet, lie came, saw ..ioue'jL.Los/, iv. 1 (letter) 

I in his own person, vid«licet AsynuLilieit, iv. 1 

house of siile, (videlicet, a brothel) Hamlet, ii. 1 

VIDEO— video, et gaudeo Love's L. Lost, v. I 

VIOES- tam lentus vides? ri(iw.4ii''ronicm, iv. 1 

VIDESNE-videsnequis venit? .. Love' sL. Lost, \. 1 

VIE-mort de ma vie! (rep. iv. 5) Henry!', iii. .'■ 

gardez ma vie. et je voiis — iv. 4 

to vie strange forms witli far.cv . . Antony * Cleo. y. 2 

tliereinmay vie honour with yourselves /'(•riWfi, iii. I 

luiglit the crow vie feathers white — iv. (Gower) 

VIEDso fuBt, protesting oatli .. Taming n/shreu: ii. I 

VIENNA be of worth Mensnre/or Measure,]. I 

and mercy in Vienna live in thv tongue — i. 1 

in the suburbs of Vienna must be — i. 2 

here in Vienna irep ii. 1 and v. 1) .. — ;. 4 
nor it shall not he allowed in Vienno — n. 1 

bold out in Vienna ten year — n. 1 

as ony in Vienna, on my word — v. 1 

thelimage of a murder done in Vienna. Hnm/W, in. 2 

VIEW-tlic letter to my view? ..Ticotien.of I'er. i. '.' 

beam of her view gilded mv foot . . Mem Hires, i. 3 

not behold her lace at ample view. Tuelfth Mglii,i. I 

I she made good view of me — !!• - 

where they view themselves.... A/cm. for .Meas. n. * 
deliver Ills bead in the view of Aiigelo? — ly. 2 
on the first view, to say, to sweor ..Mid.X.'sDr. iii. 1 



i. 9 



VIEW-from monstcr'B view ...Mid. A'.'i Drmin.iii. 2 
their backs to mortal viewel {rep.) ..Lnve'.L.L. y. 2 
to come view fair Portia . ... Merelmnt of I'enice, ii. 7 

come forth to view the issue of — iii. 2 

more dismay I view the fight — 111.2 

you that choose not by the view — iii. 2 (seroll) 

to view with hollow eye — iv. I 

at the first view, to vou that know ..AU'sH'ell, ii. 6 

at the first view sliall kill — v. 3 

and in the view of tlie shepherd .. Wintcr'sTale, v. 2 
view the inanucrs of the town.C'oinei/i/ of Hrron, i. 2 

up and down, to view the city — i. 2 

death within my view, retaining .... KingJohn, v. 4 

here, in the view of men, I will llicliard II. iii. I 

that ill common view, he may — iv. 1 

to view the sick and feeble parts Henry i: ii. 4 

is rode to view their battle — iv. 3 

to view the field in safety — iv. 7 

before th is royal view, what rub — v 2 

lords, view these letters \lleury!'l.'\. 1 

to view the artillery and munition .. — i. 1 
and view the Frenchmen how they.. — i. 4 

protector, view the letter sent — iv. I 

siglit of thy land's view, I took i Henry I I. iii. 2 

I Tost fair England's view, and bid . . — iii. 2 
enter his chaiuUer, view his hreathless — iii. 2 
gracious sovereign, view this body .. — iii. 2 

let me view his visage being dead — v. 1 

ntlVight thee with the view thereof .. — v. I 

in the view of many lords 3Heniy!'l. i. I 

canst for blushing, view this face — i. 4 

the liopeful mother at the view Hic/iard 111. i. 2 

delight to view thy heinous deeds.... — i. 2 
then you lost the view of earthly ..llenm till. i. I 

order gave each thing view — i- 1 

crave leave to view these ladies — i. 4 

when the people had the full view .. — iv. I 
in view of Trojans and of Greek6.7"roi7i«<5-Cr«f. i.3 

even to my full of view — iii. 3 

I have with exact view perused — iv. .^ 

as I would buy thee, view thee limb by — iv. 5 
amorous view on the fair Cressid .... — iv 5 

they lie in view; but have not Coriolanu 

then Aufidius was within my view.. — 
and i' the consul's view slew three .. — ii. 2 
would soar above the v'levr of men .JnliusCir.^nr.i. I 
their view upon a tawny front .. Antony ^-Vteo. \. 1 
and do invite you to my sister's view — ii. 3 
and could not endure a further view — iii. 8 

shall uplift us to the view — v. 2 

the sweet view on't might well Cymbeline, ii. h 

never winged from view o' the nest.. — iii. 3 
tread a course pretty and full of view — iii. 4 
mine eves are cloyed with view.. 7"(/»*/ln'/i-rtn. iii. 2 
enticetli thee to view acountless glory .. I'ericles. i. 1 

countless eyes to view men's acts — i. I 

with bloody views [Co/.-veiiis], expecting — _i. 4 
never more to view nor day nor light.. — ii. .^ 

the enemy's in view, draw up Lear, v. I 

love, so gentle in his view liomeo ^Juliet, i. I 

that love, whose view is muffled still — i. I 

amongst view of many, mire 

view and knowing of these contents, 
lii^h on a stage be placed to the view.. 
I never did like molestation view on . 

VIEWED— that e'er I viewed 3;;cii)!///. i 

and the first he viewed, he did it..Henryllll. iii. 2 
this day was viewed in open — iii. 2 

VIEWEST, behoklest, surveyest.LoBe'jL.L. i. I (let) 

VIEWETU all the world illenryll.i 4 

VIEWING of the town TveWh Siglit , iii. 3 

in viewing o'er the rest o' the self-saine. Macbeth, i. 3 

j'outh, viewing his progress illenrytf. iii. 1 

your woes again by viewing mme.Hichard til. iv. 4 
I ViEWLESS-the viewless winds. A/m.». for Mens. iii. I 
I VIGIL— will yearly on the vigil feast.. Hf mi;/', iv. 3 

VIGILANCE— use such vigilance Tempest, iii. 3 

Bedford's vigilance, your deeds 9 Henry! I. i. I 

most unusual vigilance, docs not attend.. Lenr, ii. 3 

VIGILANT eye. the counsellor heart. Con'o'uiiiu. i. 1 
be vigilant [Co/.-vigitunt], I beseech. il/iic/i.Ji/ii, iii. 3 

I am as vigilant, as a cat to 1 Henry II . iv. 2 

tal<e your places, oiid be vigilont ..IHenryl'l. ii. 1 

VIGOtiK— and have no vigour in them..7"'-»ipf»/, i. S 
with all her double vigour, art. . Meas./or Meas. ii. 2 
tlie sinewy vigour of tlie traveller. /,orc'i/..Z.oi/,i v. 3 
have felt the vigour of his ra^e.. Comedy of Err. iv. 4 
grappling vigour and rough trown.. /\iii(rJ/)/in, iii. I 

with a twofold vigour lift mc Hichard II. i. 3 

for thy vigour, bull-bearing.. rroiVuidj Crestida, ii. 3 
high liirtli, vigour of bone, desert.... — iii. 3 

to try tlie vigour of them Cymbeline, i. fi 

the vigour, and the picture of Titus Andron. i v. 2 

with a sudden vigour, it doth posset .... Hamlet, \. h 

VILE— but thy vile race Tempest, i. 2 

such vile base practices. . . . 7"iro Geii. of I'erona, iv. 1 

how Kalstnft", varlet vile Meny Hives, i. 3 

of vile ill-favoured faults — iii. I 

vile worm, thou wosto'erlookcd — v. 5 

but, O how vile an idol iiroves ..Tirel/thfCieht, iii. 4 
the vile conclusion I now begin .Meat, for Meas. v. I 

he hos been a vile thief MuchAdo, iii. 3 

confessed the vile encounters — iv. I 

things base and vile, holding no.... Mid. S.'sOr. i. I 

wake when some vile thing 18 — ii.3 

how fit a word is that vile name — ii.3 

thou burr: vile thing, let loose — iii. 2 

wall, that vile woll (re;,.) _ v. i 

lion vile with bloody mniitli (I.;).) .. — v. I 
knew man hold vile stufi so iWa.s.lMve'sL.Lost, iv. 3 

O vile! then as she goes — iv. 3 

vile, unless it may be quaintly ..Mer.o/I'ciilce, ii. 4 

and the vile siiuciiking of the — ii. 5 

it is a very vile life As you Like it, iii. 2 

Audrey, li most vile Mar-text — v. 1 

Ihut dost ill vile misprision All's II ell, ii. 3 

I'll poison that vile rascal — iii. 5 

with, twenty such vile teru.s.. Taming qf Shrew, ii. 1 
O vile, intolerable, not to he endured! — v. 2 
with her most vile principal Hinter'sTale, ii. I 



. Hamlet, 

. Otiiello, 



VIL 



— iii. 4 

■'. -2 
. I 



— ii. 4 



ii. I 



ii. I 
iii. 2 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 



— V. 5 



ii. 4 
V. 4 
V. 5 
V. 2 
V. 2 



^'"''^",''['^"<=.«' I'll "t'cf what ..Comfdynf Errors, i. 1 

1 tell liim It was vile and bad _ vl 

and a rabble more of vile confedei-ate's" — v" 1 
whom the vile blows and buffets of ..,lf,,c/.,//i iii l 

111 such alove, so vile alout KiufjJohn, ii. 2 

this vile drawmp bias, tliis sway ... _ ii •> 

most base and vile concluding peace — ii'a 
by the merit of vile Kold, dross 

in the vile prison of afflicted V. 

makes nice of no vile hold 

ymir vile intent must needs '."... _ 

both our tongues held vile to name . — 

tliere's no respect how vile Itiehard II. 

and but for these vile suns illenryir 

ol tins vile politician, Bolingbroke .. _ 
privilege with vile participation .... _ i 

holdup thy head, vile Scot — 

but in vile apparel, and send you iHcnriill' 

keeping such vile company 

with Erebus and tortures vile also . . 

why liest thou with the vile 

strike sail to spirits of vile sort! .... 
let vultures vile seize on his lungs .. 

O viper vile! the solus in thy 

O braggard vile, and damned furious 
is not so vile a sin, as self-neglecting — ii. 4 
of penny cord, witb vile reproach .. _ iii 
four or ave most vile and ragged foils — iv. (cho ) 
be he ne er so vile, this day shall .... — iv 3 

of thy vile outrageous crimes \Uennjri. iii' 1 

scoffon, vile fiend, and shameless..,. _ iii. 2 

with other vile and ignominious _ ivi 1 

all 'long of this vile traitor Somerset — iv. 3 

IS more vile, than is a slave _ v3 

wicked and vile; and so her death . . _ v.' 4 
great men oft die by vile bezouians.2 Henry;'/, iv! 1 

let the vile world end _ y. 2 

to draw me in these vile suspects ..'diehard 111. \. 3 

tis a vile thing to die iii 2 

1 bade the vile owl go learn me'.'Tr'oilus» Cress, ii! 1 

you vile abominable tents _ y. 11 

recompense have praised the vile.. Timon of.ilh. \. 1 

him vile, that was your garland Corinlanus i 1 

to illuminate so vile a thing JuUusCcesu/', i! 3 

dare the vile contagion of the night? 
who is here so vile, that will not love 
I can raise no money by vile means 
hard hands of peasants their vile trash 
when your vile daggers hacked one. . 

I do find it cowardly and vile 

by this vile conquest shall attain ..!! — 
tliy vile lady! she has robbed.. ^»/o;iv*tVfo 
p thou vile one! Sir, it is your fault. Vumljeti. 

Iience, vile mstrumentl 

more clement tliar. vi le men ,.!.!!!! _ 

only in killing creatures vile _ 

and for that vile fault TilusAndroaia 

let their vile heads be baked — 

should therein make me vile Pericles iii' 3 

the sooner her vile thoughts _ iv. (Gower) 

that can make vile things precious Lear, iii. 2 

flesh and blood, my lord, is grown so vile — iii. 4 
out, vile jelly! where is thy lustre now? _ iii. 7 
wisdom and goodness to the vile seem vile — iv. 2 
quickly down to tame these vile offences — iv. 2 

hinv stiff is my vile sense _ iv 6 

by some vile forfeit Dr.meo & Juliet i. 4 

for naught so vile that on the earth.. — ii. 3 
calm, dishonourable, vile submission! — iii' 1 
where are the vile beginners of this fray?— iii. 1 

vile earth, to earth resign iii 2 

cnntainingsuch vile matter, 80 fairly _ iii' 2 

tell me, in what vile part of this _ iii. 3 

stop thy unhallowed toil, vile Montague — v. 3 

with vile and loathsome crust llamlelA 5 

a vile phrase; beautified is a vile phrase _ ii 2 
[ffii^.J damned li"ht to their vile murthers — ii. 2 
and this vile deed we must — iv 1 

thou vile king, give me my father .... _ iv! 5 
those whom this vile brawl distracted ..Olhc'lo, ii. 3 
iny thoughts? why, say they are vile.... _ iii. 3 
tall into such vile success _ iii 3 

Tr^rr'SVo",;;^^'-,^ gucsses in thedevil's teeth — iii! 4 

VILELY— let me be vilely painted ....Much.Ado. i. 1 
an agate very vilely cut _ iii 1 

1 tell this tale vilely; I should first.. — iii' 3 

vilely compiled, profound Love's L. Us', v 2 

and prologue vilely penned _ v' 2 

vilely in the morning irep.).. Merchant of Venice, i 2 
work, so noble, vilely bound up? Winter'sTale, iv. 3 
am I not fallen away vilely since ..IHejtnjlF. iii 3 

lie speaks most vilely of you _ iii! 3 

doth it not show vilely in me iHenrrilV ii 2 

how vilely did you speak of me _ ' ii' 4 

they had so vilely yielded the town.Coriofanus, iii! 1 
how vilely doth this cynic rhyine!Vu««sC<psar, iv. 3 
duller Britain operate most vilely ..Cymtietirte v 5 
very doors and windows savour vilely. /'eir'ctei.'iv! 6 

VILENESS— aname; vilenessisso All's H'etl, ii. 3 

V ILL R thing upon the earth ..Timon of Athens iv 3 

I, -7^ torture let my life Mi's Well, ii! 1 

the vilest stroke, that ever wall-eyed. King.lohn, iv 3 

twopacesof the vilest earth \IienrylV.v 4 

for vilest things become .... Antony 6;- Cleopatra, ii! 2 

■>'. rl'Tj^Jf'^.y™*'"'"e"0<l"" ■■ ..Merry Wives, iv. 5 

V lLI.,AGE-vicar of the next village.-^ls uoii Like, iii 3 

more worthier than a village _ iii 3 

her pale-faced villages with war. . . . Diehard II. ii! 3 

boroughs, cities, villages \HenruII'. iv 3 

nothing compelled from the villages. Henry 1^ iii 6 
go we in procession to the village .... _ ' iv' 8 

will not part with a village of it _ v' 2 

the early village cock hath twice ..Richard UI. v! 3 

but, like to village curs Henry nil. ii. 4 

poorpelting villages, sheep-cotes .. . Lear ii 3 

i-ff'f'f^l^S^®' f"'° "■" *'l<=y ™eet- aH-nrv/V.'iv! 8 
VILLAGER— rather be a villager ...;ii;/i«Cm„,- i •> \ 

V ILLAGERY— of the villagery.il/irf.JV. 'jO,>.„,n 'ii \ I 
VILLAlN-'tis a villain, sir, 1 do uot .. Tempcsl, i! 2 



[ 810] 



VIL 



VILLAIN, forbear Ttm Gen of I'erona iii I 

O villain! that set this dowa _ ' iii' i 

these are the villains _ jy' 1 

peace, villain! !!!!!! iv' 1 

set down the basket, villain . . '.'.'.'.iimy Wives iv' 2 
gone but to meet the duke, villain .. — 'iv'o 
hue .and cry, villain, go [rep.) ... 



here comes" the little villain'..', 
like a rogue and a villa 



.... — IV. 6 

Tirelfth Night, ii.b 

,, ., - ,„ -. — iii. 4 Cchalleiige) 

thou thyself art a wicked villain. Meas.forMeas. 1. 2 

but precise villains they are _ ii 1 

put your trial in the villain's mouth _ v 1 

to call him villain? _ y. 1 

hark! how the villain would close'iiow — v! I 

buti am aplaiu-dealing villain MuchAdu, i. 3 

not take pity of her, I am a villain . . _ ii. 3 
tor when rich villains have need .... — iii 3 
most like a liberal villain, confessed — iv" I 

in the height a villain _ iy 1 

God should go before such villains! " — iv' '' 

was a villain. Writedown frfjo.) — iv 2 

to call a prince's brother, villain — iv 2 

villain I thou wilt be condemned into — iv ■' 
villain, thou art full of piety .... — iv ■' 

slandered to death by villains _ v' I 

you area villain, I jest not !! _ v! 1 

nothing but the reward of a villain . . — v' 1 
which is the villain? let me see his eyes — v 1 
no, not so, villain; thou beliest thyself — v. 1 
here, villain; drawn and reniv.Mid.N.'sDream, iii. 2 
the villain IS much lighter-heeled .. — iii i 

yi lain, thou shalt fast Love's L. Lost, i! 2 

take away this villain; shut him up _ 12 

why, villain, thou must know first .. — iii' I 

theireyes, villain, their eves _ v' 2 

a villain with a smiling cheek.. /Veic/i.o/remce, i! 3 

tair terms, and a villain's mind _ i 3 

the villain Jew with outcries raised.. — ii' 8 
on me, villain? I am no villain ..Asyou Likeil, i! I 
thrice a villain, that savs, such (rep.) — i 1 

somevillainsof my court _ ii 2 

more villain thou: well, push him !! _ iii! I 
villain, I say, knock me (rep.). Taming of Shrew, i! 2 
a senseless villain!— good Horteusio — i •> 
yourogues, you villains; when? .... _ iv' 1 

you whoreson villain! _ jv' | 

how durst you, villains, bring it from _ iv! I 

villain, not for thy life _ jy 3 

lay hands on the villain _ v' 1 

what, you notorious villain........ '.' _ y' 1 

fine villainl (rep.) _ y] j 

I'll slit the villain's nose !!.. _ y' i 

sweet villain! most dearest! Winter'sTale, i! 2 

that false villain, whom I employed — ii 1 
shoulda villain say so (rep.) .. .. _ ji' | 

1 knew the villain, I would land-damn — ii! 1 

a trusty villain, sir Comedy of Errors, i. 2 

the villain IS o'erraught of all my _ i 2 

horn-mad, thou villain? _ ji' 1 

thousand marks I gave thee, vil'la'i'n?" _ ii' 1 
villain, thou didst deny the gold's _ ii' 2 

villain, thou liest; for even her =■' " 

here's a villain, that would face me. 

villain I thou hast stolen 

to Adriana, villain hie thee '. 

ducats, villain, for a rope? 

thou whoreson, senseless villain I '!" ! 

thou villain, what sayest thou? ...! _ iv 4 

dissembling villain, thou speakest .. _ iv' 4 

out on thee, villain! _ jv. 4 

thou art a villain, to impeach. .'.! _ y' ) 

and do defy thee for a villain _ y' 1 

a hungry lean-faced villain _ y] 

thou best, thou shag-eared villain ... . Macbeth, i v! 2 

1 would not be the villain that thou — iv 3 

geese, villain? Soldiers, sir _ ys 

thou bloodier villain than terms _ y' 7 

not say so, villain, for thy life KingJolm, iii' 1 

thou hateful villain, get thee gone! (rep.) — iv 3 

second a villain, and a murderer? _ iv 3 

enough to stifle sucli a villain up _ iv 3 

that villain Hubert told me, he did live — v 1 

aresolved villain, whose bowels — v 6 

a slanderous coward, and a villain ..nichard II. i! 1 
like a false traitor, and injurious villain — i 1 

from the rancour of a villain _ i' 1 

p villains, vipers, damned without .. — iii' 2 
foul treason! villain! traitor! slave! — v 2 

I will appeach the villain _ y. 2 

hence, villain; never more come ... 
villain, I'll make thee safe 

iwas, villain, ere thy hand didset.... — 
villain, thy own hand yields thy death's — 



— IV. 4 



V. 2 
V. 3 
V. 3 
V. 5 
llain \HenrylF. i. 2 



an' I do not, I am a 

call me villain, and baffle me _ 

this is the most omnipotent villain .. — i 

I am a very villain _ ji 

the stony-hearted villains know — ji' 

cut the villains' throats _ ji' 

yourmoney. Villains! _ ii' 

p villain! thy lips are scarce (rep.) .. _ ii 

they are villains, and sons of darkness — ii 

or I am a villain else _ ii 

other injuries but these, I am a villain — iii' ; 

nay, and the villains march wide _ iv ' 

cut me off the villain's head iHcnniir ii' 

p thou honeysuckle villainl _ ii 

if the fat villain have not transformed — ii'' 

Villains will make the word captain — ii' , 

ah, you wlioresou little valiant villain — ii' 1 

than the nine worthies; ah, villain! — ii' , 

thy mother, thou paper-faced villain _ y' < 

i-h a villain, and a bastard UenriiV iii'' 

he is a craven and a villain else _ ' iv' ; 

his reputation is as arrant a villain.. — iv ; 

how now, sir? you villainl _ iy' f 

here is a villain and a traitor _ iy f 

villains, answer .you so the lord I Henry y I. \ :j 

villain, thou knowest, the law _ iij 4 

a plague upon that villain Somerset. ., — iv! 3 



iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 
— iv. 10 



ICressida, iii. 



VILLAIN--loutedbyatraitorvillain.lH».ii™r/.iv. 3 
I am falsely accused by the villain ..'illenryyi. i. 3 
base dunghill villain, and mechanical — is 

an honest mau for a villain's accusation — i'z 

laugh to see the villain run away -' i 

cut both the villains' throats 

this villain here, being captain of.... 

here s a villain I H' as a book 

hesavillain, and a traitor 

stand, villain, stand, or I'll fell ..!!!! 
villain, thy father was a plasterer! ! . . 

ah, barbarous villains! 

a-h' villain, thou wilt betray me!!.!!! _ ,, ,„ 
stifle the villain, whose unstaunched.3;/ran/;'7. ii. 6 
butchers and villains, bloody cannibals! _ 

delermined to prove a villain Richard III 

villains, set down the corse 

villain, thou know'st no law of God!! — 
a murderous villain, and so still thou art — 
ah, gentle villain, do not turn awayl — 
thus rashly in the vi Uain's death .... _ i 
they were fleshed villains _ i 

the devil-there the villain stopped — i 
dull unmindful villain, why stayest — i 

1 am a villain ; yet I lie, 1 am not . . — 
every tale condemns me for a villain 
It IB the prettiest villain .... Troilus t 

die la villain then! _ 

blow, villain, till thy sphered !!! _ iy' .ij 

that Greekish whoremasterly villain — v !l 
your lordship's a goodly villain.. Timon of. 4th. iii' 3 

without a score of villains _ iii 6 (grace) 

whereat a villain's not a welcome guest — iii 6 
by killing villains, thou wast born . . _ iy 3 
always a villain's office, or a fool's .. _ iy' 3 

all villains, that do stand by thee — iv' 3 

to serve in meat to villains .' _ jy' 3 

must thou needs stand for a villain in _ y' 1 
assured, that he's a made-up villain _ v' 1 
these villains from your companies.. — v 1 
where thou art, two villains shall not be — v' 1 
where one villain is, then him abandon — v 1 

insolent villain I kill, kill, kill Corinlanus, v' 5 

tliey were villains, murderers . . . . JuliusCcesar, iii. 2 
U traitors, villains! O most bloody .. _ iii 2 

what villain touched his body _ iy" 3 

villains, you did not so, when your'. . — y! 1 

look, the villains fly! myself .'.. — y3 

thou say so, villain, thou kill'st./fn/on» SClco. ii! 5 
hence, horrible villain! or I'll spurn _ ii 5 
I am alone the villain of the earth . . — iv 6 

slave, soul-less villain, dogi _ y2 

the villain would not stand me Cijmbetine, i! 3 

but that two villains, whose false oaths — iii 3 

thou tlien look'dst like a villain _ iii 4 

some villain, ay, and singular in _ iii' 4 

villain,whereis thy lady! _ iii r^ 

close villain, I'll have this secret — iii' 5 

all-worthy villain! discover where thy — iii! 5 
Birrah, if thou wouldst not be a villain — iii i 
even there, thou villain Posthumus.. _ iii 5 

that villain hath mocked me _ iv 2 

some villain mountaineers? _ iy' •> 

alaw-breaker, a villain: yield thee. — iv'2 

thou villain base, know'st me not — iv 2 

thou villain. Cloten, thou double villain _ iv' 2 

that s due to all the villains past _ ys 

that caused a lesser villain than .... _ y' 5 
every villain be called, Posthumus . . _ y! 5 
villain boy! barr'st me my way . . TitusAndron. i. 2 
what villain was it spoke that word? — i 2 

for villains marked with rape _ iy 2 

leave you both like bloody villains . . — iv! 2 
villain, what hast thou done? (Tcp.) _ iv 2 
stay, murderous villains! will you .. _ iv'o 
find them but the empress villain? .. _ iv' 3 
why, villain, art thou not the carrier? — iv' 3 

go, drag the villain hither by _ iv 4 

villain, tlioumight'st have been _ y' 1 

peace, villain, peace! even thus — y' 1 

O detestable villain! call'sfthou — y' 1 

beastly villains, like thyself! _ y' 1 

show me a villain that hath done — y' 2 

villains, forbear (rep.) _ y' 9 

the villain is alive in Titus' house .. — y' 3 

ifa king bid a man be a villain Pericles 13 

my daughter, and thou art a villain .. _ ii' ^ 
hold, villain! A prize! a prize! _ iv' 1 

villain Leonine, whom thou hast.... — iy' 4 

wooed a villain to attempt it _ y' 1 

Qi villain, villain! his very opinion (rep.).. Lear, i! 2 

this villain of mine comes under — i 2 

find out this villain, Edmund _ i' 2 

as if we were villains by necessity !. _ i' 2 

some villain hath done me wrong i 2 

now, Edmund, Where's the villain? (rep.) — ii' I 
strong and fastened villainl would he .. — ii' 1 
the villain shall not 'scape j,' 1 

1 will tread this unbolted villain into..!! — ii' 2 

the villain [Coi.A'n<.-traitor]Gloster — iii? 

villain, thou shalt find,— By the kind gods — iii' 7 

thy villainl Nay, then come on _ iii' 7 

out, treacherous villain! thou call'st ... — iii' 7 

turn out that eyeless villain — m' 1 

fools do those villains pity jv 2 

villain, take my purse; if ever thou .!.. — iv' 6 

a serviceable villain; as duteous to _ iv e 

villain, Capulet: hold me not ..Romeo ^Juliet, i! I 
a villain, that is hither come in spite — i ,'> 

;tis he, that villain, Komeo _ ;' 5 

it fits, when such a villain is a guest — i ■) 
term than this— thou art a villain .. _ iii' | 
greeting: villain am I none; therefore — iii! 1 
go, villain, fetch a surgeon. Courage — iii 1 
rogue, a villain, that fights by the book — =-' > 
Tybalt, toke the villain back again.. _ 
a damned saint, an honoxu-able villain! — 
villain, didst thou kill my cousin? (rep.) — 
the villain lives which slaughtered (re;;.) — 
that s-amc villain, Komeo. Villain.. _ 



iii. I 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 



VI L 



VILLAIN. I do niiprelicnd tliee ..Hoinro^'JiifiW, v. S 
villniii,villniii,sniiliii>;.>luiuni'ilvilluiul liaintel, i.!t 



III l» 



lllii 



finilc. 

tlitre's iicVr 11 villuin. .hu-lliii- in nil 

wliKpiUls me villiiiii/ l>ruuk9 my imto .. — 

liawily Yillninl K'miirm;lo«8 (rr;i.) — 

a villain kills my futlit-r (rrp.) — 

tt muiilcrcr iinil n villain: a slave — 

tliou iirtii villuin. You arc— n scimtor.. Olhell' 

tlittl Bays.— I pluy tlio villuin? — 

luiw am I tlien a villain, to counsel Cassio — 

villain, lie s\ire tliou prove my love — 

1 am n verv villuin else — 

if some eternul villain, some busy — 

I know liis fiait, 'tis he; villain, thou dicst — 

villain that I am (irp.) — 

1 am S|)oiled, undone by villainsl imp.') 



iii 

iii 
ii 


•J 
'.' 
:i 

4 

1 
» 


II 


3 



v. I 
— v. 1 



licie's Cassio hurt by villains 

disprove this villain, il'ttiou be'st a man — v 2 

tliou'rt not sucli a villain; speak — v.'.' 

iireeious villuin! The woman fulls — v. 2 

tis a notorious villain: take you this — v. 2 

I'll after that same villain, for 'tia — v. 2 

brinu the villain forth. I look down — v. 2 

villain! Most heathenish, luiil most .. — v. 2 
meant to have sent this ilanmed vilhiin.. — v. 2 
i-emains the censure of this hellish villain — v. '2 

VlM,AIN-t,lKK, I lie; that caused .VymMiiie, V. 5 
names me traitor, villain-likc he lies I.mr, v. 3 

VtLLAIN-SLAVE, where are my .Ruhar J III. iv. 4 

VUjLANIKS— in frame of villanies .. j1/nr/i.li<i, iv. 1 
the multiplying villunics of nature do ..Mncbelh.i. 2 
given me notice of their villanies ..'iHennjI'l. iii. I 
the villanies of man will set him.7ii/ioiio/.4(/i. iii. .1 

villanies nithful to hear Tilus.indionicus, v. 1 

thus Iwnetted round with villanies Hamlel, v. 2 

VU.LANOlIS-forcheads villanous \'^vl.Tfm|>esl, iv. I 
only receive this villanous wrong. iVcrryWircj, ii. 2 
rankest compound of villanous smells — iii. 5 
than the villanous inconstancy of .. — iv. 5 
spoke most villanous speeches ..Meas.forMias.v. I 
a secret and villanous contriver . . .is you Like il, j. 1 
so young and so villanous thisday.... — i. 1 
whose villanous saffron would have .Atrsti'ctl, iv. h 

that villanous saltpetre should {Hi;ntyll'.\. 3 

the most villanous house in all — ii. 1 

roguery to be found in villanous man — ii. 4 

a villanous coward: go thy ways — ii. 4 

there's villanous news abroad — ii. 4 

but chiefly, a villanous trick of — ii. 4 

wherein villanous, hut in all things? — ii. 4 
that villanous abominable misleadcr — ii. 4 
company, villanous company, hath been — iii. 3 
110 villanous bounty hath yet. . Tiinon of .ilhens, ii. 2 

'twixt amorous and villanous Cymheline^ v, 5 

my cue is villanous melancholy l.iar, i. 2 

to do some villanous shame .... itomeo ^Juliet, v. 3 
that's villanous; and shows a most.... Hamie', iii. 2 

U villanous! I have looked upon OllieUo,i.3 

villanous thoughts, lloderigo! when these — ii. 1 
acloset lock and key of villanous secrets — iv. 2 
the Moor's abused by some most villanous — iv. 2 
villanous whore! She give it Cassio! .... — v. 2 

VILLANOUSLY; like a pedant . r«'eW/i iVij/if, iii. 2 
my lord, most villanously .tieas. far Meat. v. 1 

VILL.VNY— in my closet? Villany .Merry li'ives, i. 4 
consent to act any villany against him — ii. 1 

villany, take your rapier — ii. 3 

pinch him for his villany — v. 5 (eongl 

but in his villany: for he both MuchAdo, ii. I 

that anv villany should be so dear?.. — iii. 3 
if it were possible any villany should — iii. 3 
but chieflv by my villanv. which did — iii. 3 
framed by tliy villany. My villany! — v. 1 
my villany they have uiion record .. — v. 1 

and fled he is upon this villany — v. I 

there's villany abroad Love'tL.LosI, i. 1 

tlie villany you teach me .. Mcrchanl of Venice, iii. 1 
he hath out- villained villany so far .AlCilVeU, iv. 3 

ay, there's the villany Taming <^ Slirew,i\. 3 

to be revenged for this villany — v. 1 

let villany itself forswear 't IVinler't Tale, i. 2 

thou little valiant, great in villany !.A'iMg-/o/m, iii. 1 

lit for bloody villany, apt. liable — iv. 2 

for villany is not without such rlicum — iv. 3 
wherein crafly, but in villany? ....\ Henry IT. ii. 4 
Falstaft' do, in the days of villany? .. — iii. 3 
unpuv the villany you have done ..2I1enryiy. ii. 1 
tlieir'villany goes ogainst my weak .. Henry V, iii. 2 
murder, spoil, and villany — iii. 3 

1 clothe my naked villany in old .. Illchard III, i. 3 
your faces your reeking villany.. 'A"io«n//l/A. iii. G 

cursed nature, but direct villuny — iv. 3 

do, villanv, do, since you profess to do't — iv. 3 
in me. 'lis villany; in thee .Anionii frClenpatra, ii. 7 
shall be thought put on for villany .Ci^mtedne, iii. 4 
what villany soe'er I bid thee do .... — iii. 5 
r«»t3 us. but the villany of our fears — v. 2 
and scorn o' the other's villany? .... — v. 4 

by villany I got this ring — v. 5 

anil be villany less than twas! — v. 5 

by kind for ra|)e and villany ....TilutAndron. ii. I 
to villony and vengeance consecrate — ii. 1 
a verv excellent piece of villanv .... — 
how this villany doth fot me with .. — 

endure this nionstnms villany? — 

docs iKCome black villany ..I'ericirt, iv. i (Gower) 
() villany! ho! let the door Iw locked .. HamW, v. 2 
O mi'.lress, villanv hath made mockii ..Uilietio, v. 2 
villuny. villany, villany! (>'/!.) — v. 2 

VI.V.VKJKK— mort du vinaigre! AlftH'ell, ii. 3 

VI .VCK.NTIO, come of the (rep.) .. Taming nT.^li. i. 1 

Vincentio's son? (r^p. ii. I) — i. 1 

get a father, called, •<up(K)6Cd Vinccntio — ii. I 

Vincenlio of I'isa (rrp. Iii. 2) — iii. I 

make liini i;lnil to seem Vinccntio 

the riglit Vlneentio (r»)>. iv. i oiid 

know yon lUie Vineeiilio? I know 

that you are like to sir Viiieentio . 

luy name is called, Vinceutio 



ii. 3 



— IV. 4 



1) - 



_ iv. 2 



[jn] 

VINCENTI()--willioldVinconllo.7'ainiiiy<)/'S/i.iv. 5 
mineolil nnisler Vinceulio? now wo — v.' 

thy master's fi.ther, Vinccntio? — v. I 

tolhr hiiiils of me siKiiior Vineeiitlo — v. I 

Vl.\('i:itl'.-l!oouiTius vincerc posse ..illenni''!. i. 4 

AIN'DH'A ri\ I'. Iliun jeuloils. /Vm/iii .S-OrniV/a, iv. .'i 

vim;, v\lio^e wiukiiess, nmrrieil.r.'oinc/i/'l''/wr<,r», ii.2 

viiKs. with elustering biiiielies. '/■(•i/i;;f»(, iv. I (song) 

her vine, the merry cheurer Henry I', v. 2 

like toawitheieil vine that droops..! Hiriin/'''. u. ^ 
Slimmer fields, and fruitful vines ..niiliard III. v. 2 
eat in safety under his own vine ..Henry fill. v. 4 

and like a vine grow to him — v. 4 

vines, and plough-torn leas .. Timonof AHicnt, iv. 3 
thou monarch of the winciniony ^Clru. ii. 7 (song) 

root, with the increasing vine 1 Cymbeline, iv. 2 

vines of France, ond milk of Burgundy . . Lear, i. 1 

VlNEOAKandjieiiper TiielfHiMahl.iii. 4 

other of such vinegar aspect.. Ueri'/iu?i/f!/'''""'«^. !■ I 

to borrow a mess of vinegar 'illeiniill'. ii. 2 

VIiN'i:(;i.\. Vinegia, clii non tc vcde. ;.oe<'» /,./.. iv. ! 
VINKWDST ICol.Knt.') leaven ..Troilut (,Cress. ii. 1 

VINEYAKD-lniid, tilth, vineyard Tempesl, ii. 1 

thy pole-dipt vineyard — iv. 1 

with a viiievard backed (.rep.). .Mean, for Mens. iv. 1 
from the viiieyard to the garden leads — iv. 1 
and give ourvineyards to a barbarous. Hdi>!//'. iii. 5 
nnd as our vineyards, fallows, meads — v. 2 

VJOL— than an unstringed viol Uidnnd II. i. 3 

vou're a fair viol, and your sense I'ericles,i, I 

VIOLA— welcome, drowned Violal Tiiel/lluMgltl, v. I 

when Viola from her birth — v. 1 

do cohere, and jump, that I am Viola — v. I 

VIOLATE the honour of my child Tempest, i. 2 

that violates the smallest branch., ioi'c's/-. Lost,\. I 

defend, a knight should violate! lliclmrdll.i. 3 

ne'er before did violate so itself. Antony S/ Cleo. iii. 8 

to violate my lady's honour Cymbtline, v. 5 

VIOLATED vows 'twixt ./)s//ou Like it, iii. 2 (verses) 

A'lOLATION of sacred c\\a.Miy ..Mens. fnrMeas. v. 1 

but by the violation of my faith. . n'inler'sTale, iv. 3 

violation of all faith and troth I Henry If. v. 1 

of hot and forcing violation Henry!', iii. 3 

VIOL-DE-GAMBO [C. K.-gamboys]. . . Twelfths, i. 3 

VIOLENCE— restless violence . . Meas. Tor Meas. iii. 1 

lest your justice prove violence .. Ji'inler'sTnle, ii. I 

they will by violence tear him illenryl'l. iii. 2 

king comes, offer him no violence 3 Henry VI. i. I 

to prevent the tyrant's violence — iv. 4 

his youth, by like untimely violence! UichardUl. i. 3 
to make an act of tragic violence — — ii. 2 
you ask with such a violence . ...Henry I'll [. iii. 2 

the violence of either Antony SfCteopalra, i. 5 

the violence of action hath made you. Cymdrfinc, i. 3 

you would not do me violence I'ericles, v. I 

did violence on herself Itomeo^Juliei, v. 3 

to offer it the show of violence Hamlet, i. 1 

nor shall you do mine ear that violence — i. 2 

the violence of either grief or joy — iii. 2 

1 pray you. pass with your best violence — v. 2 

my downright violence and storm Otitello, i. 3 

with what violence she first loved — ii. 1 

a sin, wlien violence assails UB — ii. 3 

VIOLENT proceedings MerrylVivet, iii. 2 

made it more violent and immiy. Meas.fnrMcas. iii. I 
ride upon the violent speed of fire .. All's ll'ell, iii. 2 

mighty, must it be violent Winter'sTale, i. 2 

his sides, with violent hefts — ii. 1 

the violent carriage of it will clear .. — iii. I 
the expedition of my violent love ....Macheth,'\i. 3 

upon a wild and violent sea — iv. 2 

where violent sorrow seems — iv. 3 

by self and violent hands took off — v. 7 

scalded with my violent motion King.lnlni,v. 1 

for violent fires soon burn out Iticltard II. ii. 1 

ye liale me to a violent death I Henry II. v. 4 

outlive, and die a violentdeath(rp/).).2H(;;iij(r/. i. 4 
some violent hands were laid on Irep.) — iii. 2 
we may outrun, by violent swiftness. //eiirj/ /'///. i. 1 
to use violent thefts, and rob. Troilus ^ Cressida, v. 3 

too violent for a second course Coriolanus, i. !> 

proud, violent, testy magistrates — ii. I 

poisonous where the disease is violent — iii. 1 
but that the violent tit o' the time .. — iii. 2 
olmobt mature for the violent breaking — iv. 3 
and in a violent popular ignorance .. — v. 2 
such violent hands (rep.) .... Titus. -indronicus, iii. 2 
some violent death they have (rep.).. — v. 2 

wnves nor wind more violent Pericles, iv. I 

upon respect sneh violent outrage Lear, ii. 4 

repair those violent harms — iv. 7 

violent delights have violent ends. Itomen ^Jnl. ii. (i 
whose violent property foredoes itself.. Hnmic/, ii. 1 

of violent birtii. but poor validity — iii. 2 

and he most violent author of his own .. — iv. 5 
make your bouts more violent to that end — iv. 7 

it was a violent eoinniencement Olliello, i, 3 

parted with foul inid violent tempest — ii. 1 

mv hlo idv llii'iinhts, with violent pace .. — iii. 3 

VII iI.KN'f l'>T eontruriety Coriohinus, iv. ft 

V|oLr..\ Ti: rUC^"'--"" 'e63jin.'/'''"'«»*Ci«i. iv.4 

VloLKiNTl.Y liiMiie upon Comedy nf Errors, i. ! 

thuu urt violently carried away \ Henry II'. ii. 4 

von would thus violently redress ..Corio/aniu, iii. I 

if von violently proceed against him Lear, i. V 

diseliurged of IJreuth ns violently. Itomeo tf Juliet, v. 1 
VIOLET— upon a bank of violets . TirelflhMglit, i. I 
that lying by the violet. .. . Measure fur Measure, ii. 2 
and the nodding violet prows ..Mi'J. A'. 'tDrcum, ii. 2 
daisies pied, and violets bine, torc'i/.. /.OS'. V. 2 (song) 

violets, dim, but sweeter than ll'inier'sTale, iv. 3 

throw a (Krfume on the violet King Jotin, iv. S 

who are the violets now Hieliatd II. v. 2 

the violet smells to him Henry!', iv. 1 

violets, cowslipi, and the primroses., t'l/'ilw'""') i. (> 
blowing iKdow the violet, not wagging — iv. 2 
the purple violets, ami nmrigolds .... I'ericirt, w. I 
a violet ill the viiutli of priinv iiutiire ..Hamlet, i. 3 

I wniilil ;;ivc vim some violets — iv. .'i 

and unpidlutcd llcsh may violets spring! — v. I 



VI R 



n thy HenryV. II. I 

itreileniption!«iWi,.r.'/7. iii. 2 



■VIPER vilcl the soil 
viiicrs, damned will 

-hy. they are vipers (,.,,.;.. V, .„;„.. •*(■,,,.,./„. iii 
the viper, lliul woiilil .|ejin|iiihite.<',„ ,„/„,m.<, iii 



I am 

V here is tliut 

virKKo('s-i^ 



iig thi 



a vipi 



. I//. 



riilillc) 
. (Illirllf,, V. 2 
an/ I I. Iii. I 
>.^;»i<i, iii. I 



_ sialic] 

VIK Biipit, qui panca loiiniliir Loee'iL.Losi,iv. 2 

VI ItAUt (-sneh a virago tO,(.-firagiO • TuelfihN. iii. 4 

^■Ili(;lLIA, turn thy solenini ?? Coriolantu, i. 3 

ViU(;IN—if a virgin, and your afl'ectioii.'/Vmpef', i. 2 
break her virgin knot before all — — iv. I 
white cold virgin snow upon my heart — iv. I 

hail, virgin, if you be Measurefor Measure, i. 6 

play with all virgins so — i. 5 

that slew thy virghi knight ..Much Ado, v. 3 (song) 
withering on the virgin thorn.. Wirf.A.'i Dream, i. 1 
ere I willyield my virgin patent up — i. I 
of noble sort, would so offend a virgin _ — iii. 2 
a virgin. It was so varied (reji.) . .Love's L. Lost, i. 1 

but, damosella virgin, was this — iv. 2 

by this virgin palm, now kissing .... — v. 2 
best-regarded vir^'ins of our clime Mer.of I'enice.V). I 
says the silver, with her virgin hue? — ii. 7 
when he did redeem the virgin tribute — iii. 2 
a poor virgin sir. an ill-favoured .At you Like it, v. 4 

how virgins might blow up men? All'.' ll'ell, i. I 

and there was never virgin got — j. ' 

is metal to make virgins — ;■ ■ 

though therefore I die a virgin — i. 1 

he that hangs himself is a virgin — — i. 1 
JJiaiia, no queen of virgins, that would — j. 3 

thut e'er I heard virgin exclaim in .. — i. 3 

a poor unlearned virgin, when — i. 3 

some precepts on this virgin — iii. 5 

young budding virgin Taming of Shretr, iv. b 

wear upon your virgin branches . H' inter sTatr, iv. 3 

your fresh fair virgins, and your Henry I', iii. 3 

beguiling virgins with the broken seals — iv. 1 
with the virgin crimson of modesty — v. 2 

sweet virgin, for our good I Henry I'l. iii. 3 

a virgin, and his servant, say to him — v. 3 
a virgin from her tender infancy ..•" — v. 4 

forsooth, she is a virgin pure — v. 4 

force a spotless virgin's chostity iHenryVI. v. 1 

yet a virgin, a most unspotted \i\y. Henry I' III. v. 4 

less valiant than the virgin Troilut Sr Cress, j. I 

virgins and hoys, mid-age and wrinkled — ii. 2 
let not the virfin's cheek make ..'TimontifAlli. iv. 3 
giving our holy virgins to the stain.. — v. 2 
or the virgin voice that babies ....Coriolanus, iii. 2 
and on her virgin honour will not ....rericles,ii. 5 
my masters, you say she's a virgin? .. — iv. 3 

I still mv virgin knot will keep — iv. 3 

but for tills virgin that doth prop — iv. 6 

thy name, my most kind virgin? — v. 1 

here she is allowed her virgin croiits . . Hamhl, v. 1 

VI KG! N AL shall be to me even 2 Henry ri.v.i 

virginal palms of your daughters ,, .Coriolanus, v. 2 

without any more virginal fencing I'ericles, iv. 6 

VIHGIN.\LING upon his palm? .. Winter' s'l ate, i. 2 

VIRGINED it e'er since Coriolanus. Wi 

VIIUJINITIES? Now, the gods I'ericles, iv. B 

VlilGINITY-is pretty virginity ..M,rry ir.rej, i. 1 
would yield him my virginity. .Mcai./oi.Vraj. iii. 1 
and made defeat ot her virginity.... /l/wr/i /Wo, iv. 1 
the rich worth of your virginity . . Mid. S.'s llr. ii. 2 
if it were, I deny her virginity .... Lore' sL. Lost, i. 1 

meditating on virginity? (rep.) AU'sll'ell,}. 1 

virginity is peevish, proud, idle (rep.) — i. 1 
who is a whale to virginity, and devours — iv. 3 
he docs think he had not my virginity — v. 3 
o'the instant, green virginity !.7imoii ofAtliens,iv. 1 

age, with warrant of her virginity I'ericles, iv. 3 

crack the glass of her virginity — iv.fi 

VIKCJINIUS-ofrash Virginius.7i7M.4rii/ionicus, v. 3 

I am as woeful as Virginius W08 — v. 3 

VIKGIN-l.IKE without? Cymlf/iiii-, iii. 2 

VIKGIN-VIOLATER; is it not .Meas.for Meas. v. I 
VIR(;0— good bov, in Virgo's lap .TilusAndron. iv. 3 
VIKTUE-the very virtue of compa66iou.7'CTiprs/,i. 2 

thy mother was a piece of virtue — i. 2 

for several virtues have 1 liked several — iii. I 

is in virtue than in vengeance — v. 1 

the gentleman is full ot virtue .TiroGen.ofl'er. iii. I 

a sweet virtue in a maid — iii- 1 

a special virtue, for then — iii. I 

she hath many nameless virtues (rep.) — iii. I 

is a woman's only virtue (rrp.) — iii. 1 

make a virtue of necessity , 

thrust virtue out of our hearts .. 
is it a world to hide virtues in? . 

virtue that trongrcsses, is but — 

is but patched with virtue — 

pood my moupe of virtue, answer me — 

virtue is beauty — 

waste thyself upon thy virtues . . Meas. for. Meas. i. I 
for if our virtues did not go forth ... 
I believe to be most stroit in virtue. 

and some by virtue fall 

from thee; even from thy virtue!... 
poad us on to sin in loving virtue... 

vour virtue hath a 1 icence in 't 

that it becomes a virtue 

hath made an assay of her virtue... 
virtue is bold, and goodness never . , 

the whitest virtue strikes 

grace to stand, nnd virtue po 



..dMeny Hives, v. 5 
. Tirelftli Mglit, i. 3 



— i. I 



iii. I 
iii. I 
iii. I 



th in virtue, I am atfionccd. 

and 1 know her \irtue 

stiifl'ed with nil honourable virtues 

can virtue hide itself? 

and never gives to truth and virtue., 
you may susjicct him, by virtue of your 



then we And the virtue, that imtwcssion 
by no maii'ii virtue, nor eullicicucy . . 



Much Ado, i. I 



vm 



.Much.iclo, V. I 



VIRTUE-thy particular virtues 
the trumpet of liis own virtues .. _ y.. 

and all tl.etaith.tlie virtue of my lieart — iv. I 



[ 812] 



VIS 



lu..- virtue's gloss (if virtue's ....Loie'sL.LoatAi 1 
of all that virtue love for virtue loved — iii i 



by virtue thou entorcest laughter.... _ „, 
the virtue of your eye must Break .. _ v ' 
your nick-namevirtue: vice youshoiild - v' i 
■V irtue 8 ofliee never oreaka men's trotli _ v' ' 
ot wondrous virtues; sometimes ..Mer.oryenice \ 1 

some mark of virtue on his _ -'ii [ 

I might in virtues, beauties, livings". _ ;;;' \ 
61 lenco bestows tliat virtue on it, madam — v" I 
had known the virtue of the ring _ v 

praise her for her virtues ".'.As you I ike il \ 2 

virtues, gentle master, are sanctified — "ii" 3 
shall see tliy virtue witnessed every — iii" 9 

the right virtue of the medlar _ \;\ \ 

not change for your best virtue _ iii'o 

virtue is no liorn-malter _ \J\ 

only peace-maker; much virtue inif — v' 4 
and your virtue, well deserve it.... _ v' 4 

of necessity hold his virtue to you ....All's Well \ 1 
they are virtues and traitors too ... _ ';" 

tliy blood, and virtue, contend for _ j' 1 

wlicn virtue's steelv bones look bleak — i' 

IS a virtue of a good wir.g _ : j 

beauty, wisdom, courage, virtue' _ ;;' 1 

thou dislikestofvirtue for the name — ii •< 
great additions swell, and virtue none — ii' % 
VI rtue and she, is her own dower . . _ \\"\ 

of your birth and virtue gives you " _ \\' % 
reposingtoofar in his virtue, which 'he — iii' fi 
purvirtues would be proud, if onr .. _ jv' ° 
It they were not clierislied by our virtues — iv' ' 

drunkenness is his best virtue _ iv" ■ 

I put you to the use of your own virtues - v 1 
since you lack virtue, I will lose . _ V\ 
I study virtue, and that part ..Taniing of Shrew i I 
by virtue specially to be achieved... _ i 1 
this virtue, and tills moral discipline — i 1 
tiiy virtues spoke of, and tliy beauty _ j;' 
her new-built virtue and obedience.. _ i'\ 
for calumny will sear virtue itself. Winter' sTale. ii' I 
when they have approved their virtues _ iv 
for which of his virtues it was . . _ \l' -' 

there s no virtue whipped out.. '" _ Iv 9 
my name put in the book of virtue! _ \l •> 

that must be i' the virtue of your _ ; v" % 

remember her, and her virtues . . ' _ ^ i 

her sober virtue, years Comedy of Errors, iii 

apparel vice like virtue's harbinger.. 1 ' 9 
wit , n'f-:";'"''' "'".' P'^a'i like angels . MachelkX 1 
witli tins strange virtue, he hath r. — iv 5 

upon the maiden virtue of the crown. A'iH "John ii' 1 
sliould go in search of virtue .... ■^"'=^°'"». >i- 1 

in beautj', virtue, birth " _ j", 

my virtue then shall be, to say ..'.■;.■.■ _ h 2 

that tliere were some virtue _ v 7 

1 espy virtue with valour couched .'.'Richard II \ % 
there IS no virtue like necessity f. ' •■"'"'^'' "• • \ 
60 shall my virtue be his vice's bawd _ v 3 

the virtue ofth.sjest will be \HenryIV i 2 

IS there no virtue extant? i\ , 

I see virtue in his looks _ .- ' T 

tliereisvirtueinthatFalstaff ...'.'.■." _ ; "1 
a virtue that was never seen .... _ ;; 1 

If louwertanywaygiventovirt'ue _ '3 

virtue IS of so little regard 2He,uvIV \ t 

grant that, my poor vfitue, grant.: !!!■' '; " 4 

111 very ample virtue of his father .. _ iV 1 

vi,!?,,'!". 'I'tl'ls" virtue in him Ilem-,, r. ii 7 

hp« f,i « *'^' <lf e"»"g to command. 1 Uemy yi. i. 1 

bethink thee on her virtues _ v q 

lier VI rtues graced with external ...'. _ y 5 
virf,f» /i M ^T=f li.onour, and virtue.2 Henry I'l. \\ \ 
vn tue IS choked with foul ambition _ iij 
virtue IS not regarded in _ ;■'-' 9 

tis virtue, that doth make t'h'e'm'.'.V.'sH. 
love, which virtue begs, and virtue . . 
beauty s imam, and thy virtue . .7. . . 
root was fixed in virtue's ground .. . 

dnlihTrn!"'^'-' "'''■''l? °f y°»'' years.ffic/M, 
daubed his vice with show of virtue 
your bounty, virtue, fair humility . 
two props of virtue for a christian .. 
pawned his kniglitly virtue., 
that virtue must go tlirough 
by whose virtue (the court of Rome 
note sta en pfyour many virtues.... _ ;;' 5 
two reverend cardinal virtues.. . _ ;;; , 

since virtue finds no friends . ' ' _ • ' 
ypu wrong your virtues with the's'e".'.' _ iii' 
tisyirtue; his faults lie open.... _ J ' .1 

their virtues we write in water . _ ■ 

t-iiristendom shall ever speak his virtue - 



iv 


.7 


V 


'2 


/' I 


2 


] 


3 


n 


1 


11 


1 


11 


3 


y 


5 

2 


111 
iii 


1 
2 


JV. 


8 


'i.' 


5 


i. 


6 

7 



ryvi. 



■ llenryVni. i. 2 



t will deserve, for virtue 

and, by that virtue, no man dare 
by virtue of that ring, I take 

?.f-fT' i?n' '^"f' *'"''■ ^'■'''"'' than this 
w ith all the virtues that attend 

IS, as a virtue, fixed Troi'l'u's * C. 

tliere IS no man hath a virtiU 
gentleness, i-irtue, youtli, liberaii'ty'! '. 
lies, rich in virtue, and unmin^led 
a man distilled out of our virtues.... - 
yet all his virtues, not virtuously 
andyour virtues the fairer ' 

as when his virtues shiiiing'up'o'n.'.'" I 
O let. not virtue seek remuneration .. 
insilence hold this virtue well 

fl«';Vil'""i''l V'- '" ^'''<='' tlie Greci'ans 
as m gratefu virtue I am bound. Timo 
noble mmd, illustrious virtue 
BonTn V" f°f '° your virtues (rep.-)'.'. 
setting his fate aside, of comely virtues 
gainst the stream of virtue they may 



— V. 2 



«a, i 



VIRTTTi, thy yirtnesettheminto.nmono/ J//, iv •! 
even to the altitude of his virtue ....Coriohmusi I 
your virtue is, to make him worthy ''°™"""''' !• 
that valour is the cliiefest virtue .... _ ; " 
like he virtues which our divines lose - ' 3 

w-hn lack not virtue, no, nor power _ ;''' • I 

60 our virtues lie in the interpretnti'o'n _ 
the virtue of your name is not here — 

I know that virtue to be in yon. . . . JuliusCccs 
will change to virtue, and to worthiness _ 
the even virtue of our enterprize . _ 

by the right and virtue of my place! i _ 
laments, that virtue cannot live .. _ 

according to his virtue let us use him — 
whose virtue, and whose .... Anlony &- Clcopalr 
and ambition, the soldier's virtue _ 

let not the niece of virtue ' ' _ 

Lordoflordsl O infinite vi'r't'u'ef'.'! " _ 
she esteemed him and his virtue .... Cymheli, 
Blie holds her virtue still .. . ^jmueu, 

ga ther their several virtues ... ! _ 

nave told this tale for virtue " " _ 

comparative for your virtues . .■.'.■.' " ' _ ,, •< 
than they are to their virtues.. _ ;\ a 

as -would take in some virtue .. ' " _ ; 9 
the virtue which their own consc'i'e'n'ce _ ii' b 
let his virtue join with my reouest . . _ v 5 
be was as calm as virtue ...... _ „' ? 

the temple of virtue was she " ' ' _ Z' I 

seat, to virtue consecrate Titu's'Andronicn, i 1 

sweet cell of virtue and nobility _ ; 9 

eternal date, for virtue's praisel... " _ 9 

virtues will, I hope, reflect on Kome" — '2 

nephew here in virtue's nest.... _ ,- 9 

iiitame that died in virtue's cause " _ ;' 2 
virtue stoops and trembles at her frown _ j ' \ 
tne king of every virtue gives renown ..Pericles i' I 
I 1 show the virtue I have borne .. •• 'f «"'. • 
1 held It ever, virtue and cunning were - iii 2 
much less in blood than virtue .° _ Iv 4 

thouart a piece of virtue ... _ j,, » 

with other virtues, which I'll ke'e'p ftom _ v' 6 

virtue preserved from fell '^ _ v 3 (Gowe'r) 

tliee and thy virtues here I seize upon Lw i 1 
an essay or taste of my virtue. . . • • • ■ ^«» - 1- 1 

pt any trust, virtue, or worth .... "" ;; 1 

bis virtue and obedience doth this .'.""■ -J ii 
and thou simular man of virtue tliat ...'.' _ iii' 2 
all you unpublished virtues of the earth _ iv t 
minces virtue, and does shake the head.. _ iv' 6 

trust to thy single virtue _ I'i. 

friends shall taste the wages of their Virtue - v 3 
?irtu^f?J»!?t"y virtues excellent.. Borneo */«i. ii! 3 
rw , L ' ''■"^ '.I'^P^ ^'.'=^' '^'^'"g misapplied - ii 3 
dotli besmirch the virtue of his will . . Hamlet i t 
virtue Itself 'scapes not calumnious . _ ' ' 3 

their virtues else, (be they as pure as grace - i i 
but virtue as it never will be moved _ \ I 

??';,'' y"''"«^^"ll bring him to his wonted _ iii ? 
virtue cannot so inoculate our old stock.. _ i 
show virtue her own feature 

calls virtue hypocrite ... 

to flaming youth let virtue be' 'a's'wax.'.' ' 

forgive me this my virtue _ 

virtue itselfofvice must pardon beg"!'!' _ iii' 4 
a3siimeavirtue,ifyou have it not .... _ 4 

tlie sense and virtue of mine eye! " _ w \ 

my virtue, or my plague, be it eitli'e'r ".'.'.'. _ j v 7 
from all simples that have virtue under _ iv 7 

if virtue no delighted beauty lack Olhello i 3 

not m virtue to amend it. Virtue? a fig I _ ' 3 
tis to his virtue a just equinox .... _ 

prizes the virtue that appears in Cassio ii — 
so will I turn her virtue into pitch . , _ 

tTie hf/,;'"'"'' il' these are more virtuous. . _ „,. a 
f 2H = -T?u^'""!'''"''''e''mbitionvii-tue! _ iii 3 
tlie devil their virtue tempts ... _ v' 1 

VlR TiTni'ra "'"''.V^ ""= "'"" °*' accide'n't ".'. - i v.' 
VIRTUOUS gentlewoman ..TwoGen. of Verona iv i 

that IS a virtuous mind MerruWive., i I 

the modest wife, the virtuous ireaturef -iv' 2 
"hats she? A virtuous maid .... I-i/WftAMW,/ i' 9 
yet I suppose him virtuous ^__y"'-^'J">f^'''''- 2 
because thou art virtuous, there slmll _ i3 

cornml-Ti«,°vf.?'''''' C«P-).i>/ea«<re.ftri)/^a>ure, ii.' 2 

coriupt with virtuous season . ii 9 

as It IS virtuous to be constant in'a'ny _ i ' •> 
another virtuous; yet I am well ...... Much Adn i i 

virtuous or I'll never cheapen ^er '; ' _ ""' " , 
put o all suspicion, she is virtuous .. _ i ' 
? vir''„;!>''^"'i,'"'f''i''e^" j"^"^""! virtuous _ V 
a virtuous bachelor and a mmd.. ..Mid.N.'sDr ii 



VrRTUOUSJoanofArc ) Henry r, ii 2 

the virtuous lady, countess of Auvergi e 1"^ ' I 

good lords, and virtuous Henrf ^ Z i ' T 
valiant and virtuous, full of haughty _ Vy 
1 ilnng of the lady's virtuous gifts . . Z v' 

of kings; virtuous, and holy.. Z' 4 

1 mean, of virtuous chaste intents . . " _ Z' i 
nephew virtuous Henry (rep. v. V) lillenrvFl i 2 
the duke is virtuous, mild. _ ,-,; f 

my son my virtuous deeds bel'iind ' '.'.'illemy VI ' 2 
Jliat virtuous lady Bona •■'■nLniy i' i.u. i 

f^,S;IJ 5'"'^'^'^"°"=' therefore 'del'ay 'not _ !' 3 
famed for virtuous (rsn.) ^ _ •"■ ^ 

the king is wise and virtuous.. ■.■.■■."■/«c/,„,.w ,;; V 1 
untimery fall of virtuous Lanci ter-'. l" '"• '] 
be was gentle, mild, and virtuous.... _ l, 
virtuousand a christian-like conclusion ' _ i 3 
ivHv^y"''"""'^''"'' ■''''« deep vice! _ jM 
bad virtuous uncles to protect his _ I ' i 

tins virtuous prince take on himself _ ii ; 7 

viri,*!^,"" ""f f"',''' ■;°y*' ''"'3 gracious _ i"' 4 

virtuous and holy, be tliou conqueror ! _ v' 3 
he was so virtuous, kept him ...... H>-nry IIII \\ 2 

WW Vit"" \ ??"''' "f^''^ be virtuous ■- • ■ 2 

what though I know her virtuous _ i ' 9 

the archbishop's, the virtuous Cranmer _ i,' f 

to give her virtuous breeding Z i' 9 

?b''eseeTvi=^';;iT'''="->°''' •••^'•"«"'*<^"«- «i>' 
i neseeoh you, call a virtuous sin .... _ iv 4 

thy honourable virtuous lord.. Tunon of Athens iii 2 
if his occasion were not virtuous . J'"^^'> • j 
takes virtuous copies to be wicked .'. _ \\\ \ 
no'lhouHi'it ,vpr'^ virtuous. . , . Coriolanus, i .' I 
no, tiiougli It were as virtuous to lie _ v2 

let It be virtuoui;, to be obstinate .... _ Z' \ 

more fair, virtuous, wise, chaste Cymbeline i 5 

tender air, thy virtuous daughter. ... ''■"™'""'' '• * 

bad quarrel slain a virtuous son .. Titus Andron i 2 
as of a most virtuous princess ...... ..PericllT\\ i 

tlien as you are virtuous as fair ... _ ' ' ? 

1 11 do any tiling now that is virtuous.'. — iv t 
a plot upon her virtuous husband's life _ iv 6 
r^n'Tf ''1"'^ "-e'l-governed youth. Romeo ^Jutiei' 
a good lady, aud a wise, and a virtuous _ i 
I warrant, a virtuous: where is your _ i 



iii. 2 
iii. 4 
iii. 4 



ii.3 
ii. 3 
ii.3 



where virtue is, tliese are more v'irtno„= 

VIKIUOUSLY are placed.. ■/K'oGen.o/Tfroim iv \ 

I was as virtuously given 1 Ha'irv/r 'iii ' I 

not virtuously on his own part.. Tmihat Cress ii 3 
we are so virtuously bound . . . . Timonor 4tZm i 2 

^iJ'^GE-bea.TS m his visage no . . Tnelfth Mirht iii 2 
se tied visage and deliberlte .... Meas.fonVea ' 1 
satisfy the Seputy with the visage '-""'"""■ '"• ' 

show your knave's visage, with r _ v 1 

doth behold her silver visage .... Mid.N Dream i 1 
mine eyes do loath this visLe iowl 1_ iv' 

wl L""-""^' displayed, to t^k.. ..Love'sL.Loslv 2 
wpse visages do cream and mautle.il/o-. „/• re, .i i 
with bleared visages come forth .. _ iii 9 

i^v tliU, '^''ili'''-'' *"* importing visage. M'sjrell. v' 3 
my trespass byits own visage .... }i inter's Tale i 2 
hides not his visage from our .... ""^'^_f_^ "'<■. '■ ^ 
desiring eyes upon his visage ....'."itichard II I' t 
on the visage of the times °...:.....2Henruir]\ \ 

put up Iier lovely visage? .....Heni/y v' 2 

and untempering effl-ct of mv visage. "' _*"^- Z' l 
let me view his visage being dead. 7.. 2 Henn/T/ v I 

n h""? 'IT';^'?-" ^''^° fair visage. We,"-y/-y// iii' 2 
and to behold his visage .... Trollns <S- c/e.^iJn Id i 

aspect, a visage of demand... .7V„iL\^'Zl";'? 
to mn?1?1.yP°" ''"!"' "^""-Se "^'''^s .... Coriolann's, .' 9 

to mask thy monstrous visagel luliusCn-sar ii I 

ough tliy visage up with her. . AHony%cieo i "'li 

slie 11 flay thy wolfish visage leal \ i 

aplague uponyour epileptic visage! ■•••^™''.| i 

a case to put my visage in Romeo '& Juliet i I 

nnr the dejected 'havlour of th" ' tj'""'?', ■• 4 



... ii.e uejecuea naviour of the visage . . Hamlet ■ 
all his visage wanned; tears in his eves 'i ' : 

hilJ f. r°4-"'"?.Y''''e<'' a"d pious action _ i ' 1 
but to confront the visage of offence? .. _ ■ ' 

withtristful visage, as against _ ; 

trimmed in forms and visages of duty .'. Olhelh 
I saw Othello's visage in his mind ""^"o, 

that was as fresh as r)!.^Ti'o .7;c„„o 



— IV. I 



of Athens, i. 2 



ws with this virtuous duke?.. i.„„„ 5, . i,„„ „ , 
your father was ever virtuous .... Mer ofyentZ i 9 

wraT/orvSisr-^^'^'^ ■•'^''-""-V' 

and my Rosalind is virtuous';;!!;::' _ iv 1 

mind carries virtuous qualities All's Well { 

aged honour cites a virtuous youth . _ ' " - 
one fair and virtuous mistress fall.... _ ij^ 

If Blie be all that is virtuous _ ■, 

place when virtuous things proceed . . _ - i ^ 
dpTv, J?S virtuous for the contempt _ f " I 
if. ^„f the most virtuous gentlewoman _ iv 5 
fortune with his virtuous deeds. 7'nm,-„.,„/-j5/,re«'i 1 
called Kathanna, fair, and virtuous' "-'Z ^'i,'' 
unto Uianca, fair, and virtuous . ' _ ;?" 1 
most patient, sweet, and virtuous wife _ iii 9 
a virtuous and a reverend luAj ..Comedii ofFrr"' 1 
a good and virtuous nature may recoil., i/ucte/,'iv-' 3 
thou virtuous Dauphin, alter not ..AV ,'"}„/„, 'jiT- \ 
"ud yet there is a virtuous man ....Mlenryiy i\ 4 
need to be; virtuous enough . ■■••""'"^" ■]'■ * 
they ofi"end none but the virtuous"" _ 'q 

and say nothing, he is virtuous ....'^llenmiy ii' 1 

come, you virtuous ass ■■■-tienryii .u. \ 

virtuous, civil gentlewoman? (ren!)'" _ 4 

from every flower the virtuous sweets _ i J' I 



VISIBLE an enemy : Winter', Tni/ 

tiiori visible god, that solder'st..r™o '^'"'"'' 
1 this visible shape.. ^,i/oi,„ , 
actions were not visible .Cy» 



cannot hold this visible 6hape..^„/„„y-^c/," fv 12 
though his actions were not visible .Cy,,*;,"™; n'i 4 

-vr^cr'i"r'-Jl'e!''V'S'ble spirits Lcarivt 

^^ BLY.charaoter'dand....r„.„G;;,;;,;'re,-Z',iV7 
i; u ~;'^ a most majestic vision ....Temm-t iv 1 
the baseless fabric of this vision . . '^ ' v 

It this prove a vision of the island. . " ' _ v 1 
isthisavision? Is thisadream? ..Mern/lTives Ui ', 
a dream, and fruitless vision ...Wd.N.'sUream in 9 
what visions have I seen I . . . . _ ' Vv f 

I have had a most rare vision....;.'" _ iv 1 
while.tliese visions did appear .. _ fepiloguel 
to a vision so apparent, rumour .. Winter's Tale^i 2 
art thou not, fatal vision, sensible .... MacMh ii' \ 
wliich by a vision sent to her from . . 1 Henri, yi i 2 
and, inavision lull of majesty... "'"^"JJ' f^'- \- ^ 
thy mother hath had visions .Troitus X- Cressida v 3 
was a vision fair, and foTtui^ats.JutiusSJ'sar'ii'i 
the very gods_showed me a vision . . O/Xw eiv 2 
the vision which I made known ;;_'^!""''f""'' ';■ i 

I bless thee for thy vision I'rrirlr, v ? 

^4S''ii'""g this vision here, it is '.'. Hamle't i' t 

VlSIT-we'l visit Caliban, my s ave 7>,""v ' ' 2 
It seldom visits sorrow ..;..... ■ ■ -i enipcsr \ z 

whilst I visit .young Ferdina'n'd;; _ ;!; 1 

will -visit thee with mine.... 7'«oG<-',;'o/-/e,.o,m " 1 
visit by night your lady's ..." »/'"<"'«.• • 

•well,! will visit lier 'itiermWiv,, ^ 

who comes to visit Malvolio .'.'.'.'rweinh AVW,'' ii' 2 
visit both prince and people. ..... MeasforSLs i I 



VIS 



VISIT-to visit tlic nfflictcd s\nr\ts. Meat, ftir .Vtai. ii. 3 

erelong' I'll visit vim n.Miiii — iii. I 

I am goiiii; to \i>it ilic prisoner — in. a 

iironiifcil l>v this liour to visit mc MiichAilo. v. 4 

1 will visitlluu lit tlic lodge Lore'iL.Lott,]. '2 

to-morrow bIuiII \vc visit you apniii — ii- I 

what, bvit wluit, come tliey tovit.it lis? — v. 2 
we came to visit yon; aim purposo .. — 
from day to day visit tlie speecliletn.. — 



we will visit you at supiicr tinu- .Mer. affemce, ii. i 
Insfriendsi visit liis coiiiitryiiicii .TaMiiigcifUh. i. 1 
not I, believe me, thus I'll visit licr.. — in.'-' 

tliere to visit a son of mine — iv. 5 

to visit Bohemia, on the like Il'inltr ilale.i. I 

to visit the next room. I'll jiresently — !!• '-' 
and on mine, she slioiild not visit you — n. 3 

onee a day I'll visit the chapel — lii- 2 

my poor house to visit, it is a surplus — y. 3 
at suppcr-timcril visit you ..Cnmfilyo/Knors.m.2 
with all good speed ot Vlashy visit . . Kichard II. i. 2 
nil places that the eye of heaven visits — J. 3 
to entreat your majesty to visit him — \- i 

let's all go visit him: pray Clod — . i- 1 

lie means to visit us I Henri, II'. ly. 4 

asTou return, visit my house •llUnrylV. in. i 

andthere will I visit master Kobcit.. — iv. 3 

and visits all his host Henry V. iv. ( clioriis) 

to visit her poor castle w here \ Henry 1 1. ii. 2 

sort some other time to visit you — .!]-3 

to visit him to-morrow Richard II. in. 7 

1 may not suffer you to visit them .. — iv. 1 
king's request that I would visit .. Henry I'lll. iv. 2 
Diomed, visit me no more . . Troiliis ^ Creaiida. v. 2 
newly alighted, and come to visit .7'mioiio/.l"i._ i. 2 

thrive well, I'll visit thee again — ly. 3 

lady Valeria is come to visit you CorMnnus, i. 3 

you must go visit tlic good lody — i. 3 

and visit her with my prayers — .1.3 

or rudely visit them in parts — ly. 5 

drops that visit mv sad lieart JuUmCiemr.n. I 

thither will I straight to visit him .. — m- 2 

content to visit otlier places — v. I 

vouchsafing here to visit mc Antnny * Clen.y. 2 

when last I went to visit her CymWiiic, in. 5 

there will I visit Cleon, for tlie babe. . Vencles, in. 1 
yon know not why we came to visit you.. (.OTr, ii. I 

visit her face too roughly Hamlet, i. 2 

'twixt eleven and twelve, I'll visit you.. — i. 2 
before you visit him to make enquiry of — n. 1 
to visit my too much changed sou ...... — n. 2 

to visit you, my lord; no other occasion — u. 2 

VISITA'TION shows it Tempesl, iii. I 

vou have lent him visitation ..Mens. J'nr Mens. in. 2 
but peace, and gentle visitation .. Love's L. Lost, v. 2 
loving visitation was with . Her. n/ fenice, iv. I (let.) 

to pay Bohemia the visitotion n'iiiler'sTale, i. 1 

what colour for my visitation shall I — iv. 3 
'tis not a visitation framed, but forced — y. 1 
and in the visitation of the winds. .2/r'nrt/"'. '.•.'.• 1 
neglect the visitation of my friends.iJic/iard ///. in. 7 

AVolsey,) here makes visitation Henry fill. i. 1 

sir, your queen desires your visitation — v. 1 
give thee nightly visitation .TroiliisiiCressiJa, ly. 4 

and your several visitations limon o/.4lhens, i. 2 

nothing at this time but my visitation — y. 1 

your visitation shall receive such Hamlet, u. 2 

is it a free visitation? come, come — .n. 2 

this visitation is but to whet thy almost — in. 4 

■VISITED by the priest Twelfth Night, v. 1 

day's approach look to be visited MnJ.N.'sDr. in. 2 
these lords are visited ; you are . . Lore's L. I.osl. y. i 
elionld be visited upon me .Merc/ianI of I euice. in. 5 

visited that removed house Il'mler si ale, y. 2 

but strangely visited people, all svioht. Macbeth, ly. 3 

sins are visited in this uoor child Kin;'John,ii. 1 

ere he by sickness had been visited .1 Henry IF. iv. 1 
for the which they now are visited . . Henry V. \y. 1 
the good patricians must be visited .Cono/nmn, ii. I 

VISITING your highness Winter i Tale. v. 1 

no compunctious visitings of nature . . Maeheth, i. 5 
are come from visiting his majesty .Richard HI- \. -i 
apperlainments, visiting of him. 7'i()i/r«.S Crest. ii.3 

beneath the visiting moon Antony^ Clen. iv. 13 

in thi<city visiting the sick Komentt^ Juliet, y. 'I 

VISITOR will not give him o'er so Tempest, ii. 1 

from the access of gentle visitors! ll'inter'iTale, ii. 2 

thisgreat flood of visitors Timonn/Aihent.t. 1 

VISOR-my visor is Phih-mon's roof.. Much Ado, ii. I 
why, then your visor should be tliatched — ji. 1 

and but one visor remains — li. 1 

my very visor began to assume life . . — ". 1 
twice to your visor, and half once .. Love « L.L, v. 2 
what, was your visor made without .. — v. 2 

afford my speechless visor half — v. 2 

or ever, nut in visors, show their faces? — v. 2 

whichof the visors was it (rep.) — v. 2 

then, that visor; that superfluous — v. 2 

nor never come in visor to my friend — y. 2 

I have visors for you all \ Henry I y. i. 2 

our visors we will change — .1.2 

caseye, cose yc; on with your visors — ii. 2 

■William Visor of Woncot 2Heuryir.v. 1 

against that Visor: that Visor is an.. — y. 1 

a virtuous visor hide deep vice! lUehard III. ii. :■ 

no visor does liccome black . . I'ericlet, iv. 4 (Gowcr) 
a visor for a visor! what care I ..ttomeotf Juliet, i. 4 
the doy, thot I have worn a visor — — i. 5 

VISOIl-I. IKE, unchanging 3/J»nr|/f/. i. 4 

VISTEMENT— d'.\nglois vistcment .. Heiir!/*'. iii. 4 

VITA-the word, lux tua vita mihi I'ericlei.'u. 2 

■X'lT./E— integer vita;, scclerisqiie.. Titus Androu. iv. 2 
■V'lT VL— then the vital commoners.. SHifnri///'. iv. 3 

let not Bardolph's vital thread be Henryf. iii. 6 

tune bereft my vital powers illenryl'l. in. 2 

eliall seiie each vital spirit ....Itomeo ^Juliet, iv. 1 
I cannot give it vital growth again ....Dtlirllo.y. 2 
VIT.S'KSS — lH.ar vilncsi that me ..Merry " irpf, ii. 3 
VlTKUVIO-widowofVitruvio./fomfoiS J"/.i.'.'(i")te) 
^■| VA.\T— ODieu vivant! shall a few. //(■tiri/*'. iii. 5 
Vn'.V-VuCE, to his face Henry HI I. li. I 



[813] 

VIVE— shout out, vivc le royl KingJolin,v.i 

VIVt)— the motto, in hoc spc vivo I'ericlei, ii 2 

VIXEN, when she went toechool ..Mid. N.'sPr. in. 2 

VIZAMENT.S in that Merry »'ieet,'i. I 

VIZAKD-X'Ugobuy them vizards .. — ly. 1 

make our faces vizards to our hearts .Macbeth, iii. 2 

VIZARDED-nmsked and vizardcd.A/frryirirM, iy.6 

degree being vizarded Troitus ^ Cresiida, 1. 3 

VLOUTING-STOO. I desire you .Merry Wives, iii. 1 

and full of gibes and vlouting-stogs.. — iv. 8 

VOCATION, Hal; 'tis no sin (rrp}\ ..I Henry 1 1', i, 2 

willed me to leave my base vocation. 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

labour in thy vocation 2 Henry I' I. iv. 2 

VOCWTIVO— O— vocativo, O Merryllivcs, iv. 1 

VOCATUK, nehour; neigh Love's L. Lost v. 1 

VOICE— I should know that voice ....Tempest, ii. 'i 

four legs, and two voices — ii. 2 

his forward voice now is — ji. 2 

his backward voice is to utter — ii. 2 

and sometimes voices, that, if I — iii. 2 

to know him by his voice.. I'lroGen. of yerowt. iv. 2 
the hardest voice of her behaviour. Merry Hives, i. 3 

let me liave thy voice — i. 4 

in voices well divulged Ttrelflh Sight, \. A 

a mellifluous voice, as I am — ii. 3 

ony mitigation or remorse of voice?.. — _|i. 3 

my matter hatli no voice, lady — iij. 1 

nor know I you by voice — iii- 4 

to him in thine own voice — iv. 2 

one face, one voice, one habit — y. 1 

implore her, in my voice ..Measure for Measure, i. 3 

it is a man's voice — .1.5 

now the voice of the recorded law. . . . — .ii. 4 

did utter forth a voice! — iii. 1 

by the sound of jour voice — y. I 

tax not so bad a voice to slander .... Much Ado, ii. 3 
his bati voice bode no mischief ! .... — ii. 3 

with feigning voice, verses Mid. N.'s Dream, j. 1 

wanting your father's voice — j. I 

my ear should catch your voice — ;. 1 

I'll speak in a monstroiis little voice — ;■ 2 
but I will aggravate my voice so ... , — ..i. 2 
but hark, a voice! staythoubut .... — iii. I 

our sides, voices, and minds — !!!• 2 

follow my voice ; — i'i- '- 

he is a very paramour, for a sweet voice — iv. 2 

I see a voice: now will I to the — v. 1 

thy voice his dreadful thunder . . Love'sL. Lost, iv. 2 

the voice of all the gods makes — iy. 3 

too rude, and bold oC voice.. Merch,int of yenice, ii. 2 

seasoned with a gracious voice — iii. 2 

of man and boy, with a reed voice .. — iii. 4 
the duke onlv, 'gainst all other voice — iv. 1 

that is the voice, or I am much — v. I 

the cuckoo, by the bad voice — y. I 

and in my voice most welcome ..AsyoxtLikeit, ij. 4 

my voice is ragged — ii. 5 

aiid his big miiiily voice — ii. 7 

the only preludes to a bad voice? .... — v. 3 

and God mend your voices! — v. 3 

and father's voice have I to use All's irVii, ii. 3 

knows he not thy voice? — iv. I 

the grace, voice, gait. .. .Taming of Shrew. 1 (indue.) 
ear-deafening voice o' the oruule. IVinlrr'sTnlc, iii. I 
thou not know my voice? {rep. ).. Comedy of Err. y. 1 
I heard a voice cry, sleep no more I.... 'WacMA, ii. 2 

my voice is in my sword — v. 7 

whose voices I desire aloud — v. 7 

cannot hear a lady's feeble voice ..KingJohn, iii. 4 
thinking his voice an armed Englishman — .v. 2 
boys, with women's voices, strive ..Richard II. iii. 2 

our setter: I know his voice I Henry IV. ii. 2 

'^!s not your voice broken? iHenryW. i. 2 

for my voice, I have lost it — ..j. 2 

like tne voice and echo — ni- 1 

in a general voice, cried hate — iv. I 

tlie imagined voice of God himself .. — iv. 2 

which, delivered o'er to the voice — iv. 3 

mv voice shall sound as you do — v. 2 

ha"thgot the voice in liell Henry V. ii. 2 

the duke will hear thy voice — in. 6 

and our voice is imperial — iii. 

my brother Gloster's voice? — iv. 1 

BO full a voice issue I'rom so empty .. — iv. 4 
haply, a woman's voice may do some — v. 2 
for tliy voice is music, and thy English — v. 2 

having neither the voice — v. 2 

is it you whose voice I hear? I Henry n. i. :i 

to suppress thy voice — iv. I 

passage of my poisoned voice — y. 4 

witli one checrlul voice welcome ,...'i Henry yi.i. \ 
and crying with loud voice— ilesu — — i. I 
myself have heard a voice to call him so — ii. 1 

that witli his grumbling voice ■XHcnryl'l. i. 4 

thy voice is tluinder. but (ir//.) Richard III. i. 4 

that I'll give mv voice on Kichard's side — iii. 2 
in the diike's behalf I'll give my voice — iii. 4 
I mean, your voice, for crowning — — ni. 4 
and some ten voices cried, God save. . — in. 7 

miseries have crazed my voice — iv. 4 

tlian by a single voice Henry V III. i. 2 

what warlike voice? and to what end — i. 4 
your scruple to the voice of Christendom — ii. -' 

nave their free voices — .jj. 2 

voice is now only about her coronation — iii. 2 

well, the voice goes, inadom — iv. 2 

by all voices, that forthwith — v. 2 

the common voice, I sec, is verified . . — v. 2 
author's pen, or actor's voice. Troilus ff Cress, (prol.) 

her cheek, her gait, her voice — j. 1 

crowns with an imperial voice — )• 3 

which with one voice call Agamemnon — i. 3 
send thy brass voice through oil .... — j. 3 

mad sister, I do know her voice — ij- 2 

to the voice of any true decision .... — j] 2 

in second voice we'll not — .!!'3 

they that hove the voice of lions .... — iii. 2 

reverberates the voice almoin — ',''• p 

crack my clear voice with sobs — iv. 2 

divided by any voice or order — iv. 4 



VOL 



VOICE— and voice, which you do. Trollnt 4- Crest, y. 3 

in a joint and corporate voice.. '/'i»ioii»>//l(/i«ni. ii. 2 
my lord, you have my voice to't .... — iii. 4 
crack the lawyer's voice, that he .... — iv. 3 

I shall lack voice; the deeds of Coriolanui, ii. 2 

sir, the people must have their voices — ii. 2 

once, if he do require our voices — ii.3 

arc you oil resolved to give your voices? — ii.3 
in giving him our own voices with our — 'i\. -i 
your good voice, sir; what say you? — ii. 3 

there IS in all two worthy voices — ii.3 

may stand with the tune of your voices — n. 3 
therefore give you our voices heartily — ii.3 
I will make much of your voices — — 11.3 
most sweet voices! better It is to die — ii. 3 

here come more voices (r<"p.) — ii.3 

voices, have done many tliinfjs (rep.) — ii. 3 
without any honest man's voice .... — li. 3 
worthy voices! You have stood .... — ii.3 
endue you with the people's voice .. — ii.3 

he has oiir voices, sir (jfp.) — ii.3 

to yield your voices? (rtp.) — ii.3 

have five hundred voices of that sound — ii.3 
against the groin to voice him consul — ii. 3 
have I had children's voices! (rep.) .. — iii. I 

when, both your voices blended — iii. I 

one. that sneoks thus, their voice? (rep.) — iii. I 
or the virgin voice that babies lulls.. — iii. 2 
of all the voices that we have procured — iii. 3 

submit you to the people's voices — iii 3 

possedfor consul with full voice .... — iii. 3 
with a voice as free OS I do pray .... — iii. 3 

by tlie voice of slaves to be — iv. .^ 

stood so much upon the voice — iv.fi 

and pay you for your voices... — iv. 6 

you are goodly things, you voices! .. — iv. li 
and buy men's voices to commend. 7«(iuj6'rt'iar,ii. 1 
is there no voice more wortliy than.. — iii. I 

your voice shall be OS strong — iii. 1 

the voice and utterance of my tongue — iii. 1 
with a monarch's voice, cry navock — iii. I 
took his voice who should DC pricked — iv. I 

it is not Ciesar's natural voice Antony t^Cteo. i. 4 

his voice was propertied as all the .. — v. 2 

IKnt.'] it is a voice in her ears Cymieline,ii.3 

nor the voice of unpaved eunuch — ii.3 

nor my voice for thy preferment — iii. 3 

the snatches in his voice, and burst of — iv. 2 
our voices have got the mannish crack — iv. 2 
hove, by common voice, in election . Titus A ndron . i . I 
I ask your voices, and your suffrnges — i. 2 

with voices and applause of every sort — i. 2 
the common voice do cry, it shall.... — v. 3 

drawn her picture with my voice Pericles, iv. 3 

voice and favour! you are, you are.... — v 3 

the voice of dead Thoisol — v. 3 

beggars, who with roaring voices, strike . . Lenr, ii.3 
poor Tom in the voice of nightingale .. — iii. G 

mcthinks, thy voice is altered — iv. 6 

I know that voice. Ha! Goneril ! — iv. 6 

the trick of that voice 1 do well remember — iv. 6 
her voice was ever soft, gentle, and low .. — v. 3 
consent and fair according voice.. Romeo 4 Juliet, i. 2 
by his voice, should be a Slonta"ne .. — i. 5 

for a falconer's voice, to lure tliis.. — ii. 2 
[Col.} make her airy voice more hoarse — ii. 2 
changed voices too! since arm (.rep.) — iii. 5 
should be the voice of friar John .... — v. 2 

host any sound, or use of voice Hnmtei,i. 1 

to the Dane, and lose your voice — i. 2 

unto the voice and yielding of that body — i. 3 

than tlie main voice of Denmark — i. .1 

thine ear, but few thy voice — i. 3 

your voice, like a piece of uncnrient gold — ii. 2 
a broken voice, and his whole function — ii. 2 
you have the voice of the king himself — iii. 2 
excellent voice in this little organ .. — iii. 2 

1 liave a voice and precedent ot pence — v. 2 
on Fortinbras; he has my dying voice — v. 2 

whose voice will draw on more — v. 'i 

do you know ray voice? Not I Othello, i. I 

a voice potential as double as the duke's — i. 2 

throws a more safer voice on you — i. 3 

let me find a charter in your voice — i. 3 

your voices [ Kn'. -have your voice] — i. 3 

the voice of Cassio: lago keeps his word — v. I 

[*.')!/.] the voice is very direful — v, 1 

out, and alas! that was my lady's voice — v. 2 

VOICED so regardfully? 7'.inoii qr Athens, iv. 3 

■N't.>ID of all ^'iVo(tl\^tition....MeaBure,for Measure, ii. 1 
you, that did void your rheum .Merch. nfymice, i. 3 
of pity, void and eniiJty of any dram — iv. 1 
even so void is your false heart of. ... — v. I 
doth suit and void hi? rheuiii upon ..Henry y. iii. 5 

come nown, or void the field — iv. 7 

hope vou are not void of pity ^Henryl'l. iv. 7 

alliance to make void my suit Sllenryl I. iii. 3 

upon w hose age we void it up . . Timon ofAtliens. i. 2 

ITl get me to a place more \oid ..JnHusCtpsar, ii. 4 

'VOIDED-would have 'voided tliee.C<.Mo/ni.i<., iv. .'. 

VOIDING-howin our voiding lobliy.2f//.«rv( /. iv. 1 

VOl.ANT-lccheval volant HeniyT. iii. 7 

vol, K— and let poor volk pass Lrar, iv. U 

VOI.l.EY- a fine volley of words. 'riror;.-ii.o/;-<'r. ii. 4 
with a volley of our needless shot. . . . KnigJohn, v. 5 
OS his strong sides can volley. . . . Auitmy ^ Clro. ii. J 
of Eimlaiid L'ivt'S this worlike volley . . Hamtei, v. 2 

VOl.ljOKiSSEN.Touraiiie KIngJoln,. ii. i 

VOI.SCE— Volsces are in arms(rep.). .Coriolanus, i. I 

the ^'t•I sees liave much corn — i. 1 

the Volsces shunning him — i. 3 

the Volsces have an army forth — i. 3 

I'll take him for a VoUce, and he shall — i. 4 

spies of the V.ilyfcs held inc in chase — i. 6 

which of yi.ii but ^sli.iir Volsces?.... — i. « 

I cannot, lieiiig a Volsce, be that I am — i. 10 
having deterniinLd of the VoUces.... — ii. 2 

I so then the Volsces stand but — iii. I 

did curse against the VoUces, for they — iii. 1 
all the Volsces, great hurt and misch.rf — iv. t> 



VOL 



VOLCES with two several powers ..Coriota7ius, iv 6 

the Volsces dare bleak with ua _ iv. e 

let the Volsces plough Rome, and lioirow — v. 3 

Aufidius, and j'ou VolBces, mark _ v. 3 

thereby to destroy the Volsces — v 3 

wliile the Volsces may say, this mercy — v. 3 
the Volsces are dislodged, and Marciua — \. i 
I fluttered your Volsces in Corioli .. — v. 5 
VOLSCIAN— from the Volscian state — iv. 3 
a name unmusical to the Volscians' ears — iv. 5 
to see Romans as cheap as Volscians — iv. 5 
Marcius should be joined witli Volscians — iv. 6 
good husbandry for the Volscian state — iv. 7 
m.v remission lies in Volscian breasts — v. 2 
you must i-eport to the Volscian lords — v. 3 
this fellow liad a Volscian to his mother — v. 3 

VOLTIM^VND, for bearers of this Hamlet, \. 2 

say, Voltimand, whatfrom oiu' brother.. — ii. 2 

VOLUBILITY, tliat you would think.^«'s tl'i-ll, iv. 3 

then I'll commend her volubility. Taming of Sli. ii. i 

VOLUBLE is his discourse Love'sL.Losi, ii. 1 

.iuvenal; voluble and free of gracel.. — iii. l 
if voluble and sharp discourse . . Comedy of Err. ii. 1 

a knave very voluble; no further Olhello, ii. 1 

VOLUME— with volumes tliat I prize .. Tempest, i. 2 
volumes of report run with tliese. Weas. for Meas. iv.l 
I am for wliole volumes in folio ..Love'sL.Losi, i. 2 
within the volume of which time .... Macbeth, ii. 4 
this brief into as huge a volume .... King John, ii. 1 
have had a volume of farewells .... Richard II. i. 4 

tlie nature of a tragic volume i Henry W. i. 1 

would make a volume of enticing ..IHenryfl. v. f> 
to their subsequent volumes.. Troilus^Cressida, i. 3 
will bear the knave by tlie volume. CoMofauHs, iii. 3 
i' the world's volume our Britain ..Cymbetinr, iii. 4 
place upon the volume of your deeds '..Pericles, ii. 3 
o'er the volume of young Vans' .. Romeo ^ Juliet, i. 3 

what obscured in this fair volume lies i. 3 

the book and volume of my brain Hamlet, i. 5 

VOLUMNIAis worth of consuls Cnriolanus, v. 4 

VOLUMNIUS. list a word {rep.) ..JuliusCcesar, v. 5 

Volumnius: thou see'st tlie world (icn.) v. .5 

VOLUNTARIES, with lacUes' faces. . KingJohn, ii. 1 

VOLUNTARY choosing .. ..Merchant of renice,\i. 1 

themselves into voluntary exile ..Asyou Likeit, i. I 

tliy voluntary oath lives in this KingJohn, iii. ^ 

heaven be thanked, it is but voluntary — v. 1 

we swear a voluntary zeal v. 2 

1 serve here voluntary (rep.) . TroHus ^-Cressida, ii. I 

no man is beaten voluntary (icp.) ii. 1 

myself a voluntary wound'here .. Julius Cresar,il. 1 

be a voluntary mute to my design. . Cymbeline. iii. 5 

or voluntary dotage of some mistress . . Othello, iv. 1 

VOLUPTUOUSLY surfeit out of ... . Coriolanus, i, 3 

VOLUPTUOUSNESS; your wives . . ..Macbeth, iv. 3 

with his voluptuousness Antony S-Cleopatra, i. 4 

VOMISSEMENT, et la truie HenryV. iii. 7 

VOMIT— eat tliy dead vomit up 2 Henry IK i. 3 

o'er-cloyed country vomits forth ..Richard'lll. v. 3 
sliould make desire vomit em'pt'iness.Cyrnhelinr, i. 7 
like a drunkard must I vomit them. Titus And. iii. 1 

he gives your Hollander a vomit Othello, ii. 3 

VORLD— Jack priest of the vorld . . Merry Wives, ii. 3 
VORTNIGIIT-as 'tis by a vortnight ....Lear, iv. 6 

VOTARESS of -ray order Mid.N.'sDream, ii. 2 

and the imperial votaress passed on .. — ii. 2 

to Dian there a votaress Pericles, iv. (Gower) 

VOTARIES— who are the votaries. Loi'c'si..7,o.v<, ii. 1 

is one of the votaries with the king . . iv. 2 

VOTARIST— I am no idle votarist.T'imoKo/'.-l/A. iv. 3 

the votarists of saint Clare Meas. for Meas. i. 5 

would half have corrupted a votarist . '. Otiiello , iv. 2 
VOTARY to fond desire? .. ..TicoGen.qfrerona.i. I 

already love's firm votary iii. 2 

lamavotary; I have vowed Love'sL.Losi, v. 2 

VOUCH against you, and my Meas. for Meas. ii. 4 

wliat can you vouclr against him .... v. 1 

what law does votich mine own All'sWell, ii. 5 

and make my vouch as strong Henry VIII. i. 1 

whicli, I dare vouch, is more than .Coriolanus, iii. 1 

will vouch the truth of it v. 5 

tliat would vouch't in any place.. Titus Anthon. i. 2 
will his vouchers vouch him no more ..Hamlet, v. I 

I therefore vouch again, that witli Othello, i. 3 

to vouch this, is no proof; without more i. 3 

vouch with me, heaven, I tlierefore . . — i. 3 

put on the very vouch of malice itself? .. — ii. 1 

VOUCHED rarities are Tempest, ii. 1 

a certainty, vouched from our Alt's Well, i. 2 

that is not often vouclied, while 'tis ..Macbeth, iii. 4 
the spire and top of praises vouched. Conoianra, i. 9 

VOUCHER, stronger than Cymbeline, ii. 2 

his double vouchers, liia recoveries .... Hamlet, v. I 

will liis vouchers vouch him no more — v. I 

VOUCHES, misreport Measure for Measure, v. 1 

theirneedless vouclies? custom ca.\\B.Coriolanus, ii. 3 

VOUCHING— at that time vouching .Cymbeline, i. 5 

VOUCHSAFE my prayer may know .. Tempest, i. 2 

vouchsafe me yet your picture. Two Gen. offer, iv. 2 

vouchsafe me, for my meed — v. 4 

shall I vouchsafe your worship ..Merry Wives, ii. 2 
and I'll vouchsafe thee the hearing. . — ii. 2 
vouclisafe a word, young sister. Meas. for Meas. iii. 1 

my lord, if .you'll vouchsafe me MuchAdo.Vn. 2 

vouchsafe to read the purpose Love's L.Lost, ii. 1 

heavenly spirits, vouchsafe not to beliold — v. 2 

vouchsafe to show the sunsliine (rep.) v. 2 

vouchsafe some motion to it (>cp.) .. v. 2 

will you vouchsafe with me to change v. 2 

that she vouchsafe me audience for . . v. 2 

to our court: vouchsafe it then v. 2 

that you vouchsafe in your rich .... v. 2 

sweet majesty, vouchsafe mc v. 2 

mighty duke, vouchsafe me (rep.)Comcdy of Err. v. 1 
French, amazed, vouchsafe a parle .King John, ii. I 
great kings; vouchsafe a while to stay — ii. 2 
you in wisdom shall vouchsafe to say — ii. 2 
if thou vouchsafe thein; but, if not.. — iii. I 

if .you vouclisafe me hearing 1 Henry W. iv. 3 

vouchsafe to those that have not .Henry i: v. (cho.) 



[814] 



VUL 



111. 2 

iv. 2 

iv. 2 

iv. 4 

.!, ii. 2 



VOUCHSAFE to teach a soldier henry V. v. 2 

thou wnnldst vouchsafe to visit her. \Henruy I. ii. 2 
lords, vouclisafe to give me hearing _ iii 1 

lady, vouclisafe to listen what I say — v' 3 

Margaret do vouchsafe to come — vis 

as to vouchsafe one glance unto ....IHcnryVI. i" 2 

if thou vouchsafe to grant SHenry'ri. iii 3 

and Oxford, vouchsafe at our request — iii. 3 
if king Lewis vouchsafe to furnish ns — iii. 3 
vouchsafe, divine perfection (re/).).. AifAacrf/// i 2 

vouchsafe to wear tliis ring _ j 2 

cannot vouchsafe this burden Henry nil. ii' 3 

beseech your lordship, vouchsafe to speak _ ii. 3 
will you vouchsafe me a word?.7')oi/!M ^ Cress, iii. I 
vouclisafe my labour, and long . Timon of Athens, i. 1 
beseech your honour vouchsafe me a word — i. 2 

vouchsafe good-morrow from JuliusCcesar, ii. 1 

if Brutus will vouchsafe, that Antony — iii. 1 

but slie vouchsafes no notice Cymbeline ii 3 

vouchsafe me raiment, bed, and food .... Lear', ii'. 4 

you vouchsafe your rest here in our Hamlet, ii. 2 

my lord, vouchsafe me a word with you — iii. 2 
^t!^?V.^J?^'4^'"1' ■you'll vouchsafe tlie answer— v. 2 

VOUCHSAFED ear Tu-elflhNight, iii. I 

odours, pregnant, and vouchsafed ' _ iii. 1 

but that you have vouchsafed.... Wintcr'sTale,\. 3 
-.T^v'^y.Sl'i'i'!''*''''' 'o *'""k he had. ...Antony A-Cleo. i. 4 
VOUCHSAFING here to visit me .... - v2 

^SS?^-'^^? '"^' '"^''^ y°" Henry F. iii. 2 

VOW— or else good night your vowl .. Tempest, iv. I 

whose vows are, that no _ iv.l 

unheedful vows may Tu-oGen.qffero — " "^ 

fraught witlv serviceable vows 

I commend my vows 

deceived so many with thy vows _ 

or else, by Jove I vow _ 

her marriage vow, and a thousand. jt/cr>i/ Wi 

still we prove raucli in our vows .Twelfth Night, ii, 4 

for the supportance of his vow — iii. 4 

even for the vows we made _ v. 1 

swallowed his vows whole Meas. for Meas. iii' I 

by the vow of mine order iv. 2 

I am combined by a sacred vow — iv". 3 

as words could make up vowa v" I 

or to a vow of single life Mid. N.'sDream, i. ) 

by all the vows that ever men _ i. 1 

when I vow, I weep; and vows so born _ iii.' 2 

these vows are Hermia's _ iii 2 

your vows, to her and me, put _ iii. 2 

to vow, and swear, and superpraisc my — iii! 2 

Navarre hath made a vow Love'sL.Iost ii 1 

vows, for thee broke (rep.) _ iv. 3 (verses) 

vow, alack, for youth unmeet — iv. 3 (verses) 

to break the vow I am engaged in .. .. iv 3 

the causer of your vow _ iv.' 3 

a vow to study, lords (lep.) '.'. _ jv" 3 

and so hold .your vow v! 2 

breathed a secret vow Mercliaiii of Venice iii! 4 

she made me wow, that I should _ iv.l 

her soul with many vows of faith .... — v. 1 
of violated vows 'twixt . . As youLike it, iii. 2 (verse's) 

I am falser than vows made in iii 5 

she thouglit, I dare vow for her All's Well, i! 3 

blessing upon your vowsl _ ii 3 

with sainted vow my faults ~ iii. 4 (letter) 

but the attempt I vow _ iji. g 

do not strive against my vows !! iv! 2 

but the plain single vow !.. iv! 2 

his vows are forfeited to me .... —' v. 3 (petition) 

you give away heaven's vows _ v. 3 

for I by vow am so embodied yours . . — v! 3 
and here I firmly vow, never.. Taming of Shrew, iv. 2 

henceforth I vow it shall be so _ iv..S 

you put me off with limber vows . . Whiter'sTale, i. 2 

so long I daily vow to use it iii. 2 

but it does fulfil my vow _ jy! 3 

and made between*s by vows v! 3 

wouldst vow that never words .Comedy of Krrors.ii. 2 

with a deep-divorcing vow? ' ' ii. 2 

and vows, if he can take you v' 1 

all religious strength of sacred moves' King John, iii! 1 

let thy vow first made to _ iii. 1 

that doth make vows kept _ iii. 1 

thy latter vows, against thy first — iii. 1 

the incense of a vow, a holy vow iv. 3 

1 make a vow, such neighbour Richard 77. i. 1 

that vow a long and weary pilgrimage — i. 3 

the smallest parcel of this vow \ Henry IF. iii. 2 

and vow to God, he came but to be . . — iv. 3 
alittle higher than his vow made .... — iv. 3 
that he keep his vow and his oath .... Henry F.iv 7 

then keep thy vow, sirrah, when — iv. 7 

now have I payed my vow unto 1 Henry FI. ii. 2 

thy humble servant vows obedience.. — iii 1 

vow. Burgundy, by honour of tliy — iii 2 

vows are equal partners with thy vows — iii 2 

hedid vow upon his knees IHenryFI. i. 3 

gives lord Warwick for his vowl _ iii. 2 

IS brave and vows reformation iv. 2 

and vows to crown himself in _ i v. 4 

to entertain my vows of thanks — iv. 9 

can be bound by anv solemn vow to . . — v. 1 
I vow by heaven, these eves shall ....ZHenryFI.i. 1 

lord Clifford vows to figh't in _ i. | 

as if they vow some league inviolable — ii' | 
nor wittingly have I infringed my vow — ii' 2 

I vow to God above, I'll never "' •> 

and, in this vow, do chain my soul 

to pledge my vow, I give my hand 

assurance with some friendly vow.... 

made a solemn vow never iv 3 

didst break that vow Richard III. i! '4 

is this thy vow unto my sickly heart ii! 1 

your mother lives a witness to his vow — iii. 7 

ceremonious vows of love v. 3 

vows and prayers yet are the king'3.77e>iryr777. i ' " 



ii. 3 
iii. 2 
iv. I 



VOW— strangles our dear vows .. Troilns &■ Cress iv 4 

my major vow lies here, this I'll _ ' y' I 

let souls ^uide vows, if vows-be _ y' 2 

gods are deaf to hot and peevish vows _ y 3 
makes strong the vow : but vows .... _ y" 3 
leave their false vows with him. Timon 0/ Athens iv" 2 

by the vows we have made Coriolanus, i 6 

and vows revenge as spacious as — iv' « 

tempted to infringe my vow in _ v 3 

by all your vows of love (rep.) ....JulhisCo'sar, ii! 1 

with those mouth-made vows Antony S Cleo i 3 

vows of women of no more bondage. . Cymbeline ii' i 
the love, and truth, and vows, which I' _ iii 2 

that remains loyal to his vow _ iii. 2 (letter) 

men's vows are women's traitors! — iii 4 

we do; and vow to heaven TitusAndronicus i 2 

upon her nuptial vow, her loyalty — ii' 3 

reverend tomb, I vow, they shall be .. — ii' 4 

the vow is made jij' 1 

therefore, thou sholt vow by that' '.'.".'. _ v' 1 
teach me credit, without your vows ..Pericles iii' 3 

sought to make us break our vow Lear i' 1 

let our reciprocal vows be remembered — iv. c ('let ) 
and m that vow, do Hive dead .. Romeo S- Juliet i '1 
to breathe such vows as lovers.... _ i. 5(clionis) 
ofthy love's faithful vow for mine .. ''l^'-''^"*'' 

and made exchange of vow _ ji' 3 

almost all the holy vows of heaven .'.'....Hamlet i' 3 

the soul lends the tongue vows _ j's 

Ophelia, do not believe his vows ...! _ i" ■< 

even with the vow I made to '. _ is 

makes vow before his uncle — ii •< 

sucked the honey of his music vow's"!!!! _ iii' I 

makes marriage vows as false as _ iii' ,1 

vows, to the blackest devil I _ jv' 5 

if sanctimony and a frail vow, betwixt'.'.'oWicWo, i! 3 

It 1 do vowa frieudship, I'll perform it .. _ iii 3 

.rr??X9r^^"^^ °*' "■ sacred vow I liere engage — iii 3 

^Rw?!?^ ''."'■^ chastity .. Two Gen. of Ferona, iv. 3 

VOWiD— wlieii you ha\'e \<ywQ&.. Meas. for Meas. i. .'. 

with a vowed contract, was fast — v 1 

hold, if not to beauty vowed 1 l.ove'sL. Lost iv 2 

where that you have vowed to study _ ' iv 3 
heavenly oaths, vowed with integrity _ y' 9 
I have vowed to Jaquenetta tohold _ y' 2 

single vow, that is vowed true All's IVHI i v' •> 

ashe vowed to thee in thine ear.. — iv 3 (fetter) 

divinely vowed upon the right KingJohn ii 1 

I vowed, base knight, when I Mlenryll. iv 1 

having vowed to try his strength — ' y 5 

BO mighty are his vowed enemies ..2HenryFI. iii 1 
were vowed duke Humphrey's foes.. — iii 2 

both have vowed revenge on him ZHenryFI i 1 

sovereign and thy vowed friend — iii' 3 

by the eye of Cynthia hath she vowed.. /V.-iV/es ii' '5 
ttM'-SVtJV^' ™^y,e<l to cherish ....Romeo /rJutiei.Wu 3 

VOWEL I shall poison _ iii. 2 

the third of the five vowels ! 'love's L Lost v \ 

VOW-FELLOWS with this virtuous .. 1- ' i] i 

VOAVING more than Troilus ^ Cress iii 2 

weeping, cursing, vowing vengeance — y 5 

5^x5t?;°J '?'•'=' '^"^^ '^"^ TwelfthNiglit, V. 1 

VOYAGE-m one voyage did Clarihel '.Tempest v 1 

lose thy vo.vage (rep.) TwoGen. of Ferona, ii. 3 

lose the tide, and the V03'age " (is 

should intend this voyage towards.ii/i'nv WVrcs ii' 1 
my determinate voyage was mere. Tu-elrihM~^lii ii 1 
always makes a good voyage of nothing _ ° ' ii ' 4 
1 mean, she is the list of my voyage — iii i 

drawn one to a longer voyage _ iii' 3 

that will make a voyage with him ..Much Ado \ \ 

as from a voyage, rich with Mid.N.'slhmm 'ii a 

remainder biscuit after a voyage .As uouLiie it ii 7 

for thy loving voyase is but' for _ ' v' 4 

by prosperous voyages I often .Comedy 0/ Errors i. 1 

want gilders for my voyage _ iv 1 

make a voyage to the Holy Land ..Richard n.v'.O 
have got by tlie late voyage, is but.. Henry Ft 11. i. 3 

in lite s uncertain voyage Timon of .ii lien <: v 2 

omitted, all the voyage of our Wfe.Julins'cn-sar'W 3 
if you make your voyage upon \iei.. Cymbeline, i h 

like fragments in hard voyages _ v 3 

repent the breadth of his great •voya.ge.Pericles iv I 
would serve after along voyage at sea — iv (i 
I pray you, to this speedy voyage .... Hamlet, iii! 3 

returned, as checking at his voyage _ iv 7 

XS^JJi^^'^V^^y- "^rayment (rep.) ..HenryV. v! 2 
VULCAN-as black as Vulcan ....TwetrthMght, v. 1 

and Vulcan a rare carpenter? 'Much Ado i 1 

as like as Vulcan and his wife .. Troilus ^ Cress i 3 
a casque composed by Vulcan's skill — v 2 
have yet worn Vulcan's badge .. TitusAndron. ii 1 

are as foul as Vulcan's stithy Hamlet, iii' 2 

VULGAR_for 'tis a vulgar proof. Twelfth Kighi', iii! | 

the base vulgar do call, three Love's L. Lost i 2 

vulgar (Obase and obscure vulgar!) — iv. 1 (let ) 

most incony vulgar wit! _ jv 1 

which is in the vulgar, leave .... As t/on Likeit v 1 

that vulgars give bold titles Winter's Tale' ii 1 

vulgar comment will be made. Comedy or Errors, 'i\i 1 
leave them as naked as the vulgar air. A'i«g-./o/,„, ii 2 

and cheap to vulgar company IHenryl I'.'iii 2 

that buildeth on the vulgar heart iHeun/ir i 3 

BO do our vulgar drench theirpeasant. H<!«)i//'. iv. 7 

talk like the vulgar sort ) Henry FI. iii. 2 

stand uncovered to the vulgar groom. 2 77«ir!/ri iv 1 

to defend their vulgar wisdoms Coriolamr: i 1 

and puff' to win a vulgar station .... _ ii 1 

no less apparent to the vulgar eye . . iv! 7 

and drive away the vulgar JnlinsCrrsar i 1 

unregistered in vulgar fame ..Antony ACleo. ii'i.'l I 
most sure, and vulgar: every one hears . . Lear, iv. 6 
as any the most vulgar thing to sense . . Hamlet i. 2 

familiar, but by no means vulgar '13 

VULGiARLYand personally MeasforMeas. v! 1 

XIIJ'^'^~ "''""'''''' Castiliaiio vu]no.Twe'irihMgl,i, i! 3 



w'lwnw'"'' ■ff'"?'^'^ ....r,™to,S-Cra;;da7(p^i.') : VULNERABLE crests' Macb.th v 1 

words, vows, gifts, tears , _ j. 2 : VULTURE-cannot be that vulture in you -I'iv' 3 

— 1.3 let vultures gripe thy guts! Merry Wires, i.S 

— Hi. 2 let vidtures vile seize.ou his lungs.. 2iJc'7i(!/;;'.'v! 3 



I'ith truant vows to her own lips 
when we vow to weep seas , 



VUL 



r B15 ] 



Vni.TUIlE of sedition Mlenryl'l. iv. 3 

llie unawi'iK viilturu nl'tliy iniiiil.7'J/ii.<l«i/ro«. v. 't 
iinkinilncss, lil<c n viiltinr Ihmm i,r«r, ii. 4 

VUKTUIiU— witlioiit vurtlicr 'uasioii .... — iv. 

W 

WADDLED all obout ttomea ^ Jnliel.x. 3 

WADE— should I wade no more Marheih, ii;. i 

wiidc to tlic iimrl<ot-|ilacc Kiiu'^o'i". li. 1 

and nmlie us wade even in our Hi,-/i..i.( ; /. i. 3 

AVADKI) tliroupli tlic ilirt ....Tainiu^'o.rstireir, iv. 1 

for tliiir inv wiided in tears Hiuitrs Talf,y. i 

W AVKK-C'.'VKKS, ond llold-fast UenryV. ij. 3 

W \F'r— wiio walls ti9 yonder? Comrily of Ki-rnrs, ii. 2 
tiie KnMish liottonin Imvc waft o'er. .KingJohn, u. 1 

waft nie safely cross (.r/).) 2 llf iirj/ /;;. iv. 1 

8l\all waft tlicm over with nnr 3Hdiiy; /. ni. 3 

and waft licr lienee to France — , , X' ' 

witli lier ivory hand wafts to her.. TiiDonnf Alh. i. 1 

WAFT.'VGE-to hire waftage. . Comedy nrJirri>ri,\y. 1 

liaiil<9 stavins for wofta'^e ..rrixlmSfCrnstiita, iii. 2 

WVKTING his eves to tlic contrary.. If'inter tl . i, 2 

W VKTl'IllC of vonr hand JuliusCmtar, ii. 1 

W\<i-whv hov! why wagl ..TitoGm.oflerona, v. 4 

let them wafT, trot, trot Merry ICirw, i. 3 

here bnys, hero, hcrel shall we way? — ".I 
nrovokehim to't, orlcthim wag .... — ii. 3 

let us wauthen.. — i'- 3 

crv— sorrow, waal and hem MnehA(lr,,\. 1 

makina the hold wn;: by their .... torp «/-. iMl.y. 2 

to wac their hiph tops Merchanlnf Venice, ly. 1 

Bee qnothhc. howtlic world v:a'is. As yn„ Like ii , ii. 7 
was not my lord the verier was • ■ ">"''■' '» ''■'<■• >• 2 

I nrav thee, sweet was (-'V'.l I Henry 1 1 . i. 2 

how iiow, mad -wnp? (ifp. IV. 2) — ]. i 

I mnst confess, ore wnus too ...'illenryll . i. 2 

mcrrv in hall, when benrds wn^ all — v. 3 (song) 
durst" wag his tongue in censure .... Hf")!/ 17//. i. 1 

bnt wog his finger at thee — v. 2 

the empress never wags Tilut Andronicus:, v. 2 

dare<t wag thv tonpue in noise Hnmlel, in. 4 

until mv eyelids will no longer wng .. — v. 1 

W AGE-for wages follow'st. . Tvoarn. of I'erona, i. 1 

thv master for wages follows not ... . — _\. j 

and serves for wages .. — '.'!•' 

have thy vouthfiil wages spent ..Wji/nuLifcci/, i|. 3 

and we "will mend thy wages — n. 4 

our praises ore our wages tl inter si ale, i. ^ 

the awlcss lion conld not wage KnmJohn.i. 1 

to wage an instant trial \Henryli. iv. 4 

stop any of William's wages iUenryll .v. I 

that they may have their wages . . //»>i>!/ /'///. iv. 2 
hos poid his men their wages. . Timmi nfAUiens, iM. 2 
ay, and to wage this battle. .-(tifDii!/ ^Clenpnlra. ui. 7 

I will wage against your gold Cymheline,\. 5 

home art gone, and ta'en thy wages — iv. 2 (song) 

nor the commodity wages not with I'ericles, iv. 3 

towage against tliinc enemies Lear.i. 1 

ond phoose to wage against the enmity... — n. 4 

oil friends shall taste the wage — y. 3 

to woke, and wage, a danger profitless ..OllieUo, i. 3 

WAGED me with his countenance ..Vminlnvm, v. 5 

but he hath waged new wars.... /l»(owyS- <:''■'), lii. 4 

honours waged efjual with him — y. I 

W AGER— for a good wager, first begins. Tempest, ii. 1 

done; the wager? • — .!.'• J 

I'll hold thee any wager ..ileuluml ol I enice, iii. 4 

and on the wager lay two earthly — in. 5 

woger which we will propose (rrp.) Turning nfSh. v. 2 

the wager thou ha.'t won — v. 2 

nav, I will win mv wager better — v. 2 

'twas I won the wager, though ynu . . — y. 2 

wager, they hove met Cnrmhinui, i. 4 

but I moke my wager rather ...... ..Cymhclmc, i. .5 

ond have our two wagers recorded .. — i.!> 

ond I have lost the wager.... — i. 7 

nothing saves the wager you have laid — ii. 4 

1 have heard of riding wagers — in- 2 

I durst wager, would win some w^oids. . renrlet, v. 1 

and wager o'er vour heads Ilamlei, iv. 7 

we'll make a solemn woger on your — iv. 7 

that he has laid a great wager on — v. 2 

you will lose this wager, my lord — v. 2 

will this lirothcr's waaer frankly play .. — v. 2 
vou know the woger? Very well ......... v. 2 

lliirnt. my lord, to wager she is honest. . nihello, ly. 2 

WAGEKED on vonrangliiig-WH/oHi/ .^-Cdn/i'i'ro.ii.S 
and wagered with him pieces of gold.Ci/intdiiic, v. 5 
kinir, sir, hath wagered CK'i'.-wagcd] ..Humlct,v. V 

WAGGING of astraw Richard III. in. 5 

think with wagsing of your tongue. ;/>nri/ )'///. v. 2 

it is not worth the wagging of your.rnno/nrmj, ii. I 

the violet, not wagging his sweet . . CymbeUne, iv. 2 

W AGGISII boys in gamcUicmBelvcs.iVi'l. AVsDr. i. I 

to a waggish courage Cymlielinr, iii. 4 

W VGGLING of your head Muc/iAilo, u. 1 

WAGGON— our waggon is prepared.. ,4H'i If'ell, iv. 4 
let'st fall from Dis's waggon 1.. .. II inter iTale, iv. 3 
to hale thy vengeful waggon.. ridn/lni/rojiiciM, v. 2 

and bv the waggon wheel trot - v. 2 

WAGGONEK, and whirl along.... r./iij/)iirfron. v. 2 

her waegoner, a smoll grey-coated lloweo ^JuM.ui 

such o waggoner ns I'haiton would wliip — ni. 2 

WAGGON-Sl'DKES made of long nomrn Jjr Julie'. \. i 

W \(iTAII.— mv griv beanl, you wagtail?. /-enr, ii. V 

W \ I f ,— to wail frieni"i» lost Lore'i I.. Lost, v. 2 

but wail bis fall whom I Macbeth, in. 1 

whatlhclieve.Illwoil ......... - W. 3 

ne'er wail their present woes (rrp.).llichnrtl II. in. 2 
not only givcst me cause to wail .... - ly. I 

none but women left to wail \Urnryl I. i. I 

andean do naught but wail -i Henry ft. iii. 1 

wise men ne'er sit and wail their ..aH.-.ir!///. y. 4 
live to wail thv children's loss , . . . Wchiird III. i. 3 

to wail one that's lost... — ii- 2 

hiniler me to wailond weep? — ii. ^ 

to wail the dimming of our Bhiniiig.. — .ii.2 
niisconstrue lis in him, and wail — — ni..') 
one llmt wails the nomo — !»■ 4 



WAIL the title as her mother doth./«r/ior<I /;/. iv. 4 

to w.iil it in Uicirnge (,./).) — jv. 4 

that wnilH hcT uliienci-y Troilnt ^Creitida, iv. ft 

'tis fond to wiiil iniviliihle strokes. Coriolnniii, iv. 1 
Tom will niiiki' Ihcm weep ond woil ... l.e<ir, iii fi 
her hrurr to iiiuke mc wail .. ..ll-meoAJiiliel. iv. & 

ifVi/.A"'. I he nivcs, ond all we wail Ihimlri, ii. 2 

WAIl.lOn wlicM it is gone ....Comedy '.flitnnn. iv. 'i 

he did i'.,nf..und, he wailed. /I iiMfm/ ^ fli;,imtr,i. iii. 2 

W.\n,yUl.-wuilful sonnets. Twoden.of Irmna, iii. 2 

WAlLING-mv fiilhcr wailing — ii. 3 

with these disgniccrul waili' %' rohcs! Mlenriill. i. 1 
wailing our losses, wliiles the foe....3(;,.iin/''. ii. 3 
cure their harms hv wuiling tiKm . . Itichmd III. ii. 2 
wailing over ■rvhiilt's corse ....Itomeo f( Jnliel, iii. 2 

W.VIN is over tin- new chimney 1 Henry If. ii. I 

WAINHoriOScinnot hale Tieelph Sinhl. iii. 2 

WAI NSUOAT-thcvjoin wainscoat./f»,i/nii/.i'<f il, iii. 3 

WAIST-now in tlic waist Tvwrrsl,\. 2 

I am in the waist two yards about. Merry Hires, i. 3 
his neck will come to vour waist. A/ms./mil/c'H. iii 2 
a German from the waist downward. «i(c/i.('/o, iii. 2 
on' your waist, mistress, were ns. Love' iL. Lost, iv. 1 
girdles for 3'our waist should lie fit .. — iv. I 

abreast, o waist, a leg, olindi? — iy. 3 

that as a waist do girdle you about.. KingJohn, ii. I 

an eagle's talon in the waist 1 Henry 1 1', ii. 4 

were greater, and my waist 8lenderer.2/l<>nr!///'. i. 2 

is girdled with a waist of iron 1 Henry I' I. iy. 3 

and buckle in a waist most . . Troilus * Crestidii, ii. 2 
down from the waist they are centnurs .. Lear. iv. 6 
in the dead waist [Coi.-vasf. Kii(.-waste].Hamte(, i. 2 

then yon live obout her waist — ii. 2 

WAIT— it waits upon some god Tempest,\. 2 

I'll wait upon his pleasure. TtcoGen. of I'erona, \\. 4 

we'll wait upon your grace — iii. 2 

that wait for execution — iv. 2 

I must wait on myself, must I? Merry Wives, i. 1 

I will wait on him — i. ] 

go, wait upon my cousin Shallow.... — i. 1 

wealth I have, waits on my consent — iii. 2 

I'll wait upon your honour Meas. for Mens. \. 1 

and wait foruo man's leisure il/tic/iji/o, j. 3 

we'll wait upon your lordship — i. 3 

I will wait upon them — lii. S 

come, wait upon him Mid.S.sDream,u\ 1 

more than to us wait on your royal .. — v. I 
and wait the season, and observe. Lore' sL. Lost, v. 2 
never more in Russian habit wait.... — y. 2 
affairs, have mode vou vmLMerchaul of I'enice, ii. 6 
in every thing I wait upon his will. .-4//'s»rt//, ii. 4 

I thank thee; wait on me home — v. 3 

Uiondello comes, he waits on thee. Taming ofSh. i. 1 

wait you on him, I charge you — i. 1 

well, "I must wait, and watch withiil — iii. I 

which waits upon worn times irinler'sTnle, v. 1 

you wait on nature's mischief Macbeth, i. b 

lettins Idarenot wait upon I woidd .. — i. 7 

good digestion wait on appetite — lii. 4 

confusion waits (as doth a raven . . King John, iv. 3 

my sold shall wait on thee — v. 7 

shall wait upon your father's — y. 7 

to wait upon thy foes Diehard 11. ii. 4 

and dread correction wait on us 1 Henry IK v. 1 

than to wait at my heels illemylV. i. 2 

wait close. I will not see him — 1.2 

I must wait upon my good lord here — ii. 1 

ond woit upon him at his table — ii- 2 

I'll wait upon you; I long to hear Henryl'.i. 1 

wonder, to wait on treason — ii. 2 

cities vou talk of, may wait on her .. — v. 2 
hcraUis wait on us; instead of gold ..UUnryfl. i. 1 
these warders, that they wait not here? — i. 3 
mistrust, and treason wait on him ..XHcnry I'l. ii. .'i 

that waits upon vour grace? linhard lll.\.\ 

rrW.K)i(.] we wait upon your (rep. ii. 1) — i. 3 

I'll wait upon your lordship — iii. 2 

cordinals wait in the presence Henry r 111. iii. I 

who waits there? ('»■)).) — v. 2 

your grace must wait, till you — v. 2 

to make me wait else at door — v. 2 

wait like a lousy foothoy at chamber-door? — v. •.' 
wait attendance till you hear ..TimonofAihens.\. I 

I'll wait on you instantly — ii. 2 

for which I wait for money — ni. 4 

we wait for certoin money here, sir.. — iii. 4 
I purpose not to wait on fortune....''"''''''""", y. 3 

ond I will wait for you JuUufCiesnr, i. 2 

waiton me to-night Antony /^Cleopatra, iv. 2 

I will not wait pinioned — v. 2 

I am not bid to wait upon this Ti)v>Andron. i. 2 

upon her wit doth earthly honour wait — ii. I 
wait upon this new-made emjircss (repA — ii. I 
I wait the sharpest blow, Antineh 119.... /'f>iV/fj,i. 1 
no man on whom perfections wait .... — i. 1 

new jov waiton 3'ou I — v. 3 (Gowcr) 

I must hence to wait nomco^JiiIiV/, i. 3 

we'll wait upon you. No such matter .. IhimM, ii. 2 
bumble and waits upon the judgment .. — iii. 4 
I pray thee, good Ilorotio. wait upon him — y. 1 

we'll wait upon your lordship D'hello, iii. 2 

WAITED— I waited on my tender . . I Henry fl. i. 2 
often host thou waited at my cup ..'i Henry I't. iv. 1 
ond duly waited for my coming forth? — iv. I 
the noble troops that waited \i\vm.Henryrill. iii. 2 
am to blame to he thus waited for. Jii/"<«C<r.i<ii-, ii. 2 
will \vn. sir; and we'll be waited on .Tilns And. iv. 1 

WAITKTII on true sorrow illenryVl. iii. 3 

WArriN<i on superfluous folly .4H'«»V», i. I 

a thousand, waiting upon that .. II inlir'iTole, i. 2 

as well as waiting in tlie court ) Henry ir. i. 2 

were as certain as vour wnitinff.. r.'nnM "C-lrt. iii. 4 
WArriN(;-(iENrLEWOMAN? Ile.-l'ioA/l'l", ij. 1 

the waiting-gentlewoman to Hero — ii. 2 

waiting-gentlewoman in the tcapc . II inter i7'. iii. 3 

talk so like a waiting-gentlewoman .1 HenrylV. i. 3 

WAITING-VASSAL.S hove done ..RIeliard III. n. I 

WAITING-WOMEN yonder. rro./iii,5-(>c«ir.M, v. 2 

cliombermoids and waiting-women /.car, iv. 1 

WAKE-ondlctScbostian Wttkcl 7V"n»-i',ii. I 



WAL 

WAKE— did it not woke you? 7>."/v./. ii. 1 

whether I wake or sleep .... Two Hen. of I'erona, i. 1 

he will not wnke Measure for Measure, iv. 2 

let the child wiike her with crying.. W«t/i/4</o, iii. 3 
good llrnola, wake my eoiisin Beatrice — iii. 4 

we w ill not wake vour patience — v. I 

when thou dost wiike. do it for tliy..(l/i</.A'.'ifir.li. 3 
wake, when some vile thing is near.. — ii. 3 

what nngcl wakes nic from mv — lii- I 

when tlu-v next wake, all this — iii. 2 

now, niv 'ritaiiiii, wake vou — iv. I 

hid thc'lmnlMiien wnke them with .. — iv- I 
at wukis, and wassails, meetings .l.nr.'sL. l.nsi, v. 2 
slei'iiwhiM he wakes? ami cmi> .Mer. of Tenice,!. I 

come, ho, and wake Diana with — v. I 

near him when he wukcs.. 7n»i.Hgq/-i>7i>cir, 1 (iiid.) 
musie ready when he wakes (rep.) — 1 (ind ) 
lie haunts wakes, fairs, and hear.. Wiji/cr'i7'(ifr, iy. 2 
and wakes it now, to look fo green ....Maclicth, i. 7 

that they did wake cai'h other — ii. 2 

wake Duncan with thy knoekingi .... — ii. 2 
to wake Northumberland, and warlike — iii. r> 

to wake our jieace, which in Richard 11. i 3 

difl'erence 'twi.xt wake and sleep ..\Henryll'. iii. 1 

wake not a sleeping wolf orp-) '.'Henry 11'. i. 2 

I trow, to woke, ond leave oiir beds .1 Henry It. ii. I 
watch thou, onil wake, when others .'2 Henry 11. i. 1 
cowordly, when he wakes irep.) .. ..Richard 111. i. 4 
never wake until the great judgment-doy — j. 4 

soft! he wakes. Strike — i. 4 

sleep in peace, and wake in joy — y. 3 

therefore, best not wake him in .... llcnryl'lll. i. 1 

quiet, for fear we wake her — iv. 2 

and wake him to the onswer.. Troilus ^ Cretsida.i. 3 

this, I nresume, will woke him — ii. 2 

60 much wrong to wake thee .... Julius Ctrsnr, iv. 3 
demurely wake the sleepers ....Antony ^Cleo. iv. 

speak sofllVj wake her not — v. 2 

I'll wake liune eyeballs hliinl first. .Cymde/'nc, iii. 4 
even when I woke, it is withciut me.. — iv. 2 
wake, and find nothing. lint, alas .. — v. 4 
wake, my mistress! It this be so .... — v. .'> 
wake the emperor and his lovely. TilusAudron. ii. 2 
all my wealth would wake me irejt ) — ii. .*> 
the dam will wake; and, if she wind — iy, 1 

got 'tween asleep and woke? Lear, i. 2 

sleep till I wake him ('■'■p.) — i. 2iletti'ri 

and turn his sleep to woke — iii. 2 (song) 

come, morch to wakes and fairs — iii. H 

that we may wake the king? — iv. 7 

he wakes; speak to him — iv. 7 

at which he starts, and ^xakes....Ilomeo^■Jnliel, i. « 

I woke before the time (rep.) — iv. 3 

I needs must wake her: madam (rep.") — iv- fi 
three hours will fair Juliet wake .... — v. 2 
she wakes; and I entreated her come — v. 3 

the king doth wake to-night Ilamlel, i- 4 

to wake, and wage, o danger profitless ..lillielln, \. 3 
she wakes— Who's there? Othello? — v. 2 

WAKED after long sleep Tenipesl,u\. 2 

that when I waked, I cried — iii. 2 

have waked their sleepers — v. I 

and waked herself with laughing ....Mnch.Ado.W. I 
waked, and straightway loved. ..4/''J.A'.'57>;r<i'", iii. - 
and, when he waked, of force she .... -^ iii. 2 
unto him when he waked.. Taniins of Shrew, I (inil.) 
or when you waked, 60 waked as if — 2 (indue.) 

1 am waked with it Comedy of F.i rors, iv. 4 

but necessary you were waked 2Henryl't. iii- 2 

trembling woked, and, for a season. .yiiWiarii ///. i. 4 
the busy day, waked by the lurk.7'»o'7iis,5-CrMit- iv- 2 

waked half dead with nothing I'oriolanus, iv. .^ 

when I waked, I found this lahcl Cymbeline,v. 5 

contriving of lust, and woked to do it Lear, iii. 4 

their balmy slumbers waked with strife. 0(/'f'/o, ii, 3 
born a dog. than answer mv waked wrath — iii. 3 

WAKEHEI.D-at WakcHeld fought. 3H.-'iri/r;. ii. 1 

WAKEN-doubted. he would waken him — iv. 3 
we waken to our country's good ..Richard III. iii 7 
that I might waken reverence. Troilus ^Cressi da, i. 3 
waken Juliet, go, and trim htr .. Romeo ^Juliet, iv. 4 
that waken [Co/. An/. -weaken] motion .. Iiilitlln, i. 2 

WAKENED thechastitvbe wounded. Cyi"*'/''"-. ii. 2 

he littth wakened thyilog Romeo ^Juliet, iii. 1 

blow till thev hove wokened death! ....O'hello, it. I 

WAKING-whot, ort thou waking? ....Tempest, ii. I 

wink'st whiles thou art waking — ii. 1 

then she waking lonks upon Mid. \.*s Dream, ii. 2 

in your waking shall he shown — iii. 2 

half 'sleep, half waking — iv. I 

our own love waking cries to see AII'sH'ell, v. 3 

with ooths kept waking Taming of Sh> en; iv- 3 

ne'er was dream so like a waking. "■in/«-'j7''i/'', iii. 3 

sleeping or waking? Comedy of l-rtors, ii. 2 

sleeping, or waking, must I \Hrniyl /. ii. I 

wokiiig, ond in my drcoms '2 Henry 11. i. I 

sleepiug. or waking, 'tis no matter how — * iii. I 
thou shall be waking, while I shed .. — iii. 2 
ond waking, O defend me still 1 .... lliehard III. v. 3 
von are one will keep them waking .Henry I'll I. i. 4 
fcept Hector fasting and waking.. Troilus ft Cress, i. 2 

it's sprilely, woking, audible Conolanus, iv. .'i 

sleeping or waking? ha! /-rnr, i. 4 

waking, or sleepine | C. A'.-still my corc].y/o ^ J. iii..S 

he and I will watch thy woking — iv. I 

that I, BO early waking, whot with .. — iv. 3 
ot the jirefixed hour of her waking .. — v. 3 

W.VK'ST— when thou wak'st irep.\..,Mid.,\.',r>r. ii. 3 
when tiionwak'st, if she he hy (rf;..) — iii 2 

now, when thou wak'st. with" thine .. — iv- I 
or wak'st tln'U.jollv shepherd?.. ../.rir, iii. C (soni;^ 

WAI. ES-prlnce..f Wales, was first ..Richard II. 'u. I 
post from Wales, lomkn with heovv..U/<-»i!,//'. i. I 
sword-ond-hnckler priiiee of Wales .. — i. :l 

though 1 be hut prince of Wales ircp. ) — ii. i 
and he of Wales, that gave Amaimon — ii. i 
the banks of England. Sci'tlond, Wales — iii. 1 

oil westward, Wales beyond _ iii. i 

the prince of WoU'fl ond I, must ,... — iii. v 
mudcaj' prince of Wole-H (rep.) _ iv. I 



WAL 



A Himrtj I Kiv. 3 



'priiiceof Wales (rcB. v. 1, v. 2, and v. 4) 

towards Wales, to nglit witljplendower — ' v. 4 



iii. 1 



V. I 



WALES— to be incaged in Wales 
{rep • " 

lOWUrUH VV aiCO, to Tlglll' TTIUll VJ 14-l.vlvlw^.i 

with some discomfort from Wales iUemylV. i 

Harry prince of Wales {rep. ii. i let.) — 
comes tlic king back from Wales .... — 
OJesu, are von come from Wales? .. — 
the prince of WalesI Wliere is lie? .. — i 

Edward black prince of Wales Veury f. 

the plack prince of Wales, as I have read — i 
the Black Prince, prince of Wales . .iHenry VI. 
that now is prince of Wales (rep.) ..Hichmd US. 

orat ria'rfordwest, in Wales — i 

liow Wales was made so liappy Cymhrh m, i 

WALK-a torn or two I'll walk ..•■••' ' .'"P"', i 

to walk alone, like one IivoOen.oJ ioomi, 

to walk like one of the lions — 

walk hence witli that — ' 

and, as we walk along — . 

I pray you, sir, walk in MerryWmes, 

1 had rather walk here • ■ : - ' " " ~ 

a tliief to walk my ambling gelding — 

I love to v/alk by the counter-gate. . — i 

come, come, walk in the park — \ 

walkroundaboutanoak(rep.)....... — i 

my shoulders for the fellow of this walk - 

she will veiled walk ^ welfihhigM, 

my very walk should be a iig. . ••■■•• — 
Malvol'io's coming down this walk .. — 

does walk about the orb ■■■••■■ — 

I do not without danger walk tliese — 

do not then walk too open — 

will you walk towards him? — 

now heaven walks on earth — .. . 

will 't please you walk aside? . . Meas./or Meas. iv. 1 

come, we will walk............. — iv. 5 

come Escalus, you must walk by. . .. — y. 
will you walk about with your lrep.).MuchAdo,n. 1 
the walk, especially, when I walk away — ii. 1 

my lord, will you walk? dinner — ii. 3 

I and Ursula walk in the orchard .. — in. 1 
old signior, walk aside with me. ... .. - ui. 2 

I will walk up and down here.Mid.N. sDrcam, in. 1 

hop in his walks, and gambol in — iii. 1 

waitonyourroyal walks ........... ^ — v. 

than tliose that walk, and wot.. .. J.oi'e s L.Ust i 1 

a gentleman, betook myself to walk — i. 1 (let.) 

to see him walk before a lady. — iv. 1 

walk aside tlie true folk, and let — ly. 3 

talk with you, walk with you. . Merch. of I'enice,]. 3 

yonder, sir, he walks — ii- 2 

if you would walk in absence of — v. I 

we walk not in the trodden patlis. . Asymi Like it, i. 3 
tliou wilt walk; we will ..Taming of Sh. 2 ^induc ) 
methinks, you walk like a stranger.. — ii. 1 

we will go walk a little in the — ii. 1 

let me see thee walk : thou dost — 1 1 . 1 

may go walk, and give me leave awhile — in. I 
we mount, aud tliither walk on foot — iv. 3 

we two will walk, my lord muter sTale. i. 2 

spirits of the dead may walk again . . — in. 3 
I can stand, and walk; I will even .. — iv. 2 

walk before toward the sea-side — iv 3 

will you walk with me about .Comedy of Errors, i. 2 

let him walk from whence he — iii. 1 

where I will walk, till thou — m 2 

pleasetli you walk with me down. . . . — 

yonder, as I think, he walks — 

iivest to walk where any lionest — 

will you walk in to see their gossiping? — v. ■ 

wliich way tliev walk, for fear tliy Macbeth, ii. 1 

and walk like sprites, to countenance — ii. 3 

make it their walk — iii. 3 

men must not walk too late — in. 6 

by day, must walk by night... King John, t. I 

lies in liis bed, walks up aud down .. — iii. 4 

how wildly then walks my — iv. 2 

tlie print of blood where-e'er it walks — iv. 3 

why, liere walk I, in tlie black — v. G 

[Coi. ATn.'.] walk upon my knees liichardU. v. 3 

of fern-seed, we walk invisible ....\Henryiy'. ii. 1 
Ned Poins, and I will walk lower .. — ii. 2 

we'll walk afoot a while — ii. 2 

lards the lean earth as he walks along — ii. 2 

the rest walk up above — ii. 4 

I do here walk before thee itIenrylV. i. 2 

if you would walk oif, 1 would prick .Henry r. ii. 1 

lion gait walk the wliole world — ii. 2 

spirits walk, and gliosts break up 2HenryVI. i. 4 

in this close walk, to satisfy myself — _ ii. 2 

enjoy such quiet walks as these? .... — iv. 10 

and so he walks, insulting o'er SHenryl'I. i. 3 

my parks, my walks, ray manors — v. 2 

to walk upon the hatclies Richard III. i. 4 

as I walk thither, I'll tell ye moTtt.Henryl'lll. iv. 1 
that walk (as, they say, spirits do) .. — v. I 

you and I must walk a turn — v. I 

pr'ythee, let's walk: now, by — v. 1 

walk off. Haveyouseen Troilus SfCressida,\\\.2 

walk here i' the orchard — iii. 2 

will you walk in, my lord? (rep.) — iii. 2 

walk in to her house; I'll bring — iv. 3 

please you, walk in, my lords — iv. 3 

as we walk, to our own selves — iv. 4 

will you walk on, my lord? — iv. 5 

to thirteen, this spirit walks inTimonof Alliens, u. 2 

pray you, walk near; I'll speak — ii. 2 

poverty walks, like contempt, alone — iv. 2 

instruct, walk, feel, and mutually . . Cnriolanus, i. I 

when he walks, he moves like — y. 4 

not walk, upon a labouring Aa.y....JuliusCcesar,\. 1 
and we petty men walk under his .. — i. 2 
that her wide walks encompassed.... — i. 2 

walk up and down tlie streets — i. 3 

this disturbed sky is not to walk in. . — i ' 
ard in it physical to walk unbraced., 
tl.mk you to walk forth? you shall not 

then walk we forth, even to the 

left you all his walks; his private 

.„ . — 11. _i 1 _mj recreate yourselves 



iv. 1 
V. 1 
V. 1 



ii. I 
ii. 2 
iii. I 



to walk abroad. 



[ BIG ] 

WALKS abroad, and turns hUiusCre.mr, v. 3 

or does he walk? or is he on his ..Antotiy ^Cleo. i. .5 
walk; let's see if other watchmen.... — iv. 3 

move him to walk this way Cymbeline, i. 2 

pray, walk a while. About some.... — i. a 

walk with nie; speak freely — v. 5 

wert thou wont to walk alone .... Titus Andron. i. 2 
the forest walks are wide and spacious — ii. 1 
let's leave her to her silent walks.... — ii. 5 

in the day's glorious walk Pericles, i. 2 

walk forth with Leonine — iv. I 

take her by the arm, walk with her .... — iv. 1 
go, I pray you, walk, and be cheerful . . — iv. I 

walk half an liour. Leonine — iv. 1 

pray you, walk softly, do not heat .... — iv. 1 

does Lear walk thus? speak thus? Lear, i. 4 

and walks till the first cock —iii 4 

the fishermen, tliat walk upon the beach.. — iv. 6 

will't please your highness walk? — iv. 7 

mind drave me to walk abroad . . Ttomeo ^ Juliet, i. 1 
Tybalt, you rat-catcher, will you walk? — iii. I 

or walk in thievish ways — iv. 1 

I will walk myself to county Paris .. — iv. 2 

you spirits oft walk in death. Hamlet, i. I 

[A'7f(.] no spirit can walk abroad — i. 1 

walks o'er the dew of yon iiigh — i. i 

perhaps 'twill walk again — i. 2 

with a larger tether may he walk — i. 3 

the spirit held his wont to walk — i. 4 

for a certain term to walk the night .... — i. 6 
sometimes lie walks four hours together — ii- 2 

let hernot walk i' the sun — ii. 2 

will you walk out of the air, my lord? .. — ii. 2 

Ophelia, walk you here: Gracious — iii. 1 

sir, I will walk here in the hall — v. 2 

Cassio, walk hereabout; if I do find ..Olhelto, iii. 4 
'twill do me good to walk. Madam.... — iv. 3 

will you walk, sir — iv. 3 

I will walk by; I would not kill thy .. — v. 2 
WALKED, to walk like one.TiroGeii. of Feruna, ii. 1 
when he wouldhave walked tenmile..Viif/i /Wo. ii. 3 
wliich, I mean, I walked upon .Lore's L.L. i. I (let.) 
should see as she walked over head .. — iv. 3 
lie.forth walked on his way. ■J'amm»q/'.S/i. iv. 1 (song) 
where I the ghost that walked. . . . Winter's Tale, v. I 
as, walked your first queen's ghost.. — v. 1 

valiant Banquo walked too late Macbeth, iii. 6 

when was it she last walked? — v. 1 

those which have walked in their sleep — v. 1 

over whose acres walked those 1 Henry IV. i. I 

he is walked up to the top of — ii 2 

his lordship is walked forth into ....IHenyyiy. i. 1 
you knew, he walked o'er perils .... — i. 1 

lie's walked the way of nature — v. 2 

that walked about me e'.'ery 1 Henry VI. i. 4 

60 long wallcedhand in hand .. Troil\isf,<:ress. iv. 6 
I have walked about the streets ..Julius Ccesar, i. 3 
you suddenly arose, and walked about — ii. 1 
in his livery walked crowns. ^n/o»i/ ^- Cleopatra, v. 2 
I have walked like a private man. fiius Andron. iv. 4 

thrice he walked by their oppressed HavUet, i. 2 

have walked barefoot to Palestine .... Othello, iv. 3 

WALKEDST-never walkedst furtherl Henry I /'. iii. I 

WALKING in a thick-pleached alley .jWi(c/i.4((o, i. 2 

besides her walking, and other actual .Macbeth, v, 1 

life's but a walking shadow — v. s 

for your walking invisible \ Henry IV, ii. 1 

and torches, walking with thee in.... — iii. 3 
walking from watch to watch .Henry V. iv. (chorus) 
walking once about the quadrangle .iHenryl'l. i. 3 
no stir, or walking in the streets ..JuliusCa?sar, i. 3 

that craves wary walking — ii. I 

he's w alking in the garden— thusyjjifony <5 C/eo. iii. 5 

look, here comes a walking fire Lear, iii. 4 

so early walking did I see your.. Roinco ^Juliet, i. I 

I will be walking^on the works Othello, iii. 2 

WALKING-STAFF ray subjects . . Diehard II. iii. 3 

WALIj— raised the wall, and houses too. Tempest, ii. 1 

nature with a beauteous wall doth. Twelfth Night, i. 2 

hung by the wall so long ..Measure for Measure, i. 3 

a wall in the great chamber (rep.).Mid.N.'sDr. iii. 1 

you never cau bring in a wall — iii. 1 

must present wall (rep. V. 1) — iii. I 

rough-cast about hira, to signify wall — iii. I 
and tlirougli wall's chinks, poor souls — v. I 
let lion, moon-shine, wall, and lovers — v. 1 

doth show that I am that same wall — v. 1 

Pyramus draws near the wall — v. 1 

O wall, O sweet, O lovely wall (j-ep.) — v. 1 
thanks courteous wall: Jove shield — v. 1 

wicked wall (rpp.) — v. 1 

the wall, methinks, being sensible .. — v. I 
and I am to spy her through the wall — v. I 

of this vile wall. I kiss the wall's .. — v. 1 

1 wall, my part discharged so (rep.) — v. 1 
when walls are so wilful to hear without — v. 1 
ay, and wall too. No, I assure you (rrp.) — v. 1 
when icicles hangby the wall .I.ove\L. L. v. 2 (song) 
the weather on the outward wall. Mer. of Venice, ii . 9 
mounted the Trojan wall, and siglied — v. 1 
within rich Pisa walls, as any one. Tamuin'o/S/i. ii. 1 

be set against a brick wall Winter sTale, iv. 3 

our banners on the outward walls — Mnrbeth, v. 6 

summon hither to the walls King John, ii. 1 

that hath warned us to the walls? .. — ii. 1 
iron indignation 'gainst your walls .. — ii. I 

a shaking fever in your walls — ii. 1 

harbourage within your city walls .. — ii. 1 
of your old-faced walls can hide .... — ii. I 

airaiust these suucy walls — ii. 2 

within this wall of flesh there — iii. 3 

the wall is high — iv. 3 

lodgings and unfuniished walls Richard II. i. 2 

in the office of a wall, or as — ii. 1 

flesh, which walls about our life — iii. 2 

bores through his castle wall — iii. 2 

and thatall the walls, with painted .. — v. 2 

my ragged prison walls — v. 5 

and for thy walls,— a pretty iHenrylV.W. 1 

within the girdle of these walls .Henry V. i. (chorus) 



WAN 



WALL— shall be a wall sufficient to IlinryV. i. 2 

or close the wall up with our English — iii. 1 
reverend lieads dashed to the walls .. — iii. 3 

all girdled with maiden walls — v. 2 

the walls they'll tear down \ Henry VI. i. 2 

in iron walls they deemed — i. 4 

our waving colours on the walls — i. 6 

near to the walls, by some apparent. . — ii. I 

leap o'er the walls forrefuge — ii. 2 

fuotboys do they keep the walls — iii. 2 

let's get us from the walls — iii. 2 

sit before the walls of Rouen — iii. 2 

summon their general unto the wall — iv. 2 

to wall thee from the liberty — iv. 2 

at 3'oiir father's castle walls we'll — v. 3 

on a brick wall have I climbed ....'/Henry VI. \v. 10 
climbing my walls in spite of me .... — iv. lU 

environed with a brazen wall i Henry VI. ii. 4 

to the walls, and sound a parle (rep.) — v. 1 

tlie guilty closure of thy walls itichard III. iii. 3 

Catcsby, o'erlook the walls — iii. 5 

envy hath immured witliiii your walls! — iv. I 
the walls of Troy (rep. i. 3) ..Troilus ^Cressida, i. I 

yet Troy walls stand — i. 3 

ram, that batters down the wall .... — i. 3 

the walls will stand till they — ii. 3 

for yonder walls, that pertly — iv. ,^ 

back upon thee, O thou wall . . Timon of Athens, iv. I 

both within and out that wall! ' — iv. I 

how has the ass broke the wall — iv. 3 

against the walls of Athens — v. 2 

these walls of ours uere not erected.. — v. 5 

that hunger broke stone walls CorioUmus, i. I 

picture-like to hangby the wall .... — i. 3 

is he within your walls? No — i. 4 

we'll break our walls, rather — i. 4 

alone I fought in your Corioli walls — i. 8 

clambering the walls to eye him .... — ii. I 

we will before the walls of Rome — v. 3 

climbed up to walls and battlements. Jii/.Cn'sar, i. 1 

nor walls of beaten brass — i. 3 

the heavens hold firm the walls of ..Cymbeline, ii. I 
richer than to hang by the walls .... — iii. 4 
this day within the city walls ....TitusArtdron.i. I 

ye white-limed walls] — iv. 2 

I heard a child cry underneath a wall — v. 1 

through the crevice of a wall — v. I 

daub the wall of a Jakes with him Lear, ii. 2 

mucli more than my out wall — iii. I 

the walls are thine: witness the world .. — v. 3 
1 will take the wall of any ma.n..l<omeo ^Juliet, i. I 
for the weakest goes to the wall (rep.) — i. 1 
wall, and thrust his maids to the wall — i. 1 

■ in the sun under the dove-house wall — i. 3 

and leaped this orchard wall — ii. 1 

the orchard walls are high — ii. 2 

did I o'erperch these walls — ii. 2 

there is no world without Verona's walls — iii. 3 
palcli a wall to expel the winter's flaw I Hnmlet, v. I 

WALLED about with diamonds!.. Loi'e's L.l.ost, v. 2 
walled town is more wortliier ....As you Like it, iii. 3 
seven walled towns of strength .. ..\Henry V 1. iii. 4 

ditched, and walled with turf Cymbeline, v. 3 

wear out, in a walled prison Lear, v. 3 

WALLETS of flesh? Tempest, iii. 3 

mv lord, a wallet at his back ..TroilusfyCress. iii. 3 

WALL-EYED wrath, or staring ....KingJohn, iv. 3 
sav, wall-eved slave, \vh\ther . .'Titus Andronicns, v. 1 

WALL-NEWT, and the water Lear. iii. 4 

WALLOON-base Walloon, to win ..\Henry 1 1. \. 1 
of Artois, Walloon, and Picardy .... — ii. I 

WALLOW naked in December snov.:. Richard //. i. 3 
I may wallow in the lily beds.. Troilns i Cress, iii. 2 

WALNUT— a hollow walnut tor ..Merry Hives, iv. 2 

WALNUTSHELL, a knack Taming ofSh. iv. 3 

WALTER, Sugarsop, and the rest .... — iv. 1 
and Walter's dagger was not come .. — iv. 1 
sir Walter Blunt (rep. iv. 3 and v. 3).l HenrylV. i I 

did sir Walter see on Ilolmedon's — i. 1 

not so, sir Walter; we'll withdraw .. — iv. 3 
such grinning honour as sir Walter hath — v. 3 
the other, Walter Whitmore (rep.). illenryVI. iv. 1 

Gualtier, or Walter, which it is — iv. 1 

Walter,-Come, Suifolk, Imust — iv. 1 

sir Walter Herbert (rep. v. 3) Itichard IIL iv. 5 

Walter lord Ferrers, sir Robert — v. 4 

WAN— and wan he looks! Comedy of Errors, iv. 4 

so shaken as we are, so wan 1 Henry I V. i. I 

hit-'hness look so pale and wan? .. TitusAndron. ii. 3 

WAND— as small as a wand, TwoGen.of Verona, ii. 3 
peeled me certain wands . ... Merchant of Venice, i. 3 
pieces of the broken wand 'IHenryVI. i. 2 

WANDER— whither wander yon?.. /Uni.A'.'sUr, ii. 1 

I do wander every where — ii. 1 

he gives them good leave to wander. ^si/oKLifrei/, i. 1 
how now, wit? whither wander you? — i. 2 
wander we to see thy houest son. TamingofSh. iv. ij 
I wander here and there .. W inter' sT'nle, iv. 2 (song) 

and wander up and down Comedy of Eirors, i.2 

to raake it wander in an unknown .. — iii. 2 
and here we wander in illusions .... — iv. 3 
I wander from the jewels that I .... Richard 1 1. i. 3 

whcree'er I wander, boast of this — i. 3 

with Cain go wander through — v. (i 

that we may wander o'er this Henry V. iv. 7 

thou may'st not wander in I lleinyVI. v. 3 

madam, you wander from tlie good. Wen);/;;//, iii. I 
to disorder wander, what plagues. Troilns f,- Cress. \. 3 
I have no will to wander forth ..JutiusCirsar, iii. 3 
we'll wander through theUreeta. .Anionydijten. i. 1 

safe may'st thou wander, safe Cymbeline, i i i . 5 

I may wander from east to Occident — iv. 2 

what cursed foot wanders tills . . Itomeo ^Juliet, v. 3 

WANDERED througli the forest. 7>o(?ej£. of Ver.v. 2 
the heedful slave is wandered .. Comedy of Err. ii. 2 

one of our souls liad wandered in Itichard //. i. 3 

hath faulty wandered, and irregular! Henry I V. iii. 2 
he himself wandered away a.\o\ie.. Itichard III. iv. i 
wandered with our traversed arms.Timon ofAih. v. 5 
wander hither to an obscure plot. TitusAndron. ii. 3 



WA^• 

WANOEKEBof llioiiiBlit ....Mii.S.'tDream,]]. 1 

welciinc. wuiLlerer. Ay. tlicro it i» . . - j • ' 
imllou- llic viTV wamk-reii) of tlie ilnrk .. Lrar, in. x 
W\Nl)r.KINli"rK.-«iiiJiriiii;] lir.K.kn. 7»mp«(. iv. 1 
IN.bi.v? u vMiiiiu-rinB kniKl.t? ..U../.X-./>,r«»., i. 2 
voufuint will. w,iiider.iig 111 tl.o«o.jd - 3 

ghosts. wiiiiilL-ring here u.i.l llicre.... - "'• ' 

Swifter thnu the wandiTMig moon.... -- .'• 

to ca«t thy vamkrii.i! eyes .. Imn.ngor Sl,re<c, u. 
a Kimt, a « imiKrins luiir .......... KmgJoin. iv. i 

comk-mned a wui.dinn^' vagabond.. /(.cAnnJ //. i. 3 

whilst we were wandering , „ ~„m' ' ^ 

that wai.,leri.,g ku.ght so lair •■■■y\ }'""''* {.\- .; 

return, tliou wuiiaeriiig lord \Hemyri. iii. . 

riled, ike a wandering l.la.ict . . ••-,"'■'"•!',' '/V 4 
cmiitv, vast, and waiideiing an....li,charJHI. . ^ 
then tame wandering l>y. a shadow. . - 1-4 

my life, she's wandering to the Tower - 'v- 
the wild and wandering >]''if'"i:"^2Tuu'a \ 
Iho wandering iir nee and Dido.. I ttus^iiiirun. i . .) 

Ulikc tl e wa^,\erini! wind, blows ''■"'■/';'•'• 

conjurer the wanderTng stars .........../'""•"•'..>• ' 

W V^OEK I XGlA'-CKM/.-wonderingly].* <Tic(M,iii. 3 
WAND-LIKE-as wand-like strBiglit.. - v. 
WANE— lliis old moon wanesl ...UiJ.A. tDieam, i. 
that he is in the wane: but yet ...... - v. 1 

WANED state for Henry's .......... 3 Hf..r>,/. iv. 7 

soften thy waned tC?'--«-«"'ll';f';-^" °"V "^f;",, ,'^ 
WANING age (irp. ". ' ) • '""•"i' "/J' ""■■ 2 Und"i- ' 

wa.T great by others' wannig J'T''".' 'v'^. '" 

the waning of mine enemies KicA-inf lir. \\. 4 

W \ .\ NE D; r Kiif.-wnrincd] tears in HamM, ii. - 

w'vNNtON-feteh thee with awannion./'rriciri.ii. 
W VNT— being drunk, for want of wiue. ioiipM', i.i. j 

wliat I siiall die to want — '!!• ' 

what does else want credit — ]>>■ ^ 

althou 'h they want the use of tongue . — m. 3 
^a c"tra."l want shall shun you - iv. I song 

now I want spirits to enforce .- (epd.) 

it was fi.r want of money . . TwoC^n. ,>fVcro,xa, n. 

or else for want of idle time — '}■ ' 

never yet did want his meed — !>• « 

and he wonts wit, that wants........ - "-^ 

myselfdo want my servant 8 fortune - in- 
in our quality much want ....... ... - ' v- _i 

want no money, sir John Krep.-) . . Merru " .r«, . 2 
want no mistress Ford, master 0'P-> — .!!• ; 

for want of company — "'-J 

why vet there want not many — '»■■ j 

hat it wants matter to prevent ...... - v. .. 

.or want of other idleness Twelfth X.ghl,^. 5 

he wants advice Measure forMeamre,iv. i 

that want no ear but yours — }J- f 

if he be sad, he wants money........ W'f'^A.J./o.i. i 

belike, for want of rain >M.A. sD,eu,n, . 1 

Biich as our play wants .-■ „ 

the human mortals want their ....... - "■ f 

they shall want no instruction .tore . I. Lot', v. i 
whcrenothing wants, that want Itself — iv. 3 

in Home for want of linen — 

come sir, it wants a twelvemonth.... — 
the ripe wants of my Mend . . Hi-rchanl of l e„ 



{ «17 ] 



WAR 



WANT-for we want tliy help »Hf>iri/» ;. v. I 

my IiUhkI, my want of streiiKth ...... - v. i 

and want love's nnije»ly IlicharUlll.l. I 



_ V. 2 



'..AWslVell, 



il.2 
iii. I 
iii. 1 
iii. 4 
iii. 4 
Iii. 7 
V. 3 
V. 3 
V. :i 



iiie ripe wttoia w "'J '•'^: ,.„,.„ 

supply your present wants, and take 

and that he that wants money ..AsyouUked 

more precious than to want. . ..... - 

he cannot want the best that shall 

and wants notliing i' the world ...... — ::■ ■ 

whose want and whose delay, is strewed - ii. J 

lose mv life for want of language — .■ v. i 

let th^m want nothing that.. 7am,«?o/SA. 1 (ind.) 

to want the bridegroom — • -^ 

though bride and bridegroom wants — n • - 
you know, there wan ts no j uiikets . . — in- i 
spites me more than all these wants - ly 3 

ttio want of which vain dew Ifniter i Tale,n. 

than thus to want thee .. ..^........ - jv- ,■ 

have money, or anvhmgt want.... - v. J 

moy know you shall not want ....... — jv. J 

my clown, (who wants but something - iv. 3 
{he meat wants that I .have Comedy o/ En or., n. 2 
being scanned, want wit in all one .. — !|- ^ 

who, all for want of pruning — ii- - 

and want gilders for my voyage .... - iv. 

fear that wants hard use MacbM, \n. i 

wiio' cannot want tlic thought — ">'• |; 

he wants the natural touch — iv. . 

ogain wants n..t.iiiig (-'p.) hmgJohn tu ^ 

in so tierce a cause, doth want example i ~ in. * 
must needs want pleading for a pair - v. I 

let hell want pains enough — '«■ ° 

send them after to snpiily our wants.K-cAard II. \. J 
feelwant. ta.«tc grief, need friends .. — - 

but want their remedies — • ■ ■' 

my want of joy; for what I have irrp ) - . 4 

to death, through want of speaking — '".-J 

abuses of the time want countenance.l Henry// . i. ^ 

and let my soul want mercy - '-3 

I want work. O ray sweet Harry .... - .;!■ \ 
defect of manners, want ol government - i.ii- 
his present wont seems more than we — i* . 

never vet did insurrection want — .v. i 

we wanta little personal stren,^th..•JHe>.rv/»'. iv. 4 

what we want in ineaU 've'll have — ..v- 3 

and yet mv sky shall not want /fenrj/l . ill. 7 

or do not learn, for want ol time — v. i 

whose want gives growth to - v. i 

no trcacherv: .hut want of men ....... 1 Henry*'/. . I 



WANTON 09 o child, skinpiOR ..../one ,I..U,l,y. t 

make such wanton gambols .Mer.o/;V)iicc,iii. S 

d. but note a wild nnd wanton herd _— 'v- ' 



iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. .1 



ii. 1 
iii. 1 
iii. 2 
iv. 2 

v. 4 



thev wont their porridge, ond their.. 

if Salisbury wants mercy — 

go<jd-rnorrow. gallants! want ye corn — 

because you wont the grar^e... — 

the herbs for want ot liusbondry . .•lllenru I I 

I shall not want falec wilneis — 

but yet we want a colour for his ... 
thot wont their leailer, scatter up.. . 
one thot surfeits tliinking on o wan 
that nowont of resolution in me .. 
nor should thy prowess wont praise.. - -■ - 

the wont thereof makes thee ^llenryl I. i. 4 

•hall not want his part — "• " 



ill. i 
V. 4 
. iii. 1 
iii. I 
lil. I 
iii. 2 
iii. 'J 
Iv. » 



the leaves, that want llleir sap?. 
I want iiKUe iiiiele» here to welcome 
which you wuiit. were iluugeious .... 

Olid wants but noinmation.. 

now 1 want [Cuf.KnI.-need] the priest 

doih want her proper liinha 

thev u|ioii tlie nilverse faction want 
let's want [fo'.Kii'.-luck] no discipline 

for want of nie:tuH, poor rats 

wants not a minister in his power ..Henry fill- \. i 
a nobleman want manners trcp.).... - nj- .- 
fl■ailtv, and want of wisdom ........ - ^-^ 

fair vonng maid that yet wants baptism — .v. - 
andliig oiniiare, want similes .'/'m.i/ih 4 Crf»>- nl- i 
if I want gold, steal but a beggar s. Timo,, of Am. ii. i 
did know, my lortl, my master's wants — \\. 2 

bowds between gold and wanti .. — !!• - 

these wants of mine are crowned — !;■ - 

they are at fall, want treasure — .!!■ ; 

he cannot want for money • — !!.'■ .^ 

cannot want filty-flve hundred [rep.) — i.n- ' 

the want that mal<es him lean — .i*-' 

the want whereof doth daily — V; ' 

the mere want of gold — i^-' 

much do want. Your greatest want (ri-;).) — 
wantV why want? We cannot live on — 
of honour has desperate want made! — . 

for your wants, your suffering ...... Conolanw, . I 

to save labour, nor that I want love — ■■ J 
which time shall not want, if he be.. 

wants not spirit to say 

of what that want might ruin ....... 

baited with one that wants her wits? 

he wants nothing of a god, but eternity 

you do want, or else you use not . . JulmtC^m, , . 3 

ind did want of what I was .... Anlony if Cleo. . ^ 

should revengers want, having a son — ..n- b 

butwiint will perjure..... — "'• !" 

and her ^Eiicassliall want troops.... — iv. i_j 

nature wants stuff to vie .- — ..V ^ 

neither want my means for thy .... Cymbeline. iii. 5 
there wants no diligence in seeking him — v. 6 
the want is, but to put those powers — y- j 

in my exile the want of breeding .... — iv. j 
you come in faint for want of meat.. — v. 4 

there are none want eyes — • .X*'* 

Cliiron, thy cars want wit (.rep.) . TilusAndron.ii. 1 

poor creatures, want our hands — >"■ ' 

shall have like want of pity .••.....• „—...„,; f 
food, and V. ill not say, he want, it ... . Per.clei, . 4 
slumber, while their creatures want .. — !■ « 
want of use, they are now starved (r^p.) — .1.4 

a lady that wants breathing too - i ■ ^ 

wherein we are not destitute for want — v. 

if for I want that glib and oily art l-ear, i. i 

but even for want of that, for which ■••• — !• } 
wortli the want that you have wanted .. — i. i 
wearyofall, shall want some. ........... — '• ' 

much more attasked for want of wisdom — .1.4 
no way, and therefore want no eyes .... — iv. i 

that wants the means to lead it ;. —,}J-\ 

if viinr will want not — iv.O(lettci) 

Ihrworse l, wai.ttl.y light ....Romeo ^ ./u/W ,,. 2 

showsstillfiome wuntof wit iZ.„,J i ■, 

that wanta discourse of reason . ... ...... Hnmui.t. f 

who in want a hollow irieiid doth try .. — }i\- j 

will wanttruecolour.. ,.........: — '"•4 

nnl wants not buzzers to infect his car .• - ■ }• " 
for want of these required conveniences. 0'fte»o,ii. 
whose want even kills me ■•,•,•••,••■■,■■;■,• ~.„'l," 
WANTED the mndcsty ...... Mercl>anl of cnc. v. 

stirit up where it wanted '.i;' •,■■'"./■, /^-i' \ 

bolder vices wanted less ^"'\Ve ",ir \ 2 

being wanted, he may be more \u '^^ ,',' ' f 

he wanted pikes to set before •••••• •'"''"^/''•J- ' 

that they wanted cunning .... ^7°" °f/' ij"'' }: \ 

which not wanted shrewctncss ../Inlo-iy^C'eo- ■ i 
worth the want that you have wanted .... /.ear, . 1 

W VNTETII but a mean to fill .. Iirofieii. ofl er. i. i 

fly swift, but wanteth wings ■;,■,, Vuii 

there wanteth now our brother ....lUclmrd 111. . . I 

O Dionyza, who wanteth food..........,''e"<-'e'. . 4 

WANTING your father's. . ...... M,d. t, . «/>'•'■'".'"•■ ' 

that to your wanting may be ....At you <-'-""• ' • ' 

wanting gilders to redeem thcir..Co»ierfy»/-K.r. i 1 
WillouglS)V,wantingyourconipany./(ic/iarJ //.i.i. J 
Phaeton, wanting tlie manage of.... — }' • •' 

being altogether wanting, it 'loth.. .. - "<■ } 

and green clover, wanting the scythe.. //'•>■>!/ • v. 2 
were our tears wanting to this .,....\lln,ryfl.i. 

Biich a worthy leader wanting aid .. — ■• i 

like lions wanting food.. ::•••;„ ," ,-; sV fi 

thv council and consent is «-.ttnting.j//r'iry » /. ; 6 
sliallow wanting Ct■"^^•"^-WltllOUt^/.cW<//'^l■. 
must slack, wanting hismanage/.oi'i";^ '.'"«• ij. J 
bv wanting light to give ...... ^ ""'""{f'^'"- '.^ ? 

only there is one thing wanting ■•••.,'»"°'""'''' ' \ 
wanting strength to do thee so .. . 7i/uf.4n Jro... ii. 4 
wanting a hand to give it action?.... - . /.• { 

ond wanting breath tospeak ^'•f'W{ ?. 

death prorogued, wanling.o thy. Uo.neo^JuI.el, ii. 2 
[Col.K,,l.-\ wanting that wi h tears J">t'' ,^''.- .X 3 
robbed, not wanting what.is stolen.. ..0(/.e./o iii. . 
WANTON charm upon this mon ond. lempeif. iv. I 
presume to horbour wonloii. 7'iioGeii. of I ttona.u 2 

nav, then the wanton lies ■• — .y ; 

yoiir worship's a wanton ■"'7!'Z'''V,->v; ? 

may quickly make thein wonton.7ire//V/.Aii-/i/,.i.i.i. 
might make mv sister wanton ...... — " • ' 

Se want-.n stings and motions ■■""•'/'ri^''"\l \ 
my soul loan approved ""J"'"" ■.■;• ",''''',-^^!; ',V J 
torrv.rosh wnnion; am not L.Mul.N. .Dream. . J 
nnizVs in the wanton gnen .......... — ' • .' 

big-t>eHied, with the wanton wind .. - j • ' 
whiuly wanton with a velvet .. Love .L.Lo.t, n. 1 
are gnords on wonton Cupid s hose.. - '^' 
pliiyiog in the wonton uir — ".3 ivernes* 



U'. uui noie o wim iiiiu wiiiii;<ii litiu — ■. ■ 

loys down his wanton siege before ..AllilVetl, lil. 7 
boarded her i' the wanton wa.v of.... - v. 3 
with all my wanUni pictures . /"'"ini'o/iA. (ina.> 
secin to move and wanton with her - 2(iridiic.) 

how now, you wanton call7 » infer j /a/r,i. 3 

and then you'd wanton with us .... — ". 1 
mv plenteous joys, wanton in fulness.. WncteW.i. 4 
is all too wanton, and too full of. . . . KingJohu. ill. 3 
o cockered filken wanton brave our fields — v. I 
winters, and four wanton springs.... /(icAaid 11. i. 3 
or shall we play the wantons with . . — M- 3 
we make woe wanton witli i iis fond — v. 1 
while he.young. wanton, and inennnote — y. » 
bid^ vou u|H)n the wanton ruthes ..1 Henry 1 1 . In. 
ot .Midsummer; wonton OB youthful — iv. 1 
with the injuries of a wanton tinio .. — v 
a guard too wanton for the head ....•illenryll'. i. 

surfeiting, and wanton hours — iv- j 

and wanton reanoii, shall, to the king — iv. 1 
lascivious, wanton, more than ....Mlenryf I. in. 1 

tliaii wanton dalliance with ....... — v. I 

the wanton Edward, and the lusty..3HeFi.!/ ; /. i. 4 
matching more for wanton lust than - iii. 3 
to strut before o wonton ambling ..Iliclwrd II I. \. 1 
and purchase ol bis wanton eye — .. — !!!•? 
how sleek and wanton ye appeor .Henry! Ill iri. i 
like little wanton boys that.......... — ,'":'. 

with wanton I'aris sleclis . Iroiln. i CremJa, (prol.) 
and the weak wanton Cupid shall .. — i"- » 

her wanton spirits look out — •"■ •> 

■whose wanton tops do buss .— i.Y- * 

to the wanton spoil of Phoebus ....Corioinmu, ii. i 

but not 80 citizen a wanton Cyinl/e/iue, iv. 2 

to wanton with this queen ..TilutAndrontcu., ij. I 
down, wantons, down: 'twas her brother. Lear, ii. 4 

06 files to wanton bovs ■ — . ,'V 1 

let wantons, liuht of heart Borneo* Jufre/,!. 4 

yet no further than a wanton's bird — !!• ^ 

now cornea the wanton blood up in.. — Ji. * 
that idle in the wanton summer air — in ° 

such wanton, wild, and usual slips Hamlel, ii. 1 

pinch wanton on your cheek; call you.. — m- 4 
I am ofeard, yon make a wanton ot me. . — y. i 
with wanton dullness my speculotivcOf/ief/o. i. 3 
not yet made wanton the night with her — n. •> 

to lipa wanton in a seciu-e couch — iv. I 

WANTONNESS is. sure Merrylliret, iv. 2 

with cold, tlian ihce with wantonne.'-s _ — iv. 4 
OS gravity's revolt to wantonness .Lore iL.Loji, v. i 
sad as night, onlv for wantonness ..King John. iv. 1 
misconstrued in his wantonness ....1 l/eiiri;/* . y. 2 
is fasting in his wantonness!. 7Voi/wi4C'eMi(/a,iii. J 
make vour wantonness your ignorance. //n"i'e(. in. i 

WANT'ST shall 1)C sent TiroGen. of lermia, i. 3 

thou want'st a rough i)ash ......... " -nlei .lale.i. i 

it seems, thou want'st breaking. Comedj/o/^^/irr. in. I 
if thou want'st a cord, the smallest . King John, iv. .i 

if thon want'st any thing V,',""'^ ',1 ,■ l' f 

old, and want'st experience? i Henry i /. \. i 

find tliot thou want^st by free.. 7-.mono//)/Ae>i»,y. I 

want'st [Kn/.-wnntonest] thou eyes Lear, in. Ij 

W VNT-WIT sadness makes of me.Wer.o// eiiice, i. I 
WAPPKNED widow wed again ..Timonnf.Mi. iv. 3 
WAH-tlie uziire vault set roaring war .Tempe't, y. 

war with good counsel TuoOen.t^ I'erona. i. I 

some to tii'e wars — '-J 

when you talk of war ••,. — . ,, Vf 

in the wars; and that ltrelph^>ght,\. 5 

I bring no overture of war — '• y 

in the smoke of war .•■• , ", X- .1 

thus, what with the war Weaj./or A/eoi. i. i 

butthat lamatwar, 'twixtwill.... — ii- f 

returned from tlie wars or no? MuchAdo,\. i 

killed and eaten in these wars! — "• 

done good service, lady, in these wars — i. 
there is a kind of merry w ar betwixt — \. 

I liked her ere I went to wars. . ..... . - !■ 

war, death, or sickness did loy..Wi'LA. iDream, i. 1 
some.worwithiear-raicefor....;... — .!!■ » 

that thou look'sl for wars, ond wilt not_ — iii. i 

thot war against vour own Lore iL.Loif. i. I 

disbursed by my father in his wars . . — \\. \ 
the civil war of wits were much .... ^-„, ,,'.'• 

the wars liave sokept you under All »"eU, i. i 

and continue a braving war .... — .?■ J 

brave wars! Most odmirohlc (rep.) .. — ii. ' 
on emblem of war. here on his . . ... . — •!• ' 

to the Tubcon wore, and never lied her — n. •> 
of a man's foot: to the wars! (rep.).. — »■ J 
war is no strife to the dork house.... — .ii. 3 

the fundamental reason of this war.. — iii. i 
theeventof the nono-spanng war.' .. ...— '"• ^ 

from the bloody course of war. . . . — m. 4 (lettei ) 

adisastcrof wor thot Co;«ar hinifClf — in. ^ 

what hear you of these wars? — 'y. 3 

tlie whole theoiiek of warm — i».3 

cxpertncBB in wars (.rep.) .. ....... — ■>'■ •> tno"'; 

war of white and red within.. 7;a»iin(fQri'ire«-, iv. o 
when raging war is done, to smile .. — v.* 
u'oHerwar^here they should kneel - v. 2 
war against ^our reputation .Cantedy ofError., in. 1 

making war against her.hair - in- 2 

thy husband served me in my wars.. — v. 1 

when I bestrid thee in tlie wars ,,-;.,. X' 1 

OS they would make war wilh Macte/A, ii. 4 

preiiares (or -ome attempt of war .... — m. B 
towards which, odvaiicc the WOT .... — v. 4 

do bravely in the war — \l 

ond hloiMly war. Ui enforce these ....KmgJohti, i. 

here hove we war for war — .<• ' 

fought the hol\ wars in Palestine .. - ii. j 
their right under vour wings of war - i . I 

in such a just andchontohle wor.... — !!• • 

which here we urge In w;or — jj- j 

if that war return from rnince — "• 

|ou from our messengers of w-ur .... — ji. I 
rrom a resolved and honourable wor — u. t 



y 

In 



WAR 



[ B18 j 

WAR— it is war's pri r.e to tuke all 3 Henry fl. i. i 

soldiers to tl'.is needful war — ii. 1 

as famous and as bold in war — ii. 1 

malie war witli liiin tliat climbed .. — ii. 2 

fares lilte to the morning's war — ii. 5 

tlie equal poise of this fell war — ii. 6 

wliilst lions war, and battle -^ ii. 5 

lilte civil war, be blind — ii. 5 

the frowns of war with peaceful .... — ii. 6 

the tyrant from liis seat by war — iii. 3 

fall by war's mischance — !!'■ ^ 

but dreadful war shall answer — iii. 3 

likely to be blest in peace, and war .. — iv. 6 

and we shall have more wars — iv. 6 

in tlie night, or in the timeof war.... — iv. 7 

in peace, yet bold in war — iv. 8 

the fatal instrument of war — v. 1 

grim-visaged war hath smoothed . . llichard 111. i. 1 

thongli not by war, by surfeit die. ... — i. 3 

during the wars of York and Lancaster — i. 4 

that thou wilt war witli God — i. 4 

maite war upon themselves — ii. 4 

fatlier, then had wars in France .... — iii. 6 

your discipline in war, wisdom — iii. 7 

report of war thus will I drown — iv. 4 

ere from this war thou turn — iv. 4 

dangerous success of bloody wars .... — iv. 4 

purchase with still lasting war — iv. 4 

one bloody trial of sharp war — v. 2 

bloody strokes, and mortal-staring war — v. 3 
is named, your wars in France .... Henry Fill. i. 2 

by all tl'.e laws of war you are — i. 4 

and fears than wars or women liave — iii. 2 

like rams in tlie old time of war .... — iv. I 
and instruments, of cruel war. Troilus Sf C'ress.Cprol.) 

'tis but the cliance of war — (prol.) 

why should I war without the walls — i. 1 

like as there were husbandry in war — i. 2 

rails on our state of war — i. 3 

as no member of tlie war — i. 3 

bed- work, mnppery, closet war — 1. 3 

and make you plough up the wars .. — ii. I 

hot digestion ot this cormorant war.. — ii. 2 

on those that war for a placket — ii. 3 

and war, and lechery, confound alii — ii. 3 

this cannot go to war — ii. 3 

call together all his state of war .... — ii. 3 

in that I'll war with you (rep.) — iii. 2 

my little stomach to the war — iii. 3 

we have had pelting wars, since .... — iv. 5 

still, wars and lecliery; nothing else — v. 2 

not yet the bruslies of the war — v. 3 

Hector, then 'tis wars — v. 3 

and our sharp wars are ended — v. 1 

he might have died in war ... Tiinon of Athens, iii. 5 

the war receive't in valiant gore (re/j.) — iii. 5 

then what should war be? — iv. 3 

braggarts of the war derive some pain — iv. 3 

beastly, mad-brained war — v. 2 

the common stroke of war — v. .5 

wilt use the wars as thy redress — v. 5 

make war breed peace (j-ep.) — y. 5 

if the wars eat lis not up Coriolanus, i . 1 

that like nor peace nor war? — i. I 

to make only my wars with him — i. 1 

attend upon Cominius to these wars — i. I 

the present wars devour him — i. 1 

to a cruel war I sent him — i. 3 

till my lord return from the wars. . . . — i. 3 

and to make it brief wars — i. 3 

and make my wars on you — i. 4 

made an overture for the wars 1 — i . 9 

Cains Marcius wears this war's garland — i. 9 

commit the war of white and damask — ii. 1 

than camels in their war — ii- 1 

the din of war 'gan pierce his — ii. 2 

being pressed to tiie war, even when.. — iii. 1 

being i' the war, their mutinies — iii. l 

he has been bred i' tlie wars since.... — i;i. I 

to speak of peace, or war — iii. 2 

i' the war do grow together — iii. 2 

if it be honour, in your wars — iii. 3 

in peace with honour, as in war .... — iii- 2 

my throat of war be turned — iii. 2 

and not our streets with warl — iii. 3 

tliou art too full of the wars' surfeits ~ iv. 1 

will appear well in these wars — iv. 3 

'fore my wars have 1 heard groan. ... — iv. 4 

and, pouring war into the bowels of — iv. 5 

let me have war, say I — iv. .5 

and as wars, in some sort, may be..,. — iv. 5 

the wars, for my money — \v. b 

was a worthy officer i' the war — iv. 6 

with the deepest malice of the war .. — iv. 6 

as lie controuled the war — iv. 7 

and stick i' the wars like a great .... — v. 3 

till these wars determine — v. 3 

the end of war's uncertain — v. 3 

has clucked thee to the wars — v. 3 

though I cannot make true wars .... — v. 3 

led your wars, even to the gates — v. 5 

never admitting counsel o' the war .. — y. 5 
poor Brutus, with himself at war ,. Julius Ctesar^i. 2 

and squadrons, and right form of war — ii. 2 

quartered with the hands of war .... — iii. 1 

what should the wars do with such.. — iy. 3 

and musters of the war Antony S^ Cleopatra^ i. 1 

soon that war had end — i. 2 

whose better issue in the war — J. 2 

than could his war resisted — i. 4 

will make no wars without doors .... — ii. 1 

for such a petty war — ii. I 

and brother, made wars upon me.... — ii. 2 

you were the word of war — ii. 2 

and make the wars alike against .... — ii. 2 

attend those wars which fronted .... — ii. 2 

might 50 to wars with the women! .. — ii. 2 

out of Jiigypt, made wars here — ii. 2 

l)ut it raises the greater war between — ii. 7 

who does i' the wars more — Iii. I 



WAR 



WAE— and rough frown of war King John, iii. 

war! warl no peace! peace is {rep.) — iii. 

and, lilie a civil war, set'st oath — iii. 

doth dogged war bristle hia angry.... — iv. 

hush again this storm of war — v. 

and glister like the god of war — v. 

the savage spirit of wild war — v. 

the dead coal of wars between this .. — v. 

this business, and maintain this war? — v. 

draw this gallant head of war — v. 

to whip this dwarfish war — v. 

and let the tongue of war plead — v. 

purpose presently to leave this war .. — v. 

the trial of a woman's war Richard 11. i. 

tliiis plated in habiliments of war .. — i. 

we will ourself in person to thiswar — i. 

for these Irish wars (rep. ii. 1) — i. 

infection, and the hand of war — ii. 

in war was never lion raged — ii. 

wars have not wasted it — ii. 

in peace, than they in wars — ii. 

till ee thousand men of war — ii. 

with signs of war about his aged .... — ii. 

for inouev fur these wars? — ii. 

York there, with his men of war?..., — ii. 

pale-faced villages with war? — ii. 

to enjoy by rage and war — ii. 

make war upon their spotted souls .. — iii. 

some slain in war; some haunted..., — iii. 

testament of bleeding war — iii. 

and toiled with works of war — iv. 

tumultuous wars shall kin with kin — iv. 
no more shall trenching war channel. I Henry II'. i. 

the edge of war, like an ill-sheathed — i. 

but by the chance of war; to prove .. — _i. 

murmur tales of iron wars — ii 

spirit within thee hath been so at war — ii. 

we must all to the wars — ii. 

a soldier too, siie'il to the wars — iii. 

to the fire-eyed maid of smoky war.. — iv. 

when he was personal in the Irish war — iv. 

this churlish knot of all abhorred war? — v. 

in his unlucky Irish wars " — T. 

sound all the lofty instruments of war — v. 

by the stern tyrant woj iHenrylF. (indue 

you cast the event of war — i. 

IS there not wars? — i. 

I have the wars for my colour — i. 

yes, in this present quality of war.... — _i. 

go not-to these wars! the time was .. — ii. 

to look upon the hideous god of wai — ii. 

thou art going to the wars — ii. 

two years after, were they at wars. ... — iii. 

were these inward wars once out of. . — iii. 

thou Shalt go to the wars in a gown.. — iii. 

harsh and boisterous tongue ot war? — iv. 

trumpet, and a point of war? — iv. 

show a while like fearful war — iv. 

this Hydra son of war is born — iv. 

doth the man of war stay all night, sir? — v. 

that war, or peace, or both at once , . — v. 

list his discourse of wai', and you Henry V. i. 

you awake the sleeping sword of war — i. 

for these w^ars be soon collected — i. 

doubt not of a fair and lucky war . . — ii. 

tlie signs of war advance — ii. 

our towns of war, with men of — ii. 

though war, nor no known quarrel .. — ii. 

as were a war in expectation — ii. 

for whom this hungry war opens .... — ii. 

when the blast of war blows in — iii. 

and teach them how to war! — iii. 

the disciplines of the war (rep.) — iii. 

in the ancient wars — iii. 

the pristine wars of the Romans .... — iii. 

of the war, the Roman wars — iii. 

and the weatlier, and the wars — iii. 

if impious war, arrayed in flames. ... — iii. 

now and then goes to the wars — iii. 

con perfectly in the phrase of war ., — iii. 

prerogatifes and laws of the wars.... — iv. 

examine the wars of Pompey — iv. 

shall find the ceremonies of the wars — iv. 

some, making the wars their bulwark — iv. 

war is his beadle, war is his vengeance — iv. 

every soldier in the wars do as every — ;v. 

knowledge and literature in the wars — iv. 

I got them in the Gallia wars — v. 

he was thinking of civil wars — v. 

that war hath never entered — v. 

and never war advance his bleeding. . — v. 

one would have lingering wars \HenryFl. i. 

nor money, hath he to make war .... — i. 

since I have entered into these wars.. — i. 

one thot still motions war — i. 

he first trained to the wars — i. 

our wars will turn unto a peaceful .. — ;i. 

in peace, and war! And peace, no war — ii. 

a while given truce unto my ware .. — iii. 

service, and your toil in war — iii. 

grown to credit by the wars — iv. 

the sn ares of war to tangle thee — i v. 

farewell wars in France — iv. 

tutor thee in stratagems of war — iv. 

of all his wars within the realm — iv. 

or tlie stroke of war, ray daughter. ... — v. 

ease your country of distressful war.. — v. 

will plague thee with incessant wars — y. 

coin, and people in the wars? iUenryVI. i. 

your deeds of war, and all our counsel — i. 

rather than bloody war shall cut .... — iv. 

dig a grave to find out war — v. 

thus war hath given thee peace — v. 

O war, thou son of hell — v. 

he, that is truly dedicate to war — v. 

shall be the war that Henry iHenryVI. i. 

first shall war unpeople this — i. 

in dreadful war may'st thou — i. 

to cease this civil war — i. 

if I claim by open war — i. 



WAR— that magical word of war. . Antony ^Cleo. iii. I 

he hath waged new wars 'gainst .... — iii. 4 

the preparation of a war shall stain.. — iii. 4 

wars 'twixt yon twain would be .. .. — iii. 4 

Coesar and Lepidus have made wars — iii. 5 

use of liim in the wars 'gainst Pompey — iii. 5 

hearing that you prepared for war .. — iii. 6 

levying the kings o' the earth for war — iii. 6 

forspoke my being in these wars .... — iii. 7 

and your maids, manage this war ., iii. 7 

a charge we bear i' the war iii. 7 

in the brave squares of war — iii. 9 

fled from that great face of war — iii. II 

that tiiou couldst see my wars to-day 



IV. 4 
iv. 4 
iv. 10 
iv. 10 
iv. 12 
iv. 13 
v. I 



IV. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 4 
V. 2 
V. 3 



— v. 5 



iii. 1 
iv. 2 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 4 



IV. 6 



determine this great war in single 

makes only wars on thee 

whose eye becked forth my wars .... 

I made these wars for Egypt 

withered is the garland of the war ., 
and companion in the front of war .. 
liow hardly I was drawn into this war — 

who in the wars 0' the time Cymbelin 

that this will prove a war — 

war, and confusion, in Caesar's name — 

the toil of the war, a pain — 

whence he moves his war for Britain — 

to undertake our wars against — 

of this war's purpose? — 

when fearful wars point at me — 

these present wars shall find — 

if in your country wars you chance., — 
and the disorder's such as war were.. — 
a sin in war, damned in the first .... — 
we that draw his knives i' the war .. — 

consider, sir, the chance of war — 

never was a war did cease. 

from weary wars against Titus Andrnnicus, i. I 

in peace, slain in your country's wars! 
from successful wars, you that survive 
though chance of war hath wrought 
youth was spent in dangerous wars.. 

nor the god of war, shall seize 

leave you not a man of war unsearched 

and with revengeful war take 

this to the god of war 

slain in Cupid's wars Pericles, i. 1 

with theostent of war will look 

makes war upon your life 

must feel war's blow, wlio spares not 
by public war, or private treason .... 

if wars, we are unable to resist 

go to the wars, would you? . . . _ 

heard of no likely wars toward Lear, ii. I 

with the ancient of war on our proceedings — v. 1 

I hold you but a subject of this war — v. 3 

C Knt.'] by the law of war, thou wast not . . — V. 3 

foreign mart for implements of war Hamlet, i. 1 

was, and is, the question of these wars .. — i, I 
you from the Polack wars, and you from — v. 2 
and the rites of war, speak loudly for him — v. 2 

horribly stufled with epithets of war Othello, i. I 

with such loud reason to the Cyprus' wars — i. 1 
though in the trade of war I have slain.. — i. 2 

the flinty and steel couch of war — i. 3 

to undertake these present wars — i. 3 

of peace, and he go to the war, the rites. . 
follow these wars; defeat thy favour .... 

news, lords, our wars are done 

what! in a tow'n of war, yet wild 

the wars must make examples out of — iii. 3 

the big wars, that make anihition virtue! — iii. 3 
pomp, and circumstance of glorious war! — iii. 3 

WARBLE, child; make passionate.. ioiie'sL.L. iii. 1 
come, warble, come Asyoul.ikeit, ii. 5 

WARBLING of one song Mid.S.'sDream, iii. 2 

to each word a warbling note — v. 2 

WARD— come from thy ward Tempest, i. 2 

from the ward of her purity Merry Wives, ii. 2 

men in your ward sufficient .... Meas.for Meas. ii. 1 

to say to me, come to my ward — iv. 3 

to lock it in the wards of covert — v. 1 

for the best ward of mine honour. toDe'sL.tos*. iii. 1 

to whom I am now in ward Airs H'tdl, i. 1 

he's heat from his best ward fVinler'sTale, i. 2 

what wards, what blows iHenrylF. i. 2 

that know'st my old ward — ii. 4 

deputy's wife of the ward to thee. ... — iii. 3 
ere they will have me go to ward.... 2 Henry r/. v. 1 
in justice, ward you as his soldiers .Richard HI. v. 3 

at wliat ward you lie Troilus .5- Cressida, i. 2 

ond at all these waids I lie — i. 2 

if I cannot ward what I would not.... — i. 2 
ne'er acquainted with their wards. ri7nono/.4<A. iii. 3 

should be as ward to the son Lear, i. 2 

his son was but a ward two jeavs, Rotneo Sr Juliet, i. 5 
there are many confines, wards , . . Hamlet, ii. 2 

WARDED— a hand that warded hm.TitusAiid. iii. I 

WARDEN-colour the warden pies. Winter'sTale,\v. 3 

WARDER— the warder of the brain .... .Macbeth, i. 7 

topple on their warders' heads — iv. 1 

hath thrown his warder down Richard II. i. 3 

the king did throw his warder down. 2 Henry/ f.iv. I 
where be these warders, that they . . 1 Henry I' I. i. 3 

WARDROBE here is for thee 1 Tempest, iv. I 

the yeoman of the wardrobe Twelf. h Night, ii. 5 

hangman hath no lean wardrobe ,.,.\HeiirylV. i. 2 

I'll murder all his wardrobe — v. 3 

dalliance in the wardrobe lies.... Henry/', ii. (cho.) 

WARE- for the bed of Ware .... Twelf Ih Night, in. 2 
and retails his wares at wakes .... Loi>e'sL. Lost, v. 2 
has he any nnbraided wares? .... Wiuter^sTale, iv. 3 

show our foulest wares Troilus Sf Cressida, i. 3 

the last that ware \_Col.Knt.-voTe].TitusAndron. i. I 

'WARE pencils! tone's L.Lost, v. 2 

than thou art 'ware of (rep.) As you Like it, ii. 4 

do hi m wrong ere you are 'ware. Troilus ^ Cress, iv. 2 

lias the game: 'ware horns, hoi — v. 8 

but he was 'ware of me Romeo ^ Juliet, i. 1 

ere I was 'ware, my true love's passion — ii. 2 

WARILY I stole into a neighbour . Love'sL.Losl, v. 2 



— 11. 1 



WAR 



[819 ] 



W ARILY— and ride not wnrily 



.Hniryt'. lli. 7 



iv. 3 
iv. 6 
iv. G 



WAitT.IKE-your nianv wnrUkc . . Mf rri; " irrv, ii. 1! 
iiiil'old to in 801110 warlike resistance... <H'»(fVH,i. 1 
tlicsc worlikciirinciiilesdonottlirow — ii. 1 

where tlie warlike .Smnlus nlnlrr iTalr.y. 1 

Northuniberlaiul, and worlike Siward..Wiicl<r/'i, in. fl 

with ten tliouHttiid warlike men — 'v. 3 

1 throw my warlike aliield: lay on .... — v. 7 

we trend in warlike nmreli these Kiiiif JoA/i, ii. 1 

told of a many tlioiisand warlike rreiicli — iv. 2 

flesh his spirit ill tt warlike soil — v. I 

is worlike John; and ill his forehead — .v. 2 
the hnried hand of warlike Gaunt. . Iliehmd II. ni. 3 
Westmoreland, and warlike Uluiit .XHrnrijli: iv. 4 
then should the warlike Murry ..Henry I', i. Ccho.) 
invoke his warlike spirit, and your .. — i. J 
receive me for thv warlike mate ....1 Hmryl I.i. 2 

of a warlike enterprize more venturous — n. 1 
the warlike Talbot {.rep. iii. 2) .. .... - ii. 2 

the reason moved these warlike lords — }U ^ 

to Bonrdeaux, warlike dukel — iv- ? 

1 break my warlike word........... 

in travel toward his warlike father! 

till witli thv warlike sword 

youthful ep'leen, and warlike rage . 

turn again unto the warlike French — v. 2 

dims the honour of this warlike islel IHenry I I. i. 1 

whose warlike ears could never illeiiryl'l.u 1 

BO fled his enemies my warlike father — ii. 1 
looked full sently on his warlike queen — i.i- 1 

nor when thy warlike father Richard III. i. 2 

crown his warlike brows with paper — i. 3 

a goo<l direction, warlike sovereign .. — .„, Y- ? 
what warlike voice? and to what ..Henry I III. i.i 
their warlike frauL'htajic .. rroi/iu 4- CreHiJa, (prol.) 

y.iu brace of warlike brothers — iv. 5 

the warlike eervice he hasdone ....Corio(<inu», in. 3 
they are in a most warlike preparation — iv. 3 

that knows a warlike charge Antony i$- Cleo. i v. 4 

becomes a warlike people CymMi/if, in. 1 

like warlike OS the wolf — >.'!• J 

and tell the warlike feats I have done — ui. 3 
warlike (ioths (rep. v. 2 and v. 3).7'i7i«^ridron. ii. 1 
thy warlike hand; thy mangled .... — i". I 
is warlike Lucius gcneraUrfp.)...... — iv. 4 

thy outside looks so fair and warlike I.enr,v. 3 

that fair and warlike form in which.. ..Hamic;, i. 1 
imperial jointress ufthii warlike state .. — i. 2 
a pirate of very warlike appointment — iv. 6 (let.) 

wliat warlike noise is this? — v. 2 

of England gives this warlike volley .... — y. 2 

stands not in such warlike brace Olhello.i. i 

lientenont to tlie warlike Moor, Othello — ij. 1 

of this warlike isle (rep. ii. 3) — n. 1 

WARM, o' my troth Tempcsl,u. i 

this sensible warm motion Meat./or Meas. in. 1 

a furred gown to keep him warm .... „—,,".'•? 

wit enough to keep himself warm MuchAdo,i. I 

whose blood is warm within .Merchanl nf I'enice, i. 1 
thv cold bed, and warm thee .TamingofSh. 
foiil head with warm distilled water — 

yesj keep yon warm. Marry — 

are comiiig after to warm them — 

with blowing the fire, shall warm myself — 

while thou liest warm at home — v. .. 

warm life, as now it coldly stan<ls. K'inter sTale, v. 3 
the very life seems warm upon her lip — v. 3 

she's warm I if this be magic — .v. 3 

your cake here is warm witiiin.ComeJyo/Brr. iii. 1 

when I am warm, lie cools me — iv. 4 

whiles warm life plays in that KmgJohn.in. 4 

full warm of blood, of mirth — „ Y- ^ 

that sun, that warms you here Richard II. i. 3 

such acommodity of warm slaves..! Henry/*', iv. 2 

but the sherris warms it ..ilieuri/IF.iv. 3 

maids, well-summered ondwarm kept. Henri/ K. v. 2 
you but warm the starved snake ..iHenryyi. in. 1 

whiles the head is warm iHenryVI. v. 1 

ewills your warm blood like wash..«ic/inia ///. v. 2 
he's not yet thorough warm. Troilus Sf Crettida, n. 3 

I am not warm yet, let us — >v. 5 

will put thv shirt on warm? ..Timon tifAlhent, ly. 3 

metliinks, 'tis warm at Ills heart Cmiolanut,\\. 3 

blood thy sword is worm .. Antony Sr Cieopalra.nu 1 

but it would warm his spirits — ni.l! 

a irimson river of warm blood. 7ilu5/4nai onicu», ii. 5 
with warm tears I'll melt the snow.. — in. 1 
take this warm kiss on thy pale .... — v. 3 

put it on; kuep thee warm Penclet,\\. I 

benediction comest to the warm sunl ....Lear, n. 2 

if oulv to go warm were gorgeous — ii. 4 

wear'st, wliich scarcely keeps thee warm — _ij. 4 

to thy cold lied, and warm tliee — !!!■ 4 

tithe hovel: keel) thee warm — ■!>• 4 

and warm youthful blood Romeo Sf Juliet, it. 5 

arestorative: thy lipsarewarml .... — v. 3 

bleeding; warm, and newly dead (r--p.) — ▼• 3 

it warms the very siekiiess in ray heart. //aml«(,iy. 7 

nourishing dishes, or keep yon warm . . O/ZiW/o. iik 3 

'W.V.K-M.V.V isdea.! and rotten ....Imvc $I..Lo$l,y. 2 

WAK-M.\.llKKl)fKitnieli...^ln(on!/.5- Cleopaira, 111. 7 

WAK."«t;i) and cooled hv the same . ,t/fr. ../J'tn. in. I 

were he not warmed with ale.. J'amin/,'o/.'>A. 1 tina.) 

>u my heart-blo.xl wanned HuharJ II. in. 2 

it warmeil thy father's heart 1 Henry fl.iv.b 

ork hatli yet not warrned me ..Coriolantu, i. 5 



1 (ind.) 

I (.ind.) 

ii. 1 

iv. 1 

iv. 1 



my 1 



of my heart is wanned by the rest 

might well have worme.l old Saturn - ... . 

rA'/i( ) working, all his visage warmed.. HomW.ii. i 

WARMKR that got this Hinlet'iTale. ill. 3 

wish tiiat warmer davii would comt.Ci/nibeline, ii. 4 

WAR.MING of the blood 'i Henry I r. iy. 3 

WAKMINO-l'AN'; 'faith, he » very in.Henryl . ii. 1 
WARMTH is therein yourafl'ection. Mer.ori'en.i. 2 
'tis lack of kindly warmth ... . Iimon ofAlhem, u.t 
Uke the last warmth oi iny lip«../4.iion|/4-C/<o. v. 2 
warmth breathes [C.-warin breath] out. I'erictet, in. 2 
from the loathed warmth whereof- /.^ir, iv. eiletter) 
warmth, no breath, shall teiitify.Koinra4-yu/iW, iv. 1 
WARN— locking, tGod worn u»I)../4»i/ouLi*«i(, Iv. I 



. Merry tf'h^es, i. 1 



_ iii. I 



j./or Meas. 



WARN them to his royal fficAoi-i* ///. j. 1 

sooth the devil that I warn thee .... — I- » 

to warn folse traitors from — lli. J 

mean to warn us at l»hilippi here.. Ju/miC<f'inr. v. I 
warns mv old age to a Re|iulchrc.Wn«ifo ^Juliet, v. 3 

WARNKf) US to the walls? K'ni,'J<./in, h. I 

be warned by me then Henry I', iii. 7 

and say you ore well warned 1 ;(i-ii;v'''..n. 4 

his grace not being warned thereof. «n'i'i> 'I /'/• in- 7 

hut sav, I warned ye Henry I' 1 1 1, ni. 1 

WARI^ING-giveiihim via.T»'mf.M.ai. rnr Meai. in. 2 
wilful to hear without warning.A/i'i/.A'.'i/Jieum, y. 1 
with warning all as blunt .. Merchant offemce, ii. 7 
our hearts receive your warnings ....Ali'tiyetl,i\. 1 
that, at so slender warning .. laming olShreu; iv. 4 
gives warning to all the rest of thi9..2;/tnri///'. iv. 3 

a warning bell, sings heavy Mlenryll. iv. 2 

too sudden, sirs, the warning is — .v. 2 

he hath a very fair warniug illenryl'I. iv. fi 

1 give thee warning on't Timon o/ Mhent,\. 2 

take no warning by my coming — in 1 

to be on foot at an hour's warning. .Coriolnnwi, ly. 3 
warning, unto some monstrous stute.. ./u/.Crt-iur.i. 3 
apply for warnings, portents, and evils — ii. 2 

the boy gives warning Romeo ^ Juliet, v 3 

at his warning, whether in sea or fire ..lUimlei, i. I 
WARl'-would not have vou warp. Wcaj./oiiVcnj. i. 1 

thou the waters warp AsyouUI<eit,\\. 7 (song) 

like green timber, ^s■arp, warp — ni. 3 

my favour here begins to warp n inter tVale, i. 2 

WARPED slip of wilderness Meat, for Meas. in. 1 

which warned the line of every other.. /«i't"V;/,y. 3 

another, whose warped looks proclaim .. Uar, iii. C 

WAR-PR()(1F— fathers of war-proofl..H<'"n/''- ">• ' 

WARRANT him from dl■ow^ling Tempeit,i. 1 

that my remembrance warrants .... — .1.2 

no, I warrant you trep. iv. 1) — .it. 1 

she will become thy bed, I warrant — in- 2 

will bring us good warrant of — in. 3 

I'll warrant you {rep. v. 4) . . TwoGen.o/l'erona, n 1 
his worth is warrant for his welcome — ii. 4 
warrant me welcome to my Proteus — .ii. 7 
upon this warrant shall you 
any bill, warrant, quittance 

but, I warrant you (rfD. i. 4) — 

I warrant, he hath a thousand — 

I warrant thee (ftp. iii. 3) — : 

I warnint you, coach after coach (rep.) — 

I warrant you (><-p. iii. 3) — i 

I warrant: what, Robin, I say — ) 

I'll warrant, we'll unkennel (rep. iv. 2) — i 
amends, I warrant you ircp. iv. 1) .. — i 
we, witli the warrant of womanhood — i 
I warrant, they would whip (rep.) .. — i 
I warrant you (rep. ii. 5 and iii. i).T>relfth^ighl, 
I warrant, thou art a merry fellow .. 
1 warrant there's vinegar and pepper 
ay, is it, I warrant him: do but read 
three-piled piece, I warrant thee. .Ift-a 
I warrant, it is: and thy head ...... 

the provost hath a warrant for his .. 

nay, I'll not warrant that — ;;■ -■ 

by all external warrants — n. 4 

look, here's the warrant, Claudio .... — iv. '|! 
showed him a seeming warrant for it — iv. 2 
here you have a warrant to execute.. — iv. 2 
of mine order, I warrant you, if my . . — iv. 2 
for, look you, the warrant's come .... — iv. 3 
I warrant your honour. The warrant's — v. ' 

he sends a warrant for my poor — v. 1 

had you a special warrant for the deed? — y. 1 

I warrant thee. Claudio, the time Much Adc,\]. 1 

I'll make her come, I warrant you (rep.) — in. 1 
I warrant, one that knows him not .. — in. 2 
wonder not till further warrant .... — m. 2 
bring Deformed forth, I warrant (re/i.) — in. 3 
I warrant, your cousin will say so .. — in.) 
we will spare for no wit, I warrant .. — in. 5 
doth warrant the tenor of my book .. — iv, 1 
which maiden inodestv doth warrant — iv. 1 
I'll warrant you. for the love of Beatrice — v. 1 
rCo;.3 for a man, God warrant us ..Mid.N.'sDr. v. 1 

hath wisdom's warrant Love'>l..l.oii.\. 2 

thou may'st, I warrant Merchant oft'euice. ly. 2 

no. I warrant your grace .Asyou I.ilie il,\. 2 

which, 1 warrant, she is apter to do.. — in. 2 
Lord warrant usi what features?.... — m. 3 

but I warrant him heart-whole — iv. I 

I warrant you, with pure love .";,.„ '•^' ', 

put me to't, I warrant you (rep. iv. I )..4H »"<■», n. 2 
1 warrant (rep. i. 2 & iv. 4). laming of till. 1 (indue.) 
I warrant Inm, Petruchio is Kated .. — 111.2 

to pass it, having no warrant II inler'sTale, n. 2 

which is enough, I'll warrant — .11. 3 

and that he knew, 1 warrant him.... — iv. 2 
the law go whistle, I warrant I r'-p.).. — ly. 3 
warrant of immediate death ..Ciimrdy oJErrort, 1. I 
all my travels warrant me they live.. — .1. 1 
I warrant, her rags, and the tuUow.. — in. 2 

so much money to warrant thee — iv. 4 

here's that, I warrant you, will pay.. — i.y. 4 

there's warrant in that theft Macbeth, 11. 3 

under whose warrant, I impeach .. ..KingJohn, 

there's law and warrant, hidy — 

I hope, your warrant will bear out .. — 
I warrant, I love you more than you — 
he showed his warrant to a friend. ... — 
take their humours for a warrant.. . . — 

to give us warrant from the hand — 

and warrant limited unto my tongue — 
I warrant, they have made their ..Richard II. 

the strong warrant of an oath — .. 

with a candle. I warrant thee I Henry 1 1, ii. 1 

thy nether lip, that doth warrant me 
I warrant you, that man is not olive 
hope gives not so much warrant . 
I warrant you (rep. ii. 2 and ii. 4). 

no; murder. I warrant now 

whipping-cheer enough, 1 warrant her — 

that 13 warroiit, 1 worront you llenryr. in. 6 



WAR 

WARRANT- 1 warrant you (rep.iv. 7) Henry/', iv. 1 

I worront you (rep. iv. 8) — iv. 7 

father, I warrant you MlenryVl.!. * 

my fainting words do warrant death — 11. o 

J dure warrant, bignn through — iii 1 

upon thv princelv warrant I descend — V. 3 

his wealth doth warrant liberal — V. .■> 

fear not that, I warrant thee ■Jlleniyl'l. iv. 3 

I'll warrant, they'll make it good — v. 1 

the tliH 1 warrant Ihee. if dreams — v. \ 

tlu-ii I'll warrant you all 3 Henri/''/, iii. 2 

ve the warrant Richard III. i. 3 



i. 5 



iii. I 
iv. 1 
iv. I 
iv. 2 
iv. 2 
V. 2 
V. 2 
iii. 2 
iv. 1 



iii. 1 
.illenryir.i.3 



— ii. 4 



and < 

havingawarrant for it — 1. 4 

no warrant can defend me — .14 

nothing spoke in warrant from himself — 111.7 

1 warrant von, mv lord — y- 3 

here is o win rant froiii the king Henry I lll-i- I 

you have christian warrant for them — iii- 2 
1 warrant, llultn, to change.. 7roi7Hi ^Creiiida,i. 2 
no, I warrant you; for o fool's will .. — n. 1 

we fear to warrant in our native — .!)■ 2 

a gift, I warrant 7'imon ofAlhent, in. 1 

royal cheer, I warrant you 



ni. 6 

r, i- 3 

1.4 

ii. I 



I warrant, how lie inommocked itl..Corioian 

to the pot, I worrant him — 

time for him too, I'll warrouthim thot — 

wondrous? Ay. I warrant you — ii. I 

on the siiilden, I warrant him consul — n- 1 
should hut hunt w ith modest warrant — 111. 1 
he well enough. I wurrnntyou.. .4n(on!/4-C(eo. 111. 3 
thon shnlt go buck, I warrant thee .. — v. 2 
upon wan an t of blood v afIirmation..C!/"il'e/ine, i. 5 
soldier; an honest one, I warrant.... — v. 1 
nobility warrants these words. TiluiAndronicut,]. i 
T warrant you. madam (rep. iv. 3) .. — ii. 3 
preetdent, and lively warrant, for me — .v. 3 
1 warrant you (rep. iv. 3 and v. 3) . . . . Periclei, iv. | 
age, with warrant of her virginity .. — iv. 3 
winch is her way to go w ith worront — iv. 3 

did warrant ine was likel.v — y- I 

thou Shalt, I warrant thee Lear, 1. 4 

upon the warniut of my art — nn 1 

I warrant, an' I should live(rep.)Hnineo^J'«/ie(,.i. 3 
quickly have lucn out, I warrant (lep.) — ji. 4 

III warrant him. lu. gentle (rep.) — .!!■ 5 

I am peppered, I warrant, for iliis world — in. 1 
Bh.illhe well, I warrant thee, wife .. — iv. 2 
fusl. I warrant her, she: why. Iambi — iv, 5 
'twill walk again. J warrant, it will.... /lomW. ■• 2 

it is a fetch of warrant — .n- I 

pray you, avoid it. I worront your honour — 111. 2 

I'll warrant, she'll tax him home — Jij. 3 

I'll warrnnt vou; feur me not — ni. 4 

aits inhibited and out of warrant 0»ieHo, 1 2 

1 warrant thee; meet me by and by .... — n. I 

and, I'll warrant her, full of game — Ji. 3 

[A-i/.] I warrant it grieves (rep. iv. 1).... — in- 3 

I give thee warrant of thy place — ni. 3 

if"twere no other,— It is but so, I warrant — iv. 2 

WARRANTED need, give, Measure/orMeaiure, 111 2 

and by other wanauted testimony .. All's II ell, ii- b 

be like onr warranted quarrel ! Macbeth, ly. 3 

is warranted liv u coinmissioii .... Henry I'lll. n. 4 

WARRANTETII by law to be Mlenryll. v. 4 

WARRANTIZE: shall I be flouted .. — 1. 3 

WARKANTV to unhurtlicn all .. Mer.ofl'enice, 1. 1 

as far enlarged as we have warranty ..Hamlet, v I 

with such general warranty of heaven .. 0(/ieUo, v. 2 

WARRED he hath not, but basely ..Richard II. li, 1 

his brother wurred upon him Antony f\ Cleo. ii, 1 

WARREN-asa lod.ge in a warreu ...VuchAdo. 11 I 
WARRENER-witli a warrener ..Meriy l»ir<-», i. 4 

AVARRING[Kn(,-jarring] winds? ie/.r, iv, 7 

WARRIOR love, to Theseus.... .Wirf, A'. '•Oreum, 11, 2 
bv that most fainous warrior .Comedy o,f Eirors, y. I 
iiifant warrior in his enterprizes ..Mlenryiy. iii. 2 

head of gallant warriuis, noble .... — iv. 4 
look for of such an ungrown warrior — .v. 4 
store France with bastard warriors ..Henry y. ill. 5 
kind kinsman, warriors all, adieu! .. — iv, 3 
we ore but warriors lor the w orking-day — iv, 3 
feast , so great awarrior in my house, 1 Henri/ >'7.ii. 3 
were no place for Henry's warriors.. — iii. 3 
we English warriors wot not what .. — iv. 7 

when the hardiest warriors did ZHenryl'l. 1. 4 

brave warriors (rep. ii. 1 and iv. 8) .. — i. • 

so high a couragel aud worriers faint! — v. 4 

to greet the warriors Trnitut /i Creuida,n\. 1 

Win thy w arrior welcome to our tents — ly. S 

flower of warriors, how is't with Corio/anu», i. 6 

yet welcome, warriors; we call — ii. I 

thou art my warrior: I holp to — v. 3 

Uerce fiery warriors Bght upon ...,JuliutCirtar,\\. 2 

kiss it, my warrior Antony Ii Cleopatra, ly. 8 

a braver warrior, lives not this doy 7'iiu».4«ciron. 1. I 

ond bring you up to be a warrior — iv. 2 

opproveiiwarriors.ond my faithful.. — .y. I 
my fair warrior! My dear Othello! ....OI/ieHo, 11. 1 

1 was (unhandsome worrior OS I am).... — iii- 4 
WARR'ST with o woinaii's..4i yon Like. iv. 3 (letter) 

warr'st thou 'gainst Athens?.. 7'irnoH qf Athens, ty. 3 
WAR-STUFFED LC'o/.-wosstufl'ed] ....i'e.ir/e., 1. 4 

W \RT above your eve? MerryWivei, 1. 4 

we had an hour's talk of that wart .. — i. 4 

tell your worshii) more oftlie wart .. — .1.4 
the great wart on mv leflarin.ComeJs/o/Errort, in.i 
Thomas WortI Where's he? irep.)..2Henr!//C. iii. i 

thou art a very rneged wart — ii). H 

1 would. Wart might have gone, sir — iii. 2 
here's Wart; vou see what a ragged — in. 2 
into Wurfs hand. Rardoliih (rep.) .. — in,-* 
well said, i'faith. Wart; tlion'rt a i^ood — 111.2 
poor chin! iiianv a wort is richer. Vroi7u»i1C>e«. 1.2 

make Ossa likeowortl Hamlet, \. 1 

WAR-TflOUGIIT.S have left tlieir Much.*do,\. 1 

WAR-W1;ARII;D limbs MUntyll.iv.* 

WARWICK; but. ere they come.... vHenry//'. ill. 1 
Warwick! Glosterl Clarence! doth — iv- « 

my lord of Warw ick (rep. ) — IT. 4 

good-morrow, cousin Warwick — v- 2 



WARWICK and Talbot. Salisbury .... Ilfiinj r. iv. 3 

my lord of Wai'wick (j-cp. iv. B) — iv. 7 

follow, good cousin Warwick : if that — iv. 7 

Gloster, Warwick, and Huntingdon — v. 2 

my lord of Warwick (rep. iii. 1) \ Henry FI ii. 4 

not live to lie accounted Warwick .. — ii. 4 

Warwick, Warwick! I foresee with grief — y. 4 

Salisbury, and Warwick (.rep.) iHetiryyi. i. 1 

Warwick, my valiant son (lep.) .... — i. I 

so God help Warwick, as he loves .. — i. 1 

which by main force Warwick did win — i. 1 

and Warwick (rep. i. 4, ii. 2, and v. 1) — i- 3 

ambitious Warwick, let thy betters.. — ;• 3 

presence are thy betters, Warwick (rep.) — i. 3 

peace, headstrons Warwick 1 — i. 3 

that the earl of Warwick (rfp.) — ii. 2 

is dead, jrood Warwick, 'tis too true — jii. 2 

gives lord Warwick for his vow? (rep.) — iii. 2 

what dares not Warwick, if false.... — iii. 2 

the traitorous Warwick, witli tl>e men — iii. 2 

come, Warwick, come good Warwick — iii. 2 

tlie princely Warwick, and the Nevils — iv. 1 

yourselves to matcli lord Warwick (rep.)— v. 1 

'tis Warwick calls! if tliou didst not — v. 2 

Warwick is hoarse with calling thee — v. 2 

hold, Warwick, seek tliee out some.. — v. 2 

what says lord Warwick? shall we .. — v. 3 

swiet Warwick (rep. ii. 6) ZTienryVl. i. 1 

if Warwick shake his bells — i. 1 

power of Warwick, that false peer .. — i. 1 

and Warwick shall disprove it (rep.) — ;. 1 

my lord of Warwiclc (rep.) — i. I 

the earl of Warwick (rep. iii. 3 and iv. 1) — i. 1 

Warwick is cliancellor, and the lord — i- 1 

wliet on Warwick to tliis enterprize — i. 2 

noble Warwick, Cobham, and tlie rest — i. 2 

lord of Warwick, if we shotild recount — ii. 1 

Warwick! Warwick! (rep. v. 2) .. — ii. 1 

gentle Warwiclt? (rep. iii. 3) — ii. 1 

wlieu valiant Warwick fled — ii. 1 

1 know it well, lord Warwick (rep.) — ii. 1 

I hear great Warwick speak — ii. 1 

retire, if Warwick bid him stay (rep.) — ii. 1 

why, how now, long-tongued Warwick? — ii. 2 

which Warwick says is right — ii. 2 

Warwick, why liast tliouwitlidrawn — ii. 3 

Warwick, revenge! brother, revenge — ii. 3 

O Warwick, I do bend my knee .... — ii. 3 

nay, Warwick, single out some — ii. 4 

being the carl of Warwick's man .... — ii. 5 

Warwick rages like a chafed bull ... — ii. 5 

and Ricliard, Warwick, and tlie rest — ii. 

Bliall Wai-wick cut tlie sea to France — ii. fi 

Warwick, as ourself, shall do, and undo — ii. 6 

tlie great commanding Warwick IB ,. — iii. 1 

for Warwick is a subtle orator — iii. 1 

come to beg; Warwick, to give — iii. 1 

wliiles Warwick tells his title — iii. I 

welcome, brave Warwick! — iii. 3 

me speak, before you answer Warwick — iii. 3 

Warwick disannuls great John of' Gaunt — iii. 3 

why, Warwick, canst thou speak (rep.) — iii. 3 

conference with Warwick (rep.) ,.,, — iii. 3 

deceitful Warwick! (rep.) — iii. 3 

AVarwick, this is some post to us .... — iii. 3 

while Warwick frowns at his — iii. 3 

Warwick, what are thy news? — iii. 3 

Edward's love, and Warwick's honesty — iii. 3 

Warwick, these words have turned Irep.)— iii. 3 

give thy hand to Warwick — iii. 3 

Warwick's daughter (rep. iv. I) — iii. 3 

stay till Wiirwick made return? .... — iv. 1 

Lewis and Warwick (rep.) — iv. 1 

j^our king and Warwick's (rep.) .... — iv. I 

wliat said Warwick to these injuries? — iv. 1 

is Warwick friends with Margaret? — iv. 1 

you that love me and Warwick (rep.) — iv. 1 

near to Warwick, by blood (rep.) .... — iv. 1 

meet Warwick with his foreign power — iv. 1 

welcome unto Warwick; and welcome — iv. 2 

for Warwick and his friends, God .. — iv. 2 

till Warwick, or himself, be quite .. — iv. 3 

if Warwick be so near (rep.) — iv. 3 

Warwick, when we parted last (rep.) — iv. 3 

pitched battle against Warwick? .... — iv. 4 

fell Warwick's brother, and by that.. — iv. 4 

Warwick may lose (rep.) — iv. 4 

if Warwick take us, we are sure .... — iv, 4 

shield thee from Warwick's frown .. — iv. 5 

but, Warwick, after God (7-ep.) — iv. 6 

no, Warwick, thou art worthy (rep.) — iv. 6 

consents, if Warwick yield consent., — iv. 6 

Warwick, and his mates (rep.) — iv. 7 

where peremptory Warwick now .... — 
honour hears, marcheth from Warwick — 
how the surly Warwick mans (rep.) — 
call Warwick patron, and be penitent — 

if but by Warwick's gift (rep.) — 

gallant Warwick, do but (r-ep.) . — 

you are Warwick still. Come, Warwick — 
wind-changin" Warwick DOW can .. — 
if Warwick calls. Father of Warwick — 

trow'st thou, Warwick, that Clarence — v. 1 

proud-hearted Warwick (rep.) — v. 1 

for Warwick was a bucr (rep.) — v. 2 

who is victor, York, or "Warwick?.. .. — v. 2 

durst smile, when Warwick bent .... — v. 2 

cried out for Warwick (jep.) — v. 2 

Warwick bids you all farewell — v. 2 

say, Warwick was our anchor — v. 4 

brave bears, Warwick and iSIontague — v. 7 

I'll marry Warwick's youngest .... Richard III. i. 1 

did forsake his father Warwick, ay.. — i. 3 

renowned Warwick, who cried aloud — i. 4 

did forsake the mighty Warwick .... — ii. 1 

he hates me for mv father Warwick — iv. 1 

WARWICKSHIRE? My good lord..l Henry/K iv. 2 
pniud lord of Warwickshire, thai. . 'ZHenry f^I. iii. 2 

Warwickshire 1 have true-hearted.3 Henry F/. iv. 8 

WAR-WORN coats, presenteth.Hejiryf'. iv. chorus) 



IV. 8 
v. 1 
v. I 

V. 1 

V. 1 



V. 1 



WARY note npon't Meumre for Measure, iv. 1 

it behoves men to be wary Winter' sTate, iv. 3 

wary in thy studious care 1 Henry 11. ii. 6 

be wary how you place your words .. — iii. 2 

that craves wary walking l-uU-usCamr, ii. 1 

day is broke; be wary, look about. ftomeo S-Jul. iii. .5 
be wary then : best safety lies in fear . . liamlel, i. 3 
and you, the judges, bear a wary eye .. — v. 2 
hold their honours in a wary distance.. 0;/ie//o, ii. 3 

let us be wary, let us hide our loves — iii. 3 

WASH— nor wash dish rempes(, ii. 2 (song) 

she can wash and scour .... TwoGen. off'eronn, iii. I 

and I wash, wring brew Merry Wives, i. 4 

would I could wash myself of the buck! — iii. 3 
will wash off gross acquaintance .. Tu-elfthNiglU. ii . 5 

you let time wash off — iii. 2 

when was he wont to wash liisface?..il/wc/i.4(/o,iii. 2 
drops too few to wash her clean again — iv. 1 

to wash your liver as clean AsyouLiheit/u\. 2 

forth to wash him in tlie Hellespont — iv, 1 

I do wash his name out of my All's tVelt, iii, 2 

mightiness to wash your hands?.. Tarn. ofSli. 2 (ind.) 
come, Kate, and wash, and welcome — iv. 1 
seems to wash the hand, was fair., iVinter'sTale, iv. 3 

and wash this filthy witness Macbeth, ii. 2 

will all great Neptune's ocean wash this — ii. 2 

wash your hands, put on — v. 1 

than we well could wash our hands. A'/ho-JoA?!, iii. I 

to wash your blood from off Ilii:hard II. iii. I 

wash the balm from .an anointed king — iii. 2 
own tears I wash away my balm .... — iv. 1 

with Pilate, wash your hands — iv. 1 

water cannot wash away your sin ., — iv. I 

and wash him fresh again ■with — v. 1 

to wash this blood off' from my — v. 6 

go, wash thy face, and 'draw thy.... 2 Henry/ F. ii. 1 
wash every mote out of his conscience. Henry r. iv. 1 
cannot wash your majesty's Welsh .. — iv. 7 
wash away thy country's stained ..'\HenryVI. iii. 3 
wash away my woeful monuments .iHenryyi. iii. 2 

do wash the blood away 3 Henry I' I. i. 4 

thy tears would wash this congealed — v. 2 

the tide will wash you off — v. 4 

how fain, like Pilate, would I W!a.sh.Richard III. i. 4 

many tears to wash hereafter — iv. 4 

swills your warm blood like wash .. — v. 2 
I will go wash; and when my face . . Coriolanus, i. 9 
wash my fierce hand in his heart .... — i. 10 

bid them wash their faces — ii. 3 

stoop then, and wash JulivsCcssar, 'iVi. 1 

when I wash my brain . ... Antony ^ Cleopatra, ii. 7 

wash the congealment from — iv. 8 

to wash the eyes of kings — v. 1 

and wash their hands in TilusAndronicus, ii. 3 

wash thy hands. She hath no (rep.) — ii.6 
which wash both heaven and hell ....Pericles, iii. 1 
he swears never to wash his face — iv. 4 iGower) 
wasli tliey his wounds with tears? Homeo ^-Jul. iii. 2 
wilt thou wash liim from his grave.. — iii. o 

gone round Neptune's salt wash Hamlet, iii. 2 

to wash it white as snow? — iii. 3 

wash me in steep-down gulfs Othello, v. 2 

WASHED and scom-ed TwoGen.of Verona, iii. I 

hath been washed and cudgeled ..Merry Wives, iv. 5 

is washed with them Measure for Measure, iii. 1 

than those that are so washed MuchAdo, i. 1 

her foulness, washed it with tears? .. — iv. 1 
eyes are oftener waslied than \\Qv^..Mid.N.'sDr. ii. 3 
their colours should be washed . .Love's L. Lost, iv. 3 

afairer face not washed to-day — iv. 3 

roses newly washed with devf.TamingofShreir, ii. 1 
which, washed away, shall scour ..]Henryl I', iii. i 

have washed his knife 2 Henry I V. iv. i 

may this be washed in Lethe — v. 2 

is in your conscience washed as pure . .Henry f. i. 2 
look to be washed off the next tide .. — iv. 1 
that washed his father's fortunes. ...SHenryT/. ii. 2 
thy balm washed off, wherewith .... ~ iii. 1 
was well washed from his hands . . Ricliard III. iv. I 

I, that was washed to death — v. 3 

for that I have not washed my nose. Coriolanus, i. 9 

ere bloody iiands were washed Cymbeline, v. 5 

washed me from shore to shore Pericles, ii. 1 

ne'er come, but I look to be washed .. — ii. 1 

fi'oni the ladder tackle washed off — iv. I 

with washed eyes Cordelia leaves you .... Lear, i. I 
shore washed with the furthest. Romeo <§- Juliet, ii. 2 
brine hath washed thy sallow cheeks — ii. 3 
old tear that is not washed off yet .. — ii. 3 

WASHER, and his wringer MerryWives, i. 2 

WASHES all the air Mid. N.'sbream, ii. 2 

these Lincoln washes have devoured. Knij Jo/m, v. 6 
were in the washes, all unwarily .... — v. 7 
at a breakfast, waslies his hands....! Henry Zf. ii. 4 

she waslies bucks here at home 2 Henry F/. iv. 1 

with flatteries, washes it off ..Timon of Athens, iii. ti 

WASHFORD, Waterford, and (Henryl'I. iv. 7 

WASHING of ten tides! Tempest, i. 1 

he will have need of washing Merry Wives, iii. 3 

to seem thus washing her hands Macbeth, v. 1 

as I was washing thy wound 2Henryiy. ii. 1 

washing with kindly tears — iv. 4 

WASP— injurious wasps! .... TwoGen. of I'erona, i. 2 

come, come, you wasp Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 

who knows not where a wasp doth . . — ii. 1 
tliorns, nettles, tails of wasps? .... Winier'sTale, i. 2 

set on the head of a wasp's nest — iv. 3 

there be more wasps that buz Henry VIII. iii. 2 

let not this wasp outlive TilusAndronicus, ii. 3 

WASPISH— and waspish action . .As you Like il, iv. 3 

if I be waspish, best beware . . Taming of Shrew, ii. 1 

laughter, when you are waspish ..JuliutCcesar, iv. 3 

WASPISH-HEADED son has broke .. Tewipes/, iv. 1 

WASP-STIJNG LKn(.-toiigue]and.. ..IHeiiry/r. i. 3 

WASSAIL— at wakes, and wassails. Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

with wine and wassail so convince ....Macbeth, i. 7 

a wassail candle, my lord 2 Henry I V. i. 2 

lascivious wassails [A'n/. -vassals]. .4n/o7tj/(S-C/eo. i. 4 
'iamiel, i. 4 
npeslf V. 1 



WASTE-wherefore waste I time. Tu-oGen. n/J'er. i. 1 

but I am now about no waste Merry Hives, i. 3 

in the way of waste, attempt — iv. 2 

besides, you waste the treasure .. Twelfth Night, ii. 5 
upbraids me with the waste of time.. — iii 1 
as to waste thyself upon.... il/easure /or jl/eaiure, i. 1 

and you but waste your words — ii. 2 

having waste groimd enough — ii. 2 

consume away in sighs, waste Much Ado, iii. 1 

never did mockers waste more. Mid. N.'sDieam. iii. 2 
than if you had made waste. Merchant of I'enice, i. 1 
help to waste his borrowed purse .... — ii. 5 
that do converse and waste the time — iii. 4 

waste no time in words — iii. 4 

willingl.v could waste my time ..Asyou Likeil, ii. 4 

and we will nothing waste — ii- 7 

the waste is no whit lesser Richard II. ii. 1 

which waste of idle hours hath — iii. 4 

and now doth time waste me — v. .^ 

very slender, and your waste is great.2Hen;yi/'. i.2 | 

and waste for churlish winter's — i. 3 

may waste the memory — iv. 4 

make such waste in brief mortality.... Hen?yr. i. 2 
enlinked to waste and desolation? .. — iii. 3 
seeming to augment it, wastes it? ..Henry I'lII. i. I 
and not for us to waste these times . . — v. 1 
in motion of raging waste? .... Timon of Athens, ii. 1 

60 shall he waste his means JnlinsCtesar, iv. 3 

and wastes the lamps of night.... ..4;i/ony<SCieo. i. 4 

and they have earned the waste .... — iv. 1 

that they will waste their time .... Cymbeline, iv. 4 

by inclies waste you — v. 5 

that I might waste it for you . . Pericles, i. (Gower) 
and waste the time, which looks for — ii. 3 

thus time we waste, and longest — iv. 4 (Gower) 
waste and spoil [C.A'.-expense and waste] Lear, ii. 1 
that sparing nialtes huge waste .. Romeo ^ Julie, i. 1 

we waste our lights in vain — i. 4 

much salt-water thrown away in waste — ii. 3 

[A'n(.] in the dead waste and middle Hamlet, i. 2 

were nothing but to waste night, day — ii. 2 

and the night grows to waste Othello, iv. 2 

WASTED— was never wasted there. Mid.N.'sDr. ii. 1 

now the wasted brands do glow — v. 2 

then he hath wasted it Comedy of Errors, ii. 1 

wars have not wasted it Richard 1 1, ii. 1 

I wasted time, and now doth time .. — v. 5 

youth, the more it is wasted i Henry 1 1', ii. 4 

his quick wit wasted in giving iHenrylV. i. 2 

besides, the king hath wasted all .... — iv. 1 

but my lungs are wasted so — iv. 4 

many years, wasted our country.... lHcJi;yr/. ii. 3 
would he were wasted, marrow ....ZHenryVI. iii. 2 

March is wasted fourteen days JnliusCasar, ii. 1 

upon the wasted building TilusAndronicus, v. 1 

till now some nine moons wasted Otiiello, i. 3 

I have wasted myself out of my means . . — iv. 2 

WASTEFUL-.and wasteful learning's you Like it, iii.2 

for ruin's wasteful entrance Macbeth, ii. 3 

is wasteful, and ridiculous excess .. KingJnlm, iv. 2 

hath seized the wasteful king Richard It. iii. 4 

charged for the wasteful vengeance . .Henry V. i. 2 
swilled with the wild and wasteful ocean — iii. 1 
retired me to a wasteful cock.. Timon of Athens, ii. 2 

WASTING lamps some fading. Cojiierfyo/A'rjors, v. 1 
like lamps whose wasting oil is .... 1 Henry VI. ii. 5 
by wasting ruin of the cruel foe! .... — iii. 3 

WATCH— up the watch of his wit Tempest, ii. 1 

and watch your safety — ii. 1 

watch, like one that fears. . . . TwoGen. of Verona, ii. 1 

I'll go watch Merry Wives, i. 4 

bi'others watch the door with pistols — iv. 2 

perchance, wind up my watch . . Twelfth Kighl, ii. 5 

my watch hath told me toward — v. 1 

being chosen for the prince's watch.. Jl/?/G/i'rfo, iii. 3 
fit man for the constable of the watch — iii. 3 
call the rest of the watch together.... — iii. 3 

for the watch to babble and talk — iii. 3 

we know what belongs to a watch .. — iii. 3 
the watch ought to offend no man .. — iii. 3 
watch about signior Leonato's door.. — iii. 3 
marry sir, our watch to-night (rep.) — iii. 5 

you must call forth the watch (rep.) — iv. 2 

also, the watch heard them talk of .. — v. I 
I'll watch Titania when she is..M/d..A'.'sDrea7n, ii. 2 
being a watch, but being watched. Love'iL.los/, iii. 1 
to watch for her! to pray for her!.... — iii. 1 
with more advised watch, to find .Mer. of Venice, i. 1 

as I will watch the aim — i. 1 

I'll watch as long for you then — ii.6 

watch me. like Argus: if you do not — v. 1 
with cat-like watch, when that ..AsyouUkeit, iv. 3 

I'll watch you better yet Taming of f-lirew, iii. 1 

Imusl wait, and watch withal — iii. I 

doth watch jBianca's steps so — iii.2 

and watcli our vantage in this — iii.2 

to watch her, as we watch these kites — iv. 1 

she shall watch all night — iv. I 

to watch the night in storms — v. 2 

the wolf, whoseliuwl's his watch Macbeth, ii. 1 

near approaches the subject of our watch — iii. 3 

as I did stand my watch upon — v. 5 

be heedful, hence and watch KingJohn, iv. 1 

sit all night, and watch with you .... — iv. 1 

to watch the fearful bending Richard II, iii. 3 

beat our watch, and rob our passengers — v. 3 

the outward watch whereto ray — v. 5 

[Knl.'\ if Gadshill have set a watch ..\Henryiy, i. 2 
watch to-night, pray to-morrow .... — ii. 4 
sheriff, with a most monstrous watch — ii. 4 
will sit and watch here by the king.. 2 Henry /F. iv. 4 

snores out the watch of night — iv. 4 

undertook to sit and watch by you .. — iv. 4 
wliispers of each other's watch. He7J7-yr. iv. (chorus) 
Walking from watch to watch .... — iv. (choms) 
what watch the king keeps to maintain — iv. I 

so few, watch such a multitude 1 Henry VI. i. I 

now, boy, do thou watch — j. 4 

constrained to watch in darkness .... — ii. 1 
had your watch been good — ii. 1 



WATCH-bcins cniitnln of lliowiitch.l //frirvf/. ii. I 
wc nilil tllt.< ^liilllflll W:itrli lint wvilk — ill. 3 

then ill) cxiciiti.m .111 tliL- wiiti-li — in. i 

l.t us w.iti'U ilu- Imii^hiv ciinliiml ..-i Henry I' I. i. 1 
wiitoli tuoii, unci whUl'. wlifii iithcvs — i. 1 

tu u'uii:U tltoooniiiiL; of my puiiiiilitid — ii. 4 
Viitcli tlic wuiiiiig of ininu ci\em'\ea. Uiehard III. iv. t 
use careful wtitcli,ulioose trimty .... — v. 3 

give nie ft wiitc'li \ — v. » 

niil mv jjiiurd wnteh; leave me — v. 3 

ril wutili y.ni for that ^rrp.) Trotlut^ Cret: 1. a 

yea, w;Ucli Mis ivtlMi Innoa — ii. 3 

tiierciiii-o I'll wiiti'li liiin till lie be ..Corialnmu, v. I 
luirriil sights seen ty the wiilch .../ii/ii«C<«ar, ii. !i 
wc will stand, Hinl watcli your pleasure — iv. 3 
BoUlieis, have careful wiiieh ... .-tutouij ^Clto.'w. 3 
to lie in watch there, und to think.. fyniMiiiiT.iii. \ 

to wiitoh, (iHior iierdii!! with this thin /.car, iv. 7 

I'll wiitch IRT place of stand Homeo ^Jutiei, i. 5 

care keeps his watch in every old .... — ii. 3 

till the watch be set (rrp.) — iii. 3 

be and I will watdi thy waking — iv. 1 

watch you from such watching now — iv. 4 

they tight, I will go coll the watch .. — v. 3 
to question, for the watch is coming — v. 3 

county's page, that raised the watch? — v. 3 
then i ran away to call the watch .. — v. 3 
rivals of my watch, bid tlieiu make ho^te Hamlett !■ 1 

to watch the miuules of tills night — i. I 

stalk huth he gone by our watcli — i. I 

same strict and most observant watch.... — i. 1 

the source of this our watch — i. 1 

comes armed through our watch — i. 1 

break we our watch up — i. I 

watch, ill the dead waist and middle of . . — i. 'i 

the third night, kept the watch — i. 2 

hold VMi the watch to-nighl? We do..., — i. 2 

I will watch to-nighti perhaps 'twill — i. 2 

thence to a watch; thence into a weakness — ii. 2 

for some must watch, while some — iii. 2 

give her good watch, I pray you — iv. .'j 

set some watch over your sou — v. I 

and dull watch o' the night Othello, i. 1 

watch you to-night, for the command .. — ii. 1 
we must to the watch. Not this hour .. — ii. 3 
he's to watch; three lads of Cyprus (rc/j.) — ii. 3 

masters; come, let's set the watch — ii. 3 

he'll watch the horologe adouble set .... — ii. 3 

here's a goodly wateh, indeed! — ii. 3 

lieutenant; I must to the watch — ii. 3 

I'll watch him tame, and talk him out of — iii. 3 

if you will watch his going thence — iv. 2 

no watch? no passage? murder! murdcrl — V. 1 
made him brave me upon the watch .... — v. 2 

AVATCH[-CASE.oracommon'laium.2//(')iri;/F. iii 1 

WATCH-DOG- watch-dogs bark!. Tempest, i. 2 (song) 

WATCHED you now .U-n v tl'i,.e,, v. 5 

longestnightthate'erl watched riTOr,v,i.o/;Vr. iv. 2 
but being watclied that it may ..Love's I,. Lost, iii. 1 

and watched the time to shoot All's H'elt, v. 3 

I have watched so long that I'm.TamiiigofSh. iv. 2 
I have two nights watched with you ..Maeh-lh, v. 1 
England long time have I watched .Hichard It. ii. 1 
I by thee have watched, and heard .1 Henry 1 1', ii. 3 
these three days have I watclied ....I Henryl'I. i. i 

we watched you at an inch iHenryl'I, i. 4 

methinks, you watched her well — i. 4 

as, I have watched the night — iii. 1 

and watched him, how he singled .. iHenryl'l. ii. I 
in our armours watclied the winter's — v. 7 
you must be watched ere you. . Troilux Sf-Cress. iii. 2 
watclied for your voices; tor your . . Coriotanns, ii. 3 
frosty nights that I have watched. 7i7u».4m/ro»i. iii. 1 

I have watched and travelled hard Lear, ii. 2 

I have watched ere now all night. Romeo ^ Jul. iv. 4 
upon the platform where we watched . . Hnmlel, i. 2 

■WATCHERS of mine own .. TwoGen. offerona. ii. 4 
and show lis to he watchers Unchet/i, ii. 2 

W.VTCHES on to mine eyes lUchnrJ II. v. h 

at a thousand watches (rrp.) .TroilusiCressida, i. 2 
my father watches: O .sir, fly this place . . Le^r, ii. 1 
the lieutenant to-night watches on 0^/ic//o, ii. 1 

WATCHFUL, weary, tedious . . Two Gen. of ler. i. 1 
fled the snares of watchful tyranny . . Mnebeth, v. 7 
in despite of brooded watchful doy .KingJohn, iii. 3 
and like the watchful minutes to the — iv. 1 

to many a wutcliful nightl iHenryir. iv. 4 

by their watchful flres sit HetiryK iv. (choriisl 

to enrich his watchful soul Hichard III. iii 7 



i do cominenil my watchful soul .... — 
lords, and watchful gentlemen 



V. 3 
— V. 3 



providence that's in a watchful. TroiluiSf Crest, iii. 3 

what wut<:liful cares do interpose .JuliusCirsnr, ii. I 

WATCIIIXO — ten nights' watchiiigs.jUurA -tJo, ii. 1 

ond do the etfects of watching .Macbeth, v. 1 

watching breeds leanness Hichard 11. ii. 1 

these ch' eks are pale for watching. .2(/^ni|//'/. iv. 7 
and then it is past watching. . Troiltu 4 Cresiida, i. 2 
had that was well worth watching.. Cj/mtWiiif, ii. 4 
by watching, weeping, tendance .... — v..') 
to-morrow for tliis night's watching /(oihct.^ Ju/, iv. 4 
I will watch you from such watching — iv. 4 

faith, that's with watching Othello, iii. 3 

W.VTCII.M.V.V to my heart: but, good .. Ilawlel, i. 3 
iiiii'ii'iit and most iiuiet watchman.. J>/u<:/i.4-io, iii. 3 

WATCH.ME.V of our English MIenryri.iii. 1 

if other wiitolimcn do hear what..4n'ony ^ Cleo.iv. 3 
WATCH-'oKIW.doas I pid you..,V,Ti!/llirM, v. 4 
WATCH-WORD was, hem, boysl ..2 Henry 1 1', iii. 2 
W.\TER— everv drop of water swear .. Tempetl, i. I 

put the Willi waters in tills roar — i. 2 

some fresh water, that a nohlc — i. 2 

wouldst give inc wat<-r with berries iii't — i. 2 
this music crept by iiie upon the waters — 1. 2 

than stained with salt water — ii. 1 

he trod the water, whose enmity — ii. 1 

well; 1 am standing water — ii. 1 

we will drink water; not a drop — iii. 2 

kill the still-dosing waters — iii. 3 

like the water in au urinal.. T/roOVn.o/ I'erona, ii. I 



WATEH nectar, and the Tocka. . TwoGen.tif I'er. ii. 4 

dissolves to water — iii. 2 

and iiuikLwaiiT against — iv. 4 

throw cold \Tuter on thy choler ..Merryiyivci, H. 3 
throwing liini into the water fiep.).. — iii. 3 

through lire and water for sucli — iii 4 

for the water swells a man — Iii. .'i 

pour in some sack to the 'I'hames water — iii. i 
about his throwing into the water .. — iv. 1 
and water once a day herchainher. TuelfthSinht, i. 1 
1 would not so inucli as make water — i. 3 

'tis with him e'en standing water .. — i. .^ 

is drowned already, sir, with salt water — ii. 1 
carry his woter to the wise womau .. — iii. 4 

1 ani for all waters — iv. 2 

that when he makes water MrasforMeas. iii. 2 

command tliese fretting waters from — iv. 3 
to dine and sup with water and bran — iv. 3 

as profitless as water in a sieve Mnch Ado, v. I 

made my eyes water (rep. v. \).Mid.t\'.'s Dream, iii. I 
fast a week with bran and water. .y.oi'c'sL./.oW, i. 1 

but moon-shine in the water — v. 2 

the roaring waters with my silks .Mcr.ofl'cnice,\. 1 
there is the peril of waters, winds.... — i. 3 

now will I raise the waters — ii. 2 

brook into tlie main of waters — v. 1 

though thou the waters vi.iTii. As you Like. ii. 7 (song) 
I still pour ill the waters of my love ..AU'sWdl, i. 3 

no more tlinn a lisli loves water — iii. il 

with warm distilled waters. 7'aini»ig-o/S/i. I (indue.) 

fire, lire; east on no water — iv. 1 

some water, here; what hoi — iv. 1 

shall I have some water? — iv. 1 

as wind, as waters; false as iVintet 'sTale, i. 2 

would have shed water out of flre .. — i" 
the men are not yet cold under water — i 
never gazed the moon upon the water — i 
forty thousand fathom above water.. — iv. 3 
to unpathed waters, undreamed shores — iv. 3 
the lands and water's twixt your throne — 
caught the water, though not the tisli — v. 2 

a drop of water (ri7>. ii. 2) Comedy of Errors. 

that's a fault that water will mend.. — i 

bubbles, as tlie water has Macbeth, i. 3 

go, get some water, and wash — ii. 2 

a little water clears us of this deed .... — ii. 2 

cast the water of my land — v. 3 

as rain to water, or devil to his i&m. King John, ii. 1 
let his silver water keep a peaceful .. — ii. 2 

trust not those cunning waters — iv. 3 

put but a little water in a spoon .... — iv. 3 
commend these waters to those baby — v. 2 

not all the water in the rough Richard,! I. iii. 2 

fire and water, when their tliundering — iii. 3 
I'll be the yielding water; tlie rage.. — iii. 3 

I rain my waters; on the earth — iii. 3 

other down, unseen, and full of water — iv. 1 
and water cannot wash away your .. — iv. 1 

will she hold cutwater in afoul \HenryIV. ii. 1 

there will he a world of water shed .. — iii. 1 
to my water? He said, sir (rep.) ....'iHenrylV.i.'i 
as waters to the sucking of a gulf ....Henry r. ii. 4 

can sodden water, a drench for — iii. 5 

of earth and water never appear in him — iii. 7 

forced those waters from me — iv. 6 

all the water in Wye cannot — iv 7 

like B circle in the water, which ....I Henry I'l, i. 2 

by water shall he die (jcp.) i Henry I' I. i. 4 

smooth runs the water, where — iii. 1 

told me, that by Water should I die — iv. I 
thine eyes can water for his death ..ZHenryl'I. i. 4 
add water to the sea, and give more .. — v. 4 

I drink the water of my eyes — v. 4 

noise of water in mine ears? Richard III. i. 4 

we see the water swell before — ii. 3 

and fall of wat«rs, Buckingham's army — iv. 4 
to the water side I must conduct ..Henry I'lll. ii. I 

fall away like water from ye — ii. 1 

their virtues we write in water — iv. 2 

tlie bounded waters should lift .. Troilus^- Cress, i. 3 

more dregs than water, if my — iii. 2 

as air, as water, wind, or sandy — iii. 2 

that I might water an ass at it! — iii. 3 

here's a water, look you Timon of Athens, i. I 

honest water, which ne'er left man .. — i. 2 
mine eyes cannot hold out water .... — i. 2 
she's e'en setting on water to scald .. — ii. 2 
smoke, and lukewarm water is your — iii. 6 
on grass, on berries, water, as beasts — iv. 3 

and drink cold water? no — v. I 

our best water brought hv Coriolanut, ii. 3 

doth rend like interrupted waters .. — iii. I 
look thee, here's water to quench it.. — v. 2 
stand in thine, began to water ..JulinrCiPs'tr, iii. 1 
cannot call her winds and water .Antony ^Cteo. i. 2 

that should water this sorrow — i. 2 

sbonldst fill with sorrowful water? .. — i. 3 

a burnished throne, burned on the water — ii. 2 

you have done well by water — ii. 6 

nor what I have done by water — ii. 6 

makes it indistinct as water is in water — iv. 12 
to water at those springs ....Cymbeline, ii. 3 (song) 
rocks unscalcable and rooring waters — iii. I 

prove holy water on thee! — v. i 

priest and holy water are so near .. 7'iim.4«'/roii. i. 2 
what, man! more water glideth by .. — ii. 1 

call for sweet water, wash thy — ii. 5 

hath added water to the sea? — iii. I 

OS frozen water to a starved snake .. — iii. 1 

for all the water in the ocean — iv. 2 

whom the waters and tlic wind Pericles, ii. 1 

through the rough seams of the waters — ii. 1 
as fire, air, water, earth, and heaven ., — iii. 1 
and humming water must o'erwhclm.. — iii. I 
diamonds of a most praised wiiter appear — Mi. 2 

hot. kiiives sharp, or waters deep — iv. 3 

with the woters that j'ou lose ;.<•<». i. 4 

swell the curled waters 'hove the main .. — iii. 1 
when brewers mar their malt viith water — iii. 2 
the wall-newt, and the water — iii. 4 



WATER— holy water from her heavenly.. Lear, iv. 3 
iCol.Knt.') with sweet water ....Komea ifjuliel, v. 3 

too iniicli of water hast thou Hamlet, iv. 7 

here lies the water, good — v I 

to this water, and drown himself — v. I 

but if the water come to him, and drown — v. I 

keep out water a great while (icp.) — v I 

to east water on the burning bear Othello, ii. I 

none, hilt what should go by water — iv. 2 

she was false as water. Thou art rash.... — v. 2 

WATKR-COL(JURS, to impaiiit .... I Hrni-j//*'. v. 1 

AVATER-DROPS have worn. Troilus fi Cretsida, iii. 2 

melt myself away in water-dro|)9l .Hichard II. iv. 1 

women 8 weapons, water-drops, stain.... /.fiir, ii. 4 

WATERED his new plants with . . . . Coriolaniu, \ . i 

was a Siiaiiiard's mouth so watered .. I'ericles, iv. 3 

WATER- FLIES blow me into .. Antony ^clen. v. 2 

I is pestered witli such water-flics. 7Vo>(uj ^ Cress, v. I 

WATIOK-FLOWING tears iHenryll. iv. H 

WATKK-l'LY— know this water-liy? ..Ilamlel.v. 2 

■WATIOIU'OKD, and Valence Uhnryll. iv. 7 

WAllORINCi— in your watering ....\ Henry 1 1', ii. 4 
W.VTFHl.SlI-dnkesof waterish Burgundy. JU-nr, i. I 
feed upon such nice and uaterish diet .Othello, iii. 3 
WATlOK-l'OT-for garden water-pots.... i-Mr, iv. 
WA TKil-i; ATS. water-thieves. A/frrA.o^/VMirc, i. :i 
AV.Vri. lv-KI*(jS, and denii-wolves .. ..Macbeth, iii. 1 
W.\ ri:K->!'AXIEL, which ie.Two Gen. offer, iii. I 
. WATI.K-STA.XDINGeve. men ....illenrull. \. i; 
AVA ri:it-TllIEVES. and land- ..M-r.of lenlce. i. 3 
WATI;KT(1.\'. and Francis tjuoint.. Aic/mM( //. ii. 1 

I AVATIOU-WALI.ED bulwark KmnJuhn. ii. 1 

AVATER-WURK, is worth ■illeuryll . ii. I 

AVATERY— whose watery arch Tempest, iv. I 

this gro.ss watery numpion .Merry Hives, iii. 3 

went he suited to his watery tom[>.TirelfUu\ii.'ht , v. 1 
silver visage in the watery glass ..Mid.K.'sDr. i. I 
in the chaste beams of the watery moon — ii. 2 
moon, methinks, looks with a watery eye — iii. 1 

upon our watery eyue Lore's L. Lost, v. 2 

the watery kingdom, whose . Merchant ti/Tenice, ii. 7 
the stream, and watery death-lied .. — iii. 2 
despite enforce a watery eye.. Tatningof.'ih. 1 (ind.) 
nine changes of the watery star .. It inier'sTate,i. I 

and wild watery seas Comedy of lirrors, ii. 1 

envious siege of watery Neptuue.. ..rtic/mn/ //. ii. 1 
governed by the watery moon ....Richard III. ii. 2 
when that the watery palate. Troilits ^ Cressida, iii. 2 
usurp upon my watery eyes .TitusAudrojiicus, iii. 1 
thrown him from your watery grave ..I'ericles, ii. I 
and from their watery empire recollect — ii. I 
the moonshine's watery beams . . Homeo ^ Juliet, i. 4 
WAA'E— make his bold waves tremble.. Tempest, i. 2 

the wild waves whist — i. 2 (song) 

'bove the contentious waves he kept .. — ii. I 
hold acquaintance with the waves. Ttre^/lhKighl, i. 2 

and salt waves fresh in love I — iii. 4 

whom the blind waves and surges .. — v. 1 

now by the salt w ave of the Lore'sL. Lost, v. 1 

I wish you a wave o' the sea .... H'inter'sTale, iv. 3 
spread o'er the silver waves thy. Comedy nt Err. iii. 2 
though the yesty waves confound .... Macbeth, iv. i 
strength with over-raatcliiiig waves .3Henryl'l. i. 4 

let our bloody colours wave! — ii. 2 

an argosy to stem the waves — ii. 6 

as good to chide the waves — v. 4 

more than with ruthless waves — v. 4 

so minded, wave thus, to express .... Coriolanus, i. 6 
as waves [Coi. Kn;. -weeds] before a vessel — ii. 2 
in our ages see their banners wave again — iii. 1 

from the waves of Tiber did I Jul'UsCrrsar, i. 2 

sword, which he did wave against.. Cymbeline, iv, 2 
friends o'erborne i' the former wave — v. 3 

a Roman and a British ensign wave — v. 5 

tide grow wave by wave .... Titus Avdronirus, iii. 1 
by waves from coa^st to coast .. Strides, ii. tGower) 

never was waves nor wind mor( — iv. 1 

woves [Kii(. -wafts] you to a more Hamlet, i. 4 

it waves me forth again (rep.) — i. 4 

WAA''ED her love to come again. jVcrc/i. of Venice, \. 1 
he waved inditierenlly 'twixt doiiig.C'.vrio/oiiiM. ii. 2 

then waved his handkerchief I Cymbeline^ i. 4 

and waved like the euridged sea Lear, iv. 6 

WAALER in my faith Merchant of I'cnice, iv. 1 

AVAA'ERER, come go with me ..Homeo ^Juliet, ii. 3 

AVAVERING, sooner lost TireliUMghl. ii. 4 

and that's the wavering commons.. yiie/mrii //. ii. 2 
discortiant wavering multitude. 'iHcHiy/r. (indue.) 
amongst n tickle wavering nation ..iUenryl'l. iv. I 

AVAA'E-AA'ORN basis bow*d 7'r.np<-»J. ii 1 

WAA'ING sedges play .. Taming c^r Sh. 2 (induction) 
advance our waving colours on the..Wlfiirj/r/. i. 6 
colossus-wise, waving his beam .Troilus 4'Cress. v. .'i 
his bat, thus waving it in scorn .... Corio/aiiiM, ii. 3 
waving thy head, wliich often, thus — iii. 2 

waving our red weapons o'er ....JuliusCa'sar, iii. I 
still waving, as the fits and stirs of . . Cymbeline, i. 4 
bis head thus waving up and down .... Hamlet, ii. 1 
W AWL— smell the air, we wawl and cry.- I.ear, iv. 6 

AVAX— by your leave, wax TweinhMglii, ii. 5 

you are but as a form in vrax..Mid,!\'.'s Oream^ i, I 

break the neck of the wax Love's I., lost, iv. J 

to make his godhead wax — v. !{ 

since I nor wa.x, nor honey All's "'<■//, i. 2 

even as a form of wax resolveth ,.., King John, v. 4 

if I did say of wax. my growth ■illemyll'. i. 2 

our thighs packed with wax — iv. 4 

old I do wax: and from my weary llmryT. v. I 

a full eve will wax hollow — v. 2 

the elder I wax, thelictler I — v. 2 

wax dim, as drawing to illrinvll. ii. .■■ 

1 say, 'tis the bee's wax illniryl I. iv. 2 

I seek not to wox great by others'.... — iv. 10 

the easy-melting king, like wax illenryTI. ii. 1 

na3'. then her wux must melt — iii. 2 

in u wide sea (if wax 7'inion of Athens, i. 1 

the ehariicter I'll take with wax — v. 4 

which with wax I brought away .... — v. A 

set this up with wax upon old JuliutCtPsar, i. 3 

good wax, thy leave: Ideal be Vymbeline, iii. 3 



WAX— a stone is soft as wax ....Titus Andt on. i'n. 1 

doth not the sea wax mad — iii- 1 

leave, gentle wax; and, manners Lear, iv. 6 

why, he's anian ofwax Romeo ^Juliet, t. 3 

sliape is bnt aforra of wax — \\\' ^ 

rich gifts wax poor, when givers prove.HamW.iii. 1 
let virtne be as wax, and melt in — iii. 4 

WAXED pale for woe TwoGen. of l-emna, in. 1 

the seas waxed calm, and we. . Comedy of Krrrirs,\. 1 

the days are waxed shorter Timon nf.niicns, iii. 4 

he waxed like a sea; and Cnr/o/aims, ii. - 

WAXEN image 'gainst a fire. TuoGen.of I'eroiia.u. 4 

witli rounds of waxen tapers Menii Wives, iv. 4 

in women's waxen hearts to set.. Twelfth Nf^hi, ri. 2 
waxen in their mirth, and neeze ..Mld.N.'sDr. ii. 1 
crop their waxen thisrhs, and light them _ ui. 1 
may enter Mowbray s waxen coat ..Richard II. i. 3 
not worshipped with a waxen epitaph. Hfjui/*'. i. 2 
like the adder, waxen deaf? ■2Henri/f'l. ni. 2 

WAXES-by my fay, it waxes late. Komeo S.- Juliet, i. 5 
but, as this temple waxes, the inward . . Hamlet, i. 3 
he waxes desperate with imagination — _ i. 4 

WAXINO-the waxing tide grow. TitusAndron. in. I 

WAY— out of our way Tempest, i. I 

andgiveitway.... ......;.... — J- 2 

novemy father tobe niclmedmy wayl — i. 2 
no hope, that way. is anotlier way .... — ii . I 

in the dark, out of my way — 11.2 

lie tumbling in my barefoot way — 11.2 

my best way is to creep under — 11.2 

come on your ways — ii- ? 

Ipr'ytheenow. lead the way (rep.).... — 11.2 

attend you, and your ways — 111. 3 

tliat liave chalk'd forth the way — v. 1 

but I, being in the way TicoGen. of Verona,]. 2 

see his way to seek out you — i;- 1 

the way is wearisome — .!!• 7 

and this way eomes he — in. I 

how, and which way, I may — ni. 1 

the best way is, to slander — in- 2 

for the wnys are dangerous — iv. 3 

can no way change you — v. 4 

nay. pray you, lead the way Merry Wives, j. 1 

go your wava, and ask (rep.) — ;• 2 

e is something peevish that way.... — 1.4 

in the way of marriage — 1.4 

I can tell you that by the way — 1. 4 

the best way were to entertain — 11. 1 

come a little nearer this waya (.rep.) — 11. 2 

but in the way of honesty — 11.2 

go tliy ways (rep. iv. 1) — ii- 2 

all wavs do lie open ...•.•• — .!!■ f 

wliich way have you looked — in. 1 

every way; old Windsor way (>-ep.).. — in. 1 

you will also look that way — lii. 1 

yonder he is coming, this way (rep.) — hi. 1 

and I will one way or other. — 111. 1 

nay, keep your way, little gallant .. — ?!!• ^ 
and my consent goes not that way .. — in. 2 

let me stop this way first — in. 3 

have vou any way to imfool — iv. 2 

I think, in the w.ay of waste — iv. 2 

thereisnobetter way than — iv. 4 

he will every way be mocked — v. 3 

in way of tliy excuse Twelfth Night, 1. 6 

well, go thy way — ;. 5 

liere lies your way — ;• 5 

will cnme this way to-morrow — }■ 5 

I will drop in his way some — n. 3 

I am a foul way out — n- 3 

cnme thy ways, signior Fabian — 11. 5 

there lies vour way, due west — 111. 1 

and't be any way, it must be — ni- 2 

there is no way but this — i]!- 2 

which way is he, in the name — in. 4 

this is not the way — !!>■ 4 

no way but gentleness — J!!- 4 

give tliem way, till he take — in- 4 

I'll go another way to work _ — iv. 1 

and no way approve his opinion .... — iv. 2 

then lead the way, good father — iv. 3 

brin" you something on the wa.J. Meas.forMeas. i. 1 

all that offend that way — 11. 1 

amen : for I am that way going — 11.2 

teach her the wav — !'.• '; 

admit no other way to save his life .. — n. 4 

and 'twere the cheaper way — .ii. 4 

come your way, sir (rep.) — ;;!•'- 

wliii;h is the way? is it sad — i}>. i 

Bomethina too crabbed that way, friar — 111.2 
after the dnwnriglit way of creation — lii. 2 

he was not inclined that way — 1.11. 2 

on vonr knowledge find this way? .. — iv. 1 
he d'd show me the way twice o'er .. — iv. 1 

let me have wav, my lord — v. I 

that's tlie wav; for women are light — v. 1 

as an intent that perished by the way — y. I 
but keep your way o' God's name ....MucA^ do, 1. 1 

which way looks he? — 1.3 

any wav. I bless myself every way .. — _;. 3 
I shall lessen God's sending thatlway — n. I 

you must wear it one way — ,V.- ' 

the most peacealile way for you .... — in. 3 
and given way unto this course .... — iv. 1 
any way to show such friendship?_(rep.) — iv. 1 
some otlier way than swearing by it — iv. 1 

vou go not the way to examine — jv. 2 

Tea, marry, that's the eftest way — iv. 2 

masters ; each his several way — v. 3 

mv fortnnesevery way asfairly.Mid.2V. jDrcom,i. 1 

well, go thy way (rep. iii. 2) — ii- 2 

to speak troth, I have forgot our way — .11. 3 

ay, that way goes the game — i;|.2 

come not witliin another's way — ;]| j 

fallen am I ill dark uneven way .... — in- 2 

be gone, and be all ways away — iv- 

and by the way, let us recount our . . — iv. 

ay, our way to begone Love sL.Lost,_u. 1 

the way is but short; away — h'- 1 

in via, in way, of explication — iv. 2 



WAY— by the way of progression.. toue'sL.Losf, iv. 2 

we are much out o' the way — iv. 3 

strewing her way with flowers ...... — iv. 3 

the way to make an offence gracious — v. 1 

that was the way to make his — v. 2 

slie is two months on her way — v. 2 

why tliat's the way to choke — v. 2 

we will bring you on your way — v. 2 

is nipped, and ways be foul — v. 2 (song) 

you that way; we, this way — v. 2 

show tlieir teeth in way of smile .Mer, of Venice, u 1 

the self-same way (jpp.) — i. 1 

this was a way to thrive, and he was — i. 3 

in way of marriage (rep. ii. 9) — ii. 1 

which is tlie way to master Jew's'if .. — ii. 2 

'twill be a hard way to hit — ii. 2 

meeting with Salerio by the way .... — iii. 2 

well, you are gone both ways — iii. 5 

it must appear in other ways — v. 1 

where the ways are fair enough .... — v. 1 

you drop manna in the way of — v. 1 

'twill be a good way Asyou Like it, i. 1 

but come your ways (rep. ii. 3) — i. 2 

and safest way to hide us from — i. 3 

that's the way to make her scorn.... — ii. 4 

to find the way to heaven by doing . . — ii. 4 

as plain as way to parish church . , ,, — ii. 7 

and tills wav will I take upon me .. — iii. 2 

and, by the way, you shall tell — iii. 2 

ay, go your ways, go your ways — iv. I 

well, go your way to her — iv. 3 

kill thee a hundred and fifty ways , . — v. 1 

my way is, to conjure you — (epil.) 

think him a great way fool All's tl'ell.i. 1 

and I apeak the truth the next way.. — 

nay, come your waj'S {rep.) — 

sense saves another way — 

my state that way is dangerous — 

you take your way for home — 

they have gone a contrary way — 

is this the way? (rep.) — 

let him have ids way — 

he can come no other way but by . . . . — 

how and which way you will — 

they '11 be for the flowery way — 

go thy ways, I begin (rep.) — 

distracted clouds give way; BO stand — 

boarded her i' the wanton way of — 

by none of all these ways, liow could — 
it is not halfway to her heart.. J'aminffo/SA; 

while I make way from hence — 

which is the readiest way to the house — 

the instrument my pate made way .. — 

open, sir, there lies your way — 

that stops my way in Padua . 
all foul wayo! was ever man . 



ii. 


1 


11. 


1 


11. 


.■) 


11. 


.") 


Ill 


.■> 


111 


b 


111 


b 


IV 


I 


IV 


3 


IV 


b 


IV 


.S 


V 


3 



— iv. 1 

iv. 1 (song) 



iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 2 
iv. 4 
iv. 5 



— ii. 1 



— V. 1 



as lie fortli walked on his way 

another way I have to man ray 

tills way the coverlet, another way . 

this ia a way to kill a wife with 

this, by the way, I let you 

shall I lead the way? welcome! 

Petruehio, go thy waya {rep. v. 2) .. . 

make known wliich way thou — iv. o 

if thou inclinest that way Winter'sTale, i. 2 

which way to be prevented, if to be. 
saw I men scour so on their way ... 

that way recoil upon me 

or will, that way inclining 

to look that way thou wert 

home, home, the next way {rep.) , . . 

I am false of heart that way 

shall I bring thee on the way? 

jog on, jog on, the footpath way . . 
sliould pass tills way, as you did .... 

nor in a way so chaste 

a way to make us better friends .... 

you wooed me tlie false way 

how I was cozened by the way, and lost 
there is no other way, but to tell .... 

give way to what's seen now 

meetslieonthewaythefather 

and mark what way I make — .v. 1 

and a sergeant in tiie way . . Comedy of Errors, i v. 2 
against hie way, my way is now ..i. — iv. 3 
comes this way to the melancholy .. — v. 1 

by tlie way we met my wife — v. 1 

you stop our way with such Macbeth, i. 3 

for in my way it lies — i- 4 

to catch the nearest way 

that nature giveaway to in repose!.... 

marslial'st me the way that I 

my steps, which way they walk 

must not be thought after these ways., 
the primrose way to the everlasting ., 

and our safest way is, to avoid 

was't not the way? 

1 hear i t by the way ; but I will 

all causes shall give way 

something wicked this way comes .... 

each way, and move 

and more sundry ways than ever 

several crime, acting it many ways.. . 

that way are they coming 

my way of life is fallen into the sear . 

the way to dusty death 

that way the noise is {rep.) 

give our betters wav King John, 

for thou wast got i'"the way of honesty — 

and give the victors way — : 

Dauphin every way complete 

have turned another way, to our .... 

lie is a very serpent in my way 

I have away to win their loves 

and lose my way among the thorns.. 

bv me, which way you go 

I come one way of tlie Plantagenets 

the best way is, to 'venge Rich 

now, no way can I stray 

to lie that way thou goest 





5 




1 




1 




1 




2 




3 




3 


Ill 


3 




4 




4 




1 



V. 2 



V. 7 



ii. 2 



./ ;/. i 



WAT— I'll bring thee on thy way ....Richard 11. i. 3 

high Hereford on hia way? — i. 4 

whose way himself will choose — ii. 1 

go all which way it will! the noble.. — ii. 2 

iiow, or which way, to order these .. — ii. 2 

rough uneven ways (re;>.) — ii. 3 

and out out his way, to find out — ii. 3 

toads, lie in their way — iii. 2 

prevent the ways to wail — . iii. 2 

of that sweet way I was in — iii. 2 

some way of common trade — iii. 3 

and surest way to get — iii. 3 

but teachest me the way how — iv. 1 

this way the king will come (rep.) .. — v. I 

know'st tlie way to plant unrightful — v. I 

another way to pluck him headlong — v. i 

thy way with sighs, I mine with (rep,) — v. 1 

make way, unruly woman — v. 2 

march all one way; and be no more.. I Hcnryif. i. 1 

uncertain of the issue any way — i. 1 

or any way impeach what then — i. 3 

and that is the next way to give poor — ii. 1 

hold out water in foul way? — ii. I 

go thy ways, old Jack; die wlien .... — ii. 4 

we shall have good trading that way — ii. 4 

in the tedious ways of art — iii. I 

but, in the way of bargain — iii. 1 

'tis tlie next way to turn tailor — iii. 1 

a mad fellow met me on the way .... — iv. 2 

if the king have any way yoiu- good — iv. 3 

rebellion Taj^ in his way, and he .... — v. 1 

to meet you on the way, and kiss .... — v. 1 

if he do come in my way, so — v. 3 

our duty tills way lies .... c — v. 4 

I overrode him on the way 2lIenryIV. i. 1 

he asked the way to Chester — i. 1 

he seemed in running to devour the way — i. 1 

the aptest way for safety — i. 1 

have been well on your way to York — ii. 1 

wrenching the true cause the false way — ii. 1 

aa common as tlie way between — ii. 2 

give even way unto my rough — ii. 3 

makes a still-stand, runnin" neitherway — ii. 3 

let it go which way it will, ne that .. — iii. 2 

we see which way the stream of time — iv. 1 

is open ; he is gone this way — iv. 4 

oldest sins the newest kind of ways? — iv. 4 

and indirect crooked ways, I met.. .. — iv. 4 

he's walked the way of nature — v. 2 

I gave bold way to my authority — v. 2 

there is but two ways; either to — v. 3 

loosed several waya {rep.) Henry V. i. 2 

lurking in our way, to hinder — ii.2 

every rub is smoothed on our way .. — ii. 2 

I knew there was but one way — ii. 3 

in the way of argument, look you .. — iii. 2 

another neighbour, stand in our way — ii i . 6 

and my way shall be paved with .... — iii. 7 

for fear I should be faced out of my way — iii. 7 

seems to prepare his way — v. (chorus) 

I know no ways to mince it — v. 2 

French maid tliat stands in my way — v. 2 

stood in the way for my wish {rep.) .. — v. 2 

make our entrance several ways \HenryVL ii. 1 

which way, should they first break in? — ii 1 

turn not thy scorns this way — ii. 4 

no way to that, for weakness — iii. 2 

thy edged sword another way — iii. 3 

and no way canst thou turn — iv. 2 

will not any way dishonour me — v. 3 

and smooth my way upon their 2 Henry VI. i. 2 

protector will come this way by and by — i. 3 

good wine in thy master's way — ii. 3 

go, lead the way; I long to see — ii. 4 

the way her harmless young one .... — iii. 1 

this way fall I to death (rep.) -. iii. 2 

my sword make way for me — iv. 8 

to give the enemy way — v. 2 

turn this way, Henry, and regard . .ZHenry VI. i. 1 

now sways it this way (rep.) — ii. 5 

no way to fly, nor strength — ii. 6 

he'll lade it dry to have his way .... — iii. 2 

a way, and straying from the way . . — iii. 2 

or hew my way out with a bloody axe — iii. 3 

let's on our way in silent sort — iv. 2 

comes hunting this way to — iv. 5 

he make this way (rep.) — iv. 5 

Edward darea and leads the way — — v. 1 

thitlier straight, for willingness rids way — v. 3 

work thou the way, and thou — v. 7 

I think, it is our way, if we Richard III. i. 1 

the readiest way to make the — i. 1 

tlien give way, dull clouds — i. 3 

for, hy the way, I'll sort occasion .... — ii. 2 

way hath made you melancholy {rep.) — iii. 1 

long ere this have met us on the way — iii. 1 

reasons urged upon the way — iii. 1 

gracious pleasure any way therein .. — iii. 4 

to meet you on the way — iv. 1 

uncertain way of gain! — iv. 2 

tlie way to win your daughter {rep.) — iv. 4 

tell thy tale the nearest way ? — iv. 4 

if by the way they be not fought withal — iv. 5 
grace chalks successors their way ..Henry I'll I. i. 1 

of his own merit makes liis way .... — i. 1 

who being allowed his way, self-mettle — i. 1 

but when the way was made — i. 1 

men of his way sliould be most liberal — i. 3 

our breach of duty, this way, is business — ii. 2 

would not be a young count in your way — ii. 3 

pray you, keep your way — ii. 4 

go thy ways, Kate : that man — i i . 4 

or laid any scruple in your way .... — ii. 4 

which forced such wajf , that many . . — ii. 4 

and that way I am wife in — iii. 1 

come not by the way of accusation .. — iii. i 

betray you any way to sorrow — iii. 1 

the way of our profession is — iii. 1 

though now the time gives wav to us — iii. 2 

and hedges, his own way ; but in ... . — iii. 2 



WAY— no way to cure this? Henry y til. Hi. 2 

vi't I know a wny, if it tnl(C rislit..,. — iii. 8 

In the way of loyalty and trutli — iii. a 

ami to prepare tl>c ways ynu — iii. 2 

Wolsey,— lliatoncc trod the ways of — iii. 2 

found tliec a way, out of Ilia — iii. 8 

ye slittll jio my wa>, whicli is — iv. 1 

of mine own way ; I knttw you — v. 1 

no more prevail, than we give woy to — v. 1 

glad, I came this way so happily .... — v. 2 

misht go one way, and safely — v. 2 

is tliere no otlier way of mercy — v. 2 

and find o way out to let tlie — v. 3 

make way tltere for the princess .... — v. 3 

BlittU read the perfect ways of. — v. 4 

lead tlic way. lords! ye must — V. 4 

go tliy way ."Hector (rep.) ....Troiliu^Cretsida, \. 2 

making tlieir way with those of — i. 3 

is this, in way of truth — ii. 2 

come your ways, come yonr ways .. — iii. 2 

beseech you. as in way of taste — iii. 3 

I will lead the way — iii. 3 

take the instant way — iii. 3 

if you give way, or hedge — iii. 3 

it will go one way or other — iii. 3 

here lies our way — iv. 1 

and, by the way, possess thee what .. — iv. 4 

which way would Hector have it? ., — iv. 5 

make cruel way through ranks — iv.b 

doth operate another way — v. 3 

flow this way, my good lord (rep.). Vimon of Ath. \.i 

wlittt a sweep of vanity comes this way ! — i. 2 

I knew it the most general way — ii. 2 

and make a clear way to the gods.... — iii. 4 

fear to catch it. and give way — iv. 3 

you that way, and you this, but two — v. I 

you must in no way say Coiiolonm, i. I 

course will on the way it takes — i. 1 

and no way from yourselves — i. 1 

r lucked all gaze his way — i. 3 

'11 potch at him some way — i- '0 

rather be their servant in my way .. — ii. I 

make way, they are comin" — ii. 2 

consent of one direct way should he — ii. 3 

which way, do you judge, my wit .. — ii. 3 

why that way? To lose itself — ii. 3 

?ou must enquire your way — iii. 1 

the plain way of his merit — iii. I 

yet sought the very way to catch — ijj. I 

and give way tlie while to unstable.. — iii. 1 

this IS the way to kindle (rc/j.) — iii. I 

sir, those ccdd" ways, that seem — iii. I 

it is tlie humane way: the other .... — iii. 1 

we'll proceed in our first way — iii. I 

hast not the soft way, which — iii 2 

can do i* the way of flattery — iii. 2 

that starts i' the way before thee .... — iv. I 

keep on your way. O you're — iv. 2 

thine own ways: whether to — iv. 5 

and have already o'erborne their wuy — iv. c 

gave way to your clusters — iv. S 

. kneel the way into his mercy — v. 1 

ond cannot lose your way — v. I 

yon know the way home again — v. 2 

gave liim way in all his own desires .. — v. 5 

after your way his tale pronounced .. — v..') 

now strew flowers in his way JnluisCcemr^ i . 1 

go you down that way (i f p. ) — i. I 

Btand you directly in Antonius* way — i. 2 

which is a great way growing on .... — ii. I 

this way have you well expounded it — ii. 2 
security gives way to conspiracy — ii. 3 (paper) 

which way hast thou been? — ii. 4 

he draws Mark Antonio out of the way — iii. 1 

epurn thee like a cur out of my way — iii. 1 

one of two had ways you must — iii. I 

or driven as we point the way — iv. 1 

must I give way and room to your .. — iv. 3 

you wrong me every way — iv. 3 

give him way (rep.) ^ An'onij ^ Cleopatrat i. 3 

no way excuse his soils, when we — i. 4 

enmities may give way to greater — ii. I 

to greater matters must give way .... — ii. 2 

your way is shorter, my Vjun'oses .... — ii. 4 

painted one way like a Gorgon (re/;.) — ii. 5 

Bhow US the way, sir — ii. 6 

show me which way — ii. 7 

and neither way inclines — iii. 2 

give light to thy fair way! — iii. 2 

the trees by the way, should have.... — iii. ti 

hold unbcwailed tiieir way — iii. U 

quite forego the way which promises — iii- 7 

olready snow me the way of yielding — iii. 8 

that I liave lost my way for ever — iii. 9 

that will sweep your way for you — _ iii. 9 

I will seek some way to leave him .. — iii. II 

I have many other ways to die — iv. I 

it will determine one way — iv. 3 

this way; well said — iv. 4 

to the way she's forced to — v. 1 

make wav there,— Ca-sar (rep.) — v. 2 

why, that's the way to fixil their — v. 2 

being loyal, took her own way — v. 2 

of easy ways to die — v. 2 

knowledge which way they went ..Cymbeline, i. 1 

I'll move him to walk this way — i. 2 

in despair; that way, post griwe .... — 1.2 

fie! you must give way — i. 2 

or a that wav accomplished courtier — i. 5 

Is ended; tatte your own way — i. fi 

would chatter this way, and contemn — i. 7 

is there no way for men to be — ii. 5 

and, by the way, tell me how Wales — iii. t 

accessible is none but Milford wuy .. — iii. 2 

told me, I could not misji my way..., — iii. fi 

ditl make my way long forth — iv J 

which is the way? I thank you — iv. 2 

this way, the Rfimans must or — iv. I 

'can to look the way that they did ., — v. 3 

the way which they stooped eaglet .. — v. 3 



WAY— art a way, I think, to liberty. .Ci/inMin?, v. 
yon know not which way you shall go — V. 

the wuy of blindness! tr^f;.) - — V. 

discovcnil not which way she was gone — V. 
Kniiums. iimke way (rep.) .... TilusAiidronieut, i. 

shall In' thy usage everv way — i. 

biirr'st me my way ill lUmie? — i. 

but go thy ways; go, give that — i. 

this way, or not ul all, stand you ... . — ii. 

this way to death my wretched — ii . 

which way shall I And revenge's cave? — iii. 

kinsmen, this is the way — iv. 

or plot the woy to do it — v. 

thus ready for the way of life Periclet, i. 

and we are half way there — '>■ 

to cast thee in our way I — ii. 

can any way speak in his just — ii 

go thy ways (rc/i. iv. G) — iii. 

your thoughts went on my way .. — iv. (Gomi.i 

come your ways (rep.) — iv. 

which is her way to go with warrant — iv. 
no way to lie rid on't, but by the way — iv. 
would but give way to customers .... — iv. 

in tliat clear way thou guest — iv. 

come your ways (jt'p.) — iv. 

will you not go the way of women-kind? — iv. 

any of these ways are better — iv. 

give him way. Rarest sounds 1 — v. 

rest untold: sir, lead the way — v. 

your liking a I'nore worthier way tcnr,i. 

fled this way, sir: when by no — ii. 

a bawd, in way of good service — ii- 

draw, you rascal, come your ways — ii. 

which way thou might'st deserve — ii. 

if the wild geese fly that way — ii. 

*tis best to give him way — ii. 

in which your pain that way; I'll this .. — iii. 
entreat for him, nor any way sustain him — iii. 

that way madness lies — iii. 

this way, my lord. With him — iii. 

nature thus gives way to loyalty — iii- 

his wits has given way to his impatience — iii. 

let him smell his way to Dover — iii. 

cannot see your way. I have no way .... — iv. 

in the way to Dover (rep.) — iv. 

not met us on the way — iv. 

our wishes, on the way, may prove — iv. 

one way I like this well (rep.) — iv. 

stay with us; the waysare dangerous.... — iv. 
half way down hangs one that gathers .. — iv. 
my brother's way to the forfeiided iiluce? — v. 

thou dost make thy way — v. 

shall give them instant way — v. 

'tis the way to call hers Romeo ^JuUel,\. 

he ran this way, and leaped this .... — ii- 

fo thy way, wench; serve God — ii. 
must another waj', to fetch — ii. 

is but a little way above our heads .. — iii. 
way ran he that killed Mercutio? (rep.) — iii- 
to light thee on thy way to Mantua., — iii. 

or walk in thievish ways — iv. 

foot wanders this way to-night — v. 

lead boy; which way? Yea, noise? .. — v. 
the steep and tliorny way to heaven .... Hamlei, i. 
come jour ways. I shall obey, my lord.. — i. 

he seemed to find his way without — ii- 

but in the beaten way of friendship .... — ii. 

we eoted them on the way — ii- 

and profit, was better both ways — ii. 

certain jdayers we o'erraught on tlie way — iii. 

bring hiin to his wonted way again — iii. 

go thy ways to a nunnery — iii. 

f A'li/.J play the fool no way but in's own — iii. 

his affections do not that way tend — iii. 

they must sweep my way, and marshal.. — iii. 

come, I will give you way for these — iv. 

nothing neither way. Have at you now.. — v. 

some one way, some another ...^ Othello^ i. 

is the next way to draw new mischief on — i. 

let her will have a free way — i. 

do it a more delicate way than drowning — i. 

it is clean out of the way — i. 

these mutualities so marshal the way .. — ii. 

assays to lead the way: if I once stir — ii- 

what, man! there are ways to recover .. — ii. 

ay, that's the way; dull not device — ii. 

to draw the Moor out of the way — iii. 

sneak, is it out of the way? — iii. 

there is no other way; 'tis she must do't — iii. 

bring me on the way a little (rep-) — iii. 

nay, tliat's not your way. Hang herl.. .. — iv. 
nor send you out o' the way? Never .... — iv. 
every way makes my gain — v. 

1 have made my way through more .... — v. 
no way but this, killing myself — v. 

WAYLAlD-havc already waylaid ..\Henryir. i, 
WAYI/AY thee going home T-i/pW/lViVA', iii. 4 (elial 
WAYWARD is this foolish love. TwoUeu. „f ler. i. 

her life to a clod of wayward marl? .. Much Ado. ii. 

whining, purblind, wayward boy . Lore'* /,. toi/, iji. 

my wife is in a wayward mood Comedy Qf/irrorj.iv. 

hath been but for a wayward son .... Macbeth, iii. 

to wayward sickliness and age Hichard II. ii. 

proceeds from wayward sickness ..Hichard III. i. 

tclcliy and wayward was thy infancy ^ — iv. 

thwarting the wayward seas, rerictes, iv. 4 (Gowcr 

though wayward fortune did malign .... — v. ' 

since this same wayward girl ..Homeo fy Juliet, iv. 

mv wavward hushimd hatli Olhrilo.Vn. 

W.VVW'AKDKR; make the doors. AtynuUkeii. iv. 
WAVWAHD.MKSS that infirm and choleric i.-<ir,i. 
WEAK-lord of weak remembrance Tempest, ii. 

a very weak monster — ii. 

weak masters though ye be — v. 

made wit with inusiiiK weak. J'«'oGeii.n//>rona. i. 

this weak impress of love — iii. 

has a most weak pia mater TuelflhSiehl.i 

to her all matter else scums weak . . Much Ado. iii. 

their sense, thus weak, lost ..Mid.N.'tUieam, iii. 2 

more strongthi than her weak prayers — iii. 2 



Wf;AK-a weak bond holds you . . .MiJ. Af.'i Or. Iii. » 

and this weak and idle theme — (c|iil.) 

were but u weak disabling .. Merchant of I'euice. ii. 7 

uiiiiresscd with two weak evils At \iou Like it , ii. 7 

valiant ill the defence, yet is weak .iU'ilfeU, i. I 

powerful sound, within an organ weak — ii. 1 

ni a most weak— And debilc — ii. 3 

and mine age is weak — iii. 4 

but verv weak and unserviceable .... — iv. 3 

our hollies soft, and weak Taming of Shrew, v. 2 

our strength as weak, our weakness.. — v. 2 
and (uir weak spirits ne'er been .. n'inler'iTale. i 2 

fancies too weak for boys — iii. 2 

fcible. shallow, weak Comrdii nfEi ron. iii. 2 

lint nil's too weak: for brave Maclrtth. Macbeth, i. 2 

to ollV-r up a weak, poor, innocent ~ iv. 3 

same weak wind which enkindled it. KingJohn, v. 2 
out of the weak door of our fainting — v. 7 

w ho, weak with age, cannot Hichard II. Ii. 2 

hei-ause my power is weak — ii. 3 

Weak men must fall; for heaven .... — iii. 2 

tiniii this weak arm — iii. 2 

how these vain weak nails may tear — v. 4 

Imld as little counsel with weak fear.l/Jeiiri///'. iv. 3 

the power of Percy is too weak — iv. 4 

to remember so weak a composition. 2HeMry//'. ii. 2 

can a weak empty vessel bear — ii- 4 

that show a weak mind — ii. 4 

twenty weak and wearied posts .... — ii. 4 
in their seeds, and weak beginnings — iii. 1 

from falling with so weak a wind .... — iv. 4 

of liizars, and weak age Henry V. i. 1 

of a weak and niggardly projection .. — ii. 4 

goes against my weak stomach — iii. 2 

but a weak and worthless satisfaction — iii. 6 
my army, but a weak aud sickly guard — iii. 6 
within the weak list of a country^ .. — y. 2 

army is grown weak and faint 1 Henry y I, j. I 

hel[)s mo, else I were too weak — i. 2 

this weak and writhled shrimp — ii. 3 

of my weak decaying age — ii. 5 

weak shoulders overborne with — ii. 5 

we find the slothful watch but weak — iii. 2 

death from his weak legions — iv. 4 

age, and weak unable limbs — iv. 5 

my ancient incantations are too weak — v. 3 

till Henry he more weak 'i Henry I'l. v. 1 

my title's weak, tell me SHenryFj.i. 1 

and weak we are, and cannot shun.. — ^ii. 3 

title t<» the crown be weak — iii- 3 

which are so weak of courage — iv. I 

hut attended with weak guard — iv. 5 

in tills weak piping time of peace ..Richard III. i. 1 
the king is sickly, weak, and melancholy — i. I 

if my « eak oratory can from his — iii. 1 

once weak ones, is not ours Henry I'll!, i. 2 

'tis too weak ever to get a boy — ii. 3 

much too weak to oppose your — ii. 4 

with me, a poor weak woman — iii. 1 

with my weak wit, and to such men — iii. I 

with these weak women's fears — iij. 1 

whose weak untimbered sides . . Ttoilui ^' Cress, i. 3 
and the weak wanton Cupid shall .. — iii. 3 

to a weak and colder palate — iv. 4 

which is too weak to be a Binncrrimoii nf Athens, i. 2 
with such weak breath as this? ... Coriolanus, v. 2 
that my weak words have struck.. Jidiu»C«"»or, i. 2 
yon make the weak most strong .... — i. 3 

negiii it with weak straws — i. 3 

if these be nintives weak — ii- I 

thus to commit your weak condition — ii. I 
ah me, how weak a thing the heart.. — ii. 4 
make me most weak, most weak. ^n/ony ^' Cleo.iu. 4 

made weak by my aftlction — iii. 9 

mine eyes arc weak; fold down ....Cymbelinr, ii. 2 
I speak not out of weak surmises — iii. 4 (letter) 

that cravens my weak hand iii- 4 

I am weak with toil, yet strong — iii. 6 

full weak to undertake our wars .... — iii. 7 

being weak, seem so: if. till the Lear. ii. 4 

jmor, infirm, weak, and despised old man — iii. 2 
nliick, too weak the conflict to support! — v. 3 
that shows thee a weak slave ....Itomeo^r Juliet,!. 1 

from love's weak childish bow — i, 1 

[<o/.K7i/0 the infant rind of this weak — ii. 3 
anv gentlewoman, and very weak dealing — ii. 4 
holding o weak supposal of our worth ..HamUt, i. 2 

together with most weak hams — ii. 2 

play the god with his weak fnnctinn ..OlheUo, ii. 3 
nor from mine own weak merits will I .. — iii. 3 
toil poor, too weak for my revenge! — iii.:) 

WE.-VKEN and discredit our .. Troihu^Cressida, i. 3 

cither his notion weakens, or his /.ear, i 4 

[Cnl.Knt.'i or mineials, that weaken OthrUo, i. 2 

WEAKENED? halh Bolingbroke ..Richard II. v. I 
80 mv limbs, weakened with grief . .'i llenr y 1 1', i. I 

WEAkEK— much weaker than you I'empesi, v. I 

so is the weaker vessel called.. Lore's I..L. i. I (let.) 
by fortune from the weaker hand. .Uer. of I'enic. ii. 1 
or something weaker musters tUce. As you Likeii, i. 2 
I must eomlort the weaker vessel.... — ii. 4 

you are the weaker vessel illenryll'. ii. 4 

am weaker than a woman's tear. /"roi/in « fress. i. I 
that the weaker sort may wish ....Coriolanus, iv. 6 
strong Enobarbe is weaker than..4>i/ony ^i lien ii. 7 

and save poor me, the w-eakcr I'ericUs.'w, 1 

being the weaker vessels Itoweo^-Juhel.i. 1 

hath laid the odds o' the weaker side . . Il.iwlei. v. 2 

WEAKEST kind of fruit drops.i/ercA. qf lrn,ce. iv. I 
dues them by the weakest minister ...•!«'» "V/i, ii, 1 

otl'enil the weakest spleen to Tmiliu .( Cieis. ii. 2 

for the weakest goes to the wall .lloweo/l Juliet, i. 1 
in wiiil<i'st hud ies strongest works IlunWW, iii. 4 

Wi:AKIIi:.\li TEDencinies Henry i III. iii. 2 

AVE.\K-lll.\(.i;i) lancv Iliater'sTale. ii. 3 

WEAKl.lNi;, Warwick tokes his iHemiiVI. v. I 

WEAKl<Y-my discriliou so weakly .. 7Vi„,,r./, ii. I 

but weakly guarded where \Heiiryl l.n. I 

then you arc weakly mode Henry I' 1 1 1, ii. 3 

WEAKNESS which I feel Tempest.i.i 



WEA 



[ 824 ] 



WEA 



WEAKNESS— bear with my weakness. Tempesf, iv. 1 
owe, imd succeed by weakness ..ileas.for Alaas. ii. 4 
raciiiia of weiikiiess and debility ..As ytmUke U, ii. i 

than I dare blame my weakness Alt sit ell, u. 1 

our weakness past compare . . Tammg of Shrew, y. i 
but weakness, to bear the {rep.) . . Ifitiler s I ale. u. J 
whose weakness, married to thy. Comedy oft-rr. ii. i 
straight; weakness possesseth me . . Kxn'^]ohn,y. 3 
cives, in your weakness, strength ..Richard II. in. i 

see I'is weakness, and admire our Heiiryi-^. in- b 

for weakness, wliich she entered . . 1 Henry r/. ni. j 

childish weakness to lament ZHenryVI. y. 4 

bear with lier weakness, which . . . . Itichardl lI i 3 

words and weakness • . ««"'!; ' / "• Y- : 

Troy in our weakness stands TroilusSfLreis. i. d 

fron'i my weakness draws ray — ii>- - 

thy country's strength and weaknessConoianws.i v. 6 
it is the weakness of mine eyes . . JulimCwsar, iv. J 

noble weakness! if they had ...inlo-iyfClen y. i 
thence into a weakness; thence to ....Hamlet, ii. . 
out of my weakness, and my melancholy — u- •- 
dare not task my weakness with any ..Othello, u. .! 

WEAL-purged the gentle weal Macbeth, \u. 4 

the medicine of tlie sickly weal ...•■• — y- ^ 
our weal on you depending {rep.) ..ktng^Jnhn.w. i 
sit at chiefest stern of public weal . . 1 Henry I l.i. 

watchmen of our English weal — iii- 1 

will be partner of your weal, or woe — ni. ^ 
Uod's glory, and ray country s weal — .v. i 
smells from the general we&l.. 1 1 manor Athens, ly. J 
toucliing the weal o' the common . . Conolanus,i. 1 

i' the body of the weal -^ .!!■ ? 

a foe to tlie public weal: obey ...... — "]■ > 

ill the tender of a wholesome weal ..-.•••• f ;««'':.!• J 

determine of my weal or woe ..Romeo ^Juhet, iii. i 
snirit, upon whose weal [Kn(. -spirit] ..Hamlei, in. i 

WE Aly-B AL ANCED form Mens, for Meas. ly . 3 

WE.'VL'S-MEN as you are .......... Conolanns, n. i 

WE'i.LTH— well of his wealth ..TieoGen.of I-er. \. i 
andmore wealth than faults (.rep.) .. — in- 

1 have little wealth to lose — .'.V- ,' 

the wealth I have, waits on my ..iUori/'fires, in. i 
for the wealth of Windsor Castle .... — ni. J 



iii.l 



to heal it only by his wealth ... 

thy father's wealth was tlie first ... — »!■ f 

for it is all the wealth lie hath left . . Much .ido. i. 

to love, to wealth, to pomp Love sL. Lost, t. 1 

for all the wealth that ever 1 ........ — . i.X- ^ 

all tlie wealth I had ran m . Merchant of Venice, in. - 

thewhole wealth of thy wit in — in- •■> 

man outlive hie wealth, to view — 'v- 

thy wealth being forfeit to the state. . — iv. 
for half thv wealth, it is Antonio 3 .. — iv. 
for the weiil til that the world masters — v. 
I once did lend my body for his wea th — . y. i 
our jewels and our wealth together. Js yontike il, 1.3 

leaving his wealth and ease -"\^ \f°''H 

honour, and wealth, from me AllsWell, n. 3 

I am not worthy of the wealth I owe .— ._,'!• ^ 
as wealth isbirrden of my wooing.. Tammg- o/i/i. i. - 
a wife with wealth enough, and young — . i- ^ 
amerchant of incomparable wealth.. — 'v- ^ 
wealth increased, by prosperous. .Comedi/qAiJjr.i. 1 
did wed my sister for her wealth {rep.) — lu- - 
might bear my wealth at any time . . — v. 
hath he iiut lost much wealth by .... — .v. i 

destroving them for wealth Macbeth, iv. 3 

for the' wealth of all the world Kiys:Jnhn ly. 1 

and were masters of their wealth, . . . 1 Henry 1 1 . n. 4 
to set the exact wealth of all our states — iv. i 
beside, his wealth doth warrant .... 1 Henry I I. v. o 

tocliooseforwealth, andnot for — „, .^- = 

neither suhjeot, wealth, nor diaaem.2Heni!/» /■ iv. J 

have I affected wealth or honour — .iv., 

or gather wealth. I care not with .... — ly. Hi 

bPen desirous of their wealth SHenrylj. ly. t 

affected eminence, wealth Henry nun. .. 

what piles of wealth hath he — !'! ^ 

all that world of wealth I have — Jii- _^ 

all the land's wealth into one........ — . V ; 

loss of wealth and friends . . TroHus ^ Criwda ly. I 
lay out their wealth on court'sies . . Timon of AIM. i. . 
I would not for the weal th of Athens — 1 1 ) ■ ; 
have put my wealth into donation .. — ni- ; 
whocannot keep his wealth, must .. — ni. . 
my lord hath spent of Timon's wealth — in. ■ 
the latest of my wealth I'll share .... — iv. . 

not wish to be from wealth exempt . . — !*'■ ; 

hadst tliou wealth ac;ain, rascals — iv. • 

were all the wealth I have, shut up .. — jv- ■ 

take wealth and lives together — jv- ; 

and whilst tliis poor wealth la-sts — iv. ■ 

you had power and wealth to requite me — iv. 
and suuis of love and wealth, as shall — .v. 
'would half my wealth would hay ..Cnno'anns. ly. 

if tliere were wealth enough fir Cymhchnf,}. 

all my wealth would make niel .. Titus Aiidrn:i. n. 

I tell you all her wealth Lc.ir, i. 

I would not for the wealth of all this town — i. 
sum up half mv sura of wealth . . Romeo Sf.hiliei,u. li 
impo thume of much wealth and peace. Hamlei. ly. 4 

WEALTHIEST, that, I protest All's»'ell.\K 3 

WEALTHILY in Padua {rep.) .Tammg of ■'Shrew, i. i 
WEALTHY Andrew docked in. .Merch. of Venice, i. 1 

a wealthy Hebrew of my tribe — ■■ 3 

steal from the wealthy Jew — .v. 1 

be married to a wealthy widow .. T'aminff ofSh. iv. i 
her dowry wealthy, and of worthy birth — ly. o 
and all tlie wealthy kingdoms of ....2 Henn/ ''J; i- 1 

liberal, valiant, active, wealthy — ly- " 

yet not so wealthy as an English ZHenri/l /. i. 4 

I am wealthv in my friends Timon of.iihens, ii. 2 

andnowVentidius is wealthy too — n;- 3 

wealthy curled darlings of our nation ..Othello, i. i 

WEAN it; it may prove Love\L Losi,y. 2 

I tire rather wean mc trom Z Henry I 1. i y. 4 

and wean them from themselves.. TitasAndro:i. i. '.; 

WEANED-and she was weaned. . Hmneo f,-.hdtet, i. 3 

WEAPON— and make thy weapon Aro'g. Tempest, i. 2 

I saw their weapons drawn — ii- 1 



\ Juliet, 



— iii. 1 

.Hamlei, V. 2 

— V. 2 



AVEAPON— let's draw our weapons Tempest, n. 1 

to measure our weapon Merry tVivci. 4 

had the measuring of their weapons — .l). ' 
what weapons is he? No weapons, sir — in- 1 

it appears so, by his weapons — ni- j 

keep in your weapon — ni.l 

are dangerous weapons for maids Mnch Ado, v. 2 

get your weapons in your hand. Mid. N.'s Dream, ly. 1 
hurt with the same weapons. .A/ercft.q/Ten/w, ill. 1 

draw fortli thy weapon Taming of Shrew, in. 2 

I smile at, weapons laugh to scorn Macljelh, y. 7 

hedotli, if his weapon be out i Henry W. n. 2 

put up vour naked weapons — .n. 4 

so that skill in the weapon is — ly. ■> 

words, and keeps whole weapons Henrt/V. in. 2 

any sword, weapon, or dagger.l Henry II. i. 3 (procl.) 

using no other weapon — .'J- j 

forbidden late to carry any weapon.. — ni. l 
his weapons, holy saws of sacred writ.2 Henry VI. i . 3 
hath turned your weapon's edge .... — n- ' 

take away his weapon — .!;• f 

you put sharp weapons in a madman s — in- 1 
your wrathful weapons drawn here.. — in. 2 

lay your weapons down — jv. j 

sliake he his weapon at us, and pass by — iv. 8 
words will not, then our weapons shall — , X- ' 

shall rust upon my weapon 3Heniyl'I. i. 3 

their weapons like to lightning came — n- 1 

kill me with thy weapon — .y. 6 

what, would yon have my weapon, ff/c/iari ///. in. 1 
empale him with your weapons. Troilnn S,-Crer>.\. 7 

weapons, weapons, weapons 1 Coriolanui,\n. 1 

masters, lay down your weapons — 

waving our red weapons JnlmsCrrsm 

with thy weapon nothing darest.. Titus Andro. 
stand'st thou with thy weapon drawn — 
the goodliest weapons of his armoury — 
and sends the weapons wrapped about — 

witli this, my weapon drawn — 

weapons! artns! what's t!ie matter here.. Le'i 

let not women's weapons, water-drops — 
horse to ride, and weapon to wear — 

my naked weapon is out Rome 

throw your mistempered weapons .. 
weapon should quickly have been out 
beat down their weapons 

1 mean, sir, for his weapon 

what'shis weapon? Rapier and (rep.). 

get weapons, ho! and raise some special. Of/.cHo, i. I 

with years, than with your weapons — i. 2 

men do their broken weapons rather use — i. 3 

In his shirt, with light and weapons — v. 1 

take you this weapon, which I have here — v. 2 
I have anotherweapon in this chamber.. — v. 2 
hast no weapon, and perforce must suffer — v. 2 
behold! I have a weapon — v. 2 

WBAPONED— vou do see me weaponed . . — v. 2 
WEAR— which I wear in my head .... Tempest, v. 1 

wear out thy youth in TicoGen.ori'erona.i. 1 

compass will you wear your fartlimgale.' — .n. 7 
shall I fashion me to wear a cloak?.. — m. I 

I'll wear a boot to make it — . v. 2 

and by my side wear steel? Merry Wives, i. 3 

does he not wear a great — i- 4 

away, I say, time wears — . y. 1 

I wear not motley in ray brain . . Twelfth Night, i. b 

so wears she to him, so sways — .n- 4 

here, wear this jewel for me — ]]]■ i 

or forswear to wear iron about .you . . — in- 4 
keen whips I'd wear as rubies ..Meas.forMeas._n. 4 

which she yet wears for his sake — in. I 

it is not the wear. I will pray, Pompey — iii-2 

he wears his faith but as the MnchAdo, i. 1 

but he will wear his cap with — i. ] 

wear tlie print of it, and sigh — i. 1 

what fashion will you wear the garland — ii- I 

you must wear it one way — n.- J 

your grace is too costly to wear — n- ' 

let her wear it out with good counsel — n. 3 
she may wear her heart out first .... — .n. .^ 

and forbid him to wear it — .i.n- '- 

the fashion wears out more apparel.. — n|. 3 

I know him, lie wears a lock — iii- 3 

no, pray thee, good Meg, I'll wear this — in. 4 

I'll wear none but this — ni- 4 

God give me joy to wear it — ?'.'.■* 

you 3iould wear it in your cap — m. 4 

win me and wear me — v. I 

dost thou wear thy wit by thy side? — v. I 
they say, he wears a key in his ear .. — . v. 1 

he slmli wear nothing handsome — y. 4 

weeds of Athens he doth wear. Mid.N.'sDream. n. 3 

to wear away this long age — ..y. 1 

wear his colours like a tumbler's. Lodc's L.Los/, m. I 

this favour tlioushalt wear — y. 2 

come on then; wear the favours .... — v. 2 

this jewel did she wear — 

and that a' wears next his heart — 

wear prayev-booksin ray pocket. A/er.o.r To 
let none presume to wear an undeserved — 
wear yet upon their chins the beards — 
them lightest that wear most of it .. — m. - 
and wear my dagger with the braver — ni. 4 

I'll wear them for your sake — iv. 1 

that .you would wear it till your .... — v. I 

the clerk will ne'er wear hair on — y I 

gentleman, wear this for me AsyouLilte ii,\. i 

wears yet a precious jewel — ii. 1 

wear these for my sake — n- 4 

motley's the only wear! — .n- 7 

get that I wear; owe no man — in- 2 

look, you lisp, and wear strange suits — iv. 1 

and horns to wear {rep I — iv. 2 (song) 

to see thee wear thy heart in — v. 2 

like an old courtier, wears lier cap All sHell, i. I 

and toothpick, which wear not now — i. 1 

and I like the wear well — !• 1 

it will wear the surplice of humility — i. 3 

for they wear themselves in — n- I 

he wears his honour in a box — ii 3 



V. 2 



— V. I 

. (ri)i(CT-'srci(e, i. 2 



WEAR— a ring the county wears, that.Atl'sU'ell, iii. 7 

must wear your spirits low — v. 1 

to wear your gentle limbs in my .... — v. I 

I have seen her wear it {rep.) — . , ^* ^ 

what apparel he will vfeox. .Taming of Sh. 1 (indue.) 
raiment will your honour wear {rep.) — 2 (indue.) 
where a wasp doth wear his sting? .. — .ii. I 

the morning wears, 'tis time — }]]■ ^ 

repair what she will wear in me .... — in. 2 
gentlewomen wear such caps as "" " 

if I wear pearl and gold? 

why he that wears her like her. 

as friendship wears at feasts — •■ ' 

that wear upon your virgin branches — iv. 3 

will they wear their placlcets . — iv. 3 

and finest, finest wear-a? — iv. 3 (song) 

doth utter all men's wear-a — iv. 3 ( song) 

but he wears them not Jiandsomely — iv. 3 

often touching will wear gold. Comcd5/(i/"£i70f.i, n. I 

which now you wear so openly — v. I 

but I shame to wear a heart so vihits.. Macbeth, ii. 2 

who wear our health but sickly — ni.l 

and wears iipon his baby brow — iv. I 

would wear the brows of grace — iv. 3 

wear thou thy wrongs — iv. 3 

or wear it on my sword — .'.y- 3 

wear out the d ay in peace King John , 1 1 1 . 1 

thou wear a lion's hide! — iii- ■ 

a glove, and wear it as a favour Richard II. v. 3 

for his sake, Wear the detested XHenryLl'. i. 3 

might wear, without corrival — .;. 3 

I'll never wear hair on my face — ii. ' 

wasted, the sooner it wears — .ji. 4 

when 1 will wear a garment — i.ii. 2 

that same royalty he wears — iv- 3 

all those that wear those colours .... — y- 4 

wear nothing but high shoes ilJemy! V. \. 2 

and wears his boot very smooth — .ii- 4 

uneasy lies the head that wears a crown — ni. 1 
He that wears the crown immortally — iv. 4 

and wear it in my heart . — 

my mistress wears her own hair. . 
tliey could never wear sucli heavy 

do not you wear your dagger 

and I will wear it in my bonnet .... 

this will I also wear in my cap 

if men my garments wear 

no scorn to wear the leek upon {rep.) 

lie would wear, if alive 

here, Fluellen ; wear thou this 

I, by bargain, should wear it myself. . 

promised to wear it in his cap 

and wear it for an honour in thy cap 
wliy wear you your leek to-day? .... 

I wear out my suit 

thoushalt wear me, if thou wear me — y- 2 

and not to wear, handle, or use I Henry I' 1. 1. 3 

well, I'll find friends to wear my — u. 4 

in spite of tliee, shall wear — n . 4 

ever, and my faction, wear — !|- * 

will I upon thyparty wear this rose — \\. 4 

still will I wear the same — .n- l 

of these colours that I wear in — in. 4 

ought to wear this ornament — i^- [ 

about the rose I wear (rep.) — iv. 1 

in that he wears the badge of — ly- j 

nor wear the diadem upon his head.. 2 Henry! I. i. 1 
name the several colours we do wear — i'.- I 

I wear no knife, to slaughter — in- 2 

let thy horse wear a cloak — .'v. 7 

shall not wear a head on his shoulders — .'^- ^ 

shalt wear it as a herald's coat — 'v lU 

this (lay I'll wear aloft my burgonet — 



.Henry V. 



iv. 8 
iv. 8 
v. 1 

V. 2 



.ZHenryVI. 



— ii. 3 



iii. 1 



V. 4 



a thing it is to wear a crown 

the white rose, that I wear 

cannot speak, unless he wear a crown 

tho' he do wear the crown 

as victors wear at the Olympian games 

and much rain wears the marble .... — ;];- ^ 

I'll wear the willow garland (rep. iv. 1) — iii. 3 

now shall wear the English — i^'- 3 

altho' my head still wear the crown . . — iv. 6 

framed to wear a crown — \\.o 

her men, and wear her livery Richard III. i. ^ 

wear both of them, for both 

too weighty for your grace to wear .. 
wear the garland of the realm {rep.) 
wear their heads, than some {rep.) . 

but shall we wear these glor-es 

wear it, enjoy it, and make much.. . 

cum privilegio, wear away Henry VIII.i. 3 

and wear a golden sorrow — n- 3 

we are contented to wear our mortal — .n- 4 

I feel I am not worthy yet to wear .. — i\- 2 
[ An(.] all should wear with him.. Troilus 4- Cress.} 3 

who wears his wit in his belly — .!)- .' 

u, man may wear it on both sides .... — ?'.!• 3 

he wears his tongue in his arms — ni. 3 

wear this sleeve — !^- J 

I do wear mine bare — iV. * 

to-morrow will I wear it on my helm — v. 2 

and wear a castle on thy head I — y • 2 

it wears, sir, as it grows Timon of Alliens, i. I 

accept, and wear it, kind my lord.... — ,,}■ j 

and he wears jewels (rep.) — V.\- : 

wear them like his raiment — V'' „ 

yet do our hearts wear Timon's livery — iv- 2 

thy flatterers yet wear silk — !v.3 

ne'er did poor steward wear a truer 



...Coriolanu 



t, i.9 
ii. I 
if. i 



i Marcius wears this war's 

you wear out a good wholesome 

such eves the widows in Corioli wear 
double bosoms seem to wear one heart — »v. i 
who wears my stripes impressed on him — v. 5 
truly, sir, to wear out their shoes ..JulmsCecsar, 1. 1 
and he shall wear his crown, by sea. . — 1.3 

where I will wear this dagger then . . — .1. a 

brare Caius, to wear a kerchief? — ..!'•' 

he wears the rose of youth Aniony'^Clro. 111. 11 

wear all your true followers out — iv. 12 



WEAR— wotild I wear them oni. Antony i- Clro. Iv. 13 
nltliniiKh tlie.v wear tlicir dices to . . . , CymbeliHe, i. I 

for my fukc, wair this; it is — i. 2 

you limy wear luT in title yours .... — i. 5 

must wi'iir tile print of liisVcnicmlirancc — ii. 3 
now. if you could wear a mind duik — ili. 1 

fortli I wcnr it lis your enemy — lii. 5 

for I wciir not my dii^fjer in — iv. 'i 

iny lirotlier wears tliec not tiic one .. — iv. 2 
and iionours, huriic ns 1 wear mine .. — v. 2 

he dntli wear a preciuus ring Tilui.lnilrnn. ii. 4 

more slie'll wear Diana's Uvcry I'ericlei.W. b 

to betray. Uotli wear an ancel's face .. — iv. 4 

siHlfiess, wears yet tliy silver livery .. — v. :i 
wortli tliat learned elnirity aye wears — v. :i(Gow.) 

thou must needs wear my coxcomb Lciir, i. 4 

know not how tlieir wits to wear .. — i. 4 (sour) 

Wear a sword, wlio Wears no lu)nesty — ii. '.* 

ha, lia; look, he wears cruel gartcrsi .... — ii. 4 
then he wears wooden netlicr-stocks .... — ii. I 

fatlu'rs, that wear rngs, do make — ii. 1 

to ride, and weapon to wear — iii. 4 

if vuu di<l wear a beard niMn j-our cliin.. — iii. 7 

wear tliis, spare speecli; (Iccliuc — iv. 2 

shall so wear out to naugiit — iv. (i 

and we'll wear out, in ft walled prison .. — y. 3 
and none but fools do wear it . . Rnineo ^■Jutielt ii. - 
will ne'er wear out the everlasting flint — ii. n 
be hanL'ed, sir, if he wear yonr livery — iii. I 
new rones, and may not wear them.. — iii. 2 
thy father 8 life, now wears his erown . . Hamlei, i. 5 

1 will wear him in my heart's core .... — iii. 2 

nay, then let the devil wear black — iii. 2 

you may wear your rue with a dift'erenee — iv. .'j 

careless livery tliat it wears — iv. 7 

should still her wheaten garland wear.. — v. 2 

wears out his time, much like his ()lheUo,\. I 

but I will wear my heart upon my sleeve — i. 1 
as I should entreat you wear your gloves — iii. 3 
wear your eye— thus, not jealous, nor.... — iii. 3 
wear'thv good rapier bare, and put it home — v. 1 

WEAltEll— merit of the wearerl..iW(T.o/ r<iiicf, ii. 9 
reverence of tlie grave wearers ..H'inter'sTali:,\\\. 1 
were I the wearer of An ton ius' ..Aiilorn/ ffClfo. ii. 2 

WE ARIED— for having wearied you. . Teiiipesl, iii. 1 
vou wearied your parishioners ..Asyou Likeit^ iii. 2 
feeble, and day wearied sun, even . . KingJohn, v. 4 
wearied, and tiutbreathed, to Harry.. i Henry I y. i. 1 

twenty weak and wearied posts — ii. 4 

even here I slip my wearied head..i?ic/i«rd III. iv. 4 

WEARIES me; vou sav, it ()vp.)..iWcr.a/r<?nic<?, i. 1 

WEARIEST and most loathed.. Jl/ea». Cm- Meus. iii. 1 

WEARIUY-vou look wearily TempeaUWi. 1 

WEARINESS— attached with weariness — iii. 3 
thought, weariness durst not have ..2Hf)iry/r. ii. 2 
weariness can snore upon the Q\x\t. .Cymbftinfly iii. G 

WEARING papers Love'sL.Losi, iv. 3 

ty wearing Ids apparel neatly Alt's H'rlt, iv. 3 

obscured with a swain's wearing. lt'intn-'»Tnh\ iv. 3 

the wearing out of six fashions 2HenrylV. v. I 

be you contented, wearing now the .. — v. 2 
in his conscience, wearing the crown ot.Henry /'. i. 2 
wearing leeks in their Monmouth caps — iv. 7 
train of her worst wearing gown was.2Hfiir!/r/. i. i 
mend the jewel by wearing it. . . . Timon (iTAt/ieiis^ i. 1 

for thy best use and wearing — v. 2 

toodull lor your good wearing? ....Cyinbeliue,ii.4 
nothing pay, for wearing our own noses — iii. I 
may remain after tlie wearing .. Romeo SrJuHei, ii. 4 
wearing his new doublet before Easter? — iii. 1 

many, wearing rapiers, are afraid Hniidet^ li. 2 

give me my nightly wearing, and adieu. O/Zic/M, iv. 3 

WEARISOME and long ....TuoGeu.of Irroim. ii. 7 
make them wearisome: and yet your. /(ic/i.jn/ II. ii.3 
tedious, wearisome, and heavy Richard III. iii. 1 

■WEAR'ST-the garland wear'st iUenryW. iv. 4 

soldier, why wear'st thou that glove. . Henry C. iv. 7 
complete armour that thou wear'st! Richard 1 1 1, iv. 4 
needs not what thou gorgeous wear'st I.enr, ii. 4 

WEARY— sick lemen. of August weary. r'm/j/M/, iv. I 
watchful, weary, tedious nights. ricoOen.u/ rer. i. I 
tales of love were wont to weary you — ii. 4 

is not weary to measure — ii. 7 

a pastime of each weary step — ii. 7 

I am not weary; and 'tis long ..Twel/lhSiuhl, iii. 3 
not to be weary with you Mens, for Mem. i. 5 

weary night. Olong and tcdious.iWii/.jV.'»Dr. iii. 2 
never so wearv. never so in woe .... — iii. 2 

all with weaiy task fordone — v. 2 

by weary steps. She hears herself (r'p.) — v. 2 
but seek the weary lieds of people sick — v. 2 
weary [Kii/. -merry] are my 6pirit8l/l»yoiitiAei(,ii.4 

if my leas were not weary — ii. 4 

[Co/. Kii/.j the weary very means do ebb? — ii. 7 
tittth many a weary step limped — ii. 7 

1 am weary of you — iii. 2 

I will weary you then no longer — v. 2 

w«» ever man so weary ? Tnmini; •,/ Shrew, i v. 1 

I know, sir. we weary yon. irep.) ilin'rr'i Tnle,\\-. 3 
the wearv sun set in the we-t .Comedy nf Hrrori. i. 2 
with long travel I am stdfaud weary — i. 2 

weary sevennights, nine times ninQ. ... Macbeth, i. 3 

BO weary with disasters — iii. I 

did part our weary powers? KingJohn. v. < 

vow a long and weary pilgrimage ..Richard II. i. 3 
passage oAhy weary steps esteem ., — i. 3 

by this llie weary lorils slinll — 11.3 

his weary joints wr.uld gladly rise .. — v. 3 
patience Is stale, and I am weary of it — v. !, 

»ofar nfoot, I shall be weary \ Henry IV. ii. 3 

trust me, I am exceeding weary •iHenrylf. ii. 2 

the continent weary of solid flnnncss — iii. I 
the king is weary of dainty and such — iv. 1 
will whisper music to my weary spirit — iv. I 

too long by thee, I weary thee — iv. 4 

my tongue is wearv ; when my legs — (epilogue) 
the weary and all-watched . . Hrnrv I', iv. (ehorus) 
old I do wax: and from my weary liinlis — v. I 

as one weary of his life 1 Henry I' I. i. 2 

art not thou wcitry, John? — iv. r> 



[ 825 ] 

WEARY— thee In my weary armi ..ilUnryfl. !l. 3 

as you are weary of the weight Richard III. I. 2 

the weary way hath made you — iii. 1 

the weary sun hath made — v. 3 

beggars, weary of their lives — v. 3 

of my long weary life is come .... Henry I'lII. W. 1 
anil now lias left me, weary, and (dd — iii. 2 
come to lay his wcory bones among ye — iv. 2 

for many weary months Ttoilnt A Crestidn, iii. 2 

to my friends, and ne'er be weary.. Timon o/Alh. i. 2 

I am weary of this charge — iii. 4 

I am weary, yea, my memory Corio/d/iun, 1. 9 

longer to live most weary — iv. a 

being weary of these worldly hars..Jii/i'iuCr''i"i-. i. 3 
waste his means, weary his soldiers.. — Iv. 3 

talk thy tongue weary; speuk Cymbrline, iii. 4 

1 aiu throughly weary — iii. 6 

weary wars against the barbarous . 7';(iit/lni/in>i. i. I 

but weary for the staleness I'erielei.v. 1 

put on what weary negligence Leur, i. 3 

weary of all, shall want some — i. 4 

all weary and o'er-watclied, take — ii. 2 

they are sick? they are weary? — ii. 4 

rocks thy sea-sick weary bark ]..Roincn ^ Juliet, v. 3 
how weary, stale, flat, and unprofitable .llumlei, i. 2 
to grunt and sweat under a weary life .. — iii. I 

wearv reckoning! pardon me Olhrllo, Vi'i. i 

WEARYING thv bearer Asyou Like il, ii. 4 

WEASEL Slicks eggs — ii. 5 

weasel hatli not such a deal of Mlenryir. ii. 3 

the weasel Scot comes sneaking Henry!', i. 2 

as (£iinreloU8 as the weasel Cymheline, iii. 4 

it is like a weasel {rep.) Hnmlei, iii. 2 

WEATHER— louder than the weather .Tempol, i. 1 

it is foul weather in us all (rfp.) — ii. I 

to bear oft" any weather at all — ii. 2 

'twill endure wind and weather .. Twelfth Xi^bt, i. 

but by tlie fair weather that you \luch .4do, i. 3 

fair weather after you ! Love's L. Lost, i. 2 

many can brook the weather that .. — iv. 2 
builds in tlie weather on.... Merchant of I'enice, ii. 9 
winter and rough weatlier. /Isyou/.i'/fe it, ii. b (song) 

as the winter to foul weather — v. 4 

for considering the weather. . Taming of Shreir, iv. 1 

'tis like to be loud weather II inter's/ ale, iii. 3 

hunt this weather? tliey have seared — iii. 3 
roaring louder than tile sea, or weather — iii. 3 

endured all weathers. Lay 't so — v. 1 

extremity of weather continuing .... — v. 2 
pour down tiiy weather; how goes .. King John, iv. 2 

and make fair weather in your — v. I 

make foul weather with despieed ..liichard I! iii. 3 
without boots, and in foul weatiicr.l llenri/ir. iii. 1 
fie! this is hot weather; gentlcmen.2 J/n/ri// /'. iii. 2 

and the weather, and the wars Ili'iiry T. iii. 2 

stomach this hot weather 2 Henry i' I. iv. 10 

shake fair weather yet a while — v. I 

placed together makes cold weather.Henry VIII. i. 4 
Keeps the weather of my fate. Troitus 4* Cressida. v. 3 

ami kit me bare to weather Ci/infcWiiie, iii. 3 

besidr fnul \\r;Lther? One minded {rep.) .Lear, iii. 1 

Wi:Allli;i',HI"ATENback \H.nryir. iii. 1 

WlO.\TlIIOi;-HITTEN conduit .. IVinteT'sTale. v. 2 

WEATHERCOCK on a steeplel. TuoUen. o/ ler. ii. 1 

had you this pretty weathercock ?.i>/eir!/ /rices, iii. 2 

wliat vane? wliat weathercock?. .Lore'*/.. Los/, iv. 1 

WEATHER-FENDS your cell Tempetl.v. I 

WEAVK their thread with bones . Twelfth Night, ii. 4 

weaves tedious snares to trap '2 Henry I' I. iii. 1 

can sing, weave, sew, and dance Pericles, iv. G 

this weaves itself perforce into my Lear. ii. 1 

WEA'VED the sleidedsilk Pericles, iv. (Gower) 

WEAVED-UP follies? Itichardll. iv. I 

WEAVER'S beam Merry i» >i ,-«, v. 1 

three souls out of one weaver?.. Tteelfth \ight, ii. 3 
Nick Bottom the weaver {rep. iii. \).Mid.y.'sDr. i. 1 

1 would I were a weaver 1 Henry W. ii. 4 

and Smith the weaver iHenryl'l. iv. 2 

fullers, weavers, who, unfit for .... Henry rill. i. 2 

WE.VVINO spiders Mid. N.'s Dream, li. 3 (so: g) 

WE.-VZAND with thy knife lempest, iii. 2 

WEB-the web of our life is of All's Hell, iv. 3 

eyes blind with the pin and web.. Ji'intei'sTale, i. 2 
have me fold up Parca's fatal web? . . Henry r. v. 1 
deadly web ensnareth thee about ..Richard III. i. 3 

out of his self-drawing web Henry I'l II. i. I 

and cutting the web 7'roi/uj<^C'rc«trrf,i, ii. 3 

lie gives the web and the pin Lear, iii, 4 

of tnc smallest spider's web Romeo Sf Juliet, i. 4 

with as little a web as this, will I Othello, ii. I 

there's magic in the web of it — iii. 4 

WED-shall wed his daughter ..TwoGen.ofVer. ii. C 
love her tlien. to-morrow wed her .. .Much Ado, iii. 2 
where I should wed, there will I shame — iii. 2 
I will wed thee in another key .Mld.N.'tDream, I. 1 

refuse to wed Demetrius (rfp.) — i. I 

that he would wed me, or else die. /.ore'iL. Lof/, v. 2 

December when they wed Asyou Like it, \v. 1 

refusing me, to wed this shepherd — v. 4 

nor ne'er wed woman, if you — v. 4 

and think to wed it, he is" so above me. All's Hell. i. I 
not to woo honour, but to wed it ... — ii. I 

fairer fortune, if you ever wed! — ii.3 

woo her, wed her, and bed her. Taming rifShreir, i. I 
I would not wed her for a mine of .. — i. 2 

the elder sister first be wed — i. 2 

if she deny to wed, I'll crave the day — ii, 1 
to wish me wed to one half lunatic .. — ii. I 

and means to wed at leisure — iii. 2 

yet never means to wed where he — iii. 2 

would have him wed again IViulei'sTale. y. 1 

and wed unto a woman Comedy of Rri ois.'i. I 

if you wed my sister for her wealth.. — iii. 2 
noble title your master wed me to. Henry I'll I. iii. I 
the wappeneil widow wed minin. .Timon of Aih. iv. 3 

she'll wed tlie stranger knight I'erielet, ii. 5 

I'll see you wed; then, with — ii. 1 

choice, and think me rarely wed — v. I 

did wed the fair Thaisa.at Pentaiiolia — v. 3 
Imply, when I shall wed, that lord Lrnr, i. I 



WED— that I must wed ere ho .. Romeo ^ Juliet, iii. i 

I'll not wed, I'll pardon you — Vii. b 

none wed the second, but who killed.. HamW, ili. i 
BO think thou wilt no second husband wed — iii. 2 

you promised me to wed — iv. fi (song) 

WEDDED-miist be wedded .. ../l/irf. A'. 'iDiMm, ii. 2 

be wedded, with TlieseiH, all in — iv. 1 

is she wedded, or no? To her will.Lonc'it.Loi/, ii. I 
I have wedded her, not bedded. ^//'i(»//, iii. 2 (let.) 
thot shall be wooed and wedded. 7'n./iuii' o/ -S/i. iv. 2 

yon wedded oil the world H inter's Tale, v. I 

were vou wedded, you would ..Comedy of Rrr. ii. I 
thv danghtersliall be wedded to.... U/«ir|/f/. v. 3 

the morn that I was wedded — v. 4 

wedded he thou to the hag:< .if lielI..2//fM.i//'/. iv. 1 
when I first mv wedded mistress ..Cojio/oinit, iv. b 
she's wedded; )icr liiisband hainBUcd.Cymbelitte, i. I 

a foolish suitor to a wecldeii lady — i. 7 

why did you throw your wedded lady — v. 4 

whom for the theft 1 wedded — v, 5 

Pericles, my wedded lord, 1 ne'er . ... Pericles, iii. 4 
thou art wedded to calamity ..Romeo ^Juliet, iii. 3 

iny daughter he hath wedded! — iv. s 

WEODING-plums at your wedding. A/«Try ll'ivet, v. 5 
wooing, wedding, anil repenting . , . . Much Ado, ii. I 

the wedding, mannerly-modest — ii. I 

very night before the intended wedding — ii. 2 
for the wedding being tliere to-moirow — iii. 3 
1 will not to wedding wi' thee ..Asyou Likeit, iii. 3 

let your wedding be to-morrow — v. 2 

wedding is great Juno's crown .... — v. 4 (song) 
olfer'st fairly to thv brother's wedding — v. 4 
great store (if wedding cheer.. 7'awii»i'o/S*r^i/', iii. 2 

siiiec, wedding it, there is such Rieliatd II. v. I 

this is the hajipy wedding torch . . I Henry T I. iii, 2 
our wedding cheer, to a sad burial. /(omro*./ii/ iv. h 

it was to see my mother's wedding Ilamlrt, i. 2 

lav on mv bed my wedding slieets .... OUiello, iv. 2 

WEDDINO-B£D-my wedding-bed .Romeo ^Jul.\. b 

I'll to mv wedding-bed; and death.. — iii. 2 

WEDDIN'G-DAY-her wedding-day..Vi«-/i.4</o, iii. 2 

this wediling-day, perhajis. is but.... — iv. 1 

on his wedding-day at night Mid.N.'sDream, i. 2 

till after Theseus' wedding-day — ii. 2 

hence iipoi'i yoiirwedding-doy..lf<?irA.o/'/>nicf, iii. 2 
barel'oot on her wedding-day.. rrtj/oMi^o/.SAreir, ii. 1 
that upon .Sunday is the wedding-day — ii. I 
to buy apparel 'gainst the wedding-day — ii. I 

to-morrow is the wedding-day — iii. 1 

this is your wedding-day, first were we — iii. 2 
upon thy wedding-day? against.... Kt'H?yoAn, iii. i 
may weep upon his wedding-day. Hfiiri/ /'///. (prol.) 

against tiiis weddiiig-dav Romeo ^Juliet, iii. 4 

the night before thy wedding-day .. — iv. ,■> 

WEDDING-DOWER; forme .TtroGen.on'er. iii. 1 

■WEDDING-GARMENT on?.7'am.ng-o/S/i)w, iv. 1 

WEDDING-RING, and break '\i.Comedy of Krr. ii. 2 

WEDGES of gold, great anchors ....Richard III. i. 4 

blunt wedges rive hard knots. Troi7iii<5-tVrj-M'i/o, i. 3 

WEDGED— not be wedged in moK.HtnryTlIl. iv. I 

my heart, as wedged with a 8igh.rioi/i/«^it'ifn. i. 1 

stronglv wedged up in a blockhead. .CoMo/<i<im,ii. 3 

WEDLOCK hours Merchant of lenice, v. I 

so wedlock would be nibbling AsyouLike it, iii. 3 

high wedlock then be honoured — v. 4 (song) 

was most true to wedlock, iirinee. ll'inier'sTale, v. I 

did after wedlock bear him KingJohn, i. I 

for what is wedlock forced MUmyll. v. b 

forthwith in holy wedlock bands ..3Henryl'I. iii. 3 
my bond to wedlock, or my love . . Henry Till. ii. 4 

that siie was false to wedlock? Ofhrllo, v. 2 

W EDI/ )CK-H Y.\IN we sing Is you Like it, v. 4 

WEDNESD.VY— on Wednesday last..l/er. ofl en. i. 3 
AVednesday the fourscore of April. /(■iii(>'r'>7'(i/f, iv. 3 
that 1 had o' Wednesday last.. . Comedy of Krrurs, i. 2 
on Wednesday ne.xt, we solemnly .Richard II. iv. I 
on Weilnesday next our council .. ..\HeniylT. i. I 
Wednesday next, Harry, you shall set — iii. 2 
he that died o' Weilnesday. Doth he — v. I 
upon Wednesday in Whitsiin-weel<.2Ufnrj(/r. ii. I 
no longer ago than Wednesday last .. — ii. 4 
I looked upon him o' Wednesday ..C<irio/inu», i. 3 
mark vou me, on Wednesday next./tomco ^Jul. ili. 4 

well. Wednc'ilay is too soon — iii. i 

Wednesiiay is to-morrow — iv. I 

noon, or night; or Wednesday morn ..Othello, iii. 3 
WED'.ST— and when thou wed'st ..Uiclmrd III. iv. I 

W EE -a little wee face Merry Hires, i. 4 

WEED-wilh weeds so loathly rr'mpr-j(, iv, I 

such weeds as may TuoGen.of Tciona, ii. 7 

this weed lier love from 'Valenline .. — iii. 2 

where lie my maiden weeds TweifXh Sight, v. I 

see thee in thy woman's weeds — v. I 

[Co/.] curbs to heaiUtrong weeds. . Meat, for Mens. i. 4 
to weed my vice, and let (lis grow! .. — iii. 2 
ond put on other weeds; and then.... iVu>-A.l<7o, v. 3 

weed wide enough to wrap Mid. N.'s Dream, ii. 2 

weeds of Athens he doili wear — ii.3 

he weeds the corn, and still lets .. Love'sL.LosI, i. 1 
hard lodging, and thin uecds, nip not — v. 2 

to weed ill is worm wikmI from — v. 2 

you weed your belter judgments .^Is you Likeit, '\i. 7 

these your iinuhual weeds to Hinier'sTale, iv. 3 

sovereign flower, and drown the weeds. .t/aW.wA.v. 2 

which I have sworn to weed Richaid II. ii. 3 

root away the noisome weeds — iii. 4 

the weeds, that his broad-spreading — iii. 4 

cannot so precisely weed this laiid..2nriirt//F. iv. I 

the fattest soil to weeds — iv. 4 

we gather honey from the weed Henry!', iv. I 

we'll weed them all at last iHenryTI. i, 3 

and weeds are shallow rmiled — iii. 1 

for what doth cherish weeds iHenryVl. ii. 

mourning weeds arc laid aside (/'r;<. iv. I ) — iii. 3 

great weeds do grow opocc Richard 111. ii. 4 

are slow, and Weeds make haste .... ii. 4 

idle weeds are fast in growth iii. 1 

he's u rank weed, sir riiomas — v. I 

Hector ill liis weeds of iieacc Troilm ^Cress. iii. 3 

[Co/. /ill'.] OS weeds before u vessel ..Conolanui, ii. 2 



WEE 



[ «2r> ] 



■yVEED— he wore his humble weeds . . Corinlanus, ii. 3 
what contempt he wore tlie humble wtert — ii. 3 
then we bring forth weeds . . Antomj (f Cleopaira, i. 2 
with wild wood-leaves and weeds . . Cymbeiine^ iv. 2 
I'll disrobe me of these Italian weeds — v. 1 
victorious in thy mourning weeds!. 7"i7usJiic/voii. i. 2 
away with slavish weeds, and idle .. — ii. 1 
but attired in grave weeds, Rome.... — iii. 1 

nor man in mournful weeds — v. 3 

I will rob Tellus of her weed Pericles, 'w. 1 

rank fumiter, and furrow weeds Lear, i v. 4 

and all the idle weeds tliat grow in — iv. 4 

these weeds are memories of those — iv. 7 

with baleful weeds, and precious-. /?omeo«§-J?i^ ii, 3 
in tattered weeds, with overwhelming — v. 1 

than the fat weed that rots itself. Hamlet, i. 5 

of midnight weeds collected — iii. 2 

do not spread the compost on the weeds — iii. 4 
his sables, and his weeds, importing health — iv. 7 
her coronet weeds clambering to hang . . — iv. 7 
set hyssop, and weed up thyme OtfieUo,\. 3 

thnu weed, who art so lovely fair — iv. 2 

WEEDED from mv heart Coriolajius,iv. 6 

WEEDER-OUX of his proud Richard lll.i. 3 

"WEEDIISrG— lets grow the weeding. Love'sL. Lost, i. I 

WEEDY trophies, and herself Hamlet, iv. 7 

WEEK— live weeks without changing.. Tempest, ii. 1 

1 sit at ten pounds a week Merry Wives, i. 3 

they have had ray house a week — iv. 3 

if they were but a week married .... MticbAdo, ii. 1 
one day in a week to touchnofood. Lore's L.Los/, i. 1 
you shall fast a week with bran .... — i. 1 

but a' must fast three days a week .. — i. 2 

that's not five weeks old as yet? — iv. 2 

and raught not to five weeks — iv. 2 

tliat I knew he were but in by the week I — v. 2 
at fourscore, it is too late a week. As ijou Like it, ii. 3 
and, for a week, escape a great deal .. /JH'.< iCrii, iii. 6 
bid me stay by her a week .... Taming of Shreio, ii. I 
at the furthest for a week or two .... — iv. 2 

adventure to borrow of a week Winter' sTale, i. 2 

shorten thy life one week — iv. 3 

ehe'U burn a week longer.... Comet/i/ of Errors, iii. 2 

this week he hath been heavy — v. I 

full fourteen weeks before tlie course. KingJohn, i. 1 

turn this day out of the week — iii. 1 

it would be argument for a week.... 1 Henry /r. ii. 2 

not above seven times a week — iii. 3 

BO many weeks ere the poor ZHenryVi, ii. 5 

days, weeks, months, and years — ii. 6 

joy wrecked with a week of teen ..Richard III. iv, I 

that had not half a week to go Henry I'm. iv. 1 

a whole week by days Troilm ^ Cressida, iv. 1 

Eix weeks, and past Timon nf Athens, ii. 2 

may plod it in a week Cymbeline, iii. 2 

not be hanged till the next week. Titus Anriron. iv. 3 
Bleep for a week; for the next ..Romeo ^Juliet, iv. f> 
not divide the Sunday from the week . . Hamlet, i. I 
what! keep a week away? seven days Othello, iii. 4 

WEEKLY sworn to marry 2Hei,ryir. i. 2 

W E ENING to redeem ) Hmryl'I. ii. 5 

WEEP— and that he does, I weep Tempest, i. 2 

my sweet mistress weeps when she .... — iii. 1 
'twill weep for having wearied you .... — iii. I 
I am a fool to weep at what I am glad of — iii. I 

wherefore weep you ? „ — iii. 1 

to weep, like a young v/ench..TwoGeu.ofrerona,u. I 

well, lie weeps on — ii. 3 

to that I'll sig'.i and weep — iv. 2 

I made her weep a-^ood — iv. 4 

I weep myself, to think upon — iv. 4 

my grave, to weep there .. TirelflhKighl, ii. 4 (song) 
when they weep and kneel. Measure/orMeasure, i. ;> 

as make the angels weep — ii. 2 

how much better is it to weep at joy..Jl/McA.4do, i. 1 
upon her knees she falls, weeps, sobs — ii. 3 
yea, and I will weep a while longer.. — iv. 1 
the bell rings, and the widow weeps — v. 2 

Bhe weeps, weeps every little. .Mi'J.A^.'sDj-eam, iii. I 

look, when I vow, I weep — iii. 2 

every tear that I do wee]}. Love's L. Lost, iv. 3(ver8es) 

and still make me weep — iv. 3 (verses) 

I miist blush and weep As you Like it, i. ] 

now weep for him, then spit at him — iii. 2 

never talk to me, I will weep — iii. 4 

to weep? As good cause as one (rep.) — iii. 4 
I will weep for nothing, like Diana.. — iv. 1 

and I in going, madam, weep AlCsWell^ i. 1 

he weeps, like a wencli tliat had .... — iv. 3 

and after weep their dust — V. 3 

Bmell onions, I shall weep anon — v. 3 

shall sad Apollo weep .. Taming of Shrew, 2 (indue.) 

poorgirl! she weeps — ii, 1 

1 will go sit and weep — ii I 

I cannot blame thee now to weep.... — iii. 2 
there weep, and leave it cry'wg. .wiuter'sTale, iii. 3 

but milk ray ewes, and weep — iv. 3 

I'll weep what's left away Comedy of Errors, ii. 1 

finger in the eye and weep, whilst man — ii. 2 
if he were dead, you'd weep for him , . Macbeth, iv. 2 
and there weep oiu' sad bosoms empty — iv. 3 

it weeps, it bleeds; and each new — iv. 3 

shames hira so, poor boy, he weeps ..KingJohn, ii. I 

and will weep niy date of life out — iv. 3 

your lord's departure weep not Richard 11. ii. 2 

things true, weeps tilings imaginary — ii. 2 

I weep for joy, to stand upon — iii. 2 

better wonldst thou weep (?ep.) — iii. 4 

and I could weep [CoZ.Kh*. -sing] — iii. 4 

in compassion, weep the fire out .... — v. I 

weep thou for me in France — v. 1 

weep not, sweet queen 1 Henry If. ii. 4 

my daughter weeps; she will not — iii. 1 

seems to weep over his country's .... — iv. 3 

think of me, if I should weep? 2Henry[V. ii. 2 

and they weep for thy death — iv. .1 

the blood weeps from my heart — i v. 4 

yet weep that Harry's dead — v. 2 

when thousands weep, more than Henry V. i. 2 

I will weep for thee; for this revolt. . — ii. 2 



WEEP— will you have them wcej) .... Henry /'. Y". 2 
to weep their intermissive miseries ..\ Henry n. '■. 1 

makes me weep, that thus — iv. 3 

and unapt to weep, or to exclaim — v. 3 

wherefore weeps Warwick 2Henryri. i. I 

weeps over them, and wrings his .... — i. 1 

his fortunes I will weep — iii. 1 

for Henry weeps, that thou dost .... — i i i . 2 
to weep; but who can cease to weep.. — iv. 4 

Wouldst have me weep? ZHenryVl i. 4 

not but for my life weep with him .. — i. 4 

I cannot weep; for all my body's ,. .. — ii. 1 
to weep, is to make less the depth..,, — ii. 1 
I that did never weep, now melt ,.,. — ii. 3 

weep, wretched man, I'll aid — ii. S 

where I may weep my fill — ii. 6 

weeps and says, her Ilcjiry is deposed — iii. 1 

from the helm, to sit and weep — v. 4 

my sword weeps for the poor king's., — v. 6 

made pause, to sob, and weep Richard III. i. 2 

and he will weep. Ay, millstones (rep.) — i. 4 

why do you weep so oft? ii. 2 

hinder me to wail and weep? — ii. 2 

weeps, and so do I; I for a Clarence (rep.) — ii. 2 

and weep, their gain and loss — ii. 4 

loved the man, that I must weep .... — iii. 5 

then, haply, will slie weep — iv. 4 

and make poor England weep — v. 4 

weep upon his wedding-day HenryVlII. (prol.) 

dare be bold to weep for Buckingham — ii. 1 
and every true heart weeps for 't ... . — ii. 2 

sir, I am about to weep — ii. 4 

no kindred weep for me, almost .... — iii. 1 
my heart weeps to see him so little .. — iii. 2 
nay, an' you weep. I am fallen indeed — iii. 2 

look, the good man weeps! — v. I 

a prophet, weep what it foresaw . rroihis ^ Cress, i. 2 

he will weep you, an 'twere — i. 2 

when we vow to weep seas, live — iii. 2 

I'll go in, and weep;— do, do — iv. 2 

weep out at Pandar'a fall (rep.) .... — v. 11 
why dost thou weep? {rep. iv. 3). Timon of Alliens, ii. 2 

that weep with laughing — iv. 3 

to make vast Neptiine weep for aye.. — v. .^ 
I could weep, and I could laugh .... Coriolanus, ii. 1 

come, let's not weep — iv. I 

constrains them weep, and shake .... — v. 3 
a deed whereat valour will weep .... — v. 5 
weep your tears into the channel ..JuUusCcBsar, i. 1 

get thee apart, and weep — iii. 1 

as Caesar loved me, I weep for him . . — iii. 2 

now you weep; and, I perceive — iii. 2 

kind souls, what, weep you — iii. 2 

I could weep my spirit from — iv. 3 

to chide, to laugh, to weep.. Antony ^Cleopatra, i. I 

turn aside, and weep for her — i.3 

sure he cannot weep it back again .. — ii. 6 
Octavia weeps to part from Rome .. — iii. 2 
will Ca5sar weep? he hasacloud .... — iii. 2 

believe it, till I weep too — iii. 2 

to make his followers weep — i v. 2 

look, they weep; and I, an ass — iv. 2 

nay, weep not, gentle Eros — iv. 12 

Cleopatra, and weep for my pardon.. — iv. 12 

tlie gods themselves do weep! — v. 2 

lady, weep no more; lest I Cymbeline,!. 2 

that weep this lamentable divorce .. — i.o 

weeps she still, say'st thou? — i. 6 

I'll weep, and word it with thee .... — iv. 2 

twice o'er, I'll weep, and sigh — iv. 2 

when I do weep, they humbly . . TilusAndron. iii. 1 
my tears, and seem to weep with me — iii. 1 

prepare thy noble eyes to weep — iii. 1 

perchance, she weeps because tliey killed — iii. 1 
how my wretched sister sobs and'weeps — iii.) 
when heaven dolh weep, doth not .. — iii. 1 
to weep with them that weep dotli ease — iii- 1 
weep to see his grandsire's heaviness — iii. 2 
will throb and weep to hear him speak — v. 3 

our eyes do weep, till lungs Peiicles.i. 4 

make us weep to hear your fate — iii. 2 

[CoJ.] why do you weep alone? — iv.J 

to weep that you live as you do — iv. 3 

why do you weep? it may be — v. I 

tliat thus hath made me weep? — v. I 

she would sit still and weep — v. I 

they for sudden joy did weep l.ear, i. 4 (song) 

I'll weep; no, I'll not weep: I have .... — ii. 4 

tliousand flaws, or ere I'll weep — ii. 4 

no, I will weep no more: in such a night — iii. 4 
Tom will make them weepand wail .... — iii. 6 

if thou wilt weep my fortunes — iv. 6 

I pray, weep not, I know — iv. 7 

ere they shall make us weep — v. 3 

no, coz, I rather weep Romeo ^Juliet, i. 1 

wherefore weep I then? some word.. — iii. 2 
but weeps and weeps; and now falls on — iii. 3 
weep for such afteling loss (rep.).... — iii. 5 
immoderately she weeps for Tybalt's — iv. I 
thou hast done so, come weep with me — iv. 1 
and weep ye now. seeing she is advanced — iv. .'j 
[Co/. A'7i^ J to strew thy grave and weep — v. 3 
a friar, that trembles, sighs, and weeps — v. 3 
Hecuba, that he should weep for her?.. Ham(e(, ii. 2 

let the strncken deer go weep — iii. -J 

he weeps for wliat is done — iv. 1 

but T cannot eiioa=ie hut weep, to think.. — iv. 5 
wnul't weep? wonl't fight? woul't fast?.. — v. 1 

do deeds to make heaven weep Othello, iii. 3 

make her amends, she weeps — iv. 1 

and she can weep. sir,.weep; and slie's .. — iv. 1 
why do you weep? am I the occasion of — iv. 2 
do not talk tome, Emilia; I cannot weep — iv. 2 
do not weep, do not weep; alas, the dayl — iv. 2 
would it not make one weep? — iv. 2 

fo in, and weep not; all things shall .... — iv. 2 
must weep, but thev are cruel tears .. .. — v. 2 
WEEPING again the king my father's . Tempes/, i. 2 

ere I have done weeping TwoGen. of I'erona, ii. 3 

my mother weeping — ii. 3 



WEI 

WEEPING— word for weeprng. . TwoGen.of fer. ii. S 

than to joy at weeping? MnchAdo, i. I 

prove the weeping philosopher ,.Mer. of Venice, i. 2 

take his part witli weeping AsyuuLikeit,\. 2 

fiist, for his weeping in the needless — ii. ] 

my lord, weeping and commenting ., — . ii. I 
said with weeping tearsj wear these.. — ii. 4 

I am not prone to weeping Winter'sTale, ii. I 

and with him rises weeping — iv. ."^ 

and weeping liis welcomes forth .... — iv. 3 
incessant weepings of my wife (rep,).Com.ofErr.\.i 

away, and weeping die — , ii. I 

your weeping sister is no wife of .... — iii. 2 
leave of thee takes my weeping eye.. Richard II. i. 2 

thy sun sets weeping — ii. 1 , 

so, weeping. Broiling, greet I thee.... — iii. 2 
digged their graves with weeping eyes? — iii. 3 
could weep, would weeping do me good — iii. 4 
in the remembrance of a weeping queen — iii. 4 
send the hearers weeping to their beds — v. 1 
together weeping, make one woe .... — v. 1 

when weeping made j'ou break — v. 2 

in weeping after this untimely bier.. — v. 6 

subject to the weeping clouds iHenrylV. i. 3 

thou'lt set me a weeping, an' thou .. — ii. 4 

fall to weeping joys: such is 2Henryri. i. 1 

1 would be blind with weeping — iii. 2 

made them blind with weeping Richard III. i. 2 

saint which then I weeping followed — iv. I 

in galled eyes of weeping souls — iv. 4 

praying nuns, not weeping queens .. — iv. 4 
bid her wipe her weeping eyes withal — iv. 4 
is arming, weeping, cursing. . Troilus f/ Cressida, v. H 
or a harlot, for her weeping. Timon ofAlh. i. 2 (grace) 
witli laughing, not with weepingl .. — iv. 3 

if that I could for weeping Coriolanus, iv. 2 

he cares not for your weeping — v. 3 

weeping as fast as they stream.... ./u/iusCo'sar, iii 1 

are red as fire with weeping — iii. 2 

and Sinon's weeping did scandal ..Cymbeline, iii. 4 

by watching, weeping, tendance — v. 5 

my brother, weeping at my woes. TitvsAndron. iii. 1 
Bhe is the weeping welkin, I the earth — iii. 1 
shut on me, and turned weeping out — v. 3 
I cannot speak to him for weeping .. — v. 3 

a lord, and there a lady weeping Pericles, i. i 

weeping she comes for her old nurse's.. — iv. I 
with woe, and shall deliver weeping .. — v. 1 

hath oft delivered weeping — v. 1 

I have full cause of weeping Lear, ii. 4 

weeping and wailing over Romeo ^ Juliet, iii. 2 

blubbering and weeping, weeping and — iii. 3 
weeping for your cousin's death? .... — iii. 5 
and herself, fell in the weeping brook .Hamlet, iv. 7 

doth that bode weeping? Othello, iv. 3 

WEEPING-RIPE for a good word, tore's L.tos/, v. 2 

what, weeping-ripe, my lord ZHenrv I'l. i. 4 

WEEP'ST— why weep'st thou.. Two Gen. of Ver. ii. 3 

Aumerle, thou weep'st Richard ;/. iii. 3 

thou weep'st to make them drink . Timon ofAih. i. 2 
that weep'st to see me triumph?. ... Coraotam/s, ii. I 

thou weep'st, and speak'st Cymbeline, v. 5 

thou weep'st not so much for .. Romeo ^.hiliel, iii. b 

weep'st thou for him to my face? Olhe'lo, v. 2 

WEET— the world to weet Antony ^ Cleopatra, i. I 

WEIGH our sorrow with our comfort .. Tempest, ii. 1 
cannot weigh oiu- brother. . Measure forMeasure , ii. 2 

go to, sir, you weigli equally — iv. 2 

what they weigh, even to the utmost. ii/uc^^do, v. 1 
shall ne'er weigh more reasons in her — v. 1 
weigh oath with oath f.rep.) .. Mid.N.'sDream, iii. 2 
will even weigh; and both as light .. — iii. 2 

I weigh not you (rep.) Lotie's L. Lmt, v. 2 

weigh thy value with an even .Merch. of f'cnice, ii. 7 
a balance here, to weigh the flesh? . . ■- iv. 1 

shall weigh thee to the beam All's Well, ii. 3 

word weigh heavy of her worth (rep.) — iii. 4 

her heart weighs sadly — iii. 5 

I prize it as I weigh grief Winter' sTnle, iii. 2 

how much your chain weighs ..Comedy itf Krr. iv. 1 
stuff, which weighs upon tne heart? ..Macbeth, v. 3 
while they wei"h so even, we hold ..KingJohn, ii. 2 
her dowry shall weigh equal with .. — ii. 2 

with that odds he weighs king Richard //.iii. 4 

to weigh against his opposite iHenrylV. i. 3 

the purpose must weigh the folly .... — ii. 2 

no more wilt weigh my eyelids — iii. I 

justice, and you weigh this well — v. 2 

tis best to weigh the enemy more ....HenryV.ii. 4 

now he weighs time, even to — ii 4 

weigh it but with the grossness. . . . Richard III. iii. I 
I weigh it lightly, were it heavier .. — iii I 

and weigh thee down to ruin — v. 3 

must weigh out my afflictions.... Henry 1' III. iii. I 
o'er my person; whicli I weigh not .. — v. 1 
fie, fie, my brother! weigh you. . '/';oi7«« 4 Cress, ii. 2 

each weighs nor less nor more — iv. 1 

weigh him well — iv. 5 

and make him weigh with her.. Timon of Athens, i. \ 

I weigii my friend's affection — i. 2 

weigh the crime with this — iii, .5 

can weigli down by the dram — v. 2 

I love them as they weigh Coriolanus, ii. 2 

weigli them, it is as heavy JuliusCcrsar, i. i 

but weigh what is it worth. . .4n/ony ^C/eopa/ra, ii. 6 

how heavy weighs my lordl — iv. 13 

they weigh not every stamp Cymbeline, v. 4 

then weigh what loss yourlionour mny. .Hatnlet, i. 3 

weigh, what convenience, both of — iv. 7 

WElGHED-fair soul herself weighed.. Tempps/, ii. 1 

the injuries be justly weighed Twelfth Night, v. I 

would have weighed thy brother. iUeas. /or Meas. v. 1 

the interim having weighed it Macbeth, i. 3 

with other graces weighed — iv. 3 

their fortunes both are weighed ....Richard II. iii. 4 

in equal balance justly wciehed 2HenrylV. iv. 1 

weiglied such a compounded one? . . Henry VIll. i. 1 
I weighed the danger which ray realms — ii. 4 

weighed not a hair of his — iii. 2 

wherein he must be weighed rather .. Oi/mied'ne, i. 5 



WEIGITED— balance to be weighed. TilmAnilnn. i. 1 
from whence at flrat slic weighed licr — 1. 2 

if Iwth wore justly weifjlied Prrielei, V. 1 

for equalitiC8 lire »owi'ij;hed, that Lrar,i. I 

be wcigiied yonr liidy's love HomeoAJitlirl, i. 2 

his gri'atiiess weighed, his will ia not....llain'r'. i. 3 
thi'dtfonilcr'sR-mirgc is weighed — iv. 3 

WKIOHINtr the youtliful season ..JutiuiiCmar,\i. 1 
tlian hv selt'-offeiices weighing.. iWe(U./or.U<iii, iii. 2 

not wilgliing well the end Iliulit'sltili; i. 2 

will take me without weigl'.ing ■illrnitiir. i. 2 

in equal scale weighing delight ;i.iiii(</, i. 2 

WKUJirST thy words l)eforc thou giv'st.<"/i,Ho, iir..1 

WKIGIIT— ourotlVnce by weight. Meat. J;, Mens. i. 3 
an' there Ik- any nnittcr of weight ..MucliAilo, iii. 3 

bv the weight of a man — iii. 4 

aiiy heavy weight that he'll enjoin .. — v. I 
of no less weight than Aqnitain .. Love'tl..l.otl.i\. 1 
'tis iinrchaecdby the weight. Merch. qf Venice, iii. 2 
to have a weight of carrion flesh .... — iv. 1 
lovest rr.e not with the full weight. .<i you L*ei(, i. 2 
linngs these weights <ipon my tongue? — i. 2 

of cidour, weight, and neat All's ll'ell, ii. 3 

OS heavy as my weiglit shoidd be. Tamhis nf ^*>- ii- I 
burdened with lesser weight ..Comedy of Errors, i. I 

with like weight of pain — ii. I 

die nndcr their black weight KijigJnhn. u\. I 

tlie empty hollowness, but weight ..Richard II. \. 2 
oppression of their prodigal weight .. — iii. 4 
I give this heavy weight from otl".. .. — iv. 1 
I need no more weigiit than mine ..1 llenryW. v. 3 
lend to this weight such lightness . . 2 llent y I V. i. I 

the weight of a hair will turn — ii- 4 

eome things of weight, that task Henry V. i. 2 

according to the weight and worthiness — ii. 2 

which, in weight to re-answer — iii- 6 

in bearing w^eight of government ..iHcnryVI. iv. 6 i 

no Atlas for so great a weight — v. 1 ! 

and heave it shall some weight — v. 7 

still as you are wean,- of the weight- Richard 111. i. 2 
in such a point of weight, so near. HenryVIII. iii. 1 
there was the weight that pulled -... — iii. 2 1 
lav all the weight ye can upon my .. — v. 2 [ 

toil, the enemies' weight Troilus 4 Crasida, i. 3 

the match and weight of such — iii. 2 

her contaminated carrion weight — iv. 1 

so much by weight hate I her Uiomed — v. 2 
deny me a matter of more «eight./(n(oiiy 4- Cleo. i. 2 

80 great weight ii\ his lightness — i. 4 

to bear the weight of Antony I — i. 5 

the weight we must convey with us.. — iii. 1 

heaviness, that makes the weight — iv. 13 

you bear it as answering to the weight — v. 2 
so many weights of baseness cannot.C'i/mlicline, iii. 5 

the weight as much, as I do love — iv. 2 

the weight of this sad time I.ear, v. 3 

thy madness shall be paid with weight. Hamlet, iv. 5 
rCiiMC"'.] of iKiizc and diftieuU weight. '«/«»», iii. 3 

WEIGIITIICK thiiifs yon'U 8ay..../(/W.ard ///. iii. I 

much weiglitier than this work Henry I 111. v. 1 

attend our weightier jndmnent .. JV>nono/'y4//i. iii. 5 

WEIGHTLESS down perforce iHenrylV. iv. 4 

WEIGaTY— good and weighty. lommffo/i/irew, i. I 

a weiohty cause of lo\ e between — ly. 4 

e5'e. for sundrj' weighty reasons Macbeth, iii. I 

no better to that weighty charge \ Henry I'l. Ii. 1 

this weighty business will not brook.2 Hniry f/. i. 1 

in ihis weighty cause (rfp. iii. 1) — i- 2 

steeled with weighty arguments Richard III. i. I 

your censures in this weighty business? — ii. 2 
It is too weighty for your grace to wear — iii. 1 
a weighty and a serious brow .. Henry I'lll. (prol.) 
the secret is so weighty, 'twill require — ii. 1 
shall meet about this weighty business — ii. 2 

in tlie weighty difference between — iii- I 

words cannot carry authority so weighty — iii. 2 

WEIRD sisters, hand in hand Macbeth, i. 3 

these weird sisterssaluted me.... — i. 6 (letter) 
last night of the three weird sisters .... — ii. I 

as the weird women promised — iii. 1 

unto the weird sisters; more shall they — iii. 4 
saw you the weird sisters? — iv. I 

WEKE. weke! so cries a pig ..Tilus.Audronicm,iv. ^ 

WELCOME— I hid a hearty welcome ..lempest, v. 1 

welcome, my friends all — v. 1 

welcome sir; this cell's my court — v. 1 

welcome him then, according.. Iieo Gen.ofl'er. ii. 4 

welcome, dear I'roteus! — ii. 4 

conflrin his welcome with some — ii. 4 

his worth is warrant for his welcome — ii. 4 
vou are welcome to a worthless mistress — ii. 4 

lliat you are welcome? — ij- 4 

once more, new servant, welcome.... — ii. 4 

welcome to Milan — ii. -'' 

for I om not welcome — ii. 5 

nor never welcome to a place — ii- !> 

and the hostess say, welcome — ii. 5 

thou slmlt have five thousand welcomes — ii- 5 
warrant me welcome to my I'roteus — ii. 7 

your grace is welcome to a man — v. 4 

bid these gentlemen welcome MerryWivet, i. 1 

Buch Brooks are welcome to me — ii. 2 

you're welcome: what's your will? .. — ii. 2 

he's welcome: Heaven prosper — iii. I 

a< I am a truei'i)irit. welcome! — v. 5 

welcome, oss. Now let'-n have .... Twelfth Nighl, ii. 3 

you ore welcome to the house — ii. 3 

O welcome, father I — v. 1 

thrice welcome, drowned Viola I — v. I 

ore welcome: wliot's your will? Mens. Ihr Mras. ii. 2 

the wish dewrvcfl a welcome — iii. I 

ond very welcome. l/Ook,signior.... — iii. 1 

verv well met, and welcome — iv. I 

welcome 1 how agreed? — iv. I 

most gentle Claudio. Welcome, father — iv. 2 

let me bid you welcome, my lord MuehAdo,'\. I 

welcome, Mgnior: you are olinost.... — v. 1 
flower there? welcome, wanderer.. .U<'d..V.'«/)r. ii. 2 
welcome, good Robin. Scc'st thou this — Iv. I 
greet me with premeditated welcomes — v. 1 



[ 827 ] 

WELCOME-pnylng mo o welcome. Mid.N.'tDr. v. 1 

picked a welcome; and in the modesty — v. 1 
therefore, welcome the sour cup . . Love'il.lotl, i. I 

princess, welcome to the court (rep.) — Ii. I 

and welcome I have not yet — ii. I 

welcome to the wide fields too base.. — ii. 1 

I will he welcome then — ii. I 

receive such welcome at my hand .. — ii. I 

yon arc wclccnne, »ir; udieii! (it;;.) .. — ii. I 

welcome, |>iiie wit: lliou piirtest .... — V. 2 

wcli-omc. Mrii-mlc; hut tliut thou.... — v. 2 
hid llu- lil'lh wdi'oiiic with .. Merchanto/ Venice, i. 2 

fincwcll heat, anil welcumc frost .... — ii. 7 

and Sulerio, welcome hither — iii. 2 

ha\e power to hid you welcome — iii. 2 

welcome. So do I my lord (irp.) .... — iii. 2 

cheer yon stranger; bid her welcome — iii- 2 

bid your friends welcome, show .... — iii. 2 

you arc welcome: take your place .. — iv. 1 

deed will he well welcome to Lorenzo — iv. 2 

some welcome for the mistress of .... — v. I 

dear lady, welcome home (rep.) — v. I 

give welcome to my friend — V. 1 

sir, you are ver.v welcome to our .... — v. I 

you arc welcome notwithstanding .. — v. I 

Antonio, you are welcome; and I have — v. 1 

in my voice most welcome Asyou Likeil, ii. 4 

feed, and welcome to our table (rep.) — ii. 7 

be truly welcome hither (;vp.) — ii 7 

good my lord, bid him welcome .... — v. 4 

niece, welcome thou art to me (rep.) — v. 4 

welcome, young man; thou olfer'ot.. — v. 4 

inherit tool welcome to Paris AWs>Vell,\.2 

at their leisure: welcome, count .... — j*. 2 

but rest unquestioned welcome — ii. I 

welcome shall they be; and all the .. — iii. I 

you are welcome, gentlemen, I will — iii. 2 

we'll be before our welcome — iv. 4 

your business was more welcome .... — iv- 4 

more welcome is the sweet — v. 3 

fellows, you are welcome ..Tamiug afSh. 1 (indue.) 
give them friendly welcome every one — 1 (iuduc.) 

some show, to welcome us to town .. — i. 1 

ply his book; welcome his friends .. — i. I 

welcome, sir; and he, for your (icp.) — ii. 1 

I may have welcome 'raoiigst the rest — ii. I 

you are passing welcome, itiid so I pray — ii. I 

you are welcome, sir. And yet I come — iii. 2 

welcome home, Grumio (rep) — iv. I 

sit down, Kate, and welcome: soud! — iv. 1 

and wash, and welcome heartily .... — ;v. 1 

yon are welcome: travel you far on — iv. 2 

welcomel one mess is like to be — iv. 4 

I shall command your welcome here — v. I 

bid my father welcome (rep.') — v. z 

draw your bow; you are welcome all — v. 2 
show in our brother's welcome .. H'inter'sTalr^ i. 2 

these unknown friends to us welcome — iv. 3 

welcome to your sheep-shearing Oep.) — iv. 3 

with madness, do bid it welcome — iv. 3 

ond weeping his welcomes forth .... — iv. 3 

most dearly welcomel and your fair — v. 1 

welcome hither, as is the spring to the — v. 1 
welcome to their shipwrecked... Comedy of Err. i. I 

good will, and your good welcome here — iii. I 

dainties cheap, sir, and your welcome — iii. I 

a table full of welcome (rep.) — iii. 1 

small cheer and great welcome O'ep.) — iii. I 

bid them welcome hither — iii. 1 

to that end, sir, I will welcome you — iv. 4 

welcome hither (rep. iv. 3) Macbeth, i. 4 

gone before to bid us welcome — i. 4 

bear welcome in your eye — ..?•■* 

tf) make society the sweeter welcome — iii- I 

and lat.t, the hearty welcome — iii. 4 

we will require her welcome — iii. 4 

'tis given with welcome; to feed .... — iii. 4 

our duties did his welcome pay — iv. 1 

such welcome and unwelcome things — ^Y* ^ 

five him welcome hither KinffJohtt, ii. 1 

give you welcome with a powerless — ii. 1 

let them be welcome then, we are ,. — ii. 1 

will not let me welcome this good .. — V. 3 

and welcome home again discarded.. — y. 4 

what cheer there for welcome Richard II, i. 2 

with welcome home from banishment — i. 3 

whv I should welcome such a guest.. — Ii. 2 

welcome, my lords; I wot, your love — ii. 3 

nor foes, to me welcome you are .... — ii. 3 

more I'Clcome is the stroke of death — iii. 1 

welcome, my lord (?r;i. V. 6) — iii. 2 

[O'-Kh/.j welcome. Ilarrv: what will — iii- 3 

cousin is right welcome hither — iii- 3 

preserve thee! welcome. Bolinghrokel — V. 2 

no joyful tongue gave him his welcome — V. 2 

welcome, my son: who arc the violets — v. 2 
bronglit us f-mooth and welcome news 1 HennjIV.'}. I 

you are welcome; witli this shrill .. — ii. 4 

welcome. Jack; where hast thou been? — ii. 4 

Vernon! welcome, by my soul (rr».) — iv. 1 

he shall be welcome too; where is his — iv. I 

welcome, sir Walter Blunt — iv. 3 

my father gave him welcome to the.. — iv. 3 

welcome, ancient Pistol iHenryW. ii. 4 

by my troth, welcome to London.... — ii. 4 

and corrupt blood, thou art welcome — ii. 4 

your yeor-f very well: welcome — iii- 2 

frour good worshii) is welcome — iii. 2 

east afTection of welcome, give.... — iv. 4 

Burdolph; and welcome (rep. v. 3) .. — v. 1 

to welcome the ccmdition of the time — v. 2 

and welcome merry Shrove-lide .. — v. 3 (song) 

welcome my little tiny thief (rrp.) .. — v. 3 

weloime these nleoyant days — v. 3 

city quit, to welcome him? HeniyV. v. (chorus) 

now welcome. Kale — y. 2 

of Orleans, Ihrice welcome to us ....\HenryVI.\. 2 

and he is welc'>me — ii- 3 

welcome, high prince, the mighty.... — id- I 

welcome, brave duke! (rrp. iii. 4 and v. 3) — iii. 3 



WELCOME to his grave? 1 Henry Vt. 1 v. 3 

arise; welcome, nucen Margaret ....'illenryVJ. i. 1 

cheerfid voice welcome my love — i. I 

and wehtouie ull; to this gear — i. 4 

Welcome ii huiiiiliuient, welcome .... — ii. S 

welcome, lord .'ioMierset — iii. 1 

welcome, mv h.i.l. to this brave ....3HenryVl. ii. i 

wclc<inu-, hiiivi- Warwick! — iii. 3 

welcome uiilo Will w'ick; and welcome — iv. 2 

but welcome, Clarence (rep. v. i) .... — iv. 2 

welcome, fir John! — iv. 7 

welcome, Oxford! for we want thy help — v. 1 

now welcome more, and ten times more — v. I 
are you welcome to this open a\T..,.Ittchard2/l. i. 1 

welcome d^striielioii, blood, and .... — ii. 4 

welcoioe. Hweet iiiince (rep.) — iii. 1 

more iiiicies lure to welcome me .... — iii. I 

welcome, my lord (r<-p. iii. 7) — iii. I 

at the Tower, mill welcome you — iii. I 

Buekinijham, to welcome them ashore — iv. 4 

your wives shall weh.ome home — v. 3 

a general welcome from his grace ..Henry VIII. i. 4 

good wine, good welcome, can make — i. 4 

you are welcome, my fair guests .... — i. 4 

this, to confirm my welcome — i. 4 

go, give them weleonic, you can speak — i. 4 

I i-liower a welcome on villi: welcome all — i. 4 

you're welcome, moi-t learned reverend — ii. 2 

m mine arms I bid him welCMinc --.. — ii. 2 

that Cranmer is returned with welcome — iii. 2 
find the welcome of a noble foe. 7'roi7u»^Cr«iid«i, i. 3 

welcome ever smiles — iii. 3 

welcome to Troy! (rep.) — iv. 1 

welcome, sir Diomed I — iv- 4 

most dearly welcome to the Greeks .. — iv. 5 

Achilles bids you welcome — iv. 5 

give a coasting welcome ere it — iv. 5 

as welcome as to one that would .... — iv. 5 

but that's no welcome — iv. 5 

heart, great Hector, welcome (rep, ).. _ iv. ."i 

wailike brothers, welcome hither .... — iv. 5 

worthy warrior, welcome to our tents — iv. 5 

well, welcome, welcome! — iv. 5 

great soldier may his welcome know — iv. 6 

welcome, brave lleetor; welcome .... — v. I 

and welcome, botli to those that go .. — v. I 

painting is welcome Timon of Athens, \. 1 

most welcome, sir (rep.) — i. 1 

hollow welcomes, recanting goodness — i. 2 

more welcome are ye to my fortunes — i. 2 

you are welcome (rep.) — i. 2 

art an Athenian; tlierefore welcome — i. 2 

they are welcome all — i. 2 

music, make their welcome — i. 2 

they are fairly welcome — i. 2 

none 80 welcome — i. 2 

you are very respectively welcome, sir — iii. 1 

welcome, good brother — iii. 4 

to nothing they are welcome .... — iii.6(graee) 

a villain's not a welcome guest — iii. 6 

tapsters, tliat hid welcome, to knaves ~- iv. 3 

living hut thee, thou shalt be welcome — iv. 3 

we are lit to hid her welcome Coriotanxis,']. 3 

welcome to Home, renowned (rrp.) .. — ii. 1 

welcome home (rep. ii!. 1 and v. 5) .. — ii. \ 

welcome all. A hundred thousand (rep.) — ii. I 

yet welcome, warriors — ii. I 

DC welcome with this intelligence .... — iv. 3 

a thousand welcomes! — iv. 5 

your hand 1 most welcome! (rep. v. 5) — iv. 5 

the welcome of his mother (rep.) .... — v. 4 

and had no welcomes home — v. 5 

he is welcome hither (rep.) ./u(iiiiCi?<ar, ii. I 

they are all welcome — ii. 1 

souls that welcome wrongs — ii. I 

welcome. Piiblius: wbat.Brutus .... — ii. 2 

welcome, Mark Antony — iii. I 

welcome, good Messala — iv. 3 

elmll be as welcome to the ears of Brutus — v. 3 
welcome, mv good Alexas ..Antony 4' Cleopatra, i. 5 

welcome to Rome (rep. iii. 6) — ii. 2 

welcome from i'".gy|it, sir — ii. 2 

ond did find her welcome friendly .. — ii. 6 

Enobarbus, welcome. Fill, till the cnn _ ii. 7 

welcome hither: your Ktlers did v\ithliold — iii. 6 

ever welcome to us. Welcome, lady (rep.) — iii, 6 

good-morrow to thee, welcome — iv. 4 

that welcome which comes to punish us — iv. 12 

strange and terrible events are welcome — iv. 13 

welcome, welcome! die. where thou hast — iv. 13 

you are kindly welcome Cymbeline, i. 7 

foil are as welcome, worthy sir (rep. ii. 4) — i. 7 

was going, sir, to give him welcome — i. 7 

yielded you: you are very welcome.. — i. 7 

thou art welcome, Cains: thy Ciosar — iii. I 

his majesty bids yon welcome — iii. I 

and he mine; all llie remain is, welcome — iii. I 

boys, bid him wekiiine. Were you.. — iii. 6 

and such a welcome as I'd give to him — iii. 6 

most welcome! lie spriphtly, for you — iii. 6 

ond morn to the lark, less welcome.. — iii. 6 

most welcome, lionda';el for iImu art — v. 4 
with lond 'larums welcome them .Tiins Andron. i. 2 

and, welcome, nephews, from successful — i. 8 

welcome, ./Emilius, what's the news — v. I 

and welcome mc to this world's light — v. 2 

therefore, come down, and welcome me — v. 2 

welcome, dread fury, to my wolul house — V. 2 

you are welcome too (rep.) _ v. 2 

welcome, my gracious lord (rep.) . ... — v. 3 

welciime, Lucius; and welcome oil .. — v. 3 
Tliuliard from Aniiochus is welcome ..Pericles, i. 3 

welcome is peace, if he on peace consist — i. 4 

is weli'oine t ■ our town aiul us (rep.) .. — 1.4 

ilap-jiicks; and thou shall Ik' welcome — ii. I 

knighta, to say you ore welcome _ ji. 3 

a word, with me? and welcome — ii. 4 

welcome, fair one! is'l not ogoixlly .. — v. I 

your graces are right welcome Lear, ii. I 

whuae welcome, I perceived, had poisoned — ii, 4 



WEL 



WELCOME-provided for your fit welcome. /.sar. ii 4 
meet l)otli welcome and protection _ jii i; 

welcome tlien, thou unsubstantial air — jv 1 

welcome, my lord: I marvel, our " _ iv' 2 

yon !ire welcome hither. Nor no man .. _ v" 3 

one more, most welcome Itome'n ^ Jutiel \ •> 

my honse and welcome on their pleasure — ' i' ^ 
fientlemen, welouinel (r<7).l.... _ is 

I come Inmi lady J nliet. Welcome then _ iii! 3 
come death, and Welcome! Juliet wills — iii 5 
weleoiiie fr.im Mantua: what saj's .. _ v. 2 

— loom.-, Horatio: welcome, good Hamlet, i. I 



[ 828 j 



WEN 



— i.S 



— ii. 2 



as astraii'.'ergive it welcome 

welcome, dear Rosenciantz and 

welcome, my good friends I 

most welcome homu I Tliis business .... 
he that plays the UiriL'. shall be welcome 

you are welcome to Eisinore (rep.) 

tlie appurlenance of welcome is fashion 

welcome: but ray uucle-father 

you are welcome, masters (.rep.) .'.' _ i, 2 

jiathsent me to you. You are welcome.. — iii' 2 

IS right welcome back to Denmark _ y' 2 

the worse welcome: I have charged ...loihello.i. I 
1 aid not see youj welcome, gentle signior — i 3 

good ancient, you are welcome (rep.) _ ii' ] 

welcome, lago: we must to the watcli — ii ' 3 

signior; welcome to Cyprus (rfp.) _ iy' j 

your honour is most welcome '" _ iv' 3 

•\VEICOMED you withal .... Tanning o/shreu. i'ii' 1 

welci>med all; served all H'inler'sTah iv 3 

welcomed home with it Comedy or Errora iv' 4 

ruileUest welcomed [Coi.-welcome] to.>e)7c;«'iii' 1 

-,,".',, S?""^'*' ''^ '''^ ""'" desire _ iv. (Gowerl 

wl fm' rs-p"' °h'°''^,', >i'ch..ri\nX^]] 

wT^i V 1 ir*f «'hen they are gone. . 1 Henry VI. ii. 2 

wti^i! Alih ot ns all haufjs on ■lUenrtil'I iii 1 

tor our liusbands' welfare .. Merchant of fenk'e v' 1 

to study tor the people's welfare.. ..■'//,.«,i,;-/ 'iv' 3 

iv''pf ?/lx? her welfare in my blood ■/•,7„s.-j„-,;,„,;. v! 3 

WELKIN-to the welkin's cheek Tempest i 2 

by welkm, and her star! Merry Wives, i. 3 

shall we make the welkm dance .rieeiniiNh'ht ii .1 

are out of my welkin __" 'i\\ \ 

the starry welkin cover thou anon.Mid.N.'sDr iii' 2 
the welkin's vicegerent . Love'sL. Lost, i. 1 (letter) 
by thy favour, sweet welkin, I must _ iii 

the sky, tlie welkin, the heaven _ 1^2 

make the welkin answer them.7am'ii^o/ SA 2 find 1 
look on me with your welkin eve . Wmter'sTale i 2 
rattle tlie welkin's ear, and mock. . . . Kiw'John \' 2 
made the western welkin blush . °_ ' v' ^ 

and let the welkin roar '.'.'iHenrtilv ii' 4 

anyize the welkin with your broken. /,>/c;mri///. v! 3 
we II breathe the welkin dim. Titus Andronicus iii I 
threatening the welkin with his _ ' ■ !' 

she IS the weeping welkin, I the earth _ iii' 1 
WELL-your friends are well. TwoG's/i.o/'^eiona ii 4 

at saint Gregory's well _ 'jy 2 

am glad to see your worships well .Merry Wives, i I 

I am very well •'_ ""> ;■ 

coffer, chest, trunk, well, vault.."" _ Sy i 
J am as well in my wits (rep.) ..Tn-elfhNight, iv! 2 
wheresoever, I wish him well ..Meas.'for .ulas iii 2 

am well; another is wise (rep.) . _ ;: 3 

IS rnv lord well, that he doth spe'a'k! '. _ iv' 1 
1 wish your worship well; God restore — v' 1 
I have a device to make all well. .Mid.N.'sDr. iii.' I 
tellrae then that he is well.... _ ; 2 

this 18 not so well as I looked tor.. Love'sL. Lost i I 
you look not well, signior .. Merchant 0/ reniee'- 
nor well, unless in mind .... _ 

lam not well; send the deed .... "" _ ]V."i 
I wish you well, andso I take ...!!. _ iv' 1 
broken limb, shall acquit him ^^^en..isyouUke it i. 

God send him well I tue court's .All'sWell] \ 

jsshe well? she IS not well (j-ep.) .... _ "ii' 4 
ifshe be very well, what does she (r^n.) _ ji' 4 
IS caught of you, that j'et are wM.Winler'sTale i 2 
rejoice, the former queen is well? .. _ Vi 

uhewell? No, he's in Tartar ..Com'erfv of R-r iv 2 

his highness is not well Macbeth iii i 

upon a thought he will again be well _ ' iii' 4 

why well. And all my children? -Weil' too - iv' 3 
an hour since I left him well (rep.) .KingJohn, iv.' 3 
1 1 ke buckets, in concealed wells .... _ I 9 

would not this ill do well? Richard II. iii 3 

this golden crown like a deep well .. _ iv 1 
Wull would have made me siek (,rep.).2llenrviv \ 1 
you look well, and bear your years (rep.) — i'ii ' 2 

air; he'll straight be well..... _ ;'" f 

exceeding well; his cares are now aU _ v' 2 

111 will never said well Henry r. iii 7 

we , madam, and in health Richard ill. ii i 

well, my dread lord _ i; 7 

none so batl, but well may be reported _ iv' 4 
feel full sick, and yet not well ....Henry nil ii 4 
make wells and Niobes of the.. r™to*CjT« v II 

I ;Th ° uh ^°" ^I^ ^'^" ^"«°» of Athens, i. | 

his health IS well, sir (j-ep.) _ Jii , 

I am not well in healtli 'JiUusCcesar, ii." 

ne shall say, you are not well to-dav _ ,12 
if thy lord look well, for he went siikly _ ii 4 
I am quickly ill. and well ../In/ow,, *c;eo7,a(ra i q 
he's well. Why, there's more gold.: ^ "' 
we use to say, the dead are well . . . 
if not well, thou shouldst come like.. 
Antony lives, is well. or friends... 
madam, he's well. Well said .... _ „ s 

well; and well am like to do _ {{ t 

I am not so well as I should be.. .. _ i;'? 
are you well? Thanks, madam, well. CymdWrnt-.i'. 7 

continues well my lord? '■ 

doth ill deserve by doing well . 

you are not well; remain here _ 

Bcsiek I am not, yet I am not well' .' .' _ 

well, or ill, I am bound to you _ 

your daughter is not well ■. i 

to better, oft we mar what's well .'." " 

1 



..if 



.Hamlet, i. 2 
. — ii. 2 



ii. 5 
ii. 5 
ii. 6 



— iii. 3 



iv. 2 



WELL-may be, he is not well . . . 

or well, or ill, as this day's battle's..'. — iv 7 

lady, I am not well; else I — v' 3 

she IS not well ; convey her to my tent.'.'.'.' _ v' 3 

tis not so deep as a well homeo A Juliet, iii. 1 

madam, lam not well _ ji 5 

runmail, seeing thatsheiswell. ...'.". _ iv' t 

IS my father well? _ ,V ? 

ill, if she be well. Then she is we'li 
I am glad to see you well (rep. ii •>) 
lord Hamlet? Well, God-a-raercy 

well be with you, geiitlemeni _ ii 2 

I humbly thank von, well _ jii' j 

that he's well, and will be shortly here.. 0;/.e«o, ii'. 1 
why, but you are now well enough .. _ ii 3 
--."-.■■.ejlfi'iiotwell? Ihaveapaiu .... _ iii' 3 
WEL-L-ACCOMPLISHED youth. Loiv'.L. Losl'u. t 
remorseful, well-accomplished. .7'«.o6>n o/Ver iv I 
WELL-ACQUAINTEli friend .. Comedy of Err Av 3 
V\ EI.Ij-A-DA\ lady, if he be not drawn Henry r.ii.\ 

well-a-day, we could scarce help Pericles ii 1 

woe and heavy well-a-day _ iv.4(Gower) 

ah well-a-dayl he's dead Romeo ^Juliet,id.2 

„,^«^,";'>'-'li.r, that ever I was born 1 . . . . _ iv 5 

WELL-ADVISED? Known imto.ComrJyorErr.ii.2 

so do I ever, being well-advised .... Ridinrd III. i. 3 

hath any well-advised friend proclaimed — iv. 4 

mv m-andsire, well-advised TitruAndron. iv. 2 

WELL-A-NEAR! doth fall.... /'mete, iii. (Gower) 
W^ ^^-i-EEi^Jlf^L^ED April ..Rome'o^JMetti 

WELL-APPOINTED powers lUenrylVi 1 

well-appointed leader fronts us here? _ iv 1 
well-appointed king at Hampton. Hemi/K. iii (oho ) 
Danpliin. well-appointed, stands ..I HenryVl. iv '' 
very well-appointed, as I thought ..-iHenryyi. ii. I 

WELL-ARMED friends tear iii 7 

proof of chastity well-armed .... Romeo Sc Juliet i ' 1 
WELL-BEHAVED reproof to ill . . Merr^wZes.lC. 
WELL-BELOVED, the archbishop ..]He„r,,ir i 3 
learned and well-beloved servant.. Hewn/ F/// 'ii' 4 
■nriiT t'^U"'^^'"^'''* Brutus stubbed. .JtUiusCa-sar, iii. 2 
WELL-BESEEMING ranks, mneh. . i Henryir. i. 1 
ot her well-beseemii!g troop? ....Titus^ndron. ii. 3 

I wn^f^-iS5?( ^^""^^ '^S "'»se KingJohn, ii! F 

Z;riiTr''S„^^' '^"'1 °f sood name . . ..iHeruy I r. i. ) 

WELL-CHOSEN bride 3Henryri iv 1 

I saw well-chosen, ridden ..HfnreFy;/. ii. 2 fjetterl 
wf^'f^-R^LOURED, shall see theclH.^vrriv. 2 
■Sf^f T ic^^^^^^'j' countrymen. Come(/yo/-iViOTs.i. 1 
WELL-DEFENDED honour .... Meas./or Meas v 1 

■.Jl^r*'?" ""' ""'>' well-defended ; Heurn v. \ 2 

WELL-DERIVED as he, as veMMid.N.'sDream i 1 
that you are well-derived. . . . TwoGeu.ofFerona'v •> 

a gentleman, and well-derived _ y 4 

son corrupts a well-derived \vdin!:e..AlVsWelL iii' 2 

m ^^l^-RSg'^^^'^D bed As you Like i"v. I 

WELL-DESERVING piW&r ..Merch. of Venice iv 1 
18 not his heir a well-deserving son? Richard II ii' 1 

to any well-deserving friend 1 Henri/ / f. iii ' 1 

tJI^J virtuous, and well-deserving? Henry i' in. iii' 2 
^ELL-DISPOSED hearts T.... Richard //. ii 1 

J^JfA'L-DlVIliED disposition!.. ..^/i/orii/iS-afo. i 5 

WELL-EDUCATED infant Love'sL. Lost. i. i 

WELL-ENTERED soldiers, to return. .4H'.,;fW;,ii I 
S^I^'-i^XlV^RIENCED archer hits ..Periclel.l. 
^ELL-FAMED lord ofTmy.Troilus^Cressida'iv 5 
WELL-FAVOURED. Sir, l(rep.)TuZGen. ofy ii 1 
wife seems to me well-favoured ..Merr^Wi'i^es ii'2 

he is very well-favoured Tu-elfthNi"lti i' 5 

be a well-favoured man, is the gift, .il/uc/i Ado i'ii' 3 

you are well-favoured, and your looks. /'eivcifs iv 1 

■nr,?T ?'''^X'?,'!;*''^°"''^'' "'''^" others are ..Lear, ii.' 4 

w'^l^-^O^'^W^KNING wind did.2H«»y;'/. iii 2 

WELL-FOUGHTEN field Herm, f v 6 

WELL-FOUND successes CoWoZ„ , iL 2 

WELL-GOVERNED youth Romeo arJuHel, i. 5 

WELL-HALLOWED cause Henryi:i.2 

Wpf'^i>wAw'^-S",''°,"' strong-jointedLoff'.,Z,.L. i.2 

WELL-KNOWN body to iHenrylK (indue ) 

WELL-LABOURING sword had three 'J;"""^^- 

WELL-LIKING wits they have ..Love'sL. Lost. v. 2 

WELL-LOST life of mine All's il'elli. 3 

WELL-MEANING soul, (whom . . . . «ic/,a,vi //.'ii. i 

WELL-MEANT honest love 3/i«»s,r/. i 3 

WELL-MINDED Clarence, be thou. . I iv 8 
Wpf^^MT Fpf P?r '^'"■'"^ ^"^^^' --KingJohn, v. 6 

wr, f'"S?Sy^^'^..'"l f""' ™« .Vuch.ido, V. 4 

wfeJ^I^'^fySSP ^'"'^ "*■ 1""'" KingJohn, iv. 2 

w p i^J^'S^R? ^'^P '"'^'O" • • '^"'''"- ■5- Cressida, ii . 2 
iVrT!, f 'E4'^-'' ™"k8. that ne'er. .Antony ^-Cleo. iii. 1 
w^i'^-Sf i^T^^D P^^='°" 1 I am . . . . .': Othello, v 
WELL-PLEASED, to change two.... I Henry r/ i I 
T,?i".-I'^',','''* "'C floor well-pleased ..iHenryll.iv. 10 

^^S^f^-S§^CTISED, and wise 2 Henry "v. I 

wnf'PS§']?P'^TIONED beard ..-'HenryVI. iii 2 

WELL-READ in poetry Tamivof shren' i 2 

exceedingly well-read, and profited. l//e//r« 7 r. i'ii.' 1 
TO nf'P"S'^^'^*^'^ERED father? ..'iHenruIV.iv. 1 
wS^r T P p^fiEi^iJil'^ 's franked up -Ricliard III. i. 3 
WELL-REPUTED page.... TwoGen. of I'erona, ii. 7 

a woman well-reputed JuliusCcesar ii I 

WELL-RESPECTED honour bid ..lH.„,s,//'.\v.' 3 
WELL-SAILING ships, and. . /'er/cte-, iv. 4 (Gowerl 
WELL-SEEMING Angelo .. ..Meas! for Mens. iii!\ 
„?!;?■'?"* "'^"-^'^cmingforms! ..../(oraTO*j,,6e/ i j 

WELL-SPOKEN da3°s lUcntrdlll. i. 

tor Clarence IS well-spoken _ i •! 

WELL-SUMMEHED and warm kepi.. Henry F v' 2 
TO§{'f "'l.^r'iJ.'S--*'""'' «ell-t"ok labour. . Hamlet, ii. 2 

WELL-TUNEU horns 7 ilusAndronieus ii s 

WELL-WAKllANTEDcousin..;Wf«.,./i,r;l/«" V I 
WELL-WEIGHING sums of .All's Well. iv. 3 (note) 
WELL-WELCOME to thy i^a.nd.Comedy of E,T.ii.2 
WELL-WILLEKS. I will peat the..Mern/wive,i: I 
^r¥/l'-}lW^^ '^'"S ....Measnre for Measure il. i 
WELL-WON-my well-won tlirift..i;«-.n/';v,„>f i 3 
AVELSH-Hugh the Welsh pne^l.. Merry fVives Hi 
Giialliaaud Gaul, French and Welsh — iii. 1 



WELSH-the AVelsh devil, Hugii?.. Merry Wives, v. 3 
deteiidmcfrom that Welsh fairy' _ vt 

am I ridden with a Welsh .^oat too?' _ v 5 
iiotabe to answer the AVelsl, flannel — v t 
upon the cross of a Welsh hook .. ..i Henry If ii 4 
there IS no man speaks better Welsh _ '■■' 

speak it in Welsh. I can _ 

eiJeak no English, I no Welsh '.'.'.'." _ 
that pretty Welsh which thou pour'st — 
makes Welsh as sweet as ditties _ 

the devil understands Welsh " _ 

and hear the ladv sing in Welsh "* _ 
to the Welsh lady's bed .. "" _ ij; 1 

the French and Welsh bayi'n'g'.".'.''.'.'2Heiin//r i' ■? 
against the Welsh, himself.. " "e,iry u . i. 3 

for I am Welsh, you know .'.'. Henni /' 

cannot wash vonr mni*ioiir'a Tsr.iioi, ..7 — .1 ^ 



iv. 7 



— i. 2 

— i. 2 
ii. I 



..,.«.„... .. v,.Di., j,uu K.now He 

caniKit wash your mojesly's Welsh plood 

let a Welsh correction teach you _ v 1 

WELSHMAN-Hugh, the Welslimin.Meny W. ii' i 

thou trusty Welshman Richard n ii 4 

hands oftfiatWelshnian taken .;;.lX«,„/r'l 
lam a Welshinan. Know'st thou.. ..Henry K W. 1 
much care and valour in this Welshman — ivi 

wTtThmcJv Welshman comes ..Richard III. iv. i 
.^„ l^?^,^^' 'rearing thou wert ..Richard II. iii. 2 

the We siraen are dispersed _ iii 3 

the Welshmen did goot service in ... . Henn, V iv' 7 
amongst the loving Welshmen ....3Henr,ivi ii I 

WPr sn-J^'AATrli!'f' ^y Welsli,nen./6V/m,</- ///: iv'. 3 

W^mFH ""^ "'" ""'I" '° ¥ "^ 2HenryIF. ii. 2 

WENCH-as an unstaunched wench. . . . Tempest i I 

well demantled, wench empesi, i. i 

no, wench; it eats and sleeps ..'.'.'." " 
foolish wench! to the most of men 
temperance was a delicate wench 
like a young wench that had .. T 

but tell me, wench 

a slock with a wench 

what wench? Castiliano vuigo'.'.".' 
before me, she's a good weucli 

excellent wench, say I _ .. ^ 

I could marry this wench for this" " _ [;' \ 
to him wench; he will relent ..Meas. for Meas. ii.' 2 
for getting a wench with child . . _ iv t 

with a wench crep.) . Love's L. Lost, i. 1 

Bir, I confess the wench _ ■"''!•, 

BO am I ill love with a base weii'cli' " _ i" 2 
great marvel, loving a light wench _ i' 2 

Guineverof Britain was a little weiich — •'■ 
so do not you; for you are a light wench — 
and, to begin, wench,— so God help me — 
the poor wench is cast away _ y "' 

she's a good wench for this. . Merchant ofFenice, ii.' 2 
1 ke a wench that had shed her milk. ^/rs>re« iv 3 

that wench 18 stark mad Taming of Shrew, i 1 

by the world, it is a lusty wench .... J;'^''"''j|- j 
what said the wench, when he arose — iii' 2 
fear not, sweet wench, they shall .... _ iii' 2 

I knew a wench married in an _ iy' 4 

why, there's a wench! come on .. .. y' 2 

I know a wench of excellent. Comedy of Errors iii' 1 

m the habit of a light wench „ ■'•"ll""' '.''• | 

God me make a light wench _ jy 3 

a fair hot wench in flame-coloure'd'.'.'l Henn//r i' 2 
ot the tavern a most sweet wench' _ i 2 

there is not a better wench '.'iHennilV ii' 1 

may the wench have no worse fortune! — 'ii'2 
to be the pillage of a giglot wench..! Henn//'/. iv' 7 
way to make the wench amends. . . . Richard III. i 1 

take thy lute, wench Henrayill i 1 

when the brown wench lay kissing _ ' ' 2 

good wench. Ift'n sit flnwn n,,, -of • ■„ 



■mGen.ofV, 



. Twelfth Kighl, i. 3 
— ii. 3 



V. 2 
V. 2 
V. 2 



iv. 2 



good wench, let's sit down quiet 
she IS going, wench. Pray, pray 

when I am dead, good wench _ iy 2 

tliou must be gone, wench .. Troilus ^ Cressida, iv.' 2 
U false wench! give t me again _ y 2 

royal wench! she made .. .. 47itoni'i Cleopatra, ii'. 2 
sweet wench, between thy teeth. TitusAndron iii 1 

and a wench tull grown Pericles, iv. (Gower) 

sanie pale hard-hearted wench. . Romeo & Juliet, ii. 4 
stabbed witli a white wench's black eye — ii 4 

go thy way, wench; serve God _ i, 5 

like a misbehaved and sullen wench — iii' 3 

agood wench; giveitme 0.'Ae«„, iii.' 3 

■'';?t?"-ed weiich! pale as thy smock! _ ' v. 2 
WENCHES-mad wenches? (rep. v. 2)Love'sL.L. ii. 1 

liglit wenches may prove plagues _ jv 3 

arm, wenches, arm! encounters y •» 

of mocking wenches are as keen _ y' •'J 

pins the wenches on his sleeve .... _ y' 2 

the lip, as angry wenches will. Taming or Shrew.ii. 1 
but getting wenches with child.. «m(e,'s3'a/f iii 3 

wenches, I'll buy for you both _ iv 3 

which the wenches say is a gallimawfry — iv' 3 
grew so in love with the wenches' song — iv 3 
dost thou conjure for wenches.. Comcdu of Err. iii' 1 

tlie wenches say, God damn me _ iv 3 

ergOil'ght wenches will burn.. .. _ iy' 3 

you see, my good wenches, how men.2/Je7ij-!//F. ii! 4 
when they marry, they get wenches _ ' - 

alas! Door wenches. whpr<3 ni.» ruiTir rr^....,. f; 



...->„ ., .„«..,, „,,v., gcL wcuuiies — IV. 3 

alas! poor wenches, where are now. Hen™/'/// iii | 

three or four wenches, where I stood. Jm/.C«'so>- i 2 

how many boys and wenches .... Antony * Cleo. i. 2 

■nJ',?A,,®,';f,'S?^"''"^'^' '^"' wenches' suitors.Lear, iii. 2 

ij7t<SJ<ir ■ ,?S';;"''^'"S '°° wenchless . . Pericles, iv. 3 
wf^SR^^'^'^J^ ™'''** '^'t'l 'hat .... Cymbeline, iv. 2 
WEND you with this letter .... Meas. lor Meas. iv. 3 
to Athens shall the lovers wend ../l/irf. A'. 'sDr iii 2 
■wr'^'Jife^'P'^^^ "^""^ ^geon wend.. Comf(/v of Err. i. I 
WENT-as ever went upon four legs ..Tempest, ii. 2 

nave I done since I went _ y 1 

brothers and sisters went to it! TuvCen. ofl-'er iv 4 
went you not to lier yesterday ....Merry'wives. v. 1 

I went to her, master Brook _ y 1 

I went to her in white _ y| 5 

how chance you went not with (rep.) — y.' 5 
a month ago I went from hence . . I'u'einhNi"hl, i. 2 
and when she went away now " _ iii. 1 



AVENT still ii) this fasliion Tu>e(/t/i Night, iii. 4 

so went lie t^uUcd to hiK — v. 1 

tliftt went to feu witli tlic ten Mras./br Meat. i. 2 

there went but n pair of shears — i. 'J 

ntiil good wonts went with her name — iii. I 

I went to this ptTnioitnis caititV — v. 1 

fouiof his five wits went halting off.. MucA/Jrfo, i. 1 
my lord, when you went onwiiril.... — i. 1 

I liked her ere 1 went to wars — i. I 

nwuy went Clauiliti enrnfred — iii. 3 

here comes the man we went to seek — v. 1 
a vixen, when slie went to sehool. jVi((. ^^'«^^. iii. a 
who went with him to searrh. . ^^erch. of f'euice, ii. 8 
we went, like Juno's swans {rrp,) Asyou Like it, i. 3 

wherein went lie? what makes — iii. 'i 

he went hut fortli to wash him — iv. I 

went they not (luickly Taming rifShreir, iii. 'l 

a.* she went to tlie gorden — iv. 4 

thev, that went on crutches ere.... Winlcr'tTale.X. 1 

but know not how it went — iii. 2 

the sequel by that went before. Comprfi/n/Kn on. i. 1 

if vou went ni pain, muster — iii. I 

helhat went like a base-viol — iv. 3 

take order for tlie wrimss I went — v. I 

not coming tliither, I went to seek him — v. I 
thane of Cawdor too; went it not so? ..Macbeth, i. .1 

late, friend, ere you went to bed? — ii. 3 

I did fo, and went further — iii. 1 

sii\ee his majesty went into the field .. — v. 1 

since l:i?t I went to France UichardJl. i. I 

iiow wunt lie under him? — v. 5 

went to a bawdy-honse, not above. I Heiiryl T. iii. :i 
so went on, foretelling this same ..^Metiri/t t'. iii. 1 

never went with his forces into Henry I', i. i 

inan went to Arthur's bosom (rf/i.).. — ii. :! 
pride went before, ambition follows. .SHfnryr/. i. 1 
the way her harmless young one went — iii. I 

Jove sometime went disguised — iv. 1 

in wh()se time boys went to span-counter — iv. t 
like to lightnins came and went.... 3 Henri/ r/. ii. I 

for his hoarding went to hell? — ii. 2 

went all afoot in summer's — v. 7 

when that my mother went with.. /ticAnid ///. iii. h 
from troop to troop, went through .. — v. :i 
went beyond all man'sendeavours. Heiirj//'/// iii. 2 
you went embassador to the emperor — iii. 2 

tliose that wei\t on each side — iv. I 

so went to bed; where eagerly — iv. 'J 

who were those went by? Troilus/i-Cretsida, i. 2 

I think, he went not forth to-day.... — i. 2 

'twas wisdoni Paris went — ii. 2 

chance my brother Troilus went not? — iii. 1 

tlic cry went onee on thee — iii. ;i 

motives that you first went out.. Timon of Athens, v. 5 

when went there by on age JulittsCrrsar, j. 2 

when he went to school — i. 2 

and went surly by, without annoying — i. 3 

did not lie there, when I went to bed — ii. 1 
loolc well, fur he went sickly forth .. — ii. 4 

that we tw^o went to school — v..') 

since he went from Egypt Aiitomj ^ Cleo. ii. I 

his power went out in such distractions — iii. 7 
and went to Jewry, on atfairs of .... — iv. 6 
knowledge which way they went ....Cj/mbeline, i. 1 

it went the backside tlie town — i. 3 

if she went before others I have seen — i. 5 
is it fit, I went to look upon him? .. — ii. 1 

when last I went to visit her — iii. .'> 

since she went to Milford Haven? .. — iii. .S 
he went hence even now. What does — iv. ■_' 
they went hence so soon as they .... — v. 4 

I went to Antioch, where, as thou Pericles, i. 2 

vour thouglits went on my wa3' .. — iv. (Goweri 
lie went to lied to her very description .. — iv. 3 

so. out went the candle, and we Lear, i. 4 

father that went hence to fast? ..ttnmenfcJiiliel,'\. 1 
that it went hand-in-hand even with ..Hamlet, \. ', 

he went without their helps — ii. 1 

no, I went round to work, and my yoimg — ii. 2 
the player went to cuffs in tlie question — ii. 2 
since he went into France, I liave been — v. 2 
lacked gold, and yet went never guy.. ..O/AcKo, ii. 1 
went he hence now? Ay, sooth — iii. 3 

3'e8; and went between us very oft .... — iii. 3 
he went hence but now, and, certainly .. — iii. 4 

W KNT'ST not thou to her for. . . . Comedy of Err. iv. 4 
forsaken, as thou went'st forlorn ..ZHcuryVI. iii. 1 
iov than thou went'st forth in. . Ilomeo i- Juliet, iii. 3 

W IJPT-I have inly wept Tempett, v. I 

a Jew would have wept Two Gen. ^ ferona, ii. 3 

wept herself blind at my parting .... — ii. 3 

1 have wept o hundred several — iv. 4 

moved therewithal, wept bitterly.... — iv. 4 

have you wept all this while? MuchAde.iv. 1 

for the which she wept heartily — v. 1 

believe she wept for the death . . Mer. of Venice, iii. 1 
Borrow wept to t'ike h-ave of them. /rni/er'i 7a/e, v. 2 

I am sure my heart wept blood — v. 2 

and so we wept: and there was — v. 2 

may be thought J have wept 1 HenryJV. ii 4 

end. when with grief he wept ^ Henry ri. ii. 1 

my father York and Edward wept..ft.c'iairf ///. i. 2 
wept when it was reported (irp.) .... — i. 3 

he wept, and pitied ttie, and kindly.. — ii. 2 
you wept not for our father's death .. — ii. 2 

wept like two chiUlrcn. in their — iv. 3 

with me. I have wept for thine — iv. 4 

tomb of orphans' ti'ars wejit on 'em! Henry fill. iii. 2 
have shook mv head, and wept. 7'iinori nf-llhens, ii. i 
when onr vaults have wept wttli .... — ii. 2 
poor have cried, Cnjsar bath wept .JnlintCfPtnr, iii. 2 
lie wept, when at Philippi he.... /4ri/r)»j/ 4- C/rn. iii. 2 
have turned mine eye. and went .... Cymbeline, i. 4 
I never wept, because they died . . TitusA udron. iii. I 

me say, that never wept before — ill. I 

against my will, but I wept for it . ..Pericles, iv. I 
we wept after her hearse — iv. 4 

AVEST— a south west blow on ye Tempett, i. 2 

to the west end of the wood.. TiroGen. ofl'erona, v. 3 
Blmll be my East and West Indies .Aferry H'l'rei, i. 3 



WEST— lies your way due west . . TirelflhSiuhl, iii. I 

throned bv the west 1 and loosed lils.A/ii/.A'.'iWr. ii. 2 
from tlie west ciirni-r of tliv . I.nve'tL.LutI, i. 1 (.lett.) 

by east, West, )i..itb, and snuth — V. 2 

west of this plaee, down in the ..Atyonl.ilte il,\\: i 
from cast, west, north, and south, . iViuieraTale, i. 2 
ere the weary sun set in the wvtl. . Comedy nf Err . i. 2 

the west yet glimmers with Macbeth, iii. 3 

that utmost corner of the west Kinjf John, ii. I 

by east and west let France and England — ii. 2 

we from thu west will send — ii. 2 

sets weepiiif; in the lowlv west Richard II. ii. 4 

from the cast unto the west I Henry 1 1', i. 3 

orient to the drooping west .,,.i Henry If. (indue. ) 

west of this forest, scarcely — iv. I 

cast, west, north, south — iv. 2 

kingdoms of the westj there's "iHenryVI. i. I 

serve their sovereign m the west?..R'c/i(ir</ ///. iv. 4 
come knights from east to west.. Tmilut^Creu. ii. 3 
known wlietherforeast or west. Corio/nnu», i. 2 (lett.) 
they would fly ea'it, west, north, south — ii. 3 

south to this jiart of the west Cymbeline, iv. 2 

from south to wt st on wing soaring .. — v. 5 

which shines here in the west — v. i 

would whip you to the west Ilomeo ^ Juliet, iii. 2 

east and west, makes us traduced Humlct, i. 4 

I am hut mad north north west — ii. 2 

even from the east to the west! Othello, iv. 2 

WFSTEHLY that blows? Pericles, iv . i 

WESTERN-the western sky ..Tuo Gen.ofVer. v. 1 
western side is with a vinevard.. Wra«. roi/l/fi*. iv. 1 
it fell upon a little western flower.. il/it/.iY.'»i)r. ii. 2 

uncouple in the western valley — iv. 1 

the east to western \nA. .Asy'miLikeil, iii. 2 (versesi 

from the western isles of Kernes Marhtth, i. 2 

made the western welkin blush KingJahn, v. 

attain his cnstlul western bed illeuryll. v. 3 

on the western const rideth Richard III. iv. 4 

not new lip.. 11 the western shore ... — iv. 4 

WESTJII^STEK, be it your charge . ftiWiarrf //. iv. ; 
conspirator, abbot of Westminster .. — v. 
king your father is at Westminster.. 2 //fni-.v"'. ii. 4 
cathedral church of Westminster ....2 //tiiri/)'/. i. 2 
vows to crown himself in Westminster — iv. 4 
you must straight to. Westminster. /iiWiarrf /;/. iv. 1 

WESTMORELAKD.whatyesteruight.U/tnii/"'-"' 
earl of Westmoreland set forth to-day — iii. 2 
of Westmoreland irf;;. iv. 2, v. 2, and v. 4) — iii. 3 
earl of Westmoreland, seven thousand — iv. 1 
noble Westmoreland, and warlike Blunt — iv. 4 
and Westmoreland, that was engaged — v. 2 
come, cousin Westmoreland (;rp. V. 5) — v. 4 
Westmoreland, and Stafford, fled .. ..2Henry/r. 1. 1 
of young Lancaster, and Westmoreland — i. 1 

to my cousin Westmoreland vep. iv. 3) — i. 2 

this to tlie earl of Westmoreland .... — i. 2 
duke of Lancaster, and Westmoreland — i. 3 

it is my lord of Westmoreland [rep.) — iv. I 
as 1 told my lord of Westmoreland (rep.')— iv. 2 

who's here? Westmoreland? — iv. 4 

Westmoreland, thon art a summer bird — iv. 4 

my lord of Westmoreland Henryy. ii. 2 

my cousin Westmoreland? — iv. 3 

proclaim it. Westmoreland, thro' my host— iv. 3 
patient, gentle carl of Westmoreland. 3//cnryr/. i. 1 
lord of Westmoreland shall maintain — i. 1 

WESTWARD— a maid westward. Iliuter'iTale, iv. 3 
westward, Wales beyond the Severn. 1 Henry 1 1', iii. ) 
westward rooteth from tlic city's .Itoweo & Juliet, i. 1 
some star, that's westward from the po\c. Hamlet, i. I 

WESTWARD-HOE: grace, and.. TireinhMght, iii. 1 

WET the grief on 't Tewpesl, ii. I 

tire property' of rain is to wet ....As you Like it, iii. 2 

this distempered messenger of wet Airs If 'ell, i. 3 

the roddiness upon her lip is wet../''iii(pi'j7Vi;e, v. 3 

to the wet seabo.i' in an hour 2 Henry I y. iii. 1 

till his face be like a wet cloak — v. 1 

tlie rain of heaven wet this place ..2Henryl'L iii. 2 
and wet my cheeks with artificial ..3llenry 11. iii. 2 
Btandcrs-by bad wet their cheeks ..Richard III. i. 2 

and wet his grave with my — i. 2 

and the tears of it are wet Oniony ^Cleo. ii. 7 

who, with wet cheeks, were present. .Cymtc/iiir, v. .6 

when the rain came to wet me once Lear, iv. c 

be your tears wet? — iv. 7 

WE'TIIEK of the flock Merchan!ofremce,i\-. | 

every 'leven wether tods H'inter'tTalc,iv. 2 

WETTING— to me than my wetting .. lempr,!, iv. I 

W HALE, with 60 many tuns Merry Hires, ii. I 

his teeth as white as w'hale's bone. Loi'e^s L. Lost, v. 2 

who is a whale to virginity All'sll'ell, iv. 3 

like a whale on ground ....i Henry If. iv. 4 

before the belching whale Troilut ^ Creisida, v. h 

to nothing so fitly as to a whale Pericles, ii. 1 

sucli whales have I beard on a' the land — ii. I 
remaining lamps, the helching whale — iii. 1 
orlike a whale? Verv like a whale .... Hamlet, iii. 2 

WHARF— of the adjacent wliarfs./liilonv <S Cleo. ii. 2 
nits itself in ease on Lethe w-harf Hamlet j i. 

WHEAT— thy rich leas of wheat, rye.. Tempest, iv. 1 

when wheat is green Mid. l^'.*s Dream, i. 1 

two grains of wheat hid in two ..Mer. of I'enice, i. 1 
with wheat? With red wheat, Davy.2//pwrv/r. v. 1 
have a cake out of the whcat.Trni/m fi Cressidn, i. 1 
measures of wheat to Home.Antony ^Cleopatra, ii. 6 
mildews the white wheat, and hurts .... Lear, iii. 4 

WHEATEN garland wear Hamlei.v. 2 

WIlEEL-the world on wheels .7Vo Cc.nr Or. iii. 1 
rCol.Kn/.] the wheels n( Cxs.arJ .Meai. for Meas. iii. 2 

before tlie wheels of Phcchus Much Ado, v. 3 

Fortune, fniin her wheel As you Like , I. i. 2 

whiit wlieels? racks? fires? Ilinter'sTale. iii. ! 

made me turn i' the wheel ..Comedy of terrors, iii. 2 

or a dry wheel grate on the i Henry I y. iii. I 

would not this nave of a wheel have.'.'/Zeiiij/"'- 'i. < 

fiirtnnc's furious fickle wheel Henry V. iii. 6 

and she is painted also with a wliecl — iii. C 

are whirled like a potter's wheel I Uenryl'l. i. & 

did follow thy proud chariot wheels.a/lm.j/ (7. ii. 4 
exceeds the compass of her wheel ..'iHtnryf'I. iv. 3 



WHEEL— me where I « heel . . 7'ro//i« $ Crrtii'i/n, v. 7 
foieed lo wheel lliree or lour miles ..Coriolanus, i. 6 

death 1111 the wheel. oral wild — iii. 2 

eiijitive lionils liis ehariot wheels?. .Ju/m.Ca>i<ir, i. 1 
that it might eo on ViiweU]. Antony liCleopatra,'\i. 7 
Fortune break lier wlieel, provoked.. — iv. 13 

a carbuncle of I'huihiis' wheel Cymbeline, v. b 

tear them on thy charirit wlieels.. Titus.indron. v. 2 

and by the waggon wheel trot — v. 2 

smile once more; turn thy wheel! Lear, ii. 2 

when a great wheel runs down a hill .... — ii. 4 
but I am hound upon a w heel of fire ... . — iv. 7 

the wheel is come full circle — v. 3 

made bv Titan's wheels Romeo fir Juliet, ii. 3 

the spoKes and fellies from her wheel . . Hamlet, ii. 2 

it is a massy wheel, fixed on — iii. 3 

how the » heel becomes it! — iv 6 

Wlli;ELi:D[Cr)(.Kn/.-wliii led] about. /(iWi. ///. iv. 4 
tin- wheihil seat of fortunate ..Antony 4 Clen. iv. 12 

■\VIlKi;i,l.\'(; stranger (liliello,'i. I 

WIIKEZIXG lungs Troilus ^Cressida, v. 1 

WIIELKED, and waved like Lear, iv. 6 

\\ llELKS-uiid whelks, and knobs ..Heuryl'. iii. « 
WllEI.iM- oeeaii whelm them nW.. Merry Wives, ii. 2 
WHELP-tt freckled whelp, hag-born ,. Timpesl. i. -i 

the nmriii'Mil the lion's whelp i Henry 1 1', iii. 3 

to behold Ills lion's whelp forage Henry I', i. i 

now, like to whelps, we crying Mtenryl'l. i. U 

how the young whelp of 'I albut's — iv. 7 

or an uiilicked bear whelp SHenir/TI. iii. 2 

playing with a lion's wliclp .. Antony ^ Cleo. iii. II 
as a lion's whelp (rep. v. I,).. Cymbeline, v. 4 (scn>ll) 
thou, Leonutus. art the lion's .whelp. . — v. It 

two of thv whelps, fell curs of TitusAndron. ii. 4 

WHELI'E^D a dog 7V>noii nf Alliens, ii. 2 

hath whelped in the streets JuliusCa-sar, ii. 2 

WHEREABOUT-of mv whereabout.. Wuci/f/A, ii. 1 

I go, nor reason whereabout illenryll'. ii. 3 

WIIET your gentle thoughts ....TirelflhMght.'m. 1 
why dost thou whet thy knife eo.Mer.of I'enice, iv. 1 

I will whet on the king KmgJnhn.i'ii. 4 

and whet not on these furious peer8.2//r;irj//7. ii. 1 
whet on Warwick to this enterprize .SlUnryl I. i. 2 
and withal whet me to be revenged. /iic'mn/ III. i. 3 

does whet his anger to him! Henry fill. iii. 2 

first did whet me against Caesar ..JuliusCa'sar, ii. ) 

is but to whet thy almost blunted ....Hamlet, iii. 4 

WIlET'STa knife to kill thyself.... «iV/ior</ ///. i. 3 

WHETSTONE-for our whetstone./l« you Like it, i. 2 

the fool is the whetstone of the wits. . i. 2 

be this the whetstone of your sword .. Macbeth, iv. 3 

she sharpens; well said, whetstone. Trail. ^ Cress, v. 2 

WHETTED on thy stony heart .. ..2 Henry IK iv. 4 

it was whetted on thy stone-hard .Richard III. iv. 4 

WHEY— feed on curds and whey.. TitusAndron. iv. 2 

WIIEY-FACE? The English Macbeth, v. 3 

■\VlllFFand wind of his tell sword Hamlet, ii. 2 

WllIFFLER 'fore the king .... Henry f. v. (chorus) 
■\\'lIIl,E-EHE-me but while-ere?.... Tempest, i'ti. 2 
WIIIXE aloud for mercy .. Aniony ^ Cleopatra, iii. II 

dost thou come here to whine? Hamlet, v. 1 

WHINED— the hedge-pig whined .....Macbeth, iv. I 
he whined and roared awuv your ..Coriolanus, v. 5 
WHINING,purblii.d,wayward..;.orr', i,.i,„j(, iii. I 
and then, the whining scliool-lioy. y4si/ou/./A(f |7, ii. 7 
whom I will beat into clamorouswhining.Zrar, ii. 2 
a wliining niummet, in her .. ..Itomeo 4- Juliet, iii. 5 
WHIP him out. says the third.. TiroGen.of I'er. iv. 4 
the fellow that whips the dogs (rep.) _ jv. 4 

but whips me out of the eluiniber — iv. 4 

they would whip me with their . . Merry Hives, iv. 5 
good cause to whip them all ....Meas.for Meas, ii. I 

whip mel' no, no; let carman whip .. ii. 1 

the impression of keen whips I'd weor — ii. 4 
I'll whip you from your fuining fence. i*/iic/i.4</o, v. 1 

I'll whip thee with a rod Mid.K.'sDream, iii. 2 

I, that have been love's whip .... Love'sL.Lost, iii. I 
now step I forth to whip hypocrisy .. — iv. 3 

go, whip thy gig _ v. 1 

and i will whip about your infamy., v. 1 

whiji to our tents, as roes run over .. — v. 2 

a dark house and a whip Asyou likeil, iii. 2 

his presence must be the whip of All's Well. iv. 3 

were, in your love, a whip to me.. H'inler'sTale i. 2 
prepared to whip this dwarfish v,at..Kint(John, v. 2 

und things called whips? illenry II. 'li. I 

sirrah beadle, whip him till he — ii. I 

nay, whip me then; he'll rather ..3Hfrir)/r/. iii. 2 

let s whip these stragjjiers o'er Richard III. v. 3 

your curb, and whip, in their.. 7'inion (if Athens, iv. 3 

wilt thou whip thine own faults — v. I 

not all the whips of lieaven v. I 

that was the whip of your Coriolanus, i. 8 

clianee to whip your information.... — iv.fi 
go wliip him 'lore the people's eyes .. — iv. li 

which will not prove a whip — iv. B 

hence this Jack, and whip liim./<iif(»i|f 4-C/<o. iii. II 
moon and stars! whip him (rrp.) ., — iii. II 
whom he may at pleasure whip .... — iii. 11 

marry, whip tbtc gosling: I think Pericles, iv. 3 

take heed, sirrah, the whip Lear. i. 4 

her whip, of cricket's bone Ilomeo ^i Juliet, i. 4 

Would whip you to the west, and bring — iii. 2 
who would bear the whips and scorns .Hamlet, iii. I 
whips out his rapier, cries, a rati a rut!.. — iv I 

whip me sueh hoiiei>t knaves Othello, i. 1 

and put in every honest bund a whin.. .. — iv. 2 
whip me. ve devils, fuim the |K)8sc»sion.. — v. 2 

WIIIl'PED-and whipiKd top MerryWives, v. 1 

«hipped. Wliipjied flillt (rep.). .Mens, for Meas. V. I 
worthy to he whipped. To he whippedMiicA/Wo. ii. I 
to be whipped; and yet iKtter ..Lore'sL.Losl.i.i 

then shall Hector Ik' whipped — v. S 

you'll he whipped for taxation AsyouLikeil. i. 1 

you were lately whipped, sir All's Hell, ii. 2 

I'd hove them whipped; or I would ii. 3 

if our faults whipiied tliem not iv. 3 

whence he was whipped for getting.. iv. 3 

he shall be whipped through the army iv. 3 

to be whipped at the hitih-cross .. Taming <ifSh. i. I 



WHIPPED out of the court ()v;j.). Winter' sTnle. iv. 2 
whipped and scourged with rods ....XHenrylV. i. 3 

and wliipped the offending Adam Hem-ii l'.\. t 

let them be whipped tlirough every .iHennjVl.yi. I 
for I liave seen him whipped tliree .. — iv. 2 

go see this rumourer whipped Coriolanus, iv. 6 

Shalt be whipped with wire Antony if CleoAi. 5 

you will be whipped. Approach .... — IJ!- " 
being whipped, bring him again .... — !.';•" 
is he wliipped? Soundly, my lord ,. — ji! " 
since tliou hast been whipped for.... — iii. II 
my messenger he hath wliipped .... — iv. 1 
all your beggars whipped then? (.rep.) .Pericles, ii. 1 

he must be whipped out, when Lady Lear, i. 4 

let him be whipped that first finds — i. ■! 

lie, we'll have you whipped — i- i 

whipped for speaking true (rep.) — ..i. ■! 

wlio is whipped from tytliing to tytliing — iii. 4 

whipped and tormented Romeo S,-.hiliel, i. 2 

I wnnld have such a fellow whipped . . Hamlet, iii. 2 

WHIPPERS are in love too AsyouUkeit, iii. 2 

WIIIPPING-unpitied whipping. jVtos. /or il/ea.s.iv. 2 
pressing to death, whipping, and hanging — v. 1 
great Hercules whipping a i:ig ..Love sL.Losl, iv. 3 

lord sir, at yonr whipping? (rep.) AtCslVell, ii. 2 

to save yourself from whipping ....iHenry ri. ii. 1 

and so 1 sliall 'scape whipping Pericles, ii. 1 

and who sliall 'scape whipping Hamlet, u. 2 

AATtlPPING-CHEER enough iHenryir. v. 4 

WIIIPP'ST— for which thou whipp'st her.Lear, iv. 6 

WHIPSTER gets my sword Otiiello, v. 2 

WHIPSTOCK— is no whipstock . . TuceWh Kight, ii. 3 

practised more the whipstock Pericles, ii. 2 

WHIPT-I shall have you whipt .Meas.forMeas. ii. I 

not whipt out of his trade — ii- 1 

I whipt me behind the arras MuchAdo,\. U 

WHIRL— justice always whirls \n.Love\L. Lost, iv. 3 
whirl asunder, and dismember me .King John, iii. 1 
the fifth did whirl about the other .. — iv. 2 
expectation whirls me round .. TroilusSr Cress, iii. 2 
and whirl along with thee about .TitusAmJron. v. 2 
WHIRLED -thoughts are whirled ..1 Henry I' I. i. 5 

V7IURLIGIG of time brings TweimNlgld, v. 1 

WHIRLING in tlie court .... TilusAndronlciis, iv. 2 
wild and whirling [R'nf.-hurling] words. Hamlet, i. S 

AVHIRLPOOL. over bog Lear, iii. 4 

WHIRLWIND bear unto .... TiroGen.ofVerona, i. 2 
fame, as whirlwinds sliake fair .. Taming of Sh. v. 2 

thee thitlier in a whirlwind Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

bless thee from wliirlwinds, star-blasting. Lear, iii. 4 
I may say, whirlwind ofvyour passion .If am fe(, iii. 2 

AVHIRRING me from my friends Pericles, iv. 1 

WHISPER— Juno and Ceres wliiaper .Tempest, iv. 1 
to whisper and conspire against . TwoGen of I'er. i. 2 

we'll whisper o'er a couplet Twelfth Night, iii. 4 

whisper her ear, and tell lier MuchAdo, iii. 1 

Pyramus and Thishy whisper. ^/"/tZ, A'. 's Dream, iii. 1 

tirey are content to whisper — v. 1 

did whisper often very secretly — v. 1 

wliich tlie fearful lovers are to whisper — v, 1 
the Russian whisper in your etat.Love'sL.Losl, v. 2 
blushes in ray cheeks thus whisper ..All's Welt, ii. 3 

I'll whisper with the general — iv. 3 

your followers I will whisper .... Winter' sTale,^ i. 2 

whisper him in your behalfs — iv. 3 

that does not speak, whispers the ....Macbeth, iv. 3 
so mueli my conscience whispers in ..KingJohn, i. 1 
mark, how they whisper: urge them — ii. 2 
and whisper one another in the ear .. — iv. 2 
will whisper music to my weary ..iHenrylV. iv. 4 
whisi)ers of each other's watch . . Henry V. iv. (cho.) 

and whispers to his pillow 2 Henry V I. iii. 2 

why w.hisper you, my lords ZHenryVl. i. 1 

whisper thespirits of thine enemies. Ri'cAard /;j.iv.4 
but he came to whisper Wolsey .... Henry VlU.i. 1 
Troy come not to whisper hira . .Troilus^ Cress, i. 3 
never admitted a private whisper . . Coriotanus, v. 3 
shall they not -whisper, lo, Csisar . .JuliusCajsar, ii. 2 
devil whisper curses in mine ear.. TitusAndron. v. 3 
is as a whisper in the ears of death .... Pericles, iii. 1 
and whispers mine ear, go not till .. — v. 1 

at least the wliisper goes so Hamlet, i. I 

whose wliisper o'er the world's diameter — iv. 1 
and whispers, for good Polonius' death.. — iv. 5 
well said, whisper: witlias little a web.. 0;Aei(o, ii. I 
did they never whisper? Never, my lord — iv. 2 

"WHISPERED faithfully Asyou Like it. ii. 7 

prophets whispered fearful cliange . . Richard II. ii. 4 
I mean, the whispered ones, for they are.. Lear, ii. I 
WHISPERING and most guilty.. A/ens. /or JVieas. iv. 1 
and whispering humbleness.. A/erc/ianio/Zenioe, i. 3 
already; whispering, rounding..., WiHier'sT'afe, i. 2 

is whispering nothing? — i. 2 

'tis well they are whispering — iv. 3 

foul whisperings are abroad Macbeth, v. 1 

sacrificial wliisperings in his ear .. TitusAndron. i. 1 

whispering tale in ai:air lady's Gax . . RomeoSj J at. i. 5 

WHIST- the wild waves whist .. Tempest, i. 2 (song) 

WHISTLE-tend to the master's whistle — i. 1 

pipes and whistles in his sound ..AsyouLit<eit, ii. 7 

to whistle off these secrets Winter's Tale, iv. 3 

let the law go whistle, I warrant you — iv. 3 

he heard the carmen whistle 2 Henry W. iii. 2 

hear the shrill whistle Henry I', iii. fchorus) 

the seaman's wliistle is as a whisper ..Pericles, iii. I 
boatswain whistles, the master calls.. — iv- 1 

sleep out, the rest I'll whistle Lear, ii. 2 

I have been wortlr tl\e whistle — iv. 2 

wliistle then to me, as signal .... Romeo ^Juliet, v. 3 
I'd whistle her oif. and let her down ..Othello, iii. 3 

WHISTLING wind Mid. N.'s Dream, ii. 2 

by his hollow whistling in tlie leaves. 1 Henry IF. v. 1 

did sit alone, wliistling to the air.^n^ony fyCleo. ii. 2 

WHIT— not a whit, when it jars. TwoGen.of Ver. iv. 2 

not a wliit Merry Wivet, i. 1 

not a whit; I have a device.. ..Afid.iV.'sDream, iii. 1 

not a whit, Touchstone Asyou Like it, iii. 2 

I sir? ne'erawhit Taming of Shrew, i. 1 

BO shall 1 no whit be behind in — i. 2 

no.notawhit — ii. l 



[ 830 ] 

WHIT— waste is no whit lesser than ..Richard //. ii. I 

not a whit, i' faith (ren. iv. 3) \HenrylF.ii 4 

for England! not a whit for me ..if/c/iard ///. iii- 4 
I trouble you. No, mt a whit. Troitus ^Cresslda, v. I 
wildncss, 6lin.ll no whit appear ....JulliisCiesur, ii. 1 
not a whit, your lady being so ensy . . Cymbetine, ii. 4 
no whit less than in his feats deserving — iii. 1 
or ne'er a whit at all, here Aaron is.. Titus And. iv. 2 

no.notawhit; whati llomeo^Jnllei,W. i 

not a whit, we defy augury Hamlet, v. 2 

WHITE cold virgin snow Tempest, iv. 1 

she is as white as a lily .... TwoGen. orVerona, ii. 3 
the dozen white luces in their coa,t .Merry Wives, i. 1 
white louses do become an old coat well — i. I 

and fairies, green, and white — iv. 4 

finely attired in a robe of white — iv. 4 

you cannot see a white spot — iv. 5 

means slie shall be all in white — iv. 6 

I come to her in white — v. 2 

the white will decipher her — v. 2 

black, grey, green, and white — v. 5 

flowers purple^ blue, and white — v. 5 

I went to her in white, and cried .... — v. 5 
whose red and white nature's ....Twelfth Night, i. 5 

my lady has a white hand — ii.3 

my shroud of white, stuck aU — ii. 4 (song) 

drink brown and wliite bastard .Meas.for Meas. iii. 2 

is not under white and black MuchAdo, v. 1 

tliat pure congealed white. . . . Mid. N.'s Dream, iii. 2 
this princess of pure white, this seal.. — iii. 2 
immaculate white and red (rep.). .Love's L.Lost, i. 2 

what is slie in the white? — ii. 1 

to iier white hand see thou do commend — iii. 1 
to show liis teeth as white as whale's — v. 2 
by this white glove, how white the hand' — v. 2 
comes sooner by white \\s.\is.. Merchant of Venice, i. 2 

have livers white as milk? — iii. 2 

by the white hand of Rosalind — iii. 2 

let the white death sit on thy cheek ..All's Well, ii. 3 
white stockings, and every oflScer. Taming- q/'SA. iv. 1 
such war of white and red witliin her — iv. 5 
the wager, though you hit the white — v. 2 
make tliee open thy white hand .. Winter'sTale, i, 2 

in pure white robes — iii. 3 

the white sheet bleaching on , — iv. 2 (song) 

lawn as white as driven snow .... — iv. 3(song) 

dove's down, and as white as it — iv. 3 

by my white beard, you offer hira .. — iv. 3 

to wear a heart so white Macbelh, ii. 2 

black spirits and wliite — iv. 1 (song) 

wliite beards have armed their thin.BicAarii //. iii. 2 
white canvas doublet will sully ....\ Henry 1 1', ii. 4 
thy father's beard is turned white *. — ii. 4 

his white hairs do witness it — ii- 4 

there is not a white hair on your tax^e.iHenrylV. i. 2 
a white beard? a decreasing leg? .... — i. 2 
with a white head, and something .. — i. 2 
I would I might never spit white again — i. 2 
since I perceived the first white hair — i. 2 

wliose white investments figure — iv. 1 

left the liver white and pale — iv. 3 

how ill white hairs become a fool .... — v. 5 

as black from white, my eye Henry F. ii. 2 

by the white hand of my lady — iii. 7 

pillow for that good white head — iv. 1 

B black beard will turn white — v. 2 

pluck a white rose with me (rep.) . . 1 Henry VJ. ii. 4 

verdict on the white rose aide — ii. 4 

do paint the wliite rose red — ii. 4 

dye your white rose in a bloody red.. — ii. 4 
between the red rose and the white .. — ii. 4 

leave me at the White Hart 2 Henri/ '7. iv. 8 

the white rose, that I wear Z Henry I'l. i. 2 

would bring white hairs unto a quiet — ii. 5 
red rose and the white are on his face — ii. 5 
saddle wliite Surrey for the field ..Richard II f. v. 3 
we will unite the white rose and tlie red — v. 4 
comparison all whites are ink ..Troilus^ Cress, i. 1 
puts me her white hand to his cloven — i. 2 
she has a marvellous white hand .... — i. 2 
to spy a wiiite hair on liis chin (re/^,) — i. 2 

and one of them is white ()£p.) — i. 2 

that white hair is my father — i. 2 

with these your white enchanting .. — iii. 1 
hal by this white beard, I'd fight.... — iv. 5 

will make black, white Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

honoured age for liis white beard .... — iv. 3 

the war of white and damask Coriotanus, V\. 1 

turns up the white o' the eye — iv. ,5 

for the white reprove the hxovfn. Antony ^Cleo. iii. 9 
henceforth, the white hand of a lady — iii. 11 

white and azure, laced with blue Cymbeline, ii. 2 

breeding, as his white beard came to — v. 3 

of white and spotless hue Titus Andronicus, i. 2 

turn a swan's black legs to white .... — iv. 2 

the semblance of their white flags Pericles, i. 4 

long, small, white as milk — iv. (Gower) 

might the crow vie feathers white — iv. (Gower) 
for flesh and blood, sir, white and red — iv. 6 

tears his white hair Lear, iii. 1 

singe my white head! and thou — iii. 2 

a head so old and white as this — iii. 2 

mildews the white wheat, and hurts .... — iii. 4 

belly for two white herring — iii. 6 

be thy raouth or black or white — iii. 6 

so white, and such a traitorl — iii. 7 

some flax, and whites of eg"s, to apply .. — iii. 7 

ha! Goneril! with a white beard! — iv. 6 

told me I had white hairs in my beard .. — iv. 6 

these white flakes had challenged — iv. 7 

with a white wench's black eye. Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 4 
they may seize on the white wonder — iii. 3 
in her excellent white bosom ..Hamlet, ii. 2 (letter) 

to wash it white as snow? — iii. 3 

white his shroud as the mountain — iv. 5 (song) 
his beard waa as white as snow..., — iv. 5 (song) 

ram is tuppin" your white ewe Oi/ie//o, i. I 

find a white that shall her blackness fit — ii. 1 

WHITE-BEARDED fellow speaks it.MnchAdo, ii. 3 
that old white-bearded Satan I iienryi f. ii. 4 



WHITE-FACED shore, whose foot .. KingJolm, ii. ] 
WHITEFRIARS; there attend my. Richard III. i. 2 
WHITEHALL-called- Whitehall Henry yill. iv. 1 
WHITE-HANDED mistress, one. .Love'sL.Losl, v. i 
WHITE-LIMED walls! ye alehouse. TitusAnd. iv. 2 
WHITE-LIVERED, and red-faced ..Henry I', iii. 2 

wliite-liverod runagate, wliat doth. Kic/iard ///. iv. 4 
WHITELY wanton with a velvet. /.one's L. Lorf, iii. 1 
WHITENESS so became them. TwoGen. of fer. iii. 1 

in angel whiteness bear away those. . MuchAdo, iv. I 

Eurity and whiteness of my sheets. Winter's 'late, i. 2 
ut I could find no whiteness. ComeJj/(>/" Error*, iii. 2 
the whiteness in thy cheek is apter ..'iHenryll'. i. I 
WHITER than the paper...., UercAant ofTenice, ii. 4 
lily! and whiter than the sheets! .. Cymbeline, i\. 2 

whiter than new snow liomeo^ Juliet, iii. 2 

nor scar that whiter skin of hers Othello, v. 2 

WHITEST virtue strikes.. Measme /or Measure, \\'\. 2 
wliicli makes my whitest part black. Heiir?/ /-'///. i. I 
WHITE-UPTURNED wondering. Itomeo SrJul. ii. 2 
WHITING-TIME, sendhim by ..iWerryfrii.es, iii. 3 
WI-IITMORE [.we WALTER]- 

stay. Whitmore; for thy prisoner \s..2Henry VI. iv. 1 
WHiTSTERS in Datchet-inead .. Merry Wives, iii. 3 
WHITSUN'-in Whitsun' pastorals Wint'er'sTate, iv. 3 
busied with a Whitsun' morris-dance. Henri/ f'. ii. 4 
WHITSUN-WEEK,wlientheprince.2HeHr!//r. ii.l 
WHITTLE in the unruly camp. Timon of Athens, v. 2 

WHIZZING in the air Jii/msCrt(sar, ii. I 

[f b/.] come whizzing in upon them Lear, iii. 6 

WHOLE— roar of a whole herd of lions. Tempest, ii. 1 

the whole butt, man — ii. 2 

are both as whole as a fish. . TwoGen.of Verona, ii. 5 
let them keep their limbs whole. . Merry Wives, iii. I 

your skins are whole, and let — iii. 1 

revenged on the whole pack TwelfthNight, v. 1 

swallowed his vows whole. A/easure/orji/easKre, iii. 1 
and now is the whole man governed.. Jl/wcA^</o, i. 1 
with a wMiole army shooting at me ., — ii. I 
our whole discourse is all of her .... — iii. 1 

before the whole congregation — iii. 3 

is oiirwliole dissembly appeared?.... — iv. 2 
to disgrace Hero before the whole.... — iv. 2 
a whole book full of these quondam — v. 2 

then the whole quire hold their..Wt/.A'.'sDreo?n,ii. 1 

this whole earth may be bored — iii. 2 

for I am for whole volumes Love'sL.Lost, i. 2 

and the whole world again, cannot .. — v. 2 
nor is my whole estate upon ..Merch. of Venice, i. I 
tell thee all my whole device when I — iii. 4 
wilt thou show the whole wealth of. . — iii. ii 
taxed their whole sex withal ....Asyou Like it, iii. 2 

the whole theorick of war in All's Well, iv. 3 

all is wliole; not one word more .... — v. 3 

of the whole dungy eartli Winter's Tale, i i . 1 

the whole matter and copy of the father — ii. 3 

a purse alive in the whole army — iv. 3 

longer tlian the whole world . Comedy of Errors, iii. 2 

who sent wiiole armadas of — iii. 2 

whole as the marble, founded as Macbelh, iii. 4 

tlie general ioy of the whole table .. — iii. 4 

for the whole space that's in ~- iv. 3 

for the dignity of the whole body. ... — v. I 
and made whole, with very easy .... KingJohn, \. 1 
to stop Arthur's title in the whole .. — ii. 2 
a whole armado of convicted sail .... — iii. 4 
to least upon whole thousands of .... — v. 2 

the whole land is full of weeds Richard 77. iii. 4 

credit sake, make all whole \HenryIV. ii. I 

and your whole plot too light. . — ii. 3 (letter) 
the state of time had first been whole — iv. 1 
goes well, j'ct all onr joints are whole — iv. 1 
what may the king's whole battle reach — iv. 1 
and now my whole charge consists of — iv. 2 
tasked the wliole state; to make .... — iv. 3 
there's a whole merchant's venture .iHenrylV. ii. 4 
of mutt m or two, in a whole Lent?.. — ii. 4 
and the wliole frame stands upon pins — iii. 2 
I have a whole school of tongues in., — iv. 3 
and put tlie world's whole strength.. — iv. 4 

lion gait walk the whole world Henry V. ii. 2 

and his whole kingdom unto desolation — ii. 2 
breaks words, and keeps wliole weapons — iii. 2 

all the whole array stood agazed \ Henry VI. i. I 

were the whole frame here — ii.3 

all tlie whole inheritance I give .... — iii. 1 
calledbut viceroy of the whole? .... — v. 4 
should demand a whole fifteenth.... 2 Henry r/. i. I 

my lord, whole towns to fly — ii. I 

preserved so whole, do seldom win .. — iii. i 
with a spear, and 'tis not whole yet — iv. 7 

all the whole time I was my Henry VIII. i. 1 

yea, the wliole consistory of Rome .. — ii. 4 
to bring my whole cause 'forehis.... — ii. 1 

these are the whole contents — iv. 2 

i' the world, with the whole world?.. — v. 1 

in filling the whole realm — v. 2 

a general taint of the whole state .... — v. 2 
I'll decline the whole question . Troitus ^ Cress, ii. 3 

the passage and whole carriage — ii.3 

know the whole world, he is — ii.3 

you shall make it whole again — iii. 1 

makes the whole world kin — iii. 3 

a whole week by days — iv. 1 

with the wholeqiiality wherefore..., — iv. 1 
and this whole night hath nothing been — v. 3 
to the whole race of mankind . Timon of Athens, iv. 1 

that the whole life of Athens — iv. 3 

and influence to their whole being!.. — v. 1 
affection common of the whole body .Coriolanus,i. 1 

and the shop of the whole body — i. 1 

wherein he gives my son the whole., — ii. 1 

as physic for the whole state — iii. 2 

and grant of the whole table — iv. 5 

will make siek men whole (Tep.)..JuliusCaisar, ii. 1 
as matter whole you have not ..Antony SfCleo. ii. 2 

roasted wliole at a breakfast — ii. 2 

wilt thon be lord of the whole world? — ii.7 
but his whole action grows not in.... — iii. 7 
and the horse whole, do younot?..,, — iii. 7 



WHOLE— keep whole by Uiul ..Antonvt^Cleo. lil. 7 

kvcp whole: prtivokc 111 t battle — iii. » 

all the wIidIc syiwul ot'ilicm! — iii. 8 

kiss the honoiiri'd 1,'iisliis whole — iv. 8 

the Worship of IlK' whole world liCB.. — iv. 12 
not stnll to)!etl\er Iti the whole world — v. I 
the whole world ^llllll not nnve him. . — v. .'> 
what will whole months of teiira .7r7iii,<ii<;ion. ii. 5 

all thy whole heap must die <'rrir'r>, i. I 

BwiiUowed the whole puriali, church — ii. 1 

anil undo a whole generation (rrp.).. — iv. 6 

creatiiijj u whole tril>e of Tups I.ear, i. 'i 

X have in my wlujle live liomeo^Julitt^'u. 4 

for 1 was cotnc to the hIioU- depth . . — ii. 4 
our whole eily U nuieh In-inid to him — iv. - 
our wliole kiiisdi.in to be i-ontiaeted \n .Hiiinlel, i. 2 

nnd the health of th.' whole slate — i. 3 

80 the whole ear of Denmark is by .... — i. 5 
[Kn/.] foree his soul so to liia whole conceit — ii. 2 
nnil bis wliole function suiting with forma — ii. 2 
o'erweigh a whole theatie of others ., — iii. 2 
a whole one. I: for thou ilost know..., — iii. 2 
sir, a whole liistory. The kiniiiSir .... — iii. z 

deliver of my whole course of love Olhe'Uo, i. 3 

in mv whole cour-c of wooing — iii. 3 

I mu-t take out the whole work? — iv. I 

but. for thf whole world (rifp.) — iv. 3 

WIlOLKSO.Mi;, 03 in state Mi-nyWiwi:, v. .5 

to the n\'>st wholesome physic. LotI«'sL.tb^^i. I (let.) 

is not, by much so wholesome — v. 2 

as wholesome os the sweat As you l.ikeil, iii. 2 

60 it lie wholesome food Taming i^f Shreu\ iv. 3 

lie have wholesome beveraj^e iVinlet^s Tate, i. 2 

with wliolesome syrups, drugs . . Cometitj n/F.jr. v. 1 

see thy wholesome days again? Machfth, iv. 3 

wholesome counsel to his unstayed .Diehard II. ii. I 
fertility from wholesome flowers .... — iii. 4 
and her wholesome herbs swarming — iii. 4 

and wholesome l)erries thrive }iem-}iy. i. 1 

counsel, you'll find it wholesome .. Henry fill.]. 1 
which are not wholesome to those.... — i. 2 
and not wholesome to our cause .... — iii. 2 
while it were wholesome, we might. .Cono/aHui, i. 1 

repeal daily any wholesome net — i, I 

you wear out a good wholesome forenoon — ii. 1 
I pray you, in wholesome manner .. — ii. 3 
he steal out of his wholesome bed..JuliHsC(Psar. ii. I 

so wholesome as that you vent Vymbeline^ i. 3 

how now, wholesome iniquity? t'eiiclet, :v. 6 

in the tender of a wholesome weal Lear, i. 4 

and to such wholesome end, as clears her — ii. 4 
the nights are wholesome; then no .... Hamlet, i. 1 

the thin and wholesome blood — i. 5 

as wholesome as sweet, and by very much — ii. 2 
on wholesome life usurp immediately .. — iii. 2 
make me a wholesome answer (rep.) .... — iii. 2 

blasting his wlioleeoiiie brother — iii. 4 

not meet, nor wholesome to lu y phice . . Oltiello, i. I 
in wholesome wisdom, he might not but — iii. 1 
WnOliESOMEST spirits of the. . Mens, ror^reas. iv. i 
W llULIA'-slancl wholly for you .Merry Wives, iii. 2 
shope his service wholly to my ..Lnve'iL.Lost, v. 2 
wholly.sir. Who play they to?. 7'>oi7iu 4- Crew. iii. I 
mistress, and command him wholly — iv. 4 

wholly depends on your abode ..Antony ^Cleo. i. 2 

sleep hath seized me whollv Cyml>etine,u. 2 

WIIUOBUB rCof.ivH^] against his. )f inker's 7 We, iv. 3 

WKOOP— did not whoop at them Henry r. ii. 2 

whoop, Jug! Hove thee I.ear.i. l 

W HOOPED out of Rome Cnrinlanus, iv. 6 

WIIOOPING-ont of all whoopingl.^si/OHLiVie, iii. 2 
WUOKE— all idle; whores, and knaves. 7>»i/ws(, ii. 1 

her, child, if she be a whore Merry ll'ives, iv. 1 

ever your fresh whore Measure for Measure, iii. 2 

and your whores, sir, being members of — iv. 2 

do not marry me to a wliorel — v. I 

showed like a rebel's whore Macbeth, \. 2 

for tearing a poor whore's ruffin ..ilieurylf. ii. 4 

let's beat him before his whore — \\. i 

and the whores called him mandrake — iii. 2 
and talkeil of the whore of Babylon .. Henry I', ii. 3 

that civest whores indulgences I Henry I' I. i. 3 

a cuckold, and a whore Trotlus 4 Cressida, ii. 3 

the heavier for a whore — iv. I 

why, his masculine whore — v, I 

my mind is now turned whore — v. 2 

for the intelligence of this whore .. .. — v. 2 
Trojan ass, that loves the whore there — v. 4 
thy whore, Grecian! now for thy whore — v. 1 
if the eon of a whore fight for a whore — v. 8 
common whore of mankind . . Timon (if Alliens, Iv. 3 

this fell whore of thine hath in — iv. 3 

be a whore stilll (rep.) — iv. 3 

enough to make a whore forswear (rep.) — iv. 3 

be strong in whore, allure him — iv. 3 

betray with them; whore still (rfp.) — iv. 3 

would make themselves whores.. y4ii(oiii/4' Cm. i. 2 
he hath given Ilia empire up to a whore — iii 6 
triple-turned whore I 'tis thou ha»t .. — iv. to 

i' the posture of a whore — v. 2 

the name of whore thus dearly .... Cymheliue, ji. 4 
out, out, you whore! is black »o..Tiliii.lndirin. iv. 2 

leave thy drink and thy whore Lear, i. 4 

Fortune, that arrniit wliore — ii. 4 

and bawds and whores do churches build — iii. 2 

a boy's love, or a wliore's outh — iii. fi 

why dost thou lash that whore? — iv. 6 

a very goo<l whore! why is not. . Homen fif Juliet, ii. 4 

must, like a whore, unpack my Ilnmtrl, ii. 2 

he sure thou prove my love a whore . . Oiliella, iii. 3 
him, nnd he hath given it his whore ,... — iv. 1 
is a subtle whore, a closet lock and key.. — iv, 2 
goodly b'»ok, made to write whore upon? — iv. 2 
what, not a whore? No, as I shall be saved — iv. 2 
you for that cunning whore of Venire ,. — iv. 2 
lie called her, whore; a beggar, in bis..., — iv. 2 
her friends, to lie called— whore? (rrp.).. — iv. 2 
I cannot sny, whore; it does abhor me .. — iv. 2 
she turned to folly, and she was a whore — V. 2 
villanous where! She give it Cossiul .. ,, — v. 2 



WlIOREll— and whored mv mother ....Handel, v. t 

WIIOKEMASI'KR, that ruitcrly ..Mleiiryiy. ii. 4 

cannot itbide a whoremaster ..Meat.^fbr Meat. ill. 2 

account tliee a whoremaster.... Timon o/Alhent, ii. 2 

what is n wliorcmastcr, fool? — ii, J 

adiiiirabh' evasion of wliorema«ter man .. Lear, i. 2 
WIIOHK-MAsriOKl.Y villain. .7ro,7uf*f;r««. v. 4 
Wlliii;i;\lo.\(ii;i{, and comes . Meus. for Meas iii. 2 
\V lloltKSON, insolent noise-maker .... 7'^fMp('W, i. I 

why, thou whorL-son ass Two Gen.qf I'erona, ii. & 

how now, you whoreson peasant? .... — iv. 4 

all, you whoreson loizgerheud Lnpe*tL.Lost, iv. 3 

you whoreson nmlthorse drudge! 7'uiniti^ i>/.S'/i. iv. I 
jou whoreson villain! will you let .. — iv. 1 
a whoreson, beetle-headed, flap-enred — iv, 1 
wlioreson, sensvless villain!.. Corner/ j/o//trror«, iv. 4 
ah, whoreson caterpillars! baeon-fed.liie/iryi/'. ii. 2 

why. you whoreson riiund mull! — ii. 4 

wlioreson, obscene, greasy tallow-kcech — ii. 4 
thou whoreson, impudent, embossed — iii. 3 

thou whrresiui mandrake, tlioii art.. 2 Htnry If. i. 2 
a whore^ou Acliitophel! a rascally.. — i. 2 

the whoreson smootli-pates do now ., — i. 2 

into this same whoreson ajiople.xy ., — i. 2 

in tlie blood, a whoreson tingling — i. 2 

away, you whoreson upright rabbit.. — ii. 2 
ah, you whoreson little valliant villain — ii. 4 

come on, you whoreson chops — ii. 4 

thou whoreson little tidy Bartholomew — ii. 4 
thou whoreson mad compound of. . ., — ii. 4 
you whoreson candle-mine, you .... — ii. 4 
a whoreson cold, sir; a cough, sir .... — iii. 2 
Bly whoresons have got a speeding.. Henryl'III. i. 3 
you whoreson curl Do, do . . TroUm ^ Cressida, ii. 1 
a whoreson dog, tliat shall palter ... — ii. 3 
3'ou whoreson indisiingiiishablc cur, no — v. 1 
a whoreson ptisick, a whoreson rascally — v. 3 
these same whoreson devils .Antony ^Cleopatra, v. 2 
then a whoreson jackanapes must ..Cymheline,\\. 1 
wlioreson dog! I gave him satisfaction? — ii. I 
and the whoreson must be acknowledged.. Lear, i. 1 
you whoreson dog! you slave! you cur! .. — i. 4 
a whoreson, glass-gazing, supcrserviceable — ii. 2 
you whoreson, ciillioul}' barber-monger .. — ii. 2 
thou whoreson zed 1 thou unnecessary .. ,. — ii. 2 
a merry whoreson I ha, thou shalt./ioweo KJul. iv. 4 
decayer of your wlioreson dead body ..Hamlet, v. 1 

a whoreson nmd fellow's it was — v. 1 

^A'IIORING-this is the fruit of whoring. OMfHo, v. I 
WllolilSlI loins are pleased.. 7'roi7us<S-C'>e«»nia,iv. 1 

WlClv— akind of wick, or snuff Hamlet, iv. 7 

WICKED — upon thy wicked dam Tempest, i. 2 

as wicked dew as o'er my mother — i. 2 

foryoii, most wicked sir _ v. 1 

O wicked, wiektd world! MerryWives.u. 1 

till the wicked fire of lust — ii. 1 

and us wicl'.ed as his wife? — v. 5 

tiiyself art a wicked villain Meas.forMeas. i. 2 

thuii liest, wicked varlet — ii, 1 

O thou wicked Hannihal (rep.) — ii. 1 

with this wicked caitiff? _ ii. 1 

thou seest thou wicked vnrlet — ii. I 

a baud, a wicked bawd! — iii. 2 

wicked auddissemblingglass..,17i(/.A'.'»Dirnm, ii. 3 

wicked wall, through whom I see no — v. I 
thy niaiiners must be wicked .. . . AsyouLike it,\\i. 2 
no, that same wicked bastard of Venus — iv. I 
a most wicked sir Oliver, Audrey .... — v. 1 
have been, madam, a wicked cr&txiine..AlVsWell, i. 3 

is wicked meaning in a lawful — iii. 7 

that would unseen be wicked? ,... Ilinter' sTale, i. 2 

1 nm assisted by wicked powers .... — v. 3 
wicked dreams abuse the curtained ..Machelh, ii. I 
something wicked this way comes .... — iv. 1 
a Willi a wicked will; a woman's .. KintfJotin, ii. i 
a wicked day, and not a holiday!.... — iii. I 
the image oi a wicked heinous fault — iv. 2 
the love of wicked friends con verts.. TJi'c/iax/ II. v. 1 
little better than one of the wicked ..1 i/e»ri,/r. i. 2 

God help Ihe wickeil! — ii. 4 

dispraised him before the wicked (rep.) 2Hcn.IV. ii. 1 
of the wicked? is thine hostess (rep.) _ ii. 4 

hath been; wicked and vile I Henri/ r/. v, 4 

I never had to do with wicked spirits — v. 4 

raising up wicked spirits from 2Henryl'I. ii. 1 

what mischief's work the wicked ones — ii. 1 

bv wicked means to frame our — iii. I 

he damned for that wicked deed! ..Richard III. i. 2 

fojce the swords of wicked men — v. 1 

like a wicked conscience still .. Troilus ^- Cress, v. II 
what a wicked beast was I.... Timon of Alliens, iii. 2 
takes virtuous copies to be wicked .. — iii. 3 
consume you wicked caitiffs left! — V. 5(epit.) 
dissuaded by our wicked queen .... Cymbetiue, v. 5 
this wicked emperor may have .. TilusAndron. iv. 3 
about the wicked streets of Uome.... — v. 2 
puiiishnient for his most wicked life — v 3 
for Marina writ by wicked Dionyza .. Pericles, \v. A 

cruel Clcon. with his wicked wite — v. I 

for wicked Oleon, and his wife.. — v. 3 (Gowcr) 

mumbling of wicked charms Lear, ii. I 

those wicked creatures yet do look (rep.) — ii. 4 
most wicked Hendl is it more sin .Itomeo f^Jul. iii. ti 
O most wicked sjieed, to post with such.. //awiW, i. 2 
be thy intents wicked, or charitable .... — i. 4 

wicked wit, and gifts, that have the .. — i. 6 
the wicked prize itself buys out the law — iii 3 
with a wicked [Kn/.-an idle] tongue .... — iii. 4 
whose wicked deed thj' most ingenious.. — v. I 
upon my soul, a lie, a wicked lie Othello, v. 2 

WICKEOE.SP caitifl'on the ground. Afen. forMra. v. I 
WICKIODNKSS— any wickedness.. .Verrv"'ic»-i, ii. 2 

1 see, Ihou art a wickedness TirrlfihNight, ii. 2 

too good to paint out her wickedness. .Uiir/i.^ilo, iii. 2 
and wickedness is gin, and sin ..Asyou Liketi, iii. 2 
marriage, sooner than thy wickedness. .Ill'ilfrd.i. 3 
a tainted fellow, nnd full of wickedness — ill. 2 
rein can hold licentious wickedness .. Henry/', iii. 3 
imputation of his wickedness, by your rule — iv. I 
gucb is thy audacious wickedness , . I Henry r/. iii. I 



WICKEDNESS— what wickedness I do . . Lea,, iii. 7 

knows be the wickedncu? Ay — iv. 2 

WICKEIl-[Co;.J intoawickcr bottle.... O/AeHo, ii.3 
WIDE— asleep with eyes wide open .... Tempest, ii. 1 

BO wide of his own resjiect MerrylVives, iii. 1 

80 wide as a bristle may enter .. ,. TwelfthNit^ht^ i. 6 

that he doth B|)eak so wide? Much Ado, iv. I 

that the wide sea hath drops too few — iv. I 

lull not for tlie wide world — iv. 1 

wide enough to wrap a fairy . . Mid.N.^sDream, ii. '- 

that the graves, all galling wide — v. 2 

welcome to the wide fields too base. /■ove'1/..I.tit/, ii. I 

wide o' the bow hand! — iv. 1 

nor is tlie wide world ignorant. .A/erc/i.o/Teniee, i. I 

the vasty wilds of wide Arabia — ii. 7 

along o'er the wide world with me./4ii/ou/.iViei7, i. 3 

this wide and universal theatre — ii. 7 

a world too wide for liiB shrunk — ii. 7 

with all graces wide enlarged — iii. 2(ver.) 

that wide gop (rep. v. 31 .. U'inier'sTale, iv. (choms) 

lords of the wide world Comedy of lirioii.ii. I 

and wide havock made for bloody ..Kin*- John, ii. 1 
open wide your gates, and let young — ii. 2 
shall we fling wide ope, and give .... — ii. 2 

we in the world's wide mouth I Henry 1 1', i. 3 

and the villains march wide betwixt — iv. 2 

too wide for Neptune's hips 2HenrylV. iii. 1 

open wide to many a watchful — iv. 4 

nnd stretch the nostril wide ..Henryl'. iii. I 

with conscience wide as hell — iii. 3 

fills the wide vessel of the universe — iv. (eborus) 
or, earth , gape open wide, and eat . . Richard III. i . 2 
for the wide world's revenue'.... Troilus^ Cress, ii. 2 

no such matter, you are wide — iii, I 

that wide unclasp the tables of — iv, 6 

in a wide sea of wax Timon of Athens, i. I 

thunder the wide clieeks o' the air ..CorioUmus. v. 3 
that her wide walks encompassed.. Jm//u< Ctrsar, i. 2 
wide arch of the ranged empire .. Antony /f Cleo. i. I 
the wide diiTereiice 'tw ixt amorous . . Cymheline, v. 4 

the wide world's emperor 7'i/m .4iirfronicta, i. 2 

the forest walks are wide and spacious — ii. 1 

still, still, far wide! Lcar.iv. 7 

far and wide a broad goose Romeo i^- Juliet, ii. 4 

nor so wide as a cbureli door — iii. 1 

for the world is broad and wide — iii. 3 

of the mind and soul grows wide withal. Hani/e/, i. 3 

in rage strikes wide — ii. 2 

thus wide I'll ope my arms — iv. 5 

her clothes spread wide — iv. 7 

nnd wide revenee swallow them up ....Othello, iii. 3 

W I DE-CIIAPPED rascal 7'e>npe./. i. I 

AVIDEN— fortune widens them Coriolaniis, i. 4 

WIDEKthan for other men illenryir. v. S 

his arms spread wider than i Henry I I. i. 1 

more wider than the sky Troilus ^Cressida, v. 2 

I Sn'.] more wider nnd more overt test ..Othello, i. 3 

WIDIC-SKIHTED meads Le.ir, i, 1 

WIDE.^T 1.1 slot him Tempest. i. 1 

WIDE-SrHETCIIED honours that ..Henryf. ii. 4 

WIDOW Dido's time. Widow?... 7'empe</, ii, 1 

that widow ill? Widow Dido! ((ep.).. — ii. I 
Alilan and Naples have more widows — ii. I 
a poor widow's tapster ....Measure for Measure, ii. 1 

awidoMthen? — v. 1 

neither maid, widow, nor wife? (rep.) — v. 1 
we do instate and widow you withal — v. 1 

the bell rings, and the widow weeps ..Much Ado, v. 2 
1 have a widow aunt, a dowuger,.1/i</. /V. '»Oream, i. 1 
eleven widows, nnd nine maids.. iVer. ofl'enice, ii. 2 

will live OS maids and widows — iii. 2 

be married to a weallliy widow .. 7'oininf<i^S/i. iv. 2 

he'll have a lusty widow now ..^ — iv. 2 

to my widow; and if she befrnward — iv, 5 

with tliv loving widow, feast with.... — T. 2 
for my life, Ilortcnsio fears his widow — v. 2 
my widow says, thus she conceiveB .. — . v. 2 

kiss him for that, eood widow — v. 2 

to her, widow! A hundred marks .... — v. 2 
each new morn, new widows howl.....Woe(ie/A,iv. 3 
mother's thanks, a widow's thanks .. King John, ii. 1 
many a widow's husband groveling _ ii. 2 

how may we content this widow lady? — ii. 2 

a widow, hiisbandless, subject to ..,. iii. 1 

n widow cries; lie husbanil tome — iii. 1 

my widow comfort, and my sorrows — iii. 4 

the widow's ehnmpion and defence ..Richard II. i. 2 

I am a poor widow of Eastchenp iHenrylf. ii. 1 

to enforce a poor widow to so rough .. ii. I 

so came I n widow — ii.3 

nnd she a mourning widow of her Henry F. i i 

for n many thonsaiid widows shall .. i. 8 

turns he tlie widows' tears ii. 4 

to wring the widow from her tHenryl'l. v. I 

left no mourning widows for 3 Henry I' I. ii. 6 

wiihiw. We will consider of your — iii. 2 

ay. widow? then I'll warrant iii. 2 

cnildi-en hast Ihou, widow? tell mo .. — iii. 2 

I'll try this widow's wit — iii. 2 

the widow likes him not — iii. 2 

Bweet widow, by my state — iii. 2 

you cavil, widow; I did mean — iii. 2 

thou art a widow, and thou hast some — iii. 2 
the widow likes it not. for she looks sad — iii. 2 

widow, go you along _ iii. j 

old man s sigh, and many a widow's — v. 6 

the jealous o'crworn widow Richard HI. i. I 

to call king Edward's widow, sister.. — i. I 

made her widow to a woeful lied?.... i. 2 

thou art a widow; yet thou art — ii. 2 

was never widow hud so dear n loss.. — il. a 
a beauty-waning and distressed widow — iii. 7 

so young, so old a widow I iv, 1 

a most distressed widow — iv. 4 

and w idow to prince Arthur Henry nil. iii. 2 

the wapiieiicd widow wed again. 7'iinoii of Athens, Iv, 3 
such eyes the widows in Corioli wcar.L'oriotaniii, ii. I 

'tis I that made thy widows iv. 4 

in aforenoon, and widow them .. Antony ^ Cleo. i. 2 
can from the lap of Egypt's widow pluck — ii. I 



WID 

WIDOW-was a widow. Widow?./lii/ojiJ/ ,? Clen. iii. 3 

a widow, tliat late he married Cymbeline, i. I 

but being widow, and my Gloster Lear, iv. 1 

to talce widow, exasperates — v. ) 

lady widow of Vetruvio .. Romeo ^Juliet, i. 2 (note) 

if, once a widow, ever I be wife.' Hamlei^ui.'l 

WIDOW-DOLOUR likewise be ....Richard III. ii. 2 

WIDOWED and uuchilded many Cmhlnnus, v. 5 

"WIDOWER ^iieaa too? rempesl,n. 1 

our widower's second marriage-day . . .^ll'i >l'cii., v. 3 
the count Rousillon a widower — v. 3 (petition) 
prove a widower shortly {rep. iv. \).3,tienryVI. iii. 3 
Mark Antonv is now a widower ..^jitoiii/ fyCleo. ii. 2 
WIDOWHOOiD, be it that she. . Taming of Shrew, ii. i 

AV IDO W-M AKE R ; O and there King John, v. 2 

"WIELD— thou the spigot wield? ....Mernjl^ives, i. 3 

his hand to wield a sceptre ZHenryl'l- iv. 6 

more than words can wield the matter Lear, i. 1 

to wield old partizans, in hands.. /iomeo Sf Juliet, i. 1 
WIFE— farewell, my wife and childien .Tempest,]. 1 

every day, some sailor's wife — ii- I 

I am your wife, if you will — iii. 1 

dost disobey the wife of Jupiter — iv. 1 

awoiider'd father, and a wife [Co(.-wise] — iv. 1 

found a wife, where he himself — y. 1 

such a wife as your fair TwoGen.of Verona , iii. 1 

resolved to take a wife — iii. 1 

wile, bid these gentlemen VfeXaome. Merry Wives, i. 1 

Ford's wife (rfp. ii. 2 and iii. 5) — i. 3 

anotlier to Page's wife (lep. ii. 2) .... ~ i. 3 
affects thy wife. Why, sir, my wife is — ii. I 

love my wife? — ji. 1 

he loves your wife (rep.) — ii. I 

this voyage towards my wife — ii. 1 

I do not misdoubt my wife — ii. 1 

and stands so firmly on his wife's frailty — ii. 1 

pood-morrow, good wife — ii. 2 

as fartuous a crvil modest wife — ii. 2 

never a wife in Wiiidsor leads — ii. 2 

for the which his wife seems to me .. — ii. 2 

and tliou shall lie with his wife — ii. 2 

my wife hath sent to him — ii. 2 

he will trust his wife, he will not — — ii. 2 

than ray wife with herself — ii. 2 

detect my wife, and be revenged .... — ii. 2 

truly, sir, to see your wife — iii. 2 

isyour wife at home, indeed?... — !!'!■ ^ 

he pieces-out liis wife's inclination .. — iii. 2 

and now she's going to my wife — iii. 2 

then torture my wife — iii. 2 

but my wife, master doctor — iii. 2 

your wife is as honest a 'omans — iii. 2 

come wife, come mistress Page — iii. 2 

to search his house for his wife's love — iii. 5 

somebody call my wife — iv. 2 

what wife, I say! — iv. 2 

the modest wife, the virtuous — iv. 2 

will you take up your wife's clothes? — iv. 2 
searclied a hollow walnut for his wife's — iv. 2 

fardon me, wife: henceforth, do — iv. 4 
will deliver his wife into your hand — v. 1 
I will never mistrust my wife again — v. 5 

and as wicked as his wife? — v. 5 

desire thee to laugh at my wife — v. 5 

she is, by this, doctor Caius' wife .... — v. 5 

myself would be his wife Twelfth Night, i. 4 

your wife is like to reap a proper .... — iii. 1 

than e'er 1 shall love wife — V. 1 

as well a sister as a wife — v. 1 

she is fast n^.y wife, save we do . . Meas.forMeas. i. 3 

my wife sir, whom I detest — ii. I 

how, thy wife? — ii. 1 

marry sir, by my wife — ii. 1 

wliat was done to Elbow's wife (rep.) — ii. 1 

what this man did to my wife — ii. 1 

do the constable's wife any harm? .. — ii. I 

his wife is a more respected — ii. 1 

he is his wife's head, and I can never — iv. 2 
neither maid, widow, nor wife? (rep.) — v. 1 

I am affianced this man's wife — v. 1 

he knew me as a wife — v. 1 

look that you love your wife — v. 1 

if Hero would be my wife Much Ado, i. 1 

she were an excellent wife for Benedick — ii. 1 
the right husband, and the right wife — iii. 4 
wlien I lived, I was your other wife — v. 4 

get thee a wife, get thee a wife — v. 4 

you, of your wife; and me Mid.N.''sDream,\v. 1 

consent that she should be your wife — iv. 1 
I sue I I seek a wife! a woman ..Lore'sL.Losi, iii. I 
a wife of such wood were felicity .... — iv. 3 

a wifel—a beard, fair health — v. 2 

I tliank you, gentle wife? — v. 2 

to yield myself his wife .... Merchant of Venice, ii. I 
JSIargery your wife, is my mother .. — ii. 2 
become a christian, and thy loving wife — ii. 3 
take what wife you will to bed. . — ii. 9 (scroll) 
my heart, so thou canst get a wife .. — iii. 2 
go with me to church, and call me wife — iii. 2 
if you thus get my wife into corners — jlj* ^ 

lilce the lord Bassanio's wife? — iii. 5 

of me, as she is for a wife — iii. a 

commend me to your honourable wife — iv. I 
I am married to a wife, which is as dear — iv, 1 

my wife, and all the world — iv. 1 

your wife would give you little thanks — iv. 1 

1 have a wife, wliom I protest — i v. 1 

was given me by ray wife — iv. I 

an' if your wife be not a mad — iv. 1 

'gainst your wife's commandment .. — iv. 1 

for a liglit wife doth make — v. I 

to part so slightly with your wife's .. — v. 1 

you give your wife too unkind — v. 1 

absent, then lie witli my wife — v. 1 

that is the dowry of his wife ....As you Like it, iii. 3 
for me hereafter to leave my wife..,. — iii. 3 

prevents the slander of his wife — iv. 1 

nave to wile tills Rosalind? — iv. 1 

for wife, I take thee. Rosalind, for wife — iv. 1 
a man that had a wife with such a wit — iv. 1 



[ 832] 



WIF 



WIFE— met your wife's wit go:ng.4s yon LiUe il, iv. 1 
to have friends for my wife's sake .... All's ll'ell, i. 3 

he that comforts my wife (re;D.) — i. 3 

she's tliy wife. My wife my liege? .. — ii. 3 

Shysician's daughter my wife? — ii. 3 

aik house, and the detested wife .. — ii 3 
till I liave no wife, I have (rep.) — iii. 2 (letter) 

to this imworthy husband of his wife — iii. 4 

to become the wife of a detesting .... — i i i . 5 

I would, he loved his wife — iii. .5 

as you owe to your wife — iv. 2 

you have won a wife of me — iv. 2 

when his wife's dead — iv. 2 

shakingoff so good a wife — iv. 3 

sir, his wife, some two months since — iv. 3 

buried a wife, mourned for her — iv. 3 

I would cozen the man of his wife .. — iv, 5 

and I would give his wife my bauble — iv. .'j 

he lost a wife, whose beauty did .... — v. 3 

when his wife was dead — V. 3 (petition) 

look so strange upon your wife? .... — v. 3 

tills is his wife, tliat ring's — v. 3 

turned oft a first so noble wife — v. 3 

I gave it his first wife — v. 3 

or else this old man's wife — v. 3 

he got his wife with child — v. 3 

but the shadow of a wife you see .... — v. 3 

thou kept'st a wife herself — v. 3 

and your humble wife.. Taming of Shrew, 1 (indue.) 

wliere is my wife? Here, noble — 2 (indue.) 

are you my wife, and will not.. — 2 (indue.) 

I am your wife in all obedience — 2 (indue.) 

madam wife, they say (rep.).... — 2 (indue.) 

tliereHortensio, will you any wife? — i. I 

to a shrewd ill-l'avoured wife? — i. 2 

Petruchio's wife (rep. iii. 2) — i. 2 

help thee to a wife with wealth — i. 2 

with such a wife, were strange — i. 2 

dowry shall I have with her to wife? — ii. 1 

am moved to woo thee for my wife .. — ii. 1 

that you shall be my wife — ii. 1 

and will have Katherine to my wife — ii. 1 

fatlier, and wife, and gentlemen, adieu — ii. 1 

have your daughter to m3' wife — ii. 1 

detained you from your wife, and sent — iii. 2 

if Katherine should be his wife — iii. 2 

is my master and his wife coming .. — iv. I 

to kill a wife with kindness — iv. 1 

she's like to be Lucentio's wife — iv. 4 

the sister to my wife — iv. 5 

unto his wife; and he, whose wife .. — V. 2 

twenty times so much upon my wife — v. 2 

your wife send you not a worse — v. 2 

and entreat my wife to come — v. 2 

now Where's my wife? She says — v. 2 

your sister, and Hortensio's wife?.... — v. 2 
unfledged days was my wife a girl. Winter'sTale, i. 2 

the boldness of a wife to her allowing — i. 2 

holds his wife by the arm — i. 2 

not think it,) my wife is slippery? .. — i. 2 

then say, my wife's a hobby-horse .. — i. 2 

Bohemia is notliing; my wife is nothing — i. 2 

were my wife's liver infected — i. 2 

ray stables where I lodge my wife .. — ii. 1 

he dreads his wife. So, I would — ii. 3 

hast set on thy wife to this (rep.) .... — ii. 3 

the daughter of a king; ourwife .... — iii. 2 

ne'er Shalt see thy wire Paulina more — iii. 3 

and married a tinker's wife within .. — iv. 2 

when my old wife lived — iv. 3 

how a usurer's wife was broTight to .. — iv. 3 

my son should choose himself a wife — iv. 3 

therefore, no wife: one worse (rep.) ., — v. I 

and my wife's, in safety here — v. 1 

wlien once she is my wife — v. 1 

as I by thine, a wife — v. 3 

my wife, not meanly proud (iep.)Co?>iedy of Err. i. 1 

my wife and I, fixing our eyes on — i. 1 

your worship's wife, ray mistress .... — i. 2 

great care to please his wife — ii. 1 

no house, no wife, no mistress — ii. 1 

not Adriana, nor thy wife — ii. 2 

for ills, me for his wife — ii. 2 

ray wife is shrewish, when I keep not — iii. 1 

deny my wife and house — iii. 1 

are you there, wife? You might (rep.) — ill. 1 

unviolated honour of your wife — iii. 1 

my wife, (but, I protest — iii. 1 

nothing but to spite my wife — iii. 1 

call her wife; 'tis holy sport — iii. 2 

sister is no wife of mine — !?'• ^ 

no husband yet, nor X no wife — iii. 2 

fly I from her that would be my wife — iii. 2 

doth for a wife abhor ■ — iii. 2 

and please your wife withal — iii. 2 

among my wife and her confederates — iv. 1 

and bid my wife disburse — iv. I 

give it to ray wife, and fetch — iv. 1 

Belike, his wife, acquainted — iv. 3 

and tell his wife, that, being — iv. 3 

my wife is in a wayward mood — iv. 4 

my wife is coming yonder — iv. 4 

she that would be your wife, now.... — iv. 4 

to separate the husband and the wife — v. I 

gavest to me to be mywife — v. 1 

we met ray wife, her sister — v. 1 

hadst a wife once called JEmilia .... — v. 1 

shall be my sister, not my wife — v. 1 

a sailor's wife had chesnuts Macbeth, i. 3 

of my wife with your approach — i. 4 

diamond lie greets your wife withal .. — ii. 1 

full of scorpions is ray mind, dear wife! — iii. 2 

his wife, his babes, and all unfortunate — iv. 1 

to leave his wife, to leave his babes .... — iv. 2 

left you wife, and cliild, (those precious — iv. 3 

how does my wife? Why well — iv. 3 

your wife, and babes, savagely slaughtered — iv. 3 

wife, children, servants, all — iv. 3 

my wife killed too? I have said — iv. 3 

the thaue of Fife had a wife — v. 1 



WIFE and children's ghosts will Macbeth, v. 7 

your father's wife did after wedlock. King John, i. 1 

good old sir Robert's wife's eldest. ... — i. I 

with thee than the name of wife?.... — iii. 1 

and buss tliee as thy wife! — iii. 4 

I was Geftiey's wife — iii. 4 

riglit of lady Blanch your wife — iii. 4 

thy sometiraes brother's wife Jiichard IL i. 2 

betwixt rae and my married wife — v. 1 

my wife [An(.-queenJ to France .... — v. 1 

bound to? wife, thou art a fool — v. 2 

once iigain of my wife's brother IHenryll'. i. 3 

than Harry Percy's wife — ii. 3 

and says to his wife,— fie upon — ii. 4 

shiill play dame Mortimer, his wife.. — ii. 4 

a tired horse, a railing wife — iii. I 

my wife can speiiknoEnsrlish — iii. 1 

swear like a comfit-maker's wife .... — iii. I 

may be the deputy's wife — iii. 3 

I am an honest man's wife — iii. 3 

the lightness of his wife shines 2 Henry 1 1', i. 2 

could get me but a wife iu the stews — i. 2 

and make me my lady thy wife .... — ii. I 

goodwife Keech, the butcher's wife .. — ii. I 

I pray thee, loving wife, and gentle.. — il. 3 

alas, sweet wife, my honour is — ii. 3 

hiswifedoth? Sir, pardon (rep.).... — iii. 2 

like an offensive wife, that hath .... — iv. 1 

be merry, be merry, my wife's as all — v. 3 (song) 
here comes ancientPistol and his wife. Henrj/K ii. I 

I should quickly leap into a wife .... — v. 2 

like a neW-marrled wife about — v. 2 

shall Kate be ray wife? — v. 2 

as man and wife, being two — v. 2 

thy wife is proud; she holdeth ] Henry J'J.i. 1 

remember, that thou hast a wife — v. 3 

I am unworthy to be Henry's wife .. — v. 3 

so fair a dame to be his wife — v. 3 

and the protector's wife, beloved ....'IHenryCl. i. 2 

wife and all, from me. Thy wife too? — i. 3 

the lord protector's wife (rep. ii. 1) .. .— i. 3 

duke Humphrey's wife (rep. ii. 4).... — i. 3 

buildings, and thy wife's attire — i. 3 

his wife, an't like your worship ii. 1 

ray wife desired some damsons — ii. 1 

and, for my wife, I know not how . . — ii. 1 

dame Eleanor Cobham, Gloster's wife — ii. 3 

I think I am thy married wife — ii. 4 

ray wife descended of the Lacies .... — iv. 2 

come wife, let's in, and learn to .... — iv. 9 
how will my wife, for slaughter ,...3Henryl'l. ii. S 

sister, to wife for Edwai'd (rep.) .... — iii. 1 

shall be wife to the English king..., iii. 3 

should not become my wife, iv. I 

on your new wife's son — iv. 1 

is it for a wife, thou art malcontent? — iv. 1 

contented with one wife iv. 3 

my lady Grey, his wife, Clarence . . Diehard IU. i. 1 

we say, that Shore's wife hath — i. 1 

wife to thy Edward, to tliy slaughtered — i. 2 

if ever he have wife, let her be — i . 2 

notwithstanding she's your wife — i. 3 

mother, wife, nor England's (rep. iv. 1) — i. 3 

spare ray guiltless wife, and ray .... — i. 4 

cannot lie with his neighbour's wife — i. 4 

wife, love lord Hastings, let him kiss — ii. I 

embracements to my wife's allies — ii. i 

and this is Edward's wife (rep. iii. 7)' — iii. 4 

his conversation with Shore's wife ..' iii. 6 

and be thy wife, (if any be so mad) .. iv. 1 

that Anne my wife is very grievous.. — iv. 2 

he is your wife's son iv. 2 

Stanley, look to your wife — iv. 2 

and Anne my wife hath bid iv. 3 

Harry's wife, triumph not iu — iv. 4 

for happy wife, a most distressed .... — iv. 4 

farewell. York's wife, and queen of sad — iv. 4 

calls thy beauteous daughter, wife .. — iv. 4 

to his cliildren, or his wife's allies .. — v. 1 

thy wife, that wretched Anne thy wife — v. 3 

tliy adversary's wife doth pray for thee — v. 3 

his brother's wife (rep. ii. 4) Hc7iry I'lII. il. 2 

been to you a true and humble wife. . — ii. 4 

that 1 have been your wife, iu this .. ii. 4 

report he has a better wife — ii. 4 

and that way I am wife in — iii. 1 

a wife, a true one? — iii. 1 

this is my wife, there; all were — iv. I 

1 was a chaste wife to my grave .... — iv. 2 

haberdasher's wife of small wit — v. 3 

as like as Vulcan and his wife .. Trnilus ^ Cress. \. 3 

I take to-day a wife, and my _ ii. 2 

elected, the wife I chose? — ii. 2 

than wife is to tlie liusband? — ii. 2 

if Helen then be wife to Sparta's .... — ii. 2 

your quondam wife swears — iv. .5 

thy wife hath dreamt — v. 3 

hath another, his wife another Coriolanus, ii. I 

but O thy wife —My gi-acious silence — ii. 1 

to help to get thee a wife — ii. 3 

I am in this, your wife, your son .... — iii. 2 

commend me to my wife; I'll return — iii. 2 

my dear wife's estimate, her womb's — iii. 3 

if you had been the wife of Hercules — iv. I 

farewell, ray wife, my mother! — iv. 1 

come, my sweet wife, my dearest .... — iv. I 

the fittest time to corrupt a man's wife — iv. 3 

his mother and his wife (rep. v. 1 & v. 5) — iv. K 

wife, mother, child, I know not — v. 2 

my wife comes foremost — v. 3 

even he, your wife, tliis lady, and myself— v. 3 

making the mother, wife, and child — v. 3 

his wife is in Corloli, and his child ., — v. 3 

O mother! wife! I am glad — v. 3 

not his wife. You are my true irep.] Jul.Caisar, ii. 1 

a woman that lord Brutus took to wife — ii. 1 

render rae worthy of this noble wife! — ii. 1 

Calphnrnia here, my wife, stays .... — ii. 2 

wlien Caasar's wife shall meet — ii. 2 

had you your letters from your wife — iv. 3 



WIFE— Fiilvin tl>y wife (rc;i.l. Antony ^CIropal)a,i. 8 
to tiike the wife ot'ii inuii tVotii liini., — i.'J 
Ilia wife, tl)at*c4 dcfttl, (lid tre^itassotj.. — li. 1 
your wife, niul lirollier, made wiir« .. — ii. li 
as for iiij' wife, I would you hud licr — ii. 'i 

en-sy. but not Bueh a wife — ii. 2 

take Antony Octavin to his wife .... — ii. 2 
the wifeof Caius Murcellua (rr/i.^ ,. _ ii. c 
who would not have his wife bo? .... — ii. 6 

aister, prove such a wife o-i iny — iii. 2 

the wife of Antony should have .... — iii. 6 
your wife Oelavia, wilh her modest.. — iv. 13 
he purposed to his wife's sole son .... Cymhetiitft i. 1 
keep it till you woo another wife .... — i. 2 

eo doth my wife the nonpareil — ii. & 

was wife to your place — v. 6 

my wifel O Imogen, Imogen — v. ii 

1 oivine, is this most constant wife .. — v. 5 
but not to he his wife, tliat is. . TilusAndronicut, i. 2 
true betrothed love, and now my wife? — i. 2 
his wife but yesterniaht was brought — iv. 2 
whoso asked her for nis wife.... V'itiWm, i. (Giiwer) 
1 mother, wife, and yet his child.. — i. 1 (liddle) 

that man and wife draw lots — i. I 

lawfully deal for— his wife's soul — ii. 1 

or I will make you, man and wife .... — ii. 5 

CIcon 'a wife, with envy rare — iv. (Gowcr) 

wife, take her in; instruct her — iv. 3 

of a beloved daughter and a wife — v. 1 

my dearest wife was like this maid .... — v. 1 
Clcon, with his wicked wife, did seek.. — v. 1 
how thou at sea didst lose thy wife.... — v. 2 

altar true, this is your wife — v. 3 

for wicked Cleon and his wife .. — v. 3 (Gower) 

dearest Regan, wife to Cornwall? Lear, i. 1 

his love, I shall not he his wife — i. 1 

tell the duke and his wife — ii. ■! 

four wife, (so I would ea^,) — iv. G (letter) 
bar it in the interest of ray wife — v. 3 

commission from thy wife and me — v. 3 

liis wife and dun?zhters {rep.)Jtnmeo ^Jui. i. 2 (note) 
stays a husband to make you a wife — ii. 5 
wlien I, thy three hours' wife, have — iii. 2 
wife, go you to her ere you go to bed — iii. 4 

prepare her, wife, against this — iii. 4 

how now, wife? have you delivered.. — iii. 5 

take me with you, wife — iii. 5 

wife, we scarce thought us blessed .. — iii. ij 
ond my wife. That may be (rep.).... — iv. I 

to live an unstained wife to my — iv. 1 

shall be well, I warrant thee, wife .. — iv. 2 
nursel wifel what ho! what, nuree.. — iv. 4 
O my love! my wife! death that hath — v. 3 

heavensl Owife! look how our .. — v. 3 

my wife is deail to-night — v. 3 

there dead, that Romeo's faithful wife — v. 3 

delight and dole— taken to wife Hamlei, i. 2 

once a widow, ever I be wife! — iii. 2 

gets the love of Gonzugo's wife — iii. 2 

the queen, your husband's brother's wife — iii. 4 
is man and wife, man and wife is one.... — iv. 3 

Bhouldst have been my Hamlet's wife — v. 1 

a fellow almost damned in a fair wife .. Olhetlo, i. 1 

1 crave fit disposition for my wife — i. 3 

to his convejance I assign my wife — i. 3 

let thy wife attend on her — i. 3 

that he is too familiar with his wife — i. 3 

till I am even with him, wife forwife.. .. — ii. 1 
our general's wife is now the general .... — ii. S 

my wife must move for Cassio — ii. 3 

he may fit\d Cassio soliciting his wife,... — ii. 3 

that attends the general's wife — iii. I 

lago, to send in to your wife — iii. 1 

the general, and his wife, are talking of it — iii. I 
was not that Cassio. parted from ray wife? — iii. 3 

when Cassio left ray wife — iii. 3 

to say— ray wife is fair, feeds well — iii. 3 

look to yo'nr wife: observe her well — iii. 3 

set on thy wife to observe — iii. .1 

to have a foolish wife. O is that all? .... — iii. 3 
I think my wife be honest, and think .. — iii. 3 
with strawberries, in your wife's hand? — iii. 3 

I am sure, it was your wife's — iii. 3 

but if I give my wife a handkerchief — iv. I 

ond is again to cope your wife — iv. 1 

he prizes the foolish woman, your wifel — iv. 1 

and see, your wife is with him — iv, i 

what, strike his wife! — iv. I 

your wife, my lord; your true (rep.) .... — iv. 2 

to my wife: my wife? (rcr.) — v. 2 

what wife? I have no wife — v. 2 

thou told'st him that his wife was false .. — V. 2 
<lo with so good a wife f Co/. -woman] .... — v. 2 
sure, he has killed his wife! (rpp. I — v. 2 

WIFE-LIKE government, obeying. Ileniyl'lll. ii. 4 
more go<lde8s-like than wife-like ..Cymbeliiie, iii. 2 

WIGHT— I ken the wight Merry irive$, i. 3 

base Oongarian [AT'i/.-IInngarian] wight I — i. 3 
Armado is a most illu.^trious wight. .Love'iL.L. i. 1 

and damned furious wight! Henry r. i\. I 

with venomous wights she stays. rroiVui^CrsM. iv.2 
so for her many a wight did die. I*erictes, i. (Gower) 
she was a wight,— if ever such wight ..Olhello, ii. I 
he was a wight of high renown .... — ii. .I(song) 

WILD— put the wild waters Tempesl/i. 2 

the wild woves whist — i.2(Bong) 

to the wild ocean TwoGen, o/f'erona, ii. 7 

for our wild faction — iv.2 

the wild prince and Poins MerryH'iret, iii. 2 

my riots past, my wild societies .... — iii. 4 
and wild Half-can thatstubl>cd.JI/riit./or A/rat. iv. 3 

her spirits are as coy and wild Much Ada, iii. I 

taming my wild heart to thy loving — iii. I 

to trocc the forests wild Mid. N.'m Drtam, i i. 1 

leave thee to the mcrcv of wild beasts — ii. 2 
a bank whereon the wild thyme blowa — ii. 2 

as wild geeKC that the creeping — iii. 2 

to move wild laughter in the Uove*gL.l.i>sl, v. 2 

thou art too wild, too rwic .. Merchant of Venice, ii. 2 
lest, through thy wild behaviour.... — ii. 2 



WII,1)— more than the wild cot ..Mer.qT Venice, ii. 5 
and the vasty wilds of wide Arabia.. — ii. 7 

turns to a wild of nothing — iii. 2 

upon the wild sea-banks, and wovcd — v. 1 
do but note a wild and wanton herd — v. 1 
mv taxing like a wild goose flies. At you Like it, il. 7 

skirts of this wild wood he came — v. •! 

will you woo this wild cat? Vaminff n/.siireir, i. 2 

from a wild cat to a Kate conforraable — ii. I 

'twere most piteous to be wild If'intei'tTale, ii. I 

than a wild dedication of j'oursclves — iv. 3 
wide world, and wild watery seas Comedy a/ Err. ii. I 
and witty; wild, and. yet too, gentle — iii. 1 
so withered iiiid so wild in their attire. Machelh, i. 3 

turned wild in nature il. 4 

flout uiion tt wild and violent sea — iv.2 

how like you this wild counsel KitigJolm, ii. 2 

wild amazement hurries up and down — v. 1 
tame the savage spirit of wild war .. — v. 2 

these high wild lulls, and rough RIclmrd IT. ii. 3 

the irregular and wild Glendower ..\HcnryI V. i. 1 

a franklin in the wild of Kent — ii. 1 

like a flock of wild geese — ii. 4 

goats, wild as young bulls — iv. 1 

will have a wild trick of liis ancestors — v. 2 
of any prince, so wild, nt liberty .... — v. 2 

the times are wild; contention llUnryll'.i. I 

keep the wild flood confinedl — i. I 

and rides the wild mare with the boys — ii. 4 

and the wild dog shall flesh his — iv. 4 

my father is gone wild into his — v. 2 

swilled with the wild and wasteful .. Henry V. Hi. I 

put in wild and savage stock — iii. 6 

and, with wild rage, yerk out their .. — iv. 7 
unheedfiil, desperate, wild adventure 1 UenryVl. iv.4 

like a wild Morisco, shaking •iUenryl'l. iii. 1 

as wild Medea young Absyrtus did .. — v. 2 

desperate, wild, and furious Richard III. iv. 4 

use of grief makes wild grief tame .. — iv.4 
if I chance to talk a little wild ....Henryl'III. i. 4 
thus hullin" in the wild seaof my .. — ii. 4 
the approach of this wild river break — iii. 2 

those, that tame wild horses — v. 2 

the wild and waiiderinB flood.. Troi/in <5-Ci csjiiJa, i. 1 

oddly poised in this wild action — i. 3 

turns my dangerous nature wild. Timon of Alh. iv. 3 
of Alcibiades the approaches wild.... — v. 2 
to prevent wild Alcibiades' wrath .. — v. 2 

or at wild horses' heels Coriolannt, iii. 2 

more than awild expostnre.... iv. I 

which before were in wild hurry .... — iv. 6 

go, you wild bed-fellow Antony 4- Cleopatra, i. 2 

eight wild boars roasted whole — ii. 2 

the wild disguise hath almost ii. 7 

does even make me wild — v. 2 

in this wild world? so, fare thee well — v, 2 

the wild motion of mine eye Cymbeline, i. 7 

when with wild wood-leaves iv.2 

1 am wild in my beholding I'erirlei. v. 1 

shut up your doors, my lord; 'tis a wild .. Lear. ii. 4 

now a little fire in a wild field — iii. 4 

thy wild acts denote the Romeo ^Juliel, iii. 3 

your looks are pale and wild v. 1 

with wild looks, bid nie devise — v. 3 

these are but wild and whirling words .. Ham(c/, i. 5 

if't be he I mean, he's very wild — ii. I 

such wanton, wild, and usual slips .... — ii. I 

even while men's minds are wild — v. 2 

paragons description, and wild fame Olliello, ii. 1 

parlours, wild cats in your kitchens — ii. I 

town of wnr, yet wild, the jieople's hearts — ii. 3 

WILD-DUCK-thun in a wild-dock .1 Henry If. ii. 2 
a struck fowl, or a hurt wild-duck .. — iv.2 

WILD liR— with our wilder days Henry J: i. 2 

have in them a wilder nature Henriif'lll.v. 1 

WILDERNESS-this wilderness 7-.rnGe,i. nflW. iv. I 
slip of wilderness ne'er issued ..Meas. for Mens. iii. I 

f iven it for a wilderness of monkey8.<Vfr.i)//'eii. iii. 1 
dare meet Surry in a wilderness ..Richard II. iv. 1 

thou wilt 1)0 a wilderness again 2 Henry If. iv. 4 

a wilderness is populous enough ..iHenryfl. iii. 2 
Rome is but a wilderness of tigers?., ritusktid. iii. 1 
environed with a wilderness of sea .. — iii. I 

WILDEST Imth not snehaheart .tlid.S.'tDrenm, ii. 2 

in wildest rage doth roar — v. I 

gentler scion to the wildest stock. Winter's Tnle, iv. 3 

■ wildest savagery, the vilest stroke . . Kin^Jnlni, iv. 3 

WILDFIRE-or a ball of wildfire . . I Henn,lf. iii. 3 

WILD-FOWL-concerning wild-fowl? TirelithK. iv. 2 
fearful wild-l'owl than your lion ..Mid.N.'iDr. iii. I 

WILD-GlOESE-so many wild-geese..2i/enn/;r. v. 1 
if the wild-geese fly that way Lear, ii.4 

WILD-GCJUSE-thewihl-gooseclmse.ffom. 4-Jul. ii. 4 
more c)f the wild-goose in one of thy wits — ii. 4 

WILDLY— something too wildly Temiie^l, iii. 1 

blowing. and looking wildly.. ..Mertyll'irei, iii. 3 

guilty to what we wildly do lI'inter'aTale, iv. 3 

speakof something, wildly by us .... — v. 1 

rough, rude, and wildly Comedy of Error>,v. 1 

how wildly then walks my KingJohn,iv.i 

that he stares and looks so wildly? ..Ricliard II. v. 3 

like prisoners wildly overgrown Henri/ f. v. 2 

valour, that wihlly grows in them ..Cymbeline,iv. 2 
and start not so wildly from my affair. Hn»i/r/, iii. 2 
at yonreves vonr spirits wildly peep.. — iii. 4 

WILUNESS of his youth 2He,iryl f.ui.-i 

let nie in my present wildness die.... — iv.4 

but that his wildness, mortified Henry f. I. 1 

nndiT the veil of wildness _ i. 1 

in their natures, grow to wildness .... — v. 2 
wildness, shall no whit appear . . ..JuliutCatar, ii. I 
sports, to wildness, and much company — ii. I 
ere wildness vaininish my stnider ..Cymheline.iii. 4 
the happy cause of Ilamiet's wildness.. ;/<im/./, iii. I 

WILE— are but imaginary wiles.. C'nm<"/v nf Err. iv. 3 
upon my wit, to delend mv wiles . Troilut ^- Creii. i. i 

WILFUL and secure Aclieoii Merry Wive,, iii. S 

when walls are so wilful to hear Mid.K.'iDr. v. I 

do a wilful stillness entertain . . Meich. qfyenice, i. 1 
and like o wilful youth, thut which.. — i. I 



WILFUL— I were wilful negligent.. Wtnier'tTale, i. 'I 
the Dauphin is too wilful opjiosite ..King John, \. 2 
drive you then to confess ti.e wilful. .SHcuriz/r. ii.4 

now shall we have wilful adultery Henry f. ii. I 

lirovokud to wilful diwhedience IHenryfl. iv. I 

peace wilf.il boy, or I will charm 3 Henry f I. v.h 

what meant this wilful silence Richard f 1 1, iii. 7 

the wilful sons of old Andronicus. 7i(m/ln.iroB. iv.4 

() sir, to wilful men, the injuries /,r<ir, ii.4 

forre with wilful choler meeting. . Romeo ^ Juliet, i. ;> 
WILFUL-BLAiMK; and since your.. i;/rnr)/;;'.iii. 1 

WILFULLY dost spurn KingJot,n,iii. 1 

knaveries wilfully [/i(.-willingly]..Ui(/.A'.'» Or. Hi. 2 

they wilfully exile themselves — iii. 2 

hath wilfully betrayed the lives iHemylV.i.i 

that wilfully seeks her own salvation?.. HmnW, v. I 

WILFULNESS-hydra-heailedwilfulness./ffii. f. i. I 

wilfulness [/^«^-8inlpk■ne8s] is this?«om. *./«;. iii. 3 

WILL-the wills above be done! rempe.i,i. I 

commend their service to his will TwoUcn. offer. \.') 

relying on your lordshiji's will — i. 3 

my will is something sorted _ i. 3 

for what I will, I will _ i. 3 

that wants resolved will to il. n 

what's your will with me? iii. I 

opposes her against my will iii. 2 

what is your will? iv.2 

my will is even this _ iv.2 

that make their wills their law v. 4 

od's plessed will ! Merry H'ice$, i. 1 

[Co(.A:ii(.]studiedher will (lep.) .... _ i. 3 

what'syuur will? (r^p. iii. 4) — ii. 2 

Got's will, and his passion of iii. I 

my will? Od's heartlings — iii. 4 

I ne'er made my will yet — iii. 1 

wit, and 't be thy will, put me .... TuelfthSight, i. h 

your will? _ i. .■; 

labelled to my will i, ,*■, 

and her will is, it should be so returned — ii. 2 

our shows are more than will _ ii. « 

I would not, by mj- will, have iii. 3 

I do assure you, 'tis against my will iii. 4 

obedient to your grace's will Meai./orMeaj. i. I 

is it your will Chiudio shall die — ii. 2 

what's your will? (rep. ii. 3 and iii. I) — ii. 2 
by yielding up thy body to my will.. — ii.4 
the law make eonrt'sy to their will.. — ii.4 

but in the force of his will MuchAdo, i. 1 

against my will, I am sent to bid (rep.) _ ii. 3 
I would not hang a dog by my will.. — iii. 3 

to stoy a man against his will iii. 3 

for I love thee against my will v. 2 

although against her will, as it appears — v. 1 

what's your will? (rpp.) v. I 

for my will, my will is, your good will — v. 4 

toyour father's Mill (rrp.) .Mid.K.'tDream.i. 1 

the will of man is by his reason — ii.3 

becomes the marhhal to my will .... — ii 3 
what's your will? Nothing, good .... — iv. I 
Egeus, I will overbear your will .... _ iv. I 
humble-visngedsuitors, hishigh will./,ore'iX..L. ii.l 

too blunt a will; whose edge hath (rep.) ii. 1 

by my will. Why, will shall (rep.) .. _ ii. 1 

to her will, sir. or so ii. i 

what's your will, sir? wlint's your will? — iv. 1 
'tis our will that some plain man.... — v. 2 

forsworn, i n will, and error v. 2 

will of a living daughter (rep.) ..Mer.of fenice, i. 2 
to perform your father's will, if you ' — i. 2 

by the manner of my father's will .. i. 2 

call you? what is your will ? _ ii. ,i 

Bassanio, lord love, if thy will it bel — ii.9 

judgment, and the Jew his will _ iv. I 

and curb this cruel devil of his will.. — iv. I 
by will, but a poor thousand crowns. .4< yon Lrtr, i. I 

charged you in his will to give — i. 1 

you shall have some part of your will — i. 1 

and altogether against my w^ill _ i 1 

ready, sir; but his will hath in it .... — i. 2 

a stubborn will to please ii. 6(6ong) 

for no ill will I bear you iVuit 

od's my Willi her love is not iv. 3 

thy will by my performance shall All'tlfell, ii. 1 

obey our will which travails in ii. .1 

what's his will, else? That you will take— ii. 4 

in every thing I wait upon his will ., ii.4 

I shall obey his will: you must not — ii. h 

to buy his will, it would not seem .. _ iii. 7 

this night he fleshes his will iu — iv. 3 

upon your will to siifler _ iy. 4 

what's your will? That it will please — v. I 
inform him, so 'tis our will he shinild — v. 3 
would derive me ill will to speak of. . — v. 3 
what is thy will with her? Taming of Shrew, 2 (ind.) 

is it your will to make a stale of _ j. | 

what is your will, sir, that you send — v. 2 

not obedient t > his honest will _ v. 2 

as mine, against their will tl'inler'iTale, i. 2 

a very trick for them to play at will _ ii. 1 

and so the king's will be |>crfurmcdl ii. 1 

in act, or will, that way inclining .. iii. 2 

their sacred wills be done! jii. 3 

good luck, an't be thy will! _ jji. .-j 

It is my father's will, I should take.. — iv. 3 

op|K>sc ogainst their wills; care not.. v. 1 

have done fjood to against my will .. _ v. 2 
he is the bridle of your will ..Coiwrfyo//i>iori, ii. 1 

then let your will attend on _ ij. i 

what is your will, that I should do.. — iii! 2 

although against my will iy. | 

my heart, sliall have his will _ Jv. 2 

our will became the servant to Macbelli, ii. I 

and bi<l my will avouch it _ iii. | 

what's your grace's will? _ iv. 1 

o'erl>car, that did oppose my will...... _ iv. 3 

to fill u|i vour will, of your iv. 3 

he by will bequeathed his lands KingJolm, i. 1 

land, as was my father's will (rep.).. — I. I 

than was his will to get me i. 1 

a will! a wicked will (rrp.) _ iii | 

3H 



WIL 



[ 834 ■] 



! WILIi— uncle's will, in this respect . King John, 11.2 
translate it to my will; or, if you will — ii. 2 
if not fill up the measure of her will — _ii- 2 

against her will, in the vile — n'- ;' 

although my will to give is living .. — ly. 2 
our quarrel to tlie will of heaven. . . . Blchnrd II. 1. 2 

yoiu- will be done: this must — ;• 3 

against my will, to do myself — .!■ 3 

■where will doth mutiny with — .';• 1 

choose executors, and tallt of wills .. — };;• 2 
oppose not myself against their will — m. 3 
to whose liigh will we bound our — " " 

BO I do, agamst my will ' 

master sheriff, what's your will ... 

and Will Squele, a Cotswold man.. 2 Henry IV. in. 2 
well, by my will, we shall admit no. . — iv. I 
present execution of our wills to us. . — iv. 1 
seeming cold, or careless of his will.. — ly- ■! 
lies all within the will of God Hennjr.t. 2 



.\Henruiy.\i 



fair reply, it is against my will 

ill will never said well — ■."• ' 

God's will! I pray thee (rfp.) — jv. 3 

Got's will and his pleasure irep. v. I) — \v. 8 

it is with a goot will ; I can tell you — iv. 8 

shall show me the way to my will .. — v. 2 
or whose will stands, but mine? ...AHenryVI.i. 3 

my will to it; and, therefore (.rep.) .. — u- i 

my side so against your will — !!• * 

now, by God's will, thou wrong'st .. — ]\- i 

time once ripened to my will — .?!•'' 

as will the rest, so willeth Winchester — in. 1 

this sudden execution of my will.... — v. 6 
against her will. Against her willl ..2HenrijFI. 1. 3 

I danced attendance on his will .... — .1-3 

and. Will, thou shall have my hammer — .11. 3 

but God's will be done I Cold news .. — m. 1 

so should these, if I might have my will — iv. 1 

with his soul, heaven, if it be thy will! — v. 2 

so was his will in his old feeble — v. 3 

why, now thou hast thy will iHennjri.i. 4 

if with thy will it stands — .);.3 

if God's good will were so — .ii- 3 

Scotland hath will to help — >n • 3 

have my will. And shall have your will — iv. 1 

it was my will, and grant (rep.) — Jv. 1 

and not be tied unto his brother's will — iv. 1 

Clarence to his sovereign's will? .... — iv. (i 

make the jest against his will? — v. 1 

go win my daughter to thy will? . . Richard III. iv. 4 

their heirs, (God, if thy will be so).... — v. 4 
the will of heaven he done (rep.) ..Henry nil. 1. 1 

a slave to each incensed will — i- 2 

our laws, and stick them iu our will — 1. 2 

his will is most malignant — .'.■2 

the cardinal will have his will, and she — li. 1 

God's Willi much better she ne'er .. — ii. 3 

at all times to your will conformable — ii- 4 

serve your will, as't please yourself . . — .i;- 4 

thank you both for your good wills.. — lii. 1 

it's heaven's will; some spirit put .. — lii- 2 

tlie king's will from his mouth (rep.) — tu. 2 

without the king's will — m- 2 

if your will pass, I sliall both — v 2 

power into will, will into appetite. TroiUis <5 Cress. 1. 3 

seconded with will and power — .i- 3 

dwells not in particular will — ;;• 2 

and the will dotes, that is — ii- 2 

in the conduct of my will; my will.. — n. 2 

of will and judgment; how may (rfp.) — ;;■ 2 

as ample power as I have will — ii. 2 

to their benumbed wills — li. 2 

nor, by m.y will, assubjugate his .... — .n- 3 

that the w'ill is infinite — !!!• '^ 

which his own will shall have — m- 3 

between my will and all offences .... — v. 2 

hence my will shall here be made .. — v. 1 1 
ladies? what are their wills?.... r™(mo/J(/ie«s,.i. 2 

with me? what's your will? My lord — .n- 2 

serve his mind with my best will .... — iv. 2 

performance is a kind of will — v. I 

making your wills the scope of — v. 5 

to let him slip at will Coriolanu$,i. 6 

to him then, as our good wills — ii- I 

not so soon out, as another man's will — ii- 3 

what custom wills, in aU things .... — ."• 3 

to curb the will of the nobility — lij- ' 

do your will — 1.11.2 

direct me, if it be your will — iv. 4 

banishment, yet it was against our will — iv. 6 

he that hath a will to die — .y. 2 

at his will he may do danger with.Jnh'usCiesar, 11. I 

the cause is in my will, I will not come — .11.2 

in his closet; 'tis his will — !!!• ^ 

mention it within their wills — lii. 2 

the will; read it, Mark Antony (rep.) — iii. 2 

hearing the will of Csesar (rf/i ) — i'.!- ^ 

let me show you him that made the will — m. 2 

the will I told you of (rep.) — i.n. 2 

I have no will to wander forth — 1.11.3 

fetch the will hither, and we will ... . — iv. 1 

yon may do j'our will, but he's — iv. 1 

then, with your will go on — iv. 3 

against my will, as Pompey was .... — v. 1 

durst 1 have done my will — v. S 

I killed not thee with half so good a will — v. £ 
soothsayer. Your will? .... Anlony <?- Clenpalra, i. S 

he stays upon your will — „}■'' 

made his will, and read it to public ear — .111. 4 

would make his will lord of his reason — !!!• " 

Caesar's will? Hear it apart — 'ii- " 

and cry, your will? have you no ears? — 111. 11 

our will is, Antony be took alive — jv. ( 

a very rebel to my will — 'v.! 

fortune's knave, a minister of her will — v. i 

that have their honest wills CymbeUne, 1. ', 

the cloyed will, that satiate yet — .i. i 

proceeded but by both your wills — n- < 

true hate, to pray they have their will — .11. i 

afteryour will, have crossed — iv. ! 

I humbly set it at your will — iv. ; 



— ii. 2 

— ii. 6 

— iv. 1 



iv. 
. 6 (letter) 



— i. 1 



ii. 3 
iii. 1 
iii. 3 

iii. 6 



. Hamlet, 



— ii. I 



_ iii. 4 



WILIi— do your best wills, iiniina.'ke.Cyiiihelinc,\. 1 

that die against their wills — v. 4 

be ready at .your highness' will . . Tilus.i}idron. ii. 4 

the mother wills it so — iv. 2 

what's your will know you — v. 2 

perform, if I might have my will ... . — v. 2 
as I am son and servant to your will . . . Pericles, i. I 

I'll make my will then — i. 1 

in vice their law's their will — i. I 

can make his will his act — i- 2 

here my father's gift by will — ii- 1 

then honour be but a goal to my will 
that beauty hath his power and will 

frame your will to mine 

trod upon a worm against my will . . 
what is your will? That he have his.. — y. 1 
a constant will to publish our daughters'.. Lear, i. I 
did the tliird a blessing against his will — i. 4 

is it your will? Speak, sir — i- 4 

fallen out with my more headier will. ... — ii. 4 
quarrel with your great opposeless wills — iv. 6 

and frustrate his proud will — iv. 6 

what's your will? Do you hear aught 

if your will want not — iv 

O undistinguished space of woman'swilll — ...- 
proceed i' the sway of your own will .... — iv. 7 
the let-alone lies hot in your good will .. — v. 3 

see pathways to his Willi Ilomeo ^Juliet, i. 1 

bid a man in sadness make his will 

my will to her consent is but a part.. — 

what is your will? (rep. iii. 3) — 

it is my v/ill, the wliicli if tliou respect — 
as well as herbs, grace, and rude willl — 
and attend our will; mercy but murders — 
God's will! what wilfulness is this? — 

more care to stay, than will to go ... . — 

andwelcomel .Juliet wills it so — 

the strength of will to slay thyself .. — 
no more, bj' crossing their higli will.. — 

not my will consents (rep.) — 

upon his will I sealed my hard. . . . 
bestgraces: spend it at thy will... . . 
it shows a will most incorrect to heaven. , 

doth besmirch the virtue of his will 

his will is not his own ; for he himself. . . . 
v/ill of my most seeming- virtuous queen 

and leads the will to desperate 

like a neutral to his will and matter .... 
puzzles the will; and makes us rather .. 
our wills, and fates, do so contrary run . . 
though inclination be as sharp as will . . 

and reason panders will 

and will, and strength, and means, to do't — iv. 

acts little of his will — iv. 

my will, not all the world's — iy, 

let her will have a free way Othello, 1 

to the which, our wills are gardeners .... — i. 

authority of this lies in our wills — i 

of the blood, and a permission of tlie will — i 
these Moors are changeable in their wills — i 
to i»et his place, and to plume up my will — 
had tongue at will, and yet was never loud — 
God's will, lieutenant! hold; you will be — 

in such, a will most rank, foul — 

her will, recoiling to her better judgment 

my lord, wliat is your wiU? 

if e'er my will did trespass 'gainst — iv. 2 

WILLED me in heedfullest All's Well, i. 3 

be interred, for so he willed it KingJohn,'^. 7 

willed me to leave my base \ Henry VI. i. 2 

than we are willed. AVho willed you? — i. 3 

they willed me say so, madam HenryVlII. iii. I 

wishes fall out as they're willed Pe)7cZes, v. 2 (Gow.) 
WILLETH— so willeth Winchester .1 Henry ri. iii. 1 

WILL HE, NILL HE, he goes Hamlet, v. 1 

WU.LIAM [.•!ef-POOLE]- 
come hither, William, hold up ,. Merry Wives, iv. 1 

William, how many numbers — iv. I 

what is fair, William? (rep.) — iv. 1 

is good, William; what is he, William — iv. 1 
is the focative case, William? (rep.).. — 
show me now, William, some declensions — 
is thy name, William? William.. /Is j/owLrt-t 

do, good William. God rest you — .v. I 

William is become a good scholar.. 2 HeKrt/Zr. iii. 2 
yea, marry, William cook (rep.) .... — v. 1 
mean to stop any of William's wages — v. 1 
countenance William Visor of Woncot — v. 1 

and sir William Glansdale \ Henry J'l.i. 4 

here is sir William Lucy (rep.) — iv. 4 

second, William of Hatfield (rep.) ..2Henryl'l. ii. 2 
William of Windsor was the seventh — ii. 2 
Hastings, and sir William Stanley .3He»!ri/r/.iv. 5 
William lord Hastings (rep. iii. i). Richard III. iii. 1 

commend me to lord William — iii. 1 

sir William Stanley; Oxford, redoubted — iv. S 

sir William Brandon (jep. V. 4) — v. 3 

the duke about sir William Blomer. Hejiry/V/J. i. 2 

WILLING as bondage e'er of freedom.rempest, iii. I 

with willing sport, to the .. TwoGen.or I'crona, ii. 7 

an honest, willing, kind fellow ....MerryWives, i. 4 

what I am willing to keep in Twelfth Night, ii. 1 

she is very willing to bid you farewell — ii. 3 

my willing love, tlie rather by — iii. 3 

whiles you are willing it shall — iv. 3 

if you'll a willing ear incline Meas.forMeas. v. 1 

not without the prince be willing ..MuchAdo, iii. 3 
you much willing to be counted.. Love'sL.Losl, ii. 1 

all pride is willing pride — ii. I 

I was as willing to grapple, as he.... — ii. 1 
one dead that is willing to be so ...AsyouLikeil, i. 2 

marry me, if I be willing? — v. 1 

most read.v and most willing. 7'a7nm^o./'S/ire«', iv. 4 

we have willing dames enough Macbeth, 'w. 3 

I'll give, and willing too; fordo ..Richard II. V\\.Z 

who with willing soul adopts — iv. 1 

you had been willing to resign — iv. 1 

willing you, overlook this pedigree . . Henry f. i i. 4 
to know what willing ransom lie.. . — iii. 5 
could be willing to march on to Calais — iii. li 



ii. 1 
ii. 3 
iii. 3 



— iv. 2 



iv. ! 

iv. I 

it, V. 1 



WIN 



WILLING— all as willing as I live ..iHenryVl. v. i 
not willing any longer conference ..ZHniryVI. ii. 2 

draw your willing swoids Richard III. v. 3 

if they be still, and willing., Hcniiz/'i//. (prologue) 
to the earth, willing to leave their .. — iv. 2 
most willing, madam. In which I .. — iv. 2 
follows not summer more willing. Timon of Ath. iii. 6 
willing misery outlives incertaiu pomp — iv. 3 

are they that most are willing Coriolanus,\. 6 

this before a willing bondman ....JuUusCcesar, i. 3 

too much, but thou art willing — iv. 3 

most willing spirits, that promise.. Cymicd'ne, iv. 2 
willing you to demand 3'our.. Titus Andnmicus, v. 1 

God willing, shall not lack Hamlet, i. 5 

the gentleman willing, and the king. ... — v. 2 

WILLINGLY I would (rep. iii. 1). TwoGert. nfV. i. 2 

and willingly, to do you rest .... TirelflhKighl, v. 1 

most willingly humbles himself. il/eas. /or Meas. iii. 2 

this rude wretch willingly to die — iv. 3 

I crave death more willingly than mercy — v. 1 
you embrace your charge too willingly. jVwc/i.^Jo.i. 1 
proud of employment, willingly. .Loi>e'sZ../,oj7, ii I 
and willingl.y could waste my.... yj-vt/oii i//i''(/, ii. 4 
as willingly as e'er I came from .Tmnivgoffih. iii. 2 
I willingly obey your command. . Winter' sTale, iv. 1 

willing! .y departed with a part King John, ii. 2 

how willingly I will botli hear — iv. 2 

received so many, and all willingly.. IHenrt/i/'. i. 3 
marrj', and shall, and very willingly — v. 2 
if I come in his, willingly, let him .. — v. 3 
and I accept the combat willingly ..iHenryVI. i. 3 
as willingly do I tlie same resign;.... — ii. 3 
and even as willingly at thy feet .... — ii. 3 
I'll yield myself to prison willingly — iv. 9 
this oath I willingly take, and will..3Hc7i)-!/r/. i. 1 
the Kentishmen will willingly rise .. — i. 2 
give up willingly that noble title. Henry VIII. iii. I 
nor more willingly leaves winter. Timon of Ath. iii. 6 
most willingly; but yet my caution. Co77o/a«u4', ii. 2 

though we willingly consented — iv. 6 

what willingly he did confound.^ii/on?/ <5- Cteo. iii. 2 
willingly; and pawn mine honour ..CymbeUne, i. 7 
poor sick Fidele! I'll wiliingl.v to him — iv. 2 
I will most willingly attend. TiiusAndronicus, iv. 1 
as willingly as one would kill a fly .. — v. I 

which you commit willinglj' Pericles, iv. 3 

we would as willingly give cure, liomeo ^Juliet, i. 1 
though willingly I came to Denmark . . Hamlet, i. 2 
that 1 will more willingly part withal .. — ii. 2 
Wn.LINGNESS-all willingness ..IHenryVI. iii. 1 
thither straiglit, for willingness rids. SHenr;/ VI, v. 3 

WILLING'ST sin 1 ever yet Henry v'llI.iW. 1 

WILLOUGHBY, with all their Kichardll- ii. 2 

in liosse and Willoughby (>-ep.) .... — ii. 3 
WILLOW— make me a willow cabin TwelfthNighl, i. 5 
even to the next willow, about your. . MuchAdo, ii. 1 
offered him my company to a willow tree — ii. 1 
stood Dido with a willow ..Merchant of Venice, v. I 
wear the willow garland (rep.iv. \)ZHenryVl. iii. 3 

there is a willow grows ascaunt Hamlet, iv. 7 

she liad a song of willow, an old thing. Otitello, iv. 3 

sing all a green willow (rep.) — iv. 3 (song) 

and die in music; willow, willow, willow — v. 2 
WILL YOTT, NILL YOU, I yiiW.. Taming of Sh. ii. 1 

WILTSHIRE straight bid him Richard i/. ii. I 

tlie earl of Wiltshire (lep.ii. 2, iii.2,& iii. 4> — ii. 1 

here's the earl of Wiltshire's blood ..ZHenryVl. i. I 

WIMPLED, whining, purblind ..Love's L.LosI, iii. 1 

WIN it from me, the lord on't Tempest, i. 2 

I thinlc you'll hardly win her .. TwoGen. of Ver. i. I 
your grace win lier to fancy him?.. .. — iii. 1 

win her with gifts, if she — iii. 1 

he cannot win a woman — iii. 1 

win lier to consent to you MerryWives, ii. 2 

that I should wiu what you — ii. 2 

tills wins him, liver and all Twelfth Sight, ii. 5 

tlie good we oft mi^lit wiw.. Measure for Measure, i, 5 

pray heaven she win him! — ii. 2 

such a man will win any woman ....MuchAdo, ii. 1 

win me and wear me — v. I 

and shape to win grace though he. Love's!.. Los^, ii. 1 
master, will you win your love with — iii. 1 

as thou wilt win my favour — iii. I 

lose an oath to win a paradise?.. — iv. 3 (verses) 

andwin them, too: therefore let — iv. 3 

to win me, if you please — v. 2 

who wins me by that means .. Merch. of Venice, ii. 1 

to will thee, lady; but alas — ii. 1 

he may win; and what is music .... — iii. 2 

we shall ne'er win at that sport — iii. 2 

his sword can never win the honour. All's Welt, iii. 2 

but of danger wins a. scar — iii. 2 

to cozen him, that would unjustly win — iv. 2 
could win me to believe, more than.. — v. 3 
(as he will win my love) Tamina-o/.S/ii'cw,! (indue.) 
we will; provided, that he win her .. — i. 2 

'tis deeds, must win the prize — ii. 1 

beauteous looks, shall win my love .. — iv. 2 
shall win the wager which we will .. — v. 2 

I will win my wager better yet — y. 2 

so soon as yours, could win me . . Winter's Tale, i. 2 

to win us to our harm Macbeth, i. 3 

win us with honest trifles — i. 3 

and yet would'st wrongly win — i. 5 

sought to win me into his power — iv. 3 

may easily win a woman's King John, i. 1 

e'er tlie coward hand of France can win — ii. 1 
win you tills city without stroke .... — ii. 2 
he that wins of all, of kings, ofbeggars — ii. 2 
I cannot pray that tliou may'st win 
whoever wins, on that side shall X . 

I have a way to win their loves 

to win this easy match 

and to win renown even in the jaws 
if Lewis do win the daj' (rep.) 

did win what he did spend 

but we nmst win your grace — 

an easy task it is to win our own .... — 

must win a new world's crown — 

to wiu thy after-love, I pardon thee — 



— ill. 1 



V. 4 

Richard II. ii. 1 

— ii.3 

— iii. 2 



VIN— this north side win this capcMItiiryll'. iii. 1 

did lie win the lic'iiits of all — iv. 3 

nothing cum sicni l\>ul to those that wia — v. I 
whiH.'V'r tlioo lif. aw\ tliua I win thee — v. < 
thut thou niiijhl'sl win the more ..'iHrnrijlV. iv. 1 

und fire, to win vour right Henry r. I. 2 

if that you will France win — i. 2 

I can never win a 0oul so easy — .'i* ^ 

doth win inunortul fame — iii. 2 

yoi^r honour wins liiid humours .... — iii. 2 
if 1 could win a lady at leap-frog.... — v. 2 

to win the Dauphin s grace 1 Henry VI. i. 1 

born at Monmouth, should win ail .. — iii. t 

ril win thislady Margaret — v. 3 

myself did win tnem both 2Hciiiy/'/. i. 1 

by main force Warwick did win .... — i. I 
which I will win from France — i. I 

f>re6erved so whole, do selilom win .. — iii. I 
lave assayed to win the Tower — iv. 5 

here let us win our right SHoiiyl'I. i. I 

I'll win tliem, fear it not — i.2 

110 liopo to win the day — ii. I 

then, Margaret may win him — iii. I 

in conclusion, wins the king — iii. 1 

and yet to win her, all tlie world ..liichurd III. i. 2 
from his mother win the duUe of York — iii. I 
I'll win our ancient riglit in France — iii. 1 

we shall ne'er win him to it — iii- 7 

this is not the way to win your — iv. 1 

shall 1 go win my daughter — iv. I 

awake, and win tlie day! — v. 3 

had rather have us win, than — v. 3 

of his Maker, hope to win by 't? .. Henry fill. iii. 2 

corruption wins not niore than — iii. 2 

sir, I did never win of you before .. — v. 1 
win straying souls with modesty .... — v. 2 
with wagging of your tonpue to win me — v. 2 

and let them win the work — v. 3 

ray Crcssid then so hard to win?. Troilus fyCress. iii. 2 
Hector's sister did Achilles win .... — iii. 3 

lose my arm, or win my slee ve — v. 3 

bade him win all — v. 5 

to win some vantage Coriolanus, i. 1 

it will in time win upon power — i. 1 

and did retire, to win our purpose .. — i.6 
and puff to win a vulgar station .... — ii. 1 
our wish, which side should win .... — v. 3 
if you could but win the noble ....JuliusCcpsar, i. 3 

his cocks do win the battle Aniony ^ Cteo. ii. 3 

you'll win two days upon me — ii. 4 

husband win, win brother, prays .... — iii. 4 

from Antony win Cleopatra — iii. 10 

as I can win the offended king Cymbeline, i. i 

in our trifles I still win of you — i. 2 

I'll win to-night of him; come, go ., — ii. 1 

hot, and furious, when you win — ii. 3 

60 sure to win tlie king, as I am bold — ii. 4 

but to win time to lose so bad — iii. 4 

an<l win this ring by Iiers and mine — v. 5 

if I cannot win you to this love Pericles^ ii. 4 

find, and win unto return, you shall .. — ii. 4 

would win some words of him — v. 1 

though I should win your displeasure.... Lear, ii. 2 

who loses, and who wins; who's in — v. 3 

I will win for him, if I can; ifnot ....Hamlet, v. i 

I shall win at the odds; but thou — v. 2 

our son shall win. He's fat, and scant.... — v. 2 
this tale would win m,v daughter too.. ..Olhetlo, i. 3 

to win the Moor again? (rfp.) — ii. 3 

so, 60,60,60; they laugh, that win v— iv. I 

what shall 1 do to win my lord again? .. — iv. 2 

WINCE, nor speak a word King John, iv. I 

let the galled jade wince, our withers.. Hamlet, iii. 2 

WINCriESTER forbids 1 Henry / ;. i. 3 

arrogant Winchester? that haughty — i. 3 

Wincliester goose, 1 cry —a rope! aropel — i. 3 
Winchester and Gloster (rep. iii. 1).. — ii. 4 

a fling at Winchester — iii. 1 

can you. mv lord of Winchester (rfp.) — iii. 1 

f field Wincliester; except you mean — iii. 1 
icre, Winchester, I offer thee my hand — iii. 1 
is my lord of Winchester installed (rep.) — v. 1 
iiow'Wiiichestcr will not submit, I trow — v. I 
Bi>euk, Winchester; for boiling eholer — v. 4 
uncle of Winchester, I pray (rep.) ..illenryVJ. i. l 
my lord of Winchester, I kuow your.. — i. 1 
my lord of Winchester (rep. v. 2.)..HenryVllI. iii. 2 
the one, of Winchester, (newly preferred — iv. I 
he of Winchester is held no great good — iv. I 
commendations, bislinn of Winchester — v. 2 
some gal led goose of Winchester. TraituM /i Creti. v. 11 
WrNCOT-ale-wife of Wineot.ramint'o/A/u 2 (ind.) 
WIND— blow till thou burst thy wind .. Tempeil, i. 1 

to sigh to the winds, whose pity — i. 2 

the sliarp wind of the north — i. 2 

tliou Shalt be as free as mountain winds — i. 2 

I hear it sing i' the wind — ii. 2 

O-s well wound the loud winds — iii. 3 

the winds did sing it to me — iii. 3 

called forth the mutinous winds — v. 1 

be calm, good wind, blow not , . Tko (ien.aj Ver. i. 2 

if the wind were down — ii. 3 

hear this shower sing in the wind. Werry Wivet, iii. 2 
if my wind were hut long enough.... — iv. 6 
'twill endure wind and weather ..Tuel/th Nighl, i. h 
and perchance, « ind up my watch . . — ii. S 

the wind and the rain (ri-p.) — v. l(soiigl 

imprisoned in the viewless winds. il/eai./or.Ue'/i. iii. I 

sits the wind in that corner? Much Ado, ii 3 

a vane blown with all winds — iii. I 

is but foul wind, and foul wind is but — v. 2 
ringlets to the whistling wind ..Mid.S'.'iDream,\\. 2 
therefore the winds, piping to us .... — ii. 2 
with the wanton wind, which she .. — ii. 2 
aliiiUt the wood go swilterthan the wind — iii. 2 
funned with the eastern wind, turns — iii. 2 
and I wilt wind thee in my uriiis .... — iv. I 
the weather, tliat love not the wind.Lot'c'i L.I.. iv. 2 

the wind, all unseen, 'gan — iv. 3 (verses) 

bullets, wind, thought, swifter things — v. 2 



WIND— the wind doth h\av.Love'tl..l.oil,\. i (song) 
to know where sits the wind. Merchant of Venice, i. I 

mv win.l. L'.Hiling mv hroti — 1.1 

what hu> 111 u wind too i.'rcat nii^llt .. — i. I 

to wind about my iiivc with — i. I 

for tlic four winds blow in from — i. I 

the peril of waters, winds, and rocks 
embraced by the strumpet wind! (lep.) 
tlie wind is come about, Biissaiiio. ., 
such wanton gambols with the wind 
when the sweet wind did gently kiss 
chiding of the winter's wind.., 
ns large a charter as the wind., 
blow, blow, thou winter wind 
being mounted on the wind .. 
but— wind away, begone, I say 



i. 3 



Hi. 2 



.At you Like it, ii. I 

— ii. 7 

.. — ii. 7(6ong) 

— iii. 2 (verses) 



— iii. 1 



inirting with wind and rain? 

look bleak in tlie cold wind All'tll'ell.'i. I 

same coxcomb that we have i' the wind — iii. 6 

pr'ythee, allow the wind — v. 2 

sedges play with wind.. Tamini; i\f Shrew, 2 (indue.) 
siieli wind as scatters young men .... — i. 2 

puffed up with winds, rogc like — i. 2 

flie grows great with little wind .... — ii. I 
as mountains are for winds, that shake — ii. 1 
from the ends of opposed winds .. ll'inler'sTale, i. 1 
that may blow no sneaping winds .. — i. 2 

as wind, as waters; false as — i. 2 

a feather for each wind that blows .. — ii. 3 
take the winds of JIarch with bijauty — iv. 3 

of every wind that blows — iv. 3 

with more speed before the wiml. Comedy of Err. i. 1 
stop in your wind, sir; tell me this .. — i. 2 

there is something in the wind — iii. I 

and words are but wind 

and if the wind blow any way from 

both wind and tide stays for this .... — iv. 1 

tlie merry wind blows fair from laud — iv. 1 

I'll give tliee a wind Macbeth, i. 3 

melted, as breath into the wind — i. 3 

that tears shall drown the wind — i. 7 

though you untie the winds — iv. 1 

blow, wind! come wrack! — v. 5 

tlie adverse winds, whose leisure ....Kini^John, ii. 1 

no common wind, no customed — iii. 4 

like a shifted wind unto — iv. 2 

thy threatening colours now wind up — v. 2 
that same weak wind which enkindled — v. 2 

to make his bleak winds kiss — v. 7 

except the north-east wind Richard II. i. 4 

we see the wind sit sore upon — ii. I 

the wind sits fair for news to go — ii. 2 

betwixt the wind and his nobility ..\Heuryir, i. 3 
further afoot, I shall break my wind 
iniprisoningof unruly wind within.. 

wind witli such a deep indent 

not wind? it shall, it must 

is the wind in that door, i' faith? .... 

like estridges, tliat wing the wind. ... — iv. 1 
to turn and wind a fiery Pegasus .... — iv. 1 

the soutliern wind doth play — v. 1 

and tlie eontrarious winds, that held — v. 1 
making tlie wind my posthorse. 2 H/.-«ri//r. (indue.) 
your wind short? your cliiu double? — i. 2 
and in tlie visitation of the winds ,. — iii. 1 
witli so rough a wind, tliat even .... — iv. I 
from fulling with so weak a wind.... — iv. 4 
what wind blew you hitlier (rfp.).... — v. 3 
now sits the wind fair, and we will....He>ii-i//''. ii. 2 
the invisible and creeping wind .. — iii. (chorus) 
the cool and temperate wind of grace — iii. 3 

the wind was very high •illenryl'I.u. 1 

the winds grow high; so do your .... — ii. 1 
if wind anil fuel be brought to feed.. — iii. 1 
by awkward wind from England's .. — iii. 2 
but well-forewarning wind did seem — iii. 2 
against tlie senseless winds shall grin — iv. 1 

like ships before the wind ZHenryl'l. i. 4 

for raging wind blows up incessant .. — 14 
for self-same wind, that I should speak — ii. I 
of the wind: sometime the fltiod (rt'p.; — ii. 5 

ill blows tlie wind, that protits — ii. 6 

obeying with ni3' wind wlien I do blow — iii. 1 

how true he keejjs the wiml! — iii. 2 

that moves both wind and tide — iii. 3 

to resist both wind and tide — iv. 3 

have wind and tide thy friend — v. 1 

slirubs from winter's powerful wind.. — v. 2 

though the rougli wind say no — v. 4 

and dallies with the wind Itichard III. i. 3 

and ill-dispersed wind of misery!.... — iv. I 
in the wind and tempest . . . . Troilus i Creitlda, i. 3 
the splitting wind makes flexible .... — i. 3 
commotion in the winds? frights .... — i. 3 

speak frankly as the wind — i. 3 

the sens and winds (old wranglers) ., — ii. 8 

and fetches her wind so short — iii. 2 

as air, as water, wind, or sondy earth — iii. 2 

rain, to lay this wind, or my — iv. 4 

even in tlic fun and wind of your .. .. — v. 3 
wind, to wind, there turn and change — v. 3 
insolence shall break his wind.. 7'i»ion>>/'.'lr/idis, v. S 

infect another against tlie wind Coriolanus, i. 4 

he should be free, as is the wind .... — i. 9 

and tlirow it against the wind — iii. 2 

wind yiiurselt into a power tyrannical — iii. 3 
then let the mutinous winds strike .. — v. 3 
when the scolding winds have ...../ii/iiuCd'iai', i. 3 
and the wind brings it from the .... — ii. 4 
to wind, to st<ip, to run directly on .. — iv. 1 
they puss by me as the idle wind .... — iv. 3 
blow, wind; swell, billow; and swim — v. I 

when our quick winds lie still inlony ^Cleo. i. 2 

we cannot call her winds and waters — i. 2 

whose wind did seem to glow the.... — ii. 2 

the least wind i' the world will — Ii. 7 I 

his offairs come to me on the wind ,. — iii. 6 ! 
tlumgli my rcanon sits in the wind .. — iii. 9 
and winds of all the corners kissed. .Ci/mMitir,li. 4 
when wu sliall hear the rain and wind — iii. 3 



iii. 1 
iii. I 
iii. 1 



WIND-ridc«on the posting winds.. Cvm6Winr, iii. 4 
to commix with winds that sailors .. — iv. 2 
as the rudest wind, tliut by the top .. _ iv. 2 
with the next beiiellt o' tlie wind .... — iv. 2 
quiver with the cooling wind .... TilntAndron. ii. 3 
a bubbling fountain stirr.d with wind — ii. h 
if the winds rage, doth not the sea .. — iii. 1 
and, if she wind you once, she's with — iv. I 

the angry northern wind will iv. 1 

and I will have the wind of you iv. 2 

as good to shoot against the wind .... iv. 3 

scattered by winds and liii;Ii tempestuous — v. 3 

like the wandering wind, lilows dust I'ericlei.i. I 

for now the wind begins to blow .. — ii. (Gower) 
wind, ruin, and thunder, remember.... — ii. I 

wliom both the waters and the wind .. ii. I 

thut hast upon the winds command.... iii. 1 

the wind is loud, and will not lie till .. — iii. i 
by break of duy, if the wind cease .... — iii. I 

and the gentlest winds of heaven — iii. s 

is this wind westerly that blows? iv. 1 

when I was born, the wind was north.. — iv. I 

never was waves nor wind more violent iv 1 

a strong wind will blow it to pieces..., — iv. 3 

bounteous winds, have brought .. iv. 4 Gow ) 

driven before the winds, lie is arrived — v. (Gow.) 

wind me into him, I pra.v you Lear, i. 2 

an' thou canst not smile as the wind sits — i. 4 
outface the winds, and persecution* of .. — ii. 3 
and the bleak winds do sorely rufUe .... — ii. 4 

bids the wind blow the earth .. _ iii. I 

the to-ond-fro coiifticting wind and rain — iii. I 

blow, wind, and crack your cheeksl .... iii. 2 

nor rain, wind, thunder, flrc, are iii. 2 

such groans of roaring wind and rain.... — iii. 2 
heigh ho, the wind and tlie rain .. — iii. 2 (song) 

hawthorn blows the cold wind (rep.) .... iii. 4 

dust ivhich the rude wind blows iv. 2 

and the wind to make me chatter iv. li 

wind up of this child-changed father! — iv. 7 
to be exposed against the warring winds? — iv. 7 
winds, who notViing hurt withal.. fiowieo<5^Jii/i(r/,i. I 
and more inconstant than the wind.. — i. 4 

this wind you talk of blows — i. 4 

a bark, a sea, a wind iii. 5 

the winds, thy sighs iii. 5 

might not beteem the winds of heaven .. Hamfef, i. 2 

as the winds give benefit, and convoy .... i. 3 

the wind sits in the i-houlder of your sail _ i. 3 

not to crack the wind of the poor phrase 1.3 

when the windissdutlierly, I know ii. 2 

but with the whifl"and wiiidof his — ii. 2 

the bold winds speechless ji. 2 

go about to recover the wind of me — iii. 2 

ns the sea and wind, when both contend iv. 1 

is ready, and tlie wind at help iv. 3 

too slightly timbered for so loud a wind.. iv. 7 

for his death no wind of blame _ iv. 7 

stop a hole to keep the wind away y. i 

'tis very cold; the wind is nortlierly _ v. 2 

mothinks, the wind hath spoke aloud ..Othello, ii. 1 
and howling winds, the guttered rocks .. — ii. I 

mav the winds blow till they have _ ii. 1 

sails freely, both with wind and stream — ii. 3 

1 pray you, called wind Instruments? — iii. I 

marry, sir, by many a wind instrument.. — iii. I 
let her down the wind, to prey at fortune — iii. 3 

the bawdy wind, that kisses all it meets. . iv. 2 

that knocks? It is the wind — iv. 3 

blow me about in winds! roust me v 2 

WIND-CHANGING Warwick now..3Hfrir,//f. v. 1 

WINDED in my forelKud MuchAdo.i. 1 

AVIND-(;ALLS, sped witli snuvins romijijro/S/i. iii. 2 

WINDING up the watch of liis wit Tempeti, ii. 1 

many winding nooks he strays. 7'i/o Gen. of I'er. ii. 7 
a wietcli, winding up days with toil ..Henry I', iv. I 

WINDING-SIlEliT; wliy faint ZHenryn. i. 1 

arms of mine shall be thy winding-sheet — ii. 5 
WIN'DLACES, and with assaj'S oth\tLS.. Hamlet, ii. I 

WINDMILL— in a windmill I Heiiri//r. iii. I 

windmill in suintGeorge's fields.. ..2//eii>j/;;'. iij. 2 
WIND-OBEYING deep gave any.. Comedy q/- /in-, i. I 
WINDOW— climb her window.. ri/oGcn. of ler. ii. 4 

one may enter at her window? jij. i 

now must we to her window — jv. 2 

it hath bay windows transjiixnnt.Tael/th Mghl, iv. 2 
priests in the old church window.... j;uc/i.4i/i,, iii. 3 

out at ;i our window, betwixt twelve.. iv. 1 

talk with a man out at a window? .. _ iv. I 
by moonlight at her window enag.. Mid. l^'.'g Dr. i. I 
behold the window of my heart ..Lore'$L.l.osi,v. i 
look out at window, for all this. iUercA.o//'en(ce,ii. 5 

BO, my good window of lattice All'tH'ell, ii. 3 

I leaped from the window of the citadel iv. I 

looking out at the window (rep,)..Ta>mni;ofSh. v. I 

in at the w indow, or else o'er King John, i. I 

would not out at windows, nor at doors — v. 7 
from my own windows torn my ....Itichard II. iii. 1 

from windows' tops threw dust — v. 2 

would have thought the very window v. 2 

no part of his face from the window .iHenryll'. ii. 2 

our windows arc broke diiwii MItnryl't, iii. 1 

lo, in these windows, that let fortli../(icAorJ lit. i. 2 
ere 1 let full the windows of mine eyes — v 3 
into the compassed window .. Troilui^Crenida, i. 2 
bulks, windows, are smothered up .. Conotanut, ii. I 
and windows, yea, to chimney UipB. JuliutCatar, i. 1 
in ot his winihiws throw (le;,. i. 3;.... — i. 2 

searching the windiiw for a flint ii. I 

5 iluck down forms, windows, any thing — iii. 2 
lowny windows, clo-ie -Ii./drii/,? C/eopn(ra, v. i 

now canopied under these windows.. C^m6e/ifie, ii. 2 
there the window: such the udurniiieiit — ii. 2 
thy crj'stul window ope; look out .... — v. 4 
very doors and windows savour vilely ./>rir(e», iv. G 
the golden window of the east . . Homeo ^Juliet, i. I 

shuts up his windows, locks _ j. | 

light through yonder window breaks? — ii. 2 
then, window . let day in, and let lite out — iii. 6 
thy eyes' windows fall, like death. . . . — iv. l 



WIN 



WINDOW-BARS bore at men's . . 7Vmo)> n/Alh. i v. 3 

WINDOWED in great nome....Anloni/ f,Cleo. iy. Vl 

your looped and windowed raggedness ..Lear, iii. I 

WINDPIPE suffocate Jlennj f. iii. 6 

mv windpipe's dangerous notes.... 7'!mo>io/"/JM. i. 2 
WIND-SHAKED surge, with liigli B.nA. .OthiUo, ii. I 
WIND-SHAKEN— 1)6 wind-shaken.. Con'om" us, v. 2 
WINDSOR— a woman in Windsor.. iV«rri/'rij)CT,J. 4 

ashore at Windsor? — ii, ' 

when the court lay at Windsor — ii. 2 

prayer, as any is in Windsor (rfp.).. — ii. 2 

never a wife in Windsor leads — jj. 2 

old Windsor way, and every way.... — iii- I 

with all the officers in Windsor — in. 3 

coming with half Windsor at his heels — lii. 3 

for the wealth of Windsor Castle — m. 3 

mcotisme a keeper here in AVindsor — iv. 4 

and mock him home to Windsor — iv. 4 

the Windsor bell hath struck twelve — v. 5 
for me, lam herea Windsor stag.... — v. 5 
to Windsor chimneys slialt thou leap — v. 5 
search Windsor castle, elves, within — v. .5 

how like you Windsor wives? — v. 5 

we'll bring you to Windsor, to one .. — v. 5 

be gar, I'll raise all Windsor — v. 5 

will hold at Windsor so inform \ Henry IV. i. 1 

father to a singing-man of Windsor.2Hc;!ri//r. ii. 1 

tohunt,mv lord, at Windsor — iv. 4 

not at Windsor with him, Thomas .. — iv. 4 
born at Windsor, should lose all .AJJennjVI. iii. 1 

William of Windsor was the iHenryVI. ii. 2 

WIND-SWIFT Cupid wings .... Romeo ^Jrtliet, ii. 5 

WINDY side of the law Twel/lh Night, iii. 4 

it keeps on the windy side of care '..MuchAJo, ii. 1 
i)y the windy breath of soft petitions-ffiii^Jo/i/i, ii. 2 

blown with the windy tempest iHeuryt'l. ii. 5 

windy attornies to their client Richard 111. iv. 4 

nor windy suspiration of forced breath.. Wa7iifc(, i. 2 

WINE— being drunk, for want of wine .Tempesi, ii. 1 

no use of metal, corn, or wine, or oil .. — ii. 1 

if he have never drunk wine afore .... — ii. 2 

if all the wine in my bottle — ii. 2 

where my wine is hid... — ii- 2 

where my hogshead of wine is — iv. 1 

where had he wine? — v. 1 

carry the wine in Merry H'ii>«, i. 1 

and in such wine and sugar — ii. 2 

and sack, and wine, and metheglins — v. .^ 
Isay! astnopof wine (c'p,) ....Twelfth .\ight,u. 3 

drink some wine ere you go MuchAdo, Wi. 5 

ratlier heat witli wine Merchant of Venice, i. 1 

set a deep glass of Rhenish wine — i. 2 

between red wine and Rlienish — iii. 1 

as wine comes out of a narrow ..As youLiUe it, iii. 2 

falser than vows made in wine — iii- 5 

that good wine needs no bush (rep.).. — (epil.) 
I am sure, thy father drank wine ....AlVa^Vell, ii. 3 
he calls for wine: a health . . Taming ofShreir, iii. 2 
disturbed with the effect of wine. Corned;/ o/'Err. v. 1 
with wine and wassail toconvince .... Macbeth, i. 7 

the wine of life is drawn — ii. 3 

give nie some wine; fill full — ni. 4 

that's a marvellous searching wine..2Hent!/rF. ii. 4 
by this wine. I'll thrust my knife .. — ii. 4 
that's no marvel, he drinks no wine — iv- 3 

give master Bardolph some wine .... — v. 3 

a cup of wine, sir? (re;), in songl — v. 3 

it was excess of wine that set him on ..Henry V. ii. 2 
spirited with wine, seem frosty? .... — iii. 5 

taste of your wine, and see 1 Henry VI. ii. 3 

good wine in thy master's way 2Henryl'l. ii. 3 

run nothing but claret wine this first — iy. B 

a cup of wine (.rep.) Richard III. i. 4 

fill me a bowl of wine (rep.) — v- 3 

washed to death with fulsome wine-. — v- 3 

good wine, good welcome, can Henry VI I J. i. 4 

the red wine first must rise in — i. 4 

his blood with Greekish wine ..Troilus^rCress. v. 1 
knaves, and wine heat fools. . . . Timan of Athens, \. 1 
wept with drunken spilth of wine .. — _ii- 2 
fill me some wine; and how does .... — iii. 1 
please your lordship here is the wine — iii- 1 

drink wine, lie soft; hug their — iv- 3 

have we no wine here? go we to ....Con'olanti!, i- 9 

loves a cup of hot wine with — ji- 1 

wine, wine, winel what service is herel — iv.b 
of our blood with wine and feeding.. — v. 1 
and taste some wine with me ....JuliusCa!sar,\\. 2 

Lucius a bowl of wine (rep.) — iv. 3 

till the wine o'erswell the cup — iv. ? 

wine enough, Cleopatra's health. -4n(ony fyClco.i. 2 

sit, and some wine: a health — ii. 7 

this wine for Lepidus — ii. 7 

till that the conquering wine hath .. — ii. 7 
Enobarbe is weoicer than the wine .. — ii. 7 
some wine, witliin there, and our viands — .iii- 9 

ril force the wine peep through — iii. II 

give me some wine, and let me — ^X*.'"' 

we drink this standing-bowl of wine ..Pericles, ii. 3 

wine loved I deeply; dice dearly Lenr, iii. 4 

set me the stoops of wine upon Hamlet, y. 2 

the wine she drinks is made of grapes ..Othello, ii. I 
I have a stoop of wine, and here without — ii. 3 

some wine, ho! (rep.) — jj- 3 

thou invisible spirit of wine, if thou .--. — ii- 3 
come, come, good wine is a good familiar — ii- 3 

WING— with thy saffron wings Tempest, iy- 1 

lend me wings to make .... TwoGen, of Verona, ii. 6 

that hath love's wings to fly — ii- 7 

on the wing of all occasions MerryWives, ii. 2 

and with %vhat wing tlie BtannyehTtreirthKighl, ii. 6 
then there's a partridge wing saved.. Mttc/i/lJo, ii. 1 

wings, and no eyes, figure Mid.N.'sDream,[. I 

with rear-mice for their leathern wings — ii. 3 
and pluck the wings from painted .. — iii- 1 

and batty wings doth creep. — iii- 2 

their conceits have wings Love's L. Lost, v. 2 

by them with their woven wings.Mer. of Venire, _i. 1 

that made tire wings she flew — iii. 1 

is a virtue of a good wing All's H'ell,i. 1 



[ 830 ] 

AVING-this haste liatli wings hxdevd.. All's ll'ell, ii. 1 

with the swiftest wing of speed — iii. 2 

with our horse upon our own wings — iii. 6 

to use my wings. I impute.. Winter' sTale, iv.(cho.) 

will wing me to some withered — v. 3 

that swiftest wing of recompense Macbeth, I. 4 

makes wing to the rooky wood — iii. 2 

and owlet's wing, for a powerful charm — iv. 1 
their right under your wings of war .KingJohn, ii. 1 
our drooping country's broken wing. fti'cAurdy/. ii. 1 

which do hold a wing quite \ Henry IV. iii. 2 

that wing ICol. Knt.-wlth'] the wind . . — iv. 1 
but with nimble wing we were enforced — v. 1 
what wings shall his affections ....i Henry IV. iv. 4 

with youtliful wings is flown — iv. 4 

more feathers to our wings Henry I', i. 2 

thus with imagined wing our .... — iii. (chorus) 

they stoop with the like wing — iv. 1 

they have no wings to fly from God.. — iv. 1 
spread wider than a dragon's wings .1 Henry VI. i. 1 
would fly swift, but wanteth wings .. — i. 1 
horsemen and peruse their wings .... — iv. 2 

underneath her wings — y. 3 

under the wings of our protector's . .2Hejiry VI. i. 3 

buslies to betray thy wings — ii. 4 

slow and flagging wings clip — iv. 1 

knowledge the win» wlierewith we .. — iy. 7 
dares stir a wing, if Warwick shake .3 Henry VI. i. 1 
even with those wings wliich sometime — ii. 2 

they follow us with wings — ii. 3 

with trembling wings misdoubteth . . — v. 6 

for all his wings, the fowl was — v. 6 

that seared the wings of my sweet boy — v. B 

fiery expedition be my wing Richard III. iv. 3 

hover about me with your airy wings — iv. 4 

and flies with swallow's wings — v. 2 

should mount with wings of victory — v. 3 

fair company clapped wings to me .Henry VIII. i. 4 
thy person under their blessed wings — y. 1 
the very wings of reason .... Troilus ^ Cressida, ii. 2 

gave wings to my propension — ii. 2 

pluck his painted wings, and fly .... — !'.!• 2 
show not their mealy wings, but to. . — iii. 3 
with wings more momentary swift .. — iv. 2 
the dragon wing of night o'erspreads — y. 9 
feather sticks in his own wing . Timon of Athens, ii. 1 

he has wings; he's more than Coriolanus, v. 4 

plucked from CiEsar's wing JuliiisCeesar, i. I 

cold demeanour in Octayius' wing.... — ...^' ^ 
so poor a pinion of his wing ..Antony^ CI eo. il't. 10 
thine eyes, though they had wiugs.... — v. 2 
the best feather of our wing Cymbeline, i. 7 

for a horse with wings! — iii. 2 

'would I had wings to follow it! .... — iii. 5 
the king himself of his wings destitute — v. 3 
his royal bird prunes the immortal wing — v. 4 
from south to west on wing soaring.. — v. 6 
hang his slender gilded winga. . . . TitusAndron. iii. 2 

with the shadow of his wings — iv. 4 

that wing the midway air iear, iy. 6 

borrow Cupid's wings, and soar ..Romeo ^Juliet, i. 4 

of the wings of grasshoppers — i. 4 

with love's light wings did I o'erperch — ii. 2 

hath the wind-swift Cupid wings — ii. S 

for thou wilt lie upon the wings of night — iii. 2 

with wings as swift as meditation Hamlet, i. 5 

seen this hot love on the wing — ii. 2 

and hover o'er rae with your wings — iii. 1 

WINGED Cupid painted W\nd..Mid.N:sDream, i. I 
do all thouglits; they are winged. ^syou Like it, iv. 1 
the fishes, and the winged fowls. Comedy of Err. ii. 1 
this sealed brief, with winged haste. 1 Henri///', iv. 4 
with winged heels, as English.... Henri//', ii. (cho.) 
upon your winged thoughts .... — v. (clio.) 

set to catch ray winged soul I 2 Henry VI. iii. 3 

spirit, winged with desire ZHenryVl. i. 1 

that a winged Mercury did bear ..Richard ill. \i. I 

shall be well winged with our — v. 3 

winged thus swift with scorn- Troilus Sf Cressida, ii. 3 

have never winged from view Cymbeline, iii. 3 

or, winged with fervour of her love.. — iii. 5 

the Roman eagle, winged from — iv. 2 

only I carry wmged time post . . Pericles, iv. (Gow.) 
but I shall see tlie winged vengeance ....Lear, iii. 7 
a winged messenger of heaven . . Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 2 

WINGFIELD-of Wingfleld 1 Henry /'/. iv. 7 

WINGHAM-tanneroi Wingham ..2He7iry /'/. iv. 2 

WINK— cannot pierce a wink beyond.. Tempest, ii. 1 

to the perpetual wink for aye might — ii. 1 

although you judge I wink .Two Gen, of Verona, i. 2 

upon a homely object love can wink — ii. 4 

1 liad rather wink than look on them — v. 2 
I'll wink and couch : no man .... Merry Wires, v. 5 

while one would wink Twelfth h'ighi, v. 1 

turn my back; wink at each other. il/id.iV.'.</)r. iii. 2 
and not be seen to wink of all ....Love'sL.Lost, i. 1 

ere you'll thrice wink — i. 2 

S.1W my master wink and laugh .Taming of Sh. iv. 4 
give mine enemy a lasting wink.. Winter'sTale, i. 2 

every wink of an eye, some new — v. 2 

as good to wink, sweet love ..Comedy of Errors, iii. 2 

the eye wink at the hand! Macbeth, i. 4 

did make beholders wink? Richardll. iv. 1 

but I will wink, and hold out mine ..Henry V. ii. 1 

yet they do wink, and yield — v. 2 

I will wink on her to consent — v. 2 

let me see thine eyes: wink now.... 2 Henry r/. ii. 1 
wink at the duke of Suffolk's insolence — ii. 2 

food boy, wink at me, and say. Timon ofA'hens, iii. 1 
have not slept one wink Cymbeline, \\\. 4 

nor wink, nor nod, nor kneel. Titus Andronicns, iii. 2 
tliat runaways' eyes may wink . liomeo ^Juliet, iii. 2 
as her winks, and nods, and gestures . . Hamlet, iv. 5 
the nose at it, and the moon winks ..Othello, iv. '2 

WINKED since I saw these Winter'sTale. iii. 3 

on distemper, shall not be winked at.. Henry J', ii, 2 

WINKING— your winking gates ....KingJohn.u. 1 
and. on the winking of authority .... — iv. 2 

winking, leaped into destruction iHenrylV. i. 3 

that run winlting into the mouth Henry V. iii. " 



WIP 



WINKING— to consent to winking.... Hejin/ /'. v. 2 
winking Mary-buds begin to. Cymbeline, ii. 3 (song) 
were two winking Cupids of silver .. — ii. 4 
am sure, hanging's tlie way of winking — v. 4 
for winking at your discords too. Uomeu ^Juliet, v. 3 
rCol.Knl.'] or given my heart a winking. Ham/e/, ii. 2 
WINK'ST whiles thou art waking .... Tempest, ii. 1 
WINNER— being a winner .... Taming tifStireto, v. 2 

you precious winners all Winter'sTale, v. 3 

gamester is the soonest winner HenryV. iii. 6 

Eeshrew the winners, for they 2 Henry VI. iii. I 

profess myself the winner of her ....Cymbeline, ii. 4 

is yet to name the winner — iii. 5 

both friend and foe, winner and loser?. Ham/e^ iv. 5 

WINNING make the prize light Tempest, i. 2 

would hazard the winning both of ..Cymbeline, i. 5 

winning will put any man into courage — ii. 3 

how to lose a winning match . . Romeo Sr Juliet, iii- 2 

WINNOW the truth from falsehood . . Cymbeline, v. 5 

winnows the light away Troilus Sr Cressida, i. 3 

WINNOWED with so rough iHenrylV. iv. 1 

most throughly to be winnowed .. Henry I'll I. v. 1 

of such a winnowed purity . Troilus Sf Cressida, iii. 2 

the most fond and winnowed opinions . Hamlet, v. 2 

WINTER— liowled away twelve winters. Tempest, i. 2 

like winter's drops from eaves — v. I 

make rough winter everlasting. 7'«o Gen. ofVer. ii. 4 

doth all tire winter time MerryWives, iv. 4 

and good for winter Measure fur Measure, ii. 1 

and six or seven winters more respect — iii. 1 

mortals want their winter here- . . . Mid.N.'s Dr. ii. 2 

■ angry winter, change their wonted .. — ii. 2 

fivescore winters worn Lnve'sL. Lost, iv. 3 

this side is Hiems, winter — v. 2 

by the same winter and summer.it/er. of Venice, iu. 1 
chiding of the winter's wind ....AsyouLikeit, ii. 1 
my age is as a lusty winter, frosty .. — ii. 3 
but winter and rough weather .... — ii. 5 (song) 
blow, blow, thou winter wind .... — ii. 7 (song) 
a nun of winter's sisterhood kisses .. — iii. 4 

as the winter to foul weather — v. 4 

thou know'st, winter tames man . TamingofSh. iv- I 
tliou nit, thou winter cricket thou .. — iv. 3 

a sad tale's best for winter Winter'sTale, ii. 1 

and still winter in storm perpetual.. — iii. 2 
blood reigns in the winter's pale.. — iv. 2 (song) 

and savour, all the winter long — iv. 3 

our ages with flowers of winter — iv. 3 

nor on the birth of trembling winter — iv. 3 
which sixteen winters cannot blow .. — v. 3 

will burn aPoland winter Comedyo/Errojs, iii. 2 

sap-consuming winter's drizzled snow — v. I 
a woman's story, at a winter's flre-- ..Macbeth, iii. 4 
none of you will bid tlie winter come.KingJohn,v. 7 

six frozen winters spent Richard II. i. 3 

four lagging winters, and four — i. 3 

what is six winters? they are — _i-3 

worn so many winters out — iv- 1 

in winter's tedious nights, sit by .-.. — v- 1 
waste for churlish winter's tj'ranny..2Henry7r- i- 3 
as humorous as winter, and as sudden — iv- 4 
ever in the haunch of winter sings .. — iv- 4 
the winter coming on, and sickness -. HenryV. iii. 3 
winter's cold, and summer's parching. SHenry/'/. i. 1 

barren winter, with his wrathful — ii. 4 

well could I curse away a winter's night — iii. 2 

that winter lion, who, in rage — v. 3 

winter should cut off our spring-time.3Henryr/. ii. 3 

cold biting winter mars our — iv. 8 

shrubs from winter's powerful wind — v. 2 

fable in a winter's night — v. h 

armours watched the winter's night.. . — v- 7 
now is the winter of our discontent-. WicAord ///. i. I 

fall, then winter is at hand — ii. 3 

till death, that winter, kill it Henry VII I. iii. 2 

take that winter from your lips Troilus^ Cress, iv. 6 
one cloud of winter showers.... Timoii of Athens, ii. 2 
I fear, 'tis deepest winter in lord ... . — iii. 4 
nor more willingly leaves winter .... — iii. 6 
with one winter s brush fell from .... — iv. 3 
tlieve was no winter in't .... Antony ^Cleopatra, v. 2 
qnakein the present winter's state ..Cymbeline, ii. 4 
nor the winter's furious rages .... — iv. 2 (song) 
and the shrinking slaves of winter .. — iv. 4 
in winter, with warm tears I'll . . TitusAndron. iii. 1 
goodly summer with your winter mixed — v. 2 

that winter kills the flies _. Pericles, iv. 4 

winter's not gone yet, if the wild Lear, ii. 4 

there's no labouring in the winter — ii. 4 

on the heel of limping winter treads. Romeo Sr Jul. i. 2 

a wall to expel the winter's flaw! Hamlet, v. 1 

fineless is as poor as winter, to him ....Othello, ii:. 3 
WINTER-GARMENTS must- /IsyowLiVie, iii. 2 (ver.) 

WINTER-GROUND thy corse Cymbeline, iv. 2 

WINTERLY, thou need'^st but keep.. — iii. 4 

WIPE thou thine eyes Tempest, i. 2 

see to wipe my shoes Two Gen.of Verona, ii - 1 

from my forehead wipe a perjured.. l.ove'sL.L. iv. 3 

Camillo wipe not out the rest Winter'sTale, iv. 1 

from my succession wipe me, father! — iv. 3 
let me wipe off this honourable ievr.. King John, v. 2 

wipe off the dust that hides Richardll. ii. 1 

come, let me wipe thy face iHenrylV. ii. 4 

will he wipe his tables clean — iv. 1 

obedience to the kiiig wipes the crime. Henry V iv. I 

do make me wipe off both ZHenryVI. i. 3 

bid the father wipe his eyes — i. 4 

my tears shall wipe away — ii. 5 

bid her wipe her weeping eyes .... Richard III. iv. 4 
to wipe ovit our ingratitude ....Timonof Athens, v. 5 
executed ere they wipe their lips ..Coriolanus, iv. f> 
out of our question wipe him .... Antony SfCleo. ii. 2 

be cheerful, wipe thine eyes Cymbeline, iv. 2 

no hands, to wipe away tliy tea.rs.TitusAndro7i. iii. 1 

Laviuia, I will wipe thy cheeks — iii. 1 

harms, and wipe away her woe! — v. 3 

let me wipe it first Lear, iv. 6 

like foxes: wipe thine eyes — v. 3 

I'll wipe away all trivial fond records . . Hamlet, i. i 
come, let me wipe thy face — v. 2 



WIP 



[ 837 ] 



WIS 



^VII'E— see Cassio wipe his l>card wIth..O<A(>f((>, ill. 3 

■WU'DD— your eyelids wl|ieil n teiu:.^i|/oul.i7rt'iV, ii. 7 

and wiped our eyes of drops tliat .... — ii. 7 

Imtli from my sciul wiped the liluck ..Mnrlirlh, iv. 3 

senrt^e wijwd Biiu'e tlioti driink'et.... I /ifnrr//r, ii. 4 

Eriefliad wiped it from luy mind .. ..'iilrurtjW. i. 1 
e wiped out ill the next pnrlitiment.l Ufuri^l't. ii. I 
thy scandal were not wiped uway ..tHeuryl'l. ii. 4 
wi'th our sword wu wiped uway the blot — iv. I 
this blo<KM)e wiped from thy point .. — iv. 10 
tlic soil of her fair rape wiped otV. Troihis'A Cress, ii. 2 
his In-t attempt he wiped it out ....Coriotanut, v. 3 
■VVIl'INCi— his mailed hand then wiping — i. 3 

"VV I KB— be whipped witli wire Antovy <5- Cleo. ii. 5 

WIRY-tcn thousand wiry fiicmU ..KingJohn, iii. 4 

WIS— be fools alive, I wi9..M<T. nfl'enice, ii. 9 (scrolU 

to fear; I wis, it is not half.... Taming (if Shrew, i. 1 

I wis, yourgrandiim had Richard 111. i. 3 

his child, I wis, to incest bring. .Pericles, ii. (Gowcr) 

■\VISDOM— God give them wisdom. J'lrfj/t/iiVi^f/if, i. 5 

I think I saw your wisdom there..,. — iii. I 

let thy wisdom, not thy passion — iv. 2 

be it as your wisdom will. . Measure/or Measure, ii. 1 
thus wisdom wishes to appear more.. — ii. 4 

runs the wisdom of the world — iii. 2 

show your wisdom, daiinhter, in — iv. 3 

pace your wisdom ill tliut irood patli.. — iv. 3 
pray neaven, his wisdom be not tainted! — iv. 4 
mv lord, wisdom and love combating. .Whc/i.4(/o, ii. 3 
oud if their wisdoms be misled in this — iv. I 
and 'tis not wisdom, thus to second .. — v. I 
what your wisdoms could not discover — v. I 
for wisdom's sake, a word that all. Lore' sL. Lost, iv. 3 
folly, in wisdom hatched, hatliwisdora'n — v. 2 

in your rich wisdom to excuse — v. 2 

in an opinion of wisdom, gravity . .Ver. of f'enice, i. 1 
they have the wisdom by their wit .. — ii. 9 
have bv your wisdom been this day. . — iv. 1 

now unmuzzle your wisdom As you Like il, i. 2 

wisdom waiting on superfluous folly. .J/i'« It'ell, i. 1 
his love and wisdom, approved so to — i. 2 
profession, wisdom, and constanc3f .. — ii. I 
youth, beauty, wisdom, courage, virtue — ii. I 

60 I leave you to your wisdom — ii. 5 

thus your own proper wisdom brings — iv. 2 
the wisdom of your duty .... Turning of Shrew, v. 2 
what wisdom stirs amongst you?. 'Finfdr'sTa/f, ii. I 

with wisdom I might tear — iv. 3 

long experience of her wisdom. . Comedy of Err. iii. 1 
he hath a wisdom that doth guide .... Macbeth, iii. 1 

'bove wisdom, grace, and fear — iii. 5 

what distance his wisdom can provide — iii. 6 
his wisdom, or his fear. Wisdom! .. — iv. 2 

as little is the wisdom, where — iv. 2 

and wisdom to otfer up a weak, poor — iv. 3 
and modest wisdom plucks me from.. — iv. 3 
what you in wisdom shall vouchsafe. Kmi'/oAn, ii. 2 
for wisdom cries out in the streets ..\Hcnryir. i. 2 
that wisdom, loyalty, and mere dislike — iv. 1 
'tis but wisdom to make strong against — iv. 4 

divorce not wisdom from your IHeuryW. i. 1 

your wi.'dom be your guide — ii. 3 

though 'tis no wisdom to confess .... Henry J', iii. 6 

as your wisdoms best shall see — v. 2 

yclad with wisdom's majesty IHenryVl. i. 1 

what to your wisdoms seemeth best.. — iii. 1 

now is it manhood, wisdom, and — v. 2 

whose wisdom was a mirror to the .Sllenryl'I. iii. 3 

till then 'tis wisdom to conceal — iv. 7 

Bir; 'tis a point of wisdom Itichard III. i. 4 

in war, wisdom in peace — iii. 7 

argues your wisdom, and your love.. — iii. 7 

out of a foreign wisdom Henry fill. i. 3 

a precedent of wisdom above all princes — ii. 2 
of wisdom o'ertopping woman's power — ii. 4 
want of wisdom, you, that best should — v. 2 

and wisdom of my council — v. 2 

was never more covetous of wisdom — v. 4 
count wisdom as no member .... Troilus ^ Cress, i. 3 

'twas wisdom Paris went — ii. 2 

tlie issue of your proiier wisdoms rate — ii. 2 
the amity, that wisdom knits not.... — ii. 3 

I'll not praise thy wisdom — ii. 3 

if wisdom be in sufterin^ Timon nf.Hhens, iii. 5 

to defend their vulgar wisdoms Coriotanus. i. 1 

and since the wisdom of their choice — ii. 3 

title, wisdom cannot conclude — iii. I 

alas, my lord, your wisdom is ....JuliutCcesar, ii. 2 

1 doubt not of your wisdom — iii. I 

censure me in your wisdom — iii. 2 

if licauty, wisdom, moAeeiy . Antony Sf Cleopatra, ii. 2 

wisdom and fortune combating — iii. II 

I approve your wisdom in the deed.. — v. 2 

your wisdom may inform you CymMine, \. i 

whose wisdom hath her fortune .. ri7u«/liir/ion. i. 2 
for wisdom sees, those men blush not ..Pericles, i. I 
who by thy wisdom inakest a prince ,. — i. 2 
whose wisdom's strcngtii can bear it .. — i. 2 

to wisdom he's a fool that will not — ii. 4 

the business after your own wisdom Lear, i. 2 

tho^l^d^ the wisdom of nature can — i. 2 

have you windom? so — i. 4 

that good wisdom whereof I know — 1.4 

much more attnsked for want of wisdom — i. 4 

liiii eor abused, wisdom bids fear — ii. 4 

wisdom and goodness to the vile — iv. 2 

wiiot can man's wisdom do — iv. 4 

desire her call her wisdom to her — iv. 4 

in wisdom, I should ask thy name — v. 3 

Biickeil wisdom from thy teat Romeo ^Julicl. i. 3 

and why, my lady wisdom? hold.... — iii. i 
in his wisdom, hastes our marriage .. — iv. I 



loma Uamlet, I. 2 

it fits your wisdom so far to lielicvc it — i. 3 ' 

and tlius do we of wisdom and of reach.. — ii. I [ 

your wisdom liest shall think — iii. 1 

voiir wisdom should show itself more.... — iii. 2 

liatii but one part wisdom, and. ever .... — iv. 4 

greutncdd, wisdom, all things else — iv. 7 . 



WISDOM-thy wisdom [K.-wiscncss] fear.Hainlel, v, I 
she that in wisdom never was so frail ..Ulhello, ii. 1 

and that, in wholesome wisdom, he — iii. I 

^^Cn;.^(l^] that your wisdom from one .. — iii. :i 
tor my manhood, honesty, or wisdom.... — iii. 3 

Wl,SE-[Cn/.] \von<Iere<l father and a wise Tempest, iv I 

I'll lie wise hereafter — v. I 

not be chronicled for wise . . TwoOen.uf I'erona , i. 1 

holy, fair, and wise is she — iv. 2 tsoiig) 

valiant, wise, remorseful — iv. 3 

convey, the wise it call Metry Wives, i. 3 

he is wise, sir: he knew ii. 3 

showed yourself a wise physieian.... ii. 3 

a wise and patient churchman — ii. 3 

was't not the wise woman of Brentford? — iv. 6 

was there a wise woman — iv. 

you are wise, and full of gibes — iv. .') 

may pass for a wise man Twelfll' AV/fA;, i. o 

infirmity, that decays the wise — i. 6 

I take these wise men that crow Eo .. — i. 5 
every wise man's son doth know — ii. 3 (song) 
this fellow's wieeenough to play .... — iii. 1 
as full of labour as a wise man s art — iii. I 

but wise men, folly-fallen — iii. 1 

carry his water to the wise woman .. — iii. 4 
these wise men, that give fools money — iv. 1 
but that a wise burgher put ....Mens. for Meas. i. 2 

here's a wise officer — ii. i 

he, being so wise, why, would he for — iii. 1 
held the duke to be wise. Wise? why — iii. 2 
one so learned and so wise as you .. — v. 1 

another is wise: yetlamwell il/uc/i/lJo, ii. 3 

that's certain; wise, or I'll none .... — ii. 3 

and she is exceeding wise — ii. 3 

and in my mind, very wise — ii. 3 

you may say he is wise; for either .. — ii. 3 

and wise, but for loving me — ii. 3 

how wise, how noble, young, how.. .. — iii. 1 
1 have studied eight or nine wise words — iii. 2 

I am n wise fellow — iv. 2 

the gentleman is wise (?-ep.) — v. 1 

thou and I are too wise to woo — v. 1 

there's not one wise man among .... — v. 2 

most expedient for the wise — v. 2 

thou art as wise as thou ti.it....Mid.N.'sDream, iii. 1 

lord, how wise you are I Love's L.Lost. i. 2 

to be counted wise in spending — ii. I 

his ignorance were wise, wl-.ere now — ii. 1 

do the wise think them other? — iii. 1 

what fool is not so wise, to lose. . — iv. 3 (verse^) 

we are wise girls, to mock our — v. 2 

as foolery in the wise, when — v. 2 

your wit makes wise thinfjs foolish .. — v. 2 
to your huge store wise things seem — v. 2 

this proves you wise and rich — v. 2 

therefore only are reputed wise ..Mer. of I'enice, i. 1 
one of these same dumb wise men .. — i. 1 
as his wise mother wrought in his .. — i. 3 
it is a wise father, that knows his. ... — ii. 2 
for she is wise, if I can judge of her. . — ii. fj 
like herself, wise, fair, and true .... — ii. (j 
had you been as wise as bold .... — ii. 7 (scroll) 

wise young judge, how do I — iv. 1 

1 know no wise remedy how to avoid. /(« r/fti LiV;/^, i. 1 

what wise men do foolishly ' — i. 2 

the little foolery that wise men have — i. 2 
prows rank in them, that I am wise — ii. 7 

if not, tile wise man's folly is — ii. 7 

full of wise saws and modern instances — ii. 7 

learn of the wise, and perpend — iii. 2 

but she is wise, or else she could not — iv. I 
art thou wise? Ay, sir, I have a pretty — v. 1 
think he is wise, but the wise m.in .. — v. 1 

she is young, wise, fair All's Well, ii. 3 

to be a pretty wise fellow; thou didst — ii. 3 

am I not wise? Yes; keep you .. Taming of Sh. ii. \ 
I know him passing wise; though he — iii. 2 
master, be wise; an' if you give. Comedy of Err. iv. 3 
who can be wise, amazed, temperate ..Macbeth, ii. 3 
he is noble, wise, judicious, and best — iv. 2 
are to a wise man ports and happy . . Richard //. i. 3 

ray lord, wise men ne'er wail — iii. 2 

it will make wise men mad — v. 5 

I know you wise: but yet {rep.) UlenryW. ii. 3 

the wise may make some Jtllenryll'. i. 2 

and the spirits of the wise sit in — ii. 2 

cither wise bearing, or ignorant — v. I 

well-practised, wise directions — v. 2 

appear more wise and modest to the — v. b 

be wise, and circumspect. What tho'.2/7c)iiy;'/. i. 1 

were none more wise than I — iii. 1 

if this fellow be wise, he'll never .... — iv. G 

for wise men say, it is tlie Sllenryl'I. iii. 1 

and, after that wise prince — iii. 3 

may seem as wise as virtuous — iv. B 

a wise stout captain, and persuaded.. — iv. 7 

great lords, wise men ne'er sit — v. 4 

say the king is wise, and virtuous . . Richard III. i. 1 
young, voliant, wise, and, no doubt.. — i. 2 
are seen, wise men put on their clonks — ii. 3 
eo wise so young, they say, did ne'er — iii. 1 
full of wise care is this your counsel — iv. i 

an English courtier may lie wi9e....l/ivii!/r;;;. i. 3 
had gathered a wise council to them — ii. 4 

exceeding wise, fair spoken — iv. 2 

1 know you wise, religious — v. I 

not only good and wise, but most .... — v. 2 
the wise and fool, the artist .. Troilus ^ CressUla, i. 3 

thou great,— and wise,— to hear — i. 3 

the beacon of the wise — ii. 2 

OS wine, no less noble — ii. 3 

he cannot but be wise — ii. 3 

but vou are wise; or else you love (irp.) — iii. 2 
do you in this wise oonipany?..7"imon ({/■;4(/i<-ni, ii.2 

nor tiiou uliogcther a wise man — ii.2 

I have noted tliee ulwuys wise — iii 1 

but tlion art wise; and thou know'st — iii. I 

more hoiii'st now. than wise — iv. 3 

poorest, of this most wise rebellion . . Coriotanus. i. 1 
than ever thuu wise words — iv. 2 



WISE— Brutus is wise Uep. iii. 1) ..Julius Cmsar, ii. 1 
thy miibter is a wise and voliant .... — iii. I 

they lire wise, and lionourable — iii. 2 

the wise powers deny us for our../4>i(oHD<5 C/fo. ii. I 

the wife gods seel our eyes iii. II 

but in the keeping of wise people .... — v. 2 

virtuous, wine, chaste, constant Cymbeline. i. 5 

but if I were as wise as honest iii. 4 

reverence, those I fear, the wise — iv. 2 

it was wise nature's end in the donation — v. 5 
wise I.aertes' son did graciously .. TiiusAndron. i. 2 
if Aaron now be wise, then is all eafc — iv. 4 

I perceive he was a wise fellow Pericles, i. 3 

counsellor, most wise ill general — v. 1 

but in no wise, till he — v. 2 (Gowcr) 

to converse with him that is wise Lear, i. 4 

for wise men are grown foppish — i. 4 (song) 

old and reverend, you should he wise.... — i. 4 

old, before thou liadst been wise — i. .'> 

when a wise man gives thee better — ii. 4 

and let the wise mail fly _ ii. 4 

who already, wise in our negligence .... — iii. 1 
here's a night pities neither wise men .. — iii. 2 

that's a wise man, and a fool — iii. 2 

elie is too fair, too wise Romeo 4^ Juliet, i. I 

good lady, and a wise, and virtuous.. — i.5 
he is wise; and, on my life, hath .... — ii. I 
when that wise men have no eyes? .. — iii. 3 
do thou but call my resolution wise.. — iv. I 

for wise men know well enough Hamlet, iii. i 

who, that's but a queen, fair, sober, wise — iii. 4 

pleasure, and most wise consent Othello, i. I 

if she be fair and wise,— fairness and wit — ii. I 
foul pranks which fair and wise ones do — ii. I 
nay, but be wise; yet we see nothing done — iii. 3 

thou ort wise, 'tis certain. Stand you — iv. 1 

are you wise? What, is he angry? _ iv. 1 

be wise, and get you home v. 2 

WISELIER -have taken it wiselier Tempest, ii. 1 

WISELY— then wisely, good sir, weigh — ii. I 

speak scholarly and wisely Merry Hives, i. 3 

make your excuse wisely Tu-el/lhKinhl. i. 5 

that he wisely shows, is fit — iii. 1 

if I could speak so wisely , . Measure for. Measure, i. 3 

and we must doit wisely Much Ado, iii. 6 

says very wisely tome Merchant of lenire, ii. 2 

that fools may not speak wisely ..As you Like it, i. 2 
says, very, wisely, it is ten o'clock .. — ii. 7 

a fool doth very wi.sely hit ii. 7 

but whether wisely or no, let the — iii. 2 

very wisely; puppiesi »'inler'sTate,\v. 3 

ay, and wisely too; for 'twould Macbeth, iii. (i 

very wisely, but I regarded him ljep.).\ Henry ll.i.'i 

pleading 60 wisely inexcusc 2Henryli: iv. 4 

most wisely hath Ulysses here. rroi7iii<5-Cr'fKidn,i. 3 

that speak so wisely iii. 2 

valiant, that can wisely sufli;r. 7'imo)i of Athens, iii. 5 
ay, and wisely. Ay, and truly ..Je/;ouCa'jar,iii. 3 
directly, and briefly, wisely, and truly — iii. 3 
very wisely, threat before you sting — v. 1 

would be wisely definite Cymbeline, i. 7 

wisely too fair, to merit bliss Romeo ^Juliet, \. I 

wisely, and slow; they stumble — ii.3 

very well took, i'faitli, wisely, wisely — ii. 4 

1 will; and this is wisely done — iii. 5 

you shall do mai-.-ellonsly wisely Hamlet, ii. 1 

as you said, and wisely was it said .. — iii. 3 
one that loved not wis"cly, but too well .Othello, v. 2 

WISER— he is the wiser man Merry ll'ives, ii. 3 

which is the wiser here? .. Memure for .Measure, ii. 1 
and tie the wiser souls to thy false .. — ii. 4 
men may grow wiser every dav 1 . . .4s you Like il, i . 2 

thou speak'st wiser than tliou art — ii. 4 

the wiser the waywarden make the — iv. 1 

hoping to be the wiser by your All's II ell, ii. 2 

well, 1 shall be wiser ii.3 

many, you are the wiser man ii. 4 

might make one wiser mad . . Comedy of Errors, v. 1 
be ransomed, and we ne'er the wiser .Henry I', iv. 1 

I am no wiser than a daw 1 Henry I I. ii. 4 

a lady wiser, fairer, truer Troilus <S- Crcs^iJa, i. 3 

loaden with irons, wiser than . Timon of Athens, iii. 5 
are a friend, and therein the wiser ..Cymbeline, i. 5 

WISEST— not talk nfier the wisest Tempest, ii. 2 

the wisest aunt, telling the Mid. X.'sDi earn. ii. I 

put on to eiitraj) the wisest ..Merch. of Venice, iii. 2 
fear which oft infects the wisest.. '>in/er'i'yn/», i. 2 
but the wisest beholder, that knew .. — v. 2 

say, it is the wisest course SHenryl'I. Iii. 1 

wisdom was a mirror to the wisest .. iii. 3 

was reckoned one the wisest prince. Wenn/ /'///. ii. 4 
wisest Grecians, pardon mo. . Troilus^ Cr'esuda, iv. 5 
we with wisest sorrow think on hiin....Hawito, i. 2 

we'll call up our wisest friends iv. I 

choice of H-liom vour wisest friends iv! S 

is great in mouths of wisest censiu-e Othello, ii. 3 

WISH— I wish mine eyes would Tempest, ii. 1 

I would not wish any comimnion — iii. 1 

We wish 3"0ur peace iv. I 

I wish myself were mudded in _ v! I 

that doth not wish you joy I _ v. I 

wish me partaker in thy TiroOen.ofl'eruna, i. I 

how stolid you affected to jiis wish?.. _ i. 3 

not depending on his friendly wish.. — i.i 

something sorted with his wish i. 3 

yon haveVour wish iv! 2 

US much I wish all good bcfortune you — iv! 3 

I have my wish for ever _ v. 4 

Anne is a pood girl, and I wish....JI/frr!/;rirM, i! 4 

now shall I sin in my wish Jii. 3 

even to my wish _ jv g 

than I am, I wish it might TireinhNighl, iii I 

the wish deserves a welcome .. Meas. for Meas. V'i. I 
but wheresoever, I wish him well .. _ iii. 2 
and well could wish you had not found — iv. I 

fi«iil path, that I would wish it go .. — iv. 3 
wish villi now, then v I 

I wish him ioy ofher .Wiic/i/4.;o, ii! I 

could wish lie Would moilcslly examine — ii. 3 
to wish him wrcdllc with aficctiou ,. — iii. \ 



WIS 



[ 838 ] 



WIT 



WISH he had not so accused her Much Ado, iv. 1 

I wish your worship well — v. 1 ■ 

half tliat wish the wisher's eyes ..Mid.N.'sDr. ii. 3 i 
I would wisli y(ni, or I would request — iii. I 

now do I wish it, love it — iv. 1 

than wish a enow in May's Love^sL.Lost, i. 1 

tliy own wish wish I tliee in every i^lacel — ii. 1 
Olieavens, I have mv wish — iv. S 

that I had my wish! And I had .. — iv. 3 

dost thou not wish in heart — V. 2 

then wish me better, I will give — v. 2 

aud I will wish thee never more to .. — v. 2 

1 wish yon all these three — v. 2 

you'll make me wish a Bin. .Meidmtit of Venice, iii. 2 
not be ambitious in my wisii, to wish — iii. 2 
you can wisli; for, I am sure (rtp.) .. — iii. 2 
lor your wish, and am well (rep.).... — iii. 4 
and wish, for all that, that I had not — iii. 4 
the wish would make else an unquiet — iv. 1 
I wish j'ou well, and so I take my .. — iv. 1 

1 should wish it dark, that 1 were — v. 1 

a good wish upon yon I As youLike il, i. 3 

and wish for her sake, more than for — ii. 4 

do you wish then, that the gods — iii. 3 

that I wish well: 'tis pity JU'sfreU,i.\ 

do after him wish too, since I — i. 2 

I wish might be found in the calendar — i. 3 
so true a name of likin", wisli chastely — i. 3 

to those that wish him live — ii. 1 

my wish receive, which great love grant! — ii. 3 
nor would I wish you; first, give .... — iii. 7 

and I wish it happily eijfected — iv. 5 

I will wish him to her i'nther.. Taming of Shrew, i. 1 

to have the next wish .after — i. 1 

and wish thee to a shrewd ill-favoured — i. 2 

and I'll not wish thee to her — i. 2 

to wi-ih mc wed to one half lunatic .. — ii. 1 
so well appareled as I wish you were — iii. 2 
and I wish, my liege, you had .. tVinter'sTale, ii. 1 
I would wish this youth should say.. — iv. 3 

I wisli you a wave o' the sea — iv. 3 

I wish yonr horses swift iVoc6e//i, iii. 1 

and wish the estate 0' the world — v. 5 

I would not wish them to a fairer — v. 7 

I would not wish a better father .... King John, i. 1 
lo, upon thy wish, our messenger.... — ii. 1 
not wish the fortune thine (jep.) .... — iii. 1 

cause to wish him dead — iv. 2 

and wish, (so please my sovereign) ..Richard II. i. I 

the wish of happy years — i. 3 

makes me wisli myself a beggar .... — v. 5 
to thy sacred state wish 1 all happiness — v. 6 

though I did wish him dead — v. B 

I could wisli, this tavern were ....XUenrylV. iii. 3 

as good as heart can wish 2 Henry IV. i. 1 

here doth he wish his person — iv. 1 

you wisli me health in very — iv. 2 

every thing lies level to our wish .... — iv. 4 

thy wish was father, Harry — iv. 4 

and I do wisli your honours may .... — y. 2 

with an inward wish you Henry V. i. 1 

that doth not wish success — ii. 2 

he could wish himself in the Thames — iv. 1 
he would not wish himself anywhere — iv. 1 

so ill, to wish him here alone — iv. 1 

I pray thee, wish not one man — iv. 3 

thou dost not wish more help from ,. — iv. 3 
likes me better, than to wish us one — iv. 3 

stood in the way for my wish — v. 2 

tlie rest, I wish thee gather \ Henry I'l. ii. 5 

that Exeter doth wish his days — iii. 1 

I wish some ravenous wolf — v. 4 

as free as heart can wish 2HenryI'I. iv. 7 

as I do long and wish to be a subject — iv. 9 

so wish I, I miglit thrust thy — iv. 10 

shall have pay, and every thing you wish — v. 1 

why, now thou hast thy wish 'iBmryVl. i. 4 

BO do I wish tlie crown, being — iii. 2 

that I should wisli them severed .... — iv. 1 
from those that wish the downfall .. — v. 

than I can wish to adders Richard Ill.i.2 

though I wish thy death, I will not.. — i. 2 
preserve better than you would wish! — i. 3 
those that I can wish upon thee .... — i. 3 

that thou Shalt wish for me — i. 3 

this was my wish, be thou, quoth I .. — iv. 1 

I wish the bastards dead — iv. 2 

that I should wish for thee to help rae — iv. 4 
wish he were something mistaken. .ficiiryr/i/. i. 1 
not friended by his wish, to your .... — i. 2 

wisli him ten fathom deep — ii. i 

I could wish more Christians — ii. 1 

ye tell me what you wish for both .. — iii. I 
I will not wisli ye half my miseries — iii. I 

appears, as I could wish mine enemy — iii. 2 
may you be happy in j^our wish .... — iii. 2 
speedily 1 wish to hear from Rome .. — iii. 2 
after my death I wish no other herald — iv. 2 

as you wish Christian peace — iv. 2 

I wish it grubbed up now — v. 1 

I wish your highness a quiet night .. — v. 1 
would not wish a drop ot Ttojan. Troilus fy Cress, ii. 2 

their fraction is more our wish — ii. 3 

'tis Agamemnon's wish: and great .. — iv. 5 
could wish my best friend at such. Timon of Alh. \. 2 

I also wish it to you. I think — iii. 6 

who would not wish to be from — iv. 2 

I do wish thou wert a dog — iv. 3 

the other, at liigh wish: best — iv. 3 

I'd exchange for this one wish — iv. 3 

neither wish I, you take much — v. 1 

I would wish me only he Coriolanus, i. 1 

I wish you much mirth — i. 3 

a soldier even to Gate's wish — i. 4 

their successes as we wish our own .. — i. fi 
though I could wish you were conducted — i. fi 
I wish no better, than have him hold — ii. 1 
to our noble consul wish we all joy .. — ii. 2 
I wish I had a cause to seek him tliere — iii- 1 
and wish to jump a body with — iii. 1 



WISH— did you wish me milder?.... Co>io!an«j, iii. 2 
a noble wish. Draw near, ye people — iii. 3 

may wish good Marcius home again — iv. 6 
yet I wish, sir, (I mean, for your .... — iv. 7 
though we had our wish, which side — v. 3 

every one doth wi.sh, you had ....JuUusCresar,\\. I 

shall wish I had been further — ii. 2 

I wish your enterprize to-day may . . — iii. 1 
I wish, we ma}': but yet have I a mind — iii. 1 

he comes upon a wish — iii. 2 

to wish things done, undone — iv. 2 

and fertile every wish Antony Sf Cleopatra, i. 2 

we wish it ours again — i. 2 

I wish, forbear; in time we hate .... — i. 3 

sirrah! you do wish yourself in Egypt? — ii. 3 

is as low as she would wish it — iii. 3 

I wish, I could be made so many men — iv. 2 

say that I wish, he never find — iv. 5 

I wish you all joy of the worm (rep.) — v. 2 
I wish not SO; unless it had been .... Cymbetine, i. 3 
wish that warmer days would ""'me.. — ii. 4 

I wish ye sport. You health — iv. 2 

but my wish hath a preferment in't. . — v. 4 
I know not how to wish a pair of .... — v. 6 
I say no more, nor wish no less.... TitusAndron. i. 2 
a charitable wish, and full of love .. — iv. 2 

oft have you heard me wish for — v. 2 

which I wish may prove more stern — v. 2 
I life would wish, and that I . . Pericles, i. (Gower) 
save that, I wish thee happiness I . . . . — i. 1 
I would wish no better office, than .. — ii. 1 

I'd wish to make one there — ii. I 

for his sake, I wish the having of it.. — ii. 1 

take I your wish, I leap into — ii. 4 

have, and wish but for't — iv. 4 (Gower) 

wish thine enemy to be? (rep.) — iv. 6 

you wish me well: being on shore .. — v. 1 

yet, let me obtain my wish — v. I 

I'd wish no better choice — v. I 

as thy desires can wish — y. I 

I cannot wish the fault undone Lear,\. 1 

so will you wish on me, when — ii. 4 

married once, I have my wish ..Romeo fy Juliet, i. 3 
and wish his mistress were that kind — ii. 1 
and yet I wish but for the thing ... . — ii. 2 
blistered be thy tongue, for such a wish! — iii. 2 
as one's heart could wish a man .... — iii. 5 

sin, to wish me thus forsworn — iii. 5 

I do wish that your good beauties be . . Hamlet, iii. I 
madam, I wish it may. Ophelia, walk . . — iii. 1 
but wish and beg, your sudden coming . . — iv. 7 
write from us; wish [Co/. Kn*. -to] him ..Olhello,\.% 

fled from her wish, and yet said — ii. 1 

I could well wish courtesy would invent — ii. 3 
in rage strike those that wish them best — ii. 3 
could heartily wish this had not befallen — ii. 3 

nor my wish, to have him see me — iii. 4 

you did wish, that I would make her turn — iv. 1 

WISHED— have wished athing. Tioo Gen. of Ver. ii. 4 
he you oft have wished to hear from — ii. 4 

I wished your venison better Merry Wives, i. 1 

wished to see thee (rep. iii. 4) .. Twelfth N. ii. 5 (let.) 
nor wished to hold my peace .... Meas.fjrMfas. v. 1 
her shame, that may be wished for.. Much Ado, iv. 1 
and if a merry meeting may be wished — v, 1 
sick to death, wished himself.. Love'.^L.L. iv. 3 (ver.) 
wished in silence that it were . . Mer. of Venice, ii. 8 

this he wished; I, after him All'sH'ell,i.2 

than I think, she wished me — i. 3 

tlie wished haven of my bliss .Taming of Shrew, v. 1 

as dice are to be wished Winter's Tale, i. 2 

I never wished to see you sorry — ii. 1 

seized his wished ;ibility, he had .... — v. 1 
by the beneiit of his wished light. Come*/ <)/' Err. i. 1 

which you have wished so long King John, v. 5 

that wished him on the barren I llennjIV. i. 3 

this matter to the wished end I Henry Vl. iii. 3 

I wished this world's eternity iHcnryVI. ii. 4 

and so, I wished, thy body might.... — iii. 2 
losing ken of Albion's wished coast — iii. 2 

we wished your lordship here .... Richard III. iii. 5 

I wished might fall on rae — v. I 

wherein I wished to fall by the false — v. 1 
such a man I would have wished . . Henry VIII. ii. 2 
ever have unshed the sleeping of this - ii. 4 

I wished me thus? Wished Troilusff Cress, iii. 2 

I wished myself a man — iii. 2 

I have often wished myself poorer. 3'(*mo7i of Ath. i. 2 

but yet they could have wished — ii. 2 

man was wished to love his enemies — iv. 3 
we wished Coriolanus had loved . . Coriolanus, iv. 6 

wherein you wished us narties — v. 6 

have wished that noble 'Brutus ....,/uZmsC<7?sar, i. 2 
he wished, to day our enterprize .... — iii. 1 
was wished, until he were .. Antony ^ Cleopatra, i. 4 
this she wished me to make hnovrn. Cymbetine, iii. 5 
for I wished thou shouldst be coloured — v. 1 
have wished that Lucius were ., Titus Andron. iv, i 
consummation devoutly to be wished.. HomW, iii, 1 
she wished she had not heard it (rep.) ..Othello, i. 3 

WISHED-FOR-they wished-for eome.l Henry IV. i. 2 

WISHER'S eyes be pressed! ....Mid.N:sDream,i\. 3 
wi ehers were ever fool s ..An tony <§- Cleopatra, i v. 1 3 

WISHES— and my good wishes.... Twelfth Night, ii. 5 
thus wisdom wishes to appear ..Meas. for Mens. ii. 4 
and sighs, wislies, and tears, poor ..Mid.i\'.'sDr. i. 1 
and seen our wishes prosper ., Merch. of Venice, iii. 2 
and gentle wishes, go withme to.. Asyou Like it, i. 2 

in having what he wishes for — v. 2 

and all made of wishes — v. 2 

madam, I desire your holy wishes ....AlVslVell, i. 1 
the best wishes, that can lie forged. ... — i. 1 

do shut us up in wishes, might — i. 1 

her that so wishes, and her humble .. — ii. 3 

he wishes earnestly fVinter'sTale, iv. (chorus) 

I will not wish thy wishes thrive ,, King John, iii. 1 
if wishes would prevail with me .... Henry V. iii. 2 

what's he, that wishes so? — iv. 3 

joy and good wishes to our — v. 2 

good wishes, praise, and prayers .... 1 Henry VI. v. 3 



WISHES towards you honour Henry VIII. i . 

nor my wishes more worth than (rep.) — ii. 

does deserve our better wishes — v. 

no power to make his wishes gooA. Timon nf Ath. i. 
to see inlieriteil my very wishes ....Coriolanus, ii. 
if every of your wishes ha.d. . Antony ^ Cleopatra, J. 
but your sheets are privy to your wishes — i. 

fill tliy wishes to the brim with — iii. I 

to whom I gave tlieir wishes — iv. 1 

he wishes you all happiness . . Cymbeline, iii. 2 (let. 

Britons have their wislies in it — iii. 

to your wishes' height advance .. TitusAndron. ii 
to your wishes pleasure bring . . Pericles, i. (Gower 
wishes fall out as they're willed — v. 2 (Gowei 

our wishes, on the way, may Lear, iv. 

my thoughts and wishes bend again .... Hamlet, i. 

WISHEST should be undone Macbeth, i. 

number, thee, that wishest shame!. .2He«i!/ VI. iii. 

WISHETHyouin heaven \ Henry IV. iii. 

WISHEUL-with my wishful Bight..3Hejjn/;7. iii. 

WISHING me with him TwoGen. of Verona, i. 

but rather wishing a more strict .Meas. for Meas. i. 
with place, or place with wishing .... — ii. 
I cannot be a man with wishing .... Much Ado, i v. 
that wishing well, had not a body ....All's Well, i. 

wishing clocks more swift? Winttr'sTale, i. 2 

wishing his foot were equal 3 HeriryVI. iii. 2 

hath sent to me, wishing me to .. ..HenryVIII. i. 2 
unsavoury, wishing him ray meat? . . Pericles, ii. 3 
wishing it so much blood unto your life — ii. 3 

WISP— a wisp of straw were worth ..SHenryVI. ii. 2 

WIST— and, if I wist, he did,-bnt ..] Henry I'l. iv. 

WISTLY CCoZ.-wishtly] looked on me.Richard II. v. 

WIT— winding up the watch of his viit. Tempest, ii. 
out o' your wits, and hearing too? .... — iii. 

■ wit shall not go imrewarded — iv. 

youth have ever homely wits .. Two Gen. of Ver. i. 
a folly bought with wit, or else a wit by — i. 

inhabits in the finest wits of all — i. 

young and tender wit is turned to folly — i. 

made wit with musing weak — i. 

but you have a (^uick wit — i. 

borrows his wit from your — ii. 

I shall make your wit bankrupt .... — ii. 

and he wants wit — ii. 

to learn his wit to exchange — ii. 

as thou hast lent me wit to — ii. 

and 3'et I have the wit to think — iii. 

she hath more hair than wit (rep.) .. — iii. 
that covers the wit, is more than (rep.) — iii. 
if I had not had more wit than he . . — iv. 

by wit or steel Merry Wives, i . 

frights humour out of his wits — ii. 

I will stare him ont of his wits — ii. 

taught me more wit than ever — iv. 5 

whip me with their fine wits — iv. 5 

my admirable dexterity of wit — i v. ,•> 

see now, how wit may be made — v. 5 

thou thy silence to my wit ....;. Twelfth Kight, i. 2 
sometimes I have no more wit than — i.3 

that does harm to my wit — i.3 

neither in estate, years, nor wit — i.3 

wit, and't be thy will, put me — i. 5 

those wits, that think they have .... — i. 5 
better a witty fool, than a foolish wit — i. 5 
have you no wit, manners, nor honesty — ii. 3 
do not think I have wit enough .... — ii. 3 
thou most excellent devil of wit!.... — ii. 6 

a cheveril glove to a good wit — iii. 

craves a kind of wit — iii. 

quite taint their wit — iii. 

when wit and youth is come — iii. 

nor wit, nor reason, can my — iii. 

the man is tainted in his wits — iii. 

ere I will allow of thy wits — iv. 2 

besides your five wits? — iv. 2 

I am as well in my wits (rep.) — iv. 2 

no better in your wits than afool.... — iv. 2 

to face me out of my wits — iv. 2 

thy wits the heavens restore! — iv. 2 

with wit and safety — v. 1 

read i' thy right wits — v. 1 

but to read his right wits — v. 1 

few of any wit in such matters . . Meas. for Meas. ii. I 
'tis wit in them; but, in the less .... — ii. 2 
thousand 'scapes of wit make thee .. — iv. 1 

my lord, her wits, I fear me — v. 1 

or wit, or impudence, that yet — v. 1 

but t'nere is a skirmish of wit MuchAdo,\. 1 

four of his five wits went halting ofi' .. — i. I 
so that if he have wit enough to keep.. — i. 1 

hath the fellow any wit, that — i. 2 

not know you by your excellent wit?.. — ii. 1 

and that r had my good wit out of — ii. 1 

and the commendation is not in his wit — ii. 1 
in despite of his quick wit and his .... — ii. i 
show some sparks that are like wit .... — ii. 3 

it is no addition to her wit — ii. 3 

and remnants of wit broken on me .... — ii.3 

and her wit values itself so highly — iii. 1 

press me to death with wit — iii. 1 

so swift and excellent awit, as she is .. — iii. 1 
doth not my wit become me rarely? .. — iii. 4 

and his wits are not so blunt — iii. 5 

when the age is in, the wit is out — iii. 5 

we will spare for no wit, I warrant .... — iii. .') 

wilt thou use thy wit — v. 1 

dost thou wear thy wit by thy side — v. 1 

have been beside their wit — v. 1 

sir, I shall meet your wit in tlie career — v. 1 

sir, your wit ambles well — v. 1 

thy wit the other day; I said (rep.") — v. ) 

no, said I, a great wit; right, saj's she.. — v. 1 

a good wit; just, said she — v 1 

and leaves olf his wit — v. 1 

thy wit is as quick as the greyhound's. . — v. 2 

a most manlj' wit, Margaret — v. 2 

so forcible is thy wit — v. 2 

frisht the ladies out of their wits . .Mid.N.'sDr. i. 2 
who would set his wit to so foolish .. — iii. 1 



WIT 



[ 830 ] 



WIT 



_ ii. 1 



— iv. 1 



iv. 2 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 



V. 1 
V. 1 

V. a 



_ V. 2 



V. 2 
V. 2 
V. 2 
V. 2 
V. 2 
.•,ii. 1 
ii. 9 
ii. 9 
ii.9 
iii. 5 
iii. 5 



WlTenouRlitoBctout MiJ.N. i Dream, lii. I 

past the » it of iimii to eay what .... — iv. 1 
liehatl. siinplv thebest vvltolaiiy .. — iv. 8 

Imt Imnk'iout (luite the wits Love iL.Loil, I. 1 

for her wit. U was so, sir tr.;p.) .... — j. 2 

my fatl\er'.) wit. ami mv niotlier 8 .. — i- f^ 

niul lie hail a very gooil wit — >• - 

devise, wit; write pen.... — .\- ' 

ill B|K-ii(liiiK your wit in the praise .. — !•• 

is a sliarp wit matched witli too — n. 

euch siiort-lived wits do wither — ii. 

forheliiith wit tomakean ill ...... — !!• 

to wingrnee il'.oiigh hclmd no wit .. — ii. 
hiseycnegets occasion for his wit.... — "- > 

your wit's too hot, it siieeds too fust.. 

good wits will lie jangling' 

war of wits were much lietter used .. 

were as slender as my wit, one of 

most i neony vulgar wi 1 1 ...... . ... . . 

o" t'otlicr side, that handful of wit? .. 

can you tell by your wit, what 

of poetry, wit. nor invention 

well proved wit I by the lord 

I'll mark how love can vary wit .... 

liow will he spend his wit? 

a quick venew of wit — 

it rejoieeth my intellect: true wit.... 

thou halfpenny purse of wit 

a sot of wit well played 

spend his prodigal wits lu bootless .. 
when they are eatchcd, as wit turned 

and wit's own grace to grace 

when wit doth dote 

to prove by wit, worth in 

muster your wits; stand m .......... 

mad wenches; you have simple wits 
these the breed of wits so wondered at? 
well-liking wits they have .......... 

O poverty in wit, kingly-poor flouti — 

well, lietter wits have worn — 

this fellow pecks up wit, as pigeons . . — 

he is wit's pedlar; and retails his — 

your wit makes wise tilings foolish .. — 
thrust thy sharp wit quite through .. — 

my wit is at an end — 

welcome, pure witl thou partest — 

within the mercy of your wit — 

all the fierce endeavour of /our wi t . . — 
hedged me by his wit. to yield.. lUoc/i. o/l ei 

the wisdom by their wit to lose — 

to wit, besides commends — 

thou spend'st such high-day wit in.. — 
the best grace of wit will shortly .... — 

the whole wealth of thy wit in — 

none that thou hast wit enough .... — ; 

repair thy wit, good youth — i 

hath given iis wit to flout nt As you Like it, 

tlieeutteroffof nature's wit ........ — 

perceiving our natural wits too dull — 
whctstoneof the wits: how now, wit? — 
for since the little wit that fools .... — 

as wit and fortune will — 

be 'ware of mine own wit, till I — 

learned no wit by nature or art 

you have too courtly a wit for rae 

you have a nimble wit; I think.. 

nor a man's good wit seconded with 
think my honesty ranker than my wit 
could not have the wit to do this . . . . 
doors upon a woman's wit, and it will 
Buch a wit, he might say, wit, whither 
wit going to your neighbour's bed (rep.) 
we that liave good wits, have much to 

ay, sir, I have a pretty wit — 

to wit, I kill thee, make thee — v. 1 

presentation of that, he shoots his wit — v. 4 
had the wit, which I can well observe -All's Well, i. 2 
joy to see your wit restored!.. 7'ammfro/i7i. 2 (ind.) 
bend tiioughts and wits to achieve her — i. 1 
hearing oflier beauty, and her wit .. — n. 1 
Buffer what wit can make heavy.. C'ln/os T.i/f.iv. 3 

barrcnmy wit? if voluble and Comedy of lirr.Vi. 1 

Bcek inv wit in my sliouhlers — ii. 2 

he hatli given them in wit — "'' 

more hair than wit. Not a man (,rep.) 

plain-dealers without wit , 

by all my wit being scanned, want wit 
I knew, he was not in his perfect wits 
Bcareil thy husband from the use of wits .- . 

brought him to his wits again — v. 1 

all thv wit; and yet, i'faith, with wit..il/.iiV(/i,iy. 2 

Buch disorder in my wit Kiiit;.h,iin, i|i. I 

mutiny with wit's regard Hichanl 11. ii. 1 

have hoi p madmen to their wits — v. .■) 

and rash bavin wits, soon kindled..! /frnry/r. in. 2 
but the cause tliat wit is in other meD.2i/fiir//ir. i. 2 
and hath hisquick wit wastedin .... — i. 2 

your wit single? and every part — 1.2 

tliank your prettv sweet wit for it .. — 1.2 

a good wit will make use of — i. 2 

it shall serve among wits of no — ii. 2 

a good wit. lie a good wit! (rf/i.) .. — ii. 4 

I would you had but the wit — iv. 3 

tlie birth becomes excellent wit — iv. 3 

have von your wits? know you — v. .■) 

to wit, no female should be inheritrix . tleitry r. i. 2 

will savour but of shallow wit — i. 2 

ale-washed wits, is wcinilerful — iii.C 

nuy, tlie mail hatli no wit — ni. 7 

leaving their wits witli their wives .. — iii. 7 
being ill liis right wits and his goot .. — iv. 7 

with all my wits, my pains.. — v. 2 

my wit untrained in any kind Mlenryf I. i. 2 

tearch out thy wit for secret ixilicics — m. 3 
liereave him of his wits with wonder — v. 3 

such as my wit affcirds ilUiirijn.i. 1 

iiiv brother Bedford toil his wits .... — _,i. 1 

I iudge mine owu wit pood — iii. I 

I'll try this widow's wit allenryVl. in. 2 

her words do show lier wit incomparable — in. 2 



iii. 2 



iv. 1 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
V. ! 



— ii. 2 

— ii. 2 

— ii.2 
V. 1 



WIT- away witli scrupulous wit!....3iJriirv/'/. Iv. 7 
to wit, ail iiidigest deformed lump .. — v. 
this keen encounter of our wits ....Kiclimd in. i. 2 
those who have llu' wit tocliiim .... — ill- 1 

cnricli his wit, his wit sit ilown — ii . ! 

with whnt a slnirp-piovickd withe.. — ni. 1 
and luimitelied wit and judgment. /fi-nr!/r//;.ji. 1 
with iiiv weak wit, and to such men — i}]- 1 

luekiii'.; wit to make a seemly — lii- 1 

lialicriiiisher's wife of small wit near — v. 3 
your si^L-r Cassandra's wit .. Troifui^Crejiii/u, 1. 1 

shall net have his wit this year — j. 2 

he has a slirewd wit, I can tell you .. — i. 2 
upon my wit, to defend my wiles.... — i. 2 

hear music, wit, and oracle — .1.3 

sooner rail tliee into wit and holiness — ii. I 

among those of any wit — ii. 1 

wliiit modicums of wit lie utters! .... — i;. 1 

wlio wears his wit in liis belly — ii. I 

hasnot 90 mucii wit— miy ..._. — ii- 1 

will you set your wit to a fool's? .... — ii- 1 

a great deal of your wit too — jj. I 

whose wit was mouldy ere — ii- I 

I will keep where there is wit stirring — ii. I 

little less than little wit from — ii. 3 

wit would be out of fashion — ii- 3 

wlieie is my wit? I know not — iii. '^ 

for beauty, wit, iiighbirtli — jii- 3 

there were wit in this head — in. 3 

tlie moral of mv wit is-plain — iv. -1 

sliould wit larded with malice tre;;.) — v. 1 
that 1 hud no angry wit to be .. Timono/Athciis,]- 1 

BO much wit thou lauk'st — ii.2 

for liis wits are drownedand lost .... — iv. 3 

our wits are so diversly (rep.) Cnriolaiius, ii. 3 

my wit would fly? nay, your wit will not — ii. 3 
I'll try whether my old wit be in — — iii. ! 
baited with one that wants her wits? — iv. 2 

is a sauce to his good wit JnlimC<riar,\. 2 

have neitiier wit rC'of.-writ] nor words — iii. 2 

seen small reflection of her wit Cymheline, i. 3 

if his wit had been like him — ii. 1 

upon licr wit doth earthly honour. 7'i7us/)n* on. ii. 1 
thy cars want wit, thy wit wants edge — ii. 1 
our empress, with her sacred wit .... — li. 1 
he, that had wit, would tliiiik that I — u. 3 

have so over\vhelined liis wits — iv. 1 

when wit's more ripe, accept Pericles, i. (Gower) 

now please you wit the enitapli — iv. 4 (Gower) 

if not by birth, have lauds by wit Lear, i. 2 

tliouhadst little wit in tliy bald crown.. — i. -I 
know not how their wits to wear . . — i. 4 (song) 

hast pared tliy wit o' both sides — i- 4 

thy wit shall not go slipshod — }. :> 

having more man than wit about me.... — li. 4 

my wits begin to turn _.,, — iii. 2 

he tliat has a little tiny wit — in. 2 (song) 

bless thy five wits! (rep. iii. G) — iii. 4 

liis wits begin to unsettle — in- 4 

tliegrief hatli crazed my wits — iii- 4 

all the power of liis wits has given — iii. G 

trouble liim not, his wits are gone — iii. G 

been scared out of his good wits — iv. 1 

that thy life and wits at once — iv. 7 

she hath Dian's wit Ilomeo S/ JulUl, i. ! 

backward, when tliou hast more wit — i. 3 

ere once in our five wits — i. 4 

but 'tis no wit to BO. Why, may .... — i. 4 
[Kilt.'] sure wit. rbllow me tliis jest — li. 4 

good Benvolio: my wits fail — ii. 4 

if tliy wits run the wiUl-goose — ii. 4 

in one of thy wits, than, 1 am fcure .. — ii. 4 

here's a wit of chcveril — jj- 4 

thy shape, thy love, tliy wit (irp.) .. — in. 3 
thy wit, tliat ornament to shape .... — iii. 3 

ehows still some want of wit — iii. .'> 

past the compass of my wits — iv. I 

yourdagger, and put out your wit .. — iv. /, 
my wit; 1 will dry— beat you (re/).).. — iv. 5 

witchcraft of his wit, with (rrp.) Ilamlet^]. ^ 

since brevity is the soul of wit — ii. 2 

a plentiful lack of wit, togetlier — _ii.2 

my wit's diseased; but, sir, such answer — iii. 2 

a young maid's wits should be as — iv. 6 

liadst thou thy wits, and didst persuade — iv. a 

I like thy wit well, in good faith — v. I 

he shall recover his wits there — v. 1 

'faith, e'en with losing his wits — V. 1 

what, have you lost vour wits? Dlliello, i. 1 

her duty, bettutv, wit, and fortunes — i. 1 

b- not too Imrd for my wits, and all .... — _i. 3 

fiiirneas and wit. the one's for use — ii. 1 

hluck.aiiil tlieieto have a wit — ii. 1 

and a little more wit, return to Venice .. — ii. 3 
work by wit, and not by witcliciafi (I'p.) — ii. 3 
tlie execution of his wit, huixls, hearts .. — iii. 3 
this is within the compiiBS of man's wit.. — iii. 3 
I ijr'ythce, bear some charity to my wit — iv. 1 
so high and plenteous wit and invention! — iv. 1 

are his wits safe? is lie not light of — iv. 1 

that turned your wit tlie seamy side .... — Iv. 2 

not without wit and judgment — iv. 2 

WITCII-the foul witch Sycurax (.rep.) . Tempest, i. 2 

his mother was a witch — .v. 1 

he swears, she's n. wilch Merry If'ii'c.?, iv. 2 

like the witeli of Brentford (rep. iv.i) — jv. 2 
a witch, a quean, an old cozening .. — iv. 2 
come down, you witch, you hag you — iv. 2 

out of my door, you witch! — iv. 2 

liang her. witclil — Jv- 2 

i' the common stocks, for a witch.... — l>;. 5 
for beauty is a witch, against whose.. W«rA/<rfo,ii. I 

a mankind witch! hence with Winler'tTale, ii. 3 

ran from lier as a witch Comedy qf Error; in. 2 

avaiint, thou witcli I come — iv. 3 

Btav lure still, and turn witch — ■ iv. 1 

aroint thee, wilclil llie rump-fed Slachelli, 1. 3 

and witch the world with iiobic 1 lleiiryll'. iv. 1 

like a foul ami ugly witcli, doth .Kriiii//'. iv. (cho.) 
thou art a witch, and straightwoy ..1 llrmyl'L i. i 



WITCM.l'V fear, not force \ Henry f'L 1. 5 

I'ucelle. tliat witcli, that ilamned — iii. 2 

see, how the iiglv witch doth bend .. — v. 3 

Jouidain, the cunning witch •iUenryi'l. j. i 

gives gold, to bring llie witch — \.'i 

the witch in Smilhlleld shall be burned — \}.» 
tosit and witch me, as Ascuiiiusdid — iii. 2 
witch Bwect ladies with my words..3;(riir|/r;. in. i 
foul wrinkled witch, what makc8t../(icAarJ ///. i. 3 
that monstrous witcii, consorted — — iii. 4 

thou stool fora witch! 7roi/u» ^Cr«Wda, ii. I 

licshrcw the witch! — Iv. 2 

you witch mc In it Timon o/ Alliens, v. 2 

I forgive thee for a witch . . Antony (f Cleopatra, 1. ?■ 

now the witch take rae, if I — .iv.2 

the witch shall die — iv. 10 

such a holy witch, that he cuchant9. .Cymliehne. i. 7 
aroint thee, witch, aroint thee! .. Lear, iii. 4 (song) 

nor witch liath power to charm Ilmnlei.i. I 

WITCIICUAFTdrewme hitlier .. 7VW/VA An,-/./, v. I 
piece of excellent witchcraft .. .. ICu/cr'.?-,,/-^, iv. 3 
now witchcraft celebrates pale Hecate's. ■i/nd/c//i,ii.l 
witchcraft with revenue cherish ....KivaJohn, iii. I 

you have witchcraft in your lips Urniyl'.y. 2 

plots of damned witchcraft Richard III. iii. 4 

their witchcraft thus have marked me — iii. i 
hath a witchcraft over the king ..lleiini fill. iii. 2 
not know what witchcraft's in liim.t"<>iio/irii/i, ly. 7 
let witchcraft join with beauty ..Autn/iy^Clen. ii. 1 
no witchcraft charm thee! . . Cymheliue, iv. 2 (song) 

witli witclieraft of his wit Ilamlel, i. S 

but this gallant had witchcraft in't — iv. 7 

sans witchcraft could not— Whoe'er Othello, i. 3 

this only is the witchcraft I have used .. — i. 3 

we work by wit, and not by witchcraft .. — ii. 3 

he thought, 'twas witchcruft; but I am.. — iii. 3 

WITCUED-am I not witched like..2;/.iir!/r;. iii. 2 

WrrCIIKS that deform CnmrJyo/lirron.t. 2 

there's none but witches do inhabit.. — iii. 2 
I see, these witches are afraid of .. .. — iv. 4 

tooth of wolf; witches' mummy Macbeth, iv. 1 

to join with witchCB. and the help ..IHcuryl'I. ii. 1 

with witches and with conjurers IUenryi'l. ii. 1 

WITCHING time of night Hamlet, iii. 2 

WIT-CRACKEKS cannot flout MuchAdo,\. 4 

WITHDRAW thee. Valentine ..TuoGen. ofler. v. 4 
us withdraw together (rep. i. 2). .Meat, for Meat.i. 1 

madam, withdraw; the prince MuckAdo, iii. 4 

withdraw into a chamber by yourselves — v. 4 
tlion say bo, withdraw, and prove .Mid.S.'sDr. iii. 2 
Indies withdraw; the gallants me.l.ore'sL.Lost, v. 2 
call her; withdraw yourselves .. Winter'sTale, ii. 2 
withdraw and weep upon the spot ..Kini:.lnhn, v. 2 

withdraw with us; and let K'ichard II.S.Z 

witlidraw yourselves, and leave us here -- v. 3 

we'll withdraw awhile 1 Hfriry/r. iv. 3 

1 pr'ytliee Harry, withdraw thyself .. — v. 4 
let US withdrawinto the other room.2H«iii//r. iv. 4 
I'll withdraw me and my bloody . . 1 Ururij 11. ly. 2 
withdraw yourself awhile, I'll fin .Jtichard III. iii. 4 
withdraw thee, wretched Jlargaret .. — iv. 4 
withdraw, mv lord, I'll help you to.. — v. 4 
if it plea-se you, we may now withdraw — y. 4 

to withdraw into your private Henry I' 1 11. iii. 1 

tribunes, withdraw awhile Cono'""'", iii. I 

let's withdraw; and meet the timcfi/mMmc, iy. 3 
that you withdraw vou. and abate . . TiiusAml. \. 1 
he is not with himself; let us withdraw — i. 2 

we'll withdraw into the gallery Pericles, ii 2 

let us witlidraw, 'twill be a storm /..-iii-, ii. 4 

I will withdniw: but this intrusion. ((oineu<5-Ju/. i. 5 

wouldst thou withdraw it? for what — ii.2 

either withdraw into some private |>Iace — iii. 1 

him coming: let's withdraw (ir;). iii. 4).Hiimto, iii. 1 

to withdraw with you: why do you go .. — iii. 2 

I will withdraw, to furnish me w:th . . Othello, iii. 3 

do vou withdniw vourscll' a little while.. — iv. I 

wil'l vou withdraw? now will I <im-stion — iv. ! 

W/THDRAWIXG. Whnt Mm.'^iire Tor Mensnre. ill 2 

WlTHDliAWN her father to break ...tlucli.Ado, ii. I 

whv hast thou withdrawn thyself?. .3«<-,i>i/r/. ii. 3 

WrfllDREW— when we withdrew.. 2 i/niri//;'. iv. 4 

care withdrew mc from TroHus ^' Crrstida, v. 4 

withdrew to mine own room again .... Ilnmtei, v. 2 

WI'rUER as thevgrow Lore's!.. Ij>st, ii. I 

do not see, my fair rose wither IHehard / /. v. 1 

jade is rung in the withers out of ..MIenryll'. ii. 1 

a fair face will wither Ileiityl'. v. 2 

until it wither with me to my grave.l llenryfl. ii. 4 
wither garden; and lie hcuceforth..2l/fiir|/r;. iv. 10 
wither one rose and let the (rep.) ..^illenryl'l, ii. S 

why wither not the leaves Itichardlll. ii. 2 

debts wither them : he men like. 7'iinoii nf.ilheni, iv. 3 
ogc cannot wilher her, nor. . Antony HCieopalra,\\. i 

pel force must wither oud come to Lear, iv. 3 

two more summers wither in their .llomro^Jnl. i.'i 
jade wince, our withers are iiiiwrung. . llamitt, iii. 2 
growth again, it needs must wilher ....Othello, v. 2 

WlTIIERlcn roots, and busks Trmiiest, i. 2 

a withered serving-man Merry II ires, i. 3 

old. cold, withered, and of intolcraldc — v. 5 
on lier withered dew-lap pour...Wii/.A'.'«nrMin,ii. I 

a withered hermit, flvesiore Loti*'«/.. /.nj(, iv. 3 

French witheicd iicurs (rrp.) All'sllell. i. I 

yet vou uie wiilivrcd. "J'is w'llh. .Tamingo/Sh. ii. I 

on vour cndtv withered hidcl — 11. I 

old", wrinkleif, fiidiil, withered — iv. 

wing me to some withered bough. IVintrr'sTale, v. 3 
so withered and so wild in their nitirc.. AfactrA, i. 
and willured murder, alarmed by .. — ii. I 
at once a too long withered flower ..llichard II. ii. 1 
bay-trees in our country arc all withered — ii. 4 
am withered like on olcl apple-john.l /Irmi/O'. iii. 3 

round, old, withered Unighls Ulenryl r. i\. t 

look if the witlun d elder hath not .. — ii. 4 

from this bare witluriil trunk — iv. 4 

their witheicd hands hold up tow.ird. //(•nry r. iv. 1 
like toawithend vine tliat droops.. I I/cMry/7. ii. & 

ehall see thee withered. bloiKly _ iv.2 

mine arm up like a withered shrub.3//rni!/n. iii. 2 



WIT 

WITHERED— hateful withered hog. iSic/iard I//, i.3 
like a blasted eapling, withered up .. — iii. 4 

put this withered brawn Troilua 4r Cressida, i. 3 

grieve thee? O withered trutli! — v. 2 

witliered is the garland of Antony fyCleo. iv. 13 

as flowers, now withered; even so ..Cj/mbftine, iv. "J 
a gathered lily almost withered .TilusAndron. iii. 1 
Bucli witliered lierbs as tlieee are meet — iii. 1 

his present is a withered brancli Pericles, ii. 2 

who withered in her spring of year — iv. 4 (Gow.) 

tliev withered all, wlien my father ....Hamlel, iv. 5 

WITHERING out a young man's ..Mid.N.'s Dr. i. 1 

which witliering on the virgin tliorn — 1. 1 

"VVITHUELD-his lands withheld. /is !/o!< Like it. v. 4 

tliese rights so forcibly withheld ....King John, i. 1 

and bite, because he was witliheld ..iHenryVI. v. 1 

his mother was perforce witliheld. Hi'cAarii ///. iii, 1 

"WITHHOLD-withholds the loved. ..Wd.A'.'sDr. ii. 1 

and her withliolds from me . . Taming ofShrevi, i. 2 

withhold thy speed, dreadful occasionl K.John, iv. 2 

withhold thine indignation, mighty — v. 6 

could not withhold thy riots iHenrylV. iv. 4 

that you withhold his levied liost . . 1 Henry VI. iv. 4 

withhold revenge, dear God 1 3HeiiruVI. ii. 2 

that witliholds fCol. ffn«.-holds offl, Richard III. iv. 5 
wlio should witlihold me? .. Troilus ^Cressida, v. 3 
what cause withholds you then . . JutiusCcesar, iii. 2 
your letters did withlioUl our ..Antony ^Cleo. iii. 6 
the gods withhold mel shall I do that — iv. 12 
to withliold the vengeance that they ..Pez-lcles, ii. 4 
WITHOLD QKn^.-Swithold] footed. Leor, iii. 4 (song) 
WITHOUT-BOOK prologue ....Iiomeo& Juliet, i. 4 

WITHOUT-DOORform Winter'sTale, ii. 1 

WITHSTAND them iHenryfl. iv. 5 

WITHSTOOD— must be withstood ..Richard II. i. 1 

AVITLESS bravery keeps Measure/or Measure, i. 4 

a witty mother! witless else ]\er..TamingofSh. ii. 1 
lilce witless'anticks, one anotlier. Troilus ^Cress. v. S 
WITNESS— hear witness to this sound. Tempest, iii. 1 
witness heaven (rep. v. 4) .. Two Gen, of Verona, ii. 6 
to wliom, thyself art witness, I am .. — iv. 2 

witness good bringing up — iv. 4 

heaven he my witness, you do if. . Merry WVtics, i v. 2 
and the witness of a good conscience — iv. 2 
contents shall witness to him .. Meas.for Meas. iv. 3 

is this the witness, friar? — v. 1 

this is no witness for lord Angelo .... — v. 1 
and in tlie witness of his proper ear .. — v. 1 
it is the witness still of excellency ..Much Ado, ii. 3 
I can bear them witness {rep. v. 2) .. — ii. 3 

to witness simple virtue? — iv. 1 

be proved upon tliee by good witness — iv. 2 
were as great; be witness this .... Lovers L. Lost, v. 2 
producing holy witness, is like ..Mer. ofVenice, i. 3 
thy tlioiights, are witness that thou art — ii. 6 
Lorenzo here sliall witness, I set forth — v. 1 
doth his effigies witness most , . , . As youLilte it, ii. 7 
my verse, in witness of my love .... — iii. 2 

but take the Highest to witness AlVsWell, iv. 2 

one here in court could witness it .... — v. 3 
to make mine eye tlie witness of .Taming of Sh. ii. 1 
than words can witness or your tlioughts — ii. I 
eyes are witness of her lightness .... — iv. 2 

here's packing, with a witness — v. 1 

I witness' to the times that.. Winter' $Tale, iv. (cho.) 

do, and be witness to't (re/j.) — iv. 3 

bear witness to his oath — v. 1 

tlie world may witness, that ..Comedy of Errors, \. 1 

my two ears can witness — ii. I 

witness witli her, that she did frcp.) — iv. 4 

witness you, that he is borne about .. — v. 1 
could witness it, for lie was with .... — v. 1 

thus far I witness with him — v. i 

can witness with me that it is — v. 1 

wasli this filthy witness from your. . . . Macbeth, ii. 2 
having no witness to confirm ray speecli — v. 1 
witness against us to damnation I . . King John, iv. 2 
be a precedent and witness good ....Richard II. ii. 1 

and you can witness with me — iv. 1 

his white hairs do witness it 1 Henry 11'. ii. 4 

lieaven witness with me, when 1....2Henryll\ iv. 4 
witness our too much memorable .... Henry I', ii. 4 
shall witness live in brass of this .. .. — iv. 3 
is pear me testimony, and witness .. — iv. 8 
witness tlie night, your garments.... — iv. 8 
and bear me witness all, that here I. . — v. 2 

eyes be witness with mine ears \ Henry VI. ii. 3 

not so; in witness, take ye that — iii. 4 

you cannot witness for me, being slain — iv. 5 
tliat I can witness; and a fouler aot .'IHenryVl. i. 3 
God is my witness, I am falsely occused — i. 3 
I have good witness of this; therefore — i.3 
for he hath witness of his servant's .. — i.3 
witness my tears, I cannot stay to .. — ii. 4 
I shall not want false witness to .... — iii. 1 
witness tlie fortune he hath had in .. — iii. 1 
and lieavens and honour be witness.. — iv. 8 
and be a witness, tliat Bona shall ..SHenryVl. iii. 3 

witness the loving kiss I give — v. 7 

the bleeding witness of her hatred.. Wcftarc////. i. 2 
witness my son, now in tile shade.... — }■ S 

then be your eyes the witness of their — iii. 4 
yet witness what you hear we did .. — jii. 5 

lives a witness to nis vow — iii. 7 

am I witness to. and will to France.. — iv. 4 
God witness with me, I have wept .. — iv. 4 
heaven bear witness irep. ii. 4 & v. 2) .Hen, VIII. ii. 1 
noble jury and foul cause can witness — iii. 2 
bear witness, all that have not hearts — iii. 2 
ever witness for him those twins .... — iv. 2 
else no witness would come against you — v. 1 
in perjured witness, than your master — v. 1 
upper Germany, can dearly witness.. — v. 2 
in wi tness. whereof tlie parties.. 7Voi(iis i- Cress, iii. 2 
seal it, seal it; I'll be the witness.... — iii. 2 
witness the process of your speech .. — iv. I 
pods to witness (rep. iii. 4 & iv. 3) .TimonofAth. i. 1 

tlicse gentlemen can witness — iii. 2 

thereto witness may my surname.. Cor/o/aiiHS, iv. 5 
witness of tlie malice and displeasure — iv. 6 



[ 840 ] 



WITNESS back than words Coriolanus, v. 3 

witness the hole you made in ....JuliusCirsur, v. 1 
be thou my witness, that, against .... — v. 1 

bear me witness, niglit . . Antoy^y ^ Cleopatra, iv. 9 
be witness to me, O tliou blessed moon — iv. 9 
and this w-ill witness outwardly .... Cymbeline. ii. 2 
will make't an action, call witness to't — ii. 3 

1 false? thy conscience witness — iii. 4 

a little witness my obedience — iii. 4 

tliis is a witness that I am thy son. TituiAiidron. ii. 3 

as your titles witness, imperious — v. 1 

deeds be wi tness of my worth — v. I 

witness this wretched stump (re/).).... — v. 2 
witness the tiring day, and heavy (rrp.) — v. 2 

witness my knife's sharp point — v. 3 

my scars can witness, dumb although — v. 3 
to witness this is true: now judge .... — v. 3 

and hollow eyes do witness it Pericles, i . 4 

my daughter, she can witness it — ii. .^ 

witness the world, that I create thee .... Lear, v. 3 

upon the witness of these gentlemen Hamlet^ i. 2 

witness, this army, of such mass — iv. 4 

here comes the lady, let Jier witness it . . Othello, i. 3 
do not rise yet; witness, you ever-burning — iii. 3 
witness, that liere lago dotli give up ... . — iii. 3 
I liad suborned the witness, and he 8 .... — iii. 3 

WITNESSED-virtue witne8sed..^syo!il!fcci(, iii. 2 
to my belief witnessed the rather .... Macbeth, iv. 3 
hath left a witnessed usurpation ....^ Henry IV. i. 1 
WITNESSES-you witnesses above.. Tu-elfhNight, v. 1 
no farther, till you are my witnesses. jUiitA.4ufo, iii. 2 
amen, say we: we will be witnesses rami/ig- of Sh. ii. 1 
and some sufficient honest witnesses — iv. 4 
witnesses more than my pack . ... IVi/iter's Tale, iv. 3 
contract us 'fore tliese witnesses .... — iv. 3 
these old witnesses (I cannot err). Comedy of Err, v. 1 
I bring you witnesses, twice fifteen . . King John, ii. 1 

confessions of divers witnesses Henry VIII. li. 1 

grave witnesses of true experience. Titus A iidron. v. 3 

WITNESSETH than fancy's . . Mid.N.'s Dream, v. I 

witnesseth thy lowliness. .Loi)e'sL.i.o.«(,iv. I (letter) 

WITNESSING storms to come Richard II. ii. 4 

as witnessing the truth on our side. . 1 Henry VI. ii. 4 

WIT-OLD-which is wit-old Love'sL.Lost,v. 1 

WIT-SNAPPER are youl ....Merch.ofVenice,u\. 5 

WITTENBERG, it is most retrograde .... Hamlet, i. 2 

stay with us, go not to Wittenberg .... — i. 2 

what make you from Wittenberg (rep.) — i. 2 

WITTIEST partition that ev&T..Mid.N.'sT)ream, v. 1 

AVITTILY said to a niece of Twelfth Kight, iv. 2 

WITTING I no other comfort have ..] Henry VI. ii. 6 
WITTINGLY have I infringed my..3HemyVI. ii. 2 

if I drown myself wittingly (rep.) Hamlet, v. 1 

WITTOL— but cuckold I Wittol .. Merry n'ives.W.i 
AVITTOLLY— jealous wittolly knave — ii. 2 

W ITTY a piece of Eve's flesh TioelfthNigU, i. 5 

better a witty fool, than a foolish wit — i. 5 

it is no matter liow witty — iii. 2 

a marvellous witty fellow MuchAdo,\v. 2 

without scurrility, witty without.. Lore'ji,./,os«, v. I 

tliou art a witty fool, I have All's ll'etl, ii. 4 

witty motlier! witless elseherson.7'am?>i^of SA. ii. I 
pretty and witty; wild, and, jet. Comedy of JSrr. iii. 1 

1 am not only witty in myself iHenrylV. i. 2 

witty, courteous, liberal, full of 3 Henry VI. i. 2 

deep-revolving witty Buckingham. /2(c/ia7-d ///. iv. 2 

and to cry— that's witty 1 Henry VIII. (epil.) 

you must be witty now Troilus ^Cressida, iii. 2 

were our witty empress well. . Titus Andronicus, iv. 2 

how if she be black and witty? Othello, i\. I 

WIVES— intent towards our wives../l/«Tj/(riDes, ii. 1 

and our revolted wives share — iii. 2 

wives ma^' be merry, and yet honest — iv. 2 

let our wives vet once again — iv. 4 

how like you Windsor wives? — v. 5 

and wives are sold by fate — v. 5 

I came, alas! to wive Twelfth Night, v. 1 (song) 

our own hearts, and our wives' lieels..il/Mo/i/f'/o, v. 4 
do not curst wives hold that .... Love' sL. Lost, iv. 1 
should shrive me th.an wive me..Merch.ofVenice,\. 2 
trifle of wives: alas, fifteen wives .... — ii. 2 

to play the thieves for wives — ii. 6 

the rest aloof are the Dardanian wives — iii. 2 
acquainted with goldsmiths' "wives. Asyou Like,in. 2 
fain to be beholden to your wives for — iv. 1 
the sky changes when they are wives — iv. 1 
wonder, sir, since wives are monsters.. .^/i's'W;, v. 3 
to wive, and thrive, as best I miiy ..Taming of Sh.\.^ 
I come to wive it wealthily in Padua — i. 2 
brings your froward wives as prisoners — v. 2 

that nave revol ted wives IVinler's Tale, i. 2 

five or six honest wives that were.... — iv. 3 
no more such wives; therefore, no wife — v. I 

your wives, your daughters Macbeth, iv. 3 

of all husbands that marry wives .. ..KingJohn, i, I 
leave your children, wives, and you ., — ii. I 

let wives with child pray, that — iii. I 

some poisoned by their wives Richard II. iii. 2 

iipon the parting of your wives . . , .\ Henry I V. iii. 1 

break with your wives of your — iii. 1 

here come our wives, and let us — iii. 1 

have given them away to haicers' wives — iii. 3 
as did the wives of Jewry at Herod's.. /I«;;!/r. iii. 3 
leaving their wits with their wives.... — iii. 7 
some, upon their wives left poor beliind — iv. I 

our careful wives, our children — iv. 1 

with wives, and boys, whose shouts — v. (chorus) 
we, and our wives, and children. ...IHenii/F/. iii. I 

bargain for their wives — v. 5 

and dowries, witli their wives 2HenryVI. i. I 

even in their wives' and children's sight — . iv. 2 

that their wives be as free as — iv. 7 

ravish your wives and daughters before — iv. 8 

wives for their iiusbands' fate SHemyVl. v. 6 

servants, daughters, wives, even ..Richard III. iii. 6 
his enforcement of tlie city wives.... — iii. 7 
in safeguard of your wives, your wives — v. 3 
and blessed with beauteous wives.... — v. 3 

lie with our wives? ravish our — v. 3 

Niobes of the maids and wives.. Troilus ,§ C> ess. v. U 



WOE 



WIVES— beat them to their wives .... Coriolanus, i. 4 

lest that thy wives with spits — iv. 1 

ourselves, our wives, and children .. — iv. ti 
to see your wives dishonoured to your — iv. 6 
men, wives, and children, stare ..JtdiusCiesar, iii. 1 
'would we had all such wives.... /In/oni/^C/eo. ii. 2 
clip your wives, .your friends, tell.... — iv. 8 
how many must murder wives much.CymUeline, v. 1 

be it our wives, our children I'enctes. i. 4 

when my fate would have me wive Othello, iii. 4 

the purest of their wives is foul as slander — iv. 2 
their husbands' faults, if wives do fall .. — iv. 3 
their wives liave sense like them — iv. 3 

WIVED— manned, horsed, and wived.2ffe7?)!//r. i. 2 

to be wived to fair Marina Pericles, v. 2 (Gower) 

good lieutenant, is your general wived?. OMc//o,ii. 1 

WIVING goes by destiny . . Merchant of Venice, ii. 9 
besides, that hook of wiving, fairness. Cymbeline, v. 5 

WIZARD— peace, doting vizard. Cotnedy of Err. iv. 4 

wizards know their times iHenryVI. i. 4 

hath made the wizard famous — v. 2 

a wizard told him, that by G his . . Richard III. i. 1 

WOE— O woe the day! Tempest, i. 2 

our hint of woe is common ,, — ii. 1 

have just our theme of woe .— ii. I 

I am woe for't, sir — v. I 

is no woe to liis correction ..TwoGen.of Verona, ii. 4 

fed upon this woe already — iii. i 

they waxed pale for woe iii. 1 

to think upon her woes iv. 4 

and record my woes — v. 4 

thee well to act my woes Twelfth Night, i. 4 

woe mel forwhat? Measurefor Measure, i.b 

still the nurse of second woe — ii. 1 

but pleased my woe — iv. 1 

heaven shield your grnce from woe .. — v. 1 

all your sounds of woe MuchAJo, ii. 3 (song) 

measurehis woe the length — v. I 

for the which, with songs of woe — v. 3 (song) 
for whom we rendered up this woe! .. — v. 3 
never so in woe, bedabbled with ..Mid.N.'sDr. iii. 2 
puts the wretch, that lies in woe .... — v. 2 

not fair? alack ibr woe! Love' sL. Lost, iv. I 

so ridest thou triumpliing in my woe — iv. 3 (ver.) 
husband's sorrow by liis woe. . Taming of Shrew, v. 2 

woe the while! (rep.) II'intei'sTale, iii. 2 

heavier than all thy woes can stir .. — iii. 2 

the woe had been universal — v. 2 

of death, end woes and all .. ..Comedy of Errors, i. I 

my woes end likewise with — i. 1 

but not with lesser woe — i. I 

liberty is lashed with woe — >i. I 

langh my woes to scorn — ii. 2 

woe alas! what in our house? Macbeth, ii. 3 

but in it shares some woe; though .. — iv, 3 

and leave those woes alone KingJohn, iii. 1 

how I may be delivered of these woes — iii. 4 

pay the time but needful woe — v. 7 

woe doth the heavier sit Richard II. i. 3 

it ends a mortal woe — ii. 1 

name, 'tis nameless woe, I wot — ii. 2 

have woe to woe, sorrow to sorrow .. — ii. 2 

what a tide of woes comes — ii. 2 

storms to come, woe, and unrest .... — ii. 4 

cry, woe, destruction, ruin, loss — iii. 2 

ne'er wail their present woes — iii. 2 

a king woe's slave, shall kingly woe — iii. 2 

alack, alack, for woe, that any — iii. 3 

play the wantons with our woes .... — iii. 3 
a change: woe is forerun with woe ., — iii. 4 
at London London's king in woe .... — iii. 4 

for telling me this news of woe — iii. 4 

child's children, cry against you, woe! — iv. 1 

the woe's to come; the children — iv. 1 

together weeping, make one woe .... — v. I 

we make woe wanton with — v. 1 

my soul is full of woe, that blood .... — v. 6 

words only, but in woes also \Henry IV. ii. 4 

and woe to my lord chief justice ....'i Henry IV. v. 3 
are every one a woe, a sore complaint. . Henry ;'. i. 3 

of our princes (woe the while!) — iv. 7 

partner of your weal, or woe 1 Henry VI. iii. 2 

ah, woe is me for Gloster (rep.) ...,2HenryVI. iii. 2 

so Iieavy as these woes of mine — v. 2 

upon their woes, whom fortune ZHenryVI. i. 4 

to add more measure to your woes .. — ii. 1 
never weep, now melt with woe .... — ii.3 
in this world, but grief and woe? .... — ii. 5 
woe above woe! grief more than .... — ii. 5 

so grieved for subjects' woe? — ii. Ji 

[Coi.ATn;.] to over-go thy woes ....Rieha'd III ii. 2 

their woes are parcelled, mine — ii. 2 

woeto that land, that's governed.... — ii.3 
that shall cry woe for this hereafter — iii. 3 
woe, woe, for England! not a whit .. — iii. 4 
woe's scene, world's shame, grave's .. — iv. 4 
tell o'er your woes again by viewing — iv. 4 

triumph not in my woes — iv. 4 

these English woes shall make me . . — iv. 4 

dead happiness with living woe — iv. 4 

tliy woes will make them sharp — iv. 4 

attornies to their client woes — iv. 4 

full of state and woe Henry VIII. (prologue) 

ay, marry, there will be woe indeed — i.3 
be guiltless, 'tis full of woe; jet I .. — ii. 1 
woe upon ye, and all such false .... — iii. I 
Trojans, cry I a Helen and a woe. Troilus ^ Cress, ii. 2 
revenge shall hide our inward woe .. — v. 11 
but woe the while ; our fatliers .... JuliusGcEsar , i. 3 

woe to the hand that shed this — iii. 1 

alas, and woe! Let him that ..Antony ^ Cleo. iv. 12 

woe are we, sir, you may not — iv. 12 

conquer Antony; but woe 'tis so! .. — iv. 13 

stands in worse case of woe Cymbeline, iii. 4 

in them have laid this woe here — iv. 2 

I, in mine own woe charmed — v. 3 

woe is my heart, that the poor soldier — v. 5 
they have nursed this woe . . Titus Andronicus, iii. 1 
my brother, weeping at my woes .... — iii. 1 
what a sympathy ot woe is thisl .... — iii. i 



WOES— could I bind my wo«8 ....7'iVtif.4ii>rron. ill. 1 
my bowels cannot hide her woes .... — lli. I 
tluit woe is me to tliink upon thy woes — ill. 1 
rcvonpe these bitter W(.>cH of ours , .. — iii. 'i 

thou nmp ot'wt^e, tlirtt t!ui9 — iii. 2 

or woe liitiile thee evermore I — iv. '.' 

woe to lier eliance, aiul iliunned — iv. 2 

Brcliiteet anil (ilotler ol'tliene WOC9 .. — v :i 
harms, anil wiiie away lier woe! .... — v. 3 
nssooiute friends in (jrief and woe.... — v. 3 
have done with woes; give sentence.. — v. 3 

feeling woe, gripe not at cartlily /Vrir/cj, i. 1 

Bound deep our woes into tlic air — i. 1 

I'll then (fiseourse our woes — i. 4 

omit we all tlieir dole and woe .. — iii. (Gower) 

a heort that even cracks for woe I — iii. 2 

changed with this unprofitable nod .. — iv. I 
passion ftands for true old woe I — iv. 4 (Gower) 

woe and heavy well-a-day — iv. 4tGower) 

lam great with woe, and shall — v. 1 

my bidding, or thou livesl ia woe • — v. 2 

woe, that too late repents Lear, i. 4 

shall of a corn cry woo — Iii. 2 (song) 

betters sec bearing our woes — iii. 6 

and woes, by wrong imaginations — iv. <j 

our present business is L'cneral woe — v. 3 

bound a pitch above dull woe .... Ilomeo ^- Juliet, i. 4 
forgot tliat name, and that nome's woe — ii. 3 
and these woes were oil for Kosaline — ii. 3 
this but begins the woe. others must end — iii. I 

determine of my weal or woe — iii. 2 

these griefs, these woes, these sorrows — iii. 2 
your tributary drops belong to woe.. — iii. 2 
Tybalt's deatn was woe enough .... — iii. 2 
if sour woe deliglits in fellowship.... — iii. 2 

no words can that woe sound — iii. 2 

these times of woe atford no time .... — iii. 4 

more dark and dark our » oea — iii. 5 

and all these woes shall serve for .... — iii. f) 

O woe I O woeful, woeful — iv. i 

my heart is full of woe — iv. 5 

[Co/.A'ii/.] O woe, thy canopy is dust — v 3 
whereon these woes do lie (rep.) .... — v. 3 
what further woe conspires against .. — v. 3 
tlier. will I be general of your woes .. — v. 3 

for E* Vr was a story of more woe — v. 3 

to be otiitracted in one brow of woe ....Ham/t*/, i. 2 
but th,. trappings and the suits of woe .. — i. 2 
throw to earth this unprevailing woe — — i. 2 
but who, ah woel [Col. Kii(.-who] hud seen — ii. 2 

woe is mel (rtf/;. iii. 2) — iii. I 

one woe doth tread upon another's heel.. — iv. 7 

treble woe fall ten times treble — v. 1 

if au"ht of woe, or wonder, cease your . . — v. 2 
adoimton: or, woe upon thy life 1 .. .. O'AeHo, iii, 3 

WOE-BEGONE-Bo woe-begone 2Ilenri/ir. i. I 

■WOEFUL suitor to your honour .i)/ra.t./i)r.l/e(is. ii. 2 
my woeful self up in a mourning .Lnve'sl.. lost. v. 2 
presents more woeful pageants . , As yau Like it, ii. 7 
with a woeful ballad made to his .... — ii. 7 

new hatched to the woeful time Macbeth, ii. 3 

on this woeful land at once I Richard 11. ii. 2 

a woeful pageant have we here beheld — iv. 1 

of woeful ages, long ago betid — v. I 

have mercy on me, woeful man 1 .... 1 Henry I'l. i. 4 
hath contrived this woeful tragedyl — i. 4 

thyself hast given her woeful breast I — iii. 3 
wash away my woeful monuments .2 Weiiryr/. iii. 2 
one that was a woeful looker-on. ...3HeHri/r/. ii. I 
for these woeful chances, mis-think .. — ii. 5 
here sits a king more woeful than you — ii. 5 
made her widow to a woeful bed? ..Richard 111. i. 2 
my woeful banishment, could all .... — i. 3 

thou woeful welcomer of glory 1 — iv. 1 

'tis woeful: we are too open here ..HenryVJII.\\.\ 

a woeful Cressid 'mongst TroihcsfrCremda, iv. 4 

Woeful dayl O traitors, villainsl .JutiutCtpsar, iii. 2 

OS with the woeful feere Titm Andronicus, iv. I 

dread fury, to my woeful house — v. 2 

1 am as woeful as Virginius was — v. 3 

the rough and woeful music that ^ve.. Pericles, iii. 2 
his woeful <£ueen leave at Ephess — iv. (Oower) 
if there be more, more woeful, hold it in.. Lear, v. 3 
O woeful svmpathyl Romeo ^Juliet, iii. 3 

woeful tunel Death, that hath ta'ea — iv. 6 
woeful, woeful, woeful dayl (rep.) .. — iv. 6 

WOEFUM.EST division prove Richard II. iv. I 

locked into the woefullest cask ....illenryl'l. iii. 2 

the woefullest man that ever lived.. 7'i7u«.lii(i. iii. 1 

AVOE-WEARIED tongue is still .. Richard I U. iv. 4 

AVOLD— thrice the wold [A'-i/.-old]. /.cnr, iii. 4 (song) 

WOl.F— the lion, than the wolf?. . Tirel/lh Nighl, iii. 1 

bear, or wolf, or bull, on meddling. Afn/,iV.'«Dr. ii. 2 

ond the wolf Uhowls the moon — v. S 

use nucation with the yuAS.. Merchant c^t'enice, iv. 1 
thy currish spirit governed a wolf .. — iv. 1 

the wolf will sooner find fVinter'iTnle,\\\.3 

a wolf, nay worsa, a fellow . .Comedy of Errors, iv. i 
alarumcd by hi-* sentinel, the wolf .... Macbeth, ii. I 

tooth of wolf; witches' mummy — iv. I 

wake not a sleeping wolf (rrp.) i Henry 1 1', i. 2 

thou wolf ill sheeii 8 array 1 Henry yi.i.3 

not half so timorous from the wolf .. — !. 5 

1 winli pome ravenous wolf had — V. 4 

will hunt this wolf to death ZHenryfl. ii. 4 

and yonder is the wolf, that makes .. — v. 4 
(lies the reckless shepherd from the Wolf — v. 6 

in the entrails of the wolf? Iliehnrd III. iv. 4 

this holy fox, or wolf, or both Ilenn/I'lll. i. 1 

an universal wolf, so doubly.. Troitui 4" Creitida, i. 3 

as wolf to heifer's calf, paid to — iii. 2 

a breakfast to the wolf (i-'/i.).. Ti^nonof/llheni, iv, 3 
prav you. wliodoes the wolf love?.. Coiiofcinm, ii. I 

aa the wolf iloes of the shepherds — iv. 

he would not be a wolf, but that ,.JuliiuC<nar, i, 3 

like warlike as the wolf Cymbetine.W'i. 3 

coinra le with the wolf ond owl /,f«r, ii. 4 

the lion ond the belly-pinched wolf keep — iii. I 

in stealth, wolf in greediness — iii. 4 

that trusts in the tuinciicssol a wolf .... — iii. 6 i 



WOLFISH-thy desires arc wolfl8h..tf»r, <;/■»«. Iv. 1 
[Knt.'] why in this wolfish gown ....Coriofuniii, ii. 3 

stie'll flay thy wolfish visage /./vii-, i. 4 

W()I,SEY-for worthy Wolsey Henry fill. i. 1 

hut lie came to whi^iMT Wolsoy — i. I 

(J mv WoUcy, llio iiiiiit (tfp.) — ii. 2 

Bav,AVolscv that OMIT trod the ways — iii. 2 

great chrhl oniiiiiour.canlinal Wolsey — iv. 2 

W(JLVES_(lid make wolves howl Trmpett, i. 2 

the wolves have preyed: and look ..MuchAdo, v. 3 
the howling of Irish wolves againBt.4<!/oii/.i7<ri/, v.2 

wolves, and bears, they say irin/ei-'*7Vj/c, ii. 3 

peopled with wolves, thy old illrnryll'. iv. 4 

they will eat like wolves, and fight .. Henry I', iii. 7 
Orleans iVom the English wolves ....1 llruryyi. i. G 
the ravenous wolves [tW.-wolf]....2H»ii)y/'/. iii. 1 
the wolves are gnarliug who shall .. — iii. I 

loud-howling wolves arouse the — iv. I 

Iamb, environed with wolves SHenryfl.i. I 

pursued by hunger-starved wolves .. — i. 4 
but worse than wolves of France .... — i. 4 
ofi'able wolves, meek hears .. Timon of Athens, iii. G 

that girdlest in those wolves I — iv. 1 

dragons, wolves, and bears — iv. 3 

if wolves hart ut thy gate howled I.ear, iii. 7 

as salt 09 Wolves in pride Oihetto, iii. 3 

AVOLVI.SII-KAVENING \amb]. Roineo ^Jntiel, iti.i 
WOMAN— no woman's face remember. 7'fwipeir(, iii. I 

I ne'er saw woman, but only — iii. 2 

no other but a woman's reason .. T'uioGcn.o/rcr. i. 2 

like a wood woman — ii. 3 

not like a woman — ii. 7 

do move woman's mind — iii. 1 

a woman eometioies scorns — iii. 1 

he cannot win a woman — iii. 1 

'tis a woman, but that woman, 1 will — iii. I 

is a woman's only virtue — iii. 1 

to ploy the woman's part — iv. 4 

will not use a woman lawlessly — v. 3 

and speaks small like a v,'uman .... Mer7-y IVives, i. 1 
never a woman in Windsor knows .. — i. 4 

how now, good woman — i, 4 

what's the matter, woman? (rep.).... — ii. 1 

you are the happier woman — ii. I 

sir, here's a woman would speak .... — ii. 2 

two thousand, fair woman — ii, 2 

would have won any woman's heart — ii. 2 
the sweet woman leads an ill life .... — ii. 2 

woman, commend me to her — ii. 2 

I never knew a woman so dote — ii. 2 

if there be a kind woman in — ii. 2 

boy, go along with this woman — ii. 2 

see the liel I of having a false woman I — ii. 2 

she's a very tattling woman — iii. 3 

your husband's coming hither, woman — iii. 3 

X see 'tis an honest woman — iii. 3 

n woman would run through fire .... — iii. 4 

come in, woman — iii. 5 

build upon a foolisli woman's promise — iii. 5 
to bring this woman to evil for your — iii. 5 
wliy, woman, your husband is in his — iv. 2 

what a woman are you 1 — iv. 2 

there is no woman's gown big enough — iv. 2 
fat woman of Brentford (ri'p. and iv. 5) — iv. 2 
the honest woman, the modest wife .. — iv, 2 
come you and the old woman down . . — i v. 2 
old woman I what old woman's that? — iv. 2 
let him not strike the old woman.... — iv. 2 
think you have killed the poor woman — iv. 2 
an old woman, a fat woman (re/1.) .. — iv. .^ 

hal a fat woman 1 (rep.) — iv. ."i 

spake with the old woman about (rep.) — iv. 5 
was there a wise woman with thee? . . — iv. 5 

the action of an old woman — iv. 5 

master Brook, like a poor old woman — v. 1 
me grievously, in the shape of a woman — v. 1 
for all he was in woman's apparel.... — v. 5 

is sembhitive a woman's part TwelfthSitjhl, i. 4 

as I am woman, now alas the dayl .. — ii. 2 

what kind of woman is't? — ii. 4 

let still the woman take an elder .... — ii. I 

there is no woman's sides can — ii. 4 

no woman's heart BO big — ii. 4 

that love a woman can hear me — ii. 4 

it might be. perhaps, were I a woman — ii. 4 
one truth, and that no woman has .. — iii. I 
In man's commendation with woman — iii. 2 
carry his ijjater to the wise woman ..- — iii. 4 
were 3'ou a woman as the rest goes even — v. 1 
never shouldst love woman like to me — v. 1 
let me see thee in thy woman's weeds — v. 1 

a woman Meature for Measure, i. 2 

but there's a woman with maid by him — i. 2 

one that serves a bad woman — ii. 1 

I thank heaven, is an honest ™iman — ii. I 
she had been a woman curdinally given — ii. 1 

by the woman's means? — ii. I 

and his mistress is a respected woman — ii. 1 

with man, woman, or child — ii. I 

more betray our sense than woman's — ii. 2 
aa I love the woman that wninged him — ii. 3 
he that you are, lliut is, a woman.... — ii. 4 
Pygmalion's images, newly made woman — iii. 2 
was not made by man and woman .. — iii. 2 
and 1 can never cut ofi'u woman's head — iv. 2 
to set on this wretclied woman here — v. I 

first, hath this woman ( n-p. ) — v. 1 

know you this woman? (rep.) — v. 1 

and thou pcrnirious woman, compact — V. t 
thou e'er contracted to this woman? — V. 1 
if any woman's wnniged by this lewd — v. 1 
a woman conceived me, I thoiik her ..Much Ado, i. I 
wilt win any Woman ill the world .... .— ii. 1 
would it not grieve a woman to lie .... — ii. 1 

one woman is fair; yet I am well — ii. 3 

till all graces come III one woman (ri-p.) — ii. 3 

never framed a woman's heart of — iii. I 

if he lie not in love with some woman — iii. 2 

I will die a woman with grieving — iv. I 

it will not hurt a woman — v. 2 



WOMAN— not play a. woman Mul. .V.'i Dream, i. 2 

will make or man or woman madlv — ii. 2 

and the Athenian woman by his side — iii. 2 

this is the woman, but not this — iii. 2 

[C»/.) Bile for a woiiioii, God blesB us — v. I 

not to see a woman {rep. iv. 3j ....Love'sL.Lost, i. I 

that no woman shall come within .. i. I 

be Been to talk with a woman (rep.),. — i. I 

sweet understanding, a woman.. — i. I (letter) 

a Woman, muster — 1.2 

no woman may approach his silent.. — ii. 1 

a woman i.ometiines, an')'ou saw her ii 1 

a woman, that is like a German clock — iii. I 

are not you the chief woman? — iv. 1 

that was a Woman wlien queen — iv. 1 

a woman I forsworct hut, I -. — iv. 3 (versesi 
beauty of a woman's face? (r?p.) .... — Jv. 3 

such beauty, as a woman's eye — iv. 3 

rather an honest woman's son ,.Mer. o/l'enice, ii. 2 

if fortune be a woman, she's — ii. 2 

be an honest woman of her word .. ., — iii. 1 

be less than an honest woman — iii. .'j 

your wife be not a mad woman — iv. 1 

ay, if a woman live to he a man ., .. — v. I 

but some woman had the ring v. I 

no woman had it, but a civil doctor .. — v. 1 
the bountiful blind woman doth ..AsyoiiLilieil,]. 2 
what hidden woman's fear there will — i. 3 

and to cry like a woman ij. 4 

what woman in the city do I name.. — ii. 7 

do you not know 1 am a woman? — iii. 2 

I thank God, I am not a Woman .... — iii. a 
is there none here to give the woman? — iii. 3 
a properer man, than she a woman .. — iii. 5 

than you can make a woman iv. I 

certainly, a woman's thought runs .. iv. I 

make the doors upon a woman's wit — iv. I 

thot woman that cannot make .... iv. 1 

woman's gentle brain could not drop — iv. 3 

can a woman rail thus? iv. 3 

warr'st thou with a woman's heart? — iv. 3 (letter) 

wilt thou love such a woman? — iv. 3 

hut the woman low, and browner than — iv. 3 

1 should have been a woman by riglit — iv. 3 
he sir, that must marry this woman — v. 1 
which in the common is, woman .... — v. I 

and I for no woman (rep.) _ v. 2 

if ever I marry woman, and I'll be .. — v. 2 

and as I love no woman, I'll meet .. v. 2 

to desire to be a woman of the world — v. 3 
nor ne'er wed woman, if you be not.. — v. 4 

or have a woman to your lord — v. 4 

if I were a woman I would kiss as .. — (cpil ) 
label the woman and I will do as we.. All's U'elt, i. 3 
one good woman in ten, madam .... — i. 3 

we'd find no fault with the tythe woman— i. 3 
have a good woman born but every.. — i. 3 

man should be at woman's conunand — i. 3 
on_ the start, can woman me uiito't .. — iii. 2 

a fool, sir, at a woman's service — iv. 5 

what woman's that? — v. 3 

by this woman here, what know you? v. 3 

did he love this woman? v. 3 

asa gentleman loves a woman — v, 3 

this woman's an easy glove, my lord — v. 3 
boy have not a woman's gift.. TamitigofSh, 1 (iiid.) 

than any woman in this waning age 2 (iiid.) 

ay, the woman's maid of the house — 2(ind.) 

do you tell me of a woman's tongue.. i. 2 

and a woman's crupper of velure .... — iii. 2 

I Bee, a woman may be made a fool.. iii. 2 

winter tames, man, woman, and beast — iv. 1 

to make a woman of him — iv. 5 

a woman moved, is like a fountain .. — v. 2 
even such, a woman owetli to her.... — v. 2 
inch of woman in the world (ifp.).iCiii(*r'i7"o/cii. 1 
the office becomes a woman best .... — ii. 2 

the rashness of a woman , iii. 2 

forgive a foolish woman — iii. 2 

for man, or woman, of all sizes — iv. 3 

it wos thought, she was a woman .... — iv.3 
for whose sight I have a woman's longing — iv. 3 

gooil, to make a perfect woman — v. I 

that she is a woman more worth than — v. I 

and wed unto a woman Cumedy qf Errors, i. 1 

a poor mean woman, was delivered,. — i. 1 

this woman that I mean - iii. l 

I am a woman's man, and besides (rep.) iii. 2 

1 am tluc to a woman, one that claims — iii. 2 

against that woman tiiere — v. I 

say, woman, didst thou so? — v. 1 

perjured woman 1 they are both .. — v. I 
tins woman locked me out this day.. — v. I 

come to my woman's breasts .Macbeth, i. 5 

in tt woman's ear, would murder _ ii. 3 

a woman's story, at o winter's (Ire .... — iii. 4 
for none of woman born shall harm.... — iv. I 

1 am yet unknown to woman — iv. .3 

I could iilay the woman witli mine.. .. — iv. 3 

was he iiotmrn of woman? (rep. v. 7) v. 3 

by man that's of a woman born (rfp.).. — v. 7 

may easily will a woman's KiuiiJohn,\. I 

a wicked will; a woman's will _ ii. I 

a woman, naturallv born to fears .... iii. I 

I am uo woman, I'll not Bwoon — v. 6 

not the trial of a woman's war Richard II. i. 1 

fair woman, do not so, to make — v, 1 

peace, foolish woman. I will not iieace — v. 2 

thou fond mad woman (rrp.) — v. 2 

make way, unruly woman — v. 2 

a woman, and thine aunt, great king — v. :i 
thou frantic woman, what dost thou.. — v. 3 
to break into this woman's mood .. ..\Hentyir. i. 3 
a banislietl woman from my Harry's — ii. 3 
constant you are. but yet a woman .. — ii. 3 
a parrot, and yet the sou of a woman I — ii. 4 
bring him out, tliat is but woman's son — iii. I 

neither; 'tis a Woman's fault — iii. i 

go to, you ore tt woman, go. Who I? — iii. 3 
now, a< I am a true Woman, hollaud of — iii. 3 



WOM 



WOMAN-honest woman with pickinRl Hetrnj / r'. i i i. 3 
lie will spare neither woman, vaan..iHeiir!/ir. ij. 1 

for a poor lone "Woman to bear — ii. 1 

unless a woman should be made .... — ii. 1 
the easy yieldins spirit of this woman — ii. I 

and satisfy the poor woman — ii. 1 

you are an honest woman, and well — ii. I 

a woman's tailor, sir (rfp.) — iii. 2 

thou hast done in a woman's petticoat? — ii). 2 

well said, good woman's tailorl — iii- 2 

no woman shall succeed in Salique .... Henry /'. i. 2 
haply a woman's voice may do some — v. 2 

God's name, I fear no woman 1 Ilenr-y f'l. ;. 2 

he shrives this woman to lier smock — i. 2 
woman, do what thou canst to save our — i. 2 

a woman, clad in armour, chaseth .. — ;• 5 
vet hath a woman's kindness over-ruled — u. 2 
be daunted at a woman's sight? .... — v, 3 
she is a woman, therefore to be won — v. 3 

second woman in tlie realm 2 Henri/ F J. i. 2 

and, being a woman, I will not — 1.2 

to be a woman of invincible spirit .. — }■ i 

what woman is this? His wife — .ii- ' 

call it a woman's fear — Jn. ' 

fie, coward woman, and soft-hearted — ui. 2 
been there, which am a silly woman.3r7e?iryr/. i. 1 
woman's general; what should we fear? — i. 2 

wrapped in a woman's hide 1 — i. 1 

seen to bear a woman's face? — }■ i 

wronged by that false woman — ii. 2 

no, wrangling woman; we'll no longer — ii. 2 
for she's a woman to be pitied much — iii. 1 
metliinks a woman of this valiant .. — v. 4 

divine perfection of a woman liichard III. i. 2 

was ever woman in this humour (rep.) — i. 2 

false-boding woman, end thy frantic — i. 3 
my woman's heart grossly grew captive — iv. 1 
fool, and shallow changing woman! — iv. 4 

a woman of less place might ask . . Henry VIIJ. ii. 2 
of woman on you, have too a woman's — ii. 3 
I am a most poor woman, and a stranger — ii. 4 
of wisdom o'ertopping woman's power — ii. 4 
I am a simple woman, much too weak — ii. 4 
with me, a poor weak woman, fallen — iii. I 
alas, I am a woman, friendless, liopeless — iii. I 
a woman lost among ve, laughed at — iii- 1 

awoman (I dare say, without vain-glory) — iii. I 
a const.ant woman to her husband .. — iii. I 
and to that woman, when she has done — iii. 1 
I am the most unhappy woman living — iii. 1 
you know, I am a woman, lacking .. — iii. I 
in that one woman liave I lost for ever — iii. 2 
of thy honest truth to play the woman — iii. 2 
Blie is the goodliest woman that ever — iv. 1 

but by her woman I sent your — v. 1 

so said her woman ; and that her .... — v. 1 
and hit that woman, who cried out .. — v. 3 
weaker than a woman's tear.. Troilus Sf Cressida, i. 1 
saw her look, or any woman else ... . — i. 1 

this woman's answer sorts — i. 1 

3'ou are such a woman! one knows not — i. 2 

thoughtit couldbe ina woman — iii. 2 

a woman impudent and mannish grown — iii. 3 
I have a woman's longing, an appetite — iii. 3 

a woman of quick sense — iv. 5 

lover, elder brother, and woman.. Kraoraq/'/K/i.u. 2 

because thou art a woman — iv. 3 

surely, this man was born of woman — iv. 3 
a fool's heart, and a woman's eyes .. -^ y.i 

act the woman in the scene Coriolanus, ii. 2 

well said, noble woman; before he .. — iii- 2 
nay, I pr'ythee, womo.n,— Now the red — iv. 1 
not of a woman's tenderness to be (rep.) — v. 3 

I grant I am a woman irep.) JuUusCcesar, ii. 1 

a man's mind, but a woman's might — ii. 4 

how weak a tiling the heart of womanis! — ii. 4 

let him marry a woman that Antony S,-Cleo. i. 2 

wliat says the married woman? — _i. 3 

ne'er the word no woman lieard speak — ii. 2 
a woman with an eunuch played {.rep.) — ii. b 

never a woman has a true face — ii. 6 

to lack the courage of a woman — i v. 12 

no more, but e'en a woman — iv. U 

and I have nothing of woman in me — v. 2 
honest woman, but something {rep.) — v. 2 
not eat a woman; I know (rep.) .... — v. 2 

he is a man, worth any woman Cymbeline, i. 2 

his own proof, what woman is — _i- 7 

a woman, that bears all down — ii. I 

wlio's there? my woman Helen? .... — ii. 2 

to Dorotliy my woman hie thee. — ii. 3 

gt), bid my woman search for a jewel — ii. 3 
find out the woman's part in me! {rep.) — ii. 5 
go, bid my woman feign a sickness .. — iii. 2 

you must forget to be a woman — Hi. 4 

more truly, woman's pretty self .... — iii. 4 
more exquisite than lady, ladies, woman — iii. 5 
were you a woman, youth, I should woo — iii. fi 
'tis said, a woman's fitness comes by fits — iv. 1 

wlio is't can read a woman? — v..') 

qualities that man loves woman for.. — y. 5 
slie is a woman, therefore (rep.) ..TiiusAndron. ii. I 

thou bear'st a woman's face — ii. 3 

entreat her show a woman pity — ii. 3 

fond woman, let me go — ii. 3 

O most insatiate, luxurious woman i — v. 1 

farewell to her : suddenly, woman .... Pericles, iii. 1 

are you a woman? — iv. 3 

not a woman? An honest woman (.rep.) — iv. 3 

what means the woman? she dies! — v. 3 

so young, sir, to love a woman for singing. Lear, i. 4 

for there was never 3'et fair woman — iii. 2 

and in woman, out-paramoured tlie Turk — iii. 4 

to thee a woman's services are due — iv. 2 

in tlie fiend so horrid, as in woman — iv. 2 

a woman's shape doth shield tliee — iv. 2 

O undistinguislied space of woman's will! — iv. 6 
and low, an excellent thing in woman . . — v. 3 

cousin, I do love awoman Romeo SfJuUcI, i. 1 

lord, lord, she will be a joyful woman — ii. 4 



[ 842] 



WOM 



— ii. I 

— iii. 3 
4 
1 

— iv. 1 
1 

_ iv. 1 

— iv. 3 

— v. 2 

— v. 2 



WOMAN, in a seeming man!.... Borneo .§-.fi((i>/, iii. 
frailty, thy name is woman! Handel, i. 

most pernicious woman! O villain.... — i. 
man delights not me, nor woman neither — ii. 
'tis brief, my lord. As woman's love .... — iii. 
these are gone, the woman will be out .. — iv. 
what woman then? For none neitlier.... — v. 

one, that was a woman, sir — v. 

as would, perhaps, trouble a woman .... — v. 
bestow on a deserving woman indeed?.. Othello, ii. 
and tlie woman hath found him already 

in man, and woman, dear my lord 

woman, go to! tlirow j'our vile guesses in 

1 never knew a woman love man so 

to see how he prizes the foolish woman .. 
fine woman! a fair woman! a sweet (re/?.) — 
the earth could teem witli woman's tears 
I do not think, there is any such woman 

O perjured woman ! thou dost stone 

what needs this iterance, woman? 

he, woman; I say, thy husband — v. 

fie! your sword upon a woman? — v. 

[Co;.J fool do with so good a woman? .... — v. 
woman falls; sure he lias killed his wife — v. 

AVOMANED— have him see me womaned — iii. 
WOMANHOOD, and the witness. . Merry irives. i v. 
truth, nor womanhood in me else ..1 HenrylV. iii. 
and for womanhood, maid Marian may — iii. 
setting thy womanhood aside, thou art — iii. 
not be believed Cor womanhood! Troilus ^ Cress, v. 
womanhood denies my tongue Titus Andronicus, ii. 

no grace? no womanhood? — ii. 

WOMANISH tears: can you not read.Kmg-./o/m,iv. 
relent! 'tis cowardly, and womanish. /iic/iaid Ill.i. 

he never was so womanish Henry f III. ii. 

womanish it is to be from thence. Troilus Sr Cress, i. 

sufferance sliow us womanish JuliiLsCcesar, i. 

thy tears are womanish Itomeo ^Juliet, iii, 

no unconstant toy, nor womanish fear — iv. 
WOMANKIND! I tell thee ..Tamingof Shrew, i-f. 
WOMANLY— to her womanly persuasion — v. 

put up that womanly defence Macbeth, iv. 

Ptolemy more womanly than he. Antony Sf Cleo. i. 

WOiNIAN-POST is this? hath she no.. KingJohn, i. 

WOMAN -QUELLER. Keep them . . 2 Henry f F. ii. 

WOMAN-TIRED, unroosted hy ..Winter' sTale. ii. 

WOMB— good wombs have borne bad ..Tempest, i. 

from the wora'o I did participate. Ttrelfth Night, v. 

even so her plenteous womh. Measure forMcasicre, i. 

following her womb, then ricii. Mid..N.'sDreiim, ii. 

nourished in the womb of pia mater Love's L.L. iv. 

child was prisoner to the womb . . Winter's Tale, ii. 

sun sees, or the close earth wombs .. — iv. 

was from his mother's womb untimely. J^actf/Zi, v. 

from thy sin-conceiving womb KingJohn, ii. 

and slanderous to thy mother's womb — iii. 
ever spider twisted from her womb will — iv. 
ripping up the womb of your dear .. — v. 
that bed, that womb, that mettle. . . . Richard II. i. 
this teeming womb of royal kings.... — ii. 
whose hollow womb inherits naught — ii. 
ripe in fortune's womb, is coming.... — ii. 
in their mother's womb to chase ....IHenrylV. i. 

unruly wind within her v/omb — iii- 

my womb, ray womb, my womb....2He7!);/Zr. iv. 
the fruit of her womb miscarry ! ■ . . . — v. 
thro' the foul womb of night.. Henr^ F. iv. (chorus 
than I'll shame my mother's womb .1 Henry f'l. iv. 

then the fruit within my womb — y. 

forswore mein my mother's womb. 3 HeiiryF/. iii. 
of Edward's offspring in my womb .. — iv. 

of thy motlier's heavy womb! Richard III. i. 

my accursed womb, the bed of death — iv. 
from forth the kennel of thy womb.. — iv. 

thy womb let loose, to chase us — iv. 

strangling thee in her accursedwomb — iv. 
if I have killed the issue of your womb — iv. 
in your daughter's womb I bury tliem — iv. 
my lady's womb, if it conceived .. Henry I'lII.ii. 
twinned brothers of one womb. Timon of Athens, iv. 

whose womb unraeasurable — iv. 

thy fertile and conceptions womb.... — iv. 

and the only son of my womb ...... Coriolamis,i. 

her womb's increase, and treasure .. — iii- 
on thy mother's womb, that brought — v. 
every of your wishes had avfoiab. Antony fyCleo. i. 

the memory of my womb — iii. I 

whilst in the womb he stayed Cymbeline, v. 

into the swallowing womh. ....TitusAndronicus,)]. 
and, from that womb, where you .... — iv. 

all love the womb that their first Pericles, i. 

to herald thee from the womb — iii. 

into her womb convey sterility! Z,ear,'i. 

her womb: and from her worab. Romeo fy Juliet, ii. 
hurry from the fatal cannon's womb — v. 
detestable maw, thou «omb of death — v. 
extorted treasure in the womb of earth. Hamlet, i. 
are many events in the womb of time . . Othello, i. 

WOMBY vanltages of France Henry F. ii. 

AVOMEN— four or five women once Tempcst,i. 

all men idle, all; and women too — i\. 

have I liked several women — iii. 

women highly hold in hate . . Two fien.oj Ver. iii. 
on silly women, or poor passengers .. — iv. 

how many women would do — iv. 

when women cannot love — v. 

women to change their shapes — v. 

the women have so cried Merry Wives, i 

but women indeed cannot abide 'em — i. 

praised women's modesty — ii. 

we are tlie sons of women, master Page — ii. 
tliat come like women in men's apparel — iii. 
in women's waxen hearts to set . . Tieelfth Night, ii. 
sooner lost and worn, than women's are — ii. 

for women are as roses — ii. 

what love women to men may owe .. — ii. 
nay, women are frail too . . Measure for Measure, ii. 
woiiien! help heaven! men their.... — ii. 
buy and sell men and women like beasts — iii. 
much detected for women — iii. 



WOMEN were all dead .... Measure for Measure, iv. 3 
these poor informal women are no more — v. 1 

hath set the women on to (rep.) — v. 1 

that's tlie way; for women are light — v. 1 
thou hast suborned these women .... — v. I 

a dear happiness to women MuchAdo,i- I 

all women shall pardon me — i. 1 

look with your eyes as other women do — iii. 4 
more than ever women spoke .. Mid.N.'*Dreani, i. 1 
women's eyes this doctrine (rep,), love's L. Lost, iv. 3 

these women to forswear — iv. 3 

the authors of these women (>ep.).... — iv. 3 

lay two earthly women Merchant of yenice, iii. 5 

mistake in her gifts to women As you Like it, i. 2 

and all the men and women merely — ii. 7 
he laid to the charge of women? .... — iii. 2 

in the which women still give — iii. 2 

as boys and women are for the most — iii. 2 
tliere be some women, Silvius, had .. — iii. 5 
the women. I charge you (re/).).. — (epilogue) 
for the love you hear to women .. — (epilogue) 
between yon and the women .... — (epilogue) 
■where but women were that had .... All's Well, iv. 3 

doryou know these women? — v. 3 

women are made to bear Taming of Shrew, ii. I 

when men and women are alone .... — ii. 1 
kindness in women, not their beauteous — iv. 2 
tell these headstrong women what .. — v. 2 
that women are so simple to offer.... — v. 2 

wlien women are froward — v. 2 

women say so, that will say any .. Winter' sTale, i. 2 

become some women best — ii. I 

I learned it out of women's faces .... — ii. 1 
my women may be with me (rep.) .. — ii. I 

to see her women? any of them — ii. 2 

which 'longs to women of all fashion — iii. 2 
not women? Women will love her .. — v. 1 
alas, poor women! make us.. Comedy of Eirnrs, iii. 2 
you should be women; and yet your ,, Macbeth, i. 3 

as the weird women promised — iii. I 

make our women fight, to doff — iv. 3 

it is tlie cry of women my good lord — v. 5 
women and fools, break off your .... KingJohn, i\. 1 
boys, with women's voices, strive ..Richardll. iii. 2 
yea, distaff women manage rusty .... — iii. 2 

sup any women with him? illenrylV. ii. 2 

for the women,— for one of them .... — ii. 4 
for women are shrews, both short — v. 3 (song) 

in disdain the German women Henry F. i. 2 

as ever you came of women, come in — ii. 1 
and of women. Nay, that a' did not — ii. 3 
the devil would have him about women — ii. 3 
handle women; but then he was .... — ii. .5 
grandsires, babies, and old women — iii. (chorus) 
and none but women left to wail ,..,\HenryI'I.i. 1 
these "women are shrewd tempters ,. — i. 2 
tush! women have been captivate .. — v. 3 
more than in women commonly .... — v. 5 

these are no women's matters 2 Henri/ F/. i. 3 

that doth oft m.ake women proud iHenryl'I. i. 4 

women are soft, mild, pitiful — i. 4 

like soft-hearted women here — ii. 3 

Edward will use women honourably — iii. 2 

women and children of so high — v. 4 

and the women cried, O Jesus — v. 6 

wlieu men are ruled by women .... Richard III, i. 1 
these tell-tale women rail on the Lord's — iv. 4 
two women placed together makes.. Henry I'lll.i. 4 
the action of good women: there is hope — ii. 3 
all other women could speak this with — iii. 1 
virtues with tliese weak "women's fears — iii. I 
and fears than wars or women liave — iii. 2 
great-bellied women, that had not .. — iv. l 
some pity upon my wretched women — iv. 2 
call in more women; when I am .... — iv. 2 
come to court, the women so besiege us? — v. 3 
merciful construction of good women .. — (epil.) 
comparison between the women . Troilus Sr Cress, i. 1 

women are angels, wooing — i. 2 

or that we women had men's — .'}.'• 2 

all false women Cressids — iii. 2 

they dance! they are mad women .Timon ofAth. i. 2 
why then! women are more valiant — iii. 5 
if there sit twelve women at the — iii. 6 (grace) 
women nearest; but men, men are .. — iv. 3 

both too; and women's sons — iv. 3 

tell these sad women, 'tis fond .... Coriolanus, iv. 1 

the easy groans of old women — v. 2 

more unfortunate than all living women — v. 3 
at a few drops of women's rheum .... — v. 5 
tradesman's matters, nor women's .JuliusCafsar, i. 1 
a hundred ghastly women transformed — _i. 3 

the melting spirits of women — ii. 2 

how hard it is for women to keep.... — ii. 4 
tlien, we kill all our -women. Antony 4r Cleopatra, i. 2 
compelling occasion, let women die.. — i. 2 
no more women but Fulvia, then.... — i. 2 
might go to wars with the women! .. — ii. 2 
otlier women cloy th' appetites they feed — ii. 2 
leader's led, and we are women's men — .i.ii.7 
women are not, in their best fortunes — iii. 10 
see, ray women! against the blown rose — iii. II 

and by a gem of women, to be — iii. 11 

transformed us not to women — iv. 2 

help me, my women (rep. iv. 13) — iv. 11 

see, my women, the crown o' the .... — iv. 13 
ah, women, women! look (rep.) .... — iv. 13 

or women, tell their dreams — v. 2 

show me, my women, like a queen .. — v. 2 
very many, men and women too .... — v. 2 

do tlie gods great harm in their women — v. 2 
bear her women from the monument — v. 2 
call my women: think on my words .Cymbeline, i. 6 
I know her women are about her.... — ii. 3 

one of her women (rep. ii. 4) ........ — ii. 3 

the vows of women of no more bondage — ii- 4 
but women must be half-workers? .. — ii. 5 
men's vows are women's traitors I ,. — iij- '' 

the handmaids of all women — iii . 4 

these her women can trip me, if I err — v. .J 



WOM 



[ 843 ] 

WONDER not, nor odmiro rirel/th M'/rAf, iii. 4 (clioll.) 
thuiigh 'tiH wonder thftt enwriipH .... — iv. 3 

I should wonder iit Anj-'clo Mrnt.for Mrnt. Hi. I 

I wonder lliut yon will HtilllM! tulkink'.^^'iic/iHiio, i. I 

1 wonder, ttiut thou l)etng — \.^ 

1 do inueli woniler, tluit one man.. .. — ii. 3 
wonder not. till further warrant .... — ill. 2 

1 wonder »t it — iii. 3 

I am so ttttircd in wonder, I know .. — iv. I 
will quench the wonder of licr iid'amy — iv. 1 
meantime, let wonder seem familiar — v. 4 
and wonders at our uuaint spirits. MiJ.K.'iDr. il. 3 

I wonder, if Titunin he awaked — iii. 2 

I wonder of their beiim here torether — iv. I 
masters, 1 am to discourse wonders .. — iv. 2 
perchance, you wonder at this show (^rep.) — v. 1 
at the which let no man wonder .... — v. I 
I wonder, if the lion l)c to speak (rrp.) — v, I 

Navarre shall be the wonder Lovers L, Loat^ i . I 

I will tell Wonders — i. 2 

a wonder, master; here's a Costard.. — iii. 1 

tliat sees thee witiiout wonder — iv. 2 

by heaven, the wonder of a mortal .. — iv. 3 

and wonder, what they were ~ v. 2 

do wonder, thou naughty giioler, .l/cr. o/Tcmre, iii.3 
thou must look pale and wimilev ..AsyouLikeil. 1. I 

nine days out or the wonder — iii. 2 

ay, and greater wonders than that .. — v. 2 
that reason wonder may diminish ., — v. I 

may spend our wonder too Airsll'ctlt ii. 1 

'tisthe rarest argument of wonder .. — ii.3 
speak that which you will wonder at — iv. 1 
I wonder, sir, since wives are monsters — v. 3 

and that's a wonder Tamuigo/S/iieir, ii. 1 

make it no wonder; if you knew.... — iii. 2 

wonder not, nor be not grieved — iv. 5 

here is a wonder, if j'ou talk (rpp.) .. — v. 2 

'tis a wonder, by your leave — v. 2 

a boy, or a child, I wonder? ... Winter'tTate, iii. 3 

enough then for your wonder — iv. 3 

begetting wonder, as you, gracious .. — v. 1 
notable passion of wonder appeared.. — v. 2 
such a deal of wonder is broken out.. — v. 2 
if I do not wonder, how thou darest. . — v. 2 
it the more shows off your wonder .. — v. 3 
by what wonder you do \\\i.. Comedy of Errors, iii. 2 

than our earth's wonder — iii. '- 

this I wonder at; that he, unknown — iv. 2 

si^nior Antipholus, I "wonder much — y. 1 

Iu8 wonders and his praises do contend. il/(ic6''//i, i. 3 

rapt in the wonder of it — i. 5 (letter) 

without our special wonder? — iii. 4 

a wonder, lady! lo, upon thy Vf \s\\.. King John ^ ii. I 
a wonder, or a wondrous miracle.... — ii. 2 

they do jdot unlikely wonders tiic.hard IL v. 5 

yet let me wonder, Harry 1 UetiryW. iii. 2 

I wonder much, being men of such .. — iv. 3 
tlie mute wonder lurketh in men's .... HeuryV. i. 1 
which is a wonder, how his grace should — i. I 

bring in wonder, to waiton treason.. — ii. 2 

have in wonder found — U. i 

wonder at him; I once writ (rep.).... — iii. 7 

enacted wonders witli his sword 1 Henry VI. i. I 

■was England's glory, Gallia's wonder — iv. 7 
bereave him of his wits with wonder — v. 3 
to comi)a9s wonders, but by help .... — v. 4 
a wonder, anda pointing-stock ....lUcnryVI. ii. 4 
few days' wonder will be quickly worn — ii. 4 
I wonder, how the king (rep. ii. I) ..iHrnryl'I. i. 1 
wonder, at the least. That's a day (rep.)— iii. 2 
leave off to wonder why I drew you . . — iv. S 
I wonder, he's so fond to trust . ...Richard III. iii. 2 
he wonders to wliat end yon have .. — iii. 7 
the king enacts more wonders than.. — v. 4 

made former wonders it's UenryVlll. i. 1 

I wonder, that such a keech can with — i. I 
who was enrolled 'mongst wonders .. — i. 2 

can thy spirit wonder, a greot man .. — iii. 2 

as when the bird of wonder dies — v. 4 

thou spenkest wonders. She shall he — v. 4 
known? Is that a wonder .. Troitut^ Cresiida, iii. 3 
a wonder! Wliat? Ajax goes up .... — iii. 3 
I wonder now how yonder city stands — iv. i 

I wonder, men dare trust Tinion ofAlhtnn, i. 2 

I wonder on't; lie was wont to shine — iii. 4 
monument and wonder of good deeds — iv. 3 
but I do wonder, his insolence can . . Corhlnnut, i. 1 

to yawn, be still, and wonder — iii. 2 

and cast yourclf in wonder to see...'u//H.iCVrj(ir, i 3 
I wonder, none of you have thought.. — ii. I 

of all the wonders that I yet — ii. 2 

kneel down, and wonder ..Anlony^Cleopatra^Vu. 2 
I do wonder, doctor, thou a-^k'st me. .Ci/rntc/iHC, i. 6 

whilst I am bound to wonder — i. 7 

no wonder, when rich ones scarce tell — iii. 
not wonder at it: 3'ou aie made irep.) — v. 3 
sanguine star; it was a mark of wonder — y. Ii 
wonder greatly that man's face .. TtiutAndron. ii. 4 

to mine eye beyond all wonder I'erictes. i. 2 

men to see, and seeing wonder at — ii. 2 

by Jove, I wonder, that is king — ii.3 

increase our wonder, and set up your fame — iii. 2 

and place of general wonder — iv. (Gowerl 

'tis wonder, that thy life and wits Lear,i\. 7 

the wonder is, he hatlt endured so long. . — v. 3 
may seize on the white won(]er. Umneo <i Juliet, iii. 3 
I wonder at this hustc; that I must — iii. .'> 

it harrows nic with fear a?id wonder.... //nm/f(. i. 1 
feeds on his wonder, keeps himself in.... — iv. ,') 
if anght of woe, or wonder, cease your .. — v. 2 
it gives me wonder great as my conlent.o//ip/(o, ii. 1 
1 wonder in my soul, what you could aiik — iii. 3 
there's some wonder in this handkerchief — iii. 4 

\\i ).Nl)i;ili;i) lather, and a wife Trmpet', iv. I 

he wondend, tlnit vi>ur lordship. 7'iro(.>ii.ur /Vr.i. 3 

wlii.li I have woncd-reil at lireljlh.Mi;!,!, v. I 

I smiled, und wondered \\nvr .... Ment.fnr Mem. ii. 2 
the breed of wits so wondered ot? .Lave'tl.Lott, v. 2 

he may be more wondered at I Henry 1 1', i. 2 

like a comet, I was wondetcd at (>«p.) — iii. 2 



WON 



WOMEN— all this, her women? Cymheline, v. 5 

liow many women saw this child. 7'f/iii.4Mrfr on. iv. 2 
take women's gifts for impudence .. ..I'criclet, ii. 3 
which even women have east off .... — iv. I 

but, amongst honest women? — iv. ti 

let not women's weapons l.cnr, ii. 4 

belrny thy poor heart to women — iii. 4 

Wi>nien wilt all turn monsters — iii. 7 

centaurs, though women all above — iv. 6 

therefore wtnnen, f>eing the weaker. /fornro 4- Ju/. i. I 

women grow by men — i- 3 

making them women of good carriage — i. 4 

women may fall, when there's — ii.3 

women fear too much (iv;i.) Hamlet, iii. 2 

framed to make women false othetto, \. 3 

if I court no women, vou'U couch — iv. 3 isong) 

that there he women do abuse their — iv. 3 

WOMENIvIND-woy ofworaenkind ..Pet-iclet.'w G 

WON, iwrhaps a hapless gain Ttro Gen. nf )>< . i. 1 

why then a grievous labour won .... — i. I 
that would have won any woman's. il/ern/lfVrM.ii. 2 

he won it of me with false dice MuchAdo, ii. 1 

and fair Hero is won ii. 1 

won thy love, doing thee injuries . . Mid. N.'s Dr. i. 1 
and won her soul; and she, sweet lady — i. 1 
Imve continual plodders ever won . l.ove^L.Lost, i. 1 
'tis won, as towns witli fire; so won.. — i. 1 

without the which I am not to be won — v. 2 
imless you may be won by somc-.l/cr. (^fl'enicr^i. 2 

that won three fields of Sultan — ii. 1 

we have won the fleece. 'Would (rep.) — iii. 2 
flattering tongueof yours won me. .4s yim l.ilti- ii.iv. 1 

ere she seems as won, desires Alt's H'ell, iii. 7 

you won a wife of me — iv. 2 

a heaven on earth I have won — iv. 2 

half won, is match well made .... — iv.3(letter) 

I blush to say it, he won me — v. 3 (petition) 

now you are doubly won? — v. 3 

if this suit be won; that you (epilogue) 

in a twink she won me to her love. Tamingo/Sli. ii. 1 

the field is won. Well, forward — iv. 5 

thewttffer thou hast won; and I will — v. 2 

'twos fwon the waper, though — v. 2 

ishewonvct? He 11 stay lt'inter'sTale,i.2 

have won his grace to come . . Comedy of Errors, v. 1 

when the battle's lost and won Macbeth, i. 1 

lost, noble Macbeth hath won — i. 2 

well won is still well shot KingJohn,i. 1 

changed and won from thee — iii. I 

wliat he hath won, that hath he .... — iii. 4 

if you had won it, certainly — iii. 4 

he accoinits so clearly won — iii. 4 

triumphant father's hand had won. .llichard II. ii. 1 
easily won to fawn on any man! .... — iii. 2 

gain of care— by new care won — iv. i 

won by rareness, such solemnity ..1 Hcnryjy. iii. 2 
oil's done; oil's won; here breathless — v. 3 
proud titles thou host won of me .... — v. 4 
not leave till all our own he won .... — v. 
60 fairly won came not, till now .. ..2IIenryiy. i. I 
the king hath won; and hath sent out — i. 1 
you should have won tliem dearer .. — iv. 3 

you won it, wore it, kept it — iv. 4 

be with a nimble galliard won Henry V. i. 2 

eight shillings I won of you at betting? — ii. 1 
the English have the suburbs won ..\ Henry I' I. i. 4 

bv whom the day is won — i. 6 

Poictiers, and Tours, are won away . . — iv. 3 

Btain the honour you have won — iv. 5 

by all the glory you have Won — iv. 6 

a woman ; therefore to be won — v. 3 

with pain have wooed and won thereto — v. 3 

hath won the greatest favour i Henry I'l. i. 1 

till France be won into the Dauphin's — i. 3 
by flattery hath he won the commons' — iii. 1 
but all the honour Salisbury hath won — iii. 2 

for they have won the bridge — iv. .'1 

nor have we won one foot — v. 3 

St. Alban's battle, won by famous York — v. 3 
many a battle have I won in France .3 Henri/ r/. i. 2 

soon won with moving words — iii. I 

that now hath won the day — iv. 4 

ever woman in this humour won? ..lUchard III. i. 2 

as it was won with blood — i. 3 

not be won to aught against him .... — iii. 1 
and be not easily won to our requests — iii. 7 

1 will retail my conquest won — iv. 4 

a royal battle might be won and lost — iv. 4 
things won are done, joy's soul .. Troilus ^- Cress, i. 2 

tliey are constant, being won — iii. 2 

liard to seem won; but I was won .. — iii. 2 
that absence wherein he won honour. Corio/aiiui, i.3 

where he liath won with fame — ii. I 

lose those that he hath won — ii. I 

that won you without blows! — iii. 3 

you have won a happy victory — v. 3 

nave ever won more in Ihc'iT .... Antony ffCleo. iii. I 

rates all that is won and lost — iii. 9 

for the ring is won Cymbetine, ii. 4 

'tis not yet won: it mav be — ii. 4 

you have won : let's follow him — ii, 4 

ruled by me, !« won at la<t TitnsAndron. i. 2 

a woman, tlierefore may be won .... — ii. 1 
OS sure a card as ever won the set .... — v. I 
think'st I am tooquickly v:on..Hoineo(fJiilif', ii. 2 

Won to his shamefcd Inst the will //.im/W,i. 1 

I won his daughter with Oih,ll„.i. 3 

WONCOT- William Visor of Woncot.JHf.iry; /'. v. I 
WONDEIl! if you be made, or no?(rrp.). 7"'m;)«/, i. 2 

that wcjiidera to hear thei; speak — i. 2 

to make a wonilcr of a poor drunkard — ii. 2 
trotdile, wonder, ond amazement .... — v. I 

ot least, brinu' fortli a wonder — v. I 

O wonder! how many jjooiUv creature" — v. I 
the W'lnilcrs of the world abroad. TicoOen. offer, i. I 

that you will wonder — v. 4 

contents as you will wonder at .. Merryll'ices, iv. 6 
at llcrne'soak, and you shall see wonders — v. I 

rather to wonder ot you than TicelflhNi^hl, i. 5 

with such utimable wonder — Ii. I 



WONDERED— make thee wondered. .3H«nrt/»';. !. 4 

be mocked and wondereil ot — v. 4 

the miduile wonikred, and the women — v. B 

I wooilerLd.cnlcl l>ehorurely Cymbeline. ii. 1 

wondereil ut in time to come .7VIuty4iic/roinVi«, iii. 1 

ne'er belie Id, but wondered at t'er tries, i, 4 

hut killed are wonrlered ut — ii.3 

WONDEKFUL-09 'tis wonderful .Merrymvc; ii. 2 
from his book, and it is wondertul .. — iii. I 

of that wonilerfnl promise TicelflhXighl, iii. 4 

most wonderful! — v. I 

but, most wonderful, that she should.. Wiic'i/4Jo, ii. 3 

woiulerftd, wonderful Oep.) ..AsyrmLike it, iii. 2 
stark mad, or wonderful froword . . Taming ofSh. i. I 

1 tell thee, Licio, this is wonderful .. — iv. 2 
wonderftd, what may be wrought ..KiniiJnhn, iii. 4 

it is a wonderful thing, to see illenryll'.v. I 

wits, is wonderful to l>e thought on\ . . Henry I' . iii. 8 
wonderful! Come, go we in jjrocession — iv. 8 
O wonderful, when devils tell (rep.).Uichard III. i. 2 

and so young, is wonderful — iii. I 

saw you anything more wonderful ?.Jw/iuiCrf'«/7r, i. 3 
unseen a wonderful piece of work. ^7t^o»[/ * Cleo. i. 2 

after, a won<lerfnl sweet air Cymbeline, ii.3 

'tis wonderful [Coi An/. -wonder] that — iv. 2 
O wonderful! good my lord, tell it Hamlet, i, h 

womlcrful son. that can so astonish .. — iii. 2 
WONDERFULLY to extend him ... . Cymbeline. i. 5 
WONDERING how thy nome..../).yo.i/,i7ir ./, iii. 2 

by wondering how thou took'st it .... All's ll'ell, ii. I 
grace equal with wondering. /rui/er'nT'.i/r, iv. (cho.) 
makes me, from wondering, fall to ..^llenryf'l. i. I 

looked wondering eacli at other C'niolanus, v. 5 

white-upturned wonil'jring eyes. fiomeo 4 Juliet, ii. 2 

WONDER- WOUNDED hearers? Hamlet, v. I 

AVONDROUS-wondrous heavy Tempest, W. I 

but follow thee, tlion wonrlrous man .. — ii. 2 
hot ice, and wondrous strange snow. Mid. K.'sDr. v. I 
that word, of wondrous virtues.iVcrc/i. o//Vnic«', i. I 
and with affection wondrous sensible — ii. 8 
and found her wondrous cold Alt's ll'ell, iii. 6 

1 found you wondrous kind — v. 3 

her wondrous qualities, and mild.VVimm^o/SA. ii. ) 
if they saw some wondrous monument — iii. 2 
is slie a wondrous fat marriage .Comedy nf Err. iii. 2 
or a wondrous miracle, the shadow.. A'ih^JoAm, ii. 2 

this dav grows wondrous hot — iii. 2 

other four ill wondrous motion — iv. 2 

lCnt.Kul.'\ it will do wondrous well .A Henry I r. i. 3 

as lion, and wondrous affable — iii. I 

and him. O wondrous him! i Henry 1 1', li. 3 

thou wilt do these wondrous fents? ..I He?iry 11. i. 2 
Henry with her wondrous praise .... — v. 3 
vour wondrous rare description — v. 5 

tis wondrous strange, thelike j'et ..^Henryl'l. ii. I 
brave (Oxford, wondrous well beloved — iv. 8 

yourselves wondrous malicious Coriolanus, i. 1 

actions would grow wondrous single — ii. I 

wondrous things spoke of him (r^-p.).. — ii. I 
had you not by wondrous fortune. 'Titiis.-tndron. ii. 3 

wondrous thing! how easily murder — ii. 4 

I'll show thee wondrous tilings — v. 1 

fair day in summer; wondrous fair. . . . Pericles, ii. h 
wliate'cr it be, 'tis woiulrous heavy..., — iii. 2 
my heart is wondrous light .... Itomeo ^Juliet, iv. 2 

but this is wondrous strange I Ilamlel, i. 5 

or throw him out with wondrous potency — iii. 4 
to such wondrous doing brought his horse — iv. 7 
'twas pitiful, 'twas woudrous pitiful Othello, i. 3 

WONDROUSLY to discontent .7imorio/.4(/ifiij, iii. 4 

WONT— you were wont. when.. 7VoGeii. 0/ ler. ii. 1 

the lights they were wont to have .... — ii. I 

tales of love were wont to weary you — ii. 4 

1 love him not, as I was wont — ii. 4 

yon were wont to be a follow er . . Merry If ires, iii. 2 

lie was wont to speak plain Much Ado, ii. 3 

and when was he wont to wash his face? — iii. 2 
were AVcmt to lie, emptying . ... Mid. .\.'s Dream, i. 1 

on the buds was wont to swell — iv. 1 

be as thou wast wont to be [rep.) .... — iv. I 
when I was wont to think no harm. Love's L. Lost . i. 1 
your worshij) wori wont to tell me.:l/er.o/"/>nice, ii. ."i 
than they ore wont to keep obliged .. — it. 6 

wont to call me usurer; let him (rrp.) iii. I 

your grace was wont to lough As you Like il, ii. 2 

I wos wont to load ray she with.. iri>i/(r'i7'.i/<f, iv. 3 
were yon wont to use my sister. .Cowifdyri/'iVr. ii. 2 

o.'^ a beggar wont her brot — iv. 4 

England, that was wont to conquer. Wf/mrd //. ii. 1 
taste of it Hrst. as thou art wont to do — v. 5 

wliom we wont to fear I Henry I'l. i. 2 

intrenched, wont, through a secret ., — i. 4 

I wu-s wont to feed vou with — v. 3 

'tis not his wont to "lie the hiiidmoBt.2frrnr|/ I'L iii. 1 

was wont to cheer his dad in 3 Henry I' I. I. 4 

swear OS thou wo.'^t wont — ii. B 

it was wont to hold me Hichard III. i. 4 

thou wart not wont to be so dull .... — iv. 2 
of nniul, that 1 wait wont to hax'C .... — v. 3 
he was wont to thine at seven. Tnnon or Athens, iii. 4 
was wont to come home woimded ..Cotiolanus, ii. 1 
who was wont to coll Ihem woollen,. — iii. 2 

when yon were wont to suy — iv. I 

he that was wont to thwack _ iv. 5 

of love, as I was wont to have ....JuliusCirtar, i. 2 
sparkles this stone as it was wont? . . Cymbeline, ii. 4 
in silence, as tliedead ore wont. 7'i(««/4Hdro«icK«, i. 2 
when wert thou wont to walk alone.. — i. 2 

ofl'eetion as you were wont Lear, i. 4 

when were you wont to be so full — i. 4 

the spirit held his wont to walk Hamlet. '\. 4 

even those 3"ou were wont to take — ii.3 

thnt were wont lo set the table on a roar? — v. 1 

Montano, you were wont be civil Othello, ii.3 

more near the earth thou slio u as wont — v. 2 

WONTED-their wonted liveries ..Mid.N.'sDr. ii. 2 
his evebolls roll with wonted sight .. — iii. 2 

his w-oiited followers shall all ■lUrnryli: v. S 

but keep my wonted calling? \ Henry I'l. iii. I 

iiutreul you to your wouted furtherance? — v. 3 



WON 



[ 844 ] 

WOOD— men like blasted woods. Timon uf Athens, iv. 3 
3'Ou are not wood, you are not, . . , JuUusCrfaar, iii. 2 
upon a pile of wood, let's hew his. .Titus Andron. i. 2 
the woods are rutliless, dreadful .... — ii- 1 
fragrant, and the woods are green .. — ii. 2 
in the ruthless, vast, and gloomy woods — iv. 1 
stole into the covert of the wood, liomeo S,-Jvlict, i. 1 
that turneth wood to stone Hamtel, iv. 7 

WOODBINE coverture MuchAdo, iii. 1 

over-canopied witli lush vroo&bme.Mid.N.'sUr. ii. 2 
tlie woodbine, the sweet honeysuckle — iv. 1 

WOODBIRDS but to couple now .... — iv. 1 

WOODCOCK near the "in Twtlflh Night, W. 5 

and fear to kill a woodcock — iv. 2 

shall I not find a woodcock too? .... MucU Ado, v. I 

four woodcocks in a disli! Love^sL.Lost, iv. 3 

we have cauglit the woodcock All's ii'etl, i v. 1 

tliis woodcock I what an ass. Taming of Shrew, i. 2 

ay, ay, so strives the woodcock 3 Henry f'l. i. 4 

ay, springes to catcli woodcocks Hamlet, i. 3 

wily, as a woodcock to my own springe — v. 2 

WOODKN— this wooden slavery Tempest, iii. I 

within tliis wooden O, the very. Hen?-j/ F. i. (cliorus) 
pare his nails with a wooden dagger — iv. 4 
upon a wooden cofBn we attend .... 1 Henri/ F/. i. 1 

tush I that's a wooden thing! — v. 3 

to hear tlie wooden dialogue. . Trotlus <§- Cressida, i. 3 
in tl>e end to buy him a wooden one?. . Pericles, iv. 6 

pins, wooden pricks, nails, sprigs l.ear, ii. 3 

then he wears wooden nether-stocks .... — ii. 4 

WOODLAND fellow, sir, that AU'sJVell,iv. 5 

WOOD-LEAVES and weeds Cymheline, iv. 2 

WOOD JMAN ? Ha 1 Speak I Merry Wives, v. 5 

a better woodman than thou ., Meas.for Meas. iy. 3 

have proved best woodman Cymheline, iii. 6 

WOODMONGER, and buy nothing. . . . Henry V. v. 1 
WOODSTOCK-ThomasofWoodstock.2 Henry I'l. ii.2 
AVOODVILLE, prizest him 'fore me?..l Henry I'l. i. 3 

Antony Woodville, her brother Richard III. i, 1 

rCol.Knt.'] Woodville, and lord Scales — ii. 1 

WOOED-motlve that I wooed thee.MerryWives, iii. 4 

if you be not wooed in good time ....MuchAdo, ii. 1 

1 have wooed in thy name — ii. 1 

and, as I wooed for thee to obtain her — iii- 2 
that I have to-night wooed Margaret — iii. 3 
I wooed thee witli my sword ..Mid.N.'sDream, i. 1 
we should be wooed, and were not .. — ii.2 

wooed but the sign ofslie Lotie'sl,. tos/, v. 2 

I had as lief be wooed of a s\iQ\\..AsyouLike it, iv. 1 
you wooed the gentlewomanraim'ng-o/SA. 1 (indue) 
that ever Katharina will be wooed .. — _ i. 2 
who wooed in haste, and means .... — iii. 2 
means to wed where he hath wooed — iii. 2 
that shall be wooed and wedded .... — iv. 2 
you wooed me the false way .... Winter' sTale, iv. 3 

when first I wooed her! — v. 3 

when she was young, you wooed her — v. 3 
because he hath not wooed me yet ..King John, ii. 2 

to be qiiickly wooed to gripe 1 Henry IV. v, 1 

beautiful; and therefore to be wooed. 1 Hemj/ fl. v. 3 
with pain have wooed and won thereto — v. 3 
ever woman in this humour wooed? Richard III. i- 2 
reflecting gems, that wooed the slimy — i. 4 
as tetchy to be wooed to woo.. Troilus <S- Cressida, i. 1 
though they be long ere they are wooed — iii. 2 
loved you well, I wooed you not .... — iii. 2 
occasions might have wooed . . Timon of Athens, iii. 3 

arms as soiuid, as when I wooed Coriolanus, i. 6 

a woman, therefore may be wooed. Tilus Andron. ii. 1 
and Itaving wooed a villain to attempt. /"enVte, v. 1 
we met, we wooed, and made . . liomeo Sr Juliet, ii. 3 
did Michael Cassio, when you wooed . . Olhello, iii. 3 
a hundred times wooed me to steal it.... — iii. 3 

WOOER— and of other wooers Merry Wives, i. 4 

to be her wooer Twelfth Night, i. 3 

she mocks all her wooers out of suit. .MuchAdo, ii. 1 
since many a wooer doth commence.. — ii. 3 

that smooth-faced wooers say Love'sL.Losl, v. 2 

lam glad this parcel of wooers are. Mer. of Venice, i. 2 
whiles we shut the gate upon one wooer — i. 2 
to make one among these wooers ..Taming of Sh. i. 1 
daughter liad a thousand wooers .... — _i. 2 
with mildness entertain'st thy wooers — ii. I 
the bluntest wooer in Christendom.3Heiin/ri. iii, 2 
to her go I, a jolly thriving wooer . Richard III, iv. 3 
prepare her ears to hear a wooer's tale — iv. 4 
fresb, loved, and delicate wooer. Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

a wooer, more hateful than Cymbeline, ii. 1 

that she was lialf the wooer Othello, i. 3 

WOOES you by a figure TwoGen.of Verona, ji. 1 

he wooes both high and low Merry Wives, i\. 1 

here hard by, wooes her TweinhNight,\. 3 

the prince wooes for himself MuchAdo, ii, 1 

yet he wooes; yet will he swear — ii. 3 

the coimt he wooes your daughter . . All's Well, iii. 7 
who wooes even now the frozen., fiomeo ^Juliet, i. 4 

WOOF— Arachne's broken woof.. Ti oilus & Cress, v. 2 

WOOING— use your art oi woo'mg.. Merry Wives,\\. 2 

we shall have the freer wooing — iii. 2 

yet wooing thee, I found thee — iii. 4 

wooing, wedding, and repenting MuchAdo, ii. I 

because you talk of wooing, I will sing — ii. 3 
lienceforth ray wooing mind shall. Loi'e'sL.ios(, v. 2 

our wooing doth not end like an — y. 2 

for wooing here, until I sweat. i^/«-c/i. of J'enice, iii. 2 
I remember thewooinpof apeascod..4s!/ouLi/cp, ii. 4 

and, wooing, she should grant? — v. 2 

my sudden wooing, nor her sudden ., — v. 2 

I have won, by wooing thee All's Well, iv. 2 

to begin his wooing, that would .. Taming of Sh. i. 1 

is burden of my wooing dance — i. 2 

and bear his charge of wooing — i. 2 

but you will curse your wooing — ii. 1 

but in this case of wooing, a cluld.... — ii. 1 
that Lucentio that comes a wooing . . — iii. 1 

two maids wooing a man ll'inier'sTale, iv. 3 

on slaves; wooing poor craftsmen ..Richard II. i. 4 

in wooing sorrow' let's be brief. — v. 1 

my wooing is fit for thy understanding. Henry r. v. 2 
women are angels, wooing ., Truiliis iCrcssidu, i. 2 



WOR 



WONTED sleep under a fresh tree's. .ZHenry VI. ii. 5 
will not lose her wonted greatness, (/enrt/'///. iv. 2 
promising to pay our wonted tribute. Cymbeline, v, 6 
endeavour keeps in the wonted pace . . Hamlet, li. 2 
bring him to his wonted way again — iii. 1 

WOO— yet I will woo for him. Two Gen.af Verona, iv. 4 

I'll woo you like a soldier — v. 4 

and thou shalt woo her MerryWives,\\. 3 

let him woo for himself — m. 4 

till tliou art able to woo her in — v. 5 

board her, woo her, assail her Twelfth^lghl, i. 3 

woo your lady: yet barful strifel irep.^ — i. 4 

for, that I woo, thou therefore — ni. 1 

that the prince should woo Hero .... MuchAdo.}. 3 

and let me woo no more — ;!■ 3 

andshewilldieif he wooher — n. 3 

nor I cannot woo in festival terms .. — v. 2 
thou and I are too wise to woo peaceably — y. 2 

and were not made to woo Mid.N. sDream, n. 2 

in such disdainful manner me to woo — _}>.S 

then will two, at once, woo one — in. 2 

that I should woo in scorn? — m- 2 

at Ninus' tomb, there, there to woo. . — .v. 1 

to woo tliese girls of France? Love s L. Lost, iv. 3 

so shall your loves woo contrary — v. 2 

they return in their own shapes to woo? — v. 2 

nor woo in rhyme, like a blind — _ v. 2 

to woo a maid in way of . . . . Merchant of Venice, n. 9 

I came to woo, but I go away — ii. 9 

leave me alone to woo him Asyou Liketl,i.3 

with unbashful forehead woo the means — ii. 3 

your poor friends must woo your — _ii. 7 

every day to woo me (rep.) — ?.'!■ ^ 

you chide, than this man woo — in. 5 

come, woo me, woo me; for now I .. — iv. I 

men are April when they woo .— ly, 1 

whiles the eye of man did woo me — iv. 3 (letter) 
lovin", woo? and, wooing, she should — v, 2 

not to woo honour, but to wed it AllsWcU,n. 1 

told me just liow he would woo — iy- 2 

would thoroughly woo her Taming of Shrew, i. 1 

undertake to woo curst Katherine .. — 1.2 

woo this wild cat? Will I live? (rep.) — i. 2 

'mongst the rept that woo — n. I 

every day I cannot come to woo .... — u. 1 
rough, and woo not like a babe (rep.) — ii. 1 
and woo her with some spirit when.. — ii. 1 

moved to woo thee for my wife — .li. 1 

he'll woo a thousand, 'point the day — in. 2 

never to woo her more — !\. 2 

new woo my queen Winter sTale.m. 2 

not the gift to woo in other Henryl . v. 2 

when I come to woo ladies — v. 2 

fain would I woo her \HenryH. v. 3 

to w-oo so fair a dame — v. 3 

deign to woo her little worth — v. 3 

how canst thou woo lier? Richard III. iv. 4 

under what title shall I woo for thee — iv. 4 

and woo your own destruction? Henry VIll. y. 1 

as tetchy to be wooed to woo.. Troilus &■ Cressida, i. 1 

sweet Helen, I must woo you to — iii. 1 

BO did we woo transformed Timon. Timon of.-ith. v. 5 

keep it till you woo another wife Cymbeline, i. 2 

doth woo me oft for my confections? — i. 6 

1 should woo hard, but be your groom — 111.6 

were it to woo my daughter Pericles, v. 2 

but wooher, gentle Paris Romeo S,- Juliet,]. 2 

and say thee nay, so thou wilt woo.. — _n. 2 

of woe afford no time to woo — iii. 4 

that should be husband, comes to woo — 111.5 

yea, curb, and woo, for leave to do Hamlet, iii. 4 

tell my story, and that would woo her. . Olhello, i. 3 

WOOD-fetch in our wood Tempest, i. 2 

there's wood enough within — i. 2 

for bringing wood in slowly — ii.2 

I'll bring my wood home faster — 11.2 

and get thee wood enough — i|. 2 

like a wood woman Two Gen. of Verona, ii. 3 

to the west end of the wood — v. 3 

sliadowy desert, unfrequented woods — V. 4 

will this wood take fire? Merry Wives, v. 5 

and in the wood, a league (rep.) Mid.N.'sDrcam, i. 1 
then to the wood, will he, to-morrow — 1. 1 
and meet me in the palace wood .... — _i. 2 
how long within this wood intend .. — ii.2 

they were stolen into this wood — ii. 2 

wood within this wood, because I cannot — ii, 2 

nor doth this wood lack worlds — ii. 2 

I shall do thee mischief in the wood — ii. 2 
you faint witli wandering in the wood — ii. 3 
wit enough to get out of this wood .. — iii. 1 

out of this wood do not desire — iii. 1 

about the wood go swifter than — iii. 2 

told him of your stealth unto this wood — iii. 2 
behind the wood, seeking sweet savours — iv. 1 

when in a wood of Crete — iv. I 

hither, to this wood ; and I in fury . . — iv. 1 

Owood divine! awife(rep.) Love'sL.Losi, iy. 3 

are not these woods more free As youLike it, ii. 1 

the brook that brawls along this wood — ii. I 
we have no temple but the wood — — iii. 3 
to the skirts of this wild wood he came — v. 4 
and burn sweet wood ..Taming of Slirew. 1 (indue.) 
roaming through a thorny wood.. — 2 (indue.) 

makes wing to the rooky wood Macbelh, iii. 2 

until great Birnam wood (rep. v. 3 & v. 6) — iv. 1 

near Birnam wood shall we well — v. 2 

what wood is this before us? The wood — v. 4 
methonght the wood began to move. ... — v. 6 

anil now a wood comes toward — v. 5 

though Birnam wood be come — v, 7 

and felled my forest woods Richard II. iii. 1 

my figured goblets, for a dish of wood — iii. 3 

I'll tie them in the wood ] Henryl V. i. 2 

whelp of Talbot's, raging wood 1 Henry VI. iv, 7 

he talks of wood; it is — . v. 3 

have I hid me in these woods i Henry VI. iv. 10 

lost in a thorny wood (rep. v. 4) SHenryVl. iii. 2 

Timon will to the woods Timon of Athens, iv. 1 

shame not these woods — iv. 3 



— i.2 



1 
— ii. 1 



— v. 1 
1 
1 



WOOING— for more serious wooing.... Per/c/es, iv. 

that came a wooing witli you Othello, iii. 

in my whole course of wooing — iii. 

WOOINGLY— smells wooingly \ier&.... Macbeth, i. 
WOOL— what comes the wool to? . Winler'sTale, iv. 

wool of bat, and tongue of dog Macbeth, iv. 

the sheep no wool, the cat no perfume ..Lenr, iii. 
WOOLLEN— rather lie in the woonen.il/iicA.4rfo, ii. 

iCol.Knt.'] a woollen bagpipe.. 1/erc/ion( or Venice, iv. 

wont to call them woollen vassals. . Coriolanus, iii. 
WOOLLY breeders in the act . . Merch. of Venice, i. 

thisfleeceof woolly hair that now. 7V/us/l?irfro»t, ii. 
WOOLSACK— how now, woolsack?..! HeHji/;/'. ii. 
WOOLVISH-TK.-wolfish] gown [C.-toge] . Cor/o(, ii, 

WOOLWARD for penance Love'sL. Lost, v, 

WORCESTER-at Worcester must his. King John, v. 

whereon the earl of Worcester hath.ifjWiarrf //. ii. 

sent from my brother of Worcester .. — ii. 

this is Worcester, malevolenirto ....\ Henry IV. i. 

Worcester, get thee gone, for I see danger — i. 

Worcester is stolen away to-night .. — ii. 

and, uncle Worcester (rep.) — iii. 

I learned in Worcester, as I rode along — iv. 

your uncle Worcester's horse came but — iv. 

there's my lord of Worcester (rep. v. I) — iv. 

no, good Worcester, no, we love our. . — v. 

ill-spirited Worcester! did we not send — v. 

bear Worcester to the death — v. 

was that noble Worcester too soon ..IHemylV. i. 
WORD— tliy purposes with words Tempest, i 

a word, good sir (rep.) 

soft, sir; one word more (rep.) . . 

his word is more than the miraculous harp — 

you cram these words into mine ears . 

but one word 

interrupt the monster one word further — 

both in word and deed 

tlieir words are natural breath .. 

nothing but the word noddy. r«-o Gen. o/Ferona, i, 

to tear such loving words! — i. 

blow not a word away — i. 

'tis a word or two of commendation. . — i. 

except an angry word — ii. 

what! gone without a word! — ii. 

truth liatli better deeds than words.. — ii. 
the shoe speak a word for weeping . . — ii. 
sheds not a tear, nor speaks a word.. — ii. 

a fine volley of words — ii, 

if you spend word for word with me — ii. 

you have an exchequer of words .... — ii, 
that they live by your bare words .. — ii, 

and, in a word (for far behind — ii, 

quench the fire of love with words .. — ii. 

his words are bonds, his oaths — ii 

if she respect not words — iii 

more than quick words — iii 

friend Valentine, a word — iii 

tlie next word that tiiou speak'st .... — iii 
your old vice still; mistake the word — iii 

she is slow in words (rep. ) — iii 

that word m,akes the faults — iii 

where your good word cannot — iii 

we'll have him; sirs, a word — iv 

to think upon tlij words — iv, 

if the gentle spirit of moving words .. — v 

at a word, he hath (rep. ii.2) Merry Wives, i 

word of denial in thy labras here (lep.) — i 

a word with you (rep. ii. 1 and iii. i) — i 

1 am at a word, follow — i 

to speak a good word to mistress .... — i 

I would have no words of it — _i 

gone to the truth of his words — ii 

the very hand, the very w'ords — ii 

he gets more of her thau sharp words — ii 
vouchsafe your worship a word or two? — ii 

a word, monsieur Muck-water — ii 

wliat! the sword and the word! .... — iii 
let-a me speak a word vit your ear .. — iii 

and I'll be as good as my word — iii 

I must carry her word quickly — iii 

he sent me word to stay within — iii 

you do ill to teach the child such words — iv 
he will seek there on my word (rep.) — iv 

to send him word they'll meet — iv 

you yet shall hold your word — v 

word for word, without book TwelflhNight, i 

will not pass his word for two-pence — i 
my words are as full of peace as .... — i 

by word of mouth (rep. iii. 4) — ii 

they that dally nicely with words . . — iii 
her name's a word, and to dally (rep.) — iii 

indeed, words are very rascals — iii 

none without words, and words are .. — iii 
not her fool, but her corrupter of words — iii 

but the word is over-worn — iii 

hob nob is hisword; give't, or take't — iii 

I'll he as good as my word — iij 

methinks, his words do from — iii 

he has heard that word of some . 

and bring me word how thou — 

maintain no words with him — 

tliy words are madness — 

the words of heaven Measnrefor Measiir 

one word, good friend: Lucio, a word — 
I'll send him certain word of my .... — 
I that do speak a word, may call it. . — 

and you but waste your words — 

in the captain's but a cholerick word — 

heaven hatli my empty words — 

I do arrest your words — 

my words express my purpose — 

business is a word or two with Claudio — 

provost, a word with you (rep.) — 

and deliberate word nips youth i' the — 

no word to save thee — 

vouclisafe a word, young si.ster (rep.) 
and good words went with her name 

is it sad, and few words? 

go to, no more words 

made known to Mariana a word of tlxis 



— IV. 1 



— iii. 1 



WOR 



Wt»UI)-not n word; if. you Imvc . Afrm./'irjWrtn. iv. 

for certain \vor<l« he dimkc npiinst .. — v. 

WiinU against mc? Tliis a l'oimI friar — V. 

and words from lircatli. as llu're is .. — v. 

strongly 09 words could inakc up vows — v. 

as any in Vienna, on my woni — v. 

friar and .vo\i must liave a word anon — v. 

iinst tliou or wonl, or wit — v. 

nut of nuiny words, lint I thank you.. .VricA.-d/o, i. 

and tire the heiircr with a Iwok of words — i. 

no more words, tlic clerk is answered — ii. 

at n word, I am nut U'T.) — ii. 

speaks poniiirds, iiiul cvorv word stiilis — ii. 

rather tluui hold three words' conference - ii. 

liis words urc a very funtusliciil liiinniiet — ii. 

lunv mweh an ill word miiy impoison — iii. 

eight or nine wise words to speak to you — iii. 

the word is too pood to paint out her — iii. 

one word more, honest neighbours .. — iii. 

one word sir: our wuteh sir — iii. 

never tempteil her with word too large — iv. 

maintained the change of words with — iv. 

she died upon his words, the idea .... — iv. 

will you not eat your word? — iv. 

a word in your ear, sir (rep. V. 1) .... — iv. 

upon his words, to disgrace Hero .... — iv. 

ache with air, and agony with words — v. 

speak off half a dozen dangerous words — v. 

only foul words (rep.) — ■ v. 

thou hast frighted the word out of .. — v. 

first, o' my word; therefore, play .... — v. 
keep woril, Lysander; we must .Mid. K.'sDi cam, i. 

how fit a word is that vile name .. — ii. 
no sound, no word? Alack, where .. — ii. 

1 am amazed at your passionate words — iii. 

I'll keep my word with thee — iii. 

I'll not trust your word — iii. 

not a word of me. All that I will tell — iv. 

some ten words long (rfp.) — v. 

there is not one wonl apt — v. 

tongue not a word: come, trusty .... — v. 

to each word a warbling note — v. 

this word shall speak for me Love'sL.Lnsi, i. 

in high-born words, tlie worth of .... — i. 

a mail of fire-new words, fashion's .. — i. 

I hope in God for high words — i. 

not a word of Costard yet — i. 

no words— of other men's secrets .... — i. 

the word three, and study three (i-.;p.) — i. 

to be too silent in their words — i. 

in such apt and gracious words — ii. 

we arrest your word: Boyet, you can — ii. 

sir, I pray you a woid (rep.) — ii. 

a word with him but ajest (rep.) .... — ii. 

of you, to take him at his word — ii. 

but to siicak tliat in words, which his — ii. 

and the word. I'envoy, for a salve? .. — iii. 

O. that's the lyatin word for three .. — iii. 

will never buy and sell out of this word — iii. 

for foul words is more than due — iv. 

thou fellow, a word; who gave thee.. — iv. 

defile! afoul word. Well — iv. 

is not that a good word? — iv. 

a word that all men love; or for (rep.) — iv. 

lived long on the alms-basket of words! — v. 

liath not eaten thee for a word — v. 

the word is well culled, chose — v. 

thou hast spoken no word all this. .. . — v. 

dark meaning, mouse, of this light word? — v. 

one sweet word with thee — v. 

one word in secret (rep.) — v. 

with me to change a word? — v. 

let's part the word — v. 

not one word more, my maids — v. 

was weeping-ripe for a good word. ... — v. 

vouchsaie me an audience for one word — v. 

did not bless us with one hoppy word — v. 

to snatch words from my tongue .... — v. 

honourably doth uphola his word .. — v. 

as will utter a brace of words — v. 

honest plain words best pierce — v. 

I'll mark no words that — v. 

O word of fear! unpleasing to .... — v. 2 (son; 

the Words of Mercury arc harsh .... — v. 
and, in a word, hut eren now...Wc)cA.o/Tem'cf, i. 

ami, fairer than that word, of wondrous — i. 

me, the word choose! — i. 

who brings word, the prince — i. 

bis words were, farewell, mistress .. — ii. 

Iw an honest woman of her word — iii. 

in a word, the seeming truth which.. — iii. 

you have bereft me of all words — iii. 

a few of the uniileasantest words .... — iii. 

and every Word in it a gaping wound — iii. 

waste no time in words, but get thoc — iii. 

luiw every fool can play upon the word! — iii. 

only, cover Is tlie word — iii. 

how his words ore snitcdl — iii. 

an army of good words — iii. 

that for a tricksy word defy — iii. 

those ore the very words — iv. 

the words expressly ore, a pound .... — iv. 

for teaching me that word — iv 

and I bring word, my mistress, will.. — v. 

we hope, tlic better for our words .... — v. 

appear in other woys than words .... — v 
would not have s|)i>kc such o word..^xyoii Likf^ i. 

not a word? Not one to throw — i. 

no, thy words are too orecious — i. 

did consist in words, tlicy arc 08 .... — i. 

in the greatness of my word, you die — i. 

answer me in one word — iii. 

'tis a word too great lor any mouth .. — iii. 

is it honest in (leed, and word? — iii. 

no stronger than the word of — iii. 

speaks brave wonis, swears brave.... — iii. 

Fll sauce hrr with bitter words — iii. 

what care I for words? yet words do — iii. 

1 cannot say the words — iv. 

such Klhiop words, blacker in — iv. 



— iv. 3 



[ 8^5 ] 

WDKD— hence, and not a worti . . Ai i/oii l.ikr il, iv. 

keep you yiiur word, () duke (rep.) .. — v. 

lie sent me word, if I said his beard .. v. 

word again, it was not well cut (rfp.) — v. 

I will iii>t cat my word — v. 

have audience, for a wonl, or two ... . — v. 
his plausive words he scattered not. . . . All'i irell,\. 

her own words to her own ears — i. 

and lustrous, a word, gorwl metals .. — ii. 

il'lhon lirociid asbighas W(jrd — ii. 

the uHTc word's a slave, dehaiiclieil on — ii. 

a word with von. Your pleasure, sir? _ ii. 

you are not worth another word .... — ii. 

Btin-siiiu in lier mildest words! .... _ iii. 

let evcrv wonl weigh lieavy uflicr .. _ iii. 

I h.ve not many words _ iii. 

spoken, is so, from word to word .... — iii. 

ore words, and poor eonditioiiB _ iv. 

but with the word, the time will — iv. 

to hear me one single word — v. 

save your word. My name — v. 

you beg more than one word tlien.... — v. 

wlioise words all ears took captive.... — v. 

not one word more of the consumed,. — v. 

but very idle words raming qf Sliretr, i (indue 

but a word, I pray: though — i. 

spake you not these words plain .... — i. 

o'iny word, an' she knew him as.... i. 

with more successful words than .... — i. 

sir, a word ere you go — i. 

more words, you will get you — i. 

to what end are all these words? — i. 

did she cross thee with a hitter word? — ii. 

armed for some unhappy words — ii. 

with that word, she struck me — ii. 

and will not speak a word — ii. 

than words can witness, or 5'our .... — ii. 

fortune stays him from his word .... — iii. 

I am come to keep my word — iii. 

therefore have done with words — iii. 

what, not a word? nay then, thou .. — iv. 

as 1 please, in words. Why, thou say'et — iv. 

take no unkindness of his hasty words — iv. 

but your words show you a madman — v. 

I would that word were true — v. 

sends you word that she is busy .... — v. 

to bandy word for word, and frown .. — v. 
do enme with words as med'cinal. tVinler'sTaIr, ii. 

within this hour bring me word 'tis.. — ii. 

whose every word deserves to taste .. — iii. 

if word, nor oath, prevail, go and see — iii- 

not word, a word; we stand — iv. 

no scurrilous words in his tunes .... — iv. 

your tongues; and not a word more — iv. 

marlc thou my words; follow us .... — iv. 
know you shall not want,— one word 

till he had both tune and words 

pray you, a word. What I do next .. 

every word, yea, and his son's pranks — 

and the words that followed should he — 
when your words are done .... Comnly of Error 

would ti'ke you at your word, and go — 

when spake I such a word? — 

that never words were music to — 

who every word by all my wit {rep.) 
her very words didst thou deliver to 
a word with you, sir; and words are but 
are doubled with an evil word . 
meaning of your word's deceit . 
with words, that in an honest.. . 

brought you word on hour since 

his word might bear my wealth — 

to thee engaged a prince's worfl — 

vouchsafe me speak a word — 

so well thy words become thee Maclielh 

to the self-some tune, and words — 

cousins, a word, I pray youl — 

spend it in some words upon that 

words to the heat of deeds too culd .... 

sirrah, a word; attend those 

his leisure for a few words 

thou marvell'st at my words 

from broad words, and 'cause he failed 

but one word more. He will not 

that bring you word, Macduff 

but I have words, that would be 

give sorrow words; the grief — iv. 

would hove been a time for such a word — v. 

I have no words, my voice is in — v. 

that keep the word of promise — v. 

they shoot but calm words, folded .. KhigJolin, ii. 

not a word of his, hut buffets better.. — ii. 

1 was never so bcthnmped with words — ii. 

but the word maid, cheats the poor-. — ii. 

this broker, this all clianging word ., — ii. 

for thy word is but the vain breath.. — iii. 

signs eonllrmers of thy wonls? — iii. 

but this one wonl, whether thy — iii. 

envenom him witli worils — iii. 

should speak those words to me! .. .. — iii. 

that gave the sound of words — iii. 

hark, a word. Come hither, iluhert — iii, 

ears, and harmfid 8(^und of words .. — iii. 

reiK'ots his words, remembers me.... — iii. 

rCn/. J spoiled the sweet word's tustc — iii. 

his words do take possession — iv. 

ne'er have spoke a loving word to you — iv. 

nor s|ieak a word, nor look upon .... — iv. 

bid me tell my tale in express words — iv. 

whalc'er you think, good words, I think — iv. 

our souls religiously confirm thy words — iw 

now keep your holy word. Go meet.. — 

anil send him wor<l by me, which way — 
let not my cold words here accuse ..Uic'ianI II. 

yet one word more; grief houndeth.. — 

the hopeless word of. never to — 

lies in luie little word! — 

thv word is current with him — 

dost thou hoard thy words _ 

should so profane the word — 



WOR 



— ii. 2 

ii. I 



— iv.3 
1 
1 
I 



— ii. I 

— ii. 1 

— iii. 1 



_ iii.G 

— iv. 1 

— iv. 1 



. I 



WORT)— that words seemed buried.,.. /ncAani/f. i. i 

where words are scarce, they arc .... — ii. I 

that breathe their words in pain .... ii. I 

these words hereafter thy tormentors — ii. I 

iiniuitc his wordn to wavword — ii. I 

words, life and all, old Lancaster.... — ii. I 

that speaks thy words again — ii 1 

thv words are but as thouglits _ ii. i 

sake, speak comfortable words — ii. 2 

my company, than your goixl words — ii. 3 

transport my words by you — ii. 3 

and that word— grace, in an — ii. 3 

mv liege, one word. He does me .... — iii. 2 

let's fiijht with gentle words — iii. 3 

of}' again with words of sooth! — iii. 3 

and limy word [Co/. -name] be sterling — iv. 1 

his words come from his mouth — v. 3 

first word of thy Biieech (rep.) v. 3 

the word is short, hut not so — v. 3 

set' tt the word itself against the word! — v. 3 

the king, what words he spoke? — v. 4 

those were his very words — v. 4 

word [A'nf.-faithJ itself against (rep.) — v. S 

but neither my good word — v. 

and sends me word, I shall hove \IUutijll'. i. 1 

sir .lohn stands to his wortl — i. 2 

for keeping thy word with the devil — i. 2 

how much belter than my word I am — i. 2 

hear you, cousin; a word _ i. 3 

should have fewer words than a parrot — ii 4 

and, with a word, out-t'uced you .... — ii. 4 

I have partly thy mother's word .... — ii. i 

not in words only, hut in woes also — ii. 4 

both in word and matter — ii. 4 

I will engage my word to thee — ii. 4 

but marked him not a word — iii. 1 

Mortimer of .Scotland hath sent word — iii. 2 

darest thou be as good as thy word .. — iii 3 

rare words! brave worhl! Ilostess .. — iii. 3 

nay, task me to my word: approve me — iv. 1 

there is not such a word spoke of in iv. I 

and bring me word what lie will do.. — v. 1 

a word. What is in that word, honour? — v. 1 

should kcej) his word in h>viiig us .. — v. 2 

this word, rebellion, it hail froze 'llleurylV. i. I 

sir John Falstuff, a word with you .. — i. 2 

nor the throng of words that come .. — ii. 1 

come, no more words of it (rfp.) .... — ii. 1 

eat twenty of his words — ii. 2 

no word to your master — ii. 2 

that you broke your word — ii. 3 

Bardolph liath brought word — ii. 4 

the word Captain as odious as the word ii. 4 

these are very bitter words — ii. 4 

did speak these words, now proved.. — iii. I 

and that same word even now cries.. — iii. 1 

I have heard tlie word; phrase, call — iii. 2 

the word with my sword (ri-p.) — iii. 2 

sir, a word with you; 1 have three .. — iii. 2 

I will not use many words with you — iii. 2 

1 have spoke, at a word; fare you well — iii. 2 

and every third word a lie, duer paid — iii. 2 

turning the word to sword — iv. 2 

I take your princely word for — iv. 2 

the word of peace is rendered — iv. 2 

any other word but mv name iv.3 

believe not the word of the noble iv.3 

that the most immodest word be looked — iv. 4 

but write her fair words still in — iv. 4 

live to speak my father's Words — v. 2 

see performed the tenor of our word — v. r» 

sir, I will be as good as my word .... — v. S 

one word more, I beseech you — (epilogue) 

before the Frenchman speak a word . . Jh-ury y. i. I 

coupe le gorge, that's the word! — ii. 1 

the word is, pitch and pay — ii. :t 

a' breaks words, and keeps whole.. .. — iii. 2 

that men of few words are the best .. — id. 2 

but his few bad words are matched.. — iii. 2 

bring us word of England's fall .... iii. .'1 

I will never trust his Word after .... iv. I 

keep thy word: fare thee well — iv. I 

cannot suit itself in words iv. 2 

in their mouths as household words iv. 3 

perpend thv words, O signieur Dew — iv. 4 

what are his words? he prays you.... — iv. 4 

■upon these words I came — iv.fi 

kill his prisoners; give the wor<l through — iv. 6 

his blunt bearing, he will keep his word — iv. 7 

and I have been as good as my word — iv. 8 

avouch in your deeds any of your words?— v. 1 

neither wor<ls nor measure — v. 2 

take the word of a king and o bachelor — t. 2 

which word thou shalt no sooner .... — v. 2 
fair words peace may lie obtained ..1 Hnoi/ ;;. i. I 

believe my words, for the.v — i . 2 

vaiiquishest. thy words are true .... — i. 2 

answer thee with words, but blows .. — i. :i 

run and bring me word — i. 1 

la Pncelle hath performed her word — i. ci 

I'll maintain my words on any ii. 4 

some words there grew 'twixt — ii s 

my fainting wonls do warrant — ii. a 

when Qloster says the word, king .. — iii. 1 

be wary how you iiloee your woids.. — iii. 2 

let no words, out deeds, revenge .... — iii. 2 

persuasions, mixed with siigored words iii. 3 

and enchant him with thy words.... — iii. 3 

bewitched me with her words — iii. 3 

these haughty words of hers have .. iii. 3 

maintain the' former words thou .... _ iii. 4 

I break my warlike word; we mourn — iv. 3 

with Talbot broke his word _ iv. 6 

these words of yours drow — Iv. 6 

Dannhin? 'tis a mere I'rench woid .. iv. 7 

words sweetly placed, and modestly — v. 3 

strumpet, thv wiirds cniidemn v. 4 

her wori's ydod with wisdom's iUenryll. i. 1 

with peaceful wonls? Mori Uieu! .. _ i. 1 

let nut his smoothing words bewitch — i. I 



WORD— give no words but— mumi iHenryVI.'i. 2 

Bay, man, were these thy worda? .... — i.3 

hang me, if ever I spalce the words .. — i. 3 

or else conclude my words effectual. . — iii. I 

lowly words were ransom for tlieir .. — iii. I 

ignominious words, thougli clerkly.. — iii. I 

say but tlie word, and I will be — iii. 1 

these words content me much — iii. 2 

was dumb, and could not speak a word — iii. 2 

tliy poison with such sugared words — iii. 2 

for every word, you speak in his behalf — iii. 2 

the commons send joxi word by me.. — iii. 2 

I would iiave kept my word; but — iii. 2 

should stumble in mine earnest words — iii. 2 

my words stab him, as lie hutli uep) — iv. I 

tliy words move rage, and not remorse — iv. I 

credit tiiia base drudge's words — iv. 2 

seeing gentle words will not prevail — iv. 2 

thou shalt Iiave it for that word — iv. 7 

and sucli abominable words, as no .. — iv. 7 

I feel remorse in myself witli his words — iv. 7 

and, I think, this word sallet (?ep.) .. — iv. 10 

for more words, whose greatness {,rep.) — iv. 10 

give due action to my words — v, 1 

shall give their words for him — v. I 

if our words will serve. And if words — v. 1 

by words, or blows, here let us ZHenry VI. i. 1 

frowns, words, and tlireats, shall .... — i. I 

lest that, instead of words, I send.... — i. 1 

Clifford, how thy words revive — i. 1 

of Warwick, hear but one word — i. 1 

where thy words should enter — i.3 

bandy with thee word for word — i. 4 

at each word's deliverance — ii. 1 

the words would add more anguish.. — ii. I 

of Norfolk sends you word by me..,. — ii. 1 

have done with words, my lords .... — ii. 2 

cannot be cured by words — ii. 2 

these words will cost ten tliousand .. — ii. 2 

and no more words, till they — ii. 6 

before his face I speak the words .... — ii. 6 

vex him with eager words — ii. 6 

soon won with moving words — iii, 1 

her words do show her wit — iii. 2 

sweet ladies with my words and looks — iii. 2 

those gracious words revive — iii. 3 

that Warwick's words bewitch him not! — iii. 3 

these words have turned my hate.... — iii. 3 

few words, l>ut suclr as I, without. . . , — iv.' I 

tell me their words as near as — iv. 1 

these were his very words (rep.) .... — iv. 1 

few words, if you'll not here proclaim — iv. 7 

speak gentle words, and humbly Ijend — v. I 

if a coward heard her speak these words — v. 4 

for every word I speak, ye see — v. 1 

I'll not trouble thee with words — v. 5 

propose the self-same words to thee.. — v. 5 

I'll plague you for that word — v. 5 

to fill the world with words! — v. 5 

with thy weapon, not with words! .. — v. 6 

and this word, love, which greybeards — v. 6 
never learn sweet soothing word ..Richard III. i. 2 

and even with the word, this hand . . — i. 2 

his grace with quick and merry words — i. 3 

tlxe urging of that word, judgment .. — i. *! 

attended to their sugared words .... — iii. I 

I moralize two meanings in one word — iii. I 

sends you word [Cn;.Kn(. -certifies your] — iii. 2 

cousin of Buckingham, a word witli you — iii. ■! 

thy breath in middle of a word — iii. 6 

your grace's word shall serve — iii..*) 

the citizens are mum, say not a word — iii. 7 

they spake not a word — iii. 7 

grew captive to his hone.v words .... — iv. 1 

my words are dull, O quicken them — iv. 4 

why should calamity be full of words? — iv. 4 

in tlie breath of bitter words — iv. 4 

mild and gentle in my words — iv. 4 

hear me a word (rep.) — iv. 4 

is but a word that cowards use — v. 3 

our ancient word of courage, fair .... — v. 3 
word with yon; let tliere be letters. Henry VIII. i. 2 

these very words I have heard him .. — i. 2 

every minute with words of sovereignty , — i. 2 

the verity of certain words spoke .. .. — i. 2 

and your words, domestics to you .. — ii. 4 

spake one the least word, might .... — ii. 4 

and .yet words are no deeds — iii. 2 

did crown his word upon you — iii. 2 

words cannot carry authority — iii. 2 

till I find more than will, or words. . — iii. 2 

if t loved many words, lords — iii. 2 

to whom he gave these words — iv. 2 

ever double, both in words and meaning — iv. 2 

understand you, words and weakness — y. 2 

and the words I utter let none think — v. 4 

here's yet in the word Troilm Sr Cressida, i . 1 

■words, vows, gifts, tears, and love's.. — i. 2 

Nestor shall apply thy latest words. . — i. 3 

Achilles shall have word of this intent — i. 3 

good words, Thersites (?ep.) — ii. 1 

a word, my lord. What moves Ajax — ii. 3 

friend! you! pray you, a word — iii. 1 

dear lord, you are full of fair words.. — iii.l 

will you vouchsafe me a word? — iii.l 

nay, I care not for such words — iii.l 

bereft me of all words, lady. Words — iii. 2 

few words to fair faith — iii. 2 

your uncle's word, and ray firm (/e;).) — iii. 2 

■withal, bring word— if Hector will .. — iii. 3 

gave to me good word, nor look .... — iii. 3 

given so niany good words breath. . . . — i v. 1 

lady, a word; I'll bring you to — iv. 5 

yet matchless; firm of word — iv. 5 

deeds to match these words — iv. 5 

when Diomed l<eepB his word — V. 1 

hark! a word with you frep.) ^. ... — v. 2 

your mind be coupled with your words — v. 2 

torments, I will not speak a word.. .. — v. 2 

by Jove, I will not speak a word .... — v. ? 



V. II 
V. 11 
IS, i. 1 
i. 2 
i. 2 
i. 2 
i. 2 



ii. 2 



iii. 4 



_ i. 3 



iii. 2 



— iii. 2 



WORD— will not keep my word. . Troilusfy Cress, v. 2 

one cannot speak a word, but it ... . — v. 2 

words, words, mere words; no matter — v- 3 
my love with words and errors till she — v. n 

there is a word will Priam turn 

and, in a word, scare Troy out 

more pregnantly than words .. Timon q 

I have one word to say to you 

vouchsafe me a word; it does concern 

he owes for every word 

you gave good words the other day . . 
3'ou may take my word, my lord .... 
and turned to me in words, but find 

the world is but a word 

OS to use mine own words to him? ,. 

Flaminiusl sir,aword: pray 

your words have took such pains.. .. 

not one word more: thus part we.... — i 

ingratitude with any size of words .. — 

for each true word, a blister! — 

these words become your lips — 

lips, let sour words go by — 

descend, and keep your words — 

one word, good citizens Coriotanusy 

"we have ever your good word (rep.).. — 
these are the words; I think, I liave 

o' my word, tiie father's son 

no; at a word, madam; indeed 

it was his word; O he would miss it 
I hope, my words dis-benched you not 
made me stay, I fled from words .... 

no more words, we beseech you 

so shall my lungs coin words till .... 

what's like to be their words 

hear me one word: beseech you (rep.) 

I'd crave a word or two 

one word more, one word 

with such words that are but roted in 
take in a town with gentle words.... 
as free as words to little purpose .... 
the word is mildly ; pray you, let. . . . 

at the price of one fair word — m. a 

f<ir Rome, than thou hast spoken words? — iv. 2 

than ever thou wise words — iv. 2 

in a word, I also am longer to live .. — iv. 5 

Marcius, Marcius, each word thou .. — iv. 5 

as you have littered words in your own — v. 2 
another word, Menenius, I will not hear — v. 2 

a better witness back than ■words .... — v. 3 

hoping to purge himself with words — v. 5 
upon the word, accoutred as I was. .JuUusCiesar, i. 2 

that my. weak words have struck .... — i. 2 
if I would not have taken him at a word — i. 2 

to digest his words with better — i. 2 

bid Antonius send word to you — i.3 

look in the calendar, and bring me word — ii. 1 

shall I entrea.t a word? — ii. I 

that have spoke the word — ii. 1 

if you shall send them word — ii. 2 

yes, bring me word, boy C>'<^p.) — ;!• 4 

sweet words, low-crooked court'sies — iii.l 
Brutus, a word with you: you know not — iii. 1 

to say to you by word of mouth — iii.l 

marked ye his words? he would not — iii. 2 

but yesterday the word of Csesar .... — iii. 2 

neitheir wit, nor words, nor worth .. — iii. 2 

give the word, ho! and stand — iv. 2 

a word, Lucilius C?-e;;. V. I) — iv. 2 

stand, ho! give the word along — iv. 2 

the generals would have some words — v. 1 

words before hlows, is it so — v. 1 

words better, as you do. Good words — v. 1 

you give good words: witness — v. 1 

but for your words, they rob — v. 1 

Brutus gave the word too early — v. 3 

and bring us word unto Octavius' tent 

slaying is the word; it is a deed in .. 

peace then, no words. I'll rather kill 

list a word. Wliat says my lord?.... — v. 5 

our departure, death's the word ..Antony SfCleo. i. 2 

then was the time for words — i.3 

courteous lord, one word: sir, you and I — 

Cajsar I biing thee word, Menecrates — 

you were tlie word of war — 

yon hear no more words of Pompey — 

ne'er the word of no woman heard .. — 

bring me word quickly (rep.) — 

that first we come to words — 

and fair words to them. Tlieu so much — 

Pompey, a word. Say in mine ear .. — 

and hear me speak a word — 

what needs more words? good-night — 

that magical word of war — 

I'll bring tliee word straight — 

and send hi m word you are dead .... — 

and word it, pr'ythee, piteously — 

she sent you word she was dead — 

one word, sweet queen — 

he words me, girls, he words me, that I — 

I'll drink the words you send Cymbeli 

betwixt two charming words — 

words him, I doubt not, a great — 

hark thee, a word. I do not like her — 

when thou shalt bring me word — 

my women; tlrink on my words (rep.) — 

as I have words to bid you — 

or I shall short my word — 

with admirable rich words to it — 

in posture that acts my words — 

that words are strokes, and strokes . . — 

in a word; or else thou art straightway — 

at once, at the next w^ord,— no more of — 

the words of .your commission will ., — 

saving reverence of the word — 

thy words, I grant, are bigger — 

play in wench-like words with that., — 

use like note, and words, save that .. — 

I'll weep, and word it with thee .... — 

and bring me word, how 'tis with her — 

with tills word, stand, stand — v. 3 I 



— V. 5 



i. 3 



iv. 11 
iv. 12 
iv. 13 



i. 6 



iii. 5 



iv. 2 



WORD— soft beds, sweet words CymbeUne,v. 3 

hangin'! is the word, sir — v. 4 

pardon a the word to all — v. 5 

rest on my word, and let not Tilua Andron. i. 2 

warrants these words in princely .... — i. 2 
what reproachful words are these? .. — i. 2 
these words are razors t6 my wounded — i. 2 
what villain was it spoke tliat word? — i. 2 
these words, these looks, infuse new — i. 2 
my word and promise to the emperor — i. 2 
witli words, fair looks, and litjcrality? — ii. I 

by force, if not by words — ii, 1 

entreat her hear me but a word — ii. 3 

let them not speak a word — ii. 4 

cousin, a word; where is 3'onr husband? — ii. 5 
sends thee this word, that, if thou ., — iii.l 
did not name tlie word of hands?.... — iii. 2 

will write these words, and lay — iv. 1 

but Pluto sends you word — iv. 3 

o' my word, I have written — iv. 3 

with words more sweet, and yet .... — iv. 4 

no; not a word? (rep. V. 2) — v. 1 

let them not speak a word — v. 2 

let them hear what fearful words.. .. — v. 2 
cannot induce you to attend my words — v. 3 

I'll take thy word for faitli I'ericles, i. 2 

prove awful both in deed and word — ii. (Gower) 
sends word of all that haps in Tyre — ii. (Gower) 
the ward, lux tua vita niihi (rep.) .... — ji. 2 
lord Helicane, a word. With me? .... — ii. 4 

I never spake bad word, nor — iv. 1 

a word, and I'll have done presently .. — iv. 6 
spoken holy words to the lord Lysimachus — iv. 6 

would win 8bme words of him — v. 1 

more than words can wield the matter .... Lear, i. ) 

may spring from words of love — i. 1 

fine word, legitimate! well, my legitimate — i. 2 

by word, or countenance? — i. 2 

not a word (rep.) _ ii. I 

brother, a word; descend: brotlier, I say., — ii. 1 

make thy words faithed? — ii. i 

to bandy hasty words, to scant — ii. 4 

few words, but, to effect, more than — iii. I 

priests are more in word than matter .... — iii. 2 
keep thy word justly [A'n/. -word's justice] — iii. 4 
swore as many oaths as I spake words .... — iii. 4 

I'll talk a word with this same — iii. 4 

let me ask you one word in private — iii. 4 

come, good Athenian. No words (rep.) .. — iii. 4 
word was still, fie, foil, and film .. — iii. 4 (song) 
not you transport her purposes by word? — iv. A 

givetheword. Sweet marjorum — iv. 6 

they are not men o' their words — iv. 6 

hear me one word. I'll overtake you — v. 1 

Gregory, o' my word, we'll not . . Romeo ^JtUiet, i. 1 

I hate the word, as I liate hell — i. 1 

civil brawls bred of an airy word .... — j. I 

ah, word ill-urged to one that is .... — i. 1 

the constable's own word — 1.4 

your mother craves a word with you — i. 5 
to my gossip Venus one fair word ., — ii. 1 

I take thee at thy word — ii. 2 

tear the word. My ears have {rep.) . . — ii. 2 

and I will take thy word — ii. 2 

three words, dear Romeo — ii. 2 

send me word to-morrow, b,y one.. .. — ii. 2 
I stretch it out for that word— broad — ii. 4 
pray yon, sir, a word: and as 1 told you — ii. 4 
my words would handy her to my .. — ii. 5 
but close our bands with holy words — ii. G 
more rich in matter than in words .. — ii. 6 

a word with one of you (rep.) — iii.l 

make it a word and a blow — iii.l 

some word there was, worser than ..* — iii. 2 
that one word— banished, hath slain — iii 2 
to speak that word, is father, mother — iii. 2 
in that word's death; no words can that — iii. 2 

turned that black word death — iii. 3 

the damned use that word in hell.... — iii. 3 
me with that word— banishment?.. .. — iii. 3 
but speak a word rA'7?/.-a little speak] — iii. 3 

ai'mour to keep off that word — iii. 3 

with patience but to speak a word .. — iii. 5 
talk not to me, for I'll not speak a word — iii. 5 

hast thou not a word of joy ^ — iii. 5 

what, not a word? you take your .... — iv, 5 

each word made true and good Hamlet, i. 2 

as to give words or talk with — i. .^ 

whose lightest word would harrow up .. — i. 5 
now to my word; it is adieu, adieu! .... — i. 5 
these are but wild and whirling words ,. — i. 5 

given him any liard words of late? — ii. 1 

read, my lord? Words, ■ft'ords, words! ., — ii. 2 
unpack my lieart with words, and fall .. — ii. 2 
than is my deed to my most painted word — iii. 1 
and, with them, words of so sweet breath — iii.l 
suit the action to the word, the word to.. — iii. 2 
these words are not mine. No, nor mine — iii. 2 

but she'll keep her word — iii. 2 

I'll take the ghost's word for a thousand — iii. 2 

vouchsafe me a word with you — iii. 2 

how in my words soever she be shent..,. — iii. 2 
my words fly up, my thoughts (rep.) .... — iii. 3 
ay, lady, 'twas m,v word: thou wretched — iii. 4 
sweet religion makes a rhapsody of words — iii. 4 

tliese words like daggers enter in — iii. 4 

but one word more, good lady — iii. 4 

if words be made of breath, and breath.. — iii. 4 
the words up fit to their own tlioughts . . — iv. 5 

pray, let us have no words of this — iv. 5 

ratifiers and props of every word — i v. 6 

1 have words to speak in thine ear — iv. 6 (let.) 
your father's son more than in worda? .. — iv. 7 

all his golden words ore spent ;... — v. 2 

but spend a word here in the house Othello, i. 2 

but words are words; I never yet did hear — i. 3 
weigh'st thy words before thou givest them — iii. 3 
thy worst of thoughts the worst of words — iii. 3 

it is not words, that shake ine thus — iv. 1 

I understand a fury iu your words (rep.) — iv. 2 



\VORD-«bhor me, now I apciik tlie word. Olhello, iv. 1 
for vour worils, iiml pi rtoniuinei.'fl lire no — iv. * 
my lonl. I would simik 11 wiinl with you — V. 2 
d.dt uiuU-rstiiiul tlic uoul? my riicmf.... _ v. 4 
tltU time fortU 1 ncN'cr will s|)cuk word.. — v. 8 
soft vou; n wonl or two, bcfoiT you go .. — v. 2 

WORE— as the first day we wore ia....Temprsl, ii. 1 
Avheii I wore it utyoiirdauijiitcr'B niiirriugcy — ii. I 
of the visors WHS it, that you wurc'i. Lovt;'s L. Lost^ v. 'jt 

he wore none l)Ut a dish-clout — y. 2 

n ehnin, that yon once woi-o At you Like i7, iii. 2 

thv t'iilher'8 fiitlUT wore it — iv. 'J song) 

and wore lis out of net : it much All's Well, i. i 

in my time, wore three-pile .... IVinitr's't'aU, iv. 2 

you won it, wore it, l<e|)t it iHeiiryW. iv. 4 

that wore tlieircrownets le^al. Troiliu ^ Ciess. (prol.) 
bnrv with those thut W(nc tluiu . . . . Coiiolanus, i. 5 

with n proud heiiit lie wore Ids — Ii. 3 

Willi wluit iMiitonipI he wore the humble — ii. 3 
eyes are imt the siiine I wore in Home — V. 3 
I wore his sword riiilippan-.l/i/o/ij/ •^Cleopatra, ii. 5 
and I wore my life, to spend upon.... — y. 1 
the same suit he wore wiven he ....Vymbeline^ iii. 5 

of favour which then he wore — iv. 2 

not wore liim from my remembrance — iv. 4 

who ne'er wore rowel nor iron — iv. 4 

which then he wore upon his honoured — v. 5 
[Co/. /Ciif.j that wore the imperial. ri/us.liKfron. i. I 
wore alovea in my cap, served Lear, iii. 4 

yes. my lord; he wore his boaver up.. llmnU-i, i. 2 
WoUK the peace of the present Tempes:, i. 1 

work you, then — i. 1 

Imt there's more work — i. 2 

the vast of night that they may work.. — i. 2 

it works: come on — i. 2 

now Prosper works upon thee — ii. 2 

weeps when she sees me work — iii. 1 

pniy you. work not so hard — iii. I 

und after do our work — iii. 2 

my high charms work, and these — iii. 3 I 

given to work a great time after — iii. 3 

some passion that works him strongly — iv. 1 

you said our work should eease — v. 1 

your charm so strongly works them .. — v. 1 
to work mine end upon their senses. ... — v. 1 
sire works by charms, by spells ..Merry Wives, iv. 2 

no mun their works must eye — v. 6 

tin 1 notuhle cause to work Tuelftli Xighl, ii. 3 

1 know my physic will work with him — ii. 3 
did nut I say. fie would work it outs — ii. S 

does it work upon him? — ii. 5 

I'll no another way to work with .... — iv. 1 
andlet them work MensureforMeasur 



WOKK-shiill wo fall to work? ItichanI III. i. 1 

done a good day's work j you pcern .. — ii. I 

no shriving work in hand — Hi. 2 

come, let's to our holy work again .. — iii. 7 
ri-iilenished sweet Work of nature.... — iv, 3 
linw holily he works ill all bin .... Henry I'lll. ii. 2 

will woi k us allfroin iirinces — ii. 2 

thunghis, th'.it W(!rk too much upon him — ii. 2 
I was set lit wc.rk among my maids.. — iii. 1 
will this work? The king in this.... — iii. 2 

nineli wei;;litier than this work — v. I 

and let them win the work 

ahiished behold our works Troilut 

divination in our sister work some .. 
simr tlitin to rnthful work, rein ,... 

and there lacks work; anon 

now is my day's work done 

how earnestly are 3*ou set a' work 

in some work, some dedication.. 'I'inun 

in this rough work, shaped out 

I like your work; and you shall ilnd 



iii. 2 



iii. I 



. All's IfelLi. 1 



ii. I 



iv. 3 
iv. 3 
iv. 3 



and instiuction must both work 

I will go darkly to work with her .. 

a very good piece of work Mid.X. 

do their work, and they shall have .. 

that work for bread upon Athenian 

men, that do work in Athens here ,. — v. 1 

when the work of ceneration ..Merch. of Venice, i. 3 

which therein works amiracle — iii. 2 

you would be prouder of the work .. — iii. 4 

I have work in baud that you — iii. 4 

this is not fortune's work neither. .^sj/okLi7,ciV, i, 2 

would they work in mild aspect? — iv. 3 (.letter) 

ehould have play for lack of work .. . 

as heaven shall work in me for thine 

lie that of greatest works is finisher.. 

shall lose the trrounds I work upon.. — iii. 7 

thut I will work against him — iv. 2 

'lis a very excellent piece of work. rummg-o/S/i. i. 1 
marry, sir. now it begins to work.. .. — iii. 2 
that should rTot work maliciously . Winler'sTale, i. 2 
stair work, some trunk work (rep.) .. — iii. 3 
see his work, so noble, vilely bound up? — 
and the work about the square oii't.. — 
to Binell out work for the other senses — 

yields a careful man work — iv. 3 

put breath into his work, would beguile — v. 2 

this most bloody' piece of work Macbeth, ii. 3 

to leave no ruhs. nor botches, in tlie work — iii. I 
with lliin above to ratify the work .... — iii. 6 
a most miraculous work in this good .. — iv. 3 
well then, to work; our eaniiou .... Ki7is"/o/in, ii. 1 
toil of ours should be a work of thine — ii. I 

much work for tears in inanv — ii. 2 

make work upon ourselves, for heaven — ii. 2 

a damned ami a bloody work 

the work cif any hand [rep.) 

knew yuu of this fair work? 

but on the outside of this work — v. 2 

awhile to work, and, after, holiday. /(iWiar'i //. iii. I 

and toiled with works of war — iv. 1 

siKirt wouhl be as tedious as lo worlcW/fiiri///'. i. 2 

this quiet lifei I want work — ii. 4 

tliis great work, twiiich is, almost . .'i Henry W . i. 3 
how able such a work to undergo..., — i. 3 

though it do work OS strong aa — iv. 4 

on your imoginary forces work.Henr^ /'. i. (chorus) 
all out of work, and cold for action I — i. 2 

for so work the honey bees — i. 2 

may work contrariously — i. 2 

mansle the work of nature — ii. 4 

work, work, your thouu'lita — iii. (chorus) 

the work ish give over; the trumpet — iii. 2 
throats to lie cut. and works to lie done — iii. 2 
there is not work ciiotigh for all our — iv. 2 

in England tiiat do no work to-day 1 — iv. 3 

in brass of this dav's work — iv. 3 

will have fur this day's work \ Henry I' I. i. 3 

shall perceive how I will work — iii. 3 

to work exceciling miracles — v. 4 

in Knglaiid work your graee'sfiill ..iHemyVl. i. 3 
read vou. and let us to our work .... — i. I 

best ^ts the work we have in hand .. — i. 1 

God in all his creatures worksl — ii. I 

what mitchiefs work the wicked ones — ii. I 

or to work my downfall — iii. I 

end work in their shirt too; as myself — iv. 7 
Work thou the way,aiid tliuu 3Heiiryf'l. v. 7 



— iv.3 



— iv.3 



— V. 3 
^Creiiida. i. 3 

— ii. 2 

— V. 3 



10/ A/he 



— i. 1 

ook in thy last work, where — i. 1 

may diseases only work upon't I .... — iii. 1 
that you work not in holier shapes . . — iv.3 
stand for a villain in thine own work? — v. I 

you have done work for me — v. 1 

graves only be men's works — v. 2 

what Work's, my countrymen Coriolnnus,\. I 

make us quick in work — i. 4 

list, what work he makes amongst .. — i. 4 

my work hath yet not warmed me .. — i. 5 

and made what work I pleased — i. s 

tell thcc o'er this thy day's work — i. !) 

a little of that worthy work performed — ii. 2 
here's goodly work! I would they.. — iii. I 

you have made good work! (.rep.) — iv. 

good work: a pair of tribunes — v. 1 

to make what cannot be, slight work — v. 3 
out of that I'll work myself a former — v. 3 

to get myself into more work JuliusCiesar, i. I 

what you would work me to, I have — i. 2 

like the work we have in hand — i. 3 

let me work: for 1 can give his huinour — ii. 1 
eould it work so inuch upon your shape — ii. 1 
a piece of work, that will make sick — ii. I 

now let it work: mischief, thou — iii. 2 

well, to our work alive — iv 3 

this same day must end that work .. — v. 1 
uuseen a wonderful piece of work..'lH/oiiv ^-Clro. i. 2 

nor my power work without it — ii. 2 

Cffisar himself has work, and our ,... — iv. 7 

1 have done raj' work ill, friends .... — iv. 1 2 
fearing since how it might work .... — iv. 12 

what work is here? Charmian — v. 2 

upon him will I first work Cymldine, i. G 

do thou work: when thou — i. B 

comes to decay a day's work in him — i. G 

a piece of work so bravely done — ii. 4 

but for the end it works to — iii. li 

the heavens still must work — iv.3 

having work more plentiful than — v. 3 

the things you hear, than to work any — v. 3 
to work her son into the adoption.. .. — v. 3 

there's other work in hand — v. 5 

work confusion on his enemies.... Ti'usAn-Jron. v. 2 
tut, I have work enough for you to do — v. 2 
the sea works high, the wind is loud ..TericUs, iii. 1 
'pothecary, and tell me how it works — iii. 2 

disturbances that nature works — iii. 2 

to do my work with haste — iv. 1 

eoine pains to work her to your manage — iv. G 

briefness, and fortune, work! /.ear, ii. 1 

I'll work the means to make thee — ii. I 

how shall I live, and work, to mutch .... — iv. 6 

if it be man's work, I will do it — v. 3 

and we will make short work . . Itomeo fy Juliet, ii. 6 
[Coi.Kii/.] tide, time, work, jilay .... — iii. 8 
if this mixture do not work at all? .. — iv.3 
bear this work of h.eaven with jiatience — v. 3 
in what particular thought to work ....liamtel, i. 1 

canst work i' the eartli so fast? — i. 5 

I went round to work, and my young.. — ii. 2 

what a piece of work is a maul — ii. 2 

will the king hear this piece of work? — iii. 2 

'tis a knavish piece of work — iii. 2 

conceit in weakest bodies strongest works — iii. 4 
let it work; for 'tis the sport, to have .. — iii. 4 
work like the spring that tiiriieth wood — iv. 7 

I will work him to an exjiloit — iv. 7 

and thus a while the fit « ill work on him — v. I 
then, venom, to thy work. Treason!.. — v. 2 
better shall my purpose work on him ...Olliello, i. 3 

to play, and go to bed to work — ii. 1 

we work by wit.aiid not by witchcnifl .. — ii. 3 

I will be walking on the works — iii. 2 

I'll have the work tii'en out, and give it — iii. 3 

and loses that it works for — Iii. 3 

what bloodv work [/Cn/. -business!) — iii. 3 

in her proplietie fury sewud the work.,.. — iii. 4 

take me this work out. O Cossio — iii. 4 

I like the work well; ere it be — iii. 4 

work on, my nudicinc, work! _ iv. I 

the whole work; a likelv piece of work .. iv. 1 

I must takeout the work? (rr;<.) _ iv. 1 

or did the letters work upon his blood ., — iv. I 
and she did gratif}' his amorous Works .. — v. 2 
this is thv work: the object piitsoiiB sight — v. 2 

WORKING of your own affections. A/m. /or .Wen. ii. I 

be cunning In the working this MuchAilo, ii, 2 

demonstration of the working .... lore' tL. tost, i. 2 
bend to that tiic working of the heart — iv. 1 
hath in it a more modest working.. .4ft/oiiJ.tAriV,i. 2 
working with thy jealuusies .... Winler'sTale, iii. 2 

colour her working with such \Heniyll\ i, I 

of liia\en, and our dull workings ..HHenryW. iv. 2 
confound themselves with working.. — iv. 4 

by whose fell working I was first — iv. 4 

moek your workings in a second body — v. 2 
wurkiijg so grossly m a natural Henry I', ii. 2 



WORKING with the eye, without .... Ilenryl'. ii. V 
sick with working of my thoughts ..MIenryl'L v. !> 
working, full of slate uiul woe ..i<«iri// //;. (prol.) 

if thou canst, leave working — Jji. I 

no less working, than are hVioiils.TrnilHi ^ Cress, i. 3 
by working wreukfnl vengeance.. 7i7m,4Ti</f»iii. v. 2 

than we can do with working Pericles, ii. I 

have you a working pulse? v. 1 

might in their working do yon that Lear, i. 4 

a thing a little soiled i' the working.. .. //um/«(, ii. I 

a working [f.W. Am/. -winking] mute — ii. 2 

from her working, all his visage wanned ii. 2 

denotements, working from the heart..O/AcHo, iii.3 

WOKKINO-DAY world! ^i !,oi,/..*,i(, i. 3 

might have another for working-days..Wi<r/i J</o, ii. I 
plodded like a man for wurkiiig-days.. Wcjirj/'', I- 2 

hut warriors for the working-day — iv.3 

but a w.irking-diiv fortune Anlnny fi Clen. i. 2 

WOUKINCi-lluUSlCof thought. .«t«n/»'. v. (cho.) 

WOJtKMAN-isagood workman All'sWell, ii. 4 

excellent wnrkinaii I thou canst not 7Vma>i o/'.4fA. v. I 
in resoect of a fine workman, I am .JuliusCmsar. i. I 
plioulflst see a workman in't .... Antony f(Cleu. iv. 4 
therein I must play the workman ..Cymbelinr,\v.\ 
WOUKMAM.Y the blood . .Taming of SI, . 2 (indue.) 

\V01!K.MA\S1II1' and value ...Cymbeline li. 4 

WOKKiMKiV .strive to do better Kni^John, iv. 2 

council are no good workmen 'iUenryl'L iv. 2 

profess to do't, like workmen.. 7'imon o/y4/At>ii,iv. 3 

WOKI.D-of all the world I loved Tempest, i. 2 

worth what's dearest to the world! — iii. I 

any companion in the world but you .. — iii. I 

beyond all limit of what else i' the world iii. I 

to instrument this lower world iii. 3 

I would not for the world v. 1 

O brave new world, that has _ v. I 

see the wonders of the world . . Two Cien.of I'er. i. 1 

set tlie world at nouglit i. 1 

tried and tntor'd in the world _ i. 3 

not for llie world ji. 4 

how will the world repute me , i) 7 

daring follv burn the world? _ iji. 1 

set tlie woild oil wheels _ iii. 1 

count the World a stranger — v. J 

wicked, wicked world! Merry Wives, \\. I 

why, then, the world's mine oyster .. — ii. 1 

as they say, and know the world ii. 2 

what a world of vile ill-favoured faults iii. 4 

my son profits nothing in the world — iv. ! 

1 would all the world might he cozened iv. 5 

not be delivered to the world Taelflh Kiglil,i. 2 

fellow o' the strangest mind i' the world — i. 3 

is it a world to hide virtues in? 1.3 

he that is well hanged in this world i. 5 

and leave the world no Cony j. 5 

more iioble than the world ii. 4 

'twas n.ever merry world, since lowly — iij. 1 

World, how apt the poor are to be iii. I 

there is no love-broker in the world iii. 2 

the world, will prove a cockney iv. 1 

and the world sliall know it — v. 1 (letter) 

a great w bile a"o the world begun — v. I (sung) 
thou show me thus to the world? . Meas. for .Meat. i. 3 

void of all profanation in the world.. ii. I 

but might you do't, and do the world — ii. 2 

I'll tell the world aloud — ii. 4 

though all the world's vastiditv you had — iii. I 

round about the iiendant world iii. I 

to take tills poor maid from the world! — iii. 1 
we shall have all the world drink brown — iii. 2 
'twas never merrj' world, since, of two — iii. 2 

is the world OS it was man? — iii. 2 

what news abroad i' the world? iii. 2 

runs the wisdom of the world iii. 2 

released him, Isabel, from the world — iv. 3 

injurious world! most damned Angelol — iv.3 
another eomfoit than this world .... — v. 1 

no further than this world — v. 1 

the fashion of the world is to avoid ..MuchAdo, i. 1 

can the world buy such a jewel? .... i. 1 

hath not the world one man _ i. j 

will win any woman in the world .. — ii I 

that puts the world into her person.. ii. 1 

me any service to the world's end? .. — ii. I 
thus goes every one to the world but I — ii. I 

no: tne world must be (leopled — ii. 3 

God help us! it is a world to see! — iii. 5 

1 do love nothing in the world so well — iv. I 

ha! not for the wide world _ iv. I 

that the world can say against it .... — v. 4 
were the world mine.'Deinetrius ..Mid.S.'sDr. i. I 

and the 'mazed world, by their — ii. 2 

worlds of coinpaiiy; tor you (»r/t.) .. — ij. ■.' 
when all the world is here to look .. — ii. 2 
caine this gentle concord in the world — i\-. I 
and it is nothing, nothing in the world — v. I 
huge army of the world's desires ..Lori'sL.Loil, i. I 

shall be the wonder of the world — i. 1 

manner of these world's delights .... — i. i 

he throws upon the gross world's baser — i. 1 
a man in all the world's new fashion — i. 1 

lost ill the world's debate — i. t 

the world was verv guilty of such.... — i. •> 

held piceions in the »ortd's esteem .. — ii. I 
did starve the genenil world tiesiile .. — ii. I 

not for the world, fair inodain — ii. | 

I do nothing in the World hut lie .... — iv.3 

hy the world, I would not cure — iv.3 

'gainst whom the wurld CHiinot hold — iv. 3(ver.) 
where is any author in the World.... — iv.3 
an' I had but one penny in the world — v. 1 
iileose his grace (hv the world ) sometime — v. I 

liv the world 1 reeouiit no I'ahle — v. 1 

that hath seen the woi Id: lint let — v. I 

a world of torments though I should v. 2 

did value me above this world v. 2 

and the whole winld iiuiiin. euiinot .. — v. 2 
when in tlie world I lived. I was (ifi).) _ v. 2 
from all tlie pleasures of the world .. _ v. 2 
aud the world's large tongue iiroclaims — v. 2 



WOR 



[ 848 ] 

WORLD— what says the world King John, iv. 2 

never to taste the pleasures of the world — iv. 3 

here's a good world! knew you of. ... — iv. 3 

the thorns and dangers of this world — iv. 3 

let not tlie world see fear, and sad.... — v. 1 

never saw the giant world enraged .. — v. 2 

any sovereign state throughout the world — v. 2 

these fiery spirits from the world .... — v. n 

the fair play of the world, let me .... — v. 2 

what in the world should make me . . — v. 4 

what surety of the world, what hope — v. 7 

tliree corners of the world in arms .. — v. 7 

all the world's my way Diehard II. 1. 3 

wliat a deal of world I wander — i. 3 

where doth the world thrust forth .. — ii. 1 

of men, this little world — ii. I 

of the world's ransom, blessed — ii. I 

her reputation through the world.... — ii. I 

wert tliou regent of the world — ii. 1 

but, for thy world, enjoying but .... — ii. I 

to show the world 1 am a gentleman — iii. 1 

the globe, and lights the lower world — iii. 2 

as if tlie world were all dissolved .... — iii. 2 

make me think the world is full of .. — iii. 4 

to thrive in this new world — iv. 1 

must win a new world's crown — v. 1 

shall not live within this world — v. 3 

unto the world: and, for because (jcp.) — v. 5 

little world; in humours, like Crep.).. — v. 6 

this hard world, my ragged prison walls — v. 5 

brooch in this all-hating world — v. 5 

up his beauty from the world \HenrylV. i. 2 

in the world's wide mouth — i. 3 

that you a world of curses — i. 3 

good thoughts of the world again .... — i. 3 

he apprehends a world of figures here — i. 3 

this is no world, to play with mammets — ii. 3 

a bad world, I say! I would I were.. — ii. 4 

strappado, or all the racks in the world — ii. 4 

could the world pick tliee out tliree.. — ii. 4 

and banish all the world — ii. 4 

for there will be a world of water shed — iii. 1 

for all the world, as thou art — iii. 2 

rare words! brave world! Hostess ., — iii. 3 

so general current through the world — iii. 3 

comrades, tliat daffed the world aside — iv. 1 

the world with noble horsemanship.. — iv. 1 

the cankers of a calm world — iv. 2 

sick in the world's regard — iv. 3 

dotli join with all the world in praise — v. 1 

against tlie world in arms — v.! 

but let me tell the world — v. 2 

all tlie poisonous potions in the world — v. 4 

that takes survey of all the world .... — v. 4 

lord, how this world is given to lyingl — v. 4 
wounds the world: and who.... 2 Henry /F. (indue.) 

and let this world no longer be a stage — i. 1 

so openly known to the world — ii. 1 

whereupon the world increases — ii. 2 

a man's thought in the world keeps.. — ii. 2 

no abuse, Ned, in the world — ii. 4 

for all the world, like a forked radish — iii. 2 

and put the world's whole strength .. — iv. 4 

to show the incredulous world — iv. 4 

all the world will rightfully maintain — iv. 4 

to mock the expectation of the world — v. 2 

like a man of this world (rPi>.) — v. 3 

so shall the world perceive, that I..., — v. 5 

he must seem thus to the world — v.h 

more wise and modest to the world;. . — v. 5 
his lion gait walk the whole world.. ..Hciiiyr. ii. i 

I have the best armour of the world — iii. 7 

as any prince in the world — iii. 7 

and for the world (familiar to us .... — iii. 7 

upon the high shore of this world.... — iv. 1 

this day to tlie ending of the world .. — iv. 3 

in this'best garden of the world — v. 2 

by which the world's best garden — v. 2 (chorus) 

one eye vieweth all the world MJenryl'I. i. 4 

fills the world with loud report — ii. 2 

for, when a world of men could not.. — ii. 2 

all the Talbots in the world, to save — iii. 2 

make thee famous through the world — iii. 3 

his life unto a world of odds — iv. 4 

his fame lives in the world — iv. 4 

tlie world will say— lie is not .'. — iv. 6 

and all the world repine — v. 2 

to fill the world with vicious — v. 4 

a world of earthly blessings to iHenryVI.i. 1 

frowning at the favours of the world? — i. 2 

witli all the honours of tlie world? .. — i. 2 

last breathing in this mortal world? — J. 2 

last draught in this world — ii. 3 

thate'er I'll look upon the world..,, — ii. 4 

the world may laugli again — ii. 4 

because I wished this world's eternity — ii. 4 

should be quickly rid the world, to rid — iii. 1 

grim majesty, to friglit the world.... — iii. 2 

what know I how the world moy.. .. — iii. 2 

there is the world itself, with every (rep.) — iii. 2 

what is this world? 'Wlittt news are.. — iii. 2 

wheresoe'er thou art in this world's — iii. 2 

proclaimed a coward through the world! — iv. 1 

never merry world in England — iv. 2 

and exhort all the world to be cowards — iv. 10 

let the vile world end — v. 2 

take me from the world ZUentyVJ. i. 4 

as this the world; whate'er it bodes.. — ii. 1 

for this world frowns, nnd Edward's — ii. 3 

for what is in tills world, but grief .. — ii. 5 

nay, then the world goes hard — ii, 6 

other pleasure can the world afford? — iii. 2 

to account this world but hell - iii. 2 

the secret treasons of the world — v. 2 

sadly in this troublous world — v. 6 

to fill the world with words? — v. fi 

tliou earnest to bite the world — v.ii 

I ciiine into the world with my — v. (i 

yet I am not looked on in the world — v. 7 
my time into this breathing world.. fiic/mjii ///. i. I 



WOR 



WORIiD— respect upon the world. . Mer. of Venice, i. I 

I hold the world but as the world.... — i. I 

nor is the wide world ignorant — i. 1 

is aweary of this great world — _i. 2 

all the world desires her — ii. 7 

he only loves the world for him — ii. 8 

the wo'rld is still deceived — iii. 2 

else nothing in the world could turn — iii. 2 

for the poor rude world hath not .... — iii. 6 

the world thinks, and I think so too — iv 

and all the world, are not with me .. — iv 

ehines a good deed in a naughty world — v 

for all tlie world, like cutler's poetry — v, 

for the wealth tliat the world masters — v 

as they did in the golden world ..Asyou Like it, i 

BO much in the heart of the world.... — i 

reigns in gifts of the world, not in .. — i. 2 

the world no injury, for in it — i- 2 

only in the world I fill up a place .. — i. 2 

theVorld esteemed th.y futlier — i. 2 

nil the world was of my father's mind — j. 2 

in a better world than this, I shall .. — i. 2 

full of briers is this working-day world! — i. 3 

o'er the wide world with me — _i. 3 

what a world is this, wlien what is .. — ii. 3 

the constant service of the antique world — ii. 3 

a motley fool;— a miserable world! .. — ii. 7 

quoth he, how the world waETS — ii. 7 

the foul body of the infected world .. — ii. 7 

disgorge into the general world — ii. 7 

all the world's a stage, and all — ii. 7 

a world too wide for his shrunk — ii. 7 

her world, being mounted on — iii. 2 (verses) 

rail against our mistress tlie world .. — iii. 2 

no breather in the world, but myself — iii. 2 

forswear the full stream of the world — iii. 2 

that make the world full of ill-favoured — iii. 5 

tliough all the world could see — iii. 5 

the poor world is almost six thousand — iv. 1 

and show tlie world what the bird hiith — iv. 1 

lie hatli no interest in me in the world — v. 1 

desire to be a woman of the world .. — v. 3 

from his enterprize, and from the world — v. 4 
with a world of pretty, fond adoptions. .4H's tt'ell, ]. I 

good will to go to the world, Isbel the — i. 3 

may tlie world know them? — i. 3 

would serve the world so all the year! — i. 3 

wliereof the world takes note — i. 3 

it is a novelty to the world — ii. 3 

wants nothing i' the world — ii- 4 

even to the world's pleasure — ii.4 

be breadth enough in the world. . — iii. 2 (letter) 

none in the world; but return — iii.fi 

the greatest oblotiuy i' the world .... — iv. 2 

serve the world for no honest use ... . — iv. 3 

greatest in the Cliristian world shall — iv. 4 

he is tlie prince of the world — iv. 5 

all tlie spots o' tlie world taxed — v. 3 

let the world slide; Sessal.. ramini'o/S/i. 1 (indue.) 

the veriest antic in the world — 1 (indue.) 

was the fairest creature in the world — -2 (indue.) 
and let the world slip; we shall ne'er — 2 (indue.) 

of great traffic tlirough the world .... — i. 1 

there be good fellows in the world .. — i. I 

scatters voung men through the world — i. 2 

am come abroad to see the world ... . — _i. 2 

now, by the world, it is a lusty — ii. 1 

the world report, that Kate doth (.rep.") — ii. 1 

yourself and all the world, that talked — ii. 1 

*tis a world to see, how tame — ii. 1 

from all the world, by your firm .... — ii. 1 

now must the world point at poor .. — ).'.'■ 2 

for all the world caparisoned like.... — iii. 2 

the world say no, I'll keep mine {rep.') — iii. 2 

how goes the world? A cold world .. — iv. 1 

loved none in the world so well as .. — iv. 2 

would all the world, but he, had quite — iv. 2 

giddy, thinks the world turns round — v. 2 

to toil and trouble in the world — v. 2 

is not in the world either malice .. Winter'sTale, i. 1 

none, none i' the world, so soon as .. — i. 2 

amongst the infinite doings of the world — i. 2 

why, then the world, and all that's in't — _i. 2 

tliemost replenished villain in the world — ii. 1 

for every inch of woman in the world — ii. 1 

as tills world goes, to pass for honest — ii. 3 

yea, scandalous to the world — ii. 3 

von wedded all the world — v. 1 

had heard of a world ransomed — v. 2 

if all the world could have seen it .. — v. 2 

no settled senses of the world can match — v. 3 
yet that the world may witness. . Comedy of Err. i. I 

I to the world am like a drop of water — i. 2 

lords of tlie wide world, and wild.... — ii. I 

and therefore, to the world's end .... — ii. 2 

how the world is changed with you.. — ii. 2 

a week longer than the whole world — iii. 2 

we came into the world, like — v. I 

now o'er the one half world nature ..Macbeth, ii. 1 

how goes the world, sir, now? — ii.4 

buffets of the world have so incensed ,. — iii. I 

botli the worlds suffer, ere we — ill. 2 

I am in this earthly world — iv. 2 

and wish the estate o' the world were . . — v. 5 
and all the world, upon the right .... KingJohn, i. 1 

he came into the world full — i. I 

from all the world; in sooth, he might — i. 1 

be a queen, and check the world! — ii. I 

rammed up our gates against the world — ii. 1 

with any princess of the world — ii. 2 

mad world! mad kings! — il. 2 

the bias of the world; the world .... — ii. 2 

with the pleasures of the world — iii. 3 

with a passion would I shake the world — iii 

my food, mj^ all the world! — ijj 

there's notliiiig in the world — iii 

the sweet world's [Co^. -word's] taste — iii 

fresh in this old world! .lolin lays .. — iii 

for the wealth of all the world — iv 

bad world the while! this must .... — iv. 



WORLD— and leave the world for me.Richardril. i. I 

to undertake the death of all the world — i. 2 

as all the world is cheered by the sun — i. 2 

yet to win her, all the world to nothing! — i. 2 

the spacious world cannot again .... — i. 2 

the world is grown so bad — i. 3 

childish-foolish for this world {rep.') — i. 3 

troubler of the poor world's peace! .. — i. 3 

to buy a world of happy days — i. 4 

they often feel a world of restless .... — 1.4 

from out a world of men? — i. 4 

all-seeing heaven, what a world is this! — ii. 1 

tears to drown the world! — ii. 2 

'twill prove a giddy world — ii. 3 

look to see a troublous world — ii. 3 

not j'et dived into the world's deceit — iii. I 

it is a reeling world, indeed, my lord — iii. 2 

how goes the world with thee? — iii. 2 

the censures of the carping world..., — iii. 6 

here's a good world the while! — iii. 6 

bad is the world; and all will come to — iii. 6 

will you enforce me to a world of cares? — iii. 7 

hast thou hatclied to the world — iv. 1 

my wife hath bid the world good-night — iv. 3 

world's shame, grave's due by life.... — iv. 4 

now by the world,— 'tis full of — iv. 4 

in this world I ne'er hope Henry J'lII, ii. 1 

has taken for ever from the world .. — ii. I 

would not be a queen, for all the world — ii. 3 

that man i' the world, who shall report — ii. 4 

shortly after this world had aired them ii. 4 

wortliy the best heir o' the world .... — ii.4 

for no dislike i' the world against.... — ii.4 

creature that's paragoned o' the world — ii.4 

all the world should crack their duty — iii. 2 

all that world of wealth I have drawn — iii. 2 

and glory of this world, I hate ye.... — iii. 2 

gave his honours to the world again — iv, 2 

that you love the dearest in this world — iv. 2 

now is passing out of this world — iv. 2 

with maiden flowers, that all the world — iv. 2 

your state stands i* the world (rep.).. — v. I 

and fair purgation to the world, than — v. 2 

and all the %vorld shall mourn her .. — v. 4 
as may be in the world (rep. i. 3) . Troilus <§■ Cress, i. 2 

else might the world convince of .... — ii. 2 

the world's large spaces cannot — ii. 2 

for tlie wide world's revenue — ii. 2 

matter of the world enter his thoughts — ii. 3 

know the whole world, he is — ii. 3 

shall, in the world to come, approve — iii. 2 

be called to the world's end after my — iii. 2 

become as new into tlie world — iii. 3 

makes the whole world kin — iii. 3 

hell of pain, and world of charge .... — iv. I 

ah, how the poor world is pestered .. — v. I 

world! world! world! thus is the — V. II 
how goes the world? (rep. i'l. 2) . . Timon of Alhens,\. I 

whom this beneath world doth — i. I 

forth the beggars of the world — i. I 

the world is but a word; were it .... — ii. 2 

is't possible, the world should so .... — iii. I 

why this is the world's soul — iii. 2 

and came into tlie world when — iii. 5 

whom the world voiced so regardfuUy? — iv. 3 

who had the world as my confectionary — iv. 3 

what things in the world canst thou — iv. 3 

what wouldst thou do with the world — iv. 3 

1 am sick of this false world — iv. 3 

that beasts may have the world in ., — iv. 3 
half to half the world by the ears. ...Con'o/anns, i. 1 

as if the world were feverous — i. 4 

to all the world, that Caius Marcius _ — i. 9 

nor fitness for the world, than camels — ii 1 

cannot in the world be singly — ii. 2 

the common muck o' tlie world — ii. 2 

is too noble for the world — iii. 1 

a brand to the end o' the world — iii. 1 

there is a world elsewhere — iii. 3 

send o'er the vast world, to seek ,,,. — iv. 1 

world, thy slippery turns! — iv. 4 

of all men i' the world I would have — iv. 5 

he is simply the rarest man i' the world — iv. 5 

we shall have a stirring world again — iv. 5 

blush, that the world goes well — iv. G 

his horns again into the world — iv. fi 

1 neither care for the world, nor .... — v. 2 

that brought thee to this world — v. 3 

there is no man in the world more .. — v. 3 

whose bend doth awe the world Julius Ctesar, i. 2 

so get tlie start of the majestic world — i. 2 

he doth bestride the narrow world .. — i. 2 

till then, think of the world — i. 2 

else the world, too saucy with the gods — i. 3 

know all the world besides, that part — i. 3 

are to the world in general, as to Caisar — ii. 2 

BO, in the world: 'tis furnished — iii. 1 

the most noble blond of all this world — iii. 1 

O world ! thou wast the forest (Tfp.) — iii. i 

might have stood against the world.. — iii. 2 

is it fit, the threefold world divided.. — iv. 1 

the foremost man of all this world .. — iv. 3 

Cassi us is aweary of the world — iv. 3 

no, not for all tlie world. Peace then — v. 5 

thou see'st the world, Volumiiius — v. 5 

say to all the world, this was a man I — v. 5 
pillar of the world transformed . . Antony SfCleo. i. 1 

the world to weet, we stand up peerless — i. 1 

the sides o' the world may danger .. — i. 2 

thou, the greatest soldier of the world — i. 3 

and with you cliiefly i' the world .... — ii 2 

the third o' the world is yours — ii. 2 

to edge o' the world I would pursue it — ii. 2 

the world, and my great office — ii. 3 

my blemishes in the world's report.. — ii. 3 

senators alone of this great world.... — ii. 6 

the least wind i' the world will blow — ii. 7 

wilt thou be lord of all the world? (rep.') — ii. 7 

am the man will give thee all the world — ii. 7 

he bears the third part of the world. . — ii. 7 



WOR 

WORLD go round (rrp.) Anionv ^ Cteo. il. 7 (long) 

aa if tlic world dHijuUI cleave — ii\. i 

tlieii, world, tliou liiiBt II piiir of clmpg — ill. 6 
till' -irtMitirciiiUle i>rilif world Is .... — in. 8 

I am S.1 lutid in tlie world — iii. « 

with Imll'llii' biilli o' tlic world played — iii. 9 
wlli-n Imir to lialt tlic world opimacd — ill. 1 1 

woild should noto aoMulliiiiK particular — iii. 1 1 
the tllrce-nooktd world sliull iKur .. — iv. (i 

thou day o' tiie world, cimiu — iv. 8 

from the world's great miare uiienught? — iv 8 

but kt the world rank me in — iv. 9 

that uml unto the world, and mock.. — ;v. 12 
with my tword nuartered the world.. — iv. 12 
the worship of the whole world lies.. — iv. 13 

the varving shore o' the world — iv. 13 

the gretttist prince o' the world — iv. 13 

shall I abide in thi* dull world — iv. 13 

this world did equal theirs — iv. 13 

the round world should have shook.. — v. 1 
in the name lay a moiety of the world — v. 1 
not stall together in the whole world — v. 1 

let the world see his nohlenees — v. 2 

his reared arm erested the world — v. 2 

sole sir o' the world, I cannot project — v. 2 

and tnay. throui^li iiU the world — V. 2 

thou lelVst the world it is not — V. 2 

in this wild workli' So, tare thee well — v- 2 

this jewel in the world, that 1 Cymbeline. j. 2 

more than the world enjoys — i. 5 

against any loily in the world — i. 5 

should vield the world this assl — ii. 1 

people, "such that mend unon the world — li. 4 

Britain is a world by itself — iii. 1 

almost stretch the sides o' the world — iii. 1 
this story the world may read in me — iii. 3 
these demesnes, have been my world — iii. 3 
doth belie all corners of the world .. — iii. 1 

i' llie world's volume our Britain — iii. 4 

none in the world; you did mistake — iv. 2 

that angel of the world, doth make .. — iv. 2 
ore like the pleasures of the world .. — iv. 2 
bravest vessel of the world struck — — iv. 2 

to shame the guise o' the world — v. 1 

deserved the praise o' the world — v. 4 

as is our fancied world, a garment .. — v. 4 
beini: cruel to the world, concluded. . — v. 5 

does the world go round? — v. s 

the whole world shall not save him.. — v. 5 
tlieewectest companions in the world — v. 5 

1 have got two worlds by't — v. 5 

a sceptre to controul ihe world — TiluiAnJron. i. 2 

the wide world's einneror — i. 2 

his betrothed from all the world away — i. 2 

all the world, I love Lavinia more irrp.) — ii. 1 
before all the world, do I prefer (rep.) — iv. 2 

welcome me to this world 8 liglit — v. 2 

who know the world, see heaven I'm ides, i. 1 

nor tell tlie world. Antiochus •lolh ^in — i. 1 

from all parts of the world, to jii>t .. — ii. 1 
looking lor adventures in the world — ii. 3 

if in the world he live, we'll seek — ii. 4 

ruddiest welcomed to this world — iii. 1 

to make the world twice rich — in. 2 

Where's my lord? what world is this? — id. 2 

do a thing i' the world so soon — iv. 1 

this world to me is like a lastioK' — — iv. 1 
yon » ill not do't for all tlie world .. — iv. 1 
lord of all this spacious world, I'd give — iv. 4 
to the world and awkward casualties — v. 1 

to make the world liiu^'h at me — v. 1 

into the world before he was sent lor Lear, i. I 

sliield thee trom diseases of the world — i. I 

makes the world bitter to the best.. — i. 'Jdetter) 
this is the excellent fopiiery of the worldl — i. 2 

I think the world's asleep — i. 4 

mu-it make adiiUurd of theworld — ii. I 

all the world well knows — ii. 2 

all the world shall— I will do such — ii. 4 

strives ill bis little world of man —iii. I 

the ihick rotundity o' the worldl — iii. 2 

poorly led? World, world, O worldl — iv. 1 

this world I do renounce — iv. 6 

this great world shall 80 wear out — iv. 6 

yet you see how this world noes (r<'j>.) — iv. 6 

your business of the world Imtli so an end — v. 1 
witness the worlil, that I create thee...... — v. 3 

wliat in the world he is that names — v. 3 

upon the rack ot this tough world — v. 3 

cuild is vet a straiiKer in the wdtM.. Itoineo ^ Jut. i.2 
her matcii since first the world bcgau — i. 2 

such a man, as all the world — i. 3 

I would not lor the world I r<-)).) — ii. 2 

follow thee in^' lord throughout the world — ii. 2 
OS any clout in the varsal world .... — ii. 4 
I am pepiiered. I warrant, for this world — iii. 1 
that all llie World will be in love with — iii. 2 
for tlic world is broad and wide i.rep.) — iii. 3 
banished from the world, and world's — iii. 3 
all the World to iioihing, that he dares — iii. 6 

tlie world is not thy friend (rrp.) — v. 1 

more monlers in tliis loathsome world — v. 1 
for so this side of our known World .... Hniiiiff, i. 1 

let the world take note, you are — i. 2 

to be hoiieit. OS this world goes — ii. 2 

but that the world'^ grown honest — ii. 2 

» prison. Then is the world one — ii. 1 

the beauty of the world! the (wrugoii.. — ii. 2 
the best actors in the world, cither for — ii. 2 

about the world have limes twelve thirties— iii. 2 

■halt live in this fair world bcliiud — iii. 2 

this world is not for uye — iii. 2 

noolfenee i'the woild — iii. 2 

tlius runs the world away.... — in. 2 

breathes out contagion to this world .. — iii. 2 
in the corrupted currents of this world — !!!• ** 
to give the world aSHuranee of a man .. — iii. 4 
whose whisper o'er the World's diameter — iv. I 
there's tricks i' the world; and hems .. — iv. b 
and us the world were now but to bcgiu — iv. i 



[ 840 ] 



WOR 



WORI,D-the worlds I give to negligence . Hamlel, iv. tt 
mv will, not all the world's — iv. 5 

wfnit part of the worlil I should he greeted — iv. 
coniileiiume in this wnrld to drown .. — v. I 

Whieh kepi the wi.rlil ill awe — V. 1 

no liKdieiiie ill the wurld can do — V. 2 

and ill tills liiii-h world .Iruw the breath — v. 2 

tolhe \el iliikiHiwili;; w.nld, h.iw — V. 'i 

judge llie llie world, if 'tis not i^ioss in ..Oiliello, i. 2 
for uii ulni^er of the worlil, a oraetiser .. — i. 2 

little of this great world can I speak — i. 3 

for my pains a world of sigliB — i. 3 

of fortunes may trumpet to Ihe world .. — i. 3 
have looked upon the world for four times — i. 3 
this inonstroiis birth to the world's light — 1.3 
of your vouth the world Imth noted .... — ii. .) 
nor all the drowsy syrups ol tlie world .. _ iii. 3 

monstrous world' take note tx-w.) .... — iii. 3 
bv the world, 1 think niv wile he iioiiest — iii. 3 

I"willcateeliise the world lor him — iii. 4 

that had luiinbered in the World the sun — iii. 1 
the world hath not u swetterereutiiie.. — iv. 1 
lash the ruseiil naked through the woi Id — iv. 2 
not the world's iniiss of vanity could inukc — iv. 2 
take me from this world with treachery — iv. 2 
eiicli a deed for all the world? (.rrp.) .... — iv. 3 

the world is a huge thing (rep.) — iv. 3 

having the world for your labour (rfD,).. — iv. 3 
as would store the world they played for — iv. 3 
none in the world; nor do 1 Know the man — v. 1 
another world of one entire and perfect .. — v. 2 

WOKLDLINU— as worldlings (\o..A>>jnitUl^e i/, ii. 1 
for the world and worldlings ba6el..2//e/ir!/;/-'. v. 3 
WORLDLY— neglecting worldly ends .. /empeji. i. 2 
no worldly gowf should draw. Two Gen.t^f Ver. iii. 1 
and most loathed worldly life ..Mens. for ileas. iii. I 
the breath of worldly men cannot.. /(iWmr'J //. iii. 2 

the worst is worldly loss, thou — iii. 2 

worldly business makes a period ..iHinnjIV. iv. 4 

httstth'ou nut worldly pleasure iHemyl'l. i. 2 

fled all my worldly solace — iii. 2 

common worldly things, 'tis called. Uiehard III. ii. 2 
in no worldly suit would he be moved — iii. 7 
being weary of these worldly bars . JuliusCrr$ar, i- 3 
thy svorldly task hast done ..Cyiithelhu; iv. 2 (song) 

secure from world ly chances I'ilus.liKlron. i. 2 

but we worldly men have miserable — v. 2 

of worlcUv matters and direction Othrllo, i. 3 

W0KI,D-SI1.\KEIIS, these Aiiloinj ■^ Cleo. il. 7 

\VUKi.l)-\Vl-;.VKI10D flesh Ilomrof, Juliet, V. 3 

WUHI,D-W1TUUUT-1£ND bargiuu. Love's L. L. v. 2 

WOK.M— |i"or Koriii! thou art infected. 7'fmp>?s(, iii. 1 

vile worm, ihou wast o'erlooked .. .ytrri/lfires, v. 5 

like a worm i' the bud, feed ou ..Tweljlh ,\ighl, ii. 4 

and tender fork of a poor worm.>/ea»./ur .U^u». iii I 

is but a humour, or a worm? .Much.itlo, iii. 2 

if Don Worm, hie conscience — v. 2 

worm, nor snail, do no otfenceA/iJ.iV.'iDr. ii. 3 (song) 

could not a worm, au adder — iii. 2 

thus to reprove these worms Lone'sL.LosI, iv. 3 

tombs do worms infold. A/ercA. ojyenire. ii. 7 tscroll) 

and worms have eaten thcin AiyouLikeU,i\. I 

you fioward and unable worra3l..7'umi7i!,' ofSli. v. 2 

the worm, that's fled, hath Macbeth, iii. 4 

what, witli worms and flics? — iv. 2 

fingers with thy household worms ..KiiigJohn, iii. i 
of grave«, of worms, and epitaphs . . Uic/mrd II. iii. 2 
for worms, brave Percy: fare thee .. I lletinjiy. v. 4 

gave thee life, unto the worms •iHemijIv. iv. 4 

civil dissension is a viperous worm.l llemijl'l. iii. 1 
the mortal worm might make thc'-'HrM/i/*';. iii. 2 

tlie smallest worm wilftiirn 3Heiiii/l'l. ii. 2 

tlic worm of conscienee still begnaw./dr/iari/ ;//. i. 3 

hath made a prey for worms — iv. 4 

when I shoU dwell with worms ..Henry I'll I. iv. 2 
and eyeless venoined worm with ..Titnona/Alh. iv. 3 
hast thou the pretty worm of Nilus./4>if. SfCleo. v. 2 
makes a very good report o' the worm — v. 2 
most fallible, the worm's an odd worm — v. 2 

1 wish you all joy of the worm (rep.) — v. 2 

that the worm will do his kind — v. 2 

the worm is not to be trusted — v." 

there is no goodness in the worm ... . — v. 
outvenoius all the worms of Nile ..Cymleiine, iii. 

and worms will not come to thee — iy. 

and the poor worm doth die for't Pericles, i. 

I trod upon a worm against my will .. — iv. 
she made him roastineat for worms.. .. — iv. 

tliou owesl the woim no silk Lear, iii. 

which made me think a mail a worm — iv. 

the bud bit by an envious worm. . ttomeo^ Juliet, i. 
not half so big as around little worm — i. 

with worms that are thy chaniber maids — v. 
worms ore e'en at him; your worm.... Haiitlet, iv. 
the worm that httth eat of a king (rrp.).. — iv. 

and now my lady Worm's; ehapless — v. 

worms were hallowed, that did breed .. 0?AW(o, iii. 

WOUM-EATEN taVestry .VuchAAo, iii. 

goblet, or a worin-eateu nut ....As you Like il, iii. 
this worni-cuteii hold •lUenryiy. (indue. 

WOKM-IKII.ES of long-vanished ....Henry r. ii. 

WOK.MS-ME.VT. in respect of ..Asyou Likrit, iii. 2 
have made worms-meat of inc. /?oi/ieo«S-Jii/ic/, iii. 1 

WUKM WOOD from your LoeeUL.Losl, v. 2 

then laid wormwood to my dug. . Homeo 4 Juliet, i. 3 
did taste the wormwood on the nipple — i. 3 

that's wormwood. The iustances Hamlet, iii. 2 

WOKMY beds are gone Mid.X.'sDream, iii. 2 

WOKN to pieces with age Merry ll'iees, ii. 1 

sooner lost und worn 7'ur/.n/i.Vii.'/i(, ii. 4 

yon that ha\e worn your eyes ..Meat, for Meat. i. 2 

and none of theiii been Worn — i. 3 

the garland he iiiigut have worn MuchAAo, ii. I 

morning now is soinething worn . . .UiU. .V.'< Wr. iv. I 
he should have worn the horns on .. — v. I 
flvocore winters Worn, might.... Lur«'<I..Ioi(, iv. i 

better wits have worn plain — v. 2 

ay, and worn in the cup — v. 2 

tlie rest have worn me out All'iiyell, i. i 

aud 110 sword wuio but uuc tu — li. I 



WOKN— his right check is worn barc.^U'i "VH, iv. & 

hath it been owed, and worn — v. 3 

which waits upon worn times .... Hinlrr'sTale. v. I 

which would lie worn now in .Marlieili i. 7 

that I have worn so many lllrlmrAII. iv. I 

Alter to be won in niv cap illeinyll'. i. 2 

like a rich aimoiir worn ill heat .... — iv. 4 

time liath worn 11s into slovcnrv .. .. /Irriry*'. iv. 3 
and worn as a ineinoiuhl.- trophy.... - v. 1 

wonderwill liei|iiiekly worn iHeuryl'l. ii. 4 

still have worn the petticoat illrmyll. v. & 

they have worn out Christendom .. Hemy I'lll. i. 3 
when water-drops have worn .. Truilut fi Ct en. iii. 2 

tlie\- are worn, lord c<insul, so Conolanui, iii. I 

before you hud worn it out — iii. 2 

when old P.lies are worn out Antony ^ Clen. i. 2 

which thou liiist worn most useful .. — iv. 12 

O|iiiiioii, hy this, worn out Cymhelinr^ i. 5 

but worn, u bait for Indies — iii. 4 

have yet worn Vulcan's badge ..TilnsAwlron. ii. 1 
the day, that I have worn a visor./fomeo *Jnhfl,i.5 
worn out thy pump; that when (rep.) — ii. 4 
misery hud worn him to the bones .. — v. I 

ill Denmurk's crown have worn Hamlet, v. 2 

WollKIED-thc dog, let us be worried. .Hfiir(/>'. i. 2 

WOKRIES he his daughter Hiuier'slale, v. 2 

W()llRY-tn worry lambs, and lap. Itichnrd 1 1 1, iv. 4 

WORRYING them Hentyi: ii. 2 

W( )R.-<E - no worse issued Tempest, i. 2 

they were no worse than now — it. I 

are worse than devils — iii. 3 

Worse than any deutli can be at once .. — iii. 3 
I would it were no worse . . Two(jen. offerona, ii. I 

and tliat's fur worse than none — v. 4 

send Anne I'uge no worse fortune!. JUcnyirinM, i. 4 
I shall think the worse of fat men.... — ii. 1 

no wiirse man than sir Toby Twel/lli Kinhi, iii. 4 

I shall give worse payment — iv. I 

and the worse for my friends (rep.) .. — v. I 

no sir, the worse — v. I 

thou shiilt not be the worse for me .. — v. I 
to lie worse than worst of those ..l/M»./or !)tras iii. I 

still thus, and thus, still worse! — iii. 2 

60 of him; and much more, much worse — v. 1 

this may prove worse than hanging — v. 1 

scratching could not make it worse ..Much Ado, i. 1 

and torment the poor ludy worse — ii. 3 

were worse; think yon ol a worse title — iii. 2 
but t should use thee worse .. Mul.N.'sUream, iii. 2 
the worst are no worse, if imagination — v. 1 

if we imagine no worse of them — v. I 

tliey are worse fools, to purchase.. i.otte'«t.iLoi/, v. 2 

that hid the worse, and showed — v. 2 

to have one show worse than the king's — v. 2 
he is little worse than a man..l7ficAau/ o/l'enice, i. 2 

was set in worse than gold — ii. 7 

what, worse and worse?— with leave — iii. 2 

tliut I was worse than nothing — iii. 2 

I'll have no worse a name than ..AsuouLikeil, i. 3 
and what's worse, to fright the onimars — ii. 1 

the worse ot care lie is — iii. 2 

censure, worse than drunkards — iv. 1 

the principal itself not much the voTse.AII'siyell, i. I 

no worse of worst exiended — ii. I 

I ne'er had worse luck in my life.... — ii. 2 
03 Socrates' Xuiitippe or a worse . . Tamingo/Sh. i. 2 
alas, sir, it is worse for nie than 80 .. — iv. 2 
neitlier art thou the worse for this .. — iv- 3 

to like no worse than I, sir — iv. 3 

3'Oiir wife send you not a worse — v. 2 

worse and worse 1 she will not cornel — v. 2 
hated too, worse than the greatest . Winter^sTale, i. 2 
which burns worse than tears drown — ii. 1 
so like you, 'tis the W'orse; behold ., — ii. 3 
you have spent time worse ere now — iv. (cho.) 
one worse, and better used, would make — v. 1 
in making, worse in mind ..Comedy vi'Errors, iv. i 

herein others* e.ves were worse — iv. 2 

ill Tartar limbo, worse than hell .... — iv. 2 

a wolf, nay worse, u fellow all — iv. 2 

nay, she is worse, she is the devil's ., — iv. 3 

lie j^rows worse and worse Macbeth, iii. 4 

aiKl, which is worse, all you have done — iii. & 

to do worse to yon, were fell — iv. 2 

a many foot ol land the worse King John^i. I 

the worse by the excuse — iv. 2 

or thou canst worse devise lUchard Il.i. 1 

but the greater feeling to the worse.. — i. 3 

that is worse; the lord Northumberland — ii. 2 
and all goes worse than 1 have i>ower — iii. 2 
each one thrice worse than Judusl ,. — iii. 2 

no worse can coine, to fight — iii. 2 

thy state might be no worse — iii. 4 

a coward is worse than a cup of ....MIeniylV. ii. 4 

worse than a smoky house — iii. I 

no more, no more; worse than the sun — iv. 1 
the reiHjrt of a ealiver, worse than .. — iv. 2 
to make that worse, sutfered his .... — iv. 3 
niv thoughts, worse than thy sword.. — v. 4 
false, worse than true wrongs ..'iHenrylf. (indue.) 

it is worse shame to beg than — i.2 

may the wench have no worse fortune! — ii. •• 

and And me worse provided — ii. 3 

1 am the worse, when one sa.vs, swagger — ii. 4 
so much the worse. If ycmr own rule — iv. 2 

no worse than they are buck-bitten.. — v. I 
and which is worse, within thy muty .Henry y. ii. | 
I never saw a fellow worse bested ..iHenryyi. ii. 3 

entreat her not the worse — ii. 4 

fur worse than his. What, worse than — iii. I 
gall, worse than gall, the daintiest .. — iii. 2 
but womc than wolves of France ....ZHentyl'I. i. 4 

what's worse than murderer — v. 6 

it makes liiiii worse; therefore IlichatU III. i. 3 

deserve not worse than wret<*hed .... — ii. 1 
thy loss makes the bad-euuser worse — iv. 4 
show a worse sin than ill doctrine .. Henry rill. i. 3 
your fears ore worse. Have X lived .. — iii. 1 
startle you Worse than the saering liell — iii. 2 
worse drst [Kn'. -show the better]. 7'iuiVii>,<c'rrn.i. 3 
31 



WOR 



[ 850 ] 



WOR 



WORSE— know each other worse. Troitus ^ Cress, iv. I 
raakes it worse tlian stealtli . . Timon of Atftens, iii. 4 

I am worse than mod: I have — iii. 5 

I hate thee worse. Why? thou flatter'st — iv. 3 

worse than the worst, content — iv. 3 

Rome worse liateii than of yaw. Coriolanus, i. 1 (let.) 
budge from rascals worse than they. . — i. 6 

hate thee worse than a promise-breaker — i. 8 
'twere a concealment worse tlian a theft — ^ i. 9 

how is it less, or worse, that it — iii. 2 

and love tl>ee no worse than thy old — v. 2 
you worse tlian senseless thingsl .. Julius Coesar, i. 1 
we will shake him or worse days endure — ..'• ^ 

I never thought him worse — iii. 1 

there will a worse come in his place — iii. 2 

and give him a worse t^rep.')..AiUony S^Cleopatra^ i. 2 
no worse a husband tlian the best of — _li. 2 

he were the worse for that — iii. 2 

what's worse, must court'sy at .... Cyinbeline, iii. 3 

stands in wor^e case of woe — iii. 4 

and falsehood is worse in kings — iii. 6 

from one bad thing to worse; not frenzy — iv. 2 
are worse than priests and fanes that lie — iv. 2 

ills with ills, each elder worse — v. I 

whom worse than a physician would — v. 6 
more, sir, and worse. She did confess -«- v. 5 
amend, by being worse than they.. .. — v. 5 
the worse to her, the better loved. Titus Ambon, ii. 3 
keep me from their worse than killing — ii. 3 
were there worse end than death .... — ii. 4 
for worse than Philomel you used (rep.) — v. 2 
ten thousand, worse than ever yet . . — v. 3 

grows worse, to smother it Pericles, i. 1 

oft'end worse; neither is our profession — iv. 3 

worse and worse, mistress — iv. 6 

brutish villain! worse than brutish! Lear, i. 2 

if I like thee no worse after dinner — i. 4 

my sister may receive it much more worse — ii. 2 

'tis worse than murder — ii. 4 

and a worse matter than that — iii. 3 

lam worse than e'er I was — iv. I 

and %vorse I may be yet — iv. 1 

his answer was, the worse — iv. 2 

thou worse than any name — v. 3 

a thousand times the worse .... Roineo .Sr Juliet, ii. 2 

for fault of a worse — ii. 4 

there is thy gold; worse poison to.... — v. I 

still better, and worse Hamlet, iii. 2 

bad begins, and worse remains behind . . — iii. 4 

I lay worse than the mutinea — v. 2 

I am worth no worse a place Othello, i. 1 

the worse welcome; I have charged thee — i. 1 

with no worse nor better guard — .i. I 

her blackness fit. Worse and worse — ii. 1 

she's the worse for all this — iv. 1 

WORSE-BODIED, shapeless .Comedy of Errors, iv. 2 
WORSER— our worser genius can .... Tempest, iv. 1 

it hath tlie worser sole TwoGen.of Verona, ii. 1 

the worser allowed by oy&&\'. . . .Meas. forMeas, iii. 2 
what worser place can I beg in.MnX.N.'snream, ii. 2 
my state far worser than it is. .Taming af Slirew, i. 2 

changed to a worser shape 1 Henry VI. v. 3 

your grandam had a worser match. IticUmd III. i. 3 
worser thoughts heavens mend ! . . Antony ^ Cleo. i. 2 
I cannot hate thee worser than I do — ii. 5 

let not my worser spirit tempt Lear, iv. 6 

memories of those worser hours — iv. 7 

where the worser is predominant. /?o?oeo Sf Juliet, ii.3 
some word there was, worser than .. — iii. 2 

throw away the worser part of it. . . . Hamlet, iii. 4 
worser, that you give me the addition, Othello, iv. 1 

WORSHIP this dull fooll Tempest, v. 1 

your worship, sir; or else . . TwoGen. of Verona, ii. 1 

she that your worship loves? — ii. 1 

was this the idol that you worship so? — ii. 4 

now 1 worship a celestial sun — ii. 6 

become you well to worship shadows — iv. 2 

tlad to see your worship's well .... Merry iVives, i. 1 
esires your worsliip's company (7 fp.) — i. I 

1 may not go in without your worship — i. I 
that it pleases your good worship to ask — i. 4 
have not your worship a wart (rep.) , — i. 4 
your worship good-morrow (rep. iii. 5) — ii. 2 
not so, an't please your worship .... — ii. 2 
shall I vouchsafe your worship a word — ii. 2 
vour worship says very true (rep.) .. — ii. !! 
lord, lord! your worship's a wanton — ii. 2 
another messenger to your worship.. — ii. 2 
and she bade me tell your worship . . — ii. 2 
and hath sent your worship a morning's — ii. 2 
he knew your worship would kill him — ii. 3 
to your worship from mistress Ford — iii. 5 
I thank your worship: I shall make — iv. 5 
let not your worship think me . Meas.for Meas. ii. 1 

I thanli your worship for it (rep.) — ii. 1 

worship's pleasure I should do with this — ii. 1 
does your worship mean to geld .... — ii. 1 

if your worship will take order — ii. I 

to your worship's house, sir? — ii. 1 

sir, your good worship will be my bail — iii. 2 

it pleases your worship to say so Much Ado, iii. .'i 

to oestow it all of your worship — iii. 5 

as good exclamation on your worship — iii. 5 
excepting your worship's presence .. — iii. 5 
morning examined before your worship — iii. 5 
worship speaks like a most thankful — v. 1 
arrant knave with your worship (re;j.) — v. 1 

God keep your worship (rep.) — v. 1 

worship's mercy, heartily (rep.) ..Mid.P,'.*sDr. iii. 1 

I thank your worship Love'sL.Lost, iii. 1 

I will come to your worship to-morrow — iii. 1 

like savages, may worship it — v. 2 

your worship was the last man . . Mer. of Venice, i. 3 
your worship's friend, and Launcelot — ii. 2 

God bless your worship! — ii. 2 

(saving your worship's reverence) .. — ii. 2 
that 1 would bestow upon your worship — ii. 2 
your worship shall know by this lionest — ii. 2 
your worship was wOnt to tell me .. — ii. 5 
calls your worship? (rep.) AsyouLiheit,i. 1 



WORSHIP-God keep your worship !./Js youLIJte it, i. I 
can entame my spirits to 3'our worsliip — iii. 5 

love him; he worsliips you — v. 2 

is this all your worship's reason? AlVsWell, i. 3 

man has rebused yourworsliip? ..Taming of Sh. i. 2 
before imparted to your worship .... — iii. 2 
the cap your worship did bespeak.... — iv. 3 
she says, your worship means to ... . — iv. 3 
your worship is deceived; the gown.. — iv. 3 
benched, and reared to worship . . IVinter'sTale, i. 2 
palace, an' it like your worship (j-ep. v. 1)— iv. 3 

four worship had like to have given us — iv. 3 
have committed to your worship .. — v. 2 
pay your worship tliose agaAn. .Comedy of Errojs, i. 2 
your worship's wife, my mistress .... — i. 2 

his toothpick at my worship's mess .. King John, i. I 
be my lord, for I will worship ttieel — ii. 2 

by giving it the worship of revenge.. — iv. 3 
the slightest worship of his time.... I Henry IV. iii. 2 

to buy your worship ahorse iHenryJV. i. 2 

give me your worship's good hand .. — iii. 2 

your good worship is welcome — iii. 2 

I grant your worship, that he is a .. — v. I 
I have served your worship truly .. — v. I 
a very little credit with your worship — v. 1 
I beseech your worship let hira he .. — v. 1 

I am glad to see your worship — v. 1 

your worship? I'll be with you straight — v. 3 
an' it please your worship, there's one — v. 3 

god-den to your worship Henry V. iii. 2 

reverently worship thee enough? 1 Henry VI. i. 2 

his wife, an't like your worship ....iHenryVl.ii. 1 
and worship it, and make my image — iii. 2 
like brothers, and worship me their lord — iv. 2 
ay, but give me worship, and quietness — iv. 3 

that good man of worship Richard III. i. 1 

and please your worship, Brackenbury — i. 1 
as I belong to worship, and affect . . Henry VIII. i. 1 
all the Greeks begin to worship. Troilus ^ Cress, iii. 3 
baseness, to him that worships. Timon of Athens, iii. 1 
what does his cashiered worship mutter?— iii. 4 
to thee be worship! and thy saints for — v. 1 

your worships have delivered Coriolanus, ii. 1 

good e'en to your worships (rep.) ... . — ii. 1 
■this double worship, where one part — iii. I 
he desired their worships to think. .JuliusCfPsar, i. 2 
the worship of the whole vrorld. Antony ^Cteo. iv. 12 
of those who worship dirty gods. . , . Cyinbeline, iii. 6 

support the worships of their name Lear, i. 4 

your worship, in that sense ....Romeo ^Juliet, iii. 1 

and pay no worship to the garish sun — iii. 2 

WORSHIPFUL old master? ..Taming of Shrew, v. 1 

but this is worshipful society King John, i. 1 

O my most worshipful lord 2Henrylf'.i\. 1 

accitea your most worshipful thought — ii. 2 

very worshipful and loving friends. RicAord III. iii. 7 

worshipful mutineers, your valour . . Coriolanus, i. 1 

WORSHIPFULLY he terms it ... . Richard III. iii. 4 

WORSHIPPED, kissed, loved.. Two Gen.ofVer. iv. 4 

but God is to be worshipped MuchAdo, iii. 6 

Lord worshipped might he \)&\ .. Mer. of Venice, ii. 2 

and worshipped as a saint King John, iii. 1 

not worshipped wi th a waxen epi taph . Henry V.i.2 
be worshipped of that we hold. Troitus Sf Cressida, ii.3 
is worshipped in a baser temple .. Timon ofAih. v. I 
an hour befure the worshipped sun. fio?Heo ^Jul. i. 1 
WORSHIPPER— upon his worshipper ..<//'>■■ <reH. i. 3 

griefs, tlian do thy worshippers! He,„yV. iv. 1 

WORSHIP'ST saint Nicholas \HenrylV. ii. I 

WORST— should be the worst. TwoGen.ofVerona, v. 4 

his worst fault is, that he Merry Wives, i. 4 

worst thing about him (rep.). . . . Meas.for Meas. ii. 1 

or to worse than worst of those — iii. I 

thati may know the worst that ..Mid.N.'sDr. i. 1 
the worst are no worse, if imagination — v. 1 

ay, the best for the worst Love'' sL. Lost, i. 1 

is worst of all; and, among three (rep.) _ iii. 1 
and when he is worst, he is little.. Mer. of Venice, i. 2 

an' the worst fall that ever fell — i. 2 

therefore, for fear of the worst, I pray — i. 2 

the worst fault you have Asyoiil.ike it, iii. 2 

no worse of worst extended A W s H'ell, ii. 1 

after who comes by the worst.. Taming of Slirew, i. 2 
had not Gruniio come by the worst.. — i. 2 

for a maid, of all titles the worst .... — i. 2 
and think it not the worst of all .... — iv. 2 
the worst is this, that at so slender .. — iv. 4 

a man, the worst about you IVinler's Tale, ii. 3 

to taste of thy most worst? — iii. 2 

and not the worst of the three — iv. 3 

on ilia side, be the worst, yet hold thee — iv. 3 
not in the worst rank of manhood . . Macbeth, iii. 1 

treason has done his worst — iii. 2 

by the worst means, the worst — iii. 4 

things at tlie worst will cease — iv. 2 

to hear the worst, then let the Vfoist.KingJohn, iv. 2 

tell him so; we know the worst — iv. 3 

condition of the worst degree Richard II. ii. 3 

the worst is worldly loss — iii. 2 

the worst is— death, and death will.. — iii. 2 

have felt the worse of death's — iii. 2 

to lengthen out the worst that — iii. 2 

God forbid! worst in this royal — iv. 1 

whose worst was, that the noble ....IHenrylV.i. 1 

that's the worst tidings that I — iv. 1 

and to prevent the worst, sir Michael — iv. 4 

than to be on tlie worst side iHenrylF. i. 2 

seem best; things present, worst .... — ^" i. 3 
tlie worst that they can say of me is .— ii. 2 

best of gold, art worst of gold.., — iv. 4 

the worst of these three gentlemen .. — v. 2 
defy us to our worst; for, as I am .... Henry V. iii. 3 

if thou hast me, at the worst — v. 2 

the worst, this letter doth (rep.) 1 Henry VI. iv. 1 

train of her worst wearing gown ....IHenryVI. i. 3 
to prevent the worst, forthwith . . . ."iHenry VI. iv. 6 
come, come, we fear the worst .... Richard III. ii. 3 

were now best, now worst Henry VIII. i. 1 

what worst, as oft, hitting a grosser.. — i. 2 

against the worst may happen — iii. 1 



WORST-dare your worst objections. UenryVlII. iii. 2 
the heaviest, and the worst, is your.. — iii. 2 
you may, worst of all this table .... — v. 2 
to the bottom of the worst . . Tmilus ^ Cressida, i i. 2 
to fear the worst, oft cures the worst — iii. 2 

what envy can say worst — iii. 2 

'faith, for the worst is filthy Timon of Athens, i. 2 

tlie worst that man can breathe .... — iii. 5 
when man's worst sin is, lie does .... — iv. 2 

worse than the worst, content — . iv. 3 

not been born the worst of men — iv, 3 

let him take't at worst — v. 2 

rascal, that art worst in blood Coriola7ius,i. 1 

come, or what is worst will follow .. — iii. 1 

let j^our general do his worst — v. 2 

when thou didst hate him worst .. Julius Ciesar, iv. 3 
let's reason with the worst that may — v. 1 
till the worst of all follow him .. Antony ^ Cleo. i. 2 

well, wliat worst? The nature of — i. 2 

the worst of me: so I leave (rep.) ..Cymheline, ii. 3 

the worst of all her scholars Pericles ii. 5 

it hath done to me the worst — iii. 1 

the gods do like this worst — iv. 4 

not being the worst, stands in some Lear, ii. 4 

to be worst, the lowest, and most dejected — iv. 1 

the worst returns to laughter — iv. I 

that thou hast blown unto the worst .... — iv. 1 
who is't can say, I am at the worst? .... — iv. 1 
the worst is not, so long as we can (rep.) — iv. I 

no, do thy worst, blind Cupid — iv. 6 

best meaning, have incurred the worst .. — v. 3 
who liaving seen me in my worst estate. . — v. 3 
yea, is the worst well? very -wfiW.Romeo ^ Juliet, ii. 4 

Denmark being one of the worst Hamlet, ii. 2 

by seeing the worst, which late on hopes. 0(Ae//o, i. 3 
ignorance! thou praisest the worst best.. — ii. 1 
thy worst of thoughts the worst of words — iii. 3 

that stroke would prove the worst — iv. 1 

ha! Do thy worst; this deed of thine .... — v. 2 

WOR'ST it on thy horn Troilus& Cressida, v. 2 

WORSTED-STOCKING knave Lear, ii. 2 

WORT, and Malmsey Love'sL.Lost, v. 2 

good worts. Good worts I Merry Hives, i . 1 

Worth what's dearest to the world!;. Tempest, iii. 1 
'tis an office of great worth.. TwoGen. of Verona, i. 2 
I know the gentleman to be of worth — ii. 4 
far behind his worth come all the praises — ii. 4 

according to his worth — ii. 4 

his wortli is warrant for his welcome — ii. 4 
whose worth makes other worthies .. — ii. 4 
not worth the name of a christian .. — ii. 5 

now's not worth a pin — ii. 7 

bounty, worth, and qualities — iii. 1 

a youthful gentleman of worth — iii. 1 

as you in worth dispraise — iii. 2 

it may be worth thy pains TwelflhNight, \. 2 

will allow me very worth his service — i. 2 

if it be worth stooping for — ii. 2 

she is not worth thee then — ii. 4 

but, were my worth, aa is my conscience — iii. 3 

scarce to be worth talking of — iii. 4 

did promise most venerable worth .. — iii. 4 

as your worth is able Measure for Measure, i. I 

be of worth to undergo such ample .. — i. 1 

was worth five thousand of you all.. — i. 2 

was worth the looking on _ v. 1 

testimonies against hie worth and credit — v. 1 
her worth, worth yours. I find an apt — v. 1 

not a note of mine that's worth MuchAdo, ii. 3 

your's is worth ten on't — iii. 4 

whose worth may counterpoise this rich — iv. 1 
we prize not to tlie worth, whiles we — iv. 1 

with the rich worth of your .Vid. N.'s Dream, ii, 2 

the worth of many a knight from .Love'sL.Lost, i. 1 
less proud to hear you tell ray worth — ii. 1 
not valued to the money's worth .... — ii. i 
who, tendering their own worth .... — ii. 1 

by wit, worth in simplieity — v. 2 

'tis not so much worth; but I hope .. — v. 2 
even now worth this (rep.) . . Merchant of Venice, i. 1 

your worth is very dear in my — j. l 

they are not worth the search — i. i 

world ignorant of her worth _ i. 1 

will be worth a Jewess' eye — ii. 5 

it is worth the pains: I am glad 'tie — ii. 6 

call thine; worth seizure, do we.. y4s!/onLi7ter7, iii. 1 
her worth, being mounted on the — iii. 2 (verses) 
his head worth a hat, or his chin worth — iii. 2 

men of great worth resorted to — v. 4 

the longer kept, the less worth All's Well, i. I 

can rate worth name of life — ii. 1 

and that thou art scarce worth — ii.3 

you are not worth another word .... — ii.3 
dog the heels of worth; he is too — iii. 4 (letter) 
every word weigh heavy of her worth — iii. 4 
or to the worth of the great count .... — iii. 5 

and worth it, with addition! — iv. 2 

esteem him worth a dozen .. Taming of Sh. I (ind.) 
accept them, then their wortli is great — ii. 1 
the time is wortli the use on't .. Winter's Tale, iii. 1 
Bhe is a woman more worth than .... — v. 1 

a man, not worth her pains' — v. 1 

not so rich in worth as beauty — v. 1 

she was more worth such gazes — v. 1 

worth the audience of kings and princes — v. 2 
whose worth, and honesty, is richly. . — v. 3 
owes more than he's worth . . Comedy of Errors, iv. 2 
a ring he hath of mine worth forty .. — iv. 3 

or else worth all the rest Macbeth, ii. 1 

must not be measured by his worth. ... — v. 7 
he's worth more sorrow; and that (rep.) — v. 7 
am not worth this coil that's vtWidQ .. King John, ii. I 
your worth, your greatness, and nobility — iv. 3 
by the glorious worth of mj^ descent. /^'cAarii //. i. 1 
by the worth and honour of himself — iii. 3 
and to thy worth will add right .... — v. 5 
I know a trick worth two of that. . . . 1 Henry IV. ii. 1 
do BO, for it is worth the listening to — ii. 4 

eeal-ring of my grandfather's worth — iii. 3 

thy love is worth a million — iii. 3 



•WOBTII— never belter worth tlmn ..Mlrnryll'. iv. 1 
pmy Qwl, my iiewn be worth a welcomo — iv. I 

ar« not worth n coosehcrry illrnri/ll'-i- ' 

is worth a thoiittatul ttf those — ij* ' 

acrown'8W.irtli of Kood intcrpretiition — )'• » 

o Rood henrt'n wortli Kold — ii. < 

of Troy, worth live ol Aanmeinnon.. — _ii. 4 

good score of ewca mny Iw wortt\ ten — *!l* ^ 
that you urc worth your brecdhig ....llrnryy. iii. I 
(how me but thy worth! what is .... — iv. I 
all that I can do, is nothing worth .. — iv. 1 
whose face H not worlli »un-b\nning — v. 2 
ne'er lost n king of so mucli worth ..\ Henry I'l. I. 1 

my wortli unknown, no hxs — iv.S 

burial as bescims llicir worth — iv. 7 

deign to woo her little » ortli — v. 3 

marriage is a matter of mure worlli.. — v. 6 

wiis better wortti tlinii all mv 'iUemyVl. i. 3 

whether your grace he worth, yea, or no — }• 3 

it is not worth tlie enjoyina — ill. 1 

twenty times his worlli, they say.... — in. = 
thai ever diil contain a thing of worth — iii. 2 

ami is worth a monarchy — iv. 10 

a wisp of straw were worth iUenry Vl-u- 2 

prescription for a kingdom's worth.. — iii. 3 
some two days since, were worth.... KiWinnl ///. i. 3 
many other of great fame and worth — iv. 5 
were^t worth to know the secret . . Henry fltl. ii. 3 
more worth than empty vanities .... — ii 3 
not worth his serious considering.... — iii.''! 

well worth the seeing. 0"od sir — iv. I 

valour's worth, divide in storms . 7"i-oi'(ii« <5- Cr««. i. 3 

§ rows dainty of his worth — i. 3 

istains his worth, if that — j. 3 

avow her beauty and her worth — i. 3 

ond not worth the splinter of a lance — i. 3 

not worth to us, had it our name — ii. 2 

weigh you the worth and honour .... — ii. 2 

brother, she is not worth what — ii. 2 

is she worth keeping? why. she is .. — ii. 2 

disgrace to your great worths — ii. 2 

imagined worth holds in his blood .. — ij. 3 
not for the worth thot hangs upon . . — ii. 3 
something not worth in me such rich — iii. 3 

esteem, and poor in worth! — iii. 3 

to her own worth slie shall be prized — iv. 4 
on his fair worth, and single ciiivalry — iv. 4 

do deeds worth praise — v. 3 

is not proved worth a blackberry — — v. 4 
dost thou think 'tis worth {repA .. TimnnnfAth. i. I 

y.m have added worth unto't — i- 2 

their legs be worth the sums that — i. 2 

1 had rather than the worth of thrice — iii. 3 
mindlessof thy worth, forgetting thy — iy. .1 
is not worth the wagging of your ..Coriolatius, ii. 1 

is worth all your predecessors — ii. I 

and to have his worth of contradiction — ill. 3 

some trick not worth an egg — jv. 1 

worth six of him. Nov, not so — iv. 5 

what is that court'sv worth? — v. 3 

and your dinner worth the eating. ../n/.iiiCa'sni-, i. 2 
and his worth, ond our great neeil .. — . i. 3 

no instrument of half that worth — iij. I 

neither wit, nor words, nor worth .. — iii. 2 

till ne'er worth love Amony ^ Cleopatra, i. 4 

but weigh what it is worth embraced — ii. 6 
take a queen worth many babes .... — v. 2 

for it is not worth the feeding — v. 2 

world it is not worth the leave-taking — v. 2 

if this be worth your hearing Cymbeline,i. I 

he is a man worth any woman — i. 2 

she is not worth our debate — ;■ 5 

we count not worth the hanging .... — i. 6 

should have lost the worth of it in gold — ii. i 
had that was well worth watching .. — ii. 4 
cannot a dram of worth be drawn .. — iii. 5 
than thine 0W.1 wortli prefer thee.... — iv. 2 
wretch, more worth your vengeance — v. I 
had it been all the worth of his car .. — v. 5 
tmdo the worth thou art unpaid for — v. 5 

mv deeds be witness of my worth. TiimAnHrnn. y. 1 

bent our honour, and your worth Periclet, i. I 

thiscoat of worth, for it was sometime — ii. I 
your worth in arms, were more than .. — ji. 3 
since everv worth in show cimnieods — ii. 3 

a show mislit countervail his worth .. — ij. 3 

spend vour adventurous worth — ii. < 

worth all our mundane cost .. — ill. 2 (scroll) 

not worth the tme of day — iv. 4 

rather than twice the worth of her — — iv. 6 
which is not worth a breakfast in the.. — iv. 6 
there is some of worth would come aboord — v. 1 
the worth that learned charity — v. 3 cGower) 

and prize me ot her worth Lem, i. I 

well are worth the want that you — i. 1 

perforce, should make thee worth them . . — i. 4 

virtue, or worth, in thee make — ;;■ 1 

found this trespass worth the shame — ii. 4 

worth the whistle. O (Joneril I (ccfi.l . .. — iv. 2 
helps him. take all my utwarjl worth .. - iv. 4 
a jewel well worth a poor man s takinc. — iv. fi 
beggars thot can count their worth. Itnmeo^Jiil.ii. 6 

n weak nuppo'al of our worth HamM. i. 2 

be blooilv, or ho nothing worth! — iv. 4 

whose worth, if prai»e8 mav go hack .... — iv. 7 

lam worth no worse a place Othello, i. 1 

and confine for the sea's worth — i. 2 

fortunes against any lay worth naming — 11. 3 
by the w^rth of mine eternal soul — ili. 3 

WORTH I EU come to crave her Merry »'iret,\v. 4 

empln-.. thee in a worthier place. Iffn.. ft» Men: v. I 
the other ninst be held the worthier. M..;..V. • Or. 1. 1 
reason sovs vou are the worthier maid — ii. 3 
worthier friemls had not prevented.. ilfir. "ft'en.\. 1 
is more worthier than a villaire ..Atyaii Like it, iii. 3 ^ 
i.i the worthier. Anibitions Warwick. 2/frffri/l'/. i. 3 
[Kii/. J allowance as the worthier. rroiViu 4-0 en. 1.3' 

ond worthier than him«eirhere — J! ' 

there was never a worihicr mon Cnriotanui,u. 3 

reasons, more worthier thon their — iii, I i 



iny 



[ 851 ] 

•WOKTIIIKR host to be served... ..4.i/uni/*C/po. v. 1 

no worthier than the dust? JuUum Cietnr, iii. 1 

a pair of worthier sons Cymbeline, y. 4 

avi rl vuiii liking a more worthier way l^ar, i. I 

■WOllTiUKS ric.tliing 7iro(.V>i. o/-|>ro,i.i. ii. 4 

several worlhiea make one /.oef'i (-. /.oj(, iv. 3 

before her the nine worthies (irp.) .. — v. 1 

for the rest of the worthies? — V.I 

I will play on Ihe tabor to the worthies — v. 1 
whether the three worthies shall come — v. 2 

ort thon one of the worthies? — V. 2 

like to be a giMid presence of worthies — v. 2 
ond if these four worthies in their .. — v. 2 
but there are worthies a coming .... — v. 2 

room for the incensed worthies — v. 2 

worthier, away; the scene begins .... — v. 2 
better than the nine worthies iHenrylV. ii. 4 

■WOHTIIIEST-whicli is worthiest 7V..r,v,i.n/'/>r.i. 2 
in that and all vour worthiest atrair8..-/H'jir(.H, iii. 2 
left his to the worthiest Ifinier's Title, v. 1 

worthiest cousin! thesinofmy .. .. .l/nriwA, i. 4 

wliose right is worthiest (rep.) Kiiii;John.\\. 1 

the worthiest of tliem tell me ..Troilut^ Cren. iv. 5 
thou worthiest Marcius! go, sound.. Cnnblu/iMi.i. 5 
known the worthiest men nave done'l? — ii. 3 
worthiest to have command ,. Antony ^-Cleo. i'l'i. II 

club, subdue my wtntliiest self — iv. 10 

a lady to the worthiest sir, that ever..ri/m(«-/iMf,i. 7 
only for the most worthiest fit! — i. 7 

WOllTIIILY purchased Tempetl, iv. 1 

your last service did wortliily perform — iy. 1 
not now worthily tenned them .. Cnnu-rlynf Rrr. i. I 
or worthily, as a good suhket should. Kic'mrd //. i. I 
deem tliat y<ni are wortliily deposed — iv. 1 

wlierefore the king most worthily HenryV iv. 7 

how may he wound, and worthily.. Henry I III. ii. 4 
presents he worthily entertained VVmoii n/Aiheni.i. i 
deserved worthily of his country .. Cotiolanui, ii. 2 
that's worthily as any ear can hear . . — iv. 1 
worthily spoke, Mecocnas ..Antonys-Cleopatra, ii. 2 

wliich worthily deserved noting — ii. 2 

worthily, yon would have now succeed Titus And. i. 1 
that I mav worthily note him I'ericles, iv. G 

WORTHINESS, we single yon ....Love'iL.Lost,y. 1 
is my report, to his great worthiness — ii. I 
make tender of to thy true wortliiness — ii. I 
her worthiness that gave the ring-Mcr. o/'/Vm'cf.v. 1 

whose worthiness would stir it up All's ll'ell,i. 1 

the utmost syllable of your worthiness — iii. 6 
according to the weight and worthiness //enrvf. ii. 2 

1 know your woithiness: my lord ... — ii. 2 

defence of my lord's worthiness I Henry VI. iv. I 

the worthiness of praise distains. . Trnilus * Cress, i. 3 
I do know the consul's worthiness.. Coiiofanuj, iii. I 
hidden worthiness into your eye ..JnlinsCwsar, i. 2 
change to virtue, and to worthines.*.. — i. 3 

wortliiness of nature! hrc-i'd of ryinbeline,]v.2 

worthiness does chulli'iigu much respect. oilifllo, ii. I 

WORTHLESS -a worthle.^s p,,at..Tu-oGen.of fer _\. I 
welcome to a worthless mistress.. .. — ii. 4 

no; that vou are wortliless — ii. 4 

and worthless Valentine shall — iii. 2 

be corrupted with my worthless gifts — iv. 2 
hazard for my worthless self ..Menh.nf renice,ii.9 
■worthless fancy, then takc.TamingofSli. i (indue.) 

a weak and worthless satisfaction; Henry V. iii. 6 

is this frail and svorthless trunk — iii. 6 

aloof with worthless emulation 1 Henry I' I. iv. 4 

so worthless peasants bargain^ — _v. 5 

the daughter of a worthless king ..iHenryJ'I. iv. I 
how I scorn his worthless threats! ..'iHenryl'l, i. I 

wortliless of such honour JnliusCtEsar,v. I 

citing mv worthless praise .. ,. Titus Andronicus, v. 3 

WOR'rHY-done thee worthy service .. Tempest, \.i 
what might, worthy Sebastian — ii. I 

peer! O worthy Stephanol — iy. 1 

worthy his youth and nobleness. TtroGen. of /Vr. i. 3 

and worthy estimation — ii. 4 

he is as worthy for an empress' love — ii. 4 

a look of such a worthy mistress .... — ii. 4 
know, worthy prince, sir Valentine — iii. 1 

as mony, worthy lady, to yourself .. — iv. 3 

1 do desire thy worthy company .... — iv. 3 

and think thee worthy of — v. 4 

endued witli worthy qualities — v. 4 

fit for great employment worthy lord — v. 4 
worthy tile owner, and the owner. . Merry If'ives, v. 5 
and not worthy to touch . . Twelfth Klghi, li. .•. (letter) 
very worthy cousin, fairly met . . Meas.fbr Meas v. 1 

worthy prince (rrp.) _ v. 1 

to justify this worthy nobleman .... — v. 1 

to accuse this worthy man — y. 1 

the lady is very well worthj' {rep.) .. .Much Ado, i. I 
nor know how'slie should be worthy — i. 1 

as being worthy to be wl lipped — ii. 1 

to her lie thinks not worthy — ii. 3 

witli your high and worthy deeds — v. I 

Dimetrius is a worthy gentleman ..Mid.K'sDr. i. 1 
find men worthy enough to present. . Love'sL. L. v. 1 

enough for that worthy's thumb — v. I 

to think me worthy of Pompion — v. 2 

know not the degree of tlie worthy .. — v. 2 
Pompey proves the best worthy .... — v. 2 

he will he the ninth worthy — v. 2 

farewell, wortliy lord! a heavy heart — v. 2 

the worthy kniglit of Troy — v. 2 

reinemlier him worthy of thy praise. .Mer. nf/'tn. i. 2 
you are a worthy judge: you know .. — iv. 1 
most worthy gentleman, I and my .. — iv. I 

of ine to give the worthy doctor — v. I 

a wiirthy fool! motley's (rrp.) As you Like it, ii. 7 1 

be yon the soiisof wortliv Frenchmen. .4/ri !»>//, ii. I 

and thon art worthy of 'it — ii. 3 I 

common B|>eech gi\es him a wortliy pass — ii. 5 

1 am not worthy of the wealth I owe — il. » 

to liear it for your worthy soke — iij. 3 

that has done worthy service — iii. 6 

precepts on this virgin, worthy the note — iij. S 

good quality worthy your lonlship's — jji « 

grace the attempt for o worthy exploit — iii. 6 



WORTIIV-miich worthy blome \iM. All's ilell.iv. 3 
many things of worthy memory.. 7'amiFi(f<!/'»"/i. iv. I 

weoltliy, and of worthy birth — iv. S 

a worthy lady, and one whom H'ir>ler'sTale, ii. 3 

most wcirthv niadain, vour honour .. — ii. 2 

thou art worthy to lie hanged — ii. 3 

queen to III., worthy I.eontes .. — iii. 2 (indict.) 
boasts himself to liave a worthy feeding — iv. 3 
imperial inonareh. thereof most worthy — iv. 3 
and von. enchantment, worthvenough — Iv. 3 
w.irthvCannllo, whatcfdourfor my — iv. 3 

none woi Ihy, re.ipeitiiig her that's gone — v. 1 

With von, woitliv his goodness — v. I 

Muidoiiwald, (worthy to he a rebel Marlielh, i. 2 

valiant coosini worthy gentleman!.. — i. 2 

the worthy iliaiie of Riisse — i. 2 

worthy tliane? irep. i. 3, ii. 2 ond ii. 3) — i. 2 

worthy Macbeth, we stay upon — i. 3 

my worthy Cawdor! (rrp. i. 5) — i. 1 

true, wortliy Runqiio; he is full so .. — i. 1 

sit, worthy friends (rfp.) — iii. I 

my worthy lord, your noble frienils.. — iii. 4 
of many worthy fellows that were .. — iv. 3 
yon worthy uncle, shall, with my .. — v. 6 
\yortli}', IMacdnfV. and we. shall take — y. 6 

all I see in you is worthy love Kin^.lohn, ii. 2 

to worthy danger, and deserved ....Itichaid II. v. I 

will add right worthy gains — v. 6 

wherein worthy, Imt in nothing? ..\Henryll'. ii. 4 
in faitli he is a worthy gentleman .. — iii. 1 

he hath more worlliv interest — iii. 2 

(Kii/.] whose worth.y temiier I intend — v. 2 
and was a worthy king: how now ..iHemyll'. ii. 4 

most worthy brother England Henry I', v. 2 

whilst such a worthy leader I Henry I' I. i. 1 

(if I were worthy to be judge) — iv. I 

worthy St. Michael, and the golden — iv. 7 

preface of her worthy praise — v. 5 

would annoy our foot, is w rthy ..iHenryl'I. iii. I 
that lie should die, is worthy policy — iii. 1 

mistrust, that shows him worthy death — iii. 1 

the deed is worthy doing — iii. I 

they liove been most worthy to live.. — iv. 7 
the worthy gentleman did lose ....3 Henry I' I. iii. 2 
queen of England, worthy Margaret — iii. 3 
Irom worthy Edward, king of Alliion — iii. 3 
our brother made a worthy choice? .. — iv. I 
Warwick, thou art worthy of the sway — iv. 6 

nor were not worthy blame — v. 4 

thanks, noble Clarence; worthy brother — v. 7 

fordoing worthy vengeance Ilichard III. i. 2 

have bewept a worthy husband's death — ii. 2 
king Richard, England's worthy king! — iii. 7 
for worthy AYolscy, who cannot err. /iciirj/ )'///. i. 1 
more worthy this place tlian myself — i. 4 

well worthy the liest heir o' the world — ii. 4 
tliis same Cranmer's a worthy fellow — iii. 2 
and truly a worthy friend — iv. I 

1 fee! I lim not worthy yet to wear .. — iv. 2 
and use him well, he's worthy of it.. — v. 2 
worthy Hector, slie is a theme.. Trnilus S- Cress, ii. 2 

worthy satisfaction! would it were — ii. 3 

1 come from the worthy Achilles.... — iii. 3 

worthy of arms! as welcome OS — iv. 4 

worthy warrior, welcome to our tents — iv. 4 
moy worthy Troilns be half ottoched — v. 2 
'tis a worthy lord I nay, that's. . Timon of Athens, i. 1 
hast feigneil him a worthy fellow {rep.) — i. I 

flattered, is worthy o' the flatterer .. — i. I 

to thee, wortliy Timon (rep. ii. 2, v. I, v. 2) — i. 2 

it is a cause worthy m.v spleen — iii. o 

my worthy friends', will j-ou — iii. 6 

no, my most wortliy master — iv 3 

doubt it not, worthy lord — v. I 

these comforts, worthy senators — v. 2 

worthy Mcnenius Agfippa (r^p. ii. WCuriolanns, i. I 
your virtue is, to make him worthy — i. 1 

worthy Marcius (rep. iv. 5) — i. 1 

right wortliy you priority — i. I 

worthy sir. thou bleed'st; th\- exercise — i. 5 

my gentle Marcius, worthy Caius .. — ii. I 

he is a worthy man (rep.) — ii. 2 

a little of that worthy work performed — ii. 2 
wortliy Cominins. speak: nay, keep — ii. 2 
you shall have it, worthy sir {rep.).. — ii. 3 

noble consul! worthy voices! — ii. 3 

08 his wortliy deeds did claim — ii. 3 

Miircins is w'orlhy of present death.. — iii. 1 
put not your worthy rogc into j'our — . iii. I 

vou worthy tribunes irep. iv. fi> .... — iii. I 
done to Rome, that's worthy death? — iii. I 

chairs of justice supplied with worth.y — iii 3 
banishineut of that worthy Coriolnnus — iv. 3 
Caius Marcius was a worthy {itlicer.. — iv. 6 
the worihv fellow is our general .... — v. 2 
but. Worthy lords, have you with .... — v. 4 
of great valnc, worthy eogitotioii8..yii/fii>C<Mar. i 2 
what hath procddid worthy note .. — i. 2 

render ine wortliy of this noble wife! — ii. I 
any exploit worthy the name of honour — ii. 1 
oil hail! good-morrow, worthy ("wsor — ii. 2 
is there no voice mon. worthy than.. — iii. I 
not extenuoted. wherein he was worthy — iii. 2 
given me some wi^rtliy cause to wish — iv. 2 

It is more w.irthy to leap in — v. 4 

know, worthy Rbmpey, that Antony ^ Cleo. ii. I 

good I-'nobarnus, 'tis a worthy deed — ii. 2 

the heart of Cicsar. worihv MeciBiias! — ii. 2 
good fortune, worthy soldier {rep. iii. 7) — iii. 2 
most worthy sir, yoii therein throw — iii. 7 

rehiikable. and worthy shoinefiil check — iv. 4 
liold. wcirtliy lady, hold; do not yourself— v. 2 
unto a poor hut wortliy gentleman ..Cymbeline, i. I 
expicled to prove so w'orlhy, OS since — i. ft 

how worthy he is, I will leave to appear — i. .'1 

this worthy signior, I thank him.... — i. .'. 

sustain what you're worthy of — i. 5 

the worthy Ix-'onatus is in sofety .... — i. 7 

you arc as welcome, worthy sir — i. 7 

it worthy fellow, albeit he comes on . . — ii. 3 



WOR 

WORTHY his frowning at Cymbeline, ii. 4 

under her breast iworthy the pressing) — ii. 4 
leave not the worthy Lucius, good .. - iii. 6 

no more of wortliy lord, speak iii. 5 

not seeming so wortliy as tliy birtli ,. iv. 2 

why, worthy father, what have we .. iv. 2 

sometime it was a wortliy building . . iv. 2 

for they are worthy to inlay heaven — v. 5 

most wortliy prince, as yours, is true — v. 5 
it doth, my worthy lord (rep.)..TUusAndronicns, i. 2 

presents well worthy Rome's — i. 2 

then liave I kept it to a worthy end. . — iii. 1 
worthy Andronicus, ill ort tliou repaid — iii. 1 
O wortliy Goth! this is the incarnate — v. 1 

how many wortliy princes' bloods Pericles, i. 2 

tliat thought yon worthy of it — iv. 6 

iny worthy arch, and patron, comes Lear, ii. I 

worthy prince, I know it well — v. 3 

so wortliy a gentleman to be Romeo 4-Jut!et, iii. 5 

a wortliy pioneerl once more remove . . Hnmlel, i. 5 

'tis true, most worthy signior Olhello, i. 2 

lamgladon't; 'tis a worthy governor .. — ii. I 
king .Stephen was a worthy peer — ii.3(song) 

worthy Slontano. you were wont be civil ii. 3 

worthy Othello, I am hurt to danger .... — ii. a 

Cassio's my worthy friend: my lord .... iii.; 

(as worthy cause I have to fear— I am).. — iii. S 

and many worthy and chaste dames .... iv. 1 

save you, worthy general I iv. 1 

no more wortliy heaven, tlian thou (rep.) — v. ii 

WORTHY'D him, got praises of Lear, ii. 2 

"WOT— the thing you wot of. Tu'o Gen. ofl'erona, iv. 4 

she says, that you wot of Merry H'ives, i i. 2 

past cure of the thing you wot . . Meas.forMeas. ii. I 
for well r wot. thou rimn'st ..Mid.N.'sDream, iii, 2 

I wot not by what power ., — ' iv. 1 

and wot not what they are Love's L. Lost, \. I 

anon, I wot not by what BtTong.Comedy of Errors, v. I 
benevolences, and I wot not what ..Ric'iard U. ii. 1 

'tis a nameless woe, I wot ii. 2 

I wot, your love pursues _ iii 3 

is thy merit, well I wot _ v. 6 

but in gross brain little wots Henri//', i v. 1 

too much folly is it, well I wot 1 Uenry'l'l. iv. 6 

we English worriors wot not — iv 7 

for, well I wot (rep. iv, 7 & v. 4) ....ZHenryVL ii. 2 

no, no, good friends. God wot Richard lU. ii. 3 

come, have with you: wot you what — iii. 2 
and wot you, what I found there. .Henry VI U. iii. 2 

my mother, you wot well Coriolanus,iv. I 

soldier tlian he, you wot one — iv. 5 

full well I wot the ground of.. TitnsAudronicus, ii. 1 
by the mill than wots the miller of .. — ii 1 
brother, well I wot. thy napkin cannot — iii. I 
the empress never wots, but in her . . — v. 2 

1 wot well wliere he is Romeo i^- Juliet, iii. 2 

why, as by lot, God wot, and then .... Hamlet, ii. 2 
WOT'ST thou whom thou move3t?/In(fmv *C/eo.i. 6 

WOTTING no more than I tfinlpr'sTale, iii. 2 

WOUND— sometime I am all wound .. Tempest, ii. 2 

as well wound the loud winds — iii. 3 

till thy wound be tlioroughly ..TiroGen.of I'er. i. 2 

the private wound is deepest — v. 4 

wounds the unsisting postern ..Meas. forMeas. iv. 2 

that only wounds by hearsay jilnchAdo, iii. 1 

now purple with love's wound.. Mid.iV.'j Dream, ii. 2 

I see no blood, no wound ii. 3 

and wound tlie pap of Pvramus — v. 1 

there's an eye, wounds like Love'sL Lost, v 2 

in it a gaping wound, issuing .jl/ercfc.o/Tenice, iii. 2 

to stop his wounds, lest he ' — iv. 1 

Bearch ing of thy wound, I have . . As you Like it, i 
if mine eyes can wound, now let .... — ii 



[ 852 ] 



WRE 



— ii. 2 

— ii, 6 

— ii. fi 

— ii. 6 

— iv. 8 



iii. 1 (song) 
iii. 1 (song) 

— iii. 3 

— iv. 1 

— iv. 6 

— v. I 
V. 3 
V. h 



now show the wound mine eye . 

know the wounds invisible tliat .... — iii. 5 

for then we wound our modesty All'sWell, i. 3 

you have wound a goodly clue — i. 3 

to wound thy lord thy king .. Tain 
meant to bathe in reeking wounds 

become thee, as thy wounds _ i. 2 

peace! the charm's wound up i. 3 

see not the wound it makes — i. ,5 

a gash is added to her wounds — iv. 3 

and wound her honour with this ....KingJohn,i. 1 

without stroke, or wound ii. 2 

the in\eteinte canker of one wound v. 2 

and wound our tattered colours clearly — v. 6 

sliow me the ver;' wound of this _ v. B 

the which he jiricks and wounds with — v. 7 

first did help to wound itself — v. 7 

ere my tongue shall wound mine.... R/c/sard II. i. 1 

though rebels wound thee with — iii, 2 

the worst of death's de6tro\'ing wound — iii. 2 

that wounds me with the flatteries .. — iii. 2 

rained from the wounds of , 'slaughtered iii. 3 

do wound the bark, the skin of — iii. 4 

and made no deeper wounds? iv. I 

and wounds the earth, if nothing else — \.\ 

with my wounds being cold \HeiirylV. i. 3 

and wounds, God save the mark! — i. 3 

all those wounds, thnsemouthed wonnds — i. 3 

working with such deadly wounds .. — i. 3 

long-grown wounds of my intemperance — iii. 2 

or take away the grief of a wound? .. — v. 1 

they wound my thoughts, worse than — v. 4 

a new wound in your thigh (lep.) — v. 4 

of sfifety, wounds the world .iHenryiy. (induction) 

his flesh was capable of wounds — i. 1 

I am loth to gall a new-healed wound — i. 2 

as I was washing tliy wound, to marry — ii. 1 

they were ill for a green wound? _ ii. 1 

let grievous, ghastly, gaping wounds — ii. 4 
these wounds I had on Crispin's dav.. Henry V. iv. 3 

yoke-fellow to his honour-owing wounds — iv. 6 

It IS goot for your green wound — v- 1 

wounds I will lend the French ] Henry f'l. i. 1 

the treacherous Fastolfe wounds my — i. 4 

which giveth many wounds, when .. — ii. .'i 

the wounds, the most unnatural wonnds — iii. 3 

whose wounds become hard-favoured iv. 7 



WOUND-that I got with wounds.. ..2HeHrj(r/. i. I 
before the wound do grow uncurable — iii. I 

it is applied to a deatnful wound _ iii. 2 

disorder wonnds where it should guard — v. 2 

though to wound his heart 3 Henry ;'/. i. 4 

til rough these wounds to seek out thee — i. 4 
add more anguish than the wounds., 
my liege, the wound that bred this .. 

upon thy wonnds, that kill mine 

and cureless are my wounds 

air hath got into my deadly wounds 
hath been balm to heal their wounds 
fast wound about thy coal-black hair 

hand that made tliese wonnds! Richard I IL i. 2 

dead Henry's wounds open their .... _ i. 2 

the new-healed wound of malice — ii, 2 

bind up my wounds,— have mercy .. — v. 3 
with treason wound this fair land's — v. 4 

civil wounds !i re stopped v. 4 

how may he wound, and worthil.y. Henri/ nil. ii! 4 
wounds, friends, and what else., troilus ^ Cress, ii. 2 

the wound of peace is surety _ i; 5 

not that it wounds, but tickles — 

that which seems the wound to kill _ 
those wounds heal ill, that men .... 

with every joint a wound 

I may give the local wound a name 

box, or the patient's wound _ 

look, how tliy wounds do bleed 

Patroelus' wounds have roused 

and made plenteous woinids . . Timon of Alliens, 

my wounds ache at you jiL. 6 

senate pours into Captain's wounds? iii 6 

I have some wounds upon me Coriolanus, i. 9 

the wounds become him ii. i 

twenty-flve wounds upon him ij. | 

the manner is) his wounds to the people — ii. 1 
I had rather have my wounds to heal — ii. 2 
and entreat them, for my wounds' sake — ii. 2 
for if he show us his wounds, and tell us — ii. 3 
our tongue into those wounds, and speak— ii. 3 
look, sir, my wonnds; I got them in — ii. 3 

I have wounds to show you, whicii shall — ii. 3 
received many wounds for our (jep.) — ii. 3 

bear of wounds two dozen odd ii. 3 

he said, he had wounds, which he .. — ii. 3 

think on the wounds his body bears iii. 3 

good man, the wounds that he does bear — iv. 2 
giving myself a voluntary V!0\\r\^\. .JuliusCmsar, Si. 1 
as many eyes as thou hast wounds .. — iii. 1 
over thy wounds now do I prophecy — iii. 1 

kiss dead Caesar's wounds (rep.) iii. 2 

put a tongue in every wound of Ciesar — iii. 2 

till Caesar s three and twenty wounds v. 1 

wound with keels of every kind ..Antony 4-Cleo.i. 4 

it wounds thine honour, that I _ i, 4 

do commit murder in healing wounds — ii. 2 
this sword, and these my wounds? .. — i" ' 
I had a wound here that was like a T 
the congealment from your wounds 
for with a wound I must be cured .. 

I robbed his wound of it 

can tickle where she woundsl Cymbeline, i. 2 

can take no greater wound — iii. 4 

peace! I'll give no wound to thee — v. 1 

heavens, how they wound! — v. 3 

dost thou search my wound . . T(tus Andronicus, ii. 4 

received some unrecuring wound — iii. 1 

sight should make so deep a wound — iii. 1 

wound it with sighing, girl _ iii. 2 

that wound, beyond their feeling.... iv. 2 

our Rome the civil wound _ v. 3 

sharp neeld wound the cambric. Pericles, iv. (Gow.) 
at scars, that never felt a wound Romeo 4- Juliet, ii. 2 

I saw the wound, I saw it with — iii. 2 

wash they his wounds with tears? .. — iii. 2 
griping grief the heart dotli woiuid — iv. 5 (song) 
you had received some bodilv wound . . Othello, ii. 3 

wound did ever heal, but by degrees? _ ii. 3 

WOUNDED reputation Much Ado, iv. 1 

along, hkeo wounded knight AsyouLikeit,in. 2 

wounded with the claws of a lion (rep.) — v. 2 

thralled my wounded eye Taming of Shrew, i. 1 

wounded his daughtur Winter's Tale, v. 2 

wounded to deatli. Fly, noble King John', v. 4 

physicians that first wounded thee..i?!rAard II. ii. 1 

is almost wounded to the death •iHenryW. i. I 

neck he threw his wounded arm Henry V. iv. 6 

and their wounded steeds fret fetlock — iv. 7 
with slander's tongue be wounded .IHenryVI. iii. 2 
sent the ragged soldiers %vonnded home — iv. 1 
either slain, or wounded dangerous. .3Henrt/F/. i. \ 
quiet of my wounded conscience .. Henri/ I'm. ii. 2 

wounded? he was wont to (rep.) Coriolanus, ii. 1 

wliere is he wounded? (rep.) — ii. 1 

being gentle wounded, craves a noble — iv. 1 
ourCffisar's vesture wounded? ..JuliusCcpsar, iii. 2 
follow the wounded chanceAn tony i^ Cleopatra, iii. 8 
wakened the chastitv he wounded ..Cymbeline, ii. 2 
razors to my wounded lieart .. Titus Andronicus, i. 2 
mine honour thou hast wounded .. .. — i. 2 

and he, that wounded her, hath hurt me — iii. 1 

when as the one is wounded iv. 4 

one hath wounded me Irep.) Romeo 4- Juliet, ii! 3 

Horatio, what a wounded name Hamlet, v. 2 

WOUNDINGhisbelief inherrenown.Ci/mie/iiie v a 
not woundmg, pity would (rep.). Love'sL.Losl, iv. 1 

comparisons and wounding flouts v. 2 

wounding supposed peace 2Henryir. iv! 4 

for thine eyes are wounding i Henry FI. iii. 2 

what a wounding shame Antony <§- Cleopatra, v. 2 

unteiited woundings of a father's curse . . Leor, i. 4 
WOUNDLESS-hit the woundless air..Havn;e/, iv. 1 
WOVION-with their woven wings.il/er. of I'enice, i. 1 

and hath woven a golden mesh — iii. 2 

all were woven so strangelv Henri/ VIIJ. iii. 2 

WRACKI at least we'll die with lilacbeih, v. b 

oft the wrack of earned praise .Perirles. iv. ((iower) 

WRANGLE-you should wrangle .... Tempest, v 1 

wrangle with mine own honesty .. il/eiri/ ;(Vres, ii. 1 



WRANGLE with my reason .... Tweirih Night, iv. s 

vou stdl wrangle with her Lore's L. Lost iv \ 

let us not wrangle; bid them rutins Ca-sar' iv'. 2 

you shall have time to wrangle. Antony ^Cleo. ii 2 

w'STiv?n?'^L'^^ wrangle with inferior ..Othello, iii, 4 

WRANGLER-with such a wrangler ..Henn/r i ■> 

seas and winds (old wranglers). . 'I'roilus S- Creii ]]' t 

WRANGLING; for thy loving .TyouSueU, y. 4 

scoldmg quean to a wrangling knove./K/'s/Fri/ ii 2 

but, wrangling pedant Taming of .Shrew iii 1 

was wrangling Somerset in \Henryr} ii' 4 

no, wrangling woman XHenryri. ii' •> 

hear me, you wrangling pirates .... Richard HI. i. 3 
accuised and unquiet wrangling days! — ii 4 

fye, wrangling queen I Antony ^Cleopatra, i'. 1 

WRAP-to wrap a fairy m Mid.N.'sDream ii 2 

my often rumination wraps me.. ^ji/oiiLifteiV iv 1 
wrap our bodies in black mourning S Henry ri ii' 1 
what dost thou wrap and fumble. /iViM.Jnrfron.'iv" 2 
will in concealment wrap me up awhile Leur iv 3 
iiro'^T^l?^^ ^'"'^P "'^ gentleman in our. Hamlet, v! 2 

WRAPPED m a paper All's»ell,\ 3 

1 am wrapped in dismal tliinkings .. — v3 
wrapped in sweet clothes .. Taming of Sh. 1 (indue ) 
instead of bullets wrapped in fire. . . . KingJolm ii 'l 
tiger s heart, wrapped in a woman's 3 Henry I' I. i. 4 
TOD A 4il"^ weapons wrapped about. Titus Andron. iv 2 
WKAir— and wrapt in secret studies ..Tempest i 2 



— iv. 7 

— iv 8 

— iv. 12 



wuTt^tj"'" I'P '" <^°^'Vt™ance I.. Jl/eo,., „,„,,„,, v. . 

WKAIH— whose wraths to guard you. 7empes/ iii 3 

my wrath shall far exceed. TvoGen.of Verona iii 1 

the Eternal's wrath's appeased _ ' v 4 

within the measure of my wrath ... _ v" 4 

skill, and wrath, can furnish Tu-etfth Ki'M iii' 4 

in his rage and his wrath — iv. 2 (son'") 

Oberon is passing fell and wrath ..Mid.N.'sDr ii°l 
patiently to bear my wrath. .il/ercAan/o/reniee ii 9 
they are in the very wrath of love.-^si/oMliiei;! v! 2 

reprieve him from the wratli All'sll'ell iii 4 

wilt encounter with my wrath .. Winter'sTnlr ii 3 

let me endure your wrath Macbeth, v. 5 

be thou the trumpet of our wrath .... King John i ) 
I am burned up with inflaming wrath — iii 1 
strong matter of revolt, and wrath .. _ iii' 4 
.that ever wall-eyed wrath, or staring — iv 3 
the wrath of noble Hotspur's ..iHenrylV. (indue,) 

whose swift wrath beat down _ i 1 

and his wraths, and his cholers Henry V iv 7 

presumption not provoke thy wrath. 1 Henry VI ii 3 
but add increase unto my vrratli ..^HenryVI. Hi 2 
hence, heap of wrath, foul indigested — v 1 

shall to my fliiming wrath he oil _ y' 2 

too mean a subject for thy wrath . . ..'iHenrv VI. i. 3 

wrath makes him deaf _ j 4 

sparkling for very wrath !. _ ii! 5 

shall feel the vengeance of my wrath — iv 1 
thy cloudy wrath hath in eternal ..Ridiard III. i. 3 

execute thy wi-ath on me alone _ i. 4 

who, in my wrath, kneeled at my feet — ii! 1 

brutish wrath sinfully plucked _ ii 1 

thy bruising irons of wrath _ v. 3 

it foresaw in Hector's wrath. . TroilusACressida, i. 2 

in his blaze of wrath, subscribes — iv. 5 

wrath would confound thee .. Timon of Athens, iv 3 
to prevent wild Alcibiades' wrath .. — v 2 
in the bluster of thy wrath, must fall — v. 5 
which makes me sweat witli wrath. Coriolanus, i, 4 
and wrath o'erwhelmed mv pity .... — i. 9 

or wrath, or craft, may get him _ j.'io 

the good gods assuage thy wrath — v 2 

like wrath in death, and envy luliusCasar, ii. 1 

to excuse their after wrath . . Antony ,§■ Cleopatra, v. i 
I something fear my father's wrath. .Cymbeline, i. 2 

I am senseless of your wrath .. ^ _ i 2 

and pervert the present wrath — ii' 4 

your father's wrath, should he take — iii. 2 (let.) 

by tasting of our wrath? _ v. 5 

and highly moved to wrath . . Titus Andronicus, i. 2 

O do not learn her wrath ii 3 

O why should wrath be mute — v! 3 

and testy wrath could never be her mild Per/We« i 1 
instrument of wrath prest for this — iv. (Gower) 

between the dragon and his wrath Lear, i. I 

power shall do a courtesy to our wrath .. — iii 7 
the food of thy abustd father's wrath! .. — iv. 1 
roasted in wrath, and fire, and thus .... Hnmlel, ii. 2 

to give place to the devil, wrath Olhello, ii. 3 

adog, than answer my waked wrath .... — iii 3 

WRATHFUL; who, as others do Macbeth, iVx b 

whiles we, God's wrathful agent ..-.KingJohn. ii. I 

shock of wrathful iron arms Richard II. i. 3 

as valiant as tlie wrathful dove iHenrylV. iii 2 

eyes replete with wrathful fire I Henry!' I. i. 1 

mad ire, and wrathful fury _ iv. 3 

with his wrathful nipping cold 2 Henry ;'/. ii 4 

free us from his Father's wrathful curse — iii. 2 

your wrathful weapons drawn here iii 2 

angry, wrathful, and inclined to blood — iv! 2 

heart, be wrathful still _ y. 2 

enlarge itself to wrathful terms. rroi7ws <S- Cress, v! 2 

the wrathful skies gallow the very .. Lear iii 2 

WRATHFULLY-not wrathfully. JuliusCaisar, ii. 1 

WRATH-KINDLED gentlemeu,be..R<c/iai<; /;. i.l 

WREAK— a heort of wreak in thee.. Coriolanus. iv. 5 

take wreak on Rome for this. I'ilusAndronicus, iv. 3 

justice for to wreak our wrongs iv. 3 

thus afHicted in his wreaks .'.. iv! 4 

wreak the love I bore iny cousin.. /Jonieo &-Jul. iii! 5 

WREAKFUL heaven Timon of Athens, iv. 3 

by working wreakful vengeance. .Ti(iM^nrf,on, v. 2 
WAEATH your arms like .. TvoGen.of Verona, ii. 1 
are graced with wreaths of victory. .3Henry;'/. v. 3 
brows bound with victorious wreaths-iSiVAard/i/. i 1 
on my brows this wreath of viiitovy. JuliusCresnr, v. 3 

his device, a wreath of chivalry l'ericles,ii. 2 

to whom this wreath of victory I give .. — ii. 3 

give ine your wieatli of flowers — iv! 1 

like the wreath of radiant fire Lear ii 2 

WilEATHEDarinsatliwart Love'sL.Losl. iv 3 

gilded snake had wreathed itself. AsyouLike it, iv. 3 



WRE 



WHEATllKD in tliL- oO\er'»atm» .TiluiAndrnn. ii. 3 

WKr.CK-8|>eotiu:le of the wreck Tempetl, I. li 

weepiiiu aRiiiii the king in> Tiitlicr'a wreck — \.i 

fnllunt wliii'li tliiiii ecext.wiuiln the wreck — \.i 
lie wreck iifull my friiiulH — X.i 

to flavc your ultip from wreck. TtroGett. of IViona^ i. I 

ti wreck past \\o])q he wria Tireiftfil^'ighl^ v. 1 

have share U\ thin most happy wreck — v. 1 
caiUirs that escaped Ihc wrecK. Mtrch. of renter, iii. I 

ehowa ill the wa-ck if niaiilliood <//'iltW(, iii. i 

nuicli wealth by wreck at ncnl.Comidi/ qfKi ron, v. I 

her urgiiij? of her wreck at sea — v. 1 

laboured in his country's wreck Muche(h,i. 3 

let seamen fear no wreck — iii. 1 

tlie very wreck tliat we must eulTer . . Ridtartl II. ii. I 

80 the caused of our wreck — ii. 1 

Willi sunken wreck and aumlcss Henry I', i. i 

grew the general wreck and muijsacre. 1 Hetnyl'l. i. 1 
compassion of my country's wreck — iv. I (letter) 
knavery will Iw tlie ducliess' wreck ..iHemyll. i. 2 
commonwealth liath daily run to wreck — i. 3 

cheer them tliat feur their wreck ZHenryVI. ii. 2 

that threaten us with wreck — v. 4 

not endure tliat Iwauty's wreck ....Richard lll.i.i 

1 saw a thousand tear! Ill wrecks — i. 4 

a way, out of his wreck, to rise in.. Henry r///. iii. a 
rejoices in the common wreck . . Timon nf.-lthfnt. v. 2 

wfiat wreck discern you in me Cymbeline, i. 7 

wliafs thy interest in this sad wreck? — iv. 2 
our shore this chest; 'tisof some wreck. Peric/M, iii. 2 

but trifle, and meant to wreck tliee llamlei. ii. 1 

wreck [KiK. -wrack] ond sufferance Odielln. ii. 1 

WKECKtU-saw the kinu's ship wrecked 7"<iii;)ei(,i. 2 
belield the king my ♦allier wrecked .... — i. 2 
were wrecked upoii tliis shore (.rep.) .. •- v. 1 
brother Frederick was wrecked.iVcni. /or A/*'a«. iii. I 
ricli lading wrecked on the narrow. jVcr.nr'VM. iii. 1 
wrecked, the same instant of their, it'inier^t Tale, v. 2 
a pilot's tliuinb, wrecked, as homeward.. VaW/WA.i. 3 

arc wrecked three nights ago Kin:; John, v. 3 

even as men wrecked upon a sand Henry I', iv. I 

nigli wrecked upon the sea iHenryl'l. iii. 2 

hour's joy wrecked with a week . . Richard III. iv. I 
[Co/.] tliat have wrecked for Rome.. Coririlanut, v. I 
housed him safe, is wrecked.. .Pericles, ii. (.Gower) 

AV HEN— youngest wren of nine . . Tiretfi/i Mghi, iii. 2 
wren with little quill ..Mid.N.'uDieam, iii. 1 (song) 

a musician than the wren Mer. ofl'enice, v. 1 

the poor wren, the most diminutive ..Macbeth, iv. 2 

that the chirping of a wren 2 Henry I' I. iii. 2 

that wrens may perch where eagles.. /?i'c/iar// ///. i. 3 
small a drop of pity as a wren's eie..Cyinbeline, iv. 2 

tlic petty wrens of Tliarsus t'ericles, iv. 4 

no. the wren goes to't, and the small Lear, iv. 6 

W'KENCU uwe from fools ..Measure for Measure, ii. 4 
noble nature may catch a wrench. 7'imono/',.|i/i. ii. '2 
thy revenge, wrench up tliy power ..Corioianux, i. 8 

wreiicli it open straiglit (rc/j.) I'erictes, iii 1 

wrench his sword from him (Hhello, v. 2 

WKENCUED with an unlineal Macbelh, iii. I 

like an enaiiie, wrenclied my frame Lear, i. 4 

WREXCIlfNG the true cause iHenrylV. ii. I 

mattock, and tlie wrenciiiiig iron. /?omeo ^Jutiei,v. 3 

WRES'r— not wrest true speaking Much Ado. iii. 4 

wrest once the law to your authority. iVci.f)//'eii. iv. I 

fasliion, wrest, or bow your reading Henry i'. i. 2 

he'll wrest the sense, and hold iHenrvl I. iii. I 

is sucli a wrest in their affairs. . Troilus ^-Cress. iii. 3 
will wrest an alphabet TitusAndrnnicus, iii. 2 

WHESTED— decay of wrested pomp.. KmgJnUn, iv. 3 
ti)o lavislily wrested liis meaning ..^H^nryl I', iv. 2 
that e'er I wrested from the king ..'lUenry I' I. iii. 1 

W'llESTLE Willi affection Much.ido, iii. 1 

you wrestle to-morrow before .. ..As yuu Like if, i. 1 

I'll never wrestle for prize more — i. I 

come, come, wrestle with thy att'ections — i. 3 

wrestle witli you in my strength. .Jn(oH|/*Clpo. iii. 2 

■WKESl'LED with Charles Asy.,uL>ke il, i. 2 

sir, you have wrestled well — i. 2 

as lie did the day he wrestled? — iii. 2 

■WKESTLEK-the duke's wrestler.... — i. 1 

tliis wrestler shall clear all — i. 1 

with Cliarles, the duke's wrestler {rep.^ — i. 2 
tlie part of a belter wrestler than myself — i. 3 

tlie parts and graces of the wrestler.. — ii. 2 
tripped up the wrestler's heels — iii. 2 

■WaESTLING— to-morrow the wrestling _ i. 1 

X would have told you of good wrestling — i. 2 

yet tell us the raauiier of the wrestling — i. 2 

shall we see this wrestling, cimsin? .. — i. 2 

the place appointed for the wrestling — i. 2 

ore yuu crept hither to sec the wrestnng? — i. 2 

that the wres;ling might not go forwanl — i. 2 

the duke that here wua ot the wrestling? — i. 2 

affeetioiir. wrestling in thy bosom . . KingJohn, v. 2 
like an Olympian wrestling Troilus i Cress, iv. 5 

■WUETCU-uiigracious wretch TweifihNiiiM, iv. 1 

dishonest wretch! wilt thou \Mi..Meas.for .Meas. iii. I 
I persuade this rude wietcli williUo'ly — iv. 3 
shall have your bosom on this wretch — iv. 3 
by heaven, fond wretch, thou know'st — v. 1 
puts the wretch, that lies in woe ..Mid.N.'sDr. v. 2 
inhuman wri tell, niicupable of pity. .Wrr.p/'/'i'n.iv. I 

a meacock wretch can make Tamintf of Sh. ii. 1 

wretch, that, for thy mother's fault, triuler's T. iii. 3 
O cursed wretch! that knew'st this.. — iv. J 
fle on thee wretch! 'tis pity ..Comedy qT Errors, v. I 
hollow-eyed, sharp-looking wretch .. — v. I 
thou slave, thou u retch, thou c^jward. Kini;John,Hi. 1 
ill tidings? speak, thou wretch ....Richard II. Iii. 4 
OS the wretch, wlioftc fever-weakenoU.'.!Hi-/i>!(l /'. i. I 

orisons 'gainst this |>oor wretch Ilenryf. ii. 2 

every wretch, pining and pale before — iv. (cho. ) 
iuch a wrelcu. winding up days with — iv. 1 
laugheal thou, wreicli? thy mirth ..Xllenryl'l. ii. 3 

base ignoble wretch! loin — v. 4 

binds the wretch, and beats it wlien.2H'-Hr|f f/. iii. I 
coward Wiiiiiaii, and soft-hearted wretch — iii. 2 
look with u gentle eye upuu this wretch! — iii. 3 
laya atroug mege auto tlua wretch's suul — iii. 3 



[_«''5J3J 

WKETCH-ilie. damned wretch. ...2;frnr|/;;. iv. 

timorous wretch! thon hast iiiuIone..3Hfiir|//'/. i. 

o'er the wretch that trembles under — i. 

that she, poor wielch. for grief can .. — iii. 

Imp betide that hated wretch Richard III. i. 

the shiugliters, wretch, thut thou — iv. 

temples of this bloody wretch have I — v. 

was by thut wretch betrayed Henry I'll I. ii. 

poor wretch! a poor capucchiaI..7'roiVuf •VC'rrff. iv. 

or foiled some debiie wretch Coriotanns, i. 

thou wretch! despite o'erwhclm theel — iii. 

mortal wretch, with thv sharp ..Anlony^Cleo. v. 

you pretend with that base wretch. . C'y'«6c/iMr, ii. 

and struck me, wretch, more worth .. — v, 

whereat, I wretch! made scruple of. . — v. 

sly frantic wretch, that holp'st.. TiliisAndron. Iv. 

die, frantic wretch, for this occursed — v. 

senteiice on tliisexccrablc wretch .... — v. 

than on a wretch whom nature is Lear, i. 

tremble, thou wretch, that hast within .. —iii. 

the wretch, tliat th<m hast blown unto.... — iv. 

pitiful in tlie nieaneet wretch — iv. 

the pretty wretch left crying .... Ilomeo ^Juliet, i. 

disobedient wretch! I tell thee what — iii. 

here lives a caitiff wretch would sell — v. 

and to decline upon a wretch Hamtct, i. 

where sadly the poor wretch comes — ii. 

pulled the poor wretch from lier — iv. 

what profane wretch art thon? Otfielln, i. 

cxc.'llent wretch! i)erdition cutcii mv soul — iii. 

if any wretch hntli init this in your Iiead — iv. 

tlii-^ wretch hath pnrt confessetl his vilhiny — v. 
WKETCII ED Isabel I .Measure/or Measure, iv. 

to set on this wretched woman here.. — v. 

the vanity of wretched fools! — v. 

and wretched ftiols' secrets Love*sL.Lost, iv. 

to let tlie wretched man outlive .Mer.o/TeiKce.iv. 

tlie wretched animal iieaved .. ..Asyou Likeii, ii. 

else are they very wretched — ii. 

and nil at once, over the wretched?.. — iii. 

wretched raj;ged man, o'ergrown with — iv. 

1 am, my lord, a wretched Florentine. /!»'> It'ell, v. 
a wretched soul, bruised in . .Comedy of Errors, ii. 
to see a wretched man do outrage.... — iv. 
there are a crew of wretched souls . . ..Macbeth, iv- 
I cannot strike at wretched Kernes .. — v. 
thou see^t thy wretched hrolher die .Riclinrd II. i. 
the world's regard, wretched and low.l Henry IT. iv. 
what a wretched and peevish fellow.. Hetirj/f'. iii. 
so soundly as the wretched slave .... — iv. 

fiosterity, await for wretched years . . I Henry fl. i. 
lave mercy on tis, wretched sinners! — i. 
wretched shall France be only in.... — i. 
wretched man! be woe for me {ref).).2HenryVI. iii. 
may England curse my wretched reign — iv. 
ah, wrelclied man! would I had died. I) Henry r/. i. 
weep, wretched man, I'll aid thee. ... — ii. 
makes us wretched by the death ..Richard III. i. 
tliy glory, like my wretched self!.... — i. 

worse than wretched Clarence did .. — ii. 
lighted on poor Hastings' wretched head — iii. 
that ever wretched age hath looked niwu — iii. 
withdraw thee wretched iSIaigaret!.. — iv. 
the wretched, bloody, and usurping boar — v. 

tliat wretched Anne thy wife — v. 

a little happier than my wretched. Ilenryl'tll. ii. 
cordial that yon bring a wretched lady! — iii. 
become of me now, wretched lady? .. — iii. 

how wretched is that poor man — iii. 

some pity upon my wretched women — iv. 
ne'er be wretched for his mind. . Timon ofAlhens, i. 
rich only to be wretched; thy jreat.. — iv. 
a distracted and most wretched being — iv. 
lies a wretched corse of wretched — v. 5 (epitapli 
and Cassius is a wretched creature. ./K/i".*f.'f*'»ar^ i. 
ah me, most wretched, that have. /^n'ony^-C/eo iii. 
you shall find me, wretched man ..Cymueline, iii. 

tbundations fly tlie wretched — iii. 

my wretched sons are gtme .. Titus Andronicus, iii. 
how my wretched sister sobs and Weeps — iii. 
if any power pities wretched tears .. — iii. 
closing up of oiir most wretched eyes! — iii. 

witness this wrelched stump — v. 

for me, most wretdied. to perform .. — v. 

most wretched queen! here she lies ..Pericles, iii. 

friefiuage; wretched in both! Lear,ii. 
am wretched, makes thee the happier.. — iv. 

wretched though i seem, I can produce.. — v. 

wretched boy, that didst consort . Itomeo ^Juliet, iii. 

and llieii to have a wretched puling fool — iii. 

unhapi>y, wretched, hateful day! .... — iv. 

of Indies most deject and wretched .... Ha»i(e^ iii. 

wretched state! O bosom, bluek as death! — iii. 

thou wrelched, rash, intruding fool — iii. 

wretched queen, adien! you that look .. — v. 

wretched tool, thai livM to make thine. 0«ic!Ho,iii 

it is my wretched fiirtuiie. Beshrew — iv- 

(> wretched villain! two or three groans — v. 
WRETCMIODEST tliiiK'. when he .Richard III. ii. 
W HETCI 1 EDN ES.-* o'ercharged. Mid. .Wtlhenm, v. 

my wretchedness iiiitoa row of [>ii\-^. Richard II iii. 

whilst that iiiv wielchediiess doth bait — iv. 

above all this wrelchednes»? Henry y ill. iii. 

leave nie here in wreichedness behind — iv. 

the fierce wretchedness that glory, rinion o^/4/A. iv. 

from most true wretchedness Cymbeline, iii. 

so liare and full of wretchedness. /foiiifo <$'./"''«/, v. 
W HETCilESliBve o'er night Wo. «rn.«r(Vroiia,iv. 

converse Willi groaning wretches.. Lovf'«£,.i.oi/, v. 

never saw I wretche-i so quake . . Winter's Tale, v. 

as are our wretches fettered in our Henry I', i. 

poor miserable wretches, to voiir death — 11. 

where (wrelcliesi their pm>r bodies .. — iv. 

be lliese the wretches tliut we pluyed — iv. 

orplians, wretches, casluwiiys Richard III. ii. 

wretches that defend on gieutiiesd'..C'j/tri&r'i'ir, v. 

hark, wretches, how I mean to. 7'i/iM.4fi(irufjfriu, v. 

lubusext and coiiteiniieilH wretciies l.ear, li. 

|H»or naked wretches, wheresne'cr you are — iii. 

expose thyself tu li:cl what wietuaes feel — iii. 



Will 



■WiilNG— a hint, that wrings mine eyes. Tempest, i. 2 

J wash, wring, brew, bake Merry li'tves, i. 4 

or wring redress from you. Measure fbr Measure, v. 1 
to those that wring under the load ..MuchAdo, v. I 

doth wring tears Ironi niel — v. 1 

you'll not knock, I'll wring it. Tamtnur^f Shrew, i. 2 

and wrings his hapless hands '^Hentyl'l. i. I 

wring him liy the nose — iii. 2 

to wring the willow from lier customed — v. 1 

and wring the awful hceptre Irom ..3Henryl'l. ii. I 
that I should wring from iiiinl.... Hiclmrd III. iii. 7 
to wring from the liard hands ....JntmtCfvsar. iv. 3 

he wrings at srrme distress CymbfUne, iii. 6 

whv dost thon wring thy hands?.. /(omeo /^Jh/. iii. 2 

and let me wring your heart Hamlet, iii. 4 

w.inlil he gripe, aiid wring my hand .. Othello, Hi. Z 

WliIi\(Ji:U-anil his wringer Merry It'^rrs, i. « 

WRINGING ol the confcieiice Ilemyl HI. ii. a 

our cat wringing her hands . TvoGen.qfyerona, ii. 3 
wringing her hainls, whose whiteness — iii, 1 
more can leel but his own wringing . . Henry I', iv. 1 
leave wringing of your hands Hamlet, iii. 4 

WRINKI.E-lct old wrinkles come. rMfr.o^*'fni'«, i. I 
so that yon had her wrinkles, and 1.. All's iirit, ii. 4 

in the frowning wrinkle of her King John. ii. 2 

stop no wrinkle in his pilgrimage.. ../(icAart7 II i. 3 
or bend one wrinkle on my sovereign's — ii, 1 
no deeper wrinkles yet? Iiath sorrow — iv. I 
the wrinkles in my brows, now ....iHenryl'l. v. 2 
this sigh in wrinkle of a smile .. Troilus i Cress, i. I 
youth and freshness wrinkles Apollo's — ii. 2 

a pox of wrinkles! Well Timonof Athens, iv. 3 

you are old. Wrinkles forbid! Antony ^Cleo. i. 2 

nlling the aged wrinkles .... TilnsAndronicus. iii. 1 
let it stamp wrinkles in her brow I.ear, I. 4 

WRINKLED-and wrinkled than.yi/fai./or.t/fn..i. 4 
hollow eve, and wrinkled brow. Mer. of I'enice, iv. I 
old, wrinkled, fiided, witliered .. Tnmingoftih. iv. 4 
Ilermione was not so much wriiikletl./rin/er'<7'. v. 3 
with wrinkled brows, with nods .... Km^tJohn, iv. I 
liuth smoothed his wrinkled front . . Richard III. i. I 
foul wrinkled witcli, what nmkest .. — i. 3 

mid-age, and wrinkled elders .. Troilus^ Cress, ii. 2 

tlie grave wrinkled scnote Timon of Athens, iv. I 

and wrinkled deep in time? Antony ^- Cleopatra, i. 5 
struck the lean and wrinkled Cassius — iii. 9 
tlnit their faces are wrinkled Hamlet, ii.'i 

WRIST-doth gripe tlie hearer's wrist. Kin^yo/in, iv. 2 
more than my shanks, and wristfi ..Cymbelme, v. 4 
he took me bv the wrist, and held me.. Hamlet, ii. I 

WRIT to you in rhyme TiroGen.(Jlerona, i. 2 

and here is writ, kind Julia (rep.) .. — i. 2 

in one line is his name twice writ.... — i. 2 

are they not lamely writ? — ii. I 

I have writ your letter — ii. 1 

I writ at random, very doubtfully .. — ii. I 
the lines are very quaintly writ .... — ii. I 
you writ them, sir. at my request.... — ii. 1 
liave liad them writ more movingly — ii. i 

and when it's writ, for my sake — ii. I 

why, she hath not writ to me — ii. I 

that's the letter I writ to her friend.. — ii. 1 

for often you have writ to her — ii. 1 

which, being writ to me — iii. I 

for that's writ down she's... — iii. I 

I liave writ me here a letter Merry Wives, i. 3 

writ with a blank space for — ii. I 

'twas well wr.t Tuelflh \ight, iii. 4 

he has here writ a letter to you — v. 1 

Alaria writ the letter — v. I 

cliaracter too gross, is writ on. . . . Meat.forMeas. i. 3 
by chance, nothing of what is writ .. — iv. * 
every letlerhe h ith writ both disvouched— iv. 4 

till she linve writ a sheet of paper Much. Ado, ii. 3 

v.lien she lunl urit it, and was reading — ii. 3 
for I should flout him, if he writ to me — ii. 3 
have yon writ down, tliat they are none? — iv. 2 

that I had been writ down— an ass! — iv. 2 
however they have writ the style of gods — v. I 
here's another, writ in my cousin's band — v. 4 
if he that writ it, had played . . Mid.X.'s Dream, v. I 
have the subject newly writ o'er ..Love'sL.Losi, i. 2 

it is writ io.laqiieiielta — iv. 1 

I'll read the ode that I have writ .... — iv. 8 
a slieet of piiper, writ on b.jtb sides .. — v. 2 
the paper it writ on ( rep. > . . Merct\ant of Venice, ii. 4 
show the letter that I writ to wu. Asyou Like il, v. 2 
so Holy Writ in babes hath judgmeiit^lJ'< irwf, ii. I 
Ixiys. and writ as little beard — ii. 3 

1 have « rit my letters, casketcd .... — ii. 5 
mourned lor her: writ to ray lady mother— iv. S 

and writ to me tliis other dny — iv. 3 

the sonnet vou writ to Diana in .... — iv. S 
you yoursell have said, and writ.. Winter'sTnle, v. I 

read it? is it not fair writ? King John, iv, 1 

writ in remenibrance, more Richard 11. ii. 1 

wtiere all my eins are writ, and that's ■ — iv. 1 
as if he htul writ man ever since ....'iHtnryll'. i. 2 
who liath writ me down after my .... — v. 2 

in the book of Numbers is it writ Henry I', i. 2 

I once writ a sonnet ill his praise .. — iii. 7 
writ to your grace from the duke . . I Henry fl. iv. I 

holy saws of sacred writ 2 Henry I' I. i. 3 

mv lord, let's see the devil's writ .... — i. 4 

of'mine hath writ in thy behalf — iv. 1 

under the which is writ, Invitis nubibus — iv. I 
in the commentaries Ciebar writ .... — iv. 7 
pursue liim ere the writs go forth .... — v. 3 

shden forlh of Holy Writ Richard 1 1 1, i. 3 

there be letters » rit to every shiro.. iiriirv Till. i. 2 

business I writ to his holineu — iii. 2 

you writ to the pope against the king — iii. 2 

in all you writ to Koine, or else — iii. 2 

tl;at therefore such a writ be sued .. — iii. 2 
within the leaf of pity writ .. 7ii«ono//4Meni, iv. 3 
I writ it lor thy sake, and Would ..Corioluiiuj, v. 2 

whose chronicle thus writ — v. 3 

if yuu have wilt your annals true.... — v. 6 
[Col. I neither writ, nor words ....JuIiutCasar, iii. 'i 
uutluug iu yuur letters writ uf Iter? .. — iv. 3 



WRI 



[ 854 ] 



WRIT hi8 honour in the acts AntonyfyCleo.y. I 

is the tenor of the emperor's writ ..Ci/mbeline, iii. 7 
too late I bring this fatal writ .... Titus AnJron. ii. 4 
when I have writ my name without — iv. 1 
read, my lord, what she hath writ? .. — iv. 1 
thinks all is writ lie spoken cun. Pericles, ii. (Gow ) 
the epitaph is for Marina writ .. — iv. 4 (Gower) 

that he hath writ this to feel my Lear, i, 2 

uttered I have writ to my sister — i. 4 

liave you writ that letter to my sister? . . — i. 4 
our father he hath writ, so hath our sister — ii. 1 

for my writ is on the life of Lear — v. 3 

wliose names are here writ liomeo <§- Juliet, i. 2 

the writing person hath here writ.... — i. 2 

delight writ there with beauty's pen — i. 3 

80 many guests invite as here are writ — iv. 2 

if his mind be writ, give me — v. 2 

one writ witli me in sour misfortune's — v. 3 
meantime I writ to Romeo, that he .. — v. 3 

we have here writ to Norway Hamlet, i. 2 

we did think it writ down in our duty .. — i. 2 

for tlie law of writ, and the liberty — ii. 2 

is't writ in your revenge, that — iv. 6 

folded the writ up in form of tlie other .. — v. 2 
strong as proofs of Holy Writ Othello, iii. 3 

WKITE-he writes how happily.. 7'iTO Gen. o/r«-. i. 3 
enjoined me to write some lines .... — ii. I 
I will write, please you command .. — ii, 1 
I'll write your ladysliip another .... — ii. i 

to himself'^should write the letter' — ii. I 

made you write to yourself? — ii. 1 

to write unto her lover — ii. 1 

write, till your ink be dry — iii. 2 

who writes himself armigero Merry If'ives, i. 1 

he writes verses, he speaks holiday .. — iii. 2 
write, in emerald tufts, flowers purple — v. 5 
write loyal cantons of contemned . Tmel/'th Night, i. 5 

I'll write thee a cliallenge — ii. 3 

I can write very like my lady — ii. 3 

go, write it in a martial hand — iii. 2 

though thou write with a goose pen — iii. 2 

did he write this? Ay, madam — v. 1 

write from it, if you can — v. 1 

we shall write to you Measure for Measure, i. 1 

let's write good angel on — ii. 4 

now will I write letters to Angelo .. — iv. 3 
in such great letters as they write ...,MnchAdo,i. 1 
with scorn, write to him that I love him? — ii. 3 
wlien she is beginning to write to him — ii. 3 
so immodest to write to one that .... — ii. 3 

for they can write and read — iii, 3 

but to write and read comes by nature — iii. 3 

I will write against it — iv. I 

pray write down, Borachio (rep.) .... — iv. 2 
and write God first; for God defend.. — iv. 2 
write down, prince John a villain ij-ep.') — iv. 2 

here to write me down an ass — iv. 2 

will you then write me a sonnet — v. 2 

write me a prologue; and \et..Mid.N.'sDream, iii. 1 
I will get Peter Quince to write a ballad — iv. 1 
strictest degrees I'll write my name.. Love'sL.L. i. 1 
to tlie laws at large I write my name — i, 1 

devise wit; write pen; for I am — i. 2 

I will love, write, sigh, pray, sue — iii. 1 

will I tear, and write in prose — iv. 3 

when shall you see me write a thing — iv. 3 

touch a pen to write, until his — iv. 3 

let us see; write. Lord have mercy .. — v. 2 
live still, and write mine epitaph.. Uer.o/ Venice, iv. I 

the learned Bellario, what tie writes iv. 1 

will I Rosalinda write.... As you Like it, iii. 2 (song) 

he writes brave verses, speaks — iii. 4 

I'll write to him a very taunting .... — iii. 5 
I'll write it straight; the matter's .. — iii. 5 

why writes she so to me? — iv. 3 

Pliosbe did write it _ iv. 3 

mark liow the tyrant writes — iv. 3 

sirrah, I write man; to which title .. All's H^eil, ii. 3 
write to the king, that which I durst — ii. 3 
let me see what tie writes, and when — iii. 2 
but in sucli a then, I write a never — iii. 2 (let.) 
write, write, that, from the bloody — iii. 4 (let.) 

yet she writes, pursuit would be .... iii. 4 

write, write, Rinaldo, to this — iii. 4 

rC'o(.] I write good creature — iii. 5 

I'll write you down: the which .. Winter'' s Tale, iv. 3 

the bill that writes us all alike Macbeth, iii. I 

fold it, write upon it, read it — v.) 

nor never write, regreet, nor Richard //. i. 3 

with rainy eyes write sorrow on .... — iii. 2 
he writes me here, tliat inward .... 1 Henry IV. iv. 1 
as he writes, there is no quailing now — iv. 1 
I must go write again to other friends — iv. 4 

for, look you, how he writes 2 Henry IV. ii. 2 

but write her fair words still in — iv. 4 

to write for matter of grant Henry V. v. 2 

worst, and all, my lord, he writes ..IHenryVl. iv. I 

writes not so tedious a still — iv. 7 

and ink, and write my mind — v. 3 

and write home for it straight 2 Henry V I. iv. I 

he can write and read, and cast account — iv. 2 
make obligations, and write court-hand — iv. 2 
they use to write it on the top of .... — iv. 2 

dost thou use to write thy name — iv. 2 

so well brouglit up, that I can write my — iv. 2 
and that I write upon thy burgonet.. — v.] 

write up his title with usurping ZHenryVI. i. 1 

I'll write unto them, and entreat .... — i. 1 
and new cut off, write in the dust this — v. I 
grim ferryman which poets write oi. Richard IU.\. 4 
eleven hours I have spent to write it over — iii. 6 

I go, write to me very sliortly — iv. 4 

tlieir virtues we write in wa,ter .... Henry I'l 1 1, iv. 2 

is tliat letter, I caused you write — iv. 2 

a strange fellow here writes mti.Troilusff Cress, iii. 3 
and write in thee the figures nt.Timon nf Athens, v. 2 

we will write to Rome oi^ Coriolamts, i. 9 

Titus Lartius writes, tliey fought — ii. 1 

write his speeches in tlieir books ...luliusCtesar, i. 2 
write them together, yours is as fair.. — i. 2 



WRITE— Csesar did write for ium.JulimCcesar, iii. 1 

to write in such a case — iv. 3 

thou wilt write to A.nt,or\jl . Antony ^ Cleopatra, iii. 1 

speak, cast, write, sing, number — iii. 2 

bring him to me where I will write.. — iii. 3 

I'll write it, follow me — iii. 11 

write to him (I will subscribe) — iv. 5 

thither write, my queen, and with . . Cymbeline, i. 2 



1.7 
ii. 2 
ii. 2 
ii. 4 
— ii. 5 



— iv. 2 



if he should write, aud I not have it 
T will write: send your trunk to me 
I will write all down: such, and such 

why should I write this down 

she writes so to you? dotli she? 

I'll write against them, detest them 

wherefore write you not what monster's 

I'll write to my lord, she's dead. 

to write, and read, be henceforth 

write down thy mind, bewray. Titus Andr 

in the dust I write my heart's deep.. — iii. 1 

write thou, good niece; and here display — iv. I 

will write these words, and lay it by — iv. 1 

and now he writes to heaven — iv. 4 

had he a liand to write tliis? Lear, i. 2 

the effects he writes of, succeed unhappily — i. 2 

I'll write straight to my sister — i. 3 

why should she write to Edmund? — iv. 6 

about it, and write happy, when thou.... — v. 3 
any man, that can write, may . . Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 4 
but I will write again to Mantua .... — v. 2 
and here he writes, that he did buy .. — v. 3 

a baseness to write fair Hamlet, v. 2 

write from us; wish him post post-haste. 0;/ie/io, i. 3 
not write my praise. No, let me not (7-ep-) — ii. 1 
goodlv book, made to write whore upon? — iv, 2 

WRITiER-yet writers say (lep.) . TwoGcn. nfVer. i. 1 
only get the learned writer to set.. .. iVuchkdo, iii. 5 
for all your writers do consent ....As you Like it, v. 1 

as ancient writers do report 1 Henry I f, ii. 4 

I'll haste the writer — iii. I 

besides, their writers say, king Pepin .. Hen?-.*/ ^. i. 2 
their writers do them wrong Hamlet, ii. 2 

WRITHLED shrimp should strike ..] Henry fL ii. 3 

WRITING— is not my writing .. ..TvelfihNigkt,v. 1 
and for your writing and reading ..Much Ado, iii. 3 
would neither serve for the writing. Love'sL. Lost, i. 2 
the part.y writing to the person written — iv. 2 
is Biron's writing, aud here is his name — iv. 3 

I'll read the writing Merchant 0/ Venice, ii. 7 

that took some pains in writing — v. 1 

witli writing love-songs in their .Asyou Likeit, iii. 2 

did use as she was writing of it — iv. 3 

it is ill writing, fairly drawn .... Taming ofSh. iii. 1 
but your writing now is colder. . . . Winter's Tale, v. 1 
let me see the writing. M.y lord .... Richard U. v. 2 
peruse tliis writing here, and thou shalt — v. 3 

although in writing 1 preferred \HenryVl. iii. 1 

writing their own reproacli ..Troilus^Cressida, i. 1 
I was writing of mine epitaph . Timon of .itiiens, v. 2 

he sent in writing after me Coriolanus, v. I 

writings, all tending to the great ..JulinsCcesur, i. 2 

still in ail my writings Antony ^ Clenpatra, v. 1 

to greet your lord with writing Cymbelive, i. 7 

writing destruction on the enemy's.. Titus And- iii. 1 
peruse this writing else. What's here?. Pericles, ii. 5 
what names the writing person . . Romeo ^Juliet, i. 2 

WRITTEN-Proteus written down TwoGen. ofVer. i. 2 
there is written in your brow ..Meas.for Meas. iv. 2 

though it be not written down MuchAdo, iv. 2 

for here's a paper, written in his .... — v. 4 
have you the lion's part written? ..Mid.N.'sDr. i. 2 
love's stories, written in love's richest — ii. 3 

written in eight and six (rep.) — iii. 1 

writing to the person written unto. Love's L. Lost, iv. 2 

there is a written scroll? Merchant of Venice, ii. 7 

more I'll entreat you written to All's Well. iii. 2 

it is written, the.y appear to. . Comedy of Errors, iv. 3 

have written strange defeatures — v. 1 

raze out the written troubles Macbeth, v. 3 

having our fair order written dovtn.. KingJohn, v. 2 

which I shall send you written I HenrylV. i. 3 

that are written down old witii 2HentylV. i. 2 

wliose memory is written on the — iv. 1 

with written pamplilets studiously..) Henry V[. iii. I 
perused what I have written to you? Coriolanus, v. 6 
our written purposes before us sent Antony fyCleo. ii.6 
our composition ma.v be written .... — ii.fi 
though written in our flesh, M'e shall — v. 2 
enough written upon this earth .. TilusAndron. iv. \ 
a scroll; and written round about? .. 

I have written to effect 

what is written shai 1 be executed .... 

whose names are written {rep.). .Rom, 

find written in tlie margin of Iiis eyes 

had I it written, I would tear the word — ii. 

and written in very choice Italian .... Handel, I'li. 

WRONG— did us but loving wrong Tempest,!. 

fear, you have done yourself some wrong — i. 
with tlieir high wrongs I am struck .. — v. 
entreat thou pardon me my wrongs. ... — v. 

to wrong my friend TwoGen. of Verona, ii. 

do him not that wrong — ii. 

to wrong him with tliy importunacy — iv. 

you do him the more wrong — iv. 

shall not do his Julia so much wrong — 

my master wrongs her much — 

I will not do you that wrong Meiry Wives, i. 1 

you do yourself wrong, indeed, la.. . 
yet I wrong him, to call him poor . 
not only reeeiv'e this villanous wron; 
and by liim that does me tliis wrong 
having received wrong by some pers( 
I have directed you to wrong places 

you wrong yourself too much — 

you do yourself mighty wroii.g — 

,vou wrong me, sir, thus still (rep.) .. — 

this wrongs you - 

upon my life tlien you took the wrong 
how quickly the wrong side m&y.TicelfthN 
the wrongs are thou hast done him .. — 
who does do you wrong? 



— iv. 3 
1^ Juliel, i. 2 



IV. 4 



— iii. I 



WRO 

WRONG— you wrong me.. TweVAAYg-W, v. 1 (letter) 
done me wrong, notorious wrong .... — Vi 1 
I have done myself wrong . . Measure for Measure, i. 2 
they do you wrong, to put you so oft — ii. 1 

and do the world no wrong — ii. 2 

answering one foul wrong, lives not — ii, 2 

hooking both right and wrong to the — ii. 4 

you do him wrong, surely — iii. 2 

and I should wrong it, to lock it in.. — v. 1 

relate your wrongs — v. I 

but you are in the wrong, to speak .. — v. 1 
because I will not do them the ■wtong.. MuchAdo, i. 1 

I am apt to do myself wrong — ii. 1 

every man the wrong side out — iii I 

if they wrong her honour, the proudest — iv. 1 
whose wrong? do suit with mine .... — v. 1 
who wrongs him? Marry, thou {rep.) — v. 1 
was packed in all this wrong, hired to it — v. 1 
death in guerdon of her wrongs .. — v. 3 (scroll) 
your wrongs do set a scandal . . Mid. A'.'« Dream, ii. 2 
and blindworms, do no wrong .... — ii. 3 (song) 

you do me wrong, good sooth — ii. 3 

begin to do them wrong: for briers ., — iii. 2 
stir Demetrius up with bitter wrong — iii. 2 
right and wrong have chose as .... Love's L, Lost, i. 1 
much wrong, and wrong tlie reputation — ii. I 
oh pardon, love, this wrong, that sings — iv. 2 
I have seen the day of wrong through — v. 2 

you do me now more wrong Merch. of Venice, i. 1 

for my love, I pray you, wrong me not — i. 3 

if you choose wrong, never to speak — ii. 1 

the Jew liaving done me wrong — ii. 2 

if you wrong us, shall we not revenge? — iii. 1 
wrong a christian what is his (rep.).. — iii. I 
for, in choosing wrong, I lose your .. — iii. 2 
doth wrong this shadow in underprizing — iii. 2 

shall I dread, doing no wrong? iv. I 

a great right, do a little wrong _ iv. I 

I swear, you do me wrong; in faith .. — v. 1 

forgive me this enforced wrong — v. 1 

I shall do my friends no wrong . . As you Like it, i. 2 

trust a few, do wrong to none All's Well, i. 1 

I'll never do you wrong for your 'Own — ii. 3 
some reservation of your wrongs .... — ii. 3 

the king has done you wrong — ii. 3 

to himself the greatest wrong of all .. — v. 3 

he does me wrong, my lord — v. 3 

wrong me not, nor wrong yourself. Taming ofSh.i\.\ 
dost thou wrong her that did ne'er wrong — ii. 1 

you wrong me, signior (Jremio ii. 1 

or else you do me wrong — ii. 1 

you do me double wrong to strive — iii. 1 

the more my wrong, the more his spite — iv. 3 

a wrong something unfilial Winter'sTale, iv. 3 

think of the wrong I did myself .... — v. 1 

the wrongs I have done thee — v. 1 

can with such wrongs dispense. Comc(i!/o/£r»or»,ii. I 
be it my wrong, you are from me (rep. J — ii. 2 

by the wrongs I suffer — iii. 1 

'tis double wrong, to truant with .... — iii, 2 
you wrong me much to say so (rep.) — iv. 1 

you have done wrong to this — v. 1 

that she hath done thee wrong — v. 1 

to take order for the wrongs I went . . — v. 1 
beyond imagination is the wrong .... — v. i 

my wrongs might make one — v. I 

suffered wrong, go, keep us company — v. I 

wear thou thy wrongs Macbeth, iv. 3 

or else it must go wrong with you King John, i. 1 

his grandam's wrongs, and not his .. — ii. I 
oppressed with wrongs, and therefore — iii. 1 
withou*. my wrong, tnere is no tongue — iii, I 
that law bar no wrong; law cannot — iii. 1 

since law itself is perfect wrong — iii. 1 

I must pocket up these wrongs — iii. 1 

possessed with a thousand wrongs .. — iii. 3 

you should use to do me wrong — iv. 1 

attend the steps of wrong — iv. 2 

injustice and confused wrong — v. 2 

honour wi th such feeble wrong Richard IJ.i. 1 

O sit my husband's wrongs on — i. 2 

against my will, to do myself this wrong — i. 3 

dut.v make me suffer wrong? — ii. 1 

nor England's private wrongs — ii. I 

'tis shame, such wrongs are borne — ii. 1 

look on my wrongs with an indifferent — ii. 3 
to rouse his wrongs, and chase them — ii 3 
had feeling of my cousin's wrongs .. — ii. 3 

to find out right with wrong — ii. 3 

from her eyes by your foul wrongs .. — iii. 1 
he does me double wrong, that wounds — iii. 2 

forbearance from so foul a wrong — iv. I 

to do him wrong, or any way 1 HenrylV. i. 3 

whose wrongs in us God pardon .... — i. 3 

you will not pocket up wrong? — iii. 3 

seems to weep over his country's wrongs — iv. 3 

committed wrong on wrong — iv. 3 

worse than true wrongs iHenrylV. (indue.) 

thee rich for doing me such wrong .. — i. I 

passion, doth .you wrong, my lord .. — i. 1 

to bear e\'ery knave's wrong — ii. 1 

the gallows shall have wrong — ii. 2 

O never do his ghost the wrong — ii. 3 

make thee wrong this virtuous — ii. 4 

sir John, do not yourself wrong — iii. 2 

what wrongs our arms may do (7-ep.) — iv. 1 
men that most have done us wrong .. — iv. 1 
go to; I say, he sliall have no wrong — v. 1 

whose wrongs give edge unto Henry V. i. 2 

certainly, she did you wrong — ii. 1 

plain pocketing up of wrongs — iii. 2 

if Ills cause he wrong, our obedience — iv. I 

and yet I do thee wrong to mind thee — iv. 3 
tlion know'st little of my wrongs.. ..1 Henry VI. i. 3 

how much he wrongs his fame — ii. I 

for that she's in a wrong belief — ii. 3 

argument you held, was wrong in you — ii. 4 

his wrong doth equal mine — ii.6 

thou dost then wrong me — ii.6 

and for those wrongs, those bitter. ... — ii. 6 




WRONG— wrongs lie recompensed . . I Henry I'l. Hi, 

firicked on by public wrongs — iii. z 

ibcrty to vengc thia wrong — iii. 4 

done mo wionu. What is tliat wrong — Iv. 1 

let U9 not wrung it JcaJ — Iv. 7 

that is sonic wrunc, indeed i Henry I'l. i. 3 

thou never didst tliem wrong (if/i.).- — iii. 1 j 

jio other reason for thin wrong — ^- ' 

be thy title right or wrong iHennjl'l. i. 1 

what wrong is this unto tlic prince .. — i. ' ' 

upon the wrong he did us all — .'• * r 

there is no wrong, but every thing .. — ii. 2 

Bmooths the wrong, inlerreth arguments — iii. 1 

herein your higlmess wrongs both .. — iii. 2 

are iusi, and time suppresseth wrongs — iii. 3 1 

I will revenge his wrong to lady Bona — iii. 3 i 

that he hath done me wrong — iii. 3 j 

she had the wrong: but wlint said .. — 'X- ' 1 
thev do nie wrong, and I will not ..Hichard Itl, i. 3 

when done thee wrong? or thcc? .... — i. 3 I 

she hatli had too mucli wrong — j. 3 i 

have oil the vantage of her wrong .. — 
I do the wrong, and first begin to.. .. — 
false intelligence, or wrung surmise.. — 
wrong not her birth, she is of royal .. — 
the sad remembrance of those wrongs — 

'tis full uf thy foul wrongs — 

God's wrong is most of all — 

self's remembrance wrong yourself . . — 
determined respite of my wrongs .... — 

wrong huth but wrongi and blumc .. — v. 1 | 

our wrongd in Kichurd's bosom will — i " 

madam, you do me wrong Hennjt'lll. i 

he knows, I am not of your wrong .. — i 

believe me, she has had nuich wrong — ii 

modam, you wrong the king's love .. — ii 

upon what cause, wrong you? — ii 

you wrong your virtues with these .. — ii 

conscience in doing daily wrongs.. .. — \ 
right and wrong, between whose. Tioilus ^ Cress. 

'twixt right aud wrong — i^ 

persist in wrong, extenuates not wrong — i 

you'll do him wrong ere you — i\ 

we go wrong, we go wrong — \ 

yourselves much wrong {rep. iii. 4).7'imori o/Alli.i. 2 

and make his wrongs his oiit.sides .. — Ijl* ^ 

if wrongs be evils, and enforce us .... — iii. 6 

sliould brook as little wrongs, as gode — iii. 5 

foul, fair; wrong, right; base, noble.. — iv. 3 

blot out what wrongs were theirs .... — v. 2 

now breathless wrong shall sit and pant — v. 5 

thine own particular wrongs Coriolnntis, iv. 5 

I ever said we were i' the wrong .... — iv. 6 

Btill to remember wrongs? — V. 3 

pride to do myself tills wrong — y. 5 

souls that welcome wrongs JuUu>C<i<tar, ii. I 

Caesar doth not wrong: nor without — iii. I 

the general wrong of lliime — iii. 1 

ehall advantage more than do us wrong — iii. 1 

Cxsar hatli had great wrong — iii. 2 

do Brutus wrong, and Cassi us wrong — iii. 2 

I will not do them wrong (rep. I .... — iii. 2 

I fear, I wrong the honourable men — iii. 2 

done me wrong. Judge me {re/).) .... — iv. 2 

wrong a brother? Brutus (>!•;).) — iv. 2 

fou wrong me every way, you wrong — iv. 3 

will not do thee so much wrong to — iv. 3 
you wrong this presence. ...Antony ii Cleopalra, ii. 2 

both how you were wrong led — iii. 6 

do not vourself such wrong — v. 2 

I never do him wrong CymbcUne, i. 2 

the wrongs he did me were nothing.. — v. .^ 

nor wrong mine age with this Titus Andron. i. 1 

to quit the bloody wrongs upon her foes — i. 2 

thus, and challenged of wrongs? — i. 2 

hand shall right your mother's wrong — ii. 3 

swear unto my soul to right your wrongs — iii. 1 

live, he will requite your wrongs — iii. 1 

he doth me wrong, to feed me — iv. 3 

yet wrung with wrongs, more — iv. 3 

Justice for to wreak our wrongs — iv. 3 

what wrongs are these? was ever .... — iv. 4 

despiteful and intolerable wrongs! .. — iv. 4 

and impatient of your wrongs — v. 1 

and right his heinous wrongs — v. 2 

a thousand, that have done thee wrong — v. 2 

'twos they that did her all this wrong — v. 3 

these wrongs, unspeakable, past .... — v. 3 

make pretence of wrong that I I'ericles, i. 2 

but shouM he wrong my lilicrtics — i. 2 

wrong not the prince ynu love (rep.) — ii. 3 

tossed from wrong to injury — v. 1 

some villain hath done me wrong Lear, i. 2 

by day and niglitl he wrongs me — 1.3 

I did her wrong,— Canst tell — i. 5 

whoee wrong thought defiles thee — iii. 6 

I had turned the wrong side out — iv. 2 

he'll not feel wrongs, which tie him to .. — iv. 2 

a cheek for blows, a licad for wrongs .. .. — jv. 2 

woes, by wrong imaginations — iv. 

you do me wrong to take me out o' the .. — iv. 7 

done me wrong: you have some cause .. — iv. 7 
leave nie 8*), you do nie wrong .. Uomer)^- Juliet,']. 1 

you do wrong your hand too much.. — i. i 
we do it wrong, iKing so majc'tical ....Hamlet, i. I 

tlicir writersdo them wrong to make.... — ii. 2 

the oppresjor's wrong, the proud man's.. — iii. I 

I have done you wrong, but pardon it . . — v. 2 

does wrong Laertes, then Hamlet does .. — v. 2 

like love, and will not wrong it — v. 2 

done you bold and saucy wrongs Othello, i. 1 

tell me, we have your wrong rebuke — i. I 

cannot but feel this wrong, as 'twere — i. 2 

bade her wrong stay, and her diapleasuro — 11. I 

turned almost the wrong side outward .. — ii. 3 

the truth sliall nothing wrong him — ii. 3 

tiiough Cussio did some little wrong .... .— ii. 3 

1 had feen him do you wrong? — iv. 1 

quite in the wrong: how do you now .... — iv. 1 

by heaven, you do mc wrong — iv. 2 



[ 855 ] 

WRONG for the whole world (rrp.) ....Olhella.W.Z 

'tis a wrong in your own world — iv. 3 

such noble sense of thy friend's wrong! .. — v. 1 

WRt)NGKl) duke of Milan rewpesi,v. 1 

wronged me, master Page (rep.) .,,, Merry If'ives, i. 1 

eaith lie is wronged — i 1 

wronged mo in some humnura — ii. I 

nevorwas man thus wronged.... Twelfth Xinhl, iv. 2 
that wronged you? Yes (icp.) .. Ment.forMeai.ii.i 
do a |)oor wronged lady a merited benefit — iii. I 
we shall ailvise this wronged maid .. — iii. I 
upon a wronged I'd fain have said .. — v. I 
as I, thus wronged, hence iinbelievcd gol — v. I 
yet iiatli wronged your well-defeiuled — v. I 
if any woman's wronged by tliis lewd — V. 1 
she, Claudio, that you wronged, look — v. 1 
told her, she is much wronged by yoa.MuchAdo, ii. 1 
that he hath wronged his honour .... — ii. 2 
I do believe 3'our tair cousin is wronged — iv. I 

she is wronged, slie is slandered — iv. I 

the count Claiidio hath wronged Hero? — iv. 1 
thou hast so wronged mine innocent — v. 1 
never wronged yon, save that..;Ui(/./V.'irDrfnin, iii. 2 
wronged him; if it do him (>f;).)../l!i/ou/,i7td'(,ii. 7 
well perceive Ihave not wronged you All's Hell, \v. 4 
behold a moii much wronged . . . Comedy of Err. v. I 
wronged, as we are by this peevisli .. KnigJohn, ii. 2 

whom the kin" hath wronged Richard 11. ii. 2 

we are wronged and would unfold ..'iUeurylV. iv. 1 

and say, I wronged the duke illeury f'l. iii. 1 

if ever lady wronged her lord so much — iii. 2 
brother wronged by that false woman. 3 Hemt/ri. il.2 

that thou liast not wronged Uichatd III. '\v. 1 

wronged in the time o'erpast (rep.) . . — iv. 4 
the wronged souls of butchered princes — v. 3 
the wronged heirs of Yolk do pray for — v. 3 
of holy saints, and wronged souls.... — v. 3 
wronged Cains Ligarius ..JutinsCteiar, ii. 3 (paper) 
that you liave wronged me, doth .... — iv. 3 
you wronged yourself, to write in.... — iv. 3 
reports give him much wronged.. /Jn/onj/ ^ Cleo. i. 4 

no, my most wronged sister — iii. 6 

opinion, and in honour, wrn\\"c(\, . Titus Andron. i. 2 
ravished, and wronged, as Pliiloinela — iv. 1 
wronged [ro/.A'ii/. -thronged] by imin^s.. Pericles, i. I 
when I think your liighne.~s is wronged ..Lear, i. 4 

say. you have wronged her, sir — ii. 4 

the more thou liast wronged me — v. 3 

was't Hamlet wrtniged Liicrtes? Hamlet, v. 2 

Hamlet is ol' the faction that is wronged — v. 2 

if thou but think'st him wronged Othello, iii. 3 

hands, heart, to wronged Othello's service! — iii. 3 

WRONGER-know your wronger,look.Wuc/i .J'io, v. 1 
and not the wronger of her, or you..C.i/»iWiiif, ii. 4 
of his I'ntc. loves not his wronger 0(/ip//o, iii. 3 

WRONGFUIy-thy wrongful suit. TuoGen. offer, iv. 2 
in wrongful quarrel you have slain... TitnsAnd. i. 2 

WRONGFULLY accused your ..Meas.fnrMeas. v. I 
accusing tlie lady Hero wrongfully .. Much Ada. 'iv. 2 
tlie which, if wrongfully, let heaven . Richard tl.'t.i 
if you do wiongfuiry seize Hereford's rights — ii. I 

to have murdered wrongfully iHenryl'l. ii. 3 

been butchered wrongfnlly .. Titus Androuicus, iv. 4 
Lucius' bani>.hment wus wrongfully — iv. 4 

WRONtJ-INCENSED peers Richardlll. ii. 1 

WRONdING the ancientry V/iuter'sTal', iii. 3 

wronging[Kii(. -roaming] it thus Hamle', i. 3 

WRONGLY— yet woiild'st wronglv v;'\n.Maclieih. i. .■> 

WRONG'ST t iiys elf, if thou should'st .. All's It'ell, ii. 3 

thou wrong'st liim. Somerset 1 Henry I'l. ii. 4 

how much thou wrong'st me 2lUiiry I'l. iv. 10 

therein thou wrong'.st thy children .3ltenry 11. iii. 2 
thou wrong'st a gentleman, who is ap.Cymfieline, i. 7 
wrong'st it, more than tears Romeo <^ Juliet, iv. I 

WROTE— you wrote to he a legate.. 'ltiii.v»^y//. iii. 2 
letters he had formerly wrote ..ytutouy ^Cleo. iii. 6 

my emperor hath wrote Cyinbeliite, iii. 5 

Lucius hath wrote already — ill. 5 

since I wrote him, Imogen was — iv. 3 

I wrote the letter that thy father .... — v. I 

he wrote this but as an essay Lear, i. 2 

a new commission; wrote it fair Hamlet, v. 2 

wilt thou know the effect of what I wrote? — v. 2 

WROUG HT by my pitv ...Measure for Measure, iii. 2 
his friends still wrought reprieves for him — iv. 2 
mother wrought in his behalf . . Merch. of Venice, i. 3 
love wrought these miracles.. Taming of Shrew, v. I 
would thus have wrought yon.... lI'mler'sTate, v. 3 
my end was wronglit by nature . . Cmnedy 0/ litr. i. I 
my dull brain was wrought with things. J/ac6e(/i, i. 3 
which else should free have wrought .. — ii. I 
the instruments; who wronglit w ith them — iii. I 
great business must be wronglit ere noon — iii. .S 
wrought out of their discontent . ...kingJohn, iii. 4 

a princess wronglit it me — iv. I 

might have wrought fears in me .... — iv. 2 

who wrought it willi the king Richard II. iv. 1 

for thou Imst wronglit a deed of slander — v. (I 

that, if we wrought out life 'iHenrylV. i. 1 

hath wrought the mure, that should — iv. 4 

wrought upon thee s<t preposterously ..HcHryT. ii. 2 
overthrow wrought this ollence? ....\ Henry I'l. i. 2 
hath wrought this hellish mischief .. — iii. 2 

miracle that e'er ye wrought — v. 4 

wrought me such exceeding trouble .2 Hfnr'/''/. v. I 
have wrought the easy melting king. 3l/'tir«)7. ii. 1 

wrought he not well (rep.) 7Vi;ion of Athens, i. 1 

well in his person wrought to be set. Cnrio/<iin/f, ii. 3 
wrought from that it is'disposeil ..JulitisCirsar, i. 2 
lie so rarely and exactly wrought . . Cymheline, ii. 4 
hath wrought this change of cheer 7'i7Mj./4n</ron. i. 2 
grief basso wrought on him, he takes — iii. 2 

perio<l will be throughly wrought tear, iv. 7 

that we have wrought so wortliv. A'nmro ^Juliet, Iii. h 
it wrought on her the form of death — v. 3 

to tliisetlect he viroiight upon lier Othello, i. 3 

a special purpose which wrought to his.. — v. 2 
being wrought, jierplcxcd in the extreme — v. 2 

WKUNG Bassanio's hand .. Merchant of Venice, ii. 8 
the pour jade it wrung in the I Henty iy.'i\.\ 



YEA 

WRUNG-sceptro wrung from thcc 3 ;/<•?»!/;'/. iii. 1 

yet wrung with wrongs Vitus Andionicus, iy. 3 

he hnth. mv lord, wrung from mc Hamlet, i. 2 

WKYI.N'G— for wrviiig but a little? ..Cymheline, v. I 

WIIY-NKCKEU life Merrhauiof l'en,ce. ii. 5 

WYE-thriee from the banks ofWye.l Henry 1 1', iii. 1 

it is called Wye. at JMonmouth Henry V. iv. 7 

all the water In Wye cannot — iv. 7 

X 

XANTIPPE.or a worse Taming of Shrew, i. 2 

Y 

YARD— the yards and bowsprit Tempest, i. J 

two yards, and more Merry ll'ives, i. 3 

in the waist two yards about — 1.3 

lie may not by the .\ard I,ore'sL.Lost,\. 2 

yard, three quarters, half yard .. Taming o/.SA. iv. 3 
1 shall BO liemete thee with thy yard — iv. 3 

eight yards of uneven ground \ Henry IT. ii. 2 

you tailor's yard, you sheath — ii. 4 

two and twenty yards of satin ^HenrylV.^ i. 2 

draw me a clothier's yard Lear, iv. 6 

should meddle with his yard Romeo 4r Juliet, i. 2 

I will delve one yard below their Hamlet, iii. 4 

YARE,yare; take in the top-sail Tempest, '1. 1 

yare, lower, lower — i. I 

IS tight and yare, and bravely — y. 1 

be yare in thy preparation Twelfth Sight, iii. 4 

you shall find me yare Measure for Measure, 'iv. 2 

their ships arc \are; yo\ir9. Antony ^ Cleopatra, iii. 7 
the hanginan tiiaiik for being yare.. — iii. 11 

yure, vu re, good Iras; quick — v. 2 

YAKELY-tull to't yarelv Tempest, i. 1 

tliatyarely frame the (,nice..4n/o«y^ Cleopatra, ii. 2 

YARN-oiir lile is of a mingled yarn..^H'»»<'«, iv. 3 

all the yarn she spun in Vlvs6ea\.,.Coriolaniu, i. 3 

YAXIGHAN, and lelch me a'stoop Hamlet, v. I 

YAWN, and yield your dead ..MuchAdo, v. 3 (song) 

that bloodily did yawn upon Henry T. iv 6 

to yawn, be still, and wonder Coriolanus, iii. 2 

when churchyards yawn, and licll .... Hamlet, iii. 2 

the affrighted globe should yawn Othello, v. 2 

YAWNED, and yielded up JuliusCirsar, ii. 2 

YAWNlNG-niglit's yawning peal Macbeth, iii. 2 

the lazy yawning drone Henry V. i. 2 

dam np this thy yawning mouth ..'iHenryl'l, iv. 1 

YCLAD— her words yclad with wisdom's — i. 1 

YCLEI'KD-isycleped, thy park.LoM'jL.i. 1. 1 (let.) 

.Tudas I am, ycleped Wuccabogus .... — v. 2 

Y'EA AND N.\Y, sir, then I svn>K..l.ore'sL.Lost. i. 1 

bv yea and nny, sir, I dare say '^Henryll'. iii. 2 

YEA AND NO, I do Men y Hires. '\. 1 

by yea and no, I think the 'oman is a w iich — iv. 2 

but b}' the yea and no of general ..Coriotajiut. iii. 1 

Y'EAD-o-piece of Yead Miller ....Merry ll'ires,'i. I 

YE.V-FORSOUTH knave! 'ilienrylT. i. 2 

YE.\N— ere the poor fools will yean.. ZHenry I'l. ii. & 

YEA, OR NO-assistants. yea, or wo.liichard 111. iv. 4 

Y'EAR- wast not out three years old .. Tempeit, i. 2 

twelve years since, Miranda (rep.) .... — i. 2 

to hate me a full year — i. 2 

painfully remain a dozen years — i. 2 

his years but young, hui.. .,'TuoGen.of Verona, ii. 4 

these three hundred years Merry H'ipm, i, 1 

overtake seventeen years old — i. 1 

I have lived fourscore years — iii. 1 

in three hundred pounds a year .... — iii. 4 

to a dog for a new year's gift — iii. 6 

till seven years' heat Ttrelfth Sight, i. I 

three thousand ducats a year — i. 3 

ay, but he'll have but a year in all .. — i. 3 

neither in estate, years, nor wit — i. 3 

they shall yet lielie thy happy vears — i. 4 

of what iiersoiinge and years is lie? . . — i. 5 

of what years i' liiitli? About your years— ii. 4 

after fourteen years' purchase — iv. I 

grew a twenty years removed thing.. — v. 1 
had numbered thirteen years (rep.).. — v. 1 
to three thousand dollar's a year. .Meat.furMiai. i. 2 
which for these fourteen years we .. — i. 4 

a man of fourscore pound a year (rep.) — ii. I 

but for ten year together — ii. 1 

hold out in A'ienna ten year — ii. 1 

seven year and a half, sir — ii. ! 

you sav, seven years together? — ii. 1 

a bawd of eleven years continuance.. — iii. 2 
his child is a year and a quarter old — iii. 2 
compound with him by the yeor .... — iv. 2 
one that is a prisoner nine yeai« old.. — iv. 2 

a man of Claudio's years — iv. 8 

anil five years since there wa< some .. — v. I 
of five years, I never spake with her — v. 1 

told your lordship, a year since MuchAdo, ii. 2 

he has been a vile thief this seven year — iii. 3 
dost thou not »us|)ect my years? .... — iv. J 
misgraffed in respect of years.. A/iii.A'.'j Dream, i. 1 
have hworn for three years' term ..Loce'tL.Lott, i. I 

'tis but a ihiee years' fast — i. | 

and study here three ycors (rep. i. 2) — i. 1 
court for three years' s|mce (rrp.) .... — i. 1 

bide the penance of each three years' — 1.1 

within the term of three years — i, | 

so to study three years is but short .. — i. 1 

was proclaimerl a year's imprisonment — i. 1 

to put years tet the wonl three — i. 2 

shall outwear three years — Ii. 1 

go, tenderness of years; take this key — iii. I 

if horns that year miscarry — iv. I 

been five thouband years ahoy — v. 2 

that sniiles his cheek in years — v. 2 

then at the expiration ol the year.... — v, 2 

for her sweet love three years — v.t 

fortune of this iircsent year..iV/i-rcAan<(i/'r«ilM, i. I 
hut two years more, thou shall not .. — i. 1 

falling out that year on (rrp.) — H. s 

rebels it at these years? — Iii. 1 

his lack of years be no impediment — iv. 1 (lettei) 



— V. 1 

7igJohn,\. 1 



YEAR— too bold for your years ....As you Liked, i. 2 
from seventeen years till now C'-ep.').. — .•;• 3 
eiglityeara together: dinners, and suppers— ii]. 2 

it seems the length of seven years — ni- 2 

I pray you chide a year together — in- 1 

yet for liis years lie's tall — '." s 

almost six thousand years old — iv. I 

would have lived many a fair year .. — jv. l 

Buch garments, and such years — >v. J 

I have, since I was three years old .. — v. 2 
within ten years it will make itself ..AUsllell, i. 1 
would serve the world so all the year! — .1-3 
and the next year, and 'tis too early — ii- 

in her sex, her years profession — h- 1 

for twice seven years.... Taming ufSlmw, 1 (indue.) 
these fifteen years you have (.rep.) — 2 (indue.) 

some fifteen year and more — 2 (indue.) 

mvself am struck in years — ii. 

two thousand ducats by the year (rep.) — n > 

near twenty years ago, in Genna — iv. 1 

ever si-ice he was three years old .... — v. 1 
I did recoil twenty three years. . . . ll'mUr s I ale.i. i 

ten thousand years together ."", , "' ^ 

th.it I slide o'er sixteen years .. — iv. (chorus) 

it is fifteen years, since I saw .~„ , '^' ! 

then comes in the sweet o' the year — iv. 2 (s9ng) 

sir, the year growing ancient — Jv. J 

these seven years, be born another such — iv. 3 
the gods do this year connive at us .. — iv. 3 

a piece many years in doing — v. 2 

lets go by some sixteen years — v. J 

to think so twenty years together — v. 3 

no, not these twenty years _, ~ „ '*'■ , 

ei"hteen years became inquisitive. Co7n<;a!/ ofhrr.i.l 
her sober virtue, years, and modesty — in- [ 
I buy a thousand pound a year! .... — iv. 1 

seven short years, that here — v. 1 

but seven years since — '^- ' 

twenty years have I been patron . . . 
twenty-five years have I but gone . 
five hundred pound a year (rep.) . . . 

look upon the years of Lewis — ';■ f 

many years of happy days beial .... Richard ii. i. 1 
for these eighteen years complotted.. — i. 1 

the wish of happy years — !• 3 

language I have learned these forty years — i. 3 

too far in years to be a pupil now — i. 3 

numberof his banished years plucked — i. 3 
he shortens four years of my son's .. — J. 3 

ere the six years that he hath to spend — i. 3 

thou hast many years to live — '.3 

six years we banish him — J. 3 

and added years to his short — .'■ * 

fortime is come to years liichard I'.]]. 3 

we at the time of year do wound — 111-4 

planted many years, be judged — iv. 1 

send him many years of sunshine — — iv. 1 

fourteen hundred years ago IHemyiy. \. I 

if all the year were playing — .!• 2 

any time these two and twenty years — ii. 2 

forsooth, five year, and as much — 11.4 

I did that I did not this seven year . . — i;. 4 
stolest a cup of sack eighteen years ago — ii. 4 
when I was about thy years. Hal — — ii. 4 
that vanity in years? wherein is he good — ji. 4 
no more in debt to years than thou.. — ni. 2 
any time this two and thirty years . . — in. 3 
whilst the hig year, swoln witli .'iHenrylF. (indue.) 
so many years outlive performance! — ii. 4 

aud Venus this year in conjunction! — ■■ ' 
known thee these twenty-nine years — 
'tis not ten years gone, since Richard — 
two years after, were they at wars (rep.) — 
look well, and bear your years very well — 

that's fifty-five year ago — 

he that dies this year, is quit for — 

as the year had found some months — 

proiihesied to me many years, I should — 
truly, sir, this eight years; and if I.. — 
we will eat alast year's pippin of.,.. — 
praise heaven for the merry year — v. 3 (song) 

that, ere this year expire — v. 5 

accomplishment of many years. Henry f'. i. ccnorua) 
in the eleventh year o' the last king's — i. 1 

a thousand pounds by the year — i. 1 

one and twenty years after defunction — i. 2 
within the year of our redemption .. — i. 2 

in the year eight hundred five — .'.2 

fathers had twenty years been made — .ii. 4 
so the ever-running year with profitable — iv. 1 

throughout the year to church \HenryVI. i. 1 

await for wretched years — >• 1 

fight not once in forty years — .1-3 

these many years, wasted our country — ii. 3 
some part of my young years might — .ii. 5 

my tender years can tell (rep. iv. 1) — in- 1 

this seven years did not Talbot — iv. 3 

my years are young ; and fitter — Y- j 

better sport these seven years' 2 Henry i I. u. 1 

why a king of years should be to be — .n. 3 

wine this first year of our reign — _ iv. 6 

my life for a thousand years — iv. 10 

a thousand oaths, to reign one year..3Heiir!/;'/._i. 2 
days will finish up the year (rep.) .. — ;;. 5 

60 many years ere I shall sheer — n. 6 

months, and years, passed over — .ii- 5 

of tirreescore and two years — 

obeyd'st thirty and six years — 

in the downfall of his mellowed years — 
well struck in years; fair, and iiot..Iiichard III. 

in his full and ripened years 

'twas full two years ere I could get . . 
the untainted virtue of your years . . 
eighty odd years of sorrow have I seen 
her bashful years with your experience 
seem pleasing to her tender years? . . — 
tlian I have time to tell his years! .Henry I 111. 
has hung twenty years about his neck — 

a thousand pouud a year (rep.) — 

begging sixteen years in court -- 



II. 4 
iii. I 
iii. 1 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 
iv. 4 
iv. 4 
V. 1 
V. 3 



iii. 3 



_ ii. 3 
ii. 4 
iii. I 
iv. 1 

iv. 4 



tiJ,iii. 3 
rtus, i. 4 
ii. 1 
ii. 2 
iv. 1 
iv. 1 
V. 4 



— iv. 2 



— V. 4 (scroll) 



i. 2 



YEAR— upward of twenty years .... Henri/ 1 Ill.w.i \ 

reigned bv many a year before — ■■ ' ' 

shall not 'have his wit this year. . Troilus Sr Cr 

after seven years' siege, yet Troy — 

many a bounteous year, must. Timnn of Allien 

for half a hundred years Coriola 

an estate of seven years' health — 

at sixteen years when Tarquin — 

thou hast years upon thee — 

if I could shake off bnt one seven years — 

than an eight year old horse — 

the youthful season of the year luliusCaisar.n. 1 

twenty yearsof life, cutsofi'somany years — iii. 1 
live a tlrousand years, I shall not find.. — in. 1 
for I have seen more years, I am sure. . — iv. 3 
like to the time o' the year.. ^7i(oi/y.§C(eopa(ra,i. 6 

her years, her inclination — .!)• * 

that year, indeed, he was troubled .. — in. 2 

guess at her years, I pr'vthee — ni. 3 

eldest of them at three years old .... Cymbelme, i. I 
some twenty years. That a king's .. — i. ' 
thou heapest a year's age on me! .... — .1.2 

this twenty years, this rock — m. 3 

at three, and two years old, I stole 
I saw him not these many years . 
from sixteen years of age to sixty, 
many years, though Cloten then . 
being dead many years (rep. v. 6) 
these twenty years have I trained up 

for many years thought dead — 

ten years are spent, fince first he.. Ti/Ms^nf/ron, 
I have been thy soldier forty years .. — 

five hundred years hath stood — .1.2 

not the difference of a year, or two . . — ii. 1 

but grow faster than their years Pericles, i. 2 

felt several years, and wanting breath — i. 4 
who withered in her spring of year — iv. 4 (G9W.) 
serve seven years for the loss of a leg . . — iv- 6 
at fourteen years he sought to murder — v. 3 
this fourteen years no razor touched .. — y. 3 

some year elder than this, who yet Lear, 1. 1 

he hath been out nine years — i. 1 

infirm and choleric years bring with them — i. 1 
I have years on my back forty-eight — — i- 4 
fools had ne'er less grace in a year — i. 4 (song) 

daughters, as thou canst tell in a year — 11. 4 

Tom's food for seven long year — 111. 4 (song) 
your father's tenant, these fourscore years — ly. 1 

the change of fourteen years ltomeo/SrJuliel,i.2 

at twelve year old, I bade her come 

of all days in the year (rep.) 

the earthquake now eleven years (rep.) — 
an' I should live a thousand years .. — 
much upon these years that you are — 
by'r lady, thirty years. What, man I — 
some five and twenty years; and then — 
his son was but a ward two years a^o — 

'tis twenty years till then — 

by this count I shall be much in years — 
commission of thy years and art could — 
for these many hundred years, the bones — 

may outlive his life half a year Hamlet 

these three years I have taken note of it — 
of all the days i' the year, I came to't. . . . — 
sexton here, man and boy, thirty years . . — 

eight year, or nine year (rep. } 

you i' the earth three and twenty years 

you shall more command with years Othello, i. 2 

these arms of mine had seven years' pith — 1.3 
in spite of nature, of years, of country .. — 1.3 
the story of my life, from year to year .. — 1. 3 
for four times seven years: and since I.. — .1. 3 
sympathy in years, manners, and beauties — .11. 1 

vale of years; yet that's not much — iii. 3 

'tis not a year or two shows us a man — 111. 4 

I would have him nine years a killing . . — iv. 1 

YEARLY will I do this rite MvchAdo.y.a 

the yearly course that brings this . . King John, 111. 1 
five hundred poor I have in yearly . . Henry F. 1 v. 1 
will yearly on the vigil feast his .... — .i.y. 3 

yearly three thousand pounds Cymbeline, 111. 1 

YiEARN your heart to see it Merry ll^ives, 111. 5 

for my manly heart doth yearn Henry V. 11. 3 

is dead; and we must yearn therefore — .ii. 3 
it yearns me not, if men my garments — i.v. 3 

the heart of Brutus yearns to JuliusCmsar, 11. 2 

YEARNED my heart, when I heheU. Richard II. v. 6 
YEARNING -on ray yearning time ..Pericles. 111. 4 

YEDWARO; if I tarry at home \Henryir.u2 

YELL— the dogs did yell Love's [..Last, 1 v. 2 

nor yells of mothers, maids Timon 0/ Athens, ly. 3 

timorous accent, aud dire yell, as when.Olhello, 1. 1 
YELLED out like syllable of dolour ..Macbeth, iv. 3 
YELLING [Kn/. -yelping] noise .. TilusAndron. 11. 3 
YELLOW— these yellow sands ..Tempest, 1. 2 (song) 

mine is perfect yellow TwoGen.nf yerona,i\. 4 

with a little yellow beard Merry Wives, \. 4 

a green and yellow mAancholy ..Twelfth ^^gllt, 11. 4 
thy yellow stockings (rep. iii. 4) — 11. 5 (letter) 
she did commend my yellow stockings — n. 5 
strange, stout, in yellow stockings .... — ii. o 
come to her in yellow stockings (rep. 111. 2) — .11. 5 

though yellow in my legs — m- 4 

to put on yellow stockings ■.•.•,, r" ''.•], 

beard, your perfect yellow Mtd.N. sDream.i. 2 

on Neptune's yellow sands — ..i.'- 2 

turns into yellow gold his salt-green — 111.2 
these yellow cowslip cheeks, are gone — v. 1 
cuckoo-buds of yellow hue. Love'sL.Losl,v 2 (song) 
raied with the yellows, past cure . Taming nf Sh. 111. 2 
'mongst all colours, no yellow iu't. fVmler sTale,yi. 3 
is fallen into the sear, the yellow leaf .Macbeth, v. 3 

a yellow cheek? a white beard? 2Henryll'. 1. 2 

guarded with yellow, will be. He.»i/r/i/. (prologue) 
gold? yellow, glitterhig, precious. Timon o/^(A. 1 v. 3 

this yellow slave will knit — i.v. 3 

this yellow lachimo.in an hour .... C!/m!)e(i«c, 11. 5 
the yellows, blues, the purple violets .Pericles, iv. 

ii. 3 1 and yellow chnpless sculls liomeo ^JuUei.iv. 1 

ii. 3 YELLOWNESS, for the revolt of mien. iUerri/ tV. 1. 3 



— i. 3 



— V. 1 



YELPING kennel of French curs ..] Henry FI. iv. 2 

YEOMAN of the « ardrohe Twelfth Night, ii. 5 

wliere is your yeoman? (rep.) 2 Henry / K. ii. I 

we grace the yeoman, by conversing. I Henry f'/. li. 4 

be restored, thou art a yeoman — ii. 4 

so wealthy as an English yeoman . .3Henry VI. i. 4 
orayeoman? Aking.aking! (rep.) ....iear, iii. 6 

for he's a mad yeoman, that sees — 111.6 

Dowitdid me yeoman's service Hamlet, v. 2 

yEOMEN— yeomen's sons \HenryIV. iv. 2 

good yeomen, whose limbs were made. Hmry V. iii. 1 

spring crestless yeomen from so I Henry I' I. ii. 4 

fight, bold yeomen! draw, archers. .B/c/mrd ///. v. 3 

YERK out their armed heels Henry V. iv. 7 

YERKEDhim here under the ribs Othello, i. i 

YEST— with vest and froth mnter'sTale, iii. 3 

YESTERDAY in this basket Merry Wives, iv. 2 

went you not to her yesterday, sir.. .. — v. 1 
heard my lady talk of it yesterday. 7'!/'ei//AJ\"!>/i(,i. 3 
with a Frenchman yesterday . . Merch.of Venice, ii. 8 
that I made yesterday in despite.. i4syoui.i7cei(,.i.i. f) 
I met the duke yesterday, and had .. — iii. 4 

was it not yesterday we spoke Macbeth, iii. 1 

and all our yesterdays have lighted fools — v. 5 

that did but yesterday suspire King John, iii. 4 

call back yesterday, bid time return. /(icAarti i/. iii. 2 
enlarge the man committed yesterday. Henry ^.ii. 2 
were but j'esterday dubbed knights.. — iv. 8 
prings me pread and salt .yesterday.. — v. 1 
called me yesterday, mountain-squire — v. 1 
had heard her talk yesterday.. TroiYus 4- Cress da, i. I 
they say, he yesterday coped Hector — i. 2 

I told you a thing yesterday — ..i. 2 

prisoner, called Antenor, yesterday took — iii. 3 
one half of what he was yesterday.. Cor/oianus, iv. 5 
yesterday the bird of night did sit. JuUusCoisar, i. 3 
but yesterday the word of Cfesar — — iii- 2 
of them, no longer than ycBlerday. Anto7iy 4-Cleo.v. 2 

1 saw him yesterday, or t'other day Hamlet, ii. 1 

sleep which thou owed'st yesterday Othello, iii. 3 

this is his second fit; he liad one yesterday — iv. 1 

YESTERNIGHT, my lord, she ..Meas.forMeas.y. I 

talked with you yesternight out iit ..Much Ado, iv. 1 

that I yesterniglit maintained the change — iv. 1 

what yesternight our council did \HenrylV. i. 1 

of the charge set down yesterni||ht .. — i. 1 
current, that I told you yesternight — .11.1 

for yesternight by Catesby was \t.. liichard III. ni. 6 

she looked yesternight fairer Troilus * Cress. \. 1 

and yesternight, at supper JuUusCresur,h. 1 

yesternight vvas brought to bed.. TilusAndron. iv. 2 
aud yesternight returned my letter. Borneo A Jul- v. 3 
my lord, I think I saw him yesternight. Hain/ei, i. 2 

YESTY— the yesty waves confound Macbeth, iv. 1 

a kind of yesty collection, which carries.Homie/, v. 2 

YEW-stuck all with yew.. 7'wei/V/i Mglit, ii. 4 (song) 

slips of yew slivered in the moon's ..Macbeth, iv. 1 

their bows of double-fatal .yew Richardll. iii. 2 

unto the body of a dismal yew TitnsAmlron. ii. 3 

YEW-TREES lay thee all along.. «omeo Sf Juliet, v. 3 

as I did sleep under this yew-tree here — y. 3 

YIELD— never yields us kind answer .. 'iempes;, i. 2 

which throes thee much to yield — ii. 1 

I'll yield him thee asleep — iii. 2 

kill the bees, that yield it .. 7VoGen. of I'erona, 1. 2 

I'll force thee yield to my desire — .v. 4 

and makes milch-kine yield blood, ii/erry 'nues, IV. 4 

I can yield you none without Twelfth Nighl, ill. 1 

you must needs yield your reason .. — iii. 2 
I'd yield my body up to shame. .il/eas. /or Meas. 11. 4 
he'd yield them up, before his sister — .ii 4 

if I would yield him my virginity .. — iii. 1 

and yield me a direct answer — iv. 2 

cannot but yield you forth to — v. 1 

and I did yield to him — v. 1 

yawn, and yield your dead . . Much^do, v. 3 (song) 

I yield upon great persuasion — v. 4 

whether, if you yield not to Slid.N.'sDream,i. 1 

ere I will yield my virgin patent up — i. I 

Lysander, yield thy crazed title — i. 1 

or else the law of Athens yields you up — ..i. 1 

I yield you up my part _ — id- 2 

or yield up Aquitain Love's L.Lost, 11. ) 

all'liberal reason I will yield unto .. — ii. 1 
I would not yield to be your house's — .y. ; 

to yield myself his wife Merchant of I'enice.ii. I 

and yield to christian intercessors .. — iii. 3 
of force must yield to such inevitable — iv. 1 
and therefore I will yield: give me . . — iy. 1 
cannot so much asablossomyield./4syouLi7tei(, ii. 3 
if this uncouth forest yield any thing — ii. 6 
reasons of our state I cannot yield ..All's Well, in. \ 
I to her, and so she yields to me..Taming ofUh. ii. 1 
every tod yields— pound and odd. Winter' sTale, iv. 2 

I yield all this; but, for some — iv. 3 

hanging, yields a careful man work — ly. 3 

and to your power I'll yield. Comedy <!/■ Eirors, in. 2 

to yield possession to my holy — iy. 4 

why do I vield to that suggestion Macbeth, i. 3 

God yield'[Kn(.-eyld] ns for your pains — i. fi 

which must not yield to one of — V. 7 

then yield thee, coward, and live,... — V. 7 

I'll not yield, to kiss the ground — .v. 7 

of Bretagne, yield thee to my hand. . KingJolm, u. 1 
that it yields naught, but shame .... — iii. 4 

I shall yield up my crown — iy. 2 

ere further leisure yield them Richard II. i. 4 

yield stinging nettles to mine — ■!!■ ^ 

the means that heaven yields must.. — iij. 2 

what, will not this castle yield? — iii. 3 

his high sceptre yields to the possession — Iv. 1 

thy own hand yields thy death's — v. 5 

but if he will not yield, rebuke \HenryIV. v. 1 

unless thou vield thee as my — v. 3 

do ye yield, sir? or shall I sweat ,.2HenrylV. iv. 3 

and in that thought, yield me — iv. 3 

here he is; and here I yield him .... — iv. 3 

this bitter taste yield his — iy, 4 

he'll yield the crow a pudding one....He7iryr. ii. 1 
will you yield, aud this avoid? — iii. 8 



YIE 

YIELD— we yield our town, and lives.. Iltiiri/ »'. iii. 3 
ahall coucli duwii in fcitr, and yield.. — iv. ! 

slmll yield tlicni little, tell — iv.3 

yield, cur. Jc pensc, que V0U9 — iv. 4 

yet they do wink, niid yield; as love — v. 2 

yield diiy to night I comets Mlrnnjfl.i. 1 

cause him once more yield the ghost — I. 1 

1 must not yield to any rites of. — i. 2 

■hall yield the other in tcie right .... — ii. 4 

firotector, yield; yield Winchesiter .. — iii. 1 
le shall siibrait, or I will never yield — iii. I 
duke of Uloiiter, I will yield to thee — Iii. 1 

made me almost yield upon my knees — iii. 3 
renowned noble gentleman, yields up — iv. 4 

ere thou yield thy hi ealh — iv. 7 

■' is youtlifiil, and will quickly yield .. — v. 3 
then yield, ray lords; und here conclude — v. 5 

I'll make him yield the crowu •iHcmyl'l. i. 1 

be regent I will yield to him — i. 3 

I yield to thee, or to the meanest groom — ii. 1 
therefore yield, or die. As, for these.. — iv. 2 
and yield to mercy, whilst 'tis offered — iv. 8 
and oil his powers do yield; and humbly— iv. 9 

I'll yield myself to prison — iv. 9 

and therefore will not yield SHenryVl. i. 1 

yield to our mercy, proud Plantagenet — i. 4 

80 true men J ield, with robbers — i. 4 

Hercules himself must yield to odds — ii. 1 

didst yield consent to disinherit — ii. 2 

wilt tliou yield the crown? (rrp.) — ii. 2 

ere night yield both my life and them — ii. 5 

I humbly yield unto — iii. I 

more than I will yield unto — iii. 2 

yield not thy neck to fortune's yoke — iii. 3 

if France can yield relief — iii. 3 

requires, and mine can yield — iii. 3 

therefore I yield thee my free consent — iv. 6 

if Warwick yield consent — iv. 6 

Burgundy will yield hira help — iv. 6 

-- but yield me up the keys — iv. 7 

must yield my body to the earth (.rep.) — v. ^^ 

sheep doth yield his fleece — v. 6 

than death can yield me here Ilichard III. i. 3 

often did I strive to yield the ghost. . — i. 4 
Hastings will not yield to ou complots?- iii. I 
1 cannot, nor I will not yield to you — iii. 7 
as thou canst yield a melancholy .... — iv. 4 

day. yield me not thy light — iv. 4 

despairing, yield thy breath! — v. 3 

odilition yield to sinewy Ajux.. TroilutfyCresi. ii. 3 

Priam, yield not to him — v. 3 

or yield me this, to show him . . Timnn nf Athens, i. 2 
if money, and the season can yield it — iii. 6 

earth, yield me roots! — iv.3 

yield him, who all thy human sons.. — iv.3 
would yield ua but the superfluity ..Coriolanus, i. 1 
<"ommon body, to yield what passes here — ii. 2 
friendliness to yield your voicesy .... — ii.3 
have voices, that can yield them now — iii. I 
.^diles, seize him. Yield, Marcius, yield — iii. I 
all places yield to him ere he sits down — iv. 7 
with an oath, to yield to his couditions — v. 1 
upon the next encounter, yields ..JuUusCietar,\. 3 

1 am ashamed I d.d yield to them . . — ii. 2 
yield or thou diest. Only I yield to die — v. 4 
if thou so yield him, there isgold..4n^oni/ ScCleo. ii. 5 

he'll never yield to that — iii. 6 

coiu'tesy, 60 she yield us up? — iii. II 

and the gods yield you for tl — iv. 2 

fo to him, Dolabella, bid him yield.. — v. 1 
yield thee up my life — v. 1 

which your own coffers yieldl Cvmheline, i. 7 

mother should yield the world this ass! — ii. 1 

yield up their deer to the stand — ii. 3 

but that you shall not say I yield .. — iii. 3 

a villain: yield thee, thief — iv. 2 

why I should yield to thee? — iv. 2 

yield, rustic mountaineer — iv. 2 

yields a crop as if it had been sowed? — iv 2 
' promise to yield me often tidings — iv. 3 

• but yield mc to the veriest hind. — v. 3 

' yiela up rule, resign my life ..TittnAmlronicut^i.i 
' yield at entreats, and then let me alone — i. 2 

yield to his humour, smooth — v. 2 

• a substance that must yield to you Periclei, ii. 1 

to wisdom he's a fool that will not yield — ii. 4 
therefore briefly yield her; for she .... — iii. I 

to yield tliec so much profit — iv. 1 

wherein ray death might yield her profit — iv. 1 

city will yield many scholars — iv. 6 

now quit you well; yield Lear, ii. 1 

life would not yield to age — iv. I 

by no means will yield to sec his daughter — iv. 3 

w'hen life itself yields to the theft — iv. 6 

nor will it yield to Norway Ilamlei, iv. 4 

and nods, and gestures yield them — iv. 5 

yield <'p. O love, thy crown oiliello/m. 3 

YIELDED— what my -evenue yielded. . Tempett, i. 2 
as much as may be yielded to viTav^n.MuchAdo, iii. 1 

I have yielded: instruct my AU'i )»'W(, iii. 7 

more rich for what they yielded.. Winltr'sTale. v. 1 

thus have I yichled up into your KingJuhn, v. 1 

all Kent hath yielded; nothing there — T.I 

now give o'er the yielded set? — v. 2 

basely yielded ui>oii compromise.... /(iWiarrf //. ii I 
your northern caiitles yielded up .... — iii. 2 
Iiath yielded up his b^idy to the grave — v. 
saw me, and yielded; that I may ..'i Henri/ 1 1', iv. 3 

is Rouen yielded up? if Henry \ Henry I' I. \. I 

before I would have yielded to thi9..2Hfniv>'/. i. I 
the king hath yielded unto thy demand — v. I 

and look to have it yielded Ilirhard Itl. iii. I 

not replying, yieldeil to bear the golden — iii. 7 

for they hod so vilely yielded C'on'olanui, iii. 1 

a very little I have yielded too — v. 3 

yawned, and yielded up their dead. yii/iwC<»'iar, ii. 2 
nor must not then be yielded to..4n/ony ^C/«a. iii. 

mine lionour was not yielded — iii. 11 

my fleet hath yielded to the foe — iv. 10 

cafe be kept, aad truly yielded you, . Cymbeline, i. 7 



[ ^57 ] 



VIKLDED— Marina, for she was yielded. I'erielei. v. 3 
YlEl.DlOKSall things ealcli....;".'i.A'.'i/Jrram, iii. 2 
not born a yielder [K.if.-lo yield] ..Wtmiylf. v. 3 
true bed, and vielder up of breath. .2/;»-iii.v/;'. iv. 2 
YIELDING unthy body to my .. Meat, fbr Meat ii. 4 
no more yielding but a dream .. Mii/. A'. 'i Dr. (cpil.) 
how well lliis yielding rescues tliec.. Love'tL.L. i. 1 
from reason's yieldinif, your fair ir'p. I — ii. 1 
and yielding to him, humours.. C'om«/!/oA/?rr. iv. 4 

a yielding in tlie looks of Fronce King John, ii. 2 

I'll be the yielding water Richard It. iii. 3 

practised upon the easy yielding. ...2//piiij//<'. ii. 1 
therefore, patiently, and yielding .... Henry I', v. 2 
yielding to another when it blow8..3HrHii//7. iii. 1 
denies tl\o yielding of her u|>?7'roi;««'i C/rnWa, ii. 2 
treaty, where there was a yielding.. CVinn^iuuj, v. 5 
show me tlie way of yielding .. Antony isfCten. iii. 8 
her go back, even to the yielding ....Cymbeline, i. 5 
not impute this yielding to light.. liomeoSr Jul. ii. 2 

the voice and yielding of that body Uaml^i, i. 3 

YOKE of Ills discarded men Merry ICivei, ii. I 

do not these fair yokes become 
needs thrust thy neck into a yi 
savage bull doth bear the yoke 
whose unwished yoke my soul.. A/ iJ. A'. '5 Dream, i. 1 

stretched his j'oke in vain — ii. 2 

do bear an equal yoke of \ove.Merch. of Venice, iii. 4 
our country sinks beneath the j'oke ..Mactielh, iv. 3 
shall sliake off our slavish yoke ....Richard It. ii. 1 
how a good yoke of bullocks at .,.,2HenryIt\ iii. 2 

come underneath the yoke of — iv. 4 

bring him in obedience to your yoke. I Henry VI. i. 1 
can I bear this shameful yoke? ....IHenryVl. ii. 4 

thy neck to fortune's yoke 3 Hem y /'J. iii. 3 

Bunder them that yoke so well together — iv. 1 

we'll yoke together, like — iv. 6 

the golden yoke of sovereignty. . . . Richard III, iii. 7 

bearshalf my burdened yoke — iv. 4 

underneath the yoke of tyranny .... — v. 2 
may your highness yoke together. Hejiri/ /'/;/ iii. 2 
J'oke you like draught oxen.. fruilnsSfCreaiida, ii. I 
nor yoke with him for tribune .... Coriotanns, iii. I 

underneath this age's yoke JuliutCwsar, i. 2 

our yoke and sufferance show us ... . — i. 3 

here did put the yoke upon us Cymbeline, Vu. 1 

will not endure his yoke — iii. 5 

yoke me in my good brother's fault. . — iv. 2 
nobly lie yokes a smiling with a sigh — iv. 2 

to yoke the enemies of Rome TitusAndton. i.2 

to thee, and to thy Roman yoke .... — i. 2 
bad bondmen to the yoke of Rome .. — iv. 1 
with aged patience bear your yoke ....Pericles, ii. 4 
the yoke of inauspicious stars ..Romeo ^Juliet, v. 3 
YOKED— 80 yoked by a fool . Two (ten.of Verona, i. 1 
and my name be yoked with his .. tVinier'sTale, i. 2 
O Cassius, you are yoked with ..JuliusCitaar, iv. 3 
hath yoked a nation strong. . . . Titus Andronicus, i. I 
that's but yoked, may draw with you. .Olhello, iv. 1 

YOKE-DEVILS sworn to cither's thnryV. ii. 2 

YOKE-FELLOWS in arras, let us to France— ii. 3 
yoke-fellow to his honour-owing wounds — iv. 6 

and thou his yoke-fellow of equity Lear, iii. 6 

YOKETH your rebellious necks I Henry I't. ii. 3 

YON— to yon foolish lout ..TiroGen. ofVetona, iv. 4 
get thee to yon same sovereign .. Tweljlh Aight, ii. 4 

yon gull Malvolio is turned — iii. 2 

than all yon fiery oes and eyes ..Mid.N.'i Dr iii. 2 
Nerissa, cheer yon stranger ..Merch. of Venice, iii. 2 
shrewd contents in yon Slime paper.. — iii. 2 
that yon green boy shall have no ..King John, ii. 2 
throw thine eye on yon young boy .. — iii. 3 

by yon tuft ot trees, manned Richard II. ii. 3 

the limits of yon lime and stone .... — iii. 3 

on yon proud man — iii. 3 

bind thou up yon dangling apricocks — iii. 4 

behold yon poor and starved HenryV. iv. 2 

yon island carri.ns, desperate — iv. 2 

ride thou unto the horsemen on yon hill — iv. 7 1 

I'll to yon corner. And I this \ Hcnrj^f/. ii. I 

I'll turn von fellow in his grave ....Richardlll. i. 2 
not yon Diomed, with Calclias'. Troilui 4- Cress, iv. 6 I 

yon towers, whose wanton tops — iv. 6 

licre's a letter from yon poor girl ... . — v. 3 ' 
is yon despised and ruinous .. Timon of Athens, iv. 3 ! 

by yon clouds, let me deserve Coriolanus,\\\. I i 

if Jupiter should from yon cloud .... — iv. 5 

and yon grey lines, that fret JnlinsCirsar, ii. 1 : 

set we our squadrons on yon side.4n<ony ^ Cleo. iii. 8 i 

yon ribald-rid nag of Egypt — iii. 8 

up to yon hill, your legs are young. CymWi'iif, iii. 3 
by you bush? pray, how far thither? — iv. 2 j 
as yon grim looks do testify ....Peticlet,\. ((iower) 1 
to taste the fruit of yon celestial tree .. — i. 1 

save yon field of stars — *• ' 

yon king's to mc, like to my father's .. — ii. 3 

yon knight, methiiiks, doth sit — ii.3 

imd yon tall anchoring hark Lear, iv. 6 t 

behold yon simpering dame — iv. 6 

see how yon justice rails on j'on simple.. — iv. 6 
nurse; what is 3'on gentleman?, .liomeo fir Juliet, i. 5 
nightly she sings on yon pomegranate — iii. 5 

yon light is not the daylight — iii. 5 ' 

say, yon grey is not the morning's eye — iii. 6 

under yon yew-trees lay thee — v. 3 ; 

when yon same star, that's westward ..Hamlet, i. 1 ■ 
o'er the dew of yon high eastern hill .... — i. 1 

YOND' tame black cloud (rep.) Tempest, ii. 2 

yond' huge one, looks like — ii. 2 1 

do not marry me to yond' fool .... Merry IVivei, Iii. 4 ! 

madam, vond' young fellow Twelfth Kinht, i. S 

[C.-yond' K.-yondcrJgeneration..W<-ui. /or.W^ai. iv. 3 
question yond* man. if he for ....4s you Like it, ii. 4 

not honest: yond's that same Atl'sll'elt, Iii. 5 

Bolingbroke, ifor yond', metbinks .Richard II. iii. 3 
but yond' man's ever angry.... Titnon of Athens, i. 2 
yond' coign o' the Capitol; yond' ..Coriolanus.v. 4 

yond' Cassius has a lean and Julius Ctrsar, i. 2 

whether yond' troops arc friend .... — v. 3 

sir. yond s your place Pericles, ii. 3 

what torch is yond', that vainly .Romeo ^Juliet, v. 3 



YOR 

VOND'— by yond' marble heaven Olhello, iii. 3 

YONDER— what Ihou see'st yonder Tempest, i. » 

yonder is Silvia; and Tiro(jeu. of Verona, \. 4 

look, who comes yonder Merty Hives, ii. I 

yonder he is coming, this way — iii. I 

f'ondcr is a moi.t reverend gentleman — iii. I 
le so takes on yonder with my husband — ir. 2 

I cume yonder at Eton to — v. S 

he has been yonder i' the sun Taelfth Sight, |l. i 

Fabian can scarce hold hira yonder.. — iii. 4 
there's one yonder arrested Meas.forMeas. i. i 

fonder man Is carried to prison — i.2 

came yonder from a great supper . . Much Ado, i. 3 

yonder's old coil at home — v. 2 

yonder Venus in her glimmering. .VIti.A'.'«Dr. iii. 2 
thy love comes; yonder is thy dear.. — iii. 2 
and yonder shines Aurora's harbinger — iii. 2 
jiat as I told you, yonder she comes — y. 1 

upon the edge of yonder coppice.. Lore^sL.Losi, iv. I 

yonder, sir, he walks Merchant oj Venice, Ii. 2 

by yonder moon, I swear, you do.... — v. 1 

yonder comes my master As youLike il, i. 1 

yonder they lie; the poor old man .. — i.2 

yonder, sure, they are coming — i.2 

IS yonder the man? — i.2 

yonder is heavy news within AlVslVell, iii. 2 

nmdum, yonder's my lord your son.. — iv. 5 

yonder he is; deny him Taming nfShrtw, v. 1 

but, soft! who wafts us yonder?. Comedy of Err. ii. 2 

my wife is coming yonder — iv. 4 

softly: yonder, as I think, he walks — v. I 

demand of yonder champion Richard II. i. 3 

ask yonder knight in arms — i. 3 

yonder he comes; and that arrant ..2//cnrj//r. ii. 1 
the morning which breaks yonder? ..HenryV. iv. 1 
we see yonder the beginning of the day — iv. 1 

call yonder fellow hither — iv. 7 

in yonder tower, to overpeer I Henry I' I. i. 4 

a torch from yonder tower (rep.) .... — iii. 2 

yonder's the head of that arch- 3HenryVI.ii.2 

brave followers, yonder stands — v. 4 

and yonder is the wolf, that makes . . — v. 4 

beware of yonder dog: look Ilichard III. i. 3 

yonder comes Paris (rep.) .... Troilus <j- Cressida, i. 2 
sneaking fellow comes yonder? (re;).) — i.2 

yonder comes the troop — iv. 5 

lo, Jupiter is yonder, dealing lifel .. — iv. 5 
1 wom'.er now how yonder city stands — iv. 5 
for yoider walls, that pertly tront .. — iv. 5 
no, yonder 'tis; there, where we see.. — v. I 
by all Diana's waiting-women yonder — v. 2 
then if he yonder, and there the strawy — v. i 
by tile flame of yonder glorious heaven — v. B 
by good hap, yonder's my lord .. 7'imono/Alh. iii. 2 
yonder comes a poet, and a painter . . — i v. 3 

yonder comes news: a wager Coriolanus, i. 4 

who's yonder, that does appear as.... — i. 6 

and swim to yonder point? JuliusCcesar, i. 2 

brought thee up to yonder troops .... — v. 3 
lo, yonder; and Titinius mourning it — v. 3 
and yonder, Cocsar. If wecomposC/liKony^'C/eo. ii.2 

where yonder pine does stand — iv. 10 

and j'onder they cast their caps up .. — iv. 10 
but yonder sits the emperor.. TitusAndronicus. iv. 4 
enrich the hand of yonder knight. .itomeo ^Jul. i. 5 
as yonder lady o'er her fellows shows — i. 5 
light through yonder window breaksl — ii. i 
lady, by yonder blessed moon I swear — ii. 2 
lace the severing clouds in yonder east — iii. 5 
from off the battlements of yonder tower — iv. 1 
do you see yonder cloud, that's almost. HamM, iii. 2 
60 would I iia' done, by yonder sun — iv. 6 (song) 
but, look! what liglitscome yonder?.... 0/AeUo, i. 2 
good my lord, yonder's foul murder .... — v. 2 

YORICKT'S scull, the king's iester Hamlet, v. 1 

alas, poor Yoriekl I knew him, Horatio — v. 1 

YORK-good old York there see Richard II. i. i 

be York the next that must be — ii. 1 

Richard! York is too far gone in.... — ii. 1 

here comes the duke of York — ii. 2 

that's as York thrives to beat hack .. — ii. 2 
what power the duke of York had levied — ii. 3 

keeps good old York there — ii.3 

regent of this land, the duke of York — ii. 3 
I know, my uncle York hath power — iii. 2 
your uncle York hath joined with .. — iii. S 
good duke of York's that tell black — iii. 4 

why, York, what wilt thou do? — v. 2 

sweet York, sweet husband {rep. v. 3) — v. 2 
I doubt not but to ride as fast as York — v. 2 
who, travelling towards York, with — v. i 
kind uncle York, the latest news .... — v. 6 
hie uncle York;— where I first bowed.l Henry/;', i. 3 
the archbishop. Of York, is't not? .. — i. 3 
of Sciitland, and of York, tojoin .... — 1.3 

my lord of York commends (rep.) .. — ii.3 

the archbishop's grace of York — iii. 2 

towards York shall bend vou — v. 5 

the gentle archbishop of York is up..2Heiiry/;'. i. 1 

what, to York? Call him _ i. i 

have been well on your way to York ii. 1 

your grace of York, in God's name .. — iv. I 
my lord of York, it better showed .. — iv. 2 

to York, to present execution — iv.3 

lake it. brave York; now, soldiers.. ..Henry/', iv. 3 

the duke of York commends him..,. Iv. 6 

and York, all haggled over, comes .. — iv. 6 
Edward tlic duke of York, the earl. . — iv. 8 1 
if thou be not then created York .... 1 Henry VI. ii. 4 
sweet stem from York's great stock.. — ii. 5 I 

famoiii Edmund Langley. duke of York ii. i 

belong unto the house ot York — iii. 1 

with the valiant sword of York — iii. i 

princel.T duke of York (rep.) iii. j 

in honour of my noble lord of York — Iii. 4 

as good a man as York. Hark ye.... — iii. 4 

the duke of York and him (rep.) .... jv. 1 

cousins both, of York and Somerset (rep,)— Iv. 1 ' 

cousin of York (rrp.) (y, J 

to Bourdeauz Yorkl else far«widl , - iv.3 



7- 



YOR 



[ 858 



YOU 



— V. ^ 

— V. 3 

— V. 3 
2 Henry VI. i. 1 

_ i. 1 



YORK, and Talbot, too rashly plotted IHenry VI. iv. i 

great York might bear the name — iv. 4 

cries out fur noble Yorlt and Somerset — iv. 4 

York set him on, York sliould liave i^rep.)— iv. 4 

York lies; he might have sent — iv. 4 

had York and Somerset brought — iv. 7 

be patient. York; if We cunclude — v. 4 

cousin of Y'ork, we liere trep.) iHeniyVI.i. \ 

brave York, Salisbury, and victorious — i. 1 

brotlier York, thy uets in Ireland — i. I 

and so says York, for lie liath — ;• I 

BO York nrust sit, and fret, and bite.. — i. 1 

tlien, York, be still a wJiile — i. ' 

bear tire arms of York, to grapple — — i. 1 

and grumbling York (.re;;, iii. 1) — 1.3 

as for the duke of Y'ork— this late .. — i. 3 

Somerset, or York, aK's one to me trep) — i. 3 

let York be regent, I will yield — 1.3 

York is the worthier cr"^?.) — !• 3 

York is most unmeet of any man — i. 3 

of York excuse himself 1 (»t'p.) — i. 3 

Richarddukeof York, was rightful — J. 3 

scouring rav lord of York's armour.. — 1.3 

because in York this breeds suspicion — i. 3 

my lord of York, to be the post — i. 4 

Bweet York, begin; and if thy claim — ii. 2 

was Edmund Laiigley, duke of York — ii. 2 

York claims it from the third — ii. 2 

their deaths, if York can prophecy . . — n. 2 

make the duke of York a king — u. 2 

and touching the duke of York — n. 3 

York, and impious Beaufort, that false — n. 4 

and dogned York, that reaches at — iii. 1 

ah, York, no man alive (rep.) — ii;. 1 

if York, with ail his far-fet policy .. — lii. I 

no more, good York (rep.) — in. 1 

my lord of York, try {rep.) — in. } 

now, York, or never — ni- ' 

Bfl'eet the house and claim of York.. — ' in. 1 

and now the house of York, thrust from — iv. 1 

Cade, the duke of York hath taught — i v. 2 

the duke ot York is newly come — iv. 9 

twixt Cade and York distressed .... — iv. 9 

and now is York in arms — iv. 9 

from Ireland tlius comes York — v. 1 

York, if thou meanest well — v. 1 

York,Icommend this (re;).) — v. 1 

for thousand Yorks he shall not hide — v. 1 

then, York, unloose thy long-imprisoned — v. 1 

i arrest thee, York, of capital treason — v. 1 

the bastard boys of York {rep.) — v. 1 

this is my king, York, I do not mistake — v. 1 

then, nobly, York ; 'tis for a crown . . — v. 2 

what seest tliou in me, York? "■ " 

York not our old men spares 

an infant of the house of York . . , 

battle, won by famous York 

victorious prince of York 

possess it, York; for this is thine . 

unless Plantagenet, duke of York .. — i. 1 

let us assail the family of York — i. 1 

thou factious duke of York, descend — i. 1 

hemade thee duke of York (lep.).... — i. 1 

unto this princely duke of York — i. 1 

be tliou a prey unto tlie house of York — i. I 

now York and Lancaster are reconciled — i. 1 

unto the house of York (rtp.) — i. 1 

the sight of any of the house of York — i. 3 

look, York; I stained this napkin .. — 1.4 

alas, poor York! but that I hate .... — i. 4 

grieve, to make me merry, York .... — i. 4 

York cannot speak, unless he irep.) — i. 4 

and set it on York gates (icp.) — i. 4 

when as the noble duke of York was — u. 1 

on the gates of York they set the same — li. 1 

duke ol York, our prop to lean upon — li. 1 

valiant lord, theduke of York is.... — ii. 1 

earlof March, but duke of York — ii. 1 

to this brave town of York — ii- 2 

ambitious York did level at thy ... . — ii. 2 

ah, cousin York! would tliy best friends — n. 2 

backing of the duke of York — u. 2 

and old York, and yet not satisfied . . — ii. 2 

for York in justice puts his armour on — ii. 2 

is for the duke of York — ii. 4 

that stabbed tliy father York — ii. 4 

came on the part of York — i;. 5 

Btrengthennig mis-proud York — u. 6 

no ground unto the house of York .. — ii. 6 

come York, and Richard, Warwick. . — ii. 6 

of York. From off the gates of York — ii. 6 

didst love York, and I am son to York — ii. B 

York and young Rutland could not — ii. 6 

in quarrel of the house of York — iii. 2 

ambitious Edward duke of York.... — id. 3 

and I the liouse of York (lep.) — lu. 3 

to create you duke of York — iv. 3 

my brother archbishop of York — iv. 3 

farewell, good duke of York — iv. 3 

committed to the bishop of York .... — iv. 4 

haven before the gates of York — iv. 7 

Edward, at the least, is duke of York — iv. 7 

let's harbour here in York — iv. 7 

Btillremain the duke of York — v. 1 

Bold their lives unto the house of York — v. 1 

who is victor, York, or Warwick? .. — v. 2 

like a subject, proud ambitious York! — v. & 
1 by this sun of York; and all the ..Richard III. i. 1 

when my father York and Edward wept — i. 2 

did Y'ork's dread curse prevail so much — i. 3 

during the wars of York and Lancaster — i. 4 

when that our princely father York — i. 4 

my son of York hath almost — ii. 4 

how, my young York? I pr'ythee let — ii. 4 

I pr'ythee, pretty York, who told.« . . — ii. 4 

my mother, and my brother York {rep.) — iii. 1 

to send the duke of York unto his .. — iii. 1 

from his motlier win the duke of York — iii. 1 

here comes the duke of York («p.).. — iii. 1 

our cousin, noble lord of York? (ri-p.) — iii, 1 



YORK-this little prating Yor\.... Richard III. iii. ! 

noble York, my princely father — iii. 5 

the prince, and my younj; son of York — iv. 1 
I'll salute your grace of York as mother — iv. I 

young York he is but boot — iv. 4 

farewell, York's wife, and queen of sad — iv. 4 
thereon engrave, Edward, and York — iv. 4 
what heir of York is there alive (rep.) — iv. 4 
the wronged heirs of York do pray .. — v. 3 
all this divided York and Lancaster — v. 4 

cardinal of York (rep. ii. 2) Henry VIII. i. 1 

my lord of York (7 ep. iii. I) — n. 2 

Northnniberhind arrested him at York — iv. 2 

YORK-PLACE, where the ieast Henry VIII. iv. 1 

von must no more enll it York-place — iv. 1 

YbRKSHIRE-sheriff of Yorkshires Hcjiryfr. iv. 4 
my lie"e, in Yorkshire are in arms.;i(c/rui(( III. iv. 4 

YOUNG-I'll get thee young sea-mells. Tempest, ii. 2 

whilst I visit young Ferdinand — iii. 3 

the eyes of this yonng couple — iv. 1 

how young Leahder crossed . TwoGen.of Verona, i. 1 

the young and tender wit — .;. 1 

a young wench that had buried — ;;■ I 

his years but ydung, but his — .ii. 4 

to hate young Valentine — in. 2 

now, my young guestl --.. ly. 1 

if I were young again Merry litres,]. 1 

Iknow the young gentlewoman .... — i. 1 

and here young master Slender — i. 1 

would I were young, for your sake .. — i. 1 

young ravens must have food — }.3 

run in here, good young man — i. 4 

if he had found the young man (rep.) — i. 4 
the young man is an honest man.... _ — i. 4 
you are not young, no more am I — ii. 1 (letter) 

to show himself a yoimg gallant! — ii. I 

why, sir, my wife is not young — n. 1 

Ibotli young and old — .ii. ' 

what say you to young master Fenton? — ui. 2 
I'll but bring my young man here to — iv. 1 
at the gate a young gentlemsm....Twel/lhKighl,]. 5 

'tis a fair yonng man — j- 5 

yond young fellow swears he — i. 5 

nor young enough for a boy — _i. 6 

my life upon't, voung though thou art — ii. 4 
madam, the yoimg gentleman irep.) — iii. 4 
come, my young soldier, put up .... — iv. 1 
when your young nephew Titus .... — v.! 
a young man more iit to do .... Meas./orMeas.u. 3 

vouchsafe a word, yoimg sister — iii. I 

first here's young master Rash — iv. 3 

young Dizy, and young master — iv. 3 

and young Drop-heir that killed .... — iv. 3 
much honour on a young Floientine. Much Ado, i. 1 

is there no young squarer now — i. 1 

is she not a modest young lady? .... — i. 1 
prompting me how fair young Hero is — i. 1 
that young start-up hath all the glory — i. 3 
had got the good-will of this young lady — n. 1 
how noble, young, how rarely featured — iii. 1 

what have 1 done being young — v. 1 

we should have been too young for them — v. 1 

to call young Claudio to (lep.) ^— v. 4 

withering out a young man's ..Mid.N.'sDream, i. 1 
spite! too old to be engaged to young! — _i. 1 

thenrich with my young squire — ii. 2 

I miglit see young Cupid's fiery shaft — 11.2 
BO I, Deing young, till now ripe not.. — ii. 3 
is't not enough, young man, that I.. — li. 3 
a tedious brief Bcene ot j-oung Pyramus — y. 1 
appertaining to thy young days ..Iove'sL.Losl,\. 2 
young Duraain, a well-accomplished — _ii. I 
young blood will not obey an old.... — iv. 3 

your stomachs are too young — iv. 3 

few taller are so young — y. 2 

Faulconbridge, the young baron. .il/cr. of Venice, 1. 2 
how like you the young German .... — i- 2 

pluck the young sucking cubs from. . — ii. 1 

master, young man, you irep.) — u- 2 

youof young master Launcelot? (icp.) — 11.2 

lor the young gentleman (rep.) — in 2 

my young master doth expect your. . — n. 6 
young in limbs, in judgment .. — 11. 7 (scroll) 

at your gate a young Venetian — .n- 9 

than young Alcides, when he — lU- 2 

both accoutered like young men — in. 4 

commend a young and learned doctor — iv. 1 
with me a young doctor of Rome — iv. I (letter) 
never knew so young a body with — iv. 1 (letter) 
O wise young judge, liow do I — iv. 1 

excellent young man! — iv. 1 

did young Lorenzo swear he loved her — v. 1 

I'll mar the young clerk's pen — . y. 1 

brother, you are too young in t\dB.AsyoxiLtke U, 1. 1 
many young gentlemen flock to him — 1. 1 
vour brother is but young and tender — 1. 1 
It is the stubbornest young fellow of — i. 1 
is not one so young and so villanous — i. 1 

as pigeons feed their young — !■ 2 

tluee proper young men, of excellent — 1.2 
alas, he is too young; yet he looks .. — 1.2 
young man, have you challenged — — 1.2 
young gentleman, your spirits are too — 1. 2 

young sir, your reputation shall not — i. 2 

where is this young gallant, that is so — 1. 2 
Hercules be thy speed, young man! irep.) — i. 2 

what is thy name, young man? — 1. 2 

had I before known this young man — 1.2 

1 was too young that time to value.. — _;. 3 
whati my young master! O my gentle — n. 3 
a young man, and an old, in solemn — 11. 4 
here's a young maid with travel much — ii. 4 
that young swain that you saw here — 11. 4 
if ladies be but young, and fair ...... — .11. 7 

here comes young master Ganymede — !!!• ^ 
it is young Orlando (rep. iv. 3) ...... — 111.2 

he trots hard with a young maid .... — in. ^ 

that abuses our young plants with .. — 111.2 
truly, young gentlemen, though there — v. 3 
welcome, young man; thou oft'er'Bt.. — v. 1 



YOUNG gentlewoman had a father ....AU'slVell, i I 

young Bertram (rep. ii. 3) — 1.3 

observe to-day in our young lords.. ., — 1.2 

for young Charbon the puritan, and old — i. 3 

it was with me, when I was young .. — i. 3 

farewell, young lord (rep.) — ii. 1 

too young, and the next year — ii. 1 

to be young again, if we could — ii. 2 

you are too young, too liappy, and too — ii. 3 

she is young, wi^e, iair: in these .... — ij. 3 

a young man, married, is a miin .... — ii. 3 

I take my young lord to he a very .. — iii. 2 

two soldiers and my young lady — iii. 2 

those suggestions for the young earl — iii. i 

this young maid might do her — iii. 5 

he hath perverted a young gentlewoman — iv. 3 

for I knew tlie young count to be.... — iv. 3 

that lascivious young boy the count — iv. 3 

I long to talk with the young noble — iv. 5 

tlie yonng lord did to his majesty.... — v. 3 

she feels her yonng one kick — V. 3 

achieve not this young modest.... Taming of Sh. i. 1 

scatters young men through the world — i- 2 

wealth enougli, and young — i. 2 

how the young folks lay their heads — i. 2 

I have lighted well on this young man — i. 2 

give unto you this young scholar .... — ii. 1 

to be but young and light — ii. 1 

sucli a young one. Now, by Saint (rep.) — ii. 1 

I young. And may not young men die — ii. 1 

sirrah, young gamester, your father — ii. 1 

young budding virgin, fair — iv. 5 

comfort of your young prince fVirtler's Tale, i. 1 

not crossed the eyes of my young.... — i. 2 

are you so fond of your young prince — i. 2 

thyself, and my young rover, he's .. — _ i. 2 

the young prince; wliose honourable — iii. 2 

if young Doricles do light upon her — iv. K 

when I was young, and handed love — iv.,J 

how prettily the young swain seems — H. 3 

mark your divorce, young sir — iti>3 

and leave this 3'oung man in pawn .. — iys'; 

not be so young as was your former ,. — v.ei 

quitted with this young prince — \i ji 

when she was young, you wooed her — vo3 

my young remembrance cannot 2V/ac6e//i, iir3 

we are vet but young in deed — iii, 1 

will flgKt, her young ones in her nest — iv. •' 

what, you egg? young fry of treachery? — iv. i- 

I am young; but something you — iv. 3 

kiss the ground before young Malcolm's — v.f 
the same into young Arthur's huni.. King John, heft 

stands young Plantagenet; son to .. — Wi ' 

namely, this young prince — Si 

young Arthur, duke of Bretagne (rep.) — i <. 

is the young Dauphin every way — iit'r. 

what say these young ones? — ?!"'' 

it likes us well; young princes — ii. £ 

old men, young men, maids — .!!• * 

throw thine eye on yon young — 111.3 

young Arthur is my son — !)!■'! 

gain by young Arthur's fall? (rep.).. — 111. 4 

look to't; young lad, come forth — iv. 1 

when I was in France, young gentlemen — iv. 1 

read here, young Arthur: how now.. — iv. 1 

both mine eyes? Young boy, I must — iv. 1 

young Arthur's death (rep.) — iv. 2 

young Arthur is alive (rep. V. 1) — iv. 2 

after young Arthur, claim this — y. 2 

lusty, young and cheerly drawing ..Richard II. 1. 3 

for young hot colts, being raged — — ii. 1 

than was that 3'oung and princely .. — ii. 1 

his young son Henry Percy (,rep. ii. 3) — 11. 2 

being tender, raw, and young — 11. 3 

Black Prince, that young Mars of men — n. 3 

both young and old rebel, and all .. — 111.2 

I am too youn" to be your father.... — iii. 3 

greedy looks ot young and old through — v. 2 

while he, young, wanton, and effeminate — v. 3 

young Harry Percy (rep.) \HmryIV.\. 1 

sweet young prince; but, Hal, I pr'ythee — 1. 2 

Boft as young down, and therefore lost — _i. 3 

what, ye knaves? young men must live — ii. 2 

nay, I'll tickle ye for a young prince — ii. * 

where, being but young, I framed ;. — in. I 

wild as yonng bulls. 1 saw young Harry — iv. 1 

young Hotspur (rep. i. 3) IHenry IV. (indue.) 

young prince John, and Westmoreland — i. 1 

tliat voung Harry Percy's spur was cold — i. 1 

under the conduct of young Lancaster — i. 1 

what! a young knave, and beg! — 1.2 

the young prince hath misled (>ep.) — 1. 2 

the capacities of us that are young .. — i. 2 

and will you yet call yourself young? — >. 2 

and the young lion repents — 1.2 

than he can part young limbs ...... — .1.2 

how many good young princes — 11.2 

a good shallow young fellow — 11. 4 

e'er a scurvy yonng boy of them all — .11. 4 

a good limbed fellow; young, strong — iii. 2 

if the young dace be a bait for — 111.2 

this same young sober-blooded boy.. — iv. 3 

are there no young pigeons? — v. 1 

I think, the young king (rep. V. 3) .. ..— v. t 
silken streamers the young .. Henry V. in. (chorus^' 

as young as I am, I have observed .. — ni. i 
I will proclaim young Henry king. . 1 Henry VI. 1. I 

red rose, with young Somerset — ii. 4 

for that (young king Richard thus . . — 11. & 

some part of my young years might — .11. 

for there young Henry, with his nobles — in. ^ 

when I was young, (as yet I am not old) — in. 4 

and on his son young John irep.) — iv. ■< 

O young John TalbotI Hrep. iv. 7) . . — V- ^ 

young Talbot (rep. iv. 7) — V^-' 

how the young whelp of Talbot's .... — "• 

alas! my years are young — .y.-~ 

way her harmless young one went .2HeTtryVJ. ni. ^ 

as wild Jledea young Absyrtus did .. — ,„ X- f 
young Rutland {rep. ii. 2 and ii. 6).,ZBenryVI. a. 1 



YOU 

YOTTNQ-spoils Iier young before her .SUeuiyri. ii. 2 

creatures teed tlii'ir young — ii. 2 

their own lives in their young'8 defence — ii. 2 

my ewes linve Ixen witli young — ii, i 

and his son viiung I'MwnnI, and all.. — iii, 'J 

queen nnil this young prince ugrco .. — iii. 3 

tlmt voung priiiee Kdwurd nutrries., — iv. I 

my liege, it IS young Henry, earl of. . — iv. fl 

brave young prince! thy famous .. .. — v. -t 

can so young a thorn begin to prick? — v. 5 

have rid tliis sweet yoimg prince .... — v. 5 

where my poor youiig was liincd .... — v. 6 

young Ned, for thee, iliine uncles. ... — v. 7 

mode liy my young lord, and tlice! .Richard III. i. 2 

'twas I that stabbed .voung Edward — i. 2 

young, valiant, wise, and, no doubt.. — i. 2 

all, he is young; and his minority .. — US 

your yoimg nobility could judge .... — i. 3 

of the young prince your son — ii. 2 

from Ludlow the young ()rince be ., — ii. 2 

why, my young cousin? It is good .. — ii. 4 

when he wusyonng, so long a growing — ji. 4 

how, my young York? 1 pr'ytncc let — ii. 4 

BO wise so youn", they say, do ne'er — iii. I 

so cunning, and so young, is wonderful — iii. 1 

the prince, and my youn" son of York — iv. I ! 

60 young, so old a widow! — iv. 1 

young lidward lives: tliink now what — iv. 2 

aims at voung Elizabeth, my brother's — iv. 3 

young York he is but boot — iv. 4 

off goes young George's head — iv. 4 

is young George Stanley living? — v. 4 

you are young, sir Harry Guilford. .//cmyr///. i. 4 

they were young, and liandsouie — ii. 2 (letter) 

wv lid not be a young co\oit in your way — ii. 3 

•n»vry, this is yet but young, and may — iii. 2 

our chaste loves, his young (laughter — iv. 2 

.8 voung and of a noble niodest nature — iv. 2 

. fair young maid that yet " ants .... — V. 2 

have this young one made — v. 2 

ner young or old, he or she — V. 3 

is very young; and yet will.. Ti oilus 4 Creu. i. 2 

he so young u man, and so old .. .. ~. i. 2 

lave ayouu!' conception in my.... — i. 3 

. t much unlike young men — ii. 2 

dj not you follow the young lord Paris? — iii. 1 

h must grieve youn" Pyrrlius now .. — iii. 3 

he young prince will go mad — iv. 2 

.lever did young man fancy witii so.. — v. 2 

how now, young man? niean'st — v. 3 

10, 'fttitii, young Troilus; doff _ v, 3 

"»ii6b young knave's sleeve of Troy — y. 4 

t same young Trojan ass — v. 4 

is young and opt; our own. Tinton of Athens^ i. 1 

, young; coward, valiant — iv. 3 

ju ever young, fresh, loved — iv. 3 

ged interpreter, tliongli young in days — v. J 

loble, and young, wlien thy first griefs — v. 5 

iielp him, young and old! Coriolanus.Vu. 1 

and my young boy hath an aspect .. — v. 3 ; 
lowliness is young ambition's ....JuliutCcesar,V\. \ 

thou Shalt discourse to young Octavius — iii. I | 

youJig Octavius, come (rep.) — iv. 3 j 

I know, young bloods look for a time — iv. 3 

young man, thou couUlst not die more — V. 1 

and come, young Cat') {;ep. v. 4) — v. 3 

1 must to ttieyounc man se.ni..Aniony fycico. iii. 9 

young hoys, and girls, are level DOW — iv. 13 } 

I was then a young traveller Cymbeline, 1.5 1 

you clasp young Cupid's tables iii. 2 

your legs are young; I'll tread — iii. 3 

strains his young nerves, and puts .. — iii. 3 

no less young, more strong, not beneath — iv. 1 

all lovers young, all lovers muft — iv. 2 (song) 

young one, inform us of thy fortunes — iv. 'J 

tliou,'h Cloten then but young — iv. 4 

ond beget young gibbets. I never saw — v. 4 

these two young gentlemen, tliat call — v. 5 

let not young Mutius then; TitiisAndrouictu, i. 2 

1 do remit these young men's heinous — i. 2 

young lords, beware! an* sltontd the — ii. 1 

when did the tiger's young ones teach — ii. 3 

thy sight is young, nnd thou Shalt read — iii. 2 

you're a young huntsman, Marcus .. — iv. ! 

and now, young lords, wos't not .... — iv. 'i 

here's a young lad framed of another — iv. 2 

to press heaven in my young days .. — iv. 3 

young prince of Tyre, vou (rc/i.) rericki.i. 1 

too young for such a iilace — iii. 1 

steal the eyes of young and old — iv. 1 

come, you are a young foolish sapling — iv. 3 

corae young one, I like the manner.... — iv. 3 

did you goto it so young? were you .. — iv. 6 
sir, this young fellow's mother could ....Lcar,i.\ 

to wliose young love the vines of France — i. 1 

80 young, and BO untender! So young .. i. I 

not so young, sir, to love a woinaii for .. — i. 4 

since my young lody's going into France — i. 4 

its liead bit off by its young _ i. 4 

come on, young master. Weapons! — ii. 2 

strike ber young bones, you taking airs ii. 4 

we that ore young, shall never sec so much — v. 3 

Is the day so young, lint new Homro ^- Juliet, i. I 

18 do lusty young men feel when.... — i. 2 - 

a8 big as a young C'ckrel's stone .... — 1.3 1 

Oman, young lady! ludy, sncli a man — 1.3 1 

read o'er the volume of young Paris' face i. S j 

ray young lady asked for — i. 3 > 

young Miintogue is't? 'Tis he i. 5 1 

that, I tliink.be young Petrucliio .. — i. 5 | 
young affection gaiws to be his heir — i. 5 (choruB) 1 

Bon and heir, young Adum Ciipid.... — ii. I 

young son, it argues a disteiniiered head — ii. 3 

young men's love then lies not truly ii. 3 

come, young vsuvcrer.ciimc go witli me ii. 3 ! 

Tflud the young Koineo? I can tell(T(r;>.) — ii. 4 i 

my young lad v bade me enquire yet out — ii 4' 

for the gentle" onmn is young _ ii. 4 

the nan, slain by young Komco .... — iii. 1 | 

as young OS I, Juliet thy love — iii. 3 

i 



[ 859 ] 



YOUNO, and noble gentleman ..Romeo 4- Juliet, iii. 5 
hang thee, young baggage! disoliedient — iii. 5 
I am too y(Jiing. I pray you, pardon me — iii. .') 
best married, tliat dies married young — iv. 5 

young I'ortinlmis (rc/i. i. 2 and v. ',;) Ilamlel, i. 1 

young Hamlet (rrp. v. 1 J ._ i. I 

that he is young; and with a larger tether — i. 3 
freeze thy young blood; make tliy twoeyes — i. 6 
being of BO young ihiys bronglit up with.. — ii. 2 
and my young niiatresa iliil tlmi bespeak — ii. 2 

what? my voung lady and niihiressl — ii. 2 

and out of liaunt, tliis iniul yciuug man .. — iv. I 
.young men will do't, it tljcy come — iv. 6 (song) 

than young I. aertes, ill a riotous head — iv. 5 

is't possible, a young maid's wits should — iv. 5 

by young Osrick (rep.) — v. 2 

and poison tliis young maid's affection ?.,0//ie(;o, i. 3 

tlie young affects, in my distinct — i. 3 

the knave is handsome, young; and hath ii. 1 

and offence as my young mistress' dog .. — ii. 3 

so young, could give out suvh a seeming iii. 3 

for here s a young and sweating devil here — iii. 4 

thou young and rose-lipped cherubim .. iv. 2 

those, that do teach young babei, do it .. iv. 2 

I hiive rubbed this young qiiat almost ... — v. I 
my lord. I:as killed ayoung Venetian.... — v. 2 

YOUNGER tlian tliyself TweiniiNin'H, ii. 4 

he looks younger than he did MuchAilo, iii. 2 

youimer hearings are quite ravished. toi,'e'»;..t. ii. I 
banisTied by his younger brother... 4s [io« Like it, i. 1 
that your younger biotiiei-, Orlando — i. 1 

I'll do the service of a younger man.. — ii. 3 
in beard is a younger brother's revenue — iii. 2 
miglit be a copy to these younger tinies./fH'sirwi, i. 2 

to be tlie snuff of younger spirits .... i. 2 

if I were but t« o hours younger, I'd beat — ii. 3 
the younger of our nature, that surfeit — iii. 1 
we shall ne'er be younger. I'amiNi; or Shrew, 2 (ind.) 
the younger then is free, and not before — i. 'i 
set the younger free f»->r our access ... , — i. 2 

my younger daughter (rep.) — ii. 1 

bein," younger born, doJi lie lay KingJohn, i. 1 

wliicn by thy younger brotlier is.... l/Jeioj/;r. iii. 2 
younger sons to younger brothers .... — iv. 2 
Bworu to us in your 3'ounger euterprize — v. 1 

succeed before tlie younger "i Henry VI. ii. 2 

Clarence will have the younger SHenrt/l'I. iv. 1 

are Salter tliau a younger man's. .. .Coriolnnus, iv. 1 
{Col. Kill.] our younger brown ..Antony ^Cleo. iv. 8 

the younger bi other, Cadwal Cymbeline, iii. 3 

Arviragus, your younger princely son — v. 5 
Bummers younger [Kn/.-hunger's savour] /"eriWci, i.4 
the people, especially of tlie younger sort? — iv. 3 

conferring tliem on younger strengths Lear, i. I 

the younger rises, when the old doth fall — iii. 3 

younger than she are happy Romeo 4- Juliet, i. 1 

younger than you, here in Verona .. — i. 3 

common for tlie younger sort to lack . . Hamlet, ii. 1 
YOUNGEST wren of nine comes . TwelfihA'i/.'lii, iii. 2 
youngest son of sir (,rep. i. 2 & i. 3).Asyou Likeit, i. 1 
to bestow my youngest daughter. . Taming of Sh. i. I 
we set his youngest free for a husband — i. 1 

indeed had Baptista's youngest daughter i. I 

his youngest dangliter (irp.l i. 2 

my youngest boy, and yet my ..Comedy of Errors, i. 1 

pride dies in her youngest daj's iHenry P'l. ii. 3 

though I be youngest, give me leave .iHenn/l'l. i. 2 

Warwick's youngest daughter llirjmrd III. i. 1 

the youngest son of Priam .. Troilus ^-Cressida, iv. 5 

well fought, my youngest brotherl — v 6 

o' tiie youngest for a bride TimonofAlhens, i. 1 

the youngest and oldest thing Conolanus, iv. 6 

a sample to the youngest Cymbeline, i. 1 

hand did slay his youngest son TilmAndron. i. 2 

rivals in our youngest daughter's love Lenr, i. 1 

youngest dau'ditcr does not love thee least — i. 1 
dowerless took our youngest horn — ii. 4 

1 am the youngest of that name. Romeo 4- Juliet, ii. 4 
YOUNG-EYED cherubinis ..3/CTc/ia.i(o/rcnic(? v. I 
YOUNGLING! thou canst not love. 7'aiiiiii»o/S/i. ii. 1 

youngling, learn thou to make some. TitusAnd. ii. I 

I tell you. younglings, not Enceladus — iv. 2 

YOUNGLY— howyounglv he began. Coriofanus, ii. 3 

YOUNKER [A'n/.-youngerJ, ora.. ;Ufr. of I'enice, ii.6 

will you makeayounker of me? ..\Henrytl'. iii. 3 

trimmed like a younker, prancing ..SlienryVl. ii. 1 

YOUTH-home-keeping youth.. TwoGen.of I'er. i. 1 



wear out thy youth in shapeless idleness . 
wliisper and conspire agains 
to spend his youth at home . 



known no travel in his youth i. 3 

worthy his youth and nobleness of birth — i! 3 

forswear not thyself, sweet youth..,. ii. .5 

may become a youth of greater ii. 7 

tender youth is soon suggested iii. 1 

the fury of ungoverned youth — iv. 1 

why, my pretty youth _ iv. 2 

that I have need of such a youth .... iv. 4 

our youth got me to play iv. 4 

Bhe IB beholden to tliee, gentle youtlil — iv! 4 

here youth, there is my purse — iv. 4 

have some Bait of our youth in us..Merrytfit!e>, ii. 3 

he has eyes of youth _ jii. 2 

you, youth In a basket _ iv. 2 

therefore, good youth, address thy. Tu'elph Sight, i. 4 

attend It better in thy youth _ 1.4 

of fresh and stainless youth _ i. 5 

I feel this youth's perfcctione — i. 5 

if that the youth will come — i r. 

youtli's a stuff will not endure ... 
since the youih of the count's was 

that youth's a rare ccmrlier! _ 

are servant to the count Orsino, youth — 

good youth, I will not have you {rep.) — 

by innocence I swear, and by mv yioith — 
fllie did show favour to the vontli in your — 

you should have banged tlie vmitli into — 

challenge me the count's youth to flglit — 

stir on tlie youth to an aiiawer _ 

Bud his opposite, the youth, bears,,,. — 



ii. 3 (song) 



iii. 2 
iii. 2 
iii. 2 



YOU 

YOUTH is bought more oft than.. ri/-f//(AWffA/,lii. 4 
youth, whatsoever thou art . . — iii. 4 (challenge) 
will breed no terror in the youth .... — 111.4 
as I know his yontli will aptly receive it— iii. 4 
what youth, Btrengtli, skill, and wrath — iii. 4 
have persuaded him, the youth's a devil — iii. 4 

this youth that you see here iii. 4 

three months thisyouth hatli tended — v. 1 
passed between this youth and me .. — v. I 
for in her youth there is a vroiit. Meat. for Meai. 1, 3 

the aims and ends of burning vouth i.4 

where youth, and cost, and witless . . — 1. 4 

all the youth in the city? _ ii. 1 

falling in the flames of her own youth — ii, 3 

ttiou liast nor youth, nor age — iii. 1 

for all thy blessed youth becomes as — iii. I 
nips youth 'i the heiid, and follies .. — iii. I 
that Ills riotous youth, with dangerous — iv. 4 

is more than ayoutli (.rep.) MuchAdo, ii. 1 

a man loves tlie meat in his youth .. _ ii. 3 
as much as to say, tlie sweet youth's — iii. 2 

vanquished the resistiincc of fier youth iv, 1 

his May of youth, and bloom of — v. I 

like a mo^t tliankful and reverend youth — v. 1 

stir up the Athenian youth Miit. N.'iDream,i. I 

strong prevailment in unhardened youth — i. 1 
know of your youth, examine well .. — i. 1 

ere his youth attained a beard — ii. 2 

with adisdainful youth: anoint _ ii. 2 

and the youlli, mfstook by me, pleading — iii. 2 
sweet youlli, and lall, and ilnds his — v. 1 

a well-occomplished youth Love'iL.Loti,u. 1 

for youth unmeet; youth so apt to — iv. 3 (verses) 
'gainst the kingly state of youth .... — iv. 3 

do you not educate youth at — v. 1 

the blood of youth burns not with .. — v. 2 
and like a wilful youth, that ....Mer. oflenh-. i. ! 
such a bare is madness the youth.... — i ■.' 

full of unmannerly sadne.-s in his youth— i. •.' 

if that the youth of my new interest — iii. 2 

like a fine bragging youth — -Jii. 4 

thy wit, good youth, or it will fall to — *' It. I 
show my youth old Shylock's house — it. 7 ^ 
I gave it to a youth, a kind of boy .. — v. 1 
the youth will not be entreated ..AsyouLi:ei..i 

in pity of the challenger's vouth — i. 2 

try with him the strength of mv youth — i. 2 
thou art a gallant youth; I woiili .. — i. 2 

that youth is surely in their company — ii. 2 
unhappy youth, come not within these — ii. 3 
for in my youtii I never did apply .. — ii. 3 
thongli in tliy youth tliou wast as true — ii 4 
where dwell you, pretty youtli (rep. iv. 1) — iii. 2 
who was in his youtli an inland mau — iii. 2 

fair youth (rep. iv. :n iii. 2 

I swear to thee, youth, by the white — iii. 2 
being but a moonisli youth, grieve .. — iii. 2 

I would not be cured, youth iii. 2 

with all my heart, good youtli (rep. iv. 1) — iii. -2 
all's brave, that youth mounts, and folly — iii. 4 

sweet youth, I pray you chide — iii. 5 

know'st thou the youth that spoke .. — iii. 5 
it is a pretty youtli: not very pretty — iii. 5 

whether that thy youtli and kind — iv. 3 (letter) 

and to that youth, he calls his — iv. 3 

unto the shepherd youth that he in.. — iv. 3 
be of good cheer, youth: you a man? — iv. 3 

there IS a youth here in the forest — v. 1 

youth, you have done me much — v. 2 

tell this youtli what 'tis to love — v. 2 

youth, thou bear'st thy father's face. .AU'iirell, i. 2 

in his youtli he had the wit — i. 2 

to our rose of youtli rightly belong .. — i. 3 
strong passion is impressed in youth — i. 3 

aged honour cites a virtuous youth.. — i. 3 

youth, beauty, ivibdom, coiirtige .... — ii. 1 
be'st not an ass, I am a youth of fourteen— ii. 3 
careless lapse of youtli and ignorance — ii. 3 
if the quick fire of youth light not .. — iv. 2 
unbaked and doughy youth of a nation — iv. 5 

done i' the blaze of youth v. 3 

boarded her i' the wanton way of youth — v. 3 
fit to instruct her vouth: if you .. TnwingorSh. i. I 
butyouth, ill ladies' eyes thiitflonrislielh — ii. 1 
youth would sleepontthe rest .. H'mler'iTale, iii. 3 
if the sins of your youtli are forciven — iii. 3 
I would wish this youtli should sa.v.. — iv. 3 
but that your youth, and the true "blood — iv. 3 

were I tlie fairest youth that ever.... iv. 3 

your eye hath too much youth in't .. — v. 1 
I am a sweet-fuced youth .... Comedy ofBnort, v. 1 

and hath been from his youth !ilacbeih,\\\. 4 

many unrougli youlh~ that even now — v. 2 
deny his 3'onih the rich advantage.. A'lngJoAn, iv. 2 

I do commit liis youtli toyour iv. 2 

the youth says well; nowhenr v. 2 

had I thy youth, and cause Richard 1 1 i. 3 

counsel to his unstayed youth ii. 1 

than they whom youtli and case .... — ii. 1 

the open ear of youth doth always .. ii. | 

deal mildly witn his youth ii. 1 

now the lord of such not youth — ii. 3 

crest of youth against your dignity..! Henry IV. i. 1 

they hate U8 youth; down — ii. 2 

yet youth, the more it Ib wasted .... — ii. 4 

abominable mislcader of youth — ii. 4 

wherein my youlli liatli faulty iii. 2 

make this nirllurn youtli exchange — iii. 2 
it hath the excuse of vmith, and heat — v. £ 

chid his trioiiit vdiith with _ v. 2 

tb.ou hast robin (I me if niy youth ,. v. 4 

though not riean : a^t your youth ..iUenrylV. \. 2 

thatarc in the va»ar(l oi'onr youth.. i. 2 

your name in the hcroll of \onth .... i. 2 

to approve my yoiilli (in Iher — j. 2 

■wherein the noble youlli did dress .. — ii. 3 

the happiest yontli, viewing his _ iii 1 

prate to me of the wildncss of hisyoutli — iii. 8 
led on by blowly youth, guardeil .... .— iy. 1 
we will our youth lead on to higher — iv, 4 



YOU 



[ 860 ] 

YOUTH, Iiowe'er distressed Cymbeline, iv. 2 

'lack, good youth! (re;),) — iv. 2 

thou art my good youth, my page .. — v. 5 
thougli you dill love tliis youtli, I blame — v. 5 
pry'tliee, valiant youth, detiy't again — v. 5 
nurse, a mother to his youtli .. 'i'itHsAndrotiicits, i. 2 
whose youth was spent in dangerous — iii. I 
my youth can better spare my blood — iii. I 
to gratify your honouriible youth.... — iv. 2 

and tlie picture of my 5'oiith — iv. 2 

if in our yoiitlis we could pick up ....Pericles, i\'. 3 

stamp wrinkles in her brow of youth Lear, i 4 

maugre thy strengtli, youth, place — v. 3 

virtuous and well-governed*youthiio7neo ^ Juliet, i. 5 
but wliereunbruised youth with .... — ii. 3 

fentle youth, tempt not a desperate — v. 3 

beseech thee, youth, heap not — v. 3 

slaughtered youth, for here lies Juliet — v. 3 
that hand that cut thy youth in twain — v. 3 
a violet in the youth of primy nature .. Uamlet, i. 3 
the morn and liquid dew of youth .. — i. 3 
youth to itself rt'jels, tliough none .. — i. 3 

know, thou noble youth, the serpent — i. 5 
that youth and observation copied there — i. 5 
mostknown to youth and liberty.... — ii. 1 
tlie youth you breathe of, guilty — — ii. 1 
so neighboured to his youtli and humour— ii. 2 
in my youth I suffered much extremity — ii. 2 
by the consonancy of our youth .... — ii. 2 

form and feature of blown youth — iii. 1 

to flaming youtli let virtue be as wax — iii. 4 
a very ribband in the cap of youth ,. — iv. 7 
for youth no less becomes the liglit .. — iv. 7 

in youth when I did love — v. 1 (song) 

that is Laertes; a very noble youth.. — v. 1 
the property of youth and maidhood .... Othello, i. 1 
abused her delicate youth with drugs.... — i. 2 
distressful stroke that my youth suffered — i. 3 
she must change for youth: when she is — i. 3 
tlie gravity and stillness of j'our youth.. — ii. 3 

YOUTHFUL Valentine TwoGen.of Verona, i. 3 

the youtliful lover now is gone — iii. 1 

unto a youthful gentleman of worth — iii. 1 
my youthful travel therein made .... — iv. 1 
and youthful still, iu your doublet.Merry Wives,ui. 1 
race of youthful and unhandled.A/cr. ofVenice, v. 1 
ere we have thy youthful wages.. jlsi/ouLrteif, ii. 3 

his youthful hose well saved — ii. 7 

tills youtliful parcel of noble All's Well. ii. 3 

prevailing much in youthful men Cow!e<i!/ ofP.rr.'v. I 
your mind is all as youthful as .... Kin-^ Johv, iii. 4 

whose youthful spirit, in me Richard II. i. 3 

rouse lip thy youthful blood — i. 3 

■wanton as youthful goats, wild as.. \ Henry IV. iv. 1 
vou have misled the youthful prince. 2He;i»!///'. i. 2 

like youthful steers unyoked — iv. 2 

with youthful wings Is flown — iv. 4 

quickened with youthful spleen .... 1 Henry VI. iv. 6 
Henry is youthful, and will quickly — v. 3 

as did the youtliful Paris once — v. 5 

lo, where youthful Edward comes ..3 Henry I' I. v. 6 
coldly eyes the youthful Phcebus. Troihts ^- Cress, i. 3 



ZWA 



TOUTH— noble image of my youth.. 2 Henri/ //'. 'v- * 

foolish youth 1 thou seek'st — iv. 4 

as a father to my youth; my voice .. — Y- J 

the courses of his youth (jroraised Henry F. i. \ 

in the very May-morn of his youth.. — i. 2 
eavouj' too mucli of your youth ....... — i- 2 

now all ihe youth of England are — ii. (chorus) 
shallow, humorous youth, that fear.. — ii- 4 
matching to his youth and vanity .. — .11.4 

gallant youth in our rich fields — m- 5 

their bodies to the lust of English youth — iii. 6 
detained me, all mv flowering youth. I Henri/ r'l. n. 5 
and shall my youtli be guilty of ... . — iv. 5 

thy youth, and England's fume — iv. B 

my tender youtli was never — v. 6 

brother Henry spend his youtli 2}{enryJ'l.i. I 

my life, when I was a youtli — .n. 1 

corrupted the youth of the realm — iv. 7 

to lose thy youtli in peace — v. 2 

like a gallant in the brow of youth... — v. 3 

resembles it the prime of youtli SlIenryFI. ii. 1 

till youth take leave, and leave you — lu. 2 

what youth is that of whom — iv. C 

look in hie youth to have him so cut off! — v. 5 
die in his youth, by like untimely.. Wc/iaxZ ///. i. 3 

were vexation to your youth — iv. 4 

uiigoverned youth, to wail it in their age— iv. 4 
stab'dst me iu my prime of youth — — v. 3 
these are the voutlis that thunder.. Henry I'lII. v. 3 
admirable yoiith! he ne'er saw. . TroilusSf Cress, i. 2 
gentleness, virtue, vouth, liberality.. — i. 2 

his youth in flood, I'll prove this — ;. 3 

forbid such scarcity of youth! — _i. 3 

whosr. ' ith and freshness — ii. 2 

oon.-t,i.iicv in plight and youth — iii. 2 

the Grei-ian youths are full of quality — iv. 4 

one that knows the youth even — i v. 6 

througli ranks of Greekish youth .... — iv. 5 

doff thy harness, youtli, I am — v. 3 

cold statues of the youth — v, 1 1 

wliat levity's in youth Timono/Alhem, 1. 1 

the n'li ids Wd marrows of our youth — iv. 1 
brirg ■:,■•'■■:■ rose-cheeked youtli to the — iv. 3 
mi'' i thy youtli in different — iv. 3 

thai, loiiow youth and opulency .... — V. 1 
in pity of our aged, and our youth .. — v. 2 
when youth with comeliness plucked. Corjoianns, j. 3 

are bringing forth our youth — i. 4 

our youths, and wildness, shall ..JnlinsCrvsar, ii. 1 

and'flush youth revolt Antony Sf Cleopatra, _\. 4 

much tall youth, that else — ..''■ 6 

tell him, he wears the rose of youth.. — iii. 11 
like the spirit of a youth that means — iv. 4 

can get goal for goal of youth — iv. 8 

that shouldst repair my youth Cymbeline, i. 2 

my youtli I spent much under him . . — Hi. 1 
can borrow from youth of such a season — iii. 4 
money, youth? All gold and silver .. — !.'!•'' 

pr'ythee, fairyoutliUap.) — iii. 6 

were you a woman, youtli, I should woo — iii. li 

1 know not why Hove this youth.... — iv. 2 
I'd say, my father uot this youth .... — iv. 2 



YOUTHFUL Troilus,do uottliese. Troilusir Cress, ii. 2 
weighing the youthful seasou .... Julius Ca>sar, ii. I 
than youthful April shall with all ..TitusAnil. iii. 1 

and warm youthful blood Romeo ^Juliet, ii. 5 

fair demesnes, youtliful, and nobly .. — iii. 5 

met the youthful lord at Laurence' cell — iv. i 

Y-RAVISHED the regions round. /'enc/cs, iii. (Gow.) 

YSLAKED— now sleep yslaked hath — iii. (Gow.) 



Z 

ZANIES— than the fools' zanies.. . . Tuelfth KigM, i. 5 

ZANY— some slight zany Love's L. Lost, y. 2 

ZEAL to Valentine is cold .. Two Gen. of Verona, ii. 4 

intend a kind of zeal both to Much Ado, ii. 2 

which such a zeal did swear? ....Love'sL.LosI, iv. 3 

what zeal, what fury hath — iv. 3 

where zeal strives to content — v. 2 

die in the zeal of them which i t — v. 2 

with an J' terms of zeal Merchant of Venice, v. I 

quench the zeal of all professors. . Ilinter'sTale, v. 1 
the constraint of hospitable zeal ,,..KingJohn, ii. 1 

lest zeal, now melted, by — ii. 2 

whom zeal and charity brought to .. — ii. 2 
and freeze up their zeal; that none .. — iii. 4 
a voluntary zeal, and unurged faith — v. 2 
my cold words here accuse my zeal..R/c/iard //. i. 1 
ours of true zeal, and deep integrity .. — v. 3 

innocency, and terms of zeal I Henry IV. iv. 3 

I should not make so dear a show of zeal — v. 4 

whose zeal burns in his nose 2 Henry IV. ii. 4 

under the counterfeited zeal of God . . — iv. 2 
doth infer the zeal I had to see him . . — v. 5 
with hearts create of duty and of zeal .Henry J', ii. 2 
them cool in zeal unto your grace ..2 Henry/'/, iii. 1 

whom an upright zeal to right 3 Henry VL v. 1 

devotion, and right christian zeal', liichard III. iii. 7 
as in love and zeal, loath to depose .. — iii. 7 
and with what zeal ! for, now he . . Henry VIII. ii. 2 
zeal and obedience he still bore your — iii. I 
my God with half the zeal 1 served.. — iii. 2 
more bright in zeal than .... Troilus ^Cressida, iv. 4 
to shame the zeal [Coi.A'n(.-seal] of my — iv. 4 
express some part of our zeals . . Timon of Athens, i. 2 
under hot ardent zeal, would set .... — iii. 3 
duty and zeal to j'our unmatched. . . . — i%'. 3 
in zeal to you, and highly moved . Titus Andron. i. 2 

ZEALOUS— a zealous laughter Love' sL. Lost, v. 2 

his name with zealous fervour. All'slVell, iii. 4 (let.) 
thy cheek lay I this zealous kiss .... King John, ii. 1 
if zealous love should go in search of — iii. 2 
so sweet is zealous contemplation. ./i»'cAard ///. iii. 7 

ZED— thou wlioreson zed ! Lear, ii. 2 

ZENELOPHON; [CoJ.-Penelophon] and he 

it was that might Love'sL. Lost, iv. 1 (letter) 

ZENITH— my zenith doth depend upon. 7'empes(, i.2 
ZEPHYR— are as gentle as zephyrs. . Cymbeline, iv. 2 
ZODIACK-that nineteen zodiacks. jl/eas../ijril/eaj. i. 3 
gallops the zodiack in his glistering.. TiVm! And. ii. 1 
ZONE— pate asrainst the burning zone ..Hamlet, v. 1 
ZWAGGEREDoutofmylife Leor,iv.6 




THE END. 




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LONDON : 

rniNTED r>T m. .vason, ivy IANB, PATERNOSTPK Rh 



